0IIAIILOTTETIIWII GUARDIAN Morning Dally trounced iii m1: semi-use s: Second Clsss Mall. PM 011M Department, Ottsws President: Heat. Col. W. Chester 8. Ileliure Vlorfiulldeui: s. n. uni-lien. F-J-l- ‘ Secretary: Haul. Col. D. A. Maclilnmn, 0.8.0. semi w: mums 011w" - 1- "- °""'°“- h“ Anoclsle Editors: Frank Walker and ha A. Burnett. "Tim Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, I946 Are We Preparing? One of the recommendations iii the in- tcrim report of the Advisory Reconstruction Committee appointed by the Provincial Gov- ernnient is n- this effect: flat an expert in the matter of siiall lziiitliiig ill'l(lS be employed to recommend ccrtziiii key loczitioiis in the Prov- ince that might at reasonable expense, be ar- ranged so that tourists flvLig Illcll‘ own planes could land ll‘- safety. “\\"e feel," says the re- port, “that there is every possibility of a con- siderable anioi irt of such ti-urist traffic devel- oping within a rcnsoiiulzlc period of time." This may well prove io be a sound pro- phecy. lt is at any rate Ili line with a state- ment made the other (lav iii Halifax by a forni- er R. C. A. l“. flier, that to Nova Scotia al- ready lias come “the ilziv or the ilVlng‘ tourist." Already inquiiics about airfield facilities for private places are being received iii our sis- ter province. At least seven aiifields will be ready to handle the business there next summer, but more are I(’(]llll'€(l to meet the demand. If this applies to NOVZ- Scotia, how much more forcefully should it zipply to our Island Province, “the Garden of Illt. Gulf" whose only handicap is its transportation bottleneck? If tourists are gong to take t0 the air in a big way, why should we not make ready to receive them? Let us hope that when the Legislature meets and the Reconstruction Committee's re- port is tabled. the Government will be able to show definite progress made in planning for this latest post-war development —— the flying tourist trade. The Burns Anniversary In few parts of the English-speaking world is the anniversary of Robert Burns permitted to pass wirhout observance In some commun- itics the annualcelebration of the poet's nativ- ity has been expanded into a Burns Week; and it is claimed that in his native Ayrshire, as soon as New ‘Iezifs Day is over, the Burns Nights begin, and they last until the month is out. Nor is this unique popularity difficult to account for. Oddly enough, however, most peo- ple who write or talk about Burns sceni more interested in his life than iii his poetry. For one good essay on his genius, there are a dozen in- different scrmrns on his morals. Few writers, it is true, have so many aspects upon which it is possible to enlarge with reason and profit. Yet the essential fact about Burns is his poetry. That, really, is the "gowd"_ his career the guinea-stamp. And there is ample scope here for study, disquisition and eulogy. His satiri- cal gift, his love of nature, his knowledge of folklore, his lyricism, his humour, his patriot- ism, his politics, his humanity, his realism, his debt to his predecessors, his adherence to and departure from tradition, the condition of soc- iety in his day-all these things are reflected perfectly in his poems. But how many really know them? How many of his most vociferous admirers, for in- stance, have read "The lolly Beggars"? Coars- er and more riotous than "Tam O’ Shanter", this is yet unquestionably one of his greatest poems; fit ro iank with Shakespeare and Ben Ionson. For those who prefer more decorous subjects there are “The Cottar’s Saturday Night” and “The Vision." There are songs to suit all tastes. and humane poems on mice and men, epistlcs and elegics exceptional in their p0int and force. Even that cathobcity of ap- peal (remarkubk in a man of Burns’ station) docs not bxhai-st the qualities of his genius. He ranks among the most versatile of poets. For the: reason, perhaps, one must take with caution his argumentative masterpieces. “The Holy Fair", for cxa-nplc. is first-class satire; but because of its excellence as litera- ture one is inclined to juirp warmly to Burns‘ support in his personal quaricl with the Kirk of his