,,q_.;>. a. -i>._.>.“ -_i_u.-._ 1+3-“ 1.. 1- . i GHARLOTTETOVIII GllAlllllAIl 13111911101111 - 1111-: Morning Dally (Founded 1881) President Lleut. Col. W. Chute:- S. McLui-e Vice I esident .l. it. non, l1‘. J. l. Editor and Managing I lreotor J. B. Burnett, F. J. l. Secretary Lleut. Col. D. A. Mulflnnon, D. S. 0. Associate Edlotoi- Fruit Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES $5.00 per year (tn adviuue) delivered to City $4.00 per year (IITBUVQHBC) mat-ed to l’. E. Inland i5.00 per year tin advance) llllllfll to coma; ana 11.5 Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than me weanest Ink”. MONDAY, APRIL l. 1938 A Speiidthrift Government 1\ truly astonishing si111c of affairs is revealed 111 t he l. tiblic Accounts, i937, which were tabled in ilie Legislature on baturday by rreinicr Lilllllphcll. .\t llle 111st session toe treiiiier had uutlgctcd for 1i dsficit oii current account of 2505c :88, but he explained that the prospects were ‘really inucli more liopeiul' 11nd that "we cuiiid szisiij- 111111111 1i 111111- optimisiic fllllllltlt and say that we 1111* go 11;; 1o lHlILlHCL‘ our lmcget this rely c1113" .\1111irall_v, the llousc and taxpayers in general cxpcciul 1111' li11\1'1'l1lil1'llt to adopt tile Iiiosl ‘hopoiiii’ 15111111111- 11 could. and aiiiicipatcd 1111s yczii" 11 suiitziiiriii siiinviil; a balance o1 ordinary reieiiuc- 111111 c:,p1-n1h1uics_ this, as we poinieu out on _\';111ii"il.-,_\, would not 11111111111111 the Liov- crniiieii. .- cicctiilii pledge but at least it would be a s11 p lll 1111* l'1‘_‘,ll'11l.l'1‘tj1l1)ll_ \\ 11.11 do w. lino? lilsiczid o1 :1 balanced bt1d- get, or (‘\1'll of 11 deficit of $o},,-1>o', \\e find a deiicit 11f no l(‘:> 111.111 $110,173.71 oii ordinary account 1iloiic, with 1~1.~.l lliillllllltls increased to the tllllt‘ o1 $_;51.;9,5.b'o. More 1111111 111111, the Accounts tcveal that the Siiiloiig 1111111» hzive been tampered with. lligh griidc lJonliilion oi tjaiiatla bonds to the amount oi \"oo,ooo which yielded the Province interest an in}; our .1 per cciil, were t1ilc1-ii out and rcpluccd by L. .'\'. l\'. bonds yielding only 3 per Eciit. The Uovt-riiiiicilt by this trade sacrificed the iiicoinc- ll1'1‘1\>lll‘y' u) properly 11111111111111 the sta- tus oi til‘ 5111111111; 'l'uii1ls iii order to obtain a profit of :~'_*1,1;oo, Tllls 111111111111 should properly be added to their deficit oi ..\‘i_'t1.i,"_;.71 since it ziciuziily represents‘ a Llcjilkqldllclll iii 5111111111; Funds to this extent. The Right Comparison l'l11: \,iii\1l'lllll1lll 1ii';,;:1i1 compares the enor- nioqi.» 111.11 iilcrc - 111st )c;ti‘ with the year 1935, a (l1'1ll;€l'{l'i.l_\‘ llll caoing CUlllpitfisOll because 1n that yczir tiic proiiiicinl election took place and both party governments were in power for part of the 11111;. tor this reason the only fair coni- parisoii is with the last full year of the Mac- .\lill111i Goieriimciit, lllllllUiy, i934. Let us sec what this coinpurisoii show5_ The Lziniplieil tjoit-riiiiient, in 1937, enjoyed a te\1'1iiie 111 $i,b’_1i._>1,1;.11o, The total revenue of the i\l11c.\lill11n Lioverniiieiit in 193,4 was $1,385,- fjfQyi, ll ihyjurivirc in fort/lo’ u] l/ic (Qampbcll G11t'cr111i..‘1l! 11f 35.49020. Noi-witlisiziiifiii-g; this iiddilioiiiil revenue of n1‘: 1v lizill a llllliillll dollars, our “budget balan- cci's"'iiici*e;-_.~1-1l '11‘ liabilities la-it year to the 1111111 o1 $551;- 1), lii other words their record in 1115,‘. conipuctl \\llll the Machlillziii liovcrn- nicnts lr-t lull \c11r of office, is uorsc to the extent of $7.