fibillltttifliitlvili suitiinuit ‘and frankness on the part of Ottawa in the way ' positions, when the still more vital question of . _ flsllest extent the home production of food, to dhing possible to provide iind distribute food ' ford‘ to pay and to maintain and extend the , ritngements were being made to implement this ‘Hg following ‘statement: , are ‘that the litre- Tlli Hernia; Dull! Ol- uetis. UGI. W Qllfllnl I. MOLIIO Vseo-Presldeht: 'J. I». lnruesL VJ l. Secretary: Liest. Col. l). it lhelinnen. 0.8.0. filter uni Managing Director: J. l. tl, FJJ. AIeol-sle Editors: Frank wnsu uni um. in L Burnett momma. tun Active ties-vise; "The Strongest Memory u Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ ‘ It. 1946 Other Other tFenndee in III) -__.__ Times, Mannersl in January, 1935, the present Premier of Nova Scotia, speaking of the "Conservative "New Deal" program of that day, said, "Be- fore .\lr. Liciiiictt puts in reform measures af- fecting the provinces, he should consult them. 1t is not fair that he should dangle legislatioli before the provinces with the idea that public opinion will force them in line, without respect to their individual needs." Similarly, in i937, the pirscnt Canadian Prime Minister declared that any alteration of our constitution could only be undertaken as I result of united public opinion. “Now," laments the Halifax Chronicle, (Liberal), “Ottawa has abandoned the stand- point which only it few years ago seemed t0 be of paramount importance. Where we once saw the Rowtlléiirois Commission diligently studying the constitution over a number of years and coming to measured conclusions, to- day those conclusions are swept aside as rela- tively unimportant, and in the new Dominion proposals being promoted from Ottawa, only the financial aspect of our affairs is being highlighted. “Even here old accepted theories are cast aside. lt used to be held that if financial as- sistance were to be granted to individual prov- inces it shotild be so granted according to their individual needs. Today all provinces, it is suggested, shall be subsidized on a flat rate without any reference to local circumstances or local necessities and disadvantages. Obvi- ously, the scheme which might suit Ontario is not necessarily going to be acceptable in Brit- ish Columbia or the Maritimes. “There has been a shocking lack of candor in which the new proposals have been set for- ward. The provinces are being invited to give their prime‘ attention to a set of financial pro- the constitutional changes involved in the ex- pected deal is ignored. Under the veil of the need for reconstruction and for social secur- ity, we are being "inveigled into undoing the very fabric of federation." This is strong language from a Liberal Party newspaper. Perhaps the case is not as the Cliroitirlc fears. At any rate, let us hope that the question of fiscal need. which is the all- important one so far as the Maritimes are con- cerned, will no: be forgotten. It was the basis of the Sirois report and Maritime representa- tives should insist that it be retained as a basis of Federal policy. Where Is The Tariff Board The Toronto Iiinaiicial Post makes a good point when it says that the Government could have saved itself a good deal of embarrassment if it had had itstTziriff Board in operation be- fore it put into its budget those increased dut- ies on stccl tubing. iliainontls and.Diescl eng- ines, That—appraisal of applications for tar- iff increases—v:as what the Tariff Board was created for. At the moment, the Tariff Board is in dis- use: forgotten. This, during the war. was ex- cusable; the tariff issue was not then import- ant, and the Tariff Board chairman, Mr. Hec- tor MacKinnon, was‘ on other duties. Today, however, businessmen are trying to plan for the future, ltave a right to know what sort of tariff world thev'intist plan for. Certainly they can't plan with nnicli certainty if they are left in the dark regarding the Government's tariff pglicies, or are without a (iinverntnent agency o. any kind to examine tariff proposals and give. decisions. - O U. K. Long-Term Food Policy lllVlllC‘ King's speech at the opening of i.he present session of the United Kingdom Par- liament" it was announced that it would be the policy-of the tiovcrinncnt to develop to the ‘promote l healthy fishing industry. to do every? to the people at prices which the latter can af- new food services for workers, mothers and “children established during the