THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN MARCH 4. 1940 41/1111: l-‘UUR TliE CIIARLUTTETUWII GUARDIAN Morning Daily 1|- unded In I857] Pr: ldent. LieuL-Col. W Chester S. McLIre v11»: President. .|. i1. Burnei... I-l-l. Secretary. LieuL-Cul D. A. viaclilnnon. 0.5.0. Editor and Dlrmagin Director. J ll. Burnett. FJJ. l‘ snriale Editor. Frank Walker. siiiisru-rrion trains c" Hi0 '- 1n advance! .c verJ t0 ‘v $431,) ni-pi-ermiilifli ludvancel mailed m P E Island 5.1.1111 per vi-iir tin advance) mailed to Canada and 0.8- lilemlic-rs Auilit Bureau of Circulation! “Tl/re Strongest liicmory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." 1—~— ~_ -.-_.: 1 _ _ plllllfi hiiiiixlei-‘s Good Resolution .0 ..1'11--~é1 111.11 11-11110 Prime Minister i11ti- , . 111111 111- :1 141-111;; 111 1100p a civil tongue in En- 111-. . {-11- 111- l‘1‘~l 11f 1110 Ciilllpiilgli. This is ._,,, ,1... 51-1-11 i ;11‘;1i.--._- 111' MllllC 0i 111s patronage 111-,;.11. 1111-1 111111- 1-1-1-111110 10111-1111 of being lcf; r111 :11 111.‘ 1-1-111 11111-1" 1110 20th inst. But 6011111 .\11" ,\1.-. 11111/11- 111111; >11y zinytltitlg rudcr, 111l- 111111111 1-, 111-1-1- 1111cl1.1r11;1111c 1111d uncalled for 1111111 he 11.15 1111-11111 ._1,,.,,,; yk-tityns 11101111 louder than .\1:. hing ll1l> scuttlcd 1110 Ship of 1111- 1111-111l11-1-s 11110111 011 the trou- ;,‘,,.,1 11,1, ;1111-1-111 1-11-c111111. Could “Lord l|..1-. 11 1.1-. 1--1-.--A~..1-.1 111' 1111110 airytlting worse w. 1 1' 1-111111111-111 of 1111 British-born truc- ;1.111- 4-: 111111 1111-110 \\11s that assertion 511,1, n11 | 111 1- .1111- j--111 111 a National Govern- 1111131 .111-1 1111: 1"_\11i1':11 1|11cst11111—\v11o are the ,1-.11.111g 11111111111111. 111-. 3111111011 would ask to 111111 J11 :1 ~ ,1 _\f1~.-1.11,;11 Government? As f“, _\1 1-1.-,,‘_1 1._-1/.-1;:-, 11-1111-0 .\_\'lill)iIllI)-' and stip- 111-1-1 1111-, 1&1 1.1l11i11g11111c1111\1->1r1i11g0,p111sir, ‘ 11g 1110 Iiossibility and prac- wortl» " 51.110. yigubjlfly- 11111111‘. Liovcriiinetit, .\Ir. King §11pul1l l1;11-1- 111111 1110 fll'~l 11-1 suggest 1t and l0 r111l1-11\1111r 111 1111111: it an £iCCOilll)ll5l‘l€(lvI£iCl. 'l‘l11-r1- 111"0 111111:-: 1111110 w11Ivs of being offensive b('\lllk" 11-111}; lllL‘ >111111011 word, aitd tl1e I’ri111<~ Illini-icr 11111-1 11:1\'0 11nd his tongue in his cheek 11111-11 111- pr111-l.1i1111-1l 111111 from henceforth he was 11.1115; to 111- ;1 good boy and refrain from "shoot- ing 111s 111-111111" at 11is opponents. Mr. ‘Gardiner The Unreliable .'\ cv-rrcs;11111110111 11-1-1105 to the Gazette: 111 111m 11-1-11111-1 111‘ .\l1-. _l. G. Gardiner's speech at \\111gl1:1n1 111- says, "Those who wish to assist 1110 1111-11101‘ in lit-g protluctiott would be Well t0 gct t11c true farts and stay wi1l1 them." In- i‘1<ll.‘lll1'lli\', ii _\1111 will refcr to Mi‘- Gafdiflfifb s1:111-1111-11'1 111 111~1~0111l10r last he is quoted as fol- 11.11.; "l1 i.- 1-111-11pcr to produce hogs ready for t11c 111;1r1.1-t in November than in May." At \\'i11gl1-.1111 110 s1a1c11: “The bonus will be given 111-1-1111-1- i1 c11-1< two cents a pound more to raise 1111-41 1'11 1111- s111111110r 1111111 i11 t11c winter." be 11-011 for Mr. Gardiner to \\'-111111 i1 not sccnrc 1110 corrt-ct informatioti and thus save tl1e 1-1-1111-1-111 11- 111111-11 110 objects. I wrote to him on 1111-, 011111 of 111-1-1-1111101- 111st and pointed out this (-11.11; 11111 110 f111l01l 111 a1-11-11owl0dge ii. but it is illls‘ 1_\p1- 111' 1-1-1-11111-11115 informatioti which comes lroni 1110 .\li11i.