~ law and tr to o en the minds and hearts f un- - . b b- buying logs out from wees sm ll r Tl" P'°P°l‘"°!' “f "19 life ' ' h l ll > ll>l S " p O 28x22 (ti l2§1-pq}f1ff:tlgf.;yyre§fli€ l-hun I0" 1n diameter. The grails!‘ fiaflrgglglléeslrlftfnifltlgfi IlJjSSIAEuEDZEIDJ-l n Elfin‘ vitamin“ l‘ Prlnkd FINE SPEEC BUT- a] P)’ co P e ' ‘h ‘I m ‘i o1 such a dnve‘ muzt be w we“: nulnberof logs cut from trees llIldBI‘ ea py 1.118 pl-ollts on u... “use onus. "Em "n u" “bd- w° "u 1 H " v ' .¢_——- lczlsc-lclkl p1-11-~1-:1111111c~. .\lr. lung “as especially - n 1-D h, - Premler r-lmullo announcevl In cut evely nee 111111 1s large enough once, Included) - - - - 1.15 l’ silk-olive. wl1c11hl1e lJltllllCll to what Canada's effort Legmm r‘ Ianlon may be assured of the his raulo adolcss. ‘ durcdily evf-‘nllll! to make a .1 x a scantlmg ll they seq our s ,. -' - - ~ _ f '" luaseu htth ' , ~~~,-:'""1&~1 vi11“u,1,1;»11,.,,w m, Ma, ..,,, m, on. ma, for l» Cavadm nul_;"1r*l.:z..1".;::1:...t..1.1. fr] :1. 122....':1*.1“r.1.;t11f BY MAIL For Peg ,9» w“ “u. Ulllllllflll‘ ° ' - ' overseas, Mr. Bowler said. It 1s understood P31111111. can really set 1n n1 1.111 Though the owe is coal" small trees should never 0e cut ex- 0 E ._ _ " to 130,917 ul .1: -Cl1ar1es Malam 1n the Christian ban l‘ 1‘uI1¢1§¢0. L05 1\u.¥<‘1¢5- ,_ Age group No. Pct. 31“ tfliswwjjrflfnfrl-lnflfs and buses nilnf- _____Sc_1ence,_MQIj}v_l°Y_-._____ “in”: b6“ ‘my by “hid? Th‘ king cquld reach I4 w I6 m ——— — ———-——— 7 ‘m berm 29,150 MULSIICZT an lflcmaiflgllld reich heard (the message tn the . _ The 11°“'~‘P"*P5'l'5 0i H165‘? Cmcsi “"11 ‘then’ lens 0f 1610 20 -_-_-____.___.._-_612 14.82 (l)? fifleffifififivfiofinild ,.,'§.‘§1,30.1,. German people which Mr. Wlllkle \ nliflions of lmdvrs‘ ‘."°“'d be by hawng m? facts 2O to 25 — — —- — ———-——— — 682 16-51 009. an increase of 19 Per cent 0V?! duvvcrilnwmlf in mndgqm menfbvoils c I v l c A L s ~11 he w: w, 521113111311 2. l.» .._--------- ~69 l»... ifigt,.l;‘;,l’fiéfi‘l‘féfllfifléfféfi.51.‘. s. lurzsv. .1... ... m... sr, mum 11111115; lumded out m \\:1.~l1111g1o11 by some o y m au 1- 3o to 4o_____...__..___.--- 833 20.17 mcreasem ,3 per cenyovu. m, pe_ eyes ma, pp Goebbgs mam; The N _ i _ only 1011K: rcp1'c5r-11L;11i\'c5 of the great HCWS 40 w ~O________________ -84 1898 cedjng yea; Then- vnnre ms 18.2 chances are that n large propor- ———-—- ouce 5 here‘)? Elven Th3‘- lhe Board of APP?“ agencies mm [he ‘:\lny__-figaj] ,1\,5@¢i;r1ed Press, the J 1 ' per cent. ulgher than dlll-llg 1:139. tlon of them wlll also learn 0! his Every noonduy, except $otur- from Civic R8165 and Assessments will be held ln the ‘w. ' . . 1 , ' i; ' “Fllllllcr? In“ will“? "f Camdag w“ itPrlf. w working on a volume of the Napoleonic wars, said fifibrliismusikfkn llrIlufllel-‘llyfilflgtls-lfdlll Ihajkav‘ cum?" Mo?“ w“; c?‘ City Clerk ' l L' 1'1 d S1.1 'c are tun 1n - - b1 ; m d.‘ .- mmpct- uc o services l 1s wee ' is E15‘; the people (31,116 11 _c _ V ies ‘(u I f if t11e other day that 1n 111s recent researches he had illlétxivlmalksstgoflsltae need_l§ L“; “m? s b_ t _ "F ‘h,’ N . k ____________ f now of legummte 111|o11uul1011 DHISICEH’ 0 prop “Conn upon Somethmg extrelnely ‘oplcapp “Thls ma!“ purpmes- conkquedhy. a ll |ec _l$ rll . 8X! Wed Flflillldfl- "r "f lmcflwmm“ “m1 Lima} STMS was a report from Napoleon to the Directory, It curtailment of automcbhe prcduc- H" "ma; W" be cmducled b7 1;; <lo111e>1il~ 11.111111») xllfllllll not be a spasmodic 1111111,’. was damd Feb, 23, 1798. Napoleon had been on an Li‘?i,‘yitirg_ggil;héuzeesfwp,b_ the Rector, Rev. A. LeDrew l llpillllll 1~.,-1'u.