‘race rook TIIE DIIARLDTIETDWII GUARDIAN lensing Dells (loud-ed In III) _ President: Liens. Col. W. Chester l. Auburn , Vlou-Prolldesss: J. l. Bud-nets, I. J. I. Indolent “out. Col. D. A. Mailman, 0.5.0. Idler III Director: J. I- luruets. l‘..l.|. Aloeloleyllllors: Frank Waller sue Meet. u: A. lenses. LC.N.V.I~ (Us: Aetlve Service) the Weakest Ink.‘ IATUIDAY. Ivovammu e. 1m ~"Difficult To Understand" "A Commenting" on the crisis in the King Cab- inet, the Windsor Star, a paper favorable to the Government, says it is difficult to under- ‘stand the opposition to Colonel t\'alston's de- pmand for conscription. “The general view," it says, "is that the Government's hesitation is founded on political considerations. If so, it is short-sighted. “The tear is that seats would be lost in Quebec if conscription were introduced. Sonic p , lmight go, but probably not as many as the Liov- _ ‘Comment fears. Any so lost would certainly not fswiug to the Progressive Conservatives, for ‘Qthcy u‘: committed to compulsory overseas i service Thus, they would not be added lo the ', major Opposition party. Neither can it b": imagined that the C. C. F. would proiii. "At the worst, the Government would lose , I. few seats to the small isolationist bloc repre- ‘ sented by e variety of minor groups with defi- jrlitely parochial appeal. 'l'here would be no i accession of strength to any party that is scri- , ously to be feared. At the same time, the ad- ‘ministration could count on picking up some ldded support from other parts of Canada, which would be won over by a courageous 1 stand." , The Star concludes: “There ere disturbing i signs that, either for political security or ' through stubbornness, the Prime Minister is rejecting the most able advice of a Aliliislflr ,who has the best grasp of all the relevant facts. ' By doing so, he is placing the country in dan- ger of a political upheaval at a time when all its rpefforts should be directed to winning the war. ‘ - The situation is one that is bound to cause con- ‘gem to all patriotic Canadians.” Britain's Health Service I.’ The British Ministry of Health has issued e white paper concerning the proposed national ‘HITCH-uh service for England, Scotland and ',Wsles. Its opening sentence is “The Govern- § ment have announced that they intend to es- . rablish s comprehensive health service for ev- , ' erybody in this country." “Britain Today" ob- "f serves that already twenty million workers i there, or nearly half the nation, are already eii- titled to medical attention and sickness benefit under National Health Insurance. The estimated cost of the new scheme is 150,000,000 pounds a year, of which some 27 . per cent will be provided out oi national insur- l snce, and the remainder from the National Ex- chequer and from local taxes. It will be man- sged by s Central Health Service Council, as- listed by a Ccritral Medical Board, and will . work under s. Minister of the Crown. However, in view of the discussion both there and here, the main point of interest is i , the position under the new plan of the medical profession. People will retain power to choose their own doctor, and individual doctors shall l. i‘ be free to direct their own practice. As well as these "private" physicians, there will be some doctors, paid by the state, who will work in groups from Health Centres. There will be others under a half and half scheme receiv- ing capitation fees according to the number ‘of persons in their care. In other words the famous British gift for compromise is well to . ~ the fore. r1- However, it is suggested, although not def- initely so stated in the White Paper, that gradually the swing of interest in the profes- sion will be from treatment of diseases to pre- vgntion. Not only mire but prevention will be- come the goal. Com tude i -’ The Montreal Star which has been strongly ‘pfO-Lillfiffll in recent years, has the following editorial comment on the recent address of the Progressive Conservative Party leader in Que- john Bracken's forthright enunciation_ ‘of his policy as being one ‘of equal responsibilities for all, as well as equal rights for all,’ will com- mend itself to thinking Canadians. It is a doc- Urine that applies to Quebec as well as to the rest of the country and, if generally adhered to, would eliminate once and for all the dissen- sions that have disrupted Canadian