rte-assa- 1m-u--.¢-,.-.>-., t . PAGE FOUR THE GIIIBLOTTETUWII GUARDIAN llornlng Dilly (Founded In 188'!) President: Lieul. 00L W. Chester S. McLuro Vice-President: J. B. Burnett, i‘..l.l. Secretary: Ueut. Col. D. A. Maelnnnou. U-B-Q- Editor and Managing Dlrector: J. B. Burnett. I..I.L Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Lleul. Ian A Bumett, B-UXNJKIL (On Act-Ive Service] “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." minim. JANUARY 21. um I944 Potato Acreage Five per cent more potato acreage is asked for 19.1.1, the designated total bcitig 558,980 acres. The provinces of Ontario, Manitoba and British Columbia have each agreed to increases of 1o per cent in acreage. {Quebec and Alberta will aim fur 5 per cent increases. The Blaritinie i'1"o"."i11cc.-, i11 all of which 111.13 plantings were greater 111x111 the long-lune avcixiges, will main- tain their level of production, as will Saslczilchc- wan. l-"zict-ars considered in compiling the national objective» slates" the 111111111 l\'c\l.\v oi .\Q1":- cultural Conditions in Canada, were: the sc-‘ircilv of supply on 111.111y central llllllbClS in the swing oi 151.13, even ala cectlisd bush the 19.1.’ crop had cx- .. |lZCtl!illL‘l_\' meceduzg yea" that lli:f.“§'1‘1' iniv 2111161 .. 41,11 1i_,11_1c1"1-pi11storage:1ici1_\1l1:1tio11 11:1- ciertalvings for 19-15 crop much greater that: ever before and likely to be tnaintziined subse- quently, and the active export demand for anv certified seed which ii is seen lit to 11<:r1nit to l1." e.\:111rlv'l. -\\l'l t1. tl1e>ed:"."1\\l1."1clt-. so far as P111 i- lill- ward island at least is Concerned, the difficulty of obtaining refrigerator cars for shipment. $1111 011 Llpgratle’ With the war in mogress for almost four and a half years, there is still r10 break in the ll[J‘~\-'l\'\l trend of (ianavlian business. inwiifir as 111,111.11" i111erz1liou- at l('€l:1 are conreiwnrl 'l‘l"11- ‘n.1, 191.1 saw pinnacle l'Ct‘"l'lls‘ for 11in" 1v": great railwav system; both in the volumes of their traffic and the aggregates of their earn- i: The increase had been steady and pro- 1111 uwl every 1111111111 of the yezir. 'l‘his t1p>111"_4"t 1s 111 1- as 11inch in evidence 111.1111 a.- i: \\'ZlS_llll'CC months ago. .\ statement just issued by the Czinadian Pacific Railway says that its traf- fic receipts‘ for the first week of this year were over 22 per cent above those for the correspond- 111: licriul 11f 1111:. The 1on1 was 151.803.1100 f1~:" 1l1~ lll-Ci» Cli1l"Fl _l.'11'111a1"_\' 7, 10.11, as contpar- ed 111th $3.o_‘1).ooo for the fiist week of 1913. T110 C..\'.R. has had a similar experience. The y"r.'11" 1'74} was its peak vear, but it 11115 110111111 mll “ill: increases in traffic and rcvcnucs about 11.11 Sililli‘ as arc reported by the Caimrlizui lluci- 11c 1.3 11."1':1l bu-iness expansion C0lllil|llCa lo b: the order of the day. Meaningless Phrases cilllllllillltlLd‘ Ring-Hall, .\l.l’., who is pub- _ pamphlets 2h‘ well as contributing to 'l'or<into Saturday" Night, his views 0n interna- 211111111 affair» 111.111 1r;- l'(‘w|)(1l1>ll)l6 for 1111 action 1:.-l1i1;"' 1,1‘ 1111: $111111 official organ Pravda in publish- mg 1111: 1"11n=-~111" 1"e~:1-'":1ee 111"o11;1gz111dz1 which 1.. 1 1-1 1111-1 calculated to cattse disruption between .-\1le1l mtions. The Commander wants the (Jer- tnaizs to be rcnsstirctl, officially, that the United \. . lftll- do not ilnl “to tlP>1l'1'1V the (icrmuu suiolr". .\'11 more incredibly" ilztngeiwpis idea can be offered. _\'0 sane 1111111 wants indis- crizninztte slaughter and destruction in Ger- manv, but the only safe thing is t0 give the Cer- nians no as "mice of anv kind, but finish the 11111: ln .s late-t borik, he say» “the econo- iizie 111,111.; 111' llltlllkilltl lies in thc (‘.\i\'l|>lUll into 1h‘: peace era of the practises and principles 111' lsend-Leasc". This simply means that the world cannot continue to function, and prosper, un- less nations which have surpluses of goods give that to 1111111111.»; which are short. llow would the fact that the sitrpius exists be proved? asks Letter Review". Dries a stirplus of motor cars exist in Canada, when we have 100,000 motor cars, or when we have one million. or when we haw 11-11 11111111111? Does :1 sitrplus of 111111: in L':i11:11l;1 irxi-t nlun evciwoiic has all 1111" milk he 11.1111» to llflllli, or when everyone only 1111s 11111."