PAGE FOUR ‘I'll! G llAll LOTTETUWII lillllllll llll lernllg Duh (Iellel 1n all!) Presidents uenoeLvLuiesssseJlel-re V1 Pruldeuts J. l B11110“. IJ-l. ars-zni-amtttaartrthrnages. Associate scalars: us: wash: sue Inn A. 1 I In r ‘Unsure ole-fir?! rsr s mouths , “muss ti’! ma? fdr on: malt-h n“ cmslf-iihrl: saiirinmtiw (‘tlflfriewglsgifiw p” fitulffi‘gtze"hlgzrg% “regs; um 1w I Iwllbl- be obtained at New lurk: Waslungte Agency, 1248 Peel 5L. Bay 5 lhronlo: News Stand, lsstnu urll. Ottawa; site's Nowe Bill! illi- DIIJOIL; IubTobeeae Slsenlllouetourdl. tan 8“ I’The Strongest Mwzogst iIsHkV-Vueaker than the rulsmr. uovnmn as isu Spokesman In Parliament Dr. Grant, M.P., takes issue with Hon. Mr. m u so the manner in which Island Lib“; mq-nb“; h“; discharged their duties in m; House, He cites, as his own achievement, the obtaining of more money for public works in his constituency than was gralltfid 501' the whole province of New Brunswick. Tilt 011i)’ item pgrticulariud under the main estimates in “snsard is a revote of $37,500 for 1'99"" 7° ti“ ris breakwater, plus an additional $4,500 ior the same purpose. It is pleasing to note that this work was actually done this year, it being judged dangerous so allow my further delay in repairing the breakwater. Dr_ Grsnt 1s to be commended on whatever efforts he made in this connection, even though, as above noted, a large part of the expenditure under the main estimates was actually a rcvote of money which lied previously been voted and no! 99"‘- Mr. Hanson, however, was referring more s. EDITORIAL NOTES-i e-ut-q Wilreslieedyfereprovinclalelectlonnow. and it remains only for Premier to Push the button to set the machinery in motion. Then what? ‘iii land should be permitted to deprive the city of a new industry, capable of employing I00 people and maintaining some 50o! Ill ll Ill I! According to the powers-that-be at Ottawa, Charlottetown, under Lieut. McCarthy, hes be- come one of the mo; complete and efficient Naval divisions in Canada. In Navy Week we should be proud to bear this in mind. ii‘! John Knox, Scottish Reformer, died this date. 157a; unexcelled as an advocate of religious liberty and as a social reformer; blunt and blis- tering in his speeches and writings, he declared: “I have learned to call wickedness by its own name, a fig s fig, and s spade s spade.” Though three times wed, women were his especial bete noir, and of them he wrote in “The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women”: "Nature doth paint them futlicr to be weak, frail, impatient, feeble and foolish; and experience hath declared them to be un- constant, variable, cruel and lacking the spirit of council." s- s- a e and Such: "My husband is a civil servant. He has the regulation complex." . . . "Of course we have quarrels. We shouldn't know we were married if we hadn't" . . ‘WVhcn I came home on leave, I found my mother-in-laiv had fixed up an orderly room." . . “After six- teen years of ups and downs I have now given up arguing with my wife.” . . .- "I don't com- plain that my wife liits me with the coffee pot. It’s her lecturing that gets me ilotvii." Cou- vcrsatiori piece in court—-Clerk: “When you attend court next time bri some money with you." . . . Defendant: "What did you say f 69531315" IQTES BY TIIE W" ---- Tliinkofkaudwonderthstzofcetof rented tuna . .____ Ten Iroquois Indlssss from the Cu awaca Reserve aro ar a big new so-tcns crane a lvndland Shiv are under- the oi; . , of the Oaughnawaga reserve, vrlitcb 1s a- cross the St. Lawrence river from tman who has always earned hlls 1' - liac Laughs from the London courts from Scissors h Montreal. are the finest steel erec- tion men 1n tho ii-crld. ~Midland Free Press Herald ___.r " ' "111: "Ii-mien worked I00 hard before. says a defender, wind w11.l work lirincler now that help is scarce." Nothing 1s said of that cat. lady of leisure, the farmer's 1e. —De- troll: News. Theot-har dlylmeflmnnvvhem I have known for several year's a ing the hard way-from ties to pitching bundles. He 1s clie sort and 1t 1a said that he lzivar ably sings at hils work. Ho ~ ad Just rctumed from assisting e farmer st his harvest. Before be nliook hands with me h; 111mm! me his callousod hands, remarking: "You can see Gut I am not a bad check artist. Those fellows, as a rule, have nice soft hands." He then went on to relate an experi- ence which he had 1n Wln/nlpag 801119 years ago. Hie sold tliwt he had just come 1n from