Vtlrp ln luence our thoughts. lbbtume rather less of ylllghtly more of a civi inkling of the wonde mtg so _ u: EZSAILOVTTETOVIII lllltllllll IerlhslhlstlsuulslhlIl) hdleltilrlsuadiltfllastcllsllb vles-lrlsdlslliLl-lnrnstklll. lsuouryzlalesaCstlll. 0J0. Illtlud DlnctonLI-BIrlstLIJJ. lIsslessllltos-a: Irui Walls: all Hell. In A. Burnett. I-CNJKI- l0: insular-vies) ‘The Strongest Memory ls Wanker Then, Ilse Wellhead III.‘ nmav, reason! 10.7545 Unconditional Terms What everybody wanted to know was the Allies’ idea of what “Unconditional Surrender" implied, and the Big Three, in conference in the Crimea, have put on paper what they un- animously decree shall cover the term. Here it is for future record and reference: r. “Disarm and disband all German armed forces." ' 2. “Break up for all time the Ge eral staff.” 3. “Remove or destroy all German military squipment.” ’ 4. “Elfinate or control” all German in- dustry‘ usable for military production. 5. Impose “just and swift punishment" for all war criminals. 6. Exact “reparation in kind for German destruction. A commission will be established in Moscmv to decide what Germany should pay in goods and labor. ' ' 7. Wipe out the Nazi party and "all Nazi and militsrist influences." Messrs. Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin added a catch-all clause, deciding to “take in harmony such other measures in Germany as may be necessary to the future peace and safety of the world." While they said they wouldn't publish un- conditional surrender terms until Germany is “finally defeated,” they planned machinery to guard the enemy when he is crushed: r, Separate occupation zones, one for each of the Big Three nations and a fourth offered France. 2. A central control commission in Berlin to lay down joint policy. Members will be Britain, Russia, the United States and France, if as expected, she accepts. Germans were given hope “for a decent life" and a place "in the colnity of nations." "but only when Nazism and militarism have been extirpated." In the words of the Big Three, “Nazi Ger- many is doomed." I. rman gen- A B. c. White Elephant Premier Hart of British Columbia is re- ported to be seeking the transfer of his gov- ernment's lame-duck railway, the Pacific Great Eastern, to the Federal government or to the two transcontinental railways in combination. Such a plan, comments the Winnipeg Fret- Press, (Liberal), raises at once melancholy mem- ories of the past and'd0ubts about the future. S0 long as we can remember, back to the days of the last war, British Columbia governments have been trying to unload the P. G. E. on the natiorfs taxpayers. Numerous elections have been fought on the promise that somehow this miracle of provincial deliverance could be performed. But, of course, nothing of the sort has happened. Today the objection to such a scheme is the same as it always \vas—no province, embarking on a socialistic railway or other‘ plan has a right, when it goes wrong, to make the general taxpayers of the country pay for it. British Columbia has no more right to ask the Domin- ion to pay the feed bill of its white elephant than Saskatchewan has to ask the Dominion to pay part of the cost of its experiments in socialism. “British Columbia." argues our Winnipeg contemporary, “is the last province to appeal for Federal help since it was one of the chief forces that,\vrecked the last inter-provincial confer- ence which was called to arrange a new firi- ancial settlement between the Dominion and the provinces. British Columbia was irilling to nlake no concessions to tl1e Dominion. was not even willing to discuss such concessions. \Ve can hardly believe that it now expects the Do- minion to make special concessions to it. eon- cessions not extended to other provinces." Education Herc is what British Incdonald told versity he found High C missioner the Senate of Queen's Uni- most valuable to him in a college education: "\Vhcn I arrived at Oxford University life presented to