. authorities to have beeir preiiieditated. . certain is that nothing is being left undone by pnogigoua _ F’ nus BHARLOTTETOVII GIIIIIIIIAII Morning Dally Ifolndnl In III?) .. "ent. Ll-.ut.-Col. W. Chalet 3. flelmro Vice r ldcnl. J. IL Burnett. I’. J. I, Secretary, Lleul -Col. I). A nlullnnon. D. S. 0. ,Zdllnr and Managing Director J. I. men. I‘. J. I Associate Editor. Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES $5.00 per yelr (in advance) delivered to City 84.00 per year (In advance) mailed to P. I. Inland $5.00 per year un ndvunce) mulled Io Oundnnl D 3 Membe . Audit Bureau of Circulation: "The Strongest Memory in Weaker Man the Weakest Ink.” I WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Mb, 1839 War Materials For Japan Recent Japariese air raids on British vessels in the Yzingtse l\‘iver are believed by the British What is the Japanese invaders of China to discredit Bri- fish influence in the Far East. This raises an important point so far as Canada is cori-:erne.l. According to the current issue of the Corri- mercial Intelligence journal, there was air in- :rc.1se of i2.i per cent in our export trade to Japan for the first three months of 193‘) 0\'C|‘ zhe t‘Ul‘rt's])tilllllllg period last year. Ores and lll('l(llS nlfllifl up the bulk of this trade but, ac- rordimz to the ptililicatioii cited, it is not possible to review at length or in a corriprelierisiie man- ner the import trade from Canada as the statis- tics covering these riiat-:ri:ils are not now lSSll\'Cl in jzipari. Conseqtienily (':iii;i«l:i’s position as a ' ipplier of such items as iiickcl, lead, aluminium. zinc, copper and zisliemis in relation to other supplying eonritries cannot be slmwn. There is. limv.-rt-r, a very significaiit state- ment in the Tiriile .\':cret:ir_v's report. \‘\'e quote: “The policy of the japaricse Govern- ment is, S])L‘2ll\'ill_;’ gt-iicrally, to permit the im- Pgr,-;,,;,,n of 1',m.~:- ggotrds which are classed as essentizil for illllmrtltllt industries and raw mat- erials for expr rt gumls. This policy is based on the ricct-ssitv to coriserre so far as possible for- eign excliarigt-, and it riiust be anticipated that imports will he riqitlly controlled by ineans 0! the import control legislation or the Foreign Ex- clraiige Control Law, at least until the conclus- ion of hostilities in Cliiua. Consequently Can- adian 5-xi)()r[Cr5 of ;_vo3tls which do not come into the class. of esseritial and urgently needed coni- moditics may expect little if any business in the iriezrntiiiie." _ Stripped of its vcrliiagze, this statement CilIl’l’3S an miiiiioiis iiit-airing. ll iiiezms, in short, that |tion of the total output. solute band of Laurier Liberals, salvaged after the 1917 election, The_fitial showdown was between Fielding and King. Mr. Ficlding—a man of large cap- 3C“)’ afld prestige, hell in great respect, had, in the opinion of some delegates, one vital defect —tlie .“taint of Uninnism." He had supported 'C0"SC|’|Pti0n and the Union government while the war was on. Mr. King, however, could be ;and \vas pictured as one of unwavering fidelity Ito Laurier and as the “Old Man's" choice, had Ilie been able to send a message from the Un- known. Unquestionably, that was a big factor in the selection of the new leader. EDITORIAL NOTES _ Heligolzind ceded to Germany this date, 1890. II V # l The number and aniunnt of home improve- ment loans for Charlottetoivn to June 30 were 233 representing $75.J,99.7(., U i V 3 The U.S. has about 375,000,000 hens which produce an average of 36.ooo,ooo.ooo eggs a year (less than an egg a day for each inhabit- ant). In 1938 US. farincrs took in $990,000,- 000 gross income from cliicketi and eggs. Most of it went into the farmer's wife's china teapot. Small farmers with ilr;cl.'s of less than too birds produce 75% of US. eggs. Farirrers eat 34% of their flocks, 25% of their eggs. Large-flock cornmercial breeders account for only a frac- I-argest egg factory is California's l\’unnymcrle Farm. Its top capacity: 325,000 laying heirs. its an an x In'connection with the celelrration of the Prime Mini.