unity in the most critical period of the country's history. We live in a confederation. Nations 0r states which come together in confeilerations do so for mutual advantage, not so that one area may dominate over another or use the resources of the country for selfish purposes. This coun- try cannot continue to exist without the sharing of both responsibility and privilege the Pro- ressive Conservative leader envisaged at Orms- town. _ . Mr. Bracken confronted the country with three courses open to Canadians: To develop better understanding between the races and build on the northern half of the continent a l». united nation; to continue as we are and let the ties of Confederation loosen further by make- if hift partisan and narrow racial appeals; or to . fillet matters take their course and eventually be ‘ lettled by civil war. _ " Only one choice is open to us. It is essen- tial to Canadian unity that racial harmony be restored and to effect that restoration there is require a more earnest effort at understand- jng between Quebec and other parts of the Do- minion than we have yet permitted otlrselvcs. I to Quebec straight lows: products. wartime demands, than in I920. dustry. fifth is exported. of markets abroad, essential." there." e e a e ginning" of Great War II, . I i I U There are two billion two Bonds? e e e s Surely the Mackenzie seniors. e e e e beer and wine off premises. t will not be brought about by provocative conditions on licenses. ____,,_,,____. try and praising another. Mr. Bracken exhibit- ed political courage of s high order by talking from the shoulder and bringing to its consideration s doctrine based on hatred but on tolerance. His unequivo- cal denunciation of a ‘hate Quebec‘ movement will commend him not only to Canadians else- where but to all those Quebeckers who have the interests of their province st heart. Canadian Dairy Prospects In one of s series of articles dealing with Canadian export commodities and industries, which have been appearing in the Commercial Intelligence journal for some time past, l\Ir. P. H. Ferguson, of the Agricultural Branch of Statistics summarizes his observations as fol- “It may be noted that the Canadian dairy industry depends upon exports outlets for the sale of its cheese and concentrated milk Other dairy products are disposed of almost exclusively in the domestic market» Since I920 domestic consumption of milk pro- duction has risen substantially. The use of the latter for creamery butter, fluid sales and farm use together have risen from about 52 per cent m 1920 to nearly 78 per cent in 1943. In con- trast, the proportions used for cheese and con- centrated milk products fell from just over 17 per cent in the former year to just under i4 per cent in the latter. 'l‘hus the proportion of milk production going into the chief dairy ex- port products was lower in I943, in spite m‘ time," Mr. Ferguson concludes, "the produc- tion of cheese and concentrated milk products remains a most important factor in the econ- omy and prosperity of Canadian dairying. Fur- ther the enjoyment of export outlets for those iwo products is of high importance to the in- Approximately four-fifths of annual cheese production is marketed abroad. In the case of concentrated milk products, about one- The latter finds a variety _ although the United King- dom is generally of first importance. market for cheese has always been the United b-lflgdoin, and the retention of that mzirkct [IDI IURIAL NUIIIS Buy s bond and encourage the “boys over The U. S. controls 57% of the world's oil resources, Britain 27%, the Soviet II%. ‘ I i U Tomorrow. let us all go to church for s change and see the‘ eftfec: or: the war outlook. Battle of El Alamein fought to a finish this date 1942, when after 112 days of cease- less attacks, the Axis forces were in full re- treat; ovcr 9,000 prisoners were captured; the battle was claimed to be the “end of the be- hundred sixtv-four million dollars lying idle banks of Canada today waiting profitable in- vestment-nhat better or safer than i King Government does not intend to denude us of our Customs and Excise Department, the outcome of having well paid dummies at Ottawa? Evidently we are not only being “by-passed" as the Premier claims, but wiped out as a Province altogether. Oh, for the days of real Island politicians at Ottawa who made the rafters