lllilillilliil illlWii Eiilllillili Praline. e. leis-ales’ L“ vus-n-ts-e,“ kg)‘. pea-q. Illter 1's. . ° au-a-issetozlramomu THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1e, 1925 ‘@- ‘FARDWAN CREADY Canadian fertiliser plants out of ' business alnd up went the price of fertilizer. The duty on agricultur- al implements was removed and the price of agricultural impls-‘ lnents went up. I There was a great deal of mis- ‘i-fberal-Oonservatlve con- volition held u. Cardigan ‘yester- day afternoon for the purpose of nominating a candidate to contest the Third District o! Kings for the Notes By The Way Sir Thomas White, who presided over the finances of the Dominion during the Great War, was iltly chosen as an introductory- and principal speaker at the Winnipeg Conference. in his great task oi providing the sinews of war for Canada so IilOCBBlllIiiy he not only ' rendered a great national service to his native land -but also won for himself an imperial and interna- tional fame. But the strain upon his mental and physical powers at high tension during those eventful years, as was also the case with Sir Robert Borden. involved the necessity of prolonged rest and re- seat made vacant by the election . chievous propaganda against the of Hon. John A. Macdonald late i policy of protection. in screaming‘ Minister of Public Works, to the l type in every Liberal newspaper‘ it was called the policy oi High Protection Taxation, people were told that protection would mean federal parliament was a typical Conservative and Cardgan one. The attendance was large, the pro- tirement from ofllcial public duty. Since his retirement kom poll l- cal life Sir Thomas Wzhlts 72s been but seldom heard from in re- gard to the public affairs of Can- ada. This has been a public loss; had his great ability and ripe ex- ceedlngs cordial and the nomina- tion unanimous. Mr. H. IF. Mac- Phee is one of the rising youuit oi Charlottetown. He has already won his spurs in his higher prices to the consumer and, highbr all-round taxation. Trim, ithis propaganda had little effectl in the Maritimes or indeed in Can-g ada for. with practically only one: barristers chosen profession and, we feel, sure, will worthily fill the seat so‘. means were used to defeat not the, ably Killed not only by his immedi-l ‘ ‘Conservative fiscal policy but the! ate predecessor but by a long line‘ ‘ ieader——the whole i ‘Conservative of particularly able men. Theimumr voted! t U l ' ora r - - District, Third King's y p o“ ye p0 _ iicy. ‘not "high protection” -but the‘ has already been a strong and_1n-. ' Cardigan fluentlal factor in our provincial‘ the choice yesterday, no doubt to m d8 against foreign products as‘ high ‘as: l ‘ that against Canadian products ,in iths countries to which we sell and merited at the bye-election WhenI . from which we buy. it comes, there is good reason to‘ believe that its stren-gth and its‘ iuflltence shall he sustained. Mal politics and in be imple- Let the electors look sauoly and sensibly into the question for MacPhee is a more than ordinarilyithemselves‘ Let them not b6 mm- _ ‘led by partlzan propaganda on glued speaker and M" make a vawelther sides but ask themselves uable addition to the debating and strength the Stewart Government. lwbere Canada is going to land if ‘she permits foreigners to exploit ‘our markets while they protect administrative of We heartily Mat-Phee on the honour conferred. upon him by the grand old districti oi ‘Cardigan and we confidently congratulate Mr. predict for him a steady upward climb in the political the legal field. as well as —~-—<o>i— OAMPAIGN LESSONS Although the campaign has left some loose ‘ends recent election which are yet to be gathered up the men and women who are to pay the taxes and the expenses arc asking what the row was all about. What was the election for? What were we voting for? Some, we know, voted for the man; some for the party regardless of the man or his qualifications; policy, Liberal or While each oi these reasons for voting has its merits, some for the Conservative. while the man to whom we give our support confidence should be known to be above re- proach. should he known to he honourable, a man ot‘ his word and sufficiently informed on political questions to be able to creditably take ‘his place among representa- and our tive men. yet the principle and the policy for which he stands must guide our voting if we are true to