......+ ._—' 0-044 4ocueooouuooo¢o¢..---¢o<».k‘ Am ...-_.. . . . .,.-..~o~.=¢~< s - c ' ‘AUGUST 3, 193g PAGE FOUR <___ __.__ _. m: a cmttttonrrown uunnnmnl Morning Daily (Founded I887) President Quint. w. (Theater S. Mel-Hr» Vice President J. R. Burnett. F-J-l- Secretary LicuL-Col. D. A. Alan-Khulna, 0.8.0. Idito and .\l urging Director J. lillfllflll. FJ-l- r A. ociutc Editor Frank “alker SUBSCRIPTION MILES -'.00 - "u tin advance] delivered lo City $30 ptiluy-ciltrlltn znliullccl mulled Iu P. Edsland $5.00 pct" your tin LIIIIJIICIJI anally-d to Canada and U-S Mctnbcrs Audit Burt-nu 0f Circulutlous “The his Weaker ithan the lieu/vest Ink." i 1938. \\'l.l).\'l-I.\‘l).\I', AUGUST.‘ 3, — _ ..___€__ i kitlicnlnus Accusations \\'- zit-- ‘l . t u. h. . . ,. mtwrq" . I- ylc\c‘il- ,, . 1 . '- zlccu-zv 1, .l ' . ' rant; to \‘. ill- t m In < ' ._ t. _,.. . < in. 1. thc l‘. . - \ i - t -' .' llr. \i rfiv. is sup- p-. , l\""._"~ n1‘ .\l:'. llun- i t i l‘- t- . i ‘with’. \lr't'< t: ' " icnmtilztrit 1f i ~i~lt-ti "the [I . \ t‘ lb l."i='t':!l Rttil\v'l_\' i‘ ' I' " ;.'.‘.':\\~ hurl a li t llr. l s . lit“.- ‘ ;-.'trt_v i l)» ~22". our . in ll--n. .\lr. - ‘ t n hc at- - s with .' n ni l’ar- f‘ i.‘ l => Rlitti-tcr ll _ v llntvc-s‘ s uztstt”. .\Ir. ll s f ' r t» ; that tlv- I any r." and in‘ w‘ (‘nusct tint ‘w t... ' a mtiniiic llritislt .\lt', l\i"~~'s hut-t . y. tn lw livlll by slitti- "vtnnn at- ‘ that we have also a .'t‘.leqiaz'tce. ar to sucrqcsttltat an". e-x-solrlicr who . Party of Cati- n tvf to steal .\lr, King's spin " l"‘w.-"i'tl T‘ rlicjr." Fvctt if hr- suc< . it, what r-rt earth would llc (l0 ‘ .,._.“,&, Golf Links At Green Gables l my. n‘ hen/l.- fr; ad". — "Pr: get». .. v, (_{,§,I win it? The Canadian Resources Bulletin, issued ll-‘Wltlii-tl Dcparttnc-itt of Alincs 5m} ltesatrres, carries the following interesting pIll>l‘.CiT_\'§ y“, year vkltnrs to Prince Edward Island Kw. -~ i l’ -‘- w?‘ he ii unit-d an opportunity 221i CIPYT‘. game in one oi rim‘. ramatttic settings Io he ca, \\'r-rl< on the new wt at Gm n Hallles is just ' - rvnrrxrvl that at least ninr lit-lee ' i ..'i\' by nrxt summer. ‘yo-i- s of thc ltlvctirlislt re- ‘. lxtwrr ucr anil stretch- "Plilll pastoral landscape of at fir-en (‘tables will prt-s- vhn of sr-:t~iilt* antl in- nriuitial lurks I ' tllmlcrtl gulf g l'll',‘i'\\'t'4l hv the dwicncr. pun "t i.» ‘ ~ In -"'~ "ri"~tt' l' ltnnwtl Lwli qr.“ v i i“ ‘,'.‘ Q ifltri tlu‘ l.'I_\'-Illl I'll Ill" .. d». p ni intcrcsl portravr/l ..~' I ~ anrl associate r". pion oi lt't'~‘_ and s ‘want lw-t n c fully ar- ~ . ‘i-iltttts assncittt- "liw- iarin ltntrst- at :1 lwtttgc, te-a rnnin thc usr- nf the , _ _'\\ lnclu" l'|\1tll\\ I'll‘ ' .._._ ., p, - ._ an} l,r,.t‘.t._intirll‘< shop aurl ' ' tin thv iarutsrt-nli ttttuns- 'v.1- arc alsn llf-itig lanrl- _>ll]l‘ tIl-‘tfl in r-tirhuvc. Start- ~ ‘ ~<~ -. lircwtnl :tl-~ut a htnnlrtvl rzi- farm h-utsc. plav lvarl< Imp.- {rum tln- llauntr-rl v . .,{ Sluinitig lYatt-rs. anvl , t w .,l p-Wtil lin- farm hull-litters. ‘ lyxvc, tin-l tltt- sprint: kniuvil f" ‘ _ hm} jltptt ljlrllll‘ tn the cighti-r-ttth a huntltwwl let-t snulhr-Itst Jntttl w i. a... i T _ ' . ,_ v n m, m, U,‘ M, are lyetttg provided for etcry fer than another man s. \ llolc, and from tee to green the placing of traps and bunkers will assure interesting plzw from the long tees for the crack golfer, but rtottnuaii. iicult going for the novice who i.s cnutcnt to play from the short tees. From the lntig tccs the litiks at-lirectt (iablcs will IIIUIISIIFQ (rut-Q mute while from the short tecs the distance will 11c (5000 yards. ._____________ Britain's Prestige After four months during which Prctnict‘ (hatnherlaitt has pursued his policy of tttipcasc- mcut, ct-tnmcnts The 'l‘ornntt> Tclrpraiii, tun facts stand out for all to see who ltavt- cycs. flue is that the [ircstige of Lircat liritain has her u rcstorctl to a point at which Loudnn is nim- titnrc the political capital of the worltl. The nthcr is that thc Prime Xlinistcr has so incrcaqwl in visible stature that ht- is nnw FCCugIIl/aal as the wl.»rl<l'_s lczulitig statcsuian. It is to (innit llfllltltl that Berlin, Rome, Moscow and lart» lot-k when action is cnntetnplatctl or trnnhfc itwircrl, and it is .