l s‘, - “ fir; ': 1w»: m...” , - ,_ rated, -ih’lil€li the present " ‘:1! thin be so, It 1i the beat juuialk-‘giapofillk YPACE roux ~ Tlli i s uluntorrzrovm euannuni Inrnlng Dnlly (Iinnlnu I81) Prullunt Lupl. 001. I. Chum: B. Iclrln Vlco Incident J. ll. Iiunult F. J. l. ldltor and tuning Director J. l. Burn“. I. l. l. “emu; Iaont. Cal. D. A. Iuklnnu, D. l. 0- Anoclnte ldltor Irnnk Wnlku IUBBCIIPTION lI-ATII u .00 ll nd l fhllvnndlo 6y ",3 pjfnpzlifill ‘iv-fixtures to P. I. lllnnd 3.00 per your (In mlvnncei mulled to Onnldn and U l lumbar. Audit Bunnu c! Clnuhmon ‘The Strongest Memory i: Weaker than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY. MARCH 551 1938 A Bad Day For Mr. Howe An extraordinary scene occurred in the House of Cotmnotts this week when Transport Minister Howe, after making a speech in which he washed his hands of political responsibility for Canadian National l\’znl\va_v operating policies, sat and heard his leader, l'rime .\Iinister Mackenzie King, make an “interprctatioi1" of his remarks which completely reversed, on several important points, the meaning the House had taken from .\lr_ l-iowt-s titterances. The Prime Minister rushed in to explain away _\lr. Howfls blunt statement that the Govern- ment lizttl “no concern" respecting the proposed lay-till‘ of a large number oi C. N. R. employees. lle aittemptetl to draw a distinction between Mr. lltnreYs two positions, those of a Minister of the Litweritmt-nt,and of interpreter to the House of the views of the Canadian National Railway management. lt was in the latter capacity, he argued, that the .\linister had been speaking. This shallow stibterfuge provoked a stinging retort from .\lr. Bennett, who likened the Prem- ier to Joseph interpreting the dreams of Pharaoh. "He has itiatle it quite clear that the Minister 0f Transport did not mean “that he said,” the Con- servative leader remarked. He ironically thanked the Premier for clarifying the situation. Hence- forth the House would know that it could attach no importance to anything Mr. Howe said until Mr_ King had given the interpretation. One of the things .\Ir_ King found it necessary to “explain" was Hr. H0wc’s expression of regret that any discussion of the C. N. R. em- ployment tiuestion had taken place. Sensing the indignation of both Liberal and Opposition mem- bers at this attempt to curb freedom of speech, Mr. King tried hard to give it a more favorable meaning. It was, indeed, a trying day-for the Transport lllinister. He had the humiliation of seeing several Government supporters denounce his rail- way policy. Leading the attack was the re- d01ll)l£1l)l€ Mr} R. E. Finn, Liberal member for Halifax, who roundly declared: “Things have come to a pretty pass when the active head of a political organization (the president of the Nova Scotia Liberal Association) is put by his poli- tical friends on the board of directors of the Catiadian National Railways." .\lr_ Finn went on to attack political interfer- ence in .the policy of the National Harbours (foimnissioii. and to quote reports that Mr. Hungcrford was planning to retire as President of the C. N. R. and was to be succeeded by the purchasing manager of the system. “If the pur- chasing manager is the right man to be president of the C. N, R." said Mr. Finn, “then I ought to have my head examined." He warned the Gov- eminent that the electors were not blind to what was going on, and “we may find ourselves over there," pointing warningly to the Opposition side of the House. ,As for cutting railway expenscS, said Mr. Finn, a. start should be made from the top, instead of laying off junior employees and put- ting their families on the street. He recalled that “we