33;. iPAGE FOUR TllE OIIARLOTTETDIVII Glllllllllll Manna; Dill! (Follmlfll In 1887) Authorised u Second Clue Mall. Pout OM00 Department, Ottawa. President, 1m A. Burnett; Vice-President, Wm. B. Burneit; Secy-Tream, G. M. Burnett; Editor lid Managing ector, J. B. Burnett; Associate Editor, Frlnk llblker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker TIM tne Weakest Ink.‘ SATURDAY, SEPT 7. 1946. Important Farm Meetings Cliarlotteitiiin is houiitiretl indeed to be chosen as a convention city by the Canadian lfederation of .\g"1'icult11re, which will hold a conference liere next week. Sept. 9 to II, this being the first occasion on ivhieh the Federa- tion will have iiiet in the .\l:iritin1es. The three-day conference will deal with both national and Rlaritinie agricultural prob- lems, and \\lll he oi outstanding interest to all our farmers. llur own Prince Edward Is- land lticd-sratiou of Agriculture will of course be well repre-eiited, and our citizens generally will follow ihe proceedings with keen inter- (WI. (f.i11ft~i-1-ii;t~ .~]lf‘-'ll.(‘l'§ will include the three llariiiiiit- .\l:1ii.~1t-i's 11f Xgriculturc, lloii. .\. \V. Blaclvenrie, llllliil\ llou, .\. C. 'l‘aylor, Fred- ericton. and lloii. \\'. l". .'\. Stewart, Cliar- lottctown. who will deal with problems peculiar to each of the three Provinces. In addition the zigeiitla calls for 1i general discussion on free freight tinlicv 1111 feed grains, farm prices and fariii costs, fertilizer costs, 11nd many other sub- jects. Mr. \\'. l. Parker, vice-president of the Cillliltllilll l-“etleratiou and president of the Mani- toba Pool lileixuors, will preside and will speak on his recent iriii to London, England, where he attended the international Conference of Agri- cultural Producers last May. Mr. Fred Sproule, vice-president oif the Saskatchewan “heat Pool, will also address the conference. The meetings in the morning will be held in the new Legion llall, and in the evening at The Charlottetown. From the discussions and proceedings may come far-reaching results for agriculture in Canada. and it is essential that our o\vn farm- ers take full atlvantage of this unique oppor- tunity by attending in large numbers- For Safe Driving Iloii-risis \\ill do well to study carefully the results of the police check-up on automo- biles which ivas taken here during the period May i5 to lune 3o, Of 3,663 cars tested, I.- 55; or 42.5 per cent were found defective in various w:i_vs. There were, for example, 207 cars with defective brakes, 140 with defective ltonis, 3:4 with defective front lights, 926 with defective rcar lights, 28 with defective tires and 216 cars with other defects. \\'itli the Fall season coming on, it is par- ticularly lllllllllilllllll for motorists to have their lights in good condition. Farmers also should see that the backs of their wagons are provid- ed with reflectors. 'I‘hc.-- reflectors can be ob- taincd at any of the R. L‘. .\l. P. offices for the nominal 511111 of twciitv-five cents. They are an absolute 1iccessi1y' to safe travelling at night. There have heen many complaints this season as to the condition of the roads in many pans of the Province. Whatever the reason for this neglect, it tiiecuis that greater care must be exercised this 1-1111 by drivers of all wheeled vehicles, both in their own interests and those of the DlllIllC. Rigid adherence to safety precautions is the only wise 601K58- Regislration Dies Hard It's zihiiut time, says the Finn/trial Poxl, the Government made tip its mind about national registration and issued a clear statement of its intentions. The system was supposed to be abandoned last month and now comes word that the records are to be uiicrofilmed. stored awav in the archives with a permanent cus- todian staff. .\hou1 the same time it was an- nounced that the fiugcrpriiit records of service personnel are 111st) to he retained. Coiiipulsorv registration was definitelv understood to he a war regulation only. The practice ivns borrow-ed liolus-laolus from the police stzilcs of liiirope and has 110 Tllill‘? What‘ ever‘ iii 11 tiezicc-tiiue democracv. lt dot-slut scare criu1iiizils and it is repugnant 1o holiest citi- zen-x ,‘il1\{.'