‘iuoo o4+4+0o¢¢o¢¢o o o4 vo-Qoovebfi-tblbb 00+44v>0w 4. »<»¢-# s» c e v s = s» e < é»? ~' "akazm -; ", 2-‘ PAGEFQPIR- tttt CHARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally tFuunded 1881)‘ President LiruL-Cul. W. Chester S. McLllrs Vii-e President .I. R. Bartlett, I-‘J.l. ‘ Secretary LieuL-Col. D. A. Mut-Kinnon. 0-5-0- Editor 11nd hluttugtttg Ulrcetot J. It. Burnett, F.J.L Associate Editor I-‘rank “allief SIQIISCIIIFIIUN [till-ii $5.00 per yeut 1m advance) drlivvflfli N) C"! $1.00 per yeut- tut nut-alter) ntutleu to l’. L-lsland _ $5.110 per yuan" 1111 JIIHIIIC!!! muncu to_ Lattaua and U.b Aleittbcrs llllllll Bureau or Uueulatlons ZT/te bit-utmost Jleniury is Weaker than me "ea/vest Ink.” \v1;t)st:.su.\\'. Jt-m’ 27. 1938 A B 1t so Betta yttl 1i1t-_1»1l"t-.s .11. 1-111-11-1111 con- i-1 _ ,-1 1'11 21s 1'.t1.:.1~1:.-.-t1--1'1~ “.1. ;.1 1111-11-1 111.» 11111-1111‘ :1.» -11 titt- tttitzti-t" 111' lll\1ll1‘l1\l'_\' ‘ 1 111111" is 1111-11- 11 111-111» . -1' 151-1 ":11 --j11t-.1--t1 1111 llt-"st- ivuts. --11 1. s‘ -i1-.:~1 -11 .t.t. 111-111 |-t1l11i1"l_\ 11m- 1111111111 111 4 1.1511111 -l.11\\.\l'l~, c1-tt1ilt-1l uuh --1'--1--1s . -l 11t1111-1.i1:--11~ i the 1111111111-1- itt ttltx-lt 1'11 ‘111-l zl-v-t" ~tt1-1---t":1-- 11:1\-- ltt-i-tt 11:11-11 11y the Government 111.111- explnitc-l 1111-1 ' 1 1".11\.t. lll 1 -.1-:" . \1.- '. 1- '11 -1\ -l1-.1.'1 11111: 711w tt1-1itt-t.'tr_\' rc- i 1" - -- 1-1 \l1" 11-- "-_\ .\11-l 11-1-1- ;tt11l 111111-1" l.-"- 31- -- .‘1- \\i-~'1-1tt l't"1-\ittt"1-~_ Q". _ ‘ , .t1-.-l 1il--~~1111,1_ 111' .\l1'. ,\l_ . 11- t-rt; ('.i1l.11.'t1Qll. 1111-1 -- -1 ’. I-1.1\. -.-11--11t'~ -l111-1-~ in the tttrit- ~;11-;11.1i1_; .111 1111- ll-utst- of .\l1' ll. 1\'. l-‘l-xtttittq. 111' --.'1l-. 11. l.11-1-1l. ailt-t‘ l1.- K 111111-411 ~11.-1-1-lt_ 1l1.'1t 111- :11 lilt-liitg 11-1 itt-lit-ztti-ut of t‘1--11t1'l:--'1<. 1 1 \ 1~.. 11,. 11-,,1 11kt 1'--11t1'-.1---l. \lr. 1711-1111111: >ill1l. "i 1-t1:'1- 111 .\,‘:tsl\'1tcl1--\\-:111. 11111-11- . \- -1-1-l-"--~~1--l tltir-vditt-t- tin-ctittgs 'l‘11.1- 1111c 11-"11 1‘:1tt-li-l:tt--s. qttcsti tlti- i-li-ct-vt-s was what :111- -11 111-1----s-.-1-l -l-11't1-,1 .'1l11111t intplc- 11-1-111111: i t-lw-l- .\lr. 1511-1111115; :t<-11r1-1l tlu-ttt t1. - 1-t11l-_-1-1 \\;1~" 111"1-<1-t1t1--l this _\1-:tr i-i 111-ill‘ r-~‘i1-i \\".-1tl-l h1- c1111- lflllll-il 1‘--- . ' "Si-tt-l l.1111-1':1l (e11- ri-~-‘1t1t"1'1v~ to f1--- 11111-11‘ (ll l\'--g1itt.'t who will he 111 --.-»1 " l1-.1- r tariffs. :t111l ii vott 1l1- tltis l c111 r-‘11--1. l‘l1‘t‘ 111 l‘.'ll'll.'llllt"lll 1.11.11 sziv 113:“ \-171---, ‘l,111\"1~1' t1---~1- ta!"- 1 ‘-1-" 1-11? :1"1t~1 \---u. \\‘1- still 5 -1 11- :11 1-1-11 :t~ 11111- 111' S.t~1<;t11-ltc\\:1tt'= grin-it l1"1-:-.7-:"-'." T1 "-1 11-14 lt-v-v 1111- Ft~11:11t-1t--\\-:111 l‘ll‘t'litlll was t1 n1. ‘v.11 - 1111- ~-.-1t1--1? \\'-- ~11:t11l--t .\l:-. 1711-1111111 ‘H1 1 his 111111 \\-\t‘-l~. ugititt 11u-1ti1tg '1'1'1~1:1 ll.1:t~'.1". _l1t111- _’_{ 111st: "lliu. l-lr. >11 . 1-. wlt1-t1 I 1111-1 1l1.'1t tt-vtltitti; 11:1: 1-11-11 111-111- iit 1111- tttrtttt-t- oi lllflli t-cilttcti-in (111 1111-111 i-t-ifi-stti-ttts 11r 1111 Jtttttltittg i-lsc, it is 1111111-1111 tT-i-1111-t.1sti1>1---1-t:t111-liq" 11f this k111i], 'l’l1e l_.lllll"ll t-xtt-ty l1.'1-l it~ ris-i- in the ll1'll\ll‘.'ll 1111111114- 111' 1111- 1-1--111l1- 111\\:1r-l umtti-r 1111-1111111, ail-i 111 1111 1's 111-11-1-1" it has 111-1-1-1- 1.'t-'1.1--l u-itttl-ss" to the itttt-"lititti-ri-Itl frtttlt that t11:it 11111-11 llfl< c-tttte to 1111-1111. 1.11-- rzilisttt lllt'flll~ 111-111- 111 m1- lltan a prts-siitg" iztiiry. l ltrtvi- .'1l\\":tvs l11-li1-vcrl tlt:1t itt 1111- l.111--1-;1l 1-111-111- 1111-1-1- -.v;t< the L'l'(‘.'tl(‘s[ ntcitsttt-e of fi-1-1-1l1-1n --i thought :111-1 iFC-‘ll-tlll of 10111-11. l-‘i-i‘ f/iv fI//.‘i‘t' 1/tl\'. 1-111/11-11 .1111» hi/I/"IV/‘if rt-iil/x of t/iix Hot-xv of /,-I!'//i/1Ilt'lI/, / hit/‘ficnc-I In lid/t’ for Xtl/l/F i11_I'1i1-i1i11/i111i fr111ii one of f/l" d/itiitf-"rx 0f I/iix (7111-111-111111-111, itiii/ I11." fitriii-d n/iou me min’ .t1ii1r' f/i-i/ l/ifr Siirkiitt-licii-titi /1lt/I('/l 1.10s s-t-ntid-m. r1111! I/iii.‘ h!’ rt-nti/il not fltf/‘HV/ t/m TF/Wtlf 1111-11-11’ if ti-c 1111/ n11! Slt/l/‘(lf/ //l(‘ /--111'» ct. .\lr. Fpt-aki-r, lct inc tcll this llottsc. Zlllll l/et me tell this (Iovt-rttnti-ttt. tltat a: long as l ant n ntetttltcr of tltis llintse of ("intuit-tits l will not be intimidate-l h_v any Minister of the (‘rott-tt." \\'l1at a revelation of Liberal tnachinc tat-tics! First fooling ‘the F.'tsl<atcltcwan voters with promises the (lovi-rnntcttt ltrtil nn inti-ittiott of implementing. anrl then ltnltlitig the whip nvcr their 111111011 rcprcst-tttativcs in Parliantr-ttt hv tltrcatcninq to scrap the \'\'ltr-at Board if they didn't vote for the Dunning budget! An English yiewpoint A refrcsliittgly outspoken expression 0i opin- lon on the sulijcct of .