—-LlaIt. Morning Dally (founded ill?) ‘.4 UNITED FRONT l . 3 vmw“ wnsldered quite impracticabl LL.i5L~.@lQ1h-~ ' .. one was then new in office he may well " speak in more decided terms with- ‘out further consideration. The “Hpresent occasion, before the three Premiers g0 to Ottawa on August 1 ' to present Maritime claims, would _" seem to be opportune for a united " expression of opinion on this sub- ject. Not that it lies within the ' scope of practicai- politics in the f Marltimes, but because. in Central and Western Canada, them still pre- -- vails a feeling that the Maritime "Provinces should, willy-hilly, be joined in political wedlock. Fortunately any attempt at coer- ""‘ clan along this line would be fore- “ "j doomed to failure. Premier Bennett. j ‘at the last session of Parliament, upoke emphatically in support of the right oi every province to main- _,",tain its individual identity, and there need be no anxiety on this score while the Bennett adminis- i’ J _;!Ifi4 01. ‘tr-short remains in power. This ‘ leaves the field clear for a disc-us- "by. -r sion on their merits of the claims! porarily, no doubt, until it is decid- vn for subsidy readjustment which the‘! ed who, among the many other Ill Maritime representatives are pre- claimants in his following is entit- l . ' » - l; paring to advance. These claims a‘; will flnd able spokesmen in each of M; _ the three Provinces, and there is :51 every reason to anticipate a fair and sympathetic hearing from the committee of the Dominion Cabineti up ' which will deal with the matter. f»! i?‘ LITTLE THINGS COUNT ha i; A few days as‘). as a funeral pro-‘ i: cession passed an intersection at , 3- the outskirts of the city, a pedes- ah ‘flti-ian. a returned soldier, was seen .. _ to stop and stand respectfully to i iihatfention. Further on, the cortcge .- was passed by an ofilcer of thei i fRoyal Mounted Police, who also t‘ ‘stopped and saluted. These marks of raspect at funer- als are said not to be so common - Yliowadays as they formerly were. “ " ‘lWe are. it is alleged, living in a bus- .. ler and more efficient age. We have less time for courtcsies and form- alities than our fathers had. If ‘this be true, it means that we have ‘f-Uiost something of real value in our civilization and have taken some- " ' where the wrong turning in our k hurried modern progzcrs we might ~11"; profitably retrace our steps with- J but setting back the hands of the ‘- "clock, or endangering in any way our prospects of achieving maierial‘ success. OUR FARM WEALTH ICICOI’ I Illll DIM“ . . . Anvil: IdltirI-lf-ffrllk Willa! and ILI. Curr Miner {In (ll advance) mulled In Canal: THURSDAY, lvlaYll. 1N1. i‘ ‘ i, '1 ihvernier. Tilley made it clear, in lpeaking before the Charlottetown _ ' notary Club, that while he desired who see closer Miaritime oo-operation n Ahs suggestion of a Maritime pol- . "Igloo! union. The same attitude has Hppequently been expressed by Pfe- ‘g i ‘ ‘mier MacMilian, and was also voic- l ‘,1 “Ted on many occasions by his 01'6- ‘ g‘; ‘ pmieccssor, the late Premier Stewart. . f; ‘fisentiment in this Province is - t‘: .1" strongly against any such political 4 1 i iherger, and the existence of similar y! - .- aentiment in New Brunswick has if :-;-'4ong been recognized. 1n Nova Sco- pj Q‘ in, agitation for political union was 1: mocasionaliy in evidence up to a 1-,. few years ago. Ex-Piemier Harring- ton dissociated himself from it en-i 'tirely. His successor, the present’ -. Qremier. Hon. Mr. MacDonald. On occasion expressed himself somewhat ambiguously, but as he have considered it inadvisable to for vegetables-produced on forms for home ule. a Preliminary estimate" of the net agricultural revenue Canada n givaru $464,499,000. crease in Jricultural revenue. um It was during 1033‘ that the worst phase of the depression was reach- ed. The figures for 1984 will un- doubtedly show a considerable in- jackets ‘a drab color in the mud of' of on service in the tropics. It reall English becomes "dust. colored." ' i ALL FOR 1T y: ed in the Legislature in support than marketing legislation. Thus Canada's present economic difficu ically. EDITORIAL NOTES 11c library. in session lMt night. day and the thirteenth. day night. led to preferment. bels' defence of Berlin's “ "od will die by it. like Mr. Bob Davis, of the Mr. lander-s in Paradise. Sackviile or elsewhere Prince Edward Islanders. withou and Professor Lloyd shaw. over" this huge financial deal. Figures recently issued by the Do-I ~ rninion Bureau of Statistics give‘ —the estimated gross agriculturali ,’ wealth of Canada for was at s5,- '-.2ao,994,0co as compared with ts,- 209,760,000 for 1932 and $056,951,000 ' lor 193i. ‘ The total gross agricultural rev- enue of Canada is estimated at $762,302,000 for 1933 as compared with 3766394000 in 1932 and $330.