_ m. --.,..<.._-., - s ' ‘ “ ‘ ‘ __.._.._.-..- A..-.-~...4,~.__._ ._._4>-4m._.--J........._._.~,-»-i-n-~. 4. 23S vifiF FOUR n-— Ind imiélioiluilllwll uuzirtlian 1.. .1 tu-ui tin il riu-un-i u uvLun I .1. ». - u. .l ii inn-int i- .1 \i.ii..-_1- t. lHrl-rllll .| It Hui-twin. l‘ il l 1.1: 1:1 l n! l \ \Ii|rl\ln||nll U. 5 luii-irs (I l-rJIIL “ulknr illld U. K, Currie _..__?_._i_ u. 111.11,; 11ml) irvumluu unfit $4,111 (w! .1." llll .1l|\\llll|') ilflltvfltll Iv >111. iI-l \l‘ .1 iln i|l|\\ll\l‘l'| iniili-u l0 l‘ h 11ml mo.» 1... i-»-.i -\|- illl\llllll‘l "nun-ii u» tin-inn- and l‘ A n..x:i.\i. JANUARY 2-1. 1933' ____ A. ._. ..._._._. _ ziifii ill!’ The Mariliiiies q ii- 111 t" 11111.1 \'<.ir lint-I. .1iiil lxlll‘ 1h. i wliltnll ~‘..-.i1.~i~ from lliitiiiiiioii t:i.~. iii =11 1tr caps... il\ lillfllltvl‘ \\t‘l't' as .\.- Kilt 11-2‘. in \'~- .1 lirti-i. liiii:i~.'i".. . , \\i.- .11.» l l'<‘ ilit- i"i'i.i i-i-i-i hie-lily" llwrtl 1m» ‘1 i’. ‘i l‘-' ‘ilIlIll'.—-lll‘lllik‘l' lliltll Xiivli _\-~ _ ‘Q w lliti: ti“ . \I\li‘ll\‘\‘».ftll Jiiiil \l- liii"_.1 \‘,' ' ‘mac .\l1-~'~». .\‘.".\'l.‘.ll' .tll~l lnittiiici fi fly f0!‘ llll‘lll~"i‘.k':~ noii . Ainriiiliiiig The B. N. A. Act "":-. l‘ l} .11"! ‘xi-iii i- ~t'll1l'l'.t_' m" llll> - i- 11.11.?» .l'i'.ti .~1l'.‘.=l‘i.‘~ll'.l'.'i\ll 1i iirzili l liiiii-‘i \i~ii'. .\ni~rii':i .\c'. 11.‘. ~. ».»r 1'» ll-ini-Eu- »n lhirlisiiiiciil <ll.‘l“i. llllk'llll>lll\'lll\'lli r- it! he :1 (ltllllll :1- l"'kl.il'i'll .\liiii i-r in lol- l‘ i< 1111'; Clcitl’ whether" .1 i\t'1. tii L'llil1>l“(' iiic ciiiii"iii'ri~iiil_\. Illl\' iii- i-i Ni iiuicivr :in.l scopi- . ll~t li._ ultliiiugli \ll-‘ll grinit. pitictirzil import- \'.\ 'l'iii.~ .\l1iiitrc;il fillZCl- p 1 t an llllj ciiroiiut. $uliiiiis~ i‘ ‘illltlilllllilll iii the Ciiiniiiiitiiin ' I» it guts, lilll iiill llll‘ ni'1irii1i1i~cil tiiiicuii- ., . with .'i- full 1i l\llli\\'- tii~ lliilWIl-lflll lii-vii'iiii;i'iii's lt']\'l>lltll(*ll _ i-r soiiii- 11f lll"lll_ ll1l\t‘ livcii iii .ill fziirntn-s tli-~_\ iiiijght IlllC“ lit . iv, he iii ~ 1.1‘ ii‘. \Pl'i\:',l‘.'. to lutu-F T‘ .1 lli-iiiiiiiiiii CUYUYlllllClll. = <1 llllilvllliifltllllnlllg zis to ‘ri- itir :1 ciiiistitutiniizil {-11- iintiiiiplriiiiit-iit lllSlllYlllCC. _, , ' 1lil_i' Zll'L'L']llill)lC to lair- ‘ _ trip .\li-. l\'1ng Zllltl his" colleagues if stich an impression is llllk‘ lfrlltlislllll‘ 1 '|' - 1il'11\lllCt‘> which are quite in 1.; 'l'li"l'.ll iiiii-iii1ilriiiiiciit lll~llfI\llL‘(‘ -i'ii;i-4 [ll ,~’\1l'1'('1\tl<‘l‘ :in_v more 0f it... 1 .. 'i;1‘l_]iill'll Jtlllll'll'li\' lllilll zihsol- .-1- ‘1- 1_ -. _ 11w il-t- 1irii\"iiiccs h) which tlit- lli/l ‘.1111 l.‘;\'\'lll‘ll‘i'lll': sincerity" respecting thlS 1i i- i. 11w 1d lii- iin-ti-iirt-il occur-lint; to 1 .1..- till iii iii- l‘l tiii \\l’-lll‘\ of the 1ir1ivin- p, . ;.>,,.1 silik‘ iii lllllll. lint all of thcin. llic llllill i:ii.i n. >01 in: a 1H‘\\' Ylfllll- i1 Til-ll“ now vruitl iii ilii: 1.1 ‘v'lllL‘k">. Iiiiil ~hould be con- teii’ to iilitnti: i1. on tcinis zigreralile to the prov- '\1".cc.~.. _ __ 'l“ii<i tiareiic clizirgt-s that a deliberate eltOrl has l|('\ll lllit/il‘ recriitl}, to TCPYPaCIIY the 1ir0v- ince- .i.- standing‘ lll the wit)‘ of something‘ which the tr iicrs of the liritish North America AC1 ilil;tlli.l~"l Siliillll he done. 1t VllllS been willfl ill-O that the 1iiiir1io-r: of the Fathers of Confederation has been fritstrzited by a SQHBS of court ilerhimis vihivli have prevented the Fl-ileral Parliztnirnt from engaging in this Dr that field of legislation. particularly in regard to the enactment. of social law. These court de- cisions have been "iiidcrerl from time to time by Flue must eminent juri~ts iii the Ellllliffl includ- ing members of the Canadian judiciary, who have taken the ltiiv as they found it. If the effect of tlxt-ir decisions has been to prevent the FtWlrTitllOn [Hirlizirnt-iit from invading provincial legislative fields. thrit. surely. is not the fault of the provinces. lt is not correct to say that the povv~rs of the central Parliament have been reduced in any degree by these judgments, 0r rim-r the iielil iii’ legislation has been narrowed. There is miirh more force in the contention that the courts have simply restrained the Do- minion from engaging in unconstitutional leg- l.