PAI =1 ruun IHETQHAQQRWEEIQKN; ___GUAR9_._!AN__ __ ’_"_ GIIAIILUTTETUVIII Glllllllllll llnrnlng Dolly (Itllilel hi Ill?) Incident: Lieut- Gel. I. Oimkr l- III-IN lnl Director. l, I Inuit. IJJ. Freak Weller, old Lleet. Ill l. Burnett, B.0..N.V.I. (OI lotlvo lorvloo) BUIIIOIIIPTION IATII ly Iell In P, I. L, [$.00 per yeer: Il-IO Ier I month, 11.29 ror l menthol 60o for one neoil Olty Delivery 36.00 per your; $.00 for O Iollll FIJI Inr I lnonthox Ibo lor ole Iolll By Inll to other Province: end IJ.I.A. N.“ For veer letnrdny Weekly: £2.00 per you: 81,00 for I loathe, 50o fur I months any to ehtolnel oi Timon lnnero. New York: Old Bonih Nun Anni-y. Corner illlk onl "eohinnel Booion: Metropolitan New: Agenny, llll Peel II, blnntrnllf J, Flno 854 Boy 80.. ‘Iornntln New! Ihlil, Chateau Lnurler. Oiiauo; Wolfe‘: None Stand lub- bnry, 0nt.: Hub Tobin-cu Shop, llnneton, 8.3. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” Ilie Chlrluttelown Gnordlen Enrolling‘: New: Annoy, FRIDAY. JANUARY l5. 1943 Aviation Research listnhltshmciit of new aeronautical laboratories , e_v thc Ntuitnntl Rcscztrch Cotuicil just outside oi Utuuvu has punidcd improved facilities for rcscztrvh ull the multitude of problems arising_ from modern trciuls in aviation, says an Official : publication. Closest co-operation is maintained; bctuceti the Roval Canadian Air Force and the Cotuiciks lziburztturics throttgh the Associate Litiuimittt-c on Acroutttitical Research, the chair- man of which is the Air Member for Aero- nautical Engineering, R.C.:\.F. Much of the work in Iirogrt-ss relates to problems that have bccit suggested by Air Force authorities in Can- ada, the Cuitctl Kitigdoni or the United States. llUYlZUlllill zuul vertical wind tunnels enable tests to be lllllllt on tnodel aircraft of all kinds w dctcrmitte their characteristics, good or bad, which Lrc likt-lv" to affect their behaviour m flight. 'l‘ht-~c~ studies are very important in the LlUYCllIlullLIlI of >ll]>L‘l'lctl' fighting machines and in Working out all PUaSIlJlC safeguards for the flying pcrsomtcl who use them. In the engine laboratory dyuzmmmt-tcr rooms are provided for the testing of aircraft engines, while in the gxtsulinc uud oil litlioraunry complete equip- nit-ut is proviltvi for" physical and chemical test- ing of twirl-tin fin-ls and lubricants. A struc- tures lllill‘l.ll"l"~ prunlvs for the fabrication of prototyyt. ui .t ;.;tft .unl for the test of com- poticut parts. lixpcrimcuttil wtuk required m connection ‘ , piwI»‘.<-r:~.s under investigation in the i. R-searrh Laboratories is often carried out co-ope-rativelv with the R.C.A.F. Test and lkvt-lnpment Establishment which is really a illll~<F2ll€ exprrituc-tilal flying station. In this wriv it has been possible to correlate in a most effective '~.'.';_v the results of laboratory and model QXpc-rltllenls with full-scale tests and It bring togrihcr on a common project civilian scientists artl fickle.- ope-rzifing personnel. [luring r11. (war thc Radio Section continued t0 uork t.~n ll-i llt‘\'f‘lfljllllr"lli of Secret Radio Locator equipniwiit with considerable success. There are rilrsatlir in the hands of the Services numc..i-z= tflc 1a.: r w mrnts which have been developed in the National Research Labora- tories. Some of these have already been used iuocooofully against the enemy. Canada's Blind The twenty-fourth annual report of the Can- adian National institute for the Blind ll cheer- ful reading with tho assertion that last year was the most successful and progressive period in its history. This statement is backed up with a record of establishment of the Institute in every province of the Dominion and in Newfound- land; that with few exception: there are no blind people in Canada unknown to the Institute; that the Institute is equipped to receive, reeducate And rehabilitate all the men who may suffer loss of sight in the war; prevention work is going forward; employment of blinded persona is well up; provision for residential, vocational and re- creational centres is increasing. There has been a marked increase