PAGE "l! IFIIILUTTETUWI Gllllilll 311111111; out, (Founded In urn z l. Col. W. Chisel 8. MGLIII hsilgleitliitfrle-iiellleut: J. l. Bismuth IJ-l- l“ Bgoxel ,1; Ueut. Cal. D. A. Mlfilllllllll. U. [altar and Managing Dis-euros: J. l lnrnlsl. IJ-Ii Associate Editors: Frank Walker and LlelL In A Burnett, Is.b.N.V.B. (On Ant-Ive Service) ' “The Strongest Memory is $100188!‘ Th" the Weakest Ink. TUESDAY. FEB. 29. m4 A Fine Tribute A fine tribute to the Canadian trouPi l"_ ha?’ W115 "yiaid recently by the bilancihester (mar - fan's 11111" corrcspoiitlent, Mr. L. 11a)’. Mf- ha)’ “Tm, 111 111..- piipcr that ‘they had foughtlloe u, 10¢ 11111! blow tor blow \\'l1l1‘P0i5ll-l)l)' K113 l)“; “.0015 111C gel-luau army has ill‘ lay altll rah bcaitu 111cm 11111‘ and squire. Compare W1! ma“. 1;1-1-111;111,~ 111c- Cauadians are second to 111: , , n hi1. 11 1'1‘. - 11:1: 11 1111- Cziiuidiaus lall short of m, m“. ,l,,,..1 gllllllllffitl with the best British * . ' "" . - ' 11 ;_. 111 11:l111cs.<, 111 the 1|ual1t_y_ 0f Old 1h.- Cziiizldians, he thinks. are _ the highest standards, they 11- (114.1. 11111 11c adds that ls a 111111cs. 111111 111 spite of bicily tlic ~,-.c- >11ll 1i lllllC more raw than the. 11111111: 51111111111111 -~ ' llClllillls i \'c1'\ it‘ . Q-uuiuiics 315- Ray: _ _ “llio t‘;1ii.1di;i11s' own special contribution t0 111t- 211'! 111' 11x11" stems to be the flcXlblllly’ @1151 ncudu“, 511,111 rouiiiic of their administration. lo 1s slid 111.1; the ilivisiuifs :\.A.Q.1\I.U. has is- sticd 1111111 two writtcu administrative orders 5111¢¢ 1110i» left Eiinland—one for the landing m Sic“ v, one for Italy. .-\ll else hi5 dfiPendfif-l 0" word o1‘ mouth and personal contact bctivccn the .-\..>\.Q..\!.G., his subordinates, and lower 1111115 and formations. This is combined with the utmost interest in the “fife” and 5911117131113 of the front-line soldier. I “Such i system depends entirely 011 pcrson- nlity, on an adequate Supply" opt administrative Qfficef§ with ability and imagination, and on 1131-11 work and goodwill all round. Without any one of those things there is everything to_be said for the letter of the law and f0!‘ evefylhlnfi 1o go 11011-11 1111 paper agcording t0 the book. But the Canadians make their own system work to a marvel. “I doubt if any British soldier in the _8th Arlny ls as well looked If!!!‘ as the front-line Cana- dian, gets hi; mail so quickly, such ZQOfIl 500d. or such support in the matter of ammunition and uipplies. And that again—excepr perhaps for 1h; matter of mail-is f0 5115K by the 111E119" standards." _ _ To 111m s11 English correspondent write 1n this fashion to the altogether reputable Man- chester Guardian is heartening indeed. Thirty - Five Years Ago Thirty-five years ago (February 2s, 1909)- the first air flight in the British Empire 100k place on Bras d’Or Lake, Baddeck, Cape Bre- ton. Perhaps the best way of telling the story is to quote the telegram which appeared in the Titties, London, Eng, and in most papfirs 1n Amegm (through Associated Press) the next av: “ti... 111.1 11111111 111 a flying machine 111 Can- ada occurred here todav when Mr. Dmlgl" McCurdy, native of Baddeck, Nova Scotia. flew a distance of about one half mile at an cgvation of about 3o fcct above the ice on Baddcelc, in an airpliiiic oi his own design. itamed the bilver Dari. (filmed) Alexander Graham Bell. Bad- declc, Canada, kebruary 231 1909-" _ 1,11". tjriilirim Bell had been long interested in the ptlS>ll7lllllC5 of aviation. Indeed, he had been experimenting evcr since he had completd the telephone. 11nd the Silver Dart was the result of his planning. An eve-witness relates that the initial experiment very nearly ended in dis- aster. ".