LInnctmIJJ. p unlit-Lonnie. , immanent-shun, advanci- , baryon! (lunivnnennfllolvoouuln nndlllltellhtcl. TIUIBDAY, OUIOIII. ll. 1985. Spilling The Beans piquant incident occurred at Mr. MAcKENnE KrNds meeting in Barrie, Ontario, sffSaturday. Dr. SiMPsoN, Minister of Educa- § tion in the HEPBURN Cabinet, was in the chair, and in introducing the Liberal leader he admitted that Premier BENNETT had the Liberal party g; worried by his programme of refonns. On get- f V‘ ting to his feet Mr. KING directly contradicted the chairman. He said that he was amazed to hear liDr. SlMPsoN‘ admit any fear of the Prime 7:: Minister. .- s-oflfinf.‘ Can't Explain It The. LEA Government and its apologists imaintain ,a. grim silence as to where the $200,- jooo went which they borrowed before calling a ‘gspecial session to sanction the borrowing of an additional round Three Million Dollars. iThe ‘iGitarrlimiz has charged repeatedly that this money £1185 been misappropriated. It was earmarked for ffcertain necessary expenditures which the Govern- Enetlt, in the Speech from the Throne, falsely qstated had been left unprovided for by the :MACMILLAN Government. T T he longer the LEA Government keeps sil- on this question, the more convinced the’ ;"~ lector_will be that the reasons for the misappro- Qiriation are too discreditable to be revealed. [Caught With The Goods ,3: The LEA press is unable to refute the charges of political interference in the federal relief projects in direct violation of the agree- ;§nent with the Dominion Government. Its only ilibi. is “the Conservatives did the same thing." gwher. is the proof of this? Thcrc is nohc. If it had the proofs it would have forwarded them to Ottawa long ago, and demanded an investi- ‘gation, This is Ihc first time an investigation has bran called for. The terms of the agreement are specific. They have now been flagrantly violated. If Ottawa invokes the penalty clause the blame will lie solely at the door of the LEA‘ Gorzcrunzent. It cannot “pass the buck" to its predecessors, who gave I00 per cent co-operation to the federal authorities. Its present excuses ring as false as the lying propaganda it inserted u few weelqs ago in the Speech from the Throne. The Bennett Swing ,_..._. y Mr. NORMAN MAcLEon, noted Ottawa journalist representing the Mail and Empirr who accompanied Premier BENNETT on this his coast- tolcoast tour, estimates at 6,000 the number which heard the Prime Minister in the Char- lottetown Forum. This, he points out, was more than the combined number which, at two separ- ate meetings in Charlottetown within recent weeks, turned out to hear Liberal Chieftain W. L. blAcKENznz KING and Ontario Premier MITCHELL F. HEPBURN. “By. any standards,” says Mr. MACLEOD, “the-meeting would have to be ranked as one of unqualified success, but against the background tifirecent political events in Canada's island pro- vince, it took on something of the phenomenal. (ma: within approximately a month of the time when the Conservative party on the island could not return a single candidate in a provincial gen- eral election, Mr. BENNETT should be able to mnstrate an attraction greater than the com- bined drawing power of Messrs. ‘KING and IHEPBURN was possibly the greatest tribute paid to the Prime Minister's personality since the carfiaign- opened.” i 5 ' Of the Prime Minister's eastern tpur Mr. MACLEOD says: “It is simple fact to say that it has pen successful throughout-triumphed in many ‘places. A moderate estimate of the actual rcstilts in seats made secure for the Government candidates would be in the neighborhood of ten, whik in others the issue is in doubt, with the Conservatives facing real hopes of winning. Of