*9: ' kn‘ ‘o. i laws . >3? A ii y‘ . t W l _ _ l ,v. l} w. "t . , “a ‘ w .' stiff: ‘ ‘i. . fit h‘ L; . V‘ ‘ l. I . , i‘ v3’, k l is "ii ii . f‘ ' r l; ,i i} a‘ t. . i r , , ' Y. _> ' . gm "gin l, mt t; lit? " 1 “l '0 ~t~.~ "fl . 1f .1, '73? '7 i, I J ti: ‘ .. 4. my‘. 4,5 at???“ . i y _ r it‘ i , l}: H y >. , I . . t _ ‘a ‘s9’: 1341:» ‘ l ' A. 1 V’ . ‘WW ' ‘k -‘ {N l ,, p}, ' n; t aiivffq m: Wilt if"? t ill. t‘ 1 l A .. I, .1 to Jill, fl. ‘i Vi}! u?‘ - .,. , "is; f , at . , “f »- l t‘ n r at» i l, 3i é . .. i) . l. 5”“; _ ' _ radii 24"‘, l- 3;" >l v. . s5. at ' ~ m: lfiiih‘ i ‘ ‘v i t . k , . All, ~ v , i hi‘ {.11 wit. .. g P: .' s gr f, t "t" ' ‘s ‘v ‘l i l ' l’. v i t “ i i. i. I ‘y t ' dirt?’ “ ‘pd; ‘t’ i hi. -1 if PAGILEQIH! THEM ciuiitonrrowii GUARDIAN blunting ll-iily (Founded in 1857) ._ .______ President: Lleut. Cul. W. Chester S. McLurl Vina President: J. R. Burnett. FJ-L Secretary: Lieut. Col. n. A. iunrlunnvu- 0-8-0- Edn" “m; ‘jlgmuglflj Uireetor, J. It. Burnettksr-Ill-eli‘ Associate Edttiirs rank W alker and Ian A. bl (‘RIPTION RATES ‘y w“ m |>_g_|,, 51.00 pt?! year; $2.50 fur ti month: 51.25 fur 3 months; 50c for one month 0th Deliver; $5.00 per year; $8.00 for 5 mollllll 51.75 for 3 months; 60c for one MIIIIIII. ljy illail m tanuda and '1. 55-00 P" Y"! Saturday vvr-ikiy; sum pr!‘ yer ; $1.00 rvr 6 mvlllhl. 50c fur if mouths uuitrillitu itiuy be obntued l! rim... aqunro. haw Yorln Old fnrllvl‘ Milk uml Wuhtnzluu. \\‘\\n -\|{t'III',V, r24» Peel an, .1 l‘,_t\ at, Yivrnnhhi bows Stand, \nllvn wu- Stand, Sutlbury, filniin-tmi .\. IL, ' In; Clllflivillflufill uq[lllllfl'l Ne“! AKVHVQ’. 4\, "The bfruhnp-(i-sgiilllt-rlibrg IVealrer than the lr-u/rt-xl Ink." ‘A. Y...» 5J1 v, .l lavut Labor Problem fir.» i, , . _. tYlt has shown little iti- ditxi l ltlxb Kilt >CliUllrll€Sb 0i one of our llll‘. tlldilt’ lifilllltllls, llillllCly, that 4t. lfitlllltlfi in this Province, of farm _ v l cl‘ capital nunlbcr ol en- . are well aware of ~ tulicr zigricttlttir- hat even thc firi- tintd. lhe following ;.il lktst (loronto) is city the Catutdian concerns itself 1 iml t _\" under cover. d probably solve it by ia special ten days’ I .- r 1.16 siiuzititin nor the so- under certain types of agri- gulfute i, i: is true, was largely cori- centratcil in c stznuncr and early tall. 1hr: explained i e . 1w l._.vestcrs’ excursions to \\'€.~l€l‘ll Ciii. \\ll'.‘ll ihe young men front the east were of i pleasant and profitable Cook's Tours of the prairie provinces. But those harves- ter excursions are nruv obsolete and have been for a good malty years. “'l‘i,»tln_v" Cillliltliilfl agriculture to a large degree has become a _\'l‘cll'-l"JL‘illt.l occupation and one that requires very special skill. This is particularly true to that par: of the industry that is now turning out biictitn, cheese, processed milk and other speci i food products for Lireat Britain. Soldiers on special harvesters’ leaves will not help here. \\‘hat is witntcd are mCn and \\'0mf!l1 that can look after live-tuck, that know how to milk cows, kiuuv soiiuwliiiig about balancing feeds, hmv [0 sow and culiitaie crops as well as harvest them, know how ta operate machinery without harm to themselves or loss to their employers. “idbmie all the) mils! be prepared to work scvfln days a wecl; and 365 ilztys a year because farming is a natural Elfl nature has never yet recognized eitlit r is calendar pr his clock. Cows ins lit _ niilkctl and twigs get just and ltolidays as any other f‘ ll A fact not noted by our '1_<1Y0Hl0 contemporary is that farm labor iortagc is essentially a prob- lem for the l)» till tiovcrnmcitt, in co-opcr- atiun with the prot-iticliil governments, to take in hand. lt i: not