vane vdim‘ nit-z q ciiiiiitonizrumi auitiiiiiui Morning Dally tlounded In III?) President: Ueut. Col. W. Chester 8. Mel-ere Vice-President: .I. B. Burnett. FJJ. secretary: Llcut. CuL l). A. Mlclflnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. IL Burnett. FJJ. Associate Editors: rrank Walker nnd [MIL Ian A Burnett, R.U.N.V.lt. (On Active den/loot "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Th; the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY, 3IARCII 2, 1944 Famous Sayings l1 is itnvre-iiiit; to recall the wise or othet-. \1'.~1- sayings 1-1 ilistingtiislictl itolltlfllfllls Wlllfill i ' 1v. 111r111 to the giave and $1111 11W‘: Diflttfill. --| 11_-.111,g. 1lu\\ll 111,111; but the time will conic \1l1t'i| vou will l1t.'11' 1111"." lillltlSltJllCl “My iiainc 11111 iiuie llL‘.1'\Llllt'\' enough to flout upon the ~ .1 1 1' 1111 ' .\-.ll'>lilll'_\ 1 "\\'e backed the wrong ..o:'s.". llallotir; "l: is 1itil1.1rtiiii:11t'...that so 11v iilll|tl\l.l\l» can ‘no iriistcd to spealc the ‘ _\~-p1ul|; "l’|nu;_-l1 the sands." l.lo_vd l1v l.1lltlt1\\'ll\‘l' inisspcutls his \-.l1\1ir2..-ls.".\'ii' _|olin .\. .\l1ic- . ud; .\ l- 1 subject luas born :1 llritish xihievt l \\".ll 1li~.'.' >11" Wilfrid lit ‘.111 .~ -1 uar t'.111:1il.:t is at \v ' Rttlittl 1'.- i ",3 "lb,- .'\orih .\i11'.-rica .\rt is our con- _ iifnvti .uh_1¢-.~1 1»iil_v to auicntlniciit 1i_\' 111k‘ lll!.'ll|lllt11ll\ l't‘i|l'.t\l of the liietleral and l'i'o- 111111! g1i\t'l"illlt‘lli~.u .\lr. _\rtliti1' Xlt-iglient “t ‘niiuli is ihc i;;it-t'p1'vtor oi the L'..\'..\. to Br:- " l\'. l1, liuinitti: "l1 l haie 1o lllllhC a iq- Mina“, t ‘tila :11»1l l':1riv, l chose Lan- , Hr, \t,tc.,1 Alt‘ l\illl"\‘l '.\'I>t a fi\t- wtit 3-. .- to ,1 l-»:_\ piovitirc." ‘£11111.’ 1. Hove Enlisted 500,000 . .11E.'t.1|'r ~taiislics 111111111 ptihliv 1')‘ tinenx 11' Xittiouzil Defence. and h_\' liifi1i'11i:1tii1ii lloard, show that tip 311 1.1-1 the inialve of the ari11_\' "the reflected glory” a "bit of a tiuisancc.” For the evidence on its face is rather against him. Why otherwise should he give so self-revealing a story to a newspaper reporter? taken that he finds 1- EDITURIAL NO] ES Q... This is thc month Spring begins. it 1K Ill * (Quito a crowd of Islanders in Ottawa this iveelc. a u 1t 1v lt the car ferry holds out for thc rest of this month, she will be rcatly for an overhaul. n1 11- * =1» From Janus in London Spectator; The post- master generals defaults will lcad to serious trouble onc day. On the occasion of a recent wedding a friend of the l1ride's dcspatchctl to her a telegram containing (no doubt for pectin- iary reasons) simply the words "l john iv., 1S," alt rsc which, as every reader of this column will realize without reference runs: “Perfect love casleili out fear." lt " vctl ihiriog 111v wcdtling breakfast htit thc lClCgl'-'l|llll.~l. by oiiiit- ting lllg tirefatory, "l" licnl coitvertcd the vplsllt‘ into gospel. .\ud _lolu1 iv., i8 runs: "Thou has had five litisbaiids. and ln- whom thou now hast is not thy husband." 1'l‘liis-—i.t".. tlic story as a wholt‘. not the last scine1ice—h;1ppei1s tn be true.) 1% i‘ i‘ 3 Horace \\'alpolc, lflarl of tlrfnrd, lfnghsli author, died this date,‘ 17317: having zunpl: iiiettns he indulged his tastc for art and letters by establishing a printing press at his villa at Straivberry- llill. near 'l‘\viclct'nha1ii, the firs‘. bnolv to l)c issued lllCl't‘fl‘Olll being tiravs (tilt-s, with illustrations bv lleiitlcy; 11111113411 an . 111;- Stplllt‘ limo he took little interest iit pnlit .. ilctotitig his time and talents to lllUl'.'