PAGEJPUB TIIE GIIMILUTTETDWII Glllllllllll Morn1n| Dally (Founded 1n 1881) Preddenf Ueut. Col. W. Cheater S. Molnar! Vleo-frealdent: J. I. Burnett, lJ-l. Secretary: Llelll. C01. D. A. lholflnnnn, 9.8.0. ldllor and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, FJJ- Apostate Edlton: Frank Walker and Hell. Ian A. Burnett, B..C.N.V.R. (On Active Scrvleaj “The Strongest Memory}: Weaker Thaw the Weakest Ink.” FRIDAY, SEPTEMBEBTl-d: 1_o_4s Shunning Responsibility Canada is not represented in London dur- ing the conference of the Council of Foreign Ministers which has begun drafting the final peace terms, Her absence, says t-he Globe and Mail, is in strange contrast to her declared aspir- ations as a “Middle Power" and the spokesman of the small I’owers. It will be the more notice- able because of the llffsEllCfi of Australia in the person of Dr. H. \'. Evatt, Minister of Extern- al Affairs, and whose request to be present at all meetings dealing with Far Eastern affairs, rqprtedk hd the support of the British For- eign Secretary. Canada is unrepresented bccause, as Prime Minister King explained to the House of Commons, pressure of Parliamentary duties prevented him, as Minister of External Affairs, 0r any other lliilister, from attending. The explanation, so far as it concerns the Prime Minister, can be accepted. But there its validity would seem to and. It is hard to believe that not om; of (h1g2) Ministers of the King Cabinet could be spared. Using past conferences which our representatives have attended, 0r "observ- ed," as the standard, there are few so important to Canada as that of the Council of Foreign Ministers. On the face of it, the conclusion will be that the Government was seeking t0 avoid the meeting, and more especially the responsibil- ities of consultation with other members of the Commonwealth which‘ attendance would entail. Thus it would seem deliberately to be turning its back on the agreement reached by the Prime Ministers’ Conference in London 15 months ago, when consultation, “continuous consulta- tion." was accepted as the basis of Common- wealth co-operation in organizing and influenc- ing the world's return t0 peace. Ready Money The ready money in the hands of the Can- adian people today totals about seven billion dollars, according to the calculations of the Financial Port. This sum is made up 0f the following items: Increase since I939 in bank deposits and cash in the hands of individuals, $1.2 billion. Victory bonds and war savings certifi- cates, $4.75 billion. Refundable tax receipts, $200 million. Veterans’ gratuities and credits, $850 mil- lion. - This is all money owned by individual Canadians, not by governments or corpora- tions. It can be spent as the individuals choose. How much of it will actually emerge in the form of consumer spending in the near future nobody can tell. Plain Speaking The Edmonton Journal, a Sourham pub- ncation, confesses to finding it difficult to work up much enthusiasm for Prime Minister King's idea of a national war memorial in the form of a huge "beautification" program for the city of Ottawa and the surrounding district. Details 0f the plan are still sketchy, but it will apparently involve a complete rebuilding of the Capital, as well as the establishment of a system of parks and "recreational areas," in- eluding Hull and extending far up the Ottawa and Gatineau valleys. “The project," says our Edmonton con- temporary, "is apparently too grandoise for any Canadian architect or city plannerd, :0 a high- powered genius is being imported from France. The (iovcrnnlcnt considers the matter s0 im- portant that it is said to have made special rep- resentations to tieneral de Gaulle in order to speed up the arrival 0f this particular wizard. When all is finished. the Prime Minister says we will have}: capital in keeping with the Canada of the futurc.' “lt