._l'AGil roim _ " ‘IIIE r , i BIIIIILOTTETIIWII Glllllllllll llorntlg Dally (Founded lll llfl) ‘ Authorised as Sooond Clal Moll Poi 0150s Departrnut. Ottawa Psfidant: Heat. Col. W. Chute: S. IsLIra Vibe-President: J. B. Barnett, FJJ. Secretary. Heat Col. D. A MsnKmnol. 0.8.0. Iilltot and Managing Director: 1 B. Barnett, IJJ. Aloolate Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett ‘Ila Guardian may be obtained at: llub Ioaacco Shop. Monruon, N. B. The News Shop, Monet-m. N. B. George McLean, Prrtou N S. Walker's White Spot. ll Salter Sh. Halifax, NJ. Metropolitan News Agency, 1m Peel St. Montreal United Cigar Stores. Chateau Luurier, Ottawa Ont». l. Aitken, l-ord Elginh tlotei Ottawa, Ont. J. Fine, I154 Bay St., Tomato. Ont. Wolleis News Stand, Suobnry. Ont. Old South News. Cor. tvlllk and Washington Sta. Boston liotaling’; News Agency, Times Building, New York. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than - the Weakest Ink." . TUESDAY, runrwmv go. ms Welcome Visitors Charlottetown is favored this week by a '\'isit from a distinguished parliamentarian, Mr. ]:i'\ucs M. Rlztrrlonut-ll, .\l. l’., who is accom- pziuicd by Mr. h. ;\. Bell, of Ottawa, National Director of the Progressive Conservative Party. 'l‘hcy are touring Canada at the request 0f their lcadcr, Hon, john llrztckcir, whose desire is to obtain a clear 1ricturc of the post-war situation in cvcry province. Nlr. Macdonncll is one of the ablest and most highly-regarded members ohthe Dominion Parliament. A brilliant scholar, an astute fin- ancier, a business executive of wide experi- ence, he- became a front-bencher immediately on his arrival in the House of Commons last fall, and his masterly address on the Budget elicited admiration from all groups in the House. He has the gifts and qualities of leadership, and is a valued acquisition to Parliament at a time when Canadians of vision are needed in pub- lic life. i Mr. Bell has visited here 0n several occas- ions. He is key man in the Progressive Con- servative organization, and has ‘travelled ex- tensively in this connection. Increase Imports The fad: that Canada, as a greet export- ing country, cannot escape her obligations as an importer, has once again been heavily under- lined, this time _by Paul Kronacher, Belgian supply minister. While visiting Ottawa, Mr. Kronacher said Belgium intended to purchase $85,000,000 worth of goods in Canada in 1946. Belgium is bor- rowing $25,000,000 for the purchase of sup- plies here, and this loan may later be in- creased. But whether the goods are Purchased with borrowed money or not, they must eventu- ally be paid for by the export of Belgian goods and services to Canada and to other countries. There is only one other way, and that is to give these goods away, as was done under Mut- ual Aid during the war, in which case the Can- adian taxpayers will be paying for them. What applies to Belgium applies to the rest of the world. Canada, by the time it is finished, will this year have lodned more than $2 billions in credits to countries both within and outside the sterling area. If she is to receive payment for these loans, she must be prepared to import on I. scale far greater than any bhe has hitherto known. Within a few years, the loans Canada is making will start to fall due. Countries which, through import of goods and services on a multi- lateral trading basis, have not accumulated suf- ficient foreign currency to pay these debts, will be compelled, in order to maintain their balaaoe of payments, to restrict imports to the bone, with the not unlikely result that trade bar- riora as onerous as those which obtained before the war will again be erected. The effect on an exporting country like Canada would be disastrous. TMargarine And Shortages The presontsnortage of butter in Canada, and a popular misconception as to why Canada. does not make its substitute, margarine, says the Glob; and Mail, has raised again the cry for manufacture of this latter product. Mar- garine, onoleomargarine as it is, sometimes known, is a butter-like substance made from vegetable and animal oils, colored and flavored, where legislation allows it, to resemble butter. It is a stranger to Canada, where it has been ‘under ban for many years, and millions in this 1 country probably have never seen or tasted it. Margarine was invented in I869 in France, and was called "butterine." It became the but- ter substitute for the poor of tlie cities and be- came accepted in Britain during the last war. Canada banned its manufacture under the flLaurier Administration shortly after the tum of the century. The order was rescinded in ,. 