merely a question of helping our farmers, but of prosecuting the war. Cau- lda's farm products are as important to our war efforts as tanks, planes and soldiers. Britain is depending upon our shipments of bacon, poultry, eggs, cheese and OZilCX‘ farm commodities. These gar-mgr be prorlttc-vl without adequate help 0X1 lllfl farm, and the same concern which the Govern- ment i5 sliotviwg in obtaining and training me- chanics for XVIII‘ industries should be shown in aiding agricniiiire, to the extent at least of pro- viding the mmipoiver necrs<riry to maximum pro- duction. Futilnote To History An iiueicsutg ca; gilt on the historic Churchill visit to Ulla‘ is Bhvil by the Ottawa correspond- ent of the \\. . 3; l rit: l‘re»>, who says: \\ll<il f\li, l in spizilt. 1n lllg llovisq of Ctllllilitiil \xti. i llt‘ lllll: lll: notes on a rcd tit-luau itii . able that separates the ti t\ rnnit-nt front the front iltii . _ _, , t ;; i... \\'.iitn Ill‘l'illI_L_[Clll('l1ln ituii; h»... --i: “.1. it'll were installed tin .. sl.»t,~.i.,; stir-face oi the my: ilic tiny - . ing. ‘t! box. So carpent- 1~ >t:ill' hastily ini- iiuli given cloth to bu. hi lllL‘ Comniilns‘ J st six inches high. That '. at which .\lr. Churchill's iacles could focus on ~p:i!i"‘i lmx \\':is ready cliaiiilieiu l: i gave the txiir‘. l: l£|llllill\ ll‘ i ‘i his mi. ~. churches and civic administrations offering the pictures and urging that they be hung in promin- cut places throughout the country. To the eternal credit of France, only 800 requests came in for the frce picuirc. And that is not all; in many of the classrooms where the picture was hung, schoolboys tore it down and even dared to substitute the picture of General dc Gatille. Obviously this must be a heavy blow to the pride of the betrayers of France, but it is cncotiraging news for us. The spirit of France is not dead but Only awaits the oppor- tunity to rise again. 1-. EDITORIAL NOTES —. The reference to the “Ottawa Times-Gazette" in Saturday's issue should have read “Oshawa lhies-Gazcttc." w s at a A gift of tin-ware will soon be more valuable than one of silverware; and a discarded tire worth almost its weight in gold. 1F i! I i All ranks of the Canadian \\'oinen's Artuy Corps are permitted to wear the “Canada” badge. TllC personnel of the C.\\’.A.C. is enlisted for scr- vice overseas as well as in Canada. I I i‘ ‘I Homemakers are urged not to waste paper. The typical family may save about a pound of waste paper a day, we are told. Cnfortttnately, here no- body knows what to do with it when the trouble has been taken to save it. is it it it ;\ penny a wet-k is contributed by catch of one hundred volunteer ltclpcrs in tlr: Y. M, C. A. Club at Chichester, England. The money thus donated is used to purchase current magazines and news- papers for the troops visiug the club. it i its i The sympathy of all our citizens will be extend- ed to His Worship Mayor Holman and family in the great loss they have stistained by the death of hlrs. Holman. A lady of charming personality, active in all good works and devoted to her home and social duties, her life was rich in the things which make for precious memories, I? it k It 1n “lashingtou it is stated Canada, the United States and Britain have set up a new joint board to purchase and allocate raw tilaterials required for wartime production. The board has been em- powered to regard the United States and Canada as one territory-not two nations. lt would seem logical that if Canada and the United States are to work as a unit in allocation of materials, some similar hand-in-glove arrangement for control of the armed forces might be brought about. Uni- fied command might be the method