w ass é"- = s = "f r <3“ §§Q§ ill l?!‘ at ' o n, re aca Bl . n,’ M 3!! fd _--nl.r4-u»nv-Flml-'vv ” ive country. . . gain experience in "J" class sloops he > _-____Endeav0ur, the first, woman to help that is, depends on the fate fhc Ircsldelt-W. Cheater S. lllclmn, Ill’. Vino-President. 3.3. Burnett, 1.1.], Hccruhn Jon: -Col. ILA. Illa-Kilauea, 11.5.0. Idltor 5nd Managing Director-Gil. Burnett. IJJ. Auloolllc Edlldrlr-Fr-anl lorninl Dally (founded llll)‘ “.00 per you (In Miami) hllvorol, ll-W Der you (in advance) nailed THURSDAY, I934 SKIPPER SOPWITH With the first two of the seven ,;.1acht races for the America's Cup acafely behind mm. Skipper ‘Pom JZSDBQpwith, of the British challenger Iindeavour, is the centre of universal interest just now. He is described by a Winnipeg writer as a tall, big ‘man, whose life's aocomplishrneuls F ihave been on the heroic mould. He _-_wa.s poor, but he is rich. As a. youth JTIWenty-three years ago, he was alment over a. five months period. in 7 Edaredevil whose flying feats thrilled "irhiladelphlans. Ho went. in - for ‘motor-boat racing, and twice won ‘the l-Iarmsworth 'I‘rophy in his nat- He manufactures fly- ing machines. accruing to him, he began sailing in small boats before going in for, m yacht-racing on the larger scale. ‘I'o ibought Shamrock V, after her tic- ‘fcat in 1930. Then when he felt ready, he envisioned Endeavour. He called in the designer, Charles Nich- olson. He secured the co-opcratlon of Frank Murdoch, a leading British aeronautical engineer. The Endeav- our was launched at Gosport last May. M)‘. Sopwlth had been elected to the Royal Yacht Squadron, Eng- land's most exclusive club. And lthus, in the course of an unfinished career indicating that its master is of a very dominating character, "Tom" Sopwith sails Endeavour to- day as shc flies the coveted R. Y. S. burgee, and he is expected by his countrymen to win back an old sil- ver mug they lost 81 years ago. Mr. Vanderbilt and his crow of the cup defender Rainbow, know the waters thcy are sailing ovcr, and the winb that blow over them; Mr. Sopwith and his crew cannot know them as well, if barely at all. Mr. Vanderbilt has a picked crew of pro- fessionals, most of whom have sailed with him before, and all of whom have been all their lives sailing the] legs charted for the America's Cup races. Mr. Sopwith lcxst all but ten of his professional crew a few weeks before coming to America, and now he sails with an added complement of amateur yachtsmcn, all members of the Royal Corinthian Yacht Club {the short space of one year, has With better ‘fortune l Wnlkcr and 0.1. 017th. In Clllldl Illll UIIOMI lhhl. Exports of planks and boards 1n- creased from 446.767 M ft. valued at $7,677,300, to 572.511 Ml ft., valued at $11,175,335. Exports of newsprint increased from 15,343,862 cwt., valued at $29,- 167,180 to 19,561,077 cwt, valued at $38,414,604. l. Exports of automobiles and parts llincmased from $4,368,325 to $10,095,- .000. I Such phenomenal trade improve- never before been achieved under any government in this country. And that the uptrend is continuing is indicated by the increase of $10,500,000 in August exrpcrts, re- ported elsewhere in today's Guard- _i______._ EDITORIAL NOTES Italy's national armament policy spells finls to the league of Na.- tions Disarmament commission. Welcome employment for citizens is being provided by the City Council on worth while undertak- ings. After Egmcnt Bay exhibition, school fairs are the centre of at- traction in the country, to be fol- lowed by the Central School Fair in the city. In commending the appointment of the new Maritime Commission, the Montreal Gazette says the hope Notes By The Way A very brief survey of history suffices to prove that the sympath- ies for the house of Austria of which thc Habsburg pl- aganda. boosts are in reality very slight. Both in Hungary and in Austria there is a Iogitlmist aristocracy and a military circle, and there is also a. bourgeoisie that realised its econ- omic and social ascendancy during the fifty years between Koenig- graetz and the world war, in the constitutional Dual Monarchy, in the time of the good old Emperor Francis Joseph. But the good old Emperor Francis Joseph was also young once, and the exeoutioners of Venice and Brescia stood beside him. By the grace of the execution- er the young Francis Joseph re- mained emperor. It is not realised in foreign countries how deeply the anti-Ha-bsburg pasions remain- ed in all the peoples who have been ruled by the descendants of Char- les V.