M\nni3%d- m Lur. uun-@.¢.;,-<-c-a . 4%: to be reorganized. The Provincial Secretary, Hon, E. CJMANNING told the Prophetic Bible Institute so on Sundizyupntkhe ought to lmow. l. bum-i‘. nous-ea. w. cum» n. mun. v ' - Ike-Infill! l. l. J. l. _ l . l J. ‘ii"!"""‘_'" m“ ~ 9' " '- 9- '- °' General commendation of the BUilNs‘ Con- 2. pita an, $.11”. w . a. afar-zap» cert is heard On all sides. It was a feather in lthe caps of Mrs. KEITH Rooms, Mrs. Hou. n» (In nIw-w- TRAINOR and Mr. James Canoes.’ Mr. CALDER “m. " c“. i‘ was in the double capacity of actor and vocalist. and added to his laurels in*both capacities. "llorllng Dull; (lauded I81) Il-OI per veni- cue nu nu (In nlvoleo) Ill IIIIUII lhhl. sliriinnav, rnimaiur 1. 1m .As we had no representative at the Domin- ion-Provincial Committee Conference ‘on the B.N.A. Act, alid secrecy was maintained as to . . ' , "the progress made, we are entirely at sea regard- Accordin to a nlainland )8 cr, the Pro-i» - _ _ vincial GOVCIEIITICIII has made ilffglllgflllfillls to; ti}; p iggzhfvgugfgsioijg 2mg; l ‘ import a Percheron stallion for breeding pur-j conmu-nce of legal experts was appointed to re__ poses, which is owned by an Upper Canadian model the Act brewery with 35 aninlals of this kind trav- . . elling each summer in Quebec and Ontario. The i" stallion in question, “Starlight Laget" is rc- ported to have been selected by representatives "T? of the Islaild government \vh0 were in Montreal >9. en route to the recent Dominion conference at Ottawa. The animal will arrive here ill a special van about May 1 and will be loaned at a 110111- lnal service charge. In other provinces tllc special vans used for ' transportation purposes in this connection are plastered over witll advertisements for beer U-mmailufacturcd by the brewery owning the ani- I: mals. The wllolc scheme is all advertising stunt to promote the sale of the conlpany's product, ' ivliicli is illcgal ilndcr the Prohibition Act of this Province. g _ How local government members callfe to "get into contact with a Montreal brewery on their visit to the Ottawa conference is not ex- plained in the news item quoted. Neither is it stated what quid pro qua the brewery is to ‘receive in exchange for loaning one of its best stallions at unprofitable service charges to this Proviilcc. Gift horses, says all old adage, should not be looked ill the mouth, but in this case ‘there seems reason to suppose that while the horse may be all right, there is a nigger ill the woodpile somewhere. Breivcrics are not provcrbially noted for disinterested phil- anthropy. Their interest _in horse-breeding ill this Province, as in other parts of Canada, is likely to be subservient to their interest iii pro- moting the sale and consumption of beet; That is what they are in business for. What special consideration has the Provin- cial (iovcrmncilt givcn the Brewery in question in this‘ case.’ Boosting The Breweries 9K 9K 3K More in sorrow than in anger, Premier l-Irzrsonu announces he has abandoned his policy of government-bond conversion He says it call- not be dolle by one province as “the financial interests would at once band together to punish us.” \Vonder this did not occur to him before. the coming session, is still determined to adhere to his decision to retire at its close. 3K 9K 9K . According to~Dr. H. F. MUNRO, Superin- tendent of Education for Nova Scotia the sys-' tenl of rural education there is of “ox-cart date," Because of “gross inequality" in costs and advantages, much depends On where a child is born insofar as his chances for education is concerned. In one section of Nova Scotia, a fine agricultural area, the school tax rate is 6o cents on $100, In another, much poorer, the rate is $7.10 on $100. Yet both districts are tryillg to accomplish the same in education. 9F 5K 9K The Liberal Party in Quebec, both Provin- cial and Federal, is in a disorganized condition. The latest upset is the decision of no fflvcr tllflll foilr Liberals to run for the Portilellf seat va- cated by the promotion of LUCIEN Cannon to the bench. At a convention, Dr. PIERRE GAUTInER, defeated Provincial candidate, was the choice, but tllrce others who were promin- ciltly illeiltioilc_d, allnoullccd after the meeting that they would be in the field as independents. They are the Mayor of St. Augustin (Mr. EUGENE‘ TRUDEL) Mr. Micnei. Dusssum‘, Lawyer, QUCbCCJHIIKI Mr. EMILE BORTEAU, not- ary, Quebec.» The contest is thus of the nature of a frce-for-all. 9K 9K ilt In these days of economy and compulsory thrift, one may extend a little sympathy to