iiscn room c.nllllllllllwlllllllll Dusty» tlolldel 1B7) [$.00 per year (in advance) delivered. an 10A! (ll advance) _-nlled ll Canada and United Slates. _ ,,,,,,,____,_._ ,,q9 < ; _~=~... _.. --_ .- ¢_ ‘l, . - - .:-.~=..~ . , ‘ TUESDAY, APRIL 22,1924 . TEACHERS’ CONVENTION ‘The Annual Convention of the ' Teachers of Prince Edward island gm"; today "Ln-lace street school that haa- been widely discussed and as advertised. The duy sessions will _be devoted largely to official duties, professional ulution speaking World, Only the otller day lmpers and in the British Parliament there was discussion thereon and such other a dmcussmn o, n" Conmmn, was matters as may be of special inter- est to the teachers. ‘These matters are important and it is hoped that our teachers generally throughout the province will be ‘present. The Ito-ordination of the general work L of the schools is one of' the vital more equitable i; u‘ 16,13, a pa" 0f school system attained only cooperation, mutual as- necessltles of our and this- can be through aistauce snd- frequent intercha .gé of opiuidb. Th1? Is the main our, pose of the annual conference. f This evening at 8 o'clock there will be a public meeting in Prince Street School, presided over by His Honour the Lieutenant Governor‘ and to he addressed by such noted edllcatlonists as Rev. Dr. McLcllnn,1 formerly Rector of St. Dunstans lluivc/rslty, Rev. G. A. Christie, M.‘ A., of Alberton, Miss Archibald! M. A-, of Wolfvllle, N. S., who has already made a name for herself‘ in connection with the Better Eng- lish campaign of which sile~ is the author and inventor, besides other speakers including His Worship: Mayor McKenna and others. All interested in educational mat! tars are cordially invited to at-1 tend this meeting. As citizens, as parentsvwose children's education has been entrusted to these tcac-l hers. as, men and women interest- ed in the future of the province, it is our duty to attend this public, meoting- and hear what our educe-: tiourtl leaders have to say and to, suggest. We trust the meeting will be an largely attcndcd as its im- Pearson of Térunm was portsuce demands. ' An interesting feature will be the architect. NOTES sY THE WAY The adoption of a tax on gasoline in our Legislature touches a llluttcr has been made the subject oi reg- throughout the English- lllnde of the injustice of a motor car taX which compels a car owner, who drives but little on the roads to pay as much tax as a-uoiher own-i er whose car mllage is far greater, perhaps ten limes as great. it was strongly argued that it would be the tax should be levied in propor- tion to the amount of petrol (or gasoline) c-onau-med and the Minis- ter oi Transport promised a depart- mental inquiry in regard thereto immediately before deciding upon a definite policy for the coming seal- son. Quebec and some othor Provinces have adopted the gasoline tax. Tilirty-llve of the United States be sides us collect at ‘least a part of the automobile tux in proportion to the measure of gasoline consumed as the fairest way of making these who use the road pay for their up» keep. The consumption oi‘ gasoline affords a close index to the number of‘ miles travelled and the amount of injury to the road surface. Heavy motor trucks and other cars driven at excessive speed are the vehicles which do the greatest injury to the highways. In reply to Mr, Benoit, Hon. Mr. King, Minister of Public Works the other day stated the coat 9f the new Parliament Buildinqs to date was $11,273.785. Tile contractor is the l’. Lyllll & Sons Construction Colllpzlny, Lift, who have been paid maven REALLY our or CONDITION Dlflphdy, boxers arc able lo get into shape so quickly. ' 'l‘hcy_ will be 0ft‘ hunting, fishing, swllllllllng nt tho seaside or other- wise telljuyllll; themselves, and yct ill u lllolllil or six weeks they are in sllupl- for n real battle. \.\i| .1 l>i|11 u lllnttcr of tho blood. 