THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN IIOTES BY TllE WAY GE FOUR ‘ NOVEMBER 18, 1939 —‘_w A7,“! YOU TROUBLE!) WITH LUMBAGO i rue y iiiiniorrrrovni auannuul nurses were notified to meet the City of Flintl bringing other rescued persons to Halifax. Thus does the Red Cross, a vast organization War Aims 0f Cflllfida ‘PUBLIC FORUM (Sydney Post-Record) of closely-knit branches, function. As aiito- The Health League . Illl I'll-I II W" l" "1' new“; mg w“ h“ pr-qper] be. . . . To the natives [lung ry ta M; - - llleullon a: umspeseuuu or ' Y _ numb,‘ n“, ,_ m“. h u!" lfllilifllgxusltl diayd fCtJllOWE nigllgtl, rrt ti. Yuma". Album “a a} _ I . queatlals u lay-stun: ‘gltiaglgfl; ‘s: 0B President. Limb-Col. W. Chester l. Isl-Ive 0W! I 0t‘ I1 Page y. ie i - and china ls Ta Chung-Hun Mlri- “mm, “n, m“, m, “m,” we; _ Kuo. And just as the natives have :1 sarvasresutn. ‘h "m." 1; mfiyflm moor-ms whowirim Vlee President, J. l Burnett. I. l. l, Secretary, Lieut -CoL l). A. IaeK-inaen, l). l. 0-, Editor and MI ‘ Director J. B. BIrIIet-L I‘. l- I i Associate Editor, Frank Waller comes peremptorily an auxiliary to the Army Medical Service in war, and “must be so form- ed as not to exclude any appropriate branch of VITAMIINS IN INDUSTRY learned to spell the name of their homeland. along comes a stranger-i M11011 11118 5N“ hell-Pd 111 1910i and changes it to the Reich or PR9" 39W WBTS- 01' 1110 1115001101’!!! been prolific in ill-judged criticism tn the past. who are apparently in- capable of understanding in the lira; ‘liiizzziisii; i-i IS P. E. l. A PROVINCE? - -.__..»_. q medical work in connection with the fighting something like that. f Toronto that v- lvwk 01 j/ltamln A calmer! ...___. present. but who will not be con- BACK ' RITE Mr" it ii»- ii- ii ii- ii Si» invariants s“i.:.'..£’$l Bu?“ Mi b‘ "l" Pm» sit stirs: TABLETS sum per year [In advance) delivered b Git: $4.00 per year (in advance) mailed to P. l. Island [$.00 per year (in advance) mlfllil l0 Members urdit Bureau oi Circulation: “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than , the W995i: ma." I ’ATURDAYL NOVEMBER _1fl. ,19E9- _ s Government Should Co-Operale Commcndiug Dr. I\lanion’s attitude in seeking to correct paritisati abuses in ivar-tinie, the Mon- treal tiiizciit- rcmiiuls l’riiuc Minister Ring that he zicccpictl the tto-tipcratioil of his political op- poucnis during the brief war session of parlia- merit "but docs not appear to have sought it since, or ivnnied it. From the commencement he set his fzicc against the formation of a union govermucui ziltlitiugh he was asking for united support and, in the illfllfi, was getting it. _l"lc will continue to gct it unless he or his associates TCll(l\'l' >llt'li coiiiuiii:iiict- lil.,)t)$5ll)l€. The remedy for flic thing.- which l)r. Mzinitm C0lllplillllS 0f is not au iuvr-tigaiioii (as .\lr. King suggested), which will decide nothing. but thc organization of a govcrmuttut ihzit will be broadly representa- tive, 1f0ll-])Il1'[_\', and therefore non-partisan. “Dr. Klauitiifs complaints bear upon only part of wh: is wrong at Llltawa and what is unlikely 1o be rigiiittil iuiilcr party ailmiiiisiriititiii," thc (Lucile coiiiiiiucs. “Pzilrtuizige and waste go hand iu lruuil and the fact that the government is doing ‘iiiilt- 1o conserve its financial resources in othvr dirccliiius li-ntls color to the statement that puiriiriziig» is ilClllg exercised. The Prime hliui-ziir llil> .'i.<kcd for a iiziiitmal co-opcrativc eiitiri but. his conception of co-opcration is one- sidcd. ludusiryt, the banks and the public have responded, the former in the maintenance of fair priccs and avoidance of any tendency to- ward yirofiiccriug. while the hanks are supplying the Govi-rumcuf with money as required and men and womcn in all ranks of life have offered their services in the arniv or in the many agencies which support the army. The people are co- operating with the Government, but to what exicui is the lioveriiiiiciit ivy-operating with the people. lc! alone giving thcm leadership? \Vhat, for example. has the Government