Act: ’ A L citltnitorrrrom, elultnznu , non ‘ . may tr-‘o'maed—»ln¢-lift)‘ President. l..l'5Il¢.-Col. W. Cllslfir S. Dfilllro Vloe .. ideal. I. B, Burnett, I‘. J. I, - , Secretary. [dent -001. D. A. Mlafilnnon. D. S. 0. III“! and M ‘ Director J. B..BIIl'nI!It. I‘. J. I . Associate Editor. Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES 15.00 per year (In advance) delivered to city 34.00 per year (In advance) mulled to I’. E. lnlnnd 35.00 per yeur (In advance) mailed to CIIIMIA and U1. Mean Audit Bureau of C‘ oulatlons “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest lnk." WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1939 When Politics Were Forgotten Writing in the Saturday, July 15, issue of the Toronto Globe and .\[ail, the wcll-known l‘llS- torian, Mr. Fred \\'illiams, says: “I wonder wltctltcr any of the speakers at Charlottetown on ;\londay will remember that ,_ the man who first proposed that conference: ‘and who dominated it, was Dr. Charles TUPPCTF How mzmv Canadians of this gcncratlfln are familiar with the historic speech made by. Dr. Tuppcr at Saint John in 1860 on “The Political Condition of llritish North ;\mcric3," in which he drcw a picture of a British Dominion from Atlantic to Pacific and pI‘0p055d that thfle should be no needless (lt-lzty? It is such a master- ly speech that it should be included 1n the Con- fcdcrzttiott Documents. Four years later, In 1854. when he was Premier of Nova Scotia, Dr. Tup- per immducod alltl carried a rcsolution in fav- or of a le,'.{isl.'lli\'e union of the Maritime Prov- inces, explaining that he rc-gardcd it as a step in the direction of a wider union_ Invitations we"; sent to the «".uv.~rnnienls of New Bruns- wick and Prince lillivztrd Island. both of which accepted, and it wa: :15,-i'ee(l that the conference should be hold at tflizirlottctown on Sept. 1. Dr. Tuppcr was so clot-.»rniine(l that party politics should play no part that the first man he in- vited to attend was Hon. Joseph Howe, but the great Nova Scotian Reformer declined on the ground that he was a fisheries officer in the em- ploy of the Imperial Government, and could ll-‘it then “meddle in politics”. He promised, 'how- ever, that he would do all in his power to sup- " port any action that might be taken at Char- lottetown. “Mezmwhile the Muulonald-Brown coalition, ‘under Sir P. Tache, had been formed in the Province of Canada. When news of the propos- ed meeting at Charlottetown reached Quebec, the Ministry asked the Governor-General to inquire of the three 1‘rovinci:1l Licutctiatit-Governors whether the Charlottetown conference would rr-- ceive a delegation from the Canadian Govern- ment which wished to express its views upon the wider union_ _All three sent affirmative replies." Mr. Williams outlines briefly the outcome of the Conference and concludes: ' "Unless Mr. Hitler has a brainstorm there sccms every likelihood that the Dominion will be in the throes of a general election on the seventy- fifth anniversary of the Quebec Conference. ' Perhaps we shall hear appeals for a new Cana- ian unity, for a cessation of the strife between ' ininion and Provinces now so apparent, and for a return to that spirit of compromise which in x864 brought about Confederation. When the elections are over end the will of the people re- corded, what a great thing it would be if the his- ‘ torium of the future could say of the Cana- dians of 1939 what is inscribed on the tablet in the Confederation Chamber at Charlottetown: _'~nna.lnm.uanlnaorutea.e1emuvho Inenbled in this room .on September the tint, B64. was born the Domlnloii or Canada. Prov!