in the em- ployment of blind persons during the war. De- fails are not given u to what form thii em- ployment is taking, but a comparison of statistic! indicate! that a considerable portion of it i: in cafeteria service in factories and that type of concession work. In its shops the Institute is having difficulty getting materials. In the libr- ary section there is a diminution in the number of Braille books, especially those which former- ly came front Etiglaud. Talking book machines and rccortls are bccotnitig increasingly difficult to sccurc also. Ilowever, the library got 600 new Braille volumes last year and each day it reports Pbst office trucks carried the outgoing stipplics of thcse books and brought back others. The lnslitulc library supplies not only the Do- iniuitati, but also Ncivfoundlattd and the British West ludics. Although no accurate statistics are available, rays the report, it is probable that at least a quar- wr and perhaps a. much ltigher fraction of those now receiving pensions could be removed from :he classification "blind" if arrangements could be made for surgical treatment for their defec- tive eyes. To the natural question ‘Why?’ the answer is that n0 funds are available for trans- portation and alterations required, and second- .ly, that tnauy recipients of pensions feel that if they were restored to the seeing world, they would not bo so oconontically secure a: they are now. Neither of the rbosoru lo good enough. It il a relief to know that the Institute luthor- lties are making every effort to clear up this lituation. A Dangerous Tendency Mr. lvaltor Lippmanmnotod Amerleinvvriter Ind war commentator, ltao reached the conclus- ion Ihat the smooth working of the American system of government ll being impaired, to the detriment of the war effort, by on unfortunate divoreernent between the aetivitlel of the re- and executive officials, otherwise styled the bureaucrats. The separation of powers under the American political system has always creat- ed certain difficulties, but in his view these are now being aggravated by the tendency shown by many of the bureaucrats to ignore the people's representatives. The same tendency may be noted in Canada. Mr. Lippmann is particularly severe regard- ing the growing disposition of tuctubers of the Cabinet ‘and high officials to resort to the radio for sudden announcements of important changes of policy, arguing that, under a system of rep- resentative government, this method is unsound in principle and unsatisfactory in practice. “The radio,” he writes, "has the great defect that you cannot talk back to it and that you cannot ask questions, and therefore it is the most undemocratic of all ways of inaugurating a new program which requires popular support, if the program is to work.” So he cites with disapproval the plan adopted to inform the public on the Administrations new program for rationing canned goods, which is a novel experiment with many complicated fea- tures, not easy to tuiderstaud. Mr. Elmer Davis, the Director of War Itifortnation, and l\Ir. Claude Wickard, the United States Secretary 0f Agriculture, each tirade an announcement about it, and left the public to make the best of what it heard. llut l\lr. Lippntann main- tains that the proper and more effective pro- cedure would have bccn to announce the policy to Congress and have Secretary Wickard ex- plain it to a Congressional committee which could ask him questions. Mr_ Lippmann thinks that such things are done in a much better way in Britain, and points out that Mr. Churchill, ip offering reports on his stewardship and making important pro- nouncements of policy, never neglects to use the House of Commons as his first forum. o- EDITORIAL NUT ES - The Presidency of the Board of Trade these days is not altogether an enviable 0r (lesirable position for a busy man to hold and efficiently discharge its onerous duties for it is no sinecure. The Charlottetown Board of Trade are fortun- ate in being able to persuade Mr. V. A. Ains- worth to continue in office for another year. _§ ‘I It It Ill Alas, there will be no sequel to Flt. Lt. Richard Hillary’s book “Last Iinenty" or "lhllitig Through Space," the story of an R..