~ ~m~vrl=lauuem ~ ./“‘\" ‘ " E13 FOUR TIE GIIARLGTTETOWII l undone-w. cu- a r s. llcLnn m? h Beurefuy-lslenh-Cul.‘ n. s: Ilelllnnon, n. s. o. Editor and llislluglllfl Direntolh-J- B. Burnlfl Alloclalo l-Iliilurs- Frank Walker 1nd D- K. Onrrh Morning Daily (founded i881) 85.00 psr yup (ln nrlvnnoe) delivered “.50 per yen: (In nrlmncs) mal led in Canada and United Staten ADVERTISING BE PllESl-JNTATIVEB UNITED STATES-The Beelrwith lpsclsl Agency 150., New York 0on- ‘ i i N i‘ g cny ilolorl gshgflld gggngnesw Cary. “llloukh Tower Building-Chicago: flyndiouiv Tenn: llullding, it. Lenin; Glenn llullullng, Aflnntnl llonsdnuck Bulld- 1135 X0. 65H! Street, Phlllulelpllll- _ Morning Maxim on; my have good manners but not carry them about with him. lng, inn Francisco; WEDNESDAY". MAY 3, 1933. let them so upon their promise w 10in the local Scout troop. “We never have Bwuts in this court," he said. Judge Hardy, of Brantford, ree- ently deceased, long on the bench. remarked in a public address that HOW THE MONEY GOES The circular letter sent out by Hon. E. N. Rhodes to Chambers of Commerce and, Boards of Trade throughout the Dominion suggests to the Vancouver Provinw. W118i tnevitably follmvs when controllable expenditure is not controlled. It bgcomes, by process of time, un-ld ‘ trollable. Canada's uncontrol- "Sam! '°“ , Club, said: “Outside tile Christian lahlg upendlture, new, amounts to home, the Boy Scouts‘ organization $313,000,000 a yvzir, or about $31.30 _ _ ,_ .. provides the finest means cf char- Der capita. At Ccillulcrnuon, it was be _b mu I m h I kno i. under $5,000,000, or lcss than $1.50 “° ' “ “g ° w ° w‘ Cardinal Villeneuve of Quebec before him. p" 08mm is one of the strongest supporters The principal itcm in Canada's uncontrollable vsrpviiriiiiire today o! the Scout movement m Canada‘ is $138,000,000 for nueiest. Our Amhbismp mm" mad °£ u“ Anglican Church, is s4member of the executive of the Canadian Boy Scouts‘ Association. _ Under the late Dr. J. W. Robert- son. the Boy Scout movement in this country made great headway: and has continued to grow vigor- ously under the fine leadership of Mr. John Stiles, the present Chief Executive Commissioner of the as- sociation. Despite the fact that there has been financial stringency. due to the nature 0f the times, the Canadian association shows for thc past year the largest gain per cent. of any national organization. The membership in 1931 was 58,568. In the past year it came to 62,250, a gain cf seven per cent. England, which has the largest and strong- est of all Scout organizations, showed a gain from 376,684 in 1931 i0 392,768 in 1932, or a little over five percent., but, in proportion to population, England has a much larger body of Boy Scouts than Canada. or any other country; which suggests that in this Domin- ion plenty of scope ls left for in- ‘crease of the Scouts. Surely, con- a u.l G rlcludes the Journal, every Canadian funded national debt is approach- ing 53000000000 and there are in- direct obligations bcsldcs. At Con- federation, thc net (lcbt of the Dominion-obligations 0f the pro- vinces takcn ovcr—\vns under $76,- 000,000. The pcr cnlvita. debt gone up from $373 pcr cwilu t0 $271 per capita. The second large iimn of uncon- trollable expenditure is $58,000,000 for pensions and soldiers’ I This is part of Our war obligations, ,1 charge which follows our contract with'the mcn who served us over- lsas. It is an obligation which no true Canadian would ivish to shirk. Thc third item is $55,000,000 for the dcficit of thc Canadian Na- tional Railways. This is, of course, l charge which has comcto us has C2111}. partly cut of thc plc-ivar railway- builcling craze days, and partly out of ambitious borrowings launch- rd subsequent to the war under thc late Liberal “It is," suys thc Province, “one of the fruits regime. 9 '7 7-7 9 7-7 QFLEJZ_**__.Q..DJ..ZLJ.'L1P,‘L°M 1"’ ow‘ ., .-.-.r.>r.—=r,.¢- rr-ne-Iseze" ’-“*""-" 1 . 0.’ cur aitcmpt to gamble ourselves into grcnizxcss Iizvi we played our ‘ . nit/i cards n. 1457323‘?! should wish to do anything he can "',0O0.l)0fI f ' lin’, 1:‘ CKKlfOO l m) or 1c k s I ' or to promote the growth of the organ- subslrhc: to p110‘. ZZVIS, and $12,000,- ization. As Isord BYHE. our former J00 {ct ‘n, n4" ‘pflliwwllfi arc items ~ Governor General, remarked not liini. \‘.F"lill-'>ldl‘iCES. ' long ago, “Making good citizens, mentallypmorally and physicaly, is the finest work that is being done in the world. That is Scouting's lob." Lord Bessborcugh, who is chief Scout for Canada, has been making many such remarks in rec- cnt addresses; and these are men who do not say things lightly; w: s21‘ . reduce even u’ we ‘ , ‘fhc pwjvmcnt . ; . a c-onrrnctual 3:10 m1.‘ the pm; 1 in thc their the muons and '4, anal-i JJY. Ztnlaliiu. Tllr‘ old nze p4“ ,i.lic rcilcf money's nrc pad u» those vcicrnns lllflilF-iflfll s-cminzzc have come lhroizgli thci: czungmims with credit hirer‘. v 1' 111ml Ill Oil ' of r11‘: and u n l". '.\ hi) P. E. I. & LONGEVITY to themselves but with no booty. The Llinistcfs ciicuiui" lPttfll.‘ is a. The remarkable record for long- evity in the Maritimcs is emphasized m "The Maritimer," monthly pub- lication of the Maritime Provinces Club of Montreal, which quotes thc following figures showing tho per- ceptages of people over 70 years per thousand of population in the vari- ous Provinces of Canada. It will be noted that Prince Edward Island leads all the Provinces, including our sister Moritimes, by a very large margin. rcpii- to H1055? who ihliil: it pcssnble to (ut governmental charges to thc vanishing point. It 1s also .1 warn- ingu-a ivarning that thc only sat- isfncirr-y way i0 L§(‘L the "un" out 0f "uncontrollable" i." in keep it out from the bcgiilninc. lfud our Cham. bcis of Commerce and other public DOGJCS ‘Jccn as iusfsrcnf. nn economy alien thrsc nozv uncontrollable obli. rations were iiuriiri-cd. thc finances 0f thc coimiry tcdny would bc in a, mun-h bctlcr yxis-itxon. lyn in fifteen ycars, less than a dozen had cvcr bccn Scouts. Th‘? "mm; °f the New Y°fk a hen to hatch pheasant eggs for lluusc of Refuge show that among the Dgpqrtmgnt of Land, and For- 10,000 boys sent there in fifteen gglg, 1g wggmn MMvMHIaIfS opmkm ycurs, not onc had ever been o that the Government could have 50mm economized by hiring a hen. This A Chain-ml» 0m. masistrate. statesmanlikc remark reminds us of ill-iii"; with two bvyi brought be- some of the Opposition comment in fore him for destroying property" locellcglslature, ‘sf-"K" N1¢4~_-. _ - ._..:'e:_‘,_g\.o_ w . fi he had never had s. Scout brought The late su- James Aikuns. aa-l the Winnipeg Kiwanis years, Hcidclburg, famed and story. has staged its firs’, pub- lic student cfiicl. Roosevelt are steadily revealed, it becomes more and more that. he is departing in vital degree from the time-honoured policy of isolation uhiirh years the cherished ideal of Ameri- can statesmen. been obvious ever since the that America would sooner or luii-r be fgfged to abandon that atluudc. Hcr entry into thc war marked lhv Prince Edward Island .. 64.81 p. c. ._~A__ Nova Scctia .93 p. c, . N B . . . . .1 mzmn.lvr.' zuovlvlulazvr o.°.‘i"..l§“.“.s.“.'f”.}f.... . 433321 —-————— British Columbia 29.97 p. c. In n 103711111; editorial devoted i0 figgllifgbg‘ - P- c. in; my Scout movement the ot- Alberta .. 10.02 181g: tawa Journal quotes some felnark- saskak-hcwa" """"' 19-12 9' c- able tribulcs paid to this splendid i EDI organization. For example: TORIAL NOTES J d J. . “ 5° c “W” °' Emmy“ Hon. A. s. MacMillan, House says that of more than 100,000 boys under of the opposmm in the g brought before thc courts of Brook- Nova 5Com‘ Mgislature charged the Harrington Government with extravagance in paying 5o cents for possibly be put iiuo effect, so noth- ing comes of their efforts‘ except a quarrel. A modern philosopher makes a recommendation that is simple and workable. It is, briefly, that individuals better their own conduct. He explains: "1 do not suggest that a hundred thousand get, together for s sunrise Prayer‘ meeting, but that every individual accomplish reform by behaviui; a little better during the