r ~:\‘v%1"‘“ r» i. .-..., ‘n; m¢gr~r¢ w, I | sir 5 ..;-.os..e-sal-.nbi t. l t.» -=i .<,____-__- _- in‘- _ " ,7“595'11l8l_fi! S!!! I! S‘! fllELls, . m?" 5_.. Aor_ II’ Bl a"! Innate. I-IJ. -~-<- ~Uuc Iwllaaol. I IO ~ i Id! and Iaaaglog Mentor-J I non. Id l. A IdlllIIh-IIIII Ifllfl i I Pwrlb mum; unarmed mm an III III’ ill _ I Vi. [LQQ p» yq ti] ndlaiool QQQ i IIQIOO i. wanuesrjarnggg. _|, ma. KIPLINWS MESSAGE A signal tribute to the part play- ed by the Royal family in Empire affairs, and a sober-warning to be prepared for the dire emergencies of war, were the highlights in the address delivered before the Royal Society of St. George on " " by Rudyard Klpllm. Kiplings voice baa seldom been raised in recent years. His popularity as a. poet has waned somewhat, yet his great con- tribution tn British patriotic liter- ature gives him a place apart. in the hearts of British subjects throughout the world: On the rare occasions on which he speaks, he "_ "~14 still able to command world-wide attention. The gist of his remarks 3on Monday is thus given by tlW Canadian Press: ‘Prop gevnral years—more than i0 l believe-our responsible adminis- trators dwelt almost with complac- ency on the magnitude of risks we were running "and on our righteous- "Iess in running them. It was then ealimd that Britain's state-defend- ed defencelessnesg had not borne much fruit and that we had walked far enough along the road which was paved with good intentions. ’ “It is now arranged that in due ~ time we will take steps to remedy our more obvious deficiencies. But if the attack of the future is to be the same swift lines as our oppon- ents' domestic administrations. it is possible that before we are aware our country might Join the submerg ed races of history." Kipling, referring to the part flayed by the royal family in nat- tonal affairs, said: “Three genera- tions of our ruling house have ac- cepted‘ whatever burden of respon- Iibillty, whatever’ merciless demand for effort, whatever o! personal risk ' the honor or needs of their people laid upon them. Each generation in turn has bowed the neck to un- broken sacrifice and devotion and patience. “These things have come to create and stiffen and inspire the whole taken-for-granted fabric of sanity and silent discharge of duty, both in our islands and throughout our Empire on which our destiny de- pens. That, behind and beyond all. is our strength and our hope." PROVINCIAL ARCHIVES The role played by archives in the culture and educational life of the community and the present altuatlon in. each province with_ reference to the department are discussed in a reprint of the Can- adian Historical Review for March, published over the name cf George W. Brown. The neglect that ob- tained in the past in this matter ‘and the wanton destruction of ir- replaceable records is emphasized. It is pointed out. among other things, that the books and papers burned in the Parliament Build- Ings in 1840, or the early records of the Cunard Company or the Canada Company. which were de- stroyed as junk would be priceless ‘now. ‘These instances of irreparable loss may in extended indefinitely Ind to every section of the Domin- ion. The paovinces, it is continued, are morally responsible to them- aelves and to the people of Canada as a whole to see that the early records of the Dominion! develop- "H0110 are preserved. ' 0f the Prince Edward Island Archives Mr. Brown writes: . "There is no separate depart- ,’ merit of archives in the province, ‘I but collections of material are to be found hi the Confederation r Chamber at (‘n-rlottetown. in the v oploe of the registrar of deeds and mpooimissioner of crown lands, in _~ G50 legislative and public library of Charlottciown, and in the sev- .._._b_ral departments of government. ;__~Ifie minute; of the executive coun- ‘lll, the journals of the legislative “assembly and of the legislative Qimcil, the laws and public ac- Jbounts of the province, and news- paper flies running back to early issues are among the most import- ant material; available to stud- ents. Them are. unfortunately, aer- lous and extensive gaps in the manuscript records of the rovince, 1nd little new material is being added. The fact that the minutes cf the executive council are coni- pletefrom Iflotothepresentisol adcuptltiiai interest. "Dining recent years. however, the government has taken a com- mahdobla intcmt in preserving rec- ord; time the direction of in. n. It. etewart. their deputy