is difficult to see just how a scheme of Ii: kind could poslibly provide a suitable monument to the Canadians who fought and died in the conflict just ended. Whatever may be said against conventional memorials, such as cenotaphs and statues, they at least compel the beholder to think about the dead, which is, after all, the function of any war monument. But no such effect is produced by the spectacle of huge, pompous government buildings, miles 0f ornamental driveways and acres of formal parks. Such Babylonian extravagances may be formally dedicated to our fallen soldiers, but actually they tend to impress visitors only with the power and wealth of the ruling bureau- eracy.” After commenting On the fact that the maj- ority of Cattadiatts never visit Ottawa anyway Ind have no particular desire to do so, the Journal concludes: ' “Actually, there is every reason to believe that the Government's program is designed not l0 much for the honor of dead soldiers as for the glory of living politicians. Since he first at- tained office, Mr. King has shown extraordinary zeal for glatnorizing Ottawa, to make it a more appropriate selling for his own greatness. He has spent vast sums of the taxpayers’ money, with very indifferent results, but he is not yet discouraged. “Now the pretence of commemorating our we: dead has given him an excuse to complete the work on a ltill gaudier ucalé. One of the Roman emperor: used to boast that he ‘found Rome brick and left it marble,’ Similarly the Prime Minister having found Ottawa a quiet and rather charming old city, seems determined to leave it a cross between Nineveh and Coney Island. "However Kfatifying this sort of thing may be for Mr. King, we imagine that most people will regard it as a pure waste of public money. Surely a more dignified and appropri- ate way canlbe found of paying tribute to our heroic dead." -EDIIORlAL NUTII$- The Province obtained Dominion-wide front page publicity yesterday, through the misguided “enterprise” of three "foreigners" who sought temporary refuge here, only to be laid by the heels, physically as well as metaphorically. U I I I Travel by air has its disadvantages as well as advantages. The trip of Premier Jones and colleague to Newfoundland was held up un- til yesterday on account of unfavourable weather conditions. Fog and rain in the air are as bad as ice and broken propeller in the Straits. I I Old time Exhibition weather may now be expected. Not infrequently it was torrid, and sometimes there were deluges to empty the grandstand as well as bleachers. I!!! A minor general election including the Provinces of Nova Scotia, Manitoba and Brit- ish Columbia takes place next month, Thgfg were rumours that Quebec might also go to the polls, but Premier Duplessis thinks it better to wait the result 0f the Dominion-Provincial adjourned conference. II! _Like the Fur Auctions, the Packing Com- panics have been having a glorious period of prosperity. The financial statement of Canada Packers Ltd. to March 29 last covers another year of great profits, with dollar sales up 11 per cent to a new record level at $228.4 mil- IlOl'l, which compares with $206,155,000 for I944 year, $169,141,000 for the 1943 fiscal year. After all charges and deductions, the year's net profit showed the sizable gain indicated of $1,- 824,811, compared with $1,687,586 for the pre- vious year. The balance sheet shows a strong P0550". with current assets of $25.4 millions exceeding current liabilities of $16.3 millions by $9,066,000. Iii! Arthur, Duke of Wellington, illustrious British Commander, died this date, 1852, at the age of eighty-three; while much honoured, the Duke was a man of much simplicity and never appearing in the slightest degree uplift- ed; his leading idea in life was the duty he owed to his country and its government, and with the performance of that he