day. end cgntlnue {he gOOd WOT}; dllfillg U16 evening." Germany Is going “old fuhlnn- ed” in earnest. The omcial ban on student duels, dating from 1025, has been removed by "Papa" Hit- ler and the university buss Brem- tling their swords in fine style. Not only are the duels in progress once more, but they are being held right out in thc open for all theuvorld to see. For the first time ill 550 in song the policies of ‘Jrvslrlcnt As cvldcnt was for so mun)‘ 1t, has of course war final phase of thc isolation period. Mr. Bennett's sane, sensible in- tcrvlcw given to thc press in “lash- ington should clczu‘ the an". Thcre is plenty of room, he told the Am- erican prcssmcn, to strike n fair trade bargain ivith the United Stat- es outside of thc lmpcriitl brcfcr- ence schedules sci fovih in the Ottawa agreements. Onc llllilg‘ that he said. is worth digesting on both sides of the frontier. It is bet-lei‘ to talk of a trade agvccmcilf. or trade treaty than of m-ciprocily- The agreements would, no doubt, bc rc- ciprocal in the sum total of benc- fits b0 both sides, but they Wflllld, not be reciprocal in cvcry detail. Reading the resolution of thc Canadian Chamber cf Commerce, one might get the impression thut the Government hadn't cconomizcd at all, that it was sionc deaf and blind to appalling realities. Yctl the truth-we venture to think that’ most people clout realize it—is that; since 1930-31 the Government hasi (thc; leash, 7 _ cut controllable expcnciitilrc ‘ qqflqxg “ho “shes the be“ for ms country current cost of administration) by, MS m, and its P901319 should keen I Warm 581.000.0011. it has cut to thc b0iic,j _ W“, , t, I ‘ d comer in his heartand mind for cut, we venture t0 5B3‘. mi a scale; CHMJM‘ a“ ‘ MW‘ an the Splendid thing ma, L, growing and in a way equalled by few‘ new lllll‘ taxpq. Hus‘. loot the private mdusmpg, ‘ D1,, in his country and in the world in i The Qtirer uncmltrollzibie items, the shape or the Boy Scouts’ and The ‘Pork “t ‘he Cam“; ' ‘ Soc-i retariat in the conduct of the Im-' perial Economic Conference in Ot-I tawa last year called forth high? praise from the British and other delegates and was a, powcrful fuc- tor in its success. Evcry day in less conspicuous manner these trained and competent officials are giving service of inestimzible value to their country and generation, and they arc appreciated most by those who best know their contribution m the march of events. Mr. Bennett was in Washington as the representative of all thc people cf Canada, as the Prime Minister of this country and not as leader cf thc Conservative party. There is an important (llzlllftlOn which will not be overlooked. There is a time and a plucc for party feeling, but partisanship must not be permitted to embarrass the head of the nation when he confers, in all the authority of his high plnce, with the heads of other great powers. Canadians will not doubt that the Prime Minister represent- ed them worthlly in these trans- actions, No man in Canada is more zealous for thc good of Cunndu, or better acquainted with ils, m.“ ‘ m and its needs. The Rt. Hon. J. Ramsay Mac- Donald, in his speech to thc Nat- ional Press club in Washington on Saturday, pleaded for a "frcc flow of international exchange," cx- plaining that only in this wny 0M1 "the wealth and. happiness of thc world be maintained." And he add- ed that this would be thc principal problem of the forthcoming World Economic Conference in Landon. Mr. Lloyd George used to be Prime Minister oi’ Grcnt Britain. When he occupied that ofllcc there wcrc. as there are now, many unemploy- cd persons. Yet to hear Mr. Lloyd George talk now one might easily secure thc idcn that ihc present Government of Great Britain is riv- liberately depriving Briushvrs of Jobs. The financial situation in Manl- toba has been greatly aggravated by the recklessnessumd inconlpetency of Quanta Bylomes W. Baden. MD. IMPORTANCE OF SAVING FIRST SET OF TEETH one of the mistakes parents and teachers have been making is in thinking that nothing need be done about children's teeth until what is