‘Illliw t.lli\_l{l,ti'l"lfidls)lYN _ V_____ --. < -i--ww\i.-. a» r .<_ii.-vwa>i-¥bl-ta'iflf »~i "' -u VJJK ll, 19.)] l‘ 4.. lit/LR ___ ‘flu: F-‘irirtctletawn Guardian . 'll|‘\'l'|' h t-iiiiii-il, It y ir (In uilvunce) me) Illtlllfll (ll <|II advance) r ,\|':|I‘ iiilenl Hlilllw .i pi- iiiil l -'i'i, oi rout-iii 12. 1937 :l ‘itnli nu iits Quoted ll-l? llwTfllli-i‘; vwasszwrzz ~ ‘vi-ii an interesting . lt is an "of- lliiughis Social Cre- '.ll' uiliiect Xlbrrta vs. zipiiiwils on behalf " i-i lii-lp l‘ri-iiiicr .\bcr— ' ' ' ient of the \\.i'i- iir ~pefll§ lo yitlll" iiliii-rtiiig to the l i “i "i1 tliiliiiii l. lnsist that .- ]l“'\ll.'lll\‘ \lr. King. n it \ll..»i-i,ii (liiveriiiiteiit. I. ii . iinlitiinizil assi-taiice." "i-uzrit- of the liullctin is the i? iv‘ ill eve statement of Pre- F." fill‘. .,_ '1:r-'—'=:;*r‘12:w§tt °°.'7.25~?:'i niqnun~w "ZUI-‘Z out iiiy [volley 0f PlllJllC .-. l criiilit. l'ntil the Con- i - ‘i iii-i-ilit is restored to the of soiiiireigntyi of Parlia- i i< iillc and futile." i ~i‘ f We wonder what ~ ' " ' ~ iii them. .-i, {iv-iii the bulletin. this time H, lzi-iii-i- Klinisti-r Iapointe in 'i'..i,g on ,'\l7ll'\‘li 30, I937; "l. i-iliiiritiim such as this "t' eoiilil lie excitised by qlu’) ii ‘l -ii\'1i ' l. are quoted, of course, as ‘i iYii- present issue in Al- lllli‘l‘(‘~llllt_f for their own ,_ e f:iiiilit_v which politic- . g iiiie way, and rowing the 1 ,_. iiiiiliiiq It Down . " tlii- Halifax (‘lironicle (Lib- i ‘ .‘.'.il furv in the Ontario elec- : lii llii ultimate there were I.iu,i1, i-sucs before the pub- ltiiin wliv, then, was the i‘ hiiraiise Premier llep- ir the sledding would iaii‘. iilitVPldllllvlllfi. i .~'\iid he ‘ii uzi-li his liruiils of “bl-HP ' oi," lieiiiffi itialtiiig his ap- tfii-"c is no verv £1111! this l~l ink policies anrl his; '- I'l fl‘i\< d tii sit on the same . ,1, dyn-iiino, has‘ forivartlcd .:i tl.i- election l'(‘\\lll>'. Mini-ii was liiirn yester- . w v succceileil in fooling ." : . .‘.i.;l prntestatiiiiis of good i i ‘.5 ~.< ilk. \Varning i“. ti-Til his ("liiezigo audience a time when meii, “cxult- i‘ i-:' liiiiiiiciile." will Swarni will lll‘ lii~t or \\'I'('Cl\'(‘(l or ;._;,,', 1,.» is ('_\'t'l'l2l.\llllf_’_l_\' right ~" v 'i ii ‘lli‘~i' things ronie to pass ttiiflil, the luiited $tfilcS inziai not expect. he séllfi. e ll'.'lllillllll_\' :riiil pranc- \ anil the arts of _,civil- giiin of ivar." hll‘: iliilll ii-ziriiiiiig or jib‘- 'i 3.-.-iii<_ iiicliiiliiig “'0- i l'lllllli‘~-l\' llllll'lll‘l'- ...i .ill ll- .iii_\lliiiig at -.‘ ' iiriiiiiiiieiiils loi‘ fiii- liiiglzinil on ~ >'Ill\'lllt’lll to thr- , ,. . -i'. i~ :ii llldlilll! : tiiur ol i i- iii tiiiiii, iiiiii sillt‘ of thr- li\l' \i<'l\'('ll on farnis i. l lziii- (':iii.'id:i and l i iixl \i-'ii'_ .'1'J.‘Il<llll.'ll't to lllt’ that -; :i'iiii_'; uiiliout leader- ‘ iiii iii l‘i*ii\iiivi-~" pulling i.~;~'i.~< lllt‘ i-i-ntral goi- i iii l llillll'l'\lllll oifcr-fil i -i. i‘ You l|.‘|\f‘ uii plltll ii ill iiilloir. You '. li‘l.' i iii illiii't rare to l l i Qivil [ii-iililt‘, ltlll ' ‘i’ niiiii, <'|_\'< an ii\:- I t. i ll .\ll'. 'I'i|b,v to . - Ji-ll-ngi- the zic~ l.‘ .'i~ li.id .'i<l<ed, for i. \l‘ti‘lll"lll stands for l ~i'al question. the un- ' erally accepted history. employment problem, the issues agitating the world at Geneva, immigration, the recasting of the Canadian constitution, the railway muddle. or any other great matter of national import, who couhl frame an answer that would lllt‘.'lI1 anything? 1 Editorial Notes I - w Columbus Day in U.S.A. ' i n- ia n- o ' Thanksgiving followed b y Remembrance a month hence, ‘ ii!