\'7._*S9.l5. But this is not lllc whole story. In 1934 thc l\l:1c.‘lil"~ii tiovvriiiilciit had to fact- extraordin- arv 11111 ciicy 1':;1\;:11':1l1;1'.-,a iii reilu lding l"1"11ce of 1.1111, College and lfiilconivood llo..',.i...l. i \‘v’hat The Figures Show A11 (\l!lll\'>l\ oi the standing of the Province rc\c11i\11t1'11i_v 1111111111111; state of affairs. U11 Aug,“ 1;, 1i_,_~,_;, wiicii the 1\l11c.\iill11ii Liovern- llltiil \\lllt 11111 11f oiiice, tlie gross lllll(l('(_l dcut “h. .$_1_55_i,1.oo_ 1m Ucctnibcr 3i, i937, alter twp 11nd oiic-hiiif yczirs of l.1i.er11l “oudgrt billilllfiillj-Z 1 ii “,1, $1,1,i1:.|.1;11.;--111l iiirrclirc in 111111 x1101‘! IHIIL‘ u] 111111.11515511.111»). 'llii- ii1~i 111111111 i1.-‘:>i on .\1i;;i1~i i5, i055. was riot plead that their failure to balance the budget was due 1o anything but their own iiicoiiipeieiic, and gross extravagance. Their pledge to do so was based on the revenue available in i935, aiid as we have pointed out, that revenue was nearly half a million dollars less than the revenue they are now enjoying. lii spite of this, after jacking up the taxes all along the line and even tamper- ing with the Sinking runds and sacrificing the interest income of the Province, they conic out with a current deficit of over $110,000, and in- creased liliilities of more than three hundred and fifty thousand. Ghost Ships “The story of the phantom ship visible off can“ LOW, E. 1.. which sank without a sound into the waiters of Nortliiiinberlaiid Strait,” says the hlolicton Transcript, "is given “hi, liiucli more detail than usually nccoilipaiiies the tales of ghost ships sighted iii the Alaritimcs ;\t ll"? lllvllltrllt it is not evident whcthci- the stolzy is a preiiiattirc April Fool's jolvc, the real thing or a mirage. lt is probably ii_i the 111st classification that the explanation lies of lnost of the stories heard along the c1111sis of these jiroviiiccs. lt is pertinent that such appearances are usually regarded 11s prcsagmg a storm. hlirages zindlooiiiing, a simi- lill‘rpllCllUlllcllUllvlll which objects are lifted zibovc their true positions, fire optical iilttsions occas- ioned by retraction ol light. lll(‘_\' are ciiiiiiiioii lll wmc 114"“ U1 llle tropics. llcrc ilicv come withl an tiiiusual condition of atmosphere. l,\’(_‘si1l()1|[5 along the Fundy coast of this coiintv for iii- flilllsl‘. 5011191111105 Iilld Ufllltlawnc lslziiid brought closer to thenr l1 would b1- diflicult tn put the stories which coiiic once in 1i while from the tiny Qhup-ur shore in the c11tagory' of niirages, for they deal usually not with nlodcrii SlfiillllSlllps or island,- but with ancient cr11lt_ which no lUllgQr stiil the seas. .\lorcover the ships are described as bcjng afhinie. “lflficzil of this sort of story was that of a youth 111 the Bathurst (listrict who a few years ago, 1n April as we recall his story, was attracted by what appeared to be a house on fire. TlICIl he saw that it was 111 the \\'111er, a ship sailing against the wind, 11nd reiitciiibcrcd the stories his father 11nd other oldcr ii1e1i had told him of the “fire ship." T\v0_years earlier a reputable man, whose good faitlrwas not questioned, reported that, while walking thclialt-niilc of ice which separat- ed 11. small island from the \\'(‘>'1(‘l'll coast of Cape ‘ I ' I . [JFCYUII 1§l=1l1d, lie 11nd :1 coinpzmitin sziw a simi- lar manifestation, lippzirciilli- a thrce-inasted schooner ziblzize froiii how [Q gfcrtL 1101114. mirage or reality, the Canoe have story \\'tll l)€ retold ill 1ll(‘ fllltlfl.