.. -., . - .-.agc;,,p;,l, @aq-.-..-a.~qs “aw-l- w» THE WCHARLOTTETOWN _GUARDI_AN_ 133.012 rout: THE OHAHLOTTETOIYN OIIAHIIIAN Morning Daily (Founded in IE3?) President: Lieut. Col. W. Chester B. McLun Vie; President: .|. R. Burnett. FJ-l Sggrulary: Lleut. Col. l). A. lIIflcKlnnon. 0.5.0. can»: lulu Mannlml Dlreptor. .|. n. uurnxttksiii‘ Associate Edlllth: i-rank “like: and In: . SUBSCRIPTION BATES ' h a; lullu III 9.2.1., 54.1w n" WI" "~50 '°' "h"“""' ‘ 51.25 for 3 months; 50o for one mph! um Ueiltery $5.00 per year: $3.00 tor b mimllll $155 [or 3 months; 60o for one Month. B! Mali lo other Prov-inure: and U. S. A. 5.1.01: 2:53;‘. Saturday Wceilni 5-59" P" W“? ‘I'M I“ 50c for 3 month! Th; Cllnrloiieioitil mlurtliau may iio obtained n “afanlny- s..." Alum-y, TIIIIEI stun-w. nu Iurk; 0"! l’! fiuuill Soul- Agency, (‘llrner Milk ‘fungal??- Bunllu; Melnlrlllllitln 5N1!’ Alyillf-y, i h . mud nlllllmli; .|. r111». asst u»! an. ‘IMMM- "' - chtlllftlll Lillirlv, Ullllflu: wlliw- hw- bland. Uudhurl. onl; lluh Turbo-w. hIIllu, HIUIIFUIII N. 0.. ' "The Strongest lllemory is IVBIIR" "m" u" Weakest Ink.’ '|~||[|(51).\\', FEBRUARY 5. 1942. Civic Affairs \1lll_\' one \\':ii'il l" '11,,“ M11 ‘W faiitzlsis in the f1Il'l1lC0liiif1g civic elections. Mayor ‘llolmali and (Imus. lluilcr, I)L\tl'!1lll. llcbfl‘, hliandler 111d 5 - ucli :1~ \\'i1t‘i' Coninitssioiiers \\tI1 11 :1i11l (iillis. will l1:- dcclllfwl ; . - 1,, _, ,- J-vfng,‘ t'11tti1<. l.:tp1li11i'ii. 111111!" Iflflfli‘ .61 .\l.‘l1.ll11ll11l\l 1.1 \\.ll't.1 i-"itc will 1.: .»:1pt><,1tl 11y tut» iicw czliitcstzutts, Alessrs. ;\. I. _\l:1cl\'iii111~1i rlutl .\. 1. \\ right. I ’ '11:‘: will 11c 1111 t occ .11 since the \\ a1‘- ;t.i111=~21. ~11 ti$tir~ii>oii that a llllllirll _ , _\1;1-,..r ',1,t- list-ii 11' icd u scctitiilliiiic, Cut-l- gfillllillllttlN tztc tiic cfttre due l<)‘IIl>‘ “or-hip .\l;i\or 111411111111, who tulics All-KI‘ llllilllllnscd f..1~',-11~,r>111.~1- 111.. veal-s. The war. doubtlcss._ 118$ ' c; .11‘ t1i\ in; I)lll)llC interest from 11ml tlic ' ' ' irtuiu this there seems to saiisfziciitiii with .\l:1y'<1\' , \\'e l".t\‘C had for the tiv vcars, a surplus iii civic fin- q critllltitiigtinn nf debt reduction w,- 51111 more importitiit as indi- J1. 11' ii tl rcctiperrliinii. llis \\'oi‘.~'liip l5 i1 pcv-fliiully‘ ti» every’ citizen. and IYHS WP" fC-‘Cnlfll us, 111181 r11 linriic and abroad, with abil- itv 1 11; 1-_ linqttct: rarely’ come to ntetr in ptililit" ~11 lllllil flit-y ztrc tlczul. but. it is fllllll’; 1111 111k o." 1151111 t» rvcttll the oiicrliiii: nature 0t the tlttties which lliivor llulutalii discharges, and y and cnuscientiousness hr. the invariable comic.- has sliowii. lli: ft-lltl-tt- niciithers of the Council have given hiui git-std >lt111\i‘\l‘I and coupcrtttioii. 'l'l_1e \\'ater C(_)[nn1j:5in11('f_< 31m hitvc evidently‘ given sat- isfattifln, and their last annual report shows that their wot-k, as on other occasions, has been drvic efficiently‘. 'l'licse t~~11ii1citd:ttr1i'v rcuirirlcs are in iio sense to he interpreted as flitiflllClilll of the candidates or their sityiportcrs who are opjiosiug the sitting members in \\'ard Five. Their opposition gives a $9511» of interest to thc nominations which “vtuld nthc-rtvi~c he l "ling. The new candidates are lmlll wcll l€ilti\\‘1l and <\lt‘(‘lll(?tl, and all will wish ihciii good luck and a fair ficlll in the contest. D0 \Ve Need It‘? 'l'hc \\'arii111c Prices and 'l'i'ade Board has zlri- nouuced that itiiportatioiis of canned grapefruit juice will be stihsitlized by the Cotumodity Price Stabilization limit-d so thzlt, despite higher costs in thc ctiuuirv of its origin, a cart of grapefruit juice can licisnld to the Caitadiaii consumer at the old price. O11 the basis of importations dur- ing recent years, this subsidy will involve an an- nual outlay of approxiniatelyi $225,000 from the public cuffcrs. 