"an! IOU‘! TllE _ BIIARLOTTETUWII Ellllllllll Morning Dally (Ihnnllell lll Ill?) Irelldontx usus. 00L W. Guam l. Isl-In Vlno President: I. B. aiPl-n- rJ-l- lsoroturyr Liens. Col. I). A. Ianllnnol. 0.10. Idllor and llanlllnl 01mm. J. I Ilrnm. I'd-l- Assoelsle Editors: Frank Wslkar. and Llus. Ian l. Burnt-tr, n.c.r4.v.|s. (OI Active Garvin) SUIIICIUPTION ‘ATE! ln P, I. |.. sum nor sour Ol-M for l Ivflil. $1.25 hsr I months; Illa (or nnc month Delivery moo n" your: use for I mouths $1.75 for 8 mnnths: Ila for n50 Ilonlb tn other Pmflnfnl and UIA. M.” III vsar Weekly: J0 (or I months.- I, sun Clly I! Null Saturday 19m! nor your: hlln for 8 mouth: g ‘Ills Charlottetown Guardian may b0 uhlullol st IlusnIllns-‘I Now: Alena-y. ‘Ilmss lqulfl. 30' 7."! Old South News-n Anne-y, Corner lllll Ill Wushllllinn Boston: Welronolllnn News Asenrs. l!“ "d ll. lhsnlrmfl; .|_ Flne 31H Bu] 8L. Toronto; News Mind, (‘tum-air Lnurler. Ullausn; Wolfe's News Bland Bub- bury, UnL; llul» ‘h-lnu-r-u filmy. Mnnrtun, 8.8. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” 'l‘llL‘lKSDr\Y, JANUARY ll. 1943 Important Objectives ~.~.,1rrr~;»..;. of activities in which ll“! Clt.tt.~:;\.~\\rt IZ-ntiwl of 'l'ratle has‘ Paruullated 5- hull.‘ :1 _l ‘u 1hr reports prcscutcd at the au- rnnrl ut t». :1; 1w. night. President Aiusworth Yqjl-tllcfll in lpzrructtltrr- to the Board's efforts to >L'\ll1't‘ 1i ft'l".‘_\' to replace the lost Sb. Char- lwlltll-vnr. to llil\t' \\ui'l\' resutuctl von the con- sirrn-rl. _, .4 ,, drip \\,\'.Q1' tcruunzil m Charlotte- wuu llmlurr, In lllllillll a rlcltydratioti plavlli. P-"il to interest llic Uulllllllltlll Government ln the installzttioti of a marine railway drydock. _ln counectioti wnlt the latter pfOjCCt a special cnttlltiiztcc ltvtitlctl by I\Ir. S. A. bIacLeml ll working on cu-upcrzitiou with our PFOVIYIClZIl 3nd federal rcprcseitutlivcs, and hope ls eXPFCSSBfl that their efforts will be successful. There 1| no dotilit, as President Ainsworth says. that such a dtvdock would be of immediate and Vifll assistance in the‘ upkeep of wartime shipping, and for this rcusoti should commend itself to the Dominion Government ss s necessary war- time project. t _ Board members sre still quits properly of opinion that efforts to secure s replacement ferry on the Borden-Tormcntmc route should b! Cvntinlfld. This pmject has the tndorssnon of the Provincial Government, the several Boards of Trsds of the Province. the Mlflillllt B01"! of Trude snd the Maritime Transportation Commission. The fact thst we have no stand- by in case of accident to the old ferry stssmer durin winter months is s hot which we mn- nct s ford so lose sight of. If s w_s.rntn ox- smpls wsro needed, it has been provided 1n lbs ‘u; .1 fig Magdalen Islands lllll wanton I171. Meaning Which ‘l, Ml sl h: lnwysss, professors sows- pspsr non sngngod in pctivrtics one would cxpoot the spots of ordsrs-in-councrl ts- suing from Ottawa so be smstsrpsscss of pn- ciss snd choice English. That is not always tho ass, however. Instance a routinely-issued or- der-in-oooncll 0s the Wartime Prices and Trsde which mitss that “the _B0_ard shsll keep In idssllidviosdofilspnnctplssitssfol- bwhg is snatching the pmnrs sssrfsrrsd spot: i by shes; rcgulllwlll, ad lull rsfrsm from doing all suds things so tbs Mir-lists; my, in priming, from Itns so llrns dine-t." Obviously, the mooning of the order ls not Qsutborlssin Bond torsfrsls from doi Hap lss sssposslbls lliolssss directs plus-astrology liss - but just moans, ss oronss Saturday srsouhully ss flfihssvrhsno-vsrhe feels us: ssnd sonssbody to . _ h his; snd H! his: pull‘). Why ‘t pdsrs-lss-oooncll be vrrlttm h flit ltylsl front Llns, I940,“ p-__-_ ‘firs ofllslsl story of the dvlb dofmsrof Britain during the months of suminsd bombing sttscks between September, 194o_snd 348]. I941, lass ban published by the British Ministry of Information. It reveals in s spirited sssrnttvs, accompanied by I81 illustrations, how the valor snd skill of the brave band of sirmsm-the few so whom so many owe so mirch-who held the German Luftwaffe st bsy successfully was matched by the unyielding coursge snd self- sncrifice of the civilians who found their front line of hztttle in the streets wherein they lived. According to this booklet, in the worst three months’ period of the bombing about 36,000 high-explosive bombs, weighing altogether 6,000 tons, and innumerable incendiary bombs were dropped upon the London area, which for 57 conscclttivc tiigltts was subjected to what was intended n, he 1 knockout blow. One single night saw 1,436 persons killed, s number larger than the tnlnl of British civilian victims of Gt-rman hrmabs in the last war—-l,4o0, lll told. L], u, m.- (-1111 of r041, when the story ends, shout xinooo high-explosive bombs descended upon Britain, and ltillctl altogether 43,667 civil- iaus. including 5.460 children. Tho prtnplv of Lonrlnn, which W3! the chief stiffcrer. by thcir lrighltcztrletl endurance and rt- snurcvfulnc» in coping with ilir raids, set I splendid cxntuplc to the rest of the country, snd, when the time came for the citizens of Coventry, Bristol, Sheffield, Liverpool, Plymouth snd other centres to face similar tests, they did so with the same unflinching stcadfsstnsss. Ittcludcrl in the narrative are stories of lov- ing episodes and humorous incidents. Afflr I raid on Cardiff a rescue party working urlong the debris of a Ilt-nrolished house was warned of life to be saved and guided t0 its goal by llearitrg "God gave the King" 51mg st the top 0f his voice by n little boy of six. At Clydebank a lad of I4, ltnlramtcd except for the loss of his trousers, which had been blown completely of f, remarked: ".\l_v maw will gie me s rowing for vrastitrg my quill trousers." And s woman in the same place, as she swept up debris from hcr front steps, said: “Well, there's one thing about m”; "ids; they. make you forget about the war." The booklet is mainly a narrative of action, and presents vivid accounts cf the fall of bombs, the ruin wrought by them, and the measures taken to cope with them by brave men and women. A fine core for their organization was provided by the Civilian Defense Corps, a million and a half strong, with four-fifths of its menlbers volunteers and ouc-qilarter wonten. Unstintetl praise is given to the selfless labors. often under- taken s: grave risk of life, bv A.R.P. wardens, firemen and firewomen, rescue and first-aid works, the \\’.\".S.. tclcpliouists, boy messen- gers, policemen and the rest. Moreover, the pages of the book make quite clear that the Luftwaffe might have succeded in its primary objective of paralyzing London, the headquarters of Britain’s war effort, if these civilian defend- ers had not shown such tremendous gallantry. a- EDIIURIAL NU H28- There are to be two or more ordiuatious to the lloly Almistry in Lion (Ihurch llllS Qvenlllg. 