safe Liberal seats there were possibly half a doz- en. Ihe STEVENs party, as, in the'wc5h l8 a 58m" ‘which has faded out of the picture. except in w- tain particular ridings. It may elect two candi- Ldates in Nova Scotia, one in New Brunswick and-l-which is less likely--one in Prince Edward Island. One thing is assured definitely, there will be no Liberal sweep, federally," as there‘ VII in the Maritime provincial elections." ' qify; Trade Policies Proposed a .1, I _ non. ma. xmo nmuonmmamrllrrr I moron - moronic: "in a any per 0611f;- (p No trade acm- mtn-thwerflffl nuns will be mudrwleh 191W!" "m" “mil” my foreign notion whlch ' "mmtl; "3', u not. m: w 0mm. "m?" l" ma u» mm will be if,‘ mbliiiatii bullnc’; "*1 "° "mm" m‘ itllThc him-chute lgncnntcunilbu rc- pud infirm‘! ‘mercury to tn- ‘ ~ age of the good intention: off the ‘Mother-land and increased their armaments.“ at walked far enough along the road which was of the whole Empire, - matters of disain ament, so they in all would treat Mr. Kinds trade ideals. _ ‘Before the Golden Rule ‘can be applied to Nations, its principles must be leamed-andprac- tised in -‘ siness and-by individuals. Let us hope that in the future ages such principles maybe applied by not only individuals but bylnations. and that Mr. KING mayhear the Angels sing the refrain that the principles enumerated by him in his election campaign of r935 have at last been fulfilled- _ In the meantime of necessity Canadians will do well to stand behindthe business policies of the Hon. Mr. Bennett- and his Government in the hopes that in years-to come all nations may learn to deal fairly with one another and that the trade principles adopted -by the British Family of_Nations may- show the world the road to real economic prosperity. - . Canadians! R e m e m b c r- t h e markets BENNETfs policies have opened up for you in the Empire and in foreign countries. Vote for the Conservative policy so that they can carry on their task of Empire and World-Trade build- ing, which in turn bring about the much longed for World prosperity. Editorial Notes Mr. BENNETT’s stock is steadily‘ rising. 5K 5K 5K A vote for MACKENZIE KING at this election is a vote for lawlessness and revolution——he will repeal section 98 of the Criminal Code, 5K 5K 5K In Prince County, if enthusiasm on the part of the executive counts for anything, Mr. ARNETT should give Mr. MACLEAN a good run for his money or relations. \ * . It may be a mere coincidence but none-the- less significant that. the LEA Government has arranged for Government Control here to go into effect on the day after the Federal election. 5K 9K 9K Our contemporary's “explanation" of Lib- eral political interference with the federal un- employment undertakings leaves the matter pre- cisely where it was—-a plain case of violation of the federal agreement. ' 5K 5K Farm machines, notwithstanding the tariff, have been cheaper in Canada during Mr. BENNET-fs regime than in the United States. Mr. LAlutuEEcan put that in his pipe and.smoke it. “Facts are chiels that winna ding, an’ down be disputed.” I ' 5K 5K 5K ‘ All parties now seem to be agreed that the BENNETT Government will continue ‘in oflke after the 14th. The Liberal Financial Post indi- cates so, and so do newspaper special correspon- dents who have crossed Canada from the Pacific to the Atlantic. 