l l. i l. mot: rock _ Tl|E ONARLOTTETOWN GIIAR OIAN .\llll‘lI|lI§ lmlly (Founded tn 1887) to follow; to look to the safety of the nation, and not cottsider the bolstering of individual reputa~ tions or the ltrepuration of political alibis." The most direct and telling comment comes ft"oiit the Coiiseiwativc leader, Rt. ll0ii_ Arthur Sleigheii, who says: “As soon as vou send men to fight for our li\"es on the field of battle, you hind the nation to stand by them, tto ntatter what tlte cost. You bind tltt- nation to see tlteiti tlirougli ____ lt‘ victory. no tnattcr tvhitt the cost and tto ntattcr f-IIWIUN RATES who oi" how many opposc supporiiig tltettt and By niiin 1n I‘.E.I.. 54.00 p" year: 52-511 It" 5 Klimt"! seeing them throttglt. You betray those men if $115 f" 3 "llmll"; 5" 1°" °“° “PM” you abandon thetn under the shadow of a refer- \"ll‘qllj'l"ll'll‘r~‘ffzllllnllfizlafa‘:llzfdzliugllhtnnanlm eitdititi or under any otlter shadcun A nation that 5y anti [Saltl;lt‘l‘l'l'l‘l)\'|1I\'tL and L", 5_ ,\_ 554m p" H“ would betray its men, or evcti suggest that they mumud, “v‘>k|); ct) pt-r yesr. $1.00 (or ti niuntiu, ititgltt be hetrayetl, is a tiation that does not dc- ' serve defenders and does not deserve to live." 50c‘ fur 3 months — EDITORIAL NOTES — Ptesitlent; Lleut. Col. W. Chester b‘. hlfil-llll vii-e President: J, It. Burnett. F..I.l. Secretary: Lit-in (Jiit. ti. .»\ ttueltlnnnn- 0-5-0- Ediin and \1.iti'.i|;ii\| “tics-tor. J R. Burnett. I-J-l- A te lidiltirs: frank \\ alkct and lfln .-\- Bu?!" rtbtulued It ....._v u» s» York; om satin». h-tllftllllll .-,, tn...»- Ilia (_' ltotnltti." ~ ca"... s"... ......,.. t1 n. null Washington. "intuit; _\i.....;..t.i. s»..- i tt-m Perl on. > _ si....t.~.-.tt. -t to»- M It-o “- h-WM"; *'l'“'buf"lljr",l- \\ c ltave had an ltlCill _l;.ittt:'rv' so far. hope I ,. _ , __ tt it \r\\Q um. " . . . ' iiliiififliiltitfliliftlti-rtfllltfdi.‘ tin-film.‘ .\ n.. ll- may colllllllle lllrollgll llfxt 310ml‘- u Evidently Agriculture Minister Gardiner be- lieves it a souitd economic policy to ship our live stock to the l'. S. .\., and then buy its coin- tncrcial fertilizer, whereas all exticriciice has provetl barn-yard fertilizer the best in the world. it! I‘ l‘ Naval Blinistcr of Defence Klacdtizialtl told a itctt .t'i' ‘r1it.ill\' tt- ital and CiUlllc her tnil- §llllll'l'lllg ‘ll ‘klllgflollt Ullln lllill llc “'35 l" ‘av’ ' \ m! u,- VM rcnchpi he,- virgin our of conscriptttin. and urged his ltearcrs to vote i,” -_t;,,u.;,,,,t_, of uU-c; for it. leii ntentlicrs of the Caliine. were pledged H,- MH] ,.,._,.,.,.,-c.-_‘ tn its suppottlietttte the l time .\lttnstei decided ti» talte a plebiscite. W‘ zflhe Strongest Jlfentory is ‘Venker than "M H (‘fl/{FSZ I I" " ‘it ii.-i».i\"_".ti§t lqtisxia Speeds llie Plow : l\'".i~~i;.'s vyttfitiie .'t(li'iit'\'.'illt'lll.< \ t l\lll\llllz ‘iL. ht~t farin l.ntds ..:i ltv Xa/E lt-trdc» up” pi"; p,“ {m- lletioit Lltlllolillll Cottticiin. lltc grcatcst lfrcnclt p-ugiu has cm- actor of modern tinies._ born this date, 1841. m of ngpicutmrc‘ known as Coquelin, Ante shone in contedy and HM“, Z,,.H1,.,\.it-;;,I. tztrce; his brother, lzriiest Alexandre Loqueliti 1 mp“ t“. Hwt_ citdrl. also won fittite as zzn actt-r and writer of A ,1 ,_ ‘HA1,,f;,\_,;,1_;,,~.; ittontiltigttes: ltt-iioifs son _lc;ut. crcalcrl the rule of . . 1., ,... ‘ 1.. t.--‘.. , . .. it W HUNG h, m, m, mt ltagttcnttttt tn lvttsjitnls *L_\*lfll1O dc lleigciac. Mr. R. G. T. llitchtnan. director of Canadian na- atioital livcstocl." records, Uttawzt. said in an in- tcrvictv iii \\'itinipeg that the registration of pedi- greed aniiitals iii Canada is higher now than at any time since the dcpercssiuti l" c said exports of attinials to the Utiited States rtachect its peak , ., \\"\.,i,.,.i, gitxw-pp with the for=tlte past five years in I941, with Attgus, Ayr- Wm 5,“, ppm ;‘n\.l.,_nscd t)‘, slit-cs, l-‘trriwn Siwiss, tiuerttsey’ llcrcftirtls, jer- WLHA .-Uyp.‘__,,\.,, {In-mi m scy hcd Poll and Shorthorit cattle, and Bclgiati p .t,_(.,;,. ‘lnlin_producil,g and Percheron horse, fcatttred in thc trade. Mr. “.431. bu.“ h). (m, “CW5, llllvClllllitll Sllltl’ a lwatr export trade ‘developed a... ;.t-.