i Premier of Nova Scotia in the matter of Do- g pi i? y. i. I f. i. PAGE from: TIIE Morning mu; (Founded in ll01)_ Authorised es Seooad Class Hell. Poet Office lhuslns Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tlum the Weakest Ink." _l‘._llhllL01'TE_T_ll_Vll_l_lillllt|llAll President. lsn A. Barnett: Vloe-Prssdiiesst, was, g Barnett; Seem-Trees» G. M. Burnett; Editor ma Director, l. B. Burnett; Aloelnte Editor, - EDITORIAL NOTES .. Tomorrow shortest day—-winter begins. I I When our ‘readin one country or one branch; then we may be sur that we are narrowin ing our education. I I 0 I I I known as Didymus, one of the twel | . shared the danger with Jesus at V’ “M” u‘ h SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1906 . Gasoline Taxes inces in l944,,the last year for which these rec- ords are complete, are interesting for the pic- ture they give of what this levy means to each of them. The figures follow: Prince Edward Island . . . . . . .. S 309,752 Nova Scotia _, 3,445,011 New Brunswick ,, 2,122,312 Quebec . , . . . . . . .. ,_ 12,333,342 Ontario . . . . .4 26,508,291 Manitoba ... . . . . ,._._.. . .. 2,678,149 Saskatchewan .. .. 3,397,280 . Alberta .. 3,808,155 British Columbia . . . .. . , , 3,763,626 Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $58,521,928 The Provincial tax rates on gasoline range from l0 cents a gallon in the Maritimes to 8 cents in Quebec, Ontario and Saskatchewan and to 7 cents in Manitoba, Alberta and British Col- umbia. These are the Provincial taxes. The Dominion gasoline tax, collected since 1941, amounts to another 3 cents a gallon. The dis- continuance of the Federal tax, which yielded about $30,000,000 last year, will mean either en- larged revenues to the Provinces or reduced prices to gasoline users, or, from the Provincial standpoint, relief in both these directions What's The lioeil 0f It? The Industrial Development Bank, a Do- minion Government institution, has just releas- ed its annual report, signed by Mr. Graham Towers. The Bank was started by the Govern- ment to help along new industry with loans for such purposes as erection of or additions to buildings, the purchase of machinery and that sort of thing. lt has a director apiece for each of the three Maritime Provinces but its nearest office listed is Toronto, apart from the main of- fice in Montreal. The idea behind this bank is good but, notes an exchange, it would be in- teresting to learn if any loan from it had been made to help finance industrial development in the Maritimes. What's tho good of an institu- tion such as this if it does not function here? Why shouldn't there be a-Maritime branch act- ively at work encouragnig expansion of our in- dustry? "The Dominion Government's brain boys can propose shipping out our unemployed young men by the hundreds and perhaps thous- ands. What's wrong with getting the Indus- trial Bank down here in a hurry to see what it can do? Such steps are taken in Britain by the Government as a matter of course. The British Government during the war shifted labor around; now it is directing new industry into those areas which have a surplus of labor. Maybe Ottawa ought to ask London for the loan of a couple of good men to tell as how it is done." And That's That! Prime Minister King's letter replying to the s minion-Pravincial tax proposals elicits the fol- lowing blistering comment from our sister Prov- ince's leading Liberal newspaper, the HdllfGX Chronicle: ‘ ”Mr. King graciously concedes the gasoline tax--a concession already made to the whole of the Dominion. l'le is willing to withdraw from the fields of amusement and pari-mutuel taxes -provided the Province compensates the Domin- ion for their loss. The electricity tax is reckon- ed by the Prime Minister as a sales tax, on grounds which would include almost every im- position under that head. He intends to keep rt. As for the subsidy granted Nova Scotia on the findings of the White Commission, this Prov- ince may now look forward to receiving 30 per cent of it-—not, however, on the ground of eco- ngmig need, but in order to equate the grants made to this Province with others