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Toroutor News 880ml Cindi: IAIIICII Ottawa: Wolfe’: News Gland lurlhury, 0M4 Iub Iobucen Hhop. Houston. N. B. ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY, MAY l9. 19M The Victory Loan All concerned in the Fourth Victory Loan drive have reason to be proud of the results. The splendid response from this Province. where every district exceeded its objective, places us tmcc again in the forefront. Coll- grattllzitinns are due especially to the campaign ers alld subscribers of Prince County on winning the trophy donated hy the Provincial Govern- ment with subscriptions representing I35 per ccnt of their quota. Such an achievement would be creditable to the most highly industrialized section of Canada. When one remembers that the wealth of this Province is almost entirely ,. dcrivcd from the farm and fishery industries which havi- had llfiufipflClilCllliif wartime boom, the result is little short of marvellous. The whole Province exceeded its $2,500,000 objective by well ovt-r half a million, a sum which in itself, belurc the war, would be regarded as a pretty high lturzllc. The canlpaign coincided with the victorious conclusion of the North African battle, and vvith evidence on all sides of increasing Allied strength on land, sea, and in the air. Every cent subscribed to the Loan will be needed short- ly, and even greater contributions will be re- quired ofus in the very near future. So what? Compared with the sacrifice every man and wo- man on active service is making, our biggest subscriptions look small indeed. But the point is that we have this chalice to serve. Those of us who cannot serve in other ways should be rateful for every opportunity of contributing iinancially. Farmers Exceed Request IA survey of the acreage being seeded to grain crops this spring, arranged by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, indicates that the farmers of Canada are doing more than the govern- ment asked in connection with this year's pro- duction programme. They are cutting down wheat acrcage- considerably more than was re- quested, and they are planting barley, oats and flax above the proposed acreage. They were asked to reduce wheat by 3,938,000 acres, to 17,648,000, and the survey indicates that it is being reduced to 17,087,000 acres. In the Prairie Provinces, the estimated reduction is 4,332,000 acres-from 20,652,000 last year to 16,320,000. The Canadian farmers were asked to increase their planting of oats and barley, eachby 12 per cetit. The acreage in barley is being increased 16 per cent, and that in oats is said to be sub- stantially above the 1942 acreage. A great increase in flax was desired alid the objective was put at 2,492,000 acres, which was 1,000,000 nlore than last year. The farmers are exceeding this mark by 24,100 acrei. 1000141118 to the survey. The increase is chiefly in the West-So per cent in Saskatchewan, 55 per cent "u Alberta and 35 per cent in llianitvbl- Copernican Anniversary On Blay 24 next, on the initiative of the Kos- Clklsllio Foundation, scientists and educationists gc-lligruly’ will obscrvethc {our hundredth anniver- wry U1" the death of Xikolaj Koperluk, better kilown by his Latinizcd name of Nicolaus Cop- crllicus. Although he was born in PruSSia 311d lilCll ill Prussa, and probably was 0f German de- sccnt. the Poles claim him as one of their own, and it i. 1111:" that the University of Cracow, Poland, was lll\ alma mater. That university 1m,- n closed for 1h;- first time ill 575 ycilf-‘u b)’ the invqnh-r, (jcrmziily. Accordingly, while the world in general recalls the works of Copernicus especially his adventures and discoveries in astronomy, the university ill which he first stu- died will rcmaiil silent. Tilt‘ mysteries of the hcavetls have intrigued mall from the morning of time. The old Ara- bians and the old llcbrcw wor-thies gazed at the suli and the moon and the stars with wonder and sought to llll1l£‘l'.