- ourirtcr of the milk he would lll\'C to clrinlt? Tl1i= is the sluff of which (lreains are 11111111.‘. and to indulge 111 tl1.'11 sort of dreaming is 1-1 awaken very" much ili-illusioncrl. VVarfare Devices "l')1:1"l\.=," "aliigalois" and "buffaloes" are Inong the wit-rd monsters which have c111n1: within the cz1le1;\11"y' of naval ships itscd in the amphibious operations which have been carried out bv the Allies ln the South Pacific and in the Mediterranean. Troop and equip- ment transports, they are of shallow draught to enable them to approach close in shore in order to facilitate disembarkatiein, and their bluff bcnvs are made to Open, the section ap- parently dropping down to form a platform enabling troops, tanks, artillery and various mobile 1111115 to reach the shore. “l1it-flier the znuk which seems to be equally al home on 111ml and water is included in the list of monsters named above cannot be determined. The improvising of war tactics to meet new conditions and circumstances 1121s been parti- cularly appavriit 111 the jungle and island-hopping operations in which the Xlmcricans and Aus- tralians have been etigagerl. Camouflage. 11.1011 in the First World \\’ar, has become a highly specialized method of concealment; it is used not nnlv by the troops whose tiniforins and equipment are made to blend info the scenery with, the obiect of elndilig the vigilance 0f the stiiper, but also to disguise ships and even towns. ‘Spit and polish" is no longer a standing order for the forces". with the result that casualty lists have been verv consirlerablv shortened. New warfare devices, or to be more vxziel, lllllll" d devices, are lwiug itilrnduccd 1'11 H11 the services. Amiouiicenivsnt 1111s been 11111111- 1 l | airman. The United States has lust brough exceed 1n speed and general p". at present in use. clouds. of which very deadly doubt, Germans in land. of Hitler's citadel. - EDITORIAL NOTES _ The next musical feast may not be so high tuned as that of Wednesday; but should be large audience-—Burns concert on Tuesday 25th. fi i I I ‘ Paid for ne\v.~p.'1per campaign advertising was used for the first time 1.111.) year in Toronto municipal election with heartening results, 37.; voters going to me polls against 2o 22 in the pre- ceding year, the actual number of votes record- ed being 13,1087 against 73,083 in 1943. e =1 =1- v Louis .\'\'l, King of lfrance. executed this date 1793; grandson of Louis XV, who 10st both India and Canada, and the Seven Years’ \\'ar, the new King inherited the seeds of the tircnclt revolution, which was also precipitated l1_\ the ineouipt-tctice and extravagancics of both king and Liovernincnt; the tmfortttnate Louis was deposed in 1792 and in jail. of the year af- ter executed; he was well iutentioncd bu! weak, rnd in domestic affairs led by the nose by 111s ‘Queen, .\l:1rie Antoinette, who was guillotine-d 111 (Jetolicr the same year; the French Republic, with Napoleon in military command followed. i I 1h I Vice-Arlmiral Percy W. Nelles, who as chief of tiaval staff‘ at (Juana has had much to do with the 1-1111, c» and (levelopnieitt of the l\'.C.l\'., as- sumes the new Canadian rank of senior flag of- ficer in Britain. He will be on hand to co- operate to the full with officers of the Royal Navy i1"1 their plans for the invasion. Canadian naval units will not be 1ilaced under one com- mand, but will be uscdwith the other Allied forces wherever and whenever they are needed. 'l‘\vo new cruisers, a gift from Britain, will soon be maimed by Canadians, and will make the RZCN. the most powerful naval force this 601111- irv has ever boasted. I I fi I “BureaucraW is a word. not a nickname. not a term of reproach or opprobrium, says an O!- t."1\va c01"1"e.sp011de11t who, in view of the reopen- ing of Parliament steps forward i11 their de- fence. ;\nd those who throw missiles a1 lied- cral officials too often l1it the wrong targets. What Iekes say/s about Washington is probably true here——the bureaucrat is a creature of cen- lralizcd govc1"n111ent, necessitated by global war- fare, but 11c is not peculiar to wartime 112111011111 business. 