allocated ta the Prairie Provinces. "Every constructive proposal in Mr. Mac- donold's all too modest program was brushed off as inconsequential. Perhaps the most lun- dalentnl of the Nova Scotia Premier's requests was that an annual conference between the Do- minion and the Provinces should be held on a fined date. This is vitally necessary if any agreement now to be made is candidly regard- ed as temporary. There would simply have to bi consultations in order to devise machinery “l, for n permanent settlement of relationships at - the end of the five-year period. "Mr. King, in reply, harked back to con- stitutional principle to find an excuse for re- fusing this embarrassing request — though _tl\e constitutional aspect of the whole- Dominion- Provincial debate has be'en carefully obscured end ignored. Any- tutu conference is to be celled "when the need a s," and "where there < is reoseirlobleunonlmity on the part of the PM- lneer lo the desire for a conference." Qf rll=ll need 6nd desire, no doubt, Mr. King would be the eltlinate ledge. Once in. the spider's web ' “Ina escape for the fly. _ _ ~ rein the Nova Scorien point of view, Mr. King's letter ls e verbose arid shoddy product. It gt"; within the narrow terms ‘o: reference if the " lnnl conference. “It entire lgnorest pre- le of economic need Instead of answering News Scotia in the rlngl The ligures given by The Canadian Press for gasoline collections by the various Fwy- Lazarus lay dead; was filled with Jesus .-.1. per; refused to b h“ “M0117 Seen 11nd, touched Jesus. they are a bundle of amazing poislbiliflgg, them is vested the future of writes Canon H. J. Cody, Scouts Association. i 0 I Saint John, N. B., had a black-out the oth- er day from 12 noon till 8 P.M. Mr. Barry Wil- m. several mic-user. said that the disruptions were,the result of trouble in the supply lines carrying current from, first the New Brunswick Electric Power Commission plant at Pusquash, and, later the New Brunswick Commission's plant at Minto. I n w er p George Eliot, pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans, English novelist and poetess, died to- morrow's date, 1880; her first effort in fiction was Amos Barton, followed by Scenes From Clerical Life, and Adam Bede-her finest novel. Others are The Mill on the Floss, and Silas Marner. Her poetical work is contained in The Legend of Jubal and Other Poems. Her place is among the greatest writers of English fietion. Curiously enough, she excelled as a painter of middle class- life and character, and her work is marked,by much p*ath_ps and humor. W i Mr. J. M. Macdonnell, member of the House at Commons for Muskoka and president of the Dominion Progressive Conservative As- sociation, charged in a dinner address at King'- ston that Prime Minister King had failed to handle the labor situation and had "made a mess" of Dominion-Provincial relations. The Canadian people were in danger of losing their freedom through the Government's refusal to re- lax wartime controls. I I I Q British coal miners will dance at the pit heads when the_ mines are formally handed over to the National Coal Board on New Year's Day. It marks the end of a long struggle between miners and mine operators, but it does not mean that the miners are left in triumphant posses- sion of the field. The operators have gone, but in their place is the State in its manifestation as the National Cool Board. lt remains to be seen whether British miners will be any happier bargaining with the all-powerful State than they were when the function of government was merely to keep more or less in balance the relative power of miners and mine operators. ‘k I i Present enrolment of 35,000 veterans in Canada's universities will increase to 40,000 with- in the next year, as soon as those ex-service stu- dents qualifying for university entrance complete their studies, according to Hon. lan A. Mac- kenzie, Minister of Veterans Affairs. The Min- ister estimates there were 16,000 veterans in their first year at universities, 12,000 in their second year, 4,000 in their third year, 2,000 in their fourth, and 1,000 in post-graduate courses. In addition