vised. ‘Y ‘F if >l< No grain whiskey is permitted in Britain these days, and the manufacture of malt whiskey has been cut another ten per cent. As there was a 30 per cent cut in I931), this means a 40 per cent rc- duction in malt output. Pcrltaps the selling dif- ference will be ntadc up by a 40% (liltition, ln the U. S. A. molasses has been prohibited in the manufacture of rum; goodness knows what other by-product of the sugar cane will or can be used in Porto Rico and elsewhere. i‘ 1|‘ it * For what is believed the first time in legislative history in Canada-—and possibly in the British Empire-women moved and seconded the address in reply to the speech from the throne zit the sec- ond session of the 20th British Columbia Legisla- ture on lliursdrcv. Mrs. Nancy llotlgcs, Liberal member for Victoria moved the address and Mrs. Tilly Rolston, Conservative member for Van- couver-Point Grey, seconded. Both were elected for the first time in the provincial election last October 2t. >i< is at x Of ititerest to dairy producers is an announce- ment from the Dairy Products Board that cheese stocks in storage in the two central provinces on 1<cbruary' I this ycar would be subject to its mark- eting control. Restrictive incastircs have. bccn made unnecessary by the substantial increase in the production of cheese in recent wecks_ A short time ago the board had issued an order restricting the amount of Cheddar cheese any one could hold ill Ufifllllbcr I lllSt yfill’ and January 1 this year, the purpose being to etistirc a wider distribution, A larger output front the factories is adjusting that situation, m n- : n- Joscph Jacques Ccsairc Joffre, hlarsltal of France, born this date, i852; (listinguishcd for his simplicity of character and life, alertness and cleariicss of mind, and organizing power; in tlze last Lircat War exhibited combination of intuition and reflection. and took a wide outlook, without common sense; known by his soldiers as "(irand- pcrc"; was commaitdcr-in-chief of French Army and litirope seemed to be in dircst peril, he was the one man who remained cool and uuflurvicd and he ipiictly orgimizt-il the “tniraclc of the .\I:1i'tic"; dillcrcnt reasons are given for the rc- treat of the Germans, but nothing can rob Joffre of his glory as “the man of the Marne.” He visited U. S. A. with Viviani and others on a spec- ial mission in I917 which helped towards consolid- IIOTES BY TllE WAY The problem ol supplyln: ade- quate tools for the fignuzig forces is nst new V? the Brlilsn. Tne mn- don Economist reports the fallow- tn; desperaze dlspatah from 1-0“! Eltfmglwm. Admiral, Ln the thlck of the battle with the Grand Fleet of Spam The date, 158B: "Slr. for the love of God and cur country, let us have with scnie speed some great shot sent us of all bigness; for thls service will continue 1on8; and some powder wtrn u." not much difference between this message and that. o1 Lord Got-Vs: “The sit- uatlon as regards equipment"... caused me serious ml5§lVlll8S There was a shortage c! almost every kind of nmznunftfon." —Pf- nattcial Post. The German lnfcntlons regard- ing the future of iue Netherlands ltave bee; cryptic. Now an lu- dependent existence. of course within Hitler's new order, was pre- dicted; then the impression gained ground that 1t was intended to in- corporate the N€.El€l‘l£t'.‘.d5 in the German Reich. Protagonist of the iucorpaticn idea ivas a small grcup under the leadership of a Eurasian, van Rappard. This party had spec- ial German Protection. As condi- tions in Eastern Etircpe and ln oo- cupled Western Europe become more difficult. for the Germans. this group was pushed more into the background. A {cw months ago they were ordered to dl=band and to join Mussert/s National-Socialist movement. Mussert. weak and valn, who had slowly ccme for- ward under tfne Germans as the Dutch "Puehrev," n?'