of Parliament ring with their assertion of Island rights and privileges as a free and independent province! e e s 4- The Prime Minister evidently “pulled a fast one” on- his Minister of Defence on Tuesday. The member for Prince was pressing hard for his policy of reinforcements for the army at the front, when the wily Mr. King pulled from his file a letter of resignation sent him by i\1r. Ralston during a previous Cabinet ci'isis two years ago, and intimated that he now accepted it! In the interval he had been grooming Lien- eral ‘McNaughton for the position. U i I U Evidently the Provincial Government pussyfooting over the South Shore and Brighton Bridge scheme, which is being utilized more or less as “window dressing". What the people want is concrete proof the policy is being put luto practical effect. The idea of waiting till the river is frozen to test the river's depth; this is equivalent to the King Government's policy of postponing investigating the Borden pave- ment project until the ice disappeared. It works both ways ss sn esscuie fior ‘fooling the P¢°Pl¢- This is Boy Scout Apple Day when every man and woman of goodwill is expected to do at least one good turn, which however, may be repealed as often as the spirit moves them. The Boy Scouts annually set themselves the duty of raising funds for their troop needs, and en- couraging the local fruit industry, by selling fine, juicy apples to all and sundry. \¢Ve be- speak a hearty response to their initiative, enter- prise and faith in the good intentions of In Ontario they are evidently Yesflrlllfi! m “high license" to regulate the liquor business. Membership of a three-man liquor authority to control and regulate hotels in Ontario is _ nounced by Attorney-General Blackwell. Chair- man of the new board is judge Walter T. Robb of Orangeville, Ont., and the other members are William T. Nugent of Lindsay and J. Fred- rick Reid of Windsor. Under provision of the Liquor Authority Control Act of I944, province has been divided into districts to con- duct a judicial system of licensing the sale of The board will hold hearings for the purpose of granting, traits- ferriug, renewing, suspending and canccllina licenses, and will have jurisdiction t6 impose I ‘Fl-IE uuxurrrmuwri commune as We old for happle officers‘ Est land Plain ttrussle ls hancellor rantford een spent ilgh. costs elleves olricare. esclershlp g hiortar marked, Colorado Brltalnls reliable. It believe. of scheme of that. the sor Star that Ehe 0g 615s. f use res no ses that in part. going Oid eg the ‘brealgfn kln s of c via twd tw a n N York lrua lnes. ngured al being. through. wounded. something cover his h Province. l j Canadians Wh n8 hard hit. war. should loo aln 13,750,000 gordlng to Sir outhern Saska t ls obviously ions with plen ng for. thou U18 WEI‘. A the robot bomb the postsc 1e Philippines. very count. harks of bh hnndlcapped; Notes By The Way ..0ue o! our first pess- We take it. will be to d": Ineana of lowering Ina-Windsor Star. Inok st the brls-h us. at least, don around worr m; about w; new car.-K Lchener new t side. 'l 118V; .____. If we fight u goodwill of the 1 to win r days. spurs hav the United States were bound to gmd later. that those m1 Dealer HOW of the b0 ——Arm er Stars and Stripes. Expos! r. OI] 3Y9 C556; l‘ . Lhlt would he hard to beetles, sobta g9 Hun potato fle sembles the clutching 1118 man it a straw. We should be thankful for this further DB! l Bil "body is i1 seething m of {ism-mg hurricanes and a“ dlfinloslons Old $01 ls to keep up with more obstrepero do 0 feelrthey 1r; b;- flnanctally, by m1; k about them. »'l‘lie costing Great Bri- P°l1nds dolly, 5c. John Anderson. Excheq e .amount of money that ha; oil exploration m tchewan so far but a job for Organiza- ty of financial back- gh the stakes may be _ also except lD_Ol‘gul'llZlibl0n5 with 511b- itantial financial katoon Star-Phoenix. PIG TCSGPVES. ‘ "wt the main cause of ranccs decline ls that it has been fulfil by second-rate statesmen ever gncfl the 118:5 of Clemenceau 11nd Undoubtedly the tlmgs plow call for kPeriln-IX. the French Journalist, strong and capable ll min “““°".. au e. m ary man ough h ls, will be the one to give lt e ville Recorder and Tim Ma 9 . l Allied soldiers have been find- n left behind by the Germans Some of these have been "Fabrication pieanlng they were made 1n Spain ‘ranco and