PAGE FOUR THE IIIIILOTTETIIIIII GIIMIIIIMI 319mm; Qllly (Founded In Ill?) - t. w. Ch to: S. Mel-urn ""‘§'.'.':'.1».';'.llt.3°.. n. null-en. rJ-l- hmm", u,“ p111, p, A. Mnlflluwn. 0-5-0- a Managing hector: .1. a. m. F-J-L h‘ It‘: Editors: Frank Walker and UeuI-lln-l- Burnett, R.C.N.V.B. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memorll i‘ weaker TM" the Weakest Ink. wemmsnnv, 001:1. l"! Navy In The Lead The .\';11-y this week is taking a leading part in the Mctory Loan cattipatgti‘, and as pug?- ample to all and sundry the ratings oiiHli1l . - Queen C/iarlvllc 111111: 111st thirty minutes _ l0 oversubscrtbe llltll‘ "W11 54.000 1°11" Qblccllle- This fine aehicvcnu-in was featured 1n MOH- days Cattznlizart l're,-s report from UIIHWE. and has won t'.'11t:11l:1-\vi<le rccognitiott. Yesterday they p111 1.11 n11 t-xrellent demonstration on the )1_-1'r1\1¢1 51111211; 111111 others will follow (luring the lialztncu oi thc neck. 11m. .5 hm Lurfl Xt-lstnt himself would be 111-11111] 11f >llCll 1:111; as we have trantnig here for the arduous 11111] dangerous task of fighting Hitler .111 .1111. 'l‘hc1 n1- all eager ambaHXIOUS to complete tiwir unwitting. ln the ntenntime they are c1»11:ril111t.1:_u 31-111r1111.~l_v out of their own lintitctl 1'1u11l~. lite Yicttiry Loan cantpaigti 1119.111; .1 1-1 1110111; but surely 111,1 more Ihflfl it shwnil 111.1111 :11 all of us. 1'1: That“ Air Conference lihctc §l]>1)\.ll‘,\ :1 111: wine tnislttttlerstatitlitig 01-m- 1111- lixrpirt- air conference which ltzts 111st conclutlcd it- sitting .11 London, The ssunll)‘ mm 50cm:- 111 be th:1t it was :1 gathering at which 111g Co1ntt1o1t\ve:\ltl1 nations Prelmrcd to hammer 1111f a11 ;.ir " ‘ ono will: \vl1icl~.‘tl1cy' mav lnter 11;; m, ‘ q“, ,1“. lhtitctl States and 1{11<<i;1 , .11 otlnr bnitcd Nations.‘ The tissutnptinit i< wrung’, 'l‘i1is_ai_I' $111197‘ ing in 11111111111 v.11; 1111rely of a. preliminary and exploratory character, and s1>_f;1r as Lzntatla is concerned there is no intention wlizftever of trying m ~gmy m," 11-1111 q11111o1l_v zigantst any- borlv. Cattzulzt 1",. rertain aithcards which she would be foolish not to use; but equally Catt- ada would be foolish if shc didn't realize that other nations have air cards, too, and that t0 grt making final decisions or talciitrg sides at is juncture, without the United 5111165 311d nip. being cottsultcd, 111711111 be a course of 7' . 111i: statement 1s borne out by Hon. C. D. Iowe, who attended the conference and who has tented previous (leclaralionsqthat it was merc- ; dgrtfying "family discussion on the back- of the tqyiestion. Only “broad were discussed. Another and larger ilerlnce will be held without dela)" One of the reasons why Cattazla is interested fl post-war plans, Mr. Howe expluiitctl. is be- Qlll it will be the Government's duty to makc ‘non for a. certain number of "the 300-009 lion and women now engaged in flying. servic- ing or building aircraft. Social Security A ttiatter cnioying the attention of the Mac- kenzie King .\linistr_v is the question of creat- ing a new dcpttrttttctit 11f sozial security in wh ‘l1 all details tmder that category‘ would be adminis- tered. Such a department, it is. stiggestctl, might be sufficiently broad tn take in not ottly unem- ployuucut instirtmcc, the 1111c ull-lknninioit social securirv mczistirc, old fun; 1tf‘tl.