provincial chainsaw council chamber» was re- of mar. n- collect of "riautuimanlotbui-"ilnnof Ha- torical interest attracts the atten- tion of a. large number of visitors." CANADA'S WHEAT The Dominion uw rmnent’; pol- ‘icy with respect to wheat, induding y the pegging of prices and the main- tenance of a price level which gives the farmer a not return of about 0 cents a bushel, has been severely cc Recent dupatchas from Winnipeg. however, says the Van- couver Province, suggest that the ‘government's policy has not been so insane as the critics would make it out to be. A variety of circum- stances have combined to send wheat prices up. The world's vis- ible supply on April 1 was about 70,000,000 bushels below what it was a year ago, and crop reports from 'neariy - everywhere "are bullish. Neither Australia nor Russia have wheat to sell. Argentina is past the peak of her shipme ts and the United States is expected to be a large buyer rather than an export- er. Canada alone is the source of large supply, having about 240.000,- 000 bushels available for export. EDITORIAL NOTES ‘The next citeme w will be one or other of the elections: than the visit of the Chief Scout and Chief Guide, Lord and Lady Baden- Powell. Jackie Coogan had the most ex- citing and tragic experience cf his ‘adventurous’ life on the stage over the week-end when his car crashed killing his father and Dunk , his boyhood chum and partner in many movie pictures. A loromo woman is suing two doctors for return of $189 operation fees and $10,000 damages for a sec- ond operation for appendicitis. The defence is that the pursuers is one of the few cases in the world o! a person with two appendices. According to latest discovery if you get car-sick. all you have got to do is to buy a bag of peanuts, throw the nuts away, and hold the bag over your nose while you breathe. It's a cure, announced at the American College of Physicians _meetings. Try it also on seasick- ness and plane sickness. Any kind of paper bag will do. and it should cure these as well as car sickness. India, as represented by the Council of Johore, signified its loy- alty to the Crown by marking the King's Silver Jubilee with a gift of £500,000 (about $2,430,000) "from the Sultan and state of Johoro to the Imperial Government for the pur- pose of speeding up the completion of the defences of Si _ ." His Majesty, telegraphed the Sultan, expressing his delight to hear of the generous help and his pleasure at the munifioent gift. The Colonial Office in London also telegraphed, expressing its warm- est appreclat‘ -n. New Brunswick has stolen a. march on the other two Maritime Provinces by appointing a fish trade commission in Montreal, ti: man selected being Mr. Lyman G. Armstrong. Commissioner Arm- strong is to promote the sale of both fresh and fronen New Bruns- wick fish. and provide the fisher- men with ‘u ormation ing marketing conditions and require- ments. The Ontario market holds great possibilities, but the chief stumbling block of Maritime fish- ennen-lack of experience-must be overcome befoieit can be taken advantsre of to any [not extent. ....__..... The Doukhobor; in Western Can- ada are a communistbody holding everything in common. but like other organizations of the kind ‘before them, they ‘are rent by dis- senslons, and things have reached g‘. impasse. The Christian Com- l unity of Universal motherhood has virtually told the nonconform- ‘ists to get out and forfeit their ‘lands. It is proposed to sell some thirty thousand acres c! the hold- lngs, this announcement havinl been madn by m. J. P. Shukin. hoodlhoteatagainatthosaleliaa of five to represent them. This group consists of forty familial. numbering I'll persona, and they have decided to resist attempts to Ivict them from their farms and also to demand a share in the property of the lotborbcoifvtrbu collapses another experiment in communist idcililm. Only unadult- d-atcd dictatorship, with" execution for disobedience, can make and flllllflfllfl I ‘Midis’ first vice-president of the motherg been mldabyanorganiadlroim] which has appointed a committee‘ “It Notes By Illrel Coaoballa Valley, Calif. behaves it is winning its fight to save th: ranches from an invading army o. millions of moth worms. Twelve miles of trenches have been plow- ed along the foothills east of Palm Springs to trap these three-inch- varieties of moths. In two days l0 tons of worm; have been removed from the trenches after they had denuded the hills