lq-awr-ss-v-n %!..-<Ua- I i PAGE FOUR THE (IHARLOTTETOWN GUAR DIAN 111E O IIARLOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Ztluriltn; Daily (Founded 1n 1B8") Pr! ldent. ueuL-Col. W. Chute: l. Mellon Vlce President, J. B. BurneL, IJJ. Secretary. LIeuL-Col I). A. llacltlnnovl. 0.5.0. Editor and Mflflflqln Director J R. Burnett. FJJ. 1' snrizlle Editor Frank Walker. ' SIQBSFIFPTION RATES $3.00 per vear (In advance) ‘ellverx k 01h $4 0 nei- .ear l .advancel mulled to P E Island 5.3 0 ner venr tin advance) mulled to Canada and U8 Members Auillt Bureau of Clrculltlonl “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” ‘Fill I'\MARC" 8, 1940. Ivrir’ llou. Dr. Manioifs Visit people of Prince Edward Island will ex- :duil wvlcouie to the National Con- lidcr, lli-u. Ur. h. _|. Alztuioii, M. C., address iu the Strand Theatre this even- ‘ -s hccn looked forward to with the keen- e~s 'r~t_ A forceful and convincing speaker anl lifilllug student of public affairs, Dr. Man- iniVs lllllkillllllCC on a Charlottetown platform would be an important event at any time; on tlii»: o~cz Mn it is a monicntotis One. Dr. Mauion fur more vigorous and effective u of Lluuulas war effort through the l. ui of a National tiovernment, represen- of the ablcst men regardless of party ....l~s. lle is now completing a coast-to-coasl: tvttr which has been outstandingly successful, and in which the issues of the campaign have bu"! lll'1'>t’l"ll€‘(l with the utmost frankness and Ci-VIH. - flu his Vl>ll here iri September, I938, Dr. Alitilillll outlined measures he had in mind for dealing with Canada's peace-time problems, notably 1incmplo_vu1ent and the stabilizing at re:l~liu.illl_v profitable levels of prices for our fhfnlcl‘; au-l ll>llt‘l'lll[‘l1. These problems are still wizh us. The war has accentuated them so far as our livestock producers are concerned. The King Government in the interim has done 8ll>i>'l:it<*l\' nothing. It has even handicapped our llllillllvfifS still further by permitting huge imports of American farm products to flood the home lllflfliCl, at a time when every effort should be ltlJHlC to encourage home production. This is an iuipovzaut factor in Canada's war contribu- tion. aul is so recognized by the Conservative IUilllFr in the speeches he has already delivered in uus campaign. Prior to 1938 Dr. Manion visited the Island on several occasions. both as a summer tourist and as .\I:ll‘i>'I(‘f of Itziilways and Canals in the llvuucit Government. Incidentally, it was under his m’ unisirziliilii of that department that we ob ad a substantial reduction in automobile raif-s un the car ferry steamer. He was also lr ppu-ible for having the car ferry expenses Tie ti 111i . l c1» ll'.'l1l~ll‘l"l'l'1l from the railway account to the cuusuli llllCtl revenue fund, thus placing respon- Vl v for maintaining the service squarely upon the lloniinion (iovernment. "Strange Halucination As pointed out in these columns yesterday, the popular vote in I935 did not give the King Gov- erunieut an over-all majority. Indeed, they re- ceived some 300.000 fewer votes than the coni- hiued parties opposing them. Yet Mr. King is now going about the country claiming that his administration is a “truly National Govern- meut." We have the extraordinary spectacle of a Govcrmiiirut representing only a minority of the people of Canada insisting that it. and it alone, must run the war for all the people of Canada. That the majority has at least as much at stake in this war as the Government's minority by a fortunate (for him) accidental political cir- cumstance, he has taken to himself the role of a dictator, not merely spurning Parliament, but spuruing the majority of the Canadian people; refusing to consult with, or even inform, the leaders of the other parties, running the war as though it were something concerned with his own career; his personal business. ln peace, a minority Govcrnment—in a. min- oi-ily with the popular vote-is not an unusual thing. .