ll * on mm». lHlEiHiHllilliiilWN BlllHllllN ,. n‘Ol|&I\'-'¢ cklhl l. IILIIQ. IOIIICIII—IJIIK c0]- “(I Ill Hangar-J. B. lunati- Vloe-Prcsldnnt-il. l, Burnett. D. A. Ileilnnon. D. l. 0. Associate Editor-D. K. cml FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER l0, I926 Notes by the Way The Conservative Cabinet as at present constituted is composed o! 15 Ministers with Rt. Hon. Arthur Meigllen at its head as Prime Min- ister. By Provinces they are distributed as follows; Nova Scotln-J-Ion. W. A. Black. Minister of Railways. New Brunswick-Hon. George B. TONIGHT'S MEETING The address by Mr. C. W. Boll, K. C.. Hamilton, tonight in the Strand Theatre. will be a literary asiittlg BS_3 political treat. Mr. Bell- ls ‘a ‘cultured- speaker and writer and his Oitiaionson the put-- lic questions of the day will be well worth hearing. miss this who can possibly come. No one should .Z_-¢o>_-__. A casmsr HONOUR The people of King's County are justly proud of the honour ofa cali- inet mlnlstery brought to them fur the first time by their present and prospective representative, the Hon. John A. Macdonald. A seat in the cabinet naturally gives a reprcsenL- atlve prestige in parliament and more opportunity for recognition of- any demands hc may make in be- half of ills constituent-y. It i; an only deepens their guilt. With all the moral influences. in- dividual and collective, u Canada pointing the finger or reproach all"! condemnation at the King party. is. it likely that that party shall sill-'- ceed in securing the government on the I-ith? Should it? mom-i LET THE PEOPLE JUDGE There wile not a line in it the report of the ‘Parliamentary Conl- mittee Investigating the Customs‘: which reflected in any particular upon the government of‘ which l had Lbe honour to be the head." Ex-Premier King is reported mi have said this at a meeting in Lon- tlon_ Ontario. a few nights ago. Ho had also said the same thing whilc addressing a meeting in Charlotte- town. Here is an extract from tho ro- port as finally amended and passed evidence of the faitll in him by his leader and his coiled-i reposed I gues; an evidence. also, 0f the ac- knowledged worthiness of Mr. Mai:- donald himsclf. Mr. MHCIIODQIII has during his short parliamentary car- eer. although in Opposition. shown executive ability of no lllcan order All who, are "called" to Ottawa are not of’ to deserve this honour. cabinet tinlbcr and l; has bcon the misfortuneof this province‘ to be too long represented on the back benches. Mr. Macdonald has broken the ice in this respect and we feel in the Cablnct Prince Etiwzird Is- land alld PSpCCiflIly King's (‘oullly will recalwi more rccognitliil oc- tzusc n1‘ his elevation to lb‘,- hon- ored piiitlon. That hi: will worthily represent his native pFOVIH-t-l alter the l-itll of September all wit) know him confidently expoct and believe. item-i NOTHING IN IT? The Social Canada is an absolutely non-politi- Scrvlcc (‘ouncil of cal. non-partlzan fctioration of s01:- ial welfare organization with na- By stitution‘ it seeks to promote all lion-wide actlvlticis. its coll- forms of social betterment in coni- munity and national life. This Social Service Council, in July last. issued a manifesto which has been circulated broadcast throughout‘ Canada. The manl- festo directs special attention to certain “outstanding facts." BmOIIZ which are the following: "The investigation into tile Cus- toms Department has revealed‘ con- the ditions which have shocked moral sense of all our people. Certain business firms and per- sons have on a gigantic scale evad- ed payment oi‘ Gill-limits and excise duties. ln so doing they have not only defrauded the state but have also cast on their fellow citizens an unfair share of the common finan- cial burden. "This wholesale violation of the law was made possible by the coll- nlvances of c'crtaln officials entrust- ed with its enforcement and was for a considerable period known to members oi‘ the government." This, from a non-political organ- ization; makes a deadly parallel to tho attitude assumed by our Liberal friends with regard to the mal-ad- ministration of the Customs Dc- partmeui... The latter take refuge in flat denial and contradiction: they make light of the robbery of millions and cavalleriy declare, as the Hon. Mr. Dunning did in the Strand Theatre a few week; ago, that everybody is a smuggler, ex- cept one "dear old lady" in Toron- to who declared she had never done any smuggling. Flat denial has ever been tile re- fuse or evil-doors. but when they are caught with the goods, as the King gwemmont his been, denial by parliament: “The Prjnle Minister and the gov- crnnlcnt had knowledge for some considerable time of the rapid de- generation of tho Department of (Iustonls alld Excise, and their fail- llrc. t0 takc prompt and effective remedial action it; wholly indefen- sll)lc."