i I t‘ l- PKcr. FOUR Tll CHAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Daily (Founded in i881) President; Lietll. Col. W. Cheater S. McLnre \it'e President: J. R. Burnett, FnlnL Secretary: Lieut. Cul. D. A. Mnclilnnon. 9-5-9- Eilitur unil nlanxiglvng Director, J. l». Burnett, Fnhlh Assutlttti: iltliturs: Prank Walker and Ill-n A. l!!!" 5 BSCRIPTION RATES . blur; per year; $2.50 for 6 monthl. months; 50c for one month City lrt-liivr) sum per year; $3.00 for 6 mom!" 51.7.3 fur :1 uiunihs;; 60c [or one sigitégth B‘ Mull to other Provinces and U.S..-\. - l!" F“ sziturtlui Wet-lily s2.00 per year; $1.00 for 8 months, title for 3 month; By Z\l.i'il in P. :l.‘..'i l ‘Iltu (.l..lll0l1£'\l'i\\l] Guardian may be obtained at iii-tithing‘. News 3591):) Times Square, New York; Old ,\uulii .\t-iis Agent; Corner Milk and Washington Bilstun, .\li'll'0p\illl_i|t hows Agency, 1241i Peel Sta lilontrt-in, .l. line I13! B21)‘ Sh, 'l‘0l'0nl0'. News Mfum- (‘liaitiu l.;iurii-i-. (lttuwa; Wolfe's News Stand bub- bury UllLl liuii tobacco shop, Muncton N. B. "TiheTSfronqcst Memory is Weaker than lTle Weakest Ink." suiirnnincit so. 1942 l. Hospital AppEdl 1.11». iii;iii_v czill~ atrt- being i iiirliiititl u» iiiiitiitziiii Xilvzuioii .\riii_v, the ‘g l~ being lllllrlc‘ l'i"'~;~ liiln ' '. ziii :i~- t» ~, y ‘ i‘: ucuc-rzilly. In the vicin- _I ~ - ' iliz- 1\l'L' zicciiiiiiteil for in t-vl ziinl zfo di , t- of hen tirtiiiil of, Dnriiit; t \\t'l't' 5t'f\\.‘ll—~.'\ll ' ‘ the {UPT- Illltli‘ and the l!» i» fccs fCCClHvl from ributinii" vim thc for thi viirpit-e. l -'ll has itiv stwl its. that is t‘ coni- .\_§0,000 was iiictirrcd of pzitiriiis who wvrc s or who were uirible tYit-y" were dischargcil. ll "no iii tiiiiirl that the llos- i i . I lililtlllS requiring hospitaliza- > "Kiwi are recommended by a doc- Ji i-r other l'(‘.\l7f)l'l5ll)l(’ citizen. izikc- their chance of pzrv- ti» note that in ihc \'Zl<l " ey are nut (lisappoititevl. e is a leeway of $30,000 to lt n .. be bnrllfi in mind that it is m cut down expenses, and indeed ~ i; tvq up as regards help, food. l, therefore, that a tfencroit: '1 i "en ‘o the zippeal now being 7 at p; the hllspitzil. Si. Lawrence Debacle lie Si. Lawrence power and imulls to the lloiictaryi .1; of obstacles it has always llii the Caiiarlizin side, save in tin. never particularly ag- <»pp--\iiiltit, pzirticulariyi in gtlllitl. ln the States, the t- always formidable. Util- Un interests, along witii s Illlfl boards of trade and ...¢ {l itry fiiriiiirlziblc combination. "ll l1\_'.t‘l” rczilly got into the Cati- :1 because, under the agree- l lii-th by the liennctt and King ' c ll. had to act, first, in ' - Ft-iiate at \\'a.<liiiigtriii failed .. t treaty. Sanction of the ~ revcr rczilly put up to Coii- lr u; put up to them because 0f (llIfllilQ if it would get by. That i5 the l-tlll 2W. :il(‘i\'illQ for the duration tllC pm..- in] which great amounts of - b l"l >peiit investigating. Nothing i of it till after the war. Then, ~ tiun may‘ be to revive it—or forget it. cilllflifffliikwplilfllOGS In The South in a report received from \V. B. , .\~~'-::iiit Commercial Attache at Aiggriitfiia, that country has a Wii pf bpth table and sccd pota- _\i»;ti".< crop, estimated at 51.4 I- as ctiiiipzircd with some 38.6 s i:i It;40-.l.l. .'.i producers of seed potatoes, lt .t".l‘~t tn note that it is estimated lWixziio (fortification Service that l of grarli-d certified sccd is about that this amount is 2,_'t1l, hit llt‘l~, and lztrgtli: ltllllli‘ up flfitll first and second-genera- 7 ~"l(l (il)l.'llllCfl originally from lion b. ' i i- lwzil of zibiiiit moor) acrcs platit- mil (liiiriiltziii svcd in llic past kw." were planted in the seed , 1i . ztifiwl, \ftit ll‘ n». iiiy- fw- .'