day. To di. so would be foolish. For Burns, still in his only twenties. to scarify various rev- ercnd clcrgyincii in his neighborhood may have been the impudence ol genius; but it wasim- pudence all the same. The unfortunate min- isters, hcld no to the scorn and ridicule of the lges, doubtless had their fairts both as preach- ers and meii. but they were only doing their duty. The greatest of English historians has testified to tm. fact that the chiel influence in stabilizing the civilization of a disorderly Scot- land’ was the stern discipline of the Calvinist Kirk. iHsd Burns lived longer it is more than possible. that he would have repudiated his earlier diatribe; and exclaimed with Pope: “Can't! be the llne, howe'er so well It flow The! tends to nuke one honest nun my foe." But Burns‘ poetry far transcends his sat- In the assessment of poetry personal en- tnt of verbal or tecrnical dexterity and 8h reader's reaction to the poet's appeal to the or to the intellectual faculties are not the ‘glteris. Distinction has to be made be» i A temporary and the permanent, be- tbe overcharging suocrficisllties of life wliernsl yea-Ides. Burns himself under- i I ion rmicii better than many Ruskin might well hsve hsd “In: wrote: “Nothing is s0 of s friollzlri hnasln who pmccsfo (‘ii ‘ so ss He be- elselelbefuiliia out Iii uluy- mat. m. the ‘earth with their weight, lsys bis bead in the dust, and speaks thence-often in broken syllables." Some of the. greatest lines Burns ever wrote were in these same "broken syllables.” —liDl IURIAI. NOI I?)- ii- Robert Bums anniversary, when “the wind blew hansei’ in on Robin." a U 1 i U Now the airmen complain they are the for- gotten men bv on: riception committees. v n The City Council has put it plainly up to the citizens that it is their fob to keep the foot- paths frce from snow and ice. But whose busi- ness is it to See the citizens do their duty? That is the rub. iii i: io- n- A Los Angeles bank has doubled the amount 0f estates business handled by its trust depart- ment as a result of daily newspaper advertising. The bank advertised its services for estates of as little as $1 ooo in frequent ads in 74 daily newspapers, and the number of wills handled more than double‘! almost immediately. i i The number of deaths from tuberculosis in Prince Edward Island in I944 was 57. The average death rate from tuberculosis in Prince Edward Island for the five-year period 1940-44 was 57 per hundred thousand. This is a 20% reduction from the average for the preceding five-year period. 151995-1939) which was 71.2. iii io- Ist Baron Fisher of Kelverstone, O.M, Admiral of the British fleet, born this date 1841; noted for his robust administration and progressive policy in the Navy; he was First Sea Lord in 1014-15, but resigned over the ques- tion of the lJardanelles expedition insisted upon by Minister Winston Churchill; he initiated the Dreadnanght (all big-gun ship) policy which created a revolution in naval shipbuilding: in his biography, (two volumes). he severely castigated politicians for their blundering poli- cies, which he claimed had resulted in Great War I. c a io- is A Saint lohn emergency housing bill author- izes the municmality to least or buy lands and buildings and h.- alter them for emergency hous- Eng arising out of war conditions. It authorizes the issue of serial callable debentures, not 6X- ceeding $100000. for this purpose. It also auth- orizes the assessmcnt of funds to redeem the debentures and pay interes; on them as due: to enter into agreements for leasing. purchase. construction, repair, management. operating and s0 on of the lands and buildings. and to ex- propriate the same if necessary. Lands and buildings affected by this bill are the armY huts which the municipality is taking over or leasing, and conveying into‘ emergency homes. In keeping with their democratic dradition, British leaders have rarely been lacking in ap- preciation of the value of a free press. Speak- ing Monday night at the centenary dinner of the New Chronicle, formerly known as the Daily News, (a paper whose first editor was Charles Dickens), Rt. I-Ion. Herbert Morrison, Lord President of