‘QflI-tiv~ -- em=rW'1"'-""‘-""m“‘ PAGE sou; TI IE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN TIIE OIIAIILOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ‘"111"- n-ily (Ioundud In ll") Prolldonti Lloul_ Col, W. Chute: l_ llnI-nro Vleo I've-Idol!!! J. B. Burnett, I-J-l. llontlryi Linn. Col, l). A. llnclflnunn. "JD. Idllul and Iunull g flint-tor. J. It lluruall. I.J.l. Anonlnlo Editor-on l-‘runli Walker, and Llnul, In A» llurnnfl. ILOJI \‘,I (On Antlvo iorvlml - BUII! QPTION BATES I) lull In P, If. l. 8 Der yuan 12.00 for l month: [L25 n» ii IIHIIIIIIII 60-: hr M» "WI-III Clly Ilellvrr: “.00 per your; $3.1!) lur ll munlhl ‘L15 lur S munlllli tlki for OBI mnnlh p; [all lo other Province: Ind U.8.A. $5.00 pa! your “mi-d” Wocklyi $.00 nu your: 81,00 for 0 month-i. 001i lor 3 months % ‘flu (‘hculnnelou-n Gun-man may b0 obtained u! Intullln ‘o haw: Age-my. ‘Nine: Quinn-Q, New Vurln; mu loinh Nan-u Ajlslll‘), (‘urnlsr Milk nnsl witnungmn Bun-mi lllrunnlltun News Agent-y, 12411 I'm-l lit. Montreal; J. Finl- 3“ m‘, m, Tnrollluu; Ne“! Stiiiiil Chisinau LIIIPIGII Otluwli \\'nllo'u hawn nmnil uuilhury. 0:10.; lluh ‘Iobn-ru Hliuv- IIMIPWII- N- "- “The StroT-‘gyest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, “Alf $71943 \\’ar P031 Planning \1] 1111- Ill‘ll\'ll1\'i\ have aopoiiilvtl 1io~t-\v.~.l" "_ ltl -:u<1_\" |>l'*'l)l('lll5 pt‘ culrir lo the 111t11\1l , l1l'f'\1llt\'> and to estab- lisli ci1-i1peratuul xviioiz; uuiiirvip: :it-~ and tulle-l‘ . .. . .,‘-l.\,1;-g bodies wilhiii 1111- plwhillt» 11'1".‘ “l "u “ ‘*1’ 11,1. |\-.,\;,1 11111111 _\111,. 1,i',".tl‘. hiivi- bt-ru rucsiil- 1v iuriiii-il uiiil are ~'1ll UH-llWdlll iiaieriah 111c- 11111-1-1111 report o1 illl‘ I'm ~\\." Lt-liabililatulil C()llll‘illll<'.'\ or twiui Council of 11111.11 t. iuiibia l> a iliorough >111", vc_v of the iiidii-iri _ and natural resources of 1111- 11l‘ii\lllt‘t'. lllt‘ QFVTII fort-st fCautlltCs 111 151-11511 (‘oluiiihigi ll.1‘-1' ii.i1iii‘."illv l1<‘\‘Il a iiiatiu of firs‘ ziltriiliiiii. llie ci-luicil l'-lllllillt'<, llir example, that 1i l-l-"Qlddllllv "1 “'1"i""1§111"“ would l1- iieci"<~ilt‘\' l» \'--\"!' -'1'~ 1'- 3 ""9 1mm“ zicres of fort-a laiid fiai "k 11111 i"i*1-="'d\1_¢ll'.4 "V" islkicturil)’. 1711i" t"; I iuvl 11! it-ii llllllllll tree» (the esiiiiiait-il uiiii-i» xuirscriesl 1H be 1 zvvd v-I the pcriiiiiiii-iil \l"r\ 3111150 nit-n 111111.11? ' (jitioilrll 5511 iii-ii \\ 1 Planing sdzisoii i:i t" SPYIIIJ- T1" l’l"'l""-"1-‘ 3150 1113111111- 111i‘ uii. 111 oi natural re~i1urrc< for the ‘Mk-mun . 111_, oi the tourist traffic and 1116 (111111. ,l_1.-§1p:i:ci1t of the [iriiviiiccs mineral r<-<11iii"ri-< ."is wi-Ii as a liiglivvay huihluig programme. _ 1111,1110)“, 1111,- {,_-ue<l a report on rural electri- ficatitin iii the ]1l'I1\lllL"l', The l'l‘COllllIl(‘ll1l2lllUl1$ of 111C c0111111i~\1.1i1, savs the flank report, would 1111-0119 1111- elet-iriiicaiioii of agriculture 111 hlaiiitoha on as" large a wzile as is ‘practicable. iii order to improve working and living conditions on 11w 1111-111,- 111111, 11v the reduction of opeinatiug costs to raise farm iuruine and encourage a - . greater Lll\'(3l'>lflt.‘<'l.ll0ll in agricultural produc- tion. _ _ _ The po_,-1_\1-;11- (‘Cflllflllllfj commissions of the various 111~ovinces are also serving as clearing houses for local projects. A number 0f inuui- cipalities have alrcadv rcpoiteil lll'tl"_{l‘flllllllt'$ 1111' posl-ivar emploviiiciit, and many more are studying their local lltPlln aiid ])1v\\l1Jl1lllCS, Mon- treals Advisory Committee on Planning, for ex- ample‘ has 1~¢¢O111111Q11rlctl a CO-Olflllllllfll plan to provide as inucli emploviiieiit as possible, to pre- vent the waste of money aiid to pcriiut the city to (km-e [hg HTCIIICSI ilegree of benefit fi"0iii the construction proiects. The proposals of the 1\Iontrcal Committee _ would involve public works valued at Szo million. A detailed programme of suggested water de- velopment in the Prairie Provinces has been prepared by the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. Eight projects. iricllldmg U}? St 1\Iary’s and .