Z - nun-m" up.» nw-cr. roux The Charlottetown Guardian augL-Cul. M. Chute: U. IcLuo ||jpn| .|. u Hurllell. t‘. J. |. mugging ulna-tor J. ll. Burnett. I‘ J. L w! u A, Ilurlilnnnll o. c. o. hunk Walker and I). K. Clrrlo ilil l In! m- rvllr) Lia-ut- Ann-twinks hill!!!" 39mm; uflll] lYuumicd 15011). $3.00 pol your llll indium-e) delivered to Clly. sum "If your no lllllllllfl‘) mull-d w P- H- Ill-wt H.100 per grill’ (In Ilhlllr!) Mullen] to ‘Canada and IJ. 5- THURSDAY. NOVEIVTBER l. 1937 Generous Al Farmers’ Expense A f“. “.,_,.i,;= Hg.» the Xlzirkcnzic King (lov- rrnmciit announced the iicgi-tizition of new tflidt treniic- with Aii-ti‘: 'i:i and New Zeziland. HIV in: the-v coiirnrit .- inner duties on lamb. poul- try mzd iiillll‘ f..rm products. .\lre.'id_\~, as point- I'll put in Ti‘.I'=(* ciihinm-s, tho rc-"ult has been a (ll‘(‘I'"It~(' 0f !I\i‘l' gt i'i'lll :1 liulltlrl in lamb prices litfiiillv. \\b.n wu- flit‘ rut-on i-ir lllt'~'(' generous con- i-i killllililliill farm pro- iliic-vv-F \rt~ri ling to '\li' .\lllll\lt‘l' of Trade ('i.iii!:i<-i‘ct-_ ll Illls liwflllifl‘ llllllfll’ the preced- ‘ii-IIIIP”, (inverti- .. - i-w niuvli iii (‘.'iii:id;i\ iavoilr. I int! ‘t’ Ztll)’ ititrg _~f‘(‘lll$ to have avcll iiflilvr the Bennett \lr_ R, P. linwer. As- ii 'l'r:iiii' V-iiiiiniwiriiicr at J\ilCl\'- (Viiiiiiicrcizil Intelligence of .\'i\v Zczdrnirl products t0 . ‘it fim hiili of i037 lfililllt-(l S",- wTM .1. Frill wart-d w-ih .\‘_*_-\'_:~;,_:ffi for the v ‘ “i l"-‘.'- iii lllUTcil-l‘ iiiirlcr the old HI. 'lilii< itiipvuvonicnt is the QT! lcr vzilur- of wool inc ~ri~v~ also iii ship- ' .Jl ‘if 4'.'l~"lll_ l‘llt‘(‘~l‘_ slilliilgcczls- hide-g sheep skins. : llllllllrls from Can- - iicrii-il lliliillCll $f_SFi3.580_ an vw-liills :1‘ llu- |\"i('ll~i' ir-‘iili- iivii‘. iii {In- Fiii i'J"-ll lll‘l"' n. .., .i,,. < (Pill, ovt-i- tlu- value of im- -1\' mouth: of i036. ll‘ liiilliili‘? 0f tmrlv- with Xpw c< ping!‘ of lfililc increase in ~ of the priwznt vcar was .i:l:iiiil'.< favour. ‘V115 it ('ll‘llll1~l-'lllC('~‘_ m give llmm riu- lzmzulhwn farm products mar- \Ill.'. iii '!'i"'l‘ :i"c|-\. p, ,~,-.-.-.._-,,-.__ W. . \\ “I l_ Kl i» iiilh our ldllPllll tariff tink- “"'~i' c ii . H. . . .i_~i ). I .1.» .i_\-. tlic tuiimr who pays the iiuicr. Municipal Expenditures (Illilflllllldlfllll in i030 had the lowest per capitzttxpviiiiiiiiri: ziiid the lowest [icy capila ilcbt lll>>l.\'il'l‘ll l‘<‘l:l‘l'~l‘l1lZiIl\'L’ citics surveyed by the taii/cn- Rvwiifcll Institute in Canada, ac- Ctiflllllg u» figures tell-used bv the Institutc. lllllli t'.\|i<'llilll1ll'l'\ for‘ the cities listed were rc- iliivwl by -\'_’i.<:_=5._=.l.> from the mgr, total. This is llli‘ first ziugrcgzile ilccrcasc since thc Insti- iuu: b-ggaii ll< regular (‘tlllllillllllllllg in 1922, al- though ihc total is ~tiIl higher. Szivs the report: "Min-c by ini- tli<~ gi-czitt-r part of the revenue Il"i'(‘>-Jl1'_\' to iiivi-t iliis expenditure is derived from tlic IZIXJIIIUI] of rml cstgilg am] Since rev. ciiue lTiilll real c-tzuc. is generally under that nbtnitu-d in 1111i), tho pron-ill Iillgl" of real prop. l‘r!_\‘ f)\\'lll‘t'< in inuiiy tnuiiicipzilitics i5 quite iin- di-niriii-lnlilc.” 'l'lic fiilliiiviiiq ficiurcs are from the report null tnbiilzttcrl {o1- cii]1|l),'iyi,1,n; Per Capita Per Captta. C"! Population Expenditure Net, Debt, Charlottetown 13.850 $18.69 $11753 Halifax 59,275 39.90 174,43 Saint John 50.000 40.36 132,31 Quebec 147.000 37.74 222333 Montreal 885,000 57.50 315,12 Windsor 101.568 42.38 23119 London 76.252 52.55 11730 Ottawa 140.1116 51.41 133,01 Hamilton 153.608 52.38 154 0g Toronto 645.462 6138 mi“ Wlnnlnes 224,532 52.23 194'“ Saskatoon um 58.50 m}; Resins ssaao 54.31 302199 Calgary 33394 5137 163," Edmonton 86.696 59.72 37799 Vancouver 853.363 50.72 31p 4,1 Victoria 40,000 65,55 min The report concludes: “It is encouraging to note that total net expenditures even after in- cluding the cost to the municipalities of direct “relief whether or not all or part of such Qxpgn. ditures were met from borrowed funds, decrgag. 