PAGE FOUR THE BIIARLOTTEI WIN GUARD IAN Mornln| our; imam ui um Prestifanl; uaut. Col. W. Chantal u. ucum Vim humans: J. B. Bunion. I-JJ. Secretary; uaut. 00L I). A. Mnclunuun 0.5.0. uimlm and Hanging Director. J. IL Burnett. i}; Auoouu limuni l-‘rsnu Wauiar and In A. Ulrlwil SUBSCRIPTION BATII By mu in r124. $4.00 pea yell". 81-60 M It 1110M" $1.25 for 3 months; We for oua inunlll Um ueuvery 36-00 pt! Yul". 88-00 fin u uiulllll $1.15 for I Inontnli O00 tat one Iurun. wlflaumnwurmvtnouand uansawwnv §&lil.ltllby wumi mm w w": 8W1 l" i ""1""- bfla for I month: In» Charlottetown huurillnn may ha ouuitneu ll Multllllll n now- Anencl. ‘Inna Iulll". N" lwrii 0“! (Juno: lull IIII’ Wanmnltun. nuuin Nomi Alvllol- I Dalian; uasxupuuun Mn Ann!- ll“ 1°“ 9'» ti]: Ila) In, Tntnntw horn sun. lluullnll; J. “no, finntun uurIc-r. Dunno: Onti lluh Tubman Shop, "The soar-aw Memory is Weak" 1"" f" Weakest Ink.‘ “ E m” Wolfe’: New: Qlnncl. Inlburl lulcton N. B-i ' Salvage Collections _._____#___. - - ' the The med for pth¢ fullest c0 opciatipln. on w l our citizens in the 51111136 "W? n0 Stressed by 11cm, j, l’. McIntyre. ks and Highways, in m1 a,h.c,.li___(.l,,c,n in mtlhy-‘s. issue, Thc Dcpzirtiiicii; is planning a. systematic drive to collec; fill available scrap material before the snow 2i >- Tle. work is under Mr. R. S. MacBeath. fin‘ : W, of mg Department, to whom flOllflC-‘LUOH uiiiulatioii should be stjnf. by the Provincial Pub- ir- \\'O—lc Department in this connection is iL l proving most effective; 50 much 5° “fat the zuitliarifies at Ottawa have Oxllrcssfid thflr C0,“? pflphiuii. lilltl the system followed here is being l is iii rxaiirple t0 Olhtff l'1'°\'l"<7"5- Th“ M o Canada's war effort cziii- ,. be too Stronoly gmphqgized, and it should a ' . r lli‘ Il iiizittcr of pride that 1Y1‘ U11‘. “'5 l“ 0th“ ‘ Q Edward lsiriiiil scts the pzice. part of a1 _ iiiulcr wziy 1S p ' Minister of Public \\ 0r Ul s:il\';i_\_;c' ncc ‘flic- lciidersliip given -_ iic of this work t tyyyQW-Iis, Pi Quota Shurta ge . is iliqiiipointing to learn. ‘m the Ymtlwfll)’ m"! \1~- l IQ \lcl-cnii president of (‘Humid }q1‘~1\>|r$ “put” dint bacon shipments from Cati- mii‘, ,0 the United Kingdom under the cprrppt on.» million lb. contract may fzill sliort o T C coiiiiwictcil quantity b)’ 111018 than Sixty “Hhon lifilllltlfi Rciicxviiig tl ziiiul rcgiitifi, “Y- w gitnfitiOfl in his COIIIPIIII)‘ s zin- McLcan traces the cause of 11h? . e shortage back to the second bacon contract for the second war year amounting to 70,000 - ' ' ith cui. \\‘C‘(‘l\'l_\' nt $15-82‘ This lmce cofnljafedlwvlk sisfio; ;i cui. Ill the previous coiitiut iiiir <1 - fnriiicrs, particularly iii 0115i?!“ n the hog business. h1- tllCZlYiOIl of this is seen from the fact that hog nqs in eastern Canada in 194T were 2'9 Il‘.'II'l\'t'll 3 _ . f lllllllitll$ ngflinst an CSfIfllZltBd 2.6 millions 0r c-iiiirrigctl 111811)’ _ Quintin from staying 1 ft z. , "Through the fact that feed suPPlY *5 ‘lmch nearer the western hog fafmfli mes‘? Producfrs (movgd an advgntggg over the easterriers so that thc-v-ivcrc zible in misc their i942 hog marlvclmtls ‘hi; ‘stint: 700.000 to a total of 0W1‘ 3-8 l‘“ll‘Om' llr. .