WTP!§"."¥'I_m PAGE c0211 THE ‘CHARLOTTETOWN_ GUARDIAY igTlie tharlottetown lillflflllfl/II Preslilrul, LlflllL-flll. W. (‘hater ti. McLun . \ .,-.|'r|-\ii.'1-|1!, J. It. Burnett, I-‘. J. l. . l). A. llui-lilnnnn, D. I. 0. Swrrvt 111-, Editor 111111 urrniziug Dtn-r-tnr, J. ll. Burnett, l‘. J. l- \\~i|l'|.ll|- Llllllllll, Frank Walker and D. K. (Fun-lo. “llfillllg 11.111 11'1.11111:1--| 1111171500 per your (In ldblllrl‘) |,,|,,,.,,,| ,, 1,1,, $1.1m 111+ yrur 1m mum-e) mulled NI Fnmi- 1.411.111 lsnmrl. $5.1m p0!‘ your (In advance) .\l.11l.-1| 11> Cumin-u um! Lmti-d Staten '111-1;so.n, preeminent a 103s ls This (ln Government Liquor’? TH- -_nl‘t1‘ 1'i'1_\ Z110 pttlilit‘ v.» 1111111‘ or 19R“- lmhm 11». l1» :1.l\i~11; 111.1 1111- tiovcriiiiteiit “m,” y ' _ lr-‘(l glffxrlu rgilllftkl cuntrztbatul ‘quot; 1'. 1:1: _'.1--t1‘r1'1.1'\‘s l.:l»-.'ral o1‘- i» t‘ 1111" tl1I< morning tire drunks » . 1 1~.- .1 -.1 toll call are .~llt'l'l. of ;.111'111l;111cc in wnrt ‘r i114 1 11 11 rr~~11.1111lt1l four days ago ' ' ""1. c in _l2lll, ivas _ .,. “A thurl: fll‘1l rli-ruwlcriyl was fined $311.00 and Itsts or tliirty- 1l.'1\s. ' ",\ 111-11111; null i111'.11'1:1‘~1e 111111 1.121 ~11 :11 appear ha] a $11,110 lvtil -n1l e-trcatetl. "Two 11131 rs. ~11 a similar charge \\.1*1‘e lined $5.00 111111 costs o." 11-11 davs and $10.00 and costs M‘ tiventv 1l11\'= rr-pectivcly. “_»\ pally 11.110 refused admission to Il. R.C. M. l‘. 1.1.1111 1116.111 to enter the premises was 5m‘ sigxio r1111 01st: or twenty days. “.\n a1111-i-t clirn-gerl with drunken driving was ft‘lll.llllll.‘l lllllll tomorrow.” 'l"hir:1=t otrone morning is rather imlucky is an +711 of the "improved temperance" pndcr 1 l1- t ,1 ‘rt-ll li11\'('l'llll'l(‘llt sale plan. 1n a I)llll in . 11 1111c were five drunk cases dealt bxtnniersblc yesterday. The New British Treaty J ___ l“; 1* 11c l 1;- hns tnkrn the trouble to deny u g .~\.1' J1: 111s |1;L1li~.hed of the pro- posal 111‘ .".1 lzw-le Treaty with Bri- tain. - ‘ ~ ~ 1.1- revised agrrcment have been 1 ~ - g .. l-"it two nr three. principal tea‘ .11.1"1*ipaterl. tlne is that the 1111.1 ~".’1‘s given to (fzniarla by Bri- ta -~ c; 11.14 uill 111' prc-ervcd. and in rr 11 ' 1 e the l\11111i11‘1»11. it is expected. 11 , 1 111F111 191113111111 a lengthy list n 1 ' 111' of thin-c, when rc- pr+~=1 "tlgtlrtxs, 111-111-101", would p- ' l 1 1 $1 11.1\1\t-.r,»<>11 \\'1'|l‘tll 11f busi- ci 1 l . . sv-sim important l‘(~rl“1'ti1‘)lIS 1 z~ -. '1» ‘, 1 e (“v17 .11 l’.=rli:1111e11t i11 the ' l ' i-h 1-13. 1 1111s, 111111 it isl * 111w . 'lt‘t‘lllL‘ltl c1111- "-'1' 131111-11 \\1111ll(‘ll .1'i-111 was l11r1r1l h)‘ 1 tcrtrs :1;_'1'1. l1 is N" 15c cut i11 the, .- ' ". but the llri- 1 .11 \\11ltltl. it 1k t1n1lcr- tip-V 1 ' if tho (fanadiait 1111M!" . specific filtCF. rwri .1! ‘i " 1111 vzilorcnl rlnli '1' 111:1_\' 111.‘ retained ‘111< that can 1v mwle t-zi =11‘ of 1T. ;.-.'.'\,.l 1,11 on $.1tur1l:1_v1 21.1111 1l.1_\.s on an 11111 c11111-‘ speaker said like him many of the young crim- inals were coming from good 111111195, Agrggs their parenthood was written in large letters the word “failure? Youth only bccontcs a prob- lem for the police, when the influence of home, school, church or social organizations failed to give him the necessary impetus to devote him- sclf to a. lifc of sa11ity and. right living. There- fore. it was the 1'1'.sp1-11.-il1i|it_v of every adult to do something by \v11r1l 111- deed 111 keep alive thi- wnrtluvhilc traditions 11111/1 cnstnnas. and to dis- cuuragc. those that are detrimental t-i youth. Editorial Notes fi ll‘ ll‘ be a Santa Pal? U » U $ "is a very big 1111111 pn_v.~iv:1ll_v." \pp;1rc11tl_v too . big to be called “a 111111111 liar" wnl1 i111pn11ityl Ill 1i i 'l11e optis111i>111 and 11111-1 favorable critisiln “f Mr; _1\_ _]_ ,-\_=hfo1-1l of Messrs .