9d "1 i936 iwmpared with i935. It is also on- "lllrallmg Y" find, from information collected by the Institute from over one hundred of the larger municipalities in Canada, that the sax collections up to the end of August, i937, are in general brzttcr than was the case in I936. Both ‘factors are to the credit of Canadian municipal- itics.’ Mr. Bennett's Altitude Ur. Bi-nncti has bi-cn represented cs trying to mislead the public as to the purpose of the Rowvll Critiiini-siuii on Dmiiiiiion-Provincial relations. (liii- Liberal apologist says ponder- 0u.~l_\'; “.\lr. ll-niivit kllriWS the (jmnlnisgon cannot (change flit? (ifillrlllllllufl am] that he Wm have full flllliflfllllllly’ in the House of Com- mons to criticizig mmiiii-iirl and suggest when tlic rvprirt is lllliillldl." llcre is. the Conserva- tivc lc:iili'i"s uiitgnrlih-rl datvmciit on the sub- jeci. as replirlt-rl by llll‘ (Ianzirlian Press: “No ninuiiilmcni in our (Tonstitutioii can be ‘made except by I':irli:iiiiciit zit Wvstiiiiiistcr, for the Statute of Wi-stiiiiiistcr lllflhPS especial pro- vision for lli:it. \\'vstiiiiiislcr will oiilv act on the rciliicsi of tlu- Dfllllilllllll Government. Un- lc-s that lifl\'('l'llllll'lll iincnils to force amend- niciits through ivitlioiil consulting the provinces. tlu- hnvnl (onimiK-iriii‘; ri-rrniiniciirlations will to bl- <l'llllllll(‘ll in the respective Provincial ‘illilfPi fur approval. If they turn down tlir- recniiiiiii-iirliliinw, uliait will happen then I" lii nllii-i- \\'lII‘il\, .\li', Iicimcll suggcsts, what is ll"lili'll is not Illliilllld‘ prirtisziti (Ymiiiiission l,-n n lloiiiinimi l'l'u\'llll‘lill conference with all iifiiil-nl pnriii-s l'(.‘lll‘('<(’I'|l(‘(l. Why his com- iii ‘iii- should llfl\'4' lli't‘.'l~lllllf‘ll so iniich hostility from :i \‘l't‘llllll vii llll’ Liberal press is hard to ll|"ll‘l‘~lllllil ~HIPP his‘ piiliijv, snbstziiitially, is just n-lmi .\lr. Alzickviizii- Kin; himself promised to put into rift-ct. Hr. King, it will be rr-callcrl, [said imtliiiig during the 1935 campaign about 4 appointing a Commission on Dominion-Provin- cial relations; but he had a great deal to Say about the value of Dominion-Provincial con- ferences. He started holding these conferences soon after coming into office, but they turned out to he Liberal family gatherings, too quar- relsome and ineffective. for his purpose. His mistake was in not making them representative of all political parties; and tliis mistake he rc- pczited in apixyinting the Rowell Commission. "A pack of Grils" .\Ir. Bennett calls them. and ii that expression is too strong for sensitive cars let us say, with the Globe and .\lail, a Commis- sion “all of whose members have been Liberals in politics or inclined toward Liberal prin- eiples." l‘ Editorial Notes r Rlcndclsohn died this date i847. u n: i: w There is evidently a let hp in Prohibition prosccutions—why? a n- : a The rain that fills the wells prior to the frost. And still Indian summer to come. i # 1F i‘ thcrc are always the foxes to fall back tip-m. and vicc-versa. m a =i= =a= The Minister of Public Works lllllsl be thank- ing heaven there are fciv potatoes to liaul over his bad roads this Fall. It's zm ill wind, etc. a in =0- n- .\ll Czinadiail. many Anu-riczm. and ;i grind few British fox mzigiiatcs Iizivc ilieir eyes 0n Cliarlottctowti and its Fox Show these davs. i 1F l!‘ 1F week ivhen Professor ll. L. Sit-wart, the great Cfillililian radio authority 0n Iinvrnziiioiial af- fairs, will give an address in 3t, l‘.'iul's Ilall. $ I 1 l A politician in Vancouver ha.- lm-il scintciigl-(I to six months’ imprisonment for libc-lliiig Chief justice \V. \\'. Foster. The libel tooklthc form jfitilloliable passages of which tlic newspapers refused to publish. The accused criticized a contractor's business dealings iii connection with the construction of the Besslinrough Armouric and ‘the Chief Justice's Judgment in a case con- cerning it. n- x n- n When doctors (lisagrcc, who shall dccidc? In Hoover, Director of the Federal Burczui of In» vestigations. has been making the electors blood curdle by his alarming statements regarding the alleged increase of crime and the gcticral dc- pravity of the rising generation of that $tzitcn .