\' .. the finish, two little girls Shal- iug 111 from of 111c tlcsceiiiliug 1vlanc, 01115-410 111,-; 11p, 11-1il1 spreading wings and whirling bladcs. The pilot swerved, missed , lilrcii b1‘ a hair-lireadtli and converted 11:11:11 l-uulrcd 111v; :1 fatal crash into a perfect till‘: poi-r; 11111" _." .\‘- ~;- dziv ilrc trial over half a mile was c._\'- [Pllilcil 111 .1 1».- lllllC5 and for the first timc_11i t'.1i1.'1d.1 11:1 airplane circled 1'11 the air. A cairn 9,1111 rommeiiioratiug this first flight iii 11m llz: l1 l-Iuipirc 11:15 iiuvcilcrl at Brltldcck 011 "-11-: 1--. 11131. b1- I.i<~11tc11a11t-(iovcruor Covert. _ -11 1141111., 11vr1- pliid liolli 1o .\lcCurdy and w. h» . . l", \\'. ("Casey") Baldwin. British Bankers Views .1 111 \lL‘l<Jl')' titiiisforiiicd lroui a 11f 1.11111 iiito a well-founded convic- ailiug llritlsli bankers, acting tipoii the -': <'11"1;.'.'tlt‘d by the London head 0f 1lmr"‘cvc11ts do iiot wait tipoli .111 ii-iv; @1111. 11.11£~11 attention to tlic .'1l'1c:"111.i111 of 11111- and the problems that will follow 'l‘l:11s for the first time during tlle war the chairmen r11’ rill ilic lzirgcr banks in the United Kingdom, 11i11>c :\111111:1l meetings llavc just liccll 111-1.}, 11111-1- |1(_'\t|1('tl 1111- general content of their 11-1-11;1-.,- .-.1l1l1'1>=,11| 111 shareholders to a consid- ei tiou 111' p1-o.~]i:~cts and preparations in regard. first, to 11111 triansiiitlu period from war to peace. and. second, 111 rcspcct to the loiig-lcrlu out- [oo]; 1'11!‘ 1111- rt-ciiicrv of world lrailc. 'l'hc Bault of 311111111211, lll a mccial stipplciuciit acconipaiiv- lug tllc Wliriiziry- issue of its monthly Business Suuiiuarv just 11111115511011, has reprinted extracts from 1111- .';u1111.:l mldrcsscs of thr- chairmen of six 111' 1111- 11:1 -1 llillllvb" 111 1111- Uiiilct] kingdom. ll! .111 11111-111 1111 it is iiotcil that. as iii Can- zidzi. tlii- f511:1.11c‘.'1l \l'ttlClllClll5 of the rcspcctivc banks hll1l\\' deposit and other accounts at rc- 1-111-11 high lzvcls, with uniformly high liquid- ity 11f lhsClfi. 111 ~ cc: 1.1 111-; 111151-11-111- transition period. tllc ‘cw i. r-vyircsscd by Edwin Fisher, 01' izirclziis 3.1111; [11:11 there will lIC 11o sudden m‘ violciii t-liziiig/s-nvcr, because tlic period fol- loiviiiu tho \\.'1r will be douiiiiiitcll by scarcity. (‘1l1|tll"-‘~l7"!l 111 tilt: latent demand which will 1 The Hon. Rupert E. Beckett, chairman of the Westminster Bank, expressed the opinion that some considerable time woold elapse be- fore, the nations of the world could be envisag- ed as working peaceably together. The prime need of those who had undergone the miseries of invasion, starvation and slavery would be an adequate supply of food. shelter and cloth- 1n . gThe Rt. Hon. Lord Wardington, chairman of Lloyds Bank, said. in connection with the transition period, that it would be a great relief to industry if some definite announcement could be made on an important point stressed in the report of a delegation appointed by the League of Nations last year. which report stated: “The post-1var problems created by the c011- struction of war plants will be particularly scri- ous if provision is not made to allow. produc- ers to amortize their plants adequately during the war. If, in the interests of national revenue, amortization rates are kept 101v, so that at the end of the war the unamortized capital volue of the plant greatly exceeds its capital value as determined by the income it can earn in the production of peace-time goods, a powerful fac- tor of dislocation. will have been creatcil." p EDITORIAL NOTES ,-. Leap Year extra; amongst the Romans it was the feast of expiation and purification. i‘ If‘ it h‘ ’Member those prc-ivar days whcu \\'c used to laugh at the German slogan, "b11llc1s for butler"? W l! ti Ill The Patriot gives a list of liltclics for the vacant judgeship and prospective Ylltllllll gub- ernatorial appointment, but curiously enough does not include among them Messrs. 