par"? not"; lk>q. .. CHAR LUTTETUWN GUARDIAN 1111111111,; Daily iFnunded ln I881) r11~-1111-111 L11-111. c111. w. Chester 5. MoLuro lit-e Frrslllclll; J. IL Burnett, $4.1 51111111111); 1.11-11t Col. l) A Maclhluwu. 0-5-0- 45131111 .11111 Alnrtugmg Director J IL Burnett. FJ-l. Ass-n-inte Ltlitors: l-ruuk walker 11nd [In A Bum"! :11 nSClllFflUN RATE! B1 111.111 111 121.1. $4.00 per yen: 82.50 lor 6 will“!!! 51.211 for 3 mouths; 60o for one month 1.1;» 111-1111-13 siuu per your; $8.00 for b month! $1,); 1111 3 months; 60o (or one Month. By Mull Lo other Pruvmccs and U. S. A. $5.00 In! yea-r 5.11m 11.1) 111-11113 aim pl‘! i337; 51-00 l"! 5 "Win55- 5111: for l munlbl T11; Cuarlout-tuuu 11111111115’: News Aut-m-y, uuarulau may b0 ubulnsd st Tunes Dunn". New Iorb1 Old Suulb News Agency, Corner nlllls and Wnehlniwl. 151111111111 .\11~11-111111l111111 hen Annoy, 1:0 Pool 08-. l\11111r1~.1|; 1| Finr, .451 lluy 51., Toronto; None din-d. 611111111111 | 111r w. 0111111111 slum‘; New! Gland. lsudbur! 1 11111. r111.1<-1-11 1-111111. 1111111111111 N. 5.1 ' “The 551111111111 Memory ls Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ 1111.17.11, APRIL :4, 11142. More C.N.R. Bureaucracy 1t i1 11-11 11:11 from authoritative sources that k is pm jgu-ilflun of the Canadian National Railway. 1.1 centralize at regional headquarters sll theItleduirseriieitt accounting offices over the ‘lll. The change will be put into i11 the Western Region, and will be effett 1e "KAT the entire system some time be- fore 1111 c1111 of the year. _ This 11x1 1111-1111 that the railway accounting office here. which ell1pl0_\'i six local official-‘n will i-e rrritisllmred to Moncton, with the like- 11111111 11f r:1- <11“ two of the staff being offered 1l'..\ 111mb, 111111 the remainder finding selu- ‘till of jolts altogether, '13,» ac1111111i11g office has been here ever “m, 9,11 Pviyicy l-Tdward Island Railway was in ‘ as»! i's transfer to Moncton is |r11111-1,.. _ ~ *1 \\lll certainly be strongly re- 51-11151 "we is already far too much control ore: file l.'.'1"~l iztition affairs of this Province _. headquarters. The conse- that our rights and require- ~r, npr very guarantee under i»: been frequently ignored. and federal representatives, Yfilllt and other organizations before this move goes through. protest vigorously against any ‘ 1111111 of railway departments this Province. "1 ‘~.- tiniiczl that some years ago the railwav \1~w1‘.3>11»§1s were taken sway on s sim- i - anti many local employees found ’1>i' the nccessity of selling their “g tn Moncton, or being out 0f vested .1: qucizce F mom'- 1- a it Con. 1‘ our l“ , 1.1;, ments at Ottawa seem to have :11 this kind of false economy—al- wt-I; of course. It is time that in this instance. which dcpcnrlcuce upon the va and Montreal. 51. Draft Law Stiffer ' 1 111' view of Cflllillllilll publicity .111» \\'l‘il(f> a \\':1sl1i11gto11 cor- _ the most interestnig angles , Ef- ;11_;1e<~111e11t between “lashington "111-1 111 ~‘1~ drafting of Canadians resid- ‘ :‘i‘ 1l Siam-s is the provision that - dtztftcd ivill be itiductcd i11 the ‘.11 '1 recruiting point situated in , . .This is done because F 11:1 ltzzfttwl l1ere under American laws t» one in the Canadian army might ' 1 as :1 civilian and then, as a Can- 111 soil. rcftise to serve except un- der Canadian ril-gtilatictns. At present, Canada Cxcfllpts c\'<'l‘_\'4..\ll€ from compulsory overseas service and ztriyrttit: over 30 from any military service \\ll1'll(‘\’t'l’ The American law Cxfilllltl: 1111 1111c from overseas service except those in poor health or with dependents. Under a bill now t1e11di11g in Congress even men of 45 with dependents will be drafted for overseas ser- vice. . 