us TlIE rtlullionrrown autumn ‘Ila. while the health eitimtien ii normal, tuber- culosis is on the increase, ~ , There has been a seasonal outbreak of diphtheria in Germany and there is consider- ‘ [one] Daily (Founded in 1H1) Aatlaorlaod o? Second Clans Mall Post Offioa _ Department. Dttawa . President: w. Cheater s. iisrimre. Ill-P- Vloo-Prealdeut: l. l. Burn‘ FJ-l. ‘ Iaogetary: lleut Col. D. L lldnnlinnflll. D-l-o- 315; “a managing Director: l IL Burnett, IJJ. ' Anoolato Editors: Frank Walker and [m A, Burnett able scabies prevalent. There is a rising inci- most prevalent diseases here are coronary, pui- monary, tubercular, cancer and. spinal menin- gitis. Tuberculosis typhoid and malaria are epidemic throughout the cpuntry; ‘ The bright spots are Great_ Britain, Swe- den, Switzerland and Eire. Health in Britain is as good as it ever has been; Sweden reports . Iha Guardian mly be Ibtained at: - Hub Ipoaoeo Shop. Monclon, N. It The News Shop. Muneton, N. B. George McLean. Pit-tun N B. Walker’: White Spot. ll Salter St. Halifax, NJ. Iatroflolltan News Agency, i268 Peel 8L, Montreal. United Cigar Stores. Chateau Lani-hr, Ottawa Out. B. Altkon, lard Elgln’; iiotei Ottawa, Ont. J. Fine, 354 Bay St., Toronto. Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. Snrihnry. Ont. diseasesgenerally on the downgrade. Eire has emerged from the war with its health record ord equalled only by Sweden. Over the rest of Europe the threat hangs. There is a dangerous lack of medicine and medi- cal facilities. Europe today is dcfcncclcss against famine or epidemic. Everything depends on olrysontb News. (Jor. Milk and Washington Sta. our efforts» Bolton Iota-links News Agency, Times Building, New York. —EDI IURIAL NOTES- “Thc Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” Rationing is by no means nearing an end, MONDAY. MARCH 25. 1946 Pussy-Fools As Usual the prospects are the other way about. U I l I Mr. R. R. Bell and Major J. A. MacDon- ald have both made exceptionally able contribu- . Prime Minister Mackenzie Kings stalc- tic“! to the Budgé: dfbaie‘ i merit on the food situation has roused the ire of the Winnipeg Frve Press, staunch Liberal journal, which says it will occasion some re- gret that the Prime Minister gave no clear dir- ective to the famicrs with respect to expand- ing their cultivation of wheat in 1946. In leav- ing the matter up to tlic farmers themselves he was freeing the Clovcrnmcnt from a responsi- bility which many felt it should have under- taken. Mr. King's statement on increased pro- duction mcreiy said: “Reference has already been made to the very large expansion of wheat acreage over the past two years (last year the Canadian wheat acreage was alhiost 24,000,000 acres). We do not feel that we should try to tell the farmers what they are to grow on each piece of land. We wish to encourage production on the most scientific basis possible in order to provide the maximum yield of food stuffs over the next few years. So far as the over-all picture is concerned, no further statement is required in respect of the target set in the Dominion-Pro- vincial discussion last December for wheat acre- age for r946. Our farm population is strongly urged to continue to strive for the greatest pos- sible over-all production of foodstuffs, and to plan their farming so as to produce the maxi- mum quantity of food during the next three to four years." . “In the light of this vague statement,” says the Free Press, “farmers may well be somewhat perplexed as to their duty. It is true that there is urgent need for meat and dairy products which in turn‘ means a need for maintaining coarse grain acreage for feed. But, when a world is ‘starving,’ it is wheat that can keep people alive best and it is wheat that can be most quickly produced.