\lflll<, 1ictisiotts for the blind and v11c:1ti1111:1l training, which are ad- ministcrc<l by tbr, provinces with tltc assistance nf federal c1 Illllh i11.'1i1l, but also Indian . _ffairs. llnc 11f tht- 1tl‘1|lliL'|ll~' that is being consitlcrcrl is whether >llCiI :1 dc zrtlttcnt should atlmiitis- ter benefits t11 vsar 1-c1craus as well or whether the civilians 11nd w - veterans programs should he kcp: llll(l(‘l‘ a s rate a1lntinistration, Ad- mittedly after poly Ii ylctcrtniuczl. the over- ri1|i1tgp1~11ble111 is 11m- of fiittiitcivigr-tt 1irohlcn1 even uwrc ztcutc than a cmstifutional question. If l1cal'l1 in-urzmcc is to be adopted singly, or even the broader schctitr. in the midst of the war. the financial arrangements between the Do- minion and pro‘. ill have to bc based on the pro-Pitt rvwntu“ .1;1r1't'i|-'|l2-'. 1 ——-,~~ .- l’l(‘f‘~ —- Notes By Th IVIn-n St l ~ innlrn Ls started u ll 111st l DER fol‘ 11 tnbatzo tl five coupoi,» fur Windsor Star off osls, 1.. a cou and , verse. -Detr0it .___ The shnpkt-epcfs prewar motto, "The (‘uslrnncr ‘1= nlways right,“ M5 lllvrn way 111 wl t titiaht be called thc r2111‘.wncz-ny-nilncy mo Dvlicy: “If itc hnllcrs let —Christi.-1n ed ln The Lond first that death l11m go " S cncc Monitor. ‘ Overy sixty ’r}.'.1‘.£1" fires are re- ported to b1‘ rauznu in Northern Ontario. Tlic extent 11f lhc flamcs stiggests that tco many crqrolosg smokers nntl campers fail ll) apT preciatc thc lmvoc that can result.’ from momentary acts of negligence. ‘ —Hsmllton Spectator, notice which use was almost. un ginning of the , Patent-er now.” _ ———-—- 1 llntleris :1 non-smoker, and there's a suggestion that when tho time comes to tzlvc him tho wcrks hc‘ should bc marlc to smoke onc of Churchill's loner-st and slrottcrcst; cigars. But for 1m cvcn stitfc- ,' It b r there's Joe Stalin's plnr, or citowiif "f, athgogelgffari those Crcrmnn ctpnrcts mnrlc nfHEvm-v bull's vrool and mkunt. e- Ottawa untsit Cmlm- ‘number of An Italian, (‘hrlslnnhcr bus dlscnvcrcd Amt-rim 451 r20. After four turlcs AIIICTlPLIIS strongest 11nd w Gangala, Bel year abou ful (‘nltim- f or vcars It and r1 bnll‘ rt-n-l _ e-atrncn? thr-m; ffillllfiillllfi vsillv his blood in tl1cir‘cd PlPDh"h1_l' ca v-"Is enrc r~1lfsr1nv'rl1iq YI~]11 (‘.111 i tn capfurluz the mibus WIPllPfl n N111‘: Wnrld ln‘.'1 Iierd nronrs 11.111111 nollllctil frr-vdcm 111111111 flow- l 11nd some 17th:- er. Ctnntllnn ntttl American tmops1 Exchange are now fltzhllnz to clcnn=c Italian" soil nf Nnzl tvrnnnj.‘ nnrl 21w‘ the‘ Tfflllnn ncnnlc r11 rrutorl11|iitr they wish to avail fltcnwclvcs of‘ 1 f0 EH10)’ a slmllar frccdcwn. Th ls n seven abreast. el 1'. "rrd to declnher 1,1 ‘Ircelv-v ust by a To prin-‘ e Way 11f ntcdicineldoes history repeat itself c. T 1 r Ir ‘ Fuefizzrngafioaogaggl; flreommlstfolzelb teacher himself peered at the w ‘holm from Gordon Young, publish- soldiers on the Eastern Hunt have‘ hmmly l" the laughter m" 1 been crowded out by notices of bomb ed casualties, the correspondent says: 1"'I‘he slgnlflcsnt thing about this n n » obituary column is that ln the whole a er “w armful of Berlin papers before me supp“ d ‘nutty. there ts not. a single death and Smlety "M" have dled for th therland.’ "They African elephants, ants. are being trained for farm and where m" m“! other ltesvy work on a farm ginn Congo, It ls run lcers cavalry akc the place of 11 sfmllnr lflllflht to draw plows and to carry logs and wate thrillln’: spectacle when. monster plow across 11 field. Tram An essay wTIfen In n scrawf Isl was h-mrfcrl to his turhnr ronto high school boy. Af- m“ Wholesale prices of all commodities in Great- Britain rose by 42.8 per cent during the first year of the war; by 9.4 per cent in the second year; by 3.6 per cent i11 the third; and by only: 2.1 per cent in the‘ fourth year. 1 i i ll - EDITORIAL NOTES - The British Ministry of Health is building 3,000 farm cottages, two of which are now, ready for occupancy. The $3.50 pcr wcck rent which workers will pay for these cottages in- cludes water and