i, .4. lac-manual a I." I.l.l_ lull-n. i u.“ ‘i. ' 0 mIICIIOIh-Plili Iollc fld I . r (IOIIIOII l_'l) important events occurred s. , ' yestu-day. One‘ ‘was the of the last session of the Parliament at which im- t- economic antisocial reform a were forecast in tho from the Throne delivered ‘his Excellency the Governor ral. ‘I'm: full text of the - appears in today's Guardian. commenddt to the careful deratiorrof all our readers. It _, be seen, from the outline of v tion which Parliament will be , - upon to enact in the way of ‘ abuses under our capitalist l. gesture, but the utterance f statesm who weighed his , who spoke with absolute sin- , and was prepared, with or out the assistance of the Op- “ ion groups in. the House, to put into efiect. The reaction to g Premier's broadcast appeals has overwhelmingly in favor of his -- policy, and now that Parlia- has met we may look forward to our potato producers especi- was the passing yesterday of £ I der-in-Council approving of _ ’Potnto Marketing Scheme under ‘Dominion Marketing Act for iprovinces of Prince Edwardia- ‘ New Brunswick, Nova Scotia Orltario. The provisions will from today's Guardian, to _ ‘in ‘Jfllcord with the schema as l ~.~ at meetings held in this ' _. The operation of the Act, hoped, will result in materially llfiig the evils of the cut- t, "competitive methods which ve occasioned such loss to our po- - producers in recent years. "ozv rm: SPOT” iioronw Globe (Liberal) a party leaders some pertin- lqQtlorls these days. It says diflennetfs series of address- “it: the people thinking earn- once again of the responsibili- , government for their econo- % welfare, and it frankly states his challenge to the Liberal ’ gas put Mr. Mackenzie King t!!! spot." ruthc benefit of our readers are not acquainted. with this r we may say that it is LAME-ioanisn g that the vidual in question is in an ex- -, uncnviable position, fight, if any, chances of get- ' data: it. The late m. nann- ‘fc: enample, was "on the spot" ha emerged from a Chicago and faced a firing squad of éderai officers. The Globe i.» believe that Mr. King's‘ unis as bad as all that. but ito a metapn... is by no means - to inspire him with con- . ‘ It sounds too much like o of his own “Valley of Hu- ‘ speech to arouse any- but gloomy forobodings. ilnmedia ‘ interesting fea- {nys u... Globe, "will be the pf the Liberals officially, for , do they stand on the qual- '¢ social insurance and the £0! the “capitalist system"? ;bave explained this in the ‘o doubt, but it will require i become. and Times, published ~- Hon. George P. Graham. the Liberal point of View . "The public must not got such legislation (as per- ~~ to minimum W953”. maid- i Y a, child labor) would be beyond the Jurisdictional lnion the very moment an was made to enforce it"? r- at such a‘ policy of ism and obstruction the warns significantly: "A divis- oonstitutl urn‘ grounds is not enough to work up election vi Jl f. ‘ s FOR asromu W igfu ‘ilaachsreau organ, the g Guam. react: violsntlf mailer- Bennett's yfcpcned , reforms, it ia inter-satin! Qtbat the Hohhot! Witness, Literal in itl polices. ia - different opinion. 1t secs Minister's statement a ‘ to the making down oi and adds: . ‘I've . ‘ . 7 v ‘and 11:10:! . el. 1;’? § I. §§§€§%f a natzm routed ‘in mushftndi- tions can bait be achieved by a atnmg. Parliamonrinaiotently bent on a inndmmedmocial order." solronlsr. lvorfvs Gangsters in the United States should honw by this time that crime and bloodshed arenot as in- vestments, gilt-edgod’ neuritis. 