-\ ltllltiifily (iovernmcnt in war, where lllt‘ il\l"- aud future of everybody is at stake, is lllwiinulv nu intolerable thing. All the more in- tolerable when thztt minority Government begins cunsiilrriiiq il~clf as a "national" Government: ‘Indus tlprui rmlniiig the war as though the ma- jority oppowil l0 it tlifllll COtltlt. flue uuglu have. assumed that when this war czuui- .\li-. lviug, rcprcsciiiing but a minority of the pm pli- of Liuizida. wuuhl have asked for the cll-llpci-aiiin, of poliiiczil leaders representing a tnajorily’ of the pcojile of Canada. Mr_ King, on ilu» contrary; =llllllnllnl_\' ignored the leaders of 1hr Illllhl’ pzu-iii-s; .'l\‘l(*II*~1tlI(l continues to act —~.'i~ though the ivzir was a particular enterprise of hiu-dlf and the llibcral party! Swapping Horses In Mid-Stream IIlll'|I1lIIl‘\' lIl1' progress of Ill". hlziuirni in CHIIYIIIFIIIL’ the ltPilllll‘ of this country that a National ||'l\1'l'l|lllf‘lll lwre as iu l'iilgl.'uul is the Ivcsl lllill’: llvll’ JllI ("I||4'('l'll(‘lI, llibcral liflbnxcts of .\l;|~l\-~u/:»- kill; ll.'|\i' swung back 11> the luick- unveil old i|'l\l\lI “Don't swap IlIlYsPS in mid- slri-zuu." (iv lll<~ of ibis Lind have a certain fas- eiusuull pn- plopli: who won't stop to ihiiik things out lll ~piu~ 41f the obvious fact that there is uu couuia-limi lll‘l\\l‘l'll girvcrniiig Caiiztrla dur- 11ml hrni-i-s in mid-stream. ,. _ h. who have the happv faculty of whim lu one side when national good , lune ltirl bothered with advices con- :~i ~l"~ and slfczilns. They've repeated- . ."lll cabinet ll'llll~'l(‘l'S who did not come 11> 7-1 -~‘.";ll\'il. l! .1 in 1lt'~l>l'lIt‘II1'S gave a forecast by leading l5: li'~ll llL“.\'~]1Il[|t‘r,s that further changes were tn l..- llll ‘in The llriiish g0 after the best men; l,il"|\ clvuigirtg uuiil they get him. 'I‘hey did it in the lil>l war ilulil they W011 it—lltey'll do it the present conflict is settled to that; satisfaction. Over here, the Prime Minister retains his in- competent men, gives “cushy” jobs to those who have been smeared with the black brush of pub- lic condemnation. He plays politics during war-the modern equivalent of fiddling while Rome bums; and he hopes to coast back to power on advice about swapping horses in mid-stream. The public, however, has beard the other one about a change for the better is always best. King Government I ndicled The hlackeuzie King Government is being tried on an indictment that it failed to make ac- curate use of the military funds entrusted to it. The GOTJCHIIIICIIFS ilvfelicc zlifll have to be speci- fic and CUlll/l/UIB, says the Montreal tiaizctic. - EDITORIAL NOTES — \\'illi:iu1 Ill, son of \\'illi:iii1 lI of Orange and blary, daughter of Charles I of liuglantl, l1iis- band of Mary, daughter of juiucs ll, died this date, 1702. Q i i IO Reports from Quebec are that the Liberals there are working overtime pressing the bogey of conscription on the electorate, a sure sign that they fear the tide in the Dominion as a whole has turned against the hlaclveuzie King Gov- ernment_ t w m k The Prime blinistcr, contrary t0 all rules of public life, having exploited the Royal Visit in his own interest at Prince Albert, Sask., the Grit press are now protesting against the intro- duction of the names of Royalty into the cani- paign, as though the Ojiposition were at faiiltl w n- : m Hon. Dr. Manion does tis the honour and compliment of visiting us tonight to put his claims for a. National Government before us. lrle has included every province in his campaign and come face to face with the electorate, un- like Mr. Mackenzie King who considers it a loss of time and a. nuisance leaving his com- fortable home at Ottawa, where he can broad- cast his airy fantasies lolliug in his easy chair. v a‘ »= >l< Patent rights on frosted electric light bulbs were involved in a judgment handed down by the Supreme Court of Canada in favor of Fuso Electric Works of Tokyo, and other japcucse in- terests and against the Canadian General Elec- tric Company. The court upheld the Fuso Com- pany's claim that a patent of Canadian General Electric was invalid and that there had been no infringement of patent. 