THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _-____._____._. . JUNE 21x19 PAAG-‘R’ FOUR IaE . , n m.‘ . I ,1}; LlihnLl) flEnniN GUARDIAN _\1,,,-1,111‘ pally il-‘uunded In IIIITI ‘qpgipihlfll ru-ut tjui \\ UIIBSICI a. mourn h“ pmnic-ng; j It Burnett. I-J-L ‘Urrvhflh up,“ “,1 1; ,1; rnnclunnun 0.5.0. LL11“; anti Jlauuglu‘ Ulltflfll I K- “urnfll” SJJ’ AWN“, Lullulb. Ihllll “tllktl and Ill-I A Mutual-I gLISDLIUPIIUN RATED u" By IUIAII Iu I‘.l--I. v4.00 n“ r~’-"- “f” "" :_"°" SL4} (u: 3 munlhs; 50c fol one mull bu» UIJIHM) will“ I!" 7ft" ' “'9” “l h “mam. 511;, 1... 4 uiuuths, 00a ioi um: Mvlllll 5y luau I0 ulucl riuvmevs and U. S. A. $5~W P" Y.“ §.~\‘.u»<.1,) tit-tin.» w-w Wf‘ We" ‘W’ l“ " “‘°'“"" 5m: Iur J will-lull ununiniu ma; on vUlIllIIW-l ll 111,, Qllurltallvluu ii _ k o“ u,,1_,1.,,_.. A..." Agent-j, |llllll bllutuu. MI N" I w uni suns Ageing. (‘turner Milli uml \\Kih|IlI l. Zidlfilull JHJIIUIMIIIIIAU mm- 15'" |"‘| 5"" ' ’ Ulnl Ilunlrrtnli .1 lctllr. 4m urn M» M“; “M? uhmq“, 1_,,,,,1,.,_ Uuuuu; “ullun awn Bil-Ill. ll - 0m, IIub ltiinyt-n blur», uuuvlnn N. 6.1 “The Strongest Memory is tVeaker than ll! n ealvest Ink- saiiikuixrxfiiixls 27. 1942 ______. Armv \Veek Objective '1" "' ‘wron of \rinv “hick ‘lilll be a M. _,_..... . . _ _ . ., -.--'~rn farasit "WV" lmoughoul (“imam ‘iiial tit ssirit of com- __, ,.,.1.-,-.ruy anall-too-prcwi '1 P shiuiltl inspire us with the renlilflllml ,.».\liitclv- iiothing—5h0l'i of a iii l'\‘<~llll'CL‘.<, wealth zindanzin- . enough. This lOllll Cll-Olt l5 not ~' '11; i\\ ..i we iiiust reconcile plat-selves to u; forth some time in the lndellllllt? lulu)‘ 1i nurse. he put forth now. It \\'0l1l<l beya malor . U.‘ m. me ,.,,__.,,1, n; Arm), '\\.cck, the ,,,.\.__.,.,,1 Cgfnrts are sufficient should ‘,.,.,.,1,-n,~¢_ 'l‘liis, of course, is fin" 1 L: 1iiirpose' of lhe Pfqlaratlons’ (m. f, QlYQ 11s all the oppvrltllllty ‘fl hon‘ win in battle Ill?!“ 51ml l0 sllmlllate . riiiv qviicrallyg The 1wilrlltl95 and 1,1‘ Elit- 1n-ngratuiiie \\'ill recall .. .. tleiii-Jiistrations in the’ last will’, ~r¢ highly effective in rousing Publlc <iii. _ , ,.,.,_,_ ,,,-,-1-{<el_v, is the point. Public en- , 111-,- flyiillwlfll, >llOLll(l. carry everything » l: ~lioiilil leave no room for comlllac‘ ezicv and wishful thinking, theforcruriners 0f icr and defeat. _ . U111‘ Auii-i-iczin neighbors were given an antl- .1i.-,1» ngfilll-l such complacency’ in a recently pull- llSllLIl 1i.»<.1;_ "Prelude to Victory", written by jaiiies B. lteston, Washinflw" corresholldelll °f the New York Times. .\Iuch of what M1‘. R650" .7“,- ;,i,,,.,,1 finned States applies to this 601th- .1. ins 111g following quotation which fruih a speech iiiatle by General hi8?- .. in i940: “The history of failure in war cnii uiiiinst br- riiiiinied up in two words: ‘Too 1111;,’ Tim Iiita in comprehending the deadly /._,,,.,.,,_,,. 1,11 11 piltriilial Cllilllltl] too late in real- ,~V.- ,1“. mural diiiigrr; too late Ill. preparedness; ,|.,,,'_i,,1,. iii iiiiitiiig all possible forces of resist- Q1111‘; (no late iii standing with one’: friends." _\lr_ Restoii pleads first of all for a thorough self examination. We must abandon our habit 0f dying to do irveryiliing the easy Wny. “EZISY washers and easy chairs are one thing. but eflsY democracy, easy citizenship and easy education arc something else. \Ve have been concentrating on gening [nflfe and more for less and less, have 1.1km nur liiaiwryi from ‘outlines’, our news from ‘r<11111(li1ps' and our books and magazines ffflm ‘cligests'." .\s a theme song, he SHyS. ‘Rfltflemlfief Pearl Harbor‘ is not good enough. “We must positive, not negative; nobody ever fiiiglit hIS best lllf‘l‘(’l_\' 1o preserve the status quo." And we must be l]tlli‘l\' zibout it too, for while time was on our ritlc before the war and will be On 0111' side after 19.13, it is not on our side in 1941 The Llnitcil States, he says, is still “laboring under the illusion that it can win the war With iIS 56f- oud tr i." '1‘1n'. i. 1111i hind of illusion which, if it exists iii Canada, Army \\'eck should help to dispel. Let u.