I-‘l )UR THE Q"A&Q7U_§I9WN_G_UARD|§N __ TllE GNARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Muflllllt: Daily IFuundcd In I887) Prulldnnln Llrut. Col W (‘hulnr I. llnLlfI vim lH-nuhlrnl J ll Burnett. lul I. awn-Inn lJn-ul Pnl n I hlnvltlllllnh nlu). Ellltor null llfllllllllll lIIro-rlul .l ll Burnett. IJ I- lnm-Iul- Elinor-r Frnnu Wnlkn and Llont. Iln l lint-rim. ll r‘ is \ u 10a Amn- inure) NVIINPNIPTIUN ENTER In T‘ I. I lino "P? vv-nri its"! In! I1 Innnlhl s1‘!!! Inr a vunnlhl: an.» fnr mu- mnnlh |\I~l|\1'f\ sr. w» m-v vo-nr: I'M PM ll mM-thl $175 m- ! lnrvilhl: Mr- fm" mu- manna tn nlhrr Prurlnrrl nml FHA $5,011 [III "M" “-,.,.|,|v: chm- m-r vv-nr- 81,00 Inr I mnnlhu MN- fur S mnnflll v-rdlnn mnv he nhtnflnufl u. Tlmnn innnrl New Ynrle (‘arm-r “Ill! llnrl \\'lllhllll'lil Azvnvv I21! Pvt m ‘Fr-mum: Nrwn llnnll lnrL-r l) m . wont-- News Mon-l lluh- nn- Iolnn v um»;- Mnnulon. Nil Iy mm cm Ry “rill Iuvurclny The (‘hnrhnn-n-u-n llulfllllnl‘! ' fllil mnfllu \vu-< \l1~ Na-u n n ‘Sf/tel Sfrtnir/esl Memory is Weaker Than liu- Hen/test Ink.” Tlll ll:~'l).\\‘, .\l.-\R(.'ll 25, 1943 i ‘l he Public Accounts financing in other Accounts tabled in thc dmw a surplus on cur- _. ;:~.-'i-t~ iu liabilities for thc - 1i t- ]trl'ti_\' to necessary cur- autl partly to lhc fitt- with lllv lloiuiuioii Gov- ‘ rift-rt during the war. In- g 1- due to wise govcriiiucntal >llilll be given the but this is a matter iw ~il\|\\lI and discussed in flu till/ill w‘: liltrl_§\'l_ \\':!' Il'§\“l’,'llll*_1 to :1u;tl_\'/.c the Accounts, ' 1- t uld out that under one item alone, I:.l»'"'~n .\ct adniiuistrzttiori, revenue m ll.‘.ll'l_\.‘ 8140.000 is shown. The l'l‘\l'll\l'.‘ {win this source in I955, thc lat-z ytdr of i::t- .\lzic.\lill.'ut KiuYCfllllilBlll, was ulll_\‘ 5.25.141. a diffcretlcc of over $l16,o0o. This not only more than accounts for last year's sur- plus, but \\<-ui'l provide stirpluscs of a similar amount for nnmy years to come. It is to be hoped that while the debate on the budget will cover every phase of provincial financing, it will not be unduly prolonged. Spccchmzilviug for political purposes should be at a (liscouitt “for the duration." It may be' hard to adhere strictly to this rule in practice, but the grim realities of the war and of our vital stake therein should not be absent from any tncinbci-‘s mind. t» _._ ."'\'\lll - ‘.tI‘I>1>l lllill ill 1 to lir. aw» u. Confusion In Its Wake According to Mr. Grant Dexter, Ottawa cor- respondent for a number of leading Liberal papers, the tide of social security has already receded at the federal capital, leaving much con- fusion in its wake. The tidal wave consisted of three imposing documents: the Marsh report, the draft Health Insurance bills; and Hon. Ian Mackenzie! statement to the House of Commons social security committee on health insurance. “It is now agreed" says .\Ir. Dexter, “that it was a mistake to release the hfztrslt report at the same time as the Mackenzie statement and the draft bills. The result has been to create uncertainty and confusion not only in Parliament but throughout the country. The health insurance bills have been largely overlooked, while most people have assumed that the Marsh report is a statement of government policy, which is quite wrong." The Marsh report is a review of social secur- ity in Canada, Great Britain, the United States, New Zealand and Australia. It is purely in- formative aud was designed to enable anybody interested in social security to obtain the basic facts in a convenient form. It does not re- present government policy. There is no sug- gestion that the government has endorsed any of the opinions expressed in it. As for .\[r. Blackenzids health insurance bills, there is a flv in the ointment there too. Ac- g-Ording to .\lr, Dexter, they merely represent Mr. Blackcnzics “desires." The-government, as such, has ncvcr approved of these bills. The refcrcncc to social security and health insur- ancc in the Sticrch from the Throne is in gen- cral terms. The government went no farther than to llll(lL‘l'l.Zll\'C to set up a committee of the ltouse to investigate and report. The bills now go to this committee but without the blessing of thc govcrtniicnt and without having been intro- ducgrl in thc llntlsc‘ of COIIIIIIOIIS and approved in principle. The fact that Mr. MacKenzie did not succeed in having the bills approved by the cabinet is cvidcncc of lack of agreement among nlinistcrs and thc higher civil servants-the so- callt-d brain trust. And it is understood that the cleavage in ldlllllflll is fairly serious. "A Political Mama Dionne" Ill!