~tcr 0f Agriculture which catiscs :11e f111-1n1-r to 110011110. for 11c never knows just 110w 11111; 1110 11111rk0t \\'lll last, especially if based on 1110 1i11-111-y 11-1111-11 l\lr, tizirdiuer first adopted and which 111- 1111s now abandoned. As the Min- ister of Agricitlttire 1121s bccn wrong on cheese. butter, zipplc pooling. and now on bacon, he cati- liot complain if he is criticized, nor that the far- mer does 11111 jump in 1o help hitn, when he will not ascertain the facts but rushes in liecdlessly and 11-1111 111\v'.1_\'s incorrect information. We can raise hogs, and will do so, if we can be sure of buying feed throughout the year at the same price, WILIIOUI being raised because of our en- dcavors to supply tl1e proper pork for the Eng- lish 1111111101. Iilevenb-Lawyers In King Cabinet How far 1111-. I~Ii11g Government’; claim to be "rcprescittativc" of the various classes of Can- t-la is j11~1iii1~1l, may be gathered from the fol- lowing altulysis of the Liberal cabinet set up: Prime Minister, President of t11c Privy Coun- cil, Secretary of State for External Affairs — llawycr, economist, author and civil servant. (2111-01-111110111 Leader in the Senatc-Laivyer, financier. v Minister of _luslic——La\v_ver. Minister of l-‘inancc-Laivyer. .\ll11i.~1ct' of [i'ub1ic \Vorks—L.awycr. l ‘ostinns1cr-Gcncral-Lzuvyer. Secretary of State (acting)—Lawyer. hlinistt-r of Pensions and National Health - Lawyer. Minister of National Revenue-Lawyer. Minister of I7isl1crics-—Lawyer. blinislcrgol l.11b01ir—La\vycr. Alinistur of National Dcfcncc——College Pro- ‘C5501’. .\l1'11i:~tcr of Agricul111rc—Scl1o0l Teacher. l\ii11ist1-r of .\lincs and Resources — School icziclicr, fzirincr and publisher. .\lini-t1-r nf 'l‘r.-111c and Commerce — School icaclii-r and jiublislit-r. .\lini.~t1-r of 'l'1-;111<1111r1-—-Financier, consulting enginccij 'l“l1is is 1110 1x11111111 that Prime Minister Mac- lusnzie 11111;; \\.‘1|1ls i110 people to return to pow- er—cl0v011 lmvycrs nut of a total ministry of I6 1111-111110rs. It's record has been not only one of 511111111111 11111 r1110 11-1111-11 1121s brought about dis- 1111i1_v in 1111: 1-1111111r_v by playing class again-t class. 1111-1 r111-1- against race. Canada cannot af- ford 111 11111111 1111 mlmiiiistratioii such as at pres- ent is i11 p1111-1-r 11nd cftcclively pursue hcr cf- fort in t11c war. Our Potatoes And N. BUS Moro :1111l 11mm 1111-1111-1111- being giiren i0 the pcliiin i111lus1r_v in Ncw Brunswick, which is striving to mnltt- 111111 province the potato centre. just .1.- ilnlztrin i‘|i(l(‘1t\'0IiI'Cll to do in the case of 1110 sihcr fox itidusli-y. 'l‘l1cy have a live or- ganization in 111.: Associated P0161“) Grow-crfll \ and' Shippers of New Brunswick, and at a re- cent meeting a determined effort was made to prevent the importation from over the border of culls and low grade potatoes for the production of starch and allied products. A resolution was adopted to this effect, which pointed out further that the importation of lo\v grade potatoes would increase disease in 1.410 potato industry and en- danger the seed stock; that the lfiipOftllljlon of 5111-11 10w grzulc stoclc 1vo11ld_1lcpr0ss t11c price of tiativc 10w grade stock; 111111 1110 tiative growers are receiving less for 1l1is ty-pc of stock than Maine growers and any increase i11 prices of starch products 511011111 be passed 011 to New Brunswick grmvcrs. 