\lr. Chatnlvcrlaiirs ntiittl that linth iricntls anrl iocs ltavc tn rcatl. \\'hcn Illa‘ Italian Jtgrcctnrnt was prnpncptl, hi< tlitlntllffll~ (trctzsctl the Prime .\linistct' ni "ti-tickling tn thr- llicr tors": now it is thc tlirtatrvt" whn pres-cs for r wztinn of a pact that will hintl him in ftattrlsltiti to llritaitt. \\'hcn .\lr. Ch.intl».-t'lain rcitisrll to cnnnnit ltitn-t-lf tn a treatv for the prntcctinti of (a/ccltoslovaltizl. he was \"lI.".I‘_Q'€’1l with couartllv intctitintt to cnncc-lc (icrttizln flu- llllllllllwll of (‘cntral litnwttc: now it l\' llcrlitt W11: aslcs llritaitt to scck a fltillliiill of the ("Yeti J-Ivfllyifltl prohlciti. \\'hilt- hi. ltnntu tnnor about his "wcaltticss" arll "wtcillrttiivti" ins tnrcigtt fricutls attrl int-s ltavc un flttlli". of his resolution and his strrtrqtlt. J‘ Editorial Notes I‘ The Farl of llaltltvin was horn this rlate. 1.96,". i i! I fill Mnntig the dislinjgttisltc-l ‘isitnrs t0 the llru- viucc is Principal Scott llaclictvit‘ of llcliill l’l'l~l>_\'l\‘l'l.'lfl (itillcge. lle is visiting the dil- fcrt-tit l‘resb_vtcrics in the Nlarititucs. I i N‘ is His Honour the Lirutrnaut-G-ivcrnor and .\lr.s. Dclllnis are giving a "gatwlrtt party on \\'ctl- ncsvlzty the 10th lll>l. Sh-Iultl .\lr_ llutitiiilg lic wcll enough, hc and .\Ir.s. Dunning will be among thnsc IIFCMJIII. l! I 1! t The worlrl is very small ztftct‘ all. as is daily living lliscnvt-rcrl hy varintts ltydltil’. liltlcrlv Morris Tolkin, of liohocs, .\'. \'._ uitlltctl into a variety store in llrtclcttiti. .\la.-.~.. firth-rial ritgrtrcttcs. thy-n stared in attiazcnttnt at Samuel llltttnhcrgl. the prnprictnr. Tin-v hzttl her-n fcl- low >l\l(llt'I‘.< in the lln-sizttt -\t'iti_v .2 yt-ars ago. It was a jqvittl rcuuintt. llnt lltvtl —- Then‘ respective wivcs wcrc ltrought in to he intrn- tlucctl. an-l tln\ icll into UJIUlI nthcrIs arms. 'l‘hc_v Wvtk‘ hali I Ii * 1 Soviet school tutthnritit-s arc again voicing anxiety about children nntsillt- schnnl hours. ;\'. a tuft-ting" of lllt‘ prcsi<lttitti ul thc Xlnscnw So- vit-t tl1t~tlit"t~<"tt't-s~ ni the city tKllICIIllIlllIIl dt-trart- ntrnt, litipt-tiia Scrut-yv t. spnltr (lillltll pnnr tlis- cipliuc anrl scentcrl. inciinctl to put thc hlatnc- nu lacl; of proper home iniittcilcc. She plfiiptvstwl that all school chihlrrtt ~-hnnltl tycat" a "~<‘l1nl:tt"> ltarlqtt". that an nrdcr shnul-l hc issued tnrhitl- ding thnsc un<h r l; tn he nut in thc strcl/ts. square autl parl<s after to p.n1.. and that the .\lo~cn\v $ovict shriuhl incrt-a-c the utunltcr 0i titusicrtl anrl artistic chills and \‘.'|il'l\'.~lll\l\S for chil-lrert. w a m n- Lilte flcrtttairv, vlztpan is being hzml hit l>_v the fall in forclzn trarlc since her invasion of Chitta. The Faltinct has attthoriycrl thc rrt-tttioti of a “foreign exchange revrwlving itmtl." lt will cx- port ahroarl gooocxmooo ycn of the llaul; nf ja- pan’s gold ‘reserve. lcztvittg ,:oo.r>oo.00o ycn in the bank's vaults. The nhjcct of exporting the gold is to purchase raw itiatcrittls essential t0 _lapan's own export‘ lnthistrit-s. The Japanese banks through which loans for such pnrpnscs are made must return the horrotvctl funtls im- mediately in lapanesc runnulacturvtl Qmi<l= cx- ported and pairl for thus. at least thcnrcticztllyx maintaining Japan's qnlrl cretlit ahrnarl null nnt necessitating further exports of gblrl. a x a n- The judicial Committee 0f the Privy Coun- cil has upheld the validity of the iritish (johnn- hia Products Marketing .~\ct. .~\ group of tlair_v- men appcaledfrottt a judgment of the llritislt Columbia Appeal Court. 'l"hcy were 1vl‘<l('l'('tl tn pay costs. The comtnittct- Ioutttl that the .