" ‘ '37’ FQUR The Charlottetown 1111.11.11.11 Prruhlelnv Lh-nL-Cnl. w (‘t-rum- LIN-Le" vu- 11min .| n llurltufl. l-..|.| n a “llvlfillllllln u s. uni l-‘runlt “talker and D K Curr .\11-11....‘ nun, .1..11.-1i.=11 1mm $5.00 u" rur "ll 111111111" 11- .-r1-.t 1.. m, $1.110 11.-1- ymr litlnunl lsluntl 5.1.1111 p" yt-m- [In s11- |.~.t 1.. (-11.111111; um! tulle-l "It" ' weus-csplfv. JFNE 2- 1937 ------» The Crisis And The Conference 1.i1ii~l1-t it-rinitii crisis. oc- .- 111' i110 Llci-inan 11.-title- (lnt- r1-~ii1t .-i' 1111.- ',-1<i..1:11] l-_\- " - 11-111111 _ slnp "1111.1~;-1f..11-l". 1111- l---111l-:1idi1i1~11t, 111 rc- l;,1,_.,H-,,,L ,,,' ,1“ _\;.,l1[]~l] p-11-1 1-1'_\1i111-r1- and 'he “-,._],,|,_,\.H,1 h,‘ 1...-1, 1,.-1-111.-111_\ and lt.'1l_v front the .\'1-1i-liu11-.1- -11 t--11i11ii1t1-1-, \\1ll h1- to furl‘? ini11 011-11111- -111ii11|1.-1 1111- 1,111-~ti1-n 111' l-itiipirc 111,11 l'llill't'l't‘lit'l‘ now sitting it is 1-1-p--1'11-1l, aftt-r tak- ‘.\ill'1l.'ll'll\ :11 1.1- 1111 1'11 l.--i1-1'--1-. L11 111;’ 1111- ‘.111 1:111. 1.1-1- ->\\n l1-'l1l-l~1< "-1111"! llllfk" 1,, ' l'-l'lllilll exerting .-..-1-. . c-r-lt-r 1111111110111 t-1 ll\"ll' m, |',,,-1,_ iurtlit-r 1,].....1.',..1 *1. 111-111; Ylllllll}. 1111.111 "-11- l‘ :1-,~ 0111-11 to zoi-rt l1 l-iiiri-p1- t'r1111i 011110 112-11‘. liflli~li policy- i-lilitgwil H.111; §.,..- -.1-1.11i1-~11'1-11t-1l stippnrt 111' ;1'1 . . l-',i11-,---.'1-, l, “m... :l\l '1~~. :11 11111 -,-1'1~~1~1it crisis, to talk 111' i1-1.1.1-' w ~-.1t-- tlri-tiiziuvk l'<‘lIt".l-'\'.1\i'\' ztctu-n 1'..'1-»u~l 111111 ~! -:1--111--li;1irl_\- 1111-111 1111- p-l\<lll's'l ‘w tht- (Inuit-ll 111' l.\'.\}{\\t‘ of 1; :11.- 1---1111.;11-11111t-n1 1-1 opt-ii - 11-13-1- that tht- tnittztiiv»: l.--:1-l--11 1111ii-iu11~1'\t-ntioit ~'ii‘.-. vf H r1 s r5111 211-7. _ 1.\.1--:1-~ int-l- 1'2 1'»- -1 l-_v Ihv un advance) mulled l0 disability. Th1 Fathers of COllfW-lffiillll" "W" dreamed of a nation-wide condition of ulll‘llllll°)'" ntcnt. The circumstances uf their day forbade. 'l'he_v~ knew of distress due to poverty, old llge, sickness or inisforttine and made |1r-l\'l>l'0ll llll‘ its relief. But tlllltlllpluyliltllll t11t-_v did not 111111-11. 'l‘liey w-ould have dealt 111111 11 had they luiotvn it, and we who know it \\-ill llilYf‘ l" 1l"?ll with it. S0 far, we have t1i1l_v ztpplied 11.-ll- liatives and when these have not pruH-ll eff-T'- tivt- have tried to push thc l)ltl'(lt'|l 0n to some- oiie else. I Editorial Notes r Sir Thomas Hardy born this date, i840. *- W 1R Polls in British Columbia close at one .\._\I. this tnortting. i ll X ll1-1i..-\~\'. B. and .\lrs. Lt-Page are expected 111-1110 next week after a Continental tour. I l Q 1.11111; out for stnne ltarsh criticism 11f lT-arl when all 111011 speak well i 1i of you." i‘ The roads west of Stiiniiterside are describe-l as th0 worst since the pro-pioneer (lays. and 1neni1-1-_\- wont at our bidding. let its forget the fact. 1i 1i 1K 1f thisliarl been 11114. licrniany would not have "stt-tipetl, looked and listened" to airv non- lntervt-ntion Cominittt-e after ravishing Span ish territory, and to this extent her civilization has zidvztnced; otherwise it has retrograded. ll! 31 Ill tlur t-str-eitied business citizen, 111m, _I. Fred 01-111111-111-1- 11-1-‘11-11 '.'-11- '.\it'111lr:t\\'.'1l 111' foreign \--lu:i1--1-1'~ -11 51,1111 \\ niftl ~§1.-\v rt-stilts. Th: r-..,-1-,;1-.-~--..-'~ :11“ 11 \\..< cullt-d "tlit- tin-st effec- 1-11- 1-0-111-1 111- .1 ~:iii.11i--i1 111' sncl "gravity 1111- i1- ;_- 1.1 -1.,-1-.“ 'l'i1:11 Ftsflliliitlll was I,,-.....,§ _,. - .:1-l 11.0 l1--p1-~ Ulllcfllllllftll‘ as to -t~ 1* . - 1- :1l1-1~.-1-lv 01-1110 to grit-f. \\l;.1t '- - 1'-r - '1 p-ztre lit-s 111 fnrtlu-i- idle 11-1-11- .11,-’. 1111111- t-viileiit that 1.11s are pft‘p;tl'(‘(l to ~t lllt- 111.111 (logs 1-1 11111-11110. .1tc\-1-i- stripe wl1--.»0 war ltl>i ‘w; l"'\\‘ :1 \'ll"l-'1‘!ll 1li~1-:1s0. lll(‘l‘(‘ will -------:111t01- 111' 1-12110 and st-ctirity. A1111 :‘- i 1- ‘tich tht- 1111111-1-1-11110 nation:- are 1- -11i1-, if it 0111111-~ at all, from Frc. 