'l'110 resolution also stated that any concession to c1111 and low grade po- tutocs from a foreign 111111-1101 should b0 reciprocal to the extent that exports to that country should be allowed at a countervailing rate. A11otl1cr rc- soltition dealt with t11c Cuban trade agreement. This pointed out that in t11c negotiations with the Cuban government for a new treaty t11c Canadian governmei-it should make provision to regain the former export market to Cuba for table stock. This request 1111s been urged by the council for 1110 pas! 111rc0 y-cars, but t11c Mac- kenzie King Govcriiincitt has 110110 nothing i11 the matter. A third resolution 1101111; with the South Am- erican mark-ct. This pointed out that there has been a great dcvt-lopiiiciit 0f tnarltcts in South Auicrica for Ca1111diai1 sccd potatoes; that these southern rotmtrics 11111-0 bccn itnxious to extend their trztdc wi1l1 Canada 111111 consequently the Ciillildlllli government was tirgctl to facilitate trade bctwccn t11c 11111111 111111 south particularly in 11111111005 and 1111101" C11111111i.'111 cxportziblc stock‘. S1111 11111111101‘ rcs111111i1111 1101111 wi1l1 t11c 111111121‘ of 1110 British embargo 011 Qatnulian 1101111005. It was felt that t11c (‘11111111ia11 government should endeavor 10 1111vc this embargo removed, as there was no proof that Catiatlinn stock was any more tlisctise zilfcclvrl 1111111 111111 of ll'(?lZlll(l or 111111111111 which l11ive 110w 1110 practical monopoly of 1110 British import 11111rl1ct. - EDITORIAL NOTES — A new wcek for l'Cl'lC\\'Ctl political endeavours. ll‘ 1K i‘ * Yes, 1111s is still 1.0111, b111 how many actually realize il——llliilil;s 10 .\1r. 3111011011110 lying. n- :- n- 1r The farmers’ only hope is the rcturtt of a Na» tional Govcrntnent. =11 41 =1- Mr. hlaclcetizie lxiitig is grasping at straws- the straws that show how 1110 wind blows. W‘ Dr_ Gus MacDonald 11:15 got the late member for Kings on toast-and Dr. Grant docs not like 1t. ‘ 4- n- 11- =11 Governor Sir Arthur F. Richards, K.C.1\l.G., of Jamaica, has decided voluntarily to forcgo 1o per cent of his salary as long as war continues. l-lis contribution will amount to £550 (about $1.1.- 200) a year. Who follmvs in his train? 1i‘ 1i‘ >i< As indicative of 1110 type of 111011 ciffcritig themselves iti support of National Liovcritment, it may be mentioned that t11c cclcbratctl stirgcon, the Hon. Dr. llcrbert .-\. llrucc, former Lieu- tenzint Governor of Ontario, has zicccptcd 110m- ination for Tbrotito-l21111111110 ctmslitticiicy. Likewise in Nova Scotia, the Hon. Percy C. Black, leader Of 111C Llppositiign in t11c 1110-11] kg- islattirc has been i1o111i1111t0d National Govern- ment candidate for C11111bcr1111111. i i i! it‘ * William kVillctt, Father of Daylight Saving, died this date, I915. l-le agitated for many years to advance the clock an hour in the stunntcr months, but was not successful 11111111: exigen- cies of war in I916 compelled t11c change 111 Bri- 1ai11 and subsequently throughout t11c civilized world. In that year summer time was legalized from May 22 1o Sept. 3o; in 1917 it was fixed from April 8 to Sept_ 17; in I918 from March 24 to Sept. 29; in i920 from March 28 to Sept. 27. For the current year t11c date has been fix- ed from February II to Sept. 29. Object — to secure a working day more closely approxi- mating to the hours of daylight. l‘ i! U I‘ Mr. King “the surrealist" suggested the Bri- tish boys be trained in Canadian Air schools, when there were no such schools in existence, and offered to train 59 British boys a year as pilots and this when British needed 2,500 a year. The senior member of the Empire had been re- fused a chance to prepare for war, Dr. l\Ianio11 told a radio audience. “I am sure he would not have refused Americans the right to train their naval men here if for some reason they could not be trained in American iviitcrs," said Dr. Manion. Isn't that so? It!!! Our evening contemporary on Saturday re- published a contributed article from the Mont- real Gazette, suppressing the name of the writer, and implying that the opinions expressed were those of the Edi1or~11nctl1ical and unpro- fessorial, to say the lczist of it. The writer is Mr. Wm. Robert Givens, former publisher and editor of the Kingston Standard who submerged his Conservative paper i11 1110 Liberal Whig in I926 under t11c title of \\-'l1ig-Stz11i1lar1l, and b0- came President of t11c Company till I931 when he retired to live in St. Pctcrsburg. Florida. The “lhig-Standard is Liberal in politics and t11c mouthpiece of t11c prcscnt 1\li11i.s11-r11f llcflncc, Mr. Rogers. Ill i l‘ W'l1ile a city cannot be regarded as the insurer of t11c safely of the pedestrians upon t11c streets under its control, it is inctiiiibctit upon the numi- cipzility 1o provide for 11v.