5K 5K “What about BENNETT, SANov?" ."Weel, he seems to knowlhow to finance the country, anyway.” "And what about MACKENZIE KrNoZ’ “Weel, the electorate has put him out twice, and as in baseball-one, two, three—out. I think he will be counted out this time, too." 5K 5K 5K Mr. GEORGE LANSBURY, M. P., the seventy- six years old Leader of the British Labour Party, has resigned, and announces he will undertake a campaign for peace throughout Great Britain. At their recent convention, the Labour Party went overwhelmingly on record in support of the Bauawm Government's League of Nations pol- icy. Mr. LANSBURY fillies’? peace at anyprice. Buyers looking over thegift and novelty lines for Christmas selling believcthat the com- ing season will reveal much less emphasis on staple utility gifts. They indicate that the per- centage of purchasers: of straight luxury and semi-luxury goods willishow a gain of r5_to 2o per cent over last year, with a still larger increase in the average sale in_Christn1as gift lines. Items upto $10, instead of $1 to $5, will be featured much more strongly. If fi How much advertising money is thrown away on the “lunatic fringe?" asks World’: Press News, referring to "these people who habitually send for every free sample advertised . . . who enter for every advertiser's competition in.the hope of getting something for nothing L . . who buy just enough of a certain brand to qbllect the packages which will qualify them for a gift . . . are they of much vagpeia; Is “M1Tcn’f also to be found on the sawdust trail ? ~‘Dr. Gnome T. LITTLE, of Toronto,‘ ad- dressing delegates and local citizens at the 58th annual convention; of the Ontario Women's Christian Temperance Union, urged temperance people of _rio to join in a" united effort to convert Pre terHEeuuitN to become a leader of the temperance forces. He will need some “con- prior to lest steam; .4 . . Truth n ‘stranger t fiction. "Birds, in his c » last, thank Providence, awakened toghe. situation _ ‘ which faces her, and in‘ the words of Roman j’ Krruno spoken last spring decided, “we have ' paved with g0°tl intentions.” Britain today,“ ‘ the eleventh hour is again arming for thedefence ‘ As the Nations treat the GoldeniRule-in ‘ probability l. ,wlt. of Ll Hung Chang lcylven in version” after what he will lbvut Pftlhlbilifl" i basal! n new heard of, but "fnloeifllfidfdlfl" _. new. A Toronto Woman visiting a ' - ll» . . » h‘ hi'hni - a ffiffifl‘ “filed; f... . cue did exactly the opposite-lthcyi iooliidvatit- i ' ...... wa the button But the stove ' plpcs ere-hut a they were. Llkc the curs o! a donkey they have. not changed. g-Strntlord Beacon-Herald. JWhat the uulvcnlty vein do ls IJODI many llnesalt can cure the boy» o! petty vlcca and chlldlch trlc- kcry by msklne hlm u man, by glvlng hlm higher ideals. more ser- lnus ways of llle. It may wln by lmplrntlon, not by fear. It must. strengthen the ‘ t In hla search for the truth. It must encourage menllnccc in hlm through the put.- tlng nwuy of olilldlltl things. Let. the thoughts of the student be as free as sir. Lot him prove all things, and he will hold fast to that which la good. Give hlm l message to speck to others, and when be leav- u the university you need not fear for hum-David Starr Jordan in "The Trend of the Amer-lean unl- verslty." ‘ Ac the result. of “a national survey of lthe attltude toward forelgners’ ln the United stnter. 1t ls found that. “Gennany la the most unpop- ular natlon with Amerlcans, wlth Japan, Italy, Russia and France in closcmlcoesslon." mltlah people, according to thls survey, are the moat popular ln the country to the south. of Canada. And this is lust. another argument for the closest posslbleco-operutlon between the Englleh-specktpg , oplu of the world ln n movement for world peace and security-Halifax Herald. The clergyman who lays war In not the worst thing reminds us of the errant. husband whose fawyer cold to hlm: "The lmt. thlng you can dole to go back to your wife." ‘Do whlch he repllcd after c. mom- cut’: thought. "What's the next beat