11> cffect will he to provide grape- fruit juice, for those who can afford to buy it, at a lo\v1:r price than would be possible other- wise. This particular fruit juice, suggests Th: Toronto 'l‘c1c_g1";1i11, is, at least, a scuff-luxury. Only those with incomes above the average buy i: at all frequently. But others, who do not buy i! at all—cither because it is beyond their rrleani. or because they‘ don't care for it——-are now to be taxed so that those who do like it and can afford it, will not ltzive to pay a higher price for it. In short, the ii1;ii1y' are t0 be taxed for the benefit of the few. . This action of the l1oard's becomes more incom- prehensible in the light of the expressed opinions of authorities 1111i lnilittlii inice and apple. juice are satisfactory‘ Slllhllllllfiw, from a dietetic stand- point, fol" grapefruit juice. Canada has large stocks of both tomato juice and apple juice, the consumption of which docs not deplete our for- eign exchange fund. 'I'liei1, one woiulcrs what the board will do if the prices of oranges in California and Florida go up. \\'ill iuiportatioiis thcrl be subsidized so as to avoid any higher" costs tn Canadian consum- ers? Tihrtt course would hc demanded in thc inter- ests of (‘t\lI~‘l.~l(‘ll(‘_\', for oranges have all the dietetic iiicrit of c:uiii<.~l qrzlrlefritit juice. But tax- payers would have to foot a heavy bill indeed it: that casr- for (1';1ii.'1<la's animal imports of oranges front the Fiiitcd States exceed fivc million dol- lzirs. What We Fight For (hie 11f the King Cabinet members for whom the late llriii. .\lr. Lapuirlte professed to be speaking 11-11011 he declared. in September I939- 11ml 1hr 11- would l1;- "no conscription outside Cali- :itl,'t" \\‘,‘l\ 111111. C. G. POWCF, Minister 0f DC- i¢1|<¢~ for ,\1r_ .\Ir. Power, on Nov 2i, I947. tnildc a speech at Alcfiill University ivliiCll plrlintt- indicated :1 cliailgc of heart on thc cou- seriptiriu question. The following 411013110“ from his speech. is worth recalling, in view 0f tuc toi-ttlcnltiing plebiscite on this isssue. Added r-itipliasis is given tn the quntalioit in view 0f 1111» fact that .\Ir. Power's sou was a member of (lturulak vzthl-lnt contingent at lloitg Kong: “Let me sriyi here, for I believe this needs t0 be said over and ovcr again until its meaning 5.'-i»a..i...)<ml 'i _ to proiiiotc ' . ‘~d‘ has burned into our very souls, we are in this war as Canadians, to preserve Canada. \Ve did not declare war for Britain; we are not waging war for Britain, but with Britain; and the out- come matters just as much to Canada as it does to Britain. It is true that the enemy has struck Britain before striking us-—but that is only the accident of geography. Nor should we think that tlle eiieiiiy has not already strutrlt Canada too. For this enemy fights with every kind of weapon; political, psychological, economic, ra- cial, yes, even religious, as well as military weapons, both old and nctv. And most of his weapons rlre secret weapons hidden from those against \\'lluiii they‘ are directed, and often un- known to those who cmpIOy them. His agents and syntpatliizers seek to discredit Parliamenz- ary institutions and (lemocratic self-govern- ment; they’ seek to foster religious controversy. racial disscnsivm and to set class against class. Iii other words, the agents of llitler are attempting to tirlderniine every prin- ciple for which Lauricr stood and the whole foundation upon which (fanadz- rests as a free tuition. (Cillilllll is iii this war because freedom, tolerance, our institutions, our (liristiuri way of lifc and finally our territory" itself is threatened by" the hideous menace of Nazi (iermuny. Th: tiermanv of llitlcr seeks the total clcsfrtiction of the (“aiizida of Lattrir-r. “'l'lie young men in the .