called the sixth year molar tooth arrives, and then the child should "go to the dentist." Dr. Irene G. Woodcock, promin- cni New York Ciiy dentist, reminds the medical and dental profession ihat waiting until the child arrives at ihls age before caring for the teeth is a big mistake. In the first or milk set of teeth, \\'llll their pulps (nerves and blood- vessels) so near the surface, decay soon mcaus infection in the pulps, with all the ailments which so eas- ily follow. A ‘ Whut are the ailments which fol- low tooth decay even in youngsters? The New York Society for the Prevention of Heart Disease _ has placed the responsibility for heart rlistnsc about. equally between con- iugiolls diseases (scarlet fever, meas- les, diphtheria, and other diseases of childhood) and what l8 081181! "focal" infection, that is infection iacgiimiiig in one place-teeth, ton- sils, gull bladder, intestine-and curried by thc blood to other parts iuciudiiig cf course the heart. What does this mciui? It means that if one half of all hcurt (iiscusc comes from bad teeth, tonsils, g-ullbladdcr and intestine with most cf the one half from the iccth and tonsils, then parents should take their children to the cicuiist at as early an age as two years instead of ivaiting until the child is six or more. Just as there is an organization for the prevention of tuberculosis in children with institutions where childrcu from the homes in which tuberculosis exists or has existed. may be cared for, so should there be a campaign of. prevention of hcnrt disease in young Children. which aims at preserving the first or mill: sot of Lceth. This can be done by means of diet, careful cleansing of the teeth, artificial sunlight and other means. "Dr. Woodcock points cut that if this first set of teeth is properly cared for, many of the ills that come with the second or permanent sci; of teeth would be abolished. Further, if thc first set is preserv- cd ihcrc will be room for the sec- 011d sct when they come which moans much not only to the child's health but’ to its appearance also. Mac Crimm0n’s Salute (Mr. A. Sutherland-Graeme in a miter Lo the Editor of the London Times) Mr. Gardner refers to the “tradilioif that the famous piob- aircnchd "Gila till mi tuillc" was composed by Donald Ban Mac- Crlmmon in 1754, when the Mac- Lcocis embarked from Skye. Some years ago thc late Mr. J. W. Brodie limes, cf Milton Brodie, gave me the history of thc tune which was composed by MncCrimmon on this occasion. This story was told to him by an old skyc lady, Marsaly MacDonald, who, in her turn, had it from her grcnhaunt, Sheila. Macleod, who was hfcicCrimmons. sweetheart. The piobaircachd composed by lvlfac- Crimmorr (in secret) was a. welcome to ihc Royal Race, and was in- u-ndwi to be first played to hull Charles Stuart King. Certainly it was not a lament. ‘with reference to Mr. Gardn- er's statement that the Macleods embarked to join the Royalists, I had always thought-and this story bears me out-that Maclcod must- crcd his clan u. join the Hanover- imis, an action which his clans- mcn bitterly resented. In a spirit of dividcd allegiance they followed him, and it was this spirit which caused MaeCrimmon to pray for death and to play the lament "Cha till, cha fill, Macleod may return, but MucCrimmon shall never," as he embarked. The fact that the Macleods were led into the ambush prepared by Simon Fraser, the blacksmith of Moy and a Rcyalist, and were there routed, surely dis- proves thc fact that they were cn thc Royalist side. The first to fall was MacCrim-mon, of the Government, for so long a time a purely Fanncr Administra- tion, but more recently a coalition with the Liberals. The utter neglect of the Manitoba Savings Bank and of the Manitoba University affairs should prove to the people of the province that they are leaning on n broken reed. It should, therefore, cause no surprise that Mr. Bennett is demanding that the deficit should be kept well under a million dol- lars before any further financial help is granted-Begins. Star. eluded at Philadelphia at the