zccrctovr R m tiiliiitoiiiziuviii GUARDIAN Morning Dally lFuunded tn i881) riesiuvut. Llt-ul. ti“. it cheater b. hull-Ill’! he; President. J lt Burnett, LJJ. Becreuny; Lluut LuL l) A Maclunnuu LL51). IAIN-u llllll Managing Uuvclur J. IL Burnett. l-J-L Associate Edlluls: rum; ii lllkttl mu tan A uurnctl SLUBLIHPIIUN KATE! By Mall m l‘-l'..l., 94.00 pt-i pull; 5:00 for ti month: 81.25 fur 3 mounts; Wu fur one munln UN,» neuter) v.00 pct year. e100 for u tuunllll 51,75 w; 3 tuuutns; W0 fur on: Muulll. B] Mall w other Provinces and u. a‘. A. $5.00 per 70A! hinuuu; not“). §~~\A\I pvt F51} 814W tux 0 manual. out: for 3 UNlIJU-ll almmml u bu: iurk; (In uuaruiuu may w: The Qtnirloltctuisu lune: square, liulnuuk‘: NONI Agent-y, Illlllh New: Akunvy, Corner Milk nntl Wnlhlnglol. llolt0n| nlelrupultian bu». Anni-y, 1:48 Pool It. lunlrcsli J. lclne, ail Bu; BL, form-lo; new: UIIII, Chum-u Luurlrr, Oll-Jnu; \\ulla~| ism- stand. undhury. 0n; llub Pulnuwu bllup, innit-um u. u.. ' ‘The Strongest Illcnlury is Weaker Hum the Weakest Ink." THURSDAY, AYGUST 13, 1912 A Book Of \Var Verse i F! t“ TH; war, it has been said, has inspired little if any gym; p. '*; it. thing comparable, for example, to (‘c . . ti bupcrt Brooke wliich roused Engi: ~ e ouibrcaik of the first world war, That iv be true; but greatness l8 I. relative term, anti ii is no disparagement even of Brooke's pocins to say that they are in- ferior, on the viliule, in Shakespeare's or John Milton's. So with Cifllllilliliilfklfy war poetry. Much of it is ephemeral, but we must be 510w in passing jud; ' icut on this pOirit. Where an authentic jwlit’ is sotitidcd of courage and heroism, we fiilfilill be prcpzircd to welcome it with open arziis. This adniutiiziiiii is scarcelv needed in the Case of a recently tiiilFi-“letl boiik of poems, “For Freedom", by Fiitial n lmzidcr G. L. Creed, R. C. A. l?“ a f-“iv r~\l "its from which appear beloiv. Tibe l=~ ' lll't’t'l.lli\'C Foreword by Air liars up, Y. C. Scotland and served with the it" Force in 1013, 6X- presses fcclinglv i ..llt‘llts of Canadians towards the people of zzie lllil Country’: The author, who is a nitive of v ',. The Little Folk of London Of all but Courage slicru, Who stand beside their bocnb-rent homes nd laugh the Hliii to sczirn; e Little Folk 0f London No hero's lillll'(‘l5 dan- The Little Folk of London- Devoted Folk of London- ‘rhe humble Folk of London Like heroes carry onl And again in such poems as "England EX- PECYB- - d’. in which Nelson's memorable message at 'l‘raf'.il_i§;ir is quoted effectively, l Tributes in verse are tiflld to the IeaderSlllP of Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt, as \\"Jll as to the spirit of comrade- ship uniting ll$ with our .-\lli<‘ril‘:in neighbors on the one hand, and our British kinsmen over- seas: Brothers in Arms! Together now w; face With firm-clasped hands Freedom's remorseles! foe. Across our world he strides each pitiless pace Marking a bloody trail of death and woe. . . Across that trail together, you and we Now stand and shall stand firmly to the end, Until this world cm tyranny be free And every man shall call his neighbor friend, Here is an epitaph on a Canadian soldier kill- td at Singapore: ' Ho died, this son fo Canada. for youl To help preserve your towns from raining hell Your wives from rape-your daughters from the ' lust. Of beasts-qour shores from shot and shell. . . I-Ie died for lack of guns-of tanks-of planes- Of ships-wt all that. wins in modern war. . . All he had left was couragel. . and the rest I; what. we stay-at-tiomcs are paying for. There lines contain a terrible indictment; let u: hope they will not have to be written again. Squadron Leader Creed was engaged in fox farming in Nova Scotia before the butbreak of the present war. He is now Royal Canadian Air Force Deputy Provost Blarshal, at Air Force Headquarters iii l,.|'t'.1l\\'l1. All royalties arising out of the sale of his book of war poems he has donated to the R, C, A. F. benevolent fund. More Doctors Needed 1Q Canadian doctors are not responding in adequ- lt; numbers to mcct the expanding needs of the country’: armed forces, says “The Canadian Doctor." That is the OtllV conclusion at which one can arrive from a sifting of the various pieces of €\'ltll‘llCt) available. These someivhat rudely shatter the lllll)l't‘.$\l0ll which has prevail- ed that the exi ' i system of recruitment was producing suffitmrt iuanpnivcr for the medical ranks. .