r l. I r- ;AI‘II FOUR g TIIE GNMILUTTENIIIN GIINIIIIIIN Iorning Dally (Founded In Ill?) President: Llous. Cul W, Ghosts! I. InLIII vii-s Pronoun- J Ii. Burns". IJJ. lonrotnvyi Llnut Col. l) A Innltlnuon DIS. can." IIIII AIIIIIIIIIIII "Inn-fur. J ll Burn-wt. I-Jrl- Asnorluto lfiltmu: Prank Wnllu-r, and Ilium-n. K Cm V it. i0n Arrive Inrvlco) RIYKSIPKIPTIQN RATE! u, min In v, n |., lmn m» vmri BM for I month [I25 (nr H months: Mk- Inr nnr month cm- Jli-Ilwrv sr- no 0P7 vnnri $3M h» 0 months St 75 for ‘l mnnflvl: n01- far one month Ry .\l:ill In olhnr Prnrtnlwn and fltA. 35,00 per roar Rnlurllily \\'I\l'|\|_\‘f 85'0" nrr vmr: 11,00 (or G mnnfhl Mb- fnr S months I'm- rIinrLun-unvn Guardian may ha obtained n! Ili-millnivn \'f*\\\ »\zi-na-_v Tim» lqnnru, New York; mil Piouth sum-q \El‘"l‘,\'. (‘arm-r nlllli nnvl Wnshlnnnn flour-n; \|n'll‘lllilllllllll N's-wan Ala-no, l!!! Purl Ill, \|i-mr--.|li I Mm- M! tiny Hr. Tonmloi Nv-vu ntnml (‘nun-ail Lnnrn-r 0mm": unim- News Nllnd Sub‘ 5hr; l)nl,; Huh li-imvi-o filusp Mulwlun. NB. JThe Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." “l1 MEmL-H’. FEBRUARY ll), 1943 A iiciil All-Uul l . in» i.l‘.l h LlI iua-lc for nearly threw: _\..i: - _» . v d». in! li||\t‘l‘lllllL‘lll lu aidop: n i. . i i w: wir" ]>i|ll\‘_\', but lor reu- i I . 1.. l|l . Innius and nilicrs of theni Y . ~l~.\ pr-igrcss has been niadc. .-\t .1l\'l’ .\lllll.\it'l‘ llslcy announces a ml lllliYt‘ in the shape of an up-to- l...<si' lfiwiji-ct ill ullt.‘ billion dollars in‘ Iimn-niizin; ll't'(lL'1l supplies to the various limit-d Xilililllx lie describes it as a “mutual illll in.. Irv‘ f-ir ilu- irznnfercncc of equipment and ~ii- us i.» :ni_\ of the nations needing" the-ti in flit-ii cnilcamiii- l<\\\lil'(l$ an allied victory. The ipic-zi-iii i-i repayment does not enter into the llllslik“. 'l'l:¢- supplies are to be given on credit, mi intllldl cix-ilii or as a gift. Adjust- ments will lu- inaile when the end has been ac- snniphslivil, but meantime the Government of Canada, ripr. ~.i-niing ihe people of Canada goes on record as placing at the disposal of our allies $i.ooo,ooo,ocx) worth of supplies 0f all l\llI(l without thought or worry whether it is t0 be paid fur by thc recipients or a free gift from their own pockets, 'l‘hat is the policy, that is the spirit which will bring the war and its ob- jective home more directly to each and all of us, and in which before too long we will be able ‘,0 claim victory for our pcnnons. W; Savings Stamps A campaign is now in progress in our food stores to scll War Savings Stamps, and it is a pleasure to learn that excellent progress is being made in worthwhile stores throughout the length and breadth of the province. Where the proprietor or manager is sympathetic, sales arc most encouraging, but the reverse is the case ivhcre thOse in control are apathetic. Why shnnld any one be apathetic in such s. war cf- fnri? If we don't win the war, or if it be pro- longed indefinitely for lack of the sinews ~of war, it will be due largely to such apathy on the part of selfish, don't care s d—-—— grocery and departmental stores. Instances have been sub- mitted to us where comparatively small stores have done s roaring, consistent trade in War Savings Stamps, and other instances where big stores have fallen lamentsbly down on the job. Where the boss is known to be "war savingly" inclined his staff have been active snd effective In passing on the Stamps to their customers ss value received, whereas when the boss is luke- warm, selfish, and sfroid to offend the supposed susceptibilities of his customers, the returns of sales have been miserable md in some use: sctually disgraceful. ,‘l'ho Wool: Point ‘HI. Gordon