- su=rvanesrrvr?'1'='**" PAGE $7 hrs CHARLOTTETOWN GUQRQIQIS} TllE BIIAIILDTTETOWN GUARDIAN Iornln; Dally (lfoundod In IIIT) Ploaltlonti Llnul, Col. W- Chutur ti. Mill-II" flu-o Premium: J ll. Burns", F-J-l. lccrulnry: Llout. Col. A. Alnelllnnnn. "-59. Itlllor flllll Mann]! g lllren-lor. J. ll llurnnll. l’. I. llwcllto lidllorn: Frnnk Walker, 1nd Maui, Burnayt, ILILNJLIG, (01: Art!" Scrvlm) SUIINCRIPTION BATES l, In]! In P. E. l. sun gier your; 2M1 Inr I months ‘L25 lur 1f mnntlu; 50c for nun month (m, |)|q"\|~fy $0.4m per your: 83.00 luv a mnnflll 31,15 fur 3 Ilnmllun; 6011 for one month By llnll In other Prlnlnmsn and ILALA. $5.00 par year Igtnrduy Weekly! $2.00 our yrur: ll,00 for d months. Mk; Iur 3 month! The Clnulnttnlunrn (lmnrtllun may ha ohtnlnrd II Emailing‘; News Maury, ‘Plum-n lqunrc. New Yurln 0X11 south xt-n- Agency, 1' n»: aunt and wnu-lnguln llnwlou: "Glrllflllllltlll ‘run Akelllgv, 12m rm an. lllunlrrul: .1. rin- 154 "n; 1'|1|'n||llI; Ne“! Ntnnd Chnlrnu Lnurleri lntuwn \\'11|Iv'n N's-nu Htnlul Smllmry. 0M4 Huh Pnlmvnn s1 n. smut-inn. u. n. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker 1713A lhe lliealcest Ink." “TQTnt-Ks-Esnlliffr-ltiinf 194s. Car Ferry Construction lt i. In be l1. _ after lllc lia~lcr rCcTsst our letltrul rt-pr atives will make ltlrlhcl‘ inquiries will1 rlgztril to the progress of the llluus for CHlhllllVllwll of a ll\'\\' Gill‘ 19”." _.tt-;ttlt¢t {nr this Prnvtt ln the meantune. the liint-ruivcttt llliqlli tit-ll give consideration to it 1-11 itlsaii l1“ ltlruartl lll 1'C>lL)ll.\llllC t 11:11"- 1 1 1 | i t A l l lcr~. 11.11111]; that a ut-w .\lll|l_\ill'<l could lie built lll llic llznic. Ltnslrticlulu plant at Lair/an. tjucbcc. :11 a cost of o11l_\' $300,000. 11nd ctuisiriiciuui n1 a car tcrry could start thcrc as soon as the bcw vard is completed. ln tlilb way. 11o time would be lost. It should ilot be iliipossiblc to obtain the necessary material for this work, in view nf the pressing importance of tbc project. 11nd the fact that the shipyard, when completed, Clllllll be used for other wartime con- tracts. It will be recalled that the S. S. Chur- iollrlorcn was built at the Davies plant at Lau- zan. \\'li_v these _\'ll.l'tl> are not being utilized t0 the fullest extent in the present emergency is difficult to understand. Doubly so in view of the attitude adopted by the (iovernmcnt in fin- slicing to the extent of $500,000 a project l0 extract tar from sand to extend the Alaska highway. ‘in Expert Examiner Many a country doctor will read with envy of 111g $38,325.20 which Dr. Aime Charticr of Montreal received last fiscal year from the Fed- zral Government (with bills for a further $2500 t0 be passed by the auditors). His “professional services," it is explained, arc largely for work as 1n expert examiner of civil servants uuclcr the government Employees Compensation Ail. at $15 per examination. There can be no doubt that the fortunate floc- tor is an expert in his liuc. From a mere 3113.- 532 for the fiscal year 1940-41, his i865 1'9“ to $33,326.75 for the fiscal year 1941-42. 1'0r the fiscal. year 1942-43 his fees will be well over 540,000. _ Only an expert could handle all this work, even if he had no other private practice. To do $40,000 worth of examinations at $15 per -— allowing for Sundays, festival‘ and holidays _— would mean about 20 examinations each working day of the year. It would take an ‘expert to do that! Muni ion Plant Layoffs - According to an Ottawa. correspondent the "levelling off" process 1n the war industries jvhich began late last year 1s now lwwmmts’ more pronounced. blimitions Minister C. Howe warned the House that "lay-offs" in munitions plants would be more numerous. Op- position Leader Gordon Graydon had asked the Minister about reduced employment in the John Inglis works in Toronto where not only gh¢ Bren gun but also an anti-tank gun wore being made, and Mr. Howe said the latter pro- duction Was ahead of schedule. More important was the Minister's comment. He said these ‘lay- offs" were not an unmixed misfortune for those laid off were thus ntade available for other and even more important production and transfers were being steadily arranged by the National Selective Service Board. Across Canada there are many such sitttatiotis. Contracts have been filled or itearly filled, and because of rapidly changing war requirements new contracts for some equipment arc not made but the plants are being switched to other output. This means new, 11ot reduced employment. 