-\t the (-11.1 lfltfiltllel‘, R. M. Gorrsliiic, lliivrulr of Medical Services at Xatioiial llr-iwitre stated that three llllllflfCtl p1. i. were needed immedi- ately for O\‘('l‘~l"l§ si‘l‘\. e zmd to fill VZICZIHClGS in home war cs‘: ‘niimits. l'i"~a<ll_v spcaltiiig those uuilt-i- flirty it .. sign up will go overseas, of luxu- l i'i lili-aih pizirlcrs, \ . and tlirisc U\\'l' illiiv l bc for home service. Within the ncxi yvzir, hr said, it was “almost a certainty” that zit llTl-i six hundred physicians would be z liiiiiul. lii‘ rgulirir Gtlrrslilic, intimfli- itig that lllt'~(‘ \\l“i\‘ it». fruiting forward in stif- ficiciit lllldllt i s, d llt"' ll iris iippcnl particular- ly t0 tliiiJ-l‘ l|llv\'~!l‘:.lll< v hi» l17l\'(‘ graduated ill re- ccut years. lii a print iiwpt~i"til>ii tour overseas, be said, he had bl" ll iulipllslwl with the fact that this i. ‘.ll‘.l‘l‘_’ luau‘. war. “The iiccd for young p‘.i_\-... ~ 1s \ 1v lll'l‘*\lll'\"i he said. Tliiit lllt‘ l‘i‘l\'li l “in .\i'!iiv .\li-rlii";il (flirps is iii u: l: ll ~i »>"iil<-l d '~pilc the scvu: drain lb i ‘ l- ll '4 upon iiiciliczil man- pwiv: i‘ ' ' W‘; ti» lllJlllV doctors who '~ ' ' r i~ririiv~ iiillliii tlicir i ' ‘ ' ’ l l l~viilli'ii-iiccd lll(‘ -='l ' " i ~. in». u lll"lll"f‘l\‘<‘<. Hill, '~ »" -l in bis ud- llrvt~= ' Hf lllt‘ \\".'ir Tlllll V l ' ‘ ‘ ~ I lIlllllV who l1l-\\' l in Ill." first (li'(';ll \'. .i~-iin'i- llizil mziiiy innit V . . 1nd. Tlicrc is reason to stippose that sufficient physicians cun- iiot be obtained. it is iin crtitive to sup l each and every demand of the armed services. British Farm Programme P Mr. Robert S. Hudson, Minister of Agricul- ture iii the United Kingdom, has told the House of Coitiinons that lie expects the British plough to break all previous records iii the coming year. This will be imperative because of the heavy military demands on Allied shipping. One of the first steps will be to expand night farming, which is now practised on a small scale when the moon is full. The Minister, however, hopes to see this ivork continue when no moon is showing and is confident that the blackout difficulties can be overcome by equipping tractors with head- lights in such a manner that these will not at- tract cncmy aircraft. The Ministry of Agriculture plans to increase the acreage 0f wheat by six hundred thousand acres during the next few months, The planting of potatoes will be increased by ten per ccnt., as well as other staple vegetables. The acreage of sugar beets has already been expanded and will be maintained ilt that level. Every effort will also be made to produce more milk. This last Spring was unfavourable, but even so more than ten million gallons of milk were obtained than in the best year before the war, which represents an iticrcase of thirtccn million gallons over last year. Mr. Hudson is proud of the achievements of British agriculture and states that thus far it has exceeded every goal set for it. .- EDITORIAL NOTES — Rivers of water rolled down our streets early yesterday morning. it u a ' Nobody will be a cent the poorer and war sav- ing stamps sales will not be less the bciiificiziry for those who take in Old Home \\'eek and its attractions. u n a r They called him “Liicky" because he kticiv how i0 llillltlle difficult situations and had vision. They were envious, jealous and bcliiiid his back, heaped all sorts 0f oppfOllrius terms upon him, because he succeeded where others failed. It was ever thus; nations kill their prophets now as 0f old because they d0 not tliiiik for lliciiisclvcs, and hate that othcrs should do their tliinltiiig for them. a: u a u Are Vichy officials to be trusted licre any more than in Turkey? A Vichy French vice Con- sul iu the southern district of Turlccy has been condemned to death for espionage against Tur- key. Tlie case now is before an appellate court after being tried by a special tribunal. The vice consul, \\'llOS€ name was not fliscloscd ivas sizitiou- ed iii .'