z ‘ -oooooa;ome - 1 ‘_ dillt 11 1 1 .1- .1 .1 -1 I ' 1 i 2GP“? . __ r11: 11111111 LUTTETOWN autnnuu lllortilng Daily (Founded 1881] ~.'l' L' L-C l. W. Chester S. McLure Prt§lil‘c:‘l'b'i.i‘fdtlll0.|. R. Burnett. FJJ. Secretary LieuL-Uul. D. A. blat-Kinnon. 9-5-0- Edltor and Managing Dirrcfpt J. Burnett», FJ-l- Associate Editor I-rank Walker SLBSCIHFIIUN RATES d ‘ c“ $5.00 pcr )L‘.ll ttu advance! dellvere u Y $1.111: pt-r jcar 1111 amauu-l tit-anvil to l’. la-lslaud _ $5.1M) pct uar 1m nut-alive; ullulcu lu_ Lanaua and U-§ Ambitious .hllU|l uuri-au of Clfclllilllfllll “The Strongest Jlt-nlory is Weaker than the ll cal/rest, Ink." .__ '[lll'l{.\'l).\\', .\l'(il‘.\"1‘ 11TH, 1938 ‘ L;;_:i ;.___ N11 Room For Alibi; 11 f.» mlilrt-s-cs 111 rcccut llib- ._.1~ t_111111l1.ll contplahlcd of was |i1l\t'l'lllllt'llL 111111 ll "lllhl 111_._1..1- 1. 111, .11‘ ll\ 11l;lllt11‘lll. \\l1_\' docs the _~-r 11111111." ill '1. ,\lr. \\‘. .11111'c a fcw 111cc 111-: b1111- ztll-l to achieve “rt-ditc- 11111 by I ,', 1\11\l clvclitnl \'L'l'- .111‘ 1111s 11c sttccccdcd .111 .1: -: 111111 the 111-111 of 111ttl1i- ’- \- "\‘.c l1:1v1- 111111 so -. ' t1'.11i~»11. 111341 111111 --\‘. , _, .11 1»-.1l1iic accounts for -1 11-1111 111i 111-1 l1lllilllk'1'tl,l[ 1.. 111 ticil i111‘ the twoycars c; 1'1\1'l‘1‘1'l 1111' l'1'1s11icl‘. This 1 w. i1_ 1111'. t111-1'1-l\ tllc deficits 1 1 i 11if1sto :11'coi1t111111_\'i1tg tltc \l1 l.:b--1':1l 1111111111111 111 11135. .\l.1~-.\lill;111 tiovt-riulu-tlt, lilc, should have 11s budgcl on cur- “11 mztgititiccttt .1v:1 1 l1:11.1-.1ci~ 1<1 show 1 '11\.1 -\-1 \l.l. 1-:c11t-111l11111'1-s." 112-111-1111, Jllly t-itztl 1'<'\'1'I'.ll1' 1-11j1>_v1~.l 11y the hlachlillan (‘111i.1-1'11-111'1: in 1-131. its litst _\"c:1r of office, was $1__‘,.\'_:_fjj 'l'..-1- 1"1-v111'.11- f‘1l_1.11V\t‘tl hy tlle Cantp- licll tl-1\1-1':111111=1 1.1-1 1'1':1r “as $l,S.zl._>(1S—- nrarlt lull-f :1 u in dollars 11111rc. \\l1:1t ' 1>1_v1t'< would like to know front Premio- .1? is this: lf the .\lac.\lill;1n (5-11-1-1-1; ltllllll/llllif Prince of \\'ales (‘njlwQP --11i\-»~tl llo-pitztl, financing un- ellllliitlll writ r- lw i. road buililitig and other acti- vi1§|e~ 1 fir; 1‘ 1- 111114 years of the depression, slt-ittltl ‘-;1\~- c-irnt- out “1 '1h a itiagititiceltt stir- plus ott-r \l.l. 1'\E1\‘ll'llllll'l'§," how is it that the (‘_1111-»l11-ll ‘i111--i"111111-11t. It'll/I 1111 infill/inn!!! Ila/f 111f11f1111 <1’ 1".’ 11.1" 1111111111111’. 111-1 oil/y [hi/ct] In do .90 [i111 f11"/1'1','f 1“1l'1‘~‘/1f If1‘/--:('l.f.\' 11f $145,000 (lllff {i111 1 n] 11-111! li1iliililics I11 111v time 0f $911» zzinjo? If 1’1'i'1:1icr (Campbell is indifferent tn this qua-U 111111- is 111» 111111111 that it is \\'orr_\'ing his 11.. v 1711111.- -1~. .\t 1111- 111st legislative ses- sion. F 1. 1v111t so far 11s to complain that if tlt" 1 \l". l.1-:1'< pr/igrannne had been c.'11'1'ierl'o11t, he l1»1\'1'l'll1l'l1'1ll would not find it- self in “we !'1:1;<11c1';1l ltlvss it is in to1l:1_v—-n situ- ation l<-:11!i said. to rcpttdiation of debts and a con-l t» 11f ztffztirs “cpitinnizcd by the Faru1<~r= Credit» ' \rr;111c'<-1nc11t Art.” Anotl 1-1- 1.1 -.-l sttpptirtet‘. .\lr. Wade Hughes. .\l.l..\., i-uaritcd the (ioverntnent that "if we tfo on a~ ut- are doing. in a very few vears. \v‘-;1'--\1-r tiovt-riiiiv ut is i1t power in this Province will 1111-1 not only the treasttrv empty but the 11w "1 11f 11n- Province exhausted." llougald _\l1'\1‘l\:llll'|4'>ll. I-\‘I>I4~A|| a very staunch p-trtv 1 an, confessed that he was “not any too 111m at the financial nuidrllc and the pro ‘t of zmother tmliztlaticcil budget this year; 1 the llon. john .-'\. Campbell, a (‘ahilttt 17711-11111‘. had to Confess tl1at in view of the uzrv things were going, “fioverntncrlt (Kinlrol - only thing left." .\'1-1-d ‘.\1' . .11 the l‘r<-i11i1-r's attention the statimi-nt of Iltil-Iilvf‘ lvgisllllh‘? supporter? F111-;1l\i1-g '11 tiw‘ 111,11 <11 "i.'1l st-s-‘iull. .