"isrt~..-;.-e;a1s* at: BIIARLOTTETOIIII GIIARIIIAII Mornlnl Dill) (Ffllllllled In IOU) President: Lleut. Col. W. Cheater 8. McLnI-o Vice-President: J. B. llurnatl, FJJ. Secretary: Llerlt. Cal. D. A. Maolflnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. IL Burnett, IPJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker end-bloat. Inn A Burnett, B.U.N.V.B. tOn Active Servlul "The Strongest Memory in Weaker Thfll the Weakest Ink.‘ FRIDAY. MARCH 21, IBM Unity And Reconstruction §peukir1g to rtrcntbers of tlte American Chartr- Der of Llonrutcrce in Lotrdorr, Lord Wooltott, Britain's rtcw Minister 0i Reconstruction, said he look, ziltead to a world in which poverty will ht: vanquished and real irrospcrity will prevail. llc expresses the belief that Great Britain and the L'rtited States, together, cart ensure that llllppy condition by launching a great commercial crusade, crczrtiitg wealtlt artd seeing to it tltat he blessings of a better world order are justly shared by all rtatious. Lord Wooltotr voices the warning that the people will not he deceived by catclrwortls or errtpty slog-arts when the conflict ends. .~\s he view-s it. recottslrttctiott must be conceived and accomplished on unprecedented litres. lle is confident tltat llritztitt and the United States \\ill give common support to the demand for solid things that can stand the test of time. De- feat 0f the .'\xis powers should bring with it the prospect of cndttrittg peace, and the Kliuister‘ looks forward to social and industrial life lteiug rrttrclr better than it ever was between the two wars front 1913 t0 1939. Lord \\'ooltott tells of ltow the British Gov- ernntt-ttt hits entharked on a. bold and deterrtritt- ed policy of rvftrrrtts, sortie of them revolution- ary. lt ltas ltt-gun with education attd health, nrveretl by tneasttres recently brought before Parliament, which provide for a better start in ‘ife for children atrd a better standard of ltealtlt for the ruttiort, hast-ll on tlte conception of pre- -crvzttioti, rather than rcsoratirttt. llc appeals for the cotttirruattiotr of .\rtglo-.\tttcricatr co- upcralitttt to abolislt restrictive economic rttetlt- nds in t-vcry fornt, either national or interna- tional. lle particularly trrges that there be nu more talk of strrplttses in the world while need and httnger‘ exist. it is there that kireat Britain and the Ynitetl States should be able to achieve rrnrrlr for mankind if they proceeded along the path of l't"c‘llll.\ll‘llt‘lltlll united irt purpose. Lord \\'tioltoir ltrlicvcs 1rroftttttrtlly' in the ttfllttiiples of lt-ittl-lt-‘tsc. llc is cortvitrcctl that the \\'l.'lil can hr rid of want if the ltasie rtraxirtt oi lcird-ltn-rst- is ztctctl upon in the ye: s oi trait- "From (‘llCll according to his resourc s; "h accordwtg to Ill\ need." li that econ- , llllt_\(I])ll\ is ircceptetl. ht- sees no iortrtid- l::rr'ricrs to the re-cstttblislrrttetrt of an ur- rlcrlv world. llctwectt them, (ireat llriairt and the linitctl $trttcs can rttttke a treuretttltttrs cou- tribtrtiotr to lllc ltettertttettr of lttuttattity. That is the chit-i problem oi recovery. as he en- dcatoirrs to uattge the situation. arid lie ltas evcrr bnlu- thatfbtrth cotutlrics will solve it in a fin.- spirit of co-oircratiort artd ntutual fzrth irt tho tiuture. China's Example xllllYlllvjiWl that .'t strong, well-orgauizetl Ch ab.» runs: be a ltcaltltv Chitin, (ienera into Chi" g; Kai-Shot. has drawrt up a ten-year health pr tqraittrtn- which calls for 331,000 doctors and IJLltlKlUU other rtrctlical workers. This is rc- p .:';t~d by llr. Phillips if. (it-cent: of the Yale-in- titirta .\.~.~tlt‘llllltlll. who is chief 0f the surgical division of llsizurg Ya lltlspllfll and professor of surgery at thi llsiitttg Ya Hospital artd Profes- s tr oi flttrgt-r). at the llsizwrg Ya .