.A.4.4- ~.:......._. ....._,..A~.._-~. -<. . ------.-_..-q\-.. 4.», P ‘ "T" FOUR ~m=~v1um ._,,., -. w-~_.-.._.. . . . u-uos.n-¢k...-.......__, K“ TllE p ziiliiloiiziowii GUARDIAN slurping Dally (Ion dun I867) lu-e PIb-pllllflll J Ii. durnnll b‘ J l. £1111... and Jllllltlfllllp; oirm-iur 1| ll lIurm-u l’ J l. 5491- curry 1.10m bu! ll A lluulilnnun l) ll 0 As-m-iniv lsiliiuy- l-runli Walker and l) ll Currlo aL h\\ nirlluh “Allan 3.14m 111-r )l“-ll I n illlfllllvu) ih-liu-nzil lo Lily lLmi 111-r yum llll “hum-n lllllllrll n: I‘ E lnillld $5.1m urr nan 111- 111111111001 Ill-MINI l0 liuilulu and U I lump-n, Audit llureuu u! Cin-ulinlnun. ;~__-*1 "FEBRUARY I938 ii-Luspkv, “The Strongest illemury is Weaker than me Mean-est Ink." Eu top-cu ii Situation i- p1“. “A... .1. 11111111111111» in llll l"'.ui"1-p1-Ei1i si1u.11i11i1 aic “111-l; 1-1 twiiiiiis-u -l1‘-\l- l-"lmP-‘r m” c-iiilxtgi- 111.111) 111:1» l1."1\i- 111-1-11 1111111111-4 i11i‘\\‘a1‘1l 111iii11i1-;11"i\"1it .l1l-l .1--1~rii11-i11-- 1111 1111- part 111i llriiziiil 11111 iii-i" l)11ll11lt111lls——l1-l' 1"1-1"1.iii1l_\" n11 sit-p 111 |‘11i‘1i-;11 11111101 1.111111 111111-11 \\ll1l->'1ll c1111- >llil§tll11li 111111 11.0 1111-0111. 1l11i1i1i1i111i~; and a- l'1‘Q'll-l~ 1111- l'."111"1-111-.111 1i"1111l1l1-, 1vuli11ut 01111-111- 1;.11.1i1 111111 1111- ‘11-1-1- .|tl1l \\ .1-liii1gt11i1. 'l‘l111s1- 11"l111 :11"1 1.’ N111 :'-11l111-.1i1g 1111- ~i11iati11ii lll l.11ii— 11-111 r1 li/v-l 111:1: “-l|". \ii1l11>i1>v 1511011. 15111“ H .\1-1"r1-1.1‘\. 11111-1 ~-1iil\‘l' 111‘ 11111-1‘ part (11111111111) 11iili lr- c1111 . '11-. as lu- cliicf Il\l\'l~L‘l‘ in 1111 l*11i"1-i-_-ii 1111111- 1111- ii".1ii-11-rr1-d fr11ii1 111111 posi- 111-ii :11 : 111-1111 1-1"1-.-1.-1l 11111-111 lillllllt‘llv\".\‘ql.'lll lli- \llll'1‘~~1>l :1- l'11":11.1i11-i1-. l'i11l1-i" $1-1"1‘1-1:ii‘v .11 1111- l-'-11"1 1011 11111.1 11.i1l1-11‘1l_l 11111 1111i auri-c \\ll.ll 111011111101 111111; 11111-111-11111 lii-pr1-il1-c1-ss111". and L'|'lls(‘1lllt'lll1_\ 1111- 11111111111 11111011 .\l1‘. 15111-11 r1.i1-1l was" gniic. :i1i1l 1111- lining-lit 111111111 his" downfall. lt ilncs- llnl llt'1‘1"\~.'ll'1l_\' 1411111111 ilizlt .\l1", l‘.(ll‘ll was pursuing a 11111111,; p11li1"_\" idczillv. i'l“l'(.1lfl thi- p11int 11f \i1-\\" <11‘ lll-1l'ill~ 111- \\1l.~ right. hilt uii- i()l‘lllll.'llt‘l_\' conditions ii11w pfCYIllllllg. and likt-ly t1» 011111111110 for s11i1i1-1iii11g pri-\"1-11t1-d lli"it.'iiii and 110i" .-\lli1-< :11l!10i"inq -ii"i1"1l_v 111 tl11- idcalism of .\lr_ 15111-11 and his" prop iii 1111- 151111-1911 Office. .\lr. FY1011. in a s|11-1-1i1 last w 01-11". ill-clzlrcd that he ivas 1111i p1"1-|1ar<-1l t1i take a pcssiiiii-tic view in 11".!- f111"ii1:1ti11iiaii1l :l1l\"111"."i1‘_v of his policy. which i"1-ii1iii1l.~" iis 11f \\'1»i"ds11"1'1rih. the poet. hrok1-ii-li1-."11"i1-d ovl-r 1111- cziiisr- 11f the Frciicb hevnltition la-giiiiiiiig. iis it 100111011 to him to 1111. with such liriulit liflpcs 1111l_v to i-iid. as it scented tn liiiii. in tlic ld\‘l‘1'lllll_\' 11f .\'."i-p11l011n. Rcincnilici" his words: "I lost All feeling of conviction and. in fine, Sick. iieavied out with COHEFHTIIIES, Yielded up moral questions "in despair." .\n1l ‘v01 as wc 1111111" back ivc can sec ilnit on a long \'lt‘\\' \\'11r1ls\vo1"tli's original optimism ii-"as jiistiiicrl i"aili0i" than his lattcr dcprcssion. In wliatcvci" diverse wziys. and alniig wlizitcvci" divcrsc routt-s. s11iii0 11f the idcals aii1l liupcs that lll.\])ll'(‘(l the 111-st 11f i110 rcforiiicrs. cot tli0in- sclycs in a largc incasurc ullimalcly wnrkcrl int-r.- thc stuff of our 0111111111111 life. S11 that disappoint- niciit 110011 11111. and should not he allowed to liri-t-d (llSUlllFllQtJlllUllI. lf for a time the cause of the rcsiorznion of iii10i"i1z1ii11iial order seems 111 11c wcll nigh lost. it is c1-i"i."iinly not lost foi"- evci". Our faith iii tliislis iii 111li-=r \\' vs iiiust 111- a long t0rin. and ii11t a -l111i"t tr-rni i;1itli_ tirczit causes are rarcly to I10 s1-rv1-1l iii 0110 ivay alonc. hut rathr-r iii iiiaiiy diffcia-nt ways. if tliirrc. secm littlc 111" n11 proc-rcss along 11110 line of action. tlicrc may h1- otlicrs to which we ought to give more 1111011111111. 'l“liat .~("(’ll\.< to be the vicw of Prime Minister CllllHlllCFlHlYl. If lflritish cti'1ii"ts in oiir- 1lirccli11ii scciii foi" the nioniciit ratlii-i" fiitilc th0r0 ari- 1111101‘ altcr- native lines of zldvziiicc which still claini their cncrgics. and 111-fore long wc may realize that having bowed tc-inporairily- t0 a wiiid storm or gas attack. lliitaiii and lici" .\llics. T-‘rzliiitc and tlic Ynitccl $121105 will rise crcct 111 makc lll0f1‘. elll-ctivc advance than if they" had dclzvvcd long and wcarily for the realization of sonic of i110 high ideals which Mi". Eden hail set before him. A Tupper Memorial ‘The Ottaiva Journal has just publishcd a 18t- ter from 1\lr. Alex. Iolinston, retired iltrliul)’ niinistei" of marine, commenting upon the fact that no public memorial to Sir Charles Ttippcr has 110011 erected on or near Parliament l"Iil1 to perpetuate thc niciiiorv of a nian wll° Plaéfffl f“) li-ss a part than did lfacdonald. Brown.‘ dlflll‘ m- _\lc(}c0 in "bringing about the Cfilllfiflffilllfill of the provinces. Tnhnstoii urged that this neglect 111- i"1.