.1 -- t qfribittion to 5;‘ tfltlspway in theSenate the other day: > a‘ i " l in: . Alitunsiomi au gunman ~ lhrllnclhlb fume-swat '~e~.:.~..".:i:..°~a.t "Me-tilt IUIIIIII Iullnnen. w» suescmrrion urea . ‘ lea! lln advance: delivered to (It). Idlt Bureau of Circulation PTIO Strongest Mentory i: Wanker the Weakest Ink.‘ m-f L, MONDAY, MAY 22, 1939 ~ i,‘ KING_ FAMILY, DEMOCRACY There is much food for thought in the fol- lowing comment from The Fortnightly Law Iournal: “The King by the hereditary nature of his office shows us that, in these days when so much stress is laid upon the ini_portance of the ballot, great men are born as well as elected, and that heredity is not out of place in democracy as we understand it. In fact it seems t0 us that successful democracy must revolve around l antral sun whose position remains fixed and from which all the subsidiary units draw their authority and life. After all the family which is the basic unit of democratic national life is an undemocratic institution. But since democracy is essentially the harmonizing of conflicting in- terests of all kinds, none of these things are anomalies let alone paradoxes. In other words democracy is not government in itself, but oniv l means to obtain good government. So if the highest and lo\vest of our institutions, the Crown and the family, are essentially non-demo- cratic, and if the Crown typifies the family, as the King does, we can learn from that a lesson of democracy, that ought to make easy the at‘ tainment of nationhood and national unity. If the King's visit can teach us that, he will have accomplished a result, that, it seems to us, must one of the underlying reasons for our pres- ent good fortune in having our King among us for the first time in history.” ADVISES 1940 ELECTION The Winnipeg Free Press, (Liberal) ex- resses the hope, now that the decision has been made to adjourn Parliament for only a few days during the arrival of His Majesty in Can- ada and at the capitl, that no general federal election will be held this year. There are, says the Free Press, no reasons why there should be an election in 1939, but many why an election in 1940 would be better. The Government would have to take into account, for instance, the charge that would instantly be made, that it hoped to capitalize upon the interest and excitement of the Royal visit. Moreover, the normal life of Parliament is five years. and only in very special circum- stances should any government reduce the length of that life. “If a Government should ‘suddenly change its course; if it abandons the pledges which it made at the time of its election for new pledges; if an historic party reverses the normal course of its policy between elec- tions; if it ‘should be seriously threatened in farliament in such a way that it is manifest it has lost the confidence of the people; then, and then only, is a Government justified iu going to the country." The Free Press reminds its party Government at Ottawa that many problems remain to be tackled. And so far as strategy goes, “Mr. King has only to consider his o\vn record to see the value of maintaining himself through the natural life of the present Parliament. Elected first in 1921, he chose to go to the country in 1925 with results so unsatisfactory that another election was licld within a year. Elected again in i926, he went to the country in 1930 with results which can hardly have been pleasant for him. Hut Mr. King will have to ask himself whether an election in i030 might be interpret- ed by the. voters as 2m admission on Mr. King's part that he could do no more. If they reached that conclusion, their instinct might well be to try and find a substitute more ready to accept the responsibilities of office." PAYING THE BILLS In their zeal for the flesh-pots electors too .frequently forget the homely lesson thus ex- ‘pounded by the Financial Post: “There is only one taxpayer in Canada. There is not a municipal taxpayer, a provincial ‘taxpayer and a Dominion taxpayer. These three ire one. There is no way that his burdens can be lightened by shifting expenses from one gov- Qrnment to another. v "There is no source of income in Canada ex- Iieept the income of the people. The government {that gives the people-or one group of them- } bonus or subsidy or grant or other form of gratuity takes it out of all the rest of the people. The Government has no income of its bwnfit merely plays aroundwith the money iofthe people as a whole. ygl-“Every time the Government makes a con- a special ‘class it has to tax to find rifle money. Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen put it . iryulivniw f j ~- “qlt-v n. FIXING run BLAME. "Speaking in the Senate on the question of Mllfllill defence, Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen de- clared that Canada was largely responsible for the Sydney Post Record, is a vital truth_ Can- ada was the country and Ernest Lapointe the man. The main exhibit was Dr. Riddell, de- moted from his post as Canada's representative at Geneva because he has had the effrontery to back Britain's policy with respect to the"imposi- affair." From the moment Mr. Lapointe called Dr. Riddell down, the League ceased to function as a serious tribunal for the enforcement of in- ternational law and world peace. 1 Editorial Notes /_ l Wagner born this date, 1813. a a a a: In the midst of the storm and stress over European affairs, the Budget, and conscription, twelve women members of the House of Com- mons won a major victory when they were as- Sllfcd that a mirror would be placed in the mem- bers’ cloakroom. Cheers, some of them ironical, greeted the government announcement, in re- sponse to a question by Dr. Edith Summerskill, that a mirror would be hung in the cloakroom for "the convenience of members of both sexes." ' 1 I‘ ‘ll i! It is now predicted that Chancellor Hitler will call for a real showdown with the. demo‘ cracies in July. This would give him time to de- velop a press campaign for Danzig, and although there is an important school that believes that a fundamental crisis will be postponed until the Nazis have gathered in the harvest, it is point- ed out that most of the crops in Southern Ger- many will have been gathered by July. It would be like our bad luck should this happen. for we were on the eve of the 1914 Confederation cele- brations when the outbreak of the Great \Var caused their abandonment. it!!! According to researches. the name "Piccadilly" originated from the fact that one Robert Baker, formerly a tailor, had built a house in what is now Great Windmill Street. In the Overseers‘ Accounts of the Parish of St. Martin-in-the- Fields of I623, he is described as of “Pickadilly Hall," the name having been probably applied to his housepin jesting reference to the fortune made by him in vending "Pickadils," which were a species of stiff. round collar. It was then not uncommon for the houses of prominent citizens to be called after their owners’ trades. x w m u $181818 Fulham Palace, the home of the Bishops of London, will soon, for the first time in thirty- eight years, have a mistress. Rev. Dr. Geoffrey Francis Fisher, appointed to succeed in Septem- ber the present aged bachelor occupant, Dr. Winnington-Ingram, who is 81, is father 0f six children. all boys, the oldest being 2i. The salary of the London bishopric is $50,000. Dr. Fisher, as Bishop of Chester, receives $21,000 a year. Mrs. Fisher, before. marrying Dr. Fisher in 1917, was Miss Rosamond Chevalier Forman, duaghter of the late Rev. A. F. E. Forman, and granddaughter of Dr. S. A. Pears, once headmaster of Rcpton. Dr. Fisher was head- master of Reptou himself, from 1914 to 1932, before he became Bishop of Chester. i ll! 1i i Tired of being ribbed about some trifling errors in his paper a fellow editor once wrote: "We'd be pleased to find a merchant or clerk who never made a mistake in putting up an order, a lawyer who never lost a case through his own errors, a delivery man who never left a parcel at the wrong house, a radio announcer who never mispronouuced a word, a singer who never struck a false note, a doctor who never made a mistake, a post office employee who never put mail in the wrong box, a woman who never forget to put salt in when she was cook- ing, or to ptit tea in the teapot before putting in the water. Bring in some of your paragons who find it so easy to critize us. \’Vc want lo see if they're human." I i! The marked gain in the sale of new farm im- plenients which took place in Canada between 1936 and 1037 was not continued at the same rate in 1938, nevertheless sales for the