8E . t‘ c: l’ "AGE POUR ‘I'll! cllsntormunn ausnnuu Marsala‘ Dill; thunder! In lll1l President: ueul. ‘ W. Chester S. Mel-III Vice-President: J. IL Iiurneflu FJ-l- flees-nary: Hens. Col. l). A. Mulflnnon, 0.8.0. limo: and Managing Director: J. IL Burnett. IJJ. Associate Eamon: a: and Llcnt. Ian A l-nnb Walk Burnett, R-UNJHB. (On Active Servloel “The Strongest Memory is Weaker [RU-l the Weakest Ink.’ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5th. 1M4 Post-War Air Traffic Mr. E. G. Carlisle, of the Canadian Pacific Air Lines, writes in “The Quarterly Review" that 70o large airliners, carrying 100 passengers each, could move the entire population of Cali- ada to Britain and back again in a year. It is not likeLv that the entire population will want to make this trip or will ltave the means to make it. llut .\lr. Carlisles imaginary calculation provides a striking pictttre of the size of post- war ilvizltitlll. 'l'his is jitst another reminder of tlle neces- sity of having our Charlottetown airport run- ways extended to standard lengtlt before the post ivar period, if we hope to retain our status as .1 provincial capital. lt is also a reminder of the fzlct that trausnortation to altd from this Island ill future will he by :lir—tl0t bv tunnel or v:ltise\v.'l_v, even if such facilities were pro- vided. l.et us concentrate on getting our new car ferrv built as speedily as jiossible, and our airport runways extended. Claims Record Yield 'lhe distinction of ltaving grown uhat is cutt- sirlered to he the highest yield of potatoes per acre ever obtained in Canada—90o bushels per acre, of which SS3 bushels were of lnarketable grade-goes to Leslie Gilmore, RR. 1 Steves- ton, BC, when he took part in the 1943 potato competition of the Columbia Potato Growers’ Association, Lulu Island, llritisll Columbia. The Association has held lll(‘.~(‘ competitions znmual- tv for the past 1o vctlrs with the object of bene- fiting the potato itidttstrv at large by increas- ing yield per acre, quality, and demand, and by obtaining more uniformity in type. These annual competition; are assisted by persons interested in improving the potato crop and by officials of the Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture who also act as judges and verify the yields. In 1943 competition, the members of‘ the Association in general obtained the highest yields per acre they ever had. Also the quality of the crop was much above aver- age. The variety for the competition was “Net- ted Gem" ivhich is popular in British Columbia and in several of the Western States. It has been grown commercially in British Columbia and Alberta for the past 4o years. "Netted Gem" is not considered to be one of the high- est yielding varieties, hence the 1043 record yield is all the more outstanding. Incidentally, the fancy wrapped and boxed potatoes imported into Canada and sold as "Idaho Bakers" are the same variety as “Netted Gem." Col. Ralsfon’: Warning Worth noting is the warning recently given by Hon. Col. Ralston, Minister of National De- fence, against wishful thinking about the termina- tion of the war. “To many people,” Col. Ral- storl said, “are thinking that the war is won, but all they need to do is to ask the men who are in front of Cassino, the men who are on the Anzio beachhead. the men who are on the right flank near Ortons, the men who are in the air flying over Germany and Europe, many of them not coming back, the men who are risking their lives ploughing the seas to protect our men and munitions in transit. All they need to do is to look back at the same period in the last war. They will realize that the situation is not the same. The German is far from beaten; he does not consider he is beaten and he fights on. The jap is quite ivilling to die as he always has been in order to maintain his place in the sun. Pro- gress in Italy has been quite gratifying, but we are still 80o 0r ooo miles from Germany, and there is a hing hard road ahead of us in the south of