<\1l 11> mciliuuc Cullslfllclloll of plants As is well known the Rush-Bagot agreement of to do the same for those wh.ch are A in (K111111111 1\2.:<~l1 11114111 culcr 111m competition 1817 was a direct result of the War of 1812, inlpplt biog: 21.} 1gp; lpglplolhg 4:51:13}; " . 111111 liri1i>l1 1.111111. :11'1rr 1111- 11:11‘. l‘r10r to D1111- which Canada 3nd the United Slates fought we}; [mid Support ‘o, a“ legitimate ma,“ » -l'.-"_. 1- 1'1’ , ' " -'- p1 .11:.. "n1 11' t ' ' ' ° “$.21?'."f....."ilvf."Ill!‘iJI."..Il"li.2Z-$‘e 1.5.1:: .....‘;.1.2::.Y:§s§.‘2' rslairz: ill“: 111:1- Yw w!!! enloy us superwr » new» m“ -»- PM raw-n P i > 1 "- ' -- " I P such legislation as is proposed w.ll Island whether lt be on lee or on turf there you \ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE mun _ M____ TIIE ORARLOTTETOYIN OIIAROIAII Mumlng Dally (Founded In 1887) Prealdent: Lieut. Col. W. Cheater 8. McLnn Vicc-Presldent: J. B. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Llcut. Col D. A. Mnclilnnon. 0.5.0. ETfor and Jluuaglng Dlreclor: J. It Burnett, FJ l. Bram-lane Editors: Frank Walker and [an A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION RATES B! Mall In P l. l.. 84-00 oer you; $2.111 m s monun 81.25 for 3 months; 50c for one month . C"! Delivery: $5.00 per year; $3.00 [or 0 month: . $1.75 for 3 mouths B; Mall ln Canada and U.S.A. $5.00 per year lillllrllily “PPKIYI 52-00 per year: $1.00 for 6 manna. 50c for 3 months. been preaching national unity in this country, a united front by French-speaking and English- speaking Canadians in the prosecution of the war. National unity is not being promoted when Senator Dandurand indulges in an attack upon British in- dustry, and implicdly upon the British Govern- IIOTES BY TllE YIAY A London youth named Jullul Caesar nos Joined the R. A. F. Here l; noplng 131st, like nls lam- uls nam "c. he conque = 51! Il-ll lnent, and thus af f routs English-speaking Canad- __o; m, N“; vane“, __ mmopwn tans 1n every part of the Dominion. It seems nec-| Joli-mol- essary for the Government leader in the Senate lo And now that outstanding Aryon. realize that this country is not at war with Britain, Fsregn luuuier Ycsuke Mouuoka. but \\'11h Germany, that it resents, aud profoundly,l 01 J89“! h“ "15"" we “"1"” an attempt to weaken the harmony and impair the. He Fuenrer. Adolf Hitler of AILSJIB. plans w so ln Apr-l t. 11ml! w understanding existing between Canada and Grcat' see mat leaomg lvordlc, Benlto Britain, a harmony and an understanding that are‘ Mussom“ essential to complete co-opcration, which, in its turn, is essential to the complete success 0f a com- mon effort. _"Tho Strongest Memory is Weaker than Illa WEDNESDAY. APRIL 2_ I941 Seed Potatoes For South Africa _____. Before 10.10 imports of secd potatoes from Czlualla iull» South Africa consisted for the most part (if smzlll sliipmcius used for cxpcrinlculzll |llll'])O5C>, writes .\lr. j. C. Rlzlcgillivray", Canadian 'l'r:ule Cumiuissilvlicr at Cape 'l‘0\.11, in the cur- rent issue of the Commercial Intelligence journal. Iluring 1511p lln-y \\"1*re 111111-11 larger 1111111 cvcr’ be- New World,” with soil and clilnale ideal for bulb “lwiljbbjgfQlj ",§}““,,3,.“f.f§‘.°“§f1°f§ l fore and. ll flu. |'(‘.~llll.