in: ........i.unrrowa Morning Qully (Founded in Ill?) W. Chum S. Mal-tun if Prddent: Ideal. Col. eat: Llflcllk Billion: [Wink W Burnett, B-(LN-V-B. (Oll A yin Strongest Memory ll WW1"? Th" the Weakest I $ubtituie For Amazing it true is the blood serum in transfusions. E. T. Waters into the whitish substance m-"lde from the bladders of fish, and in jellies and glue, have been carried 0n by Dr- N. B. Taylor and Bliss Margar and its success i.- retslrtvil in thc Journal of thd Canadian Vcdical Association. 'l'his cxperiiiii-nlal >H¢CPS$ what confined in the laboratory from transfusions in (logs, cats. mice, but clinical results have Dr, H. l5. Pugsley and D1‘. son in the Toronto (lencral learn from a report in Times that fifty-eight zldiiiitiistrations of £0111’ To seven per cont isinglziss solutions were given l0 'l‘lit- verdict stated fihil! fifty-one p.'tlient-'. isinglass appears tn be a safe and no uniliiviiiilllu rvzlction duc to it “T15 follllfl on any of the patients. These researches, of course, being still in the experimental stage. They in T10 wise lessen the great and tirgent need for hlmd donors across Canada. The paign in this connection is perhaps the most Vital of all its important wartime activities, and 111 this Province. as elsewhere, the blood rlrlnnrs remains acute. Future For Agriculture Comnicntzng I'll Progressive Conservative Leader John Brackcifs annou party's liationill agricultural reform program, the Globe and Mai] says: In scope and in meaning the lined to his Lethbridge audience represent a vflsl But it is an integrated projrct Wlluill project. ought to bring encouragement regardless of the nature of his locale. Its most lays l foundation for (lealing u a. national industry, and not by fragments and through piecemeal cxpedients, practice of all Governments. Radical as the program may seem to some who think of it purely as "assistance,” it is not act- ually new. In essence it Crystal which Mr. Bracken and his col 0nd toward for a long period foundation for reform it rest practical footings: Organization within the ill- duatry to provide the machine work out its own problems; production according to the kind and quality of the land and in rclfllioll to demand, marketing and distribution services. In these factors is to found th ‘lost, profitable farming. planned and developed cssential Canadian agriculture, not only in terms of CXPOFt requirements and home consumption, but fol‘ industrial use, which, conceivably, can become. 15 ulmost certain to become, the greatest single out- look for many forms of fami production. Essentially it is a program which places the Emphasis "not on occasional handouts, having the character of charity." but on ind self-reliance, co-Qperative enterprise, hard ivofk lt is a program which can hold out promise only to those farmers who are ivilling, by work and by intelligent use of their land. t0 take advantage of the opportunities it prOvidCS- and thrift. Hssistance. as Mr. Bracken has the objective of promoting the "the farmer within the national economy, and aid- ing him to advance to and hnl equality with other essential in ‘economy. Vine-Prcald J. a. uni-rim, ma. fury: Lieul. Col. D. A. MMKlll-M skit... iiunuui: 0mm TUESDATL1P_\_K__$| l!" Blood Serum information coming £10m the University of Tioronto. 317°"! d°cl°rs ' inn using isinglass as a substitute for human significant feature From them can be n, 03.0. B. Burnett. IJJ. uni Lleul. [an A ctlve Service) nk." starting when, beuedictdom. figures as Rt. Charles G. D. Research by D1‘- used commercially 1837i all" I et E. Moorehousc, Madame Patti form in 1859; has been sortie- to results derived rabbits fllld been tested by F. F. Farquhar- Hospital. We the New 3501b‘ Federal-Proviu blood Stibstittitc. may be taken a5 Red Cmi‘ cam‘ Conference. _ __ It evidently "Nd if" Cmlla" sels, and no wo Charlottetown. U.S.S. Lafay the completion lug $4,500,000 kecl. The trans nceiuent of his 30 points he out- for war duties, a. fire. to every farmer production 0r his i5 that; it with agriculture tion. In four as has been thfi "from 700,000 of allotment-ho ly 1,800,000. been especially lizes the reforms leagues have lab- of years. As =1 s on singularly 000 tons of ess ry and study f0 e answer to l0\v- fruits, diversification of school, Shining