- remember how fatal it proved to France and other liuropean democracies. how it nfiflfl)’ lost lllf‘ war fnr Rriiziiu herself. Let us bevv-"are nf Qfcppllflg i1_ nr eouiitcnancing it, under any disguise whatever. l< Arresting Inflation Cziiiailzfis price ceiling experiment is fevlelved for the benefit of American business men In an .-1r11r1<i 111' llrucc llutchison in the current 1551K m‘ 1f..1--11~,-_ 1111i (i'illt‘ltl.<lflll reached i5 lhilt Ml‘- liiiiizill lii-Wiiiii. chziirniziu Ill the \\'artimc Prices and l ll’ liiiaril. has iloiic a phenomenally SUC- CC<<flll jab it. llfll(‘_ lliere is only one fcfll W5?- s:i_v.~: l‘illllllllt'_ tli:ii can be fairly 5111111 Qfl “lhl? cosr-of-living llltli x. .\ year ago, in july I941. 111.» 511.1 x fillVHl ;u Ill, eleven points above the iiu:ii ‘iliati- ]il't‘\\‘ill' figure. liy November, just be- furp 111- niilinir “'51;;11i1ill("<l.ItllZl.(l reached 116.3, and 1111. iiicrczisiilg by a pfllllt a month. In liiflth arr l. mouth zifii-r the experiment began. ll i. .i.»np1it-il 1i. i154. Since then it has cl liYQIl b.’ lllilllliv fl'.‘lL‘lll')llS~—-[t) 115.7 in Febru- arv, llll ill Kliircli, In April. when the last figllffi wis l‘< '1 ~11. ii was siill n6. or three-tenths of a plum b 31w lil(’ Xiiveiiibiii‘ figure. and no cost-of- liviiig ‘ii-nu. 111.1 lll‘(lllll(‘ necessary. Incidentally. wbiii- Vii- (‘iiiiniliiu llVliX was up I; points over Angus; 111311, lllO l‘, S‘, index was up i6 points. though (I-iuriili llIlll devalued it< currency by ii per c iii ‘i1 [titling for lllH-l of its imports, which conic from the l’. S. and are now running at the rau- of I1\'(‘l' ;1 billwii dollars a year. Ulher Days, Other Budgets lliiw far-off and faint and puny, sighs the Ot- 1.--_1\-;1 _]ii~.:i-n;il_ \\ l‘1'(‘ 111- nlll-llllll‘ budgets, which we then thought so mighty. Cartwright and Field- ing and luhlvt‘, they never l\'I1f‘\V there could he suih a thing in (aiirulri as an income tax, or a ("nrpnriiziuii tax, or an i-xvvc. 1n-iifits tax or a fenllW 111v, or a llflliiilltll ilrfviice tax. lrltltllllgifi only trouble vxzis as to how he lllltflll s1xiuil his surplus (revenue raised uiusllv by customs duties) 0n \\'ilZll'\‘I‘s‘ aurl post offices and other public build- i-uzs; and Foster could make our flu}; creep over mounting e xpe n dit u re s and debt from capital outlays. They talked in hundreds of thousands and millions, while t0- day our Finance Minister talks in hundreds 0f millions and billions. Ilslcy, indeed budgeted for more money last Tuesday than the total 0f lll 0f Fielding’s budgets, and Fielding was Finance Minister for fifteen years at One stYCICh- Changed, too, are the styles of blldgfli SPCCChE; and changed as well the style Of 91¢ Ilflifldil critics of “His Majesty's Loyal OPP°3lll°ll-" Fielding delivered his budget with the aid of a few notes; and often Foster would reply with nothing more before him than a glass of water. Bv six o'Cl0Cl( the whole business would be over- Mr, Ilsley read every word of his delivery ; waded through a procession of technical facts and fig- ures and decimals; and there will be no reply from the Opposition until after days of study of what Mr. Ilsley says and proposes. - EDITORIAL NOTES - All set for Army; VlLeeliMpnday. Tomorrow in our churches evfllwne" flwught’ and prayers will be centred on the fortune 0f W31’ of [hg United Nations, esPeClallY the ‘all’ o; 2:5 own boys on the various fronts by sea. all ZIII‘ . iii!