—The Contemporary Review. To the Briton, one of the charms of travel in North America is that he is liable at any time to find himself upon‘ his own doorstep, so to speak. A Bristollan in Bristol (Pa) or an Oxonian who finds (amid many 0's) that Ohio has an Oxford too feels a kindling of the "hands across the sea" feeling. A suggestion has just been made that residents in similarly named towns in Britain and America should ex- change greetings and visits. Amer- icans arriving hcrc would find faul- illar names less obvious than Bos- ton or Washington. In Yorkshire there is act ‘Dy a New York. and there are three Broadways in var- ious parfs of the country, all de- lightfully remote from the “great white way."--Iondcn Daily Mail. The hon-life conditions of. war in the Chaco ‘pgion of South America. between Paraguay and Bolivia, are described briefly in an article by Noel Baker for the Christian Science Monitor. According to the British writer's statement, and he can speak with intimate knowledge as former under-secretary of slate for foreign affairs, the war 11,15 been largely financed by rival oil will be generally shared that their report, may at long last point the way to a. settlement that will be acceptable as being just to the in- terests of the Dominion and the Provinces alike. Hon. H. H. Stevens is one of the comparatively few men in public life who has the courage of his convictions. He calls a spade a spade and does not care a brass far-thing whether his listeners like it or not. He has the spirit and coinage of true reformers, the men who take risks, who dare, in order to attain betterment for the mass of hum- of England. Each skipper, of course, is deter- mined to win the America's Cup. Mr. Vanderbilt dare not lose the Cup after its retention on this side of the Atlantic for 81 years. Mr. Sopwith,‘ though he is two laps ahead, still has] to harbor the thought of not taking it back with him. His wife is aboard sail in an America's Cup race, and she is unlikely to forgive her hus- ‘ band if he docs not fill her cup full of luck. But victory, final victory winds hold in store for the contend- ing boats in the remaining races of the contest. ‘FACTS AND FIGURES r Plurther evidence of the effect of the Bennett time pollcles. abolll which the Liberal press is so much concerned, is furnished in the cur- rent issue of the National Revenue Review. Here are some farts and figures that challenge attention: During the first slx months Can- ada. led in the British market with‘ wheat at 17,509,568 cwt, Argentillal being second with 152114.565, Aus-! tralia. third With 10,920,203, Sovlctl Russia fourth with 2,095,067. i Canadian eggs exported in Jllllh: 1034, amounted to 15.022 dozen com- pared with 11,490 a your ago, Bcr-_ muds, being the chief purchaser.‘ During the past twelve months this- cxpcrt has grown from 278.000 to 2,- 093,000 dczcn. Despite the heavy fall ill the, ltctal imports of bacon into Scot—, land during the first six months of‘ Ills year as compared with the corresponding period of the two preceding years, lmporis from Can- ada continued to expand. There was up increase in shipments from the Dominion of 100 pcr cent compared with the corresponding period 01', 19W. During the first half of 1932,‘ only 91 cwt. of Canadian bacon were diffused to Scotland. During thc Qqnggpondiyig perlOd 0f 18.50 yflfll‘ 3,270 cwt. were shipped, while dur- ing the first half of the present you over 8.500 cwt. of Camilla-ll bacon cntcred the Scottish market. The total export of Canadian PTO- Qlco for the five months ended August, 1934, increased from 0V7.- to 950mm over the ‘an, pq-lql last year. For the some ~ period. the well imvoflfi “MM "for comumption increased from croissants to fl21.ll<l1.574- ‘Wheat emvrts (same perlvdl 11l- creased from 07950236 ‘bushels, val- ued at 045300.222 to 68,706,609 bush- els, valued at 053.613.544- Fish exports increased from 911.- 480 cwt, valued at 08.105533 3° “*3” exmwbn’ 074,604 cwt. valued at 88.809.041- Meat exports increased from 412.