ftiigltt have bccn ttvoidcd, PAGE FOUR _ THE ciuiuorrrrowu GUARDIAN Morning Dally (FBI-Niki m 1887) -—-"<"': - * TTiYTiT C." 1.. s. M... Preslygliftlenhrleisfiabiitiiotl. R. B31319". F-J-l- s o Secretary: Lleut. Col. n. A. ivipcllilngilyrikoa- i.“ calmi- and piiinctzlp: Dirsctlf- - n; m“ A ma,“ Associate Editors: l-raiik “B H‘ a - suiiscitirTioiv RATES m. ~ , ._|_, 4,00 year- $2.50 for 6 mon By MaHSIIESPIEr 3 lsfl0l1lllpSe;l-500 ldr one month I City Delivery $5.00 per year: 53-00 M" 6 "pull" $1.75 for 3 munihs;; 60o for age g3: he p“ ' - 'l d US. . . P 1' isirliiifiiiiyiivziiiilihiiioniiii Tel"; $14!" f" 6 "‘°“""- i 50c [or 3 months , . < . d‘. b obtained ll liliildfalcllliiélislulételiiigiilhiigihi; liililmldlsaySqudi-c, New Yolk; Old South News Agency, Corner Milk and Walhllllwll ntimn- Metropolilan news Agency. 1Z4! PHI "-- Munlrehl‘ J. Fine rial Bay $1.. Tritium" N"! 5”“- Chatcau ‘Laurier, Uitnivn} Wvlllfs New; Séllld Sub- bury Outs, llub 'l'ul:acco Shop. Dloncton N. . “The Stronqest Memory is Weaker than the ' Weakest Ink." Tiiciisnnr, sizrrstiiii? 1o. 1m A Master Plan Needed ‘Duil The lack of cultcsioii which €Xl5li5 it OtlB-Wa was underscoi d at the recent conference of Ilw Catiadizut Ii . til PUNK? Anal“ at Lake Cottchitig, Ont. Stine of the ablest of the 50"‘ "mung exist-rt. tcttdcd and outlined some of the problems the wcrc endczivoring to solve. L. E Westmnti zlsshlllllt director of national selec- with the manpower situation; flitauicc, and Kfiflilelll Taylt". sccrctarv tvf tin‘ \\'itrtinic Pritcs {mil Tliade Board, ‘with price controls and rationing. The latter outlined wnnt had been doneto 355MB 1 fair djstrjbutigll of scarce commodities. When 11¢ was throttglt he was askcd if any Coifiidfifalloll had bqm givutt, in face of the manpower short- age and thc finniicial needs of the Government, to the llllliiislfltlll oi an overall system of ration- ing, By a. general rzttiottitig system a fair dis- (yibtttioit of all goods would be achieved, im- necessary Cxjiptttliturcs would be Cllflflllfll. m?“ people ivould he rclczisetl from non-essential 1_n- (lvustry, and tnore ll‘i~il\‘_\’ would be iliilde avail- able for loan to the Qitaverntttent. But .\lr_. Tay- lor said glint no cott-‘idcraiion had been given t0 this idea. llis tlcpitrttttc-itt would institute ration- ing only as scxtttities devclopcd. _ _ Ilcrc, piizctttly, observes the Winnipeg Free Press (Libcrnll wls a question on which all the ggvcrfllllClll tl(",lIll'llllClll5 could have got togclllt?!‘ with [it-ofit, litqcatl of three groups worrying about fraginmzts of the itrohleiti, a united group could ll'l\'<‘ lilcimillll the probletti as a whole. Per- hgps, by the i-tttiottittg of half a dozen prodiICIS. thousands of workers coitld have been released for war work in plants ncar their homes. Need- ed power Unllirl ll‘l\'C been divcrtcrl to war plants. The itecd for brittgiitg in outside workers and providing lllilll with housing accommodation At the same time moncy which ivould have been spent upon the tuirritiotied good: would ltavc been available fOT lll\‘t‘<{ii1t‘ill in \\'.'ll' szivittgs certificates or stamps. It is bccomirg more and iiorc obvious that the itecd at Ottniva is for a ntnstcr plan of our ivrir cffort. Lacldtig that basic plan, co-ordination of the work of the various departments is almost beyond llillv‘ of n ztiiuticitt. five service, dc R. B. llrjvcc \\ . Statues To Co’! The melting down of the statues to be seen in the pithlic places throughout Toronto, including those of Quccn Victoria and Robert Burns, and the use of the ntciiil for munitions of war, i5 leriously proposed by lhofessor Eric R. Arthur of the Department of Architecture of Toronto University .\f:ttt,v, he says are only copies of other statues, nud litany are not of high quality or are jioorly jilncctl. The satue clearing away of statuary all ovcr the cointiry, with certain ex- ceptions, is nllVQCfllCd, and it is suggested that, after the war, the tiovcrumcnt should pay for their replaccmcitt ivltich, Professor Arthur says, could ivell be done by Canada's many capable lculptors. Among other Toronto monuments that would presumably g0 are those erected to George Brown, fouudt-r of the Globe, and Oliver Moivat, premier of Ontario for runny years. The pro- fessor, ivlto may bc something of a diplomat too. lays that the statue of Sir John A. Macdonald l: well placed and should not be disturbed. As for the Burns monument. “I am lament- ably ignorant of the uses of bronze in weapons of war," says .