had a commission on unemployment headed by Mr. Arthur Purvis. Now he has lost all inter- est in the unemployed, and has become a director of the C. P. R. and is devoting all his attention m that matter.” Messrs. L, A. Mutch (Winnipeg Southylg. P. Howden, (St. Boniface), T. J. O'Neill ( am- loops), M. Turner (Springleld), and J, T. Thurston (Selkirk) were other Liberal members who added their voices in criticism. It was then Mr. Howe declared it was “unfor- lumate” that this debate had arisen and that he, the Minister of Transport-who has taken upon himself more dictatorial powers than any Rail- way Minister in the history of Canada-had “always taken the view that it is possible for the Canadian National Railways to operate without political interference.” , No wonder the Prime Minister had to inter- vene! Mr. Howe, who had just come back from unsuccessfully campaigning for the Liberal candidate in East Edmonton, must have felt like I. glass of water at a brewers’ banquet when his Lrxidignant party supporters got through with m. Only One Parliament Members of the Ontario Legislature are con- uidering a suggestion that each of them should call himself M.P. instead of M.L.A. That in- volves passing a law designating the legislative assembly a parliament FOOllSlI. comments the Ottawa Journal; because the initials M.P. are recognized universally as indicating a member of the House of Commons; foolish also because the British North America Act says there shall be “one parliament for Canada,” that the legislature of Ontario shall consist of the lieutenant governor and “one House, styled the Legislative Assembly." That is the legal situation. The authority that rests in Queen's Park is not a parliament, cannot lawfully call itself a parliament, nor can any member term himself an M.P. without making himself a bit ridiculous. The Padlock Law The Montreal Gazttte has come out strongly h favour of the Padlock Law and denounces the Social Service Council for opposin it. v A clue to the motive actuating the Counci , it 8W8. Pb found in the statement that the law 11111191 flan ls intended to replace, so f , Section of the _ ederal Parliament’ ffiitlll. Law bu yet been of Section 9B was welcomed _openly and enthus- iastically by Communists in Canada‘ u g step which enlarged their treedompof action. It was a step which exposed this province, among uglier-s, to a subversive movement to which public opinion 1n Quebec is profoundly antagonistic. '1 he Quebec Government, in tnese circumstances, has endeavored, within the limits of ‘a restricted au- thority. to protect its institutions with a substitute safeguard. The Parliament of Canada, having observed what has followed the- repeal of Sec- tion 93, is in all probability heartily ashamed of ‘its action. It can, of course, restore the section, in which event the provincial law will be no longer necessary, but pending such problematical restoration it should at least refrain from any attempt to break down a protective measure which one provincial government out of nine has had the courage to provide; a measure, by the way, which appears to be least understood by those who are loudest in its condemnation.” .r Editorial Notes J Lady Day. ‘I i“ ‘K How Montreal and Toronto love one another! x a- t- a- Members are looking forward to the opening of the House Monday 1i it Ill i Honeymoon Bridge at Niagara Falls is to be rebuilt at the expense of the Federal Govern- lllCll. i IR l!‘ l!‘ IF Rev. Dr. C. W. Gordon (Ralph Connor), who died Oct. 31, 193/, leftan $8,732 estate to his widow. Following the death of Mrs. Gordon, the famous fiction writer's estate is to be divided among surviving children. 