w. .tl .__ »-.“»¥§.», ¢ f 1; . /Ji ff. 4? (4.3 .¢@,¢..' t \ i yi 'Fw ll d CAIIN ‘ ill 1*!-imcftnisrrovhsa aaaagvrsuefsaemamr- toGnsh.tourlum|hedyaara @.P!§'&h\a!¢lobearvingthis ummsrthaannfvenaryolcartiara \\ndireat0aso».&i°h»¢.ansdne h@Il,andincmnactiuithas'e- mmaneiloet has bavetba will iitigif §§§§§§@§§l -gitéflégig tri ire ta. umenta Chariot , eunpmad of granite stones, some vkht or ten feet in height, suitably inscribed in both French and Eng- lish, to commemorate Cartier-'s land- ing in Prince Mward Island. Amurance has also been obtained that the steamer which will convey lie didinguished visitors from France to Ga-Ive in July, will call at Charlottetown. It is planned to have tha Cutler cairn omnpleted U time for its unveiling on that oc- msitn. This will give added hia- toric interst and will centre the attentlm of two continents on the Iunctim. lt is but fitting, on the occasion of the GIIDC celebration, that Car- tier`s prior visit to Prince Edward Island should be duly recognised. It will be recalled that Cartier, after first visiting Newfoundland and the Magdalena. obtained his first sight eftbisIslandats\msetonJune29. 1531. He saw two jutting points of land which were probably Camp- bell's Point and Cape Sylvester. I- bout five miles west of East Point. The two following days were ment by Cartier and his men in cXDl0l’iD¢ the north and northwest shores of lbs Island, which they mistook for the mainland. They landed at sev- nal places, and Csrtier’s own words iittingly express the pleasure which they took in the scene: ‘All the said land,” he wrote, “is low and Plain, .ma tnefau-est that my possibly be lem. full of goodly meadows and trees.” ' gg-gg; may sailed northward to inramiau ans asm. wwe, di ,m|yps,l5I4,heerecteda¢rulei/v that me mls mls we ur- nehl in the nams of the Kin! 0* trance.; 'na definite am or the arrival er @ Prnt) steamer here. IM °°\\' ggtly the unvcilih¢ of the Car- hg me yet been ascer- be some time in the and in the melli- weathm' eondii-im! gnangsmalihforcouatruc- @`¢¢r|amennrklvillhlD1'°' i."*“"‘§___.__ 'ff U. s. rumors I r iil‘ 'lug Ere Ytik sf r;f EEE gilt;-;li it kit it it ew of Revllil rom which we WSW a considerable numb!! in the United States who about barkinl. but we have thousands of men runninl 1°' iw could not qualify 1°' g a branch bank of them are re- : Ned farnnrs, and others have Tbaai mon” l¢‘°¢¢f| °" *lm* m“" ,f het speculawn or buchet-lbw .traders lacking both the eswii-l°»1* "ef character and the bsckvound of training requisite for bank man- g¢¢mQt_ Suppose Nd tllnct ®lIl9» with the bank's resources mwad out ever un neighbourhood 11-mir in -loans to farmers And suPP°l° something happens to ffiihllll 5°' passion. 'rm burr has w ima in dean. and the slow process of ill!- aadm or mm bonu- 'Hill would ' not have IIN ll arm §§_§§?.t_g, liiiiérl titer” lllgislg --,~ SAFETY AT SIA -c'-on snow." Il ‘il istli Dir 'liall' dl-UBI* ati h fi IJ), |‘, ll it gli! ill ¢lihd@1£inroadm|. Qmdmilmswnaxeashadmdb- aslolvilvnatsca vd'¢idn\iill~ IrapovHlmhotill dfedive atthbvginningdhemlmtyear. tihthrthhomvmiim agreat direction of crusty; 3%; E :§§§’ §i§a§;E§a!*E; Egéfgggiggsggggig §§i§i§§§§l§.§alEl moretbans a24-hour watch. tionbeminforooinl ifornlan"wouldhave of theiact thatfhe sinkinmandprobably life considerably the seven seas today are approxi- mately 10,100 ships directly affect ed by the Convention. Out of a great disaster has coma about a greater margin ofsafety for those whogodowntctheaeainahips. THE BEST SECURITY Ons Profsaor Arnold J. 