PAGE FOUR THE BIIARLOTTETDVIII Gllflllllllll Morning Dell! (Iblflllfl III "f" Imus-ss- ucn. Col. w. Clsstsr l. Isl-In V100 sruldussi J, L Burnett. IJ-l. lscrotsryi Usist. Col. D. A. InKlucI. 9-5-9- Iflllnr and Illlllll Dlrbrtcr. l, I llrnssl. IJJ.‘ Assccisss Edltnrlr Frlnl Walker. ail Hus. Ill - fllrnoll, R.C.N.V.l. (OI Ad!" IOIIWNO) SUHIURIPTIOI IATII Iy I111 In P, I. I.. “.00 per your! N.“ fol I Italic, [Lil for l montlsli 50o [or ans month (my Dslivsry $3.00 pu- your: 8.00 for I months 81.7! Ior 8 months: Mai for an month Iy lhll so othcr Prnvinrcs IIIII (LEA. “.00 90f "l? ssmrasy Werlslyr 12m rm n". 01.00 hI-l I'M"- MM for I months Gunillus may l0 sbhlltl II “Ilmn lqnrc, Now Iorli Cnrissr lllli us! Wlshlnflcl lscl ls. Ilia Charlottetown Ilotllllsil’: News Alency. 01d south Ncvi-n Anne!- Bcssnni Metropolitan New: Agency, l!“ uunm-ali J. Flnc 35-1 Bu; !s._ Toronto; News Usual, Brian-nu lnsnrier. (lltuul; Wolfe's Ncws Bland lub- ym-y, (ML; “uh ‘lupus-cu 5110p. llonclon, 8.1L "The Slrongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." SATURDAY, JANUARY, 16, 1943- Tlie Farm Labor Problem The luutiiciul Post comes out with a stronfl warning ttgztiiist tlic failure at Ottawa to grapple with ilu- iztrm labor problem. T11R18 l5. 11 m‘ mind.» in.- ntucriimciu, one thing more import- ant tllun bullets in this war and thatDis‘ food. \\itltout an atlcqtiate stipply of that vital com‘ “unlit; fnl‘ ourselves and our allies then the light is hopeless. But while UIIEHVH i185 d0"?- a grczii tlt-nl n» tltfrvlup an ample supply of n1uni- tioiis, 11s tutiiiule has becirdisconcertingly com- placent regarding food. Only 1n the last few weeks ha. some semblance of a co-ordinatcd production plan appeared and so far little has been done in assuring that this plan will be carried out. The Post adds editorially: "For over s. year farmers have been warning the Dominion government that they were run- ning desperately short of help. Yet the drain of young mcn and women from the countryside I0 the armed forces and urban munition plfl-HIS ha! been allowed to continue until farms arc almost completely denuded. That drain has now been officially blocked but as statements from com- pctent farm observers indicate the move came far too late to prevent serious injury. "To assurs even n moderate food supply for our civilian population snd our armed forces st home, and to fulfill our export quotas so Great Britain, skilled labor must be diverted back to the farms, snd st once. “Bacon, butter, eggs, chcsse, beef snd milk do not just grow on the farm of their own accord. Thcss foods are manufactured on the farm, from hay, grain snd other rsw materials, through the medium of livestock. Labor is required every day in the ycsr in this manu- flcturing. “If we sit around snd mlrely talk about the fsrm labor shortage until seeding is ready t0 start next spring, thsn it will be too lstc t0 avert s food shortage. We can avoid that calam- ity, but we must sct at once." Coming from s so-callcd "big interest” psper, this is signal recognition of the seriousness of the farm labor question, snd of the need of prompt snd sdequste action. Canada's Coal Output During November, the lsst month for which records are svsilabls, Csnsds produced 1,618,113 sons of cosl snd imported 2,516,951 tons. This snssns that our cosl minss are supplying about 4o per cont cf shs dssnsnd of the home msrkct, In rsmsiniing 60 scat coming from abroad, fliisfly from the nfisd Stilts. Nor is this undcsircbls situation due main- Zmclr rvsn so sny considcrsbls dcgrss 1o 11st- policy. The chief rssson is that Canada's ccsl miriss an simply not goducing on the scslc lily midst. And rvm in ovombrr, I942, there wu s dsclim of 1c psr can from the 1,734,937 scns cf Novsmbcr i941, snd of 5 cent from h flwyesr svorsgc for in of 1,734,130 has. ” But fcrfliswbds ii-ssscnslspcrfodsndcdNo- vsmbsr so, 194.1, the 1on1 output of 17,1o3.93o sons represented s substantial increase-nearly pcr cam-over the 16,411,958 sons oduced tbs curable period of 194i. Th: de- cline sows the year's snd was doubtless st- iibistsblc portly so rocruitipg and nfilitq-y drafts. It should be the gQal of the industry-man- agement and minc-workcrq-to offset rccruitin as fsr u may be by raising the standards of efficiency snd of the output per snsn to the highest reasonable levels. And this would be s vcry concrete contribution, to Canada's wsr sf- The Steel Strikes