Notes By The Why 014ml! D A Ian-llamas, I) I I Minter-J I Ilrlllt. I l l. Walker Qll D l. OIIIIQ. lsundsrlllliilcwaelyeelflsllvanos (IIMIUIIIB) Il-lledllfilllllll Ufiii RC8. """"‘“'"' " " "'""- '4" 1t can be taken for grantnd that the pact between IPrancc and Russia which commits both countries tb- come to the assistance of the other. , - ...__.,...._..u, aimed at Germany. “It will be im- WEDNISDAY, MAY 15, 1935. "" hOWQVEl‘. 00 OOIIVlDOQ G61‘- GREAT CONVENTIONS horn two widely separated parts If the Province came no uncertain evidence yesterday that the tide of Conservative sentiment in this Pro- vince is flowing with undiminlshed strength and vigour. Not even the popular ovations accorded Conserva- tive speakers four years ago, in the last election campaign, equalled in enthusiasm the conventions held yesterday respectively in the Town I-Iall at Georgetown, and at Centre- = f3; ville Hall, Bedeque. ' At Georgetown the proceedings created special interqt, in view oi the fact that ayfederal as well as provincial nominating convention was to take place. Ac both meet- ings, however, there was an excep- tionally large attendance, and the enthusiasm, as well as the harmony and unanimity which prevailed, were significant not only of the strength of the Conservative party, but oi the public sentiment behind the dele- gates and their nominated candid- ates. Home time ago, l-lon. J. A. Mac- Donald, MP, veteran of many con- tests, provincial and federal, who has so ably represented this Province tn the Dominion Cabinet, announced his intention to retire from active political life. His ‘ecision was re- gretfully accepted by the King's County Conservative Associa- tion, and his name therefore did not come up for re-nomination at yes- terday's convention in Georgetown. But the party was fortunate in hav- ing a successor in view who, like ‘John A" himself, has been for many years in public life and enjoys ‘the widest popularity, confidence, ‘ and esteem. We refer to the l-ic-n. Dr. A. A. MacDonald, former Speak- er of the Legislature and at pres- ent a member without portfolio in the yPrcvincial Government. Dr. MacDonald received the unanimous I nomination as federal candidate for Kings amid an outburst oi applause which was indeed inspiring. In the nomination of Mr. J. H, MacDonald, M.L.A., and Mr. Reid Underhay as provincial candidates for the Fifth District of Kings, the convention was also fortunate. Mr. McDonald, the sitting member, has ' shown marked ability as a legislator, ‘ and while Mr. Underhay is new to political life, he is widely known and esteemed in his district, and is well qualified to discharge the duties to which there is every reason to be- lieve he will be called by the electors. The Premier, the Attorney Gen- , _eral, Hon, Mr. MacDonald, Mr. Mc- Lure and Mr. Myers, M.P., who ad- dressed the Georgetown convention, received a wonderful ovation — a tribute both w their records politic- ally, and to the able speeches which they delivered. At the Bedeque convention, the same manifestation of confidence and enthusiasm was given. Hon. Mr. Sharp, Hon. Mr. Arsenault, Mr. Arnett and other speakers were warmly applauded. The unanimous choice oi the delegates fell upon I-lon. Heath Strong, K.C. and Mr. Hugh Morrison as candidates in the provincial election for the Fourth , District of Prince. In both (‘-8508 ' the nominees were the candidates in the last provincial contest. Mr. Strong's ability as a legislator has been recognized by all members oi the House, over which he was elec- ted so preside as Speaker following Hon. Dr. MacDonald's appointment to ‘the Cabinet. Mr. Morrison, defeated in the last election by a narrow margin by the Liberal leader, Mr. W. M. lea, has good reason this time to anticipate victory; and with twosuch representatives in the Leg- islature the district, and the pro- vince generally, will be well repre- seated. While congratulating the candid- ates, federal and