prairie prov es, Mr. Gardiner does believe that it is greatly iii the farmers’ interests to establish themselves lll\\\' as breeders of livestock wherever . . , . the circtiiiisttiiiccs will enable tlieiu to launch this venture on sound lines, Dairy herds have been slaughtered for meat and other sniclc has been threatened with depletion. The farmers of Scotland are aware of this and are shaping their plans to be in readiness to export cattle and breeding stock when the peace comes. They are enlarging their herds and producing the B! Mail in l’.E.l.. $1.00 per X031’; $2.50 ti" Ii mflhtlll best breeds of which they are capable. Thorough- gr-g; rm- t ntgnlhg- 50¢ tor one nronth lirrd cattle are eagerly sought in Scotland, and Um Dfl"'.“'3l.$f"ul) l“ ‘can 33'0" l“ l’ mum“ there are no signs of defeatisni in the auctions Sh” w: “i wand“; 60c h" one Mumm tlvr are held tiood cattle hriii r hi h rices Scot- By Mail hi cannot. ullil t $5.00 per year QL} H‘, p k _ t. '8 P] - _ _ Qgturday Weekly: sin.» per yea 514m [m- g mnnum tisll irtctcrs all stoc IZIISCYQ‘ are tltls giving 50c for 3 months checrftil evidence of their confidence in victory and their fziilli in Europe's future. PAGE rout: flllllll LOTTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Daily tFuunded in I851) President: Lleut. Col. W. Chester 5- Mill-ll" Vice President: J. R. Burnett, F..I.l. Secretary: Lieu! Ctil. l). A. hlllllKllllllln- 9-5-0- Edllar and .\Ini uni; Dircctur. J. R. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Iidittirs. rank Walker and lull A. Bllrllrll SCii-STRIPIION anus The cllilllilllfllilil ii tliiziriiiaii II|1i_\' Lu: niiliiined at _ ‘ _ lltllilllllg"! w... . lllttl Square, st-tv York; nia 1n tliitiig so, iirvy are atlliering to the same gltwn‘ “ihfum A::_“::fy_""":h‘,‘ shrewd policy f\tll~'i\\'€t'l‘ by their ancestors during us-imiii. .1. ri...-. ..._I Hay si., 'l‘ul'ull\u; nevi-i. sci-iii, the Aapoleoiiic wars. lhe agricultural records of 82:91:]b“{1!':,§:_-r‘f’;‘,§‘_'l;fMfflfiffj: _\§"‘,‘,'_" ‘.""“"" 5“""'""* those days show_ that the farmers of Great Brit- ' ain generally €li]0)'CCl high prices and made money. .\lan_v of them erected elaborate build- ings and improved their standard of living. Num- erous Scottish farmers, however, used their pro- fits to pay off their debts, drain and manure their lands, and improve the breed of their flocks and herds. A depression came in the train of those wars and more than a few agrictilturists found themselves in desperate financial straits. Thole Scottish farmers who had ample breeding stock of Sironzrst JIemor-g] is ll"eaker than the Weakest Ink.” Fitibav, JANUARY 2. 1042. Not lil Vain It is now established that the Xazi attack upon Russia was planned for much earlier in the year _ _ _ than the latter pin: of June and that the tactics of lllilll quilllll’ to 5°“ ‘Yolflflllled l° "ml" mmleY- cziiiipaigti ctllwl ftit" an assault upon southern The 5m"? ollllorllmltlc5 ma.“ 05cm agam and l{Ll>>€{l' 010,0. p, _.",,,,,-,.; 0,‘ [p0 111x01; 500. '11,,“ probably on a much wider scale than marked the plan, says the \\llilll1_ltg lii-QC Ines; “n; 1111mm“ era of reciiii-tiaictioii after Xapoleolfs downfall. pm, digufyay by m,- Jugustuv refusal ,0 be joined The Canadian farmer who plans now to take ad- to the scheme and, forthwith, Allied strength was "anlafl of this film" market ma)’ 315° "AP 8°°d cast hopelessly into (jizeece, hopelessly that is to Tetllmi “hm this W" ends- say so fair as any real prospect went in inaiiitziin- iiig a periiiaiitnt front there. But for precious weeks of line lighting weather, through April and through May, British, Australian and New Zea- land soldiers spent thctnselves desperately in wiii- ning that most precious of all coniiiiodities-tiiitc itself; and in the result the major assault on l\‘tts- .\'e.