\o\v comes .\Ir. Sanford Bates, former Director of Prisons, and now Director of tlic Boys Clubs ofvArricrica ‘in flat and direct contradiction. Crime l5 not increasing but decreasing. criiniiizils are not younger but older than they were and fewer than I per cent. of those arrested are per- sons on parole. The average crime rate is 74 per 100,000 population a yciir, .\Ir. Bates said. but it is only 30.! in New York, Zlgillllsl m4 for Ylfgllllfl, 142 in Kentucky, 89 iii Florida, 21g in Delaware and 233 in I\I<'II‘_\'IZIIIKI. In murders, blew York's rate is 0.8, against 9.5 for Vir- ginia, and New Yorlds robbery rate is 5.8. C011]- Parcd Wlth 40-5 f0!‘ Virginia, 55.5 for Georgia, and 59-3 for Florida, he said. i: n- n: v: _ The importance of the teaching of thc Eng- “sh languatfii "1 tho province 0f Quebec and the Parf Whliih this educational development played in the life of the student was stressed by Mr. C. E. Gravel, former president of La, Chambre de Commerce de Montreal, at 111C Open. mg of the provincial convention of the‘ French Chambers of Commerce, Montreal recently l! - f ' Due to our geographical position we must be under the influence of England and the United States, whether we like it or not,” declared the SPBKFFY- “We may keep our language and our taadmoni. but we must not overlook the fact t M “N? a” hm three Per cent. of the entire population 0f the North American continent. If is rather presumptuous to assume that we are in a position to impose our doctrines and our Stats ophthc greater percentage of the popuph d, ' 9 1mP°m_ml_P°"lt l6 that French Can- fihlalf must rernam in the business field and t_at if radical ideas are promulgated he will be elflfled from that domain,” said the former president, U I C i Got/incite. Caitlin has been diallenglitg no Th l Bflfira s idea of Canadian patriotism. e after addressing the Canadian Institute of J International Affairs said: “A Canadian’5 first loYally l5 t0 Cariada and to Canada's King and not to the British Commonwealth 0f Nations, and those who argue otherwise are, I think, do- mR‘ I real disservice to the Commonwealth." Addressing the British Empire League a few evenings later, Mr. Cahan said Lord Tweedsmuir was in error in so far as the Crown is not divi- sible, that the ‘DOYIIIIIIOIIS do not owe allegiance to different kings ‘but to the same monarch. Were the protagonists of the doctrine of “per- sonal union’ to_ have their way 111's Majesty Wfillld be th_e_King 9f each Empire unit separ- "Fly. a position ivhicl-i would be incompatible with his CSSCIIIIEII dignity and Blllllflflly. As King of Canada._l1c would acquire rights and assume responsibilities and Qliligw 1H5 as again“ himself HI his capacity as Kin; of other Em- Pl" Willi. "So that the historical unity of the Crown would forever disappear.” Undo,- the British North America Act the provinces were, united under the Crown of the United King. dom, the authority of Her Majesty, the thon Queen, descending to her heirs and successors fmfhe Thffmfi- Th6 Official oath of allegiance is in every instance an oath of allegiance to the King and his successors. not, as Mr. Cahnn ox- plains, to a distinct King of Canada but to the King of Great Britain, Ireland and British Do- minions and, implicit in all these statutory pro- visions, “is tlie constitutional unity of all meni- liers of the British Commonwealth." Therefore fidelity to the King comrs not to the King of Canada but lo the King of the Commonwealth as provided for under the B.N.A. '5" F95 \\'lien our potatoes fail t0 lay golden eggs‘ A treat is in storc for CllilfliIlll‘l4)lll?lll§ iicxt‘ of a speech read at a public meeting the oh- ‘ the New York Mayoral election, .