cnnnlogzr mi n tire House of Gommo . "The ta of the United States." he said, upon vrhat it did with them. raise its tariffs, the Dominion Only a modification of the firm and ‘O compromising basis made." And again: "I need only to citizens of this Republic, that action taken in their interests us with small choice of action lions been reversed, what else wo you have clone? would you h routs, when the prosperity of nation required the maintenance c. reasonable balance between i ports 1nd exports?" suiting from the Ottawa tion of a comprehensive ada would not be found laggard. Bennett first assumed power, l uage as he used last week in Ne the following year the Britain and before realized at the great Empire Con ferenoe called st Ottawa. Premier Bencntt takes the sam the reaction to such a speech wll bc. It will be hailed with enthus iasm on both sides of the interns Llonal boundary line. to disabuse them of the ‘oLd..<....-;_..Z. ' ests of her basic safeguarded. producers THE TRUE SUCCESS Wales College students was on a ‘f resolution "that there is more plenum in pursuit thsn in pos- ' session." The stllrmatlve side. we m; pleased to note, won by “a plicit in his reference to our adverse trade miatiorls with our southern neighbors as lf he were speaking in its own concern. and therefor I have no business to adversely comment do I. I simply state a fact. when in 1929 the United States saw fit t: Canada had no other course open to it but to raise its tariffs also. Fail- ure tc do so pwslbly would have led to a. condition o: affairs whose nsequence might have been upon which payment of our financial obligations to this country always had been be taken in our own. Had your posi- subscribed to a one-way trade The Prime Minister stressed the benefits of closnr Empire trade rc- Confer- ence, as well as Canada's negotia- trade treaty with France and the trest- ies with-Other European countries J now in process of negotiation. These F!’ l’ agreements were evidence, he said, 5' 1.. oi’ Canada's desire to remain on the l! broad highway of international oo- " ‘i. operation. Now that United States L?’ has 5h0wn a similar desire, Can- » ada welcomed it; and the Prime Minister assured his audience that ' in the fullest practical manifesta- IBJ . z tlon of the principle of trade oo- operation, the government of Can- It will be recalled that when Mr. made known his attitude on Em- plrn trade at the London Confer- ence in just such convincing hang- York. The Labour Government of Great Britain was not prepared to accept the Bennett policy; but in National Government was formed in Great another year had elapsed the Bennett policy was Now, when the hour has struck foranother great trade movement, course of presenting, at first hand, his views to the American people. And there can b: little doubt what Perhaps its most important im- mediate result will be to educate the American people as to the im- portance ol’ mutual concessions in arriving at any satisfactory trade agmement with this country. and opinion that Canada is not fully prepared to co-olnrate, provided the inter- are A gecent debate among Prime of riffs "are N02‘ the tide, to rest on our o slumber through existence. BIS, o! EDITORIAL Ash Wednesday. Ull- llcity recently due to his war re 55y utlon. the left in Always .. ‘ are the representatives of “Fanners' Parliament" who uld ave and profitable ls the wish of all citizens. the of m- The index number of retail prices, rents, and costs of services fell from 79.0 in Deocmbe to 78.0 in January, advances in the sund- ries and fuel groups being more than offset by declines for foods. An index for retail prices alone. that is, excluding rents and costs of services, receded from 74.1 ~down from 69.3 to 68.8, declines f coke and wood. re w vs. individual enterprise. is probable that public ownershi ship works with less emtlellcy- H is a. considerable factor. Our rail 6 1 succinctly declared without saying dictum. Take the Prince of Wales pie-war days declared to be terlzed by e01" of shrewd a visit b0 the “ he remind- ed tirn London Chamber of Com- merce that: "We are now 1MB!» mostly because of the suits of the world war, s. life which is far m0"! collective in principle than 1114"- idualistic." Which is what PNmlfl‘ Bennett also hi! Men GYM!!! ll°m° has been said. URN is nothing in- animate. Everything is alive: everything is going somewhere, or @180 60111108 back; nothing is static. 