‘ llv mginy 3,11 151M111 lift-Side of a wintry night.” J I Editorial Notes I That Liberal Ghost Ship won't down, if‘ FF >1» PF Impeachment of \\'ai‘rcii llastings, this date 17 . >1- 11: >1- 1i- .\lr. \\'. F. Alan Stewart, .\l.L..-\., has at least the courage of his convictions, ivhich i5 more than can be said of the majority of the lgiioblc Thirty. i 1K i ‘i Cali we believe our ears a111l eyes? Listen, read: “\\'hat wc nccd in marketing is protection. lf we are going to boost production that is one thing we must have." ls that the declaration of a mcmbcr of the l'zirty tl111t sponsors the N111- ional Policy of Sir john Mziciltiiiald? i\'o not at all, it was inzidc in the legislature by the Liberal member for Souris, .\lr. l‘. .-\. 1\lClStl'1lC, i >3 W l! A correspondent writes: “llow would it do to appoint a lady vendor iii succession to Mi". Lester Uouglas? There seems 1o he no reason why a woman could not do good work there filling doctors’ prescriptions; .\\v:il1c temperance societ- ies, there is work for you to do here. If there is no 111w zigaiiist a lady zippoiiilcc, why iiot try the experiment? U1‘ would she talk trio much or see too much or both .-\l1is the lfllllllly Compact! l l! ¥ # 1\li‘. Blzicliityrc has h11il letters from what tlic ziffluciit .\lr. joiies c.1lls "margin f1iriiicrs", tell- 111g him that they h111l nothing to e111 hilt pola- $;_;1,,,1,_;5_ 111i l/Ucqllllltd‘ 31, 1115;, it 111111 been incrc <1 l1) I,1,1_(1;14,v,it),-—01' 1111 increase ioidrr‘ 111.1‘ 1 i1::1,i.'1i I tmrcriiiiiviil of $l,O(1_t.-’f>l. lliii [l‘l'll.1]l:» 1111' l:1i1_'c:t iiltlcx to take is the incrt lil 1111.1 ll.'1lllllil<‘.\. thi August l5. I955, liit‘ 11,1111 1111111111115 of the Province were #4577" ' were b5,- fs .103, tin llrccniiicr jl, i937 they _--1il1 iilivu" " 1.11/11.‘ 111.1"! Izuo 1:111 -, 1111.] 1w, 1:11 11.1.1 15.1111 $911,110.71). 1p}, “ht 111; 1. 1\'.‘l'lllllL‘lll which in I935 11p- Wfltp, p, 11;; on ihpnsiilciiiii piedgci] "i\’_~i,i~ 1.1 1:. iture suiliciciit to lmlélllfivl the iii: .;;,1 1:1. .\ii1lo11i' loqzil c» ili1iii_ oixiiyi said at tliat 111.11’ :1 "lt 011:1 bc done! \\'e ‘have promised to do iidoiiiii u} flie Liberal 111111111111112: slime ffzcir . lv l'_\' lfbliftlrlflflhlflal ‘l ‘l '5 m” ilmir I/lvv 1111/ 1, 1 '" 111.1 1i_i/11.1i. _ ‘ l, “d, U, 1,0 ,j,,_,_-_ too, by 111) increase iii 111x- ation. l'l"\'llllCl‘ L,‘.lllll)l)('ll‘|.ll!l1gC(l lriiisclf specific- ally on 111111 point 111 tile lilooinocld meeting. Premier 1\l1i1~.\iill;iii 111111 said it couldn't be 110m except hv iiicrciissd taxation, cutting "air unem- ployment relief, or stopping the old age pell- sions, but, said Mr, Liiiiijibcll, l say I11y0i4 fliut we r1111 11ml 11111.1! 1111411100 Hlc fmdycf zvillioilt do- ing any 11f l/HXW‘ 111111111." (Patriot, july 13, 1935). A Poor Alibi Our contemporary tidvauces the excuse that the l\vli'\Cl\'_€ll7.1C king Government was to blame. in cutting d11_\vii the Provinces share of unepi- ployinciit relief. liul who ‘was responsible or this? \\'l1ci1 Premier MacMillan and his colleag- lies (ibtniiictl from the Bennett Government, dur- ing thi-ir term 01' office, assistance to the exteiift of ovcr a inillitin 11nd a quarter dollars for tell‘? and other projects they were criticised for frisk- ing so mziny “picni1:" trips to Ottawa. The 1C- nic" trips are costing our ‘tfixpayers more t an ever tinder the Campbell Government, been anything but satisfactory.‘ If the Vflifl- uni had not been w concerned m Playmfl P0131" 1t would have insisted on getting a better distribu- tldn of federal relief money, J Em granting, thin mum lioiiimr, they cm- but the results, pccording to our contemporary,“ have toes. Last wcck 11 friend iviio owns pedigreed foxes was ilisctissiiij; the proteins 21nd vilainiiis contained iii various commercial br111ids 11f fox food. .'