v-"uuir i .____~_[ Ewciigignirvifrglowu GQARDIA§ _ _ 1.--i§§5§l=“‘53‘--!?~...1‘h3. TNE GNARLUTTEIUWN GUARDIAN examination notices and forthwith disappeared, Notes By The Way l Morning Dally (Founded In Ill?) and the 87,485 who never got these original rio- tiees. The R.C.M.P. were supposed to police the calls, but the size of the job was manifestly too much for so small a force. aring in mind the gaps in information, says Mr. Dexter, home defence conscription appears to have worked out like this: Out of I00 notices up bu, whM-s “m, around m, sent out, i1 were never delivered. Twenty- hoine at a time like this than a ia- eight were delivered, but the men were never l-"gfmi? “ma. fgem" dim‘ “m” heard of again. Thus 59 out of the original _ nmpeg r 2;. and enriches glow-pg; m we geueh.’ slr- 1 note the; we have e elem. I00 turned up for medical inspection. Twenty- With the therometer It four Ibo" ern Caucasus and tea-growing in- en iii our town who is against five were found m be in Category HA1!‘ Si,“ lpgro and more than eleven inches creases each year. In 1841 the |having a canning facto bui.t on . . snow on the ground, the people production in this section of the account of the smell. We , I woulr. teen got postponements (nine for agriculture and of Vancouver temporarily have had Union was over 10,000 tons. like to know hiin. It sure would be seven for industry). Fourteen reported to mil- 3° 5WD the" Smiimil °i "if"? ii°w'| “iii-mild! °i "i" in 99° l intereliinil to know llloh I oiiilflfl itary camps and three were sent home be- Tha Secret of. Puwc “mm” l __a,__ J. U. LEWIS lt was a happy lie when the sugar coating was thicker than the pill-Toronto Star. President: Llsul. Col. W, Cheetos l. IQLIII Vina Prcsincntr J, B. Burnett. IJJ. lsnrufaryi Llant. Col. l). A. Iaclilnnsl. 0.10. Isiitur and lounging Director. J I Iarafl“. IJ-l- lllotllh- Erlltorsi Franls Walhsr, and Llaat. Ila l. Burnett, tt.O.N.V.R. (on Active service) It's I lot of trouble bringing them fill-was filillllliffll Sub-tropical fruits such as or- MONT-loll! (PANNIRY anges, lemons, grapefruit, peaches ' SUBSCRIPTION BATH! By Isll In P, I.‘ l.. ‘L00 per yeari MM for I months “.25 for 3 months: Mln fnr nna month City Ilnllu-ry M1» nrr veal-i U.” for I months llfiii tm- S mnnthl: 00v- fnr one month By Mali in nthnr Prnvlnres and l7.il.A. $5.00 P" "l? Saturday Wet-lily: $2.00 m-r yrnri 11,00 for 6 months. 50o for S months Th! Charlottetown Hnlslllnirs Non-n Agency. Olfl Smith New! AIFIIP], Guardian may bs obtained at Times Square. New Iorhi Corner ililh and Washington Bmltnn: Jlslirirpsslltnn Nnwl Alene‘). IIIG FOG] Ill, ssnnru-nl; .|_ i-‘ins- 5M tiny as. Tormsloi News lltaad (‘lusts-nu |.llIil'll'l". (Minna; Wolfe's News Stand airsh- hurs. Ulll minim-o filmy, Monvlun, N11. ers that bloom in the winter, tra-l are devoted to the growing of e who would step any one from [ry- , la." -Montreal Gazette. mulberry tree upon whose leaves m; u, build up eh]; p1“, and cause they were unfit. Thus out of the ioo , feed-i the little oflteriiillfl-rl Wh° make employment for the few iab- M u prosPfcts eleven men were obtained for homei T'""‘ “d ""’“"' “hm” “"5"” suplmfs u“ 8m‘ 1°’ d‘ m‘ “w” "W"! i" h“°1°~“- I "mid" "h" EN °‘ chm "am Y “on defence service. Eflnlflj. ?§Z“M°.Y.‘.TEZ,‘E.°§,EE“§{,§,,I§ Urgliiildsstwfidlfnbfdsdeorgia is wood- lgéngtmgkfioilz: mfli“ gfieg‘. at Tbs Windsor bseuuss of Its It Qanngt he argued from this that the phy. Eoepcrtment. 1r that fundamental ififgoggld 01:13PM?‘ xfroggmixilte Wglig Ihgpg he l, '0... o; mo“ who hey, convenient location and its well- sical standard of our oun men is low be- m” shmm‘ be “med 9v" mm Slhee 1933 a m“ mo" yahmble plenty for himself and doesnt carol ssiublishedreputuilon foreourissy, y b‘ - | industry wont if be - I post-war -, . ., .. navecmss-s-ag-eaw-arannesnztsgw ‘The bitrnrii/esf Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” ihilUAY, FEBRUARY l2. 1943. ;____. The Map of Conquest ln llnlzcick rune], “La Pcziu de Chagrin," a miraculous hit Ui- wild u... skin seems to grant ll- t-wuvifl <‘\t‘i'\‘ wish, but only at the price of n vrri..i‘»z - rinlwtgc for t-vcry" \\'l>li fulfilled. 'l'lh- 1.1-1 “1-21 i- ih-vci" prniifictl, for the skiii lin- .~lirnt~.i. h. nothing and its owner dies. Thi- tivrutm limp iif (THIHILICSI, SliggCStS the .\'.-\\ Y-trl. 