PAGE FOUR i THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN TllE Neptune. of name and birthplace of the This is ample warrant for the choice New World Agriculture In Dissolution Possible DECEMBER s. 14m llotos By ‘lhs Way HELP BUILD UP Ulll Resistance Transition Period Next sessmn’ (Bank of Nam Brotle Review) Poetry series, which promises well as a means of bringing the work of Maritime authors, past and present, before a discerning public. GIIARLOTTETOZVII lilllllillihil Morning Daily (Founded in 1887) Authorised as Second Clasa Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa. (By 1". O..MEAR8. Gazette Reel- dent Correspondent) Hitler's “Mela Kemp!” ie out of the picture. Present sensation is Tim's mine coup. —'Iloron'tn Tele- OTTAWA. Dec. 1—Palitical de- r-eeldent, Ian A. Burnett; Vice-Preeldent, Wm. B. Burnett; Secy-Treus, G. M. Burnett; Editor and ilenagin Director, J. B. Burnett; Associate Editor. Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest lnk." THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1946 Saskatchcwaus Windfall Saskatchewan has reached a five-year tax agreement with the Dominion Government. lt has also obtained a windfall from Ottawa in the way of debt cancellation to the amount of $44,400,000. Of Saskatchewan's whole treasury bill debt of $92,000,000 the amount of $12,000,000 for 1938 seed grain advances was refunded last year. Of the $80,000,000 remaining. $61,300,000 was the province's share of direct relief costs. This is divided exactly in two, the Dominion assum- iiig $30,700,000 which is wiped off Saskatchg. wan debt. That cuts it to $49,300,000. Next= an item of $5,700,000 of accumulated interest charges is cancelled, leaving $43,600,000. Next comes the settlement of the natural resources bill amounting to $8,000,000 owed by the Domin- IOI1 to the province and which, in the settlement, offsets that aomunt of the debt, leaving $35,- 600,000. Thus the Dominion Government has reliev- ed Saskatchewan of $44,400,000 of its drouth- depression borrowing. Of the $35,600,000 still owing, $5,400,000 is not relief debt and‘ will be paid over 30 years at 2 5-8 per cent interest and $30,200,000 is relief debt and will be paid in 30 annual installments without interest. An important item in the agreement is the settlement of the Saskatchewan claim for pay- ment for the alienation of natural resources by the Dominion between 1905 and 1930, the period between the time Saskatchewan was set up as a province and the year the Dominion transferred natural resources to it. Poultry Census Hens and chickens number to 3,037,800 birds, 91.3 last year's total of 3,325,600. June 1 a year ago. the i945 total of 812,900. Sir Hartley Shawcross, been appointed recorder of Thames. er are two sugar loaves. work since the recorder - d’ k Christina Rosetti, English this date 1830; daughter of 1 x are distinguished by metrical Deep, Verses: There were 89,849,300 head of poultry on farms in Canada on June 1 this year, according to estimates by the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics, as compared with ‘$9,504,500 on June 1 last year, an increase of 0.4 per cent. numbered 85,459,200, slightly more than on June l last year, when the total was 84,724,800. Turkeys decreased in per cent The number of geese declined by four per cent, being 615,700 compared with 641,200 an The Canadian population was 736,600, being 90.6 per cent of - hDIIURIAL NOTES - British Attorney- General, who has gained a great reputation, and added to his laurels since obtaining office, has Kingston-on-the- Traditional emoluments of the record- The post involves no never sits. poetress, born Gabriel Rosetti, Italian patriot who settled in England, and sis- ter of D. G. Rosetti, painter and poet; her poems felicity, mastery, and deep spiritual emotion. Her works include, Goblin Market, Sing Song, The Prince's Progress, Called to be Saints, The Face of the Better by far you should forget and smile, Than that you should remember and be sad. ‘k X i it lt is the old story. Having created a huge bureaucracy the Government, in view of an elec- tion goes on increasing it, hence the increase of the Maritime Division of Fisheries from seven to total duck quiet gram. disarmament or phyfilfifll merit-of cleaning up poisons of Hltlerisrn. the r take an the-hate. brutality greed which Nazism orsanlwd- Christian Science Monitor. of postman every Christmas not happen lo a mule". cards. -Victoria Times. New York's of fare" which listed Dinner. l2 cents" and 5C1 cord. tiiphitheria. Erythrin red blood cells. erythrocytes. fifteen, with the addition cf five supervisors. To Allied peoples remains the talk "much harder than mere phyfilllfl the mental Aha part of task is for them to keep Such a clear concept of true religion and of the spiritual nature of God