\llll't‘. corre-i spoudencr- and trznel; amioiig lll> works arc "The Cast-ll- of Utranto" and “hleitioii-s"; his corru- spondence ivas v0ltiiiiii1oii.~, and rt-ndercil his name famous, his lcticrs being distiiiginslirwl 111i‘ their case, playful wit, racy tl\‘.sL‘t'l|>llt1ll and anecdote, variety of tot and lightness of touch: "Old age (alter fifty) is nu sitch tiii- coiiifortahle thing, if one gives himself up to it mt: _CH_A_RLfYI‘11E'l‘OWN GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM RURAL ELEOTRIFICATION Slr,- This ls i: questlon that has had some publicity tn the press, on the hustlngs, ln_ the itlllfvfnli 0f the two major parties, and on the 1100!‘ of the Legislative Assembly. And “mile I have no desire to dictate to the/assemble: ‘ ’ I think it. is time to stop marking time, and proceed to action. We need cheaper rates ln order that electricity wlll be of benefit to the average farmer. A water power system scents necessary. But why be dependent oit the turbulent. tides of Fundy when we have so much water running to waste ln our Island Province? Reference has been made to the potentiality of the Dunk River system In King's County we have the Morel] River. the largest fresh water stream in the Province If h" "vt-r was dammed at the forks ulioro it sweeps hath toward Mor- cll. it would produce enough elec- tritiy to light the whole country- sldc We have also the Montague River, where the first hydro sys- tem W115 established. which has supplied light. to Montague, Lower Montague, Georgetown and Card- lghll. When I erected my present (twclling ltouse some twenty years ugo. expecting an electric line f0 puss nearby, I had it wired for el- ectric light The outlay cost up- wards cf $100 and provided for flf- trru liuhts. When the electric line "un out from the City to thc ' i~‘,,;-i at Montague lt went , n. Victoria Cross and New Perth tvac- sidetracked My wlrlng has thus become a useless asset to y nothing of the loss of Interest. 1.11 thr- invcstmcnt On making 3.- tniiry I ncvei‘ not any encourage- ment to undertake the Installation of u privatv plant \V1~ should hnpc for areal actions fH/lli the prBSCllt Assembly. which t‘: ttlllS such a number of very . iitmtbcrs. and if the splen- lflitt ruldrcsst-s which have been de- l\' "d. zinnln: with the youth- Lentan Meditation: from The London Times our: UNGHANGING cuutsr 1 usages in the New mmcnt tun the operung of the Epistle tn 1c Hebrews. which emphasizes the hangelessness of Christ. amid the t ‘ldafitultitclsslltitidesho! time‘. e - o peope, s spe with which. betare two mo tbs an N Y has d We ; they realize afresh how much tn the world about. us perlshes and waxes old version of the law 0t dlmtnishlnz returns. to this awareness of change and decay Chrlstlaitlty cunmss with its message of realities. values. and relationships that are. unanectcd by these things. except] so far as they become each year. lmore precious. .‘ There is nothing atzsitract tu the Clhlstllilt idea: inc spiritual has bzcccnc embodied. tlic eternal has entered time, the suprn-historlcal has been made PISLOYICM. "Jtsus Christ. the same yesterday. today. and for cveW-siuch ls the Church's mescsatrc. both for Easter and for all the vest‘. An abstract. trtfll lssublect to change and modifica- tion. but ptrsonullty abides, its identity pcrslstlng thrctn l1 inward tzrowth no less that: ou wurd ctr- ctunstance. It 1s dlflitialt to see how otherwise than through the Incar- nation the two worlds, of eternlt and of change. could be reconcile . Philosophy may withdraw God from the world as Dclsm dld. only to find that lt. has made the world more irizlcvant