'l‘licre remain, how- ever, two prc-ssiitg demands from Canada's war plants-ships and planes. There has been an cuorniotis turn-hut of weapons and equipment for the lighting forces. Because of increased U-boat successes the need for merchant ships has vastly increased. and one of the most ef- fective contributions this year must be the mak- ing of more and more shitls, and the marshalliiig of all available uuiupmver 1050110595. HOt requir- ed to niziilttziitt the desired strength of Canada's armed force.- to keep this shipyards fullyhman- netl. Rlauuiacturc of ships and planes 1s the government's (lei-pest concern at llliS till"!- Income C hanges Returns tabled iu the House of Commons disclose an interesting change in the national in- cnmc tax structure. Ihhlctl at the request of Mr. Stanley Knowles (C.C.l<'., l/Vinnipeg North Centre), the statistics tell a story of rising and falling inenn1es.si11ce the start of the war; the rise taking place among the low-income brac- kets ($I,0oo to $4.000), and the decline among those in the high brackets. Though not wholly complete for lhc year ending April, 1942, figures of the National Rtvcnue Department show an increase in the number of taxpzrvcrs from 230.371 in 193i; l0 387,725 at April last. Almost 40 per cent of this increase (612551 occurred last ‘year as :1 l'(‘\llll_ of the inclusion 11f pfrullls earning $750 to $1,- 000. The bnlancr nf the increase, 95,080, took place almn-t entirvly in the $1,ooo-in-$4,txm lzrackels. There was on increase between 1059 and 1942 ' I of 63,048 in the $1,ooo—t0-$2,00o group; 29.277 in the $2,ooo-to-$3,ooo group, and 2,425 in the number of persons paying on $3,000-to-$4,000 incomes. By contrast the number of persons paying on incomes of $50,000 or over dropped from 3.11 in 1939 to 2S1 last year, after having increased to 483 during the first year of war. The number of persons with incomes betwetn $25,000 and $50,000 dropped by I26, from 917 to 791, in the four-yrcar period. There were 26 fewer persons i11 the $15,ooo-to-$25,ooo bracket and 9b’ fewer in the group between $10,000 and $15,000. 'l‘l1cse four gr0ups—-$10,000 to $50,000 and over-last year represented 1.8 per cent 0f the total number of income taxpayers. Of the $952,956,000 of assessable income, they were taxed on an aggregate assessment of $141,769,- 000, and paid 56.2 per ccnt of the $56,260,000 collected in personal income taxes. In I939 the same four groups represented 3.1 pcr cent of the total number of taxpayers and contributed 72.1) pct cent of the total personal income tax collections. The shift in the tax structure is explained in the Globe and Mail by this comparison: Last 51111" fewer ]7t'l'~illlS in tlic four high brackets ,...d lllllTL‘ taxes 011 less income than in 1939. Yet their percentage contribution t0 the national tnltll 1111s smaller than in the earlier period. The change is represented by the amount 0f in- crease in the taxes derived from the low-in- come groups. lu i039 persons paying on in- conics of $1,000 t0 $5,000 contributed only 13.1 percent ll! the $.