......---- .-..¢......a-._-.-n..>-.. ...l.-,._.---.~.._._-.' a » two-year term offer was so favor- TIIE QHIRLUTTETUWI fiillflllllh Notes By 77w Wu? IIIlldolh-W- Oink! I. IILIID. l.’ P. Search! y-l-klt-Ool I). A. laokinnon. D- I- Editor and Inlhgilg Director-J. l. Burnett, I‘. I. L Anon-late linen-hank Walk». and D. K. Curric- g u, (g d“ mu) as.» you (In advance.) delivered. [:3 plu- 1.2! (it-advance) Innllndwtro Canada and Ulltld MIMI- Vleo-Praaldont, J. l. Burnett, I’. J. l. 0. O FRIDAY SEPTEMBER M. 1935 i caamr wusmfbua Our contemporary is at a loss in account for the fact that, on its own showing, the financial credit of the Province stands high with the bond houses. This, of course, is due to the sound financing of the Mac- Miilan administration. No amount of partisan nrisrepresentation can disguise this fact. A Provinces cre- dit is not built up in a few weeks. and since Premier Lea and his colleagues were in Opposition dur- ing the past four years, and opposed and criticised every financial action of the Government in power, the credit is certainly not due to them! Our contemporary falsely states that “when the money market was at its very lowest ebb, 2.97 per cent, they (the Conservatives) borrowed for a. period of only two years." The quotation given applied only to two year bonds and it was because the able that it was accepted. The market was not then at its lowest ebb, for rates declined since that time. And what is our‘ contempor- a.ry's authority for the statmient that interest rates will not be reduc- L ed still lower in the next few years? One of the most urgent economic reforms is for easier credits. Re- duction in interest rates is a plank in the policies of both Mr. Bennett and lvlr. Stevens; and Mr. Mac- kenzie King in his latest broadcast speech declares that he also stands for economic and monetary reform. hands of money wherewith to buy. fishing communities by this means shun. Queens start on Tuesday at Eldon. preparing for our Ihrhibition-in porary, Hon. Walter M. Lea has re- sumed his duties after a month's absence. mersldc this week by the Mel-can diehards when the name cf Mr. 1B. which have so tied them up that they have been unable to carry on their work effectively. This in turn will free the frozen credits which have been a retarding influence upon the operations of buyers and storekeepers in shore communities. It is hoped, the Maritime Merchant remarks, that with such an adjust- ment it will be possible for the flsh- ermen as they bring in their catches to sell more advantageously 1n view of the releasing into merchants’ Unfortunately the flsh markets are not promising just now, but even so the release of so much money in ought to greatly tone up general business in the places along the EDITORIAL NOTES Be prepared for eqiunocial gales. The Conservative meetings in In old days we would be now he last week of September. According to our evening contem- A roorback was started in Sum- A unique pllkrlmln lo neon waa that of ‘l4 Scouts and Sccuterl from the Iraq government schools at " J‘ Bcysandleadorlwerein Scout uniform, and travelled in their own caravan of carsovcr the modern highway to the sacred city of Mohammedans. King Ibn Saoud greeted them at Mecca, and grant- ed them the privilege of taking pictures, and other special concea- sions. King Ibn Saoud is a strong friend of the Boy Scouts of whom there are some 12.000 in Irad-Ex. All other-invent with an invisible ray which. when brckxn by pedes- trians, will cperate traffic lights is i0 be tried on roads on the out- skirts of London. The new system will be worked unconsiiously by pedestrians, who will find that they are able to cross roads at Junctions fitted with the ray apparatus. If the experiment proves a success, there is a likelihood of its extension to many parts of London, where at present the risks encountered by pedestrians are causing concern to the authorities. The method now to be med has not previously been put to the test in any part of the world-London Times. The P.L.A. Monthly, the maga- zine