-ter's 20th arniiversary as leader of his Party, it is interesting to recall his last visit here as nicniher for Prince as given in The Canadian Annual Review of 1020: “A luncheon was tendered him with too rt-pi-est-ntative men present including the Premier (Bell) and mem- bers of the Legislature and he atniounced the intention to Contest North York at the next elec- tion; at Suninicrside he held a conference with his constituents and received delegates from vari- ous parfs of the lsland lllilhlng requests for a branch line of railivzrys, (lrrdging of ild7f)UlH‘S and other improvcriients, all of which he prom- ised’ to bring to the attention of the Govern- ment." .\luch water has passed tliroiigh the llillsboro Bridge since then. and the ex—membcr for Prince has been l‘rinir: .\linister in 1921, I926, ll_)3O and 1935 and yet we are as far for- ward with harbour improvenients as we were when he made his promise in I920. it * 19‘ * EToWN GUARD “"13‘.'RfBro'Io & so. i .. ,.,,,,,._.,_._ Fire, Auto, Life,Acci'dent, Siclme i . and Plate Glass Insurance THE FIRST BACK at Lowest Rate unrest in iii: an i llfliit 1801!? of PUBLIC F ORUM. ‘NJ oolull la-CDC II! III dluluilou by unawniulo It 0! lllanol». Ibo ‘nu exoeedurgiy Q;-kgflu mg WWW“ Mference of caxurmi Vllleneuve to the people of Fmnce,‘ and to their national attitude in the Affairs of Europe_ on his re- ¢“m 110311 the celebrations It which he has been such 3 complete Ind honored figure, can hardly fall to have considerable effect upon the feelings of his French - 3peak—l .Q-!_l!_?-3155.!-fi_,v louetovm iraox inter the track was my fell ..-cltluns all over Cana- ' {OOIBPIGW 31141 below any Gu'nnd- S . d,_ M , mama,“ when Frame and Two cnusgs op fllan Bnoonlfifaflllq and ienoeatwcre put up was Agent It ummerside. Lloyd Lewis Great Britain stand together as the . T333393‘ lfolingwfliidembcgt oouiiet um ' . chler defenders in Europe of those fipmen 3 mm ha mire wewfflgg 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown principles of freedom of faith and A p, - 0‘ medicine mu ¢x_ 'Rl0llnd ‘:00 lbs. um owned by Don- worrhlp which are as bltt.cr_y us- ammms me blood pressure 0‘, two Maclleod. Keeper of the .U<unln- a-—— - - 7. sailed in one klnd of totalitarian smug. one “ed 70 ‘M 3“ mm gt Bmlgxgleclty. mu qxlven by $ ""“‘b“ Eh” ‘” ‘“ “"3 °”"°' “"‘."~ aged 64. and um reeunc tire blood iiarre rroo lb 'g1iciliig by ‘mm “ wmm, ' - _. . 1‘ - ‘P°11°¥r tlgia‘ ream. gr pierhdvpsdlwe lh0llld Vessels In me win ‘mwd may ghgfMe&%l8er owned and driven by mam‘ nd?§“,°"'°" not ag -» ‘A.——When Britain is 3; ’ °" 5°’ m ““ "5"“‘ “go whim sister aged 64 was really older than ‘ Owen 'l‘1'3lI|°1'. City. ’Ihc small more mm“ d” wofm ,, Wu-_ Wm}. “m“d3 "5 “iv ‘W51’: however, liament must decide. Q.—Excellent. What aim“, “I ‘°"’1°°5 find nubllc worm has so long existed between French Canada and Old France has been a matter of deep regret. vessels we” h°"'d°'1'~ and her blood “"99 SW-18htheat.s. Ever evening then would [)9 g. m ‘ the one aged '10. because her blood . W‘ the 019%" 0n the his re-dine lherecfore higher. round pressure was selection of a Canadian Cardinal to represent the Church at one of the greatest cel=bratlorLs which it has held in France In many years.