E . , . , glllllllllllflifllflll GUARDIAN , f . llflfllllll Dill! (Bunch! 1881) - "no 11.“: t set-i- 161M: sud Manllilll Director-Ta. has... l’. .1. 1. é Secretary lrizunOoblhLllnoklnnon. 0.8. 0. 3 t Associate Editor Frank Wolku “I suuscmrnon mans ‘l $5.00 per year (in advance) delivered to Olly i 84.00 per yur ‘.111 advance) fol. B. Inland IBM) per year (in advance) mulled to Clllldl and 11.8. Member: Audit. Bureau of Clrcnlntlou “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than i1 tilievflieplsest Ink”. y MONDAY, APB-IL l3. 1938 The Callous Thirty Falconwood Farm expenses came in for a _. good deal of criticism in the Legislature last l week. It was shown conclusively by several of . the nlembers that thousands of dollars were ‘ being wasted in nlisnlztnzlgenlent, alld when Hon- ]. P~ McIntyre, Minister of Public \V0rks, at- tempted to ailswcr this criticism he was effect- ively silencul by .\[r. jolles. A number of the fzlrnler members visited the _ institution and discovered tllat the hogs were in 2 poor condition. .~\ (iovcrnnlent member contri- buted tlle illttlrlllzltirln that the farm buildings were "falling down", and that thcre was no conlpctcllt man to supervise farm work by the ; hospital llllnates. , - .-\ll this is to be deplored. but it leaves un- ' IOLIClIrIl tile real issue. The public is not so nlucll conccrllctl about the hogs and livestock at Falcoiuvootl as about the unfortunate human - beings who are lrldgctl there- Many of them i might be cured and restored to their homes and families, and placed on an earning basis again, if proper trcattnctlt were available for them. The blt-dical Superintendent, in liis 1936 report, stressed tlle great need for modern equipment and facilities. lle made ‘he same appeal in his 193;‘ report, stating among other things that the insulin treatnltmt the patients should be re- ceiving could no‘. be given on account of lack of proper accommodation. How much attention did these recommendations receive fronl our Liberal legislators? None at all! Notone speaker both- ' cred mentioning them. The Superintendent's report was not even tabled this year until the dying hours of the Budget debate. Only one member—.\lr. jones——took exception to this, and his interest seemed to be confined to the farm mismanagement. - What is the reason for this callous indiffer- ence? \\'e recall the campaign of abuse and mis- representation that the Machlillan Government was subjected to for attempting tc formulate a policy of mental health in the interests of the Falconwood patients- Perhaps therein lies the explanation. The silence of our Liberal legis- lators is one of guilt. “The people at Falcon- h Hlfl only need to be kept warm-—they don't need treatment". That was their policy in I937, and it is one whcih they seem to have followed with more consistency than any 0f their specific election planks. In one respect, it must be confessed, the Fal- conwood patients should be well provided for. Nearly a thousand dollars was expended last year for boots and shoes, supplied by the Le- Page Shoe Company, If only the Hon_ Mr- LePage’s firm dealt in equipment for treating the patients as well as for “keeping them warm”, what a break it would be for Dr. hlurchison and those concerned with him in the real responsibilities of government at that neglected institution! Worthwhile Entertainment An opportunity of patronizing local talent, of ‘ helping a. worthy cause and getting one's money's t worth in full measure in enjoyable entertain- ment, is presented this afternoon and evening at the Prince Edward Theatre, where the Easter - comedy drama “The Sunshine Girl” is being presented by the St. Charles Auxiliary Society in aid of the Charlottetown Hospital. The enter- tainment is under the veteran direction of Mr~ I. Austin Trainor, C.D.A~ It will be the 547th entertainment that Mr. Trainor has staged, and the fact that he is associated in this connection with the production is a sure guarantee of its success. It is under the patronage of His Hon- our Lieutenant Governor