1r t- >01 n Rev. Mr. Watterwortlt is not to leave Saint John after all. At a meeting of his congrega- tion the unanimous wish was expressed that ne would remain with them, and alter consideration Mr. Watterworth has agreed so, to do. Ill i It‘ I‘ Though a prophetic preacher it was not gen- erally known until Edmonton East by-election that Premier Aberhart was also a solo dancer and bit of a gambler. He told a cheery audience in Ethnontotf on the Friday before the election that he would dance both the “Highland Fling" and the “lrish Jig” in jubilation if Social Creditor Orvin Kennedy won next Monday?» Federal byelection in EdmontoirEast. Hope he did not consider this merely as an election promise made to be broken. i Ii i i The padlock law is not only in force in Que- bec ; it holds good with Governtnent members of parliament in Britain, as Mr. Alan Lennox-Boyd now realizes. He is parliamentary assistant sec- retary to the Minister of Labour. Addressing his constituents last Friday night he “was quoted as telling his audience that nothing “could be more ridiculous than to guarantee the frontiers of Czechoslovakia‘ when half the people of that country could not be relied upon to be loyal to the government of the day." On Monday he apologized to the House of Commons for his references. The House accepted his statement that his references were “indiscreet." Prime Minister Chamberlain, pressed by the opposition for a statement, said he was satisfied that Mr. Lennox-Boyd "did commit an indiscrction, an error of judgment, and nothing more." U i l I Upper Canada and British Columbia seem to be getting all the ripe plums falling from the Mackenzie King fruit tree. 1t is announced the National Defence Department has awarded a contract on a cost plus 1o per cent. basis for t2 single-engine, double-sealer “Wcstland Lysand- er" planes to be built by the National Steel Car Co, at its Hamilton plant, Value of the contract was $390,000. The frames will be constructed by the company, who will also instal the engines, which will be supplied by the department. The machines are of the general purpose‘ type, speedy, and will carry two or more machine guns and bombs. The contract provides, as financial protection for the Government that at all stages in carrying it out the right of the Department to maintain a technical officer at the plant whose job will be to exercise strict supervision over con- struction and costs. n- _ 1v m The Ontario Conservatives are taking time by the forelock in selecting their representatives for the convention in Ottawa in June or July. The following have been selected: Mrs. Arthur Van Koughnet, Toronto; Miss Edna Saunders, To- ronto; John R. McNicol, M.P., Toronto; Hon. Hugh A. Stewart, M.P., Brockvillc; W. H. Ire- land, Trenton; Thomas A. Magladcry, New Liskeard; Hon. R. D. Morand, Windsor; T. H. Stinson, K.C., Lindsay; Gordon Graydon, M.P., Brampton (representing the Juniors.) The exe- cutive confirmed the representatives of the Dom- inion Council from Ontario which were select- cd at the Conservative conference at Qttawa March 4-5, as follows: Mrs. George Gooch, Tor- onto; Mrs. George T_ Cockshutt, Brantford; Hon. Dr. R. J. Manion, Ottawa; Hon. W A Gor- don, Toronto; T A, Thompson, M.P., Almonte; and Gordon Ford, Toronto (representing the Juniors) a a- w m Toronto city council, faced with the highest tax rate in the city's history, called an emergency session to consider o ning up new municpal tax- ation sources which would bring nearly $6,500,000 extra revenue into the treasury. The move was made after Premier Hepburn an- nounced municipalities would be given onl a one-mill subsidy this year. City councillors lrad counted on a two or three-mill subsidy. Main