PAGE IQR TIIE GMILITTETOWN Glllllll Merlin] Dally tFulmIad In Ill?) Pnlllent: Unit. CuL W. Chantal B. Vino-President: J. B. Burnett. IJJ. Burnett. R.U.N.V.ll. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker T; the Weakest Ink.” MONDAY. FEB. 7. 19M Vital To Victory-And To Our Boys llow blood from Canadian donors has al- ready saved the lives of wounded Canadian, British and Untied States soldiers, sailors and airmen iras told rcccntly" by Surgeon Coni- tiiatitlir t1 ll. licst, director of the Canadian Naval .\ledical Rcsczirch Bureau. A pioneer iit tht- ficlil til ltlpiid sitbstittitcs, l)r. Best was rcsputisible for csttililislting the first Canadian livtl Cross bli-t-il donut" vliiiic in Tuitttitvt, and lic sticaks now front cxpt-rieiice gathered dur- iiu; lllt U\Cl'>k'll~. iisit this" iviiitei". Cziiiziiliztti liltiotl sritiiii, lie stzitcs, has been used liv all the st.‘l'\'lC\‘.~'i in Canada for their casualtiv. u iihulu l7l‘lt)tl i. nut available, zzttil zztlc» ' " s liaic lJcCll storctl tit strait-g»: p- s 11g. ist (‘|ll\‘l',\_[k'llClC~. lt is tiscd on llt'>.llt.l_\Ul's at sea. lt iias used at Dunkirk and also ditriu; the blitz on liuglantl. lt is tiscil in C.'itt."iili.'tn hospitals iti liuglatid. lt has liccti scti; to .\l;iita, liidizi. hussia and thc Near s1. 1t l1;l.~ lmcii used during the czunpztign in .1c11_v and llill}. Lluriiig the battle of E1 .\lattieiti 8.000 bottles of blood and blood Sub- stitutes tseruiti and plasma) were used in one \\t"€l\. . 1 this tziitil iinicli tiiorc to the same effect tiiuld lltj tttuitctl) lllI1lC£l1€~ the vital role ivhich the c" ltrin lilrw-d donor can play in Caiiatlzfs iiar. effort. lt gives emphasis tit the recent ap- peal hi" lion. l)r. \\'. I. P. .\l;ic.\1i1lan, presi- dcnt of the l'rince li-livard lslaiid division of the Red Cross, for more generous Contributions from this Province. To this appeal has now beer. added zin active house-to-house campaign. on the tiart of \.1;i1itai'v workers undcr Red _Lrnss auspices. to line up lS tuanv blood don- ors as tnissllllk.‘ throughout the city and pro- vuire. 'l'h"s" tuiniptiigit is" already showing re- sults, lint the 110111211111 still uutruiis the stipply; and it 1t.~cd lt;trcll_i' be said that the matter" is iir- gent. Four fl\'C'l'Il"E lilot-cl donations are requir- ed tut" cnt-ttuli scrum for one transfusion. lt is ctitphzisisctl that Ht] cxantitiiug doctor is al- ways on hand to see that no blood is taken if thcrc is zuir possibility of injuring the health tint". is thc greatest Ot)]J01'lLlllll_\' for serv“ home front iltat :iiiv ivar has ever af- forded. 1.01 it not be said that Priitce Edward Island, ivith its magnificent record of enlist- inetits in the fighting forces and generous stip- prirt of the war effort financially. has fallen short of the mark in this respect. So far we have been falling down, possibly be- cause the zicctl has not been fully realized. Let us hope that from now on we shall not only achieve our \\'€Bl\'l_\' quota. but set a new riiarl." for other provinces tn shoot at, as we ltztvc done iii other matters of far less importance. on the Post-War Planning That post-watt‘ plans should be made and tarricrl in‘. largely through the intelligence, in- iiiatiic and diligence of private citizens, acting as persons, as individual companies, or as groups with comtnou interests, is the view of the Can- adian blzmttfacturers‘ Association as express- ed in a pztniphlct issued outlining the platts", 0r- ganizaticin and work of the Association in c011- ncciiutt with tltc war and iri preparation for cnitrlitiotis" after the war. “Looking fui"i-.':irtl,” it declares. "Canada can become one of the most tirospcrous tiud hap- piest countries iii the ivurld \\'e ltavc a great inheritance, material zulvattttatges, enlarged iti- dustrial and scientific equipment. and our ac- ciitiiplisltnimts iti the irtii" have given 11S a" coit- firlence llf‘\'(‘l' ktioivn before. \\'h:tt other fac- tors are llCCt':\.'ll'\ ti» realize our possibilities? The i-itcrgy. in! _ tuition and ciiitrziuc ivhich will he ‘|l‘t'L'(.s-dl'$' to ltrintz; victory should not he al- loiveil ti» lag iii the transition and post-ivar \'€'i'\.t’.