light. n- 1v s1 41 Mobile baths are being used in some indus- trial centres in Great Britain where war move- ments of population have resulted in an inade- quate number of baths. There are fifteen mobile ‘ bathrooms operating throughout the country. Ebb‘- to supply, free of charge and with towels and‘ soap included, up to 2,000 baths a week. n1 n1 =11 a 1 “London Economist," leading English finan-l cial and economic newspaper in a very_good an-l alysis of Canadian political situation accepting the argument that this is now a straight C.C.F.; Pro-Con fight—-says that the only asset of thc| Liberals is “the prestige of Mr. Mackenzie‘ King.” This will be a surprise to Canadians. U ‘I l Appealing to Canadian business men to take z- more active part in politics, civic, provin- cial and federal, Premier Drcw of Ontario said in Ottawa that racial and class among the most vicious and dangerous threats to continued democratic government in Canada. ‘l 1% l‘ i prejudice are 1 Isn't this converting blaclrottls into tunteces, sary ntake-believes? A province-wide blackout test was held following armouncettient that Saint john dock areas and any waterfront scene of shipping activity 1voultl rcntaiti illuminated at stich times. Port, naval and 1rlvilian authorities. at a ntceting, agreed that blinking out (locks and ships during these tests 1111s 1111\\':1rratttcd owing to consequent delay i11 essential work! Newspaper production, for instance. an cs- scntial work yet at critical titties the scttinyg power is jeopardized by blztclcottls, while the dwlcs. the most conspicuous parts of a city to be safcguttrd- cd, are allowed to go full blast. 1K >l< >I< i‘ The need for greater Ctl—fl]l(‘l'£lil<>ll 111111-11; var- ious governmental (lepartuicnls .11 efforls 111 cu- sure perpetuation Of Canada's wild life was stressed by Mr. john R, l)_\'lll'.lll(l, director of the Royal Ontario Zoological .\lus1!1nu rc-cctttly: “.‘\ppro.\'ittiatel_v t)! yier ccnt of Cant-l s area will produce wild life, while of; per cent will pro- duce nothing else as :1 pertnzntcnt crrp," b1: said. for wild life to flourish, its piopcr habitat must_ be restored or maintained. laxity" of tnutiage- ment of Canada's tiatural resources 1111s allegcrl by him. \Vild life is of far tnorc importance to (tiuatlzt than luts been conkidercrl l11,1retof1>rc,", he declared, and itisistetl that wild. lifc and re-' zxfforeslatioti should llC the tirtgcitt lIll>iII',‘>',< of; provincial governments. I * t1 n1 Lord Palntersitin, British stntesnttin, tiorn this dale, 173.1; when F11reig11 $ccrctztr_\' unilcr Earl Gray he made an alliance with France 1n 1830 which ended the lottg enmity of littglzttttl and France; he assisted in establishing the He!- gian kittgdottt: and put (lown :1 rcvolf in Tur- key; was (lismissetl in I35t by (Queen Yictorit: for uttauthouzcd action regarding France; bu- came Premier in 1855, after which he was much less aggressive in Ettropeait affairs, attending more to domestic prohleitts then agitating the pub- lic mind: "\\'ltat is titer-it? The opinion one man entertains of another"...."Y1>11 111.1111 c1111 i1 .111 accidental and fortuitous concourse of atoms." i * I I \Ve are living in strange timcs when "city homemakcrs" c1111sidcr it repitgnzziit to clean fowl bought from farmers. ;\ rc-‘olution pro- testing the \\'artitnc Prices and Trade Board regulation that poultry can only be offered for sale unrlrawtt was atlopted mtanintourily by the flusiticss and Professional \\'o1n1,n's Club i11 the .\dtniral Beatty llolel, .