'I\:yribee. writing in “Pacific Affairs” (Hono- lulu), says: “In a war ntwcsn the United States and Japan. it is not improbable that the canadian Gov- emment might be confronted with the choice between inviting the air, _naval and military forces of the United States to occupy and defend British Columbia. and Alternatively seeing this outlying Province ol the Dominion threatened by Japan in a Japanese offemive-defensive movement to parry a United States air attack upon the Japanese lin- pire from the north-east. This no- tionwillncdoubtbeaounpalat- able to Canadian minds that they willbetemptedtodlsmissas quite fantastic the suggestion that in a Japanese-American war, Canada might be doomed to play the part of Belgium in 1914. All the same. one lmglish observer. at any rate, feels decidedly more comfortable in having his hams in Yorkshire than he would feel if he happened to be domiciled in Vancouver (a fa- vorite resort for retired nzglish naval and military officers and civil servants.) llcreovr, this same Hidlili observer has noticed that. even when a Canadim has just been enlarging upon his country's special security, if the ligliahman pub to him abruptly tha question of what would be &nada's attitude and position in the event of a Jap- anse-Ameriean war, your Canadian. caught elf his guard, almost invar- iably answers that, in audi a war, .Canada would ‘iumv in with both feet on tha American side!" This kind of misinformation may be flattering to our United States neighbours, but it certainly does not represent Canadian sentiment. Nor' does it tabs into accormt the fact that than is another "navy" which would have something to my in the event cf Brithh Columbia. or any maritime Canadian Province being attacked by a hostile power. We refer to the armor navy! CANADA’S HOUSES Aretlnnjlitnldepisbllcbythe Dominionhureauofltatisticabl- ed rm the latest Dominion oenls, showst.hatthereareinCaned.aa total of longer dwelling rm” uaedashomes. rorthepurpcsaoithhreokoning an spar'tmentlu1ildingismega.|-ded ssonehoueenornsttarhowmany families it may contain and this mayexnlsinthofaetthataocording toatati|tiu,rah¢maathnhalf ixirililiitiuztigtgf “-i:=s iiriitegi it liiigiitiilli ilerliilé §r§i§§E‘ gg; liilfl s slggé $35 dwelling has 11|,- B syasad if ~ gill; kit § I as u D. P By The Way 55? 3?? e§i‘§§§l iitti lillihl l@§lC1 §§?§§§E§l 3§5§5§§§§§i§E;§€ éiéggéggi 8%; §S§EEz§ Egls E.. f|r.§§§§;;=§§§,t;;\ 1": gs .= ‘ u ggluulllhuiil Province ef 0n- problams, plenty general position hen contrasts are eoxmtries that country stands ering strength. will come colors flying. Canadian banking showed isa heels to American banking during tha depression. Not a bank failed. Not a depoaitor lost a penny. Now Canada takes the lead again. It plans a new. Government-controlled central bank of issue. All political parties unite in the proposal to have the nation manage the naticn’s credit structure-problem we have not even begun to face in this coimtry. The Canadian central bank tebecaliedthenankof Canada, will do precisely what a central bank do for the United Btatcst B to follow the lead of Can- oose Federal Reserve Sys- ycle built for twelve, will go careering from one side of the road to the other. until the next in- evitable crash into the ditch. §§§§ tri Anyone, aays Gen. Matthew Ai- ams, can tackle a good Job and complete it to a certain degree oi satisfaction--but it takes a. man with a certain sparkle of genius to his makeup to willingly take hold of a bad job and carryolt through to completion without sing his sense of proportion toward life‘s values. Everybody seems to want tc side- step the bad Jobs. And this at a time when there are more bad jobs to perform than good jobs! There 'are enough oi’ both, however, to go round. Italy, Austria and Hungary sign- ed a pact some weeks ago. Sudents of international affairs may see in this move the hand of Mussolini grasping for the reins of power in Central Europe. Friends of France will view it as another guarantee of Austrian independence and a fur- ther check to the German Nazis. Certainly