TiiE i iutsntorrrroivn ruinous s. with respect to tllraupply for domestic con- sumption, the production cheddar cheese in» 1946 ha); been m 5g 180 mil. lion pounds. This amount would provide for tlie res-silent: vnoaemr" s. more. Vice-President: l. B. Barnett. FJ-l- ,1 lreat Col. ll. A Manluulon. 0.8.0. lditol and Mllllfllt] Director: r I. Burnett, IJJ. Alaoolati Editorii Prank Wakc and ll wanders la 1881) undid" aficiona- null. root Oflloa Department. Qttawa Ian Q, IIIIIQI\ filling of the contract with the British Ministry of Food which calls for delivery of 125 mil- lion pounds of cheese ,for the year ending March 31, 1947, and in addition would provide 5 mil- lion pounds for export to other countries and 5o n1illl0i1 pounds for the domestic market. Reference is made in the report-to the fact that Prince Edward Island was the only I}. v I'll Glardianunay be obtained at: HabJoaaooo shop. Ionelon. N. l The Nrwa Shop. Monsoon. N. B. George McLean. Proton N. S. Wnlklfl Wlslia 890l- ll Salter Si» llnlifax, N... Iotropolitan News Agency. i248 Peel 8t. Montreal. United Cigar Sta-roe Chateau Lanrier, Ottawa Ont. B. Althea, lard Elfin’: Hotel Ottawa, Oil. I. Fine, 354 Bay 5L, Toronto. Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. Bodbary. Ont. Old South News. Cor. tdilk and Waahington Sh. Boston Rotating’; News Agency, Times Building, New York. province showing an increase in egg produc- tion last year. The quantity of eggs available for export in I946, after allowing for a con- tinued hcavy domestic use clue to meat rationing, is estimated at 93 million dozen. Lighter chick hatches in r945 as compared with 1944, will be reflected in reduced poultry marketings comparison with the peak figure of 315 million Iiounds in I944. A contract hadbeen with the United States Government for a large block of Canadian poultry during 1945. but “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” this was cancelled with the close of the Pacific The 1946 outlook ‘for poultry meat is somewhat uncertain. Should moat rationing re- FRIDAY, APRIL Z6, i948 main in effect a continued high level of domes- tic demand may be anticipated. Tlléll. was llll inspiring cast uf (‘lllllllllillll in the Province given by Mt‘. Lloyd Show, Director 0f Education, at Mr. Shaw is an optimist, He secs the deficiencies in our present system, and is doing his level best to have them remedied. Perhaps he is a little too hopeful with respect to the institution of higher schools throughout the Province, but much bet- ter to aim high than have no objective at all. The sum and substance of our educational prob- lem is money. Hitherto we have not had the wherewithal to adequately provide for the edu- mtional needs of succeeding rising generations, and unless relief is brought from Ottawa as the result of the present conference it will continue It takes money to provide accommo- competent iiistruction, that money is not week's conference. but a practical one. t9 be so. dation, equipment, and and in the rural communities available. To realize Mr. Shaw‘s ambitions, and those of all right thinking people, relief must come from elsewhere, and therein is kernel of our fiscal need demand on the Federal Govern- Unless Premier Jones returns with a $5,000,000 per annum subsidy, there is not much chance of Mr. Shaw's dream being realized. It must have been readers to learn of the greatly improved tendarice at school, due to the Baby Bonus con- ditions, the appointment of an attendance of- .ficer, and the extension of the school age. Also heartening was the disclosure that there has been a 50% increase in the salaries of country school teachers since 1941. provided we obtain the fiscal need subsidy we anticipate, it will not be long, as development goes, before we will be in a posi- ,tion' to make the country dominie a feature and a fixture in our Province, a position to which those endowed with the ability of imparting knowledge and leading youthful minds in the way they should go, would aspire as their life's Canadian Agricultural Our Educational Outlook Reference was made in Tuesdays issue to lie official Canadian Agricultural