I: ,. s: a "” Qhinme puzzle. In his first ed- ". Government which he hopes to form a m” the general election (1) will 11,11‘ 1r he were to “continue ‘the Lib- .; ,|n.l policy of British preference" who would be harklng back w the i’ fluid‘ policy of granting e. preference 3T1” ‘goods imported from the Unit- _ ImH-Ifl-W- cumu- a: nan-refer. r. Vice-Incident, .|. u. nun-a. s. douche Incline: _. . lemu- old lnloglll amour-a. u. u m I. .1. r. Associate rerun-nus vvuum. and‘: 2'. cums. i n .1. o. o. F. cozvvnzvrlozv In the currmt imue of "I'm Mari- time Odd Fellow" it is noted op- » preciatively, in connection with this week's I. O. O. F. Convention at Charlottetown, “the vigour shown by the Odd Fellows of The Island and particularly of the City of meeting, which indicates a display ofmost commendable energy. The committee in charge are to be prais- ed for their fine frfltémfll Wvrk. which will have its climax with the close of the Grand Lodge sessions." It may.be added that our citizens generally are also appreciative of the work which the committee 1s d0- ing to make this weeks Convention one of the most successful ever held ln the Maritfmes. His Honour the - Lieutenant Governor, Premier Mac- Millan, His Worship Mayor Ken- nedy,-all are taking part in wel- coming the delegates on behalf of the Province and City. His Worship requests that our merchants decorate their places of business in honour of the visitation. This is already being done in the vicinity of the Oddfellows‘ building, and others will doubtless follow suit today. The programme provides for. a busy convention, but there will be time for the social amenities and for seeing something, at least, of the summer attractions of the Island That the visitation will prove a success in every way is the hope of all concerned. LIBERAL FAILURE In one of his radio addresses Mr. . king spoke with pride of the Lib- - oral. Summer School or Conference held at Port Hope in 1933. Rev. Charles H. Heustis is not proud of it. In discussing it in the Liberal Toronto Star he comments rather bitterly. In part, he says:- “The school was a. mirror oi’ ‘the mind of Liberalism which is given to adolescent yearning: which it seems unable to make concrete. Certainly the Liberals of Canada are not today think- ing oohstructively but are satis- fied to repeat the old formulas about liberty by which they mean liberty to acquire property and - do what you like with it. Karl Dreher has hardly exonerated the picture when he speaks of Liberals as those "who in time of peace stand for peace, in time of war for war, who pity the poor and hope,that they will all get rich if pomible, who disap- prove strongly of oppression, would do something about it if they could, and who live always in the hope of reforming the ,Government after the next elec- , tion." . Doctor Heustis geels that had the liberal opposition at Ottawa ad- hered to its principles, it would have been searching for a key that would unlock the door to a new social era of prosperity, leisure and security. The writer of this notable article in a Liberal newspaper leaves it at that. All the reform- ing and all the eflorts at reform and of making things better for man. woman and child have been left to the Bennett Government party. The Liberal party has long been impotent in Great Britain. What is to become of it here? FACING BOTH WA YS Mr. Mackenzie King's avowed intentions regarding the British preference, established at the Im- perial Conference at Ottawa in 1928 is flttingly described by a mainland paper as wnstituting a , dress Mr. King stated that the "continue the Liberal policy of fBrltish pa ' by a -,-—- ~‘reduction in existing tariffs rather thxn by a percentage increase against foreign countries in exist- ing tariffs, and (2) it will grant 3 British imports a real preference. he Kingdom without obtaining any ‘Wodbthrceyearuagotocancel @pire tndetreoties ueooa W ‘"11"! "l"! (founded llfl) Il-Q per you (lu advance) delivered. Li!“ M‘ no: (In adnnot) lulled to Canola and United llutou. MONDAY, AUGUST II 1985 country. thrown out of employment. EDITORIAL NOTES a’ who fa‘ in dddfelicws‘ air-ms." million mark. Encouraging? should sly so. practice as Dictator? u etenographcr. 11B story today. eats" he is pledged w serve. disooncemng, when light. subeaihed to the fund. M. Leo's 1.]