-¢<_ mp1 WW0“ t“, during i941 with kctvfotnidlaiitl and South Ani- r my“, m‘, fmwnvrs ‘Hi0 ertcan cottntrtes itt the export fitld, . . >l< >i< iii l‘ jut it‘. :\t grain to :i unl- . l‘.l Soviet Rcptiblics , x ill the soil are striv- - ...ti or zhrt t: (‘Tops this year. In the ‘it; potatoes, (tHlOIIS and . ‘ ~'. Iltllliillll liciorc the snow lint dint new" ottions will l): t-ttrlij.‘ tiotattics iii May. . htiitp and ntillet in the i- :t.~»ti lit-iii: increased to tliitlll‘. n iiu .'.l1\ll\11(llllf_‘[ the hc~ >c'\'t‘1‘t.' for such v >0- t r ‘the plottglt iii Si- . ;.._.1 thr- southeast- iilr- illte shortage of sonic oi those dis- itc uy the orderly evacua- nie \\:'.r zones, Bluch platit- w. —< gt» -. lloardcrs~pcottlc who litty lllUl't.‘ll£1ll(ll>C litytitttl their normal needs iii the fczir it tnay ttot lie avail- able in the futurc—are a rarity iii Cattadzi, the citforceittent section of the \\'ztrtiittc llrices and 'l‘r:ttlc lloard told the Czinadiati l'rt->.<. 'l‘he Board has power to deal witli those who htt_v goods iii excess of reasonable nccds but it ltas not been necessary to tnalte use of it. lnforntiititiit received by the board indicates there is no large- sctile lttiartliitg. .\cttiall_v, existing (faitatlinit conditions do little to ciictitirztge the littardet" as shortages are few and all tlteessctitiztls of life can be secured without difficulty". I!‘ i‘ * i‘ l T , tat", liklct" I ' liri lit‘ l‘. It‘ his etitpluttivr, too, that there is {tint twtltfplllfflll. The tirodttc- . . _ _ ,, , Arc l~ox ranches t.» he taxed or hoiiusctl tn I tnidct \\.t\ on a , , . . . I’; W, Hm “QH H“ Quebec. lrctntei" (iodhttitt said at a press cott- - v ., _ I, _ . , fcrciice in l)ll('l)(‘C (‘itv that a ccnstts of fox- . . .0 iatgt: p ant at l\ll>— he l. m7] l ( 1. s’ d ll 1 1 . . . ~ t -. . - ~ -. -» .. U“, U‘ “Wm lmllkqncnts “m, I etng, n. iit ting an o ict ui lCdllllh l aniinal-ltrectlittg farms in the tirtyittee would lic- giti at the cud of ‘llliltlitfyH “Statistics as Cfilllpltflt‘ as possible arc of grcat help t0 an industry‘ which - ll/lvli lmfnrt: the Nazis captures ' - Quits t-it its 1lt‘\\' silt‘. . s oi .\l.t_~c->\v'< clainis . . . . ., , p“. ,. ,_ p, ,_;‘,.,._ “w, ,t;,,,,.,,,lp,d and ls dcvr-lopttig so \\'t'll iii the tirovznce. the l 1'('ll1- “hm”. M; hi}, m‘, EH1“),- Ui who Claims iet" said, ('5])L'Cl2tll_V lvlltdl we titttlc that altiite, i» l‘ txv ftlITll-itftl pv the ottllttt U; Such last year, fox and mink raised on our tarnis re~ fir,‘ M z " presented a capital of more than $4,000,000. “Stzttictics furuisltctl from this cmistts." the l‘rc- inict" added, "are an indisticitsible hzisis when it is 2i rtuestioirof taking adntitiistrativc incasttrcs to ' ,t l . . tr N": rvc-"t tht- lituwi-rel Slut", the King (ioverti- lull) this ‘lorlh i. ,,, ,,, ,.. ' it sttppttrtet" in recent \Vitlc<vpr0.tt| Criticism <11l~~t .ll'l i In the time of Napoleon ITFHHCC stretched l“ ‘lllllllllllll "lillil-llll ‘ll front Danni-r to Cull? The world scented to lic .g . .. . . "‘“l"‘ll ‘ ‘l Xll" llllllils l’l"lll5' iii Frettcli lrinds The lfllll)('l'lll‘ sccnicd to be uti cite m. l’ " .‘ . i- tth. c.. . it .~'\v 1'u1t11(ll\' . . . . , . _ W‘ fil‘ .l . p. ‘w, _ y, u _ ‘F’, t, d -' conqueralile and \\as_ apbsotbng country after l‘ ml " " llm‘ “l6 e““erlllll‘ll 5 my country. The pomp ot his revictvs oti the Chattip l5 l° llwl " l“' "l llllll‘_’ll"‘l clll°l'l'1°llC-‘"‘ll ll: de Mars and his parades before the 'l'uileries frills to t ,d ~ " lll" lfslmllsllllllh" on echoed to the retitotest ltuitlcts "l’rocl"ttti'itioits of "lll"l_ll_lllllllll-1 lllc lffll" lfrettch victories \\'<‘t'c tiostt-tl on cvcrv village f)‘ ’l _ _ “all. llts intlitaiy gloty danzlcd cveiyonc, Where , “ldllls (‘l Olllllloll a“ ex" was it to end? The collapse came with amazing " "-‘~"‘"- llilll‘ 5.\'*l""_\' pollJfccard» rapidity" The Empire tumbled like a pack of l‘ ‘lwl lllilll‘ lmllllmll llllslllll." l” cards. \\'lten peace catite 11l(‘ll cottlrl scarcely be- ' ll‘ ll’ ""'l" llllll ll lllclc licve it If such a ~ll])l'lfilll" l)l'("ll' tip could hat _ 4 . . . . . t- - l "4 l‘l'l"ll"ll‘lll‘l lllill "ll pcnc once it can lrtpttctt 1J1... K0 pcrlr )S to dli . . t t l t. . t '. - ' ' li!