\lltakia (Antioch), in the lltitay district, which borders on §yria atid lies close to Cyprus. a a it _Fl0rcnce Nightingale, English philanthropist, p'oiicer of trained army nursing, died this date 1910; ‘V15 iffllllfid iii Germany and Paris; labour- ed in the criniea (IS54-O)—ki10\vi1 as tlic "Lady with the Lamp,”—revolutionized hospital nursing in England, with a National Gift of $250,000 founded the Nightingale Training Home for Nurses, which laid the louiidzition for tlic train- ed in the Crimea (IR§.i-G)—~l(llil\\‘ll as the "Lady wise the Army Medical Corps: “Plush, little doctor, don't you cry, You'll be a soldier by and by." i i‘ * i‘ Ill Women are serving now with Britain's Home Guard, the defence force which iii littlc more than three years has grown from a shot-gun and pitch-fork army into a highly organized army. But the trouble, so far as women go, is that this particular aspect of their war scrvicc is absolutely unofficial. The bzin on enrollment nf women in the Home Guards still stands -—Thc \\'ar Office is adamant about it -—but women nevertheless are serving in auxiliary sections charged with first aid, communication, transport and kitchen work of the Home Guards, a a a a The Justice Department, Says justice hiinister Si. Laurent, has abandoned the old policy of seeing that prison labor was not allowed to ex- pand production to the point ivhcre it would com- pete with civil labor. It is fclt all useful work possible should be obtained from the prisoners. Army uniform stores are being taken into the prisons for reconditioning and agricultural pro- duction at the institutions was being increased beyond the needs 0f the prison establishment it- self. An arrangement has been worked out with the Ontario government under which the remis- sion branch grant tickets of leave to certain pris- oners to allow them to assist in farm labor. a a v m It has been estimated that the cost in a year of subsidizing the importation bf crude oil will be not less than $30,000,000. On top of this is the estimated amount of the butter subsidy in a year of $15,000,000 and the Corporation is still (leni- ing with claims for subsidy on fluid milk, al- though the actual subsidy period ended over three months ago, and the total for this will be $3,- 000,000. Finance Minister I. L. llsley toldlthe Ilouse during discussion of the war appropria- tion mcasurc that $50,000,000 had been earmark- ed for Slll)Sl(llC5 to be paid by the Commodities Stabilization Corporation. Present indications are that this figure will be exceeded “Illlllfl a. twelve-month period. a v n- n In tlie case of many foods sold iii closed pack- ages, the labels used must be approved by the Department of Agriculture and must show on the main label the following information: The in- FpCCliOiI legend-showing that thc product has been packed from the wholesome foods and un- rlcr s=lilli1li"y' conditions; name nf packer or first dealer, true and accurate description of content; and, in the case of pacltagcrl foods in hermetic- “HY “Vllvtl containers. tlic iict wright or volume l-f cliiitcnls. \\'itli caunlicd fruits and vcgclablcs, ibc products arc graded and samples are check- cll li_v departmental inspectors before the label ‘Yilll llll‘ k'l'-'l'l' lllllrk is put on ilio can, Grades bf PIllllIP/l fruits and wgt-lrililt-s in 0mm. Of ipialily :irv: l‘i.'ll'lt‘_\' finality; (‘liuicc Qualilv and -*l-'lll<l'll'll Ulvllilv, llvcr <15 pcr rciii of ‘fruits .illd \'t"ll‘iillllt"4 slllll in (':lii:i<l:i in tin cans zirc un- drr inspcriillii and lilbcllcrl for grade, l Tl"? CBARLQTIEEYXHQPARDIA“ NOTES BY THE WAY A survey of recent baptlsms in Le icwn of sen.) ieveas mat txwlc funds-distantly lilspnco D)’ rue C-II\LlllL—3lC snug out. ct HLII- icn, allfl iuai. ucna uHJ Ami twhn- out. the e7 arc- iu-si. IELYOIHDLS. ‘the vicar of 5e.by Abbey, Canon A. E. M. uxver, gave iue name Ann to as litany as time b.-.oi_s at a siiigm- afilnutqv i)..p.i.-iii..f .i;l\'.L.€ ieecniiy. rust s lii Lllflzilall nuance, cspxxafiy gills’ names, ate a curicus pfltflhlhcllwl, I funk. lincy are muui tntiuenctci by current, literature, uie sage, Royal chitcuen, and ccii.enip.t"ai"y 1‘~SvCl-y| as well as by moi.- o). settle causts llltrcitcc Nignuii- gins, Battles PULtJ‘ and Wend , wens Ann Vcionha, u-rc four lig- utles wno left a irouccable lmptim on the ClIILSLCXllIlg records. Be- tween this iiar and the Lst tuere was a, strung kllOi"€\ll€Aib away frcni faticiiui oi" "prci-iy" names, and 1llll1i£ll€5 whim clue swzirmcq with Vlu.as, Mallgcius, tsylvas and Llnrlstuics ivere pdOPJJJ by self- pcssessed little peope called Jane, Ann and Susan. — Leeds York- shire Post. l am not a poor mam and 1 am a man \\'.l0 (lt_]_)b a pea di..liei'. so that, you tiiuy bkL your DOLL: iual. l iun gcuig to take my stiare of any decent iood tntits going. 