‘ ,‘,I14,000 for 1931. There are increases in the revenue from farm animals, wool, dairy products, fur farming, zie Kmg emplmticalh/ asserts in each case. France or Britain 1n honey and clover and grass seed. and decreases in the revenue from field crops, fruits and vegetables, ,poultry and eggs, maple products.’ tobacco and flax fibre. The greatest increases in revenue are from farm _animals and dairy products, while .;,;the biggest decreases are shown in ,,_;field crops and poultry and eggs. The gross agricultural revenue for .1933, by provinces, in order of value -‘ is 8.5 follows: Ontario smnemooo; " fur‘ Quebec $138,221,000; Alberta 5110,- . 1'_3,_»,,1os,ooo; Saskatchewan $105,411,000; 4",...- Manitoba $53,987,000; British Col- ‘ umbia $31,278,000. Nova Bootia and France on the one side and the United States on the other. unlikely the fulsome praise of Am- erican newspapers and the equally violent abuse of the British and Continental press will carry much weight one way orother. Great Bri- tain is too old a. bird to be caught unawares in diplomatic flights. She must have had a clear understand- ing where she stood with Uncle Barn before venturing her "apres vous, Alphonse." - W, $23,143,000; New Brunswick s21,- r 148,060; Prince Edward Island 8T7,- 043.000. Ey a series of deductions from tile gross revenue from field crops for such items as feed for farm ani- ‘ mals and poultry, seed and unmar- xhantabie grain. and from the gross ilu It will be observed that the Can- adian Press story of the swearing in of the new Ontario Government states that "Lieutenant Governor Bruce and Mn. Bruce were spec- tators at the ceremony" at which the Clerk of the council of Ontario actually officiated. Legally this may ‘um revenue from fruits and vegotabls] be the procedure-foi- inatmoo it The Dominion Govemmeni/a fin- ancing of its 840000.000 public works ' by reduction of the gold coverage has been termed a. policy of mild inflation. This should meet with the warm approval of leading Liberals, both locally and at Ottawa, who frequently have advocated the benefit of inflation. Mr. W. M. Leo's voice has more than once been rais- lnflation. At Ottawa recently, Sen- ator Sinclair, in commending some features of the Marketing Bill, said inflation was even more important would seem that the policy of the Bennett Government in meeting ties, though criticised on partisan grounds, is precisely the policy which appeals most strongly to Liberal spokesmen when speaking non-polit- You should see the enlarged pub- Members of the Government were Take note, tomorrow is both Fri- Some campers are alleged to have had their tom frost bitten Mon- Piomier Hepburn of Ontario has allotted two portfolios to some HIIOIIIDGIS of his government, tem- Propagando Minister Herr Goeb- saturday is that "if it had not been the other fellows blood it would have been ours-" In other words. if you don't survive by the sword you It is pleasant indeed, to be able to surprise a veteran cosmopolitan New York sun, now in our midst. Per- haps he has heard from his friend Mould why ‘there are no Is- ‘They cannot get along or far in At the Young People's Conference there no fewer than three of the staff are from this province. viz: Rev. Dr- Ramsay, Rev. J. W. A. Nicholson, The proposed new loan of $400M 000,000—more than half of which is for refunding purposes-will con- stitute one of the major undertak- ings in Canada's financial history. There can be no thought of an el- ection in the minds of the Govern- ment when it undertakes "l0 put Premier Tiliey opines the older one gets the less use one has I01‘ party politics. l-lon. Mr. Mother- well declares the older he Bets, the less use he sees for religious dif- ferencs. Rt. l-lon. W. L. Macken- the longer he lives th" greater necessity he sees for {he annihilation of both Conservative and rlatiunal govern- ments. The wish fathers the thought Having failed h» intimidate either! connection William Godwin speculated“ much - j g g 1.