‘MIA ( . , “'l.'here has, certainly been a. sPflllacular '11 ‘quality to some of tlie addresses recently de- fivugd in‘ Canada and the United States by i Mai-Gen. Brock G. Chisholm, Canada's 1X1)‘ uty Minister of Health and Welfare, says the Montreal Gazelle. _ “Few indeed would feel at all disposed t0 differwith Dr. Chisholm in his conviction that gnly a drastic change in our ways of thouzht iwill save us from self-destruction. _B_ut there i l: wider scope for difference of opinion with " regard to the changes which Dr. Chisholm _ i0 ses. , p pglt appears to he Dr. Cliiaholrrrs hclief that we have lwcn so manifestly mistaken in um- idga5 nf right and wrong that we should -refrain from passing our ideas on to our chil- _‘ dren. Our children should have no concep- ‘ » tions of guilt or fear through any influcnce of " \urs. . “‘.»\s long its children are giver! H1165 l0 guide their living,’ he says, ‘then so 10112 31¢ . 1 parents hastening the death of the human _ race, They must not have their thinking i crippled hv being taught the princiPlQS 0i WP‘ 7 posed right and wrong.’ d “Dr. Chisholm believes that our children, by being taught on the basis of right and wrong, ‘i’ ‘._are being educated to thrust from their miHdS iauy unpleasant aspects of living. They must be brought up on the strict basis of reality, free from escapism. “Certainly nn one would have cause, or indeed grounds, for suggesting that we have not tragically failed to find the way to a peace- t ‘I fiil organization of society. But can we ascribe i our failure to our false ideas of right or wrong? \V¢ have indeed been escapists. But have we not been trying to escape, on a mass scale, from ideas of conduct ivhicli are right and which we '1 know to he right, but which we are unwilling to make the effort or sacrifice to follow? “Perhaps the need is not to stand aside and ask our children to g0 seeking for new moral concepts. It may be, rather, to seek in them, as in ourselves, a deeper devotion to what. is quite real and true, but from which, for this ~\. very reason, we have turned aside. The failure i of our age is not error of thought but sel- fishness in conduct; not illusions in concepts, but faithlessness in action. 1 “And if we were indeed to leave oui children free to form new" standards of right l and ivrong, what surety would there be that their standards would be higher and not lower, more exacting and not more indulgent, more " charitable and not mOre wilful? “Somewhat similar doubts follow Dr. Chisholm’s further suggestion that the strict basis of reality requires an abandonment of all the fanciful and poetical teachings which have hitherto accompanied childhood. "t, "Indeed, Dr. Chisholm claims that ‘any man who tells his son that the sun goes to bed at night is Contributing directly to the next war,’ while ‘any child who believes in Santa Claus has had his ability to think perman- ently destroyed.’ “Yet ‘the strict basis of reality,‘ to which Dr. Chisholm makes such frequent reference, ll perhaps not capable of so rigid an ap- preach. Reality is a very big subject, and hardly capable of ‘strict’ definition. The mat- ter was put very neatly some sixty Ytars ago in a passage by john Henry Newman. “ ‘While we talk logic, we are unanswer- able," said Newman; ‘but then, on the other hand, t is universal living scene of things is after all as little a logical world as it is a poet- ical; zind, as it cannot ivithout violence be ex- alted into poetical perfection, neither can it he attentuated into a logical formula.’ "Undoubtedly Dr. Chisholm is performing a useful role in stimulating people to think. Bu! _ it may possibly be questioned whether our tra- f git difficulties have not come about because ‘ we have departed too far from allegiance to our traditional standards of right and wrong, and from losing too greatly our sense of that mysterious wonder which gives human life so much of its dignity and splendor.” Australia Wants Millions Knowing that the immigration policy of Canada tOday is almost completely negative- at least until every returned man is estab- fished in a iob-{anadians may ruh their eyes with surprise at the statement that Australia want; 20,000,000 emigrants, mostly from ' the British Isles 'if that be possible. Not all at once, of course. because there are obvious rea- sonsJfor not being able to transport and absorb 111ml nimiber, but as soon d; possible. i $0 been is the Australian Government to ' get down to business in this matter that it has sent a member of Parliament who is chairman of the Australian Immigration Committee to .»Brltain to lay the ground work for this vast ncliemel That gentleman, Leslie C. Haylen, rdvelals how thoroughly the Australian Gov- Qftfifittit is laying its plans. No man will be allowed terminate; with or without a fam- jiyjrlless the?‘ in’; job waiting for him. Aus- . t , countries, has a tremendous oommotlftiestlut will keep iothyflt but in addition ‘ railway tuck- ipfirvide uniform niouriovu Gllllltlllllll Iu-nlu; mu; tI-‘ounthd ll ism’ _ hidden LICIA‘ C-ol. W Chum 8. Mcbun WED-President: J. B. Burnett IJ l. - loaning: Hunt. Col. D. A. llnlllnnoll. 0-8-9- fljdfhl uul Mpnagln; Dtreoum J. IL Burnett, FJJ. Annotate mums: Funk W!!!" l“ 14"‘ l" ~ A. Bunion. lLC-N-VJI- to» satin semen Fflu Stronger! Memory u Weaker Tllll the Weakest Ink. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER H, 1945 About Right And Wrong servation. One huge project is to bring water from the coast to irrigate the great desert area and make it produce food and still more wool. skilled and unskilled labor in the future that will make Australia a great country. As soon as the demobilized men are settled, the Gov- ernment will take 70,000 immigrants the first year, ioo,ooo the second, then more each year as fast as it can get them. Special encourage- ment will be given to ex-servicetnen with young families. In the case of elk-servicemen, their fares to Australia will be paid. -E DITORIAL NOTES-; Ninety-seven per cent of high school chil- dren, 15 to i8 years of age, read a lffiwspaper every day according to a survey made by Uni- versity of Chicago. I I i W ' Evidently both Quebec and Saskatchewan are quite satisfied with their present Provincial Governments, judging by the results of the by- elections there on Monday. > I It it I _ With reference to the Aifport project, it is understood a citilen, who has already invest. *4 layzely in qty prowl)’. Occupied by the re- spective Provincial and Federal Governments, has acquired a large area of laud in the vicinity of the Airport with a view to developments Accordingly, there is a terrific demand for . there. i i U I lt is too bad ive have so much talk uhout the tuture of this Province and so little unic- tical action. The Federal Government advises Parliament that_ Prince Edward Island is so lIIIlC-IHICFCSICC i_n the future of its populutjuu that it has sent in no proposal regarding huus. mg accommodation, nor application for dc- prcciatiOti under the regional reconstruction scheme. m n- n- 1k Education and entertainment are com- bined in the fine exhibit of oil paintings and water colors by Miss Kathleen Morris, A. R. C- A. Montreal, and LAC. Jack Taylor, u. c. A. l1, Charlottetown, now on view in the HI!’- ris Memorial Gallery. Mr. Taylor's paintings of aircraft and aviation scenes are of particular interest to the younger generation, I U O I ' Sunimerside is unfortunate in losing, tem- Pllrarll)’ 1t 1§ t0 be lwped, its dehydration in- dustry, but in this respect it is no worse off gum Charlottetown 1n losing its ship work zit riice Stewart & C0. Ltd., or any other centre 0f ‘Ildllsirl’ dfipéndent for a period on wartime mushroom growth. The best kind of prosperity is that built to feed a. market in time of peace, all‘! t0 Ulifi DUFDOSC we should set our minds and apply our abilities. t- : v n: . The Senate foreign relations committee has