"l|-£!lll!ff"1i in, i ,0 I (l 1 h. I. ... rd -ii~i¢ g.-1i,,_‘q,‘-‘ _ _ "Pfifiiwflgq- -4 B . _=_-:_=.-_~o= an PAGE EQUR .7111!’ (:nAi<i.0'i'rE‘i‘0wN QUABPIAN. Mano" ‘19. 1937 The fihariettetown Guardian Pri-stili-iii l.ii~ut. tot n Chute: I lleLuro \ll'|‘>|' ullllllll, J It Bunion. I J L oevri-itiry l.ii iii. tot l) A lliu-hlnnnn, ll. l. 0. l-iiiiliii coo uiiiiiiitln; liiri-rtiir J is Burnett I 1.! moon-tin: iiiiiiiou ii-iinii \\'i\..e| and ll. l Clffll tlurnini: lltitl, lllilllllirll lmni $5.00 pen you (In ltlvuuool dl|i\l‘f4‘l| ll til) slam ill‘! yetu iiii ndvnnre) mulled In Ptjlieo biiiiiirii t-iiiiiii $5.00 pel you (tn ndunon) Hum-ti iii llllliltlll nu Lnltod Slain M FltllL-IY, RLIRIJII 19, 1937 i Canned Foods For Britain A cliuiii-tip of a iiiili- \'.'ii'it'ly' of canned foods Pad!“ Ill l -:\~‘:i iii-routes a probability ivith the iiiwvs from the iilil L'ntiiiii'_y' that the Unit- ‘ ed lklllgtiillil is 1J1: tiiii; to store a year's sup- ply iigiiiixi y! l.iiriipi~;iii hostilities, at‘ Cvftllllg to alt a!“ c ltl current issue of Call- adizui tjroiii", .‘i.i autiitiiizc yi-pori from Loli- doii $litll\ that i: i- to become the policy of the British tit Itxll i< t’ iooils (lepois will be opt-z.‘ .l points tliriuigli- Out the lim; - ioi" ~ storage of canned gOOClS, vilzrn‘, .. . ii .‘ l' iiiiiilii‘i'i.sli.‘ililt' products A stidili-n iiir ii Ntlilllllg u]! Europe might easily ili-ii-irb i" n "lIllCLllIJHS with the outside e l'\t'lll of such a happen- ~i ll"'lii i-rogqraiiiiiit- is to be ex- worlil llllll it i ing ilizii the i teiiiled to foi I-. iirituiii is already a stib— staiiiial bu) r iii Viiyiiliiiii caiiiietl milk, pork and bt~:iii=. iiiiv»! t v soups, years and apples. twiiini-il ii ‘i ti?‘ \ ins liiiitls Iill(l to a lesser extent. t"ft"l.l l i; its. ll Wllllltl set-iii that thesi- ivoiill lic ;.,i- t it‘ of yirotliicts lii be stored and if the re; i huge ipiziiitities required is correct. it t -t i;i.-ily' be that practically all the ‘urplii- in . .\ coiiiiinv could be shipped across the .\il;i"":.c. l: is §‘I.'t’!l that zt _vcar's require- ments if i: - »o»ls for this purpose will unioiiiii a, ~. y to 800,000,000 tins — which \\v\‘.i-‘l _‘,_§-0v(),0<)0 cases. Immediate ptlfCllilSts ;ii--.: it) ci~ii=i<t of 20,000,000 or more than Xiiooo .- o», llii: former figure is four times as llli‘. ‘it: total production of all Canadian 1' i.. .. f tr t. and vcgCtablcS. Both [IlTLlllC s aiiil cantiers 0f milk, fruits, , .5 well as tisliernmen stand \'t‘<l it‘ the indicated policy of .i ‘ll becomes a fact. Natur- .‘t..ll grailiially rising prices aial ilic operation of more vegetables, min to reap a iiire l . the British iiov- itlly it woiii-l i) for a time at ‘l .".>t canning phiiits. Right now >Yll(‘l{S of canned tomatoes, corn, the better l " oi !i".'!~. canned pears and ap- ples do flit’. io be any too plentiful al- though tliere iiiv- <,i‘.~iity of peaches. Tomato juice consuiiip“ ‘li is speeding up this winter on account of ilxi~ niiKl weather and even if the givvcrtiniciit ii~<ii~< {or r937 are correct- and they Slll\\\'tll lilll "o iuice production to be doiihlc lllt‘ priwi-iii ~~r-- i! might easily be the gmire pick won get into constimptionbe- fore next Si"; :t-ii1l.~er when the new one comes along. Mr. Power's Speech Hos‘. 11R. .‘\lii‘ii.\i‘i>. head of the Ministry of l'l.~l"l(‘l‘l.1, IllllIlIllVQS illltilll$llfitl when his .'\<1'\Ill.!ll l.i iiinl \' iiqtiiiiiii from Nova Scotia li-ixiiriil the- tioii-iiniiiiit. for neglect of m ililttiifllfll.’ pri riry il!‘i!.'l'l‘~l’ in the blaritimes. . Mn l"'lil..i.. sciis ;lll llll.'i\\i'l correspondent, ninloailvil hi W" of ni.iii_-.- rllsrcllilPlll. thoughts, iiiiil fttllllt ‘P: l":i‘l=_ rt-gziitlilig tltc iiiflii- Keri-ii e w. i kiWl-ifillll/‘ll thi: govi-rliiiit-iibs neglect viiiii r~-' -' I to a ""i'<‘IlL llillllillltl asset»- thc. inshore, lifllil=< section and tltc farther out-to-sea l.‘ s oi the North Atlantic Ocean. It wins, '.