\ir Force for whom I have u special right to speak—-tl'.0ugh it is equally true of our soldiers and sailors-arc of- feriiig their lives to save (Iauadiau ideals Cana- diuii iii-titutiotis. Cflllflllliill ter1"itoi":. iii fzict. to salve all that we 111.2111 1w tlu- iiaiiie of Cuiitulfi. ’ - EDITORIAL NOTES — The fact that 50 little interest is being iztkcii ill iiiunicipzil and other affairs shows the still grow- ing tendency" 011 the part of the public to ap- preciate the full significance and griiviw of the War situation III >I< >l< k .\l1" .\\'._l. Lidstoiie, the old reliable \\'ZII'lllti'>\5 of Stuiimersitlc, is once iiiore the civic head of that progressive illLlillClpflllly. lle is of 1h: type that if he undertake anything lie will see it through or die in the 11110111111. .\i1d of course, like all good iiicii and truc lic does not everlast~ ingly blow his nwii horn, 1.11" indulge in the sick- cniiig luxui'_v of hot ziir orzitoryz ‘II i.‘ >i= Graduate nurses, 112151 11nd prescut. iiizirried or single. have received the Villl by 1l\l\'_('I'il$CIll('Iif from Dr. Keeping, Provincial Comptroller of Medical Service, .-\.R.I‘., to coiiiiiiiiiiitiliicatc with him at once, with a view to being enlisted for local service iu the event of t‘lll(‘l‘g(.‘lIC_\'. That is 110w iiezii" the war is to its. ‘F i‘ '1‘ U Another vacancy in the Senate, btit Prime .\linister Blzlclteiizie King: shows no indication of hurry iii filling them. Why should he? lle is saving thc lrczisltry’ a fcw thousand (lollurs afl- iitially‘, besides a lot of 111111)‘ raiicour, by‘ pru- lotigitig thc liopc deferred which iiiztkctlt the heart of the expectant sick. >l< is >3 >l< Thomas Carlyle, Scottish lll<ltii'il'lll_ cs“ and jihilostijilit-r, died this dzlu: 188i; exercised a more powerful iufluciicc upon thc litci":iry' and religious, ethical and political views of his time than any contemporary liiiglish writer. 11:5 \\'Ol'l\‘ is remarkable for its qualities of htuiiotir, sarcasm, and profound insight, and his vivid and picturesque style is distinctly characteristic of the man. llis leading works include, ‘"111: French Revolution, “Sartor ltesarttis," “llcr- oes and Hero Worship," “Past and Present." "Oliver Cromwell", “Fredericlc the Clront", _"Surely, of all ‘rights of than’, this right of the ignorant man to be guided by the wiser. to be gently, or forcibly, held in the true course by him, is the indisputahlcst." =1 =1 >11 a When I\li'. Churchill's father, Lord Raiulnlplt Churchill, was Chancellor of the Exchequer, and was preparing his budget speech, he was puzzled with the number of decimal signs in the statistics placed before him. “What do all these d-dnts mean?" he inquired of the pcriiiauctit [Intler-Sec- rotary of the Treustiry. Similarly’, the average reader may not unnaturally ask “what do all these d-naughts mean" in the financial state- ments submitted to Parliament. For instance, the cost of the Commontvealth Air Training Plan has risen from $600,000,000 to a billion dollars, and of this figure Canada's share is $500,000,000. More ‘than 90 training schools arc being operated, 130 air establishments have been developed, and there are also about I20 filffilfftlllCS. Paved run- ways for the plau now total over 1,000 miles. We can appreciate what a run 011 1,000 uiilcs of hard surfaced roads implies, but who knows what $1,- °00.000,000 means’ in. cents of earned money? m m Here are the war resolutions of the wives of farmers of U.S.A., according to “'I‘l1e Farm Journal and Farmer's \Vife" weekly: "1701" most farm women the biggest challenge of pat- riotism will be to do what we are already doing —oiily to do it better. An cxtril dozen eggs may be more vital than ltnitting an extra swQater or an ill fitting sox. “It is thc duty of every woman, who can spare time from her home to vol- untecr with existing organizations. We need no new ones." "\\'e call on draft officials to draw physicians for the armed