DeBlois and Mrs De- Blois, Prenlicr Campbell and Mrs- Campbell, and His \Vorship the Mayor and Mrs- Foster. The Charlottetown Hospital, like other char- itable institutions, has been carrying a great fin- ancial burden in recent years. Many people arc under the inlprcssinn that the paying patients are so lllllllPffllli as to contribute sufficient to finance the hospital's work, but this is not the case. Last year the bills of non-paying patients ran into several thousands of dollars. The great value of an institution of this kind is that its doors are not shut on the poor and needy, and those more fortunately situated should feel 1 it a privilege as well as a duty to respond gen- ‘ erously to the modest appeals which the hospital l makes front time to time. German Trade Wilh-fgmada -'»<¢»ws- s».- c... . . i The highly_ beneficial results of the Pay- ments Agreement ‘between Canada and Ger- many, which came into effect o_n Novemberdl5, 1936, have-become evident during 1937, ‘an at the close of the year the value _of Canadian cx- rta to Germany may be said to have been treble the 1935 figure and double that of 1936, write; Nfr. J. C- Macgllhvray, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Hamburg, tn_ the Commercial Intelligence journal. The Reich has therefore ‘again become one of Canada's leading foreign " cm l’ . m“ cit: the large volume of total trade, how- t is apparent that there are limitation: to I i‘ an nmrlcet- In Government um ‘thug cxcha receipts w ic ' ‘for!!! purchase of hy-u-A-o-ur-au“ r-a,,___j,,_ _ \ 7, 1,740, percentage o bec, total number o than ever before. . The value and volume of German-Canadian trade shows some variation depending on whe- medium of ‘the W" This can be partially accounted for by merchandise passing indirectly through third countries. The ofiicial German statistics show imports from Canada in 1937 valued at R-M. 48,725,000 (R.M. r equals approximately 24 cents at par) as compared with R;M- 18,757,000 in 1936 and R.M_ 13,300,900 in 1935; exports to Canada in 1937 totalled R- ' was a connection between govem- ther it is viewed through the German or Canadian statistics. M. 22,900,000 in i935)- Wheat was the most important item imported from Canada, comprising 22.3 per cent of tho - "cnannorr-iurowlv- - GUARDIAN which are essential to German industry ahd nl- tional economy, and, with a few exceptions, there is no opening for manufactured goods. On the other hand, assuming prices are reasonably competitive, Canadian-export trade is guaran- teed a fixed and assured market for a reason- ably wide range of products, some of which had in 1937 a. heavier turnover in sales to Germany total, followed by nickel 20.4 per cent, copper l0 per cent, asbestos 7.5 per cent, wool 6-7 P6X‘ cent, rye 6.6 per cent, pulpwood 3.4 per cent. and fresh apples 2-5 per cent. ucts or groups of products. Editorial Notes I I Easter Monday and statutory holiday. . v w x a The little lamented judge Jeffreys died this date, 1689. i i i i The Legislature enters its last lap of the ses- sion this week. iii Safety first is the slogan in free. The National Council, Mayor MaéLaren, Saint John went to Ot- tawa before the rising of the House to impress upon the Hon. C. D_ Row port, the necessity for subs the Loyalist City. He was peal by the Hon. ]. E- Michaud, and other Brunswick members I l l I This speaks for itself: Maritimes, total num- ber of rail graded hogs for week ended April f total gradings, 95.5; Que- f rail graded hogs, 3,484, percentage of total gradings 37.8. Total num- ber of hogs graded in Canada, 24,523, per- centage of total gradings, 376- Percentage of total gradings includes hogs graded alive, re- ceiving direct and from l i stock yard. v x Four hundred thousand — nearly half — of Greater New York's young men and women be- tween the ages of 16 and 24, willing and able n to work, cannot find work. These young peo- ple do not include those who are in school, those who are living at home and not seeking employment, and those who are unemployable. In East Harlem