a - seas:- a it’ . or. t ti: i i °“ . w, '; ' 3. any "a". aha u ‘f fan‘ s. 4 “l ..e...a-a-nasuuw~a..' . ...,....'.,.i... ._L.'J-‘. 2-’ "jijba-‘Qlh-QAQ --..-_. ‘ Q-OO~OOQOQOOOO0§RQxg;;“ . F- "arr mini Sf)! l (‘FYI ratl‘ L. tliui non spot c Dlvf u( Ir lleti a i GAIIARLlIT-TETUVIII "Glllllllllll I ' Dally (Inlllllll In Ill" he ll t. ueuc-ou. w. Cheater a. Mel-m Vlcoz-Preallleut. '.I. l. Darnell. IJ-l- uim ma Mgr-uh.- 0 p - - Editor. mu sunsoarsnonpipgrlls _ h on‘ "' w ’°"~"" “m ' "MP1: lama " '°" '°" ' ‘ “m” “mflciinnu ‘ma us. l d l milled u m.” “when, i nA-uilrlnfiurolu of ‘The Strongest Memory l: ‘Weaker than "- the Weakest Ink. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY. 10.1940- Canada’; War Financing g iii-i As will be noted in today's advertising col- umns, the Dominion Government 1S P1111730"! t0 launch its first \\’ar Loan, the purpose being to provide money to carry on the war not only on the battlefields, but “all along the Economic Front." The importance of this latter ‘objective cannot too strongly be emphasized. All the re- sources of the nation are required, and Canada 5 financial commitments are such. as to make ab- solutely essential the success of its war loans- Eygn before the war began, Canada was a long way from a balanced budget. 'l‘he sub- sequent situation is thus summed up in the year-end review of the Montreal Gazette: _ At the emergency session of Parliament in September the federal revenues for the current fiscal year were estimated at $495,000,000 ,0" the pre-war taxation basis. Total_ expenditures were placed at $651,000,000 including $100,000,- 000 of appropriations on war account but not including further losses on wheat marketing arid two items of capitalized defense expenditures. Hence, there was a prospective _deficit of at least $150,000,000. Certain special war taxes were imposed including a. 20 per cent surtax on income, thc expected proceeds of these lcvics being $21,000,000 up to the end of next Marclt The new excise profits tax, applicable to earnings for the year 1940 and fiscal periods titling after March 3t, 1940, is of unknown productivity but the other fiscal changes are expected to produce $040000“) in i full Y“? There is reason to believe that the actual revenue for the year will exceed the estimated totals and may reach $540,000,000 while the expenditures will drop behind the September estimate, pos- sibly to as low as $t'i_’t),000,000. At the 581116 time the Liovcrtimcut is committed t0 a Coni- monivealth air-training project which will cost the Dominion some $48,000,000 up to next September in addition to a war outlay already estimated at $.$l5.000.000. and the total com- mitment nntlcr the air-training project will run tip to $350,000,000 ‘The present position is that Oll war account alone the country will be spend- ing something like one ntillion dollars per day, and theGovcriiinent had already assumed very hcavy peace time obligations. 'l'licrc is a limit to the amount that can be raised through taxation, parfictilarly when busi- ness is functioning tuidcr the restrictive in- fluence of war boards and control agencies of one kind and aiiothcr established by the Gov- ernment. llcuce the importance of the \\"ar Loan. The Finance Minister has already bor- rowed $200,000,000 from the Canadian cliar— tcred banks and has repatriated $91,000,000 of registered stocks sold in Great Britain, this to facilitate llritish purchases in Canada. Supplies From Australia Like Canada, Australia will send large vol- times of supplies to Lircat Britain during the war, Contracts have just been made for pur- chases totalling $350,000,000. Over one half of this amount is for wool alone—wool being to Australia what wheat is to Canada. _Of Wheat and Flour, Britain is purchasing $28,000,000 from rhistralia, a mere fraction of the amount which will be obtained from this country. And while we shall provide large supplies of bacon, Australia will provide I. great quantity of butter, no less than $47,000,000 worth, but only about $4,000,000 of cheese. Of lam-b, beef and veal, Australia will send Britain $38,000,000 worth, and she will also send $19,000,000 worth