i. NM By m w“ ;\lfaiteri'alllliy' Where DQIUIIISFEt . (Elven up the iililltb Tlltltlli Slllllls of For most men the truth or un- whose headquarter-g n, i, T0,, Announcement has been made I v ' Jam had pwdmed moderate I“ UIOSUBD)‘thawfllteinftlglglutfidi): truth of Darwias theory of mans - ‘_ ‘WINDS l" W"! origin only comes within the range terly winds flue and couipara I _ ' m Th, Tim" i" n” sum M ‘l-oomooo" of their speculative thoughts, but they wdm we‘ em ‘ w” Th" WNM“? w“ m“: rumba“ tor all who are investigating the liealsant readies to the Infill’. the ‘M persons no" m mm problems of "Vi" mam" DUI"! more so from the fat‘. that for “a, now the sole owners ' three tnnntlis wit. tiiiring tn. best of the palm" wllicll is generally ad- m“ "w" 1"“ ‘"1"’ “'5' "°""- pa" or "m grwm‘ and haying mm“ m be m, “an”; tn m, They depend on‘ t, trust it as im. Seasons. ‘were had he“ “mo” a plicltly as a nav gator does his Ad- iworld. For generations, perhaps ‘ I _ gupgr. absmdauce o; cloudy an from its founding in i785,‘the1‘imes miralty charts. This is particularly a- ‘ ‘ the case with professional stud- miuy ‘Qjtflq; was not by the general public re- H - ents of the human body who, as is v garded as a balm expressing the ‘ the case with the writer, have to I lliF-"Giilillilflflillili iiiillllliiil ‘Qfilloalloltcmfvecllens. JJl-nnmoumrutarau-ua ILILOIIIIO-lllcelllo u"‘b"lt'-‘v’-'i." \ tt-Jfulill THURSBAY, AUGUST 31, 1922 The Public Forum ooitflln h QII b‘ $0 dtocucslcn by ccrvoqcnd- any e1 questions sl inter egg. The Onartcnetcvn fluarltan docs not nulls artiy onions the opinions cxprccccd by Ill c0000 _ condoms. O-100-OO Did You Ever Step ts Think f 'Sir.——THA.T you should put your agricultural and commercial in- terests conspiclously foremost be fore the world. THAT customers take s illlt pride in buying from growing in- stitutlons-— that advertise. THAT newspaper advertising lrialies a growing business. THAT boosting your city and province is warranted by exception . I t h d v. L My al business and social conditions. u” a“ "may m“ e as ‘e THAT the bringing together- of figures show more than 8.000.000 empmye, and employee on a Com. can; in u“: United-Stat“ and |e35'l"ll0l1 ground is olleu good for all irooncerncd in a small business. ‘EUIG employer and help are well Iacqualnted with each other, their Hives are lived much the same l“ llmllijnntl trier are familiar with [fie u, happen when 50 or 75 p" cgnfneeds. wants and desires of eachl other. This however, does not hold, s h» 1 gotttl tn big organizations, ln suck; u“ me s needed w "p" the we“ heads o, departments aryabundant crops and enable us to not always in touch with the peo- E-“llPF them, and to dry "P U"? ‘pie working under them. Because muddy roads and to cheer the ment had made a special study of-"f tlllli fflft- "out"? 0H9" "$93- spirits of mcn and women. The -r b th -lt the tourist business and lie knnwaihlillglllbileslneagltme; tztlilltilulgetgtifreilrgiiz: weather affects cur minds and it's possibilities What applies trfiset together meetings" with all mwghts perhaps “m” "m" w”! ' pfggQnL The B05395 Wm knowlknow. We need change and var-I more about their Pfllf-iojnae; and iety and ‘these nature gives us in‘ even more force t0 Prince Edwarrhlhe PIllD|0Y€€ll will know moreiom- 591mm“; cflmatg t Perpetual . ‘llh t till b ‘ . ' _ - island and lf-ih? proper measures in‘? bnttzrrfesilsigsallltll bziltlprrzfirslifssunshine would be no boon; per. npgs and “ch Wm find out that Dfitual clouds and rzlin would bring lllflrr all. they are all good lel-‘dP»=ll0l1tlPllf'l' as wcll as discom- iiow ‘ fort and loss. loped tremendollilly. can be marle- ’l‘ll.-\T the man who is now t ---cr:::t:";i..":i..i2:";. .:::..::°::: fir-it there would he no advnntt-igmnw fiacncany . 9;.- m wan um" lam, to bu!