\l£\ll(l their movements. The Greek guCgfflpilCf and astronomer, Ptolemy, who lived later in Alexandria, in the second century, conceived the theory that the earth was the fixed centre of the universe about which the sun and the other planets revolved. This geocentric idea prevailed until Copernicus solver] the riddle by completely reversing Ptolemy’; plan. The Cop- ernican system, as proclaimed by him, made the sun the centre around which moved the earth, the moon and other planets. His views he set forth in his De Rcvolutionibils Orbillm Coeles- tium—-or in English "Concerning the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres." This founder of modern astronomy was :1 versatile genius. After his studies in Cracow University he was a student of law at Bologna and later lectured in astronomy at Rome. In addition to his achievements in astronomy. Cop- ernicus was a statesman a soldier, a church- man, a painter, a poet. a physician. and an econ- omist. In the latter field the claim is made for him that he was the originator of the law attri- btllcd to Sir Thomas Gresham. the principle of which is that when bad money is in circulation J _ school issue. withtllc ,lllebldf0flllllllllllQvllllc0flll and drivesgobilt the good. By closing Crscow University the Nazis pre- vent officisl celebration of its most famous graduate’: discoveries. But its influence will prevail after Hitler's tyrannical restrictions luve been swept aside by an outraged world. (iellimany cannot make the sun of freedom stand s 1 . PEDIIORIAL NOTES-u It is marvellous what those 4 inches of top soil of this Island can produlse. I I i Summcrside’: live wires have gone over the top both in town snd county. Public spirit does it. o u n- a St. Dunstan - 924-988—Abbot of Glaston- bury, 945. and later of_London; Archbishop of ‘Canterbury 959; Canonlzcd, 19th May being his a . y s n- a w- A_ British woollen manufacturer has given 34 of his staff a week's holiday with pay and ex- penses to work on fanns to relieve the labour shortage. a a u u According to Toronto Evening Telegram the store 0f food in which the Ottawa Government 1S mainly interested seems, at times, to be the _ pork barrel. IOU‘ At the recent invcstiturc at Buckingham Palace by the King, Sqdn. Leader Tony Shelfoon, son 0f our well-known citizen, received the Air Force Cross. a u st u p Since the war (apart from s flight to France m I940) Mr. Churchill has crossed the Atlantic seven times, visited the United States three times, and covered Russia, Persia, Egypt, Mor- occo, Turkey, Cyprus, Tripoli and Algiers; cov- firing 33,000 miles outside the United Kingdom in the process. w at a a It is interesting to note that the company which ‘produced “In Which We Serve", the magnificent war picture now showing at the Prince Edward, is engaged in the ambitious en- terprise of filming Shakespeare's “Henry V." The text will be pure Shakespeare, and the cast Wlll be the fincstavailable today 0n the English Stage. _The filming will be in technicolor, and the Agnlcourt battle scenes will be shot in Eire on Lord Powerscourtfs denleslles, which have a mountain setting with plenty of trees. The latter will be, for the purpose of the film, dyed by Spraying to make their summer foliage con- ifllfm ICCQratCIy to the season of the year at which Aglncourt was fought, which was in October. u v s- a The death of Judge Emerson Coatsworth in Toronto, says the Montreal Gazette, stirs a chord l" ti"! 1000101)’. recalling a hectic chapter in Can- adas political history. Even his native city has probably forgotten that Emerson Coatsworth was a party casualty in the great upheaval of I396 when Sir Charles Tupper led the Con- scrvativc ,Party out of office on the Manitoba Emerson Coatsworth jr. — his father was then living as City Commissioner —_ lvas elected to the House of Commons for East Toronto in 1890. Six years later he stood with Tupper, the old War House of Cumberland, on the platform at Massey Hall and his fellow cit- lzens rcfuseddlim a Hearing. East Toronto turn- ed against hlm and elected John Ross Robert- son, publisher of the Evening Telegram and a vigorous opponent of the Remedial Bill. That ended the Coastworth career in politics, other than nlilnicipal, but a good man is not kept down and Toronto had good use to make of the man who had been too loyal to a losing cause and a. mistaken leader. He became an alderman and then twice Mayor, president of the Union oi Canadian Municipalities, and later, County Cour: judge. \Vllen he died on Tuesday, full of years 30d 11°00!