- safi-lv of persons 11-110 inztkc use of its sidewalks, 1\lr. justice 1\Ic- Dougali ilcclaretl in 1\lo111r0111 Superior Court, when he condemned the city to pay l\lr. Charles Mallette $438 for injuries which 1110 lattcr’s wife suffered ivhi-n she slipped and fcll on llochc- laga street, lllzirrh 5, i930. The court found that it was “illusory for 111(- dcfotitlant 1o con- tend. if not by avcrmcnt at least by one of its witnesses, that the rlcgrcc of care which it is ob- ligated to give its sidewalks is to bc lllCEISllfCd bv the funds available i11 t11c city treasury. and 1l1e defendant's liability‘ 1111111011 to occasions when such funds are available I01 slfcci. Illdllllttljglwfia" IIIITES BY TllE WAY It Ls said that several ino- torzsts who have been involved in accidents recently when their au- tomobiles skzdded on icy streets and crashed int o posts or fences have set up the claim that the cor- poration of t-he city of Peter-bor- ough is responsible for the dam- ages caused. Surely 1t nas not got to the stage when muntctpalitcs are to be held accountable if they fail to make Winter driving toot- proof. The vagaries of Wnver weather set up conditions that n0 municipal government could reas- onably be expected to cope with and we imagine that clams for damages would have little chance to succeed. — Peterbcrcugn Ex- annner. It has been frequently suggested that the 11m»: has arrived tc-r Can- ada, to have one of her own people as the occupant of Rideou Hail. and no doubt there are many Oaritmian; well fitted to assume such a. post- tion as an Australian has assumed them at, Canberra. 'I‘l1ere 1s how- ever ve-ry little likelihood 0f the tradltzonai origin cf our Governors- Getterai beuig disturbed at this time when 1t ls more important tlmn ever that there shall be the closest ties bet-ween the United Kingdom and Canada and between His M-ajes-ty and hs senior do- minlon. There Ls scant possibility of the identity o1 the new Gov- e-rncr-Gencrai being revolved be- fore t-he general eeetion. Whoever he may be. he will have 11 most. d11- ficult firm follr-yvng the gentle- man who has jus-t pass-so to his 10st- and whose effort-s over a short period of time 11-11 a great (teal to elevate the pwrsttge and add to the pc-pularlt-y of the office which he occupied with such universal ac- ceptability. - Exchange. Of course, Germany cannot allow 1o the opmions of u1d1v.cl.a.l Ain- cricuns an importance s-iie denies to those cf individual Germans. It. 1s impossible, says Goebbels, to draw a ltne between pub11c c-pirc-n and the opinion of the State. Bv German lcgic. that is qhite true. becau-e Ge-nnan logic aces not ad- mit the American theory that the Sta-t: has no right to any op.mo11 until the opinions of a. majcixt-y of its citizens have crystanzed 1n one definite form. Under our tnecry. it is quite possible for us to a-dmu. that ten per cent, or twenty-five per cent. or forty-nine per cmt of all Germans may be raging against the United States w $110111. rmm t- t-mg the German Government to an attitude of IIOEILIIILy toward us. But under the German theory. 