‘ The British “Blitz" King Scouts now in plur midst were selected on their merits; the)’ 3ll_ long 1Q 111g ordinary walks of life, but (llSllIIgtlnSél ed themspve; m Scouting antitBllll work. c prepared was and :5 lilelimg °- Mayor Raynault of Montreal has enlisted in Canada's Reserve Army and has passed the medi- C31 test, I-Ie does not knpw where he fvlll be P‘)? ed, leaving it to the military authorities to deipide in what capacity hi: servige would be best su e . If for reasons of age 0r PllYslcal ‘Dlldltlon’ . . - =1 You are not eligible for the Afillveffmgrbétnxilizg to train to defend y0_ur homeshan m)” I to the l“ the elm“ of mvasionhyqu s if“ liapPCyanadian Armouries now for admission 0 I 8 Reserve Arm)’- flit!!!‘ A 1arge qumbu- Qf girl clerks in army offgcts are faced with the pf°5P¢°t ‘if. having to ‘hem-been ton hose eventually. A military order a! c‘ issued banning bare l¢g5i °l' leg’ Palgfgg to r Sembh hose. Ankle spck: at: also for i en. The Massacre of Cawnpgrg IIIIS date _ 1857i Nana Sahib stirred HP ffill"! l“ India against best . . - ' d the British, and during the Mutiny Pelllfffat‘ the massacre knpwn as the Bloodyrllgzljll .16“? took refuge III l\epal where he was lg of hi?“ ed, as nothing farther was ever heal ' g u D l . f T11 m stery about the purchase o Canacelizianiswlsizrzileforythe British market. Prof. J- A Scott Watson the new agflcllllll" “Hal.” to the British Embassey at vyashington. iltaeliga: the Canadian Government is P8yll18h_ °l_' - so Trade Minister MacKinnon 53)’! l l’ l5 ‘mark’ no formal settlement having hes" ma“ l" ish purchase of wheat here. i i i i . ' by the An attractive booklet has hem "W"! ‘ lla l5 helpmg lhe men m thilflfg elitftg hostels in Pictures arc We" °f ‘h? ‘ f‘ service Hanfax 1-1.1, by organizations doing war work and the accompanying text tells the story. to As in Charlottetown, the work is done lflfglell’ bl’ vopmtee; workers, and reflects credit on a 1 con- ccrned . a i: iv it Prof. J. R. Pelletier, director of the D0111- inion Experimental Farm at Ste. Annt ‘l6 Pocatiere and president of the LlVCSIOCk BICCII; ers’ Association of the Province of_Quebec, ant D,_ 1.1_ vcuienx, clllfif of the Yctcrinary 5mm“ 0f Quebec Province, are considefalll)’ alarmed over the high mortality anlflng llewlY hm" T“? young piglets, noting that in Quebec alone as spring there had been a l°55 Ol 0v" 400900 young pigs, against a total 110g CtZll5ll5 °l allow i,5oo,oo0. ‘ l‘ t ‘I Before Pearl Harbor, the 5- A- navy ha“ seven aircraft carriers in service and eleven uti- der construction. Also, at the instance of the Hatitime Commission, the conversion 0f merchant Ships into aircraft carriers had been b6- gun some new cruisers, under construction, also are being converted. The new naval bill, aPPYOV" ed this week by the House Naval AlfHITS Cflm" niittcc, formally recognizes the aircraft carrier as the ruler of the seas. The bill provides for 509.- ooo tons of aircraft carriers —€_n01_1gh l0 bull‘! from 2o to 3o, depfindilngpn iheir size. The tightening demands of war tipoii manu- facturers of commercial feeds for livestock, es- pecially in view of theisléortages ulihichtliav? d: veloied in raw materia s or amma pro Em <56 S imdlllle pressure for maximum efficiency and food value of all feeds, were emphasized at the Canadian Feed Manufacturers’ Association an- nual convention in Montreal. Difficulties which have developed in obtaining adequate supplies of ingredients of fish meals, bone meals and 0th" animal protein feeds were stressed by makers of Specific types of feeds. The fish meal problem’ IS attributed to wartime restrictionsdon the Bdfllpllgli of coastal fishing fleets and the iverson o is - ing craft into naval operations, with a consfiqllcfll shrinkage in supplies. Materials for other animal protein feeds have become difficult 3t llmei l0 get from the packers. Dr. R. A. McIntosh, pro- fessor of obstetrics, cattle diseases and special therapeutics at the Ontario Veterinary College, Guelph, Ont., declared there never had been a time when all concerned stood to gain so much from the proper feeding and nutrition of live- stock. jusi as with human beings, he told the meeting, animals suffered diseases and fell into poor condition because of lack of essential chemi- cals and xiitamius in their feeds. Insufficient Vit- amin A was a particular source of trouble dur- ing the stable-feeding period in the winter and lack of calcium gave cows a (lisease which made llicir nerves go to pieces and their hair literallyi 939d 9“ 9'14; _~@-IQILQQ?'1 . I some 1,, IIIIIES BY TIIE WA! M“ , u H .