\ledical College in (Allilllfinllll. lle reports that practically every" dist-as; known to this country is to be found in China and Itftctr itr uruch higher ratio. ltt sour: swtiorts as rttztnv as Jo per cent of'the petrpl: sittlcr" front tuberculosis. l)_vsettlcr,v and cholera cans; ntatnv fatalities autl tualarizt is a scourge in runny areas. llr. (ireert: pictures lite Chinese lcttdcr" as fit-ling; that if Lhinzi is to develop transporta- tion_ l|t':t\_\- and light lll(ll'..\ll'l(‘< and cduvrttitrr: which will fit her for lcatlcrsltip irt .\s , she rttrrst attain butler health. tihiartg‘, h.- s vs. has called for a ltigltet‘ trcrcetttatge of itceorttitlislr- ttrertt of the lll(‘tllCI\l itrogrwtttutte than for any min-r‘ project c_' ruttional dcvulopiirettt. l)r_ tirct-trt- in ltt-airy syutpatltv with the Lltirrt-st- pr nutty calls it a challL-ugt- to the rtredictrl prof ssiort througltotrt the world. Disease knows few" racial or qctrgragrhical ltoturtlaries: its era- dication -hould be an international project. Election In Offing ‘f mtrt-cottrrrtittttl as usual. \Vhen Mr. Stirling ask-ml the l'riirtti Mirtister" it the statement on . tiltills which Revcrtttc Minister Gibson was rcpttrlet] to ltave made irt Ilautiltort, Ortt., could be taken as .1 govcrtmtent statentertt. the Printe .\litti~lt‘r sakl he had trotieeil the statement tirade hv .\lr. tiibsort, but “I did not read it with anv zlcgrett oi care." .\lr. (iibson. it nray/ be recall- ril, was reported to have said it was getteral knowledge tha: federal gctreral elections would bt~ held this fall or early trext year. Mr. King ltas already told the llouse last January 3t that his givvcrnntertt proposes to stay irt power until the war is wou, trtrless it is prevented front pro- perly carrvirtg on the lrttsirress of goverrrnrettt. lle said then that he (rntrld not say what the sit- tratiou might be m,“ year when the statutory life of the government expires, bttt unless there an- “strong reasons” to the contrary’ he would wisll to see rto extension of the parliamentary u-rnt. \Veiglll 0f Allied Air Power I" 50 hottrs last w-celt .\llied ttircraft droppel rr.ooo Inn's of explosives upon Gerurany and tamets in Occupied liurniw, The present lt-rrifii- striking power‘ of Allied air fleets is illustrated bv Flllfllltla‘ striking de- t-elopntetrt. For the firwt time in rntt- night the Royal Air Force and the Royal Canadian Air I7orce last week sent out ntore than i,ooo four- engine bombers-Lancaster: and Halifaxes-to pound tlte German wat- maclrine. A thousand bombers had not been used in one night's opera- tiort since the famous experimental raid on Cologne-and on that occasion more than two- thirds of the machines involved were the muclt smaller two-engine type. Since Cologne, too, the technique of bombing has been vastly improved. By a miracle of planning and navigation hundreds of these huge machines find their target and bomb it within I. few minutes, smothering the defences and causing tremendous damage. Obviously the organization and direction of an air fleet of this ntagnitude is a complex task involving thou- sands oi ground men and scores of airdromes. It brings up problems the Germans seem never to have mastered-if they had done so, earlier in the war, the situation today might be far different. -.