. emission-son. s. o. Iii. i delivered ' vioo-rnsirna-o. a. aunts. ' a . Associate suitor-n. is. Carrie. ososusss 4, I928 i: Hon: wl .a..isotucrwou. owls mimic meeting oi-tho pool Dairy council.- reierréd rnmgLv-to the ocplcuou- o! the ryfherds oi Canada. With that dom which‘ sometimes comes by otherwise to some he tells them r this ‘depletion can be ‘avoided. remecw is not to selldairy cat- To saiyone oi ordinaryJntelli- ce this rcniedywould appear to Mrl" Motherwell" cau- isly reirained from commenting the; reasons why Canadian tarm- us selling their dairy cattle ‘st pun. He might have told them, Dilation or iiuct Ministers, elective. tile National Dairy Council ha i him. that the reason was th ii: ~ competition with Australian Uew-Zealand butter. When it a Canadian farmer better to {and keep his cows he will not f . them; and the reason so man selling theindalry cows llOW is i it-pays better m sell them at ‘nigh price that is being oiIered them. by United States farmers. matter was thoroughly thresh vut by the DoiryCouncll. Th lion advanced lby the Dairy boil "is a protective tarifl y products.’ 1n the face oi larg rrts oi ‘butter and high price dairy cattle ior export. a scien tarii‘! would hold his local mar andvenable the dairy farmer to we prices whichwould make it e profitable to keep his catti i to sell them. "isestlinated that during th ant year twenty ‘million pounds ustralian and New Zealand but- will so imported into Canada : simply nieansthat twenty mil pounds oz Canadian iiutoor must annular market. rt require rkncwledge to see thc iorcoof Dairy Council's representation he Federal Governmenimto re e to the dairymen the tariii ad age ori butter enjoyed previou he signing oi the Australian le Agreement. ie discrimination against Cana ‘lbutter and in isyoroi the Aus anproduct-may be seen in th ‘time, the latter is brought- to iouver ‘ or . Haliiax under s- duty reeand-a hali centsper pound. the fflmport" irsight rate irorn illllntl to Central Canada is per hundred. while Canadian 2r must pay 9.58% per hun- Undor these conditions. com- lon with Australian butter is ssible. particularly ior the Eas- and Western Provinces. ewhero in this issue will .bc i an interview with Mr. J. A :r. oi Regina, president oi the lnal Dairy Council. which iulLv ins the situation from the Can- i dalrymanh point oi’ view, which wccommohaio the care- erusai oi our farmers, Illberal Eonservative. \ >W' Till; TARIFF WORKS. an illustration o! the eilect lat the protective policy otthc d Btgles. combined with our Govmiment’: tariii vaoilla- iiaslupon the exploitation oi iaturai resources. the Journal musics in a recent issue cites illowiiig. cue- some years certain Canadian fir!!!" “m-Ifltlocdin ex- iomviy‘; uioj ovulation ‘w i=- u» Main-oi points sojourni- 5r w» we iewwwwr-nmw aa polo-acme. Women's and ‘children's 1 oonoc will be put into operation. mcnite ‘(titaniierous iron.) running high in titanium, and particularly suitable ior the manufacture oi ‘the Plfiment. lid the interests we have referred towere prepared to estab- lish a plant in this country, using Qlldbfl! ores from the Ivy deposits in Terrebonpe County. Then last year politics took a hand in the situation, and the Canadian Government removed all protection on certain products manufactured by the interests who bud‘ the pro- hot in hand. and this fact, together with the/general uncertainty oi the tariff situation caused“ them to lo- cate the plant ior the niair-“acture oi titaniuniyvhite in the State oi Vermont, to which point the crude Canadian ore will be shipped. It appears that the product can be manufactured in the United States at such a price that its laid down cost in Canada would be equivalent to its manufactured cost ii made in this country. On the other hand ii it is made in Canada, the liigh tarifl on" entering the United States would entirely excludethe article irom thet market, confine sales to the restricted‘ ‘ - adian market, which would, at same time. be open to all American competition.