I itions 0 bind all of us together in the future of PAGE FOUR - TIIE BHIIILOTTETIIWI Gllllgllllll Merlin] Dllb IIOIIIIIMI Ill llfl) President: Lien. (kl. W. Chester 8. Isl-Ire Vice-President: l. l. Burnett. F.‘ J. l. "The Strongest Memory ls Weaker Thea the Weakest Ink." iuoiiiKiTTmFiTrTfiyTfisss "T_" Dr. Lattimer’; Report The results of the economic survey con- ducted here last summer by Dr. J. E. Iattimer, professor of agriculture economics at Macdon- ald College, Quebec, have been published in booklet form for the Provincial Department of Reconstruction, and will be made available shortly to farm organizations, study groups, and all interested in this very important subject. The booklet runs to some fifty pages, with a good bibliography and numerous tables 0f sta- tistics. It would seem to be the most compre- hensive study 0f our agricultural economy yet ahsmpted, and is based on facts and figures pliich are the result of expert research. Prince Edward Island, the report emphasizes, is “a maritime Province that farms." It is maritime in the sense that it is by the sea; it is not maritime in the sense that it lives chiefly from the sea. The result is that our popula- tion has been decreasing in recent decades. It is impossible for any section to retain the natural increase of its people where dependence is on farming alone. This is vitally important, as the export of people is the most expensive that any section can engage in. To maintain our natural letion, industries other than developed. One of the reason the processing of farm produ work than formerly; and takes a greater increase of popu- farming must be s for this is that cts involves more it employs more people proportion of the total _ rewards as time goes 0n. Processing of farm products “to the greatest possible degree" is ltrongly recommended. Centralization of industry off the Island. expansion of agriculture on the Island and the specialization of agriculture have combined to increase the importance of transportation. In this connection the report places strong cm- phasis on providing feed grains by water routes. The marginal farmer is warned not to put his hopes in prospects of higher prices. Prices may and indeed often have been too low to ensure a profit under the most efficient man- agement; yet a general advance in price levels helps the large producer more than those who have less to sell. The remedy, says Dr. Latti- mer. is “a reorganization of farming that makes possible increased output per farm and per man." Suggestions are made for development of in- dustries with a view to providing lucrative ein- ployment. Over and over again this question of employment is stressed. eludes with the following 14-point program for rehabilitation: 1. Provide water transportation: (a) to secure access to natural nearby markets; (b) to bring in feed grain, the raw material of the farmer. This will require improvement of harbours and provision of grain storage. 2. Support the proposal to make the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act applicable to all Can- ada. 3. Make rural electrification general. 4. Broaden the term conservation to include the people as well as the land and the forests. 5. Secure Federal funds to assist education. o. Revive forests by practising silviculture, that is cut only the trees that should be cut and make forest products an annual crop. 7. Allow nature to take its course in re- foresting laud better adapted t0 forest than farming. 8. Intensify farming through expansion of fruit, especially small fruits. vegetables and canning crops. 9. Treat farming the same as other indus- tries in regard to minimum wage rates and labour regulations. 1o, Process farm and fishing products as far as possible by expanding the canning indus- try. 11. Expand industries other than agricul- ture where possible. I2. Decentralize industry. 13. Encourage Iiart-time farming. 