I. ;} p» M i. t’; l l Y . w. ..-- ~1u-.;_..~;-£~l1‘i‘-'.‘“<'."F1j , __ f;-'..-<" i Y'- ..c.,.._:_:.._,-,?___ .-. up. .5‘ .. l. .1 F. v v. u y: L Ernst roux g y TIIE - GIIRIILUTTETOWI Glllllllllll v Mllnfly (launder: I81) Llnt- Col. W. Churn u. Islam Vkv Preuldtll J IL BUMP" F. J, l. Idllu and hlllflluf ulna-fur J. ll. qunru, r. J. l. IIIIIQII’) Lhul. Col. ll. A. lwllnuvl- ll. IL 0- juouluu lfdltun haul Walker and D. I. Oink lllillCllPilflb BATIK aLfi per gnu no mhnaur Jalhend M (filly “Jo per you un uihnuf-vr Illllilrd to P. IS. Inland I Jam pa: ynu nu lnlnrwe, mailed to cum- ud IJ l. Ale-inbu- And“ Bureau u! Uireuhumun “The Strongest Memory 1s Weaker than the Weakest hlk."__ FRIDAY, MARCH ll, 1938 ‘zziibeial shaxlovilisoxarfgz: The grungy {'.,..:-!<~-t~.r»l lliidependcittl zritici-e- ti; iunrarranted cull iiiexcu-alfle Pre- mifl- _\|\gu~' XIQL-bgiggtiill irrelevant discussion "m the tariff, a Iiurt-ll." lie-feral Ilue-tion. in a debate in the Xova $colia Legi-lzlture \\‘llU\L‘ jurisdiction i- Cbflilllell to 1h»; local government of the l‘rovEn-.~t>. It revall- that wilen Professor Rogers. spr: ‘ng for 1hr Xlaclli-nziltl fiovt-rn- fllenl. loaded lite relwrvl- of llu: limes fi-milnis- sion of to}; with ~ -!Il'li£i m» re-pl-fting Vwlvrhl tariff policv. lit. only he-lpt-d 1o make the re- port of 11m body 1i fin-co i: turned out 1o be. ln lii- -u ' '~ Pilaf-ill of 1hr: (‘lriff tirotet‘ ti. ‘I. Pia-i aiall \\'-~ iii-t a- IIllICll "off t-Qtlt-J‘. “wired p‘. 4 a- llilpillll a "foul". as Preliiier .\l rlnrt with hi.- lrlllliflllfl and currenc) l iretlit t'll'.t“llll‘l‘.f~. For the trlrifi ~' the ~'tll‘t' watt-gory a» hauling, both being -pi-wili f. rl-~~-r1.l~d for the juri-Ilictiou of the lh-n . . Ill lfitrlizuiiem by the urilfen wurll of the llriti-h North .\n'.erica .\ct. “_\’.,r do“ .\lr_ Xlacdonailtl .~l|I'Ztl\‘ uith any authority fur the people of Nova Scotia in hi» parti-zln cl.'iiln lilat the Xatitnlzll Policy has been ‘injuriotv? to this Province." says our Syd- m-y cnnteiiiprirary. "flue doubt< that in mak- ing such a claim ll; =peaks even for present-day Nova Fcotizi l.ll)I‘I'(lllslll. fie that as it nmy, his complaint. if he has any. is against nillhing and nobody but the electoral verdict of the pcoplfl of Canada. who have repeatedly endorsed tariff protection at the polls. And in that verdict a ntajority of the electors of Nova Scotia have as repeatedly concurred. To show Premier blac- dnimld’; position even more 11111enable.——if that were [lU.~.~llll(',——$lllQ only needs to recall the air- plzine trip his lllini-ter of ‘Hines. Hon. Xlichael llivyt-r, ntzide la-t _vc:lr tn fnnuva. to urge before the Tariff lloltrrl the need of tariff protection to Nova. Scolin fuel.” The Pnsl-ltreord might have added that Pro- fessor Rogers is nuiv a portfolio member of the Mackenzie King (ioverlnnent, and only recently declared that to disturb the National Policy Wlllllll mean the disruption of Confederation. So much for the con-latency of our tariff re- formers! , The Camplbell Government committed the same lll('X(‘1l.~£Il)l(‘ blunder in overloading its brief before the lfvuvell Commission with long quota- tions from Prlfllfxfilfl’ Rogers’ academic treatise on the tariff question. It even included the Rogers criticiun of the Duncan Commission for not having \\‘;i_st<:rl its time on this irrelevant sub- ject. \\'h_v the (iovv-rmnetlt did so is still a nl_v-tl:r_v. Perhaps an explanation will be asked for at the cmning session of the Legislature. The Test Of Statesmanship Reviewing .