done toward making its financial dollar go as far as one hun- drcd cz-iiis can be made to go P" German Chances Waning According to a dispatch from Berlin to Busi- ness \\'cck, “a good many snber observers" in the (icrman metropolis arc of the opinion that "Germany must win the ivar in six months, or shc is lost." Blorale, it is reported, is low, war on a large scale is dreaded, and Stalin's domina- lion has meant the sacrifice of much of Hitler's popularity. Economic considerations are even more impressive. There is not space i0 g0 into that phase in detail, but other factors may be briefly rcferrcd to. For instance, the growing ability of the .\llics to make themselves supreme in the air, and the resentment caused by the (lcspotic rcmoval of Germans from Baltic and other territory where they had established them- selves in comfort. For these and other reasons it is not hard to credit the statement that Ger- many's future is more uncertain now than it has been at any fimc in the last three years of "bloodless ziggrcssiou." This gives point to Mr. Churchill's recent statcmcilf that the Allics have “gained the first campaign of the war.” lt was generally ad- rniiictl that (ici-iilziiiy would have the initial ad- vantage in a liurtipczin war, because of the long and elaborate preparations madc by the Reich in anticipation of ilic "day" on which another at- tcmpf would lic made to scizc world power. But that this zidviiuiilgc \\'Ol1l(l(ll111li1lSl1 with the pas- ~_‘11§I11 {ll llll‘ ‘lays and thc wccks and the mouths 15 tmivci'>.'illy agrccd. Nazi Propaganda llic Tillllllilll czilzlcs of the New York Herald Tri/iimi" give au amusing instance of Nazi propa- ganda. l1 \\'-'l\‘ Zi.\.~(‘l'l(‘(l ovcr the (icrman wire- less <i;uiiiii.~, say- iht- dcspzlich, that “ll..\l i Kes- ircl" hail lwcu ~lllll\'. .\illniralty officials cor- rvcii-il ilic ~lJl!\'lIl('lll. No ship had bccu sunk. .\lill'l'ii\l'l' "liin-ircl" is not a ship, but a naval air training camp iii llimiii-liirc, null lizitl uni lil'1'l1 .'iil.'i<'l\i'il. And ilic .\illllll'iilly, in its kindness, offers luggcstious lo ihc Nazi propagaiitlists for addi- tions to ibc lii-rmzui list of iuylliiczil "siukiugs". 'liht‘rt~ is ll..\l..\'. liiiprt-gii;ililc. they say, which is Z1. boys‘ training camp ncar l)c\'ciipt>rt; thc Boscziivt-ii, .1 short‘. base at Portland; thc liuz- zziril, a naval air station at lwiupiic; ihc Dae- (lllllis, R. .\'.. air stalioil at l.l‘(‘il1l-S()l(‘lll; and tht- .\li'l'llli. air station :11 l)(ilill)l'l$ll(‘. Th0 .\llillli‘iill_\' wa< highly ciilcrlziiiicd by ilic Kcsirtil sior_v_ no doubt had lll mind .\lr. Church- ills irouical l ffcr to take flll ihc complcic Gcr- maii navy with iht: llriiisli ivarsliips falsely rci poricd suult". The uuforiiiiiiiic thing, liowcvcr. is that Gcriiizin listt-uiirs to lllC piw-postcrtuis Nazi claims. dcuictl .'icct-ss to the facts, have no mcanr of knriiviug that iht-sc. asscrlious are false. Thus their hopes of victory arc hutrvcrl up by triumphs ivhich exist only in lhc fantastic Nazi imagina- fion. Otlllhllslflil armed forccs, yet maintaining :1 strict neutrality which must be observed by combatants. \Vholly voluntary, the funds from which pur- chases are made are also voluntary. During the last year, millions were collected. and all ad- ministered untlcr a carefully audited system which provided hospitals at home and abroad, personnel for their operation, equipment and materials for their use, special services at home and abroad for Canada's soldiers and their dc- pendents. and accepts the same task, while it still carries ‘behalf of the ailing and under-privileged. EDITORIAL NOTES = State funeral of the Duke of Wellington this date, 1852. “Educate men without religion and you make them but clcvcr dcvils." 1C 1h 1K 1K 'l‘raus-Canada air fields and airtlromcs are to be used for training pilots throughout the wiu- fer. Can't somebody get busy and see that Char- lottetown is included in this! #18141 Thc Censor made no bones in [iublishiug ilit- fact that no fewer than 1,000 Canadian fliers arc with the Royal Air Force in France and mak- ing names for themselves. i It Cheese imports in September amounted to 6i).