\l i1. .l'o. ill: ilwrlzireil, if not in words but iiifci-i~.~il'i-, -i< ii llli" Uttaiva authorities were ltlllli‘ »= f co v..:ll~.t l't~ so far as hlaritiiiics fisheries \‘,l ri~ sin-i: izi-il by them. lle dwelt 0n n ptis-"niii- lllftlilllf‘ of yivotligioits wealth at inching to this‘ y-‘o ‘oi-iil industry’. It ivas one that l't'.lt‘l.('(l l-ivl. ll! history farther tliati his historirzil privwiii-i. ' ' K iliily was to pre- serve it iron: vizii. . ciion; that tiattirc"s provision Iltlil Tlll hoiild not be baffled but expzinili-i‘. iii : ' -' .~<".'ilc. The > ‘ i tilt\'ltillSl_\’ not looking ‘for iii-yr ‘i“i't_\' head.- ilt Uttawti. 1'le.\\:i- l! _ i‘ f Mn, lit ~ ' . i.. ,‘: notes‘. hail aiinoitnced plan; .» - t! l i-oiitlitions; now tart-iii. ‘i. i1 - i‘ ‘ i i‘ ‘no i'lllfilll(‘l' story, so fzir zi- p -i ,\\ iniiiatiit: was coil- ctrrii- il. \\ loll l? it», who hail joined lhi- \\ ' . . 1i '. iroin Slielburtie-Yar- nioiiiii, . I . tog}. .\lii. POTTHZR was lil> \ll\\i' - ". 't Vi» (‘oloncl ratilts, in the l‘.\lllll.‘.lll -i l ' l~' ii" 7. as an expert, both lc- gal ..ii-* ‘ oi in ‘lei-s concerning the \\‘lii~ii 1'. ‘. ' li- parliamentary tac- lltIa iii il . . ~ lll jiiiie and July, 1935, Jiiill. imce of m... i. l‘ .‘ :i itl S30 expenses has not gainrtl hint wiii- :9 llis present allow- llilllllll§llt"l i5 1' " llc once held views that niori‘ 1* l ' iii Il|l‘_\' should he spent iii dc-vclopiiiioi o .‘l. illllilt‘ iislit-rics as a proper offset to il~ :'i~.:i.il t-vpi-ntlitiircs on the St. Lll\\'l'l‘llt’t‘ i‘ i - pi-ojert. The Colonel has for S(‘\'(‘l.ll ~.i:ii~ rt iii-d in Montreal where lie practises lii~ i! -l‘ t i! 11. ’l‘f;¢ 5.1a- p -. ~1-i.ii*tl to Parliamctit by MR. POTTJiIii. his Ill.‘ or. if not his mantle hear- er in ability. in il Hog with fisheries and other matters, \\'.'i.< ll‘{l“_lll\' Jllltl coinprehetisivc. The ;,_<<<~ri_ ,. iividc that there were re- sidential sections of fi-liiiriiicn whcrc “the most (k-gtitufo _<(‘,‘\'l'i('|'§" riilliil lit‘ fOlllld. PilfllCUlJF lv, said Mii. l’oi ||I'|i', and zipplicable to Mari- liint: shore fi li"l'lllf‘ll, was a quotctl‘ statement wii to tlii- hard rocks of ivant". that they \\i‘!'i' "t 11,- sprihi; iii" lill'llllit‘< with children hungry and un lVY-lliillii-Ll (.1, ,\n~l iinlil~.c a long list of coun- wit‘: hi- ininii- l, !_'I\\'i‘T‘ll!ll(‘lllf assistance was quite ill" lt-t|ii.'i<t~ in ll i< rt qwct and in others. 'l"..~ \i."l‘lllii"'li mink recital was supplement- "rt- 1w .\lii. ISNOR (Halifax). . . . . l lIonctfiililicstcr) contributed o iiie ll‘lt."ll' Ill i fin: of general praise of the Kim; Tllllllll!:"- ifliii. llis folloiv-up of MR. Porriiitfis pli». \', is nil. The other nine sup- porters of the govt-iiiiiiciit from Nova SCOtI-Eli four innit l'rinci~ lidivzird Island and the New Y l-vl o, -t ll“ Brunswick Liberal contingent, inclusive of Min- ister of Fisheries Miclutvn, Imd ital/ling to my about fisheries. Coroner. BROOKS (Royal) stated that the pso- fuse promises of the Liberals in the last elec- tion had resulted in do-notliiiigness. The “de- plorable" condition of the blaritime fishermen remained a public scandal. I‘ Editorial Notes f The Governor-General has had to cancel all his engagements on account of illness. l? 1! Ill The writer of “Arabian- Night's", Sir. R. Burton, firsfisaw the light this date 182i. i I 1F -'l The persistence of the opposition of the bluff- time Boards of Trade has carried the day in the Senate. Now for a show clown in the Commons. at _it u The various provinces. Cities and towns are publishing their arrangements for the Corona- tion celebrations save and except those of Prince Edward Island. A government lacking in pub- lic spirit is deterimeiital to the commomveal, A‘ l‘ >k Alabama swept its t\\'('lll._)'-[\\'O-)’C21l'-0ltl “bunt dry” statutes aside Wedltestltly‘ as its census ap- peal gave majorities for repeal in a county-op tion election. Alabama ihtis hccattic the forty» lhirtl state