the wood| and took a room 1n a hotel. He further stated that he had a check for $2.50, and as he needed money immediately he presented the meek a tlltie owner do! the hotel M10 look- over an asked for identifies tlons, adding. “I you are." "I told twin leaders o1’ Demootl . Churchlll and‘ Roosevelt Wit-h ‘(he 1‘ able and ou dlng Gen and officers are n» beat udoss c! m9 aompllcated world _tisat1on- IM- us have this vftel matter of the second front to the Judament- of those who are 1n the bolt 1105mm to decide this point upon which the fate of the world rests. But I want to draw your serious atten- tion to another front-The Home m-ont, This 1s where nll citizens can and should serve-while our loyal sons take their stand 1n bat- 1'“ l" “n” We "s? ‘less; 5h O68. 6 W 0 81‘ 1n fin lilt- llnteh 1n that war whlcb um" ends- e war nelnlt st this psrtlculnr time, a clvlllan k111i assault u 8- that de 1s reparlrig fo n. strenuous “my p n that lnsrldlous leader, y monster who has de- stroyed more human lives thin “all erculosls. As true Brltlsliers we feel that we can and must. beat rlie Germans and Japs. As right flunk- lng ubllc citizens of this great coun ry we know that. we can best tuberculosis and 1f we don't, we have not done our ‘public duty. T. 3.0. can and shoul be completely eradicated. 'I‘hat. so far we are only partially successful ~15 din to our inadequate handling of the campaign That we are slipping badly since the war begun l; only on our offorw, rlisimy ‘Eeflecrtiiiiission “:1 boom- :1 kf NOVEMBER 24, 1943 i from coast to coast which is not today the poorer-end the prouder gaps where once were young men. Tbeylieardaeellandputon navy blue, khaki, IIOIIDIILEII, and they hsvegonqensvveslngacelluu They are missed-missed not only in their: homes but also in the business places which once they llledr their pens.- —f'or those who thus laid down But every brands manager, as he shook parting hands, lied this consolation: he could say, “We'll hold your place. It will be waiting for you when you coins bsclu That ls a pledge)! ~i J . Yes my mil" esttli . we are slipping and slipping badlg.‘ T.B.C. has advanced roin clgh to seventh place as a cause of death 1n the lastyear. In 06.n- sd-a deaths from one. were 805v 1n 1M1 compared with 6700 the They have gorse flora every institution in Canada; but from none riioreihsnfroiutlseelssrsssed banks. the man who sings at hi; work, “that the only identification I had to present were these two hB-Lldl, which were well limped up, The hotelkecper took‘ a look at them So it ls the pert of those who remain to serve their country in sud e vvey that the promise may be was to bring?" . . Clerk: "Dough." . . . Defendant: “Now I understand.” 0 I I particularly to transportation‘ matters. He is not alone in noting and commenting on the fact that our elected representatives have been singularly silent when it comes so pressing Illlnd 8Y1"- ariees in the House. Mr. Gillie, C.C.F. member for Cape Breton South, had occasion to refer t0 this matter, and so did the Liberal editor of Toronto Saturday Night. For whatever reason. our Illlnd mqnbefl, gpgt from Defense Mm- ister Ralstou, are dumb, and our interests at Otmwa suffer accordingly. Dr. Grant's explanation for this state of af- fairs is the limitation on Liberal specchmaking. due to the urifirocedentedly large Liberal fol- lowing in the ouee. That is something which the electors should endeavor to remedy st the first opportunity! Meantime, while conceding the force of Dr. Grant's argument that only a limited time is available t: privlatebicnembers sup- ‘ tt-segoverunterst, eoud easy tocite 51:3: and verse from Hansard in which this rule is violated every ds by Liberal members from other provinces. uch men as Messrs. Raymond and Pouliot-to name but two Quebec representatives-ere continually making themselves heard, and there is scsroel s con- stituency in the Central and Western rovinces which has not got its ardent and voliible oham- ion p n; the informal discussions in committee. where the business of the House is actually done, members can speak as often as they like and our Island members are practically the only ones who do not avail themselves of this oppor- tunity when matters affecting their Province are being discussed. It hes been on these occasions that Mr. Hanson and other Conservative mem- bers from other Provinces have taken up the ciidgcls on our behalf, while our own members sat tongue-tied. Food