<l'tl’i‘€ Fll("l'1J\'i\l'F. from exercising a legis- ltitive aiitliiiriiv ivliich did not belong to it. Insult To Injury Nowqlpln of all shades of political opinion Llflllllllllt‘ to 1rn1i>i against the prostitution of tlii- (aiiziilia I211. 1 l1 .i lili" (Kirpiiriitiiin to Am- iritan zidi 7m: :1.‘ ‘ The Corporatioifs il>~lQllUil lllhniill. it is C'Ill|l§llil(‘ll,v\’\'fl$ twofold: npiirl from ktcpiiig ‘iic Laiiatliziii air for Can- illllltllx ll \\.'i.-, to ('.\i1‘llll radii» facilities to all 1i.'1rt.s of Flt" ciiiii ‘_i as r:i1ii-ll_\" as 1iiissihlc. And to thi. i-iid, in ilillliitlll l4) tht- $1.110 licensing fcc ‘zilwii fiviii ill'l'_'i iniiliii ~i'l-Il\\ll('l'. ffigixixxm was lii»i'r-i\vii1l iriini thi- lliiiiiiiiiiiii fiovi-riiiiii-iit. Next :1 si-rivs of lii;_>li~1i--iivr<-il broadcasting stations “ll; ]ll‘1l'l(‘\'il'\l lll llllh tlii- viitirr country in a llllllllll-\\lill‘ iii-tiiiirh. \\'ithiii tlit- 1i:i_~t few ivcelts Ill!‘ first l\\.'ll iii ilir-v —:it Si. Therese. (Quebec, ziiiil ll'Illl'l)_\. (Iiitario, rt-spcctiicly —-li:ive been plaiwiil‘ in I11)"|'.'lli<ill. lloii. C. l). lltHH‘, .\lllll~'l('l' of Transport. (iii-l. ;i 1iriiiiiiiii-iii 1-ir1 in inaugurating the sta- l'|'ll* ‘l 1111" lltlli iiiiirinll); and (7;1ii.'i1li:iii listen- ris iili-i luullll l» lil prochiiiii that they were the nit»! l""i\l’l iiil 1.1 built in thc country. 1iliiciiig the (‘i.¢;.~i--iii.-ii'. ilirilitiz-s zit the disposal of iiizmv iiiiirr- pcopli- llilll ‘iiiilirrto. may have fi'i‘ll"'lll 1i. iliiiii-i-liv- that lic ivzis _iti.stifi.'ilil_i’ =- ~11‘ -1' lll iiiiiiiii~liiiililiiig work by which l,ll‘ ' .1.» ili-uiiiiil in lie lllll\'(‘ll mnrc l"\l‘-lll‘ll lll'll .\lr. llflWl‘ has just wyi 11 f,'ii"lti'i-~ fiirsnlllt‘ fFflfYhfiOfi l0 .1111 ii-iii}; it for iHl .1 l lwil‘ \':~ '1, ll i"'1"i t aalwi lllllebcc (Qliruiiiclc-Telegraph. what other cuii- clusion can we coiiie to than that tlieideu undet- ‘ lving-the proposed Ciiiiziiliaiii National network. of which two units are zilri-ziih" functioning. wa- iiot to llllli Canadians itigctlicr but to sell them as listeners to coiniiicrcizil sponsors iii the Liiiitcd States? Certainly. with that iietivork. paid for bv the Clllliflllllll yicoplc. thc Corporation is alilr‘ to sell its time more easily and inure profitubli than \\'Ulllll 0lllt‘l'\\‘lSL‘ be the czisc, "liidccd." says our Quebec contcmporarv. "the ivhole Cillllltllllll broadcasting: scheme itself will have become Americanized ivhcn the nct- work is fiiiiillv complete flll'_ in the [jniteil bitatcs. a similar network is tipt-rzitt-rl by the N41- tionzil llrtitidczistiiig Corporation which livcs b) selling time to national sponsors for commercial prngiziiiiiiies. Tlit-re is only llll> difference left that. whereas in the [hired Flutes n0 license fcv is charged to sct-oiviicrs i\'liti.=t* cars are sold to the spoiiuirs. licrc in Canailzi tlii-ir cars are liltc- \\'l>L‘ sol-l hut they arc nbligi-il iii 1>:1_v :1 license fee as wcll. which thus becomes insult zidilcd t0 iiiiiii'_\'." To crip this. tlic Tran-port .\liiii.~tt-i' has rm niiiiiicvil a l\\'(‘lll\'—fl\'(‘ pvi‘ cent lll('l'(‘ll\'t' in rxiilio lit'('ll~(‘ fct-s. This is rubbing it iii with a vcii- gcznicc l ‘ r Editorial Notes J On the last lap of _l:iiiu;1r_v. O I i # (ilizirlrs _|:itiic> l7ii.\. iii-L Coalition Prciiiici‘. i)i1l'll llll> iliiic. 17.11; s: =1: 1r Tht- >l1l‘1)l'l>k' l.\ that tiic .\lzit"l<ciizii- Kin); (inv- criiini-nt should have tippctilril tlii- Liiivniplriy- nti-iit :iii1l llcaltli lllrlllllllCt‘ lcqi-llitiiin \\llL'll llll‘ll' legal .'i<l\i~ci‘. .\li'. lliiiii-ll ii:i~ s.» ~ii"<iii_4l_v iii f;l\ulll‘ 11f its ci>1i~iitiiti1iii:1lit_\. * >l( 3F .\lort- tliciii ""00 loan.