thIngPK-Mall and Empire. John Stuart. Thompson in Chlnn Revolutlonlzed tells of u men tn Southern China who, because of the expense, teldom allowed hls wllc to eat chicken. One "day, however, she‘ got. permlsslon to purchase a fowl for the god ln a Taoist temple. when the husband came he found his wlfe elzeriy eating the blrd, and be shrlekzd out: “How ls this? I bought that. chicken for the god, not for youl" She replied: "I otler- ed lt. to the god, who ate all he could of it. I em only eatln; the remainder. ‘monks to the god. and not-to you for that." m diplomatic clrolesln Was n many ex- amples are-perpetuated of the wlt. and humor o! the Chinese ambas- eidors, Wu Ting Fang and -Ll Rimrchang. One dcy at u. dtnncr party ln Washington Wu Tlng told the story o! a. Chinese abIlnuJKBQllmI-fl _ IATIIING IXEBGIIS I012. ABTIIMATIC PATIENTS It. l: certainly Iretlfylnc to ace the way the cause and cure of asthma la being investigated. All that myslelana have been able to d0 111 i118 but was to trcsttbe et- tack by various remedies knowing glut lt was bound to plus over 1n me. ‘ . ‘Io-day there are asthma cllnlcs in varlouc parts of the world and they have discovered a number of causes of asthma and some forms o! treatment that have been most helpful. , ~ The Asthma Research Council, with headquarters at Guy's Hoopl- tul, London. England. and wlth other branches ln Ilondon at the Hospital for Slok qhlldren and King's College. has Issued the rc- pgar: of its actlvltles from 1927 to Tho Council investigates every- thlng that may have even the slightest bearing on asthma-the us- one-aldetl headache, epilepsy, an skln disease; the ue- ltlveness to arnlmal, vegetable or other foreign matter and its relation to asthma; the re‘ ' ‘dp of asthma to other throat and chest allments; the c1- tects of dlet on asthma;_an lnvestl- gatlon of alleged ‘cures’ for asthma. no matter where these cures were found; collection of lamlly hlator- lea of asthmatlcs. One method of help l5 by pagan; of breathing exerclsu and a pam- phlet called "Physical Exemlaes for Asthmatlcs" wlth forty explanatory llluslratlons has been published at a. price of two shillings or fifty cents. During an attack of asthma the lungs become distended, and the Object of these exercises la to restore the lungs and the chest cav- lty to their normal else; the oath- matlc patient la therefore taught 14 use the lower as well us the upper part of the cheat in breathing cut, and to breathe as much as possible from the lower part of the lungs. A carefully controlled lnvcstlga- tlon o! this exercise form of treat- ment has been cnrrled out during the pint three years’ by Dr. J. I... Livingstone at. King's College Ho‘. pttal. The results have so lmpregggd the Asthma Research Oouncll that they fire arranging to give further ald to this method of treatment. It might well be worth while therefore l! asthmatics who can af- ford 1t would send for this pamph- let. to the Asthma Research council Guy's Hospital, London, England. PUBLIC FORUM column Ii ‘ l“ "In!" i1 undue-dents of unclean o: n, Infidel: Icon p! ofllc l who oommlttcd ‘ ‘*‘ by eating old leaf. "But 1 don't see howithat killed‘ hlm" "I d olrnludldnntc. suppose," acld Wu seriously, "that.