- -- mm an amusing story of Dr. Hush Dal- ton, president ot the Board 0t Trade: "Dr. Dalton has the reput- ation of having one of the loudest voices In the House 0t Comm0fl5- Ha Inherits It from hLs tether. who was Canon o1 St. George's, Wind- not. m. minim wit: how. when he was a child, he arsed to attend part- Iu at, Windsor, which were some- tImes honored by the presence of Queen Victoria herself. On one o! these Occasions. the Queen remark- ed on a bunch of grapes which young Dalton had In hIs hand. ‘I suppose you'd like me to go any. so that you can eat. them’. said the Queen, patting young Dalton on the head. ‘Yes, Queen" was the embarrassing reply. ‘I would!’ As she walked away, Queen Victoria tvas heard to remark: ‘What a loud voice the child has! Just- like his father!" -I.nndon Listener The golden eggs of the legend- ary goose fade Into Instgnlflcazice beside some ot our native produce. Devourlng one of the first half- dozen home-laid eggs In the house of a new recrult t4) the ranks o! ’ estIc poultry keepers In Leeds, I remarked that It was the best egg I had tasted for at least a year. “It. Ought to be." retorted my hostess, their producer. "That egg cost £4 10s." The way ot the doin- estlc poultry-keeper Iii wartime Is a thorny one, my host: tells me. Hav- Ing acquired his pullets - at a. fabulous price - he is men con- fronted with the problem of pro- vIdIng them with a residence in a svorld where timber Is rationed, and ivtre-nettuig can only be obtained under a permit which Is never ls- sued to domestic poultry-keepers. However, she assures me that It Is all wetl worth while In the eiia, and at the last report the price oi eggs had fallen to five shillings each. _ Leeds Yorkshire Post. Four major fountalng of govern- ment. publicity In Washington have been merged under able Rmer Davles. It Is a reform which should simplify and clarity the flood of news from Washington. Mr. Davis 1s a competent, respected news man. who knows newspaper, radio and the book and magazine tIeld. A! In gasollne and rubber conservation, and-for a long time-war pro- duction. many overlapping Govern- ment boards had been set nu to handle the job of issuing and in- terpreting the news made by Gov- emment-whlch Is the biggest source of news there l8 today. Pro- bably this over lapplnp was due In t to admtnlstratlve uzzlness. but l: Is only fair to say that President. Roosevelt “planned it that way" In order w try several Ideas, and sev- eral men. at the" job of Informing the people to see whIch worked out . Now- and not too soon-the news machinery of Government has been streamlined and the public should benefit. - Minneapolis Star Journal. The hearlng. was concluded n! Maxidhestei’ Asslzes of the cloth- ing coupons case, In which 11 men had remained on trial on charges of being In possession of forged coupons and three others had pleaded “Quilty" to offences In- cludns conspiracy relating to forged coupons. Five men had previously been acquitted. The trial lasted nine days. Mr. Justice Asquith passed one sentence of four, and one of three years’ penal servitude; three sentences of two years’ penal servI. tilde: one of 18 months’ lmprlsoii- merit, and others of smaller term. -I.nndon Times. A four-ton anchor from the hm. ous three-decker I-I.M.S. St. Vlii- cent hiis been given by ‘Falmoutli to the Ministry of Works team coll- ectlng scrap~metal In Cornwall. The anchor. which W85 presented Fiilmouth when the St. Vincent Was broken up after service a5 a training ship In Portsmouth, has stood for 35 years on Gyllyligvase Beach. The Bodmiri town council have