‘ It would be diiiicult to find a more clear cut example oi the diiiiculties attending the mamliacture oi’ fin- ished artlcles from our own‘ raw ma- terlalsin our own country than-this. The instance in ‘question is not a large one viewedagalnst the entire background oi our economic devel- opment, but we submit that it shows "with startling clarity the generaldriit: oi‘? events. _ , In this particular case. the situa- tion is rendered more pathetic by the ‘iact that the Canadian-Gavel?- ment Ore Testing Laboratories have carried out a large amount oi in- vestigation on our titanium ores, antlthe success oi the process which will be operated in other countries‘ is due, in some measure, to their eiiorts. -_-_-<-0->———— d e Y e ior e S i‘. c! S S c . EDITORIAL NOTES. An adherent is a supporter who‘ has not yet received all that he ex- pects to get. While the fine weather cpnt/inues, the prophets are predicting an ex- ceptionally mild winter. All progress. said a Dhu080p'mr. is based on a universal innate desire on the part oi every organism to I live beyond its income. The “ducklng" period on Govern- ment Pond is now over. The boys are skating wltlpcoinparatlve saiety on the ice. ' There are iour kinds oi homicides; rclohious, excusable. yuiuiicolc sun praiseworthy, butTit makes no great diiierencc to the person. plain whe- u... he toil by one kind or another‘, J-thc classification is ior the ad- vantage oi the lawyers. iuitin quotations, to be elective. should be careiully handled. " An honest shoe-seller, observing that his learned competitor over the way hcu oispisycd the motto "Man's ooh- sci; recti." ‘oiiilzlasnned his own ‘lbop iront with the words: wuorrs. nciii-stuiiirgooloorniniiicgr- course with others. says wiiiipm James. is non-iiitericrerica with. WIIIQUAIW liappnflovibdthoscwaysdoiflfl ‘z I v I _- I coma “p!” ab. ‘or nu itl advaicl) d‘ ‘ “neither oi you" the Lion is or is , not referring to both the outgoing Canada ‘has large ‘resourceaoi ila I ing oi the next great war. which has ONIION Punch In drsocoi ‘aouc pictured the British Lion cicad- lug erect on his hind ioot to clam hairdo within‘. Hoover. who has who his hat respectiiilly ior o6 ‘Congratuiationsi AndTm so also sary m twist marten." The question macaw/nether in using the words. and the inoomlnk Presidents. In any case British press-opinion seems to have reached the conclusion that President. Coolldgeh Armistice Day address was about as much a tail- twlster ior the British Lion as i! was a blui‘! and peremptory ‘call- down" to Europe in general. In describing the reaction ofthe London pressto Mr. Coolidges ad- drssshthe Inndon correspondents oi various American newspapers use such phrases as ‘painful-and su - prising." "intensely bitter," and so on. And among-United States pap- ers those opposed te the’ Coolidge Administration are quite as hostile in their words and cartoons as are thelrBritish contemporaries. The New York World, ior instance. pic- tures Mr. Coolidge asfnmbidextr- ous", chalking up his policies on two iblaoboards placed side by side. His left hand writes, “Treaty to outlaw War," while his right hand lnscribes, "More warships." ‘ Mr. Lloyd George h quoted by the New York Times as saying: ‘ It is no use outlawing war when we are building cruisers, heavy guns. and bombing mach- ines. and turning out the most poisonous gases. All Europe is engaged in it, and even Presi- ~= ‘. dent Coolidge is joining in. So long as we go onwlth huge ar- maments in the iace of our pledged work, the Covenant oi the League oi Nations, the Lo- carne Treaty and the Kellog pact aremockerles. One oi the worst ieaiureaoi the I-‘residcntis speech as interpreted in mun)’ newspapers is that however well intended. it has greatly tended to stir up uniriendly ieeling between the two greatEnglish-speaklng na- "0115, Ill-SO to increase big armaments among the great powers, and to hasten rather than delay the com- come to be regarded as alinosta cei ready armed‘ to‘ the teeth and still arming it has become seemingly in- evltable that some one oi‘ them will In the matter oi population, how do the conditions in the Mother Country and. the Dominions oversea compare ‘and especially those be- tween the British Isles and our own Island Province? Britain sends of! a yearly swarm oi 150,000 to 200.000 oi hersons and daughters. some oi whom find new homes in her Domlnions and Crown Colonies, and