THE (HTARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE FUUR ECT ' I N l T C d‘ I ' I Ofla 0 9S I i i’ The Charlottetown Gordian llotes By The Way . N0 more direct relief. ‘a “ Jolntnahsts ” PUBLIC FORUM h more.“ IJuL-Ool I onu- n nun Th l f 0d‘ "' l pgscgdflaggoogouggn mblisleeliarn; RGHIIIIISCCHCCd darn;- xngul-azzflf vm-Pvulaue. J. l Inna. l‘. J. l. e 35! ° 11 8° l‘ Tclnil- grain a year and support 178,000,000 The Amlhnmwr o’ Th. nus-WIN "f ‘mm’ Quit-angry Unt- Col. h. A llnlhlnl. ll. I. O. i nut-n ma lounging Dun-tor I. I llilfll I- l- l \nodllr lldlton. run" wan ua b. l. cum llarnllg mo, iii-imam uni-ii one on yell ill “II” lsliuwa n (‘fly 04.00 nu you (ll odvllco) ‘filed b mun tun-m mud loo on nu (In III-It Hailed to Ounndn and Ullltol lhlll FRIDAY, APRIL, 30, 1937 The New Old Religion “hltxlern people will not stand to g0 cold and hungry and tagged in the ‘nope of storing up ll(‘**l"itj§ iii heaven," states .\liss Mary Brislcv, a teacher of siii . \‘ill'i.' in Llnion Theological Seminary. Nisw Yori who has had wide ex- perience in social \‘.ill'l\' in the Ynited Slates. and i. it‘ airing 1 i‘i~ Xlonireztl School of 5o- Regular Steam" Line schedules are now in operation. it The President of the Council should be safe- ly in England today. it i 1k Ill Ill The Lobster Commission resumes its sittings at Tignish tomorrow. i " it u a Stars in their courses, or the Aurora Borealis are playing havoc with the telegraph news ser- vice, according to the railway telegraph opera- tors. » i it iii a Congratulations to Mr- 1i. P. Ducliemin of the Sydney Post-Record on his election to the Presidency of that great ilews gathering and distributing orgniizatitin, tlle Canadian Press. n‘ ii- Charlottetown recorded the highest tempera» turc of all Canada Thursday, 66°, the next Iii-- ing Saint John and Montreal with 64“ carli. Toronto and Halifax did not get beyond 5o”. * d‘ i Professor Stephen Leacock, who was one oi Principal Morgan's “too old at SixtyV_ii‘|\l.. re. cial ‘i'i-i.... She H- :.~ the role llli‘ (hurch mus’ play in <iici:.i llil iii.i;i_i' it it is to continue to be ‘ a ti-t-iiil and neee-sziry institution. in the past rliurcl i-s ‘ we i-ocimrziqeil their members to en ihire L». ' .i i~ gill lririlsliip< in this lift- and h ‘\'l' ' 1i iii’ ii ilii- promi-i- of a iii.- ri-iiu-"il t" iiri- i" which i.- .'t lriise - ‘ill’ .i-~ no loiigi-i- w-ilhnq to l-. i i Wileriiigs. ‘ h" iiaee to human life today is y The tfr": "in » a sen-e iii .. ‘tlll‘il_\', a lack of a feeling of “'0l'lli\\'lllii"llt‘~~’ iii one's own right. and a lflCh of iii-i h-i; of he“; 'lt“.".lC\l and tiseful to other pCltlllt" lhi- l'1‘4i..\ of our courage lie in our Cflllsillvhtililll or‘ or rt =ponsibility for other peo- ple. Ldiiiiiipluyiiient, illness, and a variety of other social problems destroy our feeling of se- ctiriiy and take from us that worthwhileness ivhich lflllhCcflilS even our own achievements Insecurity tears down personality and com- pctency. In Canadian large cities the poor are begin- ning to draw away from churches, and in the United States fifty per cent. of the population have no church connections. This may be at- tributed to a variety of reasons but in general these are lack of money for the collection plate. lack of clothing to give a presentable appear- ance, inability to keep up one’: part in the church's social life, and lastly, the feeling that the church is no longer interested in them. The discouraged, frustrated, unhappy person needs the church and expects from it understanding and sympathy, and recognition of what he is go- ill’: through, together with an acceptance of him- self ns n person, and something useful to do. This person does not want pity. One of the most expensive kindnesses of which the churches have been guilty is in givng money as charity and pity. Pity is a disintegrating experience and destnictive to personality. Further, it is less devastating to a person to take money from a socialagency than from his church. People in trouble require understanding and, above all, a \Vfll'll'l human contact with other people. If people have fundamental