-—---~ “mam-s..- .--.=...._ __.-_. PAGE FOUR The liharlottetovtn Guardian l’ ltlenl Ll L-C l. W. Oh . "Vhte-Prellllgne 3|. B, Burnt ldllor and Manulllll Illreetor J. I. Burnett. I. J I Secretary Lleut. Col D A. IanKlnnon D. B. 0. minor-late Editor: Frank Walker 5nd l). I. (Jurllg lornln; Dally (Ioundgqj 1331) “.00 Der year (In nth-nave) delivered to C“; 84.00 per year ill advance) lIlI-llll to P. I. Inland lb-IIO pa! year (In advance) mulled n; cud“ u“ u, g Fanny, J/mutinv 1, ms Canada's Isolation Every thinking Cattadiau will sense an oini- nous note itt the news itetti of yesterday, re- porting Ljtiitcd States officials as entertaining the idea of turtifyitig the ittteriiatiottal buttiidary line. lttformatioit reaching Uttawzt is to the effect that U. S, army and navy experts regard the weakness of CtmatlaE defences as a menace to ljnited States security. The .4000 miles ttttfurtitietl bottudttry" between us and our .\tticiicait neighbors has beeti the theme of post-przttttliatl oratory for a century’. Now tltat it is danger of becuitting" a thing of the past. we titi_:_ltt well ask ottrsclves why "the wt-akticss of tattatlals dclcttccs" w as never ltcrc- tofttrc rtgardetl as a "nit-iiactfi" to tltc Littitctl States. (t-rtaittly it was not because of any de- fcttstve itittiativt- on our part. .\'ttl But ottr neighbors kitcw. and the world at large kneiv, tltat (‘ztttadzt was hv no tncatts ttitdcft-ndctl—tli;.t tt ltatl- tltt- llritislt .\'av‘v at its baclt". and that any ftttacls‘ tttt lillllfltlil, from any quartet‘ whatsoever. woultl ittvtilve iijlllllllj; the liritislt Navy. Now tltc sitttattoit has clttiitgctl. The outside world no loitgt-t’ regards tts as being ttttdcr lirit- i.~h protection. \\<' are an tuttonttittotts alttlc. lxtst Setttvttil-ur. at lllt‘ l.t".'t;'tlt' of Xillittlts .\s"- st-tttltlv at ticttt-va. our l‘rtttu' .\litti>lt‘l‘. bl!‘- Xlaclct-ttzic Kitig. wcttt ttttt of ltis wav to eitlargc on that fact. and on tltc cottsvqtlt-itt corollory that cattadrt tvas tittdt-r tto obligations to light itt dcfwtst‘ of lire-t llritaiti tit‘ other l'-t'iti.slt_ l‘uttitt_4' the same proposition of cottrse, that Britain tfttllllllttfl\\l‘ltllll‘l itttu rt-vt-tzsc, it tllritlll. was‘ tttitIt-t" no oltligsttitttt to conic to Lllttitttlzfs tlt-ft-ttse, losing" tllt‘ tipporttittity of intprcssittg on tht- u-trltl the ('\\('lllltll llritislt itttit_v which still t‘.\'l\l\"_ .\lr. king tallvctl of ittttltittg bttt tltt- Statute of \\t-.stititu.ster and our iitdependcttt status as .'t itaiioit. ls i‘. an t-xaegt-txttitttt to say that this speech at (it-ttvtu-t intuit a profound itttttressittti in l-ittr- ope and :tt “I-t-ltittgtott? livctt the Liberal press itt tatiatla said it was uttfortttttzite. “lt will occur tit utzttrt." said the‘ now defunct Toronto tilt-be. "that .\lr. Kittq" vas far too particular to cntttltztsirt‘ the disttttity of tlte litttptrel and the altsoltttt- power of tit various parts to decide sitwlt- and cotttplt-tt-lv their own actions iii events .'is tltt-v d. tt-lolt bt-_votttl. \\‘ltat .\Ir. King hoped to Cott\‘t'\' to littrcttie and the League States by tltis- is dttticttlt to uttdvrstaittl. but no ttttc can be atmua-tl of distortion of his text who secs it as a stt-p totvartl isolation." The “littuittcg lirt-e Press (Libcrall (lcttotttt- veil the Prime .\litti.s‘.t-r's~ speech for its ‘cqttivtical str-od in sttpttttrt of lcagttt‘ sattctitttts; bttt, says the tilolte. "not lit-tug overly litn]tirc-iitiitdctl.the .l"ret* l’rt-s< tiid not rccrrqnizc that there arc ttv0 parts to .\lr. Kittjjs tittlicv. ttutl I/tut luv tutu" as [itir/‘trtt/rit" h- ftil/c (ftttititlti out of l/If? Iittt/vtre as out of l/tt‘ lmttg/ttw." And it added: "It ix now u/titox! y/viturti/lv. if in smug‘ HLYPS tirmiittglv. ml- ‘Hill/Hf Hut! Mr. Atttq rt-ttx Ittl/sftty/ tsolrtlfottfriit.” The trott-tttttentet- of such stzttemtittts is natur- ally a fceiiitg of itisecttrity on the part of our American neighbors as to (iattadas defensive position. P-ttt there is another factor involved. more disturbing tierhaps to ottr own tieace of mind. A fortified if. S. bottudztry’ wottlrl mean ta constant threat to Canadian security. There is at present no danger from that source, but who can tell what the fttture may have in store? 