r I . PAGE FOUR. TllE llllllllLflTlillllfll lilllllllllll Mornlng Dill] il-‘oundcd ln [I871 President: Lieut. Col. W. Chute: d. McLun vice-President: J. B. Burnett». FJ-l. Seuretary: Lieut. CnL D. A. Ml-OKIIIIIUIL 0.8.0. Edltur and Managing U‘ ~ . ll- Bllflllll. FJ-l Associate Editors: l-rank Walker and Llelt. In: A Burnt-it, lt.U.N.V.ll.. iOn Aellvc Servloel "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tllll the- Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, FEB- 25, 19M Provincial Finances The P111111; Accounts of the Province for 111L- _\\.‘lll' 1111-1111;; Dec. 31, 19.13, tabled yester- 1i.111 111‘1111- l.11_41sl:11111-e l1_v 111111. William Hughes. 1'r11\i111- .11 111-11-111-1-1; .1 11' 1111 overall deficit of ,1 .1111] ;1 111-111-11 -111 urdinai-y- account 5111-1117111‘- lht 11.1. iablcd 111 the form of “an 11111-111 -' n11‘ 111‘ 1-1-1e11ue 111111 expenditure, p. 11;; 1~.:.. ;.1- . 11111 printcd report, '11. . 1.11.11 1x11c1111i111rcs 111 $1,088,050.18 1 .1 11-1.»1111t- 111' S; 131501.01, 11-1111 ,__, .\111-111l-11111- of $1,434,101.67 as 1105.111 111-11111111-1- rcicntic. 115 11111110 h_v the Camp- 1111- 11111111111111 revenue Of c.\|)t'll(llllll‘C, including o1), le11ving a11 esti- Alaitlll of all necessary 111- without taking sinking ..1. 1-11 vuirt-m 111-co1111_t___1tEt_ie 01 11»;- |1 111.1 ~ 1l1\-;.~i1-11 to change the closing ., 111.1;- from December 31st t0 . 11 11,1. 111-en necessary for the (jov- 11- 11111:: .1: i1s present session three s 11.1 111.11“ 1111-1 expendittircs_ which nplltcs 1111- 11'1:.1-.111.ls rather confusing". The esti- 111.1-.e_< 111111 expenditures for the past year have .1111 ,.-1~;1 1111.111 1111111. lt is hardly necessary .1 m-Fer 1n the expenditure t0 March 3t in the 1-1- 111 ., 1111151: are in the way of 511171119" The 11s1i111.1te1l revenue and ex- 17-1- the tit-xt full financial year end- 31111-1-11 51, 1-115 provides for a 10tal of $2,- 458.00 11:‘-li11.'1.1-_v revenue and $265,000.00. - 111- :1 1111111 of $2,803,458.00. estimates provide for an ex~ iarv account of $2,664,849.00 int $498,000.00 or a total of senting a deficlt for the 01' $359,031.00. \l"‘ilt'l'l > 11f s3,11,..1.11\‘-_1.111> . 1,a11.1-::1l -1- l-‘remier Godboul’: Boast. l-‘r-vm l-ozli sides of the Legislature there l1a1.~<- 1-111110 complaints about the number of 1111111015‘ .~'.1|l; who are being drafted in this l'1-1-1i:1-.-e. liOYCllllllClll members a1-1d sup- p 1:01;, .<1-e1n to feel as strongly on this point 11s 111-cs W.» 11111105111011. They do 1101 seem to 11 :11 1111 about it. Apparently they _1- 111111-11 1111111 adroitly in the Province 11111-11101; n-lie-re a discussion 011 this very sub- i1-'!vV1»---111-re1l 1-111-1-11111- hetweeit l’re1nier Liod- 111-111 and 1h.» (flpposiiion leader, Mr. Duplcssis. 'l'l1<- 1l1<Ct1J<~11.-r1_ZlS it 100k place i11 the Quebec Flflturc is reported in the Montreal Gazette ' l-‘clw. 1S and makes interesting reading. llnialtssis scents to have started 21:0 11111111 111- remarking that .~\rthur Mac- .\'.-111111r;1. 11111101111 Deputy Minister 0f Labor. 11111 stated 111111 500,000 farmers’ sons had left the land to go to war plants and the armed {111-cos 1111111‘ 3511M Mr. Duplessis, could the l‘1-rnne1-_ 11311-1 loved the farmers so niucl-i, have pcrinitte-l sut-h a tlesertion. Pi-cniier 13011110111 declared in reply that the 500.000 figure was for all of Canada and there 11.111 been fewer sons of farmers in proportion 111111: 111 11111 war plants and‘ the army from Q1112- 11111- 1111111 a11_1- other province. This, he 581C1- :111-l 11111-1» is the interesting point - “ivas due 111 -l1¢ efforts of the Provincial Govcrntnent 111111-11 1111-1 11111111101 1111-, farmers‘ sons to stay 0n 111» 1111111 1.1m 1. c1112 This had enabled the Pro- ' ‘ lhicliec to 11-111-k to produce food foi- .