5591; rotm TNE n.4,». w» 1...». Mornlnl Dally il-‘ounded In I887) fact that international rates on the President: min. Col. w. chum 8- Mel-II" w” “ma”: J‘ n‘ 8mm’ nu 30 1 d a er commodities “ma”; Llulll. Col. n. n. Mnekinuon. D- - - woodpu p an P P - “m, w, imuuiii; Director. J. n; Bumitlhslifi. utlier than sweet, Asnwhle Editors: Frank Willi" l" "n SUBSCRIPTION RATE! ‘ “n”. I: mu in ma. $4.00 n" 1"" W” '°' "‘ 81.25 toi- a mnnlhe; 50c for one uznnlgnm Ultv Delivery 55-09 P" "l": $330 mgiuurt = ‘"221’ s": .... ... .... II Mall t0 other Provinces an . . . - i mam” w any; 52,90 per year; SL011 I0!’ ‘umday e 50o for I uwlllhl wise specified but not turnips) will be increased 3 per cent. Canada through United States ports. connection it is understood that a hearing wi I - i y bl ubtalind l0 Intro" sEI::§vl:‘°A‘:“elw;’“§T,',,:f s31... u" Yurln oia u I ll ‘ application of the Inter-state cute-u L-ufl" 0mm“, nulls’: new: 911ml. Sndbur! T h a mm "Mm": N B.‘ _ export and import rate relationships. Onli "lib " w’ ' ' “The Strongest Memory i8 Weak" "m" u“ Weakest Ink.” TUESDAY. MARCH 10- 1942- i . ' _ is nothing like being prepared in advance. i Potato Price Ceiling I of the Maritime Board of Trade. that representations will require to EDITORIAL NOTES --. . ' ' and l Out of the blue sky. the ‘vzlmnle Pm“ - '- i‘ ‘ Tfadg Board has struck and established 8- p?“ ~ . . ‘ D minion ceiling for potatoes. D In effect, the Fob 2 to order-in-cotiiicil QTIIlIJllSllCs the pcrlod e ' . 7 as the basic ccilino MCYlOLl I01" Potato lmces‘ _ .. _ ._ “Speculative buying with rcsllllfllll higher llnées » t0 consumers" is the l"JZl-'5llll £51m" f“ ‘hi’ 6' . i cision. 1t has hit our local P°lal°1shil’p'g5vitt I . ‘ producers all the more Sllillllll)’, a5 He)’ hf‘ e {o} reason t0 believe that liicir rcprcsetitrltiotls suspension of a price ccilinfl. mailc through the _ Horliculliii-ril council, ucrc licing f.'ivoi'.'ibly' cou- ’ sidcred at UllZHYZl. _ _ . \\'¢ understand that neither the Provincial i Department of Agriculture nlir 1119 Horllclll‘ ' ' - ' tural Council hail illlV llllllllfllltlfl that a ceiling would he ,,[,I,ii,.,i_ imiii jib official announce- fcilcrzil action was I116 An “all out" Blackout tonight 9.30 to 1o. t= It t III \Vhile the Empire crumbles, Premier bcll curls. n m i it and the Legislature will get down to business. Ill III i! 1i Fnom May 27, I940 to Ifcbrtizify 28- 194-?» I5‘ ficates out of a total of $IZfh39lh436 for whole Dominion. n- i i l Anuiversarv of Queen Alexandra's ing. The price ccilinz’. it understood, comes into effect tiulav; and the Hillllfitliille result has i. been a great rush nu the lllilfiiCl. Potato farm- l ers, with no incentive to hold. have been un- loading everything. It is fezirctl thzit latcr in the l |easori there will be an actual scarcity, and pola- ~ l ‘ _ toe; in large tlllillllllltfS will have to be imported ' , from the United Show. .\ciion on the part of . . the Wartime Prices and Trails, lioarcl at tliii i, time, it is argued, could scarcely have been less opportunely taken. Coming on top of a three y per cent increase in If. F. railwzw freight rates as a result of an lntci-stutc Coiitiiiission ruling, it hits our potato cxporlcrs l)£l(ll_\'. There is no indication in the ncws report that the ceiling applies to anything but table stock. Should it be applicable to seed potatoes as well. it would of course he still worse. Recently, potato gi-oucrs were passed over , by the Dominion liovcriimciit iii a ruling grant- ing a bonus on fertilizer purchases for feed pro- duction. Hon .\lr. TIHPFOH, Conservative leader in the House of Commons, was the only one to speak on that ticctisioii lifl lit-half of the potato industry. The fact that our Prince Ldward IS- iand representatives said nothing may well have influenced the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. l in the prcscut lllslllllCfi, to establish a potato ceiling regardless of ihc arguments advanced to the contrary by the llorlicultilral Council. 