\nglo-.\1nericrm trade rc- lations is git-cit 11y tlte National Review (Lon- don), Wlticlt ,~.'1_v.s: “A fcw llllllllllS ago a regular ‘American Tra-lc Agreetttcttf catttpztigtt was lti-iitg run itt tlte litig- lish Il€\\'s1lI11l(‘l‘$, We ltavc llPflffl less 11f this latelv liircstttse the difficulties 11f slit-ll i111 ztrraitge- meni have n-tw lJCUllllC apparent to tut-tubers of the British fiovcrntttettt. 1t is easy to talk alt-tut the great !lt'll'l-v1'l‘.'1(‘lt'~ sClll-liltg s-ltuttl-li-t- tn 11111111- tlt-t", which tut-nits i1--t11i1t1_':1tall itt \'1--w oi the tlctei-titittztti-nt 11f tltr llttiu-il States ti. ltavi: tt-t fori-iign alli-tui-i-s. lttt tvhi-tt it --11111--s t-i 11111111112 l. Trzt-lc .\'_t,1r-.-1-1t1--t1t, ttt-tttl-rs ltavc to 11t- stttilit-vl nti-tri- rlos-i-lv. 'l'1t1- whole -|t11-.~ti-ttt ln-ils 111-wit tn this: .-\1-<- wi-, in iif-‘Zll llt-itnitt, 1>1"1-11.'1t-t--l to 9111-11 intr 111,111.11. 111 lllt‘ llllllPlll .\'t.'1t1-< 1111 thi- srttnt- t-‘rttts- 111' 111"1-ii~t-i-tt--1- as we git-c to the lln- ntini-uw? \~ w1- cait 11111_v take s11 ittttclt ltac-ttl. ‘tutti-r, c-irit. 1111-111. 11r- w-- 11rt-1tztrc-l to chi-ck the 'l1-\tl-1-1-1--i11 11f the l)-11t1i11i--tts ht" tztkittq less "-1111 1111-111. :111-1 i11-1ri- it--1tttt-ltt-l'.$..\.? .~\re wt- pr1-1--11"---l to 1-11111 thr- fruit itt-i-ltrtt-ils of (‘attarla m1] ,<111t1li \f1-1t-.-1 in --1"-l1-r to l-ttv frttit from F-ilifr-rzfit? \t 111-1--i-11t 1111-1-1- is rut otw-r-pr-t-lttc- 11111 of 1111111 1-111t111t-.1li111-< in 1111- tr-trl-l. attil wt- ;--t1-, --‘1----- 1111.111 wt- 111113 \t'i- wi- gitittq to .-'-.--1\1 1-- l-ztv 1':"--1t1 a f--11ig111--11t1t1‘v. or from t‘ 1- I‘~ll1"'11 1a‘ i111 .'11--- imi-h- t't1- liritislt Fitt- 1-1-1 --.'-' ‘- slj-tlil 111 '-‘1’:|11fl~ itt w-Irlil af- -' ~‘ \ . . 5 '11 ‘it-111 '1-111 111 ili-t-i-lop 1 1 " .1 --- -"- \-- ',1-- '- 111-wk 11111111 11-1- '-- -i ' ' 1 M132? 'l_'.1--1-\\--t1l'l =--11t f-t i1- ---1 ‘-'1-‘-'1\--".1~11'Ill~ 1.‘.'-- _l-11111'-l -'-t--l 11\ 1-111 --\\11 11--1t-1i-. Tlti- (inv- 1-----11111t 11-1- lt- it1-- -1t--~~ -.-1l tn fin-l .'t11--1l11-t'.11-1tii-lt is t-1111--~- 1111- ll--1t1:'1-1-'11t1s lll"llls 111-s tn ttt-tkt‘ Trith- \-11--~11--1--ts 1111-11 the l’? \. ‘.v 111i: ~'--1-l. (lll-l 11;11"t"~.-i.1 tent for the loss of our ntarkct. The fact of their bcittg pushed outside the Empire circle for fl5lfllll§lv\'. It is a free-trade atttl antl-ltttperiul tlo-lge ittt-i lgllfllllfl he cxpirst-il." Palace Of The Soviets \\'ltt-tt c-"itttpleted, the Palace of the SOYIPIS tit .\l11~.--1\v will be the grandest, gaurliest, biggest tut-l tn-tst expcttsive building ever erected h_v 1111111. 'l‘z1l11-r than the limpire State buililittg, it will b.- suritt-ntttted h_v a statue" of Lenin 328 icct high ma-lc of stainless steel. It \\-ill 11c built in 1.- tii-rs, ll.‘\\'C 1.10 entrances, 147 elevators, 62 est-1l1.'1- tors. ztcrcs of ttturals and a hall to seat 10,0011 people. .\l0re than 6,000,000 cubic feet of rock Illlll ilirt \\-ill be excavated this your and 5.000.- ooo feet of cottcrcte 1tottrt-tl. Thi- ltttililittg inns‘. 11c L'4>lll]llt‘l(‘fl by 10.12 :111-1 h_v then ttt-n-t- than 1151111011 tints of steel \\-ill ltavc lx-vtt ttst-(l 1111-1 1111h-1-lv ltttotvs how ittttclt c1-ttcrt-te, 111111-1111- .1111] liltlz-stwlle. '1“1t1- t-i-r-"ti-ttt of the lhtlace of got-lets hzts 111-PH on thi- .\'-1vi1-t prugrattitttc since 111:3. Fit-1- year- zigi- it was rtnttottttci-tl 1l1.'1t wot-k was tli-iittitt-ly g-tiitg t1- ltt-gitt. The 33-.'1c1'c sitt- was ft-ttcc-l .-t11-l iorgottett tttttil last _v1-ar tt-ltctt :1 itllfi \\'.'1.s' itt.-11l--. l“.XL‘.'l\'1lll(7llSil\l' the tnaitt foundations \\<-t‘t- v-nttplctc-l citrlyi this year. FY0111 now utttil 1-142 tltott<zttt1ls of skillcd ttrtisittts will work 3.1 lti-ttt-s a 1121")’ to c-ttttplctr- the ltttilrlitttf. 'l‘\\'(-nt,\' tttilliott 1l->1l:tr< will ht- s111-ttt this ycztr. .\tt1l sn,ci-11ttt1(-ttts an t-xcltnttgc. wltilt- mil- lions -1f httssiatts live itt ltitvcls- and worst- rttt-l whili- t-vi-ry Rttss-iritt lllllll<ll'_\' is itt 1lr-s1>i-t'.-1t1- t-1-1~1l 11f 111111111119 ttt:1t1-i"i:1l< Illlfl whilt- lll(.'l‘(' :111- l1v 11o 1111-:ttt< i-tt-nt-glt =i-1tn-1ls_ 111-uses. l1-1s11it:1l< ~1- s-:1t1.-tt--1"i1tit1s. the Krt-ittlitt t-ntlntrks- --tt 1h-- \\"-1t-11l'-' --i1i~t.--i1-lii1e- i-xantplc of --1-1ts11i--1t1-11s witstc tut-l 0.111s- it .