1f there were any abiding satisfac- tion ln possession, in success onoe achieved. we should all be "static" --all perfectly content to drift with NOTES Lent does not begin till March 6. to Chm lottetown semble here today for the opening meetings of Fanners’ Week. That their visit will be both enjoyable 73.9. When foods were removed from this index it was 78.7 for Jan- uary Rs against 78.6 in December. rm- 46 food items an index moved e388. bread, flour and tea influenc- ing the group more than advances for cmamery butter, potatoes, and most meats. The fuel and lighting index moved up from 88.4 to 89.0, owing to increased prices for coal. Senator Meighcn makes a clear distinction between what he con- siders the advantages of national In the senate he said his view was that in national or state enterprises. d where a large amount of capitalyls required in relation to the labor, it and operation is better. Where labor wwn forms s, large factor. public owner- said: "In respect of railways. labor wsy difficulties are due in port t0 that circumstance and in P!" W the fact that much capital hi8 been expended, ' not for business reasons but for purposes of sta .' It was a. Mayor of New York who "Queen (of Roumanla) you have sold a. mouth- ful." 1t may be remarked that the Royalty of Britain seldom soon! something which would correspond to thé Mayor's for instance. whom the German's in "an ambassador of commerce.” his Dilb- )llc urarances are usually charac- comlnonsense which "much the spot." Before leaving for to k0 ly the Kin ions sh touch with and ford to liurs ciehcy; Q1‘ fill be c mOn that 0011M DUOUS ls now London 90l- is te and u” lmde g5_ for every tradition our If a. Captain duty and ship, prohibition, i" slderably out One memh‘ r or damages. An should, we and the it has beoom that the sev ould keep which concem them of defense and o: ment no member Commonwealth of individual policies, no bject to a single direction. o-ordixlated to serve the com- purpose. There is the difllculty machinery for securing the consultation necessary for effective to be created, Senator Hughes has been enjoy- it ing a. Canada-wide front page pub- generally Times. Greater than any General in war the Captain at sea-for the lat- r's thought at .a1l times is to guide his ship safely through storms emergencies, and to save those r his command and care. ‘where as the formers object is to destroy life. There is a1 statement- mains on ship.” should be ne suit of a Can Alone. a suspected rum American chaser fired Alone 200 miles st sea and sunk it. life and all the crew sessions. United Sta adisn commissioners discussed the We owe the apology. Notes The b0 a political unit with a central vcrnment responsible for the safe- wclfare of the whole e of vital importance eral governments g‘s self-governing Domin- in the closest trer 1o matters one ano all. In ques nomic deve Nations can us a policy of self co-ordinatlon has although the ncrzd something very vi map and woman in this "Captain re- No worthwhile task glected or left undone. sea considers it his privilege to stay by his and go down with it if nec- essary, how much more should each or us value our opportunity to live and to weather every human storm in the best of courage. at The two beat neighbors. the Unif- ed States and Canada, have amic- ably settled a very nasty problem. ‘Thanks to that vile experiment enforcement got con- of hand. In hot pur- adian vessel (the I'm -l"11!‘l!