MCF. FOUR TIIE littl-IHLUTTETUIIN lilllllllllll 111111111111; om; (Founded In imi President: Lieut. Col. W. Chester B. blclmn vice-President: J. IL " all. FJJ. seerelury: Llcul. 00L D. A. Mlclflnnon, 0.8.0. time: and Managing Dlrector: J. IL Burnett, FJJ. Issue-lulu Editors: ri-ank Wulkc: sud LleuL Ian A name-ts, ILU.N.V.B. 10a Aellvn Service; 'f'lie Strongest Memory is Weaker Tllal the Weakest Ink.‘ FRIDAY, MARC}! l7. 1944 As Bad As Magdalene: We 111-1: how isolated, so far as freight is con- - giilliplfilfdly as the Magdulencs. _\l1-\~1 . '1‘. 11011111111 & Co., have been 1 [Enterprise Co, Fuck-ville, .\'. 1-1., n execute no further orders for that went,- here,) 1111111 further notice. 111111111111 11.111 ordered spnre parts for ‘.2, .-11111 yesterday‘ were informed 1h.- 11‘ -1 \;1_1- 111111 zuhised the Liompztny- that ' 11-1 1111111‘ 1- ';l1t for 1'riu1-e Ed- t-iihsr 1..C.L. or cnrlund, until l\'. a.11i~i-.1 filial. ii'1‘1 1.1111. 11 .\1t,-,~i-~. "iio <_ nit-rel _1- poses ! 1- 1 1,1 1.11- ifiiihltttfliillm] 511111111011 is 1 11-111111111-11 for pi-i1piigiiii1lzt pur- Tlle \Vhip Al '1 111.- Crnck Of i; 11111 1111 mitsti-iiuling 1ii-t1ie 111 1- iithllf 111' inconsistent-y wns stir-e- - 111.,- Liherrtl members 111 the Legis- _\ 11-111-11 they got 11p and voted million by .\lr. 17.. ll. Strimg. . .\lel\'enzie, urging ilie 1“CtlCl';l1 . .1 11i~c1111111111e [lay-light Saving l1 in [.5 1'1111'11c1-. l r~ 11-11 been touched 11111111 in the 1'1i‘11(l1t‘, 11nd there seemed to be agreement, especially among 1 111 this itgririiliui-ul lh-ovince 111111; 1111.11 111111- 111 comment] ‘ie struidpuint 01' efficient-y or .‘1r. liiekltuiii, l.il1er.'11 member 1111s the niost outspuk-en in 11¢ classed i1 tinder the heading e leqi-lzttion. l-"ztrmers must work by jiviilltkl 01it. A farm laborer usually 1m 11-1111; at six o'clock. In t11e hay- 111111 hezivy- dew on the ground, the L 111-11 get started at his hay until . morning. "Daylight Saving 'l‘in1e he .111 a-tl-izitiizige 1o some of the city folk 1.1» ‘1\'e11i11-.-1l_1- afternoon off," he said, "I111; 11¢ ;»:ii1i.ii_v producers should receive a 1,1111: eiuisulcration.” 15111‘ shine reason, this matter became "politi- ' 1. l)1ie notice had been given . 11:1per, but when .\[r. Strong ask- - 1 to have his resolution read by the 1: llousc, and the motion to do so <1’, lion. Tilr. llughes said “Nay.” A vote 11-115 called by the Opposition. At a t-ouple of .\Ir. l-lughes‘ colleagues support him. (iraduztlly, and appar- cuuv ‘ reluctance, the others followed suit until 1' Liberal member was on his feet. The Opposition members, just as solidly, stip- pot-ml \l- §trong. ' <- rcsolutitin never even got read in t. . 1 .c. and Liberal members were saved the embarrassment of trying to explain why they opposed it. It's just one of those things that happen in politics, It is evident that there is a nigger 111 the 11-11111lpi1e somewhere, though Mr. Hughes Itizty be the only one who knows his exac. ‘vhercabouts, or what he is doing there. .111 Opportunity To Expand The report 01' the parliamentary war expend- itures committee shows that Canada. produces 0:11) .18 jit-i- rem of its required farm machin- ery supplic, .'1111l imports the balance from the lltited Stairs, '1'l1i~ »:1_\'s the Rlouetzu-yi 'l'1n1e.~', should rant-e s11:111.- 1, f. lllllllfllig by heavy goods mziiitifzictui-urs 11-1111 on the look-out for up- piirtunities to expand their business. At first giiuice there may be an inclination to challenge the lll'i'lt‘-‘ 111' the Qmmnittecs statement, but iii-punt,- <- revezilerl 111411 ivhile 11111111111111- iii:-.11c 11311111-1 _ iuiivrers, ]JlO\V:, seeders 11nd wu- 1411115 may prtvloiuiiiztte 011 Cnnndi-‘m farms, the IYZICIIH‘; :in,1 (Wlllblllcki which are coming into g-iierztl :1-1- :1 111111» of .-\111eri1":ti1 make. On - .- 1|u.'111ti;>v 111' lhbk-iiiitde 1111i- 111 khllllltlllill iigricullure is greater "czillv iiiunuliietiiretl machines. iuiueturers are to get larger ultiri-nl mzu-liiiierv luisincss they -1 tie lll.'\l\'l!l'__’ 11f the inicrnul The} llll\t.' 1l1-i1i1111,~ir.'1ter1 1.1 1- 1'11“: 1- 111 11111111,- siezuit engines 111111 illl kind,- 11; i-ine boilers and engines. lf they wil 11nd 1h.- inl) they will find they c1111 11b» l" i-rinibustiott engines and diesels 11-’; ‘ : - 111-111111111 for these 111 this coun- 11, 1 1-» 11111-111111 the attempt. 