11c was here before the wars, and he wasn't always bad. There are more good than bad bureaucrats. The good ones may be found in eharge of 11111111" of the myriad controls, and they will be discovered doing the same work tjiey did before September, 1939. Must of them mean well, and most of them do well. A few like plenty of power. Mighty few secm to 111m: an insatiable appetite for it_ l! >5 it I \\'o1"ld 111111001; for wheat rcuuiretnents is simply that all the wheat which we produce is needed for human nutrition somewhere. llereis one case, says Letter Review, where there should he no hesitation to use Lend-Lease methods as long as they are l‘(.'(|llll'€(l. We may have to pirc away wheat for more than one year, to stabilize the situation. That should not frighten anyone. \Vith active policies of development in Canada, and an increased 1iopulatioti, we could, almost certainly, avoid this course for 111o1"e than a year or two, and build an economy here which could absorb enough imports to eu- ablc us to export our wheat, without difficulty. Canadian wheat can be produced of better qual- ity and more cheaply than any wheat in the \\"11rld, and slill vicld the Canadian farmer a fair return. Surely it is folly to talk of throiv- 111g up o111" hands, and going out of wheat @111. tivation. 101 i 1| 111 'l‘hat (Tzmada faces :1 problem of 11111111111111111 -"-‘~ bart of ils p "war l‘1:t‘Oll5ll'llCll0l1 is gen- erally admitted, and many interested persons and groups are giving attention to various solu- lions. Without becoming embroiled in conten- 110115 ruiestions. says the .\le11tl1ly Letter of The Royal Bank of Canada for _l:11111;11-y, them i; 111t1cl1 of interest to be explored. flow 111111111 people should tberc be in Canada for greatest benefit to all ifs inhabkzmts? ls there any limit, and if so what are the limiting factors? lf ad- ditional population seerrns dewirable. where is it to come from? lnto the zmsivering of thesi- qtiestions there ntcrs the whole world story of migration and birth rates, of mcdical scienc- and the emancipation of women. of the struggl- for self-sufficiency and the Atlantic Chart-n impulse toward llll(‘l‘llRflO11{1l accord, =1- w n- u I_.’Action Catholique reports the following saying of one of the habilants: "Give i1 11111.1‘. name you like, no government can by flgglf alone assure a living to the whole people.” The paper forthwith admits that "it is still private. initiative 1vl1icl1 can do most to rcabsorb float- fllfl manpower, rehabilitate demobilized service- out a new fighter. the Black Wlltnv, said lo ' Q nuance any The deadly accuracy of the guns of the battleship Duke of York in the sink. ing of the Scharnherst also suggests further 111111r0vc1ue11ts in range finding. Previously the American precision bombing over Europe was interfered with when the target was hidden by 111:1: difficulty has been overcome. The PLJIZCI‘ divisions of the Germans. believed cap- able of causing complete disorganization of the linces l_1_v which they were opposed, have been effectively countered by new artillery technique, _ proof has been given by the Russians and by the Eighth Army. And, no there are other surprises awaiting the sca and air fighting when the might of the Allies isflung against the walls equally enjoyable, and attract the customary "rm: 1 cuknntmizrown GUARDIAN“ t Notes By The Way PUBLIC FORUM Tojo. Every time he counts 1m archipelago he's a few more short. ~Milwaukee ‘lourtial, Rats did 200, _._- 1131101‘ on the 000.000 damage In miuumn. and -the United state; last; year. A large flgigxe. but nothing compared with w t the rats did 1n Europe. — Louis Post-Dispatch- Thh being Leap Year, the Allies obviously Plan a big jump across the English Channel, landing with both feet on the Nazis neck - Strntfonj Beacon-Herald. but: proven tnls b0 A young friend In the services just back front the U- S. A. (I can vouch for his veracity) tells me 11f a, o o remarkable incident that occurred when he and a friend were hitch- In two yen-s Brltnln sent to Rus- sian rrmameirts valued at £179.- 000-000 rs7ev,e:~o,o00>_ at the time that she Was producing an ln- credible amount of war material for the use of her own expanding annles.