of the Port of London, carries on its front cover for September a full-page illustration showing Canadian apples in coirrse of de- livery from the Cunard-White Star steamer Ascania at Greenland Docks, Surrey Commercial Docks. On the quay is seen a mechanical loader and the interior in the pic- ture is part of the apple sheds at Commercial Yard West. The P. L. A. had an exhibit at the Canadian National Exhibition, and distribu- ted an admirable brochure specially prepared to drive home, the truth that London provides the wealthiest and largest market for Canadian trade; the Port of London is the obviously and natural gateway to that market." - One of the qllclfoal Jobs in the world v is that of a man who is wasp-catcher to Fry's the choclate makers. whose employee were being pestered by the insects. Darin! May and June he destroys as many queen wasps as possible to prevent MIDDLE AGE "yo: those who aspire to make the period known as middle age com- fortable, fruitful. and happy, the keynote of conduct must be "mod- erati . 1n matters of food and ex- ercise, work or play, the middle-aged must conserve their powers. Even in such common matters as sunshine and fresh air one can go to ex- tremes, like the nudists and sun bothers; and in the matter of food. it is notorious that we cannot be trusted. Faddists often eat too little or a one-sided diet; but most com- mcnly we overeat." 1 am quoting from an editorial in the British Joimral of Physiology and Medicine. Middle-age» is i): cross roads in life. We can detenn e that we are not going to grow old and so so about our work or play as if we still youthful. This is of course the idea that it is better to wear out than to rust out and most of us will agree that it is better in live until we die (really live) than it is to dc- cide that we are old, already dying in fact, and so rust out. a But the cross roads can be met in the spirit of the editorial quoted above; that is moderation in all things. What does moderation mean? Moderation means that in the matter of sleep or rest we take an extra hour in bed each night whe- ther we sleep or not, or that during the day we snatch a few minutes rest by lyin down, completely rs.- laxed. Glads one knew how to rest for a few minutes at different times during the day, and Edison, al- though he got along on four to an hours rest at night, always had a couch in his worlnoom on which he could relax at times during the day. In the matter of food moderation means cutting down on all food by 26 per cent, and perhaps as much as half on meat and eggs if our work is indoors and sitting down. If we m. or Huey’ Long (Sydney a»: m... ‘rhere is a pertinent reference- in Holy Writ to those who live by the , sword. It is a reference that ap- ~ plies perfectly. if basically. to Louisiana's Huey Long, dead in State city at Baton Rouge from the p pistol of a political foe. Up from _ a "Hill-Billy" of "Whitp Trash" origin, Long. by the arts of dema-‘l gogyandausecfforcahadcap- tured the Government of his Stats. With municipal and Fedcraloffic- ials completely under his sway, with police and State militia and even the judiciary his mere henchmen, he was dictator, ruling Iouisiana as completely as Stalin rules Russia 4 or Mussolini Italy. Nor is it an answer to say that Long, giving Louisiana personal 1 and gangster Government, seized power from other gangsters (which he did), and that he did some things well. The DOint is. and the I wonder, that Louisiana, one of the oldest communities 1n the “land oi the free" was not free, that demo- cracy, as we understand and prac- tise it, was no longer practised no understood there. Instead of "gov ernment of the people by the pec- ple", there was government by Hue, Long. Nor was Long the mere political shyster of the negro dialect that Canadians sometimes heardon the radio. He wes- a cunning, crafty, able politician, a man whose grit and perseverance and ability were demonstrated by the fact that he passed athree-year law ccuno in seven months; that he had to his credit brilliant achievements