- (710 cwt. valued st 94.545303. to U0.- ‘ "ll IIL valued It $311.51- lss.o99.s2s.v5; duties succession, s2,- |Competition was initiated by Mrs. a ‘R. lVllacKay, during her reign as anity. Its an ill wind lflcws nobody good, as the poor, harassed American ammunition industry finds. The present industrial upheaval has interests. There should be more publicity given to this blood-guilt of international finance. No war could be carried on for any long period without the oonnlvanoe of some of the most eminent control- lers of financial credit. Murder in the name of patriotism has thus been financed for four years in the Jungle territory of the Chaco.— Ottawa Citizen. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN 503i 3011p ' 0t , Quota Dal-u Egg‘; EATING THE HEAVY MEAL A1,‘ NIGHT _._____ . You have learned that if you eat a Rise meal at the noon hom- feel a. little sleepy, and are n}; u alert mentally for the hours as you would like to be, You have learned also that if you cat a very light meal at noon, get home tired and eat a. big meal at Xllsht that you are not only un- comfortable but do not sleep as well as you should. It would appear then that you are between two difficulties and you may wonder what to do. As a matter of fact it depends lllJon your occupation. If your work is hard physically or if there is not much mental effort required you should eat the heaviest meal at noon time as it not only sustains ydu for your work, but if you should happen to eat more than your body needs the extra. food is likely to be used up before the next meal ls eaten. If your work requires close men- tal atwnfion then easily digested nourishing foods in small quantities should be eaten at. noon as they will not take up too much of your blood and vitality during digestion and PUBLIC FORUM This column ls oral I" l" lllcnulon b! "iflllbfllhn" c! questions of inter-eat. Th! Charlottetown Guardian duel not noes-u: ondoru 0M gpluloul of corrunondnlll- GROWS ASSOCIATION Shy-Mr. W. B. MacLellank letter in your issue of the 1431- 105m“ indicates a befuddled mind. and this condition seems to be natural to the directors and present mem- bers of the Potato Growers’ A580- elation. w. Maohcllan says. "To my mind. the PEI. Potato Growers’ Association is a very useful institu- tion for the farmers of Prince Ed- ward Island. If it should halllll?" trial», there are any businses men or Senators on Prince Edward Island that do not want it, kindly ask them to leave us alone. We have the rillht to market potatoes or any Olhe!‘ commodity that we have to sell. in the same degree that we have the right to produce them." To much of this we can say, Amen. Mr. Mac- Lellan has, of course. the rlEht l0 think what he likes, but the trouble is the Association will not _1eavet the rest of us alone. About one seventh or one eighth of our farmers are members of the Association. A great many never joined it, not liking its business methods. Many left it when a law was passed making every membors property liable for all the debts. Many more left it after the year it paid its members six cents s. bushel forltheir potatoes, while every other dealer on the Island paid their YOU CH1] 081T)’ Oil YOU!‘ WUiik IJIOPGIIY. Bur, if you only eat a light meal at lluufl you must eat a heavier meal at night and your body and all its processes are too tired to digest it properly. What are you to do? The answer is so simple that you already know it, that is to rest for fifteen minutes to half an hour be- fore the evening meal. Lying down quietly on the right side, all0willg the body to relax as if you were greatly exhausted (breath- ing deeply) will allcw the tired pro- cesses to regain some strength. In fact you may even gc off to sleep for a. few minutes which will be most helpful. Then when you sit down to eat, your appetite will be normal, and the digestive juices will start to flow before you even begin to eat. Fur- ther, you are not likely to have “digestive disturbances" during the night. This resting before your evening meal may upset household arrange- ments, and it must be admitted that Chancellor Hitler and his assoc"- iates must be exceedingiy sensitive to criticism or they would not- ex- pel Dorothy Thompson, wife of Sin- clair Lewis, the well-known news- paper and