L, P522159}!!! ll "ring CHARLOTTE WN GUARDIAN ‘TIIE "lllRllllliluuud GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded In I887) Prelldent: Lieut. CoL W. Chalk: B. Mel-Ill Wee-- caldera: J. ll. ljurnett. I‘. J. I. Secretary: Haul. CoL D. A. llhclflnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. ll. Burnett. FJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Lleut. Ian A. ‘Burnett. ILC.N.V.R. 10a Active Service) ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ T1iul§soax._ T113111: '1. 1m m The Schools And Navy League ln 1l1¢ recent campaign for funds for the Navy lfiligllfi, Mr. _l.',l. Morris, Provincial 'l'rca.~:urcr, sent 11111 appcals to the scholars in 5111111: 100 schno ' a~s11ring contributors that any s11bscrip1i1111 1b sum \\"11uld cntitlc them to junior 11101111101111111 111 tl10 Lcague. The idea has ca" 411C 1111 i1111111\11~1'l_v a111l alrcady over I00 1:111111"1l>11ti1111s ' ' 1 rcccivcd. varying from 1111* 11111111111 vi-nt 111 SJ.‘ 1110 p111 1 a111011111i11g' to X11111». :1 1"0111:11"l.al1l0 icspoiisc to an apical t1» patriotism, and is 11111cl1 .1v 1110 0x0cu1i\"¢'of the .\'av_v Lea- 110 1111111<-1"1111s schools still‘ to hear ~ l111pc1l 111111 thnsc 111 turn \\"1ll be 111111 111111 p:1t1"i111ic 111 l10co111i11q 111' 1111- greatest scrvicc club 111 - .\'.1\_\" Lcilgtlt‘. 1. .~1|11:1ll_v 1 111111111‘ "111- world C11111!1r0l:t->11sive Reports Attrition is 111111111 to 1110 satisfactory re- ports of ".110 ;11"1-~i1l1'111 and gcucral nlzinager of 1110 B11111.- of .\'11\":1 511111111 appearing in today's 1.1.110, In 11 ~111;11"0l10111-i\"<; rcviciv of 1l1c yv-gir-g 304' < l‘r1-.i1i0nt ,1. .\. McLeod (lczils 111111 tftlih" .. pr11-p0vt< 111 this pcriodof trans- ition, 11:11! 1~1w1i11 ' 1 particula1"l_v thc existing d."111_;01" of 11:11:11. . j p111 10s which would not onlv wrt-ck 11111" w. " vffort. but stultify Canada's la-pt-s 1111 [11-1111-11111: ;1.lv;111cc111c11t a111l pros- perity 1111" _\'0:11'~ 111 c11111c. .\l1". .\1cl.<-1111 111-11 011111h11=iz0s our trading problem 1111111 lircat 1111111111. not only bccattse of its '1 E111|1or1a1100 1o Canada but bccause it is 1111l1c:1:i\"<- 11f 1110 11111011 widcr problem which 11111-1 b0 11111-111 1f 1111011111111111111 tradc is 1o ex- pand and tl1r.v0. .\lr. ll. l). llurus, the gcncral manager, also tlcals with ])l‘C>C1lf and pos '11!‘ prflblcllli 811d nl\jt\"ti\'0-, but 11-111-1- p11r111"11l11rl\" \\"i1l1 financial 111111101» >111"l1 11- 1110 riwisinn of thc 15.11111‘ .'\€l 111d 11:: .1<:1\1;i1-< 1-1‘ 1111111111111 institutions. I917 Conscription Vote .\l:1;1_'-" ptniplc arc .'l>l\'ll‘L'_ how Canada voted in 1111,‘ 1111 c-111>crip1i1111 for ovcrscas service. Tihcrc wcrc 35; seats 111 the llousc of Cont- nions thcn. 'l‘hcr0 arc 2.15 seats now. Here is fllc way 1110 vote wcnt 111011. with the muubci" r11 \1‘£l'1< in 011.11 proiittcc 111 lljlf and the num- ber 11f scnis in 111.11. 191T Scats R2 f»; [ll 1944 Beats 82 65 21 17 17 16 12 10 4 I 145 For Conscription Against 8 Province Ontario . . . . . . (Quebec .. Saslt111cl1c\var1 .. lvlauitoba . . .. Alberta . British Columbia Nova Scotia New Brunswick P. F. 1. Yukon . . . O\ N 1s I2 l} 1K1 l1 lON-l>-bO-“‘"O Canadian Senate Whcu a writer praises the Canadian Sen- |tc—tl1at's t1c\v.=. That's just what Arthur Mc- Arthnr, (Jttaiva 110\\‘sp:1per111a11 and feature writer", docs in thc llcccmbei" issue of Canadian Bnsincsr and 11c 1100s a reasoned job of defend- ing the 1)on1i11io11's mucb-tnaligncd upper house. "The Senate of Canada comes close to being l1 forgotten institution and its mclubers the for- gotten 1111111 11f public lifc." .\lr. McArthui writes in his 111111010, "The Place of tl10 Senate in Democratic C111111da." Then he poi111s out that the Scnatc is still a key institution of Parlia- 1110111 and i- 1111: forgotten in the scnsc that it t-scapcs 111111110 or criticism. “The Coilfctlvralion 110111111» show 111111 had thcrc hccn 1111 Scnatc thcrc vcouhl 11.1w: 110011 n11 tf;.111111.1. The rcprc- s011t11tiv1-s 111' 1110 .\la1"iti1110 l’rovi11c0s as wcll z1~ 111 {jurln-t" w-srt- 11111 11111111114 111 place 111011‘ 11141111 111211 111101.11.