services largely from cities .. . and not from rural communities which are already seriously tinder-serviced. \\'c urge all rural women to recognize the impend- ing shortage . . . and to fortifv themselves . .. by taking current training on lionie nursing and first aid.” “\\"c (pledge) a fzllliily garden on everyi farm . . . (Ionserve thc year's food needs of thc family . . . By preserving our own food we undcrtalvc to release the commercial pack for urban people. Rcd Cross needs and our allies overseas." “Food production is as essential to winning thc war as production of munitions . . Draft boards should (lcterntine the contribution toward victory of each boy, Voluntary enlist- mentshould stop." “We recommend that school schedules be adjusted tn free children for farm work during seasonal [leaks-withntit sac- rificing . . . standards.” "Ike urge \\'P,1\ officials to terminate non-essential projects g0 release labor for farms" V M‘ §Iu§,_--~ --—~- ‘ NOTES BY THE WAY i Fish and chips in real PM‘ ushlslyle are nc-w a_.vailab.e iii loelimu, linear, monk-s w frying equipment ustalleu In I ¥.M.C.A. canteen tnexe. To Edd to me tiorticuiless o! the flit-Mb- pnele me counter has been equip- pea wliii bottles o1 viiitgar tvllli IAOAe§ in tne corks. 111.5 news slwuld be particularly [LCASIIIB to l Yorltsnire man on have lrcril 10e- land With wncm I talked 1.1 Lon- oon the other day. He was lament- ing the lack of miaglnation “liith the I-JCIHIIGQIS showed in the inat- ter 01 Lsli and corps. As _uue would expect, there LS no 511011859 of fish Ilp tlieie. but We “mlmf-l-‘i idea of llsli nlld 511W. he told m8. '15 a huge piece of cod with about two chips. - Deeds Yflrlhlil"? Post. ,_ Ten big science stories and acnievemeiits of i941. 561cm,“ b)’ Watson Davis, director of 5616066 service, are: The radio lccator OI attacklng airplanes developed and put, into war use. The enrichment of white flour and bread with vjta- mlns and minerals. 'I‘he fcurt’ 0f gray halrlnhfunlans byvdaily closes of one olthzBvitamlns, paraa- minobelizoic acid. The great 2311mm of September 1B. The production of nmre and larger airplanes for war use. The development, of sulfadia- zine spray trcatzneiit for burns. Evi- dence that fcwls constitute a reser- volr tor encephalitis onsuceping sickness and that mosquitcs car- ry the virus. Evidence that infan- tile paralysis_ may be spread by flies. Production _of_ inxgiiesium T01‘ airplanes by ‘tni"1ii1g“ 5E£I_\\‘f\i.("l‘ l): clopuieiit aii. ccilztrliciicii of a m“. type of cargo ship Sca Ot- ter 11., welded and pzwered with auto engines. - Exchange The Food ltiinlstryfls guests who last week sampled i4 different dishes composed largely or main- ly of carrots might hnve reflected how much happier Nebumadricz- zar would have been, IIIBCI _ Lord Woolton dealt, with his diet oi grass. This is iio slur on the ear- rots, capable of so many variations and sometimes well disguised. The “Russian cream," a sutxstitutc for the usual jellies at Christmas Pa!" ties. was tirade of bread boiled iii water 111 which carrots had been boiled. It had been sweetened. colored. flavored, and squeezed through a cloth. and fznfllly look- ed like a cloudy‘ jelly ard tasted delicious The carrot 1315011115, the Ohio pudding, the carrc‘. consclrime were equally good Housswivc-s shOUld ask fol" these and other recipes. - Manchester Guardian, The shortage _ni' skilled men in the factories is causing scme odd situations Tho other day =1 colleague heard a worksunanager giving evidence at the police court against a group 0f li:s empmycs who stood in the dock charged with a series of thefts. He said the)’ u-g-rg gocd workmen and essential to 111.» film's war effort at the pres- f-nt time. In spite of their be- liavioi", the firm would 811d l" take them back into their emPlQV. “We cannot replace than," he ad- ded. He added that he wished