-11-111111,.~ .1111] the Allied countries.” 111111- 111,. tiodbout Gnvcrm-nent "worked the oix-u-lc" i: n01, stated. but the Premier seemed to 111- 111111111 rvf l1is achievement and under no ne- 111-11111-1 11111111 about it. the t-11-sitv of . Mr. BraclZeWTSincerily #11:: -11:1de nun off the farm ivho, .111ics 111 other fields, has re- n11i11c-l :1 1.11 .1~ and feels that Canada's equili- 1111111 1-11111-1; I11- =1111111l unless agriculture is re- '- I 11-11-1111- 11-1111 l-1l11,11-, capital and other ' .\lc.\1'1hu1', 11f lloivick. lt-s at $1. L'l1r_vsostome._ with fum-n-rs throughntit, :—l1l1lllillg(lt,1l1 farmers are' treatment they have rc- 1-11- 11,‘ 1,1111 years. from the Lib- . .11;1l fer-l 1111-11 .\l1-. Bracken is - 11111. 11.1] give zigrictihtire its .. ,. ,1 t‘.111111l1'1's economy, declared - 1-111111. llltvitlclll of the Dairy Farm- .-~ 1111 1111.1 .11 director of the Canadian -11 1-1 .\;_1_1'i1-11l1111‘e. Jobs ‘For Alli T-l-lk-mg ]>l1121\' 1111- the solution of all our post- -.1,111111:7.~ ]1l't1lll(‘lll5 is about the easiest oc- ~11 111,1; 1-1111111 111: 11111113111011. Anyone with ‘ 1-111 ' - [1H\\'(‘l' can. at a moment's 11-1- i- for bringing about con- 1-1-.~11_1_ lpfortuiiatelv, too many |-1-11;_1 111-1411111-11 into this pleasant r. 11.1 11,- 11- »11-_-q1-.1€1111. 111-m cmnmonly made. 1111- \"111111,11- $1111; is beautiful in its sim- pliiil). \1! 1‘-.-1: 1111s to he 110110. says the ama- teur plaivu-r, is to prnvitle jobs for everyone at g 111 -1 'l‘11e1-1- should h: no social security 111~ 1: l-1-1":111\1- 111cm should he no need for 1111-111. 111111 1-1111.l111-111"11t will do away with the 1v:-1-- ~5:1 for 111:1: sort 11f thing. ‘I. 11-1-. 1' 1-11111-“1, c1111 find any fa11lt with 1l1.- l1-1;1- 111' 11111- lllL">l'_\'. The planners, ho1v- 01-11’. 1111-11-11‘. 11111» imprn-iaiit zit-tail. l-low is flli> l--- 1 l -,- 1- 1-1-111 1-mpl11_1-111c11t 111 he brought s-i- - 1». 1 1 1 Iity via the fanciful excursions into super-duper_ thing tncrely to sav that the Government, plusl industry, capital, labor and agriculture, must work out a plan. Those agencies, if they will come together in the right spirit and with a sincere resolve 1o find the solution, 02111 u11- doubtedly do so. But the visionary who merely says, “Thai. is what must be dune; let these people find a way to do it," is not rendering any great service. — EDllURlAl. NUIIIS _ e The groundhog saw its shadow all right, and now we have the consequence. l i 1U It Prime Minister King is ,s_-1 obsessed over an election issue, that he attributes like concern to the official opposition. 1- a i U The exception proves the rule. Of 65.000 letters containing £70,000 ($315,000) Lord l\\'o0lton received in response 111 an appeal for htunds for the blind one container] no 1110110}; __ THE ctnIaLrrl-‘RTOQ G llotes By The Way Scum of then modern girl: wlll no llllgtllllli 111 attract attention w themselves. We met on: ‘be other evening wtiu hadn't. got. her linger llllllS painted -St. Tnomfl-l e1:- Jotu-nal, _ According t1: rumor: ronhlnl us lend-lease shipments of butter are being received gratefully by the Arabs, who use the precious stuff almost exclusively as an un- guent. Spread evenly over the brown limbs of the sheik; u they relax under the desert sun, it ls snid to induce the sensation of be- ing 1ileas1intly French fried. -- Plttsburgh Post Gazette. Soldier, slgnaller, lecrct IIBII scout, King's messenger, 00m mando even that is not a r dispatch riders of the Royal Corps of signals. Every military unit or tion and lf 1t halls from the o - flcial Corps so much the better. ,'The writer asked for a small loan. ‘l s u n- u 1 ,1 Mr. Victor T. Goggin, Wintiipcg-hoi-ii en-l Jgineering executive who has served as gent-tail, ‘manager of \\'arli1n11 klotising, 1.111., 1111-1111111,‘ since March, 10.11, has resigned that post 11>. assume new duties as chief cunnnissitmei‘ of the] Liquor Control Board of Ontario i11 suct-t-ssir-iil to Hon. .