- 11111101" c11111r11l 11f :1 single llo11s0 11f 111111111111-111. . ll Wlh created 21s :1 protuction i111" provincial and minority rights and without that protection the provinces and the 111i11t11""i0\ 111111111 11111 l1:1\"0 agrccd to merge their 1l1-\t11111x-." Th0 50111110 111111 prnv11l0s a 1"t-vicwi11g body fur 11131411111111 |1;1~-01I 11y 1110 Commons and a ch0cl< on hasty lt-gi-lation, thc writer points out. 110 also §lll_“_'_',<'>l\‘ tl111t Senators might be used 011 hoyal t‘11111'11is.~""'o11s, lllwlCllfl of judges. "Sen- ators havc 1111.- 111110. 1110 indcpcutlencc and 1hr ability 111 scrvc 11;; 1110 ("yrs and cars of Parlia- mcnt 1111 111C 11111110 c11111plica1ctl phases of gov- ernmental :1cti\"i1_v." Defends BritishiLabor Deibunks Socialism Th0 11111111111111111111111 of imlustry has always becn the t1l1j0ctivc- of the llritish Labor Party. and llcrbcrt .\lor1*i.<1111. as a labor lcarlcr has hcld the 1111111111111 111' 11111110 Sccrctary 111 the British (‘al1i11c1 for some ycars, and his ex- perience in 111111111111; legislation ziffecfitig‘ busi- tress entcr] 1111s lcd him ziway fro11"1 the 111.1- Yashioncd notion that 111t- ccouomic activities which stistaiit a nation can bc cffcclivclv carrictl an by govcrumcnt dcprirtiiit-iits. British trade unions wl1i0l1 have framed post-ivar plans for their industries have taken “xactly the same view. Such powerful tmions .5 the Iron a111l Stccl Federation. the Printins: and Kitidrcd 'l'rad0s Fcdvration. 1110 Boot and Shag Operatives‘ Union, the Cotton and 'l‘ex- eers and Firemen, the Furnishing Trades’ Un- ion, and even the Union of Post Office Work- ers, albagrce in explicit repudiation of the idea that their industries should be run by govern- ment departments. The Post Office Union, m fact, is actively campaigning for a plan to trans- fer postal and telegraph services from the con- trol of the Postmaster-General and his dcparr- nient to a controlling body constituted on the lines of a public titility company. i This rather astonishing development is a clear indication of the revulsion in Britain against the bureaucracy of Government depart- ments. Mr. Morrison himself, in a preface 1o a recent rcport of the Fabian Society, rejccts nar- ionalization of industry as a matter of immedi- ate practical politics. Speaking as one with ad- ministrative experience, he says that he does not believe such a scheme could be carried 0:11. cvcn if the people voted for if. These facts, cited by Prinml Word. were recently published in the New Zcalatid Labor paper, T/lr Standard, and Prime ‘.\.lllllSl€l lira- scr was asked by the editor to comment on 1l1c111. 'l'l1is is what he said: “Stale ownership 111 itself would not solve the problem of itidustry. and the transfer from a privatc citiploycr 1o the State as an employer certainly would not solve the problem of the democratic control of in- flustry." Experience teaches. tDIIURIAI. NUllzb 1s Prime Minister King 111a110c11\"r1|1g t0 avoid an clcction during the war? It would appear so, scciilg that Senator Lambert sug- gcstcd a11 extension of Parliament when dis- cussing thc confidence 111011011 111 the Upper Chamber. i! i i‘ Ill Days of 11111rtyrd11111 are not past when a 1111111 1111c Mr. Leo Praught and his wife arc willing 10 endure all the pains and indignities of imprisouuiciit rathcr than submit to what they 1100111 to be a political \\'1"o11g and oppres- sio11. =01 l! I! IF "I agree (says Mr. V. Quelch, M. P., Social Credit) that the voluntary system is the llt3>l n10tl1od to use in order to obtain 111011 f01" a raiding party or a small expeditionary’ force; 1111f when you are going into a total war which will require every man that is available. then I do not see how the voluntary system can be tnaintained on an cquable lmsis. Certainly you cannot expect to have equality of service and sacrifice under the voluntary system which may result in all the men of one family going over- seas and none from another." l i i If Why this discrimination against Charlotte- to\v11? H011. C. D. Howe, .1\linister of Muni- tions and Supply and Reconstruction, in a letter to International Union of Marine a11d Ship- building Workers of Canada, Local N0. 