QAGE roim , 1' THE ciiiiiitonizrowii iiuniuiiiii Morning Dally Wounded 1887) President. L -ut.-Cul. W. (‘healer S. McLure Vict- Presidunt, J. R. Burnett, lull. Secretary. LlcuL-(Tul. D A. blaclfiiiinon. 0.5.0. Editor. and aluiiagiiig Director. J It. Burnett. FJ-l Associate Editor. Frank Walker 5UBSCRIFHUN RATES v $5.00 per year iui ailvaiicei delivered to (fly. $4.00 per yt-ur iin adiaiit-i-i uiuilcd tu l’. B. bland $5.00 per year iiii llhllllflil iuuilcu to Liuiada and U35 .\l- tiers Auitit Bureau ul circulations “The bltrongcst Jlemury is Weaker than the llmkt-st Iiik."_ 193B ii.” .\l().\'1i_\\'. xoiiniiai-tit i. is: - - :'”“‘__'_ 'I‘iiiiiii|rii\.'; (Tonvciiliiin 1;‘. . . i It‘ tlitinty f0.» iil;ivi* ill ii“. \ p: iii. lt i; iii; "-i.~i H shar- i,‘ ‘ii i l ~ i ' \‘i -. llk‘t’i\ll*l' i 1 l lull »u i1 !ll111‘l\\‘\l . ‘zumli Will‘ liiiigilviiii. Lliiizitlzrs next .- a uatiiiual respon- i-ir liberal promise ii-di-tixitient has iiii »_- but mark time. and iir an opportuuity- to rt ml a §Z>\‘Cl'1il1lc'lll ill'l'lfl'll‘llll'tl so little. - 1o ivlieii the fed- safely be pre- f the visit next (ii-true \‘l and llllhllélllCilliiili .c.p:ition of an l‘. is therefore - atiye candidates King's Ltdllil)’ catiditlzitc, has already been nomin- couvt-iiiiiin at Charlotte- izuportaut question for plPllltfilfetl. l". I - the el-tl i ' every poll will be fully .' tlit: CwllYCllllflll will be one aiil mo-t enthusiastic ever held "The Real McKim" of (‘zmvicla is. after all. a com- ; c-iutitrv, and businesses and _~i- oi half-zi-cctituryt and over 1 to be proiil of the zicliievcnicnt. numbered that good, old felijililt‘ a it; firm of A. McKim Limited, of hlotiireztl and t1.- vlii-re. Those in the news- paper i)l'lil(’<-ll\ll \'.li0 have enyciyed association with hlcliiitrs in vetirs past and up to the pres- d t evcr friends in nced and in deed. _' are Canada's oldest‘ advertising agency but carry nothing of the sere and yellow leaf in their truest-in make-up. McKim's have ever kept abr ' . i the titties under successively the two l)l'ti' '5 Alcliim, Pearce, Stephenson, Ind now .\lcl§:i_\', and today are as wideawake Tlte n".'tlllil<tfl parati fly y iiisiitti. .is o. have a ju-"t ri Among ti: c and progrc-sivc as the youngest and most mod- 1n this respect, the tic-r to its patrons has this arn of tlit-ir coir‘ ~ firm in a circu‘ to say: ' _ "ln spite of this agency's years of service, the constant influx of _\‘i'1ll‘._'_' blood is such that the average age of ll!" waif is 33. a period when creative minds arc f‘(‘~;ll('1il. yet tempered by a knowledge of the rtaixtivs of advertising and “ping ;\liit‘(_'li\'(‘l', ll'ii\'l‘l. (‘Oflllfipfillllln con- tacts. CX[)t"i‘ll‘1lt‘("Z\lil‘i‘lil. l ve enabled them to see Canada from tlw on l: as well as intim- ately from iiviihiu. .\=~»ci:itions extending around the ivni-lil, (iiit-tfiiil HlCflfiCFS to new methods and ldfllllllill‘ ~. liaw bred a progres- sive attitude. 1\l\\‘ai\> 11w wiiclistone has liccii: vii/hat new approach (‘itll \\'l' ili-velop. what new appgfll can we CITIHYL‘ to uivvh lriuadiaus will react fnyQnffllll-Y? liit- Illl~\\'\.‘l‘ (‘fin licst hC found, not by lll('1l llYlillt d iii 111i ItllUll milieu, not even alone by y-niiiipii r int-ii ‘.\llO have grown up in one era, but by the fun/led experience of a Canadian Ofgpiiilflllrill wlio-‘t- root's rise from the evoiuiioiim-y- p;i.i of llli‘ t'll‘illlll'_\' ‘ii-elf to nourish Disharmony And lnnclion Wiiii ‘piqlii lflit Ydl i.i'<i\'iiii'i.il i1~ueviiiucut 2nd a Liberal ~_. ii-iiaiiti iit at flll-‘L : dicted tltrw ii-ir- ziuo ‘iliiii l "W" a period Ill iiuiii~ii-i-il.iiiid iwlitivzil liilfllltili)’. imagined eiievaiivi». to ti“. point vxhi lievc that (“i-rift l"! filfl fut‘ Invi‘ T‘) _\'f - Tip- 1' at iii-iiiis out that most of the factu: ‘york QHtYQI-lidl lii such an r-tir|iiii"_v' has lit-c ibnt ]-‘_\i.,-ii. who “tire hired have, iii uiziii can; gone back to their own j0l)§. Yet wor l1‘ illill