\Iilk River developments in Alberta, are now ready for actual construction, all surveys having been completed. A $€C0fld group is practically ready with surveys almost completed. Twelve further proiccts have had preliminary surveys but would have to be m- vestigated in greater detail, while another group of six have riot yet been surveyed but are lknown from reconnaissance to be possible. Al thescl irrigation proyccts would pIOVldC‘ a. substantia dcgrgg of post-war employment in the Prairie Provinces and, if placed in operation at varying times, this employment \V0l.lld be extended over l considerable period. _ A very important project which has been re- commended would involve the control and organ- . ~ I ization of the waters of the North and Soutg Saskatchewan Rivers l0 Pf°v1d¢ Pmve" a" water for irrigation. Because the Saskatchewan River and its tributaries flow through all three pray-k Provinces it ivould require a consider- lble degree of co-Orx-itilioii. V A somewhat similar pr01ect has been apprm- ed in Ontario. During lhc summer of I942 the Dominic“ 31111 (Jniarir) Governments sponsored ;1-.1:1.i1~1i- ainiuailv froiii ' \\"illi(l fCtlllllC iii llll‘ iiui"sc7‘_\' ,. w‘ \\1ll11' aii ad- i1~iw1 ilurziu; 1'. a survey of the basin of the Gauarziska. River_ 'l‘h-; (it'l1l-’1l'<'lSl\’3, which has ' in Durham County. been selected as a suitable-area for post-war de- vdopniant, drains approximately 75,000 BCFBS and 11m upper reaches have been SvfiflOllSlyklC- foresmd‘ “i111 wind and water erosion continu- ing the ilesiruction. _ "It c1111 be seen from this short survey of some of the proposals and Plilllw‘ for post-war develop- ment in C;111_1111;1," sIlVS the llaiik Letter, _that no 511111111; government. company or individual can hope t0 nit-ct "lone lllf‘ problems of the Dost-war world, §i11i1tio1i< \\"i1l require lllCpfllll- est co-ordinatiou of govi-iiuuents :inrl_th€ intel- ligent eo-opcraiiou of all rlasses of citizens. _'l he programmes already suggested and the ‘Spll-‘ll in which investigations are continuing. dllfllfiflf-(‘S this c,,_npcr_-111‘n11_ gr) rvidcut in \v.'ii"tii_ue,‘\vill continue {n10 1111- period of recoustriirlioii.’ Mutual Aid The Federal (iovi-i"i|iueii1 is shortly 1o uc-ier- niine the kiiidfiif ilrgaiiizzilioii iiudi-i" \\'1|It'1l the - - - 1' ‘ "" laced hcfuia‘ billion dollar mutual aid Pwf-ll-ll" ll- 4 _ liarpanlen, in 1.‘1-],r11;11-y is to be adiiiiiii-lered. -1-1,..,.L, “T111011 1., 1,; 5111110 iiiiscoiiccplioii iii regard 11; r111‘,- pi-ogrziiii. says the Xloiilrcal Cuizt-uc. .\ll_\‘ $Il"*"‘*lll‘ll that wt- are presenting a hillioii dol- ldgfim M“. _\1111-__1_ 5111110 or all of them, and that mis c0,,\i,]._.,..,|,|.. 511111 11f iiiniiei" goes out of thi- couii 1')’ is wliollv and uiierlv Crfllllmlfi- Th“ . 1 " - ' money will be spent in Canada. The United Nations Mutual Aid Ac! provides for the production and transfer of Canadian- made Will‘ supplies to Allied nations up to the total of $i.ooo,ooo,ooo. The purpose of the Act is to be carried out by a War Supplies Ad- loezitioii Board which \\"i1l include five minis- ters acting as a couiiiiiilec of the Cabinet. This ll02lf'(l will purchase or 1irociire the necessary supplies in Canada and will then allocate and lraiisfer them to such United Nations as need ilieiii, strategic needs lu-izig the governing fac- tur. The supplies t0 be thus allocated will re- present Caiiiidiuii war pP-KIIICIIOII in excess of llllt‘ volume required b_v Canada's own forces. 