with legal liquor, Tilt‘ states rc- liiililiillg dry are Georgia, Slississippi, 'l‘eiiiiesset. Kansas and Oklahoma. - i‘ >t- * Samuel Whittaker, of St. Quentin, Calif., who was convicted of wife tniirtlcr declared before life sentence was pronounced upon him: “I hope God may strike me dead before I get to my cell if I am guilty.” He had a heart-seizure en route to prison and died before ever entering his cell. w at w Ialear that the Federal Government have appointed an engineer in charge of the National Park and that Ottawa has senbofficials to rc- port on the necessary work. ‘It is reported the Dalvay mansion will be taken over by the C.N.R. directorate for $25,000, and that an additional $2,000 is all that is necessary to put it in first class condition for operation as a summer tour- ist resort. w a x The Government is having a hard problem in developing its road policy. All the members of the Legislature being government supportersi all are demanding preference or equal treatment in new road work-thus the South Side of the East River demands mile for mile with tltc North Side; while Prince County insists on bc- ing provided with the equivalent. of both pari passu. a ti in U, S. Secretary IItill's official protest to the German government upon the tiiibritllcd iii- stilts hurled by the Nazi newspapers at Mayor LaGuardia in particular and the United States in general ctches one little matter in sharp rc- licf. If the Ilitlcr Governniriit sustains its newspapers it convicts it both of a gross anil official‘ breach of international propriety and of a libelous ignorance of manners, customs and political affairs in New York. If, on the other hand, it disavows them, it confesses itself iii- czipable of controlling its o\vil newspaper slaves, and so a. weakly incompetent servant of its own high doctrine of totalitarianism. it: m 4i The sales at the international fur auction at Lciilngrail this month totalled $5,100,000 as coni- pzired with the previous record of $3,200,000 a year ago. 'l‘he auction lasted six days and was attended by 18C representatives of foreign firms. The prices “l-JYC firm, especially of sablcs which were tloublc the estimated rrftc owing to the conservation policy recently practiced iii Russia. There was a great (lctnantl for caracul and fox, notably silver and crossed foxes from Soviet farms which are a comparatively recent ile- vclopniciit. The ermine demand iiicreasetl he- cause of the British coronation. F it l King George VI and Queen lilizziheth studi- ously ignored the Nazi salute given them h)‘ German Ambassador joaehint voii llilibeiitloyi at a diplomatic tea last \\'C(?l\'- The tea, which was held in one of the state drawing rooms of lltick- ingham Palace, was attended by all the ain- bassadors and ministers accredited to the (Lotirt of St. _]'amcs’s. Their wives also were yiresen: The German envoy gave a more modified Ilit- lcr salute than on two previous occasions ivith the arm bent at the elbow. As if they had not seen it, the King and Queen bowed and shook hands with the German Ambassador. Herr Ribbentrop looked somewhat uncomfortable un- der the eyes of the entire diplomatic corps. For the first time at an official reception the two little Princesses, Elizabeth and Margaret Rose, were permitted to be present. They u ere iii- forinally introduced by their parents to the vari- OUS GHVOyS. ' ~ I I t Charlottetown got unusual prominence at tltc Ottawa Dominion Conference of Mayors attend- ed by Mayor Turner. Prof. H. Carl Golden- burg, of the Economic Department of McLiill. submitted a report showing Charlottetown to have the highest debt charges in relation to total rcvenuc of all tltc cities of Canada. llis statistical study showed tltc relationship of total net debt to total taxable lzaltiation and the rela- tion of total debt charges to total revenue in all the cities of Canada. In (jliarlottctowti, the debt was 18.5 per cent. 0f the total valuation and debt charges 55.7 pcr cent. of total revenue; Halifax was 10.9 per cent. and 21.5 pcr cent. Fredericton 5.4 per cent. and 13.7 pcr cent. ; Montreal, 26.5 per cent. and 33.4 per ccnt.; Toronto, 15.9 per cent. and 35.9 pcr cent. Winnipeg, t9 per cent. and 12.5 pcr cents. Regina, 26.4 pcr cent. and 33.9 pcr cent.; lid- moiiton, 49.5 pcr cent, and 44.32 pcr ccnt.; Vali- coiiver, 23.18 pcr cent. and 35.11 per cent, “l” m ~yflh ma’..