- liuvc lici-ii iiizidc to Quebec litl'lllk'l'S uiiilri‘ 1hr l\'iir:il (irrdits .\ct. 'l"ht- (jiirlicc tiiivcriiiiiciit hzis \1llL'Ll I'\'i5.0oo.uiic. for l‘l‘ ' cri-ilits. a >l< _l\l1l';_ii!'; bv tlii- k'l'lllCl>lll of .\lr. .\liirh~_v it is cniiipcii-iii ilircciiiiii our illlllllUlll‘ actors iiiiist ll('L‘(l. lt is not t‘\'('l'_\'OTl(. ivliii czui >lllllll “Heigh- prcsio!" tliiii l'lllk‘l'~' that rlizirnit-tl circlir. Stage ilirt-rtiirs .'ii‘c burn. not lllllllf‘. N‘ N! 7F >11 The rliziiiipiiiii tax (iiivrriiiiictit at llilllllWll is lll\'l'('.'l>lllQ' our rzulio nix 253i in iirilt-r to sub‘ sllll/f‘ ll..<..\. chi-zip jack ll(l\'l'l'll<lll;,f li1'1i:iilc:1.~t>. luwli-iwil indirect taxes nlrc:i<l_v cost ti- fifxiivriinti or $351) pcr faitiilv. ls this $fi'().()lltl a-lilitiuiial to he the 1irtivcrliial last straiiv? ' u >1< v >1< For the first time sillcc 1911i. tlicrc will bc no llt‘\\' iiioiiii iluriiig the llllllllll of Feliriiziijv this year. The lllOUll will reach lll(‘ iicii" iiitiiiii 1ilizisc on _|aii. 31. The iirxt new niiiiiii will conic .2115 days lzitcr. on .\larcli l. Pcriiusc the lunar month or synoilic month is 29.5 days long. occzisiiiiiiilly the month of February, ivliicli has but 28 or ll) (lays. llllSfiPs without a new moon ucciirring. There inust he :1 full cycle of the iiioiiii during a regular 3o 0r 3i day month. but this is not 1)0$.~ll)l(' in the short month of lichru- ary. The first rpizirlt-r 1ihzisc of the inn-iii will iiccui" 170i). 7 zit 7:32 l‘..\l.. thr full iiiiiiiii on Feb. 1.1 at 12:14 P..'\l.. iiiid the lzi-t ipizirii-i- on Feb. 2l tit 11:34 PM. v i1- v v Cziiiziilifs $50.000.o00—zi-yc1ii' from iiiiplcnicnl liill will be given curly consideration in the llriuse of Coniiiiniis with the report of a Parlia- mentary coinmiticc forming the basis for a dis- cussion left ovrr from last year, lt ivas estimat- ed that through the depression farmers hzid gone about $2.0oo,00o behind in tlicir farm implement recpiireiiietiis. The normal needs were estimated at $5l,700.000 zinnuallyz with the prairie pro- vinces absorbing zibout two-third of the total. Among other things the committee recommend- ed cream separators be put on the free list in the tariff schedule. llltll nianttfzicturing coin- patties should be allowed a customs drawback onmaterials imported for use in the niaiittfzic- titre of farm implements and that every effort should be made to see that the savings tliiis ef- fected be passed along to the farmers. The com- mittee. in its conclusions. declared a study of financial returns proved that from i801 to 1936 the price of farm implements had been main- tained at too high a level. Owning t0 the brevitvv of the last session of Parliament the committee did not bring in as definite or conclusive a re- port as would have been possible if there had been more time. I't was intimated further studies would be made this year. =1- : n v Overlapping of taxation. the multiplication of similar public services and the hopeless lack of uniformity in administration which obliges coin- panies to make periodical returns to the federal and provincial Governments were pictured and warmly scored before the Rowell Commission by life, fire, casualty and accident insurance companies and by the Dominion Mortgage and Investments Association. Lack of uniformity of taxation in different provinces and munici- palities was attacked because it resulted in un- fair cost distribution. It was also complained that these taxes had a retroactive effect, Wllilt the premium tax was defended. Its principle was accepted by life insurance companies as its tidministratiori was simple and effective, and it could be made equitable. The life coriipanies tirgtid that the rate should be as low as possible. as the premium tax was a special tax not shar- ed by all citizens but paid by “prudent citizens”. They urged, too, that existing doubts as to the constitutionality of the premium tax should be removed. Establishment of one central auth- ority was urged by the fire and casualty insur- ance companies. They asserted that the increas- ed cost of operation of such a central office miulrl be only a small part of the savings that \\'Olll(l be effected by the elimination of the lllll(‘ offices iii the various provinces which gen- erally duplicated the work now being done by the Dominion Department. Protesting against the multiplicity of taxes on fire insurance com- pTiHiPS. .