1K i ll U The Air lliinister admits “two mistakes" made by hi5 Department, but curiously enough he did not tncutiou turning down the Air Train- ing scheme as one of them, only turning down women and Canada's ace. i i l I At length Bermuda has followed the example of this Island in lifting the embargo on autos The House of Assembly by a vote of 2o to 7 adopted the report of a select committtee re- commending the removal of the ban which has been in effect since the auto was invented The committee report also recommended that the "rule of the road” be changed from the left to the right, as in Canada and the United States, but no action was taken on this. U U I I Archdeacon H. A. Cody of St. James Church, Saint john, N.B. has resigned his incumbcncy on account of ill-health. Outside Saint john he is better known as s. novelist and author, two of his best known works, being “Thrills of a Country Parson," and “The King's Arrow,” dealing with his ancestors of the United Empire Loyalists. Though resigning his parochifll charge, he is retainingfihaofficc of Archdeacon. s s A top-heavy wheat supply situation in the principal surplus producing countries is to be attacked in 1943 through definite and, in the case of Canada, quite drastic acreage reduction programmes. Canadian farmers have been ask- ed so reduce‘ wheat acreage next year to its low- sst level since x918, snd if this goal is reached it will mesn s reduction of more than u mil- lion sens or 39 per cent frOm the peak level of 28.7 million acres attained in x940. n is u a It his ban grstifying to observe thst, of rc- sllt months, no order has issued from Mr. Donald Gordon, of the Wartime Prices and Trade Hoard, without it being specifically set forth that the order carries the approval of his chief, Mr. Ilsley. This practice, suggests an exchange, should be extended, and s. desirable reoult should be that no orders are ever issued which do not bear the formal assent of the res- ponsible minister who is in the final analysis the mss: who must answer to the people. o o f o President Roosevelt was no more emphatic ll s prophet than Mr. Churchill was. In his address to Congress this is all the length he would go in discussing the future of the war: “I do not prophesy when this war will end. "I do believe tbs: this yesr of 1943 will give l0 the United Nstions s very substantial ad- vsucs along the roads that lead to Berlin and Rome and Tokyo. “They (the Axis nations) must be dlssrnsed lld dept dissmed.“ That was alt-nothing to bits one's teeth in. s s s s Inrls Carroll, tho English otypc of Step- bm Lssooek, died this date, 1 ; his real name was Charles Lutwidgs Dogscn, and he was s profsssor of mathematics ss well ss s philosoph- (f, winning undying fame by writing and pub- lishing “Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,” snd "Through the Looking-Glass”: “That is the mason they an cslled lessons," the Gryphon rs- msrlssd, "because they lessen from day to day." "Tl", fill- dlildl" slid the Duchess. “Every thing's got s moral-if you can find it.” “How funny it'll seem to come out among the people who wslk with their heads down- wards. The sntiplsthiesul ghink." Indictments charging sedition have been rc- turned against 33 persons, and The New York Evening Enquirer, Inc, s corporation headed by Mr. William Griffin, by s District of Columbia grind jury. Specifically, the defendants were accused of conspiring to impair the morale and loyalty of the armed forces. Revealing the names, Attorney General Biddle showed that twenty-eight of those indicted included Mrs. Elizabeth Dilling, George Sylvester Viereck, and others who were named in a sedition indict- ment returned by another grand jury July 21 last. But in addition to the 28, there were five new individuals as well as The Evening En- qutror. a s s s