t 1111GT. FOUR" THE CHARLUHWFOWN GUARDIAN TIIE GHARLIITTETUNN GUARDIAN Morning Dull: (Pounded In Ill?) President: Lieut. CoL W. Chute: S. Mal-In Vin-President: J. B. Burnett, FJJ. secretary: Lleut. Col. U. A. Mldlfllmllll, ILILO. Editor and hlunaglng Ulreolor: .l B. Burnett. lU-l. Associate tiuitms: l-rank Walker and Hut. Ian A Burni-tt, ILCZNALR. 10a Act-Ive Service! “’l'I|e Strongest Memory i: Weaker Thai the Weakest Ink.” wrnscsinv, MARCH 1, 11m Dr. \Veir's Findings i ' 11;; rcp '1 on the post-irar inclina- (Zlllllfllilllfi nuw in uniform has 11-. p: = i ‘.1 lll‘. ti. .\l. \\'cii', atctiiig director lit 111:: l"i-tl:1';11 Department uf Pen- .\ii .1c of thc report appeared in 'i.._1 l\t'.llil_\'. Its contents are based t i-sgii‘ “:11 l1_v 1t1ci1 11nd women of 1 1.1-1 1111 ihc judgment 0f repre- 111. mcii as to what, -:.i-:1, tviiiiliiiiiiis may be in Canada -1.iiil if lllllhlllull. These b1151- rt- unite liiipcfiil and believe that ,- lli iii-k t‘1il!llll‘_\' .~lIUlllll be feasi- 11‘ 111111101‘; ~.»t|1~. lii:~.11t'.~s - 111il:iuui~ 111111 there i11;1_\' [II .1 million and :1 half lillllt‘ iiitiw ilic transition , ;i.;i..- ha. llltll llll'_{t‘l_\' compleictl. 1:1 ;1.1:<>.ii.11,.1 ultféllltllls" arc ex- .i ziuz" l l»; 511mm). |)£t1'llClll£l1'l_V m1 ,1 ,;1i,.11-_\_ _\ prcpoudcrancc 1 in uniform show a prefcrcncc .1iiil iiiticc work, with hoiuc- ;i glngp >(\‘1Illtl, which stiggcsts \ll11l\‘lll> iii training centrcs of ilKiZl .\ r l-lircc lean toward elcc- i .111tl llltlltr ivork; the prefer- _, q. 111111 111 111i- ltoyal Canadian . ~zirlzir liciit. _\ n1:1ji)rity of t).- 1.» us 1~ I|lll'.\ll\_lllf.‘(l ilcsire to have substantial number are cxigcr tWllIkKlllUIln, and J1 pcr cent - _ i=1‘ irzmiiiig". 'l'host- in ihc i ii 1111:1111 like to take lllllYCfSlly i-l ;.i i-imgc from 30,000 to ‘lllll tjoooi» service men _ of the Veterans’ Land \\ . . .1 wide-spread love of the .1111 hirge percentage now serving i’i.:i- tlzlicrs are disposed to remain 111111 1111-11»; it is estimated that the p-i-{iiiiiiiiii ;11;.~l—\\'i'l1' needs of the army, navy (lllfl :i'i- forct‘, and also including the munitioii 311' t 1.111113 iviii-Lcrs to maintain those ser- Yiffm‘ 1 @111 for 135,000 persons. That num- buy flllllijll-n 1r. be conservative, if anything. N11 (Vllrillg liiiipire Conference Delayed .\ lulllilllll ilcspatch says that the proposed ' -.ii:c- iii .l‘.ll'l])ll‘E Prime Ministers in L011- i. i: 11c liclil tmtil lune. That is under- .i-_ >11,- the Lntawa journal. Primg Min- l>il‘l' kins. who undoubtedly will be I key fig- urc :1; 1111* conference, ivill he busy with Parlia- mi-iii iiinzl 131111, and South Africa's Marshal 5111111; 1111.1 .\1i_~ti";1li.t's Prime Minister Curtin lizive Ziiinic Lliiiigs on their hands, too. Also, it is a mistake to imagine that a conference of Empire l'riiuc Ministers can be called together in El. CIlSllIll SO11 0f \\'Zl\'. .\i1 liiipcrial Conference, which is what this coming gdl ..‘1'l11g will be, doesn't merely mean that the ljnipire Prime Ministers sit down in a room at the l-‘orciqn Qjfice and talk things over informally. .\n agenda has to be prepared, and the Prime .\liiiister briefed on its topics by an expcrt secretariat, and an endless number of things with all sorts of complications studied with care. lt is a question, the Empire's prob- lcms being what they are, of making haste slowly, No Time For Complacency Defense Minister Ralston, notes the Globe 411d Mail, recently sought to dilute the optimism of 111g House of Comirions by underlining the I‘(‘1lll1lCS on which victory must be calculated. 