'l'1vccdy, Martin, Palmer, nor Dr. Yeo, Mr. Clark and Mr. Allan. U I! i I It is worthy of note in our reference to the generosity of Messrs. Moore & McLeod to the Red Cross, that there are now three genera- tions of the proprietors all actively engaged iii the business. This is almost a record for the Maritimes, it certainly seems to be for this Province. I B ll l! Lord Edward Fitzgerald, Irish soldier, politi- cian and conspirator, born this date 1703; fought iii America 1781-2; travelled in Canada 1789-95; where he was made chief of the Bear Indians; on return home became M.P. for Kildarc; join- ed the United Irishmen Party in I796, and shar- ed in organizing the conspiracy of Dublin two years later; on plot being discovered he was arrested, dying a fortnight later froiii a wound received during the struggle preceding his ar- rest. U U U i All ranks of the Army and C.\\'.A.C. 110111 may wear civilian clothes on leave of seven days or more. Previously Army personnel could wear Only clothing other than uniform for sports requiring special dress. The R.C.A.F. permits personnel, including members of the Wotiicifs Division, to wear civilian clothes on leave at the discretion of officers commanding. The Navy allows male ratings on long leaves and members 0f the \Vomen’s Royal Canadian Naval Service on leaves of 48 hours or more 1o wear civilian clothing. ll i i I The New York Times said editorially that Prime Minister Churchill's war review in the House of Commons struck “a mucli-necdcrl bal- ance between tmdiie optimism and undue gloom." “Perhaps the grimincst statciiiciit the Prime Minister has made since Britain emer- ged from the dark days following Dunkcrque, though that grimness is no longer one of ilcfi- ance 0f an overpowering enemy. but the grim- ness which prepares for the kill." i i i U Women's suffrage in U.S.A. has gone tn unheard of lengths in the matter of competition with mere man. It is well-known, .\lrs. Roose- velt pursues her own course, politically and otherwise, without respect to the l'1'c>idc11t's plans and policies. llcceutly, a uiciiibci- of the House of Represeutative’s wifc challenged a bill introduced by her liusbautl forbidding wu- men to be served in bars. Now Robert Peter- son ivauls to lily-New .\lcxico's ucizt g11vc1'111"1r. So docs Edna Peterson. Bolli have filcd for the nomination, he as a Republican. she as a D0111- ocrat. They are husband and wife. i i i! I Naval bombardment 1111s provided a consid- crablc part 0f the cover fur .-\llicd liilitliiigs iii the Alcditerrancan area since the landing in Algeria. It is made possibl: by llouibard- meiit Units, a new typi- of forct‘. which are formed from sclcctcil officers of 1111- Roi-ail .\rtillci'_v. called lforivard (lbscrvaiioii tlffic " 'l"hese officers are tho eye; of the naval artille- thcy go into action with the forward troops in landing areas. Once on land. their job is to scud wireless messages directing 1hr firt- of tlie iiavril guns. lioiitbziriliiiciit l.i:1i<o11 flffic- crs have to interpret the wirt-ltss iiwsszigt-s 111111 help the gunnery officer to lay his guns on the target. i i i ll It is all very well to talk of reconstruction and pOSt-ivar industrial llcvelripiiiciit. says the 'l'1'lc- graph-journal. 11nd it is good to plan for 11101.1‘: things; btit if. lll our tilaiiuiiig. wc overlook the all-important ."