some roux ~ v [-4. .. ",1 . arr- . v- ‘I h! and In . " .4 ' ‘ ifirll llonullad‘ Isa-n ll “l! lfijlfificar (la advance)“ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER M. 10M. BENNET i0 SNOWDEN "Sire, It‘! the truth must needs be l0 . We love not you that rail and scold; And yet, my masters, you may wait Till the Greek Calends for our ma» These lines oi Sir William Watson may well have come to the mind oi Premier Bennett when he read the Canadian Press summary oi Vis- count Snowdeifs tirade against the Empire trade policy which the Can- adian Prinie Minister enunciated at the London conference oi 1980, and which was successfully _ ‘ ted at cunning. . I)‘ YlcnPndlgni J3!‘ l! A IIOKIIIIIOI. U I 0 nee-Ina ItleuInn_-I I law-m to Milken-Wash Helios and II I (‘rive-ls .8! IIfIfl..,’I VII on year (in advance) delivered. in Canada all United lhtae. in ‘i031 to a2 pei-oeflt. in 1m. The figures available for the pron‘ ent year show a s further im- provement in intro-Empire trade, and give no iridieaticsiwbatever that rnrd snowdsne dire prodictiolis are likely to be fulfilled. THE ARMY MUSTACHE ‘Hie old British army order pro- hibiting the shaving oi tho ripper lip will be recalled by our return- ed men as a source oi amusement ss-weil as annoyance in the early d1?! of the War. litany have been the speculations ss to how to $00,100,000. In the year’ 1088-84 alone, under the heading oi direct relief. provincial and municipal works and‘ undertakings, and other upendlturoi, including Domihion pfliflctl. the icderal outlay amounted in 830,000,000. The Gov- THE CHARL()'I"FE'I‘O\VN' GUARDlAb. Nate; By 11,3 Way Ono characteristic oi the _ Beds 07017111191‘! ls lacslboth oi humour and ‘loud manners. Thus threeCom munist members oi the Dutch Par- liament shouted insults at the I ominouvc first relicflprogranihro, it will be recalled, provided ior expenditure up to $20,000,000. The needs have grown since then and have been met. The record is all!" thing but discroditable. _ EDITORIAL NOTES The sacs. meeting which fell through for lack oi attendance will ‘be resumed tonight. Less subsidizing oi retailers by wholesalers has led to a price cut in gasoline. of latent gilts. The ‘ Queen llleinshe lied addressed the members. The! were arrested‘ and questioned at police headquarters, but than released-perhaps bgcguge tbeGovernment did not take them so seriously as it is evident ‘they tabs themselves. This example may be commended to the frequent vic- tims ci "scares" as to the Red men- ace. In iew cases has it been hsli so threatening as it seemed. Com- munism has no real hold on any country outside oi Russia, and. even there it is less militant. The Reds just like to hear them-l selves taika-I-“liladelphie- Inquirer. We areerested with a. multitude oi them There is one thing about the U.B.A. sharpshooters, they dispense with what was considered the nec- essary privacy oi public executions. Ramsay "‘ disproved. Unquestioiiably, Lord Bnowden is right in stating that the outstanding figure at the 1930 Imperial Confer- ence in London was the Rt. Hm. R. As e Conservative, it was to be expected that m. Bennett would not seo eye to eye with the Labor Government oi Great Britain, but the divergencies in their visw- ' points were considerably greater It my P1001100 clots that may than had been anticipated. Cali- “If! infection through the blood B. Bennett. Ottawa in 1982. Lord Sncwdeo was Y Chancellor oi the Exchequer in the Labor ministry which rejected Pre- mier Bennett's oiies- in 1930. Hie re- mained a die-hard free trader, but saw his colleagues, one by one, fail 1n line with the Bennett policy and sweep the country on it in the ioi- lowing year, when the National Gov- ernment wss formed. From time to time he has given utterance to his spleen, particularly against Premier ‘onald and Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, but evidently he regards Premier Bennett as the dominating . force in moulding the Empire policy which now prevails. it is something of a compliment to be hated with such intensity by a man of Lord Briowden’s calibre, who fights only with foemen worthy oi his steel; but in this case he speaks with the bit- terness born oi failure, and his prophecies, which he now rsshly publishes, are chiefly oi interest for the manner in which they have been the 0N6!’ originated, and what flrthlv purpose was served by in- sisting on the sprouting oi a mus- til-the by every recruit. Light on the subject is thrown by a stale- ment made last week to the Ameri- can college oi Surgeons. It seems that any infection o! the upper lip, "$11011 88 mlsht arise from even e trivial razor scratch or whgtovor risk there may be in kissing. is much more potentially dgnggmug than ' ' infection on the lower lip." The mustache serves as s health protector against such in- fection. ' 3100617 speaking, the lip" area includes not only the site of mustaches but much or the {m 0nd nose. Infections in these areas, it is insisted. ii they get beyond “n! reach the is-cial veins. ‘Hiese Wllll pass down close to each side oi the nose and then flare out across the cheeks somewhat above the mustache lip areas. Ordinarily the blood in them flows downward. But upper lip infections may block than veins. 10mins the blood in them upwflrd. 1t then flows toward the eve. passes the Ngion oi the into the “oav ontheflooroithe skull. Once there the infection can kill quickly. Bishop 08ullivan takes a. lead- ing part in the consecration today at Antigonish, N5. of Rev. John Hugh McDonald as Bishop oi Vic- toria, B.C. rt must have been a matter oi satisfaction to the Aussies Britishers won the coveted prize in the greet recs from London to Mel- bourne. The best thing the city can do to solve the ‘water and sewerage ques- tion in outLving districts is to pre- ,, sent a bill to the legislature ior the extension of boundaries. Char- lottetown has outgrown its original limits, and is likely still further to expand. for the auto has made the . distance from the business section mud m“ m ‘p’ '° “m” "m" amstteroilittleimportanoom the selection of Ono oi the main reasons why more scholars enter Prince oi Wales College irom the country districts than from Charlottetown is ‘be- cause there are-or were-more op- portunities tenth grade children in the city. “m” w“ °f u” m “d “W” ieiidlumeularmirlgl will §Zm§..i“.l. m“: bum the lncst part Prince oi Wales Col- lege and teachers licence. Now that the teachers are inter- utlng themselves appear earlyyand prominently. But the greatest of these gifts lie dor- msnt-oiten ior long years. They are the gifts that are mostly the essential ones, which mean our suc- cess and hIDPhIBES-rthé ones that mustbeearnedlltisagoodthing to be thrown upon ons's own re- sources early in iiie, for then the discovery and development oi these most valuable oi gifts are earned for long service. The fact remains, however, that little is handed to one in this world. Everything worth while has to be dug for, striven for, and fought for-in other words. earned! The things we earn we cherish and appreciate. thing ior America. The country beaten. m America trade the character oi the leaders. Most 0f the American leaders lack the British trade unionists from years ish leaders, they will probably con- and with diflereilt results-Ex. At the opening exercises of Col- ' some plain words to the youth of precietion oi the difleience between Lord Baden-Powell's now is acidosis, and there is an im- Pinsldent Roosevelt is said to b0 . moving to the Left. That rs no bad 3x05‘: body I" m needs liberalising. The textile strike cause Mums“ ma" m“ n“ tissues is over. The men are compllgiiglly’ or the body mnmmwlqoluwbem‘ organisation depends absolutely on $355338 gfigmondiuon w judgment that has come to the resum oi’ experience. When they