Mrs. GLORIA hlolzoan VANDERBILT who finds she has exceeded the allowance of $34,000 per allnum for the support of her daughter, GLORIA Lanna, by $4,477.42, aild has appealed to the Courts t0 have the deficit made good froili the estate. Ill connection with an itciil of $175.78 for ‘mineral water, ginger ale, etc.," Mrs. VANDERBILT said in an aflidavit: “I furtllcr wish to state here that my daughter docs drink mineral ivater and ginger ale. Ill the event that tllc guardians do ilot For Poetry Love rs Sponsored by the Canadian Authors’ As- sociation “in the interests of Canadian literat- ure", a. new publication, “The Canadian Poetry fllagazine", has lnade its appearance alld will be welcomed, not on itsmerits alone.but as a promising sign of the times. Forty-three Call- adian poets contribute to the first ilulllbcr, which is attractively published under the editor- ship of Dr. E. J’, PRATT, with whom is associ- . atecl such outstanding literary figures as Sir l - ANDREW Macrame, Sir CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS Dr. Duncan CAMPBELL Sco-r-r, ‘Mrs. \ _ . Ions‘ Gnvm, A. H, ROBSON, and Lgwlg the sailie personally.” Otllerutcms included a l DUNCAN. bill from a cat and dog hospital for $125 for "For some time past,” says a Foreword to the first issue, “the desire has been growing famong people interested in the poetry of this jeountry for a. national magazine devoted ex- _Iclusive1y to verse. It was felt that though tcctive to guard tllelz-ycar-old girl; and $423.35 for two months’ steam heat. \ ' popular journals and academic reviews offered 5W _l1°W 11 Clllllllfy P1’ 111011111“! Ymngfades l’: l L abundant scope for Canadian literary expres- l0 despotism! bill 1081“ 111° Llellttiljallbcmf‘ Q " : sion through the channels. of_prose, the general FY11°lF'11_1"(-°l1_11}¢l1l 111° £181" wtentalct [Ssjglalt C5011" t L position for verse contributions was in the _¢g15811°11_]\1’1l§ 011111 "T135119 t1l¢ f all’?! £0 1i; l backyard spaces of the periodicals. The ex- ISl-‘llllffi u/ll °_l11'°5¢11lcd uring _ie OYIICOIIIIHQ i‘ g .pl;1nation given is the far greater marketability session. f lie hlll, now in preparation, will enable the Government to proceed with its Social Credit plans without calling a special session of the Leg- islature, should the scheme be found practicable within the next year. The P. E. I. Government is of short stories, sketches, and articles dealing I-with the political and economic issues of the liday. After all, thc concern is with public coil- , sumptioil, and fiction answers the appetite like 3a dinner gong. . 2i “It is hardly to be expected that anything ‘like a corresponding demand may be created for poetry, but at least it is possible to stimulate 7intcrcst ill the art by drumming up a. larger ;_iLlLll(!llCC and by giving recognition to works of distinction through publication and awards ' . . . Canada lags far behind other countries ' in this respect. Not indeed is the backwardliess islloivll in rpgarlrjl ‘to (lllillllly of qulalitgtytof prg- lductioll. \'c cicvc tlat tie lig cs gra e sifted frolll the nlass can be placed without [prejudice with what is in tllc best bins of other gcountrics . . To this end tlle Canadian IPocIrv lllagasinc is launched." . 'l'he magazine, it is announced, will be pith- »_ lisllcd quarterly aild will consist of forty-eight Zpages containing tlle SIJlCCIOd best fronl the sub- ilnitted manuscripts together wétlllllptices,‘ r‘:- vicws, alld critical discussions o W13 cvcr 00 5 ._sigllificailt oil tlle poetic horizon. " Prominent among tlle contributors to the jfiirst issue is Miss DOROTHY LIVESAY, daughter 20f Mr. ]_ F. B. LIVESAY, general lilanagcr of the Canadian Press, to whose gifted pen refer- ’,'I!llC(: has been made oli otllcr occasions ill these Tcoluiilils, notably with regard to 11¢! vflllllllfi. i“Sigllpost”, published in 1932. Aélwllg flpliir . 0v Scotilll )0ClS re resentc is f- fiENaNi-zrii LlssicleL-allotllcrPwriter familiar to ifGuardian readers, ivhose fillc work In i. ‘ ' imwindward Rock" and iil subsequent volullllis ‘I of verse brought him lllucll favorable notice. __ A wide range of subject matter ‘is covered Ein the Magazine's initial issue, showing pr0lll- jising talent and auguriilg well for the success ilof this literary venture, \\’l1lCl‘l 77w Guardian jwislles heartily to commend. i Editorial Notes iopia seem to have turn about defeat. - i i Government Control policy The legal magis- trates are at present somewhat of _a stumbling block it is true, but there is a probability of tlle ap- wllosc judgments would be subject to the dictates of tllc Altorney-gcilcral. Ill other words, tlle Attoriley-geiicral would be government control- ler, botll Ctfllllllfifdalalg and legally. 