- deuce hint HIM!‘ |'Il‘ldI, they hllldod bet“! Illa I11 know." ———r:n if Ihc German Intellect |_ ._ ,-_ ' ‘(ii Iollowlng shrewd nnolyslc ol the Nu! Intellect it given by I-Iilain Bdlloc in “Return to the Baltic": ' - - “The Gen-nuns owe their defect: clwuyu in the name radical defect: they on immature. It is this which gives them the charm and also the cxaspcrating quality of children. Thus they ere not cruel but they have blind fits of rug: and they get specially on ry with people who are too much for them. %hcy hove no chance in- tellectually againet the Jew, and their “rcaction" as the Americans ‘call it is therefore to lash out at the Jew; and, like children, they must 11- ways be holding somebody’: h_c.nd'I'nd be guided and led about. I hay: heard u man who knows them well and intimately through long residence with them}. and with A good ecquaintanco of them and their idioms, compare -them” to putty. Anyone who get: holdof them an mould them Is he wills. That was the chance of the Prussian military caste; when they broke down it was the ‘ bane: of the an now i¢‘il,tl'|e'.tl1;BflC8.‘-Pl I clique, very sarla'Irtd'7wl1olly ignorant, " _ rely upon ‘the’ natural‘ tribal patriotism of 13:: milliohg:-for ,‘ the moment’ in", their hands. ' An Abortive§?M3ayem¢nt~ H ,Lea'dcrIl1ip Len-' ,':<,l minis? hi’nitpi"i‘!l"tli¢ Win- . . ‘- ' vcomewithout much. difficultv._.. The deal c » ermnenta of .adlterencc_ rd normal';mdln¢ ‘inerti- ods,,_TJt1lilcc tlredaarter deals ,on‘_whlch'_Ger‘rlta‘ ": - be sinister, whether they are’or not. The pro- tests »of_ the‘League'and'of the"gLobe and Mail that lhlS".W33 not so wcnt unheard, for so lon as the League-.remained completely empty 0 specific programmes designed to reconstruct our ism of thisgvery‘ ind. _ -' “'l'he League appeared to believe that, if the public as a whole wanted efficiencyand econ- . . \ omy and whatnot} all our national problems would _beC0n]e easily soluble, and that the de- bate, dIs6_ussion and controversy that‘ marks the democratic process would become unnecessary in thc~clcar flame of a sense of national duty, kecnlyvsharcd by every citizen. The very rc- VCTSC 15. of course, the case. The more the in- terest and attention paid to politics, the sharper and more prolonged “our controversies are apt to. become. _Democracy involves conflict of opinion. It is the process by which we have chosen to guide ourselves, and it is the best P°l't‘°_a1 P700955 We!‘ devised by the ingenuity of mankind. It has its weaknesses and its lapses; its instruments ‘are often weak enough vessels, but In the long run a democracy achieves sanity and safety to a degree unknown under other forms of government.” I Editorial Notes I Defeat of the Spanish Armada this date, I 588. p an in 1 no: The Confederation programme for today ‘combines the practical with the aesthetic. * # V ¥ The farming community is too busy to take a whole week off for Confederation, but there should be a crowd in for the picnic ‘and races. 