'l‘he atcnt relates to frosted glass articles and metiods of making them. The patent in question related to an im- provement by which bulbs are subjected to a strengthening treatment, consisting of a second etching inside the bulb. a- =i< 1k =i< Complaint has been rile regarding the dis- graceful condition of the streets and footpaths recently. The use of the [ilough in kcojiing the streets clear for cars piled snow-banks right up to the edges of the pzivvinvlllm <<>l1><"|\l¢'l"ll’ when the thaw czuue footpaths and crossings flooded. To remedy this in a couple of days would cost the city in the vicinity 0f $1.000 and as the City Cotincil have not got the funds, they allowed nature, or uust-lfish citizens, to do the work unaided. \\'licu one realizes that some $8,000 to $10,000 per inoiuh is paid out to the . - . unemployed the question naturally arises, cant some plan be devised to tiiilizc at least part of that unemployment on (lccfisious of efncrgcncy when they occur as they did this wcck.‘ n- 1 a >|= In his youth Lord Patrick had followed the hounds and so it was as an expert thatvhe gave judgment in the Court of Session at Liliuburgh, Scotland, the other day when he awarded the Western Silver Fox RIIIICI] of Leeds nearly b5» 500 in its suit against ‘the Luullty Louncil of Ross and Cromarty, which had been blasting a road running near the ranch and so ihslurlsctl the vixens I\'Cl‘lll(‘I(‘(I there that their cubs did ltm‘ stirvive the ilctoiultiuiis. The dcli-udcr 11min- tallied that no liability attztchcil to thciu tor kisses suffered at the ranch as they were fulfilling statutory duties in blasting for _a new bridge and road approach. Lord Pzitriclc szud there was no doubt that a strouyg ]ll'ltlt‘.~l had been tuade against blasting tzilviug place thiruig the breeding season, when silver fox vixens were highly nervous. On (me occzisiuii when blast- ing took place the VIM-its \\'t‘t'(‘ greatly excited; uiauv of them rushed about, r-uiuc c.'irr_vuig cubs in their mouths and a iiunibci‘ of the \'IX(‘II\ des- troyed their litters. Tiherc was no grczit urgency in the interests of public safely for completing the new bridge and rr>.'ul\va_v at that time. t t u t The. Quebec Gilvcriuucut has uuule lbc fol- lowing iicw set-up of its I‘ro\iilci.'il lli-pnrtulcut of Agriculture: Information service. headed by Mr. josephat Pruulx mid subdivided info divi- sinus for agrouoiuisls, :igriculuu':il :i.ssoci:ltions and societies, and vuuug farmers’ clubs. Mixed farming services, liczidcil by l\l|‘. .\|1d1'c Altgcr and subdivided into sections for vcgi'l:llilc pro- duction, expluilalioii of farms agriculliirzil cs- IHIIIIHIIIIICIIIS, ngricullitrzil surveying nud lcrlil- izci". l\IlllllllI-IlI1Ill\Il'\’ service, hivulcil bv l\I1‘. .'\I|1'ieu .\Iori11. and SIII|lII\IlI1'fI into Int-willing, vi-teriiiziry and dairv industry’ svclioils. Ilivrli- culture service, hcaulcd by .\Ir. _[. II. I.l'l\'lll!‘. and subdivided into sections for dcvclopiuriil of growth of veg-ct: lcs mid fruits, ill-fence of Crops against insects. weeds and other dangers, and creation of ucw industries by products of certain trees and truck garden crops. l\'iir.'il economy service, headed by Mr. llnyuzilrl lfcrrun and subdivided into sections for cit-operation. investigatiuiis and agricultural statistics. hural engineering service, headed by l\lr. David Clerk, and subtliviiled into sections for (lraiuage, gen- eral rural construction and zigrictilturzil inc- chanics in connection with maiutenatice and rc- pairing of farm machinery and equipment. The marketing service has not yet been completely organized. but the announcement sairl it wan "probable" the service offices would be located in Montreal, r NOTES BY TIIE WAY i-‘urty-nlne years no the world's first tube stat-ion was opened. Closed 10 years lanes", it ll n0‘?! w be reopened as an altr-raw shelter. The station ls King Wuluun 5t... Inndon. near the monument, and at we, the origlialtermlnus at‘ the City and South Lone-on Railway. The workmen now converting it ior use as a shelter found H3 old- fashioned oil signal lamps SUII ln place and lts name in black paper letters on the walls between dusty posters advertising west. end ar- tractloltis tn the guy nineties. Some