<l-t.026.000 collected. Last year 111st t'llllll'llllllt‘ll 24.1.3 |1£'l"_‘c'll[ of the $56,260,000 collected. Nut only has their number increased, but the iiuposls ltave also increased. - EDIIURIAL NUIES- To "Back the Attack” it is necessary to “lend- leasc" savings to the Government. m Without cash We cannot support our fight- ing forces. "That support tnust come from ls- lauders in all ivalks of life. * >a< m u “Business tmusual," is how to describe the present situation—pleitty to do and few compara- tively left t0 do it. r 1r s1 n- The new Chief justice has some Spring cleari- ing to do before moving from the Provincial Building to the Law Courts. >1‘ =1- s iv Certain Island Government employees take exception to members of the Opposition calling for a return on their salaries and emoluments. These seem to forget they are public servants, and that the PUlJllC, who employ them, have a right to know what they get for their work. >1< a: =1< it- -Tl1e Mutiny of the Bounty took place this date 1784; H..\[.S. Bounty was in the vicinity of TZllllli at that time when the crcw mutinied, setting adrift their overbearing commander Wil- liam Bligh, who, with those loyal to him, ultim- ately reached llatavia, Dutch East Indies, in safely: many of the nuitineers settled in Tahiti, sortie of whom were stibscqtiently arrested, con- viclccl and punished; others founded a colony 0n Pitcairn Island, their descendants being there to the present day. v r >1- m A premium of $1 per cord, authorized early this year by the Federal governtnent, will be- paid Quebec dealers buying between 1,000 and 2,000 cords of wood which will be hauled into Quebec City and sold at prices set by the Prices Board. A government subsidy also will be granted for the transportation of the wood. The government earlier had authorized the subsidy where necessary to fuel dealers licensed by the Prices Board to enable them to dispose of it with- out having to increase the price to consumers. Mayor Lucien Borne announced that the pro- vision of the wood will temporarily solve the wood shortage problem facing Quebec City. 4- n- »- it Mr. Donald M. Nelson told the Newspaper Publishers Association at their annual meeting that the United States this month will come close to producing 7,000 planes. Referring to pro- duction records he said: "Certainly a year ago if anybody could have told iis that we could build 7,000 airplanes in o11c mouth we would have told them they did 110t know what they were talking about. \\'c xvill do it, probably this month. We will come close to it this mouth. Next month we will build even tuore, in the next month even more; until we get up to just as large a produc- tiou as we fccl we nccd——no matter how many we need." n- 4 w a A Mauhattah subscriber draws our attention to a cut-ions situation with regard to prohibition over the border. ‘There alcoholic wine is not rationed, iton-intoxicatitlg urine is. The problem threatened to disrupt Easter Week Communion" in nearly 20o Protestant Churches, and was only ironed out aftcr Rev. Dr. Hall, former president of the Queens Fcdcratioit of Churches was appointed to take up the matter with Wash- ington. The various Churches were then per- mitted to apply for special rationing certificates to buy grape jiticc for the Sacrament. The news~ paper report of the incident concludes: —— “Churches which use wine arc not affected, since wine is not ralitluctl." n- »: a- w The tentative agenda for the international food conference, scheduled to open May I9 at llot Springs, Va. calls for world-wide regula- tion of tl1c food supply of the globe in the inter- ests primarily of human health, secondly as an economic measure which would lay the founda- lion for healthy imtional economies and free in- tcrnaiioilal trade, and thirdly as a preservation 0f peace. linod will be COllSl(lf'l'C(l as a basis for sound mituls and l1c.'1|lhy' bodies, and thus as the chicf ingredient i11 the fulfilment of the "free- dom from want" clause of the Atlantic Charter; as a basis fnr [ll‘0S])(‘l'lly, since 60 per cent 0f llli-st- who uwirk in ilvc world work at agricul- lilrv: -'i'1'l 11* n 111'<‘\'ci1li\'c and cvcn as a weapon of war. The conference will presuppose