‘ japan blames China just as Italy hlanied Ethiopia. iii! NOTES BY ni:~: WAYi lt is eai-y to sci- .ln- il.ll'i'e.il.' s in tne any oi ucnnno Lii-.ii_.;iii iii-Lon ni the tircscnt crisis, but tntre is noti the slightest doubt that n no uctionl other than u. protest against bonib-' tug ls taken uuiun Japan at u. tnuel when world (JlLlllUll is inipricetlenily iuianimous the L/eaguu IILglll as iveil close up shop and sell tne Genera palace to the arnniineiit manufac- lurcrs.—Londoi1 liTee Prtss. -It is interesting to speculate on: just how far Japan can go without wining ii ciopper. ‘The Chinese have ,' put up u resistance tar stronger‘ tnuu Tokio eiir cmpi-cted zlnd the temper of the oiiisioi: world is ris- ing sharply. ‘There r4, also, the prob- lt-in, for the Jlljlltlltflit} uiiterinnent Boycotting Japan‘ will conic pretty hard on those businesses with large stocks of Japanese goods previously imported and paid for. The State is not the best organ for riigiila~ . tion of indtlflry’, declared Mr. lrlenrv Sonier-, l ville. Toronto. in an address before the second ‘ ,i All-Canada Stakfoners’ Convention in hlontreal. i i MT- Somervlllfl. a journalist, contended that in- ' ,~ i n, “t‘:iii:id.'i." saiil the l ‘lllslrl’ Should organize for self-regulation. 'l"his. ..,~_. f,.,,.,.,] ,,.,>,|, n g"czn l"? Ffilllifll. was the principle of medieval guilds. ,,, “M, Phwpr m,‘ the ,,,,,,.,,,. jiml IS still the principle of the older professions. . ..i,, ,,i,;,.,, “m he \\4"l,!(\d h, Ylwylt is medicine, laiv_ and the clergy. It would l pliviil (n,- n _<,,.c(.,,,,,,, ie contended, be possible to have in all trziiles a i l l mile of ethics and an authority Capable of in- forming the code. Competition literally lIt(‘.'lll< race, which is a good thing occasionally, lint “we ' don't want to be racing all the time," he said. 0 m iui in What has recently hit the stock market as ltard as anything, a number of Wall Street experts say, is the fact that with higher wage and ma- terial costs, profit-margins have narrowed. They point to the railroads. In August‘, latest nioi for which reports are available, they tooli- in l, , 000,000 more in gross revenues than a year prc- ' vfously, but after operating expenses were paid, they had $14,000,000 less than in the same month of I936. In the meantimeymany business men remain optimistic, pointing to bumper crops, es- timates of the best farm income since 1020, a halt to the climb in raw material prices, zind ap- proach of the active production season for auto- mobiles, l i!!!‘ blisunderstanding of the Doniiiiioifs iiii- migration laws, Prime Minister King thought, was the reason for Mr. Hepburifs ileclaration early this summer denying his allegianei- to hfackcnzie King Lilieralisnf. Ilc referred the Ontario Government's request that the Do- niiiiion bar certain C.I.O. workers. 'l‘heri- is nothing in the immigration laws to enable the Immigration Department to forbid entry to any citizen of'the United States so long as he vs-is financially responsible and behaved himself. If he did not conform to Dominion laws he could , lie deported, or if he violated the contract labor l law he could be sent back, The Government was i powerless to meet Mr. Hephurifs request at that ' time, Mr. Mackenzie King said. But the “lin- pctuous Mich" did not see it that \va_v, and so severed connections. I tn i l II 4 blodern historians and investigators are per- ioilically taking the joy out of tradition and gen-i \\"e are now told that what has commonly been zissumeil to have been said by the Governor of South Carolina to the (iovernor of North