ii DDT“ T‘: Tindiwheh the Prince arrived virtually every one PAGE FOUK TllE CIIARLOTTETUWI GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded 1887) President LieuL-Col. W. Chester S. McLure Vice riesldent J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Incmtary LieuL-Col. I). A. MacKinnon, D.S.0. Idltor and Managing Director J. ll. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Editor Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 per year un auvance) delivered to City $4.00 per year (in advance) mailed to I’. kLIsland [$.00 per year tin auvanee) mailed to Lanaua auu 1.1.5. members Audit Bureau of circulations "The Strongest rllenlory is Weaker than me WCGIWSL Ink." "’€%"i TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1938 Spending The Money The Finailcial Post has been analyzing the financial record of tlle Ring tiovernment, with significant rcsillts. lt finds that ill the past three years the tioierillili-iil has been silelldillg the taxpaycls lllllllt'_\' at lhe llslfelllltllllfill rate of five liilllilrcll and lllll'l_\' lllilliolls zillnuzllly’, 17.x- cept for the \\';lr period, lljLl-JO, these are the must tXlfilrllLllllll Llllllllla’ of iliolley tliruilgh fed- eral channels that thi- country has ever counten- allccd. 'l'bc_\' lll\'.lll all expelldilllre of at lczlst $230 per day for every wage-earlier ivlio was Elll]7lu_\'t‘ll dining ilyit period. 11' fartiicrs. clu- l)l(I_\L'l'> and lilo-e working profiizihly on their owll zlccoililt were inrhlded, it aulounts to sortie- where lll‘i\\l‘i'll $150 and S100 per person. Analysing" the growth of this expenditure ult- der iliffilrent clzlssificrltious, the Post finds a steady and zllirniiitg increase in the out-of-poc- kct expenses of running the ordinary machinery of government. Bil-called ordinary expenditures have risen ouv-thiril since 19:9. Since 1918 they have increzlscil 114 per ccut, this despite the fact that the .-lbili1_v of taxpayers to nicct thcsc inlposts (ulezl-ilrerl ili terms of national iticoluc.) has been but two-thirds of what it was in I918 and Iozfi. Comparing these “ordinary” expenditures with four years zigo, there has been an increase of Soyoticiooo, or 3i.5 pcr cent. Some of the most striking increases are the sharply higher costs of riluning a. number of government offices. in many cases this actual dollars and cents outlay is not large blit the per- centage rise in four years is startling. These figures are lpiotcd from .\Ir. Dunnings budget lpccch of two wccks ago: Increase in Cost of Various Government Departments Between 1934 and 1938. Incr, ‘T3 Agriculture — — — — — — — — — — — 30 Auditor-General — — — — — — — — - 24 Civil Service Commission — — — — — — 60 Dept. of External Affairs — — — ~ — — 50 Insurance — — — — — — — ~ — — — 23 Special Grants and Contribs, - - - - 4'1 Labor — - — — — — — — — - -— — -— 26 House of Commons — — — — — — -— — 54 Senate — — — — — — — — — -— — — 8'1 Secretary of State — — — — — — — -- 71 Trade & Commerce — — — — — — — — 35 There are few, if any, items in this list which are not strictly “conlrollalllcf Yet llic Govern- ment shows little or no (llSllOSlllOll to exercise control. The zihility of Canada to increase and maintain its tiatiolial inconte is being under- mined by an increasingly expensive and expan- sive governmental titachiile which shows neither willingness nor :ibility' to contract the sphere or cost of its operations_ Nothing. says the Financial Post, will pro- mote Confidence and increase the national pro~ ductivitv more than a lowering of the tax biir- den on industry and individuals. Yct the budget of Mr. King's Government shows little or no inclination that this is realized. Penitentiary Reform Bill Chief provision in the Petiitelitiarics Reform Bill which the Senate refused to pass last week, in the (lying hours of the session, was luachiilcry for suhslitiuillg a three-man hoard of colttrol, in place of a snperintcitilcnt. In the Colntiioiis, where the hill lll'1)\'l>l.t'1l a lively discussion, llon. Ernest Lapoiille, .\liili~ter of Justice, admitted with regard lo the l'cliitclltiaries Royal Colu- mission that he did not agree with “sonle" of their reconlnn-ildatiius, and had "grave doubts‘ about many olhcrs." llc did not accept thc ad- vicg of the (fiilllnli-sion that the sliperilltclldeiii, General (lrniond, "should be llllllll‘lll.'