THE (JI-IARIUITEYPUWN (IUARDIAN ~ ‘ ' lanai ll . race roun- i ~ I nu GIIAIILIITTETOAWII Glllllllllll Hamill Dally (Pounded ll llfll Praaidaal: Heat. Got. W. Oink: I. Iii-II’! vtumreuldent: J. l Burnett. I. i. I. . Secretary: blui- Ooi. D. A. llacliluan. 0.8-0. um: and Maul!!! Dlrvetw J- I- Blfim- '44- Aaaaeiate Editors: Frank Waller and IJIIL Ill A, Bur-all, LGNNL tua Anilu Burma) "The szmnam HIMOII in WM" Th" the Weaken! Ink.‘ mwav. my flit" Prime Minister King Deserted One of the saddest commentaries on a man's passage through this life is in ltis loss of friends. The reflection may be as readily on the friends as oti the one who lost them. \\'e know perfect- lv well that many of the finest characters the world ever produced have been left friendless and alone iii their extremity". But taken by-atid» large. the tirdiitary man who loses friends docs so through his 0\\'ll idiosyncrasies, aud_ Prime Minister blaclceuzie King is a case in point. He ltas followed such devious political paths in his political career that he has scarcely a bona-fidc friend left on whom he can (lepeud-those stir- rnnntlitig and adhering to him, are, for the most part. influenced more by the crumbs that fall from the Patronage Chief's table than front love of principle and lionottr. Take a look at the type of men who recently have parted company from him. First and foremost, there is Mr. Ralsttlti, his lilinistei- of Defence. who rebelled against his unpatriotic inanoettveritig and threw up his portfolio. .\lr. Power, his Minister for Air did likewise. and (lcclittcs to rim again for Parliament tuidsr his leadership. .\lr. Mac-- doiiald, .\'aval Minister, followed sttit, prefer- ring to return to his native Nova Scotia with- ottt place and power rather than lend himself and his services to the devious policies and prac- tices hy his erstwhile leader. Now, Mr. hlnloclt. Post-Master General. whose father, Sir Wil- liam, was Mr. King's patron and political god- father, has declined to run again under his stil- lied banner. 'l‘hese are only a few of the many, including Mr. Cardin, who have been forced to part com- auy because tliev could not rely on either Mr. lking’; word 0r bond. How can the country at large place renewed confidence in ltitn. whert those who have been nearest, and naturally should have been dearest to him, ltave publicly‘ dis-owned him, and let it be known he is not t0 be trusted? War Graves The Imperial \\'ar CITQVCS Commission i5 able tn give a gratifying account of the state of it= unntt-tcrics and memorials in France and Ilelgitini after the ilicrntait occupation. 'l'ht~_\' were respected by the enemy and. thanks also to the care of the French and Belgian attthorities, can soon he restored. The British cemetery at Cologne is also found to he in good condition. ".\ll this." says the litm- chrr/rr (innit/flirt. "greatly lightens the work of repair and will hasten the work of making new cemeteries for the dead of this war, the coin- missioifs latest charge. lt is a melancholy task performed with reverence and attention to archi- tectural and ltorticttlttiral beauty, and some of the best architects contribute to making these memorials worthy of our fallen. Happily the commission has not been stint- ed of funds: the governments of the Commoti- wealth have contrihtiteil in [iroportion and there is no fear that the memorials will fall into neglect. At San Francisco San Francisco is only the starting place, but a lot depends on a good start," declared Rt. Hon. Clement Attlee in the British House of Commons, in a debate on the Dumbarlon OBkS proposals preparatory to the San Francisco Conference now in session. This aptly stints up Britain's attitude, which is one itot so tnuch of “great expectations" as of firm conviction in the necessity of building a solid foundation for world peace based on the principle “that power and responsibility must be commensurate and that no political or economic instrument will work in which that principle is ignored." llence the basic assumption of the British delegates that the