others locate under foreign flags. Britain complains that hun- dreds oi' thousands oi her people at. home are unemployed. and have to be led ‘from the national treasury. The Dominions know comparatively little oi unemployment, but are all crying out ior- more immigrant set- tiers. ohc oi Canada's greatest problems is the exodus of tens oi thousands oi her people to the Un- ited Stutes. Just as one oi Britain's greatest troubles _ is that iar too many of her people persist in slay- ing at home. 0i unemployment. the Sunday Times or London saysa, With the iigures oi unemploy- t ment huge and mountlni!» Wm! ‘ the heavy trades occpiv depress- ed. the country is iaoed with a state o! emergency less apcct _ uiar but hardly less real than muouicmcaorosaynthlnk. that neither oi you iound it neces- . talnty; Among so-many nations 31$ beiore long break the world peace. t castles, Abbe ty iii-the Briiislrisles can such a wealth oi memorials o! past. Neolithic man _leit traces i the "fields where the ploughman turns up ilint arrow-heads in his annual labor; I have handled a bat.- tie-axe oi Jule-grained sandstone, shaped like but with a lace dredge, on the smaller end. It weighed about I-ceven pounds, wasexpertly drilled and countersunk ior a. shaft in a way We modems could riot surpass. and dared not at- tempt with the stone, tools which were all that the ancient. warrior possessed ‘Many a wet day must he havesspent polishing his pct weapon to such a. glassy ilnishi Later in time when metals had come into use, yet anterior to the Roman conquest, the old Keltic inhabitants were Just as industrious, ior many hoards‘ oi bronze apons have been unearth- ed. A few miles from my residence. a. iarmer, in the course 0i his task, removed aiarge stone that impeded the plough, and iound beneath it about a dozen bronze spear heads. beautiiully, iormcdhand polished. Like another celebrated character. he "cared for none oft these things." he gave them to his children ior playthings, so that one only was res- cued intact. It ‘was over six inches in the blade. and socketed; alittle loop on the side oi the socket show- ed that lt was to be tied to tlleshait by the sinew ct seine animal. Both implements-Aha aIxe-and the spear —now lie in the. "Black Gak" at= Newcastle on Tyne. the principal‘ gate oi the old castle. now used as a museum oi antiquities. . ‘The Neolithic" men lived in caves; »'-0N. "o nun ‘(BY COL A. ‘i: ure oi a Canadian ev' Iicienoy almost aoomplox. ncvistving the ten sad have elapsed since mounting to criminal‘ negligence. Our collective eiiorts have a, mounted to no more "than picking lib our disabled which we have slow- LY ‘accomplished by an apologetic hat-in-hsnd attitude ot approachl- lrlg Parliment and its oiiicials. Individually we haveirad an ini- events where Canadian soldies narrative rather runs to the door oi an estaminet than to the grim bar- gaining in hardware that leit us the ownership oi trenches. Until very lately iew. attempts have. been made among ourselves to set forth the real iacts oi Canadian Canadian writer shouldflttempr, to invent a Canadian war-hero he would be promptly contradicted by veterans who would check up on the writer's mythical “Bill Jenkins" as to time. place and unit withthe un- romantic accuracy oi irwar diary. Until the present generation of vet- erans shall disappegr there are too many cold obtrusive facts ior romance to flourish. All this Ls to the bad. We had too great percentage oi our men in line. the war came too iar up our own street. to let us do what the American would term "bunking the Canadian Public.” . Now the Americans. with their low the men oi ‘me Bronze Age dug- a conical hole on the Southern slope 0i some hill, drove in poles around it. drew them together at the top) and very prdbably covered the struc- ture with turves, ior the winter is very wild‘ in this county and mus have been worse then. A ilai ilre stone in the centre completed his humble abode. At HotIBank on the line oi the Roman Wall, the "house- holes" oi a native settlement still exist. Then came the Romans -— two‘ thousand years ago-and held the country ior Tougflly iour hundredi years. They drove roads through thei deiiseiorests