111111-111: st-cui-eil by the war expenditures committee in 1111- course 0f its investigations It-itd; 141 1h.- t‘0!l(‘l11\‘1t\t1 tltnz Canadian plants c:111 turn 11111 durable uuotls quite as cheaply as .\u11-1-ic:i11 f.-11-t1 i Rlcrchnnt ships. 111-1111111-1-11 in (‘znizuliriii ,1.1.1ls have been built as cheaply n, 1111151- ;';1hr£e:itcd in .-\1iicricai1 yards and if this is llflSmlhltf in Ships why not farm machin- g1'\' n1‘ n11 1:211 s, iut-huling tractors? British i’ Churches DestbcTy/ed A11:t1111111i-it:1tive statement 1111s just been miule as to the iuinihcr of churches (lcstroycd 111111 dnnirijged iu Grcnt Britain as a result of lierinnn bombing raids. Speaking in Boston I few days zigo, Rev. \Villir1n1 Cecil Nortlicott D1‘ l-Inulzttirl, 11-1111 is Home Secretary of the Lon- don Missionary Society, listed the destruction n1 churches in llritnin by dcnoitiiiiatiniis as fulliuvs.‘ (liurch 111' I-TngL-iud. 163 1l1-strnyerl, 148011.111:- flfjvtl. l lruitist and Congregationalist, more than 30o destroyed or dainagcil. Methodist, 1.316 destroyed or dninagcd. (‘hm-ch 01' Scotland, 9 ilesli-oy-ed, 17o flfllll- aged. __,____ .\nz,;,b _ .. .. u. .....-_. |.. Roman Catholic, 234 destroyed or damaged, Mr. Northcott said in the course of his ad- dress that a comprehensive plan 0t reconstruc- tion hacl been started by the various church bodies in Britain immediately following the raids. The people over there, he said, “are facing their tasks of reconstruction in a gal- lant and high-hearted manner." The Congre- gational Church alone, is completing a drive for $2,000,000 for reconstruction purposes. Doubtless hundreds of millions will be spent on this work in the course of the next two or three years. - EDITORIAL NU] ES _. St. Patrick's Day. IIU It is reported Quebec Provincial election will be held in June. Ill i Everybody wants to know what are the pro- posed amendments to the Prohibition Act. i 1k lit I I Now U.S.-\. "isolationists" would lay the bliimc on Czunttla for cntisiiig the war - and we have not even yet conscription for overseas! ll ‘I II U Giovanni Battista Pergulesi, Italian composer“ died this date 1736; his works are of strik-ingi originality and charm; his most popular coi positions include the11pt-r1‘t1;1"1.;1 Sen-it 121111-1111; I the czuiuita "Orfco e l-Iuritlice" and the cele~' brzitcd “Stabat hlztter." s1 41 I i The American College of Surgeons will dc- vote today to a 11-111‘ session at the .\lount Royal llot-sl, Montreal, 111-, Fraser B. Liurd is chair- lllfll] of the arrangements committee. The pro- viiiccs of Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Sen- tia and Prince 1§1l\vartl lslniitl, as wcll as Xc1v~ fuuntllztnd, will he ‘represented at the sessions, 1vliieh will be attended b_v doctors, medical stu- dents and hospital personnel. 1k =11 =11 y The Stockholm Tidningeu, commenting on the LT. S. request to liire to remove 1201-1111111 and jupniicse consular 111111 diploitiiiiii- repres- eiitzttivcs, (leclztretl editorially that sooner or 121t- er "western neutrals" i111ist align themselves with the Allies 1vlietlicr they like it or not. The editorial mentioned Spain, Portugal and l-Yire as “western neutrals." ‘I i Ill F Dr. B. S. Batty, Bishop of Fulhaiti has re- plied to criticisms of the present British policy of bombing German cities and the recent 110mb- ing of the Home Cassino monastery, voiced 111 :1 llouse 0f Lords debate by Archbishop Lord Lang several weeks ago. "l favor bombing in 1-m;____c:ni\i:urrrs'rowiv_ GUARDIAN flutes By The Way l Tea-cup reading II Illfl to be on the increase Yes. and ft f; just about as useful as some of the [0- called wai- news reading. -Iondon Ree Press. There being no trains or trees In Iceland it is to be assumed that reckless drivers are virtually held down to bumping one another - Ottawa Citizen. Iluucl Grouse listened to group of authors discussing their rejection slips. The best gejgc. tlon slip I ever heard of, Cmtise told them. was an editor's note attached to a heavy manuscript. It read: I'm returning this paper -~someone wrote on 1t." -Leonard Lyons. The village of Kockport ha; set some! _ of n record for sturdy sepiua, "tans Mr and Mrs. Fred H Huck both of whom are over '70 recently became blood don- ors at. the Brockvlllo cllnlc. Medl- ezil examinntlotl proved Mr. and Mrs. Huck to be 1n excellent hcnltli, and they