._,...,-_::.,, l‘ .. i. -"‘.'.lUR THE clllhlbl luluml lillAllBlAli Murnlng Dally (Founded In I887) Prnldonli Llrul. Col W, Cbntlr l. IIII-IIQ I lenrntuyr lllnul Col. nan..- lnrl nlumlllnl . FJ-l- n-at-nn- manor-i Frank w-um. 1M UPIK- l" Mural-ll. nun \ n. rm. am" anneal nunnviuvrmn IIATI! a, inn n- r. n L. an» n" "w" U" '1" ' """" U25 for 3 month-l Mb- Ior nno nmnlh Clly llt-lhrry from 1m velr: W" '1" 5 """"" 111A for 8 mnmlu: 80o for one month I n! mm u» nlhrr Fmvlnrrn “it (MIA $1.00 Mr n: lnlurlfny Weekly: v2.0a n" vv-Im I'M l" ' "m" i n0.- for s mnnthl rm- clmrl-ntnawn Gunrdlnn mu ha outrun?! "nfnflinll New. An-nvy Thin-n lunar-n. NlFI M - 1m uinnli Noun ant-no;- rnrnn nlfllu and “nhlnxlnn llllilill Jli-n-nln-lnnn Nv-u-n Anni-y Ital Peel Ill "M". l; I Fm- xsa "n; Mt. ‘fur-mun haw- Mind ln-in-nn lrnurlvr (Nlllwll; \\‘--"r> "t" “"1" “"5 mr.\ 1In|.. nin- tonne-m Mum slam-ton. N B. “i'l'I|e Strinigycisl Memory i8 Weaker Th!!! the Weakest Ink." inluay. MARCH s. 1943. New Brunswick In Warlime In th.» Flirt-ch -lil'tt:tl the Tihrtilte delivered H‘. m, n-K-H-ar; ..|' Ill.‘ New llruns\vick pcgislaturc, n‘. i-"i .n l» <l“.t\\'.l in lllc increasing use of (hr nnn-llvt-R ilztztlral l't‘\111ll'Cl'> in wartime produc- _lt|l_ Pulp i111‘ explosives; paper for cotttain- l‘:-. \\ll~l\‘l' it-r uarnlaitt- coltstrtlctiolt and lum~ m. and wwl prntlticts for various war uses ' iguttntilit-s are Iislctl anloug the ~1ll>llllt‘- itnnidtt-tl. Wootlcli vessels for com- lFll ]]ll|'llll\l'\ ztrt- being constructed. Iron ore is ltcftig ininctl and a daily output of 1.000 long tons is anticipntctl. Coal ruining continues to orrnpy an iinporumt place and known deposits oi e~\\k'ilili\l mincrttls are being investigated For tht~ first little, peat moss resources are being <lt'\'t‘ltl|\;'<l sncccssitlllyi on a commercial scale. This in atlilinn to increased production and price advances in many agricultural products. and in- Crease in rht- generating capacity of the New Brunswick Electric I’ower Commission at Grand Lake makes an impressive picture of wartime activity. The Speech also notes, with commendable pride, that New Bruitswick ranks high in en- listments for the armed forces, being second oilly to Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia in that regard. From every point of view, our sister province is entitled to all the war work it can get. But there is a wide disparity between the sat- isfaction expressed in the Throne Speech and the attitude of the people of New Brunswick as voic- ed by the Saint john Telegraph-Journal. “There has been consistent neglect of us by the Govern- ment throughout the war," charges our contemp- orary. “There is no naval establishment of any considerable size in the whole of this sea-girt pro- vince. The Minister of National Defence for Naval Services has not seen fit to inspect, nor, so far as anybody is aware, officially to set foot in New Brunswick since he assumed office. Mil- lions of dollars have been spent on naval projects in the 1\Iinister’s own province of Nova Scotia and in Quebec. Neglect of New Brunswick is so marked as to suggest downright enmity." I ln particular, the Tldegraph-jourttal refers to the building at Ste. l-lyacinthe, Quebec, of a large naval establishment. The estimated cost r1111s.into some three million dollars, and there docs not scent any reason why a. better site could not he selected in these Maritinle Provinces. \\'e understand that Souris, P.E.I., was sug- gested as an ideal site for such an establishment; but being even worse off than New Brunswick in lack of liV€-\Vll'€ representatives at Ottawa, our claims for consideration were given scant at- tentlon. in sub-i; al More Discrimination When the Sirois Commission made its recom- ntcndatiolts with regard to the transfer of cer- tain provincial taxes to the Dominion, it