snarl? I-Tfilng "WT I 1111. BIIAIILOTTI-lluntl aullnnun Murnlng Dally trounced In 188'" Prcaldcnll Linus. c111 w. Ohm" l- ""5"" Vlro Pronlclnnv: J. ll. Bvrlllll- '41- loflroturyr Llnul.._ Col. u. A. Ileklnuol. 01-0. Emu-u- 11ml uunnslnl INPNI-lr. J Is Bur-um. I‘ ‘ Alum-lute Ellison: Ffunls Wulltnr, and Lia-us. III . llurnolf, R-(LN v.n. (On Amvs llrvlfil SUBSCRIPTION BATE! By lull In P. 8 |., $4M nor your: IIM for c months, ILSI! for I mnnlha: Mn for on month cm DaIIva-ry s-roo prr mm Ill-M IM I MI"! SL715 for s mnnllll: 00c Inr one month Ry Mull In nllu-r Prnrlnven IIIII ILRA. U.” IWI’ ‘"‘l7 fluturflny nun-my: 121111 m-r vrnr: it." l" 5 ""1""- 5011 Inr S months Tho (‘llnrlnftctnwn Ounrdlnn ma! b0 cbtulnsd It Ilunstllnlrn Nun-1- Anne-y. Timon Hanan. New Ynrii OM innth Noun 1\K0=I||‘_v, Garner hllll lnfl "Milling"!!! llflfrupnllllln Vrvvl Arum-y. I208 Pool It. F1111- lf-I-I [my tit. Tnrnnlm New: ltandl Olluun: \Vnllr'l Now: fltlnd lub- Ftlhlnt-m Iihup, blonrlnn, N.B. “(Tilieiblrongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." -111_ii1:,<11.\v, ramzfiuiuzr 1t, 194:1. Now ls The Day-Not Later 11.1 11-._~1~ ~11‘ lust1~r_r hlll.l\\', Sir Stafford Lirlgqi. ~l111lc111s 11f .\l1er1lcct1 University {-1 l1. 11.1-1;11",1' Jlll-lrrs- 11s l.o1'1l Rector. Illa‘ i‘ .1 ' . 111' pctlcc has almost al- . 11,.11..<111 11; .1 relapse from the ideal- 1-111111111-11 rill-rt to a renewal of the ~ ' 11111111-111 progress on the one 1'1 .111 1111» other. .\lany of those . >1-11l in former times were ab- 11111111- ~1*1<11.- 111 1111-ir hopcs and desires, but, :11 Zllvl . c111 1111-1110111 when they sought to im- pi<1111111 10.11» <l1->i1"<z< in action, the opposing !11<1 slfnllg. \\'1'l> for two main reasons," ford, “the progressive forces faiicil 11» -:1~:l.e while the iron was hot. During 1hr tintt; oi \\":11'. when the feeling of co-opera- >1111 drnng, is the moment to concert .»11111111~11 111-111111 1111- thc period after the war. 'l'-1 11.11:t 1111111 l1oslilili<zs ltave ceased, till the 1111111114 {nice oi the common danger is no longci- present, is to ntiss the chance of common auremncul. .-\11d, sccond, they underestimated ll11~ support lllt'_\' would win from the people- thc connntui men and women of the country —t'or a bold program of change." Surely we here in this Province will profit by this pllil0s0[1lliC_ and practical advice, and not l<'a\'e our boys in the lurch by neglecting to de- ntand and receive now what is due and neces- sary to make Prince Edward Island “a land fit for heroes to live in" on their return from the war. 111., ,1'.‘ w 211:1 a. 1..~1 l-'ll't'l‘\ '.\1"'1' “'12. ._ .1“ rtrnl 151111 is’ Red Cross Meetings The Prince Edward Island Division of the Red Cross Society is to be warmly congratulat- ed upon thc success of its efforts as shown by the reports submitted at thc annual meeting yesterday, This applies, of course, to the Junior Red Cross as well, which indeed merits special commendation and which, in crippled children’: work and other activities, has a record unex- cellcd by any part of Canada or the Empirc. The broader phases of Red Cross work, both in Canada and throughout the world, were ably reviewed by Mr. Jackson Dodds, O.B.E., chair- man of the Central Committee of the Canadian Red Cross Society, and formerly general man- angcr of thc Bank of Montreal. Mr. Dodds stressed particularly the organization's war sc- tivitics, which arc increasing in proportion to thc nation's war effort in other directions, and are of vital importanca. He referred also to the forthcoming cam- paign in which the people of Canada. will be ask- cd to contribute ten million dollars for the carrying on of this work. Our provincial quota has not yet been fixed, but judgin by