PAGE FOUR rm: CI-IARLwKNv‘ GUARDIAN ' FBWEM gm TllE lillAllLllTTETllflll lilllllllllll Morning Dally (Founded tn I881) President: ucut. Col. W. Chester ti. llcllun Vice-President: J. It. Burnett, F.J.l. Secretary: Llcul. Col. l). A. Mnelflnnon, 0.5.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. IL Burnett. lfJ-l. Assncinlc Editors: l-rnnll Walker an Llenl. Ian a Burnett, B.U.N.V.B.. tOn Active Servlocl “The Strongest Memory is Weaker TMI the Weakest Ink." And Elections Boer l'1i111c Blinistcr King has withdrauii thc 1o pcr vcnt reduction i11 beer sales imposed Dec. it», 1111.’. lt1 doing so he left no doubt as to ln hi. statement t0 the Commons ‘iis iwiisiuis. .\lr. Ring‘ lllitlg 111, ri-lcrcncc to any moral is- snc. llhlttltl, 11c tlcvtitcil hinisclf exclusivcly‘ to Lhc pi-liiicitl ntccssity- of shifting the blanic on Lhc \i~\'cr1ii11c11is 111 (Jntzirio and .\lbcrta. ‘Within the past icw iltrvs." 11c said, "11 situa- Linn 11a. aristn in rclaiion 11,1 l\\t1 of thc l‘ro- 1llli‘t‘~ which is >11 i111; rcninvctl (111111 co-opcra- 41111 .1; 111g 1,1111 111' 1hc'1- tiovcriinicnts that it is .'t'l'l.'tlil 111 gnu sc to an issuc between thc Fed- eral and l'rt1\i1 iuihnritics. 1f iii-t promptly .\ .cl1 l>~llC cannot fail to crczttc tunl and antagonism be- _._\;._»,, W11» _. 11 of 111,- c<11n1tr_v and another" $13111 iilv, lllc l‘rinlc .\li11i~tcr sclccictl fnc- 1'1!ll\' two i1~111—l.1l1:-r:1l l’ro\i1iri:il .\<lllll1ll>ll'il- _li1!l\ [or con lcnniat >11 11s 111111 i‘o-i1]1cr:1ti<1i1ists ‘ i1“ 1t, nutcs il11~ tilolic and .\lail. it tl1t~ first tvst of public dis.- Tht- Liberal tiovt-riinicni of facc thc electors this prcvcntcd, mi- _~1.11tini1ot1.~. ll‘ 1 ,. _11'.<' - in lithll‘ 1111.1 l'r-.".11it'r Gotllmiit ninst 1'.1"l. .\11=l l'rt1i1ii~r tindlmiit is ztlrcatly' oi1 rc- l as to 1'1t~ political discomfiturc caused by - fltli-‘lllllg; and a- 111 who is responsible for _'o a ilispzitch quoted .\Ir. Godbout iln _la11 -;» f; "ilr- l-‘cdcral Government should \.- to take rc-ptiii-iliilily- for its acts and stand "t 1 i thc llUlPlC upon thrin." lle 1:1- tt "1111 viii>r1 nntild 11c inadc lti lioltl discontent that ori- . .'\11d ivhcn "asked iilmt kc-lcral . sac. had crcatctl most dissatis- faction i=1 lircncli-spczilaing tianada, he answer- ed: "lilw 111111111‘ regulation-i." l)\1i'.>' llll_\ not givt- sonic clue as to thc rea- sun< fur tl1-.~ cllililgc i11 liccr 1i0lic_v? 'I‘hcrc are to be elcciions in l\vo OlllCF Provinces this year ».\'cw lll'tllli\\'lt‘l{ and Saskatche\vai1-—botl1 of tlicrn C"llll’lJllt‘il 11v Liberal Administrations. lt ls indt-cd 11 snirrv sittiatioit that bccr should l»; rni-tvl lu thc stains oi a national issue i11 rt.- ituilili’ lin- wnic u- , 11111 ittzl 111 l‘t the 111111.11 of a ivar emergency: But it has 111-111 giicn that sizitus bv the political manoeu- vr-ng (11 11n- lticdaral Leadcr. The temperance pcnplc can now cc thc depth til 1’rin1c blin- i-it-i" King's sinc _v in controlling liquor con- ' 'l'l1crc is front him no high appeal si1n1p' 1111. lilciiiil and self-discipline l1_v thc l1ccr- i 1g \"ll('l‘> when thc concern is for polttwill uwllltill. _______. St. John Ambulance Ann-n; thc inany tiscitil tictiviiies assisted out 0i tilt; innils of thc l\’cd Lross homely" is ihcAbt. _l11',_1, fuiiliiilanct- .\s.~ociat1o11, which has just ]1.'.‘\lliL'\l its rcpnrt on first aid and lioinc nurs- inq training for thc _\'(‘Zlt' 19:13. \\'itl1 thc prc- vziilin; shortage of doctors and nurses, tluc to thc exigencies of Xvar, the instruction given by the :1.~<nciaiioi1 takes on added vztluc. .\'o feu- er 1111111 1011.513 students tool; the cotirscs pru- tnlctl last iyrar, including 25,304 nicinbcrs of thi- arnicd forces, thc St. John first aid course b21111; a part of thc prescribed training of a flycr i11 the I\'.C..\.l~‘. 1t is of special interest to note 111;“ 311711, 1,1‘ 11111.0 \\'llll received thc regular training art- classiiicd as "juniors." The i11- filtllllllltut thcv llll\‘(_' iccciictl \\'ill undoubtedly‘ prove of inuch service to them and those who will licnciit from their knowlctlgc and cxpcri- cncc in thc years to conic. .