.,.-,~.._-M»i-l-4.§>,.,. , PAGE FOUR tin. Charlottetown Guardian Pruliicnt Lleuh-Col. W. Chalk! I. IQLIIO llee-Preniileut J. B. Burnett, IJJ. Eilllur and llunughng Director J. l» BIIII“ In I. I- fii-rrelury LIQuL-CDI. l). A. lluclflunu, D. l. . Auuuclule l-Jilltura Frank Walker and D. l. Currie 551 .00 (l ldvuon) fil-‘iilllilfi ‘l2"{-ii‘,'“$fllii“ Si. Li“. ¢i.'."i.i’..°£.'..i'--ii-¢ u \'l'll|1'O liliiurd lulumi $500 n" 1w (ll Mivllfll Ala-led to Canada and United Stain SATURDAY. MAY l. 1981 The Hindenburg Disaster . Whatever the catise of the shocking disaster to tli_c giant dirigible Hinilcnburg at Lakehurst, i is incredible to the people of this continent lhzit it ivas iliie, as hinted in German quarters, to "aiiti-Nitzi sabotage"- Tlte very suggestion 3f such a stispicioit throws :1 somewhat disquiet- ing light on the itientality of the people enter- taining it. .\'o (luuht, at any rate, there will be q very thorough investigation of the tragedy, which came like it bolt from the blue and focus- zd ltorritictl ititerest by reason of the heavy ilezitli toll zuiiong ilit‘ crew and passengers. It is more than two y-eurs since the last diri- gible disaster, which occurred to the U. S. navy airship Macon off the Pacific coast. Only two - persons were killed 0n that occasion, but there were 73 fatalities when the .\l<ron crashed in an electrical storm in i935. .\iiotltcr tragic epi- stitle in the history- of air tiavigation was the explosion of the British dirigihle R-lot over l-"rziiicc in I930. in which 4o persons perished. lii the last twenrv-thrce years the Canadian Press lists no fewer than eighteen major diri- gible disasters. ln the Mnritimes news of the Hindeitburg explosion came as an anti-climax to the shock- ing ixtilwity accident near Springhill junction. The Tragic Muse "But, that these base and beguarly oonceits Should carry it, by the multitude of V0106!" Against the most abstracted work, opposed To the stuffed nostrils of the drunken rout! O, this would make a learned, and liberal soul To rive his strained quill, up to the back, And damn his long-watcnd labours to the fire". -Ben Jonson. \\’ith all due respect to the critics at the D0- minion Drama Festival this year, their dictum that comedies and farces should be preferred on the stage to tragedies cannot be accepted with- out protest from any one acquainted with the glorious tradition of the English drama. Are “Hamlct", “Othcllo" and “Macbeth" to be dismissed as inferior to Shakespeare's earlier plays because they deal with tragic rather than comic themes? Or were Marlowe, Ford and \Vebster—to name btit three of Shakespeare's great contemporaries in the field of tragic ilrania—less competent artists than Congreve and \\'_vchei-lcy and the whole school of Restoration dramatists, who revelled in light and frivolous subjects because they were of an age which was essentially light and frivolous? The question resolves itself into what, after all, is the aim of tragedy? Is it to eater to a morbid pessimism, as the Ottawa. commentators WOlllfl seem to imply? Is it not rather to ele- vute the moral character, to purge the emotions by menus of pity and terror; to broaden the channels of human sytttpatlty and experience? “Of all the arts,” says a noted modern Eng- Iish critic, “tragedy is the proudest, the most triumphant, for it builds its shining citadel in the. very centre of the enemy's country, on the very summit of his highest mountain; from its impregnablc watchtowers, his camps and arsenals, his columns and forts, are revealed; within its walls the free life continues, while the legions of Death and Pain and Despair, and all the serrile captains of fyfliflt Fate, afford the bur- gers of that dauntless city new spectacles of beatity." _ This seems also to ha-ve been the conception of the ancient Greeks, who raised tragedy to the lofticst level which art has ever attained. If we have lost relish today for tragic drama, and prefer “as many comedies and farces as possible", it is f_or the same unflattering rea- con, probably, that we prefer light reading t0 $hc solid clitssics oi literature. and. ]&ZZ 0r a um,,,,,,,,_,-_,.n|_;" to the. symphonies of Beethoven. A Note Of Warning .