Carolina was actually a rc- porter's mistake. An old letter recently turned up gives what it claimed to be correct version. The two governors met, says the letter writer. exchanged formalities, veered gradually into small talk, and then suddenly ran entirely dry of anything at all to say. Finally, as they sat there, side by side, each staring off vacaiitly into space until the thing had become positively eni- hrirrassing, ‘he Governor of South Carolina sriiil to the (jovernor of North Carolina: “It's a darncil long time between thinks, aiift it?" This iviis happily misconstrued by the (loverniii- of North Carolina and the drought of small t-ilk between them thereafter was cased by liquid Ii . iiil when :iii epi- ~ ' ilirii starts lo , p, - .». ,-;i|il joins in , . -, -il.r iii protect l P i . iii-i lllt‘ t] ii 1 willing that the , refreshments. l‘!!! hlnssolinihas been having no ciiil flfllTlllllifiil = lithiopia though the censor has prevented out- l siders knowing n1iicli about it. Not only have, 3 tlierc been uprisings of the natives in the noi"li. 3 with the annihilation of the lta ion garrison ziiirl l civilian population at blalcale. but also there have liy Blussolini to f'(‘ll(’\'(- tlic_sitii.'ition. i i‘ 1F Danger of the Church lieciiining the "ailiiiii-"l of some political party“ if it (Ines not lieep its l senlic of being a separate body from the wiirlil order about it ivas suggested by Professor" l7. li. $cott, I).l)., of lfnion Theological Scuiin.'ir,v. New York. at the recent Conference (‘UIIIIIICIIIOY- zitiiig the silvci jubilee of Co-opcratinu l)l‘l\\"c"'ll the Theological (ollcgcs affiliated to Vvliill Vilivcrsitr. In his comments on the Church in the New TX-staincut l)r_ Scott held there \\'l‘l'(' at least two important lessons to be gained from it today, one being the need to zidapt itself to neiv conditions. as did 5t. Patil when founding church communities in iliffcrciit places zuiil; yet ivliilc identifying itself with the world surrouiiil- ing it there must he” a retention of its eonipliiu- ‘ individuality and separatencss. “Whilst seek-I ink to co-operate ivc are in danger of ltcingi absorbed in the world order." ll(' reinrirkcil and i i l tlrit iii course is, tiddcil that "the church stands in the world for , the highest spiritual order and when it fo-r-l gets this and merely competes with worldlvl agencies it loses its authority and gives up its, title to the priesthood." I . then: to n dillciiiini. wriv of thinking. | ellort and 0t just; how tin" i. may go itlthout creating too .it'l'll)ll-i ii in». .. . - at home. Japan ain't a lengthy cunip.i..;ii in tne shanghai art-zi-Ior both toic en and domestic i‘tiiison.s.—\\'tiiilsoi- Linn". The word “nuu-iilurvrntion" it.- sell is in ilaiiui r oi o " ‘mung a catch phrase unit-h is no. i-onuuciie to clear thinkirg. l; wit. be necessary to ensure lliii; ni-nliizi- under the pretence ot inalniriiiiiii; nor ol abandoning (lll-lllLl'I"\tiili0ll are “im- nmge 1 ( this Spanish Goreriiiniiii‘. lllllltllrfllh pcd. And in ‘i . ruin» Ilali \\'Lll hate io i ' .i‘i..t rlli‘ iamio.‘ make a mo '3 ii in.i.ioii.ii agietineiiis ii:.ii il.-._. .l llflllfillllcs o1 justice and i.i\-.. .‘ ..iii\\ihi.e lllt,’ construction u‘. a ioii.o_\' system can damazc llo oi..i ixwpt the pir- HlCL‘r—\\'ll0L‘\'CI‘ iln-y may he.—.