1 II V C Canada’s share of buckwheat imported into the Netherlands increased from 2,751 metric tons in 1937 to 4,139 metric tons in 1938, des- 'pite a decrease in total imports of that com- modity. ’ ' _ It at at an . Total imports of oats into the Netherlands in 1938 were 50 per cent in excess of last year’s arrivals and more"thun four times as heavy as in 1936. Argentina and Canada were the only suppliers, the Dominion shipping 6,606 metric tons in 1938. s It an -t nu Allocations by countries for processed milk entering the United Kingdom under the Pro- cessed Milk (Import Regulation) Order: I939, allows Canada to supply 108,000 cwts. of con- densed whole milk and 25,000 cwts. of milk powder of’ which 9,25: cwts. to be full cream. * ¥ Production in June of factory cheese amount- ed to 22,050,271 pounds compared with 10,969,- 266 in May and 22,157,229 in June, 1939. Total make during the first six months this year was 40,147,071 pounds compared with 37,371,109 in the six months of 1938, an increase of 7.4 per cent. a in an it At the Confederation Conference here in 1864, the joint-secretaries were the Hon. Char- les Tuppcr, M.P.P., Provincial Secretary of Nova Scotia, and the Hon. S. L. Tilley, M.P.P., Provincial Secretary of New Brunstvickj’ vBy a striking coincidence the direct immediate des- cedants of both these Fathers of Confederation are present at this celebration .scventy-five years later, viz, His Honour Lieutenant Governor W. J. Tupper of Manitoba and the Hon. Mr. Justice L. P. D. Tillcy, of* New Brunswick. ' # 1‘ I The British Columbia Law Society has turned down—for this year at leést—a. proposal which would in effect, demand abolition of appeals to the Privy Council. The proposal was in the form of 9. resolution submitted to the ‘annual cott- vention recently by H. R. Bray and seconded by E. V. Findland, Conservative member of the Provincial Legislature for Esquimalt. It rc- commendcd the Supreme Court of Canada be constituted an appellate court with general appel- late jurisdiction in both civil and criminal mat- ter:.’The resolution was laid over until next meeting. ‘ an t 1 an ‘ ' \_'.l'hcre are to be mass marriages in Montrecl on Sunday, 23rd. With the annual congress of the Young Catholic Workers’ Association ar- rangemcnts to handle at least 6,000 delegates are being completed by Montreal headquarters. The delegates will represent branches of the as- sociation ift many centresiof the provinces as well as in United States cities. Highlight of the day'a activities, -we are told, will be the marri- ages of I00 couples. The group will assist at mass and receive Holy« Cbmmunion’ in ‘St. James Basilica prior to breakfast in the Wind- sor Hotel. Later, in N otre Dame Church, Place d'Armcs, the couples and other delegates will hear Archbishop Cgadyuto: Cicorges Gauthier. The much-discussed» Anglo-American barter deal in rubber and cotton, (says the Spectator.) has now been concluded, though at» present neither of the Governments concerned has leg- Formal acquisition‘ of these‘ ‘ ‘er‘:,"'"“owcyer, njlcnt will get them under the Ministry of. 19. Bill, now before the »-House,-,.and‘ the ick- tfons introduced by the rubber-_ quota-'-lhe cotton stocks nrtbalready in thelmidn of the United States Government-'-are‘ ed to be over- atitutcs. less of. a departure , gin‘ appearsfat fir night from the principle, acc ’ " tvtéd 5! Inr¢é1y;r¢1i¢4e it does ‘not replace at mp ordlgnrv ,c[on'_tmet-cial .trart_‘a_a‘ ' p t‘ ‘nu ’ ‘ cxcha ' ’ ‘ national’ policies, it left itself*open to just critic: ‘"3 ishatlve power to carry through the transcction. ‘ will riot be long delayed; the.Bx-itish Goverm qm , , I_l ' one the position . Winston Winston Churchill bu .. n bldolnx to: power ever since went; out-or offlce and in 9 last cw years his bids" "have (molt continu- he tried to lorm 3 “Kln3'a" party. During the_Edcn crlals he tried to from an Anthony en ' he trled to form I Wlnston Churchill party. In order .90 oust. Bore-Bellsha. He has had his knlle, lltlcclly ‘unpacking into Bore-Be it since the latter took an‘ otflcenwhlch Winston thought he himself should have end he has from the beginning made much or the discontent which the minu- t,er's army reforms aroused among military men of rlzhe old school. He has never missed an opportun- ity to make capltalor discontent. The latest cry 15 Lhatvlf he were lncluded tn the government Hitler would know that Brltaln mean; business. '.l"tmt is as irrational as the rest. H tler knows, ll’ be ls not a com lets tool, that Britain will fight the safety of Poland is en- dangered to such an extent that Polanq fights. He was told that long ago by Chamberlain. He has been told it recently by fialtfax. 1! his ‘diplomat; or the experts of his lnbelllgenoe service are worth their the truth. The lncluslon of Chur- chill tn the cs.blnet'mlght, however. convince him that Britain meant to force 9. fight. It might, too have: disturbing effect on reeling in the Domlnlom and the United States. It would almost certainly disrupt the cabinet, for he could scarcely work harmoniously with Hor-=,-Be- llsha, even If he obeyed his Chlef. Hore-Bellshalappenrs to be the most: courageous and efficient mm- laber the War Office has free since 1919. Would the inclusion o Chm-chi‘! be safe or can ? — Toronto Telegram. . Au patbetlo I voyage as was ever made came to an end when the llner St, Louis docked al. Am.- werp. The 907 passengers, Jews in flight from Nazi terror and vlc- tims of the, whole world's fear. have b n glven 9. t,cmporal‘y haven in Be slum,‘ Holland, France and England. In the seven seas there are other shlps like the st. Louis, beurlng refugees ‘from a. place where they are not vaunted to other places where they are not. 'wanted—.-evidences that the great. humanitarian ho of the etch- teen and ninet th centuries utterly perished in the twentieth. and syrnbols of» mankind's sell- defeat. Everything in fact-. about this hapless voyage was symbofic --not least of all the identity and situation of the voyagers. ——Chrls- than Century. ' There Is great need In the West Indies today for a scientific. ap- proach to problems, shorn of all sentlrnental trappings. Trlnidarl ls laced with the urgent need for launching new tndustrles to sup- plement those of the 12‘ nd on which we have grown accustomed to lean. Our economy from the beginning has been built, up around agricul- ture and. while it will be a lonl tlmo belore this condltlon ls cl1unged—lf it is ever changed - the time has come for a broaden- ,l‘ng._‘of our economic horizon. But we must not.th‘:nk of ourselves alone, the plight’ of some of the srnallar Colonies with less natural resources than our own is des- perate. and it would seem that measures of a far-reaching charac- ter are essential if they are to emerge from the economic mire in which they now find themselves. Trinidad is somewhat better of! in that lt can balance its increasing bud et and so launch several uneloratlvo measures. But: it is to mom‘: schemes are either of a. ten- tative or an uneco omlc rnzture.-— 'rrlnadad Guarrlirn, Port of spam. . Funk Mcrx-twell. utrcunllncd, I1 gin!’ to ride again. Gilbert Pat.