' PAGE FOUR THE CHARLUPTETOWN ~ GUARDIAN ii“ 001mm: 11. 194a ' ' . TllE lllllRllllTETlltlll, GUARDIAN Morning Daily lFounded in 1887) Authorised as Second Class Mail. Post Olleo Department, Ottawa. President, Ian A. Burnett; Vice-President, Wm. I. Burnett; Secy.-Treas., G. M. Burnett; Editor sine Managing Director, J. it. Burnett; Associate Editor. Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." the conference is expected to come on intens- ive notional tourist plan for Canada with the different interests co-ordinoting their adver- tising budgets ond discussing ways and means of a more adequate and more efficient distri- bution of recreational literature. The meetings ore to last for three days and.are to be held in the Parliament buildings at Ottawa. Prince Ed- ward Island will be represented at the confer- ence by Premier Jones and Lt.-C6l. Reid, Dir- ector of Publicity and supervisor of the Travel Bureau. Following the lnterprovinciol Conference, modation. inch man will hflVQ g v owna-s are also eacperimcntlng with 0mg 1:1; ilmde fuels. --Vancouver Prov- Notes By The Way The "Tish tanker “Ilellelsra” ls to go for trials shortly with het- boll-arc fired by cracked laphisilt, hitherto s waste pnaduit. With the economies achieved hec- ppm-g ""4116 to imptwe crew i-‘llblll f0!‘ himself ‘Th: W 5995i"! bean-hes and other sun. Finis At Nuernberg (I! I. H. Roberto, In, Associated Prose Pordgn Afflllo Analyst) If gangsters had moved on Wash- ington In the '30s, taken over the government of the United States and then raised cover the whole world, their story their sights to ould hardly have been more in- credible than the chapter in his- tory written by the men who Wed yesterday in Nuernherg, For sli the mad doctors of fic- tion who practice fiendish qxperl- an! .The Soft Winds Of Government (Pmonborough Examiner) Speaking to a Progressive Con. aervotive Club In ‘Inrooto. J. M hdsodonndl warned sg socialist tsand of the pseeen - unspent, and said that "it is easy for people in business to get. into a stats of mind where they neslt- ate to face the keen Whats of com. petition, findin the soft winds of t oi , in various forms. easier and more comfortable". But as he pointed out, bhe lab of won- fr leads \\ ii it‘. \ . viii,‘ Ill’ l 1m ti. F. Iluteheson '&S0ll OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fit. ting of glasses for tliq aiyaefitlon of ocular do. 53 Grafton Street ments on helpless patients. for all poutyml ellymw of the despots of history who made death the only- arbiter of their a" 801111111118 wllnglas at these n. disputes, for all the superstition- ggls. tihe change must meet wiiei crazed who have sought to pro- f wpfmval of a mat munbqqiiiiote their. gods with human zyhpwggl- 'I‘h9rc are. however. some sicriflce, for all the crimes lxito “wows A‘: solitude more than which men have been led by their \ ' ,6"! rhell’ "milled I70 ilvflflfifl. thcse men of Nazidom pru- -cme tfiliiSidfilflllCll? Is there any Vlde a march gwdmam} V-“m lfifllflfi‘ 51100141 When Robert Ingersoll, Amerl- gjl 05),); on 053ml”; bu. f3‘ agffllltlgelvxltelzlde ltrnivoooblv he Ciili author, stood before the tomb ihcssuich to flgnt fol’ cccncmicnce- [~90 k? o“ . B-nCB cif these of Napoleon he "thought of hi] the dnm, ‘ p p “OM” 5°91"! Sum-Tllllfl- widows and orphans he had made, DOee the avers-SQ Ofllilldllfill bil- of the tears that had been shed for imam-l‘ “Ildfisimd the dmplm‘ his 81°F)?’ These Nazis who swung 8mm“ eoonomlc or on the Nuernberg gibbei», and Her- man Goerlng, who poisoned hirn- m‘ self. conspired with a man who they hoped would be s new and greater Napoleon, but who flopped even as a Genghis han. They elicited plenty of tears, but no 810W. They were pt the end v/hat they were at the beginning-gs]- lows-bait. Even Goering. a gulclde, wound up on a stretcher beneath lhe gallows on which his collea- gues died. Legal purists probably will argue for years over whether these men should have been hanged. There are those who say, citing legal precedents which they consider solid, that these men were con- victed of acts which were not illegal when committed, that you must create your law before it‘ can be broken. Others upohcld the Nuernberg verdicts as