put achievnmcnts and by the zeal and cf iciency of our Red Cross workers and campaigners, one can safely predict that every effort will be msdc t: ranch It successfully. A Growing Menace Reference has frequently been made In these columns to the growing danger of bureaucratic centralization. In this Province we are parti- cularly concerned with the effect of centraliza- tion on transportation and railway employment. A striking example is the centralization of all accounting departments of the Atlantic Region of the C. N. R. at Moncton. This change, long threatened, has been put through this week, rc- sulting in the removal of four local officials to Monctott, the transfer of others to other dc- partmctits, and the closing down of our ac- counting department here, making us more than ever subservient on Moncton in trans- portation matters. l In other sections of thc Maritimcs other disad- vantages are to he notcrl The IIaI/fax Chronicl: (Liberal) has all outspoken editorial on this subject, from which we quote: “Ccntralization gone rampant such as we have in Canada today can only be justified, if in- (lccrl it can be justified at all, on the grounds, of thc exigencies of war. On those grounds, and nmlc other, the people of thc Maritimes, in common with the people of the other provinces of Canada, have willingly accepted the measures which have l1ccn imposed. "Ccntralization of this sort runs cqunter to thc lcttcr and spirit of our constitution. The British North America Act recognizes as funds- mental the preservation of provincial autonomy in a large number of fields of activity. The Fathers of Confederation were amply aware of the problems of geography. They knew that remote control in local affairs could lead only to disaster." The Chronicle cites thc Rowell-Sirois report as recognizing this basic principle, and conced- ing as essential to sound government the pre- servation of the autonomy of the municipalities and the provinces within the framework of the federal system. It also quotes the Vancouver Sun (another Liberal paper) as denouncing the lack of understanding of local conditions on thc part of Ottawa authorities and declaring: "Agy movement which attempts to plan and administer Canada entirely from the centft. will founder on the physical size and on the In- dgpendent spirit of the Canadian people. If some of our Liberal representatives were as alert to this danger as the section of the Lib- eral prcss above quoted, there would be _more outspoken criticism in _Parliament. Until we have such champions in positions where they can speak and act effectively, there is little pro- spect oi arresting thc trcnd towards centraliza- tion, which threatens all our hardwon rights under Confederation. 1 p-EDIIURIAL NOIES- This is the sort of thing that aggravates one. An Armed Forces Air Letter from England mailed on December 31, was delivered in thc City February 9th, taking just 40 days to "fly" (P) to its destination! i U i U . It is noticeable that while both the Summer- ruz cutntmreroww GQAILBIAIS llotes By The Way Canadian troops here have given one popular Item to the programs 0f London dance halls. It Ls an eocentrlc mass-dance called "the Canadian Crawl." In whlch the danc- ers form a "crocodile" by each hold- lu"; the waist. of the dancer In front, and sway about the floor In a "fol-l low my leader" game to the rhy- thm of "Elmer's Tune " It 15 8811- orally perforemd towards the end of the evening .