Program for 1946, which was announced in summary form f°ll°wiflll l" allficultural conference at Ottawa , last December, the full text of which has now been published in pamphlet form by the Agri- culture Supplies Board of the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture. about 50 pages, and contains a wealth of sta- tistical rnattei‘ as well as textual references. The followinlg excerpts give only the high spots of the report, which is_ recommended to all agricultural readers as one of great interest and It is suggested that in 1946 a greater per- centage 0f wheat and barley acreage might well be sown on stimmcr-falloiv. The world deinarfd for livestock products is still strong and Can- adian agriculture would be improved by main- taining production of livestock products at as high a level as possible. At the same time the decrease in the production of hogs can only be arrested if there is an increase in the production 0f feed grains. A wheat acreage of 23,414,000 for the whole 'of Canada and 22,566,000 for the Prairie Prov- iikes is suggested fnr 19.16. in» the latter jirovinccs the wheat acreage may expand somewhat at the expense of oats, but In expected increase jilzlntcd to coarse grains in , Ontario and Quebec will tend to offset this at possibility. In barley, the greatest possible ‘acreage is desired this year. At least 8,000,000 acres for all‘ Canada is recommended. » An objective of six million h0g5 has been let for the inspected slaughter in 1946. This is ‘the minimum number which would piake possible completion of the contract with the United .9840"! 501-450 million pounds of bacon, and he same time provide supplies on a rationed iestic market at a level which should pre- ketings into non-inspected ‘channels. While _ are imlictttions that niarketings in 1936 not reach this total, the confidence of pro-_ ifVattempting to attain it should be in- by the prospect that any possible 'rc- n ex requirements in 1947 may be p fset, lly remohral of pr , icls. In potatoes, the recommendation ages "a normal situation of reasonably small exports and imports." For canning crops, it is regarded as likely that renewed export outlets will be found for some of these products of the 1946 and subsequent packs. review zitid 40110121“ ~01 ES-. Premier Jones gives the assurance that he did not break his journey. to Ottawa at Mont- real to interview Premier Dupclssis Dominion-Provincial Conference. All the same, he could not have employed his time better in There is a mistaken idea that betokens piety, and piety goodness. ‘The cele- brated Rev. John McNbill, when Minister Cooke's Churdi, Toronto, was celebrating Holy Communion with his Kirk Session lined up in In the middle of the sermon, he leaned over the pulpit, and ejaculated: “For goodness sake, men, smile and look pleasant! No Christian could possibly feel so bad being good as your looks indicate.” encouraging to our Warrant Officer T. S. Hubbard who is playing such a prominent part as official steno- grapher in the war trials in Charlottetown boy, son of M11. and Mrs. T. -.S. Hubbard. Before being appointed to the staff of Hansard‘, Mr. Hubbard senior was a reporter and his wife Flo Dewar proof reader on Th: Guardian. So young Tom has journalism in his veins from both parents, and brings credit them and his native Province in the success ‘ne has attained in the*Ai;my*ov§rseas. Germany is a At this rate, and educational Jeremy Collier, Anglican ecclesiastic, died this date I726; was a staunch Tory and support- er of the Stewart cause, for which he got into trouble during the reign of William 'IIl, and‘ was ‘obliged to go into exile for some years; but his time was not misspent as he wrote numerous books on social and religious questions which enjbyed great popularity; he was the first and foremost ‘leader to attack the immorality and profanity 0f the stage, in particular censuring Dryden, Wycherley and Congreve; and propaganda did a great deal in bringing ab ut a reformation of s to be again ripe for another Jeremy Col- to make his presence i! 1i‘ Program Th; booklet runs to Mr. J. O. Hyndman made a timely