_\ » __ i ij, ‘ '. 1 . if swf yr' \ fc <‘ . '.1 '-Q.. 11 ._ ` _ _.~*..=_`~ *W-~ _ » » <,=_J‘~§\ ,$__fl\;_ .» \ ~.`_',, ,l_,_l¢f_ of ...gi -.»_-.,.»j-;.~,':;§_' .-‘ '_-.‘;. .» ». :§i~ilg`,==.=l== --fi .ri ,=;l_~f;_‘€_ ',~sv.=_.-_y,' s ‘_ _ .'_r~'~r ‘.1-if,-__ _ "dn S EN ~ J, N. ` at Y Jaaf- 7 ;- i - ~_ '-..,'»"_".- ,_\ » t-.i._=_.=-»_'.-iw-_._ td? ~_f.-i"i».>;'~';l"_'ffl.\i._31~Li A ' ‘_ `-i~§i~”’»_rI_I-_~"`i3~i.;=\s;..`-IW-"ri1l."’>`ff° “ ”"*""'1‘~"T_5l:l'A<"_5§`-"‘*ii.‘f¢f“`:l.\ .1 1’ 'wi 1-ll;;ff'=; =1:1~, r -,$311,-1.-' .fl-:_ ->»~.§`- _<,,~",1*_~_‘.'.' 5 »{',»fy;;.'-1:1_§__<~:§'ff- 1 ‘f FQ-_-.». l`~_.=,.l-, -,_ ». -l;r\,).,. so 'i \ ‘ -. x ~. ~\ 5 5 . r _ fl . _ ll" ,I _:E l_. lf 1 , . a ` . , , K l ~ . li l ¢, in \_;‘j.»,_ _ ._>__.»t,"_`, _,l ha 4- ‘K '1' " ` 'Y ‘ ` vi 'fy U 1 ‘ f 1' ‘I r ‘ ' » " . -cl( ~. ~ l 1, - .2 » ~ . . th yrs.. 'PY ’ ’ ~ on \_ 3', .l _f I _ M, __ ° i , _ lit ~ *» , * » ‘ il ‘Q \ ' . li i l v ` - ` ` F- l - _ ~ \ ‘ “ s . ;.: 5 -1 __ __'_:_'_._. , ._. ` _ __ , . , , ` , .. _ » , , ~____,,__ . `~ ~ l -,ev -\ _ . l ` _ :-.`.~_\ ‘_,\ ._\- __:» ~__»`~ ,_ ,.~. _ ._ _ , , '-_ ._ ‘\..~:_-__.f.x__.,x » _ -. _ _-;;_-JHE c|1A|lL01TETOw|| Gl|A|l|l|A|| nous uve THE wiv’ ~°":"-'_`\`:`:li‘-§ ~:-§;~_f»"~;1L»'~; .¥_`=5i`»`=‘f . ` c-'X'-_L`§\,‘\ ""~~_° I' ’ Y/ . _ J l’ ‘ ~. 1 1*.-n~l§31~ 12 su \\~ ,Q \x3‘,;\;\` Y ' ,`;:i;l\ fl' _ . is-='? I 'li . l . ' _ ‘ <5/ _4_____1A lt!! _.Aa-v' 021°" _-2'" ~ Su "l» 3', ‘fb " all ‘1T\’i`?:;§+.‘¢3‘§."i_j igrlii ' fl" . 'S' "Q __ ,j_»Q_-:.f»,'.l` Y ' "" lllb T dis: the cri: the in iv.. liar `,`f,`;, "jf _~,`~`,` Cr f ; _ _'_ <'-._ . _ rf* V "_ "f, ' lor sez _ V V ed -_ _»_; cel Tl' Mc Ca ~ :_ ;» ~ 1.. _wi of ., .. -‘ \,.. '~\. , 1 -1 _ ' li °`.”,_e.» (_,; dr , _ . f _ oc , M ' ' ' ba l \ » » 4 lly vi . ' , l » V 311| rd . _:;_ / J W A ‘ ' in ev W”-'-#S22 4 ` :rc ~ ` , a ,t -W * lil , . \ . th 4 1 . 1 » Jn: tl e ' a “EVE SC 1 ` pe ‘ 1 qu . ar-1 " Of 4 , _ . co 1 , ‘ _l i DI; ". P9~ -. ,f l, .>+al: -1,' 1 , . , . ,.,, v 1 1 4 .‘ ' '-4'-.~'.¢ '1 . ~ - ,il L; _V ,l_-,>n, £13 *~ 1 ' _ " ,\y. ilw' 4' -,\ .- ¢.. :im <' ”“:--i ., ` I . 1 ., _~,_. -,,:,,~ 1 -.,., i : , . . v‘»-. » ,_ ,I ~| _ ,V _ ‘.11-, ~ -i__~'~,,..,» -, l 1 ' `\.`-».; », ._ ._ ' 'il \ _ ' _ _ _ ., . 1 ._ ll l .\','_ ,e ,»' -,f‘ lf _'\ l' , 1 I _R _ ,‘ I ii vs.: I _- PAGE F0UR__ _ _ _ _ _ __ _"THF C _ _,i ..,, f _ ~ § 'tt dim ' M _ _ niatovra-row~_onnluil¢llng..\ Francisco; 113.1 .\`<»_ uma sn-een vnilavli-lpaia oompliance with me agreements .Morning Daily lfoilrilvililhdll 85.00 per year (lu advance) delivered. $4.50 ner yi.-nr lin silvnriee) mulled la Canada und Uulted States. tlnnta; ,Monadnock Bull\ll1|g_ san ' 510;-ning Maxim V -reached at the Ottawa Conference The person who insists upon hanng everything generally gets nothing. las; summer. The Dominions have MONDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 1932 tish market from competition with selves if we think that we‘ll get that m of that nations trade agree- ment with Russia, says the New York Sun, which was announced at 1 been insistent on relief in the Bri- Soviet exports, and London has, promptly fulfilled its bargain on Drnunelation by th¢ United King- what Bohr of = guurs n. MD ' DIAGNOSIS _ “When we remember that there are about 1000 diseases and condi- tions, and that each one is capable Is Stevenson Neglected? (Toronto Globe) Inst century’s closing YWY5. sometimes called “the mauve de- THE Pool, I code," brought several literary lead- er! mlb l»l'€l11¢Ud°U° P"°mm°“°°~ Come with me, follow me, swift ss lone ,thinks mst, perhaps. °f~ Kin- if mul, 11113. but hardly les# enthll-S111-‘li-l°H1lY Ere the wood-doves waken. of Hebert Louis Sl»ev¢n5°l1~ M0004 Lift the long leaves and look down, the name and Persvrlllllty 0! the look down Treasure Island' there Where the li ht ls shaken odélgoi/ru/1. -V _ as ' *.