his gang have been helping the Germans right through ll apologists for Spain armot get BWgy from the cold 90° act that Franco w Star ' t da-Wihdso a‘ “am oi“ dropped nu lds by Nazi planes. constitute merely a furth- er evidence of the desperation of our enemies. lea. spectacular than s but none the loss ls almost ludl CORT-W. that enough of mild be scattered to do Serious damage, particularly‘ Germany‘. ability to Planes 1s strictly limited. This new distinctly re- ofa that hi. cause lslshdlyiaevlesgghllllfrtidc-l Nobody really deciaives a child or a dog. stays the Victoria Colonist, They may seem to do 5o butfrom oment forward the child. as remembers. m the some source u frank- ly Q11 Sllollid to see if lt. too holds some deception. Far better EVG bterf e that DEN l-e know. and urtfogiiunewly. often. A chlld will learn '0 C! a straight yrs or hlld can IILBRQ anything of a aims Ho. or its counter- v 5. Alt. ...._. '. rl ml! not be so good In 5i Omelet. but for some ookln! they are better thn the strictly fresh variety, m- "R1113 to Dr. Gladys Stevenson. assl tint professor the University of California. Ex. Der ments conducted under super- n have shown that. eggs from to four weeks old make me mqft tender angel food and sponge ca es Custards made to three weeks old ar have less tendency to curdle. 0191' 9835 must not be used if Eh y are spoiled; cracked or spot- l e855 should be discarded. — Times. elr applness. . p I erlcan forces‘ ln e was a landing on the Chinese cbast. another invasion of Fcrmosa, iother Luzon ln the Philippines torth and another ln the south of of economics at 'An "expert" war commentator. popular United States magn- zihe this week. outlined four alter- filves for invasion thrusts by m; the It happened this eek. and the “expert? felled on The invasion took lace in the centre of the Phlllp- kn No war has ever produced o mflny "Wfoflf experts as ‘his ne. They are a dlme a dozen on he r. too. — St. Catharine; tlndiird. Plastic surgery and artificial lmbs are doing llne thing for our fighting men. ave been performed by the medl- al profession and lts rfs to repair fuclal disfigurement rid to restore amputated here ls often an lnjury to plrlt, in these cases which ls not o easy to deal with. Even brav- st hearts must. fllnch at the pros- ecl. of slow and painful progrz-ss o something approximating nor- The doctors and the sychologlals are asking the gen- ral public to Here for once no man should be asked to see himself as others see hlm. The doctors and the nurses have lnld down n llne to be followed by the general pub- llc ln casual encounters with tho They say: Be natural; lgnore the deformity; reassure the encourage the batt- ent to resume normal soclal ac- tlvlty so far as he cnn; to do wlthl nclty: restore his fnlth ln his own ablllty to llve usefully and to re- — Vancouver ‘Ital’; .22“- lrd to keep the lberated people; ll. there is hope y newspap- one of m; us planets-Cleve. estlma te . -Brock- a Elspanola," crousto send over x0; but with eggs e smoozlier Miracles attendant lve hlm n ls cap- lush. lsoo the oost. oimllv: Most o! to drive TWQIIU-flve thousand poi-q or. e been sold by Army. out. sooner or don't help They 818mm: 111K DEX‘. — hlbltlve —Sas- ybs de when drown - mof rythlizg Pacific. limbs. the do lts part ln the no reatment of this lnsldlous injury o the spirit which our klth and in have sustained. ’I‘l'iese ho have faced flame and snot nd have brought back the vlslble ordeal want most. f all to forget that. ordeal. They ant. least of all to be reminded either by curiosity or effusive sym- pathy of what they have been men did ISLAND I‘ tlon I had this week with s "Surely do Govemment to build tor for Prince Edward Island?" mlwh driving tanks-wmdm town. ls always trying to flnd new Star. r markets for the Prairie farmirs. ____ particularly for their ma"; Beoent pictures of the um u," grslns" new idea?