.1\I'|', i: i. t'.\'ll'(‘lll<'l\’ doubtful whether flie rtygistralioiireeorils. at least. have any prac- tical Yftllft‘ and their permanent storage is lull Qfkglhpy raw 11f puhlic money WEISICCI.‘ The great hulk of the information rlbtainetl is over six VOHYS old. lluntlretls of thousands have moved to other addresses since then. thousands have tlicd. nud many. no matter how thev hflafit- ed in 1040, have now forgotten how to milk =1 cow. The authorities, if they are wise, will forget the whole thing and. before freeze-HD- duiup thir records in the Ottawa River. 00$ Canadian Figures Some very satisfactory figures about Brit- ' ish exports to Canada have been given The Times, London, by Mr. D. B. Mundy, the Acting Canadian Trade Commissioner in Liv- erpool. During the first half of this year 'these exports have exceeded by two-thirds the figure for the same period last year, the value being 11o, 4,202 dollars as compared with 66,412,209 dollars in 1945. Mr. Mundy ex- plained that this increase in Canadian imports was part of a determined drive by his Govern- mdltt to stimulate‘ a two-way trade. Canada's tbpl- imports from Ianuary to June of this gflr touched the record flltflre °l 879-374-953 “W?! which was higher than when the Do- wn importing raw. materials. ' n_ Government, early in the tllit the pout-war‘ demand for gttnlfqiiottnmiehtuzrut- er than the amount the Dominion could" pro- duce. That predietion had come true, with the demand situation being partly due to the ex- tension of Canadian credits to ivtir-torri coun- tries. and partly to the expanded and newly- opened Latin-American markets. At the pres- ent time Canada had committed herself to an outlay of two billion dollars on export credits. Of this total I 1-4 million dollars wvnt to the United Kingdom, with an additional 644 1nil- lion dollars earmarked for various other coun- tries in Europe and the Far East. Canada's two-way trade drive is due to the realization. emphasized by Mr. Slundy, that although she emerged from the war as the second largest CXDOYIIIIE nation in the world, she must be prepared to buy from foreign markets if she expects to continue selling Canadian goods abroad. For over 80 years 11p to 1940 Sllk-\\'(‘€l\‘* iiig looms were made at Coventry. Then came the bombing and the premises of the manufac- turers were destroyed. Fortunately all the skilled workers retained during the ivar period were employed on work for the Services and were not dispersed. Now, with orders for looms from nearly every country in the world, a new factory is being built and by the end of the year will be in full production. - EDITORIAL NOTES s Uontreal Board of Health sounds a rc- assuring note this week by expressing the he- lief that the polio etiitlemic there had DllSSCtl its peak, and recommending schools should be opened 011 16th inst. v It It l! If the Alberta farmers have the courage of their convictions, Agricultural Minister Gar- diner and Prime Minister Mackenzie King will have need of all their political diplomacy to prevent the strike movement spreading to other agricultural provinces. v v ll‘ Y! i Distribution of medals and campaign stars awarded for service in World War II will not be made for some time, the Department of National Defence has announced. Most of the medals have not yet been struck and in sev- eral instances the authorities have not yet settled upon the design. =i< v 1k It A shuttle service between Rotterdam. Hol- land, and Tilbury Docks, England, is re- sponsible for the recent acceleration in trans- ‘porting Dutch, Belgian and French war brides to England. Both the Lady Rodney and the Lady Nelson are busily plying the channel ferrying the dependents from Europe to Eng- land where they are allotted passage on Can- ada-botind ships. i 1K 1! Hannah More, English ethical writer and novelist, died this date I335‘. her most popular wor-ks Caelibs in Search of a Wife; Village Politics," Moral Skelchvr; a practical philaii- thropist who fo1i1ided- charity schools on