approved the entry of the United States into the United Nations Organization completely and without reservation. As the Senate is cer- tain to approve the bi-partisaii decision of its committee, the isolationists and reservationists have suffered their worst defeat since their fateful triumph of 1919, The i55u¢ Seems m have been settled and the settlement, supported b)’ 50th Political parties, is the final fruit of the Roosevelt-Hull policy. of taking foreign af- falrs out °f 0313i?!" ‘Dflllflcs altogether. Notwithstanding its temporary withdrawal from election contests, the Bloc Populairc, far. from being a spent force,’ is more alert and act- ive than ever and will continue to play an im. portant part in the political life of Canada, Mr. Maximo Raymond, founder and leader of the party states. Guest of honor at a banquet given in the Windsor Hotel to mark the third anniversary of the party and his own 2o years as a member of parliament, Mr. Raymond said that support from youth was one. of the main reasons fOr his optimism concerning the con- tinued success of the movement. l III i 1i British trade statistics for the months of _l11ly and August I945 show that in these two months, goods to the value of about 8 million P0111145 ($37:440.000) have been exported for the relief of Europe. In these two months, British exports in general have shown an in- crease. Although, however, the value ofiex- ports in August I945 was only 3 million pounds 1351312904100) below the monthly average of exports in 1938 (based on-an export value 0f 36.5 milliOn pounds ($161,695,000) ), the act- ual export volume was not even half the amount exported before World War II. 101101101101 Richard Hakluyt, English geographer and ecclesiastic, born this date 1616; held several livings and became Archdeacon of Westminster m i603; he early devoted himself to the study of navigation, and became intimate with Drake, Raleigh, Gilbert and other mariners of his day; was one of the first promoters of Virginia, and at the close of a remarkable career in Church and at sea, was buried in Westminster Abbey; his Divers Voyage: appeared in 1582, and in 1539-1600 was published his monumental work, The Pfiflfiffldl Navfgationr, Voiaggr, Tmffigufn, and Discoveries of the English Nation. I I i U Another successful fox show has been re- corded here, the birth-place of the industry, and it is indeed pleasing to note that our rmch- ers are wide awake and progressive, following the trend of the market by producing the kind of pelt which is the ruling fuhion andyin de- mand. That in the only way tolreep in the fore- front, nothing is to be gained by sticking to outworn and unmarketable patterns whldi "fny lady” has no longer use-for. This means, of W11!"- that a rancher to be. successful must riot only know how to breed good stock, but must have sufficient intelligence and vision to. see what the..stores in. the markets of the avorltl‘ YWflire to attract the taste and fancy of their fashionable customers. Hitherto Prince Edward; ‘Island has been lble m do that, and-the pros- are dike ftltuffludglng t-i. “tree ladies "v Iliad ' beret News. A: the Montreal Star n00! Eli-do position, as defined by Premler Eamon rle Valera, that country 1a "wllllnt; to be 1n association" with the British Empire, but clearl not. for any sent mental trad! tonal reasons, "but for what she can get out of ftfl-Brantford Expositor. Professor Harold J. Lulu, lo. quaclous chairman of the British Labor Party. says freedom for In- dla 1s "inevitable and lnesca able." If it's the one, it's obvlou y the other. Why doesxft. he add "un- avoidable." “predestfnedfl ‘jprede- termlned" and “foieordalnedmil Some thrifty persons, we are told, carefully save their buttonhole pimples or even poppy wreaths from one Remembrance Day campaign to the next, display uhe same pop- ples year after year. Thar, 1s thrift we cannot. commend. Perhaps these symbolic flowers shO1lld be stamp- ed wlth the