the Labor Government, de- clared a free press to be “the guardian and symbol of political liberty" He was followed by Field Marshal Alexander, Governor-General designate of Canada. Speaking for the fighting services, Field Marshal Alexander said: “We have got to realize that thc modern man today demands his newspaper and it is up to us to provide it in the same way as we provide him with ammunition indJatiniis." Mr. and Mrs. James Gowing of Norwich will sail for Canada soon-thanks to a letter to the Queen written by Brenda and Beryl, their two evacuated daughters now living on a 25<>acrc farm at Courtlaiid, Ont.. with Mr. and Mrs. R. B. McCloy. Brenda, l3. and Beryl. u, went to Canada in I940 and liked it so much they found a iob for their father and a new house for the family. Mr. and Mrs. Gowing saved money for fares for themselves and an- other daughter, Hazel, aged I7, but permis- sion to leave was delayed. Then Brenda and Beryl wrote In the Queen about it. Mrs. Gow- ing received a letter recently signed by Lady Marion Hyde, lady-in-waiiing to the Queen, saying: "The Queen has received .- notice from the Home Offici- to say Mi. Gowing‘: and your applications lor exit berm"s have been grant- ed and that your daughter. who is under 18, will not require one." The letter expressed hope they would be able to obtain space on a ship shortly. Gowing, a factory worker, will be a foreman on the McCloy farm in Norfolk County, Ontario. . a n a- Tlie Prime Minister's announcement! that he hopes that it will not be long before all Can- adian troops are repatriated is something, says The Letter-Review, to make us stop, look and listen. It is an announcement that, after all the talk of the important part which Canada ex- pects to play in international affairs. we are not prepared to make even s small sacrifice in tang- ible efforts to restore and maintain the peace 0f the world. After this, it is very difficult to see how Canada can assert any fight to behesrd in international discussions on political and military questions. Our economic policy is con- siderably clcsrei, but fsr from beinl! either def- inite or realistic. Like the U. S., we seem to have in mind thstell that we have to do is t0 mske hsndsotne contributions to 1m fortunate nations; that, by pennitting us to exwrt our surplus of goods. these contributions will solve all the problems of restoring international coin- merce. There seems to be no plan to srrlve st an Intelligem definition of the 8 Csnsdlsn in foreign currency. There seems to hem m‘ leave enough sndservlas consumption Canadian s: the living-st which we sppesr t0 be sl . which ls the greatest of all our mansion-sacrifice u es-iirHpiiIilie-illsmsg. ersl policy concerning the type of. the to which It is delirsble for us to make. Then (M! l‘ not even seem to be uiy fol-mule by Wllkh-WQ m arrive at the proportion of the its inro- ductiori which wepn expert on still “d” Notes A belated choir for the Arabs of the goem, who folded their tents an sIIent-lyhstole ewsy. The took their ho I them. —Btntfor -__-_ sltustloii wIt Beacon-Herald. ' Schools are help; orgsnlssl to treln the 600.000 dllpenslra of Ice cream sods throughout the U. S. For best service, patronize only the graduates of these schools who, I understand, wlll besi- the dlg. nlfled title of ulrtlclsns, and wlll work In Jer orlums. -8ud- bury Delly Star. News Item sly! Clnmllsn siul U. S. forces wlll have their tralnlng Erogrem co-ordlneted. ‘fliere wlll e no menace across that unde- fended border except the drIll- sergeant’: glance. - ‘Iloronto Tele- gram. Professor Albert Einstein says he Is regretfully convinced that British eolonlnl policy renders Brltaln unflt to admlnlster the Palestine llllllld8w. This ma or may not_ be true. Dr. Elnsten ls an authority on physics and mathe- matlcr, not on Brltlsh colonlal policy. -Brantford Exposltor. Dus- the war the Brlflsh Com- monwea th, United States, Norway, Holland, France and Greece lost 81,100,000 deadweight tons of shlp- Inz. Of this the United Kingdom out 18,100,100 tons deaclwelght. The Unlted Kingdom's losses n- mounted to 81 per cent. of her pre- war tonnage. -St. Thomas Timer- Journal. A