‘ p0 ,,greater than in generating vce; an with the a1 gn ng i: Wormi ‘ wg; ‘ argument which is supported by Gfldrsfmniyhilis-eonno: aheitxdfdn gnfitain “m” mwrve" “s we“ as by mm- see o . l Itis soms to Communists to; Communists and that the army wil scheme to blockade the Communis return for much-needed “ °1 salt, rice or ammunition. ii clan for over half a century. Eighty- three years ago his father took him on a yachting cruise in Hebrides. They visited the ruins of Duart Castle, which had been lost to his family for more than a century. The boy vowed that one day he would restore the castle of the Mac- leans. That pledge he fulfilled 63 years later. when Duart captured l. turned to its ancient ownership. The event was celebrated by a grand gathering of the Macleans in Mull. Saturday Night: “We are not ao- quainted with the merits, artistic now been suppressed in three of those cities nor is any judge nor any jury, for it has never been brought into court. The suppression of it by a court judgment would be a. perfectly proper proceeding in any democracy. The suppression of it by use of the licensing power of the police authorities over public halls is exactly the kind of proceed- ing which might occur in Germany, in Italy or in Austria. The police authorities, no doubt think they are defending democracy. If they go on defending it in this way they will find themselves defending nothing but its dead body." The one true motive for the man- ufacture and sale of guns and other munitions of war by private com- panies is to be found in the finan- cial profits of the stock-holders of‘ these companies. There is every reason to believe that understand- ing and peace would result in the restriction of the market for arm- aments and consequently diminish the receipts of those engaged in their manufacture. Suspsicion and distrust cultivated between nations is therefore more profitable than than the spirit of international understanding which the League of Nations is trying to create and maintain. If the manufacture of armaments could therefore be taken out of the hands of private oom- panies, thus causing to disappear the temptation to make profits by sowing discord and hate, the world would have made a. great s.ep for- ward. Y t Canon Donaldson of Westminster Abbey made a rather pessimistic statement recently: "Our day is sat- urated with seven deadly sins: pol- itics without principle. wealth with- fcut work; peasure without con- science; knowledge without charac- ter; industry without morality; science without humanLy; and worship without sacrifice. NTOIGS 8 G1": l‘ may ‘first be nil to have " appearance in the British - army when one of our famous line regimente dyed their white shell river bed during the Indian mutiny of 1857. The color with which we are all so familiar is not really khaki at all, but olive drab. True khaki. is l. light, almost mustard, yellow is worn only by our troops is a most appropriate word to apply to this peculiar color because the word “khaki" when translated into the freeing of friends or relatives held as host- ages by Chinese Reds. This is the gist of an order issued by General Chiang Kai-shek, and is supposed to be operative in all provinces. Military authorities must be noti- fied of captive civilians held by the "do whatever it can" to secure their freedom. This order is part of-the areas. Captives have been freed in of Sir Fitzroy Donald Mlclean, the twenty-sixth hereditary chief of the clan Maclean, who just enters his 100th year, has been head of the from the Macleans in the 45's, re- or political, of the play which has What 300p i of Quura 1Q Ic- U. Bull. I-D. “ADACHEQ IN CIIILDUIN 7 Our eye spec the youngster can "see" »- ---- - -- beginning, it does not really know - instances and tgiuangrasps for things w- -- no l mm, h h b. ar away or ac ua y nearer to it the fate of all Chinese who pay ran- m“ l‘ rum" of school life that the toms of "eye strain" tunately the eyes ad very well with if there are defects noticed by the teacher. Dr. Hans Barkan, in The Sight Savin that in farsighted children these defects in their early school y t ing of print; shortsightedness pre- the schcolroom. These children therefore need glasses earlier in life. As school work increases. these slight eye defects become evident as the child complains of headache , hes-l. restlessness, inability to con- oentrate for any length of time, there are feelings of falntness, red- r ed eyes, and frequent flow of tears. These children