conforming to the growth of all law. They say that in certain circumstances he com- munity itself has the right io de- Clde When egzravated acts have reached the point of criminality, when an example must be made and‘ a precedent established, The international court at Nuernberg, in effect. applied iiia rules of equity. The result makes the Nazi leaders valuable for the first time-as warnings to luture rulers that the world has harden- ed its heart against aggressors. m?! recur-ts in hills district luv; zllvwn and are tier-owning comma-e. islized. Sluice more and more people the members of the Canadian Association of Tourist 8i Publicity Bureaus will also assemble in Ottawa. This will bring together o great many other tourist leaders, representing hotels,‘ resorts, outfitters and several municipal bodies. The president of this organization is Mr. E. G. Rowebattom, of Victoria, B. C., and the secre- tory-treasurer is T. H. R. McNol|y of Toronto, Ontario. These delegates will be in session for two days and will discuss a variety of problems of- fecting the tourist industry from coast to coast. THURSDAY, OCTOBER l7, 1946 m Professional Ila-u’: an. II. lfin Bl’! s...“.':"‘.‘.:::... ...;.*~~.-. ii»- Ttlitllhone - 0lflce_.17qg_ Residence 451-1, NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St, Charlottetown Tel. 589 p“ B“ M glllonell and company Clllflcrcd Accountan‘ Eastern Trust Building Phone 1441 - Box 344 Charlottetown n. M. spans, c. s, Resident Partner . vvvvvv PUHI IL‘ ~S'I'I<.‘NIJGI\’AI‘HER Mlmflflllhllll cords and clrculs "M"! lirllrrums, uuITBHPOIIdCIICQTI ing and bookkegptn‘ Hi-‘IITEN GIDDEN e enhone 1880-; Alli. N . 4, C 1f oPownslonsrllrlelgtf Apt‘ Olvlc Health Problems _,_ A serious situation has been called to the attention of the City Council by the deputy ministers of Health and Reconstruction in con- nection with the Spring Pork and Porkdole suburban oreas. These oreas have no water sup- ply and pumps cannot be used on account of the water in the oreas being contaminated. It is obvious that such o condition cannot be per- mitted to exist, as it constitutes o threat to the whole community. It was stated that some 4,000 people are now living in the area adjacent to the city limits, and that this number may soon be increased to 7,000. If the residents of these areas cannot coma to terms with the City in the matter of provid- ing water and sewage facilities, then the health authorities should insist that these areas form corporations of their own, making themselves responsible for these essential services. There seems no other alternative. With regard to the incinerator question, it would appear that the cost per household user would be greatly reduced by the city acquiring its own plant. The present company charges $1.50 monthly, which is $l8.00 per year, where- as the City could provide service to the 5,000 families in Charlottetown at a cost including cons of $9.55. This would mean on increase in taxes to this amount, but there is no question as to the advantage, from a public health stand- point alone, which could be expected to follow. A llavy Jubilee Starting next Sunday, the Navy League of Canada will observe its "Golden Jubilee" Navy Week, marking 50 years of service to Canudo ond the Empire. Special activities are sched- uled to take place in each of the fifteen Div- isions into which the national organization is divided. An important introductory feature will be an address by Lord Louis Mountbatten speak- ing from England on Sunday afternoon. The peacetime activities of the Navy Lea- gue are considered as important as those under- taken during the war. Since 1896 it has consist- ently promoted Canada's interests as an export- lng notion, and over the same period, it lios sponsored the Sea Cadet Movement. By maintaining and operating, in co-oper- ation with Naval Service, nearly l00 Sea Cadet Corps and I4 summer comps, the Navy League “ls helping to provide a youth-training program second to none in its benefits to young Can- adians. Business and professional men are find- lng that this training is good, whether for civ- ilian employment or a sea career. The extent to which the Navy League will be able to carry on its work among