the 5V?) %%,+ .99? Q u 0 "s to; 9 l .00 BASEMENT BRINGS EIGHT NEW STOC KING VALUES We've been telling you pretty often that the BASEMENT is a good place to shop of you're interested in eco- nomy . . . REAL economy. These eight values in stockings invite your inspection . . . Children’s Ribbed Cotton Hose. Sizes 51/9 to 91/2. Black and White . . . . . .. 2 Colors, Fawn, 5c.‘ Children's Sub-Standard Cotton and Rayon Hose. Price Sizes 6% to 10. -- 29c. Ladies Sub-Standard Rayon Hose in New Spring Shades. Sizes 81/; to 10. Price Ladies Cotton and Rayon Sizes 8% to 10. Specialat Standard Hose. 29c. Sub- G- Ladies Sub-Standard Hose in Mer- cerized Cotton. Chlldren’s Ribbed Sizes 8% to 10%. Special 3 5c. Cotton Hose in two New Spring Shades. Sizes 5 to 91/2. Special 39c. Ladies Rayon Hose in New Spring Shades. Sizes 8V2 Prices 3 to 101/. Special Ladies Sub-Standard Hose in a mix- ture of Cotton, Rayon and Wool. Sizes 81/3 to101/ m the Basement . . . to keep prices low there are no approbntions . . . no charges . . . all sales for cash. Please carry small parcels. Thank You. We ‘income s. Miusoo @118? RADIO — ’ TRANSMISSION Eastern Daylight Saving Time WAVELENGTH Throughout 10.30 pm.) Western Canada 33 b2 m (to 10.09 p m.) 40.10 m (from Canada and U.S.A.-3l.32 m 26.53 SATURDAY, MARCH 14 P. M. ~ 6.15 ‘LOndOIl Cellini.’ 6.30 ‘Secret Mission MW-d. 0.00 ‘Southern Serenade,‘ directed by Reg Leopold. 6.80 ‘Calling the West Indies‘: News-letter and Postscrlvi- (Ltb ‘Iho News. 0.56 News Anslyli-I- ‘i.00 War Oonmwntsry: ‘The War at sec.’ Tull b! 110-9!’ ruby. 1:0 ‘Listcoiing '7 5 News n INTI - 1.80 ‘Canada Oslls from tendon’ (in collaboration with 0B0): ‘Gentlemen with Wlnfll’ l 00 Talk: ‘Life Over Hers.’ 8.15 ‘London Ollllnfl.’ I 90 ‘Britain Speaks.’ are Trent Line Films. e oo Headline News and views. r» M. o 1s Weekly Visit u. the American Eagle owe. 04d m Voice of n1» Nazi.‘ Talk bv cum-t mama. o as Interlude. ' 10.00 ‘Imam mndml Buli- Boar.‘ 10.30 ‘London Calling.’ 10.40 The Daliy service. 11.15 ‘lira 1: 11.80 Radio Newt's-Reel. Trout 1.111s r111».- Talk: ‘Life Over Here.‘ 'l'he News. - A. M 12.00 12.15 12 30 l2 4i Close down. When these air-raid sirens go off it means black-out. Four units we" delivered to the CJRC. Mon- treal recently and 34 other large sirens will be delivered shortly. These sirens are ullflllbfl b! "vb hpfsgpowcf ‘ . Eight smaller units will be acquired at a later date. ‘Ii “No Price Is‘ Too Great” Says Flier Ere Death "The sacrifice may be nest, but it is dwarfed by the magnificentend to vmich we are pointing. No prise is L00 great." S0 wrote Flight-Sergeant Regi- nald F. Robb to his father. Ju s W. 'l‘. Robb o! Orangeville, short bcforc he gave his own life in the cause of world freedom. The Royal Canadian Air Force last week listed Flight-Sergeant Robb as “Killed in action, F». 36." liis final letters. father under the shadow 0f immi- nent death, were eloquent, manly and full of Only 51X weeks before he was shot down he wrote: "My luck is still holding out and I think that I am almost a ‘sure thing’ to come out of this war alive." Robb was only 25 and, like the thousands of other Canadians over- Scu-M his most frequent thoughts were of his homeland. Love of Homeland increases. “Absence makcs the heart grow fender," he wrote, "Indeed, I never before realized the full significance of mat thought and my love for all those things that are behind has inn-tensed not tenfold, but by a mil- lion times, since I so quickly wan- dered out of that scene . . . It is the knowledge that there are people at home who are depending on you that drives one not only to do his best but just a little more, and it is this spirit that is going to bring a Iriuuutliant conclusion to this slrllggie in which we are presently engaged. For if we fall, then all is lest, not for ourselves. but for the vast civilized world made