0m- neighhors. with a coittirittally expanding population. may sooner or later detttarid an out- let north or south. Our ltoasted British freedom would be a ntockery if it had to be lived under the ENDS of such a tteigltbor. however friendly at present. who would be in a position to invade tis a-t pleasure. . la-tithere be no ntistake. A fortified U. S. hottttdltry nteaus tiltintateltt the end of Cattatllt as part and parcel of the British Empire. New Light And Power Rates h was attttottticed at the City Cotutcil some fine ago and later by advertisement in the local newspapers that the Board of Utilities was t0 take ittto c-ousitleratittn the advisability of com- pelling" the Maritime Electric Company Limited no show cause whyt it should not reduce its rates or hand over its organization to the City at an agreed upon tirtce or a price to be decided by a bttlities Board ittttttiry, Tltis question was brought into prominence sttmr yt-ars ago by .\lr. H. Roy Holman, who, during his years in the City Council. kept urging this plank in his election platform and had the satisfaction of seeing the rates eventually re- duced from t3 to 5 cents per kilowatt. The. present Rlayor and LYottttcillors. and es- pecially .\lr. Russel (ltattdlt-r. chairman of the Light Committee, ltave worked successfully for fttrtlter reductions during the past two yeztrs. Attotltcr important factor ltas lteett the news- paper agitation coitrlttctetl itt the columns ofThe (ittartliati by _\lr_ Aloltu F. \\'ht-.'tr. Ftir some vertrs past .\'lr. \\‘licai' ltas interested liitttself in the light and power question not only for Char- lottetown but for otttlyittg districts, and ltas by hie rpltrtrclt inrtzstigatiotts and appeals kept the iss-tts- protiiittetttly lit-fore the public. ' /\ satisfactory sequel to all tltcsc efforts is the at-"motttict-ttietit itutdc before the Utilities Board vcstcrtlayt that the ("ity Cottncil and the Mari- tittic I7.l(‘(‘ll'l\‘ (‘otttpatrv have come to an tinder- statttlittt: which is cottsitlcrcrl satisfactory to both parrics, and is lo the effect that the City will obtain rcdttrtiotis- itt electric liglttittg and power nttc< of sttfliciettt extcttt to avoid the necessity at’ the (‘tttttivil rtttmttttittg to raise fttttrls to take -\wr at .'t tired valuation the plaitt notv owned tltt~ (Vtnttrttiv. ll will be gettcrally agreed "tat this is a swttisfztctorytt solution for the tires- ~ttt. as t-ctvtttttnit‘ cottdititttts are not such as to \\'t'lI" tl~t~ (‘itr etttt-rittu upon .'t new commercial "'<l-"t't"-'tt€' which it would bt- itt no position ' -b' lll rv--v'tt""", develop and cottlrtil in n ~.,.,.. .1 ittte of gt-itt-ral rccessiott. l,\. Pjttfl e Fine Tourist Publicity "More About Nova Scotia,” by Miss Clara lJt-itnis, of Halifax, is the subject of a cliarttiitig book about present-day cottdititiits itt ottr sister Maritime province. lt provides an excellent scqttel to Miss Dennis’ previous work, “Down in Nova Scotia." The attthur, who is a daugh- ter of the late Senator William Dennis and a cottsin of the present Senator W. ll. Dennis, describes what she sees and hears at first hand; and these iittpressittits, littkctl with ltcr own ex- tensive ktttiwletlge of the backgrottttd of the countryside, its ltistoric attd Ulll(’l' associations, ntake a vivid tiictttre. The .