me, as I daresay life here does to your undergraduates, a ring- ing challenge. I met the crowd of able and sometimes brilliant young contemporaries, gath- ered from many different schools and experi- ences ini life, who are always to be found at any given time in a good University. I discov- ered that between them they already knew many important things of which I was still lament- sbly ignorant, and that they seemed to have mature opinions on them, which incidentally they expressed engagingly. Often in the eve- nlngs and far into the small hours of the morn- ings we sat and talked about these matters- architecture, painting, the other arts, history, politics, morals, religion and the rest of the great subjects which are solemnly, and of course authoritatively. discussed in under- graduate gatherings. Kindly and wise senior members of the University used to speak some- es from the depth of their experiences, and v Many new interests were kindled in me and in my friends. One gradually ' a schoolboy savage and lized being. One got an _ rful creative possibilities djmltliman talents. I for one owe such little knowledge and understanding as I have of man and man the artist-the maker of BeaulY-lifl?" ly to the stimulus cf my University. That -is what Universities all round the world can do. They can civilize young people. They can give them glimpses of the most glorious things in life, the fine things of the mind, the things that exalt the spirit, the things which occasionally raise men from being beasts and make them like gods. And they can make them so cherish these things that generation after generation turns its energies not to destruction and war but to the creation of sn ever finer civilization.” -EDITORIAL “notes- This coming summer we lose our Governor- General, Earl of .Athl_0ne and his Countess, Princess Alice. His Excellency announced at Ottawa that it would be the last occasion he would present a curling trophy to the winner of Renfrew Club. It had, been anticipated the Gcverncr-Generafs term would be extended, so that this is another indication that the end of the war in Europe will conclude before another winter. e y a c Under the new coal restrictions it is a blessing milder weather is in the offing. A householder using hard coal or coke in his furn- ace is now liable to a fine up to $5,000 or five ' years’ imprisonment or both, should he order a new delivery when he has already a month’s supply in his cellar. For soft coal, it doesn't matter. Anthracite and coke have to be im- ported, while soft foal is: llome product. 1 George Macaulay Trevelyan, O.M., C.B.E., F.B.A., D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D., British historian, born this date I876; Regius professor of Mod- ern history Cambridge University from 1927 to I943; son of the late Sir George O. Trevelyan, Bart, formerly British Ambassador at Wash- ington; publications include: England Under The Stuarts, Garibaldi’: Defence of the R0- man Republic, The Life of John Bright, Bril- isli History in the Ninelvniitli Century, History of England, England Under Queen Aime, Grey of Fallodon, The English Revolution i688 r689. 1 ‘iii Even on the Pacific Coast they are having unusual weather storms. making us all the more appreciative of the conditions at home. B. C. Government engineers have been ordered to sur- vev the damage caused by raging flood waters which swept over several thousand acres of low- lying farmland in Surrey municipality, 2o miles soufi east of Vancouver, and filled hundreds of basements in several Vancouver districts. Some highways within a 3o-mile radius of Vancouver have been cleared of the three to six inches of water which had made them impassible for depth of four feet by the raging torrents. Road gangs have been bus tiltilbers, highivays rocks and gravel from several of the fibril Mr. G. W. Hosie, president of the Meyers’ Studios, died suddenly and unexpectedly in Saint john General Hospital 0n Monday ivhile lottetown. He