Ik \ |~v- |}(‘lIR _,_ THE CIIARLOTIETOWN_ GUARQI_AN_,__________ F rut“ I crustal-with...“ autumn: hluflllllfl Dally tl-‘uunded tn I881) Prrnlllrrlll Lu-ut. 1'»! W, (‘honor I. llrL-Io n» Pvmimrlll- J It. Burnt-ll. l-‘..|.I. fivrrn-lurvi Lit-tit rm. n A hlm-Rhinitis "l0- l-lilvl-ir nn-l JIIIIIIIKIIII lIIro-vlnr, J B Burnett. ELI. lllorllllv mm... Frnlllt walk-r. nml I- vl- III l- "IIfrP", nus \ u. IIIII Avtlu llorvlrel aunt-murmurs mvrlcn In P_ It |., sum n" 7N": HM lnr I month! v.25 rnr 3 vnnnlhn: tim- for one IIIIIIIIII min-r, swam n" vrnrr IIIM rm- 0 mnnthl $1.75 Inr s mnnlhl: flflr Inr om- mnnth to other Wren-men nmI (MIA. $5.00 P" V"? £200 m-r yrnr: lmo Inr 6 month- Mln Im- 8 month: By llnll (‘Hy Ry Mull Infurdn! Weekly: fluarfllnn ml! I" I'M-In“. ‘I Tlmn lnuln. New Vnrlu (‘orner bllllt nmI Wlnhlllllon 124K PHI II. Tho (‘linrlultwtnwn Ilnlolllng‘: Niswn Aienry, OIrI litutlll News Altvnr-y, llllllnn: M!‘ llpullflln New! flllhlllrl-IIIX J, l-lne X51 Newl NIIIIII (‘hula-nu llnnrlrr. (Htunu; News lltlml lull- bury, 0nl,; Iliitu Fulani-en Slum, Alon uu. NIL "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest !nk." SAT IJRDAY, FEBRUARY 6th Cooperation Of Churches A statement oi Christian Belief, signed by the Archbishop of Caittcrbtiryi and the Rev. Dr. _l S. \\h.ilc_ llotlcrittoi" of the Free Church Fed- t-rztl Cotnictl in England has been issued. In a prcfzice thc signatories say that there are now many iicltls in which the Christians of different tlCllflllllllflllfillS are co-operating, and that the question is fvcqitcittly asked whether tltcrc is any statcmctit, to which inquirers can be referred, of the basis on which this co-op- eration takes place. The statement itsclf begins by asserting that it i.- gcticrztlly acknowledged that there is among our pcOplC widespread ignorance of what the Christian Faith is and failure to see it as an in- telligible and coherent view of life. There is also a weakening of the specifically religious sense, with consequent neglect of worship and prayer. llcsidcs this there are grave indica- IlOllS of decay with regard to some elementary moral standards, such as t ose of honesty. Christians find in the whole Bible an interpreta- tion of the world and its history which they try to ivork ottt both in thought and in conduct. \\'itli this bacltgrotnid the signatories pro- ceed to offer an indication of what they are agreed in believing may be put forward as the basis of Christian cooperation in a variety of fields. The following is a brief summary :— \\'e IScIicve— - "That the world exists by the righteous will of the living God; that he is the one creator and ruler of all things; that this present world is the sphere in which his eternal purpose of love is being wrought out; that he makes men free personal beings able to choose good or evil. “That God took hold of human history and individual human lives in a new‘ way in the great act of the Incarnation; that the birth arid life, the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ is nothing less than God's own redeeming pres- ence and purpose actively manifested in his- turic times; that God set his seal upon this life and death of pcrfcct obedience and perfect love by raising jcsus Christ from the dead, establish- ing within the corporate life of sinful human- ity a creative centre of righteousness, and mak- ing altogether new spiritual possibilities for men living in this world, "'I'hat tiod by his holy Spirit makes the re- deeming work of Christ available to all men; this present world, in spite of all its evil, is nevertheless a redeemed order, and man's high- est life both hcrc and hereafter lies in the re- (.l(‘£‘lll€(l socictv whose life is even now ‘hid with Christ in Godf "That the Kingdom of Heaven which Christ proclaimed and eiriboclied will be known in its perfection only in the eternal life of which our life