our country. lf we vote simply for the party because it is our party and the party of our fathers, re- gardless of its policy or what it stands for, we are. to put it plain- ly, sinnlng against our country and against ourselves. in the recent election there was one main issue, na/mely, the fiscal policy. the Conservative policy oi protection and theyLlberal policy of a tariff for revenue only, a tariff which would afford no protection to our agricultural or industrial pro ducts. Men and women voted, no doubt consistently. for each of these. There are- those among us who, like certain members of parlia- ment. rejoiced after some sweep- ing reductions had been made 1n the tariff by the late government, -—that they had "beard the death knell oi protection." lt is difficult to understand e Canadian consistently and intelli- gently advocating the throwing down oi our tariff bars. the free or the near free openin, up of our country to foreign competition. it is all the more difficult to under- stand it with the example of the United States. the most highly pro- tected and the richest country In the world right under our eyes. And we have instances of (ll? VII l6 Iillli Il- Th l!“ [OV- themselves against us by a protec- tive tariff. v -____¢o>i OFF ON VAOV.‘ 0N Two of tlhe Canadian political lilcnders are off on vacation" only ‘one, Mr. Forke. theQ-Plloglressive ‘leader. remaining at his post. Both Mr. Kin-g and Mr. Meighen have gone south for a muoh needed rest ‘after the ‘strenuous election cam- paign and to recuperate in prepar- ation for a se-ssion which ‘may or may not (be strenuous and may be long or short. ‘in fact ‘it ‘may not materialize at all. ‘Before meeting parlrla-mcnt ‘Mr. Lapointe will! nec- essarily have to assure himself that a sufficient number of tuhe non-Liberal menthol-s ‘shall sup- port him, otherwise he may ask for dissolution before meeting parlia- ment. ‘While (Mr. ' La-poinre, al- though the nominal ileader of the party. will no doubt lbe governed largely 'by lMr, King and. so fair, the flatter either does not know what course he is going in ‘pursue or does not want to tell. ‘It is not to iihe credit of Canada. nor for its ‘good. that the administration of its ‘pubic affairs should (be depend- len; upon ‘the uncertain issue of "the auction block," for ‘the oom- lng session, if rlt cornea at alil, will depend upon the terms that will ‘be accepted by the outside wing-g of the party. mi EDITORIAL NOTES ‘llwo general election campaigns within six mon-iihe is a somewhat strenuous chapter in our political ‘life. Curious that, to a certain type of mind. all the argument on the other aide is "misrepresentation" or "albuse" or "scurri-lity." A partial ‘blanket of snow fell on Tuesday night. just enough to give a gentle hint as to what is coming. Some people consider it always the right thing to blame the fel- low on the other aids. This is es- pecially true of the political game. The enterprise of our sport-lov- log youth was abundantly evid- enced yesterday by a number of children. mere tots. who carried enough of the meagre snow blan- ket to a favorite hill by ‘the street side and made a tobaggan slide which enabled them to coast. Surely this love of coasting should some how be gratified by erect- perience in finance been available it might have been of great value to the country. l-ils address at the Winnipeg Conference on Canada's present national and economic p0- sition covered a wide range of sub- gxwpflml‘ Quebecf“ "he" mher-‘jects and showed that he had kept‘ abreast of the national progress 9f Canada in all its lines oi‘ activity. and had lost none of his patriotic interest therein. ' “l have always had faith in Can- principle of protection. a tarifffida." said Sir Thomas. "and it‘ would be difficult indeed for me to be other than confident as to Can- ada's future. That is because i be- lieve that Canadian ability, Cana- dian energy and Canadian patriot- ism will always prove adequate to the solution of Canada's national problems.” was supported by n review 0f the growth oi‘ Canada in wealth, in the expansion of trade and industry, pointing out that while our national indebtedness‘ is large, u prlflvlillll part of the interest thereon is bc- ing paid lo our own people as bold- ers of Victory and other Wur Loan bonds. The most serious of our present national problems. all of which were brought under review -by Sir Thomas uud treated impartially, is the yearly recurring‘ railway deficit. We need a million more people to put our National Railway system on a pay- conducted on an elevated and pat.