‘ "I realize nothing of the klnd. Our farmers have had no cholce but to follow their present methods of mixed farming ever since Con- federation, for they have my, had n single profitable market ln which to sell their products." “How do you make that out?" "Well. l.n the first place our railway can only ship to Canada and the Urilied States. In Can- ada they are producing to scur- plus practically everything that our farmers grow or raise. They buy a few of our potatoes because our ncld soil gives them a better article but our farmers rarely get cost for them. We can grow bet- ter fruits and vegetables and more per acre than they ban fn Ontario in many lines. but our freight rates make shipping impossible. Vj/e are nearer by rall to the United States but they Impose prohlblbory duties.” "Yes. I realize that but whet are you groin: to do about it?" “That's easy. Prior to 1873 our farmers were shipping their pro- ducts to Britain and many other countries; ln fact lt ls a common saying that ‘Island shlps sailed the seven seas.’ In the early '70's steamshlps were increasing rapidly In number. Their holds were larg- er. their speed greater, and their freight rates lower and our wind- ammers were knocked out of uslness. In '73 when the Island entered Confederatlon we handed over to Ottawa the control of our water fronts and. instead of real- izing the on- outstanding need of this Island, they looked on com- placently while no fewer than B0.- bo 85.0w! of our people emi- sratlegl because trade became 1m- V. pose . “What should they have done?" "You know this Island and how we have wharves ln twenty-two of our harbours. all bullt before Con- federation. but all too small and not deep enough to accommodate ocean vessels. Not only that. the harbours need some dredging. Had Ottawa improved our wherves before they antagonized other countries by adopting a protective tariff. we would have malntalned our export trade all over- the world and our population today would be several times what it is." “That's a strong statement to make." “Well. in Canada there are only twelve million people and we do nob sell even to one million. whereas outside of Canada there are two thousand mllllon people. all eating food, of which we can produce the best, but you cannot sell goods unless you can deliver them, and remember that it takes no capital to employ ocean ships, for the British, Canadian and Am- erican ship owners will gladly send their vessels hen st any time that We hgpp: verso or part of s ee be . “ tie mot-hot difficulty. Who! ggpd; have we ready to lood on s s P " “Not many things at present apart from potatoes. turnips and livestock, but you wouldn't expect our farmers to grow or our busl- ness men to sell goods required in other countries untll they know that they wlll have the means to deliver them I um. of course, presIIPDOsing that the first post- war contract to be let will he for the repair of the rallwa wharf tn ‘the Charlottetown ha: us. “Toke for example the one llne of cannlng. The women of the ivorld have made up their minds not to drudze ln the kitchen ln the future and you wlll flnd that canned goods have an enormous future. We can can a large range of fruits and vegetables for has money than they can in Ontario or the United States. and We are right on the ocean and do not have any rall freight to bay. While the yield to our farmers sllplllylnfl garden truck to the oflnnoflb! would be far lreeter than from mixed farmlng. Furthermore. the ships thatwould deliver our ds would bring us hot country w"! from the West Indies b0 Complete our canning llne. we would be employing thousands of people ln canning alone. I have studied the canning trade and ow whet I am talkins about. hlwgell. have we anything else to 5 .. “f our farmers devoted the so that they are now uslnl gram growing to paaturlnl high grade llvsstoc . breeding enl- rnals, they oculd make all kinds of money. inst as they dld with the foxes. n n few years buyers from all over the world’ would come b0 the Island t0 buy.‘ "Yes, but why would they come u, the Island instead of golng elsewhere?" “Ask Premier Jones why he new 520.000 for e single heifer. It ll. of course, true that he has made a specialty of Holstelns. but he could not have succeeded as he has in any other part of Canada. I-fe has been able to give e leodto the whole mlnlon r of a number of local conditions. namely our mod- grate climate, the Island's splen- pastures. the Pure Weber- ractlcally H120. all over the I!