here is a preparatory portion but that it is our duty to live here and now as citizens of that kingdom." A Friend In Need Indeed \\'li:tt would the financial war efforts be without the aid of the Press? livcryonc who has 11nd anvthitig to do with raising public funds realize» that tlic burden bearer of'tlicse cam- paigns is the newspzipcr, and to a vcry large cx- ttnt titt- d.'iil_v ncivsiiztpta: lt enters the home lL'_‘;lliJll'l_\_ l\ thtsrc lu bt- rcad at any time, and to br trcztsitrctl t-spccizilly- when it contains any- thing iii domestic llll(‘l'L‘$I. Thc Montreal ti:i/.tiii~ b.-i.< lllls to sav about the stibjcct: “llort- than onci" lhc conlributioti made by (fznizidrziii nt-iispzipcrs ti» the sticccss of Victory l.llllll>. and to w:n' iinztncc canrpaigtis general- ly. has bt-t-n ack-nnw-lctlgcd by Ifinance Minis- tcr Ilall‘_\', lt |n:t_v not bt- uttt of place now to discuss brivily thti scopc and character of that r-intrihtttiini, p.'irticttlzirl_v ilttritig I042. News- ltltlittrs did their part in the (irczit “far 1914-13 and in the lllnl two years of that conflict were of tlircvt aid to thc thcn government in bring- ing the iitituiciul i"<'~i|itrct's of the people to bear upi-n 1hr ronilirt. \\'ilh that history in mind, and hminj; ri-gtird In thc grcutcr financial task to bt- ilnttc in this ivtir, the Latiadinii Daily .\'<:\\'~p;|)>t't\' .\s~oci;ilioit stiggcslctl a similar bt‘l'\li't‘ and, itpnn the l't‘I|llC.*<t of liitiaticc Miti- i-tcr Il~1t_v_ procvwlcil to rctidcr it ‘upon an 0r- gtiuizt-il Ira-is. 'l'h<~ (Einailiati Publishers War l"in.'mct- (‘onnnittvtu a llllllfillltl body, was form- ed. lt \\'il\ >]W~ll~t)l'C<l by the Canadian Daily Ntwvspipt-rs‘ Association, tlic Canadian Nat- ional Newspapers and Periodicals’ Association and tht- (fzinzidizin \\'cckly Newspapers’ As- sociation, with non-zissociatioti publications and 1l'l\'('l‘ll.~'lllj_' :t;_'t'iit'i<'s ctr-operating. "Tltr- ("iimmittvc completed I\VO'_VEZII'S of op- eratinn :.t tln~ t-nd of November I942. During tho-v two ycltrs it did much to bring home in thr- pt-nplt- of tizitiadzt lhroitgh ncwspapcr col- lllllll- the llltflfllfl‘ of lllt‘ fiovcrttnicitlYs war fin- nniw lll..'l~lll‘l‘\. lt ilircctcd itcwspapcradvcrtis- in; and publicity. particularly in regard to the Ilflillllltll nf war loans, the sale of war savings i-i»i~tit'it.i|<--_ (‘HllVUlllIll of the Ifl(‘0lll(' tax and so on. 'l'i.it its work was fruitful, vcry sub- sllillli-‘tllv w. i~ uttvstt-il in the largely increas- Irl slit-wit given to Victory Loans and to other 1i war measures, the increases in the amounts sub- scribed and in the number of subscribers. The 2,o4i,6io citizens who purchased third Victory Loan Bonds represented 5.3 of the total popula- tioii of Canada or not far from the average of one subscriber for each family unit. Organ- ized newspaper support helped to bring this about, backing the great efforts of the Nat- ional War Finance Committee headed by George \V. Spinney, President of the Bank of Moh- has been recognized everywhere,in Canada. “The newspapers of the Dominion, through the Canadian Publishers‘ War Finance Com- inittcc, are preparing and will be ready to ren- der the same high standard of service to the nation iifsupportitig public war. finance meas- ures lltis year as they did in I942 and 194i. The Government will be making new demands, must do so, so long as the war continues. It will mean new Victory Loans and the con- tinued purchase of war savings certificates and stamps. It will mean also a strong effort to impress upon Victory bond holders the import- ance of holding what they have, of persuading owners of war savings certificates to refrain from cashing them. There is much to be clone, a great national enterprise to be promoted. The newspapers will continue to do their part to the limit of their capacity." Soviet Russia In Maps Under