\l(‘l>\‘ retir- ed"; what lic proposal was that Parliament should give the lioveriiliieiit authority 1o set up a tlll'ee-ni:lil bo.'ll'd, the bill to become effective when 1hr three llll'll “bl-J fitted for the positirnls" had hi-cli found. 'l'h:lt <1<~p au1oni:i1ir:lll_v would fclirc lil‘lll‘l'.'ll (lrluollil. hllt .\lr. ljlllflllllt‘ wani- cd it lllllll'l'~ll od 1hr ah-dilion of his po<1 would not be “a jnilgincni by the llou-e" zlgaiiist 1b.;- Sll])i‘l'llllf‘ll\ll‘lll. .\ud all ()lll('l‘ ri-conlnicnilzt- lions would stand until the hoard took over. The thrcc lncn to be appointr-rl. of course, would llf‘ no niorc pr-rnlalv-nt and no more iu- IlCPTIlVlPIll than one superintendent. 'l‘hc_v would report to tho Allin-tel‘ and through him to Parlia- mcnt. and they would hc removable for cause. That is precisely the status of a superintendent like (iencral (lrniond. No doubt the (inverti- ment felt it desirable to placate the clement witli- in its own ranks which has been clamoring for penitentiary reform by making this qcstilrc. And probably it was relieved when the Senate threw the bill out, Our National Emblem 111: origin of the Maple Leaf as Canada's ‘national emlilcm is discussed in an ititcrcsting Dominion Dav article bviMr. Fred \Villiams in the Globe and Mail. The custom of wearing a Maple Leaf emblem was at first confined tn Qucbgc, Ontario's adoption was a sequel in the visit of the Prince of “Giles in i860. Not long before His Royal Higlincslfls arrival at Toronto a “meeting of gentlemen” was called to con- lidcr the choice of a national emblem, and that. meeting. decided in favour of the maple leaf. Though there were some who objected because l! was‘ “copying Quebec”, they were overruled wore a maple leaf. l Month: before that visit took place, however, 5P¢¢lal 81355. silver and China were made in England for the Royal party, and every piece bore the maple leaf in addition to the Prince of Wales’ feathers. How did that happen? Mr. \\"illiams suggests that somebody in Canada must have passed the hint to London; perhaps it was Lady Head, whose painting of the view from the Barrack Hill is said to have inspired Queen Victoria to choose Ottawa as the Capital. .\Ir. \Villiams closes with a note of regret at the absence nowadays of those religious ser- viceswhich ilscd to be held on the morning of Dominion Day. For years after Confederation, he recalls, it was the custom to have services in the churches, when thanks were given for blcss- ings received and prayers said for protection and glllClZlllC€ in the year to come. Anglicans, Ro- man Catholics ancl Prcsbyterians in those days never failed to open the national birthday with prayler and praise (the services were short but communal) and in many sections Dominion Day was chosen for Methodist ‘camp meetings. The Pra_vcr Book of the Church of England in Can- ada contains a lovely service for Dominion Day. lts Psalm is the seventy-second, from which llon. Leonard Tillcy is said to have been inspir- cd to suggest the name “Dominion" for the rlew nation, instead of the “Kingdom of Canada." I Editorial Notes I‘ Cecil Rhodes born this (late, i853. * M ¥ i‘ Evidently the Opposition are to have adoctor at a long last. in the person of the Hon. Dr. Tllilllf‘. A. Campbell. Congratulations. I it it! it If the Federal Government call a Fall Ses- sion it will be because of sheer neglect in the ordinary session, where Prime Minister King put in only an average of two-at-a-half hours per day. m a i: n- lVliile blaming war for much of the present (lcprcssion, Dr. Harold C. Urey and Dr. Arthur N. Complox of Chicago University told the Ot- tawa convention of the Association for the Ad- vancement of Science that mlich of the respon- sibility must lie with science. However, tlicy de- clared peoples of the world, passing through the present transition period, should not lose fait’: in a greater and happier lifc which scientific dc- veloplncnts already promise and turn to “defeat- ist and cowardly wars" as a quick solution for their temporary difficulties. x iv n- a Scientific research WOfk by three Canadian industrial chemists has resulted in a new discov- cry which, it is believed, will be of considerable importance to the pulp and paper indtlstry of this and other countries. Announcement is made that a process had rcccntly been perfected by which