always appear- ed perfectly satisfied; his army was the work of his own hands, its staff, its commissariat, its siege apparatus, its bridge equipment, its means of trimsport, its intelligence department, its knowledge of outpost and other duties, were all his own creation, hence his brilliant campaigns in India, the Peninsula of Spain and Portugal. and in France and Flanders: “A great country can have no such thing as a little war." I i l‘ Lieutenant Robert Morgan, a British Fleet Air llrm Officer, has after six year: of re- search work, completed the plans for a new type of car designed to raise the present world speed record of 368 miles to 520 miles per hour. The invention represents a revolutionary novelty in design and construction of cars. The car con- sists of a gigantic wheel approximately 12 feet in diameter, which contains the driver's seat and has a pear-shaped body which is largely made out of a special glass and light metal. The car, which the inventor has called the “Boml-l" is jet- propelled. It uses liquid gas as fuel, and works almost on the same principle as the German V2 rocket. According to the inventor, the “Bomb" will only be used after measurement and test- ing of fuels, lubricants and combustibles and after the reaction of the human body has been ascertained to the "lightning" ride. In his opin- lOfl, the construction of the new car will result also in the practical possibility of a journey into space. The "Bomb" weighs about a ton and will cost £8,000. I I O The British capitalists are expressing fears of the consequence of Imperial preference at the expense of trade with the. United States. The Financial Nows, London, discussing the situation says that if Britain should discard her empire preference trading policy as the price of needed trade with the'United States, perhaps not only the United Kingdom but the Dominions as well would benefit in the end. "Perhaps for the time the ordinary man in this country was made vividly aware through the recent cancella- tion of Lend-Lease how dependent this coun- try i: at present on American imports and American help with our balance of payments problem," it says. "If we have to choose between Imperial preference and American help, which ought to be sacrificed?" The editorial adds that Britain “has nothing at all . . . t9‘ offer that could induce any of them (the Empire countries) to canalize their trade more or less exclusively with nur static market and partially to isolate themselves from the rest of the world, including the United States. There should be no insurmountable objections from the Dominion: to lowering this country's general tariff as part of the program -of Anglo- American cooperation. Indeed, if at the same time the Dominions themselves were granted readier access to the United States market they would doubtless consider themselves gainers." All of which means that Canada must be pre- pared to face Free Trade conditions for her products in the Mother Country, if not in the other Dominionl. __ _-_L_ufl .-—n_ In B1 ' ham, 11:31.,“ mm». a club whose member: pay g we“. lay‘ fee and draw lot; w all marry next. A tlve form of lam , us. as only one at. a -Ot.tawa Cltlnen. Wall! Kim!» ll. oldest sz“a=w:r“"::...“'~' r. . ll 95. OI yo m girls the art‘. of d1 1n ‘ifllelbaek. yard of his home. a sllrllltboard. the helg to land graduall plt. Klrfi has tra champion holders. Australian eweletter, i? Boston health authorities are to be commended for utilizing DDT, the super-insecticide developed during the war. in an effort. to check the spread of lnfantlle par- alysls. They frankly admit that. they don't know whether the work they are undertaklng wlll achieve that objective. But. there ls a pos- slblllty that it. may do some good, that lt may save some child from being stricken with infantile par- alysls, and they are leaving no avenue unexplored 1n their at.