—Toronto “Saturday Night". The New York city health de- partment, aided by w.P.A. funds, service. X-ray been given to 66,800 individuals in five separate groups, including high school and college s'.udent.s_ rncm-I bers of United S-hoe Workers‘ . union Uridergarmtnt and Negllgee Workers and Dress and wa:'stma.k- ers’ union: also 70,000 families on relief, 5,000 lnmafes of correction- al institutions and 5,000 transients in the municipal hostel. The re- sults shtrwtd that incidence of tu-I berculcsls infection ran from one- half to one per cent. among high school students to 16 per cent, among transient and hrmeless men. Toronto Star It may be that the organized at- tack on ragweed in this neighbor- hood wlll. as f:rec."s., make Toron- to a haven of refuge for these who suffer annually from hay fever; but soon (trough there will be hun- dreds of watery-eyed citlzms con- vinced that their h:me cizy has not yet. reached that st:ge. stiil. the dastrumlon of ragw.e;l must have a good effect As with all weeds. this one has a rugged constitution. Were slmllrr attach made on any Dr. Xienioeller, of the German Confessional japan is buyiirg from Cairada only materials l'lL‘Cfl(.‘.l in her war with China. It may have been bombs iiiairiifzicturcd from Canadian materials, that sunk the llritisli Ships in the Yangtse the other d:i_v. lri any event. the matter of supplying wrir materials to an aggf€S50\’ 1111110". “OW 0133"‘ 1‘. hostile to Great llritain, is one which would bear closer inqtiiry than it has received from'tlic Canadian G()\'(‘l”l‘llll('llf. Better Opportunities In Canada Ynuiig doctors and other graduates in the professioiis receiving their degrees this summer have the assurance of the education branch, Do- minion Bureau of Statistics, that there is no foundation for the belief that universities are turning out too many professional men and wo- men. In its biennial survey of higher educa- tion, in which records of 17 years since i920 were analysed, it was found that “the tendency of post—war years and even longer has been to- wards a reduction in the proportion of d0Ct0lS. lawyers and clergymen in the Canadian popula- tion." Referring to the opinion that many Can- adian medical graduates go to the United States the survey states. ‘‘In 1931 there were only 798 persons per doctor as compared with 1,034 now in Canada. Potential clientele is larger here and one would expect it would be easier for the young doctor to establish himself here. ‘In Can- adian cities of more than 30.000 population there is one doctor for every 644 pe0plCi outside the cities only one for 1.350.” When They Chose Mr. King The 20th anniversary of Mr_ King’: leader- ship of the Liberal party recalls to I writer in the Hamillon Spectator the convention of Aug- ust 1919 at which Mr. King was chosen. The organizer of it was Charlie Murphy, former Secretary of State, later to be Postmaster-Gem eral, and finally to go to the Senate. His gifts included a rare capacity for organization. Noth- ing about the convention was overlooked. There was even discussion as to the music, appropriate for the opening salvo, when Premiers Murray and Gouin were to stalk down the long aisle and take the chairs as presiding officers. Some were for the ordinary, patriotic airs. Others, of the more crusading type, favoured that great battle march, Onward Christian Soldiers. Mur- phy, the old maestro, promptly rejected that He would coiintenanee no such profane His personal selection of a piece was "Hail! Hail! idea. blend of the political and the spiritual. the Gang’: All Here." The band played it with 8 great gusto. Sur- s, muffled resentment in parts of the arena were suddenly stibmerged In of cheering when a curtain parted and the illuminated portrait of Laurier became prise and, perhap contagion an inspiring background for the