\t )c.ir the \\'ar will have reached a crisis sia had to be re-niounted atid the advent of winter and the Allied initiative coiiie into play. found the Nazis still far from their goal. \Vho is * "‘ "‘ "‘ there to say that those weeks and month: were wasted, or that blood was poured out in vain? What happened in Greece in the spring of I941 repeated itself under the winter skies of Hong Kong and hlanila. Tfirne has been won, is being and now they are represented in the victorious won. The price is dolorous and heavy, but it is Russian Army driving the Nazis back to their worth while. Iapanese divisions, far- spread over home base. Marshal Semyon Timoshenko, Rus- so many theatres and great distances, were held sian military leader, is of \\’clsh extraction. He down, pllllltfl to the earth for more than two is the sou of Charles jcitkins, a \\’elsh technician weeks at Hong Kong and for longer in the Phil- taken to Russia or years ago for a Russian fac- =-. tDllURIAL NOTES — Nineteen hundred and forty-two. i- it >t= i All the Allied World prayed for success yester- day; now for the provision of the tools. it it i ll‘ The Jenltitts are always more or less at the front lippines; and those divisions with their supply tory at Stalino. Charles Jenkins married a Rus- ships and trains nave been bu" battered and kept sian girl and TliIiOSliCrlhQ ('l'imothy Jenkins) is tliotisatiils of miles away fri ll the key-points their eldest son. Time's gratidfather was the Rev. fine Nonconformist preacher which it must be the Allied hope to hold. This Carziciacus Jenkins, a ‘s and he was service to the COiIllllOtI czitisc, offered today by in both linglish and Welsh lzinguag Canada, has obvious importance rivalling the sac- also a Welsh bard.” rifices made by our sister Dominion: on the Med- "‘ iterranean shores. it I George Gilbert Aime Hurray, British classical scholar and author, horn this date i866; rcgius professor of Greek at Oxford; author of a “His- tory of Ancient Greek Literature," of the plays . . “Carlvori Sahib and Aridroinache", and of trans- Th‘, Flmleri‘ ‘hdwjcale says ‘i d“ S_=*5°l'“°1sti@i{s of Euripides, etc; keenly interested in slluano“ do“ not lmproye. (and i‘ is dmmllt at public tptcstions and has written innumerable the moment to optimistic in tliatlregzirtl) the mnwilylint, “nick? U“ mm], Published “Thy, p0,, horse may be given 0a place ot prominence it has cigg pout). of Sh. p-lmxuxl Grey", llpam,’ “Fm- nm °“-l°yed—°" ‘uncrcd-‘ln the last l?“ ycars’ h and Policy" ; contested IIIISLICCBSSTLIlllY parliament- ia not an easy matter, however, to reinstate the My Sea, of Oxford University, and the Lmd hols‘ m‘ city sweem m‘ m‘: roads or eve" o" ‘he Rectnrship of Eilinbtirch University against hlr. land. A huge zimoutit of new harness and horse- Lloyd Gem,“ t’ drawn etiuiptiient would be required, and for any i ° kind of roadtvork horses would first have to be lhod. - Back To llorse Power its i! It! In seeking direct representation at War Coun- ,. . - . . cils, one of Prime ‘Minister Mackenzie King's Th: disappearance of blacksmiths has c0iiicid— claims is given by Mn John ‘Maccommcr “wash. 0d with the diminution in the employment of mam" Cormspontyplqt‘ of the p0“, York Times as horses for farm work and on the roads. For many fOTIOWS.‘ i-Thc Secmup and lmpflps 0,0,0 impress. years blac 16mm“ Camcd o“ ‘vllhout zlliprcmlccs’ ive argument is that (lanada is the fourth of the and it would be impossible now to whistle back AIMS as rcnmds h" ‘unitary and 0000mm‘; 00m any considerable number of craftsmen capable of tributiolh Syfe has no“, more than 100,000 501C130“ shoeing a. horse properly. Many of the black- in Gym, pwpnin, b,“ Perhaps he, greatest pomp smiths are past the zige when they would care t0 m,‘ inlpmynnce is as ‘he Sim mt the Empire A],- put on an old leather apron and pump the forge. lwainin" plan, ‘vhicl, has imam). 