5K 5K The Dominion Textile Company closed _ largely to tlle fact that Japanese competition, under the MACKENZIE KING Government con- The President of tlle Company, Mr. BLAIR GORDON, wired: “Hope to reopen when we‘can see possibility of manufacturing goods which can be sold.” Sllcrbrooke City Council appealed to tlle KING government to intervene, as they could not face tlle prospect of providing S0 much additional unemployment relief. Prime Min- ister KING has responded with a Royal Conlnlis- sioil to probe the Textile Industry in general, alld the Sherbrooke factory in particular, t0 make as searcllillg an inquiry as possible into the why and wherefore of this action of the Textile Company, and to report whether it was, or was not justified ullder the circumstances. BK 3K it It is almost illlpossiblc to write history ill a way to please everybody, or, for that matter, anybody_ This the Soviet government is realiz- ing. Naturally it/consigned to the scrap heap all Czarist histories, and appointed a Commission of sympathizers to produce something more accept- able. Five new histories dealing with various phases of the life and progress of Russia was tlle outcome during the past 18 months. A de- cree has just been issued condemning these as dry and matter-of-fact, instead of being inter- esting and lively, with historical characters made real and all important ‘facts and events presented in chronicological orrlenu-The decree indicates that the Soviet histories now, condemned prooeerb‘ ed on the assumption that Czarismwli a static instrument of trade and.capital,_wllerea's Lilrlnt aw Czarlsiil a an active menns‘to__s-, W p earl. - Heneelhi-l v sity for five ab?! ffvm ‘ tlilifaiiglu deullng" with ilneleiit, feudal, modern a ' ._li.s.*x,ulli of, colonial and 31.3 i' days in this month, and one ' Albwldflflrlt Nevertheless Ontario's Premier, though back for, No tes B3171...‘ Way ...__. _ , Iii the cloud of Illlllll Inclina- tlcn which overhangs the world at. the moment the plaln facts of the case are a llttle obscured. We are all agreed 1n r e p>r e- hendlng the actlon of-Ituly. The lnvnslon of Etllloplu was an let of agirresslon committed ln bleach of Treat and in breach of (Jovenant. for w ch no adequate defence has ever been put forward by Signor K155011111, so much 1s common ground. It 1s also conu-rlon ground that the League of Nations felled to stop that act of aggresslon. We had always-been told by the en- thusiasts for the system that 1f only the Natlons could sit round a table an discuss thlngs the lnlier- ent reasonableness of mankind would suffloe. 1n nlne eases out of ten, to prevent war. That method felled. as it had already felled 1n tlle case between Japan and Chins -- London Mornln: Post- ' The Government plans that in future days tlle farm labourer wlll be insured against. unemployment. Praise the Government, who" have given justice at. last to the lowltest and the most. needy of all workers. Man llves by bread, lf not by breed alone. Yet of all tellers thls one has been let!’ naked to the charity of hls employer. 'I‘he land 1s good, but llfe on the land ls hard. Driven down by foreign competition, the farmer pays the best he can, bu!» 1t 1s llttls enough. You rlch towns! Defend the labourers! They are worthy of your hlrel vote the flu-ms the prlces that enable them to pay a. decent wageL-Lonclon Dally Express. 1 C To bring the immensity of llfe to oneself there must be somethlng far more important, far more 1n- trlgulng than the mere centerlng of one‘s thought and effort ones time and strife, upon personal and selfish objectives. Others. If we could only keep that word ln our minds and have lt engraved upon our hearts, how our own llves would be flood- ed wltll happlnessP-and all success wouldtake care of Itself. l. b o 8 a o h Congratulations to the Ministry of Transport on the decrease of 822 ln the total of killed upon the roads 1n 1935. It ls the blggest drop slrloe these lugubrlous stalls- ll more important because there has been an increase of 160,000 1n tile number of motor vehicles upon the road. There ls a. colossal task still ahead. Further improvement. can be secured by responding enthusiastic- 1111340 the appeal which Slr Malcolm Campbell makes when he urges courtesy, consideration, and circum- speclion on all -drlvers--unself1sh- ness, ln fact. That. is the ultllnate w pats to safctyn-Loildon Dally a . ——-~— . ln The cultivation