\Ir. j. Edgar, n’ ': mum ourselves “mu-w 1n; CHARLCTTETOWN __(_;[JARDIAN to...) BY fiii". hill Even‘ a people u sentimental ll ours will hesitate to intervene in Chink if intervention means wax. This ls recognized by the propon- ents of intervention. It ls explained tlia; Intervention does not amply war and ls not intended w go to the extreme of armed force. The prec- sure proposed is to be merely econ- omic. waiving the doubt Qthat an intervention so drastic as to compel Japan to withdraw from China does not involve the danger of war now or eventually, it is not denied that it will involve economic sacrifices. The JIKIIQHBILIOII that Americans feel at Japanese policy with respect to China and the method of its en- forcement ls strong and sincere, Bu; it does not exclude consideration of the price we are asked to pay for the limited intervention advocated or of the arguments advanced on its -beIiali.-—Chicagc Tribune. Bravo! young student: Q! Mm- tical. Their energetic and qppor- tune intervention swept from the mctropols a Communist meeting, and the popuation breathed easily. Thanks w them, Tim Buck, aw- retary of the Communist Party in Canada, Alfred Costes, Communist Deputy for the Seine, and other-s of the same stamp were not able to hold their rallg; at the Arena. The whole province applauds this fine a.-o.—-LeSolell (Quebec) A mighty spiritual revival. more iluiii anything else, in my opinion, is drawing the people of Ch na closer and closer togeiher In the gieat catise of a united and unified nation. In every school, college and l university; in every factory, and business house; in the vllages and in the great cities, the gospel of the , New Lite Movement is being preach- ‘ ed with a fervour and perslstency “IHCII has reached the apex of a grand crusade for Ch has national renaissance. It is a movement unique "in the history of the world; i it constitutes an inspiring example to tho materialistic West. That ls [one 01 the many lessons which Clima- can teach the world-Hung Kong Press. That public opinion in Britain ls IIICILXKG to be satisfied with no half- ; measures "in connection with its slum l clearance and rehousing schemes is evidenced by the work recently ach- ieved in that country. The slum clearance programme of 1933 called for the demolition of about 300,000 fliouses during the ensu m; five years. 0f this number, some 170,000 , have already been cleared away i vvh ‘e at the same time some 109,000 I new houses have been erected. As i reL-ulldiilg is continuing at the rate [of 60.000 homes annually, with evi- ‘deiice of that rate increasing. it la |,l.‘L‘llL’\'8(l that the full programme I will be completed by 1939. Building I trade employees have increased from ‘ 881.000 to 1920,00. These figures af- Ioid some idea of the enormous out- lay to be borne and of the df- Ificultic-s to be overcome as the re- ,sult of indifference to slum condi- l Lions and overcrowded homes during l past generations, and provide a i strong argument for early and effic- l i811‘. action in Canadian cities when: similar conditions are spreading.- Le Pettt Journal iMoi-itreal.) Perhaps the special distinction of the late Rothchild was not that he had the finest private zoo in the island but that. he was the first Rothchild who borrowed money. The story is that on one occasion when he had decided to buy an ex- pensive group of animals for his zoo he borrowed money outside for his purpose. He did not. care for his people and did not want. to disturb his bank account. Somehow the story got about and was considered the joke of the year. This was about forty years ago. The story reminds one how the great Duke of Welling- ton paid Sir William Allen £5,000 1n notes for his Waterloo pictures. The artist politely expostulated -— a ‘cheque at, any time would have done. "What—do you bhink I want Cour/ts to know what a damn fool I've been?" asked the maker-Mun- chester Guardian. The official mpresenlnlvu of Germany in this country ought: to make 1t known to Herr Goering that we are not disposed to be the dupes of the Hitler regime. The Germans who have become naturalized Can- adians will or will not be Canad- ians. Let them choose, but when they have chosen to serve first Herr Hitler, they must. not be astonished if they are sent back to their coun- try ot origin. Our thanks to Herr Guering; henceforth we will watch the people of his race to whom we so liberally give hospitality. In any case we will not permit that Cmad- lans of German origin form an un- assimllable group ln Canada. They will be integrally Canadians, cc- ooiding to the provisions of our Constitution; they cannot be, and they will not be, _ Germanl and Canadians-Le Canada Montreal.) If Mill had been 101G and 01m nations of Europe had not 0X1)!!