\, llit-st- icurs- will rcqtiiri- equal vision. rii-citi-raiitiii :i11t1 initiative combined with our spirit pf Z\<i\L“lllli‘.‘ l: >ltt7ttltl be the dutv of gtl\'L‘l'tl1l'."l‘l, iiitiiiziygciuctit Ind labor t0 pro- uirtte cniplo_v1ticnt and creatc opportunities " \\'hl.- bslitiiaiiig 111111. ])US'-\\'Z‘.t' plans should ' i ' hi private t't‘tl(‘t‘tit’l€(‘, the _. ui/i-s th.'tt in titist-ivai" proh- lQllls ;_ii.it-i"ti:t:"itt ll'ls its placc. ljoicrntticnts" sign trezttiem cnforcc agreements. control ariii- rd forces in the international field. They also llRH‘ thci lttthtzffflltt futictions in the domestic ' 1hr 1'\'rlllllll\'_ it admitted that ivat" controls nuts‘ he l'('l£tlllt'(l for a time. though .hev should hc rclzixctl and abolished as soon l5 conditions will permit It is emphasized that the war has been. is and will be until its cud. the prime concern of Can- adian industrv. .\t the satite time the Associa- tion lwhevc-s that the prosecution of the ivtir is aided rather than impeded by stitrlyitit: prob- lems of recouvctsion \\'l’\lCl1 have already pre- sented tlieuisclirs. other problems which will arise before tht- war is ended, and Jllsfi ques- tions which will prrihablv fare Canatliiut iri- (ltistry when thc war is over. l5 Classic Ground If histuri siiutctitttcs seems like a dream, what part of it is more dream-like than the ntarclt tut Rome of the armies of a nation that wasn't discovered until Rome ivas more than 22 (‘(‘|'lllll"('s old? asks the Nciv York Times. Iivcri" dtiy the map of the route lOnl-(s like mi extract f-roiu the (‘llfihlllfll atlas. Minturtto is th: old Ltitiu toivu iii whose tuarshcs blarius ivtts takcti prisiittcr. lle was to be put to death. .\ l)3|'l7-'lt'l¥lt1'.<ttltll(‘t‘ was tn be his executioner. hut fled before the fire in the generals eves. Vlletri is the uttcititt: Yolsciau settlement ivheri- Augustus was born. ln “Lays of ‘Ancient Rome" "the fuoliueu of Velitrae threw shield and spear away" a: the Battle of Lake Regillul. At Terracoina, Anxur that was, Ire the re. mains 0f a temple of Venus, and the cathedral rests on antique columns with recumbent ani- mals at their bases. Anzio is Horse's "lovely Antium", the city of Fortune, once a colony 0t pirates, a favorite residence of Roman gwgflg and emperors, the birthplace of Nero, in whose palace the Apollo Belvcdcre was found. In the Middle Ages, Cisterna di Ronni was called Cis- terna Neronis. lt is supposed to be the site of Tres Tabernae, where St. Paul met hi; frimds from Rome. These Italian journeys in the easy chair would be equally fruitful if they followed medieval history and Dante's footsteps instead of Vir- gil‘s. For instance. Anagni, where Cicero had a ytilla, was the birthplace of one of the greatest of Popes, Boniface VIII. — EDIIURIAL NOTES _ "r315 cusnum Notes By The Way _____- Oilside of a homo-knitted melt, therds rioth a tan of cosh-Toronto 5m. Blessed are the mock. [qr shall Inherit the earth-lulu Mural: cent. for Inheritance buxom-Ann“ ville Chronicle. Whatever j: dime about. the peo- ule with 1 h gasoline ca‘ ‘ , who are abe to pile up mileage, certainly there should be a very substantial cut tn the license fee for those motorists who are held down to the rrunknum allowance- those with an AA sticker on their Windshields-Vancouver Province. A recent survey luv Forluno mug- aztne on post-war buying "vent; that. the American people want; above all else a new car and a home of their own. Amidst all the burly-burly of ivar. there appar- ently hitms within the Aynerigatt breast tihe steadfast, if somewhat. conflicting. desire to no ot-aces and Everybody, oi" nearly everybody is helping the Red Cross thcsc dtiys. iiicliiiliug three young ladies ivho are billed to give a recital in St. Paul's" Hall. city, toniorroiv (Tuesday) evening. U i i I The British ration of butter, margarine and cooking fats is S cizs.. of which 2 0Z5. 