seven out of ten of the em- ployablc group are unemployed, on the lower West Side six out of ten, on the lower East Side almost as many- These are estimates made by the Welfare Council on the basis of a sampling study carried out in co-operation with the Great- er New York Fund- a: w a Just fancy l New York State These eight com- modities collectively account for 69 per cent the aggregate, leaving the balance distributed among approximately seventy-nine other prod- Switzerland the lower b01156 0f pest, without infringing the rights the Swiss Parliament, has approved the revised Constitution of the Canton of Geneva, which forbids Communist, Nazi, or Fascist organiza- tions in that Canton (State). x x u w e, Minister of Trans- idizing an airport in which, supported in his ap- of New The “bedside manner" of some Pgfgqngfly‘ we b.5119“. sport, com- doctors, which it was charged includes kissing, Pel-"ilgfislabfiml Em 1 f ‘was condemned in a paper read to the American bllim“? ‘or p" “m o mo" College of Physicians, New York. The speaker, Dr_ James L. McCartney, psychiatrist of the Vocational Institution at Cat- skill, said that suggestion is the oldest form of medical treatment. “A physician," he said, “may not realize that when the patient comes to him for help he is willing to bare his very soul if given by Dr. Allan Bates, mun- necessary. Every word and action of the phy- sician is seized upon, and without realization the the wegflnghguge 319cm‘; Man“. e than i5 akin to fracturing com any. Dr. Bates patient develops a confidenc infatuation or love. waist, patting the hand, or as I even kissing the patient or holding her hand dur- Is it any wonder so many are now studying to be- ing conversation." of our “rising hopes" come doctors? u a e With reference to what Mr~ Hemming says about strawberry export to England this is what Saint John Telegraph-journal says about the in New Brunswick tn" the sex of a baby with almost Great Britain or the smaller grade of New Brunswick ‘straw- f '::.::..*‘l::.:.*:::r'.':§:l..1l: =~ it» M» promoter of the provincial department of agri- culture. He says that large berries are not de- sired by the jam manufacturers of the Old that the market would smaller grades, which are always offered for said in large the fresh fruit season. English jam trade calls for a large tonnage of which is now supplied by mm; corresponding experiment last year: "A good market in Country. and he believes afford a. good outlet for N-B., quantities during processed berries, they are subject to a duty of try Exchange of Saint John. Before the fruit was mbjccted to t process. forwarded to Liverpool during September and reports regarding 8' Au and c price of}: pounds ($205) per l! 4 m! WWW‘ rcoiived for the lhiplncnb" The so-called ‘beside man- ner’ of some physicians should be absolutely dis- continued, such as putting an arm around the have observed, would be no subs tute continental Europe, principally by Holland, but nine pounds whereas Canadian berries enter free under the trade agreement of 193a. Mr- W. B. Gornall, Canadian government trade commissioner to Great Britain, first called the attention of ‘the New Brunswick department of agriculture to 4 the matter and last summer a trial nhipment was u, made, in which the department had the co- Amnnmm operation of the Grand Lake Strawberry Grow- ers’ Association and the Maritime Egg anal; Poul- 1n § f a E'- 5 fl- ln all 4,400 pound: of BOTH“. were gust and suitability a! the fruit for jam making were very enwuragl The ($45) oxide means pollngcal frlcnuuzl inning? PUBLIC FORUM morm%1tm<é at u‘ _ Q mnlflfl VG '_“uw§*d. . n ‘Lllllctllll In open (cf-tho Plltyllfl'ilf.hotflod9g_hgbwfl.lbb gilllllull N! 840°‘ ">118 “ma”! nun-u fr” 11mm. n; A ‘ “m; “m” um“ m!“ fbttb hlnd-hewn from n. 11113110 laun- Guardian don m n- m m!“ um 10¢. has been ven to c mum a. Qplllnll of - - "W"- W° 1mm: Museum of e Uulverslty ""'ll"i""l- - ‘1 3"" “Fl ""9 m of Vermont Welghlng several huu- ‘ “"43" “"7 ‘I "All" l“ ma’ the M) w“ m.