prcmptly went ahead with the donation. T efr example is 1vcrthy of emula on by u go-cd mamy people of less advanced years ——Klngston Whig- Standard Failing 111 wean u heifer calf 11.; sticking habit and induce i. ice t-o drink like a bona title 11:1. addict unused a north-country farmer to break into a storm of mveettve just as the wife appear- ed in the cow-shed door. i111 itpset milk 111111 jeetrtl fort-fit er cf the instructor. she c-it-iaimcu. “Goon land if you want the poor thing to learn t drink why don't; you take it ou on one of your all-night publld meetings!" -I.camington Post. Now that the Japanese are bclng more er less put in their places cue does not hear so much about POYL Darwin, ivhlch must, make 1t c1111 for the troops there relates. The hfttnchestei- Guardian. One American soldier en lcnve put 1t this way; ivhen you've been there ‘ ' .,< - ff yourself ' -l‘. After that. you V.’ to tl-ie lizards. Alter another uple of w-eeks you find the lizards talking to you. Thcn you find yourself listening. I have at Inst (lfsnovered the drill for dealing with one’s 511111-- ing fellow izicn, announces a 11-1-11,- c1- in a recent issue of the Lan- cet, It worked with B, brlgadier with 111110111 I stint-ed a hayloft, during an exercise. 38y. "fr? quietly and persuasively. You are ntrtkiiig a iicise, darling. and the offender grunts. E11’? Oh. sorry, din-ling; rolls over and pipes down this war without any hesitation 1vhenever inili- tary necessity demands in order to shorten the war and save the lives of many men,” said the Bishop. “Everybody simply lonthes 110111111111 as a form of warfare. lut if we are to get ritl of war we must fight with every available wea- pon and with relentless efficiency until the powers of darkness are overcome.” Dr. Batty said 11c was sure the statements of Archbishop Long did not represent the views of the episco- pate. I U I i Meat rationing abandonment may be per- manent, but the best guess, says The Letter Re- view, is that it will be temporary, and followed by a shortage of meat. This is how jilanncd Economy works. Planned economy leaves us, at the moment, quite uncertain as to 1rhethc1- we ltave enough meat in sight, or even enough wheat. It leaves us facing 11. very rapid 11c- cline in butter production-without any 1vziy of knowing lio1v bad this is going to be. .\lr. Howe’; policy, in the early days of War, of encouraging wages in intinition factories to rise without check, is, of coitrse the cause of o11r troubles. It led to inflationary tendencies; to the adoption of the Cost of Living‘ Bonus, and to the consequent inability of the Depart- ment of Agriculture to permit farm prices to rise enough to keen jn-oduction on the vequivcrl scale, without, at the 5.11110 time, prodticiiig i11- flatioiiary pressures, ns the (fust 11f Living 12111111; rose. l l! l 1K without awakening It works every 11-111‘ ~Answers. A few days ago when Petty Of- ‘ - . P Herbert was attending ’ function 11¢ was asked tit-ugrziph by a young girl- 1101- btfrgess for Oxford promptly Qxctemporfzed itillciving in her book: Be t-ccd, sweet maid, and, ll‘ you c1111, be clever. Or brttci- utlll, just leave It, to tho gods The chances are won‘t be eltltei- ever, so what's the odds? London Dally Herald. 501 YOII The coming age of flight calls f-oi- new nztvlgutoln methods, de- Clare; Dr, Samuel Herrick, as- sistnni; professor of astronomy on the L05 Angeles campus of the University of California. Most airplane navigators are now taught to use maps constructed on the old Mercator projection, which dis- torts 11nd masses toward the 11o1- ar regions. Mercator charts are ob- jectionable because radio bearings cannot be drawn on them as straight lines. Besides. their scale of distance ts not uniform Dr. +111 t 1c runuc coiwu OPPOSITION AME T0 PBOIIIBITION N DMENT BIIr-Tho proposed Kickham amendment t0 the Prohibition Act. apparently deslxned to be p uirbuglt the Legislature dying moments of the session. will be met. with the most violent op- po-sltfon from the temperance 10r- ces. This opposition will be the greater because of the lack of time allowed for consideration- Ftrst, let ft be noted. that the amendment 1s contrary to the splrft and intention of the Prob!