\l‘;'t‘llfll‘l(‘. exports of certi- f} .l -. C, lgp , i',_-,- 1.. lirngt1;i_v' last July) and ziililzi t- piwtt '1 ‘ll iiitpnrtcd sci-d which was 1m! c. :'»~ certified seed zones, Argen- tiiizi -! miliv about 2,121,500 bushels of -_;'»i--l i til It‘. friable for planting the next crop. \‘.liiE<~ it lllI|\' be gratifying for Cflllftfllill‘. fir‘ fr. ti. i.lllr\\' that lll(' .\l'Q'l'llllll(' has benc- fittttl by lllt‘ ‘Ni provided from the D11- flllllllill, this _,, ill ition is tempered by the gmlrpirwi tlirit at ]il‘f‘>l‘lIl "little interest is he- ing ~llll‘.‘.'ll l|\' the llTlllf‘ in iiiiporlcrl seed pota- p.15‘ ".‘\l.-iii~_- ‘(YAHYCYS and btiyers," says the “n. vvcll a: sonic agricultural 0f- lllt‘ view that Argentina docs Hull ll) iitipiirl seed [iotalncs this \<,.r l» t at llVlH‘ is 1 grind snpplyt 0f certified Flwl :l.-...i' ‘ill; n. \\i'll as adiwpiatc supplies of - lli "p-f. puuitr... that can be il$l‘(l for platit- rlulitilviil. . il-, w.‘ nut ruflr it~ lll t. ‘p y lmnd," the report continues, "thi rc air a ftv.‘ who lflbt‘ the longer view and tab-- twiiit ill that Argentina should import a f|lllllllll_\‘ of \t'i'tl in s-r-rvc as foundation stock. our‘ cl» be in a pflslllull to supply Uruguay ivitli first-generation seed for their main planting m July-September. However they do not con- sider the situation would warrant action by the government to import seed this year. In recent years Uruguay has been Argentina's best cus- tomer for both seed and table-stock potatoes. The demand in Ufllfiilil)‘ i5 for first-generation seed, though when there is a significant differ- ence between thc prices of first and SeCOvIId- generation seed, tlteyi fill sortie of their require- merits lll the latter grade.” Complementary to the report about seed potatoes in the Argentine, .\Ir. AlCCillllZJilg-ll comments upon the seed tiotzito Fltnfllivn H1 Uruguay. He states iii part1 "For the current main crop planted in Aug- nsi-Septeinlwr, Uruguay purchased about 2S6.- ooo bushels of Argentine certified seed, mostly ii wgeucrzition from Canada, as compared with 1024f“ bushels last year. "Lust vvar ait officer 0f thc Official Seed Distribution Service visited Canada and 1h! United Statics to .ttid_v the potato industry and purchase seed stipplies. It is probable that this official will visit Canada again this year in an effort ‘.0 obtain seed P0131995 f0!‘ [he Janna“ pluiiiiitq. Lust year New Brunswick expoi‘? ers Slllipllvtl uuptf» crates, 0r all the imported. ~t_‘('(l, for this planting. If shipping space can be arrazigctl and c.i.f. prices are not prohibitive. L'riigtiay' will take this fall about the same ziiiipinit as last year. The (lctiiand will be ffil‘ lit" liuinlitliii variety, with a large percentage of the small-size grade. The shipment shoitll arrive at Xlontcvidco during the latter part of lkcember." - EDITORIAL NOTES- The end of the best Summer and early Fall we have tXllcflCilCtfll for many years. * >l< i 1k The only idle pwple in Ottawa these days arc the ‘_'A:All\:.. wntclic-rs-stock gambling is at ll discount. n n- u< it This is the last “iecliiesdayt half-holiday for the present > ‘on, though endeavours are being lllZUllZ to cuiii e ii throughout the year in order t.) coniply~ wL"..i the l)l't)>l)l.'Cll\'tf 50-huurs weclc regulations. ilkitlfi Potato harvt~~tiiig is the order of the day, and the llllltlifil prnslvects are good. If the mble 0r seed market does not absorb the crop, there are the starch factories and‘ dehydrating plant, a a it n- The Conservatives of Queens have organiz- t-d for the ensuing year. Though there is little prospect of an immediate election, still it is the part of prudence to assume the attitude of watchful waiting. >ll ill i It is not ntcrc optiitiism. or even “wistful tliiiilving" to declare that the tircscnt Fall, Christ- mas and