there were B00 Canadian veterans studying in the United States and 200 in Great Britain with the Department's assistance. a w w w ' "Know Your Government" is the title of a very useful booklet just issued by the Canadian Chamber ofCommerce. lt is presented "in the faith that democracy is the best system of gov- ernment yet devised" and it tells, concisely and clearly, about Canada's governmental machin- ery and suggests how citizens can help it to work more efficiently. As appendices are given a complete list of the members of the House of Commons, by Provinces, with their constituen- cies, postal addresses and political affiliations, also lists of the various Federal Departments and Deputy Ministers, and standing committees in both the Senate and House of Commons. All this valuable information is contained in fewer than thirty pages. The booklet should prove of special value to high school and college stu- dents, and it is to be strongly recommended to our educational authorities in this connection. It seems the striking farmers of Saint John area are "taking time by the forelock", charging as increased expense in production the antici- pated 30 per cent increase in railway rates; likewise higher taxes for better schools _when they build them. Mr. John Vaughan explains all this and more in a letter to the Telegraph-Jour- nal in which he says: "On account of the hay crop failure this year and the effect of the dry season an pasture, the barns of farmers have never been so empty of hay at this time of tlie year, as at the present time. The farmer is therefore forced to buy hay at twenty dollars per ton, that ordinarily sold at six to eight dollars, but only a third-rate article lacking in Vitamin, A. l'le is then compelled to feed an expensive grain and concentrate ration to make up the de- ficiency. Faced again with a probable 30 per g concerns just one age, g our minds and restrict- Today is the Feast of St. Thomas, also Bethany when dismay when 'THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Norwegian Science Service. llstss By The Vlsy~ commercial ffiernsess "o Plllmlns to test nylon nets and fish lfaes lo see haw the materiel will stand 11o in salt-water. when they an get the material, says Still sesroe, they any, nrg safes for the fer customer. While re- "PUBLIC FORUM flsln ll Q the llllonsslon by lbonlients of qleeflnnn of ‘IIIW- Th8 chllhlfifigyn , does not noaelsr- , llr enihmmsrre opinion al oaneepors to, 4 i 1 will BRIDET VIEW! Slfr-I AAAALQiA>AA;L;AAL¢ vfiw observed the results of the vv > Joseph. 101 0d) of “p. _ man by types from Au Englishman's Sense A Countrymsni Creed. By Bl!‘ Wliiiem Bench Thoma!- (Spectator) There are. of course. ml ‘ the walks of life tn our southern psrt of the island of Brlteln. But I ' DECEMBER 21.1946 World's Loneliesl Spot (By Richard Dlmblelr , Untied dam Information Office) frhe onellest spat ln the world. has come lnlo the news. It's the island-or three lslends, to be ex- spt-of Trifles; d; Cantu. lyfns 3.000 miles west of the Caps of Good Hope. and 4.000_ northeast of the Hot-nus minute speck in the middle of the Soutli Atlantic Ocean. ‘Prlstsri, and its fellow lslsnrh Inncesslble snd Nlshtlnsele. srel f... (Michael ny WBYI Bullish- the various To w-h THE QIITII 0F CHRIST Not to the scholar at hi; 0r mm of earthly feme, _ cm h nder all may loos, The happy tidings came, His departure at the Last Sup- elieve in the resurrection till he In our country." So President of the Boy for meetings and entertainments mupllllllyl II 5 and the provision: of these, some femflv war-t s-liorl: of l' tf r ‘Med izyls arsAnot what someone humorously d“, may b, commend a public w”; to give “Jeanuys Zamagf: » °"'- flIPvIflvity of naughriness‘; obligation. 4m William Tlmes- sood samba. Mothers wlthnCanad. Journal. 5" mknfiml’ bit of information comes from Uoyd’: Resists-er of Hhloplns. which reports that of ‘he Wlllme of merchant shipping being built throughout the world up to Sept. 80 last. more than half or 53-8 Per cent of the tonnage was being built in Great Britain and Ireland. -St. Thomas Times- Joumal. ' 231%,?" would have sbeegtied to us a. un-neceeear-y u a gpogs lmpertinence. British war brides are unfortun- ately quite well aware o! a certain amount. of prejudice against them. A sunl-lflcillar (though slightly bl!