9K7‘ as a war measure, and reapplied, after a jli I battle, in 1923. it has been claimed ' flsomethat this legislation has created a mon- . " .»for the cow, or, more specifically, thd , ' farming industry. In peacetime this might ' ‘a yalld, argument. In wartime and in this of ‘world/if , shortage, however, it car- ‘ _ moral 9r actual weight. %:ue that Britainhnd most parts of the i’ ttifalldw“ lie- sale of‘ ntargarine‘, but ” ' he siuetipn t not simi ar-to in“ toll tlttettwhat she can biz, she sneer ti. 111.. x country is not entirely self-sufficient in butter. Before the war we imported butter from New Zealand and Australia to meet our home de- mands. We also were dependent upon outside sources for about 240,000,000 pounds of vege- table oils annually, most from the Far East. That figure has been cut drastically, and our are nowhere near supplying our needs. Through our ability to produce butter to meet most of the needs of our population, Can- ada. in normal times has not required margarine =15 I Staple foods But we must still depend upon outside sources for‘ our cooking oils and fats, such as sholtcning. Therefore, to make mar- garine in this country we would have to draw further upon the already dangerously low world pool of edible oils. This would mean that the supply of these commodities for Britain, the United States and the European countries would be reduced. Ifwe must eat margarine, others must go without some part of their precious fats and oil supply. ’ The Globe and Mail sums in this fashion: _ \Ve are not suffering in this country. even though our butter ration has been reduced. For Canadians to demand margarine at this time would not only be morally, but materially, out of the question. The argument for and against margariue- production iu periods of normal supply is another matter. -EDITURIAL NUI ES- The P. E. I. Hospital Carupaign is “the first order of the day.” n: a a up the situation l A grocer who started his business in an old post office building in 1941 attributes his 1945 business of over $200,000 in a town of 2.000 people to “a steady, strong newspaper advertising schedule." - s u e s There is a disturbing scarcity of ducks at most DOiItts along the Atlantic Coast, according to a. Washington despatch. Can it be the ducks have tired of being shot at, in season and out of i season, and have emigrated to where gunners cease from troubling‘ and ducklings get a rest. U Napoleon quitted Elba this date 1815, and proceeded to France which rallied to him, and he once more challenged the coalition govern- ment which had ousted him. The battle of‘ Waterloo on June 18 was the answer to this challenge, he surrendering to the British, who relegated him to the Island of St. Helena, where he died in 1821. ‘$1! It is not often, as on Sunday night, a fire plays havoc at one and the same time, with a fire insurance agency, a city recorders office, a city auditor's office, and the office of the Chairman of the Water and Sewage Commis- sroners. s m v n- Leisure is all right if one has a useful hobby and can afford to indulge in it, but this cannot be said of many of the returned men who now have idleness thrust upon them. They cannot afford, for their own morale, to be idle, , and should ‘take the first possible job offering, in the sure and certain hope that if they make good in it, it will lead to soimcthing more worthwhile. 