\lr. Bennett's great achievement in negotiating the Empire trade pacts, the Mon- treal Star says: "The only telling criticism of the Ottawa Conference that has ever been heard is that he may have done too well for Canada. Faced by the most astute and experienced statesmen of the whole Empire, the Canadian Premier-a novice in the jolr-dominated the gathering and pretty well wrote his own agreement._ The Canadian victory was so complete that we have been apologizing for it ever since. Mr. Bennett was equally successful in dealing with \Vashington. He found an American tariff blockade against this country that crippled our progress and starved not a few of our domestic activities. He broke the blockade and opened the way to all the better feeling we have experienced since. “When financial disaster fell on the Old Coun- try and Great Britain dramatically “went off the gold standard." we had in Mr. Bennett a Premier who knew automatically and at once what it all meant. l-le did not have to go, hat in hand, to the bankers and great financiers to find out what to do. He was one of them. This does not mean that he acted in their interest. He once remarked to a friend that he had taken the advice of the bankers only once,and then he had turned out to be wrong. He acted for the nation: he acted the very night the news came —-and he saved this country millions of dollars. “That Canada should have had a Premier cf this calibre during these days of extreme per- plexity and great danger was a blessing for which we have not been perhaps sufficiently thankful. It was no time for political “pussy- footing" and party marloeuvring. It was a time for swift leadership by statesmen who knew the terrain and were not susceptible to interest- ed and selfish counsel. It may be that men of this quality do not make good "back-slappers" or ‘bnby-kissers,” but they do make the best possible working rulers for a careless democracy when an unexpected storm strikes out of the heavens." The Station Touch With reference to the so-called confessions of the Bolahcvist leaders. it rnust be borne in mind that unless Ihev themselves are prepared to give their lives. their wives and families may be put to torture. A favorite and effective weapon of the Stalin regime against its enemies has been the tnkipg of hostages. Wives and children are mrnffllilrft’! for §nvict officials on foreign duty. Thus it ls many pcoplchrlicve that concern for wives. children or other kind will oxplainsome of the amazing confessions in Moscow State ma“ Tgpfgkv nrcfm‘! Stalin of striking at liim themed‘ M: elllldrm. Rut the hostage svstcm in 5M; g 5mm mil-hr In Reptrmber. r018, Trotsky I Minister of War ordered the lrreat of the J Vi!!!» fiillrcn and other kin of army officers fledugfrum Bolshevist service. “Although the desertiou of traitorous officers to the camp of the enemy is becoming less frequent. ya it still goes on. The deserters betray the Russian work- er and peasants. Let them know that they are at the same time betraying members of their owe families: fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers. wives and children." It was an effective step. Trotsky succeeded in recruiting no less than 22. 00o former Russian officers for his Red Army. Stalin. £00, finds the hostage system effective. and the whirligig of time continues to operate, and the gods are athirst, as Anatole France, put it. Senator Marshall's Legacy From Guelph. Ontario, comes the report that between 50 and 60 prize cattle purchased during the Agriculture Department regime of the Hon. Duncan Uarshzlll, and placed at the Ontario Agricultural College and at other experimental farms operated by the Province. are infected with tuberculosis. .\lr. .