4 ‘ Prince litlwzirrl Island is known to be the bau- ‘ ner potato province of the Dominion; the pro- portion of our revenue derived from potatoes is far in excess of that of any other province; and if our own chrctcd spokcsiitcn have nothing t0 my on behalf of this industry at Ottawa, how the music of the popular ditty. "Pack Up Your . can we expect favorable consideration from the Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag," has just died at bureaucrats? Brighton, England. His brother, George, wrote '-, the words of what turned into one of the most 5. - - - p0 ular son s of the last war, much to their stir- tnhshnent figures pride. Thevgliad thought their effort was a fail- ure and left it forgotten in a drawer until a music firm offered a prize for a marching song. “Pack Up Your Troubles” won the award and carried the brothers about £12,000 ($53,400 at current values) in royalties. Ill l! 1939, Tihe monthly salaries in October totalled $I7,658.9.t3; in August I939, the total was 313.477.1433} I l with our thriving liquor bootleg business. 1k IF N‘ i when peace is ollce more restored. Ill * N! Guthrie, English barrister huiiiourist aii.l became barrister iii i860, but gave that up latcr for authorship; wrote, among others “\'ice Verso," “The Giants Robe.” "The Black “A Bayard from Ilcngal." “The TilYlSS llottlc"; pla_vs——“'l‘he Man from Blaiikcfs. “The \\'oilld- be Gentleman," “Vice Versa." “The Brass Bot- tle," “The Imaginary Invalid." n n- u m At the age of 60, Felix Powell, colllposcr of , Figures showing enlistment; by military dis- 3,’ Qrictg have been given recently in Parliament, ' and have drawn uzilion-ivide attention to the leading contribution which the .\l3.l'lfll1lC Prov- inces have made in this connection. Unfortun- ately, in these figures, Prince Edward Island army enlistments are lumped in with those 0f Nova Scotia; and several mainland papers have ', I i been misled into attributing entirely to Nova ; _ scoiia the cnmliinctl enlisiiiicnls of these two l ' A‘ rovinces. Acluallyyva “have--t-he-authorit-ynof- Iajor-General Price, commander 0f the 3rd Division, fur claiming the greatest number of enlistmciits pcr iooo iii all Canada. The figurcs givcn are up to DEC. 31 last allil lhow 73o Naval enlistiiiciils from this Prov- ince atid 949 Air ITQi-ce erilistuicnts. For Nova Scotia. and Prince Edward Island the total Army enliltments up to Dec. 3i were 24,404. Altogether, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island enlistment; in the service forces rep- resent 33.53 pcr cent of our available men be- tween the ages of 2o and 24. The percentages for the other provinces follow: New Brunswick, 33.03: British (olunihin, 27.02; Manitoba, 27.oi; Ontario. 33-04%; Alberta. 23.70; Siiskatchcivzui. 18.38; (Quebec, i393, The Canadian average proportion l5 22.02. It is most regrettable, in vicw of the proud position occupicil by this Province, that our representatives at (ltlnuzi rlii not itisist on hav- ing our (‘llll.>llll(‘lll figui-is placcd to our crcdi! Colonel Rzilstrwii, as Dcfcuce hliuister, should surely be able to accomplish this without much difficulty, it ll "The enemy is already belaboring us; wherever the forces of totalitarianism strike we are struck," says the Saint john Telegraph Journal. "Wherever a soldier, sailor or airman dics in dc- fence of decency and_ liberty, wherever a child ‘starvesizftléalli‘iuiiler Nazi exactions, someone dear to us and of importance to us perislies. \Vhcrever nations suffer martyrdom, we are placed on the rack; it is only a matter of time h0- fore we shall feel the agony, uiilcss—That is the crux of the