- EDITORIAL NOTES -. It is not a case 0f——"is the car ferry safe?" but "is the governntcttt safe?” Which is why an appealioi- an "altogether pull" for an inde- pendent organization fails to tttaterialize. U i Why worry about tunnels and causeways when we will soon all be flying? Ilcnry Ford predicts the eveutttal abandonnrertt of railroads. On the future of aviation he says: “With the frrll development of the airplane . . as marry railroads won't be needed as were needed in the early days of the development of this courttrv. l really think the railroad will go irt time. The rtutottrttbilc and good ltigltrvays have rttade irr- rnads on it. The plfltlc nray do away with it altogether." II III Ill i1 i i! .\lr. Joint Drinltrvatcr, poet, critic and play- wright, died this date r937; his works include “Pocrtts of Ilen and Hours", "Poems of Lev’: and Earth", “Cromwell attd Other Poertrs", “$\vortls turd Idottghsltares", “P0enrs"; he also wrote the following 1tlays: “Cophetua", “Re- bellion", “The Storm", ".l‘awrts" attd “.\bra- ltartt Lineolrf: "Knowledge we ask rrot-knowledge Thou hast lent, llut, Lord, the will, there lies otrr bitter need, ' Give us to build above the deep intent The deed, the deed." i u a w See ltow they growl Government dcpartrttetrts llllve appointed 43 Boards and Courmissiotts with a total of 12,101 elllployees and a payroll totalling $2,519,102, it was reported in a return tabled in the Cornmorts for 1\Ir. \\'. K. lislirtg (PC-Kootertay West). Largest number of ertr- ployees, 5,234, is in the Uttentployattertt Ittsur- urrcc Cortrntission which, although appointed sittqc the war, i5 a permanent body. The Prices Board with 5,123 entployces and an annual pay- roll of $731,909 was the largest of the wartime departnrertts. Arrrong the departments labor re- ported the largest number of boards appointed, r8, including t3 ntobilizatiotr boards with r59 entployees. Agriculture reported five boards with 107 employees. II‘ The three new portfolios itr the Federal Gov- errttttertt will be, as stated itr a notice of rnotiou by the Prime Ilitriser, Reconstruction, Veter- ans‘ Affairs and Social \\’elfare._._llllre Depart- utent of Reconstruction would ltave authority to formulate and coordinate reconstruction plan-t and carry otrt such platrs for a certain number of years after the end of the war. The Veter- ans’ Affairs Departntent would replace in part the Dcparttttent of Perrsiorts and National llealth and would lrartdle all rrtatters fClililflg to tltc care, treatment, training or re-establislttrtertt of rttelttbers and former trtcnrbers of the arttted forces. The Social Welfare Department would include that part of the Pertsiotrs artd lrlealtir Dcpztrtttterrt not transferred to the Veterans’ .\ffairs Minist v. lt would ltatrdle ntatlers re- lating to tllc social security and welfare of the people of Catrada. ll‘ 1k * I i! l “On evcrybodys lips today we hear expres- sions of the ‘brave new world’ that is to be t-stalrlisuetl after victorv has been ours." .\lr. Leo Dolau told the llontreal Irishmert. “Can we itr Cattada make a contribution to this brave trew world if our hearts and souls are tittgcd with uatiortal prejudice and racial, religious and geo- graphical bielccrirtgs? Is is not time that we of Irish descent took our stand rtgairrst those things which would make of Cartada a number of Balkanized provinces?" In cortclusiort .\lr. Dulau offered the hope that Irishman in Carr- ada “may march forward with a new hope and a new confidence that we are successfully wag- ing a war against those forces which divide and destroy, which separate class front class and na- tion from nation, and tnakc this earth a place of torment for the multitude, for which a Child was born in Bethlehem and a Cross carried tip the hill of Calvary.” \Votrren working in Britain were in the habit of turning up to work with curlers in their hair. They said it kept their pernfs in shape longer. The rrtcrt workers objected to the practice as tursiglrtly and it is not on record whether the ivornctr denied this. Bttt