-Manchestcr Guardian. What do you do with your used razor-blades" demands a patriot. We use them. "I have strong objection to keeping a motor car In the same barn with oats," confesses a farmer. It goes against the grsIn-Jsondon Punch i I "Austerity meals" are now promIs-| ed and smart wives are urged to draw upon their culinary talents and‘ concoct “exciting dishes " Mother‘ says she can get qgite excited en-' side Town Council and the Summersidc Board‘ of Trade tool; cognizance of the serious situa- . IIOII rrualctl by the repcalctl brcalc down 0i thc‘ car lorry, the City Council and the CharlotIe-' town Board of Trade rcntaiticd dumb as oysters, apparently quite uncopcerned a 1K I? 1 Atletnpts to cheat the call-up by false health certificates is not confined to the City of Que- bec, as one would gather from the army sensa-. tion there. In Sydney, N.S., a business man was prosecuted and fined $500 with the alter- native of imprisonment, for attetnptitlg l0 ln- (lttcc two doctors to put his son in a lower cate- gory r119,“ that to which he was entitled. This is one reason why those called up should 1n every instance be made to face military panels instead of private practionccrs. * i U ll \\'e used to hear much about th: dfflmflllC comings and goings of the dictators; used t0 marvel at the way they held the initiative, rc- marks the Ottawa journal. But it is the demo- cratic leaders who are on the march now, who startle and stir the world's imagination and heart with their dramatic seizure of thc initia- tive. And the historic meetings in North settle French political difference; it was a ntoyc as well to organize and set in force an lrrcsls- l tible offensive; to declare 011cc and for all that l this struggle will not cease until the dictator- ship powers are on their knccs in unconditional surrender. a a =11 s1 Here is advice that patriotic Liberal M. P. M. Pouliot has to offer his respected chief in the matter of recruiting: “If Selective Service wishes to do good work let it begin in Ottawa and make, one after another, a tour of the dc- paremcrlts and burcaux. It will find it casy to recruit thcrc in a radius of two miles front Parliament Hill an army of vain and useless desk-sitters thc greater part of whom are of military age and in flourishing health and have been in warm hiding since the war began." Of course, thc Prime Minister could “Iour" far- ther and fare even better. 1s s- 111 u North Africa as Britain's political representa- tive, was very unhappy over the appointment of Rt. Hon. Oliver Stanley to the Colonial Of- fice. As long as Viscount Cranbourne was the Colonial Secrctarv it meant that Capt. Mac- Millian, as Under-Secretary, was the sole Min- ister for the department in the Commons, thus giving him considerable importance. When Stanley became the Colonial Secretary it meant that Capt_ MacMillan was little more than s brief carrier for his chief. Qipt. Mac- Millan is s great character. There is a touch of Ouida about his appearance but he has a de- vastating wit. He once said about a Prime Min- ister who shall be nameless: "He is like a mighty beech tree under whose branches nothing grows." On another occasion he said: “The only man who ever had a practical plan for Parliamentary Reform was Guy Fawkes.” He served in the Guards in the last war, when he was badly wounded, but also had been on the staff of the late Duke of Devonshire ‘at Rideau Hall when he married the daughter of the boss — Lady Dorothy Cavendish. s: n1 n1 11- Mr. Thomas Alva Edison, American inven- tor, born this date, 1847; his inventions include phonograph, megaphone, aerophonc, cinemato- graph, incandescent electric lamp, electric light, rnicrolasimeter, carbon telephone transmitter, multiplex telegraph system, electric pen, electric railways, a submarine torpedo; during Great War I he turned his attention to the invention of processes for making dyes, medicinal and other chemicals in the U. S. formerly exclusive- ly manufactured in Germany: “There is