rafcs roux THE crlaitliotiwarown consular)‘ ments from Canadian processors. _ ‘Vi? It is estimated that Canadian farmersre- NOtWBJ’ Way ' which m‘ oiiaiuonrrowll cuanillall spud ;1<»<»;»~;1~g-= l; 352;?" g;- us; __ ' ' - o» “a rom esaeowey. na lion, eauseo n“. , j “d' g . . . . ".5 . ninth, to, , th t i t h ic re uirements of the bu ers of ' '° "”' W“ We use“ d u ' m“, ("mm h um wlfeirclieedemfafctoricg had to pay exactinyg care git: yifafgdl.‘ dds-winged“; w? 3."; ‘ 9",“ m’ 7"" F" “i. "fill W110 eon- “muff: “Muir”: " - Pffiull“ 9"‘- °°l~ W- 9"“ '- 5'“? to the washing and sterilizing of milk cans. This_ fill‘; 1,10%‘ 1m“: '9'“ l- 1t Lin‘ ‘i m,“ a’ u“ ogdkhuaohuma.“ ‘u "5' l" licking fifth Vieo-PreideltsLlllrlolislil-l. . .h h b. d d 1 mellow-mi awau. llifllllollwollllfliq-mw- “ma? u.“ c“ m g In“ resulted in more hig score c eese eirig ma e at an now. e i?‘ _ m ____ Ill] be penned _ as well aa an sq» y." u. N pe My,“ M“ min, M llilor and inns-gin; oireeuer l. a. ant-nest. IJJ. niost of the factories with its correspondingly Wm, wugngggfgpg i vpgga ygxhlesionngrewuparivin-dei a well) iodeine. stnaeeu niui be between the ages or 1e ie so your; cpl-inane?‘ in.“ “amid”. Associate lifters: Frank Walker and lrleIL Ill higher price. Dally Province. Like neighbor from {nether world COURQEQ FOR GIRLS “ waiter qg human” Wlllpq h“ ' ___ . disease l a. Burnett, L0.N.V.I. ion Aelvo Iervieei ._ The British may," PM’, Residing in a. jar. . t vali yo, m‘ u “Lia m, - I“ "an h“. “In. m.“ h." we "The Strongest Meinoru ie Weaker flan Appamng Record bk?‘ udlldlgngbzitn‘ mpl°y°dmm flfi M" ‘m’ "°"- ie lit farlfsleinietelyfi: weeks:- Ilfrlt e11 to open in mi‘, nmfifil‘ 210mm’ “weiluil-oddfiihmhguufi - p 7 the Weakest Ink.’ _ _ lend. ‘mo London ‘Ihlegraysa e looking line ‘you pleale "We l" Mum‘ "WM" '° “n '1" "ll- Trllulor I-llloe vhlahefvethneiolimm"lmi,_ ' In the last year, according to the National murzlflchkhqlmlvlvge oell oonorete In an some face. shall ineiaile Ilene Managerial!- lllllillmfll- "Illllll- Qvlllle- Blw- he moowfgfgtluq wwuulmy. “Puma; u l,“ Safety Council of the United States, accidents Just been complex “Mime “village _mmy menu”. n?!“ “new III. Health and other rabies ‘ . emoeggmdtlier, 1, “I: ______.____ caused death to one American every five and a 1581:: cgsllllned if: new. d: are 9m" 3mm" . COURSES FOR MEN znduhgllengwfeel the“? "F! , . half minute d d ' ht th h tl t , m‘ m“ ‘"4 d" ‘l’ '1 1°!!! ‘W. The APPrenticeshlP Act d - . ,5. ly an mg ’ mug o“ as year mum m’ mum “w. i. IIAOIBIIIIING: One u) five inenins oolrle in m...“ drive tor nurooe f: m‘ “wit; an llljllflcl through the same cause averaged --- guy-mu", , sleigh and wagon building. Training ae- Wuhxomg lud woinemmllle _ , De _ one every three seconds. This year the rate doubt- The customer lageing to be flghl signed ie quality for operation of Itneral h thing and repair m“, m, lhllo nip m“ “I In a. booklet recently issued by the part i”, w,“ m, a, moiormg "mrcases and gm back osglili one o! these days. Insolence. PUBLIC g FORUM work. coarse te open in earl! ""‘"""~ mum bu, t: loud elm} m")! 0f 1-350)", Canadian Vlxamml Tfimmgi to its normal rate of destruction-about one f): $.§‘,‘°§..fl§i‘§i.,“‘fl"“ ffignlffi.‘ Th,‘ cdumn i, M- aul,’ wmhsm b b“: "iii huh,“ °l our Chrlsntlanollalg Annual Report 501‘ 194445. We m" ll" m!‘ fatal accident every fifteen minutes throughout 51°" W wurtesv which an olpen the discussion 2””... m, Iudm‘ ' ' v w! surpliu o1 uflffijhgucu ueriqi lowing statement: the twenty-four hours of the day. i li§°ftifimge°b lpondmu o’ "m" a miiiqmmy °‘ "3 hlveugii‘ "4 "T ‘ni Vm an: a: A reniiun- '_ "'°°""- The hlmwvfl‘ s. uaclaamcsi Two (t) nix weeks eoures in Iii-in ilaeenanler. to s l-liong with W» ‘rat 11g of r f!’ _ Between the attack on Pearl Harbor and Bldfggfesfioh tlriey have been for 5nd“, ti”; not iieoea- omnu” m; [Qpjlf e! tractors, eera and gee engines. Care and re. "Be new suits m,‘ ‘all lulu Following the passage of Apprcrlllccillll? Al!