Elven 11D tvm Russian guns captured at Sevastopol during me Crimean War. The money pald to: the scrap metal Is being given to lllilsnagld-IFO-RIISSIB Fund. _.r,>,mon Some remarkable ‘facts concern- ing the length of time which the seeds of certain plants will live have recently come to light at the Natural History Museum. South Kemlriiztcn. One of the most re. markalie Ls the case of a single seed of Nelumbtum speclCsum (fam- W-s as the sacred lotus of the Nile though It: no longer grows In that rtvvr). ch was recently taken from a Imen of the plant In SI:- Hans Sloane’; herbarium In the museum. After treatment with con- centrated sulphurlc acid and sub. Sflqucnlly water a shoot halt an ch l°lllZ appeared within 2i hours and later grew rapidly. This plant Ia now being grown at Kew. Seeds of Nelumblum from Sloane’; e01. lefitlvn were germinated In a class- Ical series ot experiments, b" Robert Brown In 1843-55, and they were then known to be at any rate 150 years old. Dr. Rambottomfls persent “Derlment has added at least 87 Years to the recorded length of time (now therefore 237 vearsi, for which seeds of known date, of any specles of nliint. have been proved to retain life. The stories to'd of wheat belnu grown from com found In Ezyptlan mummy cases are, It need scarcely be said, pure fiction. — Bantfshtre Journal. For a year or two I have seen at. Intervals In a neighbor's garden a very friendly bladkbtrd, distinguish- ed by a white head. It nested this year In some thick Ivy g-rowlng against the house. The young are now at; large, and though apparent- ly as big as their parents, stlll do- mand to be ted, and pursue about the lawn their not eagerly obedient parents. One of these youngsters as I salient white Ditch on the wing. Now It Is said by the sctentt- tlc biologists that albinism Ia not. Inherited. ‘me proper color I; latent and appears Iii subsequent gen- erations. My experience, both In this Instance and In many earlier ones. Is that: white blnckblrda have white descendants. ‘Ihere Ia one beautiful garden (In Hnmpghh-e) that was inhabited by pIebaId blackblrds I01‘ a very long gel-lg; of years. What is the biological ex- planation of such undoubted facts It Is eurtoua that track-colored birds have the strongest tendency to albinism. I have seen a com- pletely whtte rook, very many white bliickblrds. but never a white thrush though doubtless almost all specks have produced examples. I one» snw three white French par-fridges In a covey. - London spectator. ___________________ I-"or good results In 1el‘y and lam mnkiniz. use truIt just undoi- perfect matnrlty- when ctln eon- m: and new: u-Lat £1: g5 PUBLIC FORUM in; mum u 00- hl W i OI quot-Inn i-Iloulfllflflz-u. annually adorn tin Ollllou ll con-tannin EDUCATIONAL REFORM Charlottetown. P. E, I. Edltor Gun-chm, 51:: 2. TEACHERS‘ SALARIES AND TEACHER. TENURE The Citizens’ Edmatlon Com- mittee has always supported the Tleachers Flederntlon In Its aklta- m tIon for larger salaries. We believe that It our children axe to receive the best results from their nuhllc school training the teachers must be encouraged to put forth their best eflorta and to do this they inuat. receive SUIIIOI€IIL remuneration to enable them m mm teaciuns their llfe work. One of the armiments BRaInst fur- ther Increase by the Government Ls that It. already pays a. much higher percentage of teachers’ salaries than Is paid by other provincial govern- ments. However, as the other Inoes all have a form of m ctnnl government and control theIr fin- ances this argument Is valueless. On the other hand. the cost of education per pupil Is much lower in P. E. I. than In the other prov- inces and the percentage of at- tendance Is also lower. Bvtdentlv we are not taking a serlmis vlew of 3w Importance of primary educa- on. During the past year only those students who had completed first year at Prince of Wales College or held a Grade XI certificate were