The strike of 12,500 Csnsdisn stud workers st this time is s serious threat to the effective- ness of our whole war effort. Without attempt- ing to discuss the merits of the basic minimum wage dispute which is claimed 1o be the prime cause of the trouble, the situation can fsirly be described as absolutely inexcusable snd incom- patible either with patriotic war effort on the one side, or efficient war leadership on the other. According to the Sydney Post-Record. which is on the scene. the conflict st Sydney has now little to d0 with the plant management-it is, in effect and reality, a conflict between the strikers and the Dominion Government. The latter, acting through one of its numerous bureaus, has assumed the rcgulstioii snd con- trol of all wage rates for the wsr‘s duration. ft also exercises directly ifs powers of taxation by conscripfing all “excess profits" for the same duration. In consequence it is not the stscl com- pany’: treasury, but Canada's, whose receipts are increased or diminished by sny changes of wages from the existing frozen standards. On the final count, concludes the Post-Record, the responsibility is on the Dominion Govern- ment's d00r-step_ And that rmponsibility has been tremendously increased by the pottcring work of the most pathetically inefficient Ministry of Labor this country has known. The appointment by that Ministry of s board of conciliation wss s. feeble, but pstfl, dilafory device which, the Government ought to have known, was certain to make a bad case worse. No scheme could have been more harc-braincd thsn the nomination of a special committee to discover whether the War Labor Board, from whose findings there was no appeal, was right or wrong in the judgment it had previously rend- ered on the question of steelworkers’ wage rates. In that direction lay confusion ivorse‘ confound‘ ed. For when such a special investigation had been granted the workers of one occupation, on what possible grounds, in reason or equity, could s similar concession be denied the work- crs of any other important occupation in Canada? The logical and ghastly result would be one conciliation board after another being commissioned to ascertain whether this wage triburiaL-onc of our permanent wartime bur- caus,—-kncw its stuff and was functioning properly. It is now the Government's task to get all the > steel plants into operation as soon as possible. It is not immediately apparent how this dangerous situation can be cleaned up, but s way out must be found, and it is the Federal I Labor Ministiys duty to find it without iany further avoidable delay. s-EDI IURIAL ‘ NUI 12S- ‘ Not many are worrying at present over £116 proposed rationing of auto pleasure driving. I U U l , The Mackenzie King Government, the steel {manufacturers and steel workers fiddle while ‘an “all-out" is the order of the day. . i I I fl A5 the puppet Nanking (iovcrnmcnt, at the bidding of Tligvo, has declared ular on Great Britain and the United States, it means some 12,000 whites in Shanghai will be at the mercy of the enemy for the duration. I U i Sir Joseph Chisholm, chief justice of Nova Scotia was receiving congratulations on his 80th birthday last week from members of the bench and bar and friends in Halifax. Born at St. Andrews, Antigonish County, NS, he became chief justice in 1931 and was knighted four years later. s s: s- s Admiral Stark, commander of United States naval operations in Europe, says: “My views have never changed. This war is going to be long and tough. There can be no other pre- mise. We should be agreeably surprised if a quick blow-up comes to the encmy, but we should not 100k fpr it u; happen." F George Dcwcy, American naval officer, died this date 1917; fought in the Civil \vVar and Spanish American War; defeated the enemy in Manila Bay; created Admiral of the Navy in 1899, the highest rank till then ever held by an Arucrican naval officer; from 1900 to his (loath held the all-important position of President 0f the General Board of the Niivy of U.S.A. I l i Premier Bracken of llfanitoba, who has been absent from Winnipeg saying good'bye to his constitufents in The Pas, intimates that it is his intention to proceed to Ottawa for the opening of Parliament, to be in consultation with the members and Senators who will conduct the debates. It is still undecided which constituency Mr. Bracken will contest in order to obtain a sect ls lcsder. .D.... 1, ,,, , ,, ,. Senator A. C. Hardy, of Brockvillc, s. law- yer whose principal interest is dairying -- he has from 120 to 150 head of dairy cattle — wrote to the Toronto Globc and Mail at the end of December urging that the Canadian public be sllowed s. plcntiful supply of margarine. Sen- ator Hardy said that margarine was a great suc- cess in the last war and “it would be difficult to say what the population of Britain would do today without it.” He has no hesitation “in demanding that msrgariue be available to the Canadian public . . . I strongly advocate the admission to our markets of margarine without s dsy’: delay.