ggoiz root: TIIE BIIIIR L0 TTETOWN - GUARDIAN Mnrnlng Dillly (Founded In lltfl) Presfdt-nt: Lleut. Col, W. Uhéflwl‘ 5- HUI-III‘! VII‘: President; J. R. Burnett. FJ.L Seen-fury: 1.11m (r111 n A1 blaclhnnon. 0-8.0. Ldiru and HJIIQILZIII] fnrretor .I It. Burnett. FJ-l. Associate Erlilurs: trunk Wilktl Inf! III! A- BllflIfl-I SIJBSCRIWYION RATE! By Mall m 1*.r;.|.. $1.011 per your; 82-50 M‘ 6 will!!!“ 51.25 Inr 3 mouths; 50c tor one month UP.» Uclncr) $5.00 per war; $3.00 Iur 6 Illllllllll $1.75 for If months; 60c for one Mouth. Dy Mull to other Provinces and U. S‘. A. $5.00 P" W" Saturday Itt-ckly: $1.00 per your; $1.00 luv ti mambo. 50c for 3 months Tbs Cl1:1111111r»1111-- <.1..rr1|1nn may be obtained l! uflhlllllpf~ \1~\\s 111- y. Tum-I Square, bow Yurln Old South m-n- \‘lll) Lnlllrl‘ .\lllh and “'llllllllllll, liusmn; \|1~n~11|.1111.r11 Mu»- Altrnvy, 1:411 Poet it». “mun-nu, 4, r1111», 1:51 lsnv .~t., Toronto; News Stand. Chulrnu Lauri-w. u‘tu\‘4‘= Intlo-‘u sewn Bland. Sudhurl Ont; Iluh 1111114-1-11 shop. Hnnrtun N. 8., ' "The 1110-1110111 is Weaker than the Wen/crust 111k." .1 ~ 1f. .1171ii1.‘1i,'1-ii7:. Statistics l-1111l111 tum ' in the world, concludes the ,_ _ ;1 i.» n I111 difncult at tunes ..1.:1-,11-.111s lllll\lk' bv 1111111slers with 1 ‘ ' 111. w1li - ‘ n \\'cll:u1d. llon. C. i 1- \l1111'xI1111~:1111l 51111111)". -1; 1,1~ 111 persons uorkhig on 11L. 1110.000 were women. 1-~ p1'c-11111;1l1l_\' would apply t) 11n- 11111lnIe. ,,1.1 1» 4 . litlllfit‘ 11f Conuuotis ..1111-_g' 111 .\l1‘. ll0\\'e's u on l)<:c. 31, last, 600,- 1 1.11 11x11" producticn of whom .\lr. l\'1tl~'IO'11 went on t0 5E1)’ ‘ ,1r11;gr;11111111: ior 19.1: would ‘11t11l mztkiitq 700.000 in all. 1 1 111.1111 \\i'.'1. he "ztpproztchitig its ris- -' .1..11eri:1l and Inztnngemcnt. 1- 111' lllllfif datemcnts would bear ' 11'I‘l he somtuvltat rentatrkalwle .~. .\lr_ Ital-ton snid was to b: . a imnce. 1111s achieved in a month 11. 1 our full 51:11 or 51x w'e1-l<s. More Party Patronage It must be a scan-re of great satisfaction to our M. PJ's to Iittrc so much patronage 1n their control. :\:v11l:<~:' civil service army will be n:- ees-"iiy to n e new 1111111 power plan opera- tire. C~~i= Eur-q» ztve that no less than attother r,_<;1 .1'1.< will be added to the public service If nzry- This menus a further ltusiness 21nd industry of <:-1:'i<. It also means that the - vnul. oi this new orgztnizw 1.1.11 um 111m of coitfnsion i=1 stripping’ 11f c‘. ' \"c:_\ . tion vcrll c; hi} the areis :1‘ kl l1v the sclectirc service plan. Cr-"tve1"11111e<t rural and tlfba-‘l diatrlgg " ‘11111 yhc country telling people "~11- 1-1‘ Q11 flllTt‘ 111a 11111" job or ~ 1»11111l1v\111<'11I may not be 1- officers will be simply obey , perivritiiiig their duties in mak- 1rlr. After nil the effectiveness of . - rlcvised in a democracy in war tinx- 1'. greatly upon how the people talc» i’. . accept it. Thcy have snbnnttcd lr fi'1l!'l"“ll< coitrlitions and exceedingly ing in-itrttc. 111g the flan t ths schctv- "" .v' 21:01‘ arbitrary re. ciions in this war, and they will continue to do as they are shown the imperanvc need of the r11."."1 ‘trPs irrespective of who con- ~ t-rols or crib": we pattwutaqc. . ‘o Compressed Dried Milk fhe 2111;: r111 ("onucil for Scientific and In- dnstrial Rescnrclt hls artnounccd that excellent results 11.1w; l,~:<:11 obtained in the production for export of l1lr1clrs of crmiprcsscd dried milk. ltalcs .\lr. L, M. Cosgravc, Canadian Trade CGIIIIIIISIIWWPT in S\ W101’, in a report to the De- uf 'i‘1‘;11l1.- 11nd Commerce. rding to reports recently received, the nutritive elements of frcsh milk in their original proportion have been maintained ls s result Jf the new mfllitvls -'l(".'r3l1)pc(l in the extraction of \\'€I'.4'l‘ only l: is ("l‘.])lliIslZC(l, however, that over a period 11f 1 ..- a crrtrun amount of decomposi- tion has lmen 1111ted, and dried milk is now pack- ed in tins in which the air has been replaced by mtrogcn. 