*.»:“ _ s' l 5 -2 §= 3 Ei ll, , f _ - I Dreadful Sight Hin `G'. H. Langenhahn, Val-. milion, Sask., writes:-"My faeo was covered with pimploa, and I hated to be seen by anyone, as I was a dreadful sight. I got no rclicfnntil a friend, who had had tho same trouble, told me to use Burdock Blood Bitters, and after I had taken two bottles I am happy to say my face is all cleared of the pimples." lad stall; manufactured for the 1>Mt,6li yuan, gn), author of “ ' 8 ,_ . ' mm’ mf 9° that such a step would incite crim- there are not a thousand loophole' SOUR GRAPES reams of editorial criticism .of the B Caiindian Priinc Mnilsier for hav- ing given the British delegates a I raw deal ut the Iinperlal Confer- ence, now discovers that "the Eng- lishman has been just a little tJo f smart for Jul' Cnnzidinn statcsmcn.” 1\1o1'eove1‘, it finds that the Canad- i extended to the British manufac- jurer as \\'e‘1 and he can take ad- .vuniage of the C¢u1:icl1.in tariff at fthe expense of the Canadian con- 5 turer can luke advantage of thc Cuziadilin tariff except by way of o preferences which it was the a abject of the Colifercrice to estab- th leconcile its previous urgunient, fl, lla tish ninnufa\:1in'c1's are not as sub- get, with its present contention that allel Unlike many other meteors’ they are so substantial thc Canad- ian consumer is going to sullcri C exhibits every time lt mentions the Our local contemporary, after an manufacture-r's turiil' "has been .1 Ulll(Zl`. Just how the British manufac- moly, that the preferences to Bri- 1, th o After the partisan spleen it 0 of producing, on an average basis, money. No, Washington is kidding this Sub-lC°t~ a bout twenty symptom; that less us." While it is not the case that rita‘.'n made budgetary provmou for war-debts payments, owing to he pending Lausanne conference, it is understood that if the Dec. 15 payment is demanded it will be orthcoming, Nevertheless, the fact I We have had the l.z~:|.gue o' Nu- t tions only n fcw years now, and ill c that short time it has doll!! m1lCh- It has bound up some wounds of the e last war. cured some ills of the pre- ything at once-to give peace in han one in a hundred of these dis- ases has a. "sure" or definitely true sign that can be reco8'l1U°i|1 $11812 sch one has many other diseases similar in nature; that each one ‘must be reco811ized and distinguish-_ Sent' and prevented wmv Mus forled from others. not by a eiD8le the future. It cannot attempt rve-lsymptom but by cermln comblm lations or groups oi symptoms; that tp'write a rip-roaring adventure ordinary taste. sees no use in “kidding ourselves" about receipt of the money, together with hvs view that the problem must be mot through trade adjusmcnt, warrants an optimistc outlook on the situation. THE LEONIDS Here is another interesting note bout the shooting stars which are that R/oosevelts right-hand man twelve years to :1 pinuct which hnslt f ers want it to nfirnillf- The essential fallacy of I"re\‘\ch tain a cl1spa'1:y of srrcllgih in “S mulaiing figninst i~_.