PAGE FOUR THE CHARM YITETOWN GUARDIAN TllE a existential»... GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded In 1881f ‘dent: LleuL CoL W. Chester S. Mobile Vlce-Trelldent: J. R. Burnett, I‘. J. I. peanut-y: Lleut. Col. D. A. Maclfilnnon. 0.5.0. Idltor end Managing P‘ . .I. B. Burnett, IIJJ. Auoclsto Editors: Frank Walker and Lleut. In A. Burnett. R.C.N.V.R. (On Active Semocl “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." . iiiiiifsfilv iovriiiiisii-rifzafiall I Mr. Howe Once Again 'i It is doubtful that any menrber of the King Government has achieved the reputation fur making more foolish speeches than Hon. C. D. Howe, Minister of Reconstruction in the Fed- nl Cabinet. hlziritiniers will remember par- ticularly his vulgar and impertinent reference to the “yappin_;" of thcse provinces when we dared to ask for our rights at Ottawa. liut in the speech lic dt-livcretl before the Canadian Club of Chicago last ivt-ck, .\Ir. Howe stirpas- ICCl himself and attaincrl a new altitude of ir- responsibility wlicn heydcclaretl that conscrip- tion in (‘anada “is rather a political question than a question of meeting an urgent need." Ailzilyving this statement, the Sivdncyi Port‘- Recorrl iiiitls that it contafiis two obvious fzllsé- hoods. time is that lllcrt- is no “urgent need" of l'(‘lllftll't"t‘lllllll\ for tluizulzrs overseas forces. notwith-taiitliitg t‘..i.~....~i halstoifs insistence on this point. ziiit-r a tour of the bzlttlefronts and after conferring with the officers. in command of our ovcrscas (livisions. The other is that the (lClllllllrl for the dispatch of draftces from the lloiilu .'\rm_v to liuropc without dclay' is part of a. political game on the part of the King Government's opponents, designed to embar- rass the rcgimc at Ottawa. .>\nd this notwith- standing thc known iact that this issue has been iorcetl lllltlll ihc country‘ by the rcsignatioil from the Cabnict of the Blinistei‘ of Defence, whose long and tiiiuzlvering fidelity to the Lib- eral party will ccrtaiiily stiffer nothing by coni- pari-tni with thc rccoi-rl of .\lr. C. l). Howe. It is inconceivable that .\lr. Howe would dare tn make so brazen and senseless a speech in Canada, where the facts are known,—-ivhere the Canadian Legion is demanding an inimedi- ate draft from the llotiic .\i'ni_v with a united voicc, and wlicrc Liberal newspapers and Lib- eral members of parliament are speaking out earnestly in support of that demand. But in so speaking in the United States the Minister of Reconstruction has done vastly more to pre- judice the Canadian \\'lll‘ effort abroad than he could have done by giving voice to any such nonsense in Canada where he is too well known to do any harm. Ii there is a disturbing political aspect t0 this issue which is now stirring the whole Dominion, cvcryonc knows its origin. It has had its genesis and dcrivcs its sustenance from Mr. I\'itig’s dctcrmiiizition to stand iu with the Quebec anti-conscriptiouists at all hazards. There is no reason why politics should play any part in this question of reinforcements, and thcre will bc lllt danger of anything of the kind if Mr. King and his colleagues give honest and prompt effect to the will of the people, as ex- pressed in the overwhelming majority recorded 1n the IllElll]tf>\\'C'l' plebiscite of April I942. Eden 0n Controls Rt. Hon. Anthony Eden is not in love with controls of ally kind, esticcially with regard t0 industry. “To defeat the totalitarian States our people have ticccptci] rcgiineiitzition and controls to an cxteiit tievcl‘ before known in our history, but though we use these weapons we do not lovc them. Though we employ them for a spccificpurtiosc to dcfczti our encuiy in war we have no intention to perpetuate them for their Own sake in pcacc." _\ll_\' attempt to abolish all controls the moment the war was won would land us in chaos: ordered reduction ‘must be our ohjcct. lii iiitcrtiatioilzil affairs the cap- ital lesson today was that of the iutcrtlcpcutl- evil to a greater or less degree. The only dif- ference is that the C.C.F. is the only major poli- tical party in Canada which enforces machine control all the way down the line without ex- ception and without compunction; the only party which maintains as a matter of principle