Winter business promises to be the "best ever" in this sheltered and favoured com- lllllllll)’. Money is plentiful. and what if taxes bi: heavy, everyone taxed has the necessary wherewithal with which to pay and look tilcasant. m it it =i= A. Commissioner Lamb who recently visited us, says he would like nothing better lllZlll a Jl—_\'CZll‘ lease of thc whole of this Island iii which time he would convert it iiito a verita- ble paradise 0f productivity and indeed, luxuri- ousnvs-xs. \\'hat, he says, is tiecdcd, is a direct- ing. a tirotx-lliiig force t0 iiialte us reap the fruits of our find-given opportunities. As the .\lzi_vtir of New York said t0 the Queen 0f the Belgians “You have said a mouthful.” n- 1 v George Ernest Jean Klaric Boulangcr, French General, died this date 1891; described by Jules Ferryt as "a iiiusic~liall Sr Arnaud"; became \\'ar Bliiiistcr iri 1886-7; created the “Boulaug- ist democratic agitation" \Vl'llCll threw France into confusion; dismissed for insubordiiiation in i888; fought a duel with Premier Floquct the same year; rcturnctl to Paris 1889, but charged with motiarchical intrigues and misapplv- mg public funds, he fled; Committed suicide at Brussels, i891. m iv iv >l< Everything sometimes comes to him tlint waits. Had not Defence Minister Ralston been in nccd of a scat, in all probability, Mr. George H. Barbour \VOl.llCl. have succeeded Mr. A. E. MacLean as member for Prince. During .\Ir. l\_lacLean's illness .\Ir. Barbour was cou- sidcred to have the scat in his pocket. It was with great reluctance his backers consented to withdraw in favour 0f the new ‘Minister. Now Mr. Barbour has his reward in being appointed permanently to one of the riiost important war and post-war jobs in the gift 0f the Govern- ment. ~ pint in; 6* Gfl a In response to inquiries, the authorities at Ottawa indicate that this is what is done in “Alissiiig” cases. In gctieral, when aservicc- man is officially reported misisiiig, dependents‘ allrnvaiicc and assigned pay arc continued to the cud of the month in which lie is reported miss- ing. From the first of the month following, an interim allowance amounting to either thc dependents’ allou-"ziiice and assigned pay in ef- l’ fect at the date lie was reported tiiissitig, or the lllllXllllllifl pension applicable iii the event of the soldiers death, whichever is the lesser amount, is paid to the (lcpciiilcnt. This allowance is cmitiiiuctl until there is change in the status of the man concerned: such as “dearl," "prcstim- ed ilcad," “prisoner of war," “ititcrncd," or “allve." If dependents’ allowance is not in pay. no interim allowance is payable. If, after the interim allmvancc is put into effect, the Service- man is officially reported a prisoner of war, iiitv-riir-il or alive. the interim alloivancc is dis- 0tillllllll(‘fl and the dcpciirlciits’ allowance and assigned pay in force at the date he ivas report- ed tttissiiig is reinstated from the date it was replaced by ititeriiii alloivaiicc. If he is official- ly l'(‘]ml'l(‘(l, or presumed, t0 have died, the iti- trrint allowance as above is continued for three months from the date of tlic castialty, and fhc (‘ziuarliau Pension Commission advised of the pnsitimi iii order that their consideration rcgarditig pensions may be given. Future pay- ments zirc under the jurisdiction of the Cana- dian Pension Commission. THE CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY We Ire now reaping the harvest we have sowed for many years in British Columbus. In pencetimes we failed to attract men and women into the teaching pro- fession. Now in wartime. when many gallant teachers are going into the war service, and young people can get jobs far more lucrative than teaching, our whole educational system ls gravely damaged