gathering. Curiously. when near to the front in the advance 9 time to make the convention. him - across", chosen--Righ Mackenzic King had not been any- II a- fim, He was in liurope and landed ust in.when there were no reporters present. They Not audible, in advance, was much substitutions] tooling of his horn. But. evidently, fm-ces—-political. spiritual arm tical—-niust have been at work, putting. on the outside. Seemingly littlc_ . _ ‘ .gvu,lmown of it in Ottawa. Rarely has there‘ In the critical hour for the Minister of Fimnce, / .3 concrete-illuslrifi5i'i~_of the don- ! to D.’ ‘ltlcliénzic. trouble, and both the ‘result of over exertion and-{may ,1, me mm‘ ,4 . tvismaubumuckoiamreaauon ton, "“ ' " "°°° Mo item: in Fielding -,, Minister of Finance resigns and follows Mr. 15” Church. who is now languisliing in prison be—, cause he refuses to put .\'azism before Clll‘l:‘.- fianity, yet has this to say to his fellow Chris- ltizinsz “The most real danger to the Church of Christ comes from within, not from without Church is to preach the Gospel in its purity. Ministers are bound to this by their ordination vows. To coiiipronrise where Truth is concern- ed, to be silent wlfeii danger seems to threaten, to accept outward control of the Church by dis- believers, means attaching more importance to human calculations than to God's promises and His power. This, and this only, would mean the end of the Christian Cliurch.” Dr. Nie- riioellcr, as the great champion of this view, must remain in solitary confinement. There seems no hope of his release because he refuses- to bow the knee to Hitler. But from the silence of his cell comes this message even more elo- quent perhaps, and even more far-reaching, than were the words from his pulpit. # ll 3 $ Apropos the high commendation of Mr. J. F. Whear, the Campbell Government official represenmtive, of the sobriety andgoodbehavior at the \’Vorld's Fair not withstanding wide open saloons, the following from the New York Times should prove additionally interesting to the Sons of Temperance, etc.: “For the second time since the World's Fair opened the curfew on liquor establisliments in the amusement zone has been extended. Beginning yesterday, the Fair ruled that bars in that area might remain ‘open until 4 a.m., an hour longer than the previ- ous ruling permitted. Closing time for Fair bar: now is the same as in other parts of the city. When the Fair opened operators of bars were told that they would have to close at 2 am. However, after several weeks it was notic- ed that many customers considered this hour too early and were willing to remain if the bars would remain open. Owners protested that many of the amusements remained open until 2 ,a.in. and that after amusements closed they were forc- ed to turn away many prospective customers. As I result, the Fair amended its first ruling and permitted the bars to stay open until 3 o'clock." it in an t According to the Ottawa correspondent of the Globe and Mall, Dr. Dunning declined to be made a catspaw of the Prime Minister to tide him over the election. When he sent in his re- signation it was definite with no strings to it, and even now so far as he is ‘concerned he’ is no longer Minister of Finance, whether his re- signation is accepted or not. This is the after- math of the incident which brought on Dr. Dun- ning’s illness. It will be recalled that the Prairie Liberal member‘; made a dead set on him for departing from his Free Trade principles and accepting the National policyheven in the modi- fied form espoused by Mr. Mackenzie King. These Prairites were volubly critical in the House, but nothing to what they weie in caucul lambasted the Minister terrifically -- and Mr. King with his custoniary pussy footing, instead of supporting his first lieutenant wliole-licartcd- ly, attempted to temporize with his critics. Re- gult—Mr. Dunning went home and collapsed. the Prime Minister played up to his critics; now in the critical hour for the Prime Minister, the The one and only mission and purpose of the‘ useful root crop it sacn wciild be off the list of veg tables. The dlf-, flculty about ragweed is that late‘ majority of peopl? do not know lbl by sight. —— Tcrcn.o C-l:be and all. We know of a successful but en- tirely self-made m:n who rf.