and man that they will not themsem Every reasonable citizen in thl! mnununity and elsewhere will agree with the United States writer who has said: “What. haPDGHS i0 the should In that pithy comment is contained a. lot of argu- mem w guppoft the case for early trialling of parcels and Bret-Mil! famed mimosa-e‘ restaurant in 1864 (then far down- town on Pearl street) had a "bill “Regular then carried the a la carte items as follows? “Cu-p of tea or coffee, 1c: soup 2C1 hash 3c; oomed beef and cabbage 4c; beefstealr 4c; pork chops 4o‘. liver and bacon 5C; P085! mlll-"m fried eggs 5c"-— and then the bill of fare really got expensive to wit: “ham and 6855- 10¢; him‘ burger steak 10c; roast chicken 10¢". _N@a1 O'Hara, in Philadelphia. Re- A new penicillin-like drug ex- treated from the red blood cells o! rabbits and other animals and dis- covered by Dr. L A. Silber of M05- cow is now under clinical trial in soviet Russia as a. weapflll 8811-1118! is the name of the new antiboitic. 1t comes from a, protozoa. a low form _of animal life. The antibiotic gets its name from the medical name for Why la the ocean blue? A new hnswer to this age-old question has l Though ll: in more than a year since the war ended, the demand for food i undiminlfiied. Even with cont nued restrictions on domestic consumption, Canada is unable to satisfy the calls made upon her. Shipments are falling far short on the British bacon contract, the cheese and egg can- tracts will not be fully met, and because of last year's heavy drain on stocks there is not enough wheat to provide exports an the scale of the past three years. ‘ Though the feed-grain situat- ion is perhaps a little better than last year because of a modest in- crease in the harvest and the de- cllne in the livestock population, suppllesare not sufficient to per- mit substantial exports and meet our own needs. In this condition of shortage. end under increased pressure from higher prices in the United States, the prices of farm products have continued to rise. and with production at the level indicated farm income has receded only moderately from the 1944 peak. Nevertheless, though the present picture is one of dlortege and high demand, there is evidence of widespread concern both among farmers and in government circles about future prices and markets. Nor is this concern purely nat- ional. Preparations are currently under way for consideration of the problem by at least two in- ternattonal bodies. A committee of the International Wheat Coun- all, in preparation for an enlarged international conference, is revis- ing the draft convention on in- ternational wheat policy drawn up in 1941-412 by the "big four" ex- porters and the largest importer, the United Kingdom. ' In a broader field, the Prepar- atory Commission set up at the August meeting in Copenhagen of the United Nations Food and Ag- riculture Organization is discuss- ing proposals for raising the world's nutritional standards and velopmeata much more important than fiscal arrangements will be determined by the final outcome of tax agreement talks resumed here yesterday by Finance Min- ister J. L. Iisley and Premier An- gus Macdonald of Nova Scotia. Dissolution of this 20th Parlia- ment eaon after. the next session begins is held by those intimate with the situation to be a possi- bility. 1t is argued that unless the Nova scotie Government gets gasoline tax revenue, at. least, in a new five year pact the Liberals in power in Nova Scotia may find it difficult COI1Bl8ant1y to back the federal Liberal candi- date tn the Halifax byelection contest necessitated by the death of W. C. Mecdonald. These well informed persons also contend that if Premier Mac- donaldb ministry cannot logically support the King Government's candidate, that candidate cannot win, and it this crucial test of federal Liberal strength goes against the Ring administration there is a chance that dissolution would be asked for. Such a course would be dictated largely by the accumulating evi- derice that even though the King administration has really lost nominal control of the House of Commons it would certainly ap- pear, in the event of a Halifax reverse, that it was steadily los- ing prestige and cuppa-t in the country. But so much is at stake, so far as the King Government is con- cerned, ft is inconceivable the minimum Maodoneld demaridswill not be met. There were talks here yesterday, but the actual result is not yet known. It rip- parently ie a battle of wits be- tween the economists and those who because of their position have to give a thought to the security o: political fences, between those who would adjust federal-provin- cfal fiscal relations on the basis of l fl-Eld formula and those who $00113 EMULSION lL/‘lli ROUND IONIC probably 518095 “D by m9 end f’! this year, the Federal Govern- ment will feel it can face Parlia- ment more confiderlY “W! We" it to block the Nova Scotla deal and bring in its train other ser- tcus political consequence!