‘ A‘ V A JULY 11.1935 NotesBy The ay lonely, old and feeble, Benjamin Wade, of Hornsey, 8., had his Day of Days. Eighty-nine, without a rel- ative in the world, he had existed for years on parish relief: For weeks The ‘Governor General rim cnsnnorrsrowgflcpanmlig i i One Golden Thread , fllmtnaiflasette)‘ lioothwofiineciiimisdidthe Parliamentrsflect (Vancouver Province) Benkey. the retiring lord cmmosuor or malaria. lately deli- “ vsred the.» udgement of the Home c! Lords, a1’ and restating an ' u r l ' ' sat-w. Oluatec s. lei-are. I. P. :...-. llllont, a. a. Burnett, r. a. 1. me Haberdashery ” lwIItI-rr-Ll-fl‘ F-I I). A. llaelliuion, D. l. 0. Iditor and Imaging Director-J. l. Barnett, I‘. J. L Associate Editors-Frank Wllkll. llfl D. K. Currie. lamina Ball: (loluidodllfl) Isloo p" year (n: advance) ellverodt “M pa: year (in advance) rnnllod to Canada and United Staten. he had looked forward to the King's Jubilee. Anxious well-wishers want- ed him to go into hospital-he was feeble. The old man refused. “I'll go after Jubilee Day," he promis- ed. Jubilee Day came. He Joined SHAMEFUL, BUT y TRUE! ' . a The text of Premier MacMillarrs ~- mflicrlv speech in the Capitol The- ltl! which ‘appears in today's Gllfldii-R Will. we predict, be read, discussed and sted by every thinking elector in this Province. It ' is. a speech of vital concern w the election issues now before the peg- ' Die. Its revelations alone of Liberal political manoeuvring on the subject _ Odour subsidy Clallni-dit a time ‘ ‘wwhen a joint presentation was being f ' sought by the other Maritime Pro- m, f ‘ vince-are truly astonishing. No y"; similar chapter has ever been re. ” vealed in the history of any Pro- § Y vince. It is obvious that the Pro- vincial Liberal administration was ‘ being treated as a gull and catspaw yby Mackenzie King and his astute Finance Minister, Mr. Robb, and that if a Conservative government had been in power in this Province h; 1929, co-operatlng with the Con- ~lervatfve governments of Nova Sco- tia and New Brunswick, the King merit. Premier Maclifillan, in his force- ful speech on ‘Tuesday, dealt with this campaign, and particularly with mimtatements made by Mr. Thane A. Campbell, Liberal cam- paign leader. It is well to have such propaganda dragged into the daylight at an early stage of the campaign; The electors thus have the opportunity o; hearing it answered. and of judg- ing fairly and squarely the real lsues involved. EDITORIAL NOTES The trouble with the Provincial Ubcral Pwty is that the acting leader is not a born leader but a make-shift. It is noteworthy in the passing, for the sake of history if nothing else, that for the first time on rec- ord public meetings held as far apart as from ‘rignish to Souris are being reported in the following bed. The next morning they found him dead-Daily Mirror. Queti-l» the capital of Baluchis-l tan, which was devastated by earth- quakes on May 31, is to be sealed for a Year. All the survivors have been removed; 26,000 persons out of a population of 40,000 are buried in the ruins and no effort will be made to remove the bodies. Barbed wire entanglements have been erect- ed about the ruins and guards have been stationed to keep out thieves. 1n all 40.000 persons lost their lives in the afiected district, which is about 130 miles long by twenty miles wide. This disaster and others that befell over communities in the same quarter of the globe in the preceding two years have stimulat- ed the eifort to devise means to predict earthquakes. One is tempted to give a faint anarchistic cheer for Mrs. Lorraine French Brown. oi’ Woodstock. Va. who, pitchforl; in hand, did her best to persuade the minions of the state highway department to spare her shade trees which they were about to cut down in the interest of pro- gress and a wider thoroughfare. While in no way condoning threats o: violence, we are greatly relieved to note that this militant defender of trees obtained an injunction re- straining the highway wideriers