contri- bution on the Confederation issue by his letter teachers from all over Province being in conference, the subject was bound to appeal to them, and will return to their ed to follow the advice so well given by We must develop a provincially- minded population, and then Canada will take "First things first," should be the motto, and the interests of the It is only an educated democ- racy that is any good, and the first essentials of democracy is knowledge of what are our rights, privileges arid prerogatives. ' i I U yesterday. The no doubt they respective schools prepar- ltold that place. Accidents continue t0 take a heavy toll in Czfiiada, as evidenced by the following figures recently tabled in Parliament: in motor accidents Sept. 1, 1939 to June 30. it For 1945‘, 9,028; persons injured through traffic accidents Jan. 1939 to Dec. 1944, fatal accidents from drowning Sept. 1, i939, fatal accidents at level rai way crossings Jan. 1,1939 to Dec. 31, i944, 727; injuries at level railway- crossings Jan. 1, 1939 to Dec. 31, i944, 2,264; persons who died in conflagrations Sept, r, 1939 to Dec. 31, 1944, 1,221, on basis of data years 87 per cent were inhomcs; persons kil- led from other accidents ‘Sept. 1, i939 to Dec. 31, 1944, 22,488, number injured not avail- It is expected that The Dominion Day controversy is a sam- ple of the utter waste of time in Parliament. The public are not interested in it. National- ism in Quebec only becomes absurd among a small element. The rest of the nation is just as nationalist as Quebec, except for a few mild reactionaries, says This Latter Review. taste should have prevented an ittempt to alter a historic name, which linked the nnliopsl holiday with a particulail event. Justus France namtl the , of July "Bastille Elly’ forwhllioric the v.-,s. cut. m. Fourth of My 'Ds ," Canldlaiis iisve,;o~litiro~ % ithtt-"ttatienst birthday moon: a ~ it's-m It might: W Div‘ Good ‘inst gino- an on supplying of domestic demand for datlotls fotzt946 call for a total t~ iigtitiy is than rsbittioir cent overllie a “It total s" tiii Casi. give awards to ‘children for acts kindness to birds and a matter ordlnflly human decency. -W1nd- so: Star. , Tliirozhonrworoulnga or the At- c y propel) ’ planes are orecast. This is not a new pre- diction nor is lt fsntnwtc. know 1t can be done. The accom- plishment of this almost incredible sgeccl will force us to revise our ieasoiftimtmltwtllmeanthevlr- tual destruction of that. factor in our lives. Consider what throehour crossings will mean. One will be able to arrive in America actually earlier than he left, Britain. For instance, a plane leaving London at 8 a.1n., would reach New York at d am. the same day. It is diffi- cult to grasp, but ft ls true. —Win- dsor Star. "E The dc luxe streamlined can which many railroads are- plan- ning sound very inviting. But a continuing flow of letters from our readers makes it. plain that no number of new features designed for their comfort, will offset the discomfort of being constantly smelt while travelling. Thus we hope that a feature by one road — ashtrays in the side confine smoking —-Ghristlan Science Monitor. to him. Says Sir ‘Ben: have a. duty herd. They conscious that they are hinder me food minister in any and equally the publ News. urgentl needed radio DTQSS. . that wave of relief you feel sw lng world. comes not because Bufliuland finds the mail in his village. He heworkslnastore and at crop. ~—Ha]lfax Herald. ourarldup 1s 1r- noa- arlu. r ~ lsthen not any lnoro. With soft-spliced pillow! or moss ,. f hi.