\v assumes more and more the airs oi a par- san o-f importance. He believes he has a chance of officially be- coming the Netherlands‘ Qulsllng During the last few weeks the Ger- mans have brcclalrned that the Government tn London must. be rlisowncd and that a new Govern- tnent- must be formed l:i the Netherlands under Mussert. The question ts whether the Germans will dare to do this. They expose themselves to the danger that the civll servants will not. be prepared to demonstrate their allegiance to Mussert. The Germans probably DPPIEI‘ to avoid sticli a conflict. Up t-o the present they have been more careful ln the Netherlands than tn all other countries. — M. Van Blankensteln fri The Spectator (London). The process of preserving food- sl-uffs by canning L; much older- than l; generally thought. The tum of Donkin and Hall, for instance, was supplying a variety or such fonds for the navy as early as 18M, t6 311d Sll‘ Josciplt Hall, [he than ppesl. dent of the Royal society. refers ln a testimonial to the firm to me nutritlous qualities of their "em- balmed provisions." One of this film's "varieties" was soup and boullll. Hence "bully beef." It ls Sllrpflfililt; to learn of the excellent quality of these tinned foocs after many years of preservation. For example. H. M. S. Blonde carried supplies of tinned meat during a, South Sea Voyage of exploration whlrli began 1n 1826. ‘Twenty steal-s later some students of Guy's h“, pita! made a meal of the contents 0f one of the tins A still more re- markable case is that. of the tinned goods carried by H.M.S. Fury while on a voyage ln the Arctic lii the year 1825. The Fury was lust, but srmc oif her tinned stores were fcund on the ice by members of a later expedition About 1913 w.“ or the fins-some 90 years old —\vere opened and found to contain pea 501m and beef respectively. Same bald Dfflfms made a meal cf the contents and were non-e the worse. Tin-openers do not seem to have been supplied 1n the early days. QZlO manufacturer gave lnstrtic- trons on the label that the t-ln should bs- opened by cutting away the W!) with hammer and chisel.- Mancltester Guardian. Joint War Prnductlon committees of Canada and the United States have rccommened to their respec- tlve ‘Governments that the full pru- ducttve facilities and raw materials be thrown trim a. ccmmon pool to carry on the war. They rectum. mend also: "Lleglslatlve and ad- ministrative bal‘l'l€l'5, including tar. tfls, import. duties, customs and other regulations or restrictions of any character svltlch prohibits, prevent, delay of otherwise lmpede the free flow of necessary munl- tloris and war supplies between the two countries should be suspended 0r otherwise eliminated for the duration of the war." To this the Canadian pecple will say "Amen" overwhelmingly. This is no time to be thinking tn temm of trade bar- riers between this country and any of its allles, and least of all. the particular circumstances being what they are, between Canada and the United States. It ought to b: as easy to move war mater-tab be- tween the United States and Con- Bda as between Quebec and On- tarts or New York State and the State of Michigan. Red tape, rag- lllfllllJllg or rules 0f ally klpd which . m» tuiziwa llnttrc, being ilbscsst-il by details; remarkable for sound impede war effort should be ruth- lessly out away. All cf these tnngs will come back rlt might be a good thing lf a lot of them never came lit .