g ‘pf the industrial lahorcr for his 8-hour day. fi-nwral right to ‘a 30ft» Wage increase and a 40- . race r1501. fi TIIE GIIARLIITTETUWII GIJAIIIIIAII Morning Dally (Founded In i887) Authorized as Second Class Mail. Post Oilioe Department, Ottawa. The Guardian may be obtained at: Bub Tobacco Shop, lvloneton, N. B» The News Shop. Moncton, N. B. George McLean Pietou, N. S. Walker’; White Spot, ii Salter Si». lhllfn. N-B- Metropolitan News Agency, 1248 Peel 8L. Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurie:- Ottawa, Onts ‘B. Aitken, Lord Elgilfs Hotel. Ottawa. Ont. J. Fine, 354 Bay St., Toronto Ont. . Wolfe's News Stand, Sudbury. Ont. Old South News. Cor. Milk and Washington Ste. Boston Hotaling’: News Agency Times Building, New York. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than m; Weakest Ink.‘ TIUILSILAY, JULY a ~t I946 The Last Uf TheiMohicans Royal lnipc-iial il~‘ll"'.ll5 in Canada arc Sup- posed to c c- \\ll1l 1111- ll>l published iu thc citr- rcnt we: 1:11. .\ 111-111)‘ cxtcnsive volunic has been lasLltiLl ifuin (htawa containing thc 11311135 (ti l'\\‘l[1l(‘f'll> 1111 ovcr Canada, from L‘\\'l'\ ]1i'i.i1.\'t-, ;1--.l 11111 from 1)\'('l'>L‘11>, when tho award 11:. 111:1 iiutilt- on the rcctiiiiuiciirlzt- tioii of l5rI11~11 .11;.1ii1:tic~. lt is right and pro- pcr that spccial rt-tmgiiitioii should he LIiVCH tliosc 111111 liait- l't'ilil'l'k'tl cxccptiotial service to the >t;tlt', 1111-1 1i.t.t 1111-11 11c littlc doubt 111111 thc Cllllll“ll> :11 t-acli iustzuicc will justify the‘ aw-aril. l-lcrt- siiltlt‘ (lo/cu citizi-ns l1.'1ve had such scr\'ik"€s ,-,.,~.-.\.,,;/p.l_ and we liczirtilv congratu- late 111cm on 1110 lli\ll‘illl'$ obtained. llcnccforth, it is ulhlCfsltltiil, the only honour to he l)t‘SIO\\'- ed iipoii t"111:1r11:ii1 riti/vus \1i1l be the ticwly ZilIill1)l'l/.L'(l t':1i1.-ti1.;1 .\lc(l:11, which will entitle i115 (viiiiit-i- it» ;1.l.l tj..\l. 11ilt'l' his name. Those Qlitgtiiiing lntpt-i-ial honours at the DFCSCIII tnnC may tlicrt-toip be (‘ciilsiilvrcd "T116 1.815! 0f i115 Llolilcztns", 111.11 cxllllrt branch of the Mgonquin family who shat-cit thc tcrritorv bctwccn thc Atlantic coast Ztlltl lludsott River with the kindred Nai-riqanscits and Massachusetts there will be none to follow them in the pages of history, and fllCi'(‘l)\' may hang another talc for the etilighzcniiicnt and entertainment of sticceecldng generations. T116 end of one era and the beginning of another. P.E.l. Fisheries Record Prince Edward Island cracked all its\ records for dollar return from the fisheries last vcar when the total ITI-afiflfied Value 0i i115 provincial- catch wzis flltl'l"lxlm‘°l't¢l.\’ $3»1C_)8i0°_°- Taking notc- of this fact in a special article "1 its latest iiionthlv issue, the Fifherii?! N91"! Bulletin says: , I-‘inal revision of the '45 Stfltifillcfll YQPOI15 may iaossibly cut down the total—for that mat- tcr, 0f coursc, revision itiav work the other yt~;ty—l>ut thcre is 11o likelihood that it will bring the figures tloivn to the PYQViWS Dmvlll‘ cial “high", which was set in 1943 when mar‘ ketedi value amounted to a trifle less than $2." 861,000. .\s coinparcrl with 19-14. 135i )'<‘-3"'5 market return sliowcd an increase of about ' .000. All told, last year's landings from the Is- land's commercial fisheries (all 0i them 531i’ water fislicricsii was 314599.000 Pollntli. 35 shown by reports to the liltiiiiiflioti DQPB-Yinlenl of Fisheries, and tlicv were worth to the fish- q-merp a, lmtletl, $1,308,000. Comparcdwvitii I944 results, these figures show a catclug-ain 0t “early 6,300,000 pounds and $519900- Lohsters, of course, continued to hold the top Prince Fxluu-trtl Island spot as money- makcrs. The catch was u-orth, on the market.’ close to $1,544,000, or, in other words, it fiamé not far short of making 11p half 0f the‘ dollar markctccl Viillio l'L'l1lt'll from the fishcrics 8S Fl wholc. Isobstci- landings, about 3.115.000 pounds, iicre roiig11l_\' 15994300 2mm" than they 11nd been in the iti-cccrliiig ycar. 'l‘l1c1-c wcrc inttrt-astwl lziiiditigs from such other fishcrics as liltt-‘Q for 51110115, hakc, mack- erel, zturl tiiiztliziugs or hard-shelled clams, as “T11 ,1,» {i-oiii oin- (tr tiio others. in the valuable; oyster fislicrv ltbttflilvilflii showed a dccrcasc. not a vcrv big 1111c, hut thc lllflllCV fcttlffl m‘ 'l‘li<-rc 1111s :1 similar state of affairs CrPztsttl. __ in the ll(‘t'l'lll" fl<ll<‘I‘\'—iC\\'Ci' tish taken but a ~ . . more tlollars iiiiirlc. Clam figures shrank a bit. Uvcr a iuillitm ptillllflS of iiiusscls were 11112-11141 put int-i cziiis with :1 maria-ted value of a littlc mm-Q [lijui $30,060. .