“ by Wonderland” to chance for one ma. n am of Hartford, Vb, ‘mos: mum) nova m mmm- "Cb W“! I h!" m ,m__mhanse_ - MONTE!“ . w. a o cltllcn r ear-lug sanctum‘ lln-“Mofller of Thr " has cx- I ‘Puma? h m“ Jfibu‘ uotlitiio ‘around vwmu wed u palpable tug-m» not 1m- wwgkumlf: mogul-bliss) wlll ulfui street-I. Wltbout exception -thcy "lull 1n_Br1t-1ah urt-s. Where mo" in “um. u‘; any -cvery Chinese hem wears n ma‘ l; 11° "mm" W4!“ mllil- uedlwm u”. h u“ a“ b button that, cost from $50 11p m. t-r h: courts have menu: mum“ °m Y as 2"" t" "t"; t: w..."- lt.'."'.‘:t‘..."’.l“‘ .~ 3.53.1‘. “ht. " m» u» =3 U!‘ Ell OI‘ 8 - en OTC v ' ' "e mafia, buttons 1°1- me young. cs4: the l ltlmate ratlway fare. oousulmrwl l” ' 51ers. Thpyre called boycott but- P1"! 8! nom . l wst-s- o e buns and e proceeds sent toChlnl. l3!‘ l1- Wlemfl l5 ""016!" A 5116655110)"; to the medical aid fund there. - Vancouvcr Province. Report: urculafed In London wheat. market quarters that. there mlt 1a not a mortal th could y for 1t. lt ls. Ste: trig n rlde on a freight car. causing no injury. or loss to any one to meet, economic necessity, 1s neither a, moral crl even one under e Oode, where there 1s no talnt of criminal Intent. And the Code makes special rovlslon to suspend punishment. n such ment. defence plans and the buy- 111g 1n one day a total of 21 car- goes of wheat, representtnfl more than 4,000,000 bushels. It was the blgzest buying day in years. As re- rcLs reports that. government 1n- luence, exerted to increase food reserves, might have been responds- lble 1t. was noted that newspapers ln recent. days have criticized the government, as have the Natloncl Farmers’ union and housewives’ u- soclatlons, for not. storing food n- galnst a possible war. —I.acndon Exchange. The police magistrate of Colomb0 1s to be commended on the stop he has taken to combat the tout nuts- ance. The number of busybodles that congregate about the law courts are a menace to those who seek the asslltarlce of the law, and the sooner the blot on the lands- cape of justice Ls eliminated the be ter for all concerned. The as- sistance these people seek to lve suitors ls not inspired by alt tic motives. and ln most cases suitors are actually swlndled 1n addition to belmz mulcted for services rend- ered. Anyone lnterested 1n the falr name of the Bar wlll gladly co- operate with the magistrate 1n the attempt to clear the courts of a cases. Instead of raising money to pay the fine, it should be made a mat- ter for representation, I would thlnk by our Attorney General, to proper authorities to get the lads paroled. From personal experience I know the Hon. Mr. Howe, Min- Lster of Ralhlvnvs. ls a. just mun and quick to rlgllt a wrong. And, while he dtsavows, very properly, jurisdiction of the Railway Board, yet his Influence ls paramount. The Board, a: prosecutors, advised by hlm, wou‘d provide for release. The Hon. Premier Duplessls, hav- ing direction over Montreal mag; lstrates, could also 1n a few wor have them released. As a man 0f keen perception and high ideals I believe lf asked he would do so. While no government should 1n- terfere where their Ls distinct criminality, the red blooded, sptr- lt. of jus ice of the guardians of our citizenship. shoukl be ‘quick to rasent and clalm redress when an lnjudlctous maglstrnte overreaches the bounds of discretion against the mlsfortunes of poverty. Stowaways, which ls their of- fence, are usually given work to earn their passage, instead of be- ing branded and jailed as danger- ous criminals. of those who have legitimate duties there-Times of Ceyon, Colombo. “An important, Indeed. . ‘ “on- ary change," the Times (independ- ent) to-du called the new reduced I ‘mg Sh. em rate of tee raphlc communication JUSTICE wlthln ftiheu plielwglch 1x111 be- ‘ come c ec ve Apr-t . “ e new An EH30 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ n scale ls in effect a. wlse and far- Motherwbmree _ _ __ _ _ *5 slghted endowment of those multi- tudlnous lndlvldual relationships intertwined across all oceans, maintain that. ultimate unity of splrlt on which the whole commonwealth relies for its name purpose," the Times declared. harm" stern’ “' e ‘mmlm ° e u“ '5' ' the old rrillroad rolling m“m..w“3° B“? l“ New Ym‘ m‘ owned off on us for generations. the pa“ dllys which “mt l" Including the Bridge over the gfiuégundry w, ldlslfllnlntme- Hlllsboro, and everything else that th t .32 “Se 1m m” elelfmg some other place had no use for. o“: dot?!