they did dispute the uranagctttetrfs corttentiott that it was not sanitary, that ltair in curlers in the factory could not be kept free of dust and dirt. Ctrrlers were prohi- bited. The wortrcu tried to ignore the order and the disobcdiertt were denied admission. Then a compromise was arranged. Curlers may be wortt on Tuesdays, Thursday and Saturdays, but rtot on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. That is a characteristically British middle way-in this case North British, says the 'l'elegraph journal. The ntartagement tolerates a Jractice it believes to be not sanitary and the men ac- quicsec in what they consider trnsiglttly for three (lays in the week; and the women resign lltcrttselvcs t0 halving the added life of their perrrfs by abandpnlug-unreasonably they hold, but what is mere reason compared with a quiet life ?~curlers for the other three wnrktlays. It is such a simple arraugenretrt in the interests of ltarrrtrtny that NHSOII-Wfirslliflpillg foreigners will hardly appreciate its scetnirtgly illogical cornrtrottsensc. rue crtartnmttrrowtvt. GUARDIAN flutes By The Way They my It‘: pretty Inn] to get a "Help Wanted" algn tu u. hurry now. on account of the help situ- atlon.—Kanszrs Cltv Star, It. ls Interesting j.» know that PUBLIC FORUM unusable-wlll M. oennlpllkh ulthu d llhbls landmine W‘! k truncatin- sclentlsts at the L ., o: Call- fomla have dlscoverw a substance capable ot mnklzttz small persons rzrow large, but we do hone 1t: won't come Into Reneral use rurtll the street car and bus congestion eases rm a. blt. go Ryan In the Boston Herald. Let the Burn; Boclotfee through- out the world _take It u tChmchllYs suggestion for basic English.) Basic English Indeed! Scottish ls the thing. Scots Jtfle wl’ Bobble bledl The test? If ye can say "ft/s a braw. br-lcht. moonlight. nlcht. the nfchb-ywre grflcltt. ve ken." —- Detroit flee css. A recent survey shOWS that l0 per cent; of farm owners new over G0 have no direct. heirs to follow through on farming the laud. How- ever: the greatest rtrajorilv of these 70,000 farmers lll‘(\ not ewsldcrlrrg retlritrt: for a wltllc vet. ho ever- tlrauelrt tr tanner of G0 was thmuglr? After uettlntz ltls farm in shape. paytltuz off the tnortgnge the nveraizc farmer ls near 60 and just tltctr beszlns to enjoy farming wl-tlt- out n llfethttc lratrdlcap of 1:001‘ tprlccs. heavv htortgaues and ercip failures. Seventy scents to be tlte Mle of urtrst farm retirements ne- ccirtlzlnf: to what; we observe: sta- tistics tnav prove vastlv (llfferertt, howevett-Elmlra Signet. Historians may differ as to lhc qualities of R. B. Bennett's states- nrarrshiz) but his fellorv-Carradlatrs tutrcservetlly honor trirrr its u dzs- lnterested trltllatrtltropist. to whom areal: wealth has itlwavs nteant rm opportunity for service: rts a nt-stn of kindly heart and ouen ltarrd. ever ready to translate generous impulses into tvortlrv deeds; as a citizen of this Dc-ntlnlon whose conception of success ltt llfe ls nteirsured bv the value of the eon- trlbutlon, material and spiritual. lre can trrake to his country. Let ft be hoped that the precedent. Lord Bennett ltns set. that. the way he has opened wltlr these princely donations to the lrlglr cause of education. may be followcd by other Catrrrciltrns of wealth and en- lightened pu-bllc spirit. - Sydney Post-Record. This country has rm room {m- Smllfihes-s: 1t has too much of nced for betterment ln its soelnl ntrcl ec- onomic life, in its pattern of edu- cation. ln its political. moral and spiritual concepts. But. we are not eelniz help thlnas bv approach- lng our problems ln the tncod of mooning. melancholy, nor with a touch of ltvslerla, not" with the technique of third-rate rrrelcdratrtu. Lot us have dlscttsslon, by all nteatrs: but let us have if as tits- eusslon should be ttrrrong clvllized peoples — with common sense. and sincerity. and sportsmanship and fairness. Tlnselled sltodtllness and bad play-acting, which curses for Chamberlain and Munich and Franco, and. of course, the inevi- table banker tlrrotvn lrr. will get its IIOWIIOPO-AIOWIIOYO. except for the slobplest and woolllest ef senti- plttxelntal radicals. — Ottawa Jour- Dr. Edward Dewitt Jones recent.