Grsydon, ML, chose one of in most vulnerable points in the Government's armor for his first major attack last wsek as House leader of the Progressive Conservative Party. His chief complaint had to do with the manpower policy, and it wss so effective point he madl. The fact that the assault struck homo, says die Windsor Star (Independent), is indicated by the attention which Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King paid to this matter when he replied, in the debate on the Speech from the Throne. He was at great pains to put the Government in the clear, but an unbiased view carries the im- pression that he failed to make an adequate de- fence. He left much that Mr. Graydon had said unanswered, and the things the Opposition leader dwelt on are the things which are en- gaging the serious thought of s great many people in Canada today. Mr. King's statement on the manpower pro- gram, delivered last Summer, left little to In desired. 1t conveyed the impression that the Government was prepared to attack this matter courageously and decisively. The actual results have been almost nil. The announced object was to put cvcry Canadian in the job in which he could best serve the country. Virtually noth- ing has been done to this end. Since Mr. King's statement wss made, he has given every indication of being too timid to take the bold steps which the country hoped to see. A few miners have been moved from one job lo :innthcr, and more recently there has been talk of compulsory drafting of workers in one specific class. There has been scarcely the slightest move toward s general mobilization of manpower. - Mr, King's answer gives some lnlightcnmeut as to his point of view_ He says that more men Ind wonicn have been recruited into wlr in- dustry and the armed forces duripg the past ycar than were ncedcd, according to advance forecasts. This, of course, is no answer at all. Up until now, no really grave shortages have occurred, except in one industry. But we are entering on a critical year of the war, and there is serious danger that the shortages will show up. If they (lo, there is scarcely the vcstige of g plan to deal with the situation. Meanwhile, one most important industry is Igcufely short of help. Agriculture is justifiably "fr." r Llrut. IIII l. U fearful of the future, snd the only ml step‘ taken to assure a supply of workers is s plan to recruit school boys during nevt harvest sea- son. In the face of this, Mr. King rests on past successes, and has scarcely a \vord to say about future plans. Cliveden And Canada‘ ' To the future of Clivcdcu (now handed over to the National Trust) Canada will notably con- tribute, remarks the Times, London. In this war as in the last the Dominion has established a military hospital on a part of the estate freely lltlgesslm‘ °f “l”? mm" “m” 1"" . lcut by Lord Astor. .\lan_v Canadians must have 20-year-old memories of Lady Astor's active personal interest in it. l pita! was erected and equipped by the Canadian {may be the , Red Cross Society for the use of the Canadian itravellns in the wrong direction for |Governmeut, which has installed additional equipment and operated the hospital. the original agreement with Lord Astor it wast l to be demolished or removed at the end of the l war. Canadian Red Cross and Government have, however, generously agreed to give the, buildings, with their equipment, to the National Tiriist when they are no longer required for the lprcseni purpose, so that the British people may have the benefit of what lzticr on may become a civilian hospital in a rccunstriicterl national _ inediczil service. li was the haughty (ieorgc Villiers, second Duke of lillClflllgilLtlll, who built the