y n1: - cinnumsruuii aiiiinnilin Morning Dally tlbunded In 1881) "111 11 u; t. (M. w. Chute: s. iueum "' Vlg-Pruldont: J. B. Bin-null. FJJ. Sect-awry: Liens. Col. D. A. hliwlunnou. 0-5-0- ldltar and Director: J. IL Burnett. l-‘JJ- ““""1§€..ES1'l,°?Ec-.f1'.‘l1 ll1“1l“l'..1'.‘.‘.".~.';'.'12£1 ‘“‘ “ "The Straw“! Memory i! WWI-i" Th" the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, MARCH 3, The Tunnel Project .\'0le 1s 1.11mi iii the Sydney Posl-Rccoid of the 1111-1 iiizii a. iiiciiibci- of the Prince l-ldward lslziiid tjcnei-iiiiieiit, llon. Horace Wright, has 3111111111111 11 i-tiiluzir ruiiiiel as 1111- only hullllliill l\l11u1l's triiiispoi‘tutioii tiroblciii. l1 zultlsi 11-, “fl-gilt is i111" froiti being llie tirigiiiiil ,111t11111- 111 1111- 11111111-1 pi-11111,1>;ll,-—\vhicli tigurutl 1-11 L! -111-~; l.\'(‘l_\' l-'1-1lt-i"."il i-lcctioii, as a 1111.111: ui‘ 11.. 11:1. c, 11.11111 111g- Island's i-iiti-y into 11- 1 1111 :1 i’“- iill i11i_-, ithcii 111c- prr- 1111. ~1r\-1t"1- 1111.. .-iii1li1-i"izc<l 11y the 111111111511-11111111. \\'liilt- 1111-11 scriicg has -1, _- 1111-11 1111-, l>lZfllcl'\‘ llilllstitiflilll0ll ,11,, 111 iiie fCSl 11f LXuuida. it 1111s ' '11_-1l 1111- sliippcits 111 1111- l'i‘11~ _. 111 lIIJ.’ of tllc larger 11f tlic . 1 1; 111-1111-1-11 l'111i"<lt-n .'iii1l 'l'1-1‘1111'I1- 111111-111 1111- ~.'l'\lL'L‘ i1i11rt- ii1;11lc11i1:1.c ,,t 11111- 1111-1011 in ".110 p1" 111111;; 30 1111- 1111111111-1-1111; 111' the 5.5‘. "(har- - 111111 t'1-1- 11 11111111-1 uiidci" lllL‘ .1iuil11-i|;i111l liccii i‘t-~1ii"- -. i .11-11:.~ iiziitll-iiii-g 111111 a 111111111" 11e~ ~1 lizis ,1. 11; i‘i_-_;1il. - ;> i111» rcvivctl iiiiincl agitation an‘ c.\‘_- i1".1\.1_11"11: .1-111;1-~~1 1111- "something; for nothing.’ 1-11 ' lshiitd c111ci"ctl L'i.illl't‘tlc‘l‘.'llli)ll i111 111 "the 111111.111 pact 1411111-111111-1-1-1 1t‘11\,'1!lC-.‘ '1-11111_1,-1111111s sit-uni 1"i1iiiiiiiiiii— 1\i-.l1 1111- 11i.1i11la1id.' Thai iiudcrtiikiiig. 1,, \._;,"\.-, f1‘. l-'(=1l1‘l'1'll illl1ll!1l'l1l(‘s 11111111- 1lcl'."1ull ‘ 1111-; 41-1 try-tr.) 1\,1_< 11iil_\- ii11pl1-tiit-i1tt-11 iii 1111; 111 1111- llwriicii ic-"v flfl(‘l' ii 111111 111341111 11p- ,.1;;-_11,;»,. 1.1 11111, n]... 111 111: i1-i1ici1il1crttl 111111 1111- lioimicu .\l C)‘. Wllc" ll PWPO-‘Cd lllc i1i.i-.1---,1-1";iii1111 it-ri-v across" 1111- .\'11rtli- tniihc-rltuicl Straits", z ui"cd't1it- Proi-iucizil (lov- (‘tllllltlll 111111 1111:1111 111' '1'1"ad<g that the csiziblisli- 11-11-111 111 1111s .~\‘l\'l\§<I was not 111 111: icgéllilvtl 11$ a .--.il1siit1,1;1- 1111- 1111- iiiniicl, nor as prcjutliciug in anv way the right 11f the lsland to prcss 11111‘ aihri- 111111 lwttet- transportation facilities, 111 siip~ plettient or replace it. V "'l'l1i¢ i; 111-1: in sav that the lunucl is 1111- 111111- 3011111011, or the 110st one, although it would t1h— viously implement literally the pro-Confedera- tion promise of ‘continuous steam continuin- cation’ ltctwcen the Island and the mainland- l-lut tunnel or no tunnel. the right of the 11001110 1-11 Priiicc Fdward Island to a ht-ttt-i- lituispnrta- tinn deal than tlicv have yet received is clctii" and unchallengeable." lf we could only persuade 11111" l-‘c-tlcrril 1'1"- pwsentativt-s to talk like that rm the 1111111- 11f 1111: Hmwe, 11-» might get sontr-w-here. Trade Wilh Britain In a din tch from London 11.1 the lfiuziucizil Post, of ' oronto, Mr, Kenneth \\'l1S0l'1, says" that Britain alreadv is considering its 111.11» 111i- tho purchase of Canadian food and 1111101‘ p111- duets after the war. In brief, Britain will buy from the counfrics which are willing t0 acccpt payment in British goods. lf laiiada is 11111. willing to accept such twaynicitt, lli-itaiu 11111 l1uy elcewherr. Our British market ihiis depends 1111 the volume of our imports from Britain. For sewn years before the war Britain was buying from Canada far more than it sold to Canada.