Europe. On the north we find that at the same period in the last \var we were in con- trol of probably three-quarters of France. but today \ve have not even a toe-hold on the north ivest coast of Europe. The whole of Europe still has to be regained." CMisdirecled_ Mail’ Over .’ll,t)()0,t)llf) lbs. of lnail were dcspatched 0w." ts hv the base post office to the Canadian .'u'inctl forces last your. During that period, due to carelessness or oversight irl addressing, well over one quarter of a million letters alone had to he set aside until members of the postal corps could take time to fill in the gaps or otherwise correct the .'iddrcss in order that the letter lnight be forwztrrlerl to the proper destination, In addition to the above, last year over one and one-half tnilliott items of ontlinary domestic mail reached the dead letter office from the salm- cause. 'll"his, at .1 time when the resources of the entire postal system are strained as never before to cope efficiently with wartime problems, when every single lnintite lnust he made to count to gain time for the nlails. 'I'hes<-, figures :lttcst to the need for co-opcra- tion hv the general public to prevent delay- and loss. The (‘tlnadiait post office is ltaitlfljug the greatest volume of mail in the historv of this cotmtry-n tremendous increase of business, government and ordinary lnail, rotipled with the armed forces ltlail, not only overseas btlt to militarv camps throughout Canada. The proh- lelu of coping with this avalanche of tnail comes at zl time \\ilf‘ll there is :1 shortage of skilled jio-ltll l‘|l||Il'I_\'l‘('\. l|l£_lll_\' of wllillll have enlisted and tlllosv place», have ll(‘(‘ll filled by less experi- cnc: d pcrsoiulel. M The public are also prune to overlook the add-- l-d difficulties of providing an efficient postal service in \v.'lrtini<~ - - the dangers of ll‘.'lll§-.'\f- hllltic crossiilgs -—- lllt‘ time taken ftq" a convoy i to assemble-the time taken for the crossing in I convoy - the ressure on railways and on tran- sportation faciities -— overtaxing of space on ships and planes-adverse winter weather - flying conditions, and, of course, there is al- ways the risk of loss through enemy action. Delays arising from these causes are un- avoidable but citizens have it in their power t0 help eliminate some avoidable and unnecessary causes of delay. Incorrectly addressed letters, " ding abbreviations, failure to include the regimental number, branch of service, ctc., means that the letter cannot be immediately sorted and despatched onward. A letter with a faulty ad- dress must be set aside until a member of the postal corps can take time to sort voluminous nominal roles itt an effort to correct the address. - EDITORIAL NOTES _. _.._. Importance of publl’: opinion. No war won nowadays unless people support fighting forces. 4 m 4 u If we don't win the war? Compare Canada as conquered country with present position of Po- land, France, Holland, etc. n- v n- a Since the beginning of the \\'ar the RAF. has made nearly 900,000 sorties into the North- ern European theatre. u n- u- u Col. Frank knox. United States Secretary of the Navy, is to address the inaugural dinner of the Sixth Victory Loan in Tbrouto April 13. W I! I l \\'e buv Victory Bonds voluntarily because we are a democracy. 'l‘otalitarian states are not asked to pay for war—tltey are made to. I i I I The Oxford Committee for Famine Relief recently sent the Greek Red Cross $14,000, most of which was used to buy cod liver oil for the suffering children in Greece. ‘l ‘I II I! .