magazine writer. because of her crY/Fsms of German affairs, and particularly the Dictator. An incident of this character certainly shows the extent of the bondage to which the German people have been reduced. The free expression of opinion is absoluteiy suppressed. and the people without exception are expected to re-eclic in a par- rct-like fashion the policies of the meant an increase of business to them to the extent of from 5 to 10' per cent. Cuba used to be a fruit-. ful field. but there have been sol many revolutions there recently‘ that no money is left to patronize further for the present the muni- tion manufacturers. The new Primate of the Church of England in Canada, Rev. Der- Wyn Trevor Owen, DD. D.C.L., Bish- op of Toronto, was born in Twlcken- ham, England, but educated in Tor- onto. He was Curate at St. James Cathedral, Toronto, from 1902-08, and returned to it as Bishop in 1932, after having held the bishopric of Niagara. from 1925. He was born in 1876, so has youth on his side to help him in the heavy task he has undertaken. He will now automati- oally become Archbishop of Tor- onto. ___-. Quebec Government shows a de- ficit of $5,594,473. lost year it was round $7,000,000. The ordinary rev- enue was $28,282,500.53, and ordin- ary expenditure $8,876,977.01. The most important source of revenue was the gasoline tax, which brought in $5,182,082.30; corporation tax, 720,808.59; the federal subsidy bas- ed on population, $2,464,533.00; the Liquor Commission, which again shows a decrease, $2,226,927.10; lands and forests, $2,392,502.71. Mines also figure for $519,409.38. a consid- erable increase over previous years. Pictou County, N. B. has once more decided to have its rural schools singing oompefltlon to be held in 'I‘ruro in May. This Singing President of the mun Music Club and has been each year a great success. Lest year s change was made in the order of things and the competition was held in May, rather than in October, and when before, schools winning School Fair Competitions were only allowed to enter any school in the County wishing to enter was privileged to compete, the result being that 15 schools entered but only 14 com- peted with 184 scholars. Each school ‘sang a song selected by the Clubs 1 committee and a song of their own selection and the points on which these songs are judged are tone, rhythm, precision (attack and rc- enolmcing and phrasing with 30 points allowed for each. The points made by ouch school and how allotted are read government no matter how oppres- sive they may be. If the German authorities keep on in the enforce- ment of their tyrannical polizlcs Germany will find herself cam- pletely isolated from the rest of the civilized world. However, nothing better could be expected from an ig- norant adventurcr without exper- ience in statcsmanship and diplo- macy. who has been elevated to the supreme dictatorship of the country. -Brantford Expositor. It seems that the Dead Sea, - ing some thirteen hundred feet be- low the level of all the live seas of the world, is very far from being buried and forgotten. Indeed, it. is fast becoming a desirable health resort, and many business men come down there after a tiring day's work to strengthen themselves men- tally and physically in a region where the air contains six per cent. more oxygen than at any other place on earth. The mineral re- sources, too, of the Dead Sea are said to be so valuable and s; read- ily obtainable as to make its area of forty-seven miles by nine casly the most valuable spot in thc world. tainment is given each teacher for future use. Herc is a. chance for our own lladles Music Club to show their enterprise. An Associated Press cabcgram in; public with seeming surprise that Japan has banned Amczlcakl “talkies," and c-ut cut all films suggesting sexual familiarity. This is nothing new. There is no Lcaguc of Decency in Japan, for it needs none. The Japanese, Orientals though they are. offer a splendid from Tokyo advises thc U.S.A. read-| the ones at home are likely just as tired as you are, but if it can be ar- ranged it will mean thc proper nourishment at the proper time, under proper conditions, and no digestive disturbances. . notifier/nor. FROM "TIIE SIIROPSIIIRE LAD" ___-__. Lovelicst of trees, the cherry now Is