\. St. Clair 601-11011, >1 =11 11 Mr. Eliot Warburton, who recently visited here, has resigned as director of the United Kingdom Information Office, Ottawa, to take up a business appointment in the United States, l-le will be succeeded as from .\l111-1-l1 1 l1_1 .\l1- M. R. K. Burge, deputy director. a =1- » 1a 1U Charges that thousands of children a1-e grow- ing 11p in Montreal under appalling coiuliiiuiis of dirt, disease, nc-Ject and 1111111111-111111- 11-1-1-1- made by Mr. E, l. 511111, executive secrctai-i- of the Childrctfs Service Association. .\l1-. 511111 was speaking at the joint annual meeting of three Welfare Fcdegation agencies — the Chil- dren's Service Association, the Protestant 171-1.- ter llome tfentre and the \\'01nen's 1111-1-111111-11 of Montreal. i ll l i Mr. Quentin Reynolds set Toronto news» papermen back on their heels with a one-honi- informal chat, in \\'lllCll he said a European in- vasion across the Channel was so difficult :1 task 1': might never ltappen. ln a hurried appearance at the Toronto Press Club inaugural meeting before a public address at Maple Leaf (iardcns, the American magazine writer told of his stud)- Of German defence plans. l-le said his finding-s were so pessimistic they \\’0l.ll(l not stand puh- lication. Mr. Reynolds, w-ho covered the cost- ly operations at Dieppe 1.1111 Salerno, d.-.-c1-il11-1l in detail the coitcrete-beddcd Nazi defence in depth on the l,300-mile front front the XvllVCl“ lands to Spain. kind- Matiy of the mainland ncw-spapcrs, including the l-ialifax Chronicle 11nd the 311111111111 1111111-111- devote editorial comment to the finc sciniun-iu. expressed by the late Licut. tiur1l1-111 l)."lilt1l> in a letter 111 his parents. and which 1111s pub- llshcd in our columns. The tiazettt- >;1_1\: -- "It was through the force of john Ric-Lira _ imagination that the ilcad spolce i11 his [mt-tut Yet this same tittvielding appeal is 111 l»; 11111-1111- in the words of Lt. Liordon R, Delfilois, 1vh1. was killed in action in ltzily on lleccitib - 1943....This is the same notg of st-zirt- _ anxiety that gave power 1o john 11061-11111 lines It is not the anxiety that comes from 1110 fear.- Of death. hilt from the fear of l1etr11v-1l 11111-1" (lcath. Otily the living c1111 save 1111- 11-111‘ ,\ 11.1.1111 from the tragedy ntore ultimate 1111111 death itself." 1 1 > l V The Boy Scouts represents one of the pioneer- ing movements in the realm of internzitionztlisi11.. Says the Gazette. The international janiburccsu ivhen scouts of all nations and races were dr 1-11 together by their membership 111 0111,- organiza- lion, were a very real foreshadoivinp of the world fellowship that will be the 1_111l_v r-Ulllltl basis of peace. Significantly, it 1111s f1-1_11n those countries that could not tolerate any organiza- tion'not rigidly and exclusively nationalistic, that the Boy Scouts were baitnetl. Few tribute.» could have been higher, or could l1a\'e revealed‘, more strikingly the Association's 11l1jec1iv1:s,1 Canada. needs an organization like 1110 11111- Scouts to help in teaching its youth that t0 be good Canadian citizens it is necessary also to be good citizens of the world, W F 1- l Dr. \Vi1lian1 Buchan, .\l..-\., .\l.lI.L‘.\l., Scut- tisli physician, died this date 1S0 "11 ' lfclmsdale, educated a1 Aberdeen Ljnivcrsicv, he started practice in the I-ltmtlcy district 11f .