war. In reply to’ e, Parliamentary question asking what ar- Wllfliiv the lvlii-ister of Food, Sir Ben Smitli, out. will take place." tawa for the momentous Conference, with him his strong, silent fidus Achates, in the earnest hope and expectation of making an ef- fective impress-Ion on the delegates frotn the other provinces and the Dominion. heroism, “women and Edinburgh ET/Cllfllf] Dispatch reports that, at a local convention, a Leeds, Yorkshire, lady urg- ed: ing the atomic bomb be put into making child- birth easier." ‘ palitics was admitted? i‘ i pricesaiid, in accordance with the recommenda- tions of the United and Agriculture held at the-responsibility for raising the standard of nutrition of the people. government's objective to remove as rapidly as Nations Conference on Food Hot Springs in i943, While it will be the possible all controls which, with the passing of shortages of supply, labour and materials, operate merely as restrictions on consumers, traders and producers without contributing to a positive long term food policy, they will re- tain and adaptthose controls which are neces- sary to the carrying out of such a policy in re- gar-d to all those foods which play an important part in the nation's diet. The Government will undertake such responsibility in respect of pro- curement, distribution and sale as is necessary to ensure that adequate supplies are available at reasonable prices and to implement such iii- lei-national agreements on commercial and vom- niodity policy as may be concluded. The in- terest ol the consumer will be protected. The needs of special classes will be provided for. The position of the Home producer in producing the goods required by the nation from home sources will be safeguarded. The trader who renders the community a necessary service will receive a fair reward. It would be wrong to assume that there will be an automatic return to all the conditions which existed before the war. Subiect to the general principles already indicated" the methods necessary for achieving the Governments long term food policy will be considered in ‘relation to each foodstuff separately and detailed plans will be worked Consultation with non-official interests -EDITORIAL NOTES- "Despite modern inventions, the news- paper remains and will remain for some time to come the best medium to guide public opin- i0n."—Most Rev. Norbert Robichatid, bishop of Moncton. I A reli- U O i Premier Walter Jones has gone to Ot- taking I I i l and The As usual with British consideration children first.” "That the energy which goes iuto inak- iii! Government liability for municipal taxa- tion is now the live question being discussed by Maritime members at Ottawa. It is long since the C. N. R. agreed to pay $40,000 per annum for that purpose here. What became of the money, and why was not the agitation kept up once the right of the claim of the inunici- Ii 1k Tomorrow is t-he last Sunday of November which has lived up to its old-time reputation given it by Tom Hood: No warmth, no cheerfulness, no ease,—— No comfortable feel in any member- No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees, No fritits, no flowers, no leaves, no buds, --Novetnber. w t- e e Nova Scotias beer quota has been in- creased from two to three dozen quarts a month, A. S. Mahon, chief commissioner of the Nova Scotia Liquor Commission, has an- nounced. Under present allotments Nova Sco- tians may receive montlilyfotir quarts of gin, or two quarts of other spirits, or four bottles of Canadian wine, or two quarts of imported wine. s it: U. S. - U. K. negotiations, especially con- cerning tariffs, are the real test of whether na- tions are to co-operate or not. The vital ques- tion is whether the U. S. proposes to make a reduction intariffs all around or not. If not, all the talk of co-operation is so much “bnnk." A loan to Britain is, as the British have pointed out, no solution to this problem, especially if it be accompanied by a condition that Britain may not arrange trade treaties with even the other nations of the Commonwealth. it it e t i! john Knox, Scottish ecclesiastic, died this date i572; unequalled as a social reformer. coni- bining both ecclesiastical and political policies to suit the obiects and conditions of the then period in Scotland, inaugurating more thorough- going changes and discipline than hitherto ex- perienced in the political and religious history of that country; he could not be considered s stipporter of wonfcirs