pants FOUR 1 TllE - GIIARLOTTETOWII Gllllllllllll Murntng Dally (rounded tn ltlflbr Pnstdent: 1.111111. c111. 113...... s. IeLnn v11» President: J. IL humus. I-l-l- o I v ' fir‘ 1‘1"si‘1i1'.::11i:°i>1'i$11$1 J 1.. I-i-l- Annotate-an Editors: 1-1:»: wuss: we Inn l. tau-run . SUBSCRIPTION nuns . m a 1111111 tn 2.5.1.. sum pct 1w" $1M l" I" ' $1.25 m» a 11111111111»; so» 13$ 0:111:20,“ culsiiiiilil’ Sun-gum: lira-xi:- :13‘; giuiliiiilyiiviiiiiiiftizililinic»: 1W1 W" l" ' "m"- ' 50o for 3 months '7'“ 1 1.. lbtulnell 11s 1r °'"1:"1":'.'::"1.‘:c;f“1t-11"»1-~. 1- 1- Otd south News Agency, corner Mill and Wlllllllllr Boston; Mfllfflpltlltan News Amwv. !!" PM \- Montrea. J. l-‘lnc 354 l”! 51-. 'l'°_l'°m»lli N"; Blind, chum“, Lauri", 011mm; Wolfcu Nelle Sllml SID- bury Ont; llub ‘tobacco 5MP. 51°11'39" N- 5- "The Sfronqesf Mvsrzipiiéstllsnklflfliflkfi "W" “Q “ririinsniir. oncmmm 1.. 1m Wnrli1|1e Controls The Kin;- tiovcriiiiicnt by order-in-courvcil 11,1. \'\;~l\‘ll :1111111_-1 1111li111i1ctl powers 1n its war- ,,',,,,. ,~,,,,11~,,1 1,. 1.llk‘\’, This 11o doubt is necessary i11 tin- 111'11.~;-1‘1111u11 uf .111 nil-wlll War effort, but 1,, ‘fin-jun. ;111<l Kingston, Ont. ihere have been c011r1 jutlgincuts rpicstioiung 1'/ validity Of Such p,,,c,.,1,,,-,1_ '1‘1,i~,-¢ judgnlenls‘ have found the orders 111‘ 11111‘ \\‘:11‘li111c cc01101111c controllers 1o 1,,- \\1i1l1.1111 lilc fort-c 1,11‘ law. Such a situatim1— ~,,1-,l, 111,- gwllrls 1111lli11g 0111: way and the Gov- fifnfllcflt and i1s lmreaucrats another—obviou=ly leads 11, cllzlos. Last Tuesday the Government acted in 1hc matter by referring its system of \\',[l1'[l1llQ _L'11l111i11i.~1r11tio11 1o Chief justice Sir L\'111:111 Duff 1111.1 his colleagues of the Supreme c5111, of Canada. justice Minister St. Laurent. who made the reference, selected the Order-in- Cotmcil appointing a chemicals controller, and one spccinnu 111'1lcr 0f the chemicals controller, a5 1_\-pic:1l cases 11111111 which to make the test. This is a most important issue. The Justice Minister 1111s asked the Supreme Court to say whether the order-in-cotincil is ultra vires of the (joverncwr-iu-Couiicil, and if the special order, respecting use of glyccrinc, is 'ultra vircs of the controller. If the Government is upheld, the. judgment will serve as a precedent for all the courts to which actions may be taken for viola- tion of orders issued by wartime controllers.‘ But if the SLlpFClllE Court finds the Govern- ment wrong in delegating such wide powers to controllers, and that the orders of these con- trollers have no force in law, the whole system- of economic controls set up over the last three years will be upset. Of course, the various wartime control 0r- ganizations are continuing their operations on the assumption that their powers are unim- paired by the relatively few unfavorable court decisions. Mr. Donald Gordon, chairman of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, in ‘an official Board statement reminds all and sundry fthat "any person found violating any orders of the Board or its administrators will be prosecuted." It is expected a decision will be issued soon after the Supreme Court hearing on Dec. I4. In the meantime, Mr. Gordon's warning is worth heeding. Orders issued by the Board or its ad- ministrators, he says, arise from vital wartime needs. No one can disregard them with impunity. McNaughton’: Plan Now that the manpower crisis has burst en the Government at Ottawa, _with results which "gesemble panic, it is interesting to recall that the crisis 1s totally unnecessary. In 1939, two days before the war actually lug-an, LL-Gen. Andrew McNaughton present- cd to the King Government s. full dress plan 0f national selective service. The core of this plan was that skilled specialists in industry and agriculture should be kept at work in their g ‘sl fields; and that under no circumstances a ould such skilled craftsmen b; permitted to join the armed services. McNaughton knew that s modem army is dependent 0n industry. The Government completely ignored the Me- Nsughton plan. It has continued to ignore it ‘ co this day. The chief reason why tlic plan hos been ignored ls that the government itself rc- fuses to do its plain duty: to apply s, conlcrip- tlon law which would put every man and woman o: work wherever he or she can but help win the war. Will It Be Orlando? In his hour of extigmity Mussolini hu re- portedly called Vittorio Emanuele Orlando back from the political tomb in which that ancient statcman has long been immured. The story goes that Il Duce is seriously thinking 0f I. new nationalist government which will include anti-Fascist elements. If it is true that Orlando is among these, then the Fascist case is even more desperate than reports had led anybody!’ to suppose. At the Versailles Conference, recalls In ex- change, Orlando was one of the Big Four, the others being \Vils0n, Clemenceau and Lloyd George. (Drlaudo was a skilful stateman, an able advocate and a keen logician. One 0f the high points in the affair at Versailles was when he withdrew from the conference because Wilson refused to recognize the validity of the secret treaty of London under which Italy claimgd outright possession of Flume, That dispute “'35 c11111prr1n1is1-1l 11ml he returned later, but his govcriiiinriit soon fell when in a speech in the Italian Cllflllllflfl‘. of Deputies he pleaded for loyalty to the Allies. The Nitti ministry suc- cecrlerl his but he renylincd more or less active until after the ascendancy of the Fascist party. I11 1925 l1c finally limkc with the Fascists and rr-1irv1l into private life as Professor 0f Inter- lmtinnal Law at the University of Rome. Even lhis position he resigned in 1931. This action h1- fonk in sympathy with the stand of certain tncnfbcrs of the faculty who were removed he- causc they refused to take a Fascist oath 0f ‘salty. Since then he has lived most quietly, his name rarely mentioned. Any efllafktmfl" of Mussolini’: government in the 1118M" 5118' gcsted can only mean that there ls dewem" urgency to rally all elements of ltahau hfe be- hind ll Duce's rapidly dfiillmllg lJ"'~'$"B°- -EDIIURIAI. NUIIC§— s n1 n1 is Goygfnment reception ‘this afternoon ‘and dvic reception this gvenmg 1n honour Licut. MacMillan, D.S.C., and Bar, 0f W110i" fillet)‘ Islander is proud_ B05191, i5 locking the stable doonafter the steed has been stolen_ Isn't this a lunt to our civic authorities to examine the 5Y6 PYWW‘ tic-m, of om- own dance halls and other places of amusement and entertamment? i ll i l8 Si;- Aretas William Young, Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of Prince Edward Island, 1331-5. dledltllls d8". 1835i 5°"! 1778, and entered the Bnnsh Army as an ensign in I795;_ Sifved tllfmlgh the Revolutionary and Napoleon1c Wars 1n Ireland, in Egypt and in the Peninsular; 1n f§1_3 was 5on1 1o Trinidad, a11d in 1820-23 administered the Government; in 1821 was alppoilltfd PYOWQ- tor of the slaves in Trinidad, and in I831 was gazetted Lieutenant-Governor of this Island; died here in office; his so11, Sir Henry Edward Fox Young became Governor of South Aus- tralia from 1848 to 1355, and Tllmllllfl from 1855 to 1861. 111 =1 =1 111 Here i5 a won] picture 0f Si!‘ StAffOHl Cripps and Mr. Winston Churchill from the pen 0f that brilliant Island Journalist, l-lr. Beverley Owen: “Crippsl qualifications as a barrister, as a deadly logician and champion of the extreme leftist scale of thought are c011- ceded out of hand. His sincerity 1s not 111 question. He is a brilliant Briton. But 1: 1s hard to envision Mr. Cripps and .\lr. Churchill ‘valking down the garden path together. In temperament and outlook they are as different a! Joe Louis and the Bishop of London. Cnpps is grim and humorless, without color, nnpressue before a black-clad bench of judges. llis rhe- toric is too perfect, words drop from his lips like cold crystals. Churchill is dashing, 11n- petuous, sardonic, his phrases roll through lllS cigar, titled like a cannon. Cripps hopes to wreck capitalism, with a barrage of cold logic; Churchill would mellow it like the wine in his Chartwell Manor cellar." o a1 1s 1s In order to assure more adequate post war conditions, the Canadian Army has issued strict orders regarding marriage. It states that officm-s below the rank of captain and all warrant offi- cers under the age of 2o years will, belnre marrying, be required to obtain written permis- sion of their commanding officer. Non-com- missioned officers and men may be granted per- mission to marry by their commanding officer, subject to the following conditions: that the soldier is free from debt