\':1iut john, and will be forwarded to [irovittcial and federal authorities. Miss Lesley L. Pickett, the president, was in the chair and Mrs. E. Fowler, as a club mem- bcr, explained hcw impractical it was for local dealers to handle the tnttlranut birds if the cus- tomers tlcntantlcd Them clc1111c1l,-:t111l spoke of the ways to ltantlle undrznvn birds. As home- makers, many members expressed their repugn- ance to ltaving to clean the fowl. ‘The members failed to see where compelling Saint john citi- zcns to buy the undrmvn birds c1111ld be regarded s t w 1 casure. l I I l I ter a valn attempt to read ll: the ‘— ln a single word, written on 1 margin of thc boy's paper. m ,.e_: the word we. make out. N other students asked to 1h the Free Press. row llght on it. through his spectacles for n Expre“ Noting, mlnute before answerln f, "The wor °“ ‘lllcglble."' And he notlces of German‘ ‘ his announcement. —Exchange. ____ Tne requirements of total are for a mighty by n clvlllan econ Will‘; CHI s the formula wh h 9M5" 1 l t m _ front ls 155i? niin 11.1.1125. mlllfflry goals as n n11. 1111111.. e Fuehrer and Ea- rmm" It mean all leave out the- Yliltlloggls :1?" pm less web with n between the cl m‘ ntotest from the largest, lldest of all eleph- war at brought directly to bear on sons of our enemies. The leaders are perfectly aware of thts. I true that they may mgkg errors tn their thinking on home. _ from lssttes. They share the pm. I cllvlty to err with other humans, A r1 nt civilian lookout for such errors Ls certainly In order. But untll such errors develop to the notnr where the military leadership _1 ksicepirly dlscireplll "M, monitors “m1. nrs a an .11 colleagues have wild vmmgv when! clcnrlv shown thnt they are losing n 11 stamprcled. {he W" l1" "ml 0'1"" heme mung are mssood l‘llf Issues should be granted the front. their 811119521071: on home- greatest resorcl. -B:1lt.lmore Sun. _._. I _ More then l0!) flcrm~11 111111 11-11- =11 generals are now Brltlsn prls- the ner- and I20 natives regiment. t. 20 Young eleph- l-grown animals wagons, r nines. ephnnts draw n I as that cf Horace‘ ‘leasly discharges lts duties 101' I- ‘ and the discovery of the New World.‘ teacher expresed his oplnlon of it] what papal decision. ' s. the student could not W“? Pmluflfll the either could any of the “m! 11M 0f What he consulted. When 11ml Ms made of th rhe only Portuge 0rd South Amer! full Mned Portugal greew and only army ' ntlng at total efflcl- That means that the home fully as lmnorlnnb 1o the s as President Roose- Bflested. that the whole o hitches or holes vlllnn acflvltles re- front and the front power ls military tcd. 1mm <.......11 jrnc CI-IARLUFIE'I_~‘O_IV_N__GUARIZIAN Racial Appeals ($14M! Put-Record) Premier Georg; Drew of Onhflh, IP01“ t0 t when be Wld I nnnventlou of assurance agents Inf Toronto a coupe of dlya no mm rsclal and class DTBJIIGICQI were‘ "among the most. vlctous and dm- A W033i’: PIAYII geneyioiu ‘meats up ‘QM-fill;- .._—m i x ‘mum ocra c cmmen . a . Drew vain: um u;¥1.§“°lf..%° ‘ggiiidenueu u. mm. hv addlng that those m. _ 1 nave felled In mm Th! which have enacted laws lmllln8 0118 . 1m .t.nr nrhmfliebliml "I m2?‘ ° i: prglmtlpaal finch? to arouse race B.‘ S, VG p KIWI! fixple5” Ion to "ordinary decent 19611118" and are deserving of all pnlas. N try In the world stands gm lmunvs toll to Thea denied more greatly tn n such l Stand; all enmity’: offence; warning than Canada st e Dres- Of that 1 dld with Thee to Iutdo, ent moment. for Canada la n ooun- To ‘meg, through 111cc. be 9X- u-y of man races. War la the mo: ggljenee, disturbing uence that; can be ‘ensue against; social order and thought 0f men fade. poltttcgdsanrty. as has been dem- to the crlfsunan’: onstm - wan 1n the hlltofl’ In of clvl-lzed cmmtrlea. And the vm- God-Ilka. 1.5 mm o'er m mm war szfuatton ls almost u bad e And mmu-‘llke stand with 00d mga . Who. lest. ill s Eden 1n thls regard as the Period of con- fllct Itself. Nor ts the reason far to seek. War administrations necessar- lly get In conflict wtthtpopnlar sen- timent. because It ls e respon- lty to adopt restrictive men- ures. to Impose enormous mtazlon urdens, to curtail the Deacetune ace of ctvll freedom. W 801m" odious regulatlons for the national safety, and for the efficient carry- mg on of mmtsrv open-lions at home and abroad. Every V?!