_. r19". -’ -'-'- scour...» _-.- =avkn~i<n s _.. _o-w ..- C’ Evert IIIEfiBIIABLIJTTETOVIII Glilllilililli ‘resident-W. Chester l. lieLur Ieoruiury—LIeut.~CcL ll- o, li-P- - itstlurlua Viw-n A. Ieekinnon, Ii. S. 0. Editor- und ilnnnging DlrooturQ- B. Burnett Associate liiliturl— Frank Wnlker nnil B. B. Currie Hurling nuuy (founded ire-i) woo pct your (in adv-nee) delivered “.50 per yenr (in advance) moi led in Glnndn nnd United B AD VEli-TIBINO BIC PBESEN TATIVEB uivrrnn STATES-Tho lieclnrith trnl Building, New York City, (leuerni Building, Kansas City. Wlilonlhb! ‘Irunt Building, St. Louie; Glenn u‘, sun Frnncllcu; [I35 Ne. ldth Milne oi in: mu Chloigo illl lllflfll another cleanup o! gangsters u I Prelim- inary to the opening of its Century g] progress Exposition. But Whllf will Chicago do about caving its Spcelnl Agency ha, New York Cen- Motorn ' , ' ' ' ' Tower Building, Ol-Ilfllliii fiild-Wl" Building, Atlanta; llonudnock Bunn- Street, Phlinrleiphln. school ‘ ‘s s? not thern work a.s' guides to show chime’: glories? Morning Maxim Silence may bc golden to men; it WEDNESDAY, AT $4,000 AN HOUR Coincident with a glowing tribute by our local contemporary to the ipeechmaking prcclivitlesoi Mr. A. El. MacLean in Parliament, we note the followdng comment in the Tc- ronto Globe, once the leading organ of Liberalism and now the declared ‘champion of policies better suited to the country: "By actual count oi one of The Globe's Parliamentary correspond- mis there were twelve Conservatives, eleven. Liberals, three Progressives and a Laborite present in the Corn- mons at one time during the course of the Budget debate. A back- bcncher on the Liberal side was holding forth on the alleged mis- deeds cf the Government, advocat- ing reforms which had been urged arid discussed over and over again. Few, if any, of the members present were listening. poly the Hansard reporter, charged with the respon- ribiiity oi taking it all down for printing and distribution in the House journals, seemed to be paying any attention to the flow of oratory. The procedure was costing the coun- try about $4,000 an hour. "The situation, one of fairly fre- quent recurrence, suggested that there was room for improving the efficiency of Parliamentary mach- inery, or at least for imprcvemt in the discretion of members of Parliament. The member had noth- ing new to add to debate-and none knew it better than himself. He was rpenking to the electors back home, who, in due course, would receive copies of Hansard and be volumin- uusly apprised that their represen- tative had made a spcech in thc House." C. N. R. DEBTS Reference w-as made in columns yesterday t0 the tiinistei- of Nuance. or the controllable burdens of est! The total long term am of the Canadian National Railways, which includes railways in Canada. and the United States, tclegrcphs, hot rls, steamships etc. at Decombe 81, 1932 ova; 32.764.340.828. The sum duo the Dominion Government wa $l,4'89,&‘13,66l and due thc public $1,264,5i7,167. The debt due the Dominion Gov cmment was made up of $405,170,073 Canadian $695,723.20’! for loans and advances and $308,- for appropriations for Government Railways. 900,381. for unpaid accrued interes Adolf Hitler, no doubt, is de-, lighted with the decision reached by a rxtajority of one at Geneva that his brown-shirt auxiliary pol- ice are not to be classed as a mil-i eluded itary organization. They may now February 1. i930 has been ' z the uémed statesuneb proceed about their business se-i i“ m“ ° cure m the knowledge that theiri Th6 10118 "m 5°“ mam!“ u” status has the approval o! the: cost of construction and 911F941!” World Disarmament Conference of the Canadian Government lines, Committee on Armies. °°mp°s°d °' m“ mbumlmfl’ N” Hon. n. r. Btockweii. Provincial tum“ fiamcontmenm’ we" but Treasurer, states that Quebec has docs not include my inicrssi» 011 paid in full all its debts to chari- the capital expenditures nor the table institutions since the close of deficits of these lines prior to 192a "is ss-"elm 0f the lsslslsme- Th“ v 1 1 . _ old province has the reputation of “hick an a d m Pubhc M meeting its liabilities and evidently wunf-s- It W‘ M‘ “m” 5°“ intends to live strictly up to its ernmerit contributions under the good record m m1; reap“; Maritime Freight Rates Act 1927. It also includes all loans and ad- u L d i R i l l’ en y re urne rom ussa, w ierc van”. to the canaman Namma he spent twenty months as a con- t" “w 01mm“ N°m""n' Grmd struction engineer, says that every-' Trunk and Grind TWIIR Pmflc where he went he saw want, mis- with accrued and unpaid simple cry and oppression, and he declar- muren ‘t "w, from a 14 m 6 cs that only one per cent. of the 150,000,000 people in the U.S.S.R. per cent, which were made to meet belong ‘ to the Communist part)“ (l) mutfit d“ I" u” 9mm“ (b) The latter has limited its member- operating deficits. (c) costs of 8K1" ship and keeps the door carefully muons and betwrment,‘ and (g) shut. If this be the case, the rulers is often painful to women. MAY 10- 193$ Mr. Waiter B.