hits been an twailill-lii‘ comes from Ottawa that the report will not be completed in time for the tii-irriiiiii-iit to take any action thereon during the ioulicoiiiiiig ses- sioti of Parliament. If this be true. whatever proviucizil legisla- tioii be IlCCtlctl to implement the tliiiiiiiissioirs findings would not be possible iuiiil i940. For if Ottawa takes no action during the 15:38-39 session there will be no Opptlritliiit)‘ for provin- cial Legislatures, tlicii sitting. to incorporate rcw legislative recommendations on their statute hooks "$iicli delay‘. iii light of the critical. muddled and indeed precariiiiis state of the nation's fin- ancial ziffziirs." says the lliroiito paper, “is uii- thiultable. Fnriht-rniorc lllt‘ price fur such de- l;i_\ may‘ lie licyonil the capticity of tlu- iiution to hear. Failure to Hllllllll siuiit‘ iuiiuvdizite relief and aid front the Rowcll Coumii-"sioii >l1lLll05 mziv \\'<'ll lead to fiirtlis-i‘ ptvnfiiicizil (ll'..'1l1ll\§ to aii lllllliUllllllt‘ ilraiii through viiiitiiiitziiivi- I " dupli- cate tzixzuiiiu ziiiil iivizr-lzipiiiiig ‘Qifltlllllltlll; to 2i rising lll>lt‘1l<l of a liiivcriii; liurili-ii oi ilclit and taxation. "Prime .\lll'i>lt‘1‘ King must lll>l>l that some at lt’ll>l of llit‘ hi-uvll >lllilip< lie (‘Hilliilittvil gm. lllt‘illlllk‘ly\' all iiizit l\'_',;l ' dvr :ic:i-iii tiiai lit‘ taken :i~ “Hill 11- lkitiiziiiivtu"asst-iiiiilt- tltt- \\iillt'1‘_ It may tint lrt- pw-ililc 1o draft :iu-l v-utiplvie the (iuirc report li_v that iitiiv. lllll ll'li\ uui-i be a ilo/cn or iurirc iuipiiriziiit pii§iii~ i‘: "if fur pr<i_ pwriy taxation. a lrflli-illtl oi‘ pi-oviiicial tlili’. i'i'fiiiiil§ii{_'_ -Y' "'ll>\l“ if the liurdvu iii rclici. fi-v t.. iii -l' on .l.'.- commis- siiiiivlv li.'i\'i- l1ll‘<'.'l4l_\'I1‘iJl’l<‘ ll iiinils and on which fl(‘lllilil‘ and lllilllt ... .>ti sliiiiiltl be forilicoiiiiiig." I Editorial Notes _r Canadian Pacific l ...\\.'iv criiiiplqtgil [hi5 (l;,f@_ 1881f», - i a y »= a The L'.<..\. arc llt)\\‘ liCfQI-Illllfi to realize that i! is licttv-i‘ t0 re-t uzil: i-ue eye opt-ii t.i;iu to b; tziltvn li_\' surprise iiliflc (HlUUi). =i< v v x Bcausc of cxccsdvi- l. irroiviiij: and ilccliiiiiig tax rrvciities. Dayton. llllil?’ pulilic svliiiols- have l)L‘('ll cliistwl Ll‘)\\'ll ft-i‘ two uiiiutlis. Xi» lt'\\'(‘1‘ lllilll LLOOO _~tudeiits and scholars, liiwiilv- teach- er's and eiuployits have lJlTll let out. .\ deficit ot $17,000,000 in the $11120 School l*iiiiiiil.itiiiii Fund is rcportvrl impcrilliiig tlic lllill'l\'k'lill)llll_\' -"f the school howl-- .~\ siivclill scs-iiiii oi‘ tlic Ftate lCgl>lillllYC is lit-itig urged to provide fin- zuiccs. ##1## The L'.S..~\_ Department of Agriculture in a review of the crop situation and a prosp *ciivc sur- vey for the coming _vear, while tiptiniistic on the whole, give this ivzirniiig note: “.»\ gt-tieral stiff- ening of foreign-trade restrictions against im- ports of United States products is regarded as an ‘additional unfavorable itictor,’ ziltliougli this will be offset to sonic extent by the COrlcltigiriti of trade agreements with the United Kiiigiliiin and Canada." In other words, while every other country is increasing their tariff against L'.$..~'\., Canada and the Mother Cotiutry- are being pu- suaded to let down theirs. ls this not a repeti- tion of the disarmament fiasco? l! U It 1k Faith in a science of society has not penetrat- ed to the man in the street, Dr. Harold \V. Dodds, president of Princeton University told the seventh annual conference under the joint auspices of the U. S. A. Educational Records Bureau, the Cooperative Test Service, the Coni- niittee on Measurcmctit and Guidance of the American Council of Education and the Com- mission on the Relation of School and College of the "Progressive Education Associaticn. “The truth is that the so-called social sciences are not sciences at all in any manner analogous to the natural sciences," he