of sugar. While minerals hold an important place in the supplies from Canada, they are a small item in Britain's imports from Australia. They include $10,500,000 \VOl‘ll'l of lead and $4,000,000 worth of zinc and copper. If the supplies all reach Britain, they will en- lure a favorable balance of trade of $53,000,000, which will help to meet Australian payments total $1o3.000,ooo_ Australia will have to find ii way of financing the balance, and also the pur- chase of military stipplics in Britain. Impressive Figures The sea-power of Britain and France, so im- portant in achieving victory in the present struggle, is the stilijcct of an impressive article by Sir Archibald llurd iii the Montreal Star. Here are some of the figures quoted: Vl/hen the war began, the British advantage in capital ships (battleships and battle cruisers), aircraft carriers, cruisers and destroyers was overwhelming: Capital ships: Ili-itish i5. French 7, German Aircraft carriers: British 6, French f, German none. llcav_v cruisers: British i5, French 7, Ger-I "Illilll 2. (lthcr cruisers: British 43, French t2, Ger- nizui 6. Anti-aircraft ships: British 6, French none. German none. Destroyers: British 17o, French 59, Germar 22. Submarines: British 57. Frenrlt 78. G€ffllflt' 6 ‘Jl Torpedo boats: British none, French I2, G91‘ man i2. hlotor torpedo boats: British 20. FTPHCh l. (irrmitii .30. ln tilcn-of-ivai- all 37"] i-lassrs the British French nzivics have a superiority’ of about six to one over Germany, which explains why there have been no engagements such as took place in the war of 1914-18. The enemy's battleships and cruisers, which are hiding in Kiel and Wil- helmshaven, are not likely to risk action in the North Sea and a state of inactivity, apart from restricted movements in the Baltic, is not cal- culated to raise the morale of officers or men. Theonly surface craft which have emerged so far are the “pocket battleships" Deutschlaiid and" Admiral Graf Spee- and one cruiser. The career of the Graf Spee is ignoniiiiiously ended and the careers of the others will be brought to an end in due course, as were the careers of the German raiders in the last war. The position in regard to merchant shipping is as satisfactory. There is no purpose in com- paring in detail the tonnage, on the one hand under_the British and French flags, and on the other, under that of Germany, because on the outbreak of war the merchant ships of the enemy which were at sea sought safety in neutral ports rather than risk the voyage to a German port. Many of them have already been captured, and the remainder will share the same fate or will be sold to neutrals in thi- harbors in which they are hiding. The German hopes rest in the submarine and the mine, the latter laid by stibinariues 0r drop- ped by parachutes from airplanes. These tactics met with considerable initial success, bttt have fallen far short of the enemy's aulicipations. = tDHURlAL notes’ League of Nations founded this date 1920. 1F It‘ Ill ¥ “Penny Post" introduced this date I840, the originator being Sir Rowland Hill, in early life a successful schoolmaster; invented rotary print- ing press for ncwspztpcrs, and atlhcsive postage stamps. w m 4- w Responsibility for rearing children is more than ever the problem of tlic age. Boys and girls may take puppy love seriously, but par- ents and child experts llllllh it uicrcly a trausicn: thing. A study presciitcd bcfore the Oklahoma Academy of Science analyzed twenty-four child behavior problems. Child training experts and parents had been asked to rate each problem according t0 its iiiiport.'iiice as a factor in child training. All the parcuts and experts rated puppy love as the least important. The par- cnts placed these five problems in front rank: I, Stealing. 2. Iliitruthftiliicss. 3. Cheating. 4. Cructl_v. 5. Disobedience. The experts listed: I. Depression. 2. Yiisticialilcucss. 3. Fear. 4. Suspicion. 5. Cruelty. lb is 1|‘ i‘ _Here is a sample how they are mndtlling things at Ottawa as rcportctl by the correspond- Cflt 0f the Montreal (jazcttc:—“.