- riotic plane. which ii followed in the later deliberation and crystal- lized in the resolutions and recom- mendations adopted will give pro- mise oi‘ beneficial results. There la to be a recount of the votes cast in the late election In Queen's County, beginning on lFri- day next. This is-a judicial proce- dure and is usually allowed when asked for by a candidate who is personally concerned in the result. Nobody will complain that it has been asked for in this case, and no one will doubt that it will be con- ducted with the utmost care and impartiality. At the same time the recount will necessarily delay the ofllcial return oi the members who have received the majority of votes and will prolong in some measure the uncertainty as to who have been lawfully elected. Had capable and well-instructed officials been pla cod in all the polls the result of the election would have -been known at the close of the voting nearly three weeks ago and the official re- count now pending would probably not have bepu asked for. The Toronto Globe seems to think the people of the Maritime: did not vote mainly on the tariff in the re- cent election. it may be admitted that other considerations were also in their minds at the time. There was. at least a strong determination to get rid of the ‘King Government. But the Globe is wrong in its as- sumption that the Maritime people are, or have ‘been strongly oppose-i to a protective policy. in the elec- tion of 1878 on the National Policy the three Maritime Provinces re- turned 24 Conservative ‘members and only 19 Liberals. Again in 1911 when baurier was at the height of his popularity and reciprocity was the issuethe -Maritimes returned to 19 Liberals. Since then there is no doubt that a protective policy is more highly apreciated and regard ed as a necessity for Canada than it-was before. The higher Ameri- can tariff in recent years has pow- erfully contributed to that result. The three eleotlone of 1s1s, i911 and i928 in the Maritime Provinces in all of which the tarlii‘ was a main issue. emphatically establish our contention. Here is the record: Conservative. Liberal l878............24 19 1911 .... 1e ‘"10 1925 . . . . . . . . . . .. l3 Total........ 68 H mm as duty from lug s smell slide in some safe It ie admitted that This note of optimism 9'" Parliament 18 Conservatives and‘ the large 0on3 ran cnsntorrmowu commit; i ca: Soar of more flplcm Y.ICILIL MORE THAN CALORIES In a very worthy effortto cut down the food intake. thus save food and keep down the weight, some folks are forgetting that food is used ior other, purposes than just as fuel to supply the nee essary energy for the body. lt must in addition to supplying this food for energy,’ supply also the materials to manufacture the act- ual cells of the body itself. You have likely seen little tab- ,les showing the iood value in cal- ories (heat) oi the various kinds of foods. This is of course of value and the restaurants doing this are doing a real service in getting people interested in the idea of a mixed diet. But that something more than just so many calories jwas essential in the daily diet. has i-been proven by our research men, iwho have been able to show that Lthose mysterious things we call vit- ‘amius are very important factors. They are known as i'at soluble. ‘A found in animal fats. fat solu- vble B found in certain cereals and leggs. and water soluble C found ‘in certain fruits and vegetables. 4 And what are the particular pro- lperties of these vitamins insofar ‘us that body of yours is concerned? The fat. soluble A found in ani- mal fats has been shown to in- crease the resistance oi'the body against inflections diseases. Ani- muls oi" the same family have been infected und one group ‘given foods containing this A vitamin. and the other food free from vitamin A. The animals fed with vitamin A invariably did better than the oth- b. Put soluble B found in'cerenls and eggs likewise strengthens the resistance powers oi‘ the body and is essential to the growth of thel cells of tho body. And the water soluble C found in fresh fruits and vegetables is the: essential element that prevents that dread ailment, scurvy, whit-bl bus worked havoc on shipboard ori other glint-es, where fruits and veg-‘ ctublcs were