fine-goalie papers could profitably be made from the prunings of fruit trees and forest “slash", until the present time regarded as value- lcss materials. According to Messrs. H. R. Peter- son, Mr. j. Hart and T. L. Crosslcyq of Toronto, who have spent the past two years investigating the question, not only can fine grades of paper be made from these prunings, but the quantity available is sufficient to warrant the erection of pulp and paper mills of considerable totinagc capacity. Lines to be produced will include book, coated, magazine, tissue and cigarette papers, ##1## An Island parson, Rev. Dr. Sydney BonnclL. New York, and an Island physician, Dr. David MacKcnzie, Montreal, joined hands in urging that psychology playapart in curing mankind of his ailments. The former says a sinner can be saved by apsychological parson, and the latter says a sick man may be cured by a. psychological family doctor. Addressing a meeting of medical practitioners in Quebec, Dr. David hlacKcnzie said: -— “Many of man's ills come from within, not without and diag- nosis has become not merely a scien- tific examination but a psychological process.” hVliile present-day medicine was at the disposal of the patient with an accuhliulation of knowl- edge greater than medicine at any time ever possessed, it is “increasingly ol‘ i ‘hat like- ivise as iicvcr before, emphasis placed upon the more complete use "l of knowledge," said Dr. .\lacl{ei our practice, we need to rcniemlvl l cut is to be regarded as a soul . * i that human beings are mental a‘, as physical organisms." he cont n: n: 4- in ’ This is from Montreal Gazcttl is appropriate: ‘ “(iruinbling about the cost I men is ollr prcfcrrcd rccrl aiivlliing about it? Yet, if said we'd rim our own sti direct froili maker and far ness those who wouldn't could stop us? , “\\'llo docs stop us? manufacturers or iarn swer and a heap mo‘ as succinct and com er co-opcraiivcla as tc of the Montr- thc joh: it's b' fore. and res Europe, No lzlircs). It adians an’ with CO-t/I “Ollclf cause ‘i; comlno, of the. cially " Britis ish co- zis pra econmi 5‘Pr» scious whisk- "eellng of brotherhood IIOTES BY TllE WAY On the heel: of a Canadian Government order prohibiting the export of Eskimo and Indian an- tiquities from the North West Ter- ritories without sanction, and as. serting a prior right. to all such articles as are unearthed for na- tional useums, comes the 9n- iouncement that tables are being turned, as it were, in the im- portation of relics from Emgland to grace a chruch at Al: vik. For All Saints’ Church, Aklavik, N.W.T., which is expected to be consecrated within the next two years as the “cathedral of the Arc- tic" is to have oaken panels from wood originally put into St. Paul's Cathedral by Sir Christopher Wren and memorial windows in which is incorporated some of the thirteenth-century stained glass unearthed by Dr. Stanley Baker, vicar choral of Salisbury Cathed- ral. It was the request of the "Fly- ing Bishop," Bishop A. L. Flem- ing of the Arctic diocese, that brought the gift of the ancient glass suffcient to make two win- down-a memorial to King George V, which an anonymous friend of Bishop Fleming is donating. -Cal- gary Herald. The sort of story I don't like to read in the papers is that which told about the precautions the New York police had to take to protect President Roosevelt. The President, in this case, wasn't visiting the city. He was merely sailing around it in his yacht, the Potomac. But in so doing he hnd to pass under all the bridges over the East river, beginning with the new Triborough Bridge and ending with the Brook- lyn Bridge, then round the Bat- tery and sail up the Hudson under the Washington Bridge. All these bridges are regularly policed, of course. but at each of them extra men had to be stationed for the Presidential passage. When the yacht hove in sight-preceded, in- cidentally, by a police launch which signaled the men 0n the bridges—all traffic was stopped. then allowed to proceed slowly and in driblets until the Potomac was safely past, I suppose the police were thinking about bombs be- ing dropped from above and so I naturally commend their caution. But all the same it seems sad that so much trouble should have to be taken and so many people inconvenienced. It's an unpleasant world. -—Baltimore Sun. The newly-appointed Minister