'i‘hcl-le lllcn are naturally healthy, with ll good foundation lll sound heart and lungs. With good Ordinary ileum; their blood, ullld the blood making machinery, which is located in the bone marrow, work along togetll- er. The blood needs tlle'lltlle red cells manufactured by the bone marrow, und the supply is always sufficient, and the quality up to normal. Wheni the time comes for a little lllore intensive training, alld real exercise begins, the bone marrow throws out illto the circulation an extra supply of red blood cells, he- cause tllc exercise destroys ll good many blood cells. lnediately starts marrow can do this so well Dempsey, Carpeutlcr and comes to it to maintain, it, is pure in quality. if you get something info your body that is of a poisonous ulalure. anti you are uua\ble to throw it off completely, then when this blood gets to the bone marrow, these latter cannot get materials to make nlew blood cells of good quality. ' it ulzly be due to overwork on your part, that asks for more blood cells than can be manufactured. 0r because the waste from your over- worlw-fntigue products-filo not get Yo" 111i“! lwfiliillfl Wfllldfifed 110W tenant Governor did THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN The Public Forumi This column. ll. open for the discussion by corru- pondsnto of question. of in terut. The Charlottetown Guardian don not IIOOIIOIF lly endorse the opinion on pressed by its oorrelpon dentl. ona++cc+w+c+0+c+00+o+o THE GOVERNOR'S VETO _ Sin-it is evident that tilt: Lieu- tlle right Clirlielllivr. and other thing wllcll he reserved the Church Union Bill. The lllntter of the bill has not yet been disposed of by tho Dominion Parliament. Practic- ally nothing cllu be done ill respect to it until after the Dominion Pur- linlnent has passed ‘the bill that hull bccn submitted t0 it. Moreover, tho Great Province of Ontario has not agreed upon the Provincial blll. Why ihell should the little Pro- vince of Prince Edward lslalld (or its gbverllnlent) worry about the veto oi’ u bill passed by the legis- lature before it could, by any possi- billly, be effective? _With but one legislative liollse, there is nothing iu this Proviucc to prevent hasty legislatioll—cx- cepl; the Lieutenant Governor. is it not well therefore, that he should, upon occasion, use his Veto power to give the Legislature and the people concerned time for further consideration and discus- sion’! is not this the more advisable when, as in this case, the establish- ed rights of individuals, congrega- Yoll see the blood making lllac- i101"! 111141 0i large P81181011! bodies hinery, always has a reserve supp. of men and wollleu living in all 1y at hand for just such emergen¢y_ parts of Canada are incidentally lll- Agger qhmwlng this reserve supp. terferetl with. Granted that the mn- ly into the blood stream, it im- Joriiy rules. it is equally true that m manufacture the rights of the minority might some more so as to be ready to "fli- 1" any c1456. 118 Dyer ridden throw this new supply inlo the ~01‘ "- "ece-‘iiilrill’ stream “- exemsie ,5 taken the that recompense should be made. next day. Now the reasunl the bone Gram-ed 11"" for unity is " a good and Joyful thing" other to be promoted, it is equally curl.- athletes, is because the blood that ""1 "i" 11118 desirable thins is over ridden, Christian Church not likely to be gained by the force of a llllljority in u general Assembly, or Provincial Legislat- ure. or Dominion Parliament. A year is a very short time in the life oi‘ a church or a notion; alld if, in the meantime a better understand- ing and grater unanimity should be reached, the delay caused by the Veto of the Lieutenant Gover- ‘JOP Will be well worlll while and "light be so rcgztrtlcd—evcll by lllc strongest promoters of the pro- posed Union. peaceful union. i3 per cent commission on value of work up to 84.000000 and 7 per cent commission above that ‘ am- ount, the total commission being $046,331. The architect, Mr, John A. bone marrow. You are stalc. blood calls, or tho cells arc not rich quality. paid to out of the system inst enough, and these poisons interfere with your‘ ‘I Thus you may not havt- enough eullgh lll food elements, nrc poor ill l um, Sir ctc., A BYSTANDER. BAND CONCERTS Sin-Now that the days llrc grmvlng longer l prcsulnc wc are This is wllnt is called rln:ll-llll:l.,ii11 100M115 ivfwiifd i0 111B 11191151111" “Me $112345 and the “sfilslmndgo m, anaemic perm“ 1,; om‘. wlmlthat sunllllcr is supposed to bring. nddrelshou Better English by Miss ‘Monire-ll. was paid $711190- The explain the proposed contest in this line which is to take place at an ail-iv date and in which the children oi the province are to participate. Archibald who will announce and‘ FEDERAL POLITICS ‘rho,- political situation