‘ec‘.lvc ly solved the degree p.o‘Jlerris. He was important, had a good sense no degree. He mysterfou ly requir- ed one which duly appeared after‘ his name in varicus newsproer ac» counts, Mr. X——P.R.F‘ C. No ont thought. to chal‘erige or lntsrpre‘ the meaning of these letters. Years passed and he dlrd a very promin- ent man and in every obituary the degree P»R.F‘ C. apfie"!'€l.‘l. I‘.- was only some time later that up frltttd, recalled that Mr X. had been nesldent, of the Rosedale Faortball Chi). — West. Indies Magazlnc. Hon. Ernest Lapolnte’ Mlnfslerof remarks til-rat the visit of Their Majestic: brought to the attention of the p:ople "tirie vastness of this God-given country." This is true, and it may be that; because of the pictures of the Royal tour, from all parts, which were printed in the_ press, numerous Canadians may be induced to see sections of the land which are as yet. not familiar to them. Tmvel by tram, bus, boat. air or auto L1 comparatively cheap in Oantula and every one of the nine province; is well worth see- ing. Each has its historic spots and a wealth od beauty. Every- where lc to be found wccmoda- tlona to suit. all purses and the travel is as/fe in every quarter. — Montreal Gazette. Mun. ruddy lpolllghlcd planet seen in the northern hemisphere as scarcely rising above the south- ern horizon, is nevertheless ven- luring close enough to earth to en- able astronomers tn the aouthem hemisphere to try for his picture. why didn't. somebody think of mnklnc photographs before? All the good “llkenc.saea" of Mars known to the world today are Schaebetr, druwlriu made by Oomph: er Ind others. Mbal of tho tet- chu, though mule independently, In ranukobly similar. The - we: in that clouds and ‘ “ :- dlaturbtnoea on both the earth ond'Mu1 affect the appearance of the planet within it relatively short period of time. As long int- poamea are necessary, it umt. as rlmplo to not details as one might. thlnk. And the more magnifica- Ilon of the image atatempted. the more the atmospheric mlmniy or twinkle in mncnlfled too. —Oh.rl.s- um Science Manner. ‘nu-swell my mum an tuning the uuoun." For it was Chaucer’: Irnltblo notion that when the birds returned and the flowers bloomed. the library was 5 study room to occupy. The time has come for I poet to lift’. his eyu off nu book nndup tn the hills. ‘mail wu : favorite notion of sev- oi-|l,of the old English poets. Even today if ml! serve up folr vnrnlna that thousands of people who ima- llfle 31!! Ire 30111! to “do 3 lot M rctdlnt" this nunmer go very England-—Iboth on the score of heart _| contained canon. ruuwoll to branch than her younger sister. Flrst_ she _ had had to meet so many more an. ‘flcultles she had learned thus how to mcet and overcome them. There Tm: BORDEN ILIGHWAY Slr.—In The Giiardipn of August i flonal) of humor and more money than he : knew what to do \\'i:li~but he had ' Justice who is a staunch Cunadlaniiglle Winds my 11, 1-muqy, Iawell, 'l‘rum,pl- ~ would be, therefore, lea terrseness or tlghtnlng of the b'ood vessels [from the emotional disturbances. 