\lr. ll. ll. Arum 1 l-lT-lf "I bt-lieve. in fact l am sure, 111,11 lln‘ 111111- 111It1il( in tlit: Liberal platform which ;1'1-- 1Y1 i '11 1111- i-li-tvors in the provincial ca1111v1§gj1 111s t: 1' in v.l1icl1 we prontisetl t0 mrtlw i1-\---1-.11 111111 I'\{111‘llillll1l't‘ tilt-ct." \l1'. 11119 11.1.. \.. asltcd: "\\'hat in tll" \\'1‘1‘i‘l 1' ‘ - 1 tl of the mlu-r planks. then?" ‘I11 \1~11ru ri-tilii-il: “So far as our ca11111..i---1 1~ r-1111,-1-1'111-1l they did not count at ail." . And s11 1'-~ -- '111_vers are concerned. P1-,-1111'.-1- i ‘do not count at all." The fact ' 1. his tiovt-rnttu-nt has hetrayrtl tlu- tru-t ~11 in it, rind can enter no other 1,1”, 1,11; ,1.-,1 1.1‘ Qtllll)‘ of flagrattt viiilzttiott of its ciiclion 11 Brilidt Immigration smug .11111,,11.‘1.1-1'\' inns on future llritisll im- nfigflttlnll 111111 1 .111.11l:1 \\‘1'l't' 1Il'4|\'l1l(‘ll>Tvfldllly 11y Brigadier-l}-111-1111 Sir lli-nry l':1_;c-( l"1ll. chair- man of lllc 1111-141 111111111: lndttstrirs ztssocta- tioti. lluiii-giii-t.11-1-i11-1linthisroiintry.Sirllcnry “~11! 111, 1111- 1-1 \‘.' 41-1-11 lilllililll to explore "the ‘ . - Yl-‘i-i ~ 111 1111- n-opt-tiing of ntigrzl- 111111 to hear what Cattadtalts population of Great Britain faces a tuarked dc- cliile ill-the coming decades. During the acute years of the depression there was the iro11ic symptom of more people going to Britain from the tlomiuions than coming out to them front flows of llritisltcrs to the new lands of the E111- pirc. belong to an era which now docs not look as if it could be duplicated. There are many reasons for this situation. Improved industrial conditions and social secur- ity in the Old Country; the lutrdships of the Cauadittn West-once the bonanza of the over- seas migrant, and the birth rate trends. have all contributed t0 the present almost negligible move- mcnt of settlers from abroad. llut this is no reason for giving up the whole thing as ltopeless. British immigration to (‘a11- ada i11 the future should be more scientific and selective than it was in the days when people fttl ignorance of the type of work they were to undertake. Treated carcfttlly. there is ltope that the missiott of Sir llcnry will he a successful 11111‘. alld that more British newcomers. .'il\v11_vs wcl- rotue to thcse shores, will achieve profit. both for lhcntsclves and for the countr_v_ Hay Crop In United Kingdom There is a greatly reduced hay crop in the United Kiltgdotn this year writes l-‘rctlt-ric lludd. (‘ltief Catladian 'l‘r:11lc Conunissiotier at London. in the current issue of thc (onuucrcial lntclligcncc journal. 'l‘\\'11 factors will militate against any large incrcztsc in ituportatious how- crcased ccmstunption resulting from increased a large carr_\'-<1vcr. Stocks ri-maiiting on _l.'111-l nary l. 1933, were 11ffici:1ll_v cstiulated at 4.300. ooo 111111»; tons 11nd on April l. at l.7oo,oo long tons. 111 most years l1a_v feeding is no lougcr ne- cessary after the middle 11f .\pl‘il. lntt this year 11vcr $110,000 tons were co11su111ed in .~\pril :1111l. May, leaving some 336.000 tons. or 111111111 1111c- ninth of last _v1-:1r's crop, on hand :1t lune I. Altbouglt the present crop is t-xpcctcd to b1- o11l_v about two thirds that of I037. thcrc is no‘ evident shortage, since prices contintte l1l\\'. .\'cxt .- fall. of course, when the stock arc brought in‘ both demand and price will increase. Increased tilechatiization is drastically reducing the lunnber of horses in the United Kitigdottt and directly reducing the consumption of lmy. The Army, which used 10,408 ltorses in 1933-34, has only 1205 in 1938-31). This is but onc sphcre in which nlecltztttization has effcctcd rcduction in the use of ltorses; there is a similar steady dc- creasc noted among the cartagc companies, l>rc\v~ erics, stores, collicrics, etc. In view of the circumstances outlined above it is not anticipated tltat the 110111111111 for hay from Canada will be greatly above the average. I Editorial Notes I Cardinal l\'(‘\\‘lllill'l died this date, 1890. * i ii ‘F d‘ Ycek, One day nearer Fair \ i‘ l? ¥ Garden party this afternoon at Government