year rec- orded a substantial improvement over i937. Do- mestic sales at wholesale prices to dealers totalled $36,336,056 for i938, up i8 per cent from the $30,775,198 reported for 1937, which, in turn, was almost 60 per cent above the $19,343,871 recorded for i936. These figures are exclusive of parts, binder twine and farm trucks. Sales by main groups were as follows in i938, with fig- ures for i937 in brackets: tractors and engines, $l5.973.058 ($l3.329.304); harvesting ma- chinery. $7,i<>a.s4s ($3,883,524); tillage ma- ‘hinefy. $4.449-286 ($4.744.093): planting and seeding machinery, $2,138,267 ($2,209,165): haying machinery, $1,433,771 ($1,293,610); all other types, $5,238,929 ($5,315,3i2.) e e In a letter to the Globe and Mail, Mr. W. P. Callaghan. Summerside, says: "It is reported that several hundred thousand tons of German coal and coke came to,Canada in 1938, and has been coming forseveral years. The discrim" inatory freight rates on coal are responsible in a large measure for this. Right herein this small town of Summerside, hard coal has been com- ing from Germany in steamer loads, and the freight rate is slightly over $1 per ton, a dist- lnceof about 3,000 miles. It is sold here to con- '- simmers at $14 per ton. Of this amount $8 or $Q of every ton noes back to Germany.“ Andfor what purpose? To enable them to make am- fmunltion. bombing planes and other. “war ma- tliridls, and he a menace to the peace of the the freight rates on German poke, ffeotieidershleamount of which comes toNoi-n. ~ ssuyfdilb-sellgxtlyrover $t oer romwliereas the 1U T album, f amuse. of about” lllfifilllffldlfid miles.” - __ Q4‘, 1... ....,____ the collapse of the League of Nations. This, says x tion of sanctions ,against Italy in the Ethiopian “k ydneyi coke’ toflSiimmet-slde ls . parades lion clel-r whet. the woll-undreuedqwiimen 3 won on th Amer the manufacture of gherte. He le known as the King. of e Undleworld. White s ta. seyl a tailor, afford no warm to the lea-they are solely for l. er- ance. Then ft’: quite unfelr sly that bridegroom: weer them be- cause of cold feet. Why 1e thirteen considered an unlucky number?" asked a contemporary. We believe the idea oglnabed when e. defend- ant. in court added together one Judge and twelve Jurymen. — London Humorfst. A I‘ resident of Winnipeg, who ls applying for Canadian ult- urslizatlon, was asked recently wnet. he considered to be the outstand- ing th tn our Canadian charac- ter. He replied: “Duldung - the spirit of tolerance." The instinct to extend to others the freedom he deeply rooted ln Candalan con- SClOUSIICaa. At s time when gov- ernments elsewhere are denounelnft tolerance not only as weak tn lt- self, but as an unbearable handl- cap to the building up of a nation, it‘. might be well to think a little about why it g thing“ We are tolerant, because we bellevo lt right. to be so. vVe believe that. no man ls good enough or wise enough to rule other men without their consent. And we believe that no man's rights are safe unless he is willing and able grant to other men the same rights he expects for himself. Winnipeg 'I‘rlbune. A World's Fllr h the but of all places to dream of Utopia. Ours differs wlde‘y from the Utopian oi the past. Two hundred years ago when famlne might. stalk through the land Utopia was a land of plenty where mortals ate and drank from golden vessels and the very‘ trees were good to eat. Judged by these standards, we must. be llv-I trig 1n Utopia now. Today we en- vision osslble artlflclal foods be- cause ere ls a science of synthe- tic chemistry, rocket. motors that will carry passengers across the ocean in a. morning. houses so highly mmhanlzed that the mere pushing of a button will cook n. meal or bring opera into the llv- lng room. If we have learned any lesson since science and technology shaped our lives. it is that. Utopla is no changeless Promised Land, but as dynamic as life ltself. - New York Times. The Pedestrians’ Association has suggested a reform of road trans- port which must have occurred to many observers. It asked the Ministry of Transport. to secure n. limitation of the amount of merchandise now carried by road which might be more suitably conveyed by railway, canal. or coastal shipping. The removal of traffic from the roads to the ca- nals ls rather a startlln