/_:nr of wlicrc we arc goiuu t0 scll our products, we are forcdooiucd 111 failure. Geographically. .\'e1v Briiiisuick is :1 ltlllg’ and costlv rail haul from the major centres of pop- ulatiuii in Canada. llut we are on the scabozirtl -have the Atlantic at our doorstep-arc within an inexpensive water haul of the llritish lslcs and our sister Domiuioiis, 'l‘l1us it is obvious that for material reasons - evcu if there were not other considerations —— New‘ lruuswick should do all that is possible to 11cc Canada's relations with the Coiiiinoiiwcallli strengthened. Mr. .\Iackay's suggestion iii ilic Legislature that the province rc-cstablisli its own 1111110 office iii London. is well worth examining. (liitarin rc- ceiitlv rc-cslziblislied :1 trade nffitz- in London and expects it to pay (lividciiils. uiiihia. our coliipctitor province so 7111' as 111m- bcr. fish iiiid ripples llTl‘ conccrucd, has long 111' hll. had London representatives. C C llritish Col- f-"lrl-l’ Yo =hkosl1 come to mlnd at once. But t cl Dubuque? Miss Smith has iin entertaining tlioush llll bei-pof bptlmlsts-folks who believe everything they read in l seed catatonia-Victoria Times The burden of flu world 181s on the chm-tide man rexardleu o ti cadets and Guelph Mercury. Why the nuns "Sleu" applied to the rank“ British and Ca found so useful? the initials of Qiesapsid and Tur- the two Englishmen who ln- __ Bu‘ vented it in the dark trays of’ 19,40. oompllshed iwal- 5mm - ' SElILiIxIaiiIiiB."E-“ggoc¥vili: “$111113; uient. who 1's not a more passive and Times. n1 n report Dllhlllhhl in u» 1W1! “"1 ‘he "l" °' u“ 0f fill rftiisi '12s weapon that wmfimww mm m; v 1 n and pln, front. cay- them the ills which decaying teeth could be and 1h,- acquiretnent o! raise tteethi which is a common necessi y o d 7 1' g 1111; {acts middle age, would be rare — f§°fl§l1§ffi 3111,;Ls(;n1§111o111l11:tlii'ouglioufl Pctcrborough Examiner. ",5 information 1a" nature for when conversing Willi friends an relatives. 7.110‘?! l0 It l; these must have a euard on their tongues- fence of the individual; western r0- It must. alwavs be rcriiembrred that ligion upon action. The lcuchinsr. 01' H161‘? are still many of mir people Christ sets before men the 118F190 in the hands of 1.1111; enemy and balance between the two. In ldgpll 111m 1mm; mag r11; 4111s 111115; W111 the Christian not only loves G . vst vengeance on anvrm within , , their paw" y; mo much aurmncy means that. he stiivcs to work nlih is tzlven to stories of abuser: ln the nrlmner and Windsor Star . _ , A new excuse for growing cotton Wider Use Plastlcs was put forward in “he South re- _-_- cently. Dr Edward Wllllnm Alton Ochsncr, hiizhlv respected surizeon of ‘Tulane- Unlverslty, wrote Gov- environment; cruor Thomas Bailey of Mississippi modern living and c1111 @111“ mm- thal; cotton i5 the best material for ister w lane's comfort or lessen it, stitching 1m wounds. the New Orleans Charity Hospital in choosing it that: ‘rounds inter-nee had found together thread“ were less llkolv til become glance. fhosc sutured with Elev-It. or silk. Another advantage. made that. the "home of tomorrow" otton is not absorbed hold when a wound takes n long thing known to-day as to be scarce- i-lmfl l0 hflll—fifllfllll mav dlsflpbear 1y recognizable '1liat may be true in ll lllllc Over l1 Wcclh 9599015115’ as regards architecture; but. fumi- lf a wound is infected. Finally. Dr. Ochsnor noted that at. Charity l-Ios- venture that. the changes they vis- litltai the avcraize cost of catrut per uallze will be so revolutionary. A to-atleni is $1.19. as itimlnst. 93 cents wider use of plastics 1r. colors and f0f£t sllk and only l 3-4 cents for wood tones will innrk 1h; fumlture co on. infected than red with in thi- margin: com-cl 1531155811.