- Then the Prime Minister has promised a cabinet shufile before the next session. How far ll 8°" will be watched with deep inter- est. for how extensive it is may throw a shaft of light on the po- litical path ahead. Pew surprises are expected unless the Prime Minister should decide to take drastic steps to strengthen his party representation in the cab- inet. both for Quebec and On- tario. Na Forty Hour g ' Week For Britain (Winnipeg Free Press) e forty-hour week apparently is re- jected by the British government and will not be feasible for at least; some time, probably years. When the Trades Unlan Congress zit ii: recent conference, passed a resolu- tion in favor cf reduced workirii! hours it hardly expected to a- chlieve this objective at. once. Mr. Attica’! reply. in a wiles o! ed- dresses to labor leaders, not only seems to dismiss the forty-hour week but demands more work from -" Oll QIY e mulsiaa stamina why ea _t- tonic. I-li The demand of labor unions for The weal-inns of life that he; m will ' To clknib the steeperilng hill: The slclmess of the soul for 519m and to be still. _ Arid then once more stoned PYBmY fist Clenched cloudward and defiant; The pride that would prevail, thq doomed protagonist _ Grappling the ghostly giant. i118 lmmg. Victim and veriturer, tum by tum, and than Set free to be again Companion in repose with the; who orice were men. '—5iegfrled Sassoon, “Old iCliarlottelowirT (And P.E.l.) THE CELEBRATE!) COBBEI,‘ Tile ignorance which ln our days prevails in the Old Country re- specting the American colonies is not quite so deplorable as that which existed at the period of the Island ‘history (1830) at which we have now arrived. It may amuse the rest-L er to learn what. the celebrated, OObbet thought at this time c1 Prince Edward Island, as p, 110mg for emigrants, and qt the kind of business that was prosecuted her-er “Prom Glassow" wrote (sobbett, “the sensible Scots are pouring out amaln. Those that. are poor, and cannot pay their passage, m- w“ rake together only a trifle are going to i; rascally heap of sand, rook and swamp, called Prince Edivard Island, iii the horrible Gulf bi’ Saint, Lawrence; but when the American vessels come over with iridian mm and flour and pork and beef and poultry and @888 and butter, me cabbages, and green peas, and, p. piiragus for the soldier, and 0mg- tax-eaters that we support upon thgt lump of ‘worthlessness- for the lump itself bears nothing but p». A royal commission in 1935 awarded the province $5,000,000 but a minority report by Judge Bigelow recommended the payment of $58,000,000. The provincial government of that time refused the award.on the grounds it was too small. Since then interest on the $5,000,- 000 the Dominion acknowledged it owed when it accepted the commission award, has amount- ed to $3,000,000. In the debt settlement the $8,000,000 was off-set against Saskatchewan's debt to the Do- minion. That is to say the present Saskatche- been found in a newly reported re- search attempt to use llflllt. l‘!!! in anti-submarine warfare. SKY! Science Service. In attempting to find ways of combating German submarines, two American scientists Dr F A. Jenkins of the University of California and Dr. I. S. Bowen. director of Mt. Wilson Observe“)?! discovered there exist in every cubic inch of clear ocean water about a. million and a, half dust-like part- icles, each about. one fifty-thous- andth of an inch in diameter. These particles reflect sunlight beck to stabilizing returns to primary producers. Though the original plan for a. World Food Board is meeting with considerable oppa- glfitcigngruglstctiméglssg’? high P sltion, suggestions under discus- c7‘ slon include international coni- , , , modlty agreements and the el- tablistuuent. of buffer stocks of Pram" Mwdmllm l! RIIOWH t0 mule-i arii"? ‘::..i".:"“.":. ‘.‘.‘.Z°“....‘.i‘;°‘ll' it’ . e e musmnent tax as well. The Nova Bcotla Government, in other words. wants the Federal Covera- ment to restore those two inrpor. at least say that the lose of a by- electlon and further injury to British labor. Hie speeches reflect the concern of the government over the fail- ure of Britain ta attain the output of goods essential to reconstruct its economy and give it any hone B! prosperity tin the future. Britain is desperately short of labor- to make the goods it needs for itself and the goods which it must ex- port to buy the essentials of llfc. To ask workers to produce more and work harder is exceedingly etoes,—- when these vessels return, the sensible Scots will go back Ii them for a dollar a heed, and m; lawman qt them will be lefit but bed-ridden persons." If such an