‘ Ellis, who has rec- these explan- ation given by Hon. Mr. Rhodes, 1m- expendi- ture which have had to be budget- ed for this year. One of thc prin- cipal items cited was C. N. R. in- debtednem. In this connection the following lrifornuiticn from a report recently issued by the Dominion Bureau oi Statistics will be of inter- additional working capital, etc. 1t also includes the perpetual deben- ture stock and bonds held by the public. but does not include Can- adian Northern or Grand Trunk capital stock nor the cost to the Government of obtaining stock held by it. The stock oi the Grand ‘Prank Pacific is all held by the Canadian National system; GANDHI & PACIFISM Against the pleadings oi his own relatives and supporters, Gandhi has started on his threatened three- weeks’ fast which physician's be- lieve will cost his lite. He has done so, not in protest against the Brit- ish but against the attitude of his own race toward the "untouchables," the lowest caste of the community. The British Government has taken a. wise course by releasin Gandhi from the jail in Poona in which he was -serving sentence for his civil disobedience campaign. If the iviia- hatma. is determined to commit suicide there is no reason why the British officials should shoulder any responsibility, as they would have to do if he remaineci a prisoner. Gandhi has been held up as a type of the arch pacifist and non- ieslster. But it is a moot question whether his method is that of peaceable persuasion, as he claims and as no ‘doubt he believes, or whether it is a form of coercion of a peculiarly violent sort. The pac- ' ifism which exerts moral pressure 1' by threatened martyrdom is akin to the mental process of the child 5 who sulks because he cannot get what he wants. Indeed, thewholc theory of pacifism is shot through ' with inconsistencies when regard- ed as a principle oi conduct. Noth- ing can be regarded as a principle that is riot worth fighting for. Pacifism in action must become t militant pacifism, which is a con- on Government loans. The deflcitsftradiction in terms. Gandhi's method M Easter" 1m" B"? m“ by 56981“ lof fighting for his principles may be ate HDDYODNKUWIS by U10 130111111- inspired by the noblest ideals, as WI Wnmme-"t and l" "W ili- many pacifist demonstrations have fludld- been: but it is none the less a '!‘i1e debt due to the public Waspoerclvg mgagm-g designed m "1346 11D 0f $965B3L382 Eiififfliitccdlachieve his ends by force rather by Dominion Government, $72,i84,- than persuasion, m8 guaranteed by Provincial Gov- ' ernment and $226,50i,m7 ungugr. nntccd. ____ The Canadian lines of the Can- Cattle imports by the United idian National Railways include ‘Kingdom in the first ‘three months the railways formerly operated as of i933 totalled 149,063 of which thc Canadian Northern system, the 6.864 were received from Canada. Grand Trunk Railway oi Canada, The "W1? mm 0mm‘ h“ m‘ thc Grand Trunk Pacific and the mu“ ‘"3917 m“ 3'9"’ n“ mm‘ EDITORIAL NOTES are playing a dangerous game. Some day a leader from the out- side majority may arise and dc- mand the "open shop" form of government. Then it will be bad for the restrictive rulers. By the estimates laid before Parliament, the expenditure of the Government of Canada for the present year will be $364,884,000 apart from railway cost. In this total, the item to be voted for the Civil Service is $9,756,771. The cor- responding figure for 1929-30, the year before the present Govern- ment came into power, was $11,869,- 665. Thus, since the financial stress began, the cost of the Civil Service has been cut down by more than two million dollars a. year. < For a long time past the Repub- licans of the Irish Free State have engaged themselves in a resolute campaign towards the removal of the oath of allegiance to the Brit- ish Crown from the Free State Constitution. As is well-known, thc prime mover in this enterprise is President de Valera, who, whether in or out of ofificc, has never ceas- cd to advocate this policy, has chosen to make it a capital issue, and alike in his public speeches and in the Dail Eireann has persist- ently devoted his talents and ener- gies to the furtherance of this cause. Ho has insisted that it is oi crucial importance and has a direct bearing upon the paramount inter- ests oi Free State control of its own