the csiablislitnctil of wnrld seCllTily‘, ,1 rpnstumllly free world trade, and a world f'('l‘lll(lll'llC agreement Illlll curls-lie)" sialliliziiiiln, Fond itself i] an llllpllflillll clement in all tlu-cg, ___-~ llotcs“ By The Way The one-time ' ‘ 0f “ ' . those Nazls, are now definitely 0t! this bent. Goebbels should have wld us the Rled menace when it was a fad- Winnipeg ‘rrlbune. General Montgomery, of the Brit- lsh Eighth Army, wlns a Flying Fort- res‘ In a mllltuy wager. But the tan L; a veritable flying fortress If. as the enemy has already learned. -Haml1wn Spectator. Dispatches tell us that beer In Britain 1s getting weaker and that. beer ln Italy no longer will be mace for clvlllan consumpton because of a scarcity of raw materials. This war ls certainly getting to be what Sherman sald any war ls. —Buffalo Courier-mums. In a. letter found on Leonard ‘Iraudel, Nazi soldier on the Soviet front, Frau Traudel asked her hus- band to send her some things for the ohllcren. "Don't worry ff they are soiled, or even blood-stained," she wrote, "they can be washed."- U. S. S. R. Bullet-in. Berlin Radio proclaims that more than a million boys and girls who had reached the uge of 14 were sworn into the Hitler Youth Or- ganization recently. Before they reach maturity ll; 15 altogether like- ly that the little recruits will have lost their icol, together with the cause into which in their innocence they have been lnvclgled —Mcnt- real Gazette. One of t-lm reasons why Gcm-ral Sir Bernard Montgomery has been s-o sitccessful 1,; given bv T‘. E. A. Healy 111 The London Dally Mirror. Montgomery, he says, does not hold with the school of thought which gay that t; week of fighting fs worth a year of training. On the contrary, the General believe battles are won before they are begun —-bv prepara- tion, morale, and leadership. — Brantford Eixposltor. Through n new device known as the Vultee recorder, test-flight: data are now recorded on the ground. Readings of seventy different in- struments are signaled through the raclo transmitter to a, receiving rel; on the ground and recorded simul- taneously on wax disks, sound 111m, a special automatic plotting up- paratus, and ticker tape for con- tinuous observation by test engineers. The device displaces the bulky movie cameras formerly used, suc li. preserves test-flight records even In the event. of a crash. It has taken this war to bring some of the ugliest sides of the bu. man animal into the open. There isn't any more disagreeable, crea- ture than the boarder, the man or the woman who ls determined that he 0r she will have all the food they want no matbcr_who else suffers Perhaps they think ft smart, ancl possibly they do not realize they are selfish nnd making others guf- YET by U191!‘ Hired Certain ft is they do not. know how closely they resemble a certain smelly four- kirzed animal who is kept 1n a pen 11nd fed from a trough. -Ebccli11uge_ Current anti-noise campaigns are simply 1m Imitation of sonlethhiu 1,; Greeks thought 1m long ago, simp. ‘motorlst can claim son M Ritzcr \l'l'i‘ies in (Yr-y-Dytypg‘ AS far back as 600 B, c svbnrts a progresslve Greek metropolis, passed lflWs Bkalnst llll Industrial noises in residential areas. In Athens and Sparta. in 300 B. C. drunks who made too much noise after folks had gone to sleep were subjected to fines and sometimes forbidden the Ilse 0f the streets for several dflys Criflrlots and horsemen were Wqlllfed to drive as slowly as p05- slblc in order to reduce the clatter. Am Dflldlérs were prohibited ll'0l‘l1 hawking wares except during late "Wminfl find early afternoon. We must remember that, s ll himself has declared, the 13.15%; miwhlrie is tar from being wrecked. still to be feared are Hitler's sub. marines. Hi1‘ power and land strength. As the Tunisian battle shows, his troops have lost neither punch nor "wmle- Md as shipping losses make 31195-134115 flblllbv to strike hard b°ws M‘ 88B