“ the last casualty list issued by the United States f5“; yeflfi‘, 931% Qjflfimfiflef, "P"! ""1"" "l! °P|"|°" “i; 9| ruin iiieehlnery, harnoll ‘III! ll"! "Pllf- "P" Wllfle l0 {$113k ‘it “Mb” that or: in some provinces, legislation of this kind l; IiOW government, American war casualties totalled l,- pluyefs Wall “flthelgflbe relgaisid or M cmulmndmu‘ open early in Jllllllrl- wear wofdd Rm: ‘lfiifinfillgnt on the Statute books 01-3" provinces except m,“ 070,819, with 251000 demL For the Sallie period rains erre t ptos 113:: “w c bi-p- ue- lan average homeless El!!!)pgpu lbs Edward Island. Certain tradesare designate?‘ as fatal accidents in the United States were 335.000 q-uorhzrlglancog go wMonftlempu m cauanms nao COURSES FOR MEN AND WOMEN merged a} tuft, \vc should ti. Q1‘ coming under the official Jurisdiction of t 6st’- and injuries 34,000,000. As The New York G t T l” d s, d —_‘ u _ l. AGBICULTURE: One (i) three weeks course to provide in- -_________ aqs and the entrance of apprentices and the" Time: observes, the combined (loath total foi- the rflafawsmlfixolse givlfferlngs undid: a1 fllla-gfmvxkbya fiabigto £212: aCilaiffadaga ‘qgan lzofia Zfiffffdiflfiifyndry’ tum mnuemn‘ ‘m, "h" tlainiill l" the“ trade} must.“ llmmmcd by Pro’ lw° World W351 Cllverlllfl together Ymlillllll’ fl" the ranamal hatred o’ the Hitxef: “as a memorial to the “shuns l‘ t. flue l course iu Gradins and Pneklns of essa and Poultry and _ _ _ . _ lari regime have been beyond d. men of two great wars? I l , r ‘ vincial regulations. :\f'g0ll3f10llS were commcnc- years, was 376,500. But in tlic last fivc years scrlptlon. It ls not to be wondered A Canadian flag might very poultry management. Course to lest approximately fell!‘ (l) weeks ed early in the year with the provincial auth- accidents took 485,000 American lives a, hmm M» lltlgw thulfithe Wrap’: has been easily. and unhapplly. become the eoninienelnr In Janus .v- i‘? .. . T h r n of discharged Th N . f , _ ove rown, at ins stent. pleas thaine 0i‘ bitter controversy. As a . _ I . critics t0 taci itate t c cut a Ce _ e ational Sa ety Council points out for redress should be heard from memorial to our fighting men it All courses are of an intensely practical nature and provide a fav w H a members of the forces lnl0 these designated that wilt], a spake, makes a temminute tam two the survivors of his cruel oimres- attains dlsnltv. commands r . . curable opportunity for vows w" I!" "m" l° lmlm" lh" 0 ' h b- ‘ - - - - 51°11'17" Vlcwllmls United Nfllimli and Wills Bulleptarice. kn led and train themselves for wider and more effective service. trades, and the fullest co-operation as cen given persons will be killed and 20o injured and the must make sure that these pleas Too many uggested flags are A oacngn "m" m, “min,” m, the" qgugggg mny be pecan-ed from by provincial authorities, employers and Ofgflll" material loss will amount to $93,000. It hard] d‘) m“ 3° unneeded i“ ‘my mm" mpelessly °°mp]°al'°d' “he” “u w inteudln enrolees should nppl at the earliest 0p- Chartered Ad; . . y national settlements which will be rout flu s are sim lo Canada's u" ud‘"m“d' ‘ y ‘lunlalll ized labour.’ _ _ _ seems worth while making speeches at this made-Hamilton Spectator. flog needzs the star simplicity of Wflllllly- - 144 m h The implication is that Prince Edward Ia- ram _ __ -—Tq- the Union Jack. the Stars and W. R. SHAW, C mond 3L I land has no Apprenticeship Act, and therefore no arrangements could be made for the training of Island veterans as apprentices. Such an implica- tion is wholly erroneous. An Apprenticeship Act was passcd at the i944 session of our Legis- lature, and lvhilc it contains no specific reference to war veterans there is no reason why anyone over the age of sixteen years should not be eligible for training. Unfortunately however, our Act is not yet in force. 