yr- ' was zippoiiitcd iii towns, workers’ settlements 4 and districts, who was charged with the great i f raids f0 i raciifircfi were installed in the nurseries, and children's dining rooms were opened in every town and TllE QIIILOTTETOII Glllllllllll us? thickly populated locality. , The problem of the maintenance and upbring- Issuing our; (Founded lss um ‘MI! Cd. w. CDC“! S. "file width-kit .w..ir '" I I s Illtss sifi" 01mm A-sssa son: Frank LleIL Ian A garfit, LUJJLI. (On Aollve Service) "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tlsal , flle Weakest Ink." waoiviisnsr. um is.‘ 1m i Non-War Expenditures Estimates submitted to Parliament by_ the Minister of Finance call for non-war expenditure of $702 millions for the pfelfllt 51!?“ Yfirfa" increase of $55 inillionscompared with the fiscal year recently ended. This is accounted for by 1n- m-est on tllg public debt, which has jumped from $184 to $260 millions in the last twelve- monlh. But it is an arresting fact that what the Government classifies as non-war expenditure has risen from $427 millions in the year before the ivar to $702 millions in the fiscal year “P011 which we entered on April I. Total debt charges in the year before the warwere $13! 111111101"- This increase in expenditure, says the Globe g4 Mail, is due in no_s_n\ell measure to the rapid expansion of the civil service. The Fed- eral payroll is the biggest in Canada. Compet- ent authorities estimate that there are now 15°.- ooo persons employed by the Dominion Gov- ernment, one out of every 45 of the population. exclusive of the men and women in the armed services. This is equivalent to r or i6 divisions in the army-many more than anads. will have on the second front. From the taxpayer's point of view, the worst of it is that the majority of these civil servants will be reluctant to retire when the war ll Over- History is littered with evidence that the most natural impulse 0f bureaucracy is to grow. Heads of Government branches in Ottawa _in- variably try to glorify themselves by reaching out for more territory, by expanding their scope and enlarging their staffs. A brief look around will quickly convince any observant person that the bureaus which started off very modestly at the outbreak of the war are new crowded with people whose salaries are paid by the 13X- payers. When the war is over the bureaucrats and their staffs will want to hang on. They have been operating the levers for a long time, and they like it so well that they will never let go if they an help it. So they will produce a new sot of problems vvhose solution will require their special brand of ability. Europe will have to be fed. There will be problems of rehabilitation and reconstruction. They will say rationing and ' control must be continued. There will be legislation to provide for social security from the mills to the grave. So the armistice will not brin demobiliza- tier-i of the Government bureaus. Taxation will have ts be continued at a high level to maintain them. Rural Schools xLlllns-rsettiJ-l- and ' corpse, the defence counsel suggested, "I sup- ing 0f children who have lost one or both par- ents in the ivar has had special attention from the Government. Homes for the very young orphans have been established throughout the country, and there are also the Suvorov Mili- tary Schools. All of these institutions are run on model lines, with the children in the care of carefully chosen and experienced staffs. In districts liberated from the German oc- cupation, many difficulties confront the organ- izers of children's health services. Personnel who formerly worked in these places are being recalled and equipment and medicine supplied. Epidemics and infectious diseases resulting from Fascist occupation are bein rapidly wiped out. Branches of the Medical Service working far in the rear organize polyclinics, nurseries and hospitals which can be iflhsodiately set up in newly-liberated areas. T also share with these areas their own equ pment, instruments