buttons, be leaders. ividual initiative, discipline which UTC. outlined it, has self-reliance 0f a successful air d a position 0f dustries in that All Souls pa; “Uncle Dud” little dreamed what note each has a “D” . l Jenny Lind, l0 do so in connection with the The vital importance of , Capt. A. Raymond, commanding at Uplands All‘ commenting a! FDITOklAL NOTES -. \ vet's Better not put otf applying for those Victory Bonds lest the opportunity be lost. I I I F Who are the “big shots" so far in Our Vicwfl’ Loan Campaign? and Senator John A. Macdonzilil, Cardigan. Th? former boosted Suniincrsidc‘s quota. and the latter Cardigans The Holnians, Summersidv i i * he was as an octogenarian, he rfl-cflicffid But since taking that step he has been followed by such distinguished world Hon. L. Lloyd George (82) and Roberts (83). It is Wvrthy °f in his name. s: - 4 Swedish soprano, died this d1“ phenomena] success on the con- tinent, she visited England in 1847 as an operatic soloist, and the U. S. A. in I850 as a C0116"! singer; she attracted crowded audiences whfl- ever she appeared, and had no compecr till appeared on the New York plat- in her later years, Jenny, who married Otto Goldschmidt, was teacher of sing- ing in the Royal College of Music, London. nut! Provincial rights will again be a Subject V‘ discussion when representatives of the provinces meet in Ottawa on the 8th of this month for U16 cizil labour conference called by Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, Minister 0f Labour t0 study the drafting of a new Labour Lode. The report of an enquiry conducted by the National \\"ar Labour Board will serve as a basis for re- coiiunendations. cu in Quebec against centralization of puivers ill Ottawa will undoubtedly be accentuated by this The campaign presently going 1|! 1K ll‘ '1) is a costly luxury salvaging ves- nder Ottawa balked at attempting loss of S. S. The U. S. Navy Bureau of Ships has just turncd over to the Naval Board the ette, former Normandie, marking of an 18-month salvage job cost- to refloat the vessel at an even fer tool: place at Pit-r 88, North River, where on Feb. 9, 1942, while being refitted the 83,000-ton liner capsized after I Ill l l Impressive figures show the extent to which the British people have translated the Govern- ment's call to grow more food at home into ac- years, the number of allotment holders in England and \Vales has increased by to 900,000 and the grand total lders now stands at approximate- Iii some areas, development has marked; and in the London siib- urb of Wembley, for example, the pre-war r30 plots have increased to 2,600. At the lowest esti- mate, these war allotments are producing 450,- ential foodstuffs a year, whereby the ordinary inaii and woman 0f Great Britain is saving at least 18,000,000 cubic feet 0f ship- ping-space a year. In addition, between two and three million private garden owners produce an- nually tremendous quantities 0f vegetables and l i l! III little things. GrouD on the protests againfit polishing boots, etc., said to refl- ent graduates: “I cannot emphasize the ‘spit and polish’ discipline too strongly. You are going t0 With leadership there comes added privileges, but there are also added responsibilities to be shouldered. It is the ‘spit and polish’ you have rcccivcd and reacted to with mixed feelings that will aid you in the fut- Unless attention is pcid to these small details, the efficiency of the WllOlC system lags and suffers. This seemingly foolish discipline which brings about so much criticism from all parts of Canada is the main reason we have such force. People say: 'Tllis is not winning the war. Let's get on with the 10b.’ I say, let's fight any such remark as this system of . discipline has already proveii itself." —— Notes By The Way — Two thousand men of the Can ndian Forestry Corps brought back from Scotland can be a great. help 1n getting out the timber that. needs to be cut on this side cf he Atlan- tic, where it; is more plentiful- Monctnn Transcript. Business men who have been bumped around in crowded railroad passenp-u- cars the past several months can lock forward only to a bigger and better buffetlng in the months ahcad- ~ Wall Street Journal. The woodpecker is n realist. With it every knock is a boost. If it looks under a fold of bark it is for due cause. In the spring. it excavate-g n. tidy nest, but only in n softened tree- Even then 1t. will hide the chips Just in case predatory eyes were watching. Mostly, it says nothing -and saws woods. —Vlc- torts Colonist. , An lnleresllng feature of the problem of arglozxlture is that, while many farmers are obliged to sell out, city folk are buying ad- jacent; farm land. The explanation is that while the former are 1n the clutch of circumstances, the lntter are taking a long view of the sit- uation. —I-lamllt0n Spectator. An anxious little victory gar- dener dropped into a flve-iind-ten during her lunch hour and asked the girl at the garden-supply count.- er for a Japanese-beetle trap. The 1 said no. rather huffilv. "We ave absolutely no Japanese iner- chundlse in the store. Madnni." she tdded. -'I‘he New Yorker. Germain nrlsonrrs. rn mule mi ml! Cnlmlfl’ for lnlcrnmenl. nrel now deprived of lll('lI' razor blades, tobacco tins and anything else with m edrre on ll. N the reason mine man. "Load Hm tip ihat they are "unrcgcnerale," rx- immmelrv’ he" the °"ll' P00! $110! plains Lieut. John Brown, U. S. N. R... in The Saturday Review of Literature. On a previous trip the prisoners were said to have used any sharp object they could fret their band; on to slash life belts and thus reduce the chance of their captors surviving. 1f the vessel ' were sunk by a U-boat. Lieutenant Brown suggests that before becom- lxilz sentimental about German pris- oners of war, we examine the rec- ord of the Nazi Party to which they subscribed. He points to their "barbaritles," how they "murdered and pillazed in the name of u. superior race." how they helpless paratroopers floating to the ground and the whole black list of Nazi Party sins. "If we are soft," he says. "these prisoners are not. Make no mistake about this. Our decenciu are their strongest wen- pcns," _ Exchange. When Gen. Si: Bernard Mont- somery was talking to the boys of Amesbury school Ln Great Britain. shortly before he left for the nttimk on Sicily, he told them: "I would say that the chief difference be- tween the German and the British soldier is that the German soldier laughts at other people's misfor- tunes while the British soldier lauizhs at his own misfortunes." Well said. Sir Bernard, we include our American soldiers. too, in the same category. as the British? --Milwaukee Journal. A keen-eyed mountaineer led his over-crown son mm a country schoolhouse. fglfiles: The Atlantic Constitution. "Ibis here boy's ilrter iaminf" he announced "Whnls vour bill o‘ fare?" "My d... nartmenl. sir," replied the profes- sor. "canslsLs of arithmetic. algebra ftflmelrr and trigonometry.‘ ‘Thnfll do." interrupted m»; 01d with iriz- 'n the family " Mid may ' ed- drained As harvesting began in Norfolk- shire, the Old County papers car- ried a photograph of the King and Queen and the two Princesses on an inspection of the wartime farm effort at Sandrlngham, The Tor- Otito Telegram relates. They were walking through a field of barley. the Princesses dressed 1n what looked much like farmerette dress, although perhaps slacks would have been a. more appropriate item in that type of uniform. Six acres of lawn in front. of the King's home at Sandringham House, says the letter press accompanying the pin- ture are under a. crop of rye. Beetroot and parsnip are growing in the ornamental flower beds, and the King's private golf course Ls producing oats and rye. The flax crop has ptoduced over 3 3-4 tons of high quality flax to the ucre. Potatoes are showing yields up to 12 tons to the acre; wheat, 70-80 bushels to the acre. These heavy yields are the iesultcf a compre- hensfve plan, carried out with the help and advice of the Chief m- ecutive Officer of the Norfolk War an now highly mechanized and the corn are being gathered by n combined harvester and mechanized) baler. the latter driven by a Land Army Biri- Altogether there are fourteen Land Army girls on the estate. The war brought many changes to Sandringham fanning, but the results providai an impressive justification for the} drastic experiments. The work has been carried out with the keen per- sonal lnterest and support of the King and Queen. Altogether, 1,433] acres are being farmed of which 9'17 nre iirable- Of these, 529 have! been plowed since the beginning of.’ the war. representing more huff 0f the prewar pasture Despite this. by careful liuuLl with a fine incrense in milk pro- duction. Pzitatoes, peas, mustard. wheat and oats are produced on 476 acres of the Ylllflham marshes. which were and being ,= change. i- w-nnwn-wwmumwrrwnnn wmuinnnnimnnummna» r-n -~ - ‘how many medical OKlCBTS Joe; it. l lVir-gll mentions It‘ the ust. Agricultural committee. The farms A 1511 l . 