\ll\5(|ll()(l0l)0lt and Stctviztcke Valleys. Trttro, Pnrrsbtiro, joggins. River llcbcrt. Wallace, Pictou C0ttttt_v. Atttig- tittish, Cattso. Chester. (ittysbttru. Lttiieitbttrg Cotmlyv. Liverpool-a lttmdred and more places are tottclted ttpott in a ittztnitct" which should prove of special value and interest to stnntner visitors. bliss Dt-nttis is wcll and favorably known in Prince Edtvartl Island which she ltas visited on several occasions. and perhaps she may yet litirl time to do for this province what she ltas so adntiraltly dotte for her native province 0f Nova Scotia in the way of tottrist publicity. bditorial Notes r I English channel first crossed in a ballot! dtis date, i785. >l< >l< * Y! . Canada. l serted that wireless Cauatlzifs Navy has set out for the Pacific— niattoettvcriitg to protect our \\estcrn shores. i * 1K Yr‘ Now tlttrt- ttill be tto tieccssity for liotuc doc- torittll and “old ttitt- curt-s" when tttctltcal tllll can be brought to otit-'s tloor Zlll_\'\\'ll(.'l'L' by air-i platie. >l< >l< 9! $1 The llvsttrt Liberal (itwcrtttttcitt of New llrttttswick. arc ttrrztttgittg to ititrotlttct- l’t'o- \lll(‘lill liicotttc 'l'a.\'—-it.s a way Liberal Pru- vincial tjoicrtttitcttfs lt_:tve — tax ever_vtliiti_t;, tangible and ititzttigililt". - i< >l< >l< =t The s_\tll|t;tlll_\ of the couttnttttity got-s out to llrs. \\4. .\. .\l.'lCl-lll'\‘ll who has lost lt_v death lier father, tttotlici‘ and littsbatid all within a cutttpztrativcly brief period. The late .\lr. .\lac- Larett. whose passing occurred with such start- ling sttddciitttrsi, waspotitilztr with a large ctr- cle of friends who greatly deplore his loss. * at r 1k .\l:ui_v here trill l't'lllL‘llll)Cl‘ .\lr. David Pot- tittger, who died in Motitreztl the other day at the zige of o4. lle was for several years gett- cral tuattager of the ltitcrcolttttiztl‘ and Prince Edward Island Railtvtiys. with lteatlqttztrtcrs at Mfillcltlll. Since his retirement itt i913 he was justly regarded as Cattadtrs grand old railroad ntati. >t< >t< a st , Little scientific proof exists for the theory that the coiitineitts are “driltiitg," l)r_ R. Mel- drttut Stewart. director of the Dotuiitittn Ob- st-rvatory at Ottawa. said before tht- Montreal ltraticlt of the Royal Astrotiottiical Society of The Austrian gettlogist, Wegtrtter. had cotttpttted North Attiericzt was itttivittg away from littropc at the rate of about a meter a vcar. At that rate. there would he a shift of about a tnile in Loot) ycttrs. llttt Dr. Stewart as- tibservatitttts bctwecti (7t- tatva and (irceitwiclt tivt-r ;t period of titaiiy years had shown that the lottgittttlitial titnt- varied so slightly that any “floating,” of the cotttittt-tits tinder the \\'t-;_rettet‘ ltyptttltcsis ittigltt be laid to errors of observation. 4- * * 1k Dr. A. H. “pod, ('.l\l.t'i., ltas rctirctl front the cltttirntztttship of the .‘\lbt-.rt:t \\’lteat lsozird. A5 Qliairnntt] Dr. Wood tttatle a distinct cotttri- btition to co-operttlivt‘ tttarltetittg itt that province. He believed in co-operation tlttirottghly, but cotttittttzilly urged that it be ticctvtttpanied by sett- sible and sane business cottdttct. In this way. he argued, sttbslzttttiztl and sound ltttsiiicss coit- certis cottltl be built tip by the farmers tltent- selves to suit their own ends. His co-otterativc speeches were always tetttpered with wisdom and understanding tttd devoid of bitterness. He has been honored by a doctors rlegrec front the University of Alberta and by a coittpltititiitsltip in the order of St. Michael attd 5t. George front the late British monarch, King Licorge V. at u- =t< v Mr, de Valera has stepped down from the office of President of the lrislt lircc State to become Prime Minister of lrelttttd. lfnder the new Cottstittttioti his title is Tluiisetttrli, which ht- prefers to translate as chief rather than as lead- er. The new charter cittbotlics the plans and specifications for the Ireland of his drcaitts, Christian democracy based on the family> and exercising sovereign rights ittdetietttletit of all foreign control to develop its life according to its own genius and traditions. In Mr. de Valerefs eyes tlte charter ittattgttrates not only a new Cotistittttion bttt a nctv Stale adapted to the peculiar character of the Irish people, ex- pressing the rcligitttis principles of the titajor- ity, with complete