-iiic1li0( and he ll1Cl1I10l1Cd‘ other grcat lczulcrs of ilic 1185f. Tilmmllson- Flcmmg and llorrlcii. as tlC$Cl’\'lll.<_f grcatcr public ‘re; Cllglllllflll than has 1101-11 given them. DLSCIISSIH,‘ this 10111-1". 1111- capital city cxcliallflff‘ -‘l_7fl'lffcgti_ Salt‘. (mm-leg '| lmpt-r as one of the chic an. p tr] _' 1 Coiifcrlz-rzitioii and suggested that. wit 101i 11.1 1nd hi: iiiisclfisli dcvofioii to tho caust- of C011- fc.|‘.,-_-.1§..n_ Nova Rcmifl could not liavc brought 111111 1110 iiiiimi. H0 was. iii triit_i. a1‘ the loiiriial. mic of fln- great llQlll'€5_ of liis (lav. “.1 11¢ sfl-Illfi 111 have been the "forgotten man’ bf Cimf0rl1-ration_ Reduced Egg Con su mpliori figiirl-s arc prcsciity-(l by Prcd \'\. "f Canada loultryiiiaii, 11a- aziiic pllllllhllfd in Vaiic1"1ii1"1-i'. in a Si"|1‘|(l pawn-ml, showing iiii cnonnoiis ini- i l I117.- 111 ilic indiisirv I11- ilraws pointctl nia .~. ~ . - , . . - . " - 1 onc of €|lL(-|]‘|()1“|)1\Il zilariiiiiig condition ii _ l ‘i '1‘-iii-i1l1'~" ii1-ii11i- industries. an iiirlusti)’ ‘a““ all more than $i0o.000.000 ilmluillll/V wilful"?! the trcnii-iiduus drop in domefitlil COII-‘lllllllilml or m“: hm“... pigs ziniiually. or more cxactly 3.- l(‘\_\‘ pci" .1111); than tcn _v0ar;s ago. The ipii-stioii is as-kcil p11ulii"_viii1-n. “what arc yo" "Hing p, (p, 11. nit-ct tlu- (“(lll.'l|1'('lllllll1‘f)l 1r(ralrfjl_nl 11111111, 1-1-4111-1111111- 1111.1 ii-uii niiccs 111111111 m, (hip. P151111“; tl‘|(.' cgg off tlic (lining table.- - . . T. if 1110 lliiiiiiiiinii. _ _ __ Figiiri-s from i110 Dominion lliiri-au of Statu- irs nn- llllllllsllPll iii llll‘ laiiuuiy issui- slinwlllfs’ ‘w “mm. (‘pflllle iii i-gg cmisiiiiiiilioii 1liii"iI'-‘! m. l}... “in vi-ars. \\'li0i-1-ns 1111- 111-r capiia co-i- 1111111111011 in 1917 “i” 356 "Hg-"v l‘ '5 “day down Arrcsiing lli-csmi. 121111111‘ 11mm] p11iilti"_v ma}: IXKXOUU (‘gflfi l_0 260 eggs, a decline of exactly eight. dozen lur every man, woman and child in Canada. . A petition is published iii lhc same issue, ask- ing the l"l0n. James ti. tiardinci", Dominion Min- ister of Agriculture. to secure an appropriation 0f $100,000 this ycai" for tlic purpose of c011- ducting a National .\1l\'t"l'llslll_Q Campaign. Sill]- ilar to that now iii clfccl for the Fishery indus- try. sponsored by the llcpilriniciit of l7l$llCl'l(‘\. 1t is pollllcd out that niaiiy- tliotisaiiils Oi-lfllll- ilics arc wholly dcpcndciit 011 014g production i111" a li\"1-lili11o1l as wcll as thousands iiiorc 0nipl11y- 1-11 in the (listriliutiiiii of poultry pmducls. B0- siili-s tlicsc there are tciis of thousands of farin- crs who rc-ly on egg lll0ll(‘_\' to huy their groceries‘. clntlic tlic children and puy taxcs. The direct loss zinnually" to ilic poultry indus- try is cstiiiiatcrl at $i4.tx>0.ou0. This figurc is hased on present zivcragc priccs. not those 1111- taineil in the prosperous days of tcn years ago. Xcithci" docs it include tliilse ciioruious sinus lost 111 Cilllfltllllll fccd stipply" 111111 cquipiiiciit llOll<l'> through siiiallci" flocks and l11\v0i"cd gross pro» (lllCllflll. Now We Have One '1‘. 1.. Lillllltll. Ciliiscrvzitiii- iilcuihci‘ i111" 'l'111"- 1111111» lil'i)2lll\'it'\\'. zisl11-1l 1111- l‘i"iiu1- .\liii- istcr. high! ll11ii. \\'. l.‘ .\l.'l1‘l\l'll7.ll‘ lying. .'i11111.i 0.1 . 111's policy)‘ in rcgaril 111 1110 $iii11-_|apai1i--1-l conflict. T110 l'i"iii11- .\lii1i~i0i" i‘0p1i1-1l that 1111- lg-intfll 111i-111 iiitciids "t1i nniiiitaiii a strict ucutiztlit) 111111 10 c11i1u"il1i1t0. iii collal111i";i1i11ii with 1111101" gmcriiiiiciits. 21> 11ppoi"tiiiiii_v afiiirds. 111 111111-1- ini-iits 111-signed r11 i"csi11i"1- pcacc in 1111- 11111-111 through 11101111111. of c111iciliati11ii." 111111" fortuiiatc. says 1110 11111111111111 51101-111111? (ll'll_\'. tliat thc lloiiiiuioii at lt-zlst has ."i1"lii1-\1-d a forcicii policy! Pcrliaps it has soiuciliiiig 111 1111 with ihc $tatutc of Wcstiiiiiisti-i". r Editorial Notes 1 \\';1.~liii1gtoii's klinhday". 111a. ¥ >1‘ >11 >1- .\ii_v 1111c 111111 111111-11 that .\li". litlvlli: .11l\is1-i" in tiic Fuftlgll Ufficc had liccii ll'&.lll$l<3l‘l‘r‘d 111 a 111-w position as publicity agcnt, iuust llll\'f' anti- cipatcil that sooiici‘ or latci" 11c hiinsclf would g11. T110 pcrmaiieiit ci\"il st'l'\'1'llll. hcail 11f his d<-pai"1iiiciit. is tlic tcclinicialn on wh11n1 any niiii- istci" iiiust d1-p0iiil_ * 7k * PK The suiispots that cause-d s11 iiiurli 1111111110 in tell-graphic and radio comiiiiiiiiciitiuiis 011 Jan. 25 may reasonably b0 cxpcctcd to rcpcat their 111-i"f11i"iiiziiicc- this wcck, accrwdiiig to l)r. Ralph ll. Dc Lury, wliu is in charge of solar phy"'"s work at the Dominion ()l1sci"\at11r_\". “T111551? clouds llllly (levclop or disappear." lic said. “But iii gi-iicral it is a safc pix-diction llll: ilisturhancc will 110 l'(‘p€lll<.‘(l. hccausc the saiiic conditions 8H‘ likcly to he prcscnt on this rotation of thc cartli around lhc sun. The rcctirrt-ncc will conu- from 25L; lo 27 ‘(lays latci". 'l‘lu-y may repeat zigaiii. 'l‘lic_v have b63911 known to appear 011 three rotations.” " =11 >11 111 Five Oriental pri sts will sing. at the invita- tion of the Caupcliin Fathers, a mass of con- cclcbration. as it is called today, at 9:15 a.ni. in the Capticliiii Church of $1. _Iol1ii thi- Baptist. 