\s 111111. llr. .\lc.\lil1ai1 stated i11 llii: Ixgisla- 11111; last ncclv. all St. _lul111 .‘\llllltll;tllCC train- ing i» nuiv ciniiluctcd tinder a 5t. lplggi-Rcd fr», 1311111 lmnrtl. The chairinail for this Pro- viiirt- is. tliici lustirc Campbell. The cost of 1111111111; 1.. i1 I111 s has bccn consi lcrahly rc- tinctzi l»_ 1 1-1 of Si. 11111113 pa pation i11 k, 11:1d<-1" \\'ar Scri cc.» llcpzirt- lll.~. The llx-lullilllllll announces a1‘.- nndcr way for greatly cxpandcd 1.11 11.x llliVx lt is :1 inattri‘ for cougrattilzi- ‘ 1M1- thc ;:~ 1111 and thc public at ' ]li|Qlt>.\l\t‘ condition is rc- itil statement. with tlic pros- Inr ili‘\'t'lllplll'l‘lll i11 its various t pla \- -..-1|' Grips lnilianiti 111’ thc ttflllllltllll 0f It! L..~ pii; ,1 rlllllll\\'t’sltl'll lftissia is c111- 11 i 11y 11111 ri-pnrl from 'l‘nr- 1.1‘, 1. 1 l. 11- 1.111111 .\lirl a foriiicr l’rv- 111111- 111' ' 1111.1. has lcit .\11l.ara in c” ' - a l\‘i1:1.11§.'1n 1 l-l 11f .\llicd ziuthoritic i11 tliiru, l'r111'c >tirl1c_v_ 111.‘ .\iiliara dispatch >;1\-_ l‘l*1 1:'1l~r1.i1t:11 this nii-sitiil with tlu- ap- ]1l‘11\§'l ~11 l‘1':11:‘1~;- \11t~11<-.~v1i'. lii>\'t'l'l|lllt‘lll. In (“tint th.‘ l‘ii11ii~ is cxpi-ctcil to contact 1.11111 .\l'l_\‘1!t'_ i‘1t- llritili rcsiilcni lliiiistci" tlrsrc, as ivcll as tiu- F-nit-t Anilmssador. 111111111111‘. frantic effort to gut out of the war. ~ays :11 t'.~;t‘l1.'::1,qt-, is obviously prouiptctl Irv it. ti111't-1"i1111c11i'.. accurate linowlctlgc of vhat i. 111w; happening in 1h:- Klirziiiie. The fact that thc liL‘l'lllIlllS have rcrpiisitioned all Rtunaniir.’ .\lll|l$ i11 thc Black Sea to carryt out an attemptctl t‘\‘<'iCllIlll!lll of Nazi forces by way of Odess is :1 snfficicntlyr crmviiicing hint tn thc ‘iflllllflillls :11 llucharcst that all is up with the (lermane in Rus ‘a. l\‘iini:1nia’s entire incr- chant flct is 111-w . aining at full speed from thai i'11tlllll‘_\"\ lllacli Sea littoral in llilwsa. lf tlt- v-tliinalc b:- corrccl‘ that there urrt“ 511114111 1:111 troop. i11 .\'onil1\v1'~l Russia wlicn 1l1t- \'ll‘l bltraiiit- tificnsivc. started. 1‘. st-L-ms evident tlizif at lczist a rpiartcr of lll(‘l|l 11-11-11 ll('l'll uipctl 11121 b1- dcatli 111* capture zilrcady‘. j (‘MW rzniuiiiiict-d that (‘Yen in thc past ten l._ ilwr, 11.1w llt'\‘[] 75mm licr111r11i: l\lllt'll or captuicd in thc- lfkraine, and that i11 that rc- gion 350,000 Nazis hive been killed and 40.000 captured since the beginning 0f the winter cam- paign. No accurate estimate can be obtained of the number of Germans that remain to be evacuated, under running fire, from Soviet ter- ritory, but all told it must still be enormous, and the task of getting them out prodigious. T 11¢ story of Dunkirk will read like a minor in- cident by comparison with the drama now about to unfold_ as the Germans endeavor to rcsctie by sea the remnants of their once mighty armies i11 Russia. No Nazi satellite nation is in a position to get a clearer picture of his closing chapter of the Nazi invasion of Russia than the near-by Kingdom of Rumanla. That country's pro-Nazi tinvcruincg“. is 110w in a predicament compar~ ablc with that which faces the Finnish regime. lt can be only a matter of days before the tri- umphant Russian armies sweep across the frontier into Rumania. The Antoncscu Govern- n1cnt's peace-seeking tnisfi‘) to Cairo is there- loft‘ 011 a race against t' if the country is to 11c saved from being Eomplctcly overrun by Stalin's conquering armies. - EDITORIAL NOTES .- Sincc January 1st, 1943, ships of the Royal Navy and R..