\'-1--i:1l1<ttt acltievcrl. Editorial Notes f I’ Chris-tiitttitv wits lllll'U(lll\‘('1_l into httssia this ilztlt", 1,188. if I ill 151 Fri-m now on the farttti-rs will he as httsy- as the proverbial ltecs. ntakittg i111 i-tr l-tst time 1111-1 i-otttttt-t-acting the plagttt-s that 111-set them. >11 1F I! 1k \ 'l‘ltirt_v~tltrcc l'.§..\. Klztvors have jitiiti-ll lllf‘ .\l<t_vot" of New York in protc-tittg against l1t1ll\l>lll'(llll(‘ll[ of open towns. \\'ltat are the)‘ going to 11o further than pri-ttcs-t? 1 1- * =1- 1- Xcw York 'l‘iutt-s ntatle vt-rv fztt-1-rzthle t--1111~ lll(‘ll[ 1111 the visit of the K1111; :t111l {jut-cit to l':1t-i> att-l the reception given them lll(‘l'('. "li 1lli> <lis1--l:t_v," it s:tiil,"'lta<l been lllll'll1ll'4l to glorify :1 1"11l--t- or a ruling caste, it tttigltt ltave st-citt-uil lntt-haric. liut nt-ttltcr the lltitislt lvittg 111-r thi- l-‘rvnclt Prt-siilcnt is a ruler in the literal Scllsc. The cet-ctttitttics att-l partt-lt-s wet-c the cxttltcr- ant dcntonstratir-ns of two 1lcttt-wcrztcit-s. who»- 1-c-11-le often fail tn utttlct-stattil each other hut which arc littkctl h_v common interests. 'l'ltt-ri: WIIS no sullt-tt tttttlct-tottc- of supprt-ssiott and rc- scttttttcttt." n- 1- -1- w- .-\ refit-ed Ottzttva Covcrtttttcttt official, .\lt-. _l.'t1t1t-s 1111111111011. iHFIIICTlVY of tht- .\li1tt. 1m ltoli- -l.tv in l-lnglaitil, had a 1tni11ttc c.\'11e1"ir-1t1-c. itt 1.011- -l- >11 tlte other il:t_v. Parking his car at the \\'ltiti- (‘ity lirt-y-ltotttttl 'l'r.'1ck. \\'.. he was ast-tnisltctl to finil ltittts-elf sttrrottttrli-il h_v tncn in cvettittg ilrcss and prcscttti-tl with a luxurious cas-e containing :1 ni-w half-crnwt-t, lle was still more sttrpris-cil when the “attctttlant" tn wlti-nt he was t-il-l to ltattrl thc coin in pavtnent of his parlt-ittg fei- was intrnrlttcctl to him as the Minister of 't-1..11.<1-.1.1. .\lr. lcslic llurgin. The reason was that he was the ittilliotttlt motorist t0 use tltc ,1>ark since it \\'.'\S opener] in 1927. >1- n- 11- n- A laboratory instrument has been tattgltt tn ilo card tricks in lowa h_v Professor Chriqinn A, littckntick, whose "entotion meter" was oriqittrtl- lv constructed as a research tonl attrl later was use-l as a "lie-detector". The Vnit-t-rsitv of lowit psvt-ltol-ugist shows the victim a full pack nf car-ls, tells him tn sclcct one tnetttally. As PFOIPSQOT Ruck-thick’ runs through the pack. asking if each is the chosen card. the suhii-ct follows lip-tr...» tions hv say-lug “.\'n." \\'ltt-n a ltattil of liggltt on a rulcrl scale at the frottt nf thr- foovsqttarc-l hnx. which is the emotion tnctr-r. fluctuates the scientist knows the chosen carrl has llPPfl rcrtcltcrl. The excitement of telling even so small a lie is cnotiglt to chance the electrical resistance of thi- skin cells ancl flPilPCI the indicator. =1- -1- 1t n- The crazy weather we have been ltavittg has lteen no monopoly. Front all over sitttilar c-ittt- 11laittts have come—0nly in some cases the 1111- seasottaltlencss has been 111111-11 more nt-tt-kctl. For instance, snow and ltztil rattgittg 1111 to ten inches in ilepth l1lztttketeil the u1>11cr slopes of l-‘ikcs Peak, Colorado, the worst sutttntcr slot-tn in years. At one time more than 150 atttottt-tltiles, nutny of the OCCt111flt1t5 in sutntttcr clothes, were tttaronnc-l hettvci-tt Glen Cove, at the tt,-1tx1-f->-1t [we], and the t4,tto~f11ot stttntttit. l-‘otti- ll1)_\‘\' who started on foot over the lntrro tr:1il to 111-- mp of the Peak in ltrigltt, sunny weather rcaclt- (‘fl the stintmit looking like sttnvt-tttt-tt. The tri11 rcqttirc-l ten ltours. 'l‘ltr-_v expected it to take alt-tut fottr. The stnrnt sent thi- l"|lf’FClll'_V ski-l rlittg to 32 degrees at the top of the lk-itk. n- »- : 1- lt is ttow calculated the “lest will prorlttcc 300» 0011,1100 httshcls of wheat this l-Y-tll, the hi-st show- ing for six years. .-\ltottt 21.1100 men will he rc- -1tti1-1--l tn ltarvcst this CF01‘), hut no ltarvcst ex» citrsiotts will hc necessary as there ls sttfficir-tt‘ surplus lahnttr. in the \\'r-st waiting an opportun- ity for ctttplovittcttt. Forrt-sp-ntilcttts lf‘.'lll to i-nttservittisirt in their estimate of the crop 111-catast- rti p-ttctttial threat in rather \\'l1l4‘~'1ll'f‘.'l(l 5111110111"- atti-i- of rtts-t in .\lattitnlta an-l Ras-katt-ltctvatt. u-hii-lt ,1< yet. has rt-at-ltr-il the il.'t1tt:t;1itti_1 stage in oitlv a fcw ittstatti-i-s. llrottchi. llflll nit-l grass 111111111 rs- lI.'l\'|‘ t.-tl1--n t-1ll :-11-l fttrtlt1-r -l.-ttn:tqi- ttt-tv t"--~1t1t, ltttt lll<'i~lllT(' 1-11tt-liti1-tts- gi-ttt-t-ztllt" :1t'1- -l-1- iii 1- 111-111-1- than ~l1->t\tt itt llii- 11rvvii-tts- 1‘--1---11 thrt-t- wet-ks itqii. 