and a universal practice that the members of our legislative bodies shall represent the party, and not the people who elect them. “The whole basis of democratic government is that the people shall be governed by the f<-‘P' resentatives of t e people. "The whole trend of the ‘far-reaching prin- ciple‘ announced by Mr. Winch is that thfi people are to be governed by representatives of a party or faction. "In theory at least, while a candidate for election may be supported by, and declare his adherence to the principles of, a political party. his first allegiance is to the people of his cou- stitueucy. He represents all the people of that constituency, those who voted against him a5 well as those who voted for him. "When he speaks and votes in the legis- lative body to which he is accredited by the pcO- ple of‘ his district, he speaks and votes for the people, not for a party machine 0r the film-WIT of a faction. “The principle which Mr. Win61! 1135 enunciated —— the principle that exactly the op- posite is the case-is an evil and dangeroul principle. ~It is a. principle which is already too much accepted in our political lifc. and wheth- er or not the C. C. F. chooses to stand’ or tall by it, it is a principle which cvcry bchcrrl‘ H1 democratic government should oppose and up- root wherever it is found." l:Dl IURIAI. NUI tS T. B. Week. n g n The Navy Week. . U U U I I lVelcome the cauvassers with a smile and open purse. Ii I? The education campaign is opening up and broadening out i l! in m a Prime Minister King must have becn pretty scared politically when he condescendctl to consult the leaders of the opposititm before opening Parliament. I! U l Au Adelaide factory which had been mak ing hand grenades has switched over to alarm clocks. Before the war Australia imported 600,000 clocks a. year and tnade none herself. What has this province developed as a mrinan- ent asset? at n ¥ Isaac Todhunter, English mathematician, born this date i820; was senior wrangler at Cambridge in i848; elected a fellow of tbs Royal Society in 1862 on the publication of his Magnum Opus on Eticlid, atloptetl as the standard in British educational institutions; author of many other treatises on mathematical subjects. i U I i I There is plenty niotiev in town and coun- try these days, the trouble with many of the possessors is how to spend it and make it cir- uulate. To some extent it is going on‘ entertain- larger portion is being prudently used to pay off mortgages, past indebtedness, and iu in- vestments for the inevitable rainy day. This still leaves a goodly proportion for the stores to pick up in the disposal .of necessary and itse- ful articles for Christmas and after. i I i‘ i Revolutionary changes in clothes were pre- dicted at a recent tneeting of the American ments, gimcracks and joy-ridingLbut the far" Franco wants n place at. the peace conference. You have only ta look back over European history Slélclc ltkxdtti: realize tne pure, im- a utera rass of.’ this o l, -—0l-lBWB Cltlzen. pm s“ A physlehn says that ‘III: best remedy for insomnia ls a drlnk of whisky every fifteen minutes. ‘Plus carries on the modern custom o! glvlng new and elegant names to thlngs; what. used to "bender" ls now npy"- — Peter-borough Etxamlner. Goderlch has extinguished Ill! debenture debt and has $170,000 invested 1n Vlctory Bonds ' future needs. It; happy 1111mm] lwslllon ls a tribute to e com- Detence of lts municipal admlnls- tratlorn-Hamllton Spectator. Just one remark alone that Mrs. Roosevelt made not. long agq to ‘a friend of mlne ls eloquent enough to shin my respect and regard. She was asked: “Mrs. Roosevelt, why do you go all over the place. 83d- ding here and there; why don't you stay put?" the looked at her in- lllll-illol‘ and quietly replied, “You s_ee, my deur young man. there are $111195 when I have to be the pre- sident's legsF-Elsa Maxwell ln New York Post. All the organized entertalnment. And hospitality that. can be offer- ed by the Windsor Active Service Club wlll net be more welcome than the cookie jar that has been established there. Every man or ivomazi ln uniform will get a thrill {Jul 0f digging lnto this receptacle icr a few of the baked goodies mat wll brlng u taste of home.