mI-y/ _ . an average yirll r tutor rout: THE CHARLOIKTETOWNM GUAEDIAN not" cultaioirt... i. flililRDlAN Morning trait, ifuultdllil in lltfll frggfdent: Lluut. (.11. H. Chester 8. McLun Vlcn Pffhlflrlll’. J. R. Burnett, F..I.l. Berrclnrv- Lirul fol. ‘t .\ Macliinuuu. 0.5.0. Edlbu Laillil ‘ll n .9.- ‘ k’ l “"*" J R flurnflt‘ FJJ‘ Asguajlgfla liflllf}, l. “-lll\v‘l",lrllulylflll A Burnett Val link till’ HU. RATES | g Pjuj,’ 5H,.) p0!‘ )\'.'.U", ‘L50 for 6 montha n mils?!’ m s .......a1.~; sur- for one mvmh Cltv helium .~.3.=-.. i pun; $3.00 for b‘ month: $1.75 fur ‘l m. : -, 64m for one M-osgll. u u u t "P, y,“ 1.\t\ -.....1 1.s..-\. s». 1m‘ ve Bgufurathy oriltptigp pcr ysfi-l. $1.00 for b‘ monthl. The Charlr-tu-ruuu i. V u) I19 “bullueu i‘ . c . . . , . k Old liolulhlgn .\P\\r1 .\.,-_ |t...- . _.|.r¢, \un Ilnlrll loulh Sena Al i... r nun unil “m. I nlztop. _,,., ,,, |., \:\lu-_y, tun no s .. zh-nilorllinl- d YlInu- I. .. \..v.~.|.tu; Nun bland. , , . . .' ~. f _ l! db . Chutonn Lllllllrr mt .0 . . i " N“ l2: t.‘ “ml u u" Onfl Hub Tubltfl" '-v--= - ~ ‘ ‘i7 rhnliirffflkfl‘ than the m- \ ____..__-» - 1 lh: l‘ nmu'p‘dun n; iii stcd rcgartlilng licica and l.‘ c .5 .n 11L 01> 7° ' _. tut‘): are will appfOatihlilg épr- - kgpt secrets, but n. their own them: s. ' (y; are advancing lu-. Xzw York Times. -._-d once more .1 more than ma- , is a thing of the int, mus. but not to be -:h f1‘;ll'\~[l()\\'€f, ea- - ._i~ ‘y .\li'\lllt‘i'lllllfl and claima, tltaf ex’ ~ 63 glut the nu ‘p _ chines. The If ~ F‘, ‘god for lfilill~ compared in cits: ially, men f1 al they hold It in not e , -. awved as a basis fur‘ u» 0f millions of "r; t w tho princil-‘es o. ~ -. _ H p applied, after l" ~' "=1 lYl1ll€‘ICI.!\‘(’llt‘§S. Momqyq (M. 1.’ - ~- sufficient t0 adiieve considez. w- . lli zine aggression ‘of Ruuil’ rhmqgh w. t cost. But with Winter the n\=»1~.~"';~~~ l if WM pmvffl doctrine that has Jon; of an army i‘ t- Tiusea writer, and med to be \\ ‘f- a .< l ma, while an f-rte had luCSllITl- able value in '3‘ use in a war of poaition. or of ll day more oner- oul, and that n?» m itlvi“? somlitionl tank: rc- vert to dbptfvflfllifa w... infant"! manpower for aupporl. This was the s“‘.’~v‘. in rho World War, and the old adage bNUIIRaQ t Ullux‘ more: (ilnly infantry can hold ground, be ~-:i bv artiilL-ry, by air- planes or by media... vniry. Hence the ahsrflrle i _v for an all-out en- listment of men it . od to the seer and yellow leaf gtatjr. to tilalze a speedy tcrntinariotl to ho. ven keep the enemy front our shores. re rut-n. trained men. is the cry going tip ~ >5 from those who have the direction r4 ‘ »- .."r. w’. Kl \Vheat l-‘réc 2 Increase ‘epon; from U1’. wheat price i: ' concc-lrcl on; Saskatchewan, ' Premier, had tl not make pie." ' auspicion, : at Oftavxc. x . by economic and 1" t1‘. owe their final fmu r groups. And appwrr" atchewan are not price level, ani :3" an advance of the Mr. Gardiner fr ti) the effect that the ' t "s pm" bushel was .ll zntmliers from . l..l_».;1.'ii Provincial " p) rwrllt in a body d0 ~- 'i‘licy' cnuiirm the l. Hail. that policies icternnnetl solely ‘vratiania too often pressure of sectional rznbers from Sask- zh lhe increased "-1 in Padiatnenr for o St .20. he Guiiiiioiia that e potential wheat "wdrices, which had tltt- crop your 1941-42, r r 191243; and . d other farm pro- "wvrcl the prairie farm- J‘ income of the .1‘...- fallen to $r:’_=,c>~‘." to $21o,ooo.oon in the ainca prices for Five duets have greatly ' era should enjoy a c1‘- their aggregate i.