- ierioed the horrors and the 81W!‘- math of war, to say nothing of the great depression, there would have been plenty of excuses for plunging humanity into a world war. ‘The greatest hope of peace is that the rulers of every nation have sincere doubts as to the ability of their own countries to survive the economic crash which would follow another universal wan-Midland Fkee Press. Without. suggesting that Canada should turn away from the policy of exporting to markets abroad, It ls becoming more than ever apparent that the Go. "a reliance on the capture of worid markets la de- void of any Plbmlse of sustained prosperity at home. The productive resources of this Dominion are more than sufficient to scours every Ocu- adlan worker of an abundant stand- ard of living. Teh national polloy of Canada must. surely he designed first to maintain this standard ct home by productive labour applied to home resources. Canadian enter- prise in world markets could follow, under conditions of proctor security for Canadian workers, when nation- al prosperity ls no longer dependent upon competition with workers abroad under a lower standard of living. It will call for more light on Parliament HAL-Ottawa. Cltlun. am. ,1. - W rfw, qt. ~ ‘ ‘ llfbat “wit? of» flours Qttnllllplnmlllfl. OUTDOOR PLAY SHOULD PRE- VENT TUBI-JRULLOSIS BY WIDENING THE CHEST Ac students we were taught. that the tuberculous chest was flat. Shortly after graduating in med- lclne I read an article in the Journal of The American Medical Association where a close observ- er of chests contended that the tuberculous chest was not ‘flat but really round and deep; that the chest just appeared flat because the shoulders were dropped fore- word. By drawing deep in propor- tion to the width It was my privilege {or a number of years to examine student-t in preparatory schools and 1n a large university and I had ample oppor- tunity to learn that the weak. un- developed chest-the chest most} likely to develop tuberculosis - ~wa.s deep in proportion to its width: In other words an immature or baby chest. My advice to all students with deep, narrow chests was that they should play more. as play meant that more air would be needed t0 supply the big muscles with pure blood. To get this extra air. deep breathing would be necessary and hence more chest development. About a year ago Dr S. A. Wleismer‘ Minneapolis, Minn. showed that children from well-to- do homes had the flatter true of chest, were taller and weghed more than children from poorer homes. other studies made on the shape of the normal and tuber- culous chests showed that the average tuberculous chest is deeP and narrow, and the healthy chest. is flat. Therefore since the children from the poorer districts have on the average the deep tYDB of chest, one similar to the type of chest found in the average tuberculosis patient. there 511011111 l be more cases of tuberculosis in the children of the poor districts Recently in Minnesota Medicine, Dr, welsman states that of a. total number of I171 children in the better Minneapolis school district-B there were 42 cases of tuberculosis —3.6 percent. In a total of B55 children in the poorer district-S there were 71 cases—8.3 percent That, Ls, there were over twice as many reported cases of some form of tuberculosis from poorer dis- tricts, where the deeper type 0f chest prevailed, than there were from better school districts. Poor hygiene. lack of proper foods, poor ventilation lead t0 undeveloped children. The dcep chest l5 an undeveloped chest, be- cause development brings more width than depth. Outdoor play. next to good food. should “wtden" the chest and prevent tuberculosis. The Lost Battalion (Hamilton Spectator) Once upon a time war was n0!’