=elf forces of hose groupings are never the same been distracted by “"“` mr more [in the same disease. whether in the than double that Y nunibei; of ein; sumo or dlllcrenl, patlents: then’ aries. It can only ultenip. _w Il 3 2* S“ffi°i°"f ““m”»“" °f “S S“PP°"' .rm mc: that this part or diagnosis it is too complicated for the unaided Ire *_"`_ mind of man.” m policy is that, in frying to main- _i _ _ _ s Own favor, it is all the lime accu- d other. W nd only then, will 'we awaken ta What is diagnosis? th Diagnosis is the art or science of 9° On a floating flower and a weft oi "Today I seldom see th# name of t rl lm lm at our loyalty to Stevenson ran th am e wan.. sing ey le t in th excess' F" “5 he amved at the with the black choke-cherries. The London police. of course, deal gns or symptoms by which one MDIJY. SUMUIHUDE m0l1'l€l\t§ 101' ` wlth apopulat-on that ls almost ell_ isense is distinguished from an- here was a man who had played I would shake the bees from the tlrely nallve ,xml London has new ith words as we were learning to mllkweed blooms' seven mllllon people of whom only dd it like a masie and used _ scheduled to appear in the heavens llsh, our cuntcmporu1'y docs not lhls week_ ‘u e.\'pluin. Neither dues it utlcnipt to which its confused retlasniinrg takes I no account. li. is unr~ons:-lously "rc- rming" Germany nv tha fastest How does a physician equip play, i l r, And cool 0 cool 140900 10 el bUm_ The can l iimself, how does he get the “aid" w necessary to enable him to diag- do; ose an ailment? ea om the fact that they seem to nter the atmosphere at tremend- _ ous speed and burn with a bluish- Imperial Conference, wc arc not “ a The Leonids lake their name adiate from the constellation of eqimlfy of niiliiai-_v status wliieh is V _ Leo. This is an effect of perspec- d stantiui as under the Dunning Bud- tive, i team tl _ trails _ ll , ll Y 1011' are Dal' ey do not overtake the earth, but me rushing to meet it; hence they _nough illfemly. If ii goes i!1f‘ length of rnfllsiiig to the l't“iel1 ,hat While Ge:-many is in the throes s the country has not known since n route. The. p1'ec:-as has gone far 0 b cl l l altl, its pur ose, and uc her today upui any fair read- no y n Ie I P ig of thc Treaty of Versailles, it H m much practice at medical school io Texas, points out that the physlc- W ian must know the normal human uch study, much observation, wi Only in this way can a physic- DH W- 7-- Kl5¢Yl@HS» Texifkamb too, in the fine objective way we of the_rush. one American writer diagnoses the \~ . ». __ __-_,»,__. ,. ere beginning to envy in the .1 easgn ob- I M E ormal uses, and be able to recog- on may prove flu- fatal hinge of thc me anything that is.n°t normal' 0" next e'1er'1t’on'; ilu-»v1e's' “wh °“°““°"" dm '°' ° 1°” °'”° The" ”° °°h°’ f“°"°’5' °"°°”"°~ swlng|_ in the future. V which assi-St the British police, B shock in the following comment And B Whlle motlfs wma mirlal Investgatio? Department eve; comparatively few exits. There is rom slr Arthur Qumer Coucws Here the ygung mmm whm the CHU? W€BP011s ull-CSG Out 50 S9810 always a Scotland Yard man ai mists umios f°l' B mln Wh0m they KRW is Hfm- each port watching incoming and f _ ' 1 1 ° chapter of remnscences in a new swims like the bud of B golden rose ed.