\'<1 iiiiisscls wcrc 11311111911 in 19,,’ though stlllfltlllllll landings had 11cc“ made in sonic t-arlicr y('.'1i'.<. Farm View Of Strikes \\'ritii1g in the Ctiiititlitiu (‘oitnlry-intiii, an Ontario faruicus wifc gives licr View of tlic strike siumtinn iii w-tirrls which are likely to find an cclio all across rural Canada. "Apparently," she svritcs, “the onlv 18TH? would be much better and fairer to reduce the price of all manufactured articles thus bene- fitting the consumer. That would be helping cvery man, woman and child in the country. If a. product is lowered in price, the demand for it is increased, exports are increased, and the en- tire industry stimulated." “With priccs, as a rcstilt of frcc competi- tion, becoming lower and lowcr, all 1vorkcrs would enjoy a continuously rising standard 0f living even though their money wagcs remain- ed at a stationary level. "Wouldn't that be a happv situation? Iii conclusion, will say’ I ain against the ‘closed sh0p'——-f0r frcc trade, and ltclicve that if all people practised true (fhristiauitv, thc world would enjoy a continually (‘Xlilllltliilfl prosper- ity such yas is impossible for thc imagination to conceive. ' — EDITORIAL NOTES — The holiday was enjoyed, political wrangl- itig ovcr its designation notivithstaiidiiig. I i It I .-\ case of the kcttle calling the pot black is that of Stalin (lcclariiig FIZIIICU i111 (Jtlllil\\'. ll‘ i‘ >1‘ Due to improvctl fccrl ziutl iuisiurc 1.1111111- lltill>, gtlsifillfllctHlllhs‘ 1111111111 of t'lt‘iilllt'l'\' hut- ter $1l\1\\'€(l.1!l illt"l'(‘.'l>€ in .\l:11 of 111 ‘ti.’ itoiintlm v»- 0r 3.5 per ccnt, as compared 111111 1111: sainc month in 19.15. n: i- v Frccrltotn of the Ili'(’*\ 1111s liccn 1'l£‘.'ll'l\' bought, the first ilC\\'$[1.'1]1t‘1' i<~1icd in North America, appcariiig $eptcnilicr :5, 11190, was suppressed before the second issut- could be cir- culated. I ill It 1F There stems to 11c (I suspicion in sonic quarters that a Provincial (‘1t‘t‘li(1l1 is ininiiiicnt. Premier i. Walter Jones is wise uiiough not to run any such risk. it t in n It is probably just as wcll 11o titlcs go along with Govcrnmeiit brstoivcd honours, 0r wc might be running tip against barons, iiscounts, earls and dukes at evcry otlicr turn. w x It ‘it Foundation for the new $000,000 nicdical college at the University of Saskatchewan has been completed, and contracts awai-rlcd for plumbing and electrical work. The four-store»,- college is scheduled to be completed byQiuly- 1, I947. x A remarkable lambing record comes from Cradtley, near Malvern, litigland, ivhcrc six ewes, belonging to Mr. :\llllIl'('1SC l‘lllCllill_Qi, of Ridgeway Cross, have pi-otlticctl a totzil of i7 offspring this season. 3i‘ it! 1k 1k it A wool fabric with all the advantages of pure wool but as fine to tlic touch as gcorgcttt‘, is the latest material produced 11v Lliiitctl King- dom scientific research. To give an idca of how light this new wool is, hcrc is a compari- son. The average ivoollcn iuiiipct- weighs about 6 ozs. to the square Yard‘; a jumper of this weave would weigh about I i-J to ° ozs. to the square yard. 1K 1k >t< it The Battle of Marston Moor this date I644 when the British Parliamciititrv force un- der Manchester Fairfax and Lcvcii defeated the Royal forcc under Prince Rupcrt. and thcrcby registered the beginning of parliaiiic1i1.'1ry, as opposed to royal, powcr in the zuhiiiuistration of public affairs; the Moor is seven miles ivcst of the Cathedral City of- York, and the Parlia- mentary forces were strcugthcnrrl by the addi- tion of a Scottish Army; credit is due to Croni- 1vcll's Ironsides for the decisive victory. w w l? it‘ The Free Maritime League, a new organ- ization floated in Halifax, ivas told by a N. B. Liberal, ex~l\linisler of liducztlioit that the greatest handicap of the .\liil'ifil"ll(‘$ was their educational institutions~tiicaniiig presumably our elementary and higher grade schools. Ilc claims, and not without justification, that the cducatiotial policy pursued licrc sincc tirinfcrl- cration, tctidcd to boost Ontario and {Qucbcc at the cxpcnse of the Maritimcs. 