“ ltlte British. that “widest Empire , Tllat advertising is the lift- ofiwhich has ever ncen"— that he made use of’! First of all. pub-ltradt- and trade is the life hlU0di[hQrg l; ayways a gm“ v3.19“, liclty. Let the outside world knowi“ ‘he “"'"l'"a""':"'gi-r p’ Inf ivcatlier- within it ‘b0‘lllfili. On E_ {WAN-E the same flay one section reports a down-pour of rain and another section laments the prevalence of forest fires. Last summer Alberta cmplvlyed Rainmaker Hatfield to bombard the brazcn skies and call flown showers. A rainmaker “Garey shopplngstmes ffaurlshgd for a “me auditor-med to be needed here as well PM‘, m Prhm Edward lslandudlsappeared, taking with tliem the “M ‘“"““"' “°' “°“' in Pourhl Kings. there was nifiidiculous as such ignorance isihar" “med “wesimem! °l "Wi- three cornered fight. the Progreiriot the zeozralthy of Canada. lgnor-‘““"d“ "i farm?"- Th“ milpsrtillvetll sive drawing his support largelyaance of Prince Edward island, lt"s‘S""°5 were a (‘allure- from the Conservative candldateiittrtlllrillllllffll PQBltlOYI- "'5 fiillllale-i With the result that the Liberal it's resources. it's attractions‘ forj L ID lelverell I llvnlca (altll ll advance ‘ll. :0 ILLI- ‘TFRDQY’! ELECTION! l “American tourists have llcorl ltremendously impressed with their visits to Canada. They have been well received, courteousiy treated. and have advertised the beauties of the country and its fine roads. Every year will more American tourists coming acnosa, Last year tourists from the _United States spent $52,000,- 000 In Ontario. and the posslbill- " . Th; result of yesterday's polling will, not cause much surprise throughout the province. The Llbc rhl government. tottering to it's fall and with only one session re- maining. put forth every effort, tangible and intangible to save their face. The roads for uiorlPt-i past have been iiterallv covered with workmen, views of any particular man. lt see more anti discover and to impart knowledge was supposed to express the views of the ruling class. even the views togeneratlons of medical students. of the nation. $1009 it came lllldel‘ The reader will understand this tho control of Lord Nonllcliife it aspect of DaT-wlulgm 1r 1 3w; a has naturally been ltlelltllletl Wltll few illustrative instances. writes him and his lwllvles- and hi! 1'1"“ sir Arthur Keith in the Nineteenth and enemies- have sought i0 9°!“ Century. Every one is familiar with "ll"? ‘he Public generally mam“? the fact that children are occas- Times h“ 1°“ "5 “m character" ionally born witu the condition of “harelip"; in the complete form a cleft proceeds downward from each nostril, dividing the upper lip into three parts. Tile surgeon can mend the deformity by operation, but the aim of tile anatomist is to discover why such a malformation should occur and, if possible, propose means to prevent its occurrence. For help he turns to embryology and flnd that toward the end of the second month of development the upper lip is formed by t.le un- ion or fusion of three structural elements. llf union falls the condi- tion known as “lharelip" results. lie has then to answer the question why should the human lip be or- iginally cleft in three parts? Not in abuarlor of e century past had so much rain fallen dur in; the three summer months and never had garden. field and forest responded with richer growth of tree and plant and flower. The Garden 0i the Gulf was never more radiant with blocul and ver- ilure. never more ricnly clad. And vet. just now, we hail reached the stage when a day of sunshine was more welcome than another day showers. roads wlrch re.- quired no attention were turned up to provide Jobs for prospective supporters; even the standardizi- tion of the railway west tof Suin- merside was begun although not a dollar had been appropriated for this work by the federal govern- ment and every healer and job- hunter in the party became a canvasser. Nothing must he left undone to make at least a show of partial victory and nothing was left undone. The combined strength than 10 per cent of the/owners farther than 350 miles from home. What dig}: so any to digest! Cut down on heavy food! You'll feel a lot better and get away from that drowsy, slug- gish feeling. Eat lighter foods. elloggh "WAXTITE" Corn Flakes are ideal, for they are not only delicious in flavor and appetiz- ing crispness, but nourish and sustain! Kellogg's “WAXTITE" digest easily and