- . ‘ ion when tre Sctpire was laid on . the Altar. It wzts—a gathering up “ates by ilie iiay The Coronation is coming May 12 and were has been opposimn in l-arliament against any expense mourned therewith. In that con- nectlon 1t. 1s interesting to read what. Jorm Bucha-n has to say tn regard to the Coronation of King Geoige the Fifth. N0 part of this great. carmony lacked its historic romance and spritual significance; the splendid procession through the streets of the capital; the entry by the west door of the Abbey; the Recognltioti. when the King show- ed himself to the pecple; tiie music by Henry Purcell. who had writ/ten anthems for the Coronation of James 11; the Oath and the Anointing: the presentation of the Spurs and the sword: the invest- ttui-e with the Royal Robe; the dc‘- ltvery of the Orb. the Ring and the Swptre; the supreme moment when the Archbishop of Canterbury plac- ed on the King's head the Crown of St. Edward; the plesuilation o!‘ tiii.» Bible witii the win-es ‘Here is l wisdom; this is the royal Lair, these are the lively Oracles cf God; the Erithronement; the homage of the Pi"":e5 0i the Blood and the Peers of the Realm; tltc Corona- tlcu of the Qureti, the solemn c0lllllllllliCflllOll§ the thunder of the "Te Deum; the last process- ;'.':t of the past and cf the path of the . It is a very impresifve ccrertioiiy. Nct. only that, the King is ruler of more than one-fifth of ‘ ti: world-St. Catiherlnes Stand- a . In a trial lnvolvlng an alleged 83.000000 swindle in New York. an Oxford graduate rather stunned the_oourt by defining a. squawk as “an onomatopoetic word as de- noting the raucous noise emitted by a large bird stripped oif its feath- ers." He shed more light on the word by adding that in the stock market sense. 1t meant a. GUSI/Ofllel‘ who thought he had been swtndled and was rather noisy about lt.-~— Landon Free Press. , Joachim yon Rlbbentrop. to whom the following is attributed. must wonder. when he watches what Great Britain is doing. whether he spoke altogether wise- ly: “The armament of every coun- try will find a. natural boundary tn the means at its disposal and the ‘ necessities of its geographical pas!- tton." So much depends on whose ox does the Catering-Ebro. » , A chap came t0 the office of the late Joseph Pulitzer and applied for a jclb. "What: can you do?" asked the great Publisher. “I hard- i ly ikncw." replied the young man. "but I have ideas!" “Ideas!" snap- ‘ped baokthe builder ‘oi? a. news- papers. “Good God. boy, that ls what I am looking for. Give them l to me and you have a job at once!" l Fortunately anyone may invest in "Ideas Unlimited." One has but to search his own brain for but a’ stngb: idea as n. starter. Wcol- worth startled with that. Bord start- ed with that. EdLstn started with that. The dominant. and able of the earth started thus - and always w’1l! —Exc. In more serious strain he edit- or of a church paper has been sug- gesting that the sit-down strike is no new thlna.‘ under the sun, and that it: had been in operation tn the realm of rellvlon ever since the day in which the apostle wrote his protest; to the church at Sara's that was luke-vmrm and "neither cold nor hot."