\lan-, ehcster Uii-itmlnm. It is \\'(‘ll for anyone to argue against tipiii;oii.;\\liicl1 lie thinks lalsc, to Ckllllllllt the grounds upon wh eh they l)l'(>l(‘>_\' to rest. to en- deavour to (uni. irt those who hold Bu. all this in no \\. _. justifies the attempt to 11c" lie aiijioiie to go, lllllllll-“t his consii iii-e as long as his, conscience remains iiniiitiiiiiiectl. Tol convince a maxi that ltln‘ conseicn-i tloos eonvii-tiiiiis ‘ilTL no! true qulle a d lTercnt thing from per-, 1 sunning lilin to dzsolizgt- tliiin wlitle he stll thinks lliein trite. The tact is, that true Christian society and true Christian 1I‘l(‘lI(l>il1l1] cannot ex- , 1st on any iiiln-r ha; s than that. of respecting i-.'i'-li others consciructis. -.—Bi.<hop 'I‘eniplc. ' Perhaps munic palities are help-l leis.- l)(‘(‘.lIllS(‘ the]; have to shoulder" llIPll‘ ram-lion of the l)lll'(lt‘ll of relief, but that ‘he tilllll l tiriiguirlfl‘ WVIIPI‘ kliinzltl liar!‘ lo i,\' four oi‘ liYt‘ I“;ll‘a mills on lllt‘ lllll‘ aitrr a llll‘ ut int rllirtis iiitlleati :1 t-onie- l llllltfl ivro :. Ill‘. is being penalized. because of the ills of others and Lhrotigh no fault. of his own. That. is uihere the . stem of sochl legisla- ti n is at fiiiilt. It is eouce ved on, fa o premises, and has a tendency, to keep 0n the pruccss of making‘ people poorer. I! there s any new found systcnt 111 civilization which needs a thorough ovcrliriiillug, it is the ways and means devised for the taxation for and the (llstrlbtitloit of Stale charity.—V ctorin Colonist. Lord 'I‘\\'ecdsmuir's notable and adventurous trip to the Far North of Cnnatlii. It‘.>ll tilnu" in a great. con- fidence in th.“ ininortaiieo of the de- velopment that. liiis tiliead of it, will remain one of the t‘.‘~'|)t‘I‘l(‘l"|f‘C.\' by which his term as (‘ioviiruor-Gt-ner- l-Ic fnilckciicrl the interest psople in their north coin. _, In thi- transform- atzon that. will in.>-.i:(.ibi_t' take place, and In thc benefit. to conic from the = development of northern resources. Witn Icnssin nnikziig great progress in the development oi its northern regions, and with lll(' richness of the rcsotirccs in pat-rs of the Cue- aclian North alixaciyi known, why should we not, .ook to o. great fut. ure for that part of Canada, long regarded as a permanent wilder- ness '.’—-\Viiinipi-g Ii'rcc Press. l Today may prove to lie the most Important nay in your llle. At least. t is your llrllrllUgP and opportunity to ma-‘cc it 0U. A day of decision, perhaps. or o1 it chnuzv of course In win‘ life. But l(llIl0I'I'O\\' it. wlll have biicoiiii- not on.- ol your yes- Li.i'tlays.—i\onni~ ~41- ‘ a point at trhich provin- lllt‘ Constiltiliiiti perhaps‘ uii- ‘iis. n: tn.“ war il'\(l war. More ohv: 1.; that _ . hi“). l". ‘m been revolts of such inaguituili- in the siinth llizit g lb-i‘ 111W“? Iv, ' “f,” mm m "m l [iitclieil battles hnvt-‘been fought. Reports from if‘ '_“ hfmlifl-“llg: ‘Hilil s nirtlioils of DUI t. Fr I S. x l.‘ 1 H W-“Mlllrl qlmllllfb 1 , iiou l i (‘IICI . ona i ani, ucrc iai .|oii . iii:~--'.. - will} ‘ . . . . ‘ ' l l1" l". “l: l,‘ wounded Italians had’ yiasscil through the r-ail- A" IP-"twllltc “luv i -l sleet Iii-- i‘ l” “lull l“ m‘ Tlmlm‘ hear] there, bound for their native land '|‘l~.i~ I ‘ in i.. up ll sign . i" -i iurtv iroiu a , , U ' .. \\ » k. I‘ g I _, _,‘ ‘- uprisings began touaril the end of August -I‘l<l 1min hour; l "m" m“ \\'(‘l’(‘ Ell lhClr height rlllrlng the first wi-tili» of I die ca. li.cr hollivl \\ii]i the i-ontculs’ "n ' . ~ September. The Italian coninianiler was rr- zl,,llvli,slnilil' i‘"°‘T"‘l‘l“}§9mm“ >- . - . . ' l F ‘ .'. ‘i i‘ 1' l l tlllirdllll ported as having been despcrzitcly put to llj giir , throw [Klévlgljk brililueiiiitoilhlciiefiziil- ‘ i- a fortnight to cope with the natives, after coin- i trie fati. miii the whole OIllCC force l ' i rli‘ Pilitiii" of the loll‘ niunieations hail been repeatedly cut bv tlic-iii. fimlfk for ii sit-L hour ilii_\'.