- There are some inspectors at oulgffglg ll-am¢_ once the slam l, "°°k' “Fm” Y°“"`“ m2`1932°" ' Scvtland Yard with more than raised it is exneineiy-aifacuit ui case as follows: The r . DI' »' _ . French." _ Clear, O clear my dreams should be ably' ls that me Blmsh popceman l _ _ i _ Stevenson wrote for another age, made ls backed up by the law fm- more Of al li ht be -""°~*"__’_"m* e less hurried. His style, crisp, col- emffl' d 8 lmd Bm l' Shlldel effegfsvely than my omcer in th's Rx 315 me me direct from those splendid Safe as a bund she" under the sea' Unsurpassed 'hitc light as they are consumed by the Wvlmal, COllSll.,l._lml was ;ll_ ian really know the' patient _and co surprised at our conteinporai-y's cx- f pressed conviction that “the Lib- lo arals were sure to be on the right n ground ln voting against any mens- l- riction. There is not much use scripted, it is safe to say that back ii oking for them until after mid- Oi’ the iremendous 11llll@=1\'f11 “'hil`h ight. when the observer ls on the ront of the earth as it moves ure brought forward by the Bennett ll,ll.o_\l h S H * t kl th el la, 0 E DC9,allg 8065) t is now going on lies the stress of “ the economic sit\1atio'n_ And how-lc ver b‘tterly the pn1'i‘es fight for|; hc control of [hc Reich as 21 means ertain number of diseases. For no\v the disease. E; Every action ln the body that in e ot normal may be produced by a E; xample: liver enlargement is pro- uced by 25 diseases; spleen en- 57 es which Mark Twain said “bum- with red, smouldering fire un- the penthouse of his brows, and administration". mmbardment head °"‘ Unmrtun' of implemelltiurr their respective, That, obviously, explains the mo- ately. the moon will be troublesome p tive of the Farley l-mockers and the t reason why they are now at oclds with public opinion and with such I responsible Libr‘ral newspapers as a h is year. It was full on Novem- i e fogrammcs. upon on~_ oiilstzrndlnil, _ . _ n ssue they are in silbslanlial agirc- bcr 13 at 2 a. m. and will reach the " ast quarter on November 21 at 3 hm. There is some comfort in the Toronto Globe. The favorable reception throughout the Empire li agreements negotiated at a con- p _ference at which Premier Bennett presided is a. bitter pill for them to ‘n of swallow. And they will never for 'give the Bennett Government for ,last quarter the moon is only one- lnth as bright as when it is full, _______ , r New York Journal of Ccnuncrcee the fact that the strength of moon-_ ,.Xl,l.Cs_.,.5 ,,.lla£ ls -,_~C0,,l;llll a vary ght declines rapidly after thc full general view. "lu ihc `<~on1'se of it has;-_ A; the first quarter and the Canadian pa1'lir_1ncnfzu'y debate on the Otlawai zigiceinenis, .spokes- men for ratification eniphasizcd the fact. that the market for Canadian arm products in the United States had practically disnppea1'ecl.' In lucceeding where 'Liberal Govern-, COJIPARISON IN CRIME' S lnents, the professed apostles of “W ~|srif'l preferences, failed to achieve l|'e It is a. plain case oi sour grapes! ° canada and san Francisco in the t An interesting comparison is made 0 00 of her farm products to this 1 countfy, as compared with $4.532,- su,u_ or the crime records of two cities 000 ln Scptembcr 1929' and $ll’_ I °b°“t the "me size' T°"°nt° in 888,000 in Sepir-inbcr, 1920. During he three nmnihs, July, August and The follo\\"ng comm”n[ from the epiember Canada. sold only $220,- icnl. , ll e largcment is produced by 55 dis- together in just 14 diseases. Then 5 if D Y mething more arresting for the was 14 diseases have mile differ- time-though that is improbable- nces which help the physician get there will still be the haunting wist- ncarer the actual disease causing fLlln€SS Of "R0¢lUi€m~" And U\°U§\1 the trouble. The point then ls that while there may be virtue