1t must be proclaimed by order-in- council, and this has not been done. We under- stand that it will very shortly be proclaimed, which is a horse of a different colour. Attention to this matter was drawn by the Canadian Legion in a brief presented to the Royal Commission on .Veterans Quamicalimls which sat here a fcw vceeks ago. Noting that the legislation had not been made effective by order- in-council, the brief went on to say: “This Act applies to certain designated building trades and provision is made for inclusion Of others. We suggest that provision should be made for ac- celeration of apprenticeship contracts whereby service personnel who have had trade training could gct credit for the training they have re- Ceivcd." The Act pf0vld€S for the appointment of a provincial apprenticeship committee of fivc members to serve without remuneration, also a director of apprenticeship. It provides also for local apprenticeship committees to act in an ad- visory capacity in their respective areas. Provision is made for the payment “out of such funds as may from time to time be avail- able for that purpose, of any bonus to which an employer may bccome entitled tinder the regula- tions." \-Vbeu the bill was before the Legisla- ture it was noted by the Opposition that nothing had been pmvitlctl in the estimates for this pur- pose. Premier Jones’ reply was that the Prov- ince was waiting to complete negotiations with the Dominion Department of Labour. That was a year and a half ago. Now at long 1m: negotiations have been completed and the .\ct will very shortly be put into effect; bu! it is hard to understand the unconscionable dc- lay. lii the report above quoted, the Depart- mciit m‘ Labour ignores the existence of any Apprenticeship Act on our statutes. The re- port goes on t0 say that arrangements made by other provinces include “the granting of credits to veterans of trade experience acquired, either prior to enlistment or during their periods of service." This is in accord with the Legion rc- qucst, and no (loubt will be incorporated in the belated arrangements with this Province. It is to be hoped this measure will prove as sgrvicoiiblo as Premier Jones anticipated when he introduced it in the Ilotisc. and that there Wlll be no further (lclay in putting it into 0p- eration. Whey And Penicillin Among tlic iliuiiy activities of the Agricul- tural Supplies Board during the l2 months end- ed March 3i, i945, was the continued support give to the marketing of whey for the manu- facture of the new tlrtig, penicillin. The latest report of the Board covering the period, April I, 1944, to March 31, 1945, states the demand for whey for the production of milk sugar to be used in preparation 0f peni- cillin incrcasctl. lllaiiufacttircrs of the drug have found that by increasing the quantity of milk sugar, a greater yield of penicillin is obtained. In addition the added su ar has a stimulating ef- fect on the patient and it also increases the keep- ing quality of the penicillin. During the l2 month period under review about i,5oo farmers in Ontario and Quebec pro- vided 65,ooo,ooo pounds of whey for the manu- facture of the milk sugar and whey powder. Of this quantity of whey, about 45,000,000 Pillilld! were processed in New York State, close to the Canadian border, and 20,000,000 were processed in Canada. About 400 tons of milk sugar were used in the manufacture of penicillin in Canada and r,5oo tons of whey powder ‘were made available for poultry and livestock feeds. Of the whey processed in the United States practically all of llic whey powder was returned to Can- ads and large quantities of milk sugar were also made available t0 Canadian manufacturers of -EDITORlAL NOTES- Butchers and government officials have locked horns over meat rationing. As in all such contests, it's the consumer thatgets gored. It It 4 is _Plowing _is an art; and like other arts it has its bumptious amateur exponents as well as its modest professionals. I I I With the horse races at Covehead, the Pbwlnll match and horse show at Bridgetown, and the Canadian Lxgion meeting in annual session in Charlottetown, today promises to be one of the busiest half-holidays of the sca- son. Ilti To all and sundry Admiral Sir Bruce Fras- er, British Pacific Fleet Commander, has an- i-iounccd that Britain will keep her “small fleet" in the Far East but will not increase her Pacific bases beyond those already existing at Singapore, Hong Kong and iri Australia. I I I I g According to Agriculture Minister Gard- iner, so close had production