‘; in “Milwaukee Journal. Gcnnztn (Brooklyn is n notnwe winning both 1h;- lllCl- that it. ls across the river from haughty Manhattsiu M Cohan joked about Bridgeport. Conn: it has an "o" Tha- llst. ls Itllll. Hobo-Zeus. me 11°11 this (ZHARLGHTPOWN oulugm Notes By The lhy I. ii llsilltstlsiis from The London Times Giannini- s mourns roars-lun- avers; slk that mi u o, m, w. supenmm- fietglfvfjflfi "work," w. settler with or. Pwl 111v“ “- n up this {pct wish ‘chug; bod-Dd! 0 m“ c“; the necresi v nimim effort. The WW9!‘ W Wm‘ 50d’; can be fulfilled mull D8 from him: nothinit 01$“? “°' triiopn have It; curls; from 51m, he uses the human instru- woperatlnsl weeni- mgri’; will must. voluntarily ‘lg-lots begtpws uipon man his flrflfle. W‘ Stockholm paper Aftonlldnlnlen 11- received. and garding Gelrnan 8l)r'.30€Ii-Ye“‘°ld fiflfg§e§gfinlée of ll. ls_an Mil boys 1n service at the ' paper says that their training with celved 11, men must rely the l-ntier Jusend ls so flwrflllsh an eqiupm It that they require only one month; for responsible llvlnz and action- further training before they can is all be used for iahliout 1 '1 h t] t. rteen years o age W)‘ s or y , ed be trained for tntelligenee service. W6 “M n°~ Thc“ l5 ‘m “doubt from, this o‘ (mpemuon, 111011331 ghggoigg rick; ent which wl.ll fit thfim too possible to “frustrate the lme service. grace 01G -" n “Does boys 11: ten to ngofiyegléqogggafisiftge bu“, 111 i1 1.1m iusmrv iguilirlidiéi- Ggdlisseggnfiitlil but. not 1n l! it can be conclusively nhivwn 1H m“ “my we. that iluorint; and phosphorus in g“ sense that a s a r the watey stllgiilly dieck tooth de- hwmm woperattou God is slmplv SlOU c , in all water lupplzes, and mam In the large it W131? lnaeed gircsuniably to give the coming gen- be believed that, Gods purposes 0f oration good strong teem What an tove are being and ultlmatcllv j-viilsl lnestimable advantage that wolild be accomphshcd- because "15 °‘°. be! ‘Hie miseries of toothache, the of ilst-s verv nfiillre omrililolcfll- 3'1" painful hours with the dentist. and _ are iirtrwutableito l-hinfis ha“ lmvpellcd i" n“: m‘ Efflflnhlfid, as though 1n seekir18 _\o=slble to put pgying man a meaningless comiall- all too obvious that mam)’ avoided torlcal process which lire lhe v91‘)! 1 ' '- God" ‘.1111. . delxiififiaiiocfif tlichahristian CllLlfCh 111 completely contmllfid 1,1115 potential oigan of his will. The Nazi-controlled Slovak rs lo Always there has been the intract- said in 11 German-lanizuage rad 0- able human clement. 1v1i1ch. cvcn I! cast reported to the office of r it has not. thwarted recently that German etlinlcal group 1n Rumah- T-Brded "'5 fulfilmcm- l b0 l kftrodllceij d a r serv co or r l sxlecli-year-o girls. The radio-cast mid that the “cqulescenw girls would be drafted tiionlh periods and would "do this service either in aizrlcultiir. servlne tended u, 111115“ the camps. or fnividual farms, or ln- god's km d dustrlal establishments". Ipgrjgjw recorded by United Skates govem- strong-tit and inspiration. bill; it. can merit monitors. his mirposc. "t g has at least obstructed '11:‘ enipgaég: quacy and weakness of l‘ i ‘ . it c place-lit Churchs wituessm 1 ssuéytcpjgflstmfi _ , d . . ~ 1 ve_ a i” m‘ nciigiiiiitiviufiavrerdfvlflirsn 11111111“ its value as an iiislrumcnt. and 50 progress 0! g om. The mystical ex- e of God may be ii source of compulso it was urcly -Assoclated Press. never be an end ln itself. No “e is passive view 0f llio spiritual Whe repatrlifeii- l; ' L adequate. 