House, rain or shine. i #101101 Dr. John Morrtnv Robb, who has hccn ap- pointed Chicf Conservative Urganizcr for the Dominion, has had a lrntg, successful public carccr in his native Ontario where he was a tneutbcr of tltc legislature for Algoma and 31111-1 ister of Public Health. Hc is sixty-one years 0f 1 age, and :1 ntetnber of the Ilnitcd Church of Catt- ada. lle enters upon his new duties next 111011111. v v =11 =1- Among the Dottkltolmrs reilgion is taken so seriously that tear gas bombs are considered ne- cessary to bring them to their senses. A crowd of them at Brilliant. BC. in order to get rid of the officers of the Christian Comtnttnity- of Uni- vcrsal Brotherhood started burning down the Church buildings, with the result the Provincial Police were called out, and had to hurl bombs to disperse the angry belligerents who were tnilling around the ltcadquartcrs of the organization. n a a i” Prior to this week only vessels of Canadian registry of 500 tons and tinder could he scarcit- ed for contrabrand within the twelve mile limit. Now, by agreement with the llritislt (iovcrn- mettt, all vessels of that capacity of llrilislt regis- tration, except those of New Zealzmtl, Australia. Union 0f South Africa, Eire and India (WlllCll are not likely to call here aluuvtty) may bc stop- ped and searched. - The ()l"(l('l'-lll~COllllCll was passed on July 26 and gazetted August 6. I 4 \ I! lll/cddings are invariably an attraction for women, but rarely do they result i11 near riots as happened in Blackpool, England the other day when disorderly scenes marked the marri- age of two midgets. tizlicn nearly. 10,000 111-01119 tried to force themselves into thc (‘hurclt of the Sacred l-leart where the cert-tnotrv was taking place. \\'omen were knock-ed down and trampled upon by the surging mob and several other per- sons faitlted in the crush. The jt-foot 8-inch bride was Miss Annie Kiteps. principal dancer in a midget troup in a local show, and her bridge- groom, llcrman Retter. who was married in evening dress. was 3 feet 1o inches. Other mid- gets attended in the bridal retinur- and the .\la_vor of Tiny Town, llcnry Glover, gave the bride away. v v w a The llttited States Govcrnmt-tit possessed this week approxitnzuely $|3.r~ot).orio.ooo of gold, the greatest amount of the precious metal ever held by any nation in ltistory. Its gold» ltoltlittgs. 371,438,338 fine otmces, represent about 54 per cent of the known gold stocks of the world. The present United States ntonetary value of gold is $35 an ounce. but almost half r1f the. present holdings xvns acquired at the old 1wre-ilcvitluatioti price of $20.67 an ounce. 0f this total. $2.803.- 403,030 is reserve against otttstatirlittg gold rer-1 tifirates. $7.Rt7.o_;0,8(1o represents the Federal Reserve ‘flortril’; gold certificate fund.’ $0,676,571; is the board's redemption fund for Federal Re- serve notes, $l.8oo,<xn.orm is the Treasury's eign currencies, and $_‘;2_‘4.2(13-50‘) YPPTPFPIWS 201d‘ ‘.11 111.11 (‘ztitaili-tns. predicts the -; - w», 111w still thinking :1 211011 11-1 "1-11 Ulilttlllllllls‘ have almost drf- 1 ‘ 1- '11 11M 1111- l'1'IlllIl of theory‘. ll I. .11." 1- 1 '11, ;.1~1-.1-111 ll'l'llll<_ in :1 rela- ‘- ‘ - of 1-, ('r111'11li.-111= of llrlllsll 11-. ~ ' ' " tilllllllllllltlYVl by olllcfs. ,-,1-1 -1- t-i 1111- political cumplitvt- tirw- "1-1- “ ln 11131 li-ss 1111111 52 111T 1-1-111 i? -‘ 1 111 of iL-t- lloiniilion was 11f nrqy-‘H, <~ '_ ~11 11 this dig-lit ili-tiiinance ‘s. hrinrf s‘ 1"" l‘ 1 l- Il. Agsdnst 1111s is the ullttl‘ sllilung fact that tht! in the Treasury's general fuarl available for im- mediate spending. s .....A..b_. Britain. The pioneer days, and the later lteavy’ cattle out with no means of support and a \voc-‘ ever; the largc carry ovcr from last year 11nd d1-—, mechanization. 