‘\ll telegraphic records for short distance lrgitistnissiun “we broken hcre last night. A tclcgrzim was sciit from the second floor of the liast Block to the first [floor of the saute government lJllllEllll", all the way from the office of the Priuic Mitiistber to the office of the Finance hliuistcr. Prime Miti- istcr Mackenzie King had arranged to have a congratulatory message sent to llon. ].L. Rah. ston in recognition of the 1:ittcr's being accord- ed an acclamatioii in thc Commons seat‘ of Prince, Prince lidiviirtl lsltlllfl. and apparently the Prime illiniIr/rfr svufj‘ tlh/ not [mow 11mg l/ie Finance illiuilrlrr lititl [mun n! liir flask all day 3ier/rrday. . i: is a- v There are uniformed boys left behind when their regiments sziilctl for rivcrsczts, and who are uoiv waiting for the clay that will qualify them to jOlll their comrades-their ncxt birthday. A considerable number of young soldiers had to be excluded from the overseas divisions because they were under age. 'lioda_t' thcy are carrying on their training at the depots that have been established for the eventual enlistment of fu- ture overseas ttiits, and when the time comes they will take their place with the Canadian for- ces in England, or possibly in France. The rem- nants of soiue of the regiments have permanent depots ‘but those having none will come under a special organization established for the pur- pose_ i i ll i! The British Secretary of Mines, acting tinder orders of the British Ministry of 'l'ratisport, has prohibited the use of kerosene or paraffin either alone or mixed with alcohol or petrol, in hicles excepted and then only when engaged on farm labor. The London 'l‘imcs thus explains the order: The order has been made because, since the introduction of the motor fuel ration- ing scheme, considerable quantities of kerosene (including mineral vaporizing oil) have been used either alone or mixed with motor spirit or road diesel oil as a fuel iii motor vehicles. Kero- sene is mainly used for domestic cooking, lieat- ing, and lighting, and as a fuel for certain types of agricultural tractors and engines, The“ “e substantial stocks in the country, hitt it is essen- tial in the national interest that they should be used only for such purposes. i- is it n- While our Provincial Government still lags behind, Bermuda's Agriculture Board proposes to send a rcprcsctitative to investigate the market for packaged vegetables in Iiaslcrn Ca- nada and the New York art-a, lircction of a can» ziiiig plant is under consideration by the board, which hopes to scll packaged potatoes and onions in the hfaritimcs, the hltmtrcal are; and the United States. The island cxpccts large crops of both products this winter. A further ob- jective of the canning plant proposal is to make that British colony more sclf-stifficient, enab- ling it to stibstitttte its own tinucil goods for some of what it now imports. .-\ meeting consid- ering advisability of the caiincry proposal was told that Bermuda bought $180,000 worth of goods from Canada and $700,000 worth from the United States in September and October. Sir Stanley Spurling, member of the Legisla- ture and of the Trade Development Board, said the Home authorities had atlvisctl the island Government to prepare for a long ivar and every effort should be made to have Bermudaris eat local produce to conserve funds. If these ef- forts failctl, "then restrictive mcasttrcs must be imposed on the <;|lt~ of importt-il products by local grocers." it trzts slalrtl iu a iucmoraudtitn from the Agriculture Board. ~ \ any motor vehicles in Britain, agricultural ve- ~ NOTES BY TllE WAY Maybe Buuhnl are dolng that lnvlalon of Finland on the five- year-plan. -- Brandon Sun. The Bovlel ls peeved at the United States. aneerlng at its neutrality. They forget the neu- lmllty exhibition they put on 1n Poland and the Baltic states.- Kltehener Record. Copenhagen reports rumors that the Soviet dictator, Josef Stalin. 