‘eimeeq .,‘__ '5 I '4. 1. . if £0! FOUR TIIE ' EIIARLOTTETQWII GUARDIAN Iq-gh‘ Dally (Iouailed In 1881) President: Heat. Col. W. Chester S. Mel-Ill‘! ,1 Vice-President: J. B. Barnetl. F-J-l- . Secretary: Lleut. Col. D. A. Moclflnnon. 0.5.0. L . 54"“ “q Mgnaglng Director: J. IL Burnett, l-‘J. Aloohta Editors: Frank Walker and LleutJanA. Burnett, 8.041523. ‘(On Active Borvlcel "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." THURSDAY, ocr. 1. 1948 interests Teachers’ Salaries bedamn In the‘ recent provincial election campaign the platforms of both the man," P1111“ cmltalned n‘ fererice to school teachers salaries. _ _The Con- servatives promised to pay cost of living bonus- u, the Liberals to pay increased salaries to teachers who qualify in 1711's! Ald 311d P1" the" training into practice. The Jones Government will be expected to llllplfilllfill the lattenpledge to the letter but gould it not strain a 00"" and ' _ . . 7 ut the Conservative policy into effectaswell. It is a just and reasonable one. The OPP°5111°Y1 will certainly not question its necessity, and the Governiiit-nt should be big enough t0 accept gOOil sungcstiriiis, even from opponents. _ hOn the subject of teachers salaries the Globe and Mail has a timely editorial. It notes that in all the discussions oi’ wage inequalities and the necessity iiiiiv for raising wages in low-iiicoiiie grfillpa. the lVilClllllQ profession gets ‘lIIIlC con- sideration. Oiiiciallv. theonly attention which has been paid to it since the beginning of the war has been as a commodity in ‘short supply. The Federal (Zoverntnciit, limited lfl the development of its lllilll[‘r(‘l\\'('l’ policy to one expedient at a time, awoke last summer to the growing short- age of teachers. \,\'ith little or no consideration for the causes, it passed a freezing 0rd". 101'" bidding teachers to take work outside their pro- fession except Hll permission of Selective ber- vice. _ _ _ _ Teachers have lctt‘ their jobs in great num- bers since the beginning of the war. Many vol- unteered for military service, both men and wo- men. Many others have gone into war work and into (iOVCflllllflli s "vice, iiot because they failed tq appreciate the importance of teaching, but l8‘ were better aid for servin their beeguset _\ D K , country in other ways. The very fact of their going served t0 improve, if but slightly, the position of those who remained. Wage increases have been granted teachers, not on the basis of qualification, but simply as units _of a scarce commodity. I Teachers’ salaries have in many instances been low only because in rural areas, under depressed farm prices, the Cfillllllllllll)’ could pay no more. But, swag: of the injustices and inequalities which such vicissitudes impose on the teachers, la it not time that we worked out an alternative method? fears it may in the sewing is a growing 1846; after a Testament and lege, Aberdeen ; deprived him follihiiig year plied. “In that one before you Honey Crop In l94J. The 1 3 honey crop is tentatively estimated by the ominion Bureau of Statistics at 32.5 million pounds——one of the best on record. It unseeded the 1942 crop of 24.1 million pounds ,.,8.4 milli0u pounds or 35 per cent. Although e ‘was s. slight decline iri the number of pro- ducing colonies this year the average yield was 78 pounds per colony as compared with only 56 pounds in 1942 and the long-term average yield of 70 pounds. About :8 millions pounds, or 87 par cent of the crop was light honey. One-third of the total Canadian crop was pro- duced in Ontario where production is estimated at 12 million pounds as compared with the short crop of 7.8 million pounds in the previous year. Production in the Prairie Provinces totalled a- bout I4 million pounds, which is considerably in excess of the 10.6 million pounds produced in I942. A good crop of 3ppf0S(llll1ll(‘l_\’ five mil- lion pounds of honey was extracted in Quebec. Production in British Columbia was estimated u 1.3 million pounds, which is slightly less than be amount produced in 