church ines: “For you'll ne'er mend your fortunes, nor help the just cause, By breaking of windows, laws.” i1 or hrealving of it * >l< The trouble with Canada today is that there is too much money 011 deposit in the Banks, and too little employed in profitable production. Banks ‘are anxious, even eager, to lend money t0 enterprising individuals with business ability capable of “making a go of it," but what business man, or combination of hus- iness men, is going to take the risk of invest- ing in an enterprise which may he held up in- definitely by strikes, such as is our new Car Ferry at Sorel, Que? 11¢ >1- ‘I 1k Ill With the passing of the amendments to the Federal Judiciary Act, a number of sei1- ior judges are, due to retire, hence the prospect of Finance lVlinister llsley going on the bench in his native Nova Scolia. IIerc the only Supreme Court judge affected is the Hon. A. E. Arsenault, who has already passed the al- lofted judicial span. Prospects as successors are Messrs. Martin, 'I'\vcedy, Palmer, Des- roches, and Large. Under ordinary circum- stances, and according to precedent, the At- torney-General would be entitled to the first refusal, but in the present instance the holder of that office is not a member of the Legis- lature, and has, as yet, 1o run his first elec- tion. v The first post-ivar shipment of pedigree Jersey cattle is shortly to leave the Channel Islands for stock farms iii the Ilniled States and Canada. The Ilnily Teleryrti/ll! reports that elaborate precautions are being taken tn safeguard the cargo which COllSlillllf-s probablv #4141 the largest and certainly the most valuable consignment of cattle ever to leave Jersey. The vessel has been specially equipped and fitted to handle this shipment, and expert cattlemen representing importers will travel in the ship to superintend the welfare of the animals. . 1F _* 1k I Eros. London's best known and best loved statue, has had two enforced holidays from sup- ervision of the hub of the metropolis. He spent the six years of the recent war in rural seclus- ion, as he spent the whole period of the World War I. On both occasions the Office of \Vorks was dilatory in restoring the statue to its ac- customed- place, and Londoners were elanior- ous for its return. Erected in i893 as a incin- orial to the Earl of Shaftesbury, Iiros 1o the public has long since lost any connection with the Ashley-Cooper family or with the (listin- guished statesman whom it commemorates. The statue has become a Dart of the London scene and ofLondon tradition; as familiar to the world as to Londoners. But to Londoners, in- deed to all Britons, the return of Eros had a significance beyond that of restoring the merely familiar. Eros in his place signifies peace. the conclusion of a victorious war. the beginning of a new era. A line in Anthony and Cleo- ‘FHE CHARLOTTETOWN i GUARDIAN Notes By The Way The pro gm: t have much money tor Myer. 212d omen In! . n: " ontan 1 » Islbl t from Patagonla?" ilwtookefogtiti-dtfiltfiii Iceman to keep the crowd movml —- Prince Rupert Dally ‘nun-s A point for reformers -- n-d uni public they wish to reform: More Dllbllc houses 11211111 been clozrt] mm there has been t~ greater XKNIEICUOD of beer and spirits sales in the lust. 12 months than teetotul campaign. ers were able to achieve in :1 life- time of activity. Are the people on this account healthier, more contented, mare thrifty, mtg).- fen-a The)’ are not. - London Express A I-‘OIHPIEWIyTi-T; service to far- mers ls sprlmgm: up tn tflp a1; agexAvlatlon ls being Qdatngd w seeding. It provides more speed and conquers the problem of mud. dy soil in early gprlng, Sat-s The Blcoinington. f1l., Pantigrnwli, Dustirn, by plan»? 35 playing h mg part In the experiment.