‘- he was the dean of Toronto jurists. He was 89 years old and had outlived most of those who fought with or against him in the epic struggle of 1896, - 1r 4- m a Hon. R. B. Hanson (Prog. Con., York-Sun- bury) declared in the House of Commons that patriotic members of the Progressive Conserva- tive Party were "carrying the weight" in the Fourth Victory Loan, and that they “do not get one cent out of it nor ask for one cent." "I do not think the honorable gentleman should say that", Finance Minister Ilsley interjected, “It is right and I know it is right,” Mr. Hau- soll retorted. “Whenever there is a job to be _done for nothing invariably they choose a. Coll- servative to do it. "When there is a salary attached to it, then some partisan of the Liberal Party is given the job." Mr. Ilsley said members of all parties had o0- opcrated in the loan campaign, “and it is mos: unwise and unwarranted to say that the Con- servative Party is carrying the burden of these loans." “It is in my community, anyway," said Mr. Hanson. . “Then speak for your community," Mr. Ilsley replied. "It certainly is not true generally nor is the reverse true generally." Mr. Hanson was speaking on the mutual aid bill and objecting to a clause empowering the governor-in-couucil to appoint such staff as may be necessary to administer it. He asked why this should not be left to the Civil Service. The clause was an implication that the Civil Service was not functioning satisfactorily. "We know what is happening today," said Mr. Hanson. “Any job that is outside the Civil Service Commission and is worth anything at all is given to a government favorite. “Any job that does not carry with it any cmolumcnt but docs require a great deal of pub- lic service, I notice they ask a Conservative to do it. That is true all over the country." He then charged that Progressive Conserva- tives were carrying the weight of the loan cam- jialgn and the incident ended with the exchange with the Minister on this point. ' llotos By The flay Tllo Btuutfonl hpoullor quotes a °° 9 0f ewyelopacdlus as author- "! vflllns May 24 "mum Day." "m"!!! that practice has be- Wme quite 890G111. but 1t u Inac- curate. M” M ll “Victoria Day," by virtue of an wt of Parliament, and not even the most profound of en- cvchusealu can change that. or- tswu Journal. During l! 1-! mol- oonsolatlon to learn that. brother years them have been wet- ter Mays than this has been so fur; 911911811 there ls plenty of time for "W 891-1108 up of a. new record. ABYWIY. this section of the country Ins escaped the snowfall reported 1n puts of the Canadian West.- ‘Ihmnto Mall and 010m. New York's Bluhnp Willtam Mann- 108 TOWIl/ed 0 $500 cheque from a. group of churchwomen, banked ft untll wars end. Then ft will help to pay for his most famed work-in- progmas: Manhattan's vast Gothic Cathedral of St. John the Dlvlne. Most of the world's famous cathe- drals spanned centuries in building; Canterbury and Peterborough, 400 years; Winchester, 500; Lincoln, 600; Not-re Dame. 700; St. Peter's, 200. But England's graceful Salisbury was finished ln a0 years New York's St. John's has been 51 years abuild- 108- 131511011 Manning will be '17 next week. _Tlme. the prevalence of rainfall: w l"_-__l'l CHARI-OTLEJIOJDZL.§HAKQMN.._ More Moniey For Fa_r_1_n_ers (Ottawu Citizen) of Canada figures show that Oanudfan farmers received an 1n- ctplme of 81.003.000.000 last your In e there are a lot of farmers. b1: increase over prevwuts years. In 1932 the whole furln fnoolne of the » ,000.000. In 7.000.000. and turn made m the House of Comm- ons. One puzzling dlscl u 1s that although 1n 194R farmers the aIKPQwfcureAu-fdby tlleBa-nkof Canada to have received 81.083000. 000, the number of farmers paying fricome tax was only 1,468. and the amount they paid totalled 8150.102. Bank of Canada, the farmers re- ceived only $929,000,000 1.869 farm!!! paid Income tax and the amount they paid was $204,319. There may be a. simple explanat- ion for this apparent dlscrepuuq. but a total of $150,102 1n income tax collections from farmers in u year when they earned $1.08.000.000 seems out, o1’ proportion. If all far- mers liable to Income tax patd up. there ls some justification in the pleas that farmers rhould be exempt from Income tux. The country would probably save money. since 1t looks It will be to the farmefs bene- fit. of course if something can be done to get him an income more for the city mall can not. llve with- out the farmer. If farming declines more, if more farmers slip away to 0")’ JObs and fall-n procuctfon goes 110W“. the cit-y family will know 1t. 1t knows 91' the decline now, in its bvtter ration, 1n