the above title a most timely and in- formative atlas has been published by Messrs. George Philip and Son, Ltd., London, England, a long-established firm of map makers whose latest production is certainly a masterpiece of its kind. It runs to over thirty pages, illustrat- ing not only the present day geography, econo- mic resources and development of the U.S.S.R. but also the origins and historical growth of Russia from the igth century down. The plan of the atlas provides two coloured maps for each aspect of Soviet eography dealt with, one of the whole Union and facing it one of European Russia on a. larger- scale. Special attention is given to showing industrial resources and de- velopment. While the events of the war are not touched upon directly, every page has a bearing on the epic struggle now in progress. The maps are accompanied by explanatory text commenting on the salient features of each, and on special aspects peculiar to Soviet life, such as the collective farm, state planning and so on. This excellent publication is priced at two shillings sixpence in England. The firm’s Cali- ad/ian agents are Moyer School Supplies, Ltd., 106-108 York Street, Toronto, to whom in- quizies should be addressed. For all to whom a work of this kind has any special interest or value, it cannot be recommended too highly. - EDITORIAL NOIIIS - Thc thaw, probably the delayed January thaw, has caught us unawares, to judge by the condi- tion of the footpaths and crossings. v a a- s There is a whole host of Islanders located in Montreal these days. At one popular resort no fewer than 400 of them meet weekly to "trip the light fantastic toe." ti 4- 4- Toniorrow is Charles Dickens’ birthday, and how up-to-the-tninitte he is will be appreciated by his advice in "Oliver Twist" who “asked for more"; “Subdue your appetites, my clears, and you've conquered human natur’." i it i i i “Goodwill cannot be laid away in moth balls," Mr. T_ Harry Thotnpson, of the Gray and Rogers advertising agency, Philadelphia, told members of the Inter-state Advertising Manag- ers Association, "It is just like the liberty we once had to fight for and now find that we must fight for all over again. That is exactly what is going to happen to the merchant or manu- facturer who allow his service or his product to be erased from tie minds of his patrons. He will be forced to fight all over again for the place he had HIIBIILPII I){‘f'>l'(' the ivar." v a a It is now revealed that the Press were in- formed in advance of the historic conference at Casablanca where the Prime Minister and Pre- sident tnct in a villa in the residential section. The meeting place itself was protected by arui- ed guards patroliiig a barbed wire obstruction and the President was guarded by his own bodyguard, armed with Tommy guns, and two companies of troops. That was how thorough were the precautions taken. The precautions were evident from the time of arrival of Press correspondents. There was an unusual num- ber of 'planes of all types scattered about at almost every airport. Airport guards were in- creased and many officcrs, who usually wcnt tinarnicd, were carrying sidcarins. New anti- aircraft batteries dotted the landscape at strate- gic points — informants said Casablanca had I been thoroughly fortified against air attacks- and at flight officers went on guard duty with Tommy guns. Nothing was left to chance. No fewer than 70,000 words of the conference were despatched bv 20 correspondents v u m iv Anne, Queen of Green Britain and Ireland, born this date, I665; second daughter of James lI by Anne Hyde; married Prince George of Dcntnark by whom she had seven children, only one of whom survived infancy and he died at the age of eleven; she succeeded to the throne in i702, which cgan a period of great ex- pansion of Britain's power and influence; lllarlborouglfs great victories