- and. and our remarkable atmos- here rmeated u lt ls wlth ozone rom t e striking of the winds upon the waves. wlth lodlne from tho drying seaweeds. with t violet rays from our strong sun- shine, fin-Cl wlm nltro en peroxide from the sunlight re lected from the ocean during the summe months. All these Island condi- tions are hot only toxic to dlseflw but: they qlve all warm blooded animals s degree of health and vigour unequalled elsewhere on the continent. For the‘ some reason you 59¢ so many of our epxpgg llvlng to a flnd old no 1n Edward Island." "well. you seem to have I DIE"! ood story to tell. anything else? "Oh yes. there ls lots more to tell there ls no time was: '1 ROI AN ILIVATOI WILL III AIME! Bin-Let me recount e converse- glnent business man of enunfiPi wn Emmi-Ill." he slid. "you not really expect the Dominion n III-in eleva- "I certainly do". I replied. “lf for no other reason than that 0t- "Yei. but do you realise how slow our farmers are to take up s In a few years l5 YO He is doing a i r s s s s t s s s \ h h i l i i Colonel Ralstfik Career In Brief (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Nov. 2 — (CPI - Col. J. L. Ralston, who has re- signed as Defence Minister, is e soldler, lawyer and public servant who rose to the top in all three professions and ln the I940 war session of Parliament heard op- position members urge his pro- ‘ILIOHOII to the post of Prlme Min- r. With the outbreak of war, Col. Rallton forewent his 1936 decla- lon to abandon polltlcs and offer- ed his services ln any capaclty, preferably on active service such as he had experienced in the First Great War when he rose from a Clmneisicy to command hls bat- ta n as Lieutenant-Colonel and was wounded and decorated. However, he accepted the post of Finance Mlnlster Sept. ‘l, 1939, and when Hon. Norman Rogers was killed in an airplane crash June 10. I940, Mr. King chose Mr. Ralston as the successor. He found himself heed of s department that had been expended tremendously glnclewloie held the poet from 1926 o Separate All‘ and Nav Mlnls- tries were established, ut the corporation lawyer was given gen- eral supervision over all branches of the services, with particular responsibility for the Army. He stepped with vlgor into the gigantic task of swiftly trans- forming a peace-loving people into s war machine Imperturable. methodical and painstaking, he assumed his new task with de- termination. I I O In politics Col. Rslston had fall- ' ures as well as successes. His first attempt to enter Parliament, ln the Domlnlon elections of 1908. brought defeat. Three years later he was elected to the Nova Scotls lslsture from his nstlve Cum- berland County. He was re-elected in the I916 provincial elections but defeated r1 1920 and 1925. e also lost in the Dominion elections of 1926. Then. when Mr. King formed his new Government In 1926, he chose Col. Ralston as his De- fence Minister and he was elect- ed by acclsmatlon in Shelburne- Yarmouth. l-Ie was re-elected ln 1930 but retired to hls law prnc- tice when Parliament was dis- lolypttl lnh 1935. er e became Finance Min- ister tn 1M0 he wasilected to the Commons u member for Prince ln Prince Edward Island and was ra-elected at the Dominion elee. flog? ofU1l940. h ted Empire Loyalist stock, Col. Ralston ls the son of Burnett Wllllam and Bessie (Lay- on) Balaton. He attended school n his native Amherst, N, 5,, and ook his law degree at Dalhousle Unlverslty. He was admitted to the Bar of Nova Scotla in 190s and was made e King‘: Counsel I11 yep?” llklaer. n e rnerrled Nettle Win- ulfred McLeod of Amherst and they have one son, Capt. Stuart B. Ralston with the Canadian Artillery in Belgium. Capt. Ralston in his father's law business. “Ask The Boys (Montreal Gazette) (The following letter was writ, by e young Montreal officer, serving with the 1st Canadian CALLING 01v . i - \ When your Victory Loan Salesman calls on you please be prepared to give hlm your Subscription .Do not ask him to call bank His time ls valuable, and gas ls rationed Give him your full co-operation THIS IS IMPORTANT National War Finance Committee Zil-rllgelergvz-CYM-zaae At The Front” ,_ IIIIIIIIIIIIII/arllla u! patriotic duly YJIJIIIZFIIIII the terrific and Holland.) Dear Dad: sorry not to have written home before now, but lt ls not essgnéo I18 flflhflfl‘ ln BCIIIHII! e e e write because of my wounds. land was a moat welcome after the blood continent. course I couldnt see much from the Dakota in which I was flown from . . . and when I errlved I was merely curried ln my strech- er to an ambulance. I feel lucky as hell to be sllve. I'll never forget the day I got It. We were ordered to attack e place north of . . . . where we had been held up for