\l1:Lc:iii states, however, that if 111E Pr“? o“ the sccoiid bacon contract had been a wise one the western increase of 700.000 h0g5 nllghf have llt‘(‘ll twice that number. ‘ _ \\‘liile price for the third contract was raised p‘ $1937 a Qwt, and production eiicouriiged, tor a. fltftllCi‘ to get back into hog production takes at least a year. _ _ To meet the appeal of Britain for 790 fllllho“ lyiitlllllS of bacon will require mi incrcase iii pru- diiciioii of 1.5 million hogs. Nlr. i\lcl.i':iii notes that still more hogs are asked for. BCCFHHE (‘f the developing shortages of other important foods if would be extremely helpful if Canadians were 41,19 to have g5 much pork product ns they dc- sgrml, To make this possible, at lcnst n further 1.5 million hogs would need to be produccd._ It is likely, then, that the Government will zip- peat to the farmers to produce 3 rmlhfin 111011 hogs this crop year. One favorable aspect for such {in increase is that bog output dcpciuls mi feed. ziiiil Canada. seems about to harvest mic of the heaviest crops in history. However, labor is also needed and the farmer is already hard pres- scd If the production called for is realized. the i!li‘[‘(-,'\<C must come chiefly from westcrn Cziii- vs .\lr_ McLean, as leadership iii ling pro- t. duciiiiii has already passed to that area. .,_.__._____._________ Canadian Worsted Cloth \\'iih wool taken from Alberta. sheep, Canada can iiow produce worsted cloth which compares with the finest type produced anywhere, accord- ing to experts who have examined samples sub- iiiitti-d by iiiniiiifnciiircrs. Canadian ivoullcn iii- tQrQ-IS are proud of this achievement and strife that it represents ii concrete fact WlIlCll justifies the claim: “From the sheep's back to yours, I00 pvr cciit. Canadian." This cloth, says zin exchange, will not avail- able to civilians wliilc the war lasts, n5 the mills are bciiig employed almost exclusively iii filling the iiceds of the armed services. \Vlieii a vic- torious peace has been won, however, woollen men arc confident that this all-Canadian product will hold its own with the best. llritisli wuollciis, ivliich ciijoy a high prestige throughout the world, may not be seriously affected by this coni- pctition, as they cover the entire field of cloths and the range of their weaving includes almost every type that the ancient art is capable of pro- duciiig. ‘As long as Britain has access to Aus- tralia’; choice wool clip, her markets fire not likely to be threatened. Canadian suit lengths in the past have lizid to overcome considerable prejudice from (liscrimiii- zitiiig buyers, who usually chose the llritisb pro- duct bi-rziiisc of its softness and general cxccl- lciicc, zis compared with the hard and wiry fccl ivliicli often marked the domestic product. The disadvantage from which Canadian cloth stiffer- ed lziy in the combing, a process that was not lfful i!‘ miscountry. This lack has now been TI;I_EMQHARLO'I"FETO\VN GUARDIAN overcome, and the result is a finished material that redouiids to the credit of every group con- cemcd, from the farmers who raised the sheep to the spinners and weavers who have demon- strated that worsted of Superior quality can now be made in Canada. - EDITORIAL NOTES - This day week Labour Day Holiday. a is a u Great War I ended officially this date 192i; actually there was only an adjournment. U U U U \Vith the reopening of the schools, Fall is upon us; and the trees ussiuning their autumnal colour- iiigs prove it is so. a a a a The population of Prince Edward Island at the census of 194i was 95,047 qt which 49,228 were male and 45,819 female This mule iiizijorify was continued throughout all the ago groups un til the age of 75 when in the group between 75 and 79 there were 823 women and 898 men. This proportion was even more impressive at the zige of 95 and over when there wcrc i9 wo- iiieii and 6 meii in the very aged class. 