the doctrines which were taught to the Pefllile of Britain by mm like Cobbett, what must have begs the depth of ignorance the North American colonies w prevaded the masses’). -0iimpbei.l History of P.E I. (1.875). might be broadcast over the Club- nel " Most business men and private citizens had been hoping that the bureaucracies would be wiped out now that the war is over, but no such luck— the bureaucrats stick to the public treasury like leeches. s e it a The Labor Premier of Tasmania, Mr. Cos- grove, said recently that his Government in- tended to abolish University fees. The Labor Government also proposed to erect new Uni- versity buildings, and to develop a new idea in The most striking development in Canadian agriculture over the pest few years is the extraordin- ary wartime expansion in the wan government has accepted the award reiect- ed by previous governments as being~too small but in the present settlement no doubt the wip- ing out of so much of the treasury bill debt was a factor in the acceptance. A Bankcr’s Warning The argument that Canada should follow area school. At present, the a a ergency purposes elsewhere. education by the establishment at Launceston of a community school on the lines of an urban University Western Australia at Perth is the only free Uni- versity in the British Commonwealth. It .. Britain is recalling some of her troops from the British Zone in Germany to be ready for em- Belgian, Danish and Norwegian soldiers will gradually replacc of common to deep OCEB-Il whim’- eanthquakes. A scientist United States geological says the Japanese islands eventually disappear below water of the Pacific. the ocean surface. But the llSlll that gets back to the surface has been filtered; water absorbs the red and yellow colors of light. IeavlnB greens, blues, violets, the combina- tion of which Ls the indigo blue Japan has had muoh trouble with on the survey. will the J apimeie production of livestock and dairy products and the sharp decline that 1s now taking place. The record feed-grain crops of 1942 resulting from good weather and expanded acreages made possible a rapid increase in llvetsock numbers and hence a phenomenal expansion in food output. As compared with the 1906-39 ever- age, production of pork and con- centrated milk. 1t. will be ‘noted, more than doubled. while beef. tent revenue sources in return for the province, for a period of five years, handing over the cor- poration and individual income tax and succession duties. Those who foresee dire political conse- quences should the King cabinet, by refusing to meet Premier Mac- donald‘s conditions for a peace- time tax pact, and create an ex- trcmely awkward situation in Halifax, point out that the Hali- fax by-electlon will be held be- difflcult for a Labor government which has promised to improve the life of all the working people. Yet there is no conflict, in objectives here for Britain people can only live better if they produce more‘. goods. In this respect the chief difference between the Labor gav- ernment and its pi T€C€SBDT> is that the latter could he accused of be- friending capitalists when they urg- ed the necessity of harder work. The Attiee government cannot be Nobody ever deserved a. stat-lb more than Mr. Churchill as a. toils of gratitude for services rendered and the cliffs of Dover over \\'l’l was fought much of ilie Battle Britain is the perfect setting. Bit tihe mayors of the Dover area think the lighted cigar would be “ quite dignified", and that l5 ti m way of putting it. approximately one-tenth of the British forces there. lt is expected that when the shift is com- plete the occupying Belgian force will total around 12,000 men. Both the Danish and Nor- wegian units will be smaller. Troops of all three countries will operate as independent units. British War Office officials said "several" British divisions are at present in the occupation zone, but declined to specify the number. The so accused. When it states the simple truth that Britain can only prosper by turning out more goods the trade unions cannot reasonably deny it. The necessity cf production ls true and obvious under any system of society but perhaps is better understood when lit is stated by a government which the labor un- cheese and egg output increased by upwards of 50% and that of creamery butter by roughly 20%. The peak of butter production. however, was passed in 194/3. that of pork in 1944, and that of beef last year. Retrogreselon towards pre-war output levels of livestock and dairy products generally end of fore the next session of Parlia- ment. If the Liberal candidate is elected nothing much waifld imp. pen, but should the Progressive Conservative win much trouble would be a certainty. Prime Minister King in his Quebec City speem sought ta dia- ooursge speculation