\ <11 llllS >('£lr€llll s plzlntiugl culture. fiiise of our kulfolkm me Old Land QI DOMINION SQUARK are .~;11i.<f:u'1~r_\', (zluzlllizui seed should have a (le- ——— lll for this _ _ m be m“ Wham“. chewmg 0,. men clothed with wide powers W f C _ ‘ _ _ M11111 o Prof. Frank Buck of 11w for». we we brme- - 1r...":1.":.:."; filfbléfl‘: 1.11:1‘. “as; mrxmsrr o... .1. w-nd... .5 magma sity of British Columbia, the bulb industry in British Columbia will undergo a tenfold expan- sion as a result of the ruin caused by Germany's conquest and the elimination of Dutch and Bel- gium bulbs from competition in markets of this continent. Canada requires 53,000,000 bulbs annually, and that is only one market open to Brit- ish Columbia described as “the Holland of the ##1## l0 complete plans for preselvlng the world against Lu- lerior races. - Toronto Star. Dr. Ales lllrdlloka o! the Smith- sonian Inslltutun stutes that u1 the mayorlty o1 lndivlduals the m women than 1n men. 1|. remams Strauflmd Beacon-Herald. ln February Canadians were "sav- ers and lendcrsl’; 1n lvlarch they are "earners and glvels." We suve and lend for our Government; but we "Q5111 and give" 1o COIIIIJH/ and strengthen our splendxl llgllung men on every from. But no matter llww we save, 110w we "wll and lmoll", or to what extent we give. or our fighting men, who freely (Globe and Moll) The Domln more than 52.400000 a year on lei- lsla _ the lndemnltlcs of of officials of the House of Oom- mons and the Senate. Roughly one- pay 98 Senators, 84,000 each persu- num. to pay the ofllclalsto maln- In view of the need tor economy to meet the costs or war. does ttnot strike the tax-paying publlc as rath- er strange that the Government spends thls money and provides no work for the Senate to do? The membership of the Upper House 1n- cludets some of the ablest men 1n the r time. But there ls a danger that with a dozen Cabinet Ministers present and none foralse oblectlons than lt does to pass a bill with a couple of hunbred Com- moners or 90 Senators to scrutinize its nrovlslons and make sure 1t Ls in the nntlonal interest. During recent 1iears the Senate has been trying to improve its own usefulness by holding enuulrles into Why an Idle Senate? lon Government apendl mem- ber: or Parllament and the solar-ks quarter o! this sum ls required to WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY' FOB A PEOPLE AT WAR "In this loot o! 00-0991‘!- tlon between WWm-mfn“ and organization of Hull-OS’- ers and workers lies much of the stn-l and unity 07 purpose o the Brltlah people today. In the acceptance of such co-operotlon lies much of the force of dcmocrflcv everywhereP-John G. Will- ant, United Slates Ambassa- dor to Brltaln. urgent matters. sort of work. It could take made. even at a tlme when the Government! interest ls centred chiefly on raising and cllsburslnz war fun If entrusted with the task lt could show how much_ non-essen- tlal spendlng could be elmlnatedln wartime and the cltlmn taxpayers would bless lt for dolnlz so. But this sort of thhlg lt ls not permitted to do. FORESTRY PAYS PROFITS men of affairs naturally stop at the Windsor because of its repu- WEG/(GST Iflk." lowher AZ“, t; iuggtjjynjgnflfifipatafi? ma?“ yéabmet o! neoessltv must llllOfl ‘OI’ COlllfOfl lfld .