was taken ill on Sunday and ed to recover. Only 36 years of age, Mr. Hosie was born in Brandon, Man., and attended uni- versity in -Winnipeg. He had been associated with Meyers’ Studios since their inception and had played a major role in their development from coast to coast. Besides Mrs. Hosie, who accompanied him on his visit to Saint john, he is survived by his father, two brothers, and a sister..The body was taken to Brandon for the funeral. w n- s 4- At the opening of Ontario Legislature's second session next Thursday, Mr. Mitchell F. Hepburn will lead the Liberal opposition for the first time; he has already given notice of the termination of the unofficial truce with the Government to which the party adhered last session. Whether the Liberals will join forces with the C. C. F. to bring about the defeat of the government on a major issue is a prime topic of speculation in political circles. Al- though the truce has been terminated, Mr. H burn has said in speeches since his election last Dec. 9 as House leader that he is opposed to a provincial general election iii wartime. He has long been a critic of the C. C. F. and its policies and has voiced his opposition to that party in speeches both before and after h-is election as House leader. w w 4- a- pening of the Quebec Legislature from the Throne let it be clearly that the Prime Min- At the o the Speech understood says “P.I.B.” ister was planning to ma the King Government. hours later, indeed, Mr. Duplessis was having the vote taken 0n the first reading of a bill for family allowances. The step caused some- thing of a stir,,with everybody endeavoring to forecast the consequences of a constitutional crisis setting at loggerheads the Dominion and Provincial authorities. As things were, such a bill was to be expected. A few days earlier, on Friday, February 2nd, Premier Duplessis had handed to the press a letter addressed by his Government to the Prime Minister of Canada, in which the Union National Chieftain aired the view that the Family Allowance Act is anti-constitutional. In this same letter—whch made use of the statements of Sir Laurier and of Sir Lomer Gouin on the in- violability of Provincial rights-a single para- graph was sufficicnt, however, to dispose of the Family Allowances Act as passed by Ottawa: “We must conclude from the opinion of the jurists we have consulted and from the study Scarcely forty-eight we have made, that this Act 8 George VI, Chap- ter 4o is trying to give to the Fedegal Authority prerogatives and essential rights which belong to the Provinces by virtue of the Constitution. In effect, the Provincial Legislatures possess exclusive rights in the domain of family life, of education and of civil lsw, and such rights, it is useless to add, are to be considered as g/"rhjlosopher — the seeker after Truth - basic." .~. (lays. Many roads have been gouged out to a La k y clearing debris, including a f, on abusiness visit which was to include Char- u, underwent an operation from which he fail- c _ Ct-lAIgul-usrluwlv i ' llstss Iiy’ Ills Way g to j » "An EconomicpSyurv¢ understatement. ‘The blame o‘ p. E. klaind" overlain-Kitchener Record. -—,- __.__ By. Dr. l. l. nouns: Irofessor of Atrlnltin ‘egg- i omlcs, Mu can". Bpeelauastlou ln Ass-Icahn. Farmers are not. lnteuoted dear food, the bu lt themselves. yilhlh ‘l: much “ihmlsmftlifiha the e w ea "'uybbomrs“e§gec? l?" today grown ohtdly In w why won-yr m: tits other m1 fiumfidpfi‘ §'°"“‘“'- 1° " for instance, there was a little news ma“ “mm utefiiy about one of them who act- m’ a ut out a flre ln a New York Schoo . Hts b t bl ' what the elderamthis pm em m“ rest. of the klds hi. but. what the m; they catch Ib-lnee has doe" 31's?!" “tlmlslfi, luv-atolls" In ho " ed that when wlll keep the ' Alter thiee ears, no eoun ry to tbs job of the Germans. And ly she can be counted on to Munee at the first sign of Ger- Igaxtih assressgm. after experiences o v , _ Edm - h». Mill. ° m" °° la “or II I Ineoisuaii __-_- are got to a» hlm l— m oncton to llv ada as was consumed fo food. About hall of this ls fed ln other provinces than where it wg grown because that ls where the WIS. la considerable ther- est The space between generations has dwindled since the war. with slrls marrying younger than has n usual ln recent years. The pilgrsxer aglslotglutlon bier/wan generrii- t s. ran mo er a an playing an actlgve part ln lalgnlly §£f§§f'§,‘o,,§'1f§,, h’ other "u" ‘lle, ls returning. Fnlnllles are be- L; in: forced by Will‘ circumstances to fit "P house together, and the big 01d lflmll." hflmes again house sons Md dflllshiters and their families. —Vogue. untofl dilly products to a greater or lesser degree. British Columbia with over 5 cow depends lurgel There appear: In y for butter. In beéef th - r ln séglgtwiilntn twar ease . n t tl . pflllllilflS can 11b rxigiiisghiliiuriiiii Lcglgd i£g?r1’r°v’nda’ a ro n. stock. when gasoline be- “o,” 1,,“ the "me as gflxfgfwfiggeagwilxtllfgllajlgfld "m" beef ls advertised ln the stores of London. England, and for pyg- elsely the same reason. There ls also a great amount of inter-provincial trade in potatoes. This Specialty of the Island war- rants treatment by itself. Perhaps the best specialization ls ln apples. The old la Dassed out pretty be no solution conditions are present. But there ls little hope o! ihflb relief being obtained untll the wars end ls nearer than it ls now. sheet rflllwfly companies are do- "18 their bes and no one can do ltzgte than thou-Hamilton Specta- ._._. remained neutral and ports lt involved the destruction cl precious ships and precious llves. yet Britain raised g M hand attains: the southern Irish and even diverted to them the lm- plcrts that were needed to maln- u, ln their existence. In het- own witty‘ Britain has fought this war w When Ell-e dented us her fldvantases ln return. And 15 he same with every nation ln the Brltlsh Commonwealth-MaeLeans Rallmads‘ 1w trn b no means coiillnued to" gin-hing?’ 371a not; even tn the western mountains, new“ wh it seems snow-plows do hercle tasks every winter. Cars standing ln blg freight yards, walt- lns to unl ded. have been snowed in recently by thousands, c says the Cleveland Plain Dealer. c lt lmpiiissilliiienlicwreiiovgfntetizrhy QTQEE 1y. and alter they had stood through w davs of alternate thawing pgid freezing it seemed lmposlble wlth- 8 year average potato yield re was 106 cwt. The lpwegt yle was a0 cwt. and the ‘-‘ ” 132 cwt. was a vsrlatlon of 65 per cent. The averag and the hluh was a variation of The average return per was . e lowest was $33, and the llikhest $165. This was a varl- atlon of 334 per cent. . . . The returns per acre appear to ave a striking effect on the acre. Rte planted the following year. During the 7 years from 19.86 to 1942 lneluslve there were 4 years when the acreage was increased and 8 years when the acreage de- . return per acre of the years prevloim to when decreases took place averaged 86!. r and the return per acre preceding the years when the lncreaae occur- sed 8116. Records of the red avem ma ' past wlll aaslat ln srrlvlng at the wlll deerease,___l_n__r_irease_ purchase out. 30 est $1.52. This 290 per cent. In 1939 about 150 refugee lamc llles from Sudetenland, Eeeking a haven ln a lond that was free from e domination of Nazi Germany. ¢i>~ be ke a flank attack on l; Wilfrid ,,, ay 3mm“, my zi-‘calte... a... avepadfo thtt , _ - neat. well-blilllte iwriiggs aiiiiy Th“ “"5"” l” gngetvrlred h ls easy. Pota- 3 toes are an inelastic ‘ _ 111st ls consumption for human food is naturally how are required? This varies little whatever the price. Fruit {rowers are looking am working forward to the day when a ples wlll be even more efficient. an now at their traditional of keeping the doctor away. ancient fruit ls begl bred not only talste, size and yle m" 601mm. says the Kl Record. Although a are tn plentiful hat account low ee. If very low ln some may be led to llve This ls a great waste