- n, who u Burt L. «Standish con- ducted this remarkable young man through I maze of adventures tor a vast dlme-novel audience; wants to brine him back. And this tune not as n. more adventure-thriller. arise and racial feell . Patte , like so many other usuriiil n tlon by the effort. to arouse pre- Judlcca sud passions on religi- ous and mom grounds. And he is plsnnlnc to brin back his paladin of the pulp: to real: 5 lyrics for decency nnd ‘tolerance in’ I 11 action of stories specially design to teach those lessons. We hope 9 does. Frank. bested many A vlllnln Jn his day, and none more D‘ twdhidiinch film '1‘ both P 2 o a the rquvenated Merrlweu than, tucceu _-- Tloronto star. The more nnnounccment thnl the British Government t.s_ con- sidering the advisability of estab- llahlng I Mlnlat of Pro and: has sen ulre y sufflc an to of wrath tn the nu Press. This comes from 0. country where on ubllolt! ll under the control of ~ whose u.-tlvlty n 3 in la notorious. German ngenclea have wt . the . . to . bu .c-n being 1.7 . 61- * n da- °*° .°.*:.:..°*-4:‘. Qhbrohfil qua‘ L . for powgn, That." not.;.ne_ws- ed ous. Durlnz f-he Ibdlcat-lon crisu 5, salt they must, have let him know an be feared that most of the Govern- must but as a crusader agalnst. tntoler- do not now rctlrlng pl people, has been rtlr1-ed-lnto~ac- ggfiwsguw wnwmpflble than the one against . Mr. Patten now proposes mm ten md , . W“!- M. the ‘nine 01 the 8 dy's affair mmm fell in the surge: on that point at loulsbwzc, nor do we ever read that It existed ,3; they sealed 1 the helgIht.s or Quebec. and what. ' Wolfe wrote about them. "111 are u led by,t.he manlleat corps of loers I have ever seen". e was no bickering at.‘ 'I‘lc(mde!‘0B9-. And we find sir Rel Abercromble at Abouklr, after English reclments had suffered a. dlnulxolu repulse. sendlngon thcsamezroundcndon the same plan of battle, the High- land regiment.-.—-and they carried the heights broke the French lines. d sent the enemy reclln back on their forrtiflcotlons in d;lssursn.n- lzed and hoIpelcs.s“r.uln. ‘ Sir John Moore was 1 witness rlrtd him staking the fate, of his disc at Oorunc. At the height of the battle he ordered the El h- landvsrs against the French can re. As they cliarged on lite double with levelled bayonets, he gnlloped clone the flanks of the attack und shout- edhlslastcornmandorwasltztvn appeal. Just before he was torn melee at Gm-una in note 3 very youngnscot by the name of Colin Campbell. who appears to have learned much from that ap- pealing command. History tells us that the Highlanders ramembc There was no bickering at » e storming of Almarez in Spain, nor can we forget the despairing‘ ex- clamation of the French comman- dant, as the Gordon I-Ilghlart a burst like 9. tidal wave over parapets "Mon Dlcu, lea sauvaces lEl§(1:ossurs}._;' nevporifidby : British 0 car w o was e prisoner like fortress. ‘ There was no blclmrtng at the great; battle of Vlt/torla when Wel- lington launchedthe Highlanders against the key of the French post- tlon; the heights of Puebla; they swept ti.-.e heights, broke the en- emy's centre, rolled up the flanks on each side of. the DOD. and the entire Frsnr.-‘~ line gave way inma- eous,confuslon. There was no blckerlng at Qualre Bras, when 091. John Cameron of the Gardens was mortally wound- ed, carried to :1 house in the rear by a. small group of soldiers from his lo.ta‘:.cr's estate In Scotland. the sorrowlng 3-mu mod Mound tire dylng soldier, " e _ a.ndam1,o ed a.,p_lpe: by the mum of 'McVur- ch in their mldsl. "Come near me. Mcvurlch," he cried. “and let. me .4. fore ere I die. Play m the death song of the Skyemen. My forefath- ers home heard -it wlbbout flinch- lnog.” Mcvurlch played a few bars of that ancient; melody as the soul of one of Britain’: bravest soldiers pas- M m‘. 