- ma: i"!!! ‘"171- "'-"""‘" 5"‘ 1min rout; Tll E hiuntorrerowii GUARDIAN 19mm‘ only (Ionmlod ln Ill?) Pruldeull Lleut, Col. W. Ollnntnr l. IQLIII Vlco Preehlenti J. B. Burnett, l'.J.l. lgentnryi Lleut. Col, D. A. hlnolilunnl. II.I,O, Idltor and Inunll | hlroetor. J. B Home“. IaI-l. lnooolnu EIIHOPIH Funk Wnllior. nail Lleol, Inn Burnett. 8.03.7.8 (On Anti" lorvhin) IUIIHCBIPTION IATII l, In] l. P, Ii. l. HA0 per "or; 32.00 for I month: llfill for 8 umuthni We for one nonlll Olty Delivery “.00 par you: 88.00 for l moulhn ll." for I munthli 00o for one mouth lull lo other Province: and 0.1L. $0.00 pol your letnrflny Weekly» 81.00 oer your; ILOO for I months, 60o lor a inouthn p Th. r .. mny be at Iulntllufn New: Agency. ‘Ihuen Square, New York: 01d lonth New: Agency, Corner Milli and Wuhlngtou Benton: llntropolltnn News Annoy, 124R Peel 8t. lluntrenli J. Flue I64 Bu; 8t, Torontfl; News Stnnd Chateau Lenrlon Ottawa; Wolfe's New: Utnnd Sudbnry. Ont-i Hub Tobacco Shop. Moneton, N. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." MONDAY, MAY 17, 1913 School Consolidation Que of the piw-lilcitis with which the Jones Government may he expected to concern itself is that of (‘dllCllllllg public opinion in favor 0f larger rural school units. Leadership in this direction is hccottiiug more and more necessary. Premier Jones, \\il'l established the first c011- solidttteil school i11 this Province and who now Minister of Education as well as leader 0f the Government, has an unprecedented opportun- ity of furnishing such leadership. As noted in the report lztst year of the Chief Superintendent of Etlticzttitin, “the tnistztketi notion that a. small one roometl school with a teacher of minimum qualifications can provide the educational needs of the ptipil of todzw has too long prevailed. Means itiiist he found to assemble at least the older pupils in ct-iitrcs where high school teach- ers are available to give full time to these ad- vanced classes." 'l‘hat is the situation in a nut- Shell. The western provinces are also studying this question. ;\t a conference recently in Saskatoon of representatives of twenty-two organizations interested in erlticaiioit, opinion was voiced strongly in favor of larger units of school ad- ministration. Educational experts all over the world, it was stated, agreed on the value of the large unit. The conference urged the govern- ment to take immediate steps in this direction in nt least three areas of the province in which conditions and sentiment seemed favourable. It suggested an explanatory campaign in those nrcas, also an opportunity for the people to petition for the larger unit, and provision for plcbiscites. Similar views were expressed at a recent education convention in \Vinnipeg, where re- ference was made to th_e Chilliwack plan in Bri- tish Columbia, under which children in rural nroas are transported by bul to larger central schools which can offer more diversified educa- tional opporturiitiel and specialization. Gasoline rationing and other wartime restric- tions may delay the development of school con- solidation in all the provinces. But much atten- tion is being given now to postwar reconstruc- tion, and there ll no more important phase of. this subject than that of administering and niai11- hining n progressive educational programme. Cheese Production Iain‘ in Toronto lut week representatives bl every cheoee-producing county in Ontario painted a nbotlnelnl drop in choose production (hie xenon inilou the price strgture for all milk- oducto wu mode more favorable to cheese ,1 l5 {per cent. Consols to the Society of Arts on con- dition that g gum of £100 contained in a silver cup of the same value should be awarded on every fifth anniversary of his death as a prize _to the author of the best published work on Juris- prudence. “Dr. Siviney was an eccentric character, about whom it has not been possible to gather much information. He was an MD. of Edinburgh, where he graduated in 1816. Hts eccentricity was displayed in the provisions made in his will for his funeral. His coffin was covered with a gay dresses. So curious a procession naturally attracted much attention, and the crowd was so great that there was difficulty in carrying out the funeral. “Further evidence of his eccentricity was shown in the appointment, under the terms of the will, of the adjudicators of the prize, who were to be the members of the Society and the members of the Royal College 0f Physicians, ‘with the wives of such of them as happen to be married.’ No doub_t it was his connection with medicine that led him to drag in the College of Physicians, but it was rather curious he should select for this purpose the members of two insti- ttitions, neither of ivltich has any connection with the law, or their members any special qual- ifications for the task. The two bodies have. of course, sought legal aid in arriving at their decisions, and the list of the prize-ivmiiers con- tains names that are famous both in General and Medical Jurisprudence." -_- EDITORIAL NOTES - The Fourth Victory Bond campaign con- cluded in a blaze of glory. s n- u l The nurses did themselves proud last even- ing-—what would we do without them? 1K Ill 1K * College examinations are now over, and stu- dents are looking forward to a ivell-earned vacation. a u The farm employment bureau staff seems to have little to do but twirl their fingers and draw their pay-not because farmers d0 not want help, but because there are practically no ap- plicants through the bureau. u u n- a- This is now Naval Week, and fittingly enough the great film, “In Which We Serve" is being featured. There will be interesting naval par- ades by our Boys in Blue, including the Sea Cadets, preliminary to the opening of the show at the Prince Edward. i- w II i i I8 tawa is making arrangements for free X-ray examination 0f 34,000 Ottawa civil servants t0 discover hitherto-undiagnosed cases of tuber- culosis. Authorization for the examination was given by order-in-councikpassed April 29. The pensions department will bear the cost. u x i: n- A start has been made with the proposed plans for the new Car Ferry, but do not let us assume the attitude 0f the dcbter who signed a note, and then, with a sigh of relief, thanked ,Providence "that's paid." The plans are itierely a. promisary note yet to be converted into a win- ter connecting link between us and the world at large. Let us see that the promise is fulfilled long before the war is over, no matter who does the work. Better be sure than sorry. If the Can- adian shipbuilders are selfishly holding us up, let us go to the United States no matter what it costs-Canada cansland it. ‘ \ i According to the Bank of Montreal report in yellow velvet pall, and followed by three girls in m, The pensions and health department 0f Ot- Ban most districts in the Maritimes the spring sea- b0 i llotos By The Way Thorn IN honor-n ntlll tn come. A new style of muse 1s p. “ ‘ ' for n er the war. And the styles get man and worse. -Vancouver Prov- rim CHARLOTTElOWN u‘ gm PUBLIC FORUM Ihlnonlnnnhonnllvfi y’ d qnnnthnn do Inbred. I‘: Olllllnt Illlhl 10C onleaen In Gilli-l ll n was signed Th : Nmui " e o. Churchill Club." It came from a. small town ln the northwest of spill-n. and says that over 500 neo- Dle there collected 182 pesetns to- Wfl-fds l! Statue 1n London of Mr. umh1 . The "Churchill Club" 0119s: as their symbol Mr. Church- llls cigar. —Loiidon Calling, Mlulsalppl rlvermen are colorful characters. Lattky. Haunt-cheek- ed Captain Barney, for instance, who 011611’ evening lowers a tin bucket into the muddy river and drinks 111s fill of the thick brown liquid. ‘Jsc-uls my health g-gotii’ good,” he §g,y5_ "It's this here flltcrin‘ tut-y ciao water that causes all the iclncss the": is n<>wacays._aust takes all Llle Sifenmh out of it." -Frotii 1.1116 Renders Dlzest ,_____ Fmm Tunisia, says Colller's we have a. letter from Rte. Charles Colt TOITRIICC. Its a. nice long