first house i -in “Clicfdcifs proud alcove." In 1795 Buck-l inglizmfs mansion stiffcrcd the then common‘ penalty of careless reading in bed, when a maid- servanfs candle set fire to the hangings. john Shaw rebuilt the house in 1830, but in i849 ii zigain succumbed to the flames, being left wiib only the old fonndztiions and two small wings, which called forth bitter complaints from Sir Charles Barry when he ivas asked to combine them in his Italianate (lcsign. Visitors to Clive- den do not come to look at the house, however, but to look from the house at the wonderful view of the Thames valley-and this Barry made it very easy for thcm t0 d0. Time has not spoiled the “circular view to the utmost verge of the horizon," which, "with the scrpciitiniug of the Thames", Evelyn found so admirable. The Clivedcn woods will be part of Lord Astor's gift. - EZDIIURIAI NUIIJS- The Foiirth Victory Loan campaign is ex- pected to open about the first of bfay. * l? Ill i According to _ll/IacLcan‘s Magazine there is going to be another increase in Income Tax, Ruml or no Ruml Plan. s s w s Samuel Plimsol, British politician and ALP. born this date, I824; known as “the sailors“ friend", because as the result of his publication of a booklet “Our Scamen”, he was instrumental in organizing a movement which lcd to the pass- ing of the British lkierchant Shipping Act, em- powering the Board of Trade to detain unsca- worthy vessels in port, and to prevent any over- The present war hm, ,the wrong bus, generally ln bland Under sex, who are in doubt where a place - .._..I£§..Q"fi‘\_l_<.l-Ql'|'lf§'|i9YVN QlL5RmA1Z€~-._._ _ ___ llotos By The Way “Winter? we can hear Eight snorting when she 1s Fifty-elem; "you children don't know what win- ter ls, Why, I can remember back isnmfll! when the snow-J’ Toronto r. Our London bus conductresses, the majority of whom, however, are oertaLJy not Londoners, have now ,settled down viery efficiently to their ijob, says The Sussex Datlv News. In some respects they give an im- e men. They are, for instance, much more patient with those goofy h ‘lvlduals who insist on getting on obllvlon to the fact that the bus right number but them. They are very helpful, too. wlfn people, particularly their own ls. where the men score, however, ls in the quick-wltted badlnuge which ls the salt of Cockney bus travel. In fact, after careful ob- servation of men and women bus conductors, one ls convinced the fe- male of the species is usually far less gifted with humor than the ale. Witness the man conductor, an old hand with the Mons ribbon up, who yesterday in the Strand. nédresim a formidable queue at his storming plltflf‘. asked with fer- vent nfficlal cmnhnsis: “Are you sure your journey i5 IICCGRWIFV — hug‘,- bthqsafiu-ivvw .: n l runuc roausi l cl . unison or '4 unmann- f do r i d; “*- r:=i:-.....r-.. mug: m“ m Another niece of England rails the smug Jiip mi- freedom, s. mm; To snsrc our melons sos-bomel legacy, l How man sires of wood or toyi- FISB CANNEBIES POI MONTAGUE Sin-I have been led to believe that we are to have two cunning factories in the town of Mon I in the near future. Well ths ls 8. flne thing and u rnouiii he on- couraged as a homo industry. But I want to point out to all who Ir! interesed in this matter, thst. those 5 . m years lions Ivy and butt-b bu: factories should not be built within - 1 the town limits as they m d Hove fgifagriod this swift ship. how to create a. nuisance and I P" 11° m °° . “Y nuisance W, In puma by some ‘ How mgpy cesmurlos of flsots have °l °“' “s” “m” "m" 1'“ To show 8U“: mi: u» way w vic- summer I found that the air WI!