—New Outilock. Disraeli the younger has put. it all so sitccinctly: “Lflfe ls not only a rather base conflict of lntere<ts and needs; but ft should find prce for impassioned friendships, for noble and albsurd loyalties, and for , the love of beauty." It should be a uid-amental obligation of any system of Education to see that these things may be so. Exc. The attempt to pack the court i ‘s a. political scandal base in its inc ‘ve and shockng In its method. I Mr. Rcosevelt has not re- Pom it ln the face of the w-avo c- yiililtc anger ts indicated obliqiir‘ < iii ii s message recently on the ) il1"‘RhO€ bill. Whether ll(‘. is ariiful of lrifomied public oplnitti or confident that. the Con- gress will bend as usual to his wishes is a question. Apparently he Wants his 03m way and fears that it. could not be attained by We hold him for another Herakles. amencrn-g the Constitution. —New York Sun. Present Bftlsh pnllcy ln sub- stance. therefore, ls to promote peace and security by the 00min.- lon of definite International agree- ments carrying concrete provisions chief l; 1pm Lister, for their steady observance. But if that. plan ls not. practicable tn an armaments-mad Europe. then Great. Britain will build sufficcnt additional armaments to make it baby born tn this seaside town countries. (‘bronatton Day will have a. bank worth while for other ecoriombsally its well as d1pl:m-, account atlcally. to subscribe to a peace concert. -iProvtdence Journal. Wlth the kind of Briton who administers calon'es dressing for dinner is not snobbery. It; Ls as mucih a part. of the deceftdes of his life as brushing his teeth. To htm evening dress ls a symlbal and he knows well that ft 1s even more so to the natives among whom he works. He knows that British ad- muilstrattons rests entirely on character and that "the lesser; broods without the law" whom he. seeks to elevate watch him in- oesantly to detect any real or fancied deterioration. He knows that. outward form and ceremony! means-much to them; but that is only reason why he changes into“ evening dress nlgiht after night t0 sit down to a solitary meal perhaps hundreds of miles away frcm the next white man. He knows that the least. surrender to the influence of the country will iesecn his self- rerntict and that the fnevltabfc re- 'ult ls a lessening of prestige. It can hardly be denied that. tii col- onial administration he can teach] ' chances foi- the development of As once the son of Zeus with E1181!- __ I ‘“i”“" the world-St. John Telegraph- Chat Quart! 3,1 w. lbs-Jab. A DANGEROUS AILMENT OR GROUP 0F AILMENTS-IIEABT, BDOODVESSEL AND KIDNEYS With the knowledge that rest, fresh air, and good food will brtntl about a. "cure." the dread ailment. tuberculosis. ts being fought suc- oe-ssfully. To-day also, despite the fact that. the cause of cancer is IIXIKDOWI], the early use of radium. the Xray. or operation Ls saving thousands of lives. Now while tuberculosis still has many victims, and cancer stands near the tcp as a. cause of death. it is interesting to read a report of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Comrpzny about. another nflnaent or group o.‘ ailments whose victims greately outnumlber those of tuber- culosis and cancer. “It is stated that‘. in the United States (and this would likewise be true for Canada) fifty out of every hundred children born will die from one or other of the eardto-- msculiar-lcnal diseases; that: ts heart, bloodvesel, and kidney dis- eases. This is five time: the number l of deaths to be expected from . cancer. and ten times that from tuberculosis.’ Th‘s at first sight ta discourag- Lng but a few minutes thought w‘!!! i show some reason for a0 many: tenths from heart. bloodvessel and "dney ailments as compared with ‘nae other ailments. In the first place fewer babies lie at birth or during their first ear. Less than forty years ago the number of children who died at ilrth or during the first year was about 3 in every 10: to-day the number is Just 1 tn every 20. This mung that many more children will reauh manhood and Wmnun-, hood, a number of whom will be l none boo rugged. I In addition, there ts now the. rotectton given by medical science ,i against diphtheria, scarlet fevetnl "nd other infectious diseases of‘ childhood, and the