PAG li l"\' ll ' if The Clictlattctown Gua ma... . , » - - ~ I'M-alumni Lulu tut \\ \ln'lilvt a b11111" bun- Pn-uI-nl J It lhtrlwll lHJ-l Editor not. “qiluglltg lllrrllul J it. mum-n l' J l. \u'('l‘1-lr|l\ LIIUI int It a intuit-non u u. u. As-ot-tute l-nltittt- limit. Null-vi out: h. h. (‘unto flllflll tlurullu; U-lll) lt-lin-rrtl In f. tutu-let: new?» $5.00 per year (In nlvlnu) pn-r )0'l|r tln udvnnve) rnnllofl h $...ilt| pvr your [In udvmol) u nnd Intled Stolen A Great Statesman Passes ' > r bola-r: llortlen, reported in llt '.\~. oi world interest. For tilt-u oi the l-iritish Empire "C l~_\ l'\‘7l~llll of the great ser- \‘.."_l'-lllltt‘ l'rime .\linister of .:.- \\.t~' llll‘ only leader 0f .1 ' . l..-l-l the reins oi power fl i t» tlet- i-u’. of hostilif and t itlt-tlcti of hz- ielloiv-tltiveits - 1 - l‘l'ill‘i"lit'lll front public life, lit-t. i l ..;' pout-l", ltt- rt-tulilltetl 1.. syn‘:- lw t- .- rtprcstituilivt- Ill world eel-mm it-t-nt, lie was received with the lllfl which miaches wry is secure, d-rvice as war-tune Premier l0 Ollt‘ of L“ ., perhaps Sir Robert's greatest t-licrts ntrt: tlcvrttetl to advancing the cause if world ptacc through the League of Nations. Lien ..:'i» .- the l-ftlti-tpian fiasco in 1936, he re- tai-itvl ittiplicit faith in the League which he re- pirtlc-l, i his mitt eloquent words, as “the greatest \t...t:re in international co-opcration that itiatiltizitl cur tlt-iisetl or attempted”. As late as ivigo, after alien/ling a League session in (ienevli, he sziitli “The fullest service of the League ls ln the personal contact" and associa- tion t0 he loittltl at (iencvfi. Andifthe influences oi that us-‘tivirtti-tn can grow arid abide, there may be Cfvllrll in the world's affairs, wherein we inust m1- ‘ '.'.r‘ every nation as the neighbor oi every ot"~'r. si lll-lfiilllfillflf u sense of public right and llllcfllllllwllgtl faith, so deep an abhor- fen-cu iii this ivasle, ileslrilclion, savagery and ltormr of wztr, that \\'.'l!‘ will be outlawed. Then may we hove litfll’. the spirit of peace- order and i. ~ H1, in ettcli civilized nation will litfltill. cut-ct in their relations with tpe is still far from being realized. But ' pfrzliiotl which tnust prompt further efforts ii any rt-ztl "rogrt-SS is to be made in the cause oi world pr. c. Ben loo-on tlvifhilics a character in his plays as h. inc "tiru. whom no servilc hope of gain, or participation in the British itiarkct, with our feeder cattle and oupbetter grades of finished cattle, is concerned. Reference is made to the abrupt falling off in lamb production in Prince Edward island dur- ing the year, at least in the volume offered for sale, the output totalling only about 6,500 head 35 COIHPHYBd with 10,500 the previous year. The general report of the Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics showed some falling off ‘in production but not to the extent indicated by the Prince Edward Island statistics. Stockyard offerings were so small as to represent no indication of the quality of the output. It is assumed, how- ever, that it was fully up to the high standard generally associated with this Province as a whole. It is anticipated that there will be an increase in the spring lamb crop in the Province ltl i937. J‘ Editorial Notes J‘, lolm Constable, R..~\., one of littgland’s great- est landscape artists, was born this datc 177i. i l! U- Coinyilaints are more prevalent about the condition of the roads. The wet spell intensifies their many defects. 