- If the newly discovered system of “d” brmdmunn‘ we" Drdma-W my sister's death. He promised that electric light wires become popular, he would exert all his power tn ob- g W111 be “the, Qmpentlng and tain my release and that it would, returning Be home quietly, so as not to disturb friend wife, at 2 a.m., we switch on "Yankee Doodle" instead of the It is understood the gift to Lady Beflflborwsh from the women of Canada on her departure for Eng. land will fake the form of a gold ‘urn i6 or 1’! inches high. It has ai- so been decided in present Her Excellency with a boo); bound in blue morocco and embossed in sold with the Dominions coat-of- snns, containing the names o: all Organisations and individuals who Alpert altogether from politics, tho Liberal picnic at Hon. Walter farm this afternoon should be a pleasant function. Of course “expectant” party men will Notes By The Way Testimony was given in Frenchto the total clusion of English. in a murder trial held in 5t. Martinville, Louisiana. That may surprise resi- dents of other sections of the coun- try, as would the appearance of local notices still required to appear in French, or in both French and English. Nor is all the French ‘ even in some of the most remote _' of Ilousians, the “Cajan" parole for which much of H11 Promise a! a b0 oer aent- the Stateis noted. Today there are preference in the United “Kingdom 581d W b0 many Louisiana oom- hu w fled m‘ hand‘ m“ he munities, still unreached by either railroad or highway, in which is ‘mud b‘ hmdlcn>ped m mwtut‘ spoken a French as pure and free ing a feasible, revised trade ngzee- from corruption as is that of the men; yin; great 3mm“, The intelligent Parisian today. Theyar-e not all like that, but quite a few of British negotiators "would, natural- ly, hold him w his pledge, and u §,’,;?,‘,',‘,,_"°- New one“ “m” m“ they succeeded in doing so many Canadian factories would be clos- ed. as they were closed when he left n wledge. whawver may be good m °m°¢ m 193° ind “n! °1 ‘Mil-fluid! creeds or things we dislike. We are of cunadlm worker-g would be thinking of Russia. No one of Bri- One of the worst faults in life is to blind ourselves to, or fail to ack- tish tradition, or with a love of hu- man liberty and dignity, can other Th‘ "5' ""4" "Y *1" ""1"! than hate the Bolshevist idea. Only and varying statements which. folly could make us deny that be- from motives of political exped- mild 91° M°§°°W “"5 the" l" men of deep sincerity, of almost ‘may’ he h“ m“: 1mm time m fanatical sincerity, and that out of “m” °n the quflmn °t P!" their sincerity is being born some trade, Mr. King has got himself into things of good for Russian-liar. - a predicament from which it will be impossible for him to extricate b13591; with “gay to "m; country have been persuaded by their lead- The strikers. or some of them, ers to attempt to stage the trek to Ottawa. That will Cw the men n0 good, and may do them harm through loss of their public sup- Welcomevto "Oddfellows, Oddfel- port. The attempt to mate the trek will, however, serve the pur- inn: CHARLOTTETOWN cusaoms a . what In» of a, 1am; w. at»... up. DEAFNESS '— HEARING "AIDS" It is rather difficult to understand but nevertheless it is true that the blind are much happier than the deaf. This is" because those who are blind are a part of the family house- hold and take part in the conversa- tion anywhere they happen to be. The deaf, not being able to near well, if at all, seem to “grow Ln- words", ‘do not take part in a con- versation» to any extent, and often become suspicious of those about them under the impression that they are being talked about. Now there are some cases of deaf- ness that can be helped by various forms of treatment and there are others that must depend on various forms cf hearing helps or aids. In this connection if; is interesting to learn that he Nottingham (Eng- land) Institute for the Deaf has is- sued a leaflet on the choice of hear- ing aids, Hearing aids are divided into two groups:- A. Some form of “Collector”, which collects the sounds such as the well known Ear Trumpet. B. Electric Appliances-all based on the siLnple telephone, consisting of a microphone, telephone receiver, and a small dry battery, (Amplifiers are sometimes a part of this type of 10"‘ flvs‘ oddeuo" bah-m‘ and poses of the leaders. The diversion of the tag day fund from the pur- pose for which it was contributed m at"; Bflum, m, “w m.