50m some 15,000 For twenty years young men have shown no de- named “airmen ,0 Lvrimn a,,d_n0\v that i, has ‘in to d° 1t‘ . . . reached its peak-will have doubled this number Howemr’ this is ‘finely i? ‘hfflc“1ty' not a“ ‘m’ bv spring.” This, too, after all the opposition he possibility. lu tvariiine, tliiiictilties and obstacles Ui-l-crcd {m Scheme ‘ppm firs, pmp0und0d1 must be ovcrciiiiie. lll this ciiltissal conflict the ' >i< >i< s >l< weak in body and spirit go down to defeat. Spirit _ Utility cloth, governinent-satictioiicd for general always triumphs ovt r force. civilian use, will appear in London this month. There is a wide ninge of weaves, colors and pal- tcrns. The material is all wool with a springy, durable linis-li. 'l‘hat feel of durability is the main .\lan_v llitt-Z liecli puzzled ti» identify the odd- difference between the itcw cloth and that of any looking naval ilress in which Prime hlinistcr usually high-priced fabric. London's more ex- Churchill came to ;\lliCi‘it‘Ii, and in which he has Qlugiye hqttsqs, Qgngentratlng on manufacture for frcipiciiily l\l(‘ll pll‘ilil_l_‘[l'.'lI)lIt‘(l. lt stilts him ad- QXPOYI and small groups of special customers may inn-ably, bu". “in ft‘ il‘ l he get it? 1t is. accnrd- not make iiiuch use of the utility material. Houses inn iii an lflYtllilllfisj,‘ ‘ii-c garb of an lilder Urollltfr dealing litostly in iruiillt-iis welcome the cloth. They 0f tlie ilil'lll..\'. a Llilftltlt‘ iiistiilttitiii. Sir Xnriiiiu Spert, Controller of the Navy in the infinite wt» Chtir-c-liillk Uniform lt was founded in i529 by of the liiglt quality fabrics with which their repu- re Illttllt‘. Standardization of design rcigii ill llcnry Vlll. Sport was in command of will he avoided and there is no cause t0 fear that llltt lltitry lil'."t"‘ ill‘. llicu, \\‘llll‘ll took the King t0 one day wontcn walking throttgh London streets Calais iiii i s \\7l\' t-i the liiclil- of the Cloth of will all find themselves attired alilce in style and Gold. l-Xivli \t.tr i-n 'l‘i'€nit't' Stinday the mcm- color. 'l'he utility cloth will be difficult to dis- bers of the lillllll iiiiirch in their robes throttgh tinguisli from other fabrics. (Due woollens house Seething l.:ini~ t» ihi-ir tiziri-li church, St, ffllnveY-y will put out tttility tniits for the equivalent of $15 fouiiili-tl iii 1:143. lii lll4*llil‘l‘_\' of hcr release from tip and coats [iriccd at the equivalent of 3H8 up. the 'l‘owci' [jitvt-ii l".liz.'ilii‘tli lifCSUlllUtl the church "‘ * * * with silltcn bell FilIWS, and iii front of the organ The Munitions and Supply Department in a there are \\'t‘nil';l\l iron hzit stands which date Press release labelled “just about the only good front iilctlievnl time. when the clergy were ‘lfylllg iicws from the standpoint of those who want to church. spend their money" the fact that materials for the to cnil (hi: custom of men wearing lials iii p of most existing appliances and The late lairil .\\i|1llllt was a member oi the repnir and upkee 'l'rinity llott-c fillll4l and ivnrt: his robes to wcl- for repair and rctrczitliiig of tires will be available come Poincare ltl l."lllltlll. "What is your uui- for the present 1t lcast. Because tin, like rubber, form?" askt-il lbiiii re. “l :ini an lildi-r liriitlier comes tnostly from across the l’neilic. Canadians nf thc 'l'i"iuit>\'." rc] d .\~t|illlll. “.\h," said Poin- are to sec fewer and fewer articles of this metal, wire. "nuns iiliviiiis" pas" ca cu liriiiicc." (Tllfil is llritt:innizt lilUllil, the base fur nearly all the MrlllFllilllg we hrivi- lltll. gut in France.) clit-zipt-r silvertvaite such as silver-plated sugar liuwls, candy dishes, platters, and other table artic- it's, is already banned. 'l'hcrc is no substitute for tin in the ninkitig of such ware. “By the time the __iDCII1~iI_I1d For Cattle |].,|,, l_ i;_ (;,,,~.1i,,,-,»_ lfpip-rn] Minjflpr 0f chcnpcr silver-plated articles go off the market, it \l_'l'lt‘ltl~.ili‘t'. urges the fartners oi western Cati- "l" hi‘ "WY ‘llfllfull l“ lmy lllc wllllcpbil“ Sllwr‘ ziilzi lll qt. iii lllitil‘ 'iit.