provincial, upon the honour conferred upon them yesterday, we feel that the party wor s and supporters in both Con” h are equally to be common‘- ed. ‘thief:- choice, m every case, has . fallérfunhesltstlngly and unanim- 5 ously on candidates oi utstanding ability and integrity, whose anneal to=the electors is bound to be a strong and convincing one. Per their Uwn part, the candidates have ex- prelcd the greatest confidence in the" leadership of Premier Mac- miisauuioftheatuoihas. Bennett as Prime Minister of Can- rlds. They stand four-slicers bshind the policies of both Conservative ants; "F? believe , these to be h! the bit intflllt b! ...~.r.=Q.....e.s-s;e..-_LI;Z‘ Tower near Lake Wales, in Flor- ida. you must take note of y. little line in that garden sanctuary, which i; printed on a ei pie slab therein. It was written y John FIIYIOBGhB. the itveat and lovable naturalist. and here it is: “I come hem often to forget myself. It is so easy to get lost in the world." The present Canada-wide tour oi Lord Baden-Powell recalls to a Toronto exchange the part which Canadian troops took in the relief of Mafeking on May 1B, 1900. Opening of the South African war in October, 1H9, found Lt.-O0l. Baden-Powell. as he then was, in command oi 1,000 troops in this trading post of 2,800 population in British Bechuanaland. about ‘B10 miles northeast of Cape Town. The post was immediately invested by a superior Boer force, which for 213 days kept up the siege. Meanwhile the British were mak- ing strenuous efforts to relieve the stricken town. Colonel Herbert ilater Field-Marshal 10rd) Plumer, work- ing south from Rhodesia with a column of mounted troops, but lacking artillery, was for some weeks unable to pierce the strong- ly entrenched Boer lines. Eventual- ly reinforced by "C" Battery of the Royal Canadian Artillery, the Plumer column cut through the be- siegers lines. They retired in dis- order as the siege was raised. When Canada with the rest, oi the Empire celebrated the Relief oi Maieking so vociferously it was without the knowledge part oi the Canadian contingent had shared in the engagement. The Canadian bat- tery, shortly after arrival at Cape Town early in 1900, had sailed again under sealed orders. The unknown destination proved to be Belra, 1,600 miles around the east coast of Africa. Landing there the Canad- ians proceeded 600 miles partly by railway but mostly in forced marches across the Bechuanaland desert to Join Colonel Plumers re- lieving force north of Mafeking. No word of the movement reach- ed the Canadian public. and ior 9- month or two the Canadian gun- neis were "Canada's lost battery." Not till letters home a month later revealed the battery was at Mafe- king did Canada realize its troops had taken part in'the relieving engagement. It is a long-standing article of faith among the English race that they are a subject race, their con- querors being the Scotch. Ii the fact is ls 5110260, it is certainly a conquest achieved against tre- mendous odds. A study of the census figures for i931 shows that among a trifle under 40,000,000 people in England and Wales the natives of Scotland are 360,000. It is lesg than one in a hundred. In Greater Lon- don there are something more than 100,000 North Britons. which would be approximately one 1n eighty or nm°lY._New York Times. fast. Since Hitler and Pilsudaki have united for a common drive towards the East. Poland's interest in Dan- =12 has disappeared. It ls no long- " neefifd as a political handle 8851115‘? 