\l1e1-- decnshire, where he hatl an extensive 11-rrit11 to cover; he found that many of lllc 111111511. had domestic remcdics of ll1ci1- 111111 11111-11 1111-1-1 u a 1 , 1 of the then rising generation were without that knowledge; he conceived the idea of preparing‘ and publishing a hook of ready reference in, such cases, the outcome of which 1111: "lhnIlPS-I tic Medicine", published in 1769, the first 1:111;- lisb book of its kind, which proved so popular that it ran through 2t editions in 4o years, a record that has never been beaten; in by gone days, popular gifts to brides and l1ri1leg1-o011-1s‘ were the Holy Bible and Domestic Rledicine. 1 i U! I l! Complacency on the part of the listening pub- lic, generated by postwar-slanted commercials that conjure up Utopian pastures in the [weacéi lo come, is causing considerable anxiety among \\'a1- Department brasshats in \\’:1shingt0n, ivith result that the entire advertising picture, in re- lation to sponsored radio programmes, is due for a drastic overhauling. says Variety. 'l'l1e edict slated to reach the desks 0f sponsor exe~ cutives, network and agency officials in the i111- nicdiate future will put an end t0 all postwar commercial bally-hoo for the duration. 1111111 or- ders from the top to stop kidding the public; that the war's not over by a 1011;; shot, and tl-.:11 lulling the earhenders into :1 false sense of secur- 1 streamlined lands \\'lll only retard the final vie-j tory, adds the article. "What u-orries 11111 \\'u1 Department are the blinkers 1101111; pzi-svd r1111 to the home-front public via the ‘111-rid of t11-- about 111111 perpetuated? l1 docs not solve any- morroiv‘ paid-fo1- lullabies." for none are so fully trained and equipped ns the men from- the R, C. S. -John Fleetwood. T 1 The housing shortage ls being [1-11 nicst acutely by young British 11-111- brides. They are strangers lnl tcwn, far away from their families, and friends. In many cases theft-I httsliands have been posted outside of Tor-onto and the young women have had to look for lodgings themselves. They have found it a frustrating and embittering exper-l lent-e —'I‘or0nto Star. During the last 15 months this UTOVJICC has learned to do ivilhout 1111- Japanese We used to b;- told; they ivere essential 1n fishing andi ‘11-111-1»; farming But these and 0tl1er1 eallings tn ivhleh they specialized are getting alone wrthou; them,‘ 111st as well as the average of 211-‘ 1i1-..=t1-1¢s 1:1 war-time In flstnngf 1111a lumbering neither the man-. agenient nor the workers want; 1111111111111: t0 do with them again They were efficient enough but| their word was worthless and con-i stantlv thev were centres of trou- .—\'ancou\'er Sun. 1:1:- Tlie execution tol’ (‘lanai was a, f11I.1.'1lv 11f . cf which Italian his-y tat-y in its Renaissance period 1s, filled and would receive but scant attention abrnad were 1t not 1n- dleatlve cf the inherent. brutality of the "vstem and of the men 111110‘, i-un 1' What disposition the Allied; 11111111-1-1. would have made of Ciano 11s a ivar criminal cannot be saldil they too nilpht have orderzl hls| execution, but a‘. least that would have been an honorable death ln coirlparison with the vengeance zm-l itcserl upon him by the falher-ln-| law h~ double-crossed -_ Prov’ - ener- Journal T1111 number nl‘ Canadian Wesl- 111-11 funnier.- 1111.11 paid off cr re-l tint-ed their murtcagcs in 1943 Ls1 "e111 tn b,- continued and even 1 1;; 1944 according 101 ent new; item, quot-l nntrv Guido bulletin, . ,ag1~ debts 011 Manitoba \\'(1l‘c sharply reduced ‘ 111d outside the many as new mort- . In the c-cuntry only 5 w r1 rezistert-cll 1111.11111 1111» 11nd 2.253 ivcz-e talc- on cff. Similar reports eome from Saritat-s-hoivan and Alberta. -Am- lit-rat NSWS. German tires were analyzed by four Atnericatt scientists to deier- 1n.ne hcw much natural rubber and how much synthetic rubber, they ccntalned. It turned out that; the Germans are using varying! 