'l‘l111s the wide differences between Canadian and :\111c1'ican draft practice are point- ed up by official proclamation . . . A yes vote in the forthcoming plebiscite in Canada will do much to quiet much of the criticism arising from these diffr-rences. On the other hand, Canada comes in for some good publicity on the question of price and wage control - . . The story is cur- rent srottnd Washington this week-end that I. price and wage law based almost to the letter on the current Canadian law will be introduced into Congress and promptly passed . . The operation is expected to be completed within three weeks, following which I. visit by Can- tdafs Donald Gordon to America's Leon Hfld- arson will he in order. ‘llricei Ceiling Problems Canada Ind the United States are both en- desvoririg to fight wartime inflation by price fixing, but the methods employed are quite different. The Wartime Prices and Trade Board has given Canada an over-all, hard and fast 'ce ceiling which it is determined to maintain. The U. S. administration has been followinng the plan of frcczitlg prices on specific articles which show <i-r11.< 11f rising too high and too fast. Generally spP-lbiiiz. however, prices have been left uncontrolled and 11s s consequence the whole U. S. price structure is still rising, with emharras" '1‘ rosulls tn this country with its strict ptli of price control. Tito 01110111111111‘ of a differential between live- stock pric’: r111 (‘aiintlian and American mar- kt-t: llils (‘lTfllPll :1 ittajftr problem for the Price 3mm] :11 llilflllfll, (‘atinrlinn livestock prices are Ming 1]("1|'|'~K('tl l1v lht‘ retail price ceiling, where- as in H111 l'. $1 ll 1t only has there been n0 ceil- ing 1111 11-11-‘11- hut 1hr authoritics ltave been en- gnunggiiig lii-ghcr livcstrtrk tiriccs, The result has been that (':111:11li:111 farmcrs have been disre- ggrrlittf! lip‘ l1i1l- of hint-rs on the Toronto mar- lzttt 711'] sliippiitjl ll1~ if -l111‘l( I11 lht- Limited States. As [he qttntzt 1111 ‘"1: <li;111 mlllc eitlcring the Littitcrl Slfllt": i. _:11,11w1 . tl quarterly the move- ment of stock act/I ~ tlit linc 11:15 a substantial bearing on the domestic beef supplies. As a re- sult of this situation the Canadian Prices Board finds itself in a dilemma. Its policy is to main- tain ample supplies of the necessities of life but its price ceiling policy is operating to drive beef cattle to the foreign market. Lack of uniformity in anti-inflation procedure in the two countries has raised another problem for the Board which can be costly to this coun- try. The Trade Board has adopted a policy of paying subsidies on ticccssitcs of life to permit their continued sale under the price ceiling. This applies to imported goods and it can readily be seen that if the price of a U. S. article continues to rise, its importation into Canada at a higher price involves an increased subsidy payable by the Commodity Prices Stabilization Cor- poration to the importer. Though en over- all freezing of prices in the U. S. would not put an end to the payment of subsidies on im- ported goods, it would give the Stabilization Corporation protection against higher prices in that country- The foregoing are cited by the Monetary Times as evidence of the difficulties Canada is encountering as a result of the disparity in price control procedure in the two countries. Both Washington and Ottawa are awake to the pro- blem and there ere intimations that the policies will be brought into closer conformity. It is known that President Roosevelt is not satisfied with the progress being made in his country in the fight against inflation- He has intimated that new measures arc contemplated and if they prove to be along the lines of greater price c011- trol in the U. S. they xivill simplify the prob- lems of the Canadian Wartime Prices Board. EDITORIAL NOTES - Any one having a car in use will be doing a patriotic service by offering it to the Legion for conveying voters to the polls on Motttlzty. 11- 11- 11- 111 Parliament has recessed to permit members to visit their constituencies with the \'1<’\V 0f getting out the “yes" men and women. 111 111 >1- Youth leadership is sadly lacking hcrc at PFC‘ sent. Who is going to step into the breach if the oldsters do not come up’ tojhascratch? I It has come again. Two factoricsdlavc 110911 started in England l0 manufacture thnt stones to take the place of matches. 