Rationing Anticipating the probability of more extensive rationing of food 1n Canada before the war 1e over, the Financial Poet puts forth a timely plea for keeping the system as simple as possible. Undoubtedly some superlatively fancy food ra- tioning will be proposed. As an example of what can happen, the U.S. book of rules for rationing of gasoline and rubber alone is a heavy one of 81 pages. Britain has had more experience with food rationing than any other Anglo-Saxon community. That experience covers the i914 war and all of this. One of the food rationing problems which brings fortili the fsnciest and most complicated problems, says the Post, is how to rahon restaur- ant eaters. The argument is advanced that it would be unfair to ration meat and staple foods and permit those, who were able snd.could sf-r ford it, so sat without stint restaurants, Britain has gone through l this argument and has deliberately adopted the present system in which there is no rationing on restaurant meals. Lord Woolton, Britain's Minister of Food, ve a fins repreerestetive his seasons. If f: vvor rig members of a family must produce food ration tickets for everything they eat in public restaurants, they use up a sub- stantial proportion of the family supply. In the last war, when Britain did ration restaurant meals, it was found that the avenge housewife had the greatest difficulty in making up balanc- ed meals with the coupons left over for home use. Hence the present system, instead of being unfair to housewives and those who stay home, actually melnl that balanced, satisfactory home meals can be planned. The second reason for unrationed restaurant meals is that experience has shown abundantly that food eaten “off the ration"—-that is to say served in bulk-is much more economically used than food served in the homo. Restaurants, factory canteens, food cafeterias, etc., extract much more food value per pound out of the sup- plies they get than does the average housewife. They have larger quantities to deal with and they can plan better. Therefore Britain has saved i The smallness of roputedl big men. The Rt. Hon. Mr. Bevin, Britain's Minister of Labour, impressed with the work and evident ability of Mr. Elliott M, Little, Director of National Sel- ective Service, invited him to London for s. per- sonal oonfsrence. The sequel is given by the Ottawa correspondent of the Montreal Gazette, who says Mr_ Mitchell, accompanied by Mr. Bryce M. Stewart, his deputy departed for Lon- don suddenly without advance announcement. “According to reports current licre, the Minis- ter notified Mr. Little only ten minutes before he set off for the voyage across the ocean, af- ter having been previously told by Mr, Little that he (Mr. Little) had been invited to g0 lo Britain by Hon. Ernest Bevin, British Labor Minister." » s s s e An interesting correspondence has arisen in The Scotsman, Edinburgh, out of Mr. Churc- hill’s reference to his former Scottish constitu- ency as “Bonnie Dundee." The phrase is fam- iliar of all through Scott's song bearing this title, but the "Bonnie Dundee" of that song is Vis- count Dundee, the historic figure of john Gra- ham of Claverhousc, who was as intensely laud- ed by one side in the old controversy as he was hated by the other. On his allusion to the jute city as "Bonnie Dundee" some of Mr. Chur- chill's hearers jumped to the conclusion that he had made a fans" pa: in the application of the phrase, but Mr. Churchill is too shrewd a stu- dentofhi sndlitenturstofsllintosirdian error. The rlse "Bonnie Dundee" was in ess- istcnoe before Gmhairrfs day, and was applied to the city itself, as a song to be found in “The Dancing Master" of 1688, before Graham was made Viscount Dundee, proves beyond all ques- 3m. e e e e Evidently the Bible Study Course authorized sailing if _we are to believe the Rev. S. S. Stock of Madison Bspdst Church, Montreal. As examples Mr. Stock said that a teacher in Mon- treal West High School in class denied absolute- ly the divinity of Jesus Christ. Other examples which he cited were: A Montreal High School teacher told her pupils that she believed thnt we were descended from fish, rather than from monkeys. Another Montreal High School teach- er asked her class to raise their hands if they be- lieved in the Bible. Some raised their hands, others did not. The teacher then said the/t the Adam and Eve story happened too long ago to be pfvvud, and therefore, could