-nsivel\' for tllc raising of “are o" which 51 lmllllwllvll llmll i135 illfmll)’ M?" p“, “mam i“ m, ,;,,\.,.,.,,,,,,.,,,' is Ppmfing ,0 "mp. tilnccil," the llt-pzirtiiiciit Sill(l_ ltatlin mtuittfzicttir- bud, ,,,.,,‘[._,,.,;,,,, ‘h. l,,._,|,._.,|,y,_, u, 00,001,“ “r5105, ers- zire lllfClill)’ rcstrictctl ll) half their normal out- . lilll ill lllllllriry- "What ziwaits them after janit- iiry ltns nut liz-cti l'(‘VC.'ll('ll, but the answer may be had in the l\lllll\\lle»'lgl' thzit rnhbci" and tin, two cs- sciithils iii radio tiiztntifzirttirc, are badly ticcdctl for the making of war stipplics," the Department sat . Will tzilcc Jill the lii-g ziiiil ilniry priitlttcls that (an _.'iili:iii fnrtiivvs" li.ivi- ti» scll, and tlic built-d Stall-s alw has" 71!] ll'.'l‘t'tllll'lll with tlic lhlniiniiln to in- ('l'('.’|\t‘ its lliiltfllfri‘ of cattle. but this- Ullllllfy has lltll. been able ti» till the dcmatid. \\'hile wheat is always likely to rciiiaiit the major crop of the lit,‘ tittilil of 'l‘t"inity House is no longer will have to scrape the country in search. NOTES BY Tllli INAY Observes the Woo stuck Restore: ‘The ee cotini. 8- ‘ Nova Sestitt a pcpaiation of 513.- 190, or about 8.1.000 less than t_lie city of Toronto. N-:w Briziisivick has 453,377, and P1" nte It i't.ll\'l_lb~— lnacl 93,919, or iitxul- 1w -ll‘.‘. .\‘ the pipulution of Ot:..\\.t ‘he Mnritunes ought, to he able to net along vrlth one ca" rixnient " And wotiid. were the crcp oi politicians S‘lI’I"iIllli€!',—-5il'£\if(l\i BJLICHII- Iter- a . - Assize (‘ourts are taking active steps to avciii the dark. The assiwcs uliicii 01cm nt. York today and tit Leeds next week. will rise earlier th .1i “@1131, so that jurors and u" us may get- hotne bcfre b‘ time. I nan told t-hnt the .. r= 0' er has chosen jurors t io l o taitxv near the courts. rcse g those who live in remoter p " of the country for the longer diys - Ileeds York- shire Post. Brief Bicrlin I“! tlio reports about Russia using "flt.!(ll:.ll racket nuns" me believed by e' >rts to be based on this tiiiiazina ti(.\'vltil)lllt’ll'oi British are known to have devised —and are apparently having the Russians try Olllr-IIIIIQITC Cmilhllla- tiolis of tavelve nine-barrel "pro- jectors," These \v.l simultane- Ollsly send 108 rocket-like projec- tiles into the sky i-etitiietliy as high as 20,000 feet. \Vhen each pro- pe-ctile reaches a precteiezrnined height. it ejects a long cable tit- lBChCIl to a paraehi‘ The bios are capable of dent i - ly damaging an V _ them, In one $.‘.l\'.;) iiie cumt; tion weapon is said to hlatlkc‘. a zone 1,200 feet lcnpz, 3Z0 ftc: ivtde and 300 feet, deep. - Newsiveek. mean to you I s for nine hundred at‘; y u have not known invasion. For nine htnldred years the only wars that Iiwve been on E sh soil tiiive been civil wars. the life cf the pecpl». l.\ tin- tOI-lfihcd. For all that little the English Channel has saved you from what has happened on the Continent of Europe. Nrw, as I-Ilt- l€I"l‘l{iS said‘. “Tlicrt- are no more islands." Wake up your follow- counti-ymen. Make tlicin realize that everything that ‘s valuable in life Ls at. stake in this war: your standard of life, your property, your persons, the szncittsi of your 11011165; the misons cf your women- fcik, your mental and s ‘ritual liberty, your his“. f0» ~ all depend on Arte 'l only I could tell means at the haii of rue 5.4-- mnnsl -- Front a Il f‘ Ilroatlcast, by a. Polish Wctnait it ~ _ In a discussion of "What Shall We Teach Our Chili." in lite Listener of last weiu: Vi", Jixntcs Howie Mitchell is said ‘o have sfiltli "My education was ‘x Srott h village." I beg l/i that. if. as I supp is a SCOlClICII" for “Sc0titls‘.i“ on s. still-editor. I w is one village in S-o such it “gentcclistnfl n td in collo- quial Engllsh wouia to Iicai-d, or. it heard, tolera 'l"l' " li(“'1‘,i 11 use of the word is 5-» speak. statu;o:_v, ii- l“e lldli in "if iristiliuitcns -,lli: Rn "l S n ish Acadcmi‘. the tti ll Fran‘.