of those who were at the opening ceremony went on later to the premiere 0f a. new play starring Charles Hawtrey and Lotte Venue; others saw Dan Leno m pantomime at Drury Lane. Half a century later their grandoluldren may follow them underground equipped witlh gas mask instead of gold-knobbed canes and tooth- picks. - Mationestieu- Guardian. When Mr. Cliamberlaln sald he had, no difference in policy Wlbll Mi‘. Hore-Bclll-lia, he evidently meant 1n regard to the army, and indeed 1t was the army which was 1n all thoughts. The untxsclosed cause of his resignation now has been revealed. alpptmsntly. Horn- Belislia has turned to his first love, Jotu-nalism, and he wrote “Shall We Fight For Finland Now?” 1n "News of ilie World." Forty-four ‘lines were detected by the cantor, but. lvflr. Hore-Biellsiha made ms polsition clear by-repeatmg his rea- sons for answering ‘fives’ 1n an ad- dress in his own constituency. To 1.111s, the government has made no objection. In fact the govern- ment censors-hip probably was a gesture to show final; Mr. Here- Bellslna. so recently a. cabinet min- lster, was not. voicing the opinion of his collcgiues Mr, Hore-Bellsha says tihere are rzsks in taking the side of the Finns but there are greater risks in not doing so. It. ls quite possible that his colleagues hold similar views but hesitate to act. lest there be cries that this 1s 1s a class war. Mr. Hore-Belfsha, brought. uip 1n the Liberal trad".- tion and not the Tory, would not. feel so vulnerable. Stalin hlrtiselif ls stl-rrlnz the devils brew and 1t 1s alpt to sptll 0V?!‘ 9113’ day and this posslbflltty might, easily explain Mthy. when Mr. Hore-BelLsha restmed. the Prime Minister sum-weed the pos- sibility that betom long he would again be fn the cabinet. In other words, ft looks as lf Mr. Heire- Bellsha. as happened ln the case of Mir. Eden, ts temporarily a time ahead of the prooesszon. — Mone- ton Transcript. Si:r,— The Introduction of the mime lntoEngland can be traced Wlbll precislozi through Royalty. Eleanor of Castile, Edward 1's wile, was fourth in descent from Eleanor Guienne, the first. of the name here. Henry I1‘s wife, who was daughter of an Aenor (an early form 01f the name) whose father, Viscount of Ghatelleraut, was son of another Aerlor. herself a, grand- daughter of an Aenor o; Tliouars. In t-liat. house the name fzgures earliest as Alienor, wlfe of a Vis- count of Thouar; in 955, who is this the original recorded mother of the tialne. From them the name spread copiously into the relgnmg hcu es of England, Castile, Aragon. and Portugal: our Henry II, John, Edwards I and I1, and others of their houses all had dauglitrrs Eleanor, and so had several of the county houses. Our Queen Eleanor of Provence, Horny 111's wue, though closely connected with all the early Alzenors, had, curiously enough, none of their blood in her nfld mu-t have acqur d her name by favor. It. itevcr lock root. in the related hcuse c1 Caper in France. and sesms almost. exc.us vely a medieval fancy. hardly survivlng that time ~ Let-fer 1:1 Lennon Sunday Times Here was John. Illlfnl)‘. talking wlln a fellow craftsman. There was no trace Of superiority in has xiianner. He was a areal csnvorsaticnalst. He was interested in alll things Biuchan in his tlillt LLLUCII-Lll i.le -— paii..u.arly (la l‘ dllin life. He wail int only rcao but eager w lcole li.s LQTACAXUAITIS at evliry cover. wnch might be a fact I recall a story he told of Rudyard Klpliizg. Lora Twrctistmur, for many years, be- longed to a Fleet Street cllb. Tlie club was Ilnlllldfll n1 Dr. J.l1n.oi1‘.> time. Kiplug was a fellow mem- ber. The members came to talk — in the true Johusonian tradi- Lion. On one occasion, the talk was of t-hg Bible, 0n the miracle which had 111.101‘ of it the fittest prose in the language. the most glorious prcse ever ‘lLlCll by the hand of man. Su . Lora Tweed - muir bod suggested there had been others presciit at t-he great revis- ion under James I than those known to lizstcry. was it not pos- sible, was it. not certain, that Shakespeare and Ben Johnson had lclt. their mark on lltc Old 'l".'\2ll.