stated in the case of Prince Edward Island: “The sources of rcvcntle which would remain with the Province are peculiarly stable since they com- prise gasoline, automobile and land taxes, while the two llCllla ntost subject to fluctuation, v1z., public domain rcvcntlc and revenue froln liquor control. are of negligible importance as compar- ed with those of other provinces." Last 'l'ncstla_v. Fittailce Minister Ilsley an- nnuncctl that while the D0111if1l011 Govemlllelll would conlpvnszuc the provinces for revenue lost thrntlglt the curtniltucnt of liquor sales, it had flifClllCd to rcjcct the provincial request for a guarantee of motor vehicle license revenue. The Dominion, in short, is stabilizing a source of rcvcntlc which is a matter of “negligible im- portance" to this Prohibition Province. Wllll€ refusing to acct-pt any responsibility for the dc- crcztsc in what the Siruis Commission regarded as one of our fcw stable revenue sources, The Kitig Liovcrnment was urged to guar- anlcc motor license revenue on the ground that Ilnntiniotl restrictions on tires and gasoline were causing a substatitial falling off in pro- vincial receipts. Mr, Ilslcy's reply to that was: “It is the war and not thc Dominion Govern- mcnt that is responsible for the restrictions on gasoline and rubber and the provinces cannot expect to be protected against every contin- gency to which the war may give rise." We could accept this with better grace if it was not accompanied, in the same budget speech. by such solicitous regard for provincial liquor revenues. The program suggested in regard to liquor, Mr. Ilsley says, is intended to assure the provinces of "a minimum revenue equal to, or nearly equal to, the highest annual revenue they have ever obtained from liquor sales. and. in addition, the possibility of enjoying an in- ‘zrease in that revenue as a result of higher re- tail prices and the savings in custom duties on imported spirits." Those provinces which profitted most in the past from liquor sales will now, of course, he "sitting pretty". at the expense of the taxpay- ‘ era 0f ¢c Dominion. THE __ CVHARLOTTETOWNNQDARDIAN _ Ten Vacant Jobs For M.P.'S Apropos the appointments one of which is al- legedly to go to Hon. Cyrus blacMillan, the Ottawa journal says: “So we're to» have 10 ‘parliamentary assist- ants’ at $4,000 a year (plus their sessional in- denmities). It's not going to take the Director of National Selective Service long to get them. They will be on hand, ten just men and true and more than that, ready and willing to serve their country, and with a chance on the side to nlake Cabinet ntinister's kittdcrgnlrten. “What hopes this tuust stir in ambitions breasts: and what vistas it tnust open up of prestige and authority, and patronage influence. and nice offices with private secretaries and stenographers, and soft rugs under foot, and letters written on embossed stationery! Allnost we can seen Monsieur jean Francois Potlliot in one of these roles: liking it so much that he ‘would consent even t0 be ‘parliamentary assist- ant" to Col. Ralston. "it is a happy prospect; even though, alas. thcrc can be only tcn, with ten times that nutn bcr of whom there will be only the bitterness of disappointmcltt. If only there were lnorc ministers! ‘ "llclttlwhile we like lhc easy. care-free way in which this thing has been approached. .~\ radio speech by .\lr. lracken in Winnipeg: his long-distance suggestion of‘ parliamentary un- der-secrctaries to beat Hitler; a gesture 0f ac- ceptance by Mr, Kiltg-aml the thing is done. Done to the lune of $40,000 from lllc patient taxpayer, plus considerably more than that when the business rcally gets going." —ICIJIIURIAI NUIIZS- Wonder if ‘Hepburn drOve King to the “water ivagon" or vice versa. 