1U l ll The Boy Scouts and Girl Guides have just concluded one of the most successful Baden- Powell anniversaries since they were instituted, and credit is due to ,all the Provincial leaders, including especially Mr. R. S. P. Jardine, Mr. K. M. Mar-tin, Mr. G. I. McCormack, Mrs. I. Y- Reay, Miss Lilian Duchcmin, Mrs. Harry Cudmore, and Rev. S. I. Davies, acting Boy Scout Field Commissioner. Q II i O The Dominion Bureau of Statistics esti- mates that the downward trend in Canadian hog production which began in the spring of 1944 would continue through the first half of this year on the basis of the nmnber of sows bred to farrow. Evidence of the reduced spring and fall pig crops of 1945 is shown in a reduction in the hog population, estimated at 5,853,100 for December r, r945, compared with 7,646,800 for December f, i944. The greatest decreases were recorded for the Prairie Provinces, which, dur- ing the years of heavy production, have been most important contributors to the available supplies of ‘bacon foaexport. i I Restoring order in Bombay, the scene of violent food riots during the past week, is the difficult task today confronting Colonel the Rt. Hon. Sir John Colville, who has been governor of the province since 1943. Sir John can bring a wide and varied experience to bear on the problem. A Scot, 5o years of age, with indus- rial as well as political training, he was former- ly a director of David Colville and Sons and other steel and engineering firms. His flPPOint- mcnt to Bombay terminated I4 years in the House of Commons, during which time he sat for North Midlothian. He had also held Min- isterial posts. e a o a Sta-easing the difficulties confronting a woman who tries to combine professional or Summerville, M.P.-, polnts- out that “of the twenty-four women in the Home ‘of Commons today, only two or three of urhave children of school age?’ and she warns any other young ingto runabomeaudtalceinactiveplrtin publieJife that "Your attempt will fall, ubleu you possess a ‘co-operative husband and know a fine woman who will devote herself to your children. l have been blessed‘ with both." Mott women candidates for Parliament or locelfgay- erumeut,.howsver, were either r4 021mm,»; middle-god white p - WM the ,. efforts to product more vtgetable oils at home t I public life with domestic carer, Mrs. Dr. Edith i ey ave Ill-I, ill l'l w "if!" N I x.‘ s.- rilndup for their sit-down strike. ltou Spec- n; D n -_Q~ - lkIi ,hyggn About the rfllovlng tenure a: themlnnongi‘: trouble i: that oi"’n-nl-i"l-“ul° if‘??? “"13” tswo clump. “ ° ' '" “ "rezo- "H? " I'll tylllosi sppa tl {anking higher than being eiifipf.’ onsl) and the University of To- ronto has elected “the m.“ whom l1 would most willing skip u 9cm" 3° “e9 I coke- ate with." In this upward sweep or gduca. world. ~Peterborough Examiner, dLietadershlp can only he mum. c ‘and when we cease to spend our tme and effort on the mech. anlcs of organization. Club wom. en must have the courage to stand up and be counted on the vim problems facing us, rather than Worrying about the rnlnor issues involved. -Mrs. Ward B. Gormun, "president of New York State Fed. erntion of Women's Club; Like all mental attitudes, laugh- ter can and should be rulllvati ed. Laughter is a two-edged mop- ran-valuable as a tonic, but dead- iy when used as ridicule. There. fore let us develop as n tonic m]; most contagious and helpful asset ln thesebed times. Spreed hflppl- ness. Go about your daily duties seeking to cheer yourself and oth- "i- hush! and the world \vlll lmllh with l'ou.