- such a bad pastime. In t-heidflys when chivalry was in power. and‘ even for some time afterwards. certain traditions were meticulous- 1y observed. We recall that op- posing forces, once, used to sus- gest that the other fire first. We recall that Individual soldiers. fighting against each other, used t0 pay each other the respect due l0 gentlemen of the sword, encased 1n the same honourable profession. Even during the Great War cer- tain remnants of chivalry could be detected, mostly in tho air. Baron Manfred von Rlchtliofen, the great German MB. 101‘ i11- stanoe, once flew low over the British lines and dropped a wreath on the grave of a. British airman he had killed 1n a. duel. This chivalrlc aspect of. war ls probably a dangerous thing. for It creates the impression that modern conflict; ls romatlc and has some- thing to recommend it. Yet never- theless, we are now inclined to de- plore its passing- There ls a Chinese battalion in Chapel which has held out against the Japanese, without hope of per- sonal salvation, day after day. It ls called "the 10st battalion” and it has been given until Sunday to surrender or be blasted out. The story of this battalion. BDPBNYIUY. ls as stirring as any 1n the annals of war. But the Japanese are an- noyed. They are annoyed at what they refer to as "the more 0r 1w» heroic stand" of two hundred men holding their ovim against an army of 40,000 Japanese. ‘The two hundred will pass to nameless graves, and they will not have gained, ‘as once they would have gained, the tribute o! their enemies. Instead, they are con- ceded a. grudging admiration. We recall that there were two hund- ioa men 1n history who held uio l pass of ‘Itiermopylae for Greece. These Chinese of vo-dav. it seems. are of the same temper. and de- serve the came recognition. But Mines have sadly chtmied. GOMBAT l-‘ll-IEUMATISM .5- unhhfiuurlo-uaii. oaamanlfbiiii cavn v-ir rleuddb- druid As the spentradimw Of the winter sun. So is a woman With her travail done. 11g;- brood gone fmm her And her thoughts as Still As the waters Under a ruined mill. -Joseph Campbell. Maritimers In The West 4st. John TeIeEYaDh Jfliirlwl) The prominent psi-t played by Maritime Province P601719 m u“ life of Western Canada again l5 demonstrated by two items Oi He"? appearing in Friday's newslmllefi- Both refer to natives of prince Ed- ward Island. In Winnipell. Chief Justice D. A. Macdonald of the Manitoba 0011"- of King's bench. passed aivfly a‘ the age 0f ‘seventY-Ilme- lust a month before he was scheduled t0 I retire on pension. He was born in I ciisriottetown, educated flirte- W“ admitted to the bar of Prince Ec ward Island in 1883. Moving l Portage La Prairie as a young mi- I he continued to praciice law i111 lin 190s he was elevated to ~.» bench. I-le became chief Justice l i years ago, In Edmonton Rt. Rbv- Chflfl Leo Nelligan. former vicar B0119!“- of the Edmonton Roman Catholic Archdiocese, and a. native of Tlgnish, p_ E, 1., was consecrated | bishop of the diocese of Pembroke. I Qnt. No less than four other prelates, born in these pIUVIIICAZS, but now occupyln! P°5m°n5 °i eminence in other Part5 0f “he Di" . minion, took part 1n the ceremony They were Archbishop H. J. -O» Lfla-Yy, formerly Bishop of Char- llottetown, and a native of Rich- , 151mm, N, 13., who was oonsecrator. I and he was assisted by ATQhbl-“IPP lJ. C. McGuigan, of Toronto. W110 [was born in Charlottetown, and Moat Riev. J. H. MacDonald, - coadjutor archbishop 0f EdmOHl-Oll- formerly of Sydney. N . 8.. Whlle one of the witnesses was AIChbISBOD w. M. Duke. a native of Saint John. now In charge of the Van- couver archdiocese. _ v Recently one ofthe Winfllimfl newspapers extended congfallula’ , tions on his birthday W Mr- $- ‘ Hart. Green, K. C-. Who W95 mm j in Saint John fifty-two years ago. I It will thus be seen that Maritim- ‘ers continue to contribute 1n n0 i small measure to the affairs of the west and to those of other parts of Canada. ' Disallowance (Winnipeg Free Press) In accordance with the ex- pressed desire of Mi‘. Abefhflrli- the Federal Government is remit- ting m the Supreme Court t-hf; question of whether the WW" ° disallowance exists under our Constitution. 