called - "Yt- The curtain divas. firm- Mlchcholv but seldmn more so tlianinthe case of a separation which means the disruption o: u. SOOLBMOIJS which, so 1m- g5 Canada is concerned, have been o1 the most pleasant character. Lord lies-thorough came to the Dominion a stranger to the people; he will leave in an atmosphere of friend- ship. The Prime Minister has stated that the most cordial relations have existed between His Excellency and the Government and it is within the knowlédflo of all that such relations have been maintained always be- tween the Governor-Geneml and citizens of Canada and between the latter and members of the viceregal household. The Dominion has been fortunate in its Governors-General and it can be said of Lord Bessborough in all SihCBT-lty that he has worthily up- held a splendid tradition. exercising with constant tact, dignity and firmness, the responsibilities of a somewhat difficult office. He has been most capably assisted by an exceedingly well chosen Qlvll and "flute-w sum whose work has been v ,icuously efficient, especially upon ceremonial occasions. The addiw passed by the Home of Conunoins expremes on behalf ofthe people of Canada their deep and sincere regret at the approaching termination of Hlis Excellencyu of- ficial connection with Canada. expamses also the hopc that this orsy has written, the actor stops C0 m organisms was found. He names the Qpnn Illinois-ME l urns - INFLAMIMATION or _ _ in the ' ~ “M- -+. the end of and mug; "m, rowan BOWEL MAY an nus the hind. The lehguace of til}? - THURSDAY, JULY 11, 195s. the day he went looted-iv to Time oocaggrwretzlllmlir: 01‘ 1g; T0 snusrrlvnuass ro and 31c reasons for n» NDQB n3. OBGANISMS an ailment that has become fair- ly common in recent years is what is known as colitis-an ilon of the large intestine or lower bowel. comes away with the wastes from the bowel is is often known as muc- ous colitis, Physicians findthat most of these patients are of the nervous type and so it has been thought that ner- vousness was the cause of the trou- ble. sorne physicians are of the opinion that the colitis causes the nervousness. The treatment consists of the use of paraffin oil, and also oil enemas. and by using bland or soft foods which do not irritate the lining of the intestine further increasing the symptoms. That there inight be a “sensitive- ness" to certain foods causing the colitis has been in the minds of many investigators of this distress- ing ailment. Dr. H. G. Mogena, Paris, in Arch- ives of Diseases of the Dlgestic Ap- paratus discusses food allergy (sen- sitiveness to foods) and also sen- sitiveness to various organisms found in the large intestine, as pos- sible causes of colitis. He examined personally 50 pat- ients having mucous or catarrhal colitis in whom this sensitiveness to As there is considerable mucous ' ancient principle of the British: criminal law, in what was said to’ have been the first case in which‘ a person convicted of murder in mglsnd had been allowed to carr!» , his e/ppeal to the highest court il- s "is it correct to say." said Lord situation in which it is incumbent upon the accused to prove his ocence? Throughout the web of the English criminal law one golden thread is always to be seen: That it is the duty of the prosecu- tion to prove the prisoner's guilt, subject to the defence of insanity and also to any statutory exception. The case aroused an mmerise in- terest in England, and the judg- ment, which resulted in the reversal of a verdict of murder and the re- lease of a man condemned to hang, is obviously of the highest impor- tance. The aocused man. Reginald Woolniington, a farm laborer of Somerset, aged 2i, was tried on a charge of murdering his wife by shooting her. On his first trial the jury disagreed; on his second, an- other jury found him guilty after deliberating for an hour and a half. He took an appeal to the Court of Criminal Appeal, on the ground _ that the trial judge had misdirected the jury in telling them that the onus was upon the prisoner to satisfy them that the shooting of his wife was aocldentai. The Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed the a/ppeal. Then on the authority of the attomey-generml, the prisoner took his appeal to the Hlouse of Lords, where the Lord Chancellor . Suitiat scrum sun SALE Friday 8t Saturday .15. .16."