209 \\'0st 'l‘liii"ti0tli Sin-ct. .\'1-1v York. Seldom if eve-r has such a scrvice lic-cn lu-ld in America. The mass will b0 offered foi" the rc- iiiiion of churches of tlic Eastern and Western rites. Instead of in Latin, as niasscs arc said in tlic vast majority of Roman Catholic churches tlirotiglioiit the \\"estcrn \\'0i"ld. the Diviiic Li- tugry 11f St. Chryisostom will he cclchratcil in thc B_\'7.£\l'l[ll'|(’-Slfl\'lt.‘ i"itc. This is a Slavic translation of the ancient Grcck iiiass named af- tei" $1. john Cliry-snstuiii. .'\l‘L‘lll)lSll(l|l of Con~ staiitinople and doctor of 1110 church. In 1110 East the mass is callcd tlic “l)iviiic liturgy." In attciitiancc will he lilgrs. Nlichacl _l. Lavcllc. Vicar General of the 2U'Cl‘l(ll0CC.~€ 11f N011" York. and other members of the clcrgy. i ll i Scnatoi" Burton K. \\ll'l€(§l(?l‘ of Xlilntaiia. 0p- ponent 0f President Roosevelt's Suprciiic Court plan. has declared that future attempts to pass “emergency laws” like tlic Court plan might pavc lllt‘ \\'Zl_\‘ in this" C(ltlllll‘_\'. as in (ici"ii1:iiiy, to a dictatorship. lii a spccch lic poiiiicd out iii- fcrciitially that tlic dangci" of dictatorship was not absent in America. Declaring that anti- Si-mitic regime-s likc thosc of (,iC‘l'1ll&lll_\' and Ru- niziiiia were iiiiiiiical 1111i only to _|1-ws but 111 Christians an-d the eiitirc fitiiitcivork of dcni- 11ci"ac_v. 110 said: “In Ucriniliiy- wc scc pcrsccu ti11n lll$llllll(‘(l by llitlcr. a tiian who thinks llllll- si-lf a (lCIIIl-gOIl. No bcttci" proof that anti- Sciiiitisiii is in fact anli-1l0iiioci"'c_1" is ii0c1l than in tlic policy that is pursucd zigaiiist all Tfillglllllr. 'l'li11usaiids 11f Cflllltllll.‘ pi"i0sts li0 rotting iii prison 111i tniiiipcd-iip chaurcs s11 vil1- and rldi culuiis that llic rcst 11f 1111- civilizcd world is spccclilcss". Hundreds of l"i"11t1-~"1ai1t p:1st11i"~" arc lfX])(.‘llC(l from llicii" ptilpits iii0i"0l_v l11-1"."iusc tl10_v rcfiisi- 111 10nd tlicii" church 111 lllt.‘ idcology- oi zinti-Clii"ist." *1l<** .’\ii illustrated. lcttcr-sizcil bulletin ncwz-pzipci" right iii your hoiiic by radiograpli cvcry cvi-iiing is flu- pruspccl licld out 11y sponsors of iicws- liriuzidctlsling, Designed as a supplcniciit to 1- “st- ing daily iii-ivspapcrs. thc coii1i"iv:uicc is a radio sc-t iiitermcrliati- lictwccii iwcsciit sound scts and futiirc (ch-vision n1aclii---s. S|)0ll.\0l'\ 0111111111011 it can transmit 10H size panes 11f typc. ilraiviiigs. carioiiiis and idiotograplis 111111 liotiies and print llll‘lll 1111 a r1111 of papcr. lfor cxaiiiplc. thc rcccivi-i" c111il<l he sc-t to rcccivi- ncws iluring thc carly morning hours and pro» viik- a small moi"iiiiig papcr for tlic breakfast table. The picture of llt‘\\’.~‘ page to hi- sciit is placed on :1 rotating 1"_vliii1l1-i". \\'liil0 thc cyliii- dcr turns it is scniiiicd h_v a tiny hcaiii of light. Variations iii i110 light inu-iisity- falling nn a photo-clutric lllllt‘ arr ti":uisfr1i"ii"i1-d illlll siiiall cliiiiigi-s in an 1-l1-c1i"ical t‘lli'l'(‘lll. 'l'li0sc ar1- tlii-ii transformed into radio ivavc-s. lii the i"c1"0i\"0i" this process is rcvcrscil. Th0. radio wavc varia- tiniis arc 1"r1ii\"0i"ti-1l into i-li-ctric vibrations which movi- a siiiglc slraiirl 11f piano wirc tip and 111111-11. \\'li0ii 111E‘ iviri- move-s 111i tli0 ITCI-‘lflllfl NOTES BY TIIE. II.“ 8y using flu.- canilul o! the coun- Lly 101. sociiuunv. llloncv uunll». ma." last 1e» years we nave several limes liau llie 10011111.’. ma» Drosbeuvy was ‘back. Inc lac-L inusi be Iaceu mm ‘we 03111101. nave a. revumvo. pros- ‘pci-iiy unuei" present _coni:1liions. we cannot. have izood Limes. depend- abiv izoou nines. ior i1 sustained period lllllll we stop using up our capital ullu muke n possible for 'nc\v capital to be accumulated and invested in DPOGUQIVG enterplisc. -POV€l'l-.\' lies zlll811dvl0l‘ the indivi- dual who wastes liis patrimony. It ‘is no (IIIIEYEHI. with natlons-{Jlilc- aizu Tribune. The danger In Canada is that. lhc ‘decline in the Unfit-cl Stalfis H181’ cross bile borclci" wlili serious re- ‘sults here. Canadian business men would be well advised not. 1.0 bi.-_ iii- tluenzcd too much by American conditions ulilcli have been flBkrRf. vaicd by political. mfll-QEUVYPS- AHKII predatory allies. Canada Canadians general v may 18kt B lesson from WiLsl-iitiulon on the m; (‘IICCIIIRHIDSS of "Managed economy. l1 has been a case of a ilJ\‘0l‘1l}1K‘l1l- rininina around in (HZZVHCIFCICSI lrlllDlIlk over its own feeL-loionto. Tc-leirram. l . . Thr- Japanese are a highly lll¢"-1 atc people. Tlicv know u-lials POI i. on in Spain. T1101" know that 8111-. alii. the Unilcd Slates Illld L‘l"1\ll(;€_ ‘are acquit-stint: iii it. and tlnil Get»; many and Italv arc parllcinatin: m1 it. Wlicii we turn to‘ scold _l1ei_n iutli lll‘.ll moral si-iitiniciits la unmit- al tlia 111(- Jurial ‘ iutw l 1o \.‘.'\.‘\ll. tl-.-_- c. .1 our UUIHKCILlIS oi" the purlLi-‘O _ mfJll\‘(‘——0Sl)t‘l‘l1lll\' Sllllbcdllt‘ Units-Id Stan-s and Great Britain arc sol.- ln: llll‘ bombs 11ml fal on Shaw-chm anil Naiikiiilz. Barcelona and Val-_ -*iicia.--Ncw York Post. I Th1- mililai-i- purposes of’ Jap- llllfidl‘ llllwllllllhlll ‘IUWIIVS DTCdDlll- lllllR‘ UYCI" 111k‘ tkOllClIllli. lll 13Gb! niosi o1 the 00011011116 activities‘ can, bc explained b1" IClCICllCC to tile! 1110111 0 military supra-lilacs‘. 