domestic affairs and upon the historic and long-waged writin- versy as to the complete freedom of the Irish people. g ' Nazis have removed from the Berlin City Hull the bust of Ger- many's first president, Fricdrlch Ebert. Yet Ebert, a. saddlcr, says the London Advertiser, W83 one of the noblest characters raised to high station by thc revolution. He was a moderate, kindly, sincere man, who filled his ofllce with a dignity and ability that did much to improve Germany's posit-ion in the estimation oi other nations. The action oi the Nazis reveals the puerile mentality of Germany's new rulers, who are not fit to have touched Ebert's shoe strings. If Glndhi, the Hindu mystic. goes on with the three-necks’ fast which he proposes-and out o.’ which ob- servers believe he will not come alive-the fact should not be over- looked that the inspiration of his folly has nothing to dowith nat- ish policy in India. Gandhi calls the fast "e. process of sell-purifica- ticn," says there are "many rees- ons too sacred to mention" and denies any political motive. He wants "workers of unassnilable pur- ity" in his work for the "untouch- ables’ caste, has found "cases of shocking impurity" in the ranks, and trusts, apparently, that those who are unawrthy will be induced to quit the cause by the thought Canadian Government railways, consisting of the Intercolonial, Prince Edward ‘Island, National Transcontinental and several small lines in the eastern provinces. The United States lines include the lines known as the Grand Trunk New England lines, the Grand Trunk Western, and the Duluth. Winnipeg and Pacific. The Central Vermont Railway, which had been operated by a receiver from 1921 to January i930. wns purchased by the Canad- ian National Railways and, Idem of his seli-lhtgosod starvation. ,ber in the first three months of im being only m. The imports in March numbered 2,879. At the par value of the pound sterling the Vvalue of the three months imports e from cm“; wquld b. “out m1, for useful purposes of 2,306 million 00o, m‘; m; mm); 1mm,“ about cubic feet iii i931. Canada's forest ammo, resources are estimated at 267,733 million cubic feet of standing The drain on Canada‘: forest re- timber, a wtul capable of yivldins sources from fire, insects, fungi and 448,255 million feet board measure windfall is estimated at above 900 of sewn lumbt’ 8nd 1028.767 million cubic iect of merchantablc thousand cords o! PRXPWOd- "@5- timber eiiiiiielly es against s cut‘poles and other smaller melciiflls- In its "Fifty Years Ago“ column the Montreal Gazette reproduces a Chat w» of yours y lama . Barton. MD. THE YOUNGSTEB WHO l8 ALWAYS TIRED» A youngster who formerly liked to play but now is content .to sit in the house or even outdoors and watch the others pill’ ‘because he feels tired all the time is not nor- mal, physically and the cause of his tiredness should be investigated. A mother brought her ten year old boy to her family doctor to find out why he didn't want to play any more, after being practically "the leader of the gang" when he was younger. She stated further that he wasn't interested in his food, which she naturally thought was due to the fact that he didn't play. As the doctor remembered thc youngster as being very active pre- viously, he examined him, found his tonsils in very bud condition from frequent sore throats and advised their removal. The youngster show- ed no improvement for a few weeksg likely due to some oi the polson| from tonsils being still in the sys- tem, but in three months was out playing with the youngsters again. full of energy and with o. real ap-. petite. As you know, tonsils are not being removed to the same degree as they were, as it is felt that the tonsils childhood. However it is still the opinion of the profession that where the tonsils are badly scarred or broken down from frequent sore throats, they should be removed. There are some youngsters who are tired all the time and an exam- ination shows no trouble with teeth, tonsils, or other part of the body. What is likely the cause of this ever present tiredness? It is not likely that the physician could give a definite reason or rea- sons for the tiredness unless he learned everything about the young- sters daily life. Sometimes parents will try to en- courage the youngster to eat more, and will give him some of the "home medicines" to build him up. Dr. Jas. K. Evcrlihrt, Pennsyl- vnnia, in speaking of these young- sters that are always tired, says that not all the drugs in the phar- macopeia will restore such children unless there be proper readjustment of their lives. It will mean, perhaps, withdrawal from school. longer hours of rest and sleep, or removal