idea when one considers the grea difference in speed of these tlwo modes of transport. but. there cannot be much doubt, that under a unlfled organization of transport many of the heavy loads would be transfer- red to the railways as the more economic as well as the safer way. At the same meeting Lord Cecil pointed to a glaring defect ln the report of the Select Committee on Road Safety-its failure to reject. the fallacy of the importance of speed To drlve cars fast was. he said, a "cruel and reckless piece of selfishness which all decent people should de lore and eon- demn." Lord Cecl ls one of the few public men who regard the quest on of road safety as a moral issue. and he regrets that. the Churches have riot: spoken dearly upon it. —Manchest»er Guardian. Dr iielmuth llusserl, the Vien- nese scientist who ls now staying in Cape Town. advocates the Ant- arctic as a disease killer. and the life of a seamen for the prevention of cancer. Dr Husserl recently re- turned from the Antarctic tn the whaling factory ship. Suderoy, aft/er a five-month voyage. suggests that hospital ships should be sent. "down South" with pat- tents. who in the lnvlgoratlnply clean Antartlc alr, full of curat ve propertlm. will have the greatest. chance of rewvery. Outstanding properties in the Antarctic air are chloride and iodine. In a. report which ne sent to Germany, he states that the seamen who spend. their ltves at sea never contracted any form of cancer. This fact lie holds would one day become one of the most important proofs of the genesis of cancer throuiilt the earth rays. In the same way rheumatic diseases were also less frequent and never became as ser- ious as they did on land. The 01l- mate of the Antarctic is .50 healthy, he says that. contagious dlsecsea. suzh as influenza, or the contrac- tion of tetanus after wounds. do not peplur. — South African News Bul- e n. Speaking In Wlnnlpe recently before a gathering to c6 write the ennlversery of Hitler's rlse to pow- er Wilhelm Rndde. German consul o Western Canada, ls reported u: have spoken u follows: “Our Fuelirer has pressed himself that. national socialism ls c purel Cler- man matter and not en art ole for rnble maxim but. flnancod ln part ‘s predecessor, Dr. Bee , the principal shareholder. "Not for export" for-sooth. An the Zeltun: paddles the belt ll- export. than those behind th tuna are no mun bootleflerl‘; - Wlnnlpe: ‘Irlbune. ' . ha; fwgyllxls Pam are. Iuld er one .v | . . u . , ilr....""z"- cram? 3' combined is men! ‘EM’ - I-ieth rustic roltum i‘ u’ new s» a» Oillolplllntl of Ififloll ll llhldfl- I'M Clor- h--........,.:::.'..*":..'*:t.:::..-r. communicate. _ ‘I'll CAMIIILIJ All STAYING i-m tb ' f 1 :3 e orum of my 18th p was e llttlemhuty arid eh uld mews-meridian‘ - o ‘Ibo Oc-mbbells ere s Hitmh The Cemnbe are stnylna In May. ln May. Their platform was sounded Their actions are well mound ‘fheyre foténdd tn tfilose places when n _ n Thelr Rates and their fences Are darn efenoes ‘the Cam ells are stlylng To answer the call. The Campbell: m staying Hurrah! Hurrah! The Ocmpbells areistaylnu tod B , ay, The Oampgells are steylnz le say new . ‘Ihey have asked them To stay. to stay, to slay. "one t" sis" e e ve u ‘rliei-rpeiiigneys lnvgeilied the only sane ‘They've got l of manhood And use lt for your good, The Campbells are here To stay. to stay. l lln. Slr. etc" GEORGE ROGERS. ' Chelton, P. E. l. of I 0d? ot/nei. TO OUR. KING AND QUEEN Bound the silver trumpet note- heralds of the dawning, Hall our sovereign lord the King, across the frelgiited years; Hall her gracious Majesty upon this joyous morning, Ae they share our heritage ecstasy and tears! Pest the Yukon! broken of snows, tic sea; Down the Straits of Hudson, where the Eskimo is dwelling. Halrtimz tongues avow again their useless loyalty. Where on falr Acad-lan shores, Pundy's tides are breaking. Scions 0-1 an "defeat race affirm their faith anew; Where the voles of Chaudlere ln ness are waklnz. Valiant‘ sons of old Quebec pro- claim allezlance true. Deep in not-them forests where the darkllria waters gleaming, Beam no olamoious eoho of the far Eurasian mar. : Where the mlghty prairies sweep- where Qifltpvelle ls dream- ins.