\1111i11g and 11111 our ranvlicrs in parti- Trade in general this season s cular. lt will give a stimulus to trading and next year's prodnctiuii. t Y! 1K The new charter of tlic l \'.l\'. among oth Cr things provides for 4 Pl‘ rvstiictions 0H divorces 11111] prcmitnn- 13-1‘ 1112‘ lllillilifii llwlllll‘ tlrpir banded motlcriiisiii. the .\lo11t1'1-111 tiazette, the ltussians ‘(T111 to be getting 011l- fashioned as regards l1on11- lite. . 1F ll‘ * .\il\\ “l-Iagei" t0 11111111111 and yet afraid to strike." our contc111porar_v 111111" has the alternative of stating what the occurrences in the Legislat- ure were concerning Conservative Premiers which it has alleged were stippresscd “on re- quest,” or else of apologizing for its insinuation. ln its present infuriated mood it is'hitting blindly in all directions. - a n- i: Mr. Wilfrid Lazure, K.C.. Sherbrooke, has been appointed judge of the Superior Court of Quebec. succeeding to the vacancy created by the dmth of Justice A. F. de Lorimier. An- nouncement of the appointment was made by justice Minister Lapointe, following; session of Cabinet. u a n: At Chicago International Live Stock Ex- position. Messrs Edwards Brothers of \Vatf0ffl. t"lnt., solrl a stitntnet‘ yearling bull for $1.300 tn 111p the Abcrtleen-Aiigus sales. (flfficials said that generally pocketbooks were fattening for brccrlerls of blue blooded stock. “The prim‘ trend is upward and l11\l11.~= a very bright future for hrecrlcrs," said .\lr. l7. .\l. lleitlc, manager of of the Fxpositinns for 3o years. II it i‘ .\l1*s_ Fimpson, the storm centre of the limpirc, was the attractive daughter of a Balti- more bmrdiug ll1"llS('l\'C(‘lll‘l' “"110 uiflfrivfl I1 li.S.,n:1vv' licutuiant when she was twenty. llnce obtaining a footing on the. first. 11mg of the ladder she capitalized hcr rc111.'1r\:1l>lc per- sonality to raise ltcrsclf rung 11y run; till she reached almost to the L'i'1.1\\11 itself, stitrificing two liusbaiitls cn route. * 41 =1 The rcdoubtrtlilc (famillicn llotitlc has (lone the unexpected nrriiw. lle resigned from the ltl Landfill. l1" '11 1 .~-i-11ls are 11" v.t11 he givtn 17': t." *1 1‘ -11 and steel -c .11l1~<. but’. ' 1"‘ 1 ill make 1'1~l;11"t1 z iv‘ q l1‘ ' ‘i? i‘ 1' '. 7W“. illiil""'_lll 11w :1;- 1 s '" - ": i: 11c -~ 1..:_\ 11111 l1." l'L’l(l'1 1 lit 1 1114!! *1 ' i“- "1-tE'-,E"V l 'l11_»>1~_t i ~1': . 1 '1 ‘li- _i11'.i- 1 1.. l . 11" 112111 with? - 111' 11'.‘ stilijectpit can; '1 ":1 1 f1 w 1l>1'-'.1~:1111l‘ ' 1'1 111' Vctiillj 1 @1111 p1 1'1 1\'t‘l'~ , 1 l)."\\'t'('ll 1 '1 it is :1 ltitlllt" - r1111 of 111111111); 11;" lfii-ci-nin :1 1ti=t1r:11111'v' .1111 1-1 its t11r111s means 1.il11-1'tv finds its only .1111 in :1 sit-ii] tirrleriatitl a political 117.111 :1 vrpts tlu- principles of -11 ~~ lorw;11‘1l, l1_v evolutionary is 111111" 11cl1i1"\'t'1111'11t. 1 i11111_\'. 11111.: ]1'1-11*--1 3-. 1111;.111' 1111111 tic civilization are readily r1111; l\'»1-r1*»1~11t:1ti\'c guveriimcnt, free- dom of ;1~--1'1i.1.1i1-11. iruc1l1n11 11f speech, room for 1111‘ play 111' lnttnnn variables, the frt-c 0X- crcisc 111‘ 1111- l111n1:111 will. 1111: mceptancc and the practice 111' t111e1',1111‘1-_ l)r;_ KIHRGAN [Om-l]. 2d upon .:1ll 1111 >1‘: ‘11111 lie. r1111 well to stress the necessity for 111111111111‘. which is tllc touchstone of thr- tl1~111111"r.11ic svstcm. 'l‘h1'. community or government 111:1t i; intolerant of vicwvs that it docs not 1111c, is endangering democratic lib- erties. - Adult Responsibility ‘Beggars can’t be choosers, but for the most part the inmates of Canada's gaols bclicvc the. world owes them a living “which it is up to them to collect at the point of the gun if neces- sary,” Brigadier-General D. C. Draper, chief constable of lbronto, declared before the St. Imvrence Kiwanis Club, hosts to the Province of Quebec Police and Fire Chiefs Association at their weekly luncheon in the Queen's Hotel. llltintrcal. Nor is their policy changed when 111w’ get “sent down," 11c atldcd. “Unmindful o1 11: fact that the labor of honest men in all WrllhF 0f life is required to provide them with lttbsistencc. lhcv still have the effrontry to 11e- mand luxuries-f" Recalling “that reprehensible Qharactcr" wlin had murdered a “fornnto con- flghlgontheonof abithdq, party, the Xlayoralty 0n the election 111' .