great saving of life amongst lnifant children by scientific feeding. lifariiy delicate children saved in childhood will likewise grow up, and there will be that. many more . this heart, bloodvemel, kidney group of ailments. Now cf what. u._se is this informa- tion to those of us who are adults? A timely editorial 1n the Journal of the Canadian Medical Amoeba- tton gives the answer. In it phy- sicians are advised to prevent the beginning of this group 0f ailments by careful watching of the heart and kidneys of a patient afflict- ed wlth an acute atlmenb—typhotd fever, soarlatina. influenza. (‘It is not. sufficient to see the patient safely through the attack and ‘ then dismiss the matter from the mind." Two points stand out for all of us. First, to remain tn bed for a few days after an Illness is past. and, second, to get, checked over by our physician at least once a year. THE CHIEF‘ His brow spreads large and placid, and his eye Is deep and bright. with steady looks that 512111, Soft lines of tranquil thought his face fulfill- HLs time at. once benign and ‘proud and shy. If envy scout, if lgnorczioe deny, Hts faultless patience. his u.:y eld- fng will. Beautiful gentleness and splendid skill, Innumerablc grrtftudcs reply. Hts wtsc. rar: stntie is urea‘. with certalntlc , And seems tn all hfs patients t0 compel Such love and faith as failure can- not quell. Battling with custom pffillldlce disease. arrangements, modes of working tn PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihlo column l: upon for the tltlollnlou by corrupanilentn of tiuultluln 0f Intel-eat. The Charlottetown. fluardlnn duel not Iioconnrlly emloru tho oplnlonn of wi-renpnntlentn. SCHOOLS FOR COMMON FOLK Str,-'I‘he farmers. representing directly some 12,000 families, three- fourths of the entire population and indirectly all the common working folk in country and town, have raised the question of chang- ing our common-school studies. Well clone the farmers! But. if they really expect such a change they must push, and push again, and keep on pushing. for educational authorities have an amazing cap- acity toslt sttlL-or 1f they rise, to stand pat. obstacles to change-The move- ment labors under two handicaps. First, the small group who influ- ence and control educational pol- !cy.—-professl0rials, ptftt-tclans. bus- ‘ness mam-have interests different from the common people. They have larger incomes, are occupied with affairs which inevitably sep- arate them from thme, and un- consciously lose contact with and sympathy for them, even though originally they spring from the soil or the factory. This small group will plan to send their children to high school and university. The present study-couse prepares for this higher education. Our schools are really not people's schools but. tiass schools. Second. The force of inertia and l The ’ custom must. be overcome. school is tn the grip of the past. It L1 a. generation or century be- hind the best thought and practice of the day. The ruling class ts bl- most invariably stand-patter and- tradlttonal. In the face of the most. thorough research by the most competent experts, and the results of tested theory, they will tum their faces backward. But let; the farmers take cour- age. There is a. growing sentiment among teachers. clergy and social leaders that change must come. The rising tide of democratic feel- ing. the growing consciousness of their own need and service among working folk, the power of organ- ized effort. make change inevitable. Criminal waste of present sys- tem—Without; touching evils in the earlier grades, we find in grades 9 and 10 some 3.000 pupils study- ing Algebra, Geometry, and foreign ‘language. (If it were not for the sheer uselessness of these studies the number might be nearer 4,000.) These subjects require some 20 hours study in school and at: home every wreak. Formerly they were supposed to give effective mental discipline even if not of direct practical use. Modem research has proved conclusively that the train- ing thus furnished ls of little value for the average person. Latin has its place tn the university for specialists. But are not. languages the instruments of "culture," with the capital C? Again it ts certain that this is not so. unless the stu- dent. attains proficiency enough to enjoy the literature. Few university students reach that stage.