11¢ pointed out that Germany still dominates the potentially great powerhouse of Europe; that Slle has bccii able, with the resources won, to absorb terrific punishment. Last year, while suffering ilciczit after defeat on the Russian front and iii North Africa, she was able to 1'('l)l£lC5 her losses and do better. In that year she raised more than 6o new divisions, he said, \\‘lllClI lzicketl nothing in the way of equipment; inilccii, \\'ll.L‘ll have been armed with new and ii11pri>\.~~11 t-iiiiipiiiciii, ciiiiail to and in some cases bcilir than ihztt of the .\llics. lhiisi; Lire lll\"’> which, presumably, the Allie: have lcariicil the ll£ll't‘.l W3)‘. In his report to the lll'lll>ll lliiiisc of Commons recently, Prime .\l1iii~11r t lllll't'lllll .'iildt'd to them. lie took full crcdi; foi- 111i: gains the Allies have won. He. lllCilhllfCll 1111- i-ifc-ct of those gains on the en- eiiiv lll lllEllI])U‘1\'(‘l‘ and resources. Germany is rgli 11;; t'lllll'4‘l\' Ull lllt‘ defensive. Certainly slii; is till tl1c rlt-ii-asive in the air; but, as Mr. Cliiii-cliill vzii-iifullyi pointed out, she has taken tlmi "ili-fi-iisivi- nccoriliiig to 1112111", and much of ilic i-iiiiri 1.1 .\llicil bombers today is aimed at iulcrriiptiiig and ilcslrqving the plan. .\< ll!(* 1' '1iii;_- progresses there are itiaiiy thing. iii l1l'l' fiiior. (111 tho west she is strongly 1-iiipl:ic:wl liz-liiiiil lllilfifilVi’ ilcfcnsss. Of the cast thi- l‘i"ii1i1~ Minister stud: “It must be borne in mind. . .1h;i1 as the licrniaii troops retreat west- wnril ilicv \\ill find many opportunities of nar- riiw-iii; il1<~3i~ fi-niits", 11nd if thcy choose to cut the‘- 1 ~ iii llll‘ lltilkaiis or in the Italian Pen- ‘ :11 imv time, a considerable number of cziii lll‘ iiiiiilii, zii-ziilablc for the purpose ytlr-niiig their central reserve." That 1 1'11} 114 f,]1|\‘(‘ll to rut their losses is (‘\l'l 111' their power of absorption. , _, ~ , . vil, the cold facts of what lies nil iiiii» l1!‘ (‘Jllllllv iirccpicil. \\'<- must readjust ~ Ill 11ml sii, ~ w.- lllllst get back tn concen- .. ‘1l'_' iiii ilic \\ ' lliiit has still to be fought. \\'<~ must ltllli/ the lll‘l_'l'llt‘_\' of iloing evcry- lhii; ;i1l zinithiizig \'."iich possibly can rcdtic-c “w v1.1 oi tl1e battles which lie ahead. To do 1 . so docs not require abandoitig postwar plan- ning, mglecting the important problems at home. 1t is important that there be postwar plans. that we approach the reconstruction period prepared t0 act constructivelv along co-ordiualed llllCS. But it is most important that we keep a balance, and that we do not allow these secondary prob- lems to bsess us to the exclusion of all else. - EIDIIURIAL NUItS .. St. David's or Dewi's Day. He is \Valcs' patron saint, lived in (1th century, and was caunonizcd in the 12th century. l I I I No more linen sheeting or table cloths are made in Britain. The manufacture of quilts and bed spreads has been cut to a mininniin and no more table cloths at all are produced. n- : iu >1. A total of 4,618 disability pensions worth $1,700,334 annually have been awardctl to members of the Canadian armed forces for scr- vice outside Canada during the pi-csi-in \\'ill' 11nd 1,556 pensions worth $104580 for service in Canada. 4 in a i< Isaac Todhuntcr, English mathematician, died this date 1884; ivas senior wrangler at Cambridge in 1848 and ztdmittcil :1 licllruv of the l\'o_\al Society Hf .