- fDIIUR|AL _ ‘age Lax-Iceman; ,5 shanty), ‘El-eager’ have extraordinary powers ln war- It ls wen quamled unobtrusive, courteous service, a its convenient location-and be- ‘ - as the proper place for business and social meetings. lllbliiillsnr I. Aldcrlc Rlymond finite jllilCC in the South African market. War service may take many farmers. Young §1e§§f,_je“fj,‘§‘u”,°‘w§;{,§°fi‘}§f’L‘§Z.§T§ P""‘““' 1\l11~t of the H110 imports from Lflllildfl 6011' men and women students of blanchester Uuiver- Jaw Times-Journal BY H. D. LONG, PROVIN CIAL FORESTER ‘. ' .' .'. . 1, , l. 1| _» __ _ - sistcd n1yrvill11]§l11u111.1111, u 111,111‘ sccni tofcpnfpl n1 sity l1a\e_ forn1ed a bath squad as part of their J‘ M‘ Mndonne“. o, .l-0H,,,,o_ DEPARTMENT 0F AGRICULTURE m l'('4\¢|11.'ll1.\ 1l.>,~<l_\ l0 the >pcu nation} 0 11c _P contribution to the help being guen to hald- nmae a pom, W01“, ¢p,p;1us1z.ng lav-Mute. the 111<1>1 pivllllllll‘ \:11'1c1_v 1n bouth .\ll‘lL‘Zl, pfcsgfid nrolhers of large families who have been ulleu no polo n1cn1bels ol [Ale Wmu- The cutting or small trees for saw- his labor at $1.50 per day and board 513105 .\lr. .\|;1cl iillivrzly. Tllcre was also a small bombed out of [muse and puma The procedure ,5 sor Rotary club mat the p1.- llle ol 10,1. 1s.was1elul and unprofitable. and uorse llll‘8 235721.01: pcruay need cannot afford not, 1,0 prgcflse (0195-5 c“; 1g the trees are w; berm, quantity of l\';1i.'1hlli11>_ while a lllllllcd (lclllillld mm" he fumul for lri~l1 (Tobbler. ‘Ill should he burnt- in mind, lmxvcvcr. by Can- adian gl'll\\'t'l'.< .1111] shippers," \\":1rns .\lr. Mzlcgilli- -- . _. . . . .. ' . _ '. 1 "' he ex ans" mat the \1I.1y, 111.11 1111.111 lll-d-llvlllst If.1\01_11.1ble CITLUIII" mothers. And there has never yet been a ims- ‘ligggfjfule from 38% n, “um, ,9 u " n n u " U w , é m g stances the .\111.1l1.\11u.111 111.1rket 1s asmflll one. deal, , He, “amassed by my thong“, 8 9 10 11 l2 l3 l4 l5 ———~—— ——- Impons mm “H “Hurts in ,939’ yo, mSk-um.’ n- »- .- 1r m... .1115 1133111), ngighylvple‘ pcillcsliy‘): Flelling and Bucking (two men) ...s 6.40 5.12 3.11s 2.65 2.15 1.17 1.48125 — | C Q D |_ | v E R were only 31431.; 111M111; 11ml from I034 to 1939 judge joseph Sabatlt of Chicago, who has heard flFyiflm$ nlajgesm: we lives a“, skidding and ‘wagon Haul 0 | |_ ,1“, nvcrngp W, Y“, ,,,,]v\» 1.4__*50b11>'l1cl§. 52,679 divorce cases, advises against short eourt- cllilulen of sulolerg 111.,- ealeo 1o: 111111111111 leou uicluued) 7.91 6.495.113 4.37 3.59 3.02 2.60 2.31 A FOR INFANTS AND ’ ' ‘ - " 1r ,| - ~ Iggy] [hg lcadfnn - ' - - ' ' - . _ rs lly. it l5 fl W-JK W!“ l»? mom '—'——-——--—-—— —- ——- GRQWING CHILDREN l‘l1e 1111111] l\u1_<l 111 11.1. 1 g ships and adds. Avoid May and December mat P l” . .. . . 11¢¢@='¥11‘y w" lmLY-‘mc- - w1“°-"°' TOTAL _ __ There ls nothing you can source of supply of ace/l potatoes to South Africa, lming credited \\itl1(}1)pc1'cr11t of the total in 1933' and S8 p01‘ cent in 19,20. \\ lule lzuropean co11n- tries l1£l\'(‘ cezlscll 111 cxpllfl. ljllllfll hlllfidom EX‘ pnrlsrs 11.1w civminucrl lo imkc (lcliverics. As 1101611, the most pupulzlr variety 1s the Up-IO-Déllc which is grown in Scotlzulrl. Other favored var- ictics are the K111; George \' and Art-an Chief. ures lust work in the llouse of Commons. He would mczln 111 the United States in tcrms ol US. '. we l(‘.'ll', 1111111 reach the ljlllICd 518195- 1d"? be“! hc c1111 hopv- for, i.- llllll his statement \\'lll get a 51111111 lluuling on 4111 lllrllll‘ page of the New York‘ 1111105, with possibly similar or snlallcf flQliR l" one 0r two other Lnucd Slates yaupers. We ven- ture a \\':1gcr1l1r1t 11111 a 1111c 0f it will appear m tllc New York Daily News (with 2,009,000 daily cir- ctilalionl. nnr 111 the .