“'l""<‘"l Pl°lll5cllc sllolllll history may help to lllCfVttcllS to the issuelatid beg l"l""'llllllfl¢ llol“ llle P0‘ fortifier of troubled mitids vcrtlict tin the dual is- w- I it. '<i tt\"<"t"\\‘.tr"‘tititig." lite war (‘llllhtl \\'(‘l'(‘ , afiirtnatltt t. cc. . titcan .\lr. l\ sue s» t... tl crisis, "~.tv-. ‘ _ _ _ There cannot be an economic solution of what ""‘i'l l“ lmwlllllllplll "' llllll‘ is at root a tnortl problem "ind in their heart‘ ct.tti_sct'iti,..tii pol cy ti: lit: wtotig utilcnalile and [Host ordinary People know {L In the present Co; prejudictztl to t anada s war effort. and the Gov- ftjct we are fighting for nqmfs fir/ht to be ma“ _ "nmfllls PmP" ¢"\"5“- ‘Ylslcatl 0f 334mg ll" not a mere cog iii the Quite niachiticry" or an - . ~ \ . . PwPlf‘ l” "lfd-‘P ‘l lrflm Plfllflfs It had "0 hahitue of the movies and the race track" bttt it hi???“ llli_-'yll\':ll'»f-w\’\“llltllljl‘ 1", ‘fulfill-l ‘ F“ _ Y inatt for whom-the titaltittg of a l1tlllli1l1'\\'()1'l(l A b“ l l-“ltl l ' 'll ‘ ‘l _l-‘ llrl‘ l t‘ lll- _l”t""'"~ would mean inorc tltrin tltc tncrc ntakittg of tnotiey PM!) l l"'lfl"‘lill*"ll “llifll ill!“ lllc l-‘ldllg 0f a for himself. Alreadv this war has proved that iit ...., ' i.,.".,, __'- _ ; _ _ fwn patlty \t|.( (ll l .t.lt‘..ttt< ill on the cotisctlpllOll the younger generation there 1S a capacity for ad- lsslll.‘ lllllll l" lllkllll“: l“ ""l“' "wllllWTS "l llle Yfllllltt‘, sacrifice and lteroisitt which can trans Caliittet and tltc l.il)i'l'.'ll party" c-ntltlliu specifically {m-m the me of 1pc "min" in me Yighrldircclin" released front titty" prtvwits cotnntitinettts either M sun-Iv n; Him,- hm h..nh.ful.lnc(‘l [he me of of their own part or that Ul their leader. Parlia- (jct-tnatto in the wrong Already there are si its ment could then he adpitirtietl for a couple of 0f a turning to rp1ifli()n 1 vqgue yearning‘ léor . . ,., , . t weeks while inentheix-i rctiirnctl to their coir spiritual values. If it can become articulate. the IUlUNlVIP-‘i l" "dlllll ‘llll “l""l"" Tllllfllll? lllt‘ (‘lcc- soul of Canada will ll('C'.)lll€ f‘ HfllCIl with new tars, (in tltttr rctttrtt the vote could hc taker, lift; and the wlinle ittatter sutled tit a fortnight. v 4. 4. s. ' ‘l- I . “Admlucdly,” Say,- VllIC IHLII; suclva plan I)? (férycton \\_ stanlcy"lircsident of Dap would he a sorry sultstitttledoi mztdersliip by tttc litinsie Ltttvcrsity‘ “Tiles i" Thc Halifax Chmm ntnn at the head nf frtttmla s" win effort. But the iclc to tcll how closelv the universities are co- iifiitt‘ ("Wild lK‘ "lllfd I'll“ "ll." "Y ‘llllllllcl’ “ml "Pmlllllf! iii thl‘ ttroscctttiott of the war an acti- ~“<_‘lll"'l 'll"“l\'l.‘"_ ll dlli- l""!~' l‘ "t" Pl‘¢l"1"<"l l" vily which has created staff and liiiattcial problems give lt-.'t<l=it"--l.tp Ill the titattri‘ titer. he. tnzght better that are ‘voffving the governors one can sav . . . . _. , adopt sonic sitch supple dcvtte for getting a gays I)r_ Staimlc)" that Since Jmy S. 1940' the" ha! (l(‘L‘l,~;ttH hy pnliltt" ttpllllfil] without the tnne-tvast- been a downright :tlliaitce between the government l l v v . I l‘ '~ ~ v t . ' iigntitl ‘ctt-tly rt'<1t11t‘t‘t‘ to a tiatttiti-il pltliiscttt‘. of this cottntry. the utnvcrsitics and tltc press, l h..- (did..- and Jlttil fllltlppCllllFlll) argues that Indeed from the lll':~.t day of the “an. ma‘, was ‘he all ]ll'('t‘t'tl('l1l, so far 1s it is relevant to the prc- closest co-operatitiit between the gm-gmmmg i" 5211.; . ' -‘ ‘ - ~ - - -. . . f‘ llmHtt-d flirts. is against ltolditig a re Ottawa and certain of the tiiit\"ersittcs. including crept “H1011 ‘the stilitc/"t of compulsory selective Dalhotiste. lhere ltns been the readiest co-opqr- sloth} lhe ititerest of our RHICS‘, the unify and ation on the part of the tittiversities. because they "s11"? ‘ff "i" People. m a nation, would be have realized sitice the 1020's m... “m. “we me hltrtltctt.‘ if not itiidermitted. lint such an assault especial target for linsrisnt. and sittce. 10H tltcv upon liltdl‘ fonndinitnis. .-\t titties of emergency ltave realized that llitler grist) 1.3.1 t|.