~ R0301 i -.i‘. i-iii. iii ilii- stzitt ol lli- ilecitlerl that the present force in litliiopizi 1 “"11" ll"'"“"""‘_ . 'i._._i 1 ziiiailzi i< dfilt- was notfiiflicii-nt and risked for zidililii-nal , 15am“ |¢,,,.,.5,,,,,,,, 3,115,,“ §h|p_: l'iltlll\'l' lf'i'llll‘l\llll‘.. troops. lliree thousand l],'|\‘(\ hot-n emit _<r-r~rr-,]_v ‘ owner, ulio ilnid r itly, lelt tin cstziti o1 tiooui. Sllililltulz, lliii ileain - duties on \\'lll.ll will bii $1,521,844. It in intrrtsliitl; to recall tlint thi-i biiruli started li.s working llll‘ as n ch ld on a tar n: lllt‘ll wviit to sea ‘ as a cabin l)il_‘.'j uorketl hclore the in-..:~t: (‘l\l‘llt"(l iii. inasii-ifl» certifie- a.e1 bought a ship. and flniilly fiilllldfifl and opiiriitiril n 1 IllHBy linrd and lncersaiit. work, anti by enter- prise. all through his uinrty years of llli’. he m.i.'l-- fnnic and fortune. Now taint he ls (lcnd the state plots almost half his treattlrnalontrrnl GIIZJJ‘. This piear thi- Riviera haw been ll‘.\h(lf‘i'l by solar. iiiiilillerlass holi- (lair-matter lflllllfy’ liom France lt- ' jlfllhllLfl ‘ier lhs l'l'llllt' ‘ Pqpulai‘ l-‘Fotit Goteiiiiiirttt. whtch ii year i) cstnlilxshnd “piilrl holidays." . EIIlflQVCPS vnlio had worlzr-rl twelve months lnvznn" rn fled by law to a fortnluhri; llOlltllfCr .i\‘i.~iv.. Review, Liindon. The slate of Ill? toads ls some- thing lhn‘ thii liiilii-iilur. rainiot rbntrol. lllll‘l't‘ll.\ thiiri- are other izrlcvaviccs which vlslt n: tourist." (inrry home with them flint he may caslly remove. And the chlef of‘ ‘ the 1937 re=ponse will i Right close to the low bridge the l iThat sit-reps landward and lone- clr . afar, i But my akc lles alone like asinall frlghtencd bride, Silver and solemn and cold as a rustic FORUM Tllhl column l» |||||'Il Nil’ I'll’ cllu-ni-slon ll lfllfrflllhlll tl rlultoluull l ‘Nfillfny i». unlrlljbillllltlllll. “LEST we IfORCiET" ' Sun-The Pcppy has been im- mortalized as an emblem of giant sacrifice. The Provincial Command; of the Canadian Legion appeals, to every man, women and chlld tn : our Province to buy a pOPIJY B-ndl wear It on Remembrance Day, thereby honouring those W110 made the supreme sacrifice and asslst the Legion 1n helping those who survive and are now In need, and for which all money received must be used. We appreciate the very generous response of our cltlzcns In the, past. but fcel, that with conditlons as they are in the world to-day- be even greater than before. not. only ln our Province but throughout Can- ada. and the Empire. As poppies must be sold a feW day's previous to November 11th. we also ask social service and pub- lii: welfare organizations to with- hold their appeals for public sup- port for the period from the 5th to the 11th of November as a mark of respect to those "Who rest in Flanders Fields.’ and help to i-iiiise a realization of what. war inenns. whlch was so flttingly ex- pres ed by His Majesty King George the sixth ln an address to Ex-servlce men and women ln I-Iyde Park, London, on Sunday. June 2'7. 1937. "Those of u; who have seen War know what a great; calamity It. 1s, for victors and vanquished alike. and if, with the unlted weight. o1 our experience. we can convince ‘he world of this fact. then I feel we can render no greater service lo the human race." I am, Sir, etc. B. W. ROBINSON. President. Provincial Command. Oariflrlilml, Legion, B. E. S. L. , ._. _______.