not obtainable. ‘ l know that there are many fads iu foods these days, and it is nn-. fortunate tbnt some folks find it‘ necessary to actually weight their‘ daily intake. This kind of thing can |be carried to such nu extreme that? (the individual may crenté u reul lirervnils condition therefrom. ‘ i However food is really you, be- cause you are just what you eat, My: and it is therefore worth while to 1118418515- Hi5 elm" dlscmlrse w“ remember n. little more than thyme“ w back‘ up MB _afgu‘rnent' amount euteu daily. You must thlnklmen Denm- no; argue, 11 makes no also of those little essentials, the vifumlrls. v {em-i oveweo Daily Selections FOR é Guardian Readers l-O-OV Novembel: 19, 192s ROAD TO sUCCSsz-Commlt thy way unto the Lord; trust ‘also in him and he shall bring it to pass. . . Rest in the Lord, and, wait patiently for him. Psalm 37: 5, 7. PRAYER:—O Lord,’ Thou know- est us, and also the end from the beginning, and we are nothing apart from Thee. Therefore now we commit ourselves and our way to Thee. LOCARNO Lord God of Hosts, Thy Glorious Name we praise, For now a new light breaks across the Sea. Our foolish hearts had fallen far ’ from Thee. And, fed on hate. the fruit of bit- ter (lays, Distrusting all. we wondered in a maze Of dark suspicion, groping hope- lessly. We saw no outlet ‘to a world set free Prom war and anguish and th greed which slays. But Thou hast hqarltened to the orphaifs cry, The heart's despair. man's broken prayers for peace; No more shall ‘might be right and evil good: - For, lo, abpve those lands where brave men lie. A vision dawns of days when wars shall cease. And all mankind be one vast brotherhood. —-Canon F. (l. Scott. Quebec, 1925. NOVEMBER 19.——You are cheer ful. contented. truthful. and af- fectionate". You kavé many friends. and love is near you. Try to be thoughtful for the dear ones who love you and place love first in your life. Your birth-stone is which means fidelity. Your flower is the chrysanthe- mum. Your lucky color is grey. the topaz. from tariff protection than other Provinces east and west. but the necessity for a uhtevalling tariff in Canada to eet tie-prohibitive The Public Forum This oeluna ta apes he the discussion by correspondents of uusatieoa of interest. ‘Ike Charlottetown Guardian does nee necessarily endorse the op- inions ef correspondents ' o+oo BU_Y AT HOME. _8ir.—<As a. reader of your paper ‘I notice in your issue of the liillh. inst. an article entitled “Buy at Home" which says that our ‘home merchants are paying their share of the taxes of the oauutry. I cau- not see any argument there. Has not every one to pay an equal share of the taxes? Again l wish to ask how patronizing our home stores will reduce taxation, as there- are little or no goods manufactured l-n this province. This puts us in a position that We have to buy all our goods outside our province. ‘In that case wiho has the better right to order them, the menchaln-t or the consumer? Any reasonable mam or woman will admit that they can lbuy ‘from the ‘ma! order houses at ‘least twenty to twenty rfive per cent lcss than from ‘the home merchants. Again they say we‘ send our mone-y out of the province. Does the merchant no; send our money outside of our province to pur- chase- his ‘goods? Do they not send a portion of it to United ‘States manufactorles? Again they tc-li ‘us that we are spending a mgillllon dollars that ought to ibe gpent at home. if so it would cost at least a million and a ha-lf dollars to purchase the same goods flrom our local merchanm. Now, there is only one way ‘for our local merchants to stop us from trading wit‘h the catalogue ‘houses and that is to com-pate with them on- prices, othelrwlsc we w-lll ta/ke the merchant's own advice and practice economy. which means 'i/J buy our goods where we can buy them the cheapest. l om, Sir, etc. ECONUMV. {as OU R TRANSPORTATION QUES- Slr,—\Vhcn -Mr. Hyndmnn suid be d-id not intend to enter a news- paper controversy with one he should at least have quoted me correctly. lic- sold: "He. claims that a SMCOYHI Oalnfe-rry is not needed. as the present Ollie is adequate." Then ht.- went on to state what he thought the "Province was capalble of producing in the years to come and said:-—“Cuptain ‘Re-ad's argu- ment is ‘founded on the ass-unsp- tlou thnt- we have only to _n1eet prose-tit requirements." ' Why should he ‘make suoll state» uients, if lie bud nny sound argu- mc-rlt to comhatyvhat l really iii-d ii-repeat. if n man has not got difference to ‘me- rif ‘he replies or not, my letter is the-re and speaks ‘itlfdlfitfllf. ‘My argument was (based on a dcrlain resolution which also speaks ‘for itself and which roads as iollows:—“Wi~UER\i<3.