they" could. “Is it a fact." asked the defending solicitor, “that. vou brought 111059 men to court in your ear?" "Yes," azistvercd thit- norks manager. "and if iticy are 110'» $11M to prison I am going to drive thcni back. 1 want to get them restarted on their jobs as quickly 11S ‘P05- slble " The case ended in fines 1X"- ing intpased —— Birmingham Post. uuil-l- is lllilimlfiliiy 1111-1111111: fre 11 invasions. He is making an e1 QMJAIJIQ 0f carrying several tons. He 1141s seizcd all the silk material lie can find iii Eurotze. find hi‘ doesn't ntlztd who knows that it IS tiltendcd for parachutes. Is all 11115 meant for invasion oi Britain? It i; as likely asjtllte invasion 0f any- where else. Hitler 1121s made three big divisions to scatter British strength outside Britain. He ex- pected a fourth. we have to dis- wrse Dnlpire force; in large num- bers; 111 To meet a German swoop through the Caucasus or across Turkey to Iran: (2) to hold German forces in Libya; (3) to keep the Japanese quiet in Indo- china. The fourth and biggest diversion did not come off. It was intended to be a British invasion of Franm. A strong invitation was issued to us by an almost complete withdrawal of German forces. We declined the ball. DQAPlfe Germfln hardship; tn Russia there l5 no Sign yet. of German wearittess of war ln better climates. In fact, many lower-rank German officers are readler than Hitler for Crctes and super-Cretes. Nazi schooling was intended to make them like that. - Daily ‘Express (London). The battles of the Atlantic, of the Mediterranean, of Eilropc. Of Africa. and of the Far East have yet. to be won, and it. would be the sheet-est folly for the free peoples of the world f0 take a complacent" or lackadaisacal attitude. so far from having "turned the comer" we have not yet reached it. We are only in sight of it, and there Is a. long, hard stretch ahead. But. we have this consolation - that our position in December, 194i, and our hopes are immeasurably brighter than they were in De- cember, i940: that. while we have not. yet won the ivar, we have stay- ed the rush which, if Hitler and his gang 11nd been as clever as they thought they ‘were, might. have overwhelmed us. Now the formula for winning this war, for destroying i-Iitlerism and Nazi tyranny or ever and ever, Ls very simple. Fight in unison, work in unison. give in unison, to the very utmost of our strength and re- sources. -- Royal Gazette and Colonist Datlv (Bermuda). The Connens stands for a square deal for all sections and tn- terests as welt a: for Sworn]. And if Britain ts really sincere ln de- claring that she has made the Congress idsills her own she must establish her disinterestedness first. by declaring that; India. shalt have. the moment the war t: over, n; full a content. of freedom. so far as Britain is concerned, as ll y other country in the world. s. e must. further. make good the ellfm that the expansion oi the Viceroy’; Council indicate; a real flllflilfi 0f lleflrl. not by resorting to such subterfuges as pretendiriq that the Departments she has handed over to inrttltn Members are the key-departments, but by hand- inu over Defence and Fnanee also. ll not oniv India but all the world Nllfd! the“ as the key-downri- ments and Mr. Amery could not avplrently find Anv argument. to dioorcve ('13s. ‘thirdly. the Gov- vrnrnnt should, u an gamut of tit-fr intention not. to rut content. with the nfmintsti-ative chances which admittedly provide no nolu- tion of the political deadlock. order forthwith the min» f! g1! Kris-Q nous iiimibei" of gliders, each . jomtwit LETTER B; Robert L. Cotton 1 (Special to the Guardian) OTTAWA, Tuesday. Nbruary Ind-Five :\ sakers made their contribution to the Drift Address debate cn Monday ev Ling. three of thcm Liberals, one Conserva- tive and one New Democracy. I missed nearing the latter and could not understand