belief in the brother- hood of man, churches and church members Wlll not be embarrassed by poverty but will have a deep human sympathy with people facing discour- agement, and will extend to them the accept- ance and fellowship which will go far in pro- viding that security which has been lost. The modern congregation must get away from Churchism, and back to the Christianity of its founder, who came not to save the righteous and the well-doing but the sinners, the social outcast, and the heavy laden. A Coronation With A Difference Every where. one turns in newspaper, magazine or ll(‘\\' hiioh to-lziyi, the Coronation holds premier place. Perhaps one oi the most remarkable gihriiiitiiieoon is the extraordinary amount of space and fa Fillllt‘ comment devoted to the event by thi- iii-irspripi-rs of the republic to the south. judaliiiq hy the special editions and daily edi- torial i'<iii-i~iiii<~i-<. it would seem as though our Civil-ill \‘.'l'l'i‘ ll<‘lll on outherotling Herod in ‘ Hwl t-ili-hraiing the great occasion. \Vc li: rt-criveil (‘iironzitiort editions of the the Christian Science have :i::i New Yorl: dimes, and ,\Iiii:iii.i-_ ljlllh of which zire of ontstatiding merit. .i\ ldlllllllll eorresiiiiiiiletit has a glowing ac- e d‘!" oi lili‘ atir zind hustle already evident in ‘iv’ l"i lilldtis ti.‘ yllfll. ‘ ' o .- a fr-"ivzil air as the lust ~ . ii I ii i':: tWii/rl-lll llilfpufllliilllli- he xiiui». “fviiiils line the rotttc of procession. Tiiiilii-r ~llltt‘llli't'< cover ili» flower beds on th/ l\l:~‘.l. ’l‘ii-rs of st-"ts lll(l(‘ iiie delicate tracery oi the lifdl~i\ of Pztrliriiiii-iit and wooden stands oli- seiirc the mellow" walls of clubs, residences zird government buildings, while the statues are eclipseil hy 1. "'i'(‘.\l of planks and poles. “Sirzni; i id s mingle on the street, in Pitca- dilly, in ‘iiy .. l':irl<' and unfamliiar voices ari- hcnrd in ilie strt- ‘ England has become the -. l'l ~ig ground for representatives of common the flllliill l.l' "‘l'l'llOl'l€‘S of which the linlliirt- is Composed. hi the person of its statesman. soldier or citizen, India is here. New Zealand is here, Africa is hcrtg Contingents from Canada. Australia, the Llriiti-il fliatcs are here or on the way and Lorvli i \'l'.'ll'S a more cosmopolitan air than it hr. .-.er done before. "But the dtii d" significance of the Corona- tion remains uppermost in the thoughts of the people. Visible signs are deceptive. The Coro- nation constitutes a land-oar}. -— the point at which an triitirily new era begillS. ioroiuiiion of George V. the map of the world Since the " ygime at McGill has just been ziwgrded the Lorne Pierce Medal by the hoyal Society of Canada for outstanding work in Literature. =r 4- Tlie last of the Citronatitm delegates to "fly ihi- coop" is tile esteemed Editor of The Patriot, .\[r_ l\'t’.lll)t'll MacDonald, who left by plane yes- terday en route to catch the S. S. Duchess of .-'\thol at Montreal. As a member of the Char- lottetown School Board Mr. MacDonald has a status entitling him to attend the Educational Conference, to which Hon. Mr- McGuigan and Mr. H. H. Shaw will also be delegates. F i l ' cairtitudng the world's only gum- Evidently the \i\’est is in for a good grain crop which should discomfit the pessimists. Fair to good showers practically daily at various points in Western Canada appears to be the first sign that the drought may be" broken. Prevai‘ing winds have been from the south and east. The border-line between drought and good crop- growing weather is so slight that it is almost unbelievable. Good rains at the right time are what is needed most. As tine farmer. or for that matter any farmer in the West will say, “Tell me when it's going to rain and I will tell you what kind of a crop I will have." And it has already rained most everywhere. iv iii i: It is just as well to have the other side of the picture in the pelt business, seeing we have for some time been developing an inferiority com- plex compared with Norway. Mon. Bank, pro- prietor of Ampolskins, Ivor, Poland, one nf the largest specialized importing houses in Western