‘\.F. aircraft have sunk more than half of the German underseas fleet. lll I! ll‘ ‘ 1t is hoped that this year India will produce enough rubber to satisfy not only licr own du- mcsiic needs, but those of the British and Am- crican forces i11 India. n I I I Thc present air attacks 011 London are bciilg inct with thc heaviest and most concentrated anti-aircraft barrage of the war, equipped with guns far faster and more accurate than in the ilays of the Blitz of 1940-41. ' I l1 i This bccr battle between Mr. King and thc premiers, says an exchange, is getting everything into dandy shape for the Federal-Provincial con- ft-rcncc that is to succeed where the Rowell- Sirois- conference failed. ll‘ 1K 1K Canada's nine medical universities, which in peace-time graduated an average of 491 stu- dents annually, are expected to provide an aver- age of 745 graduates annually as a. result of a move to compress a three-year curriculum into two. n- 41 1a m Though laborious attempts are being made to rc-contlition the crippled battle-cruiser "Tir- pitz" in Kaa. Fiord, not a stroke of work has been done for 18 mouths to repair the "Gneis- cnau". Slfiler 511i}! to thc sunken “Scharnltorst". Slic lics with her bows and gun turrets dis- inantlcd i11 thc Polish port of Gtlynia, which has replaced bomb-battered Kiel as (icrmanys main naval base. i U It‘ The British Colonial Office has announced plans whereby $2,000,000 will be spent on 'l‘rinidad‘s Health Programme for this year. |A1110ngst the nlany improvements being made 'a1'c: new hospital specialists, higher salaries for nurses, and a new Health Education Officer will be appointed who will supervise thc teach- ing of hygiene i11 schools. It is hoped that work on thc island's $1,200,000 tuberculosis san- zttnrium may begin this year. i ll‘ 1i ll! Food Minister Col. john j. Llewellin audience of women gasp i11 London when he told them food rationing would cou- iinuc for some years after thc end of thc war. “\\‘l1ci1 thc armistice is signed you will not be able to take down rationing as you take down blackotit curtains," he, said. "In meat, dairy products and fats, there will tmfortunately be a. shortage tor scvcral years ahead." Explaining tl1c necessity for thc continuance of rationing, the minister said: “You cannot take a lot 0f able young men off farms, not only here but in Canada. the _Unitcd States, Australia and New fclllillttl. tlqltlve the land of fertility and expect iarin production to be kept up." i it 1 ll‘ l\'ubci't._ Southey, English poet and 111311 of letters, dicd this date 1843; brotlier-iu-law and oiic of thc closest friends of Coleridge, and iii- cluilcd among the “Lake Poets"; appointed poct- laiircaic i813; his poems shuw‘ great command of language and careful craftmauship, but lack spontaneous inspiration; he is remembered rather for his clever ballads, and for his prose, which is nervous and manly; his poetical works llllillltll.‘ “l'ocins“ i11 182i, including “'I‘l1alaba", “ lhc Curse of Kchania", "Joan or Arc", and ,‘_"l'l1q Vision of Judgment‘; while his prose i11- cludcs “Life of Nelson", "History of the Pen- insular War", and “Lives of Bunyan, \Vesley, tpivpcr." ctc.; You art: old, l"athci' \\'il|ian1, thc young man cried, .\11<l pleasures with youth pass away, And yci you lament not the days that are gone: Now tell inc the reason, I pray, I11 lllc (lays of my youth 1 remembered my (i011, And lic hath not forgotten my age. I 1! l‘ British lllitde 3.11 “The Province of Quebec is providing the rest of (lmarlawiiitli a strange spectacle, says "Le Int-it". There has ncvcr, it is true, been coin- plvlc tigrccincnt, but now as ncvcr before, noth- ing lllll. confusion exists. Quebec today is i11- llCCtl a political Tower of Babel. Of parties and political groups, how man are they? Herc they arc: (i) Liberals; (2) [he Union Nationale; t3) Progressive Conservatives; (4,) Social a rt-rlain Mr. Thibcaut, of Portnctif). When .-. priplll-‘lliflil of three millions is unable to show :1 lwitcr united front, it is a sign of something scrionsly- wrong. Such a display of divisions and rivalries cc tainly is no contribution tn the IJPCSllA/C of Que cc outside her boundaries. We may be convinced that such dlvlsinns dissipate 41111] sqnantler our strength, whilst they rein- f-ircc the pnsitifills of other groups." l tlotes By TM Way London lnllllnerl have making women's hats out. eu-dgq tennis bulls. Tn vtouslv some kind of Detxot News. In England today nut; u; Silas! to bring their own towels. ow some o! the hotels may have a chance to llet their towels buck aiatn-Chathum News. The nation's over the mallcmls l t concluded a n lllldfnfl hem. " attire. If, u the preslllent llld. l! ll half decided tn give a third m the nut-rendered Italian fleet to Rusntu. will the brightest ‘pllpll in ctlons fell us if this amounts to onc- 13m of a S€l\56ll0fl'.'