no sub- stitute for hard work . . . Everything comes to him who hustles while he waits . . . There is no expedient to which a man will not go to avoid the rcal labour of thinking . . Reason, justice and Equity never had weight enough on the face of the earth to govern the councils of men . . . We don't know one millioneth of one per cent about anything . . . Genius is one per cent inspiration and ninety-nine per cent perspiration . . . The English arc not an in- ventive people; they don‘: cat enough pie." Says “The Priiitcd Word"—Onc branch of the Government wants thc farmers in i943 to produce 28 per cent more hogs, nine per cent more cattle, 12 per cent more sheep, 29 per cent more eggs, six per cent more milk, and t1 per more potatoes. Another branch would draft all the young men from the farms, a similar branch would have young farm women join the auxiliary services, and still another branch is trying desperately to kccp prices from rising. It all adds up to food shortages, pre- sent and prospective. There is really no cure, but thc food industry the other wcck in Ottawa presented to nwmhcrs of thc Cabinet a proposal which might alleviate thc cvil. Ilnfortunatclv. the Prime Minister was not present; possibly for the reason that the food situation is here for thc duration, while the wife of the Presi- dent of the Uuitcrl Statcs would he in Mon- treal for only one cvcning. 'l‘l1.'1t lhcrc ls grave need for planning and co-nrdinatioll, cvcn an obtuse observe,- must concede. Africa and Turkey were more than something to to Captain Harold MacMillan, who has gone to-‘ ough trying to make a meat loaf with no meat. —HamIlton spectatma. One set of unhappy Individuals In this war against. the Axis gets nothing but brlckbnts from a1. sides. They are the censors. The war cor- responcents consider them as their sworn enemies, and the tales of their supposed ineptitude and stupidity are part of the legendary history of the war. But now and then the censors are able to score a victory which gets only a grudg- tlng acknowledgement In public, but nvhlch must g0 fur to compensate 1tlhem for the ungrateful nature of their task All accounts agree that: the Axis was kept guessing about the hlstorlc Roosevelt-Churchill‘ meeting and guessed wrong -asl usual. It guessed wrong about the place, about the participants and' about the results and In consequence broadcast wrong advance conclu-| slons which have been disproved by the facts. Considering that the conference Iasted for ten days, and that the coming and going of the participants consumed some more days, the Axls misinformation rep. resents a remarkable tribute to the Allied mnsorshlp. Conversely, the Axis spy service ls obviously not what It was cracked up to be,- New York Times After all, sincerity and a desire be fair and decent bring chelrl own reward, even In this world. We would rather have I-he reputation of being reasonably Iloncst In busi- ness than to possess wealth beyond the dreams af avarice. The reputa- tlon of a professional man, a manu- facturer. a merchant, an artisan Should be one of his greatest and most prized possessions. Money vanishes away, but the memories of fair dealing am} faithful ser- vices are like flowers which bloom In tlhe gardens of many hearts. Too often, for temporary gain, men do the mean and tricky thltlg. Then. they wonder why former patrons pass by on the other side. —SIlrlIng| News-Argus. - Anti-air - raid equipment that reached San Antonio, Texas, came mounted on skis. and Texan pride was wounded. The fellow who shin- ped It must have been that tourist. who used to come to these parts In, July with a toboggan and snowshoes; lashe" to the roof of his car. -_| Hamilton Spectator. Some Canadian