up 0i good people like ourselves. “I find a great relief in putting my most innermost thoughts in collcrcle form. For when I allow nlysclf to act thus it has the sanle effect us climbing up through the siol-mv night sky, and when you have. finally fought your way through the raving elements you find l/Qlllfivlf in a. star-clad dome, which echoes and re-echoes peace and tranquillity." Jignin he wrote: “Our work here is pretty danger- our. but its exciting, and no matter wlmt price I may pay, I’m still glad that I joined this branch of the service. We all live in the present- forget the past and never dare think of the future-for if we did we would die a thousand deaths. The only rather disheartening thing is to wake up in the morning and 11nd that one of your pals’ beds lnisift been slept in—for then you know that he didn't come back from his trip." Shortly before Christmas he wrote: "Christmas soon will be up- on us. ‘Pence on Earth, Goodwill Toward mcif-ullat. a mockery, with the world locked in a death stmugle for existence . . . .1 fear xve shall never live to see that glor- inus millennium when we will live at peace with our neighbors." The spirit of the R.C.A.F.. bom- ber crews is well illustrated by an- other note which said: "I have a g-cod cr:w now and as we are weav- ing around a target we sing and pull wisccruck; and you would think we wore nt a picnic, The 011191‘ pill we were having a little trouble and everything was pretty quiet wlwn lhc front gunner yelled 11p through the Inner-Comm, ‘Let's to bnmb lint policeman standing on the cornr.’ Ah, mci It's the little things in life!” WIVES ARE FUNNY PEOPLE BUT HUSBANDS ARE TOO! Wivc: are strange people. A wife is a woman who wanted to marry u man that other women xvamctl and than doesrft like it when they continue, to want him after 11¢ becomes a husband. A ivlfc is a woman who tells the world licw much her husband kzlnws- and tells h’m how litle, A wife is a woman who wants hall‘ the credit for her husband's success-Aunt wants full credit for making a successful home. A wlié is a wcman who knows when her husband needs a haircut but doesn't notice when he gets 011C A wife is a woman with whom a man does no‘. Ziesltate to talk about sordid more)‘ matters. A wife is a woman who once thought a certain man was perfect. A wif-P l5 a “cl-nan who had more than one chance to marry. A wife is a woman M10 loves a man mon- wheq he comes home tired nncl discouraged than when he comes home with news of a raise A wife is :1 wcmmi who was once able to make s. man think she understood 111m. In fact, a wife is a woman. Husbands, loo. arc strange 990919 A husband is 11 man who thinks his wife is lucky and doesn't know it. A husband is a man who is con- vinced he can read the paper while his Wife talks to him Mid Still 210i- miss anything important. A husband is a man who reminds 1115 wife cf the no-goods he saved her flcm marrying. A husband is a man who "your gnn" when Junior wrecks the family car and "my scm’ when he is elected captain of the football team. - A husband is a man whose wife can drive all right-when he's not in the cor. A husband is a main who will W011i‘ any necktie; his wife picks out. A husband is a man who says brightly, "Honey, why don't you get Mrs. Jones to give you her recipe for biscuits?" but would be insulted if his wife said. "Why don"t you at Mr. Jones to tell you now to handle your clients?" A hirtbnnd ls a man who never grows loo old to not-ice s nice figure. But why go on? A husband is a man. POLISH SECRET PAPERS STOCKHOLM — (C?) -— Secret newspapers arc (llstributed in Pol- and. Their unpaid working at con- stant risk of their lives. have access to carefully-concealed " tcning ra- dio listening posts, written to his 00mm youthful confidence. 