11h pro =1:re, dried whole-cream milk tww/let‘ vran "111- ui-vtltlrwl into a firm block and the vi l1_v time than 50 per cent. Thirty three 11"I1-~1 1 ywnvdvr can be compressed into I 9-inch vulva 'l‘l1‘< 11111o11t1t (‘trfltaing the food Ittftfv-"l $71111" :5 qcllvvts (208 pints) of milk, (>11 111": ' *1 r-rts .l<-~ti11:tti"111 the ltloclts can h1- lllWlwi 1-~ l l11:1'1~11 11p in water to reconvert them to 1n? l' azlier ewperinieiits are now being carried 11w: 1 a 1151-111 to compressing powder- ed milk ’i:'-1 _='1-111111111'l l1lt1rks to fit standard ex- pntl1tiztcrl111x. Ileavy Increase In U. S. Th1» 111111 '1 1'1“ 11f fmports into the Ifuitcal 51.121‘; I111‘ 1' ‘. 11:11‘ 111111\Ilz\111' 1<).11;11111)1111Iecl to $_'.315.71‘i,".1 1H1 :1: t~11111p;11'e1l with $1,872,196,- ooo in the 1-111-1-1 11,1; ‘ pcriotl of 1940, a gain 0f 23.’; pm‘ 1*1|‘t_ \\' 11', .\l1'- l). S. (jfilo, Can- :>1l5:111'l“~ 11V t‘, -11:11~1Li11111r :1I .\'"'.v York, in a rc- 1111:‘.1-1I"" l‘ _=1 11"'1111»11- 11f 'li1:t1l-- 11nd Ctmrmcrcg, 'l"1 1. ' 1111 "itn-nl- f1<11n fl\'(‘11Illi(‘ SIX grand 1l:\ ‘ \\1>Il1l sl11>\\<'<l stihslantial in 11-1 i 111-1 -‘1.- 111111 11i111-11111111l1 period, rang- 1 '1 ‘ ‘ 1 <~"=1I fur .\~i:1 I11 JSn pct’ Cent i". I I 1 l-.1,1~1 '~ fiuni Iiitrnpt: Ilcclilttfl by _‘,I 11-1 .1“ l‘ 1 ll" lztnyir. supplied clust- lu 5O per .1 1 l 11 I 111-1 llllpnfls for thr- pcriod. Im- 1111 , 11-1 t 1 -l1. \\' 1>1~ \~1l11<-1I .11 $3R(1,1o5,oc1o 1, , l ~ 1 .r111_11_;11_1111<1 in the like period 111 I‘ I1. 1 1' - 1' H p"? rent. Front lritish .\l.17,11-1_ I 'l l~"'1<"~1 sitpv-lir-r. shiptncnts 111-11- 111: -l '1 .*' ".1-“'1<11r1_ :1 gain of 38 per cent, nhslc >lliltlllt 111s 1111111 the Utritcd Kingdom, valued at $103,354,000, were 2.1 per cent above the value for the r940 period. Imports from Aus- tralia, South Africa, Ceylon, West Africa and New Zcaland showed guins, while receipts from British East Africa declined. The Netherlands Indies, the third largest source of supply, is credited with imports to the value of $159,628,000 during the January-Sept- LIIIIJCI‘ period, a gain of 30 per cent. Imports from Argentina, valued at $1 163771000. "V9"! l1‘? too per cent, and those from the Belgian Congo, valued at $25,485,000, increased by I64 per cent. Smaller gains were recorded in receipts from Chile, Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela and Russia. On the other ltand, imports from japan, valued at $79,106,000, were down 23 per ccnt_ Declines QTHE CHABLQITETQWIEIMQLLARDIAN notes n11 r1111 1m “Scorched earth" — s lnrln flrlt given currency by the Chinese-be- came synonymous In nuns-In with zrfm detcrmlnstfon to sacrifice even usttonsl achievements - such as the Brest power dun st Dnepropetrovsk - to prevent. their use by the enemy. Industrial works hundmds of millions have been lown up by the Dutch. Not I. wheel not a lathe not s» single brick was disturbed when the French gave up the st Renault. Citroen, Rcgnler, an other motor factories. Even the huge Schnei- der-Creusot aims DIEM MB!‘ Lyon fell like s. rlpe plum Into the lsps of the Nazis. who had lt. In rs- were also recorded in imports from China, non to: iishflflklvtgsd wlthtéluhtu Colombia, Spain, France, Belgium, and Ger- 3%“: M°n',"l’°m'(B0-M°';)_ n many. _ Every important economic group except fin- ished manufactures recorded increases in both value and quantity over the figures for the 1940 period. The gains ranged from 1L3 per cent for Inanitfacttirctl foodstuffs and beverages to 37-9 per cent for crude materials, while finished mnnttfaetitrcs declined by 2.8 per cent. The average import price of all groups (with the ex- ception of crude materials, which remained un- CllilllgCd from 1940) advanced over the quota- lion for the 19.10 period- IIDIIURIAL NOTES — .