- rigging‘; insects such as tne corn borer Farmers use titan-s mQre gm mo“; In their bust of buying and sellir-z livesto". fir-re farmers are becoming plane owners A11 of which indicates the growing impor- tance of avlalion and aviation m. cillties to the modern buslness of farming. No matte l; 1 called. the llvorld riltioxilieaitrif lief agency for some years to comle. If the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, n wartime creation. is to be Pfljwel- ed out this Autumn something will have 11> be nut ‘II Its plat-t», 1; makes very 'I£lle differ-me under What department of the Unhed Na. lions the work will be carried o" but pontinuea it must be iitiiiiofilé of (“stressed People In war-ivrecked l-lnds cannot be‘ left callousjv u) simlodr for lack '37 help that‘ the “or can Slve. -— Victoria Colonist. A" anneal was reee tl d t, the Great Weste:n of; yofntaheeblg four main line British railways) for the PCIUIFI of some 300,900 towels which have mysteriously dis- EPIQEBPN from Great wlfstefn 11181115 since I969. So far me re. Spouse to the SOS h-as produced two towels. The second towel, which arrived "es new," came from a “cor-science troubled" mother, It. had been unearthed from the urt- dergarments of her laaby, having been taken 0n "loan" dtlrlnsz a rail- WJY J01Irney_ Other items which the YBllWlIY is hopefully nslrlizg to be returned include rugs and cups. "C°mln8 Events in Britain. Clllm" ""1 Llffl. an organ of the Communist party, has castigated Soviet art bemiise 11 has failed i.) “unveil the internal word o: ldei- logical aims and the creative ac- tivities of our r-oeietyt." tsimiigr charges have been made Qvpr niyj over again In TIM-SILL and Pravdq Politics and art are inseparable in Soviet Russia.‘ 1111.1 tJie political line which every factory worker. eveg; writer and every painter must tor. is wavy. The iiitlst who L; if‘. favor today may be dlsgrcqgd w. morrow. Each o.‘ the purges that marked Russian irlitics in :he last quarter of a century has claimed llS victims. Painting, writing and music are "bad" not because they are technically Sin-perfect or l... adequate as ex "CSSIOIIS of artistic impulses but be ruse they have de- parted from party corcepflors of art's social function. The attack on Russian art. b; Culture- and Lite ls not to be dP-mlSSEd as the pass- ing dissatisfaction o; 50mg 1,530.15 critic but ris a rtclaratior. of party volley which calls for actlcn It has always been thus, as the his- tory of seveml pOllllCfll "upheav- als testifies. — From New York Times. According to Lieutenant (Jam. mander Peter CrrI hall, RN. uhc Info-aviation are many men still IJIIVO 1:110 claim to have heard Drake's drum. It bent at Trafalgar, they any, 11nd it beat at Jutland when "is cruiser Queen Mary blew up. The skipper of a cabin cruiser wnich ur-zs nosing Into Diuiklrk 91 rhe [IITIP of the evacuation hesvd something like the booming o.‘ t; pompqm but, there were no filfCTllfl. overhead and no pompom \\'-."IS firing A vel- eran navy ma". qssured his kip- per that It was Diake's dru wot beats when the British Nat’; ls Ir. n tou-gh place. Chews you 1'1: like)‘ In 1940. when Invasion hung. ovcz England, Comnflircler Cisnishal‘. was aboard a destroyer going out from Plymouth. As he passed Drrftefs Island, no says. he is at- most certain no neard zhe drum. It may have bPe‘ he admits "the beating. pulsing-heart 0.1‘ :1 proud little ship - or even perhaps of a proud people.‘ And, hhJPd or unheard, the l1'.'~ii Is the symbol of a great. traditlorn. »- Nee.’ York Herald Tribune. ‘.\ \\c.:1'..1n lliizitl-il In the lilie- up." reads a Breckville note. tell- fng of the charge of the housewives‘ brigade on =1 local store for soup. Some o! the most amazing T300113 have conic into the editorial clearing house 1n recent dayi, about panic buying and greedy hoarding Thev are at. most Incredlblt- 0~.2 store had 1i big box of boys‘ clothing brought back for re-sah- aver 1h.- counter. The woman rind previously ‘ald In the stock for her young hopefuls, but forgot to make any allowance for the fact that by the time tlie boys needed the apparel tney would have outgrown it. And that ls ex- actly what happened and why t.