year of issue-Amherst Lews. Whether we like thtvRussi-ans nr dislike them, they are a fact, One way or another, we have to live on the same lanet with them. Despite the fact. hat they seem to enjoy throwing their weight around, we know from past. experience that they will compromise and iiiake concessions, at least on titicse imit- ters which they do not regard as immediately concerned with ihclr national security. After all, they want a peaceful world as much as we do. -Bnltfmorc Sun. ' Ultraviolet light may be much more dangerous to human eyes than had been supposed hitherto; welders. skiers and aviators be- ware. Experiments have been made for the American Optical Co. by Dr. Ernest Wott iit Harvard on baby chicks because these have ores very similar to those of huniins. Exposing the chicks’ eyes to ultra. violet light of a kind that was not. supposed to be harmful to human eyes it. was found that the chicks eyes remained hi poor condition for as iiiuch as three days after- W8l'dS.——lSClCllCe Magazine.) “l! there ls anything we want. fn Canada, and ivzint dcsper-aicly, 1t 1s bibics, and we want thcin rlgth away." The above W35 the statement. maQ 1n the House of Commons Thursday by John Black- more, the member for Lethbriduc. It must be admitted that Mr. Blackmore ls a man 0.1 strong con- vlctfons and that he Ls not, afraid to voice them. Moreover he is not urging on tmrricd folk‘ in Caitada something in WlllCll he, himself. has been remiss. Mr. Blackmore 1s the father of eleven children.- Fort William Times-Journal. This is a troubled and an anxious world, hi spite o1 the great re. jotting at the termination 01' the W11!‘ less than three mouths ago. But the loading of ships at Can- adian ports with food supplies 1n- stead of fighting equipment is a blessed change for which we can all be thankful. While one shlp was loading the other day at Vancou- ver wlth food for Chin-.i_ where it will relieve a small fraction of the distress. another shlp was loading at. Montreal with meat for Britain. whore the people have a very short ration. Fifteen food ships left Ca- nadian ports for Britain during 0c. tober. Many more ships wtll "zflll to Brftaln and to Europe 1n the next few months with wheat, meats and dairy products 1f the Canad- fan people recognize their moral responsibility. as well as the gen- eral expediency. of sharing their food supply more freely. and at some sacrifice, with the millions ln dire distress 1n Europe. -W1unipcg Free Press, After five years together In the British Commandos, Brlgadier John Dumford-Slater. Dlstlngulshed ser. vice Order with bar, and Sergeant Henry White. Military Medal, are B01118 1n to business together as nurseymen. ‘They have bought an established nursery 1n Barnsta le, England, and within u. short time will be 1n business on what. the 511886191‘ calls "strictly an equal basis.“ The bngadler. the equal ln Erode of an American brlgadter- general, wtll not outmnk one ser. learnt. nor. us tn so many stories true and flctlonal, wtll lt be the other way around. It may seem odd to some persons that after five years of such experience; as they had 1n battle, these two men should choose to settle down 1n one of the quleteat of occupations, but 1t. la a fact. likely to gain beta-ted Nfifiknitlon that many soldiers were not turned into savages by befng compelled to team seven and fifty ways of kllllng the enemy-New York Sun. f i The clreer nf Henry H. Hewet- son, who has been named president of Imperial Oll Limited, to sucseed the late R. V. Lesueur, should b0 m lnspfratlon to all of the many young men who have come back from the war and are looklng for a chance to reestablish themselves well tn clvfllzatlon llfe. Mr. Hewet- son chose the off busfneu for n career after he wu demoblllzed from the armed forcu 1n 1919. He became a member of e student tiglnlng course with Ifn r111 Oll a practical course tn whldh one of his duties was sboltf a furnace. From tha coal-shovelllng chore he was moved to the research ~d t- ment. Through that he has rlsen to the p 1 "19 company. There's Mr. Hewetson’; success whfch any young man would do well to learn -lmat wtlllitznela to do leaner task 1a often a good start toward being u: ed to do u. blnerpne. It’: an er reminder mo. that hard work and sblllty atlll pt! 00d dtv- Manda 1n Canadian muurd-n-su. n10. Observer. . . A on“! inarnhut loft ill! fol- lowing directions upon t-h ‘FDi-aw my wtll a0 that my, t at the bin: [walla my Irlflv-lhe can explain It. vs “" 32ft’. v2.7.5“ h. 1.