its unsatisfied _de_mano for potatoes I; Wlll know lt when meat under ration And if cheese z l 988s IOUOW. lt will know it again - Varlcouver Province. In a town 0v;- uTéTiol-rit-r the nlll- er day email and woman were 111.11" rled dufmg a. blackout. A news des- Pfllch from a southern town 5113's that a couple there "will weur roller skates during their wedding core- mmly at a. rink there tonight." The clergyman who will perform the ceremony will also be an valley SKMES. Quite recently neyvspapur readers were entertained with "he accmml 0f l1 Wefldlnf; Performed in an airplane. Still another took ulace 1n a. balloon. A few years ago an adventurous couple were married 1n an animal cage with a few lions as witnesses. Yet some persons ivond~ er why there ls 50 little respect. for the marriage vow across the line and Why the courts arc plugged with divorce cases. -Chatham Dluly News. I was In Hyde _Park when Lon- don had one of its rare daylight “alerts " Most of those strolling alone the fwtways or across the grass were obviously hem, on rmrea- tlon, and it was interesting to notice how they took ft. Londoners were utterly indifferent; Americans W319 mildly Interested, and only i. ~011- tary “Nann1e" slightly qulckerle-d her walk as she made fcr homr- with ner precious charges. On the Serpentine not a single boat made for the shore. A few rowers rested on their oars and watched on: a1" wo gltlllififitl barrage balloons to 11,1 z-v mr. il‘.."11‘ fellow elephant; amongst the (‘l)1ll‘§_ The complete unconccrn would 1.1’. have pleased (‘merino u“ Goebbcis i! U191’ 5m! 110110 to affect our public morale by sneak "£110.; of tfris tyne. The Americans seemed frankly dis- appointed when the "all clear went, and nothing had liangmled. --N0t- tlngham Evening Past. The German generals cleared out of Tunisia well ahead of the Butt-sh and Americans. They abundant-d their men to their fate. Flew officers above the rank of major were left. at the last with the enemy, How dif- ferent to the British sit Diulkiflk. General Sir Harold Alexander. who led the British 1n Tunisia, was the senior officer at the evacuation of Dunkirk. He. himself. went along the beach to make sure none were loft. Then. 1n company with a senior naval officer General Alexander went up and‘ down the shore ln a small boat calling out to nsk 1f any British soldiers were there. Not un- til he was sure none were left did General Alexander leave. General Alxander did 1t the British way. Rommel and his generals dlu 1t the Nazi way. —W1nds0r 8:51‘ In this day 0f almost universal electrification. maybe there 1s some- thing to be said for the humble ker- osene oil lam-p of a not too remote period. Can you not picture the early fall night when, the supper dishes washed and put away and all gathered ln the sfttlniz room ‘around the great centre table piled high with books and magazines, a set of dominoes and a checkerboard? Fa- ther no hLs alde of the trlible with his paper, mother on hers with her work-basket, you on yours with the third-leader or perhaps the Youths Companion. On the centre of the r‘ able. on its crocheted dolly was the blg lamp with the double wick and the shade adjusted at just the right angle. Outside. crickets mito- ed 1n an endless cadence. Now and‘ then an apple fell On the hearth. maple loos cracked and hissed. and Tabby. the bliz gray cat. nosed up and curled beside Prince. the collie. 'I‘rue the lamps had to be cleaned and filled the chimneys polished nnd the wicks keot trimmed, hilt ft. was sweet and‘ peaceful. But today l: is easy to hush a button and pot al- most nnythlnlz you want. -ahno:~t everything. not all. _ Guelph Mer- cury Editorial. Stalin has lrlerltlfled Russia corn- pletelv with the mllltnry purposes and the strategy of Amcrlca and Brltaln: This does not. eliminate the nollttcal and rllnlomatlc problems facing the United Natons now and after the war. But It does place them 1n persnect-lverft demonstrates again that Russia realizes that vlc- tory over Hitler is the first essential of any settlement 1n Europe. and that military cooperation among the United Nations ls the first essential of victory, Allied solidarity on the battlefield‘ 1s flrmer than ever. - New York Herald Tribune. If. 1s often dlfflcult to get a man's real religion. A man was once drlv- lng Lincoln to home place. and he cursed and swore at his horses at a fearful rate. "Are