in Canada today is calculated to lead to very lerlonlff-thiuking. Th6 old Liberal‘ party has been splitln two. What| the relative strength of the ros- pectivel sections is has not yet been disclosed but no doubt it shslbbe before the Budget debate is ended. There ‘has been a defin- ite abandonment of the Fielding Liberalism which until very re- éently was the boast and the glory of the old party. Fleming's policy and even his promise oi last year that there should be no more tariff reduction, no more tariff tinkering, has been abandoned and the ‘dom- inant Liberals are now openly heading for free trade, for the re- moval of the last vestige of protec- tion. "RI Had this change been brought about in the course of smooth and unobstructed political sailing by a party strong enough to carry it. some arguments might be advan- ced in its favor, for there are two sides to most of our political ques- tions. It did not come in this way, however; It came as an alterna- tlfc to political death, it came in to the "Stand sud Deliv- p of a will: of tile party which mac itself in such a position that it had the power of life and death W01’. the governor/ant. Alnd the lovernment yielded; political life more to a than ti»: interests ot the country, I110!‘ than its promises 1 ~ohfolilyayoar go. ‘ Isl-iii illstabltyhu been the Qflt of since the ‘present \ lpffiasi it -will con- )‘ curls as long n tho W lLoftlqo for no one they may yet be in; their much pm alum. cumin lllllltltfy “l, (landfill numb, a .. _ hell-my as provincial were welcomed 1b,, Ontsrloybad travelling expenses $3.170. The lcompletion oi‘ the main tower, nlun- ey for which ls included in this year's estimates will make the total cost about $12,000,000. l $ome interesting figures as to the. number of pol-sons employed, ex- clusive of carrier-c. thelr_total sal- arlcs and the revenue of such offic- es were submitted to Parliament recently. Montreal, 811 employees; salaries $1,230,248; income of office $3,680.- Toronto, 950 employees; salaries $4,186,917; office income ‘$5,798,015. Quebec, 171 employeespsalaries _$225",230; office income $522,026. i Hamilton, 112 employees; salar- ‘ies $1‘59.579; office income $088,291. iln all cases the salaries of the car- rlens is omitted a-nd their number runs into hundreds. Over 2,000 men besides hundreds of carriers are now employed in the post. office service in the four cities here named. The Federal Liberal Progressive Party have thrown Messns Fielding and Goui-n, as advocates of tariff stability. into the discard, Our local Liberals by their amendment mov- ed in the Legislature at the late session stood by the Fielding pol- icy which wse antagonistic to what for brevity we may call the Lib.- Prog. policy. Now if a general elec- tion should materialist: this year, our local Liberals will have need to make a quick decision as to wheth- er they will support the Fielding policy of tariff stability or the Robb policy of instability. loss and dis- tulilance to industry and trade. lt ls a sharp curve. but to a party as unstable as water that will not greatly matter. A gent-ml election has usually followed a rOdlotributlon of seats In Parliament. in the present lnstancg. where it is found that the Provinces ibeyoud the Lakes are entitled to 12 more representatives than they now have, while Nova Bcotla stands to lbe deprived of two. The dilly an early election has be- cnflflrgsnt. it is therefor; not im- prflfllo that the people may ho called to tile polls throughout Cila- ads before the close of the present w» Prince Edward lsflfigjtst, Ih architect was paid ll. addition for‘ year. The calf will be welcomed by _|nl,,mgema_ "d “an the Klomervative Opposition an Your love will be satisfying, and QIQQQIQHQ your horns life most h py. cum. 2.1%.» after-i - up» 3.41m M; M“ J- O~ Mamba“! “Y's poor quality, or a lcsaeuletl qll3ll~‘“9w Hm lll tity 0i‘ red blond culls. Good food, light outdoor evercisl- 1am] rest will enrich the blood. Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers I KNOW A PATH ' » (Rev. George Scott.) l know a path that idly winds By breezy hill and ilollow, Where all my truant fancy binds My vagrant feet to follow. I may not con its Winsome spell, The lure of its appealing, Nor can! my grateful spirit tell The wonder of its healing. it lolters by deserted camps ‘Mid bittersweet and vetches. And then again by lonely swamps From many a league it stretches Sometimes the bushes overhead Meet in their Itangled lllasses, Be certalm where it passes. Ah me, how cool its shade Lies on the reeds and rllshes, vado The haunts of water thrushell. turns Among tile orally boulders, With yellow birch and ferns, And moss upon their shoulders. Right joyously if. winds along , in shade and sunshine smiling, The bllfdefli of its happy song All sordid cares beguiling. with winter green .iu spots, And lilies of the valleys, And catnlps in the alleys. l know a path that idly winds By breezy hill and hollow, Where evermore sweet fancy finds Some loveliness to follow. APRIL IIQ-Yott ‘are W11. bili- Will yield a point with 8001i trace when thoroughly con- vinced. You have a high dept-e"; of foresight. vats contentment. Bows nesrsld llstoningto Your Till scarcely can, the cautious tread chequered Where scarce the uooutide can in- Then sharp? from the swamp it drooping sheltered With auxin-age and touch-me-uots. on Am," n m“ He i. . musically inclined. and should develop your talent. You are positive, and argue. we going to t-lljoy olll' rautiful evclilllgs tile coming sum- mer? Sollle tllcrte are wllo are so fortun- lltely situated they call tuke their our and get the benefit of tile pael- ' ("'31 ECi-‘llvfy ills well as the invigor- ating country air, but what arc [1143 grout llllljnrity of our people who are of the llfillwulllllly class to do‘! Surely they are entitled to solllc consideration and n cllullcc to get some clljoynlcnt out of life and tilt- Clty Council is ill a position lo lllakc this possible. We have three Brass Bands, ollc Pipe Band and a very flue orchestra in the city at present. Wllut keeps them together giving their time to prac- ticcs alld their money for llluslc ls somewhat of a mystery. Tllcy certainly have had very little ell- conragenléut for some years. lt selenls to me that we should do something for these organizations especially as we could at the same time give pleasureablc and educa- tive entertainment not only to thousands of our own people. but also to the strangers we are hoping will visit our city during the colu- ing summer. Most. if not all. of tile above or- - ganizatiolls would, lbeiieve, be glad to take part in a series of con- certs during the most appropriate lnouths which are July and August. From past experience I believe two concerts each week covering those two mouths could be arrang- @0404 f Lest We Forget l TU EBDAV, APRIL £2 HENRY FIELPING Noted English novelist and play- wright. was born at Glastollburg on April ‘Z2, 1707. His best knnwn lluvl-ls arc “Tom Jones," “Joseph Andrews." and "Amelia." IMMANUEL KANT German philosopher. one of "it; most influential thinkers of mod- era times. was born at Konlgsberg acknow- ledged as the founder of the "critical philosophy." His "Critique of Pure Reason" is considered one of the most important works in Jnodern philosophy. MADAME DE QTAEL (Anne Louise Germaine Nectar) Conspicuous French writer, known was born at Paris on April 22, the enmity of Napoleon l. caused her to be exiled from Paris and "Delphine." ADA R I H AN lllmlnem actress, born _ Alan n; mo. m: but tiy on the American stage» at Limerick, Ireland chiefly en's novelist and essayist, 17M. In middle age she incurred, who and later frolifFranoe. Among her best lrnowrl works are "Corinne" particularly successful in shallower-inn come- ed for at the trifling cost of four cents per head of our population. is it asking loo much of the Coun- cil to spend four cents per capita for a sulllmers entertainment oi our citizens who are compelled to stay in town. ' A fol-mor Mayor iold- me there was no public sentiment i ‘favor of band concerts. if there w -the Council would ftlrnlsh them. 1 differ iroln him ill that I am posi- tive till-re. ll.- ll decided public opin- ion. favorable to such entertain- lncnt. if you wort: lo open n poll ut your office and llsk people favor- nllle to bnllll lI(lllt'.t'l‘l8 to poll tlloir votc l think you would soon find out that my jlldgclllellt of public opinion so fur as this mutter is concerned is more correct than the fornlw lvluy-Llr. Considering the alllount of good, to our own people, that would re- sult this credit of the the trifling cost. it should be done and arrllngclncnts isllflllltl be nlllde V019 now nlld not WllPll the alllllnler is -Pi‘0gl'@|st=live, etc. as the case may almost gone as is oftt-n tho case. should he done for the city. (Yonsldcrillg What dn others lllillk about it?