——London Express. A note from “Southern Eng. land" points out that the Metho- dist congregation displaced by the UNO Assembly from the Westmin- ster Central Hall ls having to meet temporarily in a number of unaccustomed places. So n church ministers is now e erlenclng an ltlneratlng congregat on. ‘The re- mark of an old Methodist when told that services would have to be heldJn the Coliseum Theatre, ls worth preserving: "Oh, well," snid he, " ‘m all for e bit. o! vs. rlety." Manchester Guardian. There must be a medal of some klnd that con he conferred on 10l- year-cld Elias Brownfield of Call- fornla, who confessed manfully the other dsydhst he electloneered against Abraham Lincoln ever so many years ago. And to his rent- er credit he admitted that hs er- ror of judgment is his one regret. Occasionally we hear of old-tim- ers who had u hand ln the politics of long ago, but always they stood staunchly behind Sir John A. worked their horses into s lather for Iisurler. They never it seems, were on the wrong s! e. More power, then, to aged Elias, who never smoked or drank, but ud- mlts that he took sides against the Great Emanclpator, and has Eyed to regretit. -Wlndsor Daily er. " The Ottawa Journal hm some doubts about the ultimate approv- el by the ratepayers of the plan to give all employees of the City of Ottawa a five-day Week with- out reduction in pay. The Journal does well to relse the issue. What right has any class of the com- munity to enjoy a five-day week without reduction the taxpayers, who provide the money, do not. share n the bene- fits? It is very probable that if the taxpayers of Ottawa, who furnish the revenue, worked for only five days, civic employer would be deprived of some of the gglvlleges which they now enjoy e demand for shorter hours, less production and more pay ls en economic fallacy. 1f the de- mand pen mine the stability of Canada's com- nrerclsl and industrial structure. — Brantford Ezqoolltor. Ieldapsr ls an Important rook- formlng miner-st which has found wide up llcatlon in Canadian in- dustry. t ls used in the process of the manufacture of pottery, lass and ensrnelwnre, and tn the reduction of scouring soups and cleaners. Some coarsely crushed to the Dominion Bureau of Steth- tlcs, the entire production of feld- gpor in recent years has come rem adjacent sections of Welter-n ebec and Eastern Ontario, in te general vicinity of Ottawa. Until 1M2, mine output was about %ually divided between two pro- nees, but in that year Quebec ined a substantial lesd and has nee supplied 70 to so percent. of of the total. -Kltchener Record. .11» n». muse dodo one diod of stupidity sometime in the 11th 0o A clumsy, pigeon-like. larger than amturkéy. E E1 i: e .- E Q é? T" a K. a 9 E s i s F. I‘ Inc dofenceless. Mauritius, It" Qfl 0n were slaughtered by man and bent. The dado’: flesh was tough rurs in U. l. museums. Immutable curators were sure that b at version, mldo In ll- ld bone gut- e moat complete and ctlon in the U. married listeners who were contemplating try- "lng elected “he typical m tlon lies the hope of the coming ers which is quite used to ltlneratlng the or l"! bringing people to the polls to vote 3mm of pay, while at of e s‘ , stories data and» mol- RIGIIT OI WIDKG v Sln-ltvldcnt-l none off 1018 made an bolus ward rivith any chicldattm of I Dlflllflld 10? I r film ‘iiu liindobfGovsrn O! - oi-oaAil 8511i: whim reads: “l know what Rllht la. and if I ever do wrrnig etc." and I sought tho opin- ion of readers as to the fitness of the word "right" in this connection. But. so far your read- lnterestcd. Frankly I must say I resret alibi-NI! lack of interest in the utterances of public mm by the “metal read- lt mo clearly 1 am a ml- slve and leckadelsical attitude on their part, in regard to mblic mat- ters. 1n a democracy like ours newspaper " should ‘con- stenty be on the alert to study all questions sitcom their moral and eocnomlc lute and to make careful note of the speeches and utterances of holdlni important public positions. Th» purport of such ‘ tements stioulr; not. be blindly accepted but shouk. be carefully and fully analysed. In this respect. men's minds should be as busv as their feet, and hands are ln the matter of production. l fe-ar, however. that, inn-attention is at present. too much centered on potatoes. hogs. houses. clothes. and amusement to give the r ulred time to the proper study of cl en- ship A regrettable situation in- deed! fares the land enins a DRY. when w - cumula and men (minds) GGCBY." Now to the task of dentin! with the word "right" as used here in this famous political my contention is that unfit and means very little. ‘W er proboby mean was r . "with". “m” '3'.