you an EDIS" oopaltan?" asked Lincoln. The man replied that he wasn't much of any- fng. but. so fnr as he was anytlllnt! he was a. Methodist. "Mr. Seward. COIIICS y as though ft costs more to collect. the farmer's income tax than the sum collected. I1’, on the other hand nearly that of the city dsveller. Biltilt is a failure to collect from all who 1t will benefit the city man, mQJm-e liable, then another solution ls suggested. Suffering China China has applied the scorched earth policy so consistently that. the . e are now adopting 1t 1n snvs the London Free Press. now and then we learn of c‘ mi t"'l()ll$ Japanese incursions into Free China. Usually ln a few days or weeks the forces are driven out. But ivhlle they have been 1n occupa- tion they have destroyed crops, villages, dwellings and left a wildel" ness. Even 1n the vast expanses of China such devastation 1s bound to have all effect. Recent stories from China tell of widespread famine and growing dejectlon. Chinese transportation has been almost: completely crippled as her communications with the outside world are cut one by one by the tight Japanese blockade. Now the only way she can get vital materials except. 10y the long overland road from Russia, 1s by R11‘. The amounts flown 1n from India over the Him- alayas are barely sufficient to keep Chinese resistance nltve. As a re- sult. there 1s inflation, stagnation and virtual economic paralysis 1n- sldc Cntna. Even where goods are available 1n one part of the country they cannot. be transported because of the lack of trucks and fuel, or of railways and equipment. China has 11nd nearly six years of war, and it is approaching the limits human endurance. The Japanese realize this and they are trying to intensify tho Chinese feeling of hopelessness by a. series of minor campaigns designed further crfp 1e Chinese economic lzat on. ’ Allied attempts to help China have not been spectacularly success- ful, Sir Archibald Wavells small- scnle drive into Burma has appar- ently bogged down without appre- arable results. Allied air raids may make the Japanese invaders 1n Burma. uncomfortable, but seem unlikely to open the Burma Road to China. American air-borne trans- org 811' lt ls difficult to see how 1t can be an important factor 1n keeping China 1n the war. Evidently Amer- ican airmen 1n China are getting new equipment. as the recent; raids on Halnau demonstrate. But 1t ls still a small-scale venture. The fate of China may well be decided 1n Tunisia, or in Europe. The Allies are committed to the policy that Hitler must be beaten first. But time fights against China. Films_Of Yesteryear (New York flutes.) Five thousand motion picture films made between 1897 and 191'! and subsequently 10st, will be ma». ed for those who care to see them if the Library of Congress carries through a project Just. announced by Howard L. Walls, curator of the Library's new film colleotlon. For many years film producers prlnfied copies of their silent dramas on paper and copyrighted them as l series of seiperate photographs. Carl Louis Gregory, motion ple- tiure engineer of the National Arch- ives. has now perfected a method of rephotographlng pictures 0n celluloid. The mojector can take over at this point. The lost films hcluded Edwin S. Porter's “Idle of rm American Fireman". a BOO-foot item made about 1902. Dld the flre chief lave his own wife and ‘baby 1n this swift moving tale? He certainly did. and none too soon. either. Another was Joseph Jefferson tn "Rip Van Win- FROM: LISTEN T0 THE PEOPLI Out. of the flesh, out of the mlnds and hearts Of thousands upon thousand oom- mon men, Cranks, martyrs, starry-eyed en- thuslasts slow-spoken neighbors. hard to push around. Wmflenlmhgglelhufig were with w e r And men with a cold passion for mere us. c. We made this thing this dream. This land unsatisfied by lmle ways, 09611 tgodeverv man who brought 8 . Th1; peaceless vision, groping for the stars, Not as a huge devourt machlne Rolling and clanklng wit ess force Over subsumed bodies and the ea Hut as llve earth where snythlng could Your crnnkness, m notions and Grow nnd be looke at, grow and llve or dle. hla dream, But net their change of nowtng and the nun. we made 1t and we make 1t and it's ours. We shall maintain 10. It Ihlll ‘b! sustained. n Vincent Benet. aggregate, this looks s. lotfhrut you This farm lnoonle. however, 1| u 1a paid by farmers contained 1n s. re- time But. in 1941 when, according to the The“, "5 side Parliament ls the lac: that the 9° blll and expose port. is apparently increasing. but-- Sheep-Raising Increases (Hamilton simmer) lheop-lulslng 1s 1110MB!!!