1 have tiad just one small piece of steak, about itirce liitiies square, in ie last twelve mciiilis. I have not had a single lamb o: lIlLLlUH uic-p. 1 o0 tzol itiiiik l line had oven one squaie intu of frlcd ham. In normal LlIltS 1 cat pietiiy of fruit, but. iicvv of LOLLLG lllflte Just isn't any Illlli. O;aiig.s so to our children. Ciealn valiistied lcng ago. I have a. SWELL iocih bill I o9 not suppcse that I haic a bit 0t des. sert itiat Slttillls io be aiilxiiing like svrcet. C-flOl-Jglll, lllQllf ZLILIH OJCG every two or three ivceks. We atent hungry and we are pretty lwalihy" but, exctp". 0n a few sp:c- lal occasions (llhlllg is n9 longer tnucfn of a LllL‘ A51 the best fcclc, eslzccaity hi: lJC5't_ll1ldl, gpes l0 C111‘ lllfl) lll lkll,‘ el‘l\'l((., flll(\ Dl course :it:body" flllllllullS abcut iii it. -.B' J. B Priestley, Brltsli Au tkior . German radio stations are busy these (luvs dciiaunczng Ylllllflls — and that isii‘. .i bud mi; at all Idler: ale scural iiaiicrs that uhe Gtrniins aze busy dining — and rienouiic. g. 'l‘..ey deny ie- ports that ..d Maistitt. Edwin Rommel is ill oi" [L25 beii wound- ed in a ‘plane clan, nounriiig ttifiu as of B: Tile Gtltiiuns ii;c reports that Gciuiaii tank on the eastern front ate being lock- ed inside tiheir vcilncls w assure t 1'9 W5 their fighting to i112 last. The Germans are also denying and dc. nounciiig l'(‘_lOl'i5 that ccokiiig fats ale being )ll‘C(lllJ2;l from the corpses of air raid vlct. ins in German ciiits. The rumor-dc nouneing business apparently takes up a lot of time 0.1 G.rman iadio stat-ions Maybe the rumors are tllse. Maybe the" are of Brit‘ ‘ 0 "n. lii lllllb " Gem .1 ( s tiiitl dint; (ioiiig lLle Bixlitti a lal iitiiig the l‘lllll0l‘S lously as fa they are calling them to tile alennon of the German pecple. May‘. Just maybe -— t e people ' tin idea, -- Buffalo CLZUlItL-LLX- press. The British Rational Insurance ACL has been tesltti itr a gJLIXL- lion. It has done mum gccd, but 1L docs not ' ole phisicurhs to pFZIVCJCG com; .n:1_v 'lti.~ emu- cmzc status cf the patent iaaitr than his ilittlciil n ctl rt s plllllfll)" CQll: .~.i'.ii.i.ii 11nd i‘. difficult hospitals, u...“ 5pm», has lcng ll. 311d has ' ii. i0 l‘ evils that ire... l llll'i ii T.vo years ago 1L appciiiud a MQLJCQ; Planning CtillllIlb5l0ll "to s;ut.y wartime developments and itieir effects on lll; country's metical services bet-Li p It. soliciird siigg flQDl-‘flr lii tin Z1..(ll.l‘ Draft IhlCfJll Rap , readies no CCFtluglfllls and \v ls issued sole-y for discussion. The hundred studies made by sua- ccntmittecs and the §_u_;g:Sll1_n_§ m. Celved indcat-e dlSwlllllflll-lllll vvih Drivate pzacdce, and this been: e it cannot comptio with ific hasti- f-al III ilie dliignoss and Lit" tment of disease. l-lcuct» ihtre is a. gen- W111 demand for tfie cocrdmatlcn 9! Dffivellllve and pfll-Cllfll medical $1‘V1°9. to lnciutie hcspiials, dent- ists, nurse; flll(l\\'l\’€5 and public health officials but WilhClli abol. 1111112 _lhe i .11.’ darzoi" ard the D 1101MB 0i free cJlicicc. Ilia con- sc-rvatiites, ‘who are in ttic ma. latllv. acnut that gCocl medicine is mpcsslble so 1cm; as there is com- petition from patients and practjg. 95 are bought aitd solci, but insfst that gflilffllllléllb cntitrcl insans bureau“ ‘i? or Dfilitical control and prcpcsc itiat .li'~ family ClOLtDf practice in a tnc-azcal centre in Whldl he mares ivlth h s colleagues ti"? "56 9f equipment and pcnstilt- trig facilities and which would be 095913? linked with lfie hospital The radicals ivoiilcl mike every doctor a llllklllllc gflllllyg] ggyf 1. ment, ofiictr and ltius place medi- cine on the same basis as pubic education. The ccmprcmisers would i-mit practice bout by pf1_ valte p1yslCiIllLS and by pan-lime SHl-Jfiffd officers. -— New York Times. llL and llllllfC. i~. ‘Purse now K Newjurglcul instruments which ‘Ilo0dllghi" the interior of uhe body are being iwzd by same army 5111380115 ln the Middle mist. Eqlllllmd with a srt of these un_ breakable luminous instruments, inedlccs can perform field opera- tions under a tie: or a ltuinto shelter, without. worrying ubcut, aircraft. overhead and with bzlter lightL-ig in the utouttd than in an operating theatre. Made of a trans- parent plastic mtverlal like gins; which transmits llgtit. round cirnrrs (ices not, conduct heat. and can b3 thrown on t-iic grcuiid wiihrzut breaking, lh’: lastriinicnfs are made in about. thirty different shapes, to suit any kind of wound or oprra, tion. Even where there urc tivo right-angled bfTKlS in lite trans- parent. lnslrutiietil, th= light rays lmvel down to thr frrsied tip and flood l-lie WOllIid will a cold, sfiadoivlcss light. however inacrcss. ible the place may be. nlocd does not easily congeai on the lfl$‘ru_ ment. as it dces with o. . liqhtinz ugmatnlrs About. dlffcrriit. i. l!