‘ lam, Sir, etc, THOS. F. WHITE. -—-——tv-}--—i— CHURCH UNION consider Sifllle Union Bill Slum-Wu will points ill the Church now before the .l)ollllni0lt lParliu- ill8llt. With regard to Cllurcll Ull- iolls thcrc were .but two ill the Pres byterillll Church ill Canada, The first union was between the Free Church and the N. P. Church in was all llllzlnilnous and iioih parties were in favor of it. Legislation was nei- tller required -llor asked i'or_ lln 1875 the ullioll between the Established Cllurcll oi‘ Scotland ulld the Presbyterian Church in Canada took place. A few Kirk churches remained out of this un- ion; one ill Ontario and one in the Province of Quebec, and about twelve in Nova Scotlu. These churches retained allllleir proper- ty, churches, nnnle-s, glebcs church nlembers and the name of their cllurcll. as previously. ilowcver, one mun in tile Anti-Union church was not satisfied. He claimed that Queens University belonged to the Kirk Churches that remained in connection with the Church of Scot laud. The case was pui into law and finally went before the Dolnin- loll lhlrlillnlcul, The decision of par liamellt was that the University ile- longctl lo illc large body which had @119 into the llllioll us they were ’ e parties who had built up the university and endowed it; and the ll-llitel‘ ondt-d. lll liiiil n large party left tho Es- tablished Ullllftfll oi‘ Scotland alld organized llli‘. Free Cllurt-ll‘, ibllt tilt-y did not try to take any pro pt-rly from llll- nlolllcr cllllrcll; ulor l‘0|l ll. oi its ualllo. 1961. ll Unionist Church to claim to be the Church. No- buhsimply-that it may be a church as it is not. The Union- ists want to crush the Presbyter- ian Church out of existence in Can- ada. They want its very na-nle abol- lslled, so that it shall be remember- ed no more. Another thing clear in the Bill they want passed is that. when they get all the legislation they want, none will be allowed to leave their church to organize an- other church. A cast iron rule in- deed! They will sway the Domin ion! and lwould like w see the Government that would refuse what they ask. They evidently think to intimidate Governments. They have already seen a govern- ment that dared to refuse to pass their bill, because they ' ' ll unjust, Their Bill, whether it will pass or not. will not affect govern- ments in the least, The intelligent electors oi’ the Dominloll will not be ruled by clerlcals. Tile time for that has long gone by." They will Liberal, Conservative, and be, witllout regard to Church Un- ions or Anti-Unions. They i“! tnllch as say to the Dominion Par- liament that they must not nllllfe ally change in the bllll to DFOW" the interests of thtr-Antl-Ulliollrlst Parliament may be trusted to deal justly vrirh both parties. The amendment passed by i119 Ontario Legislature. they slly. 49' privetl them of their spiritual free- dom. lt is a, strange spiritual free- dom that people can be deprived o1 by an amendment" passed lll 118F113- ment, Did it deprive tllerlrof their spiritual worship’! Did it prevent them from going to the throne oi‘ grace as often and as earnestly as they wished, ISurely uol. 7' v " . APRIL l00% PURE fix-Eve _ uklte to Head Office, Monlnoi for . Dwidot in use- ys ‘ RTlN-SENOUR HQ: -llAsw$nl_dlSllES non: mun-flue mo: uav , m- uanrtggsnolln o... Mrsrxrmms-W lAnoawll IIQNTRUI-JtQZI-‘Q \ Church. However; ‘the Dominion ‘ SERVICE, 9-090 oowwvvv» 99-00% O-OGO-Rfi-Q- According to the Unionist theory people must be oi‘ the same opinion or not be christlans at all. Then Paul and Barnabas could not have been Christians. They cguld not ag- ree upon the same plan of work. and they parted asunder .and each went his own way. When people cannot. agree they had batik sep- arate. To remain together and quar- rel would IIIO unprofitable, ii not in , jurlous, They any that the llflll Pail-l sed by the Ontario Legislature dc-l ere-es that denominationalism will continue in Ontario. whether the churches concerned wish it or noti Dnomin-atlonalism will continue in Canada, as it docs in| every other country where freedom‘ oi‘ worship exists. The Allll-Ulllflli-l ii’ glllfllfllllelll should‘ pass the hill now lbet-ore "it. certalnly| forced into They oovewcvcw-"..v-!