- dent Institution, ct" establish-r variziixt in Sr. sll . prise any audicnt-e. would f/iist it on 11F for use, as snnptiw-cfy were to have the . in Scotland, oi’ sc Scottish mist Scottish I(‘("‘Yll, r he word is vul sense-iii prize 1w‘ -Jclin I’) S London Llstene A century ago rubber was nnt an industrial material. Tdav cannot be fctialit. “llnfififll gt mecharifzctl sirmv rrli. llIlO lmtllc son rubhcr. Whcrc 0n":- 1'ill‘l‘(‘l' w". used only in mr-ktrq IlPOlETFVF, cra- sers. eloctriccl litsnlatwm. raJnrrv-fs and ovcrsticcs. olosllc hands. it nc-w serves literally htintlrrds n! rntrpns- es. It it. comes la tut» woixd. we could prnrlucc the M900‘) tors of rubber thn‘ w“ ilt‘(‘.'l in normal limes in facf-"rl'.=—<~vnt‘hct‘t' mil)- stlttitcs Bit‘ {tu- cost. would be pct-ham $'.'0'l.000f‘O() crd two years wctild be lost. in dcd/tnlnw and building the- TlP‘-""".'\ v nlrirs. As . all. "iir "ill"‘?f‘i‘ cnmcs from . .1 F-sl It mu“. bc carried 12TH) mics. evcrv one of which l5 now nrcrar‘. u= h t'."il"(' of Japanese sldmnrtncs. l‘."l’l\l)f‘l"‘. and raiders Thorn arc huwlvwrl: of islands in tho Pacific l‘.'li"l‘(‘ nia- rnudcrs cnu‘d hidx I’ ls mt ms late for us to tut-n to pr ‘ibli “Jill- ive $OUTCC= of rulrly" iftllron. 11F”? some prcmidilrg c~'j~c'i'i~c"t,< w-ll several varieties cf gi-ldcitrod evnerimctit-s that the Fcnavtmcrit of Agriculture coulfnvcd in :1 small way ’I'ltcrc {Vic rtlpo giiitytile. Y which rrsr mblcs sri tzebrti M; the Castllla troc. wh {ch grc. ws in Florida; militwerrl and the (fhrld- mas plant, pohtsct-tia There may be doubt-s about. the t"c'tiiic.il feas- ibility 0f exploiting some of these plants, but thcrc ls l ~ ilwiiln. ttbotit gtiaytili», the pm, lulu, or which have brzcn tlic stink-ct. of mudl experiment. licrc and‘ tilso tn Russia. - Now Y Titncs. The Nazis say thcv can't take Moscow this winter. That is prob- ably a. furl. If thcv hid tint said so, Maxim ljtvlncft‘. just arrived in the United States ‘.0 t~k-\ up his Ambflssfldvrsllin. might have been willing to The Nazis ll"\'l!“§ pub- rcired their own faiiiu-c, Mr. Lit- vincff inclines towarrl rest-rve. Ht- dsesnt trust any statement that comes nut. of Irrlin, i-vrn when it is not writtrti in n ti0ii-:i':{.ire.=si.ii pact ‘I'm! rc<t of tvcll adopt. Mr. Lftvincf’ may get comfait 0-: ports that. the w .i.‘h'r fllTillflfl Moscow is so cold thst it trcrzcs the oil In motor telilr~‘:= W» may get amuscment- nut of Nazi Sllxsflticns that. ire German l‘ may be rcfrinictl t1 war.‘ ttdvmrnce --fn a manner s-"il r ta tt-nt ("<- ‘f? hiblted at Rwtnv! We must nct, tmlss: vw- ir'-=i is i~ivil~ "ribs-r bitter surpass. out-nit ylf-gnn- tesscc‘ fctiurr; n? sn- rrzis w lull W; w"h rr-w If ‘ i\'"c‘:rcy.--Chr!st- Ian science ML ‘or. Mr Vlcc-Vcrsiial Frthv-r (‘lining- ham. At"lr»l‘an-l~q-p sq.- crum- cemm-ancllnc In t'--- wi- fe", rye. ertf. bewn Po lat vsn." n nitrate in the New Zwfanil rcgirreni. that. captured SMIVII. in September, I0 4. According to g gbory wit! CHARLQTTETOVlN CUARDIAN_ a vJ-ar 3T A cure twciity PUBLIC FORUM Thin uuluum h own lor- me dllounluu by correspondents at qnoutluln ol Interact. Th0 Uhilrlutlutiwvn Guardian don not momentarily undone the ' at norrnnnndrntl. ' “UARTIM E DRINKING Sin-At this time, as we are standing on lhethreshcid o! a New Year, it is well to take n backward look and see wherein we may have failed m our duty as citizens of this Province. Being eta-tinged, as we are, in the gzeritcst. sti-utzale far Iieeicm and tirtnccraey lll1’l~ the w. rid‘ has ever n. an effort which is costing us, of. on ‘ lIll_3.€ stuns of money, but. thou ‘ of the l"C\‘\\"l‘ of oilr YOllIlfI m. . .1, iiifnid nut. money IO \\‘.lSlC(l in it .ohoiit~ b-avcragcs be a lilatter oi gravest c izcern to each and everyone of us? Canada's ycairiy drink bill ex- coeds $212,000.COD and lit is quite . t‘ in suite of our Pm- hi i- nvantitlcs are cousin c Eltvard Island. Now we tire sure iha‘. all temper- aics hctixilv endorse c grinders’ recent exhor- tation to (‘\'\‘!'