in the courts: that he was a platform or- ator of power. Such things are not of the equipment of the mere third- rater in politics. Long's death removes from the American political scene a force capable of much mischief. But mis- chief stamped out by violence too often leaves mischief behind it, and the lesson of this happening goes deeper. It ‘is the lesson that dic- tatorships, fruits of recreancy to the true meaning of democracy, are desperate things, that it is from other sources men must seek peace, freedom and security. The De 4i i Steiiensh Speaking \ Charlottetown Said : "Ontario Grows Tobacco Which Rivals That Grown In Vlrglnlo" n a. u BRIGHT cur Is Manufactured From the ' Vlrglnla Type Tobacco Mr. Stevens Mentioned Hickey 8c Nicholson filfiFfgMflER 20.1935 -—.....-::-._._~ \ walrus» Why thm does our contemporary W. Robinson was suggested as a do real physiclal work food need not I r . 31°11’ bMdmE- F19!" Juli’ "WW9! be reduced in amount. J’ anticipate that interest rates will be podibn stevens candidate. he m,“ the adjacent fields and m the matter of “m!” model“ The Case. Australia L = 1|: p higher within the next few years? destroys nests. Expert as he is, he gflpn megng simply regular walking - _ _ I _ w“. m “mauve lmpeflem’ v or does it assume that. even with Mussolini u resorting u» the om sometime mm a sup. and. daily or golfing two or three times (Vancouver mvmm *9 limb" l“ P°11°'°' ""1 "'1' i, rm flim- , d ‘mjivlflf’ mung, W, o; and“ m,“ m. Qasjer credit, prgvafljng genemuy, ruse of crying out began he l, hum recently he was compelled i0 dimi a week. Badminton or tennis should » 19 in 9739* ° a 9'“ o e‘ m Some good Liberals in Vancou- ver, which is much closer to Aus- tralia than Toronto is, should really put Premier Hepburn habited by the primitive and non: Aryan Gouda. Aninteresting feature of the The fiscal policy of tho Austral- ian national government. too, has not been the policy favoured by the Liberals in Canada, but has been Europe ‘cgother, black coal veins in one continent joined black coal veins in tho other. He found other resemblance, the rock strata, for himself of his shirt, into which over 40 infuriated insects had pene- trated-News cf the World, Lon- don. be played only by tennis players who have kept up their game; it is dangerous for others. the rating cf this Province in the bond market-now so satisfactory‘ This is calculated to create an M- mosphere favourable to him when " ' after four years of conservative rule —will decline under manipulations of the “budget balancers"? A SORRY LEADER the League's peace plan does actual- ly reach/him. ‘ It is understood that the Provin- cial Government has given the ne- cessary guarantee for the carrying At first it was thought that the greater part oftheproposed“pump- priming" and governmental adjust- men would have been accomplished within one or two years, so that business could go forward in a That body of yours will enable you to really “live until you die" if you use moderation at the period of middle-age. straight with respect to the recovery of Austrailia from the depts into which it had sunk a few years ago. Mr. Hepburn, in his speech in the Arena Wednesday evening, left the impression with his audience that Australia had been forced into dif- ences, including menis, which, incidentally, do not meet with the approval cf Mr. King and Mr. Hepburn. example, of Africa and South Ame . That the continents move is now fairly well recognized. although Dr. Wegencr lost his life making tests in Greenland before his theory was established. So the pest f-w Yul-rs is the growth of fruit exports from Empire countr- ies, says the Imperial D nomic Committee, even when the world total seemqmcre or less station- ary or even declining] In 193! 8!