1s planning a “purge" of Bled army commanders because Russian arms have failed to achieve a rapid con- quest of Finland. Such minors would be incredible, were lt not for the fact that Stalin carried out just such a process months ago. It la typclal of the despot to beleve that men can be made courageous by terror. - New York Post. Herr Hlller has a solution for the problem of the peace of the world. He outlines it ln Meln Kampf. m; follows: "Whoever really desires in his heart the victory of the pacifist conception of the world must devote himself by every means to the conquest of the world by the Germans .....Tlie pacifist humanitarian idea will perhaps be excellent when the man suterior to all others shall have so con- quered and subjugated the world that he becomes its sole master." Those who are continually earning about the Allied War n‘m; should read Meln Kampf, -_ Victoria Col- onlst. "Neutral" Russia. ls fighting the Allies in the Black Sea and being fought by British planes in the Baltic. "Neutral" Italy is thrraten- lng to intervene lf Russia pushes south_ The “neulral" Americas led by the Unit/ed States are consder- lng all sorts of measures to as~st the first neutral State to be invad- ed. It is a widening WM‘, but al- ways the same war. irivbo:l,\"s war so unpredictable that \vh"n Presi- dent Rflosevelt announces that American foreign policy 1s "on n twenty-four hour bass" he ls mere- ly “Dressing the limit of certainty in a World that lives by the cla_\"._ New York Times. What la the ultimate objective which the Allies should seek in the P1050115 W31‘. a war which they did not desire, which ivas forced upon them. but. which they n"w propose to carry on to the end? Is ll lilt- ler that ls the enemy? Is it not, quite simply, that powerful and ferocious Prussian organization of which lllie Nazi party is only the symbol, or. going further, Gsrm~n unlty,—ln the la=t analysis, slnipy Germanlm? Hitler ls not an rx- ception ln German history He ls just a number ln the s""l€5 of Williams ad Blrmarcks. . If be ls more noisy more dvramic, mare personal even than h‘s lllvstriotis piedeoess n . ho resembles them in his brutality; he stvpa 5's them, above all, by the sham ‘les-ness end the facility with which, at an in- terval of a fe-w hours and unrer the most, pretexts, he viehtes hls word and his signature. The F c‘irer out of the way. another Cutreelor might succeed him and R"l. in such a way that. Ger-many would remain a menace to Europe, even lf Prus- sian militarism took another form than Nazism. In Sctember Mr. Anthony Eden sifd: "F ve time: in B0 years the lancer: 0' Gemuiny have proceeded. with the smallest pretext, to wage aggressive wars." That. la exact, and It proves that the real enemy ls nether I-Ytler nor Hitler-ism nor Nnziism. -L'Ac- tlon Catliolique (Qut-bec.) It ls untrue that. the alleged "ln- justice" of Versailles drove the Cer- rnan people to revolt Versallles was. on the whole, a just treaty de=plte many imperfections. It justly deprived Germany of regime inhabited by no Germans. It justly exacted reparations for damage done ln a war of German aggression-it is true that the sums first demand- ed were unreasonable, but they were progressively reduwd and Germany borrowed the money to pay them-she paid about as long u the borrowed money 1a.sted.... 'Ilhe lknltatlon of German anna- ments (Germany was never dis- armed) and the occupation of the Rhlneland were altogether just be- cause they were the only guaran- tees of a la=tlng peace. They were just. to the German people, 1n so for as they would-had they been upheld—have saved them frcm be- ing herded into another war by ambitious rulers, They were less than just to the liberated nations who had no defence autrnst a re- armed Gemsany. ‘Ilhe "injustice" of Versailles la a legend, created bv German Nationalist and National Socialist. propaganda, a legend which did not. flnd Renfil-ll accep- tance even amen: Germans until moat oif the clause: in the treaty which had been denotinoed as un- just had become inoperative and the hatred and bitterness engen- dered by the war were dying a na- tural death. - The Nineteenth Century and After (London). A sometimes discussed by Parlslans ls whether they are likely in this war to make further acquaintance with Germ"ny‘s Big Bertha. ‘Phat monster. wh‘ch was as long as a ten-"tory building is high, caused bewilderment. by slici- ling Paris ln 1918. So incredible dld lt