\rts in 180.’: ivzts coni- pilcr of the standard liuclirl now in use. 11nd the author of many treatises on maihcmziiiczil sub- jccts. u- ni ii- i: Cost of the liciv hospital [iluniicd h1- tlic l‘cn- sions Department in place of the Christie Si. Hospital, Toronto, for construction at Sunny- broolt Farm, Toronto, is estimated at $5,000,- 000, the Department said. .-\ health and occupational centre 1o be built in CUlljllllCllflll with the hospital i5 CfiltlllléllCtl to cost 514100.000. i: is 4- * ' "l saw the article in the Daily .\I:1il re the licalthfulness of the lslziiiil. TllCTL’ is nothing cxt1'aortlinar_v in that, l1 is just a straight c:1.~.i~ of happiness and contcii‘ ‘n1, radiated iii llltl age. ifhcsg are not things material, but some- thing in the hearts 0f tlic people themselves." So writes a Charlottctowit officer 011 active service overseas. l i Ii Wish our City Council had some of the civic pride reported in ytesterdays issue in the bulle- tin by Mel Most, Associated Press Staff writer, until recently interned at lladcn-bzitleii, tier- many: “The German policy is to sncrificc- til- inost anything to maintain an individual fccl- ing of superiority. Despite the terrific short- age in manpower, for example, the Germans will see his pavements clean, his parks swept." Ii ll‘ ll 1i Disgraccful is a mild ivord to use rcgurtliiig the condition of the city footpathcs, drains and crossings. They have been left practically iiii- attended by the City Council whose primary duty it is to look after them. Yestcrdzrv pc- dcstrians in many instances had to iradc {lllhlQ- dcep to their work, although those in the happy position of having cars could drive over ihi: hard surface of the streets. The City Council is reaching a stage when a city manager will become a, necessity. it Ill it l‘ "A British soldier, a German prisoner since 1940, followed Red Cross correspondence courses in law, wrote his examinations and has been received as a lawyer—\vhile confined to a German prison camp. Only the activities of the Red Cross, particularly through its pl‘l5U1lt'1'-0l- war parcels, are keeping Allied prisoners of war alive in Germany, boosting their morale by providing medical equipment and means of self-education, the Red Cross being about ilic only thing the German has respect for." n- iu u is D.D.T., the nickname of a new insecticide which will probably become a household coin- modity after the war, was described for its cf- fecliveness 0n the war fronts and in insect-in- fested swamps by experts of the National and of the Canadian Pest Control association at the final meeting in Montreal. The composition of this insecticide is not likely to be divulged until the war is over but its destructive power ivas described as potent. The association lizis rc- ports of the effectiveness of the new gas from the armed forces who report mosquitoes were killed for two or three miles in swamps. lix- pcriments with D.D.T. showed that traces nf it in a, room or on an invisible film on a \Vlll(l0\\'. will kill six months after it has been there, an expert said. iii‘ Teaching a calf to drink from a bucket is a polemic process, says the erudite New York Times. The laws of learning must be recogniz- ed; he who is scornful of the psychological priii- ciples involved will rue his dogmatic attitude. Experience leads one to conclude that the tenets of the bchaviorlstic school 0f psychology fit the situation more nicclylhait the zissiiinp- tions of the eclectic school. Basically, there are two possible approaches to the problem. ln the first, one gets the juvenile bovine between his legs. Choose the centre of the pen to facil- itate movement. This is mobile ivzirfztre and space is of the essence. Place the bucket of warm skim milk 0n the floor, dip two fingers in it, insert the fingers in the yiotingsterls mouth, 11nd try to force its head down to the milk. The calf will attempt both flanking 11nd frontal movements. '.l‘he problem is one of logistics. Whatever happens, the bucket of milk must be kept upright and close to the scene of action. 