- bftton Act. Indeed it. is no true amendment but actually a new act. It ls, tn effect, a measure of government control; and sooner or tater would lead to all the flag- rant abuses existent ln the other eight provinces and 1n the U.S.A. Immediately liquor revenues would become an important factor ln the finances of the province. The door would be open. the thin edge of the wedge would be ln. Our present system, though fm- perfect, has kept liquor sales down one-fifth per caplta of what they 111-0 in ofhcr provinces. No small itttalnmentl We have been spared the mounting record of crime, ac- cidents and numerous other evils which accompany the increasing Notlilg If liquor sales under government ccm- ol Except for an extremely vocal minority, living principally ln our cities and towns, the people of Prince Edward Island would pre- fer to bear those ills we have than fly tn others they know not of. Re- presentatives from the numerous dry constituencies will do well to ponder carefully, I am, Sfr, etc. imI SHAW- New Glasgow, PEI. FARMER MUST PAY AND PAY Siiz-Not only has the policy of the CCF trailed to declare specif- ically against. natlonalizlng the farnts-now oi- at. any future time —but its authors would compel the farmer to pay more into the na- tional treasury. Under their plan with regard to Unemployment Insurance. the farmers will take on new exiwtftins out of proportion to some other classes of the community. At. the some time, where the CCF gllbly promises relief 1n regard to Income taxes. the proportion of benefits would be less for the farmers than for others, because farm families are only 311.2 per cent, of the pop- ulation, as ts show-n on Page 90 of “Make This Your Canada" \_ 1i. 178 of “Miike This Your Canada,” the latest CCF book, ap- pears the following: “The CCF‘ would immediately extend the Un- employment Insurance Act to cover various types of workers now excluded, such as wage-earners en- gaged 1n agriculture . . " Now that plainly means that the farmer 1s going to have 1o pay premiums unier the Nntionol Unemployment: Insurance Act to cover hls hired man :1n:l his other casual labor AID BIIAW AN D SOCIALISM Sim-Bernard Show was born tn and he went to London In the age of twenty. where hi: ed 1n socialism: agitation and later became one of th founders of the Fabian Society. he Fabian: aimed to bruit; about "the eman- cipation of and and industrial capital from individual and oltass ownership and the vesting of them in the community for the general benefits?’ "the extinction o: rent?‘ and "the f - lty of the udmlnlstratlm of con- fndustrfal capital as can be venfently managed socla-lly," Mr. Shaw ls nonv in his eighty- elahth star. and lie ls n sadder and fifty of Socialism. He has had an opportunity of seeing it: with 111s own eyes put into operation in Soviet Russia, and he has rcccnlll‘ been suffering personally from its partial application in his own emin- try. In a long letter to the London Times. the one-time socialist nglt- a wiser man regarding the soctaib- m” chance; of m against. Ram Haul our Lord ch01 or an economic ator and castlxauir of the en ital- ts has chewed up and swa owed his fonmer self entirely ‘Facing an irresistible drift of economic changes from absolute private pi-citrrty to public properly, . Jo Fascist, Suite-aided c-aip- , from freedom cf contract to State-regulated trade, from competition to tic-operation to 00111- mmiism.” Ivfr. Show now declares that these changes “may smash up civilization." He reminds 11s 0t‘ how the socialists of Russia, "convinced that private property in land ls a bimeful institution. took the suc- cessful fauna". the Kulak. scruff of the neck and threw into the lune to beg." ‘The result was "weeds and desolation, and Russia began to starve." Lenin vnry soon had to mck the Kulak out of ditch and but him back on tlic farm "with instructions to cultivate and exploit 1t for all ft: was xvorth Soviet was readv to take on the job." This is the wiser Bernard Shaw speaking. He noes further; "A1111 what applies to farming interpi-isc applies w all enterprise, Lenin 112d to rohabilltntc the trader. _i'ust as he 11nd to renabllitate the Iiulak." While he still believes that collec- tive farming and trading "may com; in time; meanwhile the more private fanning 11nd tradbig flour- ishes the better for everybody. Dukes are better landlords than needy free-holders." I once heard Mr. Shaw say. tn his usual oraculnr manner, that no one should object to paying taxes; the