'l‘it1t<-l‘v rains lt.'1\"t- trrtttsf1-i"r1--l itnoonmt acrm 1t1-i-vin11slv t-r-p-n-t-wl as fair 111 llll’ 13111111 cnlttmit. l‘t-i1~11i-1-ls" are fair i-tt- (|ll11lll(‘l' 311110000 :11‘|'cs while tltc coitilitiutt of 5,o0o,otx> markets would loosen the ties of the fabric ills-- m; CI-IARLCWTETOWN quantum IIUTES BY THE WAY Sir Edward Beatty _ now knows that the country ls not 80- 111g to itccept his scheme for 1 1111111111.- the two great. Canadian rutltvays. The persistent campnlgn which ht- led wttlt as much tact. and skill its ttnyone could have put into it. was simply attempting the intpttssible. Canada will not abandon litrge sections 0f fBllWBY still useful to the country. It ls not going to do the thlngs which he vcttttit-ei-l to say were necessary to save the country from ruln. — Winnipeg Free Press. One hundred years ago, In 1838. the first railway tn Canada was opened for trafflc. It was the Al- bion Mines railway between Stel- litrtoit and the Ltoadlng Ground at Abcrcotnbie. \Ve_ have used the word "first." Tts true that. prior to 1838. a year before, tn_Quebec province. a steam locomotive had been lntttortctl and put 1n use, but it ran on a wooden rnll. The/1l- b11111 Aline-s railtvuy‘ was positive- ly the first wjtlt a metal rall. As we know a 111111111131 todtrv the lt-on or steel t-itll is csst-tttial. We offer this note for fear the ltundredtlt itnnivcrsttt-y- ntuy puss unnoticed. -E-.1stern Cltroitlcle Among the pampered P145 of the city ls 1111 elderly bulldog who has his own telephone ex- tcttsion. l-Ie lives 1n an old- fashioned broyvttstone on the upper \Vcst Side with an old lady who clung fot- a long time to the ttvall- ty-pe instrument. The dog used to zlitslt to the telephone every tune it run-J. 11nd worry the cot-cl. with the rcsttlt that the repair an had to be t-alh-d iit about 011cc a month. Wlti-it his ltllr-l_l‘1‘$S finally had a ltntitlse-t pltuiti- lllSldllPd, she asked tltr-nt to leave the old one on the wall. Ninv. tvltt-ttctw-r there ls n cull. tltc (log tztkt-snit on his own wire. klukes for peace 01 mind. all at-uttntl. —-'l‘lte New Yorker. 1 8V9“ H1078 Regina ls bccotnittg, ltey-tluy" of 1 1111111 it was in the _ Nii-ltt-lits l-‘liind Davin and Sir Fri-dcritk IIu-tltuitt. a- “tnotltt-t‘ of stzttcsttti-tt.‘ Mtu-rlock MttcPltc-rsvott, rttnttct-ttp 111 the COI\S(‘l‘\'1\ll\'6 li-nrlr-t-slttti ritr-c. is u resident of Regina. Tlti- two principal lieuten- ants of Rt. l-lon. W. L. Mackenzie | King 111-c fot-tncr residents of Rc- . gincvvI-It-tt. Charles A. Dunningt and I-lcn. Jumcs G. Gardiner. both l'ni-mct-'Pt-t-ittiers of Saskatchewan. In the C.C.I-‘. the lteir~apparent to the leadership. M. J. Coldwell, is a resident of Regina and a farmer school principal and alder- man of the city, though now rep- resenting Rosetowrt-Biggar.—wln- ulpeg Tribune. "I have no favorite painters. 1 dart know attytl-ting about paint- tttg. O11. yesl go to exhlbltlons and I cnvt- the men who can paint. - a figure or it lnttdscatac. But for tnc thcrc ntust be something more in n picture than the literal ren- dering of i111 object. If that were all that is necessary a can-tern would bt- :1 bi-ttct- artist than Rem- brandt. "A mzut tnust l-tavc some- tlung to s v, he must see things in n new and indlvltltial way. l-lc 1 must be stirrcrl by the play of light on flesh or by the glow of the Sllll on trees and he ntust be able to put some of the emotion he feels onto his canvas. If he suc- cccds in doing this, then he is an 111-ti. . But. unless ltc can draw. unless ht- knmvs the grammar of his art. I do nnt. believe he is cqitlpped tn cxprcss his emotion.“ -Wult Disney in the New York Times Magazine. Suggestion that it is humbling for skilled ntccl-titttics to apply for wot-k cut-ting grass or tclcanlng wittclott-s 1s tnutle by Alderman Morris. This is certainly a fine cotninetttat-y" on the attitude of cct-tttin peuplc towards theli- duty to support themselves and famil- ies if tltcy are able to do so! How nobut the thoustmds- of business, puztfessiottal and other men who have no ltcsitatlott ln being seen ntowing lawns? How about the thousands of respectable ltottsetvivcs wlto do not feel ft. be- netttlt tln-it- dignity to wash win- dows? Are the people of whom the alderman speaks any better tlllln these? ll tltct-e are those who feel 1t less ltutttillntittg to accept public charity than to earn a few dollars by cutting grass or washing wlttdotvs. then there s something drastically- wrung with the relief systcm.