1i‘ i A Spirit 0f Oplinlism is being spread as the result of the tour of the President of the Cana- dian Bankers Association. He knows whereof he speaks. fi Sir Robert Borden's with in this province. port of entry which is IV i l itame was one to conjure lle founded our railway itamed after him. 1K i We are in the limelight as being the only province with pastures above the average. lf we only had the cattle to feed our joy would be complete-or at least, almost. * m a. Many here will be interested to learn that the Knightliood of the Order of St. Gregory has been conferred by Pope Pius upon I\lr. Jilstice A, T. LeBlanc, Supreme Court of New Briins- wick, . ll! i I New York is still attracting British and Con- tinental gold, notwithstanding the margin of pro- fit has been reduced. Hcr vaults are nearing bursting poiriP-her predicament being that of the storm-tossed water-parched sailc r, only its “gold, gold everywhere and noran ounce to sell.” ilk lust imagine what business would be like here were every irl with bare le s rohibited _ ._ g _ g P from lunchmg 1n our restaurants. Yet Lon- frosty il'tl.\l't'il'l‘~lifll"l of danger, can make to be a par .>_ tllljtl‘ in time, place, or opinion". ,S\i<‘ll nus the cliaracler 0f Robert Borden. It xii-ult- ‘in. Wu» mutt of the hour in the most trv- inq w. vi a! \'.' 'll this ctiiuttry and the ljmitii-e ugh. .\dtl lo his integrity in‘ fill‘ lvlltlvfolllll, lIlS \'lSli\n and. g but deep-rooted patriotism. anrll it E rttiil to tinderslantl why his name wf , n 11s out» of the greatest in the roll at L. <‘..tll‘.~lllt‘l'l. . livestocik Market Review . "TY-Ill! and foreign lrzttlc in livc s during; lflfilt. as well its the ziit- itrtstiv. year, are coinprcheit- ' .l t:;. it) the iyth .'\lllllllll Market .~-iiitl by the .l'etler:il Department "in; to note, from the Review, gottaut matter of hog and ltacntt "'1'". rt- l> n.- c-vitlt-itce of a less favorable oirliv ir: the [Utitwl Kingdom than has been serurti‘. so much tn our lu-tlelit. >lllt‘(‘ the Ut- fnxva _‘~.' lvi ‘ill zr- lwvztttit» tipvntlive". \\'c tluwc Ptlte-"t: xt-atwl. ' ‘til-l’ zlztrt- has bet-n a tendency’ in sonic rill: . to ll‘lll\'l'~~l.'lll‘ the. value of the [Juana .\er<t:t~t _ The tit-iv aei-t-t-nieitt gin-nus his the Cilllllllllilllii uultr the lliiJt\\.'l i" has lvtit ehetl-d . _ Y, lilt‘ pldvllvgvs itlilllillell l'l_{.’. "l‘ro.ltictititi z and lllC LYlitIJrl 11"‘. tlirtiuqli (ll.\\'illl5- t but ztliro t entirely ‘ tl and rising u-wl that producers .p protltictiutt r-t _ oi Ulovl '2 .\ iii cl‘- “ l'tl'l't|\\‘lll}_f.\ .._ _, ,\ \‘.'.l . v1‘. l not l'.\[ vt-‘v far 1.7 . n of it.’ t. uotwitll-t: !Il- .\ "lug xiii: : i : t.,.- ol record m» 1ll‘.~"", ’ . . Ii .l | il'\'lll'l‘ ll) lllfllll" '-...\i-.. i~ the ttiztrltelin; of .-.i..~l \tl'_\' substztilliatl ut- "e total at y - anl plants . lll l._\- New llrtiu-ivick was iymw luaul. by .\'<»\";t Scotia __ ‘ill .- _-.' lnitiw lI/livltrd lslantl >Illll('\\'ll2l (1‘.<’l' _-',\‘,t.t.o. 'l ll<'~l? compare v itit totals of ap- proxnnatcly 101.50, N20 :ti..l .n\’._:<.<. respectively in 1w}. 'l'lte Xlariiinte. have in\.'ivi:il.l_v shown ‘tt gt‘ til -"lti“~ .'tl'il lntctilh, 3'11] - w-til lllilllllfdlllwl in will». will‘ lXllllli> lo iitt- l-lllllll lxiligiltilil "|Yl'.'i_\‘ iitolt-rttt- ilx tv-ritpriretl with ‘.'.- l i,itt.l -. "ltiif- ~;t_\'.~ flu; tiitl :t tt intportniil purl in from ~ll.‘ll']t lll'\‘llll('\' lll the ultn lilt’ lttitir lllltlhtl ivzts liw dlllllllllll which llwu dc id lill’ lt‘l'lllt'llrlttli-'. ilttporlztnrt; {Tats {or lflllitlllllll ll\l' .