~.e return was made. It Is to be hoped that before all the honrded soap can be used up there wlll be some new brand on the market, cheaper with seductive want. that wlll make all the boarded stiff obsolete. What. Item tomorrow will be reverted as short or likely to get. short in sup- ply? Well. hert- is a sure fire pre- diction for which there is no charge. The "nlnitte that any whis- per of shortage .1 passed, even. over the neIgiibo-‘y hedge or fence by nightfall, ‘whatever the Itrn. may be, It will be tee‘ snort, and ly the morrow possibly mere will DE sternum; of the snres all over the oountfylor It. The Battle of Short- ages, I916 A. D. ~h1is no hold: bar- red. It ls S05 :1: Everybonv hr Diemielves. Many cellars nave the appearance of a limit siege etiout t.) come. Panic, Peni- am Greed lead the mad uni-ash. ard there ls no patra precisely phrases the virtue London sees in the replacement of Eros: Una-in, Eros; the long day's task is done. Drletur of a nntuunnt Canada And The United States .___- "Canada. and the Uni-tad States. bovine completed more than a. century of Menuhin with, grow. lng mutual respect and Inc-ran. in: cooperation. have Just given the world ii uni e example o: war-time oo-ord tlo. m4 mgy pmftt themselves by the Qlpefl. ence If they carry the Ieuon for. ward Into peace." any: the 5w- tewnber Issue of the Monthly Let- ter of The Royal Bank of Can- ada. "They are closer Jogether today. economically and BPI-rltual. ly. than any other two Important nations In the world. and their relations cannot be owed by any other nation with Olympian detachment." After nlvtnlz comparative faults about size and populatlo . the article continues In pant: “can. add is a blllingual country, wm; moire than 30 per cent of Its pop. ulation of french origin. In the province of Quebec this large minority has maintained a unites- ion of custom, religion and hm. guage which distinguishes Iit nationally and internationally. Freinoh Canadians have proved to be good faimers. gifted p011- ticlans. and eminent In the pro- fessions. They have Item intact their manner cf living, and when they marry their Etiglfsih-speuk- Int; fellow-countrymen lit. Is t0 absorb them, as vzltness the thou- sands wl~th Irish or Scottish names in Quebec who can speak only Drench. The French Can- adian was cut ofif almost com- pletely from Europe by the fall of New France In the Seven Years’ War and the gulf produced by the anti-clerical aspects of the Hench Revolution. He regards himself as truly Canadian. Because cit its dual base and subsequent mixed immigration, Canada will never produce B. narrow racial national- 1cm. o "Geography and t/he pressure of events have combined to fnlter- twine closely the business struc- tures of Canada and the United Sta-tes. and the unusual degree of similarity in the economy of the two ooumtries has meant that busi- ness men and capitalists have been rititraoted by opportunities across the line, so that there have git-own 111:1 hundreds of enterprises which are known as "Canadian-Ameri- can." The latest available figwes Zeport the following foreign 1n- o o vestmciizizs 1n Canada: Unit/ed States $4,190 mill-ton; Great Bfllaln $2,466 million; others $270 million; total $6,921 million. At the same time, Canadian invest- ments abroad totalled $1,757,900.- 000. of which more than a bil- lion dollars W35 In the United States. Canadians are naturally more conscious of United States investments In Canada thannre Americans of Canadian Invest- ments In the United States, al- though per cmpltu the invest- ments in the United States by Canadians are four times as great as those of the United States In Canada. "Though often mentioned by public speakers. it Is wortih re- peating than these two countries are each others best customers, with it total volume of trade ex- ceeding. even in ordinary Limes. the total of trade between any other two countries. Etxchange of goods was greatly enlarged dun‘- ing the war. and It does not need an economist 1o say that a na- tion is Ln for difficulties when it 11s driven bv emergency of war to buy twice as much as usual from another nation. The aptitude of these two countries for not only getting around a difficulty but actually turning the occasion Iinto one of mutual benefit was shown In the Hyde Park declaration of i941. The underlying reason for that agreement was to provide Canada