merchant sea- men ond further develop the scope and influ- ence of the Sea Cadet Movement depends upon the extent to which it receives the support of municipalities, public bodies ond private indiv- lduels. and the ending done nothing to ed: their ad- vance. As vet their gains in power can be defended on grounds of no. tlonail necessity, but tiha plain fact is that ‘irsocialiat bmveaimacy is being established in Canada Mr. The inhabitanls a! Siam gr; N. Dotted to be roim between the bflfllbilfl-Pping foreign traders of America. and the old school tie etiffnce cif the British, 1t, mo“ "l"? I 800d place for Canadians, “V110 might to be able to strike s balance between the tap. -Com. wall Standard-h. -r. - EDITORIAL NOTES .-. irmbrhpwtefunbuuq of your natural complexion wlolingmngivcs your skin that soft, satin-smooth, star-like look of loveliness you have always wanted, Telephone 315 The 2 Macs 149 Great George Street ‘ Charlottetown, is limited in outlook and his heart, he hates and mletrusts freedom. But he has Ono (Hut advantage: be lmows where he is . The misineosnam not. still, or retreat a few Tho catch his libel-Allan and his inellm for extend only to his personal affairs The socialist pian- ner may be mllilcally wrongdaeed- ed, put m hi“ a political theory. The busineesznan, in too many in- stances, is politically illiterate, and imagines that his pecnonaii beliefs, however half-baked. Rlfllewfit "he traditional docmnes 0d the Oon. sdrvativc m- luiberai parties. Such peOplg are poor iighlEIS for Ilny soirt of crcedom f Mr. Ldacdonncl is right. Business must lead. in the fight fut economic (median, but it must. have a broad, intelligent and liberal policy with which to oppose awlellsm- At we- smi, ii, has nozihing of the sort. Businessmen have for too ion re- lt is scandalous that the Federal Govern- ment should incur o cost of $7,500 cacti in build- ing houses which the Iocol firm of L M. Poole and Co. can erect for $3,900 each. An investigo- _ tion is called for. Time being what it is. and man's " Span of the apaamxlmaie measure of 70 years, what is the uirge which forces sicmc people to press on the seconds at the “rush" hours of a city's traffic? Why is one sewnd between five p.m, and six pm. oi em’ Break/er importance tihuai tlhe same measure oif human time at any othcir hour of the dwy? Yet the scramble to save that. second in the rush hour gives this com- munity-ond cveiy other one of ccmwmive Sim in Canada,- its Irlialn crop of accidents, neanaic- cldoul-f-s. fits, shairts and bad tums. —-Vicioria Colonist. new Leftist leaders of labour ond organized farmers, soys The Letter-Review, continue their pathetic attempts to pretend that they are on the some side of the argument. Actually, labour demands for higher wages and lower prices can only be satisfied at the expense of the farmers, whose economic interest is lower wages ond higher prices. Prince Edward Island wow Sir Philip Sidney, English soldier, poet and courtier, born this date I554; employed in num- erous diplomatic missions, enioying high fovour ot the Court of St. James; appointed Governor of Flushing; mortally wounded at Zutphen, and behaved with a chivalry which has impressed it- self on history. His works include: Arcadia, Astropfiil and Stella, and a series of sonnets: Come sleep, O sleep! the certain knot of pence, The baiting place of wit, the balm of woe, The poor man's wealth, the prisoner's release, The indifferent judge betweep the high and low. We carry a complete line of Trusses. All sizes. An astonishing spectacle — all those dignitaries in mbes and rib. lflllfl flilld Bfltld chains s»:ii{£i1"'v kicking olwwy until tho helmet. end- “fl? ed with a splash in inc mossy water of tihe moat- smile the matched eoukinight stood alt the phi. drancel flops, stripped, of mil his magnificence, rugly awaiting the order to start lmnn his journey to s dreadful death. ‘the last time this grimly picture- sque rlllueil was perfnnncd was more than 200 years an» A fellow we know was closing his Summer plane (or this 99pm“ and left the following note for the nlilmrlam: "Am going homo tomor- row. Please wake me w I can poly your bill". ‘The next moirning he found tucked imcler iihe book door a nbcssage in careful script. ‘Tried to wake you" it road. "Woke four other people armnid here instead. See you next yonr."