The new five cent piece now in circulation supplant: the “Beaver Nickel," a tz-sidcd coin first issued six months ago. The “Victory Nic- kel" incorporates in its design the “V for Vic- tory" symbol snd the Victory Torch, "by way of symbolizing the sacrifice which is being made to achieve victory," in the words of the official announcement. The first tz-sided nickel bore on the back s beaver design similar to the fam- iliar round nickel. The first tz-sided nickel, may have value in the future as s curiosity, ow- ing to the limited number which could he issued in the six months of its existence. ‘It is possible many Canadians never saw this 1942 issue. Both the new coins sre members of what is being call- ed the "blackout series." The rz-sided coin makes possible its selection in the darkness —- s convenience first reported in the United King- dnm where a many-sided coin has been in exist- ence for some years. ‘rut. sures fir. wsv The Minister o! Health. Ms. Ernest Brown, speaking 1n hopdon on Sunday, gave impressive figures proving the potency o! s new drug 1n treatment o! oerebm-men- 1n us and oneumonl. By the skilled use of the new drug, sul- phapyrldlne, four out or every five patients in 1939 recovered. whereas two out ol three cases were fatal s 1n the 1015-17 epidemic. It ls estl- ' mater:- that 10.000 lives were saved in the years 1939-41 by this trest- r ment. Probably 7.500 more llves were lsuved by the use of the same drug 5H1 pneumonia cases, —london Times. Elnperor lllrohllo tcllmhls cabinet that the enemy everywhere has been annihilated and so the war "has |entered a crucial stage " The em- ‘peror must have learned that from Hitler who found that repealed an- nihilation or the Russian armies only left the war in a more desper- ate condition. Apparently both the empetor and the Fuehrer have dis- covered a neculla; kind of annihila- tion that. fails to annihilate. -Kan- sas Cty Times. While Branlforsfs w-orld record is not. affected bv the occurrence of trict. it ls well forcitizens to tn- pen here." unless they are careful to see that each new generation of children Le given toxoid protection. —Bra.ntford Expositor. There ls still nu Indication that Berlin knows vet that the Russians captured Vellklye Lukl on New Year's Day. The most recent Nazi communique in which the name ap- pears was issued January 5, and an- nounced that the “garrison continu- ed to offer stubborn resistance." The morale of the Gezman people seem; to be such that many inter- esting items at wtu- news must be ‘segt from them. —Sydney Post Rec- or . 1942 has reminded n; of many great events in the history of scl- ence. Newton was born on Christmas Dav 1n 1642. three centuries ago. Gurleo died in the same year. The Great Frenchman, Bialse Pascal. 1n- vented the mechanical calculating machine in 1642 This event was celebrated 1n London by a meeting of scientists of many IlaLl0n5_ pm- lessor Rene Cassin referred to Pas- cal as nn eternal example of the creative and critical power or PFOHClI genius, which coulrj- never be for 10mg repressed The famous as. tronomer. Edmund foroecast the return of the comet named after hlm, died in 1642. He persuaded Newton to wrlte the Prin- cllilfl. the greatest of scientific books, and printed it at his own flXhense.