1f any American says publicly an unkind word about Germany, and is not punished for doing so, that word mirt be constructed rs official opinion. — Baitunore Sun. According to the "National Zettung‘. Mr. Churchill psssesics three castles w.th pocls that itc- commodate "-10.0110 T151185" which no one is all-c-wsd to cat-ch; only their owner “oltern wanes for hIurs 1n his ponds watering his T1511." from whzch the German writler draws the mot-sf that. 1t must be a great. ccn elation to the Ftrst Lzrd of the Admzralty to hive one fomi of water of WlilCli he is “undis- puted master " Did the WIIIH‘ on Churchtllian IFIIPCIIGS invnt the whale story sclcy in orttr to justi- fy the concluding moral? l1; sezmis an 011d exploit. for the moral ‘.5 hardly wort-ii drawing. However. as a piece 01f sheer fantasy l1. seems the-ugh rather amlcss. somewhat better tempered than many Ger- manic invention-s. But why not have dressed it up a b.-t mote and made Mr. Churchill edztor-in- chief of our old frieno the "Brzt sli Pond-Keeper and Aquarst. with which 1s incorporated 1112 R-pt-i an Review?" B-ut perhaps the “Na- tional Zettung" writer, having thought up the remarkable pc-ture of the First lord wad ng 1n his own waters and gaz n1}: fondly at his fort/y thousands fish. felt. that he had done enough for one day and knocked off for the rest and reft-eshment.— Manchester Grani- lan. The new Minister for War must. have been sqigulurly tattoo eivant if he is mdeed ‘unuwaref’ us lie declared in Parliament on Tues- day. of any cases 1n which Army authorities have instructed hotel and restaurant keepers to restrict tl1e.r premises to officers The newspapers both of England and of Scotland have lately tumi-lied ntstances in which we exclu ;on of privates has been practised. 1n most of these the licensee, when questioned by interested civmans. has replied that he was tax-eaten- ed. if he did not make the distinc- tlon, that he would be put. out. of bounds by the mtlftaay autnoiuty; and in one case ft is alleged that an individual offzoea- demanded tita-t a private should leave i1 restaurant WhIOh 1n civilian me he had been ln the habit of using. The discrlminattcn was never JUSL~ lflimble, but It was more toler- able in times when it was a soctai convenience tar-gen! arrived gt. by the choice oi’ the men themselves. Now. when conscription cute clear across the whole structure of the country and the means as well as t-hc manners of the private may be no different from thoic of n11 colonel, it is quite intci-cra-blc. - Manchester Guardian. Buffalo hide coats and buffalo swak for eastern Cfliifldllfi-S from Otitarto buffalo. This is what/s cnvrstoned by the Ontaro Department of Game and Fisher- ies for the future. An-d 1i. is by no means 11 pipe dream. Recently. a herd of 25 buffalo brcugn-t tn from one of the Crown game pro- serves in Alberta was released in a 35.000-Bl1fe oorral near Burwa l1, Ontario. The animals were purchas- ecl on a. barter basis. Ontario a-bounded in bLack bass but 1t T1811 no buffalo. ‘llfztli Alberta l1. was vice versa. So a carload of 3110 adult small-mouthed black tnss from Ontario lakes was excrangcd for the carlcad of Alberta butzalo. The establishment of the bu-ftalo herd 1s only a. part. of Ontarzds plan to increase the variety of game onimuLs in the province. The program was started 1n No- vember. 