— ‘Ihe New Yorker. u. rt uosuu s. c0, Chartered Accountants ss Grafton street. Charlottetown iUi Bos II Isndolnb w. mobbing. as. _-.-__i___._____i, McLeod & Bentley l W. B. BENTLEY. LO. J. A. BENTLEY, BO. Barrister! sud Attorneys-st Low A Grim And Picturesque Ceremony Iin tihe Choir of St George's Cilmpei. Windsor. an m. “' ‘ -l jewel of stonedzrocing and fain- vaultliog, are the silken banners of llhBK-llltllhflvftilemdxof the‘. Gamer, the oldest Rind mod: colour- ful of all the British Orders of Chivalry. The Garter has: long been lllhe highest of all British decorat. ions: tihe roll of the Knights is a pageant n! English history for six centuries. Above the campy of caoih Knight's choir stall, twenty feet up from time ground. is perch- eid a gscat ibelmet with a. sword hanging dawn in from of it. Mr. Alec Wilson described how the business, swords and nel- mets figured in the extraordinary ceremony of the Degradation of a Garter Knight. ‘more are three crimes, religious and military which call for a Knights degrada- tiom- Heresy, Treason and “Flying from Baititell"- crimes which cost a Knight his honour as weld as his life. ‘Ilhis is the cereimony as laid down in the old records. The Knight. stands in iihe Choir of St. Gem-go's (Ihapcl. His sword ls, of wince, taken from him, his spurs are dropped off, any bulges or em- blemsoframkszxetoimfromhis clothing. 'I'he're is a pull muster of title officers of the Order, plumed and robed. Just before Morning Hayes. Garter King cit Arms, in his heraldic tamed, goes to the highest. step at the brazen lectem placed in the middle of the Choir. With his officers around him, and with Black Rod present he reads “mud , aloud lihe document proclaiming dauehtqufim lagged lfiglgggg iilhie Knight's ciegrackitlcn. Mean. He“ 2o mam‘, somymnold mink WBillC,l'l11£Oflill£HEl'8ld6BB5pX0~im\' vlded ltimseif with o. ladder by ' ' which he climbs up to flue back of and at. the moment when Garter pron. ounces the words "be expelled and put from among the arms" he lifts the helmet of! tiho tail pinnacle, andhmlsitdownwithsclashon the atone flood". after the helmet, go the banner and tihesvjosd. When che last words have been read, the Whether or not Mayor MacDonald told Major-General Young that there was no hous- ing emergency in Charlottetown-ond His Wor- ship cotegoricolly denies having even ‘spoken to the Major-General — the fact remains the Reconstruction Minister is of that opinion, and has been most uncooperative with both city and province in furthering housing proiects. Accord- ing to Councillor Farmer, Mr. Howe is unreliable even in his public statements on the subject, es- pecially in claiming that Halifax had fallen in line with his department, when as o matter of fact it had not. Mr. Howe is evidently more politician than statesman, the farmer's words are usually to be taken with a groin of solt, the latter's ac- cepted as would a*bor:d. One American economist declares that equilibrium and stability can- not be recovered until there is an. other depression. It is e. harsh remedy, but many shoirteighted persons aiivpoar to be asking just foir that —Hs.miliion Spectator. 4 x l "Where Cupidity Comes ln-Honesty Goes Out" I z m s-ribc. Stroet O+O-O-OOOO-OOOOOQOO-O-O-O-O-OOO- -vwv OCQOQU§QO§Q Charles R. McQuaid as. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary. Etc. (‘Ilhe Scout Insider) Mm time to time it is found necessary to warn Soouteni against methods of raising funds which may be construed as forms or’ gambling. 59mm 4 01f P.0 B. is very em. Niiatic on this mbject. It says: "Members of the Association, acting as such, must not counten- ance. or be concern-ed in any pub. lic method Qt raising money for m or other purposes whlaris In any way contrary to the law of the land, or likely in enamrggg Scouts in the practice of gambling. Scouts nuust not take part in mf- Iles or similar activities." Gambling is a. loam of greed, an easy waypof getting rich quick, a means of getting something for 119011118. 