151"” Mam‘ 31 l..'1st year's crop of ovcr foooooo tons lcftl funtlatsed to maintain stable relations with for-l "g rm! CHARLCTTEPOWN GUARmAn 1101151111 r11: wltv The Wluhlnflon announcement of the crcztuon o1 a new Division or Cultural Relations .l1at pur- poses rob {lncreaae} extfihangu g1 culture e ween e c er repu - 1.1-5 .11 the Westtn llennsultcre and tlie United Stiles,” suplles tnlo further piece of information. "Next m-mtb alx army bombers will fly to Columbia to partlclpate ln the inaugural) alt, m; xitftwtlpaeal‘; dent." Army m ers la fall‘ sample of the American culture, maybe we'd better can the exchange department and keep it at. ltome-Detrolt News. Parish bulletin: distributed In III Roman Catholic churches 1n Rome attack a lately applied Fascist racial doctrine as "a. new type of idolatry." That may be a good description, lt ls also an old type of nonsense. As the bulletins point out. "for Christians a man has worth not; only because he ls blg. blonu, strong and handsome but by the tioblllty of hls soul." Well- ,11med, also, is the warning that: I 1"i'el1g1on" which teaches the op- posite doctrine "can only sow hatred ,war and persecution." One need llook no farther afleld than Nazi uertnany with its reglmented and in large measure, quite unsclentlc, theories of "Aryan" supremacy to realize the danger inherent ln such fallactes-Brantford Expositor. As head of the. R. F. C., Jesse Jones publicly warns bankers to lend more freely or else the Gov- ernment wlll. Like Mt". Roosevelt, who does one thing as President and ‘another as lJe1nocratic_ Party chit-l, Mr. Jones has a dual per- sonality. lll private life he is chair- man of the National Bank of uonnnerce. Houston, Tex. lhls bank's June 30 statement shows loans and discounts down 676,000 and total resources more than 7u per cent. lquid M1‘. Jones would be more candid lf he told the bunkers: "D0 as I say- not as 1 tto."-’I'lle Wall Street. Eugenia Sergeyeva, Moscuws eout-ittion complains of‘ the poor iuuong t-hlklrcn for blames lack of good etice. As 11 remedy that the pupils should wear badges and that any ultdel" 15 years should i be forbidden to go into the streets, palks and squares alter 10 p.m. In i net- uuvucai-j- of a. curfew law.; dlreclress of’ depnrtlnent, discipline which she‘ home influ- she suggests .Mudam Scrgej-evn shows that the Soviets have not yer solved the] problem of Juvenile conduct. in the Clll8S.—M0llLl‘t:8l Gazette. From Le Sorelols, o! Sorel, P. Q, comes the solution of a rattler 00111111011 problem in ethics and flua11ce._Whlle the 5911mm; ls ingenious, ft may be u; W911 1,9 state that. neither Le Sofejojs 1n 91113115111118 it nor The Printed W01'd_1111_ milking a- free translation, endoises_ the morality involve‘; ‘I118 ptoblem 1s stated thus; Someone gives you a counter. felt. filfv-cellt. piece. What. do you ordinarily do? You attempt. to pass 1t on to altotlier dupe. Don't. ueny 11-; v11 11115 P0111! We are all alike. But the catch 1s that, nine 1.1mm 0!"- Of I911. you don't. succeed. So discouraged, me piece decide to yourself." correspondent; theb situation. e me an article worth 2g ctiltlitssiglfir-l _ v dollar bill in payment, 1 must give lum '15 cent-s ln change. Ivput. together my bad fifty-cent; piece plus 35 cents ln good money making 85 cents in all, ln place of '75. The customer. seeing ma; 1 have given him ten cents mo much, hurriedly puts it; all into 1115 pocket, for tear that I shall see 1"¥"~'1'l'_°1‘- My P1061215 gone.’ with a loss o1 ten cents, 1f you like, but; Bf 190st I am rid of lt. 1 do not have to reproach myself for cheat- 1115 my customer, since he him- self has been dlsltonest enough to cheat. me. Thus -1 llve in peace with my lilterests and my con. sclenceN-The Printed Wot-d, A Fascist paper ln Rome, sweat- lnlsover the new Italian policy of raulnl emphasis declares Mayor LaGuardla of New York has no right. to belong 1.0 “our race." (The mayor ls partly Italian and partly of Hebrew origin.) The amusing part. of l1. 