Europe, declared in an interview in Montreal Monday that “there is not the faintest doubt to- day in Europe that Canada produces silver fox, beaver and other furs of the finest quality and colour in the world" “Are European fur markets picking up?” he was asked. “There has been a. very decided improvement each yearof the last three, and we thinkthis one will excel anything since the depression began. As the fur trade was one of the hardest hit in the world, I think that is good news,” Mr. Bank added. Ill 1i According to the Bank of Montreal, reports for April business in the hlarititnes is remark- ably good. “Wholesale and retail sales are run- ning in excess of last year. Collections are fair to‘ good. Stocks of dried fish are low and prices firm. Woods "operations have been com- pleted and the cut is reported to be much larg- cr than last year. Lumber markets are strong. Pulpwood is in active demand at advancing prices. Paper mills continue operating at a high rate of production. Cotton factories and woollen mills are well employed. Prime fox pelts are bringing good prices. Production of steel ingots continues at capacity. Building trades in the larger centres reflect increased activity. Coal raised during hiarch totalled 347,585 tons as compared with 337,604 tons in March, 1936. Prices for farm products are satisfactory." >i=. =i< There must. be a lot of simps among the Scottish population of London, Ont-, if we are to judge by a news item carried by the Can- adian Press. Living in London 0r ticai- h) ‘lI'(' fifty-eight Scotsmen of the some name. The grocer hired n. new clerk, a s uilggrl‘ to the rom- lll\lllil_\’. 'l‘l~.e ii<-\veiiii1er’s first business trans- :ii"tioi1 \\'£l.\ to .~"-.-ll a ham on cit-d i. llc lllillllFlVl the last lllllll“ of the pufiia- r and got il- l‘- wris "lli‘ of llil‘ fifti" .1" which : llT giwiix-r coiildifl iiiiil'i,:t. ... r ‘lllll flier; ‘lit iuiestiim a‘. liiiuth, the grocer iniilly t"li:ii";_{i-=l the ham to all ihi- fifty-eight families, reason- ing that tli- w who hadn't got it would ilisputr the hill ztiiil by process of elimination he would arrive at ilii- r-glll party. \\‘hen he added up hi»: zieeiinnts some \\‘l‘l‘l\'$ later. he discovered ever} one of the fifty-tight except one had paid for the. ham. lt would have given zest to the tali- hail the reporter (ll>'C()VCl‘(‘(l that the one who did i 1‘ not pay zictitally got the ham. 1 d! * Mr. Itoebiiclt has not been saying much since his dismissal as Attorney-General for Ontario, but judging by the Toronto Star he has been thinking out loiid aplenty. It does not bode good for “Mich” and his colleagues to have Messrs. Roebuck and Croll in Opposition, any more than it docs for “Father" Aberhart, to have his former Provincial Treasurer in Opposition, The hitter, Mr. Cocltroft, Stettlcr, is now telling tales out of school. Revieiving his grievances against the | Premier in a statement to his constituency ex- ecutive, Mr. Cockroft said: “My position became intolerable.” Mr. Aberhart and certain mem- bers of the Cabinet persistently requested that‘ ;.--_. ,-i.-.,,_:¢.]_ Empires have fallen. Monarchs have gone. Poliical <_\'S'f‘Il‘lS have risen ‘and left its, '--,,,r--.§ rpoll ti ii igroping hemispheres Yet ll rough all the stress and strain, the kill?- ship of Eng" lltl h~< t lured an" now constituti" the rallying-point of qooooooon people spread over a quarter of the surface of the globe. t the Province sell out its sinkng funds, Mr Cock- roft declared, adding such a course “would have led to a misuse of trust funds and certainly a loss to the Province of $1,200,000" and would have been an action “against the common grin. ead of edible llve stock, not to mention poultry. fruit and dairy products. going hungry in thirty. five yes-rs’ time caJLs for a. lot of i imflzineuon. But. tuneful as it may seem 0o the man tn the street, it is} M31318 10s real than the posslblei Dally consequences of soil erosion in the Montreal Star and the Editor of The Charlottetown Guard- The uuummnwn osmium dun I" "unuuy adorn Ila WW9" 0| nos-nonunion!!