said. Science has helped the man in the street but little in deciding how- he should vote. "Scientific research has return- ed no clear objective answer to such problems as the stupendous puzzle of business depression, nationalism versus intcriiatioiialism, the future effects of the Munich pact, or whether Ger- many‘s territorial ambitions would not have dc- veloped under a democracy much as they have under fascism." "Scientific govcrtinieiit" and “scientific progress" are mere catchphrascs to mislead the UIHVZT)‘ and to draw them from the beaten and well-tried paths of practical experi- once. u m v According to the October report of the Na- tional City Batik of New York the past mouth brought further evidence of business llliiiFIiYC" mcnt, and (lcspiic some disaiipiiiiittiiciits the iii- dicatiiius for the near future have roiitiuuctl favorable. No one would say tluit a sutjtgi» of unqualified (iptiuiisni is sivi-i-piiig over int CHHH- try, for the situation is spotted. ln the (‘lllllp- mcnt industries particularly the ilcuianrl is still lagging, and retail trade has lici-u held hack hv llll-fllflilllllil)‘ \v:iriii wcriilici‘. .\~('\'(‘l‘lll('lt‘s>‘. the I i! \\'.’i. iirc- would i-iij-iy 'l‘hi-_v have ciilfivgvd them it i< :1iIlI(‘lllll\"~' liard iii lic- a Still-cliatigili! l"'““"l' i_ i i . litisiiicss indexes lUtYC lit-cu moving uinvuril. ~ " K ' -~ ‘ “RYHQ rut thwarts tieir .~ - < - . Mlkml‘ ‘W UH“ H L - . i’. .- . ..i i. NW1» Fllllfililoliili‘ and building opciniiiiiiis have Cflnlellflrl- imfl ll" lmlm Ill“) K (xllnifu n“ imprn\'<~d anti llit‘ ltxlllv unlit-tries have hold they and lll(‘ll' \ll‘l:\fl>‘~\~i1l'~ iii .lll.- illvlpiiliiiiiyf"my their ground. 'l'lu- lfcili-val l\‘i~~i-i"vi~ index of iii- VETlWnl-l "ml WM“; l mxm“ m“ ‘IUUi-Hll Illhlfllll iirorltiction rose to tit» for Sflitciiilicr. an cnlwuictd irit "l "biwliliii m!‘ (‘film m I“ frlilll 3h’ in .'\llL'll.~l. and the iii'i-liiiiiii:irv fiiIiu-os Yea“ m“ l". "Mild “I 1mm‘ llltlifllli‘ .'iiiiitlit~r and hrolialilv giiniici" rise iii llctober. .\l:-ri~ii~.<i1i'. >otii<- iniiiori.iiit upward rcvisiotis of filClllr-Y sclii-iliilc». which will ap- ply to NovL-iiilict. have lici-u zuiuoiiiiiw-il. lutii security‘ and Clillllllliflll)‘ prircs have her-n firm, s with indications that li1I_\'('I\ flfl‘ ivillitig to 0p- cratc a little further ahead than formerly". The Wlioiiiid in tlic markets. uhivli followed the .\l11lll\‘ll agreement and lll’ rclii-f from the strain i, i.» ii“. siliijiiltill today? of the liuriiiicaii crisis. .~(‘l‘l113~' to answer in the __ s: xii‘. : ti“ .l\"“\'*-'ll Cvlllllliedon W15 negative the qllPsllllll whether the weakness in launched," say» ilit- l"iii.uici:il l‘i--t. "the country .<t‘]il(‘llilr(‘l' vias llli.‘ to domestic causes (is well has licvn iwthiull with l"""ll,'"il‘llll\lll' X“""i""- l“ m“ “ill ‘llllilvf- The (‘\‘itl<‘l1\‘(‘ iiow is flint nfoviiigigil pol tiriiilis haw >4'1/,<'rl on obvious or flit‘ frcivl all tilting has lit't‘l‘i tipward. lhiyiiig \\'.".\' ili-ivvreil iliiritig the pvriiiil of titiccrttiiuitv, hut ihvrt- \\'."\ all the more to he done in the vim" ll-"fl "l llviolicr. and activity in cotton 2""‘l*- ffiptivr. liiilt-s and lPllllKF and some other l"‘°5_l‘l°l<"'| lip <lioiiulyx 'l"lic pare has slacken- erl ..ttilce the iiii-lillc of the tuoiitli, but flic busi- ucss is on the hooks where it will sup. port production. il n Y d NUTES BY THE WAY Newspapers no beginning in catch up with the type of poll- tician who denies next day that he said what press reports credit ihlnl with saying. One American newspaper now has recording equipment which transcrtbes to a irecord every word a speaker says, direct. from the hall to the news- ‘paper office. The reporter writes .1iis story in the usual way. When ,t1ie angry politician denies next. nay the published version of his address, all the newspaper has to ,do is to dig up the record of the address, place it on a reproducing dial and