‘ ~ s c c A musical instrument believed to be unique has been presented to Glasgow Corporation’s Kclvingrove Art Galleries and Museum by Mrs. Islie Allison of 34 Giccnlecs Road, Cambus- 1mg. It is a walking stick! But when the handle is unscrewed s full-size chanter and drone is revealed. These can be assembled snd con" vertcd into s ministurcibut perfect set of bag- pipss. Dr. Henry Farmer, Kclvingrovds musi- Cll instrument expert, believes the instrument l0 be about I25 years old. The stick was ori- ginslly the property of Mrs. Allison’: father, tbs lsts Dr. jsmczDtluglas 2f Carlukc. s It is 110w generally accepted that LL-Ccl. Thomas Vicn, of Outrcmont will bc chosen new Speaker of the Senate to succeed the late Hon. Georges Psrsnt. It will be the first time any sllslor hss been promoted to the Spcakcrship sftcr occupying s. sect in the Upper Chamber for less than one session. For over fifteen years Col. Vien was s member of the House of Coin- mons, his first term being from 1917 to 1925 snd his sccond from 1935 to last year when he was appointed to the Senate after vacating his House seat (Outremont, Montreal) for Major General L. R. LaFlcchc, Minister of National War Services. The speaker of the Senate gets ;$6,ooo sslary, plus his $4,000 sessional indemn- "L c s c s X1 appears conditional release of Marc Csr- ricrc of Montreal from detention under the De- fence of Canada Regulations has been ordered by Hon. Louis St. Laurent, Minister of justice. The Justice Department stated Mr. Carricrc’: release was on the recommendation of an sd- visory board which held a hearing on his case December 31. It was also slated that Mr. Car- rierc expressed regret for the conduct which led to his detention and "undertook to fhc best of his ability fo assist in the national war effort and to comply with the requirements of the law." Mr. Carrier: was detained November 20 fol- lowing s speech in the Montreal Outremont reported to have said hc had received s no- ‘ice to report nude-r the compulsory military service law and had ignurcil if. .\s a ntaftcr of fact he had been turned down as being physical ly unfit. NOTES BY TIIE WAY As cvcn s Hitler must now rel- llac, says the Stratsord Beacon- Herald. conquering [and 1s useless 1f you can't. conquer the souls of man. —8t. Thomas Times-Journal. For moss peoplc. this 1s the time of year when Betting up st sun- rse means being late for work.- Eort Eric Times-Renew. Almontc, which ha; figural so tragically 1n recent railway news, has had many names since 11s found- ing 1n 1821. Then it was Shlpmsni Falls, and has subsequently been Shlpman’; Mills, say, Ramsayville and Vlctcrlavlllc. It received its present. niunc 1n hon-I or of a Mexican general, Juan A1- monte, although the name of the’ town is not pAuDOllDOBd in the Spanish fashfon. -stratford Bea- con-Herald. Canada's prisoner of war popu- lation has been increased by the ar- rival of 900 Italians captured 1n Libya. We ricer‘.- have little fear that they will slve us much trouble. Compared to sortie of the Nazis held ln this Dominion, they are likely to be lambs. It 1s probable that s majority of the Italian; are very, glad to be here. They have llttlc stomach for the kind of war 1n giiged. and they are happy to be out of 1t. Their afiempt; to escape are likely to be few, and 1f they occur at all, perfunctory. We shall have little difficulty with them. --, Windsor Dally Star. an eclipse of the sun on Plebru- ary 5. Japanese time. will be visible ezlcans might retort shit this will be nothing to the coming eclipse of the Rising sun. -New York Bun. 0 l-lltler and his quired control" of many properties in Europe which represent a total investment of billions of dollars. It will be comforting to their original‘ owners to know that, when ‘this all the‘r