\ iilciiliier of tlic family said: "l c1111 reineinlicr, 11nd l iiiuigiiie you c1111, whcii people ilcvcr thought of buying fox food; the foxes ate table scraps." "lies, our lricnd replied, "but thcn we used to have table scraps. 1\ow f” U I U O lii the Liverpool, .\'. S. .\<lv11ncc, of which .\li'. (i. Cecil Duy ol tliis cilv is 111111111‘, tlic loiloiv- 111g reference to the lute 1\li". (Qiirrie is nnide: "lt may not iiicaii inucli 1o the average reader oi the Liverpool Advance but iieivspzipcr dcspatchcs this wcck ifecorileil the death of l). lx’. Currie, 8:, associate editor of thi- klizirlottettnvii kiuardizin. lilind since i925, .\lr. Currie ltcpt his zissocation with newspaper ivork by dictating 11 column czicli dziy, and was one of the oldest ziclivc newspaper- ineii in the east. lt was iii the yczir 1915 that the ivritcr first crossed a newspaper threshold and was introduced to his first boss, the late l)_ K. Currie. While that ivas some time ago we still have warm thoughts for the kindly man who hap- tized us in the faith and was ever thoughtful of others more so than himself." a- w 4- a Here is a cold crack for a politically appointed judge from thc New York 'l‘inics;"‘1\1r, justice Reed did not participate in the Supreme Court decision in which sections of the Holding Com- pany Act of i935 were sustained. His reason for not doing so was that he had signed perfunctory briefs in the case, while serving as Solicitor Gen- eral. Mr. justice Black participated in the decis- ion, however, despite thc fact that as a member of the Senatehe had attacked holding companies as “rattlesnakes" and urged their destruction as networks of chicauery, deceit, fraud and graft. We do not question Mr, justice Black's decision to join with the majority opinion in this instance. If his past record and his past associations caused ,him to draw any such fine line as distinguished Mr. Justice Reed's determination, there would be very few cases involving fundamental human “rights upon which he could pus.” 1 from llOTES BY TllE WAY In a letter to The Toronto Globe and Mall ‘gist week. a correspon- dent. says lti part: In loading over records of several recent large flies, the determined and flimsy theory expressed for th¢ cause o: over half of these coniilagi-atloiis would seem to be "defective wlr- ing’! 1 have always been uuuei- the HUIPTESJOH that, ln buildings where pub lc safety ls an issue, such a thing as defective wiring is abolish- ed. Rigid conduit and rlgld Inspec- tlon are 5 to enter ‘into the picture, and defective wlrlniz can only be had through some one tampering with inspected and ap- proved work to probably make unauthorized extensions, etc. . . . . “Defective wiring," together with its other assoclaied excuses. is not sufficient reason for a. fire-not even an excuse. It. is. however, a. s'ui' upon proper methods and on sane thought. If our lives and property. as owners. workers or users, are worth ssifegiuaiolng, let us place the dl pensing and guard- ing of same in competent hands Should a foreigner ask you: "Tell me one of the great institutions of Britain," y-cu may answer him the "Sunday dinner.