‘ 38.5.71 m mcécfuaizimoncrowetiy. Notes B571...» Way Ontario Veterinary Oolioro 1g subjected to tobacco smoke and waits or each tr of seats- e railroad com- gnles are giving up) t-lieirmefforts. certa cars. l . iagnigftlar sgxiiiizubf the Mayor's other remarks. HI: Worshi feels quali- fied to assert that, ' f he had the doing of it, the rural teacher would Pl“! get ten times as much salary as éhe jgachgrl‘: at Prince of Wales. t . vgiirkfieyfliis, despite the fact that he assures his hearers that he has never attended P. W. 0., nor pre- sumably taught school, but grounds his authority for such an elaborate be statement cu the right of free speech, This type of speech ls in- Sir Ben Smith, the food minister, Ls sad. He thinks the public should sympathize with lflm. At Ciuieflnaa he lammtod that there was a "hell of a black market. in turkeys." and he didn't. lmow what to do about it. Nc-w a racket in oranges and lemons is exposed "It's a sad thing to contemplate that theme ail-e such vicious people in the land." That's all. The public their under-the-counter- deals. They know he has a hi? Job to tackle. But. c knows that this is precisely who the food ministry is in existence. —8unday Ilmpire These examples of “absolute ain- pldlty" he encountered in the army were given in the Commons by G. H. R. Rogers, (Soc. Kensington N.) in a maiden speech: A oom- manding officer forbade mien to whistle on duty. and us, five ser- geants on charge for olng it. The same colonel out his dog on seven days 0B with bread and water for misbehaving himself. A group mg: opera oompl their training under great pressure-arid were then put to scrubbing out a Yorkshire wooll- en mill which had not, been cleaned for 50 to 100 years. -——10I1dOIi B1- That long arn-a-a-h you hear. inn throughout the English-Ewan- rrimlan crisis has dissolved. the P Russian riddle dissipated, or fasclsu departed from Spain and Argen- tina. No. none of these. But Win- ston Churchill has ust said. "This is rne." That roar o triumph, those ahrleks of glee, those lifted heads those shoulders squared-whence and why? Millions. otherwise free and proud, who ‘have too long felt secret shame. can now face the MUM-S eye to eye. and even sneer a bit. Winston too says, “This is me." —0ltrlstian Science Monitor. Alexander Sutherland of Shab- enacaxlie is one of those who seem wmove the claim made so often ys that everybody over '70 would quit work and live on a . Whether or notthat clakn sound 1n general principle, m. lt posdble to canyon escliclavinoneof those oftien-over-loolced Jobs so important to cornminiity life. At 8i, he carries 5981115 nit. half past. six in the morning and continues until sometimes 11:80 o'clock st night: in betweentimes . UND- er season. cuts his share of a hay "rile wanin- who arrives in Ber- muda. at the rate of 800 miles an h l rufliee late y to hire a carriage which will take him around at a maximum role of ten miles an hour. The twenti- eth century is none too ood for him when he wishes to to Ber- _ out of hodngvio ts and sum n m. stones omens mine silver feath- TThMhtLa jilltifilél‘... poetic M‘ m t J. ‘IN DIIIHOI 0,!‘ P. W- U- ‘ . Bin-I sincerely’. trust. tlist uls- W ht Mayo MacDonald was-in- coidgilotlhly radon-ted in Wednesday’! Guardian No reflection on Will‘ reporter is intended. Bil‘. b“ in l short condense" of any speech some isolated. points necessarily receive prominence, which taken m t from the contex, ma indi- ape: cate a distorted view. Buch. tfllli. is the report of Mayor MacDon- ald's openlng/ remarks to the Teachers‘ Federation. His Worship la reported as stag; lng-"Prlnce of Wales Collelo the bottleneck 1n the educational system of the Province." I am on; able to find the word "hottlmeck in either of ivvudictlonaries at my limited disposal. so it. may be too recent a eolloqulalls-m. However. I think a fair definition of this term. which has become so familiar in war-time. would be: "A reduction or stoppage in production caused by factors over which the produc- tive forces themselves have n_o control." Applied to His Worship: remarks this could be translated gift): "A failure to pass examina- on I caused by some defect In the educational system over which the students have no control Before applyin this ‘definition dot us first ax- ten times as much deed free. Sir. but would proceed more appropriately from n tuh in Tfvde Parkthan from the Ohlef Magistrate of a Capital City. Rural teachers. under his proposal. would receive about $15900 a year and upwards. if they had ten times the salary of P. W. C. teachers. Or. con- versely, lf we give the P. W. C staff one-tenth the salary of PHI‘!!! teachers. the wage scale of the former would be graduated