‘lGI‘) an on the I'm of the crew lost h ~Bosion ‘Traveller. ers settled leadersh but th broken up by D ed the trans ‘n1 tied in Dlgby est and most l hind all mabsri be this ever lifts in the face esl This Spirit fall. You must The l! '-" Herctoforc the cigars. cigsrillos the depression and decrease in is settlement You must not give up. You are going pipe smoking on a larger In 1176, I. body of New England- in Digby under the ip of William McDel-mott, was largely t attacks of privaioers. ‘Ilhe town as it cxlstsw- sy was founded by Loyslists from New England in 1783. The locality was first known as Conway, and the governor's grant was dated i784. The name Dlgby was given to the in honor of Hon. a British admiral. wh frequen Colonel Moody The well controlled lilc is bal- anced by its losses and gains. Each gain and each loss, somehow enters into the structure of one's charac- ter, however. And so what we are is always indicative of the manner in whichwe handle life. In a man's face is a running story of all this, though much o strlfeisscreened f the struggle and off-with the deep- acting scars within the heart. More than any monetary loss is this loss of Spirit, because bc- al gains. even. must present inborn urge of Spirit which sts ys bv one and up- of all material loss- is forever saying: must not go on!—Ex. in for scale. preference was for and cigarettes but has insulted in s reversion ts the pipe with s cor- responding increase in pipe tobacco other forms. A con- siderable quantity of Canadian bur- ley tobacco was marketed in Bel- gium in 1930 due to the scarcity of United States tobacco but owing to the higher price of the Canadian product very little has entered the Wily 0f the British -5um.. long- mLISC recognized.- lost their pos- tes and Can- We owe the d, as decent people thank Canada for being so patient about an outrageous act. Robert Digby. o superintend- portatlon of many of e Loyalist settlers. a famous fighter o f North Caro- llna, in the rev olutlonary war, set- county. Tna V manners-mow»: ouanbuuv i v T Ontario K. C’S. . . . (mu o moire) » ' ‘ l . T . 1 mo: .------ w -..-.-:.».=,-..- .-. .-=—..-.=.-.-.~.-.=.=.--- waned p», ..=::.av..:m::.::.:.:r....l fame“ » swank . . rie..-.:-.:.-.~.-.:'_-:..".':~:.-r.r. :..'="r~,:.:.-:- mum a we 1»- u u» us» a u. m m» u» u,» w» qgg a - A - ' ‘ ..... of words, hi h r 1 umbc of thcr awym. ' "fifi",fi"jgj'f,;“jg“,fi,'finf,f;yg¢"_'f,mgfik@ hidden sway and ncverw sis h: fi 332.11.‘; CHILI“: the attention of PIILIIDI m salmon (onorml- , a __ y - tlghbfnnflnlflJ 115m. folio: in- v "pulm- 0031121015,‘; ggegalldgéltilal-lllllg": mm“ u u ‘----mm ma“ "hm Farmers and others visiting the City dllflng - “m; 1-533 l”; “ oouous sue .," an are e - "r My’ u“ 1"’ never met mm m a. lifetime. n has $9“ iesrchactd srtiolo. dealing with the m mm of slniiinl childhood “Farmer? Week” are cordially invited to visit our u m.» -" that sacrum-e .,._w ‘ma. wgicglohsubgageng ozlzfiinggf ‘m’ wag?“ “d flower“ olflces for information or advice on fire m- me Y? CANADA'S ‘ATTITUDE v.....l"......u. near m goal ... " '°°‘”“‘“”Y °’ “ “‘ *"°°° - r ' "" "" Enl dwith » insurance. ‘ ' . do n” m“; — . words yum; mgnasgd w “m- 01mm" m“ us c U“ tracts the situation in can wcedaorsoms n my uncertainty existed m the s” Giana-IF!" “uum m“ “"“'°‘ 25:16“? wlg veroz 0F M021‘ 0A5" 0F gilllél- m: glgrncdfltgle um of x. o. is I om w: m" m“ m °m°"' '"°""' 9"“ 5”“- °l“"°'“° "m" 0 ‘Illum- ._ United so... .. t. 0...... ..- u‘ g3; §;:,d,,;;=,,u;>",,e, pygmy; m‘ “N” ”"“"““ h:.':..‘?"ll'.::§.':.'i't:::i'°§.ii; <>"*".=;:..'.':~ ""“"°“ ""°' ~ ' u; titude 0n reciprocal trade, it was "To m“; Mpgmm» ‘mm spam,‘ uqufimunce with about A recent survey of chrome dis- unelqieetmg head. of the fortunate n signed; m- when, ‘[9115, m; bleak » "q.- i fully answered in the great speech 5; q, ‘ 8.000 words while tho average talk- 955° m Massammz“ 51mm” m“ Iwlillel" DY "i 1114mm“ but u” m” ' & l who Peu- m» ma» u» £3332“... f’; ecafl~l=u~u=hll~w~=h silo‘. can: r.".:..."r:".: °'"*:.:;~"*==wh~~=°'=~m~* ""' " ,1 1 “$85 l’) $2M’ “'°'° "i" ‘Jimmy s" labour." Then u. world of ma... 5%.