broadcast to the world that the politician said exact] ivhat the newspaper recorde liiin as saying. Politicians of the type who try to "get. away with 1t" have been caught up with at lasr-Lethbridge Herald. The hobo's lot is not a strenuous one. So easy. in fact. railroad police in Albany are complaining about the increasing demands upon their services by those who ride the rods. In Amsterdam. N.Y. the other day, shortly after B. transient had been untangled from the rods of the night freight and llll>ll9d up to the local hoosegoyv. came this urgent tele- gram to Cu) . Joseph B. Boyle of the New York Ccntrid Railroad: "Train rider arrested here says baggage still on train_ Please meet train and itwtvvcr." Jitdging by Captain Boy-‘s indignant out- burst, the wcll-hreletl hobo has only to make his wishes kiioivii and a uniformed atieurlnni Pivill make arrangements for hie lug- gage. -Froni the Christian Luckiest people in trc world. we Americans. Above all — the frcest! We may wrangle among ourselves. We may rant and shout \‘\'~ may so to extremes in our attacks upon public offl- cials. Gcotzc \\'i\.<l1ll1glCXl was assailed as “iiioiiarcliist." Jef- ferson Wflh (Iltflllllllwfld as a “Jac- Iobin“ ta term 51> bad in its day u. "Coiiiiiiutiist" l\' now). Lincoln was calico a "baboon? Theodore Roosevelt a “crackpotf” and Franklin Roosevelt a “madman? But the very fact that extremists can en to extremes is the proof that this remains the world's great “land of libcrtv." Those denunciations never harmed the mcn at whom they were aimed But thry have served as a safety vnlvt- for human indignntlnn. and the freedom to make them has preserved our democracy while trcmcntlrius changes — both poll- tti-ai and ecoiinmic- were taking place within its framework. Lucky Amerlcat-Ncnv York Post There never has been any satisfactory explanation from of‘ ficzil Soviet sources of the ac‘..on of the Soviet Government in can- celling the All-Union census car- ried out with the expenditure of much labor and material in Jan- uary. 193'l_ It was announced that "krcckcrs and enemies of the peo- ple". operating in the Cenrtal Stat- tisticzil Bureau, had deliberately rendered the figures unreliable and useless. and a “purge" swept out virtually the entire persoiiel. The statistical Bureau has now been instructed by the Govern- ment to carry out a new census in January. 1939. The most sig- nlftcaut feature of the new ln- structions is that the population will nnt be required to confess its attitude toward religion. for the question is omitted entirely on the forms to be filled out. Close to 40.000 enrollment. clerks. audi- tors and inspectors will be utilized. About 121000.000 copies of census forms will be printed in 44 dif- ferent languages. -—-Manchester Guardian. 0f course Hitler 1s a funny chap. It 1s certainly a funny idea to ex- pect that Britain should reduce herself to helplessness which would leave the way open for fleets cf German bombers to fly over and min destruction on London and any other cities when he comes to the conclusion that the time 1a oppor- tune to do so. No British Govern- men would last a day that propos- ed drastic reduction of the air force. Not even the most pacifist member of the House would sup- port it. The British people were thankful for the Munich agree- ment. and for the Chamberlain- Hltler pledge that the two coun- tries would solve future difficult- ies without resort. to war. but they do not trust Hitler all the same. Premier Chamberlain does not; trust 111m. and that is why he advocates quicker and stronger re- nrmiimerit. To cut down the air force to impotence would be worse than setting a tiger to watch a. flock of sheep. —St. Thomas Times-Journal. It ls hard to realize today that. the country which is going through such agony was once the light- hearted. carefree country which provider‘ the setting for "The Bohemian Girl" and "The Prince of Prison.