- APRIL 30, 1937 i Studies, botany and agriculture, qll kindred stbjects and just. as essential t9 a complete‘ education of the minister, the professor 0r the doctor as it is to the farmer. We cannot drop Latin whtich ls an aid t» composition. We ‘ drop French for it ts commonly used especially the written French. We| ‘ dmp practical geometry for. SPRING TONIC BLOOD PUBIFIEB Mac's Blood Food A combination espectauy yfl_ uablo In the treatment m those diseases where m“, origin ls traceable to u, um poi/ensued condition of the inn Subjects of Recoil “‘ In a series of articles in the Chronicle, Georgetown, Brit- tsh Guiana. on his “Remlnlscences United smtgs,_'lbmngo Globe and or the Georgetown Press", "Shell- Back Mail. When an Indian festival ends the on the editorial " (Mr. G. H. Mclellan) a dis- tlngulahed journalist at one time staff of the i Village's $P°°P 8W8)’ on their bul- i Montreal Gazette, and who also l°°l< cfl-flifl. 511181118 their happlnem oyer the due performance of sacred rates and their memories of the fun of the falr. Very different was the lwmewa-Td Journey of the Mahratta Dllsrlms who attended the Mahari- eswarabetta festival 1n Coimbatore district. They were infected with cholera and members dropped dy- 108 by the roadside. Eventually a doctor arrived with a lorry and took the ailing to hospital, where more deaths occurred. Altogether 250 p11. grlms died of the d sense while re- turning to their villages. It is a tit-isle stoma-Calcutta Statesman. They used to be flve little sisters, tttplets. They are beginning to sound more like something listed on the stock exchange. The five little git-ls have aff liations as diversified as many Wall street bankers. They are in moving pictures, the news- paper business, dolls, dresses, drugs, soap, cereals, syrup and other foods. The Dionne quintuplets are chang- ing into the Dionne octopus-New York Times. From the first Hitler Ind his heart se. on completing his control of Germany, body and soul, by making a subject Church to order as a State agency and gradually eliminating all others. The Bolshev- ‘k doctrine 1s that religion 1s the dope of the masses and so must be obliterated. The “National-Soclallst" idea. which originated as a. violent reaction to Bolshevism, strangely enough harbours exactly thesame contempt for religion as its Russian enemy, but recognizing the instinc- tive hold rellgon has on the minds rod hearts or‘ men. it believes by comparison. ln providing them with a fake Church to keep them qulet,tn this case a blasphemous parody on Christianity based on the Aryan myth-Derry Journal. A South African ex-servlce man has supplied a new place for keep- ing a war souvenir. A K‘ruberley dentist. has had the amazing exper- ience of extracting the stump of n tooth from a. man's gums and find- lng a rifle bullet clasped tn his forceps. His patient had been suf- fering from sore gums for two or three years. Lately small ulcers kept forming in one spot, under whteh there appeared to be a lump. He concluded that it was the stump of a tooth, so he had it. extracted. It was actually a. bullet. which had des- troyed his left eye during the war. Hts eye had healed satisfactorily, and nobody had dreamt that. he was still carryng the bullet. about with him. It. ls believed that. the bullet lodged 1n the cavity under the eye and gradually worked its way down to the gum-Brandon Sun. The plain fact ls that. the em- ployment situation ls nearly back to the form of non-depression years. The huge sum taken from the tax- payers for unemployment relief 1s being largely spent ln subsidizing the loafer who has never known or desred regular work. Possibly the recent decision of the Ministry to strike off the dole list. those impost» ers who refuse private employment because the dole ls more attractive has been partly responsible for the more favourable unemployment fig- ures. If so, that is all to the good; but. it does not alter the fact that. the amount raised by the un- employment rellef tax ls actually higher than it. was in 1932, although the volume of unemployment ls only about; a. third of what it. was ln that. year. Moreover, it ls only reasonable to suppose that. the more industrious and deserving among the victims of the depression have new found work. so that. those still in receipt. of the people's bounty comprise largely the reckless and the undeservlng.