‘ llIlllfIlX Chronicle (Liberal) is becoming scriou-lyr li.‘|'|[||‘l)1‘4l at the (langcr Canada is facing, lllltlUl‘ present leadership, of assuming the role of safcllilt‘. to the United States, with a chorus uf “Yr-s Men" echoing Washington's evvrv whim and fancy. It says: "Ctuizivln for uiauy Amcriczuts is littlc more than an iulcrcsting gr-vigralthiczil cxcresccncc on their northern frontier-a fitting topic for enquiry on the part of an academic minority who have more time at their disposal than they have influence. For the great majority thc Dionne quintuplets constitute the high water mark of Canadian achievement. “What Canada needs today more than any- thing else is a political Mama Dionne to dn something which will make a lasting and sub- stantial dent in United States opinion. It is a role for which .\fr_ King would be temper- fllllrlllillly unsuited. Klcig lights and flaming hczidliitcs are things which the Prime Minister never achieves voluntarily and seldom in- voluntarily. "lf we are content to play the role of 'Charlcy hfcfilartlu" to [Tucle Sam's ‘Bergen’, if we arc ' '"'" " to be nothing more than an empty shell] echoing the sentiments and thoughts of others, if we want our war achievements to pass Into the vale of forgotten things, if \\'c are content to let the great factories which we have built crumble in the dust, and grass to grow in their place, we are heading in the right direction. For despite thc energy of our war policy we lmvc no pcacc policy and thcre is littlc hope while things are as they are that we will cvcr have one." All too true. As our Halifax contemporary suggests, .\lr. King in the role of a political llama, Dionne simply wouldn't do. . - EDITORIAL NOTES - It is announced that Mr. Charles Bland, Chairman of the (fivil Service Commission has been rcappoiiitcrl for a period uf IO years from April 1 t I It WI Dr Grant, MT’. had good ground for his protest zlgziinst procrastination in thc Car Ferry ruattcr, scciirq thc Legislature look tcu days to hand its resolution to thc fjuvcriioi" to be trans- mitted to Ottawa. i ll< ‘I Young Son-Daddy, what is the difference bctwccn a statesman and a politician? Darldy ——.'\ slatcsnlan, my soil, wants to do something for his country. .~\ [Xylillfilllll wants his coun- trv to do something for him. in u Y! v The licast of the .-\untu1cizition. Lady Day. the iunuviincciiicnt to Yirgiit .\lar_v by thc Angel (iabricl that she should bccutnt- thc itiuthcr 0f Christ (Luke 1:27-38) observed by the Roman Catholic Church and thc Church of linglantl as well as by other denominations. a it t ll Inventors are many but not quite original enough for war purposes. The Inventions Board has received suggestions for 10,424 inventions since its establishment in january, 1940, said a reply tabled in thc lid-MISC of Commons by 'l‘radc Minister" hlacliixtpuit. Prom l0 to l5 pcr ccut have sufficient ritcrit to be referred to a panel of constiltants. About four-fifths of the pro- posals now being received dcal with ideas which have been previously considered or are of no immediate military value, the rcply said. v =1- v v Professor Stephen Leacock is a professional humourist as well as a theoretical economist. [n an article in Toronto Saturday night, entitled “Utitimisin for War 'l'iun'. Good News! .-\ New Party!” He remarks: “lt seems you can‘; possibly hope to get anything out of the liquor interest unless you have with you some sort of showing of clergymen and professors. Lawyers dont help much for that." lle should know from his own experience, for there has just been issued from the Press by “The House of Seagram" the well-known distillers, a hand- some volume on "Canada" by Professor Stephen Leacock, and in a foreword. this is what .