\lr. Churchill's lik- from outbreak until December 1916; while France backl lf we need them when the war ls over, but whlle we are flight- lng for our very llves thiuzht about purely psacetlme regultsttzris anal ideas are little better innn lumrv For the duration of the war the line between Canafa and the United States must. be a purely 1m. agtnary llne. _. Ottawa Journal. A sehnol lad at homo, who listen- tvlll_\' {l lt . h .-'>l't‘ .\lr. liurcliill stepped iiting public upifliutl behind the Allied cause. f: l: llllficgulbhtlilTecepum‘ a‘ o“ 11,11" lb" be ~<l~_ lb v When Mr. * * * * itiiii- iififimrziifiirtrielill-lcltiailinlltls£2; Lliiiii t l ‘llflfll i< going well. he Ilon. Mr. Ralston has approved a temporary lallnevfiljllrrgng ‘llawthm Ygumsulime -»; _ ~.i.- . , _- __ -- ~ ', vr We rcug esame Y. p)“ l v mg lll\ alt foot a plan forsclcction ‘and pitparatory training of again?’ It was a most apt observa. llhf- 1_ U“ lltiu-r‘ 0i (sotll- l'rctich-Lztniitlian civilian candidates fur comlnis- "m" simflmlnll ,0" Wllwll 870W"- tltttlh. lt- s ‘ ~=i v ~ i : d .~i'vi-r:tl times. sinus in the Czttiiidizul (Active) Arm)’ The new tloxstqnrlngtheSligilhurvie hieliifir blfli/n . _ _ . e Snub For Vichy ~ i-f the Yidby- regiiii; can In i'1.~t'll .\izir>h.'il Ptlillll It: Kilt‘ litwvplt‘ Of lllC Ull- t- details of this tnacabvc w‘. r111 it“if>‘.\ll and they rqvml l .i:t- ruining more and \t\i|_\' regime in its truc morale and inakc '4 l public l. 'l ill-ll a special de- t1'- '> |l'i*1'll\llll' the pictures.’ easier to put nver,| ". bid a bzilch of portrailsf .i ~. llt lit will ti; schools, basic and Cadet ‘vings m 5L Icrumc. plan is not a substitute for promotion of French- Canatlian soldiers from the ranks in the ordinary itianncr btit a supplement to increase the number of French-Cztiiailiaii officers. The scheme pro- vides for cnlistnlrnt of SPCCl-‘llly selected civilian ciiniliilzitcs lllltl the active or reserve army as pri- rate soldiers to he posted to a special wing of the Ilasic lnfantryi 'l'rainitig Centre at Si. Jerome for four weeks basic training. On successful com- |tif'llflll of this lizisic training, catidiilates will be lowed Napoleon given the SlillllS of cadet and will be pits-ted to a cadet wing at St. Jerome for a special preparatory cadet course 0f four weeks. When the cadet ritiiting is completed they will be scut to the Of- ‘t-rs" 'l‘raiiiing (Ti-titre at Brock-ville, to take the n accommodate for) cimrlidalt-s in each (if the su gpndflfon cf wcrld convulsion. again thromzh such a, per-mt as ls one? Wtll the world ever Wt back to lie old nomnil easy- kolng self? Well, there was that Napoleonic period. and the cu m‘. tiatltig Battle of Warm-lot; In urcipcrtlon. the people of England l" lhflre times went. through what l-he people cf the world are now having. The world was little then, M crmnai-ed lo the present. The important thing. however, 1s ma; in!) Years. virtually of peace fol. In Europe, except- ing for the Wai- ln Crimea. It ls first about. safe to assume that, Fficr this struzgle Ls eluded and the drastic perkd of m-adfustlment 8011c thraugh. the old world will Wile tlvwn Rlwfn. ‘It always has, It ts also safe to assume and can . " . ._ _ . . tel ': rigular qualifying (muse. l'ltl\ll.\l0ll is being lnflllg :,,,1,.,r€:1;c:; Y§‘§§’m§°'ghlfifttil':rl- If)’: ch times as the present. It L; a Catharine; Standard THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAbI JANUARY 12. 