from about $180.00 a year downwards. Nor is it open to His Worship to. call such an absurdity as the above n mere expression of opinion: he goes on to say that his "arguments are not mere opinions. they are based on figures". whereupon he implies that because 600 students try entrance and 45 enter fourth year, the difference represents (for the moat part) students un- fairly ‘plucked’ in their examina- tions by some "bottleneck" in the system. Why not lei us be fair. Our ed- ucational system may very well be at fault, permitting as it does the granting of a license to teach upon the completion of a few months at . W. 0. But why blame the 00l- leie ltselft’! 1f only half those who try entrance can now pan the ex- nmlnatlonl, will anyone contend that a greater percentage of pupils The Provincial Building rather , etentiolu. Its INK; a windows and doors were the‘ only indication of its importance. was a wooden building about flft . five feet 1on3. and abou thirty- ftv eet in width of, the Mark about thirty feet in from Queen and Grafton Streets This bull in: was divided into two rooms. the Oounou Ohamber and y Room. with a hall eight feet. in width between thorn, an anteJoom her. Over the hall were the ‘Lal- ii Eiilidiy lfid week-day school. In Ma. f '46 th rneratone of vo might muiatnirm the present was lsld. and by the next. spring the stone work had risen only to the lower window ladies. The nortioo was not the same as now. the heavy atone work and arches were not therorbut there were four handsome round pillars‘ on each side, front and back; they m were then only half way up: an. nsrenhly they are the same pillars that. are now on the balcony. Tho buildinu was finished with only the portleo, but changed aolne years after, which unmoved its . appearance very much. There had been a few brick housor built in Charlottetown previous to this time. but nothing ao grand as a stone buildlnx had oontelnnlated. stone had to be bro ht from Nova Bootla and also t e atone cutters and builder. Many watch- edltwithuleas c. andatlut. when the stone work of tbm Pm- vlncial Building was completed. the ground was levelled off by a can: of criminals who were brought every day from the 1% chained to the cart they bau along, The men not only levelled off the ground. but broke ho the useless stone and spread aro in the same to keep the sum-l in order. and’ was a much hard- erlessontothesnl-rldureaterol- ample to others than their punish. lnent ls now. . _ _ Everyone who has aéen views o! Oha lotteto in the olden time rn0hice4Ynl-i1e' round Market would pass lf they were prepared h“ for such examination by teachers themselves permitted to slip more freelv through the "bottleneck"? I do not know if the same sys- tem .stl1l prevails. but I recall some years ago when, in common with others. I used to make a few dollars reading those some matri- culation examinations. Talk about howlersl It is inconceivable that the writers of some of those punt- err e, ‘ ’ themselves to be teachers nine or ten months later. Naturally I have never corrected any examination pmerl at P. W. C. itself. but I know of one P. W. C. graduate who. in a subsequent examination ln Physics. answering a question on refraction as to why a stick appeared to be bent when thrust inio\ a glass of water. ex-l glalned: "The stick l: not really ent at all. this an optical illus- lmi." And that student had passed through the "bottleneck"! Why this almost continuous at- tack on P. W. 0.. its teachers. and its system‘! If a rural school teach- er subsequently attends a Univer- sity and gets promoted to the P. a Fall‘ W. 0. staff. does he lpao facto ac- quire horng and a tail‘! Although not widely experienced. I have taught school in this Province, “and His Worrhl-p may rest assur- ed that it is doubtful if thorn ex- h lat: a teacher, rural or P. W. 0.. who is not thrilled, (pleaaedll a too Inadequate word), when any pupil fl or student shows algnl of “catch- ing on" to what ls being taught. Next to that of the parents, (and sometimes not necessarily next), there la no satisfaction corn ab“! Wm to that of the teacher at a etu- dent’: success, in