‘ It was carrying a heavy adverse bal- angg m’ trade, with 11111111111 which it 11.111 1'1 make up by exports to other markets. \\-hcn not (m1;- the trgrlg in commodities is consii-lt-icrl. but other factors like interest payments, t11ii1-ist t1~a1l1-, 111111 freight services. the net l1alance 11f payments in Canadzfls favor during the pre- war ycars was as follows: 1933 1934 11135 11 -li.- .-1\ 11f 11"1' z $97.5 millions 93.2 millions 113.9 inillions 1936 228.7 n-iillions i937 176.8 millions According to a rplculation recently published 1n the authoritutivc London Economist‘, Bri- tain was running a net deficit on all its foreign transactions before the war of 540,000,000 a year. This was not a large or very alarming deficit. hit as a result of the changes brought E11 r111; 11-111; the prospective dcficit when pcacc 01mg, will be ltlltth larger. Due solely to the 11111 11f intr-rtxt 111i fnrcigit investments, Britain 1111i f1"11_"r- :1 111i deficit 11f 1'21)('),0(X).0O41 1-1 r0111‘. 11111-111 $1.1>o11.o00.111,11"1, zit-cooling to Tilt‘ 151-11111»- 11iis1. But the situation may b: much worse than this. Britain will need to import more goods than l1cf11r1- the war if its people are employ-ed 111111 111111» 111 l1u_\' 1111-111: 211111 it must .-il\va_vs i111- ,-11i-: 1111»r1- 12-111 iiuizcriiils if it is to iuci"t-."i~c. its -\"|11-i"i~ 11f I|'1.'1llttl'.'lt‘l‘1tl’(‘(l goods. 1f the world .1111 1-111 1--111-1i111 ;_-1"1:al1_r_ its" imports 11f llrilisli l~_ 121-1111111‘. 11111111011 will 1w grave iiitlccrl. 11 ill 11-1-1111» .1 l1-1\\t-i'ing 11f i111 liiitig .\lill1ll1'll"l. 11111 11111 1111-1-1- liritain t11 rt-duce its 11111111115. 'l'11 1,; 1211111 ~u1-li.-1'sitit.'i'li0ii ivuuld be t-xli'ri11c~ l_\" 11111111131111; liflilllfl has bcc-n fm lllZ-lll)’ _\'(‘t'll'S -~i -11- second hcst customer, sharing 111 with lllc l.'nitcrl States. .\ sub- siiintiiil 1-1111 111' 11111- 1111114111211 r-coiioiiiic slriicltirc is l1.1~1-1l 1111 11ii1- ('.‘\'111t|'l~ 111 llritaiii. ilnr 11111-111 -'n1liisti'_1. 11-ii" |'111'-c.~t i111luislrics_ 11111" iippln :1i1tl fish 1'i11l1i.~ti‘i1->, 111 itu-niiiui 1-1 fcw. l1:i\1- dcpciirlt-rl 11111111 :u11l still ll1Y‘(l 111t- lzirgcst tmssibln iurirlccl 111 111111.111; 1"--1t:1iii1_1- ii--t-1l 11s- 1111110 :1 llllll'l\'f‘l as" \\1- 1-111111111 in l! . in l1t-|'or<- 1111- 111-11", T11 --.."-1" l" 11111-1111111-1-11 :1 ll(‘\\' lzicl11r. \\'1lL‘l'C- 1111 \-..-.s :1 1l1-l1:111- 111 llritziin lit-furt- 1h.- 111111- :1 crcditoi". llritiiiit 11\\"<-.~‘ u~ 111i. 11111111-1- c1111 111il_1- hi: paid fiuzilly 1-. l'1'l’l‘ll 11-11111.» l-'11r llicst- 1" 111s" (L-itiadri 1111-: tifilf-Ulllv 1li11ici-: l".llll(‘l' 111 i111- 11": 'i1--1.- lilli‘~l| 21111-1. 11r 111 Wtlllit‘ 11t‘.'|~ti-."11ly - '1"lI-l1lil'1l1'l' lf u1-i1-fus1- 111 111111- 111" , 1111111; ltt -' i11liiiiic. llritiiiii, -1~ lltl \' ll*1\‘i 1-11.11 bPi-n 1 1-11 bv 1121111113 l-liijglisli- |1l4t:_.II|lZ"1i ltTHlL‘ clsi-ivlitrc, iuiist sci-k 1111i 111111-- 1111111 1's". 