than ever; or may follow the clue of Pantlieism and ldeilttiy Sum wlth the process of change, which brings us back to Heraclltus. ‘the Christian doctrine of the Lueamatbn, by declaring that. lit Christ tnt- transcendent is made numanetit and yet remains transccnduiit, can claim to ccmc to igtllllCll closer grips with the prob- ‘l_ he second reason for Clirlstliui- 1131/5 Dowel‘ 1O give peace timid con- 11101; 1S allied wit-a the first. To (x- nerience the lapse of time is to suf- fer, and the incarnate Word, unless -i-v There are few moreTeloquent 1 es K fliiunanition ron In: airlines or run our-run narrows '11111111,t:' 1-1 1111‘ “v11 “in 590-09“ with good Start‘. and don't drag it about ‘in nud- llv l‘ 1ll1l’l'°»“1"(‘- 1"" ("F9011 night danctw and the public slto\\'s'."~'l'i» thc oiiurritictrt finds the following Lgmnltss m" _\;|¢5|,u,<_,-_ "The llgltlc does not indicate >1- .-= 1a 4 abum- and paw- o?‘ 1111‘ fulfil‘) 11* ll 1113b“ "'1 Not niticlt hcatlwziy evidently is being" utailv |' h’! ‘Hv-Wfi“ these ‘should 11.».|1:ti'o1'~‘. l'l'lll'C‘l|It‘ll1w‘ itnrl c115‘ in rervtntiittg for tivcrsczis sei'\'1cv. ttil hzti- Fir .' ,ll'rliliill,,iiln,giz.,_1fi \ltJll told the lloiise that the "uzisr. i‘ ~v urea: rnveulence and saving iwesciitetl by enlistments for gent-rill >t‘l'\ .1111l suffered, would seem to as statues- que and unreal. That. is why the note of sutlerlne was sounded so clearly amid zhc toys u-ltich the Christmas festival proclaimed. Re. llglon offers us n0 escape from stif- f1 ring. b-ut rathcr a motive for P91111111! it. sliariziiz it. 11.111 triimrigli- mg over it. lf v"c are follow s of Christ. "'Ilic Christ. had to tiilfcr." so St. Paul said bclorc his accus- crs:_ and ChrtstJs disciples have their crosses to shoulder ttiu, Only we ltavc in his example a strong incentive to do all iv can to brhig sympathy where d and ourselves to age: iind tn these .. . ‘_ a oialltfid by the pow- cr of hts vndlcss llfc who Ls Christ ln tis. the hope cf dot“ risvoi" 11nd sccoriderof thaAdd- \ in reply to the Speech from 'I‘l1rnue. fcllovrcd by thcsv of c Ho rib . arc a criter- nouslnds of men and women behind the lines are risking life in many factories, turning our rm- municion for every fighting from. Without the dangerous, ' , toil cf these IIICI and women, the fir: power of our nnngd forces would dwindle; we could norb: sure of victory. Included in this army of ammunition uorkers arc those who make the gurvpniwtlcr, 'l‘l\"t‘ and othcr CXplOliVti; the makers of shells for all sizes ofguns, of bombs; those who work on aerial and marine Iorpedoesfthe producers of hand and rifle grenades. RINK OI MONTH!!! "A BANK WHERE SMALL ICCOUNTI All Ill-COII" MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE . . . . . . 1h 01ml: if I216 Yun‘ Snail/II Opuliu The Burk of Montreal, Jrorklng constantly to rupply needed banking service to the Government ofCinadn, to rhc workers mo‘ inuugemenrof war industria- thrnugh hundreds of busy branches-odd: in tribute in praise of these coungeoul war-worker» ‘ total. szrvs the Montreal .111» has to lllt'll from ihc \\'.l.l’». rc- . .1 rtllllll tabled lll the llotisc of Coni- ‘r ltalph Nlzubxink, Liberal .\l.l". for Sniixh (entire. llere the Defence ' “cs 111111 380.000 men (uotc dii- 1l iii the :irni_v tip to Scptcniliei :11, ioltintecrs or draftccs. 1.20,- of litbct to the people cf our rur» (lcsertions, (lischargcs and dcatlts ~~ hu-l been 1. _.. 11,000 in the nirie months curling llcet-iubt-t- 31. J. A. DEWAR This indicated 1llCl'(5 would not b: nniclt 1n- Ncl” PET“ Feb "5 crease iit the ntiiiibri‘ ot .\'.l\'..\l..