\I:lrshall has now lNJCI: provided with a safe seat in the Senate so ht- \von't have to \\'fIfl'_\'Z but the investment of Illv 530.000 or $35,000. Some of the affected cattle have zilrezldy been killed. but the niaiority are ~.'-.id to be in quaran- tine awaiting final (llipflalllflll. The 515.000 priv- bull, which was purchased by .\lr. .'\lar.-hall in Scotland and which is at the title-lob College, i~ alleged to have reacted uilfzivor;ibl_v to recent te-ts. and ha» ior a llPk‘. been in lpl.'ir;i:1ti11e. The belief is that the infection with which the cattle ltave been nricken \v:~- contracted over- >fi1IS before they were purvhzl-ed and shipped to Ontario. 'l“llere is talk oi a dclnzlntl for an investigation. ' I Editorial Notes I Elnber Day. l i U U Baghdad-captured by Bflllnll troops lllla dill’! 1917. 3 I i i The lengthening days continue cold and in- vigorating. , ' _:_ a u a The local legislature has been sunlnloned for II-Iarch 28. Asi Good Friday is on April l5. that means the House will be in session practically three weeks before the Easter adjournment. i U 8 U If the lion. C, .-\. Dunning eolne- to the city in connection with the funeral of his late la- merited colleague. .\lr. Sinclair, opportunity will be taken by him to discuss ivith the Queen's County Liberal executive arrangements for the selection and election of a possible successor in the representation of the county, U I O I Families are getting smaller over the border, where they have no “Stork Derbies”. Relief au- thorities now multiply the number of home re- lief clients by 3.9 to get the total number of benc- ficiiaries. In other words, the standard family now consists of 3.9 persons. In 1930 the aver- age was 4.1; in 1920 it was 4.3; in 1910 it was 4.5. Two years away from the 1940 census, ex- pcrts apparently have decided that the regular decennial shrinkage of two decimal points in the size the familyhas already taker. place Decimal points are not so impressive as actual figures. A little over a quarter of a cen- tury ago, in 1910, a group of 10o families would have comprised 450 persons. Today they would be only 390_ Where there's a "will” there’s a way. An English court described methods evolved by a solicitor and surgeon enabling a woman helpless with paralysis to makehcr will, as “ingenious and fair." The story is told in “Lancet," the medical journal, London. The solicitor and sur- geon conceived the idea of a “card game”. Two packs were specially pcrpared. One contained the titles of her property, and this the solicitor handled. The other bore the names of the wo- man's relatives. These cards she held herself. The game began with the solicitor layingidown an “estate” card. The woman covered it with the card bearing the name of the relative she wished to inherit it, and they “turned the trick.” So it went on until all the property had been disposed of. i it i ll Unauthorized use of famous British trade names by certain New York and New Jersey firms has been ordered stopped by the Federal Trade Commission. Sheffield Silver Companv, Inc, of jersey City, was ordered to cease us- ing the name "Sheffield" as part of its corporate name or to represent its products as being of traditional English Sheffield variety. The other order of the commission was directed to Russeks Fifth Avenue. lnc., and its advertising agencv Fashion Firsts. Inc.. both of 30o Fifth avenues New York. which were ordered to stop repres- enting that certain articles of women's wearing apparel are made in England when such is not the fact. - i I i i The mysterious disappearance of votes is (lis- turbing the peace and harmony of political life in Newark. NJ" with the result that ‘Mr. Eugeni- Ertle. city