14. Capitalize the natural advantages for the tourist trade by providing better communi- cations, better roads and better accommoda- ion. The report con- Australia's Great Showing Australia's War Minister, Mr. Forde, announces that the Commonwealthk armed forces now total 1,000,000 men and women. This. for a country of but 7,300,000 popula- tion. is a valiant showing, representing aii equiv- alent showing, representing an equivalent for the United States of roughly 18,000,000 men and women. and for Canada an equivalent oi about 1,500,000. And Australia's casualties have been heavy; far heavier than those of Canada. Up to the and of November last, according to Mr. Forde, they totalled 84,861, made up of 18,015 killed, 6,913 missing, 34.300 wounded and 25,579 pris- filers. Much has been heard of the great United ~ States effort against japan, and rightly. But Australia is fighting japan, too, with the meas- Ire of it in 36,000 killed, wounded or missing in her army alone, plus 4,270 losses in her air force. Not with jealousy, not in any spirit of riv- inlry, but only with pride, do Canadians look at this grave record of their blood brothers “dnwn under." Heroically are they upholding the tra- f their breed, and in that great role it British Commonwealth and Empire. i ‘ain and the British Empire are selfish, "The Missing Question Iii a current magazine, Prime Minister Mac- kenzie K)": answers thirty or more questions put to him by s journalist. Oddly enough, the newsman neglected to ask Mr. King regarding 111$ 515F310; which was quite an oversight. Cer- tainly it would have been interesting to have had i‘. King's reply to something like this: " you still believe in Senate reform, as expressed in election campaigns and on public Platforms during the past 25 years? Also, how do you relate that belief to the fact that after the many years that you haye had office and power the Senate has declined in prestige and influence, has a lopsided party majority, and is without one-sixth of its membership?" It may be said that, with a war on, Mr. King has been too busy 1o bother with the Senate. Y_et it is doubtful ivhether this preoccupation with the war will prevent him filling those six- teen Senate vacanci fore the date of the coming election. . _____________ -EDITORIAL NOTES- Since 1939 ivater. and farm schemes in the county of Hereford, England, have improved the productive capacity 0f some 1,200 farms, benefiting 110,000 acres. i i! I U drainage Quebec City is doing nicely by its taxpay- It has abolished the civic personal tax 0f $2 per licad because the collection costs are too high. It realized “expenses" sum. BTS. must- have totalled a pretty tidy i!!! The Commission Government of New- foundland is to be continued till after the war. So Mr. Emrys Evans, under-secretary 0f State for the Dominions told the British House of Commons. IjIe said the Government consid- ered it wise to defer discussion of the sub- Jcct meantime. a n- s: e Quebec slipping. Citizens of County town, Thetford Mines, have voted in favor of repealing prohibition, in force since I914, and authorizing the sale of alcoholic bev- erages in the municipality. m w u u The National Religious Advisory Councils and the Lord’s Day Alliance of Toronto and Montreal respectively have protested against the curtailment of Sunday religious broadcasts by CBC and privately-owned stations in favor of “c0mmercials." In Toronto they have been successful, in Monireril theygvait response. Megantic In a newly discovered infra-r _ ed tunnel pro- cess, articles which have received their coat of paint are dried in one sixtieth of the time oc- cupied by the normal method. A military gen- eral purpose car can be dried in 30 minutes af- ter being spray-painted with t\v0 coats of eii- amel ' U l1 _ Post-war planning which had been so much discussed some months ago seems to have been shoved into the background as industry enters 1945. according to the monthly report of the National Association of Purchasing Agents. The general trend of production appears to be toward war products with more and larger war contracts being placed. Reconversion, cutbacks and terminations seem, for the" moment, “to have disappeared as a factor." U U I O Sir Arthur Keith, F.R.S., M.D., C.M., F.R.C.S., LL.D.; British anthropologist, edu- cated_at Aberdeen, London and Ifeipzig