\ iutte ni wanting is sounded in the current iiiiiiitltly rt-x iew of the Bank of Nova ScOIiO. will‘! l"'L‘ill'll ti» the sll;it‘]t atlvaticc in commodity prices “lticlt 11.15 bet-u the most striking development h,‘ iwi-iit tiittnihs. From June, 1936. t0 Maflfh la~t llu‘ "rut-ml art-rage of wholesale prices in (Xiuiiilzt mtit si-tl by roughtlyr l8 per Cent. Th8 itdriiuet- ltzis been lu-ztvily coitcentrated in bHSIC fnllllllntlllll‘<. During the. past nine mOHKh-‘iv Iirici-s oi (Eiuiziliiii izirm products hatlve rigenhll)" 4o pcr rent. iiutl those of base metas an t cir products by 44 per crttt. AfiTlOtilg tbs fopest pro- ducts. zivei" ‘e quotations or um er ave in- creuwil by lipei- cent. and though that for news- print has atlrziiiceil only slightly,da consihderpfbly higher price has been announce for t e irst half of i938. Still more important have been the spectacular jumps irtlquotatfions folr whcfflt, copper, lead and zine. Ficse c anges iave or the time being brought about a more ‘healthy rc- liitionship between the price; of primary pm- ducts and mnntifzicttirerl goo s, It should be remembered, however, says the Bank letter, that farmers generally have not been able to avail themselves of current wheat prices, for they have long since disposed of practically all of the last crop. Current estimates indicate that stocks of wheat on farms are no more than sufficient to cover sccdHrequiremcntsQY Thehpix- sent high quotations re ect an imme iate s o - age of stipplies following it aHCCCSSIOH 0i Sh“! crops in North America and fibroid. "m" ma" any significant increase in_world consumptipn- "lf (he immediate attainment "ofdda ihiglicf price level were! 1th; whole story, 3f Ssififisgé" tor, "there wont e every reason or - hm. But, as often happICHS, the" '5 "mill" -.le t0 the picture, lessbbvious none the 655 real, which arouses serious misgivings. N0 011B knows how long these prices can be maintain- ed. based as many of them _are_on temporary shortages of a few commodities, in part foster- ed by re-iarmament and acccntufated by specula- tion." Behind The Pageaniry Evidencing the_ keen interest of our United _Statcs neighbors in the Coronation preparation; in the Old Country, the Christian Science Mon- itor has come out with a magnificent special Coronation Number accompanied by a message from ETCSXIIEIII Roosevelt on the importance of cementing Anglo-American relations in the cause of world peace. lntroducingtlie issue is a leading editorial in which emphasis is placed on the fact that Am. erican interest in Britain's feeling today springs not from “any republican reverence for royalty” or even from ties of trade and tradition, but “front a sharing of basic ideals and purposes, some of which have been plainly at work in events of the last few days.” What are these “basic ideals and purposes"? First and forentost, in the Monitor's opinion, “a mutual love of order, or peace." Devotion to democratic processes, “to settling things by (lis. cussion rather than violence", is part of the foundation.‘ “insistence on equal justice is aii- othcr meeting ground. Love of liberty is an- other- Similar concepts of Deity lie deep. Not in military alliance, not in any materialist sense of race, iiot iii any joint enterprise of selfish idealism, not in unstable scntimclitality, but iu l .11: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By Th Way. The number o! Clechoslnvllhn politicians advgceating concessions _, rmany is growing iiptwe. Bomb of the scheme: for kiving autonomy w the German- Speaki-ng districts that one hears mooted in send-official circles in Prague come little lhort d’ hand- ing over these vital provinces to the tender meiolea of Httlerlati Germany. Conversations are tak- ing place between Henleln, the German leader, and men who are, 01‘ Pfefelld t0 b9. the authorized interpreters of the Prague Cabinet's no re- flection upon the courage or the the that thcv foam ' intentions. This suggests well-known patriotism Czechs. But they feel are in a situation where lt may he advisable to sacrifice a great deal of view that in the long run it is easier to sacrifice great than small things. . . .'1‘he passive acceptance by the Locarno Powers of the flagrant Rhineland outrage o‘ March 7, 1936. and of every other cynically insoisiit rerudiatlott of Treaty obligations and of the satictity of moral law, had a most damaging echo in Prague, in Bucharest and ‘in Balgrade....If the developments of the next few weeks or mouths demonstrate that ‘n fact. the small nations of Cen- the like-ntiudedtiess of coiniuoii spiritual aspira- tions are the surest foundations of British-Am» cricztn understanding and co-operatioii laid. .'