rest the stomach and help keep your head clear and your body cool. Kellogg's "WAXTITE" Corn Flakes are wonderful with the fresh fruits now in season; and, an an extra-dessert treat, serve Kellogg's "WAXTITE" with fresh fruit and plentyof cream! KM WAXTIITE CORN FLAKES . ... ..... i... . Also nahrs of IELLOGGQ KIUIILES and EIILLOGG’! IIAI, cached and Initial The Founder of the Times. have travelled ‘F! But for flve generationsthe Times has remained in the family of the man who founded it. The Walter who disposed of his interest to Lord Northcl-‘lffe ls JphnJfbe great- grcat-grandson of the John Walter who established the Times. The original John Walter was a printer, who liad experience ivl booksellitlg and publishing "before he conceived the idca of a newspaper, which he called the Universal Register. if he had the ambitlion of making his paper famous it was because he had become n'n enthusiast concerning a new printing device which was called logograrlhy. This was the invention of a compositor, whom he asftorivard employed. it consisted in casting entire words in metaltin- stead of separate letters. He had supposed that much time and trou- ble would he saved by th-is method, blvtthls proved to be an illusion. The mistakes that appeared were; not those of misplaced letters,; which any intelligent reader would? unflcrstand and mentally correct, but those of words that ought not to have been used. For some time John Walter clung to the method and then abandoned it, thereafter giving his attention to making the Universal IRoglster, a paper that been called to would have its appeal wlt-hou-t fad- omti this year. ‘where drought dlBll tllvelltlvlli- prrvalls. And yet not kings. nor! governments nor so-called ralnq “Junkers Cilflfflllst! or cure the ills of [h9g9 owners start making- tours regularly?" The manwtlio made this stale-l Ontario applies with equal Ol’ of two governments was‘ utiiizcd lo at least lessen the defeat of the Bell aggregation. are adopted the tourist harvest ofi Qn|y "y. Conservatives. 51955.5 Prince Edward island can be dcve Adrian Araenault and Thomas Macfiutt, were elected. This cou- stitueucy was formerly represent- ed by Hon A. E. Arsenauit, (Ton- servative and Mr. A. E. McLean] hi. P., Liberal. This is an import-I ant gain in trio Third District. in‘ the 5th. Dr. J. f". ftfPNeill defeat- ed Mr Wyatt by a small majority. ln First Prince. to yield millions yields thousands. What means of development Cdillg Empire is so Frcrrl the one third of Fish Stags ‘hi, m. m; m; package you h! il A suggestion is given as to the direction in which a search should be made by tne simultaneous changes taking place in the neck of thelombryo; gill furrows are then disappearing. A search among living flshcs shows that in one typo which has retained many old‘anti primitive characters, the upper lip. or what represents an upper lip, ls divided into three parts by a cleft descendliil: to the mouth ironi each nasal opening. “Hal"elip" rep- resents the persistence ot an evo- lutionary change which occui.r=ti |long ago at a very distant stage oil iman’s history. At the present time, what we have; second, railway 60-‘ London. He found that ccrtziili re- markable ilbt-rs wllicll puss along’ tile spinal cord of ilslies ztrosc lrl connection with a peculiar [llrlquo of cells sillliltcd in ii passage of the brain. llc naturally wislintl to know what illld becollic 0i tllls pliiquci and its fibres iiurinl: the evolution: ~0f tlighcr vertebrates. llo was able l that uvcli ill tile commodation. At prosent we have! secremr" - , Shawnee neither. A Prince Edward lslantLBoa rd of Commerce. Oklahoma formerly lady visiting in Edmonton tllia|__ saluted‘ by Hon Benjamin Gallant. summer was flaked b)‘ an _otller-i_ Liberal. the Liberal candidate Mriwifli! well informed lady if Mout-Umndrpd“ °f ‘wiuppmted farmmwi Jeremiah Blanchard retains the; seat. repre-- ____.. real was the .to demonstrate brain of ‘a miln a rudillletlt 0|‘ [i191 t 3 plaque is still preserved, iliiiiflllllflgLoss COMES NOT‘ FROM THE , ne hzld nolcd its presence be- jlnvestigators are entering tile