'I‘l\c dlitiurri" of pietism is 50mg. 3,0,. wmfnnvepiotdgediiuggigq» that it may became 1m exclusively sror n, caullcfned against repeatfiiv publicly, but 1t; ls not within humaj h, understood‘ 15 more ma“ ramp. . . - f lltial ex- ‘rhey nave beetl Dersggg. “EfdgymglglgreSgeffientred mm‘ and tnimical to action. Faith. r181"- lmP 511°" tlvlty; it Ls also cooperation E851- ern religions seem to qollccnlrfll-Q latter who 1w exclusively upon tne expel‘- he also loves his fellow-men; which God 1n the making man's corporate - - - - f hl “mp5. _ the peifect. expression o S (Hamilton Spectator) Furniture exerts an nrlucnce on ir is lrrrnortalit, to D0140?! M depending on the wisdom shown Most people today stitched prefer comfort to ».‘..€ formality; "ordinary; cotton they demand utility to more ele- Many predictions time been and will will be such a departure from any- ture men an. not yet yirepared to of the early post-war traditional lines uill Dc largely ad- ilenrs. but Cflmlwscr Edwllfl Mllvnflwfll 70f tiered to, according: to 11w offerings a limo held a must: professorship displayed at Grand Rapids l" Clllllulblfl Ulllverfiiilfl One day. new trends hase often been deter- as an exercise, he liad his students mined in the past, Chairs seen at write i1 Dfllze nf music. One of the this show were hullt to provide students found this an impossible 11111111111111; rust. task. Reluctant to hand in n blank four legs, straight to the floor pre- sheet cf paper. however. he filled donflnafgd, the D1129 with rests and mi occas- ional note 0f music. When Mac- green, blue and yellow. were used Dovxll returned the book. the stu- sparingly but dent observed that the Mia was neutral correctlons—-all the rest. Around them Macboweli hfld (lfflwh H 15M and hi" Wfmm neutral walls, drapes art-l spreads. "These are fhe onlv Q11 where ‘Fables which had Bright colors, lnalildfng 111:1. effectively against backgrounds. Bedrooms EXCEPY; suites were varnished In turquoise, royal blue and red to blend with e bedrocm designed for teen-age ‘J-ie exercise." girls lint! a simple inotli‘ in green and black plaid "ind included indiv- idual bulletin boards over each bed Let u; here speak frankly to the 11111111 e "wfn- ;- ,1- Gerinanvpeuple. Ustcn. you Ger- w g8 m ' up u Re mans! ou are 0n she way out. mam or “m, 111;- 11 1151 . Inevitable defeat faces you. There- 5 p t u m’ up“ fore stop Your atrocities Compound R mmbgnnqon mble “w, .\’0\11' fclfllllcs- YOU $191116 HOW be which would serve for use as dining working your passage m the hopes 01- 10,- Hvjng-fgcn] of getting better treatment than W11 deserve after this war which built. 111 section. which can i», sep- yoii unleashed upon the Stop the murders! K111 no‘. another gables 11111111“ 01,1011“ tame 15 d1. woman and child in all cupictl tcrrltcrics! Be mighty care- placed @1111 p, 911d 3g_1_-_1;1 a we“ I111 how you do away v/‘tli the life the sections make m1- “ 1mg m“. of any civilian man these errors of yours 1v up against you in the pzdod of re- can be adapted to a third use by tributlon which l; soon to T110 invincible tuniles i-re movlrii: for and ninrrliing. It l5 not nviiocritical majesty 1h,- bziby has 110g to say that this tn our lifetime ls forgotten either _ the real battle against evil. Read. of crib has been fashioned. which for example, the sentence in shook is detailing the views of the German conditioned. "0095 entering Paris do not know how tn live", said n and nnnt-aln, =' ihn res! of Euro?» has wit; to die." We 1’ ommcnd for serious and 1n- —Diilly Express (handout Miss Betty Smith, the ' clous author of "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," was quoted recently 11s hnviniz made i1 rather remarkable dllscovciqv-thal. l-, to may she says t 1c Wwlc contain the letter "o". To be sure, people