the c uroomor It. I know, because I have -‘- lnrufforably about suc- cesses In after life of pu lls of mine. The pleasure of exp alnln: something new to a pupil and see- In? hlm grasp it ls second to none. " ucklng" a a,» t who has failed to gram t i the most dil- a inlinn task-a teacher faces. kin back on my days at Prince o Wales 1n only regret tr my lack of atton on to the rub- glecta as they were presented. ave felt for many yearn-that we permit our teachers t ere to live and die without any little word of encouragement or ap raciatlon. Many looming eommonn aces that fell fronr the lips of Dr. Stacie, for Instance. h Ingllsh classes. stood e in nod riexd In had I d a1 hll rerna til attention t oy deserv- ed. this letter. at loalt. would have been party written and correct- M’ ‘nooks and vs our tongues-s. all of thorn, s‘ itlo moral poor-t.‘ bull full sev- gn or oilgvfgll beyogii hheymain wall all around. Ind norm‘ raised and nude into tabla, sup- ported by ilvn or wooden n19- rte. msodiettsnea when the ilbloa l!!- ame the Market Home were ailain use sonic or thew count-f! ooool exhibit that: "so" were goods. such as butter. e886. homo- eilun country socks, etc, on the outside tables. nuokstere a used them for their gingerbread dogs and hens. beer and candy. and the roof formed a verandah: any one fitting by those table! was protected from the run or IOU about the Ila et House; then it til t fill DUI)“ the 2,0111%?‘ Mi. . m-mT-non- m“ msmfi ‘fliilfi-Tmsieii huiidiru was taken the" poets 101%: tgltie the » or were no h“ m animals to. owners of tic than to carts. ' was primitive in nv thing i-fltlloarlllyl. but lair-day wu a "q rala day forvtho huohters Ivory- aie wehofmllgnpfrovlde a fiance on .1 posts " fl covered with tchwork quilt‘: old aailror some. nat ught of uro. there her beer. oakol. apples and plums. for t. e refrsshsnent of the 111mm poop . Home of‘ entertainment and ‘summon-a "coed , " were few and for between. waa louaro on. y was ankle 149m‘ ‘ ass ‘meatreststaaortnaano t- unin were emotions infill" louamtllolo-worenoaidewalh than yoarsafterzall. tor 5- . $35,455: ti? a . ~ I E-r i. gféi-itg 2 n?‘ of {ocular s». Grafton: nines i»; i. 2E s: ti??? és§§§ 3:51;} - a 5i g E ’ ' Elias . ‘ f is ilmfssiisiisij as... t 2 1' can-lea it. ‘ti... . ‘,1 . p a this Duninlo hum. ‘womb Iaatc-n Tract - Ohlllottotowuanuh" ‘lulu. w. IIIGGIN$ “ off oaoh cham- - Charlottetown Q ¢g llomll and company Glartorod accountants o. its. ARCHIBALD lantern ‘Irons nnuiuq. H. R. DUANE & C0.‘ Chartered Accountant: Va Grafton Shoot, DUOIIIIIWOINOIMIILIMII quite understood wily And its omission hum the evidentlywas the crown-in: long ring sense of in- lsollo 80! la-ndolpn W. Manning, 0A. McLeod & Bentley w. a. annual. no. J. a. anivnn. 3.0. Ianbten and Attornoya-al law ocean. i _ The honorable member was. ever, somewhat rnollified by The Minister's aanirance that he would look into the matter. And would allow such unlu- ions oi the cradle of Confederation advertising dmarun nt stion. But t. e matter 2.1.1. representative - had another bone to pit with the: ted unknown who - appreciate that luvPfl-hfl QUE‘ 11111.1. a MATHIESON Blflilifli. l. BELL, ELLA, o. 1.. uhnmson. 1.1.3.. no. all House a beaiifiul little saltwater; ll: ding. Crimin la had He admitted t. he umi the buil a a“ w n!“ “who m“ n ‘alarm an. w. Ii. ilAllStlll _ Palmer Graduate sympathies all with tho P11. people whonliave thus been OIWQIEIVQDQQHU. we are in that calendar? rum all. to llanphraae the what can the tourists know of ada who only the mainland know? It's time that tho root of the world knew that. this Drxnnion doesn't stop at-l-lalif I01 Prince it. , FREDERIC AQLARGE IAIIIBTII, ITO- Ihlllip Bnilllilll. lllrflrafton I onanuonnowu. DR. A. R. SMlTH omsqiifa our‘: sun can: - ‘Idophoaalili. ALEX W. MATBIESON IAIIIBTII. soucrlou. mo Oiflooi oobrea ielioaa PUBLIC STENOGRAPHEI oarda correspond ca, typing and bookkeeping. M188 IIILIN GliIDllN PALMER arusriim a. s. datum. an. 1M1 IAIII! l’! . leak ‘oi u-aw gallium rloNIr ‘to Loan ifltaohod J. A. MoGUlGAN. ILA. A reg,» V jllnAliliANkiAilMER m. 3o Continued) , " 7 admiration