\ll Fool's Day. Ill 1k it i Sonic of our legislators know more about the “lay of the land” now than evcr they did 1n their lives before. i i lfritlettlkv the Govermncnt is not fussy over the transaction of business, being bent rather on letting the members have a good time i11 the city before returning to ‘zeal’ evfryzday work. Blorale. savs Lord Iiearcrbroolt. is the all-im- portant thing at the present j1111cI11rc——Il1c 011t- come of unsclfishness, resolutiott, dcterntination, concentration and optintisnt. U Q I Edmond Rostand, French poet and dratnatist. burn this date 1868; achieved success with verse-comedy Le: R0111ancsq11es in I894, fol- lowed subsequently by La Princess: Lointaine, La Sanxaritaine, Cyrano d: Bergerac (his master- piece) L’Aiglon Clianteclrr, and Le Bois Sacra; was elected a member of the French Academy, and received the honorary degree of LL.D. from the University of Edinburgh, being a prominent member of the Franco-Scot Association, an organization which has kept alive the friendly inter-relationship between Scotland and France since the days of Mary Queen of Scots. 1v 4 >01 111 A real and grievous loss has been sustained by the COlllllllllllly in the siuldcn “passing hence" of .\lr. _l. C. .»\. Gordon. l-lc was one of our “rising ltopes" a brilliant youth who inherited the literary talent of his father, Mr. _l P. Gordon and delighted in books. He was no mean poet, and in his student days at Prince of \Valcs c011- ITIIJIIICd in no 51111111 degree to the development of “The College limes". In bnsiitess he was a “livc-\vire", took a foremost part in the form- ation of the Junior Board of Trade, and sub- scquently became active in the affairs of the Board of Trade itself. "Who dies in youth, and rigour, dies the best." a It i i This time of world sorrow represented by the approach of Good Friday makes all the more poignant the bereavement: of families whose loved ones have been taken from them in the flower 0f their youth. The “reported missing" of Pilot Officer J. M. Murdock is another case in point. He had everything to live for, but willingly and valiantly offered his young lifc that the rest of us may continue to enjoy the blessings of Christian civilization. And he was an only son, the prop of the family and ntaitt- stay of his widowed mother. Wells interprets our feelings in "Mr. Brittling Sees it Through": “God . . . is the only King" .. . . Then after a time he said: “Our sons who have shown us God." a u General election procedure will prevail st the plebiscite, and no results will be msde known until after 8 P. M. British Columbia time. Can- ada is divided into five time zones —Pacific, blountain, Central, Eastern and Atlantic —an;I the plebiscite polls close at 8 p. m. in each zone. Under the regulation governing publication of results, voting returns from Nova Scotis, for in- stance, cannot be published in British Columbia until 8 p. m_ P. D. T. four hours after the Nova Scotia polls close- The results of the active scr- vicc vote, taken among members of the forces 1n Canada. and other territories, will be announced by Mr. Castonguay at Ottawa, the results being forwarded to him by special returning officers. Immediately after the counting of service votes has been eomplctcd, but not later than May 5. the special returning officers are required to cable or telegraph the total of affirmative and negative ballots to Mr. Castonguay. I I i i I l “The German's conception of his own place in the universe is never a humorous conception, and is generally a. tragic conception, writes Mr. Harold Nicolson M. P., in The Spectator. “If he bc an optintistic person he regards himself ss a heroic character, capable of magnificent deeds; if he be pessimistic character, his gloom as- sumes Aeschylean colours, and he sees himself ss Prometheus suffering acutely and symbolically for the sins of all the world. No German ever thinks ltimsclf ‘funny’ as I think myself funny ivhen (dressed in a fur coat) I run after a 'bus. No German, when confronted by circumstances 11f pomp and grandeur, indulges in an affection- ate chuckle at his own incongrnity. No German will Icll a comic story against himself unless he can so twist it as to render it oblique self-praise. No German has the self-assurance, in other words, to deride himself. ls this a quality or a dc- fect? May it not he that, in stating that the Ger- mans have an admirable sense of the ridiculous but do not allow it In affect serious thought or effort. \vc are stating that the Gcnnrtns have a surer sense 0f values than we have ourselves?" Despite Ill the Perils of the In!