suffrage: “I have learn- cd to call wickedness by its own terms: a fii! i1 fig and a spade a spade. . . . Nature doth paint women to be weak, frail, impatient, feeble and foolish; and experience bath declared them’ to be unconstant, variable, cruel, and lacking the spirit of counsel." i ¥ y! Handling the greatest amount of grain in , ‘ “During the war the Government exercised eemrol over the procurement. distribution and pflgygf most foods. This was necessary to en- " supplies available were equitably U’, mg whole community and used to‘ Jthe Jiealth and vigour of the people fisdvantsge. The Ministry of Food been the department responsible forf ‘ihle-"mliey- will be retained as a pgnmnent department of govern-I fond shortages continue: tht l t’ food control and rationing continued. The Govern“ not] ‘policvss was indicated ' 1t the opening of tliel positive measures‘ bl shortages. nee-l ' ‘ eiii accept the, hsdequate sup-l ere available, .5! reasonable its history in the race against famine in Europe, the Canadian Pacific Railway is gearing its system to utilize West Saint john, N.B., in place of Montreal as its main eastern outlet for the winter. Bridges along Canadian Pacific lines east of Montreal have been strengthened to carry heavier locomotives and thus speed up traffic to the New Brunswick port. Since the beginning of the year, grain elevators at West Saint lohn have been delivering their load to ships at the rate of 2,400,000 bushels a month. As shipping is diverted to the port fiom Mont- real with the freeze-up approaching, the rate is expected tn become still greater. Much of the l m.‘ "Alf "l grain for West Saint john will be,routed along Canadian Pacific. lines from Port MeNicgll, Ontario. Since the beginning of August the, C. P. R. has carried 20.000000 bushels of grain for Europe from the Geogfan Bay port, 6,000,- 000 more tlisnst the peme dste in i944, a peek _ rnr - cnantorrrrown c‘ Notes syn. Way From figure; offered It Ottawa es estimated future costs of the Alaska. Highway. s feir inference is that. it Wlll be paved with sold.- lotclisnge. . Two lineis new being built in Britain will otrry helicopters to fly off mall and urgent freight, as they near port, re rts the London Dally Express. e United King- dom aircraft industry is giving s great. deal of attention to hell- copeer developmenta-Ottawa Clti. zen. Hard in fathom ls the fellow who throws old tin cans, bottles and other refuse along the highways. Evidently tossed out from moving cars, these unsightly accumula- tions show up all too often along main roads and country byways. This type of person needs to have impressed upon hlm the fact. that orderliness ls a first rule of beauty. —Kltchener Record. ' Brigadier A. W. F. Mallaby, com- mander of the 49th Indian Infan- try Brigade in Java, was murdered by natives while he was arranging tails of a ceasefire order. Is this the kind of thanks the Indo. neslsn "republicans" offer those who intervened tn friendly fashion in behalf of law and order? -If so, they can expect a painfully un- friendly reaction. Brantford Ex- posltor. The Brltls‘ began evncuatln; 50.. 000 children from Berlin last week to rural localities where they will have a better chance of surviving the Winter. The move-called “Op- eration Stork"—greatly excited the many Germans who never tire of speculating on when the Anglo- Americans are going to fight the Russians. Now, they whispered: “See, the war against Russia is about to begin. The British always evacuate children just before a war startsP-Newsweek Magazine. Early this year e new series of Greenland stain s were issued, and phllntellsts al over the world eagerly bought up copies of the new issues. Now Danish papers ask, who were the sponsors of these stamps, and who made the draw- ings? says scandlnavlan News. Ap- parently the Danish ‘bover-nment was not aware of their issuance and Danish papers point to mis- takes in the pictures, such as, for instance. on the 30_ore stamp the dog team is a drawing of cams as used by C"_'l3£ll8I'I Eskimos and not. used by Greenland at. all. Who were the sponsors? In Britain. many new industries have been created through the pro- cessing of coal. The by.product.s include 2,000 made from coal tar -coal tar dyes; medical supplies including as irln, local anaesthetics, modern an eptlcs; perfumes, es- sences and flayorlngs; plastic ar- ticles of many kinds; ammonia and argrtculturtil fertilizer. While Brit- ain has been obtaining all this wealth