1.i'. ‘ii 1111-". kets ivliicli will buy from liei- as well as scll to her. Canada‘; choice, says the Winnipeg Free Press. cannot bc long ilvliiy-etl. It should be madc- well bcfor¢ llic cud uf the war. Uiice the ivzii" is over, once the artificial economic ai-rtutge- iiieiits of the war lapse, Britain must move ii1i- mediatcly-"to adjust its trade and prevent a. fatal adverse balance. If "Caiiiidlt is not ready- to rc~ considci‘ and increase its British imports, Bri- lziin iniisl turn to other markets without delay. T114: time to prcvcnt such a course is now u-licit Britain's position is temporarily sound, due in large mcastire to gifts and loans from" abroad. __________________._ — EDITORIAL NOTES .- Prime Minislei- \\-'inst0i1 Cliiii-cl1ill‘s pursuit of clarity- and brevity iii those embryonic stiitc mun-rs that. the British ministers- cull “niiii- tiles", picked up considerably last u-eclt". Faced with a long rambling "niintile" w-rittcit on :1 minor subject by one minister, Mi‘, Chi- ' . SCl'Il\\'l(‘(i the following across ii" in red ink. 1H is i111; kind of tedious nonsense which l will not put tip with." just l0 lllillit- his inlt-ntiun 111.1111, the Prime Minister utidcrscurcd "i111" lICkIYll)‘. - i‘ Y! 1K 1% lf a dog can help, so can we. "Zip", an Airc- dale belonging to Lt. Gerald 1121110110)’, of Mon- treal, in the Canadian Army overseas, is to be decorated for valor by :1 LlUg‘ society iii London. The dug distinguished liiiitsclf during 1111- lit-ig-"lil of l‘llClIl_\' raids 11v locating 11111-1011 \lt"1llll-i tiiitl sui-Crl tithci- people from injury l1_1- 11111111; ruins 111- tlfilgglllg‘ then-i to safety: .1 . .. a _1t1h11 \\'cs1c_\", English religious lt-ritlcr :11i1l foiuidci" of Wcslcy-ziii Mcthodisiii, dicd this dzitc. 179i; an Oxford graduate 111111 lllCllll)Cl' of the University society" called Methodists; :11‘- ici- ordination came uudcr the llll'll1<.‘llL‘C 111 the Moiwiviziiis", and SlllHCqllClllhYCslllllllsllfll506101195 11f Methodists; \\'.'is excluded tlicrcfui- fr11u1 tut-aching in Anglican piilpits, but ])L‘l’.s't‘\'\‘l't‘-l with his socictics which tiltitnntcly 1101711111: i111- \\'f‘.\'l(‘v\'illl Xlclliiidist (liiircli, 111111-11 ll(‘l'\- 11111-1‘ 111101-011 into union with 1111- l‘1-<-~l1_\-11-1-1;111.; W. “cleanliness is intlccd next 111 ti111lliiit-ss." 1F fi i‘ In the past he had i-cccivt-d svcuiitl-liiiiid ."irii1_v clothing for distribution to 1111- p001‘, sziid .\li". Poiiliof. .\l'.P.. iii the llousc. lt lizid lritcr bccii dccidcd t0 scll this clothing, excl-pi for s111i11- givcii i0 the liidiziiis. “lf it is 14111111 t'111' the ludians, ivliy is it impossible f11i- the g1-101l red-blooded Caitadiaiis to havr: it?" nskcd .\li". Pfillliot- 301111: had 111-1-11 sold 1-11 i2 f-J 1-1-uls :1 1111111111 111 Alcws and 11¢ liritl 111-11111 that :~11lll-.‘ vhaiigcs hrid bccn made in such clothing and it ivzis resold to the governnictit, 11c said. i lb‘ 1i 1K .-\ Brooklyn Democrat .-\55Clll1.l1'\‘fl1;lll, llari"; Gcitlcsoii got a nasty jolt the 11thc1- day. 1-111»: inauy otlici- uicn who lvgislzitc for others, 11c lhiiilt-s ivomt-n should be bziri-ctl from 1111111111111» and, to iuiplcincnt his fcclings, iniroducul :1 bill ivliicli ivoiild make lliis illegal in 1\'(-w Ytlfli Statc, hut-His wifc. at lici‘ .3147 \' Jtl. 5'11. 11111111.", $11111: "1 we i111 liariil in wuincn 111111111111; 111 11:11.» if tlicy 110 so in inudciu-ilicm :1i11l ill'(' 1111111011)- cscuttccl. l do n01 do this iiiysclf, but l cur- tainly do not think llicre is any-thing wrong about it." What will the scqucl be? r It I u .-\ l\'.."\.l-'. 11111111- sivuopc-d down up11ii 1-111 :1ii"~ plain: carrier in flic Pacific ziud ilruppcd 1111's iiicssage: “We've boilcrl '(‘lll, slcivctl 'ciit, fricrl 'em. Now how in the licll do you ]1l‘C],1.'ii‘c 't-iu to cal", the incssage said. The 111110 1-cf1-i-1-1-1l 111 potator-s-llic lcnd-lcasc 111-111-1111111-11 vurictv. 