'l'111l;t_\-. ztct-urtliiv; to a sIt11li_\'5 ti1i.-1i‘-'lia11. 1111- :1~~1-inl1lt-1l ' lfing-it-t- are to 0~>i1~i1l0i' the -__-1 ai't.1ir.~, 1.1-1 l]\ ltopt- this - t.'~-1111-i--1i\\v.1li11 spt-aldng with - :11 support 1-1' Britain's ptn-tce ef- Canadian Relief Costs 1n 11,.- ps- -:\ \--:1rs tii1t-111pl--_\1111~iit r0l'11-t' ltzts .\11 esti- itli l1. (-1 - l .1. lliitn $1, ,1 \t'l'lll'ill. i1 1111- ‘.11 ~-. z-stzd _-.-.-;1r~ 011111-11 .\litr0lt 3i, _‘ l ‘u-‘Itl 1-x-,-1i1-‘.i’-11i'1~ l-_\ llo11iii1i1111. f. :1: d i11-.::.icip.-1] y-wti-iiziit-iits at ill-urly ,_14uu|(" 11d l-_\ 111- 11.1111, of Canztda and 11-, .,. -- 1111-111‘ 41-11 111111 to 1111- 01111 11f \l -.---_ 3-1 t--, 111s $1.-:,111-11.111111.17-11-1110 . . l_,\ _._ ]-.~t ."s0.1i 11 1-.:.-.i-t1- .\l3'l11~l1‘l' 11111111111}; esti- i1,1:-1l cost, -- ti..- 111-11111111-11 111111111 111- .il1--ut 5,<.._.~. 1...... ..i:.l .111 1111- 1-:1~1-. 1-1’ pdst expendi- tizrtw l1_‘.' p: 1110-» ;.i11l illlllllfilliitllllfis‘ tht- grand (1,311 11* 1-..,,.-l, $.\'1111,111111,i-1lt1, 1 aunt-w fur ..t~e1'11~.'1i11 ait-l \\'--rl\'>' 11-L-1-pc ‘. ~'-, u... ' .1-.1\1-1l at thc past session (.1 1-.1~'-;.11_ $111111). 'l'lii'~ u-zts down 111111 3-1111- c1 :11 11-1-111 $5t.o<111,11(1o the pre- y :1~.-:il _\1-.-11‘. 1.1 (1-1- \\'11l'l\'< rt-iuuins about the 1:1 ;:-111:~—111-;11-1 11 i-rt- 1-1~1l1i1-1--l $io.cxm.o<>o ._<1..,.-...1- S Wit 311-1 ‘\-.-- ~-,-1--'ial \--t<'~ for til-out $11,000,090 fill‘ r.»'---f 12-1-1113. and ]1.'l_\'1lit'|lls 111 r.'til\v:i_vs for ab- 51.-;1.-,1-._; 1111011111111; 1-11 \\‘11rl\'v1'.< were dropped. 111‘ [i111 .~‘1._;_;.1>1.11_1.1111_ i110 l)0nii11i1.1n paid 311-1111 .\'_-1»1_1»1.-.,111111_ 1111- pro\-int-e~ a similar ant-min .-111-1 1111- niutncipaliues $115,000,000. 1111-1-01 and 11i1~01~ll:1i11~-111s rr-lit-f took thc largest _=1.,.1~.- 1.1‘ 1111- 1.11111 will] .\"_;l1_>.0r>0.oor1. Public \\'-'l'l\s 011.1 .\‘_-_;1_1>1111.1111<1 and agricultural relief 31.11 ;11'1l .\“;_-.111111,1111t1. ,\1111.1111t 5111-111 in 01-1011 prov-nice in thc fire vein-s 11i1-li11li11g l)--111ini--n c-nitribtttinn to joint i-rl-jcvts. ztt-rni-diiig to the Haul,- estititate, were as follow-s: Otttai-io Qui-bcc . .$214.000,000 . 111000.000 .----ls-...--s. Sa-kzitt-ltt-watt . .. , 91000-000 Briti>h Columbia .. 56.000000 ltlaiutoba 41-000-000 Alberta 33000-000 Nova Scotia 151-000-000 New- Brunswick 31700-000 P1111100 Edit-urn Island 2.000.000 l‘l11- rt-~1 1-1 1111- total is 11111111: up of $131100.- om 111.; 9011111111111 spent through its own agen- G66- 1'? v "G0 To Ottawa" (In to 'Ott.1\\;1," 111-11. .\1.-titties Duplesfiifi, Pr1-11111-1- 11f 11111-1100, advised .-1 dt-lcgatirlit from the .\11111tr0;1l f it_\ 0111111011 which waited on him mgmg ,-,-1,.-1- ;._....11.1i00. The 101101‘ profile-m. M‘ 11111111-“1. >l.lli'tl, was a llllllltlllllltllllf. 11ml onlv tht- ll1-111111i1111 was capillllt‘ 1.11 Flllllllll ll- llut. s11), 111t- Yzuie-ttivt-r Prov-titre. -_\ll'_- Dull‘ l('\sl$ did not t1-ll th1- 11010011111111 that 1f It tollli his :i1l\i1-0 .-111-1 0111-1-11-11 its troubles to tlttawa. it 1.1111111 110 11.1.1 tht-rt- that 1111- citit-s could only gi-iiiiiiiitiitu-iu- ttilli 1111- lloiinniini through the prm-intw-s. |'1:r11.-1]-~ tht-rc w-as 1111 net-d of t1-ll- iiiq the 111-111;. 1-s 1111s, Tin-y l\'llCW it wt-ll t-ti-ittglt, liatiitq 1.0111 111 tlttawa ali-t-ziily m1 various oc- cash-us. p 1, 1111- .1111. 11111 >i11|'\' 11f chasing thc problem 4.1‘ r1-l‘1'l' 1-1-111111 and 1-1-111111 tlu- mulberry b1141- '11,, pr ,, 11,. .- \1\ s, “1 11- 1o(lt1.-1\va".-ti1d (lttruvzt s1) s. "(lo t1. 1110 l’r11vi111~1-." .\11-l tllt‘ f<‘*11l? l5 th-zt 1-':1- r1111». :1i'0 szt1l1llt-1l with :1 task wlllfill 01")’ l1;1\<- 1111 :1-l1--p1:it0 ll\(‘i\ll\ 111 dvlclllllillllfs’ “ml which is rI-ztllt- 1111111- 11f tht-ir 111151110“! The prol-h-ui of tiiieinployiiu-tit relief. quite. 