1 There are to be n0 strings on the distribution 1i1f these supplies, but the plan is open to reci- 1 1irocal :ictiou on the part nf the nations receiving las stance from Canada in this way, nations \\'lllCll may be in a position to make some return in ilie form of goods 0r services. ,'ciprocri1 benefits niav be I-iiiiietliate or may come to (‘aiiizdii zifler lllt- war. The main object, , is 1o share (Tauazliuu war supplies upon _ of ueeil and without present regard to 1 - of ilie recipient nations to pay for 1 1111-111. lii the iiieiiiitiiiie, as 11inch of the billion 1111111111‘ :ippi"opri:itioii as is expended. will g0 into kiilllfllllilll 1iroduciitin and into the hands of Can- z-ilizui cilia-us. first into the hands of men and ‘.‘.l1lll(’ll eiigageil iii war iii<lu<lr_v. l 1 -EDIIORIAL notes- 1 bills-s the roads iiiipiove soon farmers iiiay 1 l<1>e tlisu" Nova Scotia potato market. i 1k =11 i: x 'l‘cliai!u1\"_~"l<_v, Russian composer. born this {date 18411; there ivas a ieiiileiic_v iii musical cir- 1rles before the war 1o TC"'1l'(I 'l1"li:iikovsky' as .ic~.~ cliruticieiislically Russian than stich coin- 11)\)>1L‘l‘$ 11>" l\'iinsky-Korsakov, llorodin, and Mus- ] _~o1'g~l\'_\'§ it was aii opiiiiiiii. however, never shar- ed bv the RUFhlIHIS thcnisclvi-s, for whom TCllZll- l\'lI\'Sl\'_\' has zil\v:i_\'.~". been t: nationalist figure of ivhoiii the)’ zire as proud {l5 the Czechs are 0f Dvorak oi" ilie Poles of Chopin. w- >11 1v 1| Police iliilics in lllt‘ 'l‘o\vii of Sliediae may be . ll'l\'('ll over shortly by the Royal Canadian .\11)lllllt‘(1 Police. (lii ."uiii~iiiicciiieiit at the town council ilial Police (‘hit-f \\'illiaui Guiiii plans These re- 1 llotos By The Way Among the old-established family businesses one may find 1n quiet tiirntngs near Piccadilly Circus is a. snop which has for the last 200 years been selling English flower perfumes blended by successive members of me family. Many ills- erlmlnanlng Americans and a rel- ect number of Londoners know where they may buy the scents of new-mown hay, of bluesells. and of honeysuckle blended at the back of the shop or tn the home laboratory. -Ma.ncriester Guardian. A llrlo painting In Toklo shows New York to be 1n ruins from a Japanese alr raid. and the people of Nippon are said to be stirred to a fever of enthusiasm as though the canvas represented a fact. accom- plished, rather than just the wish- ul myth of a propagaiidlsfs brush. Perhaps only a race that believes lt- self to be of divine descent could derive any real satisfaction from something which ls as yet. far from actuality. -Ham1lton Spectator. British salvage operators, spurred on by wur shortages and by in- creased shipping casualties, are reaping a. rich harvest from the ocean bed around the British Isles. Among their hauls have been UIBSBI Thirteen thousand tons of steel from the fire-gutted former liner Majestic. Thousands of pounds of soap which had run together into a huge ROOEy mass in the hole. of a sunken stilt). Nearly 500.000 bottles erect on the Scottish cuiist. Twenty living pedigreed bulls from a wreck- ed shin only partly submerged; the animals were hoisted in farpaulms at 10w tide. —New York Herald-Tri- bune. A traveler just returned from Sweden reports a rapldly-grmvlllf! distrust in Germany's stability. Sweden will now only trade with Germany on a basis of exchange of goods; the mark is stispect. Ger- many derives one fifth of its iron ore from Sweden and has other rea- sons for keeping Sweden agree-mile. German propaganda is verv neiivc and backed by such material per- wlne frtm France. Some of 911K‘- cfifef economic experts in Swmzeii doubt whether Germany can stand another winter -London Observer. A lot of 1111.585 are likely to be planted this year. In fact, the spud .t'lil'(‘llll‘llf, the civic hiulv decided to take steps ‘ 111 have the io\\"ii policed by ilie lliuuiteil Police. , Xt-giiliiiiitiiis have been opened with Inspector" Norman Anderson of lhr: .