what one 01 the Liberals, Mr. Bertrand oi Ter- ifbonne, vttio spoke entirely in French, was saying. But he got a good deal of applause from Mr. Lacombe, the leader of the new antt-conscripticnlst party and also from Mr, Pouiiot who spoke so strongly against. conscription for overseas. so have no. doubt. that the Ottawa papers‘ reports of his address are correct. Mr. Bertrand 1s a newspaper ed- itor thirty-six vrars old. a fluent speaker, and isald he hoped the cple would vote against; releas- niz the goicrnmecit from its anti- ronscrlotion nledee and said he lumself would vcte against having the plebiscite and against both amendments. Mr. Kin-g Hazen of St. John, Conservative, and Capt. Leslie Mulch, Liberal. are both veterans of the Great War. The latter is in tinlfmm ard ls on the staff cf one of the training centres, Mr. Hazen suggested that the members of the House get together and solve the problem that ls before them. He deplored the apparent lack of lead- erslfp and said there has been tco much nopcrsemcnt lu Canada during the t tvvcntv years. He asked Mr. 1'10 rbaiidcn th" idea cf a plebiscite- and clrerv to his attention a quotation from the philosopher Emerscrl 011 "Foolish consistency." Captain Mulch said he was not. convlnced cf the need for complete selective service ilO\\', or the ini- medlate need of expanding the overseas amiy, but realized CONCE- tlons might completely change 1:1 forty-eight IICLIPS, All that Cauztch has done to date iii our notable war effort, could not have been done without the help of the great» mass of cilllfldffifi5 evervvvhcre, but tnagnificeiit as results fiave wen much more can be done yiet. He culled upon the Government 1o do HIGH: constructive pl-aiinliif: and give us’ some idea as to truer-a we are going, The country is A 1' he said. for a policy‘ that wil at nothing, and he specially’ urzed that more provision be made for utilizing in the most effective wav the services of men in the age grotto frcm 55 tn G5, One Tucsrlav afternoon lVII‘. Tur- econ of Car. cu. BO. Liberal, Mr. Pwlcv o.’ QuZAwvlfc. Conservawe. Mr. Wdght. C.C.F‘.. cf Mr er" Sask, the coiisfituencv represe. wd for years _bv Mi". Motherwell wieii he was Minister" of Agriculture, Mi". G. T. Fulforrl Tun.» wlio 1111s a got, olu l-‘reizcil 11.11119 but. EH05 11o iiidaclitrun 0t 11:5 liiisagc \\'ll..ll lie speaks, i; an old- Ifl-EIIICIIQLI, spell-biiicliiig Jlfafluf “my hiiol to crave the liidtilgeiice of tile House for extra time 1:1 which io (I9.I\'€I' Ills pe l'flL.0ll. He snared witn oifiei- bFIIISII Coluliloia “up- 01's fear its to the 11ml‘ actcqu v of Preiznrativiis 0t 1.11mi; .111 West. Coast. and Sliggff-ui/III t tr Vfiflfllls lllilltfilit’ ratios be built forthwith tn BC, and also iii Al- berta without. asslsta from the proviiic-as, and that ...c\ itiipert L‘: developed 11s u iuiilt 311st» by 11,-; US. and Ca . '1 expressing his v p_ clearly and riitphlt kill; p l)‘ that xvvtrtc rf .l1e House at tiie prercnt time would 11¢ 5,- gggq ,1 criterion of l)l'€.:‘.’fli» rcfllfujfnt throughout Cfifflfiil. its any plebis- cite. M1‘. G. T. Fulford takes his tianie IrCm his father who accumulated a_ fortune and develop-rd a, beau- t-ifilt property m Bl'\.'~1‘l{\‘lll1‘ as 1:11,» result. of the sale oi‘ a widely ad- vertised patent. medicine. A coin- Daratlvelv young vet unflueutial Liberal he devoted mm; of his fidflrcss to abuse 0t’ fttiwheti Hep- bum. Had hem! to ilave heard before new something fi'om one of the lady members of the HOEIFC oi" from one of our island members, There fife two lady representatives 11110 51l- °PD051te one another near the south door, Mrs. Dortse w, N191.” of North Battleford. ls the on» 9N1 only member c-f thc Unity iillny Pmifll b1" fl group tn Saskatche- wan who endeavoured to combine the forces of the 0,0,1“ and 5x131 credit. Mrs. Cora T. Casselman was ggsctted as a Liberal In Edmonton REMEMBER Ptenlenzber mo yvhen I am zone away. Gone far sway into the silent. land; when vou can no more hold me by the hand. Nerd fiat! turn to no. yet turning I Remember me when no more, dny ‘ v av. You tell me of our future that. you lIfIIIC . 