811111‘! from 11,-. 1-011111-11110 significance, cottcltidr-s the \'€lllCtl\l\'0l tiaper. is the most aggravating l l Fraser. of .\l€$Sl'> llavis &- Fi- scr, 11.-ts- bet-it chose-ti Cionservativc candidate for Halifax liast in tht- approaching Nova 50111111 Provincial 01cc- ti1111. l!‘ IF i1 T? ‘F CHA R ROTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way Allulllel “.1115, mete wl-l be u. “tarmac scanuat u». this vIUlG. aver) etccwl w. A m: yr upelty elhOuefl uttu 5n cu an opp-Jump») M) VOvG. Lticrt. nccu m,’ 110 dpyrencilatun Oll H181. a-Urc. Alli? new ciecwrat luw put into effect u; Al» gvvcuhnnlli. was pactcltlcu all 1.81‘ 11m? 0:101‘!!! ML. 1W0 cAlUulUAHtt/la, one uOtu curler stue, wti. time every tic-me and tllIUu c1137 lute eiccmt. .\11 cape one nus tn arm 110m uoettlcc or other cause were \\‘lAA Dc a tour uuys coutt 01 rctision to WlllCAl appeal can be thaw.‘ alter tne unul tic-s ate posted. meg-one ettttdeu. .0 vote wut be gulch every cppurvuttity 11.1 tAuflcl-‘x: their tran- ttuse —- new‘ uiasgoih nlustetn cnrottlcle. A Benin despatch contains the fottowutg puidgtatllfl.‘ "tn a speech m: untversuy ot netuii. rrotessvi- rrteurttn aetiootitntatui, who has 411a. tetutiteu truma .1-.p to the Unt- Col. G. S ll-tri-ington. K. C, Cottservzttive Leader in .\'ova Scotia, is to 111- llltlitlrfll in his tEu mates, saiu puutic opinion tn me 1.11.100 cones COUlG now be moblltz- cu tot war ugtunst uerttiaity- wtehtn llal-hvin one of these tlzrvs, for‘ "woe unto _v-1tt'*" w“ “Wh- l“ ‘-'°“~1‘"->'~ “"0 "l"? 1111-00 years t1 wok newt-e tne uh.- oea btutes entered the ureat. War." -1v tndsor afar. It will take a great deal more ..1-.1n ...'.. Me VHAUAMS wcttstitut-tott .0 utsuuio ureat prtequi. ‘there was a tune when 11. woutu nave (LPBWD ut-ttuneiattott 4M6 charges ct nigh ut-asott from quite moot-tad.- p111.- utla. N0“ rite)‘ Slllll€ WALD (b58111)- ing eotnpretietistott. ‘the last. tew jlinlé have tuttgtn. the d ucrence be- tween _nr1rc1 tacts‘ and t-heot-tes, allfl an 111011150111 auhute toward ideal- ists w-no sun imagine that a theory lllunl. nccesstirtty uecume u tact be- cause it 1s tiectareu by edict, sanc- tioned by pcbisctte, c11- given any o.net' setnuiatlce ot legal sanction.- Telegraph Journal. Th4, bright littclleets who, under the ieaoership oi Woodrow W tson with his slogan of "sclf-uetermm- aticn,‘ tore Atistria-t-tuugary into lFdglllElllfi tilt.‘ tllllklfblllltllcly 113E111)’ aluueao; but 1t their disembodied Cltpe Breton Smith fiunstittiency- by .\lr. (Qeorge 51-11111» ever rBYLSll the glimpses of .\1. .\l11r*is1111, a youtig Liberal \\'li11 now rc- prescnfS Ward Four of Syflttls)‘ in the 'l‘11\vn kl-tincil. =11 1k i The littpcrizil C4111feren0t- \vill continue till junt- 15. and thereafter its members will be in] ltilaterial conference with different tinits 111' the Cotiuiioiiw-ealth as well as 11f some litu-opcati countries from which 1111111-111-011ltusiiiessmaybt- expected. lt may be the 0nd of the month be- f1-r1- (lttawzt sees any of tht-iu, and 1t is stir» prising how well Ottawa and the Doinitiion have got along without them, =1- n- t In Caitadzt and New Zealand. the lowly 111111.111 is an ideal example of reciprocal trade, \\'hen the tloint-stic product is out of season, the New Zeitland houst-tvife sheds tears ovt-r its Canadian brother. Likewise, the Caitadiait ltotistrivife r0- ciprocates 11v'0r the .\'e\v Zcalatttl product when thc (ililléttlillfl 0111011 is riff the market. The rea- son is that the growing seasons for oniniis in the two countries are coinplctlictttary and do not compete. It is anticipated that Caitada will 111- shipping a C1lll$l(l(‘l"fll)l_\' greater (llilllllily of 111111111; to New Zealantl this year, due to a short crop 1n the doniitiion “down tinder," (Tattiulzt be- 1'1i;_- thc only linipirc source of stipply of itn- pnrtance, according to the Agricultural llt-part- 1111-111 of the Ca11.