\c\v \orl< \\ orld Telegram. nor ll1e New York S1111; that it will not appear (except by sheer good luck) 111 the nmvspapers of “Zlsliingtou, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia. Kansas City, St. Louis. B05100, Portland. Swine. United .l;'l'<.’>5 and the International NEWS? and handed as well to the special Washington corres- pondents of Ijuitcd Slates 11c\\x<papcrs. _In “lash- ington 11101-1.- are more than 1,000 accredited news- pupci‘ CUl'l'(‘>[)l)ll(l(‘lllS. To be effective, to scrvc- the good if not vital, pur- pose 111111 it should serve, it should have contin- uilv." The Dandurand Attack Nothing nwrc ill-considered or ill-timed has come out of 011111111 since the commencement of the “"111", s.'1_\s 1111: .\l11111rc.'1l (inzclle, than the ex- tnvurlliiulry- sllllvlllclll of ihe klflVcflllllflllt Leader in the S1-11.'111'--.\'e11:11or llzunlurand, a member of the .\l.'lcl-.(‘nzic King Cabinet-that prior to the cxziclinliun :11 llunkorrpic, imlustry in Great to gather up babies soon after breakfast, carry them to the mcn’s and women's union, wash them in the basement a dozen at a time in bathtubs and wash basins, and then return them home to their ings. Don't live with in-laws. Don’t let finances “just work out." Don't forget nlarriagc is a sacred pact. Don't forget children make the match. “Most of these cases would be over in a1 minute if we'd all apply the philosophy of bear and forbcar," he said. "Of. course the law says a judge shall try a case on its merits a11d sit in judgment. But I sometimes disregard the formal bus. Mr. j. R. Bowler, General Secretary of the hearted approval of all ranks of the Canadian the Legioifs War is providing com- coluplcte co-operation from Services organization which Dr, l\lanion will hold coilfereilccs with the various agencies before proceeding overseas. a 1r a a Almost two-thirds of all prisoners passing through the doors of the Montreal jail in 1940 were not very young people, as most persons seem to believe, but were between the ages of 30 and 50, according to official statistics released from the Attorney-Gcncraks Department at the Quebec Legislature. l Following are last ycar’s statistics for the met- ropolis: 5o to6o—-—----__--— 504 12.20 Canada snould make sule that the wives and lannLcs ol sululers OVcY- seas are cared hi" adequately. Be- ing a vetelan o1 the last war, 1.12 Plesldent cf the lvatzsual ‘frust company is moelesleu Ln soldiers’ Star. .__.__ 1"], Wheeler and his little bowl of lszlatltnllsls nrc 1101. hl€€tJ1§§ them ltsponslullity L0 tue people 'llle louse-lulu Dlll ls ll-w mu H!” ol the lancl, we laundered and de- Lermmcd polcy of the Hub-O". WI they retain their anlnnslty. ‘The,’ plan a. nalian-wlne campaign to arouse, if possible, a c nsoerable spealmig tlnouglu that 111s guvelmnent was SEHLIIE ex- perr, ncwce wlm respect. to lvne 1119 forces wlmh wlll bring 5mm all Columbia wlll have ieaou to‘ 111111111 11.111. And 1.11111 can u t be said about a lot of the 1.11112» Ml‘- Pattullo aces. The pwfilbll-"Y 01 wl- ting up an 11.11 and steel moustry on the Coast has been CflllViAa-Sea many times. Many men nave H1941 thelr hand atpit and come nave burned their flhgchi. No one eve: got, very far, - Vancouver Provmce. During 1940, the total number o1’ cars solo in Canada W115 l4 per 08m larger titan durlzig 19.19. a-ales nur- The large sales o! autcnlobllcs con- More than 6o - - - - - -.