59min)’. and its value t0 P0115?! eXliort trade since the con- struction oi the ‘harbour at Gdynia has become practically nil. Poland's Wishes W503’ receive the friendliest consideration in Danzig, and the 500MB. sacrificing without a, mur- mur positions labouriously gained to protect it against Poland in past yells. is now only concerned to ob- tain Polish tolaration for its cam- Dfllgn against the Opposition. The llmbithlns of National-Socialism are “m! rapidly realised at the ex- pegxse of the Gennans in Danzig. the Th! beat statisticians are very skeptical. They respect their tools, but they never forget that they are tools and not magic wands and divining rods. Ii we as laymen are going to use statistics as freely as W0 110W 05c them, we shall have to learn from the statisticians how to be thoroughly skeptical, partic- "lflfly when the statistics indicate a. conclusion that is contrary to cum- mos‘ sense and general knowledge. CV91‘. Mr. Lloyd George must know, just as we all know, that the gab. inet is not making a, technical ex- amination of his scheme: it is ‘thinking in political terms how m it is wise to embark on a. policy 0i public expenditure and how far to stand pat on "economy." The cab. inet is not unaware of the state or the distressed areas, but it 1s 0559s- sed with the idea that capitalism can make an automatic recovery, to which Mr. Lloyd George makes the memorable reply that you can never flit round the corner of a vicious circieI-The New statesman. TOURIST EXPENDITURE M l‘. The total expenditures in Canada of tourists from other countrierin 1934 are estimated to have been $120,974,000 compared with $117,- 124,000 in 1903. Tourists irom over- seas countries are estimated to have spent $9,455,000, compared with $7,763,000 in i933; from the United States by automobile 086,259,000 compared with $12,196,000; from the United States by rail and steamer $34.260,000 compared with $20, ,- 000. It is estimated that Canadian tourist expenditures in ‘foreign countries amounted to 000906.000 compared with $50,880,000 in the previous year. Tourists to overseas countries are estimated to have spent $14,212,000 compared with $13,982,000; by automobile to United States $32,646,000, compared with $24,611,000; by rail and steamer to United States $13,988,000 compared with $12,267,000. In the first world war the guns Plflyed a diapason which drowned all man made music, although the Scots clung to their pipers. The mechanized warfare which we ex. Dect to rec in the future will have little need of field music, unless some tank battalion takes a calliope to the battlefield-Ex. It is in Russia alone that women are to be given Equal rights with men in wartime. 1b this end 20,000 women have been given the special military training of the Leazue for Air and C‘- ' l Defence; 450.000 have been trained as sharpshootcrs, 50,000 have been given special in- struction in aircraft mechanics, and hundreds have learned to pilot their own airplanes. In Russia wo- men are no longer ‘m: gentle sex, ior there the age oi chivalry is gone and women hereafter must be 86 111016111; as men are attheir worst. —Vie1.oria Times. 10H!‘ C. face, THEN AND NOW “Janus" in the Landon Spectator, contributes the following quotations on a theme which scarcely requires further elaboration; "Only through the complete re- nunciation of Christianity will the German people achieve the unity which it needs and which would have saved it in the trying days The first Toronto child to dlp from diphtheria in fifteen months has passed away in a city hospital. The child had never been immun- ised-had not been given the tox- oid treatment which accounts for the city's rcnarkablw reduction in case rate and death rate. Toronto's health ofllcer states that he cannot recall a single case where a child kind. of 10l8."