country paper In Iowa wlth a passlon for exclusive news stor- les, carried this editorial notice: ‘We were the first In the state to announce on the 11th instant, the news of the destruction In Des Molnes by flre of the mammoth galnt establishment of Jenkins and ros. We are now the first to in. form our readers that the report was absolutely wltliout founda- tion." -Sarnla Canadlan Observer. Like all mental attitudes, laugh- ter can and should be cultivated. Laughter ls a two-edged weapon -valuable as a tonlc, but deadly when used as rldlcule. Therefore let us develop as a tonic this most contaglous and helpful asset lll these bad tlmes. Spread happlness. Go about your dolly duties seek- Ing to cheer yourself and others. Laugh! and the world wlll laugh wIth you-London Express. Uncle Sam advertlses flint h‘, has some 100.000 surplus boat and canoe paddles for sale, and it occurs tn us that these could be put to very Rood use In these times. Much de- pends on thelr size. Whlic we have no desire to Include oursel- ves In the "spare-the-rod-spoil- the-child" school, we do thlnk that a little judicious use of the paddle might be Indicated, In view of the problem of juvenile delin- rtruency. -Chrlsfian Science Monl- or. _A new British discovery which will mean the savlng of thousands more llves by penicillin, the Unil- ed Kingdom wonder drug. Is re- ported by The London Dally Tele- graph. A research team, It states, has announced successful expcrl- merits In the use of penclllltt for curlng one type of heart disease, bacterlal endocardltls. The experi- ments, carried out in cortiunctlon with the Research Council i.ii Lon- don, began a few months ago Bo far twelve patients have left the me dlscusdel M10110] lpflllllollfl a quills!- If Interest. The Clsnrloflslwwn Gunrsllsn does u! mp3» lly endorse In 0U“! l‘ correspondents- BIIGIITON BIIDGI IIOJICT _1|,ny I have IuHcIent s no? to make publlc s few thou his t at come to one on the m! l9!‘ of what progress ls In store for prince Edward Island generally and our f Ir clty of Charlottetown, our amblflous and thriving town of Bummersl-ie and other repre- iientstlve communities for the yes! thlnk no one wlll dlsagree with bile ciiiim that wlth such a largo number of our young 89W m“ and women returning to thclr homes, the employment sltultlon and It's outlook II one for very serious thought. Wlthoiit wliihlng to throw cold water on any hopes of government proposals at present In a very nebulous state of Exiled-WW. Iiopes alone are sometimes far from fulfillment) It raises the ques- tion rather forcibly, are we mak- lng any real and concerted efforts to secure for Prlnce Edward Is- land from our Federal Government any pledge or commitment on any work project of real Importance to the Provlnce and It's future that; wlll employ several thousand men for the coming one to two years. In the writer's oplnlon that known as the Brighton Bridge project Is at oncé the most Impera- tive, the most feasible and the one that stands the best chance of favorable action on the part of both our Provlnclal and Federal governments for several good rea- sons. This Ir not, as many think, merely a short cut from Char- lottetown to York Point oy a second bridge. It ls In reality a project to provide direct highway communlcat on for s badly Isolat- ed section of our Province, rIch farming lands and homes, lacking modern paved highway, railroad, alr commnnlcatlon or any other. except by long roundabout hauls that triple these good people's trip to their markets. That 1946 ls probably the year when provincial hard surfacliig of the Bonshaw-Borden road wlll be undertaken whether by the present North Rlver bridge or over the rightful and proper Brighton-York Point. section, should not be al- lowed to become an accomplished fact before we make all possible effort to have the new and Im- proved CharIottetown-York Polnt short and dlrect route accepted and put lntn construction. Bolled down, are we leavlng this splendid work undertaking to the efforts of one man only to foster and propagate? This appears to be It's present status notwithstand- ing that all our Federal members and I think our Premier and local Legislature ar all enthusiastically In favor of It. Pllhy ls the Brighton; York Point highway project bog- ged down as at present? Only one reason arises: our ’I‘rade Boards, City and Town Councils, Jll!