“ — Kingston Whliz- Standard. Th1‘ last. census showed over 8.- 000 persons occupied as lawyrrs 1n Canada. with 544 justices and ma- gistrates, not all of whom were necessarily graduates of law schools but most of whom are llkvly to be placed as such. There 1s thus one lawyer for every 1.200 of tho population. and as there 1s ouc doctor for every 1.000, it would seem to appear that our bodily ills take more looking after than keeping us within the rules by iviiich society governs its ac- tions. --—Kll.£‘lli‘l10l‘ Record. Aeneas Alexander MucKay. here- ditary chlefttiin of the Scottish Clan Mrickny. thirteenth btironet Rear of Crilthnt-ss 1n the Scottish pct-rage and third Baron Mackay vnii Oplicinert 1n the nobility of the Netherlands. has petitioned the British Home Sccietnry for llfllllfflllllillnli as a British sub- jqct. He was born at Opbemert. Holland, and will be 33 years old next Christmas day. Although he Iii nearly seven feet tnli he has other f1 tin-es both personal and ancestral which make him an in- teresting personage. --New York Times If’ all the people who had sbmrtiiinq about which they wor- ried were to tell their troubles to the newspapers we suppcre many columns ivould be filled each and every day in the week. James ‘Irussler. of Kitchener. had some- thing new to worry about the other day. Along with his wife he was drtvlniz toward Doon (pretty spot) and he ran into n guard- rail. iifter which it was found that Mrs. 'I'russler had suffered n fracturld shoulder. M. ‘Ia-tutor ‘Tl-IF. cuaRLoTfrisrowiy of Ncivn scritin. thirteenth Baron _ GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM l Ill: alum! ll upon In Oh dunno: by oinuponilnu 0| qnocflvn OI lntonlt. Th Gill'- lottalowl flunrdlln don not l0- muully adorn Ila IDIIIOII cl norruponlanlo- "HELPING" THE IARBIERS Ska-There is a settlement in Prt-nce Edward Island where near- ly a hundred stacks of Marsh he used to be cured each year; B Urea help ti. was to the farmers of that settlement. ‘Ihls year the bridge is being lred in the Campbell-Mc- Intyi-e- crime Wright-Erika: way. and that valuable marsh will be a. total loss. oiiirlng to the wiiy the bridge is being rebuilt. It could have been built lust as strongly as was needed and the marsh saved. with close on 100 stacks of hay worth from $450.00 up yearly. But whetare i; hundred stacks of hay to the Campbell-McIntyre-Wright - Baker pagéyoin power. A mere bagatclle. or w . I mm. S11‘. 80C. ENQUIRER RELIGION AND POLITICS Sin-No sincere Christian man need confuse moral and political 1s- sues unless he choose to do so. former editor of a chumh DB. er wrote excusiiig the failure of he temperance cause in New Bruns- wick, that it needed “a new ap- proach." Did Paul preach a new ap- proach? Did the Master teach the disciples to iiy a new approach if their persecutors go: 1'0tl',2li with them? ‘f RlHlXITOIISIICSQ dlld Tem- perance 20 together. then Sabbath - ,4- 7' “ORIENT ODE" Illl I'll-OM Lo. In the uncharted Day. l. dedlcatied W100i. his robes 1n l mftetb siotwl . 11m sweetly. From out lit: Giant tabernacle Y ‘ oontw on o Whichuslteariniklq benediction fluvlllh ‘m. Arid when the gave procession’: 1m semi iiiitii due mum-mus rite aiesseir-ers the frail unxen m"! Ot twilght, vioiet-cassocked acolyte. His sacerdotal stole: UIWCSlI-i sets, fpr high close of the hymerlous BESl, The sun in alltllst un- m°n 1M9“ Within the flaming monstranoe of the W661i. —Franc1a ‘Ilioxnpggi. THE “PADLOCK LAW" Sun-It seems an lnoonzriwvl situation. that with all the facilities for spreading knowledge. there should exist such popular and ividespread misapprehension o1 things which exist even 1n cur own country: or is it a tribute to the efficacy o! propaganda that is served us in the guise of fact. which we unknowingly and limo- eeiitly accept as true. The above thought arose when Day breaking and rum drinking cannot be good team-mates for them. Mr. Nicholson should listen at the Mouth of the Cave. for the still Small Voice: "What docst thou; here, Nicholson?" When M1‘. W. S.. Mot-tart WPOlQ that iegrevable cid- mission. “I will not change my vow," thus indorsing the rum-sel- lers’ side. a staunch Liberal said. with tears in his voice: "We thought there was one true Christian man. if there is one 1n the world. What are we to think now?