‘ thm t Canada, when farmer! have nvlvod their 9103mm" m "' to the demands 3i $5131. becomes s 111th wann- er. m sheen-Ilium! lndultn. 11W‘ ever. should mt. be u more WI!" moeaslty, Important ss meat and wool are 1n the United Nation!- Osnads’; noodofwoolfshl-WII perms-neat as Its mull-smears 1n coal, and both commodities should be amlom on s nI-tlwll m!‘ with n. view to muting 0111a country les dependent than 1t now ll 0h foreign markets rol- their ulIDPIY- um lunpla cml deposits 1n the Dominion can’; devellflill; men's, and the r0 one t a presses for a m utfon. fllieep-ralstnl likewise used to be much more E10‘ oral 1n earlier years before the de- cum set, 1n prim- to the First Great War. Competition from Australia was difficult to meet. because of the flm quality of the wool and the care with which 1t was marketed. T00 many Canadian shew men. 1i 1,; gpknowledged, failed to take the necessary afna 1n havInS the" wont clip ree of bun-s and other matter. with the result that 1t 01100 failed m command u xwd price or a ready market. The bonus of four cents a. Pound. now awarded where wool 1s properly Kredsd- 11 51'1"!‘ tng an improvement 1n this re- spect and the prospect-s 101' Pm" duoers are much b14801"- Canada, possesses great tracts of open country whfgh should make ideal grazing land for sheep. Mar- audlng dogs have caused serioufl losses, but the answer to that could be found in months elfwflve 111%‘ sures of control. No better 101m 0f protection for sheet! h“ W" bee“ MIA! 1’, l9 DOMINION COKI. “COAL We bundle the following Hill Irldo Cm OLD SYDNEY SCREINED, INVERNESQ. ALBION NUT sud ALBION ROUND g1“ minimum-geisha... W. o. GILLIS e.- <;<>_ PIONI IO 144 Richmond St. devised than a shepherd and‘ hi! E. R. Brow &Sc Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickne and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate g Agent at Summerside, D. O. Stewart Charlottetown collie. More of them should be 0m" played in this work 1n 08110005 flocks could then be larger. and what. 1s now too often no more than a bleak countryside would have a pastoral beauty. Pooling, Not Giving Failure of Hon. P. J. A. Cardin and his seven Liberal followers t0 block second reading of the billion dollar Mutual Aid B111 does not re- move the humiliation of ‘their e1- fort. Nor will failure hall; he anlr larltull capital they will seek 1° make of 1t ln their own Prwlnsc- finance Minister Ilsley was "a5- cull potatoes for tonished" by their charges of “c01- Siarcll Potatoes HUNTER RIVER STARCH FACTORY Will be open until MAY 29th to receive starch purposes. lltrlbutes." His astonishment totirioge from the fact that anv sucli notion could exist after‘ his 0dm5 taking detailed explBnlh-IQ“ of the blll and 111s practical definition 01' u.» long-ranllfl ewnmnlc. as ‘"11 a‘ immediate military. advantflees- More usbonlshlnit t0 1199919 out‘ ,. d f t] Government. from bubs?’ slile olfe the House the op- position calmed dllll 1:51 defend 1w r s ~ Stand up ea estlie dlshonestv of his followers, ‘Phat was his _ lac; tlon and his duty. He knows lb. reason for their OPPOSIWYJ- H? must, know that 1t was possum onll because of the improper 11659139‘ “on glven the bill's oredsoessfir. still flctltloualy called "the 311111711 Dollar Gift to Britain. Why was the so-called gift made last, year? Why are we repeating new? Yet us keep the natrlfll-lfi motive 1n its proper perspective we “H119 giving nothmtuwe are suwetv- 111g our allies with materials which we have not, a. need for or the kl ". ttrt 1 . coordlrlg to Terry Rgmsayesr, tTleaiiutiilorlty 1n this field, 1n which a. famous staee star 01w! the motion picture camera. A third was "The Count. of Monte Crlsw" with James O'Neill. made about 1012 wider Dame! Frohmuna direction. but. kept of! the market because Selig cam; out. first with I Monte Crlsto of its own. Old-timers may recall the Belts version. Th0 collection also indicates 50 film-I made by George Melles of 8.1110118 may still tinsel- 1n some ven mmiorfes. And mere an '16 Ku- stone oomedlel. Iittlns out! 83111017111! all!" Montague. I. l. I. ll 2 l0 to ll l. om“ 3T0‘: I. ll. ‘I Iolldsys m. b! IIIWIIIIIIIW" Office Llflnllloied