-\. troops zivail- Notes By The Way 1.111131‘ itblc for overseas service even with 111;" icooo fglfu“ Wm‘ L‘ tn be taken in this year. The call-up provi oii this year was intcutleil for maintenance of pru- hot-it struck oft strength as castialtics for other reasons. 1'31 the 120.000 the rc- ~u t'111llli1\l(‘tl 1.277 joined the navy and 8,031 ~ ir-il 1111' l\‘.t‘..\. . \‘o ilririils are QAPH in either Case as to 1ll'lll_\' 1lti1--. 11111 these arc kitntvii not to have been - \‘ll1l<>ll.-l\ lit';1v_v up to Septcutbet‘ 3o. llong; hung. llieptu- and Fieilv ricrotinletl for not 1mm’ more than 10.000. which leaves a total 11' ulnitit IHJNX) dischiii-gctl and unaccounted r .. 111.. ..~1...;;.i.;.."ror"1>; ment ln :1111~oiuti11_1_1 Francis .\. llardv as libratrian of l':1t|i:11i2c1n, sllvi the \\'innipc;_; Frec Press, tho l’;nv<:r11111<~11t has selected a professional lib- t"ir>v (-.\'.p'.‘t‘t who is fully qualified through auv years ofscrvico as assistant librarian. The po=r i. one that should properly he filled 1.11 a merit basis, and that is the principle estab- lisltrtl 111 1h: appoiittiiieut of .\lr. Hardy. .\'0t ltzist o1 his qualities is his appreciation and l<ttFi‘1\'l1‘(l,'_',c of books, as all members of Parlia- uu-ut who tt-c lltt: library will testify. 'l‘l1.- ivrcstnt library ltas been serving two fllllullltlb, as a library of Parliament and, to some extent, as a national library. A definite rlisiiuctioit should be drawn between these ftmc- tlous, :111<l 1h.» national interest requires that a 1riu~ Nan-null Library should be created at some 11111.1 niort: propitious than the present. About two-thirds of the itiatcrial in the Library of lktilizuucnt. u!‘ some 350,000 out of 500,000 \t1llltllt’~. properly belong to a national library. 1111§ch \\1~lll'l also draw liigicuwlly on a great dval oi lllillttlitl rcpo-itig znuid 750,000 volumes in ls irtnrsnizil 11nd other libraries maintainctl by lll" lloiiiiuiott tioveriiiiienr in _Ottawa. .\ll 111:1 .1l>le spare inside and outside the pro-vol l'.l1l'iil‘\ 1- lll use, and much of the mat-- 1~~11l ha. not brcu ratalogttcrl properly. llav- lug 1111111111111 :1 good inaii as Librarian of Par- l.. 1119111. it poi in which .\lr. Hardy will hold j'1ii1ll\ 111th l-1*l:_\.- lJcsrochcrs, the Government iivtv 11.111 zippzwii» the 1'eoij;.nizali0ii 0f the libr- ari .1\ soon n. ptz-Slltlt‘ after ihc war. lt will f¢1|tii|e nonu- 1uou1~_\- and further staff to in- .'l1l'1 t.1l.'1l11j_'1t1': the lltlUl\§ and lllr: trans- fw o1‘ —llll~l.'lllll.'ll oiriutitirs 11f valuable iiiat- .; .|l 111.11 belong. |1ri>|)t‘l'l_\' to a national library. \'ii'1ll"' "Reflected Glory" .\u~:h1~r lti'~1llll‘l' of- tieueral .\lr.1itgontcr_v,-— llll- 111111- :1 wrvice cliaplai11.-—lias just stepped iizio ilu- llltlvllijlll. llcrt- is the story, as printed iii 1111- Xrw \orl. Times: "l iloirt l.now .\lo11t_v. btit he tiitist bc a clever lib-Yo." (‘Itllllllllllttl (apt. the Rev. Colin .\lont- t_'11ll1"t‘_\', whtiu ii lanulon News Chronicle report- r-r I|tlt‘.\lltillt'tl lllltl ilit- other da_v about his 11.11.1111, broilur, tirn. Riv llcriiaril 1.. .\lout— gontruv. 'l'l11- (Yiplaiit is ('li:1pl:1iii on a litispitnl ship \\lll\‘ll lrul 1ll'l'l\l‘tl in lliit.'iiii from South .\f|'ica aiiei" long st'l'\lk'(§ abroad. \'ic.'1r o1 St. John's. \\‘.'1ll:i.~~.‘_\_ uhrn the uar supid. he ivas called up with thi- 'l'1ri'itori.'1ls. “.\lon1r left home to go into llie Ill'lll_\' wlicit I wa. 7 and I liavtiirt seen hiiii two dozen tinics siuvc. ' “This lTfl-Cltll tylorv is gelling to be a bit of a iiuiviiur." hr :ulilvd g1tiid-htnnoredly. "When l inz-l; i1i_\ 11.111311 in b1- rt-pztired iii 51111111 Africa thvv 111111111 1111i Illlvt" iiionet. I tireached a sritioo iii |1o)'.l.1~ _\t'~tt't'd.'1v 11ml afterward was uslwd io 1'1;tI1t'l :1 Qllllftl- 111' honor." 