- AM I BlllTTSll? it was the consciousness of inward glltl" n good sample of the keenl hip Memoirs. Referring to a vlslt to Phllndelphla. he says: “They show- ed me n benutliully shaped old bell, which Ls in’ Independence Hall, and lseclled the Bell of Liberty, which means that ct its ringing all men wlthln round o! lts voice know they are free. But they do not ring lt an more berausc lt ls cracked. Is ll rty cracked aJeoW-Detrolt Sun- day 1mm. h Prince Albert 'dct|>llch mu that. Mr. Mackenzie King. adctess- lug an audience of 5,000 tn that Saskatchewan town. spoke from 9 o'clock to 11.45 and broke no new ground. Mr. King's type of oratory lrproverblally leisurely, and Mr. Klniblwaya feels that 1n the lu- tercsttof elearnelu. every polnt should be labored to the ltmlt of its cudurpnce. But,.,,lr|nt.ed all that, one would think that ln twonours nun three-quarters he could have broken ct. least n quarter section o! now grounds-Vancouver Prov» lnec. - In the sun Weekly, Mi. connls, Bmythe. mnneglng director of the Mnplc Lien! Gardens, narrates that hi was one of nlnety thoucend spectators who vrltnclced an lm- po soccer game ln London. What struck him l-s unlqu: about thli vut nthcrlng was that lt pulsed the tlmc while wnltlng for the time to come-on the tleld by en aging 1n communlty clnulnz. ln ‘ch cart. of pastime the lmgllch no put-mute“. w. Bmythc ad- mltrthct he was very much moved when the multitude jotndd ln a "beiutllul rendition of “Abide wnn He." "l was so moved," and Mr. linythc,‘ "1' couldn't Join nkiglni.’ ply eyes filled with tears. 1c n‘; gouiptbmg 1'11 never term; _ i lo vutly different from tltqttglultlud the savage mclulm at gcmcc over here. 1t was startl- lng. and tn ullit-provuklng. Truly. mglnndfl-Mall Bib-The Imperial Pm- Akreementsqs a bond of Commer- al Uulon between the Mon-m- Land and her colonies and dumm- lons. It unites us lnto one great. commonwealth of people ufllllgted with the Brltlah Empire-and our Klng Cml I b6 B D0111! to the severance 01' that bond and utlll claim to be g loyal unlt‘ ln the Empire? It the flkrcements were oppressive; t! they We" undemocratic; lf they were uneconomlcal and not conducive m our nntlonnl welfare we might with some reason mark our X agalmt mom. lt. would bc no evidence of l. disloyalty 101' we l-rg tree bom and "Britons never, never will be zlaves." But none has yet. dared to charge my of these defects against, mum, m6)’ hive proved, their worth and "l8 met men u well u the small our our Empire have loclllmgfl their success and applauded their lnestlmable value, One men alone, lcede o! art, , has declared, ln ncniércfup yoi; elect me to power I wlll elgn m; fatal scroll that will cancel that bond of national unlty, I will wipe out that. compact which made Bug'- lend and her domlnlona lnto a great bmllwflwfld o! empire and will scatter the fragments of I dlcmerm bered commonwealth to the mercies zndodrzprndntlonc o! hostile tradlng ‘Idrolt mom to lovletiam, aoclellcm and the cnemlel of Brlt- Ilh. noccntuntedmlth c promise b0 "MI-l Olythet pattern law of Brltlsh Justice. was found to be ncllflcllly not profitable u c vote setter. and the m. Hon. llackcnnle King, lta expoundcr, lute; modified lt to screen lto disloyalty. m; ma; lu was not ‘total destruction. _ ut an cinuouletlon of lta sellout. vnluc by lword thrultl lnto lta value. One of than thrusts lathe PNIlIIllQ of in 09m door to inc W01‘ h! eomomlo logic would be an absolute repeal ct the agreements. - , Premier Bennett nu pledged himself and party four aqua-u lu- hlnd than agreement. and bchlnd the hiplrc. llclthcr the Stevens, the 0. o. E. the Abel-hart or who: clelmnnh for publlc favor have taken stand mum nu- “m1. was "“ a’: =*::..":: mlfl m ' . --"lo, ‘the pone for lrltllh “W . ‘t g ll soelatlon of asthma with voniltlu “mum 3e; plgnw o: lid-vine. But it I iiiig 8.2g‘ tflblluoll": ment blem? ‘my oral-auctions he mentlonl. all of them worthy. hive 1101i N!" nlhnt these years. But the trouble with what they have ntd and thought, like the trouble wlth what has been sold and flwucht by all the rest o! us. lncludlne the world's greatest economists and social lend- era, ls that lt rarely carrier! n8!