'l's'>:i-~_ l> like the skin in Balzac‘s fnblv. .\: i'~ iuII cxtcnsitun it seemed to pro- mi-c iruiytwwi; ilhu the Nazi heart could de- sire. Iilil the pniiilisc was a treacherous one. 5o much blood 11nd effort went into making llic map. >41 uuivb hnircd was aroused as its evil etlgvs .~[ii’<'.'lll owl" tut» continents, that the pro- cess of »l|rii1l<:r-_§c bccnmc inevitable. Now both in Rlinnlll and Africa it is shrinking disastrous- ly. Each loss entails another loss, with more blood and more effort to prevent it. And each loss stcril.» sidiiviilliig of strength from its weary i)\\'iit'l“~ body, .\1 ilic cud the German map of cuiiiliiv-t will shrink‘ t0 nothing and the men who llliltlt‘ it will die. Mr. Gibbons Suggestion A committee of the Royal Society of Can- Ida is cvmsidcriiig a suggestion made by Mr. Murray Llibimtt in an addrms entitled “A Se- cular Bible for New Canada” delivered by him before the society Inst year. Mr. Gibbon is both troubled and impressed ‘ by the lack of racial cohesion he notices in the Canadian people and desires a better integration, particularly as. he says, “the indications are that establishment of pence conditions will result in a renewed immigration of Europeans into Can- Ida." One militating handicap to the quickening of that assimilation is language, for linguistic de- ficiency keeps Canadians inappreciative of the traditional cultures of the races which have come or are to come from Europe. This hid- den knowledge is nor taught in the education in our schools, but might be gained from transla- tions done in the English which racial statistics show is the commonly desired and spoken lan- guage among people after coming to Canada. Mr. Gibbon‘; proposal is that a committee of scholars appointed by the Royal Society under- tske the translation of the best in the secular literatures in the European countries contribut- ing to Canada's national whole. A rough and ready parallel is found by him in the committee of 54 scholars appointed to translate the Auth- orized Version of the English Bible in the seventeenth century. fantastic Call-Up Figures f Os Jsa. I7 the Dominion Govornment issued figures covering call-up operations under the National Resources Mobilization Act. Ari at- tempt at analyzing these figures has been made by Mr. Grant Dexter, Ottawa correspondent for the Winnipeg Free Press (Liberal) with l-csults which are somewhat startling. Briefly, Mr. Dexter concludes that they are quite unin- telligible. “It is ss though the tables were the work of a demented mathematician," he writes. "No single total agrees with its fellow. When two of the totals are added, on the assumption that two plus two make four, the answer in- variably turns out to be five or three or seven or what you will." The explanation ls that the statement repre- sents the most intelligent compilation which is possible from the records of the National “hr Services department. The muddle with res- pect to the calls for military service is probably unprecedented. To illustrate, Mr. Dexter takes the totals from March 2o, 194i—the beginning of the four months’ compulsory service-until Dec. 26, 1942, In that poi-ind the army asked for I50,- 390 home defence draftees. To obtain these men, the National War Services department sent out 750,6ii notices requiring men to be medically examined. Tho first deduction is 87,485-'iIie number of the notices which were never delivered. .\'c.\'t are 2I6,79I who got the notices but of whom nothing more was hoard, 'l‘lt<-se men either enlisted, died or dodg- ed the draft. A The total of men who turned up for medical exinuiiintion is 44fn335- and of these $9,491 were declared in be iu category “AT Then 120.610 ‘of postponements. Despite these deductions, notices h report for military training were sent to 173.535 iflfli- 0i these, 9,345 were never delivered and 32.825 vanished from official ken. All told, 135354 reported at the training centres where 23,676 were found to be unfit and were sent home. Thus the army actually got 107.673 men f0!‘ home defence service. _ It is useless to try and make these figures halal-lee. The officials worked hard to find the errors and duplications, but at last gave up. The kind of records kept by National War Ser- vices, apparently, will never enable the facts to be known. The most intriguing figures of the lot are the 216,791 men who received their medical cause no one knows how many of the missing J-ieaven for the road-hogs?