5 lvzwsv NATURE NOTES . “It! I; “l” A_ YEAR WITH THE ‘IWEIS 1M! objectl in nature change their appearance so markedly vrith the seasons as our fomt. trees. Consider almost any ope of the 0:1 dec uous trees-fie maple on ur lawn. the oak in the field or e willow beside the . How greatly their appear- snoe alters during the year! In the spr we see on t-he bare twig; the bu swelling daily, so that sradually the tree takes 0n a soft velvet green, a pale brown or a dim purple as the young leaves unfold. the hue of the tender lee! varying with different trees. But whatever this early tint, the whole trees grows greener and greener as days pass, until in summer all is a mass of verdant foliage. However beautiful our trees maybe in the full flush of slimmer vigor. this beauty is increased many-dole‘ when iihe chilly days of autumn touch and tint the leaves. The summer green, in all its various diadcs, now gives way to yellow. orange, purple, red. crimson and golden-blown. Gradually this fiery fades and as the year rounds out 11x four full seasnrls we see a in bare limbs and naked twigs showing out the stark contour of the tree. This is true of most of our forest trees. But there are bthers. many of them smaller trees, and even mere shrubs. which outdo our larger tiees in beauty. They so through all the interesting changes of the seasons in turn, and =till an- other phase of their oum. We may admire the oak. the elm, the maple or the ash in the early spring. But all these fall short. of the lovely wild crab, the delicate saskaioon. the rl/h hawthorn snrl the beautiful wild plum in their masses of fragrant blossoms. Some oi these bosscm out in all their glory before {he leaves, making the little tree appear as though cloth- ed in pure white or crknson folinur. Generally a tree having conspic- M115 blossoms prcduces fruit inim- 50 that many of these "flown-ring" trees have a second phase cf henn- ty. The wild crab has its clumps of yellow apples, the ssskntcou its masses 0f urine-colored berries. the hawthorn, bunches of sum-rt hmvs and the plum its purple-red fruit. the glory of the fruit as well as of the flower, No chat on trees would be com- pletc without mention of im- ever- greens. Amid the 011111121711: panor- ama ircm twig to frlingo in nil its colors and to twig nrrain with the seasons, the staunch evergreens remain constant» in their deep sombre greens. No u-esther, no sea- son alters them. The pipe wood. the hemluok grove and the cedar swamp always apnrar fullv clothed 1n their needle-foliage. But. with the coming of Willi/P!‘ the evergreen forest. is t-ransfcmied Into a scene of rarest hesutv as thr- puw white snow gleaming in tihn winter sun- shine or glistening in the ‘light of the frosty full moon. vpeigihs down the dark limbs belc-w. ~ Nor would a rhnt on the ever. greens be complete without men- tion of the larch, or tamnrack, Nn_ lure seems t’; have d-"iqned this pretiv graceful mexrbrr of the _ rest to be a sort cf con voting link between the broad-lea ed de- Cidilblls tr ,s and the nadir-bear- ins! conif." nus trre=. In shrine! w? find the tamarnck swamp, hereto- fore SI) barren and brown. izlzlps! on a soft verdant hue and her-cm- ing green urifih the mreuiinir of tinv need!" day by day. And In autumn, after a. surrmcr of thick foliage of green needles. the tree fades into s rials Wlhw 111"" grad- uallv the wilted needles drrn saw-w leaving bl""l‘l'l’l cones persisting on im- iwlzs ‘hrrvivrbnut the winter. And so ih" forest Irccmw with its crest varielv of fve": and ‘fien- different ‘h-"Nis of le-‘tlpr’. fluv- efinsz and fvllmz p new wonder- ful panorama of change. SPRING BROOK SCHOOL The followin" is the report for tte month of February: Grade X~L Ruth Mock. Grade VHF-l. Erma Marilee. Grade VlI—l. Austin Wizmore. Grade Vl~1. Beulah Mnclinr‘; 2. Cecil Psynter; 3. Shirley Wig-more. Grade V-l. Walter Cole; 2. Jean Cole; 3. Uoyd MacRae. Grde V (a)—1. Jane Fletcher: 2. Wesley Cole; 3. Robert Jdivmore. Grade IV (bl-—l. Byron lilac-Rae. Grade III-J. Franz-es Jfilllulwfe: 2. Mildred Co‘e; 3. Hugh MrmRrw. Grade 11 (a1_1. Clarence Payn- ier: 2. Bobby Fletcher. Grade I1 (bl-l. Alvin MacLcod. 