have "ma". “um had theusame experience as Brit- f5: mingtfiirénly Mg" u duct their strikes on different lines are known u w“ tannin‘ leave an acid ssh when they are used or burned in the body. umbia University, the President, Dr. uwh Sh u; a; gem 101mm; Nicholas Murray Butler, addressed nwdg’, o d we e today. “In respect to manners and because they a" 5mm; om- personal conduct, present-day hsb- foodsflqneag, e333, 11gb and, Qgygflg, its. as manifested in every sort oi It wquld be pymtgmlly lmpmgiblg m public place and personal zeiaticn- 3e; B, W911 bounced diet without ship." he said. “are time and usalu these foods. They supply pmteid to quite shocking. one wonders why it me body and the body cells all need is that yputh can come to full ad0- protelds to maintain their form or lescent years with no apparent ap- structure, 800d mall-IRIS and their 00006109? when too much fat food-cream, butter, fat meat, egg yollm-aro eat- statement en with not enough starchy food-fl- that 29,000,000 weeks oi work were sugar, bread, potatoes-t irurn up lost in this country last year be- these fats properly. It is food that supplies energy and is ‘the BRIGHT: ‘RHYTHBIT-of MUSIC r _, GUS,‘ 0RCHESTRA= ” RITIME AUDIENCES George Wade’s Corn Huskers l INTERNATIONALLY FAM PLAYIPQKG, LARGE MA ro-Night { A 1a. comical: HALL-Admission-SO-cents. l ._ Iiimiiuiiillllllii- t - , ., veuosvicnr, _ cqlyllllllllly ‘YREGORDING j, ARTISTS’ i‘ l a AOIDOQII .7 used A word that is commonly pressioninthsmindsoisomsthat Nowthisisriotsofarwrnngbe- v the always be sllshtiv alkaline. . Iithebodywereaciddesthwouid What causes thstbody tisuse to Certain foods that we eat, what foods, The natural question would be, Acid forming foods mustbe eaten Another form oi acidosis is found starchy Mia's plmosal was that Canadian strum allover the body. or result tariffs against non-Empire goods lu meningitis. or both. in treating would ‘be raised ten per cent in re- Ill 1101M‘ lip infection, a pimple tui-n for preference ior Canadian than should never be aqueeasd. food products in British markets. Billseons discussing tho 1913011 “id This 1. eierence could only be ai- the practice of plucking superflmmg folded. by erect Britain levying a h!!!’ frmn the nose offers some tar-iii ‘ against food products from risk of upper lip iniectiopg, without the Empire. This was un- thinknblo to the British Labor Gov- ernment. In rePlY. Mr. Thomas. Minister for the Dominions, startled the British Parliament by character- izing the Bennett oiler as unprece- ORIGIN 0F GOLF The Weekly Scotsman comes elvhswlthsslnrysstotheorigin * * "huinbllg." w. Bennett's °f Fw- Th° MY“ "Kl Ancient reply was to telephone his Cabinet 9"“ °1 3°" l‘ memlv Icserfled colleagues at Ottawa and get a sum- 54 l 5°°mBh Pastime. and to have m“? o! the 03mm“ reaction to been of native origin in Scotland. the events o! the Conference. He ‘The story used to be related, says then delivered a scathing criticisraTM smwmm- °l l Vim"! 511°9- ization does in ‘rruro, organise '4 achieve the desired end. south, west as well as cast leading newspaper men have affirmed and imports. m, ma," development o; musk, cause of sickness gives point to the iai e gen all l; id than flame that helps burn up fats. Thus i” m‘ “h°°"' w‘ ‘l’ ‘h!’ °° 3°” .....°....$.'..T‘§Z. thatatflrftai: is be- we find an acidosis in these ger- somewhere. Ii the Women's Music comm; a C3 nation Germany has weight Individuals whoa-e reducing Club would do. as a similar orgari- taken elaborate steps to hat her Youth shall have iull _ scope ior outdoor exercise on an 4W1 l5 Wills t0 b11111 llll N! Mm "t school chorus and juvenile solo com med m“ mly h” done me ensure the amount of starchy food eaten. Therefore even ii the lat indivi- petitions in Charlottetown in the what B heme done here? Th, there ever has been. Open-air pools we hem; sunk an over the mum vent the body tissueslosingtheir e1- t _ All that; m bed Ls 1 “L I ksline CODditiOIl. The meeting of the Canadian ‘gym much Jagope thgte u“: To prevent acidosis then, foods mmreclm" ‘l1 551m 3°“: N- Baden-Powell, the grandest young- -. he pod to put that port old men oi them all, may find time . " _ that is why fruits, milk and vege- mws more on the map. From north. 