Security Council proposed at lluntbartoit (Jaks and representative of the ljreat Powers, which are to have responsibility of maintaining international peace and security, must also have “permanent seats and special rights." “lt is no good but-Icing the fact (again to quote Mr. Attlce) that great powers exer- cise great power iii any event. The only ques- tion is whether they will exercise the power inside or outside the framework of the ordered illuminating. Already out of the Conference has emerged some salient points, which Lon- don commentators are noting with satisfaction- It is most important, for instance, that the Con- ference should not drag on. One month has been mentionedas the time wherein the main work of the-Conference should be finished. The object at this stage will be to obtain agreement in general terms, leaving details tc be filled in later. Also it is stressed that the Conference's task of setting up the Security Council is no more important than the positive social and economic contribution which the settlement of an inter- national charter will produce.‘ It is emphasized that the Dumbarton Oaks proposals represent a compromise document, put to the Conference as a. basis for discussion. kVhen the constitution of a world organization is agreed it will be necessary that there should be titachitieryt for future amendment if occasion should arise. Finally it is pointed out that there is a two- fold obligation on all great powers: Firstly. to support the world organization, secondly. to re- strain thetnselves in exercising the influence over small nations which their position gives them. ' -EDITORIAL NOTES- ..__ 'l‘oitiorrow closes another week of the Vic- fury Loan Campaign, and a highly successful one, too. 1‘ $1 q i! Ii ' Quebec reports that, far from the Duplessis (Iovernitteitt being unwilling to co-operate, as was the case with the Hepburn Government :tl the time of'the Sirois Commission, it is quite ready to go into a Domiuioti-Provincial Con- ference, as soon as one cait be held. Of course, as long as Mr. King is Prime Minister, this seems impossible, since he does not want to sit with airy btit Liberal Provincial Premiers. it Ii Ill I The Progressive-Coitservativcs have accom- plished marvels in building an organization. ottt of the rttin in which Mr. Bennett and Dr. Man- ion left the Party, says The Leffur-Rcztietv. .\lr. Bracken has worked very hard to get an impressive list of candidates. In short, in place of being an organization without a leader. a platform. or a machine, as in 1940, the Pro- gressive-Conservatives have now a highly colit- petent practical politician as a leader, and a fair itiachine. I I I i The Saskatchewan Department of Agricul- ture will use spraying equipment this year to put an end to the noxious weed, leafy spurge. Most prevalent of the newer weeds in Saskatche- wan in late years, leafy spure smothers crops. The saute system of spraying will be used in Saskatchewan as was used in Manitoba last ytcar. where the tvced is more prevalent. .-\c- cording to S. H. Vigor. commissioner of field crops for the department, actual cost of spray- ing will i'un to about $r25 an acre. 1- a a- v David Livingstorie, itiissionary and explorer, (licd this date 1873; a medical doctor, he offer- eil his services to the London Missionary Soc- iety for service in Africa, and after nine years in Beehuanaland, the heart of African heath- endom, he started on a career of exploration which took him from Capetown to Cairo: he was the most extensive and successful explorer who ever lived to tell the tale, opening up vast territories for missionary work and coloniza- tion, dying ultimately in the field of his labour. his body being taken to England for burial in Westminster Altbey: “hlen are immortal till their work is done"—tueattitig the results of their labour, for good or ill, live after them. I fi Q Q Replying to the defence filed with the seed grain dcbt tribunal by the Dominion govern- ment. the Saskatchewan government maintains that the former had no right to set off amounts