hung with bloom along the bough, And stands about the woodland ride Wearing white for Eastcrtlde. Now, of my threescxire years and O I1. Twenty will not come again, And take from seventy springs a score, It only leaves me fifty more, And since to look at things in bloom Fifty springs arc little room, About thc woodlands I will go To sce the cherry hung with snow. -A. E. Housmanli. . ~41: ;~—————€————-—~ It would not be difficult for any hitclllgent schoolboy to enumerate a whole series of profound changes in the political, economic, social alld physical landscapes of England during the decade and a. half which separates us from the clid of the Great War. He might mention, for instance, the substitution of social- ism for Liberalism as the spearhead of opposition to Conservatism; the steady dccfine of the old staple in- dustries oli which our wealth and power mainly depended down to 1914, and their supersesslon by oth- ers; the radical redistribution of the notional ilicslnc through the mcdia of discriminatory taxation, and of the social services; mid the desecration of the rural scene which has accompanied the plienomental development of road transport. He might also mention thc renewed southward lnlgraticn of industry, after a. century nlld a lialf of se.f- imposed cvile in the North-Jinn- doli Morning Post. i- The course cf Britain in this sil- uatlon is clear as the noon-day. The inlcllllll politics of Austria are not example. They make no mystery of sex to their boys and giris. But, after taking the mystery out of sex, they teach and demand of their young DBOlJle maslery and control of their emotional natures. The kiss to the Japanese is sacred, ture house in Japan that shows pic- tures of amorous kisses. To show a novels are prohibited from public sale whirii describe kissing and pet- ting. In fact, a. boy and girl found "spoonm," in Japan are dealt with. by law just as summarily as a! young czuple discovered in thisl country in a compromising aims-i tlon. They educate for marriage. but teach suppression of the emotions‘ sacred to marriage until tlicy can be legally expressed. As a rcsult,~ Jcpon is known the world over for thc happiness and faithfulness of. its husbands and wives, and, al-I though divorces can be procured as, easily as in America, Japan has less; than ten per cent. as manv divorces cnddlouccpydflnlchowaat- per omits u ILSA. bu. L I our concern. The intei-natirnnl pol- itics of the Austrian quarrel are not our concern. Kccp out! Keep clear! Twenty ycnrs ago thc Kaiser told his Chancellor f9 inflame the Moslem world against Britain, for if "Germany must bleed to death, at least England shall lose India." Britain, fighting a European wlir and you cannot find a motion plc- wday’ wmnd Jmpardise mm” 1m‘ cious things than even India-the free Dominions who have not sign- ed the European war pacts, and will lover's kiss is illegal. Magazines and not-London Dally Express. An ancient sheepskin patent deed by which Thomas Dongan, - tenant Governor and Vice Admiral of New York, in 1685, transferred the title to land in Kingston to Waldron Dumont for s, gm 9f wheat, to be made annually on March 25. has been found in the 01d records in County Clerk James Simpson's omce. It conveyed 269 acrcs of land in Kingston at the time King Jnmcs of Engkind was reigning over the American Col-I onics. ._i_i____ Figures for the first scven months of 1934 indicate a million dollars incrcase in the landcd value of Canada's catrh cf shellfish as com- pared wilh the corresponding per- iod of l9& customers from fifteen to twenty cents a. bushel. The farmers who never joined it, and those who left if; for good and sufficient reasons, naturally thought they were clear of it. but not so, if the Association can have its way. As many foresaw, the Association is now 1n financial trouble, but in- stead of meetlnv its obligations as every one else has to do, or try to do, it wants to shift these obliga- tions onto the Government, which means the rest of us; and the rcst of us object. Senator Hughes in hi5 letter clearly and courageously voiced the feelings of the non-mem- bcrs of the Asociation, and every honest man and woman on the Is- land should thank him. Mr. W. B. MacLelian says he is disgusted with him, and with the rest of us for our