matter unless what? Unless we fling ourselves and all we have into the struggle and do lt now; no less " o- a- w- u "News columns are already overloaded, and in most metropolitan newspapers the old ratio, be- tween news and advertising volume is more often overlooked than observed today," says the Editor and Publisher. "Less than one-third of the daily product of the wire services gcts to the printed page, yet reams of requests for free publicity are piled every day on editorial desks. It's import- ant to somebody, we assume, but the task of getting more than a trace of it into a newspaper is physically impossiblefThe waste of paper and men's time involved iii thesc frce publicity efforts must be colossal.” lii That old and ex-parliamentary veteran, Mr. C. H. Cahan still ‘maintains the plebiscite is ultra virrr. He writes: "If the Prime Minister desires release from his political promises, he can only Obtain such release by submitting the issue to the members of the existing Parliament, to whom under our Canadian Constitution, he and hi5 col- league are always responsible for their political conduct. In the event of the existing Parliament rendering a decision which he declines to accept then he can advise the dissolution of Parliament. and submit the same issue to the electors in a gen- eral election There is no other means, for 0|). raining such release from his embarrassing po- litical pledges, which is now known lo the fiiiidrl- mental constitutional law and practice that gov- Qfl: mlitiral arlimr i; Can2rl2_" i U. S. Railway Rates .\ matter of considerable importance to Canti- diziii shippers and ltroiluccrs \\'¢is the flpllllCallOll, lust I)l'('(‘llll)(‘l‘, liv the rzcilivaiys 0f the United guilt-S for iiu lllCl’ isc- lll tho nilz-s :imouutiug to to pcr cent. Tlic pciiliiin nfllii- railways involved the application of the lllCl'(‘ll~C lo international rates as wcll as export mid import rates through Canadi and the Yiiitcd States. Tilt‘ Interstate Commerce (Toiiiiiiission, under dnlc of .\l.'ircli 2. issued its‘ judgment mi tlu- pcliliiiii. approving 'l uciieral iii- crcasc 0i‘ (i pcr cciit upon all commodities except certain "basic or riiw coiniiiotlilics" which are the products of agriculture, livestock and products, and low grade products of mines. The increase to the latter commodities are approved at 3 per cent. Of interest to the Maritime Provinces is the following commodities will be increased 6 per cent: fish, fresh and cured; lumber and lumber products; Potatoes. arid fresh vegetables, not other- cold pack (including It is proposed to apply the international in- creases on or about March I8, including the in- creases in export and import rates to and from In this be held by the Board of Transport Commission- ers in Ottawa on March 18 or r9 to consider the Commerce Com- “m, New! Ase-w. (""1" ‘lair, ""'m:“",":e",":: mission increases to the export and import rates :"",'“,',§i, “friiffiluliii tiff-st. haven't»; m" amid. in Canada for the purpose of maintaining the on r - - '~ ' This in a matter which is being followed with close attention by the Transportation Commission It is possible be made to the Transport Commissioners. In any case there Camp- This day week St. Patrick will be honoured, lzuitlcrs invested 5455.675 in \\"ar Savings Corp- tic wedding day. She W115 the t-hlcst dziughtcr of King (,hris~ ._‘ mqit \‘C>lL'.l'(lll_\'. The. _ tian IX of Denmark. Her rose dfly is still Ob- _"" mQfg surprising, lllilSlllllCll as Pvlflto PIIQBS. served by the ]_ Q_ D_ F__ l.‘ fairly high a week w’. ha"? 5m“ bee“ dechn‘ * " " " The total of civil servants in November i941 was 105.290 compared with 66,514 iii September i94I In Quebec, bv ordcr of the Oil Controller, scv- eral gasolciie stations have been closed. padlock- ed and sealed for selling “gas" on Sundays. Seein- ingly a controller is wanted here in connection On April I, Thins-(fiisizttla AicLincs will he- giu trial flights bclwccii lloiicton and St. John's Newfoundland, and inaugurate a regular daily service on May I. Later in the summer or early Fall, a service will be started bctween Edmon- ton and Alaska. Thus the whole of the North American continent will be spaiincd by ziir scr- vices in preparation for further dcvclopmcnis Fred Ansley. pseutltiiiyiii of TlltllllllS Ansley dramatist dicd this dutc 1934; cducatcd Oxford; Poodle." “Lyre and Lancet," “The Pocket Ibsen." NOTES BY TNE WA a The talk now ls that canned 10W may be done up in silver-DEM tins. This is likely to enoourflfl brides to open more uicl more ems -—-DdmOIll03 Journal- ]; i; genually agreed that North Atlantic corvette service l5 one 0i the least agreeable of wia-rthno jobs. And yet nearly even/body e11- gqod in 1t -— and that lncludel many young men who have been complete strangers to salt: wife!’ and to sailing - seems to like it H and, moreover to thrive upon ll..- Brookvllle Recorder and Tmee. ‘twenty-ll: United Nation: are engaged at this t-tnw In U10 supreme effort of their llvea —t.he task of defending themselves against forces which would destroy their very existence as free and ln- dependent. states. Each one of these nations will need. and will want, to hold its own war leaders to strict, accountability; but each, if ll. ls wise, will not attempt to pronounce __llild-,!1l'l6'l'll2 on the contri- bution made by it; associates no long as they are loyal to the cause. -New You: ‘Times. t! ls no exaggeration to nap that lie F'ree French holdings l; wen and Central Africa constitute a key to the possession cf the whole African continent. PvOfrsgor Deni, saui-at, prcfessor of French inn. Rllflse arid literature at the Univer. sity of LOlTClOIl, save in the London Sunday Times: "If the Chad coun- try fell into German hands, cm». man airplanes wotrd soon reign Over the Congo River German au- thority established in Brazzaville vvctilrl easily create such is 51pm. ton in the Belgian Congo that. German influence would spread all over lt In a few weeks _ Jchari- nesburg Times. W5 a long way to Tipperary. But hardly any farther than to Sans Origine. where all those telegrams seem be ocming from. The messages are from men in the United Slates military service and many of their rccipcnls may won- der - as they taste the beauty of I the name-Mil’ the sender docs not add a generous ‘With you were here." The explanation lies lri sans Orifginds (censored) whereabouts, which is doubtless ii (censored) mllilaigv secret. To try to find the location of this evucutlyi lovely spot. let us read an (tinoerisomd) code-book prepared by A_ A Milne On an (uncensored) page we come to an (uncrncvredl verse. It ls verv innocent, lwklng. as all writ-lug in code is. But perhaps it ls there that we can find where Sans Origine is: Halfway up the stairs Isn't up, And l.=n‘t dovm. It isn't hi the nursrry, It isn't lri the lcwu. And all sorts of fvnny Run round mv head: “It isn't really Animrherel It's somewhere e‘se Tnslend!" -Chr.‘sti-an Sckerice Mcnitcr, thoughts In time of war there is always n strong temptation to ttiLnk nothing but lll of oneLs enemies ‘and lf a consensus of oplnicn were now taken in this country it would probably be found that the Japan- ese, were regarded as exclusively designed for treasons, stratagems, and spoils, All the more reason. then, to be grateful i0 the National Poultry Council, whcli has just fllfllialcd t/o the Hrire Secretary “to release from lnficrlittlenl, a number of Jaicanee who are ex- perts 1:1 discovering the scx of newly hatched chickens." This sudden disclosure of the brighter side to a,race so gererally [Cgfllfied as specialists in gulls and aggres- sion ls anything but unwelcome. Nevertheless it seems very odd that we should be dependent. on the sons of Nippon ln order to as- certain ltie sex of a ncwly hatched chicken. some chicken, some prob. lem-but, here, in n. I/ancashire which in recent years has been so freely lit-tend with hen-coups, a: there no native-born dilvfners? If not, lt seems high time that some of our own island race devoted themselves to this more profitable version of the chicken hazard tn which Charles Fox and his con- temporary gamesters applied them- selves with more zeal than merit For how do we know that the Jap- anese chicken-testers, if 110W re- leased. will play the game? They may deliberately confuse the issue of the hen, making Pear] Harbour n! the poultry-run by mixing up the sexes of lta rlsfiig generation. -—Manchester Guardian. It ls time for blunt words to do Valera and his E-ire. That weak, impoverished. and defenseless country is utterly unwilling to allow either Great Britain or America to undertake her defense against Ger-runny. Eire, nursing zrlevances and mumbling shlb- boleths, insists on independence and hopes to keep out 0f the war. What are the obvlcus facts? Hitler has his eyes fixed balefully on Britain. Eire Ls the stepping stone to Britain, very clote to the main cit/Adel of the anti-Air's front. Who earn prevent her wzure by Hit- ler? Not Eire. not the Southern Irish. They could not. and a naval l-Jiae or ari airfield for an hour. Ihev would be swept away like chaff before n. Geiman invasion. when the Germans fcrred n land- ing Brltlsh trccna ard airmen would pour dowrn throtrl-i the gate- way of Northern Island. But they would be too late-Va l"te to fore- stall a desperate peril to the Alllfls, loo late to save Eire from the horrors cf Poland. l-lcllard and Norway. Oiits‘de the black and obsdnate stupidity of de Valera‘ and 11's henchmen the extent and lmmlnence of We dam-er both to Eire and the Aillerl cause are well understood. ‘This darivr must be averted, -- London Sunday Ex- wtefl. . . _ Two feelin heart Ls launched the wartime Drlce mntrol measures editors of Canada to ed to them frankly; informed th’m and asked their never been enough crlllclsm of a constructive character-and even o! 3n ‘explosive character-in this war Globe and Mall, Toronto, this week bondercd upon Wlltll- different faie might there ti“ ‘lbli *0 e c v service cits s '1 rotted that Le ystem t at criticism L; ShlD. But lt of people in Canada who are Fr-gt- lewy on the verge of n great spiw. itual reawakenlng ln respect to t)“; war. Canadians are anxious to net. on the march. I: would wake lPtle to stir them to action and sacrifice beyond anything they have yet trlbutecl. “loo little, and too late." W115, i; missing la a spark of inspired lead- ership . rm: crcunixrtotrautvllkvlstl ASM voim lA‘l on I iiii RUBlNTkX time Suiting: cream a yo‘: In; of confidence. MANuVAc Ii‘ WORDS OF (YHALLENGF A Thought A Bl! For A People At War "We face the greatest threat to humanity 1n a. thousand ears.’ —- James L. 11518)’. M111‘ bea‘ of Finance. Too Optimistic I (saskatoon Sba-f-Fhwhl!) sir stiitrora Cfll-‘YPS. who is said to have done an excellent Hm- bassadnrlal Job in Russia and in now back lri Britain, has been trell- lug the British new-pie about the laud of the Soviets. telling of their great fight, their willingness to sacrifice themselves‘ and their com- forts, their determination and the blunt methods they use to deal with any internal interference with the war effort. There ls much. lie thinks. that the other United Na- tions cau learn from Russia. Perhaps t-lie most interesting part or 3r stziftnrdfle comments was his assertion that he sees some reason to hone that Germany will be defeated within a year. only a short time ago Premier Stalin, lri a radio broadcast. sarcl somewhat the same thing. Plans, of course, do not always go throuszh as intended. If Hitler lr able to launch a great spring offensive that may alter things considerably, even if Moscow ls eiiontir" on that and preparing for it. Tlirre is. cf course. much to suizeest that the Nazis’ armies are much weaker now than they were six months ago, but even lf the casualties and destruction on the eastern front are as heavy n5 has been rrvicrtcd Hitler sl‘ll has large forces. 0'1 the whole. Sir Stafford and his Moscow friends seem some- what. more cijmistlc than circum- stances fllppf"? to warrant, at least as seen from this side of the Atlantic. ReadyTITZFFThETCaII ' * (Financial Post) bJOltn MacCormac, in his new 90k America and World Mastery," says that the ‘Canudlail people have a vague fooling" that in tlicii- di. rcifluwal" effort there is some i jiig mlsblng ‘bu! ill-fly are not. ‘quite sure what ‘If, Ls." Mr. MacCoriiiac Wflllls to think it J5 lack of inspired leadership; in tiny event he com. mcnls “There ls no rsmccly for l1;i1f_ lieartedrt-fiss nt the top," , _ gs are dcvclopiii ,-‘cl by Side in the minds of the Gillian? la" DIODIC» T110)’ are becoming more apparent every day. One is a desire to do more to 5110M! victory; to "get on with the Job." They do not want lye wai- protractcd iiito liulinily, The other L; a feeling of fi-iisii-a- tion. Canadians seize every chance to demonstrate how much their lii the war. Volunteering for the fighting forces has been more enthusiastic than the recruit- lug czuiipn nonsc lo I 9 ha; provided of tha war. Sugar rationin . asollne r . llonlng. the g g a have all been whimpering. But do llie people get themselves with ll ifillS‘ themselves. R19 Vctcrv Lean campaign astonishing evidence of Canadians to feel pie desire Dlflyllliz a part in the they are ban on cars and tires accepted without how mush chance to really identify 1e war? W719" the Mini-stir of Finance wages and he called the Ottawa: taik. - t. Wl Churchill was here iiueplfgiircd IV"??? ly to a group of editors. qi~_.;59 were excellent precedents, Mr. King himself has never more than half-hetirtedlv discussed wai- pollcles with the editors of Canada Following Mr. ’ invited the 5a the-record conference, But. he and most of his ministers have gated as t-hcucrli the ance. They have been toucliv a- bmll Slvfcsllori called them sa IlSlEYZs conference he me editors to an off. press were a nuts. s and criticism; have botage. there Heaven knows that has, McAree, columnist for the have befallen Singapore had been one edltorfbore willing exoose and break down citadel. Inviting pubtlc one phase of leader- ls only one. Tlierc are hundreds of thousand; con- Tn leadership. too, there can be from Ottawa. _ NIYI MIG! WNIII‘! m|uAl§D‘5l illNiM£NT' s '/// \\\. .,., "(Os - i 5' l. i i ll t‘ FISH AND GAME MEETING will be given by the Department of Agriculture- “i lr. the country at fishing places will be discussed and , a board appointed to work with the Department of l Agriculture. iiiincii llth, 1942 to swoon down ii“ s tf-hzklw ll n o; m“: ’ “’ "use int m‘ “W! _ Ohm-ting your course for mm A l t t ting of all Fish and Game license H deivbh-dea-llnlz fllzhts- holdnerdnghd ‘IIIGIIIITZTS of the Fish and Game ‘Avsséicla: ‘kwflfgngfig: “mmlllly mm:- tion will be held ln the Oddfellows Hall on e nes ‘Ilhe winds forever in m, day eveningJllarch 11th, at Eight Mllwk sllarP- Glvem lepldler, um, mm As was originally planned when the license ‘will: ru- a matchles flghunl m, Put. on, a meeting of all license holders would be ca ek atrium the stars, once a year and representatives be appointed 1° W" —Sudle same“ 519155; 1n New Yon with the Department of Agriculture. _ “m- I A full statement of receipts will be elven Blwwl"! - cl t w iifi blug. o! m“ “m” MARCH 1.0, 1943 souunn or m. s“ -___ who made the collections and where collected. This Ways and means for the Sllémllllg 0f "ll! 1'10")’ The meeting will be open to everybody from outllda districts. The future of game and fish will be discussed, also pollution of streams, etc., and all things tending to better fishing conditions in Prince Edward Island. The Department of Agriculture wishes to co-operate to the fullest with our gunners and anglers from a local and tourist standpoint. W. A. GAUDET, Chairman of Committee. for Rustlco Cross School month of February. Kueaboiie; Kneabone: U Mildred Kneabone; 2. Edmond Gal- lant; Grade V--1. Isadore Gallant; 2. Clarence Gallant; 3. Azade Gal- The following is the Honor "Roll 1am. for the Primary Dept. - Grade IV- 1. Alalrie Gallant; 2. Raymond Gal- Senior Dept-Grade X--l. Ralph lant; 3. 1511189116 Gflllflfii- Grade VIII-l. Elfeen Grade II—1. Edna Gallant; 2. 2. Wallace Gallant; 3. Louis Doiicet; 3. Yvonne @‘laiit. Eileen Doucet (Principal) RUSTICO CROSS SCHOOL Buiinil Trip SI5ECIAL FARE§ - T0 ‘ Summerside —i(iolng- FRIDAY. MARCH 20th AND SATURDAY, MARCH 21st w Hominy, March 38. 1M2 $l.45 From CHARLOTTETOWN l (Gm t. Tax additional) Proportlonately Low Fare: [miii other stations Children of Five unit under Twelve years of age HALF FARE Tickets Good m COACHES ONLY For Further Information Conrail! any Ticket A gent CANADIAN NATID Un Canadian Nallminl Telemann: ._=§ .5. a T701124 ,2” / - ///<._<1\ o». A CONSERVATION rbaln Gallant. Grade VII- _1. Life Insurance does not tear down any plan a man may have for his family. It simply underwrites his plans. A Life or Endowment policy l an insured savings plan with guaranteed values for retirement. Conserve the Home and stabilize the Nation. Consult your nearest Great-West Life ivrite Prince Edward Island Branch Office. A» Agent or NYNOMAN AND OO. LIMITED Provincial Managers Offlcey-Charlottetown, Summerslde, Montague Thomas McAvlnn, C. L. U. --Speclal Representative I ' X n‘ LIGHT HOGS lii view of the recent order prohibiting the slaugh- tering of Hogs weighing less than 130 lbs. “warm, dressed carcass weight" we would urge that all farm- ers in selecting Hogs for market adhere to the prac- tice-that their Hogs weigh at least 200 lbs. live weight when selling. Your co-operation in this respect will result in the maximum number of Hogs grading within the desired weights. DAVIS 8: FRASER L-657-3-2-tf. Hickey’s Black Twist 10c Per Fig MANUFACTURED BY NNJKEY ANO NIONOLSON TOBACCO c0.,,t.'ro., wiARwTTmown. of strain - headaches. W‘ m. nlnrfiunply o! the lollollll Ofllll. erlel m o. o. n. mm m W. O. Olllls 8i O0- MAGS HAIR Restorer A delicately perfumed nre- paratlon wh h restores, striengthena and lieautlfies the ha r. It will restore [ray hair lo lta orl liial color. prevent Dandru and afoul falllnl halr. Get vour bottle today. Prlce 60 cents. TRUSSES l Modern and 11040-5110 ones from a large assortment of American Trusses lust received. All sizes and stvlel at prices to suit every one. Call and have us flt vou. COLDS l Prompt nnfl effective relief ls obtained In eouzhs. Mildl- chllls, sore throat. whnolilnl cough and bronchial trouble: In infant and adult by C AMMONIATED BIIVONNCSIIIAL COMPOUND This preparation ls cum- nnunded from nure drlllfi ll"! has been thoroughly tried and tested. Price 50 cents B" bottle. We have a complete llM 0! Max Factor Toilet arena"- tlons always In stock. TIIE TWO MACS mu Orders Given rwmn Attention. How Are Your EyESQ If vuu are havlnl flmllm“ eye: or dlulneu - eonlull 1 lpeclnllat. ' lth will orfuigiilnliflfiiii ilv thorolill refractlnl service- Call In and discus: 10' difficulties. ti. F. llutchesoii P. o. IIUTCIIESON a. r. IIUTCBISON COAL . W are now receiving l our avnnn acnutml ALBION aousm neuron NUT aarvraw scnuNID DOMINION coll iuue IYOB LIMP mvmivaas scnaanll! Prompt and eareflll "l" Phone 175-