'l‘he second plan has less mobility; but in a. de- cisive conflict the issue may, perhaps, be happily consummated in accordance with old-fashioned rules. Back the calf into a corner. straddle it and force its head downward to the milk. ltccpiiig a finger in tlie calf's mouth. 'l'lic tlicni-y is that with the stern end anchored the bow is more readily controlled. llotli plans oiicnitc on the basic assumption that as soon 11s juninr n1‘ junior miss tastes the warm milk, instinct iiill assert its powerful force and llie juvenile ileliii- quent will begin taking the milk. lii :1 (lay or so the human finger is retired frriiii flCllfill, 'l‘lit- countryman says he has tried both ineilimls :iiiil each rcsults in tuiprcdictzible actions bcfurt-Nhc law; of learning at; established. llotas By Tho lhy slr Willlaim Burl-ell, 82-year-old trustee of the National Gallery of Scotland. has offered his lrt trea- stucs, valued at 84.500900, as l 31ft. to the city oi Glaslow. S1: Wll- llar ivas tor many years a mem- ber of a Glasgow shipping firth»- Freclerlcton Gleansr. Then there l: that Pennsylvania family of 11 member who llvo over a coal bed which his been burning for years A sort of eut- ern version cf that western favour- lte. Home on the Range. —Strat.- ford Beacon-Herald The chairman of the 311th]: Overseas Airways predicts that; jet.- propelled ‘planes will be available after the war. Petueys! -Guelph Mrrcury. /\ used tithe is no longer neces- siiri’ when purchasing tooth paste and slznvln: cream. By sudh little nascments will the path back to Dflilllfll living be retracecl -I-lamll- i011 From the proteins In blood plasma scientists have succeedfid ln making plastics, films and foams for clini- cal use, as welt as the more fami- liar immune globulin for measles pmplii-lrixis and isohemagglutfnlns lll blood iyniniz Dr. Edwin J. Cohn nf Harvard Medical School re rt- crl to the Nciv York section o the American Chemical Society 1n New York, according to Science Service. The plastics arc made frcm flbrino- 1:011. the substance ln blood upon which the physical properties of the blood clot largely depend. In connection with thrombln this can 1:1- mztdc into fibrin films used as membranes. and into the fibrin foams uscd to check bleedlniz ln surge)’ on the nervous system Albumin Putin blood. nbo avail- iiblc now as a stable. drv. white |)O‘.\'ElCl', ls put i11 twenty-five per- ccnt water solution 1n the 100 cubic centimeter army-navy package and tised fnr treatment of shock. This approximately three-ounce solution l: ouolvalrn: to a plnt of blood 111115111: ~Excl1an2e The common eulfl is one of man's uicst bothersome ailments and one which may lend to sc-rlous complicit- llcns if not propcrly treated One d_. cljvclyt related to the com- moi cold Ls pneumonla It is one of the most grevalent and fatal tlLseases. It ratikcd seventh among the leading causes cf death 111 Canada a yczr or two BRO. Pneu- monlzi is peculiar to no climate but shows a dlstinct tendency to sea- sonal prevalance It ls most fre- rincnt in Canada and the United States durlnz the winter and early spz-lnt: months Neither ls pneu- monia a respecter of