\l:tr- lcctittg Act was confincrl to rcgttlatiluis nf trans- actions that take place wholly within the“ ro- viuce and therefore was within tht- sovrrcigtt powers granted the Legislature unrlcr Section O2 of the British North America Act. The act set up hoartl to regulate thc tnarlct-titiq within llritish Columbia of varintis mttttral resntirct-s and is scunt-trhnt similar tn ntarlteting tncastirt-s of thc Dominion. apprnvcvl liy thc latc (bust-rut- tive Government hut founrl tittcorutiltltivutal by the Stiprctne Court of (Yntzirla and thc l‘riv_v (innncil. i: a w n: On Frirlav the ititcrtvill (“orriqan is expcctctl hack in New York which hc lcit recently‘ cu route for (Aillll-Iirlllfl antl ltmrlittg in lrt-lanrl. Th!‘ ht-v. S. i7r.'tsct' latiqfnrrl, the tnihl- grzrv-ltair- t-rl unch- nf llntitglas is in N t‘ \\' Y 0 T l\' tn serve as ",1 sort of littlfcr" lflt‘ his nephew and i n c i rl c nt i a l l y t0 greet thf‘ trurmt airman. The clcruywnati flcw by plant‘ from Filllltlflllfl. .\lr. latiqinrrl asscrtcrl lhill all offer; frnm various ‘onrccs were lwitlQ hell in rthvjvancr- pr-nllittq fjltfrlflflllifi return, lllll that "qt-mtg prtwGflfr-n m“ lIPlllQ hrnttultt to hear o" tlp- ftvifltnj‘ tn gn rlirt-vflv tn Ins \tIL'<'lt-s ztftcr <tnppitig in .\'<-\v Ynrk, Thu flit-r prniml-ly will visit Fan lirfititciscn before lwqinttiit»: lti< mttinn- wirlc tour for .\I‘ll(’I'i(‘7lI1 Airlines. .\lr. Latminr-l snitl. .*\sl<cvl whcthcr he actually hclicvcvl that ("nrrigztn intcnrlrd to fly to Lns .\nc"l"= "I1 Ill!‘ hop which lrlnllcrl him in lluhliti. the pastor rc- ‘ylipllj “\\'h\' spoil the lthcf iulzl‘ nl thr- ccnftirt‘ ln- t-xtrlaitiitttt? .\nv\v.t_v, my opinion is no lict- t sisters. _-<~p.‘t1‘.'ttt-:l int- 5Q year-y. THE CHARLCTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TNE WAY In the Grevln waxwork: In Parts is a figure of Mussolini. ueiott- that llgllft,‘ Inst week stood Lyuphant Dante, former Turin lat tor) 0\vner, Italian refugee. lie had sworn to hate II Duce .,,.,.,,._,11y_ Dante, petuuless, look- btl at the figure, then shot himself, Iallnn; across the feet. of the waxen lttussobnt-Netv York Times. Civilized men will unite In hop- iut. that. as the shattered fabrIc of Rheum Cathedral could rise again from its ruins the edifice o! world pr-ace can be rebuilt on more solid autt lasting foundations. The next mtr would cause civilization to crumble lll worse devastation than was suffered by the cathedral In the last war. —London Free Press. A Illassacltusctts farmer had 260 turkey eggs, o1 which 243 failed to lunch because he said ‘they Itacl been damaged by blasting on 8- guvertutiettt works project. So an Ubllgltlg Congress put through a bill to rcnnbursc him to the ex- tent of $516.12 for the Christmas runner "plOWCd underfl President. Roosevelt vetoed the bill, on the grounds that the alleged loss was wholly speculative _ and proving Jgtilll that the old zidage about. cotmtmg unluuched chickens cov- crs turkeys, too!—0ttawa Journal. One of the big New York news- papers decided to move its Vienna office to Imtgue, Chechoslovakia. The contents of four small rooms. including some fIIes and a few desk" and clrairs, comprised the tiruperty- to be moved. The moving tool; cxttctly‘ two months, and gave those concerned u, wonderful les- son in rcd tape and Nazi efficiency. ‘The story o1 the tnovitig 1s a min- or classic and would make a good bllbjtftl for u Iiuntorisfs pen. it is also a guott lesson for those who think a dictatorship is the last. word in etticicticy‘. The job which cottld ltuvc been done in a day took two tnontlts of strenuous ef- tort, —Bostult Post. For some ycars now our pent- house gartlcus have been flourish- mg so succcssfttlly’ that In certain sections ol the city foliage seems Lu wave lrotn every other parapet. 1n time, It the crops were good, we Illlglll. Ine on our own produce. 