“! itiy zoddwfll. M orulltarl 2%‘ o! til butiem‘ _ , m: cumitoijrgfrqwu. finalist"... ' l i ' ' Om- u“; lbw“ b. ‘pglled to ‘ . u _ . N018! B)’ 77w Way ruauc FORUM covers f... nzfl m i; .. —--- b . h, a!‘ and“ done it!“ 819w" w° Tllb IIIII ‘F! m!!! IE6 0 D- lam now demands um mum the r lbs-III i! M" Only n few of mm aeittuwkngg; troops leave the country. Memories oponllmtn d‘ auutlul d ab! are first. offenders, so nd m mom The m,“ w," mums, fr)” tinlotmnwn l for that offenders, but. two ‘nob mighty glut of the rltlsh when Gun-dial dos not noon. I three time offenders. The e15“ m’ Rommel and nu hosts were 1m a- olrlly ultimo tho vnlnhl , Iwdm enmll are lwk *1 W round the corner and Muuolliif of oorrelpouilentl. _ by mbufonri loan of thoedwufid %%‘illfi“¥fa§"ml1l“ all‘; iii...“ Y . i-r all. ll’.£.“”i;'.'i§.".°"u‘.‘.““‘<'§umllm ' " England and sentenced IUIAL ILIOTIIFICAHON Blr,-It. has been s Ineat. atla- fmtlon to me to rend the Petltcod- lac wer report fn The Guardian of h v. 20 and the letter of Mrs. Malcolm MacLeod 1n the some 1s- sue. There 1s a close connection between the two. The former an- nounces the removal o! n 10118- cxlsttng obstacle to the develop- ment o1 our own power resources,- and the latter proclaims that. the moment has anlved w proceed with the foundation and structure of a better country that will dnaw and. hold people to ftself by nat- ural attraction and not, by imposed restrictions. Although one should be careful about investing much money ln factories to be built .wlthtn the Province the present tlme for the manuf cture of such things as boots, shoes and clothing whlch are now easily procunable and could not be made here to sell more cheaply than at present, yet no doubt firms manufacturing £1158 goods would start. branchea here lf and when 1t becomes profitable to do s0. We could nake no mistake 1n proceeding wit a plllll that deals wlth our problems 1n order of mur- ft. The greatest», need ln the Prov- ince ls to recognize and remedy the cause of’ the low "per captta nnan. clal returns for our labour" as stated b_\' Mrs. Mucleod, By con- servlnc and developing the easily available exlstintz resources rhe average farm income can be 1n- craised ten times what 1t ls now w‘th less expenditure of time and labour. For ten cents a farmer could get more work done by electricity than lifted help would uccomplfsh cost- 111R $5.00 per day. The rlght. place for the farm labourer then is on u construction lob at a power site where he gets full nay for an 8- hour day and gives the famier better service at about a cent, an hour. Everyone seems to feel that, the returned men are not keen to no on the farm with the conditions and prospects as they are today. I do not think uliey deserve such punishment. Bv taking the first slen necessary to the promotlon of the welfare of our people. other fH‘.'»l","‘Cl‘llflQ developments will fol- low. that ln a few years will bruit! our Prnvmce a population of half a mllllrm neonle with ii reversed r-roricmlc condition tvhere we wtll be abh- tn lend a helninit hand to our ‘ass fortunate. neighbors ln the Central Provinces. It ls a tzreat nleasure to concur with the nrnocsal made by Mrs. Mac! co-l to tiikc immediate steps to raise the necessary funds to build in our land a fitting war- oi‘ ivthei" peace-memorial: and I will be our of those to contribute at least. $1.000 to be used for hMw-rilectrlflcrtlon. V/ho