and the lives of many children permanently affected. Vancouver Sun. There is a novel for ooma writer in the fact that the Wlsoners in Western penitentiary. near Pitts- burgh. have built a chapel exclus- ivey for religious services and the cash outlay on the stnicture was slightly less than $100. Inmates did the work and provided the skill themselves. Now behind the drab, grey walls of the “pen" stands o white gleamine. mission-style place of worship. The religious instinct of practically all men. even hard- ened criminals. often lifts them to spiritual heights in sharp contrast to their sordid conducn- (King- ston Whig-Standard.) Unless a man "has clothing coup- (m5 left on last year's cards. or can borrow a few from a member of the familv he eanont buy a new suit until October 10. To t;r\' and bridge this zap. n mall-known tailoring f"m is allowing customers to take (le xcrv of coat. and trousers bv sur- z-rndexirirz 2l couomis. The waistcoat (value five cctiponsl can be collect- ed ln October. Onlv the 20 zreen coupons ln the new clothlmv hooks are valid between now and October 10. Twenty more colored brown. then become available. A new suit takes 26 coupons. ‘Tin-re sti‘! re- malns. however. the problem of the odd coupon. __t1.ondon standard). Remember the escape back to England of the British Amiv from Dunkirk? Eiizht hundred of those English soldiers carried with them back across the Channel 800 (i005 picked un bv them in France. Bel- Rlum and Holland. These homfless dogs. their owners killed or flee- llle from their hwncs. had simolv been adopted bv those eieht. hund- red Tommles. How can vou account for the rescue of these homeless dogs? "Y can nffer no exnlariatlnp." wr'tes the journalist who talk the story’. “than that. thev were British and even the horrors of war could not rieaden their ‘ove for does. es- rterlrillir dogs in distress —Our Dumb Animals. A New York newsnuper with a luree circulation has announced that it ls no lancer zolnz to use the word “ccmmimlntir” 1n FPYQfPHQQ y. official war bulletins. The Journal laid down this rule for itself at the beelnninz of the war and its news- editors have fiCfllplllfiuslv changed the wordlniz of desnatehes received f"nm the C P and B, U_ t_=_ 1w; the First Great War the Hench Wfird Wfls adonted eenerallv instead of “stat'irterit" or ""ommii-i¢g,¢lt-,v~"- but ln the Second Greet War with Francs vlrtuallv out of the nwuwg as a united nation. it Pernod hi he unncressnrpv awkward f»... Pvvvlieh Waders. It doesn't reallv miittflr Vffy rvuch arid we would gledlv call firm “corumimim-p" if it WOLF" assure more nlsaslnz "slate. 1118"” firm ciir headquarters. - (Oitawa Jcurnali. The Nlzle don't hold “mm-tn ln Particularly high esteem They are considers-d deflritelv lllf" lor to men. Men. after all. are the warriors. and war-Mrs 1w» rew-rw-i aloctm 9n 415E by The Noll mentality. So a Nazi SNdir-r killed on the Rugeiuq front in his w’ll urqes hi= wife, who l5 still voting nvicl health", “to marrv at once in circle" to hear sons for the Fatherland.“ Aw! then the Nazi soldier “roivrlns ‘bet If n“. (‘hllil even then expected b‘. his Wm, should not be a son, then his world- lv goods should be elven to the National Socialist institute at r105. lin. What ii clvfllzation these Ger- man throwbacks are tryiriq- to im- nress on the W01‘ld.