~ltu‘l\' _-. oi llit lfitilvtl lQi ilom mtlrltet don, evidently, will not tolerate» them, and four Catiadlan girls had to don stockings before they could eat in the B.B.C. restaurant. W I‘ >ll Sessions of the Royal Grain Commission may be extended to Great Britain and the Continent, where the titarkets are, and it is also suggested that the comrnissiotl investigating the prison sys- tem itiay cross the ocean. Canadian Royal Com- missions may be costly, opines the Gazette, but their members do a lot of travelling. * I i The Marchioncss of Aberdeen, widow of our former Liovernor-General. is to be the hostess of Prime Minister Mackenzie King when he goes to the north to receive, with Printc Min- ister Joseph Lyons of Australia, the coveted dis- tinction and honour of the Freedom of the City of Aherdc The present Lord Provost of Aberdeen, Colonel \’Vatt, knows Canada and has visited this Province. 1K i 4 One of the most resourceful individuals we have know/ti in a long and checkered career, writes a, financial editor, was the chap who liv- ed by the side of the tracks of a railway, and kept himself in coal by making faces at the rail- totltl engineers. But his ingenuity did not equal 0r surpass that of the fittancicr whose fortune ivas found to have shrunk front $100,000,000 to 515000.000 when estate duty came to be paid. a a x .-\ plebiscite in connection with the inaugurat- tion of a (iovcrntncnt Health lilsurancc schcnie in llrilislt Columbia has rcstillcd itt approval by .'t large itiajtirity, only six out of about 45 rid- ings voting in the itegative. .»\ll the larger urine rulings with the lone exceptions of Victoria tiit)" and neighboring lisquiinalt- were in favor nf the plan which Prcnlicr Pattullo has said lll'.l$l benefit only “those who make contributions thereto." lt is not known what foriil the health insurance plan will take hilt it is expected to be one of the major pieces of legislation to lie ititrodttctt-d in the frll session of tile legislature. #1 I I If this“ -__,js itq_t,_.9l$féll'....tl.ii.aiutctist.inaymitti: etilcri an intersection until he assures himself that another vehicle is not approaching on his right, Mr. justice Denis ruled in Superior Court, Montreal. in crindetnnittg Paul E. Valirpiett: lo pzty the Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals $239.85 and costs follow- ing an autotnultile accident at St. Lambert {Sop tetuher t5 of last year. During the hearing each driver ellargetl the other with travelling at an exccs-ivc rate of speed and driving intprtitidctlt- ly. The defendant committed two faults, Hi5 Lordship found, first in entering the intersection too fast, and secondly in not looking to his right before reaching the corner. v a- n. There is little prospect of Major Douglas mak- ing any lteatlway with Social Credit in Alberta so long as Premier Aberhart rules the roost. Challenging .\lajnr C. H. Douglas to show how he would bring "bold and successful action" to inaugurate Social Credit in Alberta, Premier .\berhart commented on a London report of the llrilislt cconnmisfs latest book, “'l'|tc Alberta lixperitttettt.“ The book written by the founder of the Social Credit school of economics, states, "almost every nlistakc of strategy WlllCll could he made in Alberta, was tnadc," and dcclares the ivt-iglil of popular enthusiasm behind the ntnvc- tilt-lit would have justified "bold ztctimt" by tliv! provincial government. lt would be. better tn . come to Alberta and put his ideas into effect, l rather than put them in a book, was the Pre- itsclf, ,. _- t g‘: our export tittivententi. llllve l v .. i’ l. " ‘ " 'i'ii.'» I ‘ill ~ i < ilurinj; m}; dt-pcntb. $il_'.\ ll." llt~ ill obey of very cleanly deliut-d Pity-v condition] of domes- tic ti-;ttl~ ;-~,‘, ~- ~ 5;, i lt-tl in lztltour cont- ‘pqtiiiou, ti: t‘. i u anl nr-ivspriitt. and uu- .