sec-taco Darwws theory is an engine! F422. came pomlml are new our, v___ ltliat come from floods or drought; But. after a-ll, inventions were toimm pa" 91 m“ problem and “Tor discovery; it guides mun to the} (‘i U] L ‘ d 5 ‘ 5 “" "Year by Year tllle sun's ilent pro-inrovo the iiielblood of the Times. ‘eemng a" answer m me quelslmrliwobservafion m- m“, mew For [he e i - - _ _ . v . . _ ' r e “H” Farmer“ "f o" -|illf‘£2i1 and lifts into the air an tip-Joli the second Walter. the man wbolwhl’ 52W“ ‘m: 5mg” oluuwn“ Iiibraln silrgecn Darwin: teaching lslplana. we" u you‘. Imam"; __“_ longer united. Tlle-LPmXllllfliPly flqllill Bllll v8“! fllllflllllt ‘Pan?’ mm“? ‘he Times- w“ ewilytperslst’ Anm er M“. mg 0cm ‘not n tlicory but ii basis bl llraufllfour plant burns down. Comp‘!!! being condensed the most enterprising newspaper-HEW‘? was 5°13“ l" a mmimr mm“ i protection is accorded -, v - " b- - l» Jlnanciai lite ilc has found y txflcrtnrclyou- Con.‘ p“; n o” g||| m; m, ‘happens. Hatfield has _ The Steam Press. The organizations which candidate won nut. 1 ll i i- tnurlsis. etc. is painfully evldenh ‘ ow- FI" hwran“ p0 c" a . low you to p0 ahead with your In every‘ constituency the vote~not only in Canada but llfllllfllllilr" Ifafil) are no was comparatively small, many‘ ly in the United ‘States. Before wc_ . . |fll va n whl "h . _ .. r . lit t . l’ l’ s . .- conslderlng ll nf little consr-qw- can hope for any considerable tour! Ir U’ up m o groups as nnm. the “ppm. mgions form; Cmud; man of his day. He smuggled news tier. Sonic children zlre born viltll - v _ lapart as were the original political! ' ‘ ‘ be elected asilst trade this ignorance must be t . _ ttliilt KIlOVHOUI-(G gained froilml study . . 1h, t‘ b , h :0 genital maliurni-lllou of titc- _ _ A. ,_ . I _ ‘ infirm,“ a am“ whim r I n q I and these. when tho! are full,.7f‘°m 9 “M1219? declfmvs: "me Le?“ by H" the coglmonest ronniot tilt bFtllll 0i nnthmpold apes can‘ even the return of the whole flyeiat 1939f rrioilirlt-tl and the only way: " g ‘ “°~‘ "“ ' '| Plrlrtl- th-rlrwelves upon thB earth ~."°"°""‘""’"' “ma” .8 “e s, ‘ ' I , |. ,1 n ,- 3 Sm,“ m’ ‘WWW “PW”! "M" "lmmmlil conservative candmm“ woumh h‘ h h‘ b lo ‘ b ihelled and. one by one. the memqThe tltgtribuqon ,5 m the bands letters and packets Willlevdftilver-Ibfllll; the nttrpon 0 o I “hm m“ Dram Ur a PM“, Ur U, a: v I m v‘ ‘c t ls can e I he a ylhers arc returning to their rcspeti- "f Him "Who hath gathered thaw“ tho“? addrefised Lminsiivalsfaddnlona] “amber on [he “"1 ifllitll. Pllyslolouists alive not materially affect the voting pub1;¢|ty_ ‘Nude ~ H, n t .. which supported the Govern-mellfside 0| tile licilri. A study ltivc political parties. m s s S‘ strength of the Bell government. I loilliili of tlle- As to our railway disabilities it Wm‘ great punctuality- - ' Thl i l While regretting the defeat. of]; not necessary at present to gu‘ s br any has been the mg insure NOW. His most development of this organ ill liltllumt ‘he uulncuomnollf‘rerzi“$135K \\'hg]-ef0re 19¢ us take the WM. notable invention was that of the hunt-an embryo has revcillctl the t ilnry of farmers‘ orzranlzations. So Mr. Wyatt, Mr. Gallant and Mr.|into details. Suffice it lo say that, McLean, the Conservative opposi- ence who would llyndman 8i (o. Ltd. lexlst in lllc brzlin the; a; 1t mmng [haffkfully wfwnl-iiwlll lmlltilrg Dress. 0r rather llm-Tpresence of an extra chamber, -long as‘ their unlterbetforts were | Managers for P. E. l. apes urc rcprcsentcduanil are Ill-IT": olden "nurance Agency m it Serves m" “eds mid always hefwas the Invenmon “finch he was which m normal circumstances be‘ figulintif“Icizblltlilieifljbrfii-o: ' E. l. l n4 nevi“ ti!“ it is wisely orriorcdilhe first w_ amply to “°“‘.