letter Whelflll Pflvflle Torrance goes lnto some delull about the progress of our lads and the British Eighth Army alzamst Field Marshal Rom- mel; But the sentence that we nope you l1 appreciate ls; ‘And f1n.tllv. tell me whether we're doing the right thing over here. We hope we re siiflfifylnz the i-aclo commenta- tors. We dent lietir them over here. "—Exd1amze. -____. Most plastics use the formula of the all-day sucker . . . . . .The groundliog (hoggus subterraneus) 1s not a hoe, except on vegetables , . Half a mile from the third house on the left. Main 51., Solirlograd, Si- beria, ls the coldest snot oit earth. Engineers and scientists are apply- ing a IO-thousand-acre mustard blaster. . . . .The cracking sound 0f the Northern [lights is caused by their cracking . . . Latest air- craft is a helicopter which 1.111115 on a sheet of flvpaper. In taking off again. the helicopter takes the field yvlLh it. —Tor0nt0 Stitr. The Javanese. who fumed Nan- kfng, China, into a shambles when their fliers devastated the city. are swift b0 Drate of "civilized wait" re’ and "military objectives" when ‘ht-tr Own land 1s bombed. Japan 11nd Germany bflflt appear to have liven lndoctrlnated by the same ivoirrl and one-sided philosophy whim has warped their imtionzil ntcntiili- ties. Iilfe under such 1111155 ezotism 1s not worth living for any one who ever knew freedom. -Har.ntlton Spectator. From a Glasgow minister. who read the stow about the little eirl who sang “Praise the Lord and D885 the ammunition" as a hymn. comes another to cup it. when he was a minister in Edinburgh he pic- slded at one New Year's party for d of Hope chllcren. and dur- ing the entertainment asked one or two of the children to come up 14> the Platform and slut: a verse of a. hymn. One tlny youngster tnurcfn- ed tip gravely and sanlz a verse of "Another little drink wouldnt do us any harmfi-Glasgow Herald, Today’; civilian military strateg- l-Sls says The Canadian Elk. iemlud us of how one Roman leader. Lueitis Aeinllius Paulus, wok mm o: sum Fireside Warriors" back in 1a B. C. Before starting 011 u catnpaltzn against t-he Macedonians, he tnzfde the following proclamation; "If any one thinks himself qualified to ttive advice resnecitnz the uiar which 1 am to conduct . ._ let him come with me_to Macedonia. l-Ie shall be furnished with a, ship, a horse, a, Wm: 9WD his travelling charges will be defrayed. Hut lf he thinks this is boo much trouble and pre- fers the repose of a city life to the tolls of war. let hlm not. on land. assume the office of t1 D1101; _ _ _ We shall pay no attention to nny councils but such as shall be fram- ed wlthlri our camp --Excha1]gg_ The United Na-tlons among them l" bllildlnlz more and Improved U~ l" destroy s and convoy pro- VICTORY LOAN CAMPAIGN Sb‘,- The pe-ple of Prince Ed; ward Islam-J. ‘mu-e Just contpletea another flnariclal triumph. 1n 00n- rlderably over sttbsg-ibin; heir nb- jective in the vlctorv Lorin ram- palgn, thus once again demonstrat- ing their loyalty to the Empire. and their faith in Canada's future. This. fine result was only nt- taliied bv the united effort. and e0- operatlon of all citizens. and 0n b0‘ halt of Mr. G. w. Spinney. Dom - lon chairman, National war n- ance Committee I wish 1,0 thank lll those who assisted 1n any way. Particularly do I wish to thank th members of the tinned forces for their inspirational example 1n per- sonally buylng bonds. Let us all pray that thus enabled our country "Back the Attack" that. this awful war may speedily end and pence will once again ‘high over the n4, I am, Sir, etc. E. W. McKINNON. Provincial Chairman, National Fin- ance Committee. (‘oiiantt Retires T0 C-ap Bon (Ottawa Journal) All the CB-p Eons are not 1n A1- rlcu. Theies one 1n Toronto, too; and on 1t stands the Honorable GORDON CONANT, Premier 0f Ontario, holding out against the forces 0f Mr. Harry Nixon, lately promoted to be Liberal commander- in-cliief by a Liberal caucus, plus seven Dominion cabinet