-General Ludendorfi last who had received the complete Sunday treatment succumbed to the disease. —Toronio'star. "Ludendorifs complete collapse at the end of the War was one of the tragic sensations oi the time. After demanding an unconditional armistice, when the armistice was actually granted he abandoned his country and fled to SwedenP-En- cyclopaedia. Britannica, Vol. XIV, p. 471. The London and North ibstcm Railway have decided to operate a hish-speed steam train between Newcastle and London timed to do the journey oi 368 miles in four hours. The new train will be named "Silver Jubilee." The object is to ascertain whether the public de- mand for such limited trains of a on high-speed character is suiilcient in warrant their provision as sper- manent feature-f‘ ' , Events in" Britain. r EDITORIAL NOTES President Roosevelt says the United states will never arm offen- sively or defensively against Can- ada. Canadians believe he is sin- cere and that in this he speaks for his country. They feel no alarm over military or naval policy in the United Btains, and are thankful "There have been rumors," says our amusing contemporary, fthat the election date may be deferred." Bincs neither the provincial nor the federal electiomdate has yet been announced, it is difficult to "ass why 06E5S€8 O. F. ion many ‘aha; :1; hhilft provocation fi/anu w en e e oose er dog; of war. Pnvnnnna ovlmwuom, _ A LOST BATTERY If you ever visit that lovely Bok snvaflwluuurm" “PD” ,Notwithstancling that heart ‘dis ease stands first as a cause of death, the number of. individuah with heart disease who are now able to live for many years is most encour- aging to physicians. This is accom- plished by Heating" the heart and thus not using all its “reserve? However there are souie cases where even rest is not suflicient and the heart still continues to work too As the juice oi the thyroid gland in the neck speeds up the, heart Just as a draft does the burn- ing of coai_in a furnace, the remov- al of this gland has been done in a number oi heart cases. Sometime ago only a portion of the gland was removed but lately surgeons are re- moving the whole gland, It so happens however that in some of these cases the removal oi zne gland, while quieting or slowing oown the heart ‘rate, also slows down the other processes so that tne in- uividual may grow fat in body and sluggish in mind. This can be read- ily undcrstood when we remember that the body processes before oper- ation may be working at the rate oi 130to 140 as compared with the nor- mal 100, and after the operation me working at the rate of about ‘i0. Two Boston physicians, Biumgart and D. Davis. in Endroe- rinology, describe a method of giv- ing the extract of the thyroid gland to make up for the loss or removal _of the thyroid gland so that patients with heart disease may be free from distressing sympt weight and’ sluggish mentality) and yet gain the benetfis to the body by the reduction in the rate at which the heart works. In addition to these symptoms there may be a mild anemia (thin blood), and lowering or lessening oi the free hydrochloric acid in the d stouiach digestive Juice. Apparently this anemia and change stomach Juice produced no symp- toms in the patients. Further the patients had (lo trouble in handling starches in the system, and the kid- neys performed their worik as well as oms (over- "Under these conditions - slow- ing of the body , rcliei oi the heart conditions has been definite." It is certainly interesting and re- assuring to know that the thyroid gland can be removed to rost the heart, and enough thyroid Juice can than be- given the patient to proper- ly control the various processes of the body. C. C. F. Ambitions (Sydney Post-Record) J. S. Woodsworth, M. P., leader of ‘the Co-operative Com- monwealth Federation. does not expect his party to carry a majority of the constituencies in the coming Dominion election, but professes to believe that it will have enough seats in the hem House oi Commons togiveit the bahnceofpower as between Conservatives and Iiiber- als. This was the view he emreseed before a meeting of his supporters at Barrie, Ontario, a few days . "We have no yobs to oifer," he said, “no contracts to offer. We don't expect to swing into po first Dominion ‘ ever fought as a party. but it is probable that the C. C. I‘. next election will hold the balance oi power as between the two old mm”. After pointing with pride to the C. C. F. Oppositions in the ~ Saskatchewan and Biritlsh Columbia. Legislatures. and to the weratthis WC H. L. 436 wm. destroyed 132.090 m“".,,,‘,',‘°“".”,.3,,°m;,f§°",.fi‘$ ‘lllolttfpfctfiesdtgrkneeer efiffil‘ h’; ‘l. .f"’l\t“.'