revenue source under consideration i; n’ ‘ll tax, not exceeding $25, levied against- every oronto man and woman between the ages of 21 and 60. Exemptions would be propert owners, those em- ployed for less than six mont s in the year, those dependent on others because of mentgl or phy- sical infirmities. If the new taxiitioh sources are approved by council and necessary l ‘llati-m obtained from the legislation, the muncipality aha wpuld umlider imposing tfltltion measures on clmn mm, public militia, Government- versity o Toronto. lands theatres, prlvntc whwb. rental or leasehold a, clubs, lfisfil‘.'°‘....,"'ff‘t.ii.‘i“l.é.‘“'i" " v. 11$ so eei, Day eatinufld the city's m: me wimlm lbdut ,co!cr unfavcrnbly at .8151. his first owned prtzportiu, income on corpofuticfla, Unl- f THE nurse an: with l l not flan amount o! tum ~ whlch munufuchtrcra and b1; com- m m 051009411; to 1n 0mm auras“ -‘"' .““°.§° "d ovens - ulations. with the lcgkp {if "e335- onllnntlon among bodfu. The system. hu rown 1mg a VQILAbIO bedevflmcn to lamina; Ind lfldfllfllrl’. and l1 cake: I. char- tered accountant c0 figure out what 1t ls all about. There ls I triplicate renderln unto Caesar, municipal, provmc and federal. and income ls twl-ce Land. Even the tax whlch has to be pald to the provincial govcrmnont is n- garded cs lnconte which 1a scam taxed by the federal uutl-iorlty. W111 the Rowell Royal Commission clear the aha-Bl Cathmrlnes Standard. The student body of the Unl- verslt of Western Ontario. 1n Lon- don. as declclea to abolish the practice of lnltlatlt freshmen - of hazing. that 1s. ‘he University 1t to be commended for a senslble step. and 1t ls to be hoped its ex- ample wlll 11¢ followed by other Canadian institutions of the high- er learnlng where the nuisance stlll continues. Hazing is nn utter- ly indefensible ractice that dam- ages the prestge of nniverslrec. detracts from the dignity of the scholastic life, causes nothlng but embarrassment and- pain to the studsnt-vzctlms. To many a youth the lQHOIIIJUOUS details of hls 1n- ltfatluit into unlverstzy life rnus: year. His education is retarded that his seniors may have a chance to lnduge 1n senseless horse-play and vtllpld vulgarity at, his expense. And public opinion 1s solidly against. nazltig. because it ls known that to a great, many famllles the maintenance of :1 son at university ls a. burden cheerfully undertaken, bu: at u very real sacrifice. that. the boy: may have his chance tn llfe. -- Oltawc Journal In the latest farm home flrel, one 1n Manitoba and the other ln Nova swtla, rune persons. a mother and eight children, perish- cd. Constant repetition of such tragedies suggests that the cum- palgrts for mes/fer satiety 1n the home be intensified 1n the more isolated section of she country. ‘The fire hazards 1n the humble farmhouses are far higher than 1s the case 1n the towns and often the families an rger. e authorities concerned should see that the lessons of safety are brought to the most remote notice- holds.-—Montrea1 Gazette In Middle“: and Lambton countles rapid change are taking place. The sons of the old pioneer families are not staying on the farms. They are selllng out. 1n many eases to the New Canadians of’ alien orlglns. In Liambton County, particularly near Alvin:- tou. there 1s a large settlement of Oaeohoslovaklans who have b0 ht. out old farms, ‘rhev are mak g excellent settiers. ‘Ihey are hap- py Just. now that; they are 11mins n Canada and not. 1n Czechoslo- vakia. The majorlty of new settl- glsl are anxloulsmtio asks out. ettlzen- P DEWIB become good Canadians. They are ready m adopt our ways and our customs. Posslbly 1n the end 11'. ls not, such a. bad thing to have an lnfusfon