- tempts to curb the dread disease. It ls sound and thorgggsp publlc ed several - From _ health work-Boston The real remedy for the :hort- age of houses ls to create more of them, not by the dozen but by the hundreds. Thls country ha: the labor-ff onlv the anned force! wlll release lt-nie materials and the sklll lo bulld houses 1n large numbers as 1t bullt. shlPs- aircraft, motor vehicles and many other articles ln volume durln! war rlod, provided there 1s alm- llar lrectlon and 12001111118110“ 81V" en to the effort and the housln! shortage wlll not be materially YB- lleved untll such construction ls undertaken and comDlef-Bfl-Brmk- vllle Recorder and Tlmes. sn- Stafford crlprl. exnhlnlnc 1n hls somewhat prim manner the necessity for more drastic $109195 ratlonlns than ever. WES 61°59‘? cross-examined by women JQUTIlB-é lsts on the prospects of more all better corsets. Would the fact. ma; the Japanese war was 3111M’. he was asked, mean that. 6Y8 would be more rubber avallable and therefore that. corsets could have more elastic ln them? At rust Slr StafIorcLWBS lncllnsd W take the llne that the matter W85 under conslderatlon. But eventu- ally he surrendered. "I really 1101;; know very much about. tlltlem.der_ admltted. "except that 1 l!" m stand from reliable dornest c sour there ls a. shortage. —Manchester Guardian. . ___ Good accommodation ll '5" rules; safe llshlng boats, anglflcilfei ful guides; courteous H1113 9 99g salespeople ln stores: these are t B things which wlll brim! these ting;- lsts back time and alzaln. The or é nary citizen 1n the cltles an towns of the district can Dilly part also. If a tourlst. ls seekln! information, Blve 1'1 Wxgllimngictlg; atgly and courteously.“ s‘ any physical characterls cs o t 1 hlch endear themselves o latte vlslwr so much as 111B smllmg faces and the friendly DRUNK; of the townspeople. When our Sage frlendl. our 800d cllswmfirsl and tourists come to our c y ‘ wwns, let us make the? reglfi welcome. so welcome é 6y m_ want to return alllllll a" 55a ' Owen Sound Snn-Tlmes. D 1r l1 ltalel “(Qt gxiffacffiiyrlgrs aI-euconfldent 500000 passengers can be d out’ 1n the remalnlns l0"? of thls year, that the best. 91'6""? production level can bl: fegéfllzig early next. year HM l ‘"- be 1946 ls over the Industry gall m tumlng out. motor cars at. t 61"- t of slx mllllon a. ear or alnoe double the best s owlng 1n My previous peacetime yeari cfglpggg that wlth the cautious p arm“! um WPB allowed the industry ‘I dertake after v-E Dav — less t‘ "l" four months aso—wllell ll W" be‘ “evledi btihaiodriggciltthfsoofggr- w“ p s moved up t0 249-‘ d cl l t e 1v ' iiftiiie aieaiirt. a- Kansas City star. shock to mm! p.l.‘,,1';“l.°i$§n”tifn "will n21 g2; mainline Canadian am l l practically obsolete. be in“ rather startling sltuatlon c of the geneml 1mDTB55l°n $1,132! as the “alrdrome of democrat! Bliltl: mg the war, Canada ls l)!‘ _ g retty 1n respect to BWBY facllll es. At least. 149 new alr- tbs were constructed and 816 6X- gtilng alrdromes were BXDlndf-d by the Department of ‘Pranslwfl- fill?" mg m‘; wnr years to meet the re- quirements o; the Air Training Plan. The total area o! NHWBYS constructed ln the ‘devgllllgligl ‘i: d e s ma” newlnfo in 53m... lnflh- way more than 2.900 mlles 1on8. we are told. Airport construct-loin in Canadn. durlng the past- 5X years has absorbed nearly $157-- 000,000. This vast outla was well invested. But. such 1e t e PM! o! blg-alreraft development m“ u“ majorlty of our alrportl. "ll-h "n" ways 4,000 feet. long or less, are below par for transcontinental alan- dards of even next year while vlr- tually none of our alrdromes qual- lfy for the ‘MOO-foot. mlnfmum o! uru soceanl termlnals. Cana- dlan Avlatlon. MIMQRY ~ mlnd lots a thousand things like dates ofsgvar: and death of s. And yet recalls the ve hour- "rwaanounby yonderv Andontholaatbluemoon nM: load Of pine-scents. and shook lotleuly Two petals from that. wild-mac L- purch , . e ma.