- 483 pounds, of which Dcntuark supplies 17,002 pounds, France 11,111, Switzerland 9,120, the United States 8,051, Argentina 6,974, Italy 5,- 144, the United Kingdom 4,700 and the Nether- lands 3.749. The import in September last ycar totalled 56,681 pounds. it- ioi i 1i Sir Robert Brooke-Popham, British Air Mar- shall, says he has come to Canada as part of the British air mission “to help win the war. That's what we're all tryillg to do, isn't it? And we shall win. ll is my opiuiriii," he dcclarctl, “that the Empire training schcmc ivhich will be centred in this country is one of the most im- portant steps taken to ensure ultimate victory, for it will provide a constant flow 0f new men and planes to the fighting lines. .\ud the air force will give the drive." iii i- ioi i: In point of age of its members the Godbout Government is the youngest French-Catiadn has ever had; it is probably the youngest in the Do- minion and most likcly in the llriiish liuiiiirc. Eleven of the new ministers are under 50 years of age, two of the three others are 51 and 52 respectively. Dean of the Executive Council is Hon. T. Damien Bouchartl, Si. llyaciiiihe, Min- ister of Roads and Public \\'orks. lile is 58, though he feels and acts ycars younger. iii iii >- Lance Bombardier john A. Robertson, a former Glasgow street car conductor attached to an anti-aircraft battery, has bccn recommend- cd for courage in repelling an air attack by German bombing planes on the cast coast of Scotland in the course of which he shot down a plane when it was exactly ovcrhcad and might have dropped a bomb on his battcry. The formal dispatch congratulated Oll1(‘l' men attached to Robertson’s battery for thcir efforts in beating off the enemy. It The Federal Government is reducing for cus- tom appraisals the value of sicrliiig tixchaugc. Uiidcr a iicw oiwlcr-in-couucil lhc ralc of cx- change for the pound sterling for purposes of customs valuation will not bc 2414,36 2-3 as it was fixcd by the licunctt (ifiVfirlllllflll, but \Vlll bc thi- sc-lliug ratc as dcclarctl from time to time by Canada's Foreign lixtrhiuigi- (fouirol lloziril. This action, has ihc cffcct of cousidcriiblyr rc tluciug the duty protection zigaiiist lritish im- ports, it means a lowcritig of fhc raic ou the pound sterling for valuiuiiiii purposes from $4.86 2-3 to today's raic of $4.47. This liiilt-i" rate is subject to alicrafiou by flic lixchzuigc Control Board. viii iv iv it it lt now fl]i]K‘Jil‘$ (iramliiufs favoriic ionic of sulphur and iiiolasscs turns out lo llIiYt‘ had more .~L‘l(‘llllflL‘ basis llillll slit; probably sippcvlv-l. J-jxppi-jppini; just conclutlcd ill the .\lZi\.~llL'llll\(‘ll~ lustiiiiic of VFCCllHUlUQIY show that olil-fzi-liioiiwl iuolzisscs is just ziboui ilic lli'~l food known for treating lllllfllliillill anemia, lhc kind duc io im- propcr dict. Spinach as a stiiircc of iron wtis (lClllllllvTfil by the rcscarch cimdiiclctl liy llr. Rubi-rt 1\_ llarris, Dr. lolin \\'. M. Buukcr and L. Rlziltrtilm lloshcr. Whcrczis molasses has 6.1 part5 of usable irou pci- 100.000 parts by weight, spiilzivli 11:15 only 0.5. llct-f livcr has 5.6, oat- mcal 4.0, with apricots, egg and raisins following iu that ordcr. The scicnt is couipiiictl tisualih: irou. not total coiiicut, for only that iron which ihc body can usc to iiuuiiiiziciiirt~ hcuitiglobin is vnluablc. lloih rtlicmical and biological icsis wcrc used. 1F 1'1 11 1U Mr. M. A. hlacmicrsou, formcr Aliorucy- C-cucral of Szislcatchcivau and a contender at the 1938 convention for thc Nzuiriiial Couscrvalivi‘ lczitlcrsliip, in a scrvicc club ndtlrcss said “it is hard lo bc rcasouziblc with a clcrg_vi1i:ui who, in ilic issue of war, licsilalcs. tiipiivocaics mill l-‘lllis this almost anomalous position, it exists in inter- national law as the sole accredited organization empowered to function in co-opeijation with the ganda" when Mr. John F. Whear protests. "Eleven" military districts Iin Canada. and nine provinces, or is it only eight‘! i Sometimes the King Govern- ment discovers that there really andmvirkltfliéy dlstributlaiipitsgcuclgr m .cream a u . wwm °f nldlm“ Wm be Pmdmwrots. leaf lettuce and spinach: Oil from the Elciorado mine at Greritlpver and kjdrpy_mgny P911501‘ B?