ad- mitted to the class In Teacher ‘Pralnlniz. This raisin: of teaching standards calls for a corresponding increase in the salary schedule. What has been done about It? Al; the last session of the Prov- incial Leeislnture an Act to Amend the Public School Act’. was passed It provides for four new classes 0t license. superior first class for males and females and superior second class for males and females. In each case the Increase in salary ls $50 oer annum, of which $25 Is paId from the Provincial Treasury and $25 by the district. In order to secure a lfiflfiller lwldlwl n superior first clasii license the district must pay $125 supplement or $100 must be bald for a superior second class teacher. is inusl: be borne In mind by the rate payers of rural schools at the annual meeting. If the district falls to vote the amount required the teacher does not receive the Iii- creaied salary from the govern- men . Another reason for the voting ot an adequate supplement 1s the Im- portance of retaining a satlstac. wry teacher In a district. WIth the prevailing scarcity of teachers the best on . naturally. are IIOIIIR to ac. cept the best: salaries. ThIs Is where the lame!" Administrative Unit would prove of value. Rn- m: would be equalized. teachers placed in schools best suited to their quali- flcatlons and all would have a. sense of security In their nostttlons. In conclusion we wish no stress the Importance of s. full attendance at the annual school meetings and the voting of the stlbnlement re. quIred to secure the class of teach- er vou wlsh to engage. We are. Your: truly, P. I. I. CITIZENS’ EDUCATION COMMITTEE. Per (Win. A. R/eddtn) chalmicn, sub-committee on Educational Publicity. EDUCATIONAL REFORM NOtllEz-Your careful consld- eration In reading this letter Is £8 your; ismmentsi on 11 wou aipwec at- ecl by Incl’. B. Island Citizens’ Education cmintttee. Confusion Reigns (Halifax Chronicle) ..E?§i‘.?.‘.‘“...l.‘t§ll°“‘°’l °’... “m” ons n . pgglrsicontuslon wars? pkpnfoiiiliidvvgd s n man par o e t iegardlng emdloyinent and élgfiiil ieirylpet regulations. In many niral srcsthepovlst t I . Ive service orher which hllfiilielelsltd) effect last March are being flag- iantly disregarded. Farm Wages are soaring at a time when every effort should be made to prevent factors whit???‘ hiimifiiiwa t. 0 un ers riding and conseqluent dlsrenrd of assent. InI restrlct ons could be avolded Ifththe varlollls wartime boards and 0 fir akenic es would publish simple til? filiiiiill ltifiifél “""'"’ilfl“' - nary c en "mnfll- b6 expected to Interpret ac- %.’li1‘1§’l...€§".i§‘é.’;“§tf. i." “let? . 5 _‘ minister them do not understand themselves. Nor cim farmers and iizrlcultural workers generally be expected to seek legal advice upon every new regulation that Is ground put fronh tlpeoprlst; mill of orders- n-couiic a tawa. It would be equally unfair to ex. pectthe newspapers of the country o b.ccme Interpreters of statutes and regulations through their ed1- torlal columns. II’ Canadian news- Iciggprs attpimplpd lferlously to dis. ge suc . i ,i_i,me Shane i8‘. i.“§yiiilii°§°ei§.§“1d l” m}: ":10 tinge I}? thphhiiiwrv of the on w a. 1 —“Ignorance of fhe liawigtas gab’: €lti£{'“i.”°i§“..".l2£° dim”. ti. “.°"°“ . . e matter Is that; thousandsilbf clllzgiig €5°ifi2m£1;i.‘§l¥.."‘€€."““ .':.°ir"’-" =8 . as e ver, existence as well of countless rulcl - wuu u.» UF CHALLENGE "Strong In our faith and re- solved to shrink from no e1- fort. no SMILIIOG. we shall march on to the tritlmbh 0f right which alone will open to all the premise of a broac- er and better use." — H. M. Kin: George V1. ._..<>.o.