‘l- mcnt. Herc, lndectl. was a Lope. Away the members went, sam- pling each book. savoring me great. pa uiges, tuning their ears to colon Lhe cadence of Shakespeare or Jonson They came. at. last, to Jeremiah. And as Klplng lrtt- tne circle, he nodded to Lani Twceds- mulr, who had first. flushed the thought. “That is an idea. Buohan," he said. and went his winy. A year after. Klplmg b- lislied a snort. story m w fch Shakespeare and Jonson are re- vising the text of‘ Jeremiah, 1t. was, in Lord Twmedsmniris opinion. the bed. short. story Klplmg ever wrote. It airmpramd tn tlhe Strand magazine and lhas never been rte- published. Ho, commended 1t to me as a pin-r- ot great. lmaglnattve writing u Grunt Dexter 1n Wm- atlpcg Flee Mess. ‘ 'l‘r1ilh used to lle at the bottom of a well. It. ls not. them now be- cause Premier Abruliearl. of Al- tierta l5 usliig t-t. tn a little book which tells why the b00914: of Al- berta should melect the so-called Social Credit Government. 1111s little book ls entitled "The Rlewrds ‘Dell The Story." On one of the opening pages 1s the legend "bet the People Know the 'I‘rut~h". and below this ls an explanation to the effect, that "11 they know the truth, me truth will set them free." The latter proposition seems Just a little risky from the standpoint of the Abel-hart. Government, as 1s also tlhe conclnltdmk declaration that "an henesrt stmfgti-fftrrwam Government deserves your support." It would be distinctly unfcrtunate for Mr, Aberhiirt were we electors of Alberta to take 111m u nu word. —MOIIN'QII Guam. PUBLIC FORUM Th]: column ll |I||g|| l" g. tlllcuuin by enrrnponilafln QI ‘mutton or meme. n- m". lotlohwi Gun-din do" not I> a nrll eidrulngndivluiitz". "l. "bu" ‘I I PARENTS‘ COOPERATION Slr,-'I'he following letter which appeared l-n the Montreal Star, ls self explanatory and ls appllcable ggcthls Province as well as to Que- I am, Slr, etc, RE ADER. (Enclosure) Slr.~I suggest that parents eo- operate more with principal and teaching staff. and tlll the atr wlth less_ grumbling and fewer com- plainls. I have had experience with prlnclpal. teaching staff and school board, and find all tlhree parties only too eager to help parents and chfldren alike. I have children attending St. Lam rl. High, one boy ls ln hlgth school, and he studies less than an hour each night, but manages at times to earn a dime by securing above 90 marks 1n his exams: the others study a normal amount each night without any tearful hysterlcs, and Rrade each year. It ls expect- ed. of course, by some parents that the teacher must supply the brains as well as the ktmwledve. "A SATISFIED PARENT." Radio And Print Reference airmears 1n the New Republic to a. forthcoming publica- tion of what ls said to be the most thorough study or radio yet at.- tempted. ‘Ihls survey. financed by the Rockefeller foundation, has been carried on for two years by the School of Public and Int/ema- tlonsil Affairs of Prlnceton Unl- verslty. Thousands of detailed 1n- terviews were held with raldfo listeners of every tytpe all over the country; ‘U116 most hfglhly de- veloped. modem fact-finding teen- ntques have been effectively em- ployed 1n this study. The. Princeton survey classified the population according t0 in- come levels and educational cp- port/umties. And it found con- clusively that. the higher the level the more reading. Radio goes the 01'1"?! Wfllvi the lower the level, tlhe more listening. On the lower levels the radio 1s frequently on ten hours a day. In the home of a. p00!‘ tenant tanner. the, one who llves up a back country mad and sees little cacti money, the mam 15 often the family's main ccnuwt wttlh tlhe world. The survey analyzes the audi- ences of those radio programs til-tat complete with prfnt-the programs that wflvey ideas. information, interpretations of news, polltltml opinions. And the Interesting discovery ls that the lower the level of education, the fewer peo- ple listen to suclh programs, Vice verse, tihe reading people do listen to them more frequently. The majority listen to the come- ellan who confides tn you about his mother-in-iaw, to the 1mm- merable serials that dramatize