3, has zidvisetl that despite rcdilrlintl in ccork fn nrarlv ail shijabziildirzg yards in Canada, “there is every indication that the volume of repair work to be done in Saint John will continue to be heavy." The letter was in reply to one forwarded to Mr. 1"l0\ve by the union seeking information as to prospects for the future. l U I Church offerings made by Protestants ir. Canada and the United States during the past ycar surpassed their givings the year previom by more than $33,693,000. The stewardship council of the 23 Protcstantchurchcs reporting their receipts, announced that last year's giv- ings of $441,868,327, were the largest since 1931. As happened following the last war, it" is expected that the marked increase inoffer- iugs during the past four years may continue to climb after thc peace when bond sales and war funds are discontinued. 111 It! l l Echoes of the farmers’ political past were heard in Parliament the other day. Senator John T. Ilaig (P.C., Manitoba) told Liberal members of the Senate that if it had not lwen for 27 years of a11ti-co11scriptio11 education in Quebec they would probably not be members of tbc llousc. “And 1 probably wouldn't b0 here if 50,000,000 pounds of New Zealand but- ter l1ad11't been landed in Vancouver," he said, referring to an issue in the 1930 election in which a Conservative government was return- ed. “You slid 111 on butter." one 0f the Lib- eral Scnators c11111111011t0d. "Yes, I slid 111 011 butter," Senator llaig agreed. l k I I Pearl Harbour tllis date 1941; without warning and while hcr c11v0_vs in \\':1,sl1i11gt:111 were still ircgotizitiug with 1110 ljnitcdStatcs. Japanese bombers zittzickcd the great naval bast- at Pearl Harbour. Hawaii, and air and naval base at Nlanilla in the Philippincs. Serious (lamage was done to the United States flcct at Pearl llarbour, whcrc the Amcricans were taken by surprise; Japanese high command latcr announced that Japan was at war with Britain and the United States; attacks were also made the same day on many other. British and American places i11 the liar 131st including Ilong Kong, Shanghai, the islands of Guam a11.l Wake in the Pacific; President Roosevelt im- mcdiately ordered mobilization of 1110 Navy, Army and Air Force and went to ivar. ll ¥ >11 ll‘ Beginning fo111" Stmdzws before Christmas, 111C Advent dates back to the early Christian Church and is symbolic of the 4.000 years the peoples of thc world have waited for the coni- ing of (hrisl. as pmphcsied in 1110 books 0f the Old lk-slaiiirtit. .\s a 111110 of penance and preparation for Christmas 1111111y of the priests and ministers 111 churches will wcar purple vest- mcnts. 111 the 1101111111 (‘titholic Church. except 11y special dispensation, the solcmnization of marriage is forbidden during the Advent sca- so11. Many quaint customs arq cotmcctctl with the r1bserv11ncc of the season. It is said that in some parts of liuglantl poor women used lo carry around the “Advent Imagcs"—1\vo dolls (lrcssetl to reprcst-nt Christ and thc Virgin 1\l:u"_v—11111l visit every household, asking for half-pence. tiles Unions, the Society of Locomotive Engin- llotes By Tho Way What a world. what g m; q; the Christian nation; g; v1.11,- i311: all the savages at Pellceh-(Kjwgnjs Magazine). 5"" I0 0M 0f the man prophecies of things ta 90mg, nevy; discoveries in fabrics may nllaw men to walk around in 5mm, 11,111 blizzard clad only in lightweight slacks and a thin sweater. Women have been doing ltimeflqmg like $33. ‘£51.13? 1‘1"<‘i.‘.‘°“12 °““1"1“1 Standard.) ' s? n whg ' Dfllllte the fact that the afar- llllxs have been unpopular bere- abouts for years. and that exterm- ination campaigns ha“ been aim- 11d at them. the birds are not with- Ollt their merits. Recently, Can- ada-lncluding this part, of {hp Cflllnlry-has been menaced by the Japanese beetle. It so happeng may; starlings eat all sorts of 11155915, including the Japanese beetle. Compared to the latter, a starting 1s a. beautiful. desirable and thor- Wzhly useful creatum-(Brunt- ford Expositor.) A1 the limo when m; bomb m1 the annex of the Regent; P3111313 :1 woman friend of mlnc v/as queue- ing for fruit in Glasshouse street. Th: queue was knocked off its $69k My friend Picked herself up. dusted her clothes down. and. sec- ing nothing better to do, mo]; 111-r plucc again in the queue which was. by now, reforming. After a few moments she felt a gentle tap on her shoulder. “Excuse me, N11111: woman." said a voice from behind her, "but I must pclnt out that I was in front of you!"