\ll'l those bases are not exclusive; they are broad enough to offer a coitimon meeting ground for all humanity." 1 Editorial Notes 1 ‘This date i660, Charles II was proclaimed King. Tomorrow Sir Jzmleks Earric, Bat-L, O.M., celebrates his birthday-born 1860. n- u- n: Death and disaster all around we see, while here a chosen people ‘we appear to be. i‘ ll! A nun who could and would eat l 5 whole lob- stcra at u meal ought himself to be canned. l! i W German oppression of the Jews has its com- pensation—none was aboard the ill-fated Hin- detiburg. a w u Are you to be in the parade? It will be a memorable and historic one-none more so in the long records of the province. i! * W Did the benign Campbell Government make any rebate to those enterprising Prince County lobster fishermen who last year bought their gasoline at 11c per gallon, while we were pay- ing 31c? n n- 4- Premier Campbell and Mr. Massey C.A., have concluded a deal with Mr. Rogers, Minister of Labour, for unemplyoment relief work. Hope it is generous, or at all events sufficient to keep our many unemployed busy till winter once more sets in. u u n- Now the anarchists are taking a hand in wrecking the government of Spain. It was ever thus-laxity of administration followed by dicta- torship, followed by Communism, and ultimate- ly anarchy and chaos. It is the part pf wisdom to nip any such tendiency it; the bud. Development of a scientific “divining rod" to locate petroleum was reported to the annual meeting of the American Philosophical Society. The device operates by analyzing gases found above and immediately below the ground in oil bearing lands. The mass spectograph is a deli- cate instrument hcrctofore used to separate isotopes, which are the component parts of the same chemical elements but have different weights. The iustrumcnfs use as a “divining rod” was described by its inventor, Dr, Walker Blcakley, Assistant Professor of Physics at Princeton University. Because the device is so sensitive, Dr. Bleakley said, it can detect rare gases which oil mcn say are itidicative of the presence of oil far beneath the cartlfs surface. T I I Revision of the Ottawa trade agreements in the interest of British industry and agriculture is being urged by the Conservative party's tariff policy committee. At the same time the “Econ- omist" and the “SpectatoW, weekly reviews. call for plans to encourage economic rela- tion between the United States and the British Empire at the forthcoming Imperial Confer- cnce. The recommendation for revision of the Ottawa ‘agreements was contained iit a resolu- tion sent by the recently-formed Conservative committee to Mr. Neville Chamberlain, Chancellflr of the Exchequer. It declared: “This committee recommends that the Ottawa accords should_be so amended as to provide tliat,whilc preserving the margin of preference, the United Kingdom should be empowered to impose duties on Em- pirt- products, both industrial and agricultural, where such duties are necessary iit the inter- csts of the United Kingdom." I? >l< i‘ Approxiiiizttely $5u0.ooo.uoo a yrztt" euultl he saved in the payroll of the five million office workers of the United States through the ap- plication of sound principles and techniques of scientific managements to clerical works, declar- i organization authority, iu an address to the Mott- ed Mr. Harry Arthur Hopf, American business trcal Branch of the Engineering Institute of Canada at the Institute Auditorium, Mansfield street. Mr. Hopf described the ten qualifica- tions of a. scientific business executive as: A strictly impersonal viewpoint; ability to thin‘. in terms of management; a passion for truth as revealed by methods of science and research: adequate training in sound methodology and ‘thorough grasp of modern statistical methods; ample cultural background; an attitude of philosophic doubt; devotion to scientific use of literature; spirit of co-operation with other work- ers in the field, as well as with members of his organization; success in the art of self-interpret- ation; and the saving grace of humor. The trial and Eastern Europe have the great democracies behind them and thrt collective security is not a vain word or an empty phrase t0 which they are rendering lip service alone, they all may