- poria of apples from Canada, Aus- f th Pot i; G o s Associa- , ficulti b l’ ll wing h tariff trali d. New aland- of citrus The paucity of Mr. Mackenzie zinc u; mean: thratirlsga “sod” nqmzslwaygrilfts owl? regained u: poucleiflmgh 250mm 11:13am‘! by Gondwanaland of dilsruptcd Gtogdwtziifii, m“; gnu so“ ‘him ma King's campaign mam“ m“ m ‘will ti the business as mlllelnilrm shifting sneivmprefinrfnre- “h” mm“ K°"°'"'“°“‘- "f! m" - nntun noAsscciesgWiryvlfor the ‘as m°mn°i -~°' “m” 3mm 5mm‘ Judged from the frequency with lgrlgetoformcofreguirom any undue g-"gnglns hi8 ‘fiold-malg-ihals and a rewvered by L w 9mm“ (“an”) vancemcnt of ‘Science the other Amm; or “m” “d 6mm“ which he repeats, over and over the staff of his planned-prosperity such as those which Mr. MacKennie Twelve years ago a scientist. day was scarcely new, except in from Australia and South Africa L_i.__..._.. {\.l> again, the barefaced misstatement “n”? "gmim ““'“°“‘" Program-has ceased to think of SONG mgdililmagfsfftlfigmg if); mi“: flggm fidtifely detail. Professor Watts has ac- ‘Qgmgifflnujfnflif “:3; cmsoudfg ‘that Canada's place m the expo" The impressive funeral service in fangs??? agllglgriglerziots ind lists; oh- elruel‘ shill 9h‘ P95973198 510W. what m‘ Hepburn mum’ the“ m’ mcnnscmmly be!“ to may a gllgigtrigiilgqlflm huh “menu o! Africa‘ m" m “ch ‘we aub- and Mr. Markenzie King, on hear- , 58°. "18 l W?! mllfih mum Wldu- ' ' w claimed: "surely ware not crew some saoonoo. w. Km; w» in m» spread language than the world has ygmgu i» Iva-q Al» I dminfstratfon of Egtatgs m‘ the m 3' exlmmed u“ mo“ to run ainst McLean House and in hoarse voice repud- y“ i001! iu iii! hl-ltflfy. Ind the firilt d - W.‘ ' M” "mi "l" Domini“ “m!” awn“ “a. , mm .1 “ the melon-roe ms boobies rim , . would go the same way. One thing You know you cant bee. - fated them, threw them over with- t0 1am h ‘h. the" “e mm’ E N o S a“ ‘ “m, “an _ h“. a eclalty’ 4 ymmsously. tmderthisAct, which many mistakes, been guilty of "no has said it—" began m. Germany and Italy will form- an 9 . , , l‘? 7 warpuaed at-tbl int saiaioacf much hammers and oppression. but Kind , gtmommlfgfiu “dun £$ - .. parliamonhmcneyiatobcloaned hithcriobchaalcarnedfromcxpcr- ' and when?’ flatly de- ponafaflhmmmmmuan_ p 1 -=~-~-~---~m m-~,':::"s'..a::s.+ ~":.::"..:"~ :~'"s*..".:."~.... m. asses-m . ~ - - - - ' g-eaipropertyamortgageiatakaatccnvcm e - ' no" . . no . . . > . hrmturnandinthiawanfthba- imcfqrcatlritainandtholmit- ‘Wqhahasgotfircpiiodllatcn- Wmilflwmmém- "4"": HoiuiuoLu '2'" o . , k . lfcvefl, new funda will ba released ad ante-am thereby has vaiuab- nelat. . “mm” , ‘ 1 n"! Llffi i ACCIJIRI, SIC R888. markers of the world -has been lost during the past five years. To intelligent electors this mis- statement was answered convincing- ly bythe Prime Minister when he showed, in the course of his broad- cast messages, that while in 1929 Canada. had 3.71 per cent of world export business, this had increased to 3.99 per cent in 1934. In other words, Canada's place in the export markets stands higher than it did in the heyday of Mac- kenzie Kings regime. ‘this has been due in large part to the oper- ation of the Empire Trade Agree- ments which Mr. King and his fol- 0111i’ 79-999 "W" P°°P1° 9" em‘ d u, t d m w,“ r m mine: ‘ duc'|on. istribution and k , _, is not ‘ They lowem 1n pamameng; peg-glstgnfly nioyed today than in i930, and this dgzmmogseor afithmltymml‘; the; Unuwved. unbiest, by WOW!!!’ the bfeuklns up of the great estates must match 1n color. Dr. Wegener b g chance. and cvernment e hi d tched his oiors when he opposed. numb" is “may acwunted :03“! “"9 "i"? meant the °V°""“““3 9' The dead must rest, the dead shall control‘ of public utilimsrsltg) sogiial ___' ORANGE PEKOE . 3'91‘ “"19 11W mistake 111 Judfl- me development m mass p o - P"m"m°"t' which “um withdmw rest. policy included a variety of reforms men-t and in statesmanship, he de- serves to remain forever in the “valley of humiliation," into which he admitted he was responsible for leading his party in 1930. Mr. King learned nothing from his mistakes when in office, and his prerent campaign tactics show all too clear- ly that he hasqeamed nothma, Sh" l. many thin“: “u-“w the difficulties Canada has been Conditional. such u lnasllm- _ .'.‘;“".§°.§‘°2.§f;f;‘";.°‘§?f;. ‘£31’. vr-vw-v-v- I» v» ~= o: szraezizitzzcazz: 1.