V’ LY TIIE BIIABLOTTETOWII Gllllllllllll Morning Dally tFounded In 1887i . Prenlvlnnn Llvul. Col W, Chnnlnv l. bill-III VII-o Prominent: vl It. llurnrll. I'd-l. Ioflrnflry: Llont Col D A Ineltlnnon IIIJI. Ivlllnr unrl llnnnllnl lllrn-lnr J I llur n“, IJ-I. Anon-Int: Ilrlllnrur Frank Walker. Ind l-FIQ- III l Burnett. R0 N \ ll. mn Arllvo lnrvln) NIIITIiPKIPTION RATE! n, "n" m |._ n |,_ gum nor vonri BM Pnr I nnnnll: u!!! Im- n monlhl: mu- rm on: mnnlh rm Dull-n! l-lml p" vnnrt u» for I mnnlh: I175 Im- i mnnlhn: 00¢ In: on: Innnlh n, mm m rim-r Frnvlnrvl 1m] 0:4. tam p" m: "guru," ‘Ypg-[qlyg 12m: m-r vmr: 11,00 for 0 nmnlh: 50m Inr l Innnlhl (tui-rrllnn may b: nhlnlllrfl :- lzi-nr-y TInu-n llqunrvl. New Yuri: {gum-L (‘nrnrr llllh and wnmnflnl Hvwl Agpnry, I248 Plcl ill ,|..n|>.-.||= -I Flnr urn Ila] all. Tnlnnlnf New: than! Dli-umin Linn-h-i- 0mm“; Wain-n New: Hum! Hub- zurv Ili|l,. Hull In! I slum blullrlnu, NB. NI:- Flvnrlnfh-Ilnvn umnrlinuw- w»..- Jln mnuli Nv-w- ‘innlnn: Ila" rnpulllnn ‘rfne blmngetfz illemury l8 Weaker Than me it eultesf Ink." I- ..li..i\. MARCH w, 1943. _ .... ..... . . ......| FILIuICIiIS .-i sqhnnl itzichcrs continues to ‘. .1 in llli\ Province. In his ll. ll. Shun". Lhisf Superin- ‘til. status that when the .'l \‘.i__(ll\l tipwiirlls of thirty i Liralttztlly’ these nmrricd women who 'i~ lt"l"‘t‘l‘.<_ hathcr than 'lZlV\' of thust‘ women at "l-d their IllIl and 1m: ' grtzitcst importancc. n schools were thus 1 och rs. .i_\ i>_\ w‘ wort‘ continually oC- iguntinn of tcachcrs Lo Ill- ipzlliinvl l<';lt‘ll&*l'S guts i kill whnols. There are I71 ihc lh-ivvince with an aver- ‘. ~~ lll'lll fifteen pupils. A Ii-r schools, Dr. Shaw sug- .l niul thc pupils transported with much advantage the 1 . Zllill vcnnniny to the district and prntiiici-. .\l should bc found to pssemblc at ltzt-t thv ltivlt‘? pupils in ccntrcs where high school lvrlcln-rs are available t0 give full time to thcsc -.ldv;-.u<cd classes. This objective, unfor- tuuzltcly", is more difficult of attainment under wartime transportation restrictions than it was when teachers were more easily available. Dr. Shaw stresses the need of at least one high school where the study of agriculture and its basic sciences would form a major part of the curriculum. The attempt made at the close of the last war to establish a technical and agri- cultural school in a building no longer needed for war service, he suggests, might well be re- newed when the many buildings erected for air training uzhools will no longer be required. That may be looking pretty far into the future. Enrolment in the public schools for the year ended June 3o, was 18,007, or 187 less than the previou: year. The average daily at- tendance, however, showed an increase of 1.4 per cent. The Chief Superintendent lay: in this connection: “In view of the fact that five t: .- v nix! .\ t: 4 to convince the Italian: that we were not deli- berately poisoning them (so effective had enemy propaganda been). On one occasion a number of Greeks arriving wounded from Albania were ‘so filthy and vermin-ridden that they had to be shaved from head to foot. They have toiled along the roads of France among refugees, delivering women of babies in unpromising circumstances; they have been in bombed hospital-trains and had the duty of pr:- vcnting the shell-shocked from throwing them- selves out of the carriage windows. The "Q. A.’s" as they call themselves, have certainly been in the thick of it from Iceland to the South Seas. Often they have worked I4 and I6 hours a day —and sometimes far more. Biting cold and great heat have been encountered, but one finds a note-“We seem to manage to nurse all the same, and soon after arrival were functioning as if we had been here for years." One reads of sisters struggling on when stuttering from sand- fly-fevcr, and, on the lighter side, how pla- gues of ants and of cockroaches that ate all the gum from the labels, envelopes and stamps and devoured silk underwear. atlded to the day's pro- blcms. 