‘ He was the first to detect the niptzon of the so-cnlled "fixed- §lflrst a discovery of tremendous ‘mportance to the hirman imagin- ation and.» the conception of the size and mobility or the universe. After the movement of the stars had been observed. it could not be long before dynamic Ideas of evolution in the universe qnd 1n things on the surface of the earth began to grow. In three hundred years’ time. what will men be remembering of the year 1942? Equally important things, I10 doubt. —Monthly Science News, Rev. llLarlonT. M. Johnson i; {he flrst woman to be inducted into s. United Church pulpit in Manitoba, She now ls in full charge of the pastoral field which includes the church at Starbuck and the nu- pointments of Ferndule nud Prairie View. 'In the almost 2,000 years Q1 Christianity the sphere of the priesthood or the mlmstry has been amost exclusively for men. In some of the great divisions qr the Christ. lan Chwch there never has been any deviation from that rule and never will be The nnptfntment o! l‘ “Wan l" fllll Pastoral charge is an innovation at least as fur as glam a ls concerned. It ls pro- able that there will be other ap- pointments of a similar nature in the United Church. The la 311911 1°‘ l1." mllvwv is being felt in the mama “imntr-V» Perhaps more keen. 1v! tihan in other parts of the Do. m non. -—!'o t u; Journal, r w 1am Time Mlnr ls reported to b 1 | flfllntlhflsnlgle favorite drink 3,2535% not niaake flfii: fist our enemies vlfldlnz that it 1s i. waver’ °' °°“' Orflmlzatlozn-Wlndsor s Tllher trl Y" - on foodstuffs wgligrflaixllllli’ bf an imvflrtant. fac- cmase I gigs about the expected mr l" e number o! Wind. Deon e who will work Victory lots neft Bum. eommod ties are om and magyf-‘filfigtlv more serious, thvught of raising their own good are now seriously considering mean; wlmebY "WYT can fllllllflent thelr applies. A v increase 1n the num- Itrhg; ififdfllfl ls to be welcomed. ecome a national guy to ma)“ ‘he 13nd Produce as much food f‘! msslblet and Putting the vacant Ogfsufé) 800d use ls a. definite my; war effort. —Wlndsor star, possible breakdown or oortant factor in history or n1 didfriicfiaiihg“ all,“ comes when their ‘huncher’ . oetvs them, when o! their 9181s causes them to loss they grad n ' who says h1g5’ gfiérard every one faith in themselves. 8 He has b0 l" everything he does. Ho be lnfalllbie or he t‘ 105:, He ‘mm-i i"! 5W“. Pretending to god, and it‘ he does not stride far. er and faster than sn man on m. ground, without u ml or stump“ he is only a mountebanlr on wood.’ H1 Drops When dictators cut them- selves off from s11 contradiction and listen only w their own cchses, they beBln to lose contact with the real World. snd therefore they begin to love comrmlftl of events. From all HWOIHIN. tl-v ls “(mt E happening to Hitler. It is what has happgngd long since to MnssolinLvAnnc 0'. glmglvlcflomlck ln the New York We thought he srgumenl. hsd been burle . but no, a Swiss sclen. tlsl; interrupts the war to announce that h‘; researche- have cortclus~ lvely prover; the ape ls not the mLs- sllll; link However. we Imagine the announcement, particularly at this juncture in human afbirs. has been received wlth great. fEjQLClllB by the spec. —W1ndsor Star. a caseof diphtherla in this cis- ‘ mind themselves that "it can hap-| ‘he, Halley, WhO l- W8; so small s; to be qulte un~re- milk-and-w t; m’ H er ll. ls who never bcroro, In the flood of spooulsllon ml faith first in their advisers so that l r rnamrrcrcwy Gvosggm MR. KING AND Till IlRlWlBII-I Bun-The halt e liquor sd- vertlsement pu Mondrw 1n the Guardian by CI-nsdssn Brews!