“ Once a week. come what may. the humblest of us expects to eat his fill of toast beef or whatever e Se 1s on. Sun- day dinner and Saturday light have done mere to rave Britain revolutions and counter- revolufioiis than 111‘ the wisP and eloquent. speeches on liberty that ever our statesmen mildew-Lon- don Daily Express) According to the tnwn lLIllCfS, there is cnlcanciy iii Crnclczslia, 0111a,, whore bald ncazlsd men iiaie joined themselves together in the Brotherhood of Burnished Brows and are vocierouly demanding that banbers change only for the smoum of hair may c111. They object. to paying 40 cents for a liaiiouu-the same a,- tile fellows with a .01 of hair are charged. Their demand as first seem enli- netly just, especialy when they say they are willing to compro- mise and pay a nicely more thiiii the 20 cents for a neck clip. But. the snaip declson that, the bald- headed men are right and the biirbers wrong Jun. proves once more the Iallfblllty of superficial reasoning. It seems that the bar- bers don"t like to cut. bald-headed men's lialr. One barber calms bald-headed men are too par- ticu‘a1', afraid something wlll happen lo one of their rare sprigs. Another declares that the lzlare from a bald pate is hard on the eyes and has made it necessity for him to wear glasses. S0 lf bald-headed men 1n Clilckasha are going to insist on getting their haircuts at, cut rates, they should at least be less persrifckety and alo try to do something aibcvut the occupational hazards they create in the ordinariy saife vocation of barberlnL-New Glasgow News. Assuming that it ls not prnctlc- able to ubolish the Provinces —- many Canadians of today believe this should be done-At is up to all of us to make the best of the existing system and to endeavor, as individuals and collectively, to produce a spirit of cooperation instead of one of antagonism. Let us try to get away from the tn- tense sectionalism that has been especially noticeabe in recent years. Let up keep in mind the vision of B. united Canada, of one great nation 1n which the interests of every section are considered ori an equal basis. Let national 1n- terests be the primary considera- tion, If they are made that, no sectional interest will suffer ln the long run-Windsor Star. Reports from points along the Hucisoii Bay railway indicate that trappers W111 halve between 6,000 anu 7.000 beaver pelts to stww for the six-weeks 0pm beaver season norm of latitude 53. This season's catch will be approximatey the same as last year's, The season opened March 15 and will ola.e Aiprll 243. ‘Mapping of beaver has been strictly tonblciden for many years south of 53 and there appears no pmsenit llitelhood of the ban being lifted for many years to coins. An ordzr-iii-counci. prob- ably wll be issued by the govern- ment in the near future setting the time for the muskrat. trapping season. Nothing definite has been decided y€l1.—~wlIlXLl1D€1g Free Press. One of the simplest tax-doglng documents in England is ktio-wn as an Accumulator. Under this the taxpayer undeitskzs to pay to trustee. the whole oil his income in excess of 22.020, to accumulate for the benefit of ii berieflolniy who, as a mnher of fact, wll ncver re- eeive the money. The trustees can invest thls accumulated money, WlLCll legally ls capital and not incsme, by lcndlizig l1. back to the taxpayer. The result ls that the trustee pay iiicslne tax but not surtsx bezau e there ls novxxly ln receipt cf an lmcme Qaible to sur- tax. and the taxpayer pays natnlng because lie receives the money as capital and not income, The 1.1x- puyer also retains the power to dlzcfizinge and appoint trustees at will. so nothing can g0 wrong. Another scheme whlch works ad- mirably untl the law slapped ln was the establishing of numerous Canadian ccmipanles which had been formed for the purpose of tax evasion. But. there