of patience ls no small task. We all want: things to happen at once. All worth wlllle C0 things are developments. The ' mushroom sprlngs into life over night. but it, dles as soon. The ful fertilizing. It's the same ln the and the more thorough the train- Cora Hlnrl (of the Winnipeg Free Press) ls a remarkable‘ woman, A; 75 years of age she ls tourlng Europe by airplane, train and auto- mobile, and when she returns to Canada she wlll have gathered to- gether knowledge of world agrlcul- ture and world economic condi- lions that. probably no other can. adlsn possesses. If Premier Aber- ls of 51111-10113 Buy route was being as- Sllllfld. she decided that the only way to flnd out whether lt was a vessel satllng from Churchill to England. She made the trlp and came back completely convlnced that these was nothing wrong about the Herald. , ln relatlon to foreign currency ls to be stabilised. The Torgsln country's currency wlll be closed down. The Government makes overtures for forelgn borrowing to extend and ‘evelop the country's internal resources. The Russian 50611118111. may now be described as a new aristocratic Adminis- tration. No doubt the hereditary element. wlll shortly appear, At the present time the Russlan Govern- ment ls provlng itself a. good GovernmenL-Jlondon sundsy Ex. press. If Ethiopia la to be conquered It. Probubly means a. succession of IGVMIOO! Wlbh lntegvals bgtwggn, during which the invaders wlll make themselves safe from attack from the rear and provlde fonthe safety, of their communleatlons. There wlll be more than one rainy season before the end 1s reached. The French Ivheral llld- of the char86 of the Light Brfglde at Balaklava that ll. was‘ inqnlflcent, but lr. was not war. What 1s happening la Africa la war without trace of msslilff e. It ls not. tbh klild of we: the tellan people, unan- the spell of Muslollnlnn elo- quence, were led to believe they n t 1.8M leaders of the Patriotic ma: have formally declared their de- termination to flint ell efforts to iniltmtllelr country with Germany. V Ital-hem seam that the lislumes ls inund- inonstratlon perlod wlll soon have leached its climax, and I believe. Slr, that many flowery bouquets and eloquent words of commendation are ln due order. The frilltls of thla noble endowment wlll blossom and multiply a hundred fold 1n the years to follow. It may take years for some of us to just really under- stand and estimate the true value of such a circulating library and lts endless posslbllltles. for eltller of two main purposes: for tnfonnatlon or for recreation. There is scarcely any field of human knowledge which our forefathers have not. explored; and they have faithfully handed down their 11nd- flnd the accumulated knowledie of are not confined to any one authors oplnlons on a matter. counsel many authors and formu- late our own oplnlon or conclusions. Thls applies more directly to serious reading. There ls an abundance of lighter literature or flctlon which provides excellent recreation. derived from prudent, well-directed reading. The reading of good books ls an education ln Itself. The most liberal of all educators 1s a good library. Wlthln lts walla one may undertake daily trips into foreign countries and he can acquire a. far deeper knowledge and appreciation traveller. galned in books ls not so exciting for sorrow. In no other pursuit. 1s worry the reader very little. He 1s for the time divorced from llLs cares Apart; from being a source of pleas- of training the wlll, and the self- control galneld from reading wlll as- u slst us great y ln overcoming vari- es were published’ and it Ll the ous obstacles wlllch we may encoun- ter ll‘l our daily lives. The pleas- ures lmcl benefits of reading are many, but in order to derlve the greatest benefltpwe must choose suitable matter. forth words that are a credit. to themselves and a perpetual source of wisdom and pleasure to the read- ing publlc- To such writers the grntltude for the lnestlmably valu- able contribution to the progress of as deeply indebted to the magnlfl- Library Demonstration. be considered worthy of such a I rarely paralleled endowment; 1t. 1s - 1 t t1 - 1 _ I '11 b e5 onsible for ony way to make a plant or tree, ln my humble opinion a tribute to v15} 0 pay “S i em w‘ e r p or flower grow faster ls to glve ‘it the DTHUBB Whluh We Commulld b8- s. richer nourishment through care- Your! 0111' 0W1! “lB-ll‘ 1819-" And 60. lu due honour and justice to this, care of a cat owned by little GLORIA,‘ $214.46 for development of character and sue- 11119 <11 P1111" Edwflrd 18111114“ two