- Wheat is our famine food; but the farmer is left to make up his own mind as to the relative world needs for the produce he has a choice of raising.” ‘The f“ Skebbnd’ Great Fear Emphasis is rightly‘ placed on the great fear in war-ravaged Europe today — the fear of etarvation. But there is a second great fear, almost as pressing. It is that of disease. In a This is the season of the equinoctial gales from 21st to 26th, hence the change in tempera- ture. l! ll I i It is too bad if Ottawa Tourist Bureau should issue incomplete maps of the Dominion excluding the Province which gave the Fathers A dence of influenza and malaria in Spain. The ‘h virtually unimpaired. Switzerland has a rec- of Confederation the credit‘ for “building bet- ter than they knew." Fathers knew “better” than present-day bureau- crats that there should be nine provinces ‘ Canada, and Newfoundland not one of them. I Anyway these \Videspread regret will be felt at the death at a comparatively early age of Mrs. T. Roy Cudmore, who took such a lively and extensive interest in religious and welfare affairs of this city and province. Her aid and assistance were ever in great demand, and always willingly and She will be greatly missed, and sympathy will be extended to her bereaved husband and Qllldlfll ‘in thei: irreparable loss. I efficiently given. Mr. Ilsley continues to argue that we are a debtor nation vis-a-vis the U. S., so must con- tinue the premium on the $ U. S. We are not a debtor nation at all in this respect, since the figures of U. S. investments which he uses to prove his position do not cover debts at all. It cannot be too often repeated that there is no obligation on the Government of Canada guarantee that $ Canadian earned by-U. S. citizens in Canada can be transferred to the U. S. in $ U. S. The $ Canadian cannot g0 to a serious discount in the U. S., because ' will buy more goods than the $‘ U. S. will at present, in almost every field. i I Stratford Beacon-Herold says: In this day aral age, the city housewife may not have churn around, but she probably has “something just as good"—an electric mixer. is said, some of the town ladies are making but- ter easily and efficiently by using their electric mixing machines in lieu of old-style churns. Husbands, we imagine, will not be recklessly inquisitive as to how they do it so long as there is butter for the morning toast. Like “rolling your own,” churning your own butter in these .. . ' frtioi ' sain. aomprehensive survey gathered from corre- “mes O a n": s“: I E apondetlts scattered over Europe and the Middle ‘East, the New York Timcs last week traced the dangerous upward curve of sickness. The ‘cums ‘ncreases are m tubemulosls ‘a: suburban Ste. Foy. The university is acquir- ereal disease. "Tuberculosis," says other, “is the natural consequence of the grad- fial lowering of nutrition and clothing stand- frds begun when Hitler's buccaneem began to weep up all the good things within the realm of the New Order. . . . The rise in venereal disease is the unfortunate and traditional re- stilt of the marches and countermarohes of suc- L'Evenemenf-Journal, French language daily newspaper, reports that Laval University shori- ly will build a. $20,000,000 university town in ing large tracts of land along a I 1-2 mile stretch of Ste. Foy road. All university facilities, sev- eral affiliated schools and Quebec's Upper Sem- inary would be grouped there, surrounded by a large campus. First work on the university town is'said to be scheduled to start shortly al- though completion of the enterprise would take at least 20 years. cessful and unsuccessful armies, combined with a .,. s. a the accompanying declines in the normal levels of public morality. . In France tuberculosis is the greatest John Drinkwater, English poet, critic and playwright, died this date 1937; was manager of Birmingham Repertory Theatre; his works single disease problem, with venereal disease include poem, of M”, and you”, Poems of and cancer the chief other dangers. But in ad- Low and Earth’ Cromw,” “m; 0",”, yuan“, dition, steady progression of infant mortality re- mains a grave threat.