are other couri- lrles whl2h remain staunch for the harassed tax dodgtr. notably Mon- nigzsque, Luxembourg and Pales- tlntr-Glcbe and Mall Whoever fights Soviet Busch In the next war must. deilenu against an iii-my marching on clouds; the formidable parachute troops that will drop out of the skies carrying machine guns, cannon and tanks. Russla. once depenoent. only on it: inexhaustible man-power, has turned to acleiioe. The parachute troops are the most striking mil- ltnry development since the world war. There are at. least 2.500 of them, and than may b0 thouunda more. Th4, Buvvlict, forced to ward 1.1m longest frontier ln Europe. does not. emoiirue curiosity about suddenly hundreds plane: fllf the iky. Before the enemy can otiuiflia, e fl crowded with mun-d l on the and of II, C12; parachute troops also carry A machine gun or MIM- imtlc nth. Pieces of tank also flolthcufli. Ontlinflvlltdlihl 1'1"!" mun? OTTETOWN1 GITAQFVAW PUBLIC FORUM This column In wen l0!‘ "10 dlluunnion by correspondent: of quutloiu o! lnterut. The (‘hur- lottatuwn Guardian ilnen not nu- nenni-lly uudoriie the oltllllfml 0' corrnimiidentl. THE PREMIER it EDUCATION Sin-It ls unfortunate that our Premier, himself highly educated anJ sincerely Interested in edu- cation, seems so completely out of touch with the actual conditions and practical needs of ordinary citizens, farmers, fishermen and wipe-earners that. he can treat the mater of the common-school cur- rlculum, is so tin ractlcal, un- realistic, utoplen fas lon. It is 110 be hoped that among our legislators there will be a sufficient number to represent these and their needs. The Premiers ai-grment ls almost entirely beside the mark. 11) "Mathematlc; are needed to tpach accuracy and close applica- t_on.” Quite true. But. full provision is 1118.8 for such training. For ten Yeaxs. during the entire ten grades. every pupil has to grapple with arithmetic. and soon discovcrs that. 4 and 5 aiway; makes 9. never 8'01‘ ll. The extra subjects of Agebra and Geometry are unneces- sary for this purpose. and for the average pupil involve much Wwtc effort 12) “Latin is necessary for a thorough knowledge of Engush." Some of the grratest masters of 151131.511 know 1111!»: or no Latin, Llricofn, Dlckms. Burns and SlIElKG- prare. 0n the other hand h0\v rarely 1s a ttecher of Latin a good writer or sprakel" of hls native 19118110? The way to learn English ls to rsad and stiiztv good Engmh intensively and _rx‘enslvely. But our present curriculum crowvds out this study, (3) "Fench should be taught from the primary grade All those interested in the present re- vision have from the first; insisted on the need of special consideration for the French-speaking pspuiatigir This statement of the Premier, like s0 many other made by him and by Ollllonents of the propoed re- V-SIOYI. is utterly unpracttcal, vls- lonary, fantastic. and the Premier himself kncws then, l5 no inter]- tum of putting lt into effect. Con- sequently there is the smack of in- zfncerity about the p!ea_ 14) “Regional High (“Gralnmar”) 39115015 mfly DYOVe a reirieily. In some far off ideal age this may prove trite, Again the Premier and m’ .y Lke him ‘are thlriklng of the exceptional pupil, But the propo ed revision thinks of the present time land of thepavernge citizen. How 0H8 will lPg15lR10TS and other lead- Maiden Castle (London Times) The last of the four years de- ' voteci to the scientific exploration o1 Malclen Castle 1n Dorset. nas baen marked by a. dramatic surprising discovery. Dr. R. Wheeler, the director of the exca- tells the tragic awry- 8RD- poi-tea