“ F)’ mémlll“! We “ash The latest report 1s that we are to m est-l “an 7' ne'er “m1” going to have a nlce second hand 1 m em w fin ey grow uv m" ferry from Mr. Dunning and the °° at; “"2, a V“ e 3"“ “'5 ‘"11 Government. This wlll no doubt be ‘anuft e‘ “as ‘a! u,“ weelk- A5 ‘ a wonderful asset to our National “f iw“ ‘e - e "undxevs ca“? Park and help our tourist traffic. a tremendous loud the ftrst of the I; the 30nd 0g 1-,“, 5nd. mo” ace?‘ ‘gllleuits maul“ “e 1'91"‘ interested don't wake-up we are "95’ le ward the ""1 °t m9 going to have another hand-me- week-“Demm F?” PR5‘- dcrwn. How about the Provincial Government getting busy and see- lng that this doesn't happen. At- tention Messrs. Jones and Mu- Klnrlon. SECOND HAND FERRY ‘FOB- WOOD ISLANDS? A mutation before the public jut cw : Are the Olympic games beneficial? Do they create that good-wlll between nations 1t was thought they ,wol.lld when the games ware commenced? lShcfld Canada take part ln the 1940 Olym- talc, or should the Brltlah Empire countries hold competitions as they I Lin. Slr. etc. TOURIST. TIIE EXOBBITANT FERRY RATES Sir-l read a. at deal 1n your do at. the present? Take any slde mp9} about “m, Q to gal-men; md _ ,, ou wish 1n this matter. You will ‘ d h°n° - m9 ‘W31 9°"- Ilnd lots of backing on either side wflqpiggke-tfilswfiysibifid m: mm“ u“ mutual)“ l.“ of the argument. Perhaps, haw- ever, most of us are not sufflzlently m, w wwn wtm paying 8lr,-M1¢ht 1t not be worth wbtlc nerous peo‘ c to preserve s valuable con- made refer- 5's‘ In E- F. O I fi i? a s 5. the brfdge?" I have no doubt but that such a preservation 1n book form of one hundred and some pages, contain- 1n the arguments bro and con and enl ed to some utent with bographlcnl sketch of the several authors would be often re- ferred by readers looking for inspiration and a‘ao by those who would be interested 1n observing the plla-blllty and nlcctles of our language. The strong point tn our currl- culum Ls that. ll. ls always funda- mental and possibly cultural while the new learnlng or that suggest- ed by the reformers. although cul- tural ls not always fundamental. It 1s often qulte fanciful and the Professors do not always ee 1n the ldeu or theories they vancc. We should take into consideration that. the chlld mind la nut lnclln- ed to dwell on theories. The child 1s practical. Only those who have finished work take up those arm-chair studies suggested by ogreaclvu as they must. be able separate the wheat from the chaff just. as 1n reading novels. I said Professors do not agree. Here ls an example. Some wlll fell you that. ln prcservl wood-lots the younlz trecc shoul be cut. out so that. the larger ones wlll grow better and that there will be less danger from flre. Others wlll teach the very opposite. Th will say that 1f n farmer wan should cut, the larger trees and leave the smaller ones to grow, that; when the smaller trees are cut out the larger one; will trrow and the wood when the forest. ls w thick there 1a less danger of lrc spzeadlxp; u the ground keeps no open spccu carried by the wlrld. I wonder 11' we were cullln our poultry or our herds woul we cull out. the young ones and keep the old. I notice "Old Teacher” ln hls letter where he approves of mathe- mcttds. etc, being taught, 1n our scohols leaves Iatln out. He will not go very far ln mathematics when he wlll come across au words u aubtrahend. mlnuend, o 1.1130351, undrcnt, mantlssa, etc, of In I am. Blr. e00. M. McN. ___..