'SCC0nd. she had had all her teeth has azhleved 3 mass tuberculosis; "’"‘°"°d “"4 d°“’“*1' DEW fitted la examinalioris have at 3 much 9371'" "39 mm hid he! 5 lster “As psychic (mental or emo- influences have a great effect in raising blood presure, mental hytllene is very lmpormnt In the treatment, pressure. moderation. avoidance ambition, anger, 01 high blood pressure" should nuver be dis. CUE-99d and blood pressure exam- lnfltlons should be few and far apart " ' Rest. and exercise must. be pre- scribed as needed, Regular inter- d5Tm'fr flaps, a rest. cure, a vaca- tion for the nervous overworked 15 Just as important as 15 exercise to the easygoing overweight lndlvld. rial. Fresh 3,‘: and sunshine are gocd for both. Mosh individuals with hlgh blood prssure 'al: too much and exerclre too little. The second cause of high b‘ood Dressure to be prevented or cor- rected ls infection. The infection may come from tonsils. teeth, gall bladder, lntrsrtlne, or other pa;-tg with each infection of the body. may come Just a sl‘g~ht inflam- mation of the lining of the biooa vassels with the result that the ml15C1l1EI‘ or elastic cca'.- of blood which does not "give" the blood vessel Cultivation of calmness, of haste. _ anxiety and ex- ritement-—there should be seeking -of the quiet easy me. The "lzfnod 5th. I see we have ii. dictator who 15 8011!: to put the Government. Board of Trade, Albany, and but but not least. North 'rryon In n r position regarding tine paved way which will be built. via. North '1‘:-yon, Albany? searletown. u- ctln with the melt high- way at 'I‘ruema.n's Corner. He tells us that line traffic on this cove road is the heaviest, of my road of slniilar length in (what a dream!) a d.X‘€8JIl when I say without fear of contradiction, that. there is more valuable traffic over the ."1‘rvon-Adban road, t.ha.n there is over any 0 er road on 1=.E,1, outside the limits of Charlottetown and Summerslde. writer says, let. us all pull on the one string. But when the string breaks Ihope y no one will get, hurt by fall.lnr.t over the Cove Bridge, or get stalled in Maclnidyents swamp. He Says that the mad recouunended lby the Board of ‘made is no short.- er than through Augustine Cove. the former having five farmers with Augustine Cove about ten What a popukitlonl Now as for me. and I think I can speak for TIYOII. we are wllllnw to leave this road in the hands of the men who und.ersta.nd w‘rlch way is the most. pmfltatfe to the interested people. And I know thrse men will not be carried about by every wind of doctrine. Let, them irlve the road to the people who supported the liberal Governmzri-L in the last. e!-action. . pro We are qolrg to have the paved highway, Rlzht l.‘l.‘l'Oll‘I'1 to 'I‘rueman‘s corner. vesst-5 is replaced by 3 hard tissue!-Ivhe only way_ the W1“ mm S” , or stretch ‘As l-he read wll‘. be no ran;-.-.-. ' so readily as b.occl pa£ses>Lh1'cugh‘Ar1d II: requires more when cur friends from Augus- tin-° Cove, “Pressure” to push blood through, is “"11 5-.» the sltuatlon, hard blood v‘ssel tum one that in soft and elastic , .i sum» or-' BLUE I do t Bu‘ E11301 géwénisagl of land, The <3fi'§}'ai;i'ds and the The lawns and nm_ -00 a 63 bring me tithes dlilliiigs "°' W11 scents and subtle essenca A tribute rare and free‘ ' And more masnincem iiun all ”A"ri‘i"r§‘p°13" i“l’f“’ .‘...°‘..."“ - 0 A rime strip o:"§e._ emit’ -1410)’ Larcom. mmlv everything in animal him. For one strong. rm unolfher, people mm to talk lntermlttent.ly_ which de. Sm-‘rys a reader’: conceritratlon. M°“’ ‘hm “"5. I summer after- noon lri the country Lg fund‘. mentally t1.1_| _ __ Yon‘ terary New sassy stomachs Relieved E (".3 .l’.°i§’..’5'l.‘."'.il:“‘.'..'.'...i. 2:3 WWII -howl rot - home of Infill is hmvsquloll It will re ’ - Have all distressing Iylnplonu, Shlrp palm In lbs abdomen or about the heart an often due -. I'll - on Your sumo mi-runua can We have riodvod 1 new *.'