.‘.'“"‘,'.',‘-",". 35,’? I - ' H I in the 52m ?,‘:§%°£$“m°“h°; subsidies m adgglt education. m. mohlfdigninmhatfivguwl‘ on f: *~~.....".......... _ ;, v - .. ng ear ~. , institutions within anoblonga mih mfimwm deduar h“! he“ 5 numnya of‘ m, pkfim, they ery afterbhe our ronossow i _.___- , a “xinciramém l .. » Om“ " a ~ Reid full particulars in this paper ‘ INIHIATIUN _ ' v G d "srmW.r:r.r~r.,....="-1~ "~"‘°"°‘"~° ' "' Imus the depths r where the star light .~ i _ mthmbb minionsofthenilht Riaehoston ostbeforehiscyes, y Withstrsinsoffarceiestialnymns Wllllook the Pleat wh°"“'°“““°m'-‘.‘~"°--“»°“"9‘P'» skies. ~ » - lbrgot the din and all lifebithrob, Bis visions wide horizons ._can; Be Irasns in some small measure The breadth of God's eternal plan. ~12. Emmett Buckley, Harcourt, NB, Adult Education (Winipeg Free Press) Adult eduotution has been for B from lacking in Canada. although it has gone by many other names. Last year, in Toronto, ‘numbers of organisations which had had ex- perience along these lines met and Will-lured an adult education com- mittee which was instructed to make a survey of what really was happening. That ‘commit will report at a, meeting called for June 14-15 at St. Anne de llellevue. Great Britain now has a well organised system of adult educa- tion wanking through various - ‘, including the universi- ties, but the-one dominant feature every ‘effor-t" is the presence oi tutors. “These ‘are men and women especially trained to lead adult education groups and perhaps pant of the success of the ¥so00 J HEINZ 57 Populqriiy- Contest a =1 utter the early history of Isondiniiun is hlgtm-y o1 England. The names of the streets. Wood. M111! Bread , , USE BRAHMIN rsa ‘ ORANGE PQDI , , i GIDWN l \ is not in the air. He labors in the world oi sober fact; he deals with schemes which can be schemes, which are desirflble- things which are worth the cost. British statesmen who have suc- oocded have shown the same quality ' oi sobriety. Radical changes have been effected without violence, so that the mow seems of growth rather than of destruction and rebuilding. ‘Britain's defences.’ Work is already under way with additions to the all‘ force which had reached such a stage of incfficiencyias 100B?" 311°- oonmempt of otha- nations. Thus pecifism collapses with the mere contact with reality. Circumstances which have changed Premier Mac- donaid from a Pwlfisl l0 00° Wh° hasjustsoundedacailtoarmscan- not be ignored by Canadians- Eagles Not Wanted dedicated to st. successor to Mellitus. its bishop. was the famous Saxon saint, Bmenwaldi, iwho preached to the forest tribes in London north; and after his death Saint lirkenwalds altar was heaped with offerings by rich and poor. foreign kingsnnd princes being cmonl these devotees. Fitz-Stephens, the ohronlcler. has recorded his con- viction that “the only pest oi Lon- don are the “lmmoderate drinking ' the Huey efforts in Great Britain is due “at? ., s. =1; d, m s...» t... a»... He" Paul's has been destroyed by the Y‘ P- . r _ Th, “mo, W, Just recently m the United States me joumflnéfllflhewazmn mm burned to the ground in the year I rem-t was sum-fitted by Mew m“, ma,- m _.,,,,,,,,e “m”. Cartwright, who, working under the Carnegie foundation, has made a survey of “Ten Years of Adult Education." The re is not particularly cheering. He states that its costs have been but ' its effect: have been by'no means commensurate 061.. The second fire occured in Isrifrancm tune. 1081. and with the cathedral perished much of its treasures. Agcln it was partially. of King Stephen. After thegreat Iondon Plague in 10$ came the Great Fire, which covered an area captions ‘albout Hitler. It says the dlfiicuityis launder-standing eagles, or whom Hitler is one, dwelling on the high mountains. "Those 0n little hills and