1L is true that in many plots our sky" gardeners groyv only roses. dzthlirts and things like that. But; liardier pfllllllOLlbU farmers are raising corn. tomatoes, celery and other vegetables of high nutritive value. It etiougn of these could be lmrvestcd and sufficient wheat. acreage added with, say, a little cattle grazing on the side, the metropihs tnight. render Itself en- tirely independent of the agricul- tural rctnutts. —Ne\v York TIIIIEE. Jean. Francois. Puulfot, a fiery and fire-eating ntembcr of the Canadian parliament, is In quite a lather about the eight wander- mg cows of hfayot" Ludger Richard, of Estcottrt, Quebec. IL appears that the cows-still waiting for official continuation by the ttuthorlties of Wastiington and uttzuvtw-crosscd the river into a utsconnectetl portion of Maine and got to work on American grass. They were then, according to reports, seized by United States customs officials and it cost abft to tirevcnt their becoming Ameri- can beet. That little point of Est- court by the rivet" where they a1- Iegedly‘ crossed-and Mr. Poullot. has tirged that the jutting piece of Mame territory separated by n. lung stretch of woods from the bony o1 the state, should be an- nexed to the Dominion to make things ettslct" for the Quebec farm- ers on the other side of the un- nuirkcd botmuury- is thus gain- ing a sort of intcrtmtional signif- icance antl anti-acting the tourists. -}Iznnilton Spectator. Sin-With the Richard bank bandits itptiarently‘ far afield by now may I make. a suggestion? The provincial police were Lel- c-ptioned while the bandits were still m the bank. Richmond is about l8 miles from Ottawa. Pre- sunung such an urrangentent ex- isted a call from the provincial pouce to me It.(.‘.A.l-'. at Rock- clitte would Itave had a ‘platte ovcr Richmond Wllllll] a very few tmnutcs. There is not the slight- est doubt that the aviators could have picked up the fleeing auto- mobile without any great difficul- ty‘. If the meu abandoned the automobile, it would stIII be Im- possible for them to “shake" the jplane, which by continuous circl- ing could bung police to the scene. It. scents to me that in districts where the R.C.A.F. have stations, such an nrrattgettietit. with the provincial police could be made to work, and undoubtedly the tact that. such an arrnngcttletlt. was known to exist would effectively kill any attempt to use the motor cDar In Iioldttps In small towns. -— .A. ‘ There are stlll 205 veterans oI the Riel Rebellion living in Sas- katchewan ,'Ihe old boys have been observing the 60th anniver- sary ‘of their soldiering on the prairies. l-cw people realize that the tnnchmu gun was first used In action during the Riel trouble in Canada. The weapon was tlien known us the Gatling gun, Its rapid firing bud much to do wttn quelling the supporters of the fiery Riel. This ts historic because the ntachtnc gun was the major weapon III the Great War and It still remains an unsolved arma- ment. During the WIJI‘ thc Ger- mans held up advance after ad- vance by the astute handling of tuttehtne guns to defend trench tiosittotis, The war ended with the tnachltte gun stIIl a supreme arm for both sides. It could be used effectively In attack as well, be- cause dashing troops could ush forward with n gun to estn IIsh covering fire, or to enfllade a de- fcttthtig Jine. The Canadian troops fighting Rlers men knew they had a worthy" weapon when they turned loose theft‘ Gatling guns. But. little dId they think they were trying In action for the first time the nmchlnc gun. vrhfctt ever since has been the major arm to be reckoned with In any Ian of battle. -—Clark In Windsor tar. Slr:—- In my early stamp- cnllectitig day's. away back In the '80s. I wrote to other collectors elsewhere In the world for the tiurtwsc of exchanging stamps and recclvcd with thrills their replies from The Netherlands, India, New Zt-alutirf. Turkey and probably oth- er countries. Naturally I was at that pPriud of boyhood desfrlotls of some Clinic-st- stamps; but havlng no address of a collector In China, I could thInk of no way In whlch I could cstablfsh a contact short of writing to the Etnperor, and that's precisely what I dId. IIIs August and Imperial Majesty dId not answer my letter, and I never knew whether he was tn- terested In stamps or not; but In - ton may cause: £5290. nuuumc EAR. AND 1,055 or nsamuc It; 15 now known thaf a Erma percentage of 1'"."