—Melbourne Argus. Criticism has always been one of the main incentives to progress, and we are all" in favor of it. There ls, however, a fundamental difference between criticism and insult. which is why we resent, on behalf of citizens of Ottawa and of Canad as a whole, a remark in u. recent. is- sue of the Etigllsh weekly "The Aeroplane“ which comes well with- m the latter category. Following a . a ..c.-...:1r. of the ex- i'o.. ll . l museum ‘played an important part as an officer tn the Great War, makes the following comments with re- ference respectively to Mr. S. Morgan Powell. present Assistant Edltor-ln-Chlef of the Montreal Star and Mr. J. R. Bumett, now Editor and Managing Director of the Charlottetown Guardian: "AT HIS BEST” Mr. Cunningham did hls best work as Editor of’ the “Dally Chronicle” and subsequent to the death of the proprietor, Mr. C. K. Jardlrte. ‘Prior to i902, his style was necessarily cramped, but freed of the repression which his late employer's strict supervision 1n- volved, he could be himself, and people awoke to the fact; that an exceedingly able Journalist had arisen in their midst. "Have you seen that. damned flne article in this morning's “Chronicle? was an almost stereotyped and oft-heard question. The situation was not. without its humorous side for, ad- mitting the excellence of m. Cunningham's work from this time onward (or several years, many of The Chronicle articles which won so great a. measure of public appreciation and praise, were not from his pen at all but; were written Mr. S. Morgan Powell, a clever Englishman, whose style was so vastly different from Mr. Ctumlns- ham’s that. in confronting i318 W01"! of these writers no very nice power of discrimination was betokened. If anything, Mr. Powell had a greater command of language, far more descriptive ability and l keener sense or humor, but he was superficial, more entertaining than convincing at. all times; whereas Mr. Cunningham's work rested upon the more solid foundation o! careful thought, reliable ‘data and logical contention. In a. sentence, Mr. Powell sought to be amusing and was consistently successful, but. Mr. Cumilngham was ever seriously bent. upon scoring points. Mr. Powell dealt tn adrolt. subter- fuge to conceal defeat; “alliter- atlonls artful ald" was one of his many smoke-ccreens. I recall to mind an instance of this admirable and amusing aclrolt- nms. The "Dally Chronicle," championed by Mr. Powell, and “The Argosy" by Mr. J. R. Burnett, 1f I recollect rightly, had a “brush” ataperlod at which the Water Street. organ was published. on pink paper. The matter in dispute 1s immaterial and, to be candid, I do not recollect it. I am. however, clear upon the point that Sam Powell or ours came off second best so far as argument went, but his defeat was lost sight of com- pletely when scofflngly, he amused his readers by referring to "The Argosy" as a “poor, pampered. petttfoggtng, pork-knocking, pink paperlet." Such formidable alliteration mlsed a laugh, of course, and when the "Argosy" resentfully retorteri with reference to the "cranky chronicle," 1t. was generally two-apt.- ed that honours lay with Main Street, the original theme o! con- tention having meanwhile been lost sight of, and Mr. Powell's defeat, thus screened, as he had planned. He was far and away the most brilliant writer in his class which the Georgetown Press had known. I met hlm tn Canada some years ago. Hls iron constitution was seemingly unimpaired, notwith- standing the exaotlons of journal: ism, and he had risen to a high administrative post on the "Star". of Montreal, and ranked amongst, say six of the most outstanding journalists of Canada, this after 25 years’ continuous work 1n the Dominion. He was glad to talk over the good old “Dally Chronicle“ days, and l: heartened me greatly to hear hlm refer loyally to the "Dally Chronicle" ris a “model paper“. A quarter of a century had changed him not at all, and luughlngly he kept barking back ‘o one memory-how he and I had stood together on the gallows 1n Georgetown and witnessed the ' \JL' lolly PLEA mt: that the mercurial C. u. (my. like the l tile boy with the ‘perenniai sneeze in the nursery rhyme “0l1i) tines it. to annoy, b: use he knows it "tenses," ‘but. we trso remember tout bout sneesaig at.:l uncouth be- l havior are thscouraged in polite soc- ety nowodays.