1932, when. wt-th the co- operation of the National Parks branch of the Federal Depart- ment o-f the Interior a cartoon of 25 elk was shipped from Waln- wrlfht. Alberta, and referred 1n the Pombroke Crown rm- pre- serve, roughly 100 mll-sa north- west of Ottawa. - By Ralph Barnes in the 0,1,1, ova], uorrelooiidnih. THE FARMEB PREJUDICED Slr:--I11 your “ms-columns the other day I observed a most en- couragtng item. in the course o! w i J. . McLean adv-sad the members of the Canadian Chamb- er of Ccminerce. in his presidential address. that ‘The plain tact is that the interests of industry and of agriculture are one an the same”. and the speaker added his convic- tion that l1. was tn the interests of the nation "to seek by every means to bring about genuine and confl- uent co-operatlon between agricul- ture and industry." Fine! But. your financial contem- porary 1'I‘i1e Tunes) in Montreal, in dealing with 111's “more national viewpoint for the Chamber of Com- merce and its members." also points out that “Of Canada's pu atlon, 45 per cent. is rural and 5 per cent is urban. while agricultural produc- tion of 569000000 in I936 compares with manufacturing production of $l.290.000.000". and quotes Mr. Mc- Lean thus: “Agriculture still is. and for_a long time seems destined in re- main. Canada's basic industry." Statistically revealin i But, for the attention of all ose Canad- ians turban and rural) who desire lationsliip between "the nterests of industry and of agriculture" I sub- mit the foiiowin amazing asser- tion from so aut oritatlve a sourre as the premier of Manitoba (Hon. John Bracken), on the same rural- urbait theme: "One-third of the population of Canada is associated with agriculture. but ll: teceives only one-twelitlt of the national income.“ How can there be built “genuine and confident. co-o oration" against an uneconomic bac -drop of that kl d? n I 11m, Sir. etc.. AGRICULTURIST FARM REHABILITATION Sirz- There a pears to be an un- fortunate and fa riy widespread m s- understanding regarding the pur- poses ancl aims of the Farm Reha- bfltatlon ulim. Even so dlstlngush- ed 11 T811118!‘ as Mr. R. A. Profit 1n i115 important. BCIQTESS - resident of the Central Farmers iwtitute, referred to farm rehabilitation as the placing of young men upon the many abandoned farms of thLs Ls- land and qu.1e correctly Yellilfded such work as of questionable utility. It would indeed call for u. lull meas- ure cf the pioneer spirit of our fore- father. on the part, of any 31011118 man who might be placed on one of these deserted farms. As a rule the bLIIlOiHgS have either entirely fallen away or are beyond repair and entirely out-o.- ln any evtnt are date in design. The land in many cases was 1111paver.sl1e.i before ab- xibatidonmetit and a5 a rule ls cover- ed more or 10s. with secOHd-BTOWT-h trees. Some day these farms, fcr the sake of the Provmice, must be brought, back to life. but. it, would cull ior a formidable 1mpenditure of mcncy 1111011 work planned on a wholesale scale in anticipation _ of p u-ell-acviseu system 0t coontza- icn. 1 b11011 an undertaking as the above ,was not cottceived of under the re- ‘hllblllllitlOil pan that. was lead be- fore the Government a year ago. There was Iicthlitg new in the main 1110a. for 1t consisted sllnply 0t a- lduptiug the detail.- of an undertak- ‘lng that has proved a complete suc- cess In the United states, concetveci of and worked to B. successful fin sh by the MetropolitatrLlfe Assurance Company of the Umted States over a period 01_ several years. This Com- pany finding itself in possesion cf many tnorigages covering close 1o two hundred million acres of land in different, states of the U11 on. which mortgages were in default (f interest payments and upon wh ch foreclosure proceedings had beaome i1 threatening necessity. decided to follow the humane and comman- een e nan of assisting the mortgag- ors to rejuvenate their farms on modern lines. They plwed the whole mutter in 1h: hands of a most, capabe man. M1-. c1011 Rogers. and he II'I turn em- ployed sub-managers in the d.ffer- ent 11.11105 with supervisors taking charge of 100 farm; each. Thorough in 129311011 was made of each farm and a report