and realizes his f1n- ancial responsibility and that the moral Chflrflcwf and disposition of the intended Wllfi are such that it would be in no way undesirable for her to occupy public quarters. If under the age of 19 years, the soldier will be required to produce the written consent of his parent or guardian, before permission is granted, a11d if the intended wife is under the age of 18 years, the written gqnsgnt of her parent or guardian will be r1:- quired also lJClOfQ‘pCl"mlS*5iO& is granted. With the worst intentions, Mrs. Casgrain and Mr. jean Dropeau have dOne gOOd in bringing some of the Quebec French newspapers to espouse the all-out war policy. Here for, in- stance, is what Le Canada had to say in reply to the anti-propaganda: One of the young par- tisans for the candidate of the League in Outre- mont exclaimed that ‘if the Royal Police can make arrests today, it is because in the past French-Canadians have ba_ttlcd to save Canada for England.’ If Canada had not been saved for England in 1776, it would have passed over to lhg Union of the Thirteen American Colonies and the Province of Quebec would today be mother star in the American flag. This means that in lace of being arrested by the Royal Polioc, t c young subversive speakers would be arrested by the G-Men. In other words, what ls the difference? '11:: League for the Defence of Canada ought to know that there are Ameri- can conscripts in Australia, in New Guinea, in the Solomons, in French Equatorial Africa, at Lake Tchar, in Morocco, in Algeria, in Tunisia, in Egypt, in the Near East and without doubt in other places also which the military censors keep from us st the moment. One must be very childish to imagine that n universal w?" is going to spare the French-Canadians, under the pretence that we are a people of brave souls, kind and peaceful, who wishyuharm to nobody. a r With the changed outlook in Europe, econo- mists arc discussing the future. In the'ver_v first post-war period we shall have to share our food and certain other supplies with the war-stricken peoples abroad. After the last wer it lasted from November, 1918, until after the harvest of 19x9. This time it may last through two harvests, but it need not be lOIZIgCF than that—provided we use the world-wide s11p- ply built up for war purposes to lend them or give them the tools and the materials to become self-sustaining again. The human capacity for recuperation is greater than we think. And so is the adaptability of men. If priorities for cer- tain fertilizers could be obtained, the British Isles, which for a. ccntur have depended on imported food, could wit in s year grow 9o per cent of the necessary food supply. We have, however, a greater end to achieve than that. Our greater end is to prime the p11111p WlllCh will, so to speak, cause the desert to bloom- to make the initial investments in the form of materials, and technical knowledge and promotion, which will start the undeveloped rc- gions of the world in a great (lcvclopirietft. In the [irimitive places this means, aflcr political se- cnrity is established, communications and public works and the exploration of their hidden rc- sources. I11 the sparsely inhabited and poorer countries it means the encouragement of the simpler industries which, in the natural evolu- tion of things, will become the foundation of the more complex capital goods industries, NOTES BY TIIE WAY “You can get out o! cheese much of we 81112113111! you uuuugm. you got out o1 meat. —-.wrd woolton. ___... Chaplain For” u! “Praise tho Lord anu rass the mnmurution" ts s b1! apologetic over lus Immortal out- ourst at Pearl f-fimbor. He need not. be when Oliver Cromwelfs troops were about to cross a river to attack the Royallst-s the Brent Protector ended an address by say- ing: Put your trust in God; but mlnd to keep your powder dry, Much the same idea, and very sound. —Mont1eal Gazette. It ls easy for planners to brush off the farm labor problem by s - gesttng that farmers’ wlves she d help out more ln the fields But they will have to dlg deeper than that 1:1 their bag of tricks, tf food is to be produced for this country and its allies. With few exceptions, farm women have beegi devoting more hours and mo e woman power to production, right down through the years, than ctty women will put Into