1181-12111‘ is 1011111011 of sanctions. Political‘ 001111111 oi curtain sources of raw lllkllflllzll is tlicrctorc. in this scnkc. e-ssentlal w lici- naloniil security. Anti liei- usc of mlltlzirv control isl llll‘lll(‘l' cncouruzcd bv the fact. that she lacks the economic and futon-I Hill powoi" l0 compete with England‘ and the U. S. A. in China: she inusl cUlllDPlO by cosiiiiz‘ the door and brcakiui: up Chinese unity. Al- iliouizli tlicre is some basis in lacLl then-fore. for the Jamincst- asscr-t lion that the Cliiiicse were not de-' vcloning North China that cotton production. foi" example. could not br- di-veloued because there was no roads and railways Lo market. if. that adcriui-itc steps were not. beinz take-n Lo iniinovi- cotton staples or prevent. adulteration of the product. Ill(‘ clotoriiiiiiafioii of the Japanese to rcniedv llie-sc tliinzs cannot. be FNDlHIHCCl in tcrnis of “economic co- operation." But the economic plans of the Japanese must not be under- estimntc-d. even l.' tlicv are designed with iiillltari ends 1'". view. - The Statesman and Nation lhonclon.) Dictator Mussolini. defending lLaly-s adoption o1 the Gcrman lzoosestcp. remarks that "our 0D- ponents \\‘lll claim the step is the most zenulnc expression of the true militaristic spirit. We nre zlad. be- cause l1. is for this reason we ad- oiit/ed i1. Thai-es frankness for vo_u. Al the same time. Benito- miizlil. take a few moments out to wntenipliiie ivliai. happened l0 that. other famous izoosiesiep leader _ ND‘. I-Ionenzollcrn. Ml‘. IL. 10o, glor- ied in militarism. bombnst. snappy. uniforms. uoose-stcpbinlt. sword-l rattlinir and all that sort of l/lllllfll And lock WIICYE 1.110 former All—| Highest is now-cliuppiiiiz wood at Doom. practically forgotten and luckv lo liavc been left. alive by a u-orld which has destroyed men foi" ci-inics far liulitcr than that per- Dibfllicd bv Emperor Bill-Windsor, at". The governing principle in the economic svstcm ls the principle o. balance. Costs and prices, ivliich represent the terms upon which goods and services are exctianizecl. must bqeuuitably related if the ex- chamle is t0 2o on. 11nd the distri- bution of producers amomz the oc- cupations must be 1n balance with the demand for their products. When the system is Ln balance it IZIVGS employ-mam, to all. A clianize in any part alters the balance. and requires clianizcs elsewhere. When lllCfC ls acneral disturbance trade is blocked and 1.1111 cfIccL is unemploy- ment and_ depression: and there ls no way oi overcomilifz the blockade without miikiniz the eliunlzes that W111 WStiJfl- the elinilibi"liini.—Nat.- tonal Citv Baul of New York. A Dlvminfnl Physician declared in an‘ address the other day that. noise is not a cause of mental clls- order. I-Ic pointed out. that 150 years 3R0 there were assertions flint the noise ‘m London was af- fecting Llic nervous condition of motile. but. London is n, hundred times noislei- now and there seems to be no adv "sc result. The phy- slciang-xprcssed ‘the opinion that antinolsc cainpaiuiis have been overdonc. It is m be assumed that. the doctor knows what ho ls talking about. and ncrlians serious nervous disorders cannot be traced u; noise‘. But ccrtainlv a reduction in street noises in the- citlcs makes for more comfort for the citizens. Noise docs not help tlii- nerves much, at any ram-Boston Post. It u-nulil bi.- wrong to Ignore the nrnbnbirlv that apolicv of izreqfei- cli-cumsnr-ction is at last beiniz ln- culc-atcd amoniz Japan! more reck- less fire-cntcws. even if its inculca- tlon soc-ms to b0 II slow‘ process. For the mililai-v dominion 0f Clilna bv Jniiiin is; llkz-lv to b1- cven slower- if it cvc-i" t-oim-s into belnu at. all. Hei- 111-mics havi- still some 3.000 niilcs 1.0 11o before lllPV reach ‘hosi- [ZOTFFPS 11f ilw YflllElZ" lti Szecliwan wlir-i-c. so lllf‘ Clinic-si- proverb says "all vars i-iirl." Thi- resumption of irur-i-llln fl-rhllni: in the nolizhbour- lioml of Slmncliai. the Jana-nose stiiitliiv-nn-iit is flll'l‘.R(‘l\‘ rilvlni! a l‘f.‘l‘lll‘rll‘l‘ that in a areal counli-v iiivasr-ii and siiblu-iallon are not "ulti- 1hr sami- ililniz and the vaiiulx/r- \’l\lll‘V ls nnl. all China. - “allv Ti-lc-rzrai-h and Mornlmz Post. London. It iilll b1- no comfort In the res- pl-ctublc Bi-lilsli liouscholdm" 1.0 re- flect this week-end that birds of a leather flock toizetlier. For he learns that. his new al.y ln the challenge of tlie American gunman ls h Enizllsh burizlnr. An American has been sentenced at the Old Bailey to twelve years‘ imprisonment. Con- cei-nliiiz this lt ls stated that. Boot- limd Yard lins been assisted 1n its win" on liivtidlnu uanizsters by in- formants ln llll! London underworld itself. It will ho inlet-pirated. accord- lnc: to the simpli- faith of cynicism of the ODSCTVPI‘. us" an outstandlnk instance of pairloalsm or an imple- mentlniz 0t the sloflan "Bi-lush cribs for British cracksmenP-London Sundnv Dispatch. It l: quite true that 1hr gnedlcal profession has not vet dev! Oiled B m cvliiidcr it pri-sst-s against a sll(‘(‘l of oiw-iinary carbon paper, tracing or iicws on while paper. sure cure for the common cold. out- Gltle of rest and sleep: but this is It position as Cullllllfl. in ,' nickel. can THE cliisiznoi-"risrowu GUARDLAI)? .. ..'