placed in Mr. Rogers’ hands stating the actual minimum requirements in the way of more 11nd better livestock, improved farm implements, repairs to buildings. seed of the best uallty, an analysis of the soil, and t eiinancing of the fir... vein-s’ fertilizer. Wl1l1 the above information 1n hand the farmer had an agreement placed beforeh m in which in con- sideration of the providing of the above necessities, Dllffihfllfid for him at the lowest (possible wholesale cost. he had to un ertake to subject him- se‘f to the supervision and advice of skilled farmers of the highest order provided by the Assurance Company, all of them graduates of Agricultur- al Colleges. men of long arming expepence and of a fair and kindly 1p r PUBLIC FORUM r1111 Health League ' 1 .11.'.'.'.‘:'.122"'£' --'-'-3l'J-¢-'-"1'- "i: 0t cdflfidfi l 11:23.2: :.'...':,.'.-:;-'.-,,:~;,,;=~;; ______~-_-_i "Illrll! undone the opinions 0| l 1 to bring abouta more e uitabie re- d TORONTO. March I. — Ontario‘: Department of Health ls actlviuy c0- operatingugic Canada‘; war effort in several tions. To date it hi! 1 dstributed 15.000 ounces of typhvig l department aomlssion of soldier aanltorlam and men iliospltals. 1 ese facts were announced in the Legislature by Hon. Harold A-i Krbv, Minister of Health, who- polnted out that in addition to war- imebtergeasuil-es. continfued régentloln was n" i: ven to 5a eguar g c1 - illan health. Mr. Kirby made the important revelation that in hospitals where insulin treatment was being given for particular form: of insanity. 45 per cent of those whose mental ill- ness W941 of less than 18 months standfngemade complete recovery. The partment of Health is dia- tributed by B letting-up in vaccin- ation. The Minister predicted. that unles the younger generation is protected. this Province would suf- fepmsome day from a smallpox epi- c. Ontario has 5o per cent less cases of diphtheria in 1939 than in the year efore. The substantial reductions in the amount of typhoid fever and un- ulont fever. Mr. Kirby declared. were proof that the Ontario Goveri1- mflnffi pasteurization policy was bearlnz izood fruit. h 111s rrimged for as oaflent; to b01111 S FROM “UNVANQUISIIEIW My life will not be broken- That shall never be; No one shall have the power h u thing 1o me. I could not betray life so. Comcl not deny To do suc My rich inheritance of beautyb store; And if 1 cry In heartbreak at; the loss of you I cannot blind Mfy eyes to sunsets. and the forms O flowers, or [all to find Rapture 1n wlnds. and flash of swallows wings. be the last man on this Is‘and to withhold the granting of_ald to the many farmers who. unlike himself, are suffering hardships from a 111cm of capitai and 1n many ulses lack of p roper knowledge of modern agr cu tural methods. The question may naturally be asked to what, extent these untowar-i conditions prevail in Prince Edward Island and to that question one naturally hesitates to make a retry. Some idea however may be obtain- ed from a statement made by our Lieutenant-Governor, Hon. B. W. LEPBRQ ata public meeting in Char- 1011; towuuu-yem 19__-. 11012111111 ‘ ‘JEN-NR "v-"ufiV-‘l-NNFIINHHNHN-V EYESIGI-IT I; EXAMINATION g '1 i: Fitting and Sglilllyirlg Ginsu . to. ll. 1|. MABDII OPTOMETICIST Montague. I‘. l2. l. Office Hours: i0 to I2 A. M. 2 to ll P. M. ilolidavc ctc.. by apmitniment Office Connected with DBUGSTOIIE i 'QQQQ-QO-OOOOQQOQQOOOOOO—OO How Are P Your Eyes’? l If ha I to or atluoilrliillieendgchgsrhirali: sl-T-i oihgzzinesl — consult l spec- a At your service with years iii experience and u thorough retracting service. Cali In and discilsa your dil- iicuitiea. ii. F. llutcheson G. F. IIUTCHESON F. G. HUTCHESON. O Q4l At first the offer was not ,3 .3 by