8m ti a new dairy herd has beef: stlilrfaelii was‘ fhecripgilaglisoncd by Sir Hud- |5on Lowe late beanspon st. ‘Hale As th Sand-, to Rnmd dltch- selves plowed. —l}k-,clnssical WI! fl pro? 111' find Ions llflplgzullflrg ‘um’ my " Ancient _ History drought To Life (Edmund G. B9711’ 01' the DI- °t<=..""a~.l'.’.t"is".:i.rt a 1t. u 'curiou| for a classical scholar to rend the newlpgglurl the: days and to m old f ar namiis appearinl 1n the headlines. piacu fought. over time and time again and now once mo" seem of critical battle. d?‘ “filly”? m‘ fffimm“ Sc y t0 . 20m . Both were old 0N0! colonies, founded in the 8th cen- tury 8.0. I knew‘ Meuina. l8 cities which centuries N10" obi-at had s womrmu sulfur‘ of their own and noon out-RI"! mainland. Tarsnbo, the scene o the engagement between the Ila.- Ihm and the Allied $16!". "l": m‘ l’ settlement before Actfurn. The Allies landed in amphibious- operations at Paestum and I saw in several newspapers and magazines pictures of troop! in the colonnade of the Greek tem- ple there. Apparently an Amer- ican Negro battalion had cstab-y llshed its headquarters under thl Greek columns. I thouzht of the many raids the Carthagfniaps made along that south Italian coast. in the early days of the, Roman Empire and now it seem-l ed as if Africa had pin invaded Italy and the Punic euions were avenglng their defeat centuries ago. Countless different civiliza- tions have spread over that. rezion and still the old Greek tenl/ple at. Paestum stands-one of the best- preserved in existence-as a re- minder qf the culture to which we owe I0 much, of the great an- tiqulty of the lands over which our armies are movlul- Some of the fiercest fighting thus far took place at Salerno. It brought back to my mind a refer- ence to Salerno in Horaceb Epis- tles, for here a Roman colony was established in 194 13.0. to hold 1n check the hill tribes to the south- east who had aided the invader Hannibal. But. it was in median- val times that Salerno became fa- mous. It was a rich city of the Lombards and was frequently at- tacked by the Saracens. In 8'74 a. Mohammedan chief spread his couch on the altar of the cathe- dral: in 1016 a. Saracen fleet was besiezing Salerno and some Nor- man knights who had landed mere on their way come from the Ho land aided the citizens age t. them. They ref/tuned to Normandy laden with rich presents and romised to bring back their countrymen to help the Italians drive out. the invader. They did so, and settled in Southern Italy and Sicily, setting u a Norman oourl; under the uul tired soldier- prince, Frederick II. I womlitefi w the Allies know that here was one of the sreatest medical schools of the Middle Ages. While schol- ars went. for graduate study in theology to Paris, tn law 0o Bologna, thqmedlcal professors of Salerno were unsurpassed and all European doctors studied there. a . . Only three weeks ago there was fighting atrium; the ruins of Pompeii under the shadow of Mount Vesuvius. It was neces- sary, but it. is good to hear that much 0f that, city of the dead still stands, for here we can best see what a small Roman town looked like in all phases of its life. One day in '19 AD., when busi- ness was as usual in the town. B. sudden and swift eruption 0f ve- suvliu; took place and in the course of a single day covered the whole town with molten lava, catching many of the people their houses and shops. ft was buried and forgotten until the 18th century and now little by little nrchuecologlsts have cleared, the streets out, exposing houses; and shops Just as they were on that ill-fated day. There was bread.