-11lian National Railways, i 7" # "Queen Victoria's \'oicc——perhaps the H1051 lfltfll E085 11111101301655)’ me moon, they can ituruly tail LO 1see moi m0 cniei llllltltfi)‘ today of the late "Altes "is 1c re-cohsb Lute m some form that political entity. I11. 2s as true as ll, was over a ccn- tury ago ma. 11' Auzuriu cud not. ex- ist, la would have to be invented."- Montreal Star. The leader of the Opposition has obtamed the assurance of one of England's most tamuus- physicians thu. his lteaitit LS good, that. tts condition LS sound. rle intends w seek 1.110 auvice of a nmed German methco. tf the two experts agree in their judgment, then Mr. Bennett, i1; is felt, Wlil probably curry on. There are a great. many who hope he will be able to do so. Canada can ill af- 1 90131.1(: FORUM nu colrunl u open III fir tllceuulul b! "Pfflliondclll l! nnelllnlll 0t lntnnt, la tlhnrlutl-ntunl Gunilla loco lot nocuurlly (Iltlfllll tho Gplnlfill of wmunendentc. REWARD RE. PUP STEALING Sin-In Saturday's Guardian w,» read in your editorial notes: “Pm- bably were the P. E. I. Fox Breed- ers‘ Association to offer a reward of $2000.00 out of their 3200.000 accumulated fund for Information leading to the conviction of pup stealers, someone would bite." We presume that the above sub-~ _ junctlve probability ‘Canadian National Breeders’ Asoclattcn. refers to the Silver a-nl if our prestimption is correct the item is 01151-5 Wlthirwmlnl! 9W5- .‘ . , v , l . .. vdem] misleading i‘ as much as nose, sneezng and coughing we can u" we ' m m: “'6 0' h“ "'5 u itifgl-ence m be 8mm ‘herb understand why they think Nature from is um the Association (which 15 5° "Hi8" in flffllellnv them Wit-h is a Canada --wtde organization) docs not sufficiently interest of fact 1t maintains a. standing of- fer which prev-ails in every prov- ince of Canada to the effect that, it. will pay $2?0.00 to the person 0r persons who furnish information that will lead to the app-chenslon and conviction of those who have stolen foxes from reglstcred ranches. The offer 0f a ZOO-dollar i-e- ward for the protection of our tnembers against thlevery holds good in cVBTY province of Canada while a Zoom-dollar offer for each case of theft from any ranch whet-her registered or unregistered might be s0 large as to prompt dishonest framing. an early issue of your good paper with any explanabon you may care to make. We are. Sir, m. CANADIAN NATOINAL SILVER FOX BREERI-flts‘ assflclannu, G. ll. MACC-ALLUM Secretary. PJWCRM. Is it. at all probable that anyone w-quld risk along term of lm- bt-isonment for the sake of obtain- ing a $2.000 reward? ED G. ____._______ TWENTY-ONE YEARS AGO TODAY Sin-Again the silent, wheels of time their atmuul round have driven. and in a spirit of deepasf. humiliation and respect. we arrive at. an anniversary-the twenty- flrst. of an important engagement in the titanic struggle mentioned 1n hll-tory as the Great, War, 1914- 1918, the engagcmen. rtnerret. .0. being the 1111111 battle of Yprcs. ' Twenty-one years I"_.-;0 today the ford to lose his public sci-vices,— Vliirtdsor Star. Germany is powerful now; she ls armed and teat-ed, sht- lias broken her “shack cs," she speaks as an equal, shc boasts that she has done w-hut so many others des re but. cannot do, that she has “conquered uttctnployitiettt." It might be thought. that, being strong, she would be merciful; that, having ‘crushed her small Jewish minority. casr many of t-ltcm out. of a bare livelihood, insul-ed and ltumillatcd t-hein. and reduced them to the lot of an inferior race, she would leave then". alone at last, to live or to escape as best they can. When one man tortures another, death sets a limit to the torture of, a religion or a race, and the German Govern- on, turn liistnric gramopltotic record in existent-c —mtist all" 011'“- “5 l1- dmes l5 Jews ml“ 00111111110 to preserve its forty years of silence.” says the travel magazine Globe. ters ltave instructed the British phonograph con- 5 ccrn. the Edison-Bell Cnmpatrv, makers of the record, that