111C wgziniza- tioii has decided to start a campaign to bring about reform in that respect. i it! 1k 4K .\iilitarv' iraiiiiiig is going on apacc even with the higlicr-titvs or so-callcd “brass hats." The Imperial Dcfcnre College, closed during thc war, has reopened with two tianadiztiis, 1.1.- (ic-u. tiny Siintiioiitis of \\'iiinipcg, former crim- iiiziiillcr of the ziirl kliilliltlliill (Xtrps, and .-\ir Commodore F. R. \V. (_i1'1tl\\‘lll of llcllcvillc, Ont., and Montreal, among the 30 high-rank- ing officers studying broad problems o1 com- monw-caltli dcfcticc. Coniiiizttidaiit of the col- lcgc is Gen. Fir William Slim, former com- iiiandcr of the British 14th .\riny in llurnia, whO will direct the work throughout the time-month course which continues until the end of thc year. group in this country not iii a striking mood is the farm population. The fnriiicr scents to bi satisfied.» He is (tllifiylllfl a tiosition of econ- omic parity-a position in which his returns for a 12-hour (lay (plus the hours contributed by his wife and children) arc equal _t0 the returns “Let us assume that all these groups have i-lhour week.’ Do ihcv not cnitculc to all the l non-striking groups tlie same right? Let u! be fair and square and increase the income of every person in thti country by 30% and cut their ivorking hours to 40 pcr Wrck. Are W6 ibut, being firmly mlllfl his discussion of life iii Russia as he experienced it, Flgflsirut. Peters says that when he managed to talk to the ordinary Russian people he found them friendly and hos- pitable and cagrr to know about the way of life in Britain and America. They seemed, he said, firmly convinced of the necessity for friendly relations between Russia and the democracies "sold" on the advantages 01' their own system of government, found it dif- ficult to appreciate ours or to understand it completely. He found plenty of "privileged classes" in Russia, but their system of privil- lny hcttcr off? Even a moron could 50c that we would be iii a worse position. Our export‘ trade ivould stiffer if all prices were increased "by 30%. The non-fariiiiiig population would ifnost certainly be half-starved if the farmer . l" world-d 40 hours per iveek itistead of flie too hours which he (and his family) spend on the flrtn work at tiresent. __"If industry were able, by more efficient judgement -— (ipto date machinery - in- brastgeri Otitptff, etc, to offer a pay increase, it f ege differs from us in that money does not count as much as service to tlie state. Soldiers, politicians, artists, scientists, newspapermen, and similar types are (he ones who are allow- ed tn have cars, private apartments and other advantages not available to the general public. The most disqif g factor he observed was the emergence of "a wlefinite military cast." Mili- tary colleges are being reopened and new ones founded, and many young Soweto are melting military life a full-time cameo .111 rue Cl-IARLUTI Notes By The Way stated by s clerk to be both pracb. ical and sensible; which should be the worst. blow ls has had yet. - Port Arthur News-Chronicle. 5131101111. put bac In a going condition by the Allies. Ls re ay- ing that effort. The little ri- can nation, so tiwlly mistreated by Italy tinder direction of Mus- solini. is ding 100.000 tons of wheat, 1 .000 tons of coffee for the relief of famine in Sioux City Journal-‘Iribune. What Is the value of your homo?‘ This is one of the $64 Questions now being ask-cc; by census-taker» in the three prairie provinces. Li our opinion, it is Jtis about unau- swcrable Take the case of the man who says his home is worth $6,400. I-ie means he could s l it for that. much today 3r lhl he could. Ten years ago, he would have been lucky to get. $4,000 for it. In 1939, it m h: have brought $5,000 -Its value three or four 30am from now is unpredictable. M-Calgary Herald. Most people are conscious of too rnut-li inonciozi-i- 1n their lives these cars. Monotony is a shackle that ci-cry man can strike off himself. Do something different, even a1- vhougti i1 is on» a small advises The Land ‘CUP. "Ialk . t; 1 o) a different mu- .. Io dif crctit people Stretch your mind Escape sizinctimes from "the streets" Next xpedltirin to an id carry It out. swvcc; srcurity ca weckcnd plan an cnllrcly’ new soot —Exchange. It is only natural and pro- {ld-ltCICnlS cif these two .1 . I church orgauizaeions should cherish their great tradi- tions and be lost-h to modify rin- ciplcs which, in the firs: pace, COIlSiblUiEd their vc-ry “raison don-c". it is ccrtain that them art: many futidamcntals on which coiifinon understanding might be arrived at Orthodoxy can be trio rig-ad {is Carlyle has observed. the Lorri did not create the unl- verse 0n the plan of the Ililfiy- 111.110 articles 0i‘ any other denom- inational formula ‘In union there ts strength " (Hamilton Spectator. Modern doubIJ-hlghways which go straight ahead without regard lo natural features are a symbol of the times They not only DY"- E TOWN GUARDIAN Lincoln's Inn (By George Bdinger, in the Fort- nightly Lew Journal) 1 (Lincoln's Inn. one of London's four Inns of Court, embodies In brick and stone the history of Eng- lish law from the fourteenth cen- tury until the present day. It he! suffered damage from bombing In two wars but is yet a t lcsl cer- i-ier of the London scene. Up tlll the 1040 air raids, London ssessed in their entirety the anc- ent buildings of her four Inns of Court. They were not the most i-m- pressive of the City's monuments, but they were certainly the most intimate and perhaps the most characteristic and charming. '1'he story of the four Inns goes back into the Civic lifs of four- teenth century London, and the manner of their working is es- sentially unchanged slnce then. These self-governing Societies of Barrtsters-at-Iais’ (advocates) do not only observe their ancient con- stitution and customs, but they are still partly housed In buildings grouped round gardens that date mainly from the seventeenth cen- tury and are in some cases a hun- dred years older. Any kigllstiman (for the Scots have their own legal system) who wants to pract- ise at the Bar must, after passing his examinations and complying with other customs, be approved by the Governing body (Bench) of one of the four Inns and be admitted to the roll of its membership. He is then free to use its gardens 1nd its library, attends at least in theory) the services of its chapel and, while the Courts are sitting, is entitled to lunch or dine in its hall. . .. All this obtains in theory, and till 1940 It existed also in practice. But the late world war has cut away a great deal of that lelsurecl spac- ious life. Of four halls, only two are left standing (both prized among the showpieces of English Gothic and Early Renaissance architecture). Three of the four libraries, with nearly a quarter of a million manuscripts and hooks. have been destroyed. The social life that used to revolve round the four Inns has possibly ended only for the moment. But the buildings that Bacon. Raleigh. Shakespeare or Oliver Cromwell would have recognized six years ago have van- lshed. Vanished. that is, save in one case. Lincoln's Inn, though it has been claim the wealth 01f the P601339 b bd d ' m i f who have b11111- ‘hw-l- they bet"? 18111-18918 ‘iigildlgwiils-lm stlllarfirg- 1111911‘ #511155 mama for speed- serves the essential features of n and their indifference 1,0 the beau- Iv of the countryside One enters such a highway with the intention of going somewhere: ‘he destina- tiori is the irn. ‘(taint thins Po travel the roa to peace o! mind and n ulet spirit, one should seek a winding. tree-bondered b way that carries out. of the past 1' e a fine old, custom —T0i‘0i1t0 GlQl-‘lfi and Mail. The Russians can cause trouble lri South America, either through native Communists or such arnoiT-l nationalists as Peron. 'I‘he BHSWBI‘. however does not lic in shriek-S 0i righteous indignation but in prac- ticable policies carried through firmly which capitalize on the r6111 assets of the United States in tor- cirin affairs rather than on sud- den bursts at polemlcs. Meanwhile the priflClptll gainer by the whole sequence of events has been Juan Peron who is finding that, food in ,1 hungry world is an excellent solv- ent or ideological antilifllllieb New York Herald Tribune The logical solution of the I199- cnt tangle, witr. its uncer sin. wandering holidays (Easter bemr; the craziest offender) would be to apply the plan of the World Cal- endar Association Its reformed calendar provides for a ll-mflfbli gar qt equal quarters, tn which holidays are ilxen so that. the? 5'1" £1111 on the same day and date, car after year and anni- versaries, similarly. always “Cl-r On the same weekday. Advantages of suoh a calendar. "om ‘m 9°11“ of view of organized business alone, would be greet 1'0 argue in favo. at relFIInlng -he present screwball method of date-rccfwning is about as sensible as to 511889“ the in,‘ vcntion of cloclcs and Watches ‘ha? record uneven hours. —Branli01'fl Expositor. Canadians still have no way to distinguish between those 50161613 who did me Mattel flghnn 11nd those who merely 119d B hi?