_?. _~..._..._. i‘ PUBLIC FORUM 1 ‘Ihh column ll opal (or 1hr illocunlon by cornnponrluritn u qlnllonp ol Oar-out. Thr Chulottetown lluudlnn door no! uoouurlly undone flu olllulour nl oolloopondanto. WHAT ABOUT NICKLE? SiIr-In a __ ' recent. editorial | Japans War Supplies" yflu ;e_ iéiark, "It Oll ha. been shown that anada acting alone could do time w cripple NiPDOns WM‘ Effort." -Wcil, what. about. nickel? If me supply of nickel were withheld from beliigerents how long could they last? Canada produces 90 per cent, o. the worlds supply of nickel. one of the most essential lnalt-rlals in modern armaments. Without. a sup- ply of nickel. not. only would the WEI‘ efforts of Japan come to a blleeay end. but those also of hei- _ has here- 111m supplied in ini- form of nickel one of the most materials to further the dc"- our countries‘ enemies. Is tli. W550“ W113’ Canada. pos.c&1:1g a virlunl monopoly of this ini-lal should not have placed, years a. v a heavy export duty upon it. tlii-i- - by checking the warlike 13318110115. that are today the 1- . of such alai-ni. and at 1n,- lilllll" time greatly augmenting llfll‘ w. venue. - If Cernianv were in 1,119 51111“) respect lo ‘M- 11011111 fur n inonir-ni ‘-" ' “H-I-Lri s11. . . ilflllflS of lici" . bv permitting than} m share in ii 1111 equnl 1 ms? _ Willi llic issues of lilo ml dcatl" l|1 oui" hands. is our polly 30:11.11. ed by motives of liunuuii 01- is it ~01 | i" another cast- of av-ai-icc cloaked in the specious plea of the ncccs- ~ities of trade? I am, Sir, e143,, 1 M. ISLAND TEACHERS BRITISH COLUMBIA Sin-It is not my 111101111011 1.01 continue the teachers‘ cont1-ovei".sy- in this letter. but as I promised in one of my former letters to say something of the ivomlr-rfiil pin-t played by Prince Edward Island teachers in the history of education iii British Columbia. I nni now sending you this lcttci- on that subject. I u-lsh. 11011-111101". tn warn young teachers in Prince Edward Island that the situation in respect. to employment of teachers in Bri- tish Columbia has greatly altered during the past 25 i-cars, foi" to- day the supply there is far in ex- cess of the tie-mind. and outside teachers going to flint province will meet with formidable competition. whereas 25 years ago tliei-n was a constant, demand there for good teachers from all parts of Canada To those of your readers, Sir, who may be disposed to think that. because British Columbia is ontlzc extreme frontier of western civiliz- ation. it. is therefore likely to be backward in education. I wish to say at once that. the really oppos- ite of this supposition is tun». British Columbia, gcogiwiplilciilly speaking, is at. the meeting of (Inc ways, and Vancouver is in many respects a modem Alexandria, for. here meet. and mingle together representatives from every nntlon on earth. and ideas ancient and modern. eastern and wcsteincliish with one another to eventually (use lnbo a new civilization and a new learning. In respect to its system of cdu- catlon, British Columbia has a full-fledged university with over 2000 students tn attendance and splendid higli schools and public schooLs esiabllslied all over the province; and in respect to its teaching profession. if is doubtful if any other province ln the Dom-l inlon. or any state ln out" sister republic could muster togctlierl according to population at a teachers‘ convention or teachers“ summer school, such an army of highly educated and well-trained teachers as British Columbia could during the past. twenty five yearsl For ll. must be understood. that a large percentage of tlicsc teachers- during these years ciimc from the; universities and teachers‘ training. schools of the British Isles and; ‘Canada. and some evcu from‘ training schools of the United States of America. ' Now to my mind. the most woi-.- derful thing in connection with‘ this array of teachers that. fi"om year gatherings. was the fact that. a.- mong them all. the one outstand- ing group that was by common consent admitted to be second to none. was the Prince Edward Is- land macliers, who were neverthe- less notorious for the fact; that. they had received little oi" no profes- sional training whatever. the teachers from tlic Bri ish Isles and front other provinces of Ciin- ada. not to mention the Slates of America. received in teachers‘ training schools. Not only this. but 1n respect to their academic training, many of them could boast, outside of the education rc- celved in a rural upgraded school. only one or two years‘ fl('llClCll‘llC training at Prince of Wales Col- mCi 1 member hearing of tlil- academic training of P. E. Island teachers. spoken of except in terms of rc- staiiding of Prince Edward Island teachers in Brlllsh Columbia ncerl be glveti than the fact that dur- ing the past, 25 years these Lslimtl ti-iichcrs as a rule have occupied certificates legally permitted 111cm to. No higher professional oi- v1- dcmtc certificate need bc present- fli-st class teachers‘ certificate from this Island Province. and as foi Island teachers holding unlvcrslty degrees. only the highest. positions 1n the teaching profession iviis con- sidered as becoming to them. In proof of this assertion l will now give as fai" as I can from lncmory. a llst. of leading positions in Brit.