tolerance for others, and cott- taitiittg a uttiqtic scl of “tlirectives" designed to guide the legislative body itt traitslatitig these pflrtClplCS ittto social policies to trtcct modern conditions. Tltc Cuttstittttion he has put tltrottgh against opposition, tame compared with tltc fierce contests of the past, is proof of his personal power and a triumph of ltis ideas. It is a masterpiece attd tnoutttttent to the attstere ttioralist who survives the hothcad of the revolu- tion. It is proof also that although five years in office ltave mellowed ltim, they have not al- tcred the coticeptiotts of his own revolutionary youth. Mr. de Valerzfs opponents accept his Constitution because they say it changes noth- ing. Mr. dc Valera probably is closer to the trtttli in contending that as the first charter was not drawn in complete itidcpetttlcncc free of con- sidcratiotts based ott the old treaty with Britain it nicatis a new start and so cltattges everything. Its ituportatice. iti his itiittd. lies in setting an Irish pattern for Ireland. This intportance is ttttdt-rlinerl by recognition on the part of Britain .'tttt| lltt- tloutittitttts of Ireland's fttll right to set lltis- pattern. Fit a itt-iv chapter iii Irish ltislory’ and .\itglo-Irislt relations begins. JUL UIIAKLU l ' NUTES BY TIIE WAY The country cannot at one and » the same time have abundant em- t ployment and the cheap food which l was partly symptom, partly cause, of world-wide t‘ pressioa and un- empoyment. The low prices which prevailed even as recently as a cou- ple oi years ago meant starvation tor agriculture everywhere and the litabtlity of agricultural populatlons at. home or abroad to purchase the product. of mlustry. Happily we have now emerged from that; situ- ' anon and the rlsese in prices has‘ been no more than the nec and inevitable accompaniment of rising prosperlty. -- Telegraph and ; IWOHllIIg host, London. [ISTUWN ‘JUAKUIAH llllbat but? of Quilts QbeeIIulaaIl-D. INFLAMIHATION or‘ THE GALL BLADDER. IB VERY. comfort It. has been found by examination after deahh that 2 to Illndlvldu- ills ln every ten have gall stones and another 2 to 3 or every ten Franco now faces a. better trained > and equipped foe 1.11311 he did earlier _in the war. The opposing forces , are almost equal. The only au- I vantage he holds is in the ai- strength. The capture of Teruel in- dicates a greater arlvlng power tn ttlie government forces than they , have displayed ln the wnole war. l ; The snlttlng of hostilities to thel t Aragon front has a so relieved Mad- ' rid and Almiem from threatened‘ 0fIBllalV8d.—-EXCl‘Bl1g€. Either the Japanese forces which. went. to clina to “establish order", are out of control or they are under, coittvol. Tokyo may be really dis- ' tresscd .-ur either answer will be embarrassing. President Roosevellfst "request." that Americas opinion of , recent. Japanese perforinnitces be tcoitveycd w the Emperor is espec- ' tally difficult to handle. Either the 9 Emperor can control the military oi- lite cannot. Individual Japanese are t stopping Antcrictms on the streetsl ot Tokyo to express regret, Ger- many and Italy ate showing act ve coitcerit. Obviously Tokyo is nearer | than it has yet been to having to .givc a genuine answer to British > and American protests-Christian Science Monitor. When things go well there are al- . ways people who wag their heads‘ and say that. good times cannot last, This vague notion is the only foun- dat on for recent talk of a coming slump. There are no facts behind it, ‘and no responsible opinion. All lhe| facts and all the authority are on the other side. “There is no slumpl and no reason to anticipate n,’ slump." says Mr. Reginald Mclfien-t na, chairman of the Midland Bank. t To this ful.y informed business man t the famous trade cycle ls a myth.) What lic does see is the enormous_ expansion of Britain?» home market. t Facts like these are the complete answer to all doubts and fears. -- London Sunday Chronicle. There is no