and manuals-and what is most essential, send them qualified people for the new institutions. EDITORIAL M‘. ltlltbsyeans. IslsnowrusrsoisndMn]. Lester Douglas, M.P., may be raised to the Senate, where his brother-in-law, the Hon. john Sinclair, already holds asset. e s s In his budget address, Mr. Mathewson, Que- bec Provincial Treasurer, forecast a surplus of $225,000 for the fiscal year ending March gr, 1944, and predicted s surplus of $275,948, 0r the following year. s s Bulloclcs are now receiving battle training in India to get them used to the noises and shocks they will be subject to as members of the new Indian ack-bullock companies. Their instruc- tor is Lieut. A. j. Mills, who put them through a tough course. Red flags are waved in front of their noses, thunder "flashes explode all round them and on their forced marches through the jungle they encounter gas-rattles and sirens. \Vhen the course is finished they are given bat- tle dress—wl1icli consists of camouflziging their white hides. NOTES 4-. l I I l A lady doctor, Dr. Frances McGill teaches the Mounties mcdico-lcgal work in Regina. She is a retired doctor from the Saskatchewan Public Health department ivhich she served 2 years. She entered private practice as a special- ist in skin diseases upon her retirement in i942. On the dealli of Dr. Power, medical specialist at Regina, she agreed to carry on his laboratory work both as a. technician and as an instructor for the R.C.M.P. Known to policemen all over the province as “Doc", a niclcname that carried with it a great amount of affection. l)r. McGill is not only a woman of great ability in licr chosen field but issomelhing of a humorist. \\’0rdy battles in court have made her “qiiitk on the uptake." When she was giving evidence as to the origin of (lust found in the pockets of a pose you presume t0 be air expert on the C011- tents of men's pockets?" "Not at all," retort- f ebeel consolidation was emphasized woek’! convention of the Teachers’ Fed- . The same subject is attracting atten- flea in other riovinces, as evidenced by this dussusut Iil-esnier Drew in an address to is Ontario tlonal Association in Toronto: “Educational unitslarger than the one-room sfloola are needed to give every Ontario school child equality of educational opportunity by utilizing to fullest advantage the newest scienti- fle aids to education. "Of 7,489 schools in Ontario, 5,377 are one- lnoin schools. New aids to education cannot be given full effect in s. school in which one teacher hstructs children whose ages range from 6 to i6. "Some of the ethical standards taught in one- roera schools a generation ago could well be re- vived today-but do not let us confuse the prin- ciples underlying education with its general practice. Our system must adjust itself to new facts. With transportation available to nearly every one, small educational units are not as necessary today as they were 5o years ago." Safeguarding Russian Children How the health of Russian children is being protected in wartime is described in a recent bulletin issued by the Soviet embassay at Wash- ingion. At tlic beginning of the war, serious difficulties confronted the institutions respon- sible for child health protection. Mobilization of fathers for active service, mass employment of women in industry and agriculture, evacua- tion nf children from threatened areas and their i-ccsttiblishiiiciit in new homes, necessitated a rapid extension of the nursery and kindergar- ten systems. llundreds of new institutions had to bc organized and equipped, uninterrupted lll]1]>ll(‘$ guaranteed for the children's mainten- lncc and zirrangcments made for women to nurse their infants at their places of work. Ar- _ rangeiiiciiis were made for the suppl of milk and utlicr dairy products for the chil ren; basic diets were established for all dining rooms, and the pffilllClllflf equipment and proper heating of lilll(l(‘l'_£{Zll‘lCllS and nurseries was solved. By Government ilccisioii a special children's