‘ at sea, naval examinations for the rank of paymastcr sub-lteut, still take place ‘float. "Disturbances" often make the time for study short, and behind the success of one candidate Is s story cf remark- able achievement. For 1 3-4 hours of the 2 1-2 hours allowed for s paper on the Naval Discipline Act and Court-Martial Pnccedure his ship was under constant enemy bombing attack and was several time; shalten by near muses. Yet he obtained 122 marks out of s pos- sible 150, and was fourth on the llst. of 21 entrants day Dispatch. II’ n Hohenzollern cannot "til" the throne of Grrvnaflfifi 8 BOMB‘ nollern lmbes to be a Hitler st-coge and a.=(‘(‘TI(l the throm- of Rtusta. He is Louis Ferdinand. second son of the former Crcwn _Prlnce W1l- helm. better known 1n last war days as “Little Willie " _Louls Ferdinand is married I10 PrInPt-‘SS Kyra of Russia. a niece of the lute czar Hitler has been meetlntl W131 the Krnpps. who represent the Junkers and landowners of PYIFSIH. They are favcrable t-o Louis Fer- dinand as a young man could be- ocme monarch of either Russia or Germany or both. The 911F518? mtlltarv and limd-owntnz castr- Is still 1s powerful Free in the R/svh These vectfle have wlcldccl Im- 11101159 influence- over Germflfly for gcnemtions. They have m-wased to preserve their power, no matte-r who might be t!“ dominant poll- tlcal figure I11 the Reich. They mnvcd brhlnd the. scenes In the davs nf the kaiscrs ard they are active behind the scenes 1_n this era m’ Hitler Hitler ls nlayng all strings ln Germany as the 001K11- tton; wlthln the Reich become more and mom tense. Wlth the Dec-pie growinz more weary of the war. the Nazis have to repzvr Pverv pollttvst fence they can. —Wfnd- s01‘ Star. Utopian Socialists are fund of the hrase "oonscriptlo; of wealth" which too often, perhaps, does not clearly convey the meaning they wish to express, or, at best, 1S used in a loose sense that. would spell disaster for the system of individ- ual enterprise “wider which most of the demccracles conduct. their national economies, A better and more feasible term Ls the “mobil- ization of wealth." a procedure trttinh is being followed in Canada. Mr. H P Thomhill, retiring president of the Dominion Mort» gage and Investments Association, dealt: with this question In 1m fl- Iuminattmz manner at the annual meeting of that body. He ventured the opinion that many of those who advocate the "conscription of wealth" are really suggesfnz the confiscation of wealth. He himself favours the term “mobilization.” which he Interprets as meaning nothlng more than the harnessing of the forces of capital to the ser- vice 0f the state, especially In such an emergency as the present one Mr ‘Ittornhill wculd remind the loose-thinking sharers of other people's material possessions that the funds of Insurance. trust, and loan companies do not repne=ent the contributions of a few large corporations. Far from being the fatness of big business those funds are the savings of 4.590.000 thrifty Canadians, the majority of whom are 0f modest means. The insur- ance. trust and loan companies are merely the custodians to whom these citizens in all walks of llfe have entrusted their savings for safe-keeplng and investment. - l-fsxntlton Spectator. ‘Traln up a. child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from It," ls one of the bits of wisdom In the Book of Proverbs. Many American parents and educators have come to the conclusion that, not enough ch11- dren lro getting Instruction in the things o! the spirit. ‘Ihs remedy- Inl d’ this s conference sponsored by the In- ternatlonal Council of Rcllgmus Education recently In Chicago. Representatives of s number of