with DIUGBTOIII Mortgage Sale Thorn v11] be sold by Public Auc_ Non 1n front of the Lww Building 1n Chart Queens County. Island on Thursday the 27th day of May, 1M8, at. the hour of 12 o- clock noon, all that tract of land ‘rownatu be 1 Bounded on the west by lnn George Keefe on the south by the boun sry of Township‘, Number 31. on the um bathe ulldary of ‘mwnahtp nurn r 23 or ny land of Daniel Nicholson lmd on the North by lands of John A Mcfnnls or by a. disused road separating the land hereby described therefrom. con- tain one hundred and ten acres of land ll little more or less. This Sale fl made 1n ursuunoe ‘of a Power of Sula con atned 1n an In- M. McPherson rl Queens County aforesaid. Fun-nor of the first ul- and Annabella. Cummings of ur- llngton aforesaid, widow of Malcolm Culnmlrl of the second art and which ortgsgc was nssgned by the said Annabella Cummings tn see lit b0 for trained men to use. Canadian money is used to purchase 011119111011 111N110 or produced goods to send not only to Britain and Brltalns armies- which was the unfair Implication of last. car's assistance-Jam. to the Russ ans, the Gllnese. the Aus~ tralfans. or any among the 1.1111000 Nations who have a. "strate81c’ use them. In a very real sense we are uslml machines and food instead of human resources t0 defend 011!“ selves. Not onlv do we Ealn from this. but the money spent is uro- vldlng comfort for Canadian work- ers while Britain. Russia. and China bleed. It means that more men and women are emDIOYQd 1n 0111' factories. mines and 0n our 1mm to produce these supplies. thereby it increasing wages and dividends for our domestic use. It means an 1n- dustrial development and expansion from which lneatlmable advanmles ca; ffifilit n01; to be forgotten that ft was 1n lame part British orders. paid for 1n sterling. which 1n 1940 and 1941 developed our industry to the polnt where such contributions to the United Nations’ Dool were possible. It ought not. to be for!!!)t- ten that we have IKNIUlNG all Brft- sun's invest-merit lnthat industrial machine by the sllunle Process of selllmz back to her the products of ‘her investment, when these thinks XO-O§-O-GO-§§+-6->§-§-O§O5Q§§." '“ lloticenFarmersi We sell- RENFREW SEPARATORS STOVES WASH-RITE WASHERS also repair Separators of any make. Livestock taken ln trade on new machines. Gordon Roberts, Winsloe and Herbert Buchanan, Fredericton District Representatives “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE” the undersigned by Indenture of Ass! ent dated the 20th dayeof Ap l 19M, default havtng en made 1n uyment o1’ the interest and prfne 1 secured thereby. For furl. or particulars l; to the offices of McLean sud c 1n- non, Royal Bunk Building, Chur- lotutown. w Dated this 71th day of April. 1N0. Agencies Ltd. Plum 540441 my Secretary of State." sald Lin- coln, "sweara verv much the same aayoudtaandhofam 1701500‘ y; an, so thing-you must one tooP-The Arsonaut. __ ’ A.‘ an". Jlrdlrlu. f-I-l-ILLI. _ "'°' l‘ Milfllil‘ are totalled there Ll precious room 1n which to parade a be etlt natrfotlsm. The ‘Prliltdad Government appointed a committee to form a long-term policy for agrlc and to dlrect. research work, report; to be ready at year ell The distance between s ~- eyes 1s about the width of m *I~-Aus|.a'W-“ r . v- Prufessional Gar ism-an»- ... McLeod 0 Bentle w. u. BENTLEY. K. c. s. A. BENTLEY. a c. ~mnrnn Barristers and Attorneys-s Law ONEY T0 LOAN 1M P111100 Street llorrelland 0001" D. F. Allfllllllll. Chartered Accountants Intern Trust Bulldllll Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARM LL“ LLB. BABRISTEB. SOLICPTOR. E Olllldluu Bin! of Commerce - _m0§u_y_'r0 I.(I»\N__ ALEX w. fTAI HIES uanlzlsnm. soucrron l 081cc: 00 Grout Geurll 5"" Money to Loan “u” NOTICE T0 FARMERS s have 111!‘ l'°°*'l lpment of FORMALIN ron smur on 011A!" n cheap but thoroullll! d [active remedy. Gruln growers would -v who to not promptly 110$ to have seed IIIBW"! " before sowing. Duo pint to every 4‘ Inns of water. I-‘ull dim‘ given with over! order. We also curl’! "W M" w improved OIBIBAN w: ti‘: c duidilcehm “i: es ,_ u s - pound lrestii 32 Wilma?" what you m!!!" l‘ ‘m ' SEMESAN BEL ill 01p disinfectant for control of scab nllfltijgufi ventlon of rot in 0° l‘ m“. ls u quick, elm’ l"? “M. mesltl that’ Wm"; III OBI ll t treats from 80 l0 W 5'5"“, mu Orders 01ml Prim‘ Attention. TIIE mo MM ..._..__~ -»~ i,‘ '