“ l n a g ven cu er cue. u he knew that rllht oulllt to be done. Now his o ponent. or snv other person In h s audience would or should also know that. "right. seem \lI'l plight. to be done.” ‘llhia ls where Conscience comes in. It that. "right ought to be case. but, it. never right is." me illustrate by taking a iculnr example. At the Labour nion meeting held k1 Charlotte town last week. then were. in ed ltlon to the labour Union . two or three very "prominent cit- lsens who also spoke. Citizen No. to U8 done" in_ every tolls us "what twitlcleaieawavbeforethsblilb-i , . a lng what this would cost them if u. shelter for them on stormy nsnhtr. 5% o! " he tbs label Stale sat Aquifers-Eyed defiance through or‘ neloudsiibofnr-fsiot useznaeweeehelne» ornaments-unsound msnlsaaaiionasm . Throbaui: the conduits of g‘,'l"-du‘é'g,""_%'jqfl, Iseusemaelfliwllllmmm "I brew peaeiLmIlpatlek/a --.s-.-..:..:.->~ "- e- e """ "*- n ' d willbeuk before °‘“".‘li¢ c8553‘ And lneadbws will be riotous with is...» 12ml vim:- men-rm" mo’ slopfl- streams will quiver with *1" IL“ -~::. .... O “an. nope. ‘ -A.nderem1 M. Scrufll P.I.‘I. Federation of Agriculture) with re ard to its future plans, we should or our own rotection in- quire lnto its actlvlt es and make sure the Island is not made a sportsman’: paradise of the ex- pense of the farmers. Perhaps the members of this club are notrswsre of the fact that Hungarian partridge have been ucsponslble for npresulng weed seeds and damaging grain stacks in. several districts whsre at resent there are only l 19W r s. Many farmers are wonder- \ ofTrsIes. TIIE 2 ure and Pheasants there were enough birds to sat- result in e future tsfy all non-fanning gunners. Then optimistic about collecting n shoot- lng fee ‘from all farmers. Let us analyze the case of one farmer to whom I was talking lest week. Re has been for the last several wLn- ters placing out feed and grit for ungnflan partridge daily nnd _ leaving a ‘shed open to provxle He, as WQlbll the majority of farmers, would do the same for heasants. If they dld not, those lrds would not continue to thrive. ?"'”?€”4‘ Pniorilqnt i: t Ilu Fattir‘: , ‘ * i’ " Sseilty- Vi I lusty All: INFLUENZA mags Cannons-ran or micron iee dandelion: that lmtwlill I oourourm m u- _ banners m the mu: > . ° ‘Elk’...- roa COUGHS AND COLDB I -.__ AHIITIOI’ _ Weoarry a oolnploteliuo Ailsises. The Amazon River area as large a: the United States. MAGS II s Q mu Orders Given Prompt l Attention ' ' lIIII-IJIIII tween the Federation of Agricult- Unlhnlted will pro em backed by the full efforts of nl concerned, the some question comes up with I em, Sir, etc., regard to the pheasants. Should L - “M5550. they be imported in large num- Provincial Brent"! berswwoigld they be ’a menace to Firm F-ldlfl F0"!!!- erm n n any way -—--———--——— 'I‘his‘group seems to be quite DRAINAGE FY5551 drains an 1 advocated rural electrification on e provlzml scale. and th in- Now, this same farmer also feeds ‘Whufliwllllsussssrii ferried that he wo LIV a v and cares for e few hog during III! ills bleed. you hrs a i e uvernment. ‘ e - that same; six months. ould he IQIIIIIIHIIIUHQIJC“. money order to lu bli pro- be justlfied in having to ply a lhdfs libs; II: huh yep ' . Citizen No. 2 ev" could “ fee to kill a hog if hewent. L: yeq 57y J m‘. Q not agree to a m for ed to? Why then, he asks, should “b; $1573.03“. '5 helswportedtohave stated that he be corn lied to pay forellc- Q-Qhghbgifi all our BOvernuientA. munldDl-l. ense to~kll a Hun? To many, 5th‘. u h" a" ‘d . provincial and federal alike. should this may not sound like n lust Mafia ' F. -' cease uoendlnc public nwnev- Now comparison but 1 would like w nee "W Int us m Be that. bot-h there men m. Acorn go out and m: that are csnd ates for office like “Al" gum" f9;- g 4°11"- tee‘ , smith was at. the time he enun- ciated his credo. "rm question to be decided by the audience (voteralls who is lzhthm in