“ “Y l,"_ uniform The government 179F515‘; in its failure ‘.0 rccosnizs ‘he We for a service button for which only those with battle experience We eligible. Deserved honor ls 1.11.119 being denied them There shoari be a buttqn of distinctive design, awiart-ted only lifter the most carc- ful investigation of a mans we. record Certainly, there are some who raped t4, see active service. chm“ h m mun 0t their own. Mid the lstirictlon mi ht be slistvli’ unfair b0 them. T e majority 9i them however, Will not Obieflihwtl marking the flghhng men for w. a they arc-Windsor SKBT. There is a startling vitality to the moon on those rare days when Suspended low to the southwest she fights the thrust. of early llKht from the east Huge In the perspective of her advanced sink- ng she flames rich orange over the lillls taking a hue more brilli- ant. than that. with which she first climbed the deepening dusk at evening Prom her she throws a broad copner highway on 56a hot-seeming .n the cold dull grey of retreating n ht But. she must withdraw in hase behind the bastion of the mountains if she is m save this brief character. Re- tiring she can hold the wonder of eyes unaccustomed to her daybreak triumph; delsyh she must fsdo again Into a palld spectre In ins sun's bright court. -—VIct»orIa Tunes. The two- Ieoe svtlm llllt nu been Nearly 2 veal! an a Irate; “Iii y was executed st Wap Ind. an this t (7th n- and to pick up the thread: of It appears that Nicholas let l‘. year a direct descen eraolon) called at the P L.A Offices the tale. Wineileld. of Hastings, am m of n priveteer cut 1 place that is at once peculiar to and characteristic of, the London scene. The Inn stands on the western confines of the square mile of central Londcn known as the City, Its total area ls not large. perhaps eight acres (3.2 hectares) in all. But within that space there are three gardens. two squares sur- rounded by sl-xteenth century and one by seventeenth century houses, Another square dates from the eighteenth century at its best. and a fifth from the nineteenth century at its worst. There is a hall that goes back to 1500, a chapel ut up in 1620, another hall with a ilbrury erected in 1845, and three gateways dating respectively from 1518, i690 and 184.5. In its way the place ts a museum of British city architect- ure. But lt ts a living museum. be- cause the lawyers (though most of them have ceased to live in the Inn) still carry m their business there as they have done for six centuries. All the four Inns of Court carry the names of those who possessed them before the coming of the lawyers in the fourteenth century. The Middle of the Inner Temple were once the commimderiies of the knights Templars. Gray's Inn was the town house of the Earls of Lincoln occupied tlll 1308. The Inner Temple still retains the circular Church of the knights, and Gray's Inn can show the arch- way to the Earls’ dining hall. Hut there is nothing left of the Lin- colns in Lincoln's Inn save their arms now appropriated by the Soc- lety of Lincoln's Inn and emblazon- ed cvver the gateways. . . e Lincoln's Inn contains some of the most ancient buildings In any of the Inns of Court, or Indeed in the whole of London, The eastern archway, flanked by rectangular towers of red brick, opens on a court of houses that all go hack to the first half of the sixteenth century. On the archway itself Shakespeare's friend and contem- porary. Ben Jonson. once worked as a bricklayer. The house Immedi- ately on the left of the gateway was the office of Oliver CromwelPs secretary, John Thurloe, during the English Republican period. from 1646 till 1649. To the right stands the chapel. built in the Gothic style ln 1630 by the English archi- tect Inlgo Jones. It was enlarged, restored and largely spoilt in 1862. But there are still some