ls Perhaps greater than ft has ever been. Add m m1; the fact that we cannot be sure of just what the Luftwaffe has been Willi? ln recent months, and there all the reason in the world to take to heart the warning voiced by botih Premier stalln and Presl. PUBLIC FORUM lunnurnlnusnll_'“ I of qlcdhu d. Olnllcctchwn llhnll. ‘I'll Con: g-ggg-ll; onions 1 Ollll cl inbuilt Cardinal Hinsley as Barbara WIN in the BDNWWY) e obltuartes have given the 11111 imam of Cardinal Britney's 1W8 111e, one who cares to read them can Io ow the succeslve stakes 0X his apostolatc as slmplg, Wish "o" as Pfofespor at an Se "'5'- TIIE KING'S ENGIJQH Shy-Some folk speak of "$0 many spoonful", instead of so many “spoonsfulfl Lofllc W111 4°,- monstrate the propriety of m“ rule, namely, are you 11161181111118 by more than one sPOOH? I! 5°- spoonful must be the correct term; but. if the process of measuring ls carried on by refilling the some spoon, then becomes evident that the idea we wish w convey ls the quantity contained in the thing by which ft. is measured. namely, a. "slJOOIlYIIL" , The other day I read a story .n which the nuthor used the words pulse and patience as pluralltles. and made a distinction between farther and further-they are. ln fact, the same word: further, how- ever, is less used than farther, though it 1s the genuine form. In the Southern States I have heard persons address me as fol- lows "How are you all today?" In some sections of ontario and New York, farmers frequently refer to their livestock as being in good “rlgglng" meaning, of course, that they are ln good condition. It is a common mistake to use such sentences as, "between you and I", and "they returned back", but it you will listen carefully you'll find that the majority of speakers make such mistakes. It is amusing to perceive the broad line of demarcation which exists between vulgar bad grani- nmr, and genteel bud grammar, and which characberlses the violation of almost every rule of syntax. The vulgar speaker uses adjectives instead of adverbs, and says, "This speech is written shocking," the genteel speaker uses adverbs instead of adjectives, and isayp, “This speech roads shock- 118 v." Another strange perversion of grammatical propriety is to be lieu-d occasionally in the adop- tion of the present tense of the verb ‘to have", most probably lu- stead of the past participle, but tn situations in which the partl- clple itself would be a rc-dundance; such as. “If I have known", if I hflvfl come, cw; of what use 1's the word "ltavo", h, the sentence at all? What office does 1t perform? Noun. The sentence is complete without it. We speakers and writers of the King's English have a Sllp-blflp way of expressing our thoughts. For instance, the following sentence 1's taken from the writings of a well educated man: "If I have known that you would have been there before me, I would have written to you to have walt- ed tlll I hurl have come.“ To say that a thing lonks when we look at it, is an idiom peculiar to our language, and some idioms are not reducible to rules; they are conventional terms which puss current, like bank-notes. Most of us say "The Queen looks beautifully"; "The flowers smell sweetly" and etectera. When we kilow all the time that it is oursellcs that do the looking, smelling, etc, not the noun look- ed at. How different is the following sentence: “The Queen looked graciously on the petitioner"; because the act of looking is preformed by the Queen. Hardly more than one ln seventy speaks or writes good English. The reatsoit is obvious. We prefer to follow the slip-slop ulettlocl. However, if we bear in mind the following rules we ought not, to cncern ourselves too much. mantle- ly, that _in arranging our sentences there \\'lll be precision. 