“ "He that is not with Me. ls against Me." I joined a Temperance Society '1 years ago. at the age of fifteen. stilt keep the Pledge 1 am. Sir. etc. L._P_. U. AND PORT coxnmoxs Bur-One day last week I bor conditions. _I happened to go thiougli the railway’ freight shed and I was verv much surprised to see only a few men working at such B. busy season of the year. I made some inquiries as to ‘Why those conditions prevailed.’ I wtis told that the boss was away shooting and certain work was 51151380660 until he returned. Further quest- ioning revealed “this; three cars of freight were in position a‘- the shed doors. These cars contained meichandise for our businessmen. At that time men had been laid off and were watluna around town. don't ske very much inter-est 1n railway affairs but when worklntl men are not tzettin-z a square deal I think that the business men and the Board of Trade should know, I was told that men were laid off ln the interests of economy. I don mink economy should be racflred by laying off meri and lea niz large quantities of frelizht locked n cars when those cars should be unload- ed as soon as oossibie. In a recent issue of ihe press I read that the Board of Trade sult- qested that a committee of mem- bers interview the Laborers Pro- tecdve Union and ‘rv to Ref-The Union to adopt a satisfactory rate or wages, a5 the present rate was too hitzh and had a tendency kieeu boats from canine at our port. Well. as a member of L. P. U consider the present rate very fair and rcasonalme 1n every classifica- tion. I would surzizes‘ that the BOWd of Trade procure a copy of the Saint John. N B. scale and also compare the WBRGS bflld at B81158! port. with that paid 1n Charlotte- ‘ovm. It would be well to visit other Maritime ports and see the splendid working conditions. Let us keen on trying for harbour improvements. and the wages ‘paid in Charlottetown will no‘ be any way affect the steamboats from cal- liniz at our port. There are many its that might be talten up at meetings of the Board that would benefit. the wetting-men and the busineai comrnunitv as weil. I am. Sir. etc. L0 QSl-IOREMAN >-< Q la ‘f5 years of age and has been driving a car for 22 ears and never had a mishap efore. but that was not what bothered him iit all. Mr. and Mrs. Trussler were on the way to visit Mr. ‘Prusslens father. who is 100 years old. and the son was worrying it bit about what father might have to say to him. —Peterborouph Examiner. ATTE‘?! Swine Breeders ls the time 4,, 2 ll a r d against PIG - WORM by "Si"! the most effective "WW! on the market: Mac’s Pig - Worm Tonic Powder It will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms. and Improve the health of your herd. Price 35cts per lb. Don't delay. Order by Phone or Mall. All orders promptly attended to. l Phone 315 PHE 2 MAGS Preacrlptlons A Specialty Remember there l; nothing brtter for your Stomach than Dr Evans’ Stomach Mixture PRICE FEB BOTTLE 85c. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED T0. 