- (Lotidon Sunday Despatch) Canadian breeding stock may play a large part in rebuilding 1.110 livestock herds»! Efurope when the war is over. Particularly in the restoration of farm power, the horse will be required. and some idea of the coming demand for horses may be gained from the estimates of ttie declining number of horses in the various cuun‘ries since the war began, says The Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph. It is estimated that the number of horses in Britain, Holland and Belgium has been reduced by half, in Russia by one-third. and that only one-third of the original n11m- bers of horses has been left tn Poland. Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Greece. Germany. by plun- dering the other tiations, is be- lieved to have as many horses. if not more, than when the war be- gan. Signs of Japan's desperation continue to appear. The Japanese have organized their own home- frotitVolksturm of civilians. Tokyo is stressing heavy air losses suf- fered in the “vlctories" off For- mosa and the Philippines, in a nationwide drive for silver salvage to be used in airplane motors in such factories as may escape the lethal wallops of the B-29’s. The official Dnmel agency reminds the people that every Japanese must realize that the current battle in the Philippines will decide his future. In the circumstances. the likelihood of a peace offer from Japan is an appreciable one; 1nd for that reason, We may well be on our guard. Only llllC0lldlLlOIlfllSilf— render can be accepted from a nation like Japan. Given a breatn- lug-space now. the hydra Wlll live to vent fire and devastation an- other dayz-(St. Catliarlnds Stan- dard.) Two coincident news items from Britain bear a marked signific- ance. While a trade journal in London was loudly cnmplalniru: because a news reel gave too much prominence 1o American 1.1100115, Prime Minister Churchill was telling an American audience at Albert Hall that the United States is now the svorld’: greatest mili- tary power. We like one story quite aa much as we dislike the other. Presumably Mr. Churchill was speaking the truth; he is cer- tainly in a position to draw expert comparisons. Even he were stretching things a bit for the sake of graceful compliment. he said the right thing in the right 5P1?“- As to the nawsreel. it is difficult to understand how anyone can be- lieve any good purpose is served by rousing jealousy between the two great nations in wartime. Am- erican fiims undoubtedly do give the "breaks" to United States for- ces. Whysho-uld they not‘! Even if they over-play their own im- portance a bit, i1. does not hurl. us. and 1t, gives the people of our great 111111111 nelghbvr added 1n- splrution. It 1s a time for friendly generosity. not for petty jcalcus bickering.-—(Windscr Star.) This Christmas will be the sixth which Great. Britain has experi- enced since 1111.- start of the war and it seems probable that with the exception of the first-quay was the period of the “lJlWHY war-it will be the brlghest. Not only will Christmas 1181115 11519111 shine ln many Part9 0f m? 3mm‘ 15155 where, last yeur, lllPy rvure blacked out. but thera- will bc rid-l- er Christmas fare because cf 1110 December rationing program 11n- nounccd by Colonel John J. Llew- qllyn, Minister of Food. For each child between the ages 0f Si! months and l8 years there will be an cxtrii huff-pound of swvcets. 