of new blood. In any case, whether we like it or not. the Western 0n- tarlo of a few decades from now may be an entirely different West,- ern Onmrlo from that. of our day and generatloxm- London Firm It 1s curious how those tyrants who mast. despise free dlscusslon, reporting and debate seek so des- perately to suppress it; how the more completely they sllence every voloe a-t. home the more they yearn to gag crltlclsm everywhere else; how the higher they rise above Fconsfderlng their ptibltc oplnlon" the more sensltlvc they become to any penny-a-llner 1n Tibet or Tasmania who 1s still free to speak ‘hi5 mind. It, Ls curious-and ln- stn-uctlve -New York Herald- une. . A dGIpll/Ch from Berlin reporting Herr Hltlws banquet celebrating the pact of “peace and friend- ship‘ wl-th Austrla says "among the guests was Held Marshal Gen- eral Hermann Wilhelm Gearing, wearfng s. new uniform." 1111s might. be kept as a standing line 1n n11 accounts of official mffatrs 1n Germany. 50 pronounced 1s the generals weakness for new unl- forms ‘and gaudy decorations that even 1n the Third Belch. wlsecracks at the expense of par- ty leaders are extreme! unhealthy, sly stories about him s 11. clrculutie. One of these imported tales dls- close tilt»: stoutlsh Fleld Marshal abandlng before a mlrror admiring the cut: and color of 11n- new outfit deltvered only that. morning and loudly demanding his medafs to hang on his manly chest. I'm sorry General Goerlng." apologizes his valet, “you'll halve to walr un- tl. I un 1n them from your paja- mas.”—- ew York Times. Unfortunately the dlctatorc be- llcve and not without reason, that the United States will remain 1s- olatlcnl/t. 1n the event of war 1n ,Eurcpc. The American neutrality act W85 framed with that. ln view. That. ex lalned the eloquent s11- enoe 1n ngrezs 1n the matter of the selzure of Austria by filter. But as the dictators pursue melt‘ ambitions, wlll not there come u tune when American Inter-tau make laolatlcn ‘Lpossfbln? ll nceml to be- a reasonable . rtnclple that no one should be al- lbwepitotauccpronithcustrtxet-‘s or v0 uneu e , flnuidglnupocltlon, through 1n- cnixitnoifrcro {Gum ‘government ¢ ivunuc ; FORUM j Ihll column h OIII l8‘ ill illscuulon by ourupnlnlolltl OI tinnitus; 1f muni- Th4 uhubflctown Gloria: non an of nnrnlnudantc._ our, rcovmcuu. STATUS 8113-4 have been mtansely 1n- tereawd 1n recent letters appear- ing 1n your paper relative to the suggestion that Prince Edward Is- land glve up provincial status to Esme or unltc with other prov- ces. The theory u n which the sug- gestion ls base 1a very plausible; but 1t 1s in effect roven to be the reverse of tho rlgh one wherever 1t has unconsciously been up llecl 1n North Amer1ca. - The actual facts are: The smel- ler the territorial area with its own parliament or legislature the more population pet square mile the ter- ritory support-i. Various topographical and 0 8X‘ hyslclal conditions, of course, en r lihe picture. but nevertheless when these are checked one against. the other to so offset each other, the flnal result ls that the statement becomes vlrtually a postulate of our North AmerLan polltlcal and ec- onomic order a; represented 1n the States of the Union and the prov- inces of the Dominion. when this fact. of “reduce the cost of government" basses and our Canadian editors and parliament- arians begin to catch up with their thinking, they wlll see that, a small terrltcrtal area self ruling and self organizing 0n its own ac- cotnt. within the framework of the Dominion 1s the sounder place than that which they now suggest. Canada should have several times as many provinces as she has at resent. Now every provincial cap- tat becomes a center upon which m0 eat. a territory leans with the res t, that 1n turn the provincial capitals lean on the Dominion Capital. Ever area that can become self- managng takes that muchburden off the central Federal Govem- mcnt. The subject. 