T14 y! g-A mfii H B l-‘F -<.-¢..s-<n~<4mn¢—_: “rzmflflllflufllfl ~__<=~¢-._. _.._.___ , u- 7 s illlllllgfllfiiiflllllllll rand that before the Social Security committee iAGE FOUR TIIE GIIAIILOTTETUIIII GIIAIIIIIAII Inrnlngllnllytlonndollnllfl) hfld slalnlCd-W-Clultallnlalfl Vai-Prnldentt ll. m" Hen cub‘ llnnlfilnnTnJJ-DBA). II, a limo: u": k Immn J. l. Burnett. IJJ. tour hank Walker and Bill . Llent. Inn A gamut, IQNJIL l0! Anllvn I ‘The Strongest Memory la Wanker Than the Weaken Ink.” THURSDAY, JAN. I. l9“ ,Y.M.C.A: Centennial One ltundrcd years of service with youth throughout the world will be coittpleted by the Y. M. C. .~\. this year. Canadian observance of the centennial ivill be held in Montreal early in June, according to an announcement by Pres- ld0lll L. ti. Slia\v of the National Council of the Lair "n1 Y. M. C. .\. This is an important eveitt in many ways. The Y. .\l. C. A. was founded in London, England, by George Williams, a 23-year-old drygoods clerk, as a society "for the improvement of the rillfllllill coitdiiitni of young iiicti engaged in iIic ilrapcry tiadc" Soon it lJl‘t>2It_l_t‘ll€tl its programme to include educational and athletic ' a-ities. Seven \c.us alter the futinding of the a Canailiaii fishing .l..(llltlllll saw “ha: \\ illiains- ivas iliiing tiierc, and returned to Can- aila to launch a ltindrvtl orgziiiizatitiii in Mon- treal. Today tlic Y. .\l. C. .\. operates in sixty- eight countries. lts twelie original members have gronn to many millions. ln evcry country the “Y." has bccome a nat- innnl inovcincnt of the itcoplc, rather than re- iintinitig a "lorcigrn" enterprise. The various llillltlllill movements form a federation \vitli headquarters in lleiieva, Switzerland. .\ striking ilitistration of the prestige enjoyed by the organizatipn was furnished by a recent news itczn from .\'cw York, quoting officials at international headquarters as stating that the Japanese Government will permit the Y. H. C. A. to conduct “general welfare activities" among American, British and Dutch prisoners of war in Japan and occupied Chin". Instead of glorifying past achievements of the Y. M. C. A, the forthcoming centennial occas- ion will form the basis of a Canada-wide study of Y. M. C. A. policies as the “Y” enters its second century. Right now it is serving Cau- adian men in uniform in more than 60o places. Helping soldiers in returning to civilian lite, eti- abling youngsters to live normal lives in abnor- mal times, providing relief and comfort for the distressed peoples of many lands, and bringing about a better tiuderstanzling betwccti all nat- ions through its world-wide organizatitm, are among its laudable objectives. ' Health The Government will introduce a Health Iti- lurance bill at the coming session of Parliament, with the intention of having it passed and brought into effect this year, according to the ttztawzt correspondent of the Winnipeg Free Press. The plan is understood to be one 0f pro- vincial health lllbt-Ta-IICC, and expanded provin- cial health services, with the leadership and large financial assistance of the Dominion. Accept- ance by the provinces of the standards laid down hy tlic Dominion with respect to medical service and public health service, will be the condition on which the proposed federal aid will be granted. The new government bill will dif- fer from that introduced last session for pur- puscs of discussion, in that there will be a large tritiisfereiice of the financial obligation from the provinces to the Dominion. This alone will enable the Prairie and Maritime provinces to co- operate iri the scheme. Apparently it is to be a real itisiirauce sys- lPill. with contributions from the citizen, from his employer and from the government, and not the Marsh plan of free medical service for all. The re-ivriting of the financial clauses is said to be the chief difference between the new hill l Insurance w. of Parliament early this year. The latter pro- vided’ for insurance of every adult Canadian and contributions from all at the flat rate of 50 "m5 Pct Week ($25 a war) except for those in ibr low income groups, who paid less or nothing