of Blenheim. Raiiiillies, Ondenarde. Malplaquet, the capture of Gibraltar, and the union of Scotland with England were outstanding events; her later years saw political trouble over the succession. The Tories, under Harley, Earl of Oxford, wanted the restoration of the jacobites, but their plans were frustrated by the death of the Queen and the intervention of the Whig lords who successfully carried on a campaign for the sQICCIIOII of the German Elector of l-latiovcr. who succccdcd as George I, though llc was never able during his life-time to speak or un- derstand Iinglish except through an interpreter; Anne's reign witnessed a great spiritual revival and much political and intellectual activity; her- trcal. a committee whose remarkable efficiency m; llotos By The Way An Italian oflleen’ handbook} plcked up by the French ln North Afrlca. contained this detall on the toclmlque of surrender: "Instruct. the men to unload that: rlfleu, place o place of whlte material on top of l rifle and hold up thelr bands. At the next conference of the It- allan and~Germaii high commands, the Itnllans might. pass along the -Brantlord lhtposltnr. Present lndlcntlons seem to war-l rant more research ln the fleld of, rarer metals such as lltlilum and beryllium. Deposits of both these metals have been located ln South- eastern Manltoba: Exploration and research mlght well be pushed at thla tlme to determine theli- commercial pcsilbllltles. The value of these mate's to the war effort can be readily seen. Llthlum ls the light- est of all metals, so llglit ln fact that It wlll float ln water. Berylllliim Ls the metal that when alloyed with copper impart‘ the characterlstlcof "tlielessneas." Bnrlnxs contfllnln! 1i ornutlon. out showing signs of Winnipeg Tribune. 1 When farmer: are helnl WIMP from every polnt of the compass to raise more produce so that people wlll have lots of food how would lt be ll’ city and wwn people raised" some themselves bv starting this- sprlng to cultivate home gardens. u was done during the first World War? Nothing like havln! thins! I0 at right ln your back yard or In‘ a plot not too fin- away. -—KIIIQSCDX‘I; Whig-Standard. For some unexplained reason there have been suggestions that the Ruml Plan might be adopted ln part. to apply to the smaller incomes. There ls nothing tn be Alld 1n favor of thls and much to be sald egalnst lt. Such ii plan l5 best adopter} ln its entirety or not at all. The notion of squeezing an extra months‘ taxes out of the well-to-do may appeal m peopie of vindictive nature but lt wlll not gain general support. l! the burden of back taxes ls to be wh removed from the country, let. evbry- one share ln the benefit, and leave the flnal plratlcal raid on the estate of the wealthy corpse to the admln- latmtors of the death duties. Peberborough Examiner. Foreign trade and Chlnele In- dustry throve In the shadow (of extmterrltorlallty) It was the re- fuge of much honest Chinese wealth! In times of stress; and scores of able clilnese of international re- nown are alive today because they found sanctuary ln the concession from great rogues ln power. But the great rogues and their loot found snnctuaury there. loo, when their tum came to run for cover. Every criminal orsbnlzatlon ln China had lts headquarter; under a forelgn flag. From sanctuarles under armed guard the Italian authorltles neddlecl arms to any and all dlsturbers of the peace. and the Japanese authorl- ties patronized the nation-wide dls- tributlon of dope. The power of the most consclentlou (xclderital au- tholtles to patrol thelr little Im- perlallsms so that they would not be e. menace to chlnirs peace, or to protect the hordes that packed lnto them when bandit satrans were on the rampage, never caught up with their responsibilities. —New York Hemld- ‘Irlbumnlb My next-door neighbor whose hus- band's business takes hlm