\ total of $9,191,053 was collected from Aug- ust 1, 1939, to July 31, 1943, from the one cent levy on grain sales under the Prairie Farm As- sistance Act, Trade Minister MacKinnoit re- ported. I I ll ‘i A national system of education for India has been planned, in which all children of India will be given a good basic education. It pro- vides for a school for artisans, technical high schools, and a three year (lipl0tll3 course for engineers. . t t I n The British Army's parachute is so tough that it takes n jerk of 5 1-2 tons to break its cords. Each rigging line is carefully atld pains- takingly made of the finest braided silk cord, tested to a breaking point of 45o lbs. The can- opy is made too of the finest silk and alto- gether the whole business weighs 3o lbs. and costs $280. i i I I Badajoz retaken this date 1812; the capital of the Spanish province of the same name, the second largest in Spain, surrendered to the French General Soult in 1811, only to be re- taken by Wellington a year later; has a very old Cathedral, and the ruins of an old Moorish Castle of the days when the Moors ruled Spain: its capture by Wellington was the turning of the tide in the Napoleonic Wars which led on to Waterloo. .- I I I i ,'. Is the war near an end? In Pacific theatre, out- Australian and New Zealand brothers, with U. S. Allies, are slowly pushing japs back,.but enemy has China, Burma, Malaya. War not won until these are taken back——c0l0ssal under- taking...lndian Empire is in jeopardy... Hong Kong, Singapore and places which were considered keys which lucked the door against invaders from the Orient have been taken from s. u I i O i 1f One Wiillts I. novel for Easter reading he could do worse than choose “And From That Day" by Alan Sullivan who won the Governor- Generals Award for a former novel in 1941. This magnificent story of the Crucifixion is exactly right for these momentous times. The callous hunger for power of the Roman war sabotage by the Jewish leaders themselves, It all culminated in the degradation of a race, as well as the death (so very casual among so much death and grief), of the Prophet son of refugee parents. Yet all history is dated by that hour. I i l O The United Kingdom no longer can speak as the policymaker of the British Empire or Com- tnonivealth, Viscount Bennett, our former Prime Minister told the House of Lords, during a de- bate on imperial and national defence. “The sooner that gets into the minds of our people the better," he said. "If we are going to main- tain our lives we must see to it that our foreign policy is the policy of all the Dominions as well as this country.” The debate was initiated by Lord Chatficld who called for changes in the machinery of defence. Speaking for the gov- erument, Lord Chcrwell said the question of na- tional and imperial defence could not be answ- ered before the forthcoming conference of Em- pire Prime Ministers. i i i i The extent of delinquency and crime in any trcal juvenile Court said in an address on juve- nile delinquency. \Vhcre crime exists, he said. Cllllllft! and civilization are at fault rather than the individuals who compose that civilization, If the laws of a country inspire disrespect; if the financial set-up of the country is such that dire poverty and great ivealth exist alike; if a spots ln the bottom that. would take lords was matched by an appalling spiritual m“ given society represents in part the extent to M-R- Dl- Gm". "l" hell) when WlllCll its culture frustrates the human being. ha“ on M} Eghlflsylélgys" judge j. Gordon Nicholson, judge of the Mon- ANOTHER TRAVELLER. cl funnel. Until Ffiellenull fill-Cl} fl CAUBBWAY shy-In my letter 1n the Guar- dian of March 28. I referred only to the ftlllng material, from more llne to shore llne. sold fllllng mater- tnl estimated at O50 per cublo yard. I clld not refer to top flnlah- waterway passages or draw bridge. In your Issue of the 1st tnat. a verv able artlcle signed "Nltlv " claim; that every lard of stone would have to be ta en to the site by ship. I do not believe tn this method of transportation of atone required for thg "flll". If ships are used ll: would take elghteen to twenty years to complete the "flll! Afterwards the top surface for rall- way track, driveway for autos and the draw bridge would be quite s contract and quite costly. ‘rm finish of the top surface could easily be figured by a Clvtl Engineer. I believe that: "Native" can