holdings will be restored to them. -Hami1ton Spectator, of the democracies were of believed. The British Common. at the beginning of thg war and was lulled into complacency as a promised blood and tears, take have taken disaster in The policy has won the confidence a of the rank and file and 1s a mor-' This new law maklng every able- hard on some feisured. lazy nien we known around town They are like but when I ‘ears the word work I bothering his sheep. He put an open bell azound the neck of every fourth or fifth sheep (the kind of bells farmers used to wear on their hors- es) and he found that these bells waved docs. as they do not like tlon 1f his sheep were attacked. and the bells fetid to keep the sheep to. gather. —-Chesley Enterprise. Th! 70-year-old mother of Gen. Sh- Bernard L. Montgomery, leader of the British forces which routed Flcd Marshal Erwin Rommel 1n North Africa, says that "when Bernard was young he was a very nwshty boy." It's just possible um some sources in Berlin hold the opinion that. he still 1s. -Buffa1o Courier-Express. When we read that the Magdalen Islands are facing near-famine con- c-ltlons, the most of us around here haven't. much to complain about 1f we find our gmcer’; shelves s little more bare t. an 1n normal times. Even 1f some goods do tlghen up bfldly. disappear entlrely under the restricted quotas based on 1941 population. we are a long way from knowing what the continued pangs gfeétunger are like. -New Glasgow s. Pucrtc Rice is known ns ‘was Glb. raltsr of the Caribbean " It; pog- sesslon ls of great strategical "im- portance to the defence of Panama Canaf and of, our own shores, and 11c well-being therefore, should bs s. prlmc consideration. and hold its head up. -From N. Y. Herald Tribune. As s Power with Impcrlnl gm. bltions Italy has been s nuisance to s11 the world, snd not least to her own people. She has neither the resources or (it would appear) the capacity for such c. role. and own snd his country's merely landed 111m 1n lm use where he was de lance 01:11 permanent Itullsn 1n- teresfs, to become Hitler's client and jacket. Italy’; future an 11c only 1n loyal cu-operstion with her neigh- bours and with all those who seek to ensure peace 1n miropc If tho Germans must be taught to forget their tradition of sgigrcnlon and conquest. the lesson most needed by Italian lltfclsns 1s that of the value of fa r deallntr. and one must hope that the disastrous (allure of position federal by-clccfion campaign in which he was ‘$39’ n m mom 41mm’ H"- Fasclst forelim oollcy will heln to THE .CH W_N__QILA_RIJ;QN Slag-As ws wlsh b llou gig“ cu thfiollowks: fnfisarirnnm. uceirs b Edward Island m dale Prince Edward Island Waterford, Ram- If" of the dtlrlnp trans ernc w Car On Canada 00ml 0. lotte wn and was especially film-k“ I B lstol e peop c o r had been bombed homes. Included 1n the shove amount also was the sum of lected by us during November and December, kcd "Children; Christmas" to provide gifts and partles for British child- ren who would otherwise have no a1 t Christmas. ‘timed fffllinmitalihh f La C l: which they found themselves en- Jors s 88c mm c' 0o ' 1n the Provincial Sanitarium st Charlottetown. These Postal Orders were sent direct. to our Montreal office in order that the transmtttved present form to be used __._ benefit of the British cilldrcri The latest Japanese bout 1s that Chflsdm“ “m9 ~su only in Japanese-held territory. Am-I gflu-gur p publicity gven by you 1n such s generous manner. We tube the ppoptunlty of shmklng you on e a “men have unc- tlnued cooperation 1n War 1s W011 by the United Nations’. THE PROBLEM 0F INCREASED attention. During ale builder instead of the opposlteyear; thers has been too great an as was feared. -Wnn1peg Tribune, expenditure produce enormous quantities ‘p015; for tvgir DIéTPOSCS-LTIQ?! is’ n10 the - c _11m to eorenonv emn- m' they 8a e me lam" indies ‘mum amount 1s mentioned. In pre- war days our quota was 2B0 million lbs. annualiy. Last year we were BSRBCI b0 1111111811 G In‘ ’ million lbs. Thls year 1t gflllllOlhtfifldflQflalc expect?! to d0 t. In e s ms rov ces we s arc expected to do our pm: grow, from first to 12-81. WM fihfl BR89651- our fish- pro-portion with the rust-Jill!" W" of Canada, and w the end um youth by my mto there be no excuse for falling down “ma”! on the job. the ment has nicely taken care of vltsl natural disabilities that might 1n- terfere with