14s a rule the Bennie andficnatom of this country are holdin high es- teem as elder statesmen. but hi the United States, whore they an elect- ed and not appolnhrha diflcmnt opinion prevails. For instance that rodoubtablo of Louisiana. Senator Huey P. Long addressed his brethren of the red chamber as fol- lows: "Doyoukxiowwheroyoilarc heading? I'll tell you. You am headedhatassmqhztoneuu a martin over went to a gourd." pmctl they drive. All ostoopaths and chir- opractors registered under the noardoz Regentsof Dntarloulcs- aliaed to Practice their llfllfeskiofl. will in assigned the initials "Mt" on their auto licence plates. The mark of distinction was granted by the Department of Highway. fol- lowing a joint application. Medical doctors will continue to carry the initial "D" on their licence plates." A significant common‘ y on the administration of. Jliktim in the- UAA. is the following from a New York correspondent: Edward J. Reilly, the rotund chief .of the m. pmann counsel, has ‘been offered $1,500 a.‘ week to ap- pear in vaudeville atJlio close. OI the trial. It will probably 8o ill! lo $0,000 it Haurptmann escapee thQ chair. This u more than Reilly would make in a month asDlatrict Attorney, which is his life's ‘amul- tion, and what a splendid actor he would make! Ask the Jury at Flem- In connection with the ‘B01 scout message by Hts Honour the Lieutenant Governor \over OFOY this evening. it is intending to note the appreciation enprosmd by PM!- ident 1.‘. W. Beat-fly oi"_a. simillr message given by the Ohicf Scout of Canada, His Excellency the marl of Bessbormlgh. last week; "May I extend my warmest concratulatl to you onymn‘ stimulating and in- forming radio address on behalf of the 50y Scouts cemoaicfl- The Wei of o... ion rel-the campaign is being rapidly and satisfactorily completed and we are. very mteful to you and much heartened b! your inmlrifli leadership‘ of the Buy Scout mowment." h. This is how the-City Council of Montreal put on record a N!!! monourconferrod uponztbeir official- head: . ' . - "blond by Al%nhn AG". 59°‘ Layton. "That the nlmhuru of tbs coun- oil wish to email to mrwvnhip the Item/Mr. oaniliien hoods. tboirsincereocwhtlulaltenn forth: honor which His. Mlliociy. Si!!! George vihll iuctrbedowed “W! himby making o! the ordermunBrltiIhJ-lnvire- "that they consider tirisdeoorn- tlon as a woli-deccrvodmwiflli-Wn of the unstintod coal and-‘dcwtlou shown in the bathe/HM uni-mate ofthe Mctrwoiil 1M whichhcocntinnaa-todlpllgintbc and more,particularly_ of the out- standing and activopartlln has tannin the‘ organiltioarof‘ (M grandiose fchtivitiea hold on 4 the occasion of the fourth centenary of the discovery of Oanada by-Jaodlm "fiat the aocqltlwlultdimvlthi- l follcltationa- "carried lmanimoueiy." The ‘tourist Annotation annual meetingramlndsmtlzatlcutbefem that demvinl mmintiw W” into existence the real tourist al- nociaticn of this province was the ohsrlsmtcwn Dlivllll Park and ambition Alaochttop. Year-ill. year-out. a has boomed an ww- incc and brbilht vflllfllflom all clfluwdibdfattafldrhhem . . IIUIWW 1 l lively. over lmglieh spelling. What are known’ as drugleq, in Qtlrio will. hence- , forth be " ‘lllguisbed by the autos 011mm cudbdbyAldermei-rofilormcll and " §§§§§§2 John Mfllqlklld, ‘ntland. not only made a contribu- tion to litdrlliiiflhbilb appears‘ in have struck a blow in the battle. whim is now particularly Bis roqdvrlns of the word. harassed" as "Milli" should dflkht the heart of . Emery Barnes of 0am- bfillckwhoatthemomantisurg- A vmflllvndent. roles-ring to the revived controvsrsyon greyhound racing and its attendant betting Practices; writes to aarus what are the underlying principles which 8029111.. or should govern, public interference with the pleasures or habits of individual ,citilens. On this anaemia-there is no doubt as much conflict of opinion as upon dog racing itself. and yot the facts are that gambling in hatever shape-or form, is recognised every- whoreirl tbnnrodern world as a proper matter for government re- _ and is so restricted by legislation. Behind the aw‘... ctlons Ind" prohibit of the law one or two principles stand out clearly.