clerk, of Jersey City, has been sub- poenaed by thc Assembly Committee investigat- ing the last gubernatorial election in Hudson County to appear before the committee in the Essex County Court House and to produce nomi- nating petitions for members of the Hildsnn County Republican Committee "i all of the ten districts of the ‘First Wart‘ of jersey City. Mr. David H, ‘Vlliencr. counsel to the committee. said in the first district. first ward of jersey Citv the Republican ticket received only one vote in the last general election. "Yet, the petitions for nomination for the county committee all con- tained twenty-flve or more names of persons who stated. as signers of the petitions. that thev were Republican voters." Mr. Wiener explained. "if there are twenty-five or more such Republicans in the first district. first ward. the committee wants to know why only one Republican vote was tallied". Which reminds us of a Liberal poll nomination meeting here on one occasion. A candidate was proposed, second- when the ballot vote was counted he bad only two votes, and he and his son lud voted! province in the infected cattle is a matter of l ed and supported by two other speakers. yet- IIITES BY TIE Ill 1' nlnlnbt uni nrllilleueofvoflnlllaluultuliu: nasal b 29%;’; a» purge a “ti... hifioamlu“ “commllugfiuft lame- : than f? Jul , noon» n» u». mum ml!!! utsweonservaunu ho ready wuaethe fruuchtlezurlptfr- lXltlbflleihulllvgnngtg-hfln. ahouldmmou Ioddln it? _. . .flverwasrea.lly ,___ *- inlt what w authority 1m; named l; the ulmer Ilmff. in weed. Incident- tallv. It mlzht. be well worth noting i "H" lhe fiver was a soldier. not. n cIvI Ian allot. and that the mono- nlane be used was a combat ship. a fI-Iurrlcane" tighter. European nat- ions may accept hls- record as a striking bIt of the abundant evi- Jimw Erlkland now offers of her i new and formidable strength In the |alr.—-Ba!:lmore Sun. f Municipal Civil Service Cam- lm35I0l1 of New York receuly held gan exanunatfon for the post o! u»- arnfner in the Ecard of Education, ‘a 1CD navml: $11,060 a year. There were I14 tandfees. CJIEAZ)‘ men i IAThuVfS Wnll ANGINA PIC- TOIIS OFTEN LIVE LONG USIFUL LIVES l» write often about angina pec- tofla-breun pang-because it not; 0H1! frlkhtens m: patient but ten. the entire family as these "held attacks" are distrcslng In enaure and even u) watcln. There ls a Slmnghng, vise-gig; pain In the chest over the hurt or under the breast. bone wnlch Is brought. on by physical effort (ex- ercise) or emozloual dfsturbanoe. It lusts but. a. short time ciunng which the parka: stands In what» at the tlme and as he stands . hls band over his heart, he has the 19¢ m! that If he makes the slight- est move it may be his last. Angina pectcrls Ls often caused b_v_the heart muscle (the muscle wazch pumps the blood frcm the little blood ve which andvwomen from the ssho.) sysem. O. spat number 58 SIlI'\I'-'8(l the 0.1m; 3,200 ‘£6.15 and took zhel I . - i1 '0." 29. On the first . ‘est J12 number was cut to 15_ Q11 Jig finakand dcCfdlllfi om. ex- a-Yl-nfll-f ~ 111v one canclcate quad- fi " I arher m a pnvate school. kets KheIIcb. This proves Lwo , 4s—th_e SLIHKIOSS of’ the examfn- ations ancl the ac. (ha; the 5019 Mkrvlvor LS an extraordinarily gifted DLIZEUII. since his rivaLs were, for the Qjtflaf- Ylljriheéllllréanilgg [of “true who e - 1 a- - ._ . w“ Pas:- sys m. Bos H A C d' dl lalo conrseiluallahvl: szlvednrfih: “mag; "mblem rears alzo. Dlctulnrahlps are much more efficient Jhan deln- ocracfcs in matters of 1,5 kind Bl"- l" 11-? remit. Canada doesn't ganLd wont. have. a dictatorship. ..“’.‘§.ii‘.' dfilféllvsfillli ““’°‘"°' fieienL-Wlndsor “Sunni e more e!