how the Jones family overccmes lln tribulations 'I1he=y don't list/en so much to potitlml speeches, pub- lic affairs forums, cultural talks. The survey found that even President Roosevelt dcesnt reach as many over tine alr as some might suppose. Though he 1s ad- mltltxtdl_v' a charming and persuas- ive political oer: ialzty, hi; speech- es. excerpt on TlLlSUfi-l occasions, are listened to by less than one- tihfrd of tlhe JfldlO owners. It 1s generally thought that. his main support ls frcm the lower econnnic levels. Yet on the lower economic levels one set in fcur is likely to b9 lulled ‘I11 on him: on the upper, one in two. Tlne better-educated people, who wculd 1n general mm- cr get ideas by reading than by listening, are twice as tkely to liten to the President. And the difference is apt. to be greater in the case of ot-hr serictis brtrdcxsts. Seventy per ent. of the famtres owning radcs llitcn to news more "r less regularly. ‘Yhe averrize amcunt. cl trws lfs‘en ng l5 the some (m all level: of soceby But tlhe es cnfal p0 nt. of the fmdngs s that the greater the intsrest 1:1 news the greater ls the prfe-ceee frr the nc\v==n"pri' over the rad o. As en ‘Ly lticrcrsws, the hzibtu‘! non-reactors are less satisf ed w.th the ccntnaratively simple fare radio ZUVCL 'I'he.v tlevelup into news- navcr renders, If. as the survey shows. radio ls not die-placing the printed word, there must be some fundamental reason ‘The reason, says the New Republic. is that. f*r those who uaopen to be skilled readers. reed- lng 15 a mere efficient process than ‘lrterilng. "You can esucrntrate on reading more than on llstcnzzig," was a statfmeiit frctuvntly met. “v the surveys fnlervmwers. And ‘listenmtz 1s easier but. you get more cut of reading." That ts the ""l“m'.ll’l-SPY‘='\ wuv tn put 1t. In the case of the skilled readsr. the suitnorfnq one, the Tarts needrd tn cl"i1eh m1 avcurrcnt. can be ivnrhaled more adequately when one reads. The reader elhooses his own material and can come to 1t when h:- wishes: he sets his own pace. Every boov. has a “rriz_ht" smed ‘or hlmisclf in listening or renown. The reader can aduist to 1t, the bsterier cannot. The math!‘ can re-wnd and dwell on the pas- sages that. need it. ‘there's le=s onrportnnltv to tlhlnk 1m argument bhmnvh nlczig wit-h the broad- caster. The NPWIYHZ-mlfldflfl per- son. whr-n he listens to a program that requires any t-houtlh. 1s apt Ln halve a feellnz of fnistratlnn, he isn't netting all that he should get. out nl‘ lt. serious renting re- quires more effort tlhim listenmz. hull intellect/tinny 1Q. Is more sat- tshctory. - ‘Ilhe ermr-lnstnn reached 1': that. radio may become a tncrcasmz Conservatives See Hopeful Prospect (By Abel vmeberz 1n Montreal cimtm - 1.1m: auweu tn the oloctlon are 81w!‘ l-l rlou. Dr. R. J. Mmlon leader olf thei movement for a. wartlme HOLT-TUB“ overnment as well as Con-WE? tve party leaaer. sWmB-‘l 111w r provlnee of Quebec and on to tnlle llfarltlmes. The ooinPflPl-W“ 18 m“; thesituatlou as lt- flfl-ilfid L; , J1me weeks ago, when I" m“ government ideas were 181891!’ $11,‘: nebulous state. and there was t n noted 1n Ontarlo and the wes 8:‘! provinces something akin t0 1J0 ; ti“; jassltude. The turning Plfltimh was reached last week. by W C time the project of a national 80V- ernment had been mm‘? clelafly stated and elaborated. Tne_ Sign» now Point to greater enthusia m fol!‘ the national government ldeallTssugl at least flpethsoxlalgw $3: 311891,‘; °m server a r . Ontario which took filmggfin Ontario province ls admitted Y upon In Ontario as belni the “hard nut." to be cracked. Olllés n” conversation wlth 011L811" 01 “k d ers not too much ts bell"! ‘f’ 9e for 1n this province. There are cogge signs of comfort aDPBB-Ylnk "Fill?" .5 TGDGO horizon however. T ere i t e fact that Llbe Ml h province, notably members 0! t 6 Godbout Government have taken to openly speuklnl; 0 wnxflllllfm- That. there would be oonscrltlflfl" talk 1n this rovlnce has of couisle been taken or granted, since sue‘; talk 1s alwa 5 a My In 9" around ut; it. had been expected that 1t. would beflsllbmer" ged campaign. 