laugh at some towns which have no "o" but Mk; Smith says “"5" fllmdl-‘ll. that usually these are towns which ' arp dwarfed by. or considered lii- ferlor to nrsr-bv clues with stealer pretensions. really anything to lailch about. but hr Designed to meet. the require- lally where there ls no dining-room, shown purposes. One glass-and aluminum dining table is WOfld- arated to form r-cciislonzl and wall V0111‘ 00- vlded down trip centre. when Qt-Yfalnli’ all sole table; ivhon placer] together be llddcd they form a dining table rind they come. nrranlrltig the sections in :1 U-shripo llvlnz-rcom gatherings. His been in "nprovcd t. ‘We 06mins By adhering to traditional lines, ldinz ‘ mod "And therefore ~— ~- tenslve nostw ll‘ t d . ~11. Herald-Tribune. s u y nriirnvrs" SHE cALLn IT towns almost at. which invariably losing lnlsrut— , lover went out FOII—“INI‘:'I.Z'"IQQ tourre, this ls "In lit-but it wu boys. lbs fliers the "m; sl lior blood, Ills! exzmplsj. lssdul sltsntlon. coun an hunt dump. alm- M...» ..... .- - h_els|r ‘any biog, u ii u u-anf-li-mwwnufd" ha“ "fl; Budd's Kidney Pills Just. George Hoboken, Kalamazoo. W” icy prior w 1m to lassed-ln sotizid-procfed and slr g a‘; We an stlll making i111, luscious bar, but naturally in lesser quantities. That's why it Scams s11 scares. Soon, we hope, war-lime restrictions will be over. g; :- em trend toward mor: color has av aimed to make homes iinbxfgrsclaeriful, without sacrificing comfort or utility. The day may ccrne when furniture will be made vmolly of plastics, glass and light metals, but. the Pew slyici. W111i" approaching lt. under the necessity f war-time conditions co not up- pem- to be trying t/o nasten it. Eli- hancernent. without. oreakinB m1‘ sharply from conservallve patterns ls the keynote. men attained Iuioboruslvr-ly. Db’ l I I In The Gleaming (Montreal Gazette) she was a very old lady-in tier" 96th )'Bfll'——Wl‘l€11 she dlcri last Mc11- ; day at her home lr- $113151!“ BCYK- shlre. an; W85 Lady Afmlll‘ H111. the widow of born Arthur Hill. who had managed the Pnnliltes of Queen , Victoria's household. She had lived in close retirement. Item the (llS- turbed twerity century 1:111 ld when interviewed in 1939 stie spoke of the songs she used to write. She had once written two volumes or hem. may vrere called Holiday Songs and had been dedicated to Queen Alexandra. B111 l‘. was nil so long ago, she said She had written nothing for some twenty years. But she recalled how One morn- lng in 1M7 a friend had sent her 11 poem in a letier. It beztin with the words: In the gleaming. on! my darling, When the lights are dim 11nd low, And the quiet shadows falling, softly come and softly go; When the wtids are sobbing faintly Wltfi a gentle unknown woe." W111 YOu think of me and love mc. As you did once long ago‘! It was best to leave you thus, dear. Beat. for you and best, for me. "I liked them very much." said Lady Hill. "and lifter breakfast went. “Pltalrs ‘.0 . piano and wrote the music Ln fifteen minutes] —c1- twenty minutes at the most. It hilt came w me." Like many other effective things in composition, it had been easy. There had been for those few mp1. lite a full opening of the heart, W! out. the hlnderances of consci- ous effort. "I mink it wa, extru- ordiriary," she said, “that an antl- teui- should have the ‘snack or com- posing a song that, seemed to be liked s0 universally." Yet perhaps 1t was lust tiecause was an amateur that she was able to write so directly, matching the expressing with tier music the simple wisnflrwv of 111-.» words And words and music together have an appeal that seems to be time- less: for they combine to waken‘ the inevitable memory of the tfilngsl that were longed for '11 the heart. but. denied by circumstance. I 1 1 Misplaced Humaiieness (Bruitford Ex. tor) ‘me former Aliphb nhifm It: Chiral-l . I18 m i and m; Bishop of ChlOChCSIGI‘ were 1 11111:: .12:..