—-N€\V York tin. . A young American soldier, It l: ed. wrote home o inten- tton to stay in Australia nfter the war. He proposes to cross kangar- oos with s. thus brodiuclns fur coats with pockets already ln thenL-Ktmlswn Whlz-Btandard. Std ped of his titles of Klng of Albania and Emperor of Alb sslnta. pressure continues to have V c Dn- manuel forfeit the Italian crown, It ls felt the fellow ts already down g; history but. not. far enough.- . V. Wade in the Detroit News. A Pomeranian named Pele ls re- ported to have made its way from Nonfolk, Virginia, to Patcholzue. Long Island, ll. distance of S85 miles. tn a little more than three weeks. A blg tale for such a little d0g.-New York Sun. Italian "Labor" leaders show ll disposition to be cocky and to defy the Allied authorities. book whos being tnsolent! Do the Italians im- agine they an» aides? It seems to be about. time some steps were taken to make them realize that. they have lost u war. not. won one. -~Brantford Exflosltor. . A recent hulletln from the Dom- inion Department of Agriculture ralsas a fine point 1n manners for the poultryman. In dlscusixig cgg production from pallets it states that a outlet. when commencing to lay is very sensitive and ls prob- ably more sublect tn disturbance than at any other time. It also states that the poultryman who ls succ ul 1n maintaining cmistst- antly high production should make a practice of knocking on the door of the pullet pen before entering.- Wetasktwln Times. Enough ts cnoulzh. and uiore than that, ls too much. That is only too true when it-pplled to the Can- adlan Broadmtlniz Corporation's handling of programs which gives us an entire afternoon of grand opera from the United States and then. after a short, interval, feeds the network more operatic singing from Toronto. all 111 one afternoon. We have no quarrel with opera, but listeners are entitled to var- iety and after three hours cit any kind of program. noltplnlly’ expect a changta-Yarmuntli braid-Tele- tram. n a en Satumay Review of Uter- For n one-paragraph picture 0f Britain at war we suggest this ex- cept from a BBC talk: "I have just been to visit 52 grandmothers. No. they weren't in a home for old ladies. They were tn a factory which makes radio equipment. for airplanes, and they were sitting at: long benches. with dozens of other women, handling pliers and :0 '1 and blts of wire and s01 ‘ I was fascinated. -- Ottawa. Jour- nal. A newly-bulk German warship 0! the Whaler type “'11s all set for her trtal trip but the night before she blew r17: and sank tn Oslo harbor. It is believed that the explosion to magnetic mines dro - Ded into 0510's inner harbor y British planes some two weeks ago. German plants have been busy since try-lug to blow up the mines, but tn vain. Inst/end cf a trial trip the new shin will have to be rais- ed and then need months of repair work-vlvlnntreul Star. The people of thln country have clwertutlv exidured all numner of sacrifices necessary victory. but. austerity for austerl y‘: sake ts ulte another matter. and the of- ‘lclal specification for men's suits awe always been regarded as be- .0 m; to that categor, . In par- t a1- fit. may be quclt oncd whe- ther the abolition of turn-ups we? e the public to buy the large exlsttn-g stocks of muster ti: suits. Ml‘. Dal- ton offers a. reduction o1.‘ six col‘;- terma. Certs v their belated llberatlon from one of the most irksome and least justifiable of war controls. — Dally ‘gelcgzraph and Morning Post (Lon- on. t press of ada has now been made public. She tvfis tor- oc ed by an Italian submarine lnntlc. So died another of h mum Pacific Bnpmases o! peace stalled 111-wildly out o press of Asia and t e . As well Pacific fleet n keep the battlefront; of freedom.