ln every detail by tne evl- uence revealed by the spade. of tne 111.1 of this primitive fortress be- fore the mignt 01 B01119. its cap- tnr was undoubtedly Vsspaslan, aiaerwards emperor, whom Aulus Plautius, after the conquest of South-Bast Britain 1n A.D. 43, sent t. subdue the West. In that or the iollowing year the Second Iieglon unuer his command overwhelmed the resistance of the Britons. The isle of Wight and twenty towns fel That Maiden Castle was one ' these admits of no doubt. No other interpretation of the evidence so impressively marshalled by Dr. Wheeler ls possible. The town was stormed uiiuer cover of a heavy barrage from the '" the riitlliery of the day. The great gates were toned; and the sword- cuts on the skeletons of defend- ers and noncombatants hastily buried amid the ashes of their hut-s tell a. grim tale of the slaughter 11.111; .oliowed tne entry of the bat- tle-madclened leglonaries. Wlt-hiii a gcnetatlcn the dismantled fortres- city had been abandoned b its peo- pL, who had migrated or ad been transferred to Roman Durnovaria. our Dort-fiester, and was left to the JJQTSCt sheep. Yet. ths was not quite the end. The earlier discovery of a pagan Altllllt) built in the last clays of R0- inan Britain and a dry-stone struc- ture, prehistoric in type yet roaf- eti wiin Roman ti'e., shows that some local deity was worshipped for a ivnile on the hilltop of sub-Ro- man provtncials. The seventh-cen- tuiy Saxon. pirate or sheep stealer, buried tn pagan fashion ln the in 11nd thrown up by the v11- an appropriate epilogue. 1hr early fortunes of Maiden Cutie its excavator. have learnt much. the great rnouiid and the large vil- lagc near it were the work of pastoral peopfe who seem to have indulged in ceremonial cannibalism. They abandoned the site, and only after many empty centuries did the men of the warlike Irsn Age con- vert the hilltop into the fortress whtzh Vespaslan took Such are a. few of the results of the explora- tion conducted by the Society of Antiquaries and the country Archaeological society. which ha; thrown a vivid light bath on the pie-history and the earliest htstory of South-West Britain. ers. forlzeffiil of those who bear the heavy burdens of soc‘etv on their stooped shoulders. ntiqlcst this great. cblgatlon and refuse to pay the debt they owe to the commril pro- "$311 U19 Premier fake 1hr re- FDOITlbllltV of hlotikfrn the mogreq demanded by so large B. body of elsctoi-s? ' I an}. Sir. e112. . W. A.NICH North Bedcquv. OLSON FROM "EX ORE INFANTIUM" Little Jesus, wast Thou shy Once, and Just so small as I And what did 1f. feel like to be Out of Heaven ancl just, like me? iJldst Tnou sometimes think of there, And 8.8K where all the angels were? i I should think that I would cry For my house all made of sky; I would look about tne air, And wonder where my were;; And at waking ’t.would distress m» Not an angel them to dress mel Hadst Thou ever any toys Like us little girls and boys? And didfit Thou play 1s Heaven with a angels The angels that were not too tall? iJldst-Thou knciel atinigh-t to pray‘, And dldst Thou joln Thy hands this way? And did they tire sometimes, being YOURS, And make the prayer seem very ong? Thou canst not have forgotten all ‘That it. feels like to be small; And Thou knovfst I cannot pray To Thee in my afhers way. —1F‘1'ancls Thompson. troops assemble their machine guns, put their tanks tC"3Lll€l' 1,1101, and take uip baitc position. —-EXcnaiige. Saskatchewan paper observes that under the head of Canadians we have Westerners. Esteriicr. ivIai-itlmcrs. free trades, prulgcf- 16111-515. etc We have also labor- ites, partisans of several poitlcal 51-11985. communists. fa clsls, "X151.