Uni. versities, Curator of the Museum and Director‘ of the Laboratories of the Royal College of Surgeons from i907 to I933; President 0f the British Association I927; Rector of Aberdeen University" 1930-1933; now Master of Buckston Browne Research Farm; publications Ifninan Etnbryalogy and Morphology, Antiquity of Mali, Concerning Man's Origin, New Di:- rovcrior Relating To The Antiquity Of Man, Dai-zvinfrm And Its Critics, MEI! Of 171a Slam’ Age Of MI. Carmel. u- n- e w- Dalhousie University has received gifts and notification of bequests running up towards $300,000. $9,500 has come in in small amounts, iriucii 0f it anonymously and the bulk of it tn be added to the endowment. On January 29, a cheque for $10,000 was received from the es- tate of the late Dr. j. Ross hiillar, to endow a scholarship in the Factilty of Arts and Science. Recently lixecutors of the estate of the late Iiflll. Dr. J. C. Tory, estimated the residue for the Uni- versity at from $250,000 to $300,000. At Convo- cation in May, 1944. it was announced that gifts and bcquestsduring the previous year or so had amounted to well over $1,000,000. In the last twelve years about $2,000,000 in all has been added to the endowment funds of the uiiivers- ity, and, in addition, about three-quarters of a million dollars hay: aom: it: in special gifts. ii l Britain's creed, as stated by Prime Min- ister Winston Churchill: “We seek no terri- tory, we covet no oil fields, we demand no bases for the forces of the air 0r of the sea. We do not set ourselves up in rivalry or bigness or might with any other community in the world. We have given and we shall continue to give everything we have. We ask nothing in return except that consideration and respect which are our due, and if that were denied us we shall still have a good conscience. ‘Let none either in our country or Commonwealth or in the outside world misname us. traduce our met- hods. Our actions are no doubt subject to human error, but our actions in small things and great are disinterested, lofty and true. I repulse those calunmies, wherever they come from, that Brit- power- greedy and land-greedy, and obsessed by dark schemes of European intrigue or colonial ex- pansioii. The British Commonwealth and nat- ion may rest assured that the Union Jack of freedom will forever fly from the white cliffs of Dover." es with deserving Grits be- 11.‘; $70,000 per annuni, so the G THE ETOWN I ilotss Iy Ilis w... We shall have le get along with less grape-fruit. Juice. but that 1m- ported tonic nu no g that our ‘ and tomato juices haven't got tn good measure. - Vancouver Province. liow min: o! u who read o1 that great landing and advance of Am. erlcan forces on Luaon realize what it. tells o! United States power? Here is a nation Mfr-VIII: war m two mlzhiy Wwors norms the world's two greatest oceans; fight- lng Germany over 8,000 miles of sea, fighting Japan the wlille over more than 5.000 miles o1 sea. What this involves ln taller? Journa . atlons must close ey must come to- "Eht wsether. work, to- months when lt seemed that the war was all but won. We hope, too, that the lesson will be taken‘ to heart. United we can work wonders lu peace as well as wax-r -but divided We must tall-Ion- dOn Dally Mall. , _'_”“ I It is pointed out in London the battle for Strasbourg and the bat.- tle for Budapest are strikingly similar in their implications, and should be linked together. In neither case can the Germans hope w achieve a solid military result. w. successful they are. Both, however. may offer a chance for Goebbels to do some effective pro- paganda-effectlve. that ls. for the ermans. who may soon be in the to clutch at iiiiy straw of comfort amidst. the manlfo l asters into which Hitler has led them-United Kingdom Informa- tion. , \ ey tn those l1 A number of American Indians were assigned by the army to stalk NazLs on the battlefront in Italy. One of these recently observed a motion-picture fllm being deliver- ed to the Post Exchange. "Movie tonight," observed the Exchange officer. “Better come." “Urn-ni,’ grunted the Indliin brave. to ln- dlcate not-too-mucli enthusiasm for the usual fare 0f twogun west- erns and sophisticated love drama. “What show-klllum or ktssum? Klllum I maybe came; klssum I st-iliy In tent."