- lv wrote 1n DFBJSc of the ltltlltl- Inkale W. K. Kelsey writes ltt The Detroit News. It. has a sung which has inspired many poets, The rttghtmgtale ls a. European blrd. We have sonzsters that cart eorrrpete with ll. Chase S. Osborn believes the brown tlrrasher the fright- tngules equal and often its super- 1011 H6 says some of its more clo- qutent. utterances am 5O soft. that they are inaudible unless one Ls close to the bird. Several of our tlrrushes have entrartcfrtg songs; the robin which ls rettllv a thrush, can do very nicely on a clear- surlng evening at sunset. My fav- orlte is the catblrd. which not only has a. beautiful soruz of its err-tr. but imitates those of other binds, and ls an excellent comedian. A cardinal talking to himself ls tn- terestlng, turd a jay has a good llrre of conversation, ltt the nesting season. Astounding as the new jet uro- pulslort method of drlvhm lrlglr sDeed nlrplattcs is to tr uetreratlotr familiar only with propeller pro- pulsion, lt has been successfully used tor trearlv lralf n century by the Royal National Lifeboat Insti- tution 1n bfliwcrltrtz its lifeboat-s. and for tureounted uses by Nature ltt powerink one of its most hide- ous marlne creations. Jet pro uls- fon engines of marine type ave saved llfeboats and their crews from the ttatrger of racing propell- ers ttttd the fouling," of propeller shafts b_v rope llnes. Lorre bt-fcrv. jet. Dropulslott i-ttgltres Wtfc used on llfebotrts, Nature used the prin- elble 1n providing the octopus with means of propulslon. Devoid of’ flns or tall, the ocwtpus can shcot through water as lt shot out of u gun. rlrnaglttg its eight, tt-ntireles behind it. It accompltsltos this b_v fllllnz the two eylltrtlcrs of its lungs wltlr water, closing the tn- take valve and expelllnrz the water courier Province. , Nobody Seems to know who wrote lt, but lrere ls a jingle which spread like wildfire after publlc- anon of Mrs. Roosevelt's picture rubblrrz noses with a natlve Mnorl woman ln New Zcalanzl. . “A poor betrlghted heather, with n jungle for a lrorne, Whod tlrttrk my fame would spread pfm", to latrds across the 0am I wastrt very handsome, I wasn't very bright: But. now they ccnte to see mv nose. the island's greatest sltlht. My nose was ottce n sLtn-nle nose, a little flat; and bent. But now my nose l5 trot o. nose. lb la a monument. So tourists. take your‘ place in line and. for u. modest fee. Rub the nose that rubbed the nose o . Franklin D. A thought has just. occurred to me whlch I find rather stunning; Since mv nose rubbed the se- velt nose. wlll 1t boo keep on running?" -— Minneapolis Star Journal- lle wan a young Cnnbdlan slllnr wltlr a lurotrtnant red beam. He was 1n his early 20's. If ho was even 20. Th was one of tlro finest; alfn. we have lesion to ro the beard. l-le lmd. In the mvy. a boy wanting to grow a d tn: oftfc new a beard. It ls . ed. But. therelsaca h .0 permission has been accepted. the aallor camrot. ahrwe for nt; lerutl. four months. Dining i e B has tn cultivate and tr-lm lrls beard- e cannot use permission to row an excuse for not shwvlnz or n 1c 0t weeks. The lxzv with thf- throuiglt its rrrouulslon tube. -Van-, ECONOMIC INEQUALITIES Sin-rib! the lnforuufle" 0! fannera who may be Interested