0f reading various letters in the “Pub- lic Forum" anent the "Padlock Law”, which mall and mis- represented legtsla ion may well bear some clarification. The “Padlock Law" (so called) has m bearing on free speech. as is abundantly clear from the abuse and vituperutlon heaped upon Du- Dlessls by the Communists and their duipes right 1n the province of Quebec; it but gives the power to padlock for a year the premises any person found guilty of OLD TDIER WB-S taklniz it walk around sizing up la- selling Communist literature. Fur- 3 thermore. in order to wreak no I hardship (in any person unwitting- 1y offending. it makes provision for aiwoeal. There is absolutely no prohibition of anyone owning oom- munlstlc literature. it BIDDIIBS only to the sale. What is so abhorrent about. this law? The law can padlock housos of prostitution. which desecrate the human body. can it not. also for it. they carry money or "legal tender.” The answer to No. 1 is: Look at any bank balance sheet and ou will see for yourself that a owns more than it owes. That is to say—lf all of its de itors were paid off and all of its other debts id, a balance would be left be onging to the shareholders. That should answer your first tion satisfactorily. And now or No. 2: Look a ain at a bank balance sheet an you will see that in bank owns assets quickly con- vertible into cash. or which can be used to borrow from tho Bank of Canada. Experience has taught banks the amount of cash it is neces- mind with Oommunistlc philosophy of inherent dictatorship, denial of re- padlock houses which pollute the viclence. of militant Rlhflstffl, lizion and its making of a coun- try a huge ant-hill and man "but an insect. that raises its tiny hum for an hour and is gone." How this law can be interpreted as denying free speech is u mystery. While we are on the subject of "liberty" it. might be we}! to ex- plain certain essentials of ltbenty. The crux of the difficulty is the failure of many people to dis- tlnzuts between liberty and 11c- ence: and the fact that . cannot be prlvatelyh bilerpreited. that 1a the work of e constituted authority. i. e.. The Courts. Be- cause 1f everybody could inter- bret liberty to suit. his own whims, fancies and punposes. the objective criteria that distinguishes liberty would name of "liberty." For The founding fathers of ur neat southern republic in their justly famous document the Am- erican Constitution (in essence de- rived from the Masna Chamta and the B111 o! Rlghits) adequately provided for llberlly and its pell- aidium. an authorized Interpreter, the Supreme Count. Heme during the war when Victor Be , Comrrwsman from ‘Milwaukee. was arrested and brought. into Court chained vrith Reasonable timer- ances he pleaded his ccnstltutlonal right of freedom of meson. “Biit." said the Court 1n effect. "you are not the authorized interpreter of that. document. The Supreme Court has decreed that that passage of the CMISMMICIOn may ngvgr b; 59 construed u countenance treascn to the government. Free. dom of speech la always limited by the dub! to refrain mun inciting citizens to rebellion ogistmr; trig mimmt~'i.."'zfrt "t... never us t e away rtirhts of the citizens. for ltber must respect the ltberty of a]. FTOP" fhe foreizoing fundamentals, Communism can't even claim the Pill“ 0f free mach. because in fir" tuft» at least, It contravenes the British Constitution." The British Constitution guarantee; rcllillous liberty and democracy. both of which Communism repii. diafes. Therefore. to advocate Com- munism 1s to advtvmte the abolition of these tlwo cherished British 11b- ertles. 8nd is tantamount of trms. on anzainst the lawfully constituted authority of the people. so to pro- lecl- WE Dwble the authorities should not allow 'frecri0m" of Fmi-ch to be used to take away fi-rl-‘fitiom of ant-mp ioreover. as tie Edvo- n "Guardian" has so nertbientlfy t}: marked. we have our padlock law as to ca to meet ordinary 11a‘; to dayrzlemanda, and also the it is necessary to carry in gilt-edged quick assets which can he liquidated to meet even any extraordinary demand. Banks know that it is absurd to expect all depositors to call for their money at the same time. That would be like saying that if everybody got sick at the same time there would not be care of them. - Or that if everybody who travels by street car decided to navel at exactly the same hour, therowould not be enough cars m carry them. 0r that if every person who carries life insurance died on the same day all the claims could not be