yet be well with Europe and the world. To-dsyitnat is the lesson that la writ 5o large in Central Europe. that he who ruins may wads-The National Re- vew. The great fault of the America-n tax system is riot mat it rests on boo narrow _a. Phase. but that only part of’ the these is visible. It would he an excellent thing if some of the many taxes now levied indi- rectly were promptly scrapped in favour of direct personal taxes, even on the smallest incomes. That would give us an electorate with n greater sense of responsibility in the matter 0f public finance, and legislators, with more backbone in the matter of retrenchment-New York Titties. i “In the spring a yifung man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of 1ove"—lbut this has to do with love of flowers and gardens. ‘The writer does not claim to be an authority on birds. He hopes. however, that these few words will be of help to many people who soon will be planting flowers or vegetable seeds. The species for today's study lathe scarecrow. A scarecrow is more useful than ornamental. "Clothes do not make the man," (but they do make the scarecrow. A scarecrow stands a lot without a. murmur. He has no caws for complaints. .\ scarecrow scares. but doesn't crow about it. A scarecroow is an affect- ed creature; so stuck up. Yet. n. scarecrow never gets anywhere; he is an old stlck-iit-the-mud. After all, a. scarecrow is just a. frame-up, but don't tell the birds. Scarecrows make crows scarce. Birds do not believe in signs, but they do believe in scarecrows. Exc. I sec no way for u: to keep out except absolute neutrality. This means complete isolation from belligerent nations and nations doing business with belllgerents. It ls impossible to define muni- tziong of war. Food, for example, is more important than gunpowder. Americans would travel at their own risk. They would do business at their own risk. We might con- sider whether the Government should not pay as a. subsidy the average annual profits over a five- year period before the war to any corporation that had been doing foreign bitslness. If this were done, corporations from trying to con- duct business with the belligerents directly or indirectly-The Forum (New York). German denial of the massacre by Nazi ilyers of the Nationalist population of Gucrnica. would be much more convincing if the semi- official Voclikischcr Beobacherb had not described the reports a “lax, shameful Jewish journalism." One remembers the brutalitles of the Nazis to the Jews. which all but the Jews deny tn Germany. Ham- ilton Spectator. According to the conclusions reached by scholars, the first quarter of the present century was "the bloodiest period in all history.” Having studied 902 wars and 1,615 "internal disturbances" reaching back over 2,000 years. they find that the "war index" for the twentieth century is “eight times greater" than in "all the preceding centuries. In other words,’ says Prof:.=.-.ci' Sorskln. ‘the average man o." the thirteenth century had 6.500 more chances t0 die peacefully in bed than has his descendant in the twentieth." — Baltimore Sun. The busep only exist because so (a: they have managed to render a specialized kind of service. The railways have shown, both in Can- ada and the States, that when they get down to business, they can take it all. People like to travel by train, prefer it, in fact, to all other means of travel, when they can afford it. The railways have, of late. made it possible for people to travel, both on long and short joumeya, at reasonable and very cheap rates, and the people have not been slow to take advantage of the offer. Buses and trucks should carry their full shore of the tax loud in view of the fact that their xcadbed that part of their Business equipment indispensable to their xlaience, is provided from the public funds. But they must not be simply taxed out. of ex- lstance because they take business away from the railways. The ratt- ways have proved beyond question the business. they can gtep out and last qualification surely should be the first. take iL-Dauphin Herald. in order to preserve what retinitis. it might help to prevent great» that any time they feel like taking ‘ an IKBQOLID. DON'T WORRY ABOUT YOUR HEART I When you feel a pain in m; m3. . ion ot the heart-directly over it, . below it, above it or to one aide- , and you are not doing any work, and it ls