\’lr. _l. A. Mann. K.C.. who presented their brief. said that the hurdcn of taxation rout-d more heavily iipoii insurance conipzuiies mitt-iii; 1-lli'|l' ~<-.~.. hi iiciv iii lllla fact, says the [than llll other corporations. "TUE .-S"HAKLUYYE'EQYYE _ §LL1ER_QIAPI_~ NOTES BY TllE WAY Ireland ls much safer within the BrlllSh commonwealth of Nations than she would be outside. Let. us una China. can tiaiinen to Ire and so long as sue remains a member of the Brit- loll Commonwealth of Natlons." — James Dlllon tison of the old Home One of the must amazing things about. the struizizle in China is thi way lll whlcli Cliiani: Kai-Slick ' maintains his liold on the loyalty o1 his lleOlllt? desulte the sue-comm ot 1 uHDLIJIESO victor es. Tliis has made it difficult for the Japanese to secure reputable Chinese leaders to ecu-operate in the administration of Dunner. uovernmeiils. Ln- addition those prominent. Chinese who are not. deterred from WOIKLUS! ‘vlllll the Javanese tiv considerations of lov- tLltv are frightened bv the terrorist. tact cs of tlie Chinese who have as- sassinated severttl nroiiiinelit Chin- ese who seemed disposed to become ilnnzincse nutlnels. — London Free rcss. This continent niiiv hall, its march towards colectivisiii: it will not likelv return to the pioneering con- ditions of luissez falre, with _ every man for himself and the devil take the liinilmosi. No ionizer ls there a wealth of resources lviniz about for the stroiitr to take and keen regard- 10-55 of others: there must. be coin- scrvatioii. the fairest measure of just clisti-ibiiiioii. keener realization that iaossessioxi brinizs responsibility. The blcssuiizs of a free capitalism. DFODOFlY understood and practised. arc too valuable to be sacrficed to inc l!1'\‘!3(l iit tiny class. - Ottawa Journal. When thinking about game con- iiPflllllOll iii AlliOlllll. iiisl. stop _ to c lblflfil‘ illf,‘ .-; of the Canadian bison in Biiftiio National Park at. \V2\li‘.l\\‘l'l2lll. Alta . where ll 1101‘!!! 0f 711; putt: bred bison has iii thirty veins crown to such proportions iliat evcrv vent" it is found necessary to slauulitei‘ some of the girrmnls. This yi-ui" 2.000 had to be lulled Ofi- ‘Fliiri v rears aim. the bison was considered to be on the way to ex- tinction but now look _at ‘em! That. is what uronei‘ Drolection m good \l‘l'\'(‘h' should be able wAac-com- l) . 1 for several AllLOHTR animals.- Saull. Star. Apolugisls for llie current terror- ism still just-ily it as a necessary precaution to safeguard the revolu- tion. But. even sortie of these must l\.ll‘l)Ol‘ doubt. If the exterm nation of lhusc iilio depart from the t-irtiiizlit mid lll\l‘1‘0\\' ptitli of Slflllll- isiii kccus uu tlicre will 500ll_bfl i e ‘cit but Stalin and a few iii- s tlllllllllll iinilerliiiizs. What siicr iii-rs docs ii cause demand bcfori- [he price mud becomes intolerable? —Otttiiva Citizen. 'l‘t-chiilcal military journals are autlioritv for the statement that the works now be n2 pushed forward hvrr bv the Canadian Government. iilien completed will make this the fifth mos-L stro 'ly toi'.ified_ area ln the woiid. As such there will be no YPZoOH for Canadians or Americans to fear Caiiiiclu _is not domil her uurt.—VicLoria Titties. Newsnamr film er" ' York have chosen “Zo1a" most dlstiiitiulslied motion Dcture of 1937. And this is the picture. ll. will be reciillcd. that was banned from the Province of Quebec by the QurbeciBoatd of Censors — banned for reasons tliiit never were made public for reasons that certalriy were not OllVlCllS. Everywhere but in Quebec “Zolev” was acclaimed as a filni IINAHTFIWJlPPI? b_v critics and the Dublic.