_\'l)t‘(l)’. to sign the p‘. djie for the dt itlon ol’ the witr. ~ ‘low cilfltrixs ‘hat- arc wt- go- izi: to do iilzotit this in I942? Are we going lo stay in the same old rut rind let. ll‘0 spcakcasvs and bcfitlcacers still flourish? Will ft. eesv for thirsty tourists to "s appeal to the mart. rnatiltocd of our be- P we. l0 d» tlitir lit-most. e veal tlr t. lies- nit." d. to make fllil‘. Thcxc are litany ways In ll lClI we ail can help. It is for every citizrn to look for his own s-rmclel Jcb in it's own com- and don" forget. that we R.C..\I.P. to rcncrt miv if). in PR1. itcallv ._, ._ ciia. .7. ll. ‘JIACFJRIANE President. TfllIp'l'f'.I‘.L'Q Federation. Rcdcqnc, PEI. Dt"C<‘lill3*C‘i 2 7/; til. l?» rolten (Ilaiilnx Harald) The death of Mrs. Artemas Lord. 9'7 years old, in Charlottetctvn, will recall to residents wt‘ Prince Ed- ward Irlritid the lctig _vrar,,~ of de- bate which procrd-ed the cntt of that. province into Confedera-lon. The passing of this aged lady, daughter of Colonel John I-iami ton tsrav, will bring roii‘ ‘scences, too, of the stiatgtrlc ng the " 'ii".nt sf»! m“ and of the estab- ‘rnctit in that p t. (f “e D0- 1.011 of a DPOHDE‘ ‘ which is trailer than most betrnuse so f Fill‘ liter‘. on ttgzistctilt-iire, Colonel Gray. a naiive of Prince flciivcrd Island. loft ivlicn a boy to i: ectjalryiiitin and saw " Itf rind ye a 1'5 25 ii afterwards e1. working ener- ,. later‘. in llliti was Prune i W“ a"; to w ttbciit- Czinfeder- iciiicinhcrcd in 1939 , the only stirvlv- ilcd _ a llc tllllllVi l" last‘. Union Cottlcrcitcc. and again in the same _v<:.r when she was rcecivctl by Their Msijesties, a to her and the memory of, f-fuliirs. Lord breaks _Y‘.t‘ t .1 law < ' s lilllZS with lii“ ‘ \\ 1! this Dis iniuiun. It is soiiiciling to thin]; ill) n as lite counts’ enters a new y.;r. Airthm‘ llleighen Lotilred Ahead (The Citizen, Ottawa) Rltfllb ' Arthur Meighcrrs one of the corner- n lliillf.‘ has . Frv Cann- innJi about . lo it lIIIIISTlf. The Citizen the slant taken by Mr. ‘l"iI tit- the Imperial Confer- _ years ago as vital. however: it should certainly be reiii:iiilier<-rl in Canada at. this time. It. related to closer British zit-cord with the United states be- fore renewing tiny British alliance " Japan. Rv-‘lvrt. Bordon took Mr. hcn over first in 1918 to nt- zin Impei '11 Conference. the ting Ctinadiitn lend llniibtlcss _ IIIlIIlFlOY profited well by up gage ("nun-cl of the vct-"rnn stritcstitan, Canada's great leader in the inst. w ar. At the next imperial Conference in 19.21, ; Nlviwhsn ntlcndml as riri~ ii of Canada. lie eli- "llllfrYfll l1 < “illlTbilltr move by the Yrfrltlli Office to ir-nctv a military alliance with Japan, without. first. "Hiillw, lo nu llll(l(‘l'§l.'IIl(llllI', with the Iliitted Slates, Mr. Mzighcn tuck no hostile tiosrition inward JIlDillI, but. strisi-"rl the univlsdom of a separate tilliance. A3 an al- ternative, he put forward the de- szrnbilllv of a llIITO-ptlrvpr m“- ’. ‘I s» ilnitcd States ‘own together at the coiifciasiicc i ¢. fi 9F II ll cilF/Itifl as British a lord foreign cl‘ nraltcil tigaiiist this coli- 't‘l.‘ .0 method: he maintained lllfllivllll‘ nlltnnrc had already nuto- matically rcnctvctl itself. bccritise iiclice sliotild have bccn given ti Year cat-her to oiirl it. Iii effect, the Domintnii slnteinctl had mar-sly been called on that subject, to aj>a,t_i\ryir/s.onietlilnz__ alrcttttyijloqitlqd here l>,\' Pat. Hair/ah. another Australian serving‘: in the New Zcalaiid FPLYlIIVJill, Csirnghnm was a bail Slifll"l‘ which D':<:v::nt"<l h s premo- 1\l!7..\V fnrccs. "It. was l and saddrziilig stutter" i "It. was so prnncunc- .ti‘.d' nrt tvrn make him . -c r oral. Si Canlnrrham de- i the R.A.F.. where it vraltr " - Australian Btu-eat! 21' n iii th" Kidney Acids Rob Your Rest hlriny people never seem lo [at I gout r.‘ l’: rent. They tum and ton-lie await.