318$“ "-5 M Lmdon Sud” tables should be eaten overs day. Mr. MacDonald's reaffirmed their convictions that journal, “The News Iietter," Canadian ports should be used ior for an inquiry into the activities oi ‘mlkexcept puma‘. plum "m shippmg and Rum“: expo,“ and British armament firms. It is clear, crmbemekévery d” ‘claws may declares that organ, from the Unit- be prevented‘ ' lch. Spring, it would go s long way to more j; mom Qfganlged sport t“? one-half the usual amount-should fortnightly asks or m. Thomas for his "humbug" M“ "1"- Whlls Wsluhlnx or tend- speechand scored the British cabi- net for its failure to mudictc m». °l ‘MP- "flick e smallish mus ‘Thomas’ attitude. He went on w “m” ""11 l"! 1°“ °r hls m" "I so. that ii the proposals oi Canada “°°*- "Kl ‘he M“ huvlus duly weyre to be so "ooritemptilousb re- “n” i“ 51bit“ dlilmw- 05m! l0 ' ' rest in s. hole in the ground-e hole et hand for strengthening her econ- ml "W11 llmr than the stone it- self. No doubt the young shepherd Plemier Bennett's propqgglg meg was struck by the feat, and tried Isl-in to periorm what he had done b01019. jected, Canada must use other means ornio condition." with the support of the other Do- minion Prime Ministers, but the Bri- tish Lebor Government refused to accept the policy oi i-sciprocalftarlil m" 110*; some o! his comrades preference; Lad Bnwden was may have seen him and have tried wrong, however, in implying that the 33°- fllm" $110 ' mo Conference was a complete iail- some 01 whet We Mm sol!- ure. It resulted, among other things, in Britain agreeing to maintain ex- isting preierences given Dominion products for three years, and in the acceptance of an invitation to hold a further Imperial our-‘eronce at Ot- tswa.’ The most important result, fcrcnce issue squarely before the British , ‘ . of Premier Bennett's policy in the Wt “wasted vlut, agreements negotiated at the Ottawa "i114 h"! 59911 (“W04 tlM wow conference, - ur. Thomas, oi the 5M wlulllv adopted and out into uhuuflnm» ‘mach’ hem‘ ‘mnlu n“ “i000, 3nd "ION @011‘ (Q b9 leading British delegates worm-u, little valid ground ior criticism m.‘ "principle whichffl" had; so," I" Is rcunj ' $151000. ' . , I a, " _os=.ol%.ec.im'>i§~.r¢-u~4» eral spoksrrien to charge the Ben- nett Government with having fail- ed to implement its promises re- however, was to place the tariii pre- "will “mllllflwlmllh Th‘! 001F89- as the Montreal Gazette points out, Itbecum‘mmfails intake any accolmt oi the bu‘ m m. ‘locum o; "M. m ‘ma, ormdltidlls which arose arier the the National Government, largely "ma"! ""9 "W": 11mm!!! “I066 Conservative, wascreturned/rhs fol- Milli-W" l" "I1 well known to lowing year saw the the Opposition critlm. No one hes hlg his or solne other person's flock RELIEF PA YMEN TS and refreshing to have as any in the unpleasant business Lord Snowderrs opinion regarding Prime Minister Bennett. It was at u” Imdm “Brenna °l ocwbel’ knows. MI. MacDonald is not the 1090 Mr. Bennett first won his editor oi "The News Letter." But spurs. as an imperial protagonist. He was returned to power only in July, taking over the government on August '7, 1930, and in October he had turned the political situa- 11; may h“, aumeged o, h, tion not only iri London but in the ' ' Iimpire upside down. Never before had such a vigorous able and de- w“ m, termined personality appeared on ‘the dllilolnatic stage o! the Empire's capitol, and it was not long before he had put all such laissez-fsire soothsayers oi the snowden breed It hafbgcomc-ghg cugfpm or 1,11,. on the run. He figuratively blasted