—-Ex. The death of Sir Austen Cham- litiza n liALUtLll men of all parties tn the same way. They felt ti. like a suntan tall 0A Lmperature when so much goodness of heart. and mtnd ni-eppeu below the horizon. Cynics have sometimes professed to doubt whether u pol tlctan could save his soul. But. here was e. man who had been bred to politics from boyhood, and had given them his whole life, except. what strong family affec- tions and n rock-garden claimed; and nftier fOf-Y-HVE years 1n Par- lltii..ent, his soul was still as pure and sincere as when he first. entered it. 0t all that the cynlcs have at- tributed to the pnP“ ' self-seek ng, duplicity. arrogance — he was desntue. Hts politics were I continuous uterclse tn collegiate loyalty and tn doing his duty as he saw it without thought of personal dnierest. All politicians alike recog- nised that. he was rls ng the moral standards of their calling-Dally Telegraph. Mu- ruufim, of tn. mm ciples of decency and honesty." credit administration, recent-Ly told . _.. l: . 1 tapped Mt". Pom"? is; Yllillll ' by reminding him o.’ the mariner in which, by suddenly rating hls knee. he had assaulted me in- descrlbcbly frzm the rear to silence me in the prcsenc; of death. But. I have dlgressed. It has previously been set. out that. upon the death of the pro- prietor, Mr. Jae. Thomson, "The Argosy" was acquired by a comp- any, the object. being its develop- ment. a: a planters’ paper. The eholoe of n man capable of accomp- lishing the complex and difficult tBLlK tell upon Mr. Wm. Mtwdonald. Already the absence of Mr. Thom- son's n had deprived the papri- of its reole smack, upon which its popularity had so largely depend- ed, and this meant a progressin- diinlnutlon of interest if the brescl were not filled. Obviously, the one man who could in. any; appreciable e or Indiana farm women tn convention at Indianapolis that a farm woman's labor over a period of 30 years ls worth more than $50,000. A: one example, she said that tn 30 years the farm woman would pre- pare 236,425 meals. Plac m; one lab- or u low as 15 cents a meal, that. would reach the staggering total cl more thin 085.000. and PROHIBFIION AND EDUCATION slr,-In the lumber which Mr. H. H. Acorn M. L. C. rolls out I8 his speech 1n the House, there appears t be some twisty grain. He makes a comparison bet/ween two laws which are not parallel and speaks of Prohibition, as lf the object of Prohibition was to sell liquor. When he states that there is more llquor sold under Government Con- itrol and less under Prohibition he ls not saying much for prohibition. The Prohibition law does not per- mlt the sale of liquor except for medicine. There is liquor sold con- trary to the iww not under tt. Gov- ernment Control to the apposite 0f Prohibition, pemtttttng the sale of liquor by Vendors. He thinks there is too much said and written by Temperance advocates re non- enforoement and seems to think it ls n11 right. to shout aloud about venereal disease, which ls a result of over indulgence in liquor. Keep things quiet. Don't talk about. such awful things which happen as a result of liquor drinking. Keep quiet tlll we get the whole body of Prohibition mutfated. 11¢ wonders why ministers indulge tn talking about this matter of non-enforce. ment» I suppose he wondeys too Why our Saviour, gave us the parable of the ninety-and rune also of the lost piece o: Sliver KIA-statement rm there u not much habitual drinking ls pefhgpg true. but there 13 enough of 1n_ dtvidual and periodic drlnklng "J4me with moderation to destroy the harmony or life Ind to make the automobile, which was intend. ed t0 Elve man the most; hgnnqnjc mews of promsiim yet; devised, a. most dangerous machine. 