\lr. Sam Bronfman, President of Scagrairfs says: “We, (that is the distillers) felt that it ought to be done, and done now; and that no one could do it better than Professor Leacock." * ‘ll ll‘ Ii Referring to the tour'of thc hlaritimes by Rev. Dr, Inskcr, in the interests of the Founda- tion Fund of the Presbyterian Church. that stalwart Pictou unholder of thc faith, The Eas- tern Chronicle, New Glasgow, comes to this sad conclusion: “Surveying thc situation as a whole it is not encouraging and the fear is fr»- quently expressed that the young people in the town Churches are being neglected. They are the ones upon whom will depend the carrying on of the Church of the future. It is to be hoped that thc Church may become rclicvcd of thc dehr that hangs over it, but at the same time it mav be hoped that the Church directorate may not be forgetful of those who constitute the rank and file of the Church even in the isolated places." n a m a: The Berlin radio is giving Adolf Hitler a new description these days, describing hini for the benefit of the Jap-occupierl Dutch East Indies as a “lover of good books." The broadcast, re- corded by the Foreign Broadcast Ititclligcuce Service from a Dutch-language emission beamed to the Far East, refrained from mentioning that Hitler nurtured his “love of good books” at book- burnings in the early days of his regime. Ac- cording to the broadcast, it was Hitler who pro- moted the idea in Germany that “to read is equivalent to a good education.” It’ added that Hitler had sponsored “not only books on Nat- ional Socialism but books on German poets.” The Office of War lnforntzition, which report- ed the broadcast, did not say whether itientioit was made in it of Hitler's chief claim to lit- erary fame-Mein Kampf -—- the bible of Naz- 15m. i!!! An enthusiast writes: lfore than one exponent of Izaak Walton, when equipment was plenti- ful and all that was needed was the cash to pur- chase it, tossed his gear into a corner and for- got about it until the next spring. But not last year. Ile stored rods and rccls, liucs and hooks. flies and lcadcrs, and similar nccds for outings on the woodland streams in more suitable places. Not so long ago. he hauled it forth and give it the once over. Most of it was found to have come through the winter in first class condition - which is just as wcll, cunsiilcring that it's darn- ed hard to get at the present time! These per- sons are all set for the opening engagement with trout——but there are others who are not so for- tunate. However one thing is certain. You can stop ntanufacturiug fishcrincifs needs; you can also ntake travelling almost impossible back and forth from city to streams where fine big trout were caught in years gone by; you can put 0n the pressure all you want to — but it's darned hard to keep thc outdoor enthusiasts who knows thc thrill that court's from battling a fine speckled beauty, off trout or salnton water ivhcn the time comes. There is an urge that \vill not be satisfied until he docs get into action- and thc truc fisherman will not be (latinted by such trivial things as lack of suitable gear or tlw fact that he has to put shault-‘s mare into action. llc WZllllS to fish-mud fish he will, conic what may‘ i llotes By The [lay German anti-aircraft guns which were to stop the punishing Allled alr attacks on ‘Italian cltles have proven Ineffective. Mussolini again is left alone with hls question. “Why does everything have to happen to me?" —-Wlndsoi $1111". In 1942 alone 11 British peers were killed on active servfce, and 4B other holders of titles. These were members of what some misguided people have called "that-effeve Brit- ish aristocracy." -Ottawa Journal. Uulty Is spelling victory for the Russians. Only the most completa form of unlty In war effort wlll spell victory for the other United Nations. The whole country lnust be fighting; just as the whole of the Soviet Union fought at Stalin- grad-Chathnm News. Mlsslsslppl rlvermen are colorful characters, observes Reader's Dlgest. Lzuiky, gaunt-checked Captain Bar- ney, Icr lnstattce. who every even- ing lowers a tln bucket Into the muddy river and drinks his fill of the thick brown liquid. "Keeps my health a-goin‘ good." he says. "It's this here