- lest Limited. reflects the Nor _- ~ ons’ disutlslactlon with some statements 1n Mr. Kim's address o! December m; Itls easy to lmsstnc these gentlemen, pale with rile. grinding their teeth before thelr radios, as the Prime Mlnlsher wit: devastating fscts snd losln rsveslod r the llquor urdustrv. as a v paraslbe. and s menace tn Osn l war effort. And then their faces “ . They become first u- lous, and then nappy. For the Prlmo Minister’: loslc had suddenly taken s queer turn. Were their oars do; j celvlu: them? Wasn't. Mr. Klnll ' voice announcing I More 10% rs- » ductlon ln beer sales over last vest. It was s. great relief to thou bir- ons to know their lomt months of £52m" °.“J"§n‘2“'°§i‘r“‘¥l.§“3<>llr"i D WES E l' - stlll sell more beer than they dld in 941. But what about those nasty. blunt statements Mr. Kins had made about the liquor industry, damage to morale, absenteeism among Indus- trial workers due to drunkenness. ‘ me prohibition or liquor advertl-slns alter Flebruary 1, and ms an =1 for and all the rest thing shou d be clone about lt. those parasites felt. They concocted the speechgwhlch they wished me lPrlme Minister had made. sent B. | copy to Mr. King, and had it set up as an advertisement to send to adlan news a rs. ‘ ‘tiff; chance orkifflns 1n I "l" extra propsgm before the Iebr - my 1 dead line was too swd w be mrssei 1 ling tor the "Breech" n a o z Canadigii grewerles Llmllkd fll-BWB that it. was wrtttenfout ol s: desire to retain the public: respect 1. e to , undo as far as Possible the damnini 1 statements made bv the Prime Min- lster of Canada. The device o! writ- ing a speech for the Prime Minister ‘I was childish in the extreme. but none the less dangerous. We are awaiting. Sir. your publication ol H": *:.tu.°{.2l’;hl$’.l§’. 31.5.2; ve . life must necessarily 515311111598!‘ 9° the liquor interests. In another letter we hope to make some pointed comments on the brewers‘ speech. We are. Sir, etc. ~ muss COMMITTEE. r. s. lsLAND TEMPERANCE FEDERATION. lsyourdtoncsl Rscrvltlssg Station. w p, ,_..-Ev, u. k3 §ii NESS. Also WALSH PROHIBITION iMondlsCclesoryurdcslawssTan urgsnllynssdod csfollowslsyllsoloyol Canadian Anny Ssrvlcs Corps lo rdonso Calvary "A" msnlsrssrnbol duly. 2's ouvsss " e 1s CLERKS t to HANDY men lfyou have bsarusabls lo snllsl because d your physical audition, and on bslwoss l8 and 45,00‘ c Volsran Spsdol lmlss pay wll b0 pcld lo‘ 0s- psrlsncod mun who pass a required lrado lssl. Promotion open fisr aggressive workers; solely on morll. Ac! now and hslp lo hasten victory. Apply o! ones at your more! lOCAl. RECRUITING STATION NAUFAX~C9qsw0ll 50nd nssl h llosplld Ab olYu-lsvlhlsdslq. Isusqllnfllssoomlydssydl Onslslldln We have ln stock and cars arriving of OLD SYDNEY SCREENED, BRAS D‘0R, SULLIVAN, ALBION NUT and INVER- ERICAN HARD NUT. Lowest prices, and quick deliveries, special attention to C.0.D. orders. W. o. GILLIS o c0. PHONE 176 elleved “firs” whs a ma‘: shill m s ma. M $a'.2.“&-‘%n“.b‘2£° llovs Ill distressing symptom; llr. Inns llsmssls m; llhll ll M; ‘E03 D up lofoilhonhcrs 00d Llvsr Oll o...“ and c-Whfli" pound. A sell tonls for cough.‘ ’ thus “a m,” n cont! | puma» n ussthelgg. bu: so withstand future n. lull. A splendid blood and idly-bull lnlllo for hon, yo snd o d who take u ly. Price $1.00 00d Uver Oll Capsule; $1.10 box. l0 Klrb 's Iron and Yrast Tonia ‘h lets 89c. lhcs lhlr llesturer 60c boltls um mo ms l H9 Great George Street l Mall Orders Glvm Prompt Attsntlon. ouosrs Fon- QUISLING BIOOKHOIM. -— (OP) - Tele- phone callers who announced them- selves‘: Norwggltplns who hi}? been . xecue —s.n enramzo —so COBBIJES and AM- - ulslln and his henchmnn Iingstad at te ephone booths 1n Drondhelm had to be closed for s. time. The fYght decks of airplane rlers are surfaced with wood Professional Bards MclEOD s ssunnw I.KIIJNLIY.I.O. I-LIINTLIY l0- Barrlatcrs snd Atsorscss-ss IAI Cir-s Sin-Have we not heard 0v" "4 over again that. Prince Edward Is- land l; a model for the other prov- inces of Canada inasmuch as ll lends all others by lezlslntin! 