payable to the province tinder the Dominion- Provitieial taxation agreement against the province's seed grain debt. The tribunal is to decide whctltcr the Federal governnlenfs action in withholding a. payment of $581331 under the taxation agreement early this year was a viola- tiott of the agreement. “There is in law under all the circnmstatices. no such right of set off," says the provincial governments reply. lt adds that contrary to the Dominion contention. no part of the $16,468,852 seed grain debt was due or payable at the time the Federal government withheld payment of the $582,331, {tltltgttglt m]. mittiitg its itrdebtethtess to this amount at the time proceedings were started to set tip the tribunal. Terms of the taxation agreement did not contemplate any right of set-off, the prov- ince claims. a n- io- i: Catuillieti Houde is a power in Quebec, primarily through his marvellous utiderstand- itig of the mass psychology of his race, tvritcs Notes By The Way In hi: 30 yearn of service Major. Gen. Penrkes has, passed through all the rattks of the Canadian from private to major-general and wears more decorations British and forelgn, than any ot er Oun- adtan soldier-Vancouver Province jor Richard lilo d Geo , eldest son of Earl 1.1g d Oeogg, has taken the courtesy tie of Vis- count Gwynedd. According. to the "Gaul/tee of the British Isles", Gwynedd is the name given to "ancient territory nearly Identical fill/till North WaIes."-—London Dally a . Children of Toronto are not worrying greatly about the can. tlnued snowbanked condition of treets. Every dirt-covered a snowcapped rnoun. k, which they scale at. cun- dflflzer to themselves; each shouting messages of exulta- tlon to the boy perched on a neigh- boring eak In another sense. ea ls the klng_of the castle. 0f course all this results In dirty and generally musscrl-up titothlng _ but that is another story-Toronto Globe and Mall. a V-bomb crash- ....Thls 1s what happened, told by the bend mistress." "The win- dows cracked and broke and. as If blown by a great wind, all the kiddies swayed. There was n sil- ence. Then I carried on with the prayer. Some of the girls were a little white and a blt shaken as the prayer finished. Then they sang happy. jolly songs which they all knew, and In a short time for- izntuthq exploslonfih-Isondon Dally a . Saskatchewan now has It! first. woman mayor In the person of Mrs. John T. McOrmond. Mrs. McOrmond was duly Inducted as mayor of the town of Sutherland on January 1 of this. year. For the last nlne years she 11115 been a member of the town council. Burn In Kingston and with a de- gree from Queen's University, Mrs. McOrmond moved to Sutherland ln 1912 with her husband, John T. McOrmonrI, \\'l1i'1 is an operator with the Cattaclian Paclflc Rall- wav. She has three sons and a daughter. All three sons have served with the R.C.A.F'.—Reglna leader-Post. - Only once before in the ‘III years since Confederation has Parliament been allowed to spin itself out to the end of the constitutional llmlt of five years, the Vancouver Pro- vlnce recalls. That was 1n I896. when the long Conservative period power came to an end. Sir John Macdonnld had come back in taowet" in 1878. ousting the Mac- kenzie Government. 1-le had won the elections of 1882, 1887 and 1891. In the latter year, three months after the election, he had died. The next five years saw four Con- servative ministries, each one less sec-tire than the one before It. In 1896, there had to be an election. It. was held on June 23, when the Tupper Government went out and Laurler came . Alt-ha! To heck with pessitntists. Here's something lo llvc for. Hero's the most important domestic news of the week. The dcspateli comes front Forest. 0nt.