them out of the way oi progress and econoin‘ salvation. Is it any wonder Bnowdon feels sore? Rev. m. Rochester, Editor o! the Presbyterian Record, that the eppellatidns "Right Rev." and “Very Rev." as applicable to the Moderator and err-Moderators oi the Church of Scotland and icing megguyog United Presbyterian Church this qlllstion oi lmlllivlwlncntreiief is concerned. oithe may; 11w- m-r how ism minim-e- mantshasrnorethanjustiiiedwhat tin mom-but ~ um- ‘were not lnowden calls ur. Bennett's Ill! “avoid where at least three "dominethig leadership.” cannon luthvrlllu vm ‘withtucnuipirohuinmuodirwbuw M mlmwipal. and -in ’. federal, ewflmd’ h"'°n°tb°°n°m°m“'r°°' "More trouble, always trouble!" ‘Ulllldlllfllc Plnebyterian Churohiri "Yes," she answered, and then with Oeneda since 10%. Prior to i010 a smile, "Still, “humus? iiiekggmglt these titles were not officially "u" °“;" ‘l’ “f m“ 5 no": m u“ Pmbyteflm church fitlillyto be really olive,» This, faith. DON, and in 1036, the year after the n,“ when 3| m, phjmopher who dierlllfilofl. on the motion oi the has a eaner view oi life to offer? late luv. m. lphrai soott (Dr. And 1s not. incidentally. this st- “ titudeftybixy erituhgmrtatn for; us to we knocks ing o t“ ma“) m‘ hum" “m” life resolutely and not supineiy be- tion was passed: "that this As- moan their occurrence-Gabriel ed States Senate inquiry that Brit- ish firms are as heavily implicated oi trafficking in armaments. They do what all the others do. And what that is, the whole world now lie is leader oi the “Nations? Ls.- bour group whose mouthpiece it is. And whet is mole, he is Prime Minlstelz-London Daily Herald. Events, unprecedented in ‘ern red the people to open protest. The only way in which information can be given to the people is by type- inside the churches. For the first time since Hitler! about the house"oi the deposed "Hell Hitler." "I did a little homeiy ‘ ‘ at an establishment in Piccadilly. The phone. I could notice by her per- must have gone wrong. when she uced, from a. plain shop- My doorstep world is measured by The mean circumference oi eye, times, are transpiring in Germany. A d t f u, ‘ed I ‘rho attack on the church has Istir- T3 161i“? “T; the; liewmudsoknaw- press under the thumb oi the About, m]; hub o; m, m“; p,“ state is closed» to them and the Thu 5pm 0g 593mm through u“ written sheets which, are being dls- While like two specks upon a wheel tributed to assembled congregations Both aim and moon in turn rev"), v accession to Time's fixed rotation to the sight, power, a. great multitude assembled In brilliant, first, then paler light; bishop Melsser and did not close Andinthc restless song and stir the demonstration with the usual Oi sparrow, ant or grasshopper, I shall behold both greed and grace, .. o, saloswoman, while attending to me, As in. from flowers oi a weed was suddenly celled on the gels; Dis ill the tenets oi a creed. turbed expression that something ‘Ilwse worlds beyond the wcrid I 8C0, hung up the receiver 1 remarked: Incorporate with humanity- b‘, using his food intake, e little s€ii%\iood—ebout one-quarter tc be eaten toburn 1m his fat and pre- ihat render the blood . and tissues more alkaline must be eaten and It is very unwise to try to do without acid forming foods because your body needs meat, eggs, fish, or cereals. By simply eating some couchuslos SW33» lgrggr Him’; 50 Years Ago And Since it. n’ . FRED COOK AUPADAOUS RAISING About twenty-five miles from Ottawa there is a chain of lalces, tributary to the Blanche river, un- der lease to the Echo Beach Fish- ing Club. Practically all the mem- bers of the club alo Ottawa men. Mr. J. A. Gouin, who had retired from the Russell House, to accept the position of city postmaster, was president oi the Echo Beach Club. He was s. iikeable little chap, and although for mull? years he had de- sired to be relieved of the duties oi president, on account