ages. as 1t at- tacks young and old. with equal severity but the incidence ls more marked at. the extremes of life. Overeroivding ln barracks and 1n- rlusti-lal plants, ctr. ls “lllfl to de- volon a susceptibility to an (x- Now we understand the reason for llIf‘ mild weather. American nirmcii have #1161. most of the zercs out cf Lhc air. - Midland Fret- Prcss Herald “hat has ltlussollnl to show for all his rears of cffort? asks a con- temporary writer Well, he has a iilclic in the Hall of Shame. Pcterborouizh Examiner. It ha; been reported In n Mont- real despatch that "Canadian sold- iers were disappointed last August ivlicn they landed on Klska and found that the Jiios had already moved out of the Aleutian Islands. And there 1t 1s again - the ridicul- ous suggestion that Canadians 1n this war are always "disappointed" when they move lri and find that the enemy has fled Why under the sun do immature press Writ- ers attecnpt to “put. that over" on a sensible Canadian public? No man ln the field. at sea, or ln the ttlr ls “d1sappolnted" because his enemy runs away He leaves that fdea with imaginative wrrespond- ants and perhaps a percentage of the folks back home It doesn't help the Canadian reputation a bit to have such absurd yarns spread out before the eyes of the world.- Hallfax Herald A chaplain back from the front says that. America needs a few izcod bombings tn stimulate mor- fill‘. Maybe so. but one cannot help feeling that all the millions of Axis bombs that have not droppsd on the United states are more port- anf ln winning the war. —Wash- lngton Star. ‘Wcngrance Committees" are be- liig formed in occupied Belgium Eventually there will be vegeanee committee delegates in every street, every district and every village. who will meet 1n secret to draw up lists of traitors These black lists will 1x- handcd to the Belgian judicial authorities as soon as the country 1s liberated. When Allied troom land, the patriots intend to arrut any traitors vmo try to escape he Germany. —Montreul Star. ——--.- The nfflce of war lnlormltlon re- ports that the United States has lost four times as many work- liours from industrial acclteritii as fi-nm iviii-flme strikes; that indus- trlal accidents have killed five thousand more. people slnoe Purl Harbor than the guns of the en- cnvv. and that: 60 times as many petiole have been Injured by such accidents sis have been wounded 1n battle or reported missing 1n action "“ inton Bulletin Mayor LaGnardla Iii siren; for home environment and as flrm as anv 111.211 Chinese patriarch in his insistence on parental authority and respect for elders He makes Another plea for better manne 8 -a plea which, though ft may seem strange coming from hlm. 1s. we stisneet. largely the crux cf the Whole matter He sees no reason iilhv children should be nbow- learning thc fntrleaclui of enolzlng, housework and wuhlnz dishes. He gocs even further and miikcs the auguestlon. so shock- lniz tn many of the ‘I rtlerns. that r- snanklnw (sometimes known tn flit-r» days of bosztis trtrmlnolnav as "m'fll’1ll"l guidance" l1 often nreelsnlv th- mcdlflui: required — Ncw York Herald Tribune Mccn/mizini raoAi-ivs A small itlrbai-i-iggnt-orcycle. about lll~ sir: of child's Lrlcvllc, la belng produced for use by British parach- ute WWI- PUBLIC FORUM , I I _ I BUBAL ELEUTRll-‘ICATION l Sim-The opinion expressed by manners o! the Government time have referred a0 Rural Electrific- atfon menu to favor developmz our Own water power. As one con- siders the matte: tulb’. the only problem that ts likely to prevent