months’ telephone service; $420 for a de- “55- The 1111"" 111° Dmlmrflllvn- 2332:‘ofigulfggézlgagxgfifiilggiafi 1118 1113 B10118 the way, the some, deserving support ln every possible the success and onc's dream come manner" I s, t into belng. tlessness 1n cl t - 3m‘ r‘ e c" m; (mew, Panama is a an; 1.. M. CALLBECK, 0.11s. feeds the soul. 3'59"“- llobler 1n the mlnds of the people their representative to keep the priceless heritage donated by the Carnegle Library Fund Corporation, or lo bow - - - - ‘t hm“ be _ worship to Mammon and mater- pi-oceedlng practically on tlle same lines with i s is a m; ‘$1- 35,332? ($11-11 lausm and term“ supply the ne_ cessary funds to keep the library circulating. The great. msjorlty of Island people never before had a. - - - ehan t 1th t poilltlllcnt of laynlen as judges and magistrates 800d 101118 01‘ 110i. W118 l0 bollrd a mm 1°” u? tmamgulgad ‘on,’ g2’ today, works of the best wrlters ln the world, which --k1ngs could not command twenty-five years _ __ are at the beck and call mute Leihbfldn “umblest cltlzen. _ 11mm; Dull,“ o; "m “on, whloh the 38,000 books 1n circu- down their Sherbrooke rayon factory, dlscllarg- lzolcl-mlnlng exceeds the combined In?“ hzvetdmlet “Yak! 21¢ 19”“ ~ ~ . output of the U. s. A. d c . 1111 °°11°nl11911 ° l1 ° 0111' lug about 1000 employees, due, it was alleged, a“ Now the value o! “:1 b01338 mph we cannot n” by bread alone. There must. be "food for the 5mm, mlnrP-a balanced mtlorl. cessions, had made tlle business unprofitable. where foreigners buy m their own "111 "l" 131B 111.1111» 11° 111M111"! Where wealth accumulates glue most baitént way to get 1t 1s Gflverflmenl. which has been stea - ""311 - lly 111111111; 5w“ 1mm Bolshevls?!‘ perlodlcnls-to read and study at. ease 1n order subject matter. radlo and all publlc performances are educative, but their are more eluslve and veneerllke; the printed word 1s atlll the most lasting and potent. factor ln edu- catlon. Knowledge 1s power. l-Ilgh school and only the groundwork, the reel edu- cation must come as one lets alon: 1n llfe through the “univers- lty of hard knocks." In the words 2 POW "A llttle learnlngils l"dIhI0l‘0ll8 thln paradoxical-ft seems almost. l certainty that the more knowledge one gels, the more he or she mel- lnes that their XIIOIlQIIIO 1| u on ant-bill compared to mlds. A b tellectual giants and men of [not wm to-hove-Bflton nmm-gpg, affairs educated themselves B! __..._. ~ resdlng, ~Mr. Cornell: plow we The aunt-imam of llama m! the M: wt which boob contrib- uted to hll success, abimilaneo of llll mieroelty plillsnthivw dons-ted lfllflllfhflllll them." If we do not ctienie, we ed cine ‘for chancellor Hitler's Q0 PUBLIC FORUM This column lo obi: hi‘ 35' illlenlllol b! woman-ow- '1 quentlnn o! lateral. ‘l’ Charlottetown GUIIIIII doel I" Ibo , ' of oonolpcldentl. CARNEGIE LIBRARY DEMON- STRATION Slr,—’I‘he Carnegle Llbruy De- The average reader turns to books ngs to us 1n wrltlngs- In books we enturles ready at our disposal. We but may There are many benefits to be han the hurried and bewildered The knowledge to be ut very thorough. Reading ls an excellent antidote ne so alworbed- as 1n reading a ood book. Surroundings or time ncl llvlng in another world. If ne 1s merely tired, he may soothe ls nerves with light, alry llterature. re, reading ls an excellent, means The majority of authors have put orld owes an immense debt of . _ , 7 rue tinaltwrrrxrowu GUARDIAN ‘~ (mm "Day and Nlzht") Up in the roller room, men swing steel Swing 1t, zoom; and tut 1t, ensh- Up 1n the dark the welders torch Makes sparks fly like lightning reel. Now I remember storm on "a fleld, The (X1009; ~ blow tense before the b . Even the jltlerlng sparrows’ folk Ripples lnto the stlll tree shield. We are 1n storm that has no cease No lull before, no liter time, When green with reln the greases . grow And elr ll sweet with fresh lncrelse. We bear the burden home to bed, The gurnlco glows wlthln our e Our bodlerhammered through the nlght Are welded into bltter bread. -Dornthy Llveuy, 1n "Canadian Poetry Mega-line." appears to be stationary, 1t 1s either advancing or retrogrsdlng. Hitherto we have kept abreast of the times 1n lntellectualpursults. Many of our cltluns have zone abroad and dlstlngulsll ’ them- selves. We refer with pardonable prlde to names such as Slr Robert Falconer, Jacob Gould Schurman. Slr Louis Davies, Coles, Whelan, Archblshop Otflrlen. Archblshop McGulgan, Rev. Sydney Bonnell, Bishops Morrison, McNlllly and Slnott, L. M. Montgomery and Basil King, and many others. It. ls too soon to prophesy