~liansard_ Page 5018. 1f this (loos not “refit-ct" on fill? King government and its Prime Minister. what does it mean? I5 it any use bandying words witll man like that? 8 iOi-i————_ EDITORIAL NOTES Great harvest alld election wea- Joncs, Minister of Labor. Prince Edward launch-Hon. J. A. Macdonald, Minister without portfolio. Quebec-Hon. E. L. ‘Patenaude, Minister of Justice; Hon. Sir George Perlcy; lion. Mr. Fauteux. Solicitor General; Hon. Dr. Paquet. Ontario- Hon. Hugh Guthrie, Minister of Militia; Hon. Dr. Man- ion, Postmaster General; Hon. __ ilfbat ‘ Bnhp of Quilts Byjang: W.Bavfon.M.D ' PREVENTING BRAIN ‘mount: A patient consulted a specialist regarding his nervous condition. He confided to the physician that he fell fairly well, but that he found himself confusing things a great deal, seemed to get "mixed up" on simple little problems, was losing ills temper frequently even to the point of wanting to hit somebody. " ' He said‘ ‘fYou know I never was any angfelfbut certainly I wasn't ai ways the mean cuss I seem to be 110W. James Chaplain, Minister of Trade and Commerce; Hon. E. B. Ryck- man, Minister of Public Works. Manitoba-Rt. Hon. Arthur Maig- hen, Prime Minister and Secretary for External Affairs. Alberta-Hon. R. B. Minister of Finance. British Cqlumhlr-Hon. H. H. Stevens. Minister of Customs; Hon. S. F. Tolmie, Minister of Agricul- ture. Bennett, It is a galaxy of able and patrio- tic public men. The large majority of them previously had experience as heads oi,‘ Departments either un- der Sir Robert Borden or Premier Meigbcn. They represent eight of the nine Provinces and all the crceds. Farmer: are represented by Mr. Mcigllcn who has a larger internist in agriculture than any man who has sat ill Parliament in twenty] years past. Mr. Tolnlic. tho Min? later of Agriculture is widely‘ knowll as a farmer and breeder 0i purc brcil livc stock. .\lr. Jones. Minister of Iinbor, has largo inter- ests in farming and lumbering. Maritlmes Rights and Claims have the hearty support of the new government as publicly expressed by Premier Meigilen. Hon. Mr. Ilatt-naudc and other leading men in the Cabinet. Tho important portfolio of Railways is IIOIII by Mr. Iilack-of Halifax and that of Finance by Mr. Bennett. who was thcr. also great roads. Never again! Must be Canada's Tuesday. llow nfter should a lic be re- peated bcforc it becomes a truth? Some of olir Liberal friends are ex- perimenting on this problem now. it is no uso gcntionlizn. The trans- mutation cun't be effected. If ally one can glvo any just cause why the Conservative candid- ates should not be elected. let hiln declare it now or forever after next Tuesday hold his pence. The question to be settled on Tuesday’ next is not a5 heme‘... Liberals and Conservatives but be- tween moi-administration and res- ponsible government. iDo not miss hearing lMr. C. W. Bell, K. "C.. of Hamilton. in tho Strand Theatre tonight. He is an able speaker and bc has the rc- liutatlon of always telling fife truth. I All has been said about the polit- cept the -Li-bcral fore the election. Mr. Mackenzie King's hope is to groasivos and Independents. Don't give him a chance to have Canada again ruled by a uondescrcpt Gov- ernment. Give Mr. Melghen such a majority that group Government will be impossible. Canada’ needs at the head of hcr public affairs the boat men she can send to Ottawa, clean men to serve under a. clean lPriixle Minis- ter. The lPrimo Minister is the Rt. Hon. Arthur Melgben, a man who has never lbeen charged with crookedness in public or private life. the ablest man in the public life of Canada today, a man trusted even lby his political opponents. He is the man for whom you vote when you cast your rballo; next Tuesday for Macdonald. Myers. Messervy and Wyatt. Were lhe lihal ais ical situation that can be said-ex- roorback which will probably appear on Tuesday when it cannot be contradicted bo- tlgsln hold oifico by the aid of Pro- ' born in New Brunswick. Maritime Rights are further as- answcr to Mr. Mackenzie King oil-cured hy the accord established be- Inemy “I ‘margyl and “c” ltween the new government anti Si!