“ Lake dull"! the present YBBFJappai-eritiy do‘riot get an adequai. and the output may exceed th t supply. As a. result growth is mi- tsrded and weight becomes station- lt U estimated lhbl ‘LWILWD, from all other sources in t e are him provinces, that there is a would, Canada's "barren" hlnte - iary. track of this vitamin, too, may p1,,“ up“ pm,“ “wad ma“, land is staging some simpr es lmd 10 bad l-eem- that archivist-s claim waaonce, and But Vitamin A has been noted for its effects upon the eye. This vitamin, it has been found, regen- erates th-e “visual purple", a sub- i-hese days. - Edmonton Bulletin. still mould be listed as a province of Canada. when volunteers for the front. lLX-RBISCI’ Wllllfillfl of UOPIHIIIY on its far-flung nation-wide peace services on r has finished turning the cellars of his Netherlands home into a mod- ern air-raid shelter. Says a dis- lpatch from Doom: “Two hi,h _ iimperial chairs have been plaed And now the Red Cross again faccsiside by side in the inner recesses ‘of the shelter. In the event of a they will be occupied by Wilhelm and his wife. Members of the staJf and villagers will sit on benchesP-Nelw York Post. A German-Jewish refugee, now resident here, has heard indirectly ihow the Nazi authorities guard the German people from "contamina- tion" by British propaganda leaf- lets, Not only is it a serious crime to pick one up or be found in possession of it; the ‘Nazis remove temptation by having the leaflets cleared from the streets as soon after dawn as possible, by children not older than eight-lo, unable to read anything but simple texts -Montreal Gazette. The brain of man gives us the telephone to reach far places with our words of moment, and we tie up the party line wvlth peti/y gossip. It gives us the electric lirzht to free us of eye strain while delving into good books or engaging in good conversation. and we sit up half the night gazing fix- edly at cards with spots on them. It gives us the automobile with which to annihilate distance, and we annihilate ourselves with it. It gives us the airplane to free us of the exigencies of two-dimensional transport, and we use it ‘to bomb fine old cities. - Providence Jour- nal. Alfred E. Sloan, chairman of] General Motors, tclis his stoclh, holders there is no long-range pro fit and advantage to industry fro war business, even t0 a corice so favorably situated as theirs fo meeting the demand for such a important essential to war a. motor vehicles. Even as to immediate profits from war bus- riess. there are so many offset/s doubtful whether there will any gain at all. In the long vitw he can see nothing but loss. waste and destruction of prope y that war brings have a terribly 11,2- flationary effect. _ Philadelphia Bulletin. But there can be no peace negotiations founded on the pro- posal that Britain and France should simply acquire in leaving to Germany the fruits of that policy of aggression which is re- sponslble - and alone responsible _for bringing Europe to war. While our purpose remains \in- shakeable, however, our strategy must be sufficiently fluid to count- er a political as well as military at- tack. It may be presumed that Hitler has two objectives in mind. He has hoped to frighten us into making a peace which would leave him with the spoils of victory. That Wlll. not succeed, as he must by now realize. But, no doubt, fall- ing that, he still hopes by skilfully drafted proposals to deflect neutral and particularly American 00111011 “also pacifist opinion in Bril-ain 1t- self-from an appreciation of what is the real cause of this war and his own responsibility for it. — London Daily Herald. Reports from Spain show the steady progress being made with the establishment of this regime of peace and order. Very many of iihe restrictions imposed by the war have been relaxed. Potatoes are no longer