- le-Y‘) greeting among u; at blie mom- cnt 1s "Oh hello trhere. and have you been insulted at ~--'.s recent- 1Y?" The attitude of many young wvuien shop assistants is made only too painfully clear to us. These and these alone. are We referred recently tn these ul-Iiiins to riie announcement by a Harvard professor that stout. men. as husbands, should be in a. pre- ferred close. We iwlsh he would lake time off and tell clothing manu- facturers about this; they appar- ently do not know that stout men exist. —Kingeton Whig-Standard. This lden of balding n ‘citizen- ship week" is worthy of commend- ation, It can be used to do much to impress upon new Canadians the importance and significance of the action. Bur lt. is not. enough merely to hold such cewmonim during one week end then forget all about tt. The bestowing of nei- iurallzatlm should always be lrn- presslve said there should be as- surances from those taking it that they realize in full the meaning of whet they are doing. It ls sri honor to be n. Canadian. --Wlnn1l- peg Free Press. l-Iave you noticed how messy times recently when you chive into a ser- vice stallon you are addressed as ‘Biff’ the mung attendant. Perhaps 1t never struck you as un- usual but 1t started us to thinking. In nine cases out of ten the at- tendant who so addressed you was n member of the armed forces who learned discipline and respect. for hi; officers on the parade square. He is too recently out of the forces to have forgotten the hard-learned lessons. That is the reason he od- drmed you as “Slr." —Oshsiwa Times-Gazette. heartily welcome. Our "in-laws" have been wonderful, and the kind- ness ahowrn. to those of us In "rooms" is heartwarming. Th, churches also have welcomed us into their midst wlah great kindness. We are not all angels we know! Some have been much too out- spoken in criticism of your ways. (and t-hese are the ones sensation- seeklrs; reporters rake a malicious women have to uproot themselves from an old familiar We ism settling down. slowly. some raking longer than fall, I felt n little bit of small mot wont firmly down. I am. Sir. etc "A SCOTTISH CANADIAN‘ HISTORY FOR YOUNG CANADIAN S Casual visitors are not the only ones who sometimes forget that the foundation stock of Canada and the United States is not the same. Into the latter poured many streams --comparable to our Continental European immigration - but. no major currents. Here we have had two, one going beck to France the other to the British Isles. Tires-e ls nothing to compare with those two dominant divisions ln the Unit- ed States racial background and the gradual merger o; the two will produce not Americans but Oan- adians. Jim-onto financial Post. purpose of reaching Carsisdlen recently been published. This re- port recommended that the same general content of history ‘and social studies should be taught throughout Canada but that s common history textbook for the whole Dominion would be imprac- tlcable. It was hoped by social studies teachers everywhere that a dif- ferent decision would be reached. Nowhere 1n the whole curriculum for Canadian schools have we been more badly served in the past. than in the provision of There are n few characters who are always present; at auction sales. 'l‘here is the lady wlm thinks that suitable textibooks for teaching anything old is antique and that Canadian history to young Can- walnut tr valuable no matter what adlans. It was Slr John A. Mucdonnid’: conviction that education should be a Dominion Government re- sponsibility. that only by having a national system of education could we hope to foster and de- velop n izenulne national spirit within the British Common- wealth. Thore would seem no more valid reason for having a. separate textbook for teaching Canadian History ln each Prov- lncenss 1t ls at present. than there would be for a separate textbook ln Geometry or Algebra. insisting on separate textbooks, separate school organization for each