knows hut what the helrs of this land of promise may yet; nrove to be God's chosen people if they resound to the Order of the Dav given tn Exodus 14-15 and mi" rcsoundiiiz: “Speak unto the children of Israel. that they no forward." I am. Slr. etc. ' HUGH CAMPBELL. Graham's Road, P. E. I. i Tragic Defectslu Cour! And Prison Systems (By R. Gordon Burgoyne) Posh-war plans are belnz made for many th ngs, almost everything except for the handling of law. breakers, and up to the present. The anthorltles seem to ililnk that, the very fact that we have courts, pi-fsons and penltentlaries- well—t.hat ls enollxh. We have about 12,000 persons detained ln Canada today. with a turnover of about 70.000 a Y1“!- Many firms will not. take a man Into their employ who has a crlm- lnal record, even lf 1t, has been one small mlstake. This ls a. very ser- lous tendency. but there 1t. ls, and remember man cannot be bonded. Apply this to the man freedom, but who, before he en- hated had once been lmprlsoned. A Royal Commission to study the whole penal system of Canada. under the chafrmanshlp of the Hon. Mr. Justice Joseph Archain- bault o! Montreal, with Mr. R. W. Cralg, K.C., of Wfnnlpeg, and Mr. J. C. Mclluer, K.C., of Tbrvmto. They vfstbad every Province of Canada, travelled to Brlbaln and studied their penal system more, then to five other Euro an eouii. trles. closlntl their nu lea by 1n- vestlgatlng some of the American institutions. They dld I a lendld job. for which the Cuna fans should he grateful, and 1n the aprlng of 1038 presented Luelr findings to the rnfn-_ ster of lusttee 1n the form or n bib-page report. The report. was passed y the Federal Government tihnt ye r, but was blocked by the Senate, and the followlng year ll. was ngaln presented and passed by bum Houses. Since than has been 1n the dog-house or some. where else, for the s lendld nud- fngs and recommeu ntlona have not been put into effect, except regardfng the tratnfng of penum- thry gumla to Borstal becom working oliizens hard work 1s one of the secrete o! , 1's success. - us look at the official figures of 00m; they are straight out of tho Royal Oommtmlon Report. Hem they are: Cost of ' " ~11 alone, 188 prisoners oonvlctaed M34 tlm Tlme spent by state for maintenance $1,348,130.70, which together with the conviction COSlJlBIIIOIIIllQ to t4.6tYl,090.70 or a tots 90st for these 18a ners 01’ 825,453.34 per lndtvldual. Mr, Businessman, 1f you were a manager of this concern would you be sa lulled with spending $4,801,- 090.76 on 1B8 men alone? At. the annual meeting how would you go about; explaining 1t away? Do you think the share-holders would slt quietly while you assed the buck by saying “my trends. 1t ls the w". ‘you know." Why will not Ottawa, with its used cl to make a better undo. put into action the recom- mlfldfltions 01 the Royal Commis- sion they have passed? U. ‘$383M. 1N ln penal lnstltutlons cost the 801! and shoot hlm- The 11h Lord Blilrenhead 1n- vtwd a barrale- of T.N.T. 1min gym-y paclflst and home lover ln Great. Brltuln when he told a body of university tzraduatos that. the world still had rewards for the uflhgyp sword " He was accused of uplaoldlng Mars. Satan. Nfetasche and the modem bunklnll a stqn. How Major-General C laholm uualffted hls statement about. Santa Claus. and moral standards generally. we are not quite sure. but. 1t was one who bod to lltllit. hard for his Oplnionl when @110" was much mom 1n ei-mnce than there ls now. V2110 bald 1:‘ n. letataz t "I do no IRNQ W m’ wfth m span should 1D As far as our treatment; of pris- oners ls concerned the slogaii| seems to be: “Let's keep the urlm. .. vou my. but. I will defend Voltaire knew what that. meant.‘ I Ital jl-ilcion l hm:- - Factor Skin Frelhener. Mo: Eve Shadow _'lud Pluto Bougo.