—Wind- sor Star. Firmly brushing aside the pos- slbllity that the Court. of Ch ncsry nilght some day be asked to ap- prove of crossword puzzles or bezl- que as nn educational instrument, Mr. Justice Valsey decided that. a. legacy for the establlshment. of a chess tournament for the youth o! Portsmouth was a valld charitable notes By The Way A‘ '_____ PUBLIC FORUM THE IIOG INDUSTRY sesmfwheii thigh-P EJIA’ r cre ary o - - - - - uttve Livestock Markeflnn Hoard. ands a contribution to the forum he always gives us somthlng worth reading. His letter ln_ Saturday's Guardian on ttie not: ludustry has no doubt been read widely by all who take an interest ln the trade of this Island. Apart. moreover. from zlvlnlz the farmers very valu- able insistence ln marketing thelr hogs Mr. Glllles ls proving to them the great value to all farmers ol the tic-operative sbult. Now Mr. Gillies has promlsed a second letter and ln that lmter I am going to ask hlm to ICDLV to certain specific questions.- Prlor to the war the trade with the Motherland tn bacon. poultry. eggs, butter and to scme extent: ln chem, was practically controlled bv Denmark. ‘Ihev had represen- tatives ln all the larger cities and towns .elther as consuls or sales e- aents .ancl bv these men all com- plulnts and suaeestions for lmbro- immcnt were sent rclzu-larlv w the Danish government. S0 soon us 1h‘: war ls over Denmark will no doubt return to this nlr._n_ and I would like to see Mr___ Gillies‘ opinion as to the ticivlsabintv o1 Prince Eu- wartl Island hLlVlllL!_ at least. one spacial representative travullnig lrcm point to uclut ln England unu Scotland, constantly seekln; lion;- ularlty tcr He.‘ l. products in the retail stores. e-_ Mv second question would be as to the titlvlsabilitv of having all Island hogs slaughtered and dres- sed on the Island and subltcled to strict. l-lovcrnmcnt inspection aiulv first class shipments _b_elniz nl- lowed to be sent to Lrltain. There are, of course. sutisfncalrv packrrs in other Darts of Canada‘ buutlv. Island bacon would lose its toen- tlty lf shipped from Montreal. n- part from the fact that there are trust. Those profound experts who sometimes plead for a bigger board to make a harder game should remember this judicial compliment. They might intro- duce the Judge as a new piece. His place has lon been neglected, and lll5 move mig t be decided by internatl el conference. - Man-- chester uardlan. In all the planning for uvorl-l peace one proposition appears to be assured of acceptance. It is that. the maintenance of law and order develops upon the most. powerful nations and because of this the great powers — Britain. the United States. Russia, and China, and France, later ctr-mus". have a permanent place and ivbat will amount to an overriding vote ln the organlzatlon charged with preventing future aggression. -- Toronto Telegram. A survey conducted by the Com- munity Nutrition Committee in n cross-section of Waterloo County sCIIOOIS, ln ivlilch pupils were rc- qulred to keep a score .sliect and enter the dnyls meals through die week to show the nutritive value of the food consumed, nrcvltlcs ill:- basis for corrective efforts through an education campaign, the Kitch- enet‘ Record repcrts. The repcrt showed that out of "good nutrition,” 24 prl‘ =nt under “fair nutrition" and 3L6 p cent under "poor nutrition." 33' There ls a new inducement to "hasten the end of the ivar in cm: announcement that chemlml b"Cf‘.l.— ment; of fibres. developed ln rc- cent months for war uses. has al- ready attained such a state of pur- fectlon that women can be assured their silk stockings will be run-- proof when the new process ls at)" plied to hosiery. It ls flll clue, the explanation goes, to a deposit of submicroscopie iirallts of sand or silica vrhitli prevents the fibres from slipping-out of the positions Chemical Society, by adding to the tensilc strength of textile fibres. New treatments make it possible to produce stockings that will not run. trousers that will not shine, suits that will not ivrinkle even when wet and woolleiis that will wear three-times as long without chang- ing the feel or texture 0f the cloth. Use of phosphor crystals in fluorescent lamps, it was also forecast, would illuminate workplaces and lnto ivliicn they are knitted. For the men. the same