from coal through diligent research, Canadian coal remains ln its primeval condition. with lit. tle or nothing done to extract its hidden values. — Winnipeg Free Press. Last, your the export of Italian honey across the Swiss border was prohibited, niuch to the pain of a Swiss trader. This trader manag- ed to get a message to his Italian supplier and in response, according to Lhc Geneva corresptmdent 0t The London Times, the Italian acts of honey were brought, close the frontier and open. ‘Iihereupon the Swiss trader moved his beehtves to a point across the border from the honey pots and let his bees do the rest. The busy little Swiss bees are credited with bringing 20o ounds of Italian honey across t e border duty-free 1n three days. Sweet. are the uses of ingenuity, too.-—New York Sun. Jade, like the other sembprec- ious stones, is cut to shape by means of sawing. dri lrig or grind- ing. and for this preparation the craftsman uses drills. etc, actual.- ed by a foot treadle. His tools have to be fed continuously a paste con. slsting of water and fine sand, The hnrdness of jade makes this tech- nique essential, and thus it. ls the tools which remain fixed and the CSN/lrfrlg which is turned as requir- ed. e carver does not clamp down a rough piece of ade and proceed towork upon it; e clamps down his tools and brings the jade block to them, a series of op- erations which demand the utmost nicety of judgment and sklll.-C~1n- adlan Mining Journal. A short time n90 s Reuters des- pateh from Germany reported that. o. special Allied Commission had ut Hitler's "Meln Knmpf" on the lst of publications banned to (lar- man renders. Such it move ls stu- ldly dangerous. e war was ought to insure freedom. not. impose censorship. The Nazi themselves once set a futile ex- ample in banning and burning books, and the NRZls were bv nn means the first, to make fools of themselves in this mtiriner. _The mere fact. that Hitler's rambling, often incoherent. book is prohibit. ed, or put on n sort. of index ex- puratztorieus. will make it, for many people, n “must? volume to be sec- ured rind rend at. any price. That is the simply psychology of all book-banning; which thus defeat their very purpose-Brantford Ex- positor. A picturesque flsure in Bulllfll is Georgi Dlmltrov. who was plac- ed on trial for his life in Germany on the charse of complicity in the R/elchsta fire. He bessn work as s printer. became lender of rinterii’ union.» and rose steadily n the ranks of organized labor says The Toronto Bier. Ha join the Communists end moved to Ger. man, When the Nests set the Reie tag fire and started s num- ber at fraudulent trials of labor lenders, Dimitrnv was one of the H; boreititlself well dur- isi and mlde e lsushlns rinl. This-was in i938. Dlmltrov was ulttetE. Afiier his release Dimitrov ouudthimstii in peril as en exile with no glue to so. Bo lenses he ms in rm“! his life was» etsdsneemi- Nickel Mushsnov, the _ , refused the urgent. N! iv. and [tamed , Dtmttrov, wboiwpu meted for men! Yuri PUBLIC FORUM This column is on» ,1" union by w!" questions d The Charlottetown does not noun. eerily endorse the 09'5"" n! correspondents- MRS. MALCOL MncLI-IOIYS LETTERS . sin-It is an exceedingly encour. aging feature of our life n Prince mward Island when the women o! the community exhibit h strung sense of citizenship. a convincing public spirit, by protesting the Inc. that. there are not. sufficient cnan- nels of employment on the Island. for our returning men and women and young people generally. BN1 the women of the two previous generations evinced a. like feelliifl of discontent, the exodus which has mgd white [this greatly endowed Province might have been arrested by awakening the interest of the Ottawa Governments sufficiently to make them realize their many shortcomings. Whether or not. readers of The Guardian are ln agreement with Mrs. MacLeocPs various suggestions is not a. matter of moment. The main feature in the series of let.- ters. is that an exam le has been set to Islanders of b0 h sexes and that. they have been asked to show an interest in this important mat.