anything being cone ls that, of ftnanoing- Individual farmers, litre and there, can easily install thi- _ own system. Whltlh tor mum would be quite satisfactory; but that does not. benefit a dozen or more of 111s" neighbors wno cannot afford ms own ulant. I mint: it ts agreed that. the Government. have to out up tho lines anti lean lht: money naedzd to wire the homes and pur- chase generators. motors and equip- ment. The Dominion Government. have a right. to advance the money nccaed, its it will be sDent ln Cen- tral Canada, from when 1.111s equip- ment comes. _1 am going to sugzest that thtl district ot urnhams Road be used to prove the wisdom of 10c watér power for generating electric- ity. as we have two dams, Ideal. power slit-s, with n good stream- mowing idly tltrougn, capable ofi developing fifty horse-power 0r_ more, which wouzd provide for great. cxtenuon to the lines Whlchl should be crested thioughoul; New London and the North Shore and carried through Stanley Brldgi: to the National Park As more power ls needed, the heavier streams o! GFflfll/llle. Mill Vale 11nd Hope Riv- er. where lminidreds of horsc-power 0f imznitiii cnePsy are continually wasted-can be used to generate the Dower required for all time come. A generation ago. _t1_1e Dominion Government, recogiuzmg the dis- advantages suffencl by this great section of the Island. pipceeded to give them R_‘."l1.l1W6V_. e to some accident. this uromtsecl servant, of the people was sttll-born, These natural dlsarlvantuzes have mver been overcome: and compensatlorl for this disapu ntmcni: and kiss can at least. be made by putt-tug up Wwer lmes at ‘a small fraction of the cost. of a. railway. and providing a greater service lest there should be a feeling that the cost of rural electrification will be too great, ‘let me point out a few facts that mich; help to a Just; decision: The farmers of _th.ls New Iondon Bay territory alone, have perhaps half v. tnilllnn dolls ' up 1n farm machintry imported from Central Canada that are used mi an average three days ln the whole year. Tlicv have spent in Central Caniada, a iikg a. 1.11": 111.12.‘?- 131": “its a s o insurance policies. the premium-s am not used country from le ted on iit all to develop the which they are m1. e . "Phese statements are very conser- Iatlvc, and many more such claims c511 ll-lSLlv b1" made. What thin, docs llle profitable investment, at H. few thousand ilollars amount to from our Dominion Government. compared to the starzignrlng burden 0f public and private ezcpcndltures 23$" lfgwlalllcl $112131 orotsnrrivus and .» c‘ 1r , r ~ Prxcc Ediynird Island “mew or a Koo mun is ivunted to l end 8 Survey. and import. to tho Liov- emmem- Dtfillflrllfltv to undertak- 1118 amt Work. you lirivc one of the alnfl-Tlfit vouni: men of tho Pro- vneeuttght thorn In Charlottetown. 531g {ellllftt-‘d from overseas dis- wh I cit fuinier mllltaw ggrvicg, o am sure irould be glad w 11;- 515l- 1“ em": under way this trrmL est. p e01 for DOSE-WM‘ reconstruc- tlon. I am. Sir, e14; noun CAMPBELL. Pagan Shrine (Hflllf-Jzli-ronlcle r {l may lflmg a itlow o1 thank- uncss still tu the hearts of some W know that. amid the fires <11" war which have destroyed so many rep 10s 0f the cultured past, what, 1,; Perhaps the most revered memorial o! the pawn age mu remain; in- tact. This 1s the tomb‘ of the R0. man poet Virgil _ r The master writer of Imperial Bflme WB-s buried at. Naples, on the ‘Dad l0 PUWO 1x119 B. C, and hi! limb. 1n the Middle Ages, was venerated almost, as [hnugh vim“ had been a. Christian