‘ ‘Ills-first is that the State mzula- tion of gambling is a matter not o! mule but cf expediency. The mor- y.of gambling-the rightness or wrongncss of betting on a. home, on algog or on the weather—is one for V private ‘cum. The State cannot listen either to the cranks who want free ‘trade in gambling 0r._f0 the cranks who desiro its pro- hibition, but it must intervene to prevent grave abuses of the habit. -'1‘he (xpe ‘It h n. long time v the about "a nation 0f ‘ , first heard fonvarious l": who are said to have smiled it disreepectfuilw to England may have borrowed it from Adam Smith's "wealth of Nations." and a‘ crlan of Gloucester with a taste for political economy is said to have used it before Smith. Ono thing iscertaln; if it is to be reck- oned as a characteristic of this country the cap still fits and ‘even does so more tlghtlyjhan it dld.— Manchester l" " . The steamship Mringtcn was an impretcntious old tub. Silo hadn't the latest automatic “inory. She hadn't ornate salons, a famous mpu‘ -- or a wealthy clientele. But she had something morc—_e crow of seamen. ‘may and every L bran L - being rammed by a. freighter in the Blot River. Five of andhistorio‘ documents we t?‘ “.41.- ‘Iqifllfll In J the help uncertain stars." §§;§%,.; §. wait: " rstiris saoumjras ronamfu u; . ' .HOVIDY , ' fected tonsils are the .f ‘ _ of rheurciatimi heart-and ' ey disease, 8t. Vitus Dance (chores- and other organic. conditions, and patngllywgifotgowhatisbest or heal of e younpter. ‘mm-in rel-haw no other mean in the body that much attention and study as have the tnnoilo. The wonderful results obtained. by their removal have been sodramatic that for the pendulum swing over so for that it was not unusual to see at leact ten youngsters have their ‘ " removed in one hoqlital on a single Saturday morning . It was felt that Just as they were protected from smallpox by vaccine , tlon, so the removal ‘of tonsils pro- ; tected them against not only beset g gumbo and rliemnafibut . c ._. , scarlet fever, diphtheria, the com- mon cold and otihera. ~ To-day physicians hesitate about 7 removing the tonsils in children uncsrlysarsotasoasthcyfeel that as long as the tonsils up healthy-even though large-the! are serving really a useful or protec- tive purpose in the body. Thus Dr. ;r.. w. Dean, st. Louis. says. “lb me it is certain that the tcmflsln infancy and early childhood are l. part of the defence mammary o!" the body. ufhey which the body against those factors which cause them to become acutely swollen. ‘when the boy or girl rcadlol puberty-ii to 1d years of ago- the tonsils lose this power protection." However there are certain con- ditions where the tonsils Jmust be A . to p illnesses and these were well stated by Dr. Frank R. qaenoer. Boulde , Colorado , at the last Annual Boston, American Medical Asooclntion in Cleveland. . Then conditions are: 1. Where the hearing is made worse by each attack of tonsillitis- 2. Whore patients with goitro uo having attacks. of tonsillitls.‘ ,3. In sinusitis-inflammation d ithc sinuses about the nose. and in inflammation of the car-runnin¢ ear-aggravated W 9056mm!- 4. In St. Vitus Dame-choice. ft is also agreed that - when at- tacks of rheunratisn follow some weeks after an attack of tonsillitil. the tonsils should be removed. , Momentous Kiss (Ottawa Journal.) That kiss which Frumeb Mon- sieur Laval imprinted somewhere on ms ntenance of signer Milk solini must have been B PM‘? potent one No doubt the new: reels will give us a close-up 0! it. later on, but in the meantime we have word that, the caress ova‘. the two gentlemen got together for a few hours of conversation. Bmr ergod with a "complete new; ment on Frame-Italian- policies.’ Akncat one feels like s that, in ‘the future, peace and dis- armame conferences “ ‘ 09° with a round of kisses instead of with a round of speeches. And this q. t betw Laval and Mussolini looks alike a real one- Austria's independ- ence is guaranteed and he!’ boundar‘ safeguards“ which is g tip for Herr Hitler) with Gennam. Hume-w. Yuzollevll and some others invited to 30in in the safeguarding. In addi- tion, agrcement was reached 0n. a treaty of iron-interference h! which entrai European nation! undertake not to interfere in the internal affairs of the nations con- cerned and alsciointosuwioalaots oflntenlaticrlal terrorism threaten!