--Ottawa Citizen. dent. A department of reconstruction ls mooted at Ottawa. but it will probably be a branch of another department‘. Association of. ideas having put the National Gallery of Canada under the department of public works. because. apparently. painting; are works of art. recon- struction 1111111 be put under the department of transport, because it is a sign We are $01111! some- iwhere. ~Ht1mllton spectator. conseienties 0t‘ 1nd tuge A young woman In Regina startl- ed the clerk in a tobaeconlstfis shop the other dny. The girl bought a plpp as a belated gift for a boy- friend she had apparently for- gotten nt Christmas time She ask- ed the clerk all about the pipe and then tried it out herself. Yes. that's right, she filled it like an old timer and lit. up testing it to her satisfaction before walking out very pleased wit-h her purchase. - 1 Regina. Snsk. £01 e, bout. In a gloomy New Year's mes- sage. Fuehrer Hitler told the Ger- man people that 1n this war there could only be two classes of people, the survivors and tile mmlhilatedu This “'15 characteristic oration. The Nazi chief boast- ed mt "Vlh0l'CV€l‘ they land, the Allies will receive an appropriate welcome." ’I‘here ls no doubt of this, but it is significant that; the Fuehrer admitted that they would 111m that his passengers were not wearing Anmricnn uniforms. He wanted lo know where they came from. England. they told him. A 1on1; pause. \Vas England in the war? he asked. Yes, they Said. and had been for some time now- ' Another. rather longer pause. Then. grudzlntilv came the final question: “Which side she on?" - Lendon New Statesman. the world. The Bituminous Coal Institute predicts a poet-war golden age of coal as the result of proudsed en- gfnearlng research, says The New York Times. RESKlEHOc are to be cooled in summer by the same ccel furnaces that heat them in winter. Coal will be converted into gas without try-products Machines will transfer coal from the bln to the cellar furnace and remove ashes automatically. Coal-burning heaters and ranges will warm rooms day and night without smoke and with only one rekind- llng in a season. New coal-fired loeomatlvm will run long distances without stops; for fuel and water. Finely pulverized coal suspended in a liquid will burn llkc gos tn hot furnacru, Intetnal-ccmbustlon en- gines for plants, locomotives and ships will be developed to burn pulverized coal just as gasoline is now burned in automobile engines. More tar acids, the basis of plailitlcs, will be obtained from con . We ed through so There may be anything" from 400,000,000 to 450, 000 000 people in need of 11 more 2111111113 diet than they have had for years- Is Britain to supply it? That has only to be asked for its absurdity to be clear. If we took only 10 percent of our existing rations lo sengt nbmud we should ourselves be reduced bemw the subsistence lcvel- And what use would the tenth of a rat-ion of 45.000.000 19501719 be to 450,000,000 people? The main burden of sup- plying the food will have to be borne by the primary producing coiuitrlcs". The Hot Springs Food Conference last May recommended the expanslott of production between the end of the war and a return to more normal conditions. A lot will depend upon what time of year the Will‘ birds. It may 11111111 he that increased production after the conclusion of peace will be too late. and that a beginning should be mad:- now. Thu is but one of tlreflveyrv big questions in one of the biggest Jobs that men have ever tackled. There should be no delay in seeking the answers. - essetitinl bonds s uttered ltunl meanlmz, of I err." The British Something more than humor lies in the story of a. United State Army officer who attended divine service on Attu Island minus his pants The incident, in fact, gives a deep insight. Into the tinderlj/lng spirit of‘ the men in action. This lieutenant had been wounded. It was necessary to cut his trousers off in order to dress his hurts. He had w dhoose between going to church minus this essential article of clothing or miss the service. He went. with his 188s encased only 1n long underwent". This may not be tn keeping with the genera] idea of the moral outlook of the men tn the armed forces. ‘may are too often supposed to he rough, vlves as one of men in civilian life, direct into normal channels the economic lifo of the country." But there upon it adds these few lines: “The unemployed of yesterday now in the armed forces arelccr- tainly not fighting to maintain a system which allmvs the extremes of misery in the midst of 11191111". 