more taxes the merrler He has evidently changed his 11.111141, or 11c may argue that his dIClllm has been taken literally, and that you can have too much of n. goon thing, He 1s now calling upon the Govern- ment to abolish the surtux and the excess profits tux "root and branch." There can be no doubt that the continuance of these ex- cessive taxes itftiz-r the war would put; private enterprise into revfisc. Mr. Shaw has lived 1on1; enough to learn. not only from personal ex- perience. but from current history, that you can't have Socialism 11nd DQIIIOCIBCY at one antl- the same time. He 1111s seen their-the first impulse of the socialists is to injure those who profit by the TlLDIi-flllib system, and. as he says. "to liquidate who, at present, he ls not required to insure. So the tanner will be paying more into the national cof- ters than he does now. We do not mention this by way of discussing the merits of the proposition, which 1s another matter. We mere- ly state- i; 11s a fact because it is one Met that the CCF can be pin- ned down to I am. Sir. etc. CANADIAN STATESMAN. ANONYMOUS COLONELS Sin-On wetiiTesiitiy lost there 8.1)- peared prominently displayed on the front. page of the "Patriot" Hat-sick has recently completed n series of scientific jiapei-s in which he advocates 2e use of the mill- tnry grid s; n superimposed on a map consti cted on a conic projection, which maintains accur- nlc scale and 1 ‘lo bearing direc- ' (2111 combines the 0th mini-ts It 1s vigatc a line as easily as with the Mer- cator projection and at the same time maintain the advantages of A virgorous demand from Hon. R. l5. Han- son, former Opposition leader, fo1- keeping di- vnrec bills out of parliament, wns :1 feature oi the llousc debate on the ju-oposcil changes in l-lotise rules. In voicing his protest to Parlia- ment's handling of divorce bills, llon, .\li-. l-lniisoti tirged that a. special section of the l" chequers Court be set up to handle these cas .. "1 do not think I tun going to hurt anyoiu-‘s religious sensibility wiieit 1 say that 1 am 11111 opposed to divorce", Mr, llnnson declared, ridd- 111g: "I believe there is such a thing as unholy wedlock which can end in unholy ilentlloclt." I11 reply to :1 suggestion 11v the Rules Conuuittee that “full consideration" be given ll) eliiniiutt- ing divorce bills from Parliament, the former Opposition leader stud the Committee had not gone far enough. "l intend to support the stiggestion, b11t it does not deal 11-1111 the prob- lem :15 it should be dealt 11-1111," 11c said. “Let 11s get divorce bills out of the Senate, out of the l-Ionse of Commons and into the hands of those whose knowledge of law will allow them to handle the questionin a judicial manner." 1' i 1 1i! In his animal report of the N. B. Liquor Control Board, Mr. R. G. Fulton has this to say: “ln spite of the restriction on the quant- ities of liquor sold, we are pleased to say there is 11o sign of any contraband in the province. It is true that in one or two sections there has been some resale by bootlcggers of goods P111’- cliased from the Board. This is chiefly cotifin- comes in scale and radio naviga- tlcn —-‘=‘xchange. Look carefully nl. the first of thCsc two coins 1si1-swing a-small ‘slhlSlZTGUC-Ill, 1 know what, your answer will be _ why should you troubl: to examine n common Ilxlttsh shilling. But. I iii-peak, ex," 11c [he i-oln Compare l1; with tl-s hc-iicl elder of a shlllltig, and see 11-11.’. you find You cannot de- feel niiv differ-mice? I admit it is slyluht. but undeniably there l5 p, difference. This coln ls no shill- tn: For these who still have doubts I turn it. over and repro- duce the other side. Now It stands gilnitilv revealed foi- what l1, ls-n 01111111111111 25 cent piece. It was 11n- wittlngly accepted - and doubt- less given in all innocence — as a shilling in change. And llttlg wonder. For, seen head-slde tipper- most. the coln ls almost Indis- llntrtiishnbls from i1 shilling, even nt a elcs: glance -Lced_s York- shire Pest _i__ We have news of flue G pcoplc. Our men returning from prison camps report that. their camp guards and command- nnts are muttering among them,- selves Krelg niche gut. War no good For Germany the war is certainly no good. The weekly pro- Pflganda. blast to Dr. Goebbels now becoming n weekly dlrge . . ‘Twenty flve year's ngo the German tpeople were beaten in s war But they were not. cured of blood-thirst, It occurred to Uhem thug the way out of their defeat ed to one or two sections, and while annoying is of a very limited nature. Continued observa- tion, as well as daily reports of the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police, indicate a limited amount of intoxication, and tiint, in vic1v of the financial condition of the people and the numher of tran- sients, conduct is good. Net increase in sales for the rear 1111s $358.129.42. Net [irofils payable i.» the piwu-iiirinl Smrt-ctary-TN-eiisiirev, 11111-42, f-h-tvnaisfifis- 1041-43. 