filterln‘ they do to water that causes all the sickness there 1s nowadays. Just takes all the strength out of It " Salnl Patrick's plant. the sham- rock, ls one of the best-known yet; most disputed members of the veze- table kingdom. says Science Service. Nobody knows exactly what three- parted lenf the great missionary plucked to 1 lustrate a difficult pclrit In Christian theology to the doubt- lng Celtic king. The word "sham- rock" Itself means merely "three- leaff’ so the honor is contended for by several kinds of clover and at lenst one species of oxalis. Llfe really begins with a break- down, if you ive through it, And the chances are you will. I had ""112 about t." third year 1n r0‘:- lege, and it was the best course I had. I learned more from It than I did from the profs. The best. thing about it was that I touched bcttunt. and I have never again been scared about; going to the bottom. I've been there, and Iknow, It doesn't klll TnDon Herold In Your Llfe Maga- z e. In the United States the spread of nursery schools was aided by the Federal Government during the de- presslon perIod. Various types of pro-school nurseries were esfnbllsh- ed throughout the country. and some were horned in school bui dings. The number In todcv increasing as a war measure, bu. their function tn the field of education I5 being con- s‘"ntly stressed. The fact. ls they prepare children for school work. Toronto Star. An ingenious bomb which blown apart In midalr and releases a pigeon ls the newest nir weapon, says the magazine Quote. Pigeons are KISSd by the air force where strategy calls for radio silence; but ah‘ above 10.000 feet. is too rarefied to sup- port u tilgeon in flight. So the signal utrps Invented the “burnt? -a can- vas-covcrcc‘ w'rc tube held together with a timing device. When the bomb falls apart the pigeon spreads Its wings, heads for home. New lightweight carrying tubes and fllm now enable the pigeon to carry 1,- 000 words. Warmth of American feeling for hersdf and for China has been made clear to Mme. Chiang Kal- shek In many ways since her arrival In the United States. And. outstand- lng among those expressions of goodwll. are the unsolicited sub- sclptlcns that. are potiring in for Chinese nvar relief. More than $310,000 Ilready has been received, and addi tonal sums are on the way. A friendly people. the Chinese can- not fall to be touched by this respect and consideration for their First Lady and themselves. In the final cvaluticn, however, It. my be found that the official honors she has re- celved will have to yield place to this demonstration of spontaneous gener- oslty. —-WIndsor Star, The frank admission that blunder- Ing cost: American forces their first. major battle with Rcmmel wlll In- crease rather than lower the publ1c's confidence In the army. It Is not easy to admit mistakes. When they can be hidden by censorship It Is natur- ally a great; temptation to do so. But our generals preferred to make an accounting, showing Just how and why our fighting men were out- smarted and outmanoeuvred. The mistakes can be corrected by expert- ence. The Important poiit Is that our generals were not. afraid to ad- mlt them. They have absolute con- fidence in their nbllltv to whip the Nazis and they have pnsscd on their confidence to the people. It Is to be regretted that more of our lead- ers 0n the home from are not equ- allv as wllllng to confess mistakes. -Bost.on Post A large proporflon of the Cana- dian public has consistently shown that. while howling loudly for Can- ada to do more In regard to pro- secuting the war, they wlll not deny themselve; anything whatever to at.- taln that object until they are forc- ed to do so. They want everyone else w make the sacrifices or to practise the self-denies that are 1n- volved. Why, then, continue to make statements about the dire neces- sity of rallway passenger trans- portation being reduced when every b0"? 