‘ Belgium reports a four- Sword: and Ploughrharer, and Poems (contain- ing all he wished to preserve from these four f°ld “crease i" mama‘ “d physical dismders‘ collections); his plays include Cophelua, Rebel- Inlant mortality is more serious than at any times in the past I5 years. Typhus and infantile paralysis are up. lion, The Storm," Pawnr, Abra/lam Lincoln; his prose works include critical studies of William Morris and Swinburae: I" the Netherlands ti" dllflle illdefi. which Knowledge we ask not-knowledge Thou has [increased by 500 per cent in the last years of the - lent, warns only 410w slowly decreasinz- Grime end But, Lord, the wilb-there lies our bitter need, diphtheria, practically non-existent before i939, Give u! to build above the dc“, intent are prevalent. Dysentery, typhus, infantile The deed, the deed . . . ylflfllfil? and elllfiflillfl a"! lmk in f°f¢¢- In‘ For earth's little secret and innumerable-ways, [font mortality is double the 1940 figure. p themes! immediate '_tbreat. ~ 0 For the carol and the colour, Lord, we bring , _ Venereal disease‘ has shown an almost what thing, my be of‘ thgpkg’ and that Thou ‘ Mtastrophic increase in Denmark. Tuberculosis ., hast [em p“, d“, _ has increased, as have psychiatric cases. Flu i; E d a t h d 1' l ' _ blew’ lent.- In ltslylbilierculosis infant y" to i“ an ‘n ‘.0 ‘nan ms o m“ l gar the worst actualflfblllfilil. while The omission of Prince. Edward island j ioofblornewu nu at the door ‘olttlo .10 lfl 4 .- nbdtireirenr cute was thatXPriMe Edymdiiland i.» ._rioh C. P R. oonnectlon,*uod_il_ier¢foi;e, presumably l " hflroifff“ , a ment by Vlor move man ind‘: h collective _roat, w lodges from fear of fit atomic destruction _ “restore to m normal position-pylon it may once more beat, at a normal rate-Guelph ' . ll. J. Oates. Goalltlon I. L A. for North Vancguver, stated in the legislature the‘ other day that he lven training at aeo. fltgt would iineet the boys’ craving or ad- venture buldes teachldlll than: dla- u‘ cipllne, a‘ craft an cleanliness. The suggestion ls a good one, and if it could be carried‘ out would be a worthwhile contribution t‘ to the solution of Juvenile delin- quency. A spell at sea would have t ng peat to the tyreof yoiithowhoa s not attracted "y. the ’teen town projects or slmiiazxcom- munlty undertakings. — Vanoouve. Province. ' If your boy or daughter at is slow, fails to pass examinations t and doesn't happen to live up to the parental dream of brilliance in the progeny, then cheer us. In the news reel showing Mr. hurchill getting an honorary degree at 1° Westminster College, Fulton, Mia?- souri, when they were tackliigon his regalia, the Old Boy remark- ed: "I never knew of a man pau- ing fewer examinations than I have and getting more degrees pinned on his chest." You never cnn tell about these lmponderablel. The Churchill boyhood was some- thing to bring despair. They final- ly chucked hlm lnto the army.- St. Catharine: Standard. Commenting on the fact that the the average Canadian can hardly realize the acute scarcity of food in England the Financial Post tells the follow ng story. An American soldier stationed in England wrote to his parents that he was marry- ing an English girl. Back from D the United States came a package which contained the rice thrown at his arents’ wedding. They had saved t to he used when their son married. But the rice was not thrown at the young cough when they left the church. It ld, how- ever, a pear at the wedding-in the form o s rice pudding. That was practical, lf not traditional. Food ‘is too scarce in England to be thrown way-Winnipeg Tribune. George Arilsa, who died at his London home Tuesday, will be re- membered ori this continent nnd in his own country as the man who brought to stage and screen a memura ‘ portrayal of histori- cal figures. Be war over the years, Disraeli, the Duke of Well- ngton Alexander Hamilton Voi- taire, hothschild and it is fay the Ariiss characterization that ‘Jnsse u figures are