in prloe eelllng and foundation ad- justment. of the P. E. d P0- tawes, last year several cu- loads of potatoes were slrlpped to B. C. where they were sold for M-W I bushel, wlrlle the Island farmers’ only received $1.46 a. bushel. Evidently the difference In price was not caused by freight rates, slnce all potatoes at the coast were the saute price whether they were local, front the Butte of Washlni‘ ton, or from P. E. Island. Slnce P. E. Island was one of’ the flrst provinces to enter Con- federation, they should take the tnttltrtlve in 911111111118 belle!‘ rights for the people. Tm Bcverldge Plan ls not, suf- flclertt and the late Premier Aber~ hart of Alberta dld not receive cooperation from Ottawa, but lf all the provinces were unlled 1n their demands to the Domlnlon uovertrrtretrt for an allowance for eaelr person as they are at present supplyltrg to the soldiers, they would have to agree. It ls said our money ls not nec- essarily backed by gold bricks, and lf a movie stat‘ rs not expected llve on less than three thousand a week. wny snould a household be tnztlrttattred on less than ten thousand a year? I ant, Sir, etc, “FOR. oeuvres." Sltx-At last we are gettlrtz some information about; tlre eonstruetlotr o1 a causeway. "Native" ts 500d at figures and ls the first person to give us ltt black and whlte the rrrrllorts of yards of material te- qulrozl. Also he suggests the cost; of moving the material und the nrm- bet" o1 years 1t. would take to move It. but he dldn‘t flmslr lrls job. In the last Donrlrrton C.N.R. Etrf-Zlrreens report 1n I929 re these projects the estimated cost. for tun- rrel was over 115 ttrllllorr dollars and for u eausewrrv less than 50 mrlllon dollars. It. was clue to tlrls Informat- lon that. a. number of people sull- ported the causeway. The C NR. engineers must have had seme ln- forntation, and not; made from utraglrration when they flg- ured a causeway so low. Now that "Native" has shown w: the number of yards of material 1t will ttrke, wlll he be good enough to estlrtwte cost of ntnterlrrl er yard so we can cortrparc it. with he cost of u tunnel. A generation ls about, 30 years and 1f the cost ts within bounds. 20 years to build. n. causeway wlll be lone enoualr to wear out the new lee breaker. then we wlll dmlve back on the cuusewtty, probably not tn my life-time or ltt “Natives” but for the next; generation. Int. us have the figures anyway, will rttnkc good comparisons. we trtlglrt. also be able to shorten the years of construction. I um. Sb". etc ANOTHER TRAVELLER. BOARD 0F TRADE Sin-In reacllttg your report of the Board of Trade counoll meet.- lrtg. I noticed a. great stress was lrcrrt on the post. war work, espec- ially the constructing of a new dry aoek at Charlottetown, but I think tr rtrore Important duty 1|,- the 1m- tneulnte transport ulttlcrrltres wntcn affect. the whole province. We are uuvtsea as soon as the rce is gone me present em- terry ls to no to dry dock lf there room and Wlll have very extensive re- pans to withstand the lrnrd ice conuitrutts of next wlnter. The re- port didn't say rt‘ she wlll be away all suntmer or not. The report. also sutcl me only boats available w and from the Isratra were the old Seo- 1.1a prying at Borden and the rrtnee Nova at Wood Islands. If that. 1s so, ls the Board lravlng these boats thoroughly looked af- ter when tltev are now tree up at the wharfs rvfy experience on the Scotla was rrct. pleasant. There isn't much room. l rtuttttt, utter you accom- oazrte the crew. could there not. be sorrre roam rrttrdc for 1r refreshment booth somewhere? Strangers ex- treet w get a. snack inboard a boat whip‘ they are travelling by auto- mo e. How about the Prince Nova? Complaints were current. last