1|‘ Ii i i Now that Gandhi's three weeks" publicity stunt is at an end, people are wondering who has been "the greatest beneficiary under the act." u a a n- Premier Campbell does not intend remaining Pooh-Bah for long, and \\'Ill in all [)l'Ol)Zll)llll_\' unload his various portfolios at the end of the coming session of the legislature. w - 1r Thifwar is gradually bringing us back to a realization of the Divine command-“six days shalt thou lab0ur"—-not four or five. If every- body did that nobody would have to work seven, and there would be less trouble in the world. I =0- =o< w‘ >l< A ‘$21,600,000 budget providing for an overall deficit of $201,809 but including no new or in- Cffiflfiflltaxation and making provision for a $1,000,000 start on a post-war reconstruction fund, has been presented to thc,:\lbcrta Legis- lature by Provincial Treasurer Solon Low. ‘i I I1 l In congratulating Blr. E_ Benjamin Rogers, M_.Sc., on his acting appointment of Canadian High Commissioner to Australia, the fact was omitted that he won an I.O.D.E. scholarship to enable him to pursue his university course in London. It lS interesting to note that he at- tended ‘the lfondon School of liCOllOHllCS, of which Sir William Bevcridge of the “Bcveridge Plan" is principal. 1F IF I i Here is a story that is on the rounds at I‘: tawa. Prime Minister King will not run another election but will retire, g0 to England to reside, and, like his predecessor, be made a peer, In or- cler to carry his peerage it will be necessary for him to have a coat of arms. An official of the college of Heraldry being consulted he sug- Keslflll an appropriate device for Mr. King would be "two snails rampant on a field of red tape ” a 5- e u i He_re_is General Sir Bernard llloutgotncrfs description of the ideal soldier: “At his best he mancler of about 35 and a brigadier under 40. He can live on bully beef and biscuits indefinitely, sleep wet in ditches or on the moor, march till he drops, then march again. When he is com- Pleteb’ exhausted he will again march. And then he will fight.” i n: a u n- Tllolllas Carlyle. historian, philosopher and es- 53W“. 010d this dale- 1381 i his work is rentark- able for its qualities of huntour, sarcasm, and profound insight, and his vivid and picturesque 1 his disposition Carlyle was often irritable, ltasly’ 1 and inconsiderate, afflicted as he was by chronic dyspepsia. yet these defects scarcely served to hide a. noble and tender nature: he was accus- tpmed to sit alone for hours in deep contempla- ,' tlon; once when he visited Lord Tennyson, the two sat 111 silence for two hours before a blazing l1“; Wlleil he rose to go Carlyle remarked: “l ,have enjoyed this intercourse immensely"; “No ispeech ever uttered or utterable is worth com- parison with silence.” n 4- w- i» The Patriotic Pouliot, MIC, has askcr] in ll";- Housc of Commons why LL-Gen. A. G. L. Mc- Naughton, Canadian Army Commander over- seas, has not been promoted to rank of full gell- eral. Can tlfis be the explanation given by Mr. E. W. Brown ill his biography of the Prilue Minister in l-Iarpefls? "When Canadians are urged to‘ ‘support their leader’ the face beside the Script will be that of General McNaughton, the Commander of the Canadian army overseas. It is true that General hfcNatlghtott is magnifi- cently photogenic and the Prime Minister is not: photographs always fail to catch the quality of Mackenzie King's eyes, which are of a singularly full and impressive blue. sontetimcs command- ing, sometimes simply amiable and winning. Not‘ do they suggest the strength of his thin mouth, the lines of firmness in his chin, or the general air he has of integrity and distinction. But it is l not just because the Prime Minister falls so far l short of being photogenic that his face docs not | appear on posters; what his country-men believe lhis character to be does not at all satisfy their notion of a