“ and the Biancr must been feeling good, ‘lhus the new Year starts ocf certainly have tween Japan and Russia: trouble between France and Germany; trouble almlost sverywhm- NW we find that the Japanese-Bila- siaa row over the Manchurian Reli- wuy bu he ‘difficulty cf the scar is pretty wail in hand: that there's mom tnndilil- llty everywhere- _ m moral o that moat world's disasters doxrt happen. ft who once said that the moat mclnentoua new“!!! in l-‘fltlllld in the ‘nineteenth century was the revolution that didn't take place. lllareoelvad an the ltlmfi-.. ‘ ."‘ But 'Mary h ouglas was not the cnlydauglltrr of Lord Selkirk, and my disappoint- ment with tiroaoribes is. that they donut scam w be familiar enough with the history of “The Qf-‘lbfilzllig Earl", ' as he was known.‘ After M04198 this recent article, I turned uptbcpages of that splendid vol- ume of Mplcohn Mat-Queen's, "'I‘hc Skye P‘ ‘there is no mis- taking the great value of this de- tailed volume. to the future histor- ian, for it shows very ' ahing n If thiaro is anything that needs exploding in connection with. this ‘we only, then it may aswell be done as not.‘ And explode. in- cidentally, the mistaken theory, thattho "Great Earl" was never Bo without further detail-l, I pass on‘the following extract from the "Montreal Herald", i811: Birth: "In this city on Sat- urday evening. the 4th inst, the Right Honourable, the Countess of. o; Selkirk, of a daughter." Then fol- lmv further items regarding the mrl and his family, such u; "While the liar-l was inldontreal, regu- larly “ ’ ’ 8t. Gabriel Btreet Presbyterian Church, and brought his family with him. On December 1, 1817, he bought a pew in that church, for which he paid 230-104) sterling," etc, etch . Wcnowpasscntclnerrorfor which itis limcst too difficult to find any. excuse. In" an issue of The Guardian about four weeks ago, there appeared a list of the names of the various vessels. in which were conveyed immigrants from the Old Land to Prince Edward Island. and, if I remember rightly, to some points in lgova Bcctia ~I regret having not been able to resurrect that list.‘ ‘Ibo-point of landing of each vcslcl ‘was given, and, lo, and behold, it stated that the three vea- la which‘ conveyed tboce bravo ye pioneered: 18w. landed in ("h-R ‘ ‘ _ .‘ I that the reason the descendants of those hardy pioneers are not u: inarms concerning that mo: is,‘that it es- caped their notice. Surely, there can be no possible dispute as to the fact ‘ that ‘the "Polly," the ‘ “Dykes", and the “Oughtonfi disembarked their passengers near the present I-lalliday’: -Whart, ‘Auga, 18H. Bee page 13, "Skye Pioneers." ‘It is to be hoped that no-futuro historian will copy from the list containing the above. inexplicable mistake, as to the landing place of the Belfast pioneers. - ~ - . I Andbcforo the ink Iota dry on my pen, I mAyvatata that the refer- ence of E. Cora Rind to the Morri- son-s, whoiaro kin of_ the famous “ missionary explorer David Living- stone, is appreciated. How many, wonder, of us, to whom this great man stands out as an outstanding Prince among c missionar- ies arc aware, that in Idstowei, Ont, still lives a naphcw- of his, John Livingstone, who is hale and hearty at eighty-four yearn of age, and from him‘ about a year ago, .1 re- ceived a. letter, in hislown shady handwriting, and ‘ closed was a copy of clatter which he " “ had received from the great explor- er wrlttanlrom Central Africa, and dated July 20, i688. (Rev. w. Griffiths has evidently misread the-reference to the Selkirk territorial integrity, Monsieur Laval qua-Mm n settled aimiclbiy; the "W? of th! w was o. x. 'd1esierton, we think. "° v bright sea - , _ The all!