'l‘hcrc~ were thc patients who spoke no linglisli—(irccl<s or lndizins or Italians 0r na- tives\yud there was the occasion when wounded prisoners \\'1'app(’(.l themselves in blankets with pyjamas round their heads as headdress; on be- ing rcnionstratcd with they pointed out that sonu- headdress was essential. so turbaus wcrc made from towels till something more appro- priate could be found, To say that the spirit of Florence Nightin- gale lives iu these women is trite; yet I do not know how bcttcr to cxprvss 0ne's opinion. There is this iliffcrcncc: Florence Nightingale had to force herself on the Arnrv; by indomitable will and social influence she muscled into the Crimea. Our Army Sisters today are an integral part of the force. never far from the fighting; every Sister ranks as a Lieutciiziitt and wears similar badges; senior Sistcrs are captains, Matrons majors, the Matron-in-Chief a. Brigadier. Slow- ly they have won the status they deserve, and need. (Seldom does the right thing get done without a fight.) It has lalccn time to win rc- cognition of the fact that a qualified nurse is as much a professional person as a doctor. — EDITORIAL NOTES- Lcmoris are so scarce in Britain that the spon- sors of a dance in London on Monday night put on an exhibition and charged guests a penny a smell. The lemon later was auctioned off for $14. n- u m n- How easily may be resumed the downward trend to the restoration of slavery_ It has been cur- rently reported that in Texas certain Negro farm help has been held as slaves, and for the first time in the nation's history a woinzui slave-ouincr has been sent to prison. It was at Corpus Christi that Susie Skrobarcyzk was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment under the United States peonage law after she and her father, Alex, 62, were found guilty of forcing Alfred Ir\viu, 48, Negro, to work as a slave on their Bee County farm. The father ‘received a four-year sentence. u- : w William Edward Hartpole Lecky, Irish his- llotcs av m v... Th: um will not be equal unlll working women bring lhelr chequ home and turn them over w the husbands. -—Galt Reporter. The uompoultlnn of the ocean vu- fe: considerably In different. place: and at different depths, say: Na- ture Magazine. The salinity expres- sed as total salts per 1,000 part: of sea water varies from a um In the wuthern part of the Indian Ocean, 33.01 parts, to a maximum from the middle of the North At- lantic, 87.37 part-s. ' Nciw It I: the value of lettuce ll a food that Is being questioned. It Is hardly worthy of space In Victory gardens, so It I: sald. However, we may recall how the prune, once victim of the epicure’: oontumely, suddenly leaped Into prominence as a table delicacy; also the place the‘ low.y spinach occupies In the diet fleld, and be not. alarmed about the gt: of the Julcy lettuco-Amherst 6W!- Tho memoriu, both of college [ioriers and hotel porters, are pro- verbial, but they occasionally aston- Lsli one none the less. I spent last‘ week-end at. Caanbrldge, and had a. word with a porter, whose face I vaguely remembered, at my old col- lege. He looked at. me and observ- ed, "You used to ‘keep’ in C Second Court." I dld but It Is nearly 38 years (I regret to say) since I vacated my rooms there, and I have never had anv connection with them since. —I..ondou Spectator. "English I: spoken by the peo le of England; ls also spoken by t e Scots, by the unredeemed Irish, the Australians —a lot. of other people than Americans. Who speaks It best, no one knows. It‘: a matter of taste. Personally I think I like best ‘the speech of s. cultivated Scot, and perhaps least a certain high- grnde English which calls a railroad u “wailwoud? I mysef talk Ontario English; I don't admire It; but its all I can do, anything Is better than affection " -Stej9hep Leacock, In "HOW to Write " “Folks, this Is war, and we didn't want It, and tried to avoid It. and don't like It. Now that we're In It, we are going to win ft. come what may. And this belng so, you People tn other countries, there Is Just one thing we want. to ask: "Are you with us. or against us? Being neutral won't do Either you're on ou side, or you're not. If you're not, why