at all. Each province will administer its own scheme through a commission to be set up. The cost of health insurance for childrcn will be paid by the giwrruiticiits. This \\'lll incliidr dental service, nhirh will lie expanded as more ilcntists are available. The instirerl will be able to choose their doctors and flit-latter will be paid for their services by the provincial government according to rates to be fixed. These. at least. were fea- hirrs of thr- formcr bill which seem likely to be fnlloi-uerl for the most part. to a Cheese Xot long sincc in Perth, county’ seat of Lan- ark County in liasteru Ontario, a statue was unveiled to the memory of the world's biggest cheese, relates the Toronto Telegram. This giant replica of what ivas 50 years ago a seven- tl:1_v \\itll-l(’l', in (httario. in Chicago and in Lon- don, ling-hind, nas (‘rt-civilncartht-LZYTR.tracks ‘It l'crth by the l..'lllfll'l\' tfounty Cheese Produc- ris lssociatirin and commemorates the actual thrcsc itself which was manufactured 50 years ago and brought so niuch fame tn the cheese- tinakini; industry of lhilztrin. lt was inzidc in fiirin part of a pvrziiiiid of (Yinatliaii dairy products at the \\'0rlrl's Coltim. bian lixpositirin at Chicago and iveiglicd 22,000 pounds. To inakc it, 207,200 pounds of milk were ""l"ll'1“l- "Ill-ll l0 tlic quantity yielded in one Fepicutlwr day by io,oo0 cows, and a dozen cheese factories contributed in its tuaiuifacttire. The Xlanuiioth Cheese measured 28 fcet iii cir- cumference by six fcct in height. and it ivas en- cased iii a llllrlfl or llilflp of steel boilcr plate, _§-I(>lll of an inch thick. A pressure of mnrc than :00 tons- ivas .'ipplicd to itittlte the cheese Memorial part in building Canada's reputation ‘u a ched- dar cheese producing country, and the ensuing decade proved the greatest producing and ex- porting years this country ever has seen, be- duced, most of which was exported. The cheese was sent to the Exposition by special train and it crashed through the floor of the building while being moved from the car to the space prepared for it. There was no refrig- eration for it and the chase underwent a sev- ere test, standing for six months under a glass roof in a temperature which at times reached 90 above. Nevertheless, it was awarded the Ex- position diploma and bronze medal. Subsequently it went to London, England, where it was acquired by a caterer, Jubal Webb, who cut it up with considerable ceremony in the spring of i894, notables present including Sir Charles Tupper, Canada's high commissioner, who later became prime minister. Two of the chceseniakers who helped in pro- ducitig the Mammoth were at the monument un- veiling. .- EDITORIAL NOTES .- Dr. I. D. MacGtiigan, who has just retitrucd from t\lilllll'Cill, states that the explanation of the glut in the Christmas tree iiiarltet there was that the sellers demanded too high a price to begin with and hy the time they came to their senses, the market was gone. 'l"hcre is a tiioral in this for others who may think they, itidiviilual- ly and collectively‘, coittrol the law ofistipply and demand. e a n- a Feast of Epiphany, or Twelfth Day, com- memorating the showing of Jesus to the Magi; is first alluded to by tilcnient of Alcxaiitlria as observed by the Basilidians 0f Egypt about I94 A.D.; as late as 385, Jan. 6 was observed in Bethlehem; inithe Oriental Churches Epip- hany still retains its early connection wtith bap- tism and the blessing of the waters; in the Ar- inciiian Church children are generally baptized at this date. n II it h It is estimated that 400,000 men and probably at least 100,000 women have left the farms since i939, so Arthur McNamara, deputy minister of Labor and director, National Selective Service, told the Dominion-Provincial Agricultural Con- ference which met recently in Ottawa. Tens of thousands of young farmers are serving on the battle fronts. Thousands of others went with munitions factories during the first two years of the war when it was so yital that fighting wea- pons be supplied in ever increasing volume. u a u u The executive board of the Canadian hier- archy, on behalf of