- nlpeg Tribune. Some of no l1 —— up grave difficulties respe distribution and the globe-ctrcltxig t llv tllt our military commit esbubltah unmis ruanvnlvzs Africa. Pl‘ capital h laughing t vwnom but g which the car fen-y would have to The story 0f the last. Wynn of ll 1a.} vear and sank with a loss of four hundred lives in the shark- infested wallets of tht Smith At- t a Can- . The l of this class o! liner which tn times Canadlfif ports to Britain and the Far East. has now reached three — the lilmmress o! Britain. the Em- Emmess o as loci; two ships of the Duchess class and four freight- ers tn Canada's mighty effort to men and suioplles flowltwitn “A _|.ve been eunfurgi‘; o r have accomplished I xpected to d lop he. the éarels ended. millet, focwexliimpyzy ed in common-Wash- qzlces stlll are use! to preserve food in parts of clilm and North on a good. well built and sensibly paper ls very much to_ the potnt PUBLIC FORUM a? den and Tormentlne. out. towards the channel as fur as travel from pier to pier. I am not. a. Sea Captain, but I worked as ll Mall Clerk ln the Clv‘ ll service for several winters on the ‘mutter’ and "Mtnto" and at that time tt was the floating Ice- and not the bonrd tce—that cau- sed all the trouble and left the boats helpless, regardless of 1111.311 DCWBI‘. That ls the lzlnd of nonsense which ts keeping Prince Edward Island without daily COIIIIMIIIIu- atlon with the mainland. Every one has a remedy of his own, but‘. “a. house divided against ltsslf cannot stand". neither can n pro- vince secure its just rights. If every man and woman, boy and girl ln Prince Edward Island would rise up in unison and de- mand a tunnel-m tunnel n5 the only feasible ramcdv—then, and not until then. umutd our claim be iztven consideration 11nd this wasteful expenditure _uf publln money un piers and ships that has been gotniz on for over half a cen- tury would cease and the tunnel would be undertnlzen, I intend to deal with this mat- ter as fullv and convincingly as I can. in the time at. mv disuosul during the debate on the Budrtet. which will be after Easter. and tn the metlnthlI-e shall be thankful for any helpful stuzzestlous that may be sent to me from “The Island." Some years ago I attended a school concert in Mnntauue and a little bo_v strpncd out on the plat- form to salve a homemade icclt- tble. to shorten the distance it atlon which run like this: “When Yam a man-a man I'll be a politician-and I can, 1 I‘l1 build a tunnel across the‘ Strait. I'll build tt inst as sure as fate When I'm a man." Perhaps. Sir, .1 little child shall, lead us. I am. Sir. e-tc THUS. V. GRANT. Ottawa. Ont. , March 18, 1944 , A CAUSEWAY POSSIBLE l Sin-It should be a very encour- aging sign to note the interest at present taken tn the question of continuous steam communication between our Province and the mainland. Letters with good sug- gestions tliat mean serious think- fng have appeared in your columns regarding tunnels or causeways. 0f course. we are all agreed that at present. no delay should be fll- lowed in building l1 new Car Furry steamer and determined pressure should be forced on every one i111 a position to bring this mutter to‘ a conclusion. But it is no allure- ment to we long suffering Island- ers to be promised that the new boat iwhen bullti is to have such gorgeous tnsldc fittings and furn- ishings. As many say, we do not want a luxury ltner or a palatial yacht, but We want. money spent equipped working steamer with enough comfortable accommoda- tion for ‘nor officers and crew and for piissenzcrs makln: the short. L121). 