proof that this gen- eration betrayed youth, not" that lt. Youth dld not speak out. against the last ttar, nor is there evidence that. young men are more concerned than old men about; the world's existing it than ls being done. Alas! It ls the other way round. The men who ln the past. ten years brought upheaval and tragedy in Germany, Italy, and other countries-of‘ the world were not. old men. They were young men: mostly youth. When they turned ‘out the otcfiitéft’, the oltlmen who had “betrayetfl-them, they did not turn to peace. They. turned to war; turned to back shirts and brown shirts; to guns and bombs; to steel and marching men. In Germany and Italy today, where ls youth? No, there is no proof that. ln the demo- cratic latids, at. any rate, youth has. been betrayed. Some young men may charge betrayal, but. not all, not most; the charge, when lt ls made land it is made too often), come from old men. Youth itself ls being msquoted-London Sunday Chronicle. Speeding up of Russia's armament program ts reflected in an increase in orders placed tn the United States. Having demonstrated that he can control the domestic situation, Stalin is actively setting himself in opposition to Japanese penetration of China. Russia ls regarded in Washington as the only country that will have an important; influ- ence on Japanese pollcia-Business Week. If for one occasion the constitu- tion ls amended 1n a single essential article, the precedent wlll be cre- ated, the door will be open. And we w ll see afterwards how the hardy centrallzers will rush lnto this breach to take the rest. The loss of one privilege wlll invite another, the disappearance of one right or one power will provoke another. Soclal reform can be carried out perfectly ln this country in the contractual way between the different contract- ing parties of Conferedaton. Prac- tical successful experiments have proved that. We should continue on the same road, but the constitution should not be uselessly amended for ulterior motives as dangerous as they are plain-Montreal L'1llus- tratton. But it rmay as well be remembered that. the boycott ls a two-edged t sword. It cuts both ways. Nobody could blame Japanese people for re- fusing to buy Canadian-made goods ls lt became plain that. anything llke | that these adults have disease of the liver - and bladder without stone forma- tion. ‘rhls means then that‘ not less than half of all adults have gall bladder trouble. And ff only those of middle age (E0 to 60 years) are considered, it would tnettn that. ‘I of every 10 have liver anci gall bladder tmu-ble. It; Ls not surprising therefore that I write so often abzut. the liver, the tking of the organs, and the little sack adjoining itP-lhe gall bladder-auto which blle or gall manufactured by the ‘iver is uied. Not/withstanding this graet per- centage of cases, ll: is a fact thrt the majority of those wittli this chronic inflammation of the gall bladder do not. know they have ll. and believe that the symptoms — gas pressure, bloating, belching. and “lndlgestlon.” are due to same- thing they have eaten which upset the swmaoh. In reporting his observations of 5Z9 operations upon the gait blad- der at Hantilton (Canada) Gen- eral Hospital, Dr. O.W Niemeir ln the Canadian Medical Journal states: "It ls possible that aertaln chronlc gall bladder coitditiotis may remain apparently latent tlnactivc or quiet) for long periods of time. From extperience, ‘hcwever, we know patients will etidure considerable distress from diges- tive disturbance and suffer it's- comfort and even attacks of pain for long periods of time ivithout seeking relief b_v operation “ Dr. Nlemelr prints out that when the symptoms are practically al- ways present it ls a mistake not. to undergo examination. lncludlng Xray. If’ examination shows suf- flclent evidence operation should l PUBLIC FORUM f“. .'t-g. l; ‘IQ II III “um-g” a, nerreependean a! ‘union 0| interact. Ike Olnrlnfletovvl flaalllal (one not gaqggflrlly calorie