are too much light. or by a bit too lime. by glare from walls or ceil- lng, disturbing noises, and so forth. “In general, headaches of the school child occur after school hours and are often easily dispelled by a little exercim, a piece of bread and Jam, 0P u Bless of milk, or by a dose of castor oil." However if the headaches are really due to the eyes they persist 1n Bppearing after school hours usually in the forehead. Dr. Barkan warns parents imd teachers that infected tonsils, teeth, an_d very often the sinuses, are to blame for a great many headaches, and glasses should not be put on the child until these conditions have been removed. The POint i8 th most "precious" senses and that aches may be due glasses should not headaches, even by an 0cu]j5L_the Physician eye specialist-until the digestion, tonsils, teeth and sinuses have been investigated. . The Lesser Poets (Montreal Gazette) The recent unveiling of a bust in Westminster Abbey in memoriam of Adam Lindsay Gordon, the Aus- tralian poet, brought forth the com- ment that this iribute to the author of “Bush Ballads" and “Sea Spray" is set beside the memorials of Ten- nyson and Wordsworth in this na- tional shriné. The Archbishop of Canterbury declared that the cen- tenary of the birth of this poet was a. fitting time to render him this mark of distinction in that “by the consent of the people of Australia, Gordon had been crowned as the unofficial laureate of their nation- al life." The thought stressed was that although this singer of the day could not be classed as one of the great eplooi poets, the memorial set in the "Poets Corner." is in all re- spects an appropriate recognition of the man who in his verses gave apt and telling expression to the free and vigorous spirit that dam inates the folk of the island contin- ent. The incident once more brings up the question, oft debated. as to the distinction that is betimcs made easily upset by at the eyes are the of the five special while some head- to defective vision be prescribed for ialistii tell us that it is during the first four years of life that the finer developme n. of child- ren's eyesight takes place; that while from the However it is during the first years first symp- are met, For- just themselves most children so that they are usually San Francisco, g Review, says or nearsighted are discovered ears. Farsight- edness causes headaches and blur-r- vents clear vision from back seats of ‘ Stamp ‘ 5 (mailings) - now at 850.000. by Arthur Hind. of Utioa, New York stamps to an syndicate. ted in England. but because- of the hum'd ‘ l climate, only small colony, s, practice which often - ree- ulted in shortages which were sup- plied by type designs from the local ne paper office. Such a stamp was this rarity. It was ongnally found by a boy collector in G _,etown but its dull appearance. black fig- ures on deep magenta colored Duper , was unattractive, and he traded it for about a. dollar's worth of bright new foreign stamm. From the boy's collection the stamp worked its way by easy stages and incneasing prices until it reached the Ferrllly collection in Par . Oin the dspersai or that collection in 1923. the Stamp was boukht by Mr. Hind bidding againtt K1118 George V.. who needed only this specimen to complete his collection of British stamps. it was . .. Him-l, a, fcnner British aubject,_ said the Kim's agent was not in serious competition when ho bought m; stamp. An Egg That Strayed (The Manchester Guardian) Th9 plflyful spirit of n. farmer named Twigg. of Lincolnshiie, has landed him in gpruggcuflo ' of some public interest. Mr. Twigg lately 110d B "Joy-ride" in an air- Dlflhe. and he conceived the boyish notion of taking up with him s bad are and dropping it upon the local bowling green in order to aatonish the Bruin keeper. He even went the leflkth of so wrapping it in Duper that it should descend with wmothlfls of the graceful hesita- tion of a pamclmtc. But Mr. Twigg calculated neither viriifh the laws of dynamics nor with the Consolidat- ed Orders in Council made under the Air Navigation Acts. His egg, released at about 1.000 feet. not only missed the bowling green: it landed on the local police station. and more particularly on the 1n. Spectors house. Mr. Twigg- in con- sequence was yesterdayfined fl-by the Alford Bench under the Order in Council which enacts that "a person shall not drop or cause to be dropped from any aircraft flying within