rationed, and bread once more is fully whit-c. Old age pensions have been increased to three pcsetas a day (2s 6d. at par), and in order to favor the cm- pioyment of young persons the aged for withdrawal from work and in riddles, whcn ht: rcalizt-s that this war is rcccivmg olti age pensions has been fixed two years earlier. A scheme of family allowances has been lu- ltrotiuccd, and various financial rc- iforms Lo permit of freer exchange iof ninucy fiiitl prevent financial {frauds have been effected. The dis- iSOllltloll of the‘ war-time aiiuy icorps and of its high command has had a profound effect both in ‘Spain and outside as an indication jQf the pacific intentions of the na- itionalist government, - Iri h In- l dependent. It ls much to be hoped that among the people there is an un- derstanding of the extent of the vast enterprise which our Do- minion and its three partners are commencing to carry out. No one can doubt that it i; a great un- dertaking, the success of which may in large degree lessen the effect of the enormous which the have to assume, because of the war. and her labour will groin‘.- advantages as to considerab- I sketch which tells the history staririgénmtihe rletiria which is indis- pens see ng. It was this fact which prompted the managers of the Westkighouse plant in Mansfield, Ohio. in admiri- ister Vitamin A wherever there was marked eye fatigue. After two years eacperimenls. Ralph T. Bis- bee, Chief Inspector of the plaint has reported to the Porcelain In- stitute Emazmeling Forum at Ohio State University. the following in- teresting results: Assembly line rejections because of ‘off color’ were reduced from an ave-rage of 1.7 per cent. to an average of three-tenths of 1 per cent. The quality of finished pro- ducts was improved. and oom- piainfs of ‘off color’ entirely elim- inated. As much as $5.000 a year ivas saved in the correction of de- fective ranges alone. Most household apparatus is en- ameled white. It might be supposed that whiite ls white and that en- emel would therefore offer no dif- ficulty so far as color is concern- ed. But absolute white is a fa color. There are as many shade. of white as there are of blue. l helped a little to insure accurac of comparison by testing all col matéhers for visual defects. B t since repections still occurred. the conclusion was lnescapanle that some malchers suffered from forms of eye fatigue that could not be detected by the regular tests. $0 it was decided to administer Vita- min A in the forrngf carotene in oil. ‘but only when the color match- or rejected foods rich in Vitamin A because he did not like them. Malpeque Oysters (Montreal Gazette) Judge Arsenauii o1 Prince Edward siaiiu, is author oi‘ the IOLIOMIABI LIN.‘ famous Mi-illitlqllfi OYSLEI‘ H3161‘- 1251 Tho oyster industry in Prince Ed- ward Island dates back to the early Faction occupation, he states. Mal- peqiie was settled by Acadian immi- igrants from Acadia (Nova Siootiia.) l in 1728. From tradition we learn that the Actidians found oysters s90 plentiful in Malpeque Bay that 1t not only constituted an important l‘ article of food, when other directions as to render t scarce. but that, they were food was spread by the cartload on tihe lend as fert- ilizer. The oyster shell is mostly lime which 1s largely used by farmers to sweeten sour land. andthe flesh c! the oyster contains iodine. which is also of value to the soil. Naturally oyJers were not shim)- cd in those days and it was not until about the middle of the 19th century that oysters began to ship ed to the Montreal arid Quebec mar ets. Eveirthcii the 5111191119113 were in a negligible quantity as the only means of transportation was by schooner and owing to the per- ishable nature of the articles very few barrels could be successfully marketed. In the early 1860's an Island mer- had learned of oyster" cultivation that country on his return secur a lease of an area of OYSWP-KTOW bottom and proceeded to cult-Wat it. There ls no-record of what suc- cess he had. This area passed through othe hands and is nOw owned by Hon. C Shelton $112111’). former Minister ti Highways, P. E. 1.. the weil-kno oytet‘ grcvrcr. 