from the economic point of view the agreement has little or ho meaning; Italy can buy little or nothing from either Austria or Hungary, and the foreign markets oflered by her Adriatic ports are negligible. ` Supposed to be both an education- al and a sensational aint, some CIIIGIKO millionaires are lnving a dining room in the new Union Lea- gue Clubhouse papered with stocks and bonds once worth a million dollars and now wwth less than decent wallpaper. This "Million Dol- lar Room, or the Folly of 1929." quite appropriately looks out over C‘hics¢o'a stock and bond center in la Baile Bt-rect. Ons feature common to many speeches and letters to the press dealing with the subject of middle- claas careers is an insistence that education shall henceforth have as its obieot the ability to earn a liv- ing. Usually the term "vocational training” is used. a term that is in danger of becoming a catchword. We agree that in the s;nse given above it la a crying need in education, though it ia not necessarily synony- mous with manual tralning for which wmkshcpa complete, with benches, lathes and the cobblers last,areasine quan11i»h`f:\n$3"k:nf al-mm; me me sem" ' ' Mmcm~www»w»wrrMwrm~"uhrmrrhcu ‘T§fl2‘,2‘,f‘“ ‘° ‘““""‘““‘ “ ’°°°°" f§°l¢`:s°»fl`.fr¢" ilfld'§<§1.aligm mu; ~ bulletin mum by the 'N-' rl very rare. The treatrrlent consists of freedom 1°‘d°d' d°““"“¢' W" “mat 1”' "mu °°mmm‘°' Th' Jem” N" from won-yxomplete phyucu "_ evitable. For this reason he was U03!! Fund- WMC!! bl” 1-“ld ill 1u,M°n_ ,mm doses at cuomel md not_ anxious for the early arrival of P°l'D¢ff\l1'-Y 101’ the Jewish D0°Pl¢. mom “lm , mm, d1¢¢,_,,,¢¢ W1- the GUNNY and was not following and which may never be sold. now ed an muk_ chicken and mh_md her movements closely. owns $7.000 acres in Palestine. This me use of “nam medycmu m¢¢m_ The only reason that we were land is leased to Jewish settlers who ally,and pastes or ointments to the f°11°Vi!l8 the Association boa; at lmust work it themselves, thus elim- ¢rupr,l¢n_ Bt. John was to ascertain when the mating absentee landlordism and Tr.. lmemu medycr-re, m mm- ourmv was leaving that Port asispecumlen. A tem or 24.ooo lc, quinine, phenucetin, sqm-in, we had no intention of letting anyi ish children are enrolled in the camphor and other, given undef mg boat into the berth at Georgetown schools maintained by the tupervmw or 5 physieim were me somnaoo. whim waslageney for Psluune ma The external or outside treatment then at Bouris. and which we plan- mately 12,000 are in private consists in trying to prev; me sed on move to Georgetown imrne- infant mortality was 86 per blisters from bursting. Opening the diatoly we knew the GUNNY\had among Jews last year. as blisters is considered unwise as it left St. John. |102 per 1.000 among the often leaves an ugly scar. Mr. Boulter was well acquainted lation. Construction One of the preparations used with these facts and why he would petroleum yeggrvbiy-g under soft gauze is alcohol, whi<.i‘is make the statement inferring that and Acre, employing Ovcred with Oiled Suk to prevent if his host had left st John four workmen is about to ian 2 - . be evaporation. Lime \\'atcr,hla& wash, days earlier it would hav!! GOD- lowing the laying of pleted loading at Georgetown ia difficult to understand. The Associations boat loft R. .lbhn with instructions to proceed ta Buirisund it was any when they brned our boat was frozen-in at that they wfrele_d the %!'cnDecember2bthtopro- oeedto of Bouris. Let I consider what would have he/'ppehcd had the GUNNY left Bt. John four days earlier. Immediate- ly we knew, we would have moved the BCLHAUG from Bouris to Georgetown. That would have been Q Sunday December 24th. 