2. Keith Paynter. Perfect Attcndance:- Ruth Mock. Penzle Campbell, Alvin lifnclleofl. -Tcacher. R. Wizmore. our 01m W_A:Y n11: cmm_ GUARDIAN TIMELY NOTES ON TOPICS CONNECTED WITH Silver Fox Farming ' Will See away your coat you will $14.95 t0 $27.95. clothes and accessories. E GLORIA wsluzllutu iiulil pullc 9, shown to be so closely linked with household hygiene losses in f storage and municipal sanitation, that considerable thought has been given to rodent control practises. By exercising reasonable fore- thought very effective control can be developed by proper adjustments in construction of buildings. These often c2111 be made with little or no additional cost. Three important modes of attack are helpful in rat control activities. <11 Rat proofing the structures. (2) Eliminating their hiding places. (3) Keeping feed in covered containers. Community campaigns against rats are more effective than when action on individual premises is carried out. The migratory habits of rats make it possible for a continuous supply of these pests to kee com- ing into premises where cean-up efforts are regularly conducted, The problem of mt control has become of suu- economic and hygienic mean.» that widespread campaigns are being organized covering entire cities, Fur farmers, who are often victims to a great extent, seem to put up with rat depradatlons with- out nmking an adequate defense. This is wrong and every fur farm- or should decide to take measures to eliminate the rat and mice nuis- £11106 as it. is a potential source of great danger. The mating season is rapidly divining to u close and when this month is complete it will be at an ei1zl~or almost at an end. Reports reaching us lend to the belief that matings are much latrr this semen than usual on many fur farms. Just \'.|'il' the cause Ls we 01111.net say. Maybe the rancher is not feeding ag heavy as other years, cr perhaps the milder winter had something to do with it. Lots of ranchers tell 11s that they" like In have their llt~ ters come late. that they find it easier to raise them and that the pelts of late pups bring just as good, if not better, returns than the earlier born ones. in our own case -we have always had better success with our earlier litters. Why this is so we cannot say. unless the foxes take more exercise in the colder weather. It seems to the writer that we should take precautions with inter litters, to have the fe- mlfle let's brflrrels l-"pt in a laxative condition mrfl-lnq ~,~| veins easier. Researchers in il-c United States have shown two factors that have causcd losses of pups, (l) feeding too much ground green bone, (2) s no daxativs diet causing the fol 00d macs to get tied up, thus making wlielping difficult. In the illustrations o! prize win- ners at the Wisconsin and Nebras- ks pelt shows we note that the sp- pearanee 0i the pelts is quite dif- ferent in regard to shaping from ours. “were they seem to concen- trate on having the pelt as wide as possible-some of them are real monstrosities. It is said that they often use s board one inch thick and very much wider than ours, with a. very short neck. Whether this fools the buyer into paying a bigger price we cannot say, but cer- tainly the pelts would have to be re-sliaped before they could be made into neck-pieces. Olmar Brager-I-arsen, who intro- duced the Norwegian platlna foxes into the United States, has, we un- derstand, applied "for " and has become associated with Howard Erickson Underwood, oper- sting fox ranches at Alanson and Harbor Springs, Michigan. We regret to learn of the death of Captain Joel Shepherd Allen, which occurred in Summerslde last Tuesday morning. Captain Allen