\lr. Arthur, "but I like to think of Robert Burns of Allan (iardcn5, late of Ayr, being transformed into a shining torpedo boring its way into an cncitiv battleship off the coast of Scotland. lf that cuttld be nssttrctl, the Burns So- ciety in Tint-unlit could make new pilgrimages to _ an empty shiitw in Allan Gardens that had taken on a new si_gt~.ii..;titcc." The lcttcr, jiuhlidtetl in the Globe and Mall is approved b_v that [taper which publishes pictures of the ttioittuttcziia including one of a fierce- luoliine" lion ultirh, it aplly' says, “might gain a roar" in a ltou-it/cr. Profcssor .\riluii"s lcitcr has to do not only ivith slrittic; but al~o with tuuicccssnry iron fences and tlic pt-utlfty-tl u~t- of tncial in architecture since tltc lnq wztr, llr- ivritcs: “Aluminum was used to Cr)\‘t‘l' whole facades to a depth of inches,_ and large rtrgntiizuiirtus vied with each other in the richtvt" 1nd monumental gratidctir of their from dim:- 'l‘lt~ ~-tit;4t uivm is offcrcrl hcre that doom tuizgltt be PIT- turd as a patriotic gesture and rcltldtrtl hv wood, lt is tibviotisly farcical, if m: h_\'pt)r'|'i[ir.'tl_ p» cg the housewife on pat- j-jnlic grnnttds to i ‘ ll('l‘ snuccpan ivlicn tons of nltitniuuni \. in .; rttloru the facades of Toronto buildings in i-‘rttc of stunt" llc t-lt-t. with n clinching argument. \Ve can- lint nuw nfft-pl, he ..t_\.~, the lttxiiry of sentiment thvt is st d ltv itvtnintaic objects in bronze or ~oit, Tllllfll nzuit ‘or lITTSS. 'l'lio<c are things that “n ll‘ r plc l. llli the r-tlicrlinnd tlicrc is no and» {ht- up.» i u qiui u vd. li_\' will’ munitions in- l~ lav, of q-j-p}. jiiflfll of (‘very kind, and it is iwtnuh it: on ("ritavliwiis in all parts of the coun- irv to l"".‘litl pt, 1',l‘i_\'l"i‘3l pound of iticlal that is nvrvlibln nttvitiinruls ilizit have no pflrtiClil-‘lf valur- m‘ ril“ lir r itlflfTil lnlcr. iron fences, scrap 0f cvrr): l-:iuil_ ll should be salvaged at oiict‘, f0? the necd is prcsdtig, - w: iiiithiat not cs- 4 Evidently there is to be no let-up to the fine weather for storekcepcrs ltalf-holidays this year. i ¥ i ll There is a moral as well as an economic side to the question of food control which some are apt to overlook. It is indecent for people to be p0liriflg doivn their throats money which the State needs so urgently to barrow. 1F U l The appeal of the "Wavy Navy" auxiliary for subscriptions for comforts for our boys at sea. should not go itnhecdcd; indeed, should be gener- ously respondcd to. But for the Navy and the brave boys who man our ships where would our other armed forces be, what would become of us? u a n- o The hearts of the German people “are sinking into empty stomachs and soon they will sink lower into their ersatz boot," Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief of India, declared recently. In a broadcast to the Indian people, Gen. \Vavell said that United Nations’ conferences in Moscow and Cairo were "permeated with itispir- ing confidence and courage." in n- : a Co], Daschq; M. Reeves, commanding officer of the Ist U. S. A. Air Ground Support Com- mand, has been relieved of his duties along with Maj. Lynn Farnol, public relations officer for the same command. The relief of the officers from their air force duties followed closely upon a press release in August purporting to expose ground markers laid out by snbatcurs and allegedly discovered by fliers undcr Reeves’ command, which proved to be merely a publicity stunt. at n- a- Thc executive of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, ntccting in Toronto, said that only an adjustment of Canadian cattle prices brittgittg them into “proper and fair relationship with American cattle prices" will assure a continuous weekly floiv of cattle to market. The executive said the cattle producer's only cottrse, under ex- isting