for muss and miles in a stralghtiina; where a modern cn-q gineer would detour to avoid a hill or other obstruction the Roman per-i mitted no deviation. They rounded; cities oi stone and brick, the llkcbi‘ which were unknown beiorc. They crowned every strategic position with a. walled-cheap ment; till finally. when they had subjugated the Nor- thern part oi’ Brltain,.they built a wall from. segedunum (now wan. 58nd 011 Tyne) to the Solway. Firth, seventy miles away. as a protection aggilnst the turbulent tribes oi Cale- o a. ~ When the Roman Empire went down beiore the assault oi the Ger- manic nations. the Britons, now helpless, called in the Saxons and other tribes to their aid, but won in turn assailed by their allies, who bmke "l! the. Roman civilization, sacked and burned the towns, and exterminated the natives or drove them‘ to the mountains. I A Will-WY after (to be exact, in :97 A. D.) Augustine. the Apostle oi he Anglo-Saxons, landed in Kent, m“! the cimqlTélors were gradually bPOIIBht under the influence oi Chris- “mmy- MEN’ Dflrlsh churches in Northumbria (as it was now caged) were built in this period_ mg por_ lslgis oi them. instinct with Anglo- On technique, are to be seen in. Wfmrated into more modem build. lugs. Thus the church at Whitting- ham {near Alnwick) has the mull. 1°05 0r uprights oi the windowg carved to the shape oi a modern newe dilfféil-ealglanthflwicigwer 11g cm»- pro ecting ii‘l'.‘.°‘is..iicii..i'..'f‘ii“.;“ WM r Idgs m “one. l’! out their ext came the Norman - has moved on a thmwgn; _'y§,1§,°°‘§ nation delighting in war, they mfflitulthfll‘ flyrios on the hills oom- were lbs“ the ltoman roads whigh count‘ "18 m"? hlshwsys in the PY- Th0!’ love the iaircst val. lav» to tho Church, and its devoted antioundld those building; ‘hm m y is a marvel which we can ° i! lmllllc. but can never surpass, "orthvmberhnd. then. is a land oi Y“. and churches, and the propaganda oi thqtjnited Slaw!- bad fellows. Perhaps some Canad- British in line with or a little later Mons. In 1918 the C hadiari 001175 been some controversy as to casual- French Corps in so striking an act in percentage oi actual combatants and casualties in proportion to their total population, are in a ‘elicious state oi Bunkabundability. Already their magazine-writers have invent- ed ior them more war-heroes than their hospitals had cases oi pyorr- hes. Their senior oiiicers too some oi them at any rate, have started to throw a chest and exalt the eiiort OXhAIIlEHOB. above that‘ oiany oi the A ies. .' , ' Students oi military history will not quarrel with the claim that the Americans won the War. A hundred year ago the Prusslans claimed to have won the Battle oi Waterloo. In technical sense these claims have merit. It is the lust straw that bicaks the camel's back and it is the last reserve that win a battle. As one dry old Prussian general said to the bragging elementoi his day: "Yes tli Prusslans won the Battle oi Waterloo; the migliah iought it; and the French lost it." So today we mayrit least say "Yes the Americans won the Great War: the Allies iought it." Many 0i 11S would be happy to add. “And me Germans lost lt," but we are not S0 darn sure. ' But I am not ‘tonight objecting to Her advertising methods have done more ior her in building up her P0P- uiation than her tarlii wall. _ What I am saying is that it l8 shameiul to us that. having in our shop ten times finer military ex- ploit than the Americans, we con- tinue to practise a policy oi low vis- ibllity. Nonatlon on earth has ever fill!‘- mg {our years oi continuous tight- lng entered so‘ vigorously as did Canada and then maintained and increased its eiiorts to the last day or the War. We did not enter with a Bull Run but "saved the situation." In the last hundred ‘days of the W!