for Sweden took up his duties officially last week. He is Mr. Bjorn Gustaf Prytz, ant; he suc- ceeds Baron Palmstierna. Mr. Prytz is no stranger to London. He is. in fact , an old Dulwich College boy. He was eleven years old when he went to the famous South London school, and he ac- quitted himself well on the mod- ern language side, as befltted a. future distinguished diplomat. After leaving Dulwich twelve years before the war, Mr. Prytz lived in Sweden, returning to this country only on occasional holiday visits. After the Kreuger smash oc- curred, Mr. Prytz was the business man called in by the Swedish Government to reorganize the match industry, which is one of the big commercial enterprises of Sweden. He is quite happy to be back in London again, and de- clares thet his schcol memories are happy ones. in spite of school- boy prejudices against a name like his. His chief academic distinction at Dulwich was winning a prize by an essay on Hereward the Wake. That shows at any rate that the new Swedish Minister is in sym- pathy with the vcry spirit. of Anzlo-Saxon England-The Jour- nal's London Letter. The benefits that accoue to boys from Scout training are apparent to those who have come in contact with the Association and the con- tributiun that it makes towards the building up of self-reliance and good character have been endors- ed from the highest to the lowest in the lands where it has taken root. “At least one good turn every day" is the Scout law and when one pauses to consider the potential force for good that hundreds of thousands of boys obeying that rule can be each day. the thought is staggering. Different from the mllitarized youth organization to be found under some dictatorshlps. the Scout movement is not con- cerned with military aims. One wonders how long the disputes and differences of nations one with an- other would remaln if all the de- glates to international conferences broilght, the some open mind and that Boy its bring to their international ~~ Tin- Scoilt movement '— making a fine ilning of r and mi; cualztorrmowu GUARDIAN FITTING FEET FOR. LIFE One of the helpful things that was learned during the examina- tion of recruits for overseas serv- ice was the importance of having normal feet-free from pain and discomfort. One may have brains and ambition, but to be unable to be about among others because of painful feet not only interferes with business and social progress but constant nagging of the nerves affects the general health and happiness of the individual. As most of these were young men who were presenting them- selves for service. it can be seen that their foot defects were not due to any heavy work that was being placed upon them but be- cause as little children and later as growing boys in their ‘teens. proper footwear was not provided by their loving but thoughtless parents; the narrow ‘trim’ shoe for growing boys and girls did not allow the proper width for the growing feet. In writing on the subject ‘Flt- ting The Feet For Life.’ Beulah France, in l-Iygela, states: "Nor are teen age younizsters the only ones who are guilty of foot indiscretions. While college girls and boys show sense about shoes as a. rule, graduates who enter business leave foot fitness behind them. Men as well as wo- rnen suffer all too needlessly from hammel-toes, calluses, corns, bun- ions, and ingrowing toenails due to ill fitting shoes. It is difficult. to understand why a woman is will- ing to ruin her posture, her gait, her facial expression and her out- look on life by wearing uncomfort- able shoes. Many an impatient gesture, many a harsh word spok- en, many a lined and wrinkled gees, may be traced to the owner's e8 .. It you have any foot defects, common sense should take you to an orthopedic physician who can give you ‘safe and scientific ad- V68. Walk correctly. Do not toe either out or in. but straight ahead. If you cannot do this. your doctor will tell you whether he advises u. leather lift on one side of your shoe's heels, or whether he would ipegest some other form of correc- on. - If you have no fcot defects or dlscomforts. keel? conditions that wav by wearing shoes wide and long enough for your feet. keep soles and heels from runninlz over bv solinz and heellniz repairs be- fore they become absolutely neces- sary. PAN He knovgue the SSICTVEYS and un- 5B And he