iin valleys cannot see the eagle. They know nothing oi the great open spaces above. So they ‘i success from the standpoint but far from con- ' the "educational "Imwwer, unintelli- is Mr. Cart- andahalfinlengihcndhalia mile in breadth. In this “horrid bloody and malidous flame," as Pepys calls it, saint Paul's Cathedral was gutted. Drelyn says: "The melting lead ran in a stream down the streets and its stones flew like gren- ades." The work of restoration was achieved under the leadership oi Sir Christopher Wren. What a story these stones might tell, a romance equalling the modern thesis that radium is go be found in the dust of London clams. Herein was Bishop trentbie. He is beyond all their ex- pectations: ‘they can only quiver with fear." It sounds fine; but the only impression on the mind oi this or any other free country is devout thankfulness that we are not governed by eagles or other birds or beasts oi prey. We do not want riders who live. on the mountain llil. l.. B. EVANS m m, m, sww, ,,,,,,,, of ' London Eng. upon us and make us utter cries oi distress. We have troubles enough r wthout being scared to death by Noted physician treated sle- eagles. we have recently read many ocufully and obtained per- 89m. Wright's explanation. the _ Renunciation 0f War (Glace Bay Gasette) When a. man signs a declaration stating that he will take no part in any future was it is about as futile @1159" “W” ‘ixwnmmmlld W l proceeding M that he was,“ q] ma” u. pitch nd mauent curesslstmnnch sau- Bwkai- 153mm“ the PM" d.“ willhave nova-tin any wflhauslw- happilynoneof these nienedhiugw , dltlm mi- u alithe metheretnarra-ign nun-ioaneorotbercouvuisionoi mgqhmwwmbedw_mm nyspspmi, Bong. gag“, William 0° Wwhm“ l“ “We which my we his "an lnmely virtues linking him with heartburn. Gastric mne- tyranny. It was in st. Paul's that Stephen I/angton displayed his old charter of He the First and plotted the le to demand from King John the “Mogna Charter" He might as well sign a declarsti against any future economic de- preseion. Canadians are not likely to pre- cipitate s. wart On the contrary they luunantty, not isolating him and that common sense which is the essence of. statesmanship. Bagehot, in describing the British monarchy, said that towLiht/oheadespot, aridmanyothernllnentspcc- uliartothestomachwlthl prcccflfilllnwhlch we have procured and sell under the nsuieof EVANS UIOMACB Refwaier Wycliffe was scammed will readily m». 011 Premier Benn- ,,¢,,,. mxruas. he“ t° tfle m‘ m“ but‘ pmmwd m4" "£39m?" F1111 0° "m! We? fiarrlirulofeznuncultmykmmads: the ’ by John of Gaunt,.escaped convic- gm w pmngfg.wm-IQ pews, no; n.1,“ notion of I. ‘Briefing and We alone have the sole tion. In i400 Henry Bolingbi-oke areflwy mesh. ngw week, p"; in mp0,“ atammn, who cm m, rlshlsonlhll lull he" 80W 9315"!“ f" u“ ‘Rlhlmm’ BHY W11‘ 0f 88819881011 b90111 by a"? down plans for ages yet unborn, is m“ “m” n’ h.“ twemd uient of his cousin, Richard 11.. and ems or the empire, a contingency a fancy generated by the pride of “mm” uumwu‘ m“ h" m‘ mm" *0 the "W"- w "mote M hem-Iv to be W!“ the human intellect, u. which ma" ""‘“°‘ “M” Within these doors also came Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester to do penance. - "Mailed up in shame with papers on nw back. And followed by a rabble that reloice To see my tearsnand hear my considering. Butlt does not follow that t/hey will not become involved in awe: fortheir own dcfenoccr in defence oi the mother country. ‘their declarations on behalf of peace are not likely to have much influence hi til-love quarters from which war may be expected sooner or later. In any case they will know what to do when the emergency arises. It does not make series to anticipate an emergency in which they decide in advance to take no Don't fool with your stom- ash. Serious conditions are likely to arise "If you allow yourself to lapse into a. chronic‘ state of gastric troliilc Get l bottle today