process means slllls that won't wrinkle or wilt, that wlll never pick up a shine and will always retain their creases. - Boston Post This ls I story about a Kenslng- ton lady ln the old "blitz" period. A warden tiammered at. the door of a Acnslngton house late at. night and when a slightly dist-levelled laoy appeared he told her that a extra freight charges to that city. Under this svsk-m our farmtrs could br- ltuiisczl vxactly as to the lzist. fcctl and other methods of ralslniz their nous in oratr to lzlve the Dllfllflllllll‘ ‘ lilv of bacon de- slredbv the British ‘lleonlemnd lnas much as Island grain ls not sub- jected to szovcrnnicnt inspection. would it not b: advisable lo have lilo farmers f: cu thtlr hugs cxclil- sivrlv on Western uraln of a cer- tnln inspected oilullty. If Prince E mrcl Island could Rain control oi . large share of the British bacon trade the farmers would have to raise for more 1103s than has bean the case during the war. Moreover with the bacon trade we wculd also obtain a like share of the drctsd potzliry, eggs, but- tlr, etc. for Illa buvcrs are the szimi. lu all lines. A paint wcrthv of not: ls that Denmark ls not llkclv to suffer from the war as Holland llllS been doing. If the Allles attack Dciztnarl: Copenhaacn would be lll- jurtetll but not likelv the country dis r cts. I am. Sir, ctc. ILILS. IIEMMING . l my answer to .Mr. Herbert Johnston cf Si. Dun- stairs College, by admitting that. realize nothing I can say wlll be of the least consequence in changing one iota of his convic- tions on any paint discussed. Slncc he claims that “no institu- tion has done more than Colum- bia Teachers‘ College and no ln- d' " rial has doncunoripthmllohns Dei y to vitlatc It‘. Nortn America destroy whatever vestiges of civilization irorc to be found on this contin- ent" and since I am a graduate of Columbia and am an admirer of John Dewey, lt, naturally fol- lows that anything I may soy must also be false and pernicious 1n the eyes of Mr. Johnston and those who agrce with hlm. (I here register a mlld pro- test. Is lt not a trifle drastic for Mr. Johnston to state that, “the suspicion, now become a demons- trated certainty, has long been growing" that Columbia Univers- ity and John Dewey have been largely influential in destroying "ivl-latcver vestiges of clvlllzzitlon were to be found on this contin- ent"? Have all vestiges of clvll- lzatlon been destroyed on this contlnenb-more partlcularly by lmpllcntlon ln the United States since there the evll influences iveri- most felt? Is clvlllzatlon flow- -». -—Cuudlun Army Photo gro of Latin. Rightly or rand of t-uitrsc I believe rightly) the young; people crninut sce any con u ll2~\‘.‘l2(3ll Com- mon School . and life as it ls lived in 1914, but. they do see the great, bearing that science upon their every netlvlty. Again, I believe that tagln" . llvflfofiffnon §hoot would lead to more emphasis upst. ‘the teaching of English. ‘This t.. e ls a most desirable aim. I do not know whether the neglect o: Engllsli can be lald entirely ta the presence of Lsitlii, but ls it. not: s contributing factor? When I utlvocme science ln- stead of Lzitln ln the Ctrznmon Schools I am not advocating n scientific rather than a. llbcrat or classical education. I sin ‘v do not believe that. the ol‘ “Tflllljly amount Latln taught, and the way lt ls taught, tn the Common Sclpolr. bearl- tiny relationship to a clas- sical, liberal or cultural educa- tion! I bellcve that teaching Eng- llsh to the pupils in sucli u way as to lead them to study the great works tn English would indeed make for I cultural education, I am no proponent of any one way of llfe. There wlll always be. I llullt‘, those interested ln delv- lng lnto the past, those looking toward the future, and those ln- more . . fighting men. To keep going; in the face of nerve-shattering mortar fire; tn hold fast against the deafening‘ concussion of artillery, until it seems that flesh ccr’s shelves. and blood uni! nerve and bone can stand no . that is the dailly task of thousands of Canadifa It is not enough that tht so men be fed . . . they must be foil well. Thu-y must have the strength, the stamina and the slaying power to sm ash the resistance of an enemy that is desperate, yet stil l powerful. They must have the finest food that Canada caregiver them. If you miss your favorite seafood, remember . . . during the past four years nearly 4,000,000 cases of canned salmon have gone to the Government for distribution to the fighting fronts and civiliu ns in the war areas. As soon as conditions permit, Clover Leaf Salmon will return to your BRITISH COLUMIBIA PACKERS LIMITED VANCOUVE R _ yfl-AlIA-WOOD-IEHJANDB?P. l. Lzgngmiffgj ll l-V. PRINCE NOVA lDAlLllp-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) U URING NOVEMBER Will leave Wood M ands I0 a. rn., 2.00 p. m. i JJNCIIES NORTIIUMI ‘tERLAND latlons now available. I leave to you!