- Ieam the undying patriot flame ln staunch Canadian hearts. Bound the silver trumpet note- heralds of the dawning. Hall an anon-es Kl it and Queen, across the frellz ted years: Bld them tender welcome on this inertial-ab m rig. As they share with Canada, he: ‘ ecstasy and tears! —Irene Fhmpmm Benson. creased German power tn Central Inn-ope at the expense of and brought. a German army to e Brenner Pass has plainly shovvm that it Mussolini who ls the real dictator of the Axis. - New York Times. SAME BY ANOTHER NAME TOwNr-"TCPI — Bllln - irucllsm on South African ra - ways lri f-utuve will extend to the stewards department. and he. w’ll advertise his beef with hUSEHGlBlI as "cebraatde beesrlb met peper-A wortelsous," 1n Afrlkaans. NOTICE TO FARMERS W h mwsmipvs. hut received a FORMALIN m; ‘MUT ON GRAIN h bl cumin - fniivrremilay. ""- aims?" 11mm" properly treated One pint to every constant’; tlrfiédl... “ERESA N Mug, for debt‘. It III! We that‘: 1"“ “M1094”. PlmWsri-i 13°F“??? Italy ' ts Hitler and not . ‘Qijanulfllalcnllh. MANY PHYSICIANS Now nave MITABOLISM monitors One of the pleces of apparatus that ls more into use tn physic- lens’ offices ls that used or ths metabolism test—rate at which the body p. s are working. Th): m, ls controlled lgtvhthe thyw-d gland in tlhe neck. e body pm- would go on without this laud but this gland decides or de- ermlncs how fast the processes will Work. ‘This metabolism machine ls now can carry it to the home of the and make the testmgatuatly without the mental dist ance and physical mm of poms to tbs ho ital metabolism cl nlc. some at enizs et so upset by going to ospltal ore breakfast ln the morning that it ls necessary to have them rest. from a half to as long as an hour and a half before they are sufficiently quieted down to undergo the t. And even after this rest there may be the "Inward" emotion that. makes the body processes go a. llttle more rap- ldly than they would if the parent were completely calm ln mind. For years. the use of this met- abolism machine has enabled phy- slclans to learn whether the thy- roid gland was pouring the nor- mal amount of Juce into the blood. or 1f. on the other hand, lt was pouring too much or not enough. One of the results of too much thyroid juice ls a rapid heart beat and loss of body weight; where there ls not enough julce, the heart ls slower than normal and there Ls an Increase of fat in and on the body. 'A more recent finding ls that. when the thyroid gland ls over- actlve-too much julce-the abil- lty of the liver to fllter harmful substances from the blood ls les- sened so that the lndlvlclual loses some of tlils protection from the wast/e substances resulting from digestion. It was found that when a part or all of the thyroid gland was removed ln these eases, the llver‘s ability to rid the blood of ha-mtful substances became nor- mal or nearly normal. "It can thus be seen that with a metabolism equipment ln the physician's office, the patient will undergo the test Just as his heart, lunim. or b‘ood pressure is bested. It will not disturb or upset hlm and so spoll the reading. It wlll immediately glve the ph- slclan some very helpful informa- tlon in trying to flnd the cause of the patient/s symptoms. ARTISTS REWARD LONDON- (CE-John l-lassel, 70-year-old artist. who once farm- ed in Manitoba, has been award- ed a pension of £110 (3547) by the RCNY""""""' for his " r- vices to poster art.” ’ Kidney Acids Bob Your Res Many people never seem to get n good nilhfu rut. Tlwyhnnmd ton-lie avnh mdeeunteheep. Oftenlhe bhlnplton “nuvu" when It may be ‘r kidneys. I-fnlthy kidney: filter the blood. If they an faulty and ful, poisons my in the eymm and lleeplouneu, held- nehe, backache often follow. If Elsi don't sleep well, lry Dedd’: Kidney l-fw half a century the favorite remedy. I03 Budd's Kidney Pills J. ALDIIIIC RAYMOND VIII museum Gill. N. llN running‘: Mirror Of The Nation By ‘Commoner’ OTTAWA. Ma 20- W afteriioon snow leader of the Government make another com- plete volte face wlth regard to Id" Journment or proiogatlon of the House by H-ls Majesty the King. In fact the Government changes its mind so often that the column- ists are much 1n the position of clowns in a circus doing perpetual (mental) somersoults tn an effort t» keep upwlthlt. Whenwestlrt. a column wheat ls to be soc a shel; before we set to the end o!’ the first page lt has taken a down- wardtplurige to 60c: and