000 barrels. of oysters were beli shipped from Prince Edwardplsla and at. the Paris Exhibition in 1 riecl off the Gold Medal choicest flavored C,V5_i9l' 6111111311011- pequc Bay. huntircd barrels. sees began from the UtiIl-rd States to bv reason stcrs did fnractlcallv all chant who had bccri in England imdl In the carlv 80's, 40.000 to 50g 6 r1 think» the iviiiliseque I'~lB.l1d car-i for the Sonic years later fishermen begtm to set their lobster traps in Mal- The bait in those traps attracted the Slllfll 1i from the Gulf of Si. Liivsrence. The starfish ls a deadly enemy to the oyster and ow- In that year the provincial Gov- ernmcnt sought to encourage oyster cultivation and opened up areas 1h Malpcquc Elly for lca-‘ilnk. The 1B5- io import smhll oyters stock their beds. Whether owing to the introduction of an oyster dis-ease or that the-so imported oy- nof thrive in our waters, tho oysters in Mal- ilYTllll‘ Bnv tiicd. Thc cause of this and a mil share of tax contribu- tions to war expenses, are called for. they "discover that the Island is really on the map, and when these calls are made there 1a an effervesihg patriotism that 81101105 11118106811181!’ as any section of the Empire. Bue these contributions, both of men and money. involve a sacrifice. which is willingly made, as e part of a united Canada, in this great- est of national causes. And, I t-hlnk 1t Ls Mr. Wheat! idea (it is certainly mine) that, sharing the sacrifice, we should also share, per (fzptplta, a just portion of the bene- Why must our boys be expatri- ated or removed froth home to other provinces, and our cash con- u utlons carried away for the benefit oi’ merchants in the more influential cities o! the mainland? While in training, we like to have our boys with us. and to be fed and cared for with the products of our farms and the homellke hous- ing amongst sympathetic friends. When limiters like this are consid- ered it seems as if there was no visible P. E. Island on the map of Canada. As a dumping ground, however, we are well remembered. With only four representatives in ilhe Colm- mons, at Confederation we were promised six, etimes one. and sometimes two. must give way to add to the seats oi’ other provinces. It is the familiar parable "Unto him that hath shall be given, and to hirh that hath not shall be tak- ern away even that which he hath." AseatforMfinKing in Prince County. when his own constituency rejected him. Another for Mr. Dunning when no admiring riding in greater Canada hastened to the door to embrace him. And now they propose Prince County as a refuge for Finance Minister Rais- ton whose home province, with plenty of seats to spare, are not in- viting hlm. apparently, to “keep the home fires burning." Now all these men as represent- atives. ti’ not otherwise employed would be efficient, might I add. an honor to their rldings. But they are amongst the busiest in Parlia- ment; they could not- be expected to give the service which a constit- uency needs. and Prince Edward Island, already almost obliterated be from the map of Canada, with on- ly two weak representatives at Ot- tawa to get the simple portion of Justice to which we are entitled. No wonder our aspirations and claims are rejected, and our Prov- ince only remembered when con- ltributions are want/ed and a polit- ical dumping ground is in urgent request. l I am. Sir, etc, t LOOKER 0N I 'l‘HE L0 ST ONES Somewhere Ls music from the lin- net/s bilLs, And through the sunny flowers the -w1n s drolne, Arid wrlliillllle be oi’ convolvulus on Of quiet inay make silent ringing, own Hither and thither by the wind of ing to the ravnlles of this destruc- tive pest and to overfishlnil. the showers. prQduCtlOn of oysters in Maipepue And somewhere all the wandering Bav in 1912 had fallen to a ew birds have flown; And the brown breath of Autumn chills the flowers. But where are all the lovers of long O littgwilight ship blown up the Wheregpégél the facm laughing in the Of morning years. the lost ones scattered wide? Give me your