“: isn't‘: on’... urtlfiod Pllnlif iiufllflufli FLUKE VICTORIES Some Liberal newspapers are raising a hullabalioo because the Social Credit party polled only 54 per cent of the voles in Alberta, but took 89 per cent of the seats. 'I'hat's nothing. In this Province the Liberals polled 58 per cent of the votes and took all the seat: that seems pretty certain is that it won't go that way again in this Province. rvsusnusms LOAN Aer‘ The coming ma: operation of taii Fisherman's‘ Loan Act is an event that will affect» everyone ad- ln i - fishing communities. Thou run who already have mort- v. their IWPQYWI W"! b‘ ‘u’ to; ‘th_:mi¢1-l1“".9".m¢9f gags: 1‘ alowdfrlililintcallfi fill: Trinity Church ycsterday W85 rl fitting tribute to the memory of Mr. Paton who fought a 800d 118119 commercially, politically and spirit- ually, and, while not invariably successful in attaining his objec- tive, at least never gave up tryins to help the under-dog. Mr. Ralston says that the num- ber of unemployed in Canada 1B riow 700,000. Mr. Hepburn says the figure is 1,300,000. Neither Mr. Hep- burrfs assertion nor Mr. Ralsions has any real relation to the facts. tion methods which is going on all over the world. .- The choice of the electorate at this election will largely decide the future of democracy. If there be not sufficient return 0f mombf-‘rs favouring constitutional govern- merit, Canada will be on the hish Germany-both ruthless and tyran- ical. A correspondent writes: ‘After being successful in making Premier Lea. eat his words, one of the clan who resented the remark: “1‘il haul __ _ _ 1n on my back" is extend- ing the bullying tactics farther afield. Meeting Mr. F. J. E. Wright on the street the other day he ex- Baid Mr. Wright in reply: “i real- iu I can't but him. but the people can." Should K118891101}? the last moni- ent consider a promise in the llthiopian dispute it would be in accordance with the reputation be has already earned. no has made 1y improved his admittedly bene- The New Deal as now viewed at Washington from the Administration's standpoint is a political and social revolution. All pretense of temporary emergency has vanished. Its aims are positive and progressive, rather than nega- tive and conservative-Dr. Albert Shaw in the Review of Reviews. The present government has oh- tained large powers from Parlia- ment to act independently of that body because it believed that it could not otherwise deal ‘properly with .unforseen conditions that were. with the country's affairs in so unsettled a state, arising from day to day. There have been numerous emergencies which have the authority if it felt that this was being ‘ abused. Parliamentary supremacy has remained ‘ ' - ed. Nor is there the slighest danger that it will not be fully maintained during the next five years. no matter what party is placed in oi- flee as s result of the coming elec- tion. It is a wholly unreal issue that Mr. King is trying to create-Ed- monton Journal. is assured. Mr. Hearst has broken with him. Mr. Hearst's opposition has been the rabbit's foot of American politics. Any man he op- poses is almost always sure to be elected. In a long and melancholy political careei Mr. Hearst has three greatest friends and party supllortors, Senators McDougald, Haydon and Raymond, stood con- damned of having received from Beauharnois for Liberal Party funds out compunctldn. He claimed he had no knowledge of the scuice of the Beauharnols wot- button, and asserted that Mr. Bennett had said "a loader should have knowledge of the source." "Where and when has he (Mr. Bennett) llltl that?" demanded the Prime Minister. "Inhiawcrdsaminuioaacila inferred it." continued m. mag. blow, In after years, those happier years, And children weep, when we ow Far fewer tears, far softer tears. Oh, true shall boyish laughter ring, Like ttllnkling chimes, in kinder m And merr shall the maidens sing: And I not ere, and I not there. Like lightning in the summer night Their ‘mirth shall be, so quick and ree; And oh! the flash of their