of any conditions in the home or school that are causing emotional strain. “If chronic fatigue is to be pre- vented or corrected it must be done by right living habits, rather than by the use oi drugs.” fiat‘? THE HAUNTIN‘ TUNE I canna. catch the tune that the Broomc Burn sings: I cauna catch thc crcon that the Broome Burn brings Frae the moor upby-if a‘ thing were still. “Whecsht, whcesht!" I cry tac the whaup on the hill. "Whecsht, wheesht!" I say tae the leaf faln‘ doon- There's the sang a‘ day, canna catch the tune. but I Nicht o‘ blindin‘ roariii‘ storm; "Pwas then I heard it plain, an’ s.’ my hert was warm. Abuiie the birlin’ blast cam’ the low licht sown‘; I learned it a’ at last, I kent the bonnie tune. rain, nicht o‘ O fule tae’ fa‘ asleep—the nicht it was ha lang- O fule that couldna keep bumie’s bonnie sang! I wakcned in a fricht an’ my hcrt gied a stoun: I'd lost the iilt again -i canna catch the tune. the —-A. Hall in Chambcrsls Journal. despatch from Philadelphia print- cd on April 2'1. 188d, telling of a. new word “dudc" (at that time pronounced sometimes as two syl- lables) which "is supposed to have originated in New England and thence to have spread with alarm- ing rapidity throughout thc States." Some dictionaries still describe “dude" as American slang, but others point cut that it originated on the stage in London in 1801-02 and that it is related to “duds” rclcfthcs.) “Dud“ is Gaelic for “rag” and the English “duds" is also said to be iclatcd to Latin and Greek words meaning to put on clothes. Even for slang a iespcctubie fam- ily trcc can sometimes be csiablish- cur-Threats Star Ute “Brain Trust ’.’ Behind‘ Roosevelt (M. Gratan Oieary, in the Ottawa Journal) . MAY 10, 1933 Tools For the Garden. Every spring there is to be replenished in farm“ garden implements. You n M new clippers for the hedul h for the lawn and spraylu; gm” m- the insects. In our’ nun‘: hardware ltcrc you clu mm u” ' Where, people ask-where does board". (to use the description of President Roosevelt get time for one cynic) is William C. Bullitt, l all of those ideas and policies with young man who, 14 years I80- W‘ which he is startling the world? cupied a lot of space in the news- Thc answer is what has come to be papers and was once the subject of known as Roosevlets “brain trust"|a debate in the British Hbuse oi s. group of young radicals, mostly » Commc . Member of an old Phil- journalists and professors who, for adelphia family. Bullitt W18 I i‘!- the time being, are practically the I porer on the Philadelphia Ledger. Government of the United Statesiwcnt to Sweden on Hem’! Fwd’! They erc the real authors oi the famous Peace Ship. Later on he proclamations, executive orders and spent some time on the French messages which. come from the i and Russian fronts as guest of the President like s series of special'Gerrnan High Command, an ex- extras. They produced the farm re- g perlence which landed him in the lief bill and thc much-debated and ‘ United states Department oi State much feared currency measures; as an authority on Austria. and sponsored the bill for the stimula- ‘Germany. Woodrow Wilson took him tion of private industry under Gov- to Paris and in 1919 Bullitt, with eminent supervision: worked out Lincoln steiiens, noted Socialist the Muscle Shoals bill; devised the plan to reduce the gold content oi thc dollar; have been thc inspira- tion of nearly every demand mmcveit has made of Congress. It is one oi the strangest experiments in politics. ' Roosevelt began by recruiting his secretarial stat! entirely from the ranks ‘of journalism. Himself a great newspaper reader (he spends an hour in bed every morning go- ing over all the papers he can have brought to him) and keenly aware of the value 0f publicity. his first “ secretary and Alter VEgo is Col. ‘author, was entrusted with a con"- fidential mission to Russia to make peace overtures to the Soviet Gov- ernment. The mission was sponsor- jed by Col. House, by Wilson and Lloyd George, but when Builitt re- turned, his peace proposals, which involved recognition fo Ionin, was ithrown into the waste-basket, Wil- son refusing to give him an aud- ience and Lloyd George, who flay- cd his report as "a. tissue of lies" speaking of “a journey some boys were reported to have made to Rus- ,sia." l Bullitt resigned from the United Lin“! Mcnemy H°“'9» ("We 01' the I States Peace C- mmissio and pub- - thing you want in gurdm m“. We carry the belt and most gm clent things. nested: m. M‘, house new. The Rogers Hardware COMPANY, LIMITED F ERTILIZERS i" ' Mr. Farmer: It is important that you plan your work so that when the ground is fit to till seeding can be rushed to completion without