“ "attic, n l. their crops give \ slwnlzl also be l-mq-rmtgc out- wwr of whcaf ja still H-hivh will diminish if o.’ a depressing cloud ' .11. c". ion. Russia whcnt normally c< in the Ukraine, l she will have t0 w, wwports from Can- ~-s of wheat tlcstinerl l» evvcmv action, and lrcsh shipments. (Canadian wheat il zx-ions, wheat prices :\"./'. \\'e=t¢-rn Cilllflflll ~"<l.l heartened by a l» 100k for wh-u-aa. 1' very large, but upon the v.1. czannot court tl~ . grown tip/m 23'. now held by the f. make goo/l thi= l.“ Ada. Then I'lll".. t‘ for Britain haw l.- will have to be w. Once the hug"- cirivw. rerlticerl to matnqtxi are almost llmmrl {=1 -; \\‘lll then fcfiffltt‘: ll. ‘i i l‘ lnsuraime In V/vrlinie The life insnr: ceiving the wit.» ll it (lid in ilr 7 l-t " Y» ,~. v in (Tnnarla is re- ur: flTllll this war . rI-m- in both cases l0 the ll£‘.'l\'_\' e". - . .. ‘n. ir- l? lwrnmcnt aml the fact tlwrt n. -f ~ ul- lmvn muff? mnncy. Life in-‘lirn. i .l iwvn $1,242.,- 000,0oo in r’.- l ' . ' viv in TQM). 'l‘lw new lmsinl-s -. n m», .. , .~";_",r.ooo,ooli, but the nnv lw- r i I -. I"l"- tv- ._-r3.r>oo.ooo. This was rll>til.l' u i ~ Vi" to crurywne hriv- ing more mo". t4 ~ of llw war lyrlr-nl, but also fn fhr‘ c-z '1l " “l, as a rvstllt of which hi-"lrwrtv". " * .l " wiunn rzttca scrim-fl :;I\"'p m-E ' ‘l - ill The ;|l]l.rll'll wt iv-nwuct- in form‘ in Citmatln was triplvl l.-*r_-.-~-. l .»:~, n] Illjh‘, uliun thi- “nr bu; _' w‘ i fr" t ll ' zr- of flu‘ \\'.'ll‘ (hr-n- \.-,,. , .0 ~ a. Ply Rotation,- (I'M in rvt- 1' .. 'l’l- .1‘ \\";|.- a grout (lfflll milky , , l ', lu '~t‘ illl‘ ‘illfifPIhC in fm-rp ppm "i1 um‘ lll'l\\'l.‘t‘ll nvu‘ ‘n-urnnu- will ‘l < llllll is paid off. 'l‘lu-ri- \\.'t~= “i” n1 ilw- f-tul fr?’ L'1~<t\'t‘,|l'_ ll i". ll ‘I l rg ffiltriiuxlalufl. Since llll' l‘fr* - r l l-w-t-i. .~ rm- zunorttg H26 lurgvsl <Al». '~ t».l'-~ urn‘ l..;xn-', lllr great grmrlh ul in xix.» ,~.~ I»'.i.....c>.. during the » r augmentation of- war helps them to fill that important role. They ran].- $170,000,000 of the three war loans pre- \ious tn the present loan, of which most of the cumpaiiies have taken large chunks. In addition to the fact that many people now have more money the advance in insurance in at- tributed by the- superintendent of insurance at Ottawa, to “the continued confidence of the pub- lic in zlw stability of our life insurance companies 3.1.1 the comparatively l0\v yields available on se- curitlcs in the investment field." Cost of Repudialion Premier King, concedes the Sydney Post-Rec- 0rd, is right in saying conscription is not the is- suc in the $1,500,000 plebiscite he has obtained Parliament's authority to hold. \Vhat Mr. King i; actually seeking in this plebiscite is an electoral verdict that he was wrong in pledging his Gov- ernment against conscription two years 33°; judging by the estimated colt of thia P011. l‘ would mean a staggering drain on the Treasury lo obtain a similar electoral reptidiation of all Mr. King's foolish pre-election promises. i. a EDITORIAL NOTES n Lou] Lqialatun begin: it: annual session fo- day. ti!!! Are you one of the 600 clPtll" Lowth“ “n: f0“ and have you zesaonfledi If not, why not. This i5 the final month wherein we ruust Kl"! a detailed account of our income for taxmll Du“ 05¢!- p i ‘U 1U i P0115“ g, a, I discount these dayfl. even warty leaders eschewing controyersy. Rfld 5°"! “Qt be‘ ing above accepting position: from their 5T5!