~ _ . -' '1 good- in zen- cral. “It. i ~" ‘ i 1 l" l>"l""! jh-il 1' ~ ‘f t '..t u" :1 xrt-chlltlt‘ gains. if i. . . . liit- tir-li in volume Cull- gp... ' ‘ l - .=...-. lllt‘l't' .',l"' illriitviter-ti- l" t ‘ ‘ ' - ;ltl\'."lll"'. ."Il4l ("il- g‘ \il‘l\‘>' itiiirt- llll|>|'!I\(’ .,,. t - 'llte intention of tlv: l’. . '"t'l‘\t"' to effefl im- tUrJ-tw- ' 1 5'. .' Ti ivef ("ll l" can» no. b“; p“, a ;a,-,,,,.ai,,,_- [gllC in so far as our mier's comment. THE - QHARLQTIEI Notes By The Way "The real peaceful League of Nattons." as uetteml Smut; ecu“. the British Empire on Coronation my. begins its work. At St. Jamests Palace the statesmen of the Do. minions and India assemble for a momentous imperial Conference. Their deliberations should produce results very dtfierent from the Piper resolutions and vapld talk of Geneva. For, as The Daily Mall has emphasized for years, the British Commonwealth 1s exactly the reverse of that other sham league, and stands, as General Smut-s declares. B-s "the largest peaceful unit‘. which has ever ex. lstcd tn the world." How to bring the great and powerful klngdonrs of Kim; George VI into still closer and more fruitful union ls the problem which once again faces British statesmen. This year the representatives of the Empire come together in a world which has never more ominously bristled with the chances of calastrophna-Drtily Mall London. A breakdown of U. S. statistics on advertising expenditure for 1935 shows that 18.9 percent. purchased P8610 time. thirty-three percent. went. to magazines. and forty-seven percent to newspapers. The figures reflect the judgment of advertis- ‘ allowance ts made for advertising l evident that as an effective med- "Kelr Hardic and Ramsay Mac- owti GUARDIAIJ _ Bu Jame: l0. Barton. "117- msuuu SHOCK TREATMENT or DEMENTIA Pnaaoox - PERSISTENT DREAM sum- srtu. unnun TRIAL A physician ls in; any other man in that when he believes he has found something that. will cure gr help to cure some obstinate or "incurable? ailment he wants t0 ‘try his treatment. and have other physicians try his treatment on every case of this kind. And per- naps 1n a short time other pry- sicians will find that this treat- ment will help or cure this disem- Afler a little more time has passed other DhYSlCIEH-YlTYl-“E this method of treatment find t-hfli ll does not help their cases. Some of these physicians will say nothing about their failure. but; others will come out. ifboldly" and say mil the treat-mitt ‘is worthless» That ing agencies seeking the besL r:- sults for their clients, and when in procssional, trade. scientific, fraternal and other magazines of spec a1. limited constituencies it. ls tum the newspaper retains a. margin over all others combined. -W0odstock Sentinel Review, The lrlals of people who writ: big heavy books are many, not the least; of them being a feeling of responsibility toward readers. Miss Margaret Mitchell. who wrote you know what. (Crone with the Wind) ,\ recently recewed ‘from an olcl lady tn Ureana. lllincLs, a long letter expressing her admiration of Miss Mitchell's work and saying she hoped that there would be a sequel —"not." the old lady added. wist- fully, "that Tm likely l/o live to read it.’ ‘Miss lvfltchell hastened t0 reply. Yes. she said. there was to be a sequel. all about the same people. "And." her letter concluded. ‘everything will work out all right. for everyone.