should we worry about you? We're going to help our friends, and pun- ish our enmles, and that Is that. So think It over." -Chlcago Dally News The fortunate Crusader had a su- perbly efficient Toledo sword of high temper; that Is. the blade had a tensile strength of more than a hundred tons per sqwre Inch, sa s Nature This was obtained by te diffusion of carbon Into wrought tron, and the stee‘ so produced when heated above the critical point be- came a solid solution of carbide or carbon and tron; rapidly quenched In water from this temperature, the blade was intensely hard and also brittle. but when lightly tempered by reheating to a skilfully selected mem- perature. material hardness was still retained but was accompanied by a remarkabe toughness. Leading hotel: and restaurants In Be fast surprised their c lentele this average farmer, and the extra :1: ‘runuc roauu CONOEIININp IJVEBNOK Blr, — The livestock Maxim-lg Boud report: that the dun-Ila hog: d the of March 1 tho hill-l standard qmlfty not du-rfnl the previous Th-punnt: of the e - n; at per cent, 01f the off car llv: weight, and 81141118 ll follows: Select: 40 per cant: B:- comNdlld peiroeunI-Ichhand Heavies 10 per cent»; Off ‘MN- odct: and end: 5 per cont. U per centlnblwtovpbwo grldesl: u good record, but II: can b: Impmv. ed upon If farmer: bold thou- llaht until they u‘: within tab: r:- qu red welghls, and ahfp that: bu. I vies before they get Info that. cl:::. Farmers are undoubtedly fpedmg _ their hogs and other live: bet. | ter than ever they dld before. The free freight concession on Western Grain and Mlll need: ha: been o. great boon to livestock man. with the musonubly remiunem returns for hogs, cattle and dairy products, Interest In, and enthml- asm for. production. ha: been re- vlved and rexsfablllhed To u men- surable extent. The much talked about. labor problem f: a drawback. but not: : definite ammflllbc um. wodllwerfl are going to fall In measurlng up to the task of meeting allotted quotas. It. ls nu-prlslng, the urge to greater effort, that well: with- ln the battered old frame of the Inches that can be added 170 hi: N- gular pace, n: he step: around, early and lat/e, to cope with an al- most endless succession of Jobs when he sees that. extra dollar. uarely envisioned In peace times. but now flouting in the brew! Md beckoning him on. Ye!» 1H‘- mer deserve: the best we can ti" and the most. we can do for him. and If given an even break. rarely ever falls down on the 105- Olmd" Ian farmers have glvem 8111916 proof of the accuracy 0f 0118i statement durlnl the P959 59w YGHIS. I‘ Largo quantities of “Feeds will be required diuln»! the m" 19W months, and importation will be menialn source of supply. W“- Lhls year's crop Is 1m l" Uhe fall. The importation of mlll. ed feed, that. l: Ground Wheat. Oats, Barley, etc, l: not ulwu-Ys an advisable procedure to follow 1!! getting your feed Nqlllmnmnls- It ls impossible to measure the vBlW o; your purchases untll It. l: 100 1a.». The opportunity w 618W“ of quantities of grain of low crude and value l: too often taken Bd- vantage of by unscrupulous ll- lafcrs, and a product that should never be offered to the trade. l8 found 1n the hands of the feeder. and he gets little or no retaurns from his investment. ‘The meanest kind of low grade grains w“ be ground Into a product that. will un- sispectmgiy mange hmds- and ""- less the feeder ls a good Judie °i lends, or doing business with a milling concern or dealer of Integ- rlty, u. is milch. better toavoid such transactions. The Jfest wa-y f: to lrnlii)" m‘? whole grain on Government certif- icate. and when buying, do not 8° TfllflwQflélil-(YFIEIOLN __GU€\_RDIAN.___. m Ways "r0 raxruuvan . 