- While at Balmoral Queen vmgofl; caused grea; consternation by beI rowed on the loch on Suncyy. Kamekwberb wife who was loud In lfimemillil that falling from grace had her attention drawn to the fact that Chx-Lst Hfmself salled on the‘ Sea of Gall ee on the sabbath, “Ayg. I kfin that." she moaned. "but, twp blacks duma malt‘ a whfteP-Man- chester Guardian. CIR)’ 0W1. most famous Canadian Indian of the day. was to lecture In Chalmers Church. Ottawa. under the auspices of the Woman's A5505- Iatlon. on March 81h. Grey Owl 15 an exDert on wlld lffe and t11¢ beaver in particular Is hls protege. Hts recent. lecture tour of 311mm W88 B llreat. succesm-Ex. The Mint must flnd people hgl-d u; 9168-56. They complained about. the old five-cent piece because u; w“ too small. so a larger coln appeared. And now people don't. mo; up,» new" Zllélaliii“? “ ‘°‘.’..’.'.2°“°‘l§"’ W)‘ a r.- Reoorder and Tfiites. m: e A little dinner service of old ll to be presented w ' Simeon on his first birthday. on June 6. by the Sofia city council. It. will consist of three plates. a cu and saucer. bread plate, knffe. for and puoon. and napkln i-Inll. weigh- lmz in all eight pounds. ‘Ihe various Darts of the servlce are to be cop- ied from hlswrlcal pictures and treasures. and will bear m Inlflals of the baby, Prfnee rage er wfm the clty councfrs coat-cranial.- London Observer. Though Japan's resent war In oer- talnly hard on C Ina, It wlll have performed a service of fncalculsble benefit to the white nations If It. gets them to (so-operate In the face of a common menace. Removal of the hlghl unsettling effects of per- slsbenl. wa threats should leave the _wor1d‘s economy In a. position from which It could stag: a major ad- vance. True. there also the very real menace of , fascism pressure toward but much of the this would dfsappear _wlth the us- surance of peace. In zact. llfctafnr- ship Itself. as an Instftutlon. would have less reason for being. —Sn'-ur- dav Nfzht. Whatever may tnn Ire under the cloak of dlplomacy, t Is com- monnlace to assume that the two leading free nations have an of- flcfal bond of sympathy at all lImes. an especfall when so much of the world's re om l5 being chal- Ienge by Fasclsm and Communlam. What wIIl count, even though dIp- lomacy fails, Is a sym athedc un- derstandlng between te set-gov- ernlng peoples themselves-Toronto Globe and Mall. It Is curious how those tyrant: who most ‘ ‘ free dlscusslon. re- nortlng and debate. seak so desper- ately to suppress It: how the more ‘ ‘e they sflence every volce at. home the more they earn -to gag criticism everywhere ese; how the higher they rLse above "conafd- erImz thelr nubIIc oplnlon" the more aensltfve they become to any pen- nv-a-Ifmr In Tlbet. or lfaamunfu who Is stlll free to speak nu mlnd. It. Is curious-and lnBl/FUCblVGr-NEW York Herald Tribune. ' Centennial usually evoke some sort of celebrntlon; but Geneva was wlse not to attempt anyjthfru of the sort for the hundredt uufon of l“ °°%'I°“.2£.".t.§fit.““° °’ fill; onn. e can find to my about It. II It, at lent. It nus not yet. been UnIIke n oertaln fumoup was ullva and Ia dead.’ the Le ue Is neither alIve nor dead. But. h; o some verdict app ea t0 them "There ls no page to Mld " o axon-exec t. but III thIn. The League has fa ed: but do In lome hanmer condf- tfonn an on a more pm: mother attempt l. Inturultlonal oven be useful. ‘lb ore. retain the to keen It Inaflectlve. Any Ioun mtlor: from It It: at. ltutr- would not world's delfcuu ullfbrfum but m- mo iu mi . z hm s ‘M... .. rotate" l" "- onu . -- tlmuon.) Thur Ila! flbbll Ounnda “In time which m uncu- Ingly beyond the uurelv rtv 5' s9. 