the Roman Catholic arch- bishops and bishops of Canada. has created permament secretariat with headquarters in Ot- tawa. The permament secretariat, decided upon Dee, r5, i943, will have two joint secretaries, one French-speaking and one English-speaking. Msgr. Paul Bernier, C.S., chancellor of the Que- bec Archdiocese, has been appointed French- spealcing secretary. The appointment of an English-speaking secretary is expected in a short time. u a s- w The C.B.C and Ontario Hydro, which are corporations owned by Governments, com- peting with private companies, do not pay Do- minion taxes. This question of Government owned companies and taxation is a most import- ant one and should be a most important ques tion for all associations of business men. This is especially the case since Mr. Justice Donovan, Manitoba, has ruled that the Canadian \Vhcat Board is also a corporation separate from the Government, and capable of suing and being sued like any other business. I i i i Nobody-wcll, hardly anybody-expects the Mackenzie King Government to be re-elccted- not even some itiembers of the Government themselves, who are now seemingly manoeuvring for graceful retirement from place and power. This, of course, is due, not so nuich to any great changes of views in the English speaking pro- vinces, though these also count, but to the col- lapse of the Party's representation in Quebec. The last straw seems to be the rumour that the Hon. P. j. A. Cardin, ex-Minister of Public ‘Works, has aligned himself with the Duplessis- itcs to head a strong Nationalist Party in hither- to solid Quebec. . O U l Mr. R G. Fulton, Chairman of the New Brunswick Liquor Control Board, formally re- tired on pension at the end of the year after sixteen years service and was the recipient of a farewell address and leather upholstered chair from the memocrs of his staff a‘ Fredericton. The address said in part: “As you enter upon a period of well earned release from public duties, you have merited the satisfaction of knowing that the public iii general realize that you have conducted these duties in a highly thorough and efficient mannen. ..Y0ur record of service will live as an inspiration and example to all of tis— a record all admire and the worthy will emulate." l\lr. Fulton was formerly Chairman of the Pro- hibition Commission in this Province. a a e r The City Council is headed for additional ex- penditures, and will ticed wise heads to direct it in the years ahead of us. The School Board has been interviewing architectural and electrical experts ivith regard to school reconstruction and improved lighting. Those who have given these ntatters thought are convinced that our schools are sorely otiI-of-datc and must be remodelled or rebuilt to be brought into line with modem requirements. Then the different service clubs are moving for the provision of public, super- vised playgrounds for different parts of the city, most desirable, btit ticccssarily costing ad- ditional expenditure on the part of the city. A civic election is approaching, and it would be wcll for the Citv Council to join hands with the School Board for the purpose of devising plans and preparing estimates, together with sug- gcslions how the money could be borrowed, to raise this capital of "the healthiest Island in the tween 20o and 21o million pounds being pro- well as orthodox ways of . Huddled In a. foxhola ln the Solo- mons. a. prfvate skilfully dodg enemy shot and shell. But. a stray bullet dislodged a coconut from a. tree llmb overhead which fell ker- plunk on the private! breaking it. A rancher fn Wuh- InBWn state had a run-In with his reaper. The spinning rod caught: hi; overalls and tossed him the alr. when he landed, he was clnd In shoes and eye During n game n Chicago, none of the play- ers on either hlgh school mini was hurt. But u a. touchdown scored. an overjoyed substitute :11 the bench yanked his 00801115 iirm :0 violently’ that his left shoulder was dislocated. The safe way to handle matches was being demo- striated In» a junior hlgh clans In Oklahoma. "First, remove the match." the professor explain- ed, "then cloee the eontafner." As