1 Only remember me: you under- stand It. will be late to counsel then or iu-av. Yet ifmvou should forizct. me for :1 vi And afterward remember, do not lzrtcvr." For if the darkness and corrup- tioii leave A vtislfitre of the thoulrhts that once n Better by far vou should forum and am e ‘man that vuu should remember and be sad. -B.v Christina Rossetti FACTURY GIRLS KILLED IDNDON -— (UP) — ’I‘ Year-old Blfls were killed in aq. expitslon at a Lincclnshire lact- 9Y3’. Nazis-Tun moses? LONDON '-' lCPl "MCHIIOn (if Napoleon is forbidden h.» the Nazis in all history lessons in Nélllie). land; schools. vri] NCGQYIIIICI, free Dutch n waPflDer publih d 1 mnaoll relwrua. i e " , political prisoners and follow it up _v n. new and earnest at-tmipt m corlrm to a setttllemcnt wig: the great r es. - rplnfiin in o Hindu *4 were the teuderest spots on which 11111111111. Ir. tmsses bv the imtei al WORDS OF ( ‘HALLENG I‘ A Thought A m! For A People Al. War "The future demands of us n sober realization o! the dif- ficulties and discouragement: ahead and an acknowledize- ment of the cost: to each of us but our own will to victory tells us that we shall win."- Wendell L Willkie. Best And Worst (London T;mes) Tolstoy's house at Yasnaya. Polv- oana has been destroyed by the German invaders. The houses of Chekhov. tlie writer of plays and stories. and of Tchaikovsky, most famous of Russian musical coin- posers. have also been wrecked. The nature of the destruction de- em “M "d "re" eve"- i plation. It was not wanton. and it. was not. n11 act oi’ barbarfsm. It. was deliberately and shrewdly de- . ,1, h- u 1 aim o; b“. termlned on. and for reasons which 1jf,l,f}§§,,“,,Ifimfsanlflfii“pl-illcipfliaim ious no barbarzsm coulr understand. It. or an warm“, n, strikes Efralgm L1 time that the Hun, the Goth, a, “.8 and the Vandal were relieved from ' like ire modern German invader. would burn onen towns and slaugh- ter unarmed men. children, trouble to plead that these means of blocking roads oi" of protecfng women. and realm, the flames, if. must take the conse- qll€liC€S——I)'l1‘bl-Il'l.<ni- in such mat- ters a Hlppocleldes. would not care. But the power that seeks out and befouls the shrines of dead 111211 of trsnlus is iint barlvtrkm. It is a power more wicked ‘Pan nnv carefully cheeses its victim. and be- cause strikes at. spiritual states. Nether “civilized barhavlsm" nor “the bar- barism of civilization" quite ex- vjouq‘. presses it. It Is the corruption, the ’ ' the refinement of the wavs of bar- barfsm, a conscioul, constructive. doctrtnairo brutality. No barbarsm would know that the homes of Tolsto". ChelPov- and Tchnikovskv the Russian people could b‘: smit- ten with the deadliest injury’. Hav- inz at. lca=t an inheritance of in- tel‘ectual cultivation, the Germans did know it: and that inheritance tl'-."_v have perverted into an engine of subtle and mortal cvueltv. Therein lies the real v.’ rss of sllfl‘ outrages: corruptio optlmi taecsiina. The "dark. wild. essential devllrv." as the writ-er of n letter on another nafze calls it. shows an iurreiiiiltyr that is. Indeed, rather devilish than s. ATTENTION Swine Breeders j NOW is the time to guard against PIG WORM By using the most effective remedy on the market l\i.~\C'S mo ‘WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly‘ abolish all traces of worms. and improve thc health oi‘ your stock. 35.