4 n- u in Here is something for prohibitionists to make capital of. Extra tea 0r coffee rations cannot be ziuthorizcd by a doctor's prescription, No pro- vision has been made to issue extra tea or coffcc on i medical certificate. This is not an nrliitrziiy decision of the War Time Prices and Trade Board, but rests on a ruling of the Department of National Health that these beverages have no nutritional value. If caffeine, a therapeutic agent in tea and coffee, is necessary for the ptiticiit, the Health Department ruled, it can be [ircscrib- ed in tablet form. \Vha.t is sauce for the goose tea should be sauce for the gander alcohol. a: is in Lord Rutherford O. .\l., F. R. S. liiiglisli chemist and physicist, born in Nelson, New Zeu- laiid, this date, i871, Cavendish professor of cxppriniental physics and director of Caven- dish laboratory, Cambridge University i919; a- wzzrdcfl the Rllfllffiftl hlcdril of tlic Royal So cicty I905, and the Nobel prize for chemistry‘ i908; elected president of the British Associa- tion for Science, i923; was blacdoiiald professor of Physics, l\lcGill University 1398-1007; ruini- crous publications relating to the conduction of clcctricitv through gases ziiid i'a.dio-zictivi‘._v; raised to the peerage as baron in 193i. in n- u- i- Finzil figures issued by the Dominion Burcnii of Statistics slioiv~ that tlic population of tho province of New Brunswiclc at (late of the 194i IDQiiiinioii census was 457,401 as compared with 408.219 iri i931, an increase during the ten-year period of 49,182. The rural population of the province recorded an increase of 34,699. 0r from 279,279 in 193i to 313,978 iii 194i, ivliilc the tirhtiii population rose to 143,423 from m8.- ulo in 193i, .1 gain of 14,483. New Bruiisivicks mule population in i941 was counted at 234.097 compared with 208,620 in i931, and the female 213.304 compared’ with 199,599. [a is in u It is stated some twelve million ration books are being distributed to Canadians, in which very important connection the Wartime Prices and Trade Board has issued a bulletin warning the people to study the instructions in detail and fol- low them to the letter. The contents of the ratiriii book need to be carefully read and the orders ful- filled, including the filling-in and the signatures. in ink. There is also the possibility that some of the books do not contain all the coupons the rccipiciit is entitled to, which is a real induce- iiieiit to make an accurate survey of the pages. Otherwise, the householder may find himself in difficulties when it comes to buying his foods. No COUPON, no sugar, ten or coffcc; so recipients should make a thorough investigation of this 11C‘- ccssnry book, If they don't they and their family will be the sufferers. n: w is n The cry for girls mid still more girls has iigniii gone out for the three woiiieifs lllllfOflllCtl scr- yices of Britain. As the time is slowly approach- ing when the male forces of the United Nations \vill go into large scale action against lllf‘ enemy —nf which the raid on Dicppe is only a prelude ——lllC feminine auxiliaries must bc sharply iii- crcnscd to relieve every single maii who can be used for the immediate fighting front. The ideal that the Auxiliary Territorial Service, the Wo- mcifs Auxiliary Air Force and the \V0mcn’s lfqval Naval Service organizations have sci themselves is ambitious. If it is attained it will iiicmi that the girls and women of Britain will be doing a far bigger job for the army, iiavy 3nd air force of their country than was over be- fore contemplated or thought possible. llric-flv, it ivniilrl consist of tiilciiig charge of almost every activity that can be performed by women, leav- ing only the actual fighting to the men ifllflti "If we were looking for a catcliwiiril to dc- scribc our age," said Sir Richard W. Living- stone, in a recent speech reported