—windsor enlisted for active service. much duplication in the postponements. And there may heist"- If all this had to be done over again, no] An odiustobie seet- has been de- doubt it would be done much more efficiently. But from the practical point of view, the job now is to find out what has become of the iniss- ing men. Where are the 304,276 men who never got the first notice or who never res- ponded to it? y -- EUIIURIAI NUI ts - iMany oi today's men and women Brighton Club, one of the social centres int the city, having complied with the regulations imposed by the City Council, is now once more active, zuid arrziiigeiiiciiis have been made with it for Saturday evening dances, proceeds from which go to the Red Cross funds. s x e s. I “This I can tell you, I am very thankful to Scouting," writes a Scoutmastcr, now a member of a Commando unit. “Each man in a Com-i mando has to go through the training a Boy Scout goes through from the Tenderfoot staged with a few additions. When I see a Scout troop , at work I think to myself, ‘by Jove, here's an- other Commando aliiiost ready to take its plzicc in the fighting line'.“ s- 1r a s Lady Jane Grey, “Nine Day's‘ Queen of Eng- land", executed this date, i554; granddaughter of Henry VIIYs sister Mary, she married Lord Guildford Dudley, whose father, the Duke 0f Northumberland‘ influenced Edward VI, xvho was rapidly failing in health, to nominate her as his successor; on his death in i553 she duly came to the throne, though very reluctantly and after vain protests; meanwhile Mary, zlauglitei‘ of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, rallied her supporters, caused Lady Jane and her hus- band to be thrown into the 'l‘0\ver; her father- in-law was executed without (lelibv, while the innocent, unambitious Queen and hcr husbaml were sent to the block later. i U C i Sqd.-Ldr_ Gregory Vlastos, R.C.A.F., former professor of philosophy at Queens University. who was guest speaker at the slipper meeting of the Saint John Y's Men's Service Club dealt with the attitude of the boys in the R.C.A.F. overseas to the post-war, stating that even though their immediate duties kept them busily engaged at present, nevertheless many were ask- ing what things would be like back home after the war. He felt that many of them took the attitude that while they were sviniiing the war the folk back home should be working on the problem of winning the peace, so that there would be something worthwhile for them to rc- tura to. iii‘ "Rich In My Heritage", by Anne Blakemore, is the story of ten years on a farm. A young couple soon after their marriage take up their residence at Greenacres, an old farm which has family associations. The husband has a busi- non in town, and there is no intention at first to work the farm, but Anne, his wife, is per- suaded by Charlie, the stockman, to let him buy a few sheep and, gradually, pigs, cattle, poultry, ete., are included. The charm of the book lies in this gradual development, with losses and gains, for every detail of management is des- cribed, with the result that the reader gets a shrewd idea of the difficulties which face the ordinary farmer in his everyday life. There is, of course, the romantic side as well as the strict- ly business outlook, and those who like coun- tryside books will get a great deal of pleasure in the descriptions of harvest time and the de- lights and trials of the varied seasons as they roll round. For some considerable time the farm does not pay, but by dint of profiting by experi- I enee the balance ori the right side is secured. The keynote of the book lies in the fact that it is a human story and not an agricultural text-book, and we commend it without reservation. It is just one of those books which will be lent to a friend with the determination that its return will be insisted upon. (Lutterworth Press, 10s.) ’ s a e s An undertaking iri which every man, woman and child on Canadian farms may‘ take part is the egg production objective for 1943, says Mr. W. A. Brown, manager, poultry products section, special products board. The goal is if eggs each month from birds on general farms‘ and i4 eggs each month from birds on special- ized farms. The production figure for general farms is two