behind them of vegetation before starting across to the farms. It is as strange a sight as since the days of Egypt's plague what Pharaoh, if any, can be (‘Qnying their rights to what Children of Israel in the scheme of thiugsil-Monitor. We must accept the fact. whether we like it or not. that the German Army is now by every indication the strongest in the ‘world, with be- hind it an air form of unrivalled power. The situation in this country is different indeed. In the vital air arm Britain remains lamentably weak. . . . Our Air Fore is still only seventh or eighth. That is to say. it is so disgracefully weak that the people of this country havn to depend for their security on the possible intervention of foreign Powers cn their behaiL-Jiondon Daily Mail. The modern newspaper k our most successful demonstration of co-operative enterprise. Each reader pays a few cents a week for a ser- vice that would cost him thousands were it an individual efIort. But because thousands of others also am paying those few cents, and because the product of this co-operation is a publication that offers business an unequalled means of reaching its customers, the reader spends lit- tie more than the cost of paper and ink to know what is going on in his own city and country and throughout the worlds-Ottawa Journal. While hank debits throughout Canada during March decreased by 2.3 per cent, those in the Maritime Province area showed a slitht in- crease. This shows that businc in this part of the countiy at least held its own during that month. Sin sand, who is at present ruler of the greater part of Arabia and has narrowly escaped assassination. is one of the most picturesque fig- ums amongst modern monarchs. In direct oontiradistinctlon to the Turkish ruler, the Gazi Kemal. who holds sway at Angora, he stands for what has been termed Phritnnlsm in the Moslem religion. The Wahabi sect to which he belongs not only "scorn to touch forbidden wine" but ban the um of tobacco. They also maintain the regular performance of elaborate ritual.—Beifast Tele- graph. There are about 8.000 kilometre! of splendid roads in Palestine and Syria today. On the other side "of the map. Cyrenalcas roads are as good as the best in the world. Even Turkey is busily tackling the road p blem. The recent semi-oili- cial tour oi’ Omar Pasha and Sabry Bey will not have been in vain if thP trip has fired them with en- thusiasm for a similar road system. and has thoroughly convinced them of the shame of ioadless Egypt.» The Sphinx, Cairo. “God Save the King" ls add 1o have been sung as his own composi- tion by Henry Carey in i740 . . . There is much controversy as to the authorship which is complicat- ed by the fact that earlier forms of the air and the words are record- ed. Such an ‘ayre' i610. is attribut- ed to John Bull. who has long been credited with the origin of the an- them. . . . Carey and Bull, in the general opinion of musical histor- ians, dlvidn the credit. . . . Bull's is the earliest form of the air; Carey's claim to the remodelling o! the anthem rests on an unauthor- ltatlve tradition. . . . John Oswald, a Scotsman who settled in London in 1742. is a strong candidate."- Encyclopedia Britannica. We are our own best critics. be- cause we understand ourselves bet- ter than anyone elsn-even though there are always those who may. dispute this statement. Who ever knew anotherfis mind as he does his own? A5 losses, troubles, and dis- appointments come, it is up to our- selves to appraise thn situation and to find a way out. And the oftener we appraise, the better we are able to face evnry turn of the tide in our daily affairs." The weird note of the whlppoor- will from the hillsides above the old pond where the hylas gave forth their first note of song even in the earliest hour of April, when frost and thin ice were still to be encountered. lovely in the country. lovely in the town: the flowers, tin trees, the vines. the shrubs, the birds, the little beaslies, the deni- zens of the ponds. And fish are-be- ginning to bite. and crabs arc corn- ing up the Chesapeake-and why should anybody worry for a little while about politics and crackers- dcwri. and boon-doggling. and defi- cits, and new dealing.