doctor l 1i fCspOllt-‘llllllfy’ m’ taking all measures to safe- guard lllt‘ licnlih of children during the war. Iifforls were made by the Department of Health to insure reliable protection from air r children remaining ivitliin the enemy's 1' sphere of operations. The rapid construction of shelters for hospitals saved many lives. Ter- rihle as conditions were in Leningrad, all chil- dren‘s iiislitiiiiniis except those evacuated con- tinued fnnclioiiiiig. In the districts in the interior to which chil- dren ivcre evacuated from the war zones, the best biiililiiigs were converted into boarding schools, nurseries and kindergartens These in- sliliitions were staffed by local residents, first trained by the more experienced personnel who had accompanied the children. -Diiring thc- first ‘no and uiie~linlf years of war, 96,500 now mtg l t f t 1' lst as well as a statesmen; Party t‘ regimes, passed more seclalistic legislation than any previous u.‘ m. B tory; he wus ussdou greatest rid‘ sh stat modem y, and a brilliant debetn’; his nanny as valuable pictures of the times in which he Tlelgilfilltklfl clelldefAotleu. Wsesssnet learismufremboolrs.‘ a u e s tory has been built in four months. Be on the war an undertaking such as this one would have taken nine to twelve months. the site was settled, the final sch proved and the contract was Consulting engineers were called in at the pro- alongside the architectural staff. were placed with suppliers as soon as the con- run smoothly, an organization including archi- site from the start ficiently and it also resulted in an excellent team spirit between the contractors and techni- cal staff. during rainy periods, an tubular scaffold was crccleil- and the work went on uiiiiiter- ed Dr. McGill, "I am not a member of the legal profession.” I U The delegation of able cngiiiccrs scnt from Ottawa to witness for themselves‘ the ice con- ditions in the Straits, were sadly disappointed to find that ice had practically all disappeared. However they had a. profitable two days at llor- den learning all they could in the time about the prospects of digging a tunnel or building a causeway. They have now gone back to Mon- treal and Ottawa, hoping to revisit the Island when conditions will be more pleasant for sound- ings, etc. It is understood an investigation, if finally undertaken, will occupy over a year, and cost in the vicinity of $100,000. A tunnel, if agreed upon, is estimated to cost $100,000,000, while s. causewa would run up to about one third of this. These, of course, are unofficial estimates, but tend to substantiate the quotations given in different letters appearing in The Guardian recently. s- is a s- Primrose Day. Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield, British statesman, died this date. i881, and Queen Victoria, whom he treated with almost oriental adulation, sent a wreath of rlmroses, his favourite flower, to be an is grave. Thencsfcrth, this hte was set a 1i I was a Jew, but he and all hisfamily abandoned Judaism, and Benjamin was baptized in the Church of England; was a distinguished novel- oonverted the '1‘ tilfl. and iii h b 1___ | government in the country's hls- ef times- ived; the best of these are: ‘Coningbyf’ "Tancred", and "Henrietta Tem- ls the eliild of Thought, Id Near a Scottish city, an 8,000 foot ho- Two vveelrl after eme was ap- let a month later. iminary stages, the "consultant staff working Bulk orders ract was let and in order that the work should ects, engineers and surveyors was set up on the of the construction. Due to his idea queries were settled promptly and ef- So that work should not he stopped iiigeiiiuiis invention of frnfllria with tarpaiilin slieels mall in England as Primrose Day. Disraellh fail-i‘: m I814‘ in unwise correct the address ln order that the letter be oil-worded the ll: m“ The pleases of nlaht, Q nlrh ii n. itself} ‘mld if‘ illkmmwhln Not cuss: - ‘ho given-case seal. In no lghe aims. the lunelfnel a n» And with Thou nlorceot Not unto ll. O Nay. Lord. bu yen- Mav light. and life and earth and s v as - But. let not. all that weelh of love ‘Pl-IE o criagnprifiifiwhi.