‘ n, polluted with their smell of do- ‘How “my New“ o‘ k“ mm NIOWD, But no less rich deserts. how may cayed fish refuse. We do not wwt anything like that, in our n- We have B. larxe p my 1n the Town now and that bad onoulh. but fish canning factories would b6 m" w“ wmwr. m “on worse Where ls our Town Coun- mmacgn . h; d 5h ed cll Mr. Mayor? He and hi8 sughegnfgfilailielp‘ an n , Coupcilb had lpctlgr lsgldaka this. 531g I ud e we a V m m; q ; lilo theumatfte; of granltin! $0903" Th“ Tlgggw" m . P u. w o‘ t es o suc p rpoee - g k 0 u... A "armature. "t "c" CITIZEN" Speed hon, the?‘ slfépiihnd when you, t an POISON MOONSIIINE Grey giifnrbin battle thunder echo-' 1n all the bloomlu‘ lot of you!" Real heroism Is exacted of mem- bers of the Crir-Jdlnn Women's. Army Corps. This is true. at lens of one little izrnuu of them who are members of the cast. of "The Army Show " Ten nf the lassles In the chorus have been ordered to slim down. They mint. within the next four weeks, take off from flve to fifteen pounds oat-h. What makes lt hind is that they are on army mtlons. which contain hltlh Propor- tions of body-building foods. Wnmcn in civilian life find lt enough of an order" to diet even when they are not faced three times a dav by temotlnc fattenlns! vlnnds It \vl'l be much \".'\i‘<e for flit-so ulrls. They dsserre credit for the courage with which they are facing this hard duty. —Wlndsor Star. We Ieamcd Tuesday night that while we were nnzrily writing last week's editorial attnck on President Roosevelt's shabby treatment of his Fair Hnployment Practice: com- mlttee that the unpredictable, cour- ageous Mr. Roosevelt was ln Africa making history. What are you go- ing to do with a cu" like that? His sense of the dramatic GDIHIDCP5 his world leadership und makes us for- tzet for a while shortcomings tn the war effort at home. -Mlnneapolls Spokesman. When we are flrrhflng mad, says The New York Times, two little glands which are called adrenals and which lie above the kidneys are aroused to chemical action. The "lands pour out adrenalin. Some classic experiments made $01116 years alzo by Dr. Walter B. Cannon (Hur- viird-l have shown how essential adrenalin ls ln the emotional life of all hiahcr animals. It stimulates the heart so that it can work hard- er. Without It there is no fight in loaded vessel to proceed to sea; the “Plimsol mark", painted on every ship, indicates the maximum load line. i II 1U i Sir \Villiam Bcvcridge, the Master- of Uni- versity College, Oxford, who has come into the international limelight through the publica- tion of his now famous report upon the social services of Britain is no stranger to Canada. During the summer of 1924 he spent a con- siderable period within our bounds when the British Association for the Advancement of Science held its fourth meeting at Toronto. Sir William had long been an active member of this body and, since he then held the post of director of the London School of Economics, it was natural that he should take s. leading part in the proceedings of tho economics section of the ss- sedation. o n o n It is for svoryono to remember, says the Win- nipeg Fro: Press, that inflation continues to be s very rul danger. Conditions are perfect for it, with the great purchasing power of the people and the shortage of supplies, if the con- troll were not firmly maintained. We are all receiving vitally necessary protection through the price and wage ceilings. But the pressure groups, if they had their way, would destroy that protection. Then everyone would suffer and the war effort be very seriously affected. As has been said before with truth and aptness, we are like people who live bclow a great dam, whose safety depends entirely on the structure holding. To damage and weaken it is danger- ous