“ 9 01 paternalism. and with ft ever: 011B of retaining publlc favor, Quartz from any government Whlch fear- Th dnth anddremofmydlll" Th: sine: Pwths wherein 1 ski)’: Thou knowest who hle made the Thou kiiowest who ha; made ~ the clay. One stone the more swings t0 her In that _ temple of ‘R1? n u $133131. um through Thy I sawanatight common 0n Thy earth. cleznocrauc nation at war. rm- these reasons every war Bflvemmenfi _ becomes a post-war polltlcal cas- n; u Take not that vision from m); Item 10h, whatsotfer may 5P0] svee , , Help me to need no aid Arom men 111st I enaay help such men as ne . v. Although these abnormal condi- tions are certain to dlsaPWIlf W119" snclety aguln finds‘ its base. When vrar and its economlcal aftermath have spent, their disturbing force. they nonetheless perslst. 10ml 9n- ough 10 give those who truffle ln class prejudice and restless lknllr- ance the opportunity to dlvlde 8nd obstruct the nation serlwslv in "-5 progress toward normal 80815 01 post-war reconstruction and ex an- sion. Those who are old e110“! l0 recall the events of 25 vent‘; ‘B80. know how correct. a lcture this l3 of the surge and subs dence of war- induced social and polltlchl discon- tcnt. These are by- roducts of war with which the wel -bulanced mal- nritv cf the _ people must have lhB natlenze WhlCll ls essential to the 1on1: vision required in the smld work of tiatlon liulldink- B11!- “I'll” ls a limit to the harm the post-war agitator can do. And there l5 We?!’ reason to believe that the fomenf- ers of class and racial divisions. 0f half-baked economic theories and crack-pot olitical grasps. will dls- turb Cana a much less after World War II than they did after World War I. Even natluns lenm by eX- perience. Group politics cos: Can- nda the less of nearly 10 v98“ 0f economic progress after the last war. That ls something the elec- iornte of UIIS country are not 11k!- l_v to forget. -—Rudyard Klpllnfl- Azores were for centuries a great. assembly point. for the convoys which carried the riches of South America back to Spain and w Portugal. The Engllsn freebooters and adventurers tensetously fought their way Into the trade and won thelr own place in it; and among the bloody episodes which marked the growth of Etngllsh power was the action fought by Slr Richard Grenvllle In the Revenge against. 53 ships of Spain. The battle was fought off Flores In the Azores. But; 1n 1311s 38th century a great chnnge tool: piIiCe. Portugal. which has seldom had cause to love Spaln. Joined the Grand Alliance against France and Spain in the war of the Spanish Succession. She urns hard pressed ln this war, her people suffering great prlvw tlons and loss of trade; and It. was perhaps this need which brought about the Methuen treaty of I703. The terms of that treaty have changed substantially ln the ln- tervenlng 240 years. It was orlg- lnally a commercial bargain. But the preferences grruted under lt lapsed In 1831 and were repltued by other clauses, one of which brought Portuwal ranldly Into the war cf 1914-18 on th~ Allied Side- But the preferences lasted enough to chrngc the snclcl habits of Eng- II1 land. Up to 1703. the praular wine the Azores