supply that information. I am, Slr, etc" MARINE ENGINEER. April 3, 19H. FISII MARKET SITE Sin-A letter tn your recent Issue signed by "Progress" should be commented on. No doubt; an up to date Fish Mar- ket would. be a benefit. to the City but "Progress" has misrepresented some facts. and states “it 1s claim- ed" and “it. Ls alleged." In the first place the city went to considerable remodelling the fish market and also set out. sani- tary regulations for the keeping of foe in Pruner containers, then sold these stalls for a price. “Progress" claims the elty 001'- poratlon has received no revenue. “Plogress" tn writing this letter must be a stranger to our fail:- clty when he doesn't; know 1f the market L; sanitary or clean, and as fm- as odors are concerned he must. be thinking of some other city he lend about. If he visited our market on market days in the summer hi! Wflllld see hundreds of customers setting their fresh fish caught. the day be- fore and some even caught. the same morning. Our flsh market would be open two days all winter if the city filth- ers when making their improve- ments had added a fevr heater coils. I have visited tine market. tn the winter time when you wouldnt keel? cattle tn lt, it. was so cold. I nm, Slr etc. TRUTH _ (we interpolated the words "it ls claimed" and "it ls alleged? Ed. 6-) TIIAT CAUSEWAY Slr, - In ccrnparfng a causeway Wlth a. tunnel as regards construct- ‘on: there ls a vast difference. With a tunnel, engineers have to drll lnto the sea bottom hundreds of feet gvery few yards to find out. thc material you have to dig lnto building a tunnel and the tunnel should be completely ccvered under the earth; after you have these Bor- lngs analyzed the engineers buv’: to figure the cost of moving that earth or rock from underground and 1f pm deepest, soundings are l2 fathoms 72 ft. you would have to enter this tunnel several miles ln- laqd on each slde toget. a level to go ‘through. This wou d be an expen- slvq; mndertaklng to get an estimate s e0 . Wit/h a causeway as stated ure- vlously tn making your survey you would only have to look for soft more material. I am afraid “Nattve" ls a little severe with “Marine Engl- neer". When “Marine Enzlneer" gave us dimensions of an Icebreaker I suggested that. as he made such a. good 10b that he figure the material of causeway. This Engineer dld after he secured a chart, Apparently hls figures on the construction of an Icebreaker are closer than they are to a causeway and I think he didn't do too badly as a. first, attempt. As I mentioned previously, to the meosulemen of 66 fathoms at low tide there would have to be added the extra fee; for storm, high tide, and then some. The difference of angle between 46 and 50 degrees would be caused by the rocks fail- or dulfllPed to find their own grade. If you let. n contract; for bulldlng n stone pier or breakwater or llke the approaches to the H111. sboro Bridge, it ls generally figured ln square yards and the price ls generally gauged on where you get the material. Thll price has been as low as $2.60 to 06.00 per vard. I realize tf you went lnto one of the utountstm 1n Nova. scorn or New Bru the material would have f0 be handled twtoe. one on the curs. the other tn scows, them a spur Pflllwnd tract. t0 the handlest water front. Another expense that, must not he overlooked ls the one of butldtng an opening f0 allow shipp- tng to g0 through. We wlll find that the construction of a causeway ls more exlpenstvelevery day we figure and with one exception ln the world la entirely new. “Natlve" has shown us ln hls lett- ers bhat it would almost be a. phy- sical lmposslbtlty to build a cause- way: the expense 0t’ getting the material to the spot would be pro- hlbttlve but. even with all the ex- Dense woud lf not be cheaper than a [tunnel and safer? THEME-GT" hi8 made an attempt at “sures and "Native" has found too many omissions; would he make a. stab at. the figures? It all mnkcs interesting reading and our Ottawa ___.