circumstances, is to withhold his cattle frotn the market until October or January or “until prices are adjusted and stabilized satisfac- torily." a o a- n Styles of wood pencils will be reduced front 68 to 38 under an order announced by Mr. G. P. Sabiston, administrator of sundry items for the “lartime Prices and Trade board. But quantity and utility will not be restricted. “Styli? is defined as a combination of writing color, shape and degree of hardness. Crude rubber erasers and metal ferrules are banned by the order. Wood penholders have been limited to I0 styles. As in the case of pencils, no new styles may be introduced. School pen and pencil boxes will be available in only four lines per itianufac- turer when present stocks are exhausted. u u w w Small retailers engaged in sale of magazines. newspapers, cigars and tobacco in Toronto will send a petition to the “lartiitte Prices and Trade Board against a proposal retailers adopt a 56- hour week. The proposed restrictions would put I,- 40o stores out of business. A 56-hour week would mean opening at II a. m. and closing at S p, m. for five days and lo p. m. oit Saturdays. A lot of small store business is done from 9 p. m. to midnight. Mr- Edgar Burton, retail price ad- ministrator, has assured the retailers considera- tion would be givcn the protest. a- : at i: Sir John Ponder, l\l_ P., British statesman, born this date 1882; after Eton entered the scr- vice of the Eastern Telegraph Co., and passed through its various branches, including cable- lziyiitg operations, which brought ltint to Canada; chairman of the Marconi International Marine Communication Co. Ltd., Governor and joint managing director of Cables and Wireless Ltd: Served in the first Great War in France and Belgium for four years; subsequently scrvcd (m several Government Commissions. at a- w 1k Gen- BTOWYW. Ifl-Sptctor General of Reserve Forces, revealed that an average of I00 men from each unit attending Reserve Army summer camps have gone active on completion of their two weeks at these camps. “The Reserve Army training program will become more and more closely allied to training as it is done in the Ac- tive Army," Gen. Browne said. “We are getting the equipment —cquipment we never dreamed of getting when the Reserve Arnty was first started —and this equipment will be used by the Reserve Army during extensive week-end schemes. These schemes will be held often, the weather not- withstanding." iu x a m Complaints are still being tirade that iii certain instances parcels for our boys overseas are fail- ing to reach their destinations. In this connection the following from the London Times is interest- ing: “Pilfcrage at ports has catised such a (lraiit on commerce, it is said, that it is for all con- cerned with thc movement of goods at each stage of transit to do everything practicable to reduce its present serious proportions, As in other cases of theft, the receiver is the innit to nim at, and the conunittee of the Londoit (Iicncral Shipowticrs’ Society are convinced that the most effective line of attack is on this sinister figure. Receivers, they think, are indirectly responsible for nearly all the ntost serious cases of theft. 'l'hcy believe also that the recent ittiensificatioit of the police campaign against ‘black itiarkct’ offenders will have favourable reactions on the problem. War conditions in the Port of Londott-and similar conditions apply to other ports~ltavc greatly increased the opportunities for thieving and also the difficulties nf prevention. Mr. Robert Kclso, the chairman of the society, approves the action taken by the National Dock Labour Corporation whereby workers convicted of the offences will be (lcprived nf their rcgistriitioti undcr the Es- sential Works (Dock labour) Order. Mr. Kclso also makes the point flint before looking for help front others in combating the evil, the users of the port should first ltclji themselves by ensuring that, whether their cargoes are handled by stcvcdnring firms or by orgnuizniiotis controlled ‘Ll-IE _CITARLO'T'TETOWN GUARDIAN ER L219 NOTES BY TllE WAY A small new: despatch from ftiiladiemnia announces that §W3llll1, the language spoken