-'\.l'. fighter pilot in the Battle of Britain. Lieut. llillary, who had been working on a second book, was killed in action this month at the early age of twenty-three, one more addition to the next missing generation of leaders v w w a \Vho constitute the Treasury Board which turned down the vote 0f Parliament regarding our railway wharf improvement? The l\lin- ister of Finance and several officials! \Vhat right has such a bureaucracy to defy the will of Parliament on the pretext that the necessary out- lay lawfully voted by Parliament was not a war measure? It is simply preposterous, and our province will be writing itself down in his- tory as supine and gullible if we submit to it. Oh, for an Angus MacLean or John A. Mes- servy at Ottawa to assert our rights and pro- tect. our interests! =0- t l U A: might have been foretold by experienced newspapermen, Rev. j. L. Thomson is having a perpetual headache over C.B.C.'c Labour Forum, which is the equivalent of the rtewspztper corres- pondents’ column. l\lr__IIO\ve, the Minister oi Munitions, Mr. Drummond Wren, Secre- tary of the Workers Educational Association, and Mr. George Bart, of the United Automobile Workers of America have protested vigorously against particular contributions, and at present the reverend manager in conducting an investi- gation of statement: broadcast. Strict control of tho correspondence discussions is an essen- tial, otherwise endless trouble is apt to en-ue, the average contributor having no sense of res- ponsibility for what he writes or says. u a u a Sir Henry Morgan, British buccaneer, born this date, 1635; native of Glamorganshire; be- came “Admiral” of the West Itidian buccanecrs at the age of thirty-one; two years later he ravaged Cuba, and crossing to the tnainlattd, carried Porto Bello by assault, sacked the town, and brutally tortured the inhabitants, withdraw- ing only on payment of an enormous bribe; for incurs av TIIE WAY Who wouldn't be o teooher! When school opened after the holidays, u ‘mm Wllllam kindergarten teacher called little Billy to the front. T5e youngster started f0 crv. Teaeher took a sturdv lIt-tle chap by the hand and put hlm beside Bllly. “See BllEy," she sald. “Jackie Isn't crying." Then Jackie started to cry. In a few mo- ments half the class was crvlng. It. was their first dav at school! —Fort wllllam Timea-Joumal. l Hitler's latest newspaper photo- IBFBDh shows him with tousled halt land sagging cheeks and neck. whim -may well ‘be physical signs of worry l over Russia. and the African sltu- atlon. The war seems to be getting Into his hali- to such an extent that before long he may have none at all.—-Mont-reul Gazette. You always can depend on a bus hflvlnt! seats when It's coming back from where you are going. —8her- brooke Record. The United States may rnn out of caster oll In 30 days. but that's 114mg tlmepfor iittle Wlllle to keep his teeth clinched. -Toronto Star. There has been a lengthening of the average llfe In Canada. ‘Ihls does not mean that the maximum span of life has been increased. but only that more people I've lo a greater age child mortalitv has been greatly diminished -thls ls the brlghest achIevement. But there has been an extension of life: at the other end. This means that more llve to be old, and In no do- <lng llve further bevond the perlod of the greatest v‘gor of easv ad- tantrttlon and nf adequate eumlngl ‘ability. Thus IliLs lengthening of l lIfe makes the problem of old age, more acute and difficult. It maker!