‘ Gfihiimim PUBLIC FORUM I fllssduanbepeuesvu“ questions II latenci- I: JUVENILE IIELIIIUIIEIIGY survey of the CROW CONTEST sun-rm other asv when I w“ a group of boy! 1 overheard their conversation. was on how to win the money in hls crow contest. initiated W "19 gm. Bird Ocsnml b _ths Hovlnelal '1' sli- talk ran this: "W; can take them means except poisoning. crows are very fond of wheat and corn and so srq wild geese and ducks. We will take corn an wheat and spread it over the grain field; and on the shores, then we will bulld blinds to hide 1n and we can shoot them. We will have to put up signs ‘for crows only.’ At thf end of will gvs all t one fellow to lon Shopfl o sure 0o m! pIlIlQ and then he will dlvfds with us." my I hope than was no ens in on this crow racket beforg lt aunced and so snubs couch of o I 011 llotss By The Way we won-tag (‘J05 doctor lust ec II ID “I ‘W. were as sound ss a dollasu-Chlc- lnto 81in. A doctor says that a heart laugh does more good than a. inen . So when you run out of food cou- ooiis just laueh it ofL-Strutforrl Beacon-Herald. A fashion expert say any glrl can be beautiful if she has the right clothes, And any filrl can have the rlizht clothes if she ls- well, can't you guess? -— Ottawa Cillzcri. Among tho many post-war prob- ems of personnel uliiceinerit will be suitable light employment for the "unusually well-Informed ob- server" and the "hitherto reliable sourceJK-San Francisco Chronicle. llltler ls going to he hit so haril in so many olrices all at once that he will feel like Bob Pastor. on rollci- skates. tiivlni: to dodge ivhivt Joe Louis had iill the time to ulive liim when lie caught up with him. ——SLi‘utford Beacon-Herald. A sentence in n. speech by Flight Lleut. Telllnu. in t-lie recent foreign affairs tic-bate the House of Commons, provokes fruitful rcflcc- tion: “People do not realize that. onlv 700 people took cart in the battle of Britain. ivlilrh ivas as vim- bortnnt ln mimv ways its Tisnfnigar girl yvatcrloo." — London Specta- r. A medical journal advances l-lie theory that; “than is slightly’ tallci" in the inornliiir than lio ls in the evening." And the Dunnvllle Chronicle adds: "We have never tested this but we have notlcsd a tendency to become ‘short’ toward the end of the month." - Strat- ford Beacon-Herald. There ls one serious deficiency ln the personnel of the medical profession WlllCh must not continue tinder a National Health Service: it arises, from hindrances to the admission of wornen doctors. Anions: the l2 London medical schools, llll of them constituent schools of London University. one school. as Sli- Ernest Graham- Llttle bolnts out ln a letter to the Times, admits women only. two ac- re", a small iironortlon of women. and the remainder take none alt. nlL-Jondon Spectator. A ghost story to end all ghost stories ls belniz circulated by the Japanese to bolster home morale. It insists that after all Jiitounese troops had been evacuated from Attu spirits of dead soldiers engag- ed American troops for three weelm. even stat-tint! counter-attacks. It odds that in the South Pacific, too. the snlrlls are nuttlniz up a. good fight. mental derangement to the enemy, causing them “to klll themselves as a result of nu- voiu and morbid tear." —New York Sun. More than 29,000,000 pounds of W911 0T0 KER "-51-..- its-sir Tammy“: flblelillldellfld “"»'l'.°'l... ma! t untolhd be all uptcd. Let Hell isnorof The pavement. of her Heaven! 1t toryll ‘hand d man, being a conscious t of all the sport: seer in "an tboyl.""whoknnwef '°1"'°""' thduovllao fist im-ii in the hearts “eg,,*;,f”a,3°li$ii“'i§l°‘ with “wkwwq amnnmnau un 0H 1'8 I 5'1"! 