by 180 million Africans, is to be taught at Temp» University. A vocabulary of about one uiousand words ms been prepared. iuvms "all a vinite man needs, PBJJUCXLET- 1y a, soldier who mignt, be sent, to an African front." lri terms o! Temple University stucbenks, it would be Interesting to know haw far the oounse in swahlll will ex- tend. Arid what. it. prssages 1n American SO-dlflfs on Africa fronts L; an even more bunting came of conjecture. However, there are s1. ready small groups of Canadians who have started on their course in Swahili. and very much on live East African 580k It Ls a. case 0X inlng the R. .A.F. and not see- ing the world, but. learning how to say “Jamba" for "How do you do" and "Kwaheri" for “Goodbye? with enough cf the iticusand bass words to get. along with lxi b2- tweean. Swahili Ls the llngua. frame. amongst the many differ- ent. tribes of Africa — i116 Zulu»!- the Matabeles, the Merus and the rest. It ‘is a, compound language of archaic Bantu mixed w.t|.i Arabic, Persian, In-dlan and such Eilrc-peari languages as Englsh. Portuguese and German. Together with the learning of the euphori- lous Swahili, the young Canadians are being fritrcduced to ail the other varied sights and sounds of East Africa. They will have many talcs to tell when they get b.tek-— and i-all outs into the bargtun. — Ottawa. Citizen. Paper bags that hold forty pounck of dry satid for incrndinry bombs are now bsiitg made, rc- ports Nations BIEMTGSS Sealcd against; mcsture, they ivill with. stand ordinary handling bu; will burst vmen dropped ficm a liefghi of three feet or mcre. In use, the unopened bag is dropped cnto the bomb or beside it. A new pump to be used instead of the sti-riip pump in fighting inccnduiry fres is made WlHlDut, brass and other critical materials The pump lsclf is woccl and fabric and the ncse is aibric. Th3 trundle action l5 said to be less fatiguing than ilie stir- rup pump. Many people todn-y DOIICVP that the old English public scticol is a thing of vlie past and in many Ways we are inclined to share their belief. However, there are many attributes of the English public school sysbcm which are irrtplnc2- able in the life of our niiicn. They have contributed to mcuid British cttarncl-cr to the envy and respect. of the whole vvorlzl Can- adian schools mostly have preserv- ed these attributes and methods adapting them to mode life and to the cullcck and op: "itinltv of a young country and 1'. is tin: litip- DY ccmbinaticn cf high pr-nc p155 and modern training flint com. mends the Canadian schools t0 pBl_\‘-‘l'lf»S who with to give their children the advanlagzs of iin EnglLsh educatricn in a Caesdnn environment. _ Canadi-West In- dies Magazine (Montreal). The Popolo d'lirilia's headline, "How Much titougti csteiislbly referring lo "lnc'd'ni.s' months sinx Izaly stabbed Ffni‘ in the back in Cfllfl‘ to gcl Imce, Corsica and Tunis and ohir cov- eted territories Yet her scle re- ward to date has bzcn a turbulent comer of Crc-atici “Qlfh Ls more trouble than it. is ivsrtli. The Julclcr morsels are blng slircivclfy withheld by Hitler as dplctnlalc bargaining counters, and they tire not likely to be drziireti ligsty. In the com Lltlcn between Laval and Mussolnl for lheir mnslefs favours they are too useful as a means of ltirerttcnlitg or cnj:l1ng bcili ace lug to ice eizig-s ' 5 of t Mus;o.ftii's patience .y exhausted at this hu- miliating role; tinbiasd onlookers will be lnlerestsd to cbserve what. he prctpcses to do ab3ut it. —Daliy (Telegraph and Mczniitg Post (Lill- 011). A blunder Is cradled for the crlgln of blotting paper around the 191i century. A paper ntlllliand In Berkshire. Eng" negleotcd to put. ii slang lngrerl- 1cm; into one day's batch of psper when it was ln the liquid stnc. I1. came from the rollers apiiiitntly worthless. The thrifty r pnetor decided to use it for his own notes and. figuring. However, as fast as ink touched he paper it was soaked up, The m'l owner had a great. inspiration, for new; was a eon. venient substitute for sand which was sprinkled on handwriting as the customary ab; "be-at fcr ink. The paper was advertised and qulokly bought, for this new pur- pose. - The