111 111 i l? Bear in mind, no employer can now employ male help between the ages of I7 and 45 tuilcss he has been rejected as medically unlit for the armed forces. u 1v 111 Prime Minister Mackenzie King announced that President Roosevelt hopes to visit Ottawa during the present session, and 111:1_v consent to address a joint session of the two llouscs. 111 111 That the new Minister of Justice _(Mr_ St. Laurent) has the courage of his convictions 1S evident from his broadcast on the plebiscite. whctt he told (Qucbcccrs to end lllcll‘ dream of a French state ivithin the bounds of America. s1 1v 111 1r The new train time table for ‘this proviuct‘ gocs into effect May 24, not April 26 as slfllcd in vcstcr<lay’s official notice from Mouctou. The former date applies to_t_he arraugetitciits in the other parts 0f the ‘MorlllmtiS- a 1r 111 111 The Maritime Conference of the United Church of Canada will meet at Sackville 011 lune 4 with Rcv. Dr. 1~Iugl1 hltller, presirhng- l\l':1t- tcrs to be discussed include settlement of 111111- isters, home and foreign mission w0rk,_evangel- ism and social service, Christian education and war service activities. Ill #101101 IIere is an official rctniudcr in the latest 0f- ficial summary of this country's part in air war- fare: “The commandos who raided the German radiolocator station at Bruneval, France, and the submarine nest at St. Nazaire were covered by a‘ protective umbrella of Canadiaut-tuaiincd planes. Canadian airmen nightly rain tons of bombs on industrial Germany. They have hit at Italy. By present-day standards the Air Force with which Canada entered the war was hope- lessly inadequate. Now it is one of the world's prime fighting machines and is sending men to every theatre of war in ‘staggering numbers. It is building up s broad defensive system st home." 11- 1s 111 1s Daniel Defoe‘, English author and pamphleteer, died this date 1731 ; a born controversalist, he wrote naturally and forcibly, his outstanding pamphlet being "The Shortest Way with Dissenters," for which he was convicted 0f seditious libel, fined, pilloried, and imprisoned; subsequently released he was sent to Scotland to promote the Union of Parliaments which was accomplished to s conside able extent by means of bribes end corruption; in 1719 he achieved popular success with “Robinson Crusoe,” a story still popular, depicting the actual experiences of Alexander Selkirk. He has to his credit other works of high literar quality, includinng "Journal of the Plague ear," a masterpiece of realism: “The art of war, which I take to be the high- est perfection of humpn ‘knowledgcf’ U I The first objective of Selective Conscription is to get for this year 300,000 persons for the armed forces, for the war industries and for the farms, and to see that the right people go to the right jobs. But it will be done in In orderly manner. lt must be achieved by preserving s balance be- tween the supply of manpower, the supply of raw materials and the productive capacity of in- dustry. Those are the salient points made by Mr. Elliott Little, director of the selective service scheme, in his illuminating talk to newspaper pub- lishers in Toronto. There was s disarming candor in his words. a desire to show all his cards, He took press and public into his confidence. He cautioned against expecting speedy action. “Let us be sensible about such matters," was his ad- vice. While compulsion will apply to men and boys it will not be felt by women. But "when women are needed l am sure," he declared, "they will be atixioits 1o help. The desire of nttr wo- men to serve and sacrifice is at least equal to that of our ntcn " THE “VCHARLUFTETOWN GUARDIAN o-QQQQQQQQQQ-Qo-QO-O-OQOQOQOOQOQ-OOOO-Q-QO-OO v HITLERZS’ “NEW ORDER” I11 Haul-Col. l. l. Thompson, 11.6., V. 0., Wu Common!!!" he The Canadian lulled notes 11v r11: 111111 Speaking at en alumni dinner recently, President Bowman of the Jenna l-lopklns Unlverslty sold that u. drop to titty, or perhaps to thirty, percent of’ present