—Ot.tawa Journal. The ing cost of living here ivorries some iieonlc. In Japan they would let-l rcallv disturbed. Prices are 20 to 40 ixrr, cent» up. the fight.- looit toilay at the fate of weak ln- 1 dependent nations such as Ethiopia . Not-limit or that kin. Ruler John Dillon.) t Luii services take 70 Der cent. of the national revenue. Jnimws. conquests cost IllllCll. yield little. Munchukuo is a burden. North China is now a laud of smashed railways. bombed cities. broken dyltes and barren fie us. Vic-tow is ashess-London \Ellfl.l Express. And ivhcrc. when Christmas is over, do the rzuod cards e0? There ls no sucli market in “fuli1res" among them as delights and nemlexes the nhilatelist. or the collector of ctilar- ette curds. Here and there. it would seem 1m entlius ast. hoards them. It. Ls on record that in 1094 a public- suirited gentleman olfeied l0 an embarrassed British Museum his colection ot Christmas cards in 700 lame volumes. There will always be tliriftv-mlnded nurses to suggest. that the veers receipts should be made .nt.o scrapbooks; and we have heard of a modest home industry of charitable intent. when consists in removlnz from Christmas cards all manuscript additions and other traces of previous use with a view to ilttlnix them for further migra- tions. But. such devices are not. 1n 'lie true tradition. Few stir-rings of uninortality flutter the gay ranks o1 the Christmas cards. They- are born. like the butterflies, for uealli. Some iew of them may lilbemate. But when Twelttli Nllhi. has come. and the holly and the mistletoe and the paper decorations have depart- ed. no wise men will ask what. has happened to the Ray and lmnrovld- out creatures so late-v Derched unon There mnmlns to be considered the moral obligations of the Great. Powers town-rd China. Some of those Bowers. Germany and Italy. are v-r- tually ln combination t0 encompass her destruction. But. there remains B. verv Dowerful zrout) of nations unonwhom rests the task of leader- SlllD imposed by legal treaty and by ClVlllZEd opinion. These are the nations who now find their own private interests linnerllled. imd it remains possible that. what. they re- fused to do at Brussels in the face of their public obligation. they may now find it necessary to do in order to save themselves. ‘this ls the nrettv Doeltlon 1n which abandon- ment. of the rule of law has landed us iallll. ls the trail which had its bcizmniniz 1n the retreat from the uaizue of Nations in 193i. But the end of the trail has not. yet. been reached. thouizh it has of late come onenlv ln slflht 21nd ls no more en- chantlmz today than l1; was when first. envlsalzed by the "impractical idealist-s" who foimhl, for the Rune and were then denounced as men who had no real grlp of the renlltfes ot‘ the situation-Winni- Deiz Free Press. Mr. Ford lend the III. loo, In his mluiteli1lece.-—B. B. C. Listener. 1 raisins: waizes. and he understood loniz before most economists that manufacturers can't. sell cars unleat workers earn enoulzh to buy them. All the more paradoxical then that today 1t la the Fbrd company which la cited bv the labor board for on attack alleged ln lts words to have been "almost unbelievably brutal," ' and that. the Ford company has recently seemed to replace the erst- wlille anti-union United States Steel Corporation as a focus of labor volence and trade union hostlllty__ Chflllllll Salome mum. , ZElJat filthy of £11m ._ Quill-tall. I FINDING 'l‘I-lE CAUSE or uasrniim , As a medical student I was taught that as the cause of asthma was unknown and there was no known ciue. all that. could be done was to give the usual treat- menb-amyl nitrite. iiltroglycerln, and no! to ivoriy about the case as the asthmatic seldom if ever died from an attack. To-tlay asthma ls notthought of as a disease such as diabetes, Bright's dlseas/e. typhoid fever. but as a group of symptoms due to various causes ivhlcli. tend to contract or lighten the little air tubes to that a little plug