Advergram. Bishop Wells, the principal Pro- testant. chaplain, says that. on the average the English and sgomh girls the Canadian trccps are matnying overseas are of a higher intellectual standard than the boys. The great thing about bring a bishop and an honorary colonel to boot. is llint you ern say whnVs on your mind. Bihop Wells has apparently studied ma; lllnrrlqge qucsbion and looked into all the angles; and the result of his s:udy ls that he believes it is a good thing for Canada that. 5,0‘.0 of our boys have married English and Scottlift losses. A gocd thing tor the British l-‘lcs, too, he rfids Particularly clcse ties am 1n this way kept. bound between Canada and the Motliicrland, and besides it gives the boys a sense of home over them on the eve of their de- parture for the continent and all ll. can mean. - Otmvva Journal. Recently decor-rind by thi- King Councillor Admiral Sir F M. Austin in a lcttsr acknowledging the congratulations of the Mavor cl Gosport (Alderman J R. Gregscni and his colcngues cf the Borough Ccuncil, said: “It may be cf lnlcrrst. to my fellow Coun- cillors to know that new ltaving travelled in 39 rtilps in the Royal Memhantlle Marine I feel that this honor bestowed on me l5 more of a recxrgnliicri of their dcbermlned courage and dogged resktnnw to all the enemy ciiti do to cul the life line of our supnhcs and ivnvls- ions than to any personal merit of my own. I am very proud to have served wrh mom." - PJrLsniouI/h Ei-entng News. We commend lhe forthright ac- ticn of an alderman of Wccdsfcck who recently bought a basket of deliciously r5 e pcazhfs Th“, Ls, he thought tat. they were de- llciously ripe as he lccked at them when they lay bitching in their l1GEkCb,ll§"1lly covered wlilt the pink game or rlcillng utikh is the tradlUonnl ctvtring of peach hrskrts. But vifirut he got his by themselves, iltc highcst attainable degree Ofpfwh“ Mm” hc ml“ m“ ""7" efficiency and discipline is itiaintaittcd." l wne.e gran a. grass and hard u Pharach’: heart. The alderman iuuuuunuu-un-"u- u- WORDS OF CHALLENGE ~11“, gll-lmportlhf. issue ll . that. of winning the WB-g-l-Vlalga - ninz it as soon as P0881 ‘Into winning it decisively- umg wg must, put 0m’ “W106i "" A-r-Izesson 1m R0Y81 , ‘ lineage (Si. Tbomu Tlmes-Joumal) A slip that occurred m ine cur- rent. issue oi Lue mail-Kim Wm!“ w us to oiier correction and alonl l uiercwim to iirinl (OIWHG a. Imi- um‘ historical coincidence. L116 JTfNMKKXMMMIMMMMMInM sorl" f andsomo D10" fgfff-fiffprjnduwivrzn 191' litiiieisieiiiistiie iiiiifiii iiovni 11111111;- . n _ Cordell Hull. U. s. Secretary ggillgggzatgbgufrglll: "filgf fimuy °l state‘ carrying tne blood tradition or Wil- soooctztdsuacionmcznamczoa, 11am tne conqueror. Elem" 9'1"" i Edward 111 Henry V111 algal Elizabeth and’ the 61201198 01' hanover. This was erroneous as far as Henry viii and Queen Lumber“ are concerned. since mere is n0 Tudor blood in the oresenj- R031“ family; moreover, Queen hllllbafih never married. desuite- various ro- mances circling about. her name. . bl in Green's ' up Wllh many XIWOIIYflLIJW“ iflllfillruori“ fife Etnglisn People." owing w B- iwfmge °l lmpcru show that present British Royalty through ivrmi 0! 1MP”! spam’ is descended from the Yttrium admitted to being very Sllrlm-f“ branch oi the family oi‘ Edward 111. to see an advertisement lnmfm“? one of than branch named Mar- me world that a liars‘? 8119mm‘ garet, in the early 1500.: wedded me of musical instruments had 1H5‘ men Kin: James 1v of Scotland. been unpacked. "Are "'3 *1" from whom resceriaec. Mary Queen correspondent asked. "l0 ha” of Scots and her son. JBIIPES I °1 banlcs instead cf blades (razvfi- both Elngland and Scotland and so saxopticnes instead 01’ SOCKS. mm“- on to the Georges of Hanover- ‘is instead of tea, and biEPlPiS The singular historical coinci- instea. d of butter?" He mlfim deuce wnicn we now brinz IOYWBYd hava added kettle-drums instefld ls that Charles I. who was beheaded Am _ o; kettles and pianos instead of largely at Cromwells insistence and ants. But, his allliei-alive com- Oliver Cromwell were 111ml‘ consuls’ P- . the nu fSttdes- liciantiie “lildinile. iditiiybytrigaiirtyst ow" glifilwliisa iiargiiiso iverlem Rvbm To feel fit to enjoy life —ready'to step out, buoyaiitly flllvg, you need Eno to help give you the glow of inner health, t; Bagpipes Or Butter . . ~ 1 lease Cromwell and Elizabeth Stews-rd c‘ “gleifiaterilghiilirtdlsiigiiitiy paiiticu- tvarlably spelled Stewart. or Stuart) the if dgcune m Share hi5 ind’g- his mother having been descended fail“ p? from being ashamed lrom Alexander, the Liord High "at ‘ma, f“ no rag-n m; regret Steward of Scotland. the snczstor cf ‘my “l s“ ‘ ' the wliol Royal family of Stuarts. . - . tea and excess astric ‘d in the priority given to the Dire!» , 1 ,5 m b_ system free of poisonous was _ g w g‘ we can dbo t ggfiggsfil lieisieigei-fietgvig tiiafiogrtiiiiriiveiie iaatnl A dash of Eno in a glass of water first thing every morning tiititiidiiiisit‘, viilnéiifcifid bulgflf’ until, i: giiiicifsisinlfrf. 2$°.§‘,1§.‘},"§';'§ will assist nature in removinfl finch Poisons that frequently hill‘ y BVQU v cause constipation, headaches, Indigestion or listlessness. Start today-get acquainted with lpukling, refreshing appear at first elanoe. for it ls wall known that. in the course of cent- uries and the unions of persons greasy, tho-ugh palatarllalge, substance gly in UAGSB spreadb 1gb?) egg? 5g: med. what days , that occur. an efiect ls that many ' - are the bflwlliti-i? Th“ “e the British families have more or less Em) and enjoy the good flung‘ o‘ month“ come ohm” soul of tr itatton. , k “a, Royal blood in their veins. l-letice fitness. Keepln“the picture of health -take It ls blflsillflflmfi l‘) “l” ‘It, the fact. of ninth cousinshin ls of butler can take their P ace- small account alongside the manner ., 1 ace-time amen‘! l¥iie=hitiodi% sgfe-iiilgiitte, but. not. iii Nap They are not n luxury; “theg are t; weapon of ‘war. wail“ they're grauiid the p-Dfif- h i-ve [33:11 tihai ttrzd on tie mart in which fate crossed the paths of these two men, in the beheading of the one and in the virtual success- ion of the other to the klnizship ln the name of the Protectorate. ‘cklers for authorities are re- ‘FRUIT SALT’ ENO’S = d d-ecd, - ~ lgdélclfl? it.“ ttEEJt... fair sgggswggfgiggggwdfioqgs “lg; .3; rmsr fume zvznv nomvmc lifted me lll) again." So serd One Funk and Wannalls: to I-"osttifls "Lives of British Statesmeii." vol. vii. and to Mark Nobles "The Crom- well Family." . ft Lco- in the Télihgiifigmflixfrergriilfiw gilear iolllfica. tion, when on the platforp-t shag’: the bgrjqugbing beard B- l) 91h m been paying. and m“ ‘a France was filled Willi i115 wit? strains ‘cf the P1995 A‘ "aging Piper Ftndlater of the Ger 1 was awarded the v.0. merelythcr playing, along with several o ‘er ’ , encouragcmcnt and rp- Fjillfftliflll at the head of m? “u” ‘ ‘Iii: Ciordcns would harnly havfi thanked vcu fvr bull" m‘ m“ Maryland on one sldie and Pennfiyl- not rare is Indicated. by the sn. vania. and Delaware on the other. criticism of it vozccii ttv Ml’. i Thzse two Englishmen did the 10o ard S. Hosklng. General between 1764 ‘and 1767. They lm- of the National Ccurtnl cf ported from England n. great quan- C. A.. who has Jiisi rc my of iimestcne and marked the Britain. boundaries by erecting a 500-pound One finds it hard to conceives! stone at intervals of one mils. four suitable punishment for SUCJ :1 and a halflgfgsttrixiigll} and one fltipi; son pig" Cflklllllfllirlili. Certainly. haw VOL-Mm some monms ago ma, m; squnre. Iii e rie was re-s - ever. ey s ou_ “nor” i1 Govemmen; Suuslulze college sLu_ veycd, gbllb those men had donexspch to gpdfrep! of ixiiibriigicrt. l}: Gems m cmer w provide [he “Hum an EXCJlElTl. Job that no error o m- cons era pniof moan-pit _ . d dCa1 ‘owes wit“ Suf‘1clel‘tl Dumm- matel, pcrtance was discovered. ed forces 5 _nvol\_cd‘.i...i t tiny. It tins sometli-nfl a 2°C n‘ 15L wasningion some S now mdp During that interval a great many tary authorities \\Oll.(l be moiie stirrmz 11163’ c-"aved- ' mm ma, me war Mnl;power Co,» of the stones had disappeared. Ef- in seeking a menus of putt . marl-i?" fill-l‘- cf we pmroch ca“ mlsslon is cgnslderjng me pro osaj forts were made to trace them and stop tn the practice. This C0lll(1 t; ried iii-em away. m mm o, ‘mac, money ran? w it was found that lricomlnz se-t-tl-srs be done by tmpcsinz szifl pin 2 1119 curlcus 1111118 i5 m“ me new), an“, 51mm“ h “l! “l Sn“ had removed them to make door- and letting it be known tint tli bagpipes B"? m" name l° 53°“ othewhjse beLanle L wo%u,iiui.u q. steps, to build bake-ovens and even would be inflicted on itnv fo 18nd. 0T eve“ ,1"?gf5§=‘t1'f"°d,nl§ tneii‘ education 0 c ' w n to heli) build homes and churches. milltv of such dirty iarllfi- unit land. The r 1'1 YE B“ W .. ' u . -. for other tirpcses. Manv of the ii——-——— Eccllfllld W“ B5 hle a‘ ‘he ‘e 5n refills-ii éfoiiie Elfin Biedmgféayijieijmizjt glliltilfilll! stone]; bore carvings made Mill-I'd‘! lillls_p_:gln. c‘ Mary Q4631‘ of scam The would be to the C0ll es nti lDfll- b" 501M975 °n Mm sldes M the all“ iii‘ ancient, Caledoniari instrument of m: a 3o per can,’ dim 1a,, ecmliojj. War. Enough stories were recovered __ H music “i” ‘he hi1?) ' gsangiocxililil? merit this iall, why should there be to be replaced exosut for a. space 01 -' ‘ c t- -- gifgn @5321" blew titre htrn, “Y “°$"““°" °v@1‘$1°-°°°-°°° 01' 5° '7“ “"1” m‘ mam” “mm Wm ARE Yogngpouiiirn u m. 0f “h, h “,5, as tumble that will be a. dirzct contribution to Sllbflltuled- 1e Z56 I -> - “d LllMBlllill _, _ _ C .5 b3, m the winning of the war? m“ ‘Caciselll. alifllgis gaging“. “m? m During woild war One. the Gov- Poison Pens Busy (Windsor Star) 0R l! so we have one of thi- but r “ to Scotland pictaiobr {mm France. ertiment created the Students‘ Army It ls dlfilcttlt. to understand the offer, niuttzely .\ {l0 Why Hesitate ? (Christian Science Monitor) President uonantgof riarvaru ad- and their Wage of “gm m remde Training Corps and Students‘ Naiy type of meritttlltv that will indulge . _ T ' l C hi ll antiquity mm t» ow H“ Itilv- t£il3o“§iti§§€€.‘l. “ifieflélt ‘iii ‘till’ 1n the nrnclice of writing to soldiers h, mi gp-m rumors n! their wives Nero, the Rcman Eameror, we are T, t d L 1 tut. tin the instrument on his slltée“ifilli.n‘lli’°rfi.le‘liitllSl dill? ‘Ilintthc nraetlco is BACK -R ITE TABLETS Iiupeclnll effective for Lum- hago. Sclitica. Neuriiis, Jtiint Muscular and other furtiis iii Rheumatism which ordinary coinage, and he had pr:m'se:l b0 on me cane e am ue j give a pz-oulnr epfaibnion on _ the L; a dmerfnll, “ewe ‘Qffigfgf pti-i-i-iwvinr. 111955. “ighfln (151111 Vfcvldenlmny Dcsed Dian Ls different. and in the inierveflf -' opinion of man educators mor I The Dltcs were Ifmllifll‘ W En!‘ practical. y I e land a 09111116 0! Wnlllflefi m‘ 9° The contemplated program will bcrorc they rcrhsd Sflolltnd- l" affect. 1,500 colleges and unlvergiflgg Cttaucrris day, it 56MB. flit? bfll- with an enrollment of 600.000 men. """""""'€—- nine was a fist-ii svrd E-"isllfih 1n- The students will take subjecfslerd- I l strumcnt That. “tout earl," the 1m; to spwiajizgd military fields and M¢LEOD 8i BENTLEY r , _ ,l_.e Mill-er, 1rd the Canterbury D1‘ the subjects will count toward lzrad- qi-qugy K c, §‘{,'§:',’,'.§“,‘,1,“.,'.l,‘° rem“ m grims on ltieir way wJl-i its htafl- nation. There are many thousands w E“ ‘,' Y‘ K a ' citing sklrl of mentally superior hlizli school 1A BEhTl-E GAS“, STOMACHS "A baizgtittiw wel cowde he biowe graduates of 1B and 19 who cannot Mummy’... RELnjYED and scwne il-st more education without Federal Barrister: and Arid ll1c1'\vlll1-°l he bmVBl-ill ‘B °“l' R-isliltflflw- Many of them are Law Every person ivini ls tmiilr of tow " potentially viiiiiaiiie leaders. noun T0 IDA" led with gas in tlu: slomzirh By Shikesi "e1; time the pip- lnd b els should rot ii linillr ularity cf the pipss in England had “w l“ 9'1"“ 8””. of Dr. Evan's Stomach llii- The Mason-Dixon Line apparently fitferi off considerably. lure and see hnw quickly It Falstaff confessed to Prince Hal —-——— ‘m "m" a“ dismflml that. he felt as melancholy as "The (Stratford Beacon-Herald) lymlmnm e Mason-Dixon Line crops up in the news from time to time and is generally taken to mean the bounclar marking the area. below drone of n Llncolnshirs bazvploe.” It was perhaps to be expected. therefore, that Ute pericd retween Dr. Evan's Stomach Mixture taken at meal times. hut mil.