-bS the present ‘car ‘ferry steamer IS ilNlSUlF-FIC- LENT during the Fall lmmrths for the handling of ‘the increased traf- fic." ll ask ‘Mr. Hyndma‘ . ‘if ‘by any stretch of the imagination, ‘oh-e albove resolution should he con- stnued to refer to the increased production. "we ‘believe that, ‘P. E. l. can -produce" in ‘the years to come’! ‘ hf ‘shat was the invention of the iresolution, then he shou-ld ‘have ex- pressed h-l-mleelf in different lan- gvualge and used the words, WILL ‘BE ENISIUPEIOIIENT instead of ‘llS INSMFEIJOIENT." for the re- solution was NOT -llN ACCORD AINICE WllTI-i THE FACTS at the present and how was anyone to know what was meant when it dlltl not show it. l cannot see that his explana- gion re the C. ~P..'lt.11as strong-then- ed his argument in falvor of ibrlng- img her in, in fact he admits it w-lll never lble an accomplished ‘fact when he saidr-"The C. d’. R. can be depended upon not to undertake- anything that will not -be profit- able." . ‘It le 1o Ibo presumed he meant PRJOFITABLETO THE C. 1P. R. in which case the proposed Brula Charlottetown ferry lSsnvloe will inate atever profit there ‘t be where and I defy Mr. Hyudlman to bind a single lman who knows anything about lWinter -Nav jggflfill) who will say that ‘route is feasible. - The great cry through the Marl- times is that freight rates nre too high. fl asked the question, what would ‘happen if the C. IP. R. was Ibrou-ght in but there has been no contradiction to the answer l gave. in fact not a single assertion l made has been refuted and not a single question answered which is pretty good -proof that i have the riglht end of ‘the argument. |Mr. l-iyndman concluded his ar- gument with a rather persona-i re- mark when hc saidz-"lt seems a pity, indeed. that if Captain Read felt that-he had such valuable in- formation on the subject to lbe dis- cussed. that he did not see fit to come before the Maritime Confer- ence at Charlottetown. which was the proper place. (rather than’at this late date. to endeavour to be- little and criticise, without hav- ing heard the various discussions." ll differ with ‘Mr, ‘Hyndman as to the proper place to discuss this matter and -if he will refer to some tm-eepondence which passed be- tween us just previous to the sn- nual meeting o the Aaoaoisted Boards of Trade he might be- able lo answer the reason why I was not there. f wrote M-r. Hyndman expressing a desire to attend the Associated Board of Trade meeting to disoull the question of Tre/niportatlen ea it effected this Province and the re- lily i got was. that while he would like to see one ‘present he oouid twtvery well let me epefl MAI! WI Printers sun Tramp‘ But Methods Change The-tramp printer. the moat colorful of ‘the characters with whom a wandering heel was Q chronic complaint, has not disap- peared but has merely changed his methods of getting round. says James M. Lynch, speaking auth- oritatively as the president of the‘ international Typographlcal Un-. ion. Printers ink seems always to have been an inspiration to Wanderlust. The "tramp" was us; often the man who wrote the copy as the man who hand picked the type and set it up. Bayard Taylor] _ tramped Europe "with only a sheet} of paper between him and hun-‘ ger" before he had finished his aD-' prentlceship as a printer. accord? lug to the New York Sun. He could not have done it “had ~he not been one of us." says the tramp printer. ‘ But the tramps whom Mr. Lynch had in mind were those referred to in recent despatches a "the last of his kind"——meu such as Jim as soon as known. Phones 67 and 833. We remind you that any claims for loss or damage to goods arrhving from abroad should be‘ reported to this office insurance promptly effected on goods leaving the leland by rail. sailing vessel or steamship. Charlottetown. Pike. old Si Robinson, Bert Dale. Bob Ayers, “Muskogee lied." Hard Montgomery. "Tulsa Mike" and Ran Phillips. (“Old Kokomo") whom newspaper offices knew from one end of the country to the other, or. -as “Kokomd ' put it. "from Bangor to San Diego. from Tampa to Tacoma." the weary travel-stained wander- er. “Couldn't stay nwuy from the Peerless Princess _of the Plains. Colonel." The applicant for a job showed by that diplomatic remark ihe knew men. Wichita was tbc Colonel's idol and he was himself u past master of alliteration; ‘he had just styled Wichita “Tile Magical Mascot of the Mystical liferiflinu." A familiar form, stick in hand, was back ut the (eases. “Kokomo" told his old friend Don Gaston of the present method of travel. "l dont ‘ride the brake any more. l carry a razor and n change of linen Sounds Reasons For Moving On. New York, “Bean City" and "Phillie" were too "confining" for them when riding a brake rod or going blind baggage would land them ut Pittsburg‘ or Buffalo. And Buffalo was "too windy" and Pitts- burg "too smoky." and after that Chieago was "too rushing" and "b"! W" llll-‘illle-‘lfl- Cmchmau ~50 any to get awayimOlille out of ton would pass an from." California was the plncofvld mnn"~l<nkoulo" is pas! 70— ~m 89m“. down my, 3m many ufifluu the automobile highway and [hem never mach“; |¢_ Bob Ayers-bot give him n lift ii‘ be looks clean cffeulinzlto." hc adds lalologetically Not one auto- ‘lmrie continued. "is tha‘t it be courageous and. i-i you will. bold -enough to ‘make it abundantly clear 10 our own neolfle B-nd the world. that i‘t represents a new. serious, fle-tttnnlned and statesman-ilk.- endeavor to reaillly colonize our vacant lands. The seoand essential is that the emphasis ibe upon col- onization rather than ‘more im- migration. Canada must not con- ninue to ‘be a stepping stone for i-mruigratrlon to the U‘n‘lted States." The speaker urged that loans (be extended to destrnilale pemonpwith sufficient capital as a means o: speeding up the ‘new settlement scbelmc. “No one is more opposed ‘than i l0 pqtelrmalism. ‘but lit 1811' case of chosing {between two ewllls. Our. pro-sent national situation rls un- ‘benmalllle. lPemranent. and lncreas ad ‘lmpullnmion cannot be secured in he n- CCSSRTy - qquanilitlee without finuutcinl nld lo-muny gettlm-g," when ‘ihc tliiilfiltllcl‘ of the ne-w ll0|‘ii‘_y has been lfinnllly approved lby purliarunt, its adcnrinistration yems utter he left New York and! got no nearer than Lajunta. Color? ado. and "Muskogee Red's" friends declare he never got beyond ‘Scott City, Knnsus. West of the Mississ- ippi was the tourist printer's happy hunting _ ground. Leaving St.‘ Louis by blind baggage on,the irou Viountalu Railroad. he might reach the Arkansas border in a week. Colonel J. R. Taylor of the Para- gould Soliphone always had a fire burning in his office during cold weather for the printer who might; arrive late at night, and ‘lhe was put on the payroll and kcpt there until he was able to go elsewhere regardless of the needs of the oi‘- fice." And the Woodruff tradi- tional welcome was ever awaiting the wanderer at the Gazette office. Little Rock. | Ode to the Tramp Printer. I if, instead of starting south, he‘ went west. there were "Jeff City"i and Sedalla should the freight train crew interrupt the journey. and should it not. there was Kansas City with Colonel Van Horn of the Journal, Colonel Nelson of the Star and Colonel John Edwards of the Times. all friends. to furnish a job. "But K. C. was no place for a "wandering printer; more good "bourbon there than a man could “live near and keep his job." He was off then for "the plainll" The Hudsons, printers, had a "sheet" at Topeka. one of the Murdocks had another at ‘Eldorado, Emporia had a Gazette and Bill White was his friend. The onlytinle old mu "Olle to the Tramp Printer": “Whose card is his principal treas- ure. Wlhere night overtakes him, home; Whose shoes are run over and twisted. Whose garments are shiny and thin. And who takes a blink in the ‘base- ment When the pressman lets him in." The Present Method. Wichita. Kansas, was the goal; Captain White was running the Beacon and Co onel‘ Murdock. young Victor's f ther, ‘the Eagle. “Ah. back again." said the Colonel. a Chesterfield in dress and man- ners, looking over his glasses at but it was the-meanitg conveyewihe has copies of the letters and if my statement is not substantially cor- rect he fnigtrt publish them. ‘He goes further and says of my ‘letterm-“such actions do ‘no; tend i0 promote the prosperity olf the Province or help in secure the re- ediuoiunents or sat-ions that we might reasonably expect." - Alllan eey.la thatf aim just ‘an good an ‘Islander an Mir. l-Iynd- mon and have done asmuch for my native ‘Province as he has. and if