111011 all, regardless 11f aze1 furl‘? will be no extra half-pound o1 margarine; an extra half-pound of sugar. and, in the week PFECQdlIlE Christmas DRY. 36 cents worth 0f meat instead of the regular 23 cents worth. Persons ovcr '70 wll flncl their weekly tea ration in-\ creased from two to three ounces. Finally large stocks of nuts. dried fruits, figs and raisins Wlll be Dill 11pm] the market. To those W110 lire disposed to crumble when a grocer is out. of butter. W110 feel 1t is a bit 0f a hardship when u retailer limits purchases of candy 1,0 half a. pound for a customer. and who are distressed because the butcher cannot provide this or that cut of meat. such extras HS Colonel Ucwellin is able to D1" into Britain's Christmas stockinl; do not look like much. That tney arc treated most seriously "1"?- bclng described in detflll lmd Ill/- en prominence in the newspapers, simply emphasizes allflln how com- aratively little .thls country has E1111 to give up because I W" is going on. Certainly nobody l5 K0- lng to begrudge Britain a sweeter as well as a brighter Christmas.- (New York Sun! A HOLY CITY The city of. Memel was founded in .1252 by crusading Teutonic Knights as an operating base n- galnst the then heathen Lithuan- fans. TYING UP THE WIIALE Sin-The feat of corrallixig and tying up to the "bow" of the wharf 11 specimen of tho largest mammal in existence ‘was chronicled in a “Westenfl Guardian news item ‘in a most casual and commonplace manner. One would think such a stunt would rate screaming head- llllCS and be a "special" in the book of “believe it or not Ripley." There must be considerable curi- osity among the people of the pro- vince and abroad as to.,the details of the Herculean task. Perhaps the Guardian representative 1n Summerside will nave the good grace to use his fncile pen to clu- ciclatc at extended length. (Time and space permitting.) I am, Sir, etc, 1 x RUMINATIONS IN A PIG SHED Si1".-—Aftcr examining s1 some length my family tree. I find tn one of the far-off branches cne of my ancient progenitors, a husky 1111c, 11.110 lived his years rovingtlic jungle by the side of the Niger, and who finally succumbed, a vic- tim of dementia praecox. Ana since some modern scientists as- _c.: the s! 1n. RISK ONLY. sure us that insanity is hereditary and advocate the sterilization oi lmbeciles, I face the melancholy prospect, that eventually I may be reduced to that unhappy state where. in the words of Macaulay, I shall posscss “neither pride of ancestry nor llqpe of posterity." with such depressing potentialit- ies. and void of any literary cre- dentials, it is 1111111 great fear of being accused of arrogance that I venture upon a few general obser- vations. As I, this very morning, trudged towards the pig shed to serve the daily repast to iLle anxious in- mates, I found myself absorbed ln solemn contemplation concerning the various views expressed in your Forum on Education. B111; the orchestral disharmony that pcnetralcd my aural orbs as I cn- terecl the sllctl, rudely disturbed my powers of concentration; with 1111.- result that you may find this ccntribtitinn somewhat disjointed. As I poured iortti the buttermilk 111111 but-icy mcal to the hungry hogs 11nd ivntcbcd them greadily lop it up. my mind wandered to bus" 111111"‘rin1isls who are satisfied .1". o. , drink and be merry. That ere is some deficiency in our educational system seems ob- vious. Iscvcr before. it has been said. have such educational oppor- tuntticsbeen afiorcled to the mass- es. as today. and never before lms there cxistcd such worldwide con- IUslOn of thought. O11 the current topic there sec-ms to be some honest differences of opinion, and. 11s Joseph Addison would say. “mucl1 may be said on both sides." True education may be described as the simultaneous development of man's intellsctand xvlll. It comprises, more specific- ally. a training of the will in what to do, the mind in how to do it. The training of the \vii1 presup- poses 11 distinction between right and wrong. And this distinction between right and wrong has dir- ect relations with man's origin and man's (lcstiny; and when some diffcr on this major premise it is essential that tneir conclusions as regards the proper ntode 0f edu- cation will bc at variance. The mcntion of the Huxleys i11 this controversy brought to my mind a recollection of an irritat- ing trature. For. if