—-It says the strawberries will be good this vear. Think of it! Only four more months before you can rush home In the evening, carefully bearing n. bux of red heaven, Into the house. a pat for the baby, u kiss behind the ear for the wife and then-grab the cream. dump out the contents down to enjoy a blt of heaven. If you are not too greedy, you might have sortie left for a repeat performance rtt. breakfast. And lf you have foresight, you can carry another box home at. noon. Life may not be a bowl of cherries, but. who cares so long as It turns out; to be a box of strawberries. -0wen Sound Sun Times. There \vIll be stronger egg shells in the future. This sounds like a sllly thing, but lt. renlly isn't. A stronger, lessqiorous shell on eggs‘ will help to reduce breakage and prevent spoiling. improvement. wlll be reflected In the price. Poultry scientists have just concluded n series of expert- metits. and now they know that an ancestry may be developed in which hens regularly lay large, strong-shelled eggs. ‘These expert- meuts indicated that less than a third ns much breakage ls fottnd with these good-shell eggs as tvlth eggs of the present. poor-shell group. Another" thing to look tor tn the future Is relatively low cost retail packaging of frozen whole eggs, egg yolks and egg whites. _Also, better quality drieu eggs, egg yolles and egg whites. Some of these items have been on the retail market. in lim- ited quantity-Chicago Sun. Many people with ailing feet think they cun solve all their prob- lems by buying "orthopedic" shoes. Before slice rationing went. into effect, more than $2Ji),0'.lU,t)'.".I was spent for footwear" of this kind every year. Yet those who ex- pected a cure-all were likely to be dlsu pointed, Elsie McCormick writes lit Colliers. No make of shoe can lengthen a short. meta- tarsal, cure feet puffed up because of a kidney ailment. or remedy n dozen other diseases and mal- formations. The best guide shoe buying ls comfort, any expectation of miracles. Important to be certain that the 4m! write "mu la v-z: Dav." It would} strated as In Italy. where the Ger- of the box and sit l“ Eventually, this 1'» The Curtain Falls By I. M. IOIEITS, JI- (Canafliall Prat Staff Writer) The impulse this mornln: is be. If Allied men were not st fighting and dying In the pockets. which the last fanatical Germans can't hold but. refuse to surrender completely. Or ‘It would be if V-E Day had not already passed. . _ Historians wlll argue that V-I Day was the day in 1940 that Hit.- ler failed to invade lkigland. or tbl day he beat himself by invading Russia, the day he was turned hack at Stalingrad or El Alameln. 0r the day he failed to throw the Allies off the Normandy beaches. Whatever the verdict. the day hen f‘ y changed her xnll- itary policy. stopped fighting for key centres and began to declare them open cities.’ will stand as n great climax of the war. The Allies are clown to the mop-up. and 1t begins to look as though the final days of guerllla warfare may not be so extensive or so exasperatlng as once expected. Regardless of history's decision on Just when Germany lost the war militarily. there wlll be little debate on moral grounds. Germany lost the war before she began It, by arraylne against herself the freedom-lotflng. right-thinking peo- ple of the globe. Nowhere ls this so well demon- mans have Just surrendered. Hardly a free country but has been represented there. many of them by fully-organized armies- Poles. Hindus and Moslems from India, Britons. C-"Mllens New Zealenders. Australians. Americans. Jews, Yugoslavs. French, Negroes and the first Important expedition- nry force ever sent across the seas from Latin America, the Brazi- lians; Italians themselves since they escaped from their Fascist rulers. The German Idea arrayed all these. and more. against Itself. The recent sweep of events has been so great as to approach confusion. The end of resistance 1n Holland, Denmark. Norway and the re- malnlng continental pockets seems irerely a matter of arrangements. We are In the middle of the great.