1t is something else they desire. And if the capitalist regime cannot sufficiently guar- antee to 111cm the existence of that jusler and tnore linmatie order which has been promised . _ 4 1.1’ 111111.14 wadiiun-s to the allureinenl of ucw and i118 Jfil propelling aeroplane devised by a British dclusivc experiments." them. they will ‘give themselves over with the. needless sinners with llt-tlo thought for the finer things of life. Few of them are, of course, examples of the conventional idea of piety. but they have n deep religious feeling which shows up in such incidents as Vhlt rather than in their eon- versawln. Many civilians at home mbzht well take their example to heart. —Wlnd_=or star nvnox SUDIJEN _ The population of E1 Reno. Oklahoma. jumped about persons in a "ZIIRlE day ln 1901 when the last "free 1111111 in Okla- homg wuropened to white semen When the High C1 Canada expresses hlg opinions of the future, he speaks for a people who now stand fourth among United Nations in wur production; and that; ls as good a measure as material standards afford of the au- thority tnst Canada L; entitled exercise 1n the future councils of M1", Vincent Money's interpretation of Canadian thought. gives assurance that, the ion's influence will be exerted in favour of the unifying forces both within and without the fight, as Mr. in Parliament. to secure ticns a free choice of their destiny. But we need not assume from our 1111111111113’ experience af- iier the last war that freedom ls imcessarlly centrifugal. If self de- termination con mean an 11st of separation. it can also mean an act of association. There is mood hope that the nations that have learn- suffering the 4335.3. oonnpoilnh Perhaps It l: funny people no gondola on Incest n. longer keep albums, but. it was Qlulnhhn eunu- 0:“: funnier when they did! -Edmon- i 5' ' ton Journal The Oriental with the ' pained expression would be Hon- PBDI-IIBITION IIIJIUIFUL Sin-I have 111T with interest 113319115 letters published 1n subject o! have spoken experience be true. Prombitm. has been 1n existence. official-w. in tins province, for itumy years, and the drunkenness. "booze-timing" nnu genera-l c regard o! the law 110W prevalent are 1 " omment. Secondly. eoraewvlu drink. ‘tnore semis 1o De no sunstitute 101" beer and tram liquor. not even, as was 111051. help- fuily suggested by bile 0011131900- buttermilk. 1110111011 111w as yet. devised hast)!!!- vented the people from Fmully tne miles c"! Cllnstlllll this isuinu could not uessibir continually guarded cgaizzsi. iaunwrs. n01" could the keep a continual “Men 0n houses stuipeeted of "baoze-ntaklng." 111411986. I can tmnx o1 r10 890d reason for the present prohibition law, uuiess it be to 1111111111 people with mis- giudec. conceptions of the nteatiing ot the word "teztnieraatce '. 1.111111111111111 ls not harmful in IIIOGOISMOD. The satire applies to smoking, and many o1 the other habits 1n which we b0 number of people on the same sub- jeeuend. having obser- con/A: 14cm under the law, I should like to v0 1 t "Sblifilft. toe mv 00411- on. Oovlously the prohibition low cannon o: siweesstully enforced. 111 111's: Place. IJOOYJQSS i Wnen carried to excess. 110111011911- drmknig ls 1111111111111, not only ourselves, but bootliers; and Lucre- 1 "ohibitaon farce shoulob be abolis ed. and the unrestricted " and wine, with govern- olled sale of hard ' "iituteo. With the taboo 01f to drink. and to become d1 11.1111, would be mb- olished. Procuring the liquor 1 ould no longer be 901116111 ‘ ung to t a- attitude of "EM. drink and be merry, for tumorrow no can't. 140i. 111w ntore’ would d15- appeur. 'I“11e liquor purchase 1y would not be s. vile. mnccetion often made up o1 rub b11111 alcohol. turpentine, or c-mbal- miug fluid, nor would the 1:0 11o the bootleggers unmet. bnazleirrriu: would die B Hitler-lair n-"urcil death, and 111w the Spme p... "e WOlllG 11o doctors scupts, lrcurcrnatle stills. 