___ i WESTERN RELIEF Shy-Carloads of frults. vegeta- bles and other field products are. moving from every province ofj Canada to the distressed areas 0f_ Saskatchewan. Already more than 250 cars have been shipped. Sections In Manl- loha ivliich last year had to ac- i-ept. rellef owing to a crop failure are this year sending 100 cars to llIPlI‘ Saskatchewan neighbors and over 100 cars have gone from the j eastern provinces. ‘The objective of the joint com- mittee of churches for western re- lief ls 500 carloads and the chair- man of the committee expresses confidence that. thls objective wlll be attained. If so lt 1s essential, thnt each province must do its share. The United Church 0f Ciltfldll in this province have arranged to send forward their first shipments this week. A car wlll be placed at Charlottetown on Friday the 15th for Cornwall and vlclnity. On the same day another car will be placed at; York and a third car Is being arranged for the district of Wlnsloe Piistorate and the Milton English Parish. the car to beplac- ed at Milton Station. Glfts of pro- duce wlll be acceptable from any source for any or all 0f these shipments. The question will be further discussed at a Presbytery meeting AUTUMN Lake of Shining Waters DAY The wild duck ls flying the length of the lake And its shadowed WlIlK5 llft ln the water, and fly stiller reflection. spruccs shake With dark sudden murmur ngalnst the pale sky. In The thin tall grasses cling, And their rustle is cold as a Wind from the sea some. and only to bring The ghostly grey song of the sil- ence to be. By the long north shore fL-Ids where the white breakers rtde, The gulls scream ln terror and star. Dorothy E. Sangsler, Ottawa. NOTE:--Many tourists to Prince Edward Island are puzzled to fliid two lakes“ one at, Cavendish and one at. Park Corner, (inch called The Iiiike of Shlnlng Waters. Ii. M. Montgomery, however (urhiisc “Anne" was responsible for the name» settles the matter. In a letter written to me tn July of 1935 Mrs. Mnedonnld states "Park Comer. iivhere my cousins llvr, ls right beslde the Lake of Shlnlna Watcrs", and ngaln In a statement publlshed ln October of 1936 she declares "The Pond at Park Cor- ‘ i-xpiss» nor, commonly known as Camp- i hcllfls Pond, ls the body of water I had In mlnd when I descrtbcd the Lake nfi Shlnlnz Waters ln‘ ‘Anni- of Green Gables". The poem above refers. therefore, to Jhe authrntlc Lake at Park Corner, -D.E.S. ‘here ls a stupltl, slmrt-r-‘r,’ ted over- ' charging at every turn of which we l 'rust our people may some day be ciiied. -— Quebec Chronlcle - Tele- graph. l in b.- iirld in Hc-artz Hall t-odflv and lt ls expect". tha‘ as a result ' rlcts wlll become int?!’ “Thy can we show that ' ._.=ni has no place in 0th .,| rmr-iini our glllh will our fslli. whip vfilll llll-lcl’ hi need. There and for a near neighbflf WM 11-“ be?" ls no lzick of sympfllhll l burnt-rt cut or has suffered loss 0r has mct ivlth dlsaser, but thE parable cf the “Good Samarltaii" gjycg a wldc meaning to the ques- ll0I1 "Who ls my neighbor‘! I" that. parable the answer ls Hethflt showed mercy or had compassion to the man In need. This replv met. with the commendatlon of Jesus ivho at once rcjolned "G0 thou, oh traveller, and do llke- ivlse.