- est military surrender In all bis- tory. The curtain falls on n Ger- mflfly. which is not brave. but merely disgusting. In its final tall- last-tings. From The Rubble T0 The Reich (Negley Farson 1 th Em 1 News. Ioiidoni p" It ls impossible to estimate how fttr the calamity of Hitler's lead- ership Will put. Germany's c1vll1za_ tlcn buck. r, the great Eng- n, asserted that the ears War (1618-48) hack the clvlllzutlon of the is. Joined Gennan Federation by 200 "ri- a e erm Instantly nsi‘.i'y¢n§°i§§t"§°fl.n almost In the space of five years-ting to 193B-HItlet' dld two unbellev. able things: HE bfflllZhl German civilization down to a h _ rmy the most powerful fighting machine the world has known. Perhaps these two things have 5°!" V91‘! important connection. new Germany, rhaps. At any rate, with the Thrd Reich now a eap of rubble such as no other war has ever left any other coun. try. how much of a bltterlyai - B 119W Gemlany. the tncurabe Nazi, now lles, still living, among hlm’. a s he foremost ‘ to WhlCh all our generals qifiitflthl-il. M. G. O.T. officials wlll soon wish they had the answer. The only way to answer It, lt. would seem, would be If we were ourselves Inside the Ellfifilllilfifllil ifillifillfillilfillillfillillfillillillillilfillfilfl IEIEEIFJLIIEEIEIIEIIEI fflfiil able to put. Germans’ minds We must see how-In their cor- rupted eyes and hearts-l-lltler U506 the Veliv best points of demo- cracy to defeat democracy; how he actually dld get Into power by rlctly legal means (how absurd Is for well-meenln Liberals and Leftwlngers in tl-is country stlll to try to deny that); and 011w. when you see how all Ger- many, with all its heart, wanted Hitler-then you wlll begin to un- derstand something of man, who has led the entire Ger- man people to their destruction, ls still ooked up to the wounded young Nazi dylniz among the ruins of hls Fatherland-us a god. I had the good luck to slt three feet behind Hitler at; the first lselpzlg trial. when he was testi- fying (In a shiny-backed double- breasted blue suit) In defence of the three Relchswehr officers he ilflflaiiih. . "HIST IN THE DEBT" Let me Invest In all the things of home: In rivers, strong of shoulder. car- ry i! lips Of pine. andm r, und hemlock to- e wards sea, In reeks which form a glittering HOW THE COW MAKES MILK .1 ._ _ Ellillilillitllitilallfilfilli-Jlélléllw was accused of having corrupted I sail never lo et. that I i worn-out m “nest voice that ‘came roaring, at you-like an express train com- g lhlfllllgh a. tunnel. biog his fln i“ “l”. er eon uson) he cried: "I never tried to eorrupt the wehr! I want to intend And then after 45 mlrtutgg u; repeating the assertion that. would get lie made that famous declaration, lng J led in w why inn P “s emberlstlulctlouiitillloiie ‘iilmf? d headsiwlll i-oll too." xpa e ' and .222" muc erence between the two 11v; tgnyhat speech. Actually, ‘l 10W?“ lhvlikhb he was being too his business. a long ‘way was September, d1 t. He knew that the bl Ive-hr gjenerals hated 1m. In . ma; the his Ruhr industrialists would drop hlm like a hot br stalled a revolution of any sort—' at the millions of marks was secretly gettltiz from t. Wllllld l» knew above all other eonslderatfontntliaf the Germans were still a la lng and law-abiding peoplestrunge and th rout VICTORY ion . . SALESMAN ins A BIG 10B 1on0 us: can ONLY REACH HIS OBJECTIVE THROUGH THE COOPERATION OF EVERY PATRIOTIC CITIZEN. PLEASE BE PREPARED T0 D0 BUSINESS ON THE FIRST CALL. THIS i 1s VITALLY IMPORTANT T0 TnusUccEss or‘ TI-IE LOAN- lational WarFinance 0otiimittoe< taiateisteintauiatatatatsiutatsltataislutatatati interact-isolationistunannounced-Jubilant l; DAIRYMEN Another Opportunity too see Talkie Movie » _ Picture on DAIRY COW You are invited to be on): guest at. the Prince of Wales College Auditorium on MONDAY, MAY 1 Ill. s-tio p.111. To see this talkie Film In Technicolour “The Science of Milk Production" by Dr. W. E. PETERSEN, Professor of Dairying, University of Minne. sofa, and one of the world’st greatest authorities on the dairy cow. You will see in actual pictures-i ' WHAT CAUSES MASTITUS, AND WHAT' T0 D0 ABOUT IT; A TWO-YEAR-OLD HEIFER MILKING NORMALLY wrrnour uavtno BEEN BRED; , ' A MECHANICAL cow PRODUCING MILK; Bring your-neighbors and your hired man. This is the most interest‘ d ' f‘! duced and this may mg any ‘m w" p". of seeing it. Come and see it now~ be your last opportunity Sponsored by lllLLll-‘N 8i SPILLETT CHARLOTTETOWN --_______ rid Left-WI 6 e8 a oae p which Hitler always held 0t Into power were not such as the one n ééi 8- 5-5 suit. or the galvanic roaring 801" at the start- all lutched back éitsrtaxg, 19g; when g e ur . Relchs- ubllg Gegmfn or “if” Relchswelir! I thereu n made "' c Relchswplirl" n; we; n; pt..." Yet Liberals In fuse to abandon of proving unit there st are-sizable blocs of Gennany. useth n!