Ill 011"" u anneal-Illi- CHARACTER TRAINING NEEDED Sin-Kindly allow me lo p're- sent a. challenge to our Education- " at Authorities. It Ls generally admitted that aclenllflc uiiv cement ln recent t years has far outstripped moral and ' social progress. Notwithstanding lmarvelous skill and mechanical t power, the good earth ls st.l.t1 biot- ted by poverty, distrust and war. Therefore direct Character Ed- ucation, call ll; social Science, World Citizenship, or what you wlll, should be prescribed by the Department of Education, in every country, as a separate - subject, obligatory to all pupils 1n every t grade. The lndlrect methods now used are effective as far as they go.‘ , The studies of health, literature and current events, also school ldtscipline and the example o! l teachers, all contribute. but: are plainly inadequate. Social, eco- , ttomlc and International conflicts all point to the necessity of direct, practical character Iductttlon from kindergarten‘ to university. ' This ls not to excuse the home or the church, but to poliit out , that the school has a special 0p- .port.unity. Many parents them- selves need character training and only a few are trained teachers. Attendance at church schools ls vnltmtnry and brleffwhile at pub- llc school ll. ls compulsory and for several hottrs five days a week. Pubic lnstrttctors are tralited while Sunday School teachers are often untrained and few church schools give a systematic graded course. Public schools are support- ed by taxation and churches by free-will offerings. Churches are apt to emphasize doctrine while schools can stress moral values Churches. being dlvlded, miss tutttty who need training 1n how to live. Cannot. our educators develop a , course of character teaching, bas- ed on the ntoi-al and social prln- ciples‘ of Jesus, interpreted 1n the light of the modern social, eco- rtomlc and international situation? , Wl‘l the school accept its respon- l sibllity to lay broad and deep the foundations of social and finan- be peflormed as won as p-551.“ clal justice and world frlendshlp as the history of these 529 opera- tions shows that in the early cases vttittiout stones, there were less than 2 percent. of deaths, whereas when condition existed for a long time. the death rate W35 nearly 4 per. cent-just double “A diseased gall bladder. even state, or could do much more about lhwgh quiet‘? (few if ‘my 5W9" l toms) ls a menace because of the attack of gall complications. " A diseased gall bladder may n1 o be the cause of other dlscasc or ‘lsenses in the system, to the patient. possibility of an stone colic wit/h ICARUS Here fell the daring Icarus in his prime, He who was brave enough to scale the skies; . And hlere bereft of plume his body 2G5, Leaving tue valiant envious of that. cllmb. 0 rare performance of a. soul sub- me, That with small loss such great Dd- vantage buys! Happy mishap! fraught; with so rich. l1 p ze. That bids the vanquished triumph over time. So new a path his youth dld not: dismay, Hts wings but not his noble hem-t. said nay; He ltad the gorious sun for fun- era] pyre; He died upon a high adventure bent, The sea his grave, his goal the fii-mametit, Great. ls the tomb, but greater the desire. —Maurloe Bat-lug. from the Italian of Sannazar RABBY-l‘ FOR UN E REGINA-Some ready cash vval obtained by hunirrs tn Sask- atchewan this year when 578,803 Jack rabbits were kllled or trap- ped. Pelts are worth 15 cents each. the Mitt-red linear. a unlversal boycott was being ap- p. led against Japan here. Panther, t such a boycott engenders habredsl that linger, and which wlll work against Canadian goods and Jupan- , ese good-wlll toward Canada long! after the present business in Chlnn t ls pasta-Vancouver Bun. It ll absolute nonsence to talk as lf any section of the country could be mobilized or organized agalnsl: any other section. The moment any such feeling comes lnlo our publlc ltfe. our fishing-rod Dom- lnlon wlll be ln dlre peril. What we want to remember Ls that. we are all Canadians. We are not provlnclalfy- mlndedv Any 0t’ us would resent an abuse of our aplrlt. of concession, tired-Sell! as an individual ieaenta en obvloue attempt to impose on hla good nature. But aecllonallsm would be n deadly danger. It, u history tragically teaches in, t5 the polgqn- ous spawning-ground of reunion.