with sufficient United States dollars to mtrchase all the iamerlcan-made goods she requir- ed. with the secondary objective of eo-ordlnatlng production effort so as to avoid needless duplica- tion. By the end of 1942 notes h-ad been exchanged extending measures of economic co-opem- tion Into theJzost-war years." I U The article goes on to tell the ups and downs of larltf policy. and the special products with which Canada ls equipped for trad-e with the United States, and then remarks: "It can be said that of recent years the Ameri- can State Department has dis- played remarkable knowledge of Canada's economic position. luk- imz into account her great de- pendence upon exiport trade, her FINE BE GUUU TU YUURSEU: PodVxu URRET CUT some facts about the Interm- over lt. and rental-ks: Otwlnua- ly. neither nation can distrust. very much another with which It has such relations: which Ne: Imno similar hyflterloe over the World Series. uses the nine shave lotlons and lfipatleks. mire: its colds and P018011 IVY W1 11.319 same nostrums and oreamfl. WISH the language Into queer forms t0 express indignation at standing in street oars and tivalxis. and. 8811B?" ally, lives the same llife in l-hG same way. But this does not mean that the eovple are the same. Erich up on has Its owin peculiarities and diaractemstlce- I.t ls not a two-dimensional mat- ter only. a length of border line and the traffic Acrou It. greatest profundfrtles are 1.11 the spiritual rather than In the net- uml world. The question ls no longer as to where an Invisible lane rims: It has moved Into the realm where man- on both aides are wonderlnfl how the 110W 0f people, rivers. harvesting mach- ines. and trade across this line may be added to by the flow of ideas. so that the well-being 9f both peoiples may be vrvmotw America's Next Congress _ 1' I s ctator) "at 1.: people will go to the polls to choose an entirely new H011?‘ ti‘): Representatlvel. vne-thmlt "t {he Senate, and thirty-four o; 060v- nation's fortlkelflllt s” m "_ ernors. President 1111MB?‘ w two malt-t in office for anot er i years; but the autumn elect ons decide whether or not he get. u working mfllflfliy l" c°“3""' whether the semI-Plmlwl‘ l’! 3°“ ernment that has befullen tlllfi United States since V-J Day wm be ameliorated or worsened. {t h _ therefore be an election 0 C011 sequence to the nation and the world. The chances of Mr. mans Democratic Party l“ bright than they M" bee" ll" many years. Every publlc-bfll" °" poll during the lust few month! has shown u decline in the P°P"' larity of both the party and the President, although the Democrats still seem to hold a slilght. advant- age m the peoples political s m thles. yngiocratlc strength In Conzfe“ has been on the decline We?‘ llllce it uched Its climax In 1930. In- ste t1 of the aas Reoretenlltl"! 3n '75 Senators which the Demo- er ts elected In that year of P1- sidcnt Roosevelt's well-deserv- ed triumph, I-t now has only mimbers In the lower any 5'1 In th upper ho-use. Its loss of only 27 seats in the House of Repre- se tatlves and of 10 seats 1n the Sdnnte would be sufficient to crleate a clear Republican major- lt . Of the 48 states, 28 are al- xgady administered by Republican overriors who, among them, are control of the majority of the A crican people. But United S ates dmnestlc and foreign polic- I s during the next two years wlll n t be determined only by the par- composition of the new Con- g ess. The polltlcal character of e individual Democrats and Re- blicans whom the people wlll -» e ect may become even more Im- dlortant for the country and the c~rld. The decisive question is hat, numbers of Democrats and epubllearis In the new Congress will fit into the rough categories f “llberulsfi "conservatives and ‘reactlonarles" which both parties mbruce. . ' The Democratic Party. as a fflzianoliil connections wi-th the United States. and her relation- ship with Great Britain and 11s a member of the British Common- wealth of Nations. Just how im- portant the bilateral exchange of goods can become Is Indicated by comparing 1989 with 1944. In the year wan- broke out. Canada bought United States goods valued at $4471 million, and hi 1944 her puir-. chases from the United States totalled $1.477 mllllon; In 1939 United States purchases In Can- ada amounted to $380 million. and, in I944 llhey total-led $1,301 million. Canada Is the best customer the United Slates has. :41: biigvs more than she sells there. 