0f the 61W and night many thousands of people pay no fatten. tlon whatever to such requests and go on travelling as they have al- ways done when It suits their con- venience or their person] pleasure? Whv doesn't the Transport Con- trollcr begin to uet tortgli rind to ration travel as so rnnny other thlrgs are now rntionerlll-Brock- ville Recorded and Tlmes. The new utlllly Iurnllure 1| now i "vnllable. though for the moment only a small quantlty Is ready. It 1s rafioned. "It ls purchasable only on n points system, and only, ngnln, to a restrlcted class of peooc. as the newly married or those about to be married and those who have been bombed from their homes and are desirous nf maklng a new start, The furniture wlll be free of purehnsc tax. 1t may be bought no the hire put-chins.- system. and the prices fixed rover free delivery nvt-r a m- dlus of‘ l5 bills-x Apart. from Its present paucity of Bllwtllp-g 1t 13 my, golnpz to be easy to get. Young couples Or those who wLsh to re- fumfsh will not be able to walk Into a shon and make selection from a w!dc choice. They mv-t. flu"! of all cot n permit. and In the case or a Canada Still Loses_Far Too Many BabIeB (Ottawa Journal) A report on health Insurance no! before Parliament, having been pm- Jared by a committee of exmrts mder the chairmanship 0f Dr. J. J. rieagerty, dlrector of Public Health ESBYVICBS. pays speclal attentlou to the problem of Infant mortality. 1t Is a field In which the position o! mu country, although anally 1m- provecl In recent years, reflect-u no glory at all upon Its people. It Is true that. In I926 tners were 13,537 deaths In Canada of chlldren under one year and onl 7.844 sucn deaths In I940. But. as ate as 1937 Canada stood 17th among the nat- Ions for Infant» mortality-had a rate of ‘I6 per 1,000 DIIUIS, as agnlmt. 31 for New Zealand and, to be falr, 241 for Chile. The United States that year lost only 54 babies out. of each 1,000, and England and Wales 58. In 1940 the Canadian figure was down to 56, but the report does not. give comparative figures for 0th countries. It does glve them 1 provinces, however-New Brunswlc with a shocking 80, Quebec wlth a bad 70, Ontario with a fairly go.d 43, and Brltlsb Columbia with an excellent, 3B. The simple truth ls that our In- fant’ mortallty rate la absolutely within our own hands, and we can make It as good as any In the world If we are wllllng to take the trouble, and stand the necessary and moderate expense. We cannot, save Infant lives by deploring their needless deaths and P3551113 plous resolutions, or even by reports to Parllament. The rem- edy Is nearer home._ In Ottawa to- dav hundreds of children are alive and, well who would have dled but for intensification 1n recent years of our effort to save them. We ave the Board of Health more vls ting nurses. took up seriously the bust- ness of pro-natal and post-natal care and education. and the bene- ficial results quickly were apparent. And that ls the way to cut the Infant death rate-by organized ef- fort In every municipal ty, every cflmmllnill’. by mtelllgent and sym- pgthetlc instruction of mothers by _ in; such tested life-savers as the immunization treatment against dlblitheria. by hfbllc clinics. By ap- nluns. that Ls, to our human popu. lIillOfl the care and thou ht a gcod livestock man glves his pr zed cattle. Briefs from Britain By The Canadian Press Railway porter 1on1‘ Pruuen of W-sflu. bnlg» has collected 200 tons oI scrap n1 less than two years. Rt. Rev. John G. Neville, titular bishop of Cams and Vicar Apos- tollc of Zanzibar, died In Dublin. He was B4. Twenty per _cent of men called up for Lhc British UK, army are rejected on rncdlcal examination, according to the latest available II-gures. Slr Jchn Drughonn, Bl. a shlp- who lost his fleet of nine 1n the last war, died at. Cra-vvley, Sussex. ' John Lindsay Anderson, '13, town clerk of Cupar, Ftfeshlre for 44 Years. died at Dundee. He was an unsuccessful Conservative and Av- rlcultural Party candidate in an East. Fife lay-election In 1933. Mrs. M. Fit ngnam was the first woman dental surgeon In Britain to be commissioned In the women's forces for service with the Arm Dental Corps She holds the m,“ of Lieutenant. Rt. Rev. Bemamln Pollard. Blsh- op of Lancaster and member of the British H""*te Guard served as a traffic mll- I 121D at one of Lan- caster's busiest Intersections dur- ing a ‘Jelivv Ilvw of military vehic- ular traffic, Robert Cross. coxswaln of the Spurn Head. Yorkshire, has