- lorialisisf’ and a fcw others. How woud l1 be lf We lirid a few more Canadians? W Wm_*“' l couuiiri siizizr 000th“ will What a relief to nettle down to I rul night's rut, and nuke fully f refreshed randy ' for the (hi: duties. l vru tortured by hath! niihtr-louin], turn- ing — never comfortable. Half lwnlie ilayl -over-tirod, driving body and mind to work when they needed loaf. “Tr Dadd’: Kidney Pills." uid a friend - ‘ ' may bu you kidneys" I'm glad l followed his advice n now I'm sleeping like atop-thank! to | I | Dodd’: Kidney Pills A THOROUGH EXAMINATION with latest ‘ClQIIl-lflf! instru- ments will glve the prescrip- tlnn vihlch allows you to use your eves without utnln. Avoid the headaches and irritations of even slight eye- strain. 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(a) that canoeii" is a. fatal ailment untreated. and 1b) that ‘cancer LB ourivble" if discovered and treated year's of receiving quite as important, they did not have freed from months and even years of former secret worn’- Thaf. the detemilned effort of this army of women to siive the livm of women, and men iilso. made a deep impression on mink- lng men and women ts provcn by the enactment of the National Cancer Institute Bill of Congress. the founding of the Chicago Tumor Institute, and the estab- lishment of the Child's Founda- tloii at Yale. Dr. Thomas J. Parran. Surgeon General of the United States Pub- llc Health Service states that last year's woiik of the Women's Field Anny was of enormous value in preparing the way 01f enact- ment, of legislation which brought. iii-to being The National cancer Irutltute. The slogan of the Army which 1s the slogan of the American Society for the Control of Cancer. with headquarters at. 1250 Sixth Ave., New York Clt-y. Ls “Fight Cancer with Knowledge.‘ “Senen- 1y thousand lives might. be saved each year lf every min-i, woman and child knew the following "painless" signs of early cancer and, when they appeared. prompt- ly visited a competent physician. These signals may not mean can- cer but they most certainly should lead to a thorough and immediate examination. l. Any perslstent lump or thick- ening. especially ln the breast. ‘l. Any irregular bleeding or dfii- charge from any body openings 3 Any sore that does not heel— particularly about, the tongue. mouth. or lips. 4. Persistent. ixidfgesif-lri, often aecompanled by loss of weight. 5. Sudden changes in the form bPllL #111238 FREE COFFEE , 3 SAMPLE j We depend on you; judgment, rather than on expensive advertis. ing. Mail us a copy of this ad, and we will send < you a Free Sample. We believe that if you try lt_ you will buy it, in preference to any other coffee. freshly roasted, vacuum packed > T. H. ESTABROOKS O0. Limited Saint John. N. B. Mall sample of RED ROBE Coffee to:- St. orrate ofgrowth oflmoleo! wart.’ This ls a voluntary iii-my madc uip of women who first pay a Ono Dollar membership fee and then by every means try to qiread the slbove knowledge that will save thousands of useful lives and free thousands from needlxq w lrry. 11.8. HEMMlflfi. Certified Public Accountant and Auditor ' Bookkeeping systems installed or revised Profit and Loss Accounts Computed Trustee under the Bankruptcy Act Company By-Laws- Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prepared. ' _. Administration of Estates‘ a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. 88 Great George St. Charlottetown, P. 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