he flipped open the eontnlner to demonstrate the wlsd tililreetlnns. all the matches caught re. been bandaged. he said: ‘THE CHARLUNYTOWN ' GUARDIAN inn} By The my lffianadabloluoenllulneot- thqrequlrementeolthe word "co-operation" must be k t constantly mind Ind worked It; fullest capacity. and mennlng. -8atnt John ‘telegraph-Journal. Plnolur Creek bollll n B- pottnd turkey. well, what elu could one expect from the town ma; goes over the top before n Victory Loan campaign even opens. It tab” a bl; with that reputltfon. —I.ethbrld30 Herald. Pipe line; whleh carry petroleum fiom Texas tn New Jersey um midgets when compared wltn the plpQ lines which carry blood through the body. In each ndulfls body t-hg arteries, veins and Oflpll- larles oould- go around the equator four times, with a. n.lle.s left. over. -Donald A. Laird in Your Llfe Magazine. 000 aeroplanes tn November. tan average of one every four minutes and 46 seconds. Actual deliveries dld not. reach this total because in some places weather hampered the best flights required before the planes -.t>0uld be turned over to the military servloes. But; enough went Into action to spell woe for the Axis.-New York Sun. An American general In London lclls this one on lifmself. l-lls staff car, emblazoned with the 11181811111 of his rank and driven by a. military chauffeur. had n slight collision with a buttered old Lon- don taxl. The general got; out and berated the eabby at, some length; ending with the rhetorical question. "What have you to say for yourself?" The ca/bby looked the general in the eye and replled, "Pearl ‘Arbor to you, sIr."- 1m Nation The new world will not come be- cause and It can never come p0 long as. the old heart remains the same. For 19 centuries the nations have failed to see this truth. or. seeing, It. have passed It. by. A new order cannot be created 1n any realm out of men and women who have the old disposition that made n wrecked world possible. To build a new world out of men and women of the old disposition ts impossible. Paul knew so well that the people of the city of Diana of the Ephesians must en- throne. Christ In thelnheartg If a new order was to ecme. -M<mt. real Star l cannot t-efnfn from [Mug just one last quotation — this time from an R. A M. C. officer tn North Africa -from the letters of ntllIts-ry onilthologLsts: “I've seen n surprising variety 0f birds In Tunisia, but found few nests, chiefly because I was ‘busy’ dur- lnz the nesting season, many of the s-naller finches and Warblers and also things like emets. hoo- poes. owls and hawks . . When I lived for a month in the spring In the tIcket-offlee of Medjeu-El- Sab Station, swallows built with- ln 6 feet of my bed. and a pati- of goldflnches built n nest entire- ly of my cotton wool in a bush outside Unfortunately, just after it was flnlshed It was blown out by a shell -but they started a- gaInP-London Spectator. A drastic turtallment uf the Ger- man domestic coal supply in the present winter will be a. direct consequence of the ceaseless R. A. F~ raid-s 0n the Reich throughout necessary to allocate more cool than ever to plants making syn- thetic oll fuel. Realizing that cold homes threaten to undermine discipline and to foster wholesale black marketing. thg Nazi; have quietly appointed over 500.000 house wardens -one for every 40 or 60 households -to keep s. sharp watch on the people. -London Times Aceorlng to Newsweek Mega- months: The American bomber- riglitei- forces in England and In with the R. A P‘. will be to cut. down German ulr power by de- stroying planes faster than they can be produced and meanwhile smashing some 50 German war- productlon centres. Then wlll tron-e the job of clearing the way for an lnvaslcn from the west. when the winter ralm stop and the Rround ls dry. -Stratford Beacon-Herald. The sad ease of n soldier who wan welded Into his sleeping bag by a. bolt of lighting striking the zipper ls among the odd accidents occurring during 1943. A roundup of acctdents by the U. B. National safety Council shows unusual as getting hurt. says The ‘Toronto Telegram. ed left leg, Int/o BlIISSBS. hard-fought. football WI! school