hand. O brother, lei. m-i liaps the most fuy-minoed of all idealist/s, asked for such a defini- tion in the House of Lords. HG. Wells added his voice in a letter to The Times. The Manchester Guardian and the New Statesman and Nation support the request in their own columns. Premier Cham- berlain and Lord Halifax have taken the stand that it is not, pos- sible at present to define ln pre- else tenns the peace for which they are working and that it would be unwise to attempt it. A writer in the New York Sun- day Times, Edwln James, admits that it is not feasible "for Paris and London to say today precisely what sort of peace they would make,” but suggests that they are UTIWlSG to say merely that they are fight- ing "to sa what sort oi’ govern- ment ari her country" -"should halve." Agreeing wit this in part, the Ottawa Journal thinks that if the Allies are anxious to let the Germam know that it is only Hitlerism that is be ig fmight it would be better to tel them what will be done once Hi eir has gone. It wants. apparently, a state- ment from the Allies to say what kind of government Germany is to be allowed. This seems to show a misunder- standing of affairs. The phrase "Hitlerism must be crushed" means not only that Hitler himself must go but that it must be put the power of any other like him t0 so terrorize the world in future. The war is being fought. in the first plaice to preserve liberty against a direct attack and to break the attacker. The peace that will bseoiigihitwlllbe one based on freedom for aicehil peoples, great ‘and small. wth as much justice as I is possible in a world like this. How $11M Peace will be constructed. and secured. it is impossible to say in such a situation as the present. when no knows what the po- sition of the world will be after the conflict. What the aims of the Deacemakiers will be may ‘be seen by all who are not blinid in the ef- forts during the last two years to Ovmfwse the quarrels of Europe. To attempt niow to plot a map of Europe, or lay down laws as w the kind 0f government a country may have, would be rash and - slibly disastrous. The naive aith in prepared schemes is like the trust placed in the League of Na- tions long after it was a proved failure. The task to which the Allied statesmen must address themselves is that of winning the war and preparing the ground for the kind of peace which dtcetnt peoples desire. The aim of critics, especially of than» whose foliy has been proved no abundantly in the D581. should be to help them in their task and not make confusion worse confounded by ill-considered demands. CHARITY FOURSOME HESICEIII. England —(OP) Dick Burton of Sale Timltlish om golf champion and T. H. Cot . meet A. L. Bentley and his brother v rarer; ran 50x 5M AC’S HAIR RESTORER A delicately perfumed p“ ti hl tt3..iii';.",,.§",,,,';_"~r=- ma It Ill] it: inns-Hill's” h“ k M ' |r molar“; a; lzelgémg. Dro- wth where the ha“ hllfilfiflr "I and la Iillllfklb], "J"; l!“ l'{°'°"““l ‘hndnlfl and .:; fr" "a ii-i- ni- uat fo 0w the directions at the results. W11" 01' Phillie today. rruca so can-rs For the finest Stomach M1; aria-r ma» in 85c ran BOTTLE. The 2i MAGS PHONE I15 H. 8.. Lanoashlre fit same foi- the Nov. 19. Si» 111 a bene- titli Red Crws hers s4’ _;a ‘Th-urinal gusts-unanim- ' ‘i requests-enigma». ‘ [Ifialeeflk b-bmb ha. Ihippyesain to ut- !9l1I"ll uh-uwrlunnvfitsuos-r- aneaputectionli taking undue.“ W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN rtiiscaso has] ncvcr been ascertained. In 1929 the federal Government c Vblishcd a Biol deal station on Malncque Bay with Dr. R.._ W. H. Necdicr in charge. 'I'hls Still-loll 11115 dour» a grcai diral of valuable work. It ascertained lllfil,_ oysters which had resisted the disease were im- mune to it and bv brfifidlllf! f1‘011’1 such oysters Mr. Sharp has succeed- ed in stocking a larrze area with disea-e- immune oysters. A visit to the Biological Station and to Mr. Sharp's oyster bed is quite interesting and well worth makiniz. There you can see the pro- us no Crying about the dark for those who died. Francis Letiwidge. Lained a certain Size they are plant- ed on beds specially prepared. In about four years from the time the spat has been gathered the oy- eXpcfises floating rnft: and catch the minute ' Federal Treasury will ‘PM 0f fill‘? 