ministers, lncltuling one from Quebec. It's an odd. odd story. One which has mirth in it, and ti spice of dranta, plus the tale of some muffin‘; by the Llb- ernl chiefs of staff. The long and short of 1t 1e that MR. CONANT, ticcordlntz to all re- ports, is not going to resign; not going to surrender his throne to palace revolutionaries, their power- ful allirs not ivitlxstanding. Bland- isluuctiis, muttered threats, the ball. of fl. 111cc jcb-nll have left him cold. When that Liberal convention met, nnd seven Ottawa cabinet mln- istcrs saw to it that Mr. Nixon gut. the party‘s provincial leadership, evcryliing scented rosyl The night- ntatr of "Mitch" Hepburn was over. Mr. Nixon would be obedient, and Toronto and Otiitwa, long estranged. would embrace. That ttiglit—tlie night that Mr. Nixon was ctitlironed,—tliey' held a banquet; . Prime Mittister King, sat- isfied that, his seven ministers had served him faithfully 11nd well, sent the gathering a. message euloglzlng Mr. Nixon and hailing the party's new unity. They rent the ceiling with unity. They rent the ceiling with cheers. And Mr. King. so our scouts tell us, Wasn't satisfied ivitli a tel- egram. Mr. King as well 100k up hi5 telephone and culled Mr. Nixon (those little intimate party things are not for telegrams): and the tale ls_ that what Mr. King said to Mr. Nixon on the telephone was that. 110w was the time for an election. Mr. King, alas. forgot. Mr. Conant, What was worse. Mr. Nixon forgot. him. and the seven cabinet minis- ters and all the rest of them. which was bad. Mr. Conant WD.Sll'l. at the batiquct. Earlier that day. bcfcrc the ballots for the leadership were taken, Mr. Conant liitd gone off to u hospital. abandoning a fight 1n which he had been showing vigor; and, whether by coincidence or not, Mr. Conant went to the hospital without giving any pledge (which was given by all the Ol-llefsl that he would support whoever was chosen. Mr. Conant has not been heard from slnce—not publicly. He sent no congratulations to Mr. Nixon; not even a postcard: and unlike Mr. King he didn't telephone, nor have Mr, SCORES 0f young airmen today are doing essential work on the ground. They can’: fly-can’! get into action- rill someone takes over their jobs." That is what you are asked to do. Will you serve so that one more airman may fly? Canada's airwomen lead a thrilling life. They go places, do things-things useful to their country and to the allied cause. They meet women from all parts of Canada-airmen from all parts of the Empire. They take interesting courses of training which will equip them for useful positions during and after the war." Don the Air Force uniform and do your share in winning the war. Help an eager airman to get into action. It's a great opportunity. Tb: KCAJ’. need: girls, age: 18 l0 45, wilb at Inst I-Iigb Scbool Entrance. Apply a! your nearer! R.C.A.F. Recruiting Centre, bringing proof of education and birtb certificate. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR PROMOTION. "Sllieaaagldatmanaq/lyl" recruiting Centres of: Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Seiltulaon. Inqlnu, Winnipeg, Novlh Icy, Wlndial, London, Hamilton, Toronto. Ottawa. Mon- mst. one“. Monclon, Mullins. ROYAL en Airwoman on needed for those and many other duties: Clerk: : : a Fabric Worker! Srenograpli us. T Driven : : pOfl : Cook: 2 u | Photognphere Send for (hi: free booklet about nit-women inthelLCJLF. Write; of Manning, R.C.A.F.; Building, Ottawa, or the unrest Recruiting Centre listed below. Recruiting Codn Helm londeyn and fhwidwvl 9 0-m- N 1o 9.»