111t- lzliti‘ 0t Marine Lnginccr published a tsw days ago in your especially as to what. 1s required and the best kind of power plant for an Icebreaker. Of course. us many have pointed out, we stmulcl 00k ahead '11:_vun:l the Cur Ferry connection and consider connec- tion with the mainland tn l} more permanent manner. As regards the causeway plan, in looking at the chart of North- tunberlatid Strait, we find that. the F‘II‘.I‘K°S1, tiitfillflg would be tn a llne drawn from a point in Trav- erse Cove, north of Cape Traverse to about Jourtmaln Island Light. tn New Brunswick. The total dis- tance from land to land on this line lsshou‘. 8 1-2 miles but there are the shawls on tl1~ N- B! side of about I 1-2 miles and the vnitc.‘ un me Iaanu side at innt a 2*‘ of at. least three quarters of p a Olliufllltle oi what we c1111 c deep water of about, 6 1-2 miles. Of course the approaches 0n each side not actually over the waver would add to the total length of the causeway, but work on that. part would be comparatively easy. Now all the man people say that the tldea and xunn n; tce would be a factor against. n causeway tan. but. that t: open to question n my opinion. suppose for instance that. an isth- mus connected the Island about this point. with the mainland. would there be those strong tides? Or would there not be a long bay on each side with the ordinary rise and fall of water such as Ls now tn the harbours along each sldk, of the coast‘! Would not a causeway then act as an Isthmus‘) This idea should be an interesting subject for further discussion. Some people will at once say there would have to be an opening tn the causeway to let ships pass through. That ls another question. For the last number of years tn normal times comparatively few ships of tiny atze, pass up or down tn;- Straits. as the shortest distance for ships coming or going from Nova 300MB part4 to ports tn Northern New Brunswick or St. Lawrence River ls a course on the north of P. E. I. its the charts wtll show. However, as Mr. Pcndergnst says tn his tn- texcstlng latter, if tnese sugges- tlos start local engineers cipher- tng over the subjects they will! n any case It ls well for those Inter- est-rd to took over charts and M- certaln facts on these important C-c it; Tl C.C.l~'.- 6 tl C d' . . Piirity ; ((7€)the 1lc3loc Poptilaiieg (Sic theallgbiiiii: $z alga“ expreugdtlnlast 32love 3:332:11? t1 ti‘; ilaxiiailiiilwisiiival; 1U tiltntiiiaylyydai N°§”1ioll1l1“§§.“§l'1§§”§§ Ilfogfcssivc; (9) the Doironpoy group; (m) Bffi-léf" mllmfimlgl“ mllglfl: ‘— ‘_'————- "“‘—'—t'~- = r thc lIamel-Gotiin-Chaloult Trio; (n) the wmlnete. these difficulties m uht . -. . dimlrpen. Am ‘£0 . h t Cardin (lroup. That is nearly} dozen. _ (In Wm ,0 ‘l,’ m; 1,, $3," “u s}; fact. it \VOlll(l make the dozen, if Lc Droit had to o out; £1; maltlinngl vyrlllé ' l .. s ' ' ' C ' l _ " ' wanttd in add to its list the Reformed Social 00.1mm, mnummfli" w l t 1min larty, recently founded, whose leader 1s imnerbnlie wor balk: ls \ n4 v ,1 the best possible solution, making us really connected with the main. land and of course the construc- tion \\'0tlld take care of employ- ment after the war for years. right It: ts about ri year since Mr. J. O. l-Ivridman gave his memor- Bble address n1; the Rotary Club in Charlottetown. and covered so many of the griev- ptnces that. the Rotary Clulnhad lcirculated and ma led to interest- shoal and New York re Post War pro- mile. This would leave the tot-m HQ reviewed the LOST FROM CANADA'S WAR crronr‘ Every you valuable time In Int u n mutt of 1 culdl. Smith Biol. Cont! Bro ‘ ' pmmpt ralluf from I cough. i Iloi wlth ‘ m. Two ma: lint or llontiol, 10¢. SMITH BROS. COUGH DROPS .. ‘Lllllll Meditations [Inn - The London Tim A HOUSE DIVIDED no world o! to-day t: a house ’ ‘ against Itself, The war has d only bmught. into startling relief what. has glways tn some degree been true. 11m fifteen: condition. of the world ls l?!) the result- of conflicting ‘Ideals o! life, and has become clear that no llm-l tted or partial conception of unity is adequate. There must. be world unity, or then will be no lasting unity at, all. , In the Christian Church also‘ there is s deepentnu realisation, of the weakness caused by its gwii "unhappy d1 " The ernl emphasis on the