1i1ii:.t b;- (‘titthltig fats" and not more than _' ozs‘. hiittrt", and the rest margarine. I't'\’.<\\'Jtt‘ domestic cor.- suuiptiott averaged i0 1-2 ozs. I I I l I It is reported from a Siviss source that. Nlichacl Clemenceau, sou of the Lircat \\'ai" Pre- iiiict" Clenicucrau has been deported bv the Xazis" front his native France. The Siviss ac- count did not disclose where Clemenceau had been sent. but presumably it iias to Germany". The t.).\\'.l. quoted the newspaper as saying he httd been held iit a ccuiceutration camp iicrtt" Paris following his arrest some mouths ago for protesting by letter tn Pierre, Laval against its-c of his father's natiie for propaganda pitrptises. '--—4 b a n l)r. 'l'liotnas l‘arroi1, Stirgcon (jcucrttl of tlii; LYS. l't1blic llealtli service ivriies to the ."\tlt~ crican Magazine that one fourth of zill sickness could he avoided "if we only applied all no know about preventing sickness and ticcidciits." it is alivays the "if." "If" we were prepared there would be 11o war. "lf" we ncvci" tasted drink there would be 11o drunkards. "If" wc always told the truth there would be no liars". "If" we loved our neighbour" as ourselves, there would he n0 policciiten. "If" there were no sinners there \'i'ould he no saints and vice versa. In fact, and indeed, it is that little, two- letterctl word that decides \\‘ll(‘ll‘l("1‘ wc shall cit- jov heaven or the hell of the present and 1h: hereafter. And what are. we going: to do about it, apart f1"oiii 1ierii<licall_i' hut-airing it? a- m a General ".\ud_v" McNaughton is back f1"o111 four years arduous service overseas iii coin- inatid of the Canadian forces-and with no on’: to give. him "the glad hand." \\'h;it is the trouble? \\"li_v, before, and at, last election it. was the picture of .\ndv that blazoited all the bill boards, illustrated all the ncivspapers, and decorated all the calendars. Now he is cutti- pletclv out iti tlic cold, a gctteral all dressctl up and iioivherc to 5.10. .\ iieivspzipcruiait risked: —“\\'ltile you have left the army comiuunil you are still in the army. aren't you?" “S0 far as l know. I'm still in the arnrv," Gen. .\lc.\‘auglt— ton replied, adding "l do not know-exactly when" l will report to Ottairn hezitlutiarters." Surely an extraordinary sittizition. \\'h:it is the CX|)lilll~ ation of the mystery? \\'hat has happened be- tween the Cvencral and the Prime Alllllfilfl‘ whose tool he was in the stirring days when plebiscites" and conscription enforcement ivcre in the air? ii- a n Live births in this province during the first quartet" of 1943 numbered 454, (43.2 legitimate and 22 illegitimate), 13 beinry still born. [Jeatlis totalled 26o, heart disease being responsible for 5H, uephretis 24, pneumonia 2.’, cancer and other malignant tumours it, intiacranizil lus- ions 2i, accidental deaths t), diseases of the arteries 7, influenza 3. diphtheria 2, tiuerperal causes t, other specified Cattscs 72, ill-defined and ttttkttouttt causes 8. Live hirtlts in Cilltiltltl numbered (-8.577 giving equivalent auutizil rtttu of 23.6 per 1,000 population as compared ivitli 49 births and a rate of 22.9 for the first quarter of 1942. 