‘ more ‘mpcrntlve too. some frlend-Iy provision for the care In that per- iod. even if there ls Increased sav- lng against old age and Its severit- Ies, ~Gue1p|1 Mercury. Because troops nre Jeeplng lnateodl of tzaniplntz. savs Sigmund Rom» berg. no good marching songs are‘ being wrttten. There's a sour note lm phut. phut. phut, the boys are marching -Torontu Star. Marshal Tfmosheillro, wltth hln epic defence of Stalingrad followed by the drlve of hi5 troops against the thwarted Germans, Is again the hero of the hour ln London, where he ls familiarly nnd affectionately refeired Io as "Old Time" Actu-‘ ,a1lv ths great general is nnly 47‘ years old. When a young man he} worked as n peasant in the fic-‘dsi of hi5 native Bessnrabla. Now he is bne of the famous military fig- ures of all time -Toronto Star There has been hoarding of butter and the offenders are not all whole- salers or retailers by any mennl; Fig- ures given out SllOW that there were several million pounds of butter pur- chased In the month of Nnvcmlwr than in the Drevlotts mouth this Year. Anticipating a shortage, peo- ple, particularly 1n cities and arg- er centres, have been purchasing, buffer far bevond their aetuall needs and storing it away for fu- lllfe IIBEd-S It ls greed and self- Interest and nothing but that that has created the present butter s't- nation. But human nature l5 like thflt. and If It ls left unchecked. some one. and that one ls always the poorer clnsss, has to do w’t!1out one of the necessities of life, Huron Expositor, Seaforth When the history of this war comes to be written, It wlll show, undoubtedly, that control of the seas by the American and Brltish fleets v.15 the essential element of victory’. If Hitler and Hirohlto could really communicate by either sea or land, fhc military stuation would be fur different: from what It is. But by land. Russia holds them a- part. and by sea, the Allied fleets. —Clilcago News. John Bracken was once a teacher of field husbandrv in an agfictilturnl cdlege. Mr Mackenzie King has had plenty of experience In teach- lng In unlverslfies and elsewhere. M J. Caldwell, the C C. 1". leader, Is llsted In Who's Who its n school teacher. So Ls John H Black. more. leader of the Soclal Credit group In Parliament, Arthur Meig- hen, who has just tellnqulshed the Conservative Ieadershln, taught In the Caedonla l-llgh S1001 In 1897 and 169B. Viscount, Bennett another former Prime Minister of Canada taught school In Douglaslown. New Brunswick. The late J. S. Woods. WOYlh. 0f C C. F‘. fame, was also, at one time. a country school- master. -Brantforc- Expositor. Th! China Up Fund, operated by Canadian Boy Scouts to assist Brit- ish Scouts who have the mlsfor- three years he continued this course of rztpine and cruelty, till at length he was captured by the British Navy andieptmto England in chains; _ there,'winning Charles II’: good graces, he was knighted and made Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica where he died in I633; he was the proto- type of the ruthless high financiers and mono- polists of the Nineteenth and Twentieth cen- turies who accumulated hitherto unheard of wealth by the exploitation and ruin of others, and then sought and obtained royal honours in the guise of philanthropists by expending part of their ill-gotten gains f'or ‘theipublic weal. Britilheru have been warned once more t0 tighten their belts in the current year in an- ward total war in which consideration for CIVI- lians grows less and less. It should be inter- preted as another indication that Britain is pre- paring to throw its last reserves into the strug- gle against thc Axis powers. As far as shop- pers and housewives are concerned it is not any longer a question _of “you pay your money and you take your choice", it is a matter of produc- has on hand. That goes for almost anything. The development of the points system, which was designed to allow housewives something above a. subsistence rations in the past year gives an idea of how little margin there is left for further tightening restrictions. Each individual is allowed to spend twenty points a tnonlh either m1 one can of luxury or such a dish as five cans nf baked beans. At the beginning of the year the only foods included in the scheme were can- ned meats, fish and beans. In the past twelve months, however, rice, sago, tapioca, dried peas. prumtati-ves of the people, thereby n-neaning beans. lentils, dried fruits, canned fruit, vege- tables, condensed milk. breakfast cereals and Q