world-wide char- acter of the Church la at once A promise of better things and a. h‘ n“, m“ be,“ m E“, - d f 1 m m; dellverv of this boat bvs mon . e e er holiday flgmlgei°roi° ,,,fl“°,,,,,g,,m,,ie keg. Another thought. Why not con- W181i: 051;; menglblerglget home. 111:; fectlveness of u» Church's wlt- 8mm the "P" "m1 l1" “Wm”: "3 _ D°,," a, ° "m- Dv it nnss. Hence the Bfowllnfl lxn at- 9w“ “d ‘med with mm 1°1- cm n w o f 20w s, Mme m many quarters’ es c any accommod tlon and have her here m. ‘hem, tn the Churches oversea, wth the bftlhetggsl fifllgeaiwgfli" “Ace? ME LOVE. sélztgggrlizg gpglléizéantiittla declfifig: 311:: t0 Quveibec rfor another seven U d t :4- tratlng attention u n the great galtltwogdggufgmggewtlkeogémfig; n ers lllldlllg P0 truths and ideals which all Christ- ians hold in common. At the root of all divisiveness lles the fact that men are not: tn themselves unified. T00 often the individual l5 himself "a house dtv- ided." A unified personality t5 dlf- ficult to achieve 1n a world so full of every variety of conflict; and yet the lack of harmonized raersonalittes ls .1 contributing cause of the world's dtsunltty. It, ts the purpose of God to‘ bring harmony into the llfe of‘ tine individual. He ls “the God peace." When Jesus said: "My, peace I give unto you," he was not offering spirit of passive resignation, a re- lease from the stresses and strains of llfe. which would weld together into‘ one integrated whole all the var- ious elements of potential conflict which ccmprise personality. so creatlniz a dynamic which would brlng tn bear upon thc whole of lllC a powerful and unifying tn- fluenco. If the world is to be at peace, planning 11nd good wtll and cle- termlnzition will obviously be cs- sentlal, But. above all will be need- ed men and women whose spirits nre so responsive to God r1111; their lives become centres of a beneflclent. influence which will 1n- "llflbly spread lnto the common life which they share. Psychology, whether its met-lauds may agree or differ, ls here in ‘complete agree- ment with the Christian ideal. For the Christian, however. this un1_ fylng Influence both comes from Christ and ls Christ: hfmself. He‘ no: only gives peace: "He ls our’ peace." And 11s he t; the fount: and centre of all true and lastln?‘ unlty-"by hlm all things consist". —so he must be the centre of lliel life of the individual Christian. It should therefcre be the aspiration and prayer of every Christian tn make this centrality a fact of, his own experience, and to e11. devvour to express it in his every union and in all his relation-l Qgwulltvai u'l_ll bcc all ‘the s1 s. " are own‘ l' - _.p_-;-=———— Of mistletoe, and sift these ashes town, P. E. Wcififegdacy, ld Thurada and Friday‘. illauh I am, Sir, etc, ISLANDER. MR. nvivmvlkirs AiYnm-zss Slr,—If my memory serves nie ‘ It was so splendidly put. together printed ln pam let form and Ed Parties that dld not have the prtvtlelle to attend the , l uncheon. l Hyndman gave B. Rotarv | M - number l of quotations from some worthy‘ men from New Zcaland, Montreal 160W. GBWCBIIIY did he mention Prince Edward Island necessities different Improve- ments that P. E. Island received by golnl! after them, by continu- Ous agitation. such as the Hills- boro Bridge, reconstruction from narrow gauge rails to wide zauize to sult the car ferry tracks; the improved highways from one end of the Island to the other. and another of tho reatest. boona was the billldlna of be Canadian Na- ‘ttonal Hotel. It took a lot. of hard lwork. a lot of lobbying, but ff you wtll succeed you must do hard ‘work 1n all walks of life- l In Mr. Hynclmunk address n will" B80 he mentioned for post war work a dry dock for Char- lottetown. There has been severa. constructed tn the Marlttmcs, why not one at Charlottetown? We could then repair our own ciir fer- ry as welt as other ships. A point that. was strewzd very strongly was I. new Car Peri-y. This l wu also stressed by our Govern- 1 ment. and Board of jrrade imdiby l our representatives at Of/tawa but It fell on deaf ears and it. was only n short time ago that we were ad- | vised by the press that the keel for a new boat was laid. but the dls- heartening part Ls the but h Oberatlon for the winter at 1945- 8. On making inquiries I find the reason for the delay is the getting r...