-- - 238 ‘$.76 4,129 100.00 n- w n- n- Sir Charles Patric, the British historian who is inspection of the ‘invasion ports’ between Etaples and Ostend. His conclusions were: “I. France could not gain supremacy at sea for some years. “2_ Without that no operation could be more haz- ardous than an invasion of England. "3. A sur- prise was possible only in the long Winter nights. 4. Their preparations were too backward for such an attempt that year. “Napoleon, at the time a General under the Directory, then obtained permission to strike at Great Britain in the East- cm Mediterranean. His abortive Egyptian cam- tlxlued tIIIOUBII-UD the year and did not slow down during December. It ls possible that. as a result cl the Domlnlonfls war eflorts clurlng the present year, Canada may nut be nble to produce the same number ol .’__ h-otection of the publlc, at a time when protection 1s vitally needed, ls aimed at by the Canadian welfare Council ln its campazgn 1o have Provincial GOVCIIIIIL-llbfi enact .('gl§- lotion controlling clvlllan charities. Adoptkn or the idea wouxl round out tho work already begun by the Federal War Chnrnnes Acz, A1 a tlme llke this, mien every tent must be watched closely, Lfilllle 1s lezs room than ever for the "ruc- ket." form of charitable camplugn or collection. As to war c! Mules. 1.1m Dominion G-Véllllnélll. has paign was the result." 1r .1- n- a ions that jilzuus 11o built in (janzula which would ifying the number of war vessels that might be cnmpclc wi1l1 l'1l‘lll.~ll plzuus wcrc coldly rcccivcd maintained by each, and the armament of those by llrili-li fl‘fll.\l‘(l to pnvvilll: ilu-ir plans, secrets, bluc- pri11ts,(-lc.,tl1.'1t 111115111 llffl1.\'(‘(l in competition Wllh them 11 fu-r [he \\'.'1r. After Dunkcrquc the attitude clmligcrl cnlirrly .1111] Scnzltnr Dandurand eulog- izrvl the splendid \\".'1y in which British industry‘ and flu‘ llrilish pcnple tlicn ruse to the occasion. ' Senator Xleighvn prmnplly demanded a rclurn showing u Lv-iht-r 1111» llrllish or the Canadian Gov- ernment “'11s l1l:11111-\vur1hy in not compelling Brit- ish imllislry- lu t'1>~upc1'.'1ll' at lhc time named by Senator llzlndiiiuwinl. The (lovern111c11t leader was not p1'cp;11'('<l 1n promisc- this return. lt docs not111111101;l-v-1111111111sthe (iazclte. whether he i111l11~1r_v. llrilish induslrifllififs vcsscls, b11t this was regarded as only a nominal and not an actual armament. With the advent of the present war the United Slates desired to have larger naval vessels on the Great Lakes for train- ing purposes, and to have heavier armament on these vessels. The United States, moreover, wanted a further understanding regarding the problem of naval construction on the Great Lakes, a point stressed by President Roosevelt in his r argument favoring an immediate start on the St. Lawrence scaway project. It was urged by the United Slates that the terms and definitions of the Rush-Bagot agreement, as drafted in 1817, brought 111cm under strict control. The provlncm are now being askCd place no hindrance 11-1 their way. The only thing to be required ol them ls the pr ductlon cf evidence that their aims are legitimate and l that the money raised ls to be used ‘honestly. When um l5 the err-e 11. jshculd be easy to prove. - Windsor Star. Apparently Dr. Goebbels thought he was