“ by the public also shows that the leaders care nothing about the un- IIIIN d-IKWIIQQQ, “IO IIIIIDIICI‘ 0f 11n- favourable light m which they place emoloyed has fallen below the two the mien before the public. All they we are thinking about is the serwirig of their own ends. The men who are sincere and who value the support of the public in their demands for It will be moaned an mg yeeem; something better than the relief Vi.“ to Drop,’ M“ Km‘ ment ‘ camps would do well to pull away from that sort of leadership-‘Win- considerable time in Italy. Was he mp9s Free PM“ studying Mussolinfs system and “Spontaneous combustion" is a favorite expression nowadays of fires of uncertain origin. In earlier "Bfillhlmilii" Pmvided the Iilb- days, s. popular theory was “match- enleiaeweorwrrmieaawbols B HM flflw" This should give 100th‘ m. w] now, mmember m rise to the conundrum whether there are fewer mice or fewer mat- 1933 w‘ m“? dwmad u“ W“? ches or are mice more intelligent was lo bod-Iv of! financially that it than they used to be?--Ex. had not sumcient funds to provide s. different There are thllse who think and speak of lVir. Bennett as autocratic, cold, unsympathetic; some who write of him as a "rich bachelor," When one finds "Big Interest" bereft of human klndnem. From newympe" 1m, the Montreal Gav such judgments of misunderstand- ing, and sometimes of malice, it is ette featuring Mr. Mackenzie King, I to d ,, ,, We “WW m which 85119! that Ryannjtust ttlrlerledto ggrrns giringngn gentleman, recently of the “Valley penitentiary: “H5 (MI- Bennett) o1 Humiliation," finds himself. It “n” to the mm“ w see me" I have heard people say he was auto- “ m" ‘h’ b“ t" "mm- cratic, but r didn't get that im- pression. He talked to me as man to man. He also sent my brother a personal letter of deepest sympathy for our bereavement at the time of only a question of a short time before it came. He expressed his conviction that I would go straight. I can never hape to repay him for his amazing sympathy and I shall never let him down." This, says the Liberal Toronto Star, is "the sort of testimony that any man might covetK-Amherst News. A despatch speaks of the Klng’a “pay cuts" being restored. It is quite incorrect to consider the King as receiving a salary. Since 1760 the Crown land revenues have been paid to the public account and out o! these the civil list is drawn; but the King gives to the state much more than he and members of the RoyaLFamily receive from it. How- ever, when there was a general cut of salaries imposed on govern- ment servants the King expressed a wish that the civil list should also be reduced proportionately. How- ever, the clvll list must not be look- ed upon as the Kings salary. In- cidentally the Prince of Wales re- ceivm nothing from the civil list. his maintenance being derived from the reverlues of the estates attach- fect of their number will provide an excuse forthe successful cand- be there in numbers, but the‘ very mg to ,he>,,,,e_ At first it was thought that the idates avoiding them. There 1; e1- Bffiisxr Dflfidof the pmvofield ‘Lllbjllutl! prm g" an governmen a a us - w." m‘ herd o‘ the famous m" ment would have been accomplish- attention. The Dominion Drama Festival, a corporation established to oom- memorete the King's Silver Jubilee and to ensure the perpetuation of the Drama Rstival, has just been ' -f--’- at Ottawa with sir Robert Borden as the first presi- dent. All the oflicers were nomin- ated by the marl of Bossborough, Gcvemcr-General. as provided for in the Charter. In the list o: gov- ernors of the Drama Festival all °°nw°°d rmfsum bu“ t‘, awn“ ed within_ one or two years, so that birsiness could go forward in a nor- mal way on its own regained mom- entum. But the President-quietly shifting, shelving, and re-arranging his field-marshals and ilhe staff advisers of his planned-prosperity programme-has cemd to think of the affair as an improvised set of emergency experiments to hasten recovery. The New Deal as now viewed at Washington from the Ad- ministration's standpoint is a ‘p01- ltical and social revolution. All pre- tense of temporary emergency has vanished. Its aims are positive and progressive, rather than negative, and conservative-Dr. Albert Bhaw the provinces are ‘represented ex- cept Prince Idward Island. -——- l seems\to be a wo A movement to make Prince Gus- Herr mu?» ' intervlgw jw-ihe m Adolf, eldest eon of the " l ' °“ "l" m“ “' Swedish omen Prince, cum lcout $533" “mm” w‘ “m” "m °1 m! WWW 5°! Bwllt lltilllill- inn when woman wants all her slang when 14m! Jason-gym m. rights and neglects all her cwn m,‘ ‘u. Mum“ ‘g ‘ m“; special duties.’ This shoifld. the ‘ "Ohatham News argues, put this wo- ‘utnmkm ‘whim’ M m‘ men blok on ‘the throne again.- d. ti!’ international 1111-511” globe. in Review of Reviews. Ilinbetb, ex-Q n of Greece. n of sensible tasks. I am against femin- Pehlbly a fascist regime can be avoided in France. The French, on the eurme- may "effervasce, but underneath they have tremendous poise. Then. too. a fascist dictator- apparatus. capable of prpducinga very great volume of sound, which may or may not be of assistance. The battery must be renewed from time to time. Advice as to Selection: Collectors are more generally useful than the electric aids but of course are very noticeable wheras the electric aids are not. Three Nos- 1. No person can decide as to the value of an “Aid" except the pat- lent. 2. No "Aid" should ever be bought without the previous oppor- tunity of two weeks’ trial. 3. No instrument maker should be trusted unless he will lend, on ap- proval for two weeks, any Aid which the patient selects as possible of use; with some reasonable arrange- ment for hire to cover wear and tear or risk from loss. The above suggestions are so clear and apply in such a general way that our deaf friends would do well to study them. Personally’ I have friends sing different makes of these electric "Aids", and it has made a great dif- ference in their business and family life; they are now a part of their surroundings anywhere they wish to go. FROM “WIND” Wind from the stars, wind from the infinite, You reach us from the shoreless realms of space And vanish in illlmitable years; One golden moment's grace of money he has taken a oil-lid against monetary inflation. But this cannot be said of some of his, associates. including tho Holl- l!!! megenzie, MP. for Vancouver centre. zie has been susmwd in "MW! Mr. King And Inflation (Financial Post) Whenever Mr. K1118 hi5 59°36" It so happens that Mr. Macken- quarters as a likely Qfllldldflw 1°? the Ministry of Finance. This sui- gestlon would not have been taken Seriously some time ago. But now ma; mm Ml‘. Dunning and Mr. Ralston are out of active political me, the possibility of Mr. Macken- zie becoming Minister of Finance, in the event of Mr. Kins b61118 91' ected w ofllce, is something to con- sider. Mr. Mackenzles views on money are also worthy of attention. Mr. Mackenzie wants the gov- ernment or Canada to issue half a billion dollars of money on the basis o1 the gold now held in the Bank of Canada and t0 1186 1t i0 reduce the public debt. The impli- cations of such a plan are Well Pill by the Calgary Herald which points out: "There ls no question about where the money would come from in Mr. Mackenzieb scheme. It would come from the printing presses. It would be direct and ex- plosive inflation with all the pos- sibilities for evil that such a move has always involved. ‘The public should not be misled into the argu- ment that printing new money cream new wealth. Actually it re- sults in the depreciation of all money and it is particularly hard on the poor and the employees with, small wages. Every recipient with a fixed income, everyone with a savings bank deposit oran in- surance policy. every veteran with a pension and every individual who draws an old age pension would be injured by monetary inflation. ‘ “Contrary to popular belief the wealthy do not have their riches in bank deposits. Most of these peo- ple have their wealth in real es- tate, factories, forests, mines and so forth. so inflation benefits them. But the ordinary clI-ss 0f citizens sufler heavily under inflation. Dan- iel Webster said: ‘Of all the con- trivanoes for cheating the laboring classes of mankind, none has been more effective than that which de- "ludes with paper money.