°1,‘1"1..“a.“ Ame“ mm r nci ICLSmOI ment and the Bcmlicr Command ls W blast the Germans out at the WBT- 11 Dflsslble. or. in any event, to so smite than that. the landing invasion armies will be able to force them into unconditional sur- render. It may be difficult for a prelatc who was closely associated with the ill-fated aiwpensdiicnt. pol- ulto apprec- ‘£57498 lltunt m. But this which he held tn t s. justifiable act of war." 11y the standards of Orlme the South Ari-lean ca-mpal n, ft ls not. But this ls 1 4. or 1099. A combination of, peoples has assailed the free woirld. mishlng much of it. trader the yoke cf slavery. Like it or not the nations still free must fight firs with flre. Li’ they would coca s like (plans m u h 6 some ii e mo- lives. it. would scan that, this $150.‘ all‘: two Loyd‘: Bplrltual sense o iimanencss to obliour that an and wu devoting ft courage. ill Ind 6mm! in diestroil the indus- trlsl arena wh ch e possible 0611M '1 WI-sns of riiuii ens war. Even rom i1 nurely humanitarian bolnt of view. it should ent. that the harder the forces strike. the sooner will the 1 strength of the made safe. DIN?!- OFFICES: “BL UEPRINTS Of Your Estate When you are ready to build, the ZlfCllllet‘ draws the plans of as fine a home as 11111 funds will permit. The blueprints show lli structure and whetlit ovary provision has been made for you future comfort and convenience. What of the estate you intend to build? Let us submit plans. in accordance willi your income. of an estate in life insurance. We have policies to cover every l1ocd,blue- prints which sliow how the future can lie If you do not live to see your plans through, the structure will not tumble. Your estate- in-the-making becomes automatically coin- pleted for the protection of your loved Consult a Great-West Iiife man. Hyndman & Co, Lfmite PROVINCIAL MANAGERS. Charlottetown, ' - snmmgpfldg, _ Mom,” LAMENT Home they bore tli—o village lad, Battle-fallen. honor-clad. Best. of what few friends I had. Oh. I wept. and wept. for shame, That it was not I who came With a glory-lustercd name. Borne. immortal. home m 11s In the clituchyiird he and I Bravely used lo whistle by. Branson Blake 111 the Wuhlnlwn Star. Professional 0a McLeod £4 Bentle W. I. BENTLEY. LC- J. A. BENTLEY It C. lllrllllers and Attorneys-s LII Ill Prince Street 1.. "Irfllland 60in: II. F. IllllllllBlll. Olnrlu-ol Accountant Illil‘! Trust Blilldlnl ' Charlottetown Attention Swine Breeders . Now ls the time to sunrd against FIGIOIM By using the moss effective remedy iln the market. DIACPS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER It. will thoroushly abolish nll trwes or worms and Im- hultii of‘ your ml. Prhs Ila pa: I AMMONIATEI) BIONCIIIAL COMPOUND A Illlll doll ll . psi-salon ififlifiirlfsl": colllhs and co A rellof for chi-onto Bronchitis. Prloe I01: per bottle. All; YOU TIDUBLBI) WITII LUMIAGO OI HOB! IAUI TIIE mo tiles Ill Great Georg. Sheet mu ora GI filer-now." m” ‘ M. ALBAN FARM n. 5.. LLB. lAlllsTl-zii, sOucITOK Ollsndlnn Bank of Commit" ‘noun r0 LOAN " w, Maiiiclt“! u i 1.11 " llolnlgvlllgTlil-l? SOLICITORS‘ Office: 90 Greal "w"! "silt 1s MAIHIES Mousv r0 1.0" cunsmn Block milla- H. F. McPhit; NOTA - 1.11.,"1&ll.ll‘..'.“‘ EYES EXAlIlllill GLISSES l-‘lltill J. S. TAYLOR oivromisrklsf Si! c. -gg||g and Qmnmg ..:::...-_»- 1111M" I one u "n, sir-ism: "l _ _ enemv stve in and the eama¢e be I 111w spoils w life. uosslblv unomportant 1111mm. which "Id"!- GHT BlNDlFiG