0n the other hand, she sells more to the United Kingdom than she buys. and uses her balance of sterling funds to purchase United States dollars with which to pay the trade bal- the United States. A good many- domestlc and co-operatlve In ternntlonal affairs. But the "Southern Bloc" and a few small- lér Democratic groups In the North put a good part. of the Den-iocratlc jvhole, remains more progressive fl n mm Into the most reactionary sect on of America's national and nternatl-onal politics. Democrats Ike the negro, Jew and New-Deal- aiiltlng Senator Bilbo of Mis- lssippl make It only too easy for Republican isolationist: to find he allies they need for aggressive anti-Administration moves, both on domestic and foreign grollcfex. A number of President Truman's social and economic mcnsurel have been defeated by this un- holy coalition of reuctlonarles from both parties. which has thus become mainly responslble for the present economic confusion In tlonal boundary. and the trwffln 7 466°’ of the difficulties encountered by; the British loan also arose from‘ the co-operatlon of Democratic and Republican dlehardl. The Republican Party, on the, other hand, provldel a Ian Cllllllfl‘, ous atmosphere for Rrolrelll" dot-nestle and foreign , than the Democratic Party, whose Inb- our afflllatlons still exert eon- alderable influence. Yet there are Republican liberals and Internat- ionalist: of the typo of 11h Wendell WlIlkIe,_men like Harold. E Stusen, the young eat-Governor of Minnesota, whole Ideal: and actions seem to put. them well a- head of to-day’: stagnant Diamo- crlitlc rank and file. Without that small number of progressive Re- pubII-catu who have frequently voted In favour of tho Administ- ration, Resident Human would In recent month: have found him- self even greater difficulties from right-wing Democratic ob- structlon. The flnt few week: of primary elections In various States have brought resounding defeat to some of the moat prominent reaction- arles, both In the Re- publican and Democratic camps. But it would be rash to conclude from this that the un- denhble liberal trend of Amerlciut polltlcl II certain, or oven Ilkely. to expren Itself In November, against powerful party machines, In u decliilve change of‘ the chur- acter of tlie new Congress. Re- ubllcari voters I-n the State of Innemta refused t0 reuornlnatc the party's leading isolationist, the long-time Senator Henrik Shlpiitend, who voted against the ratification of the United Nations charter. The North Dakota Re- publican: made It Impossible for another of the most notorluul Isolatlonlati. ex-Senntor Gerald P. Nye, to stage a come-back. Yet whlle the Minnesota Republicans chore one of Mr. Stuuen’: pro- gressives u their candidate for the November electlom, those of Nbrth Dakotg were latlafled ' to renomlnate the present Senator William Langer, a man whose rec- ord on International, and especially domestic, policies I11 not much bet- ter than that. of Nye, The rule, rather than the exception, in the Republican primaries seems to be the renomlnatlon of the party's present representatives. 0n the Deriiodrnffc side. the voter: of Montana rejected their odd-time Senator Burton K. Wheeler, the clamoroiis leader of Democratic Isolatlonlsm. Even the T0 A MAN WITH A LANTERN He mime‘ within-Tagged patch of Doing his more; about the stable A nth, ammo voiiow m the nigh Asbwkund forth he loel for sheaves and my. Whlatllng he inovu about. hfl humlble The friendly and chores. duztock. the stable warm Long moving ‘shadows play nbouti the floors. The b83235 softly nelgh for out: to! The cattle stand beside the sanc-h-t Ions bare, Yielding their snowy mtk; it; rm‘. nimiiirnlihegiiae ui r t 1 e c on e rosy a . The bedding straw In gold‘ beneath- thefl" feet. I A kitten rubs Its hoe agnhut hlg arm, Purflniz ltgufrlendly trust; the dog Wugglni ins‘ tubby t I.l ti. diam l l hm” His master's love the only heaven he knows. Ali. could we flnd more gracious Ilfe than this, Full 11123: ofhtttrll and lovely brood- ii . 