national lender." more speeches in Parliament and to play in a‘ is between 23 and 30, led by a company ¢Om_' style is distinctly characteristic of the man; in‘ llotes By The Way l A heading ln a Toronto news- paper, "Birth of Qulnts B, Boon to Others," reminds us that no North Sunooe mother has as yet entered a claim for that million dollars we‘ R. A. F. In Canada (l. N. B. 1n Otn-w Journal) There are bits of all over Canada these days most of them ln n. A. F. bl They haven't lost ramb- mtu. ' tumblm: clown bllls on . Bl l! 01"’ distances and muttering a ult our offered some three years or s0 ago 091d for the first sextet of boys to be born in this peninsula. Not. much etiterprise evident among the ladies of this areal We are half ln- cllned to withdraw the offer. -M1d- land Free Press-Herald. l Sent from the Cathedral of Si. Bavan 1n Ghent, Belgium. to France for safe-keeping in Mr-y. 1940._the famous painting, "Adoration of the Lari-u," has been presented to Goer- fng by the Vlchy Government. Fatty should be proud of his new trea- sure. The devious means by which it. reached his salon probably gives him clearer title to this picture than holds on any o-f his other pos- sessions. -Wlndsor Star. I Sensible people, we think, wlll want to step on this “freedom of the air" controversy before it goes an inch fart‘ -. Post-war air transportation and lts control are nmtters for the peace tables. our job now is to stay unite" and get on with the war. — Ottawa Journal, | Forty million tons of wood a year are used for paper making 1n North America, yet this is only five per cent. of the Lmzer cut. The rest goes into lumber, fuel and other uses Some mills are turning pulp into paper 270 inches wide at a rate of more than 1,200 feet per minute. — Siratford Beacon-Her- nld, They say Mr. Bracken is never ltapplcl‘ than when he can get into 1a pulr of old overalls and dig up 't.he garden. But it's going to be bad ff his nelgh :or‘s a Liueral and keeps hens. -Ottawa Citizen One of the most contented pall- ients at a tuival hospital on the South Coast. is a black cat, who ‘since her arrival a few weeks ago has had the best. attention that sur- glcul and medical skill can give Puss, the pct of a destroyers crew, was wounded during a lively en- counter recently with the enemy ln the Channel A piece of shrapnel ~pierced her lung and damaged a paw. Other casualties from the ghlp pleaded that she should be given first attention on arriva. in hospit- al and she has made a splendid re- arovergv. ——S\lll(l£‘l'lllll(l Echo. i Particles of a IlIDO-ycar-old egg ‘have been dug up nt Fort Ste. Ma- lrie. That just might 27L‘ the exp an- ation of an experlcltt-e we had at breakfast a few mortiitigs ago. — iWinclsor Star, The people eff-Paris nre said lo be eating r1115 this winter Tlfcy had {the same diet in 11171 and again dur- llng th: last Great War -- soazte- ithlng always to rz-tnctnber the Ger- fqgns by. _Stratforzt Beacon-Her- a 1. t At the Casablanca conference, Roosevelt and Churchill shank hands. Hitler, Benito and T010 lust sltook -an:l theyrc sfill doing tt.-- Exchange. Thls note was loft. on the slot ma- chine in a Chicago lzccr parlour: "In case of an air l-nlcl. stand next to this machine. No one hrs ever hlt. ft." -¢Stratford Beacon-Herald. Men's stilts are sunpuscrl (n be cut 8100f! $01191‘ lites. ;ul. they still ltrtve hip pockets. -Quebec Chronicle- Telegraph ‘Many people art- not only mysti- fied but greazly rum-elated over the growing numbct" of strikes. Wllh Cilnflllfi engaged in the itrcalost. war effort in its not very long history, Blvlllg every snare oollar to help finance the stupendous bills and wo- men joining tn a number of capaci- ties both military and clvll, 1t seams strange that. labor should be so rest- less, and even upsetting the war schedule to the extent that the