‘, éh°fin§m 33.2.2.3, “ffifi janchliglrllioldiseasiisther? vvvvears 132w,» .. aggl-racr-iilxla-Oounciish Itceifiorraugy Heard ‘in ma: ktlhrough, m. mam The Oldest Insurance Agency in p, 13,1, l oe y of New York, No more s stes- m mm ‘Waugh which preceding u" English language comprises by w r cuma m o om . gfgn y e Lord an ems ear, * ' were totally disabled. the application of the would-be , __ Zantlg: gglfzgz ti‘: Lexy neg? stlrerstions also felt and expressed. glvlllelelblezgéfihaarzdtggomxntage, 1g gym‘ figure; fxérghfiibow that: tlbue xufgzltciounslel himlsfiligndfllrlhfl‘; Was this tn; saddest music that he J‘ o’ HYNDMAN . Ptésidenh _ 8U ern 811 Ky CBUS€ Y l‘, sonywllg . codes. In the citadel of United Th“ f‘ why mum momnmm“ ‘f; M mm “"*“¢'-“Y chronicgarthritls (rheumatism) is a bsrristcr has reached the 1 hen- ul, w", with... n‘ h..- states financial interests, the Prime 3e11,: a “"3,” l’ “m”? l” d‘; ‘ “° p °‘°“'y' ereater than this: from my other pinnacle of nu career. and when ho r i Minister was as clear-cut and ex- m“: c an‘ r’ m Nam’ i Since the British Empire ceased o! me chrome d Ewes o’ temperate has demonstrated beyond all dllllbt that he is a leader of the Bar. I'm- the English K. C. must be literally a leader. He may not, after attaining his K. O. accept any brief in which he does not appear ss the senior and ‘ -" _ counsel. His source of rev- enue is thus considerably circum- scribed, for he is , collided from ao- ceptlng~ many lucrative briefs in which he does not appear in the leading role. It is. therefore, Only those barristers who have attained legal eminence. and financial in- dependence who can and do "take silk" in England. “Obiter Dicta" goes on to express regret over the situation in Ontflriv- "It is not suzprisine. then, that in harmony with the disinterest of the recently defrocked King's Coumel, there should be a tendency within the profession to deprecats, if not to despise, the acquisition of the honor. What is more serious is an climates. Thus there were B4000 cases of heart disease with 2600 dis- abled, hardening of the arteries 64000 cases, diseases of eye and ear 24000, apoplexy 16000, tuberculosis 16000. diabetes 15000, and cancer ll 500 The modulation and 0f rhyih waves have surged in SCI. Heart disease leads as a cause of death, but, whereas the patient with heart disease lives from seven to nine years on the average, the rheu- matic patient lives fourteen years or mor l I am quoting Dr. Ernest E. Irons, Chicago, in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It is pointed out that chronic arthritis can be no longer thought of as a disease of certain joints- knce, ankle, shoulder, spine -- but rather as a general or "systemic" disease in which there are disturb- ances of the blood circulation, the building up and tearing down pro- cesses of the body, disturbances of echoing tendency among the laity to the stomach and intestines, as well disparage both the distinction and as the changes in the joints them- the possessors of it. Layman as u selves. whole have always been chary of sc- You can thus see that as there are cording due respect to the memberil a number of wrong conditions there of the legal fraternity. In the Past must be a number of causes which the ‘wearers of the silk, robe" have include infection (tooth, tonsils, been free from public opprdbrium by gall bladder, and intestine), injury virtue of the impregnsble position (falls, sprains, strains), pressure in- they occupied in public esteem. terferlng with normal blood or That this last stronghold of probity nerve supply, fatigue, exposure, sen- is being assailed should be of con- sitlveness to foods, nervous strain, com, not only to the profession. but and gland disturbance. to all thoughtful persons. Disres- Now as there are such a. number pest for those learned in the law of causes it means that treatment leads inevitably to disrespect for the must be of a general uatuxe-re- law itself. Disrespect for the law