8nd ll. will be readily rec- ognized as making no contribution to the building 0t good char-acre;- in the boy. Gamlbling takes away tlhe ele. ment oil sportsmanship too. When it becomes an ingrained habit, oine does not play games of any kind for the game's sake: they play for the possibility of winning some. thing, and that. at the expense of r. Some will s-rizuc of course that the minor forms of gapsbling are quite harmless That is not true. No one starts in as sin all-out gambler. They aswaye start with the innocent seeming fonms of cimbllng which have an insidious way of becoming habit. Isegitirniaite gains In life come from three things They are either earned by viral-k, the profit of ii sale, or the result of a gift Gambling comes under none of these head. lngs. 1t ls a fcmi of irreied, which gives little satisfaction to the win- nee, and much unhappiness and sorrow to the loser. Gains are ul- wsye made at the expense of others. Lad BademPowell in Rovering to Sirocess gives the record in inn- Accordlng to experts attending the National Safety Congress in Chicago, the present day glimmer girl is u. “walking accident lmzard." Tlhey point to her high heels, elo- bcosiic but tiialng-zmus jewelry and inflammable iWCCESOIiGS. These learned gentlemen are obviously t-ct-hlly wrapped up in their work. They are thinking only of the glemor girl. ‘Nhizit about the dang- err to the poor, mere male who dis. ICCHUES his neck or fsifs down a nmnhcle wuiile Z-iwking? —W1nclsor Sim‘. “EVERY MAN OUT 0F HIS HUMOUR" FROM . . . Be a man ne'er so vile In wit, in judgment, manners, or Elston! Trust Build!!!- what else; -' Charlottetown if he can piuwchase but a silken pimp. i711 l COVE!‘ I.‘ I'll‘. l-le shall not only pass, but puss re-, ' BELL 8t MATi-IIESON garded. i Whereas, let him be poor, and‘ mmswm solicitor.’ ‘a B. BELL, M.L.A., mes clad, - n“ Though ne'er so richly varied W“ o. i. iusruiusou. LL.B.. no. Attorneyo-st-Lsw shall have y A fellow, that knows nothing but Loans 0N crry AND PALM PROPERTIES his beef. Or how to rinse his clsmmy g-utsl lsgo%ilz‘gn'rrcaugt c on with beer, Will take him by the shoulders, or Chmllmh" P-E-l- FREDERIC A. LARGE s: It must be refreshing to come across some one who has never been annoyed by radio, who does not even know of its existence. The BBC has o Listener Research Department, which regularly conducts scientific inquiries into the listening habits of the British public. One of the Survey interviewers visited a remote farm in Glamorgonshire, Wales. Here is his report: "l explained I was doing Survey work for the BBC. ‘What does BBC stand for?', I was asked. When l told him, 'l have never heard _of it,’ he said. He hod never seen or heard a ‘vnreless set and did not even know that wireless existed. To make o check I interviewed his wife on hour later when he was on the hoy, ond I received exactly the some replies." i 1r fi The British people are so deeply involved in their owrn tadss of re- construction that 1t is hiard to di- vc-zit their attention i0 the prob. emf» of other pea-pics and other na- iicins. But the challenge cannot be airlifted, The war was fought in the hope of building a demo- cmitic Eibrope, and that purpose began only wiun ffhe victory in the hiatus-fluid. A new wxmld must be built upon the ruins of the old We cannot do our cl-iity to the peoples who were on-x: our enemies if we pass by 0n the other side. Recon. structloui ln Europe will not take place without us For good or ill the decision rests 111E891? with us. Lf we were to dlsintcraid ourselves in ilhe solution, life on the contin- eint mlgiht. be reborn in a. shape wlhlch would threaten us moire pow- erfully even then the Nazi coins. such that sought to destroy our country in 1940 —London Herald. the throat, And kick him down the stairs. Such ls the state 0f virtue, in bed clothes. l-Bcn Jonson (1573-1637). xonksrnnu sonar-runs sovnr mars-sis, Yorkshire, England —-(CP=-- Firs‘. squatters hene were Mr. and Mns. Keith M! Bo: id CBARLOTTETOWN. 