our dolng so. l’ st. s price that will permit s nfcs margin of profit. when used for hog There 1s no place intended for the speculum‘ but there 1s an implied contract wlth the pumhsser, as? with tho lndfvidiul consumer. s beef. dslry ducts etc, - to Musaollnls attempt to inflate his be wed w, ‘m, m“ 0mm“ pub s political PM“ u ‘med’ m ggcéftafxrig up to this Imp sd cm- we sre not. Many of us 11's snaking use of its sdvsntsgcs. but ccliously ignoring our counter obligations. Other phases of 1h‘: sublect will . be dealt wfth st s fissure dstc. Charlottetown. Ml. AINRWORTII’! ADDRESS I0 TBA!) sacred 1n- (ficmtfiiq: rad”. icpletcmdslytl 1| a- QUEEN'S CANADIAN FUND 0651M! » oll snndlisnwltmnd 1n Prince rnmmoutcclccsum Q 090 m“ amounts v0 $8,850 1,0 8.39 ,. ccenta Bristol oel camber. 1011, us thro Chsr- ssr- rovldlng comforts for , lmglnnd, who out o! their 0f‘ $828.56 col- IBfl. and bar-snu- In addition to the sbovc we rc- Poctsl Orders -. 0f the'R.A.F., who 1s s tlent Ekigland. st feel mat n great deal of the ccess of the Fund 1n Prince Ed- - Island 1s due to the efforts er and the continued We f of the Fund for our con- matter. We are. Sir. etc. ROYAL TRUST COMP-ANY A. . RUSSELL. Agent PRODUCTION ‘ of the channel in the Chm-lot cc nfng town for his srpimcn other 111st of simply caring the Jealousy o! other Canadian provinces. To snyonc who understands Island conditions. 1t must be cvl- dent that. cs n insult of refusing w renew the contract for the above work. the fsrmsrs of Prince Ed- wsrd Island/arc having ycsr the cost o! flnlshln contract, all the materials svfng already been paid for. Practically h Iqlsnds prodpcfi 81101111 as , ii , , u er, c ee m m is1ii"°éii' e ar es u n are about three tfines The on 1s . t e event of an accident to the Borden Fern, this Island would be pl 1n s. vcrv serious condition, which condition however, could be greatly obviated by having sccommodst‘ l 1n the Charlottetown harbor for mills of all kinds to take the place o! the Borden merry. Spending. s-s Ottawa. does. over four billion dollars a year, of which this Island subscribes its full share. the persistence with which this comparatively trivial ‘sum 1s refused for the above purpose can- not bc accounted for on any com- mon sense or logical basis. Surely the Island fathers of Confederation must turnfn over 1n their graves because o the unjust treat. merit meted out year after year to this Province. I cm. Sfr. etc Sin-In continuation of my letter The United States has declded to appearing ln your columns s few follow the Dolley adopted "in Can- days ago. I wish to draw attention ada of publishing casualty 11st: of to further facts incidental to, and their ft. ces fighting agalrist l-héfllfffiflblng present an? prospective Axis. In the past, newspapers were hog production 1.11 this restricted to printing the names of, In my concluding remarks on that men whose homes weie 1n the area occasion. I pointed out that efforts in which the papers circulated. It,were being made ‘s another indication that the peep: gather obsollete features into our mu t 0g produc ng program, tougher stuff than their governmentfthat have been pin “ Province. to inject certain features 11y foreign ‘to our prnctfoes during the periodof wealth suffered from such a bellefuaui- most successful hog raising ex- periences. snd features which 1f per- mitted to continue. or allowed to consequence. Winston Churchill has hold sway, would in the course of Pfweeded On the Opposite theory-He time demorailze our present swine he was improvement efforis and hog grow- wnfldem V716 British Pwple Collidiing structure, and reduce 11s status 58d "EWS R5 W611 H5 800d. llo that dlscredtable condition that The D0116?! has D8111 W611. The people existed some twenty odd years ago. titer stride. This danger 1s present and gaining foothold and demands immediate the inst twenty of money and well Idirected personal effort to the end ,that hog production would be est- bodfed man work 1s going to be nbllslied on practical foundations. nurtured by sane LIBOUCES, and developer;- to that degzee of excell- fhe ma," h}, a" 01d English ccmedylencc and maturity where the 1n- who sad: I eats we 1, I sleep wellfldustr-y might; become a scum; of n profitable revenue for our farmers. ltoes all of a tremble. —-St, Thomas-ft, b9 gllowgd to disintegrate and Tim“ Jlmmal- Irevezt to its former state of 1m- potence. At the Instance of parties Jlcsvy claims 1n Elderslla town-'l°per“u“g' m"! wuhwt the Pm" 5111p for sheep 1.1116,; and mjurediince, but. 1n col uslon with their sel- by dogs lend DRIHCILE!