Probutant denominations IIIBIYYEG this experience wltn vsrfous form-s o! week-day rolfgloiu instruction which have been developed In con- junctton with the school programs In wldcly distributed communities This movement, though growing for more than twenty-five years, Is still In an experimental stage. Dr. Roy G. Ross, general secre- tary of the Council, noted Increas- Ing doubts whether a single hour s week at; Sunday school is sufflclent. for building "strong rellglous foun- dations." There Is, In addltlon, the question of children who do not receive that. hour s week of Instruc- tion In ethics. The plan of week- day religious education, Integrated with the school curriculum but. glvcn by the various churches for those 0f their faith, ls helping to meet the need. Yet Dr. Ross up proprlately ted out that the supplying thfs mstructlon does not relieve schools and home; of thelr responslbllftfos In providing "a. community climate favorable to rellglous teaching" and giving evI- dence "that. they believe rellglom indispensable to successful liv m; ‘m; relfglon that. counts and that best serves the chlld I; religion not. confined to an hour or two of d15- crutslon on Stinday or s week day but. llvcd and practiced all the time. The object of rellgtotts In- struction should be to brlng the Influence of reverence Increasingly Into the lives of 5011001 mtldren and to make character-building I; port of educatlon. -- Ohrlstlsn Science- Monltor, A wsr problem which has not yet been satlsfnctoi-Ilv solved k1 Ans. aJla Is that of fully exploiting the fnventtve genius of the nation In the Interests of ffghtlng efflclency. The supreme need for quantity In order to match Oennanys colossal weight of armaments. mu=t not nb- scure the importance of quallty Revelations rf the nrrlsrt from wftlrlt the Owen snb-mnenne gun suffered showed that them were lou; weakness tn tho IYIIMII - London Sun- ' 'APRIL 1, 1942 l Advertising (‘fimmlns Dsfl Press) The most oon argument ‘j to support the contention than. .. newspaper advertising psys, lies 1n tho Iucoel o! the Second Victory wrén finll rot-urns sho total subscription In the nefg bor- hood of one blllfon dollars, rather If than the $600,000,000 originally ask- ed for, no anal! share of this locom- pllshntent our be newspaper sdvortfstng and news- PIPHI‘ 811119011 thrmigh I110 oohunru ofthoprcss out theDo- minim. Radio also p yed u. part In II bringing to the people of Cs-nads 1: the need and urgency of gunpartln; the loan. with posters end display cards uddlng to the (enersl effect. TodI-y the Dominfon Government has become the l tnflvfdusl advertlser In Ounads and certainly this condltlon would not exist If the expenditures had not shown justification long before this. The youngest voter can recall when ‘uvernrnent advertfslng In newspapers was almost entirely con- fined to legal notices and tha In. sertfon of other announcements In an equally drab background. “oday the government has embarked on an advertising campaign in which 111.. ustratlons and art work play p, large an convincing part. and the effect has been more than gratify- lng. Actually It took a second world war to make the government. adver- U-BIHQ conscious and 1t is safe to conclude that no government of the future wtll attempt ‘n carry on business unassisted by an intellig- filély directed system of advertis- T" "c Past. the business of gov- ernment 1111s been shrouded in :1 cloak of mystery and red tape. The fnar. In the street was more or less m the dark as to just vrhat, was taking place but today the govern- ment ls leaving no stone u11'ur1~_e_1 l0 b11118 to the attention of ewryone the aims, hopes and ambltlcns 0t the administration. Never berm,- has the average citizen been more conversant with the problems facing the Ottawa legislators and It ts safe to assume that Wis frankness will continue long past; the day gvihen the war Is victorlously end- Re-Planning The Senate (From the Ottawa Iournelt A SEIIBIDI‘:IEID Isn't. a job; it's a title. Also