Pro- vince. separate qualifications for teachers has done more to retard national growth and intellectual development ln the Dominion than any other single factor. A good case might be made for having different. textbooks in dif- ferent Provinces for teaching such a subject as Agriculture, where soils and climate differ. but why the facts of history mould be stated and distorted nine dif- ferent ways in nlne different Provinces just to satisfy the whims and tihe prejudices of a select few la a little difficult. to understand. ‘Ilhere ls a science of history first as there is n science of mathematics. If me fundamental fnots of history. the cause of the rlee and fell of empires could be presented to our young people in clear, unprejudlaed language. free from psraahlallsms. free from provlnalellerrie, free from racial distortions, en lnestlmable service would be rendered to contempor- ary society nnil to posterity. It n separate textbook le need- ed for the teaching of the mu of Onnadlen History. let us have one that can be used without swiftly in every school in every Province from the Atlantic to the wise lt has assumed. There ls e (gertialn period of walnut furniture which l; neither fish, flesh nor 800d red hen-ink. which ls her special joy. and many the time we had heard. or overheard- "Well, my dear. 1r must be good. It ls certainly walnut-and an antique." —EIlora Express. The frequency with which women are being attacked lately is shock- ing. The reason for the increase in this type of crime ls hard to find. WOmen must exert great care and avoid the company, of men with whom they are not well ac- quainted. They should ovoid iwelk- ing alone an dam streets at night unlesg absolutely necessary. And perhaps those who commit these assaults might be discouraged from the practice lf women went armed with old-fashioned lust pins and used them whenever accosted by n prvwler of any type. And when an attacker ls apprehended the courts should give him the punish- ment such crimes deserve. <—Bost0in Post Somewhere ln England there ls n m-sn who suffers from noises ln his heed, oamme - The Vancouver Province. The thin: that disting- uishes him from other noise-in- she-heed sufferers ll that his noises can be heard by other people. Bri- tish Medical Journal flnda this sufferer’; esrs produce loud crackl- lna. like static la s flrulty radio. st en avenue of 3d to 32 times s minute. He first heard the noises M hours slter being hlt ln the lace by a football Doctors say the "moat. likely cause" of his nt- fllcntlon ls "spsssznodlr. contraction of the stnpedlus"— n smell muscle attached to s tlny bane in the ear which helps to keep the ens-drum taut and resonant. you... with some sum of item idlaense may la future have fresh. n private homes, as the ""1 wn-ln-lew spoke of him with 00115010": pride. (wording It m; a llll-le over ihoee not so fortunate. The holding of s Gallup P011 m see whet Britain thought of tier "war up to an nus morals, and The Prelude. w any of 5'9 l wax and Angler. The historical depth strike new roots 1n a sLrange place. the Wm Wliuld 5h°w “P helm“ dmwmd ‘"11" T°W1I1I Please e member we are two t.hous- HOWEVH‘. r9441 ll they "B. and miles from those we have lov- three volumes ere e noble contrlbu- edly with su 9g (or m; gfgafgf pm of mn- lives, tlon toward the revelation of that left. But stl and the tie of blood ls strong its us. particular aspect of the English s genius which Ollltlf-i- Spenser, George Herbert, My happiest moment came Wham Wordsworth, Gilbert White. Jef- wstohlne mv first Cimadlw flrww- ferles and f-ruirron have already can“ made. You will see where the blai i crow into my heart and W8 "Y" lies; in the solltsrlnese. Solitude ls the keynote of Beech Thomas’: creed. It colours his mood bulld is radar signal and weather (and he" cells mood “the "mother station there. More ships thin tied of thought"); lt shapes and rots ever been seen at once before came the pace of his desire for ft ls _ meditation, end every reference to men; tinned food end electrical wfilflgaagfxmfnflggfi gggsgejtg, ii is rm.» expression of l pssslon- gear. An nngiisir doom; m, m, advisability