not be taken as true_ A teacher from Mount Royal High School stated that miracles, as recorded in the Old Testa- she also said that she did not believe the Genesis story. Here surely an instances where if ignor- ance or the Bible is bliss, it is folly to make the students unorthodoxly wise. s- m v- s "The time has come," ea s Col. Drew, On-i tu-lo Conservative Leader to tell those who would wish to dissolve the British Empire that there are red-blooded Canadians who are deter- mined that Canada shall not be responsible for the liquidation of that great partnership of free nations either- irs whole or in pert." Col. Drew cites the preamble of the British North Am- erica Act, with its stipulated consideration that “such a union would -. . i. promote the interests of the British Empire," and he makes the points that every-right claimed under that contraiz is dependent and contingent upon that condition. And then he says an interesting thing: “that should be taught in our schoo t” Whether or not it was so intended, that sentence implies fed- eral supervision, if not control, of education, That, in turn, implies a change in the Canadian constitution away from piecemeal federalism, and in the direction of solid nationhood. Fed- eral aid for schools has been suggested, during rccciit ivccks, by several speakers whose point has been that the provincially-r-un system is in- in enormous tonnage of‘ food by encouraging people to eat “off the ration" in restaurants, canteens, etc. tolerably bad, and that if the provinces will not vote adequate finances, Ottawa must. Col. Drew has brought out another and even stronger srgismsitfssthasuw in Quebec Protestant schools is riot all plain since ment, were untrue to fact and were impossible; , and remarked, '“I that in good enough,’ an cashed the checkP-J. B. Yule 1n Oneida Prairie Herdla-lrlbutie. The Axle cnmpnlgn of terror s- galnst Allied prisoners ct war 1s l! brutal and cowardly piece o1 business as any yet rtaken by our crlme-snearod enemies what 1t will lend to ultimately no one can say. This much, however, 1s certain: frlglilful practices by the German and Japanese war lords will never deter tlins country cs" any of the United Nations 1n the pro- swutlon of the war. On the con- trary they will fan our anger to higher flame and intensify our de- termination to rid the world of such barbarlsm. --Bostori Post. Brllllls Illl traitor of this war. A young mer- chant iseriman who solid military 11i- formatlon to the enemy for $72 has rightly been given a murderers re- ICIIIIG previous year-the rate increased from 00.6 tn 51.8 per 100.000. Every province 1n Canada except am- ish Columbia. ls showing M1 -ln~ crease 1n TB. death rate. What's-i bout Prlnce Edward Island-The death rate 1n 1941 was 71.5 over 11-3 more than the average death with for Canaries-two and a half times more than Ontarlo Please don't present as on i1- 1bl that we are no worse than other countries iii the world. Granted’ that 1n countries over rfi-by dev- lllah and ruthless ts that‘ General Tuberculosis reaping 's. terrible harvest, that the poor un- derfed, undernourished starving children and also adults are dying There ls lsesdly e branch oflce kept: “We'll hold your place." III. IN!) L“! other: ' have else enlisted. who Ielnesl lsunlr staffs slnee war begun THE CHARTERED BANKS. OF: CANADA by tens of thousands of this dls- ‘ ease, that 1n Brlbbln 1t 1s increas- ing markedly, that tho Btltfdi New 1s suffering from 1h inroads lldllltlllflllflfllldllbhllflhlx. account of their lnadequafe qu era and constant exposure to cold ward. The percentnre of such acts of treachery 1s probably lower 1n. Brltnlzi than 1n any other Allied country. No one ‘pretends. however that the three men hunt-r constltufe the tota1 number who ought to be. In n11 wars there have been traitors. ‘Hie new tea- ture oif this war 1s the emeigen o! s. new type of first : woman, Jane Anderson. who uro- fcss to commit thelr acts of trea- chery 1n the nanle of a higher “lltayalty . "—Vanoouuver News-Her- a . There I sold and sells reason ‘behind e resolution nwjsd by Councillor Teed and passed at the last meeting of this Saint John Municipal Council, calling for a new basis of selection for coroner-s’ community. It. aed out that melee-l m4 ‘a come to a when than an eeuonel ," and the record for the lust your 1n this eonn-icotlon bears out his contention. December 1, 10411, sixteen cor- fllle Oltiy d 511M J 50d 03 individual sat on egg the lil- o- WM- “2... _ y, sixteen 11111110815 would call for a total of 112 1111'?