'l'hert~ \\'(’l'(‘ 2,994 illegitim- ate hirtlts" forming 4.4 per cent rif all live births as compared with 2.997 tn‘ 4.6 per cent. Still- births amounted to 1.773 oi" 25.9 per 1,000 live births as against 1.824 and a rzitc of 27.7. Deaths totalled 31.29.; with a rate of 10.8 pct" 1.000 potiulatioti as comuarctl ivilli 19,474 purl a rate of 10.3. 'l'h<- natural iitrrcz e for the ituzirtci" was 37,283 giving a ralc of 1.2.8 pcr 1.0.10 popu- lation as against 35.375 or a rate of 12.0. Ii fi I i in i Charles Dlckvtis, novelist and popular philo- sopher, born this dztte 1812; \\'£\S a journalist and soon made a llltlllc for liiiiisclf as a Parlia- mentary reporter, later as" a skctch-ivriter, col- lected and published as "Sketches by Boz" in "The Monthly Magazine"; this led to the be- giiitiiug of the production of ‘The Pickwick lkipers", and a wltole series of tiovels which have made his uttuic famous to four gciieratiotis, the New York '1 itues _r€C€Itll.)I.....(l€C1BIllIg. him. mun, to be the most read novelist of the Nineteenth Century; this is due largely to the fact that he ivas not only a realist, but his genius was e:- sentially ltumourous and fantastic touching the risibility spot in the lteart of"t1‘t'E reader un- expectedly, jiisi as actually happens in every day life; "The Chimes" and “A Christmas Carol", together with the wonderful characters of "Qiiilf", ".vIl'>. Liamp", “the Wellers" and "Mrs. Micabcr" li\'e for ever as tiart of the British heritage as well as an ever present char- acteristic of our race: “It is alivays best ori these occasions to do what the tuob do" - "But suppose there are two ntnbs?" suggested Mr. Snodgrass-“shotit with the largest," replied Mr. Pickwick"..."Battlcdore and shuttlecockls a very good game, vhen you a'ii't the sliuttlecock and two lawyers the battledores. in which case it gets ton excitin’ to be pleasant". . ."Out- noble society for providing the. infant negroes ii1 stat" mll.—5lfflbf0fd Beacon - Her- a . As sure as the sun comes up In the mornttir; and 1.109s down again In the evening, these good times of hlizh ivatzas being cnioycu 0v lu- clustrlat workers will be followed bv poorer" es again. It behooves us then to spend carefully and out. sovmethitig by for the rainy ctay.— Stirling Nears-Argus. When we read with justifiable bride of the exploits of the Royal Canadian Air Force, there is one tzrouip of men we are mp1. 1a over- look. These are t e instructors whose skill. patience and ability tiave platted and are playing a tnoioi" role iii 1h;- ereatioii and maintenance of this superb aerfal corps.—l-1a1ifax Herald. One of the few lhiiizs wlttleh ma)’ be said in favor of war 1s that it broadens our horizon. For instance, w(~ lczvrti that. thr- ILILlYCS of New Britain are convinced that no inuri can pzo to heaven itutess he dies rich. How different trcin the gent-r- al attitude of nut" own fair lnnil, where reliizioit looks upon wealth as a handicap in the Journey to heaven, where the Goveriimcttt does its beet. to ken tveti from (tying rich, zinrl where vizorotts paliticul patties are eager in trrevctit men even from becoming riehl-Pcter- borough Exaitnmer. Olive trees In the Garden of Gethsc-ttitine on the Mount of Olives simple of the dotermkiatiptt of liv- in-r, things to keen on lIVlIlR. 'I'lier0 3T0 olive trees in the Garden of Gethsemane that were there iit. the time of the Crua-lftxioir Our 10rd silent the everiinz of iigcinv before His atrest tmrter these olive trees. To-day. some of the trees ‘that. were tlicri- then stttt bear IIUtf..-— Windsor Star. Out of Patterson Field. 