¢,,,"n',arkc;| it is thc l-usitiess of the (ioverninent to lead, not for destruction. __ t .r..-.> THE _ CHARLOTTETOWN H GUARDIAN_MA_ NOTES BY TNE WAY Sir: You newspapers lre certainly bchuid tii_e_times. ‘Fhsre is never ary advertising matter in the middle o: an editorial or a news d lAll. Now the radios. they are modern; they shove down your throat, in the sameurarnabte breath, some prcduct wltzcii is 110 doubt, excellent on the kitchen shelf or In the bathrosm. PM ma‘ you learn to detest when it l.» so uiwtuousiy thrust upon 5'0" l“ l~h° mlddlq or the news. However. let us give the devil his due. 1 was pleasantly SUFpTléKl “hell MY» Churchill's speech was n-vt inter- rupted in the middle o! Plffidflml the merits of somebodys 9106"“- Yes, you are ce_rttain.y oldfaslt- toned - for which let. us It" praise. — letter to the New York Sun. l lecm that the War >0flice will co-ttperate in the maktnz 0f a tum about the stage of ‘Nbruk- 1v. will be a SLTMQlH-IOYWSXG u:- counn of the deitence of the desert stronghold, and will contain no irrelevant scenes. Scme recent films. about Britain at war have been criticized for the way the H1611) themes have been s-wamped bv the inclusion of distracting sup- PKTTIQHLDTY plots, while fault has also been round with the undue pffimjlltilCc given to the minor lrivialitles of Service llftk, In this res-beet the war fi‘m frcm Russia, "Three b I. Shell-Brie," provides a marked contrast. ‘Ibis ls the first Russian war film to b2 handled by the Ministry of Infotmatiori. -- Edinburgh seotsntan. .\Inlta,_ of any ptIi-e tn the Em- pire. is in as tough a spot as there is. It is a tiny 1ittle_ place on1> about. 120 square miles all tol . It is crammed .th a quarter of a million pecpie much more densely pspuiated than we are 1:1 Britain - and sitting right out fn the middle of the Mrciiterranean. 19s,; than sixty miles frcin Sicily, but getting on the 1.000 miles eith- er way frcm the nearest British naval bases of Gibraltar and Alexandria. And, in spite of this, the little colony receives regular sup-plies of aims. reinforcements and food, In fact. in many items the-the better off than we are in Britain. It says something for Britain: naval and air strength tn what Musscltzti. I suppose, would like to call his sea that we tn Britain are able to kezp Malta, thousands of miles away. regularly stipplied and pref-acted. I can re- member wandering through its tiarrottr, dust little street-s. and being amaze nt the number of people the houses contained. The people in Malta neatly are packed tight. and it's nothing for 15 or 20 ‘to lIVC‘ in cue house ‘Thevve es- caped injury. first. because of their splendid discipline: secondly, because of their remarkablv effic- ient shelter accommodation. If you were to sic-ramble dzwn a trot or S0——SCl'I1€llI\1-t‘5 only a matter of ' th the soil in a llL ivlaltcse g. you would come to rack. An that's the sseret of Malta's gcod shelters This rock, although it stands up to the toughest. bomtbtnz. happens to be very easy to work. and there is a squrd of 5."00 Maltese laborers digging small reek site" ers ail over the island. — By Sidney Herni- bicw in Loztdoii Calling, Mr. Kevin's description nf our race as "an avvktvard squad" seems to suggest recollections of other view-s of our peculiarities It was Mme do Staci who said of the difference between English and French: “The difference be- tween you nnd 11s seems to be ntrttnly this - you're a. proud people and care fcr liberty, we are a vain people and care for eItu-til- ity." Aqitiaretttlv the atttltot" is not. known of the enigram "The Erg- lhhman is itevei" happy unless lie is tniserable: the Irishman is never at. peace unless he Ls fight- ing; and the Scotsman is never at. lttmc unless he is abroad." If we tzo back to Tudor tLmes we have Frctttlels summing up: "Invariablv, by friend and enenty alike the English are thscrib-"I as the fieteest 1n all Europe (the Etiglfsh wild beasts. Benventtto Cellini calls t-lioml." and a State paper c-f 1515 asks: "What ccmy folke in all the world ma?