about his continuance in the Liberal lead- scientists reveal the fact that an Island in Kyusa Bay vanished 10o years ago. drowning 5.000. However, Japan may stay above water long- er than some other countries. Scientists show that south America not s) long ago as geological per- iods go. was completely under water. The chalk cliffs of Ealglamd WW6 manufactured by tiny marine creat- ures at the bottom of the sea. And the United States in abolishing price regula- tions at this juncture was refuted by Mr. H. D. Burns, president of the Bank of Nova Scotia, in his, address at the Bank's annual general meeting yesterday. Mr. Burns conceded that our complex network of emergency controls, willingly accepted during wartime, has become more and more bo-‘ensome in the post-war per- iod; nevertheless for Canada to permit a free adiustment of her prices to those now prevail- ing in the United States might not only cause an upsetting readjustment of our econvlljy. but would expose us to the apparent risk of‘ down- ward change as American prices work toward a more stable basis. Until American prices show some indication of stabilizing, it seems common sense and good business to continue efforts to keep Canadian prices and costs from rising sharply. Mr. Burns reviewed many salient points in the Canadian economic venture, leaving it to proximately 12,000. 94 a a stitutional or' home care, the tional Committee for Mental hygiene committee's brief was strength of each British post-war division is ap- Out of any 100 elementary school children selected at random in Ontario cities, nine or l0 will develop mental illness requiring hospital, in- Ontario Royal Commission on Education was told by the Na- Hygiene. submitted Prof. W. Line at bpening of the final sessions of the Royal Commission, which has completed a The you find oyster shells on mountains, lifted up from ocean's bed. —Ohathe.rn News. Collier '5. by high the Tho greatest trick of the late Horace Goldtn. England's master magician, was usually performed at meetings of fellow magicians, says Goldin allowed each of them to set the hands of his own watch-close the cover and hand it to him. whereupon, without open- ing the watch. Goldin wrapped it in a napkin and as a third person held it. before him, he told the time at which the hands were set by look- the feed grains to produce them has proceeded a considerable dis- tance, the chief reason being the trend out of livestock and dairy- lng in the Prairie Provinces where a very large part cf ‘he wartime expansion took place. There has been, however, no ‘falling-of! in demand. Indeed, as the war drew to aclose, eioport demand was further swollen by relief needs, and wheat. whidi had been in embarrassingly surplus supply, was added to the list of scarce com- modities. Thus scarcity in food is as great as. or greater than, ership and about who might be his successor, and he insisted that the main business henceforth was the winning of byelectioris. but there has been much speculation here for some time and it has by no means been confined to those in other political parties. I O I Siould the worst happen there would be a considerable demand for a change in leadership. if not for dissolution, and the selection of a new leader might be thrown into a party caucus, a meeting of the elected meunbers of House ions themselves have elected. They Ire now compelled to face the rc- tual position of Britain -_ lPs pav- erty which can only be overcome by more efficient industrial meth- ods and by toil. Mr. Churchill's Cigar (Ottawa mat) We think Mr. Winston Churchill should be consulted before they set. up a gigantic statue of tilm on the For Foot Ailments-- CONSULT l1. J. ll. BROWN. 11.11:‘ Orthopedic Chiropodist- iu omit germ:- Mm‘ anemone-rows. v1.1 _ lng through a smell paper telescope. No one ever discovered how it was done. Dover cliffs overlooking France and the Channel. especially if the plan is pursued of fixing in its brotiu mouth a metal cigar which would be illuminated by night and made a. guide to shipping. It ls a wonder somebody hasn't proposed also that the statue should have a fog-horn device; or perhaps a phonog-raphlc attachment so that on appropriate occasions some of . = e i hS m. Churchill's immortal ‘ 63884 “w” an III! also with Premier John Ifart words Rohcved of British Columbia and Premier Every person who la trou- _ . ‘d vrlh gas in the stemoob ll ‘ Walter Jonee of Prince Edwardl Island. With at least six provinces‘ during the war. At first glance. this year's 410 million-bumel wheat crop-100 million bus. greater than last year's-would seem to indicate some easing in the tight supply situation for this grain. Actually, however. because of the sharp re- duction ln the carryover, total supplies are about Bil million bus. less than a year earlier. Our