fall that. tlrjs bout had steering trou- ble; 1t so, has that been intended to? You don't want any steel-lug tzoltru wrong ltt the (men and have her run on tlre sand banks at. Caribou ltt the rush sea- sort. 1t was also rrrentlotretl that Crrrlbott needed to be llrz ted. dredzozl or buoyed. By the look of the Caribou sand banks when you net. a lnrger- boat you wlll need a dredge there all the time. Last. fall a letter ltt wur paper suggested that when the new boat would be available she would so t0 Plctou. some mlles further, which would sirve all that 0 llgltts, dredgltrg or buoys which would be thousands of’ dollars, e- ven the expense of a telephone on which there was consider-able nervspuper talk last. vear. I am Slr etc. BER. . nlfty red beard wtas feeling sorry for l1 elf. Hts shlp was dolng patrol lrr trorlhern waters- where t-lrere were no retty izlrls. He tlrouzlrt lre wou cl save himself shavlnrt. so he trot permission to grow ltls beard. Then. ln n. couple of weeks, the slrlp teas transferred down where there are many prottv zlrls waiting for sailor buys. Orrr sailor was stuck with a red beard and he had to keep bearded for xrtmt-her- three months. by which time he was liable to be flnmy In the northern zone agnltt.—Wlnds0r t- ss» _. . ,_ llll $LEEP mil rullunul k lo yew lrldvnyl. II your kidney: m out of mlu and hilin h ' tulle- rut In tit-r, ...".'.'..,, he. tu u» m: a; 4 lnnblo Inn y to Dell's Kldiuy Pills-In 0m Ital a usury the hmlh kidney Nlldy. Buy l0 hi0. Ill ._Dodd's Kidney Bills figures ftrl SCIISOII . 1 Lontonilletlltations mm The London Times SPIBPIIUAL HEALTH 1662 the .Engllsh Prayer - book. was given its Druent term obi-vi e was nu collect used on the Eighteenth Bllndll‘ after Trinity The ancient Lat-in waver- from which 1t. was 3.55312“... at" llwlildflttia a e t - oh In the first llsh evll." and so 1111111 and minds to follow thee. the 0n God." "To avoid the Infections 0f the devil" remained ln the of 1:552. 1559. and 1604; not until 1062 was the petition altered 1° one for "at-ace to withstand the rm: on: of the world, the flesh and the devil." _ whatever- may be thought. or this. alteration there can be no doubt that. the older phrase sttxlsestcd u striking and valuable Idea. It le- tured sln as a form of infect ous disease. as a. noxious germ. so l0 , which lodges In and Grad- ually paralyses the soul. and ex- rber-lence oonflnns only too well the abtness of this analogy. ordinary; thotuzlrt llmlta the term “stutter; to the man who “does wronz. though in our lord's vlew ft. ln- cluded those who failed to do right. It was indeed these “sins of omls- slon" which were most: sternly con- " ‘ ln lrls teaching and ln 1118 pictures of a dlvlrre Judgment. Yet the vleLlm of the “dlatbollc infec- tion" often has an almost unper- turbed conscience. on the ground that he has absbalrted from B1055 for-ms of wrong-doing. And atro- phy of conscience ls among the results of this devilish lnfeetlon. this slow nolsonlng of the soul. which slowly weakens every ferm of spiritual activity. The lnfertlon derived from the source of evll l5 communicated to others ln turn by influence and example; they. I00. are led m suppose that mere ab- stinence from obvious slns repres- ents somethlnl like compliance wit-h the Christian standard. The older wording of thr- collect. is useful also tn lts suatzestlon that sln ls a disease. ccmmunlertted t0 the soul from vtrlthotrt. and not M1 inevitable characteristic of its llfe- Often enough the world SUIYD°595 that a hlrzh standard of Rvflduffi l! uosslble onlv for b00919 01 11 5°93‘ temperament. and the lndlvl- n51 fee]; that some moment when he was deeplv conscious of’ God was altotzetlrer abnormal. But our Lorosvlew rewarded