111 SPERM!!! of Education 11¢ "Y" ‘t “ha/nee in the system is long overdue and that. he urged em; chlmie 188% year. and at the same time he cauttcms us to go 510m Contrary to deplorins our poor system of Education. in his m- iiiirtimce to placing "m"! Pimple on V3881“ farms, he gpgnkg of 1t as an excellent syintwr I "m of opinion that very little aha-Yin! can be made and that we ‘We “a 3°°d 8- Sysfem as our financial circumstances mow we “m” “m” l" 4WD Nbture Mr. J. Van sea-time. who loved and understood the common pooplg, bu; Mr. Mstedonald was unable to enlist his services. - THE “EMANOIPATOIP Where Mr. Macdonald failed, his 311C085“. Mr. James Burnett, succeeded in rendertng Nk, Von, serum Wllllflc to wear his “har- ness". The Creole held the Scot in nest esteem. ls did all m» 1°°l1 Employees or “The Air-easy". Well they misht, for James mun- son Burnett was their benefactor- more than that, he was their emflnfiiflflliol‘. for it was he who rudely swept aside the unrlghteous edict that a local journalist should be permitted to rise so high and no hlsher. My own case was one 1n point. I had "‘bul1ocked" my way mm journalism, and each rlss i.n the ham and difficult climb from the Post of junior reporter to a. mflllasifls-edltiorshlp abroad, was the result of effort and strest which aged me while I was still young in years. In all likelihood. I never would have got anywhere if Mr. Burnett. had not provided me with the opportunity I needed to make good. and ll: is no boastful spirit I men- tion that as soon as I delivered the goods" he added £100 a year to my salary. And there were other asplrlrtg men who were indebted to hlm for the only fair chance they ever had. Prior to his connection with the Georsetown Press. lt was accepted as an indisputable truth it was impossible to make a journalist of a Portuguese. As if revelilng in dis- pelling yet one more fallacy, Mr. Burnett, having selected two likely- looklng youngsters of the hereto- fore bEnned class, knocked them into shape in record tune, My, Fred D'Omellas became the best all-round reporter in the Colony, admitting always the superiority of Mr. B. D. MacDouzall untll ‘yester- day" (Official Reporter and Reu- ters agent) a." a specialist. Nor djd Mr. J. P. Rodngues, the other Portuxuese youth of his preference, fall to vindicate Mr. Burnett's un- preeedented disregard of the un- written rule which had debarred youths -f the class in question from engaging their services as journalists. r the lo! ' of Mr. Thomson's "Creole pun" was M“ I blood. i One of the [realest remeq. I les in the treatment of Rheu- matism and a guaranteed w. petite restorative. Get a box fro-day. Box of 50 tablets 50o, DB. L uvANS 1f you have my gnu“, with your stomach such as ilndlrelllen- dyspepsia. sour stomach, heartburn, 355m“ idlstress, eta, then dolft dilly it helps us todraw out the frame work of Composition which with "The Spark of Nature" we dress up with flesh and blood. ‘ I am, Sir, etc. l M. M. N. ANEWIIEAVIN ANDANEW EARTH Bin-Yell 88k. Old Teacher, what New Teacher means by "Sclenoe has created a new heaven and a new ear-em" Qlngg 1L1; wflgtenyi 1n t getllng I bottle of Dr. Evan's the begummg God omated me , ‘stomach mixture lmlned. heaven and the earth." lately. Evan's Stomach Mixture i; a prescription of Dr. L, |;_ Evans, noted English Phy. siolan or which we have the sols rights to and since sell- ing It have received numeroiu testimonials from ‘Qflgfled Olil‘ discussions, Sh‘, though P81181118 widely. have concerned themselves entirely with the physi- osl aspects of heaven and earth as seep through the eyes of man. Th"! W0 Obviously mean. not that nemrkronuiwoq, tbronsh the discoveries and ln- 35w"; m‘ “"'7' 95* vent-tom of science, ti~s earth, and hslven. seem different to man, rind that his way of life, 1n a. physical Sense. Ls different from what ll; was before these scientific discoveries. m example, ln i608, a. Dutch Optician. Johannes Llppershey 1n- vented a crude telescope. A year later, Galileo began experimenting with this instrument, and ended by