5°- briety into the lives of its citizens? But is 1t sobriety that. ls vlrtualy be- lng fostered by prohlbltlve lesb- latlon, or ls- lt not rather the llllclli manufacture snd sale of lntoxlcants. with their consequent results of drunkenness, manslaughter, perjury and other cJmes in which. l"! l0 state, our tatr Island has figured s0 inglorlously? The facts are that our Provincial Government of both political start - es has for many vests had ts chance -per prohibition to cope with the Illicit liquor traffic wth results that are pevnt to every observant (person. Recent Liberal and Conservative governments alike —ln their trying to combat mtern- perance —ha,ve apparently done what they could with the tool n1- lowed into their hands. The people of Prince Edward Island dld allow this "Proh1bif1on” tool to become jaw. How? stn-iply by not votln; for what they wanted at the so- walletrpleblsclterlt lrquestlomsble .1! the term, plebiscite, 1s strictly pppllcable when the referendums are so confused wlth politics s; to gbe practically smothered as was the case on one occasion. while on the lother occasion the total vote polled sentatlve of the peopls as s. whole. Democracy ehl Two quite incorri- pntible questions we were forced to ations turnrd out en masse to vote so came 1n Prohmltlon. Our last. liquor plebiscite (or “hoodwlnk" u" someltmes termed) tumor;- out to be -what very many had ex- pected —1itt1s more than n fsrcs. There were seemingly no party ties to be forged or consolidated. hence there was little political artron- age to be seen in the of x, and as s consequence the vote was so unsll as to be far from repr *- tlve. Had the people o! P. ll. I. 1n- cludlng the parents o! rising gener- ation turned out en muse to vols for what they wanted the moon- shlncrs, bootleggers and the “mill- tant minority" would most likely have felled to saddle us with this worse --ths.n -lnefl’ectlvs method of controlling the liquor- tfflfflg, (I copy the term "militant minority from s letter of exceptional merlt Whit}?! recently appeared In your Pulmc Forum over the name, “Junes r Pendergast. ") Asnln we u: why ls Prohibition such s. failure? It ls largely, s; Mr, m. on the line day u s general elec- tlon. " I sm. Sir, etc. —DEM. Summerslde, January l1, 1948. Five Hundred Men For Maine! tottcwTbTnnr Wrltlxi; 1n the Toronto Financial Pcs Mr. Ksnnsth Wilson. able 0t.- tswl correspondent, saks: "when has "the ‘manpower crisis’ vanish- 7.. “Well, we ask ourselves that, too: all the more so since news has come w "err o" at" at rears: m cave gm from New Brunswick to out Mains. 0E’: m old story; baffling. Here's the Csuaxllul lmirher hrtlustry dead up ssalnst lt. for men. and Minister ot Munitions Howe saying that. the lumber shortage ls "one or n Gov- ernment's worst. hesdwchea . and s. shortage or tlmbsr for alrplme! md other wru- and vet the Clov- smment. says 560 men mav have cannon m cut loge for so v in Ms ne. Who 1s this "somebody" ln Maine’? Is lt possible. as we hear, that he s connected with s Ubersl M. P. in Quebec? And that the Timber Con- troller opposed the loss to Osnsds. 