1942 PUBLIC FORUM nu cum; u one: III III flljqul-Ig- b; oorrupondntn 0| qnltlnno 0| Interns. The Ohuhmntawn Gurltun don ll" manually undone m opinion: a! ocrnlvildoltt HUNTING HUNGABIANS Str:-—I wish to call your atten- tlon and the attention of the Pub- llc to the fact. that. Hungarlfln part-ridges have been ruthlessly shot, on the snow. We are anxious to secure the names of persons guilty of such l misdemeanor. The well populated with these blrds if they were pruperly preserved. I giéfipt mg“ x6e liavfirbéegxinoffereedlzs Is - a D8 "l" ' soctatton; abroad but we refused w sell piem flllllh the ltlltvtlé "wt W1‘ . iu rlze rem. Pevllieafel’ gisdkigg school teachers. Women's Institutes, etc.. to f0- operate with us by uslns their K1- fllleflfie to protect time bim- Anyone knowtrig of these birds being shot will kindly lnfor-m us and we will treat the matter as confidential and sec that the RC. MP. enforce the law. I am, sir. etc.. w. n. DENNIS mnlster of Asriculture “Incompetent” (Ralph Ingersoll, ln PM, NewYorlv It Pas been tune days since ex- Col. Ltndberglt re-voluntleered his services to the U. 8.. Armv. What. depresses me ls not ‘his effrontety, but the obvious difficulty ourpqti- vrvnmcn‘ has had in flit-idiot! what. to do about it. W119 is it in the Army who finds it difficult to give him an honest answer? Why mould 1t have taken moxe than nine minutes to write hlm a straightforward note rejeczfng his services-such n note as: Dear Mr. Lumber-ch: The offer of your services to the U. 5.. Army Afr Corps ts noted. We have considered it carefully. We realize that. tn this crisis we cun- nut afford to overlook a Single HS- set tn the war we was? against o0!‘ enemies. It is. therefore, with _i'cnl regret. that we reject your applica- tfon. The reasons for tlils rejection are: We first considered whether we could make use of you as a combat pllgl, but the records show yo! are over age. We next tousldercd YOU H5 E technical adviser. But. the records show that as a technical adviser on military aviation you are incompe- n . In 193B you reported that the British couldn't handle the Luft- waffe. You rendered llllS‘ react": after- spenduig some tltuc in G21‘- many studying the Luftwaffe ‘and its equipment, and later visiting fihe Rcrval Air Force and familiar- izing yourself with the Hurricane and me spitfirc. Subsequent events proved your judgment. wltolly 1n error. During the same year you visied the soviet Union and reported that the Russian Air Force was even lass pfepflvgd to cone with the Luftwaffe than the British. Sub- sequent evctiLs have proved V0111‘ Judgement grossly itiaecuratc. Please believe I; when we say we are not joining with your poll- tzlcal opponents tn questioning! yqm- loynltyu-or your tuotives~fn rrevolunteerltig. Your patrzotlsm would have bten a pertinent sub- ject for us to discuss only had we qlnsiaei-eu you otherwise qitall- fled. Our rejection of your applica- tion is based solely 0n Y0"? 111mm‘ pebence for the only role you are now qualified to fill, that of adviser on military aeronautics. Rostrectftllly, The Roosevelt Mind (By Samuel Grafton in the Chicago Sun). There are. nu mv desk. the 1'01"‘ new volumes of "The Publlc Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. ilzoctisevgti" To lest! lllmllfgbll s o mpreme once m re" .1 the special quality of the Presl- dent's mind; its taste for il 1e specific. In vprlvttte converssithotl MI‘- Rooeevelt. ls snld to be a determin- ed Rllccdotnllst. one can tinder- stand this. He ls a kind of anecdo- ballst. in his public statements too. In the course of one press confer- ence the hitherto private trans- gflpfg or manv of wliteli are now printed here for the first time) he will run through the case of Mr. Justice Black; the sujects t0 be taken up at a special session of Congress; Wall Street's love for the phrase "when. as. and lf": the difference between a planning agency; the firm that crops are better now (and tlils 1s October 6. 