20x 41:41:! Ayhner Cream of CtllyrSqlp, (in Thermal . _ _,, Chopped E" and Piello Sandwich (an whale when! bred), Mixed Fluff 8:141. TI/hole What Mu/Iinlh Carrol Slick: AYLMTER 0G TEIG NOW AND THEN We have been Impressed with Premier Campbell‘: rectnt plan In lupport nf the "Press" because It would be incited I weary world to live In, without our dally newspaper, - and When we have any story, bearing on our business, to get out lo our prospective pulrons, we like Io use the advertising column: of newspapers most suitable for adverltslng. Of Couno We might put II all In a. Iflng letter, ostensibly In the Interest "I "I0 Illlblitr. and have the newspaper charge It up to "charity advertising" but we prefer dolng It this way, Perhap: that’: what the By Gosh Premier had In mind when he tuned hIs 1116a l0 DIE)’. at least fair, with the press, If not. Indeed generous. Co-Operntiv: Marketing of hogs was instituted In this Province about twenty - year: lgu u: u mean: by which tho producer might rId himself of the Infamou: marketing :y:tem then In vogue.‘ ATTENTION ‘ Swino Breeder; sonata um, ,0 m‘ PIG WORM 2111:!" mall's. mghm" Mac: Pig-w". Tonic Powder It Ill] thong“, u» uJlim"ff"l',,,f,“f,fillzmii gall? “III. Order l" mm,‘ ‘ mm: d, °"'°" "tlmvll: n- GA!!! 310515 BELIEVE!) ca‘ Dr. Evan; 3g; liken of mu] invent; rm: mo Mm 149 Great Georg; 53m‘ m“. ofdiiruflxgn Prom“ War-ZS Year _Ago Today (B! Th: Canadian Press) M41911 36. 1918 -Gen. Fwy , , Foch took over nupreme ccrnma of Allied mm on u» West ' Front. German room checked w of Roy: and Noyon, but, mad, w of Peronne. Turkish army In area, Mespotamla muted by 3,1 lah; 3,000 prisoners taken. i _._______ WHAT WE'RE MISSING The average prtoe of g, ma; h ‘ Brltlah government restuum t 2o cents, Including t... o, ca“; THROAT torian and man of letters, born this date 1838; was M.P. for Dublin University and a nielnbcr At That Tim: The producer here usually received from sixty-five Io seventy ‘week by serving with luncheon a__ 0a n“ down the 11m m the 1W5;- new type of roll‘ which Includes a mod “meg Have the 3mm very considerable percentage of ground legally and p“! WP YWY‘ :chools were unable to secure teacher: and that numcrou: changes of teachers occurred during the year resulting in much lost time, it would appear that the attendance in the operating lchool: had improved considerably and it doubt- ku reflect: the influence of the increased com- pulsory attendance requirement: recently en- acted, though it: enforcement i: greatly handi- capped by tho ahortage of far-m labour and the consequent demand for child help. Th: out- look for the present year i: much lcs: encour- newt!‘ Let n: hop: that new Fulani-Provincial planning will be more effectivo thi: year in off- letting the farm labor mortngo. It jun goe: Io chow how rmny factor: entor Into the odua- tional problem, however. ______.___i..__., Red Cross Heroine: " I: I: gratifying to Ina that m. m: Crol: flund Campaign i: still going strong hero. In view of the drive the following extract: Irom an article by Mr. J. L. Hodson in The Spectator on what Red Crol: work impliu i: both timely and illuminating: On whether performing Christ-like work give: iddcd physical courage and spiritual strength, opinions may vary. But I remember thinking during the last war that I had never seen :. doc- tor or stretcher-bearer with the “wind up"; and such medical services a: l have come across during the past two or three years-dncluding Tubrtll; and Rangoon-Aver: as calm and en- grossed as though in a London hospital. It is- unlikely the exact facts will ever be known :s to how many doctors and sisters have given their lives or are wnundcd or » prisoners of war through rcfusing to leave their patients, but it is certain that ten Army sisters are prisoners of war taken in llong Kong and that : number are missing from Malaya. Through records 0f our Army sisters’ experi- enccs in this war, some of which I have been privileged to rend, hruvcry and sclflessness shine like slurs. It would be POSSIblC t0 write a his- tory of thc war as sccn through the sisters’ eyes, for (ht-y have _bc('u almost everywhere — Belgium and Franco, Dunkirk, Singapore, Ran- goon, lnili.'t, Nlidillc linst, North Africa; they have bccn shelled, bombed, dive-bombed, and aunk at sea; they have lived in open boat: and llEpt in fit-Ids guarded by armed men, They have worked in a hospital at Singapore that was be- tween two fires, our heavy guns behind them and the Japanese shclls from in front