not after eating a heavy meal. ‘it .s not. likely that. there is flhlfllilng wrong with your heart. again, you find yourself getting out of breath easily, and you have been riglicy told that this is the fu-st sign of a falhng heart, If, how- ever, you have been éatm; too much acid food-—eggs, bread, ceteals, meat, , flair-the blood and tissues are likely to be acid and are asking for more oxygen which would mean itavliig to breathe oftener. ‘i Perhaps also, you find your heart . beating rap dly, perhaps at a rate of l 8i to so instead oi the usual 72 beats to the minute. If you are under any tension or strain, or have just eaten a hearty meal, it is nor- mal or natural for the heart rate to increase. PUBLIC FORUM run lolull u town l“ W flugqulq- by oon-uvilrlcutu ll qnnlom of lnurul. ‘Ila Uhnrlntlahwi Gunilla! ltd Ill q adorn the Qllllnll o! ocrluopudenll. man's BBlDGI Bin-On may 1st 11st,! naked "Taxpayer" through the Public, Forum to change his battleground to other parts of the Second Dia- trict of Queens, Oolville Road, 0. N. R... crossing. Who were the fifty percent who worked on this relief work or otherwise? And 10111191‘ 1 would ask, does he know 1f Y-hfl WV‘ eminent supplied those my D!!!‘- cent with free gas for their can for the faithful who could not; ride bicycles to perform their arduous day's labor from nine a. m. to some- time in the afternoon? I am. Sir, etc. v PRISON VISITATION sin-I couldn't help wondering on Sunday while hearing the Sal- vation Army at the jail, why churches didn't do this work. There must be c reason why their money is sent to India, China, Africa. and to fill parts of the world and. the prisoners in However the thought is not. that you should ignore or tell yourself rzo "Ivftlct" the pain in the cheat. or under breast bone. the getting out of breath easily or the rapid beat of the heart. The very fact that you have these symptoms and they "get on your nerves" should cause you m saty tn yourself, "I've either got heart disease or I haven't and I'm going to find out about it." Fortunately your family physician can tell you in a very few minutes whether or not your heart is sound. And if he finds it. sound then you can give the pain, shortness of breath. and the rapidity, even some irregularity, no more thought. And even if he finds some actual heart trouble. does this mean that you are doomed to the life of an invalid till you pass away? ' By simple tests-exercise, holding the breath, and otherm-or by means of the electrocardcgraph and fluoroscope, your doctor is able to estimate Just what your heart can do “safely.” He will give you some simple instructions as to rest, exer- cise, and food; (medicine is some- times glven to steady the heart, and also to a great extent to steady the upset mind.) So, don't wony about your hes-rt. It is sound or it isn't. Even if not sound, all you need to do is to fol- low the doctor's advice, and so live “safely? 11mm‘ or EllITIBE -- 19st A little Isle that spans the aeven 568$ n pulsinglwiblt the iiiiiwi-y of past Yea-TS. Toward which the sentiment of Empire turns. We watch thy unfolding tritimphs , once , In welding destinies in along chain Of sovereigns, kings and queens and entperors Thy princes, nobles, men of great renown, Are gathering east and west to swell the van. The argosles of nations, lay with . 3085. Bring forth a. chosen few, Domin- ions’ pride, first ltiiltlelslbrfi and counsellors of no . From uiuia. come her princes. great with gold, Arid jeweled retinues that boast a. state Unrivalled in the new-found realms - of wealth. South Africa. is musterlng a band Of statesmen, proud of Dutch and tish ood Erst, foes, now friends» in a free Commonwealth. Australians, for most with their men of might, Arrive, strong, bronmd and keen, with loyal hearts, To take their places in this pag- eantry. New Zealanders have joined the race to meet The parent stock of lineage tried and true. And Lntermingiing French and British blood With alien peoples, in Joint hom- age bound. The choice oi Canada will greet her K _ All knit by bonds unsevered yet through feud. And Eritfs sons come, too, north and south, To view the King's anointing — uneicnt rites Beside the mystic stone, where Jacob slept. Of old and made his covenant with God IPUIII Th s earthly power is pledge to safeguard homes And subjects’ rights beyond the sev- en seas. S0 may God save Their