— Windsor Star. There sllll ls, however. In our 0111111011, an obstacle wltlclt has discotu-itgerl ltome building and home owning which finds a defl- ttite reflection in the conditions now pt-cvnillttg 11nd the attitude of ottt- citlzctts. It is taxation. In ntmty Citnndtitn cltles the levies are so _hlglt that it ls not. good economics to own a home as com- pared with rcntiitg. And rentals are such that there ls llttlc or no profit ‘for the landlord nftet- he pays lus tax bills 111-tel provides for the costs of ntalntuinlttg the prop- erty. 'l'l1us the individual. avoid- ing any tangible dlsplay- of wealth which nttght nttrnct tux-collectors. prefers to rent. and, because of tnx lcvlcs, SDCUlllflllVE builders are (ltscotu-ngctl front ttddlr-z to their property investments. bVc would suggest tltitl. to encourage home bittldlitg nttd speculative residential constt-uctoiit there should be as- surance of a more intelligent and considerate attitude on the part 9f the various taxing authorities. —-Montreal Financial Times. A new walking record ls reported to ltttvc been set up by nn Indian gctttleittnn at Feroze- pin-t. 'I‘l1r- t-t-cortl was [not for tnr-i-v walking; 1t w“ (m- sli-i-p-wnlklttg. Pandlt Ramrakha walked lit his SlPOIJ for sixteen mtli-s, most of them along the Sl(‘1']) and dangerous bank of a crttml. Many r1 sleep-walker has frltzlttt-ui-d t-vi-ry one but himself by climbing out of the window and tvitlklng along the edge of the roof. But sleep-walkers do not only walk. They have been known to swim rivers, to ride horses, to draw water from a well, and carry the bucket to the house and fill cans and things out of 1t wtttlqut,“ sDllling a drop. TheymTu-ive hem know to thrcsh corn with a feat], to make drtttvlngs, to play musical Instruments ihtit. fortunately, not t0 $111121. The fun of the real thing ls lost. to the slct-tt-u-alker himself. Ho fci-ls no thrill of pride at walk- lng ttlnttg the edge nf a precipice. or climbing the church steeple 111"‘ "Q's" Harry Revel, or per. forming any other feat that h; r11t1lil iti-vr-t- do if ltc was nwnke. Even Putt-lit Ratnrnklm km-w 11-1111- of tltc _]11y 11f brt-aklttg a ri-t-nril _Atnl. when he W115 told 111111111 tt. tho pnltt of his swollen fr-t-t Iflllsi surely have spoiled his chance of a good sttvollen head. -- Lottdon Titties. lhcatts tltt-y 1111,4111 he CulllltCllrfuQd to some ex- acres is poor. 1: 1.. /\ hlklng rluh has been nrganlzrtl ‘either during the visits which be 111-ad paid tn Ciutatlit or through his YSBTSJIHCI 11c had more than a nod- some of these cur-sis hlm that to their surprise he knew Governor-Genera‘ of Canada in the Bronte neighborhood. This A Seat At The Rideau Hall (From The Glasgow Herald) (From The Glasgow Herald) Flve ears ls the normal term .of office or a Governor-General of Canada. and slnce Lord Weeds- mulr took up hLs duties on Novem- ber 2, 1935, he has now occupied his high post for just. over half that ertod, m; appfllttlmellt, ntarked a reach wlth a tradition that. the office of Governor-Getteral should be reserved for members of the British aristocracy. Slr John Young. later created Lord Llsgar, was the only previous Governor-General who had been a commoner at the time of his appointment. The experiment ofchoslng Lord .TWEEUSIIIUIX‘ was criticised in certain 'sn0bblsh quartet-s, and the argument was used that 1t marked a descent ln the status of the office which ;wou'd ultimately lead to abandon- ment. of the pra '.e of sending out Govcrnor-Geiterals to Cattada ft"om Britain. There were also Canadians who nmitttitlttcd that it would have been a ltajtpiet‘ course .f Lord Tweedsntttlt- had arrived at. Rldeau Hall, the Govctnor-Gcnerars of- ficial residence. as Mr. John Buch- ‘an and 1f no title had been cott- ferred until he had spent some time ln Canada. _ Undoubtedly Iorcl Tweedsmulr was a completely new type of Gov- ernor-General for Canada. I-lis pre- decessors had all been members of the royal faintly like the Duke of Connaugttt, great nobles like the Duke of Dcvot-sltit-e. fatnotts soldiers llke Viscount Byng, or distinguish- ed OlllIlClillIS. .ikt- the Marquis of Wilingdon, who had represented t e Crown in other cotuttt-iets. But 1f he lacked their background he had other advrttttttges. Not only was he known to thousands of Cat-1- adians tltt-ottglt lts books as a. dLs- tittgtitslted lli(‘l'fll'_\' figure but, he had srores of personal friends throughout the DOlllllllOIl, acquired contacts with Cttitatlian soldiers and joumzfists din-tug the wat- years. l-le also enjoyed a friendship with the Premier. Mr. Maeki-ttzlc King. which dated back ticttrly- 30 dlttg acquaintance with other emin- ent personagcs in the Canadian DTlIiZC-fll tt-orld. S0 Lord ’I‘\vcedsnt11lr did not come devoid of ft-tettds to an unfamiliar scene, and he rapidly settled down ln his new cnvirotuttent. He at once addressed l-timsi-lf to the task of trqutrlng a thorough ttndet-stztndlttz of the realities of Canada's po‘lti- cal economic. and financial llfe. and he made it a. practice to invite to Rldeatt Hall EYGXT wt-"k two or three individuals ~p0l1tlcinn.