newspapers stIIl are displaying considerable agita- tlon cwer the statement of a retired‘- prcfessor In the United States illati after the war the United States should "annex" Canada - to save, us from the Russians. There are fools In all countries. even In the so-calfed learned profvslon, and a silly statement even if made by a man wlt-h half the letters of the alphabet. tacked behind his name. 50 we refuse to become excited be- cause this erudite American thinks the Russians have Lhelr eye on‘ Can- ada and that the United States shoud take Ir first. Canadians In- tend to remain Canadians, do not propose to become citizens of either republic. But to be quite fair, th-re I; notthlng at all to Indlcata that elther of them would take us as a gIfL-debts and problems and every- lhlnk. They both have troubles of their own. so, when a learned gent takes his nose out of his maps and says this and that should be done, let us not take him too seriously. It Is of no more consequence than If a Canadian professor were to demand tlhe return to Canada of that awkward corner of Malne. - Ottaws Journal. mands that we have something to my bu that country. too. The Italian wllflllse could come very soon. What do we mean to do about It? Are we 801m! to make a separate peace with Mussolini? Are we going to accept. Peace with King vlcmr Emmanuel, Mussollnrs accomplice 1n the be. trayal of the llbertlcs of flay? This "Bwfillnpvr nrofoundlv hopes ("that America will commit ncltltcr of 1= neznlnst sane nolitlcs and decent morals. -Chlcngo Sun. We should In the lust to suggest that laymen should Interefere In military strategy; become back-seal: drivers for thc generals. On the other hand, those wfhn hold that no laymen can fXlSSlIJlY to compet- ent to suggest anything about war- maklng are hoidlrtg nonsense. ‘Ltlovd George, who had to flzht to com- pet the Admiralty to adopt; the con- voy system- Jelllcoe thnurht the submarine cnmnaltzn would succeed- nnd Clemenceau. who ke-nt a ntrlct watch over generals like Petaln. had a different Idea: Clemenceau so‘ much so that he once remarkedz, ‘This war Is too serious to be left to the generals." Llncolnb troubles with his generals are now classlc. —mtawa Journal. AI the bcglnnln: of Ifhe Fall Ierm1 In the public schools of Llndsnv,‘ Blble Instruction was inaugurated. Each Wednesday morning members of lhe Protestant clervy clvn a Imlf-' hour of Instruction from this the greatness of all books. This surely ls n move In the rlcht dlrmlon but It Is to be hoped that parents will not think that they have no further pesnonslblllty now In tthe rellrzlotss tralnfnsz of their children. Some parent-s ma» ronson thus. "t rr-nd mv chlldrnn Io Sun-h.- school. Thv-v the Soviet Unlon or our nelghborlng‘ PUBLIC comm w; bl oumamncmauuunn - as M 1 mun- ouowluo m’ rumor: unwup ssumn Rn- m his Intsrutlnl’ 10M" In Tuesday's Glmnlfan hssdsd "Apples, Pears. std". w. M0500" zle made no reference to the mm! neglcted apple orqhilfis 71° b! m!“ throughout ‘the Isalpi. Mlélyrlaw ' blame our armers or no I more fruit, not resllzlnl thc t-hI fro small orchards does not.’ iii’? yields commensursta with fill labor. . As In most lines of agrlcultun. condltlons have chansed IP95“? during the past tvm generations- Just as In manuf . - abls fruit growing calls for mus production, and so It Is that we ave the Annapolis Valley In Novl Scotla, the Niagara Peninsula In Ontario, and the Okanulran. Root- enay 11.1111 OlhlLIwack Valley! In Brltlsh Columbia, not to cntlon the vast fruit growing nus In Cullfornfa. In those districts. lnflss, pears and other fruits are grown on the most sclentlflc lines, packed. shipped and sold by oo-operatlve methods and yield enormous ro- venues w the farmers. Just. as