week- end, furnishes experts in antique lore with a good deal of interesting data regarding the Natufians, a prehistoric race of- men who, some 20,000 years aw. or even at a much earlier dais, inhabited Palestine. Three dozen Nstufisn skeletons were unearthed not long ago at Shuklbah, near Jerusalem. and further finds were made in the caves of Mount Camel of famous memory. Along with charred bones, some eight thousand flint tools of various sorts were also unearthed, this material being pronounced as belonging to what scientists term the “Mousterian" period, which is dated some six thousand years 3.0., and of course puts hack the time index far beyond ancient Ur of the Chaldees and long before the l-Ioly Land was known either as Palestine or as the habitation of the Canaanites. Some of the anest- ing features of this latest discov- ery, as set forth by Sir Arthur Keith, are that the ancient folk whose remnants have been now brought to light had some "facial characteristics" like the so-called Stohe Age men of Malta and cf the still more remote Aurignacian men of Southern Europe. Additional interest is lent to this Palestinian "find" by the account given of mother archaeological discovery recently made in an en- tirely different quarfer. If. were best to put the testimony in Sir Arthur Keith's own words: “Two years ago Miss Gertrude Cation-Thompson sent me burned bones from under the foundations of Zimbabwe, Southern Rhodesia. These repres- ented the skulls of two women which had, been burned long after the flesh had disappeared from them." The special point to be noticed is that a suggestion is of- fered concerning some connection between the habits of the primitive folk in South Africa and those "Natufians" who "may still have been living when the first city- states of Sumcrla arose." Aucl in like manner the hint is advanced that the funeral rife or “ordeal by fire," or whatsoever the ritual may be called, prevalent amongst Chal- deans of the third dynasty also prevailed amongst the primitives whose relics have been dug up from the caves of Carmel and other spots in Palestine. It is an amazing romance. Its real merits only experts can decide. It is the business of the historian to make, if he can, a vivid and con- nective narrative of things which have happened in the development 0f human society within times when some record was kept of human happenings. But the archaeologist finds great gaps becauseit is certain that much of the material he must collect antedates any written or scratched record, and that thc major part of the experience cf a race now vanished passed before any recording art began. Neville D‘Esterre, in his essay, "Israel in EEYPV’ says: “Hebrews and Cana- anites were alike immigrants, tol- erated by the Empire to which that country belonged. The empire in question was that of the Khatti, or Hittitcs, a lost race quite un- related to the Semitic peoples." More than thirty years ago Prof. 3°11" Cflmllbell. of Montreal, pen- ned two volumes about "Hittite In- scriptions," ln which he states that it is impossible to overestimate the importance of this ancient people without a. record of whose exploits ancient history can hardly be said t0 exist- He goes on to recount how Hittite influence penetrated to the uttermost parts of thc earth. The “Mousterian" type to which Sir Arthur Keiths refers may g0 fur. the!‘ 5M4! and. is he states, “may have been the ancestors of the Arabs, or Semites, of Biblical times." But yet more startling is the Rho- desian "find" already mentimwd, For those who have dipped into the writings or Gertrude Page will r6- member what a graphic account is given therein of thc Zimbabive ruins which have puzzled all explorers, and, furthermore, Dan Crawford, the eminent missionary, who also made careful study of these remark- shot through the lungs and the story relates how, as he lay dying, he summoned his remaining strength to play the first bars of his "secret plobaircachd." The theme was remembered by one Rory Maclean, of Milli, who had been sent out from Invcrness w warn Lady