'l'1i1-_v 11-"111 hccn flown to ll..\ < \ict11ri11us when thr- British aircraft cariici "in low 1.111 food while tiarlicipaling in the New Georgia drive in the Solomons. In response to the mes- sage a torpedo bomber flcw to the Victorious ivitli 1.100 pounds- of 1lchydralcd sputls" 11nd chit-f eoitiiiiissai-t- Stcu-ari llzirvard 111-11111 l'1-i1"1: of Los Atigcles. Price iiivcstig-atctl tlic llrilisli tiri-pziralion 11f the waterless potatoes 1-11111 rc- 11011611 they ltzidift been soaked f111- eight l111urs n01- hoiled four. No cauut-tl milk or 1111111-1- was added to the mashed murphics. 1i i i fi Prime Minister Churchill's “young friend"- LLCol. Frederick \Villiam Danipiei- Deakin, who parachutcd into Yugoslavia and spent ciglit n-iontl-is at Partisan headquarters 1- was 11c- scribcd as "a man of great guts." "'l'liei-c’s no other way of putting it," said Dr. C. .\l. Bowra. warden of Wadham College, Oxford, where the 32-year-old Deakin taught history. Dczikiii struck up a, friendship with Mr. Churchill ivlicn he made long historical rcseai-clics in connec- tion \\'1'th lhe Prime 1\'lll1l5l(‘l"5 l.il'c of Marl- borough. In the l-loiise of Commons .\[i-. Cnurcliill said this “young friend 11f iiiinc" luid 1iai-acliutcrl into the camp of hint-shat losip l-lroz (1110), Partisan lcatlcr, a _\-<-ar 1-15-11 and bet-tune a friend of Tito when built were wound- cd by the same bomb. Dcaltiit was a captain then but recently returned with promotion and received the Distinguished Service Order, "lt W35 a complete surprise to us," said his 11c- wiltlci-cd father, a B1‘(l\\’0l‘flSlllt'(‘ f;ll‘|l1(‘l'. "‘l can't say lie showed a particularly 1-1111-1-111111-11111 spirit in his boyhood." 41 r u .\n appeal to the public 11111 tn iiiclit1l1- un- tiuucd incals, cardboard cartons of laultt-t- 111111 other yx-rishable foodstuffs in p11" ,\ dcsiiiitwl for men and woincn serving r1vci-sczi. is rt-iit~_rat~ crl by Postmaster (iencral \\'. l’. Mtiloclc in i1 press statement. “Postal authorities find it ne- cessary again to remind the public that itcins such as raw laccfstcak and ]l0l'l\' l1uilei- and snct tinddiiig, when mailed (1\‘Cl‘.s'(‘ s. nuts-t ii-zivcl in llCillCd railway mail can-s, and b1- pacltetl with thousands of other twarct-ls- in the ll0l(l\' 11f sliitus", tllc siatcmcnt points 011i. “Recently :1 11:11-11- 1-141- t-oiilniiiing thc-sn ilt-iiis rcaclicd 1111- linse- l'11.~t tlffice cu ffllllt‘. 11111-11011 in :1 t-znwlhoartl 1-1111t.-iincr, wrapped in brow-u 1111111-1- 111111 11111111415- cd to :1 soldier oii illc other side of 111(- .-\tl.-inlic. NPQIllL-Ss l0 51y. the reception git-cu llic parcel 111- 1111- Canadian Postal Corps, ivas f.-it- from cortli-"il. .\n uufui-ttitiatt- angle 11f this 1-.-1.-=-.-, iipzirl f1"111n the u-astc of valuable tiint- it oc- rasiinicrl at Ill-c llzise Post Ufficc. w-as i111- fzict 111111 1111- sciidc-i- must have cxticutlt-tl 111111111111- r-iiiou 1-11i11111i1< 111 piu-clms-t- i111: 1111-111 and the 1111111-1- in send tn that boy l)\'l‘l' flit-re," flll‘ V m: HCHARLGTTETOWN GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUII Illnoolunlhollifi Iuundaubrco- HON. MR. WRIGHT VS. QUI- s1 -,-I - 1d like to oommond the lllfinlbzguim‘ Fourth Prince who 1n lils stieecli. in the , can! . . wood ndvlca. Whci-eveij the 0.0 P‘ D0 hll bfeiasfitipied eurtlaefulgland “Venn z ' 10 D909 V6 fhbfi- whole heal-tied a port ofw 014mm r lino?