of livestock kept pace with supplies of feed grain this year that when the new grain arrived in August, the farmers’ supplies of old grain would have last- ed only two months. liIi Hon. Mr. Law, Boriar’s uprising son, is being provided with a London district seat to enable him to return to the House and assist Mr. Churchill. Mr. Davidson. the present rcp- resentative, was raised to the peerage by Mr. Churchill on the eve of the general election. ‘ — I I I The Soviet Government has announced that the withdrawal of Russian occupation troops from North Norway will begin shortly. It is estimated that between l0 and 20,000 troops are involved in this move. British and American authorities have announced that, according to present plans, their troops will have Icft Norway by the end of October. This will exclude chosen contingents of British soldiers which will re- main in Norway until the evacuation of German prisoners of war has been completed. I I I 1' Charles Bradlaugh, English political reform- 11'. born this date I833; after serving 2i years as a soldier, became a solicitors clerk, in North- ampton and entering politics, became a rousing Radical platform speaker; he emigrated to France, and entered enthusiastically into the political uprising there, and was nominated one of the Republican candidates for Parliament; he was shipped back to England, aiid resuming his political life in Northampton was tiltimately elected M.P. He refused to take the oath, and the law was altered to permit affirmation of the oath. , I I Australian champagne manufacturers arc suffering a headache which has HOHCIOf the usual joyous antecedents of a hang-over, says a Sydney Morning Herald correspondent. Thcy cannot take advantage of the enormously increased de- mand for their wine, or hope to profit by a greatly expanded post-war market overseas. Be- sides quota restrictions on sales and shortage of skilled labor, the champagne maker now faces the serious situation created by bad seasons in every grape-growing district in Australia. Since the war the consumption of Australian cham- pagne has doubled owing chiefly to the thous- ands of Americans who were open-handed hosts, industrial workers no longer on beer incomes, and the cessation of imports for three years. N0 one can estimate the demand, but the public thirst for champagne seems inexhaustible. At first sight it may appear that a lack of sparkle at formal functions through shortage of the most effectivemeans of breaking down Anglo-Saxon reserve is only a minor tragedy, but the shortage of wines for export, if sales of wool overseas fall off as many expect, will be felt indirectly by even the soberest citizen. Enemy occupation eliminated France as a competitive exporter, and left the markets in India, the Ditch Indies, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands to Australia. Japanese l- nquests, of course, greatly narrowed this field. But the Pacific, Great Britain and penicillin who could not obtain their full require. The vy apparently has decided to set up a huge base at Okinawa. The island which was consecnated by so much blood of United States fighters ls strateg- ically placed. Planes and ships based there could command the coast of all East Asia. If we oori- tlnue proper watch over a defeated enemy we do not: need Okinawa against Japan. The Philippines give us protection from any pos- sible Asiatic foe. May not the Rus- sians then look upon an American base at Okinawa as a robable threat to them? Could we just- lfled. after taking Okinawa, in ob- jectlrig to a Russian baseat. say, Big Dlomede Island in Bering Stralt?