- vid count sheep. Often they blame it m: "n:'r_'lcl’ when it may be their lidneyr. Healthy kidney: filter poison: horn the blood. II they an hully and hil, poison: rtay in the system and Sl-‘Iplilllllll, head- uzlie, hat-helm oltan fallow. II you dun’! sleep well, m Dodd’: Kidney Pills-JO! half a century the favorite remedy. m Budd's Kidney Pills l ll‘ -4 71w a wiZilQot/itm. The sun set, but set not his hope: Stars rose; his faith was earlier uni Fixed on the enormous 8st Deeper and older seemed his 0Y9; And ntatehed his suiferimoe sublime The taclturrtity o! e- He spoke and words more sort than 1 n Brought. the Age of Gold again: His action won such reverence sweat As hid all nteasures of his feat. —Ra.iph Waldo Emerson. by the Foreign Office in high policy. Mr. ivleiglieirs vigorous stand impressed other statesmen at the conference, however. inclu Lloyd George and Winston Church- ill. With new light shed on tlie sit- uation by the Canadian prime minister, they could see the danger of it preliminary British deal with Japan before inviting the United States to sit ln at a three-power conference, The United Kingdom and Japan would have been sitting as military allies. It would have stiitetl Jttpzin to convey the impres- sion that they were tvorkintz to- gethei‘ in oonstiltation while the United States negotiated alone, or as one against, two. With new light, the British law officers of the crown were able to 'l is»: the Imperial Conference t. titer: hnrl ieen no automatic rtncwal of the Anglo-Japanese nlIvtizte. Tilt- Bifitish ILITIDZISSIIGOI‘ to the United States ascertained that. Washington would welcome a three-power conference. So. out of Mr. Meighens cour- ageous stand-ms a young Canad- ian pflifit! minister looking far alieaci—thc Washington conference followed the Imperial Conference of 1921. With Sir Robert Borden as one of the British delegates, lllG three nations csiine to an agi-ce- inent on ntival armaments, includ- ratlo of 5-5-3. 2 and the ,. five battleships in commission, so long as remained content with three. The Washington pact also included soieirm declarations to respect the territorial intczrity and national sovereignty of China. In I931, Japan flagrantly violat- ed. the agreement by the military occupation of Manchuria; but Bli- tish foreign policy had become afflicted with the palsy of appease- ment. Under Messrs MacDonald, Baldwin, Chamberlain. Simon and Hoare-ndvi.sed to practise drastic economy by Montagtt Norman- wlth Cztnadlzul approval, the Bri- tish ruling tttithorities followed the chimera of disarmament from one conference to another. Far from disarming, Germany, Italy and Japan rvssed on with the building up of greater" armaments than had ever before been known in human hlstpry. O taln no more than each Japan 0 One corner-stone of the Wash- ington coitfeicncc endured, how- cvcr: AngIo-Saxcn unity survived even the strain oi’ Sir John Simon's appeasement policy In 193i. when Japan struck at. China. Great Bri- tain and the United States con-t tinned to honor the terms of IIEZIKFIIIPIII». They were drawn closer t hey its U13 menace of Axis power became more formidable. It is vain to speculate on what the British position would have been in nu alliance with treacher- ous Japan. It is timely. however, to YCIIITIIIDPI‘ Ml". Meiehcnis great. contribution to closer British ne- coi'd with the United States at. the Imperial Conference twenty years ago. It has surely bome- good fruit. Pooling Resources Tinics) Unitcd States of the lack its‘! (New York Canada and the have long been proud _ of military barriers aloniz their common border. Now. in the in- terests of their joint war effort, it ls proposed that the economic bar- riers tiiso be done away with. The Joint- War Prndtietion Committee of Canada and the United. States has proposed and the President hits approved rt program calling, In ef- fect. for the pooiln of the raw mn- tcriais and produc ive resources of the twn countries. The committees argument runs thus: Victory will require maxi- mum production. Tlint will require the maximum use of labor, raw materials and facilities. Each conti- try should concentrate on those ar- tielcs it can produce in largest quantitv and in shortest time. The necessary goods that one country needs from the other should be iii- loctitcd with n ' to maximum ..