“‘“5 dellrsusng: d“ m that the clearing HI? ° t. eheah ning ear and restoring n8 in mg 15 brgriglfy[ ltilbottt by remov I; the sinus n cc z. The sinuses 813F937 w bemm‘ PUBLIC FORUM ‘I'll: nlurn In Ila‘ h: ll: dl l nrnopon u I 0 “.73: .- QIIIINIIIL in Chub. lothhw n! Inn don alt Il- eenull; Jndirlo tho onlnlnl d corrupondlnto. P.W.C. MATIIICULATIONS Sun-Retard to foot-note to P. W. C. Matr ulatlou results a - gearing In the press under It e eadlng "Advice re LIcense-s’. I beg to su gut that a great deal of correspon ence will be PWVBMN If the ment would advise students more specifically lhmllflh the Dwki In order that. the sched- ule ma be completed and IOTWBTG‘ ed to e college. According to the foot-note. one who has matriculated at. B8B 15 with upwards of- 65 per cent a very common occurrence, ls deprived 0! the privilege of studyin8 f0!‘ lea‘ chers’ license at P. W. C. I5 i! the Intention that. such a student $11811 be required w frltter away a Sear In school going over the work of infected In a number of ailments. During the flu epidemic of I918, the number of cases of shuts trouble Iollotved by ruimin: ears or mastoid thou)‘ lump behind ear) trouble was very 15789. fine to two nmstoitl operations being necessary daily m the hospital with which I was connected. An Infected hIIILlS ls not only a. common condulott 1n Influenza but In other uiltnt-tits also. Dr. M. M. Cullottt. Nashville, in the Ten- nessee State lvfetlical Journal. after sixteen years of investigation or running car and mastoid trouble. states: ~ 1. At least 85 tsercettt of pus tn- fectlon of the tmddle ear and mastoid are the rcsttlt of a pus In- fection of a sinus: nearly always on the same side as the Infected car and mastoid. 2. Of those having scarlet fever, 91 percent have, at the same time, an infection in the sinuses. It 1s believed that about the same per- centnge, about 9 in every 10, have this sinusitis in cpitlctnlc influenza. 3. If 91 percent of patients Ill with scarlet fever and Influenza. together with those having sinus inflammation lsinusitls) from other diseases with skin eruptions. have Infection in the sinuses, at one time or attothcr. practirallv the entire tmpulatioti suffers from sinus disease. 4. A large proportion of those so affected are left with a chronic infection Ihrutlgltout iltfe unless diagnosed and treated. 5. ‘These chronic infections (n1- ways present in a mild fortn) are a menace lo the life, health and hearing of those so affected. The point for all to remember then Is that In the sinuses of many of us is a low or sleeping infection which may be roused to a severe infection by a head cold. Influenza. or other ailment, and that In children who have recent- ly had scarlet fever. measles. or other eruptive skin ailments, sinus trouble may start up and cause a running ear or loss of heurlng. Remember. runninz ear and loss of hearing may follow these a11- menfs In but a few cases but when they do, inflammation of a sinus as a cause should not be forgotten. Iktrly treatment of the sinus trouble may prevent running ear, mastoid trouble, nnddoss of hear- ng. Mussolini At 55 (Ottawa Journal) In that. extraordinarily interest.- ing bOQk. "A World of Action," Valentine Williams tells how in Paris In 191B Mussolnil, then a humble jottrnalisl, sent in his card to Lioyd George, only to have it returned to him. Yesterday, only twenty years later, Musolini cele- brated his 55th birthday as supreme dictator of a powerful tiatimt, not mzrely one of the tuost compell- Ing of world contemporary figures, but undeniably one of the remark- able men in all Iustaryw Wrtters have written of Mussolini as a "sawdust Caesar"; Iiave at- tacked him, ridiculed him, indicmed hlm on this count and that. They have not extitaitud the extraordin- ary fart of this man, son of an obscure blacksmith, turning swiftly fro; .