frequent- ly to Manchester, has been telling me how one North-Country hoteller ls aolvlntt the problem 01’ staff and llltpply shortages. "My husband puts up at a hotel" said my neighbor, "where the week-end residents have breakfast ln bed on Sunday morn- lng. This arrangement naturally de- lights them, but It also saves light heat and service ln the dinlniz- room lounge and writing room. “By a gentleman's agreement between management and guests. each resld- ent on -Sunday makes his bed and generally tldles up hls own room. "My husband's becoming uulte a gonrl housemald, added inv neighbor. with a f/wlnlrle. Needless to say. the nro- prletor who thnufl-it out thls utility guest -d1eme ls a woman. -Sunder- land Echo C may be flexed- mllllons of times WIl-Il- 1m" “ I "’“'“"’°' ‘mm’ m‘ m" fatigue. — | h Mind written hlm n letter Knowledge, ant to when I met bka. l PUBLIC FORUM Imam-mutual! IIDDIBN POITI-Y sti- 1 lo ed din: the ,— en y m , lo on modern Onnndlnn No doubt It wo‘ " l Te h ". 0d w u rend more of hll be lnterutlns’ to own verse "Pine DUI I hlbltlon" ls certainly true to . wdlan llfe ls we knew. ll a I" years ago. Dltfefespplt zugroungnlb carhlnlv r a eien p00 . c i remember reading a few yenrl no a poem by an Australlon author whlch I thought was also true In llfe as he knew It. I have for!“- ten his name and also most of the poem. Perlmpa "Old Teamer" or ~ some render can supply lt. Tho first verse, and a few lus Clancy of the Overflow lcli 1 had, for went of but“! And I sent a letter to hlm Just] on speck. addressed lg fol- owl- "cinncy of the Overflow." And an answer came dlrectee In a letter unemeded which I think the Ill-Ill! was wrlt- ten Wlth a thumbnail dipped ln for. hls shearing mate who wrote t. And verbatim I wlll quote lt. "Clancy's gone to Queensland dro rig And we don't know where he are." In my wlld lrratlc fanc I sometimes tfilnk Yd unite with G Cancy. m‘ one a. dmv down the Cooper ere the seasons come and go, While I faoe the round eternal Of the cash book and the Journal But I doubt he'd stilt the office. Clancy of the Overflow. 1 mi, sir, em, AN OLD IOIOLAI. —----_____ TAKING TIME BY T!!! I0!!- IDCK Slr.—A clarion call out for more and for Britain during 1943, In g m. cent radio Farm Broadcast Mr. Schultz who runs a 25,000 lien plant ln Ontarlo said that commercial poultry plants had been operat M cwtwlt/y for the pm three or four years and any expansion must come from the farm flock {ship-ll puts the mile squarely up Of course we mull: ireet lt and right now whlle the blizzard: are howling round us Ls the time to beam-Oh. no. not to 8 art-listen- lng our chickens. but to carefully prepare our plans. A first consideration ll how much accouunodntlon have we and what additional accommodation can we provide? Ia there a dls- used building which can be con- verted or a fox pen which would be euteellent as a range house? Right now, we can talk lt 1th the f‘ h still mfidre ‘$25 ltu left untll the sprln rush we shall not be able to ge the work done. From 300 to 400 chickens pre- ferably 400 ls a very economical flock-a flve hundred chlck brood- er will provlde the heat and the fuel expense ls low per chlck when this number la raised. A house 12' x 14’ wlll take care of this number while heat ls necessary but lt ls surprlslng how soon they will outgrow lt. Additional housing must bevpro- vlded as nothing lowers the tal- lty of a flock as much as over- crowding and poor ventilation. And do see that bulldlngs are rat proof or ulas for our poor efforts! A house rnlsed eight or ten Inches from the ground by sllls or posts elitnlnates the danger from this source. Having decided the number 0f Rallwaymcn threatened to strike because of n Cllfillqf‘ ln the system‘ b‘! wlfch mcn were sent around lo, wake them up By the way, who. nerrforms lhls service for Cabinet Ministers at Ottoman-Toronto Tele. gram l Those students ivlxo lviw- recently been p‘ou""liccl at universities rire" merely vizrtlivs n! lhe llmc How coud the raor ft-Vow- bitrrv ‘be ‘It'd-l ,nl"'**. nll ""is'"i there ‘z i-w lltlfe rill- lo be h"d?