____- FALCONWOOD "Bulb-PEN" Bin-I notlcc. by statements 1n the Home. that Ilhlccnwood 1a m- der dual management. which 1a not. nrovlruz catlsfoctory. Now the public ought to be told " the ercctlorl of who m ... that out-dated and lomr flme con- aummcr, I was astonlshed to sec an tnclocure. after the numner of . which enables the d, ntaztentcrlecscoa. mentupf at. French Xavier Oolleeu 0 . The dc c nroceu 1n cducplzlon 1a by c WI! fill? 1| m " T.“ mark have round that: way to cw- nomlc independence nus llfc lulled In a study cl 51:1 Ideas and hO a 11nd th f in Zhe 11130116810118 hi! “m ulimzml and more flnn- g flxed in hi5 mind. other: l. a germ of llfe and has e power of vast. development. It ls the cell of the new organic economy. am, Sir. etc, EXTENSION STUDENT Klnknra. P. E. I. n A NEW SLATE Slrr-‘Ihe opening eyes‘ of the sane: portion o1 the “tblr-y", looks lLke n. gleam of light and nope for the unfortunate vlctlrru; of Uberal taxation. If we are to have a new 1 Phoenlx from the old wreck. w th views such asex- l-Ion. J A. Oampoell, Stewart, Hughes and others, waft. till next session for the boon? Why not commence the relief at. once. with its enormous saving? As liberals often spend their en- ergfes formulat. slates and poll- cles for Conscrva ves, why not 11.50 eater grounds of reason. and end a suggestive helping hand tn form! n better mlnlstry out. of the dc ls of the heap? Economy being the lrsf. essential how would 1t be to una a three major jobs into one. on. .1. Walter Jones Premier, Mlnlatcr of Education and (as formerly) Presl- dmt. of the Council. Be a B. A. and a practical author an business man. he could ftll the btll. the!" Mr. Stewart 0r Hon. J. A. f-lesslon, pom; Mtalnst the whole multitude mould. be able to handle the job o! Attor- ney General wlthout a rettlnue of costly assistants. If they didn't want. tn retain the C. P. W. present incumbent, he has done some Federal klcklrlg and 1s 811110“ Hllzlble. Then mere are such M Llnklefwr. Barbour and Hu hes, and no doubt others rtpe for 510cc onors. They would have mater-la] such as Dougal McK on. 0r Mr~,- alrmle of s re material for Clerk pad“ the 0 ctr minor offices of Arldtherclsafcellngthatthe overworked should be relieved (11 Loan and other Boards an as Rood 11’ not: n better service seemed ‘Ihece are suggestions. when the men of lr own policy I am. w offeredmua helpfwtal Llld DIODE. v G -. wan: ma MONEY ins take a turn the other way. with wnded Phee for the Speaker's honors, and u Open revts stats formulata tum“,- m 7corr:E What do the neighbours say‘! Check your cx_ perlerlcc with theirs. Each day we give you exactly what. some oth- er Marltlmcr took the trouble to all. down Write and mall to "5: They are simply sincere expressions of pplnlon b)’ People keenlylnter. eated in Coffee, in the same WI)’ 85 You are. Hlllllt, N3, "l lsh to than} lnfrodiiclng u" bu; wean’: on the market to m. We are "f! fond of Coffee. but RED RQSE has made u; [n] we mfmhmi-lllycn. It n‘ ‘nu’ ‘b0 I110!‘ II chug lovwui n" l0 Iflqitlon the ely coffee aroma. We 5h3l| file without. RED R055; T. H. ESTABROOKS, CO» LIMITED Saint John, 8.3. seem that the principles of the co- Olleratlve are not tnoroughly 1m. derstooo by, at. least. some of the members. These producers and consumers (lo-operatives are no; flykby-njgm, IND-holes left as exits, when the“ >wn~nrlva1e needs have been at- i to. but societies bullt upon a llrm loundat-lon of education of tho lndfvtdua-l. and upon the Rochda-le prlnclplec. I wonder docs the honor-able lzwt-lemn who spoke of educating the people know what. those rin- cl lea stand for? Has he ever fink. 11D the 015111 of the Rochdule method? Or the originators, the 38 new downtrodden weavers, who in 1844, surfed wltb All their my. uh looted to the Ownuipera of All about them. or has he f owed the mova- lmslhud. tomb-settling" nZL-u, Sweden. l0 the United sum, to Canada. hu he notlced whet. ouemttm 1s doing Nova Booth? If he wmh he I13 eully avail e Or I118!) tine. and caulking lcr E __ “"'_ cu-u to uound nu n an tru-zutsgatrm" gmgt" mum-w? awn-k to the fac phat. the d $9M!