1s too much w cover here; but actual independent re- search discloses that the sltucnon 1s not; "too much government as much as 1t 1s a case of mo little governmentr-too much lsolatlvn from government of some parts. and the answer that ls send government out 12o them, let them organize then- own small self rul- ing body to look about them to see what: 11h can do with the means at hand improve their own con- dltlons. Let then have thelr own wfthln the framework of the Domlnlon Government even 1f they have to sit in a barn function until they can arrange bet- ter- If Prince Edward Island Blves up her Provincial self govemnlng status to "unite" with the other rovtnces she will make the mis- ljake of her hht/ory. and I am not glvlng this as my 11911110 . lvfng It as o. deffnlte statement of act. ' I am, Sir, etc. JAMES M. MACLEAN 2149 Nelson Ave New Westminster, B. C. illihat a IMP of a Quilts Q J30: W. Irina. MD. TIREDNESB. LACK OF INTER EST 1N LIFE. AND OTHER. SYMPTOMS MAY BE -DUE TO LACK 0F THYRDID JUICE When we read the symptoms of certaln ailments-tiredness, pains, lack cf appetite and others- it. 1s not hard to imagine that, we are afflicted. with almost; any or eve ailment. except, perhaps, as Mar Twain sold. housemalcfs knee. In describing a certain condf- llon we mead, “He looks and feels older than his years. He 1s tlrecl even after a long night's rest find does not’. want. to gel up. Hts face 1s without expression; he has fre- quent headaches and rneumatlc palns; he 1s apt. to be sad. dc- prezsed and worried; Ills nose 1c stuffy, hls hearlng poor; 1t. tires hlm to talk; he has frequent colds; he always chllly; his temperature ls always below normal; he has no interest 1n anything; he has no appetite and drags hlmself nn- wlllingly from one endeavor to an- o er. I am outllnlng just. some of the tymptoma recorded by Dr. 3.1.. Bryant. la Annas of Otology, Rhmclogy, and Laryngology tear, nosewmd throat) 1n his descrip- tion of a. typfcnl patient wltn lack of thyroid juice 1n hi5 blood. You can naadlly see how this 1s exactly the opposite of a typcal goltre case where there 1s tno much thyrold juice ln the bleed. The oltre atlent 1s over-active mcntnly an physically. wants to do his own work and part of other-r. has a fast heart beat. and 1s inter-uteri 1n everything and f.“ .t"°.'.rr .2‘. “r , muc cc - fngm mgr! lnto the blood. this gland” 1s often removed by surgery no that the individual will not wear htnuielf out mentally and tea . ‘mgr tall: other hand, when the metabolism but shows that body processes bro not. worklrlfl 5m ht“,...t."" 11"‘? .€....."“‘°.l.".. ‘lift bod Th n- I am mm-e o; dqtmycd by Xray treatments, “w,” l School-curriculum Discussion n; l. c. mm mm the and Ibfbna cl T the writing of, 1111B. a 1-“ mass?" {duarmltniagm wlilcli u ai- to rm consciousness of mv own liiwrflnw- ‘Ilhere 14, moreover. n Y9!“ feeling rather ever wlth me lately that. I have what I wintod to l6)’. “"1 ‘his nun. wanna 1 ddd any Wu not ml 8:- ft would have been sold. Of all tine saws 1 eve:- suw- I wvfl‘ saw.... . The reading 11c.‘ despite the m» that they ve mow w‘ i-ecdmgvefitilw 1 teivolihgaiilinlim o cc a in finen- oonvpofilwrn. hive been most. coumaotrs. Whether or not. Mike Clceavrs senators, they hflw meant their silence m express bhelr condemnation. I cannot: my. But. they have been "Item; "W! 116W given me floor: and they have allowd me to run on like the bub- bmolt-seemlngly forever. Sure- ly. t rev must feel relieved w know that I tun through. I wm rel-eved ntyself. Anyone who has got so much stuff oft his chest at 1. have 1n the last few weeks would 11M.