Malestiea and grant Them health and wealth to away the soeptered throne For Justice, peace, prosperity and we . That all may live within an Em- pire's might! —Flurence H. Edgar, in the Ottawa Jorn i» PAIN-Soothe SORE HANDS MP5 suflhwcl utter: n11 both our Jails never even visited. Well, the fact remains, and the situation doesn't reflect credit on any of the churches. and the sooner a. change is made the bet- ter for all concerned. Here is n work right at our own doors, and the doing of it would give an opportunity for the many young people in our churches to practise what they hear preached from Sunday to Sunday. If. must b6 itiiuughllflinflll 011 the part of the leaders of religious work in our city. The Y.M.0.A. could my well give their young men this oppor- tunity for service. The condition of these poorsouls shut up those lovely May days, is sad indeed. Even if they have done wrong it is inhuman to shut any person up without work of some kind. It does no good. Do those who acn- tence them ever visit the prisons? I think not. done and done quickly. We were pleased to learn Sunday thciiuome of ‘the prisoners work at. fatmwork every day. some one will answer for these conditions some day, and it may be the prisoners will not have as much to answer for as the b90919 who keep them there and care nothing for their souls’ welfare. The writer attended a meeting pome time ago in the city when the matter of visiting the jail and holding meetings there was brought “pThe remark was made: "Why. the prisoners have done wrong; let them take their medicine." At the same meeting the Bible lesson read was “The Good 5am- aritan", and the closing hymn WI! "Rescue the Periahinf- There scents nothing furtherleft to my on this subject except l great need has been presented. 111 a. feeble way, and now that ihfl need has been made known ma)’ there be a. response that wiilehee: the hearts of all concerned. 1 am, Sir. etc, PRISONER!‘ AID. The Yukon (Bydziey Post Record) The proposed annexation of the Yukon to British Columbia will enlarge that Provinces area to 573,831 square miles. will place it second only to Quebec in size, Ind will give it jurisdiction over more than one-fifth of the land surftce of the Dominion. So stated, the agreement just concluded between the Pattullo Government and the Dominion authorities can be made to read like fine campaign mater- ial on the~ eve of a Provincial election. But it is more than doubtful whether this mammoth real estate deal will prove financi- ally profitable to n Province in- volved in what looks like a. losing fight against bankruptcy. The di-covery of gold in the Yukon tn 1893 caused a great stam- pede of prospectors to that minute and inhospitable corner of the Dominion, but the radiant drea/ms of the wealth it was to produce were disappointed. the boom quickly collapsed, and the administration or the territory. $P3N8ly settled and srnmo TONIC l moon rununm Mac's Blood Food A comhinati cspeclllly ni- uablc in the treatment oi those disease: where their origin is tmceablo l0 an in- povorilhed condition of the blood. - One ol the greatest remad- ica in the treatment of Bhu- nntiam Ind a guaranteed up- pctlte restorative. Get l box tan-day. Box of $0 tablet 50c, DR. L. B. EVANS If you have my WING with your u nah ll indigestion, dylpeylla. lolr ltomnch, heartburn, gastric ‘may; etc, than 4on1 delay getting n bottle of Dr. Inn’: utomuoh mixture immod- a Inns, noted English nlchn of which we have flu lolg rights to and lines loll- in; it have received numcron testimonial: from nlllllod put-chosen. Try u bottle lo-llly. film l5 canto. TiIE rvo mics MIQIGOO h. In God's name let something be l CIDENT. $25.00 CIDENT. us.» SULT OF vwncmkimu INSURANGE FOR $1500. IN EVENT OF RESULTING FROM AN AUTO Ac. A WEEK FOR DISABILITY RE. SULTING FROM AN AUTO M; A WEEK EXTRA IF YOU ARE CON. FINED T0 A HOSPITAL AS A RE. For FUOLL INFORMATION CONCERNING THIS SPECIAL POLICY CONSULT- IIYNIIMAN & 00., tmnru SUMMERSIDE CHARLOTTETOWN MONTAQUE Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup oi Full Flavoured Tea Use IRAHMIN Orange Palm Toa DEATH SUCH AN ACCIDENT. I Mall Order! Prompt!) to be wholly omnuod Ooltimbiu, for the Dominon Gov- ernment will, of course, continue t0 maintain such services u fall within the responsibility of the Federal Poatal and Interior Dc- partznenta. as well as meeting the costs of the Judicial