- lsh Columbia held by Islanders in 1925, the year I left. that. province I regret. however. that tn some cases I can only give the surnames but. their next of kin on P. E Is- land will recognize who the per- sons are ln these cases. l regret. also to say that several of these outstanding Island teachers in Bri- tish Columbia have passed away since I left that province. The outstanding lLsl. ls iis follows". S. J. Wlllls. superintendent of education. Vlctorla. BC: Jolin Glllls, assistant supt. of education; tor McLean. mliilstei- of educa- tloii. Victoria, 3.0.; Principal Har- ry Smith. Principal Victoria High §vl1p~1'.__-\.111_-9_r1__0i-ml>b@l1 P111121: mlniile with others when they are affected. and Luke unnecessary" risk of snreiidlnii the contaitlon. — no IGLWD wlly IIIIBNII lllollld Cholhpm Nevin. 110W 1 . from Lir-ntral Ciuuwlzi who know us to year at. teachersl such as '. 5081'“ loge; and yet. never oiicv do I i"0~- spemr inol. ovcr-izlven to No higher testimony of llll‘ lilgli- the very best positions that. their. - . r ‘- John p51 Vlctmla Public . _ lcambbell. Pilnvllml Vlmgéfi F1,"fb_ lii: School; Ernest. Camp _. VIA clpal Vlctorla Public School. J. - .uoi"don, superintendent of Van- ,.couver Dubllcschools; Samuel Rob- ‘ EPLSOII, professor of classics I3.‘ C. University; Edward Jordan. p10 es- s01‘ of mathematics. B-C- UMVBTB‘ 1 fly; George Robinson. instructor at. n. c. University: Henri Mcl-wl- tnstructor in Vaytigouver Normal lScliool". Lizzie Dicicenson. P111101: ‘ pal South VEIICOIIVBI‘_ public schools. u. Ulilllpllrlll. Pi-gncli-al Powell River schools‘; PYRWIPBJ Campbell; Principal Ladnc-i" public school, Principal Morrisey, Principal Mer- ritt. Stipei-loi- School: All’! Mame: son. Principal Pentlcton 1,1117!”- school; M. McKenzie, vlce-l-nncl- pal Vernon publli: school; James King, Principal Silverton Superior school; Allan Stcwni-Lpubltcschool jnspeclm‘; A. F‘. Matthews. publlc school insgcctor: Leslie Bruce. pub- lic - school inspector. This 11st lakes no account of dozens of other Island teachers FEBRUARY 22. 193s wisfcoiliiz- You are invited to call 61 Lower your insurance problems with us. llYllllMAll 81 00., LIMITED The Oldest Insurance Agency iii P.E.I. to Charlottetown during FARMERS’ WEEK at. our office and discuss Queen St. who held gzood positions as assist- ants tn the public and ‘high schools. 1 It. also omits the names of several 1 filitllllllfilll. tcaclu-is who died be- -l0rc 1111- v0.11" mentioned by nic. and iii the case of fl-niule teachers] those who married and hence loft: tlic teaching profession. The listl might also wcll include the names 1 of pi-oiniiicin i-lcrgiini-n, doctors‘ and la-yvy-ci-s in the l 111:. and clt- ies of British Columbia. ivlio once tiiuulit. school in Prince Edward Island. . The above record is indeed ti, pmuu 11110: but pcrli-aps it is well. to l'1"l'i\l'llll)r 1- ivliat has been c011- - -- »,; ._ - 11.x. _. 11.1011511- m tle 101-0111 icnclieijtfcon- . 111111111115 tluil this proud of Islanders abroad has rocoid b13911 won at a ll‘l’.Ill(.‘ll(l0llS cost to tlic Island. namely. the 11111111111 loss for ilic past. linll-ceiituijv of 1111.- best blood 111-at lloued in the Vfilllc. cf out" Island people. It is a noblc contribution that the Island llZl;. nnide 1.0 llic- hi}; ivldc \\'Ul'l(.l. but ll 011111101. continue to make such a contribution lllllflllllllfll)’. if it. liasi no regard u-lizitevct" to its own ex- istence; surely sticli fl. land as ours (ls-serves more of lit-i" own best blood at lionic. Lair-i" on. S11". lf your space poi"- nuts. I 111101111 l0 write sonic rem- iniscciici-s descriptive of tlic Is- lnnclci-s abroad which I trust will Llt‘ 111 nnert-st l0 a considerable iiunibei" of your readers. I am. Sh", eic., M. llll-KENZIE. UNSOLICPIED ADVICE Siv.—-\s I read on Saturday your‘ reply l 1.110 Guardian Lu the re- ci-ut 1.111 ' Province of the Dominion made by; inc _T0l‘OllbO Globe and M1111. WlllCll critic "ms ‘ Advice.“ it. 1161110112111. me that pos- sibly, when ivrllimz vour editorial. '5 v- 1-1 ‘I; F? 5 C‘- 5 in you did not fully realize the sei-l-’ toilet- and pass ‘his flillSlllVv-S‘ 0t the situation from the standpoint of Prince Edward land's future. The Globe and M if not iudi-ed of t.l ion. has painted in vivid colors a pit-lure lUllLl since and many times outlinccl lll black and ivliite by the Monti-cal Gazette. a journal which vou recently stated is one of the best edited of Cuniidas nmvsp-apers. In other ivorcls. these _t.wo great". me-l 111a of Oiinadlau Dllbllc opinion can‘ no 10119.01‘ bi.- reizarded as friends of this Island. Before cominz 1,0 lCh-arloLtlnou-n. I rctul many un- 101838111111 editorial siillies and dis- CUSSPd the mutter with some of the |\\'I'll€l‘S and the tliouizhi; that they naive me was that Prince IIXlWBIdf Is and is a stubbom half-developed youiiizei" brother. incapable of carn- imz a decent livelihood. and satis- fied to live in a poor house in which. like Oliver Twist. he ever- lastinlzlyi thrusts forth his bowl and spoon and asks for more DOITlIlEGZ and vct. so impressed with his own self importance imd sense of inde- pendence. that he makes a practice of tin-nlinz his di-nf ear to his buzzer brothers when they tender lilni a little common sense advice. It lsn‘t a pretty picture. Rather ls lt. B. most unfair cartoon Dcncllled by a clev- er but ill-informed artist. It. is a picture. llevcrlhclcss, and is being vlevvcd and inwardly dlzested by tlie people of Central Canada, many of whom unfortunately" ‘Wow lli..lc more. tliini that. there ls an Island Province somewhere in the Gulf of Si. Lawrence. called Prince Edward. And vet thesi- are the people wln-l influence came-s more welizhl. 