01x10. runs the long-est freight fine tn tho ivorld, longer than any Cassy J0l1f5 ever rode or hoped to ride. 14.000 miles tn Itidiia. Its freight cars have wings, its signal livthts urn the siui and the stars in their courses mitt when 1t whistles fer a crossing it can b: heard a thousand miles away". We don't know by what route it. runs. but maybe yen can heat it, rattling down to Natal. and climb- ing the Atitantiic hill to Africa and outline around the lilu curves pver Farm and tic valleys of 111p TIZYIS and Eurphra s and ‘niulittz into the yards at "1111 Bhopal or Calcutta. The rnglncei" doesn't lean out. the window. out! f-hc brakemati don't run alon‘: the tarps. laitt. they take her through snow and lDE.\'...l.filiE..11f§l‘ Lhrutizli dust, and 1f an eagle gels on the track so iriueh the worse foi" the czi-tclie.--Neiv York Times- There has ben a zratefut welcome for Mn Oliver Lycteltoivs encour- aging assurance that we shall “shi21"t.lzv" be able to export ti izffiflfi IRIUIC of new precincts to the rest. of the ivortd. Indeed- the rosy 1m- plicntions of that somewhat nidc- iimte forecast. have overshadowed the far more solid cuounds for sat- isfaction to be found tn its con- text. The minister of production has been castlizatlni! the blindness and unintellitzeiice ot those ivnu us. plate the girowth of secondairy _in- dizstrics in the faltacious belief that. it. means ri tiltrihk-fltlt cf the market. for this country's urodiwts. 1t will. of course. mean a shift. of overseas emimd to new products and to the better qualltles ot‘ the old statplcs. it. “bhe more prosperous people become and the more they develop their own industries the tzreatci" will be the volimie of IIILCFIIJIIOIHI trade. and not less." 1t Is hearten- ing to find n man in Mi" Lytteltorrs ltton putting on record hls firm eltef tn that simple and essential facf.—Munchestci" Guardian. Some people just love l0 urzanize. They are not. satisttcd unless they have catheter! around tzhem group of people who belteve as they do. who iue ready to march for- ward WlLh them. shoulder to stioul- dei" toward the achlcvcmeut. 0f those high ideals which. every soc- trty says, are the sole interest. of 11:; loyal members. Consider tlic Canadian Almanac. u most. impar- tial volume. ‘Ititrtyi-three es of small type are devoted to u. lat. of “asoetmtl and tetles." ‘There's one for every taste, How would ou ltke m belong to the Bates Tax e- ueal Association? Or the Rational Calendar ASSOCIBYJOII of Canada. may be more in your ltne. Did we say organization to suit; every taste Not unite. How about heltping w organza tihe National Society for the Dlsoouragement of National Sodettes of Any Sort. Shoulder to shoulder we'll go forward totvnrd the attainment. of that high Ideal. the end of the search for high .- Cornwall Standard-Hee- hotdu. ATLANTIC No season frontiers here: we mow- whtte tun Impacts no din-it uumvclcnmr of the tnl: No gold corn trampled: no 1on3 1A home Smoktnv tn ruins. n tear-pictured thine. Here bitter war has no such weep- "RI s Is borne unseen, and ntn goes un- renown . The convoy to safe harbour wlna: no cross Mark". where the station was sunk, the \\'est Indies with flannel ivaistcoals and moral pocket-lsandkerchiqjg" the siittnr dmwne ' -G. Denma- Innflhn. ‘irrowiv i118 shrinks faster than I C UARPIAN PUBLIC FORUM THE CAR FERRY str,»1t: ls noted by the pnplen that the car ferry has been td up for repairs. It. i; time this old tuner was penstoned off. and It ll past, time, something was done m getting a boat: to re lace her. It 1s no trouble for Pr ce Edward Island to get. a seat 1n the House for outsiders. but 1t la hard get a steamer which will be to travel on. We may possibly get. l MI ferry on the 6V0 of the next, elec- tion. That would be n real vote catcher! " Prince Edward Island l! full 0! suckers. I thlrik we should _be nearly fed up on promises. Action t5 what we are looking for. 50 1N5 hope ti new car ferry wttl soon be underivnyILet. us hear something. am. Slr. m. PRINCE COUNTY VOTER. Summerside. P. E. I. RETURNI