omof these When hilt burned hand hmd "That gfxlngdout 1n food materials that. I‘ free hmelf. few hundred “.00 American plants turned out 9r m can and Russian with aptitude by refusing toe , autonomy 01191111 Fischer does- nqj. intend to honour that pledge and Proves ll. to. his satisfaction by quotlrit‘. the oLofflee politician of five and 10 years ago against the Prime Min- ister who authorize - o ut Iitnglan DXQMC tier pledtze of Irish pendence, even under extraordin- ary provocation durliifl the P796- ent war. offer as were the mentbere 0f All-India. Conzresii. It In one para ofJndependetiee that would have liquidated the F171 an a. proposal xvtueh "sawed new dis. cord inside India": In a uni-d "a gesture of fieedocn with a. blow for continued lndlan 1 finally l5 a. nmposal which ‘offered notl-ilmz during the war and surrounded by reservations the war." been all these LhlnBB ut 01106? capable of dealing wltn the Orig: tn of unity and self-reliance Is to be confronted with restlcnswll dfa did not meet yesterday. a, day when white Imperialism was so inevitable that the United Bbfilkiiolwlfilmlf. rut-h was s V problem bygtne method mlna have gmwn under British mother mutter. anot er precious ally m; been British four years ago she would have been Jn anese today. Who will hold the rng for he!‘ bloodletttng tomorrow? The Fall Of Ortona have often been puzzled during the lut few years l-n their w tlon of the fltlmlnt , - have hm time dlfflcuhy In under- of the old Canadian 00:95 who obably only one division 1011 ht iiie battle bf Ormna. 0110"?‘ '51“ can be only suimtse. ably one Canadian dlvlflnn in: on someihlnill) front. I gpmgany by contpany mining for- war most, fgnnlpfigle remem er of 1917-13 can fl "ure out for them- selves what. klnci of defence could be made from a tank. sunk in the ground. with uddlttonal concrete s c zine, New York, rialltery students Ll port. and flfllll’ m°d°m m" believe the alr war In muepe win nine-sum with 8mm" f"; ta-ke this pattern In the comlng 130W?!‘ 111"‘ u" “Balm” ° years ago, plus the heavier arma- ment. of the big modern funk. The may wlll be bulll: up ts their 8mg “m” l‘“"‘=.”°°“ “mg” new by the first of the YBM’. a" gmfifif, eflflflfiftlfif ‘m Tl-ietr objective, In collaboration or m’ a“ “ know that they were driven out. 0f uni town and that after- n prolonged and obstinate and very brave defence. was W011! do“? ha. Ourdwpstsnt attacks from :38 ii-ii haasnbegn ‘the feature of uni Nazis subjected tio every kind of ordeal. ‘Their morale and flshllflt! quality was verv hiZh- stimt fighting to wln Orton: and (me must ask what, pcrsuaaed tno Germans to attempt for so lens to hold the port In 5 Pefhapg the Nazis wanted to ue- prlve us of an advanced base for as luniz Bx they 9911M» PM‘- tteularly as beyond Ortima the imiiii" rm QM 6 I Pesegrl, Is reached, l6 mile: to the no t . teriinlnuu of a lateral rand throuih Rome to the Tyrrhenlan sen on the west; and the loss of Peacnruwlll be gerloua. Perhaps therefore the resistance at Ortona WM dlfllllbfi ‘by u. desire to "nuld the molt. Im- portant outpost w PERM‘: "M!!- a iiiihhi B terraln are easier to twill than the corner at. 011M18- vgi-y good contour mops, not. iwnll- '=_- ----~___-___--—.= _~.-._ India Problems Not So Simple ( 1e DY Mani. comm ow “ti. we .. at.“ a comesubut flatly for ‘mtlqlvndmm for India.) . er wrllu. a! 11W!!!- wtth force. But lt In the emvhuh of a lam er Wm! I if“ "m" than of u udsa aim»! l." 0W4?!"- Ihae such ununvfifsglhflllgleg‘ M m“ m, - n In the Pmblnn turkey u» been up mm‘ a a Glblblmd ciiltom. tnuch h by me themselves in any: of 14nd Palmer - Mr. ranchers object land to And t W Is-to Induce EM."- nd t0 die.- Lndlz for whom Fischer lte his contention that the! freed . their lend- compare! hem . Des rpe for lllllfnlalllll“ /\‘>Illf' t wHOOvlhiia i1 ulna» cATARRti/tt Asllirvtn SIMPLE SORE THROAl DON'T DELAY- IUY A BOTTLE ln I942 . Mr. argues that Churchill n1 ‘an 2%! B Inde- ffer. Mr. Fischer snows himself as In- l-Io refers graph as an “offer but. plre" In another a! servitude"; flow could ll. have The truth ls that the acid tell . ty. 1ft" this test. did not conquer nidll Enl d San She inherited It U011! or gugilm. her own n an of exter- The Indiana of mdtn tfon. m” 1130 mill! 3X8 K938!" 