o 11st of the ‘gnaw’ 1n our present day and generation of our legislators, clergy and edueatlonlsta. Posterlty with lts unerrlng judgment wlll award them tllelr proper IIICIIQ lli the hall of fame. L. M. Montgom- ery has aeeompllshed a greet amount of material and senti- mental good- for P. E. Island. We have many potential L, M. Mont- gomerys and Basll Kings. Famil- larlty with the writings of great. authors through the instrumental- lty o1 the library wlll bring out t-helr latent talents. _ It. will be just too bad l! our legislators can’t “flnd n. way or make 1t" to keep the llbrary books 1n clrculatlon. It la an institution which supplies a. long felt want "ln the provlnoe. We were never very strong on publle institutions such as baths, public parks, etc. (Nat- urally the wholeJsland 1s a. mll- llon-aere park). This llbrary puts us 1n the forefront for publlc ln- stltutlona and 1t would seem a. shame and disgrace to let 1t go by odern clvlllzatlon, and we are just nt. contributions of the Carnegie Flor the people of P. E. Island to P. E. ISLAND Bin-To be, or, not to be, that the questlon; whether 1t 1s Prince Edward Island through so generously 1n 118° ofthe n ls mm w esllnute. the good 111s a prey. and men, decay." We want. culture of the mind. newspapers and to asslmllate the Motion pictures. effects education la I. Drlnk deep. or taste not the Plerlan Spring." Even that thought, set ln beau- lful rhyme and rhythm, seems lgpereentlleoftheln- mdlntbe and eahbllsh l. llbnrv fund. Al on. , declares the "Tempura" mllt-antur. et non‘ Nell movement to be "Austria's mittens tln lllll." an old Letln public enemy No. 1." 1t would proverb mooning "The time; m and we m Clllhllhl with default. The other provinces are watclllng our experlment with a deep liltelest-not unmixed with envy that we are so lucky. I do not wish to be considered presumptlous by reason of giving concrete speclflc advlce to merri- .bers of our government, but 1t does seem that a nominal charge (1 cent.) _on each book would not work a llsrdshlp on any reader and would help considerably 1n defray- Lvig rurlnlng expenses. At all munlclpsl baths 1n Boston some years ago a charge of one cent was made for towels and soap 1n order to defray running expenses. The building of three or four mlles less of asphalt pavement than the proposed amount would perhaps provide the funds to run the 11b- rary. It is fervently hoped that our government wlll flnd a way. I‘ am, Slr, eta, JAMES PENDERGAST, Kenslngton. —---—__---__. ELECTRIC LIGHT BATES S1r.—I am pleased to notice that our electric llght and power owners have at last become vocal end are glvlng publlelty through the press to "a series of neighborly talks about your local electric company," and these published statements are embellished with some plctorlal views which do not deplct local scenes and most of thali- alleged facts are like the pictures "wide ‘of the mar ." There 1s another matter worthy of note, namely, that the Company has filed wltli the Clty Clerk a reply to the serles of complaints lodged by the Clty Council ln De- cember last. In 1933 whens pro- perly legal petltlon, slgiled by ten representative cltluns supported by the Light Committee of the Coilnell with a letter of approval attached algned by Mr; G. Shelton Sharp as Mlnlster s1 Public Works on behalf of the local ‘Govemmeut, was lodg- ed wlth . tho late Public Utlllty 30ml. not even an acknowledge- ment came from eltlier the Board or the Utlllty. The present dlfferent attitude not only of the new Board but of the Utlllty itself opens the way for further action which I have no reason to doubt. wlll be taken by the lncomln Clty Council. Noth- lng wlll su lee except a full and complete investigation. not by an appraisal company but by compet- ent electrleal engineers and uttllty ex rte. n “the lei-lea of neighborly talks" reference 1s made to “your local vlwtflc comp-w." but 1t tmy wall be asked: What 1a local about this urn? It was incorporated at Ottawa, owned by a" Boston 'I‘ru|t which ln turn ls ofmtrolled by l. New York Holding Alloolotlon which hu at the present tlme m application 1n bankruptcy before a federal board. There ls not a dollar of local money lnveswdtln the Com- pany. There ls not e llnlle local shareholder or director of the Coll-l- pany and the local ofllee» of the Company 1a t 5h ltree , P: - erleton, N. B? m ~ t Id The New England Ola and Electric Association nuke. an @11- nilel return to the Department. of l iut return 1t. 1a stated that. 1111A:- biliailliuiiuiiliilii‘ l a m ll l not-ea of the Ragtime ~ Th