best recognized toda . Arllss was on sta e 50 years. e b was also playwrlg t and ‘author. But of his many achievements one stands out—hls superb perform- ance as Disraeli both in f. e thea- tre and on the screen. It will be as Disraeli he will be a ‘ ed as it s as Ariiss the great prime minister ls now best known. -Winnlpeg Free Press. Moot of the deep asa fishermen of New Brunswick still follow the methods of their ancestors. The schooner, the dory the handllrio— u such are their too s. The machine age haatgassed them by. Bur, else- where, e industry has been mo- chnnized, production costs have been cut, qunllt has been improv- ed. Unless our lshermen take note of these developments they are go- ing to be very uphnppy and very poor in the years to come. Lately they have done fairly well because of the abnormal market require- ments ushered in by war, but there should be no false optimism. Once these requirements diminish, as m“ they inevitably will, the sort of living our fishermen earn will de- penp or; tfilher ltheyd are gaelll; equ ppe or -equppe . — n John Telegraph-Journal.‘ Innoothertovwnofltaaiuin the world are there so many cats as 5t. Ives, England. As soon as s vlstor arrives at the station he is surrounded by friendly cats who rub against his leg and mew and purr to attract attention. Hun- dreds of cats will be leen walking through the streets, sitting on the doorstepa cleanlri their aces, or lying curled up n sunny corners of ingl. In fnct, cats are ev- erywhere. The people of St. Ives make their living y fishing, and the most valuable oasemlons of ev- ery family are t e fishing nets. St. Ives is a very old town and there are many ouses that have been there hundreds of years. In these rambling dwelling places of fishermen there are large numbers of rats. During the Winter the Wm’! I! you hearhhofsfreaervatlons in to say that tests ‘rah% ’ . . . . ‘" : .'-. d ‘""‘“‘l-‘l.'.‘§‘8r'f‘“nf$'.'“' “l ‘h,’ I ' . i “ethyl. ‘ ' reclous nets are stored in the cel- ars of the houses. If it were not for the close watch of the eat: there would be vs little left of the netl when fish ng time came around agalm-Our Dumb Animals. “Nomannora,” “are finer than even the o: awkward manifestations of od will to others." Emerson la and,‘ and a0 it is plain, an some of his ideas. The obscure tr dltlon which linked plealantneaa’ d an agree- able department to normal human. relations is now a matter for‘ the penurlous historian and manners nerally come under the abstract _ Th 8am- eadln of resent-o llton pectat and than to th need for defining s gentleman sword that. has ya - oii- various a. d _ , , from the Map of Canada, to which’ Mr. MeLore u m the-oily Jyfltlnz llm of wl- drew attention in the Houumis ‘not the" int (shore- , p y p cases. offence of this nature. Under thsBemiett - _ m°¥l1§°f F945} 3345"" eminent a similar map [wsrinued and circul- . ,. =vereveeerdeilhi the eiw- sled brmdellfihut ermine ' " ‘ _ Yeocrssldlseaie’; tuber- rlie major dangers; lo trunnion than 1.500 elm ‘lhe-hiitiaia 13.9.1‘. stand if“ Di benyl - thanebutamoreoormotsoien 33 1-Wimfakwo “wit? “ ° ° y it our. first nude that ‘its worth aa an Y tmible for 00., were insecticide, wag] and . usually applied as a dust, or as a may. alt it may “and ClllOd sa a con- ct with not’ the lnaechorasa Jll0l1, killing the insect .. By virtue of its chem- cal properties it can film which remains ts. ermc the use of any perhaps the most portant question to ask is whether it will damage the plants. DT. has a very Bood record. there are very few report! of it causing any plant domifle s where it may not cucumbers and mar- Q i rows. Now to consider some of the Dos- albiiitles of D.D.T. in orsctlce. I don't think o give s. detailed survey hat would take too lo n give some general lculturai sslbio .80 I'll try eas with a farm buildings, ma prove-a fee. boon in; flies in tiheo in dairy aces U‘ ra ve them a coating of D. flies settling on th are killed. The coating may remain effective for several m is coating tbs. ‘Ru-mum farm buildings to farm an is, DD.'1‘. has also admixing results havefly against I find it difficult to make any generallsatlons about the usefulness of_D.D;'1‘; against plant pests. each casehaatobetreatedonlts merlta. DDT. is not a cure-all. m- - ti?