1.1 Ottawa than that of all the 011101- scven Provinces of the Dominion put together. I hope that. I have not. over-stated the situation. Tliose well will perhaps (llffer with me. but. liow few in number they iii-e? I1 And now. lo return to the Quebec iand Ontario (‘('.ll.Dl'S. Cmi wr- blame 1 them for bellftlinz us. after having rend the- drcaclfu". title of woe that. For a Delicious Cup Mr. lea Poll Says: Full Flavoured Tea Use BRAHMIN Orange Pekoe fea 0i ly Jdlllll l0. Barlon. MD. inn-mops or Tuna-rise BED- WETTlNG-J-INURESIS Oii-e of the embarrassing condi- tions that some nervous children 1.‘ have to endure is trad-wetting. Des- 1. pite puiilslnnents and rewards. these youngsters are unable to eon- Lrol the outflow of urine (luring sleep, . Many parents have wonkert out. a. uvslem whereby the youngster ls made to p355 his urine Just. before vou termed "Uiisollz ed; 801113 lo bed. Then when the pal"- eiils are about to retire they wake lliini up and have him go to the urine again. should ellliei- parent. be iiwake during the night the youngster ls again wakened and sent to the toll- .et. This method works out, fairly l well but is. as you see, ‘dependent lcntlrely upon the iivatchfulness of - the parents. 1 Manyparenls have seine success l by using a d diet-no soups, milk, 1 or other llqu ds after 4 p.m. The use of atropine has been a “standiby" of physicians for years as it serves to "lighted the musc- les controlling the opening O1‘ neck of the bladder. Some months ago a “new" idea In treating bedwetftng (enuresis) was suggested ln that sandwiches containing a great amount of salt were given just- bEIFFC bedtime. Formerly salt. was avoided as much iis possible as It. made the youngst- er thirsty. but salt. taken just before bedtime actually draws water from the whole body to Itself; a slngle gram of salt can hold '10 times its own weight of water. Wttli this great amount of salt. ’ln the sys- tem holding wiitei". there would not be as much wafer get lnlto tlie urinary bladder; and there would be little or no desire or need for the youngster to pass this small amount. _ Stlll another treatment. for bed- wettlniz comes frcm Great Britain. Dr. R.W. Brookfteld In The Lancet. London. tells of admtnlsts-r- lng ephedrine (the Chinese (‘lflllll ' l t- " of enuresis fucks. Tell us what we can do -.n help you. but. make lt practical." The above. Sir. I believe is the situation that we now have to face and. lf I am correct. it. bccnnw our first. duty to do everything ln our power to correct the wronir impres- sion that. for years. has been li-ft in the mlnds of our fellow‘ Oimiadl- ans in Ontario and Quebec. To bewln with. we must. let them know that. tn this Island. they" lwni-n for llllTl‘ 1011i: days. was unfolded .10 the Rowcll Commlssion ln the brit-flcss briefs l)l'(?“'\Y"‘" ‘ r---i"| lGovcrnment. rind the Charlottetown’ of Trade and oi-i-scnli-d f . them mi their recent. visit to Cliniw. ‘lottctow-n? I do not say that the- storlcs told weri- uiili-tic in nnv rc- ,spt-ct but llicvc was such a. lack of constructive suuizestivonnss. other [than the himrllni: over of IIIOIIOY and moi"e inoiicv b\" the 0t. mva Govcrnmr-nt. 1111-’ on oin- occasion a1 lciist. the Chairman of ilin Board O a era-partnership in wlv-t. ls un- doubtedlv the izem of the North American Continent. blessed with a climate that nimkes for cenfe-narliins and which. during the Summer months-ll Ontario and Quebec coud but duplicate lL-would be worth millions and billions to 111"“ We cnn tell fliem in all truth- fulness Jiat. ln n0 uni-L of Cannon - the United States can summer tourist conditions equally enflclniz be found. with our entrancln scenery. sunslilnlng days. coo S ’(‘Xl)CSl1Llllll(‘.(l and aski-il WllCTE we invprirtr-d all tlils mrinc-v lo come from. 1 A". will zidiiiil. that -.v1- "Y0 1111111": .111 l;‘rlll.(‘l'—0f-lf\l‘l clays nncl that. our l(‘llU‘.V Ciiiiziillinus ll‘l the Central 1 Province-s are fnirlv linrd boiled mid se-nttmeiit, and furtlici" llllll. ".10 arc no; ifkcly to. not vcrv fur with tlicm bv remind-l ins: tlicm that. when 1hr“- izrund-, ,lIlll‘(‘lllS ln the tlicn Upper and 1Loyvei- Ciinadii. iiftx-i" years of nuar- ffdlllllfl. had reached 1m impasse s01 ifni" iis self-zoveriimcnl was c0n-‘ ‘CCFIICU. came clown lo the tlii-ee -l)l'0.'il)0l‘0llS British Colonies by the sen and persuaded fli- izrandfatli- ers- of the Mnvltlnies of today l0 on t/c-rms which have 'll"‘ proved to be far from satlsfnctor "iirtlr-i- lnrlv to the laconic of Prlnoe Ed- vmi-d Island. where vcarx of pi-1is-. pi-i-lty have been converted inln halfi u century of hard financial 11111-- ‘~ The oiilv i-eplv that we are llke- lv 1o obtain to tlicso unpleasant. remiiitlc-i-s ls. “Sorry. old chm). that. 1oui" izvandads did vou an lnlury. ‘ but vou really" must" not blame us for that. Lei, us net down lflmllljgé IllKlll-S. miles of hard sand beaches. fuclnz an ocean of warm salt WM- er. free from reptiles iinil offering iniexcclled surf bathing. A veritable Mliimi of the NOTIJI awaiting de- vclopment- by men of means and vision. It. ziuiv bi.