from which our aunt» drunk ln Errglqi was French Ubaat. campaign will be waged‘ nlarct- After that time the enr- henceforth with ever-growing speed third prefer-M's "ra“‘c:I to Portu- and efficiency. In it tlicrc ls twined "al made port. not clrret. the pre- the wliolc story of the exploration dominating urn» of Fn"h_ind' and of the New \Vorld end of the Far n11 tn the outbreak of this war 50 East and of the set of chances oer cent cf Pcrtmtsl“ msl export. which more than 2C0 years ago were " .tl1e bulk of which moved brought Great. Britain and Portugal l0 Eflglfml into the eldest of thier alliances. Portugal. with its lcng Atlcntlc coast-line stood in the very fore- Iver, G-"crt Bold" h": done cverv1 front cf those adventures which ‘hing in its orwcr tn strengthen brounht with them the thrust. of the ancient bcntk that have K9113 the European powers Into the Orient _', rail. Poutrnv -. Use Of The Azores twinnlpcg ‘r119 Press) A long ltistcry llcs bchlnd the acquisition this week by the Unite Natlons of air and naval bases of a I Q I Ever slricc 111* outbreak of his But the Portuguese were not the first w discover thls big group cf islands which lle 1,000 tnlles west of Lisbon- In thcsc days that dis:- ance can be lravercsefl by ship ln less than two days and by alt‘ ln a matter of hours. But the first ad- venutures who tossed and fought‘. their way out from the Pillars of Hercules lztto the Atlantlc were the seamen of Cartsage. When 111131.‘ went no man today knows. Only the discovery of Carthaglnlan re- malns on the islands tells us of those first voyages. 'I‘hc next 11w. tigers were Arab. These. too. laid no permanent hand on the Islands. It remained for the vigor and- lmcglnntlcn of Henry the Navi- gator. cite of the truly immortal princes of Europe, to lay hands on them for Portugal. ‘Phat great; monarch. whose drlvlng energy lald the plans which for n short time drove Portugal to the front. rank among world powers, sent trusted and skllful men westward to flnd and take permanent pos- session of the Azores which appeared vaguely on maps about the year 1351- In 1432. were firmly ln Portuguese ha And ln 1943. w vldcd the world and Portugal, the line of demarca- tlon of the two great maritime emnlrcs was drawn from the North» ‘Pole to the South Pole, 1west of the Azores, We require unlimited quin- tltles of chicken. fowl. Al!" all other lclllds of melt poultry llve and dressed. Cor- rect trading and hIghQJ market prices. Our Emil"! 11111111; pllnl. ls n vvur db- polnl. ' ' Swift Canadian 60., Ltd. Uhlrlottetown. emb 1nd 9- -'l I n’ 11. .1. nmu l OPTOIIBTIIST Hltln: om! supplying Glace. ‘ Ila. I Jun nds. hen the Pope dl- between Spain at country the Mo", l " " ‘ l‘ sc-speaklng country of 1 Offlu Bonn: l0 to l! n. l! ca. 1.. I to I I. ll. O O I oclst-lon of Britain and comes later In history, after msnv clashes "" bffilikht on by the growing Import- ance 0T England as a seapower. The Holidays eln. by lppolntmom Office Connected with DBUGQTOII 1i‘ The ass 1 Clip These Coal Tips I 1 Keep Temperature Down Tests show that for every degree over 68 degrees coul consumption In in per cent. Thus lf you, kI-‘ED your home at 6B decrees In- stead of 76 degrees voll wlll save 24 per cent of your fuel. Doctors ure that 66 CRIN“ In more hell ‘iii her and Portugal together. but he c Salazar. the Portugal. has been make n move which might ernbroll his country in hostllltles- Now. how- ever. wlth the tide of battle swfi lng ln Europe so firmly Allled favor. Salazarks rloub been resolved and he has made his first step towards the assum The tnllowln, autumn o! 1943 an Charlottetown ylvlng attention mlts 1v to 30 years. Appllcat on ntlon desired may he secured by n sealing to enrol should do so pro Cooking. Hullh and other s 2 Tractor and hinrry. mulc- slgncd o Iraln suitable y necessary furm product! nnllhln for uncut-l only In Novena contraction 1nd [e atlon and repair of Inc fun: machinery, ‘ In January. lncllfdfng one 1nd foedl and crops. hortlculturo an ment grading and packing runw- This can" will b In; no e the course In which 10-13-15-18-30. Z0. 