'l'li,_- Rev. .\lr. Aloiitgoiticrys word must be sent strength. but the number might b1: iiictwzts- e11 if C3Stl2tl1l€5 are not in accordance wiilt val» ctilations, or it might bc decreased. liuxpliiiliiiit; leaves granted to arniv personnel for (‘Sritllllill employtnent, Col. Ralstoit said that 11o turn 111111 been released for six months to work as quali- ficd electricians in \\'est Coast shipyards on :1ii1i- aircraft carriers. I ‘l I I .\loncton sets an example to Lharlottvttnvii. The first steps taken in the itivt-stigxition, of the possibility of setting up a Liradc 1.: in ililonctttn werc reported lJ_\' .\lr. Li. ltegittahl _Spcticer, chairman of tlic ctirrictiltiui and vocational coni- inittcc, to the members of the .\loi1c1ou Srlitiol Board. Mr. Spencer reported that his commit- tee met with Dr. Fletcher lfeztcoclv‘, director of cdticational services; .\lr. \\7. K. 'l‘ibcrt, pro- vincial director of educational services: .\lr. 1i- H. Chapman, county school sipcriutendeut; and Dr. \\'. McL. Barker. principal oi the Monctou lliglt School and that all \\‘Ct‘c in agrccincnt on htiportant tnutters of policy. Thc committee's discussions led to a |il'(1t_'_l'(‘.\.s report in WlllCll it was said that a desirable program might contain the follow-lug points. 1 -~—lligl1 school courses planned to extend ovcr a period of four years instead of three year..- as at pres- ent, to case the present overcrowding of nigh school cottrscs; to fit students better for voca- tions, arts, science, engineering; tcaclicr train- ing or itursing. 2 — High school after tirade f) would contain courses such as general course, matriculation, technical course, industrial cotirsC. commercial courses and home cvoiioliiics. 3 —— Work of (jradc i) be exploratory in twgai-il to the abilities and aptitudcs of pupils, .1 - 'l'h:1t lllc board eventually itiakc application to thc provincial vocational board for ticrinisiimi to place the technical, industrial, commercial and home economics cottrscs under the vocational board sn that vocational grants for equipiiir-ut and teachers’ salaries may be received. If‘ it it Ill The extensive facilities of Camp Stisscx, N11,, now will come iii for widcr use than in the last several ittoiiths. .'\ll officers school, for about 700 0r 800 officers of the (janadian .’\l'lll_\', will be established in the iinintrdizite fii- titre. Rumors of this, ctirrcnt for Sitlltt‘ days, were stibslaittiatcd with the arrival in thc province over the week-end of Brigadier .\lil- ton F. Gregg, V.C., who will be eoinntantlant of thc school. It is interesting to note that he was born only a few miles from Stissex — at llotitttain Dale, Kings County. ltrlgadier tit-egg, sergcant-at-aritis iti lltc House of Connuotts at (Jtlaiva when war broke out, 1111s visited hi1; native PFOVlllCC in thc course oi his tuilitary duties in this war btit iiiitil iiotv has not been stationed in hlilitarv Disrict .\'o. 7. llrigndicl‘ banana. (Ircgfs staff also is expected at tmce. “bile no official announccitieiit is available oii thl txact tiattirc or purpose of tile oifirers‘ schoull it is understood that Ottawa has decided l0 list‘. 