Great Britain and Ireland any article except sand or water ballast, cr articles dropped . . . by special permission of the Secretary of Stute" Bench reminded Mr. Twigg that the maximum pen- alty for an infringement of the Order is as much as £200 and re- marked on the fact that his was the first offence of the kind. and that a large penalty would be inflicted in future, Mr. Twigg has in one sense done a service in calling at. tention by his prank to a much- needed regulation. It operates alike to curb the exuberance of advertis- ers, who but for it would doubtless rain leaflets upon us from above, and the carelessness of trippers who. if they carried their terrestrial habits of litter-strewing into their aerial excursions, would light-heart- ediy make life more hideous andl more dangerous for their fellows by discarding from on high anything from Waste paper to empty bottles. .___._-_ _ -_ _ ~-———-——————-——-~— [World's Famous A One-cent stamp. issued in SouthGuiuu. in 1866.15 valued rt was boughtin m: is.“ $82,500 andpossessi rofithas now been awarded to his widoiv. to ‘whom he had given the stamp some time be- fore his death, and before the sale of his collection‘ of British Colonial It is perhaps the. most famous stamp in the world. It was pr-"ntod in error. and is the only one of its kind ever found. The stamps of British Gilinna were generally prin- quantities were kept ’n stock in the PUBLIC FORVUM‘ Till alum; ll open for the lllonulol by oorrolpondrntu of qnuflnnn of tutu-on. The Cllrlottotown Guardian loci “c nooeuorlly andaru the opinion of oonoucndontn WEED-KILLIN G TIME them to get after the weeds. ospeci sections, still be seen raising ita un head and doubtless preparing to pro treated. without much trouble, be cleared out farmers‘ worst enemies . I am, Sir, etc, THOMAS MCNUTT, Dept. of Agriculture. Angling Art And Books Thereon (Monctcn Times) The fishcrmank craft is likely as old as that of the plough. If fish hooks are any token cf this ancient m. it is sure that the knack of angling was well known long be- fore Anthony and Cleopatra tried their luck upon the Nile waters. and that the cavemen of the Nean- derthal period knew enough of fishing to insure themselves a tasty grill over the embers as the result of a day's catch.- And it follows that the good disport which Jul- iana. Bcmers. the Prioress of Sop- well, near St. Albans. wrote about in the year 1406 A.D. was far long in vogue ere her "Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth the Angle" was done into print. Therein the Prior- ess tells how she thought fit to put together a “treatysc that sholde not come to the hondys of eche ydle Dersone. but compylyd in a grater volume of dyuerse bokys concern- |yhge to gentyll and noble men." In point of fact this book, of which a. reprint was made in 1827 in Baskerviiie type. was first pub- lLshed by Wynken de Wordc ten ,years after Caxton at Westminster isued his first book printed in Eng- iland. Now whether sister Juliana |Berners herself was an angler, we iare not told- But judging from the ,text we might well infer she had ,tried the magic of the rod which ."be cause of man's fair age and long life." Else how did she come at the close knowledge of the ang- ler's art for instance. when she says that "his loss is not grievous, and other griefs may he not have, sav- ing but if any fish break away after he is taken on the hook, or else that he catch nought"? Which sounds all too pat to be hearsay. Or again: least he hath his wholesome walk and merry at his ease, a sweet air of sweet savour of the mead flow- ers; that maketh him hungry. He heareth the melodious harmony of the fowls. I-lc seeth young swans herons. ducks, coots, and many other fowls with their broods. And is no man merrier than he is in spirit." All or which is so apt that reason to be thankful for the Dante, beween major and minor poets, so classed. and whether this anti thesis ihhiA/ll, itnilyeon, DTOWIIIIIQ, mere- can be sustained. Nobody doubis that there are many varied phra es I of poetic craftsmanship. The line’ Cape Argus: "If l-litlerism ever bursts upon this country the safest thing for every printer i0 do will be to scrap all his punctuation; ,marks. To German newspaper-B, 0h? at Essen and one at Cologne, were] banned for inserting a question mark at the end of a sentence re- ferring io Hitler's reconstruction work. They have apparently been. able to convince the dictator that the crime was a slip of the p8". 