“ -Neiv Yorker. How different are nations from caterpillars? Driven by over-pop- ulation and economic necessity, the caterpillar horde has started to march. Millions will be wiped out by gasses. sprays. motor vehicles and the birds. And the human family, despite the lesson of 20 years ago, is mobilizing tn parts of Europe and malcng ready for its Eaterplllar hike to destruction.- xc. In lhe “Twenty-Years Ago" column of yesterdays paper there was this: "H. G. Wells predicted a revolution 1n England, saying Iobzr troubles were preparing the way.’ The revolution didn't; come, what came instead was that admirable capacity of the British to adapt the capitalist system to change. Twenty-five years ago men Vke Donald and Philip Snowden were thought, to be dangerous revolu- tlonnrlcs. MacDonald went on to be- come England's Prime Minister and Snowden her Chancellor of the Ex- chequer. They were. orthodox con- stltutlonalists. England's ability. twenty-five years ago, to adopt so- clal and economic consequences of technological improvements. made them constitutionallsts. —Ottavva Journal. As we think o! these Russian scientists, with their portable fold- ing. warmly-lined, duralamln house, with their condensed foods 1n which ‘vltarnlne are carefully pro- vfded and with alcohol for sponge baths 1n temperatures that change water into lce that. ls like metal. and then think of the hardships that stirrountled Kane and Greely and Peary, we gain a new can- centlon of modern man's power over the forces of Nature. From now on the North Po'e bids fair to be not only a conquest, of rlvll- ization but. an outpost of it. -— Providence Journal. “lfniv to Wln Friends ‘luence People" is the title of a book pubdshed in the United States. It sets but to tell you the secret of popularity and power. But potufarlt" docs not depend en any lOHS effort. Cnnsder rlcn. He never sttuirit _ ..f§l.‘/.Or. H" never ccrrrl on about. it. Snowden went. his way with resolution and de- cision. Seldom he devlated-ln the war a little, perhaps. just. enough to keep hlm out of ja‘l, Yet he won many friends. lnfluencrd psrplc profoundly. London Da‘l,v Express. ' and In- Thls ls no time for cynicism and aloofness 1n the United States, as un-co-opetnttve Americans would shortly discover lf trouble broke out ln Europe and Asia. from the ult- mctle effects on recovery tn secrntng- ly isolated America. And the sooner lhe nations can "call a conference" because it. fits Presldetit. Roose- velt's specifications of guaranteeing , Christian science Monitor. good results, the better tt will he tor people on every Main Street..- The U .S. 5.11. organ. Pravda, calls for broader anti-religious work, stating that. believers are becoming bolder and more active, while tnc God ess League, tlic trade unlons and other organlzahlons are regret.- tably inactive. Rellglun, the news- pnpcr states .l.s reviving, particularly ln the countrys do ,whcre the needs of some collective farms even con- duct church councils and others al- low Blrle reading, choir singing and eventing enu-rtnltiment under the‘ direction of priests. In this respect. Ruuita seems to be undergoing the [experience of other lands that ln l the past made var on ‘the pecpte‘: fltfll Rmlglon preva Ls 1n the end.- Montreal 0mm. is. the pendulum has swung from one extreme to the other and whal. may be a really helpful treatment may be discarded. However somewhere between the two extremes there ls likely B- deflnite place for the discovery. and so finally takes its rightful place 1n the treatment of this all- ment. One of the recent "cures" that is being discussed favorably and nnfnvorably by the medical PTO" fesslon ls the ‘insulin cure for dementia praecord-the persistent dream stnlCZ the condition in which the patient has ivorked out a svs- tom oi living that. satisfies hlm but which retidcrs him tinflt. to earn a. living or take his place in family or business life. The treatment consLsts in giving the patient a "shock" by lnlellll“? insulin. after which many patients have apparently become nonital in mind. The results in some 0f the cases reported have been "amaz- However. as this allmentcauses much unhappiness ln families be- cause it often affects “the btnghb- est. and the best.