‘ Henry Thornton head of the Na- tional Rallwaya. who has publicly expressed his strong sympathy I01‘. the Provinces by the Sea under!‘ their past disabilities antl his dc“, termination to do all he can to 60-.’ cure rt- icf for us Ill the future. The‘ opponents of Maritime rights and‘ claims are all in the Opposition camp. from King at the top to Duff at the bottom! Prosperity is coming back twice as fast since the King government was turned outi given heart and hope to all. to the captains of industry and production and to the workers. Hear; and hope_ born of the prospect of effici- ont,-stabln, clean anti honest gov- ernment are truly wonder-workers. And what a nightmare had been the past five years. especially for the lliarltlmes. When the end came it left only E. M. Macdonald to re- present our three Provinces in the King Cabinet and be afraid to face tllc cleciors again. We sent from this Province four Llberaiis to Parliament In 1921 and two in 1925. And we had the nar- row gaugo with Us until the change of government. -Why was "it so? IWas it not because they were nar- row-gauge politicians? Rubber stamps to endorse anything that Forks demanded and King propos- ed! ' Tament of tame followers of a shattered Administration! Our hlundcring and bungling Lib- eral representatives followed lfluli- dorlng and bungling Ministers at ‘Ottawa with cringing fidelity. Min- isters bunglcd immigration till it dwindled ‘to a trickling stream. Mr. Sinclair must need better their ex- amplo by his own bunglng at Eln- crald. which blighted immigration prospects berc anti wroghg a grout wrong to brave men. And. what has the Province to show for it but a liability of $11,000 and a hniigiit-i as a monument to his bungling? Didn't Mr. Slncllir make another blunder when he out out from the estimates the grant for a frost- proof warehouse at Georgetown? We think co. Also, we conclude that when Mr. Jenkins voted day alter day, over and over again. to whitewash the rascals involved in The overturn has - The physician was able to cor- roborate the patients story by cou- sulting the family- In fact the family had reached the point where they thought his "queer" actions. and violent tem- per. were the results of a crazed brain. ‘The specialist after making a complete examination found that his patient bad an afternoon tem- perature about one desree above normal, and an early morning tem- perature about two degrees below normal. There was a generally tired out feeling, restlessness. befiacllea alld us mentioned above, a slight tem- perature. The physician took a sample of his blood alld found that the white corpuscics were above the normal Ill amount, showing that the system had a foreign body or poison in it. and these little white fighters had increased ill number in order to give it battle. Thus our specialist was lrnhlcd- latoly ill possession of facts that silnwod him thilt his patient was really sick. was suffering from ll ‘low form 0i‘ poisoning of some iklud. m" Knowing that ‘the most frequent causes were from tho teeth, thou tonsils. thou intestine, then sinuses adjoining the nose, then gall-blad- tier, he started out to locate the trouble. Tile X ray film of tile teeth show- ed four of his griding teeth to have abscesses at their roots. The re- moval of those seemed to actually cause all increase in the severity of his symptoms, so that his family were much discouraged. illowcvcl" be was handled, gently, carefully watched, the intestine kept regular. alld he was encouraged to get out- doors alld walk. A month's time saw the change for the bettcr. In three months ho was at business, anti in six months he became ills owll old self, with from cranky spells. ,, Now what would have been the course of this case years ago? lt h; difficult to say; but we know that lnally of thesc cases went ou to institutional rare for life. Poison of any IIIIIILIPOHI within or without is bound to damage the mentality. .____4-o>-—-——r O04 94 ~OO§-O-O-QO-O+O §O-QOQ-O-OQOQ' Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers “wk September 10. 1926 l JlllQJiECTED-—-"Because Tllou hast rejected the Wbrtl oi" the Lord, lI-Ie hath also rejected thee." I Sam. 15:23. PRAYER-Cast mo not away from Tily presence ;alld take not Thy holy Spirit from lue- ‘ITHEY SAY They say—Ah! woli, suppose they do, But cttu thcy prove tllc story true? Suspicion may nriso from nought But malice, envy, want of thought, Why count yourself among the "they," Who whisper say?