5 ma ‘whd l throughout the lzody Naturally If the heart muscle that ls pump the bleed from the heart. t0 all parts of the bcdy and so no mzvement do any work until it gets a llttle more pure blood into it. with whlch to continue work. Thick- ened walls of aorta also cause many attacks of an Ina. These attacxs of angina pectorls i"? T9811? “life savers" because the Indlvldlml teams what. It likely to bring on an attack-heavy work. excitement. a m of anger or other emotional dlsturbance-qand so by living carefudy he Is enabled to live a useful and often g long IIfe. Thus Dr. Robert. S. Befghoff Loyola Unlversltydn Illlnols Medical Jour- nalstates that there fsmuch evI. denec that. the progncsls (final out- come) ustxflifemaxigfna pecwrlsla good. Sir James Mackenzie stated. “Of I47 patients. one lived 31 years after his first attack. three llved 25 years: one 20; seven more that: l5 years and. 21 for more than 10 years. Thlrtv-three lived more than l0 years and at the time the bcok was written I6 were still alive. Mo=t of these patients. too. Ilved useful lives." Most angina patients carrv IIt.t‘e peer-ls (thtn glass tubes) of amyl nlbrlte which canbe emlly broken In a handkerchief and inhaled. which soon enth the attack. h _, odZLQIn/nul. AT ENGLISH BAY By the winter-stripped willows In the Park I walked- Gold washed fountains In the Iud~ den sun: Brlsk the air. whIte-capped the mounta Close pt. my feet the rim of the andks end. Everything held In a silent axls, curved In sunllgut- Bxcent the ocean, pounding belaw me. relentless reminder. Thoughtsdn my mind clear as heu- ven s azure TIIJ the heave, the roar of en. crouch rmI a es Broke on my heart's shore. ' Water that has washed the couta Ohln of a, Ehuukhafs cfty. yellow Yangtse, Water that has cleansed the blood- Ied hands And healed the wound; Signed the death-warrant on too tell-tale lIpc Sent to obltvlon the Iron ships- Water forever restless, forever In stnuzgle As u 1;?! geelstln himself, hls fev- R-lslnz and falling, urglng and being suen Int/o new deeus and farther conu- neute- PM-‘lflct Your name: maker of peace o When the storms are quelled, and the people bring thank-offer- inks. 1n their strength. seizing the wt]- lows as banners- Gold washed Lountafns In the sud- den sun! —D0Y0l-hy ldvesay In ‘Toronto Saturday Night. BAND PAY UP world-famous French Repiaylqm Guard band have 131d their pay In- creased -a ser cant -major to get about. p.62 a ay. the least 0f these Is our rallway altuatton. so serious 1a not to b; kept out of the general pfcture, no mater from what. angle It Ls view- ed. The satisfactory solution of mesa problems under part govern. ment In mwsrted. even I It were otherwfso wulble. because they an bound to be vlawed solely from the lmrtv viewpoint. When Great Brft- uln LL00! such oblenm under party Ipvemmmt ‘It the common prac- —- School-curriculum Discussion n; s. c. Bib ever m-ition he bI-Dpfins w belt? "m" w receiving enough blosd frcm the. "" ' . l > , . ti!“ he“! muscle, 111m bwgd friiiil ‘i233: ifiliéceieililxfeii-tgiiiyaéieiiciiis of t e general supply as It c.rcu.ates 15mm“ upon m‘, flees m! set l r a t inn m: t. etwush Pl-"e mod 1t cannot w~.