1111-0111 _ ef nalusal rubber, some- times 1 large amounts. ln| “sy-nthe‘ tires. Of tcn tlre treads. one ivas wholly of plantation rub- ber 11nd nine were pure Buns S - the synthetic butadlene styrene rubber on which the Germans are supposed to depend principally. Of_ icn tires, all contained from twenty to 109 tact-cent rubber. The tubes 11101-0 seventy-five to 10D percsnt1 natural rubber and cushions also‘ were largely of natural rubber. The tests are reported in the analytical edition cf Industrial and Engineer- ing Chctnistry. —Exchange. The Mediterranean field of oper- ations provides a most spectacular cxtitnpte cf the United Nations ivoi-kutg together Apart from the British, Canadian and Amer-team trnops engaged there, one can flnd New Zculaizcha-s. Indians, New- foundlnntiet-s 11nd French Belgian 1111.11 Polzsti commando lmils are also doing their Job A1. sea, nper- utlm: 1n the Adriatic and the Aegean, there are American. Brlt-| .1111, South African, Dutch, French; Greek, Polish and Yugoslav sailors, who, as I19 Dutch proverb says, are ‘O 1L together. Home together." A war 1 10111011112111 has said: I have seen ' American offleers1 vet-king hand in hand 1n perfect hztrmctiy. Sometlmes the chief 0f- cer ls American. sometimes Brit- -l hut 11lwa,v; thzr: ls complete r1i-1zpci-1ztian If we could only rim natlmial and lntci-ntitional pol1~ that way. we might get some- e ~Ha r: Chronicle _What l hope ll that the first 11111111 the allies will do when they are 111 Germany will be to take 01-1-1- the ivh-cless and 1n fact every 1111x111; of nronagatidn and let the German peopla have a blg dose of truth. They haven? had much of n, during the past few years ‘The sneaker was a man who knows Germany well. having lived there fnr lei-icrthy periods. The Ger- mans, he went on, have a rever- mzee for authority which seems strange to English people They believe what they hear on the radio simply because they hear it They will not believe it 1on1 tf it la con- trolled M1116‘ lfllleffioplllfllla ‘l! all-Important in Germany Thar, ls pi-nmblv true. and anyway it la a pnllcv the (lei-mans adopt 1n all-tho countries they have occupied. . ll-nsv broadcast. the products of Goehhrls‘ lie factory. We nhould live norm so. anvwnvt ltlck to the truth. —Bheffleld Tofu-mph. $111111, F11 BROS.’ . COUGH DROPS 11111.1 lull summing up of the work 0C1 1 ,tlm1 of economic 1a1nong their inimests. ‘could rent the best mom in the [Justice Felix Frankfurter, of -provldc restgl ravens for ___________——————-———____-——-- _,-_.._-_ - UARDIAN Lontnn Meditation: from The London Times HIST THINGS F1351.‘ Both for nations and for tndlvl- wry abo stances of enterprises that failed. of compo ns that. were lost, merely because t e details tiecessnry for success. though not forgotten, were undertaken in a. wrong order. Everyone knows how keen tn these time: ls tally may be the bask of assigning tnem ilggtly. hat perhaps everyone dos not know so clearly 1s that these facts supply an apposite parable of the spiritual life. A community may share a number of alms, all o which tn their various ways may seem (tern-able. But the dc ree 1n whlch that community w l help forward the prugres of God's klnB- dom ln this word depends upon which of those nuns it puts first. An lndivldual may ponder a diver- sity of ideals and plans, each of which is to h c some share ln shaping his '1! But his character will be the pr uct of what be places fxem-i-in. and l0 the attain-l ment of’ which every other wish; and ambition Wlll be subordinated. Our 10rd emphasized this truth No one can read the story of 1115' nie on eat-Lu mthout being 1m- pressed by lts poise and serenity, its quiet dec ness such quall-| ties in a most: zmfavourablc setllpll ere possible because his ivhole life was controlled by a single motive. "I am come," he said. “to do the will of my Father." This must al- wa-vs be put first. by this test. every call upon hlm mtast be Judged. Having dedlepted himself to purpose. having resolved that. 1t outweighed evc1'y_ other . worry and indecision did not trouble hlm as too often they trouble us. ivncn we are pulled ln opposite directions by conflletlng motives. and are doubtful which we shall obey. His teaching was as explicit. 