‘ Com- mon-school pupils are busted with declcnsions, conjugations, vocabu- laries, rules of syntax. Five years after leaving school not one tn a hundred could read a simple para.- graph. Culture? Crimlnnl Waste! ! ! A suitable course: Having emp- tied the basket of useless pebbles, what. Sllflll we putdnto it? All are agreed that the training should be mainly cilitural, in the real sense, not. for an exclusive set, but valu- able for everybody-adapted to stimulate latent powers, enrich the mind with facts and ideas, develop the capacity to think, and make one familiar with the world of things and persons, past; and pres- ent. For this we naturally turn ‘no reading ln our own tcnnue,-ilter- {m G 0o d Pasturesi are absolutely essential _ NO DAIRY OR LIVE STOCK BUSINESS CAN SURVIV E ON POOR WORN OUT PASTURES What GoodiPastures Mean L-A longer grazing reason with better quality herbage. L-Leu acreage necessary per animal, thus releasing land for ' other cropa. t-Healthler and better developed live-stock. L-Much more mllk or pounds of increased weight per acre. §|—COIlIld0IIlblc paving In labor if p=riuanent pastures are “tub. fished near the barn. 6.—A distinct nvlng in the cost of production of either milk or melt. ‘General Fertilizer Recommendations For PASTURES, the following treatment: should give go“ ruultl under average conditions in the Maritime Provinces, when applied BEFORE THE LAST 0F APRIL, to an avenge god, On LIGHT SOILS, such u: SANDY, GRAVELLY. or LIGHT LOAMS, or where EARLY GRAZING ll desired: Iii-JO!) to 700 lbl. per acre 5-9-8. or 4-8-10; or 2.-125 lbs Nitrate of Soda, 600 lbs Superphoapliate, and 10¢ lbs Murlate of Potash, per acre. (Sulphate of Ammonia, 100 lbs. can be used instead of Nitrate of Soda on timed soils.) 0n HEAVY CLAY SOILS or LOW INTERVAL LANDS: l.—500 to 700 lbs of 2-12-6 per acre, or its equivalent ln home. mixed chemicals, or l.—0n IOllI sufficiently high tn Nitrogen; 800 lb: Superplm. phlto or Slag, and 75 lbs Murlate of Potash per acre. applied attire, history, science. Thrse re- quire no elaborate apparatus. Ele- mentary science oiilv needs simple, available, l'"l5i!‘l!".‘.fll ..~n prism to show noiistuimit nails of the sun's rays. a boiling kottc to Indicate the (ivpansive power of steam, nnd turn the mind brick to the tilstory of James Watt. and the "Steam Age". Nature's laboratory is at; hand, soil, \\'.’1l.0I'. ivind. plant, an!- mal. Then le'- the child down the spacious avenues of his- tot-y. not dealing with (tales andl and warrlorsi tenable)» story of tltc struggle ‘ battles, with king's anil nobles (often very bit‘, with fli“ of man for the mastery of nature. the restless, insurgent, versatile, victorious humnn race, the tale of the heroes of pence who have made real contributions to social pro- gress. the record of the inventions, Death and Hell. _ _ ,_____,_ -W. E. Henley From Hartley's “In Hospital." The GUINEAS FOR BABIES (i. BRIDLINGTUN, El18lfin d-Every opened with a guinea (about $5) given by Mayor A. E. Journal. Cavemen weren't n0 tough. Moat of them died at forty, almost ncne reached the ripe age of fifty. according to studies oi! prehistoric skulls reported by Pro‘. Henri Vallots to the French. Academy of Bciertoess-ilitterai-y Digest. It attll remllnl n hot that the Japanese army can break up any gwen-iment it: likes imleae thine! are said and done exactly u it wishes. It knows with what d'ff- lculty, thanks to its own obatruc- tfon, a cabinet. was formed after the January crisis and now it ts threatening to disrupt