~l<.: ° n“ ‘l’ its be r p“ . l5 made b)’ flwlAnatole France. or any other of patient. to make the heart muscle, Quatrc vlnzt trelae, and Lea MlaenbIea-nre uompnre favorably wlth the but work; of this kind In the Enallsh e. There an those who that. Hugo's works are so f Scott for YCUR Ink: youruenrooin; pun" l: m‘ Seuddinnuiunlofbuildfiforuunmou the painted on human soul, but he ould also "how us that soul In It Ls true you may read Hugo In English. so. for that- matter. may you read Voltalrwajaollere. " ‘ ‘the French Immortals. But when you read a man In any other than his own language, you lose some part. of hls vlrlue. for he Ls always m~ "e powerful and more poignant In his own tongue. Jean Valjean may steal the candlestick; from the good‘ bhhop lust as easily in English as In French; he may plan his many escu just as de- terminedly in one anlzuage as In the other. but. for all that, the moment you u ‘ Ic an nu you lose some -—In many cases. Gclvcnl - "eollucll. STANDARD” if w! Roofing and Siding i" You Illtdla: of Pedlu‘ . Iluuln i: f: l; .I_I_IU flfii mmlulsluulln “- m... we‘ "F" "- oral? Look for llils marl: uoncillod on ouch about protection. "Good for a Lifcfimc- Sold will _a ZS-Ycu Guarantee" - k-tnnll eantalszreli. 522:! THE PEDkAll PEOPLE LIMITED Erlablizbd lldl r u xuznnu it. iiiiiuuii‘ Mumnucrunras rose rue FARM row oven 7s YEARS or itlit always u; BRAHMIN CRANE PEKOE TEA iouuua'.../»z;,,.,,_ 505. Including trimming; the brevity an compression of dramatfc events. I do not Ive as an argument why your c Ildren should learn French the mere fact that great men have written In that tongue. for great men have also wdttan In Hebrew and Chinese. But French Is n world Ia and. oosslbly, the easlest of a! languages to learn. It Is. as I mid before. m offHaI language of the Parliament of Canada and for that reason. If for no other. our children should “m know something about It. m.‘ Ten years ago, I should not have held out. any hope that n child. teaming Pkorwh. could 9°“ "vet tobe abletospeokltaslong ma“, as he IIved, for much would de- In his community n speaking people with could oonverca ‘At fourteen, could speak It almost like u Frenchman, to the great do bl. q and admiration of the 1 m e_ fa Ie caudal; f M. Duplessfa: I fear I should my myself and them. But the radIo Is now helpful: students who suffer lack ‘of contact wftlt “h French-speaking Ie. All a "new av axe; ca nry a ave learn, for thew Carlfaleelsegn the wmmmd °f a . In order to s k a Inguagu fluently. one mugte‘ learn a rather than by sl ht. usslm Th treme tII men had been using speech for thousands of years, language Ia u - natural acqufrement: grammar a urtlffclal one. ' It. would seem. thgn, more nat- “PR‘£“»&I"°€I.‘ ‘I311 “Tl-Sill; w =- c en n e a o a In the primary grudemyslmple, In- “W “m! "m"! te l: nu In e French m” the pu . l! grammar were en- .tIre1y orgottlen untIl the child got. to the ninth grade, I do not hlnk any loss of efficiency would a“ result. So long as the ache: were competent to pronounce the Ian- guage as It should be pronounce and the lessons were dun. t need for education, Is another present system can afford to I , h would be able to read Huzo and Raclne as cull as he oould read Dfrkens and kespcare. QXDGIBGI 00118 But Hench sh wo possess k French language which m methods of te by the English-speaking t‘ ond year work In Prfnoe of Wales. " °~ After all. 1s aux-Bruin; how w little prolonged effort euary In grder to enable a atudent to reu the news In French. I belfeve that. every school tenchfn: Grade 10 French should lk supplied, either by the dlatrlct or the Go place. he ma second. a ch t_l:ere gwere French classes every noun‘, lleaterdfiis L: Prune (March 3rd.) Ia of the debate In the Quebec I Isuro oonoernfng Oommunllm. u 18 ls devoted to an account of the debate and ucrou that page In Inge letters II: "Lu cumpuine contra Ie fuaclnne lnvorlae ea _ fates," And underneath: "Ilhon. M. Dupleull ujoutmque outta cunpugng at fnIt .%d n Patient - sovfotlque ATTE thlnkiu the d3 rule wlll mu 0e to orllufle n National Iovern- “ “ ‘h. m“ u "an Jv-alaatstrama; m, m NW’ --- do thfug In the Mother! d ' cum at falls treat at.::1...t="~=-..