1s that Mayor LeGuardla would probably be the last man ln the world to boast, at thls time, of Italian ancestry. The sort. of gov. ernment. that. Mussolini and Hit- ler represent. doesn't appeal to the Illflyol‘ even a lltfle blt. Indeed, not: mall)’ YI_1°nth5'"flE0’"Ile created an lnterttnttonlzl storm by lils out. spoken remarks regarding tho German dictator. No Mayor 1,11. Guardla ls a hundred per gem, American and that's good enough for ailybody. I-fc can sit back and laugh at the racial acrobatics ln stay honest tn splte of Here is how the of Le Sorelois meets " “A custom Magazine o; 1 Dr. G. K. Wharton, London. On- Rome. Mussollnl ls reported highly lndlgnatit because Pope Plus ln a recent address referred to Italy's lmlfatlotl of Nazl Germany's racial nonsense. What really lturts, of course, is the solid truth of Hls ‘fullness’ suggesllon. Dictators al- ways llke to be originators, not followers, but. lf Mussolini keeps playing along with Hitler he's llko- ly to flnd hmtself tn second place on a good many occasions. - Windsor Star. If a Russo-Japanese War comes, the whole face-of the world will be changed. The first result wlll be the salvatlon of Chlna, at which we will all rejoice mightily. Japan, no matter now devoted, united and patriotic, cannot wage successful wnr simultaneously with Russia. and tn China. She might dlg ln along the Yellow River and ,try to hold her conquests ln the north; but: lf she lost. ln Man- churla, the Chinese would never permit. her to remain ln peaceful possession of anything soutn of the Great Wall. It ls qulte posslble, lf Russia presses such a. war to I flnal conclusion, that Japan may collapse completely and disa- pear as a flrstclass power for a generation. This would dispel the cloud over the Paclflc. ‘The Ameri- cans would not need so many war- shlps, and Halifax could get some of her guns back from British Columbltr-Montreal Star. 1t ll to be hoped that the cum- palgn launched by several local chambers of commerce "to resell the American system to America" wlll prove a sound and effecttveln- fluence upon public oplnlon-but that. wlll depend upon the Intelli- gence and the sincerity with which lt ls conducted. As or ourselves, we believe the growing tendency of our people to look~ to political actlon for economlc progress and security ls dangerous. We know that. the average business man II o. decent, wellmetmlng cltlzen who has vnlld ground for deepl resent- l the demngoglc vlllflcutlon and abuse with which polltlclnrul from the President down have smeared business managers. II know also mat busln served a more useful impose- The fear of not havlng reliable lnfor- 1111,..- ,,1-.-,-, 111-11-1- 112-"1111- H», ....,,..1,,1.,. cluntottlsrowlt ttunnnun - go n; on n ea ne a er - ent pal era of mlstakea be l 1s 1h nm t1 ‘gorge, gm; . 1 9 1 avoided lf t ey hope to "reset the 1igfir yriogilng cafrfgr mornlng ln t e Phone 132 hr Appoin m n But A on nan- Tbc Magnum of Wall Street. inn-undoin- fllibat £0111’ I The Greatest Suit Sale ln Our History 1Z5 11111111111111 1 4'95 Regular $22 8c $25 Values Sport or Plain Backs About 20 of the $11.95 Suits left HENllEllSllN and CllDMllllE F1‘ italitt; alwatjl use BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA the Governmefft‘: wheat. policy. and we may expect to observe an lncrease of political pressure against: any repetition of so generous a prlce." -— r SE 0F MUCH OI’ OUR T": CA“ TIREDNESS l atlent vlslted a physlcllm an?! ciimplalited of a tlred feeling all the time. After a careful ex- amination he advised him to vlslt hls dentist and bring back a re- port a; to the condition of his 1 teeth lncludlns an xray 91011111111" tlon. When the patient returned with a statement from the dentist that. there was no infection of the teeth or sums, the physician simp- ly turned to the patient and sald, "suppose you tell me the whole story. I flnd no cause for your tiredness nor does your dentist, so that. your tiredness ls not due to organic trouble of any kind. You have something on your mind, something that has you ‘thinking ‘ most. of the day and part of the night; lt ls this constant thinking I _worrylng or puzzling of your braln- that ls keeping you wn- ' stantly tired. And untll you get ll; settled ln some way you wlll re- main