all but: when they saw the marvel- lous results of the system, 1i; became not acase of acceptance but rather of begging to be included as beneficiar- ies of the scheme. So successful have the results been that in many case's the farmers have been able in a few years to pay off not on'y the old mortgages but the additional sums loaned t0 them. The money was loaned at the low- est. possible rate of interest on a 25-year repayment basis. Unlike this Province man of the formers were subject/ed to ronght. years find part of the agreement stated t at, no fitferest payments would be expect- ed ln such years. The plan has worked out to be m immense success and there l; no reason in commonsense why should not be applied to this Pro- vince. always provided that. it is "of Numbered bv the rnicioua spoils sy tom. That would iii the whole zdea just n5 it injures our Governmental system. ‘The under- klng is one that naturally adapts ltre f to tho oversight of an honor- arv commission by whom o. paid izetn-ral mzmaizer and supervisors would be employed. I am sure that. Mr. Profit ' woufd . . :=i “Wllllll 0llT" liilli ITOIIRIEII Duuivu muiid udi day, unable lo do IIIIIIGIOII - q-ufiy with lltl child's“. fooling miserable. - Illuiiin ilon"iium" iolln. l!!!» Qiigid’: Kidney Milli“, an‘ u: Ilvlnl mun a elum to ma" "'4 Iilly- Buy ioluh. Solo. . DoddsKidnoyPilli STIIP MMPS AMMOIIIATEII BIIOIIGIIIAI. IHIMPIIIIIIII Thin preparation l; an Q;- with!!!“ and aedlilve for Iiroat irritation, Cou h; and Cfllfll lllllv luurantee . Prlco MrboiiIe----_._5o¢ DR. EVAN'S Stomach Mixture W0 lllflll! recommend thin MDlrli on for people suffer- ng from otomu 11mm; liter min. rim-mum, ma arid sour | much. miffmi: iihtlye finest stomach I e o mon l, ii'| Evans. 85c bee; Ilia-tile. u, SPECIALS Ilofldw Kidnrv Pills — - 39¢ Kruiiclicn Suite With Trial Sine Free - - c911 Plblllui Baby Food — — 45c l0 Cake; vllltlll Cutlle Soap -- - 25¢ v Onrtcfl Little Liver Piiil 19o ‘ Grotto EmuIIIon-Jiiind 98o Nonerno Cream 15c. 49c. 54c Monev Saving I 1 of inab ity to utlend then stated: "In my opinion 5 cent, of the farmers of this are annually going ‘in the red‘ and a further 25 per cent are not maklns a decent living." Mr. lePage was at that time Ive Counci, there were many men Big Fire Sale At The Central Drugstore STILL CONTINUES Lots of Good Stock still on hand and Prices are bound to move it. Don't fail to get in on these excep. tional Bargains. E, ‘A, FDSTER-ilentrai Drugstore ocfisrrhmrp-‘reseueuwifiirfiizternn to Mr. Dennis’ e meoti . He l‘ 1.113511 lcuiture owin Le? ‘a hear farm rehabilita on. resident of the Lleli-slat- 1 am. Sir etc H n farming tlclsed M; 811d I have the percen- -ClBI5 l-Mml e room weli- be conditions, but no one crt statement other; who place age of second and third B8 hi!!! as 85 oer cent. 1f such 1; the wit! there {ii-s certainly need 1°1- I-l. K. s1’ iisniuiuo nus 2 mores 1 1 1 1 1 Home Work is when children have abundant Glare-Free Light Give your children Ilia benefit of better light ‘ with Edison Mazda Lamps. Choose the I00 wait sizes for reading and studying. "1110 WATT 111m 110w 011112111- HADI IN CANADA Better Light . . . Better Sight EDISIIN MAZDA amps CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC 11511111 AIIIIOST F1111 For a. Delicious Cup 0i Orange Pekoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea A TIPIFROM A BIRD WHO KNOWS makes all the difference HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10c per Fig MANUFACTURED av IIIGKEY 81 IIIIIIIOLSON TOBACCO CO. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN Wise people know that frequent changing of oil the differ- ence In the wear and tear on a car. And wise people know that it is flavor that makes nil