________________ C. C. F. GOVERNMENT Sin-In a letter a eartn l Public Forum on bfisprch 21g), ifuifég M. J. Kenny of Toronto takes 1t. for granted that under a C, C. F. Government all control of property would be centered ln the govern- selfislt and lawless atmosphere exists, he said, the culture wllfClbrBStllfS front such a civiliza- tion frustrates the individuals who compose it. Poverty, inconsistency of authority on the part of parents, bad cultural atmosphere in the com- lnuuitv and cultural conflict between parents and children, hc pointed to as conditions leading to rlehnquelncy. "lack of respect for parental au- thorityg’ he said, “is the beginning of lack of respect for all authority." lie added that few proph- rould stand the insecurity and irrilalid Il_\' existent ill an atmosphere of poverty um‘ have a kindly outlook towards lllflllkllld. ment. and mes to prove that each individual would be told by a gov- ernment board what work he must, do and shat, lf a O. C. F. govern- ment were elected and found un- satisfactory, it could be removed from power only by bloody revnlvif- len. He concludes with a challenge to show that. hla reasoning ls not. round. I nm writing this ln res- Iwnse b0 that. challenge. One can always reason thlngs out to the eoncliulon he wishes ‘to arrive at. lf he Ignore; the evidence that l“ ment. abounds, "Jesus Christ ls the Lenten Meditations from The London Times FOLLOW ME Of the appearances of the fllfn Lord recorded by the evanaelb two uunn are quite certain: flrst, Wm, on occasions. brought. to the sure conviction the crucified Jest: was risen from the dead: secondly. fhflb m"? l‘ ‘ absence of mechanical unlfomiftv ln the nanot-lvea, E8011 of the different narratives has ll-s own tn . This l; mtably m" of the account o! the lnamfasta- tlon of the lord to a. number nu disciples in the sea of 651116;?‘ given ln the last ehniDl-er of e fourth Gospel. The very eidsteltlfi“ of this chapter ts remarkable: B last two verses of that which ure- codes 1c seem to tmloly thlb the W" artgellst. has reached the end 01' what; he wishes to saYl the purpose with which he set out has h6g3 ‘““‘l‘°“‘ “mil” "$.P°tf.“t.l.llt°.°.'é’tn me 1e P0 ‘ wave n Sonof God and B010 all. he dld not. lav down or. lf he did, another of perhaps a younxer friend who hfld access to the evlmZBlISlB mfimol" les. took it up. Whatever the el- ulanatlou. the New ‘Pestametit rec- ord is completed by a Stuff’ "(ll less beaut-iul. and movlnH than that. of the two disciples and the stranger on the road to Emmflufi and at supper m the lnn. But n0?! it ls morning not evening, and It Ls tio men already at. work and with the day lieore them that Christ reveals himself. There are some who appear l0 think that the real truth of the Resurrection. symbolized by the Gospel narratives. l5 that Christ lived on and lives on in the hearts of Lhosewho desire tn be reckoned as hls disciples and followers. The value of the Gosnels then ls lllflli they have enabled the historic Jesus to be u lovely and continu- ing memory, That the evangelists would have regarded such a 1'0- moval of the Resurrection from the sphere of actual fact to the sphere of imaginative fanev J15 subversive of Christian preaching and faith is unquestionable. More- over. it ls not the case that 1t l! or can be all the same for the moral and spiritual llfe ivhetnet- it Ls a. Jesus acknowledged to have lived and died nearlv 2.000 years ago, or a Jesus who was dead and ls ullve for ever-more whom a. mlm seeks to follow. The inspiration of that followlnl: throughout the years of the Churclfs llfe has been the confidence that. Jesus ls the risen rd who still says "Follow me," and gives to those who be- lleve tn him the power to do what he says. flan experience l5 something quite different from the venerutlon of a. great. and revered re who served hls own gcner- atlon and became, through the writings of those who knew him, a. hallowed memory. It is the eon- stzmt. renfllrtltatlon of What. the writer to the Hebrews expressed in one of those conclusive, all-satisfy- lm verses ln which the New Tcsta same yesterday, and to-doy, yea and for ever." That nlornlng scene ln Galilee with which the witness of the four Gospels closes is for us o.