“"“'e“’* mm” gradually nmmellnm and responding curtvoliitlons of the llu- at bewre we can “was riled at agricuitur lmnrove- whether H Suns ups for the m“ He knew. oi course, that his prlnt- absorb“ by the right venmchh wonwn toilllelll- B! tilt‘ flvvvlfiltinent of their The extra chamber, which riiitkcs it man brain. The correspondence lic- mem or “m. Aways we ‘lave this ers would object in any such laibor- :it is infinitely below what it aught tion is to be congratulated on havtgo be and m l lug added to it's strength, M long fight against illv cxtt-rniil clic- my trl ll triumphant t-lltl, which ha: to induce mcn and a“ -" ‘dal- Adrian Afflfiflflllit‘fli'lfi Mr, Thomas QacNutt, the former a rising and promising young lawyer. the l-zt- ter a prosperous and progressive farmer and both good speakers. —~Z——{QL OUR SUMMER VISITORS Our summer visitors. like the migratory birds. are returning homeward singly or in groups. We shall miss them; we have enjoyed their visit. enjoyed their company, enjoyed their evident enjoyment oi the short visit and we may as well admit lt-enjoyed their pat- ronage of our hotels. our stores, can: ‘automobile service, in fact ogery service that they purchased ftortl us and that we had to sell. We have no means of ascertain- ing the number of visitors who spent the summer with us or how much money they spent with us We only know that otlr hotels were well filled. that they pill- roulzad our stores, employed our automobiles and motor ‘boats and paid liberally for such serv- ices es we had to sell. We may safely conclude therefore, that apart altogether from the gratifi- cation it gave us to mingle with them and to share ln their en- joymentll, we have profited very materially from their visit. On tourist question we quote the fol- lowing from a statement made re cerltly by ‘Mr. A. W. Tracey, Sec- retary of the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway Associa- tion during a conference with the Oilitlrio Legislature Committee on "Nels. and Tourist travel. l-le \ the material aspect of the spend their holidays ht-rc it must Ibo very materially intpruvetl. The tourist business for this year is over. The tlllle to prepare trade is now, right now, and tile things to begin “on are publicity and the railways. NEEDED ORGANIZATION From time to time the farmers for next seasons 0f this and other provinces have formed themselvesillltn organize- tiona under varying titles and for one purpose only. namely, for mli- tual benefit. There were lfiirmers‘ of industry, Grenges. United Farmers. Agricul- tural Counclls, etc, etc. The ori- ginal purpose of all these organ lzstionn was to improve agricul- lnstitlltes. Patrons t turai conditions. to assist ench ot- her; to ctr-operate in everything citlculilterl to benefit and to deve- lop the agricultural condition nf the country. A great deal of gum-l came to united efforts. Movements set otl foul those were which resulted |n better markets. in better roads. in better exhibi- tions, in better stock and better crops. Looking backward over the history of our Farmers‘ insti- tutes. the benefits secured through the llo-operation for which they ptcorl and which they did much the Improvements which resulted were very many and very great. fn other provinc- oll, notably in Ontario, these farin- ‘ organizations had a marked to develop. 8TB influence for good. fn an evil hour they departed from their original purpose. They went into politics and commerce. Their commercial own particular calling. they lnalle good progress. they improved the general agricultural condition of their province and ‘did much to ititi to it's prosperity. When they turned their organiza- ltions into political groups they its came the victims of political agi- tators and their usefulness out-- side of the OVGI‘. $911978] political arena was t Him This has been and shall bathe history of all organizations which depart from thein original pun- p086. We have Retail Merchants‘ Associations. Manufacturers’ As- socltlilnns, insurance Associations. and others; they are all prosper- oils, all mutually helpful, all con- tributing to the prosperity of tile country in which they exist; we iinheiillatlulzly venture the predic- tion that lf any of these were to become a political group, or under tnok to do the work of either of the other organizations. it's um- ltllncrss either in it's original sphere or the sphere adopted would be over in a very short time. There is work and ample work for