in Co-Partiier- ship, “various phrases would occur to fhg mind; we might call it the Age of Science, or the Age of Social Revolution, or the Age without Stand- zirds. The life without standards exists in all epochs, but it is the peculiar danger of a rich so- ciety at whose feet every kind of facilitv. zlistrac- iion_ and pleasure are poured iii indiscriminate protusion. Coiiiiiiercizilism help-i tho. clizios. For the aim of commerce is not to sell what is best fpr the people or even what they really need, but $1111Ply 10 Se"; its final standard is successful sale. Such a $061M)’ breeds the type which Plato calls the ‘driiiocratic’ man, behind the liiicaments of wlinse portrait, (lrawn more than 2,Qp0 years rigo, we discern a contemporary face. ‘Hi- spends.’ says Plato, ‘as much time and pain; and money on superfluous pleasures it; on necessary W“. H0 Scts all on .1 footing of equality, deny- "UI 10 "one its equal rights.‘ ‘llis life is subject to no order or restraint, and hf‘ has iin ivisli to chalice mi vxi-striicc WlIlClI he calls pleasant. free and lIflPPy-'_Bllf of all livcs, the life without slfllidflrds, without .1 sturdy mid worthy priii- Ylllli‘ l" govern it, is the most barren.’ 'i made to learn in thefr own medicine is an fndispenssb iliis she came down for breakfast. ‘The clerk nodded, mildly mm;e5wd_ ignoblc and NOTES iiii TIIE rm The Gallup P01! people alumni! report. that tfielr researches show ta peioenf, of the people cf the United states in favor of an attack on Europe by the United Nnllom now, 3t percent. would waft until we iuo atronxor. 1B percent. un- guided. "me 118:5 fnwthia£itbg ops’... m Winston, "think we should attack -—48 prr cent. of them. ‘Itia corner- store generals. the fireside stretc- gists, the cracker-barrel taicttclam, any the time has arrived to ma tlut second front. I IUPPQGQ f wettlen 1H" Bill’: 0f 00ml! W‘?! cannot be munlfed l WW meetfni; or a Galup Pgll. An 1n- vasion of Europe Is n. task tn organization and equipment beyond the imagination of most. laymen. it. lnvolvcs many and complex fire. lots, and none o! them ts famtltl-r to the chap who snya, when the Gallup Puller questions him: "Sure, we should go over there right now and lick tticse guys; look what tfierre doiii to Russia!" We can't run unis t at way — either by public meeting or plabtscttie. The when and where of a second front must; be decided by the few men who have available all the details the others of us lack about ship- ping, about avails-big troops and s0 on, and a Gallup Poll curt. help tlicm at all. fii fact. It Ls n ha. f- cap and a. snare because 1t fIEDdI to confuse the cpinlon of those whose reading is confined to head- lines. - Ottawa Journal. "The world," says an astronomer of note, “will last another three billion years" That: should allow B-mple time to pay the war debt. _-Kitctiener Record. Now It’; the man who no being liit. Itie niuiiber of fur felt- hat shad-cs is to be reduced from 42 to l8, and ivool felt shades from 18 ig. 1O Boys’ It's awful! - Owen sound Sunlrimes. With cryptic cynlclsm, a Chicago NflVs columnist avers: "Taking his iii-it. r trip in 10 years, a lociii iizi r is amrizsd to discover viii‘. p15 ngers new outnumber ili.» ffJlIl crew. - Si. Catharines Standard. The making of high grade wors- ‘rd cictlis fiTfll home-grown wool 1;; ‘lire cf lite most important suc- v scs tliiit Canadian industry and ‘UGO have achieved in many cars For the duration these new cloitis will be made only for the armed foices _As an after the war industry 1t will be highly Import- 1111i. - Szrotford Beacon-Herald, It is the first time for over a cen. fury that the Germans