‘ lie l" 01113’ by legal menus. all the outside worm in lnto power genuine Eng] make It so hard to wlll be for the next to kllluble Nazis f the Third Re n, gnythltrigl like a "soft. riot think there Is t: ke and!“ f In wlll be a National Nov- er's Brown Shirt fol- ltler, super-schemer, knew The Nazis were still from being 1n (this 1930. and they get. power until March, R. l‘h . didn't llfie iuini fa He knew tnssv stunt nrittvzn ll Yell have any Dylnevrla m, i, he Heartburn. he letting g hem medlately. cut. oil-and he w-Iov- n very effect tnlnin IEIZEIIEJIEIIEJEIIEIIIIPJIEIE 5' 3 5' o after he President I-llndenbutiéw s “t” tler g 0n. and President Ylfllllhll “m u; tielr fond hope were-and That Ls wh these good-hearted, fin Liberals wlll new r the man on "It! Snot In Germany whose job 1t {O m‘? or so s e ng un- rom the rubble of He knows that lee" wilt and drink It wlll hep them to keep l stomach ma‘: _ . Slur Gutrle etc. Thghdlqn’: . o o Evan's Stomach Mixture lm- ' Evlha Stomach Mixture l] we means of oli- fimmmwwfimm" C nnnunuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuamend l l‘ fakes- ét tiiii P COUT- Liberals "ll 1- ‘t. It. “license (luff OUBBIE BUILD Riley lllldlll Bank Clta Phone 1M! At LOANS 0N Ill Professional in--. - and fig.“ ‘n. r. AllGllIBilll-ii Channel leaning It“!!! TIC! Illlliq Charlottetown ‘Mclfiml ' 9 Bentley w. l. BENTLEY. ‘i. a. J. A. BENTLEY. I. 0.‘ Banister: and Attorneys-u. kw ill Priaee ltnet M. ALB‘? FARMER‘ HONEY!‘ BAIRISTEB. IOLICITOB. I'm ‘Bank Ofofintlamgr" u“ cnauLo-nerowu A X W. MATi-IIESON Office: IO Great George em Money to BABRISTER. SOLIQITOB. nu Richard B. Johnston I - .. mublwt’. i135"... i. Prince Edward {thud 0 tlaocuaor u“ 3min! E. Johnston! II Mill lllilt Ollloo HIIIQ ‘H. laden .|.tt. McGIIIGAILITIi IIAIIJSTIR. IOLIOITOI . NOTARY. ETC. ELF. McPhee B. A. K.C NOTARY be. BARBIE‘!!! BOLIOITOI‘ Charlotte!!! PALMER e HASLAll A. J. IIASLAM. 1A.. LLI- IABBISTIB. ETC. I Nova 800th Clullll riottctowll. P. I2. l- t T0 LOA Lille!!! Frederic ll. Large lAI-IISTII. ITO- ilb Great George strut P. 0. In ti! CIIAILOTTETOIVN. l‘. E. l. Charles R. McQllflld I A. Banister, Solicitor. Notify. Illa. lilo! Building, Gharlotletwl Phone Ill fr? - couucwtosis Oharlotleowll. P. E- l- sacs Eiilifilltftf lattsseimrmtn lJ. S. TAYLOR I otvromtartusr l Corner Kent and QM" m" Phone 56 , Evenings by Alltfiilfa?“ - ll. J. IIABOII Norman Marshall. He is a wonderful orator. and French Cattada is just about the only place left in Canada ivhere oratory counts for any- thing. And he does not go otit to destroy his opponents; he accepts what they have done, and. in a most reasonable way, proves them to be fundamentally wrong. The other figure is llon. P. J. A. Cardin, Minister of Public Works in the King government until 1942 when .l1e resigned over the conscription policies of the model ls long enough and broad enough and that. lt fits stiugly around the heel. Also n shoe‘ shouldn't be selected until one has stood up in It, for when the bodyb weight 1s ut upon the feet, they become a alt size or even n size larger. If a shoe has to be "broken ln", be sure that It was a bad choice. Rat 40 Id n Feb- ruarymalhwilll. wageTblitriidedudn th middle of America, Chicago, b a mun Paul P. Harris. whose lo- Rotarlan Inclusive- easury. Harbopgiirwslyggsh shelter navlea In orfomnvalsqi I'll-ling lllil eggplant “m” society of nations. lf their power is recognized they can take the corresponding responsibility, bttt it is impossible that they should take that responsibility and allow others to decide how and ivheti it is to be used. Or as