- h'l nets. wieoppo n l‘ 1. ‘l I‘ He“ i, gm policy of Martin Barman, whom Hitltr has appointed to succeed Rudolf Hess. now prisoner in England: "The P601116 muff b9 wrested from the churches and their pnestl. Their influencce must be permanently broken in the same way as harmful influences of astrol- ogers, soothsayera and similar swmdlers. Our Nazi world picture stands far above the teach- ings of Christianity." That being the CI“. l" l" buy more Victory Bonda, u. n. u a Gustav“; III, creator of modem Swedm. assassinated thin date I729; aucceeded Adolphus I whose father Frederick I, had gfI-flifll Swfldfll ‘a constitution abolishing absolute monarchy» but plunging the country into trouble between C§P5 and Hats, the war policy of the Hats bringing fresh humiliation to Sweden; overthrew the Hat oligarchy, restored absolute monarchy, checked Russian aggression, promoted literature and m- dustry, and supported Louis XVI against the revolutionaries. u w a u A trust i: being founded in England b)’ fl" Kinsmem-nn association of parent: whose Chlld“ rcn have been evacuated oversea—aa an expres- sion of their gratitude for the ldndfle?” Whlch their children are recieving in the Uwtcd States and Canada, The object of the trust l5 to es- tablished scholarships in England after the war for the children or nominees of lh! f05Y°Y'P31'°“t* oversea. It is hopedthat _those_ interested in Anglodnterican friendship will support flit? trust. n. a. a w How easy it is to have two dianieteripflll! W‘ poiite views concerning the same situation/r waa evidenced recently by two reports on the Ylflwk trial in the U. S. A.; From the Yllashmgtoll Posh "The 57-year-old German publicist 5110f" ed no emotion at the announcement of th: decis- ion which was delayed until 8.05 _p. m. From fhg Washington Times-Ilerald: “Viereck lost his nervc—\vhich kept him cold and detached through the I2 days of his trial-and suffered a bad case of jitters." a a u One of many expressive Old English wordl lonl-l gone-mate's fl" Plty“ff°m Wdlnar)’ You‘ hularies is srvink: n1eaiung_ to do hard muscu- lar work. Chaucer used the word ifflll-lenll)’ “Pd evidently knew that the act does not necessarily depress the splritl! _ "And many a riband (laborer) is mery and baud. That swiukelh, and berith, botherlay and mght,_ IIany a burthen of great might." It will accordingly, without causing offence be m order to say now our Victory B_on d executive and canvassers swinked labouriously at their jobs, muscularily, and mentally as wfill. all, not only uudcptfsszd, butinspircd. The lut civilian passenger car to be made in Canada until the war is won rolled off a Gen- eral Motor! assembly line last week almost un- noticed, while the rest of the huge plant hummed steadily along on war production. “kirkmen who gave the car its last touches watched it drive to the fest track through a yard packed with military vehicles of many kinds. then turned back _to their assembly line where already the first unit! of a new. type of war vehicle harl moved their sturdy bulk into the mass production picture From now on (kneral Motors is more than 90 per cent. (m machines of war, the small remainder of cap- acity licittg devoted to badly-needed commercial trucks. a n a a It appears members of the Church of Eng- land form the largest denominational group in the Army, and members of the United Church the lrtrgvsr group in the Royal Catiatlian Air Force. 1'1... was shown in a return tabled in the House nf (fmnrmns, Dcnontinations of men serving in the Royal Canadian Navy were summarized, Protestants 74 per cent and Roman Catholic 2i prr ("cnl of strength. For the .