- ter by sending their contributions to your Forum column. Perhaps the most encouraging aspect of this exhibition of public s irtt is that a similar Stellkll“ already been taken by a group of serious-minded women hi this city (over 400 I understand) under the style of the School Improvement League, who for the past. two years have met frequently for discussion of conditions under which their children ln the local schools are being instructed. They have given this matter special and caref study, have written for infomiat. ion to other Provinces, have form- ed committees and interviewed educational authorities and after deciding on any definite course of action have come out boldly in your Forum column and have sought the endorsement of public opinion. The result has been that they have accomplished some real- ly worth-while reforms, including better light in the school rooms. and increased safety of the pupils by the installation of fire esp-mes. Nor ls this all by any means, for in order to reduce the over-crowd. lng of the children they are rec- ommending the addition to our school system o! a. High School in which all the boys and girls of the higher grades will receive their h)- structlon. This Lieagtie, I believe, is a fairly permanent institution and we shall no doubt hear from them frequently in the future re- gardfng improvements in educst. ion, not merely for Charlottetown but for the Province as a whole. It ls unfortunate that Mrs. Mal- colm MacLeod lives in a, rural dis- trict in which there are compara- tively few women to assist in her excellent work. It. is however, to be hoped. that. something tangible will result from Mrs. MacIleocPs excellent. show of public spirit. In this connection may I say a good word for your Forum column in which you allow so complete a freedom of the press to your many contributors. It is doubtful if in any other newspaper of Canada of equal circulation there ls a cor- respondence column so widely read. I am. Sh‘. Etta. H. K. S. l-IEMMING. FACTS ABOUT POTATO MARKET Sin-Last week I uus in Mont. real. One investigation showed a wife of a P. E. Islander being re- quested to buy ten dollars worth of groceries in order to secure ten pounds of potatoes. part of this grocery order being cosmetics at a very extreme price. This is one of the many reasons why American potatoes to the extent of four and a h-ilf million bushels are coming into Canada. Two years ago last February by request of E. J. Chambers, Admin- istrator of Fruits and Vegetables under Mr. Donald Gordon, head of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, I spoke at. a meeting at To. ronto advising the indignant. assembly. that. we were not. short of tatoes in Princedildward Is- lim . What, we did need was re. frlgerator cars to move them. Thir- ty minutes after I spoke one 0.1 the heads from the department, who should know things at Ottawa, got, up and denied my statement. He 11nd been in touch with one of the lsrg ship ers by telephone on the Is and. nether it was a. fact. or not I do not know, but. he stated there was a critical short-me of potatoes. Mr, Lorne Mc arlane at Summer- side came out with a statement in the Summe " papers that we would be dumping otaboes in n. few weeks. Both eFnrlane and myself .were right. but the malor- lty of the principal shippers in this Province scorned McFnrlrtnels re- mark. Back a few years n80 two of our prlncigal shippers, one not. telling probe ly the whole story and whole truth to the other, came out with a statement in the paper that there would be between two him. dred and not.‘ to exceed two ‘nun- dred and fifty csrloads left. on P. E. Island. One ship er at that. time owned over two undred and the other around a hundred and the result was there were 51x him. dred and eighty some odd cars shipped after that. statement was published. t The followlnt! is my opinion and not advice. United States have such n large crop that anything in the line of ridiculous prices could have been revalent, today had it not been ue to the fact. that. there is s floor on potatcmi in the U. B.A and we need it. right away, is a floor on all farm produce and me. stock. Thst ls what. I have been working for. A scheme t0 eon. trol and support a floor is til- "l" molt ready i0 l" but in operation. The Government have talked very plsin. They cannot wdvertlte like private enterprise. tstoes would be about. fifty cents a barrel torlsy in the United Stats-q if it. were not that. they have s floor, I sey t0 many farmers. take stock 5e of your potato crop now. es ecisli your seed If you have pprowfi eight acres I t tn n the rental of yfftif‘ lsififl the villi: f} of your labor. the cost of your fer- tiliser sud seed. end see ti. you hsve not about seven irmdrsti tie! lsrs inverted. sail s thousand doi- MM]. isrs worth of "Mb," potstoes new. 4nd m"! 