of effc several times the quantity of ter feed In the shape of turn and mange can be grown with less labour. I aroma, rt 55 r vlt-a- whener typical eating I O The record of potato indicates the need this c KWWlIIB °"""“°' for otsblllzlng I ha 1t 14 comparatively deficient lh vlta. mlns C and Bl. Pa lcular aspira- not. wlthpuet ippliliiiw h ' oun a on. ls t at the "Win15"! B1 a Dle lugs wlll m’ as a ge juice. It'll M for the orange ll D ___h_e grade‘ mclety ln gelgral aidilxtg u‘ n o,‘ h ~ ' e expense prov e re- says that the iiudlzes oolmthehnlgirigg (“med supply‘ Ti“ “h” rum“ l‘ Bench, nwhose fumbotwmed was. the wlde variation prlce and acme; robes and proton‘, “ma,” returns per nere where no regu- nnces from tile Bench make them “m” is “m” symbolic of the majesty of the law, feel that tbel". dignity has been ae- salled—by being asked to hear un- defeufled divorce cases at the as- alm- Mai . e report ls right ln saying that the judxea‘ prlde has been hurt. but the report ls wrong ln saying their lull-bottomed wigs are symbolic of the majesty of the w. The S‘ _ Beacon-Herald Obleets. do have lull- bottomed Wtes. but they do not wear them ln the Courts. They wear the same sort cf wigs as any other lawyer; a white wt having several short Lalls ha hi over beck of the head, an tie-wig because the talla are tled to ether with s blnek rlbbcn. The on time the judges wear their lull-bottomed wlxs ls 0n ucTOmOnlll occasions such as when t y at. tend state functions, singly or In I body. and that ls very seldom. A new miles to A news An example of regulation that may be cited la that of Brltaln ln pro-war days. ‘llhere prlce and nerenlze were controlled. The grad- lng was subject to rlddle regula- tlon aecordlniz to the size of the crop. It supplies were olentv grad- lnu was severe. If the crop was 10:23: grading regulations were re- For a crop ltke potatoes, grown lsrzelv for the domestlc market and with almost constant demand as far ea human food ls concerned, production on order, or bv con- t ct. ld bo ' l a?‘ demggbhsppesr th less ble null ml Vegetable Crops Other laltles that might be expanded are frults, vegetables and canning crops. Boll and climate favour such crops. In some llnes of small fruits such as mm»:- rles the harvest comes late at a time of year when there l! no ennapetltlon ln a fresh state. In this case transportation may not lfie aln lmtpeflble bstrrler as ska:- erres ve been masons-ted y air lroim Itoulslags to Detmlitflelar- "time read!" thaiicth: pnieeihhsiiiia Wolnl “mmsml”! sufficient to pay the extra cost of immediately.‘ transport - ‘Y "k 11°" IBlueber-rles and cranberries are . ‘bk l” d""now lmoorta t or on the Isl-- velop a three-cylinder ear espsbl "m mmlngmn g “m, cm,“ la , to bring 25 to the United tates American motorists m tho British have been reed graln. There l flgg l" lnaorlptlons. Where 1-118 ubll support. p c for war veterans and for, - tres. hospitals, t Zlii , Revises.» Oran a?" he’ [legion On War Memorials (From the Legionary) It "151" Oglhlvn to say so, but we lave t at. war memorials are lfiliim”. 53th» ‘all’ "F"? l1 o n er vs ue a mtafbke. g Simple, dl nlfled serve a slgn llcsnt community. First and lore- tney are a visible tr ‘ , memory of the gallant men who fought. "not, for glor nor wealth. nor for honor, bu freedom which no cod man wlll surrender but with ls ills" they are a dally re- 998KB‘? avoid another n w mnlkitrtheg‘ form an approp a so or s an- nual Rem nan-u Day servlee and other commemorative cere- monles held on major battle an- niversaries. None of these lm- portant purposes. we submit, can be served b.v memorial hospitals. schools or playgrounds, however e'm:sy ‘othe be. l This does not mean that we are favor of 1y iMr. Churchill this feasible, or m memorial exists. we urge the erection of a eenotap I l slmllar to Blr Edward Lutyena simple, aesthetic masterpiece that stan ln London's Whitehall. This "empty sepulchre", to our, way of thinking. inspires remem- brance and