been awarded the ld medal of the Royal Nations. Lifeboat Institu- tion. He has saved about 300 11v" slnoe war started. Several hundred book- from the ROYRI Library at Windsor Castle were contributed by the Klnq to the Wlndsov- book salvage drive. Princess Elizabeth and prince“ Yg/Iafiaret assisted In sorting the o0 ' . Incendiary bombs, kglpt as mu,“ onlrs bv people llvlmr In East Du]. with. London. are belmz voluntar- Ilv elven rm to authorities since one o! them exploded recently, Would Include Farm Population In Health Scheme OTTAWA, March I6 — (CP) - Dr- I» C. March. technical ad- viser to the Advlsorv Committee on Reconstruction set up b the Dominion qjovernment early fit m; Wal- wdfly recommended estab- lishment of health Insurance across Canada and sold 1t Is "Im. Perfltlve" that the scheme extgnd Sfiigemlditlitgiinwhat fill]: Ipl Iidinlon neulittig may be." n m‘ “ 1 d be for Cantiiiilan tfitilffhal frislannffci: Dlflllllin‘! t Ht eW-‘fv endeavor must, lpe made to Include the rural and “I'm population and that m]. mlnlstrat vc facilities must. be de- ygg to do soul! they are not n1. .v exist/Int’. Dr. Marsh n14 in a! report submlttcd to 1th; you” pmgttztgrnmotis Social Security Com. grzzgpesalltlf, care In needed by s11 t t. , m‘ liivnnfhe: inliwoin ziiimgenfrvn Council of the Canadian Medlcal Canada's Most couple whose enuagcmcnt. 1s broken "M hermit must be returned-Mar cheater Gunrdlm. pelvic) fat. under this ruling. Penalties are processing. SPECIAL NOTICE T0 All SLAUGNTERERS 0F CATTLE Wartime Prices and Trade Board Order No. 231, Effective Thursday, March 25th, 1943, Requires the Removal from all Beef Carcassev-(before sale)—-of Cerlaiu Internal Fats as Listed Below: (a) All internal fats adhcii-ing to the surface of the body cavity known as crotch (or (b) All internal. brisket fats, including fat in the heart area which does not adhere to the heart when the heart is removed. (c) All internal fans known as kidney fat, and fat adhering to the tenderloin and flanks. (d) All cod fat, udder and udder (dug) fat. Beef frozen prior to March 25th does not come infractions o] this Regulation. Slaughterers can either render the far them- selves or ship it to a packer or rcndcrcr for Further information regarding disposal of these fats can be obtained from your near- est Wartime Prices and Trade Board Office. ——WARTIME PRICES AND TRADE BflARD—- provided [or MAIKUH 25,_124_3 The Immortal lrtfh To clrcumscrlbesp am no ' My soul hath pastured with s us l Upon the meadow-lands of m; Its dwelling u] My mlnd and ear at time; , F: can ht, be om realms d reach W“ our m° The utteraitce of Et , or which all nut-um drills‘ rill’. And hl h above the on refit-Attire llpbedsevillliniriol ‘l? dauntless splrlt mutely sum t/tth 51151112. wngs Olllfllregd -—Frederlck George :. i? FR ShLE Snull hnn of late lime; l Judson at Alexandra, 20 m more or less. with "my", additional; large resldenc plumbing and electric Wlrln hlillulld- lfilfllhone avallabl on paved road open n] m sons, nlx miles from Charlntfg. town; splendid view and Slllll . location: large modernly gq. "llllled hum In excellent con. dltlun: lllllll orchard. For particulars lpply p, undersigned. MARION L. McCALLUM, Cross Roads. llxecutrl ~1 l ATTENTION Swine Breeders NOW l: the time to zlurl agnlnst PlG WORM u, pun: the most ermine Baseburner AND Brooder HARD COAL Finest Quality — _ — Any Quantity A. PICKARD Es’ CO. PHONE 240 Assoclatlon endorsed the general Drlnclple of health Insurance but; reserved the rlght tn accept or relvct any speclgc plan which might. be propose .) ‘The key fact." said Dr. Marsh, “ls at most, famlly Incomes, ex- g onl those at. the highest levels, are lifflclent to meet, e ooa of continuous or serfous 11- Many computations had been made of‘ the yearlv amount re- qulred on a r caplta bash; to pro- vlde a stun ard amount. of medl- Th nerally __ n 24. It mly be that. nothlng except experience wlll establish what should be the most ustlflable and a. roprlate char es or a national system. The set lement of a scale, to >0 Wt Into operation subject to revew after I stated tIme, ever should be sufflclent all do made on the collec- MVS m0bllllflll0n of’ Lhg ngqggggry