hB/Ve been land the taste that. ver bitter condi- Dcrmansnt peace. what. war means; and and memory of iioii of a really ‘Iitcre can be no permanent. peace iiiitll till nations-and the most of all—reii1lze that those who take the sword snail perish by the sword. _ London Telegraph, Germans Pigeons in the Murray HIII Hcicl, alas~—pigeons cmergin , t0 be cxact, from urclei- the mg of a. lads‘ who find ulicckcd in and pctlrcd with nothing further from ‘if!’ pigeons, thoughts than lgeong, 111g iivo in niim r, didn't. do Rufdhhlg wry alarming. They fiillllllv came out frcm under the brtl, iii over to the ivfnciow, and new o“; ‘Vilhmli even icaviniz their key of the early drum. winked the desk. The Indy menttimgd incident to the clerk when “Prcbsbly one 0f the previous c-ccupaiits encouraged them to Emil’ he murmured. — The New Y: iker . 10¢ cream has been ellmlnnwd 510m the ration of soldiers at. aiuijv posts located in England, A114‘: Qctcbcn 1 manufacture of 1hr delicacy will be sfoppgd 1n a]; England. Reason given are to free ‘IVOPKIYIAEII for military service to T°l°a5¢ Nfrlizerating space arid to Save 9111181‘. There are 40,000 small manufacturers employed in ma“ 111;: ice cream in England. Already consumption cf log cream in “mt liiiid has smown ii hegvy decrease Before ttie ivar Britons ate ml proximately {npoopgg “no,” o; ice cream annually. Oomumphion l“! 11W dPQF/Pfid w one-third of that amount 10st ncne of itsilgcfrfuliicifltyirtelsifxglhm b-‘I “is qucuss of chLdreii and noul... bcfcrc shops (pa; advep We iii advance “Ice cream next, gélul‘fitifli' or whatever the day my -— Sarnla Canadian Observer, Susse h ' the, Iirin-irfrifi-aéehfcfilif-Z pfiigfiiciifi SifliiSllCfll review for the year 1n vitpcli the war broke out, just is. Enstboiirne 1s one of five named in England and Wales where people live the long- 351i tare other being-tn order- _ X°r' sWmflmDton. Bourne- “lwlh and CTQYGOn. The counties gillli the best longevit. records “e flllflCydrxplfd Bucks, among“ from, d0 ii inistrative point. of view Southampton, too, 15 a ooumy Sussex (East) has the ‘uwegt blrflimte (11 s» follc/wed by‘ c“. dtgaiiifiirc 12.2), Devonshiro rind Crinibridgrsliire (1z_3i_ me m-L est hlrtfirate was in Stnffordshlra '17 4h mumved b)’ Llncolnshlre (lfflllflfidl 1 and Pambmkeshfm with ia s. - Sussex Dally um, v In _.Iune of 1939 when the Chum. borliiin Government- wlxttied to lynch an itndcrstandlng with Bus- slit-h 50111. as its special envoy to Moscow, ii mun without even min. Lsterlal prestige. William Btmri head of the Central European r1.‘ vision of the foreign office. was known in Moscow u a. farmer counsellor to the British Ehibauy of 1948, as n. ‘tic-re. In August. riiessenger from one grgaf, “Mp-m to another, Winston (‘Xiurchlll went to Moscow to confer with Biotin. Their conference one British official B5 "an epoch. Inflkhvz event, marking the fum_ 111i! point of the war." Whether It is that. or whether It to not, It. m; been a fitting visit for n British pmmler to pay Nat-ions will reooe In this getmoristration of unity Dram nr. It ll fllnclowd, by g nlri of flrg, that. continents are not semi-mtg entitles. but are parts of tha round small and mialttva planet, of ours. So rm old question blT-Flfv’ of this acquires scverlt. Who In m Y 9 hclklibniir? f see It, ls of first Im- portance to me what L; tho ht and done In Tacoma, Chunirkng mid Doitil. whatever happens there PM“ il-s impulse up the ‘themes. I l-“Ilffl that, the wny I regard Mm- cow moans life or bulleta to Hm fellwv-s I do not know. rn the orig whni We must accept the b11515: itiin, or tel-to the nsnnlty for drum, hl=lrry of mankind the day