‘ the nature of a parable. The risen Lord l5 nct l-emcte and aloof from hts people. He still comes to them, and ls with theln, und gives them strength to work 11nd to eu- dure onslsts of a fe power-loving lndtv lduals who will LLe any means to get. lnto power and wlll then make a great nturlber of harmful changes, ln the political and conomlc llfe of our country, presumably for the fun of it. He ignores the fnct that the C. C. F‘. is really an orgnnlza flan of the people and that it's lea- ders are there only to express and carry out the will of the people. The C. C. F. ls tnade up of tlldtv~ tduals who are organized ln small, local clubs The members of these clubs study the problems of the times and make their p resolutions regarding them. which are sent on to the mnstltuency. the provincial, and finally the national organizat- lon. In a like manner decision about. the nomination of candidat- es and the apllointmenf of party ef- flelals crlginate with common people who make up the C. C. F. membership. The party funds come almost entirely from the mod- est, tndlvldual membership fees. Thus the C. C. F. ls a people's organization, controlled by the people ln every way. The great. majority of Canadians need have no fear of anything an organization as truly democratic as the C. C. F. wtll do. The only ones who need fear are a few pow- erful, wealthy individuals who have become very rleh at. the expense of the common people. who see a real threat; to tihelr wealth ln me C. C. F. and who are back of mueh of the "howl" that. ls being raised ag- ainst it. Judge Kenny, I run afraid, la not. as much interested ln demoe- racy as he ts ln preserving econo- mic dictatorship by the blg interests. If a C C F‘ government were found unsatisfactory, the peoole could vote it out of power as readily an they voted ll; 1n. Judie Kenny tnatntatns they couldn't. l-fe ls sim- ply circulating another of those big-interest inspired stories about the C. C. F‘. designed to scare the people and confuse them. I "m, Slr, c , DOUGLAS II. MACFARLANE. C. C. F. Provincial secretary. Bcdeque, P E. I 002's THE Tmclt/ s Nrrwrltlng. No monev orders. ‘ No bother. drop In. Charles E. Worth. 142 Great. George Street. Charlotte- town. lchlelu on illntvtay.) G. Franklin Brown, New London, Just phone. 0|‘ Wm. Christian, Launchlnl. W. K. Crater. R. R. 5. Ken- slngton. W T-Dififlfefl-fifi new suit or fopeoat, Suits $30 to $39-50- sszvlswlavwixloyig 1 »- ARROW SHIRTS l P E. I. Seeks Tunnel! ii- l (Slant John Tolegraph Journal» ‘Prince Edward Islanders are ur- glng ma; their province be linked with the mainland by a tunnel cgpablg of carrying both rall and motor truffle. The have built “D a strong and conv clng case lol Show what this would mean in the way of economic development. and why n; should be under aken by the nation. They 118W Pllwed l‘ mean of data before the federal government. We sincerely hope llwt this am wlll not be pigeon-holed- and that the scheme wlll not be swept aside as ‘fantastic.’ No scheme like this ls fantastic untll qualified experts have ruled lf_out of the realm of possibility. fhe very leaat Prince Edward Island ls entitled to t; a comprehensive study of the proposttton by the neers Ottawa can engage. study should be made now - not later complete plans for 1t wlll be ready; when me war ends. Jobs for nun-| dreda - perhaps for thousands —' of men mtg-ht be provlded by the project tn the cltfflcult period off dcmobtllzatton and of transttlonl from war to peace activity. It thel undertaking L; sound from an en-l glneerlng standpoint, the question wlll naturally arise of whetther tt.