\l1'. lJtiplissis to the Preiriiersliip, because 11c blievctl Duplissis . to be responsible for ltis failure as Provincial 1 1 , ~1-r'\‘,1li‘.'O leader. Now because only two c011- 1 11--11.1=.1s entered the Mayoraltyr race, and both Mr. llnpll S11p1~1>t“1t;'< in the Legislature. l 111111111- 1111s 1111111111 his hat in the ring with a ~ \lt'.\ l1) llltll‘ 1101-111. .4- 11111 ;1 ..1f1- lcss than three 1411 lliln’ 11» iii ish that shop- 11t- ,1_\i well, 1lisa|1p1>i1111111~111 211111 frayed 1111‘ stores are cranillitttl with holi- rl. - 1111~1'1'l1:u11_lis1- 111111 1111M" who want to ct _ s in comfort ~= wcll as t) show 1'1u1>-i1l:‘ oil for the infinitely p;-.1i1-111 :11 l1111‘1l~\\"111'l1i11_-_{ p011 p11- luliinrl thr; 1‘11\lItl1'l\ v1.11 1111 1-31-11 11111 111 p)»: W111i‘ lllt‘ i111). 11's g1 1_~111i1l i1l1‘(l. 11in, 111 1111 0111"‘ shopping 1-:11'l_\' i11 1111- 11:1)‘. for 1111“ cl'1-\\‘<l~ P111111 in the afternoon. 11111-1..- ping. tempt-rs. I? Pk IV l‘ri111c .\linis11'r .\licl1:u*1 firivztgc, 1>f X1111 Zr." 1.11111. stall-s lll(‘l'(‘ w11nl1l 111' 1W1 r1iurn 111 11n- 11111 system of immigration until jobs were avail- able for inunigrants. “lf people, conic to New Zcalzmd from Britain their jobs will l1avc t0 come with them.” 11c atldctl. “\\'c can’t have them strugqlitig with those who arc here now for tl1c jobs that are going. lf we are going to put people from abroad on 1111‘. land. 1111')‘ must have the \vl1cre\vitl1:1l to maintain them- selves. To bring out people to NBW Zvillflllll without having prepared the. way would be to repeat the maclttcss carried out (hiring a num- ber of years by a 11111111101‘ 0f govcrnlflfllifi- It should be possible for llritain to provide the assistance necessary to settle pcriplc on the landy» 1r =11 s Mr. llugh Redwood. editor of “'l'l1c London News-Chronicle" speaking in l\'cv. Dr. 13011110113 church, Fifth Avenue, New York, declared 11c looked upon the “Gospel of Jesus Christ as the biggest news the world has cvcr yet knmvn, and the biggest news that the world will ever know until the watchers scanning the skies catch the King of l-lcavcn descending." .\lr. Redwood. who formerly was a night eilitor, continucrl: “l believe that the (iOSflCl of Jesus (Thrist is pres- ented to us as a statement of scientific truth hascd upon immutable lzuv." \\'hen his wife's life was tlespaircd of rcctlntly. 11c said. :1 friend called him up at the eleventh l1o_ur and lolrl him of a surgeon who might cure her. llc did not ask the friend trivial questions about the sur- geon's identity or technique, ‘The News- Clironiclc" editor related. Jle merely asked at what time he could ltavc a cousulation. ‘The. important thing‘ about the doctor, 11c extilzunctl. was whether he succcc1leil. as h? did, and 111(- ‘imporlant thing about 1l11~ tiospel was whether ‘it worked. as he said it did. Have you selected the child t1» whom you \vill' . f, , _. -i . . 1 - failure as ‘.\lr. “attcruuitlt , say- our L0lll[lll|l0l8l'),;around! Cobb. London. must be apprt-rzziterl l1_v the F1111 1 as we mzy Notes byihé Way A man makes himsel‘ Inferior. Supczlorlty is not measured by money, political fame, or social lstatlon. There are inferior men ;all through this line. You can't 1 elect a man to be good, or great. or 1 anything else that. he isn't; in litm- ‘self. We are only as inferior as we thlrLk we are. And why think that we are inferior at all Each 1 man ls unique 1n zome way or rather. Any good salesman isfar , bower versed in the value of his i muduct than the one to whom he 