music-ism, and thou e1 ti; administrative crackers have been added to point rationing. D :5:- Ill‘ ‘completion, e t ‘ I other step in that progressive development to- imarked difference between It and ing coupons and taking what the shopkeeper l tune to lose their homes or equip- ment, has now passed the $31,000 mark. Ln Calgary one Troop don- uted $50 with the challenge that If another Troop would do the same ey would donate a further sum. second Troop responded wlth $62, and the first Troop promptly sent along the additlonal $50 —Moncton Times. A looonvotlve Just completed at the Doncaster works of the I. N.E R. la the 1,942nd to be bullt there. Thus tlz" number plate fixed to the smoke box of the engine combine the re- glstratlon number and the year of Ide that ll unlikely to occur again. It. W85 In 18M that the first engfne was hrullt at Doncaster and there 1a a very the 1942 model. For example today's locomotive Is twice as heavy, the total weight of the I861 engine In working order and Including tender tbelnz 83 tons 19cwt. whlle the mod- ‘em one Is I30 tons l3cwt. —-Gla.r- gow Herald. l That lien Doctor Goebbels and his staff suffer sadly from lack Iof balanced lmnglnatlons has seldom lbeen a0 amuslngly demonstrated as n the llne of propaganda wIth The French Forces IntNorth Africa (GEE-m) ' F52‘ 1-1- mio“ liirlrf-lna m u» atre, bu? such h Prenhsol Tm...“ s“? anothe- lls Abner-lea. To quote from Pertfnlx’: ravlew of the North Abdel-n effu- o a n. "At the present hour the Punch troops that are flzhtlnl in ‘mums are nearly u numeroul .8 the British and they greatly outnumber the Americans. speak of British and Amer-Icons smelled h that tl-ientre of o rotfom. "It roball: memgethot‘ Ire men will be fled up In the pen ance of accessory t and more will become available for the battle- field and. simultaneous] , of course. adclltlonel French dlv one wlll be at hand ready no nlfin themaelveo by the aIde of the Al ea entrust. the common enemy." In these brief paragraphs "Per- tlnax" gives by inference the crucial reasons why an early accord be- tween Glraud and de Gaulle l; e0 necessary. The complete unity of all f. elance htfng Frenchmen would quicken an shorten the Allfud lob of expelllng tho rump o! the Axh from Africa. But nu- . punche- ment Is not easy. The trouble 1e, Pertlnux explains, that Glroud. while a great. soldier, 1| no politician or diplomat, and that he on v beats the air u "groups and actions whirl around him." General Char Nogues In IVIOTOBSO and Governor- General Yves Chute] 1n Alger! "take counsel only of themeelvolfl, Nogvues Is I Pebalnlfe of dlmlnllh- I I. Chatel a Dorlonlte- “i man of obscure beglnnfn whom Admlral Dar-Ian raised l his present position.” Pertfnax obviously reiordl both these men as political ndventuroe and trimmers. He does not use those precise words, but says: "They try hard to salvage whatever advant- It seems herd to helluva that the l"! Milt- ofonoatlillgfll! lee ; “"‘°|¥‘»" Parliament Won liohhlnn h Wino") .. Amxvunoemmt o! the e t.- ment of Lon! Glut-well of ll Brl '| Poymutor and of a tussle between Wtnetnuplnm and the Brltlli Parliament. lllmont. obible choloo no Plymuter But that Ie in Mr tlnnodeoblriotlnd Pl‘ Q gWhflQ. Prelude to the o see about the Ohm-chill tank. Had the decision i0 wt It Into mus pro- duction without wot for tests been a. . and l! not, when had it hem? Mr. Churchill himself replied, more luv-ply than the question seemed to jut-fly. Ealakl the docial no hf: end had taken It all“ own responsibility. It, he laid In 100, when the need o! tanks was desperate and battle experience had proved that. tanks of the oldchrzlneglgn were In- tho to t-oh AN fin-the: questioner Then were rune. Tho ofltioa lflctcod. But 10rd Cherwoll lddod t0 the British Cabinet loot rook. verbal bottle, gevo right on the matter of Principle. 1M‘ the questions about tanks that hid but twmnc up ot Westmin- obmlt Lulu 0M iwflt‘. 0N0 hill Per. ma. On the {we o! 1L1 Protease: tel at the University of Oxford long”: Lord Ohorwell’ ‘l recondi- t-hollnueeof Oommoeucoanovr lit bockfor ANeIVuouQK-mletoollnflloow-lrbovondciuvhnwm Now! qs plow as . 