in the treat- ment given by "healers" and others who are not regular physicians, and that help has been given suflerers by these healers cannot be denied, nevertheless the training before going to medical college, the train- ing at medical college and hospital in recognizing what is normal and what is abnormal, equips the reg- ular physician to make a diagnosis and give treatment on 11 scientific basis. the world may undergo further ev- olution of taste, it will still find an undying beauty in “A Child‘s Gar- den of Verse," for it speaks a uni- versal language. Recall the all- conquerlng simplicity of "The Land of Counterpane," or "Looking For-f ward," with this gentle threat: When I am grown to man's estate I shall be very proudi and great, Andmtell the other girls and boys Not to meddle with my toys. pos Is there any real danger from terity’s judgment for the out- put of such a mind? r- United States. Last year there were » WAR DEBTS OUTLOOK D September, Canadian 'farm ex- orts to our markets totalled only is Now that the presidential election Frisco nad' 1,2111. No bank robberies $ settled in the United States, the _question of war debs, which both |psrt’es sldestepped to a large extent hs forty-one holdups in Toronto while in Toronto but "plea-ty" in the Cali- t fornia city besides 638 "grand thefts" and 5,352 automobile thefts. 000 thrq years ago and $24,000,000 that affairs in Canada and else- 767,000, as compared with $14300,- welve years ago.” Complaints are frequently heard A Good Appointment The appointment of Col. L. R the election campaign, will be .dent elect Roosevelt stated in Toronto had five murders, all the perpertrators being brought to jus- rr UD 'speeches that he wouxd take with ‘rn 'sn Bmith. Mr. Smith has earned a hgh position in the Roosevelt Cabinet, and it would surprise few to see ‘him 'to pecially the war-debts questions Si In struttive suggestion about _disposal bf believe that he would grapple with ‘tx lpromlnent. An exchange notes that es: _ m e, at least. of his campaign to Washington his predecessor Albany, former Govemor "Al" Secretary of State, with much say about foreign policy and es- nce he was the first Public me-H the United States to make con- these debts, there is reason to done. "The Canadians," it says, “are Francisco could have better police sisted on having it." tice, Frisco thirty-eight, in only one 1 of which has anyone been arrested. The Cslifomla paper making this comparison has no wish to lay the blame on the police. It is the people and public opl'on which are at fault in not demanding that justice be the same sort oi folks as ourselves. We have no excuse for letting them beat us in keeping down crime. San and court work if public opinion in- EDITORIAL NOTES where are stagnant. which is one more reason why hard-earned sav- rigs should not be confided to the first pjomotor who comes along. In order f/J reap a profil through the luxury of playing the market, one needs to be strongly armed, but even those with _the greatest resour- ces are liable to be mortally hurt when a crash comes, That has been said and repeated many times in re~ oent years, but people have short memories and too readily forget their penible experiences. But in this instance there is virtue in re- iteration, and people cannot be too frequently warned of the dangers to which they are exposed when they make speculation a dist'ac- tion. fl Lafleche, D. S. O., A. D. C., to -be Deputy Minister of National De- ll fence