ens-ole- ment may be e l! the we! continues ltwo years longer. ‘Ihls would Involve, amonpnother things, a heavy reduction the lnccmo oil’ the university. This ble“m l e confronts every college n country, and lt. ls no tr%le, even prosperous to the riches! Baltimore sun. IIIIOII fill. - +o+++¢ (Cont-mood rrcm Wednesday) Denmark, once so peaceful and bu beep“ robbed of “Loni after I um under the sod 30000 t. or scattered to the {our winds"- Lhe words are the words of Mr. Pattullo, former premier of British Columbia, ln a letter 111 ‘ms 51m, They Indicate that "1'. D." hll not. qultc decided-which my he wants to be buried. We hope Duff will not. have to contemplate the matter for many s. long year. He 1s s grand old man, full of un- appropriated efficiency and ros- peotlve usefulness The en- oouve-r sun. The Canadian copper may have to do without tin. So long s5 it L1 lssued by the mlnt st Ottawa. end says "one cent" on ll some- where, most Cskuulluris supremely lncllflferen-t lo its 00m- posltlon. And that goes for nlekles dimes, quarters, half-dollars n1 dollars, too. - Edmonton Journal. Any kind of a warning about a possible shortage in sanctum; other of common use, at once caus- es s. public raid on_|t1ock.s ls has been war cxperzence to date but, it. worked ln reverse 1n recur to razor blades 1n the United States. The scare was soon oven bccause bi stores in the U 5A., by plaoa and otherwise, dared the passer-by to ocme ln and buy more blades. The reaction to that was a sales resistance which stem- med the tide 01f hoarding... The razor blade scare should be a les- son ln commonsense to every- bcdy. For current. needs everyone can get the necessary things and s. good nmuy luxuries. ‘Hie boarder is a. public enemy, in the words of Dona1d Gordon of Ottawa. — St. Cathaxiues Standard. Once more a great. crisis has rc- vcaleu oelecas m llle administra- tive machinery of the Elmplre. With not less spontaneity than ln August, 1914, did the whole Ekn- plre leap to arms in September, 1939 Canada and Ncwfound1and— not. yet direclly tlueatened— have made splendid contribution: in men, money, munituons and sup- plies to the common effort; South African forces have fought side by side with HOG-pg from the home- land and other parts of the Ekn- pine in Africa; while Australia and New Zealaxid, with no thou m. whatever of danger threaten n3 their own shores, have made superb contributions to the forces of the Elm-plre operating in Africa and ln the Near and Middle East... As a people uc mistt-ust machinery; we have relied hitherto with an as- tonishing measure of success upon improvisation. For the moment lm- provisation has manifestly failed. It 1.5. then. imperative that we should at, once reestablish an Im- perial Executive. But the warning uttered in 1917 ls, I submit, stlll pcrtment. Ultimately an Imperial Executive can wcrk only if ll. Ls re- sponsible to 1m Imperial lature competent to impose taxa- tion for Imrpcrlsl defence. - slr Jchn Marriott ln The Nineteenth Century (Londoim. Pity the poor, pool‘ Japanese. They need living rozm so badly in their overcrowded country, where 405 tplcrsons llve per square mile, that ey are trying to move into Java, where there are only 821 persons a square mlle -Mir1ne- apolis "rlmcs. As has been observed before ln lhcse columns, the art and science of advertlslng ls con- cerned with more than the present moment; it locks to the future. '1t11s has been well illustrated ln Great Britain, where war short- ages and industrial transforma- tions have made it. virtually 11n- possible for some business houses to continue their established lines cf manufacture. But ln many cases it ls these very flzms which are maintaining their publicity schedules. advertising goods they cannot supply They are keeping their names before the ptubllc and constantly reminding cus- tomers that the day will come when the ‘old familiar products wlll be available again. - Brant.