Ls vihfch is dccmsdayn-H. , Tomlfxuon, tn Atlantic Monthly” of those below category "A" may be subdivided into three or four major reason; but, tihey era merely expla- nations of causes which society should seek to remedy. say ‘ ened with care, or freezing tn the winter tune, lf one does nomfn! about It. The to unemploynenf, tn malnutrition; 8'68. ditions in big lowering of vitality and the devel- opment of bacteria; true, and lack of regularity In sleep together with fntemperanoe in for more inroads of disease, but when all these and other thin!!! a" added up. that: an intelligent people. Canadians are should do somethins about the matter. speculations regarding that meet- hope that It means u. in 1942, but we have no reason whatever for the first or this meeting. or because of any- thing said subsequently body who took part In the meet- - i1 W striking things about this Moscow conference 1s caution of’ the official telling iii London and Washington a. Joint, British and American statement spoke of the "urgency" of a "sec- 0nd front In i942." Churchill met; Roosevelt. ii tngton, B. joint; statement, spoke of "steps to divert German from Russia." nothing of that sort this time. The is described by Why So Many Disabilities ‘I iuiirmn whiz-standard) Staffstlcs based on medical fllm- i fnatioxis and certificate forms of the first 50.000 men who wet! called up for reveal what, only “Til 0°C 8°17 "A" 1° P" °°m m e a . were rated B1; 8.66 p01‘ 0mi- W" B d tn C1 and classified as 2 an “i; and ‘m 30,845 01' the flghtln! 1011798. " 2.11811“? _ r cent, were nblo to l t _._. m—q_ WURDS 0F, CHALLENGE C! 83:?! r$£§,,v‘;?y From m, High Commissioned to Can- fib list trailed down until sfmfl i, L m? 1011M $0 Pa! 11° “‘° ‘°' sw-snsztociunocioootwaim. l I I o w‘? 1t. will be noted from H811!" which have been released that the little Lslnnd of Prince mdwiud. 6W" by the Atlantic and which l8 most- ly rural and blessed by ffelh 5°“ air, showed up to the best advant- age by far. The hi8 @119?“ °f more or 1w crowded IWPIIIIMOB. produce, on the whole. the last healthy and vigorous tyres 91m" Edward Island hit. the mini 1115115 of 30.16 per cent; 1n the grade A standing. In Quebec City and the surrounding area. only 44.09 per cent obtained top ratinz- Toronto girth, with 09,55 per cent be- ing classified an a catezory- 101* don, Ont, Ls not. far behind with 66.61 in the A group. Port Arthur recruits show up well wIUh 79.8 per cent tn A category. Montreal has 51 per cent tn the top catofzofv- Halifax has 77.29 per cent. New Brunswick 66.3 per cent. Mflnlwhfl 61.59 per cent, British Columbia 66 per cent, Saskatchewan 76.39 per cent and Alberta, 65.09 per cent. The usual physical disabilities were chalked up against these men —aye, foot and stomach troubles. bronchitis. asthma and so 0n. But iegnrdloss o! what the defects were, they were “dofects" and told a story which ls no credit to the economic and social living of the time. Recent statistics of other countries are not; available. From what. has been published, however. from time to time in medical or pseudo-medical articles, writings by those who have a. flair for figures and in comments of books. et cetra. the inference may be soundly drawn that: the mcords of the United States and of the British Isles would not be a whit better, if as good S0 far mi Canada is concerned, the facts given show a. deplorable state of affairs. A young country like this should have few in its male population who between the ages of 2t and 40 would not. be able to pass an average thorough medl- cal examination. The explanation as to Why the numbers nre so high It doesn't. mean very much to one ls starving. or over-burd- deprouton years Ied and UYIQSSf/Gd, squalid cori- cittea make for ii habits accounts emphasize th, simply w such as That Moscow Meeting (Ottawa Journal) some of the interpretations and tng between Churchill and Stalin seem to us unfortunate. we are being told that: It. mean: the “turn. lng point. 