“ ganlaed and hardest-hitting Corps in Europe, the equal in quality OI my military body in History. Welling- ton would have given his back teeth to command such a body and Marl- borough his immoral soul. - When some oi our 8611811118 115W ' It ‘is riot consistent with the hot- . en on cools‘- ‘ sions such as this to indulge in much r brag. This is not o. virtue but a‘ dc. years that‘ we veterans were gnpdrtant to anybody, since our iad- g away in obmure citizens or us some oi the boys_would put it sine: we stopped living. I admit we have been afllicted with a modesty a- mense distaste ior recounting the made European History. Our line oi service; and as ior fiction. ii any‘ the Canadians were the best or- _ l I have said enough I think. Don't growl at the Americans for. their prepaganila. But, whenever they rnonticn one of their pet shows, just bring out in‘ parallel columns three bigger and better shows put on by the Canadians. - Discharge your present Publicity Committee and begin to show your goods in the window. In these days {modest merit is only unearthed at l odd times like fossil remains and-the man who does not advertise attracts ' nobody but the ba-iliii. i<o>-———— Potash salts have been discovered in a thick bed or rock in New Bruns- wick that wss_ being bored in a search for oil and gas. Alarm cock mechanism has been in- vented to close bedroom windows at set times. Currie and iArchle MacDonneil have gone to their place and their mortal remains havincrumbled into dust wel shall admit that they were not hali- ians will arise and say they knew and practised the real art oi But I doubt it. That is not the Can south wav- . In 1914 the Allies recalled; the, than their Allies retreated irom dashed the gate or Mons. There has ties. Hadflr Arthur Currie led o 9 Cough and rack WHY‘ yourself iolplecos or allow your ohild to suiior in distress iiom Whooping Cough or Croup when by "m" MACS SYRUP _0F TAR. . AND ’ ‘ 001) LIVER 011. YOU cm oar on Gm; “at which inspired he’; w “n. “fremomat H18 GNU’; ‘W3! Dram!‘ CV91! u‘ PROBE‘. AND EFFECTIVE paralleled endeavor iourtesn Th"“"""'" church at Beumfimn’ "m" REIJEF‘ years ago. House o: Cod, hali bulwark ‘gainst _ M“; g; m‘, m." out o, only - Unemployment, says The“ Man- ' 49° NI‘ 7 14 or. bottle oquuy poster-Guardian, is not yet, ‘but bids inir to be the greatest o! ' British industriesI Ii all theun- employed could be groupcd W- getheruin a single industry and mI-aoulously let to work. they mold constitute the second greatest industry oi the coun- try — more important ior in- worn, soi- this can oi thinll, iii-Iliad with alight changes iofbottiir or worse, "ior some iivshsiarmand nobodvcnnuy . ior a certainty um it will be .,‘ ended in anotherseven years. or ever. sniioouiohcocior textiles. disclaim-soi- ‘ 1TB! mt givossome moi-hrs fl, . that odtiielcuauiiorcdbythocoun- late inns imvtioioaroi-this disloca~ 1M symbolism titiioiitsbusinoas...ltil "m" chancel, and the iroin the chan- r s s 355%“ and the Northern one ti: ii E 3 ‘r if beneficial i and all Brgriioliibi Trogbitlrh T116 ._Mam ' IODRUGSTORE ’ ' “G All . . r._, » save riie ‘Poicim nouns” _ ' o though he had ten thousand casual-| "r ties, the Fkenchhviaeilld havenmade . him "v Mars a o ance - . and a’ national hero. We are wiser we make him a litigant. Here's where we shine! our most attractive specialty. li possible, I believe we have ever shown-in PASSORTMEN T OF SMOKERS’ GOODS Shwkflf ooooi have always been This year is no eiceptiori and surpassed anything we have l’ clllfl: Siifllll"! Mics (S's i0 50's) we have Simon's and Benson Hedges, iuil eline 4 oi Clear Havanas, Morsueflm. Bachelors. Ben Bess. noiioi-i Burns. sooocwcii 110K801!- eto- . In Clllrflfics our stock is complete in every respect-Yackagcs were never more beautiful. Smokers‘ $918. All! Trays’ Clnr and Cigarette Holders, Tobacco Pouches. Pipes, Cigar Lighters Look them over. E/LFOSTER,» , eta, are here in abundance. {icgggmv Sunnyside 4 Vv ‘Sold only in "Ye $44‘ m4. ~=¢¢¢ :-“* --- s a a n AA ‘d4 s‘ vvvY v v vvTVvvvvvv BRAl-IMIN TEA L ' is better , ,7-¢ - : - __‘i than CV61’. d. Hygenic, Airtight Packages. e has; v vw A AAAAA QAAAA vvvvvrv-vvwvvvv t “- '=-'-'l4'»_» l)l*"l)%r_ a, 1.1),- y _, o Insurance, covering Iniury‘ from ‘a cheap. , ‘ o for par" v policies also wriitdii. Travg| Hyndman Oiiiccs -- Lower Queen‘ Slippery Sidewalks- Cause Many Broken Bones The Oldest Insurance Agency in p_ g; L s, carious Bcokstorq B? wllsc, surprisingly " " SI “ and ‘ llflliclos a specially. _ Ea” Co., Ltd siroci - Charlottetown. i y. 5m: clans iioadqiiiricrs I-i- .wc u. now opening up our illG “IIV ‘u, v Q. . ‘i