- ford Elcpositor. We do not know how much lub- stanoe there ls behind the report ln “The Dally Herald" of lnndon that. the Brltlm government ls con- sldeflnx a Plan to sblolsh the hereditary House 11: 1111111 11111 substitute for it a ‘brain trust’ chamber chosen on e represenlallvq basis. ' But the idea is appealing- not. because there ls any 12ml 1111111 ln lCl lnttcrcetlng and colorful sur- vivll. but because the notion of e ‘British "Poor house oomoosed of mcmlbefs selected for their 1n- tellects ls so purely GllberLlan. $11191! Strephon. the Arcadian she herd of Iolsnthe." of. the sug- ges ion of the Pelt-y Queen, W111 m- troduoe s blll provldlnsr that "5 Duke's exalted station" Be attain 9-bit! by Competitive Examination! And ll may be confidently ex- peeled that Lord Mounlnrarat will T160 lmvns the peers of the realm f" "mlfk! "I don't went to sav l WM initial brains-I've e greet mpeet for mun-r oflgn v1.11 1 had some myselil ._ bug House of Peers composed 11:11’ of pea-rm of 1111111111111 egchlué- become otf the House of a o 7'01‘ WW" natursllv be bynlhe r1111 house shouting .. Our lcridly style you shall not quench," offer which m, session would b- QGlOIIITOC with lmfilflllfhw of "Bow. bow. ve lower middle cltuses." w-i‘h "nlentv of gill?” lpzoérlke!" fin-I} "T"Y‘ftlflknfarll aid-Tribune. W °r 3"’ WII lf ’ P 1 We re going to do It. let's d0 ll- TlRhl we've got. 1o 51,"; 11 nlebtrclte now. lel-‘a 1111 11, wm, heads 111:1 and make ll, poslllvg No mom doubts. no more hesllsncv. no more nolltles. It's 11111111111115. we 11nd. Mutual eonngmcq wp" lhmirht 11 lot about. this leblscltc. 11nd to some of us ft 111-41111 make sens» _. ‘m w, "ya" lbw," 7"“"'"l Y" mater national -‘~¢verr1ev1l_ than It’; "-1 m u; We'll l“ Cmadlsns. not 1-1111-11111111- WWII forget our own view; mg rrlPclms. We'll start ell 11v"- nealn Amd nerhaoq the sl-renem of reervle wW-v on g-v-mg, naval- "arllsan and racial dlffovienms 0f twnlon. Wlll b- 1111 11-1-1111‘ 1M1 car-We- Terriers Mr alotw. fha rmvl to PTHIHW" Town w," ,11.m1-1d< Rrcalncss ln 111-4313" And 1n a PQCDIe too. 0. K., Mlsler - we'll m‘ where, German lug-holidays" ln 40,000 Danlsb workers have n tsloen to Germany for towed lab- our, but o! these at but 1.000 bevs been put ln prison for sabo- tage. Dmes are n y contem- lnstlng food intended for German consumption and buruln houses. In Copenhagen e celved 30 days’ having "spat offe e before n German mllltlry cu. Dutch and Bslglan canals, German sold- lers have been “found drowned" Danlsh harbours. For the greater part, however, the Danes remain sullenly quiet; but vrslt. Holland Holland, once happy end eon- tented, ls now s1 land of scarcity. In her flrst week under the "New Order" Germany stole ulna-tenths of her butter-stock. Hen, as else- selzed woollen and fur goods. lea. r, coal and inso- llne. Dutch rolling stock, baries and 1n tucks sold for l0 francs tn the markets. and par and outbid. Clvl cm ed cent. and d cos German PW been closed. Poasesslon of srms untenable 1n De workers 20 Belgians were shot for destroy- lnv l1 mill mpply train by flre. M v ab: the l urry l 1 tn ns c Be 8131! 110814888! l0 be shot st one wnen sabotage occurs. Al: least one mu- nltlona factory ln Antwerp was cle- 8 y I-‘l. A. I". bom ‘ its workers llt lt up at. the rl ht moment. lbtecutlons continue, ut the mslstance of the Belgian peo- ple remains unshsken. Franco France fed herself befsrs the “New Order" came to her. Today Frlnoe ll short of food. fuel, medl- dc ed meet ls mush‘ hos ltsls are with hunger-v cums who mo. at m dle. Tbs output o! tron be? by death. ‘rhea-e are 5i tl-Nul papers publlabed secretly B0 um. prison and the gallows. eve sabotaged several =1- wsre- ectrle utlllly and metal plants so no re- eumpletely that the German; have lxrgprlslpnmetnt for abandoned them. On one occasion v .. As 1n vlllsns must guard the even fire engines have been stolen. cine and clothluu because Germany Over 100,000 Hollanders have been has robbed her. Of the supplies taken for forced labour. Professors. which the Brltlsh Navy allows V: lawyers and Journalists have been be landed ln French Mediterranean flung lnto prison camps