5-5 it were, and the ban has been re- moved. But woe betlde them, says the secret police, if the pen 51105 again, Quite right, too! More im- portant things than the exis ence of a newspaper have hung upon a point of punctuation. Yet although one man’; book is mother's poison, the power of books in generating virtue is probably, as ,mon sense, for if there be any vir- itue in virtue, any power to defend itself, which in spite of the doubts ,0! faint-hearted moralists, I believe |there is. then I say that the last ‘word will be with the good book laainst the bad. and the permanence 'of its effect will be the best of its ,goodness. however poisonous it may l be called by those with an axe w, |grind. Virtue xodccirs itself by, Ireason of its viriIity.-—l-lolbrook Jackson in "The Fear of Books." is the Clerk of the Council of Canada who swears in Lieutenant Governors-but in practice since Confederation it has been the Lieu- tenant-Governor who has presided at the function. Of course, Mr. Hepburn and his advisers may be wanting to show that so far as his assuming office is con- cerned he can dispense with a Lieutenant-Govorlior. l of demarcation is drawn between descriptive and imaginative vcrsi- fication; between the romantic and mystical stylists; between those in‘! whose effusions the didactic c c.nciil| prevails and ihosc who leave this ingredient severey alone. we ilZiVJ| the so-cailed "pcets of society." of‘ which cult Frederick Lcckyer, Mat-j thew Prior and Mackworth Praed‘ may stand as examples, tile first! qualifications of ihis ilk being thatl they must be men of the world, cd-i ucated up io the level of prevailing‘ culture, and gifted with humor, with tha; sparkling wit and mental‘ temper which can only be gained by: him who “lives in the universal wayi with ‘multitudes of men." And‘ alongside these may b0 111E060 I11P| "poets of nature," who finger less. upon the satirical and pessimist string, concerning the foibfes oi humanity and the vanity of human wishes. and betake themselves to the “mysterious face of common things," quite content to get aside from the dust and din and furious clangor of civilian thoroughfares, and to descant upon a wayside weed or a. common daisy. bright-eyed ev- angel as the sunbcams it courts, and sweetly wild as the grass with which it loves to herd. "Slight as thou art, thou art en- ough to hide , Like all create.‘ things, scclets from me. , . And stand a barrier to etclniiy And I. how can 1 praise thee well and wide From where I hither side? Thou little veil for so great mystery. All of which shows plainly enough that poets differ in temperament. degrees of talent and power of ex- pression. as one "star differeth from another star in glory." But minor poeis? What means this phrase? Why this subtraction? Do any of us rank the minor key in music as an inferior strain? Do any of us doubt that as beautiful flowers may be found in odd nooks and crannies of the landscape, or beside the crumbling wall, as in any other quarter wherein nature lpiudg hor largeae? W; have over! dwell-upon the (lltil and other cults that serve to ulllW our attention 0o and perpet- uate the sovereign influence oi these. Ana-Ital‘ splrhs in the poetic realm. Ana let mis be said wlcn ai. the run-toned empnasis the theme it- oeii deserves. yer. anyone acquaint- eu Wltll ine range oi poetic genius is perieciuy well aware that here is Lne dreamworid that profiers to the iIlJlCl “a welcome sweet and marvel- .ous.y hula," and that in ihe pages oi writers who are but known, per- chance, to a very narrow circle of leaders, there are to be found passages oi genuine poetry as ex- qushe and well expressed as any- thing that appears in ihe epicai or cpocnai tomes that strike on the chorused grandeur of the organ in ..s iuii-prpcd resounding appeal i0 the nuinail emotions; and m the lovcl- of poetry they serve to fill the smallest acts of life with divine meanings. FROM "A SONG 0F THE HILLS AND MY FRIEND" There are two things I long for, An exile over the sea: The hills I sing this song for In the old land over the sea. The lad I sing this song for, In the old land over the sea, The lad I bring this song for, The lad who once loved me. Itury passed through ten it sounds very like the "Compleat Angler" that Izaak Walton 0d in 1653. and which within a cen- editions and today has passed through seven times that number. And Robert