'eArIbo nY "c" e ‘o . " - can |o|n the Active Army MendlgCotoQoqoMulvvvol'C”orev|-gom|y needed by the Royal Canadian Ordnoneo Com: to mve o: Clofb. CNN 599N001» oflVCfl-Mltlidlilfl, Panels looton, lady lulldon, Shoo Ropelrorq, ole. and release Coioqory “A” men for combo! duly. Spoelolmdecpoyioexperlomodwovltonponhg trodes rod-promotion en merit bush-with Oppwlmlly loloomolrodoorhueoloyowelrlfllnyotarprerem occupation. Agellvnll II tofloovdveloruuup b55.AdNOW and help to homo victory. lOCAl. RECRUITING STATION Hollies-Camel Shootout": llllplld JANUARY i. 1s. 194; signed, Tendon wlll be received It the office of the shoeing ltoroeo and blacklmltlt work for the lottetown, for the season 1948. The not necessarily accepted. TENDERS T up to and Including Saturday January 90t J. A. FULLERTON, ’ C117 Clerk MORE cozvrmsurzozvs undu- ll, for c“! 0f Chu- lowolt or any fend" ages and honors they held when the im- were not reelly t ' Adlmral was llv ." But tho chlof 1t oll t were about m Bn- , stumbling blob; f.» French unity m w, 'o,,m,mm Nmmuyhuv. R F Africa. u (Iioneral Nogueu, who In Qqvgyglnlgnj, (mung mm. the ‘lpgllflm ‘lgiperunafi shgtmanm t! Ind th 0d Lin! I011. And i cmove rom spresen p0 _ fr... ellmlnatlon of Nogues. n1 fac- pgmvy," ph,,""'°'1m®k';t,"*,ge$wr;, $31,011:? ygktgyggdmdtlapég crggptun. a a mum. n t 2°“ Wflilf fllflfiklft’ “*3,” lfldfi‘ mm Ohorwell o: Oxford, who was néqerir lggrdware Co Ltd ' 26.00 Albert’ 3137f“ Joeopbi ‘ nera rau . D e ' ‘ v asethat, the problem should“ soon be rmmlmw d3 Kg’ mwmuurzcfltom. b. . Mgfiaaailélon J‘ Glut’ Mt’ mm ‘lhahlhunl can, mg 3- “lfedd ghf,“ ll‘ h“: f” “l?” 2:’ ermmnt ' ' w“ West Kent School Dunlh 40.20 Joy fiorolidnmmloek m " w ' I fililetearm; oiinfrgnuendbiiee 2mm.» m"! Qlwwell, u proves“,- Mrs. V-L. Goodwin 15.00 Mount Btowort, nonmt n siblv exceed,“ 1000000 men m an nun-kg Akxand“ wmmmn, Col. G. Elllott Full $.00 Argyle, Waldo l B0111, ortb servlces—flrmly bstdbllshed on the a mm mo" It home In Iwborewr- ‘ Fm“ '°-°° 5""- l- "Wml- WW ' lea then In emmenta hes been R‘ c" Omndl" 1°90 551W!’- Thovnpoon, 1m; Nlorth Amctfuf will’ Ind rrtefryflig Winston Cumin‘: personal ad w‘ a‘ w‘ O33 L'°'l"°nh 5m m" payarnos mporan D8 . - ' ' ' Band offensive of the Allleo. , Irv-tame?“ p3; gum w! “his; n“ I'm“ “mum 0°‘ 1am edits. m“ "°" “u” l?‘ 1°" “m- A. n. Oufolllfe 10.00 um pun“ m‘; m‘. 3 Farmers Co-operafe 1;, fmkfllsmfgglfllla :12 film"; Wo-he-lo Club loo Beer, nu n. ounmtng, . "'_ In» oonslderatlon oifnwun ctiiinbav wlumuiisslliiiuiiiicii Block iiiig ' uareodpm‘ 8' Ieiifwbsamfavi ‘Hmmllm’ 5P°°“'°” dummies. Amr- oervinc tnmuan MrsE. lartche C.Ph11llp| 10.00 miter Dover, wiinuoi m WM" m‘? Pl'°d“°l~l°“ "1 1°“ tho last war with the old Royal 6 F. Hutcheao 00 0300 roectvod from‘ 3 ranks M one of the mm 1m "- myL-tc Come. Frederick Lfndemann srkn womeill- Institute ' 1min 1.. n. mm ab...‘ m M" phases Of (“Ma's W" "m- stayed on with the n. A. r a; III sum Brld e m. '. A. omfmm i and greater exertions are called expel-imam p “m, in wok Que,“ - omen.‘ mum Bhmhumnuth‘ m "n. n for to obtain maximum crows. it u mug, o; “mflmmt, h, m. tute. Murray Harbour 30.00 M. Johnlfon, mm Glii . wu- sswlllsl that =11 hflvhflwd msm- avlatlon lwborawlu In Fnmboro- Wfl-QRHIEXIKIIIQOH-y 10.00 llam mum, Bessie . Oflg; be removed from war-tlme _ Then he went to the Chum Norman MacLeod 10.00 Frank Miami, ml. O. Wunouth. agriculture In this country. Pro- do“ uborawry at Odom w W . lllle 10.00 William C , North wuurm. ductlon fell short of objectives in continue h,‘ empermmm “m, S. N. Keys 10.00 J. A. McKlnnwkGOOIIQWWH. DI‘. a. number of districts last year m“ w" came and 9,015,361. mndb MMDOHI! Ill-RAW! 00- 1J4- 30-00 Built-i. Mi‘: J. cl-mPblll. chiefly because farmers were un- mm mmed’ m. mwnmlc mm“ J- A- W95 ‘ 10-00 A- W. HOIIWQ. 