ex- ports of. wheat are likely to be cut down even more than euch a figure would suggest, since the large quantities of low-grade wheat in the West may result in lnweued wheat feeding, and since the carryover may be gigant- er. Exports may thus be closer to 206 million bus. than to the 34o million bus. of the last three years. As 100 million bus. are ‘pledged to the United Klnfldom [under the lreceigi contra‘? thg: The ha“ h . WM“, bu‘ h leaves cone derii y less t an “cam 0mm. and “Y ‘Md m b‘ milliond bus. to satisfy all other thought that surgery and manua. dem“ 5' , , , treatment were bu lengthy survey throughout the province. The brief urged a remedial program to provide first aid for children emotionally maladjusted, as well as a positive, preventive program. Schools have the power "but not the wisdom," it said, to prevent development of"crime and criminals by arranging scientific aid for a youth, who feels "out of step" in school. Personality tests should be a basic requirement for teacher-training course, it suggested. "A dithery or fussy teach- er has dithery or fussy pupils," said Prof. Linei "A tense teacher has tense pupils." Prof. Line added: "Until the salaries offered are much greater than at present the public cannot hope to have many resourceful, outstanding teachers." "k ‘It i‘ "k and Senate whose task it would be to select someone now in the cabinet. 11 la contended that the names of at least four ministers would have to be considered- Justice Minister St. Laurent, Re- construction Minister Douglas Ab- bott and Agriculture Minister Jflme! Gardiner. That Prime Minister King will do his utmost to see that the worst doesn't happen can b93514:- ly assumed. To begin with. every effort will be made to make new tax agree- llterite with Premier Macdehflq the general manager, Mr. H. L. Enman, to deal in his address with recent business trends as they directly relate to the Bank's activities. The latter in this connection cited some striking evi- dences of progress. Bank loans have recorded the first really substantial increasemin, _, many years as peacetime production and commerce have expanded and as government-financed war production has been eliminated. Investments have continued to increase sharalv. The Bank's total assets, at nearly $700,000,000, now stand at more than twice the pre-war level. The other ~side of the picture is a correspondingly sharp in- crease in deposits which is indicative of a gen- eral increase in bank deposits in Canada to a level notably higher than the peak at the end of the war. The short two-clause Bill to terminate the annual payment of £5,000 to the indirect descendants of Lord Nelson will get its second reading shortly. and an interest- ing little debate may result. for an Opposition Front Bench Member intends, I believe. to oppose the Bill in a purely personal capacity; there is no reason to suppose that the Opposition as such will vote against it. The present Earl Nelson. a Catholic priest, is aged 88. and his tic-other, who is" his heir, 08. The Bill provides that the annuity shall con- tinue to be paid to whichever of these dies last. but after that shell cease altogether-plainly an equit- able arrangement. Already £700,000 has been paid out in thte wary. - London Spectator. end bowels should set l bottle of Dr. Evans‘ Stomach Mixture and sec how quick; ly it will relieve nli distress- ing symptoms. - Dr. Evans’ Stomach Ml!- ture taken at meal time. not only prevents all had eflwll from rel. b!“ it Drlmml". the functional activity of the stomach. assists digestion and The temptation to accept the baby bonus is great, says The Printed Word. For parents who are paying substantial amountsmdfdnccme tax from a moderate income the temptation amounts to compulsion. lf they do not accept the bribe, they are presenting the money to a government down. The prospects for retain- ing Canada's present place in the British bacon market would ap- pear to depend greatly nn h“ up. turn in Western hog production. llcw Poetry Series . A new literary venture has been launched from the Abanaki Press, Lower Granville, N. S., in the form of a series of booklets entitled The Marc Lescarbot Books of New World Poetry, of which the first volume, A Sheaf of Songs by Sis- ter Maura, has iust been issued. Sister Maura is professor of English at Mount Saint Vincent College. The edition is confined to 500 attract- that will undoubtedly waste it. ‘snobbishness to think cfbringing without state aid. They will re- ceive credit for their refusal only from their own consciences. It is unlikely that theirvwives will appreciate the sacrifice of cash for a principle. lt may be Jhat independence has gone out of fashion, that within a few years it will be mere up a family it is i mposslblc. ing it for a number of years. r a1, Five