113-054-1131.». In- crease for 1042-43, $103,974.97. A survey in- dicates that the ratio of net profit in the turn- over for the year was 36 1-4 per cent. Further, that the total operating costs based nn turnover 1111 5.115 per cent, it bring uiiilt-rs-tririrl tl1:1t "op. wits another war. and perhaps a victory. That must not happen twice. Germany must learn -and the lesson must be rammed home relentlessly and fcr all time -th.1t whnt they have tflscovered about two wars ls true of every war. Let each one of us make s solemn resolution here and now, not to slaelren ln Clll‘ purpose by one lots ilil the Gennan people are con- vinced of the lrrevoevbl" truth nf lhelr discovery "Krleitnlcht, gut." —Sunt1ay Chronicle fmidon. ones-r exr/msrou ‘Hie great wartime expansion of the Cniiadhm Army has taken plnca around the tire-war nucleus 4.500 permanent force man. Its pre- erating costs" include all wits of your Board." nt gtrength ntmben 466,000. straight . . local evening newspaper. ii curious communique from tic Canadian Priiss. "A hard-bitten Colonel working in shirt sleeves over demobilization plans who would not; permit his name to be used" said. among all its functionaries rcplao: them with congenial revofiitlonlsts." He wants nst anv a-ttuwiipt to repeat; the Russian expiriizicnt. width its "tcirrlble results.” “Never- theless." he says "ft. scems quite probable that. we shall repent tnem all, and learn from experience, at; an appalling cost, what we are tn- capuble of lmrnlniz from history." I am. Slr, etc. LEWIS MILLIGAN. IA Hogarth Ave., Toronto. A TUNNEL ENTHUSIAST Sin-Considerable space has been taken up 1n your columns re. the proper means of permanent and uninterrupted communication with the mainland and you are perhaps beginning to tire of the subject, but tt ls one of such great, import to the Provlncg that I feel too other thing's. to the Canadian Press: "For God's sake don't: let us deludc this generation of flghttrs . lino thinking they tu-c coming back to beoi- and skittles. Natural- ly, efforts will be made to provide every opportunity, But this should not be taken to mean there will be a ,ob security 0R EVEN I-IOPEFUL PROSPECTS for all our returning men". This fellow wcnt on: "Let the Government control the labour niarketiand start pla- clm soldiers III mining and axbu cleaning vacancies and you’ on onus: widespread discontent-J’. "Another think we must watch ls n re-cstabllsliimctit pnv progmnune 111111011 rmlght, dhicotiram lndfvldtial enterprise and enthusiasm fci work. Bluntly, let Us not. subsidize Loafing". Rugged individualist, our wlonel. ts ‘t he? God help the boys who an bleed- fnsz and dying for us. if those de- partments of the Government which have to do ivlth i-clmbilltat- lon are manned l\_v reactlonarles of this type. Fancy this person and others like him Dulllng 2.0) 11m- d-ay each for trotting out such ~ iiemble excuses for shit-king their u v, A_.nd he chooses to be anonymous. it because he doesn't. dare to the boys ln the face when they . inst their r f mm. his fellow lac eys of Is look come home and numeracy. enemies tn their reu- s than the foes they s n of certain Ministers o! the Cabinet. some of whose dub- ous and clespontlent pronounce- ments an quoted later 1n the same Oanadlsn Press article? The boys 1n tliu nnned services have lon born troubled with the thought at the chief headache of the Rovemtna classes of this coun- try was w dev the smoothest way to met them back on the dofie. and rldlng the rods from end w end of Canada in search of non exist- ant Jobs. as tn the good old days of the 1930's. 5110b press articles and interviews ns this conflnn their suspicions to the hilt. Let all the apostles of scarcity and of Plutomacv. in ou- Out 