my memory serves the moment. it was the cool, malculnttng, materialistic mind of Thomas Huxley to which the world is indebted for this classic absurd- : "I would rather be wrong and be free than be right and in bond- age" Here. Sh", is but one unhappy example of 110w far into the jungle of mental confusion some modern minds have wandered. For those who believe that man was made to the image and likeness of God. and destined for heaven, the high- est form of freedom is to be free from the bondage of Satan. Spec- ifically, it may be called the pur- suit and acquisition of Truth-the search for what is right; and what. ls right being good, and the great- est good of all bclng—G0d. True freedom and error, by their very natures. are incompatible. Tyranny for its very existence depends on the spread of error. Error indeed limits freedom. How could Huxley say "I'd rather be wrong and be free"? Can we imagine Simon Peter, bound to a cross. deprived of all temporal freedom, proclaim- ing: “I'd rather be wrong and be free"? Though freedom be objec- tive it may be possessed "in mente snium." Lot the scriptural answer be sufficient for Huxley: “The Truth shall make you Free.” . Parallel with the above fallacy is another. crcdltcd to modern lib- ualism: “I may not agree with you, but I shflll defend to the death your right to express ycur opinion." How cheaply bought ls n license to spread error in tho name of tolerance! I view the above quotation 11s tantamount to this: “I do not bslieve in murder. but if anyone denies you the right to advocate it, I shall help you nmrdcr 11112111." What un exhibi- tion of modern liberalism poison- ously drunk on the fusel-oi] of freedom! Just what 1; degrading influence ls exercised by false philosophies in the mind of man may be seen by the following: While perusing some literature distributed to war workers in Canada (apparently as a morale booster) I came across a little pamphlet by Eric Knight, and in the first paragraph. on the first page appears this astounding statement: “Truth is not abso- lute." If thnt statement be mis- construed by some as true. I trust my questioning of its truth will not be condemned as arrogance, since the supposed truth of the quotation would not he considered “nbsolutc" in any case. If false, it dcservcs condemnation. I grant. as the author states. that what seems truth to different men varies as the opinions and prejudices of men vary, (But that ls only what. seems tn men to be truer. An opinion that is partly false. or a statement that ls not wholly trite. deserves no more to be culled truth than an egg-shell to be called an egg. Truth is not charged with the opinion; and pre- judices of men. The existence of tru1t1~one, absolute, eternal. im- mutnble. lndlvlslble — presupposes neither a human mind to under- stand B, nor g hunan tong-no l0 - -Masier Cleaners Phone 1104 spea . Trut , tn all its abso- luteness. exisud before the ele- ments of reason first, sought ref- uge beneath the callous crlmlums of our apelsh lancestors, and even before the first verbal vibrations escpped from the primeval prob- osc s. If Truth be not considered nbso-‘ lute, 1t will be considered relative. Yet nothing can be consider-m re- lative except 1:1 relation to may, which is absolute. If we attempt, for example, without benefit of °°mDass to draw a series of circles. we may, according to our degree 0f manual dexiterlty, achieve aeo- metricnl figures. one or more of which may benjilicl to be relatively round. But o "y could we predi- cate relative roundness about them. by judging their roundness as compared to that, which ls ab- solutely and essentially round. 