\ll1‘.f“llS arc- flVPl_ able, but there are l/JTL" or [cur duiil-piirpcss- mcrlcls whch are quite sufficient for ordinary dag- nost-ic ard Sllijficnl u-jrk ‘in the field A sit of tfics", fC"lll‘J‘f‘ wit: a small olrctrk arrimiilllor, cosis about. l2 ptitlrds n'(l nrnv gllfg- (‘fills in the f'u'.it'n'_' s: hfive biirht. them 0"’. o! i cit nwn ncckrls, so ii cflll have ‘my yr i/(‘d in action Sure cf Biitalii‘; gr-at- est surgeons are new usng those ytoctocmooonoooomoaamunci WUR US UF CHALLENGE “This time we were almost caught napping. This time we almost perished because we were stricken with a deplor- able case of fact-blindness. . ~ Let. us watch that never again in the future. calamity, over- Q takes us. because. having eyes. ,0 we yet failed w see and hav- ing ears, we yet failed to é hear." - Hendrik Willem van so ' " -. .¢_\j\-.Q~ . ‘*2 annually Illillfll lln a cl nornliolnicnlx History 0f Tryon ilnitel Church 1792—-—1942 150 Years Of Service By a. s. n. Fmsr cuuncu BUILT 1v d Bedeque were made “Earl-fin paigaching appointments 0! the Charlottetown circuit. ply Jgigfi buipitl/s succesor. the Rev m Hick who arrived on the Island August. of tats. writins “ls w“ year from "Charlotte Townflfrgl? Edward's Island on May B - Hick told the secretary for Missions 1n Enklfilld- rantvtmw near Sir,-According to the news col- umns in your Alberta contemporary tTne Herald of Calgary) the fed- eral minister of agriculture, Hon. J- G. Gardiner. advised a prairie audi- ence that "the most important thing for the farmer to do was to get. out of debt ...These are the at. years for Western Canada and this was the time to save." I think this is first-class advice. but I also think that it is hardly fair to give the general urban read- er the impression that. in farm language, "everything is hunky- dory" with the wheat growers? Turning back the pages of cereal history, my farm journal would re- mind all concerned that. (forgetting entirely the fearful experiences of the (llDllgflL-d-EDXCSSTOH decade) the wheat farmer's revenues are still quite modest, and furnishes the following spectacular table of con- trasts. showing the production and value of ivheat. in .917 as compared with 1941: . our cgnfleflfigms? are remarkably large. l" ° ' elety is the smallest. of! any“); Li: Island. the generality g ‘I might be in; Presbyterlans or W flflnomlany, more prvllefll’ lflmed f“? H w; “Buy he said concluding is porfon ggqcque "l am not. without. “l” °‘ 8"“ g°°° ‘i3’? liiéii also." At Tly°n luv" " u, found the Methodist PFOPW“ l-crhefi pleasing. "The lastflnle 1 Dgifinday there," he writes. Wis ll", God 27m April, and glory bermo" . heaven was opened 9“ ea ‘Ive ‘ma . . _ In meeting the classes i a refreshment from the Dre-Sell" ° ll» W“ M“ " 1 ““.‘- ‘iif.“”.é‘.‘a capable o! describlnK-o ma“ one classes Wfillgdc néiglgnmaéethls Mme sggmhfiet bgyween thirty and forkily members meetinil "1 gag: ‘gguentrs? little Society at. M5 glck had formed in 1815 by - only six. who The mwd John B. Stronfl succeeded Mr. Hick in_ the 533L125; of 1816 came t0 Prlncf? h d m 51X weeks. He P19“ e n -I every _ _ - _ m" Nathaniel‘ vvrishmctplllsmoéllnaeltigr Prairie wheat crop .. 23331424350 bus ‘iue- 5' bu‘ ‘$3180?’ the present Bede_ Average net. price per bus. $1.94 3°!“ me 5 n was pogsmly one of Net value stsaoaaeoo qua ¢lll1l°h~ t m; me has; barns in the district. be _ 1941 for many W" m" “s ‘m ii had lost the echo of Mellwdls Prairie wheat ci"op .. 