... imam VMii-Wii! and Hlduyi 9 mm. 0o 6 I-I-l swam 9 1m. to uo w. silence front his cot. the first three night but the crushing clean-up o1 the punch-drunk Afrlka Korps has turned into an quenchable flame and sparks of unrest: and revolt There luis been only silence since. A silence that 1s Betting on the nerves of Mr. Nixon, and the seven Ottawa cabinet mlxifslters; first attacked his unoffendlng which have flickered slnce Hitler- m; war, 1t ll estimated. Brit D purchases hi the A. amounted to about 17.000000. considerably more than the U lend-lease delivefles to Britain » llLlfilfl-LET 111d- flttln; and siipplylnl 0 Ete- more especially as it, 1s accompan- ied by reports, growing more insis- tent every day, that Mr. Conant has no Ixitentlon of resigning. UNEASY GERMANY anybody telephone for him. Only son is from two to three weeks later than usual and very little work has as yet been done on the land which, in parts of New Brunswick, is It is anticipated that plant- tectlon vessels. inl d1 '- 1 carriers. We are biillillzinggimarlutpisaiii: more airplanes against the enemy submarines and we are building more and faster merchant 511108. There 15 nothing in the submarine neighbors to lny waste their lands, to slaughter their people. Fear has turned to fury 1n the hearts of men of the conquered lands as they prepare for the day when the evl men of the Refchs- ry potrono or milk diverted to the factories by more drutic iunenl. Canada has a contract to amply 15o million pounds of ‘- to Bri- flg your. _ ‘iiizxrrrqa D77W('*TI'TI’\_' I S)?! m-‘Lu-vanriwq>.\n.>;. i ‘ " i : .-~_-¢. a‘... _.._...__......_t.,.,. i at‘ t tibalriwvsuri‘ rnrInIcrI-g; bequeathed, among other legacies, £5,000 thick‘ ‘ still under snow. The nitration hen hanged conoidonbly since hat ylnr when Canada bed n. reoord cheese pro- Iutioo, lufficient to moot the British contract, ‘nod with plenty over for domestic needs. Now butter prices an more in lino with cheese milk time In mom hog: on forms needing nHm inillg nnnufnoturlng plum an paying hit over-o! prlooe, and the demand for whole pill: for hnmui consumption hoe increased re- purhbly. Then in just not enough milk left to moot hot you’: clioou production figures, the patron’ dllognooo claimed. _ It now looks n if the over-growing domestic ‘demand for dairy products cnrmot be met if we on to supply Britnin with all the cheese lhc may want. It may come to a choice of butter for Cnmdianl or cheese for the British people. Can ldians also expect cheese to help out when meal rationing comes in but at the present time their boon of getting much cheese an llilfl. 'AN Eccentric M.D.’s Request The Council of the Royal Society of Art: has given notice that the next award of the Swiney Prize will be made in January 1944, the hun- dredth’: anniversary of the testator’: death. Here is the queer story of the bequest given in the Society's publication: "In I831 a stranger called at the Society's of- fice and handed to the then Secretary, Dr. Arthur Aikin, the will of Dr. George Swiney, sealed up in ati enclosure, and immediately left. Dr. Aikin cntleavtitirerl to find out Dr. Swiney's nddress, but without sticcrss. When lie retired from the Sccretaryship in 1839 he took legal advice as to what had better be done with the packet, and was advispd to open it. lle found a note from Dr. SWlllCy asking him to take charge of his will. The note was dated from Sidmoutli Street, Gray's Inn Road but 11o trace of Dr. Swiney could be found there. “Dr. Aikin handed over the will to the Society's llUllnT-‘lfj solicitor, and it remained in his hands until i844, ivlicn Dr. Aikin was summoned to ittend at Dr, S\viney’s lodging in Camden Town, zvhcrc he had died on January 21st. On the will being read it was found that the deceased had ing should be general in two to three weeks’ time. While little growth is apparent, pastures and orchards have wiiitered well, with fruit tree: reported free from frost damage. Warm nim would be beneficial in the more northerly districts. Elsewhere farming operations would be accelerated by fine ivarm weather. it w n- Dr. Edward Jenner, physician and discoverer o1 vaccination, born this date 1749; in his ria- belief that cow-pox was antagonistic to small- pox, uid after prolonged research, Jenner sat- isfied himself of its truth; in May 1796, he in- noculated a boy, James Phipps, with cow-pox, so that, when