mor- ale 0f the people is etidairgered. which must give a 800d deal of gqgnfort to the eitetnv -Pnrls tOnt.) r. We have now llrrivcd at a polnf. where astute traders, or commercial vultures. will begin to plah to be "in at the k1ll“ when the war is about to end. The theory ls that. by direct confiscation and all kinds of trick- ery, Including the depreciation or wiping out of native currencies, the Germans and the Japs have secured possession of all the industrial or- ganizations and other, properly of their victims; that with defeat ldoln- fng they will look for fences to whom they can sell the lcot; and that pos- sibly many are now roosting tn neu- tral countries preparing “to fly ln ‘and to buv ln " The warning rc- ferrecl to serves notice on such commercial vultures that the Allies wont. countenance their dens. - liMontreal Herald. It ls wrong to tnlk of the failure of colonization during the last quart- er century. Far frctn that; wc owe it. a number of new pttrishes. What. is more and more apparent, ho\v- over, ls that. new methods must be, adopted, especially to get around the first painful years. Even though it ls distasteful, ft must be recognlmd that the race of sturdy settlers of yesterday. the “makers of new land." had disappeared. Formerly one could. leave an old pariah where there was nothing luxurious about the life. a! wdfly. for a colonization JUGS. The passage from one life to lanother was not. too hrusque. That. ifs not the case today. It ls a long jump from the old parish into which modern progress has perforated. to ‘the colonization tnwnshlw where tthere must be clearing done and ‘the land made productive. 1t needs nearly heroism for that tour de. force. Under such condltlona you can preach ln vain that. salvation lies in colonization. Try a little of that heavy lob yourself and you ‘will be quickly disillusioned. —l4' lNOllVQlllllA (Three Rivers). Our neighbors. the Canadians, like a good ides wherever they find tit. For instance. they recognized that ‘B. M. Baruchb plan for over-all Iprlce-freezlng rationing and taxa- tion was a common-sense program lfor stabtfzfng living cost,‘ ln war- ltfme. so they ado ted it and made ‘it work, Mcanwbhc our planners; in Washington, rejecting experience gained ln the last war. merrily bus- led themselves cooking up more novel schemes of prlce control -:tl1 of which failed -untl1. months late, after much damage had been done, they started trying to adopt some of the basic Ideas in the Baruch firm- nln. ‘They are still trying to catch up wflh the Bartlcli nlnn but are not making fast progress. —New York wnfdJfolnfll-m lne Al: Ministry l: shy o! flilllll- bu; We can say there are tens of thousands of n A. r. bovn and 111w serving ln Canada on the Vatafls 01 R. . l". schools. And than are tom of thoualplraids of RiIARFkbOgI men 80 throng . . . R. C. . schools a: aircrew trainees. now are they gettlnl along? Fine {lust now, theytsalflh Bl fir“ tugs were no so a . bOmDs were falling at random over Britain, over the homes of their wives and mothers and sisters. the R. A. F. people here were intro- spectively nurs heavy conscienc- es. And because of their unhflPDY rstlessxiess they dldlft let 011 W0 well with Canada and Cauadhnl- Now, however, that neat burn is largel removed. They can ell: and wor and play and slew with at. least some assurance that. “over home" tlantls are not. too bad and that. the jot: they are doln: flllhi here is one of the reasons for the miprovement oyeryhpro. The gladrlenlng of their hearts was not left entirely to the fortunes of war. Communities nearest. the R. A. F. schools 0129-1111061 interim" lneut, dances, and recreatlonpand tnany homes were 0080K! 00 0101009 a friendly hearth. Aircrew students move about the country from school to school and are absorbed by their strenuous courses. But such excitement and change ls not the lot of the staff worker ln the R. A. F. schools. The mun who ls stuck tn a main-s ham- let for the duration on a dull rou- tine Job can use some friendly treat.