1n the wax and that “undoubtedly it means a mom! front in 1942." Now we can hope that this Mos- cow meeting means a turning f th w r, nd perhaps also pom“ n e a a second front certainty sbout. either last. Not because of by any- Ofn the contrary, one 0! f-hfi reserve and statements about; ft. When Molotov was the La. r. after Wash. power There hiis been official Moscow statement spoke of the conference having beencar. rled on “in an atmosphere of cor- dialfty and complete sincerity" and Mr. Churchill, 1n ii departing message to stiilin, said that "our contact will play a useful part In furthering our cause ' ‘This 1s guarded language-u it ought to be. There have been per- haps too many hints and too much talk about; is "second front", and the delay or failure to back up the talk by action has not helped the morale of millions Whose expecta- tions hm been unduly heightened. In the eircumst would seem to be wise to waif. this time upon events and not be carried away by the easy Optimists who are forever jumping to conclusions. In. any event, the term "second front" Ia mlsleadfii . There are at leut five fronts n this wnr ll- rendy, all of them merging into one front: one front being wher- ever anybody happens to be kIII- Ing Germans or Japanese or Ital- ians. Too many of us may be 0b- seued with the Idea that because’ Garmlny was beaten In France in Your Eyes f If on no Invln ntnnu of u In — huifnoaal. all. eyes or dlnlneu — oonlnll I Q specialist. ~ At vol? larvloo with your of experlenea and n thorough refrntlnl Iarvloe. '" Cull In nntl dllcnn ilIffIouItIan G. F. Ilutehmn F. G. HUTCIIESON G. I. IIUTOHIION YOU! —A. A. M 1918 that Is the only place where Germany can be beiiteri now. Going The w ole no; (Halifax Chronicle) Now in the drafting stage, negotk- atiom under which 100,000,000 scl- clttfonal pound: of Canaclfan bacon will go to Britain din-In: w» com- ing year will give Canadian farm- ers some indication of the ro- blems Involved 1n going the w ole hog. Very considerable difficulty has been met 1n coping with the ex- isting agreement, culling for lhlp_ mbnt: of 600,000,000 %‘und.s, which eXPlms 1n October. a problem now f: whether Canadians can fn- ciease that. figure 100,000,000 while at. the same time meeting the new demands of bacon for Alaska, Newfoundland, and the shfpl of the British Navy calling at Canad- ian ports. Adhirlniz to the counsel of the D°ml °I1 Dfllartment. of Agricul- ture, many Canadian farmers di- verted much of their land from wheat to feed grains, a fact. which promoted the production of hogs. rhla aim was further sponsored by the voluntary domestic rationing egg home. But a few troublesome 0 tacles still remain to be clari- fied. Beef frequently demands a higher price than the 19.9 cents offered for bacon, and much of the additional feed supply n3] been turned Into beef production rgthgr m!!! 110K. The word “bacon" means both ham and bacon to the Briton. iuiii like Jack sprint, iii likes his bacon" lean, Producttm. of lnrizer hogs. lvhlcli Is LISUBlly more economical tlinii tho raising of smaller varieties, is ‘thereby out lawed, And though the production of hogs may not require the use of scarce farm implements, if, does de.. mund ivcll-trziliietl iiiid gfftcjen; XIIXGUIOIL? of handling, a 15mm- whlcli i5 becoming lflcfeaslngly rare with the continuous drainage ‘“';s..