511 1”"- e enJo u» fortnight/s ho - ‘fly to go w they llk as tbs W111i such - atlon oceufl. tfiher ls safmfi e ls clvll soolet lndtvlduai Justl veryoimda or multitudes limbo one: dtrbslndvlduel, sanetltyof tract, andof mole- teoope this. n, w. u. imiusy. mo. rv An sspsnnisist 1n tlcn of tgrllpslnals “n!!! swblsm. IIIBI in "Russian ‘Iilisyari ls conditioned by hls 8H1’- roundings, but at the same time. being can roun nd - In 1M6, I saw the suaslve meth- ods whim are applied to their (the Russian) criminal population. "At the colony or Bosibevo, e thieves and murderers (s. murderer etc eight yfsrsi are in mam a! 5121!‘ own wnahlps and factories without olloo, or prison walls, an only alxgeexi miles from Moscow. on an excellent siall service. “These they earn the right. to be honest citizens, by honest. work. "There, I saw t-lsem produchg l» we may vvo say "those incred- ihle Russians"! oiiiis two meth- ods, punishment, and the 311451811 system, which comes nearer the "revolutlonor new system" of the Master ‘Ibac er of Mankind? Changing Attitude 1n leav the subject of l'€lflfl0l’liflllg‘0f legal tribunals to juvenile offenders, o. passing re- ference may be made to n change which is taking place in the 8t- tltude of many persons towards law itself. More especially within the East two centuries and partlcu rly among our neighbours to the South, tliei-e emerged and had been developed a conception of law which may be described as “lndlvlduullst1c". Rights of ln- dlvlduuls were stressed. Some of these were: freedom of develop- ment, freedom of competition, freedom of contract, mid the sanct- ity and binning nnturc of con- the niately, after some external pres- sure lind been exerted. they i-c- volted and formed n new society- A statement. of new rights and principles was prepared. These were to be the basis of the organ- ization oi the new and 1111199911551"; society in the new land. The pas- sion for freedom had become so impregnated and ingrained lnto the spirit of this people that they declared no Act of Parliament or Act of Congress should ever do violence to those principles or ln- tcrferc with those basic rights. Any attempt to do so should for- ever be unconstitutional. The de- elaratlon of rights 5a announced “was heard around the world.” Revelllng in the luxury of'tl1ls newly found freedom, the life of the new citizen expanded. No bounds except his oivn capacity were set to his energy or to lils ambition. Under tin inspiration of the new freedom there occur- red the tremendous expniislon of the past two centuries. The de- velopment of this individualistic spirit, of free enterprise, lins been accompanied by an incredible ex- pansion of law, defining individual right-s. Success be 0nd all cal- culation or predict on resulted. A legal system, built up for the de- termination of these rights. has occupied the time end attention of a very considerable body of persons - lawyers, judges arid le - islutors-viliose function lt been to differentiate and define these conflicting interests. No! All Results Beneficial But while this new system brought s ctacular success to molly lndlv duals it had other re- fiflts. Individual free common man. separ- e between liberty . as I ho great stand y. when invades tli all, it f the s principle of 0e oo undermln HE SERVlC ” w. K. iioiitiis llgsnelss Ltil. Pisss 540-541 c —a~ dom of enterprise petition, vast fortunes were creat- ed. Aggregation; 0f wealth through joint stock companies took place. Control, through interlocking di- rectiorutes, and cnrtcls, gnvn numbers of eggs niiil yo wild ducks, us wcll as song; birds. llll! l‘. Association wlll award $ troyed in eaeli ol‘ the el wllli November, 1044. ln for the three highest to period Queen Street for ciiunt not l.i each month to qualify for monthly at Fashion Barber Fish and Game Pr rm» i-IB-IB-IT-ll-fl-z. 4 53*“ ““"‘ -. i? Ysuva i. ‘INIION C <>11 tlEADiOEFICQ j [or .5... nnd through combines power. Power 1st GRAND PRIZE 2nd 01mm) PRIZE 3rd GRAND PRIZE’ To reduce the Crow Feel only of Crows must. be submit ' tcr Association, N0 0N T0 we" ._ PIJIS Commeneln flier notice, all hl closed for motor Anyone drlvln trary to this order shall be 0.]