1 of sub- ject; 2, perclsion of thought; 3, percislon of expression. To these one might also add. say what you have to say in the fewest words possible, then stop! I am, Sir, etc, F. H. MacARTHUR “NERVES” SHE CALLED IT L . . ' __ 1.13.12 ‘llflnilfift. f" never went out my man-always too dent Roosevelt tha complacency at this time ls senseless. -Provldence Journal. The motorist who deliberately $10118!” through pools of water on he paver a nt ln such a manner as w splash pedestrians on the side- walk Ls Bllllhv of a5sault EH11 may be prosecuted. There may be mo- wrists who are not aware that this ls the law. In addition to this, it ls “N I!’ "Wvzht -le1l|'luil l: her kidneys. the film; of her blood, that , . needed attention. " Delay meant Clinger. »-‘ She _loolt Dodil’: Kl q Pip, n on“ lo ill".'l'"l"°d if?" f" h". lid-w:- h-iwi wid- rill». "i1l2Zl‘£""l;'.'.f."l.,"l"' "Wily. disappeared. i t ' "k u. matter of extreme dlscnnrtcsv "BM-s of pedestrmns lhroiwlt d‘=- when mQlOTl-fl-s lyl to consider the l Budd's Kidney Pill; m“. nlaylniz such lack of oonslderatim for thelr comfort and yielfare. No Enorance of this flwl This makes two good mic‘, sufficient masons why drivers n; atitomoblle= should exercise evm-v Possible care when traversing the 539955’ l0 be sure that pedestrians ggenfst ‘puxffcrltnnpoygftice or (lam. esu o t _ Chatham News e r “cums Thousands of freshmen In Am- "lvin °°1|98es are so ignorant of American history that they think ‘Thomas Jefferson founded the Sat- urday Evening Post; that Alex- ander Hamilton Invented the tele- Phmle. and that Walt Whltnmn is u. jazz orchestra leader, according u, 5 511T"? mflde by the New York Tlmes. Twenty-five percent of the 0011680: students questioned dldn know that. Lincoln we; President dllrlfil the Clvll War. But worse than that. 30 percent, ha‘ no 5151a who was Preslncnf. durlhg the last world war. some said Alf Landon W98. Mnvbe those questionnaire pro. Brains are just about rulnlng Am- erican education. Three more ltniz Programs. bringing the wtal to l-Wenlyt-hree. are going on the air and lf they ain't. lowering regard for education, nothing ls. The nlr l; loaded with qul: programs which ask questions any moron ought to be able to answer. The professors coach the volunteer; along with hints and cues and then makes cash payments m the boys and girls who flnlllv give Washington's first nanu; u "George." The trouble ls that the whole country has gone quiz pm- gram crazy. Nobody bothers l0 “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 concentratc on m education, good or bad. in a school or college any man. -New York 81m. of a Ernmmar School. Rector of the English 60116518 it Rome. Apostolic visitor to the Catholic Missions in British terr- ltlo . then A smite Delelzate w Afr ca, and fnally Cardinal Arch- " ‘ ,. of We-stmlnister. But here I would 11k; to write something more personal, for the flrst. impression that the news of the Cardinal's dea- th made on me-and I think on many thousands o! others. 081010110 and non-Catholic was one of deep personal bereavment. We have lost not only a Brent ecclesiastical diz- narltv but a. fat-her Ln God. I have never heard of enveno- oung or old, rich or poor. British gem. Iorelgn-born-who dld not leave the Cardinal's presence warm- ed enlightened and in better heart. His face lighted up when people came up to him. he would peer at. them throuzh his metal-rimmed spectacles with a look of such fn- terest and encourageme it, that from the first they knew he was their friend. In his conversations with others he was extraordinarily sen- sitive and responsive to their feel- ings. One could almost tell the mood o1 someone talking to the Cardinal by the sympathetic reflexfon of that The F0101}! NAME SOURIS MURRAY RIVER NORTH RUSTICO GEORGETOWN CARDIGAN 0'LEARY Alberton BRADALBANE MURRAY HARBOUR VICTORIA TIGNISH later. Realistic and authentic mood in his keen expressive face. "My friends." or “my dear friends" was the form of greeting that; came most naturally to l1ls lips. It was equally natural for his farewell to false the fonu of t. blessing. I