the conttnanrl given in 181); not to; reproduce it for public performance i5 still in force. “This record is one of a itumber of valuable cylinders which were recently discov- ered by Edison-Bell," reports the magazintr, “The Victoria record was covered with mildew‘ and fungus, and its identity was at first doubted, but official research has established its claim, though not its claim to be heard. It records a personal message front the Queen Empress to the Emperor Menclik of Abyssinia, co11gr11t~ tilating him on the attainment by that votintry- of independent sovereignty. Ttvo copies were made. One was taken by Sir Renncll Rodd to A-byssittia, and the Queen requested that the other should be immediately destroyed. 'I‘hi's was (lone, but it appears that a duplicate was preserved in case the copy for Abyssinia did not arrive. It is prestimably this duplicate which w-ai recently discovered, though thc art-hives are silent as to w-ltat ltappcitctl to Meiiclil-Cs copy." iii Canada, the second high road and the bread basket of the Empire, is defenseless against arrn- ed invasion, Eric Acland, U.S..-\. authority on military affairs, rlcvlztrt-s. “(>110 squadron of laombers operating front a base in lltidsrm Bay could, in three days, completely cripple Catiatla as provider of a motherland at war, and could demolish the alternative limpirc- route to thc East," Acland states. A1111 adds : “Canada's ‘isolation’, if it cvcr did exist, has gone by the lmard." .\clai1d insists this picture is not fanci- ftil. The war of the future, he says, will be waged on the “central shock" principle, the bomb- ing of industrial and cointtitiiiit-aititiit centre-s \\‘1tl1 a base established at Churchill -— v11111er~ able and open to anyone four months of thc v021r——01i1..._.' planes could 111 tlirr-c (lays trans- form our-three transcrmtint-ittal links at \Vinn1 peg into a “twisted jig saw of tiictal carnage"; botnb thc R.C..~\.F. airdmtics at Ottawa and Trenton; cripple the flying fields and radio at Montreal and '1-.11.1..1..; crumble the locks of \\'e1l:tiid canal; demolish the grain elevators at I'm-t .\rtbu--. ln short. .-\cland states, thr-v could "split the bread basket of l-Iittplrt- wide open; blast the second road of l-Inipirc out of stein-c.’ against this prolf '_ .-\cl:iti1l ("an chalk up only four defence estimates of 111s- vt-ar, which call for two d .1r11(\-t-rs. hm‘ fl7lll(‘—'§\\'f‘9[7(‘l'F "That means." At-Ianrl point- .1111, “one (lt-strnyer and ttvn trawlt-rs tn patrol the 111-151 insistent feature of our constitutional 1 our Pacific and our Atlantic seaboard!" the moral andlntelleciual Ghetto which it. has planned for them.- Official quar- , Manchester Guardian. Canada has genuine reason to feel pmuci ofthe consideration given to he: representatives at, the Coron- ation and at. the Empire Conference which opened two days following that great event. It goes to prove that Britain thinks highly of her Canadian possess on, 11nd we. in turn, can best reciprocate by show- ing our highest loyalty to the Mother Country. The fact that. the Canadian Premier, Right. Hon. Mac- kenzie King, had a place 1n the Coronation procession lmmedlatcly following the cart-rage of Premier Baldwin of Great Britain was a mark of great honor to th s Domin- ion and to Canada's chief represen- tative-Dunkald Herald. The Conservative leaders in Nova Scot-la may or may not be playing shrewd politics in accusing Premier Angus Macdonald of “spt-tnging" an election hurriedly and at. short notice, but. it ls a line of strategy witch. though perfectly legitimate, should be followed gingerly and not too persistently. For compialnts of this kind, whatever else they sug- gest. certainly do not create an im- pression of strength and confidence on the part of the complainants.- sydney Post-Record. The nuw rules for German legal procedure prnvtdc that offences not. punishable tinder the P611111 C046 shall be decided "in accordance with a healthy pitbltc sentiment.