__ I Aniiaion TBUSB WEAIIBS To thou of you who no unfnrtiuilta enough fob: to wear a truu wo uk question, l‘ you nntl nlzeu and styled and at prlcou to lult eveflllmdll- tsittti lull-i!» I'l- Eyahmw Pon- cIL-Llp Brul . Powder Brush “V: utlnflod the onunvou no wen- lngf Does It t-oomforhbly ma‘ _ "We have fnals crlmlxials. rat‘ 2 vies moment. no steps have been taken. ‘ who ha; fought for us, for world-- A General’: Santa Claus (Hamilton simulator) ' Now that. Mater-General Brook Chisholm has established himself as amnumber one oizre. we are 1n O1‘ - Pursuit for his scalp _ls hot. and has boiled up a controversy that will be a lonll time dvlntz In antfclnatlon of this battle. manv powerful ltnd respected bodies 1n the land have demanded his resiznatlon from the post 0| Deputy Mlxitster of National Health for Canada Thev look on hlm as a. corrupter Others have defended hlm as Rlvlnll out purely Dersonal oom- tons on sudh impure mibllc blas- Dhemles as “ re's no Santa Claus!" ‘they feel that l! M110!“ General Chisholm 1s ousted for stgrmlnl over the physical health boundary into he zloomy and distorted world of psychiatry- Canada w l be put under a stltzma of ridicule like that invited by the famous Tennessee monkev trliil. It ls not entirely a case of tak- lntz morn] sides. because What Major-General Chisholm said has been siifd mtmv tlmes before. and wlthout much comment. because 1t was not. nonnally nssoclated ivith hlzh niiblfc office. It reminds us. thou/ch. that some sublects are tricky ones to mu; on, and from an apparently harmless utterance can come the storm When Sir William Osler spoke about the dylne down 0! man's fir» and initiative at about the aize of fortlv he established an B‘ m llfe your i-lzhl to any " 0 DOOM OE OVEBLOIDSHIPS l O doom of overlordahlps! to decoy First at the heart. the eye scarce dimmed at all Or perllh of much array. The hardening robe of omplre. and ' cumber and I pa " Or, of voluptuous hour: the wanton Die gfieitllie poisons that. molt sweetly say; , from lnsensate helBhI. eVllth prbdlgles, with light , Of trailing angers on the mon- strous night Mugnlfcently fall. For off from her that bore us be Forbid the doorwayi. 017-41919 "f" " tereth . . - _ t _ Already ls doom a-slllnnlllfi- l “n stirred In leisure of ancient nathwayl slit; lose 1030b “much Of the our. B11 0V ' Recline upon achlevement. and b! slow _ . , d To "i? trite world llfhlhl. an or e How perilous are the stature and port that so b _ Invlte the arrows, how unslum er in! a l The hates that watch and craw- -—Sir William Watson. From Ode on such fatle. t h r u“ And va n axe ns c m knocking. But by chin" "d! - crannies. Death. i ' l the Day of the Coronatlon of Kin; immortal legend that he had snld that any man reachtrul triihfgl_ Edward VII. u‘ is 140 . Grout George Street Mall Order: Glven Prompt Attention. ti. ‘F. llutchcson .& Stllt . OPTOMETRlSTS ‘Specialists In the fl!- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular dc» ‘facts.’ i 53 Grafton Street ll. J. llllllll OPTOMITIIST filling nnil séltllplfllll (Hones o. binnlalue. P. B. l. p Oll!“ Hours: l0 In ll A. I I to I P. M. l! lld _ u. h nolntm t °d§l.'.°c.....l.f.’¢ m. " IIRUGSTORI Neck wear \ Christmas cheer! In n0 muggy ouos the poor mun ls fmprlaon for the some offence as the mm of means, but: the man I man’; non worltwpzyttieflneulndonuln Englan In one your over 10000 were mprllonnd 1n emu ba- ln 19.30 the ‘ a1 Oommlulon Int ' eumlnntlnn n : of the methods of treatment. of Juvenile delinquent! 1n ab. 0.8 A.. mglmd and uvml ouuntrlu tn min-ope, hm ted them to the con. SM“... ifilntfi‘... 39mm“! ~ ou e mo: etiectlvo method of dull with endm Ch IPOHOH 0’ ml: um u» pmgl of nu- eooontrf misuse etéavy could not pay the one‘ Please Him With this Beautiful A touch of blended beauty bursting with A sign of good judg-' ment la to give HIM Tleu with our label. - You'll fnll iii love with tneile handsome flu-nevi: m. we nliown lucli beauties. Pollloyl - Strlbll - Brocade: - ln pntlornuinovor more compelling. - Coin 1n now, plek one, two or l-dunn ._ n’; guy, $I+j-$I-50--$i2--1 >a m? or“ n brawl * let ' All “I! Ill-III.