3- 301111111111. M8 v, mm - m». are. a automaton ’. “an” tau mud-r...» A use» compee n e rc ance _ - -- - ' let some of their acreage lle fallow Qsuiinopisilsfistfig ti}; §§2$°°a/,§{§d aligning lai-chldéplge! n 26.83 1g‘, 331A, Eclgonold, Mrl. F. . °' "h" °°“‘d m‘ Ewth" ‘l’ ‘m’ ‘Pith "WW Implement v1’ scientific mos» Mrs if a ufliiioii bloc xeffy‘ hiiv ri Bernard ‘ctlitiij fgvs S31v1; dim time w 111116" win-rm. m um em Prime mm- m; mvn ‘Pacikfri: 0o. toIoo Ofty, ' swim ‘mmm, Vlctorli m ~ - pm- of Brlteln got- together on ‘vi-um Shoe 0o 10.00 rm. cm n. mum’ '1'“ "m"! °f Wm "m" " nlmwiuen hove beenmuboeenon m: a Mrs. Byron Botwnou 10.00 , . cm. n. lfhcMlIlau have Inks" stew w tw w PM“ with Mr. Churchill ever since 1w. Menaeer a. s l“, novel ink. Hunter mm- u. non Rose- a recurrence of that eltua lon In w". when they w,“ can“! ..wm_ qhumtwtmm no "y v_ '_ _ Mgmeh ‘mm, g their Iowtlshin- Thev believe that my; Fgnlesj‘ 0,, "m" m, pm Hon. H. H. cox. More]! Io.o0 McWlllIaml, J. n. ‘Tlmmlnl, .1. J. 31161510533 mnzfhlieevey clgvoggysmmgr fessor and the Prime wnfrter found Hgv-‘YJZBP- Igygggre. w“ Mclntm. Winston BM. w e r p o - . m h 1 W ~ . '*7* . by nelghbou: working» wftla nefzh- ,,°§,,“§,§,,°‘ Suwmxlgalix?‘ L91’!!! Shoe Co. .00 $1.00 received from: MN. l. 0. t" t" rr- ma?" MM- 1- m» H»- ~= ‘carers. ....:=. . alts." s-ir:~"a.r::~=.v-.rnt *2" e ‘i’; us°° w“ a! “v°‘“"m*°*9m-1'°'¢°l“""ell" 11min maiemoaetzfnm Beer-n yvrWtii" ggiileuiii-uiiilst fl-ioihfhtiirlig‘ lylll-.fil"l°"l°"fnxym n“ Wefllllned- Mr. d: Mien;- il. Kemp. ‘WC i Niall MoKennIe: gi-uob Agfileglilf Mil o“; u, o; foodstuffs m ma,’ u": '5 5 ° mum“ "all!" T!‘ Gaudet. James 8r Frank an. Dr. Stewart, Vlvfen Blrt, Mrs. Jun. Thf, have organmd memmve; WWII)“ "elm"- w vmblflet- PH- Howard n. Smith, Frank ennes- coade; John McAsklll, m. BIBWMI, “m, ,, Md nodumon Army m, 11'"‘°'“ "°' WW- h‘ films 1" my. MY!» J- 9- Jsnklm. m. a. A. Clifford Robertson. A Friend. Itlra. m m, ,5 . h, h on whm; m we “mm. and one that Murchison. mun» Tw t, u a a. A. s. Boyer, mule! Inwther. r. ouelzep mun coemnpunitvemn fouowzlgergfeyrimhbglgmurten. I4 how had w gftgciap. lgrmkkmrquhgrlsop‘ Mt. J. HI lnl. Mulls Kissing, Crrlpo with equal promise of mm"- m-tmn dld not have so much steivvii-tl winfr vizorsaimoift? gfiiamrieiiofiflbiiiiy’ Jvlviisiitisiibiftivieif Mr. R 0. Denmnn. Its sponsor. luck out of the 1m personal and Monttzmnery. JJ P. Crockett: A. r. Mrs. rm Bohrlne,'Mt Stewart. Bgvlifllty; thagnthf Tvwnistlttlr Qrfilfjlmflconfl-denttnl mus: e BrltId-i gpywn. Mr. say/tn. A. 1t. Maclrelfl, Total cosh received by Provin- ciseceracommee. ere 1' w“ _ h1{_,1|,__p1111,l $511113 ‘if? a! a?‘ kégghtlllnzofiltzrrgiestiiimaiftteiinz n,’ ldéitmhifi. A. ill’. rrvndiiiinniiswiiiaur/ri-eiiidiri. cnlaiidiouiiuniirvgtsiaiit fibraiiiizii. “p . X ' Into ecifroolysectfonu, which In turnjvithigeiiit, fofgeéwnllziilminnqls ll‘ von haven't cent ln you eontrlbnllon yo! rnlll ll at once in R. S. are rum-m ‘reduced to gtuupl mh!my’tk who w” from n“ t.” P. Jar-dine, Bank of Commerce, Charlottetown, or to any branch n! The wnmnln; go“,- m- give gnmnqpnm o, the my“ sew,“ w b“ Cnnldlan Legion, or hind It to any Legion member who has In official Each group names lle leader. who “m, ‘he pm ~- p m Mel!!! Mob _,__ Moms-s I member o! the whwl Neville Chamberlain's decisions, sectlon commlttee. and each school section names two reprenentotlves to the central committee of the, tpwnshlp. In this way the whole: orvanlzatfon should be well Integ- rated, capable of being eully wlel - ed end responsive to whatever con-. sttuctlve changes are deemed neces- sary once field operations are un- der way. ‘ There In no thought behind the project of relieving the Individual farmer of hls responsWllf or leading hlm Io believe tha he should look to any one else b0 over- come his difficulties: the organ- ization wlll rtrlve, however, tn help hlm to help himself by securing the whole-hearted support of other ftmnm llvfng near hfrn. Mutuol help In the exchange and oper- atlon of equipment. the poollng of efforts when certain seasonal work ha; to be clone In the qulckeet pos- sible tlme. these and other form: of co-operetfon should moko the toll lighter and also golve many tasks whlch are too much for one or two men. but not nearly no herd whentackled bv four