‘ " Those who know m. King's views are convinced that he would not approve such a plan. Mr. King cannot be expected to go around the country denying responsibility for all the schemes and promises offered by his numerous followers. But he cannot avoid being associat- ed with statoments made by the more important of his colleagues, among whom is m. Mackenzie. Either Mr. Mackenzie should get off his inflation tack or Mr. King should repudiate it as part of his policy. Otherwise, the country will rest uneasily under the prospect, oven if. only a distant one, of hav- ‘ing a Minister of Finance with in- flation as his chief. policy. Respectable Movies (Father Donnelly, in America) If after a year of unprecedented cleanliness in their product they are still to be cursed, threatened and boycotted by Catholic organiza- tions and speakers, why should they continue at all in the difficult pur- suit of virtue? If they are damn- Your voice is sweet with far, strange happiness, . Your breath is quickentng with un- known life. . . . . From pole to pole you pass Tossing our childish griefs on wings of laughter, Breathing dream-fancies on our tear-dimmed gias ~ ed when they are clean as round- ly as they were damned when they were dirty, what, they might reas- onably ask themselves, is the use of reformation? Catholics should be warned that if ever the producers, nagged by the extreme and irrelevant de- mands of legion enthusiasts, should 5. Sighing and listening, smiling and whispering, Evan as you chant of death and dust and strife, ' Gusts of unbldden hope leap echo- ing after. ‘ Wind from the silence, wind 1mm the sunless sleep, What have you seen within the ray- less deep? What have you heard beyond the forms of time? Had we the heart of the wild, lake, The clearer hearing of the wave- washed shell; Were it but ours to take Truth from the constant hill, and purity From the soul-blossom of the hea- ther-bell, We, too, should know the meaning of the voice. Wind of our world, wind from the worlds unseen, Voice of what shall be. and of what hath been, The meaning of your laughter and our woe We know, we know. —Geoifrey Winthrop Young. Too Much Bother (V.V.M. in Winnipeg Tribune) I see were golfers on the West- ward Ho course, near Chicago, have started to use rlckshawa. Inst of having to walk between shots, they loll at their ease while an enor- getic youth draws them within a step or two of the ball. All they need now is some one to make their shots for them, and act and put on something else". One thing, however. is certain, and that Had we the crystal vision of the L reach this state of mind, decency will be dead for a decade. they will have eliminated any need for them to visit the course at all -—unless they wish to linger at the 19th hole. MMVS ilair Restorer A delicately perfumed pre- paration which restores. strengthens sud beoutlflee the IT WILL RESTORE GRAY HAIR T0 ITS ORIGINAL COLOR An excellent hair food ton- ing up and invlgorutin all the glands, blood vessels and nerves of the hair- and scalp, thus producing a "ich and abundant growth of hair. Prcmoieeanewandeupar- Iorgrowthwhere thebairh I flailing and is ueefulinpleveutlugloudrul anddleetroylngpnraliflelulr killemluetfollowtlronilroe- tioueeuefullyand willbe amaaedattho _h. Getabettlotodaywcente. MAO! PIG WOIII POWDER Averyofleotlveromedyin Ilbetnatlaeutelwunne. A eurecure. . is the instability 0f the present pdtical order. As one die-hard conservative part it, when queried as to his ‘ lenient that the Iiandin Government would prove perman- ent: "Of course, when I lay ‘peri- anent,‘ I mean a few months."- mw 31"“ mm], I‘; The 2 Macs I Preecriptlocehlgaeelalt Current History. USE m might seem more certain if It‘ BRAI-IMIN TEA _jll GIDMI ‘B! all; I tel airtight pigs. OIANOI IIOI 8 hear‘ lotions Embroidered organdie with ylelllrlrgt bows and pleated Smocked shoulders, three voile. Eyolets are cool, in a aim ls frock with crisp white col sr. A’ sheer cotton print with unusual rever collar, pastel edged, Plaid gingham for rshlrt- gladia- frock with big but For Women and Mince s4. Msboualdi Tire xii-new beading aim » CHARLOTTE TO wzv WE HEARTILY EXTEND OUR GREETINGS TO THE DELEGATES ASSEMBLED HERE FOR THE SEVENTY-EIGHTH SESSION. MAY WE TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY OF INVITING YOU TO VISIT. OUR STORE, AND ASSURE YOU OF OUR KEENEST, INTEREST IN THE SUCCESS OF YOUR CONVENTION candy buttons n. — ehiffcn‘ so "- U . y, 12. 1935 TO Made for sunshine wear, became theirs cool and filmy, gay and comfort- able. Very sportive styles to wear on the sidelines, and dressy ones for formal charms