_ IWIIBI. they dare not They say-But. wily tile hearse, help to make worse? No good can possibly accrue From telling what may be untrue; Anti ls it not a nobler plan To speak oi all tile best you can? tale re- Alld the matter They say—Wcll, if it should he so. Why need you tell the taltfof woo? Will it the bitter wrong redress, Or make ono pang of sorrow loss? Will it the errlng one restore. Henceforth to "go and sin no more?" ' t i... w They any-Oh! pause. and within, See how tbyhoart incllnedtta sin; hour ._ Thou, too, shouldkat sink beneath its power, Pity the frail, weep o'er their fall, But speak of good or not at all. electors who sent llim to 0mm». We hope Maura. iMeuervoy and Myers will vote better than that. Here's to them as a winning team. supporting Arthur Meighen a win- nlng Loaller! iitO-Li-m-w Watch. lest. Ill am témptatipniu- ‘l was cmnnormimws GUARDIAN g 4ca+n+vu+owpoooo§kfi {The Public Foru 2 1 his column in open fertile dhurunlun h)’ turreslflmhll" M questions of interest; Th! (‘hurluttelown Guardian do" not necessarily endorse the up- ininns of u" respondents. OQ§O4§ 0-044 EVASION AND CAMOUFLAGE. i Sin-Mr. McKenzie King deolnros that the unanimous report of 111B Customs Committee did not con- tain one word which rbflected in any way upon tho government of which he was head. What evas- ion! What camoufbage! Does any- one imagine for one luoment that the four Liberal members on that comlnittee would permit anything to be incorporated into the com- inlttee's report which would reflect directly upon Mr. King or his Min- isters‘! If theybsd done anything like that the government would have been forced to resign the min- ute the Committee's report was presented to Parliament. But Mr. King forgets to tell the people that the report of the Cust~ oml-l Comlnitteens it finally pass- d Parliament contained some ‘ERY SERIOUS REFLECTIONS upon himself and his Ministers. Here are' the words of condemna- tion which Parliament added to the Committee's report: “THE PRIME MINISTER AND THE. (wv-ER-NIIIENT HAD KNOWLEDGE FOR SOME CON- SIDERABIJE TIME 0F THE RNPID DDGENERATION OF TIDE DEPARTMENT 0F CUS- TOMS AND EXCISE. AND THEIR’ FAILURE TO TAKE PROMPT AND EFFECTIVE IIEMEDIAL ACTION IS WHOL- LY INDEFENSb-BLE." ' And a majority of the members of the Customs Committee voted ill the House of Commons to add these words 0i censure to the Com- mittee's report. In case this as- sertion is questioned I shall sub- mit tile proof. The Customs Com-i mittee was coluposed of nine mem-i hers of the House of Commons as follows: hiessrs. Mcrcicr. St. Pore Donagby. Gomlison, Stevens, Ben- Boll. Dollcet and Kennedy. Well, if we consult llanzard of Julie 27th, page 6018, we find that the following FIVE members of the above named committee voted to add tile above quoted words of censure to the C0lunlittee's report: Messrs. Bennett, Bell Doucot, Ste- vens and Kennedy, and the follow- ing FOUlR members of the Com- mittee uanlely hietssrs Goodison, St. Pei-e. Mercier and Donagby voted against the inclusion of the words of censure. The words of censure on tile King government quoted ilbovc arc llow part of lilo (Illstolus Commit- tees report, thcn what becomes of .\ll'. King's contention that that re- port contains nothing that reflects in any way upon lliln or any nlem- bor or his administration? I am, Sir, etc. ELECTOR. ..____<-Q->-___. KING'S BLUFF. l Slr,—lll a speech at London. Ontario ylr. McKenzie King stat- ed tbllttllc Liberals had taken ac- tion against a certain newspaper in Toronto for publishing adver- tisements containing charges against the late King Government in the (Ill-touts. smuggling matter. anti that thcy intended to take sim- liar action agulllst all newspapers publishing those advertisements. Did anyone ever know of a more transparent case of bluffing? Ev- eryone who has read the advertise- ments which Mr. King com-plains about knows that the charges con- tained therein are amply support- ed by sworn evidence taken before the Customs Committee, because in almost every instance the num- ber of the page of the printed evi- dence, which supports those char- ges. is quoted in said advertise- ments. - it la a wonder that Mr. King has not taken action against every Conservative candidate alld speak- er from Vancouver to Charlotte- town. And