- m. .20- o We are cleaning up our big stock of New Suits at ally low prices. criception- If you need a Suit we can save you dollars and give you your choice of the finest line of high grade Suits in the city. Come early and select your $15.00, $16.50, $18.00, $20.00 ‘HENDERSON s. cunuons Government's hands would have momingsissue of The Charlotte- m) 1mm" ac 1 m “west, B’ vale,“ organism which were 1.0mm g forced, and the irnplementa- Guardhm- tiollin has beent 0l;flill.uill€.—-Ba.ltiln%re (taimélvmmtgntgieu a: by means of injecting the dead or- $nt8hem neg V221,: —MEN'S WEAR— _ \ of the Duncan Commission re- . Sun. have been estab ‘ ” during 10rd ggnmm‘ 1m" the 51m‘- Th° ‘eacmm heard it. [commendation hastened by several This week Quebec entered the Bessboroirgha sojourn m this coun- {T} mad “m; £“°'h§g 2w" ‘ma; T1115 iildsmeflt i! admirably clear em’ market wmmemmu Wm, new l» Even when the us. Government u-y, 1115,11,,“ Wm and m who m y our and o y-eig our? and “m, upon the 1 s no yBut there will be equal ummgh. tatoes They sold at? $1 '15 to $2 per reaches this wemmgly “pfilea?” 311mm of the Dmmmm “he” m” Zhltfirfiia tel}; 11:10. wegemtg: 11g a: gflttsh “man”! ~ l °1 Wm“ "at rem “R- Excellency has madehimselimw" injection was made and in other affumauvefy °,,,,“°,,°“‘K,,” u, ‘f, ti“, nousas ms snsxmw district inent with regard to the attitude o! Mr. Lea and his party supporters, who have brazenly maintained that their subsidy settlement failure was due to the refusal of the Conserva- tive Premiers of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to co-operate with them! The Saunders-Robb corres- pondence nails this as a partisan slander of the most contemptible kind. And what shall we say of the con- 1 ditions in Prince Edward Island in 1929—the peak year of boasted Lib- ‘ oral prosperity-ms revealed in Ex- Premier Saunders’ heart-breaking letter to Prime Minister Mackenzie King? Failing federal assistance, Mr. Saunders flatly declares, “I honestly think our Island might as lwell hoist its anchor and drift help- _ lesly at sea." MnKinz replied with B fir“ heel Wm h d the es"“°,,‘,'ff'§f,,§,‘§ ggglgmljmm 2&2: of a. depression thathasbeen world- beg? nliirliéihzngglgsféuggvlfgi- It mushy, we think, that isshould be ‘ n snub and a sneer. u e w ° c“ o’ the Se” and that it w“, be quite wide. Another Governor-General in Se,“ ‘t’; i?“ p n lusts‘ once more affirmed. squeaking l ‘ these circumstan might easily 5' "e m?“ ‘up m“ ‘Incidentally, the correspondence shows the boasted Liberal surpluses under the Saunders-Lea Govern- ment were purely fictitious. "Not- withstanding our frugal expendi- ture,” says Mrpsaunders, “we are unable to make rovenu and omen- ‘ ditare meet." , And those claims of Mr. lea about f doing so much for public healthl "an this n bad-enough," says ms v then leader; “but to add to our un- fortunate conditions, we have never Jieenableinthehistoryofthislho- ; yince to do anything for public health.” ' “Here indeed is a "record of per- jiormance," to place alongside the equally hopeless Liberal party plat- form of 1935i i‘ ‘A __ :4 VITAL ISSUE v c every province of Canada. and in every country in the world t0- day, governments are straining every eflort to achieve one thlrig— namely, to tide their people over ‘r the worst economic deprmsion in Jci-ld history, to provide as much I‘: i’ employment as possible. and i0 ,put in circulation as much money as the at on w_ LMM, creditable Canadianism. The Prime , money in their P9938" l | ' as - ible among the farming and aexfggmmng’ Hon Lust mpomtel- lviigister’; éstizhight talk uwgsfpre- tsm firiiwouflflnmgomm times for all of Canada. gin 1:21;“; :::""el;9"'r:: 15b°11ll8 “55995- and even such an ardent champion Qydggywpkgnfwiff’ m e 0L- doiilali‘ mil‘! will! W603i! I180 Ind ‘ these blood-sucking " l ; ‘m8 h" m“ ‘hi’ “my °' m‘ or liberty 88 m. Woodsworfli. care- --- WM” i° ‘M’ W33" “"1 time about this gunshot; fetish h: win: thi- mm- JfacMillan Government. mu Rimmed “om attack‘ “an”; l: a man hu been in prison five bmnds- n‘ i‘ m‘ 5 "umxf that is no use for olothinG °' food’ TRY A CAN '- - y 01‘ ten ears he has become a victim W" “w”! °“ ""8 “mt "1 and indeodhas few utilitarian w- . 