liad reached a ripe old age and had the great satisfaction of seeing his sens. daughters and grandchil- dren grow up to become useful and respected members of the com- munity they live in. For many years Captain Allen sailed the seven sraa. being one of the best of the deep sea captains. In 1009 he became associated with the late Dr. Alex McNeil] and A, C. Saunders, now Mr. Justice Saunders, in a ranch situated near St. Eleanors. This ranch was visited by Princess Pa- tricia and her father, ilze late Duke of Connaught, in i910, and was af- ter "ards known as the St. Patrick ranch. The company was a very successful one and produced many of the outstanding foxes of the boom years, and furnished the breeding nucleus for many success- ful ranches throughout the province and elsewhere. Had the late Gap- tain Allen lived until August he would have shared with his devoted partner their 65th wedding anniver- sary. To the family we extend our deep sympathy. The whole province was shocked yesterday morning when news was received of the death of G. Shelton COME HEAI-LFELLERS" . 1 WANT WITNESSES! THIS CI.‘ FOSSIL I5 IN‘! HE'S GOT A SET O‘ ‘HORSESHOES HID UNDER A QACK BENEATH HIS $ADDLE ~- I'M ATBOIN‘ YDU GOT IN THIS A-HOARD- EXPECT ME TO WALK ON AN EMPTY STUMM ICK! TO REPORT HIM! RATIONIN’, WITH no coop m ‘m’ cup- aomo "so now-r T --_- __q_ ....__¢ WE SPEAK of EASTER 10w! Just lioinc in and You Costs for Easter and days to follow are here, coats that are beautfully styled, metic- ulously taiiored ., . Smart coats these . .. . Yet so very moderately priced! AND by laying Easter, that is why we say get ready for the Easter parade now. It's just being in tune with- the times- planning ahead and making the pennies count. Our coats are priced from Shop at THE GLORIA where you'll get. your moneys worth, plus delightful and becoming scamctaucv i HERB . is A ra-r Bonus rem/own , ‘nu. THE ALL-CLEAR TERRIFIC iauocaoor 0F Gooeaui-w our. 1=16T1c fitfidftldFoe° For. 11-15 MARINiG/ Why have paid for it by CORNER QUEEN AND RICHMOND STS. Sharpe, Ellerslie, PEI. A man of wonderful physique and great mag- he had made his way into the affections of many, and was a most useful member of the commun- ity in which he lived. As a fox ranch- er he was in the forefront years ago when this industry was going strong Al- though not a pioneer he was very near to being one, becoming assoc- what the second phase of the industry. His popularity and good sound judgment caused him to be elected ea president of the Canadian Silver Fox Bieeders’ As- sociation, a position which he held netlsm in the vicinity of his homo. fated with fox ranching in might be called Texnusea fluii 11‘ and Straw? c“. $2150 to ‘3-98 Hats for suits, hats for dresses, hats for lpoflg. time and teatime, m, Choose a sailor, or a hon.‘ I» 0r perhaps a calot. Trimmings of ribbon o; veil, colours of his“, navy, burnt sand, red: rose, Sunibluc, and browm for several years and where s. great deal for the benefit Ii? fi ranchers not only of Prince Edward Island but of all Canada. l-lis cs. leer in politics is wsul knovm, m; also his occupancy of the pcsitlm of Minister of Public Works in p; Stuart and MscMillnn governments, Of late years Mr. Sharpe has con. rvutraied on the production of L1,, best quality Malpeque oysters and has worked up a very gucggufu] business with good connections h Montrea and elsewhere. In oom- mon wi thousands of ranch“ throughout the length and breadth of Canada. we express our deep gmvlgthy w Mu- Shurpe and u» Gilbert Rcney Junta Monies, CsiiL, aircraft worker, thinks cvcn a 111ml- uscs too much rubber. lie built himself a unicycle and this is lww 11c luulfl pedaling to work every morning. By. J. n. Wiliams out: sosanruc uousa give n", Muses‘, w 114s opp-sow IS SD51’ COMING Aaouao caps uoau iN a err or Mas-w wearusn! -<i With 1411.101 110L910 \ \'\\ \\wm \