‘ Pro- vlnclal Government and our cltl- zens are In a state of lethargy In regard to such a vital matter. Recognizing the Imperative need of getting started new work un- dertaklngs In thls Province, why are all our peo Ie, our represen- tatives groping n the dark, hop- Ing that by some miracle the hospital free from Infection. Pro- fessor Blggart, who headed the, research team, has sidd that these patlents would certainly not nave done so twelve months ago. For- merly, every person who contract- ed this dlsease was dead wlthln two years If not slx months. Unlted K‘ngdom Information Though there was no city, town, or village In the country which dld not In some way contribute to vlctory In the war, It Iii riot. unjust to record the fact that three cItIes dld, In their own ar- tlculsr departments, more tan thelr share. BIi-mingham, Oxford and Covent —two of them with an old trad tlon of englneerlng, one with a new-were truly nerve centre of mechanlzed war. Thelr Influence was so pervasive through- out the armament Industries that there Is hardly a weapon that. was not produced wholly or part in one. of the three. Manchester, Shef- fIeId, Glasgow, Belfast (and, of course the great lndustrlal clty of London) may have heavler armaments but few of their products went Into battle wlthoiit some component produced by the llghter Industrles of the Midlands. The smaller llnks in the chiiln of war production are so often the most. Intrlcate and the mos vltal; the mightlest efforts of ouiidry and forge are useless wlthou: the precliie and highly flnlshed mech- anisms contributed by the machine shops. -Manchester Guardlan. We were unable m rend wlfli our customary equsnlmlty the news that an American retailer ls about to Import from Great Brlt- eIn large numbers of sur Ius mld- get motorcycles. Frank y, we've never felt we were wholly en rap- port wlth motorcycles. The fact that speed cops use them mall has nothing to do wlth our fee- lng. They are undoubtedly e won- derful gadget In s war. But wheth- er we csn gather these snorting Ilttle things qulte as resdlly to our hearts In peace Is dlsffncfly horsepower pf another color. P11‘!!! midget pars roo r, we are o . will “do" so to n-illes an hour-- with s rosr qulte out of pro rv tlon we feel certsln, to Its Im- lnutlve size. And then when you jet It to Phllsdelphle, or wherever you're goln , you can stand It In s corner‘ oh yourugoom - ‘unless the hole n s sorup cs. —- I ' , Science Monitor s en mans p o i»??? ."‘;.i -‘"I..i pl about hls acquaintance wll whisky. Nevertheless as mm,” and mndu-elit one remnln unanswere Wbst klnil of n plsnlst Is ills-Tru- h good hsd or 0311:! mad: Illlll. “m, cues ensw I0 Is no champion. Here ls Presl- deiit human’ tlnl In the three e -- vim marked ,Iaw makers and om ha‘ itwflfiirbll; on Is s benevolent government wlll send us a gift without our asking It. If our representatives are In such a state of coma, surely our buslness men whose future Is so vitally concerned wIth Island PPOSIJGPIIY should raise their voices oud enough to brlmz at least thls sensible and progressive project into actlon during the summer of 946. Remembering our BIbIe ex- liortatlon and a very sensible one. “Ask and ye shall receive" should be a very workable slogan In or- der to secure the Brlghton Bridge- York Point project. I am, Sir, etc.. . A. L, WRIGHT NAVAL BIXIEPTION Shy-Please allow me splce In your valuable paper to wrlte In connectlon with the naval recep- tlon for Prince Edward Island Na- val veterans and Naval personnel which was held at the Sporting Club on Tuesday evening, Jan. contributed 22 d II . First of all I would llke to ex- press my very slnrere thanks to the Cltizens Reception Commlttee and the Women's Naval Auxlllary of the Canadlan Legion Branch Charlottetown, for the wonderful tlme and celebration which ev- eryone enjoyed. Several of the boys from far and near were there for the momentous. occaslon. I am Indeed proud of