279,000,000 bus Meetings ll- "esmmdei-dt, alwcésf Average net price per bus. .. $0.50 frenzied sml-‘Ches Pi p0 i 1c “dyed. Net value $139,500,000 didat/es in the eltlhleell" l“ It is evident, therefore, that. the d:cision to improve the price (to the farmer) in the i942 season, from an average oi 50 cents the bushel to 70 cents. is a modest step in the right direction? The immense over-burden of farm debt, which has been accumulating over the thin and profitless years since 1930, will largely nullity p115- ent. price bctt/erments — including livestock - for two or three years. This iliimense "indtbtedness al- ready carries interest charges at. too high a level, if it is to be scr- vlced out of current income, and I think the three prairie governments, siipporird by the farm organiza- tions. are on the right track. in call- iiig lur reiutioing, or amortization, til. interest. rates more in alignment. with the value of money today? I am, Sir, etc, PRAIRIE READER crifi-ce tOttavva. Journal) The ohicrtn avaucfllclau of the Wartime rrices and. Trade Board. Lnnl. LAA€_ tea mm Luhtit: X80011 11198.41. '4 cousioera-oie sacrifice‘ to uan- 301mm, are» an appropriate com- liicilt llulll tile paigan nerald. ‘roppyt-bck ', said n10 Iléfafu, fnmfi HAA-l “(Aulaub at: at saw-nu; lcu tlllu Cuntifi raiiuitmg is not." Aiiu now u. is cabana-at. almost apologetic-sly. l-fllll. iiiere may ue no Inuit; uanuiias UllLll me war LS won. is tilitl, too it saclnixr IL is. but Xlub at nus Uflfl oi inc uanuna route. taunt oi hie west. mules, where lllC Udllllllilfi COLHQ “Um, 1|l€SvC lOi/“Y isiuiius, ivitn U-boats prowling about Ukll‘ coasts, are all out cut Ou from ine world. iviany snips nave bun sunk, and transportation is difficult and uncertain. The mainland ls Lttllllg witacui. bananas from the inuhs, and me large ivegro popula- UUI) LIRYC l5 UHSQHAQQ, LOHIUSJI, ll] Rial‘ 0f LllC IQULUYC. ‘THC lllagflZlf-C 'llI‘llC says there is actual "fear of starvation." We think of Jamaica, where Neg- roes used to carry bananas along the dock to the ship at. a penny a stem. Obviously the work could nave been done more efficiently by trucks, but. the old-fashioned way gave the Negroes work and so it. was retained. Jamaica had too an mantle industry which it was developlnz with great. success. That also is gone, and. a lost market is hard to regaxi. We think of the Barbauoes, wnere Negroes carried sugar cane to the crushers, although cranes and trucks would have done the 10o faster and more cheaply. But work was needed for the natives. and this gave them the means of existence. ’l‘o.iirisis have seen men and women of the islands sitting bv the road- side breaking stones tor a pittance- Negroes and Indians in Jamaica. and Indians in Jamaica and 'I‘rlnld.ad and the Barbados and all the other spots winch were so lovely in peace. which still have all that lovellnets but. with grim undertone, doing triv- lal jobs fol" siriail pay. From the white decks-of the -"Lady" boats many a tourist has thrilled at. the sight of alm-treed islands stand- ing out oPthe blue sea. Now not. all the "Ladies" survive, and under those palms and t-he white-roofed houses goes on a harsh struggle for nothing less than existence. And that. is what. it. means when we have no bananas. no Jamaica oranges, less sugar. We lose a minor item in our diet, buy oranges from California instead of from the West Indies-but in the Indies a large native population wonders if and what. it. is to eat, and a small white minorit, worries about the possibil- ity_ of r ots and bloodshed. instruments for wounds which can- not be seen into bv ordinary operating lheatre lighting. - By Robert Wllliemscn uteen-hund. iiélili-iirvivdfltliiiitlezbmivheerig the electors or Prince County met at W 0d f8‘; tres only, Priiicetown and m. cq é to nominate and elect, at. lldlvllllr meeiinfls E Sh“ 9’ “Ye “pleselll? uve m; the Legislative Asselifoi- In December o1 i816 Mr. strong called meetinE-‘l a" 110th Tryfin an)? Bedeque u; plan the elec on I churches In neither settlement was tnere any YEW)’ mime?’ Pl" _"'_“d1° agreed mat a Methodist, (i-‘llgltpg could be built by labour an (a! S In Tryon some of the mem 6rd agreeu u; supply sufficient squl" timber, others donated S0 mam’ m“ o, boal-dg other; so many hidlui wrought. nails, and still others B0 - . wont.’ , . mliftlicdiiyd i817 saw the beginning of the work and b)! We 911d °i ‘y? tnere was a. Refil- 1°§ chP-“ih er C , gd it, seemed only fitting that l should be on the Lord iarm near the first. graveyard in which even men quite a number of till? $13?" fathers slept. their ashes mixing with those of the still earllvl‘ Freud.) pioneers who had com- menced the cemetery. whether Mr. strong preached in the church be- tor-e. gfilng to AJfbt/A.Cl§ ivteetiitg lb no: certain but when he returned to th. Isiamy prince County was no long- er a, part cf his Charlottetown cu- cult for Tryon and Bcdetiue had become a separate charge with the Rev. John Flshpool as resident minister. The first pastor of Try°ll