‘ more than a slave to the relative-l Notes By 77:0 Wqjiw sold reputedly by other: 1n bet- ter language than I can com- all tho htful 9611011! ands, and now we lay mllllonl. but lnbeulperanlce ha: elnln ten wlth the evl of lnternperance. Some of our returned aolcllerl. are asking the Government to permlt the sale of llquor. Our soldlers went out from us leavlnfl home and frlends prepared to give thelr llve: 1n the interest o! ‘a great vlctory. I refer to propose to ltrlke a fatal blow at. the cause for which they have mode greet acrl- f . people of this Provlnce have placed themselves on record repeatedly u favoring Prohibi- tlon; now a mlnorlty ask the Gov- proceed the people and allow the sale of llquor. A great effort 1s made today 1n many places to make the llquor business respect- able. The llquor license system ls called government control and the bar-room l: called a beer par- lor. but the llquor sold ln the beer parlor under govemnlent. con- trol wlll produce the some meas- ure of crime and wretched as that which ls sold 1n the lowest bar-room. It. 1.: aald that the Prohlbltory law cannot be enforced Is lt not true that every law made by God and man has been broken? Should we then abollsh all laws because we have men and women who break them? I am sure that more than 75 per cen-t of the people of this province are standllng loyally by the provisions of the prohlbl- tory law, which proves that 1t 1a not Impossible of fulfllment. ' The prohlbltory law ls necessary and 1t. ls also necessary that. we elect representatives to Parlla- ment who are 1n sympathy wlth the law and officials 1n office who are determined to enforce lt and we need citizens who wlll in- form on those who break the law. The question we should ask can- didates for the Legislature ls not whether Liberal or Oonservaitlve or C. C. F. but, "Wlll you stand by the prohlbltory law and falth- fully enforce it?" For this Ls the most. important matter ln the llfe of the Province today. I am, Slr, etc. WM. CALLBECK. Central Bedeque. REPLY T0 "UNEVEN TRADE" Slr, - In ters entitled reply to the leb- "Uneven Trade" "Advlce To An Island- publlshed 1n the Sept. B and Sept. 12 editions of The Guardian, and to the very golden picture of farm lLfe versus city llfe, I am reminded of the old proverb: "All that, glltters ls not gold", as ls also true of the "gold- en grain" descrlbed by the author. I am one of the ex-fanru ex- servlcemen who has returned to Prince Edward Island because It was "home", and not because of any desire to again test the cp- portunitles of farmlng, for I re- member too well the ho eless plight of the fagmer just p r m the outbreak of war, when there was scarcely a market for the produce the farmer had for sale. rm- example, let. me remind the author of when potatoes were sell- mg for slx cents 0r less per bushel, until finally there was no sale for what rernalned and they hurl to be dumped 1n swam s, eta; and let me remind hlm at. the Gov- ernment subsidies the farmer now receives a "wartime measure." I have been ln many clues, and my sense of H1191] 1s normal at least, and yet; I have never been 1n contact. with the varlou: odors described by the author_ whlch were ln any way as unpleasant as the dust. from our own P.E.I. dlrt roads. The author has palnted a glow- ma. L! not reallstlc picture of farm llfe, I now propose to ex- .laln a. few of the reasons why arm llfe on Prlnce Edward Island ls unattractive to most. of our re- tum g men and women. It. has been sald that. ln order m get a true perspective of any object. 