11s {its example. Ma social i-n-oblems r0 he llved; in o "tieular, _ burdened by 11 dual system of tux- atlon-Romazi and Jewish. clvil and religious. Either bv itself might haverbeen tolsrable. but the coni- bmatlqn of‘ the two made the dom- estic situation already difficult. and n. seemed likely to be worse in the future. Yet "do not be over-anx- lous," he said “ bc-ut food, drink. _ never nut material comfort. 1n_thc- first place. seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness. 1nd all these things -these mate 111 needs-shall be added unto vou. Place 130d first. inrtke your community a p ~11, of hi; kingdom, make his law votn- stand- ard. and you will find that the solufi 1 suc WCYG and other problems will follow." Often too the med _<11tisfled with tlicu- rel n which i <1 implies. Why 101d them greater l-e an; far from has lacy should Ia"- tlie qu a place Yet. ls the g first place? are 1111111111: to put 10w -nd rewards of i-laee tliev zit-e It the Only they w it. before 1111 the true 1111-1111 j- Christian (llsciulr Debasing (.111- (Witinlpeg Free 111-551 i We wonde; if 1t is not just about time for "anadiai Christians to rlse in ser: us pr test against the way the word Cbrhzlan l; being debased 111 this cflllftll‘! The Weekly T111-1r1t11 nape-L News, has crme 110011 -1n t111.s-1r.1:i<111 11f 11- vflse in 110ml. ~11 connection with the advertising folder being dls-' trlbuted for the Hunt ‘1-1-011111151-1; 1065c. a well-known murentlan re- Sort. The followlfg uuotatlon la from this folder: “WPVWOLIlG llkc _1-.1u to know that our clientele ls entirely christian, and because our l1ot1el t; more like a family club -l1an 11 hotel, non- Clirlstlans would feel more or less out of place 11111.1 muld m); enjoy themselves, In fact. our cbiect strcnuousm to hl“l- beinf! here W4.- want u this so that. 1111111 "nation will not be Spoiled 11' you a111, m1, a, Christian " As the editor of News a "no more slttny piece of antl- Sfimlsllfm his Leen produced 0n this continent. Kn lRWilflEl’ appeal t1-1_ hatred has ever been smeared with hypotrlsy." - - iianity What the operator; o! this resort. Ere Blytnrr 15 quite duv. It ts: No Jews admitted. ‘They are not tn- terested tn Christian; ner 5e, If a ‘nure Aryan 1111111151 drove up, he nlaci- and he welcome. ‘But lf Mr the Fuprcme Court. 501181" to pay a stood-neighborly call, the gates would he barred Main-t. him. If Canadian few-tuners seek u; United States MJL" AT MILVILLEUS TOMB The dlce he saw bequeath we ed. Beet on the druaty shore and were obscured __v__ 11114 without mind The cglyx of heath’: bounty glvln: A scattered chapter. llvld mero- Omn beneath the wave. wlde from w this ledae of 111-owned men's bone: w An embassy. Their number u h! m Charlottetown Tax Appeals l 11-1 Aivv omen BRAND, FOR QUALI TY-MILDNESS-VALUL: capitol-uni 2s. 1944 l. . ___‘__=. cotnay HARVEST uoc FIIIISIIER 13% Will IlYQ your bu.‘ Glut lull touch that Ill] bring you up; doll!!! when they go to market. RESULTS PROVE THE QUALITY lleBlois Bros. Charlottetown TELEPHONE 1697 The Board of Appeals from City taxes and assess- mentswill meet in the Court Room in the City Build- ing at 9.30 a.m. on Monday, February 28th, 1944, to hear all appeals from Civic assessments and valua- tions, and will continue thereafter by adjournment if and as circumstances may require. Charlottetown, Feb. ll, 1914. J. A. FULLERTON, City Clerk We have in stock and receiving regulat-ly- cars of: Old Sydney sci-coiled. Spriughill screened. lnverness screened. Bras D'01- screened. Albion Nut. Dominion Coke. Walsh Hard (foal for Furnaces Phone us your requirements. Prompt deliveries. w. 0.0 Jew-haters and turn .1 profit o - the deal. that ls tlvllr business; Why those who have buen lllluJLCll with Nazi race 111.1111: .