-'T‘oz'ontn Fiar. ‘ l 'l"lr:r has l" ‘Wlhefni Psi" "i ‘Pefiln fa d"='.~"‘ ‘w hrri" \"l""ll h." dlrs. P". "by innit? -Ov'?n sounzl Sun-Tlmes Ifwi-“r In the ofleurlzw- vs:- of submar- lllss we iwogicar l1 be din’: 1'2"" well. How y'all vwtih ‘il-i r“ii"')l. “'- ',~'-l unlll. the full s‘n-:y u! our s~a o!- ferts ve ivalnst Ja-mn can be pub- llshe". tut our submarines M ‘he Pacific are ("edited by authorita- tlve sources ivltli weakening qravefy Japan's supply llnes. Put ln our tie- 761159 Rllfilnst submarines we are obvloiisly falllntr short of what our shlpulng extremlty reoulres. Our amazing shlpbulldlng efforts are not: the solution. and the asttsfactlon we Stet frcm our accomplishments "i that fleld ls dulled bv evldence that loo many of our shlos. with their cargoes, are stlll izolniz to the bot- tom As loniz as the submarlne pro- blem ls unsolved I.Ilf"'° ls scant baslq for over-optimism about our pro- gress toward vlcwry- Minneapolis Star Journal Iishlona In word,- are like faslilons elsewhere Most of the time they are overworked and become common. place and then ttrmome and then vanL-n almost as fast as they came. wlthout having done any pnrtlnular Mnn. It does not. mutter neatly lf for a time every book reviewer finds every new book to he excltlnsz: even, a book. ln praise of the hennlt llfe wlll be excltlns: lt ls so exeltlnglv milet. It does not matter lf for a" llme everything ls arnmllned. from rutomoblles to annual meetings of the professors of philosophy. ‘It may have been lrrltntln" m well as werrlsnme when evrrvL-odv recently went ln for ITO""Ill1f' on com- placency. -New York Times lndlgnnnt cltlnenn of Ontnrlo want tn know lf the estimated total of 40 0C0 voumz men of the province who have answered the cal‘ tn mlll- self dull, obstinate, homely and good-natured, Queen Anne was deeply religious and entire- ly English at heart. larv services includes more who en- ; pal;- the full leng chicks you can raise and the breed you flnd best. 1t ls wlse to place your order wlth the hatchery early to make sure you Bet the 6111639 ulltn you want them. So far, so good and now to e- quipment. In hese da a when la- bour ls scarce and pou l-rv BHPDIIN hard to izet. a 800d 110"" ma“ drinking fountain canbe made by punelilivz nall holes around, 8 gallon tln about half azi Inch from the top, fllllng with waterr- and inverting ln u_ten lnchgle Pl!"- Fn- growing Chlfilleclll lcnzd "Olga: vltli bullt u en s Ml l B i p tli to keen lhfi rnicken frcm scratching 011l- e . eczssar . “dc ayiiunremetn-gcr last year how (tame chickens were killed ' mm n now some when in world m; very mbstantlal contrlbutlon to our lnl pool: the men who are the flnlslted Whatever Your lmunnu ‘nnfd — Whatever- putleulu combination of protection and Savings- Soc flu Mulllml Lilo Representative First. HIS COMPANY IS YOUR COMPANY- THE ONLY ALL-MARITIME COMPANY. a. . mnmrimte Lire IIIAD OIIIOI ' HALIFAX-NJ. fore they are hatched but lleve now we are off to a. ‘m’ Slr w.- I I ‘rifts. iuanborm moi-son Convener of Agriculture. P-E-l- women's Instltutes, mrne Valley. DRINKING WASTAGE . Bl: Iaupposeltlsaxood thin: for nirvana that lilch a keen ln- I be- good and public uffnlrs. We are fl out how much we can be affected by events which happen far away- 1n revtewmc the period 101' wears proceeding the out/break of war we can nee how the picture could have been dltferent today l! P901119 responsible posltlom find bu“ llfl" to the dangers threatening us. A better example of walchfulnesfl and quick acting could scarcely be found, than that shown by CHM- lan Brewerleg In the cunpalgn they have begun In their own Interests, and the thoroughness and subtle” wlll: whldi they have attacked their nents and endeavour to defend elr posltlon. The cost of this cum- palgn Ls not known, nor how long it wlll be carried on. but as ll i! hing borne bv the consumers of their goods who contribute more than la lawful for them to hold. W6 may expect that they wlll mike I "“1ili§,h°" 53°35‘.