ought to give general satis- cl f 1 (Ottawa Journal) KU - “Double - Crossed By The Devil” (Exchange) ished English author, who is to dress the Plefades Club in this ty next week, recently wrote an John Drinkwater, the distin- d action. Co. Lafleche brings to his new position a pract‘cal training conditions in the military forces of Canada. His ability and industry have been demonstrated in many lines of public service, which ex- peculiarly adapted to present day D article for the London Daily Ehr- ress entitled "Is It Good To Be fty?' His answer is an emphatic Fl . affirmative. He says that on arriv- ing at that age, Instead of feeling that the best oi' life was past, and perience has contributed to a broad knowledge of men and events, all of which will now be utilized to the public advantage. ` Col. Lafleche saw service in France with the 22nd (French-Ca. adian) Regiment, was wounded and decorated. Since the war much oi' his time has been given to move- ments for veterans' relief, and in 1930 he was made a member of the Pens'on Appeal court. He has been this as do a fo th de evidently have expanded, for he has said. phraseology: "No country except Great Britain has 'ncludcd war debts ln CC G1' nations. speech in which he proposed to al- _low ‘tent of one quarter of the gross purchase of United States products by was taken up recently ln m°d1fi@d l' Hoover's appeal to the electorate was based on still higher tariffs, Mr, Smith announced that he would favor creating a non-part san Tariff Board to readjust tarfls to permit debtor nations to sell, and so gainil all-important problem as bo`dly he spoke about lt. His selection r the Roosevelt Cabinet would be eptcd, therefore. as a. fair-weath- forecast for the debt-depressed Last spring Mir. Smith made a credit for war debts to the cx- thc debtor nations. This idea m by Mr, Hoover. But _While Mr. e means of purchasing. On the bt question his views Since then in his customary picturesque of Pensions, has informed Parlia- ment that $180,292,818 has been I expended by Canada on pens‘ons in l the last three years, the. grand total being a rather convincing HHSWCF to those critics who assert that the Dominion is not doing its duty to war veterans and others. Hon. Murray Maclaren, Minister It bas been freely commented by many who have travelled in leading "°1`"m"“'-°~ Canadian and American gitiea this Fall, notes a well informed ex- change. that the appearance of retail- savlng. but that no rl:-finite act‘on nadian magazine for burlnrss men, Word comes from Paris of s. re- sumption of the campaign in Franco against further debt pay- ments, and there is a similar move- nent in Italy. However, it is un- lkely that either of these countr’es will actually default. lL is under- stood, says thy New York Tribune, thai. thc British Government has already acquired Unilc-d States bonds sufficient. lo nicct its pay- ment, thus effcctiiig n considerable 0 0 a has been fakcn by other debtor go-` Ccmmercp of The Nation, :i Ca- fr ays: The pulvllcailon in detail of its budget. We're k'ddinB OUT' president of the Canadian Legion, that he ws now on the first steps of a. tiresome decline, he realized that he was getting the best of both worlds-youth and age. None of the relish has gone, and ex- perience has taught him how most fully to enjoy lt. He was no longer afraid of gossip, irresponsible opin- ions, petty detract'on. He had team- ed one lesson at least-that no one but himself could write him down. Attacks