why has he not insti- tuted proceedings against a score or more Liberal and independent newspapers and speakers who have ileennluch lnore scathing in their denunciation of his mill-administra- tion of the Customs Department than any Conservatives have been For instance why has he not taken action against" the Liberal Toronto Globe the Independent MacLcanh - Magazine, the friendly Grain Grow- ers Guide, one of his candidates in Manitoba. Mr. T. W. Bird, Miss Ag- nes MdPhall and a score of others? Mr._King is surely cutting a sor- ry figure at the present time be- ing unahlé to refute the charges of mat-administration made against his government charges which have been fully established by sworn testimony. he is now, in the closing days of the campaign. try- -~ ' DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH L. Gordon ‘*9’ WOIbDS OFTEN MISUSED: When" either the singular or plur- elinoun ends in “s." place possess- ive apostrophe after the "a." "Mr. Jones’ home." "Ladlenv gowns." O FT EN MISPRONOIJNCED: onyx. Pronounce on-iks. the o ae- in "on," i as in "it." 0P1‘ MIISSPBLLED: cl l? acre; not er. ‘SYINONYMS: barbarous. savage, uncivilized, brutal, atrocious, in- human, cruel. - ~WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours." ‘Let us increase our vocabulary by master- the blackout and dirtiest scandal in all Canadian history he was giv- ing very poor service to the decent a mixture of silk and thistle down. There is one automobile for each 71 persona in the world. according to a recent government estimato- mII-III .. ,.,:._' in; one word each day. Today's word: TRADITIONAL; handed down from generation to genera- tion. "This story is traditional; many do not believe lt-" lug o I iéel tthe bluff wonIt “J6me, eryfiidy knows that his government was censured by his own friends In Parliament and driven thflrofrom in ssrace. and no amount of camou go on the Liberal leader's part Ill cov- er up the facts. I am Sir. etc. READER. --—<o@-—-— A VISITORS GLOWING TRIBUTE Slr.-—lt was with a feeling of pleasurable anticipation that l looked forward to my second visit to ‘Prince Edward island. When last I visited it I was. to say the least, charmelLwith the beaut of its landscapes and senscapea, o , as one so often finds in this island where the sea is never far distant —the two combined. Reaching s shores as -I did with a considerable knowledge of the many beautiful places in the world and without any preconceived op- inion. I must admit that the real- ity I found far surpassed my ex- pectatlons. It was early summer. The land was clothed in "greeu—such won- derful greens. such a variety of greens. from the palest of pale emerald to the rich, dark greens, of the pines, in striking contrast to the deep, rich red of uuplougbed lands. I drank in inlmeasurable enjoyable of the beauty of her sil- ver glades, her smooth ‘broad Illeflllflwfl. and senscapes unsur- passed. I imagined the joy of tile painter at the sight of her startl- ing yet harmonious colors. The almost unbelievable greens, and red, singing earths uprising from torquoisa seas that lisped alld sang their chantics as they broke on sands of reddish gold. And over it all a sky of tranquil blue. -l have seen the blue seas of tile Mediterranean. and the beauty of its coasts, the tropic isles of the’ wide spread Pacific, the throbbing colorfulness of Burma. Malaya alld far-famed Japan, and of India even unto fair Kashmir. l‘ hai-e breathed the fragrant scents of Ceylon and Java, alld the nlally beautiful scenes Australia and New Zealand ‘have to show. have also seen. litany other plac- os I llavo visited, alld loved full well. ‘Bill. it. seems to me that this fair isle nanledPrlucc Edward has a charm all its own. One thinks with rapture of the greens and rods uf lievtuv-undoubttldly thcy are very fine, yet I wonder if they have tho vibrant colorful qual- ities one finds here. A tow evenings ago l sat on a hillside above Charlottetown. The suu was getting low ill the west. Tile scelle I had viewed before had subtly changed. A beautiful inel- iolvlless had tout-bod thc land alld changed many of thc greens to do- llvatc yellows alld browns, illrflllQll with varied ranks of dark stately pillks. As I sal there the sun sallk low- er and lower. The sky was bath- ed in glowing light, yellow and orange, rose and red, changing ever changing, and with it tho sen front ecstasy to ecstasy. The red earth banks back on a