proving Aristotle's theory of the universe, wrong. Later Issue New- ton. based his three is/ws of motion on the findings of Galileo. Need we explain further; need we show how WaWs invention o! the steam engine, how the use of electricity, how counties discoveries and 1n- ventlons have penetrated man's physical world and made it o. new world for him, necessitating newt adjustments? Now-New Teacher entered this controversy with the sole purpose of adding his voice to that. o! many other: who felt that the old ways of education were inadequate. He does not wish to ibe drawn into a. diseuslon of the comparative merits of two great poets like Shakespeare and Milton. Refer- ences to Shakespeare were incl- denital lp the discussion of the system of education under which he was supposedly trained and to the discussion of the wisdom of im- posing rules m the teachlns o! most. suitable for the patlenfs m of hearing trouble. "The time 115d arrived when am; to hearing should not. be hlphgg. ardly sold to tho public, but mourn be supervised and each case tested on its oiwn merits." Al: this meetlnc rule: were sug- gested as to the type of instrument most‘. likely to suit. any case of ham of hearing; these depended not only on the degree and nature ot the hard of hearing condtion, but m” on the individuals envlronmem antoi aocialwstandlng. no ou tandmg authortt , Gen. eral Blrkett, Montreal, studied that he kept pamphlets issued by the Nattonal Institute for the Deaf, an organization resembling to 50mg extent the American Society for tn; Hard of Hearing. and handed them out to his patients with poor or im. perfect hearing. These pamphlets advised the patients what. to no and what to avoid tn the matter oi aids to hearlnz. 1t ls certainly gratifying w so; how patient and ear specialist rm now working together to the‘grea.t advantage of the patient. This u mmpo51g1°n_ because the patient. has learned I m‘ 51,-‘ m," an. he ahstzttld not. be ashamed in NEW 155G533, o sligh to wear a. caring " ore than one with tmperfeiiil anym eyesight is ashamed to wear glasses, And the specialist can now give ad- vice on the type of nid most suitable for the patient. 5 BEARING AIDS PBESCR-IBED LIKE GLASSES FOB THE EYESIGIIT The clocks an chiming in my bond Their cobweb chime; Old munnurrlngs of days Int die, The sob of linings a-drlftlng w. The clocks us chiming tn mu been! ‘rho stars have Minkied Ill OM! out- Falr candies hlownl The hot desires burn low. and wan Those nshy fires, that: flamed and). The ate? have twtnkied and 80M ou . It seems strange to u: now is we 1°01! b“!!! lust e. few years that physicians and surgeons, and par- ticularly ear specialists, did not, lens m. try to do to: trim who are hard of hearing, what; 1mg been done for so many years for t-bose whose eyeslsht was imperfect. amt mwhenitwu mums that the eatarrh, the sinuses, or m; go; condition itself. had done so much damage that no i----, - m, m; natural hearing could be made, that these ear specialists should have recommended some mechanical oir electrical ald to zlve the patient; increased hearing. The tum m; now arrived when no ear specialist ls justified in sending away a hard of heaxzng patient without discuss- Lnzwlthhlm mnldtohearlngand to do so he himself must. have a t-howuah hwwledse of the various type: 81f aids. 9 mflelilllfl 0f the British Medical A ‘ " last year. the section on nose, throat and ear dis. mused at amt Ienat-ti the question 01 heerins std-s: not w whether or not hearing aids should be used, but. as to who should fit the hearing aid Orange Pelioe Tea —Joh.n Galswortm \\\\\,\\ nouns” "i/(cnlxicrfl st“: "us" “Kn vnOup 4o" T“; PF m. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup ot Full Flavoured Tea U58 BRA HMIN Id- "The Good Earth" for over fifty years, “BLACK TWIST" CHEWING lill been a favorite chewing tio p]: farmers. Thales! is grown tn Ontario w r0 0 300d MW especially suited for growing the finest tolioooo. The leaves are oured and processed right hm on the bland by our famous motltodswhtohaddoxm flavor sndnatursl goodness. 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