that used to make him tingle for days were now. no more the annul Poppy Day campaign is ne of his interests, and in many ther activities he has made a no- table contrlbutlon to the welfare of war veterans and their organiza- tions. In the civil service he was member of the Purchasing Com- mission of Canada, later for some years of the contracts supervision branch, doing useful work and pre- parlng himself, as lt has turned out, for larger responsibilities. Particularly through his act’vi- tles in behalf of veterans Col. IA- fleehe is known across Canada, and his friends everywhere will join lends and associates in the Capt- _ 5 tal in congratulating the Minister ers ,stocks both in window displays the new tariff srli~du1e_s betweenl and me government ,pkg fm this and in the stores themselves indicate C“"“d“ and Gm-l" Ufllllm H55 GDD0l"tmEllt- that old memhandlm has been spiked the guns of those who were pmcucau lean d tl "Fr _l _ bomhnrding (hp pnrripets of the y c e ou esh at _ ,, , "active merchandise is helm; offered lilriplhglltgglvcgpmllrglj iv tllinilie 110;; criticism ot the negotiated Trade at very reasonable prices Reports ' r‘ y R PMS- It is clearly evident from ihe ' stivements releas from hi res of the Fall retail season to dale im- pogslble quam? lollowlf.; lh; revealed that the unit volume of sumer interest. Now would _-,com to publication of the duties that bus- -'.a`eS is runnin: well ahead or 1931, be the myciifiogicni mme is en- ’“°‘” U°“"°"Y "°"‘ 1" “ned” “"4 and that stylsts in many lines have nance this iiiiei~r~_=.'; by well directed outdone themnlves in cream” com dau news 8 B advert; _ the new tariffs arising out of the Great Britain is well pleased with than pin pricks which he forgot in ten minutes. Friendships that once had been solicitously tended were now assured in a security which no accident could disturb. Woik seem- ed more important than ever, and the material rewards of work more enjoyable. In his view, the man of fifty who is not at the top of his delight and prepared to stay ihe“e for another twenty yers or so has somehow been double-crossed by the devil. ad y P D I 'S “gn l Ottawa Conference. -no ‘ -~~"‘ “ ‘ ' ` wow .av\¢1\r<";*”“‘!l‘*"‘5} "vm," ____11» _ ~ wif- _ B -Marjorie L. C. Plckthall, in “The Lamp of Poor Souls? - They have cut down Milton's Elm. 5 font St. Giles, ln Buckinghamshire, where ihei Chiltern Hills send down their runlets to the Thames. It was still a noble and a spreading tree to view, but lt had become dangerousi -or the authorities, as author-inesl will, said it had-and, after a long dispute, between the preservers and the destroyers, the destroyers had their way. But the stump is to bel preserved as a memorial to the great poet of Puritan England. “Let it long remain" says the London Times, “a memorial to the endur- and of an ancient tree.” A 500-year-old tree is nothing uncommon in our British North American experience, but our trees, even when they go back tothe days of the Saxon kings, can not convey such a tradition as that of Milt/on_'s Elm. Our racial and national mem- ory of them is too short. But Mil- ton's Elm, when its seed germinat- ed-or when, as the common elm of England is wont to do, it sprang from the roots of some mighty for- bear-grew up in a community of men with a long past oi' ordered and recorded existence. Henry VI. of Lancaster had been ten years on his disputed throne when Mi1ton’s Elm thrust its first shoots through the Bucks mari, and the Wars