long be- fore e end of the column ls reached ft has taken an upward half owl to 70c. Today the Gov- ernment qulte tlvc in its position that the“ ouse will pro- rollle on May 19th, otherwise ft will stand adjourned for one month; tomorrow. lf the House must adjourn it will be for s. few days only. This week all signs point to a summer election: next week indications will be that there will be no election until 1940. Even eXpei-lenoed parliamentarians are bewildered and lost tn the maze created by the vagaries o; m; Mflwfllzle Ialng. Adnzlxtlmatlon. Public opinion was so strongly 0 to the business of the country being sidetracked in the manner advocated bv the Admlnls- tratlon that the Prime Minister was forced to reconsider his p"- vlous decision with regard t4; w- joummezit. The G-rernment was well aware, fmm the marine- ment of the session. that it would be the fervent desrne of the Can- adian people to have the House nmmsued by the King on May 19th. yet. import-tam lm’ ' - ‘f. fectlng th 1f f th - tuzal denial: oiirewgeterne dsgifil, the youth of the country and the'r problems. the ever pressing qua‘. tlon of unemployment, the mm- entous matter of the defence of Qlillfldfl. and the spending of $63,- 000.000 ln connection therewith, find "why other problems of na- "Qmil importance. were left until Hs Majesty was actually on the hlllh seas. apparently in the hone that these measures could be mi]. waded thrown the House wlth und-ue haste and corresponding lack of care for the public lriderest, Th eader of the Opposltlon. . R. J. Manlon. woke for the pepble of Canada when he sold: I think the sworn-ment are lé-rekgymtotgtimeleiror the use; that ° mp e our lnessln time to have the Kin conduct the °°Nm°YIY 01' llwwnat on They are 1n full control of the whole business of the House i; . This particularly so today when the ‘___.i._.__ .__..___.._ Today’: Neglect file Tomorrow’: Expense Many accidents, and moot major upelr bllh, could be avoided by having the automobile inspected REGULARLY. This h the anon when on Inspection, BY EXPERTS, ls- peitleulnrly Important. Amongst our special services m llm, lubrication and batteries. We melts NO s. TIIE 00. LTD Wholesale and Retai‘ Automobile Accessoi-Li finest; loaf Government bu such a large 1mm. witch! u...» times "“‘ number a the dlff m‘ non. IIWfll-‘L _ _ in!“ 0pm" All dam point to subordination ln the be...‘ m‘ Five of th G mm, their condgmnigdim u?!‘ valid s not on. Mr. Gardiner; wheat lll. o others voiced their din at of, the dam,“ mm one. There was ,0 mum lon the Government, nuke over the agricultural that: the Government. declded u, any! lt through the final reading 0n Vlllw. without a formal vol, being recorded. Thls week we flnd ‘m! I503‘! P!!!‘ of Literal Men-f. hm llnlnr 1m l88~lnst the ow. erriment when Mr. O'Neill, Libm-g] (>096. 3.0. and Mr. Arum, 8 t. Parry Bound. Ont, partial. humerus the debt free mm, m. ogufilll: Exposition group; I Keen lftleal Observers are u the op on that. the Government Wlll 110C hilt m0 BlBClON this sum; 1111f- Wll-h uncertainty, confusion and vaetlletlon displayed by m, lenders of the party becoming dolly more and more apparent m4 the dilssenslon and dissatisfaction s 1y increasing, not (m. throughout the country but also in Government ranks. it seems ex- tremely unlikely that an early eleg- NOII will be on the program, GOODWIIiL GMTURE SAINT JOHN, .\B., Mi; __ (QM-Boy Scouts ln townis iillong the New Brunswck-Malne 130mg; joined ln International Goodwin ceremonies Saturday. New Bruns- wick Maple trees were planted m, United States aoll and Maine pine trees were plan-ted on Canadian territory. How Are Your Eyes‘? ll yo ‘ __, to of etrallrli-r-rhaendlchesfgiii: 0y‘: mud ese-consuft s spee- At your service with years °| Qlllerlenoc and a lhorourh refrm service. p‘ “wit: and dlleuae your dlf- G. llutcheson U. I‘. HUTOHESON. I. G. HUTUHBSON. For Vitalitt; alwaui uie BRAHMIN ORANGE PEE TEA CHARGE for our 10-minute battery chock-up. - Our work In efficient and moderately-priced. May we help you uve money, and iveld poul- ble accident, by examining your ear TODAY? noarns iunuvnin: SOUTHERN STATES . ‘a supplied Canada Al‘. of in tobacco. Today 80'1"" onurio ls predator: . flank-Us" .»ui* . a .- i “Tl-IE with practically some of ll“ '. From thll fl" 1. u?! vi“ l. HEMHNG