of mucous gels caught in these tight- ened or contracted tubes and the individual has great difficulty 1n coughing up the mOCOlIs in order to get relief. Naturally the first thought lri the treatment of an zistlimtitic attack ls lo open up 0r dilate these little air tubes so that not only ls the plug released but the air ln the boltomof the lung" cziibe breathed out more readily because the little tubes are open more widely- Tlius adrenalin. ainvl nitrite and 0llll0l‘_dl'\lgs that clilatq or ripen up the little tubcs give relief diirlniz an attack. Hoivevcr. during recent years tl hits been found tliat- various sub- slatices and conditions of the bodv itself brinz hi1 asthmatic attacks rind every few week some new sub- stanve is (TISFOYOYGG as t1 cause of these attacks, Antone the conditions in the bfldi’ known to cause the attacks are deformities of the iirse and thrnat-cnlarricd tonsils. MliPlIGiCl‘. enltirtled t-urbinate bot: .—-—‘t‘.l‘l iilka- losLs iiiistcisd of ncidn.» i of the blood. and an allergy or sensitive- iiess of the individual to vtiiitius siihstiiiicem Aiiicng the _\lll3.<'i1ll"(‘S knoivn to cause asthmatic allzicks "re DOllcn of plants, fiir of airline's feathers. house dust. molds. scores 0t‘ fungi. _ Thus ivlicn the cause of nslhniii ls souclit. the nliv- i-l1in t-xaiinnos nose and throat. uses. Xrziv of chest. tries to flnt if nll the glands are wcrxliiiz nivinci~l_v--iiot too 'l"Wl\‘ or ton rapidly hfnvl n]... h,“ skin tests iiiiitlo in see it the mt. lPfll ls ‘Pllslflro in v".rl"1!s \ll“sfn1]. ces or to inch crmwimi fomie 3g 022s. \l’ll€‘fl.l~. beef. nii‘k. pnfntqgg and oranrre lulre - You ran rc-iidllv see Uni it mav take a loniz time to find the (lflligo or tiaires of asthma ln an l - flivrldival y n In the meantime breathing tn ninvl nit-"Wa will ugvvnvv 11.110‘... a“ flllwk "no N" lirezithiiiq eY¢>1~'-i,ee_ tWlr-e to breatht- out evei-v wmim of ab‘ l“ the liincs—cften prevents an attack. KNOWLEDGE What l5 mOYB 181716 than knowledge and more sweet? Knowledge o1 thoughts and deeds. of rights and wrongs, Of Dassions. and of beauties. and of songs; _ Knowleélglen of l1fe; to feel its great. ' a ‘Iltrouzlil all tie soul upon her crys- ta sea . T0 50¢ l0 feel. and evenmore to know: To tlll the world's old wisdom till ll. arrow A izardent for llie wandering of our ee . Oh, tori; a ll'fe of leisure and broad ours. , To think and dream. to out away 1 small tlrnzs. This world's nermlutil league!‘ of dull nauitlits: To wander like the bee among the . wers . Till years slmll find us laden. feet and wlnizs Grown heavv with the izold of many thouizl s. —Arcliibnld Lamnman. MAOS BLOOD FOOO FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE A combination especially valuable In the treatment or thou diseases where their orlgln ls traceable to an lm~ ppverished condition of the One of the greatest remed- les ln the treatment of Rheu- matlsm. For those, who have lost "W" fllllillitc Macs Blood Food wlll prove the restor- alive. GET A BOX NOW. 50c. Mall Orders uomptly Attended to. Oassy Stomach: RELIEVED ll you have any trouble with your stomach such n Indigestion. dynpopsh, sour IOOIIIICII, heartbum, gastric dlslreu. etc. Then don't de- lny gelling n bottle of Dr. L. B. Evan's Slonuoh Mixture lmmedlnhly. i Evan's Stomach Mixture h n prescription or Dr. L. B. Ennn, noted English Physic- llfi of whlch we have the loll rlghfu In lllll since ulllng It hue reoelved numerous lieu- tlmonlaln from ntlnflul Mil’- ohuen. Try n bottle today. l8 can“. TIIE TWO MAOS Prlcl ' and “darks" had the same percent- JANU1E.¥__2_4_’ 1938 PUBLIC FORUM nu; mum u on» l" W AIIIIIIIIOI b! mnollitndnlln ll qllllltllll on lntoml- Olin-lantern Gunilla I000 annually clone l: Illll cl A GOOD RECORD Sig-IL may be lnterestiiiz to compare rates fox: electzxclty l“ 'I‘ruro with those in Charlottetown under the proposed new schedule. Truro according to the 1931 census had ii population of 7,901 whereas Charlottetown had 12.361 but. it ls fair to compare these two localltlw for 'I‘rui'o has 358 commercial cus- tomers. 