o, providing a ca,“ ale need. He ls not unaware of the wife, s nurse and a London clergy- adian History m“ book ‘m, me dangers of lhls craving. Fe says. mun were among those who land- “It ls a glorious thing to be soll- ed. The Admiralty. which likes all history in Canadian schools. The “"3" l‘ "°°°"“y "l!" t" the d" covery of the soul. whatever" thri findings o1 this committee have may be. but H u o, no “P34, , altogether harmful -to let s flol lie fallow for long; and loneliness if over indulged, becomes a vl‘ce.l' ‘But he ls more concerned wit the positive attributes of than ‘with its drawbacks. He lieves in the Words-worthlan doq- trine of what tie calls “Origins! Joy" rather than original sin phrase which he -- '< 14 In this felbh son. It ls probable ment of his books. Beach Thames would ask for a less personal concentration than I have given. He would whole purpose of his life-work I: to show not himself. or ever. his fine professional ling of words. but England herself. as she manifests weather, clouds, and trees," her flowers and green leaves, rivers. hedges and roads; and finally ln all the human signature which the centuries of our upon these lnflnlte riches. ‘Thomas ties learned to know those treasures first by their being the birthright of a country-born man. lmd- ‘econdly. as sevoured by an English scholar "useless" education which produc- State that ls shape. prejudices and over-night. but fir!" MIG our children's children mfgtit be spared. I em. Sir. etch VERNON CBOCKITT York. P. E. I. Medicine), who has been educated at some parental nscrlfloe. brought through hls own chosen vocation. Such men have flourished PM! throughout the whole of our his- tory, each adding something to our heritage of art, ery reader can name n dozen. ac- cording to his taste. I will now add Beach Thames to iiisr pantheon- In the autumn of n Ion: profes- sional life es naturalist and journ- alist, he has written three books- The Way, the Poems and this lest. A Countryman’! Creed. They are a unit. Read together, they brln: to the reader a whole was‘ of life that is enriched by quietness. an austere sympathy and an emotion- the a1 vlisll-ty deep-routed in our EH8- only people who have not made us fish soil. He has much in common with Wordsworth, to Whom he 100R! during openly as his mentor. People will’ Enkllshmen, some are initiates of that; great poem. to assess the value of Beech ‘thorn- ns's affiliations. For me. these three books con- cert to make a deep. green Sym- England; uld break up the volume ts contents s- l delight 1n quoting). That happens 1mm“ “d ‘cnhir ' all over the world when men and "w"! the Pm“ °f the "h" em,’ n the manner of The Compleirt there were only nineteen mm on hem were| to a| . his relations with nature, the unique nature our English countryside. ls e which ls constantly fecund wills a quiet, steady flow of understand- lng and lay-a Joy almost nbsaliitp. so deep indeed that it becomes is mysticism comparable only to tti t which fills the work of WJ-I. Hu - If ls foo much to expect that we grown-ups should terlty of taste and reacted setssuously qum, poflponed a, m‘ henna,“ relative in the large family of Brit l t . s-efenoe or law. Ev- n: ' “y Admiral ‘Ifi-lstsn. e commerce raiding. When took the garrison away a gunner behind with his wife and children and two other men. thus was founded the 'I'rlsbnri c. munlty. with Glass st 1h Gradually, various settlers the 19th Italians. two Ger- mans and some African women. The numbers rose but, g] they m", selling ships wer, changing to steam and steamship: no longer needed to vlslt the lonely island _ for supplies- and the numbers went - down again. The world forgoi about 0f ‘Prlstisn and Irieccesslble and Ntglit- ngnle. r One disastrous day fn 1335, when ill be able at once though of. the island. fifteen of t out "if 5MP that had turned up unexpech Drill". Four men were ll the population rose gain and by 1840 there were 34g such es men and women living there i-n CQWTWY? b writers The biggest and most hing that has ever happened when the Admlralty decided to, prose rhythm. The up over the horizon. They lay off a constant