obstinacy. I am sorry for Mr. Machellan because I think he will have to remain disgusted till the end of his natural life. We have no intention to pay other people's bills, 1g we can help it, and we shall have something to say to the Government that compels us to pay such bills. we notice that some very prom- inent politicians, who are also members of the Association, are very anxious that we should all be- come responsible for their debts. They are pursuing this course, mt for their own sakes at all, Oh! dear no, but for the sake of tlie dear A Formidable Agenda (Montreal 0mm) In the list of questions act forth in the letter which has been will w provincial premiers over the 818115‘ ture of Mr. R. B. Bennett as a. PTO‘ gramme for discussion at the Pro- jected conference between trio D0- minion and the provinces there 15 presented a. cream- Wblllbfllw i“ disagmednent than of the 00-01181‘- ative action which the Dvmllllml Government evidently desires. Th6 provinces will be asked to transfer to tho Dominion a number of im- portant legislative responsibilities which are now exclusively theirs With these responsibilities 8R bound Ulp a number of cutstandlnz farmers they love so well. New, it is bad enough to be asked to pay other people's bills, but If is rubbing it in a. bi; when at the same tm: they take us to be foals. Surely wc farmers will have something to say to these gentlemen when they come around next year looking for our votes. I am Sir, etc. WILLIAM NEALE Bear River Station. A MEDLEY Slr,—-To hark back for a moment to one of the topics mentioned in a. former letter, namely, the consolida- tion cf our statutes. This work was started away back in the romantic nineties of the last century and has been continued more or less casually under various governments ever since, and all the time has been costing money-money provided by whom? Provided by the taxpayers of this Province, and no complaint at all would be made if they got any returns, but the returns so far received are just as substantial as those which came from most of thc investments put into fox companies. and may be spelled by three letters - N-I-L. Is this a just, proper. equitable way to treat the public? Is this the way that governments should function? Well, this is the way they have functioned in this particular instance, up to the pros- ent hour. We have paid heavily for goods that were never delivered. Perhaps it will be said that there is no demand for this work. If there is no demand, no necessity and no use, this should have been discovered and known before the work was evcr started and before a dollar was ever spent upon it. And who says tlicrc is no demand? Because people are silent and not continually clamoring the inference is drawn that tllcrc is no demand. The inference is with- ouf, foundation and not true. I say there is a demand not vociferous, but still present and earnest, and thoroughly proper. Men are taken from streets, farms, villages and in the twinkling of an eye arc convcr- ted into magistrates and sent out into the highways and byways with a. blessing and little else, and are, I suppose, expected to be competent jurists. The something else I mcn- tioned consists of a copy of the Criminal Code and perhaps a half dozen or so of thc statutes passed by the Legislature during the years im- mediately preceding. With this li- brary the new fledged magistrate is supposed to be adequately furnished for his office. But he is not, for he has absolutely no access to the real body of law of the past. I-Ie knows nothing of the fundamental laws of our province and can only see a lit- provincial rights which some of the provimm, at any T946. will be unwilling to surrender. The ball with which the Dominion is anu- ling is a. tempting one under PN- sent conditions when every PTOV" inoe of the Dominion is rllcre or less hard up financially and some of them are in very serious straits Indeed, so heavy are the existing obligations under which some of these provinces labor, with the Do- minion Government as creditor that it is going to be very dlfllcult for them to insist effectively upon the retention of their legislative rights, assuming that they have the desire to do so. Some of them perhaps, have not this desire, but among the older provinces