I50. Mac's Pile Ointment Gives quick relief In all cues . oi’ internal and external piles. Brings instant relief and a lure cure if directions are fol- lowed carefully. give no support. The plans of Char- lsmange died with him; those of Richelieu were mistaken; those of Napoleon frantic. But a wise and great constitutional monarch at- tempts no such vanities. His career srirfusss 58° have v pest _ . And when the notorious Jane Shore did pensce, report has it that the citizens nun-veiled at her beauty and thought less of her shame than of the King's cruelty. ' ;1—_ promise with ain't! cvmtslist Government, be Windsor. ylinnlveil. and the apostle of political gospel declared: "I frankly admit that unless there is a real reason for a third political organi- zaiinn in Canada, there is little benefit in having one. But we need a third party not dominated by the big interests." If Mr. Woodsworth expects his new party to hold the balance of power in the next Parliament. his view is certainly one not shared by any seasoned political observer in Canada. one doubts however that he looks forward to anything of the Unlike Westminster Abbey, the If-thereisany i the canoru of 8t. Paul's have neuvg had world opposed to war on Pflfllclpld PRWE 5° CENT!- ... J- any r‘ with .Ra.mscy barons _ m. mu oi-de c. o..n. Prompt-l tchtmflo secular only. What stirring scenes was a bacinst during the great] Afmded h But how would it profit the doctrines Mr. leases, or how would it advantage Canada as a whole, if the C. C. F‘. should hold enough seats in the next House‘ of Commons to give it the balance of power. It this strategic position in only one of two ways. It might enter into aooalition with either the Con- servatives or the Iiiberafs or it might throw its support behind one or the other of the older parties, as the Perogresslves did during King's tenure of office. But in would not such a. mm; Woodsworth "m". would h." w he llaxenm-II that their international, boundary . I . _ ) m” the ma“, mm u w," w line bears no m-mblmos tonal-or _ ' f mmyhh] - _ A 4*“. IINEXCELLED AT THE’ PR Cl.‘ . peep frontiers. . that a apwcacbint . exahm. o! wane, is that its nrevi- ; __ M ----- m.‘ m nutrients-auras rlteryeweaa... , a _ ousprcgnwcatiouuaatothewo- IAIIIBI Jlllflfllllfllllllff ‘_ ‘ ,-......; ' ‘ ' _ “y; ma. not... date, m... u.» a w» g-mvg;i_~;is%. gum u. lyghvgaggnvgaal. r. g; l - '°~»"-'-'--" I. a : -. a f ~ - ; " _ . I P'°‘°"°‘"“'"‘""°"“°"°°'"a.aiui.hm=v.m u». mmiawvwymvvr" low. iivltiilitlll aw are likely to prove as wide of the “y. m m, m “y, ‘m, p‘: puny cg uitopava ..._.........-s._.........-....._..._.-...._....-.~...-~ mcrkas_wasitspre-bcnquatlcli|r-_ of ,,sut - my; glwqihi from menace from Ala MW connected with Reformation cam- paigns have been" witnessed at 8t. that he was socially and politically Pam's Cross. On Bhrove Tuesday, oetracised. He had jeopardized his piblic career by his agitation for peace. lonely under his guidance as prime minister during the last ten years, Great Britain has set the nations of the world an example in the limitation of armaments. No nation has done relatively ss much inscalingdownallbranches of the service. Andye-tin the faceoi hard The 2 Macs é rlptlous p", Specialty. northern door. when ‘Edward VI. came into power. The cruciiixes and images were pull- ed down. Altar cloths were sold for tapestries. Knights and squires bought chalices for claret cups and {mu he h“ men ccgnpgflgd to oarvenmarbleimnbsbecameh - change posltioanifiliie ‘has ad- wo to troughs. The Marian reign did not remote Paul's to its former dressed Germany and has followed up his words with ilimlieth, on action. He has initiated a policy looking -to the strengthening of PM‘ 11$ u“; Mailer Wlmf Sharpe ' or Sfje. your Pipe-r Mr. wi the he 08 ill which fdedontheir tnsfdic. (lithe Our mild aye 1v. auteur our ti» our pwwm strength RIVAL‘ . _ ‘PIPE’ stoma Tobacco will nu u ' , "uh “m”! “My!!! entaldllg value, I . ,1 i;