eggs per bird per month over pre-l vious production and in a sense constitutes a game in which everyone can play. This in- crease is necessary to provide the 345,000,000. dozens of eggs required by Canada in i943 to} supply the armed forces, ships stores, exports to Great Britain and nearby possessions, do-i mestic consumption and a small stock pile for emergencies. Contracts with Great Britain for‘ i943 provide for an additional 1,000,000 cases: (3o,ooo,ooo dozen) over 1942 and provision is made in the quantity mentioned for an increase of i5 per cent in domestic consumption There are about 35,000,000 hens on farms in Can-, ada. Average farm flock production in the pasti has been around nine eggs per bird per month. Under record of performance many birds lay from 25 to 3o eggs per month. An increase of two eggs per month on the part of the aver- age flock would, therefore, appear well within the range of possibility. signed which will insulate the pilot from vibrations of his plane. says Science Digest. Rubber bushing units in the pivotal scat supports are said to insulate both dominant and stray vibration impulses acting in any di- reetion. In the scarcity of butter every ounce of meat fats should be saves. can testify to the good taste nf ‘bread dipped in hot gravy made. ‘electric turbines which give light M0 from the meat tats which make butter on the bread unnecessary. — Brockville Recorder and Times: "From now on." warns the editor of the Kingston Whig-Standard, "we intend to indulge in an apple pie diet, with raspberry pie or bueberry pie or pumpkin pie 0r mince pie in season just for variety." Rostraln yourself, Rupert; that could create another wirimcy in the Senate. — Ottavra Citizen. If cups without handles have a lonq rim if may mean the cllsnnngar- mice of a very charming accomplish- me In our modern civilization there have hccn few sights more pleasant to behold than milady fimzering the handle n! her china while drinking tea. How the girls do it. no mere man can understand. It is a feminine feat with grace and techivque all it- own -Fort William Times-Journal. _._,_ If. is ouite proper to criticize‘ me-‘hods of rnfionln". It i5 (ii-tinge. lv improper to create the suspic- ion thct thr- seifldonlal imposed cri the peonle through the war is uri- necessarv and caused \~_v iictiVous shortages. Such oz-onarzauda tends to weaken the will of the neonle to perform the duties iviilrh face them. and we cannot afford any such slackening in the national. snlrlt for the sake of party ad- vantage. —Windsvi' Stnr. Formerly a British lawyer in Paris, M-r. Arthur Vanson 15B). nas reached London after escanlni! from France. Here is his first reaction to wartime London. as told to an Evening News representative at his temporary helm in Queen's Road. Elllfigf "What luxuries you have - ilrrs. milk. tea and shops full of 100d that I have scarcely seen for two years. Food conditions in France when I left. were appalling, aiia Liie pour peoue, generally speaking never nine a hqidfl: lump-mutton Evening News. Nutrition is not a cure-ail, but when iiteruny cnc-iuih oi our pOpli- latioii 1S uuueireci and when up ‘to 40 per cc... u: recruits" for me Can- auian army nave our. to be rejected tor medical reasons, it 15 time we set snout eliminating causes Wnicii destroy the iirusion of our being a young and virne race A concenti-at- ed and organized attack on the pm- 018m oi poor nutrition, however, is unuer way. Government departments are vitaiy interested; so are busi- ness organizations. Internationally. known nutrition experts are direct. 5 ingtho campaign. Industry and business have much to gain by any betterment in their workers’ health. —-From Canadian Business. Into the newly opened British Seamens Club in San Pedro, QaliL, rolled a laconic American sea cap- tain from Ohio,_a;id walked up w the manager. Nice place you've got here." he said. "What is it?" "It's the British Seaman's Club," the mflnfliler said. "For the Limeys, eh?” the American captain said "Anything special you need for it?" The man. ager was at the moment throwing out a bunch of faded flowers. "Well. there are these," he eaia, The Amefioon captain strode out without saying anythng. An he“; 1M9!