°".: t nu» m» out» PIG ' W°RM Fascist rule. Olllld ma! vet ° °°mm“mm°- b! Infill it ‘qt gflguy; m follow rent Brftlln’: - JQQQ" ~ ‘h. mph“ v tar qua la argument! um- ' an t uncut luau. the ~ " a. ca... '-"'--' “ll-Plat Q. ulmnad “. In whlch I have just Ilable. e “prim schools are, at a oua m; teach of viiiigiiigetmafiui ers a sun a: o grammar were not urmmwd ‘ Infng, and the solutloa of the blun will not nge. In the meantime, free term ran. Flor A huge ulatfon. Prince of dlatnnce from home Board mus be pald and this Item with other tftutes a whlch only the few can bear aching, possessed 1hr in 111 primary Ind student who now graduates fromsec- 561ml“ T° 15"‘ l-hl-B 5115.196 m. u. ma“... SWIIEBREEIIEIIS Mac's Pig‘ - Worm ' Tflnic Powder wnnuwlgww ‘Men 35c‘: nan-lb. Phone 815 i“ rwn ll/(Afflfi eve tl-lem. m Tau can nee how a school-child. huvfng access to wo Interesting to often Is not pub-. lluh datl . out’. “We. quottcd. there would make her teaching euatly dltfou of the country road: during the winter months. However, thls phase of the educatfonal ues- these letters v0 f” g “y be unfifslctlll wdiiii Enamel? “iii” on , no ou , w en could not. fall to be absorbed by the public becomes aware of the Improved hcllftlec there will be a pntofourpap- Widen halo burden vuld not be taken from the curriculum. Under proper It ca be n ruled until cc of Wale; Is cave It too long. In the first PARIS _ _ , ernment, with a French daffy i ~- 11: r.»- 5354- 35‘- “lllill? ar"...l.l".."..t.£t:=."a"'.l.lr..: ' ltllllllllkl. illlliill M v a l’ e mmlcmls “l m” Ind Items of new: whether or not - NTION. " fa Imuosslble to collect ut all. Him.‘ BEllllIlll T—3T Veterinary, WORM-POWDER And Tonic For Pigs u This preparation is from a Formula of the De artment of Agri- cul ure and is of great value to your pigs. It is given by mixing well with the Iced and fed twice a day for three days to remove the worms..This in fol- lowed by a small dose daily as a tonic. The results from us- ing this powder are all you could wish for. Try It and see. 35c lb. 2 lbs 65c E. l. FDSTER Central Drug Store Sole Agent for Dr. ffrenclfs V. C's and Animal Remedies. i PUBLIC FORUM Ihll column In open for ll! dlmuflol by oulltlpnnllellt of question of Interut. Tl" Charlottetown Guunllan don n" uoanuarlly undone the olllflhl" 0f wrnlpomluntu. "INCREASED nxiriigx: mcnusan 1mm Slr.--Your correspondent ‘m Payer" Is In part rll-tht. that ml Increased taxes Imposed b) m: Oltv COUIICII means Increimju W“ But. It ls only for those \\ll0 a.‘ able tuna wflnnm w um" uiet _ rent. The OItv Incoruomaun Ac- li amended to urovfde for this. . Lundords wIIl tell vou tnul In“ mnIorItv of cases It 1s 111ml W185 nt rents. let ‘B10111: intn wit‘ added. Ind that. In mauv cases dredn of tenants don't par Wlllv-‘Bn they can wrlttlle out. o1 11- law 1mm number never Dal‘ R ° u’ except to truckmen for IIIOIIIIIZ-M- thov akin from one house w u other. utter Dlfl-Ylflll their .1109!“ Ion: as they can wlmout p711“; and leaving the landlord W 16am exponllve Iob reuslrfne and l‘ In: un the mess. m" How can the llélfllflfga :13" h“ than? Th8 Y h dosn" unuortv for e tuea It e u . b c m lndlord cunlwl t‘ mv u t‘ goruthl; ‘fanglnls 111% l! OHG 0 ifiitfil. t] “ f” who does nvuv. otherwise h? H, he obfaouna. ‘muse who- ""0 “w, nunshlno or olvlc favor nave" 1 we" and who but landlords ou ‘an m, "1"- .:." at. tut: w» l m t nronn - 0'11"" v.~..l"..pn...u-u:l.n~ vpwflv it MI! n‘ W" I ’. m‘ 1mm.» m. wmnlndrr I0 m’ HW-s-i-TJ-"ifxrlr" cm». HOSPITAL . ..,.--- __ m can .n-_€l°§*,,, $33 1 w. f m‘ °1wn a i