c. TO EXPORT Str--, In the course of the Guar- dian's edi-‘nrtal the other dRY Q" the possibilities and functions of a )‘Pf‘1‘ll.11l1l‘lIt,_FOO('l Council" fer the United Nations, and eventually for r111 mankind it is mzelv DOWWII w" that; "To raise nutrition standards viihere they are generally low, would mean n. greater demand on the countries proctuctng food surpluses. Arid efficient. agricultural produc- . lion should mean not only the “S! of necessary farm equipment. but the production of those things which a country can naturally pro- nuce best. Western Europe vflflflfif grow wheat ln competition with Catitida. the u. s. Auzeiittnn 0' Australia?’ 1 agree. I also have tin.- dfsttnct lmprtéfilon that. vtflule the Brit- is people, taecording to represen- tative men like O01. J. J. Ltewcltin. Britain's food fl-lttlstet‘, and Lord De La Warr, chairman of the AR- riculturiil Pat-arch Society in Brl- taim do not ititetirt to allow their agricultute to revert to its pre- To the Electors of Vliirtl 1p I have again nominated u a cenelldltakfozjifleleqtlon to the City Council as one of yoiirrepresihtatlvn. I have served on the Councll for thb put“ four years, and if you believe I can bro! any flit-titer eer- . vice, I wlllappreclate your support. - "r. A. "IIUTLER. .".§.EEEPJ.£LFX_?. w... —~w-__ Attention Swine Breeder; “'52. " ‘h’ '1'“ '° "w rte-worm ‘ l min "at... .: ti: Ztftfijmt- MAUS PIG - w TONIC mwnfl,“ FNVI l-hl lltlllh herd. P8118 35c p" ||;_ .__-__ AMMONIATED comobiigum“ To the Electors of Win14 At the. request of a number of citizen: I-IISVG nominated as a Candidate ln Ward Four at. the forthcoming Civic Election and hereby solicit your support. If elected I shall endeavor at all time: to serve tn the best. interests of the City and lnter~ pref your wishes at the Council Board. W. R. LEPAGE. n r11 Electors or time 4 Having nominated for Councillor for your ward in the forthcoming Civic Election I uln- cerely solicit your support. Anything for the benefit. 0f the City in gen- eral and Ward Four in particular will receive my complete attention. T. B. ROGERS. war statidartt tn their economy. neither do they propose to "lock out.“ higher quality wheat from ov- erseas figtds at, substantially tower prices than the hcmegrowti grain? They will get back tnto the more in- tensive and more profitable work along the, dtitryint: and tneat. fronts, and will doubtless be looking for, ivays rind means of towering the, heavy SUIJSICI)’ payments to the t".on.e farmers. which last year reached just. $800,000,060. We can help them (and oursetvesti by buy- ing falr tonnages of British goods The logical thing. of course. ls to get “world ivhcat" flowing ar- ound the seveii seas 1n the post war years, firstly on a food relief basis to the stricken peoples of Europe and clsewherc. and at the earliest 1iosstb1e date izet this vital traffic written into the food policies of the nzitions- BflCk tn 1926-29 this wlicatstreatn called for the move- mcnt nf 850 mttttoii Izustiets ann- uattt’. from where the grain was plentiful to ivherc it was scarce —— t". figure which the idiocy of "econ- omic riatioitatistti" had hammered down to 450 million bushels tn the last pro-war year! 'I‘hnt fact speaks for Itself? Under the second Intertiatlonal To the Electors of Want 4 I have again nominated as a. candidate for election to the Oity Council as one of the representatives of wlrd 4. a I have served on the Council for the past-eight. years, and if you believe I can be of any further service, I will appreciate your support. n. c. ouanntfnn. Z-S-Thurs-fil-Tues-Zt. Wheat Agreement, Canada's quota of world's takings of the breadgratti ha; been set at 40 percent, It. seems to mt- that. JflC}§_Q§1_1)_tl§l{__Sl10l1l(! be yzivint: lcadcrsttli; to the QTOWIIIK forces itfDtllifl the iiatlens, frivcrlnz the freeing nf this vital traffic from the tariff obstacles In the world's ports 0 1 nut. Sh". etc. n “FREEDOM FROM IVANT" stétidZéliffirgiiiiem Is Favoured imudoti Free Press) the agenda of the BrUcB y Council meeting 1n Walk- eirton is a proposal to revert f0 standard tune. a suggestion that will be echoed 1n every farm h tn Ontario. Daylight saving has been an LESHI‘ iii Wcstem Ontario centres for years, nlyvayg qnposcd iii the rural cmniuunittcs and ftnd- lug its sttibport. 