1942. Production in the Maritime Provinces was less than in the previous year. About 50 per centof the crop had already been marketed when retail sales of honey were suspended by government order prior to the in- troduct-lon- of coupon rationing for this com- modify effective September 2. Prior to that date the greater proportion of sales had been made direct to the consumer with very little honey mowing through normal trade channels. were to be had. our tests point _ n! EDITORIAL NOTES -. Zombies being relmsed, ass result of the obvious PUBLIC FORUM ' failure of the plan, are as was feared, going w_ m ll W" i" i; get the first opportunity for Government as- unima- cl menu. lb sistsnce in civil reestablishment. The real Army _,,,,¢, ‘:2 a}: is bound to resent this —-despite the fact that ‘I labour organizations have endorsed the plan. a- a Evidently Ottawa is still regardless of our nuiwilhlllhdlflfl They have held up our wharf improvements, our new Car Ferry, and i-iow our Sanitorium _ad- ditions. With us, as in the case of the American railway millionaire towards the public, the Mac-l kenzie Kin attitude is -—“Prince Edward Island! ed ll If the price-ceiling collapses —as Mr. Gordon that it has been impaired in public favor by slmlnlfln . . o‘ sd in number of 31¢ "Eullllofli which IPPW 1° "Flea hyefullailtisliiego of gbrk-prfgaga people as both unnecessary and absurd. The big to the British Government. over battle may be in Ottawa-on the wage front. But! price-control admigistpatigri ‘are plumb crazy. The Quebec Liquor Commission published s. do forceful advertisement last week using 60 inches of space in a big list o _ , Headed “A Word of Warning and Advice" this m,” was designed to show the dangers of purchas- lilg any form of liquor through unlicensed sourc- es. Copy pointed to the dangers to health, the. breaking of the la\v and so patriotism of any who purchased liquor through people under such difficult circum- sources other than the Commission- how liquor ingredients and machinery is now subject to priorities, copy stated that “efficient apparatus is virtually unobtainable with the result b that present day illicit distillation strikes a new and dangerous lowi’ Professor William Robertson Smith, Scott- ish theologian and Orientalist born ecclesiastical career, became professor of Old higher Biblical Criticism so offended the Churcn authorities that in 1881 the General Assembly Encyclopaedia Britannica, and iri I883 was ap- pointed professor of Arabic at Cambridge; at his death the Assembly not only erased the dis- missal resolution from its minutes, but voted $5,- 000 to provide a stained glass window in his ine- mory in Assembly Hall. A Jew in a witness box taking an oath, must have his head covered. When Archibald Mend- helson of Toronto stepped into the witness box in defence of an alleged assault on Tim Ho, Chinese, his head was bare. “Do you wear a hat when you take the oath P" Magistrate W. F. Woodfcliffe. but I haven't got my hat with me,” the youth re- At this point Mendhelson ran into difficulties. A survey of the court-room revealed no men's hats under the circumstances. headpiece available, s neat embellished with rosettes around the brim and topped off with an off-the-face veil. the fragile head covering perched precariously on his head, Mendhelson stepped back into the box and the oath yvas‘ administered. 1U I A rose by any other name may smell all right, but now it assumes the part of s vitamin. Rose hips. as a source of ascorbic acid, known, as Vitamin C, have been the a great deal of research both in England and in the Soviet Union and more recently in Can- ada by the Nutrition Services, Department of Pensions and National Health at Ottawa. Vari- ascorbic acid in a given quantity of rose hips varies with climatic conditions where the roses grow. For instance, Nova Scotis roses show s low per cent of Vitamin C per too grams of roses hips; roses grown in Quebec in the vicin- l ity of Macdonald College show a slightly higher per cent of Vitamin C of rose hips while ghose it decided increase in vitamin content. Rose hip extract, containing about five per cent. Vitamin lsut°gfififstfifl° m? "W, wum C. can be obtained by covering the. whole hipsl W101i 110811’ 118M. with water, boiling them for about I5 minutes, °‘“,,‘},°,‘,§“,,,§‘,’,,"‘"°’“ m m’ m“ breaking the fruits to a pulp and filtering this —Cathertne Haydon Jacobs through flmmL IrLOElstlan Science Monitor. i i . BOG PRODUCTION AND ‘III! EXPORT TRADE , Sir. Recent re rte from Boara ind unified w i9 - uo prom ‘nae 32min “°":.."