system of the district and providing necessary aids to navigation. The Yukon postal service! coat cure of the Indians $100,000 per your a‘: QAA:AALQQAAQQAAAA difficult to mach, has over sin been a burden and m expense to the Dominion Government. Ibr, the put imam-y ha: been nupplylng more» than two dollar; on the Yukon for awry dolla- takcn out of tho territory. Since the [old rush of 1690, the Department of the In- terim! has lpcnt $10,782,000 on public works and administrative services for the Yukon population, and the outlay contimtca from year to you. In the fiscal your 1933-34, the revenue derived from the Yuk- on omountad in $187,000 and the sum spent on it administration l0 you: tho Rdemsl 06041110. In 1934-35, these wu figutu were 0210.000 and $466,000 respectively. lat your receipts mu to $228,000 and ox- pendltums to $587,000. For the past 10 years mixiing royalties from the Yukon have averaged only $20- 000 per unnum. IUWHUO These burdens, however, are not British $117,000 and Acbordixic w Pruuler Pattullo’; announcement, British Columbia in to receive $125,000 mutually for the next 5 years, as a special grant to help out in provincial public service; for the people c! the Yukon. ‘rhis will mean that the nonunion will be paying more than ever on account. of the Yukon, time. the Provincial rqovemment must obviously make cirtoin ex- penditures from Its own treasury on the annljd 01500“??? o! sold in the Yukon was an unluclw accident for Canada. while, at the some territory. The Johannesburg (Montreal ‘Guottel Johannesburg, the lamest city in the ‘Irartsvaal and the centre of the gold mining industry in South Africa, six thousand new buildings annu- ally. according to latest reports. is growing at the rate of and‘ they stand makes of Worm “ffirench’s” » Vermicide Capsules . No. 2 Size (Round) For the Cubs aged from 8 weeks to 8 Icntfl. They have always stood the test Those words, written by Mr. Edward Fromm, director of the greatest Fox Ranching Organization in the world, whose breeders number 14,000, represent a con- clusion based on the employment of nearly half a million Vermlcide Capsules during the lntervenln! years since he first tried them in the year 1911. No. 2 Round Vermicide Capsules come packed in Boxes of 25 capsules — — -- — - 3 1.00 Boxes of 100 capsules - - - - 3.00 > Boxes of 500 capsules - - - - 18.00 Prepaid to any address E. A. FOSTER , Central Drugstore Sole authorized distributor ‘for Dr. ffrench’! Animal Remedies for P. E. I. 1n the month of March u mm a 1,026 applications was rocordeq, constituting a record. In the {liq quarter of the r there we”, 1195113’ 3.000 permits Lsued, m.‘ value 0! the buildings being £3,320,- 401. No other town in the Unig ll IJYWNI-llfll Bi; such a rate, and there is I. reason. Gold and other metals, precious and base. are in universal demand, and Johannes. burs. atmtegimiy situated near the Rand field, supplies the want< 0g the mines and the tniners. Th; P1800 grew with tunazlng rapidity following the gold CISDOVGHPS. in 1086 and when it celebrated its jubilee last year with an exhibition, visitors came from all over the Empire and from other parts of the world. They saw a city planned on regular lines. with theatres aoological gardens, two racecoiii-ses. great parks, art galleries. libraries. fine public buildings, churches and synagogues and all the other Humanities. The chief edllCilliotifll institution is the South African School of Mines and Technology. The dihens are generous with their money and the public institution; math! no luck of funds. The cit is counted by a council run t‘ Bndiill lins, and altogether is ' credit to the Union. Its inhtbi ants total about 318.000. mm 304,000 of whom are wtltpl. statistic: Jud published about‘ building development indicate tti the half-million mark will soon he reached, provided the call for gold keeps up. MANBLAUGHTER CASE DISMISSDI TUR@"I'O, May ‘I — (OP) ~ Olmrgo of manslaughter until-iii Funk Marshall, driver of the cl! In which. Mrs. Gladys Baird. i019 mcrly ct’ Truro, N.B., was fatally injured in u. collision last March- vnl dismissed in ' magistrate’! court today. The bench held then was no evidence of a criminal nu- titre TABLOID _ I but in qprinklcd ma?! m the stove or ma. no uxivlfl smellofbtirnirtgwfllremlt. Reticence ll what n. m“! when he decent get g, dollar word for it. supreme over all Remedies.