~l11.ul<l try to disguise the tact 1.1; bcyontl us. Goabbels never tries 1u disguise, his hatred of Jews 11.11111 nicer] words He comes rlgtr; cut witlil it s11 should zhey. 1 The Canadian churches surely, 0.1111101. allow this sort t-f thing to go on unol-ialletiged. F-Jr racists to' describe themselves as Christiansl libel on Christianity. The founder of the (lhrlstlan rellglon would not recognize them as his follower-s. for he tauz-it 111.11 we, should love Jne PflO‘.".‘l"l‘ and love, our neighbors -..s 1111,-;-_-]1~1_1,_ ‘ Discharged Veterans (Don Baldwin 1n the Winnipeg Free Press) In a recent loSLlQ of a national United States magazine. Hon Ian Mackenzie, Canada's minister of pensions and national health. pub- Lshed an article entitled “Canada Honors Her Heroes." While there nan be no argument about the fact that Canada does honor and respect the members 11f ier armed forces. it ls doubtful if 1513p; Canadians are mware of the e . senseless walling, and the red tape that envetons every officer and man who returns from overseas for medical reasons. I returned 1mm England with a group of l2 officers .2111 of them etnz returned on medlml rounds. Treatment at the port w ere we landed was excellent; train ac- oonunodatlon was ect; there WM only one delay, and that com- bletelv béyfind the scope of army offlclals. However. once launched fnm the maelstrom of administra- tion that enveloos the Canadian army at home. me story was en- tirely different. we were all destined, the president of the standing medical board for the district boarded the train, talk- iClldlTtf‘ and sends A few miles from Toronto. wherel ed to all the officers, made a super. flclal examination and told us that 17 days’ leave would be coming to everyone. It was. therefore. a considerable shook when we were w an officer. who had n0 connection- wlth medical matters. to report to, clptaln tn charge of officer following morning at ed with himself. t officer am of- thlt onl, by moi-m’. of tho d1: commnndlng, could grant _ flour-lave. Arguments were of no avail. and he made it nllln that we, 1n hi: lnlon. were certainly ask- lng a lo when we sought more than a week-‘end. . O The reault u: thipmcn with. ln frho porteni. wound tn corridor: of melts Then tn the clmill. CI-lfll of one n; tagigisgancéiiarmed and malice hound eve: there wen that lifted And dun-aver: crept across the some clue. a child ey had never proximately 36 a! er being away for periods varying from one year to two or three. - Much Inter we found out that both the captain and board presid- end were fight u far as the leave question was concerned. we were entitled w two weeks each. How- ILLIS 11:. co. Phone 171i. that lliev vr~ definitely were not ivantt-d. For those who remained in the lll‘lll\' 1111,. feeling \'.'1\s increased 11s t- _-l1 1111111 -.1111s shoved from one 1111x1111 111-tor‘.- lqb ta another. llu- systenr p1 discharges sore point 1v1tn soldiers Canada 11nd those returning from over -. On paper the procedure ls_ s1 _-plr1_. A 1111111 ls merelv sent to his district donut. medically hoard- cd and dbcharscd. However. in practice the system ls 11 cznplcte paradox. Nothing could be more involved and stlll get. resillts. 1111tl1_ s innt medical officer. The 111cn11-at_ officer does not mist his 1111.111 01111111111 111 a matter of dis- _ _ the man to a specialist. T1111 specialist. usually much ovcr-u-orkcd, probably cari- not see this patient on the day set. He sends hlm back to his unle with \'- _ .. 3s to report back 1.1111 followintr 1101/. 