“ I am, Slr, e'c.. JOIIN F. WHEAR» For Trinity Church Committee- ON REVISITING THE ISLAND Sin-Perhaps the most Interest- ing Incident of my recent trip w the Island, (outside my immediate fiimlly circle) was a conversation with a Chinaman In Charlotte- town- He soon perceived I was a stranger in town, and, immediately bombarded me with questions about: the war lnChlna. He sald he iivas n native of Canton, and that his family was In the zone of Japanese bombings. “Too bad" he sald. “my family good chrlstlans, ' educated by mlsslonarles to love everybody. and not b0 fight. nny- body, now Japanese come and kill my people, and missionaries and Americans riln away." As I traveled back to Boston, that statement kept rlnglng In my ears,“ mlsslonarles and Amerlcans run away," 'I‘hen I began asking myself a fciv questions. What ls our responsibility ln such a crisis? Are we our brother's keeper? Slioud we teach the Chinese to love his neighbor and turn the other check if attacked by an ,- cneniy? Should he glve his cloak as ‘well as the coat that ls demand- ed? Should ll(‘ triilk the second mile when he is forced to walk the first? The an=wer faintly to echo Itself to me In the christian tloctorlne thrt suggests such things. Then, came the dis- turbing thought, are not Italy and Germany, christian nations, yet; are they not doing the same thlng ln Spain? Dld Italy not do 1t In Ethiopia? Slaughtc the Innocents ln the mime of chrlstlanlty. Dld they nct do It in the Crusades? Have they not clone it gtnce the datvn of the Christian Era? YES! Came the answer, and with It the stinging words. “The mlsslonarles and the Americans ran away!" lhttlefifll Rltl by iiiii- D809", seemed l REMEMBER? . . . , , _ . A few years ago when you said, "ll 8°Pd time: ever come agllfl» I'll build up n safe 1nd Jun financial reserve. 1 human GOOD Resolu n‘ Is a BETTER our: NOW! With a well-planned life insurance programme you can establish, at once, a safe financial reserve. Through the years, increasing values will provide you and your family with protection against the uncertainties of other financial ventures. Dominion Life re resentatives cordial] offer you their co-operntion, in Ormulating your Li e Insurance in- vestment plans. Get in touch with u local Dominion Life man. BE SAFE AND SURE, as you promised yourself you would be a -l 1'1: D FIRST POLICY fore they aqulre this crushlng power, where they demfl-“d lmedm‘ and justice for themselves. but deny It to others, and rob them of . that)‘ life and property in the most, cruel and bIood-tititrsty WHY- l-Iow aptly the words 01 Pfltridi Henry would apply to such a con- dltlon, when he sold. "I8 W599 5° sweet and precious that. it must. be purchased at, such a price? To my 9111mm friend, the world says NO! Carlyle says: ‘There ls a. force that eternally makes for right. Indeed. it- would seem, the very; Perhaps the great. democracies of words seeicd the mind President. For, dld he not. answer the Charlottetown Chlnaman, ln his Chicago speech on ‘Tuesday the 5th instant, when he mid, "The present reign of terror and Interna- tional lawlessness began a. few years ago It began through un- justified interference In the In- ternal affair; of other nations or the invasion of aiien territory ln violation of treaties, and has now reached o. stage viihere the very foundations of clvtltzatlon are seriouly threatened. The land- marks and condltton of law, order“ and justice are betng wiped away. Innocent people and natlons are being cruelly sacrificed to a greed for power and supremacy which ts devoid of n11 sense of justlce and humane consideration. In times of so called peace, ships are being at- tacked and sunk by submarines without catise or notice. Nations are tormenting and taking sldes In clvll warfare In nations that. have never done them any harm. America. hates war; America hopes for peace. Therefore, America actively engages in the search for peace. The peace-loving nations must make a concerted ef- fort ln opposition to those vlo- latlons and those ignorlngs of humane Instincts which today are