____»._~__ __—V ~-.. __—=.—__._—-—- IIIIACQKWQWKYQPGYKKYIKIIIIIIGKI" EVANS St ‘mach Mixture Eve person who ls troub- led wl h gas In the stomach . and bowels should get a bottle . oi’ "Dr. Evan's Stomach Mix- ture." anti see how tyuickly It will rcllcvc all t! stressing symptoms. It also promotes the func- tional activity of the stomach. assists digest on and Improves the appetite. Recommended for Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, etc. Don't delay. Order your hot- tle today Price 85o bottle. . .. I. P EFIEZ LTEH? "Z €‘{‘€'€‘£’i'€\Z"I’l‘€ a _ . .. = MONIATED BRONCIIML COMPOUND Relieves acute Bronchitis. Spaeimntllc Croup. Bronchial Catarrh, Coughs and Colds. Price 50c bottle. COD LIVER OIL For Infants and growing children. There In nothing on can Ive children who are o be "Rlckety," that will build and strcn then their hams and hcdlcg Ii e "COD LIVER. OIL“ Babies thrive on It. It ls llltc sunshine to their bodies. But the Cad Liver Uil mtst con- IIIII the right ‘prnprirtlnn oi vitamins. We sc and recom- ' mend the ltlnd that In nclentl- fically tented and innseqnt-nfy reliable and eflectlvc. TllE TWO MAGS I49 (ii-cat George street. Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention f<‘§'-Z"<'€'€‘{‘-E‘€"-l l. v tr r 5 v r iv One of the Better Me 143 Great Geo. St. IIJlI/Illlnsllz/z In Our History To Everybody For 1942 We Wish PROSPERITY IN GENEROUS MEASURE AND HEALTH d: HAPPINESS IN ABUNDANCE Harry A. MacDougall JANUARY 2, 1942 . ...________ WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ For Increased Patronage . During 1941 We say to our many Customers ‘THANK YOU” You assisted in making 1941 Best. n’s Wear Charlottetown. JUI-Yffflflfilfifljll Yllllllllilllllllyya ontzrilbution toward the olnt. ef- fort. Leglslative and administra- tive barriers inciudinz tariffs, im- eustoms and other rez- ulations and restrictions which im- e the free flgw o! munititani and supplies. shoui be Eli-spell E 01' eliminated for the period of the wlr. In the light o! the war needs this is no more than common sense. But common sense in matters o: trade barriers i; always rare and always to be cherished. It. is earnestly to be hoped that Congress will inter- pose no delays in the way of ca-r- rying out this (program. Arid it is also to be hope that when the WM I thl mo sense i311 Eli‘ fiiiiniivgi- to sgtiiii: lihg twig policies between our countries the post-war years. .____-_-—— CIIILES ELECTION g‘. Every citizen over 2i will have l. vote in the election of successor to late President Don Pedro Gerda. Feb. 1. ___________. CALL FOR PATCHES A rush call for patching nmteriai for small boys’ trousers was Bull by the Women's voluntary Services In pmglmd m the American Red BRGAIN FA§Es Charlottetown —Going-—- FRIDAY, JANUARY 9th AND SATURDAY. JANUARY 10th blnnday. Jim. 12, 1942 _ ‘M’ $l.45 From SUMMERSIDE (Government Tax Additional Proporttonatelu Low Feral from other station: Children orlriia: and under Twelve year: o] nae HALF‘ FARE Ticket: Good In DAY GOAOHES ONLY For Further Information Consult any Ticket Agent CANADIAN NATIONAL r0 ll/ARYWIIIHI IN (Alanna, “ t7: Cancun liatlcnal llnm Mm M him l“ Currie ‘AH .,'w* v vwv v WORDS OF CHALLENGE A Thou For A Pedals ‘Annulm- “A: Canadians, deeply Con. cerned with the happiness and welfare of our fellowmen and with the future of our country let. us one and all. each in tits fllihere of his own activities unite our eflorts to promoto our national unity." _ gay. dlnal Villeneuve. CUPID 11v LAND ARMY LONDON —(CP) —Lord Glentor. an, Minister of A -i -. the Northern Irehiiidultlilldfiee will Cfllllmvns that every one d: n1, first grou f I d ‘ In Ulster iisii mibid?“ signed “p “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE” W. It. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. 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