=, Clvll servants. journalists. and she like- wl-tc, he thought could make some contribution t0 his education. and had informal talks with them. And reported of a. great. deal more about Canada her history and her probletns. than they themselves did. He had fulfilled his constitutional dutles with mctlcttlotis znclttstry. and ha: not spared himself lll the dignified pcrfortnancc of llls cere- monial rol=s..But since 1926 11hr: 5Q become a constitutlon flgttrcltcad. and an energetic splr llke Lord Tweedstnttlr. who ever slnce he left. Oxford nearl 40 years ago has had his davs bust ,v occupied in a variety of wor and public duties. could not be BXDECI-Kl to take kindly to a life of decorative ltfcness. He has lJPEll considerably handicapped durln-zhts sojourn in Canada by recurrent ill health, but this disability‘ has not. been allowed to operate as a restraint upon his activities. From his ycuth onwards he has had a passion for travehlng which lu- has never previously been able to gratify to the desired degree, and when he came to Canada he found 111m- self presented with a uni tie op- portunity for exploring hal a con- tinent. He seized upon it and he had not been 1on1’. 1n Ottawa be- fore he was faring forth ln his private car to fulfil. cngngcmetttls 1n different sections at the Domlnlon. Now, after two and a half years. there ls practically no important centre of the Domlnlon which he has not. vlstted. and scores of small towns and villages have seen him 1n their midst. But. ever a lover of the mountains and the wilds. he has repeatedly ventured far from rallwav tracks and beaten baths. and last summer he followed in the footsteps of Lord Byng (another great traveller) by making 111-st. an ex edition which involved consider- ab e hardship to the mouth of the Mackenzie Rlver wlthln the Arctic Circle. and afterwards n trip west.- ward throu h the Rocky Mountains to the Pac flc Coast. In the course of this lattcr jottrney he 11nd the pleasure of seeing the fine new pttbllc park in Northern BrltL=h Columbia. which has been named 1n his honour Tweedsmulr Park In these two expeditions the Governor-General encountered the real pioneers of Canada's vast. northern hinterland. and by all accounts they were as pleased wlt1h his frlendly democratic ways and eager interest ln their fortunes as he was with their frank cnndour and their rlch store of Interesting experiences, vrhich he drained with the enthusiasm of a romantic novel- ist. He has also been at speclal pains to make several t1lslLs to thfl drought-stricken areas of the pralrle country, where thousands of once falrly prosperous farming families have seen themselves ln the Dre- aent decade reduced to penury and condemned, when their crops with- ered summer after summer and thler livestock had to be shipped a- way for lack of water. to dead dull. drab llves on miserable grants from the pttbllc relief IundsT-For '11 d15- trlct fllled with such unfortunate families 1t. was a heartening expert- ence t0 welcome a friendly demo- cratic Governor General. who viewed their Plight, with uttderstancllng sym a hy, brought them a ntessagi of ope and encouragement. and convinced them that. t-hey were not ocmpletely forgotten men and wo- men. In his general outlook on life the Governor-General, althou h he has lived much ln towns an cities, ls fundamentally a countryman and a man who. like James I of scot- land, would "rather beer the lurk sltliitlttin the mouse squeak.“ More- over, he has a good working know- ledge of farming livestock, and farmers’ problems, and so he la al- ts news-good news. A couple of decades ago each week-end saw the highways and byways about To- ronto dotted with pedestrians traveling leisurely along tn the original method of locomotion. These lteel-and-toe tottrlsts were not for exercise fresh atr and 1n- pectlint of the counlr sldc. and _ they were compnratlvey safe on the roads. Now there are only ltltch-hlkers looking for work. In this country walking for its own sake ls out of fashion. and the change 1s not, for the better. - Toronto Globe and Mall. ways at home in Eatherlngz of farmlng folk ln Canada. SPEED}! CAUSES CONTR/OVIIRSY In the role of Governor-General he Ls supposed ln 1111s Public ut- terances to steer clear of any 0b- servatlons which might. be c011- structed as invading the fleld 0! political controversey. and this restraining rule must. be very irk- some to one who was for some years an active politician and holds strong views upon public questions. Very few of his publlc speeches have had any political flavour which could be criticised. but. he E. R. Brow & 5.111, Fire, A1110, Life, Accident, sit-111...” and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest _ Rate Agent at Summerside, 144 Richmond St. Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown has on one or two occasions disre- garded the restraint. lmptxsed upon Governor-Generals, with results which must. have been disconcert- ing to himself. In hls polltlcal car- eer 1n Britain he was a Conserva- ttve of the Left who could be classified as an ardent imperialist. devoted to t-he ideals of the British Commenwealth. 1n Canada he has not. forsworn his. falth, and has lost. no_ opportunity of exhortlng the Canadian peo le to hold fast t0 the Commonwealt as one of the most effective political instruments for the preservation of democracy and the advancement. of an enlightened civilisation which has ever been devlsw. But, curiously enough. this earnest ImperlalLst. has by some of hls ut- m. r1... p.111 Says: For a Delicious 011p of Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN _ Orange Pokoe Tea terances brought down upon his head frank criticism not from Leftist elements but from Con- servatives of the ImperlalLst school of thought. Particular offense was caused by a speech which he de- liver-ed last year in Montreal at the annual banquet of the Can- adian Institute of International Af- fairs. Ln it. he emerged as a strong cnamplon of what, seemed an ex- treme form of Domtnlon national- Lsm, and, ugholding the rlght. of Cattada to ave her own forel n policy, declared that the flrstloyal y of a Canadian should be not to the Commonwealth but to Canada. Ills intended lmpllcatlo - was that, lf Canadians were truv loyal to their own country, they would also come 1 to be equally devoted to the Com- monwealth bemuse they would rea- llse that their country's future was bnttncl llD with its preservation. but some of his actual phrases were unfortunate. Thls speech. made to an audience ln whlc Canadian Nationalists were ln a decided majority. provok- ed no resentment. on the spot, but. when lt was pttblshed ln zhepress it brou ht forth strong protests from lfferont quarters. Among Cannrllan Imperialism there has long been n feeiintz that since the war the doctrines of Dominoln na- tionnlLsm have been carried‘ to dangerous lengths in practice. and that there has been ln evidence at Ottawa too little of a genuine co-opcratlve spirit in regard to the EXERCISE OR WORK MAKES THE LUNGS WORK HARDER TO SUPPLY FRESH PURE BLOOD Durln the War I watched two squads elng put throuih m?" physical training. Both squads were following the same schedule. Toward the end of the exercise period what ls called the breath- lng exercises were given. One ln- structor had his squad raise their nrm well up over their heads as they drew 1n a deep breath. and let the alr out of their lungs ngnln 11111111119111 of 01111111110115 arising as the arms came 11011111 10 1111‘- front pnrtttt-rsltlp ln the Common- sides. The exercise was accom- wealth. so the object-ion was rais- 1tanled by the noise of breathing cd that. the Governor-General was n and breathing out. The other by his speech giving comfort and instructor pointed to a tent about encouragement to idea's and tend- 100 yards distant. and instructed uncles which were impairing the his squad to "double march" (slow solidarity of the Commonwealth runt to this tmt, go round by the and frustratin any coherence for right. and return. its foreign p10 c Now which was the best exercise The genera‘ impression Ls that for the purpose of strengthening Lord Ik-eedsmtilr v,-.--1ld have been the lungs? wiser 1f he had kept. clear 0f such The simple. deep breathing by topics, but his subsequent speeches. sending the diaphragm (floor of ln which he has touched upon chest.» down against the llver. political lssttes 1n any shape 0r squeezed the llvcr and helped to form. show that he ls now, like increase the blle flow. This of Agag. walking delicately. LADY Invntsostvtmrvs PART Lord Tweedsmtilr has been great- lv helped in hls task bv Ladv TW-5“‘t’l$tl"ll1ll'. who accompanies hl-i-t on mos-t of his expeditions. She ls an admirable chatelalne of Rldeau Hall. and under their regime its traditions of hospitality are being well maintained. Moreover. they have widened the basis of BOCQQQ to vthat ln Canada is regarded 1;; the fountain of social prestige and other merits than the 11051-3541.... of "PR-111 and 101-11111 11111-11111.