delay. Now that the roads are dry haul your fertilizers. We can make quick delivery to your team or truck at our Plant 0r can Ship you a carload at short notice. We are here to serve you. Give us a trial. “Island Goods for Island Growers.” The Island Fertilizer Company Limited Charlottetown, P. E. I. 9235-54-61. E. R. BROW serve very useful purposes during . old New York Herald. Louis Howe is a slight, frail man with an extraordinarily wrinkled face, wearing rumpled clothes and an old-fashioned stand up collar; During press conferences last week he stood behind the President as motionless as an Oriental god, fas- cinating by his very ugliness. It is said that he is not as forbidding as he looks, which must be a mercy, and he is undoubtedly Roosevelt's closest political adviser. Howe credited with digging up the "Happy Warrior" phrase with which Roosevelt twice nominated Al Smith, is said also to have been the real author of that still more famous phrase about the "ior- gotten man." He lives at the White House, takes his meals with the Roosovelts, handles the President's private mall, private business and and even his private home in Man- hattan. He is the mun Congress- men and even members of the cab- inet go to when they demand favors. Next to Howe is Stephen Early, a. large, handsome, curly-headed descendant of the confederate Gen- eral Jubal Early. He covered thc Navy Department for the Assoc- iated Press when Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary. followed him in his campaign for the Vice-Pres- idency in i920. Ah easy, likenblc glad-header, he served Paramount Publix as Washington contact man; is thus well equipped {or his job o! steering the wrong cal- lers away from the President. Finally—oompieting the journal- istic ring with ivhich Roosevelt has- surrounded himself-is 001. Marvin Mcnityre, known as the “side-office man." An old-time Washington Times reporter, he handled the Navy's press relations during the war, caught the eye of Roosevelt a veer ago he left the Pethe Newsrecl to go to Albany as Roosevelt's personal press represen- tative and later as a sort of bus- iness manager of his calilpaign, He L! 63910011)’ of the Roosevelt in- ner circle. But the real Roosevelt "brain 5111-919" begins with a man who, un- known up to a year ago, is now Delhi-DB the second most powerful flsvre in the United States. He is Professor Raymond ltioley, a 47- year-old professor of public law at Columbia University. This stocky,| tMIFMI-Yed P518808. who began his career as a. school teacher in Ohio. was first discovered by Al 51111"!- who used him in the prep- aration of his speeches. Last year he accompanied Roosevelt on his campaign travels in a simiibr cap- acity. as a sort of fact-finder and statistician; turning up artery“; election ls s. full-fledged adviser- when Roosevelt met Hoover over war debts. ‘Ndiiy Moley is Assistant Soc. retary of the State Deparfmpnf,‘ stood at the President's elbow last - Week when he conferred with Mac. Donald, Hen-iott and Bennett. Just what he knows or can know about such a question as the tariff re. lotions between Canada and the United States, is hard to say; this all the more so seeing that he is Biilmoscd to be an expert on crim- lnll procedure rather than on in- ternational economics. Neverthe- less he is the power behind the Roosevelt throne. Incidentally, and as mentioned in previous letters, he Willis to be much at home a the Canadian Legation (where met him at lunch) and to be o intimate terms with Minister Her- ridge. 1S} lished a book. It flayed Wilson and [made sensational statement about ‘British and European diplomacy, landed its author into world head- lines and before an inquiry by the lUnitcd States Senate. Now, after i l3 years of silence and eclipse, Bul- ilitt turns up suddenly as one of lRoosevelts advisers, holding down ‘an important job in the State De- ,‘ phrtmeiit. i Another curious Roosevelt advis- ‘cr-said to be particularly inim- iested in tariffs-is Charles William iTauslg, who describes himself rs ‘a manufacturer and author. Taus- -sig, who is not to be confused with ithe famous Harvard economist and tariff expert of the same name (he is not even a. relative) is really a molasses importer, is but 37 years nld. Few people in Washington know anything about him, except that he is president of a molasses com"- ‘puny in Boston, that he once wrote a book about radio, and that he served for some time as a radio electrician in the United States navy. Yet he is one of those who occupy the inner chamber of the President's ear. Other members oi thc “brain trust" arc Rex Tugwcll, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture: Dr. Mor- decai