\rmy percentages of the llt-brcuw in the Navv formed decimal F‘: large .(lCllf'lllllll2lllf)llS given were: Church nf linglaml, 35; Roman Catholic, 22; United, I7; l‘rc<l>_vtrriai1, 14 and Baptist, §_ Hebrews serv- ing in lhr- army makv up rlr-cimrlf 62 pcr cent. In lllv .\ir Force the division was: Llnitezl, 21): (hurch of ling/land, 2;; Roman Catholic, 2o; l’r(~<l>_\'trrinii, l0 znul lfilpllgf’ 5_ [Idn-L-WS made up [.7 per cent. NOTES BY TIIE WAY Th. Qxplmhll of the ‘Indian Anny has made such rl-P-‘l P10- gregmatmerolaadeuthulofll- eon, both Indian 1M - - Under conscription 1n Ind-Ia time, h“ been a drastic comb-out of Eurgpeflng of military age wllh the oblwt of supplvlnl 14W RBWWI quota for offieering tho army. There 1a M11. however. an t. need for entrant; for tho oom- mia-slonod ranka. - Time! d Ceylon. Dcsplu the differences between m British and the United BMW ayalems, action in thu counts‘! paralleling m British action la feasible. ‘Althoulxh he holds 1115 office for a fixed term, President Roosevelt, like Gmrchill of the British people, clearly is the eholoe of bhe American people for the IU- preme leadership. But. the mem- berg of his Cabinet hold their posts at the will of the President! Polntcdly, the feature of the prea- Qnt British shuffle installing Ern- eat Bevin u sole llsbour member o! mo Iondon War Cabinet, comment: on our nbmtfon at “pettfooat government." 1n the labour field. Mrs. Perklna, apparently rooted 1n her position as Secretary of Lalb- our, the post corresponding to Bevlnu, Ls impotent, and, of course. h not seriously a factor in dealing with our mprecnely urgenn. war- labour questions. -Detmlt News. Nmv the Government ls to issue a second suit for walking out by the soldier. The difference be- tweem an army batvedreaa uniform and the attractive Royal Canadian Afr Force blue, L! to be abridged some-what, if ft can be. Brass but- ton; come into their own again, also a belt. a brown tle and even a collar pin 1s l0 be purl; of the issue. The soldier will certainly look smarter on the street, and he will also feel that. way. Good clothes have a good effect cm almost every- one. — St». Catharlnes Standard. My 1min In altuakd at the bottom of a hill In a little valley, and Lhg garden Ls bordered by a clear running brook. On the other aide of the brook is a field of very marshy land, which even pro-war Jerry builders ooulcl rvot uaol 1111a mlrah has hem the home of two families of pheasants, ever alnoo we took the house over seven yearn ago. There are two resplen- dent. wClKENIS and about half a dozen soberly dressed hen birds. They have survived many at- tempt; on their liven by the local sporting fraternity, the r1501": of Winter, and shell shock from the “blltzesfi They are an example of the highest-art of camouflage, for their tawny plumage blends ex- actly L110 the withered reeds where they have their nests. In the Winters before the war, when marsh and garden were rapped 1n a mantle of snow, and che smaller birds had eaten all the ber- ries off the trees, we laid a trail of xultanaa to the dining room wln. dow, which never failed to attract the pheasants: they would come close up to the houae to f-ecd, while the cheeky iobins playfully hopped all round about, excn alfghting on top 0f them. Since then ff, la the Pheasants Who do us a good turn. We always know when danger threatens from the skies, for long before the sirens go, the birds are very agitated, flying round and round and crowing loudly with a. distinct note oil alarm 2n their voloesl We hope that our feather- ed h-lendg will come through the dangers of wartime safely, and look forward to the day when we may again lure them w our win- dow with sultan”. — From the Birmingham Mall. More vita-l war materials like of] and cordite can be obtained from peat begs in allied countries when a new method for carbonic- fni peat. he: been developed on a commercial acgle. Evolved by Brit.