0Y9" "5 Certainly, Canada. will have w nay 1101' S1101. but her industry iiwioi-s are pnSsod throiifrll recover so chino which breaks ihcm ly ics en her budget....Ycs, Cau- ada may look forward to big benc- cess of ovstei- cultivation from the minute =pat which are caught and gathered by means of egg crate sterile-straw" 10.11, rrrsrkstslulzslzsd invmc ANY LUCK‘? protection, which can be through life insurance achievement. l The Great-West Life HYNDMAN 8i Offices — Charlottetown. Guaranteed Ubjectives No investment other than life insurance permits you to create an instant estate for business or family you live, and in which all further indebtedness will be cancelled if you die. Financial objectives programmed and the Guardian of thousands of Canadian Homes. Consult your nearest Agent or write or call on Provincial Managers paid for by instalments 1f are guaranteed complete is the Champion of Thrift co. ugmrrn Summerside, Montague For a Delicious Cim Mr. lea Putt Says Orange Pekoe Tea Use BRAHMIN Q g Full Flavoured Tea of cardboard filters dipped in a x- tuprdof concrete sand and lime and r e Twenty of these filters so treatedl are placed within a wire meshed I hag. 'I‘hesn are hung on the sides of t it floats e- rmind nnd before it becomes 1arge' enough to sink to the bottom. i In a fcw months’ time these col- a ma- up and scmrnics the small nystrrs. These small ovtters arc then placed cn‘ floats mid when they have reason to spoil Whether you are bagging the fltid duck 01‘ coming home empty-handed there is n0 getting to take along with you HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST the day entirely b)’ f0“ 10c Per rig fits. and it would be stupid not to takc the means of profiling ___ ai- A Mighty Organization l hciu fought bclivccii thc :ivowi-d (iod-fcariug F? suitcs and the ilCl\'llU\Vll‘ll§l‘(l (itidlcss stairs, 1mm mom m a mum » . , _ _ _i _ , ry which has Tl 12y will do the same thing esc- _ _ i)! On siillililV, September I0, 103‘). the l.)oiiiiii-' with lhc vcry right oi rcligitius frccdum not yet recovered {mm the blows “win-c. m Great, Brimm 1n Aus-| LVERYYVHLRI] ion (im-Qruiiiciii, by tlic formal action of lli-i in the balaucc. lhc lruti emotion of tho aver 11351011: lnlllfibfifgoxlglililg: Ltfialiglpndotitiuglcx Eppflligrxip thlgreis, [N THE . . - ' ‘ ' ' ' ' " m . nce . Our e \ o . - . l\la]csl_v' s representative in Canada, llficlilffll 1M1 age (auatlizin is indignation lhat this war had 21d not want this new w" any‘ tom toliwcond the lérmrths and the pRoy/[NC]; to be, rcscultncnt whcii he hcars llitlcr and his crowd assert that (icrmanyr was ucvcr tlcfcziicii in ihc ficld in 1918. lit-grcifiillyu wc have ii) a “state of war" existed. .- l‘ But ouc day carlicr, on Saturday, Scptcmbcr 9, Cauadizuis had projected themselves beyond t ‘ ~ ‘ the confines of Canada to participate m thc admit that it nuglii liavc Iiccu bciicr for ihc siiiic of nffziirs aibroatl. Tcn thousand dollars world today if ihc. Allit-il Iil'lill(‘s’ had pri-sscil on ‘i was cable-d to liuglziud, for the relief of victims to llt-rlui and not ]i(‘t'iillll(‘(l ilic cucmy lo rcircat - , ~ , ' . . i . 9i the Aihenias torpcdoing, and QOt-lljfi 311d "110 3" "llmvdgfld Cuulllryiii .... ...s. inks...“ more than the other Allied couns labour of the organimrs Let Can- irles. Now that it finds itself en-y gageti in it, if. has a perfect right justify l-heir reputation as labor- wiiilc supplying its fullest militarr ions and law-abiding artisans. ‘effort. as it engaged itself to d1, Tht-y will be among the first to! to profit from the good things benefit from the new estaibllsh- ' which i-he creation of an Imperial ment and the orders which it, will aviation centre among us implies. give. — Lo Press, Montreal. adlim workmen more than ever HIOKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO CO., LIMITED Charlottetown