-Baltliriorc Sun. Chronlcllng and commenting In one act of German bad faith after another beflfne; weariscme. It will have to be taken for granted that Germany under Hitler agulatel her 1 conduct according to a code morally far lower than tha.t of any other jnatlon. Imperial Germany know how to strain a point of national honor, and even atreaernannh Ger- many was fairly slim"?! in nor twisti and turns: but Hitler simp- ly brushes aside treatiel and obi‘- aations ‘ ‘ pretence or axl- cgy. And to all appearances t a German nation SDPIOVOfL-III. ani an -'i‘he. Imdlluwartanaplcaofhian-Georlvliiverlullvolnad» i fuinardcraayafltbiaiaoeaaabu 080000. ,. nollttla importancnabd tbeoontributionarvccivodmd priaooorisonhhtriatlomyoaifin annoiiucaahcm andllympctnyfxan neuaaatottawsflutlovarlm. willful quality. have: ien attractive than when it la practiced at somebody’: nxpenac. You know unwell an I d» long larvae of Sphinx and other ' lylanw.iwho.lh. HELPING S acne "fl5%li 7"‘- I often speak of acne (pimplca) l because they are so om to Your young folks just when appear- . anco means so much in their livu. , I have spoken of the suoom of two Chicago research workers in curing themselves and a number of students by a month's treatment of ' viosteroL They started with 10 drops daily. gradually increasing the dos: tuntil at the end of two weeks 20 drops were being taken daily. They ‘continued using the 20 drops daily {for a further two weeks. By count- ging the number of pimples oefcxe and after the use of vicsterol they were able to measure the exact amount of improvement. Another important factor is the =food. Certain foods cause the con- dition to become much worse. not ,because there is anything wrong livitli the foods, but because certain [glands in the body which become ‘more completely developed at this time (i4 to l6 years of age) seem to interfere with the body processes in such a way that they do not handle or use up these foods pro- perly. In general, the starchy foods — potatoes. bread. saga... candy. pastries-should be cut down and the fruits and egetabies should be increased. Sometimes an infection of the teeth or tonsils will interfere with the body's lighting ability and pim- ples result. I hesitate to talk about the treat- ment of acne by lotions, ointments, Xray, and vaccines. These have all been of help in many cases. but vised by a physician. However a sug- gestion by Dr. Bernard Fa-ntus, Chicago. may be of help to many sufferers: “Ari excellent ,_ ‘ before the treatments are given ,is soaking the face in borlc acid solution as hot as can. be home, carried on as follows: Add 8 ” ‘ tablespoon- fuis o1 powered borlc acid to 8 quarts of hot water. Patient should lean over the bowl and repeatedly soak the face for 10 or l5 minutq with towels wrung out of the salu- tion. 'I'his removes grease. outer skin cells, and many organisms and thus increases the power or ability of lotions or ointments that are then used. The blackheads should be removed by an extractor, not ivy-the fingers. After the hot applications cold water should be applied for a minute or two. The Enigma Of Europe (Mail and Empire) Ever since Kipling bade Britain beware of Adam-Zed, the bear that look; like a man, Russia has been acting as if it were striving to live up to that reputation. In the Great War it lost its prestige as a steam- i-oiier. and proved a sore disap- pointment to its allies. In the story of her life Queen Marie of Bourn- ania tells how Ruaiia betrayed her country twice. The first betrayal was not known until after the ’ The Czarist regime was glad en- ough to have Roumanla enter the war, but feared her entry would dislccate Russia's ambitions south of the Danni-re. Indeed, the CID!’ himself wrote Marie expressing amazement at umaniafls ambl- tions. Bulgaria had secretly agreed not to attack Roumahia should Roumanla come into the war. Rus- sia threw troops into the Dobrudga and Bulgaria had to go back on its pledge. thus forcing Rioumania to fight on another and an nanticl- pated front. The second betrayal came after the A volution, when Kerensky forbade Russian troops to co-operate with the Roumanians. Russia's conduct since has mt been such as to encourage Allies to trust it. The Soviets have been and are still suspected of propaganda to undermine the govr- ‘ of should only be prescribed and super- _ 5i ii gggggisieii it w heart. g perhaps the moat significant new "How happy is he born and taught, ' ‘ll-rat aerveth not mother's will; Whose armour is his honest thought, And aimpl truth his utmost skill." “-'I'hl.s man is fned from ser- vile bands . Ofhope tcrisaor feartofall: Lord of himself, though not of lands; ' And having nothing, yet hath all." ~ ' Plato, according to the works of . said. ‘L’ of the kind first. "The rulers of the State," according to his The Republic. "are the only ones who should have the privilege of lying, either ‘at home or abroad; they may be Allowed to lie for the good of the State?