saint, p". muted by God 11> llve, before his time. The Fouth Eclogue of chts Poet. indeed. for centuries was be. "Wed by mlnv to be a. prophecy or the coming of Christ. Nothing secular can give h“. mimltv more comfort these day: than the contemplation of the per- manent values that have been caught and preserved by the classic poets of the world. So Tennyson, Perhaps, though when he wrote; "Thou that seat Universal Na- _m°l/¢d by the Universal Thou majestic ln thy sadness at ltgilfi doubtful doom of human NW’ 111v Forum ro sullen every ‘iiici'§-i°“§1'fi.¢ 0 _ me- Tho- thine ocean-roll of rhythm sound forever of Imperial Rome." 1r ls flood; u, of God were rs tied u‘ Lonton Meditations IIOII The London Times 1N THE BEGINNING 011i» qaiu, w, story of oreaiuon been aura. with its crest cu- max anti-m: man of Lhu execu- enoo o: the Creator's work; "and w we: that he him mane and oeinum. Wis very zoou." ‘mum. at the very beclnxunc of m; 1111111., there la iood news- 10 has not been 1m easy ining to eon- lesa wholenoartied uod the Creator ann the lustiory of religious arm Bl f-hd-lflht smwl nut quite clearly. Tnose who our- sue that history will oft/m find doubts or dEnlllS of God's full res- ponsibility for creation. with de- preciation ot 1.11s valrue and roofl- ness of the created world. ASE-infil- atl siwn mndenctes. the wtucn. at. its xurttmst. ex- tent, oeptorw vial-id's existence the rum of the Bible, and of the Christian creed which 1001s to the B1018, sumo mmsmutelv firm. ‘tnc world ts God's world, for he made it: to nan it owes its whole exist- enoe; what n ls the evil which has penetrated newly into 1t, putt not. so as to dut- tmy its essential loudness. hl true vision of the world ls that wtueh is never concentrated on the pvtl whlgllinlslixlut; to the point. of 051118 8 O ' C9096!‘ “BIKING-W. 11mm this Gospel of God the Creator. the believer may, in two ways. find at this time renewed “WHICH! um confidence. first, he has u an anchor of the soul tne assurance that tne evil forces wmcn tuwavs and evcrywhere make toi- destruction are at. war with some- ng infinitely mightier than themselves. The CIBBMVO pwposes not. complete tn one act. of the past oven though i1. be that treat act. described tn nmtlnlflcent. noetriy of the Book of Job as tne £34118 of the found- lonz to his original creation. 1t 1s 1n creation, the creation which has not ceaspd-"my Father 1vo1-ketl1 hitherto -—thsl; the truie and eter- nal nuvure of God is rcveaed. For creation ls the outflow 04 11m love of God. and m shat invincible love 11st: secure. wnntv. ‘the zood news about God as the Creator may be 111-; in. s-plratton of the creative activities man. For man too has the now- er. according to the measure q: hi; own nature, to create. Because he man not. God,’ wha. not perfect. flaw: neverthless, it Ls of which curled may be the IBBSUIH-twg that. whatever 1n human life corresponds at all with the pattern revealed 1n the making of the heaven and the earth cannot be In vain. REVERIE 0N A DOG How did it iisppTii too. that in default Of words you had a language all your own Wlbh many modulations, many l. e How mutplh o! harmless fury for as- sa. Was held in the potential of your H!‘ Awakelned by a. distant. timber 10w Your notes ran the full imtutcfrom That fell below the leonlne Down to the soft insistence of I w. admittance at the . . V8. 