| ls "economically sound"-v/het,her the cost. ls justified. In any con-l stderatlon of this. these facts should not be overlooked: 1. Prince Edward Island was on~ ly Induced to enter Confederation (this in 1873) by the promise of continuous and adequate commun- teatlon, winter and summer, with the railway systems of the maln- land. The ferry service, no matter now good tt hfla been. nan never been "continuous" ln the strict. sense of the word; has always been- subject to lnterruptton from one] cause or another. The rest of Can- txlszlllulitas a clear obllgatton to the‘ an 2. Prince Edward Island hasi been under n very heavy handicap» due to the hlgh cost: of movln goods across N-orthumberlati Strait. This has worked against progress and has prevented the full reallzatlon of the Island's po- tentlalltlee. 3. A tunnel by removing barr- iers to development, would create new values, new industries, new sources of Income from which the "lnuld make for any other conclus- ‘cn. Judge‘ Kenny plays up the ldl ca, uted so much in crlllcls-tt of the C C. F pthat. the party Wlltstolt W- Currie, Allxlrton. Earl Dtnmultd, wtnsloe. K931i)’ federal treasury would gel. ielurus both directly and Indirectly. 4 Most of the lnoney spent on the tunnel would be paid out, lnl R ' e our spirits to a new hifilll _ ms y all our stock is made of fine, Remember...its the style llllll “owls! A srsrson F» EASTER! -~ i myth kofmas- The distinction align’; :11?‘ through Craftsmanship makes STETSON a lull that wins immediate popularity- $4. $5. $6. $7.50 I-IOLEPROOF HOSIERY _ wwwxmwlozurevwlvfi _ y LONDO 1y, h 1d be d w that, lfivlslng the Dutch people the furiiiel Ls iiiillnif “ti: b? feasible lblanket soaked tn water and wrapped Start the Easter _ tireless fabric — and and Fashion-Craft Hyde Park terly styling. fl" DACK SHOES PNDERSON s. CUDMORE MEN’S WEAR wages at a time when, most 1H0‘ bably, public undertakings will be necessary to prevent Wmvom?’ unemployment. Any attempt to estimate volume of traffic which would flow through the tunnel wlll be farcical 1f it ls based on stflllitlw of freight. and passenger truffle carried by the ferry service. rhls service has restricted traffic vol- time, That, l5 why the tunnel 1.5 demanded. And 1f the tunnel ls built, it wlll open a. new era for our smallest Dffivlnoe-Wlll jotn it. to the mainland, wlll glve fr. e ual opportunity with the either e t provinces, will change its whole ec- enemy. If the tunnel la feasible then tt should and must be built. And 0t- tawa should not delay tn ascer- tnlplng whether ft. ls feasible or no . ORDER wrru a CAT-CI! N -—(CP>- Nazis are ad- t-hat a around body wlll “offer pro- tection ln escaping through flames cruised by Allied raids." But all blankets ln Holland were requlstt toned~a long time ago- - ‘i?!’ ~ .. ‘L11 t‘ THE GROUND SWELL Three tunes we hand ti. calling with a low. insistent time; at ebb-tide on the noon: And m. me hour of dusk, when the r moon Wu rfillng and the tide wee 0n thi ow: Then. in ne hour of midnight. once Though ...-' had entered ln and shut the door Ami drawn the blinds, It crept up from the shore And smote upon a bedmom wln- dew-vane: holiday off with a ‘“‘ I-‘ARTIIING nor ronutnn mam. —(CP)—~l‘untrulled 15251130.- milk has brought. t1 nrthtng (l-Z cent) on toflle All! ' rallun milk but ans a. court. why; tender. But larsbscale llév- >1,- would prove unbollllllf- ' _ declared the little coln to tnlr TWICE nunorws m: *1 south America hi8 nearl t/wlcfs one area. of Europe. but 0 W?‘ th the bobul n. .._i I 1.01‘:- Anslmtilf svmua BREEBGRS’ Now ls the time l0 Ill-I'd against ' Pie-wont. lkynffifbnl htlimz:l'i.ligwi. MACS Pic-worm TONIC Powben n wlll therolilhl! twill" all trues 0f worm! ll!‘ proves the helllh OI 10'" nerd. Prloo 85o lb. ~ MACS HAIR RESTORER l l~"=-'~ti..:r'--.s_l§; imeugthsm lllll Then passed away as some dull pang that new Out of the votd before Had fashioned ‘gut, an edge for human fer . Before the winds of 00d had amed to sfrew Hts harvest-sweeping: on a wlnwr I To feed the prlmal hunrere 0f I reef. a3. J. ENN- | Eternity u] rile rvlo Jules ".51.... m. if»... M." omen 01ml Paint Attention. fHT 7 BlNDlli