- merit. Providing this treatment Ls an organization known as "the Can- adian Committee". itself a lore- runner to another obltquelv named organization called "The 0111181111111 Foundation." The orflrlnal finances came from an anonymflllsgdllnfll‘ m England who is lnteres fn Dro- mottng wider knowledge and better understanding of Canada. both at home and abroad. That broader purpose ls lust now held at arms length while the 0110111111118 0011\- mittee is charged with ma R. A F. personn-El feel ut- home ln Canada. Q O O Mr. Walter Herbert. formerlv as- slstant director of Public Inform- ation, ls the executive secretary of The Canadian Committee. him we learned of work under way for R.A.F. staff workers under these headings: Providing 50110015 with libraries of (Tana: Mlllil, with movfnlt pictures 0! Canada, with lectures and hobby club facilities: En-"uliw. H. A. F. personnel to travel at little cost and lzlvlnz them entree to places and institutions that interest them; Assisting tn the orlzanlzatlon of stud" groups or hobby zrouus - en- glrlcernlg, camera, agriculture. and so on. - A5 an example - lhany have be!!! amazed by Canadian mlnlnz acti- vlty and the Canadian committee 112s assls’ed 1n the blanntnz of trlns to Finn Flori or Sudbury. or other notable mining projects when 1|: R. A F. men are received as Rueas und given splendid facilities for study 1*" the work ln which they fife interested. As an example with rellard tn llbrnrlfs—Mr. Herbert found one R. A. F. school had 3002) books. of which only three pertained to Can- ada. Yet the interest ln Canada is exceedingly active, and lf these men are given any assistance they will become very familiar with the Dominion and presumably very friendly b0 it. The committee. ln short. aims not only to entertain but to educate. It. ls public relations work at its best Bind directed while the tron ls hot. Mr. Herbert nurses a hunch that if this way lasts lonR enoutlh the R. A. F. men will be better equln. pad for a quiz program on Canada bun will the average Canadian — but he is not. so anxious that he would purposely prolong the war to u, attain that lzoal. I . As for aircrew trainees — they avers e 20 years of I89 and live in a iflerent world. Work and nlay. with enough sleep and feed to keen m“ keenly alive-that- u their maxim- and let the lecturers. libraries and mlnes go hang. A study grout) 0011- centratlng on railway construction Lend-lieu l C d , be all rllzht for old- siiersalii‘ 1315i“ thirties dolnlr staff work, but give the trakles a ‘plane b”; or a glrl or a 100d hockey rink and he's in his element. At, many an R. A. F. school two rinks are on the time. The Common fill Officer oc- casionally skates clear of! the fee and has to be pushed back on by Epectators. and others can remain prlght only so lonlz as no one D ll their stick from under them. , t. there's a laugh for all and the llnl- ment bottle is large. One D. F‘. C. fellow wears an old rubber tube about his seat to ease his fall. Baseball has not no over very well, and a soot. o cricket here and there ln a prairie field no 1on1- or staglzn-s a wandering farmer. They also favor rfdlnz. zolflptl. skl- lng (of sorts), hunting. As one a. A F. man Dut. ft to me: "Look hereflsshmlthihwte Rlxll, 6‘ varélaeijtv of s r ere a. ony e D can aiffoord bqpkhhome and then they have to as m) over to Switzerland to pack fl: we don't think much of your cities. but your country! lzra-nd. Another vlsttlnlz Briton says the most interesting thin! lbmlt $310 R. A. F. schools u the wav the lfnea of British aoctetv have broken down. Fellows from Eton and Har- row sleep alonluide or in the um»! bunk to s. bloke m Ed 1 . . 