‘ 1% Wright ill-as one. reuse o l part. in joint “ ‘ l rneeflnf. o- lnt: as far as to nnnmmce n m Press that; they would not attend any such polltlcal me a - Why? Because whey were lfrflld some of the voters m-ltght loin-n the ti-ubl-i or the 0.0 F. upon lts an- alysts and give l1 their support. How can Mr- Wright. be fli-iml. vino-d that. the C c F. policies are ivi-ong when he so flatly refused to discuss its policies on the plkbllo platform before the elector-aloe? some of Mr. lvi-lght/a iemairka inn-thei- on in his speech would in- dicate his knowledge of the 0.0.1‘. ls vci-v incomplete and lnaccursve. I-‘oi- rxample, lle cites C.C.F. fig- ures in an effort to Drove an ex- ti-cmc wrici claim that. durlns the ton the industrial‘ labore-l ed $50 for evei-v $5 the farm- 11- received. Had he quoted correct- lv he should have stated that. Um fui-inoi- who constitutes tine third of the total population meelved one tenth of the itarionul income. while tito i-cst of the population reoelvtd llillC-IOIIU] of which amount. the industrial worker received but. a \'Cl‘_V small percentage Mr, Wi-lghr. commended the two old purllEs on the slncuritby oftheli- war effort, but. condeiruied the C- C l1‘. This Ls not. the nttit-ude tak- cn by the incn who are doing the netulil fighting. as was well de- llltlll$1l'l\l(‘(‘l by L110 Sflltllefs vote in 1111- Qiiitii-io rlcutiunsvtvl-icre the C, (:.l=' i-ziiiclldnlcs received nlmost. as inaiiv soldit-i- infcs as the two 01d uni-lies uui LOEUUIEI‘. Mr. Wright questioned the slu- eoriiy of inc 13.0 P‘ party leaders in lhcii- wtu- sffOlT. Does he dare. ioi- cxitinple. no question the sln- eci-ity oi‘ George H. Williams who as leader uf r-lic C.C.F. ln 1hr? Saskalclieu-iiti lERlSIQLUY/g enlisted at the outbreak or tlic war and has bet-n set-ring overseas over 51BX28? 0r that oi 1115 successor, ‘LC. Deu- ulas Ml", who also 10111861 th-c cin- 1n the ivtir being n11- -< cd to 1111 Officers’ Training school in lht- West for some llrne 111111 bciiig able, J-rcausti of a physic- at disability, ta go overseas‘! Oi- 11111-5 111- question llic sinouirlty of the C.C l~- l-‘edr: 112-5., who had 5 out of ll niem ‘s servlmz in Hts 1V1/\f,nJc?sly's Forces in the last Great ai- iii looking over W110‘; Who. a- mong,- ilie (3.0 1"‘ members of we uiitnt-io Leglslanin-o, I find lh-cre 11-1-0 l0 out. of the 34 seifvcd in the 111st \\'1ii". and ‘.2 are serving ln this. l L'1llLll('l1_L‘C Mr. Wright, or anyone 1111-, l0 .-.ui'])i1."».s 11v to equal their record from 1111 analysis of either of the old 1)t\l'll'.S. 1111111111; (J Li?" l('il(l(‘l'5 nominated lliroutzlioul. Canada lo stand for (‘ll-Ulltlll in t-lic- future are to be found a large number of men on active service, out: cl yvhom has sec-ii action at Dleppe. It sucms easy lo have the sincerity of other people questioned from the safety of tho four Walls 11f the Prince Edward island LORlSltlLLlP". 1 am. Sir. one stiiti-iiii-iit coiiliiiucd. ' IRVING 'l'0Ol\lB_5. Provincial rfBSldCHf. C.C F Album; R-R 2. Feb. 29. EUPHONN? DEI-‘lChENCII-Ifi 5ll',~——Wil.ll much interest dld 1 read the recent contribution of James Pendergast. to the sub ect of mlspi-onounclatfon. Mr. Pen er- gnst can always be depended up- on to Rive the most, ei-udllg and scientific ti-r-atrncnt. l-o even the inosL t t1salc and unromtmtle sub- jt-cts Hi1: learned treatises on such uni-cmaiille subjects as prohib- ition. classics vs. mathematics, etc. are classic (‘Xunlphs cf how he has dr-vclobcd the art, possessed by few. of being able to exhibit tolerance