—“Pnllifluder" Mag- az ne. A report from liberated France states a delegation of night club and cabaret owners recently czill- ed on the prefect of Lyons to pro- made. closing their" places ln or-~ dei- to conserve food and fuel. Ac-i cording to the story, the prefectl listened to their complaints with great patience and_ courtesy-and then had them all thrown in jail. This procedure sounds rather high- hr.nded. but maybe this French oi- flclul has discovered the most cf- fectlvg way 0f handling wartime pressure groups-Calgary Albertan. In a large degree the debt ln- currcd to Canadirs fighting men has been of a human. psychologi- cal andspli-ltual nature, and the meeting of the debt must be on the same basis. Therefore, it is sure- vltal that when they return from the wars to their native land. and are ready to resume their ln- terrupted lives lri peaceful pursuits. they should be tirade welcome and wanted. Their problems must. be grasped with both gratitude ‘and understanding. and recognition given to the service they have ren- dered and the handicaps Incurred ln so doing-Montreal Gazette. Consider merely the item jif synthetic rubber. Without its speedy development and mass uro- ductlon, lt ls difficult t0 see liow we could have waged a successful war against the Axls. It. has been a boon to manklnd. In the 110st- war world, it. can cause many headaches before we learn liow to It can disrupt world econ- ; involve this nation ln trade wars and tariff wars with other nations; provide jobs for millions. throw 0t er millions out 0f em- ployment. It rfiould help us built a better world. But whether lt does or not depends on liow We use it.—Chlcago Dally News. Looking hack in history one finds that the Germans have been the worst offenders in starting ivars. In the present century Germany has set the world on flrn twice. Seventy five years ago Bismarck. at. the top of his form planned and launched three wars within seven years. 011g hundred and flfty years ago Mlrabeau, the famous IPrench statesman. said: "Germany L; not so much a country with an army us an army Willi a country" Seven hundred and fifty years ago Barbarossa, the Red Bcilrd. all” Frederick the First of Germany, conquered Poland, Denmark, I-Iun- gary, and Burgundy and brutally subdued the states or Italy. Fif- teen hundred years nzo the van- rals and Goths (stlll Germans) swept across the tlien known world destroying everything before them. It's high time this warlike nation is put ln a straltjacket that will defy the utmost of the most skill- ed cont/ortlonlst. - Kitchener Re- cord. on odéfl m. . NOW SAILS THE MOON Now slallsl this‘ ove_ , Across thevsoarlng pines with fea- moon across the .inucli tree underneath the ground ‘big rocks; and I have seen a tree test against an order he had Just”. I 0118 ' .g ~ l v i APPRECIATION Slr,—I should like to thhnk “John of the Utes" for 1,119 n1“ poemhehsawi-iten andmklndiy medicated to me 1n .01 January 31st. ,his thoughtfulness and aha lt ln remembrance o! a very poem. I might sey too, the not alone In I men h mg uary Ilth. there are “‘f..'“'..l"‘° .......'"“.. "- . 0 mys . lYlOIé of their beautiful o pormnlty success and he clever Island p0 e to wlahlne giant of luck to our I am. Sir, etc. "MRS. READER? SUMMERSIDF _"0NLY GOD CAN MAKE A TREE” Slr.--I, have always admired beautiful trees. and ln my ymlilliill days loved to roam through the woods back of our farm on Prlnee Edward Island, and was so amazed at the way a tree grows and shoots out its leaves in the 811F111! time. and liow a tree could be transformed 1min a dead tree lnto a tree of great beauty and grace- fulness. Tree leaves have always fascinated me. There is nothlni; that speaks more eloquently of the love of God and the infinite cum He has for Hts creation. than i110‘ free leaf. I In Isaiah 64:8 are these words! "We all do fude ns a leaf." day has life. God expects more than leaves in our llfe. He Wflllld have us bring forth much irilll f0!