reverence to s hlsher. degree than any other form of war memorial because it. really, possesses that quality of artistic beauty and spiritual validity which ts so essential to the appropriate- ness ol any monument to the memory of‘ 01:1‘ gallen. Montreal and ‘Toronto wisely chose the cenotaph as the elvlc memorlal to their Great War dead; so dld Winnipeg and Van- couver, and several other Cana- dlancliles. we hone that other mly run counter to current - montunenta ' Y. t 10f that. l . Sphee n» visitors fl quite ul- oood tea” ‘ . do Pelfoe Tea t in extra goodly. Whitehall Notebook i nysouu panama: v (Canadian hem Stuff Wllffl) There's not much denier l!!! would.“ guy wawkes wlll get Into the House o! Parliament lulle- gtlme. There Ire "w" lulu" vtherehpe, mug: 1810b than 11mm unWYIEIEIrePTlIIIB Mlnlster Churchill 500k!) " ‘e recently venom" hill ' ir DWW-‘S’ I8 min)’ ll. reen main entrance ‘min press gallery. One ls stopped st uvery doorway.‘ . . I Facilities for members of Parlia- ment to listen to debates are poor (Jumplifttd with those In Ottawa. [The Commons Chamber I bill-I- .-ed and M.P.'s now use Red lChsmher of» the House of Innis; tllhere are not enoulh ssata to I0- mround, and the members have no- sdlvldual desks like those PTOVM- d tn Canada. ‘ , - But even ln the destroyed lJhamber there were only 31B seat-s ‘e-and there are 815 members. Af- iter the next election followlng parliamentary redistribution, time wlll b9 010 Younger i members . dlslnee with House be maintained ln the new chamber, ‘whlle Providing more mace for visitors and the ress. They "It t. seat tor every l’. Older members. amon them lik that to ln- N’! o ‘OIEBSQ the a would spoil the ‘bate hhleh has been a lstlc of the Brltlah Parliamentary system through ghe. cen urlea. But there la no arsument that the house of lords ls 3 too small to accommodate e Com- qgoners. when Mr. Churchill speaks ’ embea plmsii I the n“ on rm rs on oor or lohalrs arranged outside the bar of the House. cabinet ministers who arrive late flnd crowded out of sh ‘benches and have to back themselves e ‘Treasury all: at the adequate. ‘there ls a slnsle row ~cf chairs tn the narrBw gaelllerles idown each side of the chant‘ _ and ts few more at the end. A " stringently restricted. wnd- for cities wlll also adopt the cenota h. particularly the Dominion Capt al. The heroic uniformed figures which form part of the Nat. onnl ‘ War Memorla depict lighting men . o! the first Great War so faith- fully as to make the March broth- ers‘ tlne monument qulte unsult- _ able as B. memorial to our glorl- ous dead of the present conflict. We propose that. tn due time. a National Cenotaph be erected in front ct the Peace Tower of the Parliament-buildings — ln "Ache? centre or the spacious lawn which 0n Remembrance Day would ac- commodate Ottawa crowds much more conveniently than the congested trallle area around the National War ‘Memorial. As for the many other types of memorial which have been sug- is zlrnporfint neaatesf the . dlulomstle corps andmemberr Oftflil: lords are I¢ x . d‘ gel the heroigdln an: ithe m lgtngte ea r_ a pleasant room. The dark-red Ileather euahlons harmonize with the dark brown woodwork which ‘extends from floor" level to seven or elsht feet above the galleries. Jlgures of ancient klnu ol - ‘nd elrcle the chamber-mind hl . JIKCHHLWIIIGOWS- so up almost. to tlhe ceiling. Old bras-s gllstens tn ualllngs everywhere. gested ln the newspapers stnce this war n, we consider-provided s. town a eady has a elvlc war monu- - mentr-that Memorial Halls for the use of our ex-servlce men and women are especially worthy of Bo are scholar- ships ehlldren of men who have died on servlce. But we cannot say that we are much ln favor of community schools. play- grounds. etc. being bullt as will’ memorials. Experience alter the last war clearly showed that the memorial aspect of such undertak- lngs was lost sight of ln a very sthopt thidoreover. we maln- a piiiii by our buys on the bntllflfleld should not be used as an excuse for obtaining elvlc tacllltles and amenities wh...i, for the most part, should ln any case be available in all clviltzed. forward-thinking com- munltles. American architect. ln the last issue of Arehl- tectural Forum, nearly all "ll-SB- lul" memorials are a hypocritical sort of economy, like glviln ~11 chlld a pair o! rubbers or mo r a HQ holds that no dedleatlcrnean splrltuallae such "memorials or make them anything more than useful buildings. ttuie farming?