3i,- miposed to this policy. pledfld t0 this provision of the Code under o! muzme on me d” he wan“ 1mm k, m,“ a cub, o; 80m mum“ hm “Mm u m“, 2 M . q" _ _ platform or repudiation °i "i" which the Government found the out an m; chum“, m, mm “Bu, about the sire of e. two and a half m,“ m,‘ em), Wm, metigulfllg e s T =~'*‘p°n‘ib‘my M awn“ the “W” means of controlling subversive do something on his own initiative, ‘W?!’ hmm- “m” ma“ l‘ m care, by izbosweat of the brow and M,“ "h" (L04; pmmp", ‘ "thmugh m‘ deprwmn‘ °l puma’ movements in the West and else- an: ha: 111322;: '2 ‘fir: nmngmm’ l‘ P9111 M m" ‘W? m” attended to. an w . employment and unemployment relief, stands the ‘Liberal partyvof his Province. Its suppoitem do t not hesitat to condemn even such ', necessary undertaking as hobo restoration of the historic l-Provincisl Building, the condition 80-lb. bag. New potatoes from Vir- ginia brousht $4.75 to $5 per bbl. Old potatoes were 85-400 for Que- bec whites and 50-00c for Maritimes. Not only will the people of this Province generally be delighted at the announcement that Rustico- Hunter River road is to be linked up with the Transcontinental Highway. but also summer tourists-Joi- most of these bound for the North shore leave and take the train at Hunter River. IMr. Lee's deputy may be remind- ed of his chief's philosophy, which, it will be recalled, he announced at a public dinner in somewhat the follow-ing terms: . Ihatetobeakickeiglliketobeat Is the wheel which gets the grease. Miss Grace Beatrice Pattullo, pupil of Eastwood High School, Edmonton, Alta, who is the win- ner o1 the free trip to Australia; for the best essay about Australia writ- ten by Canadian high school stud- ents, will be the guest in Australia of the Hon. Sir Fieedrlck and Lady Stewart, who are at present on a world tour and will pass through Canada during the Fall.‘ Miss Pat- tullo will accompany them in the Fall, sailing from Vancouver by the S. S. Aorangi due to sail on Oct. 9. Miss Pattullo has promised to con- tribute a short article on her trip to the Guardian. Proponents of the idsa. that Bec- tion 98 of the Criminal Code should be abolished as constituting an in- frlngement of the liberty o: the subject have had an excellent op- portunity to display their, sincerity of late days; but it is to be noted that, contrary to the practice which has prevailed for the past two years. no effort in that direction has been attempted. Evidently, such lovers of where Are women's rights in 6811i"? According to Miss Alice Paul, form- er leader of the United states fem- inists, and an official in the 108K011 of Nations at Geneva, they 611- 511° told a Washington audience the other day that "the tidal wave of apposition to the freedom of women its embarrassments are not lessened but increased. The Treasury with $000,000,000 actually in hand, pre- pares to bury its gold! An under- ground vault is to be rushed to com- pletion at Fort Knox, Ky., where 1300 cavalrymen are stationed, to store yellow metal now held in New York and Philadelphia. Already 3,000,000,000 has been transferred from Ban Francisco to Denver. Vaults and soldier guards far from ports where invaders might land- Having too little gold is dreadful, having too much is a dreadful nuis- ance-Christian Science Monitor. Lloyd's register m- March indic- ated that shipping on the stocks in Britain had increased over the same period last year by 70.000 tons, tot- alling 550,815 