—Ml]waukg9 Journal It is the nllot instructor who takes the fledollng iilr student and elves him his first dual time in the all‘. nurses him into confidence 1n his ship. and eventually sends nlm off solo ——wlth a out on the. back, and a. cold lurun of ice in his own heart, The instructor dies a thous- Mld deaths‘ iintll his solo punll re- turns, and then he takes him in hand again to turn that embryo w“- fldeuce into an assured knowledge and the real thing. On everv 111p- fleld in Canada that, has been go- ing on for many months now, yet the general public could not. name five instructors between Victoria and Halifax. Nor ls there any lack of public srnpathy or of interest, in that, because the names of these men have seldom, lf ever, been mentioned. Ask the young pllolg, however. how_it ls that they re. ceived their wings --the broad dou. 1119 Winfis of a mun who can fly an airplane -and the wlll lve the credit. where it is rightfuly due: to their instructors, nameless and unknown. —Vlctorli1 Colonist. Belfasfs street artists are oppor- tunlsts, quick to take advantage of any new idea for drawing which may attract. the attention of pul- ers-bv. and since the arrival of the American forcs. I imagine, bl15lngg5 has improved for them. It ls com. motiplace to see three or four Am- ericans standing admiring the draw. ings on lthe pavement. Yesterday I noticed that one of the artists had introduced it new work --heads carved from turnips. He had com- feted three heads _ of Mr. Churchill, Stalin, and Hitler and I mllsl 3B3! that thev were very good. Details such as eyebrows and motistaciies had been disliked 1n_ Mr ChuIchlIPs head was “furnish- ed" with the Inevitable clqar, The "exhibition" afhacted g good deal of attention, and when I was p.135. lng there was quite a crowd of spectators. —Brl.stol Evening Post. It Io extrrwnely regrettable that when the official and general re- lationships between Canada and the United States are so friendly, and when the two nations are work- ing no amicably in cit-operation with one another and with Great Britain ln the serious business of battling for our existence. that this kind of perverted publicity should be placed before hundreds of thousands of theatre-goers from Halifax to Vic- torla. If the bill Motion plclurg lnteifsjts fies the bordyr desire o m s ea r own pecvne t- tinq lines with the plctin-gy liffat. unfairly minimize the part play- ed by a neighbouring countrv end unduly miiirnify the part take-n by their own, that ls their bitsl. ness, of course, even though 1t. is bad taste Canadian uUClIQIIOQS, however, should not hove in be llaiiglanil’: lary Lost in Wilds Of New Guinea Jungle (Copyright 1962. by The Aloocioted Press) ickest Man In Canada’ J. Dtaclnnan in m“ Ottawa Journal) 1 at down in the rpobkgé-l m will? 1 merit. mynviere "WWI " Iborttimeexoftl-ldm“ meat, "I nod a Professional cal} from the sickest. mun in Ca-ilgdl- umvn. Auamiu. seprfm MEILBO 29 —(AP)— The story of what. hop- pened to Vern Hauglimd. Associat- ed Pres: War conespondent, dur- ing the first 32 days of the nix weeks he was missing in the wilds of New Guinea Wu disclosed tn- day 1n the dlnrv which he kent while he was able to write. The peflcllled entries in the small, black, paper-bound notebook oiled. begin Aug. 8, and end Sent. 0. How Hnuglnnd fared in subun- uent day; and how he come to be in a native village where mission- aries found him Sept. 19-15 not known and may never be known for he was delirious when found and remained so until hLs first. oorlod of lucldlty in a Port Moresby hos- pital, where he now la recoiverinrt. Prom the dlary and other in- formation it. can be said that. Haugland landed by parachute somewhere in the higher ranaes of the Owen stanlev mountains and by a tortuous route followed mount.