‘ compare with the ccmyns of England in riches. free- dom. tibartj". wellfare and all pres- tytlyfllj’? What comvn folke is so mighty. so strong In the fetde as the ccmvns of England?" -Man- chest/er Guardian. Wlth so many temporary brick structures and plies c-f sand- bags obstructing tlie foot-ways. in- juries of pedestrians ln the biack- out have been common since the beginning of the war, but I was surprised to learn from a. dentist. the other do)’. how many patient-s cfme to him daily for repair of damage to their teeth. cattsed by black-cut collisions with station- ary objects When n. friend ex- plained that he had broken his front teeth through walking into a piillar box. ineonvententiy of the rig t. height to catch an unwary vviiikei- on the mouth the dentist revealed that exactly similar acct- dents were not. infrequent. One young woman walking quickly had broken a number 0d her teeth vtthen she struck the top edge of a Pillar box. and was knocked un- conscious to the ground, sq severe was the shock. My friend tells me that he went to inspect t-ho offend- ing pillar box b.v daylight next mimlfls, and on tot) of the box he saw two of the fragments which had been chipped from his own teeth. The only remedy, 1t would seem. would be for the Post 0t. flee to draw a band of luminous mint. or white paint. around the lctp of these slntzuinrly tinreslsting objects. - Birmingham Past. A war problem which has not yet been sattsifactorilv solved 1n Australia is that of fully exploit- itt the inventive genius of the na ion 1n the interests of fight- ing efficiency. The supreme need for quantity, in order to match Germany's colossal weight. of RYmB-ments. must. not cbscure the Importance of quality. Rgvgja. tions of the neglect from which the Owen sub-machim gun suffer. erl showed that there were serious weaknesses ln the system or assess- ing the value 0f inventions. To remedy this situation the Federal government has decided to make acceptance or rejection o! int/en- tlcns the responsibility of the several Service departments and the Department of Munitions. The ministers concerned are now considering means of ensuring tho?» each department inventions bound wttlllno; 1n future neglect MW useu venuon. — "one Amtralfa, Herald. s’ y' A Canadian engineers company. r-hle-flv cttnpossd cf Kirkland Luke bflvs. has just set up a new mining record, according u; word 1 ‘J-‘fl. l é worms or ;_. CHALLENGE‘ In: {hlkgalple ‘MD-air é “Canadians! Let u: pray. let k us work. let us fight." — Maj. Gen. L. R. LaFIeche. 'u'u‘a'u'ln 'lfln'tn'u'u'ln‘ TOTTAWA LETTER i By Robert L. Cotton (Special to the Guardian) OTTAWA, Sunday evening. Jan. 25th. - Having satLsfied the de- mands of my Anglican upbringing by at-texdiiig St. John's Church this morning where the Governor Gen- eral read the lessons and the rec- tor ln his sermon had u. dig at, the Government, for lack of forthright- ness on the manpower Issue, I went this evening to ltettr Rev. T, C. Douglas, member of Parliament from one of the Saskatchewan con- stitueiicies. Am not. sure whether s minister of the Gospel was ever elected for one of the Maritime seats. Out, in the West it is not utiusttal. There may be others besides Mr. Douglas in the present House. But you nev- er Iiear them designated as “Rev- creiice" up on Parliament Hill. Mr. Douglas is n Baptist, a real preacher with a fine gift of imagery and a fttnti of applicable stories to (irive home his points. It stetiicd Strange to heat" liitn. from the same United Church platform which Grat-tan O‘I.ear_v had occupied one evening last. week, elucidating more emnhsttlcallv a point which the Cailolic Irishman had stressed. namely the tlesirabilltyi and need of seeking outside o1‘ self something to lake firm hold of in these times of stress when the war on nerves continues tinceasingly with such deadly effect. At this sF-rvlce the newly elected officers of the Young People's Un- ion of the eltureli were fotsmally in- stalled for their yccrls work. But here as in most oJtcr churches DOW-ii-(lfljki the young people seem- ed to be rather conspicuous by their absence. It was mostly the old-tim- ers who were helping to install the youthful office holders. On Saturday. a sprlngilke day I