other words, which er knows what Is right in th particular case. There is no question about. the h- ebould be don ling to do r ht . So the question not one of ht or wrong ln a moral lWW i s E table citizens have power- he power to know "right built: to be dam." No. question e to be decided giherther gzavfialmmento should e “open g spree‘ or. o on we have been xoins dining post flve or six years. Int us ask w this was (mane. in; what? e , eit- ‘lit-ft’ nudlzirace- u "who is morieyt". "It ls ourmum o emcham ' answers r is sold for stucco dash, ertl- 11B m the e i . clel stone, chicken grit, etc. Prec- W18 0! m0 0 0111' Willi? min ticall ail colors are equally ec- i619. M H! e80 s their arbour ceptable for ceramic usesh bait (m; fiflci-lgfimlflrlt sYl 0! mrvileelee- ivliiiiimd. t» 1° life irileirfslniianig must be fed end clothed loony case. We have the wire (or can uee it). we have the poles snrli lxt-uétes. we have the coal or water ‘iiriilueifeid: dlsgriiisttiedwdlrsoouraaed Diva the way for lalwlesnnss and d the woliilnrlgbtwenugeqmggo. ticalsenoe 1n nextlettefzlahalldeal f’ with l1’. Obishohn the word "Oohseleraead l bfiaflflrfi on}: nseownou Bln-Iiegarding the Gems" lutlon presented to the P13. oratlo 1h 11$! lllelllo Asrlculture I annual i is: mun i "I t ' there lines; so can we if all get Having ‘had the opportunll to lee at first band the marvelous work do e by "Ducks Unlimited” ln tho eaternprovlncel, 4 feel . ,. . ., that titer: I-Il " room for vast im- ' CONQUIII“. > llivjlflfi‘s.33r%.$Z.-ll‘l".€' ‘it'll u J. A- BROWN. 0-!’ felon . ut, no one group entng- ' ' ' ‘onlzlng another can accomplish Orthopedic much. On the Prairies all worked - lfllether at this. the farmers, lab- ourers and city-dwellers. They ee- compllshed greet thins: along understanding or dull ti f effort. ‘trusting this pmgtliir: b:- together and eliminate any Into} Cllllifil-‘OIIIST Ill Great GQMII Itnat UIABIDTTITOIN Ill in the welfare of Canadian Citlsens, and tlonal Economy. - it is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to people's future more secure. Life man for a suitable plan to ‘meet your qulrements," including-Accident 8: Health IIOVINOIAI. IANAGIII ' Offices: Charlottetown - Summerslde - i CYIIJI A. l. SHAW. District a socui sscumn l Friend and Protector io millions of people in all walks of life, the Life Insurance Companies play a vital pert Consult the Great-West IIYIIIIIIAII 81 60.. LIMITED i unison r. llsLIAN. outrun Iassglr u anus-ass lasagsl at TIIOIAI IsAVIltN, l. l. IINDIAN. i Isoetal Iesrsssatativn st Qhsristtsiewa In the Na; help make utter,‘ Ill.’ It... time; ./ I'll-I tlrtlslls . Obailioitdswa Mrs-Mi». u“... vw-vg Charles Ii. Mequald IA- lantern lkut may. Illlls 171l- GAUDET a HASZARD Ion-bun. Iolietilfi. Notaries, m, atoms ‘m m“ i“‘.'vi1le&~“t‘l%l’n.‘€r.k" Qllllilo Bank's! Bu‘, Clsrbtidown, 11'; NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.0. Box 66 "Offllland tummy Chartered Aeeoantaats D. F‘. ARCHIBALD Basics flkust Blllldlilg H. It. DUANE l CO. Chartered Accountants a: tlrafion Street. one-unions Ilene III be: ti‘! lsndslpb W. Manning.‘ 0.A. . McLeod & Bentley l I. I. BINTLII. l0. I. A. BINTLIY. SO. nsrshtsss and Attorneys-at law ltdhlaesltrsst PALMER & HASLAM l. J. RAGLAN. IA” LLB. BAR!!! wQIIO. Ian! of Neva , Charlottetown, I. l. l. MON!!! T0 LOAN II J-O. Bo! II J. A. McGUIGAN. B.A NOTAII. I'm. samurai. soucnou CUB-Ill aunmmo M. ALBAN FARMER as. nus. irons! '10 LOAN snafu-n, soucrroa. ere. 0n mrmrown Canadian Beak ol - ' III Btu. a mrunsson w. Solicitors. do. III-L M.I..A.. D. L. IATIIIBON‘.LI.L.B. 8.0. “hf! I IDANI ON AND FAllt PROP ‘I'll! :"'°“' '* surveys. Oil neuranee. ch-nnéwn‘ Hm‘ Montague -.__..;...4‘._ @- ... y». .. c , . "c, ~ m n. FJMePIlEE. an. n.0- , , NOTAII. no. saaaurea soercr-roa auq new»; t Ollarloitciofll I rnsosnlc A. LARGE sasalsrsa. no %.b‘“'"- "‘..“5"l'.': l: OIIAILOTTITOWN. Ill-l- na. A. n. surf IIINTIBI‘ ~ '1' s... emu one.‘ lieu-Hal r *‘ am ‘i W. MATIIIESON YufiYTs..'3"a'.‘.‘£.‘--- " _g'qgq; 1. 14a Oolluihl eueufi >sfirtuoomun