per- sonally have never met auycare in whom the _suipreme Christian virtue of charity and its handmald court- esy were so unmistakably shown forth. ' great gift of friendship sprang from the Cardinal's saint- llnes of soul. We have overworked and misused the word "saint." I would prefer to say that Cardinal Hlnsley “walked with God." for that seems to express more fully the sense one had when with him of being in contact with a klnd of life which was not only fuller and deep- er and more energetic than the goodness of even very good people. but, was actually of s quite different quality. An example of his work as a rec- oncller was the founding of the Sword of the Spirit Movement... In the dark days of 1940, the Nnzls prepared to repent lu Britain the tactics of disintegatimi which helped them to victory in France . Each group was assailed. For the Catli- ollcs, the bait was the "unity of all Europe's Catholics in Hltlers New otrder" and the “necessity of a negotiated peace." ‘The Cardinal's lead was immediate and direct. He called all Catholics to reaffirm with him their loyalty to the nation's THE EMBROIDERESS carefully now Spring puts he!‘ Stlwh‘ cs , Along the hedges and the ditches, Deciding what shall first nDI-lcfll‘ On the dark fabric of the Will‘; To mark the pattern, to define with delicate, brtcf line Where soon her nrodisflllly W111 hln s e And all her riches. Of white or gold or crimson red 0r emerald green she takes 8 hread; With here n. pearl and here a stm‘ Where the wild plum and the blackthom are; This for the orchard. mlfi e wood; Wlth here a spear and there i1 ron To flll the garden, edge the pond- Tlnsel for frog and willow: For celsndlne, chrome yellow; Red spri for dark green laurel; Rose-bus , a crest. of coral; small White horse-shoe for i118 wood-sorrel; The hazel stave, many a. crochet; For Veronica. her watcher; The strawberry leaf. well notched; And amid the brown Cross-hatching shown. _ The honey-suckles Attic crown. with here a curl and there a. stttgl. l these pictures. They will tions. assist in the war effort. riEt cwuse. and he set 11p the 5W I'd of the Spirit as a symbol of their determination to fight on tlll vfc- tlory. Finally, we shall not easily forget his great work m PWIBOMW 0°‘ operation between Catholics and other Christian communlons in Brit- ain, on the basis laid down at an early meeting of the Sword of the 1r . 21s Christians we proclaim that the real, lasting peace for which wo work, fight and suffer, should be founded on the triple basis of faith, hope and charity, but the greatest of those ls charlty. Though we differ on important; questions, we do all mafntutn the brotherhood of man and the Fatherhood of God lln the charity of Christ." Perhaps I have conveyed a false Impression by insisting prlmairlly on the radiant goodness of the Car- dinal's character. The lcture would indeed be incomplete f I dld not mention the rlghteous flaming anger to which he was stirred by injustice and cruelty and the op- pression of the weak. His condem- nation of Nazism was fierce and absolute. his defence of the Poles, of the Jews, of all suffering people, passionate with the outraged anger of a, father whose children have been attacked. His goodness was never weak. It was full of energy and power. In a recent broadcast m the youth of the country the Cardinal quoted from Shakespeare these lines: "Master, lead on and I will follow Prominent speakers will Every citizen should attend these meetings, and A PUBLIC MEETING 11v SUPPORT OF Victory Loan Campaign _ DATE April 21 April 23 April 29 April 30 May 3 May 4 May 5 May s May 7 May 10 May l1 All meetings 8.30 P.M. Additional places and dates will be announced War pictures actually taken at the Russian fighting front. 