‘ Centuries later, in 1004. Sir Henry Wotton wrote in Iiatin in a (mind's album as he passed through A1188- onhbwlytovenice tobc h Ambassador. ' Emil-sh If’ years later a. “scurrilous controver- aialist," one Jasper Sciopplul. t- ed the sentence, and King JHIMQ 1- w-mrni" r an s 0f u a mo"? r. tion." czalledgttcntion to the doidrle m of "lie." It will benefited thatiho versioncredited tn will fingers has no possible double rmaning. i Sowing Dissention (Sydney Post Record) A cable from the Oldn quotes the London Dally 911 .0 - flcial organ of the Britishm Party as stating that Can the Ulhion of South Africa new. _..‘ their -. " "l!" Ministers, "served notice," on the Imperial Government "that their Dominlons antimal- oaily to Great 's a . M”. of war." The Iondon Labor news- paper is not content with publish- lug this extraordinary statement. but seeks to point a moral from it by predicting that it is evidence. of a "split in Imperial sentiment" rs regards military aid n a. new co . The essential absurdity of this pronouncement is obvious. Neither Canada, the Union of South Africa. nor any other British Dominion ha: ever ‘acme Bléffllllulflfiinf’ T, Great Bri in's ai war. participation of overly one of the Dominions in the Great Warlof 1:114‘ . . of J 'ANII!m,I-II°l-lNlfidUl-‘lllflldll they. , . Waking‘? larrad wilt-they sting Driving me oil muck in beauty‘: t m thoughés are strangely ule pools that frame q I Still pictures where the changing lhldUWS p18)’. My words-are haltinl. paaalonless and cold; ' As aliens, they neither know nor share ‘ ‘ wonder: that my thoughts can hold; From out the written page they mock and stare - slow; They cannot follow whore my swift thoughts go! —Aiice Leigh. in "Poetry World." John Buchan’s Books (Ottawa Journal) Concluding an attractive portrait of John Buchan in his "Life and Iiitertatuie" corner of the Journal, is to flil the high post of Governor General later on in the year, I have pointed out some of the qualities of this many-sided man, qualities which one ventures to think will en- sure for him the warmest of wel- comes." Orie of the Buchan qualities not emphaaied by Mr. Burreli, and’ which is curiously over-looked by most of those who write of him. is that; while he has distinguished himself as an author in the realm of history. biography and economics, his chief claim to fame as a literary man is in the field of romance, as a novelist. ’ Since 1008 Buchan has written 41 books. averaging more than one a year. l-le has turned out twenty-two novels. eight hiatnrfcals, works, eight biographies, one volume on economics.’ one volume of poetry, one book of essays. But while his extraordinary versatility has per- m mitted him to range over ail sorts of subjects, using one literary form as readily as another, his greatest‘ talent is in romance. Those who have read his “Thirty-Nine Steps," or "Greenmantle," or "The Path of the King" could hardly fail to have been fascinated by his mastery of glamor. by his genius for investing his subject with marrce and rrrys- tery. Without anything of kinship with the modern school of novelists. who seem to dote upon the morbid. Buchan has the seeming-y lost art of being able to tell a story, of being able to make his characters clean. brave, gallant and wholesome human beings. His "John MacNab." published in 1025. and still a favor- ite. is a fine example of this gift. Even in biography, in which he has been brilliant, Buchan is essen- tially the romantic. It is the ex- planation of his preference for figures like Cromwell and Montiose. Into “Montrose" he put ins whole heart, and his deft ‘and spiritied pen never did better writing. Having read and walked himself into every detail of his aub- ject (he has walked over nearly every acre of Scotland) he made of r wrote My stumbling words-are colourless l an I i , l l TRADITIONAL STRENGTH’ For sixty-six your: The Royal lcnk hoe been - adding strength 1c‘ strength- forglng a sound and conservative policy, and on established porltlon. THE ROYAL OF CANADA BANK‘ staff in France; to be connected with the British information De- partment during the war; to be_ a director of the Nelson publishing house and of Renter's news agency; to tin-n out 4i works of