the value of their constitutional rights is more clearly understood and more actively appreciated. Quebec is in this category. The agenda so far as given in the Prime Minister's communica- tion is suggestive only. and the provinces are being invited to sub- mlt proposals of their own, but there is quite enough in the letter to indicate the trend of federal pol- icy. Some of it is good, as for ex- ample, the apparent disposition to eliminate duplication in the field of taxation “and provide a more logical allocation of sources of rev- enue now availble ‘to the Dominion alld provinces." As things are now, Canadian citizens in some localities are paying to as many as three different public exchequcrs uncle‘: the same character of impost. There are other anomalies also which call for correction, and the very dubious validity of the federal income tax ought to be settled for once and for all. There is duplica- tion also, or at any rate, consider- able overlapplng, of Dominion and provincial services respecting pub- lic health, agriculture, cic, and the question as to the desirability of defining the respective jurisdictions of the provinces and the Dominion in regard to these services ought to be answered in the affirmative. The difllculty is one wihch can be remedied by agreement among the administrations c o n c e r n e d and without necessarily readjusting present legislative powers. The same applies to research work, in which the Dominion Government is engaged upon a somwhat exten- sive and extravagant scale, and also to the preparation and distri- .bution of statistical information. The extent of the latter, an its almost infinite variety, are both unnecessary and confusing an: cannot, in the nature cf things lead to an accurate llfldefiililildiflg of thc matters with which the in- numerable compilations deal. Much more serious and difllcult problems are implied in the ques- lbion: "Are the provinces prepared to surrender their exclusive juris- diction over legislation dealing with such social problems as old age pensions, unemployment and social insurance, hours and conditions for work. minimum wages, etc, to thc Dominion Palrlinnlcnt? If so, on what tonne and conditions?” The llrospcct of being unburdened of $118 wit. or any share in the cost, oi’ the so-cailcd social services in- dlcated in this item is an. alluring one to some of the provinces, but there remains the awkward fpcl that thc financial responsibilities concerned cannot be transferred without the concurrent‘ surrcndler of , legislative which the provinces have alway: Cllloycd and which many of them have jealously guarded. That the Dominion Parliament has been -‘—*—————- "w-rlzzz” but he would be more illtlmaloly ab- lluailltcd with the laws of ills coun- try than he can possibly be at pres- ry limited Qpportunl- I think it will be done within a rcasonablc time. Mag|5_ tratcs arc entitled to thc work ],n.ge_ 15' Paid for, but ncvcr completed. Sir, tllis letter has got out of hand and I nlust quit abruptly, I am, Sir, etc, c. s. luaco’. Hopcficld, CNALD 9m?“ PILE 011v TMENT Gives quick relief ln all cases of Internal and Exlemg] Piles. A safe and efficient remedy in the treatment of this wretched torturing md on llmca stubborn disease. It brings almost Instant relief from the itching, burning, “ ’ 1. sensation of plies and is a positive cure. tle of the superstructure. If he were, however, provided with the conanli- dated statutes he could stand on solid ground and traverse safely and _surely the regions of ordin law [according to his lights, but he could ‘never hope to vlc with the lawyers. .One such law book can never take jthe place of years cf legal training. »The magistrates scape would still be hedged about within narrow lim- its, but even so, his knowledge of provincial law would be greatly strengthened and increased. Yet he would never be admitted to the bar nor could he take fees to which law- There has been for years an effort to discover Ion-lg |0¢g| treatment by which Pu“ could be cured without re. Ivrllnx to an operation. Such a remedy has hem found in our ointment. We positively assure the cure of this disease, if the dlr. actions are carried out csre_ fully, Gel. a tube today. Price 50c, Tile Two Macs ycrs are entitled. I-Ie would never make great or even considerable in- mods upon the lawyer!