‘ Many runners now. l th me “nwrimghig n s summer or otzher job part time rt-tlme at. many other jobs. This ma t ltnatl l l dust! that should nreuver hgiireo herein coiiniisralliied. One the late twenties the county of Jacques Cartier lncludllnz the and was edited wlth the manu- facture m’ lmost ml! or ten llon uatrylspossll °‘ m" "m t“ 5° ""1" l" ll" '1‘ swears both leaslble and vii-ont- I expand t o nspsbed to! ne with lon at 60 mlles r hour. Is lt er.- jfiopsnsar Welhpesomethlngl like n. §§,',§;,n,“',"d 1°" “m,” l}, l! inventors have eomrlveel a v “ab, n “wf-v‘ d “m,” wa olutlllzlng the eithsunrgsses- u ° ’"° M’ m lilt "rt: wasted on all aiondard- “umber WW“ hm’ “m” ma" modilmachlnes-throusha turbine. “Mm” b" “mum!” "mm" ‘This may mean a great deal with ...... .;:le oll supplies srsduall les- senlng. Ieosuse the nlted tea ls the bllelt ear market. the mar- yels are tn be msnqfsetur-tirIat ‘an and we c..‘er that as a nalne ture and enmlov more workers ln the canning industry. Put-Tine some of these very easily be dev 1N1? manufacturers, free of e berry growing might to “we: llshl with roreelry 0|‘ n by an: means the llmlt to e -- Christian Marvel. mic other as oblrevalled durtnl hlrtlas.’ . ~ (To Be Continued:- nlns-s uuaav gnomes Ill-Ill" Nlllifllllll Use .-i the t 0Ch~~ supreme sacrifice l Mr. Charles Mailnnls. thei sshlng machine for Christmas. , put. tn psi-t of their time in lumber- - n5 ln larrnlns mlsht include part Mm; ' mm 3351!! into being the deeen- ' ‘instance may be cltedJM one tlrne - n Island of Montreal and Jesus Isl- - FEBRUARY "The robin on my lawn '. e was the first to tall h ow, tn the frozen dawn, acle lell, W g the meadows white With hour, the lron road _ .Aglesrn with splintered light, And lee where water flowed: r"- "r lee: s“: n m s cos °°° holllbd ma: O!‘ l .§-,:::a:ae.._-itl=. l, l amlbs on e A blaekblrd whlstled sweet; glld beeches moved tllelr arms f to n. mellow haze insist, newly-born: Bo ltair Ibbrusry came. Blddlniz my llus to slnR whlslper their stirprlse. 'Wlth al the loy of aprlnx rid momlng ln her eyes. l .' " To tlnss s: Ins ‘ to wear igggire ‘ggtlc llls time to ‘ rid-worm _ the . , glued! on the “LT.'|..'¢"“"' autos no w“ ’ ' TONIC roman" It wlll thoroughly sbolhl; u». seiiiifiiuiii-i“: mo: an ran" u, sun's an.“ on. ‘ h _ N lhW-T-aafl “- > I'll!’ 2 M08. l ids-oun ha... Prsfssslsnal can; MCLQGdI a BQnfky. ’ w. a. names. u. g a. a. sannu. n q, ll. It. [loans v 0s, - Clarficeh Accountants ll Grslhn Street. P‘ i cam sss- s» m’ - lsnlelph w mum. ca. g M. ALBAN FARMER A" . ',' fiONlllohlfolaflAN N Ill-INTER. SOIJCITOI. ITO} =, anax w. MATIHESON ;I .2.'.:e=.."..<.=.-* SOIJOITOE l!“ ILF. llllllllbllll a Chartered Accountants lantern ‘Inst Bulldlll Charlottetown - -! J.l. MeGIIIGAII, M. IAlI-HTII. SOIJOITOI NOTAIY. ETC. ' CUBIII BUILDING CIIAILOTIITOWN i Charles R. McQusld i ’ ' I l. lq-Irélatzré igacltor. Iflg, Qfllalssxaharlollelell PALMER 9 L]. nasasu a.» l- . < Harrell and 00mm l m“... n oiuntfeiifvsra rams.‘ - ‘ -nancls Bntf Youns. n. .|. ultras orrouaralsr g Fitting hnd Biaaplylng Glleses‘ Monique. P. I. I. v Office Ieurs: l0 toli-A. M.‘ s to s r, u. r l 2 I>Iv¢FTE9lI§ ~ i n- . I those-or l0 , I "h.‘l.‘.°"t5€ Ell Jitllilfiiogi“ IQ] III EYES examiner, isusstiihrrtn \\ J. s. m v1.0a", ' OFTOMETRIST t ‘ Quest Ill Tai-"tt-yaa- {Frsilsiifls ll. l-lffij , gsiggssnlsyflth. |h_'flfljggl smn Cbsslettouwihlhl i- ' ulna. as lllA'|‘Hll§5"< none: so we" " uranium“ as. l‘- . i / a. ‘Ha-flag golfliilml I‘