some time. We couldn't take the town, so we were to attempt e left flanking movement along the open coun- try to the west. There was no cover at all and the ground was spfiglutely flat except for the i Of Two companies got cut to rte- bons trying to take their objective in the morning and so the re- maining two companies were sent out ln the aftenioon. We had lots of sjspport from the srtlllery, but than not good enough when 09g- msn troops ere well dug tn, and especially when s lot or them are Dnratroobers. I wen tn the after- noon show and lt reminded me of accounts of the last war. We formed up behind a dyke and m. vancecl over the o n ‘young-L when we got prsct rally to our obloctlve (say 600 yards away) the machine suns and mortars be- came too hot and we began to Continued-g: bag; 0 -_______.. _ CHANG! New tlmee demand new monies. and new men: The world advances, Ind in time outgrow: The laws that ln our father's day were hes ' And doubtless. after us. some oils-er scheme wlll be gloved out. by wlser men Mode wise b‘. the of “pith-v steady lrowth The tune la rfnc. and rotten-ripe. O I. B ‘ Then (lit ft come: I hsve no dread Iseslllixegrllgr p! the instinct of um- limp} thbt 00d’! wqi-ia would Because w?‘ s rchment more 0r m n l Ele 1. h With etiaiqulihuigiun rirufinghi: our, Her mlrror ls burned forward to re- The nromlse of the future. not the Past. . Asmegjtyusgglldtpgell. Attention Truss wearers To those of you who ere unfortunate enough to have to wear a truss we lsk the question Are you satisfied with the one vuu ere weerhuf Does It M comfortably or ls Arm overseas wh l withheld for dbvloiiislereaxiilihl: Ii glves s striking picture of what Canadian troops are up against In exrHFtZi say that Filliuiiftflt if our farmers ll! fertility. they could save from three to ffve million dollars annual- ly. but I wlll show those figures ‘l; ope of my other letters. Good- e. I em. Sir. etc. ll. K. B. HEMMING “NEBVES” SHE CALLED IT lssln| lnler losing friends-she IIII went sol ' ' IOII-—IIIII,'III the fliers el her bleed, "Ill needed ellenlieis. Dole . , .. st» Qiifiar n. w“: ma.» .1 i... uswfum h“. “dead excess d . all“. ache, leek t en sntlqneteu and out-of- gl style-outgrown lie use- : II eeuslng untold agony. then why continue suffering when we OIII ellevlnle the muse by offering you s perfect filling. modern and uo-to-dste from the large assortment lust received All siren lnll mes st nrleee to null every- i. Gassy gornachs Relieved t. u out '.;'lli.’°"°'l.."nl'. n“... should Jet s bol- ‘Dr Ivan! lb h p? I led Molvc 101v SAINT JOHN... 7,00 A. M. 11,30 A. M. v 6,00 P. M. (‘Monsoon Olly) To NEW GLASGOW l.00 P. M. $51)“ One Wsy (Plus Tu) RESERVATIONS-INFORMATION. TICKETS PHONE 540-206! MARITIME EENTRAI. AlllWAYfilhtlul Fur Font Ailments CONIULT H. J. A. BROWN. DJ’ Orthopedic GIIIRDPODIST HI Great George Street CIIARLOTTIJTOWN. I'LL Professloiiial Dards McLeod G Bentley I. I. BENTLII. I. C. I. A. BINTLIY. I U- Ierrlsters end Attorneyl-Il- Lew lllPrlmelts-ees I i ll. R. Doaiio o Do. C‘ ‘ Accountants ll Grafton Street Charlottetown Phone 208D l0! M7 Illldolpls W. Mlllllll. OJ- llerrell sud Dolmen” D. F. ABDIHBALD Chartered Aeeenlsnts lest-era Truss Bnllrlllll Charlottetown Richard B. Johnston Alton»! M Lew Csssnslsslonerfor Deeds. its. for Prince Edward Island. . k l Lek 8121mm, Johnston) ‘ ofrlee lulu e20. s1 Milk 81ml Boston. Mess. Frederic A. Largo IAI-BISTII. ITO. l“ Richmond Street Charlottetown. P. B. I- BELL 8 MATHIESN MONEY ‘I0 LOAN Cameron Block - jlherlottetows g HI. McPhee B.A. K.C. NOTARY &o. ' IABBIITEB SOLICITOI - - “Wwhfiz-lré PALMER Q HA LAM l. l. I-IASLAM. B.A.. LII-B- BARRISTEI, ETC. loll of Nova Booth Chlmllfli °h‘<'.'§b‘§°°‘r"d {s} ‘ n“. s5 P. 0. In l! Charles R. McQuoid n s lei-rim. l-ullclsor. Notary. lie. lllcy lullfllul. Charlottetown Phone I88 ... 11:. "a.'"..'.......""'i. IQ U toms . Inns Stomach Alh- ture tslmn st mesl times, not only prevents sll hell effect from gee, but It promotes the functions! loflvlly of the stomach, sums digestion end Improves the espouse. Prise 85 souls our bolts Moll 0rd lilellllon. c" u.“ “m.” TllE 2 IAADS Ill Great GQOPIO lines eves txsmm I AND GLASSES FITTED l J. s. TAYLOR’ l orromurmsr Corsézollent no Queen Its- lwenlss" Ediumtalsiiiinu "ml.- IA’; ,1 "\l-l' >iil .x4..._.. a..s t-“ i. s,_vb>\.Z's>k.4' ' _t'-1KA. ~l.-.........-...........-.........._.-