ppm‘ ' "form" its the’: ‘file Merlnfhne Ilfttrh i ' E tinny la owned 100's by bio-lot n <11) mutloll own 021105022‘ ‘m vilui or bl mm clear Infill Wilt till Assoelnlon. and the thing lam I p p “HINDI ll I WI ll" Public Utllltleeat mm min t- Th ‘Dfscussfoinl: iIi-Iikelyi I . v ,Ki'ng ‘Gooiemment Action (Norman w. McLeod 1n file Holland niaplm (Norman W. McLeod 1n the M841 and En-iplre) 113v 11, s ‘ s that quite uaaglellmleusii-mu- overlooked l“ the excess of grlef occasioned by the with of his 1m majesty-J” Ottawa Government- has ~ liven octlvely ensued 1111111111118 11°11‘ lillllll-IUODBI history for the Domin- on. For the first time, 1t seems. Ub- nsda has despatcbed messages to foreign oountrles wlni which 1811B has direct " ' ‘lc relations. aoqualntlng them- with the death of 1m- sever-slim. and equally for the f t tlme, the Domlnlon has iieoel messages of condolence lri return. ' On the face of things such inter- chmu‘ might seem lnnocent enough. From ‘the standpolnt of Imperlsl relations, however. and as marking a new mllestone In Can- adian conetltutlonill development. they have e. definite and important slgnlfleilnee. That. @1118 18 T600801!- ed by the Government is revealed by the fact that. Mr. Kins. 1n a recent conference with the press. made definite, lf passing reference to them and lndlcated the Statute of Westminster as thell- justlflca- tlon. In the past-as 1n 1910 when Klng Edward VII dleib-forelgn nations were offlclally informed of the melancholy event by the Imperial authorities on behalf of all the British peoples. Japan. for example or France would not re- celve one notification from the Im- perial Government and a separate and dlstlnet one. conveying the ldentlcal lnfonnatlon, from Can- ada. Mr. King's argument ls, how- ever, that the Statute of West- mlnlster created Hls Majesty King of Canada. to the full and some extent that he ls soverelgn of the United Klngdom. In addlllon, it conflrmed—alt.hough upon this point there 1s disagreement due to the control wbleh Westmlnlster still holds over our onstltutlon- the equal legislative competence of the Canadian with the Imperial Parliament. Havlng thus her own sovereign and full legislative com- petence, the Dominion ,. sses, ac- cording to the evident vlew of the federal prime minister, an mallea- able quality of natlonhood which makes lt impossible for any other authorlty to speak on her behalf. In other words. on Mr. Klngfls vlew. there can be no longer any united voice of Empire, but. just the several volces, each speeklng with full iluthorlty for their lespectlve peoples. Whlle Mr. King's attitude may be argued to represent the ultlmate logic of the Statute of West- mlnlster, 1t is reasonably certain that 1t will evoke a storm of con- troversy ln the approaching parlia- ment tf ever the debate centres‘ on the questlon of Ilnperlal ielatlom In the first, place, 1n taking the ilnltlltlveli la Inform 1 countries of the amigo tiled’; Domlnlon’; sovereign, the pm“, Government ls oonalde nu ln some quarters of Parliament H111 to hm read Into the Statute of Wm. minister a. oompulslon or obllgatllm whlclrtlie leglslatlon does not 1m. pose, unless by malned Inference Canada would have lost. notlllng m legislative power or world prestlge these crltlos hold, lf she lllld u! lowed the solemn fact of s, mm. alien's passing to be proclaimed u ln the past with the voloe of a United Empire, In the second place, them ls s1. ways the questlon ln the minds 0| many iPlirllamel-lt H111 consul". tlonallsts, 8.5 to whether, 11 yqn come down to the flne point. o: spllttlng legal halrs. Hls Majeggy can be considered King of Cans, excluslvély, liialls, and wllnolli reference tn his stat-us at m, same time as ruler of the other sec. flons of the Brltlsh Commonwealth. The traditional theory o1 the m. dlvlslblllty of the British crown l constltutes at least an important, l obstacle ln the way of subscrlblng l to any such theory. 1 The truth of the sltuatllou 15 m“ Imperlal relations have now new j advanced to a polnt at which s j distinct and important cleavage o; l oplnlon wltll respect to their further development ls commend. lng to arlse 1n Federal clrcles. QIIQ school of thought, mpl-esemed largely by the Conservative plmy holds the vlew that tile Dominion. liavlng secured complete leglslstjyé competence and full equality wjth the Motherland for all practical Purposes 1n every sphere of natlon- hood, should rmt content mu; what. she has won, lest. 111mm. l progress along the same road ‘ should prove to be 1n the dlrectloil of Imperial disintegration. The contrary oplnlon. towards wl-ijgh . 