will lead the lambs to f Gathenniz them with "his 111W. The RenT-le and the overbold. He counts them over one b one, And leads them back by cit! and 5 6D. To grass hills where dawn i; w e, . And tally may run and skip and P And lust because he loves the lambs He settles them for rat at noon. And plays them on his eaten pipe The very wonder of a tune. -Fnuwis Ledwldge. ""1137 Sore. inflamed, If A = ~ “"" watering, itchy lyqf evcnletltltlrt. Tab Templeton’: RAI. he llmdv but», in. RAZ-MAII for was relief from all your miserable symptoms. IlQliQI H box from your dfllllllf D0 You dread it: I nllllnifll hose! Don't MAH Clplulol blfor! your attack is due. If It from ll worth-or money back. Get a 500x: \ ‘my Stomachs ELIEVED h c any trouble omiufi such as ‘vspi-psla, sour burn, gastric "n don't de- _QQ old, merry pulsiic FORUM an?“ ."".'" "...::'.:..'::. ‘t: o0 ""- rhmmn. n. elm- loflotowu Guardian don not n- eonarlly endorse the onlllou of aoneoponhlh. SERVICE AT CALEDONIA Bin-On Sabbath July 3rd. it was my privilege as one o! many to so to Caledonia, that old his- ~ tcrlc Church. At 9.30 a. m., people besan to wend their way, and at 10 a. m., the Church was full, at eleven the appointed hour for ser- vloe there were three church fulls, so all had to vacate the church and go outside where on satui-da they had prepared for a crow . After the mornin service the peo- ple returned to e Church, which was filled to capacity, where artook of the Sacrament of the 115's Supper. The evening service which began at five was again so largely attended that it. had to be held outside, where a multitude of eople, young and old listened to ha man of God, the Rev. Alex- ander Murray, who preached two Gospel sermons from Galatians 6 verse l4. "God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of Christ". and 1n the evening Matthew 2'1, verse 22, "Pilate saith unto them what shall I do with Jesus which is called Christ.” And as the sum- mer breezes floated throulzh the trees, so the Holy Spirit fell upon the people and many were seen in tears. I am glad to learn that the Rev. Mr. Murray will address the midweek service in Zion Church on July 13. I am. Sir. etc. ONE WHO WAS PRESENT. MR. DUNNING AND THE TARIFF Sin-In Saturday's Guardian, in- stead of rejoicing over the fact that the Federal Liberal Party has of late seen light in the matter of CHSIOms Tariff protection, you critriclze them for having chang- ed their policy since the last elec- tion. Surely you do not want the Government of Canada to continue to whack a. dead horse, simply be- cause in the past they have been foolish enough to ride it w death, "Free Trade as they have it in England” was Lauriefs war cry in 1896. and he was in earnest too, but Mr. Fielding him not been Fin- ance Minister two years before he had Riven Canada the hi best ous- iDfILS tariff up to that ime, and every Liberal Government s'noe then has followed his example. Low tariff or even free e may be a winnin election cry, simply because hoi oi have never studied the inevitable consequences of such e. Policy, but once in er, and with the res nsibility o government on their s ouldeis, no Government, whether Liberal or Conservative, would be so .00lha.rd as to throw the workers of Cane to the wol- ves, for that ls what would happen if imports were admitted free of duty from lower wa e countries cr countries where fac ry mass- ro- ductng 1s on a greater scale t an in Canada. What has misled many Canad- iany-particularly those who emi- rated from the Mother Country- as been the fact that Great Bri- taln prospered under a free trade policy during the second half of the 9th centur . but. these people fail- ed to realze that conditions in Enllland at that tfime were entire- 1y different from those in Canada. today. There were four outstanding factors. l.‘ England was the first country to introduce machinery into the industries, particularly in the tex- tiles and steel, and they held the su remacy in manufactures gener- alv until the tum of the century. . British merchantmen almost, controlled the commerce of the high seas. doing the 081111111 trluie for every nation in the world and from same earning an enormous income. 3. London bankers had connec- tions everywhere-end still have,- and what is more they understand world finance. 