the boy was innoeulated with small-pox in July, an attack of the letter did ‘not ensue; he published the result of hi: inves- tigation: which met with much criticism and op- position, even from the medical fraternity; b‘ lntlr received support from many eminent physi- ciuu and surgeons, and honours were lhowcred upon him by foreign sovereigns and loomed societies at home and abroad; he received separ- ate grant: of $50,000 and $100,000 from Par- liament which he devoted to further research work and the propagation of the benefits of 11in discovery. ‘Ill A coffin earmarked for David Levesque may be interred in the family plot at St. Phile- mon, Que, but Levesque is still walking around Vancouver, alive and well and wishing there was some way his family could recover $150 funeral expenses. Something of a wan- derer and no great shaken as a. letter-writer, Levesque said a mixup apparently was caused when his family read in the local paper nearly two year's ago a man of his name had died in Vancouver They arranged a full funeral, minus his body. Recently he wrote one of his infre- quent letters home. His family didn't answer hut sent his brother, Maurice, a soldier stationed at nearby New Westminster, to investigate. He found it was David. all right. Levesque went oVancniiver 3 1-2 years ego from South Am- "Wfl. Where he had spent nine- years. He noti- fied his family he was there shortly after hi: arrival, but didn't write again until the other 1! 80mg to refund hil funeral expenses. war to Justify us on our side ln any 9°11 0f Oomplacency. but equally "m"? 1-5 "(M11118 to make us despoti- —Fr0m the Vancouve: Prov- Tlm retreating Nazis ln Tunlrla 151451111 Great thought and mechani- cal skill on tricky little ways _pf leavilnz death behind’ them foi’ m- dlvldual Allied soldiers. The War Department described some of the latest- booby trans: A whistle um does not explode until it ls bliwit. The vibratlniz nea. hlts t. detonator. THE HAVEN 'I‘htere 1s an Island, Laid who knows where, 11-1 undis- covered seas: ‘Iliere the breeze Bells the scarlet of no wandering still, Arid all about the land the lens 1s laid (Exchnnke) Allied bombs screamed down on a jittery Germany again today as the thunderous roar of the march of Mara drew nearer the homeland of the "Master Race." From Berlin came reports of rioting among anxious relatives of German soldiers killed, wounded or ca tured In the concluded Tunisian fghtfng. Prom conquered lands came new reports of a. rising s lrlt of rebellion as Axis lenders tr ed painfully to izueae the decisions being taken 1n five county of Gloucester there was n popular Th, nnos bottles that c110 not explode "M11 “my are tilted to the mout/h. Earphones that do not explode un- til plugged 1n on an electric circuit. —JNew York Herald 'I‘r1bune. Canada bu always done her ut- most for her Indians. At least she nlwflyg mmnt well. All she has over- Qyls Indian psychology, and the Indians own preferred ways of llfe. After all. long before vitamins were 981K061 0!. Indians made nemmlcan which beat the fresh fruit into the buffalo meat. and had all the I nutritional nolrite for which we now B lnhor. Indians do not hone for auri- fllllilre. and the vast majoi-ty of our efforts 1n that direction have been n. waste of peed. and the wast». of such reluctant effort as the Indians h". under supervision. made. Our most successful enterprise. by all odds. among the Indians, 1.; the one now under way 1n this movlnce‘ and being undertaken 1n others, that 1s fur farmlnz. Thai: flts 1n with the Indian! own Ideas. The Indian has always been willing to go 1o war, ‘that 1s mother actlyltv of the ivhlte man which has his approval. - Wlnnlplk Mice Press. The Churchill Gazelle, llelgkn underground newspaper. two bases of which were reproduced 1n our last issue of News from Belizlitm. ' publishes the following amuslmz nntuy 1n 1m November it. 19.42. number. "The inhabitants of Pa r:t~ dlse were worried . . . . It was 1m- poeslble to know what was reafy olng on 1n Genuanv anymore. .. e he communlq lied so much! "It. was finally decided to send down n reporter . . . .But who? The choice fell on Methiiselah. the acted saint who had seen everything . . . and who was anything but gullible "Twenty-four hours passed . . , . and Melhuaelah returned on the run. lzusplngbgor breath . . . . 