of his sterling qualities his fellow members insisted upon retaining him as to their pre- siding officer. One year he took with him to the camp some asparagus seed. sot the guides to clear a piece of ground adjacent to_ the clubhouse, and there planted the seed. He was rallied e good deal about his experiment by bu, his fellow members, who told him that nothing would come oi iwthat what he should have done was to bring in some two-Year-old aspura- gus plants. Mr. Gouin insisted that ever)’- thing would be all right; that in a couple oi years the members would be enjoying asparagus grown 111 their own garden. ‘There was nothing visible in the garden the following year, but in the second year there were eviden- oss oi activity in the ground. Mr. B. J. Devlin. a. well known citicen o! Ottawa. was secretary oi the club. and one oi his duties was to act as caterer for parties going to the lakes every spring and fall. This particular spring Mir. Devlin Dill‘- chased among other things a doaen tins oiitiine large asparagus. 0nd one morning after Mr. Gouin had gone off with his guide t0 a. distant lake the secretary hiui the ground cleared. and then with a stake made 5 number o1 holes into which were dropped sticks oi canned asparagus. until forty or iiity had been so planted. the" heads lust shcwlu! above the ground. It was dusk when Mr. Gouin returned to the club- house, and therefore he did not ob- serve anything special about his n. Next morning Mr. Fred Avery. who with all the other members present at the club was swaro oi the joke, went to the end of the ver- anda and called out in excited tones. Mr. Gouin, come and see. what has hs ." The little . ter Joined Avery who, po ting down V.» the garden said ‘ ere is your asparagus."- . Gouin was delighted, and went for the doubting Thomases with real zest. He knew perfectly well, he said, the experiment we! going to succeed. The members crowded round the u. sident, slap- ping him on the back, and thank- ing him cordially for the succmshe had achieved. Nothing for it but that they must drink his health. That night Mr. Devlin had all the asparagus heads pulled up about three inches, end next day there were further congratulations to the president. The following day the asparagus had grown so well that it was de- cided to have a. generous supply (out oi the tins) cooked for dinner. Sir Robert Borden made e witty speech in proposing the health oi the president, and the toast was drunk with Highland honors. Never was a man more delighted than Mr. Gouin. He took all the congratula- tions as a just reward ior the suc- oeu heohsd achieved. I was not present the occas- ion but the story was told to me by one oi’ the members. It was too good to keep. I put it into print in an Ottawa ill-Dal‘. and then for the first time Mr. Gouin knew of the joke CANADIAN soolsrror soreness p.11. ASS I Aoeceaiingsyeteimepned creditors. P. 0. BOX $5. ll. lL-S. IIEIMIIIG, B.A..C.PL'A-.C.G.A a l . csarlpmn ruhun aooonnraur ‘ mucosa or i COMMISSIONER Ion Tairmofiasnnavns m ma‘ ua-r or r. s. i. \' ‘III CANADIAN III-fill‘ MIN‘! ‘IYUIT TION, LIMITED. IAN! OI‘ NOVA IOOTIA BUILDING CIIABLDTTITOIN, P. l. I. Laboraavingofloelaethoihinstalled. outaooounieig menu's. nitmoisiaqaeonen ~ Monthly, qnarterlyandaeaaai aadih. - Baiancesiieetsanahofitandlaieedcconnleprepased. lncomeTasreter-nswrittenllpendiiled. Financial arrangements nude between debtor and United Uablity Companies Incorporated. 005'!