- leh engneers only a few months ago the indications are that the new process will yle'd over three tunes the quantity of bar compared with existing methods, giving a conupondlxigly diesel and other 011a. 1t fa also honed to Obtain about z per cent. of carbo-hydrafvea frcm the tar waber, yielding acetone for the manufacture o! cordite, the smoke. leu- explosfvo propellant vised by the Navy and Amw. Peat, used from time immemorlal u a fuel, ha; become of increasing industrial importance 1n recent year; owing to tho development. of gvtificlal drying method; which reduce the time taken from weeks to hours. Them f! some alx thousand million tons of peat. solids 1n tho peat h0g5 of Great Britain alone, while‘ peat, bogs cover one-seventh of me area of Ileland and huge tracts in Russia. and Canada. - Peoo Ltd. A 01-year-old randmolhor fmm New York City has flown her seaplane on to a naval reservation and has asked for service-for her and the plane-in the Civil Afr Patrol; a 71-year-old man from Utlca, N.Y., nan taken a leaf from the lady's book and 1a receiving flying leswna; In Cordele, 0a,, a holdup man pulled a Pistol on a 72-year-old housewife. but she took ft from 111m. whacked him over the head with ft and knocked hlm out. In Jericho, Ark., a 76- year-old man L; taking high aehool over again aa a refmeher; ln Den- ver, a man of 7s fell 25 feet out. o! a lrev. 80f "P. brushed himself off and walked away, grinning. A lady of 80 and a gentleman of the mme age have secured a license to wed in Lou Angeles; "In ‘Ibaueck, N.J., In Bfidflr-Old man walked 56 miles without a atop; 1n Rockford, 111., a man celebrated hlc 93rd birthday by doing hla usual eight,- hour hitch ln a metal fabricating plant. - Clifcalo Bun. 0n a Inovry Sunday morn. fng recently l9 was decided that lb would be fmposslbie for the smith family to vmrshlp with the Presbyterlans, as they usually did, tho church hem; nearly a mlh "tfvabo larger yield of ‘g PUBLIC FORUM Illa IOlI-l la IDII Chanda; by lornlpollalla valuation o! Intonat- P. I. I. ENLISTMENT! our Issue of MB-Nh W!» mu zlw o number u! man W fad in vaxloua aectlona o! Can- ada. per 1000 population (1941 census) u t “ - ‘ Maritime Province; ........... 46 Prairie Provlncea . .. Brit-lab Columbia .............. 45 Then fa a certain grave omis- sion here. namely: PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND .. 76 “Let your light so shine before men, that. they may see your good works. . ." I am. slr. 0w- PHALANL SALVAGE WOIW SOCKI Bin-We hear .. B'\€at deal about aalv o nowadays and ll: la needed, too, 0r we must all aave before m» ssh u» acuh. But "we ll one Phase of salvage that so far I have not heard mentioned, We all know W001 is needed and with an invasion of Australia 1m- mment, our chief aupply wul be endangered. Every farm woman knows that socks can be magma and $116)’ BIB Just u good aa new. Now wouldn't 1t be possible to 10.1. vale these socks when the feet, are Wom. refiurn them and have them te-foobed? It requires almost, as much wool for the foot of B, 50,-}; l“ 1°? WE'RE. and as much time f0 rknlt ft. rherefore that would be a .0‘... saving of wool and energy I should think the worn artfcle§ “mm be returned b5‘ the same channels through which the new 5°°d5 5° ("IL $0 l8!