‘ two lflrge bunches of Lowers B-Yrived at the British Seamena Club with a card inscribed, "From the United State; Merchant Navy to tihc British Merchant Navy." _. m4 Britain (New York.) They new utility furniture i; new available, though for the mgmgm only a small quantity is ieady. It l5 "$101190. it is Durchasable only on l- "Wlnta" system. and only, again, to s restricted class of pacp l the newly man-leg or those Ema’; ‘t: I held in April ogdastzyoor, 171% some be married and those who have been bombed from their homes andmr are desirous of start. The furniture will be free of purchase tax, it may be on the hire uchnse system, and i110 Prices fxed cover free deliv- ery over a radius of i5 miles. Apart from its present paucity of supplies ii i5 Mi 80in! to be easy to get. Young couples or those who wish to refurnish will not be able u. walk into s shop and make eeiee. ltion from a wide choice. They nmst i first of all got a permit, and n the case of a ccunle whose engage- My appeal for light on the deriva- tion oi Gremlins has borne the de- re fruit. In fact, several fruits. for there is s vaiety to choose from. One suggestion is that the word is s mixture of Grimm. Elf and lin; another, which carries more conviction, that it is due to the fact that gremlins were originally ob- iins that came out of ih-emlinh ‘beer bottles,- or alternatively that the blend was Gra 's Lager and Pre. mein's beer. Bea dea these the idea that the word derives from the Oid England verb germ. to vex. is mere pc-‘intry. -i.nndon spectator. An order issued by Itcrnrncll to "officers only" captured- by the British throws an interesting light on the relationship between German and Italian soldiers. The order urges the Germans not to treat their Allies with contempt: yet its every paragraph is an lnsu't to the It- alians. It reads: "Tha ,of all the manganese mined in mmfm“ a "ewlrequeste on . ;gressivo Conservative member for bought. West Peterborolllh. One policy which offsets them, The old tree, the tung-tree, is cultivated. It was bought by Soviet scient- ists from Grins and took root quickly in its new home. This tree yields clusters of nuts from wipich is extracted a varnish-like o . aircraft industries. t The little Republiclof Armenia, the smallest oi’ the four Re ublics '0! the Caucasus. is_ said to the source oi the rivers which flowed {through the Garden. of Eden Eden is not found today in the Caucasus. or anywhere else in this crazy world. but those same rivers continue to flow through fertile land and beautiful scenery. As they flow they turn great and power to eat ndustries -wh0se output. is elping to turn ' Hitler hack. The Lake Sevan sys- tem just completed com ares in size and efficiency with t e much advertised Tennessee valley Pro- ject of the USA. Altogether. there are over two hundred hydro-electric power sta- ticns. some of those are relative- ly small serving only local needs but many are large such as the 88,000 kilowatt station at Khrama Fails, the 90,000 kilowatt station at Erivnn, and the 300,000 kilo- watt station at Mangechaursk auout 240 miles northwest of duku. As a consequence of all this cheap electric power, most of the trams running out of Baku are electrified. This great quantity of electric power prays an indispensable part in the manufacture of rubber which is carried on at the giant ‘Synthetic Rubber Works located at Eriviui, capital of Armenia. While the United States is using the by-products of its petroleum industry-no doubt as a conces- sicn to its oil companies - as its method oi’ making synthetic rub- D81‘, the Soviet Union prefers to take advantage of the cheap coal bud the inexhaustible resources of limestone, both of which are in the Caucasus, to use the cal- cium carbide process. This method is considered the cheaper when there is an abundance of water power, The Soviet Union also uses the petroleum method and al- cohol process - the one used by Germany — but it is now fast developing a natural method. this process. the rubber juice or latex is extracted from a dande- iicn-iike plant known as the kok- sugiing. 