- hbiirtf this materiel] can be uro- cured 1n work and go on the dry clock tn the winter and not ruin our sum- mer traffic with the Scotla. We should send a strong delega- tlon to investigate whv this mn- tertal cannot be procured at once as we "annot afford to go through anothei: winter like this one. This gtfilzassglgk bgflrllnbtlon of United ts a wnr measurelfthere ever was S f 1'16"‘ one and our new car ferry should “YWSS round Commander: have precedence over every shin in °“ “e ‘We’ swllzerlflfld." the shin-building plant. kngwns‘ cmnmand?" "We In demanding our shcnld be Union Government at “Vleast until this boat arrives Charlottetown. ,sl1ould be men of both parties that . . l° ma“ Q18 "Iefemave been to Ottawa and succeed- quielms c! their inward storms. 8'91! before. They should also go to the fshlpglulldlnlg plan}: and Shleck llb or emse ves w a 5 on, He was offerlnz a sptrittgur t g .__I___ Set share tn furrow, shepherd the Tend well the Before the commmfwall stand like a rock Where elders Pour the ablation. don the sacred hide. Tlll that day with universal shout ‘Beneath the snowy plinth slowly vcu e Of srm» new city. golden as a ride. 1 I czinnnt. be with you, for I must s n The still deer) D00! or seek the Cltmb lllmllllll {the forest m1- m oo For the lost diamond from our dln em, 311i lf "u: sllver fish, the cup of Bold The branch of n1ystg1~y_ the “us”, gem I find —— quickly I'll run and bring l t e contractors‘ promlse ls u boat in I l of the extra heavy steel and the construction of the s eclal engines. I 51180 understand wt this steel an ..... - ~ can be procured tn ifhe U. B. A. at any time but by extending the tum or construction tt can all be procured pl holy flu ' 1 YEP? TOBACCO Gives-i lull value for those who roll their own Ivy llll l/I lb. eonhlnw . . . lb’ oconofiilecl. spent iwotfmérFfviiiiziiiiaii-c-i f U. S. A. and hinder the delegation and have them if? TlfnpuMfigia ‘ . y W ‘l r1 lg 1 Swiss "llllllfllllfflllty", n: ioag: bmndcast-er reported r1115 Wm heard radio dialogue between Swiss anti-aircraft buttery 1111a: rights we _ ,, v _ weswvillsli shItiotl-F“ do!” “"11 but ll- 3-! "We litlllOW." The conversa a furious ack-acol? lialllsi-iillvdll,“ resumed: ‘ f“ r U. S.:"“Your flrc In The delegation is 1,000 feet vernmgqt. would hnyc hard of EXPERIMENT hearing ‘l flowing flock, herd and. taking weapons sbcut drone tn council, there speak out, can help you Whv llo 50% of all ll rl Ald Purchasers choose e311“? tone? For better hearing based 0n illllfllor design and 11111111. dual flltlnlz. mndc possible with the Audlometer, which elves an accurate reading of your nt-i- ual hearing lnss. Mrs. C. F. Smith. our chief crocus bold one wild an l 22, 23. 2 lh. These consultations cost you nothing and may be the means ' of ensuring future hfllllllncss. McMURRAYS ‘ ‘ Representatives. Fredericton. N. B. You them. —Aquiirlus. National Efficiency In. the battle against Fear and Want, ade- quate Llfe, Accident and Health Insurantc ls a major factor. Thrift ls vital to the. war effort. Premium savings add to the mighty army of fighting dollars that ls helping to win the war. It is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to help make peoples future more secure. Consult the Great-West. Life man for a suitable plan to meet, your special require- ments. Hyndman & Co,‘ Limited Provincial Managers Offices: Charlottetown, Summerslde, MontniI=t'-' NOTICE DISCONTINUING Commencing the first of Aprll we are discon- lllllllnk the contracting and jobblng part of our Plumbllllf and heating branch of our business- W_e will still continue to cart-v ln stock nlonil with our General Hardware ailinc of plumhini: “"5 ""1""! supplies for sale. STANLEY, SllAW 8t PEARDEN