—Mlnneapolls Star Journal. Offlolaldom Ia a pretty inveter- ate killer of romantic thou t, but the Office of Price Admin stratlon in Washington has outdone itself, says The Hamilton Spectator. Put- ting a ceiling on "hula. girls" with scant regard for popular ideas about the South Sea Islands and an icy contempt for dreamers-up of Hollywood plots. the O.P.A. de- fines its subject thus: “A hul girl means any female posing for com ensatlon or profit for a direct, posllve photograph, whether paid by the photographer or the silb- ject, 0t‘ the photograph." We hope at least that the 0.P.A, will stay out of the travel pewter business. The suggestion offered from some sources that is "demo- cratic" for every community to be allowed to make its own choice in the matter (of daylight saving) is absurdly specious. If the Dominion were to adopt that principle, there might soon result complete chaos as to time. After all, the much vaunted "Standard" variety ls an- tlrely artificial and arbitrary and has nothing natural about it If every place on the map were to discard “Standard” and “demo- cratlcally" devise its own clocking, the Parliament of Canada would soon ‘rave to alter the national title to “the Dominion of Bedlam". Brantford Expositor. It will do no harm for the peo- ple to f-ace more squarely the awful altematlves to which man- kind too often thinks itself bound by modern war-destro or be de- stroyed. Irideed, lt, wll be wholly salutary if they can bearoused to resolve more firmly that war has become too horrible to tolerate. Men must make the spiritual ad- vances which will permlt them to hold lntematioml crime in check without the necessity of slaughter- ing millions of the innocent. — Christian Science Monitor. The “goober” has come info its own, according to the United department of agriculture. A hundred years ago it. was a novelty. oday it is the principal source of income for thousands of farmers and the crop ls worth more than $200 million a year. That the pea- a coming home. stripes, the Hammer and Sickle. Sixty years ego the ensign with the Union Jack in the upper quart- er and Canada's ooat o arms on the fly was widely accepted as the Canadian flag. The Union Jack and the red en- sign are pan of our tradition. Why not; replace the coat qf arms by the emblem worn by our fighting men-a single maple leaf? Gold if you insist-though I, for one, favor green, because Canada is in the s ring and not the aus- umn of na tonhood. A single maple leaf - token of the unity we need and our fight.- lng men had-and, most of all, an enduring memorial to those who Chatham, Ont. BATTERY BOYS‘ HOMECOMING Sin-The remainder of the and and 8th Batteries of this city an ‘Those boys have been away from mothers, fathers, nearly six years. The first place they want t0 so when th€¥l get to Charlottetown 1s home. e.v will have no desire to so to the Exhib- ition grounds, drill shed or any other place to parade. I say give them a big welcome: decorate the railway stations en route toCharlottetown, have bands down a1’. the station to play arid people to cheer them. But; above all have their own people there to receive them and take them to the place.they have dreamed aboutfor six years-Home. I ism, S etc, Charlottetown. Home From The Wars (Christian SIQr-fce Monitor) The nicest thing about his home- F. P. MAIIAR. hours, that he would be wanting to dash off to pick up the loose ends of acqualntanceshlos where he had dropped them from high school three and a half years ago. But there were not even very runny questions about the old gang. All his time and thought were spent hanging around under foot, looking in the refrigerator tun- lrifl up the motor of the o car, asking if we could have waffles, or tune and noodles, or raisin- soiir-cream pie to eat, Putterlnir and sitting. Loving the way I national feeling that all Austral- ians wlll be able to sing with en- thusiasm. This poem, set t,o ef- fective music. we feel sure, would be a national song of which Aus- tralians could be proud-Austral- nut is so important will riot amaze anyone who has watched sacks full of them disappear down the gullets of small boys in the front row of a western matinee or seen them muriched by the tense fan behind home plate or observed a small boy slather a slice of bread with the gooey spread. Just keep ln mind the next time you're in- clined to say "Aw. nuts!" in a dep- recnting manner-the nut has come up in the would-Minneapo- lls ‘Irlbunc. —Wlusion Churchill la not writ- hig his memoirs. He will not retln to his cottage studio and dint ex- cept when the House is n recess. It seems absurd to write it but it, is the truth-given health and a few more years of life, Winston Churchill may rise to greater heights than he did in the war. More than any other man he med the Nazi tide and hurled it back. Now he sees himself iis the statesman fated stem the strongly flowln world tide of Left- ist politics witch, in his opinion, can only lead to totalitarianism and the regimentatlon of man.