‘ I have never heard where those worn articles go Th“ W°"1 Darts could be made over lslelttzeblfkpkets and these again could I ho te soldlerscr the rclugegg, throgflh o obtain some information subjegt‘ Your columns on this Em. Bil‘, etc. r AN nvm More“, P. E‘ Inaswzn KNITTER- m "rsnsracrxvc" slTr-WE are all looking ahead__. {or something,- some u, Just hob n‘ dOWH l! they ‘o lions m“. m "W who mm the beauty a, they pun through and aométhnes look baclg to visualize 1n par; what n’ they have missed in travellfn g along fihe WBY- Some are in too much ‘we 1° B" Mons: Where? They themselves could pdgglbly m, you that, though 1n m, end too much m“ 1111M mean a quick mp from Dolnt to another onlv with m- ‘It’ flgnnggigztklln between. er look around on ail iitiesthfi” 3,2; 9° "mi ‘he hlshwav. 1n case they mltghg miss something and want. to Of life they can, a; ghey ere are again ll‘. Ereater vision; they p99:- 21111835112: the future along the way. seem u between. but at the same ‘r1112. "Whirl: and building in the prgs: fsrtéfllie ‘great Pyramids of the t..- . Hy n: the foundations or ma; greatness which suoerintvres an distant and the roads almost bmcked "P They thzrefore sol; m“ n" m? Conflfsallcnal church. which was only Just. round the “m,” when they Brrlved In the vestibule of that building the smanfm 5mm! KY1 We heard to whisper anxiously. ‘Mother, are we rezzis" | :-d here?" _ Manchester Guardian. “n:nv:s”" sm: OALLE, |r Loving Inland- loaing friends-aha nave: want w! any . IIIIIII——IIWIII loo fired. "Nerves," aha "IOIIEIQ —- bu! If wan ha: ‘dnoya. Illa Ellen of bur blood, that needed attention. The improved action fl Eliieyflnxrpi: l “u. dfifyhniuhq backache, Budd's KidneyPiIl; f»... rum Restorer A delloafel -‘ ' . Jarallon wlrlch reatonreea, Etrleulrthena and beautlflca the a r. It wlll restore gray hnlr n, If; original color. prevents D-aadrufl and nous hlllng Get Your Price 60 ccnla. TRUSSES l Modern and up-tu-flng a large assortment of American Truaaea ha! received. All alien and atvlea l! Ilrlcec to cult every one, . Call and have Ill Ill vou. bottle today. COLD! l Prompt and affective rellel la obtained In ohllh, aura throat. vvh nlng 001Gb and bronchial trliiilblea In [ant and adult by MACS AMMONIATED IIBONCIIIAL COMPOUND Tbll preparation h com- pounded from mm drum and no been thoroughly med and Price 50 centa nee no o. "We have a pomlalehgna‘ of u "n: Mona llvvaya In afoul.‘ THE‘ TYIO MAGS Mall Ordera Glvm Prompt Attention. f wonus OF cwtumucr A nought A Day to: A Pooplo M Ill “Our llvea Ml" u- fona are worhhleu our right to eidat nrevalla and. we owe ft to ourselves. and to the cause of human freedom in world. that we be pre- tn purines our all. In [rec ammo.‘ - Hr. fagiitii“ fringing‘ a fa“ 1m“ Ramona. . 4 and whilst they may have oil-m du- tloa f» perform which may claim their attention, when a part of their time la devoted to laying the cornerstone; of the future, then out of chaos and the wreck of tempor- al Lhmgs, arises the structure of the future wetness-that which la yet to be; at which mun be 1n the em l. aolld foundation, on whic to erect tho which must contain the future well being o! thla Natlon and Empire. "There are no tomorrows"; we muat of neoesalty begin today, tn bulld for the future of our own gen- eration and those who are to comp; “In reality"; In deeds not words! In deeds not words