'l'hat Liberal lead- ers, however. should resort», l0 We“ platform talk on conscrmtlon 1e- rlicates that early Conservative foxe- oodtn a as to 10881150118 1n Qllebfifi have an are Lllbergl aopes 1n Quebec. Why it. aske , lhe resort m conscrlp ton talk b)‘ Aberal leaders when the Llberflls claim to be so certain of this PTO- vlnce, and talk so confidently 0f m“; “rilttaeiirafflli a muc a e - won in advance? la the question whlch Oonservatlves axe commgtigca lng to ask themselves, and they the dblvlmis response t0 be hearten- lust . Manfon will devote as mlwh time to this province as ls jto-ifilble ln a, country of such vast distances- He s at Sherbrooke. Quebec en 1n Montreal. This Ls all that 1s announced to date. but it 1B being hoped that ft will be possible for Dr. Manton to sllu 1n the ad- rlltlonal odd meettnk or twv l" Quebec. l-le speaks the French lan- uage well. a state of affairs wh ch ivlrlitlbiafislisrrl." stalls; EIITICC tlhepda s o1’ Laurler. (though » ‘J Rt. Hon. hur Met hen was com- ing along 1n that; rectlon) and there ts no appeal to electors like ant.“ i ‘trial: “f” ‘° “m” ‘“ e own . ‘Burning to the national picture. Conserve lves believe that the score ls 1n favor of m. Manlon as against Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie up’. Ftrst. he has had. and a parents’ will have the advantage o speak- lng at more meetings. and is n10"? free to make personal contacts than ls the Prime Munster. and the W1’- sonal contact appears to be count.- tn fncreastngly as time oes on. wflii feellntl anmremthlt e P"- sonalitv of enndtdates 1s t0 001ml? more on March 26 than at previous elections. Party ltnes have been loosened even ‘out. tde the bound- aries of the western provinces. The fact that Premier King has cem- plalnect that Dr. Marilon has b9- come so embittered hat ft will be impossible to consull with hlm 0n war problems after e ectlons ls con- sldered a point for the Manlon forces, since 1t. tacitly admits that to a certain extent at east there l: more 1n the idea. of national ROV- ernment than the Liberals formal y wpvsld awwar to believe. Why does the Liberal leader feel the need of consulting hls bolttleal foe ff he is surrounded wit-h the best. and most experienced brains tn the country? Conservative 0b- servers believe that the Prime Mn- Lster "slipped" when he tacitly 11d- mltted a member of another Party mtizht. have a contribution to make r0 the slay-instill conduct of the war. and interlocked with th" WM‘ no," off‘, of cour e the mvrad other Canadian 1111111191115 whim vyrtnot be divorced from the war ef- or . Germany Was Beaten (New York ‘ltmest Frcm the standpoint. 0f Allied mcrale tlieire may be such a fling as 0V€X"Sl.l’8'S5In'! the role pia-ed by the British hrekace of GP-‘mflnv 1n the World War. It: great. et- fecttveciess as a wmpon no one will question, but 1t ls quite i-in- otner matter to say. as perple are saying all the tlme, that t/re Ger- man Army was nct date-awn in 1918 but that. German mrr~le c21- lalpsed under the ecrnomfc strut“. Germany laid dzlwn her a ms in November, 1918, becavse h:r arm es had been beaten tn battle on French soil and she did n t Want m fight 3 105ml: war on Gnrmim soil. Woodrow Wilson did not. lure Germany lnto surrznd-cr wtli the false promsss of his Fourven Points. The German mUlLflTY lead- ers sought refuge in the Foiu'f'en Points only after they had lcst the decision tn the fefd. Smrary. German morale gave way under factor Iffl popular education. but its ultfmate effcctivenrss will be determined the stimulus it gives to other means of acauu-ng MARCH §,_1_q4o ___________________ Big Fire Sale n The Central Drugstore r STILL CONTINUES Lots of Good Stock still on hand and Prices are bound to move it. Don't fail to get in on these excep- tional Bargains. E. A. FOSTEII-Jlentral Drugstore economic pressure only utter hope was lost of o, vfctory in tlhe field. The Lust Act General Ludendorff nzmself ll authority for the statement that the German Army was defeated. It is all there in his own war mem- oirs in the chapter “The Last. Phase," which begmfi Wlm ‘the’ famous confession: "Aug. 8 was me black day of tlhe German Army in the history of this war." 0n that. day, 1n the Smnmer of 1918. the British broke the German ltne M. Vlllers-Bmwnneux. west of Amiens using chiefly the AUSl-mllflflfi and Canadians, and with Merton us- sistance to the soutm. Roughly three weeks before this. Ludendorff had made lfs last bld for victory with his Pkledesistunn in the Champagne. 