1b." extensive Lamp Sussex for this purpose‘ rather than the camps at Debcrt and \\‘iudsor,l NS. Sussex has not lit-id as large :1 nuntbcrl oi military tiersotiiiel stationed lll1‘l't: as ivas the case earlier in the war, and arrival oi thc 700 0i‘ 800 officers, ntaiiy of tlicin pp coinpanietl by their wives and fann means mtirh for the whole eoitiinituitv, llrigarliei‘ Gregg i5 an "iuf.'1ntr_vinzn1" ihz- school will he for officers of all l)l‘-'|ll4‘llt‘~ of ll1- srr- vicc and, possibly, will ‘x for the chivi pnrposr 01' giving thcin n final brush-tip votirsc before lllCy tirnreed overseas. ' ' ibl y ac- _ 'l'li United States wlll purchase ‘ iiauaacci bushels of Can- ‘ i teat this ycai‘ It wlll mean at l: st $2li,tl‘c‘.'.0f.u American dol- . r Canada, thus ltclplttt: the "chance situation and atlclhig to the reziscns why Cattudlans should 112v: be pcitnlttcd to travel ln the Unit:d States. »-Port Arthur News- Chronicle "Over l.000 school building's have been (la-magetl beyond repair. The tinder-livers have nsvcr secn a never known a life not tavcrliuttg by war. ‘Whafs that noise? asked a six-ycar-old, 1c'.k- in; .-cared. ‘It's the guns,‘ said his brother, Oh,‘ said the six-year- old. rrlaxlng, ‘l thought it was thunder "’ A Hamilton man was given six month< for flagrantly absentlitg himself from a National Selective Servici- J31), lt i: the first. prison sentence of its kind and seemed to draw forth a lot of apologies for it from government official". The rtilprit was given more than a dozen chances to mend hi5 my: but he just couldn't get. up tn tnc tugrning --St Catharlnes Stand- ar A drunk on West End avenue Couldn't get into hl5 hcme because he had forgotten hLs key. He culled 1-1 policeman and asked him to break down the door. The cop was about. to oblige. when t1 neighbor ilflfistttk by suzizested: "Maybe I can hell) you " He ldentlfled himself its Samuel Sent. the inventor and foudcr of the Segal Lock Co a Sctzal lock?" he asked. "No". eon told him “Then I can otck i." Sena] insisted He dld. -Ncw York Post 'l‘hls l; an cdltorlnl to women by cue of their own sex. Tlme was when we went to the movies, the- atre or concert we just naturally removed our hats. , tub.- ilractlcc has been becoming loss and less of a custom untll now one seldom secs or has the luck to s11 behind a hatless Wcmnn. t grant small hats snuggled tn be- the pompadour of the babushka are fashions darlings but in every audience there ls u smat- trrlnz of the tvlde-brhnmed. off- tlic face models and lf you happen to sit behind a barrage caused by that, style. the evening l-s ruined. “Amherstburg Echo. An electrically heated cult l; a necessity fo1- fliers and gunners on long and high-altitude flights. The men would die from exposure ivltltout. this protection. A new suit has been devised by General Elec- tric engineers. It consists of jac- ket. trousers. shoes and gloves - nll electrically heated from an ln_ dependent power source installed ln certntu types of planes. Fabrics tirovcd to be of good wcarlng qua]. ity: scam construction was strong, shoes and gloves stood up well In nddltlnn. the electrlc clrcults built into the clothing operated perfectly when plugged lntn power lines after completion of the field test; Tflxchltiict‘. THE WET LITANY When the wate t. ttnlctiantco BllllTS ‘twlxt ttlancx. and secCnd ancc: Then our trrtti-rcd sinuk); forcrun Ashen biccitli a stlvirretl sun; When the tiurtaln n1 inc uaze Shuts ittpon out" helpless we. Hear the Chanml Fleet at . Llbcra 110s Domlnc! Whcu the engine ‘s bated pulse Etzarcely thrills the nosing httlls; When the wash along the EldC Sounds. a sudden. magnified; Wlr n the lntolcvultle blast taltndfold Marks minute passed: When the fog-buoys i_ 1t Guides-at]. throtizh the haggard n 1' When rue fvtirniutz bugle blow: _ when the lettered doorways closc. When our brlttlc townships press impotent. on tiuiptlticss. wllfiltl thlc unseen lctirllgpécn lean u sionnrz n teen u n: ellfen their lessened count they t. ll T0 a bcrldtlcjnvlslblti V When the hid and Dvrtlotis Clllts rcttirn our cry to us; When the trcblc thickness sbtefld 5w llows up our next-ahead; a lreivs frightened whine Shows her . at 1111": squattcrlng . CCHHH filll When, her passage tiiidlscerncd. We must turn where she 11115 turned. Hear the Channr-l Fleet at. sen: Llbcra nos Domino! -H.ttdvurd Kt-nttnlt- _i—;1~‘iit.