01' Your banker, end see if I “l —-Just tihe privilege of making s . for furtther industrial few weeks inter Wd What. we need in Canada, d!!! UARDIAN ’ . -.’--~=-'"‘ ‘em not correct. Do not. put sll your esss in one basket. If e Y wishes to answer or correct the following statement. I would be side with me or correct me. I em ults willing to bet tho my per cent of the to el Monu- tain seed on the Island will have to be sold on the Cenudien market at. tablestock prices between now and the windup next‘ spri . If there ls one variety that int; t be in demuridlt; will definitely be Cob. the Canadians who have already bousht Cobbler seed have in the majority of cases been tempted by these so-called specu. litors who are trying to boost the morale of the potato market, and it needs to be boosted because it is sinking into chaos daily.’ ‘The seed that the have already bought and shipped u been sold in the retail stores to the consumer at. seed ceiling. That in my opinion is the best. bet, the Cobbler seed, on P. E. Island. This floor price is not; exclusively an Island moveme it. It ls a Mar. time movement. Suggestions re committees are in the mainland press, and the key names will ap- pear s. little later. I am, Sir, etc" FRANK B. CLAIRE. rsmnn ‘INDUSTRIES nslznlin Sin-I have been reading in yore valuable paper the complaints made because the Government has not provided jobs for our returned soldiers. Gen rally I em not. in- clined to tak up the midgets on behalf of our Premier; however. st this end of the many projects which can be under- taken and tn create white-collar jobs would only put additional burdens on us all. Public works at. best only provide temporary work end while much n to-be done we must; plsn permanent. jobs which will give our people nnsn- clal security. These re urned men ask so little living for and their faiétilfles. m p‘ e ore e war our young peo a had to leave the Province to find the opportunities which were not. open to them here, so how can we thEIIISQTV/CS young people but particularly for thousa of our returning per- sonnel? The snswer is by building‘ e sound economic structure iris ad of perpetuating the lopsided affair which has grown up like Tops, through the years. Instead of selling everything we oduce on a wholesale market. and uying our necessi" on a mun market which at best 1s poor busi- ness. let. us len industries to make the goo we need. By so doing we shall keep our mone and at the same time provide wor for our lpeople. A mil on dollars sent from the Province (and we semi out many millions in the course of e year) ls a. million dollars gone never u. return-gone to keep the whee]; of industry humming ln other pro- vinces; but. a million dollars re- talned here, paid out. in wages rm for raw material, kept circulating, would mean increased prosperity for us nil. We must; have tannerles opera?- ed on modern lines to process our hides. We must build factories to make our shoes. luggage. harness. school bags, etc. We must have factories making overalls and children's clothing. Let me be more specific. With our population of nearly 100,000. we need at, least 200,000 pairs of boots and shoes a {mar-around 4.000 pairs s. week. Some "factory, 50m? Payroll and permanent work for ulte a number of employees. A. t. ousand pairs of overalls n week and wind breakers. ski-suits and other articles of clothing to no end. ' Much of this raw material would have to be imported but We shun‘ bu)’ wholesale and the spread be- tween that glee and the retail ld boosting ' * ‘ . right here. A" 8V9“ Kreater advantage lies in the establishment of factories- they would be breeding grounds expansion. Ambitious men working tn them would get experience enough to start other factories making “mg. leg for which there is a emand, so that ln a. few years we should be manufacturing many of the thinss we need. In short we should have s nee. time boom- based 0n the soli foun- dation of n people's needs, No other province has the opportunity glitch presents itself to u; at, this, me. I have talked with many people on the subject of industri- alization and whlleI have not met witli much approval. definitely there have been some objeetfonki which I should like to deal with av. Of course you suessed the first. one. We can't compete with Bit: Business. Let me ssv rlttht hem and now that. the person who says this ls one who is thrlvlnz under the present. system and he doesn't. care a hanc what happens to the other 99. Ho is an economic