“.'.. ": , an r a Y or :1), dwhen fin: enigma; con- u . This satisfactory bu been undo two amines-the splend response iy m: producers ‘to the appeal for IJICIBBSOd production. and the tn- telltgent management of the ho: industry dfstrl utlon by the Do- Booon Board election promises. the U U i i —0ne important reason may bei that of the previous year. and then . . . .. _ ed Canadian producers. to fill circles in villages and cities, there the btlillhllt 586318;: a t. ’ pa -- - ' er n,s1i wssriecessav °pml°n that some people m the unan everygsectilon of the Dominion -East and West-do its . Without further elabora lon. suf- ftoe 1t w say that the lob has been ne, and tremendously well done. I Labpur gas difficult to Dgocure. - ee or stem r ulremen a was ‘f duly and weekly papers‘ tardtemote. and ltfqwas only with cnfflculty, and ln a rather iiwkwari. fashion that these supplies were at all made available for loc- al needs. Despite such handicaps, and obstacles to be surmounted. it be said that never before was much accomplished by so few the thorough un- f ca“ stances as was done by the 111ml- as of the Maritime Provinces dur- 111K the past year. On several occasions during the year of 1942, appeals were made Showing i | y the Bacon Board to the people of Canada. to “eat less pork pro- ducts" so that greater quantities might be shipped to our flghtlniz men on the “other side". The re- sponse was not satisfactory, ln fact such appeals seemed only to adver. tlse the commodity we were asked to refrain from using. and con- sumption was thereof Increased- probably a modern indication of the attitude of human beings to- wards "forbidden fruit”. and that fundamentally we have not chang- ed much with the passing of the years. Black markets developed ln various parts of the country. and desirable distribution was serious- ly interrupted and impeded. Even in our own Province its demoraliz- ing influence was felt, and for a time threatened to overthrow all organized effort of production and distribution. Again it became im- pressively evldent that more au- thorltatiye potion was necessary if officially planned export. Dollcles were nognto be thwarted, and as a result. fixed quotas for domestic consumption were determined. op- eration of slaughtering centres re. strlcted in number, and an alto- gether more effective system of over all supervision inaugurated. Intro- duction of these lnovatlons ap- ears to have had the desired ef- ect, so that with the quota year ending October 31st. 1943. Canada can face the world conscientiously assured that ln this respect as 1n so many other ways, she ls meet.- lng her commitments and fulfilling her obligations, and Prince Edward Island farmers have not lagged 1n playing their part. U U I this date distinguished University and Oriental Languages at Christ Col- but certain of his articles on the 0f the professorial Chair; the he became the editor of the D F i 8 he was asked by, “Yes, I should, case, I think you had better get are sworn," the court ordered. I am, Sh". eta, J.A. GILLIES. Secretary P.E.l. Cit-Operative Marketing Board. So he did the next best thing He borrowed the only creation of pink felt, With AUTUMN TRAIN B-IDI snugly along the climbing railroad trac commonly subject Of The heavy mountain its wooded back ‘Iliebsun, the tree! lri rival bel-uty urn. Fadltng to mauve, w purple as we ur I1. Like a cool wraltn. to shore this evening tryst. From the smooth sky descends the wzuiet mist Under the damn aria