folly; to protect it, is the wisdom of self- preservation. o u a u LU B Nfli! I mind that in appealing for support of Red Cross, War Savings Certificates and Victory Bonds, etc., we must do so with clean hands and singlencss of purpose. Sim- ilarly, in pleading for recruits to go on active service overseas to maintain the freedom and independence of our democratic institutions, let us ever remember that it is on our shoulders lies the responsibility now of defending‘ and protecting these institutions from the insidious inroads of the enemy by Fifth Column or other- wise. Our sons are fighting and giving their lives for great causes and high ideals, it, there- fore, behoovcs us to see that we at home put no obstacle in the way to shatter their ideals and undermine their morale. s: w a a Every person who buys a War Savings Cer- tificate does a patriotic action, and at the same time gets himself a good investment and a‘ cushion against post-\var hard times. Every person who caslies in a Certificate miucccssarily, l docs an unpatriotic action, cheats himself of,’ part of its value, and weakens the shock ab-i sorbcr which may save him from nasty post war | bumps. The Certificate for which you pay $4. ‘now, is worth $5 if you keep i! to maturity. If ymi cash it in after six months you only get $4 for it. Net loss $ii And actually you lose more than that, because by spending your l$4 at present high prices you get less value per 'dollar than you will when prices are back to . I man or beast. Dr. George W Stavraky (University of Western Ontario) ha; applied this knowledge for the benefit of the Royal Can- adian Alr Force. He conducted re- search of oxvizen at altitudes of more than 10.00 feet. He determined the exact amounts of GXYEGII and carbon dioxide needed for the best action of adrenal glands. He found that unless a man's blood contains certain amounts of bot-h oxygen Bud cflrbfln dioxide the adrenals do not perform their function effici- ently. Hence the man can't fight. The Food Controller say! there will be ratlonlnz of most foods ln Canada before the end of thl: year. Why not think about lt now and prepare for a. bang-up back yard garden to produce fresh greens for the table, real health food for the Summer sea-son? —St. Cath- srlnes Standard. W. A. Walgreen of flaxstaff. Arlz. not more than a laugh out of a story told by Rank Bradley, B. Navajo In- dian, at an Amerclan Legion pos 11169508 — he got s little something to think about. says American Leg- 1011 MBBdzine. A ZPOUp of tourists were making the rounds of the old Indian ruins near Kayenta, ln the NRWJO country. and at one of the cllff dweller villages they had to lesvs the cor and walk some dist- ance. ‘Then someone remembered he had neglected to lock his car -and all began to worry. "It ls perfectly safe," assured the Indian guide 231cm is't a white man within fifty on." According to s statement Issued by C, M H Q., statistics on discip- line show that the proportion of Canadian troops who get into trou- ble with tlm police ls small, and steadily decreasing. For example, ln the first quarter of 1942 only ons- sevenlti of 1 percent. of the Can- adian Army in Britain were involved ln police court cases oLall kinds, including traffic offences. In the next quarter there was an 11 per- cent. decrease in this proportion. The Bmph for the nblrd quarter took a slight upward trend, but. even so, the proportion of soldiers who got Into troub'e with the police was 5- 1-2 percent. less than ln the first uunrter. In both field and static formation; there l5 a smaller per- centaee of personnel causing trou- ble than in January. 