without; sacrificing truth Fin-flu r-rmoro, he can always produce from the literary shelves of hls wall stocked mental cupboard such nls- torlcal allusions that serve 11s a i-errrvoii- for much rumination. “And still w:- gazr. and still the wonder grows, that. one small lit-ad tan carry all he knows." We must tiowever quarrel with Mr. Ponder-gut. on one point. It’: a matter of the utmost importance. and which conceivably might change the entire course of man's existence. and have the most pro- ‘found effect on human history and tiostoi-ity. The point ls this, Mr. Pcndci-tzast. for reason or reasons imknoivn prefers lo predicate mu- euilnlty as regards the previous 11-1-111-1- 111 . p. "a sensitive earl‘) Although not professing to he a tzt-nr-th- r-xpt-i-t I vlolentlv disagree with this hasty conclusion and base my disbelief and biological findings on the follow premise; "Sensitive ear," ln i-efe n: to the euphonle deficiencies of radio ann- ouncers, surreptitiously mentions one WHOM name ends in "bosh". Nmv ivinir name but Maclntosh could 11nd ln 10911? The reference then niusl have been directed spe- ciflcnlly towards- the ticsseesm- of the fr-itiltilnn diaphragm _whlch pi-cdurcs those rraelllflucnt. tones 111111 daily emit from m loud spen- km- and fall with suci mellowed cadence upon my aural orbs. We tticrefoi-r- cannot. bring ourselves to believe that any lndlvldusl of the masculine gender would be so tacking in chlvnli-y as lo make this d11stn.-1-tlly and unprovoked attack up- nn Lady Maclntosh, and thus are convinced that the whole mutter had ti; unholy origin in the zeal- 1111s and vngarlous mind of u. foll- mv frniiilc W11 might also nah-it out some additional dlstlngulslilri; r-li-trat-lci-lstlcs of “Sensitive Dir’. Slit- ls n literary pi-agmntlclst; tcdut-nled beyond her intelligence), ls welt advanced towards the mls- t\' twlllizht 11f maidenhead; ufte likely considered by the worl ln u: :"al its a bachelor lady (form- ri-lv v-"llsrl splnster or old mail and finally. stilt has a hankering 1111- (‘ll‘l|}',17Fl1 ticttlcoafs ‘these tle- tlFWii-‘lls innv all bu verified 11v a mi-rfui nniilysls of her letter. And 11.1--1--' '11l"‘l',: also mlzht h» disclo- sed but the exigencies of time and 1-11-“1- do 11m, pr-rmlt Now as Mr Ponder-cast has well “ii m, 1| Linton llotlltatlns from The London Times Till GOOD LIFE ‘more are few collects bellm- kgprwn to Clu-lstl- are a pcrflzet. up of the character of Christian moral life. The ooilect ls me mprelvaluable t. ¢XDI‘B&‘GS, n 11116-11889 ham may be called robust com- ggngg, g, wlrth with which over-sensitive souls are lll at ease. True rellgloii is certainly not. an alialr of barter; here. 8115'" whore. there can be no assesurinnt 1n temis of "LhlDES done malt loos the eye and l-iad their price. man cannot. open an account; with God on the basis o1 his own merits. But 1t ls quite another mnttci- when ll: is SUADDOSJ/l oi- leaf-ell that. any mention of reward spoils the pin-- lty of the moral mollve and tar- nishes, even if ‘ti. is not; fatal to, the moral quanzy of the ensuinl: action, It. appears sometimes to be imagined than any association of rewtu-d with the service of God and with good works l5 0pm to the sar- castic challenge of Satan at: GI opening of the Book of Job. "Doth Job fear God for nought?" 