.i.a_i,'g."'l".+'“.'.':.' .‘?.:."..::.: : ml: color. ‘ Prion min no lo‘ sue. SPECIALS I nouns xiputv nus 39¢ per. box PAILUM _45c you in’. VINOLIA cA$‘r,Ii.!“ SOAP .'°- W“ 35°, . mowing- garden In the flbgmoon, “though thins. the light 15 mo The ’ all will esy. no olh--r way, But l“'0U8~11 by Albany Station. The 103'‘ ‘s straight, no swamps to fill And nevrr any colder. A few st-iv-I hoes to H1‘ t‘_:.;. fl]Lg_ end verv llttf-. shoulder, And when the t.r-ucks from Cra- naud come. 4'1 laden dcwri with butt.-,3-3-_ They iv*ll not care how hard it rains. 'I'hey'll never strike the gutter. A1058 t-‘I‘s road there‘: stores and ml'd.s Likewise four good churches: And W--—.-stview lodge an decked with flowers, With shumecs and white blrches. Avid to my tourist. friends I'll say That you will eat no thlmier, Just stop at Westvlew lodge, And N u riizftrt good uliicken HOT. I am. Rlr. etc. J. W'~1H,'NG’!'0N THOMAS. N. Tryon, P.E.1’. The Peace Front (Winnipeg Free Press) It is absurd to linngizie that the European crisis is over. The sun- shine su.-its who see the present clouds rolling away are the 1030 counterparts of the 1914 wlseucrea who had the boys out of the trench- a by Ohrlsti-nan. 'I'l-ierwe is only one fact that is in fh- least, likely to do- luv the wild ambitions of the Nazi leaders. and that is fear le din- fronfs. The news thls put; 24 hours from Danzltr sucnzest-3 his dread does not vet dominate the Nazi mind. Dunzlgr is now militariz- ed by the Nazis. ‘Ecarwinlc runtu-M la mtrnd the Nvrner. ‘iv move-3 of place-meal nlhhllrw ‘Hill!-F endeav- ms to reach his wool V-rmhmirt war M‘. such alien the Peace Front. —gnd above all Poland -must. decide ly ho for the rebuuding or gm ‘,’"m the mwpeot of B that so utlon o! the proltems (‘M180 W8.r.‘8'ure);v the time 1;“ D3-H-sad when the most ardent 1m- Derlallst. or netforiallst peas in ms glvti 5111085715 any hope for the futum, a now under the constant. risk &t;ntl3nie:1a.ceofwar.Illstune to risks fo;Mpeaoe_ IN mflectt l-Went?-fiftlh anmversar¢;vmi;tf°rw§,‘,‘i, we called the Great War. Our ho;-. ’°1' 18 h-elxhiened as we meditate the int: 21”” it But no my « e R lube wherein we can “‘°d"'°‘° in My upon the ini- ures and fmlltles of pggtesmamhip u";.:,::'=.:;" We In no I 1118 is that there can be °l“¢fiD9 from war unless collect- ive actlc-Ii be taken to stop m I, ,5 8 Short and bltte l . -2 sale result. oi; “-3 11098 that we will not The Cliche Expert I; Nominated (Winnipeg pm, pm”) Questf : the ncriiffiatltiiilly did you accept Answer: :3 p.r°“°h°d by fioaliiiize ;l'ldwla:Ill.l::: L33 dtlzlegatlon of citizens. 5Umel'hfl‘lD8pe;boc1,|etnti Now‘ ml "5 your record, yourself "ml A--MN record is ..Q--mm .':.';.°a.“. ‘::’.°*.- ...’i‘.§’.$‘‘l..3.i’.‘.f..‘”‘‘°‘’‘ "1 mat 3.-—A lcllcar-cut stand, '4“ mfifks. Wh P°§"‘°n Ia resents labbi-?u W" --I am for the working man Q.--Good. ' opium? Now what ‘“f°“‘ A»-CID“-al must b °l’3°"‘_I“_:1t¥ for safe °ii.§e‘.l:°.§en?" ~— It’: right. N ' Ivbgul 1'29 1!9.l'm¢l'? ow Wm‘ .— e ofothe nnt*lo:i’.m" '3 the backbone .-—Rlght.. Now ht is Dokltlon on the y0u:hflIpf®]en-$0“! A-—'-“I0 routing of today are the cltluns of tomorrow. Q.—mgm. N an ‘We not been °::n:vt.chcdl" it ml A--Our great natural resources. Q.—Coi-reel. What. about Com. rnunlsm, Fascism and Nnzlain? th-:1;-‘lg they don't llke to run. um. “Sgt-l go back where they "e??—F-llht. Now what about re- A.—-’l‘liousand.s are on relief ““°“¢13.no fault, at thelr own. Q«-"Rl&M- what. in ymrr slum on the railway problqrfi A.—Amalnnwtlon never; com. to all sincere friends of religion: ‘ ‘° 1°“ h°"'5¢5 011 the trick the vnnmu “mun A__.; 1 and the can: 1,0 which the Cardinal i '(f;“°m‘;:f figs": hge I31‘ f:;“‘;>;|§‘;,{,‘,§,‘§du,”.