spent, the afternoon at the Experi- mental Farm and on the wiiy out saw a few of the thousands of new homes vliich have been built since I was here last. Some of them are nice to lock at and it lot tnore noth- ing to write home about. I (lccideci that it ntttst keep some cf the civil servants pretty busy paying their rent and taxes and car fare. At. the ftimi at this tint»: of year there ls naturally not so much to etitertain its there in spring, summer ct" autumn. In the fne large glass houses I “'11s niuelt iii- tcrested in tlwz extierltiietits in plant; breeding and also in the flowers and plants being grown In sand. gravel and ashes fed only by tneans of chemical solutions potirezt on at regular itit-rrvztls. Fine hetiltliv look- ing growth id gorgeous blooms. In one se n many experimznts were utidertvav crossing the verv early but very stnnll tomatoes with others of good table size in an en- deavour to develop n satisfactory table tomato which will ripen in the shortest possible growing sen- son. Probably no branch of live stock ls of such general interest. and im- portance just. now as pork produc- tion. The big pig ltottse at- the farm is therefore being fully utilized. In the "growing" pens different, ts vcere getting differing rations. the proportions being posted up on each pen and these tests were all trying out wheat mixed with other grains in varying quantities. I cottldirt. me mitt-h difference between those get- ling very little wheat in the TflilOH and those getting a great deal. But. the scales at killing time will tell the tale. In the farrowlng pens there were tlte greatest. lot of little suckling pltzs that I have ever seen in one building. For the feeding tests it is nattii"a11_v tlCSiftlble to have a large number of pigs of approxi- mately the same age. So they ar- range accordingly-well, u nearly as they can. Apparently they have brood sows pretty well under eon- trol because lit all the pens the litters were ot about the same num- ber. ten to twelve. while the Oldest were just two weeks of age and the youngest liad come along the night before. All are Yorksliires. SONNET 1f thou survive my well-contented BY. When Uhlll, churl Death mv bones w th dust shall cover. And shalt by fortune once more re- survev These poor rude lines of thy deceas- C CV91‘. Compare them with the bettering of the time. And thouuh they be outstrlppki by every pen. Reserve them for my. love, not for their rhv me. Exceeded bv the height. of happier n . O. LhQlfef/IOUHISBTC me but this lov- Int: thought: "Had friend's Muse grown with s now m: age. nit! hi! love A dearer birth than had brought. To march tn ranks of better equip- a e: But. slnlzce he died and poet-s better prove. ‘Theirs for their style I'll read. his for his love." —W1111am Shakespeare FOUNDIJR 0F PRAVDA Molotov. the Soviet Commlss-ir of Foreign Affairs, was me of the editors of "Pravda" when 1b W115 founded, Gibraltar. 1n seven day's they drove a seven by seven opening 127 mt. That's n lot of muck to Inbvc 1n a week. Prcvlcus seven-day ree- ord was held by English tunnellers. 11:0 feet. white Kirkland men in unifcrm are dolng marvetiott; work in what any day may be n be_ lea tiered fortress (and doing their mi larv duties on the side) the men who took their Kirkland jobs fcr the (titration of the war iu-e on strike. doing "Qlhlng f n, Wml/PY. - Northern Mlngrr. c“ PUBLIC FORUM ‘I'M; column ll 0pm III in: dlnuulul by uwrrelpondolln 0| qlutlnln 0| lntuut. The Guardian does not IIIIII the Oplllun ltl. ICE BUSHING sin-Now that the fee is being hushed It might; be well for those In authority to nee that ft In DN- perly done. It ts too late now to call attention to the very poor job done Li 1940 in the section from McNaliys wharf to Charlottetown and the very much poorer job done tn I941. Stakes with onl one or two Itve branches from lve and six and some places more chains apart are a poor guide in a foe or snow storm to say nothing of after nlgti‘. (triv- ing. This is not written 1n the spirit of fault. finding but stmplv WW1 ‘J10 nope that it may avert a trozsdv- I um, Sir, ate, TRAVELLER POTATO PRICES S1r,-’I‘he appointment