- tnln stneants and made his wav to- ward a coastal vallaz, Lteut. James A. Michael of Temple, Ok'a., co~pi1ot of the bomber in which Haugland was travelling when it ran out of fuel after riding out a heavy storm en route from Australia to New Guin- ea Aug. '1. still 1s llstod u mic-sink. Haugland, wlho bailed out. just. ahead of Michael, met the oO-Dllot on the second day of his wander- ing but the two became separated Auiz. l6. Auiz. 7—Balled out about 6:30 at 13.000 (feet). Uninlured. Aug. 8 — Heard plane at. seven. Aug. l0 — Mike and I hiked all BY. Aug, 12 _ Thru God's grace Mike and I are still together. Forded river near fork, Aug. 13 - still no food, no sign of peope Aug. 14 - Not much progress. Most horrible rainy nlte yet; we Rot plle of wet. reeds - slept under them in soaklniz clothes. Aug. 15 — Over more min. heard plane but. too much clouds. Aug. 16 — Both very weak - feet bad. Later-Aug. 16 —- Must. hko to river. We may get separated or drowned but pray to f safety. (Entry in different handwriting. presvmablv Michael's; "In case we are separated I'll be up the river in bad need of food please to rescue. Lt. James A. Michael") Later Aug. 16 - Mike went. no over the hill. I started down the river, saw I couldn't make it. and came hack to dry my clothes. Aug, 11- Plane came over early, but too far away - didn't see me. Very week. Evening. — Awful climb up mt. Terrible mts. ahead. River ifso impassable — winds endlessly. View on top convinced me only a mir- acle of God can help now. Aug. 19 — second day lying on rocks, chevrl-ng grass and reeds. praying n. great. deal. Aug. 20 -- Worst rainy nlte slnoo Mike and I spent two terrible ones. I was lust lying in the mud. soak- ed and stinking, all night. some- how stronger today. t Auiz. 22 — Worst relnv nlte Wt -dldn't think I could stand that torture. Raln today-dread tonlte. Aug. 24 — Hard warm, dry nlte. Two and one-half weeks with nothing to eat.—my body looks ter- trible. Aug. 25 —- Worst nlbe of I11. Heavy rain. River came up. 110°5- ed me out of one bed, then another. Had to climb into rocks and sit Shivering there. Aug. 2e - Awoke a bit delirious for first. time. Aug. 2a - This may be wroni date; either last nlte was very long and full of bad dreams or I have been semi-delirious . Twv or three days. Found some delici- ous berries on shore. Aug. 29 — Climbed all day. Evening Aug. 26 — On WP. rmaztng. awe-inspiring view. Aug. 30 - Got dry during nite so fairly comfortable despite 1R0! of cover. Aug. 3f — Pound bwo pockehsfull of fruit. looking and twine like sour lums. Helped a lot. but, too sour eat many st once. Sept. 1 — Reached too. for first time see great va11¢Y~far away- and not impossllfe 10 Elf-h- D"? God, help me keep my etrenBi-h- this may be into settled area. sept. z - Almost longest hike yesterday and today. ‘Now golnl into valley —lhope on!!! through. Sept. 3 _ Reached river bottom below extreme Duh. bathed. washed out. bandesea. dried 100l- One toe very badly swollen. scpt. 4-After tough dlY worst wettest coldest nlte. Hand no numb can't write. Terrible struggle thru jungle today. Sundown- climbed. most wond- erful vlewa yet. Sharp air bottle. (No elaboration of this statement). Sept. 6 — Reached river's end ~ . . Now surrounded W rivers which can't ford. Only chance now native come, I (um. Almost nothing edible several day! —very week. Later -— Answer to prayers — D. dozens and donenn of bumble berries. Sept. ‘f -- Berry breakfast -- forded rlver- berries galore. . . Mosqulios unbearable. Little mm twliz shelter. sent. B -—'I‘0day tried ford river. couldn't, Manv berries still. Crossed big river on log lam, not almost across uni-her on log meaning five fool: jump. woded instead. Pound three native note one with floor. . . Qurroimdod by stinking weeds. Blck ln nlte. first. time. probably from ctlngera on hand and mouth. Sept. B - Spent rainy n.m. ln hut drying shoes. Where frcm here! Impossible stick close to river be- cause impassable tall reeds. PM. — Thank God been near reeds Rot on to faint snhol truck. Crossed stream on lo: at berry nlnce, trail new pleiner, definitely track thru forest. Made more dia- $881166 ‘my? trilianmfor neg! . . . llfl B . l one lofliéd over, no vines, all cleared. FRESHWATER FISHING Ontario's fisheries live employ- ment to about 6.600 persona mostly the as consultant.