met. Or that if every sea were drained dry there would be no ocean liners. Such statements are meaning- less when you expose them to the cold light of commonsense. Where, then, does all‘ the money come from ? Hagan - tion can best be answe by asking this one: Who owns it— and how do they get it ? Addressing ourselves to 4,740,000 depositors we answer: "This money is ours. You own it. When you ca l for it, you 5st it. When you ask any existing Canadian bank for it, do ou ever fail to get it promptly '1' ’ W31 ask ydou, too: 2B0 you re a our e ‘t as gin-coin a Emil" ‘m t addition to the cash it holds, the- room in the hospitals to take. 15191510413131! 7. 1.23s WHERE DOES ALL T MONEY COME FROM? ORE than four and one-half million depositors in Canada have "money in the bank."- They are satisfied to leave their money on deposit because Canadifs chartered banks are ready and able to‘ ay back promptly every cent when the depositor- These deposits in the chartered banks total rou hly $2,262,000,000—approximately 10 per cent. of which in cash—in other words Bank of Canada Some people do ‘not fully understand banking operations and might ask: I. Whnrhava the bunks yo: u: npnocnt our deposits H they do no: have l! all in euh! I. How can flu bunk: repay our dopoalu, our SL262,- 000,000, with the amount of cull they hold? Ifyou are a w: o-earncr, pay ing your way an depositing a little week b week in a savings account in t e bank. can any. body convince you that your dc it. came into being by writing figures in a book? Or i: it not a fact that you can call at your bank and take it away with you—in cash! Suppose you are a fauna- let us use one acre and somu round figures for illustration. You use % bushels at a dollar _a bushel, of wheat, to seed one acre. You reap, say 20 bushels, worth a dollar a bushel. Leaving out your coats to simplify mat- ters, your gain is 18% bushels equivalent to 18% dollars,which you deposit in your bank. Do you regard this as just fi in a book ? It would be hard to convince any wa e-earner or any pro- ducer o new wealth, that his J r " which arose from bin labour and production, is any- thing but real money. , He knows better, for he can bu things with it. . ere does all, the money come from ? Your deposit is the measure of our own real wealth. ; at wealth comes from the marketing of your labour ‘for wages; from the a plication of labour to the soil o the farm, or mthc standing -' " in the forest; from the catching of fish in the sea; from the wresting of minerals from the ground; from the fabricating of raw materials into manufactured , “'5; and from marketing at home o: abroad this continuous produc- tion. When somehod wants to dunge all your ueineaa and economic methods and by some mysterious magicto brin about ayes-night a promise: mifienium o 'ty, ask w at success lugoipctrliieorist has made of handlin his own aflain, before you ba his theory. Bank deposits reflect tlngiblu wealth produced. Every dollar we owe to 0ll—-0ll.l dcpoeitom —ia back by many dollars in ma] Insets. Cannda‘: chartered banks no: only mrvo the individual well, the no a gout factor in the b ' ding of e nation. THE CHARTERED ' BANKS 0F CANADA Your local brunch bank manager will be glad to talk bank- ing with you. He will In glad to answer your questions, from the uandpolnt of H: 01m experience. rbzlif here in this province. re pad. liffklnlf P111095“ "vhcre ltuiior is ‘-- Ff ~<°'">_T*?s£_!° "@1119. 1r é°"“l»ll‘-.f*i_‘LPe'5-——_L§- °°1 l’ For a Delicious Cup of Orange Pekoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN G O O D C O O KIN G Demands Real Skill m AND rut: CAREFUL MIXING or IN- GREDIENTS. EQUAL SKILL AND can: is REQUIRED IN THE PRODUCTION or oun CHEWING TOBACCO. THE RAW LEAF UNDER sous CAREFUL ggoglllzgsffllfElBlifllFlllizllllila liiiifmmfi” KNOWN mania Wm!” HICKEY'S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10C P» Fig Manufactured by lllllllEY and NICHOLSON.