1f the fear and love of Gotl 11nd all that. foes m the 1.0mm: oi 111111. had. as mpelllng cause, tlic desire to _i'e- celv: prizes and to esciuae. punish- ment, the clia-lciigc would be dead But, it. docs nut. follow that. there ls SOIIIENIUII improper in the very mention of rewiu-ri. That. would be the case only if such reward ought. not to cxls: iit. all, if Goodness should nor, be followed bv happi- ness that could be represented as the consequence of goodness. At this point. the moral scrupulousnc-Bs which is so intent: on not; allow-ma the entry of ivhut. l1. conceives to b1.- base metal is fatal to a belief ln the just ordering of the uiil- veme- No amount. of subtlety of theorizing will taei-suutlc the 111-11111 man that. justice ixigns in 1111111011- vcns if, in the words of ILCIJlOSIR-SICS where, as in 110b, in": real lc-nsisn of the problem 15 felt, "one VOVOHE happeneth w them all," which IS death with tiomlng t1o come alter it. Tnat earmly llfe leans on w n0 distinctions DBLWEBD the righteous and the wicked ls an ethically ui- toleraoit: position. , ei-eas AUJClPSfflblCS. 111-1‘ Preacher, docs iioi. beucvc that what. a. mail sows licrc tiial he .-.nall roam IILYCEIUCI‘, tlic u-iiole 1.1‘ the New ‘testament, proclaims tile rt!- verse. ‘f I11,- tsuicguui-ri iuaiiist. a cun- lusioii ol luc result. \\‘lll('ll iuLtiu-s from the good 1-1-3115 L11 lllp ti-iic motive for b11050 11-1-1111 l5 _io be iounu in u ueeuzi- llllfltlloliillfllngjlf the Christian moral ideal wnich has at. 11s centre the piogrrsslve likeness of children 1o inc Heav- enly r-atlier iinu tiie undying lzi-a- iltude w ilic saviour u-nu loved [D2111 anti gave iiimseit for 1mm. "lo still an misgivings as to me place iii true iciigioii of n deserved r1:- wai-d. the ivoi-tis of St. Augusunc ure 11s Liuc and i-elcviinl. as when he first. wrote 111-2211: ‘when God crowns ctii- merits tin crowns his ‘own gift ‘ lncoiiseqticrit-al when civilization should be devoting all lls energies to thcpagan pastime ol war. But my Aunt Mliiiile had her opinions on this matter: and aunt. Min was 11L very tii-actlciil Wbflall New. she never said Monti-cal, or cveii Mun- fi-cat but alivriys Itlintroal And ' Auizt Minnie alivtit-s tniiillllfllllfid tanrl her contentions were later show-n to be scientifically cui"rcct.l,1 that the incctianies of laryngeal‘ operation for the tn-onouiicintiun of .'1ll(‘l'| words as Afoiili-ozil l'(‘qllll't‘£ll a more oxtendctl 11112111111; of the pro- boscis than for the proiiounclatlou of the variation Mlnti-ciil. Aunt Minnie further contended (and this too has been woven to he in accordance with inter scientific data) that the lClIlpGfDTy but, iiii- iiccessiirv t-xtoilsiun of thr- osral an l\'r- occasioned by euphonic forming- cf the "O" ln Mc-riti-cal, affords 111 winter time, i-nwat-rai-itnd oppor- tunity for the facile entry lulu res- piratory system of the vlriis of‘ pneumonia, and. in the summer time. permits the unimpeded flow lnto the alimentary canal of such‘ undlgestables 11s flies aiQ potato bun. yes, Aunt Minnie was p1 very practical woman As a foot-note I might adrl that. Aunt Min lived lo R Fibe- old are. and was able to boost. n5 wot] shc dld, that. three olffercnt men at three different. tljmegeéitadhsuert {or 1101i hang-but 0 BY so w“! icr s er. Thank you. pp I am, Sh‘, etc.. UNCLE ELTIIONIC INSURANCE RATE CUT LONDON. Mai-ch l - (GP Ciiblct -- The Institute of London Under- writers today announced w - risk insurance on cargoes belwegn the West Indies and South Africa been reduced from three to 2 Der cent TIIE EVACUEES Four years ago Th-Jy came, and ln four childhood years . 