1943 i}; ocronnn‘ 1 i l i 11 ‘ill’ " ill!‘ I T I YE ssrrrzrrzzssr/awiez ICTORY _. iiiiiiljlllii I 11"” "'1: til .... GREAT-WEST LIFE AIIIIAIIGI cbnrsuv x I t l. I l l1 I ould contribute anything which will help us more than the use of the Azores; and Salazar counts on the fact that, playing this Import- ant pawn, his country's role 1n the ng-l world will be retidercd more effec- ln 11111111111: when the battles finally sweep ts have over those portions of the remn- ant but Important Portuguese col- ptlnn rmlnl empire now occupied by Ja- ole. It ls unlikely that- pan. 11111111111; cou11s|zs~ [NSURANCE ,,...... .. SER VIC ” d up to March 3 I, 19M. All c Students will be allowed one rnun t‘ W. K. ROGER» - n Agencies Ltd. wance for board and lodging wh'l- gtlelltllil, oollrsc and to the tralnln ‘lsfactory In officials In charge. Alfi ve months course In general bl l1- wagnn building. Cullfle 1a 111111 lfy fnrms for Enrollrrwv‘ "~14 11*" Inform- lng 1nd repair work. Course lo fllNn 1 shrewd dictator of‘ reluctant to n actlvej conducted during "l! curses will be hold l! d trlp fare on bus or also an allo pplylng In the undersigned. Parties ln- i mptly. as cnurses will open at. an curl)’ GIRLS’ COURSES Three (l!) six weeks courses for girls, first to open early In N01- Tralnlng In Home lmantgement, Handicrafts. Home Nursing. u cc s. o courses In Fnrm Mech s and Training for Farm Work. Car o ration and repair. Care and operation of Farm Hitch I lllfl hllltlllh: of horses. Care and fcedlng of llll- Mflklnr of cows. operlflng cream separators. Care of mllk. CAN re air of harness. Length of course slx weeks. This colllse I; de- oung women to render l service In carrying out 011 IUIIIIIIIIIS- ' ',COURSES FOR MEN IILACKSMITIIING ’ One 1n n g. woodworking, sleigh and on flgelCllQlll bllclrsmll r. l 6|’- .'lw UARPENTBY Two M"! billldlnl (2) at: weeks courses In Cor-pantry, I In earl: M" arm repel: work. first mung u. 0pm MECHANIC! Tm (l) slx weeks courses tors. cu nnd p: engl making and repnlr. In hnn mechanics. oper- ncn. Care 1nd repair n! First course to open only AGRICULTURE 0 general Agriculture, om: relating to coll to open In Jamar!- (l) th eekl uric I :0 o! flfllelelwllllflllgo Prob‘! other subjects. Course n , ,0“! . Ono (l) fol:- can?“ In poultry man's}: e 1p§f1"w'1.1.¢1'f°:1.f.’ Ind 111$,’ o one" h. e Ap Ilcntlons fa nrnlm t h uld b Ilcfl I. . Wh I - ' ° =" .:..:........'.."':.....:.. "' m" , MACS’ , HAIR RESTORER ..A gal-lento hfirtumed W" I w "gtorrl. "m mgulllles sum-u Gray o1- ""1"" llllr to ltl nrlglnll shard, whether Black. Brown, RM m. or Alllnl 1.. .. 1r" m w 1v are e I r falllérfn ind ls Ifllnlrktlbly and I preventing tturunv" In den ro In; parasitic 11"" kl n. Jul follow the '""‘,'°' Ilong cnefully and vou "l" at the results. 00o not homo. -___ MACS PERFECT WORM POWDEIIS fit flbfllffifl‘ 11539113 Pf Pull!!- IGG b POULTRY The nln bow has alwo | been of good cheer to farmers boon-use when there l: a rainbow, there has been rein for he crops. Another good friend of sun "1 ls H. t Nil "QLAOK TWItrt" CHEWING because Itl stimulating, friendly flavor and lut- _ b - In; goodness help In smooth the fur- l-ABKSIUI. LOTION llly nlrmles or Intro!‘ In mu Orders om.- Home‘ . Allcnllvn . ‘I'll! 1W0 MACS V, . k CH lllflreolqllmilm"