llll such organizations, NHYI more, no calling, be ll farmers. merchants. insurance agents, doc- tors. lawyers. drugglsta or any other can do business today with- out orgatitzatlon but such organ- ization must confine itself to it's own particular sphere; to go out- side of that. will be fatal. From the organization the in- dividual members may take a hand in politics, in commerce, in insurance or in any other calling, history (as short and disallirousJ and do it successfully, but not us to remember. that in no land un tier the sun has the husbzlndmarl more atfiurance of a good re- ward for his toll than in Prince Edward island, lf for a short time the season is unfavourable we, may always confidently hope and expect a changefor the ‘bet ter. lt is quite possible for the dir- ectlcn o! the meteorological ser- vice ln Toronto to predict with reasonable accuracy; tilt‘. weather conditions in all parts of (‘amida for 24 hours tn conic. This is be- (lilllSF hr». lltls before hllll at tile time a full report 0i’ the temperature. the force of the winds where it is clear and where lt is cloudy"anrl where rain may be then falling Hence it ls ‘not surprising that the forecast of yesterday's wea- ther conditlons ln Prince Edtvard island was happily fulfilled. Hut for the state of the weather a month hence. or the result of an election, near or for oft", there is seldom sufficient information or it is too contradictory l0 enaillle the wisest persons to make a rc- liabls’ estimate ln advance of the polling. Thai is why we are M. the time of this writing hopefully awaiting tho still uncertain re- turns from the four electoral dis- tricts in which the elector: are voting. The weather. a horse gain grid an. election are always more less uncertain. or With the power and patronage of two governments and what le left of the Liberal ti- dal wave of December last. the Bell combination iuicceeded in electing three of tilult‘ five candl dates yesterday. one of them by a very small majority. But a small vote was polled. doubtless because the immediate fate of, the govern- direction and . savlngdevice, and that a premature announcement would have meant a strike and the crlppllnig of his plant. So one morning, alftor the ‘printing of the paper had been de- ilaycd, presumably because of the failure of news to arrive from the continent, John Walter ll. sudden- ly appeared in the preseroom and announced that the day's issue had been printed by steam almost next door. He told the printers that he would give iihern their wages llntil they could find something else to do or until he could absorb their surplus info his business. He also told them that violence had been anticipated. Independent of Government. The original Walter had tmade the discovery that a newspaper is likely to th-rlve better when ltfsels free to attack a Government than when it feels restrained from doing so. Before his Unlversa-l Register was two years old he had inserted a paragraph which gave grave of- fence to the Duke of York, and, acting on the old principle that "the greater the truth the greater the libel," he had been convicted and sent to tprltlnn for slxtccn months. For that period the Uni- versal Register wits edited from Newlgate. By tile lime tile origllr/al Walter had served his sentence ho found thwt, while his paper had gained considerable poptrlarlty, it was being confused with several other Registers, and that is the reason be rechrlstened it “The Times and Universal Register." lt was not long before the public had fongvbtcn Bill about the Register, and the Walter paper was known as the Times. n» nmictllet-le moncsyl. imbic name that. has had more than a little to do with its fame. The second Waiter pursued the policy 9f independence of the Govern- "ll-‘lll-‘ll-llll- by dint of enterprise condition will ho changed. things will be more interesting and lhc merit wail not at stake. At the all organization. / general election nextyear this. result .we confidently trust will. "Thullderer," while Thos. Barnes man in the country. the greatest of the editors. and his regime extended thirty