“ This leaves it w the judges to find out. what public sentiment ls and act. accordingly. Tht-rc can be no Jus- tice for minorities tinder this prov- ision, no way out for those who re- fuse to run wit-h the crowd. Hltlerb Germany cannot tolerate d ssenters. What a ntockery 0f justice this is! There is thus no need for courts at. all. The cry ctthc mob, directed by the dictator. ls to be the 111W- Nnt-hing so vividly illustrates how mtghiiy is the protection of the gum-ts to citizens of 11 free country and how zealousy it should be pre- servc.'.-Bost0n Post. Frum Cleveland comes the report of the production of a new electric bulb, giving 10 per cent. more llght than the present lamp without using any more current. The new lamp Ls made with a. shortened, extra-culled tungsten filament. in a gas-filled bulb the method lncrfllfllll! "Eh!- lng eflclency by reducing the hect- wuste in the current tmed.-Monc- ton Times. Government creates no little 1nd t-oltstimes much. 111m. has always been true everywhere, but. in our country the waste was relatlvely unimportant as 1on1; as government kept. wlt-hln boundl. Now that it. l| BACRAClIE OFTEN WARNING trouble. wimmhd-R H" yalfilyl. maiden-mam livcs of thousands of Canadians were taken in this battle. one of many, waged for the continuance of democracy. These dead, who there gave their lives that right; might not perish from the earth, , now lie in serrted row- of curt-hen 1 mounds between which the blood‘ red pflPllles bloom in eternal ro- y fatten; these graves now hallowed by the tears and prayers of those who have survived. In the beauti- ful lines of Colonel MacRae. "In Flanders Fields the poppies grow between the crosses row on row"; but. comrades for you who are remembered with a cross, the struggle i= over, the supreme sac- rifice has been made and the crown ls won. You are gone. you have fulfilled the scripture reach. ing “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his Ilfe tor his friends." However we who are left must say with Lincoln that. “The world wlll little note o1- long remember what. we say here. but it can never forget what you did there", at least 1t, can never be forgotten by us your comrades. The years move on, we cast. aside the mantle of egottsm that. pox - of year. men, ting others-m the same family, to offer 11 reward for the capture breuthmg me “me MT- 05003 the oi m. thieves, while as a miter 5"“ l°°¢ 91118118“ 111 ‘he same tn Lhose days lay on our young rhouldet-s like the dew at. morn on the new blown rose; that eguttsin, breeding in maturing and plastic adolesence, a spirit. of lndtvldual- ism and earthly worth, a spurious consciousness of fleshly importance that must. have caused the Omni- potent Being, who had dled on, Calvary: Cross tn cgaln hang his . head in shame-perhaps perchance repeating “Father forgive them for they know not what. they do," for forces over which they have no control have brought, these things to pass. But time has somewhat healed the wounds, has marred the pic- Lures of horror and has left a remnant. of those lnvlrictbles, who now seek only to profit by the les- sons, you who have gone, have taught us. You have completed in a tcw years what. we over many year. must. conclude. God in hls- inflnlte tvisdom saw fit. to relieve each one of you of further mspon- sibtlity in this earthly scheme of things, but we the ltvlng are still burdened by the cares of existence and can only hope that. each day. we may live, so that. when the summons comes to joln t-he 1n- numerabie caravan who have 80m, on before, we may g0, not as the, quarry slave scout-god to hLs dun-- geon, but. like the man who wraps the drapery of his couch about him and 1ie= down to pleasant consumlnéwa dollar of every four earned in the Unit/ed States the question arises whether the coun- try will really benefit ln the per- formance of tasks which are them- selves to a very trifle extent 1111970‘ ductlve and wasteful-Chicago Tribune. lluhelnmybulhcfntuipdlfithy - _ Tuk _ _jdill 1:1,...