193D than ln 1935, “which was not a serious drouth year"; an explan- ation that 1t ls perfectlv sensible to reduce croos while bringing new land into cultvntlon, lt‘ the reduc- tion takes place on prior lflflflj 3 little story iibotit a drive he took thrown exhausted ttplnnd soil, and how the farmers on _tt should be transferred to the Boise Vallq. to grow "small stuff. garden crops like onfons..; the fact that farmers lose interest ln "the iicrfctillttral question" when crops are girod; Supreme Cotirt reform: the anti- lvnchlmr b‘ll: the "ouarantlitc the aggreszo " idea. He will bring many of these topics up himself. embel- lleltlng his treatment with small stories (“I safd to Jlmmfe .. ..") and prtvate jokes with remrtiers known to him. IL reads, in some ways, like n "stream of consciousness’ chapter by Sinclair Lewis, tulcy and con- erte. and the reporters are rarely fobbed off with viurue. moraltstlc statements. One recalls the csfton- wood conferences with Calvin- C-a Hze. remote austere. ending -——_, ._}———________.______s-l——-——--— 57min" Ill. TllE TIE Sh N! lniunblo- . , rhfly-lowlnvihlity ,5 , -lowor Ipiih. S um m mined - rlur hurled ma" . . f‘ loop. Huadaeho, lncheha, luuitullo and other signs of holly liidmyl disappeared. n: Budd's Kidney Pills Province u ' t wonos OF , CHALLENGE A Thought For A People “W0 must prepare to fact ,t.he winter of gloom which may lle ahead of us. I am not under the delusion that. this war will end soon. We have i A A Day At Wu- n. hard road ahead of us. But a at reward llu at. tho en ." —- Hon. J. Arthur Mat- E hewson. 1 IN THESE OUR. WINTER. DAY‘ In these our wlnter days Death's lron tongue 1S glib Numblng with fear all flesh upon A fiery-hearted globe. An age once green Ls buried. Numbered the hour; of light; Blood-red across the snow 0111‘ S“! Still trails his faint. retreat. Spring tllrou h death's lron guard Her mllllon bilades shal-l thrust: Love that was sleeping, not extinct. 'll'1l‘C\V ofl" the nightmare crust. Eyes. though not ours. shall see s y-hlgh a signal flame. The stin returned to power above A world, but not the same _C. Day Lev-ls. An Itlnsent Message (Monetary Times) The ‘nest; word that Mr. Macken- ze King could have sent to the C; radian brigade at Hottg Kong is that the country had abandoned all distiniction between service tn Canada and service nnywhem in tre world. _ _ What, an adtulsstotr of lncpftttide rm- Mr, King and those he keeps around litm, to quibble over want the position or this country ought to be ln using its man poyrer here or anywhere. ff by s0 Q0111! ll 15 going to help defeat Hlllflr- A lot of lnatie phrases come from the Prime Mll\l5l(‘l' which IHllHlL make ‘Jr's country look IlPCllV Elvis‘ before men like Roosevelt tint. Wllkle, Hull, Stimson and Iinorr. Churchill, no doubt, has his own opinions. o unltiflfl 5mm“ Acco Spwie1-P“'P°‘° Disburwmefim‘ ~ LEQBIIZTrSnO- first; 2:131? '° Ltfiislllilli - s Sale! u" Travellers’ letters of Cwdi" couEcTtoNFr-o“ 0mm. pountl‘ . a vi This Bank s sere o your actwfi "5 (‘liarlollefoivn Montacua Summrrsldc N CURRENT . Acfififit for i runsacuonfl and P ice -' Builil for Tomorrow ¢onI||\::“Y _ ‘a gfitelen efiofl 9'“. xssi-For 5”“ afe-kwlfi“ (1 Exchallfle" TRAV - REMVCTANCE: 311m, u...“ of CICdIIa Orders 8"choques_ r s ext-oar AND it"? - Baum P” a1 ca, are avfl th NOVA SCOTIA ssrn. tan-oven A CENTURY or aamtmo IXPERIENCI BRANCHES IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Albany Olean- 50 “call manor‘! d |° g“ IIIQIP q ts u vilul will b9 fl" ‘Ewqf PIQQIQ“ a1 Buolnfll Household enond (includifll flflgg and g __ Purchased: a ruuo5-M°"°Y ' l ERVlCES~Commercta ilablo w w" “"1 m win be goelconted. Kcnsing Lon Victoria Mum finally tn slateinettts by a Illsml- bodied “While House Sl?