moving infection, improving the clr- leads ultimately to lawlessness." cuiation, removing (by surgery) if “Obiter Diets" fears that owing necessary) obstructions to nerves or to the unprecedented profligacy of blood vessels, improving the circula- successive governments at Queen's tion in the Joint itself by various Park in awarding the honor, the —Ircna ‘lg? other was n. rhymer the same scrvi of th Ef- mlmu-elsv of scotmld. would care to, pro-Bu are exceptions such as luck about the noose." ner Dickens llsh novel. “Th when he was so youth, "throu to sing, let alone yet for could call a blush into delicate cloeek or wound ings of the most sensitive. Now neither Burns nor Dirk flflmby-Dlimby persons, and obvious that in their the tal ed by the highest ideals. that Both ousto "Hallowebn" to keep memory of cert ing custom. alive too much to conten larity of Helium's taining_ an account of some Dickens And Burns which. although in their way good custom, are not quite too religiously no . . t l ‘ ". L, PUBLIC FORUM (Andrew Plteasgllletgl) the Monixeal ‘gigging: a: glllefneaydiggrnerw e g o servance of Chr mas- s hundred ‘I. ..“;;.::P°:.2*i-.::'..::.P".z".=:v.§2 v»- w» u- r - ' ’ years the imparted much of t use and have 33mm ma; m? Charlottetown GIIIIIIIMI GQQII’ICI Burns allover the world oelebrat- a: tfigagfiioiwgogiggeénggai: ‘if géiedillllélgc 818$ 6911115918 511d $18M 5km to “few native workmm Umted 5m“ ‘hall “mmgm t” l‘: °Z21?Z'.'l...'a“.1‘1'." a” “H. M“ ed m“ “nmverflry M the birth °t mous Christmas chapter in "Pick- In ‘En land most of the glass is In 1595 Wmhlfllllis were made Canada and pay damages. Right! scotlands Bard. On February 7. B » wick" with his Christmas stories "Christmas Carol," on an equally large scale, the birthday of Charles Dickens, the English novelist, was honorcdjThe universal tribute thus paid to Burns and Dickens is lied in the annals of literature, and strange as it may seem. is but one of the many interesting parallels which the careers and achievements of these two g:est literary geniuses have to offer. Consider, first their lives. Both were brought up in homes that knew the pinch of poverty, Dick- ens's boyhood was associated with a debtors’ prison, which reminds us that in one respect their early years differed. for Burns‘ parents were of the sincere, hard-working, godly type, while Dickens's father. Micawber, of, "David Copperfield." was a thrlftless, careless, happy- go-lucky mortal, into whose life, strange to say. something did "tum up" that was beyond his wild- est lmagmatiomand that was a son who was a. literary genius. Brought up in the circumstances indicated. both Burns and Dickens were denied the education they coveted However, neither was illit- erate. thanks to their passion for books. Whether college life would have been s help is o. debated point. would it have meant the sacrifice of the heart to the intellect? If so, then college life would have been fatal to Bums and Dickens. for both owed their great power over their fellows to the fact that they wrote from the heart. victims or cireumsta-nm. both Burns and Dickens were sent to work at an early age, and to tasks that did not help them much in tho pursuit of literature. We see young Burns as a form hand, Dick- ens as s. bottle-washer in a black- ing factory. On sttslninz manhood their lives seem to separate. we are all funlliar with the story of Bums. striving in vain to be s. farmer on his own. and cultivating the muss as a recreation. On the other hand we see Dickens trying one profes- sion aftcr another to support him- self and his people, st last finding his meticr as s. Journalist and a novelist. And yet their motably LON GEVI TY Gin-There is at present living on the south shore of Prince Ed- ward Island five of the sons and daughflcrs of the late John lnman of Harrington which, I think must surely break any Island record for long life and retention of faculties- The oldest, Elizabeth, (Mrs. Har- rington), of Nine Mlle Creek has passed her 94th year: Mary Ann, .