‘lu“1iia1i‘f‘d§orii‘ °hm°§',:, “J or vim lm ' 3“ ii the rbleffoec mm lne?¢::laT $2.125: has evidently set himself. of re- W, W’, W om ohm .m'f °m,<.,,.., ,1“, bank 0,; ,,,e°,,§,‘,’,"{,,,.,, no of the Vlatula. and the . 110 works. moving the m1sunderstrnd"'rg and Sm” had also Md I m'm.° duflcunl to the bends. V°lV° pf-ll: defence of the Q. Now what restoring ithe community of ._,me nmmmny lD0ckend ‘i did the hmh-dive one mansion must be taxation? thought and ideal between the two ‘ ' evening with the trtfitlng Bfalllon 3000906. A__. 3,”, comm,” mm the Rene“; The physician pointed out nmfnobbiedee or full brother of Bind: 50 lone u -aims-ion runnlna : vlalan!lnamtfll(’le:d.8ed to ‘ mm“ tongue ‘M sharing the glonés ohdesp.tze not large family and her Pilot. 2.30 1-4.) The chariot was D0tentuu1vu.luableprlncipalo1t.be Ql_'m8m, wh much cu-mm ,5 B mes, 1mm,,_ I Eng: vdgflcugtvo trlaene fmapcmigi. l;rT0l;:¥ebz1g uf horse and drlv- policy of °I:1y‘ogmtry,uf;here is 1:3 mu" . at about am and valuable one. It was a was ream?’ mm “Hon-5 wlyu e I ‘ml 8.‘: etc wmdflxa m secklfluflnty “fig. r_ Q,_1 pm 100 per cent for happy llioru-gdat. which led to the Y 8 Phi’! 31137 J. M. NICHOLSON fly it 13 um um whiéii a.ion.‘§T,. dale cmm reduction, amp, ,, ll will prove injurious 1.0 can standards of living. Q.~Perfect. Now, what 3'01-I 169-Ve in your search to; kets for Cunadlan wheat? A.--No stone unturned, Q--Very good. Now, om question. What. about cam. racial problem? A.—0ut: of the melting pm many races will emerge 3 rm true Canadians, the Kreatest world has ever known. Q.—Bravol ioo per cent. McGill’s Principals (Sydney Post- Record) Announcement. is made by Edward Eeatty, Ch.ar.oeL'cr of Gill Unlversify, that the next 1). clpal of Mt.-Gill will be a Canard Why not? McGill's greatest, clpals have been Canadians, at the Ottawa Journal. It was u Dawson for nearly fony years, native Canadian, eventually Wllllimi Dawson, that Mcclll gm to great. status. He was by Peterson, a Scottish professor who was efficlentbut not notably Presive. Then came for foiimq years aiiobher native Canadian Arthur Currie. a great soldier was also a great principal. Arthur was succeeded by a wen professor, Dr. Morgan in 1935.1] Morgan did not get on well with it: Board of , ceeded by Dr. Douglas, an import. tlon from the United States, AL though _of Canadian stock. I)- Douzas. apparently. has deem after trial that his B.mbitl0n.S woult be best. satisfied in other direction mm the Drlncipalshlp of even it great. a university as McGf1l. 50 the position is ODEII again. on does_not need to feel that ill!!! should be any bar to inviting high character and higii qtiakficatju from a.nothe.r country to any posl lion we have in Canada: but thi McGlll record oerlalnly suggg,-q that our men people are able lA (f)iXi1mLsh first class men when called liER.E’S I lot. more to "mod from . good Insurance than Just fire Insurance. No ml how well you're insured. 3'00 ll“ Win! I flre—und neither does 1' want you to have one. “The agent of the National lnmranca Company of Hartford not only given me what you call ‘fireproof’ ln urnnce PW tlon—but. he pointed out‘: late ways to prevent the sneakin in etflng 5 shirt. That‘: war II I To my a of mind, believe brother ” W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES L petition av . Q__ms,h:.’ Wu“ about Cmuw‘ CHARLOTTETOWN ' | I I ' I p - . ‘ . ‘ ~ A -Ppitcheir Must Have ‘.‘ Something” -. MEANING can To MAKE GOOD HE MUST HAVE SPEED, CONTROL- CHANCE,-OF-PACE. etc. Tl-[AT EXTRA 3 “SOMETHING”. YOU WILL mun THAT pxma SOMETHING T00 IN HlCKEY'S BLACK TWIST. 'Chéwing 10¢‘ Pei-[Fig ."‘“"%lh£?.£i'i€” m; r... iiiciiotsoi