tons, compared with 713,719 tons for the rest of the world. There were 116 vessels under construction in British yards, and 209 in other shipbuilding plants accurate to continue singing ‘Brit- annia rules the waves." - To the North of the international boundary. as well as to the south of it, devotion to local self-govern- ment is deep and strong. There. as here, healthy conservatism insists upon looking radical proposals over carefully before leaping up to em- brace them; there, as here,_ it is suspicious of bureaucracy, especial- ly of national bureaucracy which would rule a continent as if it were a mere parish. In Canada as in the United States any workable Fled- etal system must take into consider- ation the fact that local interests and aspirations are not always the same in all parts of a. far-flung ilim- pire.-—_lNew York Sun. _ Aswaltohavebeencxpectedho- mier Bennett has declined to enter- tain any of the six "demands" of the British Columbia. relief-camp strik- ers, and has bidden them returri to their quarters where they will be provided for as are all others in like circumstances. The first of their ‘demands’ alone-the request for worlc at 50 cents an hour for a six- hour day and five-day week-would mean a Federal outlay of $600,000,- 000 a year if made to apply to all the unemployed in thecountry. All the delegates but one were foreign- bcrn, and the single exception is anything but a shining example of face the handicap that he is an ex- convict and that narrows down to a small number the people who will give him a chance. We believe the man who leaves a prison has a greater problemcn his hands than the man who is in prisons-Ghat- ford Beacon-Herald. In a meant anaiyuic it found that two-thirds o! the wor d’: popu- respected and liked. rung the custom of his , he has travelled extensively through the Dominion and, in the words of the address, has “geiined an under- standing of our problems and possi- bilities as profound as it has been apt-pathetic." His Excellencyh de- votiontoiiheaffairs of State has been fully as assiduous as repre- sented in the address, and his in- terest in the activities of the peo- pleasdeep andas human. The reference to his -- ment of dramatic art in Canada is timely and appropidate, His Exoelloncyb active interest in this phase of the national life being known to ema- teur actors and actresssee in all parts of the Dominion, and being and international economic disturb- ance. Canada has had to contend with dlflicultiw peculiar‘ to the country as well as with the effects have played a different and lem constructive part than that which stands to the credit of lord Bess- borough. It was said in the Senate that in his discharge of the difficult duties of the times His Excellency has earned deep regard of the Can- adian people. In this there will be complete concurrence of on. Whenever and wherever possible, His Excellency, by his counsel, and an ever-active interest, has done whatever‘ one in his position could do to er- , and stimulate re- covery, while lady Beseboroughti participation in philanthropic ef- forts of various ldnds has secured for her a. permanent claim upon the gratitude of the Canadian people. Whence It Came (Exchange) Atanisolatedas-mypodat Fort Knox, about thirty miles from Imiisvilie," ‘waaubterran an vault is to be constructed ofUnnle Banfsannywilibe ontheapot. ‘Iuiereesonforhasteistlie isto be moved ihirlyinto the die of the county. cases there was a general disturb- ance throughout the body as when any poison or infection occurs. In a group of normal persons the degree of itiveness to these or- ganisms was only about half of that of patients with colitis. Dr. Morgana reports thavremov- ing the sensitiveness to the organ- isms by means of the above inject- ions was successful in all except the most serious ulcerative colitia cases. An Optimistic Picture (Exchange) Business Week, which is usually one of the best informed publica- tions on this continent in regard to vworld conditions