- Beverlcy Baxter, M.P., in a cable from Iondon tp the New York Times Magazine. —A 76-year-old woman _. Mrs. Marie Pitt of Nort-ticote, Victoria- won the first prlae of £70 in the Australian Broadcast! Commis- sion's competition to f d suitable verses for an Australian riatimial song. There were 1.200 entries. First. verse of the winning entry, "Ave, Australia" is: fan News Letter. e Deputy Minister of Agriculture, - apartment of Agriculture, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, walked ‘round and noun? him with l’. l on m! l"- ‘ grptbgaeriiirlrudf the first day in? face actually aohed from sullllns ,0 hard and continuously. After all, I could not keep on salllfli MW hep y I was to have him home a n. but I could and did, grin my appreciation for. oyra on 8nd- And then on the second even- m he asked, "Where is every- infra; thatiyised to be in my dress- er- rawers ' "It's all in the his box in the made our future worth while. ha“ 1 t“ I replied’ _ why not?! am Sir etc “néizyi; out n???’ ' ' " th e o e v room VICTOR. LAURISTON. “if, W “m, m t, e geemegldtgwregxiuid him o! something he co . "Where is thit box of camera pictures I always kept in the sec- ond drawer?" "What did you‘ do with that old elects-lo razor that wouldn't run? "Whsre did you put my '1‘ wives, sweethearts and friends for gilrt; I could ave sworn I had stored all his g gets in the "big box in the hall closet". In fact. I thoulihl I had put his things in there ex- pressly for safekeeping. When any of them were not there I was as bewildered as he as to their whereabouts. With eadn missing thing the search was on and with every "miss" I could see his sense of security crumbling. been dreaming of all those things Flor three and a half years he had right there in their rightful place in his own dresser drawers. The)’ were really the , things he was fighting for and coming back to. The THO} that we found the alarm clock, whch was also missing. on the closet. shelf and the '1‘ ta in another box did not help very much. They had already sort of out of focus for h and he had to make some readjllstrnents which should not have been neces- comlng was the way he wanted to sary. do nothing but just be at. omr. I Suddenly I hoped he‘ wouldn't had expected, after the i’ st few decide to look or "clvvies" that night. They were stored with moth balls in another box and their wrinkled shvppelesmess was somethln, lch want; hlrn confronted. Hastily I began talking about e fishing trip for him and Dad next. day-and I averted mat feared emersencv.‘ When Dad and I were alone that night, I begged him 1,0 keep him away for two days and during that reepte I did some mighty f-ast stepping armlrid. Clothes to the easel-s was out of question-in our wn it. takes a week to ten days for that, in times like these-but Grandma down the street, was won- derful. She stepped r ht in. The hall closet was re-eo and its contents distributed back into their, habitual places; clvvles were ln neat rows on hangers in his clothes closet; even his girl friend's picture, the one of her in int; all the things that; my thrifty nature had packed away so care- fully I began to think of the con- fusion that would develop in this country when the thousands of boys all came back home and be- gan looklniz for the treasures they hadn't seen for four oi- ilve years. Can you imagine them all lookln for ‘ hat old electric raaor thn wouldn't run?" 0r, as happened in our house the night of the fish- lns trl return. "I believe I'll see how I ook in my loafer Jacket arid a pair o1’ slacks." Wlépn he said that I settled com- fortia. y‘ deeper into my easy itlfiiniffd ;'l.."'i“l..""".' '5“ 0 co es cose’ 1 fildtlnlnoeently. w ’ a a one made ose two d5 a of hectic searching and preasldg worth while. Everything in its place-and the look o! content- ment on his face as he came out of his room again. at these doll-Bone cloth- 68. he grlnneifh "gW/rtlxtgazwn c1951‘ . u e se s. and look where the bottom e351. trousers is. I'm going to have to get new ones.’ But getting new 32¢“ {as s11 rlsht now. It was he ° M! STOW"; not 1n s t. had changed. "h g h“ To Clothe The Naked (Ottawa Journal) We 1n Canada, with our coin. Pflrltlvely puny inconveniences, can hardly imagine Europe‘ mtg. eds’. We think of the defeat bi ine Nazis, and are satisfied; up don't realize that the consequences of Nazi dominion remain on every hand - starvatlo . dislocation, dis. ease, millions of homeless. millions of workless, homes without roofs. factories without fuel. roads and streets without transport. There pgrlgyer has been more horror in hia- The truth is that Euro . at this is threatened wi a holo- catislf almost as terrible as the war itself. The tragedy of it is increas- ed by ‘the fact that the great energ- riiiswsii 13* Her back asked-else felilaiurable-nepep —slie eeuldn’! be “bolheeedfle energyreiIned-lee .."i'Zl-““"""' sparkled-hence; zueeagelnelaewashrzlld- ||5 lay IOODIYI ‘[0 IACKACHI will her gym suit, was on his dresser ionic-mi e881" "Yo" l" film"! 1mm "It Wishing trip. ' ' _ ' ATTENTION While 1 was sorting and replac- TRUSS WEARERS l‘o those of you who are unfortunate enough to have to wear a truss we aak you the question. Are yon lat- lafied with the one you are wearing? Does it flt corn- fortably or is it an anil- quated style? If so why continue suffering when we can alleviate the cauae by offering you a perfect fit- tlng modern truss from the large consignment lust re— eelved. Wc carry all slaea and styles at prices to suit everybody. QUICK IE5 Ch M]... Charlottetown IIICLCDd C? Benfley W- l. BENTIIY. I. 0. J. a. usurp“, I. c, Blrrletola and Attorneys-at. Law 1M Prince street ta-cmwsnvexw arles R. McQuoid a. a. 4 Blrriater. S Notarv. ll. ll. lloane 8i 0o. Chartered Aeeonnte l! Grafton Street. Chariot teown Phone I080 i l-Iudvlph w. c. i Public Stenographer ulflla oil m. Mo: Bnlldloe. Charleietown Phone J33 Tel. 589 R0. Box 5i Frederic A. Large BABBISTER, "Q Phillipe Bulldlnr. iii Grafton it PM" 1°" r. o. so, i; _. “FFPPTTETPXILQ- I- t "was cltor, Box M’! and olioalll nhlos . d _ illlfffiflflllbozm and MISS HELEN GIDDEN Telephone 189M. l’. 0. no: 452. Cmsnanght Apia No. i. slum-HM.- m-n-nmse-smmw flllfiell and Company Chartered Accountants ll. F. ARBIIIBALII Eastern Trust Buildhil Charlottetown .-.Ma.li.-l.~s--.~.~.-.-~sw.~mw BELL G MATHIESON - s "*t""ll"ie Dfldd SKHIIQY Pi"! Claarclalfetfiign. ‘i. s. i. ' Attorneya-ai-Law » mANs 0N crrv AND rill B” K” R°""°"'“ PAIMEIT o HASLAM sassy sTosi/scus RELIEVED A guaranteed remedy for aoaiach oongitlonadueh Q] "u"! YIN]! Stomach. fleartbnrer, Gaeirie treea many other all r to the stein pneerl fllnpmceiiiyvtlzeggfllifip "to! the world and my‘: m "u n m. u“ I muprpg siheghngeme he the dawn ‘m. hr-sfia‘ h" n Ave,‘ Alllt-Siffllfll Name with a aofll h“. ‘mm; nun‘, n Name of the freel ms . Pitt. in 1000. won oom- pehtlléripn for a "w 10f m", w was o a e ltnglleli- work,“ The ID» B . ludses say of her latest work: "It Canada will be open to the Australian exporter ftcr the war if he has the wine to sell. has movement. passion. and poelle ltnasery. which stir the blood: is and f , ml QIQIII , TIIE 2 lilacs Ill Oren George lines sun oreor-‘s Given runs Attention “'All I've get to say is-lf you've gotten a dog with a Guardian Want All ‘he'd been smart eno ow" Imam-l" Blllk Late office Suite m. lesion. ugh to bury Illa t A. J. IIASLAM. B.A.. l-L-B- BARRISTER, ETC. of Nova Sooila Chambfll %i'35le‘*§~“"'“' ‘foil?’ Q r. o. no: II ‘Richard Johnston Attorney At l/‘W c |g|| t Deeds. m. ll “meals? Egan! Iallllll (g ssor , neto l Richard Bfl-"glmk gnu. W‘ .4 J.i\. McGIIIGMLM- NMAII. ITO- nalnrlrll. soucnvl ovum aunnruo u. F. McPhee as. K-G NOTARY l"- lSHT Bl IAIIIITII. souorroa an» seam; ¢W°“'""' [DAN NI! ‘stunts’? "a canning Bank of Cflflmm‘ m‘ _.4 ALEX W. MATHIESON Olleei Slug-fill 9m" fits-an. seuorrol» F“ line‘ Colleetlll