Macintosh at Moy of the M’ ’ "' approach. He even- tually found his way back to Skye, and by describing thc rout and whistling the tune he had heard convinced Sheila that her lovcr had died even as hc had wished. This story then (l) disputes the fsct that MacCi-immon composed the lament "Chis. till mi tullle" for the occasion referred to, though he played it on that occasion: and (2) states clearly that the tune he did compose, when he imagined that in: (After a Concert.) Here is a harp of stone that begins to sing; 59ml’ the fluted columns to the an- thems ring. Answer to answer, chord to chord, the notes arise; Up to the fingers of the long carved fans the music cries, And clearly the stone reeds call their crystals of reply Till the last quivering sounds into the shadows die. The Love of God holds this aloft within Its hands, Fashioned of iron and stone, and Rlass from sun-filled lands, Fashioned of wood turned to an intricate design Of leaves and beasts changing to wings and shapes divine, Offered by one who carved, within, his own proud name In shield and rose to adorn’ and consecrafe his fame. The Love of God holds this aloft, this stone, this glass, This spire on spire, while flame- spent ages pass God's fingers strike upon this in- strument cf stone That vibrates surely to His One High Praise alone. —Harriet Plimpton in New York Times. Cost of, “Free” Services (Ottawa Journal) When Premier Henry presented the Budget to the Ontario Legisla- ture, in the absence through ill- ness of the Provincial Treusurer— since able to return to his office- he included some astounding fi- gures on expenditures in this pro- 146 Richmond St., Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis rm: WN GUARDIAN , , .. t MAY s, 1933 GUARDIAN nous av m: vmv The “Nawfians” f " l Viee-Bresidsnf-J. B. Burns“ (Montnfi Guam) E R 0 Most reformers advocate llwh The meeting of the American large measures that they W110!" Philosophical Society, which con- . . Charlottetown * juicy vince on what are called “frec" servicts. On health, public wel, fare, relief. education, etc, there‘ was spent in Ontario last year a grand total of $121,784,000, or about $41 for every man, woman, and child resident in this province. Of this‘ money $34,975,000 came from the provincial treasury, $69,- 555,000 from the muifcipulities and $17,254,000 from the Dominion G0- vernment. ' Even this huge total does not in- cludc the cost of higher education, but only thcse educational fncilitirs provicfczl frcc to thc public. N01" docs it include, pf course, the many millons raised by the people of Ontario last year, and every year, fcr private and public charities and phflanthropics. . Edutation accounted.‘ for more than half of the total, thc province contributing $10,062 000 and thc municipalities $52,500,000. Services having to do with public health cost $8,072,000, the province paying $5,576,000 and the muncipalities $2,496 000. Unemployment relief 00st the proviitc: $14,235,000. thc municipalities $12,500,000 and the Dominica 311000.000. On public welfare activities of various sorts the province paid $3,994,000, the muni- cfpulifcs $2,059,000 and the Domin- ion $6,254,C00. There were other smaller items. S: long as we prcfci- to do as a community the things individuals and families used to do for them- selves—nnd thc processes of pater- nalism expand increasingly-we cnnnct comp'aln vcry much bc- cause taxes are high, or expect the impossible in the way 0f curtail- ment of expenditures. Govern- ments, it has been pointed out many times, have no source of in- come but the public, and money put into one packet in the form of "free" services comes cut of anoth- er pccket in the form of direct and indim-t taxes. General recognition of this fact will bring us closer t0 able monuments, descants fascin- atingly upon the remarkable cor- rcspondence between the features and language roots of the people in the Rhodesian belt and the races in possession 0f ancient Palestine. Those who would follow this inter- esting truil may do so by reading Crawfords book, “Back