'Iuis plant yields as much as 18 per cent rubber and will grow in almost any climate and even as far as the Arctic Circle. The Caucasus is rich in min- erals. Besides iron ore in limit- ed quantities and a cheap grade of coal. it produces about two-thirds the Soviet Union which has 70 per cent of the world's reserves of this metal. Here, too, is pro- duced about one-eighth cf the Union's production of copper. Molybdenum, a great steel- strengthening metal. is produced in the Caucasus to an extent which relieves the Soviet Union from any worry as to an insuf- ficiency of this mineral. Rich deposits of lead and sine are found in Georgia and there are also deposits of mercu , co- balt, arsenic, tungsten, nieke, and ur Had Hitler not attacked the Soviet Union. few people outside her borders would have known the facts contained in such an article as this. And if there am those who did not know them until they chanced to read these words-they have no cause to feel ashamed. When our own lead- ers oi’ public opinion, including so many cf our so-called "state- men" revealed their appalling ignorance of the Soviet Un on by cxpressln their fears that she could o y hold out against Hit- ler for a few months, there is some excuse for the average citi- zen. Evpecially when the 03.0. allowed lady newspaper corros- ggndents w o had been in the viet Union to say that there was nothing to fear from s union of the Soviet Union with Ger- many because "Russia had noth- ing tc give Germany but furs caviar" (T6 as Continued) $1,500,000 For What T (Exchange) The taxpayers of Canada paid $1 - 503,158 for the manpower picbisci accounts stiii amont the orm of a return Ikascr Pro- half is tld on ‘n4 I I. y “Y. Will’ llvmll quite a. lot. of money. What did we and “bfmwrpyss z lebiscite is w e u o a ascertaiii e will ofpa majority of the people on a given matter of Romans used the system. In vptc last Alrii, gig Conadilan upg- e, respcn n; an sppes e grime Minister, voted w null y]: Government commitment aga t comtgglscry overseas service. In eilht of nine provinces the vote wsa overwhelmin . An amendment to ‘the Mobiiizs n Act was what n- sultcd and nothing in r0. . lhtptlesled in. l0 “certificates, it is what the poor man will do. Weli,_ I gues; we will all have to go to the other side and leave this per-i fumed town with this fine gentle-= man. Perhaps he will remember, a tfcw years ago. when the depression [was on, it would have been very nice to have a factory where the poorer class of people could get a little work. It was stated in his letter that the Mayor arid Council had better wake up. Well, I should think so, or else we wiii have no town left. It will be all lovely trees ant‘ perfumed gardens d lnbo , to look after theni.“ no m“ | I em. Sir. etc. CITIZEN AND TAX PAYER. ntaguc. .______________, ans-roams»: POETRY I‘ sin-In replylo "Old Scholar's" the Guardian, 1 wish to say mat I have never seen the whole Aua. imiilh poem from which he has quoted lines. via, ‘Clancy of the 0v- eriiow“. I may say however that I “Wider that this particular poem unlike much of the rest of modern ‘"1182: "DOBWW. has in some re- spec equalityofreai t . Th Australian-colored p” n a. former much respected Governor Geiiflrfli 0f Canada, the late Lord Tweedamuir, which he expressed terested in Canadian poetry. He mid in effect that Australians in contrast to Canadians tried some-. What too persistehtiy to infuse 111-‘ to their poetry the idiom and stylel of the Mother Country. I was also agreeably reminded by Oid Scholar's article of a. pleasant acquaintance I enjoyed during a summer vacation with an 01d Aus-t tralian schoolmaster. He was principal of a large public school {in Australia but he had been ai- <lowed a six-months holiday in or- ,der to allow him to visit Canada ‘and the “Old Country". He was an upstanding man, square-shoul- dered and six Jeet tail. but en- riowed with a refinement of feeling .I would hardly expect to find in lhim. He was delighted with much that he saw and heard in Vancou- ,ver, especially a peculiar broguel and twang that he noticed preva- lent among the Canadians which he insisted, contrary to m opinion was not dominantly Scotisti nor Irish. I think however that in Australia he was accustomed chief- ly to the lowland Scottish brogue. and not the scottisi Gaelic tone common to some extent tc the Gaelic Scotch and the Irish, which now 1 believe dominates the tone of speech in all Canadians of long Canadian ancestry - at. least the Maritime Provinces, and parts‘ of Ontario, and perhaps even in‘ parts of Quebec. My Australian friend told me too quite frankly that while Australians had great respect for ttie leading role of Canadian statesmen in the evolu- tion of the