bulld the foundations of the future now, and 1n so doing be aura that wlmln are the principles that freedom stands for; founded upon a rock that will withstand the rava of time, the swirling lash o! e tempest. the buffetlng fury of the wildest storm. and be a secure harbour for those who have Weathered the lawfulness of the hurricane of hate, turmoil and war In other countries; who will 100k to us for a haven where they can live 1n peace, happiness and security; where lustlce will reign for all! rich and poor alike; where they can forget. the awfulness of that spectre ulzlch swept ‘their all" away in the maelstrom per- petrated against them, by iniquit- ous, beastivl leaders, who caused the awful strife and carnage, 8119f and misery we are witnessing bo- ay. “Time and tide wait. for no man." It is therefore our duty and by that It fa obvloua to all, that the peoples representative; are they who should have In hand now. I policy broad enough and with such a farsighted means of encompassing not only those from the Mother Country, who will most certainly be looking thla way when Peace returns; but fa thou especially of war torn countrlea which have been the vle- tlma of such awful helllshness. lltat must be one continuum fright- mare of horror. brutality and ter- ror. Those too are they for whom we must hold out a. welcoming hand; let. Canada be found in that. post- tlon where she Ls ready to open her doors to those,—not with a. dump- ing policy-where people el Izer llve or starve after they have been ad- mitted here, but with a great policy worked out and ready to function. between our own Government and the Government of the Mother Country; also a facsimile of the same to operate with the other Gov- ernments concerned: to coordinate with them and whereby those peo- ple may be financed to a reason- able amount: firstly by their own ,g— . v I Penslar Golden i Pen-Lyptus i. wlll soon rld you of that harassing cough and the rell I will be w. neul. This eflectlve Cough Svrun helps ynu to throw off your cough by reducing the inflam- aflon of the nil- passages pr ,_ and without any l harmful after-effects. .14. Sold In 500 Bottles. Penslar Laxative Bold Breakers l will relieve the worst cnld In twenty-four hours. They also Insure you against taking a cold If you follavv the direc- 4 llama. An excellent combin- ' action with the above Cough bi byruv. One slze only-Ni cents. i E. fl. FUSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTORE ' Sole Agent Ihr DI. Wrench’: Vermlclda capsule: for great edlflw ' Fight Fasl GRIPPE - BULBS rms PRO van wa y;- tha pnaoutdpllalmlc don‘! M a q; _ muumummacmvnamu‘? m“ "h Clnnamaml Oaililea and Buckley’; llllxtun. "rm, “u” treatment aok fact. Buckley’: lflatnn eaaea the nub lnatanlly and helpa correct over-acidity. Buckley’; I‘ ‘ give you the benefit of not ONE but Tim, nlhvllll. colfl-dllnvlllnr lmodlenta. om qnlnk relic! from when, palm and cold mm", atlmulatca and reimbu- luatlon of the nerves. A fourth lngrullenv-ou 0g --haa long been I atandb! ll! Europe for fighting m”. and slmlhr maladies. Buckley remedlea NOW. prompt rolls! call your doctor. filial == ..L‘. llllfdlaut an.