“ lt would be gretilf 1y regretted if the report of this treatment brough false hopes to many. For this reason. a warning l" patients, families, and physicians l3 given in a recent editorial of the Journal of the American Med- ical Association: . "u is hoped and may tmwe l“ be a fact. that, the so-called ln- sulin shock treatment for dementia praecox will find a. useful D1509 among the forms of treatment" but its exact value has not Y“ bee“ determined and it can be defin- itely stated that it is not by any means a cure for all cases of dementia praeoox.’ It is now being tried out in New York and Massachusetts state Hospital systems. and other P18095- after which trial we should km“! the real value of this method of treating dementia praecox. Mr. Dunning’s First Job (Canadsf; Weekly 100K101!) The Hon. Charles A. Dunnlnx. Canadian Minister of Fm-mnce, arrived in Leicester on Monday morning to attend the inaugura- tion of (he “Canada. Catlin! Laeleeswr" camrmisn Mi I lunvhwn at the Grand Hotel. Before leaving Leicester 35 years ago. Mr. Dunning wa em- ployed 1n Wright's [Wmuy- and on Monday afternoon he pB-ld 8- visit to the foundry to renew acquaintance with the 16W "W" with whom he used $0 W°Tk and who are still employed there. They were Mr. Alfred Tompkln. who was his foreman, but. Who 1135 been 9n n. Yghter job during the. latter part .' his 56 years at the foundry: Mr. Harry Chapman. an employe. for 40 years; and Mr. mount-d Noble. who has been at ‘the foundry for 39 years. Mr. Dun- tnlng also met two 0f hi5 101'!!!" colleagues who have retlred tn re- cent years. Mr. Jce Flavell and Mr. Harry Flint. "It ls good to o: back in Leicester again; one always has tiivfd rccollcctlonq of that place ln' which one has spent the early years cf one: He." safd Mr. Dun- nlng. at the luncheon. "It w: my good fortune to spend the frst 17 years of my llfe in ulcester- mire. and partly ln the city of Leicester. I was thlnklng today, as f set’ before me my old friend and the present proprietor of the Old foundry ln whlch I served my ap- prervtlcelhlp, cf the slvyvflcance of the name of Wright: I am referring to Mr. W H hvrillht. f would also like to refer to Mr. Martin W. Wrlct-l cf the Shoe Manufacturers’ Monthly. who l; also hem. "As 1 rcmem” . I was second in rrwmard cf the Shoe Manu- facturers‘ ftfcrthlv SCTF" 4'! years ago. Mr. vllrlwht. rlld n‘l the work except vf-v‘ I it'd. Mv wart con- rlstrd in pert. t-f delivering ‘l. tn every rhoe fectnrv ‘w l". cfty of Leicester once a month.“ PUBLIC FORUM rut. will»... l- wen nu lln- _“M,.;....t..n lry eurrrqtllllrlrlllr- oi qutmlulll ul Intern-wt. Till’ Lhmltttfetnan (iulrdlitn nluu not urrcntlril! IIIIIIIIII n! enrrnupnnalenln. the nplnlnna CTVIC LAW tEJr,-I read viilth mucl. interest Taxpayer's left/er 1n this Mornlngs Guardian. I may say that I am in synzpathy with the rtand that he is taking. but as ! am not l. property owner I have not felt that I had a right. to ask for higher taxes. I did, however, urge Mayor Turner to have the tax rate raised and he did what he could, but I understand that. the whole Council opposed hlm. t I Shall be gllld lf Taxpayer will do me the favour of calling al: the office to discuss this and other matters refattnz to the welfBFe of this City and Island. It ts evident from the letters that he takes u. keen mtercst 1n public matters. I am. Sir. etc. H. K. S. HEMMING “That Delight In War” (Montreal Star) It is not. clear why Mr. Samuel Pepys, Clerk of the Acts and high officer 1n Hts Majesty's Navy. was so annoyed over the Irish Doctor who preached on the text: “Scatter JUNE 1_1_. 