\l0llCl4Jll II.C..\I.P.. di-tacliineiit. The council also ilecitled to stay on the present Atlantic Daylight T1111!) for the =uuiiiivi- months. 1o- n1 x 1a 'l'liei"c is a (langerous lack of tlfgfillCy in the country on the war. No one but a fool thinks it is uou. Yet the spirit of letYs-plzrv-for-thc- 1111s‘-ivar-vutcs-aiid-soft - pedal — on - fighting- ilie-ivai- has overtaken our political leaders, says 'l‘oi"oiil11 News. Too niaiiv people are forgetting that this is still a war for survival; that if we lose there \\"ill be no post-war 1ieriotl 0f recon- siriirtioii for us; no Liberals, no Progressive l<‘<-il<-i".'i1iuii. no $ucial Creditors, and not even a 1110c lhipiilairc tiaiizidicii. h? 1‘ i crop ls going imo the ground Pota- toes constitute one of our best foods rind if you want to 5101 the 21'9"!- cs‘. good from them eat the iaek .<. A thoroughly washed, baked 110111“? ls a real. annetizing food rrocuct and 1s thoroughly good. everi the skins. as our mothers and izrand- mothers knevtn-Letlibride Herald. Innocent paper bags have heroine a. civilian weapon lii Holland's w1r1 against quislings. Itiimediatelv after the shooting of two of the IIIEZIFSI Nazi party leaders lii the Nether- lilflds in February, patriots took ad- vantage of the restilLaiiFtciislu-i to blow up ant. explode pauci- bciizs during absoibing moments 1n dark ened movie houses. So effective was the new weapon the NazLs zissigned special patrolman to the theatres “to stamp out. such annoyances." announced the Nazi miner Zwarte Soldaat. Entering or ICQVIHZ ii the- atre while the weekly newsreel is showing is now prohibited by tlie Mr. G. H. hates, principal of Staffordshire Farm Institute, iii a lecture before the Royal Society of Arts, London, on the maintenance of‘ farming after the war, gave aii interesting side- hght on a handicap from which we are merciful- ly free here, but which may account for the deficiency of farming in Nova Scotia and Other industrial provinces, viz. the smoke muisancc. Of the (liimage done to agriculture by industry by far ilie worst, he said, is smoke, the air is polluted, fllc vital rays of the sun are excluded and soil is rendered so acid as to become in- fertile. It has been said that industrialists can- not afford to combat the smoke nuisance, but neither can farming afford to pay the bill for them. It is riot realized that smoke damage may be prevalent within a ten-mile radius of some big cities. w u x u Major Rev. J. A. Sabourin, O.B.E., spoke in Saint john Sunday night, and according to the Telegraph-journal the vast public gathering churchman was highly privileged and all were conscious of the fact. The ringing words of one who accompanied Canadian troops in their assault on Dieppe, who knows the hardships! and perils of war and its grim demands on men and machines, provided first-hand testimony, stirring the heart and convincing the mind. Noth- ing could better stimulate a sense that it would be Ufllfllfllflllllfi to do less than “back the attack"! to the limit. Our men have already been in battlefafloat, ashore and in the air. Abbe Sa-_ boiirin has been with some of them and marched with them on a memorable occasion. The storyl he told will doubtless be repeated with variations maiiy limes in the future. In order that our men may always engage the enemy with confid- ence, we must provide them with all they need. \Ve must back their attack and let them know we back them. We must buy more Victory Bonds. 