2.8.1. llR. W. R. BARS!!! Chiropractor _ Palmer Grsdusto Charlottetown l0! Prince 8t. Phone I01! PALMER & HASLAM A. .I. HASLAM, B.A.. LLB. BARIIISTIB. ETC. Isnlr of Novs Sootis Chamber! Charlottetown. P E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone It v.0. Box l! H. F. McPHEE. B.A.. KC. NOTARY. ETC. BAltltlliTEIt SOLIOITOB _ Riley Building Charlottetown o-oooo-oooooo-oowow-woo» Our Seed Potato Exports Canadian certified seed-potatoes are ex- ported to several countries, os indicated by the annual report of the Agricultural Supplies Board and the Agricultural Food Board, cover- ing the l2 months ended March 3l, I946. Ship- ments totalled 2,269,2I6 bushels from the I945 crop during the twelve months under review, and went to the following countries: United States, I,52l,04Z bushels; Cuba, 3ll,l54,' Argentina, 109,846; Uruguay, 92,400; South Africa, 9l,26l; Venezuela, 86,5ll; Bermuda, 20,063; Panama, 825; Martinique, 770; Newfoundland, 3,750; West Indies, 25,306; Dominican Republic, 4,276; Mexico, L263; Holland, 749. There-were other shipments being made after March 3l, I946, and it is estimated that total shipments from I Freight airliners may play o large part in moving livestock in the event of future droughts in Australia. Airline officials expect arrange- ments will shortly be made to "air-mail" cat- tle, when required. Stock could be token furth- er from drought areas with less travel fatigue, ond planes would be able to carry supplies of feed to necessary centres more quickly than by ordinary transport methods. Present civil avia- tion requirements prevented many country air- fields from being used -by large freight planes. Before your COLD GROWS SERIOUS Stop it with Winston Churchill has always manifested a bland disregard for railway schedules and his habit of coaching a train by the skin of his teeth hos always been an anxiety to his imaveling uimpaniosis. says Tlhe Christian Science Monitor. A friend oinoe chided the matmman the I945 crop of certified potatoes were about 2,500,000 bushels. Production of certified seed- potatoes in Canada in I945 amounted to 6,50l,000 bushels. Of the 2,500,000 bushels exported from the I945 crop more than 90 per cent was grown in the Maritime Provinces. As previously reported, the estimated 1946 production of seed potatoes In Prince Edward Island alone is estimated at five and one-half million bushels; which means that our trons- portatian and marketing facilities will be taxed to the utmost, and that every consideration should be given by the authorities to the handling of this bumper crop. Furthering Tourist Trade Canada's tourist leaders ore to assemble at Ottawa October 21, 22 and 23 to formulate Plans for their I947 programme. The confer- once called by the Hon. James A. MacKinnon, Minister of Trode 8i Comma cu, under whose wrisdiction the Canadian Government Trqygl Bureau operates, will be attended by represen- totlves of all the provincial governments in Can- ode,_os well as officials of the large trensporta- i tron interests: rail, steamship, bus and qii-liii; It is the first conference of its kihd ever assembled in the Dominion, ond the tourist lead- ers will dlscuss the results of the I946 season new said to be o ‘record-breaker for Canada and as well to outline extensive programmes for next year. Nine provincial cabinet ministers will be in ettendencetogsthcr with their tourist officials, ‘fill? l6 rslatlosd counsel end passenger ireffiej of the" railway, steamship, bus "so entrain-lines en else to cmhd. Out of With the improvement of radio and other safety facilities in the post-wor period, mord and more inland landing fields will become more avail- able to all types of aircraft. The largest con- signment of livestock so for token by air con- sisted of I6 stud sheep flown from Adelaide to Sydney. The fact that planes hove been fitted out to carry livestock shows the possibilities of the future when whole fleets of freight aircraft will be able to move large numbers of stock from one area to another: * Some time ago, Premier Jones was criticized by not o few for advising agricultural students at Guelph, or some other college, to be par- ticular in the choice of their wives, as so much depended for success or otherwise of the farm on the co-operation of the helpmeet in the kitchen. He now finds support from a professor of eco- nomics~in the Agricultural Department of the University of Minnesota, who calculates that a farmer's wife, if a good one, is worth $69,000 at the rote of $2,700 per year. Commenting