1'. ciiiined the exoerlment into 0 n1 and successful use. The trainees pet n. lllck wt 0f things we take or lfrlnttd: T141118 -"' mv-u on our trains. min! our all-dramas all 1ft unl SLEEP m mm: lliflll pliulll Illa“: maths-yer - like] i It. M "I U ' trail. ....."u".".... added; h our. Kidney Fills-hr any lull a all’! l“ iunrko kihoy nnody. lacy uuh. I14 Budd's Kidney Pill: 0 most of the bee‘ u ___.___ ____- 1 2m Pvsebaa’ g yaw/w neon to get acquainted with ..-.¢_-_. .. (a . NEW YORK, March 4- Tbe btu Small; and Mtify Joneses, the mlu- ions o. men ano women ln our war prooucmon plants, are largely fe- stponsibfe for our current food snortage. This is not refectfon on them, out Lena-Lease Administ- 61:1- Edwnm R. stettlnltfs says it's And the Brltlsh Tommy's John Bull, not our own Uncle in". 1S lflrxely responsible for putting our vast war production prolzram lnm blah gear at an early date. This 1s no reflection on Uncle Sam or American war workers. but. Lord H1111“. British Ambassador, says it’: true. These two statemafs, ‘inst; on ‘agile 388100“! '85 Ollrb war egort, ven a . agllllltlllllilifxiilfll’ Steittnliis 3 INC] Amorlgan Mame.‘ u m The II Stettlnlul analyze; the sbortagu in mznt, mflk products. ens, fish, veletlb es and fruits-and concludes at American war workers, not the demands 1:! our Allies, are chiefly land-leased and fl to Emgland, beef," he says. represents only one out of 1'! 000 muons we produced. on rid. through rwlpmcal a. Australia Zeal-nu lfllllflled our forces with 25,000,000 and New Nrhul we recefv 7.000, more ooundl of beef 00° Wed abro than we Btettlnlul declares that our has Bone larsely to our arm- ed forces at home and abroad. and i0 Q1080 lchlufLv war workers) who have more money to spend than m‘ Dfggjttllua daygflb ' e 1'" u" " ‘end-Lease foods which we shipped 1n 1942 w" mrk. gmllk products, to rend back home where "like them scarce. Mnnv a 0! Bhllnnd’: bl: cities has a train rlde until sud- llela] i into one here to es rn . all nu» l, hints n I001» of the reagiiovrls of a ilBtrlimi ylfll u: a wartime vlalt. and of the dlaclolure of new facts on two 8. ‘America since the outbreiak of war p‘ O A tobacco that gladdens all the days of your life-fiber’: Rosebud l Inexpensive too. Buy a package today. You'll find it burns slowly and tastes good right to the bottom of the pipe. Yes, today's a good day Rosebud l Lend-Lease Figures Revealed By Halifax and Stettinius Letter Asserts Americans Received More Beef‘ Than They Shipped Magazine New York) t lemme fats and olls, and B885"- .etl.lnfus discloses. “In 1042 we shipped 1,112,000,000 pound; of pork lto our Allies. That was 10 per cent of our American supply. and ll a really big bite of pork." Stettmlus reports that we Lend- Leased 23 per cent of our cheese, I per cent. of our crndenaed and evaporated milk. 1. per cent of our butter, l0 per cent of our eggs. 7 per cent. of our fish, and about 1 per cent. of our vegetables and fruits. All the butter went to the Russian army. “Why such luxury for the Russ- ian army?" Stettlnlus asks. "The l per cent of our butter (17,000,000 pounds) would permit each of 000,000 Russian soldiers, flghtlngl the boocllest battles 1n history, ml have American butter on his black. total food SUPDllh but still 1t was a great amount, and was of lncaicul- able value to our hsrd-pressedl Allies tn n crltlcal year." Stettlnlus warns that the armed forces and Lend-Lease may each take about twice a; much food m 7743 u they dld In 1042. but adds that Americans will still have the most nutrltous diet of any people ln the world. . Lord Halifax, also writing in The American Magazine, declares that the British Government. through the expenditure of uzoooooooo 1n in September. 1939. made possible "10 EH11!’ Bmflnslon of war factor- lel, and the eafy designing and quantity production of airplanes, Lalillltas, machine tools and merchant s . , "British expenditures with mu American aircraft Industry total 1101110 01.750.000.000." Lord Halifax reports. “While this may not seem like a staggering all}; in the light, of subsequent congressional appro-I rfatlons, it means that America, ad an airplane industry built up and operating when she realized her peril-an industry that would have taken a much longer time to b11111! 0D. had ft not been for Brf- tlln’: earlier assistance.” mzwfelbonalhlllty Canada has of th Cnnaiiliih trdops fnvliilfi ‘ion liven SIC TRANSIT High rldo the armies of the con- qusmn; Olllllllxlfll-fl and burnished realty tn c tlo on tho loner-contested chores Bfllht valleys all tho dark Ionian And legions cum Carthage. rank 0n l’ While wu- u purple bomb and ban- . om imperial edicts and the Roman Rule all the world: Canaan no Th; [cds of rut-lileunm are nlorf- fled Helen. whose beauty lntuiched n thousand ah m. Watches the tide of battle while. iYounk an’; faces ruin for her lloa. The brdutplam and the mun have urn to run: Troy la n vanished dream and Car- thage dust. | o -Bayk|. the‘ New York ford Hfiffax assert, that while w. think of "the finest tank tn the woj-ld-the Ill-ton General Sherman - a; an American product, ft ts tn one sense "a olnt Anglo-American enterprise.” r finding their mm melon in the mm» of France. British pin-chased quant- ltlel of,our General lac tanks.‘ "Perhlpg vou can Imagine our du- may. fn thou dart day: after Dun- kirk," [lord Halifax nya, "to dis- cover that the 00110111140 had all the faults and weaknules of our own tank.” The mull. was that British and American experts, Lord Hallfcx re- ports worked together and lubaequ- ently produced the General Grunt and than fr. ."=“:PR.I Sherman. PIPE: TonAcco California B51955! rm 1 at Richmond, bad for lu -t ent. Mr. Henry Kaiser. who abfillfll‘. moment had never b "The incident l5 notewortli two reasons: First, because it ~ duced. a new giant ln the wur production, Mr. Kaiser. who tlnues to utilize his Brit. v ed experience to turn out faster and faster for the r Maritime Commfsson. to which British yard was sold. And. - ~- 1y. because it standardized a. of cargo ship for the it Nations." Imln; and Sllnnlylnl I- ll. J. mllABllll OPTUMETRIST Blontane? 5.1. Office flours: I to l! u I to 5 P. M. Ilolldl etc. 0v up liolu 0f ea Connected with DIIUGSTORB bread once a week, instead of lard‘ or linseed 011.. ‘Ilhali ls not luxury.” I All told. Stettlnlus reports, we shipped to our Allies fn 1042 "lean than 6 Der cent by value of our How Are Your Eyes ll vln; 111119 of" bl'|illl=r.— headache!- o,“ u’ mum“, _ consult specialist. Ar your “"1" “ll” .. d “mrknce m5 ; thorn relracllnl servlw o." u, mg discus! Y difficulties. write l" 1111"" appointment!» B. F. llutchesntl r. o. nurcnusou q, I, IIUTCIIESON Attrition Swine Breeders glme llllwl". plg WOR m t eflfl aflljlffinuifn Iiiiifrket Macs PlS-Wll“ Tonic Powder n n will lhorfllllllll’ "’°"’ n mm of worms 11118117" an health of m" h M , , o "fflrfif-"iil-iw -~ mum w. ‘ us sr sromac a“ lmaavan ‘through Great. Brltafn’: rpm- Iflm of "flat orders" fn Ame can a pool of standard tool; was formed and mo volume of our machine tool ln- duutry rose from 8200000900 a veil’ 1n 1080 to 8700000000 yearly at the time of Pearl Harbor, Lord Halifax reports. "Two of the slupylrda now ach- ieving production miracles were built with British money." he sava- The British Merchant snuvbutlalnx pffssslaptecame tfflahu Uéiltfinfitgl n m r. . nn - able to find facllllks to build mor- chant shin; fast enough. lellcfid and purchased ulna for new yard! at Richmond, GBIIL, and Portland. Ore. "Two brand-now Amorlmn 00m- oamu were fanned to buld "l! yard; and the shins.” lord Ball!!! 1mm. 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