Iupéis" WM Berwrn-llv conceded that "thcel maxhnum posslble range" of me Ical old should be available. Dental care mlght “Rasonubl be somewhat. llmlted" at first, i)“- ostlc facilities. like X-rav for uberculosls, should be Included igrutipfllgnpneiyagnglve vrputes. Speplal pecla s ' serv oes m ht. be drafted. o problem was me extent. lfld manner In whIch members of I fl-mllv should be brought wlthln "l? 800W of‘ health Insurance. It was dlstlnctly preferable" "lit every male eontrlbutor to W4 111511181100 scheme should pay the same rlte-‘tnat In effect Into the 0n fund an amount to hi! Wife. actual or potential." puts was the practice In health nsurance legislation In other copntrlgsal“ n n a on. It was necess "M" Bu" W Drovlde nutomntlcalli LY that. the contribution of the w}: lltlelzg of‘ the family "carries t. for all hlsielilfditenig medic“ care urn/macro vfiifia vyalml- 37559810 Ruaslnn town {Ihlldkjopulntfon of 20.000 beford Popular Cocoa NAZIS ILL-TREAT GEBMANS LONDON -T<oP>- Germans In- terned In Norway by Nazi offlclais because they would not. serve on the front In Finland are beaten, kicked and struck with bayonets, being treated worse than Russian prisoners of war there, my; the Norwegian Information Bureau. o "’\(0-\r\( I|"|I ‘ usuum" U n‘! "Pu vuo .907 THE f Mortgag: Sale There wlll be sold by Public Auc- tion In front ol the County Court House at Sourls In Klnl’: County In Prlnce Edward Island on Saturday tho Seventeenth day of April. A. D. I943 at the hour of Iwolva o'clock noon ALL THAT TRACT piece or parcel of of land lltuntc lylnl and being It Rollo Bay Cron Ronda In Lot or Township Number Forty-low (“J In Kln ‘l County lforonld. on bound and duorlbed ll lol- lown that In to uyz-lloundod on tho Wen by the Bur Blur Llne Ind: on the North by land In on ol’ Michael Sweeney: on the Eon by land In possession of Flilelle beagle. Jr» and on the South by the Rollo Bay Road leudln from Sourla West to the Head of ollo Boy lllll con- taining by cstlmntlon TWENTY- FIVE ACRES of hm! n lllllo more or less and being that part of the farm formerly owned by Ollvor Cheverle which ls attuned North of the Rollo Bay Bond The above lulu l: made under and by virtue of onl! ununt m n power o ule oontulu In on Innlenturo of Mortgage ban-lug date the loooml dly of December A. l). I916 and made ‘ ‘ Mlry Choverlo o Rollo Bay Centre. In King's County. In Prlnco Edward Island. 8gp“: ur F. McQuald of South In King’: County llorenld Executor onl Trustee under the loll Will and lol- umcnl. of Inn L. Mellon: decealcd: and henna of Ilelnl having been mlde ln the Dlvmonl of the prlnclpul and Interest nee- ured lhereb, For further particulars apply lo Arthur F. Moquulul. Bollcltor. Sonrll P. B. Dated this Ninth day of March A. D. 1M3. ARTHUR F. McQUAID Executor and Trustee under the l!!! WIll and Testament of Allan L. McDonald. deceased Martina. l-ll-Il-Il-I-II on the market Macs Pig-Worm Tonic Powder _ It will thoroughly abolish ll] trlcu of worms and Improve the health of vour herd. Don't delay. Order hv phone 0| null. All orders promptly lt- tended to. - GASSY STOMACIIS RELIEVE-DD Every person who Is troubled with gas In the stomach and bowels should act a bottle o! “Dr. Evan: Stomach Mlxturefl and up how qulclrlv It wlll » llcvc all distressing symp- tonal. Dr. Evan: Stomach Mlxlun taken at meal times. not onl! prevent: ill had effects lrvll q but. It promotes the func- lnnnl ucIlvlIy of the stomach nnlnst digestion and lmprovrl the appetite. Price 85c oer bottle. Tllli. TWO MUS I49 Great Georn Street Mall Orders Given Promlll Attention Professional Carl McLeod t? Bentley W. E- BENTLEY. K. C- J. A. BENTLEY, K. G Barristers and Attorneys-al- Law IiloNI-zv T0 1.01m I54 Prince Street flan...“ H.F. McPhee 8A.. K- NOTARY 8w. BABBISTER SOLICITOR Blloy Building Charlotte! illorrelland Gompan .11. F. Ancmaun Chartered Accountants lantern Trust Bufldln: ' Charlottetown 5 m BALMER 8. HASL A. s. IIASLAM. a. A. L!» B- BABBISTE Bank o! Nnvn S00 Charlottetown. uouux. T0 Phono u Bell's MATHIES MONEY T0 LOAN Charlotte! - Inland Bloc! flunuon P B. EYES EXANINE AN BLASSE J. S. TA YLO ‘i OPTOMETBIST New Loentlon 5 "til-fill 2.22:". I In: "update “fulfill-T l."