< '- ' CIQMQQQ»... Circular Reasoning (Sydney Post-Record) The Winnipeg Free Press, which Ia one of perhnm a half-dozen of the slmon urc Liberal newspapers still following the old party trails In 9 west, has this to say regarding Prime Minister King's extraordin- any speech on the manpower bill: Mr. Kinks statement that con- wrlptlm may never be necessary “"5118 110551118. I1. by a miracle, the war ended tomorrow conscription would not be necessary. If Germany were szirmshed before the end of this Year It. would be. perhaps. super- IIUOIIS. But, If we go on the only safe assumption-that. the war is lIkely still to last a very long time. conscription will oertalnly be need- ed. The word to emphasize In Mr. Kings sentence Is ‘may,’ and we can now surely take for granted that he means what he says. namely. that when the voluntary system falls. the Government will Impose the neces- nrv measures to keep our armed forces up to full strength." This elaborate effort at fine-spun s Isl pleadtnz shows that where t ere Is a will there Ls always a way. It also shows what an Intolerable burden Mr. King's north-bv-north course on conscription has imposed on his journalistic friends. T e last sentence In the above-quoted extract contains a. perfect ex mple 9f the 1 cal fallacy knowiil as begging t e question." Because Mr, King said conscription “may” never K160955811’. The Free Press ritz- Rests he thereby implies the con- trary posslbllztya-whlch is obvious HIOUBIL-bitrt It adds with reckless assurance: We can now surelv take for granted that he means what he says. namely. that when the vol- utarv system falls. the Government will impose the necessary measures keen our armed forces up to full strength." That unfortunately Is not what MY- Kins "says? and therefore can hardly be what he "means." the one bclniz the Wlnntpeiz paper's invenmi assumption. the other its Inference based on that fictitous premise. The EIIIIIB Minister has never saId his uovemment would Impose consmp. tion at any time. or under any clr- curmtances. At the start of the war. however. he said the onbosttie. and he has never since unsald It. EASTER DAY, VALETT, 1842 I watched Llw pearly shadows of the Easter aw . And then the Sun In splendour rose. and bathed the City In a glorlous light, and all was very quiet. . . . But soon sad walllngs foretold that Deal-h was on Its way. And ere Io that. glad morning sky w With ma: droning wlngs of Death. an a Easter peace of Christ was shat- tered By the roar of pjuns and trembling o! the earl; . . . And n; I watched, my heart with sorrow filled ' A: Death screamed It way to earth. an As It fell great desolation came wher Once mucheloveliness had been . ~. . ‘Then as great clouds of dust arose. and hn An some vasfufaurtaln o'er the City It seem To me that Christ Himself must weep to see Such deso atlon. . . . And when the clouds hm passed awn . I law the’; City, much shuttered. ye Verv lovely atIll. And so, throughout That Easter Day, until the evening came ‘The droning wInizs of Death were heard. and The setting stm wounds . . . saw the City's blood red. ‘men game night most gently and The City front my sight, —Repr1ntcd from the Times of MIIIALVADPII 25.1942. and regulations affecting their daily lives. The pII ht of the farmers Is des- perately lfttcull. as It ls. No time should be last. In publishing in the form of advertisement-s In the daily and weekly papers of the country Interpretalave ccmment, on the vari- ous wartime regulations wlniilzii- to that given In talk toi-ni hv ‘he OI‘- Ilce of the Dirxtor or Public In- formation rver the CBC nrtzvork, Unless some such steps are taken. taken soon. the contusion that now exists In manv carts of the country will tlevclon Into such ii hopeless muddle that the very nur- pose that many cf these ririuln- tions are designed to achieve Wlll be frustrated. ‘Those loolfnv Icr furs will tlnd that. on the vivicole. the stocks are fairly large mvv-biit unless t)“ garment Is bciiglit scan-thera- v 4| doubtless b: an nrlvanze in DFICL‘ Styles In Vancouver are as un- to-date as anywhere on Hits cori- tlnent. and the brie-e or her oar- ents may bin ‘h the surety hm what they ci~c will be right, m the fn"-_Ii_lon irr i The Ilishup %MII.EI_I_QII