Burton, au.hor of "Anatomy of Mel- ancholy," published in 162i, cites the verdict of the Prloress in praise of fishing and almost in the self- same words. The seventeenth century was rich in fishing lore. Following the work of Rev. Samuel Gardiner, D D., on "Angling." which appeared in 1606. came the book called "Barker's De- lisht" in 105i. and next year "Sportsman's Delight" by Gervase Markham, and old Izaak himself Speaks with joy of William Perkins, "a. learned divine and painful Dreachcr who bestowed commenda- tion upon angling"; of Dr. Whit- aker. the Rcgius Professor of Div- mity 8t Cambridge, "a déar lover of angling": and of Dr. Alexander Nowel. "noted for his meek spirit, deep learning, prudence and piety; and as constant practioer of angling 8S any age can produce." Forty and four years was he Dean of St. Paul's Church. we are told. and spent one-tenth ling." His pictu ose College, de re, kept in Brazen- picts him leaning on his desk with a Bible before him, and his lines, hooks and other fishing tackle lying around. He lived to be ninety-five and his age neither “dimmed his eyes. his hear- ing. nor his memory." Walton has it that angling and temperance were the causes of those blessings, and "l wish the-like to all that im- itate him. and love the memory of so good a man," says the author of "Compleat Angler." who commends the fishing craftsmanship of Sir Henry Wotton and of Dr. Sheldon. Warden of All Souls‘ College, 0x- There are two thinu through all life's ills A man must love to the end, The great hills, the straight hills, And the oldest dearest friend. I weary me 0' the sound o‘ the cu And all her white waves‘ buffetings, Her triumphinga, l-ler loud iienceable trumpets of proud foam, ‘ I want the hills, my home. ford. founder of the shelrionian Theatre. and Archbishop of Can- terbury. and not lcss noted as an expert fisher for umbel and barbel- The number of clerics who have become famous for their skill with the rod would make a large and scholastic assembly. _@..___________ CULTURE. wcoifrcynlunic. Culture Ls to know the best that has been said and thought in the world. ' w I- Bin-It is encouraging to note that in certain sections of the Province; many of the farmers are acting on the suggestion made through this Department last winter, advising ally the wild mustard. It is to be regretted, however, that the hunt is not asgenerai as it ought to be. On many farms in otherwise progressive this pernicious weed can pagate its kind on a more extensive scale than ever. This is a good time to get after this pest and thus save thousands of dollars in soil fertility and enhance by many hundreds of dollars the value of every farm so No progressive farmer will buy a weed-infested farm, nor will any progressive farmer permit his fields to be infested by weeds which can It is earnestly hoped that a deter- mined eflort will be made at the present opportune time to clear our farms of all weeds, wherever pct-ss- ible, and so rid the Province of the if the angler take fish, surely there t that the entire faml] ill _ ciate is to take u y w app“ publish pp Venetian blinds to darken the of his time in ang-' l tates. In men ments are the state," If harsh service 0n should be best-served ly a decre uikated in or whether b body. This with far traitors. bu friends. If port such who, at wo annies and f orever. 1n punishment and have to An independent Company . . . all The Way Of The Soviet (Montreal Gazette) The U.6.8,R. does not practise half measures in enforcing its dic- in Government anddndustry in re- cent momhs it has sent dozens cf before firing squads score more to prison. These state- Mosoow, in a court of which city three workers have just been sent- o-ced to death for systematic pil- iering of sheet iron. nails and other materials of which the Union of Republic has not enough for urgent industrial and housing needs. It is terrific punishment that being meted out dlvidual rights and considerations and everything else. ' rials and rogues makes for patriotic all the time, then the U.S.B.R. 133811180 the fatherland" w for the punishment by shooting of» any persons who “are attempting preparing to escape abroad. This is aimed to ch scale desertions from th a well-equipped and -reaching ramifications, for it relates not only to the punish- ment cf the actual deserters or reprisals will be sons who may treachery towards the state, and of sympathy friends. The decree to make spies of ordin citizen , who, in their zealous u? a ready to sacrifice fra altar of worship of t force w“ to disappear and the tyr- of the Czars were remain, as do the . and omission are “And yggtlniftc‘ thye,‘ 1 leaders demand ____._.