of a "Board" to control prices rather than have them run wild as they dld 1n the last war. was a wise more, as was also the decision to exempt potatoes from the price ceil- ing. At. 2 cts per 1b. estimating that a. person would consume a half pound at a meal they tire a cheap article of diet and would only amount to 1 ct. In the make up 0f a meal. Owing to the very low price of the tarociuct- during 1040 and 1941 and the poor crop of the 1185B Sea" son, farmers are not. liable to be un- duly enriched over an advance in the price of potatoes. I am, Sir. etc. J. A. DEWAR New Perth, P. E. I. OWL BOUNTY Sin-We were sorry indeed tc lcgrn that tn: Department ofjtgri- culture had decided to put a riotin- t_v on owls. in nit endeavour to ex- terminate the species in this Bro- vitiee in order to nurse along an ini- port/ed one. A lesson might, be learn- ed frcm the Olti Country “there due to the lnsLstaitce of the game in- terests some species of hativks and owls were Vlflttillly extertnizvated, with of cottrse the inevitable t‘ - suits, the country became so tve run with rodents that they e compelled to put H. bounty on tHEm. At the present, time, according to the Press, the finances of the Red Cross are being largely attgmettterl in the district of hli1lli‘llt"Sl(‘l‘ by the bounty of one penny for every rat's tail turned in for that pur- pose. Such a backward step its a bounbv law is deeply regretted not only by a very large titimber of our most intelligent asgricttltttristvs but by we think we are quite salt: in saving, every Bov Scout and Girl Guide and leader in lite o'c- vince as well as the hundreds of ntembers of the Audubon Society winch Pas been futictioniitg in the schools this last two or three years. One of the aims of surlt t".ic"'et_v backed of cottrse by the lilglt/‘kl biologists is the opnosltlon 0t‘ not." effort. to externilnnte anv bird or animal reaardlcss of species. Due to the bounty 1n former years all otti" native species exeotttitig the went. horned otvl and ot‘ cottrre the migratory ones arc nrztetlciillv ex- tinct for to most gunners an owl is tin owl. Unlike ire game ititerests our young people have no way of mak- lng their" wishes known to the De- nartmeitt in question but have llx‘ hope that. steps will be taken for the rentoval of this b/xtty if it ts not already too late. I am. Sir, etc. FARMER SIR itinmrs sflftr Sir Harry Latider. sect comedian got. his first job in a flnx mill at two shillings and a pennv a vreek. NIYI SANG! ATTENTION Swine Breeders NOW ls the time in guard against PIG WORM By using the most effective remedy on the market MACS PIG WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms, and Impfuvg the health of your stock. 35a and 70o a package. MACS CONDITION POWDERS FOR HORSES AND CATTLE Tones up the system, cures ||| skln troubles and given n ‘loan cont of hair. For swelled legs. purifying the blood and u an Eradicator of worm; 1|, 1n III unfailing remedy, 1m“ 50c I package. ' MACS IIEAVE AND COUGH REMEDY Relieves Coughs. Colds. lie v and all Infections of the hint: of honel. t. can be ens Iv administered by mm" ‘mi. the food. and leaves no bod after-effects. Prléa 50c. TNE TWO MAGS’ I49 Great George Street Mall Orders Glven Prompt Attention. $25.00 tsaoo All other overcoats 25 per cent off MEN’S 25 per cent off. Nothing reserved. Come and get the bargains. HENDERSON MEN'S FOR FOR JANUARY 27. 1942 OVERCOAT SALE *1 9.50 m ‘i350 $11.50 $21.50 SUITS & CUDMORE WEAR C OMBINA TI ON DISABILITY "For most people who work for salary» wages or Ives ‘time is money’ only so long as they are able to (‘OITIIIIP-tilll- ize their time. that 1s. only so working hours to their business, trade or profession. When. as a result of injury or Illness, that ability h impaired or destroyed, their earning power stops, the fiii- anctal returns for their invested time are no longer availatle to support them, and their economic existence is geoturdizctt, unless they have token the precaution to insure against blti.» ness and accident.” If you would like to know more about the benefits of this form of Insurance, we will welcome your inquiry. NYNOMAN AND OO. LIMITED