1t must. be vlmed at. a dletance; ln a. comparative some the some la true of farms, and life on our Island farms. The unpainted, and dilapidated oondltlon of the ma orlty of the farm houses and bull In]: thrcuih- out the country 1e. or should e, an indication as to the nieces: or failure of our farmers. more are ‘ousands of rut: on our Island roads, which after be- lng filled wlth rain, vehlcles eon- tlnue to pass through, fore water to the right. and left unt fln the rut 1n dry-there ll no more water tn be forced out. lo 1t l: with the farmer who also i: a rut, and whose profit: are being forced out on elther aide-on the one slde l; the man from whom he buys. and who tell: how much he mun pay for each every artlcle he mull purchase; on the other alde 1a In man to whom he lella, and who once ufaln tell: hlm how much he -wlll a] ow the farmer for whet h: has produced. When buylnl and nellfn: con- cerns have grown to monopolistic :0 on: an hove our 011. palnt, are only or concerns from whom the far- mer 1a of necesslty r “ ’ to he becomes hlrt ly small group of monopolfe: and cartels, that. now control this great country of ours, both polltl- enlly and economloally, Another of the many reason: why farming 1r unattractive to the returnlng service men l: be- dorm-lawnmower Olthlkf 0e cauze eacoauafane the welfare w Beale, alrln: t. 22m‘ Wwfi... 1 1| tluftherebeaflvo le, maehlnery, and many oth- Th ‘t0 kill twenty-five birds, l d . ...._...__-_-—- P.iy.l.0||||ortunltla: In Banning Industry IyI-KIIIIIIING -__ 4v. .. altimmlx Nolfl m angel-able: and frulll that. can b: nova to advent!!! 1! Prince ldwaru bland for eannlnl’ put-pom. Artichokes: Unable to lay; 11° experience. Apparently grow ex- ceedlnlly well. upualua for ear: 1f properly ogvered. particularly with peat moss. winter k111i!!! @811 be avoided entirely. ~ : Excellent yield: bably more t kcellent yield: of [ood an y. Rust not so lerlous. Bee : Good geld: of excellent quallty 1n this vlnce. Broccoli: No e enee. No ru- sontolupole tltcannotbe grown n actor-fly. Cabbage: Prince Edward Inland ldeal for cabbage, both yleld and quality. . Carroll: Growth 00d but. rust fl many local- serlous handicap 1t es. The rust fly‘ can readily be overcome by fnsec cfde. Cenllflower: Poulbllltle: good for excellent growth and quell . Personally I have never been abe to o auvflllng llke the same returns as ln Prlnce Edward I:- land although I have trled to grow ca/ullflower ln Quebec, Montreal and Toronto. Celery: Poulblllflu fnlr but. ldeal Ian llmlted. Cuenmber: Good e here but would e ect better n Ontario. The smal cucumber for pleklcs grows exceedlngly well. E“ plant: Same as cucumber. Endive: No experience. Kale: Experience lnaufflclent to -w comparisons. leek: No experience. On g coll ft seems to Brow falrly wel. hLelluee: P- slbllltlee excellent ere. Mushrooms: On any farm when there 1s an ample supply of horse manure mushrooms could probably be raised 1n cellars or special bulldlngs to greater advantage 1n Prince Edward Island than in any other part of Canada. Melon: Would any cannot com- pete with Ontario. I have a frlend who for years grew melon: near Montreal and has met with excel- lent. success lnpharlottetnwn. He sows the seed ln e hotbed and re- moves the bed wlthout. transplant- ing the melons. Onion: I fll-SBQPQI with l friend‘: crltlclsm that. we cannot compete with Ontarfo. Onlon new: I agree with hi: comment that. we cannot compete this case with Ontario. eyl Possibilities excellent. Excellent growth and quality. Parmlp: Excellent growth and quallty but rust. fly serious handl- cap ln some localities. ens: Pea moth v handicap to mmercla tlon. No efficient control. serious produc- As al- ready stabed the pea moth calls for very careful study. Pep r: Cannot compete with Ontar o. Potatoes: Excellent 1n yield and apallty. I have been introducing e Idaho potato and farmers al- ready have probably 1,000 bushels. There are still a number of polnls to be considered. Borne farmers flnd that a very dry 9011 l: better than damp and vlce verse. Per- haps the chief hantllcap