British Empire into Britili Nations, Canada was not amooiated in the minds of Aus- tralians with anything beautiful, -artistic or poetic - with one out- standing exception, the Old Mari- time Provinces, the Ancient Land of Acadia endeared to Australian boys and girls. at least in his school days, by "Evangeline". I could not but re- flect on the great debt that we of, the Maritime‘ Provinces owe to the! great American pom. and I much regretted that I couid not as re- quested by my friend, acoompan, him on his visit to the Maritime Provinces and lead him at least tol some of the beautiful pastoral scenes of our own province which I was quite sure would not disap- point his pleasant anticipations. I am sir, etc. OLD TEACHER. War-ZS i... Ago Today (By The Canadian ) "an 1:; 101:8” -.Britiah ggrengmeitit I-iwvlk treetv. Prime Minister iii“ lfleorfi in the Commons stated the‘ situs n on tthc Western ncht heal themed ctmnieteiy owing to eli0r-‘ mo"! reinforcements from the east. '“" °=3§S'-‘}’S‘.‘."'.t’°"' cney ‘mmffiivigflli-‘oillivn 3.338»! ZTEuSS was taken or seems likely to be tak. w- Whlt the people did m ici- their nfmdY- Ill-rt from e repudiation p“: delllpocfatio principle and an ex. r "Y Qfia-eatgldlinisterial mflm“ Willi”. a widespread l lo of resentment. Whatever er. 9°?- "IIN Wis upon the war spirit °i "i" Poo was adverse and mg”, ‘thin as an ex- of 's million .5?!‘ h . upwud‘ o A plebiscite is s democratic peo- cedure under which, in ,........ Ems‘; majorit In th the majyor ty has not been permitted have Hways been good soldiers, therefore they must not boast. Still less must they belittle the achieve- ments of the soldiers of other coun- tries. "'I‘he Italian, of course, is not quite the some as the German sold- ier, the former havi his own pecu- Iiiarities. He is a dfferent human being. Therefore it would be wrong to jud him by German stand- ards. " e fights as well as he can ‘-that must be appreciated. "It is 'unwort to laugh at our Ai'y and to alk about his soft points. We must trv to see his good points." w; germ“. —l.nndon Daily Mail. _ Sensitive Bureaucrats if iif m“ u émpt aunnghtmnieie) rso in . pos-fffonsmsholinlif rfiflfl. Uli- lilfleltlon of public critic tantamount to persecution. that such sn stti ude exists is pep. will! lQRrent and should sur no one. e exigancj impelled some and attracted others chum rbogtlsmof avg" administrative of their lrtieie in last Saturday's issue of e i! X1126 that but for Poem too. would charge‘ we, ti?” t; 1n 1.. seem to contradict the opinion or gig $33312‘; °é‘§,,::dw%'fn; finfi... before e Canadian gathering in- ‘even though the return in terms of lexists for taking care of mere in- ‘gnou h and should be comfort and service. The Windsor ls recognised as the proper place for Business and social meetings. I'll! iiifiiinilsur QN DOMINION SQUARE l. AIDEIIO IA YMOND IRIIIDINT s umstances. . Efforts to tem r or moderate such public critic sin, however ex- pressed, are natural enough. But such efforts are apt to boomeranil. oftentimes to the extreme discom- fort of the individuals concerned. Most of us are acutely award o! the difficult tasks which these war- time Mmlnistrators have to dis- And we know that in many cases exactin duties and long hours are met wit out a murmur of comiilflint ssla may be modest indeed- Bu we also recognize that this new army of bureaucrats. beinl human like the rest of us. Some- times make mistakes. The mistake! mgy be mistakes in administration, or they may be mistakes of Juda- ment in ma ters of policy. With the former we are not Particular! °°"' cerned. The neeessolfv m“ in“? efficiency or lack of foresight. But when it comes w mistakes of iv - ment in matters affecting pubic policy then the average citizen bo- comes at once directly and immed- iately very much concerned indeed. We have both the right and the duty to criticize administrative of- iiciais on matters of policy. So long as such criticism is tempefed with tolerance and fairness there o d not; he gny ground for com- plaint on the part of public serv- ants. or the wartime agencies of which they form a part. But it would be well to recognize that neither public onscience nor the press oi.