delight I shall not see, I may not see. In deeper dream, with wider range, Those eyes shall shine, but not on -Wllliam Johnson-Cory. been the unsuccessful candidate or for the offices of President, Governor, Mayor, Sheriff and Alderman. Like the heroes of Shaemas 0‘Bheel‘s great poem, he went forth to battle but he always fell-New York World-Telegram. defiance of authority, friendly in- timacy-most moods and situations and experiences produce some. English must not only borrow- when in its long history did it re- fuse to borrow ——but it is becoming a basic duty for the Briton to get on close terms with the racy speech cf America's plains and cities, or else how will he understand O. Henry and others, or follow Holly- wood's flicks? "The English langu- age," writes Mr. A. Lloyd James in a book we referred to some days good ways of speaking itfl-Gacutta Statesman» . dcmandingaanct-icnaftilahard tbofcarthat i S a r lie m? parallel he drew between Australia and Canada is quite without mean- lomething to do with. Australia's however. was only a factor, and not the most important factor, in the chain ofevents which ledtothe ment was a socialist government. Its economic policy locked to the socializati n of the means of pro- game with himself, in his imagina- tion sliding the continents around and fitting them together "like o. High tariffs did, of course, have jig-saw puzzle Mentally, he moved Africa. 3,000 miles to the west, and- difficiilties, but the tariff in ques- the bulging outline of Brazil filled tion was not a. tariff on the Bennett the Bay of Guinea and the project- and Stevens basis. but an abnorm- ing Cape San Roque nestled in the ally high tariff affair imposed by hollow of the Ca the Scullin Labor government with born Dr. Wegeners theory of the idea of making Australia eco- drifting continents, and the Aus- ncmically independent The tariff trian scientist's suggestion that all bodies of land were once joined together in one vast continent. a monster Gondwanaland, the "lost" sweepingout of the Labor govern- cbntinent ment in 1931. The Scullin govern- placed in the Southern hemisphere in prehistoric times. So was that geologists had But when one is working a jig- saw puzzle, finding. two pieces that fi ‘ ‘” and a host of pensions, allowances and benefits. all of which involved high expenditure. Whatever pro- gress might have been made with these reforms in a time of pros- parity. in an era of depression they Wore found to be impossible of ac- complishment. The cure for Australia's difficul- ties which were very different from Hepburn has been advocating, but through the repudiation of the wild ‘ men of the Labor party and the union of the moderate men of all the parties to form a national gov. ermnent. That national govern- ment has succeeded because it has choice for the French government. ~ been moderate and sane in its Policies. because it has been careful and economical, ‘- it has pro- gressed on conservative lines and, 0R. L. B. EVANS 0f London, Eng. Noted Physician treated luc- cessfuly pnd obtained por- manent cures of Stomach tress and many other ail- ments peculiar to the atom- ach with a prescription, which we have procured and aell under the name of EVANS STOMACH mxruaa. We alone have the solo rights on this prescription and vines selling it have received num- erous testimonials from antin- flcd p chief of all. no doubt. because it has enjoyed the comf-i-[rce and support of the Aust“ian people. who have willingly made gacriflcgl DON'T FOOL with your "FRUIT ll cents. MAGS Ill-l OINTIIKT Gina quick relief in all cacao Why Gondwana-land has been so firmly established as the name of the primitive continent we ct say. In any event, scientists are as fond of tiwword as diplomats used in be of Mesopotamia. Evid- ently they found a clue in Gond- stantially above the average of 1027-31. , Eng. Sept. 19- MANCHESTER. A male reindeer killed s. female reindeer after a flcrco fight at Bellevue Zoo. The animals had just arrived from Sweden. 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