where many port-s. three-quarters go to Germany have perished. Lcyden and Delft and Italy. Germany has taken over $860,000,000 worth o! rolling stock Universities have been closed. my- den ls to become s. Nan “nets-folk- lsh" university. On one occasion 680 youn were rounded up in Amstc the Nazis. The Dutch rose from French railways. Alsace-tannins ell In Roman Jews Catholic semlnarles and organiza- am by tlons have been broken up, and all and children over l0 years of age mus: fought the Nazis ln the streets, many Joln the "Hltler Youth." In Hocu- belng kllled. Blots and strikes felden, Alsace, because of demon~ spread to other cities. These were stratlons on France's national holl- surpressed 1n the Germans’ usual clay, 160 young men were arrested bloody fashion and enormous fines at random and sent to prison camp. were imposed. The richer people 0f At 191150350 patriots have been ox- Amsterdam alone bad to pay 39,- ecutcd ln France slnce the occupa- 000000. months over 400 were dead. Netherlanders are executed for assisting British airmen b0 escape. A Netherlander can now get years ln prison and an unlimited fine for displaylnz the colours or . ‘llc 680 young men were tlon. The Germans now have a pool sent to work in mines. Within nine of hostages ln Paris formed bv the arrest of Frenchmen found ln its streets after curfew. French rsllwaymen were shot of some high explosives German ammunition alg. At uuelip o . l5 lowing the unsolved disappearance from x lnslgnla of the Royal House of Frenchman getting on 11 suburban Orange. ‘Ihe Dutch reply with sa- train ln Paris in a crush knocked botage. In the wreck of one Gcnmu a German officer quite accidental- troop train 50 officers and men ly_ He was arrested and exccired were casualties. ‘The Germans have next, morning. Yet. despite execu- French and many passive resistance continues. some shot. trucks from French factories sznash 'Il"e G31"- at ln France during 1.800 trucks loaded wlth war material 51nd es- In snlte of Vlchy's lies msllgnlng Brit.- Belgium ls the most densely pop- ain, over 90 per cent of the French people are longing for the landing arrested hostages for she safety of their communications Dutch patriots have been Dubai “Nazls" have been found hanged to trees ln parks. True to her ancient character. Holland will never give in. but. also walls. Belgium ulated country in Europe and htu a German army to feed, yet Ger- many robs her of food. Rats are u ‘j . g WORDS ()F ‘flet us, remembe 111; the prace that some have paid for our survival. make our own contribution worthy de theirs upon the altar of mans faith.” Franklin D. . Roosevelt, President of the l ‘H A LLENG F i if besi to lle l1 g9, Nnimd states. TANKER Up from Trlxildsd, up from the <3 . Wallowliig north through the p“ ream- Up through the lslr of the under- se w ; And 11's“ "Sub on the starboard beam." Man the four-lncher, train her o d. Take sflrmuialt the flash of their are. But the 1111-11111 bits with a blue o sound "And your ship ls o. funeral pyre. Listen! ‘Iéhe siren. They've tled the cor It's the sl s11 “Abandon Shlp." Now ulck Get. t-hc lifeboat; over- And it's desith lf you make s. slip. Glve way on the oars. Make the water boll. For all of you know too well How e Lbmus-ud tons of burnlng all Cm llvo you u rentals of Hell. Comes dawn: then the sky ls white- hot brass And Death Ls our 11111111111114 by noon- But. you find u the long-drawn ‘that the fortunsto ones die soon. Yes, it's the fortunate ones dle first. And you sit here and watch them Tlll on‘? by one you |o mad with s Wbllouggesberks llo ln wellhe- And stlll there are fools who drive l haste Who hiaive nevbr understood That evepy drop of the gas they was Is stained ‘by s sailor's blood, —John laklergn géoronto Saturday make ll "Yes!" - Saint John Telegraph Journal. "uncut? All TIIE TIME i tlons, fines and starvation, after very little usage. mans admit th October and December. 1941. 