tired." ‘Ilredness ls sometimes said t0 be due to overwork but it tnuy be 1 the worry about the work, not the work ltself that causes the tired- ness. And if the lndlvlclual can- not adjust himself nicely to his polnt for Moscow. Not with any 1n- work, then the constant upset- tentlon of precipitating war, but menl. of this lack of adjustment rather on the assumption that Ja- is going to keep him tired. pan wlll not flgllt, Russia ls keep- 111g the lncldent allve as a strategic diversion. True, there ls a danger of lt-s the getting out. of ltand. But that dan- ess, ger ls considerably lessened by the presence of Lord Runciman tn Czechoslovakia. It, ls a fairly obvl- ous usumptlon that. Japan cannot stand another major war. The only rational basis on whlcb she could be goaxled into lt. ls that, she could |be certaltl of assistance from Ger- many. Havlng accepted Lord Ruttclmatfs efforts to mediate the tarlo, ln the Canadian Medical Association Journal, tn speaking of the fatigue syndrome or set of symptoms we call tli-edn says: "Worry, not; work, kllls. Frequent- ly overwork suggests 11 mental con- fllct. Atlythlltg which sufficiently- upsets the ntentitl balance of 11 person wlll result in fatigue. In- security of home, affections, ltealth, or employment becomes a powerful emotional factor produc- lng fatigue. Fear and worry from his rlvate aeroplane venture to the ast. But can a, vlsll; like this really untangle the m stery that hangs around the c0 llct of Jew and Arab? The proposal to dlvlde Palestine crlttclsm of Czechoslovakian mlnorltles dispute. n 1 _ _ .1 whatever cause point ln the same lt ls hardly robable that Germany Qhbgwgne 511250;‘; ffieaiatlqlg. oaiitliigetflfdikihittii? Iviglatsetfi: direction. It ls well known that. would take t e rlsk 0f mOVlIIC {mm Neither wishes to give way. and ous risks lit-renaming 114 1939 wheat any emotional excess produces ex- thflt dlrewvn While the mission rs- that reluctance to meet ln oom- price declslon," the Freq Press m"- haustlon. Unhapplness, dissatls- mains at Work. rudely cluzensltlp has not arisen gues that u flxed price can only b; faction, fnptratlon, a feeling of 1 In a sentence. Russia ls taking out o; “c131 frmflqm merely 1; 1s succe$gu1 so 1on8 as the“ 1S a lack of purpose ln llfe or lts ln- the opportunity 0f tlvmllflfllllv? well known that Italy has for a thick cushion “between it and the completeness, lead to a chronic lessening of energy. Indecision ls a great. waster of energy.” It wlll be noticed that. no men- tlon ls made of excess thyroid or other- land juices as a cause of fatigue. ' safety on her western flank to ex- perlment. wlth a new form of inter- vention. By dlvertlng Japanese at- tentlon and men to the Slberlan border she ls aldlng the Chinese ln their defence. and especially the Chinese Communists ln thelr The thought then 1t that 1t after guerrilla campaign 1n Jehol and examination by physician and |N0rtlt China. It. ls not a strategy dentist, there ls‘ no organic reason ‘that 19101111585 Sfit-‘Olflfllllflr result-f for being ttred all the tlme, one beyond the ever-present possibility should take a look ln on 0ne's self of 11s bewmins wnr- But l1 has the prolonged period been stlrrlng up trouble among the Arab trlbesme 1. One method ls by forceful broad- castlnz in the Arabian tongue, conveying assurances that. the Duce of Italy ls the great rotector of the Arab and the Mos em peoples. Anything farther-from the truth would not. be easy to flnd. but the Arabs know no better than that a voice from the alr speaks what they may like to believe is the Open market price" to take care of ‘lsllrltlglégcoted zecmtons. And ll con- ‘The fact la. of course, that k1 the 1on1: run Western Canada mush be prepared to sell wheat at world Drlces or ultimately face the con- sequences." ElZ?