1r 1i- 1k Apart from the naval coast defence elements, A.A. and Air Force personnel, it is estimated that 25,000 men are needed to assure the defence of the entrenched camp of Bizerta, and it is to be feared that the German-Italian forces are in a position still to maintain effcctives of this or- der. (TllCFC are certain weak points in the de- fences, but it will be appreciated that it is im- possible to disclose them in this article.) When the operations of the Iiiglith Army have en- abled the Allies to (iccupy Southern Tunisia, the (ieriuaus will probably endeavour to hold on to the cud to the entrenched camp of Bizcrta, the rich lower valley of the Medjcrda and the a1111i-oaclics of 'I‘iiiiis_ as well as the region of ("apt- llou. It was iii this neighbourhood that the |\'~iii:ui legions, ovr-r twenty centuries ago, Il(‘>ll"I_\4‘tl the last (Iai-ihagiiiiaii armies. The lk-rliers. 1111' ltoiiiaiis and the armies of the Arabs {lllll tho .\I.-ilidi fought each other there, and the columns of 111i‘ great Mosque of hairouan stand as ilie lad remains of a succession of riches and ~plriiiloiux This region seems ilesliiietl to he the ilii-ivru of 111v Moody struggles of opposed civil- l7.'tllllll\ and 1o witness ilie (lestruelion of the iorres of evil. .\1 the |)l'L'\('lll iiioiueiit the Axis ‘troops .'ii"i- smuggling there against the armies of Liberty. which assembled to listen to this very gifted goo German authorities. The Secre- tary General for Information Issued the prohibition which fixes a {inc lof 500gullders for offenders. -Mont- real Star. The thoughts of’ the British farin- er are turning with anxiety to what his condition ls likely to be when the war is over. What he fears most. is a repetition of the frustrated hopes of the last peace. That, must: never be. Once again the govern- ment: have promisec to formulate an agreed all-party policy for iigrl- culture. That pledge was first. given more than two years ago, and now plans are being discussed. The foundations of a. plan are not hard to find. They have been proved ln this war and the last. and they must be applied with equal effect in peace. They are; Stable markets, guaranteed prices. and good wages for the workers. These are the three fundamentals of a healthy agri- culture. not, to British farming alone but to primary production the world over. —-London Dally Mall. The daily cost of the war to the British people has risen from $22,- .000 to $66,000,000. and it will probably continue on this scale uiitlf victory is achieved. It. ls truly as- h tonlshfng that some 45,000,000 people living on a little Island endowed with comparatively meagre natural resources should b.1- iible to carry such. tremendous buxens, but. they are bearing them cheerfully for the sake of a izrent cause, and it is fortunate that they had a large nest-egg of accumulated savings upon which to draw lii an hour of need. The strain upon them has been eased by Canada's generous gifts, for which the chancellor ap- propriately voiced the gratitude of the British Government and peo- ple. -Globe and Mail, Here's an underground story from “We Cannot Escape History." re- lates Reading mid Writing. Glend- ennlng Robertson of the American Cross went. to a Parts restaur- ant. where it was said that one could still eat well despite flie ratoln svs- tem. The