placing Wendell Wlllke ln an undeslrable light, by publillmg the story that a Jew was respon- slble for hlu grandfather's depal lure rom Germany. But that conclus- lon c.u1d not be reached only by A person of extraordinary mentality of the Nazl rcpugandlst minister. In any case r. Wlllkfe never rd this alle ed bit of his family hll- tory. '1' e circulation of the no Industry l0 the province, Britsla '1 ‘llle lamlcr llas lcullzcu 1.111s m a general tray. our. he 1111s not glvcn u senous counluerat-lou. ne cuts small tlccs along wuh the large outs and S2115 them to me mlll without considering the cost and proft lu handling 111cm. 1.1 lhe lnrmerhlredl ‘(These figures were taken from Q1112 ULMTBHOII). Assuming that the farmer 1's paid $10.00 per 1,000 board ' logs at ule mlll, 1|. Wlll be seen thct lie loses money by cutting trees smaller than l0" 1n dlameter, ‘the null operator a so loses money by 10" 111 diameter are small logs which TIIE FLOWS CAN WAIT . "$14.31 11.61 8.96 7.02 5.74 4.79 4.08 3.37 feet I or his ln lucludew, we per 1.000 ooalu 1661. fol‘ clluung trees 01 ulllelelll. diameter and lunumg lnem at we of large knots and ls of lnferior quality. disease and Insect damage ls widespread and only n sma'l pro- t ls realized when the mlll wou.d be as IOIIOWSZ- Colsl per 1,000 uu. n. lor lreep of various dlanlelers- actual records kept on a small log- Tlle practice of cutting every tree me stun mar. 1s huge enough to nlliliv R. l X ‘A Suflllulng, l3 Cxblcuuily wasteful and LUIPYOAIIMILC. 11. uocS no» always appear so, owanse 1..e small logs are sold along wlul ule oe 113110180 at a loss whereas 1f_le.t Anu running high, l1ere's a smell ol lce Where the wlndlalls lie; Qlleres winter close by, A dandelion Has JUSl. found room In the lower lot To open a bloom: Sprlngs at her loom. But out of the sun Where the crows debate There ls snow at. the root. There ls frost lying late. The plows must wait. reply. — Edmonton Journal. \\\\ \\ \\y increase the growth rate. Almost‘ any farmer can thin hlS own wood- lot wlthout hlrlng labour ll he works at lt ln 111s spare time. and proved 1n value and lrl a few years the thinning operatlons wlll be seen If the farmer does not practice forestry he wlll never make very much from his woodlot. Forestry 1's concerned with profits. It ls the sclence of obtalnlng the greatest value from the forest. The farmer try. If the woodlot ls neglected the they are allowed to reach a dlanlel- trees grow slowly. the lumber '5 lull er of at least l0 inches, the lunlber is small and lnferlor 111 quality It ls only by good forest manaltement that profits can be made from the woodlot. stand ls ‘i - - ~ suspicm“ OI me pigment in me cannot be sawn at a ~oflt If rlumdlfi" we 5mm‘ m“ “ream, le- fl l . . _ _ n . callv tested and conso- (V EVldfinllv dlflllrbefl b)’ recent ‘Videna mat Hgenlgrallgpgroléal 1-5 given to (ialipoutlmgent of gingifiuwny fig)‘; m)‘, Llfypilf; trees nbove 10" were CITE‘. there wgflld floucltlautfleproa tslflélff ‘It’; quenu’ "Mb" ‘M mum" _ 1 ‘ 1 . . n_ r. . . anion as s ecla eega e o con- ‘_ - - .