14957 eds. Saturday. Super Value Suits $17 .95 Here’s your choice for the Week. end. We have selected 50 suits from our $20 and $22 range and placed them on sale at $17.95. Every Suit is carefully made from serviceable all wool English worst- The patterns The shades include all the new blues, rich browns, greys. super value. Every suit worth dol- lars more than the Special Week- end price of $17.95. If you can’t come Friday come -_at__ are outstanding. Yes, this is SEE null SPORTS suns AT $15.95 Henderson o» Cudmore them, O Lord, that, delight ln War.“ He describes it as a. tedious. un- reasonable and tmpertlnent ser- mon.” There have been naval officers that delight 1n war, but. Pepys was not. one of them. When the fanatics were terrifying Lon- don, scattering the bands, carrying everything before them and parad- tng their motto. ‘King Jesus and their heads upon the gates."the offlcers and gentlemen were asked to arm. Pepys had no delight ln lt. "So I returned." he says, "though with no good that I might not. seem to bé afraid, and got. my sword and pistol which, ltowever, I had no power to charge." It is possible that the Irish Doctor was a pacifist. which is always distressing to a man of sense and particularly so for an officer in the navy; for the navy through its history has always been a. great constructive force for peace." Now the prayer of the Palmlst,-- “scatter them, O Lord, that. delight war,"—ha.s been answered. Horace speaks of "the long sport of war," but there ls not. longer anything jovial or hilarious about that sport. Men have become too serious, too deadly ln its pursuit. so that. those who delight. ln ll, have been scattered. There are some who may still consider it a gainful pursuit; but they are pretty well. fearful and scattered also. For long it. was held that. war was a noble thing 1n itself and that combat was inseparable from the life of humanity. For long the same opinion was held about duell- tng. If a. man's honour was tn- sulted, there was nothing for lt. but to fight, and the recipient of the insult. might lose his life as easily- as the lnsulter. The thing now reems idiotic beyond imagination. There is a growing opinion that. peace is a noble thing ln itself. The pacifist. tells us s0 in many voices. This Ls quite as untrue as the sirnllar view about. war. War Ls always deadtly. but peace may easily become a foul‘ tranquility from which the wise man will pray to be delivered over to war. It; is life that is the precious thing. a noble thing in itself. It L! a rich mherltance, to be used to give opportunities to all, to protect the weak, to restrain the cruel and selfish. In the accomplishment of these things, war or peace, conflict and co-operatlon are but incidents on the way. "1 am come that ye might. have life," said Jesus. He dlcl ‘not; promise a pampered life. not. even a. peaceful life, nor al- ways a warlike llfe, but; an abund- ant: ltfe. He promised s. llfe with peace at the heart. of ll, clouds or storms or sunshine chirtng one an- other around the circumference, according to the weather and the voyage. Today the south wlnd may blow softly and tomorrow s. tempestuous wlnd such as struck Ulysses on his raft. and forced hlm to swim for lt nlne days before he can crawl ashore. It ls a poor thing if a man has nothing he Ls ready to fight for. ' to die for, 1f need be, ff war is made for the sake of righting some horrible wrong. 