20 per cent. of the Cameramen lost their lives in “shooting” stir your deepest emo- glve short addresses. No admission charged. National War Finance Committee. Professional Card; _,___ . .1 i’ McLeod £4 Bentley w. n. BENTLEY. n, c, .1. A. BENTLEY. u, q Barrister: lligwflttflfflgy|sph MONEY ‘r0 LOAN I54 Prlnco street B. Al! LLB. BAR-RISTER L c"! n Bnik So? ICITOR, m‘ M ALEX wjiisruusso BARRISTER. SOLICITOB. ET Office: 90 Great George Street Money lo um: Coll - 1 ll. F. AlllllllBAll Chartered Accountants ' ‘ Trust Bulldln thee To the last gasp wlth truth and lovnlt " This ‘could serve as his own epitaph. C‘ lotmtown NATI ONAL maul to National SELECTIVI SERVICI Men Born from 1902 lo 1924 Must Provo Compliance With Mobilization Regulaticlll When Asking Pcnnlh to lock Employmelll BY order of the Minister of Labour ‘Issued pur- Selectlve Servicc/ Civiliflfl M. ALBAN FARME Morrelland Gompan . Feather - stitch, pettc - point and couc . The season deepens touch by much. T111 what was little becomes much. Last. the perfection of her art.— To give m every flower a lewellsd heart. -Sylvln Lynd ln the London Sunday Times. PAN-AKE MA KtE- U P A new klnd ofmakc-up created by Mnt Fnctcri’ Hollywood... it seems to create a new com- plexion . . . ii imparts a velvety- smoolh, ynulltful look . . . it helps hitlu tiny complexion fnults...itatn son _ for hourswil out ' cpowvdering. fiscal» Qncuvwcoc Mn Factor Face P 0 W d l! l‘ -ll;x—l:cl:r 155m- ... _ _ _ - - - i c m J21 5°31 £"_'.“§%',n%'sefiss POI!" _b2x_ twin; D-n- §5cnnnd 11.35 “.11 .5 '._° ‘l’ L -A ialfiiiiffiiii Flctor Ml Factor Rfllllt Refills -— Ml! Mo: Factor {tiwldere _MI'E"_°.'°.'_ _' '3'- m ma $1.15 TIIE TWO MAGS I49 Great George Street MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT A TTENTION- Regulations, (EC. 24-6, Janna y 19, 194-3) all important change la now made in regard to tlll issue by Employment and Selective Service Office» of permits to seek employment. After April 30 I943, a permit to seek employment HWY l" refused to any imsle rsou born in any of the years from 1909 to 1924, inclusive, w o has reached ago 10, uulua such Pflw“ presents satisfactory evidence that he has notysontravened tlw provisions of National Selective Service Mobilrztttion Regula- tions (that is, Military Call-up Regulnhc ). Evidence 110"" in to be in one of the following forms: (n) A certificate of discharge from Hi: Majesty's Form! alter service during the present war; or (b) a rejection clip iuued by tha Army 1m applicafivfl l" enlistment; or (c) a czrtificaia o] medical eaxzminafi Registrar of a Illobilization Board,‘ or (d) n 110sfp0lle1nen£ urdar anti/leafs famed by the llcyil- tmr of a Mobilization Board; or (c) in the cuu o] a mole person born in any o] UIB l/"f" from 1909 f0 1916 inchuivo, a Jlafutory declaration on u form available in the mployment ofiice, that III i0 not a "cingla person" under Illobilizntion Regulations. Documents referred to in (n), (b) and (e) above ucribll! presented only the first time a permit is sought alter April 150» I048, unless subsequently asked for by n Selective b0"; Officer. Documents referred to in (c) and (d) above mlisl presented each time a pennit la applied for. head points under the new Regulation: no to b6 speelllll] lot : (I) Mala persona applying {or permit: by mail short/vi forum-d with "It" application: flu widsncs reqnlrfli (except (o) nbom). > (I) A Salectiun Sewica Oflicer MAY furnish a PW!‘ without n": bu», handed evidence, wlwrl it. HPPI" aunt's urvicu are required or immcdiatn unplcymcnt, 0r when u permit‘. i: tuk [or by mail, but m thgll can: the evidence 1mm be uenlad tn the Sdwilvl Bennie Oflicer later, usually THIN THREE DAYS o] lbs iuua cf U» permit. All men, born from 1902 to 1924, who h!" reached ago l9, no urged to cooperate will‘ Employment and Selective Service Offlcera lll "l" mailer. Help yourselves, help other: applying for Wmm‘ help the Offlcu lo function smoothly, by llflvl"! your documents will: you when needed. famed lll/ l," Department of Lab!!!" Hummus? Mrrcnnx, llinlater of Labour A. MMLNAMARM Dlrecfvr, National sumac new!"