118111611’. a circle“ According to a modus lnquendi we classify many things as rela- tively so and s11; yet. if we trace the relativity a1? things backward, we must comu at length Great Absolute. But 1n the words °f P118395 "Quid est Verltns?" And While we clean all curtains ‘in laundry nets and handle them with the great- est caire possible; yet we receive a small per- centage that are so weak and tender that they break, and in a few cases go to pieces. umA/lvé Owing to the shortage of many household furninhlngs-Curtains are getting longer nu now tlhan ever before. The longer they remain in um the weaker they become from the ef- fects of wear and espcially from the offsets of special For these reasons we, like ‘all other laun- dries SCCGDI CURTAINS AT CUSTOMEIPS AVOII) THE RUSH — LET US HAVE YOUR PRE-I-l OLIDAY CLEANING-NOW. & Launderera- Phone 104 elsewhere in Scripture appears the answer: “Vis, Verum, Lumen Ego Sum." , I am, Sir, c1511., RUSTICUS IGNORAMUS The Sticks, NOV. 30, 19M. NATIONAL ASPIRATIONS LONDON — (GP) — Sh‘ William Clark, former British High Com- missimer to Canada. and South Africa, told- the Royal 1:11-1.1-. Society that those countries were "the two most nationally ‘ of the Dcmintons." Despite Canada's small population she would emerge a world power and independen and "patrlcipation" would be her guiding principle. a ‘ciiiusrms slut? Proiecf Your Home from Tuberculosis SHORE NEWS FROM J. P. CROCK lTT S. CI-IARLOTTETOWN Just received 12 of those famous Gllllllllll llAllll POWER WASHERS with Wrin gers . . . you've bum waiting for $27.50 ‘Will anyone waiting for :1 High Closet for their FAWCEThl‘ BEAVERBROOK or FRONTENAC RANGES please wriltle us at once as we now have them in stock and don't want to miss anyone. FRll Z "WEISSLER IFUR BUYER AT W. Cheater S. Mature’: fifties: 110 Kent Street. WEDNEHDAY AND DAYS FOLLOWING Mlllll-M llSllRllT-etcr SILVER Fllll Plume if you desire us to call at Ranch. 1 a1- I! you throw back l l l 1 This is‘ the Ca 1 sent léhasemfoiggéatlierlgllumn. In: Y t. e Sm“ W" 1. fluid‘. 0h nod cheek; Genmpfmzec‘ _&:ukg:§jnand m: .. 1.11111 “"1" "Y" In u with . Sylvia! 0:111" them? Tho coral Ind crimson 11M m,” Gathe thb 1 til flea “..‘."’11.,l.,.§f‘* “W” l‘ 11.111111» lrnunililn“ °°““°°"""- lll Ill a Pbr Téllllllklfllvlng dinners 11.111211 =11 ~11»- ym" bl! atral tutu, f Of Ameerican or camps hit IIICI ll“ YOIII’ eygg, 5 | ees. hardentligvié’ from your practice now ‘we: To the vine-furred roof of tht- if you raise your head And flx those deep. dark eygg Eves the Nezro-Portumm: Be '11 in min ‘ l _ yon he ro n ivory q You will notice t c stagmiindrutlli; doe leap to the woodg, 1YOU Will see the bleaching hum. dune mocks o .5 That seem- so still but shift with. .1. "an soon y ow 1 m l rounded here, m“ A hollow there, p, trunk arched 0| its spine Of stubborn beach grass. Rise and walk the plank Across the cranberry ditch and bu“ the plums off, The tart beach-plums the the wine-red jam And then look of! to sea Beyond the sapphire Sound and ~ the yellow bar. Over the shimmering tourmallnl Atlantic To the bon coast other ancestors Prayed at the shrine of Vasco do Gama before Sailing to western shOres, The low tides low today‘, 1114 ,1 tangled weeds Cling to mv feet and ankles is I walk in 1 . Eager to get under wiaves that an B warmer than r. -Pearl Stracpan, a The Christ- ian See “T-n ttention Swine Breeders New la the time in mud anlnst PIG - WORM by min: the most effective rcmedy on tho market. MACS PIG-WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly abolish Ill traces of worms and im- prove the health of vnur vlxs. rloe 35 cents ner lb 11mg“ . when v01: MACS AMMONIATED BRO.‘ ' "fIlAL COMPOUND Believes acute Bronchllll. Qpumodlu Croun. Bronchial Catlrrh. Coughs and Colds. Price 50 cent! a bottle MACS FILE OINTMENT A Illa and efllclenl rmmly [of internal . ll quality lnlrtdienta possessing remarkable then- ueutlc value for this nurnose. It carries out i111 bencflclnl effect In three ways ll Mwlhel 2. If lubrlc-ates. 3 It ll Astringent Get a tube fully. Price 60 cents. TllE 2 MAGS I49 Great George Street Mall Ordcn Given Promvl Attention , McLeod 6 Bentley w. 11. BENTLEY. n. c. .1. 11. nannav. n c. Barrister: and Attornvri-If" bu! 1M Prince Street Chartered Accountants 53 Grafton Strcfl- Charlottetmvn Phunlfllll) Box 147 lnndulnh w 1111-11111111111 A- lmorroll and 00ml!" ll. F. AIIGHBALB Chartered Aceoununll lantern nus B-llfll" Charlotte“!!! r? ‘M. ALBAN FARMER fighard_BT__Johfl$l°" Attorney M u‘ uoumlnaloner for 9695'- Eu" u‘ Prime It!!!" :""'a' f 0 o111.';"%-'1‘1'lll"t1ll'.m1’11'lffii"ll'°* ‘IQ; l1