waiter shrugged his shoulders and said that he hiic‘. nothing w serve. Robertson finally persuaded him m prepare an ome- let. Afber one bltc of obviously spotl- ed eggs, Robertson put down his knife and fork and called for the manager. "I've been working for months with the American Red Cross." he sale, "We have brousrht. milk and bread to your children. Herie I come in and ask you for a. meal and you servo me rotten eggs." The manager cuffed the waiter. "Im- becflel" he screamed. "I've saved those eggs for weeks lii order to serve them to a German." Federal olflclals are being urged to provide shotgun shells for hunt- 01's this fall with the plea that. the meat; shortage will be less severe 1f hunters are permitted to bag game. This ts a rather farfetched excuse for maklriiz possible wartime hunting ti-lps. If these sportsmen are really interested 1n helping to alleviate the meat shortage, they should get busy right. now. They probably will be able to raise manv more fowl than they would be able to shoot 1t they had an unlimited supply of ammunition. But many sportsmen are not "meat" hunters or at least a0 they say when they return after i; weekend trip without izame They only make the Li-lp be cause they eiiiny writktniz around 1n the flelrprz during the fall Herc again l Hr desires can be satisfied without ammunition for the farmers OQ-Q-O-O-OQOOOQO-QO-O OOO‘ V. of whisky from a ship which found, suasions as oranees from Itnlv zvii~i Leaflets 0n Tho Loan BY STEPHEN LEACOCK i TIIE CHAIRMAN'S WALKING STICK 0049040404000 It. was DNIW well understood bv the middle of’ the Victory 1min c a m nnfxn in Marlposa that on the final even- nresent the Chairman of the Committee with . a stick. This was _,_ "- partly on the 1 i: ” "-‘ Chairman's own account. Jlm Heavystde. —1;hats the older one; don't confuse hlm with youngWJlm, —-ls one of the I718" gest business men 1n Marlposfl. held of the largest of the commutes, and Just retiree; from active work a month ago after a long llfe of ser- vtce to the town. And now hes thrown himself into this campaign with 1111 1115 old time energy. In any case us‘? a good teller: 1 mean hes all r1 It gas always been the thin: 1n Mgflpqsa to give a man a walklnil stick ln recognition of any Public service Tliev gave a stick to the designer of the historic monument in the Park. and a stick for the Municipal Abbattotr. and a stick for the new wing of the Asylum that increases its capacity three to 0.119 and definitely put Marlposa on hhe map as a. home for the feeble mind- ed Generally when_they're going to give 11 stlck the Idea sets started and goes round town, confidentially. of course. so that the man himself won't know it. In this case. as a matter of fact. the Idea originated lii Jeff Barber Shop and it was Jeff himself who first started 1t. He and rested his elbow on the cus- "tonurfs neck and said: “What about a slick for Jlm Heavyside?" The idea caught right on. And Jeff, -—y0u know how a modest man gets encouraged and goes on,-siild that. to his miild, one of these hfalaccu canes with a band on would be just right It appears that. they sell canes like that. clear up to a hundred dollars. and past it, though you wouldn't think it. Well, that was all settled and the next thini: was to raise the money. Bill Landy, —he’s the mining brok- er I spoke of. generally does that because lie understands finance. I-Ie Just. irels from each feller what he feels like zlving, and keeps ft con- fidential. He gives out ncthlnrz except the total. A lot of mining business is done that wziv, They lust. tell you ivliiit you get. So that was llIl settled. and‘ Bill izot busy and ii couple of days later