pleasing things about it The building is supported on piers. so that e colormude runs be- low the floor, and It was u nnd down this colonnade that t e bar- risters of the Inn used to wander ln the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries talking over points of law and theology. or possibly the prospects of Newmarket races; it was under the chapel arches too. that their clients used to come to find them. Its stained glass wln- dows, Flemish work of the later Renaissance, have been Ln danger three times. During the Puritan Revolution of the mld-seventeeth century, the London mob threatened to smash these windows. end on October 13th 1915, a bomb from e German Zep- Deiln fell at the foot of the chapel and shattered the panel on the north side. They were pieced to- gether again after 1018. There wee some heavy bombing within twenty yards (i8 metres) of the piece m he boarded the Danish vessel De Jacob on Auiwt and seized 20 cash of butter. this vessel was the De-nlah bssaedor and it was doubtless dn ' to his presence that the Ad offered a rum-d 5 I 0i’! i revnrdledto “m-imstri. ' t‘ . mt; match 9, mo. toimdy - ‘Only on" 1.: n: “iii no. H1759. It is, , » ‘ tnqOver the IIIIQ .1... Overthe - Iii. teedlt "1 m. X7111‘ iln ,- utnh -_ .wu "mil . rill-in a . c n the Brit itAo 0&5 ' model: of e Qlllifllfldfilbdlttflk hbrhyer nae Ilium amen nl-harhinisndnennlman. - "*-"‘ of the nine motes of soil on earth's surface v-orldls population went. sixty inches below nine inches, a final masterpiezc of erosion leavin people beyond tion. And then Ly la and 11min: and Palestl great pmSpeCi/us: “A land of wheat and barley, s Iwialfiser s ringing out of valleys and thing in it’ Lybia used to be the Roman world's graln- wing atchewan and today t has joined the Sahara desert, wver more in urnml tmy kind‘: I‘! for ‘i009. ‘ Canada? We blind ourselves if we think for one moment that the laws of Nature affecting soil and waters and forests have altered one lots in a million years. the 510131 of Lvbia well developed within e an Ontario valley, and there full-grown sam ks of S ria check- ered all over t e Can Natural Law works exactly Lhe same in the Peace River count China It will build a hi? desert with the same smiing face with which dcsiigris Nfature waits only or o right or the left, Nature st with engineering equipment masterly Job- whether for a hell OI‘ of ancient lands has much to do with Canada. is that most of them were simon-pure exploiiers They built greatness upon the earth, but. ear of Lebanon clothed the mountain ranges of North Africa. but when those forests fell to plottation, chaos swept agricultural economy. The debris of moiintalnsides heaped down itpon the valley farms, streams dried up, fertility ceased, population migrat- ed forward the business of living much as we do in Canada but they fin- ally missed out, as we can miss out, on the one great. law of survival. Soils and forests and waters, are perishable possessions, also are renewable possessions. They give way to degeneration, but they double their Thev can dw ndle or tthe can wax fat. Take a look at Broo s Alberta of power poles to the Hydro Com mission at six to apiece, In a lake area of Quebec, two biologists prove beyond a doubt. that s. cheap the vegetation of takes bottoms W11 change n fishing water of pound trout to a steady or compound interest or the enormous fecundlt herr the game by her etenial and bene- men have wrested a ltvln at hand, so upo The Wealth We Waste (Part hi’ en address betoue the BOISG 0f 'I‘rade. by ROB- SON CK, President, Canadian For Association. Reprinted from rest and Outdom-s.) , Whole libraries of history play down the fact or smother It eu~ tirely. that the reason why a long chain of nations passed from wealth and pOWfl to sterility was that very an was too busy get- ting ‘isheadmto notice the natural resources getting behind Greece, for example, was doom.- ed to die by the selfinflicted pov- erty 01f her sou, b the concer- ous inroads of er on. the deal of her rivers and streams Greece had to die, and to tahLs day the wetter of her politics is the re- “gm M‘ gm] Im- flection not of a cantankerous proves the appetite. peo 1e but of a nalf-straved people p", una. 1e to scra a living from a. land that once valied a Garden of Eden And The Island of Crete. 