to the Long Grass." Enough is suggested to show that the long-arm reach of coincidence, whether within the cycle of hltoric or prehistoric times, affords material which, if it docs not carry back to the verge of the glacial era. itself, at least hints al- luringly cf connections strange and romantic which Lucretius in his time, anticipating modern archaeol- ogical discovery, mentions in his De Rel-um Natura- "Man‘s earliest arms were fingers, teeth and nails. And stones and fragments thc branching woods, The copper next; and last, at latest traced, The tyrant iron" And the tyrant iron has dug up from his clan ‘was about lo Join thc Itoy- aliste, was a salute. these bones from ancient caves which ncons ngone knew something of the ordeal by fire. L-s-s-t-s longer- and you'll like the flavor. HlCKEYeNICl10lSON . the realities in public finance. There is but one body of taxpay- ers, serving though it does in a triple capacity. The Scripture In Gaelic (Mail and Empire) Th: National Bible Society of Scotland crculatel last year nearly fcur million copies of Scriptures in most of the countries of thc world, notwithstanding universal econo- mic and finamclal disturbances. Amid all its foregn work it docs not neglect thc interests of those 1n Scofand itself. It is sometimes overlooked how extensively the So- Cfflll’ is seeking to fu‘fil its early aim of fostering the circulation and the reading of the Scriptures ‘r. every Scottish home. The Society, moreover, has con- tinned, ns in former years, to sup- piy the Highlands and Islands of Scotland with Scriptures in the Gaelic tongue. The National Bible Society of Scotland. the sole pub- lsher of the Bible in Gaelic, has been. one of the main supporters of the aims of An Ccmmunn Geld- healach. over many a strath and glen and island, which has fostered the Gaelic languagc, and maintained its position as a living tongue. Last ‘ year the Society circulated 1,906 Bibles, ‘110 New Testaments, porticns, a total of 2,721 Gaelic spfcch, a decrease of as compared with I931. Sihcc the Society first undertook the print- ing of the Gaelic Bible, it has cir- culated no fewer than 1,112,078 Scriptures in Gaelic. If Canada wishes to hold her own in the barley export market, says Professor Henry C. Grant of ' Manitoba University» it would seem the part of wisdom to forget about . growing small quantities of malt- ing barley for export and special. ize on the production of high grade feeding barleys. For (ronl-bllo—Mlnnr|l’l Llnllnent. Professional Gard: Stewart & Lowther s. n. srswnnr, g. c, N. w. LOWTIIIB 55331811118. soucrrons, no M Great Glut“ 81mg], irons! T0 1.01m McLEOD a. SENTLEY I. A. BENTLEY W. B. BENTLEY, l. O. Banister and Attornsy-nt-Iqq MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 100 Blelmond Street .1‘- Prohibition Commission Chen. f1. Black. Chairman, Charlottetown. Isl. B. McDonald, we" 5g, ha,‘ s 13bit" Blame». gllllllhll. en a emu on filing Infractions of nonmmrsic. AU! It has been the Gaelicll Scriptures, clrcuhicd in thousands ' 105 i in the l 134 l When raspberry rows are dense and close together, or when wccdl 8 N.‘ allowed to flourish bciween rows, there is lcss air ventilation and more opportunities for fllFCZiSfl attacking the canes. r l Carters SEEDS GROW We have nniv our SPRING STOCK of Farm and Garden SEEDS ready at our SEED S'l‘()l(il. All carefully selected and LIVE SEEDS purchased in ENGLAND, CANADA and lhc UNITED STATES. GOVERN- MENT INSPECTED TESTED for germination. Prices generally arc mucg lower this year. Garter & G0. Limited ustlil and GAIITIGN rox owurns and RANGHEBS Now that the litters 0! young are arriving daily. what precaution are yon tak- lng for the treatment 0f Worms? A great many n! the lend- ing ‘Nleterinarians stronsl! recommend either- BURROUGIIS WELLCOME C0 (London, England) WORM CAPSULES -0|t- ‘ , NEMA womn cnrsum Pnt up by Park E. Davis 6a C0- Both these remedies u" guaranteed to destroy Round Worms, Ilnok Worms "Id Stomach Worms. _ Don't Delay. Pride m, m and 51- w b“ rue 2 MAGS 14o Great oeme 54"" Send In Your Mall 01'5"‘;