- Monlreal Star. Itlaoneofthe tragedfeeof-the have ended in the futility of many words. We have discussed economic difficulties. the problems of war and peace and the menace of rein-ma- merit. Our fears have now become facts: economic selfishness has run riot and the threat of war ls upon us. The conferenoemethod of lntema- ltonal diplomacy has felted because nations lacked the wlll to turn their words into atettona-Jrlte New Out- look. i-r—> I am. Sir. etc. REV. T. R. GOUDGE. Noel. Hants Co. N. B. War Graves (Manchester Guardian) Twenty years ago the Impetlal War Graves Commission camelnto existence. when the guns atlll roared from Switzerland to the sea and war graves as they were known to the serving soldier , (when they were not a. nameless l sepulchre in the tragic soil through tvlticlt he dug attd trudged) were the vast or scattered clusters of brown wooden crosses behind the line. Now they have been turned into an almost world-Wide as- sembly of ordered and gracious i-cstlttg-nlaces “To the Mentory of One Million Dead of the Brltlsh Etnptre." and tn “The Immortal Heritage." which was published re- cently. Slr Fabian Ware gives a. fttll survey of the work of the Commission in bringing about that tri-nsforntatlon. There l; a. movlng preface. too, by Mr. Edmund Bttmden. who speaks for the serv- ing soldiers of twenty and more years ago. And there ls a remind- er of the hope expressed by King George V when he visited the war graves on the old Western. Front in 1922. that those "vfslble mem- orials" might serve ultimately t0 “drww all peoples together tn san- About the store as a whole. birthday gift, and also the What When you make a caish office, l t l l t Men’s Clothing-Reversible Yarns-l Box Monarch Girls’ Shop-Jumbo Ladies’ Hat-Hat House Furnishings 0f flee-Goods of purchase, or pay cash you will be given a slip, write your name and address. The slips are retained in sealed boxes until the last day of the sale. Then they are drawn for the fortunate winners. Special Gifts a Men’s Furnishings-Broadcloth Shirl. — _- -_ 52,50 - ‘ All Wool Pullover Jeney $2.95 Linen Department—Lace Table Cloth - -- - Lingerie Department-Satin Slip - - - - - 52,00 Ladies’ Ready to VVezflT-i-Tllzpe Dress - Dept.—Esmond Reversible CD OD BIRTHDAY GIFTS At thei45th Anniversary Sale 0f‘ course....the three birthday cakes, given by the Then each department. offers a Office. - to do at. the on which you may Ruiz —- — - — - $3.25 Boys’ Clothing-Navy Frieze Zip Jacket - — $2.75 Ladies’ Gloves & Neckwenr-Kid Gloves - - $250 Hosiery Department-Si pr. Silk Hose - - -- - $235 $2.88 Silks and Dress Goods-Dress Length — — -- $3.00 Sweater — — — — - - 51,95 $2.50 —- — — $2.50 - _ - $5.95 Blanket - — — $2.25 Men’s Basement-Jumbo Coat Sweater — - — $2.50 Women's Basement-All Wool Coat Sweater — $2.45 your own choice, value — — $2.50 And 3 Birthday CAKES "on In: lsuwn C I: a l K. s. tirnittitttt. Trustee under the and Reports lty; totalitarian States postulate the self-control. but mainly for I. readlitess to sacrifice all to an- other declsion by that armed force wltlch plainly brings on the his- tory of the past two decades. no decision at all. It ls hard to study this record of ‘what. the Imoerlal Commission has clone. with its "It"!!! rzrnvely beautiful lllustra- lions. without a sense of traglc lrotty as well as of awe. Sill‘. even our dictators praise peace while they surround themselves with drilled devotees. The choice ls be. tween sanity and selfcontrol for the Xlflllflns or insanity and self- destrttctlon. If some of its can toll and organize for the dead. why not all for the living? No other memorial could serve the