“ few small log nd tl1 t f 1 . —-—~——- Cailrulzt s wzlr story has not been told in the Ulllbcd sun with General AICNaughtlZJn on m6 ‘vork of the Icllflfielflélive uvvrlfme“; ma’ production wouldsbea new? $3112.21 ‘linear/e 10mm; 1n which me Th0!!! W|l0 have tele- VACUUM $111165. mlll ‘Yllll llild ¢‘ll1$e‘lu@me5» Prime Mlms‘ auxfljary Services in the field viz Y M C A fuggloflapnéiggfigj‘,gefin,iéi,r‘g we 115141 profits correspondingly lncrcas- traces l0" anuhuverfln dlanleler ale phones have all U18 re- Mu BOTTLES _ ,1 , _. _ _ , . . . . ., _ _ _ c , . y tor lluckcuwc 1W1: gu\'@11111>"§>1\'@ fads alld hi4‘ Legion, salvation Army, and Knigms of C01,“... urajlgeyafsxfl-Bgytjcqrllull-Z ______________________ Mlfi; §§§.fi“’f,ee§"I;“f,f,°,,‘$‘.fv°’§§$§ sources of our store at Bump: “ffi, l,‘}f,f,,|,§:,,"',fffi . _, g . . erican people _ . g l was, llc Sold. flmlklng ‘or ‘h? benefit of those Canadian Legion, advised of Dr, l\;lani0n'5 ap- their elected '_rep1ese111a1..ves, nave Louyfa’ aléelztxzwgiohytfurs ‘my lf a need arises, lei I18 ¥°".','},‘,',°,§' ,,}L",,,,",,°,",,‘;";',,',',' = “ho mnv he zmslerl by comparisons between our - - - .. _ reached a, major decision. — Provl- any runners say mey camlot know and we will end I‘ the moneyr . . . pomtment, said 1t had t e general and whole l 8 ' \\'.'lr effort r1111] 1111.11 has llecn said concerning the den“ -7°“1‘—'“‘- fllforfl I-o uraouoe forestry. Instead l4 Ol- Royul Vacuum 49o mail delay. tal 1h lhl you.“ 1 :1"...:....; "r. norm". ELBOW . command at any time. quickly you what you want at — PHONE 217 — All orders promptly. money order to avoid p 50 can . J s Moll Orders Glven Attention. DRUG STORE if glvo children who nro In. be "Rlckety" that w b Id and strengthen their bonu and bodies llko COD LIVER OIL Babies thrive on It. It h like sunahlno to their bodies. But the Cod Llver Oll muut only tho klnd that la uclontl- ll you that hero l: Royal Lunch Kits (bottle Wlndow Dlsphy f Them. MACS BLOOD FOOD A comblnatlon especially valuable ln tho ireatment of those diseases where orlzln ls traceable, to on lm- goverlshed condltlon of lhc lood. One of the greatest remedies In the ireatment of rheumptlam. Gel a box now. a go by first Send Prompt I TllE TWO MAOS __ 149 Greatgeorge Street day, during Passion Week and Holy Week o service for Men will be held in Sl. Paul's Chapel. The services will begin at 12:05 and 0005"» “"/\<MI\C"' ‘,1 uur u"“‘ ,1 "f n 1110"" will lost fifteen minutes only. Gardner. All men interested are cordially invited to attend these services. "Como yo yourselves opurt and rest awhile." E l Say to Your Grocer I Want X l .9291’? w. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD. FOR COMPLETE City Court Room, City Building, 8th, 1941, at 9.30 o'clock A.M., when appeals from valuations and assessments will he heard. on Tuesday, April J. A. FULLERTON, will find that popular old Island favorite HlCKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10c PER ‘FIG , Manufactured by INSURANCE SERVICE 1 v ever. of nylng that he ls fluttered _ p did not fit actual present-day conditions, By an m, g1 on hhn are opportunity, how. brings ll dmvn r11‘ not ; the dzmuige has been done. exchange of notes of june, 1939, and November,’ _ EllgllSll-Sjwfllflllfl cilizcns throughout the Domin- 1940, it has now been agreed by Canada and the, km’ ‘w? jififlgflafi ion cannot 11111 vxpcrivncc :1 sense of anger over. United States that armaments might be installed have no an enemy. u well l5 of re- TOBACCO C0, LTD, Charlottetown the conduct of 11w Alinistl-r who, individually and 0n vessels in Great Lakes yards "but dismantled mwngem" mmflh" ""1 “'4 7m“? i11 common 11-1111 other lll(‘lllll(‘l'S of the Cabinet had for the voyage to the sen." evlqmqwrjifi ."‘,‘,“I.1{’2';nj"fi"m’;‘ _ .7... ,_.