\_ a Soclnsist journalist Into a. Fasckt "patriot." suddenly seizing control o1 an entire IIBUOII. becom- ing chief of the Government of his country at. the age of 39. nus, too, at a time wucn Italy" was seething with unrest, when powerful forces were anuyed agalnst everything Ire stood for There were these who predicated that Mussolinl would fall as swiftly as he rose. He didn't fall. By force by the slicer power of his personal- Ity, by voJeucc that was often ter- rifying In Its cruelty. he smashed hLs enemies, made Italians subject to this will whether they lIked It or n0 . Unquesttonably, too. he has tirade ovcr Italy. Fufise may be his philoso- phy. cruel and desperate lll5 meth- ods; Lhe truth remains that, In the tnaterlal sense, his ncltlevetttents have been enormous. Italy" s not a rich country; Is tiegligfble In re- sources. Yet Mussolini. despite all the thin 5 he lacked with which to work. I85 built great harbsrs In his country; has redeemed marshes; rebuilt cItIes; bullt, countless schools; revolutionized transporta- tlon; put the Italian army, navy and aIr force on a formidable foot- Ing. Prom being a second-rate power, all but Ignored In the coun- cI‘s of Europe, Italy today is a for- mldable entIty, her voice listened t0 In the world's chancellertes. ' To under-rate the man respons stble for this transformation Is to argue ones own idiocy". Tyrant. Mus- soltnl may be, menace he un- doubtcdly Is. but. the Indictments don't alter the truth that he is an extraordinary personality —one wIfhIn whom there must. be some spark of genius, some force dented to ordinary men. due tfme I dId get a friendly 16f- | fer from a natlve boy etght yearn of age. who told me that. the Em- peror dId not recetve mall from "common people". but who sent me some stamps. said that he had an English teacher (winch fact ac- counted for his ability to write to me In my own language) and inquired If I could "come to ChIna some time." In a recent Issue of the sun I read an account of the death In Shanghai of LI-Chlng- mnI or Lord LI. youngest son o! the wtettcrnblc and well-known Im- perInI Premfer and ndvfser, ILI I-Iungchang, and hImsz-lf the holder of vnrlous Important offIces before the revolution. This was the foreign correspondent whose courteous letter Is stlll In my pos- sesslon and whose ImpIIcd InvItn- tIon I have not, been able to ac- cept. much to my regret. Willis R. ‘ dldate | teacher-txatnt t 1 trust that the reply by the t Department ‘will | of unemployment, I rem. Addlston. July 1a, , Grade l0, or has the BOaId 01' Education an advanced course of stiudles In preparation for such pu- P Ls? What should prevent such a can- from enterlna college f0!‘ with a, two-years‘ course In view be less ambigu- ous than when candidates were ad- vIsed by post. card dated June that Entrance Examlnatlons would wm- mence on June 27th l71‘°Xlm°- I 5m. 5 WHAT PRICE LIBERAL ' PLEDGE S ? SIr.~'I‘he conditions In Charlotte- town and in fact all over the ‘Is- land has never been so distressing and deplorable as now under the Liberal party. The Island has nev- er been faced with such discontent and unrest as we are now experi- encing. Men have been forced to unite and organize to obtain a mere" subsistence. It. has never been known. under any other administration that men apart. from politics were forced to so to Ottawa in an effort. to ob- tain an adequate itrant to help to alleviate the distressing conditions We can make reforms in our economic system In attempt to 1m- prove conditions, but we can not. improve condlttons or restore rto the working clawes the pufvhflslnt; power by tmytng starvation wages. The prices on commodities have not, declined and there is no rea- son why wages shouldn't. be In pro ortion to the prices of com- m Itfes. The consumer Ls being ex- ploited. , Unemployment has obviously mwn worse ever since taken over , the Liberal party. To whom was the Preference given In respect w positions Ie vacant, by the Conservative party? Not the Liberal workers that I am sure. The time 1s not far distant for a change In our economic system. The most. frequent. and the most bitter complaint of labor against the present. system Is that the ex- traordinary