“€lll3tlZ?1§"°§l o“ zllstta’ 1111x111 ..::t-".ts.;t".i1': lttfte-tfli“itné"leifik "distill? FOR ey causfi latent hate ln Munchoukuo and mnalfi W111 "Y 11°“ l‘ W°Tk5 l“ I 1' china. wlll be sufftclent, to com- “WW1 °l Brlwln l“ “- has d°ne 77' plate the rout possibly ln the name 5°‘ Imly- e o; oommumsnfih The problem of Palestine ls an intricate one. because it. does not w; “n7 a gmnplegc “My A. 0 d F metely concern the Arabs and the 91 M" p“ p. 50cm, trcra l‘ ers 01' Jews. There are International B-nd- Beauty Aldo lniilualn the p1,“... fiféilmffliltfiflfiii l"a1.r:..:: 51:12": Fs"""'-=...."--- ‘tietvtieen the Jews and the Amos Issue-n‘ aniium’ a and would have served to settle their dlfferenccs long ago. However that m ht be, there were other matters wh ch the Jew and Arab alone could not. settle. and if Mr. Mac- Donald's vlslt leads to a better knowledge of what ls needed and what may be brought about to al- lay the facial problem as well as Face Powder |n flvs shade; Roum ln flvo ahldes LI Sticks in seven shades B lllantlnes and Eye Brow Penclh, etc. We also curry complete Ilms of Evening in Plrls—Ashes of Roses-Deny’: Three Sec- (Sydney Post. Record) I'm; survey now belng made by the representatlves of the‘ British Alr Mission of the available facllt- ties in Canada for the manufacture of aircraft. fol-the British Govern- ment, may result in the placing of the biggest range of contracts that. "A SONNET FOR MY EIGIITY- NINTH BIRTHDAY" (Ociobar 24th, 1937) Now, verging on my nlnetleth year 0f llf What store ofmsoclal maxlms have I 1 lsengnge the commerclal §§,',§‘§,T,,';.'fi§,-P°'°“"G°'"" 88.1116 t _1 h . . _ First, the futility of frequent strife; izicfitecogrfiailotg torfistlizunflrlyeiastncllvttar? {Lgglurlglewfiiltgflnzlefinfyollltlfi M“ 151111511". '“°“"°"* l‘ “m 2122211115; 1.1- --1-, 11-»- W? --,<,--1 -- W111;- " * *3" . voatono rou ne me os “'°'1.lta1tt? “e "' ""° 111a‘;*tl.-*itrr..tllth.rsr.tr"s; wi-c- m- -- ------- m 114-455 Ingmtytégele 1111?? worse than Elm their pans Pare Mr F Hanger authorities on convention. 8 ’s m e‘ ' ‘ ‘ Page, one of the best-known plane manufacturers of the Ultlted Kingdom, and Mr A. H. Self. a llAlll RESTURER One 101111-11 blesslilg u a faithful w e; True merit; wlll not, 0ft. be basely spurned. SO-cent Wheat Price deputy Undersecretary of abe Brlt- . (Excltanzf) i lsh Alr Ministry. Next week they The Wlnnpetz Free Press. most In m,“ Al“, maxms, Needs some wlll be mel- 111 Montreal by s11- flufl-Orltfltlve firs-In of Western n wlll restore grey 111m ti» Llberallsm. takes a dark view of an H Cl L h Er man ever’ w o Ls ‘Blgficent. flxed prlce for wheat. us: of the Mission. Although nothlng yet has been made public regarding the probable degper thing. Chairman It: original color. To makelor mar s. man, to save a M 1w: Ilnlr Restorer pro- motes a new and superior rmvth when; the halr In full- sou. Men cannot change the mlnds of "Here ln the West we have al- volume of the order the Alr Mln- n nd l m It hl u! ful 31y “Q1231” ma? by warrmg; bog), lstry wlll likely places ln Canada, or mad-l’ Pad “me bill-e!‘ hm“ °5 ll" In‘ arevetslnrge dbliilrtiff fund m v1 n. g- 1-1-15, v who w €‘1'1‘1‘é?3°1§.-'c‘§l1‘l°.1l rat-rs... 2:11- e-i-i-ii-t t-"fl-t- ' _ ' Do j 1 , , , " era. t, rte .on.s mvlnethvpisiigitiffiy! shew mm‘ ctgnsaldgsgble fi-irtiisésssthetiasmilieiisxit ed h°“d"°"“ '0 the We“ ‘"115 ell-chili: (in? yvil w"! l" ls not. the time to arzue the justl- flcatlon of such jlbes. The cold o- lltlcal fact remains that. the ex st; and nothing ls more certan than that a hurrlcane of crltlclsm wlll arise over what, wlll certalnly be called hand-outs and over- ny- ments to Western Canada whlc . ft must always be remembered. does not domlnate ln numbers the House Commons. Hence, ll‘ the world market takes a bad tumble, we may BXDBCt to hear from certaln out:- spoken Easterners harsh and bitter ilh, goodness, beauty. these con- tentment brlng, —W. B. Grove. Litvinoff’s Map (Globe and Mall) When Japan offered tonegotlate the settlement. of the Manchou- kuoan-Slberlan border dispute ft was assumed that Moscow would haggle. It was not known that. Fo- elgn Commlssar Lltvlnoff had a. map. Up untl‘. today. thls mysterl- otu boundary settlement has been an important prop