and Becicque made his home atfffryon the only one of the early tnimsiers 1,0 do so. He wrote iii August of how he preached the first Sunday on the Island “in the beginning of June" teither June 1st. or June 8th) in the partially fmishedcliapcl a; Tryoii, There were no window's. no pews, no pulpit, no lntcrioi" fin. ish, and probably no door fCl‘ hing- es, like glass, plaster, and pain’. were scarce and costly ln Tryon 0f i817. Mr. Flshpool could however preach quite acceptably without, a pulpit and the devout Metliodlsifi of 125 years ago could sing with great fervour “My God the Spring of all my Joys" without having ti ‘cushioned w to immediately af- terwards re ax on. The greatest need was glass for the windows. and a stove for the the winter. These Mi". Flshl>°°1 55W must, come from the generoslty vi (Lhers; accordingly he exchanged pulpits for a week or two with the Ministers at Backville. Wallace. and other flourishing churches across the Straits. In his letter Mr. Flshpool tells not without l1 little humor of his SUCC€5SI—"All.llOU8h they this fellow ministers) refused to let me beg, I was determined to see what Icould do by borrowing giving them 800d security, even the Divine promise. ‘he that. giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord." They liked their security and so laid down their dust. I was enabled to return las’. night with glass, stove. and money to spare." Thus did Nova Bcotia and New Brunswick have a share in the first Methodist church at Tryon. It was some years lnber that the interior was finally finished. The high pulpit which stood on posts in this church was erected through thelgeneroslty of Revkd Fitzgerald, an Irish Hancisian priest stationed in i823 at. the Ro- man Catholic mission charge of Charlottetown, where his black thorn walking-stick was an import. ant factor in toning the moriiLlife of the younger members cf the community. His eccentricity which included an offer to the Charlotte- town Methodists of twenty shil- lings for a bell. led to him being practically asked to resign in 1829. (To Be Continued) ‘l: PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND-NOVA SCOTIA l, FERRY M. V. Leave Wood Islands l, 7.00 un. 11.00 nan. 3.00 pa“, VIA woon ISLANDS, P. a. I. -CARlBOU, N. s. “ PRINCE NOVA " “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces." Daylight Saving Time-Sundays Included LUNCHES SERVED NORTIIIIMEERLAIIB FERRIES LTD. CI-IARLOTTETOWN. I’. l. l. SERVICE Leave Caribou 9.00 mm. L00 pan. 5.30 p.m. EU§U$T 13. 194.; x We are booking orders for American Hard Nut and Welsh Cobbles. For delivery during August and Septem. ber. Please phone u: your requirements. 1 W» D. Gilli: 5' Co. PHONE 176 coI l And He Wrote The Book! (Times Review) In this war-weary world, a news despatch that has in it n. bright. touch of humor is like n. breath o1 fresh air after a long session of 10a- ing at poker. So no apology is made for retelling one which already may have come to your attention. Last week in Washington. D.C., Price Administrator Leon Hender- son ran out of gas - and regula- tions which he formulated himself prevented him from getting an emer- gency supply in a can. Here is how [he news story describes it: Walking to a gasoline station with a container Mr. Henderson was refused gas. "Can't do it, mister," the attend- ant: said. "Regulations say the za-s has to be served in the tank of the car. Look at the notice lnstdr- your ration book." "I know, I know," Mr. Hender- son said. "I wrote those regulations. But, I'm out. of gas. How am ‘l supposed to get the car here?" "Get somebody to push you in here, I guess," suggested the ll- tcndttnt. "That's not necessary." Mr. Hend- cson argued. The regulations pro- vide foi" emergencies like this. l ought to known, I'm responsible for them." - "Read that last ygur book," the a 0 ragraph inside mdant persist- That. paragraph bud: “The station at lndant. is per- mitted to deliver gasoline only into the tank of the vellcle described on the front; cover of this book. Do not nsk him to violate the law." Of course rigid enforcement oi the rezulations governing the ramm- iiig of gasoline ls imperative. NJ one doubts today that the scarcity of liquid fuel is a very real thin? Just the same that simple lltte news storv makes one want to chuckle. Now if orilv George Cottrel- 1e or Donald Gordon. . . Poor Man’s Smoke (Winnipeg Flee Press) 5P¢B~klll8 0i tiie revolutionary as- DOlH-s 01 this global war, has any- body noticed ivnat. it has done to the 91W? 101111)‘ Clkfll"! At one fell swoop it has toppled it from its pedestal and replaced it with the tailor-made cigarette. Once the trade-mark of the idle rich and bloated plutocracy, the cigarhas become a, poor man's smoke ivliile the smoker 0t bought. n cigarettes is marked by that. fact as a person ot wealth and substance. 