- supnnortefs v! prohlbltlon In our DNV 1'4! W" nearly 1a IEIIOIII ln defendlnz our dqgfly bro ht llberty u the Dro- ducera are utbendlng their Ill-BIG neat, the results for sobriety woul be as great a; the evlls of the ll- l . ‘ qua! lgufinggsnt satisfaction to I119 majorlty of the pewls 0! W!‘ DIW- lnce I um sure. bera of the clergy exnrwlnr "W"- 311v“ u; they have recently been doing. If the advocater of the blqlm‘ tmde are going to publlshed mnttelr denying the teachlng of our sclioofi and of the Chrlstlan church. 115 We u the evldenoe 0f flXlfiYlenfie- we- 9*‘ product of the schools and lead- era of the church. to flirt-end VJ 31¢ job of oouifillaeracttllngttligp‘ influence and publls n! 8 Y" We are haimv w he 151° “I 1m to brln our trlbute of praise t0 those o have done their duty ln stopping the slle of poison which has had such awful u sequel‘ Had this good work been done when lt was llrst neetlec, how much happier some people mlilhfi have been. We have now the vf°°f m“ the law can be enforced. The evldence ls Wmlnllfllly mounting that condltlon ln other provlncea having Government sale of liquor ls lntolernble. Reliable evid- m armually. The loss to the drinker-la In find the nllm- K11 . goat. .1 private uuu The W88“ ln man money and material ls some- thing awful. The Brewers "emselves say lt takes 5,000 men to immu- fact-ure the} geer alone. How many mole are employed in manufactur- lng other llquors? How many ln making their bottles and contaln- ers? How many engaged In pro- ducing their raw mater-leis, and carrylng and dlstrlbutlng thelr pm- dueta? Then who eantestlmate the loss In the purchase and consump- tlon of these drinks? I was going to say "goods" but the word- pro- tested. It k a total loss to the pur- chaser. Hundred; of mllllons of dol- lars lost to the people of Canada lncaltrtilable. Character l: worth a. lat of money. The word "lost" has a great depth of meaplng. The fate of our natlon; today depends on how much wlll be "lost" at sea of vital su - plies and men. It would be ul unwlse to class this waste we refer as less than "the mall dust o! the balance." We hope that thls war whlch strangely ls bi-lng- lng about much good. wlll put the intoxicating liquor business where lt: belongs, I mi, Slr. m. HUGH A. CAMPBELL, Graham's Road. Animal Deaths In The Mountains (London ‘rl-mes) DR. JULIAN HUXLEY When I was In East Afi-lca ln 1929 I met a Mr. J. W. Stauffacker. of Narok, Kenya. a missionary who had recently made the ascent o! lmanjaro and had descended Into the crater. Mr. Stuuffackei- saw the oelebrated leopard corpse whlch laY near the crater for many V6815- The apparent nablt of certain aiil- mala to no uphill to die Is 8 011110116 one. On the top of Muhflvllrfl (13,500 ft.) 1n the Western Rlft Val- ley, my ti-uvelllnrz companion. Mr. John Russell. new the corpse 0f a monkey, wlilch the outdo mlmd hlm had been there for many years. REV. ATHOLE E. MURRAY In m9 w. w. c. s shy made the first (human) ascen of the menasutuid. in Norway- 0n the very top hefound the akeleion 0f 8 m ioao 1 was on tthe mountain- and, bearing ln mind. Mr. sllnzsbr s story, I searched the summlt rocks. and found. 1n their crevices. a num- ber of goat. b01188. Efren will! “$9- 11; l; not perhaps solitude ratheii m“ helght that the avinz wlmfi seeks? REV. G. T. S ence- both ln the_n v\-\l\r '2 If fWAll TEAGIIES Insurance Collflér"! _ By ‘encouragement theiNation. A i As advocates of comp] l’ . lil '2 doors or fclllng hatches ‘fiat-aware hooks and eyes Wl,“_.~°<'€‘_"" teéll..l?fs.f*.'ld.-lfilllfii' t..