“ nu lblrd Induce! a mental“: B6 Pffilllred. Get these d If thla treatment doq Ifrfim? Gil Government, secondly by our Gov- ernment advancing them I slmllfl-r or leaner amount and workfn 1n conjunction with mean: ofre Plylmn whereby tho families or individuals may, whilst. they are being absorbed, into tails Nation, the knowledlze. that. we as a 9co- ple, are doing all 1n our power to help bulld their future, and that their own Governments are also eo- operating. Then by meam of a refunding plan between our Government and the other Governments in question who would be loo-partners in this enterprise for the well being of hu-i manlty, could be worked out means of sett‘ two countries as repayments are made; by reciprocal agreement. This would not only ensure a ae- cure footing for those who are- when this awful night. of darkness is over-people like 0\1X'5ElV€.!—-"_lll8fi get along”—on1y unlike ourselves, "they" know all about the savagerv of war and the litre db- trylng f0 tress and mlserv into winch u, - i azrtuttm vow M l. Furthermore, from m, work and the actlvltlea in m, lous trades, a! well as the m" up of new communities land " tlement, em, will be derived g u tlxiuous, evergrowlng, soume. o; enue. from the families and imam uals so helped. the repayment the initial expenditure being 5110c: ¢d 0W1‘ a Derlod of Years. The!‘ l" Perspective we will able to see Ute growth an, branching out in all directlu where instead of ten or twelve 011 lions we will bulld a Canada will, in her aieatness. flourishing north to the sout . from the u, to the west, will resound with an flvlw and ‘industry, u... Homelan of a Nation in whkh all will glory The results of working today w1 make reading ln the future, I am, , e "The Ulaca,‘ P. E. I. wit a thalra: out t. worked “"1" [0 ahead with the 1i, between the —~J0flN, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII POTATO and POULTR ANNUAL MEETING POTATO GROWERS‘ I PUBLIC MEETING OF THE POTATO INDUSTRY P. W. GULLEGE, THURSDAY, March l9 THURSDAY MARCH 19th 2 EM. A PUBLIC MEETING THURSDAY DIARCH 19111 7.30 l‘. M. FRIDAY MARCH 20 2.30 P. M. \ FRIDAY MARCH Z0 7.30 E. M. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII’ ‘Machinists a... Hum warren IMMEDIATELY TRENTON INDUSTRIES LIMITED Experienced machinists and fitters requlfed who are qualified to carry out precision machin- ing and assembly operations. Good garage mechanics may be acceptabl! for portion of assembly work. (Men novv employed on vvlr contract work will not bl accepted). Ill‘ INTI-Ill’!!! IIPLI DIIIOI I!) l TRENTON INDUSTRIES LIMITED. . GIVING axvanmuca. auz. NATIONALITY, arc. MEETINGS ASSOCIATION and The Annual Meeting of the Potato Growerl‘ A: S""i¥\l.lflv1 for the transaction u! general business Il b. held at r. w. College. Those shlpplnf lhrotuh - organization should endeavour w be present. Open to growers, ahlppe a and everyone lute M in the potato Industry will be held In P. W. Col Ir Assemhl Hall. This will be an open meelln or the discussion of Transportation. hlarkelln R ‘cuhtiwq. Potato Diseases, Fertilizer Bonua, elc anrl wlll he conducts! by quillllal offlcliln. "We Annual MlfF‘lvny nf the P. E. l. Approved Flock Association and the P. E. l, l-lalnherymen’: A1- loclauuu. P. I. I. Poultry Industry Committee. All poultry men In the province arm Invited to attend. Add! and discussions of Interest will be conducted. meetings except public potato meeting \vllI be he Basement Roam, P. W. College. Entrance Gnf n street. ["873-341- tzann: " '" ~ i Trenton, Pictou County i, p5.“ .‘ l» ‘__ _ i‘? TANKS WILL WIN Because they have what if. takes. They make M!!!‘ way against obstacles, and our tobacco also ha! will’ It has ‘made headway with the 9'15"‘ m" ‘the day It first went on sale. i‘ Hickey’: Black Twist Chewing Tobacco Mamuvacrunuuaxar" ' - llllllfiY 8. NICHOLSON Tollaccollo. ltd. Charlottetown It lakes. THE DA Y