4. Great Britain was by far the leading creditor notion and loaned money wherever it would bring sales to their industries, give ton- nage to their ships, or assist their bankers. and the revenue that an- mlfllly poured into the Old Country from those sources Wu many time; renter than the losses sustaned by cit: manufacturers from free im- r . But wlhen Gernumy, Poland. It- aly, and Japan with their low prio- cd labour, utilizin: British n\.e machine-S. made an onslaught on the trade of Great Britain. and wlhen the war compelled Britain to call in her foreign loans and when the seas became dotted with Amer- ican, French, German, Italian and Jflbanese trading ships. the com- mon sense inherent in the British- er made him change his mind. Free trade was the winds, and what do we see today]! Britain spending billions of pounds on armaments and beckoning Eur- ope to follow suit if they can, and that is whv the world is still at eace, for neither Germany nor talv can match Britain in her game of finance. As to Flee ‘Prado in Canada, those who favour it as a rule think of“ themselves only, and even then they stop thinking too soon. Farm- ers. for instance, imagine that a lower tariff on farm implements would give them cheaper machin- ery. Just let the Government kill off the Canadian implement i\ k- ers and what kind of a price would our farmers have to my the Am- erican makers, Or clone the Can- lan manufacturing industries by duties and put hund- reds o thousands of TERS THROUGH THE ING EFFECT OE i Mr. Tea Poll Says! industrial _ Many Big Leaguers Chew Tobacco IN FACT IT HELPS PITCHERS AND BAT- WHEN THE CROWD IS IN AN UPROAR. ISLANDERS MADE THE SAME DISCOVERY MANY YEARS AGO ABOUT THE SOOTH‘ For a Delicious Cup 0! Full Flavoured Tea use IRA mum Grange Pelioa Tea . __ '7' WIPED OUT ! fortilnntobflfivlllflddli‘ m“ vloe Ask th man wh ha: had the if you heed Fireolnruranoe, ll"! "u" m‘ '4 ' 00d Inauran otootlon. éilgrPgfluzlgsziliriiriiclilidytawrlrbkn of whim? i: wcll u I0. fl l we can also furnish ro- lillifi. "fit-Tilt: oi-Tdmrdllhllrom wind-mm. lml. h:- plosion, Impact of Aircraft or Vehicle! k 8M- Consult our nearest Agent or write or N“ 0|! liyndman & Company Limited ESTABLISHED 1872 Sllnmeralde 55011958“ Char lottetown u r em loyment and wards m apolozize- His opponent fiflffiriofllfi ‘giappenptp the food usually accepts the apology. markets upon which the Canadian As a cabinet minister Dr. Maxi- farmei- depends .or about 30 D91’ Inn's experiencs have been varied cent of his income? some iwwrv and full. 1v. was his ill-luck to h0ld worker; also imagine that as con- portfolios which he had to relin- sumers they could buy the" s“ ' quish before he could get the min- plies m less monev- we 11° d“ t ism-s 5081i. Warm. they could do so in some lines, but when Mr. Meighen re-organlzed what benefit would there h“ cabinet “m; union govern. them in seelnli cheaper swd-i l“ ‘he shop windows if their DONW“ We" empty because their waxes had been lowered or still worse if they were on relief? The tariff D0110? of the country should, in the interests of the D0- mlmon, be free from party 9°11?“- but has been kept there ever smile Alexander MacKenzlcs time. 18181!- l_v because so many Canadians have been willing to sell their souls to one or other o. the political mach- ines. But the dawn has 001116 at last. thanks larsell! l0 MT- Dun‘ ningg wuragg and COIIIIIIOII BQIIBC. May Allah be prrglgcdlw I .9 -. BIT K. S. I-IEMMING. A Prospective Leader (Toronto Financial Post) merit in 1921, Dr. Manion went. in as Minister of Soldiers Civil Re. lbtmblishment. Mir. Meighen, liow- ever, lied his usual luck with gen- eral elections and Dr, Manion lost his portfolio, though he won hi: se t again. n 1936 Mr. Melghen formed ali- other cabinet, and Mr. Manion. by this time a recognized Conservative, wgs included. Hon. Charles Murphy was the Liberal postmaster general and one morning after the 1926 de- bacle. he arrived at his office w find Dr. Manlon busy on the Job. Mr. Meig-hen had appointed him postmaster general and Dr. Man- ion did not believe in lettinl; the mails wait. Alas! Mr. Meigherrs Jinx again set on Dr. Manion’; doorstep. The new government did not survive the 1926 general election and again Dr. Manion went beck to the opposi- tion trenches. Meanwhile he had put down hi: war inlpresslons, and “A Surgeon in Arms” was published. a read- able narrative of the eat