1 wishes to sell. He, therefore, starts 1 off superior to his prospect, which tract, alum should inspire hlm to l sell. The world likes deflnite men. men ivho believe in themselves, men who put their hearts fnto their work, mcn who eliminate thelfS and the cunts and who walk past, though it. weren't Get tlrs: YOILRFERVL in- ferior-mnlcss you think you are! If every person in this \\'(‘l'lf‘l went: l around with this song in 111s heart. V-I am a healthv. llilpllf‘ l1.111a11 bring-wirhat a V-fwldfllll- uo.:‘d be. , What a man. or woman _vuu would be! ..1 , megalom- run the rlsk 1f 2 '11 11.11 ( S. W0 mn-si . we :1 e to stop the hideous German 1 1 country. cOIIIHJlOII ol.‘ anti-scmitlsm ln this Th: .emmcnt; must: "x as according to urgently rCIISl 1 the Lord President ft Ls considering 1 l :..\ t1 , 1 .11 the prohibition of the wearing of that give the Fascists the aspect of a "private" army. It. must give evidence that. 1t. 1s dealing ruthlessly with hooliganism in the East. End. 'I'l1i.s calls for no political decision or clever legal draughtsmanshlp, only efflclent. pollclrig.-Manche ter Guardian. From Clydesbank comes the news that the Queen Mary's sister shlp, to be temporarily known as the 552. 1s to cost $27,500,000, or $2,500,000 more than the present great liner. This new leviathan ls to be lauixched b11938 and be put ln commission in 1940. According to 1o Lord Aberconway, because of successful work 1n the ex- perimental tank at. Clydesbank, Messrs. John Brown 8e Co. are convinced that: the firm can bulld a. boat of similar slze to the Queen Mary with engines capable of a still further improvement 1'11 per- formance. Some other experts on the Clyde ntaiittrtiuerl that the newer vessel will reach 36 knots m1 hour, an show an average speed over along distance of 33 know- Motztreal Gazette. They are common In their hatred of democracy. in their cxploitatbn subversive cntls. in their fflJlllQdS of lIFlGlOIIS provocation, in their reliance on outside encouragement, in their pretended allegiance to the ideals of liberty Thry know noth- ing, and can leach us tiotliing that they have ‘not lcarmd from their foreign instructors. '1'11e Conunuti- ism of’ Mr. Pollitt is the pure ntllk of Muscovitc BoLshcvi n1; the ‘Fascbsnr’ of Sir Oswald Mosley is an amalgam of anti-Semitism (which is tin-Italian) with Cor- DQTElllHll twhlelt is tin-Gcrntati): neither includes a siltgle clement which Ls remotely British. They are admitted hero on suffcrance, because it i: not tho British ltabit. to disallow the expression of any politkal opinion, however extrav- agant, unless and until such ex- prcxion is uccomauiezl by menace to the public p6flC.-—LOT.(l0I1 Morn- ing Pod. Again the British chancellor of the excheqiter is able to show a neat surplus on the years btrlncss. It seems that England has recover- ed about 80 per cent, of her pros- perit-y and some of oursF-New Yorker. ‘ ——--—— 1 With cars engineering to as high a degree of eafcty as they now are, the obvious next step toward accident-free traffic ls Improve- ment. in driving technique. The tool ft 1s impozslblc to educate, and he mould be removed from traffic Izlv as he is detected. But .. c mllllons of others now 1., a _. 1111's there are many who 1111 e 1 '~ irver been taught the prapur inunageltieitt. of u car or the responsibility of the driving T.‘- dlvttltial to others around him.- Detroit News. ‘First. Rus la announces the ex- pansion of tltc Red army to 1.300.- 000, and the ivar chiefs “Yarn the people to be ready for momentous events. Then German doubles the number of her conscripts. B111. I/lussollnl multiplies tliezc millions by eight, and thereby seems to bring the logic of mllltarisnt to the point of rlieer fantasy. The tragedy ls that it ls not fantasy. The mlllous of Stalin and Hitler and Mussollnl are real men. We tmaglnntlon but. with terrible realities, forces actually on the march. Mu=so1inl‘s boast will serve a useful purpose 1f it. makes plain to a pop-eyed world that he rpeaks less than the truth when he reiter- ates that the war Europe ls prepar- lng for wlll involve every able- bodled man. It: wlll moblltze whole populatlons.