factory work under an all-out economy. The werage farm Wife has been glvllll,’ r111 she hus for so long that there isn't much stretch le t. Kitchener Record. Glasgow still has an elaborate system of tramivnys. A young doc- tor on hLs irny heme frrm a case early one moming waited patiently at a car-stop fcr the all-night car. He put his ear to the electric stand- and to hear if the car was ap- lproachlng. but no hum was aud- ible. Then he lt-ad a bright idea and took out his stethoscope. which he adjusted and placed against the standard. At that moment two policemen rounded a comer. Well, what could t'-':y think? A man at one o'clock 1n the morning hold- l tng a sbelhoscone against an electric. standardk ‘The doctor pocktred his Instrument and began to walk home traded by trcouple of sus- picious constables. _ Manchester Guardian. One of the tiny assemblies ln the gyro horizon and directional gyro mdfcators for warplanes, says Patn- finder, weights only 16-100mm) o! an ounce; 3,000 of them could flt into an ordinary needle. r- ~ __.._ The restriction upon the manu- facture of hats reminds me (writes “G. C "J QI a comment; 1 Qngg heard from a staunch member of “No Hat Brigade" about man's deep common hair to protect his pale “In the first place," he sold, "God gave man hair to protect his pate. Not satisfied urithi that, man ln- vented the hat to protect hi; hair. and l0llOW€(l t-hls up by inventing the mnbrellrr to protgct; his p.31, And lu spite of this armament what does he do when it rains Stands 1n a shop doorway!" Not long ago we called- attention to the fact that the Federal Judge in New Jersey who administered the oath to Boss Haguos mon- Meaney was Judge Guv L Fake Judge Fake ls not the only Federal jurist with what we may call, for want or a better adjvtlve. a curl- ous name for one who dlsnenr-es Justice In tlzis connenfon, the name of Judce Thomas W Slic". 91' Ifldlflim. also comes t9 mlnd And lf cnndtllons ln the Fv-rleral judiciary ever make ft advflsable to assembk- n three-fudge court. from as many states, .111'V<ve Jgmpg A_ Frv- "f Owucn. mam» be c111»: 111 sit with them. Jvdnves F00. F‘ kg ”“" "‘i':k—-th"1=~ woukl he a l-e""l1- ful for l1 Foul-St. Lmfls PrH-Dls- patc What we need ls ubllclt , intelligent Phbliclty Don whit 13:01:; and what we are doing The 53mg thins! can be sald of the Anglo- Canadlan provinces. Among them there ls about as muclv prejudlcg and tnexact notlons about French- Canadlans as in the United Stat. es. We have often noticed ft. It l3 n truth which the majority of Can- adians and- all those at the heads 0f_our governments have been com- neded to adrnlt. Whnt ls to bedone? Our conclusion ts the some afthat of s. correspondent: we must our- selves Ofsfinlze our ‘publlcltv 1111a not let tt be done by others, . _ D0 not let this propaganda be con. fined to Amerlcnns only. It should equally be aimed at the Engugh Canadian provinces Frankly. as we see it, we need s healthy French. Cflnwlsn DTODB-Kanda service, .11. Owflnlzatlon ‘backed b_v men of fln_ anclal standing to carry 11>; work go p supcessful end. -Le Drolt (Ot. awa . ji.__ F" s 1M1: tlme It has been clear that production must obey rules different from those which have guided it up to the present. M- wrdinsly as the exigencies o; war have increased ft has been neces- BBYY to leave the beaten paths, have recourse to new methods. A goodly number of flrms have understood that from the beglnrung and u; to work without delay to mgel; new needs. They have luad w suffer Bcflrcely at all frcm restriction; that, have been lald upon them. B111; other concerns have been slow to Bet into motion, luesftatlng about the P!“ l0 b6 played. Today Lhgy l" embarrassed and are looking to the future with apprehension. It ts lav any longer and 11m, ln snlte of countlns‘ upon a support that wlll ‘rcbably not be given mam mev wlll take thetr future lnm tlvelr own hands and means which experience has dictat- ed to them. In this wa they will attain maximum product on as the textile, lndifstijv has done and, in ad- dllltm. organize themselves with the reconstruction period ln mlnd when thevtcnn no longer depend on the assistance of 111- atrthorltles. .44 Presse (Monfrenll. In n small Laneashlre town there l5 B Brocers shop, kept by an ex- colher (crippled tn a plt accident) and his Wlfg and flvo children. some months ago he recetved from s. wholesaler three large tins of pineapple chunks, which he still guards jealously. “Aye, Ah-‘ve tow.d ‘em all Alrm selltng nine or none. Alfve got nlno famtlles registered wr me. and Alrm noon scum; b tin tlll Al-rve got mother stx to goo wt’ ’em. Ah damn. let these three goo-it'd com to‘ much jealousy. They know Ah've got ‘em cozz one ‘ooman saw ‘em coming Into t‘ shop and wanted to buy one there and then She kc s nskln‘ after '1» n11’ saying, '_Ah'll ct. t.ha's etten ‘em thyrmi, thee afid ti! brood o' brat-st!’ Aye. a1.‘ more, Afuve got to brlng em out every week-end and show em to t‘ customers just to rove- Ah‘ve still get eml Not so ha . l5 tt, when it's ml cwn stuff as Mfve bowt an’ pald for months ago?"- Manchester Guardian. nussls- AND m camel _ Ska-Your tuue c! leturdly November 14, brings-to tte roosters a letter from J. 0. newts-e letter that must epeeltous u wort-by- of thought! perusal. It ts one that! strikes a resounding chord tn the people everywhere. _ We abhor the Nut of stealthy fifth col ts, whom. upon recognition, we rtghtfully dc- prlve of many o! the privileges s0- corded ordinary Canadians; but not even passlvc reslstsnce ts of- fered to those of the class whose publlc statements your corres- pondent deals with so e1everly._ To belittle Russia's wonderful progress and achievements, or to pick flaws tn her system of govern- ment-obvtously UB.S,R.'s own af- fairs-are pronouncedly ungrateful, and Indicate a lack of even com- mon decency. Does not Bussta flll for us the role o! "l. friend 1n need" and should she not, by all of us, be recognized as . u friend indeed? Our government consid- ers Russia. a friend and ally of the highest value and importance. But note the Inconsistency which ls apparent tn the Government's asslstln so earnestly tn furnishing ' her wlt fighting equipment, ete., while Individual detractors not only operate with tmpuntty but1 are even allowed Iacllltfes for their dissemination of unspprec- fatlve vapor-lugs which can servo no useful purpose. and certainly do not tend towards unity tn Ill atl- out- war effort. If "He who receives e benefit. with gratitude, repays the first tn- stalment on hls debt“ what must we think of those who, lgnorln or disparaging the tremendous fght that the Russlan people are con- tfnulng to wage agslnstonr mm- mon enemy, have with gross 1m- proprlety busted themselves with adverse griticfstn of Russian tn- stltutlons? We are told, "there are two kinds of gratitude, the gratitude we feel for what we get, and the ratltude we feel for what we gve"; but not n trace of either oi these is to be found in the broadcasting of derogatory criticisms of a benefactor. "Looking a gift-horse 1n the mouth" ts putting tt much too mildly, Read what Shakespeare hm to say of ingratltude: grateful minds of freedom-loving _ “I hate lngratltude more tn u. man Than lying, valnness, babbllng drunkness, Or any taint or vloe whose strong corruption Inhabits our frail blood." No matter what our religious tenets it wlll be admitted that; the pro-Ally delineation of things Russian by the Rev. Dean of Can- terbury, coming as lt does from such a highly respected and emln- ently qualified English scholar as the Very Reverend Dr. Hewlttt Johnson must appeal w us as fairer and more authoritative than the carping crltlclsm of any itin- erant. or broadcastln quasi-fifth- to be hoped that they wlll not de- n use the m“ columnist of the str pe that. has earned such a denunciation from aha vlrlle pen of your correspon- El’! , I am, Slr. etc, APPRECIATIVE Summerside. Storing Bulbs (Science Ssrvf-ce News) In most. parts of Omada. glad- iolus corms have been dug and are now ln storage for the wLnt-er months. It ls best to remove the tops by cutting them of! an Inch or twa. above the corms us soon 11s the, are dug. If the tops are left on for later topping and cleaning, thrtps may be carried Into stomge on the tops and wlll eventually work then- way down the stem to feed on the corms, state officials of the Division of Entomology, Domtnton Department of Agriculture. corms should be oaremlly dried, and after tihe sou has been shaken placed In storage. Some growers (‘to not remove at; hulk at all which s sound pure so 1 u cornu come from s dive plan/lotion. " ‘If at all postble, the com-ll lhmrld be stored tn s. cool plaeq at a tem- perature of from 35-40 degrees l". ours can be maln- rlod of two 01- three months it kill 1m evens o! the insect shoulld fimlgstfon wtth nspthc- lene be necessary It ts best to carry this out early tn the winter to flow pleanty of time for the comm tn l1!