1n rural Manitoba, a colleague re- ports. the hired men are now smok- ing cigars while me 5Qulfe5 of the pflillLflLlOn smoke iuady-maae cigar- ettes. ‘this aroused our colleague’; iiiqiiisltivcness, and here are the ec- oiicniics of tobacco consumption. cigarette taxes have been increas- cd several times since the war be- gan, Smokes which once cost. a pen- nv each now sell l6 for a. quarter. '1 lie normal or average smoker ccn- siimcs about 20 cigarettes a. day. 'lnus it. now costs him about b2 cents a (lay for his cigarettes. Few cigar smokers, on the other hand. dtstroy more than four or nve of their noxious weeds a day. The price of cigars remains today what it, was before the war. A nickel will still buy a cigar. The Government doesnt care what it docs to cigar- ette smokers. but it has been care- ful of the cigar smokers. It now happens that a normal cigar smoker if any cigar smokers are normal of which there is some doubt. can get by with twenty cents or twenty-five cents a day for his nicotine ration. Ergo: It. is cheaper to smoke cig- ars than cigarettes. and cigars have beccme the poor man's smoke. SUMMER NOCTUB-NE Wade in the sleep that. lies upon these meadows, Knee-deep it lies, and more, waist.- deep, eye-deep, And leveled of‘! in gray that hows no owl. ~ Througlh unremembering silence of seep. Step over the edge. and enter. and wade on Through rising tides of sleep till you have found Forgetfulness of peopled more: for- gone And silence with no memory of sound, No other sleep will quit such mien as we Of mOrlfltl tiredness that, can and no res ‘This side of level alumbe that mus Like swelling tides. like silence un- oppresse , Like this tliiat on the stat-lit mea- ow es For man's lost. wading in, up ho his eyes. -David Morton in the New York Times. EXAMINAIIUN Imlng and lupplvlng Gblnn ii. J. “iluaoil OIYIUMETIIIST Montague P I. l. om" ll : l0 ll ,3] H?» P h“. " Hnlhi , 1,, 07b}: Conrliuhcgdmnivllitilinnm DBUOSTOII MALAIIA HANGERS mtmon - (o P) _ Vlillllwc by doctors to delieet-id aria brought into Britain i, m bets of the forces and “lame seamen is emphasized u, u, m‘ 11-55110 mo! we Biritish Medical 601,111} . arrn dge npeclalisilziion Yorke‘ "W MAX riic iiouvwoon m: Pownu cnlhd b! Mix Factor [hi], ‘:22’. . . In correct rolbr any to blend with 1m", vldunl complexion Coloring; If your skln I k. I lifeless try this iiiniaiyl m“ I80 if your skin doesn't 1m lovelier. Price 750-5135, Max Factor Cleansing Cream ---_ ._ __q5, Max Factor ltlcliing 01pm... In: Cream - - _ _ 5H5 Max Factor Flllllldlllh‘!!! Cream — -- - - 75¢_§|_;5 Max Factor Dry skin Cream - - — — lac-sits THE PASSWORD TO QUICK SMOOTH SIIAVES Yardley: Shaving Lotion — — — — — 85c and $1.45 Lu: Shaving Cream, rut-e '-————-————30c Lux Shaving Lotion, Price Williams Aqua Velva, Pris‘: ————————-50c Gillette Blades. Allin Stop Binder, Minors Blades. Schick Electric Razors. m: rwo lilies H9 Great George Street Ml" Orders Given Prompt " Attention. Professional Gard I McLEOD s. BENTLEYW W L. HENLEY. K C. J A. BENTLEY K. C. Barrister: and AllUffICyl-ll- L: w MONEY T0 LOAN I51 Prince Street Morrelland Gompan B. F. ARCIIIBALI] Chartered Accountants Intern Trust Ruilillnl Charlottetown ‘n'uh'tflu'l-'-'-'I' ALEX W. MATHESON BABIISIER. QOLIUTIUK kl Money to Luxn Clllllfm .2" llylsssgfiserstsll‘! M. ALBAN FARMEI! 5A.. LLB. BABEISTEIL, soucnok ET ' Ulllldlln dank uf Commerce Bl MONEY T0 J40AN MacGUlGAN 8- TRAINOR MAI-l ll MlcGUluAh K O. HT. CLAIR TRAINOR li- Blrri Solicitors MONEY 'l'0 LOAN k Office: Over Provincial Ban Richmond some (‘liririnttrw HASLAM M l-l-ll mantis-ran. En!‘ - Bank of Nora Senna uuimb! (finrlottetown P E l- AN ouav r0 u‘). o“! u. r. McPHEE a A. K1‘- Noranv m, IAIIBISTEB S0l.|( [F350 Riley Bllllllln] CW" " IELL 8| MA THIESON noun r0 LOAN Cameron Block. Chnriuttetn P l. Inland. eves zxliviiirn GLASSEiS FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OFPOMETRIST New location Kent nn_d Quark!“ owofl“ m‘ ' Giloctinentl Q III B] Alum“ "nfaone Residence 1°13- .4 __ J Corner