‘ Jlldlmfi Bl W118! relationship te amount .cil Latin taught tn our Common Sc bears o Matthew Arno) 11's of a Cu tural Education. hools | ldea - ' NOVA SCOT Ih-PR-INCE EDWARD ISLAND F FERRY SERVICE has _ CllAll ILOTTETOWN. P. E. L Service wlll be tdlleontlnued after November 10th. i i — d and minty ltrlnza I heard the ._.’ O CANADA Will leave Caribou 12.00 noon and 4.00 b. m. SERVED FERRIES LIMITED my '_"I'1l0l1f1l!1;$l'lQY have murdered their eluotuiefthan they. h; shall not ll with the slain. breath shall blow 8s thi e light was showing ln an upper ivin- bill his dOW. ' beg your pardon," snld W the lady, “that's not. a light-It's an incendiary bomb. And ll you don't; disturb us again my sister and I wlll put tt out." This ls the best. from a. Keuslrigton lady since the burglary case litter the last war. The chlef witness was n. Kenslngton lady. who deposed _. “I heard a noise and a metallic sound. so I got up and went to the top of the stalr and called out, ‘If there ls anyone there, wlll he say what. he ls doing ln this htusc?‘ “Of course." she added, "I spoke ln the third person." well WHS lt said that. Hamnstead ls as Hlimpstead does but Kenslngtcn homes better and cheaper, also brighten street signs with vari-coloured tubing. I l fl I Thomas Huxley says: Englishman cannot get; culture out. of hls B shakespeare, hls Mllton, nelther tn my bellel’ wlll the prqloundest study of Homer and Suphoclea. vlrgll and Horace. glve lt. lio him." I am, Slr, etc, RUHAMAII SCHEINFELD FRANK P. 8.: Among the many quota- tlons given by Mr. Johnston to prove the dlabollc effect in ion clv- lllzntlon of John Dewey 1nd hls school, ls tlils quotatlgig» from John Dewey himself: " . lucatlon therefore ls a process of llvlng mid not a preparation for future llvlng." Dewey's emphasis on growth - the child should be ermg ln other countries? Is civ- lllzatlon less destroyed on other continents?) My answer la not ln the nature of n defense, but to shed further light (as I see 1t) on the simple matter of Latin ln the Common Schools to be replaced by element.- nry science. I dld not. begin by quoting authorities or “pnradlng" Columbia. I was challenged w glve chapter and verse and I dld so. But. I think, as I thought, that every teacher. present pupil, former pupil and parent, has a rlght, out of hls experlence, to voice lils opinion on this subject. Sometimes t ls necessary, tn this age of specialization, to accept that authority whose conclusions acr tlffds bkdw d l I lulln nu e ree an a niz v - hll llvlna Msvmphvlu 1811a." terested more ln the immediate present. We need them all, and according to my philosophy of education each should be given the opportunlt to develop ln hls own way. owever, education should lead to an overlapping of interests, The man of science may and often does read the classics ln hls leisure. The scholar often takes to a trade. The ideal educational system wlll afford‘ on- portunltles for development alonk l lines. There Ls a great deal more to be said on thls subject and I hope s- great many express their views. both for and against. This ls n. democracy. When all have had ence of nations. "Nations can no longer go their own way and scek to be masters of their own destiny regardless of their neighbours’ fortune. Netitrality has become a delusion and immedi- ltc frontiers nffcr no defvncc." None would dispute thc iiccd of some international‘authority which must command stifficicitt zirmed strength t0 enable it to enforce its decree in a world not yet ready to accept control bv international law. If the new iiitcriizitiotizil ordci‘ was to have. a fair chalice of sticccss it iiitist be