whining over their heads; they were on a ship in Dun- kirk's inner harbour when two pier: were broken and a third blazing and the prospect of rescuing anybody further sccmrd too remote (yet the ship lnnk nff (mo): they have waited in Greece for the GCTIIIIIIIS to capture them when each day the cncmy drr-w nczircr and German wounded they were inc-king aftcr promised them visits to Vienna or llcrlin if only they would stay. They have tended Italian prisoners of war when it of the Privy Council; chief works, “History of England in the Eighteenth Century”, “His- tory of the Restoration in Europe," “Democracy and Liberty", “The Map of Life", “Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland"; wrote poetry, pub- lished in various magazines including “On An Old Song": All thing: perish, 1nd the ltrongut Often do not last the longest; The stately ship i: seen no more, The fragile skiff main: the shore; And while the great and wise decay, 'And :11 their tmphie: pass away, Some ludden thought, some careles: rhyme, Still flout: above the wreck: of Time, i: n- : v- On an average the Australian soldier and air- man npend: only 4c a. day on beer, in canteen: controlled by the Australian Defence Canteen SQIVICCI. Th: volume of :oft drinks ha: :1‘- way: greatly exceeded the consumption of beer.’ To cop: with the demand a number of aerated water: md oordinl factories ha: been established in forward am: by the Canteen: Board and more are on the way. From one factory alone more than 80,000 bottle: of aerated water: are delivered in canteen area: every week. Average cost of each aerated water facory i: $7,500 and each cordial factory $6,000. To meet the de- mand for cordial: 42,000 bottles of cordial are being produced each week, and in anticipation of heavier demands this figure i: being stepped up. Output from each of the aerated water fac- torie: will be expanded to 100,000 bottle: a week. The Canteen: Directorate hu decided that where transport difficulties limit the und- ing of liquid refreshment to remote battle sta- tion: cordial: provide the best answer to the problem. Each bottle of cordial make: one gallon of pdatablc liquid refreshment. o u : v- Retailers must start to plan now the mer- chandising methods, the advertising and pro- motion programs, and the general development of market: by which they will hold their com- petitive positions in the post-war world, the Montreal Sale: Executive Club was fold by Mr. Richard G. Meybohm, of New York, sales pro- motion manager of the U. S. National Retail Dry G0ods Association. Because of the changes wrought and still to be wrought by wartime stresses, and because of the vastly different conditions that would prevail after the war, Mr. Meypolim foresaw that retailers would be unable to "return to the old hit-or-miss meth- ods". As a result of government wartime re- strictions and regulations, shortages of labor, and disappearance of many lines and services in stores, Mr. Meybohm believed retailing would go into the post-ivar period "stripped of non- f-sscntial srrviccs and with cusomcrs cdtlcatcd to the benefits of low-cost selling." At the same time he believed research and wartime dcvclupzncnls would bring on the market after the war a great varicty and volume of new pro- ducts. was necessary to take sips of the medicine: first potato. It. has been dubbeq a “potat/o roll," or "Woollen roll," and I found It very palatable. It l: not shaped like the round lunch roll to which we have been accustomed, but Is n long finger. about the size of a. chocolate eclalr. It. has a crlsn outer crust like the ordinary roll. Inside, however, It I: rather soft, like very new bread, and I would dent-Ibo It :5 "chewy." The com- blnatlon of the flavor of potato "flour" and national flour I found agreeable and, especlall with soup, I think the Woolton r01 wlll be ac- claimed ; success. —Belfast New: Letter Fuel lhortage: which have become acute In Canada have drawn great- er attentlon to the possibilities of the Northern Ontario deposits of lignlta. Thor: f: gmun$ for hope that plan: for their evelopment will be lpeeded