- men( there are seven on each lag 11% by‘ Mlllltlfilgfwllllt there were mm s - ve cram person! served, and of these nineteen were "repeater-a," that 1s, served tzwo or more - Saint John Tele- graph Jowrzial. It has remained for Mr Herbert Morrison, and hot before 1t was time, to come out 1n re- pudlalton of a great deal 0d mean and ungeneioug cr-ltldsul of the British people and their war effort which rims been current lately 1n the Unified States. He tells his 0W1‘! tiriwn honest landline- ilgiiie vrlbligilftoe the recrlmisintlon hfcls 1d be so e88? w - igmflutlls because and e calunrii by coma-c Vuneouver Provfrice. my! 1n Once more the scheme el Il- towel have tried t: get iomiiei- 1n the of gem"? and 01166 B C IQTQ. grab; e m” of the men-climb er. some have decided to close their place! buslneu whether all do or not, and ‘ment 1n 1.111s question. t to co-operate with the Govern- ” The plan of those adopting the new hours 1s to open at 8.30 1n the morning Ind close at 6 p. m. and at 10 p. m. on satui-days. ‘the stores close Wed- nesday at 12.30, except dining the month of December. We believe the citizens 1n N. mid 1t ls to hoped that the merchants will fall 1n llnc. -Lll- towel Banner. Despite e-‘nne-thlrd out In speed limit. and oontlmzed daylight saving. which eliminated poor vial- blllt during the evening mali- hour period, Just as many_pcrsonl were llled by aistnmobl In Rhoda Island last month as were slain 1n Octdber a year ago. The nlnc deaths tnougtit to an even em have been held 1n T!" meter ‘ our mileage, a theoretical fill-mile a . ‘rlirbest plan of losfs 1s to have enough eauatorlum beds fer all this cease. In ls hspnufble. Ind until some led- ersl ant undertakes solution of this vital m “y e led n5 of who can't get ltblO ll this! 0|‘ ‘up w.“ bOlllZ b11811’ flehtlns Iubereu _=- families, what about the families of tlente 1n the BI-u. sum of ten thousand unllel set aside by the Provincial Govern.- merit 1s entirely inadequate h deal with this situation. But II who enjoy good health 1n Province, we who have not made great sacrifice while iiusls l0 of our man power 1s flghtliu for our existence. We can at least b2! Xmas seals and we should dc (Continued on page 6, Col. '0 In lonely watches night by n Great visions burst upon my s1 t, For down the stretches of the - The hosts of dead 1o manchlng by. mosey amuse eu- Iain out, ' Strange bugles ‘sound us swfll no And all their faces and thelr eyes Are 11f with starlight from the news-uni ens in vein he" Andplmce hathoonieto tltemet as , , But 1n the stem looks 1111801‘ etlll iron purpose and the "will. Deer . who tflflTlfl-IIUN ml Of human tears sud hunks-blood. A weary road those men have $106. 0 house them 1n the homo of God. Beloved "Geno ’ ‘ - < .35 ‘Zr Canadian Dlviialon 1n the In AWAKE llEFllESllEI v l? SILENT SERVICE rfarllv thr- kllllrvga 11:1 1111s State in tho first ten months of 194-2. only three 1e than at. the nme at» 1n mitt-mim- u—ls Evans Stomach ‘PILE QINTMENT i __ for nosey you y in lltuos. of Canadian homes. llYlllllMll 8r Offices: T‘. ML -_- , (LLU Your LIFE INSURANCE in Wartime Durln! today's conditions, your llfc insurance 1s the safest and best investment you can make-best you and good for the nation as a whole. The premiums-held lu trust for you- ll! in large part 1e finance vital war expen- Tlie Great-West Life 1s the Guardian of thousands Provincial Charlottetown, Allbsn r. muss. OLIL-Dikfet mm, leels l. J tetlv‘: s1 (Ylseury. I-Ieslteean tlve t M lane. his! 0. Mclacheris-llepreeentutlv: n; ‘gimme I‘. Ir. llllcNutte-Bcllfelcntsllve at Dnrnley i 00. LIMITED Managers Summerslde, Montague et Burmnerelde WI . Rep. GIVIBQUIO! IIIJII‘! fel- Ill furs. Bring, express, l 110 Kent Street tnun»_- Furs Wanted Buying Muskrats, Mink, fled Fox and other wild or mall your furs. Will remit payment immediately. W. CHESTER S. MeLllllE Charlottetowl i sisiiciimr -M.A..RINB of Conner-es. Bring or shlp your F. R. McLAINE. SILVER Fox PELTS WANTED It ll our business to market your furs. We l’!!! cash advances at ones. No waiting. Fox farm!" please give us the opportunity to help you, ""1 "2 will satisfy you that our marketing service ls the bee‘ References. Ask any shipper, or, Canadian Bill furs to us. W0 Pl! u" _' pressage and supply bags. TIIE irinirim: run root iru. Local Representative THIS IS THE YEAR 1'0 SHIP