based upon the closest understanding bctirccn the three great Powers-the LTS, the Soviet Union, and the A denial usually finds it hard to overtake a lie once it gets twenty-four hours start. A case iii point is the report that President Roose- velt vented blasphemous expletives at the ex- pcnsc of the voting tnachitie when he voted at Hyde Park. Miss Mildred M. Todd, a Denic- cratic election inspector. said she did not hear President Roosevelt use profanity, or any other words, while he was in the voting machine booth. Miss Todd said she was sitting "just a few feet from the voting booth" when the —Helen Snaldlfll- l Attention Swine Breeders Now ll the time In mil"! agnlnll v The Brit- thelr sa British Commonwealth of Nations. ish Commonwcztlth and linipire could make an ever-growing contribtititni to its record of serv- ice to niankintl. “lazuli no pessimist about the future," he said. “l have faith in our people. I have confidence in their destiny. In the last four years we have played no mean part. We have led the world at its darkest hour. We can lead it, too, into the sim-splaslied periods that break beyond.” Provided we keep our armour bright and otir ardour unimpaired. —Pa rly Discipline In spite of the desires of the people of his Constituency, the British Columbia executive of file C. C. Ff refused to allow Mr. I-I. W. Her- ridge, M.I_..A., to run as a Federal candidate in Kootenay West. The decision "involvctl principles of far- reaching importance," declared Ilarold Winch, leader of the party in British Columbia. "Mr. lVinch is correct in his statement but, we believe, ivroiig in his stand," commends the Vancouver Nvtvr-Ilcrnld. "The principle of party executive control of elected representa- tives is indeed of very far-reaching import- ance. It goes to the very foundation of our democratic system, and it has an evil and per- nicious effect on that system. "It is not confincd to the C. C. l’. by any poem. Other parties suffer from the same President voted. “I did not hcar him say a wordtwhile he was in the booth." she said. add- ing she did not recall that the voting machine failed to work. i; n A graduate of McGill University and one of that institution's women pioneers in the field of economics has added further laurcls to licr career in American politics. She is Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse, Connecticut Secretary of State from 194i to r942 who defeated the sec- oud district Republican incumbent, Representa- tive john D. McWilliams, to become a. Demn- cratic congresswoman, the second congress- woman, elected by the state of Connecticut. Born in Victoria, B. C., Mrs. Woodhouse, who was formerly Margaret Chase Going, entered McGill in i908 electing economics as her field in the davs when few women devoted their at- tention to that study. Four years later she re- ceived a B.A. degree from McGill. and in i913 was granted the M.A. degree, the subject of her Master's thesis being “Women and Prison Re- form in the United States." At present a pro- fessor of economics at the Connecticut Col- lege for Women, Mrs. Woodhouse was at on: time assistant in the department of political economy at the University of Chicago. She is also at the present time director of the Wo- men's Institute of Professional Relations. She is the mother of two children, ouc of her sons being in the United States Army Air Force. I! it: lan. Jeanne Paullrrwas l6 when ln 1040 she Joined the clandestine ic- the downfall o became a message carrier edness for he years. was caught. been able to would have le tails about the organization which she belonged. Fbr more than R Year she was held ln prison. then secret from her. “You wlll nothing from me ln spite of your efforts. 