Mr. McKenzle states, howevc , It fl doubtful whether. apples, and a number of other fruits grown In Prince Edward Island can be equall- ed In appearance, text/lire or flav- our anywhere In North America. A full gamut of our frults consist of apples, pears, damsons, plums, dharrles, strswberrfss, rsmberrles, goosebcrrlea, white, red and blink currants, blueberries, wlld and culti- vated hlgh bush blueberries and cranberries. also a few others of lesser Importance. Protection from the wlnds referred to by Mr. Mc- Kenzie Is an easy mutter to over- come for our spruce trees 1mm rapidly. In strawberries alone, In which we particularly excel In peace time there Is a possibility of market- Ing I0.000 tons annually, the pro- duct of 4000 acres st a grass ylsld of $300 per more. sum Immense profits are procursbls from this Industry that the question may be asked why It Is beIng neglected. A Bimlar story could also be told of vegetables where we have I2 hardy “X195 In which we excel In quality and quantity per acre. Un- der circumstances such as this there Ls a temptation to blame Someone. IucIudIng the funnel-s. The fault lles. however, entirely In the fact that so far as selling fruit, qlther In the raw or process. ed. this Island ls practically for- bldden by the Domlnlon Govern- ment. We have no means of ship- ping except by rall and then only I0 the United States and Canada. The American tarlff Is prohfbltory and Canada is producing to a our- plus. Moreover the cost of freight- Inlz our produce lnm Quebec and 011111"!!! l5 1mm 3 tn 61 times that ' 0' Shipping to Eurapeund to hot. couhtrles where the demand Is 0on- paptt because they cannot grow our flll . ‘Nuff sed’. Did meone mention the Charotbetown Railway wharf? 1 I am. Blr. etc. HJLS. HEMMING. F. D. R. In ‘Darkest Africa’ (Ottawa Journal) O11 his way nome by aIr from Casablanca President. Roosevelt stopped of! In Liberia. a curious lIt- tle country with a 350-mfle danger- ous coast on thc under side of the great African hump and close to he equator-a country where there were cannfbuls In the back tow-n- shlps up to a few veal-s ago and where, even Into this cent , iwomen of forest tribes suited ther attire to the equatorial cllmato by going about naked. LI erIa has so many oddltles that ;one hopes the took the Prcsldcnt on o. sI ht-sce n; wur. He would have en o ed. for example, the mun. keys wt h brilliant. orange-red Eh Ell-S. the pyg-mv hippopotamus, l the antelope the size of a goat, and Istrlped like a zebra. The great tur- ‘tles would have Interested him, and ‘the crocodiles. the cobru, pythons and other ton-try nous ‘snakes, sIx-Inch soorp ops, all the strange and profuse tropical flora (ground and tree orchids) and fauna developed by s hot climate and s ralnfal of 100 to 150 Inches per YES-l‘ The Allied approach to Italy cMn- l mcfl§§§,,'_‘“,'§,d““‘°””'°' now wud there are great for- ests of filo-foot trees. One uninhab- Ited jungle extends over 8.000 square miles. 'I'here Is rubber, of course. 32 klnds of lt-flg trees, too, and cocoa- nut palms, and an Inflnlte variety of plant life not familiar to a res- ident even of Waahlnmn And of course, the sidcnt. was Interested In the historical assocla- tlons of Lfberla. It; real ‘minder was a whlte Amerlcan named Jeh- udl Ashman. who turned up on that part of the Afrlcan coast, back In B22 He brought In several thou- sand Negroes from America. Thom 1M7 Llbcrla has had an Indepond- out, existent: , If sometimes more than a little precarlous. It, Ia s Negro republlc (the only other one In the world I; Hultf In the West Indies), and Its relatlons to the Unl- ted States are somewhat those of a very small broth Bl’. m- Bo what with om thing and un- my; other we Imagine Mr. Roosevelt sn- joyed l-tfmsclf grestlv In this short vIsIt. And what wIIl stick longest In his memory mav be the famous tropical mosquitoes. 