'I‘he company $(‘l'l¥(.‘3lll-l1ll\,lO1‘ never lakes the unstip-iorted word of a private sol- dier 111 anv matter that allows hlm off duty Therefore th man 1s on parade the next morn m; and has to report back ta the unit M and repeat the procedure. Tlieoi-ellcnllyu the specialist’! report will follow immediately the 01111111111111.1011 is ROTlCll-ldPd, In prac- tice. 1t ls seldom less than a week, and ln some eases ll. may be de- layed 11 monLh. ' is a both in 'I'l1n man will then be struck of! strength tn 111s home district depot. ‘Here. documents-a bugbear word 1n the nmiv-‘wer the picture. In about no nor vent. 11f the cases the documents will either be or. nrrlvlruz at the depot. will b complete tn some detail that wlll nt-cc-ssltate a delay varying tn lenzlh with the serlousnes of the minim, With 110111111: in show In wrltlni regarding nhvslcal condition. 1511B man must either seek excused ditty from the medt-"il officer of the donor m- sr-i-ub floors tn while awn! the time durln! his w . Whe-i n11- 11111-1111111111 situation 111 plow-rd 1----_ 1111- cotirs» ts not. clcM‘ of rneks hv anv means. The med- 111111 111111111 :1: the 111-not izrnerallv has a line-no ahead that. makes thfl min given-fem! begs!" $323.". You caiilull lll-IIIIE ever. the Joker had come lino the ploturo when lne ndluttmt-izencr- 111's department had failed tn any Compass. quadrant and sextant contrive - No farther tides. . . . l-llgh ln the azure steep: Monodv shall not wake the marl- _ 11111111 111111111111 1111 I191‘- 1111.5 fabulous shadow only ‘the sen teens. —lllflG‘lllO- having just when this leave would be given-before 0r after a medical ‘bowl ln Canada. The talnlv d1 not feel like returning heroes belng ll0‘.\Ol‘f‘tl for deeds. They felt. rather. that ll-v-v weru more or less 1n disgrace fel- ntinol to thin tn’; dpiun afftcera involved err-i lubed teal that loam] mum; lollw. T: lib hi! ' ' cedar-to :l1y:lc,:lll':l-down—un Dom lor our lull neuhiylh lmhully Kilian. A i111: iifilm. 11f. .111 1.1311. Usuallv the man starts-out" unbound! Doll’ K l“ 1..1.'1.."*1tt Budd's Kidney Pills Attention Swine Breeders Now l: the time to guard against PIGWORM 5y ruin; the most effective remedy 0n the market. MAUS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER l; will thoruuxhlr abolish All trlweu of worms and 1m- rove the health of Yollr herd. Prim 35o per lb- AMMONIATED BBONCIIIAL COMPOUND A rellnhlc and effective D"- pant‘ for the treatment of cough: and colds. A quick relief for chronic Bronchitis. Price 500 ner bottle. ABE YOU TROUBLED WITH LUMBAGO SORE BACK It no we have one of the best remedies to offer name- ly. Back-Rita Tablets. Espec- lnlly effective for lumbar». Sciatica. Neurllls, joint mils- cular and other forms of rheumatism which ordlflfll‘! treatments fall to reach- ‘Prlee 50 cents per box, Tilt-l TWO MAGS m Grout George 511'"- Mall Order: (ilven Prom?‘ Attentllln. llic end of the Null» 1151111111 m’ wait. is from ttu-ee to >18 W991“ b?’ fore the final 110111121" 15 coml-‘ldeg and the "blue ll-JKCL 1s tun out. 1.0110011 -1c1=1_ Fire sum“ and other elvil defence ‘WFKQYS- 11"‘ eluding women, have been authorolfa ed to wear service chevrans alpd gm wound stripes 1491;111:111 wn t worn by the armed 101cm. HEREFORD. 211111111111 MP1‘ All public auction tccurzls for D9111‘ gree Hereford cattle @1111‘? Jtegfig‘: day; at. the end of the l-trsthamr War were broken 1191*- 11“ C um bull sold for nearly $6.5m- ___:._ _---_-_;§ 110v THEM av THE cARIOVN w, u.» 0-14 w WAY" lllllll IIIIIIID How Are Your Eyei? “If you an Ill fir”. llfllll - I '"1.:.'...1"“""" ' °°""" upee . M you: nrvlu Illaflz‘; pl “penance lnll I nlrnetlnl oervlw "- c1111 111 111111 Illtflmnw llfflcnltle: Write M appointments ti. F. llutchesol AND S0" I. G IIUTUIIESON 0. I. IIUTCIIEBON \ "BHT BlNDllilfii