- urally have the some feellng. Yet. I would not have you tililnk bluff. superflclal as my effort: have Lien ulna-y e xesscd a1‘, my views c-n the suhoau-curfletullmti question. 0r tire). they have expresed ful the few cplndcns I have, to some extent. dwelled upon. We do mt always succeed 1n getting dmvn on paper than which we lmd Intended b0 I mild like to see tfhe S c015 which have been condemn . by the "wfiorm group" remain on the curriculum 13f the-y were taken m- way. where would be nothfn left but tiho three R's. A l-llmle now- ledge of them matv have - fie-lent for most people ln the pinn- ee, days, but such elementary ed- ucation 1s not autlflclent Merelyvobeabletnreadandlo F“ and 17o do a 111M: arithmetic 11o be 1n a, state of 181100-11“ 1n tlhe midst of a mpldly-cltfinx world. ‘Phe future of a, gen on 1y rendered; 1n other cases, the Gov- ORANGE Wewutnll cotpobtob than: counter. Ill POI VITA-SEALED worm cmrs vie cl Charlottetown to know that m, “c; icon tllll». mum: mom cnotcc fr. n. pron-ions an: u: um vmmm mum due u» u» Vita-Sealed pm, no imam-pup 11x3‘ puss - no norucn t Rudy to lilo. 0O in roan th b . your grocer or at your favourite resubmit, Get them from or refrcflmm“ Look for the word VIM-Sealed on the Yellow Bag. Ml-nnhckued by , ' IiULDEII-BRISP PRODUCTS OHARLOTTETOWN 115i thousands of dollars per year-Ac tug thelr active clans were paid yams as p ugh fbr the servlces f. more than eno eminent places the obsolete and decrepft polltlctan 1n the Senate "tn conslderntlon of valuable ser- vlces rendered his cowl-FY!’ Th! supreme Court Judie urawa some nlne thousand dollars oer Year; when he reaches such on IIQ as to make his lncompebency too plainly evident, he rot-tree on a pension. the amount of which per year 1s tfiwr= waits-wt. ,. ' ‘n a y encugh l0 u“; nevus“: v»- WBMZB 0!‘ about one-half hay- li. B5 Dr. L1nvrmu1,q_ —-'wil'11ch claims, "n so to consume Lathe good Alio- the fuel raquiremm high that the insccti mm: VMEN cit food cverv Adfrondu will’ ivouiq b, y. deal tor a m». MOYC‘ lhfln {(5 “com, m‘ ordln workman can en the ti’. time. The dlallke o the Supreme Court 1s, therefore, understandable. The Government. can Ind tenderly and mollcltcu H the mnfrerlnl welfare such m; vante of the at: ," but 1t pay a teacher who has devoted the beat years of his 111a to hla pro- fession, a mlsmble fifty or start-y at least ten tlmea that whlch 1.111: for Communism does look after dollars n month pension. And yet Ihnvenodotiluttbatpartcfttw reason 1b: the reform 8M0‘! m6- tzlltrhy wwanl fire fnnltrslnnofln- tirnI-‘rectdunzrd Muthemablcsln tllteschonl-cirrnlctrlumlsthatlmw tn wh why the” m Mo: gduwelihdb-f m On the other hand, 1t 1c one 1mm to point. out evils, taut It k p”? 11y different mcbtor to cm‘- th . Canada? prides herself on n modem, democ-rgtilc country our new of lnfoirniron eonvePf-hc immu- mto our minds that aducntlon of the R10 Gnnde 1s more advanced and more common amoni the masses the 1t 1s 1n European countries. Nothug could be more false. Compared with mod ernEur- o ncotmtrlemeduoctlonlnuuch aces u Prince Ildwufl Island 1t aoflrboltlndlstomkeall rldfculous. In France, °" the skies. that fmplles she n» n.1- ‘! should not be u: chlldren who cumot even mflk a cow? What earthly use 1c c super- tnnoe, no one gm teach 1n l ed school Whu has not a . de or its equivalent. H ry and Goon-why are two subjects on the curriculum whfch are important dnce Canadian cchool-chtldnn should know the mom 1m t facts of Brltlab 111s u well a the zeorraphlccl sftuu on of the different countries. But 1! Brltlsh hlc 1s to taught. then 1t sho be hlsbory and not misrepresented facts. text-book that lauds Ifnglnnd to wa a meted from altruistic win- olpes and never from mercenary motives ls not I true hlabory. If» school-chtldren ue not to be taught the truth. than 11; would)» better to teach them not-tuna. The Elements of hrm Practice taught 1n urban centres. What 1s the use of doa- crlblnz u narrow or l blnder ‘w fl l l k 111d kn 1 as .."