‘ AOOOUNIANTI AIIVI qaadlovbsl. TELEPHONE 1816. Festival Hats (Barbara Cough, in the London Spectator) The people oi Balriburg weer fancy dross. Thel wear it all day and every day, without ‘ ‘ tion. but, since it is very becoming, with a. slight swagger. It consists for the men o1 leather shorts, adorned with s. compliotsed arr ement oi tas- sels. iacings and ’ pockets; of s very brief jacket, embellished with iloggings, colored facings, em- ‘ idered oak-leaves, and s. gloat many silver buttons; and large this splendor were not enough to dazzle the eye oi the delighted tourist, it is crowned with the most as istible ‘ -' in the world- the Tyrolean hat. The Tyrolean hat has many variations but s. univer- sal appeal. If it is a Balrburgcr hat. it is encircled by several rows of colored cord and graced by s. feath- er which resembles an immense shaving brush somewhat out oi control. It it is en Aussee hat, it hssagaygreenribbon and a slightly less conservative feather. Either hat is worn rakishiy over one eye, and romoved by the wear- er with an extravagant sweep and turn oi’ the wrist which no English- man without strong Cavalier sym- pathies could hope to achieve. In- deed, the people oi salaburg con- remarkable degree; their hats and their manners being in the best Cromwellis-n. murely ior the Music productions of “ ryman" about Goethe's "Fausti" ebou sooner have they set foot outside their hotels than all such thoughts are driven from their minds by the discovery that the town is swarm- lIIB with b00010 in isncy dress- men swsggerlrlg genislly in cutaway jackets, women bustling in ilow- ered petticoats and little ep , and all oi them wearing, with sup- reme conviction, tho incomparable Tyrolese hat. The feet oi the inur- ists falter, their jaws drop; turn- in to each other with s wild sur- ise, they stemmer. "But all the people must have seen "Autumn Crocus!" The first bewildermen is followed by a wave oi gratitude to the Austrian for combining all the characteristics which are so desir- able. and so rare, in a. foreigner- Lutheran buckled shoes. As if alll trive to combine the qualities oi both Cavalier and Roundhead in a Cavalier tradition, and their shoes and their morals unmistakably Ittis fascinating to watch the reacions oi the English and Am- . g h ericau tourists to this unexpected ma‘ “m. “n sartorial splendor. They arrive ds- thl-ugtg 0g m, [Qplgf once knew something if only they could remember what it was. No t)“; you “Hanan,” The“ I M1; However variant, shall teach No mol-eutlllisn this my eye may X1 , —W. H. Gerry, in the NOW Yolk Bun. "Mrs. Jones issimplyinadoaths subject oi germs, and sterilisss or hm, m, be, 1 mm unmistakable cordiality, superb oo- wNsxt-Fooledn liiyyei uwgnrtnno" “llmm! °1 mlllmil- lml- 10°" 5hr” _ all, a pmitive ‘eterminltion to ..._______ speak nlglish. . Collective Dishonesty osphsre oi solid and enduring fflVilllflfls with which they are sur- Ravs you noticed that small with their own prosaic appearance. groups 0i men like s cabinet, will Their envy is aroused everywhere, . ‘loin-Isis, enchanted by the at- (rrom "The nhiet’ rounded. soon become dissatisfied "flow do“ m; we firm‘ hm‘; do jointly what none of them even by the embroidend braces oi would contemplate singly? the Bach may be a man with an hon- them stamps. ‘They curable record, and yet, all together ieellnl. for the first time in their , jpcr crnt..acflpmhmhwl_r.moedwm wpreathioorninioulcclmsthsllvmiym "emulsion-oppor- gmmiguqggbyocpeotualtlmfcsnmorqsblasarlevsry ~~ mroureanthoprovlnoooie-tllllswvorymwoandxwehtnsv eiivssoetortinndorailroasm nolQa sniitlian tiI.000.00o for ssmbly. . .wouldalsoreaiiirmWslisihtlisrfewYoi-k'rimes. . o! silver. The United States has wells-inc this metal inthe national in its influence is evidenc- wwld market, and most countries ed by the tablet mi Mt. mlbidmu that have any to sell are quite wil- at Riverside, California, by the ltiv- ling to find a buyer. Not so China. erside Humane society, in honor reasons or Lisut. Col. Bhuriao Kido. one ci| - that China is the only country that tho contestants oi\the Tmth Olrm- the responsibility oi each in the hires. tremsndous pied held at Los Angslss in ill. guilt or crime of all requires no’ amount of silver the United States As the inscription lelam, ‘Iis tiirh- little elucidation-ior on the- mor-' more. nut sum u onion stand- ed aside from the gnu to save his flit! sense‘ oi duty and responslbil-‘tsrminbd ciroi-t to out t s low voice o! ity oi govomnient, our lived ‘aruhburlsr at his Chilielworriedovertlie rudim- been It seems that ior several could. supply the 11B" 00 disturbing de- KMI cveriiment tiflioilthopolsilfil- aid money: silver-is to China-whet horse. no heard t gold is to the United states. And. Mercy, not the loud acclaim therefore. any undia loss oi silver Glory." By thus being Inlidflii» Thetehamansactcuibohter- may pursue e plan of crookedness or injustice. I , , , ‘mere is a collective irresponsib- on u. export 22cc... other only careful study but also system-I etic denunciation. - I indeed the morality oi groups, It srnlnaat has not: it"u time we iii-g slated on what it must have-Con- _ I “Vance iii "Burns las- ility immorality and dlshonour 0i|b f0f government groups, which needs not oi forty-e t hours: and on thin: day ti!!!‘ lhli.‘ and rapidly m. pottiwltl. brilliant . r It! lilqlliiod daily '. spirit out with srsucessa. an llaiaburlsrerf ‘ 0i being effortlessly indigonuous alike in costume and custom are sll~ Beliiol men qn a holiday. Artistry In Rebuke i 5 (Toronto Globe) a Canadians are prone to be rather rough and crude in their choice vi f words intended to be oflensive They have not mastered the senile- ment oi rebuke, nor learned that the rapier thrust is at least more ; artistic than the bludgeon. Oi course, there are exceptions, as re- vealed recently in a Montreal court presided over by Hon, Mr. Justice Wilson. A barrister overassertivs in proclaiming his |reputation for frankness. A trifle l bored, no doubt, Justice Wilson said quite ceimLv: "I believe you; and ii throughout your lifegyou have ever deceived any one_ it has always been Willi the greatest frankness." Commenting on this, the Winnipeg Tribune says : This is a vast improvement _ over the “four-fiusller" retort, so crudely resorted to last session in the Parliament at Ottawa. There is as much difference between them as between a rapier in the hand lif a Chesterfield and n blackjack wielded by a thug. i There is no in fighting a duel had beooms with stone clu . One blow and all is over, The rapier is a much more sporting weapon. A prick here and a prod there, with the chance that tile pricked and prodded one may have a riposle in reserve. Biuntly to call a lllllll a four-flushes when there are so many better ways oi saying it is like drinking champagne from n necked shaving mug-or shoot-_ coin-airy. eagertitisiobeliopedfui-Moeart,“ ‘ _ . prepared ior Strauss. i»... reclined or; 31%’ é°lomdwTifi°wfifllc to Weber. They are speculating “m” vssllely about Professor neinhardfs acular dissertations e cally. During one 0i his or- llsteni-r Other instances f scathing are rel- Festlvsl: called by w. Justice j u gen; laughed when the doctor thought __ which they nothing ,oi u, . , _ m?" twmcgdgh" ere was no cocasionmor it |'"What." he ‘asked, "provokes your , risibility, sir? Have I said anything pardon of the rest of the company." There is too ready a resort to thl utterly colmnoriplsce word "liar." Winswo Churchill, of course, dig not use it; he referred instead to n previous speaker's “terniiriolonical inexsctitudss." And on another oc- casion Premler Ramsey MacDonald did not say that w. Lloyd Georiw was ‘falsifying. That would in coarse. He merely remarked that the little Welshman "required s‘ certain amount of freedom when dealing with matters oi fact." 0F DRUGS flnkiiamsColnpoandunJic I ‘on llitaigialitsllt) 090 Iruitativea (large) 38c Dr. Chase's K. 6 L Pills 20c Parkebavleilllasralllii" 89o lrooissd noddhiishcypuh Phillllllllllk Veooltfl. eesaeeeaaaaee ‘Mmohieieni 28c uttic Liver m. 21o we sranr su. moss. ans orders pamptiy attendfll ._ The Two Macs iisoeoiiousoseet cfiéilf ‘v n“w.mm“|“eaeeeese 08c Abeoflleill Oottolalllntolllic Nnifiluilergs) 88c . Ponds 38c "