the gzvern- merit again because of a remark by the foreign minister that: the issue of war or peace tn the Far East lay '.n Japan's hands, an obvious truth jut now. The army Ls Just trying to make parliamentary gov- iWiiitrs tum RESTORER A dellrnlely perfumed pre- nnrntltui wlileli natural and lienutlfleii tlin litilr. It wlll roatnro (my halr to It! nrlglnnl rnlor. lino‘: llalr Rrglorrr prnmutel n new mu! nuperlor growth wliara tho hulr t3 fnlllng and l: remarkably unefiil In preventlnl illmlrulf nnil tlelfrnylng nor- lnltlc hnlr killers. Jnlt follow I the dlror-tlnnii rare-fully and yon will bn amazed n: the rrlultn. _ Write or pltfllll! to-rlny PRICE I100 Mac's Special Rx. 3l5 Curl Liver 0|! Extract vrltli Cruolo and (inlnrol Compound. A real lnnlo for Conlhn. (‘nlih iuyl (irlppe. It In hotter thln nn ordinary Cough lled- - lrlno for it roadie! flia out n! "in trouble. rellovrn the mull!» null lnnplln i-nnllnnnl trut- mont to hulk! IlI'l the nvrifrm, t0 wlthnfnml Iiitiin attack. i It nplrmllrl hlnoil rim! hm‘!- hllllflllll lnnlo for both WWI"! nml nlil who talu- lt IPIII|IIIIY~ l rmrl: sum rim norrnn l Mull ordern promptly attended to. :_ ‘HIE TWD MACS wander i crnment. unworkable as an gXCtllé for u. Fascbt. form. —Elc. ~ in the Fall or Early Spring. Where additional Nitrogen la required, It can be supplied with either Nitrate of Soda, Nitro-Chalk, Cyanamii, oi- Sulphate o: Ammonia. For further information write your nearest Agricultural Offlu or The Secretary Maritime Fertilizer Council 44 BROMLEY AVE. MONCTON, N. B. _(1'Iio Council don not nil, handle or quota pficea an fertilizers) m. Tea Poll sayi. For a. Delicious Cup 0t Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN llraiige Pekoe Tea the several stages of devefirTttiewiitiittigiiiavstTrnassefl 0n ‘villfliifiiwllllll-l l4 Along with this would go the chotc- broad-based the whole social elfllc- est. literature, embodying the ideas, ture. ‘The best ts none too good lm depicting the efforts, and ser- 019m- vlng as models of literary ex- I am. Sh‘, all‘... _ cellenoe“ For instance, Scott's J. W. A. NICHOLSON Ivanhoe would paralell the North Bcdfiqlle- story of Norman England, Reades Cloister and Hearth, the later Middle Ages. Poetry would be wov- en Into this fabric of studies tn a similar way. The pupil on leaving school would possess the nucleus of a. growing body of culture which would be a real delight and eri- i-tchment. from the very beginning, and to which he would be adding through all the years. Special training: There may be a small place even for studies bearing on the vocations. The elementary actenoe would be adapted to suit the needs of those going into farm- ing, and an optional course for the urban occupations could be provid- ed. Further, for those going on to High School and University, pro- vision woufd be made tn those in- stitutions for the special mathe- matical and language studies. A goodly number of students oven now begin their language courses after reaching the university. Thus would the special interests of all be met. But fundamental to all our training should be the provision for the needs of the common folk, the great majority of the population, PONY MOUBNB RIMIBEY. AlttagogOPl-IAN 14W!» old roan pony s l" ml" the embers of a lifltle homestead shack here for several days m" its master, George W. Ill/filler. 011w a rider for "Buffalo Bill" 0063i perished in the flames. Kindly‘ neighbors fnally Induced “Blilfy to leave the scene. MOIOI‘ Boat Besides furnishing you with the best en- gine for your motor boat in the “Imperial”, Bruce Stewart also specialize in motor boat supplies: Such as shafting — propellers — stuffing boxes — batteries - coils — spark plugs - shaft couplings — piston rings, etc. We have the biggest and most varied stock in the East and our large turnover enables us to quote the lowest prices. Write — phone — or call. BRUCE STEWART KCGIMPANY LIMITED Cllllllhilliilblllfltllfll.