1f India had Freedom and unity. rn In blood. (Winnipeg Free Pres-E) Veterans of me last War wlw eels»- 01 01M rob- lght- like a brigade y battalion or ll- was battalion t ints of the t» “We “star's... ..... concrete DIILbOXN the garrison. Magnificent Bl! led camlmlm In Italy. and the In Ortona must. have bet!!! But. it took many clers 01' £0"- lace. Ortona Is the flflll’ mlles of Adriatic coast. r harbor s s s s s s s s s l E l5. ‘k flat. and not easily de- ne imtii the xt b Pescara Is the eastern , for all we know, Pescarn 0111! nouns KIDNEY "'\1|q.\I H’ ‘VI t .- I \ pCrltZYllV solid. ' This "museum piece" played a very important world." to the forefront as an ideal city for anall- studentii ls what hBDDflIs when children's education and recreation. °“° b"”°""°‘ m°m°lllamY °"°1°"- m“. mun decision to hold. event. the battle has ended German defeat. and our men will now be moving northward over the heavily mined plain. for easier going next. tlnte. B t It In clou- that. the Italian terrain 1s Wu veterans difficult It was to wln the low p ridges of the Somme In 1916, and how our advance moved slowly front one ridge to the next. same was true of the low rldgel In the Ypres salient. Imagine new rldhiis” all g hills or small mountains. To reach the crest of each one la w look across a deep valle other equally the bulk of g 1n the Apeumne mountains, and they run like a Inlay. httmpy back- bone right up Italy until he plain o of lflorenee. This is what: makes It most. dlffl- . cult. and the cpiadlazis of proving themselves worthy greatest traditions and o Idence Imposed army commander. Education Prue-needs (By Bruce f-lutchllon in the Up to now the has been almost Ignored in the cur- rent discussion of t. d th. Ignored 1n Its public utterances the fact. the izlve the national |5uv suf flctent power to do anythlng the sort Too much power remsfns with the provinces which can rc- fuse to accent such n society. he! 0&0!‘ Bubllqly ac meats In the West. and East. the West Mr. Winch faced lt head- on by announcing that. the 0.0.1". would scrap the present constitu- tlon and establish z new ope. In Ottawa. Dr Eiuene Ferny. labor expert of the 0.0.11‘. and one of If: top brains. announced '1‘ this flag together. possible. , On the surface these statements are In stranile conflict and show that the 0.0.1“. h think Its way through the tleal realities of Canadian poltlca. Gm Up to now sienna lflly n the In attract. a b09111! have fncec; them an defeated by them I O In fl In. will remember how The event constitution es vence of the The Canadian llfe. '1' m" a" 11°‘ ‘idle-l It governments refualng fl l bor ll I lt knsows. p2: cilVli-i‘ that you cannot build socialism to an. high hill a end-for . Ls part of Italy lie: nwnt I: level the l-‘o Ia reached. north whu‘ 0'0!‘ well tries to reconcile vague formulas. one m” “e finally emerged and of their the con- ,“ mm by m“, It Is that soclal 3m moval of the puhll power ln Ottawa. The Vancouver Provlnee It bu almost. t the omtftutfon doe; not of u: can George recognized simultaneous staff; bl that. the announced that. the M! mdln: m! as only begun to c. "louehwn IB-O- zylilllllllllliamlll~ FRITI WEISSLER Buying- All Kinds oi Furs at: W. Chester S. lllclure “Office , - I!!! and promlses have been lame following. But m“ "'1" ‘he at last have forced the ca?‘ to m“ “c” udoiaanpagzle: The midnight. never tells. h! . nrovlnclal rights which has Ways been one of the key facts of whleh Dumas the with all lh dlfffcul- the open fl the renter- nl- h 0.0.7‘. h In the last few dnays the u m“ rovlnctal at! to lur- reridar any of their rllhts to eon- "Ol peacetime and Pbrsoy admit: nation-wide If the national lovem- nowerlm to ftx labor IIOI t w ' point are eonflleifzig 13d‘ tlatfritdiilil! them wlth truth hits penetrates the public mind tier the first time. Canada means centrallzatl n, the 1n 1 of provincial rlifhlis. the whltilillitiii down of the provinces, the re- zovernment further from c. the concentration of uubllc un- For Foot Ailments 'I‘.ha time