seem that the projectiles could eemform any gun, consider- lng what the range would hav~ to be. that the first belief was that bombs were being rlr0p“cd from ‘planse flying trio hfizh to be ob- served. According to Colonel T. A. Lowe, DS.O., M.C., ln the current "Men Only." the Gennrns had seven Big Berthas. but 11° 5'11"‘! soldier ever saw iinv of them. They were cut to segments before we entered Gemianv. and though blue-prints of their design were discovered. the Germans alone possess the secret. of the cm-rtlte formula for sending n. shell 80 miles. Within 30 hovrs of the first. bombardment of Paris the B‘: Berlhns’ position had bwn located from the alt and photographed, . vuauc roRuM ‘thla ale-I.l: IIII h: the rllanulol by ail-napalm“ al quntlala a! Inflated. The “as fashion: Olanllal laaa ant no; a aarrollromlanll. PBOIIIBITION ENFORCEMENT Bin-When a man Michal hi! 80th birthday and hu n0?- Wflllfill anything for publication, he ll not likely to wlah his name to ‘M00616 publle property. But 1 know that "O16 Soak" had much 9f NINE 111 what. he wrote. "Prohieltlonlst, in trying to put. the blame all on lax enforcement of the Act. forflsl! m“ he himself has a responsible PM?» 1n the temperance cause. His writ- lng indicates that. he shlrke that duty. His Bible says: Pay the vows. Better that thou hadkt. not vowed. than to vow and not pay. "Traveller's" experience and mine do not correspond. I never was a commercial traveller, but. I have been ln all the Provinces of CHIP, ado except Nova Sootla, more than once; sometimes for a. week, ln one case three months. in another case nlne months. I was nlne months ln Vancouver, and was curious enough to go down Main Street, Chinatown. ln company. I saw a "dope friend" stagger out. o." a door, properly "shot up." But, I was all over Vancouver, walking. also by street ear and auto. I was also in North Vancouver and New Westminster, and can truthfully say that I never sew a man drink- ing. or having a drink on or near him. I know not whv: but I dld not try to flnd it. But. in my own home clty, Charlottetown. I turned a corner lnto a group of flve young chaps. eaeh’ln a different state of intoxication. That. was only last. year. 1939, ln Prohibition P E. I.l Mr. C. N. Murray has out the cause of failure of Prohibition on the rleht shoulders. but ln a way that suggests to mind the young mun who only lacked one thlniz. Herc is the mlsslniz link: let R-‘ishtenusness begin at the House rrf (and. If that could harmen, the W.I‘..T.U. the 5.0.1‘. and the F.'I‘.S of the Churches wou‘d chance from nollthal nartvlsm to never again voting for fh» man whQ fools them once on a Prohibition nledrze. Let them lnslst on that oledee ("n Nomination Dav. Q7139 the politicians realized It. ‘was the onlv wav to izet the Temperance vote. hvnoerlsv would die out. It cannot be achieved whi‘; party m- "tics rules the churches. It w“ done rec°ntlv ln n small place. but it can't. be done by nartv mums Write lb" Message. Make ff, nlnln SD that h" may rim that fcadqtvh! v any so; m; V ANOTHER. TRAVELLHL ULTRA VIBES SlI‘,—-—'I'l10 noted Bank Act-m;- Aberhart-Jies b"en dec‘ared ultra vii-es by the Sllpcrlnr (Supremei Ctlilrt of Album, hemp‘;- 1; e..- CfPflCllES on Dominion jurisdiction. I have not yet the d-wis of um decrsion. except to are eieent that it lntcrferes with Ilhg Fedora] ri-m to control of certnln deflried mag- ter: of flnvnrlal payments and col. lemons. Hrw fer it w'll impede eftv exolotrs ln legalizing that which ls ncw outlawed, and twist- lnir out of countenance t/h- world “dd? systems of correct business methods. I dare not predict. but lt will be safe to pit lt. against the recent wild proposals as a barrier over which, even if wllkng. our local legislature will find it unsafe to vault. Our Supreme Court, is ln- clined to be wposed to leizlrlatlcn stibversive of the rights of the sub- lects. and jealous of any b‘d_v, legislative or otherwise, trampling down the guarantee of elv‘l rights and liberties. Nor ls lt eredlb‘e that an intelligent legislature will stoop to white-wash a corpcratlon when lIRS already lgncred their own statutes. Ilf we have an Act of