‘ now turned to atone, in the bak- ers’ ovens. Never has a picture of ancient Roman life been better preserved for us than at Pompeii and we have a letter of Pliny the Younger, who had’ a narrow es-t little harbor town of Pemioli, which the Canadians occupied. Its ancient name was Putieolt in Roman times nn important SCH‘, port. Cicero landed here on his! return from Sicily and Paul on' his journey to Home. He had landed at. Syracuse and had stay- ed there three days: "And from thence we fetched a compass and came to Rhe lum; and after one day the souh wind blew, and i -~ cz-ine the next day to Puteoli; where we found brethren and were desired to tarry with them seven clays; and so we went to- ward mme". Paul was a prisoner in the Castor. an Alexandrian |shlp and landed at. Putlecit on ,Mly 59 A. ‘The “brethren” were Perhaps slaves in the scr- vice of wealthy Romans [or Puteoli was a Bummer resort and great villas aufropnded the bay. On the south side of the Buy of Naples lies Capri. now occupied ‘ by l-hliAllles. It is not many years since "Iwas on the Isle of Ca r1" Wu heard everywhere; Cans fan and American soldiers will remain. well. mlny of them must now have seen the little island in the blue of the Mediterranean. Emperor "8 "Bwvknllnaton a visited it for the last. time four an days before his death. But it Tlbg . lug who establish himzdff theiiel rmnnentl 1n y; g and y there, accordin to o l W811i- the laatxten yell- lgfooutrim 117° l" "fly Sort of debauchery. Bataan: M» historian Tuotus Hatched“ the readily gnu"; g beriiia built 12 palace; on chm-t fs1§1gd_ 0n a different pm or an, wal is interesting two yearn cgprl governed by _ {mm 1006 to 100a. Admin! sli- gun; the inland which m r Napoleon's keeper . I Allies advance nearer they will find ttiem-' ""0118 mcre and mo” names and scenes. Gnpup, been Hanni- Mmlm‘ "l4 “$3” l“ nhwhm’! But count the FBMH o! my fat be mmmnil 3.0. it was the scene of the mset- I I trig and treaty between Mai-k Anton and A til-r. thv cape himself z th f~wui-.u...' °: tl:."t:~..2t.":.rrt. “a am mm. of Vesuvius is the than, The, kmw u,“ m fly," matte air control a-nd should dlustrd wh h | n“ trim of will.” c B“ m ‘I'll LII __ ,a:e>.~i..ir°a".:t.~t.*". m» in l ti: fL“i.::.-~.:: ‘it. mark Consider not inv time wart- The moon t The rush rebolve and low The dgstm that liars n01: result, deal: ‘n l ht:- mve not, in the do | 1 thful dark. their parent town: on the Greek Ilbrzot filo vision and the hetcht. Tgiberlairlthlislylotgdgasrborwllllyyfl ooh- nrii» fog I‘? will tgplvv also I less Thy 30a a! —Charler G. D. Robert-I- Reverse Gospel (Lgwlg Mulligan in Tweed News) The chiucheii have lost the POW- er of spiritual healing because too many ministers have reversed the gospel of their Master iuld an seeking first a material kingdom. They have been trylIlB Y0 Wm me gospel into a, syst/em of economics and have abandoned the doctrine of immortality and Heaven 1n the hereafter for a. socialist Utopia ‘new and now -or as soon as they can elect a socialist Utopia. They are not concerned with the fact that most of us will be dead before the C. C. F. politicians and professors can put their plans for a heaven on earth into operation. By that. time a new generation will arise with ideas of its own and will want to be free to learn the lessons of life at first hand. Young people resent. the dictation of their elders- They want. w work out their own salvation. and there ls no room for that in the strait- Jacket 01' aready-made Utopia. Daily Newspapers (Financial Post) "It. has bee quite impossible," says a Toronto weekly publication “to rely on the daily newspapers for any accurate account of the pro- ceedings in the courts and council chambers bf this country, however signifiant they may be." Such a condemnation f: so sweep- ing as to be patiently ridiculous. Either the author wrote that sent- ence in a mcment of petulanue or he doesn't know the daily press of Canada. The high degree of accuracy in the Dress of Canada la one of the most remarkable things about it. In view of the difficulties under which it works. especially in war- time. and the speed of production which the public expects, the mer- vel ls that there are so few errors. Not the least. o! things against which the accurate reporter must contend are the mumbiers, unfor- tunately comprlsing many judges, parliamentarians. attorneys, may- ors. alderman councillors. court clerks citizens. And in it bl , ‘he!’ "e ‘ifllled e” a y “ the supporters of the Czar in the reporter must depend verbal information. Equally dankerous are the people who profess to know; who are burstlntl with zeal to be helpful and are so sure of facts they don't know. There are as many words in the news columns of a daily newspaper as in a good-sized book. Yet the book produced over a period 0f months and Willi a multiplicity of checkers. is seldcm without errors ___________—;_=————— much on bars headquarters after he de- feated the Romans at Cannae, near Foggla, the Allied air base for operations against the Italians in Albania. Much of the Roman road from Rome t0 Capua 1s still used as a modern highway. So as we read the newspapers these clays ancient history comes buck vividly with bll the place. names. We feel that Italy is no strange country, nor Rome an alien cit-pita]. but, to quote the New York T.mes, "instinctively are a. book rltte 1 to history of oui-v civliizaiioivgne °l the --_____ It coat the Canadian National Railways $683,000 last year to guard its ml rcrienies from coast m coast an nst possible sabotage. “Vlllllll llllT” Mill WlllilllEll Prlrrlnrmuilum i- i Bu]. unable lo do trmnstmt achievement. scum?“ face mo Q, I my A reader would like to know who the White Russians are and why 1917 shev ll‘ DodcfsKldneyPills I Clip These Coalifips Check Stacker Adlustmnc ' \ WIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIJIII P959111 f0 the lkl The WhTtFRussians a to do with the h d nothing "1911811 lb ls true i116 °l the milmrchy at that time were (551190 "white." Russians and a before Bolshevi you can! i w». .. .1. -. .‘;..';- .... 9 I White Russia (Vanccuver Province) "white". Were they . a oun ry eas o she asks s op- Russt t. r pqinnn R” mlsilanfi 01‘ 501- c The Great Russians - mixture of Finish Russians are purl: Tartar. revolution, i917 revolution, supporters _ and marshes. were for Tnere were White White Russia long heard of. Holders of Dominion of Canada 5 per cent Bonds due October 15th, 1943 and Dominion of Canada 4 per cent Bonds due October 15th, 1945. Both these bonds were called for payment on October 15th at 100 and no further interest will be paid on them. While the subscription lists are open they may be tendered at 100 1-8 in lieu of cash for bonds of the Fifth Victory Loan. For full particulars be sure and contact your Victory Loan Sales- man at once. This is most important. NATIONALWAR FINANCE COMMITTEE. IIIII VIIIIIIIJIIJ‘ Buy all the 1 VICTORY BONDS i Cnowiv. LIFE lNsunm-ice COMPANY In the slav population of Russia there are three main divisions, the great Russians, who inhabit most of the country; the Little Russians, whose home is the Ukraine but; who extend west. and north into Poland and the Carpathians; and the White fans who live in the vast marsh have an ad- blocd. The Little White Russians, who took refuge from the Tartnrs in the swamps centuries associated more closely with the Litnuanliins and Poles than with the Great Russians and have Polish "IIIII IIIIJ ATTENTION s,‘ ZIIIIIIIIIJVJIQIIIIIIII Many stockers do not have tailg- e NATIONAI. EFFICIENCY In the battle i t F Lin. i..i.i...f“i.‘i.l‘°ii.fii‘tl. “ilitllllfi jot factor. Thrift is vital to the war effort. Premium savings add to tli i lit fighting dollars that is helpiieigmttrg wlii ifilivg, It is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to help Elalgi-pvegsglellllilauan-more secure. Consult the llYlllllllll 8; 00. LIMITED Provincial Manager; adequate is a ma- Offices: Charlottetown, SummersiddMontagmi, BUY BONDS to SPEED VICTORY ‘m! t "— and Lithuanian blood iii V0 ' They are suppcsed to have been called "white" bernuse of eir costume, White smock. Willie egg- ings and white homespun cunt. White Russia, now one or tlie re- Dllbllcs of the Soviet Union. lsi P001‘ country at best. and has sul- fered woefully in tn: win-s 0f the Past. century and n half. It lnr in the path of Napoleon‘: army lii the Russian crinipziirn of 181! and suffered a devastation frciu which it had not recovered gt the time of the first World War. The Rilss- fan retreat lny through it ln 191i Bud nOW. it has been overr aln. Are You Troubled Will: L U M B A G O 0r , sous BACK 2 If so we hue une of the h?!‘ remedies to offer namely slur-air: TABLETS Especial! effective for l-llm‘ ban. Sc alien. 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