“- ment. and that. the beat‘ of edvloc and of theory have seldom proved a solution.- m. xlnc. uklnc =11 the WW1- laatlons he mentions for advice. wouldn't be new advice. nor unm- unous, but merely c- repetition of the slncere but conflicting. plans that have poured tn upon Govcm- ments from all qua-rte?! ever Q1109 the depression besfln- In $116 0M» Mr. King would know no more than he knows now. Wfhln! 166i: l“ 11° would have nchleved would be 0 sort o! public dcblll. the W?» 0f thing that seldom WWW"- In the end. and inevitably. he would have to take the 890ml l1- lty upon himself, or 11901! hi! 5W‘ e. nt; do precisely vhnt Mr. Bennett has been coma. Whil- "- gfy ln W617 other 00011 B - 1t u whens vemlflsbb t" "r mind htm um. for in leader who P55551195 responsible government. this growing tendency w h" W" to evade Government rclllmlmnw i... shifting lt t.» the shoulders o! pi-lvsbc orgnnlmttons la-for hlm- a. atrenke hcrfly- . mum .118 LATIN Well to the woods no more.‘ Thelaurcls all are cut. . The bawera are hero o! boy "That once the Muses wore; The year draws lngthc day And" soon wlll evening shut: f'l,‘_hc laurel; allure‘ cut. ’We'll w the woods no more- YOh we'll no more. no more To the leafy woods" . To the high wlld" woods of laurel And tn; bower: o! bay no more. . '-A. ll. Housman. ‘NORFPXOIQLBOP 0- B. Tinker pronounces this translation one of the most beautiful in Engllah. ' romeo nun uonuuu mo: LflllIaBOURNE-(CJZ) ~ Follow- lng a. paper trail lying along the walls of c house, police today traced the loss of valuable jewels to rob- be: mlcc ‘fhc diamonds were n- covered after several bricks had been removed; Paper wrapping on the stones save pollce their clue. YOU'LL feel fittei . . . more active . . . In Stanfield‘: Underwear. "It is kind to the most I sensitive sltin. ll won't bind or bunch. |twon't shrink. lngives you complete bodily ease and freedom . . . vital health ' protection . . . snug comfort‘ . '. . a flt that‘: like‘ wish tailoring. You. will be proud to wear‘ Stanfield? Underwear-w: brand that has held tho cofifi“ iififfh. 1' "lsnfvfai. , - v m __ e l 5*" _ . f .'. ' ' ‘l 1' Stanfield‘: Undo-wear i: tailorifif an living mill: form-rm fitting and’ lntlnglfolyjrfort. It's‘: mid: in weight! 4nd sign for nmy maroon of flu family. . _ . . sr-Anripiatirs Linnea ,. niuno, NOVA scorm, . 86 nice from London. inn. t. n. EVAIIS uf London, Eng. other nlliucnh peculiar to the ltnluch. Doutfool with your stoni- aoh. Serbia condltlonr will ""—' onu YE’ s y sonny Polarity“ o! M) dglriirbilke ls a. major ln the Hus- ‘ -'cara-nndwunomlnatedtotlw Lennon. ont.~o-(o.~_1=.>-Tnu sun onuece at. Camber-Icy by the mks" o! Glouec‘ and hta bride- Wnr Omen recently. 1t 1s expected to-be. Lady Allce Scott, will-m kc the Duke will lolnthe college next; their, tlrst home ct (lumber c!- ‘ :- ~_ USE ' BRAHMIN TEA _ .' VOIANGI IZOD ‘ill onovm t lrlnellyouullow, " to lnpcc lute n cluuulc chic of gultrlo trouble. We AIDNI HAW flak tem- ennlalltlonfhyulclnlfe prel- jrrysnotun; ‘A A£AAAAAAA an n 44AQQ_AJ w ' vv Reconstruction ,Party Meetings .~ / mcsnnoon moo n: nu um! Thlu People 1111c 2 Macs _Hlll0fllre0.0.D,- from]!!! .10; . - the. .. . l a; ‘XLAA: WEDNEQDAY,QOCT. a-mcon and w... Islands.‘ THURSDAY, 0CT.-.1_0_-_-Vcrnon Rlvcr antbflrnnd V ew- FRIDAY,- ocTLJL-clisrlctutown, strand entre- SATUQDAY; 0C1‘; .17,'..1,qng River, Hope River, Clifton, . p New Glucowl ‘(avers-n .. =2. {pd-in sum... so _ m_ ... rm n '_ m INGBAND nuance. “ ' ' Candidates. nan-natal’ 1' . .‘"..l T ' .4. an ALLA‘ a A vvv v_vv - Yr‘? " L t ‘I'll Vi.’ i .,fihestj=i$hew 1i¢n_' . r r . , o ‘Zl-"t ' .5 "7'- ~ .,- .=" 1 w.‘ ‘ ". l >1 IN» l ' Prociicij . l‘ h w" V Mu I. 4.». fir.‘ ' fl‘ ., p