undoubtedly auprwwhe revolution. The 0.0.11‘. has none when jibes! mll-Iit dbfll/Eatgélglillg, 12:‘; ahead as 1f It hat: only to wln a CONSULT . sse ozm grog; wuti puke good use o‘ n u majority In parliament and than a J_ A BROWN up ORTHOPEDIC GlllllllPlllIlST Ill!!! OIIAILONETOWN. P-IJ. POU_I._TRY hlfllfial 00., Ltd. ’s YIIIQIIIIIJHIIIII Kiffflffffflflffflifllli MONDAY (All Day) George Dlngwell, Soul-la TUESDAY Until 1.80 pJn. Justine Lurkln, FIvo Houses TUESDAY, Until 2.30 pan. Dlngwell k Reseller, Morell The above loading lion weekly for DAVIS 8t FRASER until further notlce. ‘h; rulnhnsl ‘kt And few would over uk It gt llliféhmlttlilflfily mo.‘ o e moonlkh So vfrgmal stands she, Snoring the little silver flab That swim her silent sen. ,But hush! A hum of Instrument -Deep tn the , .Aloniz those dusky galleries Low muslc thmbs and thins- A whispered sound of flutes j And ghostly vlollns. For what mysterious vllftor Do all her wlndy bells u And amorous farewells‘? . . . The elm trm Ia a lady -0dell BhQpQQ derstandlng of thla fact l; o, gem advance In Canada's polltileel thlnklng, whether It Is izolnl t» approve or reject socialism. we are berdnnlntr to know what It means. We are bezlnnlng, In fact. to think In pructlcal terms about the choices ahead cf us, whereas moot of us have been thlnklmz of catch. words and most politicians have got by with unlimited Dromlm and precious few policies. ‘Professional Bards ._..-g._--_. TMe Lend Tgflliienfley W l. IINTLIY- I. G J. A. BENTLEY. l. 0. But-ruler; mid. Mtornqn-ni- I L m Prince some ‘in’ _ "Orfllland camp" ll. F. Allllllllllll Ohamrefl Accountant Intern Trust Illllll Charlottetown BELL d. MAIHIESON i MONEY 1'0 moan (ll-moron Block . t ding why the bame for 0mm, federal government must. control‘ We _, ‘ nnllmlted qllnn- v h‘ p 6e B. _ _ 1511i}: been slow and bitter. That. Zlzfvlvallallfllef} fg-"egmigla lgllslgflfilll- titles of chicken. fowl. Alsll H'F' Earn“ mi‘ ‘K C! ham“ w“ Y,“ gill, “T51R52; $35] province‘; yFlnallve Mrri sctildwelle ‘u “h” ma‘ "f m" BABRISTEB BOLIOITOI i ii§iihi§saiit' iiiie-eiaiipiiii the men still trrlnw to mnlie the two wlnvi "°“"" "'° ‘M '"°'"°- c” 8"" "will"! ("IIPMMM PALMER & HATLAfi the summe, writes our a clal fou ht around Lena and Its environs C-C-F- would change the conztltti- market film.’ Our I101"! correspondent on the Geprinan knoiw what. house to homo fighting tlon. ff necessary. but with the "m" "u; g, a "my dll- L _|_ 555mm g, u, g, frontier. The newspapers are ex- la. when every will and every t-uln- cttmtsent to! the nwvlflm- Th5" poll]. ' ' lAlllllflTi 0- Dlatnlnz that the efficiency of ed cellar ls a strong point. Progrfi it?) 8X23 B‘ Ilgllelikbg Beaded f0 the ' Bank of Nova Sun ll Chllllbfll transport ls being more and. more ls never fast and ulwayswlslly-l B “v3: m 0w "Y! W! 8nd DP-Vld n Charlottetown P. I. I. impaired um eonl mining oper- we casualty loo m M H l” ° "W 0-0 Jwndbovk synft flgnafllan MONI.‘ .10 was atlom are frequent, damn,“ be “gym that. a. constituent assembly should y [Ihgngflfl I. 01a! and that u, devumm o, m; Two flmleg are flghtln tn Italy. be called to frame n new conntttu- —j—-— Plum, on ‘gimme! hm made n t)“ Fifth and the Ell; t-h; ‘and t-lon whIch would make socialism ' are: tXAIIIIEII tittsstimriniin tsmnm OPTOMETRIST C t d 0 lb. tliigiil-ngenliv "Annoliilel-‘aflli Phone 1956 Phone lt-stdunce IOII Dr. Evan's Stomach Mixture Every net-sun who I: troub- led with [an In the stomach uvd bowels should zet a IM- tle of Dr. Evans‘ storm!!! I. d ll I)" I! lvtl liiiifiililvfiii odvlutresslnl not only iii-event: all bad of- feet! from gnu but - motel the [unclfonnl not V", nf the stomach and Imprflvll the appetite- Don't. delay order you! bottle today. Trio; QM. MACS SPECIAL IX. Ill Cod Liver 0Il Extract will l Ornate and Gllnflnl Compound full‘ l‘l'..“'...l°'l!.°."’ "kl-fill and Irrl sting conlhl Ill bronchial affection!- lt nlllcltly relieve: the eon- “ festlon and the" Y I T‘ ' tn tonic and TIQIII WM “III propertfes to become - “iii” "hiiuit riiiniin: dun: e . ipiifizi. .1’ " algtrl-r. . n i>r'i'in'§1’.oii".'n»¢ti¢. TIIE two nulls HI) Great George Sh?! Mall Onion W at uni its‘