“ lb forth in beauty-even Gouferward eagerly! Only u» may». lawn. ice, ‘so 111188": he; anchor, while a great; throbm through the“. h”? not; down, ind from afar . d‘ The ships return. Beggar-ed n; m. For 12h‘ demlooming‘ ' ‘ ea a e h ' the hazbor bar, ‘Wu m,“ lmrlcd canvas, quiet sleep. _ But sleepless mint the lightship lie. an lone ~ r ' Great burnini unknown stars. bright bird, fantastic bans Bleachinl on island sands_ Never the Never the Draw throflth the foam Of fabulous sliver shotollnu-fltgr the fiercest gals, Nbwr the hone of homai cutting; . an Lccelymcmue‘ dstill Arebeflconsinthe am: —Jflllilhine Johnson in January ‘lapiritj’ The Marketing Act (BYdDQY Hist lteoord) - The demand cu the part of Prime-l‘? producers. . and others engaged in the marketing of primacy products. to come under the operation of tho Natural Pro- ducts Markoting- Act is the best possible endoraation of this im- 110N500 Piece of ‘ " lation which was enacted by the Bennett Government at the last session of the DominionPariiunerlt. In fact so many groups have ap~ preached the Dominion Marketing Board. with plans to 0128mm for the orderly marketing of their par- ticular products, that the Board has been under necessity of ad- vertising the advantages of the legislation. Producers in many lines saw immediately the advantage which they would gain in being albletobalguinutothepriccthcy would receive for their product. ‘Iihis lack of bargaining power is the greatest problem which pro- ducers of agricultural products have had to face during recent years- Even in the most ploapero times. it has been difficult at time: to obtain the cost 0f production. Flux time to time then QIIIVC been dfor-tu to organise to control the sale of certain 1 . shroud, . ~ m ‘M ~ ; Fbrscrtsabemaynotknow. .‘,. 33 Then thebluctiui ducts but most of the‘ efforts me failed by, reason of minority groups who refused to enter into any scheme. The result, in many cases, wan that as soon u. increased rc- turns were available by reason he tho Ofl-qlctltillé efforts the III-llwrlty nullified theefforia by flooding tho market, often with an inferior product. In this wary not only Wu the scheme a failure. but than who refused to enter into it and bear any of the nee y cent; oftell ‘fined the benefits. Neither the Government nor the Marketing Board ozganizee market- ing schemes. The ' ‘ or .marketi.ng o: a "Meryl 13 that $2.. . oe 8 mlioliiy of a group has decided to avail themsel ca of the legislation however it becomes all the producers in that I Cvl-v-v Prompt and affective “us: a oilllholh only, ‘gable: h‘: m»: an adult. Syrup of Tar And Cod Idvcr Oil. All Men’s Wear DURING WEEK . IlOMEIAiIIDYSELEGT YOUR llrrns yrnou mt: rmrsr srocli or u:ufs;vl£An |n TIIEGITY i 232333/E; §;i5 (IJUETIER hell's nvrncolrs ' cruel. iuui" cons A A run cons HENDERSON o» CUDMORE. _,1o1 GRAFTON STREET. / I i v l. > ' r r I FREIPK fllllTll’ 8: GU. 58-60 CannonSL, EC. No. 4 London, England SILVER, Fox AUCTEONS LAST RECEIVING DATE IN LONDON M r h 18th, 1935 February Mgyc "" 29th, 1935 A” '1§"'-1935 September 19th, 193s “I” 3 “@1935 For further details and ‘shipping instructions please communicate with our New York Office 15.1 Wet st. N-Y. ow SALES ll. Ii. S. IIEIIIIIIIG, as..cl>.c..c.ca cairn-ran macro uoormrmr HIIIII OI‘ CANADIAN SOOIIT! OI 008'!‘ AGOOUNTKNTI UOIMISISIONII IQ! TAKING AFFIDAVIT! IN ‘II SUPRIKI OQUIT OI‘ P. I. l. r. a. l. IIPIISINTATIVI m: campus cum: nmra nun ASSOCIATION. mrrrln. us: or nova scoirra aomnnlo orulwrnrown, a. a. r, Awmflnc mun canoe up aaa mined. Labor laying cfllaa ncthah installed. Out Accounting imam-a tonic Inch! mun-sue. Monthly. our-tall! and annual audio. Balance about: and from and Inns accounts proposal. income Tu returns written up and riled. l" ‘ mad» ‘ ‘y croditon. Limlhd Liability Complain lneotparahl TIIIPIONI It'll. l. debtor-all A man are unanilao o-qro ' p! boaticfclrilavofid ‘vile! oedem-