“ and 70c a package. MACS CONDITION POWDERS FOR HORSES AND CATTLE Tnncs up the system. cures nli skin troubles and gives r l Iossv coal. of hair. For swelled egs, purifying the blood and ls an Eradicator of worm; l In an unfailing remedy. Price 50c n package. MACS HEAVE AND COUGH REMEDY Relieve: Coughs. Colds. Ilenvn and nil Infections of the lungs of horses. It. can be easily administered hv mixing with "w fwd. and leaves no bad after-effects. Price 50o. THE TIYO MAOS 149 Great George Street. Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. i Because of the extensive field it covers, and the frequency with wnich it is used by the public, the Telephone Directory has be- l come recognized as an ideal ad- vertiainz medium. Telephone subscribers represent a preferred class of buvers from whom your message will gain the utmost results. Be sure to re- lerve space before February 14th. that soul in order the the undeserved reproach of being more firmly w end-mm the w“- ._ __ _, quered in The blood-thirsty bartalsm of old which u w be me dark nigh, of ‘u the peoples. I H t d t1 ur eiic o 1a and dolmess “mud mt fPreat all: thrdiivn fill-O relief. It ls DUBLIN —— (C?) — all the more terrible a threat be- ,_ , _ v , . cause of the Germans’ (‘OIIVICLOIT lzlflllsmles ‘lifmlst allfl"'l‘_,_“fl° f“ that they tire still able and stlll at lfrbmlfll“, 11111113” lll."‘ls';'"sjlr l} liberty to enjnv the works of Tol- l ml-v sum‘ "0"" m n" “fl-v ° stcv. of Chekhov, of Tchaikovsky i-i their own land or the places that their smiles have tvreiiched from tie true owners. Imagine the out.- cry they would raise if any of their Injured neighbours were to follow in Wsintar, iii Bavreutli. or any of blind fury of destruction. because it 11121115111011], throuah physical force it glalgggfgstgzwéhe truth’ the prom“ crushing turns wrnnr: for others into right for themselves become more 0b- danzerou H . y. h , Russians know the nature of the neitersion of the cluhed n1 rid to m." thing “WV a", fighting aqmmh and thev fight, all the harder for TOO MANY COOKS YES AND CAN BE SPOILED AS EASILY AS THE BROTH. OUR T0- BACCO HAS BEEN ' . V E RY CAREFULLY w - produced for many years with the ISIANO TELEPHONE OIL, IIIAITEII Air Raid Precaution In order that the medical section of the Air Raid Precautions can function smoothly and he prepared it is most importanftllat all graduat; nurses married or single residing in vince be enrolled for emergency calls. IIIQ p11). All graduates are urgently requested to send in their names to DR. B. C. KEEPING Provincial Comptroller of Medical Services A. R. P. Charlottetown malignity ,has cfssity that, mankind cleansed of the absolute slavery would enslave the soul. By such deeds the. MURE COPPER IN lilitll nickel Is scarce. the Eire ment authorized Is with a bigger cfyype lnlustlee wh.‘ch We are now receiving a n; than ever. The OLD SYDNEY SCREEN l ALBION ROUND ALBION NUT BAYVIEIV SCREENED DOMINION COKE BRAS D'0R LUMP INVERNESS SCREENED Prompt and careful vieiiv cries for C. O. D. orders. eic WLII. Oillis 8r Co. Phone I76. b‘ |C Rnzufllfiyt‘ , TOBACCO right in- gredients and under the right direction. That's the reason so many people ask for y Hickey’s Black Twist 10c Per Fig Manufactured By HIONEY ANO NIOHOESON TOBACCO CO. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN NEW TELEPHONE OIHEOTOHY NEW issue of the Island Tele- phone Directory is scheduled for publication on April 1st. Listings will be closed on February 14th. Persons who intend to become. Telephone Subscribers at this time. and subscribers who ‘wish changes made in their present listings. are urged to send their requests to our nearest Business Office at once. We cannot undertake to give effect in the new issue to orders received after February 14th. Please note carefully this closlnl date. EBRUAKL; 1943 M. the spiritual wound; which iiigen. _ dealt their national pride. hum what has hap. soul of man: it aims at pened in Russia all the free people; may see beyond mistake the m, should b; this corruption that Be R1151: a vorii- uinr supply of the followup Conls.