being a dlscharged veteran but at the same tlme think not only of myself but to the other boys of the Army and Alrforce. Let me any that when 1 our Army boys arrlve home from overseas the mostly lend at Hall- fsx. Immed ately upon their ar- rlval they are given a reccptlon at the the Armourles there and when they reach our Island Pro- vlnce are met at Borden by Re- ception and Legion Committees from both Summeriilde and Chu- lottefown. When they arrive for example In Charlottetown they are met by the Citizens’ Reception Oommlttee st the traln. They sre driven to the Canndlan Le Ion Home with bends pls ng, ags flylrig and horns blow n; for s reception there If they wish to attend. The src also accommodat- ed by the glen untII they reach their own homes. ‘I- wlll readily sdmlt that our ssllors came horn, In smslI groups There were no bends playing, no flels Ylnl. Thls their was the svy’ Tlltlllly evo- Club. , auestlon I wmld like zensilecept Cam- , “What receptlsn do our boys In the Airfares lot when- errlve home o . ttsll hem think our Airmen are the picture Fntlre . Aecorupsnylng the lnvlhtlon fly- léi"a“'i".zl~’lii"b=si~i°°“ll."m"ll ri a e £11.???“ "52"" m“ ‘t: Ill seven tlm lltl o It wIth curl-Ill- to lllf our CI slsnd on the prscti sdvlee. courses of ' The Bunk-of Nova Idviso you regarding future for which you fought. And naturally, you have decisions b snake. For example you may lmw t0 use your Relnhililslinn “runs l0 besl sdvsnlsge . - . s msller on which this Bank is repsred lo help you with friendly, Gratuities and Money Grants, Business Loans and hurl Setllernengllnlyerslly Education and Tlschnlesl Training offer new opporlimilles, open marry pessibb endeavour. * you ohsrfyour course. Why not come Into one of our Branches and talk ll over with the manager? Ha is ready and anxious b0 ‘The BANK of‘ NOVA SCOTIA Over u Cenlury of Banking Esperlelses An INVITATION I0 EX-SERVICE PEOPLE ANADA welcomes you Irene! Yo! ldoflhopeloefnl In wondering Scolzls wants lo help your problems- eri to me was a letter regardlng the reception for the Navy boys. Part of the letter read: “We dldr't come back In a group llke inc Ar- my and Alrforce. Perhaps a dozen at a time. ’ I wonder If more than a dozen Alrmen ever came at one time from overseas? The letter went on to ray: “There was noth- ing In the way of a bang up af- fair, just to sa I-lelIm-Wclcome Home." I won er If any Recep- tlon commlttee ever met a small group of perhaps a dozen iir so Alrmen comlng from overseas at the station. As far as I can under- stand there never was. It's not falr that those boys who manned our planes, made dur- ing missions over enemy terrltory and so on are not glvlng a recep- tlun on the Island. I would Ilke to see them get- justlce wherejustlce Is due. So how about the reception committee glvlng those boys a hearty welcome home like the one our Navy had on Tuesday last? Let's hear from some more of the boys. I thlnk they all wlll agree with me. I am, Blr, etc.. RETURNED VETERAN SOCIALISTB AND NATIONALIZATION Sin-In order to scare our peo- ple ngnlnst contemplating any change In the oId-tlme social and economl order many Canadian newspapers are carryliig edltorlnls or re-prlnted artlcler bearing the captlon "Soclallsts Would Nation- ellze the Land". One of our Island papers confalned such an edltorlnl n Its Issue of January 19th. Thls edltorlnl argues that because "the Brltlsh Minister of Agrlcultura has warned the farmers of Brlt- aln that failure to cooperate In the Labor Government's planned agricultural program mlght mean the i-iatlonallzatlon of the land," therefore e 0.0.1". Government Iri Canada would follow the some procedure. Let us take a look at this artlcle and we shall easlly see how mls- Ieadlng the whole charge is. But first let me quote: “It Is best to remember that soclallsm Is soclal- ism no matter where you flml "It. It Is n polItIcnI phllosoghy, predi- cated on fixed socIaI ufl economic bellefs. If Bi-ltlsh Soclallsrs be- lleve In natlonnllzatlon of fnrm land, you may be sure Canridlen BocI-alleta belleve In netlnnallzat- Ion of farm land. The only dlf- ference msy be that one group hesltntel to ndmIf It o enly and frankly for fear 1t mlg t embar- rass the party at the ollii." The fact that "soclnlsm Is soc!- allsm wherever you find It" should not condemn It as a polltlcal phil- osophy. Rather It should recom- mend It, for does not that quality prove It: conslatency? And we are ltold that consistency Is a ewe né statement that arm-ii and Ionnllzatlon of lend Is quite true, but If does not follow therefrom that elther Brltlsh or Canadian Boclellsts wlll nationalize farm Ia I. The. Brlflsh may nstlonallze boon the necesslty of such on Is almost Irnperstlve under t Ir food sltustlon st the resent Cnnsdlen Soclellsts believe In nat- l tIml. And the British ulster w peo Ie that such ectlon wlll follow, bu only under certain condltl .e., sclrcl of food for Its-starvlng people. o such scu- clty or necessity exlsts In Canada But when such necessity doe fill’? HGHIFR ill()/ll!Nl§ w exist, then the, Canadian Social- Ists have promlsed that given a they wlll not fell to act, even as the Brltliih Mlnlster warns. Moreover land ownershlp and operatlon Is entlrcly different In Canada from the BrItI-sh ‘system. In Brltaln their land Is I.ri large estates and In possesslon of the landlords. I-lere In Canada our farms are smaller and we have few "estates". And agaln, Eng- land has almost four times as many people as we have in Can- ada, whlle their cuItIvated acre- age Is Inslgnlflcant when , ed wlth our Immense acreage. Bo even f Soclallsts In lmgland and Cans a hold the some polltlcnl philosophy Incommnn It docs not follow that elther country wlll natlonallze farm land. Certainly Canada wlll not need to consider such action for many years lo come. And In matters o! this klnd let me further point out that "be- llefs" do not necessarily require action. At present, for ample. we are Ilvlng under a prlvate ow- nershl system as opposed to the Socla sts’ system of collectlvlsm or public ownershlp. But becnus prlvete ownershlp "belleves" In not natlonallzlng It does not fol- low that much land Is not nation- allzed under the present system. Look about us and we see at every turn how Ivate owuershl belles It; “belle " and nstlon - Izes very much lend Indeed; Nat- Ional parks for On upon a time thls was natlonulfzed by Act of the Iseglslature and then resold to pi-Ivate Indlvldunln. and even to- day msny provinces have "Crown lands." I em, Sir, etc., 8t. Peters. D. J. MULLIN- 1114111114 MAPS ‘ IIAIII IIESTOIIER defies lief-um *3»; I. the hsh. . wlll restore Iii l0 llsnwllllsl eolanl?" l: gfinsutrvrhs‘ _, mifiy....z"d* i’ on "I ma. .‘ hlaelllsmtspsr ‘sun normals snasivsn "ma"; / m "so mandate by the people of Canada 1118f vllll iiJli POULTRY‘ i we ARE PAYING men PRICES FOR DRESSED CHICKEN AND FOWL’ Ills Iloysl Packing Gs. Charlottetown J. n. JENKINS, Prep, . FURS Send 0|.‘ IIPIIIQ flu your Furs In as soon as possible as the next receiving dim for the sales is Iebrirsry 4th. Prices are good. ' PROMPT RETURNS J. n. JEIIIIIIIS p Charlottetown c/o The Royal Packing Co. OUT FOB WORLD ‘IR-ADI —(OP)— Patents offload h dlghn ere Qhfl-p rlse . m. 921st In appllcstlone d-utlng two yea-mi in- duslz-faillsts abroad realise that Austmlla wlll compete for world inflicts. md is now culpable or Pa...“ saw ....."'"°"*: an North Anwlca. IDNDON-(CPI-The‘ Ace ef Spades road house, requlsltloned for the Royal Canadian Navy dur- Inz the war, Is for sale. It has club facilities, e ballroom, reat- aursnt and cafe. ll. J. IMBOII orrosnrssss flfllnl sud Sgalkhl Glenn INN-Ills. P. _l. I. Ofllse I : w. n" ~ - Bullion m. by sppulusnsnt IIIUGSTOBI Ofllfls Colllloflfll wlll 6. F. Ilutchsson 8t 50H ' OPTOMETRISTB ‘Speclallsls In the fit- Ilng of glsnes for the correction of ocular de- 53 Grafton Street feels.’ . Professional Ilsrrls GAUDET 6' HASZARD ail-mun. sTi; rimrun. m. uomrr 1'0 was TIILBIBT A. GAUDET 5A., ILL-l- LLB. A. wsunmv osunrfr. Csnsdfsn Bonk of Commence Bill. Uhlrbflohwll, r. l. l. NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 R0. Box 66 llsrrsll iii-a Belpsiiy OIIIIIIIC Ans-fully D. F. ARCHIBALD nun ‘mu nsiuhr Qirlsflslswn , PUBLIC STINOGIAPHER M m" use and! omnlll ‘llfflflfi’ cum-m 1h L... 1-1.8. DOANIRI co. y’ cunt-m sqeoiliiusfl: w a u.‘