1h other; lzra. d him. astonished. "What? Back already? Well. what dkl you flnd ottt? What's the real situation down them? "I didn't seq a thing! "When I got to Germany, they were just 431111531: up my class O ‘J31’. and now his family wants to know Wllil . . . . and I scrammed." -Newa . PNm Beliltlli. ' Green 11s melchlte and smooth as jade. Dark 1a the lsland Dlm Myrtle and myrrh: There through tpe B. Flutter the plumes and shine the ‘rherelem And yet my heart has found 1t, and as made safe in some shadowy bmigh 11.5 secre n And the Wind. the wind rocks 11. w 11s rest. the Churchill-Roosevelt; conferences at Washln ton. German troops were on the move 1n Belgium and Holland as Axis warlords sought to strengthen their vaunted coastal ramparts against the long-heralded Allied invasion. The Germans and Italians are out on a. limb of suspense; stories poured 1n of armed clashes wltli the Nazis 1n Poland, Norway, Yugo slavla and Greece- dlrect attacks on the already strutti- ed German-operated railways which were havlnir the effect of a creep- ing paralysis of transport; of some- thing approaching open revolt 1n Holland, of bloody lncldents 1n Bel- gium and 1n Warsaw. Thus Hitler and 111a slnlster henchmen wlo floated to the top of waves of b ood 11nd their dreams of world domination turning into a horrible nlghiunare on this spring . All 1.111s didn't ha n over- COAL with henvenward-reachlng boughs of fir, twilight of the glen and 1: de planclnz eyes f goddign-glorled birds of para- e. lnlnnd: shall not 11nd it, r shall never loo 1rd or tree —-A.udre_v Alexandra Brown. We handle the following lilgh grnlo Cosy OLD SYDNEY SCREENED, INVERNESS, ALBION NUT and ALBION ROUND also DOMINION COKE. lWMlIlnn-Pn-ptlallverleo. W. D. GILLIS é? CO. PHONE 17C viehr will pay in klnd for the mur- der and lust they loosed; for the hundreds of thousands of emaciat- ed bodies and fleshless limbs which have been the heritage of the ch11- dren of the pllla. ed nations. Yes, Hitler 1s t inking of attack. Of an attack against Italy, his grovelllng ally, who was so quick three years ego to stab a fallen tfrlend 1n the back. Of an attack against the many thousands or miles of shorelines which he un- easily controls. And come it will, ll.'l‘i§‘d.‘3°.§l“’.'l’ $532.53". '3'“ m” a on - 1118 to its doom. 8° American industry was well- wlth her own II. J. MlBllll OPTOMETBIST Montague. P. l‘. l- l! : 10¢ 12 n- i °"'°' 313% p.11‘! llolldnys e141. hv Illlwlmm“ Office Connected will! DBUGSTOBE eoulnued to cope hllze war i-equ rements largelv bu- Call-Se of the vast British orders which had bullt 1t up before of sabotage amla; Harbour. Professional Bards McLeod 8 Bentley l l W. E. BENTLEY. K. C- J. A. BENTLEY. K. O. Barristers and Attorneys-n- Lew MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Street Ilorrolland Company} ll. F. llllllllBAlll ' Chartered Accountant lulu-n Treat Inlldlnn Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARMER I- A». LLB. IAIIIISTEB. IOLIOITOR. ET Olllullnu Bull o! Ollllllllfifce ll . BIO}!!! ‘H! IDAN ALEX W. MATHIESON BARIISTEII. SOLICITOE. ITO- OIIuiIOGi-entfloorlellrool . i411 I I l .1 , Pearl ‘ NOTICE T0 FARMERS We have’ 1115i "-'°°i"d O shipment. FOBMALIN FOR 5M3’; 9N GRAIN a cheap but thoroughly =1 fectlve remedy- wigni‘: f'°'°=ii'm1ii:li' ‘Q f" . ‘ to have need, DI°P°Y|Y m" before rowlnx. l o 91m go ever! 4° l, lomniif Inter. I-‘nll ialffll: given with ever! l" t ' We n!» M"! ll" "°" "d lmprovetl CERESAN A gm; olllnfealllli 0' 1 . 1111-: .21.‘: “"1111... p» what you mill" ‘l °""" SEMESAN BI!- u. n1 autumn-w Y" control o! Nib ""1 u" w‘. venllon of f" l" In n 01111::- ‘mg,