In- corporation the Legislature gave ft to Us for e Wipe-e. and that. pur- pose most certainly ls not a defl- ance of almost everv pr~espt ft contains And yet that la our pres- ent. predlcaimenb Mr. John Anderson boasts of the number of acts which he has fath- ered, nnd their suggestive effeencyi Even so, they are no more perfect. no more complete in accuracy of their provisions than our present. City Act. Of what use lf they are not regarded by those for whom intended. and searce‘y even studied by those for whose dlrecfion and g-wdance lt is made lnto law? He tells us the proposed new civic Management Act could be projected in a couple at sentenc- cs. ‘But it. wants more than this. There should be some clauses ln it to pennllu dflsobedlence, something (.0 do away with that recklemcss that. has for so many years been the centre M Bfflvlw in W!’ c“? legislative observance. Above all things it should make provision enabling any taXPlYfl. without a long elrciunloeutory legal process to compell our ooun- cils and clvle administrators w convply wltih its precepts. I, am sir, etc. IIELIEVER IN LAW. SANITY OR ITS OPPOSITE Slr:-— Mariv years m‘ Ma?" wavllnnd and a business Council without a ccstlv research dlsi-overgd obsoleti- tax defaultn similar ln la proportion to the then revenue to the amount alleged ln the 1W0!"- audit. There was about. 810.000 ll"- mild vnxes on a revenue of ‘M000. wh‘ch was euulvatent lri m-rrentatze to the lndeflnlte clelms of the special audit. As practical men they dld 1109- nsk outside heln to rake un decay“! ikeletons. nor dld they employ 9X- pertstc izo over the accounts. Ar- NISlOIIIEO to business practice in their own eountfntz houses they used their own eves. and without waste of clvlc funds applied the sensible mercantile cure. On motion of Simon W. Crabbe. Chairman of Finance Committee. I "resolution of ncll" was m wine this l10.000. uncollecuble sin-ears from the Cit . And r0. by "red in " strokes. they saved the expense of chasing what- could not be ca-iutht, with a saving of another $10,000. or more, plus with the result. that French artTl- lery flre from much nearer the target compelled the German gun- ners to remove the guns. The Germans are great fllln-W0r5hlp- pers, and Gen-many still sticks to the barbaric ideology of Thor, the J“ yaw i FROM "AT LAST" l when 0n my dnv of Life the ntzht la‘ l And 1n "r4328 ' ‘xx-grad: from unsunned a . I bee: fai- voices out of darkness calling My feet to path; tmknown. ‘niou who has made my home of. life s0 pleasant. Leave not its tenant. when its Wfllll ecay: I O Love Divine, 0 Helper ever- present. ‘ Be Thou my strength and stay! Be near when all else is from ms‘ nut-m, sky, iiémes picture-S, days o! shade‘ and shine. I And klntdly faces to my own 11D- 8 The love which answers mine. I have but Thee, my Fat-her! let Thy so Be with me then to comfort and uD-i No gate 01' arl. no branch of 081m I mer . Nor street. of shining gold. reckoned. And both (ifprglveri through Thy Il-ll 11g KTBCE—— I flnd myself by hands ffllflllfl beckoned Unto my fitting place. . . . __.wiuttler. a§§%f§"i;;k4 interest from then until now. which would have resulted had they i01- lowed the unsystemattc methods of BY We have today several business houses doing as large, and some a larger business than that of 0111' City Council. We don't find the e with overcrowded offices and lllfh- lv paid officials dumping from $ - 000. to s15.000. into outside pockets to come in and tell them how to run their business. or how lo handle creditors real or imaginary. That is their business, they know fiow to do it. and they do it. And ll\ s is true, not. of the exceptional one, but o1 every large and almostgall the lesser merchants of the Province. The same ls also true of EL Our bank‘, mist. and commercial cor- porations. Why ls it then that for years and decades we have those civic upheavals, costly yet non- pi-odtictlve. to waste taxpayers mon- ev with lavish prddlllnlllil‘. adding to our too large civlc debt chasing af- ter and trying t9 catch will-o-l-lie- wisps which have no stibstaiice evtvi 1f they are caught? Why not. adopt the sensible methods of the banker