. at Lowest 144 Richmond St. itself over iill Power gave to individuals and to their groups control even over the State. Law through liberty of the individual, had become anti-social. As ii consequence, is new atti- tude was created towards law lt- uni: birds of llun zht months enmmcneln addition the above. Gra prize. Model Traps on display at R. T. llnlmans Ltd town and Summerslde .E.1.F|h vehicle traffic, eases when the total weight load doee not exceed 8,000 pound _ users ACHVI sssvics roses use S‘: ciaiitm d ration Life IORONIO other $50.00 25.00 12.50 led at Fashion Barber Shoo, 150 than seven (7) days after the end of The decision of judge ls flnal. Drawing of Crow Tran and full directions for building nvallnhls free Shop or by mall from Game Bird Committee. I’ l‘. I. Charlottetown. s will BE USED NOTICE HIGHWAYS CLOSED T0 MOTOR VEHICLES duly prosecuted. mm the sis slay u April, an, 1944. Ir. 01hr. ITEWART, lAeIng Clerk s! the Incentive Couiiell Rate Agent ut Summerslde, D. O. Stewart Charlottetown \ g April 11th, 1044, and until fur gliwnys ln this Province are except ln such of vehicle and g on provincial highways con- tr r - i elo ~ resulted in o presslon, in many self. and requirement-i of the Common fngglttslcglrllerégtllllslgs i? iilizcgfvsonlie instances in flpllll. Unemployment "me law, its objectivity and the man which are essential to tho time previously there nan taken became one of its products. The principles underlying the law. common weal, to that extent law plaoe a. great effluxlon from Eu- Competitive instinct, ivitn success wen. studied. law was recognized and government fail. ropp notably from the British for its rewiird, ivfiosc linllni" as n ninnmadg science. It was (‘Io be (Qntlnued) 151,51 11mg‘, pef5gns can"; from was the dollar sign super-in een to be falllble, as man hlm- —~——"— ' n land ivhere liberty ivas greatly restricted, seeking freedom. Ulti- yfififiwwwm@m A‘ 0W C NTEST l! Eight Monthly Prizes (April to Nov.) of $5.00 each. population of the Islam! and thereby save great gal-Inn partridge. pheasants and n, l. l-‘lsh and Game Protection 5.00 cnsli for tlic greatest number of Crows dea- g with Aprll and ending rid Prizes will be awarded tats of Crows destroyed during the eight month Fire,Auto,LifqAccidenoSiclcness and Plate Glass Insurance .. Stores in Charlotte- and at Fashion Barber Shop. . NOTE-While this contest was initiated and will be directed by the Guam Blrd Committee ol‘ the P prize money and advertising expenses Government from the and Grime Association. the be paid by the Provincial sum appropriated for Flsh ism! Game nonscrvullon. a u. vself. Y ‘ as the -y of Justice. law can prove the anth- ltesls of justice. Man makes the laws. By mien they an changed. To the extent that lsw and government {all to meet and provide for tn, fundamental needs We Have the Proper TRUSS For your particular case, To those of you who are unlor tunate enough to have to wear a Truss we ask the question. Are you satisfied with the one vou are wear- l We have Just received a sh p- ment of new style Trusses. All sizes and at iii-loss lo suit everybody. llr. Evans Stomach Mixture Every llcrsoii who is ‘troub- led wllh gas lri the stomach and bowels should let a bot- tle ol “Dr. ‘Evans’ ‘itomnch Mixture" isnrl sen how oulekly lt wlll relieve iill Ilisfresslnl symptoms. Reeninrrlrntlcil llcivsetlv lrn Indigestion, Dyspeivsla, Sour Stomach, Ileartbuns and all stomach troubles "rich 15c. TllE 2 MAGS It" Great Geoi-gs sir-mg Mall Orders Olven Promo! Attention. Professional c552‘ McLeo 6v Bentley w. I. alnrust. l. o. s. a. aeivnev it. c Barristers and Attorneys-at- l-lw Ill Prince smog M. ALBANV FARMER BABIIBTLTQL- d» LLB. , SOLI ‘ITO TC. csnsdlan Bani of Cleimlsielrtéclflldr- MONEY ‘I0 LOAN latex w. MAIHIESON Oolleotlsl SOIJCITOB. 51'0- reat George Street Ierrsllsna Bngpgpy 0. F. ARCIIIIILII Chas-sane Accountants linens ‘Irll Illlllll Charlottetown PALMER K HAslAM ‘l. “ABLE” ll l‘ Ia cs bell uoiibrlifi"u%. F. e1“ is n“ ‘MONEY. ro o‘ a BELL d» MAIl-IIESON IONII to nohis boomer» Ilse: costume"