power whIch It. gives to capital alluws the possessor of cup- ital to keep his profits high at the expense of the workers‘ wages. am, Slr, etc, DISSATISFIED LIBERAL Charlottetown. Immortal Echoes (JUDITH ROBINSON in the Globe and Mall) “I can just stand ‘Last; Postf" Rudyard Kipling wrote once. "It's 'I‘Ipperary that breaks me." It's Tipperary that breaks must of us whose memories go back to 1914. For the generation whose youth was set to Its refrain, the first three notes of ‘Tipperary are enough to blot out the present and call back the past. No other mel- ody ever written, no other words In the English tongue can so surely waken again the old grief of part- tngs, 0r the pItIful young glory that stayed their tears. Yet of all the millions who left peace and happlness and youth be- hind them somewhere on the lung way to Tipperary, not one In a thousand, It‘; llkely. knew that a flshsalesman named Jack Judge wrote the song until yesterday when the news was cabled around the world that Jack Judge was dead. Perhaps that's as It should be, too. For the man who wrote Tipper- ary was only wrltlntz a music-hall chorus. Fate and the spirit of a. people dId the rest; andthe voices of an army of young ghosts still echoing down the years . . . But. not for every one. There are those for whom the tune of TIp- perary Is and must always be the most. joyful of joyful sounds. They are the men and women who heard It. fIrsI, not In August of 1914 but In November of 191B. It was made clear by one of them Why Tipper- ary has no sadness: We had heard for four yw-ars and more n0 song but the Ger- mans’ songs of war and glory. They are, you understand, a little heavy to the ear. We had watched the German trcop trains moving always westward with boasts of Xlcifiry chwked on every car. Kaiser Wilhelm II of’ Germany. Emperor of Europe "Such things. Always such thin-gs. After four years of them one beglns to we the hone that they mav be We had seen only German hel- mets all those years. You p9;- haps know the shape of German helmets? They fit. low on the forehead andjhe cheek,iand_on A RELIGIOUS USE 0F TOBACCO (Seventeenth Century) The Indian Weed withered quite Green; fir‘, morne cut. downe gt Bhewu th d ll fl h ls - Thus thfnlie. illicit “drinker? Tobdicaclo’. And vmen the unoke ascends on alkali-lily“ sliiilglndittzinlahe wllllxtnu: Thus thfnke, then drlnke ‘Iiobtwco. But. wgien the Plpe growes foule Thlnke of thy mule deflfd with alnne And Ih t tl fl I ' m... till-till,‘ lhiitdéfihtli Efllitiia. The Asha that are left behfnd Mny serve to nut thee gIlll In mInd That Into dust. retume Lhou must: 4-4, Mr. Tea Pott Says: For a Delicious Cup of F‘u1l Flavoured Tea Use BRAHMIN Orange Peltoe Tea out. The size of single medium. coarse and hoo Inl- by mall or freight. lots. pound. and colore blankets, yarn Plume 145-1. gm 1g; medium, double yarn, fine, name on all parcels, gloat-leg: $5.: anagram!“ on Price of well washed and plcke wool S echl price for unwashed, Auto robes, white 1n all shades tor sale. SPINNING and WEIWING Sand us our wool t» t» spun ma» yum and worm W“ blankets. Chgrlcs are: ainlle 11m Z3 “I'l- ll°llbl° '53 "n" per pound. blanket $2.00. It takes five pounds of W00! W!‘ blink"- Wool must be well washed and all dirt and burrs I110!“ PM shtpgers and owner’: c on: Inllde. Send 10! pound: In 23 cents per WM. cannon, l 65 ueen Street, Chariot town, P. E. l. E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident. Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, 144 Richmond St. Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown The Provincial Branch of vincial Exhibition. investigate this competition, Horse Improvement Society. Week End 181 Queen St. Going-Noon on Friday to 2.00 P.M. on Sunday, Return Limit-Leave destination not later than midnight Monday following date of sale. Fare-One way first or coach class fare and one-quarter. T.’ B. ROGERS City Ticket Agent ATTENTION HORSE anrinrnsfi the Canadian Hunter, Saddle and Light Horse Improvement Society has decided to add two and three-year-old sections to the specials at the Pro- Entries must be registered in above society. Owners of foundation mares entering in Section 1 rnusI have and pass inspection before showing. i Registered thoroughbred mares are ineligible. Owners of foundation mares bred to a thoroughbred stallion should A handsome trophy will be awarded this year for the best male or female showing In these special classes. For further particulars, apply W. R. SHAW, Secretary P. E. I. Branch of Canadian Hunter, Saddle and Light L3533-l-8-3i — Excursions Phone 540 find them beautlful. Then that was all gone. sud~ denly as a nightmare Is gone. ‘And the Canadians came, boys without beards. singing ‘Tipperary. Boys with brown laughing faces and fool- Ish little basin; of steel tilted over one eye as a young girl might tllt l new hat. So young and gay they were. they seemed to us, wlm had seen no smiles and heard no friend- ly laughter In four years, like chIl-. dren, not soldiers. And we, we washed the streets before them and wept. and laugh- ed. and they laughed. too, and marched on singing. Always sing- ing Tipperary, After them. the Americans came. They also sang Tipperary. And at last there were our own, the French and our own . . . All the ppr‘ was singing Tipperary by that me No not the words. For us the words had no meaning I do not know them yet. It was the tune that brought out happiness again. It nus the tune that was young and gay as the marching boys who come with It were young and gay. It was the tune that had no thundering trIumnh In It. no battle cry, no boasts of victory; nothing at all of war. Only the lllt of life and the gayetv of heart that we had forgotten could be. And for you Tipperary Ls sad. . . , .It Ls so with lIfe. Is It not? What Ls sorrow and the remem- brance of sorlow for ole Is. f0!’ lb: ‘twill? RoumITrip 0MP FARES AMHERST Going FRIDAY, AUGUST 12th 3 Mon.. Aux. .15, I93! 1H1: $2.45 ~ From CHARLOTTETOWN Proporftonately Low lam from Ofhrr QMNMII Children o] l‘ H18 _ and under Twelve year: o] ago HALF‘ FARE Ticket: Good In DAY COACHES ONLY For Further Information Oonntll any Ticket Aacnt CANADIAN NT mu In IVIDVWNINI IN taronnn Thus thtnke, then drInke Tobacco. I... —TrInIty College, Dublin; MB. I lluinatulattmmgultrimluldnyul J \ theflneck "r...t..;.; " Bnéiioasfiaarfiamfififieiniesrtwr-iaa; ptness. When a great, day needs fitting celebration. It's best to turn the job over to a master workman. This Is the day when men who fought In France with the Canadian Corpl paradr once more. This KIplIng wrote on a like day: “Their loyalty, their long en- durance, their bravery had done all that was called for. They made no claIm to have accompllshed or suf- fered more than others. They knew what. loacl had been laid upon all. “The, had done as well as most It. a war that, had made mere glory fkllClllfllls . , _ ,0; the“ things nothing but the memo would remain. And. as they move one saw, here and there . , men with eyes wblch did not match their age, sunken beyond speech o1 tears by the splendor and the grief of that memory , _ " s sf" _ -_~'_~i. _. r~~ ' 1 he Ladies We curry a complete stuck of Max Factor‘! Society Aids Including the Foundation Cream. Cleansm: Cream. Skin and Issue Cream. Face Powder In five shades Rouge In five shades Llp Sticks In seven shades Brllllantlnes and Eye Brow Pencils, etc. We also carry complete lines o! Evening In Paris-Ashes of Bonk-Dewy‘! Three Sec- rets-Three Howers—-Gu'ncy and Yardley’; Mjféis NAIR RESTDIIER A delicately perfumed pre- paration which restorel and benulfflm the hair. It will restore grey hnlr to m original colo . Mac‘: lhlr Restorer pro- motes a new and nuperlor lrmvth where the hnIr In fall- Ing and Ia remarkably useful In prevetlng dnndrufl and destroying nrlsltlc halr kill- en. Just Io low the dIrt-cttonl carefully and you will be amused at the results. Wrlle or phone today. PRICE 60 CENTS. THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTORE I49 Great (Ieor Street IIAII Order: Ree: v0 Prvmyt Attentfon.