‘ ciipTliifnxui." was the rabbi. “b?! in the um now-Oatezorv 'A'l" T11?" m pulled a medical meet out or his et and hl-nden it. to hi8 men“- Tbere was mush iaimnlfl- Tm? ‘m; one of ,' "You will emOY 333‘! ifiilli. u. ha-ndeo me me Diver. It. was the usual f0 . the medl- col meet of a amtee. the swwmwfi of nit-me. we. nlwe o1 M10600?- reoord of Dost illnesses. This snap was 2i and resineu m a normein Ontario town. He bad. Bow-WWI W his own awry. suflereo irom almost. every ailment. The question rifle“- "Have you ever sufierw 110m "W of the foiiowiniz: rheumatism. osm- ma, heart. disease. kidney or blad- der taoubie, rupture. varicose" V8108- nervous mental disease. '10 each he answered with a straight "yea." On veneriu disease he admit-- bed one and denied the other. He suffered from fits. had nértcotive eyeelaht, but. did not. wear releases. He had also had toot trouble. M me bottom o! this irnoosinn record the doctor had written: category "A" and beside it. these word-ii 1 do not believe one word of an he says about diseases. ‘leprosy is not listed". I said s73 I handed back the document. "No . laid the doctor, "but. 1f it. had been he would nave had it." I asked lf in the oblnlon of these man would be likely to make a Rood soldier, and the tenor of me reply. on which both weed. was mut- the answers given were no indication whomever of his soldleriv qualities or lack of them. Some mien Wlli try ever dodge to keen out. of the army and then enloy army life Just as completely as the man who volun- teers on the onenlnfl day of the war. This man had lived s more or less secluded existence. He disliked me idea of constant contacts with other men, Living in a crowd was outside the field of his experience. "It's like a residence colleize." remarked one of the doctors. "There are a few who can't. stand 111D to it but. thou- sands look back at it. as the hanblest days of their life. The chances are m. that army life will be the happiest. experience of the sickest mm in Canada." The Trend Away From Socialism (News. Toronto) A neat. mrmv amateur and Dro- fesslonal students of DOLIlZlCB-l econ- omy have expressed their views of late anent. the kind of oolltioo-econ- omic system Canaan will develop after the war. The (xmsénsus seem to be that. here will come into being a much more nltzhly socialized state than has existed tiitherw country; that. the zovernment will assume far greater responsibility for the welfare and prosperity of the individual. Much as this may have to recom- mend it. tine means 0y Mitcn u. must. be nnniemenveu are likely at least. no defer its attainment. For some years mere was n. zrow- ina ouniic sentiment. in favor or a more hlohiy socialized state. There was developing a feeling that pri- vate industry and. individual en- deavor under the capitalistic sis- tom had failed to orovioe the mass- es with that. more abundant lite which should be their cue. ‘the ex- perlenoe of ten Iona year-s of de- pression did much to Justify public opinion in that. regard. Then came the war. and with it the creation of a multiplicity of gov- ernment ds and bureaus. To- dav these creatures oi me izovern- merit are almost omnipownt-em- powered to usurp the functions o! Darliement. itself. They reszulate with. the authority of law, the daily affairs and wenare or every citizen. But. slam are not. lacking that. a manifold muddilng, bungling, m- conceived plans have driven folks nlzhto distraction. Oeilmn on wanes. with msultlnl inequities. have not. endeared nov- ernment control to the oeonle. Con- trol of Drloes which fails to prevent B- rlslnlr cost. of living and brings about. such fantastic