-:N0i|_iiss|sr/1rsc'u M‘ STRIKES mum tuows coupon, March i. - 1 or l _ The Army of Ilcslstnncc in Frnuccl reached London hendqut-rters- An ls__s_tr_lkln_g__e_ver 1 'nd_er blows at thcl intprcssivl- do: Charlottetown Branch: A. l. B. BELCHER, Manager irtuziiicccupleis of then country. Army's activities tiuriitg the three weeks of November, 810 cases of sabotage, attacks in! This is stiown tn u report of the last which ncnt. lt__ recorded III 4— other actions lgalnat the enemy’! war machine, including the da- tructton or 56 locomotive,- and tlit blowing up of an ammunition tnln Attention Swine Breeders Now‘ ll the time to guard B again PIG-WORM By using the most effect-l" remedy on the market. MAUS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER It wlll thoroulhly abolish all truce of worms lllll lin- rovo the health of your 0rd. Prtta 35c per lb» AMMONIATED BRONCIHAL COMPOUND A relllhle and effective pre- poratlon for the treflmenf. c‘! coughs and colds. A tulle relief for chronic Bronchitis. Price 50o per bottle. ARE YOU TEOUBLED WITH IIUMBAGO OR. » SOIIE BACK If m we have one or the bolt remedlen to offer name- y. Back-lino Tablets, larce- Illly effective Ior Lllmhllo. Selutlcn "tent-Ills, lolnt IIIII- cuhr and other for or rheumatism which urd navy treatments m! to ranch. Prlca MI cent»! per box. HIE TWO MAGS 10D Greet Georg; Strut. Mull Order: Glven Prom» I Attention. oi=i=iciAi. NOTICE, MEAT RATIONING d an MEATLESS Tucson 1 TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED KEEP YOUR UNEXPIRED MEAT COUPONS FOR FUTURE USE Effective at once Meat Rationing and Meatless Tucs- days have been suspended unill further notice. This means that ration coupons and other ration docu- ments are no longer required by anyone to buy meat and canned salmon from dealers, and that hotels and restaur- ants and other quota users may obtain supplies so as td gervc meat whenever desired. Consumers should destroy unused meat. ration coupon! up to and including coupon number forty. All meat cou- pons on temporary ration cards should nllo be deetrOlecl. Other coupons should be kept. NOTICE T0 THE MEAT TRADE. Ration document! should be surrendered by the trade in relpeet Ofj" d!- liverles of meat made prlor to mldnlglit February 2911\- Those with ration coupon bank accounts will dapollt all purchase documents. Those with no coupon bunk ap- counts wlll surrender purchase document: to the banks 1n exchange for a Bank Transfer Voucher to be eentto thO nearest branch of the Ration Administration. Instruction will be contained in a Special Notice and Bulletin. NOTICE T0 MEAT SIIIIIEI‘. THE WARTHVIE PRICES AND Ottawa, Iellrulry 20th, 10M SLAUGHTERERB. suspension of the meat ration ls purely a temporary meni- ure, meat slaughterers with permits will be required 10 Cfllltlllllc observing the provisions of Board Order! 231 (defattlng) and 340 (slaughtering and stamping of car- casses) but temporarily need not. report on Form R347» or be limited by quotas Issued under the Order. ~ Farmer! may now slaughter for sale direct to any household eon- Com late ood Became WHT" Bl ND 1N6?