30 ammunition dumps were troyed. and 184 trains derailed of a British army. (To be continued.) (Moncton Transcript) With each war, Canadian govern- ments learn something more con- roblems of providing land for discharged soldiers. Once apaln s. plan for post-war settlement o men ol.’ the flghtlmz forces is ' being prepared and the cernlng the nounced ln Psrll earlier admlnlstratl AI ter the Boer War, land grants of 160 acres ln western Canada were ofiered to all who served. Some took advantage of the offer and occupied their quarter sections. The majorly sold the scripts which were lssutd to them for small sums, and land lsficulawrs were the chief benefic- es A more careful scheme of land settlement was put into effect alter the First German War. but these were they see fsnns at highly lnflated at the end of the war. Althouzh some sd- justments were made, the weight of for many of clally for those who ln l’. Under the plan announced last Pensions the Government. will assume part of l. land. whlc will who took advantage of lt. handicapped by the fact that undertook to purch ees based on the standards whlch prevailed debt proved too much the men, es lacked mnln suff clent, experience night by the Mlnlstcr o! he cost. of the make the burden on the prospective is ls a feature which must be carefully watched. farmer easier. FarmT-For VEtet-ans details sn- ament. yesterday show that the present government has profited by the experience of om. h W 1 Ill d 00 h lh 113113111’. 111111155 11.11‘2'1‘1’1"1$1‘1‘11§111§i§ by the scheme. P undoubtedly will be vent abuses. T!!! Better 11111111 Yields new 11111111111111 causes Kllls certain Smut: and other seed-borne diseases by both Contact and Vapor- lrnproves yields of when, Oats. Barley, Rye and I1: 1 lb. tln l 0 WAY TO NEW IMPROVED SEMEHAN BIL Dl Page dln treatment that ell-nln-tss Islmur and loss of ll-m, l lb. tln--—-—--—I2.l5 FOIIMALIN SDIUT 0N GRAIN A cheap but fecllvo rented Gruln growers would be who h not promptly In order lo hove and properly kQlgfl before so . Full directions every order. Prlos TllE TWO MAGS l" (ll-Q! George Sh"!!! Moll Ordgpunlzllpin Prompt ven wllh roper safeguards provided to pre- Usunlly i dlsl Ieotutt I Seed tumult ls s qufdk, any ‘i thoroughly ef- 7- ._ ;. per plnl. p; _ A APRHLQ; 1 To the Electorate 11f 01111111111111, ~ I most earnestly request that all clllzeng of Charlottetown vote “YES” in the forth. coming PLEBISCITE, thereby releasing the Dominion Government from any pledges which might hamper it lu the all- out prosecution of our WAR EFFORT. B. R. HOLMAN, Mayor. AIPENINEB IN SKY (HOSE-UP 01" SUN ‘more’: e celestial lunar ‘ rmat- Seen through a blg lJBlESCOpQ , lon as well as terrestlal mountains sun presents a1 pnottled flppgg called the Appennlnes. on a darklsh background, To the Electors of King's- A Kings County is a small constituency but it ls ths percentage of “Yes" votes that will count for or against us when the ballots are counted. 1 Every “Yes” vote is a nail in Hitler's colfin and no one can drive home your nail but yourself, by going to the poll on plebiscite day and marking your cross after the word “Yes” on the ballot». Kings County must not. fail. The polls close at 8 p. m. DI. T. V. GIANT Iederal Representative DR. A. A. MCDONALD Ibderal Candidate Highways Closed To Motor Vehicles Commencing March 30th, 1942, and until furlh notice all highways ln this Province are closed for mob vehicle traffic, except in such cases where the total weigh of vehicle and load does not exceed 5,000 pounds. Anyone driving on provincial highways contrary lo 1 order shall be dully prosecuted. Dated the 27th day of March, A. D 1942. By order, 0. W. CAMPBELL, Acting Clerk of the Executive Conn 1 i1 — ANNOUNCING - NEW EXIDE MINUTE MAN BATTERY 0111112111111 AND rusrsa Fast re-charging in the car while you wait No Rentals No Return Trip No inconvenience Mallett’: Battery Service __ Q1118» 4i! Sea-Power Will Win And tn its modest field our tobacco has ma"! wins to its credit. Every Island community h" ll.s "quota of people who use Hickeyb Black Twist MAN UFACTURED BY HICKEY t? NICHOLSON Tobacco 0o. l.t1|. llharlottetown