of Roses were brewing, and it was to spread its branches and bud its springtime leaves through five cen- turies to come, in the air of human lI.M. Lampson&tlo. LTD. ey made him beautiful." ‘ 64 Queen Street When changing tastes lessen the Death A Tree L°“d°“- E' C' 4' E“3:‘“'d lp of "Kidnapped" or “Prince Ot- _“__ ' ' Q lol., there Wm still be the unchang_ (Vancouver Province) uses; these two signs (enlarge- ing charm °f TTCUSUFG Island-" ient of liver and spleen) are found when the ESS” S “T0 T9 1210611 b For 500 years it had stood in Chal- o or'~. ' RAW FIIRS Dates of Silver Fox Sales "to be held in London ’ 12 December 1932 23 January 6 March 22 May 27 September Shipping bags may be oh- talned free of charge upon »appl|cs.tion to ll. T. llolmanl Ltd., Summerslde. ` For full particulars lu ra- gud to packing, shlplrllll. ill- surance and _ conditions of sale, apply to Allred Fraser, Inc- 2l2 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. 1933 1933 1933 1933 sz. l As _ a Tonic Rx 315 a. prescription con- taining lng_e_lients recom- mended by the lending phy- sicians. The tonic properties of this mixture are so hal-. anced as to ,produce quirk results in cases oi ANAEMIA. RUN-DOWN CONDITIONS. TIRED AND FATIGUED SYSTEMS. LOSS 0F AP- PETITE and GENERAL DE- BILITY. Prepare. yourself for the physical strain of winter by taking a bottle of Rx 315 ' Tone up the children’s h¢&".|'l With RK 315- ONLY $1.00 PER BOTTLE AT THE 'PHE 2 MAGS deeds, great and small, splendid and obscure, in the procession and pageant of a na.tion's history. l Milton‘s elm had already lived ` nearly half its appointed time when Milton came to Chaifont Bt. Giles, blind and sorrowful, with the proofs of Paradise Lost in his pocket. He was London‘s poet. hom and bred, the second figure in the great lit- erature oi our speech and kindred, and he came down to the Chiltern Hills, to refresh his spirit and rest his weary body. Perhaps he- sat under the great elm, correcting his proofs, or writing the first books of Paradise Regained. Perhaps he only felt the influence of the tree, view- less to his darkened sight. Perhaps he has left us its fitting epltsph in the sounding music of his austere verse: Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail, Or knock the heart :no weakness. no contempt, Dlspralse or blame, nothing but well and fair 1 And what may quiet us in a death so noble. The London Police (Exchange) The handling oi the recent riots the London police is bound to f\` and Plate Glass Insurance ~ at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis E. R.BRo_W 1, `iFire, Life, Accident, Sickness l u by call forth world wide comment. A' London magazne recently conta`n- 3 ed an article ln which it was urged that the authorities tum down the 'proposals to equip mmm pouu- ' , . . if m » .1 .4 1 ' ‘».‘ 1 » / ~,_:.-,. ,_ .ef/T '-.,. '._'_g_~<.:1w§" ~. _-V . / . v ,.. _Jan- _’\ _ 4.\ n\`- - \_' _ ‘ /if __ " 1 Y n|cusvt|||cno|.so||’s B LACK WIST ‘|i‘©lAlCZ@@ ,f. . ._ _ . _ _, "' ~“< "> A _.s;s;;<;.,'..at»aat- _ _ _ _wg _, _ ‘ , ._.,-...t.-,.....,_,.._.__ ,__ V ,, - _.1 . 1 _u., van ,_ ._ .__ .,~. - ,.,ly~Vl,,...,ll_,l,,l.g,mm___,,,_l_l,M l Mlnww' _ avi; ,_ developed a gramour which seemed Amber and brown, wl \ \ im rishable. This arose from his On the woven ivory .roots of the mm _ th “umm m me mwd mug” want his mm d"°9p°d5 \ _" Avg" 1 i 1 l 1 . 1 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown \ _ .`-‘ ' . \ 1 li ll l l i if t l. l l 1 i 1 1 l