1111a the age-old prohtbltiair controversy. I arm. Sir. etc. DUM VIVLMU a‘. VIVAMUS . — . sit . land Brantford Expo or Canaha Ana ihe 1111111 in Alaibaizta. They were w ' picktiff up by a farmer driving one hmplre of those ancient Fords After a i. long silence it began to dawn on (London flmee) 1 your PTO- has N0 DPO- drinking. OH be I'll-Ill" authorities the ' to liq- profits l pi WANTED Beets, Carrots, Cabbage; Parsnips. Paying highest prices. George Justine Larkin, .- 1 viva-vs‘ wW-‘l-Vwb‘ h‘ How Are Your Eyes '1) l! you an uavl lymnwlll :1 at strain —h aches. w" 1' eyes or dlulnell - ounlnll I ‘ enrrlallll A: your service with Yuan of experience and n thomllh refraining uervIr-s. Cull tn and ducal-I Your ,- dlfflcultleu Write or nhono loll appointments. G. F. llutcheson AND SUN l. (i IIUTLHbaUN G. F HUTUIIESON much their mutual dependence in modem world will so exercise their liberty, when they recover it. as to draw nenvcr to one another rather than farther apart» If so_ Canada 15 well placed to assist the imiflcalioti of the world. , She has uct only her ocean links wllli thr- British Eftnpire and het‘ land links with the United States. but her new air links across Arctic Circle with the Soviet Un-, ion. With all three of the leading Ptnvcrs of "the alliance her con- tacts in the realm of the have been correspondingly inten- sified during the war. Mt". Mn perceives that the strength of his country as a focus of operation depends first and fore- mcst on its status as .1 member of the British Commonwealth group <11 sister itatlons comlnues to movldc, in all the chaos of the twentieth century, the ing example of harmony and com- men action, which only becomes more united by the Stress of war. 1t ls not 111 any gree a political union; n01" are 11s economic, tetermlnnnt de- Commonwealth relations s ies of business deals linking a of chain stores. It L; a union with a :splr- Mr. tlie D0119 freedino-lov- collection and believes that, because provocation to rather invites other trig communities to coo erate, this meaning is capable of muniented to widening circles of internatlonnl friendship. Dflplffi the 1m for world oo- outstand- as 1f WGTQ B. Mnssey union elng oom- ls not a closed system, seeking self-suffici- ency ln its own circle by turning its back upon the world. It sur- controlling forces of the world's destiny be- cause It Ls in tune with the age n11 age that sun-mom; men every- where to ncknowledae stnntly growing complexity of choir relations It can contribute tn the solution of international problems its own successful experience of retaining in a era-operative order Ldlvrrstlv of rnces. languages grid the’ con- iBombing ilkhdfBiology me t0 Domin- Empire. Eden repeated for na- own the mind 556V 01H‘ but of belief in the modern iraperinl (By Llya. Ehrennuvg in U. S. a‘. R. m guuettn.) e B21 utegaalne. Amhlv fuer Biologic 11nd Ramon zesellschaft, V "on the usefulness of aeaual 90m- boadments from the viewpoint o! racial selection and social hy- giene." The 1111111101 declared: person whose nervous system ls de- toomve cannot eta-rut heavy sexual bouibarcments. Thus. aerial bom- bandzneitts will to d15- oover the neurasttrenrw and remove them from social rife." This article was written a year after G-eintran bombers nod de- strcvyec‘. the Spoiush town of Guer- inca. 1n 11139 they ravaged Warsaiw. On gay 14. 1040 umn of 1940 they born on every fright. In 1941-42 tltev car- ried death to Leningrad, ml- gov, Gomel. Livny. Yelets countless other Russian towns. Now the German press Protests hotly against the 1101111171111: of Ger- mom towns. fcamiot quote the Amhiv fuer Biologic und Ross uesellschaft on the subject, ‘but here Ls a quoiuuotr been Gocnntzs National Zeitung of Julv l8: fellow citizens. those shocks which all residents of Essen have ho suffer. mmrlnerdments inevitably affect the nervous system 11nd hOW many sensitive natures have - crippled forever by e raids. how manv talented adolesc- ents, how many frail Genrum women have been affected with nervmie ailments, frequently incur- Bble . . d’ We still await n competent. art!