Insurance Service Since I872 Offices: Charlottetown, THE SABBA TH DEMOCRA_CY’S FIRST FIINDARIENFAL RULE (By Donald MacKiititon, K. C.) (Continued from yesterday.) The bible gives no iiistztttee cf iiinusetticnts in connection with rc- ligioits services with perhaps one ex- ception. when the people rose up to tilav as recorded ltt Ex. 32, ti‘. tin instance of having for the time forgotten their mediator Moses and titeii‘ God and when lll'_‘l1' tlCiltLil rcstiltctl in dis-aster. their punislitncnt W115 mitigated llirottttli the ititercessioit of their titediatci" who was rcitdy to die‘ to stive tlietn. a tyne of Hint whose sac- rifice believers commemorate on the Lord's Dov. Many Christians and Christian nations (so culled), while the events of the oust have lroni auc- to age been a mirnititz, failed nlld still fall to consider them tnainly because consideration of the sacred and holy on the dav appointed has given way to that of secular things. The secular tiewsttaper, or novel, or some secular study, industrial. 1)0l1l.iC_t\l or otherwise stippliuits the the Bible and other sacred writings and meditation thereon on the lord's Dav. The sentimental and secular song on the radio and eLse- where (its tf six days were net enough) crowds out the songs of Zion and oriilses of Jehovah on the one dtiv in seven. '1‘1ie Sunday sec- tiiiir concert. Sunday picnic and pastimes of various kinds, and the financial. Industrial, political and various other secular engagements, and radio talks and dramatic per- formances. under the supervision and control even of tttitioital author- ity. have taken the place of, or titonopolized the greater part. of the one dav set apart. by the command of the King of Kings for prayer to, raise of and communion and fel- owslilp with Him Jllld meditation ution His works. white, tit the same time 1t Ls definitely recorded and “$41bllfillfdjitjtlstorfcatbproofs. that [wing fi Starring COVERAGE long as they are able to devote (from "Saturday Night") Summerside, Montague on the observanceof the Sabbath day depends tht. strength and the existence of the itation (Ier. 26 2-28), Contrast Ezek 20.12 and Ezek 2111-5 as to wars kitowledge of the Lord mny be acquitfccb-Bi" whith of these are we acquiring it 10-day? One of the commands publicly proclaimed while the Chosen People were on their wav to the cottqurs; and destruction of wicked nations was: Remember the Sabbath Dav to keen it holy. Failure to do so tvas ultimately a factor in contributing to destruction and dispersion. Fail- ure to observe the day culminatedln lack of wisdom, knowledge and pov- (r without which no permanent vlc- toiiv oi" national stability can be lt- tntned. The first dentocrttct" (‘olttll- tuting in ‘its initial stage one lone nttiii ltad its its fuztdantettta. basis the observance of one d. in term as sanctified or Ziolv anti this has ccntirved and s'l“. ‘s t. prime 1181!- essity to all dem-tcrttcles in erqiei-to know and learn of Hint wtlto is the snitrtt: of the kHUJ/‘rdlle anc naive. csseiitfzil to llflllTiil existence nid assurance of YlZJIQDIJs icss and tit-tee. No armaments. however oowevlttl. wtil therefore save n nation that will not observe the Lord's Dru‘ A“ oceasioital day of grate." Hjvil ll fttlly observed. is not tzititclcitf. Where the Sabbath ceases it» b" tb- served the word of God cttascs to be read and heard. Faith content ltl’ lWBflIlR and hetirmv bv thsdvflrfl of God (Rom. I0, 111, This ..s the victory flint, overcometu the tip-Ht!- evtn our faith. (1st John 5. l-ol» VETERAN SERGEA-1*T’I‘-_.\JOR P IA —(CP) —~F.lI‘ ttbttro the age limit, and with 45 r91“! army service, RSM, C, F‘. WIM- rum, of a. south African Sctttttsit Regbrtent, has been retired and sent. home, much against his “ll. from the Middle East nouns AND Books The Harvard library has doubled 1n size every twenty y-e:11'sl01'l century. MlnartPs kELpuin. L‘ As Usual For ‘any a yeur now our Tobacco has been up with the leaders in its class. Today it is still a star performer, and still deliver- ing the qoqd;__. BLACK HICKEY’S TWIST. CHEWING 10¢, Per Fig Manufactured ly HIOKEY 8i NIONOLSON Tobacco Co Ltd. Charlottetown