new beauty ——they snug with light and color and vied with tile beauty of field upon field of golden grain all ready for the reaper. The wood- lands were colorful with early autumn tints. and bore and there a maple like n flaming torch glow- ed vivid red. The gently swelling hllislopes worn painted with infill- ite colors-ptrtcllcs of yellow and bronze. side by side and turquoise alld emerald. and greens so pale alld exquisite as to b0 indescrib- able. There, where fields had borne their crops was the rod of new turned earth in patches fram- ed with shades so elusive as to ibe hard to name. The valleys and roadsides were decked with wild- flowers. white and yellows. reds and purples, growing in endless profusion in their beds of delicate silver tipped grasses and ferns. There. also were creepers rich in their trusses of scarlet berries and all the rest that goes to make 11D tllo wonderous flora of this beauti- illl isle. . Asl sat and gazed in rapture over the wide-spreading scone of colorful hlllslopcs, mirror-like har- bour. and beyond its encircling arms-tho sea. the sun sank below the horizon and-a range of red sill- fused the sky. It lit tho waters and the landscape and all the world was bother in its glory. Slowly the light faded, and tho flanlo that lit the heavens grqw soft and died. into the vault of the firmament. crept delicate violet tones. with here and there tho pale light of a star . . . . . ..Deop shadows filled the valleys and in the wood- lands all was still. The softly glowing masses of wild-flowers poured out their fragrance on the night. Then. as l wandered city- wsrd. I knew one might wander far and yet not see such beauty of scene as I had witnesses that nlgllt in fair Prince Edward Isle. I am. Sir, otc dOHN K. HEUGHAN. Giant British Bombing Plane . UNITED STATES CLAIM OF HAVING LARGEST MACHINE OF KIND IN WORLD. l8 INCORRECT ‘LONDON. Sept; 8. —.-* Reports from the United States tlwt the new bombing plane Cyolopes was christened near Philadelphia as the lamest ‘machine of the kind in the world have aroused British aero- plane manufacturers who maintaiin that the clslm ls incorrect. lt la announced here that a. new British plane; also a. bomber. which has just passed its test. fer exceeds the ilnllted States machine in many de- tel s. The British aeroplane carries not only n load of bombs. but. also a IOPDQdo weighing more than a ton. its engines have developed 1.400 horsepower against 825 of the Unit- ed States machine, 1t l; claimod, The machine is built of steel tub- llll- tho whole piano weighlngmomo ten tons. , tre NIFTY ~-' NEW DOLLAR COMPACT‘ We have jun for tl I n III and ‘incvery y“). m" receiv" ‘n MEI] IIIGQ ngw colm "m 1a all ONE ' DOLLAR I II OI! U16 IIIIIII p!" n =, I I » otlvg; Thexwllite Drug so}. l.’ G. IIIMIESUN “ ""“9l'lls‘kfst _ The Man Nobody Knows By BRUCE BARTON INSTALMENT XL, ON THE TEMPLE STEPS Silently the cautious people slip- ped away. and afterward denied that they had ever had anything to do with him. Thosewho were nlore daring. or devoted. continued with him through the rest of the week, and on the Sabbath crowded into the synagogue where they knewhe would speak. Tile days had given him time to reconsider and coul- pose his thoughts; perhaps now ho would make a reasonable reply to their hopes. Bllt there was m. compromise in his message that day. Again he repeated ills seem- ingly aenselcss talk about tile “bread of life." It destroyed tho last hope ofthose who ilad looked tn him for the deliverance of Israel. “These are bard saivings." they pro- tested, “who can understand them?" And then the note of trag- I f c y. "Upon this many of his disciples I went back and walked with him no more." The tide had turned. He realized it clearly though the disciples could not. At every opportunity he sought to build up in them an increased oeuse of their responsibilities. He t nlust "go illto Jerusalem," be told. the elders and chief priests anti c scribes. and be killed." They could N not, would not believe it. Peter. hot-headed and enthllilial-l- C tic, took him aside and rebuked" lliln for what seemed a temporary loss of courage. "Tie it far from thee. Lord." he exclaimed; "this shall never be unto thee." Gener- olls, loyal words, but they revealed an utter failure to appreciate the real situation. All hope of a re- vived and regenerated nation was gone; his one chance now for per- luaueut influence was in welding his little group