1e have —psrhapp unwlttlmly “$3.. jksrdod any i prohlblwry s; s chnllenss. snd have bsnt their on- deavors towards plucking the "for. blgyn fruit." e Bummerslde Town Council ldl-mlstcd with. and hesrtll am: u! of Prohibitions long imlltd failure in hsndllg the ll uor sltu- ation on Prince wand Is snd, hss "messed ltselt ln no uncertain terms on Uhh mool snd bother- some question. There ls no hypo- Orlig in their action -lnslnuatlons to s contrary notwithstanding. firs»: wbtzo knpws our Msyor and om rs 0 Council walling their tins slnosrlty m: s r. I But ll in the present World |Wsr, the tide ls turn n; the chums in each cue being for the better, lgiigasfmoiifngthollfirolilbllim ‘an w no s ow sue large dlstlllln snd hrswlu; ops". tions: while r e no Hon. Premier of Canada snd the Hon. Premier ol lthe Province have both pronounced nouns" rmitt.:'.=:::"rt.r..t2italts: it» r I! a Prince Edward Island oleb- "t lsclbe be ever sisln resorted w, mlsht It not be kept free from ,\ r -pollt'csl ent lament-s. —lsolsled, ' '" ' N B8 it WON. —~ om burly polltlcs, that the issue may not be clouded and confused. and in order to get the more complete democratic votes of the people at smaller coat mlsht l6 not b0 held st the slmo polls lnl "Mu \r|<' u‘ nut \|*l ‘ l" Facisg spidflli Dominion 3W1"- um lo w» bvsinsss some, to mo» and llsuclros, Tlss Windsor is 9"‘ hnol by usswfivos WM "FY “W” brmoswssisnso ml Oil U! "dim" o! a modem hold ' Ill tuésur I DONIIIIUI SQUARE J. Aldsri: ROI-U!‘ ' "'“d"" IONIY T0 IDA]! 1M Prlnoo ll-IIUI {__......_.% llsrrsll-ndfionpany ll. F. ABDIIIBALII Olssrtsrsd Accountants lnstsn Trial Inllllfll a i I I l Chsrlollelssrl v-IIAI-“RJW-"nl-F-l-N-IHK-F-fi-‘lsflfif: PA ER 8t HASLAM l. ‘LLIAIAABLAM BJL. LLB. umssrzll. are. Burl cl Nora Booms Chambers ” lnltetosvn l‘ E I. (3 . . MONEY T0 LOAN ll P. O. Bo! ll BELL It MATHIESON v NONE! IO- LOAN n Block, Charlottetown u. r. fieruss I.A., K.C. NOTAR I he. IABBIBTEB SOLICITOE Building Charlottetown eves sxlutnzitfl GLASSE? FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OFPOMETRIST :0‘ lagstgnee“ s“ “m u clips-fa It's Grocer! of these men, and was over-filled? "m" gzddflj“ w]; Parliament meets three weeks hence. Perhaps then we'll hear more about the “manpower crisis"; find out whether it has vanished so com- oletely we can lct 500 of our lum- bermen pack ofl for Maine. l A KIDNEY ‘ REMEDY THAT WILL nut YOU nooxmo. n sums '. These paickages enclose s little As yefloiitiuorn. Within them llo rich hues. And lovely shapes. snd fragrance stlll unfur ed. Awaiting sunlight hers. I-N rods and blues Of lsrkspurs raising slender. wind- own were And hora, calendulss sccreu ldlfll‘ In 1mg; flsts s11 t-lthtly closed. Now l owers I have not seen swslt the dsv when I co Wlll Vanish. Here, sn yellow , pearls of com Within‘ whttsei ‘serabsasncs tulun , s rang s ~ Irons areas. hulk. red tnmltml will And here aré pass snd buns for, some Wm field. . , I In; on these seeds.- cl u gufasairtnershlp ln lova- lnessl l! you sre suffering 1111:" ‘ Klflncy Trouble. the time fl do snrnelhtns about ll ls Don't wsll m the eond v" to gel worse. Start llklnl PENSLARV Buchu and Palmell" Compound u» rsllet slut has been W successful ln other ones. Yo" “n Q g unprovemcnl In I very on time- Tho Iorrnuls ls nn "my m, "m- rotectlns- nl It oft. et I bottle mm- and r-"f yourself further dlscnmlflf 1nd experts!- E. A. FOSTER The Central nrurm" sle Pellml. tii the Kl y Science Monitor. -Lols I18 Ghrlstlan l or il- I l l Hill OVERSEAS More than 200.000.0019 pounds of American peanut butter have been psi-chaser} for lease-lend shlpment a ron . CARRY OWN IIEAT Australian passenger trains have n1 steam heal; passengers can’! Agent for the Pflllh" RQIIIQGICI. Auto robes In cold wssl-hsr.