000d food and love anrfwlnlup thnllfli the mist And homes wftihfn a yellow patch o! light. _ —Edhn Jlques. In "Beside Still Writers." ance ordinarily due. “Problems have art-sen. of course. ‘Hie Uintted States can return, now that peace has come, to almost normal economic condi- tions, but Canada has been corn- pletely changed. She ls no long- er merely a producer of raw ma- terials. Her manufaoturtna out- put Increased from $3,400 mllllon PERII. o}. the sea, on land, In accident, of sickness. In I839 to $9.074 million tn I944. What Is she to do with the pro- ducts? It Ia no wonder that u-ie Canadtan Mhifster of Finance an- nounced his readiness to dlscussl with the governments of the! United States. the United King- dom. or other countries ‘recipro- cal trade arrangements wider In scope and longer In duration than have hitherto been made.’ Cer- tainly. with 26 to 36 per cent of the n-atlonal income for by exports and receipts from tourists. Canada. w! power to ream-h reciprocal agree- ments. and the Anglo-American- oahadfan trade talks hold neat significance for her. A fnlr tenchantze. on equal terms, of the products of these two North Am- erlcnn countries wlll be greatly to the advantage of bath. and wlll give to the world another ex- Ilcn of common‘ rce-re methods to sathttlognfor lillé frelw. but. final; em y v or t c mnny. .1.- Ooflurlnen 11rd. International relations." l: condition. the ankle ma: BCOHIIIICGC , Il do all In her. ample at theft- suoeessful nuolfcn- - In our modern life we IIs, and that Is why we employ the system of Insurance w protect u] We are In a position to surance service, and w llYlllllMll 8i Insurance Since 1872 Offloel: cnsrimemwh - lightning, falling aircraft, of iiutolnoblleo, of for advice and information. thoalr, peril of fire, are surrounded by per- financially. provide a complete ln- elcome your Inquiries No obligation. 00., LIMITED llmuonlh - Montague ALLISON P. MeLlAN-Dhtrlct Manner at lnnmlrllh OYIUB A. l. SHAW-District IIIIIIII l‘ Ktlhlll moans muvnin lpochl Iapnnnutlns at (Inrlothlown AOINT! TIBDUGIIOUT ‘III PIOVINOI -nu. n. IIUIII t 1 of Trusses. genes-mun 1, 194s For Foot Ailments oomwu l. J. A. BROWN, DP “Orthopedic GlllllllPfllllST Ill Great deem Street OIADIAITIITOWN. I31. 1 Jlct that President Truman. In g, surprising gesture of personal loy- ,'alty, supported hl-m as an old ‘friend, did not Imprea; the peqpl. _In his favour; and they nomlmt. f ed In his stead a labour-backed Rooiieveltlan Democrat. In the State of Washington some of thq most progressive Democratic Con. grersmen were r nominated against the formidable luppgrt that was mustered from. above for their rightist opponents. Yet thy reactionary "Southern Bloc" s! the Democratic Party proves u stubbornly solid as ever, and 1, likely to remain as great an em- barrassment to a Democrat prql. derit as It Is today. America's bet; nolre, Senator Bilbo, and othem Congressmen with notorious anti- (Oontfnued on Page 6) Notice to House lloldors Insurance that was u]; quate in 1939 most likely do“ not cover 1946 values. Per- mit us to check your cover- axe to ensure desired pro- tection In the event of a loss. Phone No. 540 or 541 W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Life - Fire - Casualty - Marlne Insurance Every Risk - Every Kind Largo or Small Queen 8L, Charlottetown Music Instruction A. ROY KENDALL, L.R.A.M., 'A.A.G.O., A.C.C.0. q; Studio: 7m‘ School of Muslc Heartz Memorial Hall G. F. llutehesiin 8i SON OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists In the fli- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feels.” 53 Grafton Street ATTENTION We carry a complete llnl All sizes. H's the Most Exciting Make-up ln Years . . . *...tl1e screen star secre! that beautifiesinstantly. J/ax 7min!‘ tllJLlYWOQD_ Moll Orders Given Prom!‘ Attention The z us...