‘ revenues, Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. For Full Strength Use <1- and Fine Flavor BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA Ceylon Small Leaf Window Frames a Direct from —Bailding Materials- —— Just Received — One carload of the famous C. Lloyd & so.“ Inside and Outside Panel Doors All sizes. One carload of Rhynas & Son 1.111, nd Glazed Sashes. One carload Douglas Fir Mouldings Spouting and Finish Vancouver. One carload» Johns Manville Lid, Asbestos Shingles and Rooiings Direct from Factory. Prices on Application. L. M. POOLE & C0. PAOLPS WHARVES persistently, if insidlousiy, en- croaching upon some of these rights, always with money in its hand, is a fact known to every parliamentarian, federal or pro- vincial, who has followed the course of legislation in recent years, and the movement has progressed so far that the federal government now has the plausible plea that if it is to pay the bill it. should also have complete legislative jurisdic- tion. It will be well, however, for the provinces to consider whether the monetary relief which a sur- render of their existing rights would bring may be purchased at too great a price. The provinces cannot have it both ways: they cannot free themselves of financil responsibility and still maintain a constitutional position which might be vital to their existence. The trend toward centralization of log- islative authority may be in har- mony with some of the ideas cn- tertained by some of the Fathers of Confederation, but it is not to b: forgotten that those ideas, insofar as they we're held at all, did not find expression in the terms of the British North America Act... and for the reason that they were not acceptable to the‘ majority of pro- vincial rcprwentatives. It is ques- tionable if they are any more ac- ceptable now. They were rejected at the time of Confederation as in- consistent with what was then held to be a vital principle, the principle which was actually and, as was then believed. permanently cstmb- lished in the provisions of sections ninety-two and ninety-three of the British North America Act. It is that principle which is now at stake and its preservation will re- quire ravolufe and energetic insist- ence on the part of those provin- cial representatives who believe in it. Down Labrador Way (From a letter by Sir Wilfred Grenfell) ST. ANTHONY, Nfid., Aug. 19- We have just had a. visit in our Black own home for some days of ' . Minister Ramsay ltfacDcnald; f the new Comlnissiollcrs of the r ernment of the ccunirv; and! the chairlnan of flu- Lolidcli Co ty Council. It was accompa by a, couple of wnrslll -.. onos, but still, like the Anpian horts, suggesting a golden age fishing village I am glad to say that we have I a good. flslicly fills yvurlr, and the salmon, tllrounl thc newlns tan-sous freezing is being su ~..< ly put on the marku. People to get it, because it is just as _... straight out of the wafer. The erous treatment of this Colony the Old Country has brcughta hope into the people's faces, and exposure of our former methods govcrlilllent. by the Royal C u sion inst your. we flunk, has g; a chalice for recovcly that our - pie will make good. The country is not poor, but really, and whcn it pols roads an airplane service, and the -' are furnished. thc wraith of scenery and thc attractions of North in sum-mor- will not only - great help to tile cie\'l'10l)1ll(‘lll» that wirelass and radios make ~- munication possible all the w- but also will be a real bollllllll those whose pockct-lxioks do not title them to a 1‘Olllld-iil(‘>\'.'0l'i(i - or pomibly a European tour. A largo steamer. crowdrd Canadian and American visitors. just left; and every fortnlllhl. directly from Montreal, lux . steamers come along file all! quiet water; and rcfrcsh lnlll body and mind of those lllw perhaps wearied and worn “Will and conventional civilization, After the young thing at tin» v had fixilslied hcr sccolld f". the old lady leaned towards il('l' - said: "Thank you so much for l gongs, my dear. The)‘ W?‘ m” " to childhood dlliis on my in!!! farm. Thelle were “luvs whcnl sang that I could silut my l‘ and fairly hear the old front :1 creaking in thc wind. Hlckevs. NlCl-IOLSO Q l I si £0’