- " ur-"Mm. ..:.:."r,':....,. my“! Bnehehehlnmnfidlfllyh Dull: Kithy Pith-Jar our lull n century thc Inevit- nuulyfw $159715“!- 107 Budd's Kidney Pills ‘but ' I“! If 11m Dc Ind If’. ha. I). THIS rs nus TIME T0 sun-r INJECTIONS T0 PREVENT HAY FEVER l As hay fever is a yearly visitor to a large number of individuals who find the hey fever season-some- time 1n August till the first. frost. -appear.s—~t.he most miserable time And when we sec these lndlv-l- runntng these distressing symptoms and let.~ wnrk-ascape. we can hardly blame them. There is no question but that. heredity-w: family tendency-causes many of these cases and also 11¢. formtttes in nose and throat. but Why hi)’ fever picks out some and avoids others cannot be explained but only likened to the fact emf cancer, asthma rheumat/sm, tuber- culaslfi. diabetes 11nd other ailments, also seem to make their own selec- tlonz. As the great majority of the autumn cases axe due to the tndlvl- dual being sensitive to the pollen of JUNE 2, 1937 <_-_i saw-m, a Prowse Bros. Ltd. llave Just Received Another Large 1 Shipment of Regular $5.95 1 LADIES’ DRESSES , 0n Sale at $4.95 7 1 11. s. tisnniiie. ; 0 ragweed it. is now customary to try to tie-sensitize these lndlvlduafs by the injection of pollen extracts 6 weeks to 3 months before the yearly attack usually arrives. It is there. fore my custom to suggwt. that. they start; recelvlng these inoculations or 1711661110115 by their physicians dur- ing the month of June. Not. that. these injections cure all cases: not. even when the series of infections have been given yearly for as long as three or four years. But. that. one yearly series cures some cases, two series others, and others are cured only after a, sci-leg of three or four years, is undoubt- edly true. And when all nose and throat defects have been corrected it. is very much worth while for hay fever victims to t-ry one or more of these sertes of inoculations. Having once established by tests that. ragweed (or other pollen) ls the cause ofthe hay fever, "injec- tions should be given at. intervals of once or twice a week for 6, 8, or more weeks before the yearly attack ts due, gradually increasing dose from the strongest dliutlon whizh does not. glve rise to a. positive sk n test. to the strongest dllutlon which ertified Pulilie Accountant 1 anti Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised Profit and Loss Accounts Computed. Trustee under the Bankruptcy Aet Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statement; and Reports Prepared. Administration x of Estates a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. 88 Great. George St. Charlottetown, P. EJ. B.A., 1.1.0651 l m. Tea p011 Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea ' Use BRAHMIN Orange Pekoe Tea produces a. positive test. When .1111... 111311-111 (New York World-Telegram) At. 6:46 Sunday morning T. J. Ross, who appears to be ivy Lee's successor as the Rockefeller-s’ press. agent. press associations and flashed the death of 01d John D., fulftlitng an agreement. propos- ed several years ago by Bob Bender, who was then news man- ager of the Unlbed Press. Mr. Bender realized that. the old man's tlme was almost up but he wanted to avoid the bother and expense of a constant death watch over a period of years and put his idea up to Mr. Lee, who agreed to DlB/y ball. Bob and Ivy both died before the flash. came, but their agree- ment. carried over and the Rocks. tellers, as well as the prose asso- ciations, were spared the tncon. ventence of B, death watch, wmm ls one of the most. distasteful jobs in the newspaper business, 1m. pleasant to the reporters, who reef a resemblance to the wheeling buzzer-d, and to the family of the dylll! person. who also not; a re- semblance as they peer out the windows an. the lnik-afalngd wretches of the Fourth 53mg, dreams. Sucl going can omy be realized, ‘my utilizing. as you‘ would h"! 