5.000 years ago the cradle of amaz- ing cvtllmtton, the most advanc- ed of its age. a land of ninety cities! And now two thirds a stony waste, in good part because the mighty forests of cedar and cypress have gone and the winter rains flood quickly to the sea, leaving the sol sterile and rofltiess Or let us glance at Barri}, two thou- sand years ago, a f ly-kntt. mili- and l0 ‘ wary agr ultural state and now em/pty of population over most of its interior. They still have the skeletons of a hundred and twenty big towns, with some of the grandest stone architecture in existence- exce t a handful of nomad herders. out no population, W at. has ha. pened, You Icnou- me that feeds the In Syria they that. to; a nation and its io e of resurrec- Moses‘ ne You recall land of brooks of hou shall. not. lack any- Sask- 11 his to answer man- What has all this to do with I hBNQ sem past twelve months In are 8.11 map as tn grade it a paradise, the decision trustee Wtnjen Re t e In r s t-he human thrusts the lever elf-her a heaven. , Another reason Why the story the put no greatness into the The glories of the Cedars ouse is the whole u T carried Those ancient peoples but they Ieln by regeneration a eight dollars 1 look five years to and simple scheme of fertiliz‘. qt half- of .- uttct three pounders Ta of of Nature once we study boo of instructions and play volent rula. , Since up and down the world. for ust one lifetime out of who ver ie:-i and clown the world men are now lning hands to make certain that in carvtng out one successful decade we do not wreck the foundations fm a century after- d eerie Eastern province a succession of governments tiers off the land in l years than they have the soil in that O of a good. forest, and In the end -zero. Worse than acre, they ruin- ed the forests they squatted on, llzoumcd a lung's ransom of neigh- r ie iloa. ed soil, of it southerly-flowing rivers, eneratiom the last fifteen years we have turned to charcoal and ashes 400 million cubic fut the public-owned domain of - lands; and many of the townships that gassed throuzh little or not. 1~ wages aiuifthe years it takes the voungest tbatby in Canada to grow to old ago. lustre ans lies at our vent of the Rockies is the most import- imt single st/ri in the whole reason ts that it goveirrts the flow of virtually every river the Western guard West's richest. Irrigation, ers, the water levels er's well and the st-abi ty of Sask- atchewan and northern Manitoba. vBut those watershed forests ere In ten years, i930 to 40. show an wer- thlgg that Swede ng Jobs in natural agement. quite like Alberta; It has two thirds its a Alberta's 60,000 forest ind ursuit. weden has achieved is a s to of mind - a determination that. no man no anything 0r the waters that. will weaken the advert the Sassy . Stomach: ltoloivad Iv perlbnwholllronl led its In the wil and bovvershonlil net e bet tie ol’ Dr. Evan's Stemeeih d lee how quietly v0 all dish-using Stomach Mixture “him at meal flmee not only prevent: all bed effects from re but It promotes the funo lonal eotlvlty of the atom eon ention delay. Order your y. Prteo I60. MACS HAIR BISTOBEB A deIIeateLv umed paration whim“ recto: eht-rangtllena and beentiflee the It will restore Grey Heir It its original eolor, Promotee a new and super Ior growth where the hala- h and Is remarkably use‘ re d ... some" "-1-" a yin parasitic bah killers. .. I-‘o ovv direction: t! and you will In unued at the results. Prioe We Bottle. A Dlllt disinfectant for Whelt. 0am, Barley. 0m pound treats s2 Imlhela. Get our pound today. It pays to use Cereean. The 2 Macs JULY 2, 1946 Professional Garlic NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.0. Box I DR. A. R. SMITH DINTIBT I'll Grafton Btree Oflleo loam 9 to I! - Telephone $8M. ALEX W. MATHIESON assets-ten. soucrroa. um Offlol: ll Greet George Strefl Ilene) to been Collecting J. A. McGUlGAN. B.A. NOTARY. mo. BAIBISTEB, SOLICITOB CURBIE BUILDING M. ALBAN FARMER ILA. LLB. MONEY T0 LOAN BABRISTER, SOLICITOB. ETQ, CIIARLOTTITOWN Ganadlsn Bank of Commerce m“ GAUDET o I-IASZARD Barrister: Solicitors. Notaries. lite. MONEY TO LOAN ulLnEnr A. GAUDET, an. 1.1.5. A WALTIIEN GAUDET LLB. Canadian Bani of Commerce Bldg, Charlottetown. P. E. l, t itel IIR. W. R. GIIIISOII C‘ praetor have taken more set- t. 40 pas laced on Y Fem trylngto err-bad farm our. in: timber, a d presented soo- tytewaith an HICIIIIDII of human In another province, t-h ’ - millions of acres of hiegholgght densely wooded, ever acre as the women ed of A few mpraaeed. The warm‘ ty feet. ‘rho pop- 1%” abet:- nio- acting " 3.0"?" 