ls that the Idaho requires to be planted as early 1n the spring as possible. The flavor of the Idaho particu- larly when baked and the fact tha the eyes are not lmbedded Into the surface make l1, a very desirable addltlon to the Island's potatoes. Pumpkin: Do not. believe we could compete with Ontario on commercial scale, Radish: Excellent 1n yield and (yosllty. Rhubarb: Iarcellent 1n yleld and quality. This product calls for keen lnveatlgatlon for a number of new varletle: are being brought out and the returns are excellent whllo the actual labor Involved ls very small. Salllfy: Very little experience. Splltnach: Excellent. 1n yleld and qua Y. Squash: Excellent but unable to compete with on commercial scale 1f sold ln orl- ginal form. For cnnnlng pu er the Island should be able to so. (To be concluded) prlce for the produce the farmer has to offer. probably Ontarlo We are well aware of the floor price on everythlng else - why not. on the products of agrlculture? Must we on Prince Edward Island welt for a aoclallat. vernment 1n order to have leils atlon lnmted for the protection and encourage- ment of the farmer, as 1t, has ln Saskatchewan? Wetare told that. these thlngs- markets, floor prlces, rural elec- ttrlflcatlon, houslng ‘m Bo if’ fill. T»... ‘co . u on , but must the farmers of Prlnco Edward Island waft. untll then? I am, Slr, etc" . 0.1M’. Bradalbane, P11. ._.__. mtflgln-l-t! read wltl; tgonalderzlble re a report e me o: ° lama-lug wan passed m o no- eon on cock ring-nee p Quanta and thatwthfa five day utlon ukln: the aeaoun on Buniairlou Oct. to not. both d3: Inclusive. The llmlt for cock pheasant: not M: ve blrdnflper day mtthe Hungarian part die at. per . Blnco when £6 the pheasant: “L: n: number: a: e that may take advantage of the flve day season n no ““.‘...‘l.‘:."°'..'l‘l "5..“t'.‘°" lame . e v ce Ontnrlo, when than bird: were lntroduoed over 1h years ago and the number ha: multiplied until today they are qulte numer- ous. there a two day open aca- lon being opened for one or two week: and projects, m d- °m rmk that .0 done Machine llo. Wlh the Cuapanf: 4 Afaxrbu/m Awful/bu l‘ new 05m: t Tlilnlfaaeolflltvllfllllrloiuiundlnnln anevlivebeot related with: hnlhagelhwronuwvleahalfiyhury Mum lomtnuuulmllonyvqq lonlyood lMMlblAlllYoehwpan lmwane: hegainucenlorkablylovboauah lunatic. Heeeyeur paella franlilybdmllt. eenlbenodvboywonlbebodpoleylobuy. loetboMorilmal-IQMMTODAVI Anllfliylldlnihdlllao Uh l: h ONLY Colony Ill NIH OHII i fie Morllllel. = t! . , "'1 l j r .4354 “I QIUQIIKY. Hemline wally” IlIlo-Inllbak punt‘ MIMI: II! deal an ma» uh ma, Minion/m Cor! w, HALIFAX.N.S. gay, wlth a bag llmlt of three per my. Although no mention was made tn the report of the meeting as to whether or not they may be hunted with dogs, I presume thls 1: the intention. W311: the llmlted c of dog: 1n lng these birds should be prohib- lted. l! we are golng w take the future lnto consideration and wish these birds preserved 1n aufllclent number: for good hunting. are only n. select few 1n -, of trained anlmalu and ft. ls way. Year after year we hear the old cry, from e. few that the duck season be opened earlier. I am glad to note that. Mr. Frank Acorn and some of the other members present. at the meeting took excep- tlon to the earller openln of the duck season. It 1a a fact that. duck: taken 1n and November are prlme, whlle those taken 1n September are hardly worth taking. 