he was telling a, group of us 1n the sh" that he 111d all the monev for the cane lii siizht. when who should walk in but. Jlm Heuvysl-dc himself. He was leriiiinz on a Malacda cane. You could hav- knocked any of us down with a club One of the tells-rs, In a chair, who could only liiilf see. culled out, "What's the mutter, Jim, gone lame?" "No." said Jim Ileavysice wltli a laugh, "the boys at the factory gave me a farewell supper last night and this stick as a presentation. "That's the third stick," he added. “that. I've got in less than a month. Take a look at it, isn't it a dandy?" Thev passed it i-ouiid but of course the heart was out of the idea now. They had to think of some~ thing else. Well, the next day, Jeff said to some of the customers in the shop, "PI'OI(.‘SSOI' BYTOH W85 11D h€I'€ fTOfll the city yesterday and he says why not give Mr. Heavyslde one of these sets of books. —wliat 1s it. —an en- cyclopaedla?" "Ari eiicyclopaeda." said one of the tellers, “Why. Jlm Heavyslde could never read that. He's no scholar " “You don't have to read an en- cyclopaedla says another. It. is for the front room Anc. when you buy them now they sell you a glass case right with them so that you don't have to open it. even for dusting. Bert. Trawley has one-has had it for ten years-and it's in dandy shape. -i;ood as new, - they never open it." "Grandfather had one." said an- other customer, “gtven to hlm like this when he retired. but he read 15: yes. sir. sat down to read ft clear through and get the good out of it. But, lie was too old when he started. He died in the letter A. But Jlm Heavyslde is only sixty-five. He can tackle It." So it was settled that the pre~ sentatlon gift would be an gn- cyclopaedlii. But lust b0 avoid all er- ror this time they not Bill Landy to go up to the HeavysldeLs house to 511v round and see if they had one. Lucky tliev did. They had one sure enough, and a real beauty, an mitlqiie, in fine old leather, at. least seventy years old. Goodness knows what 1t would fetch today. B0 that was ii lucky escape from another biid break. . Then there came to Peter Coglimd on the spur of the moment one of those bright Ideas that will some day send hlm to Ottawa. —or half way to it. Anyway-as far. say. as Kingston. - "I've got it," he said. "We'll lve Jlm Heuvyslde a. hundred do la: Victory Bond." Wasn't. 1t simple and timely? and obvious? And yet on one had thought of it. It's always like that. Give the Chairman one of his own Bonds! Why of course! So the meeting, -ft. was a sort of meeting -broke un with enthus- iasm and went to dinner. - I llnirered behind a moment. "That's flne Isn't it? I said, "that was the real solution " Jeff shook his lrad "I don't know ilmt I hold with 1t." he said. “You glvc s. man one of his own Bonds and 1t seem; like giving mllk to a mllkman- or it's like giving me a free shave and‘ a shampoo." . . And he added gloom- , "Jlm will be disappointed about thledsttck." "About the stick?" I a . s "Yes. he is expecting it. He'd heard something about. it He's got the notion of sticks, You see. Jlm Henvvsdle is not vain but he's pretty proud of having three sticks liven to hlm . and he was hoping f0 make it. four. That's why he came down here with the Ma coca cane . . . In fact. it was my idea, I siild to hlm. "Mr. Heavyslde 1f you'll come down to the sho and bring one of your sticks that‘! nul,__t. e__ are going to need a lot of help with the corn crop iilong in October. — Los Anizelcs Times. fng they would (11311 stooped his scissors one afternoon - R. A. F. Transport‘ Command Crossing The t of speed records over the At antic ls discouraged by the Royal A1: Force Transport Comm- and. It Ls, tndeed, a disciplinary offense for flying personnel deliv- ering new aircraft to Britain or Africa to attempt to beat previous best flying tfmu. The Captains of Bombers crossing the Atlantic have their flight plans regulating the tvuties. zones, altilt/udm and engine -speeds for each mission ‘ ' ‘ 1n accordance with weather forcasts to obtain maximum safety, comfort and fuel economy, as well as to avoid unnecessary wear and war. Periodically, however. with unus- ually favorable conditions for the t. plans, notable trans-ocean t.