- find ltelp of course as blle ls Nxttttrt-‘s purgatlve. However. the simple breathing 1n and out. even if the men breathed ln and out as hard as they could. dlrl not really call for much work from the lungs or heart because such a small amount of work or exercise was done. The running of two or more ltundrcd yards, which meant raising the 150 or more pounds off the ground and driving it forward 120 times a minute meant that the huge muscles of the letzs raised ntany tnns of weight. which meant extra blood driven by the heart. and ex- tra blood had to be made fresh by élggntelgvtgsyg 01th gldlsgue gféttll 811111212111 glltle hmgs. Itndothtg- wnrdsa tlfte b ‘ . nn DR 078R 9 R (‘ED T189 ' OI‘ Pen ln the past. pure blood and all the llttle alr ———-————-____. cell-s in the limes were called on to work: 1t ls this work that de- velops the lungs. "Deep breathing exercises such fii -,. 1 11s were prescribed years ago tn _' I gtoiréutsrfinoxygen are a snare and ' The thought then ls that 1f I you are well enough tn take ex- crclse. dnlng some work-walking. running. playing games - makes the muscles ‘nec-d‘ more pure blood and so develop the lungs. Held Responsible In Shooting- Fatality (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wlrel MATl-IESON, Ont, July 25-M- ready charged with murder, Ilouls Tee. 52-year-old Hooker Creek settler. was named by a coroner's jury Saturday night 8.5 rcsbonslble for the shooting of Harold John- ston. 28, at Hooker ‘Creek a week IN THE SELKIRKS‘ The oltglgrey shade of the Mqtm- Stands in the open sky. 00111-11112. as 1r 111 111.1 leisure. The days of Eternity. The Stream comes down from 11.5 Sources, Afar :n the glacial height, Rushing along throttgt-t thg valley In loops of silver light. -- - - ~- ago. 1ma1%1i1$1¥1‘1i1l11gy-t19ee¥°u“‘“m1 Chief coroner E. R. Tucker was, m it, Oiflashlng tone," commended t1 the jury, 111__ 111111.11- Uke 111%“) be fr“? - w their vet-d ct, for his prompt and courageous apprehension of .. .me....pr1sone,,_...._. .-.. The M1111 utters the quegtlong, ii-ii He breathes-he 111 tégnel (By The Canadian Press) The ltzpgntaln start In the heav- maAl-‘E TOIZVgi-The red antd whé: - gn 0f was seen or The Stream ruahea on. first time 1n Cape waters recently Dun 1h:- the ll t ste er ‘Mt. Bfr Donal?“ Campbell 8am“ EVEIQHB dockseldnil Allrbiiiipone oiixlier _ ' ' _cr_ew of 34 were, Latvlnns FAVORITE. PER FIG PUBLIC FORUM Thln column II 090i III lll! dllonnlon by anrlnpnndnlil o! I Intcnlt. tto w: Gnudlu doe: not n- conlrlly endures the oplnlunl of aorruponlonto. A "PUNISHMENT TO SUIT THE CRIME" Sin-Of the three methods to; protecting property. which Ls to by considered the more humane, tm use of hcgh voltage electric current the‘) use of firearms, or the use o1 o n. At the rear of our residence w\ have what we are pleased to call | vegetable garden vt-hlch. while 1t may not be 1n the prize wlnnln class, ls nevertheless highly prize -b_v us. We value it. not; so mu ‘on account of the great amount o ' atlent. labour which we spent on 1 t. but rather because it shout lenable us to 1arovlde our family - very small ch ldren with at. least. a few fresh garden fooods. Sometime during Monday nltrhi some person or persons removed several sections of fence. entered the garden. and combletel . de- stroyed the greater portion o it. be- gldes ruining some young cherry rec-s. Now. Slr; slnoe ft; would be un- reasonable to expect. our police to watch all our gardens each night, and since we are likely to lose the entire crop anyway. l5 lt vlclnlty no spray our gardens with a rlcadlv poisonous solution. Or ought. we to resort the more troublesome methods first: men- tloned. I nm. Slr. etc- FITZROY STREET EAST I Gassy stomachs RELIEVED If you have any trouble with your nomad: such as Indigestion. dyspepsia. sour stomach. heartburn, gutrlc distress. 910.. then don't de- lay getting n bottle of Dr. L. B. Evan's Stomach Mixture Immediately. Evin‘! Stomach Mfxtllrc In a prescrlpetlon of Dr. L. B. Evans,’ n'o d En Ilsh Physic- Inn o! which we ave the lole rights to and since MIND‘ l! have received numerous - tlmonlala from satisfied pur- chacers. Try n bottle today. 85 cents. It 11$ I! i! SPECIALS Price Just arrived Inrn unort- ment of Bathhtg Caps and Beach Bun. Blthf-n C P! In all colors rangln (trom- _ ... 20c to 750 Beat- Ball In Blue. T811 qymm,__.__._- 1.00 From II J lll . _. _ _ Si": -rr;9c Pa: ado 010ml- ,,1:‘,°'_'_' ESL“. 39o Pel‘ 1.11. B0! 312. - w- 2 nabs DRUGSTORE 149 Great Georgi 9"“ 111.111 011111-115511511- "W" IT WILL SOON BE EXHIBITION TIME BUT ANY TIME 1s r111: tztcn-r rtttm 1w BUY A coon TOBACCO. BETTER THAN STICK fro rut: 01.11 HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING Manufactured by I-IICKEY and NICHOLSON YOU CAN'T DO