(Mrs. Inman), of Victoria, is now 93; Grace, (Mrs. Stordy). of Vic- toria, has passed her 91st year; Carrie, (Mrs. Farrow), of Hamp- ton, is 89. and Mr. John Inman of Hampton. who has passed his 87th year. The grand total is 454 years. It is a delight to meet with any of this aged five. It has been my extreme pleasure to have recently spent. an hour with two of the family» I can truthfully state their faculties arc as alert as they have ever been. In conversation one for- gets they are conversing with aged people. In the family, there were four older members, all brothers, and also there had been four younger members. the five named above forming the centre group. One can only wish such dear young old folk many more years of their present happy existence. They love this present world, but the ties of earth have in no way interfered with long years of pre- paration for the mansions to which they shsll some day attain. I am, Sir, etc, OBSERVER. by noun in the calendar. h ztacra that he chose no Grecian gods goddesses as the subject of muse. ‘out he immortalised “Bonnie Jeans" and the Marys" of Dickens in ll highborn mai his stories. His most ch episode centres Pinch", clerk. arming around v Again, Dick about the so Burns; sometimes on less. Burns sings: Ye see yon birklc ca'd a lord, Whs struts, snd starts, an‘ that; Tho‘ hundreds wo He's but a cool The first lord for m, that. “Pickwick the title that just “Bleak Hou 0f Foodie, “Sir Tho "Nicholas not." No. mixer of th of lords. Palwfs" at Bath "Lord. Mutonhcsd". mas DOOGIGZ" and this ‘ record cold storage meat dell- c o US. MAGS BL000 "F000 POI PAL! AND THIN The trouble with the League of Nations ls its modesty. It hides its lights under a bushel and the lay- man. or the msn in the street kn little of its great value to t c W0rld. We made this comment after attending a. Press conference at Geneva, where like every other delegate we. were enthusiastic over . l...“ majority." m vote u. ho 1., m. speeches. market mice. The United states is ii" refill“ '1' W“ m“ WY- Bl" be not disslmiiblfiulvlf‘ fiivfmfiifi ~ the largest source of supply. "WW5" “m” a" ¢°° m“? W" Burns was only 2'1. he . m: w- ‘. l "n59 791199335 <75 "19 5511")’ 0r ' 80h! who think the world Infill/id Mum“ in Emma-in u acqflmdj .' tho dlsputants on the contra side; If tbs $3.01‘. Mayor 0f “m” Ancient llelk ma!“ c, h, m’. know what trey do without their “m”; “M, m m“, “m. 91¢. It could scsrcelyhsve gone in their does not believe in cutting omolal goo Wm o ; - ‘ 43cm,“ Eaggguag peelgggg-rmadvertilc. or gm n, omy :1‘, gum gm . , rm u =~-»~=1 - - u- 1-» *- r» u“ -~ We“ 2.": are. s... .. .. n» not experienced the icy lwl- 1* 1'10"“ i‘? "‘°”°'°‘ mammoth which ms been dead 1o.- him u uls- am of the hour m bl - a M pursuit v1 some hobby or bmbl- "l" "l" mmiwummmm‘ "" 000mm. Professor Lindbergh, head . w ~ ‘~ \ i» i , s msnner m had not dons since ' \ , “u, u hm, serve u. itself the rlzht to lmvw of the small Expedition, who " ' she crowned her own Scottish son °'" ‘f "ll WW1 "MI- i ma’ m“ m. d“ ac on w ‘ to u to B0 per cont or has just returned from the North ‘ '~ " .0 with her inure . h‘ h “""“"'°'"°¢ l!!!‘ 1T1 WWW"- '°°""' °' "if" "m" “m” ‘ °. m”. "ma, m, nus, Siberia. nude u». mnounoe- - i) i l i l i P m: m». threw out off when null-u. inevitably 1n its wake! The theme "m" °' ‘ m‘ ' » rnsnt. The scientist discovered the 1 up; were at the mm o! mu , , a province will "h! Illilfh“ '11“ ‘Pd carcass o: a mlmmoth of u» antc- f ' ‘ - ‘ . marl. sums was only a1 when - - l: one which has inspired many m h“ , ‘f , t u In thou. who luvs m: . , no“ on . and", Um" then finally the city w take I diluvisn epoch, perfectly preserved a >- c died. Dicklns. it is rvr. was . “M, "fluklumn. h“ 8'1" v u Mb,“ m, m,“ o; “W, u. u» im. um o thorough invcs- , but he wu stricken vane in the m m 4; jddrcning the figures depicted in would ‘pm, m” w "am" PM” tlgatlon the animal was declared midst of writing “lg-book which Inn restorative. ~ u» "we ~= i“ "~- c" v. . m... u. - ma. a.'h.'