0000 As Welllnctondlsooaed his forces accompanied by the Bzvucslan Am- bamado one of the tlona favor. and said ‘so. wellington tum- ed on wlm thut lcy t. fail I smile and observ- otuwk was repulsed and one ‘may murmur“ *" ‘.....**°-" 1: ' lttee so who attempted to force an entrance. 9 others ln terror. In the e . wl the encm tn dlaordcrl t The on . _ r . _'r . . .. . We 3.“ . . 3‘ .133!‘ Y». ’ mmflii '.:°f“""l.° . . can out out fear. at». leaf of which la,used in ° *0 "M .:naktnesa.. v . “ta ,.\ . _. ll10l1Jlaer,.wI.l‘. Ilnat. of Hell ,Ihlll no pr 50 run: his ‘holy word’ tank‘; our lives and do we vote?— 1'. Wednesday ilwul cmva o n '!ree gift. to help this affair, and ten years later we 3 entire army on I. single throwot the\ ego Yo colours the pure h°w!‘.“nId1llbCl““' a love, of__'Mot.her. china tor her. sorry: I b e to so this s.ttern‘oi:n; but to such W from his saddle. "Highlanders. to-' fedcbt Quit: .membet- Egypt."I‘nthem.1dst ottho ° “ I “cm” m ° ° run by tens at thous.-lrula . ml.sery—and rgtuse ll . my rc'( bits‘; and I trust ‘ . , V . .. or China" In vlcttorlmnot toglet " ., t , . . , ‘ it be idle 1n.the Bunk’ ’ t v I - _ tor alx mont.h.t:, they need lt rlxh now across the Paclfl Oblong Knl-shek has "This is the firs ' Mantxeu L‘ uat I . t dl.y‘o the ‘..hlt'd murderous invasion of ourhomes; allohlnnpraya And is trusts that. after such awful un- rlflce of life. and with some: little nor!!! '3 clog help tram Chlm. _. .. in 1rtendsi;1tbu_ year will ice its end." My down-hearted when I c I had just left; 3 “lovely she‘ got down ftp lmouslne alter ‘tn’ afternoon-at. the thestre 9 shout China’: now srurgufimo, rs_.c_unun Ml‘ . my" Nouunc‘ ‘ V" P , entcllat - "Let; Ch 3 teed her own brats! Why don't. you donromethmg for yourown children, our ‘Native. ns_'—-only the ‘white’ one: o! courso——cta.rvlng A3 ,"Churlt.y Nzlns It ho1ne"—ye5—|nd ocrtcln lochell valiant. Fosslfern." obwrv- Skim but by our lfrlen mac A I hear the sound of the plpes once c°mm°nwwm' V ih "mp Mt the , O. P. 3.: through the monntaln men, on which ‘whim’ llbour fallen down. (vlde:-Rbllaral, '~ of 0. Pull. on ' Onde-rt‘lonc's reports ~ I5'bldlé!i'.ni9r¥1.i9dv ‘h.-ml’ I lit hind .wlt.l_rthc p_lon- ‘ once their 3. ‘Tobacco, in Brown; - dagetpptnjuc . v ‘ iii; "mom in ,~ ‘ " 10¢, PER ,FIG , .~uAsr,po1,lv'r, no NORTH cure" < , MkNUrAdrunu’n~nv— " '°*h~g°“,::,f,v,.- L flllll NIGIIDLSON ‘.'ronAcco' co; l.TD._CI1ARLC'l‘TllTOWN T .' ‘, As. 0 i torn l.hpre‘wIs uwiye .*"'fi,9.-;lI|l!l|l|i lnlnnnoe luv n;lnui‘lr“:l‘a:n~c_‘sn:tlertn¢ boy not lnunn up to do-Jami reading. i believe h - tut, , -.w_u A men-- 004305, . V ‘J l‘ “[03 014015,‘! ‘P wnroneof‘. _ _‘ coking“: up V who wont "over nlliof us‘ stutter-3 ‘ ad . Icorreo my. even ‘for man!‘ 33 Ituttcrlnz wan m'anm ao- .'¢';.l..‘ .. . .. 0“ berhpelg 1io.;‘_"1I, tnulhlt. help to,Ch1nn now lnphcr neural to. 3 us ¢1um$adErcn.wotk- 3&4’ V need, some day soon -our mm: with that . great - now being re-orgaolud on mod- ern bualnesa lines. will come ‘to be our economic salvation and workers have full dinner-pulls. are all rendyao work up bhrd mitten-tn; sens (etc) when greet-great grand Inn’ at Waterloo a few days la/tcr he was P y 1:: speech would be pres-_ u ' if tor children ll." or mt- -dny [ulna ‘ uu'£‘i°mliaunm° wflfdtmm (1 c_lwu.o'rrrrowN , ...l.“::..“:‘3.i:...i!:.=:°.:'*.‘; ""‘”‘~ ~ Gqscyjstonachs tr etc... ' ounce of others And no ‘N’, ""° " moon: crinto, w_mm outof hlruult. - 1%’ cut. in nu odleort cs