dead so truly. “After” Vincent Massey (Sydney Post. Record) ’I'lte story carried by the Ottawa Journal to the effect that Hon. Vincent Mnsseyfls record as Can- ada's High Commissioner to Lon- don. ls to come ln for heavy crltlc- lsm at: the appronchlng session of Parliament. wt‘! cause general sur- prise outside the Capital. Mr Mas- sey‘s appointment was acclaimed as a particularly happy one when lt was made. and those whoknew htm well predicted that: his areer would prove serviceable and dls- tlngulshed. But ff the Ottawa. newspaper's article may be credited. he has fal- len down sadly on the Job. "Admlnlstratlon of Canada. House 1n lnndon." ll: says, "L; to be the subject of strong crltlctsm jtibniis". KID n EY p“ hloqylw M /\( H‘ ‘q k ~n poet-war era that. we‘ have had much talk and lltttle action. Confer- ences which should have been the prelude to more declave policies _ I UM t "ids "m" It uvNrl "U". b H '7 1-1-15 ‘F 1n the House of Commons at the coming session of Parliament. Lib- eral members particularly are tn- censed over the lack of attention and ‘scant. courtesy’ accorded them this year. , Certified Public Accountant and Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised. Profit and Loss Accounts Computed. Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements Administration of Estates a Specialty. ztzozvsv, T0 LOAN, 88 Great George St. ti... c.r.l., B-C-A-l Bankruptcy Act Prepared. snu- ’ Charlottetown, P. EJ. Q1‘ “The attitude of Hon. vlnoent souls, ready at times to map where Massey, Canada's High Commis- sloner tn London, wlll be drawn to the attention of Parliament. The .membc~rs who went to London for th: Coronation saw little of the High Commissioner. who. they claimed, was too busy wlth social functions to bother with them. “Another cause for complaint was the accommodation set aside for the Canadians who went. to London to see their Monarch crowned. The members maintain- thal Canada House showed llllte Judgement fn the flats to be rent- ed by the visitors. Complaints were vigorous about overcharging and accommodation. "One member said that he m- fused to rent what. Canada House found for htm, but went. out and leased‘ a, better flat at. a much low- ra .' It wlll be lnleiestlng to hear what. the conservative members who attended the Coronation cere- monies may have to say. "when and lf" this full dress debate over Vincent Massey lakes place. P08- slbly the trouble may be that. the Liberal membes expected more than they got, and possibly more than» they should. In the my at ceremonlous attention from amen appointee of their Government. ‘Those who administer patronage are sometlmes proud and exacting '_‘““__i_'*“~j"r—~~ tittttttttttttttitiitit C h! Co hl Co l ' fllllilkdllfll Gugt TempletoWeRA MAI-I Capsules. Gel or 81 box from your druggiet. H.5- they have not sown and to gath- er where they have not strawed. Possibly they found ln Mr .Ma.ssey an equally proud and unbendlnt; soul. MAGS BLOOD F000 FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE A combination especially valuable In the treatment of ‘those dlaeuea where their orlgln l: traeeable to an Im- poverlehed eondltlon of the blood. One of the greatest remed- fee In the treatment of Rheu- matlnn. For those. who have loaf their appetite Mac: Blood Food wlll prove the restor- atlve. GET A BOX NOW. 50c. Mall Order-r Promplly Attended to. Sassy Stomach; RELIEVED If yon have any trouble with your stomach such u lmllnltloll, dylpeplll, will‘ stomach, heartbnm. peiflfl dlrtreel, etc. Then don't de- lay getting a bottle of Dr. L. B. Evan's Stomach Mixture Immediately. Evan's Stomach Mixture h VIII Writelet-IREEum le Templeton TRIAL Li ' RAZ- mm mm. Mali. '5'...»- n?” Vitalit] alwatis us BRAHMIN RANGE PEKOE TF a prescription of Dr. L. B. lvana, noled Englleh Phfllll‘ fan of which we have the aole rfghtl to and llnee eelllng ll have received numerous tee- thnonlale Iran. utllfled fill!’ ehaeen. Try a bottle today. Prlee ll cents. 4 HIE TWO MAGS