years. havebeen more IIUIIIBTOIIB, and per- haps less influential. since rivalry among the great papers is keerler. Tlhe Times can no longer speak for Elglcnd. it can speak for its read- ers only, and on several occasions tremendous- tacit to carry its read- translent appearance in the numali heart, persists as an active struc- ture in the hearts of sbnftts and rays. llow are we to explain the occurrence of this fourth chamber In the heart of the human enlbigvo and its occasional retention lli tile child unless we accept the validity of the Darwinian theory’! Darwin a Rock We may trike anotherlnstance from a discovery recently made by Professor Delidy of King's College, and tremendous llilbor. he ran the circulation of the paper up to near- ly 4,000 a day. Great Editors. The original Walter had never found it necessary to employ an editor, but his son found the bur- den too great and chose Dr. (after- wards Sl-r John) Stoddard to relieve him of this part of tile work. Thore- tltfter the editors of the Tltmos were to become more famous than flie owners, and such men as Edward Sterling, Tllolnas Barnes, John Thadcus Deliine. Thomas Chcnery, George Earle Buckle, Geoffrey Dawson and Wiokllam Steed, while unknown to t-he general public, wielded thiflniluence of Cabinet Ministers, and sometimes‘ an influ- ence greater than that of whole Cabinets. ii. was Sterling whose alodgchutmmerbtvle of writintg won for the Times the nickname of was admitted by the Duke of Wol- lingtoll to be the most powonfnl Delano was for more than Since then editors ll the courcebf the war it had a, be ‘different, °"§‘°'.'"-.~s1-. w‘? jmiv .' statement on t.lc tieiitll of Mlclllicl countrymen snlileti tlirtllllill the rising up 0i the ngitioli to which lie lllld tlefllciltcd all tilc powers 0i uel Collins lclit force rind inspira- tion to the race tind brought the comes less us we ilcaccntl the sherbet-onto scale} 1 Again, when a ll0(fll||(|i"i_\'- humzlll disease liils to be lnvesti-l gated it is found that of itii living anllllztls only tllc alnthrtlpoid apcsz show a nigh degree of susceptibil- ity to human disease. —-<—<0>—;—— IRISH GOVERNMENT IN TRIBUTE TO COLLINS DUBIJIN, Aug. 29.—Tlio government issued tile Irish following Collins: "Tilt: greatest and bravest of our hits been snatched from‘ us lit it moment when victory illc (‘iOUKiS upon iis magnifict-nt manhood. "Tde gt-nlus anti courage of bitch- vv vvvv slot ' wllaiiy Seiectioil Guardian Readers ‘rem the W. l. Louscn collection WORD OF LOVING A little word of loving ls more to hcr than wcultll, A little word of toildornoss is Just ‘hands tllil illlllnsl .1 drf-lllll. svrcpt before it tllo IiQIIICSHfE rcvolt which trlcli in pint-k from Ylllll‘ fruits nf that trlulllpn of your unclllillcngcil authority in tilt‘ land. ‘fin every plliisc of tllc awakened activity of the niltioll. tilc construc- tion. administration anti exi-clltltlll of tllc nliiitary. the personality lli hlicllzurl (‘nlllllti wits vlvlll anti illl~ polling. llo has bccn slain til mil‘ unittlcrillllc til-lei‘ llntl loss, but h=l cnniml dlc. llo will live ln ine rule cl" tltc rtcople wllicll nor-iv. his grout best to assert and confirm nlltl which his twollcalrllcs llndcrtllke as s solemn flilltfl-Zf! to maintain." Farmers Work Shoes The Famous AMHERST SHOES For men who work out-doors. Our new stock for Fail is the sulneaa health. — it brings the bright hopes shining alld it keeps tho doubt away-- A little word of loving, take it, home to her to-tiayi i A little lord of loving. ‘mid her worry and her corn, — it clears tho household shadows and it swectcns married air; if kW-Ds filo ‘young cheeks glow» ilig with thc rose-glow or lov- ed youth— A little word of loving is her idea of the truth! A little word oi loving lift; the shadows from her mind, it keeps the spirit gentle and the '“ , aitiorl kind; But when you say it, feel . lhtfil ltItOW —lh yeg ghg will lt-I vlllr‘ wmethlns lcted mitt the trlsoliies that kill! i_t. or | ready for your in- spection. ‘GUARANTEED to...» LEATHER $3.50 to $5.50 Wear the best. . Sold by Ailey 8r 60. Ltd. Agents Charlottetown t