- tail-ti ll-sits. of those ttlzthte for set-i rec ,,_"‘__ .. Qfrifir and Ma". tradinz uri a down: You note her dented funnel nncl the 1-1 "m upvifflcifieradiiiiils a ch01 name. ' er liinie. l; The Prlds of London own. I I11 III "r “sin: ':t"~:-.‘.r:..:: ma... the engine-room The Malt: he la a Elli-III!" ml"- m Oookle comes from Wllel. ' But nlilasarersona in. w l9 e an s . Their purpose never slackens, and‘ Th i m “tiiiiirhbiitleviiiliiiaifliiil um . ey tIii-ouah each null"! ltorin thn l owl: ' l , l h lturel. °“"‘"..£‘.°.‘"';'i€..ll‘5 it‘: ll‘ ma.‘ listed long ago. and many of whom have lost thelr llves, but whose names armour stlll to be on the Ot- cost; Old cookie-nicks the carvlrll! knllfl m . reoelved much love and core, But she who chance to we her. vm-l the brlde of London TOW! for every one of th Her worn but patient enllml h!" holds no lpeedv record. the - c lma no wlde r0110”. Yet you do well to stand and stare, Salute her now for Whll she Is - ~Greta bi-lim ln the Port of Lon~ don Mon . IIEIIIBTS furnished without a IIYNIIMAII 8i Insurance Service Since 1872 Offleoo —- Charlottetown, Eat Right - n”: ntalil Canada Needs You Strong COAL ~- t l llltl Thiiivgs llave New Value - By providing indemnity for what is. deslfflyfll- Conserve your Home and Business and stabilize f. it f lsting in handling the Govern- gtnliptgyiChharliauWdfsDamage Insurance. Full par- ‘. Whne 1 Wfl-s_5¢1‘.‘iP-'v'_1!\ m!“ $$RMQ-QY$ GUNSERVATION , of safety precautions ete protection, we Welcome obligation. B0. LIMITED’ Summerslde, Montague t4 I f . (Z ,. I 2 l! f c?‘ / t :2 r0 two’ W ve ln stock and ears arr-lying of OIIDhQYDNEY SCREENED. BRAS UQR. SULLIVAN. ALBION NUT and lNVbR- NESS. Also WALSH COBBLES and AM- ERICAN HARDNUT. t a Lowest prlces. and qllld‘, ‘IQIIVWIQQ, Bllsclfll attention to C.0.D. orders. I W. ‘D. GILLIS Er CO. PHONE I76 ti Eli lame war of t» ,, showed me the skull of tip"; B!“ I19 had SllOL. Ho. ‘round elephant but ft elsctm .1 U,“ L . made their way lhroit laliing, and tlic lrlttk- Wlien they overtook t... den was In hill country l"ll‘g (10 ,. evidently waltlng to die, MISS G. MARTTN-IJKZWEY Slr Halford Mack.i.tt~i~ tot skeleton of n buffalo on Ir Mountain at a height. of ltt 1n 1899 and lt was silll the 1933 when I saw 1t fol‘ myseji climbing n nelghbournag m1 MR. I". R. IRVHQE 1n 1030, when visiting . Cameroon, 1n west Africa, " companion, I saw the kcletoii monkey near the sum and helght of about 13.000 t, bleak 8nd lifeless surround ‘ATTElllll SWINE BREEDEH NOW ls the tlme lo . against PIG WORM B “In; th mot ell reinedy on the miiirkel Macs Pig-Wu Tonic Powder It wlll thoroughly abolish " traces of worms and lml the health of your livnl. Don't. delay. Order br blioiu mall. All orders Droinplly tended to. GASSY STOMACIIS RELIEVED . Every person who ls ti-oub with [as In the stomach - bowels should get a. bottle “Dr. Evans Stomach Mlit and gee how quickly lt wlll llevc all distressing sh» toms. Dr. Evans Swmauli .\l|sl taken at. meal times, not o prevents all had ellrctsl {as but ll. uromntais tlw ~- tlonal acllvltv of lllrbll) - against dlgestlun and mum the appetlte. Prm" l» bottle. ' rur. rwo mi 14o omit omni- Stu-f Mall Orders Glven PW" Attenllon Professional lJai McLEOD a. BENTLEY- W. l". RENLEI’, K c y, A, BENTLEY IL 0. Barrister: and Atuimt-yl- Law noun ro um‘; I54 Princi- SIR" ‘\~“u‘h“d‘lu"n‘ ‘chi’ Harrell-ind Bantu ll. F. llRBlllBlll. Chartered Aitulllllflllll lantern frusl innuitiu Charlotti-lovi n --"'w'u'u'¢"s'n'-“‘n‘--‘-" ' n. r. McPHtt 6A. noun! M- . BABIIISPEII. sovluhlflgf Riley Bulldlna Ilia LAM‘ S l". nit U” Bank of Not-a Suit ‘ Charlottetown, I MONEY T0 Li‘), i ttsoti l.0.»\NY (‘liarlolle BELL 8. MATH MONEY T0 Cameron Blot-It. from? tum: tittssts rm; J. s. m YLQ ONOMI-YPRlISI‘ t New lornlflfl 1 Corner Kent n"? (l),',','£.',':y 09mm“! RI!‘ ‘nhflnwnl. Brennan It: RP" m3; Phone llffildm“ '