closer together, and sealing their union with his blood. For the first time ill his public work he forsook Palestine and led his wondering ibut still dutiful fol- lowers illto the foreign cities of Tyre and ‘Sidon. Tho journey gave him a chance to be alone with the twelve; and it was, in a smnllway. a repetition of his earlier triumphs. These foreign folk were friendly without ulterior ‘motive. They lnent of s throne in Jerusalem, or the possibility of profit 'for them- selves from his political triumph. They came to hear him because his words thrilled them. because they felt their better selves touch-_ ed. and made vibrant by tho wonder of his lifo. _ He hated to leave these kindly strangers. Much more he dreaded the thought of another trip through Galileo. What a Srnveyard of high hopos it was! Every road, every street corner. almost overy house and tree was alive with memories oi.’ his success. Now he must pass each one attain. conscious that it might bo tile inst time, his heart weighed down with tile thought of hlgll purpose that had lbrought no res- ponse, and sacrifices seemingly Ill vain. Small wonder that he cried out against Chorazin and Bethsalda and even his own loved lCapernaum. the cities for which he had done so mlich. “Woe iunto you," he cried in his loneliness, "for is the mighty WOPRMQICLWBTB done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon they would halve repented long ago, in sack-cloth and ashes." ' But neither Bethsaidn nor Cap- ernaum had ears for him any long: cr. Some, new novelty had taken bold of tho public imagination. He bad had his day; nothing more was to be expected from him . .' . So the Spring and Summer passed, and Autumn came, bringing the feast of tmbernacles. which he determin- ed to celebrate in Jerusalem. It was a suicidal resolve. The report of his dwindling in- fluence had been carried to the Temple "olllue wh ch was embold- ened iby tho info ntion. There were spies in-‘every crowd that listened to lilni; the echo of his smallest act flew to the capital; he could not hope to arrive outside the city walls without Imminent den!‘ er of arrest. All this he knew but it did not weigh against his resolve. This might be his last feast. There would ibe visitors from-all over the world. some of whom would Iultly take the seed of ‘his message with them back to their homes. He mult be true to his calling at whatever cost. -So he went. ‘ We catch one glimpse of him on the Temple steps, surrounded by s partly curious, partly antagonistic crowd. It was hid chance to re- capture a little of the popular favo . to speak a placqting word lhl might open the way to reconcilia- tion; ibut no such thought astound“! of Abraham and hence a he replied that they we flIgudglillLAilbrflhan" but "children then and there. failed. After all he I\ SIdEPfllbIQ following, tar to wait. Every speech was alien body. they would sleze him -p¢|- the next feast, ll ill the he had himscli and disappeared. $4; argued among thelllsclvcs, went back ollcc- luorc illto ll lee. Gold Wave In prairie provinces, worries of farmi-rs who havcltgt II his mind. The time 1 IIBdhIDIII: “I have rut ." e cried, " would make you frets?- :35“ they shouted that they were‘ Ifflfldy , PB no .. 0|‘ do .. offered you The)‘ Would have km“ but their .-,, ad still; GI bland" ve mr . would tangle himself 1331' ati I’ illll time i?‘ When not entirely disc -——J{O&r—i_ Western Canal (Canadian Pren) WlNlNl-PEG, Sept, 3__ , routs, the first of the sellsolth ollowed tllc prolrili-tt-il 5p“ wet weather in many pnrisollli adding i.) m nuble to gurucr their harvest Tile cold weather embratm Wide stretch of territory in Allu- ta alld Saswatcllowall with sum. toll, Calgary, liiacklcin and Batik ord registering below" freellii: than,‘ “and sum" many things of point. Forecasts indicated llutlll old wave would Ianitohs. tonight- Tllc frost was llot slllilclellllo ausc any serious dalllagt. __\ ’\\\\\\\\\H fnonlis , KI DNEY" PILLS 0.\'It'l1lI ill l 5 v V’ l0,“: I “Jr I‘ I cared nothing about the establleh- ¢+c+vo+4o++wn v4 Buy llilllll col .2; Now is the time bnY hard coal; Schooner Theollne = rived and is discll. ing a cargo of the -' best quality. You _ save mono)’. by. b - now. A. Pickard ab i PHONE 240 Pickling? CHECK THIS OVER 40ers mt p SENCE .0!- " ESNINEGAR; I c rr POW" “Mllyfllfd and QpIOOI whole Gill" clove: ghyenne Bill" I YAnd Evfrything. "m! “l” onuosroRE tn 14o Great than"; Tmplleno 8 4