up, and that ut least a llnflted supply of this fuel will b: made available to the public by practicability of using llgnlte for Induurlal power and domestic heat- Ing aeem to have been duslpuud. Actual fut: have shown that. pro- ly processed, ‘It I: thoroughly :at- factory for such uses. The North- ern Ontario field: are virtually tn- exhaustlble, and the Provincial Gov- ernment Is now erecting the neces- :ary processing plants. The emit situation call: for the utmo: haste to get than Into productlon. --Wln- so: Star, An can slde mother had two :on:, tone of them a wizard In school, while the other always flunked, Col- lier’: relntu. Whqn tho war came, both boy; enllutcd. Th: brlght one went to officer-a‘ training school: the other entered the air force: and In no time at. all was overseas In plenty of combat Mamma. was sitting on the front steps, a little de- preued, the other day, ufter hsvlng Just recelverd a letter from her non In the solomona, when n. friend passed by. "Hoza treex, Mn, Nos:- baum?" asked the fifend. "And hozz foul: and Henfy -~such smott boys?" “Well, Hem-y I: everything fine," replied Mu. Nussbaum. "Strictly kopaoetlk. He ha: Juut lruiuatod from officers‘ training :chool. But dot dope, mule, he write: he ha: Just got truce Zeroea-uga-Inl Friend; of Madame Chlunl Kal- ahek swear that at 7 o'clock on n recent morning, the telephone Jmgled In the Wuhluglon n art- ment of g minor government c erk. The clerk tumbled out of bed. picked up the receiver. A :01! femi- nine voice at the other end of the ' to :peuk to ht: wife. ' mumblad the clerk aleeplly. "'I'hI: I: Madame Ohlang Kfll-ihPlf," wag the reply. "Oh. Yeah! Well, I am Napoleon.” The clerk hung up. Later. at breakfast. he told his wife about the call, with :omo angry Imprecatlon: about prac- tical Joker: who get people out of bed at seven In the mornlng "But, dear," replied hl: wife. "I'.l bet that was Madame Chlang Kal-Ilhek. I went to Wellesley with her and I understand she's been calling up all lngton.” -W::hIngton Merry-Clo- her old claumutcx who llve In Wash- Round. j next Winter. All doubt: a; to the‘ own rations aocordlng i0 fl DI‘!!- scrfbed formula. This l: t-he safest and most economical course to follow. . Then again, farmers can reduce the season's purchases of feeds by growing green feeds and roots as a. supplement to grain feeding. Root: can be started early In the season so that n. supply wIlJ be nvailwble a: soon a: the pig an ENWH to the stage when tmey will re- quire feed In quanvll/y. It I: sur- prlslng what can be saved In cost: of production. by growing "Green" feed: for aulnmer feeding . We will soon have arrived at. the mason of tbs year when owing llt- m: will probably be arriving In immtloned volume. There I: no pet. prIce on flhls 019A: of stock at. present. but Indloatlon: are that the price will banhrfifi, unless of- fend In ouch. ty that the floor price will automatically be. 0mm a ceiling. Prom contact with many farmer: this year w: are In- cltned lo believe than. they are dIs. posepeefiomretaln their early tltltalx’: or g purpose: a: against e u:ual widespread pueblo: of sell them for "ready money" to m y Ill»: imavoldwble demand: that :- rlse :t "cropping" Mme. ‘Ithl: f: a wlse move, If It can be put across, a: the early litter: will mature In midsummer, when the hm :uppl_v I: wually limited, and the price at It: peak. It I: sometime: farmer, when ‘he I: “ " prlce for ht: litter. and h: I: llalble to accept, but: Ila should be remembered that little pin moncv on the average farm I: only "pin" ‘morn Izer: awn: of mature hos: l: : mare: may be anticipated with mllm. ‘Ilien 94min and flnall-y, m: win- nlnvt of the war depend: In : very 333.’. “sfi fir‘? “i Her-com“ - : :. II Help Onnadwand IhI: Inland md (INTI-l You. Tlllnktlhl: duce hos: 0r name food‘ will feed our allied notions. SI .. I. A. GILLE! Iam new t..