0 thi- Government. read. and moi-k these words. vn-ltten very lately by Mr. P.M. Richards, financial ed- ftnr of ‘Pom-into Saturday Ni lit-n man who ls no ioftlst or rad cnl: "I think we c1111 be very sure thin our people will not atzaln accept conditions sucl tn the 30's. The exner wartime have given hem reuson to believe that the stn e can ormm- ize to produce an nbtuidance of any needed goods, if ft has n mind to do so. If. after tho war. there ts the prospect of nnethei- rtriprezvlon with wide-spread 1ine1-mp.1oyment and Imitation the new of this n doubt, but much cannot be said about It. I am a tunnel enthusiast and I pro- pose to air my convictions on the matter. We have had our experience with water communication and have learned that, 1t has decided disad- vantages both summer and winter. During the summe months when motor traffic Ls at its peak the boat; which ts equipped to handle that. traffic ls off the run for its annual refit 1n drydock. During the winter fee conditions upset our schedules and throw our transpor- tation system into n. state of chr1- os. For a few months only, sprltig and fall. we have a fairly satisfac- tory service. despite the fact that we are offered all the luxuries 0t an ocean liner ln the construction of n. new ferry. Coupled with this ls the fact that the docks at Bord- den and Tormentlne have come t» the stag» where they tire tn no condition to accommodate a new boat and wlll have to be rebuilt. in the very near future. The combin- ed overhead of boss and tannin- ais 1| tremendous. and groves each year In proportion to the age of the equipment. The feasibility of s. causeway across the strait. I am lncllned to COIISIdBFI-n]; the project 1s feasible, the ‘ p of such n structure would run into n tidy sum annually, and unlus ft were built to a great height there would be considerable time when autc traffic would be halted by suit. spray. A good strong gale over an expansa of 111119 miles of water ran stir up quite a fuss, u anyone who has experienced I crossing on the ferry ln heavy weather and seen the green water combing over the sen-wall at Borden pier can test- ify. I have not stopped to figure h» number of cubic yards of ma- terial necess y to build n cause- way nine to tcn miles long with an average depth of forty feet be- low water and at least twenty feet. above high water level, wide enough to allow for a rail line 11nd t-wn lanes of motor traffic. I sm afraid to tackle ft. It is argued that the strong tides tn the strait would not effect the causeway as ft would form n dividing llnc where ‘he tide would rise and r1111 on either side; 1r. would simply closi- off the run of the tide. But 1viien you closg off the r1in of the tide you also close off navigation. 1v1ll1 which the Department of Trims- port mlsht not isgree- To allow for passage of ships a driiwbrldge might l; built into the causeway but that would allow n ninniriy: tlde v/hleh ln 1vlnte-s HIPYI’; i-iin- nlne lee. and this would Vl‘l'_V soon ‘Ull- uuq serious domain. so no mat- have gained an B t; u: Yet manv been for the Authorized Version lous for render-biz. yet even misinterpreted. which ev fous for a sum o! his own should dfsocrn more fully, to nut remedy which our comment but re of encouragement. the dav 1s the t-hfs f; no lament divine wisdom answer. In contrast to and causewa y an a tunnel. Wh l9 the time required 111g costs, and the automobile truffle. to have n new before the tall of would be so much to which we, are ever tolerated our post-wan tourist a few minutes, or accommodated on mcntine. and the discouraged from would furnish the the tourist could vii-ice at his own nny weather, and t11~ nresent, cause UH.- orlsts from th ~- provinces. But. of fact that railway be maintained t fee conditions. 1iantuge at a t when we can in nor out of the produce e3 merits, It may b, but winters when ceptlonal, Ind navfqutlon of l 00nd haopenusven wf "Another ‘rt-ave 1s evlde unb of mllesmg tunnel ons of use and I have yet to from suffocation. trains of eight with passengers ls at a premium, these subways at occasion to commu await the fourth to 1t cur, vet no thought of suffoc advancement of air-conditioning literally s network nine in all oirec firms experienced lton of then s11 tunnel acrolll same time as it. our Canadian iLonton Iloilltltloil (III . The London Times OVII- than‘! urmm 1.1a‘ out the leader of I n81 unrocévtlve of 9911191111 insistent. therefore. was, u ‘ alumni/app“ ‘m...’ Renata lexed by the words.‘ mun-ow ll The Revised Vérslfll‘: “b6 not the monw" is n ery one otuht 1m the uiorrow, Lord's training of the a. time to come. What he was not anxiety bub aver-a: The disciple shprulud be wa" - o times should prepuro lumen uslniz whatever ODDOTI/IIXII for bearing hatover IIIOITOW might bring. To wit; 5t tlotn 11nd Hls righteousness. n ‘dedthfateflchlnk Mimi-dis 111911;}? are often mfst/akerivfor mind n. in trude into the naxtbfiaz, and Rood ter from what angle you lock-ct a causeway you get ages of communion. for might be something , that of a. new bolt (but I doubt ll- tt ut-zuld greatly exceed but t both boat and docll) expense would soon be taken. can of by the vast ssvf has told us that we cannot vinced that n. 1am cowl-n jierlv equipped for the job working from both have a tunnel 1n operation almond 11s quickly as I new boat eon b! commissioned for service. 0M0 the tunnel was tn oberltlon the service 111.11. we would wonder how The effect. of tunnel communi- cation with the mksitcplsnd on i116 y d exceed our fondest: imagination. It 15 well recognized that this 1mi- vlnce loses a substantial number of totirlsts each yen- by the fact 111111, either they miss the ferry by the boat after they arrtvs st. r- tiu. Island after contact with time who have thus been disappointed cannot be estimated. Connection of the two termtnols nu times. in all seasons, and satisfactliin. The result; In I 1m- witii subsinntfnlly u tolls and their lgwn tlmstsblo 1vouitn be encttaiuraggdm r a er dvan B 0 topper-mn- of wBeek-end irlslts to our ulster tut 1m tones, this pi-ovtiiciiiau I whtialo fl hroulfiwt flu on 1-" -~---.:i:..11.:~:.-r=.i; tau-aura cmnof move ' that: brought fn to nntulh that: sent conditions are operate on scbodlll! m l but fluotlth tlom limb ll thumberland Bluff m might suffocate in I t. best method of trivsl l: Cltv. or ‘subways’ u Ni tlpem. through which ll D , rush o OITI QIOII,‘ ll n11 mini: eWrv three minutes. I hnvl hid of travel and have stand in the subway could find room to fsmmyulf 1h- the art. of modern’ fear- from suffocation i; the our worries. New York Hobo Mons. One Make strait fnto operation in r ix tin-aw‘ v0 . b: renders them. 1.531; y be to be and was anxiety for the d ted sch! . it’. if for ttu and trim! 1 fir}!!! Lardweetrlbéd l wont b n. nejstfvo " atudvum- on b 1m? the fen n! initial out 11d m“ greater tthsn ,0 the um Q Premier Jens! m 19G. I m e02 wro- and stdu could to that tiggefllzllllfaum: present typo. they cannot bo the first. tri of in; to reach by tn l mu w 3m. 11f. pre- convenleme. in would ellmlnlt: of infinite dil- uosd mot- nxuauiw 00 like t-h m6 miqiii iiei n ens that __ exceptional, ‘b l0 um fl JIM?- Mtffi‘ 9° f sou s3’: ,3. er- hlasro lg! pus h the rota of o 0 tn one atlon. "of of In‘ the com '- coui and orthum about the ‘lb Heaven-and r 1 WAITIMI Gl-ACI ‘who brake. on m1 Th; herd-boy's loaves of 1M1. And 51:11:11 Lnke-flahel. knew In J Wm fed tn no accustomed Nornowarbwefl-lenmu; certain n1 men- Gtve sober trunks. in mud Of very nmxibie “ it“ ' .l.1-Ier:t -MI esfnthnamiqq, ‘II Ill-IN! IIIII PIODILYI Miuf C soothes vmmntlr- llumfbrmnynsnul Buytodsyl l: CUT RA SOAPIOINTMENIV ; t mos iitoon ‘roan In Ulla Ind tblu m: h - K In thohligicllelllcelnt olfutibm dheues 1v e lrlcfllblo n: :11 imboliierlsbed condition sf the blood. °"‘ 1'.‘ '1'.‘ '32.?“ ‘H; o men gn-uuthm. than. who luvs a oetlts Macs HIM win Drove the restor- For their Iood “In. G01 a l0: now. Price W. - Br. Evans Stomach Mixture A very effective means of ob- rf frown tllsordefl M" nrglnl which by pl, held- tllfn, plIh below Bneommentlell for flygpepsll. soil! "n! ull stomflch troubles. Price 85c be: Bottle. ‘HIE TWO MACS HI Great Georle 54"" w" °"'ii:...fii:;t- """"" ll. J. MABOII OPIUIII-TIIIT null: um 1131211111: Gill" Monique I. l- l- "r- "acute -= ~ '- Iollm m. by lnputntmm OM00 (annealed If“ DIUGITOII .........-..-- i$’."v> Professional 0m __-—-_—r McLeod GI Bentle! I. I. [INTI-ll I- o- I. l. IINTLIY. It. (L lawman ma Acumen-ll- I 1M ream lanes ALEX W. MATHIE§UN lo Ian 0e %.";.'*...::-1-zi1as".'sr M. ALF/in‘ ' FARM ER w-"iiiii-‘FE-"e m Dunlap Mm 31"‘ IONI! To IDA" nrroill-ndflnlllllf , n. r. 11101111111111 Ollrlsnluuulub Initials-Illa“!!! will take one of .00. onu-