-"e-==v.-=-"eflawcvcvmc TURN TO THE RIGHT MAY 1st AND LATER BUT . In case the other fellow forgets and follows a lifelong habit. Protect yourself with our complete Automo- bile collision land liability policy. DEPENDABILITY, RELIABILITY w. K. ROGERS 00., LIMITED. Charlottetown Dependable Service There la no substitute for experience, and as this Firm has been active in the Insurance business for over fifty years you can place your order for Insurance with them feeling confident that I twill receive prompt and of- ficlent attention. llyntlman 8t 60., Ltd. Tho Oldest Insurance Agency In P. E. ‘l. Established m2 ' A‘; are in sufficient numbers to organ- ize a new denomination and call it. Presbyterian or any nwme like, The name of the new Union not overreaclling, Church will not be Presbyterian, is to tuko away the properly. the to so they cannot complain that the lnclllbcrsllip and the lllllllQ o name Presbyterian Church will be vl-nerzlllllu Pr crowding them in any ‘way. Now lllH Anti-Unionists in (Tallu- es from ullltlllg and forming u lle vent tilt-lll lrulll talking their prop- l-rty with llllllll, iWlWll lllu lllltjorlty decides to go: Tllcy can decalllp lillll lllltc illl their ‘hllggtlge witil ills-lll. Should uot the liuitlni-shq mu- llilosi. llll- Slbllll". (‘llilflliltble spirit to like oi‘ that won't do. say the Un- ionists, What wt: Wlllll. is tlll tile propclty llllll all ihn lncllllbcrsllill oi‘ tho wllnit- lwesbytterllln Church in Cllnulln, Wu are the lllajority. The lllll asserts illat majorities should rule. Ought not this apply to individual churches as well as ‘cly it. ought to apply to congrega- tions in which tile majority voted against lilllltlll. i1‘ it does not. logic is of no account, and reason and urgulllellt may as well ‘be laid zlelde. Tile llill says that the pri- vaté llills Committee expressly sta tes that tile three negotiating chur- ches shall not unite. This is not so. if we can rend the private bills re solfltioll correctly. it states clearly that these churches may unite. But it justly and rlghtqously protests the rights of the mother cllurcll. The Unionists say that they are un- ited already. Then what more do they want? What they want is 0b- vious. They want to got possession of their neighbors property, And" yet they will proclaim from their pulplts, “Thou shalt not covet any- thing that is thy neighbors." Truly the gold is become dim. The Bill speaks of the freedom of the church as follows: “The claim of the church. from its com- encemen-t, and through the cen- turies has been that it must ‘be free lo realize what it deems to lbe the will of God. For the State to infer- fere in this raises the whole ques- tion of spiritual freedom in its most acute form." In the face of all this the Union Church refuses the Anti-Unionists the fleedom to ‘remain in their own churches and worship God as they deem to be the will of God. Friend-s, rememiber the golden rule. Then for the State to interfere in this rogues the whole question of spiritual freedom. Then why do they go to the State to seek legisla- tion? Why not grant the Anti Ull- loniets the heedom they speak off That won't suit us say the iUnloll- ists. What we want is entire poles- sion of all Presbyterian property whether Unionist or Anti-Unionist. ln the billthey charge the Antl- n ~.\\ .‘v Dunn's’ V llill the Unionists have now (lll do noi llllldur lllv other church-lImrlmmen, is (m. reachmg, “- it 1,, \v _.._ theyl The (Tllllllda. and leave tlloir brethren beforcillunlt-ll-ss and nllulelese. But the Alltlo are determined tol What they want use all just means in their power cllurcll. Nl-ilill-l" do they try l0 prc-' wards tllost- opposed to ullloll‘! The . to an aggregate of churches“? Sur- . a AKIDNEY 441cm. J ' lllillil Strength . and Beauty "Wiliillillll"'""' ||ll| l | | llllllllllllililll lllllllliiiiillilliilll std?‘ Gr q, tllii 51M E3111 i ‘he 0‘ ‘h: P3759103”. I “$6.5 x eXQC\\1e“\ ¢QS ‘QC 1“ ‘go ‘ii \ca\ tel i’- . 'd irfi y,“ Tb has mot c nitétmls who”? Dodcre and Service Station: Everywhere am atom... T across-or camps. ulumlb, saunas trqaoslvol ultras» ‘ preserve the i thciChurt-h in Canada. They will coll- eebytcrlun Church ill test the rights of their Church to the last ditch. They will make a ii (Continued on Page 6) ii