‘ Morrellandliompany , . _ 2 i ll b d iT i fwm fflaktigcpziiieanhiddigitiidoriwimeefhg which t e colored ople of the pilvfiiisiiipmiimtfi. func- ‘Wygplpes ln the scutfcern kingdrn, United States are " opt. in their lonalactlvity of the stomach. ll. F. ARBIIIBILII places?‘ where the "Jim Crow" laws which have no Federal authority, are out into operation. lullts dl cation and iinnfm! the nppe lte. Price 85 unii per bottle. ‘Iiugit the process la not alto- "tther clear hv which tn Bums’: day they had become the national genus“ 1n,_t,.um_9nt_ Originally. however, the Mason Chartered ‘ ' -——" .1 .. 1g 7h 1 - u and Dixon Line was the work of two Enos Fruit Sales. Til" 93' mi: tiitd nggriitiiiniiti igrcdboiewltlin fifiggwaxgnhazllfis 248w“ ting him" Tm" "wdw iiiiu m. for dii-ge or lament. on the pipes ' ° w m “Image Cha intuition . Ls a: close to one int/mate Aldé w delineate the mums“ between a r PfizerTfildehllsfnhiiiterrff; of Scottish character as their martial strum ts to another. and ALEX w. MATHESON clllllllfll’! Improved lull“! their gay. (IITVWLDTOVCKIHQ mus'c. Balm 35c. such as Auld Nick ifiiysd l1 the RARRI“ B“ scum-rug‘ 51-3 viilris of Allcivay Kirk in "Tam ‘ ' u u~ rrsurnter," ls to still a mini Money u. t...“ c» w ulll 2'_'.l.9==__9.9_":s=L<L=2:c9.§*1=L M. ALBAN FARMER B.A.. LLB BARRISTEIL BULIUITOIS BTU- Clnldlan din-k at Commerce DWI MONEY T0 LOAN. PALMER 8t HASLAM A. J IIASLAM ILA- _L‘L.B. BARRISTER. E10. Bank of Nara Scott: Uhlfillbfll! Anywav no butter can beat. It. Give the soot h'.s bagpipes every Mill Orders Given Priimpl Atte time. ntlon ROYAL AIR FORCE ihcreurpon made a fo.d'> ln the clly council He was told that the irauze was put. over the P€flCii€6 l-o keep off files and to prevent pros- pective purchasers from plriohlng hem. His retort was that a rleoe cf white gauze would do Just. as Squadron by squadron down the sky they come, Like white birds flying on a sum- mer day. Lords of the air. these stalwart sons of ours. Like knlgnts of old they come ln w well, and he dcnounsed pink bright, “may ghm-lntiyeiarlws auze ~ . .' NE ‘As a iibisuift siilnf-iésciltiiitlotil wgsusigrd- The "silinffg hifraiiliié, me younm the 210p: 8:10 l’ Qjox I‘ 5rd DYPWIilIn-g the sile of baskets of fruit. undcr colored gauze in Woodstock. It l: porifble t-hat this action may be repeat/ed efsswhsre. and the pink IZRUZ? on in» tap of the peach basket, may follcw the strnwhsrry box wl‘h Elie ralstd brttcm Into oblivion. - Peter- borough Examiner. Soaring across tne iicaveris. wave 0n wave. H. F. McPHEE 8A.. KC. Into the vast and lonely night they “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE” W. K. RDGER$ Agencies l-lll- Pliono 549-5" iwriiifzk YSOTTLITOB mum s ' . ' mm Blllltlllll Chariomww “' alzu. a. MATHlE-SON MONEY ro LOAN Cameron Blorii Charlottetown P. n. mum. j E0. Charting their course by stars we r in one long themselves. a iCaniidlan Pres!) happy crew Born iii this splendid hour of man- RIISSIA-fiermam force wedge nftr f lnl ‘t. .k Si. ll - ll v grad’: Bugatti‘; piiiidltlon: 2t Some brave and mighty destiny to MIICGl-"GAN a TRAINOR Novorosslsk. flfld- ' MMGUIGAN. MARK N. k 0- ...___ O. ST. CLAIR TIIAINOR. K. O r/icnricqym. “gum”, g, “m1 They ride the skies with laughter Bari-Intern. Solicitor: twom on Gllflflllolllll hllllfl In on t-hcir iii». MONEY T0 LOAN Solomons repulsed by Amgflggn Above the clouds the throbbing Omoe: Over Provincial Bu! alr forccg, MOIOI‘ 51088. Richmond Street Chlrlottctowr The sunrise glintc on the propeller bin e . The wind ‘is whistling down their silver-ed. wings. And all the empty sky la tilled fill“! noun Polling like chords of music u; the Iround. ibonos” EYES EXAMIIIED f KID u Ev , fill-SSE; FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMITIIBT New Mention Corner Kent and Queen lb Opnoolh Ell’! GPO"?! I I B A polnlmv It ""33... hi2... rm" Squadron by squadron down the ey come. A mlglilttrgtcavaicade armed for the e . Whose pinion-s xleam above a dark- ened world A: on tihpp come out of the quiet. n . A ahlt-ilimz host. their chariots a me, Winning their right/sous cause in Freedom's name. -Iidria Jacques in the ‘Doronto Btu. 1 ‘ZMM-W i! ' lull \I"'"‘ ,| *1 “n"l n mum.‘ ' "s l