?.“s.‘."..:.':;‘l:‘='.:t':i'. c; a" c" m" ""- "f c: m m “rw- - I "’""“”" ' mam-u income, cub u u» gov- bum and dsvouml s; m hungry . 1m mood," a m: which showed mu Orlm ragga; - alum‘ RNJOIHQI are sweet. but thou 9 numbers of the plrty, who found that he bod lull an’? oldhglzglll .. Allcnlollo.‘ “Evian. therefore» yrnf: will". m. wbllybfmhkm ‘m lidilfltlo! 13".‘ admin our. m. m»... M‘ fwd. clvthlfll 1M lhvlhr-Ill so much m m» um aggcksrels "Hashim a snub. l . ., ~ “gm, gum a wri - . ' """"”"~°’ "° ‘°”’ w.» vizsuvlur 112053."?! $51 fr: T33 will“ m»! n, T M ,. most i mica munch ‘osulng ' 8 I00 dCS no um 1c “won? °' “xlé,"“' inminil."‘vf‘oo|nlo.tllst'thc vehicle - - -': ~ ' law . - Iwmmw - u i cavmwubmmlmthuthn . mony, In the recurring plum-so, tho minor third m, chords and theme. The Upon the shore. I sec the sea, his Ha - m the first place both rendered cc toths literature cir respective countries. Every- one knows how Burns purified the Nobody rns songs. Of course there "Item's noe In like man- purified the old Eng- In his first great book. o Pickwick Papers," published srcely more than a he records his ambition that ghout this book there shall be no incident or cxpmssion which the feel- person." ens were efforts to purify literature they were actuat- There .ls another odd parallel may be mentioned in passing. delighted in preserving old ms. Burns. for instance. wrote sin fast-disappear- How he would stare today were he on this continent on the 31st of October. But it is not d that the popu- n today, though vessels in evslb-eydsy use in Ellgla forms of heat, correcting the diet title of King's Counsel mu soon the nature of the customs may .____ We" 0f PW l’ m‘ earthenware- (by lessening the starch foods and share the unhappy fate 0! the BX- 1'1"" f-‘h-B-"Ged- W” "l! 5°10! W (Industrial Britain) “m” being mmidemd "mm i“ avoiding foods to which the pat- title of Esquire. leaving behind only Bums Wem- The uses of glass are so familiar "Wm m‘! '“1““b1° m‘ a"? W‘ lent is sensitive), and u. some cases its name as s popular and colloquial ‘Illmllls i» Blew“ We find him to us that we become almost un- “W”! °°°"-"1°'“- m" 1"’ Bil-W the use of vaccines. Synonym 101‘ lflWYfl- i" "Pickwml" "M118 "8 8°00‘ conscious of its presence. Yet there h“! bee“ m u” h“ bee“ imlimd ‘ humored Christmas chapter, oon- sports equally celebrated and these so revived interest in the Advent festi- val that its observame is excelled But looking more closely into the works of the two, one of the first things that strikes us is the dem- cy of Burns and Dickens. 0f e former it was early pointedout "Highland his own countryside. kc manner made no dens the heroines of “Ruth the sister of an architect's ens seems to have me regard for lords as e would think, rshlp at his word. you meet in Dick- cosh works—you meet him in the and about describes him. In so" we meet the "Duke " "Lord Boodle." and s Nlokleby," 10rd Veri- Dickens was not an ad- e personnel of the House We meet quite a number of "Holy 9. i, 5 §—~<¢-~~. Q afesnusnv 1 _.J I Buy the h Best TEA Brahmin Orange Pek Ceylon Small leaf Scouting Stands for Service" oblectl. ' certain types o1’ window glass, . The general prosperity of Eng - in Tudor and Elizabethan t‘ brought about a great Change " domestic architecture. m with only narrow slits to admit t light. was rapidly giving place to . unprotected manor house with ample window splice. nccordlbg I there was a strong incentive to - troduce better mehcds of m ' window glass, In Lorralne~ .. the Vosges to the Ardennes- J making of large sheets of b i glass was being carried on. It wg‘ theneoesslty o: having giuss in . form of these larger and bet . sheets for the new type of ma house which led to the scttlin the Lorrsiners in the forest of . Weaid o! Sussex and Kent in - latter half of the sixteenth century Wlllies" in Dickens. But perhaps the nearest approach is "Mr. Peck- snif " in "Martin Chumlewit." "Mr. Pecksniff" was