is not pessimistic as to wheat prices. Discussing the general wheat situation with par- ticular relation to this continent, Business Week sees possibilities of a likely used up. Italy's excess has disappeared. Germany is down to a thin margin and France, chief sur- prise springer in 1934-36, not only has a poor crop coming up but will have only a moderate surplus left. Australia is still persecute‘- by drought and Argentine is getting dry. Acreage in both southern hem- isphere countries is likely to be be- low last year. Hence the first real market to greet American wheat growers in three seasons may ~bo waiting abroad this cumin! fall and winter. "Moreover, the late price drops here were far from a calamity. 0n the contrary. values in the Pacific Northwest reached a point where export business with both Europe and Asia in competiti with Aus- tralia supplies was only a cent or two out of line for us. If our hand is played right, we may yet forestall the rcaccumulation of surpluses. If Canada's hand is played right she may find the market more amend- elble to a different quality of sales- manship. Meanwhile, the future of the North American crop is in the hands of the weather man." 1t is to be sinccrflli’ hoped that Business Week is right 1n its cal- culations. The wheat problem is in accused. "No matter what the charge or where the trial," said the lord Chancellor, “the principle that the prosecutor must prove the guilt of the prisoner is part of the common law of lihiglarid, and no attempt to whittle it down can be entertained. . . . It is notthelaw of Enslamitosatnaswassoidmthe summing-up of the paesent case: ‘If the Crown satisfies you that this woman died at the prisoner's hands, then he has to show that there are circumstances to be found in the evidence which has been given from the witness box in this case which alleviate the crime so that it is only manslaughter or Oether by showing that it was pure accident?’ ‘Phisisastatementofthelaw of lmglish-sneaidns justice in the world. applying alike in all the nations of the British Empire and in the United Btaltes. and it is Live Stock Spray Prepared Specially For Milk Cows, Cattle, Hones, Hogs and Poultry. One application repels insects inlfltoflholifl. which excused the homicide alto- ' BY - METEOR. EXPDOSION KZRASNOVISI-mmflll. U. B. 8.3. July 10—A meteo , which passed over this town in a fiery streak to- day exploded with such force that it shook the houses throughout the was still marked with a trail. us? BRAHMIN TEA .......°";"...""°‘ Harmless to human or ani- mal life when used as direct- ed. Pearson's Livestock Spray h n scientifically prepared disinfectant and antiseptic solution for repelling and killing house, barn and atoble flies, ticks and lice. l Milk will not be tainted. - Will not discolor animal hair. Will not cause blisters or burn when used as directed- Govennnent figures prove that cows which fight flies yield anywhere from 85 to 00% lun milk. Hogs-Stunted growth in hogs is likely due to oom- mon lice, for lowered vitality and predispositlonwco infec- tious diseases. Poultry-The health and productive value of liens and cliickensare rionsly elected 0 Tlhe Unanimous Verdict of Successful Ranchers “We have never fed anything to equal IMPERIAL FOX- BISCUITS IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD in promoting healthy and normal growth of pups‘ and and developing sturdy bodies with superior pelts of lustrous sheen, thick-skinned and retaining their color.” _ ‘H&N’s ifiaemmlilstqnrfiizb _ qjilllgfililliilolllli- 191210111" cur .SMOKING' TOBA 000' ‘at-d- im" m“ “m u u»- m-m a- www "we ww- COMES DOWN THE ‘sraarcn wrrn r s i 1r HAS FRESHNESS, FLAVOUR. AND %E‘~§;§,E§,¥§~ . THAT MAKES A wmma . _ .. ILL iiivswcnflv w» men's‘. r new ' the , , l ammunition-m- ~ a F‘ ‘can ‘ ‘ a Evert’. Store in the Its mum. high over the tow-i; W"! IWOmPB-Iiiodliy a thunderous noise. The explosion, plflflumgb], before striking the earth, occurred three minutes later while the slq smoky