1n the cities wherti the Ionizer evctilntts provided light for recreation. when daylight. sav- llifl W85 HIGH! IIYIIVOTSBV 95 R WEI‘- ttrne measure ft. was accepted M a menus of victory But recently there has been n ‘recurrence. of protest. War fiwturies have been ivorkiniz 24 hours a (‘la-v and there was little suvtiuz ln lighting power. As for private homes, 060316 had to rLse tn the dark amt they used as much llzht. as thev saved tn the evcntmzs. One utuise of daylstgtit: savtng which never fails to call forth the most intense ertttetsitn from wcmeti tn the coimfrv ls the problem of getting children b0 school. As ft ts now. small ch11- ctren go forth tn darkness to school 'I'hey walk from two w Kidney Acids gob Your Res ypooploncvu lnnlopllpol night’: rut. Tlily turn and ton —Ilo nuh 1nd count aliup. Often tho blame it ll "nuns" when il my be I i: lidno l. llulthy kidneys film poisons Inn I» blood. ll they an hull] and hi, phone my in the system and sluplumou, hul- ncho, lnchcln often follow If Fl In’! slap wall, lry Budd's Ki 0y Illa-Jot lulf a century the lnvonto randy. to) Budd's Kidney Pills How Your Eyes "2 In; 0r dlnlnen - noun! nozcllltlt Al nppolntentl. ti. F. llutclmon AND SON I. G. IIUTCIIESON G. l’. IIUTUIIEION four miles. old or to physical health. Ontarlo ls about 5 mintites ahead tlia_ IJIIIIIIIIZ TAIIDWIIIIII . s cannot ibl_ be atted conducive to beffigsgfltlcvflblfln Western reached n peak. and tines actually ' being reduced. f actual sunttme in any case, so t . wluéjlu-BHLE?“ ' w swell urn to standard time ON OUR RECORD OF THE PAST WE SERVICES AS COMMISSIONERS AND WATER SUPPLY OJKIEIIIIIIIIJ ln darkness iantt blttef almost 9o tnlnules luisait of time. wiui war production iisvtng t-hln match then.- tn imtrs with some together around the edges and from mtght be n good time now tn re- J. A. WEBSTER G. D. All! YOU ‘IROUBLED wrru LUMBAGQ on soar: BACK n1: two mics l“ Great Georg, Street, '““ °"'r:...‘;-.'.::=." M» Prnfessioifal 0am _________ McLeod £4 Bentley w. I. BENTLEY. r. c, l. A. BENTLEY. it. t; Bunlflen and Attorney“; . law t lllfrlnoo sum . M. ALBAN FARMER BABE S E , - ' anlllldnirlfni sgLéfihllfp Egl“ v NONI!’ T0 1.01m ———-——- L klllX w. MAIHIESU tlonl! ll lain (3 || Baggy-inn; soucrroii. m d2‘ %__ I 90 Great Georg; stmg , .vi.-s'-ms~vw-i.Z-L-i. . . éullfffllland company " n. r. AROIIIBALIIl Ohlrland Accountant; Illllfll Trill Bulldlul Charlottetown i t-- --—~ When dl-sti or hand towels wen "Sfttitlt ft corner u; comer. Reinforced thtn -Wn.v there's tots of 800d ctrrlnl stlll to be got from the thinnest towel; IIIIZWJOFIJYI‘ To the Citizens . of Charlottetown OFFER out’: or SEWERS WRIGHT W. D. GILLIS. TRADESMEN mechanics for essential war wor Marine Plpefltterl Sheet. Metal Workers Copper-smiths Marine Plumber! Mlrllll Electricians Rivitteru Bucket-a trade-Shipyard experience a decided not essential. -room and board reabonabli. AWANTED IMMEDIHTHY Firm located In Nova Scott: "tum the following Mlrlno Machinists [ham-n Boilermakers Applicants must In completely flintllnr with their Bachelor accommodltlonl available through employer Application will b0 uollhl hon the llllllllu Provinces. Apply to your nut-cut implant: III lolntlvn lei-vice Office. H Ida A_ I0. advantage-but “é