‘ interest to ected ‘esldelll’ “gemsi m“ an Ontario farmer's assertion thatlimtm $55-17» danliu ‘mummy prove he never ha n ‘H6115 Y all W l1 - d a y trouble Wm‘ dogs the rulnafcn of one of our primary agricultural industries. if allowed 1o go on unchecked. 1s bclng 1t is growing 1n Canadian farmers sin asked to! o uinof600 1s s. U Dominion Govern- The contract prfce for pork pro- ducts with the British Purcharlng Board 1s comparctfvely high. and, we have no reason to comnlaln on- thst sccrc. The one naturist dls advsntsgc we have to contcnd with. compared- to most parts of Canada, 1s the shortage of feeds. Naturally, Western Canada. wfth surpluses of grain. 1s 1n s. most fav- ourable post o lncc the Dominion Government hls temporarily neutralized advantage. They are paying pract- lcislly all Mic freight on western grain imported here from Ibrt Wllllam to focal destinations. 8o farmers can group together the my, its vast n, but 1n this Prov- thll dis- 1n their grain rcqulruuents growfng purposes, beef product/fora hum; mmmmmmm, 1mg gfgulggflglld ti" £11195‘ mflif-‘Yllll increasing dairy , ’ ct yields and ‘gym m. 1”; ngrgflon, , c, d°°m° t, ° °"° ° “"- fhat of poultry and ew- Thln rm And wiui-iwiiun We . 1t can- esnet m! pres se- 110w can 1111! Frellfhi; Policy 1s costing the oov- not, be escaped. Thcrc is stood Who poun l’? a fqrd m permit my "Ifl- cs ‘ of Canada millions of doll- i; m. , -w1sc and 11f- °PY “"4" is "B! 14> 511391’ 171'"!- srs. It was dcslsnod to prcvldc rs- loving. 8s 1s still on His throne.‘ 11°" "mvfimble Wllh, “we o! lief against m. hlgh coat of fccd 11m why the whirlwind u Nazi-held Europe? 1t can 1.01 course u, mm," u; gum-n 0mm; bound yes 1n cn whfch the GovsrnJ will be roductiuuon fir’! ' . PN- tiht w,1‘-1 bcpguurncd cvcr Govcmmsnt control boards, tn insy ho decided u n. An R7816 Islllldl N0 I Am. B11, etc. .I. A. G 11 f mssllncl riir sosm or s dgffifim ,,,,,,,a,,,,,,,'l',,_,'1,i,:;g';,‘,§ 3u,.'___ML Mm'am. l _ I C I10 88 sn N 011. 0 .,.,,.. ...;_k........:..-..=":"s..':. Jaw-oi ~- mh gengfne p] 1c qnrft and s ‘Zl-IIOUR ARMADA ma: “.tl.’l"1.‘lifi't2s“$¥.l'f.‘£.' iii ""‘_ the onfederstlon. M my liven moment coo British The sevcrsl matters dcslt with . , ......t-is arc st. res. uis report arc s11 of prime m. $11‘? “H! "ill"? F snug‘: n. K. s'.' IIEMMINQ WILL REAP Tim wuinLwiNn (‘The following letter to the Ca1- gary Herald 1s from the pen of the Rcv. .D. MacDonald s native of New Glasgow, P.E.I., Although Mr. MacDonald 1s 1n 111s 88th year. he 1s pastor of a. church 1n Calgary, and 1s a ualous and earnest worker 1n religious causes.) Sun-mutant Germany today 1s like s defcctfve child with criminal ‘ tlricts-s. kind of robot without s soul, trained by false teachers to hate Christian ideals, and equipped by the uniformed lords of evil for the slaughter and cnslavement of men by means of s miizhtly war machine, constructed for rspiwloa a5 fission and instinct with a de- v s urpocc. The ‘lzreaty of Versailles, too easily satisfied with disarmament, left Germany's educational system enti- rely free. was a most fatal mis- take, the consequences of which we are now sadly reaping. (It 1s a mis- take, however, which will not. be re- peate .) _ After 19111 the Genman war lords knew that. they could not spring another war upon the world for per- haps is uartcr of a century. But within at period they could quiet- ly train and equi B. new generation of youth for ano er war. And this the proceeded st once to do. spl of all warnings and protests. False teachers and professors were easily available. and soon the schools of the nation were saturated with nulftarlsm. War and paga suvcser were glorified as the high- est nut onal ideals. And when Hlt- ler appeared upon the scene. 1h.- war epidemic became at once more malignant. 