8 And m bébliltgll“. r1 ties f lJ l: Elflmesuive of annoyance orodei Brit. mar A mutual recognition and a fight. —-E. J. Pratt. ANCIENT c.1111: ' A lime sunttar to one-tors was played by the t1 woo B. c. Egyp am as early as “wont 011i? (Allll lWlllllEll gllfiillfilllldllcll ~- hlyéunn o lo do _ "b- u" in ‘ idpd slfldnoyliills GLEN WILLIAM SCHOOL Following is the rc r1 or G15 William School for 1h: month (if January; Grade X: 1. Mary Collins: I. Mary Mathuon; 3. Catherine Mai:- Pherson, “grade IX: I. Gordon MacDon. Grade VIII: 1. Jeanette Buchan- an: 2. Elizabeth MacDonald. Grade VII: l. Barbara Mathe- son; 2. Vlctnr Buchanan: 3. Sara MacInnls. de V: 1. Lloyd Macfnnla. rade IV: 1. Vincent Buchanan. Grade III Br; 1. John M. Muc- lnnls. Grade If! Jr; t. Randolph Buch. anan. “Grade If, Sn: I. Charles Murch- o n. Grade II, Jr.: I. Margaret Mac- Innls: 2. Stuart. MacDonald. Grade I: I. Donnie Eva. Pct-rm, attendance: victor Buch- anan. Vlneent Buchanan and Char- les Murchison. Annie M. MIOLQQII, teacher. FIRST TENNI5 COURT ‘m4- rldcst tismils couri- ln England GOLDEN HAR VES T H 0 c rimsiiian 13% Will [In yum- h"; thlt flnnl touch that wlll brlnl voufloxtta dbfllrl when the! go to market. RESULTS PROVE THE QUALITY DeBlois Bros. Charlottetown TELEPHONE 1697 was bullt for Hcnry VIII at, Hump- Qon Oourt palace ln 1530. , _. We have in stock and receiving regularly cars of: Old Sydney screened. Sprliighlll screened. lnverness screened. Bras D'0r screened. Albion Nut. Dominion Coke. Walsh Hard Coal for Furnaces Phone us your requirements. Prompt deliveries. W. D. GILLIS 6- CO. Phone 176. With those domestic gllliliufflls m: l 1E. R. Browi&$onl ¢ Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent. at Summerside, D. O. Stewart 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown i CHICKS We are now booking or- ders for Baby Chicks. We urgently request that orders be placed early. First Chicks‘ for delivery February 18th. All orders promptly acknowledged. c, SWIFPS Chick Hatchery cHal-lottctnwn, P. B. l. h. J. MABOII OPTUMETIIIST HIM d S lvlnl Olllfl n: an a? ontlra: P. l. l. Office Hplas; a l! n. I- ‘l jlollflngg m. nv appointment v Ofllce Lonneclcd with DBUGSTOIIB Attention Swine Breeders Now l: this time to {and lgalnst PIGWOBM By Illllll the most offwtlvl remedy on the market. MAUS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly ubollah all trace; of worm: Ind Im- Erovu the health of your ml. l'i-t-.a 35c per 1h. AMMONIATEI) BRONCHIAL COMPOUND A rcllnhlo and effective un- pnrnllon for the treatment 0| coughs and coldl- A call: rlllel for chronic Brim: ltls. Prlce 50c oer bottle. ARE YOU TBOUBLED WITH LUMBAOO OI SURE BACK If In we have one 0f the but remedies to offer nume- ly. Buck-lift; Tlbletl. Enpgc- |l||,Y eflectlvc for Lumblp, Selntlca. ‘loin-Ills, Mm, nun- culnr and other f0 of rheumatism which 11rd nary treatments fall to "mi. Prlce 50 cent-n our box, THE TWO MAGS 149 Gran Georg; strut. mu 0rd 0| pi- tr.....:.:" M" BOMB WAS NOT FUSED A NORTHEAST TOWN, England —1CP)— A maxi here was knocked off hi; bicycle Into 3 Iftcti by a l, GOO-pound B. A- P‘. blockbuster and lived. The bcmb rolled off ii lorry and he heaved a c-lgh of relief whom he learned 111s bombs are quite safe iinttl they are fused. “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. K. RDGEBS Agencies Ltd. Pliomi 540-541 Professional Barns - McLeod c» Bentley I I. BINTLEY. K. O- J l. BENTLEY K l: Blttllfelu lflll Atlnrnnyl-ll- lav Ill Prince Street wIIIAi-itpt Irsvqnmtm . ..t h-nwnlaob ..___.__.- --—>-~-._._____.__ . m'-nv1-1; llorrolliina company ll. F. AIIGIIIBALII Olnmnl Accountant Illlcrn ‘III! Iillfllll "Ina-Macon M. ALBAN FARMER . Q L. LLB. .:~.:.:1.-:':.1.-. IONI! ‘I0 w!" Al, w. MAIHLE U" snot