‘ Hls tree on which there was nothln! but leaves. The trees I saw ln my youthful days was only part of a tree. W0 are told that there ls almost its ns above. Anchoring the tree £0 the earlti. and tapping the S011 101' moisture 1s a huge root system many miles lii total Ienstli» 11 ivedgcs deep into the earth, forcing itself around, and even through forcing itself throutlli cement 510B- walks here ln California in the search for water. The shape Cf i119 r001, mass resembles the sliupe of e tree above the 1119111111- we are told that on n summers clay 0 nilddle-slzed apple tree W111 1111 11°" pounds of water out of the 511ml“- sprnying all but a small P11" unit. water into the air. Botanlsts glory. Our Lord found e. fill ' NG the closest up: ’, Edison “ " ’ _ Pizovioi factories, offices and ho glare, ' salsa/I Maui MOS; L _s (MIPS ; L494 ‘N-zioiingu: ,0: lliiaickenk Attitud: I / on Reinforcementf From an address delivered at Owen Sound. Ont. by llon. John Bracken, leader at the Prngreoslve Conservative ___________ II My record on the manpower Isl-- sue has been clear from the be» 1 zzled over the tree's iibiiiity at? so much water to such heights. Neither suction nor] riot pressure explains it. They. now think that cohesion of i???’ 53p is the answer, that 11 tree .s almost nlwF-YS 11 591111 9011mm °f water or sup from r0015 1° 195V“- Psalms lfllzlo-“Tlie trees 0f 1111! Lebanon which He 1111111 11131111“: ivlierc the birds make their nests; As water evaporates from the leaves. more water 1s 11111100 11P1111°| the leaves from the tree. Sop has great tensile power. 2.250 1115- 1° the square lncli, which ls enough- tn lift ll. to the top o1 _a tree al- most a mile 111311. Yes. Only 13°11 can make a tree’! ‘The vltal func- tlons of the trunk. 111111111195 111111 twigs of a tree are to trnnspor water, and to cflrfl‘ i000 1111911311 the tree. ‘The outermost layer olé me hark 15 purely protective. Jusl underneath is a lnycr of cells W111“ carries the Processed tree-food. a slippery jelly like fluid vililch ls mcst noticeable lii silrliiis- 111515‘; the food laycr ls tlie critical m!‘ of the tree. the camblum. which tree, which turns into wood cells. The trunk of the tree ls built up 1n layers which when out. crosswisie lay bare the BT01" °1 $119 “'°?_-' called pltli. heartwood, camblli.___ food-carrying loyflffi 111111 1131-‘- Ericli veiii- the camblum lalP-‘Y forms ii new layer of saii-vmnd. t, ' tngc. “filly: rbifd i grreeiii rigiilc about trees 1n the Word of God. When tRe Psalmist described the 111051101‘ Y 0f the godly he referred ton the rlgliteousflqs haying‘ £21110!‘ 1° 111"‘ r " 5m . “ha? in eCgllfornla We have the gguydy paLms, growing upright ‘in the sun. heads niah up 1n t s 111'- wlth its evergreen fea hery iollallfl. lts tall stem from 30 t0 B0 1091i mghHp-a symbop o1 eloquence and rii e . K vile must remember that the stately palm tree growing 111 i119 gnrclen of the Lord was Planted by His Dlvlne hand. The trees here 1n Cnllfornln were transplanted from the desert. John 12.13 0118 or Hts trlumphal cuff)’ to Jsrils"; 1cm, "Wlicn the people heard 11151 He was coming to Jerusalem they took branches o1 imlm "W! 11,1111 went forth to meet Him and er ed Hosanna: Blessed la the Kim; of h mi-d,“ Christ. had palm trees ineabundonce. He found H1! W" carpeted with palm branches. E118- erly the people acclaimed Him King. Christ was on nu way 1° Calvary. found Himself thorns. crowned with k. “Praised comtiiaiiggln (Lnihemiizextfl. I Peter 2:24. " I-Ils own self bore our n“. i" c n 11v: hnto riightetmluypu. by H Btiiiiieft ‘livid? ‘péileiyl olimt W111¢11 tliery gee All tipped with jeweled needles. pouring light Llke ‘ecstasy along the fllntod es. It holds above the valley, looilnl u EXDQCIBIIIIY, a brimming gslleon With glory, and the valley. like e 0 . Itself like up the [low that h So lavlialily - when flows the sli- ver flre " To lllumlne every rlciule on the . stream That sings along its way; where glows the spire Of one tall pop ar. tender u s in. Now sails the moon be ond our Ihfi'.