on this The New York Times says the Professor's esti- mate is on the conservative side, adding: "With- out going into the question of how one‘ would determine the value of city and suburban wives, $2,700 a year is a modest sum for o lady who runs e house, takes care of the children, looks after the chickens, heats the milk and bottle- feeds orphan lambs, helpr in the garden, makes pie enough so e man can have o piece for break- fast, bakes beans every Saturday, and is willing to make home-mode biscuits with reasonable fre- quency. Add to this the fact that she under- stands that o man wants fried potatoes for sup- per five nights e week, and the professor's arithmetical conclusion ls fer too low. We would make it e flat $00,000 without qulbbling.” for his little weakness. is such a sportsman" explained Mrs. Churchill; "he always gives the train a chance to get away." hasagood tsam.ssrdttielmdll lreefromstouc, itlsnotenardu- oue task, differing in this reqieet satisfied myself that is a tremendous the hosll-y industry". er "Winston Plowing is one of the moot pleas- ant, as well as the most important, parts d! feirmlxig. Provided one from some other types of farm work. saws The Klitdticner Renard. It. is important because good plowing is iihie basis oil good fanning. Usually egoodplowmm lsagoodfsnner, while a bad one is s poor farmer wiho finds his land overrun with weeds. It requires some skill to be adept at: the practice. No nutter how good a oiownum is, however. he isnotgoingtoberrusmofs success unless he has a welLtrained experienced team After all. It is tlhe team that does meet of the work It ls mot. dlfflwlt to keqa s straight furrow if one has horses iihat know how to walk tor-sight and pay attention to dir- eotlcns. The harem must sloo have the proper gall ~ s...- Aillnltod rcihgiim tlrllt claims embezzlement or theft, bankruptcies. ‘first record was for London alone. B..P. adds: "It looks like a new ' wq of getting rich quickly. but tzoo oftenprwcetobothewsy toget rapidly flake. In almost any ease, it ts-eeds in you s nasty n-ait in choiroctar-cuipldlty, ‘Ihe so called qaartmisn wsnfs to win for the mks of the money he ie going to get out o! the other fellow. Whore oupidluy canes in, honesty goes out. These is precious little of true sport about the greasy hankering oft: isnne other: fellow’; money.” dos-i for the 12 years previous the first world war Attributed dir- ectly to gambling were 284 suicides or ,8,33tcaeesof and 530 B.-P.,takee marry pages to cover thisstbjoct. Assrnanwithsvu-y with experience in _doaiing with both men and boys he realised the harmless forms of gambling lead ss 1-1’. seas to cipiditv and with cupldioy out goes honesty. The first Boom Lsiw deals with the l-ronour of a Scout. Gambling of any km to have produced the patted stock- m‘ ing; fully fadiioned. silk and com. pletely liadrlerlcn. Mlle Caroline Haslett, disirrnan of the Govern- ment Hosiery Working Party which recently published its Nlflf. (k- saibee ihesmsbcilrinee as “very. ". She snys, "l could not difference between them fully fodiionod stock. tire-ordinary III. I they wen rosllyisdderprmtsndlttiinkilg‘ ion is only the entitlin- stage and It can at beetaiod who; very good tell the and pine Inga made ll (Wi- A pantie commie like the plague. _..__.____._s_ scnoor. “ITIIII” Ilium/shire Scotland - until‘. “Wk. u. "amino-um ofiheoiulromoibotstodtiheweet Door. down the hill. and thromh they were tihzoivn into tlhe ditch. r QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds ‘wooso ao- "Ihs Guardian ‘Light s1 an to was 8' rehab-bail EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Daren (A. Phorii i050 Evenings lir Appointment Phone: Residence I01! OQOC-OOO-OQOO-OOO-O-O 06600-044 ALEX W. MATHIESON asssrsrun. soucrroa. srro. Offloox I0 Great George Street llsm to Man Collection .I. A. McGUlGAN. B.A. nurses. no. assures-ea, sobrcrros armors eurunxo M. ALIZAN FARMER B-A. LLB. MONEY T0 MIA.‘ BARBISTER. SOIIICITOII. ITO-l- cassborrrrown .'_ GAUDET £0 HASZARDf Ion-Morn loflottoro. Notaries. I141 Osnsoiso out el (hammer-cs Bill; NIB 1'0 LOAN ' . ui udhnsifrasis-“fin I osssoisiomssceeulit .Pll on. s a sums nsxrllt o sf I'd-sans mo. v I0 llllill s wit‘ mosltoo