111° 1111*"! Pflrly leans. holds um l Canada cannot. be too careful ln l upholding 5nd awn-gins on every ‘ occasion calling for action ti; nationhood at wlllch she has ar- rlved. At bottom the confllctlllg views represent unruly two different vlews of Canadian destiny. Th; Coilservatlve party ls 1115mm 5° see Canada's future as restlng in m Imperial partnership carried out 0H 6111181 W111i by the various nat- ions of the British Commlorlweath. The Liberals, on the other hand, are more inclined to atrem Clin- adafs futum as that of a greet world power, trading ‘ ‘ 11m. ally and without dlscrlmlnatloii, and rewsnlzlll: no ba-rrlers o1 eltlier sentimental or graphic affiliations to bec- legllzlmate aspira- tions. The. two views have such strong elements of contrcdlctlon that. they can hardly be held side by side 1n the one House of Com- irlilions wltlioui; an explosion rguit. g. been compelled to pay. high rates for our light and power. It ls a case of taxation wlthout representatlon which ls wrong 1n prluciple. The fact. that ‘The New England “Trust" own $1,750,000 notes of The Maritime company wlll cause some surprise here. We are told that "nearly $1,000,000 was invested to serve you." I fear that no lnvestlg- atlon here would unravel all the financial wlzardry ln connection wltll the Maritime Electric. Here ls an electrlc plant that was assemb- led and operated by local people up to 1913 when 1t was sold out for 890.000 and the olefin ls now made that its present value 1s "nearly 31,000,000." Up to last November, The Marl- tlme Electric owned a half dozen plants 1n Nova. Sootla. New Bruns- wlck and P. E. I. If nearly $1,000,- illiliat I 330112 of Quilts i142!“ 1"- W’. '11-"- PLAIN FACTS ABOUT THE HEART As heart and bloodvessel ailments stand first. as ll cause of death, 1t ll only natural that. when n. phy- slclau makes the slightest comment lt 1s small, 1t, ls larze, 1t aklps a but, there ls a. slight. murmur, the heart muscle 1s a llttle weak ln power-the patlent 1e apt to be- gln worrylng about 1t. _ Now, u mentioned before, any of the above conditions may be pres- ent and yet there 1s really no Cllllt! fol-worry, It may be that some little thought. u to the amount or kind of food eaten, the amount of sleep needed. the amount and klnd of ex- srelse hot 1| but, ls necessary, but the tll ht that tbeheort 1s 1n a dllsuedor alllng condltlon should never enter the mlnd. o! course there may be reel trouble with the heart-a badly leukln: valve wlth enlargement; the been. muscle may not be strong m . , the blbbth V980 luwbln; tbmbeort muscle m“ not be elutle enough comm; be (engine ,. mm may in breethleancae on al t exertion one even Jwellln: the feet. o» are all reel organic ants of the heart lflrl tbetr uiturolllblt u llIIP on the heart-ft 1s rapid, lt ls slow,‘ on um m:- i n» wlthstand these various s81. . tlons ls because 1t possesses what I! called “reserve" or reserve power, whlcll Nature seems to store within lt-s muscular walls for cfes or even long continued demand oil its power. - Now lust as we try to save by putting money 1n the bank, tilts in. surance, or lnto safe Investments, so the heal-t. patient must t-ry to save or conserve thls reserve power of the heart for enlergencles. The helm spends its strength by work-sending blood to all parts of the body at a mole or less rapid rate aecordlnl to the need. It saves lt-s strenztb by resting or sleeping. In fact even rlurlng llghl; work the heart. can really save its strength and build up its reserve. The heart's reserve can be low- Ered or lessened by overwork, men- tal or physical, overeating, or doing heavy work. Ill A 6 S Fig Worm Powder A very effective treatment for worms 1n Pin and Hon. Now II the time for treatment for worms. Recommended by mmlnlon Dept. of Agricul- e. MACS CONDITION POWDER Tones up the system, cum all Skln Troubles and glvel a llosay coat of hair. For swol- len legs, purifying the Blood Ind u on endloatnr of worms It 1| u: linfallllq remedy. ' MACE BLOOD FOOD For Pale and-Thin People A combination especially valuable In the treatment o! lion illnues where their orlrln h traceable to In Im- poverhlled condition of the 100d.- One of the greatest remedies laéhe treatment of Rheuma- lor ‘fhba who have loot their appetite Mu Blood Food wlll prove the restorative. MACS IIAIII IISTOBEB It wlll restore my lulr to m n‘ mm "diffi- m‘ o . new growth who" the IIMIQIIIIIIQ- jgfilmpnvontlfl! Gfitomfllifi-Iflflm T513572 MAC. ' W 1w and with; cluiiul bh 1111mm! be vacuum Manny t ‘ 1 " ‘ ‘The airline martinis t