Viscount Cranborne expressed it it! the Hottse of Lords: “To abolislt war means that the ("ire-at Powers on whom this eitormotis responsibility will lie, will have to keep up great armies, navies and air forces to be available in as that Inst truth might seem now. Had We Reallsed! o. in: I nld. I watched I-llt- ln action. deliberately and knowingly using the best points’ of democracy-the free vote-ta de. surety n . nstead of buhllclslng hlm then as the ranting comic Omit-ll’. we had shown the deadli- neee of his very orthodoxy and its lrrestlble appeal to the distressed Gannon people. we might have of Is trued . Isl". hgmburn‘. lllln lllll a IGIIB 0 Iflfll ' heart. Price 88;. npaglogeil}: — All YOU TIOlJlI-ID. WITI LUMBAGO OI IOII BACK T Here, at the very cross-roads of the wor swift laallelons shall meet and bus I1 B l‘ Bea no longer death beneath I!!! But. frgulta, exotldflowera and spicy in . Strange and amazing canoes In l their care. Montague. P- E- '- = to u i: A- l- Olloo It‘? . a t . fill llolbda 016:!!! pl! '1“ DIUOIIOII New in her morning; stare ltlll in government. any part of the world where peace is threatened . . . and, I say quite franltlyr, this is going to put a heavy litirtlen particularly on this coun- try, We are not going to be rich immediately nflcr this war, and we shall have many admir- able objects in the field of social improvement k; n-lticli we shall all desire to devote the nat- ional income. and yet we shall have to direct a considerable propnrlioti of that income tn lltc needs of international defence. . We must not fall into the error of thinking that we can buy international peace on the cheap. It simply ‘cannot be done. But however dear peace is. it is much cheaper than war." In.“ realistic approach to the problem is ~ t w Cardin's Independents are sup- portd by a very large amount of financial back- ing from wealthy French-Canadian indtistrial- ists. Mr. Cardin is still a Liberal; while it does not require much analysis to realize that Mayor llottile~having bccn interned by the Liberal gorcrtittient is strongly opposed to’ Kitig. _There is a itoorl deal of lhinkitig rtroitnd the capital to the effect that Cardin may be used as a bait to get the anti-King Liberals to itdte Liberal lndependetit. Mayor Houdc is rather the mart to watch. lf he is successful in swinging a large number of seats in Quebec to his support, it will be a most serious defeat for the Liberal graphy typifies ness. l-le was born In Wisconsin, rew up In Vernont, went. to col- lege In Iowa, settled down In Il- linois and married a Scottish wife. He worked as a reporter, teacher, fruit. picker, actor, cowboy. sales- man, and boat hand. The idea and the organization has spread all over the world. Rotur ls not- etl for the many service p ojects it. has undertaken. But pt-‘fllfiltfi l" greatest contribution to today's world ls 105a tangible and obvious. In an age of speclallzatloti and competition. Rota has brought together on n baa of 800d w llt She has outirovrri her adolescent r eyes. A ltflllgfl of degp blue lakea upon er Neal. Gowned 1n the line of hills, the gold of 3rd , Kissed by attenlve MIIIOII, tun and r n. What lam-l could be ful. more blerse I would invert In courage, youth and dreams; Here l]? I28 hollow of my country's I fa’ proriilse. wrapped tn folds ‘of future vearr inore beauti- d? and 800d fellowship thousands of men who. In their other contacts with each other, are either rlvttle or mutually unintelligible. -Chrls- pa rt y.. tion Science Monitor. IGOR‘! or Ill lands blessed by 0w Mme: is the Iandl —Dor&t.:~y ‘Bright-ilk, “width, averted a lot I! h d th lf erl bu‘ Back-Rite Talil A remain lmmttam Neuritll. other lo. We have one of the remedies to ufler manly for Bnehein . Urlllltv enabler ~ t liilntrflflular ‘and o a coma. an which $0!!! kinematic l fall to releli. Prieo l0 nettle oer In. rite. z m: Ill Great Gentle line! k Mail Order: Given from! Attention. - . ° B. F. l|titeh|ioit' I SUI opronsrntsfl lt- "smtuiuu in t!" l tin] of I'll"! l" correction of ocil facts. l ll Grafton 8W“