- Cliappecl Lips Quickly Relieved Prevent Painful Roughnm lwlll. film! mpnlnfully an mlymlg r o ducked nuns: o y dupmu mun. nlloflbaqulekaunwnywllilyplyll It: wonduful unolllnnl dado: lnlhllh moths: lb: woundud nnnbnno: nl lulu than llllflll mm: and Impu-Iflol. I: notion: the cmknd Iufaou, keep: than pliable, huton: nlunl hul- lng. The flrlt ' flvo: ‘ "lllf-"Plqulckly nglfnmrnllllootb- nu. Oat Lnlyl n your mm today. Th: If rogulurly to loom: lull 90C llpl. Sold ovuywbaroln hmforn. LYPSYL -""~'-"'~'~'-‘-" Hawaiian be RAN and Stat: Secret: absence with and Nat alertness can: Ire allowing In f III: war. If they would ‘ to Ir h l ideal-Mom. without relaxation, eh: thedeud of the war would he said he dld not know whether the Poi-elm Be~- tau-v inclined to be lonuacl- vfted hlm to ::_v some- lled be added, b: r: m: nus. but In thlm DH‘ W!!! 0f what hogs were selllng for on the open market In Montreal. 0n Th= time hula. hogs would be selling In this Province today 1°!‘ 19177031111315)’ 11 1-2 — 12 cents per lb., as against whnl, I: actually taking place. 0r l" 01h" words. mama of m: $25.15 per 15o lb., mm n»; now Illld to the farmer, he would b: recefvlng about $17.25 '- 38-50 per head lea: than It I: actually worth. l That I: an example of Jackie’: more correctly nld—l)addy‘g n‘ "m Daddy ll thlt tfrno couldn't do unythfng and“; m And Do Not l-‘orggl, Surely pl; and Daddyh pork, or Dealer: Pork! And poor That was when we had the “Home Market" m- an “m; um gonna-y dressed hogs and the DRAWER. a: marketing avenue:- , o under they kept the Home Ffre: Bumlng, but who“ p1,“; Do you want u. [o backto such n»; l! :0, II can be done. Just relnstutc that comblnatlon uguln and v v_ Former: arkeflng condltlom? . make It your hog marketing nystem. Well we Ihould ny not! J. A. GILLIES, Secretary LIVESTOCK MARKETING BOARD Eden Pleased With Progress - tantra-samurai" 0f Negotiations By .I. I‘. SANDERSON (Cllndlun Pr“: Staff Writer) ABHINGTON M roh 15 W . B (OP) — Anthony Edilrl. A. l‘? uu-p och 11.1.: that : hard and long road Ito: ahead before the Axl: an defuted Mtulon h H1! u 105m’! verv m after fortulchtl: not. In Florida. sold he In: rl knpreued du tlh I dld! ' ":15... s: . ‘Pumlnz to Men . ldcu lmlllnelv rep nllaoe Cordell Hull ha‘ l: consid- nation: Hull uld he wa: a vl n I-Iel I: rest Amerl he prosecu- I1 - nod really come for |. little In- struction apd Mm say that he had learned filllle a. bit. He already felt better, h: add- BB B- rcsult of today’: con- versimons, and looked forward to further conferences. To this H1111 541d“ itlilaflifl ‘they bléldéfid mad: n. ver an ac ory fnnln , ckfilll m: naked lfnlguglnd a Pl!‘ l!‘ DOIII M tlwvlhf shout be born: In rvrlignd In connectlo with Eden’: He wnlled that he thoumht them W98 Bvneral cement on the ah- s0lu mcessl y of mnmggmlng comp f: understan among flu fmvwmxlg governmen concern- ed with the prosecution of the war. 111:1; app led not onlyhbo the successful proseculslon o o war but to tho unportant problem: of bog-xiv; reconstruction. plot: ungh tan nnd ulabor example t e EéLQthUnéEnuor-lth: United sum ¢ a r: exchanges, he added, would of course not mean "16 "ndefl-lklnz of anv daemon: Involvlg all of the United Nations. _‘-'——' ~IEP lltllnl and llpplylu: Ohio» Ila. n. .|. anon our-unam- Montague P I l. llolldny: m. In lbmlnunen- Offleo Connected will DIUOOTOII How Ar _ Your Eyes? ) If you u: lluvlng symptom of Itnln - headaches, m: eye: or dlalneu - consult : necfalln. At you: urvlc: with yun of experience and n thorollzh retracting lervlce. l , Cull In and dlscus: your -~ dlfflculllu. Wrlt: or nlwn: fol appointment; 6. F. Ilutcheson , F. G. IIUTCHESON G. F. HUTCHESON i ‘i - atlillillbillifl i Woodland For Sale 50 acres of good wood and lumber at St. Georges in King’ County, Estate A. Bennett McDonald. Apply to H. F. MacPIIEE, K.C. Solicitor, Charlottetown Professional Bards iiMcLeod a Bentley W. B. BENTLEY. K. C- I. A. BENTLEY. K. C. lurlnlen and Altornen-IP Low MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Street M. ALBAN FARMER B. L, LLB. BABBISTEII, SOLICITOB. E10- Cuudlnn Bank of Commerce Bldl- _____ moruunrouonivzg, ALEX W. MATHIESON IAIIIBTIR. wucrrou. I1"- Oflloo: IO Gm: Gentle Street - Money f: Lou: 0011:0410" l juflffilland Ilompalt! II. F. AIIIIIIIBALII Obumrod Account!!!" Bum-u Trust Bullfllll Ulmrlottclon