1 am French." lntervals between one lengthy ex- amination and torture and another Jeanne Psulln passed her all c tlvlty. France to them. until the exasper- ated Gestapo officials transferred her to a solitary ll. Then came at. last trlal and sentence of death. Jeanne laughed at the grave faces of her judges. Then she rald slm- ply, when they asked her lf had anytlil to say: "I have worked for ll erly, I have done my duly. I can allow myself t0 dle." Shortly before her execution she simiz again. this time "Auld Lung Syne." It was the last song she sank. And 'now her trlends who shared the captivity of the young martyr gather together from time to tI-ra and ln memory of her they slug “Auld Lang Syne." -- from Newl Prom France. goes by faitor. — Manchester Guar- slstance movement ln France alter f her country. She nntl gatherer of lnformatlon, and went. about her dangerous task with re- markable bravery ancl cool-head- One day sne If the enemy liad make her talk they amed invaluable de- t0 Beatlngs of the most brutal kind, torture, failed to drag her set 1n tlmfl heerlng her companions ln cap- Stte sang old folk-songs of seem truest to you, where exact knowledge ls essential. But expert- czicc ls enough to guide you ln this matter. Nor shall I be drawn into such vast flelds of differing schools of thou ht us "What ls Man", "What ls lis Destiny?" My own knowl- edge ls lot. lnflnltesmal, my wls- dom too llmltetl, for my oplnlons tn have much validity. I agree wltli Mr. Johnston. that such questions must be answered ln one way or another before we can re- organlze our educational system (and that includes the home, the y, may the majority be on my slde, but ln an event, the oplnlon of the ma orlty should prevail. I shall end 5y quoting Matthew Arnold, the fa ous proponent of the classical or cultural education, and Thomas Huxley, the areal scientist. Not because lt. ls neces- sary; to this dlscourse, but because lt interesting. Matthew Arnold says: "When l speak of knoivlng Greek and Rn- man Antlqulty, therefore, as a help to knowing ourselves and the world. I mean more than the knowledge of so much vocabulary, church, the press, tr»: radlo, the movlng pictures and many other factors besides the school) so that (my goal) men may llve together ln brotherly love. I can only my that I bel eve John Dewey u among the great: educators who are working toward that goal. Mr. Johnston does not. No con- clusion has been reached by any educator, and It may be a long while before ll: wlll be reached. thlnk the question of Latin does llttle to solve the great problem, but does have an important ef- fect on the happiness and well- belng of our youn people. and so merits serious dacusslun based on experience. I believe (to come back for the last time to the subject In hand) that. taking out the Latin and aubstltutlng elementary chemistry and physlcs. in the Common Schoo , wlll promote the he l- 11058 of our young eople, first y prolonging their sc ool llfe. From what. many have told mo, a large so much grammar, so many por- tlons o! authors ln the Greek and Imtln languages. I mean knowing the Greeks and Romans. and their llfe and genius, and what. they were and dld ln the world: what we Bet from them and what ltl value." Note: that can all be dome through flne IUI Olll‘ TIIID ACHII NHJARDS number would have completed GI l0, lmd bola-toe been hiflt ‘llNiMrNl growing ln leamlniz. mt: merely absorbing knowledge for the fut- ure. Doeénk. sound very wlalosuit l} s n e I TENEBRIS I timed lnto a symphony from a conuuered country. They weiae conque cu ton. those us. and the wlnd tn the reed was the wlnd of desolation ' -out o! the dark I bu rd the mus come- and th»: ulr tn the D190 Bu: nlr of the lost cltv and the brass the crv of m lllutlon and the silence its prayer ‘or nlty and the beat of the drum be beat: of the ylelded drum. y It was izrcy muslc as all the streets were rev. weary us tun feet are weary. un- comnrehendlng i, as scnsc that. suffers the- slnule n. ‘ lgnornntvbf its birth, immlnl lful at I‘ wam enliflst. that; I h i .- s a u o out: t. ‘the shndow of a wins ml in the sun ' l and he full of l shot bird. ‘yet those vlollns dld mm’; than by Illllll tho moat elleetlvl remedy on the market. MACS PIG-WORM TONIC POWDER lllntrgcliill inlliohlliirgriilivniiilialiifi my: the helllh of vuur 0|!!- ce 85 cenll her lb. MACS AMMONIATED BRO NC H IAI. COM POU N D Belleves acute Bronchllla odlo Group. Brvnfilll nterrh. Oolulu end Cflldl- Prloe l0 cent-l a but!!! OINTMINT "med! ext MACS PILI A ale and elflelenl for Internal and h 2.3‘ “"0115” ‘ll-hilt? ‘ffihlifklgk titer;- i l Mira-gill" ‘h bgiieilloclll eleoluln martini“: g’ It In ulrlngcnt. Get n III today Price 60 oonll ‘I'll! 2 inns Ill Great Georze 51"" . n . lthelr piegcgpi-munlc: wlr thel 0| . rmmlfi m" MXVIQ-tdf?‘