adven- ture from a. medical o ficer's view- i t. DOB‘; 192'! Ontario had decided tn do something about. the Liquor question and Premier Howard Fer- on asked Dr. Manion to initiate e Liquor Act and its machinery. After a, year he returned to curry on his duties in the House of Com- mons. ‘Then came the election of 1930. The fighting Fort William veteran was in with a. government that intended to stay in, Mr. Ben- nett made him Minister of Rail- ways and Canals, which depart- ment he administered until the change of government in 1985. During his term with the Ben- nett. government Dr. Manion was Geneva to heed the I933 A nearly-forgotten man is beck in the limelight again. Whether he will stay ‘here or not depends on the action of a thousand or more Conservative! when they meet at Ottawa this week. For Hon. R. J. Manlon. M. 0., M.D., C.-M., is leading the field for the succession to the leadership of the Conservative party when Rt. Hon. R B. Bennett, retires in July. When Mr. Bennett was elected to that. leadership in 1927 Dr. Manlon was so close behind he could have reached out and grabbed Mr. Ben- nett's coattalls. He followed the new leader into the 1930 election campaign and so into the cabinet. In fact this stormy Detrel of the north of Lake Superior was the bucklnizest broncho in the cabinet. “Bob“ Mouton is fighting Irish. His father was Patrick J. Manion and his mother Mary O'Brien. t Both Irish-Canadians. He wan ‘(Emails delegation and later lie born in Pembroke, Nov. l8, 1881, w” g delegate to the Disarmament and was educated at the Fort Wil- llem Public and Port. Arthur High Schools. He took up medicine and surgery and might have done brilliantly had not politics and the war in- tervened. Hls first. public office was alderman at. Fort William in 1913-14. He served with the French army in i915. then joined the Canadian Army Medical corps. He was a front line M.O. and while medical officer of the 21st Bn. he was in the thick of the Vlmy Ridge "show." When the smoke cleared he had gained a Military Cross. He had been nominated by the Liberals in I915 as a. candidate for the House of Commons. and in 1917 both Liberals and Conservatives united to give him a. Unionist nomination. He was elected. OI medium height. he has none of the ascetlclsm of Mr. Melgben nor the ponderoslty of Mr. Bennett. Yet when he speaks he says two words to their one. A speech by Dr. Manlon makes the old soldiers in the Commons instinctively duck for cover. A machine gun drawls by comparison. The late Rt. l-Ion. W. S. Fielding was long consider- ed the speedlest talker in the House. When he passed on Dr. Mouton inherited the title. He is the bane of Himsard and the des- pair of reporters. . In action his mind moves so swiftly that. the words pour out in spate. They come so fest at timer that. they out-speed his mind and he says things he later views with surprise. At times he is bitter of tongue, but is at heart friendly soul. He has been known to hammer an opponent unmerclfully, rhii-pc un- fairly, and then in the obbv after- conference. Ap Iriahmgn at afipiirkaruhxrlélm: con erence some Pacifist at a Nazi rally, but Dr. Manion showed that it took a fighter m talk about slopiltrlll fuhting. m the 1935 election. Dr. Mouton u a minister had other ridings be- sldm his own to assist. It was liar sledding. The betting, however. was still on Manlon to win in Fort William, until Harry Stevens. will!!- in: his way west. sto of! 1W the head of the laku to toss e couple of Reconstruction pan monkey wrenches into the Man ion machinery. The Reconstruction lets nominated a candidate. ill Q91‘. Joined 1n the fracas 3&1 fl ,. things. The net result was that DI Manion was beaten by Mclvor. Llb era]. McIvor had 5.481 votes. D_ Manlon 4,565, but the Reoomtrll» tionisl, had garnered 2.030 vote the 0.01‘. 1.635 and the Inlicvell dent ‘f8. SIAMESE TWINS AMONG TRIPLETS "Siamese twin-s” were limonl! ll" trl let; born to a native woman- Be lma Mkulu, on the farm Sailfi- drlft near Harrlsmith. All thl children died shortly after birth- Accordiu to Mr. P Fllmalter, who oocup es the farm. one of U tri eta was an abnormally 1M4!‘ ch 1d, weilhing at least _-- while the other two, who WM linked together, weighed less thin 5 lbs. Only certain portions of tlwu‘ bodies were Joined together. 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