1941 —Can- ndfl’! Weekly (London). During the nnst few years there as been a belle! among some well- to-do parents. and some nt-hers not so favored but. who have what they call “modern. un-to-date ideas about rearlnlf chllrlren," that youngsters shtWlrI hnvr little or no fondllmz and cuddlnlz. If there are any of the older izenrratlon who have been so "sat upon“ fov their views. they can now take comfort from an art- Me hv Dr. Dornlihy W Baruch ln The American Journal of Odlrhopay- f“1ll'liT,V. It nnlnts out that one- third of seventy-two nursery child- ren of educated well-to-do parents showed evlddnce of mnlndluslment Thev bad all been deprived of "cud- dllnn" experiences by mothers who were trained tn the advanced Ideas of the present time. As soon as the "rlon‘t touch" mu... of the parental rianged to tender affection and- closi- maternal contacts. the youmz- stars, who had been deprived of I- comm ma, m. Degple o; Prince m hidden ambush of the new at s-ummerside Journal of lebrusry ac . - Sir,— The matter concerning so Th, mufiae, o; m; gsle. remember many people on the Island Just . still now is not. nquestion or Prohibition You sail for freedom and tsko East-l but. the lack of enforcement. IPA-our land you the letters written by the Temwr- W!!!" W“ "m 151d gm" W" "bl ance Press committee, one would. 8! B9910" "8 Edward Island were indifferent to this muffler]? this l]: far frommbzlni o d m,‘ ‘loom correct. e poops are pro s _ against the nmklngtfigndt seipng ‘:1, Hfltwgégtc, “F” mu‘ “Md °“ u“ poison moons ne, mac - ' hm h_ u, suits of which have been shown And Y,‘,}§“,',,$“,,, g G c“ "em repeatedly in our Courts. What is .11., flying death, the swarming aggravating and deplorable is that’ my" o; 13m the booteggers of this poison are 3.11 m4 59in back, as Nelson sall- I war. Th‘; llgng Inn; shape which lurks c not punshed and all their dens m,“ on, closed up. And Bhflw U8. "W0. Ill Ila 0f Vlic- Do the Temperance Press Com- wry. mittee wish to see the Prohibition ' t u Act fully enforced and these boot- —-\- E- T°m"'“°“- °f “we” - loggers put out of business, or do, Elwlmdi m gfibrflg: York Herald they think it sufficient to writs letters in a. vague way about the‘ Brewers and Distillers of other Provinces? Since I last wrote on this sub- ject, one bad place, the Soviet Cafe, according to the letter from the Attorney General ls not $- erating at present. I see in c The Socrot of Russia's Success 4th in referring in these closings,‘ says: "Not; from snv system of ro-‘ -ly- pentence or any other reason but, they have run out of the necossar ' 3- (7- LEWIS ingredients, etc." While people 1| An mum"), ‘mush; 1mm '06 glad to hear of even this late. my o m, Don closing for any- reason, why should gl-‘mrm w“. ‘Qqum; o; it be left w these bootleggers to m, vol‘; Wm “w. u ; m h decide when to close their businesanl mmmgy (m- m, norm or t s instead of the Law beinl unforced. 351mm,; rggionl on m; west, to close them? this rcxion is bounded by the Thlshrinaklngtriind tjeléinid 2f“ P018011; Black Sea. and ghe ‘to. or "Agov: moons ne w re con- tho south y no orn sequences is the most serious blot ‘Quarry of mciont Persia, now on our Prohibition province, and known as Iran, and the eastern all real Temperance Peeps should par - of tho northern boiuidar of insist on something being done Tur ey. It; lensth, from nort to without delay, to engrce ttche Law.‘ south. iawpgpilltmwgloomllpfesuntgt iii: , r, . avers o m - I am CRUBSADB. om 08f thinrlahest ifilrdfliflfidflf are‘: marl , . , for arcs, e wor an or sum iii Hitler would be wlllln: to sacrifice COAL SUPPLY PROBLEM the lives of s million of his men. , Here. in this Caucasus region, Sh‘.