in his the island and fended redlio parts. its depots and stations treated as ships, whether they are afloat or not. decided to rename ‘Prlstnn d; Cimhs. There wise no bow over which to break a bottle of cham- pagne and no champagne either, though them was an empty bottle, so the doctor set up an African dug-out canoe, made from a tree trunk end his wlfe smashed across l solitud Mr flce ls gains to reopen it; special enquiry trite the economic sad liv- About the Saviour’; birth, lng conditions of Tristan, an en- The V61‘! heavens wit-h sob; "an named Iflflem Glass, asked to stay two And Time cannot cblm Christ's day. om- 9 helfl- The shepherds blazed arrived; wnntl-‘YY. mvre when silence fell again, he one tsnd only village, Edinburgh, I O D I axr-ltln: httfl-son m 17m to "mug Tristan was only three years moral“? o! two h i l aiuirdimniheiufirtfiidielrzdkeuiafi Gallic» Pou on iwar brldee with m“ ‘° "m" °' ‘h’ "‘“""'“‘”," in» lonellest inhabited Islands at” "§§,p"d°““‘,m hm“; m“ w" ' hl r iu and express W ' < 3i, "1"" w —W~ “°’§:..‘.2°="ii“li“°“‘" ...‘.‘.I.“.‘1;..f.‘;“2°.°.:... .. n. §;§,,}‘,'°',‘f; ",;"*“','"" gm "w my f». i»... a... i... 1...... es ' lsn Amer] countless Cmad‘ sons of the perpetually ecanomlc- h in c ' mm‘ °w w” T" "mm "l" lmebv m“ “PM. m," yd] “Th, "n, “hm” Allied 1mg?’ .,.°,ll"‘,,“,’}_.“ gm" ally embarrassed professions (the L30‘? the???’ m;nt-'3:,W°m°“ n "l" l“ P“ ‘hm Q ll D u W“. should have n. coirruritrnlty building ‘Bfllflv- They were sisaiiinegivii: strvlw- "it °h"f°l'- ll" "l" °' But now ‘the British ColorilbloOf- ameli- fenre alloyed, me rhesus-oi beard g IUITQIL of the war. mash. the lorseliest The Lord had wow to earth! _ Fitting. ft was. shoe harmony lsh nations, has g highly Interesla- n‘ 1°11“ in l“ 5°53 WWI» That to the sound of music Ho, The fslsnd was first sistirerl by Bfllh H" tilt-WY “YI- Port ' “no, m, m, w”. home ",3: That night one starry heavens been dis five hundred years ego. h: the esrly part of the 10th century kit- aln sent s garrison to Tristan to prevent it being used as a base for‘ Britain low. ._ The snzols bend came dawn; Hemeforth f» city's fame would grow Like little Bethlehem town. In oalbs of Athens and of Roan, Artists and warriors lay; Dist though to duet earth's ferns shlll oome. l r the new! abroad, 'To1d what they saw and beard. that. GOG In flesh had come to men. The heel-em wandered; and while now Art 1n worm rapture stands. Devotion at this shrine must bow, And cold earth warm her hands. —A1exander Louis Roses. Old Charlottetown rm mi, FEST CHIEF JUSTICE John Duvort. Prince Mwlrd II- and’: first chief Justice, reoelved his wmmlsalfm from Governor pounds year was Just. twice the nun he had been receiving as second sselst- snt ludae of the Supreme Court of Nov; Scone; but he seems to hsvl had difficulty in collecting lt. H0 wrote plaintive letters oin this lib- Jwt to 10rd h. 59170‘ tsry of State for the Colonies. "The Governor." he wrote in Apffl, rm, "gave mg leave to drew for my first year's salary due in my last on Mr. smith. hll l8!“ in London. which I have nomad- ingiy done, but. my bills have not been paid s; M1. Smith informs me that he llld not money In M: hands. occasioned by the backwerdncss o! m. proprietors ln pastas their quit-rents. I would humbly submit to your Lordehlirs rudiment. - the failure of e resifllr PIYIHIW must reduce me lo the utmost db- l“! n cliampalne bottle tilled with frult salts and a dash of rum The bend played "God Save the King" and the Home Guard —- they lied e Home Guard even there-salut- ed, and ‘Tristan do Cunlie became H. M. Blilp "Atlantic Isle." Arid so lt remained until this year when it became Tristan again. But the weather people are stay- ing there and so are the stocks of food and the medical supplies and the radio and the running water and the electric light. And now the official investigation to sea liow ‘Ih-lstsn can be further improved enough to make Old William Clash turn in his grave with pride. ( csstlgistes as “sl “l? 0 that ,ln an asses.