*~=-.._flnd ye He who has seen such llaht cannot e org -.Ie l Gilli i th N ver ey "new n e e11 g be rooted up. _, John 15:11.0. Jollll says. I m the vine, ye are the branches. H0 that abldeth tn me. and I h! K1111 the same brlnaetli forth much m fruit. 11p: without Me ‘we M" d" n . otblng. - Jer. 17:7. "Blessed is i-hc In!“ that. trtiateth tn the 10rd. 011d whose hope the lord N!’ 119 shall be planted by the "M! and that spreadeth out her roota by tue river." Igam. Sir. etc. S04 '80. Msrengo. Pasadena, Call . r1... Sinatra immi- is M1111"!- ed in Sydney. Australia. by 1111111; bars of "the bobby sock bit Me- Thua the Voice becomes an nter- national diatomi- of youthful emo- Olllafldllllwll BENIN! MAY EATON. The word of God tells us in, Lord are run of sap. 11w cedars 01' as for me Stork the m. trees Breil now lead flflufipbfld, with their home." i 15 the main growing part of theI making annual rings by 111111111 1101' ln Israel that eomcth ln the name of hm Then a few days after "1 Palm Sunday and Good Friday t l‘ lithe my Father hath not planted shall 1e ginning. 1 differed with Mr. K111i‘ on the necessity of a leblsclte.- felt that after Dunkirk the safegy the State transcended all 0t‘ - er matters. I differed with hltn when he decided to run the wfsr as a party affair. I formed a nou- partlsan Government for the per-- lod of the war. We passed a. .uiiunlmous resolution three years: ago favouring total mobilization for war. Two years ago, tlie party- proval, the fa ulsory selecti hat policy I isve never wavered. nor has, the party lead. ou may put that record against that; of the Government's performance and Mr. Coldwellfis recent acquies- cence in it; and I ask you-partgr labels aside-who has a better- rlght to speak with s. clear con-- science on this issue - Mr. King. Mr. Caldwell. or myself? Yes. lt Ls a good thing for the. question to be asked-What ls to [become of our political institu- |tlons if the public ls given cause ‘to lose faith 1n the professions of public men? Let me recall brief- ily the sequence of events from last. Septem er. When the demands arose for flmmetllute octlon because of the desperate shorta e of reinforce- |ments. Colonel alston as De- ,fence Minister went overseas te- a n what the situation was. He li-eturned in October and reported to the Cabinet, insisting that im- mediate notion be taken by send. g the men of the Home De-- fence Army. Let us never forget that the Prime Minister had lven ii solemn pledge on behalf o hla Government that reinforce» merits were ever needed, the draftee troops would be sent. But om The man who stood out for rein- forcements was pushed aside and one who accepted the policy that failed was taken ln. But the volume of the demands for reinforcements continued tn rlse and become so insistent that lt could no longer be ignored. On November 8th. Mr. King addres- sed the people of Canada over the radio for the purpose of reas- suring them that the situation. would be met ae his new Mlnlsteu promised-by voluntary enlist- 111C138. He so badly mutated the Ralat w publicly to cggtrsdfg O O I General McNaughton ln his own statements to the ubllc emphas-. Fl 00853411717 NE RAI." ELECTRIC LIN IED roach to real daylight ever . lighting u real discovery in the sclenitte of Illumination. Applied to ol, attractive lighting ' ' work to ,. 5 more quickly, more occu- rotely, with leu strain. this c0 a ‘co. The posltlon of the Prime Min- ister and General McNflilslil-Ofl shifted from day to day. Even those acquainted with military af- fairs were wholly unable to fol- low what was_ talking place The Progressive Conservative Party ln the House of Common! demanded the use of all the train- ed men in the Home Army t0 support our army overseas. Some Ll erals supported that motion. Those who were sold the com- prggiisehftorced uporéupxpégd M a on were D0 me siiiiinuis. led by Mi- 001d- well. u mint to keep in rnlnd. Parliament liad scarcely ad- journed before General Mc- Naughton besan making state- ments about the satisfactory re- inforcement situation. ‘Evidently a miracle had happened. Almost overnight, according to General McNaughton, reinforcements were flowing through the designated channels ln abundance. A1 08ml! Borden. early tn January, the