2.046 domestic and 123 pow- er customers. 'I‘ruro muchases its DOWGI‘ under a 20 vear contract from the Pictou County Power Board. but. it. also maintains a steam plant as a standby and dur- ina last summer venerated the now- er for its own use iincralso sun- ulied the Power Board with over a mllou lciinlirs. I _ Mr. Chandler in his report stat- ed that. in Charlottetown there iire 2.529 domestic consumers and that the averaize consumption was 54 k. W.lll'S. well. here are the rates: Tl‘lll‘0 $2.25. Charlottetowxi $2.86. difference .61 cents. a, saving 0t $7.32 oer imnum. For 72 k.w.lirs. the cost ls: Truro $2.70. Charlottetowiti $3.30, difference .60 cents. a savmx o!’ $7.20 DEI‘ imnum. Commercial: For larrze consumer. 950 k.w.hi's. 10 kw. connected load. Triiro $34.75. Charlottetown $42.00. ditference $7.25. ll savlnz of $87.00 ner annum. For smsrl consumer, 200 k.w.hrs. 2 kw. connected load. Tl‘lll'O $9.25. Cliarloltetown_$ll.00. (lifforonuc $2.75. or a SBJ/lflfl or $313.00 ner annum. _ All that is necessary lo add IS that Truro has il_l'llll.l'llClDZll Dlanll and notwithstanirriiz its low rates turned into the Toivni Treirsurv lri i036 Dl0lllS amountlinz to 829.580 42 Nrit too bud for municipal owner- Sllll), I inn. Sir. etc. J. F. W. ords From The Gaelic iBy set-ill O‘Faola'ui in U16 Com- monwealth.) . Tnerc is one nmrvclous word, ivliicti must. be some form of siting but which deserve: to be- come part of blue King's English pim-‘ty on 11s lll61'll.S.Il» is used every day of the week in the little cit-y of Cork and maybe elsewhere in tlie south of Ireland. The word l; "aiilve". SClIOOlDOYb tn Cork, who go swimming. never say. "Let's go for a swim". or "What about. a spot. of’ diving" The say come for a glll\’6"'8nd surely e ivord has a great power of sugge tlon when once associated with bodies cleav- ing the ivater. A similar word ls “streeffl which means to drag one’s legs untldlly as one iivalks and aptly describes a slattei-n maid “streellng" around the house. That is speech-language. ruspecl bv many tongues, made smooth. like an old penny. by the thousands of live: it has touched, The men- tal associations of such language are all directly linkee. will: lite- not with books. . Some words of that speech- langunge have long since slipped liim the Kings English. such as “bog". or _"wh'sky". or "bother", all of which are from the Gaelic. It. is significant that most Irish- nien 1n 1st. on spelling “w-hlsky", as “whlskey". with the Gaelic ulsge beathn, (‘water of life) st-lll in their rwclal memories. The same tlilng applies to American. English. One begins to wonder if for several wa-otis, Anglo-Irish will not. soon begin w add more such words to the vocabulary of English itteravuiie. For one wing. Enron-language ls more powerful to penetrate into literature than any synthetic oi- teclinlcal lingo. and in Ire-land tliero "i, Still, far more authorlty ln speech than l1] letters for the mn-ectness or words ln common use. Hardy liked to use such words as "snrlpléng". “ltrumperyfi “malxi", "vlctuals" and that. pleasant, word for handwriting "clpherliig". But class ooiidescension and the weight or a literary tradition und the snob- bery o! a watery, book-education kept tiliese words very much below salt. whereas. ln Ireland, no writer. no crlitlcs, would resent such words as "flrlt". “fix-kin", "after" (for a!