0:1 July 18 Foch ushered 1n the last act of the play with his counter-stroke south of soissons, 1n which the American Regulars paruclpated. ‘Phls in turn prepared the way for tine British effort- of Aug. 8. when the ftghtlfl! took 0n more than the character 01’ a German defeat; ft was tn place; very near a rout. After three days Ludendorff found that "our war machine was no longer ef- fluent." End of the Game Iludendorff puts 1t more specif- ically than that: "Aug. 8 put the decline of that fighting power beyond all doubt, and tn such a. sttuatlon, as regards reverses, I had no hope of ftncLng a strategic expedient whereby to tum the situation to our advantage. On the contrary. l became canvlnc- ed that we were now without sate foundation foa- tlhe plans of Gener- al Headquarters on which I had hitherto been able to build. at least so far as tints 1s possible 1n war. Leadership now assumed. as I then stated, the character of an lrimpoitsible game off chance, a thing I have always considered fatal. ‘I'm- fate of the German people was to me too high a stake. The war must be ended.""llne Ism- peror told me Inter that, after the failure of the Jilly ottennve and after Aug. B. h" know the wnr could no longer be won’ Defeat, Sups Morale Lueleridortf. to be sure. mrntfons the breakdcwn of morale on the home front and later made great play with the Lktuizer-in-tlie-Bnck theory tn which the Scciarsts at heme destroyed the army's fight- ing spirit by foster ng popular d‘s- content. But it is strange that as late as July l5 the Germany Army should sttll have been the mug-n‘!- loent. frglivrig force tlhat. made the desperate last effort. in the Cham- pagne battle. and only a few weeks lat/er succumbed to the defeatfot Socialist pofson. Obv".ous'_v' the true explanation ls the difference bteween victory and defeat, Letters from hungry wzves and children at home would have one effcct cn a German armv stimmonrd f~r Just one more ef- fort to insure victory. and Inother effect on that army driven back and brc-keu throuvh. It‘ destiny hkl nerniittfld Lurlonnrrfi to break through the Br:t"-l1 fn P'c1rdy 1n March or tbrcufli the French tn the (Juanita-ache 1:1 Jrlv. wmld ne ever have (Pscovererl that the So- c‘nll’ts were startvng the Grman Arm" fn tlv- trek? This excursion into _the World _ ~—-1 Wat's last phase 1s not for an u. ademfc purpose. The story o; m, Spring and Summer of 191a real importance for Allied morale today. Wltih a great German or. fenslve 1n the West possibly draw. fng near, and Berlin placing m“ for victory arches 1t mould balm;- up the cause of democracy to ma“ that England and France are not restricted to winning wars by starv. lng out the. enemy. ‘they can m,‘ 1511s armies 1n tlhe field and h‘ em Twenty-ewe years age month Germany began ner- bld for vtcwxy, oddly enough mm ielnforoements from the Russzau front which Lenin and Tm kindly released for servtce tigatnst the Allles. Three times. next 1m democratic pcvwers 1n 1918 dtd not find the Gieman Army invincible, HA! LITTLE CHANCE WINCHESTER, Blfillnd —(OPl_ If the Admiralty, from Wl-ns Churchill, Flt-st Lord. down to m last Sea 10rd, were wiped out, sir Mon e Browning, Vice-Adam. a1 of e United King om and Lieu. tenant of the Admiralty, would nilo tpaenngvy until a new admiralty wu s e . sror ills. AMMOIIIATEII anoucniii comrouun This preparation 1s an ex- pfictorant and sedative for‘ C rout. Irritation, Con bs and olds fully l, mtee . Price her bottle — — — — — — 500 DR. EVAN’S Stomach Mixture We hf hly recommend thll reparut on for peo le suffer- g from stomse dlstresl after eatln . heartburn. uld and sour s omleh. If lt ls the finest stomach mlxture that monev can I111! It's Evans. 85c ner bottle. 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