- true that v.1.- lmk sable of the so-called natural resources. Such BS timber. 011s and minerals. which ln the other Provinces are the raw materials for their indus- tries. On the other hand. we are surrounded by a vast sea from which. under wlsc direction, an un- told wealth in fish of many kinds can be brouizlit to shore. w-lille 1n nizrlculture only ln parts of British Ed l0 8 001111110" Public $611001 llPllJ 111cm out. 01' their difficulties Collfmbl" can 0"!’ ""."'”"k“b1¢S“'-“'- lmflrd- in COUIIIPY 01‘ 01W. "W" Pl bv lOlllllll! in a Federation scheme mm growth be equaled. this poln-t tn Olll‘ stoiy the natural lnterlectlon will be. "Why then are vou so poor?" to which we shall reply. "Because we lack three essentlnls for our devefopment (l) worklnii capital. 121 direction and control of our sea and land activi- ties. on up-m-dat/e lines. introduc- lnit all the latest scientific discov- eries. (3) ocean Lriullniz facilities with the outside world. including a drediled harbour. a concrete pier suitable for ocean vessels. and a ry oc . Give ua these three thin s and all that we shall than wan from the Dominion Government will be a subsidy sufficient to repay a‘l the direct and indirect taxes now belniz levied upon us under Canada's Nu.- llonal fiscal policy. In a few yegi-g we shall not only be lf support- 111R. but. our people wliigbe as well off as those ln any other part o! Canada, while our population will Increasi- three and four fold. Has imvnne any practical summ- | Mona to make for the fulfflment of -what la not, a dream but. n plan 4111M van be carried into execution if we iio at. ll with a will. l‘. etc. II. . Giiiflotletovim. P ‘a. “IMMING over periods up to several lIlOllllb Th1.- enuresls sllppfll in 10 011-11.. and there was iinprovelucnt n1 11 others. Half a griiln of Cpllltlfllf-u alkaloid in ftiblcl form ls given a‘. bedtime. The (lose is increased b1 half a grain evci-y UIYCB to foui iights until. in some cii-es- as niucli as flve grains is given. I like to pass along any sugges- lions on the treatment. of enuresis llS the embarrassment and distress. of these youngsters is gl'l3fll1»lll(l8t‘(l. THE CHIMNEY Deep lnogljie clearlnir of the Winn-i" w The little house was like a. Glllltl that. wore White ccaal and can too biz for ii. an Solemn gnsd slranize beneath the weiiztit. w. _ The ‘chlmney. muffled in that. whiteness. boo. - Had drawn us from the mad. for on the air No ristniz column‘ of the train-ant That. wcilgd smoke bullds in Wlxiu-i- skies was there. A drift was leanlnz hard aizainsb e‘ door ‘ Arid only feaihTy tracks o! squir- i-el and .av Were at the spriniz. and we W811i buck once more And called to one we knew had K0116 EWBV .A.b.°ve u!‘ cold No answer came. and still. The cglllrpnev stood upon lbs snowy -Glen Ward Di-esbivch in the New ' York Times. 0f Thc" 113st: ‘ l"'1w Inn (New York Tlmi-s) Ever since the days of Chaucer the English inn has had a fond place tn the hearts o! all who lqvc- English literature and the Engllbll tongue. It was charming views two years ago that Miss lshbel Mai-- at l0 Downing Street, had trims- fencd her talents for gracious hos- pitality back to the old Plow Inn. at Speeii. tn Bucklnszhamslitre. Slit could serve her country lzhere, more humbly but no less offs-cilvcly- lhfl“ sht- had done tn the Prime Min- lstoi-‘wofflclal residence. Nnw it 1S plcnsaiil to learn that with (fflllfll nnconventlonallty she was affianr- ed herself to a "tall and simrb“ halt-ed" citizen of Sheen. by m?‘ .cupatlon a bulldei-‘s decorator and Iharidyman but posslbly by avoca- llton an Innkeeper. One hopes that he approaches Chaucer's clz-scrlll- élon of the landlord of the Tiibard nn: A semely man Otire Hooste wlthalle, For to ban been a max-chat halle was in ii. A largo ‘man he was. with Eycll stepe. , A fairer burgeys ls flier noon in c _ . ‘Iliey reed such men in Eiitllflllfli sllll. ns travelers may discover b3’ folloivlzig the old roads when» ny- carl-s and slime-concurs passi-d i" times gone by. There have been rumors that Miss Ishbel was thinking of civil-ll up her lnn. We hope her iipprnacli- lng marriage means that Sht‘ 1111s changed hei- mliid. The EinP-"f may creak imd the deck wntz-li fill the Grant Flee-t mnv hnvi- tn k001i rye-s cocked for hostile Blffifflff. bill as long as the English lnn keeps its cliiti-nc-tei- Enizlimd ls safc. A- way with the cold mutton! Brlnit 0n the roast! Let the flddlei-s hi‘ summons-u imd 1e? +1.1»... 1..- 11.111:- tiig on the grecn! A, '1- TE N '1- i 0 N SWINE BREEIIEBS iilai-ilhe siiniiniii PIG - WORM the most effective by using remedy on the mbrkot; Mac's Pig" - Worm Tonic Powder ll Iilll thoroughly nbolluh nll from of worms. and lmvffl" the hum; o! your herd. Price 35cts. per lb- l)on’t an». Order b! Phi-M 111- imlii. All orders pron-Ml." attended to. Phone 315 THE TWO ‘MACS Pmcrlpllonl A infill"! Donald. once hostess for her fatlii-r "