“ ti ii ‘fleet on m‘ “PIC cl y n0 Q I ma Spider. in rm it may increase K?‘ ‘ k _Sp dei- because insects that prey upon the a? - o! a ; the hraaslcas or D.D.’I‘. gives ex- flea beetles that icaa and the eat- em later on. pears to kill some of the rasltise it and ore! 1d ls found with ‘ faml oea I've given only re- Ttie instan flectlnamonextremewa, fact. that with D.D.T. as otm insect! ides in othioe ll gplg-oyduciiion od llvzmirgiaeiits In ttlnorldotan lit!!! inf I‘ 6X I NQUII vl. “M! n Q mm ‘QUItIKIfZS 1 t in’ u. oonaequn tloerr might wiiiumosm Dower! oon no can remain active over a lag: e should f used ‘in a wholesale and indis- tloual with careful ‘observations of population aa a . Final! ‘ , d its» iaoao noss to Mafia gunk-waning]: nu beentoearsmatiiatensoimrlotoomb-i and.to an: a v 0 vast stillness, knowing oyolo of the the frktlie berry. and the ooiru that alaokd. to rise imperial we! death. Wherever fyouf can: Travel or T radc . . . * _ , O ALetter ofCreditianiodbythll Bank will make you: funds avail- able to you or your customers, u and when required, when!!! 5 or mdels possible.‘ ‘ " Our Letters of Credit are adaptable , to 'any requirements, whether for travel or for importing goods, and your instructions will be carried out with speed and eficiency. f » run BANK or COMMERCE, Charlottetown hands n. s. r. Jaisomn. Manager. ihuoe mm labors ‘v- Q ‘ oeutragma thaot we iflgynfooobe mount. “h” w“ i. hem used in practice. there is evidence m” that under field conditions they are ~ ' ob not seriously harmed. However. GU! IAWKII HUNT mum‘, morohevldence la - before . _.._a oua. . of nature ls delicate seems t not at but int: ‘ ‘ cau- wool. my}: nuoauss or wmna Illllch Booauseofwlnter and theolog- , m”: anawnbiooiwiori ' nave" " ma“. o no“ “n. . coon gone itlsthosoawnolthedrlftlm-ysar, 3'9"“!!!- _ Oflnlltlstheaoasonrwwwrekr-loreo ‘"- tbe oummerbeebo Tbonwliloomo ~ 003999. u,‘ “Y” ma ' as tnapaldatoklauarefreohilveri , _ on Iiptm ' m“; > W .' agile}: » light-ho“, ‘mbmk’ . arrnunon ffillllilamn i “mum” W0‘ mgrltltlmatlononths heartlmmosaed‘ Jffiil-i chiropractor ‘ . . curls-to. McQuald IA. Banister, . loliottsr, ‘Notary. Ito. _ mun. unis , A Building Phone 1m GAUDET 8 HASAZARD Ianlatlla solicitors. Notarlea m noun so ma]; R"#f£irr‘mr“flr'&§'srl‘rfr;n“ ‘inay‘ Chartered Aoooantanta stay? gidefinite can be said. Because at the tdmoua Sfgua- e e ect of DD.'l‘. on the 1m powder lot" of l .l ceremonial ts that parasltlae and prey u search o each bu t pests also require of, Flflll- nientla made every year. A B I511) Y’ Max Factor’: i u coo-nurse mag. l Charlottetown. l’. l. I. NEIL ‘W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond 8t. Charlottetown Tel. 58,9 R0.‘ Bo: 66 Iofliollnnd Bonpany D. F. ARCHIBALD laden ‘has: Building _ Charlottetown ovo-o-o-oo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-oo-ooo-o-oooe H. R. DflANE i CO. iflhartored Accountants l ' l! Clifton dtroit. Charlottetown Iklslll loam _~lalloloa-W.Ianaiag.0.A. ’. memos-a ‘Bentley I. 8.1181181. l0. Am...» '7 ‘ hw n uiruieilzi 4Q‘4‘QAQ‘4 co i‘ h.‘ 9Wfl.l90lI-'ll.ifllh. tll- ‘I i l. 4 1 _Tll'E'~7-2-~7lflo§~~] t 0- _ When dllolved in certain liquids I . i l" "W'- We" DDT. can be absorbed , the skin and cause unpleasant . ~ .. .3 ti":2.;“:"'l."l°..i‘. and“ m“ ' I ‘ Pnwm e " Hist-AM m" m it loom cannot“ m“ m’ Bgguty _ _ a. s. maul. an. ma. onion. _ _ lblltll HQ GU13" C I (‘GO will .. 4 ‘.1 d N." “"- zceeramm-"m ' some“ ivwaod’: mu Iv ‘ u “Qfl h, u ~ 3U...- fi ’ .I. it, MeGUIGAN, as . ans-ii; ma. Ifi" im-raavxaso. , onus areal. _ » i mania souonoa 1 tnvfmhknq“% c,’ ouaan iiomomo mun-nu. .. s i. 2 sou. aiwrnissgn ' o. ~|.'i‘a no. mans .08 Ania rams