‘ 1 t. least u month offer one - wlll b0 1n the . If the col- rosfve sublimete met od is tn be used this can weftl be delayed mtll , spring and should be carried out just before planttn . The some 111p u» w the cushions wfui hot: er. _ dsleytng“ matment until thes m. ry corms prior to restortng fill not then be eoossary- Whelther thrlpg ‘were the trot summer or not, it preca/utlon b0 treat all corms some- prlor to next . _ will take relutlvoty Ittt‘; lme Ind may save much heartache next summer when the sofbes are begin- 11111; to break. The eraser of nontamlnatlng neighbouring gafllells bv pfantlng untreated corms should also be borne ln mlnd when de- cldtnguwhetfier or not to destroy lltlé t: tps dining the Period of s oraae. Boasting About Waste -. (Financial Post) All over the continent. patriotic publlshers are uxerelalng the great- est possible economies tn the use of metals for ensravlnu. 1n r. manpower and other mote all. The dtstrlhutton of Information ts an essential wartime serving but Value l _ careful “w”? . 0 O ‘lgiiithsiuion? S“ . overall“ bu)“ I'll’)! dly not tn line are the publish- ers 0f the American Tlme known to metal, paper 11nd manpower are of be present ln the garden durlnglltttlo account to them. I11 a puh- is a wise" ltshed latte week, Tune hoes three already printed covers 1n one week end having 52 more covers on hand "all electmtyped 8 up" tn ease of emergenc . It adds half of these “w ll melted down, unused of course." White paper scrapped in discord of covers would probably amount. to 30 hundreds of pounds of metal, to sey nothtng of rnen ower, ants wovu d be wasted tn the me tln tlme. ‘rho publishers of Tune, el- weys ertttcel of others, erronntly oflume cause the news may move more ro- . LORED' TAI EASURE d g5 t!!! - at W ‘s famous unto l To-M . dayfi o‘ s the KW“)? iiioihsaiaitors °°“' so in? amid wow“ l e o men ffer 1 ‘cream-measure ates! "l egcoatiflfl In 0“! m’ ‘he kin f choiCe ° -o,. materials- Suvefl still Pwdamiliat keel’ Y°“ Y“ maswfY ' ' ' _ gylin extra "fish TtP T g9 Grafton s 1. 51”" s .1 h~ co Qaii r11» T°P .41.; nwem‘; will uiloflfll . ‘liq. “Pa” ve q“ Tsilorflkw‘ for Wgmfll and ‘mil e ‘or mega‘; qualill’ efquafigy fllflv t dollars l" rt. tailored-Ill‘ ovegcOflle S 01H! TREE‘ 5 e fabrifi! “d “u” cgis-“itlda more o: pl , 0 Measul°”fl9 5 01> TAll-QRS "l 'd tree!» sunny“ e. does not expect nor ask waste materials De- “my ma“ they “n are at liberty to lndu sale waste magazine, W33“ I‘ their own admission, m outta" r to subscribers 11st a o‘, discarding ordered. ‘There ls ers wlll be asked to that order that Amertc may have to be wlll expect and they "H" to expect. that there wlll tons. In addition Tlme so bosstfully admits, acids, we: and o her com on- unused engravings. A r0 save rmtrn sures srocxnm _1on_ Nether. rlnt it, they e tn whole- . at s time when any ‘Before many months are over. t» 1» Proposed 1111111 some contlmnt- Wvlde curtailment of paper wlll he of course, SNOPIBH! of paper tn this count-r but Canadian publishers and res seorlflee an consumers 1M adequate supplies. This they wlll do cheerfully; but they nve s right n0 V a.’ no more of the shocktnq wash that vital material-s ln war- alder‘ who m“ 1'5"“ l“ m‘ rmun lanzuaze from ha thelr the efforts of qupmonem m, that be- u‘ m”) POULTRY We are buying llve and dressed chickens l" “W1 45")’. paying top market value. We ‘also require Turkeys. Ducks and Geese. Phone or write for prices. ‘ Island Bold Storage Ltd. l Q _ t“ istcyiliamprc- orttles soeordlng o. ‘m4 m’ lng here. FOUR TIMES LORD DMYQB PLYMOUTH - (c?) - A t‘ mayoral record tn e00 yell! "l h corporation was estabnticd W lord Astor was re-Pltrl Mayor for tho fourth surtmi yea-r. w-“‘ s POULTRY We require a vet? l“ i‘ in quantity of chicken and during December and 3"" arr. As some of the III" wlll 11111 be 1.11 111.1. 111;; routes we smiles‘ Y0" r . your poultry by, n, Prompt. returns daily a market value. THE 11111111 111111111111: t" J. D. JENKINS Prop. .v;~.~r.~<.\04vi*4\.v..,.