finance cor wrntiou. or practice level heade business men. and cloe up those flood Rfltcs of useless waste? Do these business men repudiate the books and accounts 0f their own accountants‘? D0 they tell custom- ers that the receipts signed by clerks emploved for that purpose are “not auithorin-tl" and worthless? D0 they sort out the receipts legiti- mate‘! given in connection \v'th business. and declare one lot signed bv the proper employee is wood. and another lot signed and delivered in the same manner. by the same offl- eial is worthless? Yet this is appar- nntlv the "New System" of account. ing purchased by the Cilv at enor- mous expense. Why employ ac- Cflllntflnls and ivnste money on books with so handy n method-the HERE'S a lot non to b0 pained from I 900d insurance aganl llian ‘wll lira insurance. No matter how well you're insured, you don't want a lire-and neither does b0 wanl you lo have one. “The agent of the National Fin Imu- anu Company ol Hurllord has not only given me what you might call ‘fireproof Insurance protection-but he pcinled out a l0" of ways lo prevent lira sneaking h mil polling a slut. That’: worth a lol lo ny peace cl mind, believe ma, brotharl’ W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOYVN "Rule of Thumb" t0 Hume I am. 8 . em. (All Benita and Trust Companies nowadays are Suffice it lf-my good and lll lln- “New? and wgdgplploylng efficient auditors.- S ark "JANUARY SALE llEllllEllSllll 8t GUDMORE 1A off 1,4; Off Overcoats Overcoats Fine Suits 1A Off ALL NEW STOCK. gal-gains You'll Remember. them. CHICAGO -(CP) —Fa.l n1" tlo books r dro ialiia lgchiiol-age ghild‘; pp REFORMER subject to retular 811d lnslslt b _ Wm‘ which they do us fer militia] stories. “but. want the animals to ta J ANIMALS OUST FAIRIES tales Off preferred reading list, says the American 1,1- brary ASSOCIBUDII survey. 'I‘hey pre- the d e lkfly o no ‘Zrziiilllixrryll/Inma» / IIIIIFFF Ii IIIIII§II§§IJIJI§IIA $40‘ A Naturalists Calendar FOR l Prince Edward. Island A carefully prepared series of notes of Meteorological and Botanical observations made in the period l9l0-l937; and includ- ing a short list of common insects. By BLYTHE HURST (“AgricoliWl ‘ Brackley Beach On Sale at THE SCHOOL SUPPLY CARTER AND C0. MARITIME STATIONERS WOOLWORTIIS TRAVEL BUREAU GUARDIAN PUB. CO. Price 25 cents per copy VIIIIYIIIJIJIIIJJIJIJII jfifffOf§fffffffQ9O§99frfQF4 @494 FOX FARMER: Prices are satisfactory or otherwise only by comparison. The more you compare our realization prices of Silver Fox Furs the more you become im- pressed with our marketing system. Market your furs with the MARITIME FUR POOL LTD.. MONCTON, N. B. W. CHESTER S. McLllRE will receive your furs and pay you a cash advance. l (i l For a Delicious Ctm of l I tlrange Feline Tea Mr. Iea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea 1m fQQ-Qfi-O O~Q4~OQ+FOOOQFOOOOQ A o o l ! §_ i 1i Swine Breeders Attention Now ls the time to guard against l. PIG-WORM by using the most effective i remedy on the market. MACS PIG WORM TONIC POWDER ll will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms and Improve the health of your herd. PRICE 35 CENTS PER LB. We carry a complete line til Cattle Remedies . liassy Stomaclis i Relieved Every person who la troubled wlth |as in the stomach and l bowels should get. a bottle 0| Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture and see how quickly It will re- lieve all distressing symptoms. Dr. Evans stomach Mixture taken at meal time. not only prevents all bud efleiilg from In. but ll romnleu the fune- lonul letlv lv nl the stomach, "Hilts dilution and Improve! the lDDellle. i Dr- Evans Stomach Mixture h sold only at the Two Macs at 850 per bottle. Gel Your Bottle Today. i TllE 2 MAGS I H9 Great George Street hammer 10d, — Ottawa Journal. ln The Year 1940 as in all the years of our lull tory our Tobacco will remain the some in lluvor freshness and dependability. It's goodness is unquestioned HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST. 10c per Fig ' MANUFACTURED BY IIIOKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO CO. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN