7 rhos soon ~ ‘Z I ' Whitclrpll, Notebook, n: sons osurnmaa‘ I Canadian Press itaff ri b-slscusas mind“ marl"... YWN gencrnlblfleogirisinca When NotesBy The Way ' a long period of y“... . on many subjects cvei- time to recall his atti It is interesting at this - iude towards socialism forty years ago. Speak- ing in St. Andrew's hall in Glasgow, Oct. u, i906, he made this characteristic comment: "It is not possible to draw s hard-and-fad line between individualism and colieotivisni. You in theory or in prac- tice. ‘Ihat is where the Socialist makes s mis- take. Let us not imitate that mistake. No man can be s collectivist alone or an individualist alone. ‘the very nature of man is a dual nature. The character cf the organisation of human society is dual. Man is at once a unique being and I Ilolariotis animal. For some pur- poses he must be collectivl-vt. for others he is, LndlNWn-lfwllllfimfllfllilhfllllifllflilllll- “Oolleottvely we have an army and a navy and a Oivil Service; collectively we have a Post Office. and a police. and a Gy- ment; col- lectively we light our streets and supply our.- selves with water; collectively we indulge in- eroalngly in all the necessities of communica- tion. But we do not make love “ “ ...,. and the ladies do not marry us collectively, and vle do not est collectively. and we do not die col- lectively. and it is not collectively that we faoe the sorrows and the hopes. the winnings Ind losings of this world of accident and storm." ” Excerpts ‘From "An Economic Survey of P. E. Island’ B!» DI‘. l. l. bail-liner Professor o! Agrlcllt Econ- omics, MacDonald “sellers ‘ill! ~ = CZZARLOTTETIIWII Gillltlllili. Isl-ass; Dally ihuasu in ism rinses-tr um. Col. w. Chester s. lleLIIo Vleo-Prddsnt: s. s. Barnett, r. s. I. Ilclotlfr: Uoll. Col. D. A. flacilnlol. 0.8-0. us; use longing" s. a Burnett. us. Insulate liters: Frank W er and Lieut- lav A. Burnett, LO-NNJ. _§_0n Active Service) “The Ilrossgcet Memory is Weaker Till the Weakest Ink.‘ . saronoayfrnnhvanv 24. less _____.._____. _______ inwards-rs . Joodetock Baum-RB \ Ii If she only badmoroplamsays four 0i them- Japan, she would shoot wn av As the first ‘ . ch realign" i005 is c! one oi’ the old . this some bacon we'd have bacon and aggs if we had some eggs." —Owen Sound Sun-Times. Perhaps we are iasiscntsbly Ignor- ant of such technical matters, but we have never been able to under- . stand w _ t lawy s: ' " "u: YPQW!‘ es Windsor Star. p“ “WIIT PIINOI QOIPLAINS" ___ llr-I lln how lo . _ I _ s::.=~"'...~"...'~*' "'15 "muff filll-‘cfivmliffimfim mlmtmflmic 6o long as any area. provides - side, chef-lo " it?” mgfiil children and educates them to send ivy-elections will be the 1mm ~ mm ,1,”,hm u, n; 5 M, m; first Ill which the new. up-to-date provision of education will be com- "W?" "31"" 5° ""5- Th0- pnrativcly costly. When such an vow-Ht m" l"- in area s. province the is- cllmervlu" — chem"! sue is clarified. Those remaining town at at home and g providing the funds feel that educa Education Farmers’ Meetings The farmers‘ , meetings in Charlottetown next week promise to be of exceptional public ilioroet and importance. The necessity of main- bining the “food front" with the greatest ef- ficiency during wartime is recognized by all, but few except our farmers are aware of the many difficulties involved ill this task. The week's activities will open on Tuesday afternoon with a new educational feature, s. provincial bacon show, which should be productive of beneficial results in connection with one of fie most important phases of wartime farm production. There w-ill be a general meeting of hog producers 'l'l1esdily night, followed by the Sheep Breeders and Dairymen's Association meetings on Wednesdzrv, and the Farmers In- stitutes and Federation of Agriculture on Thursday. All interested in rural problems are invited to attend these meetings. That includes our local citizens, and it is to be hoped that as many as can do so will take advantage of this opportunity. In particular, the evening ses- sion of the Federation of Agriculture should prove of great interest. Representing as it does no fewer than twelve rural organizations h the Province, the Federation speaks auth- oritatively for agriculture and its interests. Last year the Federation presented a brief to the members of the Provincial Legislature. outfitting the resolutions passed at its last an- nual meeting and requesting action thereon. The progress made in this regard, and the prospect of further implementation, will doubt’- lese _oorne up for discussion at next week's leeesng. One page ef the Association's brief of last your ‘gosh with the problem of transportation. t sai : - kept of the Ten Con. s mandments and they are no better observed than that Atlantic Char- ter. ‘You see, when the Ten Oom- r . e there ' tm-Bfnil- pass , won in see by ‘the inald Olarry with mn- pgilscl" limo} b acolnna- - ea , won tion in i036 by Sir Wh Jen- kins whose 1001 majority was 13,- 9 ell. won in i935 Walker with mador- Liberals-O Bar hs . sic-bill?“ °“‘ A “p7 w” on is d ned and l" carried out for the peoul prep- aration for those that depart rath- m” er than for those who remain. 1h appears to be a case of those who pay the piper being prevented 7 from calling the tune. Dependence on the personal pro- pert tax. which amounts to a real e eosdtazstiiaax flpr furnishing iotr “find ' lice on so proven aequae and unfair. In some places such {§",,‘,‘Q‘“P{,,¥:B“§_‘ “m” ammo“ as- Switzerland. and many states of The major pun" ha" decided the American Union this has been m, elecmml/tm“ 5mm“ be w“, ‘mm "d ‘WWW Y" - tinucd until the defeat of Ger- The remedy is not 41mm!" W" many but other groups already have ‘h’ “w” °l the need l‘ ‘d-mll‘ entered candidates-Commonwealth d- Tl" ""1"" i‘ “m” f‘) "Y Independent Labor, Revolutionary to improve conditions in the w" Communists and Welsh National- sections or to aid such sections “m ' from wealthier areas or work wnysitowgrd tgfi game egg. probem pcc ary one - urban and rural districts. areas provide most of mral areas get the in- ccd teachers. If any schools lack teachers it is the rural schools that suffer first. The sparsely settled districts get least for their money in education. as in medical one and. as the suction sale bills say. a host of "other things too n to mention." 'f'l-le more centralisation the greater the need to restore the balance. It is the duty of the group to make sure that no ares. goes without sohook and other serv- ioea. centralisation takes li.°"‘,.".‘s.i;‘z‘.’ .i2"‘§€i'. ‘it’! 1'1"“ s cg er o ows that this question enters the lied- ernl field. Federal funds for edu- cational purposes would in this case be as fair and equitable as they are necessary. lnral llootrlflostiols ly the Breatest benefit Probe-b could be provided rural districts ocuwlete nlnl electrification. ete is used delib- WE was no U. S. don Sun. A history-making youth nsevo- ment in organized labor is reveal- ed in the small city of Burley, pl ccd Icahn. This is the Burley Bay Tenders’ Association, composed of train 183 teen-ages. ‘They spec emin- ch lays, quite avoidgble man; faults, Mr. Churchill proceeded to argue: anti), regsomblz was“ p d on“ w‘ roper an c era "i do not not to see impaired the visor c! cenasitin .2-uéh£ln u To roach suraia aid oh' - competition. but we can do much io mitigate the m" ‘m’ if lssececwh e’ ° °" “ consequence of failure. We want to draw a line No Naal deseriion has by rill it takes below which we will not allow persons to live and made Hillel‘ more 911N891’! d "01". 1H; 9° flight of Professor Hartmann, pro- "lfieotiv . to *.:ral.l::..:r;l: .l"li;’;..“};l..‘l.‘;5..°°.'2'°?.§.l"l'.? w» c»- m m u lted with being one of the in- 2 am. or even l am. the next have free competition upwards; we decline to “ed _ 11-, mop] u, m allow free competition-to run downwards. We venwm or the v weapon‘ He is e e mm! e r '45:.” and re t d to ha fl d to well or Arc m“ m mid l?" "t": €§‘°......‘°"‘§'“"€..‘Z‘ .....*"= M ‘" “m” “slams ll 0115 ll I lill El‘ l .— - the lbylflclnd 1 am sure ti?!» if the vision of a fltcn Spectator. » l think that fair Utopia which cheers t e hearts and lights ——- firth-st. . . .....w-i I 1 ii 9B, emsn Dill’ "noun, tnlmggulcauonlzcm’ and“ impmvb est town in Britain. Residents hale "It not “um we I“ than an INDY} Oil 0 . l Ollil comp V6 UPI!!!- wrltte t0 th b0 I'd 0! t d , - islfkvlng elgl-Illcen eftrs. “clothes rolls.- I ‘Mun m" 9° 5°" 9mm "N" ilation of society." used l" ‘m’ - I an. . etc. ' UIIVIOI" puns to each inhabitant to be for raincoats. Local weather ex- IOR WEST IRINCE. _________. ports claim that Burnley has 17¢ AN OUTIIODID IYIIEM wet days a year, and on annual rainfall of 43B inches. Their rain- lin-The machinery of our pub- ila school system was set in mo- tion in ill’! and has not had a complete overhauling since. Patch- ed and re-lnforced as it is. it re- mains a pltlsbly archaic system. Its 0h!!!’ are, of course, the children, and trough them the community. Our present methods l" Mt Ii our children the chance they ought to have; forty element» Conceding that the competitive system bad Slow decoy d " , Overiake thsmslmfidm,,j,l°hw “m” We avoid that lflbulgum or Al . under present con- seven hours or more these ht, ay. both '1'he tween The rural the Willis. Members of Parliament are re- ceiving from service personnel in the Mediterranean arcapersonal questionnaires as them to state their views on moot‘ political is- sues. The forms are typewritten cu long, thin sheets of paper. Sem- ple questions are: “What do you think of the government's plans for social security?" and "will you please send me details o! the so- cial ' once plan " A conside ble number of the forms are arriving but there has been no indication on any of them where they originated. The Rouse of Oommons by a vote of 20s to l’! has rejected ‘pro- portional representation in coal u... ent elections. The sug- gestion was made by Sir Geoffrey Mander, Liberal‘; member for Wol- 8 . vcrhnmpton Ea Geo moved that local authorities h d elections on the la transferable vote system if three-fifths of the members want- ed it. This system, he said, was already used in all parts of the Efmpirc and would avoid unrepres- entatlvc results in elections. were not built to sun“, —Lucio u; m, Welds». ATTEllTlllll f muss wrlnlls Those words might have been spoken yes- “50 those of terday. They have the timeless quality of common sense and sound logic, expressed in phrases which Mr. Churchill himself has prob- ably never bettered. . yon us, u, costs soon wear out.—l.oudon Daily uonsh is Mail. ugh” ling Pater of Ilgoiavia Hm- solf is interested in racing motor cars and aeroplanes, and there seems no reason why, left to him- self, he should not live s. harmless existence, indulging ole hieth century hobbies. Jnstoad, he has been persuaded by his tlves, or entourage, or naps by business people here wit large in- terests in Yugoslavia, to place him- self in a position from which he can scarcely emerge with credit. - ts usefulness , thlia causing “M; “L”! "h! continue s 4 w en w . cause b o offglngawrp: loot fit lng, modem “g n, l0 fllfe one. All elm u; lays? at nrlces io ilnlt m", -EDITORIAL NOTES- Tlme is to be given, evidently, to General McNaughton to make himself acquainted with “There is nmhing we m" gel! you about the Liberal organization before again seeking transportation that you do not already know. Xcu all realize that the most vital problem fac- ing this Province today is how to maintain the ficilities that will guarantee the transporta- tion to and from the nlainland of our farm products and the materials required to produce our crops and feed our live stock. It is use- lose to refer to the past. The present is suffici- ent to create in the mind of every producer s. fear that he nlay not be able to place his i944 atop on the markets of the world. May we sug- [eet that hnnsediafely you begin investigations as b the boot arrangement which can be made that will insure a continuous movement to and from the mainland during the winter of I944- 45._ To avoid rl-isaster you cannot allow the annual ice barrier to again close the Strait of Northunrberland without having at Borden an- other boat that will assist ‘the Prince Edward Island in the movement of the freight which under normal crop yields in I944 will be much greater than it is for the present winter." We have had favourable weather so far this Win88, but our lack of an auxiliary boat to replace the present ferry in the event of an unergeslcy remains a source of great concern. There is absolutely no assurance that the new tar ferry will be ready before next year. In the meantime it is useless for the authorities to as- sure iss that all is well when we know that a ntishap may occur at any time to isolate us from the mainland and ruin all concerned in the ex- port of our farm products. The Five-Year Men It is announced that a. number of five-year DOll who recently returned from overseas have been required to sign xvarning orders calling on them to hold tllenlsclvcs in readiness for over- seas draft. In plain language, this seems to mean that some of illcsl: lllfll, zllier having spent five years at the front, are now to be returned to the. front after a few weeks at home. Because tllerc are so fclv of them the pub- lic outcry against surll Ii d1 Gian luzly not be great. But this is a mniicr in which numbers do not count. What rlllillflCilllOll can there bc for requiring men with five years overseas ser- vice behind them in undergo a second teml of battle service? Obviously, it would be both fair and necessary to send ihcul back if there were none with lessor service available. Rota- tion lcavc—-—if it lllCllll5 zulyihillg-nleans that they should take thrir po-ilion in the reinforce- ment stream behind llliJSC wlm have not served overseas at all. - "This action," coluulcnis ille Will/lips]; Iircc Prcss, (liberal). “docs not jibe with the state- ments made by (iullcrzll McNaughton, Minister of National Dcfcncc, at Owen Sound on De- cember 17, and at Camp liordcn ml January I0. He their said ilvzlt llicsc men were not as im- portant as l'i'illf0rc¢lll<‘llis because the shortage is in infantry, wllilc nlosi of those five-year men were from illllCl‘ lhzln infantry units. He their thought illzli llli.‘ cxpcricncv. of tllcsc vct- erans would he nf the greatest bollcfit at home in training rwzruiis. 'l'llc.~c siuicnlonts seem- ed sensible. llut what is nnw living dune ap- pears to bc ilirerily the opposite." Forty Years Ago the suffrage of the electors. i I i i The Red Cross is now attesting attention to itself; usually it is looking after others. The campaign promises well, but every One must do his bit to guarantee success. i! i i l! Those are the days when pedestrians, as well as vehicular traffic, must mind their “P's" and “Q's", or take the consequences. One thing, there is not much frost in the ground, so a thaw will soon prove effective. ' a a a e A Durham (Ont) cow owned by Orville Calm of Osborne has established a reproductive feat which vetcrinaries doubt can be equalled. The cow this week calvcd twins for the sixth time, and for the fourth time in a row. Her progeny also include two single calves. All but one of her calves are 1iving._ ‘iii And it isn't leap year either. Chatting over-- the garden wall at Stoke-on-Trent, Essex, 77- year-old Mrs. M. E. Downs told 78-year-old William Molineux “I think we had better make it up together for company's sake.” Molineux accepted. It was the third marriage for each. a e c a Excellence of Western Canada's butter, and. higher rate of production in comparison with Eastern Canada, were mentioned by Mr. A. S. Thurston, secretary manager of the Ontario Creamery Association, in an address before the Provincial Dairy Convention in Regina. In Ontario, said Mr. Thurston, average qannual production of the 283 creamcries was 262,000 pounds, in comparison with a yearly output of around 667,000 pounds by 62 Saskatchewan creamcrics. “It is an open secret," he added, “that Ontario does not grade so high as west- erns. My best investigations failed to bring out any criticism in connection with western butter." a e w- s- George Moore, British novelist and dralnat- ist, born this date I851; his novels are strong- ly realistic and at the outset were severely criticized by the average critics; he retaliated with an essay on Modern Painling, in which he sharply attacked the Academy and other art institutions; his novels include A Modern Lover, Eslhrr Wafers, Celcbatvs, The Brook Kerith, Hale and Farewell, Aw, Salve, Vale; bis plays include The Strike At Arlingforli, The Birmi- ing of the Bough, Elizabeth Cooper: The one invincible thing is a good book; neither malice nor stupidity can crush it." . . . “Cruelty was the vice of the ancient, vanity is that of the modern world.” . . "The State and the family are forever at war." a e a s- Ordinary, every-day Canadians each have $l35 more cash in their pockets or in the bank than when the war started. They also hold an average of $580 in war bonds fnr every man, woman and child in the nation. This docs not include extra cash nor victory bonds held by corporations or financial institutions. This was revealed in the annual report of the publicly- owlled Bank of Canada covering I944 opera- l lions. The report also showed that Canada has spent $I7,0oo,0oo,000 on the war, more than r0 times as much as Canada spent in the First World War and a total of $20,000,000,000 D Everyone now knows how riglli Winston ‘Churchill “'35 when. frmn ihc uplmsiiion Yiellcllcs bcfnro the \\'.’ll‘,'l|(! predicted (liszistrous Ilonséqucnccs from the zlticlnpis to "appease" Nazi Germany. llc cpulio as mic inspircrl. .\lr. seems in have hold consistent views since the war started. Of this bilge sum half has been paid by taxes and current revenue. Of ills balance about $6,600,000,000 has been fill- nuccd by war bonds bought and retained by in- dividual Canadians WlliCll moans ihe ordinary men and women in all sections of the country. London New Statesman. Shortage of coal and rnanpo diiflcultiixgs_l_spve led to unismgiizar" scenes ,, A .1 t i‘ i‘°“"‘i..‘""l°°‘ 2i... cpo , an ow ose n e took away two owts. of small coal in the vehicle. A minister, wheel- ing an empty pram, also called at the yard and- had it filled with one cwt. of paraffin coke, the only sort of “fuel" ‘he could buy. Every day people are using anything on wheels to take away coal-taxis, bicycles and prams-Beriffshire Journal. inch a rise in popnhrit now shown by hillbilly and phonograph records can mean but one thing. Our people are seeking escape from the trials of the pres- ent ln racial memories of the past. To listen to the cowboy's laments and the mountaineers love is to lose ourselves for a time in a by- gone day when life was simpler and sweeter. and now we are mechanical. The war has intensified the scientific, gadget-laden nature of our exist- QIQQJnd so we Jong..for..tl1o- hills was note-Chicago News. Beef stew has been greatly ins- proved, of late ears. and there is only one form n which it is ac- ceptable to the cultivated palate to- day. The modern beef stew-what we may csll beef stew a ls mode- is made with beef and the usual vegetab , but the stewing is done in cider-sweet, not hard. When the stew has still half-an-hour to cook, a. dozen or more prunes are added, and these and the cider svy are served with the stew. The prunes are stewed with brown sugar and lemon should be plump and tender when added to the stem-Peterborcugh Examiner. , Jet-propelled transport and pas- senger planes msy be manufactur- ea in Australia after the war. For months Australian aircraft techni- cians have been in Great Britain following the development of this type of machine, which federal ministers consider ls particularly suitable for local manufact c. ‘There has been a. constant inter- change of information between the United Kingdom and Australia, and hopes arc held that in the post- war years Australian factories, with experience gained by local experts, will be able to swing from propeller- led ptlsanes fgr Jcitvil usgfiflflo far, exper ropor,» e prop on pos- scsses only one limiting factor-its range is loss than on propeller air- craft. struct, _a.nd faster, and can use various type of fuel. It is hoped to overcome the range limitation, and if this is achieved, the government will urged to concentrate on this type of production. - Aus- trpllan News-Letter. If we had a parliamentary lys- brsnchcs and all appointees would be merged into a single unit and be compelled to accept res nslbil lty overnight for any blun er. This does not necessarily mean in actual practice a series of elections. It means that the mere threat of an a change in policy or in rsonnel. This has worked well in t a British Commonwealth of Nations, and it can work successfully for us be- cause it is true demoorao to give the people an instantaneous check on their rulers. The Canadian W- liamentsry system is what the n- ted States should adopt. Then we could avoid the necessity of hold- ing elections in the midst of some national crisis where continuity of administration might be impers- tive. We could acquire also s new sense of responsibility in the rela- tions of the executive and the leg- islative branches of th as far back as the 1800's and ad- yocmd it again as president-elect n tcr to Congress on the subject cf presidential tenure. - New York use. I We were a rustic people, u, and the plains where the machine t juice, and they 0f ' BOVGIIIIIIEIIL type war machines to jet-propel- f,‘ But it is cheaper to ccn- I tcm, the executive and legislative m; election to test power could force tra e government. V Woodrow wusch foresaw this heed F" ruary, 1913, lii- a historic let» ' composed f , th “Board and five‘: other: by the L-ieutenant-Governor-irl-Council. In actual practice these five other rem YIalI cowboyboqy tion, these Executive Council mem- llcrs are otherwise n educational duties of this Board arc to d e general policy for the schools of ince Bdward Island-such as M614. dIlWlngsllp curricula, set» the types of text book for use, etc. The board is ing that the different sections of 1 Act are carried out. Bach school district has its in- dividual board of trustees, three In llllflbtf’. Th se are gleq. tive (except for Charlottetown and erside) and are responsible for such matters as providing school accommodation! and equip- m ... . on —~ ~ a ers. etc. The schools arc financed partly by the district and Pmly by the provincial treasury. According to th 942 annual re n,- the Department of Eduoa the total amount raised b the dis- tricts in that year was 1,593 and c amount contributed by the $388,897, making the to a1 rovincial expenditure for eclucat on This is l“, than p" ts schools. to spend more? Our answer is that in Province spent $178,430 on tickets (Canada Year Bock, 1942 , .181 on the operation of auto- mobiles (Canada Year Book 1942) an I090. on vendor's spirlts and tobacco (Public Accounts of P121. 1942). Our Victory Loans are al- ways ovcrsubscribed. Indeed, this war has shown us that when the blic interest is eat enough the s always orthcoming. l 1121f” to "The Past and was muc oppos on ichool Act of 1877 on the people couldn't af- a school tax. How- ever, soon after the Act was pass- ed (and with a small ms ority) many new schools were bu t and education flourished, for Island cfllllllfloh! 1877 were very diti "A? thpgetslent day con ons. a me, alo with the ' - 1 "g so co _, wont a practical or vocational train. , supplied outside the school in the form of apprenticeship. Today all that is c ed. Small indus- tries have become centralized in blfl I ‘ d practical train- ceship is a supply this tional courses sy does olusion of prac- advocaie a new and effective administrative sys- tem ct on the educational theatre W , .. TIII Elflaltriblgliliaghbllihli LIAGU rofthe Pl fictals lithium i] defining boundaries of school dis- ' salaries, also responsible for see- w“ y other province in ‘ ased, n u; pain of 1e71, but on the needs of Lam 1 ' Hitler's Luitwai tricit not there. pect. is erall 1"or'a by P Aho in th urities Weds Wm. lssz this B!“ cheese )- we have within our own land only plished by M80 slam? ropic GOV NY me well will (It Ottaw Bdwor e won! erstaly. yhoannot be provided should be resettled ence is not present or in pros- eleotlif The Future Of Farming Iarmingninalthe fuxtxurebee promise. s . Few gathers tangy '8 n told that was always available for quality products." ise needs in war-time. . Future Brithh ' Market the great expansion of home production during expansion has been brought bonusing home production at thcdssme time that Oanadian farm D the gfowlrtlfil of wheat in i932 8 lcy was pro-war and may be e - pected to continue. market is unlikel past is it hard exchange goo This brings up the third rea- son why the British market fades. This ma _ preaches the iniquity of and unis-m the cost of fies can be o l owances or some ooee funds appropriates for ernmen taxes) should lately . generous 1107s ' or young lost both l d egs an Germ tlv unfit "ll lui!“ . nuainstosluoh mhslli l: New r the BIQQ, 0i‘ . n is tooffllterlottahfofwnortbrtlldward. Those living where elec- enooul-aged to Certs no farms should w ore this conveni- ‘ThisI is “not a new proposal, a u With the provision of 11:21 ication many other con- wcuid follow. ls full of were e two of the old ones. lifetime farmers have been "an unlimiteclln market This of the coal the co tabllsh prom- glcat qualification. The market for farm products Proved limited competitive and profit- ian farmer only import no do et is to boats traffic marker. will be less st- the postdwsr y reasons. One the war. This about are bought at almost as l8 D01- ther reason why the British war held ln Britain. er to pay for Canadian in any other way than the of for goods. are we willing to take from in exchange for bacon, and wheat? Coal, yes, as iyelephonc or a 4c pos- ap- n scandal, those - M, . hargod to Family Al- public philanth- PIi-Iwoses (there is lots t money, we all love to be cut short im- tter to manv people , I fthe maimed one rcrs. who elrlaeriericec. ilrst hand and have thing pf precaution- ven these sinecurcs. a most fitting and totive these light for ins . to some of our who have lost a. leg. an eye. Islander who rcocntLv should soon be inayladd terseasns tledwlt th “raw. m}; ab,“ Norolk Naval area. hard likely tho th. l‘ potato“ ‘Mia'- I Sir . "gdk Iii s saxs" ill be becrvcd from today's bullctfrss that the “Hips: w l G.) Printing th the biggest job have had in wartime. 30.000000 Altogether constituency- and a number of each list will be print» ed. Some b v tracted to handle but many are being small firms which do only the work for their own riding. one-thirteenth of the line but we are told there is an There ls s great chance of an interchange of people. will provide the ballast for passenger on the round countries is hard to maintain. SERVIC i” Vi. Agencies Ltd. Phase 540-541 e new voters’ lists is British printers More than and addresses u . there are more than lists - one for each considerable ATTENTIIIII’ Now against _ Pro-wow»; lg firms have‘ con- a number of lists remedy ch the marlrsi printed by MAGS PIG WORM ‘IONIC POWDER coal supplyi- wcrid-we cin and do take Textiles we might use from, untry that did most to an export business in traces of worms s. the health of vonr herd. Don't dcldy. phone or mall. All promptly attended to. "TIIE 2 MAGS duty that limits that trade. ubt continue and expand. requires some goods even trip. in goods between m» as continued» i Pfbfiiilllllfl Swine Breeders ls the lime to {mi by using the most tittiin ltwulelsc lily 5cm Mo: ‘a d rlucn 35c PER rls Order by nrdiil I49 Great George Street, llilii McLeod B’ Bentley 1M Prince Street . , Charlottetown Phone 10M ChlrW-‘MWW AGGIIIENTS llll IIAPPEN! At home, at work, or at play-tho surprli‘ lllll thing about Accidents ls that so maul’ "f them happen at home and at plny—b"l "° matter where you are unfortunate enough l” tangle with an Accident, you probably won’i be able to work and ‘your INCOME. will be lfflfil at the time your Expenses are heaviest! When you're flat on your back due to an Accident or Sickness you won't need to worry about the penses of Medical and Hospital bills, "l" ,“" you have that sinking feeling about your silv- lngs Account if you own a Great-West Life AK cident and Health Policy. Accidents are Expensive — Insurance is Consult llynllnlan s ca. Limiitll+.,l The Oldest Insurance Agency in P- E- “M” Offices: Charlottetown-Summoulds-Milling“ w. c. BENTLEY. k d s. s. ncunsv. s. o Barristers and Atiorlefiil‘ Isaw not! l ll. ll. lioansttlll. Accoluitddii s: crunch street... ‘ Randolph W" ' liorrcll and iiollllll ' n. |=. Anclllslll Chartered Acconniflmi j casters ens: sullillf in, is