a moral _ma.n. so he was. Hzrhaps. there never was a more moral man than Mr. Peck- snlff; especially in his conversa- tion and his correspondence. He was a most exemplary man; fuller of virtuous precepts than a copy- book. Some people likened him to a direction post. which is always telling the way to s. place but nev- er goes there; but these were his enemls.” Now it must, not be construed that Burns and Dickens were irre- llglous men. Far from it. They were religious men in the best sense of the word. But they dislked the cheap, emotional type of religion which ls always posing as I sm holler than thou. Their religion was based upon s. ccep and solemn rev- (1579)- erence of the Almighty, a reverence About the some ti that is described in the Good Book the Lorrslners were bringing p5 as the Fear o: the Lord which is England the art of window-gun the beginning of wisdom. making, Venetian; were being in- _.__.__- duoed to settle in London and men Origins The drinking glasses. Until the middle m Glass Industry listen, most i-t is i mo (1515) tlfl thn the sixteenth century the drink is a, surprising amount of it in nearly every home-windows, mir- rors, electric light bulbs and shades, we: vases, tableware, bottles and other glass containers, and orna- mental glass. Besides this, there are numerous industrial uses for glass. gleam! from Venice and were extremely costly. The Ventian glass-makers wen housed in London in a hull ol t r Crutched Friars, and the King mafl them liberal monctray granfl Youths were taken inm their en); ploy. and in the course 0i a the Queen's Council with regard i the laying waste of woods occasion- ed by the working of giasshousuu: their vicinity. Wood was the u: fuel, and the consumption of it enormous. Even the supplies timber for the navy were w dsngered by its constant and h- creasing use for other int-rpm These considers 1011.5 brought the use of coal. - The new fuel was naturally MI adopted gradually, and it was M! until i815 that the Giivérllmelli WU able to take the important rap oi prohibiting the use of wood entire‘ ly. It followed from the use of coll that the industry was obliged l" move to the coalflclds. Acccrdlnfl in a short time wo find slosmlll established 1n Ncwosstle-on-Tinl and not long afterwards in Lanw shire, which is now the most from?" tant cent-m of the lnausrv I Britain, ' i such as high-pressure gauge made in the northern part of the country. Glass has, however, a. his- tory which begins long before its establishment in Northern England, and in fact before the history of England begins at all. The earliest glass of which specimens now exist comes from Egypt, and we know that it was manufactured in that country as long ago as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries B. C. The Ro- mans, who, unlike the Greeks. made considerable use of glass, became acquainted with the craft through their trading contact with Egypt. Upon the, break-up of the Roman Empire the centre of the industry was transferred to Venice. 1t is probable that the Vcnetians were largely indebted for their skill to the teaching of Roman refugees who fled to this swampy and in- accessible part when the imperial city fell. The. lndust y became so impor- tant in Venice that if a glass crafts- man endeavored to leave and teach his art abroad. he was lie-bis to a range of punishments varying from the galleys, to death at the hands of a trained assassin. In spite of the utmost precautions, however, the making of glass revived in medias- val times in Inrrslne and in Bo- hemia. Whilst Venice manufactured mainly drinking glasses and artistic the and his the lovn i CAR WINDOWS car windows are picture fmmes Where fmoes strange 3909M‘ Ono need not seek adrvefllllm In lands remote and flue"- Pbr standing on the corner, In the solallest. dullest Diner. Reflections of the world so bl’ In every type of face. “Edli-"ilililzisififg ‘v b7 in "insist on our Black Twist-it has l better taste. i!" lasts a 1on8" PW! f CHEWING