-New York Times. llilufisolilvfs wnrllkc speech ll- Avelllno, at a time when all of Europe is trembling with appre- hcitsloit over the pro per-t. of n11- othcr great: conflict, sounds like the utterance of 11 mailmai or .1..- braggadoclo of an adolescent. He calls upon the Italian people not to be mHcd by the "absurdity of eternal peace"; he enjolns them to be strong." to be "always stronger.‘ "We must be strong enough tn face any eventualltles; to look any dertlny flrmly ln the eye. To this supreme end all the life of the nation must be subordinated. "'I'hls ls the klnd of statesman hlp which lplnnged Europe lnto the World War: it. ls Nlotzschetsm in the cents of the mighty. It. ls N11: kind of democratic forms for their own 1 nnlfornLs and all other trappings 3 , proportion .. .are..deallng not. wlth»armles~of--the- » n, 1m win-u. Am. BECOGNIZING EARLY TUBERCULOSIS 1t ls very gratifying to know that - some of the most advanced cases of tubreculosls of the lungs with large cavities, profuse expectorat- lon, and high fever are now being cured by collupslng the lung, thus glvlng 1t. complete rest. On the other hand ft would be more gratifying if tuberculosis were treated in its very early stages, or if it were not allowed to get. u start r1 the body at. all. ‘ Therefore all the organizations engaged 1n preventing tuberculo- sis are Irvin: to instruct the public 1 on how to prevent tuberculosis and {how to recognize ft 1n its early 1 stnea. i In Handbook of Therapy. edited l by Dr. Morris Flshbeln and pub- l lished by the American Medical 1 Assoclatlon, the very early ' or pretubercular symptoms are out- lined. "At the very early stage there may not be any lung signs. ‘There is loss of weight, more or Jens dis- turbance of the stomach, pullor, a. general feeling of weakness, and disturbance of the circulation of the blood-cold hands and feet. , There 1s generally a history of progressive lose of, weight, irreg- ular chest pains. shallow breathing, dry cough epeclally when a deep breath ls taken, and, most lm- portant sign of all, an afternoon or evening rise of temperature. Stomach Indigestion, with loss of appetite, ls often an early symptom of lung tuberculosls." Instead of the tuberculous chest. being flat, ft 1s usually round or barrel-shaped; that. ts its width ln to its depth is not. as large as in normal lndfvlduals. 'I'h11.s as pointed out many years ago the tuberculous cheat. 15 the lmxnaturc or "baby" chest. The chest: expanslon ts usually be- low the average. "A Fltldy of the temperature of the suspected person Ls Important: the temperature should be taken every three hoins during the day for several days; or at, least; at, 8 o'clock in the mornlng, at 4 in the afternoon, and at B in the evening. A regular or recurrent rise of temperature in the afternoon or cvcntng. without any other known caurc, is almost. a sure sign of a latent. or quite tuberculosis becom- llli; active. Some patient: who show no fever when at rest. wlll havo quite a rise of temperature on the least exercise. An increased pulse rate—100 or over-avlth or without rise of temperature, rm- less there is a thyroid condition, ls suggestive of tuberculosis." I believe that recognition of these rymptotns of early tuber- culosis, which can be noted by the patient or the family, wlll prevent. the advance of tuberculosis and save many lives. And at. this time the efforts of the National Tuberculosis Associa- Lon to rai=e funds by the sale of their Christmu- seals should re- ceive our sympathetic support. of statesmanshit) whim will tend to hasten another bath of blood