history; biography, romance and poetry, to write as well countless articles and essays for the newspapers; mean- while finding time to Wiin fame as a mountain climber and a fisher- man. Little wonrier they used to say in Iondon that "John Buchan is a syndicate." Eclec‘ ‘ ::Excellent for Croupy Childreii_ When a child is suffering with oroup it is a good plan to use Dr. Thomas’ Oil. It reduces the iniiam, mation and loosens the phlegm git‘. ing speedy relief to the little suf- ferer. It iaequally reliable for sore throat and chest, earache, rheumatic pains. cuts. bruises and sprains. Dr. Thomas Eclectric Oil is regarded by many thousan’ as an indispensable of the family medicine chest. E. 146 Richmond St, Barnum TEA in! GIAYWN lold only ta na airtight pim- R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate-_ Glass Insurance at "Lowest Rate. Agent at Sumrnerside, ‘Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown USE OIANGF IKOI Montrose a hero of of him in this stirring ' “ : “This slim young man with the quiet face and the searching grey eyes, striding at the head of his men. daring the wildest cataran to outvie in hardihood this intimafe of scholars, this familiar of courts and senates. the King's lieutenant- general, and dying a felon’: death with a stately courage which drew sobs from the very mob of 17th cen- tury Edinburgh." Going over the record and was .v and r everyone knows that there was no dgmwm; “ ‘ onthisl‘ " cram’ J one won- he will think of life in the , other countries-not without evi- frence. In that respect the ..' itlon in Russia was like that in Trance. The revoluticniat-s felt it a {sacred duty to preach their gospel throughout the world. even in countries that had ,, ‘ - ’ a century hwfore. Having been sub- jected to repression and tyranny themselves and having gained lib- erty through bloodshed it never oc- curred to them that other countriu had gained theirs long before through peaceful and constitutional pa eases, qualified occasionally by strong-arm methods. - ‘rhe strong men ofRiiaaia today are afraid of Germany and an seeking alliance with countries whose govemmnnts they had sought to undermine. They pointed o to captain Eden the menace to t- ain implied in Germany's aircraft. gAll European nitiona are fairly un- animous in regarding Germany aa dangerous to the peace of the Lworld and are casting about for ways and but the statesmen of other count- rieg must have some misgivinll ll to how far it can be relied upon. [its military strength is laid to l! creator than in i014 in all but ml!!- wer. for the Caarist forces were scandalously ill-equi , butyit. ia at least significant Ger-army sllthlnitdklofgblfl. yingthatifaguiitypuannisaa- quittedthejuryiaoondemned. teblow ‘ban-summonin- MIhI-l’! approciativaofthllliflvl moon» from aitmnr tampon ahowl no more fearcf the new nor. ‘it; other to send a. single expeditionary contingent overseas. In the South African war, Canada's contingent was the outcome of a voluntary movemmt. sponsored by the press and ‘timately endorsed by the r ' ' van ‘ There would therfolo be no point what- ever inia. present declaration from Premier Bennett or General l-Iertxog in the sense of theI-abor Herald's highly colored, if not entirely manu- factured, story wlthrespeet to Dominion tic-operation in the can of war nor-nit the way of Dominion Premiers to “serve notice" on the Pwfiflllflll- have related to hnlgn policy ban inviolably confidential. iii f? c ca; E? i i it prison-house of Bideau Hall. Coming from Oxford, where he won highest ‘ and was , ‘dent of its famous Union. be has found time to be admitted to the Bar and to write about law: to serve with Milner in South Africa; tomiiitary matters and foreign policy obviously owes its orkin to the same cause. If the Herald's at- polioy of the British Labor Party. the latter is headed for a heavy fall when the British eledtiona take p ace. Attention Truss Iloarm Totboaeofyolwlioalolrl- fortunate enough to have to to been the British heednunrters‘ Imperial sentiment" with respect- titude in these matters reflects the l ii l l1 i1 94 Great George Street YIIIEI ‘You .SMQKII§G m reiiovs tart-iii»; I Booil Biennium, l tiuPi-z, “Peon-lea. at lb! ." €ii=iiliiliiliillfiildiHii-Ziirliflildil-I? acmiuni flllll west names - New Low Summer Rates elective with April 20th Sailing. _ For full particulars call Charlottetown, P. E. I. Phone "540 and 541 mlis:-:%xrgi-za=xgz-rara§zcx§x§x§rt§ i» l lftor tho TOBACC‘)