it's a blessing. a stroke 0f 300d fate; something IIke draw. In; a. royal straight flush In the bltleest pot of the evening. or wtn- ning the Calcutta Sweep. marge why we think It. wrong to think of a senatorshlp as a job; and wrong to think of the senate as g Dlace where people are supposed to work. Pensions aren't. given for work. And that's the reason, too, why we Irtnk setnattorshlps should be "dread around; made Into a. sort of "share-the-aenavurrl 1 fps‘ Idea . We wouldn't; have any senator hold his Dlaoe for more than flve years. After that. we'd have hlm vacate the premises. the heartbreak n11.1- wlthstbndmg, and give joy w some other fellow for flve yetbrs, after which we'd have the Iteatbreak. too. In that was‘, nearly all of us would have a scnatorshlp to look tarward to, something that would cultivate the admirable quality of hope. Also. the Senate would always be IFCSII, be f111l of new IJPOOIIIS sweeping it clean Wlth a man In the Senate for not more than five year - we might even compromise and make 1t ten-he would have just enough time to become useful and nJIZ enough time to become useless. The Senate would be on its toes, We'd have the Prime Minister ap- point half of them. and the legls- aturtes of the provinces appoint the other half, and we might have the universities nominate some of them In that way we wouldn't have senators. who should be thlltklng of the hereafter, getting up and Pnmpffimlsing their chances with it by SWIM that the Senate Isn't partisan. We'd even have church- men tn there. and we'd have (why not?" the chtef Jilstlce of the S11. bremc Court of Canada. (like the Lord Chancellor of England 1n the Lords) and we'd have some ofiher people we've In mlnd, and who are good. SO UP-AND-FISH OUT I" 101111011 l "Personal service lfilgufizusellzdrilreas 5132:1111 evening n sca r Ildren’; clot-hes. men” ‘or of assessing the value of Invgn. 'l%¢‘321.f°<§§£“ “' ‘h? 2W3“, m“ e111 n to abollsh In m u “d” rejection of Inventions the rg. sponsibility of the several Service Dt-‘Partments and the Department of Munitlons, The Ministers con. oerned Me now considering means 0f ensuring that each department. lnventlopp board will not. In (m. 11W W860i any useful Invention. —3Ydney Herald (Australia). Wfdlffifif INSURANCE s1a11v1c ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 the i: avtrfbuted to II onus 0 ;, CH ALLENGF E: QPWLK? '15- “Sotho tflnehlfwm! lust, one o! us The Growth 0f India. (Iaudon Tunes) ‘rho approach of war t0 the bor- ders of India. and the striking and progressive growth of tho Indfsn srmy, which now has 1.000.000 men under arms and ls enrolling re- cruits at a rate of over 50,000 a momn lend speclal Interest to the re- markable figures of the decennial Indian census last sprlns. which are gradually being published. Ex- oludtn Burma. now separated from the ca ctrlntton, the peoples of 1n- dls have Increased since the begin- ning of the century by no fewor than l15,000.000—a figure little 165-! than the whole population of the United States of America. two de- cades ago. The rate of growth ln the past ten years was as high as l5 per cent, as ccmpared with 10.6 per cent, In the 1921-31 perrod. The present Indian total of nearly 389,000.000 represents some fo11r- fifths of the Inhabitants of the British Empire. This rapid growth wlll be viewed by the administrator, the economist. and the social work- er with mixed feelings. ‘Phrough the generations of the pax Brltun- nlea Increasing aressune of popula- tlon on the soil has "st-wily handl- cnpped efforts to overcome. the grinding poverty and-Ignorance of the rural masses; and Lnolan think- ers who formerly dlsmlss-zd the Idea. of blrth control now reco-gtfize that It may be s valid tar‘ necessary ally in facing this gloat problem. On the other hand the 15 per cent. increase In the ‘ast- ten years Is a tribute to the rapid develop- ment and Improvement of health and other welfare services: to the exorclzlng of famlne and scan-fly In large tracts 0f