which may mean the and of European civilization. And in all of Italy, with free speech suppress- ed. not, a single voice can be :"a\>d against this egomanlac “llllsll Dower Ls supreme, whose word’ ls law. What. a commentary this 1s on n. land which bore Garl- baldi, the great apostle of human llberty-~St. 10111.5 Post Dispatch. No one knows better than slnglc unemployed ln this city and pyov- 111cc how “tediou.s" the delay ha: been ln lnauguratlng a “>011; for wages programme. So far as Cal- gary ls concemed. ll: has a problem on its hands that 1s not. of its rwn making. It ls sheer nonsense at tlilt; stage of the depression to inxigiiv that: the oflerof farm jobs for r111; e imemployed with no ulteruati-e be a compete solution for a group of people who have suffered six years of demprnlization through no fault of their amt-Calgary Herald, XMAS GIFTS We carry n. complete line of MAX FACTOR. "YARDLEY HOUDNUTS IIOUBIGANTS EVENING IN PARIS THREE SECRETS SPRINGTIME IN PARIS CUTEX MINTY’S COLGATES PALMOLIVE any many other Toilet. Goods. We also carry brush, comb and mirror sels In chromium flnlsh for ladies. Military Sela ln bath ebony and chromium. Clllrs lMl cigarettes, pipes and wblvw- Our plpe llne la the finest ln the clty, with prices unl- lng from 50c to 88-00- CALL AND SEE US. THE 2 MA CS PIIONE Ml lllllfllll l . “uglanrl PUBLIC FORUM nu- nurn- u on-n I" l" annulu- b: eon-urn“!!! ‘l qlufloun o! lntarcll- ‘I'll Charlottetown fllullu docs I0! nooounrlly undone (In II|l-|'-' o! w. |g0lrlnt0._ ' A‘ NEW PARTY SlI.-—ITI my last I suggested that. temperance leaders get- Lognther and organize for action to flghttlie encroaching llquor traffic. I pro- posed adoptlng n methcd of policy which would ensure our moral safety, yet without asking the peo- ple to sacrifice their party tden lty. or the right to pass their own de- clslons upon our fiscal and econo- mic problems. . It. ls unsafe to trust the queallon to the fragile mercies of modern politicians, ln their party capacity. We have been betrayed already too often to again invite the noose of deception. This is presently be- fore us in its most convincing form. I am not; infallible. I may even be accounted Qufxotlc by some Id- vanced thinkers. But I suggest. o. programme for acceptance, rejec- tion, or modification, as ln the best judgment. of temperance leaders seems most feasible and adaptable to the purpose. In former elections a plan ins adopted asking candldates to pledge themselves to stippcrt temperance lf elected. It, was semi-abortive fn that who htuilcrs signed, or evas- lvelv acquiesced. to get: moral sup- port, wlthout ever glvfng 1t. an after thought. My suggestion ls for a third or Prohibition party at the poll and in the legislature. But not as "Third" or govemlng party. Wlth the strong popular prejudices for Conservative or Liberal lt has been demonstrated too often that an ex- cluslveepeclril party. such for ln- stance as the "United Farmers." "Lblbor," "Rrconstnictlonlst" and others are likely to fail. In our province, which ls so strong for temperance. with good men tn the field, we might hope to wln some seats. but not. to control the govern- merit. But with n. well devised system of organization and operation at elec- tlons we could I believe establish a party in the Assembly strong en- ough to absolutely control the la- sues of temperance. Suppose temperance people of bofh parties were in sincere and deter- mined cooperation. let these sel- ect mcn of high repute and depend- able moral qualifications. both Llb- eral and Conservative. Have these ln every dtslrlct pledged to unite as one controlling temperance govem- ment on the floor of the House. By proper engineering and influence they could compel the respective partles at conventions to accept them as candidates. Backed by such forces they would have the pull for nomination. It‘ not accepted by the convention. and mcn not; enjoying the confidence of the temperance body being -nomlna‘.ed, they then might. run one at: least as indepen- dent. I would then allow every voterto vote for his party nonrnee and each elected terupermicc member to sup- port the party of his affiliation on all malttrs of govrrumcnt. except; upon temperance in which he must stand by prolzliritlon npmlitt. their own administrators and officials, and enact, their own laws regard- lo.