11-110 wc-pt. on the platform then Now feels tier body blossom like a trees. Discovers tennis, poetry and flow- us. And utignei- 1111c ilrlpplng lnrchcs 1n o n Knows the ilisl experiment. or a1 kiss. Will they rest. Wlll they be Jontcnled. these Fledgllnga of a cuckoo‘; o? reared ln a stranger's nrst Born of one people. with another red. Will they return lo their parents ngnln, or choose The footer-norm. or seek the un-, rented road? 1 G-rmtflmpt in cite future thaw may] .-11i:l this FliFTt2==lflI1 of the sublret 1- - . 1»-11r1»11,---~ mid its 11cc- 11111111111111 complications may seem A rock on which to built-l ll house for heart and mind. | -Nurm1in Nicholson. A leader claims cter Ch l1! s poker player." en follows n IDBYMZTBPh on name itself. Nazi wlsver ls a moot. question. But. pok- TYF! . wwhoul PA'Y or GLORY filial; s VIILIIIITEEhS wrries on! - ~ ould f volunteers there c d WITHOUT t m“ ° " 1111a only 11-‘ R“ . R d Cross- . he no Canfldfl" (ti/Cross work» ‘ ss can do R‘ ccls 1'01? (.ro ear millions of food Pi! across wotkers. Last y ire agkCd by m?“ Re . s for over- ofwflfwc P ' r ical drcsslflg _ f The made tons Of 5“ g Wat millions 0 Y They cut and‘ slredressing stations, eessorics or (work Ye"; they ivilian re ietd is the grateful fill’ ‘CW3 d Cross a thousand F‘ prisoners sc3§ USC- ac armcflts and‘ r c 1105171111115, o _ pa)“ ThC-ll.‘ 0 that risc 59"". for ask no pggytllfS out Q5“- _ Th: dawn of Victg ccd 501' RC a ' as W mounts 33111’ - in Red Cross VOhmtcCtS Give liberally- as intoflilfled s, Suffering p011’, (115 wot-k- 1, 111 B11101“? Cross 5uP-P ‘e the n 1- sprcads. Sulgh this unsol 5 .. _ , 1 ; 1111141111! l.u‘1-al Lantpaigii lcu z St. ~ 'l‘Qk\vh11ll€ ~15 -_, 11-‘ ce (J Hi1 warm N“ m: m» arrows n! 1 ' ' . ' ' heals It. N821 Poker Plct l‘ er heme a rum» o! leisure lndwm‘ ° u e1 Great Britain-s war Premler beinl l‘ "mmu-v -"°“‘dc [a man utmost. destitute of lelsrin-e. ' 11f is doubtful that. he has ever had- -inucli intensive experience-of that; kind 0i fliliiu. ln any case if the (lei-mans. oven at. this lute dbl/ml E811 V1- " 1111111. 1111c"- 1t with d“ w“ --_._ (Sydney Post. Record) Nazi writer. Dr. Robert Loy. of the German "labor front," to have discovered the sce- Prlme Minister , . Attention ,_ , . » Swine Breeders . Nltmtt; llfg lime 111 |;ii.1fl-‘- m m 11-1011101111 By uglnl lhe most. t-fleolm remedy on the market. 1 1 _ §\"0R.\l Mfi-‘f1f1io""r'-o1v1>r1= " lMl ll wiii iI1111-".'-4~""Y-""’ - all tract-s of 11111111“ 31"“ 11$: n," m; heal Ii m‘ ‘ ‘m, Prl- a 35c l!" ll1€'tl€\VSDll]lCl‘ the ‘rind ébiiiziliis some iii- obscrvatlotis. "T1111 \\'110lL‘ of this tnuii." the gamblers char- 1. 1 . succc sful llUkCl‘ pl yc 111111110: fall to s ock iliose of LLS‘ who nave never been initiated in that. allegedly wicked most instructive £35k °§,',{;‘,§‘§,‘.f“ recrcaum" y the nature of t1i"ll_v ,who (TJYCS nothing: for ‘l'l‘i(‘f1(lSl1l.-1JS1 11-110 has either l‘, a , moi-t- iiionov than he knows what. to do wifli t1i- lins- nnfhln to lose, and 1111811601111141 cvelopmt-nt l! s 1.0 his ore-p ‘ Wln i1 Spence-i- nccompllslictl wkc-r m,“ that pope not always, an 0n. l" l‘ not necessarily, Immoral game. . A c951. We have in stock and receiving regularly can of; 01d Sydney screened. Spring-hill screened. Invernoss screened. Bras D’0r screened. Albion Nut. Dominion Coke. Walsh Hard Coal for Furnaces ' Phone us your requirements. Prompt deliveries. Phone 176. . ‘ _ L ' NIITITII) BIIDNLII|5 AMMO CODWOUND p A rallnble and cffvflw" “l” I “nun” “l. ‘he gyeglmtnlgln‘ , ,\ a 1‘- -- --..-:-:1:1.-:.-1;M11.1111111- min m oer M i . n _ A‘! yo]; TROUBLE - W111; 1.11015560- on _ min: um‘ ' ill- nil RM i! cum I" ""- TIIE ‘M0 M93 10- can 000m 9"”- mm, prom!‘ Isl! OI-tlzr-‘Ikuuom