°r..==.." staaa~d=m= re teach Grade should be to ary. Moreover, pay should b- lncreused each year he become: n-d er mould be . m engaged WlhO will not. stun c con- tract that he or m.» will comfntre teumhlm at, least five years. The pres-em system of engulfing teachers 1- not a "nod we. Be- cause. a m'n 1s a trim-e. 1t do‘: mt. ncoesrarflv "o‘"0w tilwt. he 1s a jut-due of whet conrfltivtea a fear-liar. Eovmett-‘mrs. too. hlc vrtc is influenced by the fact um he M: rvi s-v- to mind: He wnnt- his own mm or dotwthter o!" his ns-r-h- bar“ son CT dammit-titer to have the school and l. will vote for hlm or h." 1n preference 1o the rmplf-nvif. from outside the district notwlth. tom that . side appli- be tho better teacher. A fee for each Ormntv moirld be amofnlled 1b;- thr h! _ —0 ‘ 3645 I118. wmvlruf mitt 15.70 fut year. t v der-especlnll 1n March. A student Ieavtng Gra e 10 should have a iioundatloncl knowledge of the best .n English literature: “houl have a knowledqe of whlwh would allow 111m to solve the ordinary, prnctlcnl mathemati- cal blemc of every-day llfetrhe ahcud be able w rend Fmneh easlly. and he should have such l knowledge 0' Intln u wlll- enable hlm to bulld upon it 1f he wlshel. elther at college or at homo. There 1s only one wuv to brine such a result about. and that 1c tn show your representative who W111 ln the House It flhnrtotletown that you wan‘ t‘- rlandnnl o? ~""~"*1cn In this Prov- lvm lncrered. If enounh of you to writs these Ienfeme“. the result con"! not. bu‘ h- Mnoflclnl for education. ‘But 1f vPu are con- tent to do noihlnw about it. than von mcv "xnut to s» thl- "tand- arrl of education co cradnnllv down. It 1a up to you. ' Botfly Debunked ~ fr; 3§= g4 Es reg! £955 8? FIOM “THE mos . Pmvlnrrs the - ' be res. Buy not. tor A 10y worth iuagd not u»: d 1-0 all“ 53. the 11 1 Alb; _ gum u“, Dctlcncel Char ottztown. niid other ~Georce Herbert. 1593-161!- of , ‘ " - Of 1f nmc- _"—‘_' tlcul work were combined wlth 6””! a ereufmm ca: AQTHM ,,,. so muc o on, u - , dongle. gluaeunoopvlid dhave III,” . a ‘ o - - - i, r t... ‘£15.. .833 haul’... will’... ;-gg,,-;t-*t.v.-.r“sir'.zstzp“ .. srtsrkzmszzsm at‘. arse =- c’- vslluble In nrl "cod. Mntlllll. it l’ m2...»- .911‘. Ill-lac hold?" 100i n hi0 c2 Resort. to sermons. but to pram thou hast doth lest Away thy blessings, and extrurll- flout. thee. Thy clothes being fast. but!!! soul loose about wee. thv ludr If thou mlsllk celv’: him not. God calleth preaching folly. D014, ear n not. , The worst speak somethmll 80°11 all want God takes a text and prod": t t brings u . mfitifitizbisizqrridr; g fiAdrDnnnuflldl-tlllfiizv B-L 0 0 II F0 0 ll FOB. mu»: AND ram l rconr A combination than diseases m lln II traceable 10 l? m ' nourished cnndltloiv It d. . One of the H8811“ "m , lea In the treatment of F71" For than. who 1181MB,“ - their b21114‘ "it" ‘ rm will -.-~"~ “"‘" “our A cox t“, f‘, Ptontp '“" 13333.1 w. IMWS UIIITIIEIIT l». CHURCH POM! end of ureachlnt. 0 th’ other pin: vhf lost words. ‘Thus hell preacher; “for liti 5' nun, thou M‘ treasures from I SEER. "MP1 men the aggro u, m!’ 50¢- ilwlv-llt ILI: mile! 1n ernnl 11"‘ 5'“ , m, ~ -'- -:.:.:1'1i1:"'¢ - wmn w‘ ll:&°"’$_;;§;,-,,'5l'“"av ' the 110111118- nnllonc Todor- "l" w j Milli < ,,,,,. ,