‘ this countrv will wil- llngly acce t. "suggestions, how- ever care! l_v worded they moi! be. which call for the abandonment oi established practices built u over centuries of experience mere y. he- cause some board or agency or ofiic; ial believes that such ‘tsnskestnons. if accepted. will further the efforts of that board or agency, or indi- vidual in the discharge of duty.‘ Bureaucrats must learn to ‘take it," just like the rest of us. i N evfiarferry Our a Immediate Need (Summer-side Joumai) . The recent three da s tic-up. b! reason cf dam e to e rudder, o the carferry rice Edward Lsian , demonstrated beyond any doubt, how absolutely necessary it is that a new and ndeqlllte steamer for the service between this province and y. As mentioned by one of the speakers at. the meeting of the Summerside Board of Trade loot Frida night there was not a busi- ness rm tn the town cf Summer- slde but was adversely aflectcd by the interruption. Numerous oflrloldl oi goods were delayed in transit and transportation between the prov- ince and the mainland was given a much greater set-back than a iona- . delay in pro-war days would have - er meant. The Government authorities as a result of the tie-up must naturally realize more than ever hovv import- ant it is that there should be no ln- terruption in the flow of transporta- tlon on this route and it. is certainly unfair that the travelling public should be detained on a crcasinp in- st on" which "continuous communic was s definite pledge to our M0919 when this province entered Confe - oration. There has been talk ct a tunnel as the only and ultimate solution of this continuous communication robem and while this may bed-rue mos lv to, en up by the authorities as an aft/er-the-war nroiect by the Gov- ernment, of which there will be many. the immediate need is a suit- able carferry. In re ard to s. "bun- nei a great deal of t me would nec- essarily elapse in the inakinl o! surveys and would mean s period of several years before the task of exeava" -. and construction of the project couid be completed- In the meantime while having all faith that before a years eia our hope wiu be real med let us press for the solution that must bridge over the W“ -"-°i"'°"--'--'i'-§-E:--__L"'° Your Eyes? of strain - h hoa sore ayes or sllaainess - ocnsalt s specialist. ' sf experience sfnl a thorough Call in and discnsi ‘ appointments. l‘. G. IIUTUIIESON ore outspoken than it IDN normal oi:- tho mainland should be provided at, Wadsworth _ ~_ unwell” m hwnorwl memitttie very earliest possible opoortun , . ous- I if voo srs hamnsyniptons At your service with years i refractlna service. . your t -- difficulties. Write or shone for, i rnr. mo mics ~ G. F. llutchoson 1» - a cost of some is s matter Wdiiv the; should not be a hindrance in the least to our etting it, when so iiiniiv other under kings of inr grew-l- cost and of lesser importance are being carried out in other parts of the country. FROM Till RURAL FESTIVAL (Translated in the original metre by Prof. Skull Johnson from the Latin of Tibullus) On this day holy let the land hnn "B. And ease the pioughman; his hurl labour cease, with share uphung; let loose the ox-team, n Before filled ataiis now let the cxn 8H . with heads wreathed, as they ought Lot all be done _ In service of the gods: let spinner none Dare a; set hand to wool-tasks. l Avaunt. far hence and leave the altar you Whomolvenus yesternight nave M ve. Things pure are pleasing to the powers above: Clean be the garb in which yoi coma, and bring, In wetll-clepliiised ltlipgnds, the will" rom spr . Behold how c’. the gleaming altos oes The iialiowed lamb, and how the throng that glows In white arrayed, whose tresses are on w ned With olive-wreaths, the victim tread-s behind! ATTENTIUN SWINE BREEIIERS NOWIIthQ time to use" PIG WORM By Illlll’ the most effective remedy on the market - Macs Pig-Worm Tonic Powder It will thoroughly abolish all _ of worms and llniirv" i the health of vonr herd. Don't delay. Order bv M101" "7 nail. All srdors promptly l!“ GASSY STOMACIII s IELiEVED Ivory person who is trcobld with [as in the stomach am! bowels should lat s. bottle I “Dr. Ivans Stomach Mixture and see how qnlchlv It will ro- lleve all oistrcssinr smo- some. . Dr. Evans Stomach Mint!" ' ssssn at meal times. not ell! prevents all has! effects "I" {lac int it promotes the incl; olyahsaglvitv‘ oflgoml". || ilfl fgpuappe to. Price lgolf e. m Great ossm Him‘ uni Orders Given Pro-It Attention G. I‘. IIUTOII IlOll --.-’