118. lhe intervening years to the perfecting of llvlng and close application of the greatest: mllg- lvlw leaching-The Golden Rule. Comrades, in the phantasy of day dreams, and the sleepless watches of silent nights, we tri 1m. cgtnatton stretch forth our hands ""056 l-lw years to you. 11nd fsln would agaln embrace you and kllOW you as we all then Were. An intangible somethtng ls missing from our lives. a pm as 1t were has been amputated. and forever, we are striving for the Invisible, the forgotten equation, the ether- eal mlY-ltle Into which you have sllnped away from us. Rest in Deuce; you have carried the burden of life's iesponslblllfles to a, point, and left Lhem with us who mtrt can-y on to the end. The memory of you bums more indeilbily into our consclousngss a; "l8 years go by, and but; a few re- main to the most. of us. Relentless time advancing with precision, en- rolls before us the flashing page: of the new order of things, the new duties and standards upheld before us, and using every artifice to eradicate from our vision the spectacle of the then all impor- tant, era, but with equal tenactey 0f purpose we refuse to give you up and are only satisfied to take you along with us, as the acme of’ perfection and the unforgettable example of The Golden Rule-Per- sonlfled. We cannot forget you and the things you lived and suffered for. Enshrtned in our hearts la a pic- ture of the flower of young Cm- adlun a-ianhood marching stead- lly on, tn cert-led rank‘, m an in- evitable Gethsemane and onward Yet to a Celestial Pinnacle where we will willingly leave you uphold- ing the blazing bmnem of Love. Charity and Blcrlflce, toward which our eyes must. be ever turned that we may emulate; end cherish a hope to agctn be penntttcd to take our place in your hallowed ranks. when the Great ltevellcr shell have at. least carried m away in the tnevttablc Transition. I am, Sir, etc. O. W. MACAIITHUB, Jordon, I. I. l- telephoned the three big ‘,1 simultaneously , " 1 steamship lines. consult, ' 181 Queen Street .vy= OCEAN TRA 1 I am the representative of all well known 1 For ‘cruise or one way trips l W. K. ROGERS EL Phone 540 I44 Richmond 5t. E. R. Brow& Sort Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summer-side. Lloyd Lewis Ch- ' xtetown FROM "insomnia-- Tonight. what Ls it. breaks the bond of sleep- - The Iteration of insistent though-t? A treasured name forgotten vainly sought? Moon-beams that through the lattic- 1, ed window peep EY E S I G-ll T EXAMINATIDN Fitting and Supplying Glasses Etc 11. .1. 111111011 OPTOMETRIST MONTAGUE, P. E. l. Ofllce Connected With Drugstore The friendly dark that, yestterntght. would keep Its faithful vigil, never to be botlsht. Seems now mlne enemy, as though I fought. Minute by minute, back unto slum- ber deep. '—Rnbert. "Undérgood Jolinsmil I I . S|||nn|ng& Weaving Send mo your wool 1., be llllm mm yum and woven info blanket. Charges no. llfllle yarn 23 cents per pound, doubled yum 26 "mu, Blankets $2.00, ll nnlnunder- ed $1.85. It takes five pound! of wool per blanket, Wool mun be well washed, Ill dirt and bun-s picked out. The nlu of single yam In: medium. doubled yarn; fine, medium. conne and honking. Put shippers and owners’ name on nil parcels. ulna-cu and 2.“;- cllnm lnllde. Send by mnll or freight, Freight will be paid on I00 pound Iota. Price of well washed and picked wool la 32 cenll n pound. Special price Ior un- washed wool. WM. CONDON, S5 Queen St. Charlottetown SMIJT PREVENTATIVE FORMALIN one of the best known preventative: for SMUT 0N GRAIN An effective, efllclent and proven remedy. Formalln ls a cheap but thoroughly effective remedy- Grnln grower: would he 11M to m! promptly. In order to have need properly fronted b6- forc sowing. One pint. to every 40 till"! of wafer. Full direction: will! ev-y-y order- Do not. delay. Write in M‘ one totlly. Mm Order-l pt-omnl-l! ‘l’ 0-11.11 to. TIIE TWO MAGS DRUG STORE PHONE Ill