1.22 . n a s e season. Taking Cenadd es n. whole, in each year of or employment for ‘This isn't nation-bulking. This simstroction. , Perha» one of the moat grsshlc he East slope watershed‘ forest of forest treasure mtnion. And the that waters plains. It is a citadel ramparts of the dzo-elmfne_ h“ 1y ec pow- the ranch- ing the her state of subset-action. The Dom- ion Government's records for the n uses to accom- Ish one of the world's outstand- reetrurce III-lil- Of course Sweden isn't rec under forests as against square miles, sit-a ‘ _, is Sweden's ohtef But the one thin that group of men, shall do to the roll, or the forests, es the men Lnd families abft. the land In “g7: So ebcd. y says" a. mil that for the go- the only gospel that m“ t either Olnl or g or ‘ie yo s now on the bcltoolmizieypround. lines of Iuoces- Pelmer Graduate or... Iottetown I01 Prince St, 00099904 Charles R. McQuaid an. Phone I01’! Y vvv Barrister, Solicitor. Notary, Me. E Trust Building, Charlottetown Phone I'll! 0 4-O-OO-OQ BELL & MATHIESON Barr-Intern, Solicitors, he. B. B. BELL, MJ-A, 0. L lIlATl-IIESON. LI..B.. LO. Attorneys-et-Lew CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond 8t. Charlottetown P5]. OOOQ OOQ Morrell 1111a Company Chartered Accountants Eaten: Tron Building Charlottetown vvv H. R. DOANE & CO. Chartered Accountants n aim» sum. Charlottetown Phone I060 Bo: lfl Randolph W. Mannlng, (LA. d m1 tri tun~ gr: ‘iblataxfeapliebo toeaiimlfgetify oe- age debit of 30,000 acres of annual McLeod & Bentley cause someone turned on the water fire damage, and In. writ to be w_ ‘_ 35N-l-Lgy_ ‘a and someone turned o_n the trees thirty thousand acres ed rather l ‘ BENTLEY Lu at...“- ----'- are. wit: 1r....-.1-1;. 1.2.:-..-.-n.:-.-:..-.1.12- ,,,,,, - ~ . geese a. yea. - ~- they planted fish fry in Lake New- n has been a Dominion-Fwtfinciel m‘ ‘if’ "‘"’" -*1..12r.1'"~i.&-*'- $111" 1°“?- "‘ l°5"°'t3‘.2‘“'l- arrows “wit: t vi- hmar ouoaotm-v op on H451,“ eu- ooulee. _ _ . gm Minion doubgsgbnafi ti‘: z on not I an) ‘ Imkaiow almanedwain plagues. cost. _ _ _ unte w i- e s s .. i fi years ago. The sand dune wasn't What's needed to place Canada. PUlEJiLChEThN-OGRfiER worth a. tine an acre. Now hes anent-Iy uncer the ska-thine m" P dl "N! III “III selling the send dime in the form of Conservation? The some "WW" "m!- ‘Yltlnl Ill bookkeeping. 101158 HELEN GIDDIN Rlellhone 2020 Evenings 1500-1. r. o. 1m m. we Queen sum FREDERIL‘ A. LARGE CHABLOTTETOWN. EEJ. PALMER & HASLAM A. J. BASLAM, B.A., LLB. BABIIISTIIB‘, ITO. Bank of Non South Chamber! Charlottetown, P Ii. I. gONEY TO LOAN PM» v.0. Bo! ll w” We inly have gone far ‘to bayou! our v . Let‘! listen ‘ ‘ with the wrecking process In one mnJohn Rikki-ifs we! 81f saying 8' F- MiipnuEt B-A-v K-c >i h " vQn m . tn utumn of 1940. but um time i _ If i, m‘, t (i "MARY- 5T9- 1h: Stained ginsl had luckily been §‘,",,‘,’if,, m” muohflo thojflka BABIIIHTER nnuorron taken away. It has not yet been mm‘ 51 u; n; to u; gm} m; Bu” _ __ C u... replaced. To Be Concluded Freedom From Fear Removal of fear is the privilege end the duty of It was the fearful consequences of the qreat Fire of London In 1666 that [eve birth to In- surance. It ls fen- of financial loss’ by fire, accident, insurance. and other unpredictable and main spring of the Insurance business, Initiated and nurtured by private enterprise, and which for more than 250 years has conferred untold benefit! on the human race. All lines of Insurance effected. , 1 ' v 1 IIYIIIIMIIII 8t GIL, i Lllflltfill liltebiilled I872 llepruen ting British, Cinadi writers; also Lloyd's Corporation of London, ‘Inland * Offlebs: qnururu1¢n~ nvH-vwrrrwIuiwInc-Iv r1 . caminueaonrucie costly events, that Ie the to, and American Under- - EYES EXAMINED um l _ GLASSES FITTED J. 8. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner lgtmueleee lb e lveelnn Appoint!!!" Phone: alone ill) ‘ Ii. (l. Illfll I‘ ova-annulm- -‘ = “new”. momma: Sunni-aide L Mantegna _, 1 i°""' v'l'li'“f" = ‘nurses-tn z-sssu- ‘- nsaats-rsn, no Phillie- Billlfllhx. n1 Grafton s Phone I045 , 0 5°; u: _ .'.'Q+Q'§O-OO§O§O§§OO'§QQ+.4§' I