'l'h_e Pohto Growers Assoclat|on‘s boat would have arrived at Bouris on the Nth. would have loaded potatoescnthe2‘fth.a.ndinall' probability would have met the fate that befell our steamer at Bouris and remained here all win- ter. ma pomible that. due being at Georgetown. boat at Bourls would cleared when she be- aa was the case with the Potato Growers would have had to pay delmltralo all Winter. This would have amounted to more than $15.- 0®.00, which, plus the lou on the potatoes that would have been loaded cn December Tlth., would have Bought their losses up to nearly lll,®0.00. They saved this large amount of money as a re- sult ef the G-UNNY caving Bt. John em December 21th. instead of December 33rd. what a different result to whst Mr. Boulter has en- deavoured to portray! Regarding the other - questiass raiaad by Mr. Boultor on this ver! contentious subiwt Oi IMI*-0 ml-\" ketingwaieelnothinl isio bs gli by continuing this discussion. We have already told our side of the gory-Kr. Boulter has told his. It fa up to those interested to draw their own conclusions. We an. Sir. etc. ASSOCIATID BIIIPPIID INCODPOIATID I- 0. Mehllrlsl Manager. § t reg? iiiéiii The Pots And The Kettles lathe war .E ati; Canada is to ha restoration of made great progress sin under the British mandate extent to which Jewish effort is contributing towards the social and across the Mesoptamian the Mosul and Oaum The Anglo-Palestine the end of September, ls and current accounts U0.W0_‘mm / 'Del . the Jewish metropolis of Palhtlhe, hal a population d $900. This city, whose drigln and development are declared to be "the outstanding event in the Heart lhst", has about ll.000 separate bi-\ildi!i¢I» i-Mil-lliilil homes. factor- ies, schools, etc. Tel-Aviv bcaata a Jewish Flying Club. a radio broad- casting atation and is the locale of the Levant Pair. More than 3.0¢) industries, of which 1,400 are da- voted to handicraft, have been ea- tabliahed in Palestine by Jews, of whom 40.000 are members of the Jewish Labor Federation. Nearly ?0.0g0ofthaeworbeslare"onthe an .” repudiated their debts. some of them by conatiuttlonal amendments. 'éilexir bonds, worthlus, are atm in England. (me hates to revive such thlnga. Yet it rils to hear these American Congressmen talking about repudia~ tion: and besides, nothing tm we could say about them would be gg harsh as what is said about them by the best oriheir own pecpk. 5 Ee 5 i IIGS ‘ Slltlal RX. 315 Iii? lilrtllllaeauss ‘.1 -<- EZ- F liner' . *_ Q23* e '¢¢!@Q fhlfirfovv I'.ls.."'$§s-an-» "-’ q»...""’ “" Qu . tavaueprdhgto .'l'bav&sah1lll!yi\|n.t: ms pd_es is so small that the my inset quality coats the average iamily only a iew eau” ll°l’0 per year. YougetmonoutclGO0Dteain every ways more flavour, mon energy, more refreshment, more pleasure, more cups, and ao, more .conomyx a truly inexpensive luxury. ferving GOOD toa ls a delight.-any ima, anywhere-aa a aocra rite or homely hospitable gesture-with meals or between meals. Everyone can enbytbeincrilavour and unfailing roirealiment of GOOD tea, available la all the leading packaged hands. THE CEYLON 'l'EA» BUREAU How to Make GOOD TEA Salas ‘GOOD k d small'-l:a! tea. fl-Sh water. Warm up a clean te t. P 1 f"“r:r:.rn;..a moua p eachmp and onaiotthepot. The mouaenttlrewatsreoulea toa boil,pouriten the tea. Lettheteabrew five minutes. ' l \ “Q anon p. i §.t i USE. DR. FFRENCIPS VERMICIDE _ CAPSULES TO ELIMINATE WORMS AND SAVE YOUR FOX PUPS NATAL INIISTATQK hfdad . rms lf; ;§i§s=;§;l§§§. ‘§‘~lr= E' EE; iii; dh? is lil HE ig iii il E r 5 V .zu iii Ei? *iii ii? Ihbsuasleagadsssut. llecnpdmlaloaad Hveapulvsillll. Na.lh\amUIilklL“- lltlyklliad lteapsulsslllll. . Pubsldtoanyaddrc. fl E. A. FOSTER Central Drugstore ! ldaAl\llUalDi\l1ll\d'!¢P.l.lli- =- i iii ~a__s rv Y E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. _ Agantat8omma'slda,Uo`yd Lewis -l46'Rlclnuond8t., .`CharlottetowD i -rrznvsra inisrst-