8cm supreme power thro h Nations Socialism. this wlc semi-moron permitted him- self to be dclfled and worship ed as t-hc supreme overlord o1 the er- msn people. Soon mere-after s new generation of German youth, cap- able of bearing arms, was duJ 1.:- sfstcrcd as Germany's new nvln- clblc army of youthful warrforilpre- pared to ffght and dic for tler and the htherlsnd. German youth movement, perpetrated against It the moral life of l‘ to 11s lowest possible level nnd poisoned the springs of national denllsm st their very source. Al- to thes- ft was the most. ghastly and ids.) sowing to the wind that the world has ever known. The whlrl- must. now bc reaped. From that. there 1s no escape; for them- or for us. ' ‘Ibds-y s11 the world 1s s war zone. No scs 1s ssfe: no country 1s secure. No law or fl force 1s Bglorlf ed ss the only reality All mor standards and national sacraments Ire cast aside as scraps of paper. Thousands of innocent mcn women snd children arc being ruthlessly slaughtered u hosts cs by the German Gestapo. Chi- t- lsnft 1s scoffed at: the Sermon on the cunt 1s derided and parodied 1n terms of hate by infidel philoso- ers. And God self untcd snd dcflsd. to His very Is this s11 s men accident? Not st s11: Itfsthcnsturstsndm ' " m ‘y stri 1s held sacred. Brute e1 is virtually “Md man wlth hints of dmgsr to "Cun- adws unity," arising from liquor restrictions. Canadian people will know how to 111C188 a IIOUD of 1n- dustrlalists who would, create fric- tion 1n Osnsds on the bssls of s myth. Contrary to the opinion expres- sed by the tuewers, we assert that me issue Ls a moral one 1n every respect. The so-callcd "uioderatc" uruikers must bear I. heavy loud of responsibility for maintaining the liquor industry and fostering the yoke of slavery upon the thousands of their weaker brethren, and for the anti-social resmts which follow n1 personal and family llfe and 1n 0i the hall nmrks o1 a good Christ- ian is his recognition that he 1s nls brother’; keeper then "these consumers as well as those who manufacture the beverages" would not too much “resent the implica- 1111311; that they are not good Christ- The boasted willingness o; m; brewers to make sacrifices for the wai- effort will evoke memories of that other boast. of the 50 mile train load of bee., most. o1’ which was exported to Lvbls 1n pgrfgr. cnce to munitions. The severe Brit. ish defeat which followed result- e_d 1n the whole question being bflorvusmy aired in me Canadian House of Common; to th¢ intense discomfort of Canadian Bnawerles Ltd. and others. Members of Par. llament who were determined that there would be no recurrences ask- Bd mflny questions and reccfved only evasive answsns. The Canadian Gov. eminent disclslmed responsibility, the U. s. Government disclaimer! bee" Shipped through American Ports. the N. A. A. F. I., which had bought the beer claimed that it had merely exercised priority rights, and 1t was denied that Mr, E. P- ‘Taylor's visit to miguum was connected with tho mastery The feswnslbillty was accepted by nobody. but that 50 mile trafn load more than any other factor creat- ed the public opinion which forced the Cubuiet to act on Dec. I6. Throughout the speech the Can- adlan Breweries Ltd. 1s consctous. vfrig for respectability. “may clamor to have beer classed with "other consume: goods!‘ in. the mat. fer of ciirtaflments. Aware of the stigma attached to their nefarious “ industry. they give the public their custvpmary mouthings about mod- "R1 0H- 8nd 1n the same breath complain blttezly at the prohibition of liquor advertising. The brewers refer vaguely to "s great dust‘ of medics! cwdcncc" on the value cf beer for food and 18111111111011. but cite no authorities. ‘Efzngiipply the omission here are Dr. Haven Emerson, former com. mlssloncr of pubic health of New York 01W. snd professor of pic- ventfvs medicine 1n (Iornell Univer- sity, now of Oolumbfa writes. "Beer Will-Pi!“ only water. alcohol. l starch, s. very small smount of protein, some minerals, and no vitamins. The Poisonous effects of the alcohol 1n beer snake even its nan-ow nutrition. a1 uses strictly limited and of lltsic value even to an adult." (Alcohol Its Effects on Man" pp, 2a,) W. S. Alexandcr. U. S. Alcohol Administrator, o m hfedersl s im- nual report flied with 601131515 on JIH- 6. 