- terwiirdl. "back" (for faction or support). “PlJBIlQ0" ifoi- shy or clls- tant), "stranger" (for vl-iltor or tourist, without alternative). or even such metaphorical Words as "Iabrlc” (for an old tumbling houset. .r the word "street" which I have already mentioned. or a verb like "redden" (for klndle)—1a.tid so on. Silver Fox . Prices Stronger NEW YORK. Jan. 21 -— Sllvcl‘ foxes continued to do well at. yes- terday's sessions of the auction be- lmz conducted by mmpsori, Fraser 8: Hutli. Inc. Prices were maln- tained for the most. part at the levels of the previous day and in some instances bolstered them. Bld- dlniz for Section 2 of the pelts of- fered for the American atlonal Fox and Fur Breeders As H ‘litlon showed an advance of 5 percent. of the three-quarter slivers in sales of 80 per cent. "Halts" on ii turnover of 85 per cent. "Quarters" acres of adivance on a similar turn- over. BRUISES Thanh noolilng an equal Mind's. l: "the boll”. $ ONE DOLLAR $ cm YOU ACCOMMODATE TOURISTS? no YOU opmwm A GARAGE? HAVE YOU A TAXI? l Have‘ your name listed 0n 20,000 folders to b printed and distributed in Canada and United States. . Send one dollar to help pay printing cost Prince Edviaril Island Travel Bureau CHARLOTTETOWN . or Vitalit alwuS u; BRAHMI ORANGE PE KOE TEA 9 . ' Harry llirsh iii Mlllllllllll, 11.11. Fur Buyer is interested in buying 500 silver fox pelts. Send by express or parcel poet and check will be remitted as soon as possible. Will hold them separate for six days. <- *- Real Estate/kgency H. K.‘ S. HEP! l8 Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as Agent and Manager. To BUY. SELL, RENT Properties in MING QQ-nifinq City and Country. To give valuations. arrange Mortgage Loans. Secure Tenants, Cnllecl Rentals and Manage Properties and Estates. NO CHARGE UNLESS DEAL EFFECTED Owners of Land or Buildings are Asked to Llsl Their Properties Persons Desiring to BUY or RENT City Houses or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call 88 GREAT GEORGE ST. TEL. 1376 Charlottetown i lleport Of The 1.11.0. cllllllllllllllli FOR A NATIONAL CONFERENCE OI" CANADIAN UNIVERSITY BTUDENTS. P. W. C. was allowed to have ODE deeiizate in the trainstwrvatlon P001 WlllCll equalized transportation at $40 from any nomi’. in Canada. The local committee of twelve selected Douglas Black to represent. the col- leize and rallied the sum of $67.10 for his expenses. tine S. C. M. also sent. a dele- uate. He. however. did not. rece.ve any rebate from the transwfmiloll mTlie money was raised as follows: ‘ Stiff 22. l0 Students 6.00 Lleuta. Governor DeBlols 10.00 Mark McGulizan 5.00 C. H. B. Intigworth 5.00 Mr. Shaw 5.00 N. D. McLean 5.00 T. W. L. Prowse 2.00 Mayor Turner 2.00 Dir. C ark 2.00 G. F‘. Hutcheson 2.00 Judie Stewart 1.00 T 56mm The students are verv zrateful to those whose contributions have made possible their participation 1n the conference. LYN BURNETT. [F2070 Chairman Conference Com. “TIRED”. nu r11: n: She lull lniunblo- . , film-low invihlity p mt . She ' Headache, lucheln, llilo all: fin! 0| fully HIM]: Guppnnql. neaaaitianeyriii: STRAIN ON YOUR EYES lye! IIQII for clolu work- pertlululy l! llglmng h not “OITQOO —nn Inhjscl l0 I greater than normal main This lvrilptlie pullout II comfort lflhcnla pram! any Ippreclahlo refractive arm out! lhmll ltliell In had when. um eyu. do. A pa: m ha no my 0| knwlni the degree of strain on tlii eye! until they m nominee G. F. Hutchesoni EY ESI O llT ‘EXAMINATION Flltlng ind Supplying Glasses ' Ito. N. J. MABON OPTOMETRIST MONTAGUE. P. E. L Ofllce Connected With u: __ ton Professional Bards J. W. MacKENZIE REPRESENTATIVE CANADIAN GOVERNMENT ANNUITIE S 7 Brace Black Phone 153‘ Queen Street — Charlottetown ‘ ' O. F. AROIIIBALOI Chartered Accountant 140 Rlohmoud Street Phone l7. P. 0. Box l2. ' ivicneiiii & Bentley W. B. BENTLEY. K. 0. J. A. BENTLEY K. (l. Barristers lllfl Attorney-abhor “' 1NEY T0 LOAN M. ALBAN FARMER aimmsrsn, SOLICITOR. mo. MONEY T0 1.01m Bani ol Canada Bldl Charlottetown Alex. W. Matheson BARIIIBTER. SOLICITOR. ETC- Money to Loan 0011mm“ Office: o0 amt 0mm 51"" ' MARITIME ADJUSTMENT BUB-THU CREDIT — COLLECTIONS CREDIT REPORTS PEBSONAI. LOANS I Tweet Bldg. chutomtown i - Frederic A. Large Barrister Solicitor etc. Success» to I). Ed!!! Show, K. G. Prawn Block, 1Z7 Grafton Street Oharlollelown, I’. I. l. Money lo Donn Oollectlonl, Bu! Estate l _- sracnu. on P E R M A N E N I S 81.75 — 88-50 - 8M9 Shampoo. Wave and Mlnll-‘ITV all for 01.00 Em press Beauty PBFlOY l! lib] sum Phi-rig — ' s ‘vsfifiiikx- 1i» .,-..»|.....,,.,,,,.,-.....-~. ....... WM» -