Slum] A Church of Inglcnd llosldontlcl and Day School for Girls Kindergarten to Junior and Senior Matriculation-House- hold ScIence,Art, Music, Physical Education wtth games. New modern gymnasium and swim- ming pool. Principal: Mhl I1. M. Lowe, B.A. Vice-Principal: Min Reamer, Cheltenhnm and Froebel Innltute. For Calendar apply to Bursar. f‘. Established over 70 Yam New I ‘l! (Ilrln-Jfrd" flept. II. I0 IJI, Nuv Boarders-Ind" Nepl. II, Ilium, llonrglnrn-Wmlu Haul. 0. ll nan. flrhonl DIIQIII-—TIIIII‘II., Noni. l0, In 1‘ m, i - -___-_._.l . Citizens cl I CI-narloflel: a w l! The week-of June 29th to July 5th has been des. ignuted by the Government of Cunudu us “Army Week"—u week sot aside to enable the paoplg o; Cunodu to become better acquainted with, and to my tribute to Canada's Army. AI’ no place in Cunudu should this opportunity b; more welcomed than in Charlottetown, the capital 11f Prince Edward Island, the province which has provid. ed more personnel for the Canadian Active Army, in proportion to its population, than any other province of the Dominion. ' I urgently request that during Army Week all available flags be flown, patriotic bunting be dsplayed and that all merchants with display windows urrcnge to have them appropriately decorated in honor of the Canadian Army, and of the many Illlndridl OI Chg:- lottetovvn citizens serving with it. B. ROY IIIILMAN, Mayor Be Confident . . . n u; then address ourselves I0 our task, not in any way unit-railing It: tramendiml dllliuultleu and perils. but In good heart. and sober confidence, resolved that, whatever the c0512, whatever the inflating, we lhnll stand b one mother, (rug and falthful comrades, and do our duty, oil hclplng 11., to the endP-Wlnston Churchill. The Great-West Life is the Guardian of thousands of Can- adian homes. IIYNIIIMII 8i (I0. LIMITED PROVINCIAL MANAGERS Ofltnes: Charlottetown. Summernlde. MMIHIIIO AlIIsnn P. MoLoan-Dhtrlot Mona er at Siunmeral‘ 11g], 3. Jelly-Re eseutltlve at ‘Leary J. Mai-tln Currle— llresentatlve at Montague Peter G. McE ‘- R resentat‘ at Victoria Thomas McAvInn, C. L Ilv-Speclal Representative. Evans How Are Stomach Mixture Your Eyes? A very efleatlvo means of ob- ulnlng reller from dlmrden - n. of the dtgestlvo organs. which '- are attended Ily m. headache. f heartburn. aIn and a sense of pressure elow the heart. Recommended for Sour Stom- ach and all stomach troubles. Prlice 85o a bottle. MACS HAIR. RESTORE]! A delicately perfumed pre- on m having gnaw: -~ of I rain — hendac el. eyen or dlulneas — MIMI lneolullst. At mgr lervtcz Ila! ‘a! l’ expo once on n n l afnctlnz lervlce. and Ghoul 1 I ,. Clll In flllflclllllei. gigazii...iiri....iszz"iri . B. F. lllllfillfltl" l l’. n will restore (my anu- u» r. o. nmcuzsoa IIs orlzlnal color G. I. IIUTCBESON iotessional Gar Promotes a new and an r- Ior growth where the h r I| falling and In remarkably une- ful In preventing dandruff and dest-rovlnl nraalllo Inh- kIII- ers. Prlce 0 cent! a bottle. Are You Troubled With LUMBA-GO Morrellandliompan II. F. ARCIIIBAI. or BORE BACK f If so. we have one of the beat remedlea to offer mely. , sAcinIiTa '1' LETS Chartered AMEIIIIIIIIIII A remed tur Bacltncha, Lum- sum“ Tum alum“ b: n. U nary Troubles. Nu. rlts. Joint. Muscular and other fomu at Rheumatism which ordIniu-y treatment: fall to reach. Prlce 50c a Box TIIE TWO MAGS Mull Orders Glven Prompi Attention. 3‘ Chlrlottelowl mun-mumm- McLEOD a. BENTLEY w 1, HENLEY. k 0. _|_ A 55141-1.“ K. c. Bari-mm mo Alwrlllllfl’ LII MONEY TO LOAN I54 Prince Si?!" u. i-. McPHEE 8A.. K-C NOTAR I dic- p BAIIRISTER SOLII. lags" event-lie»- am a. MATHIESON COMPLETE INSURANCE "e sine’ cusses rum LSMHM OPTOMETBIST N" mention “sin-rail ~i=="+~'"' lvenlnp B! Allpmqgfn" Phone Buldfll" m PALMER LAM ‘i tAIIIIBsIBTEB-i of Non 50° P Charlottetown- MONEY m suism]. rumour iualizii. l. wggggg’; i - ° "bfrhililf salpgxg g! T0 I I g,9§.‘°-°ill'i'i'um- SERVIC ” I ) E