°k‘-"l1l\n ' the difference is that between n man who loves the real wo d. 11$ sounds, its tastes. its colorii its l‘"ll to cxtiirtiti to retina-tern r liitticr; iiri- lturri up, lt ' u 5mell5' and a man living in a LiSs-z not. intend to act ls the one who wsrld" made up out of h‘s otvn needs the vague and Luishlng DATA- limd, llvinrz ln it in terror "sf rea- lity poke its head in at ‘he (WW “""‘“‘" solve day and snoll his flll"l‘tt0-ll‘i. This love for the speclfc - plains n great deal in Mr. Roe.‘- velL. Intcllectitals have wondered somevmes how. Willi f1 "m1," f0 rpm» to mo evcnvrlav tmdmnsyftnd- it", Mr. Roosevelt has lwen a i-e in s‘e:1l‘ throttgli waters so deep.‘ t" reforms so {Ifffll- T7"? l‘““""' is that; no other klnd of mind Pilllfl have done it. The impms. of a specific situa- mw 5-... l-leprpgc-slon on the farms. sq s}; pvt-at rind immediate i010" i. . . _ , him that llf.‘ moves to ritcct l»; (ft.- mcqt, Tntwtotru of snelrrtsotitn.‘ ln nianv fields has ndrleJ tin p pOllCY. but the responses to fpctiri or "snot" situations came aefoye the pqllqv, Mr. Roosevelt, the real world, docs not nald .:‘l_ osophlc excuses for action, re .cc .. EXAMINATION Fitting and Sluaplyfng Glasses ll. J. MABON OPTOMETRIST Montague. P. E. l. om “Hill's: to u. i2 A. M. w z u» s r. tu. Holidays etc- by apn°|"""\'"‘ Office Connected with DRUGSTORE Professional Bards McLEOD 8. BENTLEY w. a. aaxustt. K. c. .1. A. stsnrutv K. c. c. F. urzxruzv. LLB. Barristers and Attorneys-at- Llw MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street l-llbrrell n. r. ARCHIBALD Chartered Accountant! Eastern Trull Bulldln] Charlottetown _L€—O_iif M. ALBAN FARMER B.A., LLB. BAIIRISTER, BOLICITOR ETU. Canadian dank of Commerce Bldl. MONEY T0 LOAN. zfirrvi/Tmifiiesdfi‘: BARRISTEIL BOLICITUR. ETC- Mnncy l0 Lnnn Collrrllnnl Office: 90 Great George Street. EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST New LOCIIIIIII Corner Kent and Queen Hts Opposite Rh’: Grocery Evenings By Appointments Phone Residence 1013. n:mzczv<=z'c'ezzu'c=c's-s1ziz-z-s-z-g-gi u. t l..l\lll',{ it) add four giidrit’: {f I prn )l'fl{lll5 about how litrcl It. i to " be hiirrl up. The President. who lrsioes g I P! lrraphs of explrinigL b‘ ‘f Everv person who ls trnuli» , led wlth gas In the slnnutcv‘. r and bowels should got n bottle l of "Pr. Evan's Stomach Mix- ; flirt.’ and sec how quickly I\ J will relieve nll distressing U symptoms. ll. also jwotuotvs the furv- a p tinniil activity of the sfoittiirlt. y y assists digest on and improves a i1 the appetite. Recommended i 5 for Indigestion. Dyspepsia. a , Sour Stomach, Heartburn, iitc. g ,5 Don't delay. Order your bot- ' a tle today. Price 85c DOUIE. ' ll - &%. __ Li; AMMONIATED ,4 BRONCHIAL COMPOUND 5 Relieves acute Bronchitis. v Slmsmorlic Group, Bronchial Catarrh, Coughs and Colds. Price 50c bottle. COD LIVER OIL For Infants and growing Y E Q ahlldren. There ls nnfhlng , you can glve children who arc u lnltldlnttidntir) be ‘gllckcLvf tlrit It’ Vflll are havlm! symptoms Their bbncs nhltl hudsltersciifiiiiiici‘ o! straln - headaches. ma! cycsutlr dizzint-ss'- consult 1 "COD LIVER OIL" “m” “h Babies lhrlve on u. n i, mi. “At vngr service‘ wig: year; $21521? ltlpv thtlpilhndles. ltut oxm- rnre an a orou - u er must cm- relritt-tittn sr-rvlcc. g tiytln the right pmpnrllfln ill Cull In and discus: Your bigsmslilllniilig dlfrllmmes- flcally tested and consequently reliable and effective, 6. F. llutcheson 1|“; Twp M35 F. o. ntrrcnrzson "9 Great Gltflrge Street o. r. nurctnzson m" °"1'~'" film- Fromm Attention l’ ‘N And You Get REAL VALUE ‘Vhen you buy a fig of 7 IIIGKEY S TWIST First h: Value First in Quality Tobacco Bu. Ltd. flharlottetown k _J