situations as the bee! Bhmflae. but: which re- quires the employment. of thousand: of civil servants for its operation. is no longer so generally reszarded as a boon to the family budget. Instead of p. oting Dost-win- socialism. it is probable that. a con- tinuation of the present. trend to. wards bureaucracy during another veer or more of war will persuade moat citizens to advocate a return to ruRBed individualism, What sooclcl virtue can we claim Rt whom simmer summer snowed and uni? Whose dove undarkened. rich in joys And duties aeli-inmooed, ended 1n nights, moon-white and flowered Aatlr villi‘ 51m" fnmlli onl ones. , beloved? " y ‘M’ 81ml! we than "ooimt our bleuinirs" le the miser Counts his noun and huaa it to his heart? Unbleot. u miner’ lomtinz 1| mouthed and einfrty etetltudel Tho Dower we lumen-ed tnrouzh the fear-free days; ‘The calm of restful nights Are sacred loans to be returned ten- fold To lorliloéhmet know not day or Where hour and hour alike crawl Y Dung new horrors in imbroken Hive our flu Illddoru dupin- OI With vision of a world rebuilt for men— when onndoui’ giant-strum}; m. lint. Adds its ..ncs1cullble might. And earth and no and air no oleanoed Of all the God-demon hordeel --Rl\il'llmlh Beheinfeid Prank. employed ln flnhlni tug: and boats. treated to i his kind o! ‘mound; It erotioee, unite no ur- Hlll’. n. patriotic resentment V2110: lwgklrm itself vocal. -Kkiuton IAIMDN OUTPUT British Colombo’: l6 nlmon oennorlee in 1941 had o combined nluo of more than 616,641,000. l Jim's in it for the Duration. and so are DON’T SELL YOUR VICTORY BONDS to raise cash for some tempo- rary emergency. It is your duty, as well as good sense, to keep them. s a» a If you have temporary need for money, use your bonds as security forabankloan, which can be paid off by convenient instalments if you wish. Any manager of The Royal Bank of Canada will be glad to discuss such a loan with you. Your Victory Bonds are the finest investment you oan make. Hold on to them. TIIE ROYAL BANK 0F 0AllAllA E. R. Brow & Son and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown OYSTERS 0F P. E. l. Prince Edward Island's oyster production for 1941 totalled 5,500 hat-refs with a marketed value of lll|lU"‘ I 111" ‘It: ruu P I RCM/icn‘ ,1’ If A‘ ~ x} ~ q u |‘(NI o», ~ . SERVICE ” flttln| and Supplying Gillie! ll. .|. InlAABOII OPTOMETBIST Montana. P. l. l. Office llotn-n: 10 to ll n. l. I to fl P. M. Holiday‘: eto. o! no 0f co Conneo DBUGSTOBI intmani with Attention Swine Breeders Now l: the time to guard against MctEOD 8- BENTLEY w. It. neuter, u. a l. s. BENTLEY rc c. PIG WORM By using the most effective remedy on tho market: MACS PIG WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly abolish all traces of wonnu and improve the health of align and yonnt noun r0 was m Prlnoo street ‘and ell in oetlons of hone! lunn. Price 50c. Are You Troubled with Lnmboxo Intern y Trim Bnildlnl Charlottetown or Sore look If so we hove one of the but remedies to one: nunelv TllE TWO MAGS Moll Orders Given Prolnvl ' Attention. Radian flank el common! I01!!! T0 LOAN. M. ALIAN FARMER Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness “COMPLETE INSURANCE W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 Professional cards Blrhtero and Atwfn¢il'l" LII . 'lifififi'ln'tn'll'll'l” llorrelland Company gzshufrlce and 70o oer BEAVI QND (TOUGH no F! RD! Believes co In. eoldn, heave: U|""'°'°d uwuiul" J.A. Macllonaltl, K17. BATCAK‘ - arr: mnnrsrnn. arc. l h“ “Lars I i Prawn Block O 60 III- bow ‘Jello: psaorlgfor. bin: Grafton Street, Charlottetown Ill I nlZfn-il-A“ wild.’ 3%.?’ ALEX w. MATHESON treatments hi] to reach. Price m not-box. niialnrmt. BOLICITUR. e10 “m,” u, L,“ collecticnl Office: 66 Oren (leer 81R"- i ma. one BAIIIITIIL souorrou lg‘.