~s of what, the ruling putty’ tn government tray wish to dlctate. This would give us t-wo govern- ments on the f‘oor of the House; one Liberal or Conservative as the case might be. and one composed of members from both parlles 1n abso- lute control of temperance issues. I am, Sir. etc" PROIIIBITIONIST. The King And His Advisers (Ovawn Journal) It is probable that altogether trio much has been made of whatever ll: ls that, ls taking place between the British Cabinet and the King. arts- lmz out; of His Majesty's reported littcntioti to marry Mrs. Ernest Simpson and make her Queen of Yet l1; ls clear that the wlnspe -‘11~ nnrl rrcssip surrounding ‘i ~ "liiotzc rccsntflv had (o1 be brought to the llzht and now that this has been ilrne. or done par- tlallv. 1t may be well lo have the situation, whatever ft may be. faced sensibly and entn-arzeously and de- termini-d accotdlnclv. The mslllon, as it has existed. was obvlonsly lnnwsslble. It does no good to the ltfenarcnv. to all that. 111: l/Ionarelyv stands for. or to that mystical Imperial unlty svm- bollzccl and -untll recently - strensthcned bv the Crown, to have the King of England the subjectbf cheap wlttteisms ln clubs mid Pull- man smokers. or to have his prlv- ate affairs vying with the Mlllar "stork derby" ln the pages of Am- erican newspapers. Nor is lt. an answer to say that most, of the things that have alp- peared lu Amcrk-an newspapers (we are not speaking of the better class of them) have been beneath rn- tcmpt. Beneath contempt they may have been; vet the truth remains thnt st-upld, ignorant. and contempt- lble as they have been, they have been read dallv bv scores of thous- ands of our people. with an aston- lshlnzly large number cf them ac- ccrflnir as gospel. We have hsatvl people retreat. iand evldrntlv b:- llrvc) thlmzs said by Unttcd states rmlo "commentators." this even lhotigh such tlrlnizs betrayed the cntary things in the Brltlsh Con- stltutlon. There ls scmethlng else. ‘The King of Emgland retgns; he does i‘ Well and Firmly Mode - ORANGE For Vitnlitu BRAHMIN E nor: TEA dlwaus use The Dominion above Act. and if you u‘ consult ollnlhll. CANADA PIIIIANINT Ollooo-Chnrloflowwn a King, not, a. gracious nutnmatmi, wireless-controlled by n mun-be: of other people who have a less clear sight; of what duty ls, Whit the needs....'l'kie more modem Ipirlts most appalling ignorance o’ elem-| see rapidly developlng_ the most forthright, direct-acting and at the some time human King ever known —the leader Britain needs m n world of -v'lgo1'm1a fast-moving dlc- tutors." And further: “Quldk as a dictator King Edward on Wednesday had brought to hlm in dlstressed South Wales the inln the Cabinet had dlsappolntedfexey Malcolm Stewart. resigned Commis- sioner for Special Are-u in England and Wales. He invited also the new Oommlssloner, sir George Mastic - man Glllett. "The King did not ask the Cab- lnet first, flashed his command to Stewart 1n London, who caught the next trnln. "The distressed areas had aigrlev- anco. The King went there. The mun who was going to help the dla- u-essed areas had a grievance, the King called-hlmwp to dine with him 1n his railway carriage. "Officially accompanying the King as ministers concerned, were boom- volced Ernest Brown, Minister of Labor, and stumpv Bl: Kingsley Wood, Minister of Health. "They were faced with the man they had been rkeeplng at arm's length. the