- ele in the Archlv fucr Biologic unr. Rassengescllschalt. No doubt they will be able Lo convince ES6€11 that air raids are tiseful. as the bombs hit neumsthonlcs. can 1t b9 that the four-torment of our Allies have zurned the sh! of this respectable magazine into neurasthentcs HOME FIRES LOW During the winter 1542-43 Brit- ish domestic and industrial eon- sumers of coal affected an economy of 11.000000 tons in response to the Government's request. This was 3.000.000 tons more 11111.11 the Bd- vance estimate of savlna. J. POPE CLARKE ' MONDAY (All Day) Dlngwell, TUESDAY Until 1.30 p.111. Five TUESDAY, Until 2.30 p.m. Dingwell & Rosslter, The above loading hogs weekly for DAVIS 81 FRASER until further notice. We sum South Houses Morell . _._._______. ______=.—-___.._—-—i a NOTICE Water Rafe Payers wish to remind con- ers rates for pre- sent quarter are now l overdue. Charlottetown Water Dept. POULTRY A We titles all other rennin Ilntlmltod fill-II- of chicken, fowl. Also klndl o! me!!! Poultry llva and dressed. Cor- rect marl klllln main: one lumen et prloel. Our @011"! g plant ls at vour dil- ponl. Swift Canadian 60., Ltd. Cfiulottetown FROM: He is made one with nature: there IW ADONAIS e His voice in all her music. from the moan ' 0f thunder. to the song of 111811“ est bird: He k1 n presence to be felt and own, In darkness and ln llihb from h"?! and Spreading stOhfl, itself whereer that» POWGX‘ may n1 I16 iustalns it from beneath, ove Which hug withdrawn his being to lt-s own; Which wields the world with ver-wearled love and kindle! it above he Sweep; through He is a portion of the loveliness which onece he made more lovely! doth bear HI; part while the one Spirit's plastic stress the dull dense world. compelling there Curtin has spokenwof. the. means required ln the strenuous times ahead of giving closer articulation to the imperial unity thflt Blreliiy exists. Mr. Massey’; sminuu wu rather on the lblllt e of re- flecting this 1m ty outwards upon a still discordant world. But they Wfife striking obverse and reverse of the same medal; and both alike 11m wurgsentatlve of that revival All new‘: to the forms "w! "m L‘ m‘ “mmld l“ m‘ '1' mm ‘izytiimhnwintng m“ r1111 world 01115111., its borders Mr. ° 63am i“ mm To "itgrowu likeness. as each mass THEY And bursting 1n its beauty and its ml ht Prom tries and beasts and men‘ bear; into the Heaven's light. --Percy Bysshe Shelley. MALE DOMESTIC The mine 11f Wlleotfl! 11111111110110. nasalon. which u; Mr. aseey an American bird, latumrs the bur- lsatd. 1s one of the significant dehs of nest-making an: trouse- lme. _ keeggg. , ‘genomen or our t A111 A1174! British Cons ols pic/t»; This War——F11111 Summer ‘ and Cllnflflflfltnwn Years Ago JAN. 21, IMO-British Ammm announced sinking 0f destroy: Grenville in North Sen by mine 1" torpedo with 10s! pf 76 crew m bers, Finnish airmen Kronstm Sovl nnval base _—_.—:i—-——--____, CHICKS We are now booking or- ders for Baby Chicks.- We urgently request that orders be placed early. First Chicks for delivery February 18th. All orders promptly acknowledged. SWIFFS Chick Hatchery 1 Charlottetown, P. F. L Attention Swine Breeders New l: in, time to nun! lust 5K3 PIGWORM By using the most efleetlva remedy on the market. MAGS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly abolish all traces of worm: and 1m- prove the henlth of your herd. Prim 35c per- 1b. AMMONIATED BBDNOIIAL C OMPOUND A reliable 11ml effective pre- paration for the treatment of coughs and colds. A quick relief for chronic Bronchitis- Price 50c per bottlfl. ABE YOU TROUBLE!) WITH LUMBAGO 0R SORE BACK 1f so we have one n! the best remedies to offer- 111m:- Iy. Back-Rite Tablets. Espre- lally cflcnllve for Lumbflizv, Sciatica, Neurifls, joint mus- cular and other forms 0| rheumatism ivhlch ordlnll’! treatments fnll to relleh- Price 50 cents per box, fill-I TWO MAGS 14s Great Georg; sir-m. mu 0111111. w“ rmmvf A ll -1-111:11. Professional Biirus end £4 Bentley VlcL w. n. BENTLEY. a c. J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. Bnrrlstcn and A-tornoyl-lt- Low 1M Prince Street -_..-~_-—-;'i| ll. F. ARGIIIBALD Chm-tend Accountant lantern Tron illlfldllll Charlottetown 4v= M. ALBAN FARMEK I. L. LLJ. BARRISTEIK SOLIUITOE Canadian Bank 0| Commerce MON!!! ‘I0 UOAN A‘ 17K ‘wTM/slmfivi Money to Loan Wmflh‘ 51111111115511. goliggglfl