De- fence Minister went so for as to sev that he was no longer conv- cerne‘. about any shortage of re- IIAIOPOGIDOIIIIS but o i with the s ortn o war sup e5. Pleage do not. forget that state- ment. At the very time he made it. the Minister was using cen- sorship orders to conceal from the r-ubllc the fact that 6300 men had failed to return to their units after enibarkatlon leave. Disclos- ure of this vltal information had tn be forced by the, press. Con- fronted with exposure and oom- pelled to give the truth. General McNaughton then sought. be- little this grave situation by im- plying that it was all to the good that such desertlona had taken place as it sorted the wheat from the chaff. Yet those thousands of deserters were from amonu the 15.000 oonscrl t troops notified for overseas serv e. But the thing! I would like most to emphasize thls- The dues- tlon of reinforcements is no mat- ter of arithmetic. We cannot con- tinue to limp along on a haphaz- ard system of what has been well described as "budnetlng for If the men overseas are to feel any comfort, much lees securlt" tn tLe Job they have to do, we must not chisel their support down to doubtful numbers “gen larirer numbers are avall- o e. another BRITAIN HONORS RUSSIAN ATTEIITIUI/ Swine Broaden i Nowlsthetlmun“ against b min; the rslmedy en the n...“- MAO’! no woiiii TONIC trues of s the health of vol?‘ POWDR, It will lllOmnglly 110M‘ “n11!!! riucir an» ran i]; Gels . phone or Ila llfflllllllly attended Tn: 2 nuts 14' Quit Q0011. n,“ 01kg E"- l 1 V Prciesslonm, McLeod 0 Bentley w. n. saunas. 3, g J. A. BENTLEY. I. C. Barristers and Album.” Law I54 Prince Street Phone 20811 .fi\N'J'-NY Bani of Nova C Phone 8d tlon of the Royal Institute of Brit/sh Architects to Victor vemtn, president of the Academy of Architect of the. 0.5 5.1!. , an architect of the great Dnlevper nm. will“ SLEEP ilillllllllT lzed that he had aken on the ak because of his belted that the reinforcements could be obtained by voluntary method, and because mmltt to was the Government his policy ed to atlck to it. Don't forget that. It ls the key to the present situa- tlon and. cannot he I!“ “mo” iffy into lit! I 11¢ n‘ on po on and the developments since that time. General McNaughton later cal- d together the officers mending the Jnlllterpn Stlll prof felt-h fl’ all must recall the un recederited notion which many of hose offic- ers gookthn rage ltd céearwto go cope er a v e e gefence Minister had been the exact o te. ‘Then arllamont met tn s spe- clal session. 0n the first day, there developed. as a direct resu t of publlfeupressurc. a seoondlcalb; era . the c lets reversal of the King- McNau ton position and a dis- crlmlna o policy of the use of a part of to Home Defence army o make available 16,000 trained reinforcementa. What. 1h blip f §€8lf€'% “Jim” " Alma-m ,6. F. ilutchsson It still i orronnriusrs “Specialists lii the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular cle- feels” l8 Grafton Street LQWDOIN —(0P)—'Ii}r ,9;,1;1__,,m;;1"1,,,*;',g,1,*; 0:,‘ N115; Office Suite m. n u ILR. Duane 8 Bu. Chat-Mano Acconniaiiu Bl Grafton Street. Charlottetown do: ill llllldflllh W Manning. 0.5. ildflrrfilliandlitlmpa ll. F. Altftllllllllll Chartered Accountant Intern Trust Building Charlottetown . J.A. Mclillllifllhlll. BARRISTER. SOLICITOI NOTARY. -ETC. CURRIE BUILDING ~' CHABLOTIETOWN Charles R. McQmid I A. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary. Etc Illcy Blllldln]. Charlotleten Phone 8!! PALMER e i-l_ASLAlf: nasuim, an. 1M .1 aaairisriia. arc. - Seotls Prlnu ldwsrd iii-inf 1,, harlottetown. P. l. 1- ONEY 'l'0 LOAN i P Id __.___ _:~% Richard B. Johnsloq: CounIhlAoaer for Deed! l" '1 (ameni- to ‘é an Blnharrl e. Joni-psi," '. ‘n. ALETN riuznu, Oflloei Money 3A., LLB. Canadian Bank of Connie!“ MONEY T0 LOAN BARRISTER. SOLICIE ALEX w. MATiiissoNf .."..*::.-'“="'a-1== RARRISTEB. SOLIOITOB- 5 EYES EXAMIIIEI IELASSEENDFITTEB . J. S. TZIYLOR’ 1 OPTOMETRIST I comet: Ramona ma“ I one h, A0 b“. "5 eilsric A. l-Ifft IARRISTER. ETC- l“ Richmond 51"“ ‘oauiaiuimi. I. I 1- ‘i m; 11.1‘. lvicPh ‘I'll IAIIIS NOTARY l T? 80 A. 0. 1.10110! g