'I'he history of dis- allowance. the repeal-ed expres‘ sions of COYYIPBWII" 13w mflcers’ have left little real doubt Bbflllf- m but, Mr. King, doubtless for tac- tical reasons, has P655911 ~ ‘he matter over to the Supreme Court. which should settle the matter once and for all. The tactics are good. Much 0! the cry from Alberta. arises from some belief that distant Big 8h0t-S. remote powers of evil ln one form or another, obstruct the pwgfw of the Social Credit Government towards its 8061- The ludicm impartiality of the supreme Court is, however, admired by Mr. Aber- hart, and judgment Is being sought In the tribunal of his own choos- 1118. He wiii likewise be doiishwf} that the famous "CQIHflEd 00D! .NQYI‘ZMBER_ 4.1.19» ——-== FINEST Jewelry at WELLNERS DIAMOIDTEATUKE , ~ swtot at gold 14kt. mounllnl- WATCH Sensation! 15 jewel move- ment. Guaran- $25. Pay Weekly $8.00 Pay Weekl! l0 NAMONO‘ PRR ' i flail-MN“ At onll $52.50 Pay Weekly V Solid Gold CIMEOM MEN Z ' . -sive aching t.- oubie mails. Pay Weekly camco$8§J0 y. ‘rim- NO INTEREST Olt Lt-uuninNG CHARGES. W. W. WELLNER JEWELERS SINCE 1868 CHARDOTTETOWN iiicxtv a iiiciioimii TOMCCO (0.110. GOAMOTTETOWN Pil- of the British North America Act is also new available. The pre- tension in Alberta. that, because no such "certified copy’ exists, 11° Canadian Constitution. 11° 9°?!" federation. exists. Ls also settled. The “certified copy.” no doifbtl will be the document used by the Supreme Court in making its rul- ing- A world of sanity find mm’ mon sense, it seems. 1s slowly building a banter between the lcltlzens of Canada. and the ex- cesses cf the 8001M Credit GOV- lernment, and It will not be long before acceptance of the rule of law will once more be established Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN Orange Pekoe Tea across the Dominion. PRAISE BOOK BY CANADIAN TORONTO. Nov. 2 -(CP) — How a contemporary boy and Sill. objectively considered, look and sound to a parent with unconim gifts of reportage. ls is feature ‘which appeals to a book-reviewer for the New York Herald Tribune, ,ln her comment on "The Very House" by Mazo de la Roche, the Canadian author now living In England with he: adopted child, “The children , . have grown just. enough older tn be articulate without losing their charm." the reviewer say-s. “Indeed they are lust that more charming . - . iThg impulse to quote what they any is all but overpowering, they say such unexpected things." Across the Atlantic. The Lon- don Timec reviewer also speaks of the‘ Canadians new book. He mentions the two small children of Mtss de la Roche's former book “Beside n Norman Tower," grown to be flve ‘in “The very How" land all! rem 01d- l "Th; infant hero and heroine bscoim enchanting to n larger.‘ public than their mother, nurse and faithful chi-onlcler. Somethlng of the fleeting grace. the airy. lpolgnant loveliness of early child- hood has been captured by another M“ patient worshipper." The Boston arm-min m a_f'-°Ii‘5"¢~'-'ir3‘-‘a°-'5£4*“n?"a2ti'."¢a.a”" .'.l the new book: "Delicate and deft as ts the treatment, the children emerge rounded and perfect, with a solid English background. A11 the time you are reading you feel the su- stained wonder that makes you watch a humming bird, with breath withheld." Wounn DOWN iii-mo T0 ERECT PATRIOT (By The Canadian Press) ENNIS, Irish FTee State, Nov. I -Clare County Council wants the Nelson monument in Dublin re- placed by one of Wolf Tone. hall- ed as the first Irish Republican The council unanimously adopted a resolution urging that "the fig- ure of a British admiral" be re- moved from the Nelson pillar one replaced by "the figure of the fa- ther of republlcanlsm." 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