“ “ll ofreckon lsdrawlrlgnear d,’ °° mlhm m the can 1d admission Hon. '15,,” l“ " “Mlgllnnwi "1 "1' um‘ l u (not u“ “Bugntffilhllllonly null;- ‘m: ram-g are the Jlkhus and 1 gxrp m. n“ mnikuwn m‘ u? tlhxmxfiefif” to the hearts of the numbers. was thtpubeet. review of the ‘WM our well informed w express a sensible _ _ w w early 1w much. wit-h I h mm“ . u» olltnlon- The Olympics are certainly i‘r““€Z°’h§3m‘§°l§ nseegabrvfearil “ii: “u- Th“ “m4 m wmfmé,” iiloliethe uesiliuu The one "fly ind“- “m” M‘! “Y °“ “l ~ not msponsl“ for condltlorls tn my a5 cents, Murry g r person fmtealméalmflmwm“ l” ' 1n my," g w,“ n NW l" hi! I19 o nut put Germany, Italy, Austria or Ohlna. goes wwn and has godo wlth- memmfum‘: tnflmem tlcn was that. deplorable hlnt. to when”: u’ l‘ t u” w‘ but. they also have done little for out his dinner 1n order to y. his It i‘ we“ fins“ m“ m G°°d_ m“, . mm“ Wtlvu an a wldh the 14m foster that good-wlll hoped for. fare on the bout. I see by iii: pa- mo” 1mm“ vlsltstton upon the t9‘? °1 N10 oer bhpb m. 11. 1-1. 00x, . 1.. A., “w,” cane! They belong u, ,, our h , m, p, "gnu glfl- M be een teams represent- thlnks a great. deal of our Premlcr. m“ EM map.“ safety of our gm; and dnghu" m‘ "1 lfllf-b. it me I)‘: When the petition went Ln for West why Sh“, m,‘ mo, “mm” by exact , undcr rm cover of wwlgfim l‘ W" m4 “mule us as an Empire than and North Rlver bridges he was Mlwhbe m mo" governmen control, another t not mfmd m“ w "m" 7M ‘n those 1n which the whole world stro y opposed to them and his ‘onumw u; m“ ma,“ p“, upon the ltfc blood and the ragga ,,,,,,,,,,,,,;'°“' °l °°'g'i""u°n- " l’ engages-dhirham Chronicle. "l" l“ Qmwe turned 1t down. by? I, u , w?‘ , m“, or ourepeonle m: the funds needed mm,“ mm“ ‘h m"! W" ;lrow% £41111; play V‘?! us 1310 brldgcs m m. m, “ma o, g f“ The 102th co ' a .0!‘ m. e a neede . mnn ' mun t 515d If nutomoblle bodleu ton nan they put. 1n that boat ande the cocci Danni?‘ “,§’,,,“,‘,‘,',',,F gum “m” d merit shoiiltd aurdvmmld. ‘fields: m o‘ 1hr“ “lumY- “d ago were as strong as automobile of running her dally would go a ‘ m‘ tlon to soc that to t ‘T500811 m‘! "m m" Imp" l“ bodies are t-o-dav. they would hive 1on1: why towards bul e ' ' P335334“ more out; o; mm m; g “o, 3m H "118 w factions We been three times as heavy. TlllS was brl . We have to pay taxes just. . real deflclt. 1c more than this) he ‘m pm l” “n” m" one or the new nonttechnlcal facts llke obher people and pa that ex- “Um, cums - would have to cell at least thme “hmmldm “mm” "l" tortlonate tax besides. 11y that la __ _ ttmcs as much booze as they are m m o‘ e1‘ lamb" “d w a er of the chemical and meb- justice 1 leave 1t m eve falr- suumdutm g the mom“ how dlstrfbutlrlg, and thls would "M ‘k’ °" ‘M’ l" °° Y‘ alurglcal research department of minded person to decide. rha mgrfimem o’ mum" In. m, p“ moan three tfmos the number of aw mm l“ m wm m‘ m“: “'6' ft 1s what. our government cafe ma; “moon m‘ mam,“ o! the debauched homes. three time: the m’ ‘t u” “m” the l” ‘hm " ° °"‘ "m":- l“ ‘e’? “m” “l” nest. and opens no the hidden 1mm; fightba- and dune of hlshwny ac- fifimafl,“ Qfdggtm m" a‘ 0 8n . three time; "mm ° t. Come on, Conservatives, and give lalned that. mproved methods of . and we wtll vote for reatln steel permitted greater stren t and elasticity per weight. unlt hnn was possible only a. ew years ago He redlcted there for steel, as had been developed for other metals, because steel re resents ab: per cent. of the compoa tlon of the earth's surface and was first. a- mong metals for strength and elasticity. -Hamllton Spectator. us the bridges from th tax 0f the not be so bald. I lilfgoifilriltri" LIBERAL Nlne Mlle Creek, April 16, 1938. "Tn: EASTER BUNNY seams" 8113-1 read 1n Saturday's Guard- lln the letter "Alice 1n Wonder- . Being somewhat. o1 ma teacher I immediately concluded 1t would have been a delightful ahantasy for the Grade V offer to his dear teacher. But, of main objective, an ascertain, was to ll in. finunlt: that Mr. Trainer's soc mo- t 1t would The average British mother can now choose between glvtng birth to a boy or a girl. British doctors have discovered a system of flx- 100 per cent. accurac . In one ton- don