- ‘Ilhe loss of s.s. "ciisi-iom- in 1940 W" l_"'°d"°°d $°-"8°-°°° town" and the recent mishap; m wm of as rich I GU53? of crude 5x5. "Prince Edward" must. bring °u l“ w" H" “Xi'an ‘man ‘my to the notice of all of u; the rli 9m" ‘m we“! 1n‘ the fad‘ n of our having our source of suppiy Mam’? _‘ n°w m‘ ° m“ absolutely cutoff partimlarly during fiwfw“ jqfgmg; oxnugl‘; the whiter season. As regards flour vu‘z°°°u"b°m“d m‘ n“ new‘ a" and other food supplies one of our Canadian ice breakers could fairly “m t” M" 1325 mum“ w“ o’ well take care of this via. the Pic-l (fixzgwvglgifhklalf ix; ‘§§"§§‘§,§“,‘,§ ton-Georgetown route. As regards “u” “Qmhwen W“; m1. cost this could not be handled by; cum,“ m, Ammmm glaizsgxilwélnary ice-breaker for obvious m“, w“; "y, ‘a; pmggwgpn, At this date we understand um qffiu“, '22‘, 2,11, “h... u §§ our coal yards are practically sunk iii Nlsrzsnl (um miles east denuded of soft coal s0 nocessn y o1 Tylm), Supss. Shtrahagn. Step. to the comfort and penhaps the pa, mg other laces, ' existence of the poor and many But mo C!“ e oil as it comes otlkiiegshuasonmoxéila can “undo-artisan; agmmtlfifgsrth ls of nonupo either wa aonwoubn ryoroconoo ur- anythlng serlo happen to N: "Prince mdwardmlsland"! . the mo! ofl for My suggestion is thlgz- "Hove lubricating oil for machine ar- the Federal and Local governments lflfl “mid collaborate in giving this province and the gssollno for trucks m priority in the supply of m1 mg Elmo! must first be refined from guarantgg m; Dqymgnfi gm- "n", o crude oil. Caucasus has this on m, mum o; w, “ma.” some of the lamest of! refineries situation. Then next summer o: ma” "Tm" early autumn wm-l the nmmm. Tho refine handling the loll or the “Senna.- bdng 0",, g “mo” for the Bsku-n tum pipe-llnot ias ent supply of coal to fonn is largo gums? s‘ “lgfliéalflwllfiigoofzoq sufficient. 101' flOXb Illliiblf ‘mpulfiznt w“ wan tons c°§,'*,‘f,,,§§“,‘,’,‘“d,fl°;‘ 51:11:" u’ u: Grainy. Armlvlr, sud Krasnodar. from m“ rem." u Nqukgwmdl . but the Caucasus ls not. only deposit the plyment for some with om us,’ m1,,‘,!,°§}§,'§,_'{,°'lf“,,,,§“; ‘wme lwvemmfl“ Mild“ °°' 5° great and diverse agricultural pro- forwaded ln turn to the oosl eom- duct“ comm-L In m, ldayglnlgl)! . $110M V - By the following spring the coal m; xii“ __' ‘Zen We fiuml "W"! be distributed and vnld for mu prlrnltlvs condition prevailed and the two novemments released lntho Caucasus as well. In fact, from their guarantee liability. Th: m; qondltlon of tho additional cost such as cheap Quads, gums;- m- peasant - the name extra hflndllmz- would be slight by which he was hemi- known - as compared with the safety of our wls even worse than that of his @081 WVPIY- Russian brother. Pbr whlls the I Mn. llr m. lam: often h u much u Cdlllmflm. slsvon sons cs1! his own, tbs former hill seldom more than nine. Moreover, relatively speak- lng, it was not good land. The e s or rum “I. Inhlstory ‘Ptnlfcannovorbosstctthoondofihe page nor at tho closo of a your. Tho end of one chapter tolls tho hoginnlng of another. the close of the old your tho opening of a now. Standing within the throohold of 1943, tho challenge is of the ages, a call for courage amid toil and trlol and sacrifice. Wolookbackuponuyoarofclaudandpain, hollowed by tho docilh of horooc. Their valor is ransom for our future, and has opened for us the vista of triumph now sketching ahead. Lot us not loss what they havo bought. Al wo press on to victory, lot tho flmno o! our faith bum brightly. With gratitude for tho past, with couruqo for tho present. with faith for the future, lotus roconsocrate ourselves toourtulkudothoondthattoxmontmoybe lifted from men's hearts and poaco como for all nations and PQOPIOI. from the 72nd Annual Report o! tho Sun Uh Alumna Company o! Canada. SUN LIFE OF CANADA SAVE WISELY TODAY — ‘FOR TQMORRQJZ Copy w also Annual Report 1w Jim gladly mu uu oral-w» II. C. BOIIAKEI , Local Maillot Charlottetown, P. l. I. BURN BRIGHTLY .