swiftly mov- us 0f afterslow. New blackened fern and bush Breathe a fresh incense; now the ac smoke Mingles with scent of Dine; the width of oak ts like it benediction. A sold moon Battles the landscape; w inter leans ln to the fact that the content of per the same quantity grown in Alberta show ~ Notes By The Way A "Mill's mire writer declare! I only i thingtobe said about I m"! W110 Stays out late at night But wtfey known 2.000 ways to say it. -Guelph Mercury More than one reader has asked 1n Wfllider. ff not in actual doubt. about the large number of recap- aiid lll l the Red Anny dallyv tfiriiiiiiiiiifi have been announcing since the bezlnnlng of the Russian countar. offensive early 1n July, 0mm daily bulletin claims several hund- red such towns, villages and popu- 10181.1 cpliwes. Yesterday's communi- aimed more than a thous- and. The figures be . ated but. the old l-ltfiiasblu. beiflciieifgtelle revolution was called a land of 100.000 villages. and the Ukraine has one-quarter of the la Among untoward timonsequences o; ml-nlmver s» ortatze. Having lo back for lllf‘ fingernail lacquer be new. -Wlrilimeg Tribune. Sn Rudolf Hess wanted Prime ter Churchill and his Govem- fired, before Hitler would do ess with Engl However, even at that time, Mr. Churchill was firmly ‘froaerfl in h A lady plumber the th o ll . and wife who can produce evid- trsct n good deal of fun from the - But the author sketches the "ln- erl. and no one will fret. more than extllieulshabls beams 0f the human they at their helplessness. They will spirit" in the present darkness of tberated eventually, but pro- Norway. The author feels ft signi- babl not before Germany has been flcant that on July 4 194.1, sworn] crux ed.-~ Windsor Star. hnusand people gathered around l‘ ._._. the statue of Abraham Lincoln in For U00 can n custom has been FWBner Park. at Oslo, and gang carried ouli at the comely village in unison the tune, if not the of Little Dunmow, Essex. of awardlnz s fllech whole cured sld England. W010i. of the American national im- OJ, bacon —a them. In the cold austerity of the e —- any once their for one year and they never had the sllihtsst and h to a day “Imp. i6 can surely must be pur- Y —-The Lincoln endure, even though lt. chased so dearl 5*‘ Herald. of all European Russia. r lay. the IIki-alne ls s land cf per- haps fifteen or twenty thousand Toronto Globe and Mall. Indirect faxes Ire very high in Britain. More bhan m1; the price "Pvliulated Places.’ —New York lner and a Judge. Nel hbors are of a vim of bee-r goes ln tax. Timel- ca ed as witnesses and There l; a “""~——,~' T-‘vtenty cigarettes 00st 46 cents. of ———— 800d deal of hilarity over some of WcLeod a B "ii wl 8'7 rims is m tax! On B11 Ontoorlilhe unalie- onus course the dpuefionsmien-oooiiniiea m the ‘ 911110)‘ ' ms o . l. marred man evens av taken l Ital s1 cm do . pr eedl l m: two children would ayaboiit that coiunti-eys SUITBI-lldél‘ ywmn: hold this year as 3:031, nagrid 1'53 w- '- Burnen- l- Q found in the present status of Allied Prisoners of war, num‘ hi; from Oiwlsimdl tt,i d'tl t £300 1n dlxegct xx n: Blrannriloii 70,000 m 90,009’ yo, whom M _ first. time sln the 12th oentury, Barrister; and Anon-as - i m“ was m Sign, a yew weeks big‘ there was no bacon to offer on ac- Law y. n‘ i A Mona coffin which has been NW Wm, the Genmns holding m count of the rationing restrictions m "u, “n” l 19h around the gird of a gas "ppér hladdnqmly n ,5 us e5 which are more strict than during‘ c. | wor ln Not-folk. gland. for 35 y,“ they B", be,“ ‘ m, s‘ "s" the last war. However, two"'¢am- " ~ ~- wiffngs genes? k1’) Colllgal" U"? the Reich. There flare it? mom", o‘ mo!“ mm" We" bw'l..-——_-_-_ifl_-nflu_h e ' ° e “n5 . Km? suspicion that Italy botched this rowed “om a m“! merchun’ “m later accepted Kin and, says The Montreal “Hog matter just as it failed ln the rela- were obll ed to hand them back lld. n wa th r tl r r Kl “my ‘lmple m" °' We'd"!!! Mus- i . (innate? and wags iiii iieriviifslon cliff 1911M" If the?’ had bee" am“- hndrniigd ybaeblilifwtiliio othhgnnnt: ears ago. He invaded c?" Wm‘ m‘! WEBWIIS 1101111" 50111 hand lt back. But iafter flie war ‘ Tmied Exetelnt i-avaizeg Sig:ewgsdihmzéaisdgilvnidlléfy Co"? they wlllrfit their Lltches. —6t. n F . en years ner ld 90 B Y QW- Th J -. by Canute. he made a comlpleiie ward for the Germans ln Italy. But om" a mm“ I . conquest of the country. The story oes that Just before he was to ve been crowned he was stabbed to denlth The sarco hiigus was unearthed on an one ent church l“! 11°" 00411101911 by the zas works. Jixchange. from all accounts they were 1m 1r. their stoclrades, an easy prgy for the Germans. Relatively few were ln locations where advancing Allied troops could release them. Many of those prisoners are skilled airmen and seasoned desert couples w d em d to winners ofrfhsebsoeian. es handed over 0o the winners. who! a new day of freedom when Nazi . rule ls overthrown. In a recent book, i They Game as e . y Tor, Myklemfil. the story of the Nazi invasion of Norway fleiit- its cold, sitter. illtorotil brutality. which are conducted! by a lacs-f jury composed of bache- 3f; and maidens. assisted in iirriv-y at their findings by an ex Profsssionsl Gsrils be worthy .I. D . ~‘ But for the A mu‘! K’ o’ .___ i Hope burns in Norway, hope for ,' Chartered Adeolnllllll Eastern ‘Pi-all Illldlnl m m“ b i Charlottetown ls fold ln all 011$ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Ten thousand acres of some 70,000 to 100000 tons. are I LQLUR dlirlniLtbe winter. INSURANCE W. K. B06513 Agencies Ltd.‘ 7.. SPIID 'l'l'll VICTORY! dWeesa lidp tdbrlageloser main...» day- wheii the boy's ‘come home triumphant to our welmminganne. Wenundoourpsi-esospeed Victory. by buying 5th Victory Loan Bonds. , Theyhra got the Axis back on its heels: the master race is on the run. Our money, invested in bonds, will buy the extra guns, planes, tanks and ships to lay it prostrate in unconditional surrender. Back our boys with bonds. Remember, we're only asked to lend. Do it now, and speed reunion in Canada. Sponsored by HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. ' , Insurance llncs l872 Charlottelbwn, Offices: Summer-side, Montague ' harvest/ed in ‘Bflbfllfl for stor- 3 our or. 'l'I “Ell NOT DIE! MACS’ . '0 HAIR RESTORER l ..A tlelleatel perfumed bre- Dlrnttnn w fcls restore!- strengthens and halal-HIM the nlr. ‘ Restores ‘Grey ai- rode: Illlr to its arlglnal shin ‘- “- , Black, Brown. Bell or Auburn. omotes a new and supen" for growth where the lislr ll felling and remarks useful ln preventing damlr - and destroying yinvnsltlo lull killers. Just follow the (""0" ilons carefully and you will amazed at. the results. Prlcc 60c per bottle. .?__ MACS PERFECT WORM POWDERS Safe and effective. liilsy to like by children. Pr§ In net package. LARKSPUIL LOTION ‘m’, W? "Tr. "T111 \ .<*".<'”", bt-uz/ V-xs/ V-w’ i/LQ/ you? sac?» t‘; f; i’; ‘m’. ‘m’. = “ 4 u-cé u-Q ‘Q ‘G Oil! of the aiiorege lllterof eleven pigs 3 dla during weaning, and mush of this mortality ls due to poor feeding a! the brood sow. Farmers who malts the blues! hep profits Iri-iow that undernourished new: can't produce big linen of husky young. That's why more and more breeders are feeding their sows Miracle Brood Sow Ration. ‘llils feed eontuliu ‘ oxaetquantltlusol proteins, minerals and vltumlris abroodsowneedstoproduze ' , and have sturdy, uniform young. lot Miracle lroed Sow Ration brliia you more wells . . . gal a supply from your Mlraele Dealer and prove its value on your fami. 108ml’. snoop sow RATION when u...“ no chance to unolu. victim-ub- lighting Misha-nay toedui r- a2.‘ i‘ 1A5‘ Uy/Yr/‘e ' i _/'r‘.>" ygqgfi/ l-IICKEY s. uicuotsorrs BLACK TWIST" CHEWING COMPLETE and keeps the head of call’ ren free from aandmf. Prles 35o per bottle. Mull Orders Given Prompt Attention . TllE TWO MAGS 140 Great George sum Potato Starch Factories '_"—'—"’_‘l The Potato Starch Factories 8T8 IIOW llllflll ll HUNTER RIVER MURRAY HARBOR ST. PETER’S i A good market for off grade Potatoes SERVIC nonnsi KHINEY m.» sin-iii