__________ KEEPING COOL except those that made of glass 0r white porcela Charlottetown Headquarter: In Chariot CIGARS I by Canadians for aver 50 yure. f With that passion distinguishes them, stltutions of learnin ised recently in the to see what sort of its drive against graft and ing to their studeri made in despatches from 8080101011 81110841 0h of subversive from the pens authors. It transpired that name of Jane Auste its is “for the good of comes before in- of her contribution which dealing with the crlm- H8101; the part of everybody of Richard llieverelfl’, dith; "Vanity Fair, "Old Wives’ ‘Paley’ “David Copperfield", ens and “The Mil George Eliot. They d0 not have revolutionary library. stand in rows of the most patriotic and state on earth. Recent- e relating to "crimes as pzomq provides‘ Moscow, which l y running or flying." eck any large- e Red Army, well-trained of public safety imprint‘ publishing house. can tell. Each of isalaw every ro-resding. t to their relatives and these latter do not ro- on your vacation-ff intentions to the Ogpu- oollent company. "I359 58511150 P9P 1 in be innocent of any “l: g ‘t fit. may only be guilty for relatives and is calculated patriotism, are tcmity on the he fatherland, T0 Punishment of the innocent for the B01]; $1115 °1' the Bullty is something new in statutes even in a Socialist land. Pimple; The UnShS-R. started out to make _ everyone equal and the proletariat Skin Diseases happy and contented. The rule of injustices of the Empire to be abandoned priwtloe. armed forces secret police. and ins of commission Bpllarently harsher mPerial days. The fldvflhwd government y whatever price their Nervousness for s Anaemia pi p the rugs and put taking down all or- are in. For Full Strength and‘ Fine Flavor so BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA Ceylon Small Leaf 1 'I_‘IME TABLE lctown Headquarter: in Sourl|—LI-JNNOX HOTEL L‘. OCGROTHE LIMITED l". ' ' communicator-million Universities communxn not was rampant. fed. was Prejudice." The others frequently recommended the “Retum of the Nltiv “Henry Ehmbnd," Nathaniel Hawthorne; "The 1,. i , . ‘m- ,. Jane To Thb For Winnipeg Free Press) for polls which thirty-three l,“- g were circular- Unitcd States books the pro- fessors of English were recommeni-L tsJTheie was . It within and wh y the strea litswture flowln of‘! contemporary '3 lady by the ngstood first in the profesao n regard, and the titlg "Pride and in the most list were Thomaq W Thackeray; "The Scarlet int Ordeal "GQOYEe M619 ‘Ihackerayq Afllold Bennett. (vi-mien Dick- l on the Flog‘: the look of i Rather the} respectability Buarantoed appropriately with the of some unimpeachablo But you nevel them have with.‘ in them the spark that burr‘ through the years and klndies every fresh reader-indeed with Take one or two of them a you wish gheymwitlel be imprisoned for from *—_‘-_——-———— ve n years, and all th l be- ~ M18103 will be “uiflsoatcdf {Thus M Aldulhot’ an‘ audien“ 40°00 iifiulple was let‘I\ in oommun a military tattoo hero. __________=_______, The Answer Sallow Complexion Loss of Muscular Tone Impaired Appeflto Run Down Condition Stomach Disorders lronized Yeast The 2 lilacs nnucsrona ’ 149 Great George Street _iw FARDY nus a ITAXI §ERVIGE ciiiiiloirisrowii to roliiuiiiz Leaving .. 4.00 p. IILIAIVIIII Fortune . . . . . . . .. 8.15 u. m " I-lnelbrook 20 p. m. “ Dlngwolre . 8.25 a. m. " Keefe‘: Lake ... 4.35 p. m. “ Dundnsf 8.45 a. in. " 48 Road 4.45 p. m. " Bfldgetfivn 8.50 u. m- " 5.00 p. m. " Cardin ....... 9.05 a. in. " .. 5.15 p. m. " 48 Static 9.20 u. m- " 5.20 p. m, “ Keeleb Lake 930 a, m- " D 5.40 p. m. " lhnlbrook 9.45 a. m, Arrive Fortune .. 5.50 p. nLArrIve Charlottetowm. 10.05 a. m -—BED INDIAN SERVICE STATIOB CHABLOTPETOWN CITY BUS SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY SOURIS LEAVES TIME LEAVES Elmira .. ..... 1.15 A. M. Charlottetown . . ..,.. Sonrh. .. 8.10 A. M, Mt. Stewart ..... St. Peter! .. 8.55 A. M. Morell Mogell .. 9,15 A. M. St. Peter's . Mt. Stewart 0.40 A, M. sou-u Arrives Charlottetown .. 10.30 A. M. Arrives Elmira .. Bu: will atop on signal at my point on route. Headquarters in Charlottetown. Old Spain Ton Rooms. 915mm]