'l"hey must be ls blg as sparrows In Llbcrla. and I presldent Is nothing to than: but another Iuaclmm meal. What a war thIs Is for loft-In: us interested In Icography. A Bit 0f Canada (Monctmt ‘Iranscrl ) The fact that part of gonads II located In Scotland has rc- cslled by a recent. decree dcclarln a portion of an Ottawa hospital to be territory of The Netherlands. In reparation for the blrth of a n- lal heIr to the throne o country. ‘The Netherlands’ clslrn to sovereign rIghta over a few square 1 u ds f Oanad was umporary, but ballad: stlll Is ZHIIQ nomlnsl owner of the soil gruntcd to a component port are 5'30 recnlvw- 311.1,. "upon.- p, the oocaslon of his vfslt of‘ Inspec- the school. 511ml}: this is n11 that tlon this week. Dr. Currelly should 111 required. -Llndsny Post. Iknow. ls he u recosnlud u one of aAt Yfou Kori-m To Carry 0n Your War Work? Every Canadian citizen has spartto do lnwinnlng this“survival"war against the international bandits ' 1T who are trying to kill freedom and enslave man- kind. Your was work is your most Important lob. I The Bank of Montreal encourages war-time saving. rather than borrowing, but there are cases where a timely bank loan not only saves money for the borrower but helps him to do a better iob for "VICTORY. vat" \ x4 t-Ss 1% If you find it necessary to borrow money In order to perform your highest duty as a Canadian Cllllfifl -whatever that duty may bc-pleasc fcel frccito discuss your financial needs in confidence with the manager of our nearest branch. We have hundreds of branches throughout Canada. RINK OI‘ MONTREBL "A stun: when: smau. ACCOUNTS an: wzscoun" Modern, " , ’ ced Banking Service . . . . . . the Outcome of 125 Years’ Succfllfill oPflllhl Charlottetown Branch: A. I. B. BELCHER, Manager CERTIFICATES BATTLE SLEEP somewhere, 0 sun, 50ml’- 0011191‘ there must be Thou vlsllest, wnere strap Quletly. still, the waves so out W sc Prom LITE Breen IYIHBES 0! '1 Pu‘ toral land. down the Dgep In the roof-trees stand. me brown ghgep graze alonu me And thyfou u thed apple-mush! above e sun The bees‘ hum sounds no fnlnwl‘ than the spray. Then throush uncountcd hours de- ‘lb off»? fiudfii twfllshl’: elm- And, Just la nIaht about the moon rows RWY. One tiiall leans westward to the fadlng rose. Glvsr 01m dreams, ‘O thou Wm! scs cuss Ibrever movlnl throulh “l6 5°" To nlhnelélfllfld IIds I110 “WW3 vIsIon bring. m‘ And let. some soul so seaward w Iihlb All]! —-Edlt.h Wharton- d more Since the made morally pgrtlng a e t 88°- mant In gclizltlatted was flit- the purpose v1 l"?- d a‘ flctgizlitddfatilasasggtt reaar as I ~ ma‘ history of mu bIt of Canflda overseas dates from I021 when Klnk Jams; I presented the recently ac- alps-ed lands of Nova owns. which en Included what now Is New Brunswlck, m BI: Wllllam Alexan- der. Land In the new countrv W” granted w n party of Bwls and A oondltlon of the irant was that thfiv d take an nth of loyalty to the , Tad , the oath should b0 taken on tho soII whIch they would swear to hold 101' "l" m“ but there were no re msentstlves of nu mlesty In t-hl W" "I, ‘l? world w whom n1. duty of Mm n - cal-In: the oath could be wlfulled- Klng ma have wanted to Q Q1 loyalty DQIOI‘! noun th n- ts an Ac of Psrllam sued’ declaring part of wtut the parade ground of Eqln- fl 11“ lf-sslfésliaN-‘ilitst. W!" ‘pouch-Mad aghast tshpoggenduglggra: m‘ m. thusoivss fulnled but never Ina been mwllfli- m of a historic slte In Nova Scotla and thus of thc the Ac and so that ‘lmsllhl.’ ° o Q9 f Ia known nclthcr Nova “with... Domlnlort svcr has 11mm to profit by the "m"; shlp. re are no “no trespasslns on the um. and as there n“ no rmancnt residents domlclled on d plrldg ground there Is n0 dppdrtunlt to collect a federal In- come m n that nlrt of the Dom- pIon. ~ At Heavy Cost (Ilnanclai Post) It Is sheer nonsense to consider orchard-bloom the I We have In stock and cars arrlvlng of OLD SYDNEY SCREENED. BRAS 0'0!!- SULLIVAN, ALBION NUT and INVER- NESS. Also WALSH COBBLES and AM- cars, restaurants or llvlng rooms. T Is strike cost Canada 100,000 tons of steel, sufflctent to build 75,000 fleld guns. supposing General McNaughton led the Canadians Into actlon and lost that much the McIntosh Art fiallrr" at Unlverslty of Western Onttulo on im It was hlzll nrnlso that Dr. C. T. "urrrllv. rllrrotnr of lb» Rovnl "ntnfo Museum a‘ Toronto. be- ‘nworl uprv“ Hw- "W" Parrln W11- u-tm- Mlvvynflgl A,» ll/lyL/nflm m"; the great authorltles of the conun- ent on sudh matters. The [Fain fact; are that the Clty of London today has In these two buildings two o.’ the finest. art gallcrles from the uandpolnt of both usefulness Free Press. 0mm; on an all-out war basis. so long as the setters] public con- Ilnue; tmnerturbec over dancers at our very door. For over s week we had H.000 steel workers Idle and yet after the fIrst day or two. one ‘ho 1nd beauty In Canada. -f.onCon hardly hoard the strike mentloned In "cum conversation mm armament, There would have been consternation from one and of th country to the other. The loss wuul lhavc cute down In our history books as a great defeat. , But the unarousec: general public failed to sec the connectlon be- tween raw steel and guns ‘just. as It, falled to see the connect on oe- tween the recent Windsor strlkc whlch halted production of trucks carriers, and armored cars an th- fighting In Africa and Russia. It Is golnz I20 be both very ex- pansive and very risky to leave this rousing of pubIIc opInIon to s great and bloody battle In whlch Cana- dtnru: wIIl be In the van. Ex nslvc In precious Irood and upment, risky because Ir thlngs go wrong, there mav be no second chance, unless we are wakened from our complacency at once. The trucks we might have had had- there been l, no Windsor strike, and the guns and tanks there might have been had there been no steel strlke, wIIl not be there to flll the gaps. far In ovqr three ears of war we have concentrate almost cntlrslv In moblllzlnp our phvalcsl strength. We have done far too llttle In moblllzlng our moral strength. .i_.__._______ JUDGE ROPK"R'I'cE. LAIDLAW TORONTO. Ont. Feb. knob-rt E. Laldlaw. 8.0., ssslstant region- KIIIN “if PILLS ERICAN HARD NUT. Lowest prices, and quick deliveries, special attention to C.0.D. orders. W. D. GILLIS o» CO. PHONE I76 al counsel, central region, 0111111111311 Natlonal Railways ‘IUPUIIW. tun. 1e- celvcd official nutlllcnllull lrvlll Hon. Louis StLaurent. Minister vl Justice. that. m has been apwllllfd a Judge on the appeal 1111111511111 of the Supreme Court of Ontario. suc- dIn Mr. Justice Middleton wlw retlred from the bend»; _ ATTENTION SWINE BIIEEIIERS NOW um» time 1.1 1m"! lnluss . PIG WORM By llslnl the most c-Ilevll" remedy on the market. Macs Pig-Worm Tonic Powder It wIIl thoroughly sbollsh all of worms and Imprfl" tho health of your herd. Don't delay. Order bv nhorw °' null. All orders promptly II‘ tended to. GASSY STOMACIIS BELIEVED Ivory person who ls trouhlfll with n: In the lwmach If": bowels should get s but"! °,, “Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture and sec how qulcklv It wIIl r6- lleve all dlltrcaslns II/ml" toms. I pnvsnh all had effects m": m; but It promotes the funroh ml sstlvltv of the 840"" I. against dl Iron and lmvfl" r o c stunt h- Pr!" 95° " ' bottle. Till‘. TWII MACS m Great Georse 81M‘ mu Orders 0111.11 PrvmP‘ Attcntlou