iso- liitlonlst. The other 99 know that we must; compete or exist. In out present. psnurlous condition. And can we compete? Well. lens aiio. a travelllmt cobblereould make a pair of shws bv hand to undersell and outlast the products of Biz Business. so why couldn't we if we build s modern well- equirmed factory. We have only to look sround us to see people successful! omoet- inn with 8.3. mom! us u Hardy's harness? Not on . are the standard of uuslitv from one end of the Islsnd to the other. The only trouble is he euuiot. meet the demand. Francis’ sleinhs and wagons outshim ell combe- titlon. and Condoms blankets oom- bare both as to warmth end price. We cm com wit Bi: Busi- ness and don't let anyone tgll vou erent, Others told me that werd Islanders tfeles made here but very MIDI‘ to have someone either _ possibly find work not; only for our ‘£10m furniture _ m ~ ever demand for the neces- uld amenities o! clenched wi I Iii. Island exporter of potnt es would reset st. lesst m It Bt-lll ROI r less an would loathe WEB Saskatchewan turns from must imewlde drive reuse of. year there are not. 86 so that "once customer" can returned men cremains cities economy of This ie s or leave it. Sky-Meadow in the Ia drawing me cioudwe d our. u wild with the blue untell fientinn 1nd the tc hazel flower. In this sun-heady the chequered silver p0 slug» and thlstledown bl ms h‘ h trees w roulh apples. Mfhfifl viable reputation of lowest. per cspite. our lebor of Oenede. eltler this some rendered stidh Let those Such s. pro permanent lobe for f .%'°°P§ nsdlen an beused by to d —l‘rsnces Frost I-I sll t mbtber obieetkm if we not factories one: sue cesslullv. hi: firms would" one in sud buy them out. Tbet hood costly f“... ,1 war 1 e sums Dill‘. into wsr which were of use to them to live in? . Prince Edward Island end unen- shsre that who w s customer always s be their sloam. feet wopld provide ti: m. If"! sisv-Mmbow ll, bluel where the t. orn- grnss with bitter If foxes bark too nothing is here in to hush them‘ .curved under s the ferns have n d doe to brush them. In this high place, dreaming of year of autumn nly while the seed pods burst a runs wlvlthlthe shy here haul! one ll my hen s end, q _ ereld- bune. so. 38ml same‘. sorta ngviinitmcrtan lmsigiovr lor tZNI-IOO! be en insubenhle I dhsll endeavour to prove: indusrrislise ' our‘ To mo» would be s and since lwrelt would xoertment. E. bedtime finettclsl ell we Bo let. us nut we‘ e prov for $3. s Rift and rememb- nrieeless ‘service to oemuivew M. prof 0e ectdvitiee nos-l genial t but we cenntzt leeve it G O o the people. vou out this across g the war Onede produc- ed armaments and materials that for e wind; sir nys flesh in the ud e funiper pstci gt: cloud, fting end tawny rt- . dream tins The New York I nemntltiu -.l Tlekfll rflouyi Rotten no: m sole rt. y and notone. "lb- M" lizo that s wIr‘ mem- .s definite benefit-t‘ to dollsrs for them. Let us no lonlor run 0w ninth unontr provinces, Ceneds but reellv and truly Prince Edward Island the den of ye een do it. i-b re- el other! on this Itibiect. I urn. Sir. etc“ AIINII asuqq Mk N51 lm HIST-QC 01.01.60 Vefigy. try. which hnd en outptut tens in 1939, bes been r utter s lapse of five yous. iutx ritcron" Parasite Hake-up m. Htill;.w'rd’sbytlnko-M.: yeere bec h f .....'" t» - re We lleo blve e influx NA: hater hoe Ponli m and sue Mex hater Ionndeltn Oreem . ........... .. ‘lie end Ill Mu imtor one 0re_ ‘Ila mt! nifiilf .............. .. eoswentfeilé x hover lung hater hinges; sun“ Ireebeneé; Mug l Mo‘ “'5' ' I-I Brnlls. Powder Brfl summon ‘IIUIS wuenns those o! yon who Is uh t» m: Mei! Orders Given Proi Attention. “COMPLEI?! INSURAN SERVIC Agencies Ltti. Phone 540-5411 propert car or use lnferiior floods I've broom rectory so menv time sllernic to brooms. Partisan themes true people “at: i if Y0 llh llh t- t.‘ ‘I'll! this ovelf- filth flame flhrfsritiisal w Insurers theft. ‘ v t ' '- 4.... Qflleslt AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT s An automobile accident may eense damage to lift b! pf others. It may sisottlsmsgo Yo" truck. Mair we look slur your requirements? I The automobile owner can secure finsiteial Iifilwfu“: against? my of these haserds ° gee Ile can else insure against loss b!‘ tltrousb Atria: an v . I-lifndmals a mi» fTlte oitiist 1...»... Agency In P. E1 I- ssluoit r. Isl-IAN. cheese. ‘ .51"! attain-iv“ i- IIITIIVIIN. 5% C - a muiaitxemresatasvt. COLWYN BAY, Wales -- (q: _, Colwyn Bay's mussel fining 1|, at E