creating a state of International anarchy and Instability from whlch there ls no escape through mere Isolation or neutrality , , . , ," He said more. but this 15 adequ- ntc to tell ht; feelings on the mat- ter or the ruthlessness that la go- lnt; on tn Europe and Asia. I hope my little Chinese friend ln your city, will read these words and trike comfort. from them. Perhaps. after all the 90% of the peoples of the world, wlll safeguard the rlghts of themslcvc; against the 10% of internal murderers and devastation who uizzird rain bombs of death on the innocent. women, children and men of the world, whose only of- tense ls that of bclng born human beings and nilndlng thelr own bilslncss hi their own country. When we were young chaps, we resented the action of a bully who would attack one of our pals. Usually we would gang up on him and glve lilm a well deserved beat.- lng 'I‘hat. is prlnlltlve Instinctive- ne s. Dlaced ln us by our Creator for prutectlve purposes. Any artl- fli-lnl culture tn natlonnl groups that ivould allow any bully to d95- troy n sister natlon wlthout her pas gauging up to defend her, 1,5 "will! Cvfllfflry to their Creator's de-“lkns, Clirlit proved thls when he single ltandcd. drove the pro. faners of the temple from theli seats of exnhnnge and barter. Are we los mfltiint and human then He? Rsrsrvrlt must have had thla 1n mlnd trheu he sold." If clvlllza. tlon ls to survive the pflflclplgg or the Prince of Peace must be re- torcd. Shattered fruit between ha. tlons mvst b: rcvlved." Then, tho Prcslzlrn‘. went on to say, "Let. no one lmatzlne Amerlca will escape." then quotlng from the "Inst flvrlwn’ by James Hllton nie Enzllsh wrlier, he sald. "There wlll he no safety by arms, no help from ‘. authority, no answer 1n sc‘ence. It wlll rage llll every flower of culture ls trumped. and all human thlnga are leveled In a vast char." 1111s latter. seems to be poetical than frctral. Especlally at. this time. If, however, those bully pirate nnttans. are allowed to wln vl Lory after vlciory, and con. quest after conquest, these word; or prophecy. wtli come true ln fact. It ts better that the aggressor na- tlon; of the world be stopped 5,. H1078 of our i England, France and the Untted States ls that: force, ln thls pre- sent world debauchery. Alt-ho the visit to my native country was short, lt was EH10)‘- able. Your kind remarks were ap- preciated, even tho 1n part. im- deserved. One naturally notes chanles that. occur between vlslts of elapsed decades. One notlcable observation was the growth of un- derbnish and shrubbery tn fields that were under cultivation a. few years ago. The trains seem slower and less oertaln of their schedules than ln former years Buylng prices of commodities are very high and selling prices very low. Any evldenee of improvement Is usually the result of government ald to the source of such Improve- ment. Rarely It, ls the result of local endeavors. The people are few years ago ! W: inn h! ‘n4 iii rrml you Si" simian. "ul- Innunlcc A: An Inn-WWII"! - 0M1 i Mini» .i. s. MacKenzle, o. 1.. u. Provincial Manager, m ti» us oritnim sum Assmmflcf QQMPM" I No obligation. LIFE ISSUED _lN 1889 friendly and reverent and sollcltmls of ones welfare. My ‘blessings on thee, little Isle, Wlth your ktnd and friendly ltykr- Wlth your flelds when “t-aterl" grow And your crystal streams that ‘flow- Onward, outward to the sea- Let me think and dream of thee, I am. Blr, etc. _ PETER A. RIELLY I Boston. Mass October 6, 1937. fi-i SLEEPIm i AIME IEFIIESIIEII poison: and Into u“ . 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