Ezekiel, economist for the sham: department; A. A. Berle of the Reconstruction Finance, Cor- poration: E. A. Goldweiser of the Federal Reserve Board: Herbert Feis, economist of the State Dc- partment, and William I, Meyers of the Farm Board. All are young men, mostly from Harvard or Columbia. They are not popular in Washing- ton. Republicans speak of them with open contempt, old-fashioned Democrats with misgivings; while to experienced permanent oflicials and bureau heads they arc mostly anathema. Yct behind Roosevelt's choice of these little known liberals is a definite idea. He has his own ,cor_icepts of political economy and ‘he deliberately seeks to introduce a new mind into American Gov- emmcnt- He wants to make a Lib- eral party out of the Democrats, _and the "great" men of the party, the obvious advisers and ‘ -‘ the Owen D. Youngs and Al Smiths and Newton D. Bakers-are set in ‘old party lines, against change. That is why a. group of young 0R. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. Noted Physician treated Inc. "$5511"? and obtained per- manent cures of Stomach Conditions such as lndigq. lion. Dyspepsia. Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gutrln 1)“. tress and many other ailments peculiar to the stomach with a prescription which wc have lirocured and sell under the name of Evans Stomach Mix- lure. We alone have the sole rights on this prescription and since selling it have rec- eived numerous tecthnonlniu from satisfied purchasers, Don't fool with yourltouu- ach. serious conditions are likely to arise if you allow 4 yourself to lapse into n chronic state of Gastric trouble. Get n bottle today. Price l5 cents. TIIE 2 IIMSS Mail Orders Given Prompt Another somewhat Tnj-‘Sifiljldllli; member 0f Roosevelt's "collegiate! ‘ttention. 146 Richmond St» radvml, an ghgngirig the financial. ndministrativeand economic life of the United States more drastically than it has been changed b)‘ 18B- islation within 50 years. New Leaves To Canadian History (Winnipeg Free Press) Canadian scholars are adding, by their industrious researches. new leaves to Canadian History. T0911 are a number of gaps in the. N- cords, and places where thc talc is unsatisfactorily vague, and ti"! patient labor that is new: applied to fill in these pages is worthy 0f merit and encouragement- Whut Mr. H. A. Innis is dointi fur Canadian Fur ‘Trade. BN1 Di‘- D, A, MaoGibbon has done for Canadian Wheat Trade. Dr- A- R- lv.. Lower is doins T01‘ 9011mm“ Lumber 'I‘radc. It is 8°°d news w llear thu-t Dr. on has recently received an aururd Loan thc $00181 scjéneg Research Council for usc in competition of his study o‘ Canadian Lumber ‘Prods in We - nineteenth century. This research is not to result in a mere compilation of docuinPii-l-S and annals, but is an apllmiwii l” the gppreclatlOli oi a hew isnsish- and French-spf-‘bkiiw Gilliam“ nationalism by the study 0i a staple trade. This point of view. which seeks knowledge on Canad- ian eccnmnlc history, as well m! social trends and politcai science theory, is throwing fresh light on the development of Canada's nat- lonhood. Dr. Lower will spend the summer studying the origins of the old Fire, ALiIfe, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown Timber Trade in Elnglliid. and wll‘ make comparative studies in thc Baltic area, looking through re- cords in the old cities of Danzig Stockholm and Leningrad. Students of Canadian History owe o. debt to the indefatigable re- searches tha-t scholars from coasi io coast are putting forth to make the records complete. - . Are They Canadian? ‘ (Toronto Globe) f S0 rarely does the Caulk abroad give cause for his bc g considered mi undesirable alien, that reputed sabotage by certain Dominion muskrats in the Irish Free State, who are flci-‘uied °i threatening the safety of the shin- non River hydro plant, cannot but cause distress to every pntrioiii Canadian at home. One would liki to be able to show that their it- tacks on the hydro embankment: were mudc without criminal intent, nnd were mcrcly u. manifestation oi that irritation which is aroused is certain Canadian breasts by n" mention of the word "Hydro." But, on second thoughts, is it I proved fact that these annuals an really Canadians? Two only, according to till cabled despatch, settled in Ireland originally, while an Irish fnrmcrrc- cently shot thrcc or four. Is it not most probable, then, that the do linqueiits are the grandchildren, or even the great-grandchildren. i! the Canadian emigrants, that tilt! are actually Irish muskrats of‘_ adian ancestry and that they hi" naturally adopted the provcrhlll Irish attitude of bring “ngin ill Government"? ‘ u|c|tr:Y e .7‘ NlCll0U0l| i.