0r setting free a coun\y from abuse by tryouts and evll gov- ernors, then ft ls not athlng of shame, but of honor. If one nation invades the peaceful terri- t/ar of another, then the invaded must. appeal to force and stcrnlv repel the aggressor. But that men should think it. admirable to spill each others b'ood for vain-glory and for passion and for greed will rometlme be thought. an inconceiv- able and intolerable thing. The great thing is that one have a high standard of character and retain ones self-re peel. ln war or peace. One has to llve with oneself ln war or peace. and to do that on good terms. Without, conceit, Ls sufficiently difficult. The thing to be almcd at ls life-life more abundantly. To develop that llfe, that inner life. ls the work of religion. . The Inner self ls the sptrlt of man, with a. long He behind ft and be- fore it; one c: nnot mcird it. or con- trol lt; 1s ls oneself. It. commands and does not obey; it. live‘ and does not mason. It: joys and 1L1 serenity are troubled by the sorzows and pains of the body, but only as t‘ wlnd ruffles the sur- face of a sleepmg lake. It. knows what belongs to its peace. Nearly all our itnhapnfness In the world comes from ml trklng where our real ltf». life ltea. "Move onward] says Barron. "serenely. cos‘ aside teizrrt. cleanse and nnrlfv ‘He, only be ltnrllsmayed and hopeful, as yon turn page after rare o’ the revel- , a"or\ of 01d. Thin ts the reeenlvv: cf the lnfnlie desires we feel. the emotion that. would embrace every- courage at all, but ' i ll. S. llEMMlllli. Trustee under the and Reports Certified Public Accountant and Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised. , Profit and Loss Accounts Computed, Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements Administration of Estates" a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN, 8S Great George St. Charlottetown, P.E.L B.A., 0.P.A., C-GA. Bankruptcy Act Prepared. z or Vitaltq alwaus use BRAHM IN ORANGE PEKOE TEA SPECIAL ON FLOUR ' PURITY 98 lh. ha; $3.95 Creamery Butler 2 lbs. - — — 53c Get your Content Entries here. MacPHEE BROS. Prince Street. Phone 246-1. PHONE YOUR. ORDER to 1h . E Queen St- Meat Market All kinds Fruh, Smoked nu] Drled Meat and Fish H. PETERS Phone 1301 S3 1-8 per cent ofl balance of our,’ 18 ulle ma! Elgln Watches. No more can be bought, only a few left. The but Int-ch for the man at. heavy work. Call before lt to too late. W. N. T A N T O N Jeweler 180 Kent Street o0++o+o+o+o¢+u+¢+w FOR AUTOMOBILE l N S U R A N C E Consult A- R- McINNIS ‘f5 Queen Street. 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Brlng me my arrows of desfrel Bring me my spur: 0 clouds, un- fold Brlng me my chart-lot. of flrc! I will not cease from mental ‘lgh’. Nor shnll my sword sleep ln my hand. Tlll we have built. Jerusalem In Enqland’: green and pleasant lend. —Frcm Milton __.i_..._..._ SHUT PllillEllTllTlllE FDRMALIN one of the but known preventative: for SMUT 0N GRAIN An effective. efllclenl nrlfl prover! remedy. l-‘ormnltn In a ‘the!!! W" thoroughly affective ramedy. (‘u-an growers would M: wllfi loin: promptly. In order to have seed prnpcrl! "1""! h" fore sowing One plnt to every 40 Fm“ of water. Full direction: will! . v nrdrr. Do not delay. Wrllo In fl" one lndny. Mall oi-am aroma"! ll’ ' d f0. t THE two illlcs DRUGSTOILE PHONE 315 (Wlllllm Elli-w 1767-1817)