country by irriga- tion and Improved communications; and to the grown of large-scale Industry, The Industrial pr Izress which the present war. r121 more than the last, Is stimulating at an enormous rate will doubtless be reflected In a substantial advance tn the per- centage of urban dwellers. The largest city, Calcutta, had the amaz- ing t1 crease rate of 85 per cent. Her 2,109,000 Inhabitants would make two present day Blrmlnghams. Bombay Town and Island giving n. total of 1,488,000, has fallen decl- slvely behind In a. race for first plwe extending over the six pre- vious general Indian enumersztlorts. Apart from the aoarstny populated North West. Fronfltcr Province. the provinces with the ltlchest: rates of Increase-in both over 20 per cent. -are Bengal and the Punjab; and It ls not without Interest to observe that In both these provinces the exerelse of self-government through Cabinets responsible to legislatures has been fully malrvalned for nearly five years. ALASKA Rumor-ins Reindeer: were Introduced Into Alaska about 1890 to feed tire na- Ives. O-GOQfi-O-O-OQQ O§+O§O OeO444-Ofi0 ST. PAUL'S IIIIIIPEI. NOONDAY SERVICES Every noonday, except Good Friduy_ and Saturday during Holy Week, a service for Men will be held In St. Paul's Chapel. The service will begin or I2:05 for fifteen minutes only, and will be conducted by the Rector, Rev. A. LeDrew Gardner. All men interested ore cordially in- vited to uttehd. 1 "Cull upon Me in the day of trouble: l_v1ill deliver thee and thou shalt glorify Me." PAN-CAKE MA K*E- U P A new kind ofmske- Qopiql by Max Fsctortllollgwood", 1t sepms to creale a new com. .' L . . . it imparts a velvety- ‘ youthful look . . . it helps h Ide tiny complexio fsullsmilsts son for hours wit out epowdaring. "vomit: IHCI BLOOD FOOD FOB PALE AND THIN PEOPLE A combination especially valuable In the treatment of those diseases where their orlgln ls trouble. to an Im- vsrlshed oonrlmon of the loud. Ono of the greatest remedies In tho treatment of Bheumsthm. Get s box now. Price 50 can Moll Orders Given Prompt Attention. TFE TWO IMCS I49 Great George Street MORE EGGS ' r011 BIIITMII SWift’s BABY CHICKS Our Chicks are bred for continuum egg production, sud for meat qusllty ISLAND STOCK adores hl host In Clllldl- Breeder flock: no blood tested and approved b e Government P011183 Services. We n6 equip d with modern dt-chery egIIDIIIGIIII-W» “Didi: We also 111mm» Broader Sto Swifts cell Constantino, Ohl Starter, eta. Write for price u. All orders receive prompt tcntlon. Order direct or through the following ogentl: butt llsglole. Noflhslll. Morel] (Io-up. 500., Morell. Eastern E g b Poultry Assn., Smarts. R. L. Dlc eson. New Glu ow. Swift Canadian Co. Ltd" ontsns. 0. Wallace, Elms "tle. Maurice Bernard I1 00.. TI h, Frank Bryan, Cascumprquc. Jerry Richards, Wellington. 11m. A. A. Weddell, North Tryon- Alec Buell. Mums Harbor- ll. Murphy h Sons. Gavin. Walk 81 McQuald, Kenslvgton. Ivan It. Brown. New London. A. K. Lord, (Jaw Traverse. w, ll, Burns, Mal eque. A full Hen Home on every form 1nd two morn eggs per month from every Hen re- nlres EARLY CHICKS Swift Canadian C0. LIMITED. Charlottetown, PILL E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness l and’ Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown 1% i EGGS! EGGS! EGGS‘! We can offer PRODUCERS and shippers of Ilngraded eggs quick and courteous service at our Plants in Charlottetown and Kensington. We can grade your eggs while you wait. We are paying highest market price at all times and we believe it. will be in your interest to get our price before selling elsewhere. Bring your-Haggis- Ioi us the next time you are in town. It will pay you! Canada Packers Lintitetl CHARLOTTETOWN KENSINGTON THE MAN BEHIII/D THE cuzv 2 THAT'S what counts. And It moltos a dlffarsncs also when you know than is a long and hon-u record behind HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10c PER FIG Manudtctured by i ' IIHBKEY MID IIIBIIOLSIIN Tobacco 0o. ltd. Charlottetown