to M Llt- lnoff's gymnastics to avold talking peace and at. the same time escape he onus for aggravating the lncld- ent. whlle Russian planes and ar- tillery have. increased hostilities as much as they dared. It Ls of Drlme slgntfailce that the map. which settles not only tho ownership of the Changkufeng terrl- to . but the whole frontler. over wh ch there have been numerous clashes, has never up earcd untll now, Allegedly a pro uct of the Chinese-Russian treaty of 1886. lt. may be genuine. No one can say, which fact raises further susptclon slnce l would be logical to suppose that. t, e Chinese archivists would know of 1t. On the reports from Hankow they don't. nor can they flnd a copy of . The ignorance of the Chlnese ls no responstblllty of M. Lltvinoff and he ls adamant that. the Jap- anese accept the map and wlt 1- draw from the Changkufeng area. before negotiations can beg n. Just what. would be left to negotiate he does not. make clear. All of which lead; w the unavoidable concluslon that the map has no more value. put or present, than as a talking made in worklng out. the problems Involved and a deftnloe statement ls expected wlthln the next couple of weeks. A Canadian committee, consisting of representatives of the Commercial Alr Transpor Com- pany, the Falrchlld Alrcra t. Com- pany. the Boeing Aircraft Com- pany, the Fleet Aircraft. and the National Steel Car Company, are cu-operatlttg ln the survey being conducted by the Brltlsh Mission. This Committee and the Mlslons representatives have held several conferences ln Montreal during the past week. working out. the details of the programme, and report says that. ttese meetings have been hlghly satlsfactory. The construction of aircraft. ln Canada on a large scale for the Brltlsh Government wlll be stgnlfl- cant both ln lts economlc and 1m- perlal reactions. If the orders to be placed here tum out b0 re resent as largo an outlay as well-tn ormed people antlcl tie. the reflex on Canadian ln ustry, on egtployment. conditions, on general uslnes ln the lar e centres across the Domin- lon wll be wholesome and stimu- lating. On the other hand.Bt-lt.aln‘s posltlon wlll be greatly stxengthend nternatlonally. the prestige of the Emplre enhanced notably, by de- monstration of the fact that, ln the production of the thews and lnstrttments of defence, the over- seas Domlnlons can co-operatc u effectively ln times of peace as they dld at the crlsls of the Great War. Flies To Palestine (Hamilton Spectator) When Right. Hon. Malcolm Mm- Donald decided to vlslt Palestlne he displayed an lnlflatlve which re- called the early days of his father. After his father's elevation w cab- lnet rank the healtatlon of a new experience up d to slow down his orlgtnal energies. But the fem- llv strain has u. quality 1n 1t which ls not to be dented and Malcolm shows that he can strike out on 11h own lwoount. with the best of em. unused at the results. Wflle or phone today. PRICE 00 CENTS. THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTORE I49 Great George Street Mill Orders Receive Prompt Atlcnllon. wt: OFFER To FIGURE IT OUT FOR You are invited to talk over your Advertis- ing problems with our MODERN Ad Service Bureau Complete information regarding our NEW SUPER SERVICE is yours for the asking. IDEAS, CUTS, COPY, LAYOUTS, ILLUSTRATIONS, , ARTWORK, READERS ' FREE T0 ADVERTISERS IN TI-IE and especially the ohleftalns of Blg Business — have not. been blameless and have not. been alto- gether wise in their relations with thil puilzgc,‘ 11-11111 the1r stockthofilfirs an w e r emp oyees. e er _ have they been smart l1r thlnklng ,,,,",‘,’,',‘,“,,§°“j Q§,,,‘,°',f,',',{‘§,,‘“f.,°§{, m?!’ hid "meld"!!! '0 8m" fmm- wind. There are more kerlous things generalized denunclatlotls of the 1n Palestine flaw’ u mere were n New Deal where constructive and the 01d dam 0m o; we dttncutg- fatrmlnded crltlclsm Gould have 195 o; modem sgagemjmshtp t; the merlcan system to Amerlcn." — newspapers: ‘rhntla doubtless what sent the Secretary for Colonies on