‘ sstngs are made. A distinctive perfonnance newly recorded 1s that of Captain W. . May, of British Overseas Airways Corporation. operating on the North Atlantic under the R. A. If. ‘II-aris- port; Command. Captain May, flying B Liberator with maximum all up load 0f about 58.000 lbs. and aided by a tallwtnd sometimes approach- ing 100 knots. made I] landfall to landfall crossing from Newfound- land (2,200 statute miles) 1n 6 hrs. 20 mlns. He flew on to an airfield inside Britain, registering only 7 hrs. 40 mlns. from take-off to landing. He thus reduced by 21 mlns. the previous best tarmac to tarmac Atlantic flight 0f 8 hrs. 1 min. acc- omplished fourteen months ago by 1; pilot officer of the Royal Australian Air Force in a Hudson twin-engine bomber. Captain May flew practic- ally the whole course in a dense cloud at. about 20.000 feet. and found that he could not get over it even at 22,000 feet. Another outstanding flight Just: made ls that of Captain S. T. B. Crlpps, D. F. C., who flew non stop from Montreal to Britain (3.100 statute miles) 1n l2 IIIS. 51 mfns, lowerlngby four minutes the prev- ious best time put up by Captain G. R. Buxton a year ago 0n the same direct. journey. ._______________. their mettle to give another." Luckily it hasn't been ton Everything ls arranged and Chairman will get his stick. have l1 all ready. and real dam-y Some of the fellers think it must be Worth a hundred and fifty dol- lars. some more. No one knows how much Bill Landy collected or ivhat he paid for It. “Better taste." Bill sald, “to keep it confidential " THESE. MOMENTS These moments from our hands e ape Like stars in water, sllp awny And mingle soon to make the shape Of yesterday. Each thing our eagerness collects From them 1n passing —- 10y or sorrow. Defeat. or victory-reflects Upon tomorrow . . O moments that are freightcd now With mere than any eyes iiiziv :06. There must be light upon the brow For days to be- Or else all moments when the r wo Stood tlptoe. Where the dawn had crossed To touch God's face, to depths be hurl . . e . Forever lost ! —~Glenn Ward Dresbiich. lii the N York Times. Your Eyes "Z 1 l! you are having symptom ,1»! ntraln - headaches. sort- eyon or d! cu — consult r specialist. , A: your lervlca with years . of experience and u thorough retracting service. . Call ln and discuss your difficulties. Write or bhonc for lppolntmentu. (i. F. llutcheson F. G. IIUTCIIESON G. F. HUTUIIESON $5 ~ », . 1.1-». PAN-CAKE. MA K*E- U P A new kind oImake-up created 00w 8f! 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Realistic and authentic War pictures actually taken at the Russian fighting front. 20 pei- eenl of the Cameraman lost their lives in "shooiiniz" these pictures. They will stir your deepest emo" lions. Prominent speakers will give short addresses. Every citizen should attend these meetings, and assist in the war effort. No admission charged. National War Finance Committee. COAL We handle the following high grade Coal INVERNESS1 ROUND aISO OLD SYDNEY SCREENED, ALBION NUT and ALBION DOMINION COKE. Lowest prices. Prompt deliveries. W. D. _GILLIS o» c0. PHONE I76