1938 sold: "All advertising, referring directly or lnfiflrgclgly m the vcluc of alcoholic beverages, .1215; r. v "L10 d Genres 1n issa wrote: 171""! the Great War I found that drink was rotting out national e fort st equipment in deadly rash. 1011. It hccsms c choice indeed be- tween alcohol and vfctnry." . Evidence like the above, both medical and non-medical, could be 1n monumental quantities, ls almost driven to the con. On 1 tlhst the brewers src Ii‘- C Cllll Oh Bfncs there 1s thcrsforc s mom order 1n the universe‘ slncc the law of csusc’ snd cficcl noldr snd since there 1s s.n essential difference between ht snd fcsisl rctrl slop must inevitably follow nsttonsl us well ss individual crime snd 1mm dofns. I sm, B ., . . A. D. MscDON/HJ IIPL! ‘I0 BREWERS lln-Osnsdfsu Breweries 1.141. hsvc conesfvsd sud sxccutnd the droll plsn of writing s "temperance" sprout for Prune Mlnlstcr King. I 1s ss difficult to flnd s bu‘: for rlllncnt wfth the ll uor manufac- turers ss 1t 1s with dolnh H't‘~cr, DI ENGLAND If stonework of an older Gave beater substance to s nation's Than brihaomfum and llsss ~ If c , war-rm Horizons can obscure the drcsmer’: ‘all Of bcur 111s snd rrcstcr things 11 culture tiiniimsn belly-whftc to I! Benestiéflgnuck stsmpcdcs of ssv- s . . 1'11 1 ii I And 111 '" "::=...t"1.... "* m" -. With us. or plqn. We due s differ- ent to . To Biglapd snd hsr stubborn fslth Unconqucrcd :nd imccmpsomlsed. must snswcr: s; long rrsdcs the hismsn snfrlt snd rufns the lives of man, the bicm csn-, not bs put. cutsfdc relgicn. which mconccrnsd with thc whole of man's s. m Of 1.11mi mid shin of bombs reel c . To Enrlsnd. fresh with heather 1n c spring, For solid. sober hope: God ssvc her King! ‘Nil; perverted viewpoint 1s fur- thsr illustrated 1n 1.11s brewers‘ isisllcfotls sttsmpt so crests s bowl —8ergesnt Robert Ullrlch. U. 8. Army, 1n the ltondcn Tlmcs. We lisvc In stock snd cars arriving of OLD SYDNEY SCREENED, BRAS D’OR, SULLIVAN, ALBION NUT and INVER- NESS. Also WALSH COBBLES and AM- ERICAN HARD NUT. Lowcst prices, snd qiilck ilsllvcriss, special attention to C.0.D. orilsrs. W. D. GILLIS c» CO. PHONE 176 sasotage of the war effort. If one ' resiivnslbifly. although the beer hath. 8681113 that 9901119 who consider a law "unreascn-gbte" should- “sign-w lznmc that law." This practice u... advocated 1n United States a 19w years ago by the Association against the Prohlbltlon Amendment, tum, led a campafgn of law Violation in order to discredit Prohibition. ‘rim, mo Mia. E. P, Tay.or, president of Canadian Breweras Ltd, now s, dollar, a year man employed by the Canadian Government, knows s thfnq or two about simply ignoy. mg a law. Since liquor advertising had 1on3 since been prohibited u, Ontario, Mr Taylor decldgd a few years ago to publish s liquor hi. ve;t1slng magazine, the New World find mans of fooling the gov.‘ ernmcnt. He has the magazine printed 1n Ontario. but bearing s, Montreal date llne. has each edition shipped to Montreal, where i‘. :5 "nub-wheel." and has copies m. worded to Ontario news standard elsewheic. Thus Mr. Taylor is even now circumventing the laws of On- tario with impunity. The involuntary admissions ln the “speeclf that bootlegrlns exists 1111.. der government sale, and uict r»- tall sale ls not being conductor! iii the open and on the highest ethical standards, are the only points 1n the whole dccument- that deserve credence. We are, Bir. etc. PRESS COMMITTEE. P. E ISLAND TEMPERANCE FEDERATION. A. 1mm REMEDY THAT win HELP You If you src suffering from Kidney Trouble, the time 1o do something about It 1s now. Don't wait for the condition ._..|.!.'._!_9.!._'!2!!.'£~_.§.l§'_¢l<1n1_ . PEN SLAR Buchu and Palmetto Compound the relief that hss been so successful 1n other cases. You can expect Improvement 1n a very short time. Thc formula. ls on every label for your rotccticu. D0111 1st 1t off. e1 a 50c or $1. bottle sodsy and save yourself further dlsccmfur. snd expense. E. 11. FOSTER The Central Drugstore Mont for the Penslar Rcmcdlcs. __._-._- jinn» Gassy Stomachs Relieved Every person who ls troublrd "m! Ill in lhc stomach and bowels should get s bottle of tcnuch Mixture sns sec how qllckly it will re- llcvc all distressing symptoms. Dr. Evnns Stomach Mmurs lskcn st meal times, not only Prevents s11 bad cflcols from cs but ls pcmoses shc func- nsl seslvlt of lhc stomach. 1s d1 cs on and Improves "II III» llc. Recommended also for Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Sour Stomsch snd Heartburn. Prlcc 85 cents Bottle. MACS SPECIAL I X. 815 00d lslvsr 011 Extract with 1c and GIIAMII Com- pound. or 1s rue es "II '1." 1'.’ 91”“? """€.' "‘: i u II cs con nu iircsssucns scfiilild up the s11- bm s» withstand fissure s1- llcll. p splendid blond snd i cosy-cu at Ionic for ho"! Y0 sndnldd who fsks ll filly. Prfcs 81.00 n" Coil Liver 0l| csvwlfl 81.10 hos. s Iron snd Yeast Mo. ll llr ‘Irnlc Ts ms Hus Islr Restorer 00c but"! Tlll‘. TWO MAGS Ill Gnst Guns Street _ llsll ordsrs Given Ho!!!" . Atssssslsl. a