‘- Sir Wllltapi be right: for me ed such men as Philip Sidney arid ‘Ibnnyson, It may be that such is way of llfe, with its special culture, in dying out before the advance cl the new lntpmallonal technology. Or lt may be. more happily, that such people have always been in a minority, a salt. to savour every generation otherwise insipid with materialism. In either case- ‘Beach Thomas’! creed, manifest in time three books. l-s of the utmost value. --Rlohard Church. art ln the hand- herself lrn her soil. "rocks and stones birds and Insects, history have put Beach SHEFFIELD. England -(CP) __ Sheffield Repertory Company plans lo build a new "people's theatre" to rest 1.000 persons, for stare plays and movies. PERTH. Bmtlsnd - (OP) - Lawors Mansion end term at Oomrie are belnir acquired by Perth and Klnrosr County Oounall for use es an agricultural school. lm-iw—,flfliifllplflnyv y, "baby rush.” London Cbunty Couri- cll ls rrettlns so more ml-dwlv. n total Increase of B0 this year‘. nourished ln that even now taking shed our our suspicions surety our chil- Pnalflo. so tihiit the children ln the schools of today may realise . whet their elders have never llvlrig muscle grafted onto their hearts to replace derd bit‘ of In their arm hem-ts. This centfincrease in freight rates on feed,_it will rnake that commodity the highest priced in hist- ory. The government has allotted a number of Totes to this province as form labor, stipulat- ing that-they be paid. seventy-five dollars per month with roorn and board. This stabilizes the wages of the hired man, as no native will work for less than a Pole. The buildings of most farmers polllblllty eppenrs from studies re- ported Dr. Mendel Welristeln and Dr. nlnmlrr G. Bheflsiaff of New Yolk University College of Medicine. soy; Balance Qervt learned, that the Dominion of finndn fl one and lndlvlllhle. ‘this petty provlnclsl autonomy ln this etonna use ls u obsolete u rise bow and arrow. Lot us be done with the hrnlly Compact and Meeker-isle and Pnpliseeu. and the Olersy He- rervel. ena Bunkers lllll. whet- hove become dilapidated and need very extent- ivs repairs at o tremendous cost. l-lis form machinery, equipment and trucks, are worn out and must be replaced. Better rural schools are the need of the day which means higher toner. \ ever that was. end get around to en understanding of the- position of also Doalrifon of “nude, in the Irldsb _ commonwealth and the relation of itre lrltfls Oom- monweeltls to the dress World . The Idea piecing deed parts of heart Where is the money going to come, from lf he “go's get e profit from hi; cows? with srefu of Bests more: been Inflected before, m the York inreeiigeun an eopersoflr "tell-fl ' Udfflbp Iflloflfll Merry Christmas liYllllhlAll s G0.l.|hll'l'£ll fltllsssr Charlottetown-Immaculate“: ireg m s, place where ready monfl ls expected for every necessity d life." In the autumn of the some VII‘ ‘he wrote: “The rrrotwlns of ms bill; hen brought me the greatest distress imaginable I have stretch- ed my credit to the utmost in pro- curing salt pork and brown biscuit to mppori; me through the win- ter." He referred to his 1on8 "l" vice to the Drawn and thus closed his or-y of relief: "I trust that I shall not. be, left here destitute in my old age. I sri-i informed that there ls a vuomr-‘Y for a Chief Jil- lice in south Gsrollna. and I huntbly hope 11m your Imashlr will riot. think me too Jesumlnl in requesting that I ma! be Ill- polnted to that vacancy." This appeal was unnvellfrig. He died here. still impoverished. on Jan, 29. _i1'l'l4. _ BELFAST-id?) - The refrig- erated cargo liner Loch Avati. 9.200 tons, was launched by Mrs. CiauEQ Barber. wife of‘ the managing df- rector of Royal Mall Lines. LONDON - (C?) -— Blr Stanley Holmes. member for Herwlc-‘i. has been elected chairmen of the Lib- eral National Parliamentary Patty. lilllhlrfir El FTHINTSL Sterling Silver Vanity 1 .. 010.00 Ivory Vnnlty Cases 010.00 Onto: Gift Bate lilo-IBM Partner ........ .. 01.00-03.00 levlon Gift 8ete— 01.00-05.00 Dieting Powder 100-0030 PIGGT BAG! 01!’! BIT! and Besti VWshee for a year of Happiness, Peace 1 and Prosperity it leeerence. Since I072 , Colonies .............. .. 01.00-88.00 POND’! GIIT BITI Babble lath 750-0140 Ivoodbnrrs Gift into- .¢......