years ago a London s Mr. Hamilton Bailey -British goons dislike the prefix doctor devised a new technique for mar specialists have been peltoilnln operations upon lt. and manipulati- late; The Si. Thomas Timer-Jami In livestock products. the moat acute shortage la that of pork. Hog merketings. which in i045 were down by more than a third from the 10M record of 8.0 mil- llon head, fell a further 27% in the first 0 months of this yell‘- end the latest estimate for the 4A million head- By mid-November less than half of the dbtl-milllon-ib. contract had been shipped to the United King- dom. and it is. quite‘ clear that shipments will fell far flier-t er the total contract. In beef, on the other hand,the minimum contract quantity of 00 million lbs. has airerirtv been The eesy-lactlon laxative lor ordinary constipation Improves the ntliletlte. Dr. Evans‘ Stomach Mill- ture ls sold only at the Two Macs at 85a per bottle. MACS PlLl OINTMENT n T. pulatian or the heart which is sel d to have saved the lives of tllousen 1s lf that is the case, hardly worth while pointing out to parents that, by accepting the-bonus, they will render them- selves liable to investigation at any time. The Act provides for investigations and it will not be fair to confine the snacpirig merely to those lam- ilies that are spending the bonus on beer. With class distinctions abolished among the recipi- ents of relief, there must be no discrimination shown in prying into their lives and habits. in- dependence, personal rights, freedom will con- tinue to have some meaning. The politicians of all parties will see to it that some way is found to minimize the shame a parent might feel in accepting a handout. The few who continue to regard the baby bonus as an iniquity will be thought of by their neighbors as cranlu. ively printed copies, with woodcut cover illus- veal‘ ll limit" tration by the Halifax artist, Mr. Chambers. The series is under the able editorship of Mr. Andrew Merkel, former Atlantic Superintendent of’ The Canadian Press and a well-known poet in his own right. Other books in course of pre- paration are Marc Lescarbot, Thomas H. Raddal and Andrew Merkel, the latter edited by Theo- dore G. Roberts. . Lower Granville ls better known to historians as thb Port Royal of 1604. Here Marc Lescar- bet, a slllpinate of Samuel de Champlain, wrote the. first verso and the first play produced in North AieerTcTeT" The some autumn that Slialie- 1 ling Lsanwas lvsn its premiere in i, there was enact on the shores of the _lls lesln More Lescatbofi Theatre of approximately 15% lower than in 1M6. True, the decline in the East has been much less imrked this year then last-Ova asagelnst g 10% drop ln ION-and breed- ing: indicate that eastern hpg production is again on the up- turn. But in the Prairie Provin- ces the downward trend has con- tinued et the um- drastic rate- soar. from the previous year-and at June Lthie year Prairie farms had only about thr- same propor- tion (e little over 40%) of the captain tiou population an in that, compared with about 60% of the peek population of 101d. 111m u, however. some indicat- ion in the latest figures of breed- lngl that this deoilae is slowlnl much exceeded. In addition, a- bout 90 million lbs. oi canned meat (approximately half of which is beef) have been sent to Can- tinental Bur-opi- considerably more than in the some period inst year. ‘This record has, of course. been made possible onlv hv rationing. since production is down sliahtl" from inst veer; in the West, marketlrws for the moat part have strive-d above the year- ago i-vel. ri-vi in the new "v-v ‘have declined moderately. no that. th~ overall. More for tb~ first a mn-itlie of the veer-about L! Milli-m heed-wan in: than 4% below the. comparable. period of i046. (To be continued) A sale end efficient relflfl gay [or internal and ester". nel piles. It is made only "T- th; highest quality lagredt. enta possessing remarliarll therapeutic value for til-lb» purpose; It carries oat it‘ beneficial effect in lllldr ways: l. It iribrtcatree. 11l- is astringent. 3. It sooth“; Get. e tube today. Price The 2. Ma's: " 109 Greet George 8t. We oerry a complete illl Ir—ee. All slaee. bi r Bailey was invited to explain ta method recently at an international conference of surgeons in De it When the heart stops. the on metres an ncialon underneath he diaphragm and inserts his h . He then squeeses the heart by ep-{ly- lng end. relaxing the pressure. He must reach the heart within 90 - ands after it stops beating else i is too late. The heart usually meow action in one or two minutes. t in some eases the manipulation u continued for 20 minutes. A er Office otflclei stated that th ds a lives were saved in this way. a , became so common that mo record of the elem twes kept. - of soldiers during the war. .