sin as 0X‘ trlnslc and tot-elm: lt is at his best moments. he tau-vhf. that a trrrmr ls most- trulv himself. Those who have come to reootmlze sln as a rrlsense h‘ 11@1‘5°.11P.m_l' which mags __ A CHEMISTR depend on having absolutely waterproof. rain, grow and heat. produced through the the Industrial Chemist. It is water-repellent, with an inside coating of synthetic resin; it seals perfectly by heat FIGHTING man's life may sterile, surgical dressing quickly available. To safeguard Canadian soldiers a special cloth has been designed which makes possible Va package for field dressings that is lugs sealed in packages of this cloth keep dry and sterile through cold, This special waterproof cloth was .. "avoid the devil." and when 188M er uten- rnallgn Influence wlll turn t0 the great hyslclfln. an the was ln each age have turned, for the heallntz of their wills. FOLDED WINGS Pluoked tnwTQTm from the w . A vl wrea h Laid tflamlngen on his tomb; now th lerafiiltlfl! nd un Mav shea e t e er I ' string the bow. . The arrow soared For one brief are of zlmv . . - qulveflnlp. fell Into the swo en bosonr of reward. He flew frag phe teeth of danger .nws Ga/pernrflqom the vault. of deMh- Amid the amJlauBe OI vultltrres rind their ehwDNBB w n RS He power-div To death unquestloned. lsed po on P5 And the roaring earth arrived. That was hls flight. Pause not: for tears. None may defer his fate. Across the v , ears The vctunrzer" are the RYBBW‘ ‘P1119. He wn has flo As only the vounq e811 fly. W110 d Hts soul have Homeccnrltrg ltt their (‘WS- —Mtrry Elizabeth B83191‘- a-a-nna-s " ‘ Attention Farmers llear Gharlottetown On account of conges- tion and shortage of re- frigerator cars to move potatoes, we will not be buying any Number One Small Table Stock until further notice at our Charlottetown ware- house. Flllllllf B. CLARKE 1 '1. i$fl'l-':-'w’efizfe'.vi‘-_'v I-‘V.'H'~'I"I'IFW -v\'.~.-..'.P.'-'-'.'H w era-Jaw. a.’ .-=-.-.-."..-u-.--v.-.~.-v-'-' Y SERVES ‘t’ guts u.. Years Agu a (B! The Carnal", mlraltv wpoiféa sln 22v": W“ 1m»- Il n Better If’ _ u apblm. Cut ln s rain through IBIIIDVB ED Now ls. the time Ilalnst PIG-WORM by uslnx the must proves the health nerd. o‘ Price 35c lb. A delicately paratlon whi strengtnens and the hair. hrrlr. Promotes a superior rzrflwllt ably useful Price 60 cents. Attention. CANADA éb ~_‘~',"Innl' ' .L\\\\\\\\Q \-\- a clean, dry, Field dress- needle holes will leak. _ caused -by stitching The development of this special ingenuity of Making possible water- roof packaging: for eld dreuln a l: another example of w Chemis- try menu Canada. cloth and the seiirliifguiiioccss which provides efficient waterproof packag- ingfor field dressings is a wartime achieve- mentoftlteqiabrikoicl" Division of Canadian Industries Limited-H, I CANADIAN INDUSTRIES "LIMITED " ATTEllTl0ll SWINE BREEIJEII: Derfumetl p". ch rest bealltltlel Grey or Restores ‘Faded Ilalr to lts orlglru| - shade whether Black, Brown, Red or Auburn prevent; Itltltll‘ ‘ ' h hnlr ls falling and rer-rrirerlt? Ire-kill’ . . ,,,§,’,;_°°“°°"1 ""1 “tutu-h .,.,'.‘ "@111 peer . llélfltlers, wok ' blls of skln 02$” El" tn §l|l|fl remedv on [he mflrksllecun MACS PIG-WORM TONIC POWDER It wlll tho u m all true-es 0f their»: Miami]: N"! MACS HAIR RESTORER 9N1. dandruff ankl 510135 than; and In preventing dandruff. Get a. battle today. THE TWO MAGS I49 Great George Street Mall Orders Given Prompt ruorntrtn PACKAGING rum tuner tum pressing. Regardless of temperature change, the package remains water- proof, yet it can be quickly opened when needed. This type of packaging overcomes the bulklness of metal containers and the limitations of stitched or wax-sealed packages. Wax will crack in low temperatures, while FA-l" ___