1.1’ some of these gunners who are always agl- am very much of the oplnlon that they would tire pulllng pln feath- ers out. The same thing ls true of the flshlng rights on Prince Edward Island. A few lease all the good streams. w the detriment of the masses. These same flshemten, whlle lmvlng rights to their re- spective leases, may be found a- long the banks of all streams, where those not so tunate as to have leased rights. wlah to fish, and stlll they cell thfs a democracy. I am very much of the oplnlzm that those who wish to extermin- ate the rtn -necked pheasants wlll find "No respasslng and Shoot- lng" signs faclng them when they sally forth to their choice hunting grounds thls season and they will not, only be deprived of the prlv- llege of huntlng pheasant: but also all other game blrds 1n these localities. I am, Slr, etc, "GOOD SPORT". A Bad Egg (By Dewitt MacKenzle, Associated Press Forelgn Affairs Analyst) One would search long and hard to flnd anything good about. Gen. Tojo, but. we must ilve hlm credit for maklng a valuable contribution to the welfare of mankind when he shot. hlmself yesterday 1n ToJo was whelped ln mllltarlsm. He grow ln strencth until he came the of mighty wat-machlne to establish a greater last Asla under the rule of Japan. His was the hand which held the dagger that; stabbed the United States 1n the back, for the general was Premier when the meek attack was mule on Pearl Harbor. Through the long years ceedlng Pearl Harbor the Japan- ese people came to look T010 as the arch mllltarlst. would lead them to vlcto e low men. t we: right. M111- Oorlnn was the pun-word to 1m- perlal greatness, and ‘lbjo symbol- lzed mllltarlam. Now suddenly the publlc lhmned with the dlacloaure orln nuon on rmannrs "m" has felled. Many Japanese wlll nod with approval and s: that this was the only honor-ab: thlng the leuanl could do: thla wea the only way he could atone for dishonor-inc his Mlkado. But. whatever confirmation you put on ft. the fact remaln: that the peo- n ple of Jo n are for the flret tlme seelng m llnrlmi ln 1t: true col- eapocnfboll .tht andlkrtllgnv. elm emphulnlng 1h wlll aid futility mllltoflnn i wlll of lnvaluable assistance to the Alllea 1n remouldlng the char- aoter of the J O a anon people. For b their to‘, and 1t must be by enllglitqtlnent. Apropoa of thl: not educa- tional lob. we have an Interest- fnl continent from Saburo Kurluu, the Japanese diplomat who talked peace n Waehl on a: the Im- The United States naturally has a very low estimate of Kuru- su. but even the devll hlmself may make wlse remarks at time!» and so we flnd food for reiflectlon en : r opeaforonomor: 1n the diplomat’: llAl-Hh "l cannot lee m llke the Unlhd a“ , The People In nothing have been so long under hm; lstlc government. Chung“ mu’ be gradual or the world N155 fgvmmilglrdnubaauhw t aecev~rs»~» erefi“ _ tun me:tu-,%g.m'i',,u?,’ 5m", T010 sent through hi; b“ act u a tracer of light my m the D0091 f Jo about e eoellonpm m m. m more fgin the ll 8M4 under mll y‘! Kins v- Bracken; TIIG F1111 ROBIN] (From the ottlalu Repa- Houae of Commons for rm. nor-m BRAUKEN: . . '1; l5 "W 0! '11:‘ honor uwtlnni u 0 l and vlce verse. The G '4 choice 1s 1n DOOOITHUIOQ with m“ worthy tradition. . . . MR. MADKEN la to alternate betwouan whose mother tongue ls mllah and one whose mother tunnel: hunch. I any to lint-tilt the longer he this Home and the to lls I IIQ Egg rm. mm izll-Iia ulnmml’ undnratood that such was hi resume‘: m; of the Muse 11w wmauns hegyggn an a ill may“; speaker and uslng the ouher lento-Me t, "m that 1 utoushl M’ l‘: Etna.‘ m.“ “mam n: {It .khndl0llly MImlldlIel-O practice one lower was to ha" IKING: l “iitnn should be W‘ 0 _ mAcKEN. NO- , . iig. Maoxmnzlahmlilpflfifi I misunderstood mvw bu“, g am only _ tn new!“ “M” i} ~ ATTENTION TRU§§ WEAREIU , _ » who l" Io those ulnaglltgl; m m" “I [OI m '°" y" "' OI unfortunate e In hfled with the 0M wear-ful? 9"‘ l‘ m run-bl: M l" l‘ "‘ quoted utynlgzmnl: n” n continue a ‘h’ on“ n m It- mull" pill- can alleviate offerlnlodyl" g‘- tl m lfll u:- wulnmfl" 1'" oelved. Wc w" I" n and style: n nrlw t" " everybody- oxssv sTomxcus aeuevro noel!" .t¢‘-.Ji"”“'ih=':'"'" "fnwg, m. s"'t.¢»n."" bngffiflhflfi a: to 1M "'- I P o again: aelllnl w, eelved f lltlafled P“: u“ y" bottle. rue 2 urns [hell ~l"3¥&3fii'"”