man the Government had appointed as a. sop to agitators, political and poor, and politely pfg- eon-holed his too-energetic report." All thls ls nonsense-mfschevfous nonsense. The King of lmgland reigns within the Oonstltutlonand 1f or when he ceases tn abide by that Constitution, ceases to bake the advice and directlon of his re- sponsible Ministers. he ceases to be King. That issue was fought out and determined long years ago. Royal Blood In Europe (Frederlcton Gleaner) W. T. J. Gun gave a. lecture re- cently on "The Heredity of the lRloyal Castle” to fellows and mem- bers of the Eu ' Society Iii "l6 1" Society, Buxllnglton House, W., ln Umdon. The royal famlllea of imrope, he said, were mainly descen’ -' from princes of the old Gennanlc Emp‘re. but these were hardly German tn the modem sense. ‘They were best described as central European N"- dlc. The proportion of Nordic blood ln the caste might. be estimated as about three to one. The Protestant and Catholic aectlcns, whO dld not often infer-marry, formed the main dlvlslons, the former being muth more Nordic than the latter. There were five specially import- ant: groups from which the present royal fnmllles were descended: (l) ‘ J-Inpsburgztml-Iesae-Dann‘ stmdt; (3) Coburg; (4) Dmfahuand (5) Beauhnmals. (Three) mdffi) were able and (4) avenge. (2) "f? varied, able. but also eccentric. (1) definitely weak. The present. Brlt- lsh royal family had no descent from either (l) 0r (i). There were also certain unofllnlal duoents. for example, the M00111- fty of mo Emperor Poul o! masts not rule. Yet to an extraordinary who ought to know better, this truth Ls not. anpreclated. Tllvstrnt- lve of this. with its capacity for ltttln but lmrm, ls ‘the hllowlng comment from n promlnont. ‘Brltlah news-maizazlne. Cavalcade: "He (King Edward) intends l0 N number of people, and t1 many. and of the children o! Queen In- belln of 8min was very doubtful- Interunrrlqu within the caste. ithough sufficiently arose, were no’- ‘so dose u was sometimes mouthi- IIn the one of 109 roprestntirlve lndlvlduals, the parents of 58 were second cnualns or nearer. of M, more lnmotp~flnn.ooo@il1m|ln|. Oboe Waluvohndoovallablofocthalillingallonnnnndqfl. infill-In; 1B8 t-hoeomlngiprlngwolhollilho u. zillnformntlbsautothodovornnnnl ebb-hurl, unllnnluailspodflntimg ' noun-mayonnaise... u‘ "' Agyllllfilhlllldlmlfllltlifi it! Ilthofl llYllDlMll IZIGIGI CIIOIAIDI modern Brltllh lirmlro wants flld the ‘M Housing A; b fill-chainsaw- flail 00., Lmirizn anllllnnliln lntlmrrlajel wen now on flied:- arena. An aowint was given o! the duloenta d want monarch; o1- of remnant!!! of monarch.» Mm "I nwnl puma w. The present. British royal family derived chiefly 1mm the Duush group or 1mm swims with Very anulernirr- actor-Mica, but. there was 111 addit- lonthoOolmmshu-lmnndanex- lnlnely interesting I-mqulan des- cent on the std: o! Queen wry, thf: lut being the only non-Nordic descent. T0 A CAT NAMED BAUXlI When on our doorstep we k0- ered you mere was no mouth of h fil- tier About that. soft, oppreclnflfl F1 No malice in that tlmld llbt-b III- Even a. kitten might. deservn N claim Some honor fn a friendly domldlfi Flndlng a sort of mlaslon to fill-ill CBy living up to an illustrious mill- Poetlc Justice I suppose 1t wt! That. proved us more mflfllnlm" than wlse. Such lordly; airs, such far m!!! "5 vet aws cm only hm at. Genius in mulls Or show am chm-m h» '1'" been A virtue common to the Phlllflllllfl —Leslle Nelson Jennlrltls l" u" New York Sun. You Will Find a Host of GIFT Suggestions here at the PENSLAR Store Christmas u but I l‘: week: away and now hum“ um w m-ko w" "l" Drop In "If! Ill! "d “f the new Items we are flailing’ ally ldllllll ‘ll m" o ‘ ltook. We will be planed 1° P" ‘ any lllflhllll Y" It l: wanted. You wlll “m”, . prlnd at the tart! l!" - of goods to choose ffim- , 1:. 11. rosin can't-nan. DRUGSTORE