What he alamda for survive under discussion. without navel-t- ilsg to questioning my motive; then In much the worse for his case. _ The truth is not always pleasant id hear. but no men oeedlbe fried ior the Golden Gate for urtyillild Well kam- l l’ll‘llii3 some duyr, ‘ ' should lll- i-utrustcd to a com-uniss- |erings wanged the poetic lyre was in his ' unto us much as 2C0 nllles on the road." Famous Tramps. To be calico a "trump" is no re- proach to the peregriuutlug printer \Vusn't1lyron 4p trnlnp? be asks. Read his "Cbilde' Harold's ‘Pilgrim- age” if you think he was not. And Heinrich Henie, whose trumps through Europe made literutilrc. and Oliver Goldsmith. whose "Tra- veller" was his own experiences and reflections, and 'l‘horeun,wllosc tramps on Cupc Cod were ‘his bust work. 'i‘bcy were all trumps lllilli- lug "copy“ that only u trump printer could sympathetically sci. The muder need not be u tourist to understand und enjoy that copy it breathed of freedom. joy and careless love of adventure. Most of the old fellows have passed. Si Robinson, who bud also been n strolling player, closed his wand- by remarking that "Now is the winter of ‘my discontent," and dropping into the flooded Ark- ansas. Ayers, after working stcn-il- ily for months, said he mllat sec the sun set on the prairie and hear the coyotes yell—and that was the last of him. "Muskogee Red." Dod Gaston says, is living independent- ly on a pension. He and "Kokomo" expect to ~buy a farm. if ever they get money en‘ougb. in the Ozarks and retire "Plenty of stuff there". berry wine." Would Have Strong Colonization Commission (Canadian Prose) - WLNINIIP-BG. ‘Nov. 17.—-Creatiou of a commission‘ composed of the Dom. ablest ‘m-en to carry out a "bold and courageous" scheme of immig- ration nnd colonization formulated ‘by the federal government. Wils ur- ged in nn address givon by .l. M. lm-rie, President of the Edmonton Board of Trade before [hi5 first national economic conference in sc-sslon ‘here today. “One of the chief objectives of a courageous nations‘! policy would ‘he the early systematic and inten- sive colonization of the Dmmiiniufl-s vacant land through selected immig- ration on a large scale and the re- patrietlon of former Canadians and tbelr (losccndnnns now living in other countries. Nothing eflse would serve so quickly and so effectively people andfll-lie confidence in Cad)- ada of the ‘people of other count- ries" saild‘ Mr. lnnbrle. “The first essential in- frnmin-g s. new colonisation policy," Mirf .f\ _..f'f\ ~( e \ e _ on us! " “ K l ‘nN E ' Pi.Li_..S.' Iklnrsii ‘will! rim/xi,” tgflllllhyllt. apd astortiona Issainstos tart!‘ , l ‘ _ tdsiectaathelo newsman-i Imam - - .s-~ our» - ‘ "-‘ l... IIAO ., vin/ ., r says “Kokomo," "to ‘make elder-| l .58“ i Genuine ‘ i ‘n rmtore the confidence of our‘ inn composed oi‘ some of tho ab- csl lucu lu (kilrada, who have jlvcu unqucstlonalbie evidence of _ll‘~‘lu Olllfllllflllli. and executive nin- llily and ‘their fitiness -by Blffperplgn. fie and teurjioramierlt for this ‘work. Tlliy-ellotiid stand ‘be-tween ilhe lmleP-Tl knverluucnt and these to whom ‘loam-l ure- lulade‘. Admliviatm- 'l()ll ‘by such (l. wmlnisolon would cud .tn -pl\-.‘ven-t conflict of’ opinion it'll‘ political and other reasons ‘be- .wecn the federal govuzuumem of the day._,and concurrlugmroviuiylal over tunents. The Qomnflgsflon would be devoid of political in. iPrUSt, its only (Fbject-wqulfld be Jevwloprnen-t of Carrsdu tlrmugh ef- foriivc colonization. Quebec Boot And Shoe Factories C e a s e i Work (Canadian Press) QUEBEC, lNov. 17.—'l‘he boot and shoe factories of Queibec are sil- ent today. At a meeting held on Saturday evening 1500 -boot and ‘shoe workers me-mlinc-rs of llllrg-e unions affiliated with the ‘Nation- fll Catholic Union of Quebec, un- animously voted to go on» gull-ire rather than accept the new wm-k. ing conditions offered them by the members of (he Quebec ‘Boot and Shoe ‘Manufacturers Association on Octoiber 31. ' _~@.- ' Safety lliazor Gillette Razors and Blades ag bargain prices. GOLD PLATED College Style B4 eta. GOLD PLATED Debutante Style‘. . .. l4 ots. sltvsa PLATED Liberty "Style ‘.l.... 1s m. see oua wmoow We will mall those to.any address requested. m: g ullcs Drugstore 149 Great George Stredt Have you ldld in your winter supply of Coal‘! it is time you did. We are ready to fill your blnl with all good Coal. the yet at the lowest prises. -- P's