hospital, lt. f: c ed, ‘l5 out of 100 mothers had their wishes or a girl gr filed. The ac e naruc ons yen em. u th 1 fildtiioi Cain “iii “- Th,” m, mew“; efnp o,“ m“ Prohtbltlon Act, 1n advocating the on the belle! that. the chemical er and 1n th composition of the mother's body controls the sex of her chlld. Wo- men wlth marked acldlty ucunfly bear girl-children. If alkali pre- domlnntca the babfu are boys. By increasing or varying the chunlcll contcnt which can boflmc slm- the onl! Viv 011$- My cont-rlbutlon to the prom at. m- cmm m, g y, b; this time l1 not to 111cc the n: entc with flu lyntem, BN1 Ind 1t ti: un cmtood. are be com cu but remiry of this Island. wock" malntclrls that our learn- gg ‘fraud, MI]. Txllftmhfl, suggau B 9 P0000 o vlnce drink Away our huge deftciitr-It j; ln the press, he lhould be able to arlnn m r and ll!‘ (If printed tly) can a y be termed "chldlsh wattle". e fut that Mr. ‘lkolrlor l; a mm- oller. that he I ' I V00! C propose‘ for lack 549"“ tyAfnluth m ‘m m’ attractive - upcnmoofbnrandwtnehiotu mfg?“ not tuattfy luch a OvIr butcd Jobblrwock mut- You. If the -wou.ld cxem t. us tanner: m, dkzzW cogiluatom Whlflh ITO III “m. t, Mm Mntnl Waco and ct. cum u- of the future. Scientific lnveatlgc- Learn even 1n the udvuiced ears of whellfpl.) ‘Ilheedbist- plane to £8111 la Il Q I18 U1‘ Q - that. need 1a uultc evldenm B, . Youuu men and women who, through no fault. o1’ their own, have not. recelved an education that. flta the study the man.‘ who mlllht. have a education. wlll 11nd kl c. stu club, that there are mlmy things e vet. to team; For man 1a a scclul hllmlutfil‘ °“"’."‘.‘hl§°“°u‘l%l‘ ‘l2 onmen o ‘ac ea ot-tnlncd. This form of ‘ucotlm can be and la helm brought m the peopic oflhlterncanodathro hthcme- dl f th 5t Clix. ofulrlfotomor: 1.11:1? twelve mambo‘ "our: to discuss the nouns 302mm 5nd wlntcr mm for uurptlel autpcv and discuss . Qcmo enthusi- m th , . Ngtnmmtnlcm ntmcrvlncnnddl Alltficlbdvll-mlfllmazlvcn are: mernblccmcn month 1n I ted ctlnp mung-g filth». ndiiegmcnl nu! 1n" nut of their atudv an dimmed. It h n16 that. the llblfl! the lub-ctructun of I ttons have proved that. a man can h‘ Lbenl coeds u» mftfifihw. t" to alm 10f mlx of um . mu k "lflmifldwendchocgflof. lid” m" .lowl.whorcm unprotected bymtacf mtutflcof uybavethcb- mmgpm . 01mm ucomcrto bqond duorlbcc lllomc e t.h ol so run 5.1 $2.3.’ per cent enforcement,’ the 51m. atlon 1s tug _ ma: I mnalnflffltllllh without fur But "Where has the money one?" It. would take a lot of space d5- tall the whole. Lat u; take m, Unlt as an tndcx. Mr. Jones and gather? m letting some of the kit- na 00cc. On embq M”, Millun budeetail ‘fir: a smbllysdeflclt. but. ulslead ft was #3781190. It. was ml’ 5°- “Ml/fill”! Wfla 1n power for 0n! e ht months of 1935. ‘The Llb- falimg :31; renmgslllfl four, or And how was 1t. made up? How dld it happen? In more than eight $348.97, or Qqm _ u Maclllllau cunt month w. i mmlméntafollow details and make ll: tlcally uaawciimatfugufi. llflllllfllhlbl M an onllutflit. I mm, 811-, etc. ‘IAIIAIII ‘ TRIO -O N Ulfr-KI b!!! to d)’ .. doubled sale of liquors and doubled b,“ 2:201’ dloek. 1t. pecomec monoton- Now as for the honorable mam- addgdwhppenre glorryfng about the e nae aaupcrvtaonsure- l.v the amount involved wmtd be “will wmm-red with the amount of good 1t. would do 1n encouraging mrbllc confluence in the movement. Another member states he has stud] d o-opernttves, and most. of them faLed. May we ask h1m how many o these were founded on the Rochdnlc principles? True there has been some failures, but. remember fhlc 1t was the people behind 1t who lulled,’ no he movement. Next we come to the member zhofllzafilbllfil fniiti “n ed iv- o c co-o ratve shareholder-g! because De . AN IDIAL fhllffilunh confirm”) Gtvomcomfrltltotcnthhltfdl ‘ no 1mo|t.'_%1|§1l|flflodw1thn numb lit. all-yank Imflc: Ill ‘mltlhcdrtallcntcnnmdhnrbll 1on0 ' humanist ‘lion t a Taculmmtmuun Whit lh CK blll fiegeuzl"e~ “- ‘ghg 111% a-utfittfi, mu mam the 80015010014 nut piano-town" I010‘ nuttobtul-nlfkiwlilrrcuanl-