‘r“".- ‘ e a ona demands production during the comlfizr will be met. But not without cori- siilcriibla effort and sacrifice. Cen- zidian consumers must: deny them. Bfilgesb of the frequent use of ham Si‘... ‘Z33 ‘l’? ill?" °‘"' ‘“‘°‘°' '“ have them. g n“ Briton‘ may must. f1 d hhiil°“filli“idtfiinil° together, can meet this problem as We)’ have met others In the past,_ bY B01118 the whole hog, Canadian farmers (Sf monumentum roquirls. olrcumspice) Old Iondoni time-encrusted will; Am but the work of human 11mm Whatrmlan has fashioned for us a . Ls. What Lion has breathed Into m stands. Whu f; the splendor of the put; I: mattered into dust, wa raise A monument that; shall outlast. Eve-n the Abbey's span of days. 0n broken homes we set our feet And raise proud fiends that all may I96. Immortal Ln each little strut, The soul in its integrity. lino in the London Ttmu. Hmixiii‘ g1 LVlNlM c Nl ARE YOU TROUBLE!) WITH LIIMBAGO son: ollAlfK If no wa hlva one of the but remedies to offer, nl-inely BACK-RITE TABLETS Especial] efloctlva for Lum- hqo, Sulnflu, Nenrlfla, Joint Mumnlu and other forms of Ehaiimnthm which ordinary “ailment: hII to ranch. Prlao M) cent per box. GASSY STOMAOHS BELIEVED Evaral person who ll troub- led wI flu In the ltonuch and hove rhould {at I bottle‘ o! Dr. Evan's Stomach Ml:- mre and sea Iinw ulokly It will ralluva nll d treulng uympwml. Dr. Evan's Stomach Mixture token at maul Mum, not only provanh all Ind effect: from pa; but It promotes the fune- Ional nctfvlt. of the stomach. Isaiah rII es on and Improves the app: m. Price 85 aenh per bottle. m» 1mm ma, Price Q and 59o. 98c vnlue Demo Fnca Powder end Tollel lter 89o. Can-pans’; Improved Italian Ill . “iiithwo mics Mall Order: Given Prompt Athntlon 'lQIQR¢Q:£m"-33Q£§CLU " Aususr a1‘. m; AlTENTl0N Patiiolic Citizens (The need for salvage is urgent, eflpgg. lally RUBBER and SCRAP METAIS but all is required. ‘ It is the patriotic duty of every citiz- en to bring all available material to their nearest collection centre, either SCHOOL, LOCAL COMMITTEE or SERVICE STATION. It is essential that all possible matgr. ial be on its way to war production centres before road conditions inter- fere with its collection. Will all TEACHERS. SERVICE STA. TIONS, COMMITTEES etc., please notify R. S. MacBEATH, Dept. of Public Works and Highways, Char. lottgtown, when salvage is accumul- ate . The Department of Highways is plan- ning a systematic drive to collect all available material before snow fall. So get in the Scrap Now. Service Stations require ONLY receipt from Government truck driv- ers or Salvage Committee to legally release trade in tires. Signed J. P. MBINTYRE, Minister of Public Works. E” {laskgifl 1' L319, ./‘~ WW viii “I hll my lnmlly Ihal an long in Jack ll ovoruau, we'll out huh and Ilka ll." "W: ARI at war. h out: he: m win. f: would most everything to loco. S_o I don’: figure that because we'll noon pay a small amount u oompullory uvlngl, I our fold my hands and my ‘That's that!‘ No sir! Some people may need compulsory lavlngl to uvo something for thdr own good. But that‘: the minimum. I'm out to nave all I can to buy War Savings Stumps and Cartlflcltea to help win the war and have nomethlng nubltuifhl put by for the day! when there won't ba all thh vorlr and ovortlma." "fva elnhlomd my garbage can ‘Illtlar’ Ind helluva m0 Iio dawn‘! gal onyllilng Iliat‘: worth anything." Buy ini- m". sun-i»- M" MW“ bonlmpoltqfliuls alert-w» Wmwom,“ nnmnwraa, [mclfh wb‘“°'”'f'u n Inoru. (Zorfiflwm "wY “W” h» anti-minim dvlivcr! I» 4"'°"""‘ u, 310,, m 1m» bank-- ' ‘m! pout ofllcas. “mm-l w" pmnca Commlwao