o“ five men. The queetlon of labour and vol- unfnry help from the cItv u also being dealt with. and It I4 felt that condltfone tltla simmer will show a marked Improvement over last veer as e dlrect result of f o practical manner In which the pro- blem has been approached. (Jo-op- eration and willing hearts hove worked wonders In many fields of human endeavour In tho m; the may not look match like Lord (filer-well of Oxford, the eminent ‘eefentlot. But he was a Pefaonal and confidential ldvlser too, and thot-‘e mom/h British Home o! Commons. it Isn't hav- ing any more. so It asked queaflone about M cues- the Prlmo Munster eve In mode hf: oonfldentfa adviser member a! his cabinet. They've lot eometlilnl it West- mlzwter. and a ounlnma A snrrnom or nnmovm Sweet sounds. oh. beautiful music. do not cello lvifiloct mp not Intn the world nroln. th you alone In excellence and llama? plausible hfo our- mchaml In Wllr air benhn anti With llmbe K-lpnwl end 0mm! m infill ulé tho otlnlv an fire same ndmlrable qunlltlee a ould ec- whlch they followed up the an- nouncement of Admlral Dmlan’; as- sassfipatlon. Uslng the Germans press and- radfo to the lImIt. they asserted that. Prime Mlnlster churchlll had plotted Dar-Inn's mur- der at the recent secret session of the House of Commons. They fab- ricated some nensntlonal "last wontls" for the nw-deved admfrnl. They oven declared that President Roose- velt's prompt announcement that the killing was "first degrees mur- der" was actually dlrected at Mr. Churchill himself. Fdlowlng this lead, the Nazi propaganda agency of General Herfflonore Qlreud to subsequently sent out a Morse-codemenlar- Dari-a w" ~ ‘Wu-r blow to transmissloti for use In the UnltedlM-z Churchlll." the pagnntllets are n mnln points In the original Goebbel; people. —8ydney states, eluburrviutz more fully compllah mpresslw feats of food production In West Flamboro. The rolect Is one that other rural D dtatrlcts might. well gtve eat-Iv ot-l tentlon m In order to Increase their own yield of foodstuffs tin: your. Torment sun-e Natural nlato sometimes comes In ween. red or even mottled colors. product Quotlng certain Berlin papers. Tra reprelenfod- them as saying that thg Dar-lon murder had resulted In ietue “Anna-Ameri- can tenslon," and that the selection Jkcord. L lleop llke the Qculllome In the film'- "rnu monienciln the but the world Gill I ‘mo tr ull tlanlnuom on the wr- I . inject mo not. mm ooundil oh. lot mo llve. TIll Doom copay my tavern end not. A my lmell-boimd under the ntnl l "iildnl 8t. Vincent Mlllly. WOMEN RAILROAD!!! rollroodl. nun, , Music mv rempert. and my only ‘These Nut pro- Women worker: form I0 per cent "rlcelessly drollof oll worketl employed 0n Brltllh MAKING ITSELI‘ FELT 1n gravitational moon upon nurtures on the earth Is three times that of the iaun. int-uni Gassy Stoniachs l Ever: new» who u troubled prevente all bod but l pull of the Relieved o eololrom It omo IOIII ‘I0 IDA!- Iliill; oll llppiying Glenn ll. J. “IAABIIN orrolmmlsr _ Montague. P l. L Office Boon: i0 to I2 M. M l to i I. M. Iollrlo 0f ea Connected with ole. In opnolntment lth jzo'.ilglph‘l'g‘|uttihu‘pe:lvlzmlpggau.n|i'qg L IJIIUGSTOBI u. .:.'v..=::.."..-:;'..~.:;- —-""'*-—- _—.-_.~_Z flue Ill dletreloln ' "- ' ""?"- Professional Bards “B; Evans Stnmoch Mlxtnro _ at meal tlln not only ' _=_-;;—,; MeLEOD 8| IENTLEY_ m" win-Hm I.l.Rflfl.lI.lO. m, F” mflmwaifiam I. A. semen r. c gggsaalzllllgficghlieertbom lorrhton oravltitwrneyt-nl mo . “P's?” "tmrrzrx" u um- ou Ixtrooi with - gm? Ind cum: Goln- ---- ____-- -—_....~-—; ‘OHIO f0! Q0 p: b. ‘Igneous: and grfpmhlll c g" y; g4; mm“ llorrelland 0mm! mm: no n ilioe linen‘ "g t" fig;- Il. F. IRBIIIBILD ma. A mum bleed m ;'2l‘-""'l‘l'li"‘.l4‘°‘.'.°r.'°'u§."i‘c °""“"' ‘°°°"""'" y. Pr)“ u,” n, l ' loll: ‘Irut Illlill"! cm Liver “m. ‘u. b". Oil collliee mien “M. an: nlron and rem """" ”"" m“ "' '°" "r not w. mmesou Mace Ihlrleotororlloloitio Munni‘ ‘ouuwun g0- nu: nvo rues - '-"-‘1'-"‘ whiff" m aim o»; linoi I M. Aura Amt 3| II Onion Given Irolfl "-3 ~ i Attention. IAllllTIit sputum!“ L.