* IMPROVED DIRECT AIR SERVICE TO t“ 51 MI II B“ South and West. Fare: Boston -— $32.80. information: Maritime Airways. 1 Md Th: shortest distance between Charlottetown and Boston and New York is via Northeast. Big Zl- paslenger Douglas planes opcrltl on convenient schedules through Moncton, N. B. , to Boston, connect‘ ing to New York, Washington, the SCHEDULE: Leave Charlotte‘ town st 4:30 P.M., arrive Boston 8:55 P.M., New York 11:00 PM; York -— $44.75. Reservations and Central NORTHEAST AIRLINES New laughe The ls an south lniz m enla p over 3 Lion wealthy‘ farmers) ever had. wore better clothes and had short- er hours to work than they. Those were facts which could not be in. Today an individual ls a curiosity in the Caucasus. Northern Caucasus ls same as that of the Ukraine and and the new spinning and weav- each year. wn, that from the Caucasus does not nave to be bleached. Professional Bards Swedish ‘ L 1942 lmounted to 365.000 d off and, finally, they gsvo compared with 415.000 a during the previous year. wheat yield per acre 1n the _,_,__ about. the ~- lmportant crop. Further cotton is extensively grown ills of Lenlnnkan ln Arm- roduce from 117.000 spindles 0 million yards of textiles Unlike Egyptian cot.- I i (To Bo Continued) “w lfififl, ' m" ° on the rnurkcl only thins to do was to hitch h wife and one 0r two of his Irown sons or daughters to the p ugh. ‘nits-moans of ower did not make for deep cul vstlon. Toduyyst Ions 90 per cont of s11 mount Mldlnu in the Osu- cus sro included in collective “COMPLETE fu- . The wooden ploughs srid flslls have given way to great )9 um xiii-mm. Blltdthll change wsgnotih ofnsdsy. Msnyof tho sss-nts wars imbued wltn the Ides, still so much favour- pnsldents, th l. W. ll. ROGERS I Agencies Ltd. ults so prsls - Phone 540-541 ed by our than ls no Iystom worthy ll st of them to oon- It nlWr nod t0 sldcr thbt the ‘Leohcorp- n r " on ntgus wondering oi hrsso this lsw of the lu la," this system of so-cs led free ontorprlss hid loft their fathers u wit!‘ loft thom -wlui ‘an in slim of sir their inborn lll"“".‘i°£‘ nos a es. is: ‘me now buildings? the nee; enterprise. libraries, she. new oommunlt halls sud s11 the strain new mechani- collective llo ll narenliil love. bt-qan lo lmnrove ln temperament and KQHPYWI conduct.- $iTva ‘Craig-Standard. arms. y sow the collective tumors had ls much money to qllslvhs Iulsts gn-Iuvo l“. McLEOD l. IENTLEY Barristers and Attorneys-us law B-A- LLB IAIRISTEN BULIPITOIC I1‘. (hnsdlsn dull of Commons I“ toms. p ‘mm Dr. Bum Swmnch ll‘ on” tskon st mell tunes. 1:0 "o. prevents sll bsd eflllffnu". 5‘ t" '"" ':.-::"':':':a.'.f~»»~- Inuit‘: v Nlon and lflalgffi"' I I HENLEY l Us l. A. BENTLEY l. G IONII ‘I0 IDAN IN Prtnor lines _ .. _‘;'. Z-L“. ALEX w mun: u Wm" "- nsnins-nsn souvn u no onssv sTOnIM-‘lls Ofllosi II Gross Gear Quart RELIEVED H! Honey to boon ersl-‘II Ivory person who ls troubl f with us In in. non-ch W" bowels sliould let s Win13". “Dr. Evans Stomach Mini" n. and m how IIIIWHV "- "' M. ALIAN FARMCR [love nll dlslresslnx MITNIY T0 MONK rrellandfiompauiy, soa-lg,,,,,,,_ h... . F. ARBIIIBALD- Charles-ad Accountants lutorn Trust Inlllflll ,%_q_@-- CIIIIONOIOII LUMBER. EXPORTS nOW-‘l exports dull! ATTENTION SWINE BREEIIERS PIG WORM B! "ling the must 959cm. Macs Pig-Worm Tonic Powder It will thoroughly abolish l“ es of‘ worms and lmllffi" c o health of vour hud- Don‘! (IQIIL Order by DIWYIQI" mull. All orders llfflmlli" standail stands!‘ gnsl synlll’ C i uii ....i rm! m om: 6"“ We” i»! GI n PW“ mu onuflun“: