1_ CI_-I_ARLOTTETO_\VN ',_" ‘ h-‘IQLR The Charlottetown Guardian tm-stttt-nt lJt-uL-(trl. n. 011m»: s. ut-Luzu \1.-.-1-r..,n1.-111 .1 t1 11-11-11,“, 1-4.1 £1111." 11ml \l.1|t..>;||t|_- nth-run .1 Ii. Burnett l- J l. s tar, 1.11111 (1-1 n a 1111-1111-1111" o s. 0 1\\\|1l‘l.|lu t-Attturn tmnl. “ulhrr and u. h Curl-tn - 11.111; trout-den ma?» $11.00 per yeur (In advance) , ||| 111, s‘ llrl‘ yt-tu ttt- titlhlllrri mulled h Ltludrtl Ivl- 1| $31.00 tn-r year lln tuhtmeo) 5L1 led l0 ndu 111111 lmu-tl strut-n .\I().\D.\\', JUNE 31. I937 Potato Re-lnspecliun 1 s run 111111.. ~11 tllll l-e paid at "w-sl --t' ~ttr point-- shipper» \\.' 1 .1 t-l ears t-f pt-tztlt-ei ' . ~vtl sattstztctory i11- s s 1-111. \\he1't‘ this t . . s l :1:1-l it is sttggt-stetl t 1 1 t 1 : s I-t-tvtt-t-tt l'l'lll\‘(‘ '- tt-nztt- tnigltt itéte-{t 1-1 tut-let'- -11 itt this '-t-::"g1-1.l\ ‘Walt 1.ts<'- Is .-t surt-r. ‘ st 1 stttrtttt-n \\l1l.'it. i1\'t_\ t1 tht utspt-c- tw-tti-tlt-ttett in the ‘-»:s:t_t-p--111:etl itt this ss 1 tt-tmnts 11f |'l\l_'cr> as t-i an i11- "tetettt 1111:111- t‘ -‘ ' t l, l -v1"l.tn11 it is w .1 wsst-tl inspec- - ~11 1l-..-1t there i. .\1 attyl men‘ risk which. i J1 tttt-ivt‘ a proper itt-i 1 . ' ' 11' s --.1t 111' 5 ~ - - 1' 1- unfv ones 11111. ltztvc ~11 111 ()lt_.1\\:1 '1 st-tttzttives of. t-l‘ ~11 behalf of; \'. that time it li-ltvtrrl lsYut-l .1~11tl=11g _-1 m. ' 1'1ttt"_{<-\-t'rtt~ rtt vl< as" well. 2-» 1'1t- si:11:1'1--11. ."".;-t't-ss1<1tt l' ~ K ultwit his I‘ ' ' ~ ~ t -:‘1l‘1'/11t11.--1, thc t "1- tltrt-ttzttrs F Wterever it‘ 1 t ..< .-. ». -11' ot-ittitttl. lt s ‘ 1r. ' ~1- t .1t11'v‘.-1 t» willing t ~ ' p 11-111 though ulli l“ s 1 illt 1' vfncit pztcifists \ . t l.1"-ti;.11 lwl-t-lt‘ are l EntUlllU» 111.'ti\'t' tvitlt _ l'-1_\ .1l-lt~1' \\.'t1' tvith If s a .1. s '_' -t':-- hatt- l-t-ett (lis- l l -- l" our nrt-n t‘\t't' tztltt- 11p ~ t t ‘ t ~11 ;.-:1_\ tiittsions ttbt-ttt l‘ . ' . " .1 -' '- trt-l-t" the 11111-1 ugly 1 s ~ .- -. t 11- l-pittiott 111' the l‘ ' l ' ".1 t .' i'1< stop tv-tnt-s in l ' i ' ' t‘ 1'1 “it {ditt- {itv tvll-tvltllfl 1 l . :1.1- 11-11 sttrt. tl1:tt that 1: s a 1.1a. ztrkv. tltr-st-attt people lg. 1 t: vim-l tt- 11-1 per cent. Hf 1 ~ ltatt“ agreed t111ztni~ statesman ' ..1t111t-11t of policy, Tin-y nit-st 1141's :t1'e s11 ub- ..\t:..\1- 11.;111 can l1.1t'lll_\' l\'lltr\\' " 111‘ not. 'l'i1t-y agree that in tin-t aQt-t-t- that a tnart "1-"1111 tlh-tigllis while i11 tlte act tnztn. llttt. ltztvitr; gone all 1w :1r-__\<-1'_vntanytitt- 111:1jt-1'it_\‘ pro- luing to say, eirrtnttstances will we y» 11:111. , ft-llowittg tlte dictates ‘"~' c drivel-re. 111 t tel-l c-ltnpelletl to take tlte " ' ' :--:1 res-tit‘. Ilut ln-frtre he asks tlt- '19s ‘11- should also pllllll ottt t0 "- e t‘--t1s1'1|ttettt‘t:s of their act. It .1 possible (‘:tl\-:1r_v. the crucifixion '..1"~-ll. lt is 1111 argtttttent to say ‘t ~~--: 1.: 'i--11 would l-e so "inn 11 utttzlt‘. st- p its et-n-ptest. l’il:1tt~ :1ttd tln- 1'1 ‘t 1' rttlt-rs .1"1tl pro-st were impressed. hut 111-1 t'1--11;?1 z- s 1y '1 ~11" lrt-td. lt 1s just pos- thtt 1: :1 111.111 llr-epp-wl his uttn the tiger llllglll r1111 .tt-.:t_'.". lint the prt-l-ttl-tltties are the nlltel \\:t_\' .11.-1' the rt-ztl tpttstinn 11f the ttltst-lttte pzteiiist postttott is ttltt-tltt-t" one 1s ready to he eaten l-y tl1e llQ-‘l’ i111- el-nsciettet; sake, tr‘ fl-t‘ 1t r311» --i l--s-_-_. yt-tttht-r t‘ -1:n~-t tltentselves 1111-11-1" 1_- 1.1- (1 1111 :1 -~- ".1lt- Flidt‘ “tlttr stntptttltit-s" t-tittelttdes T/m I'm/rd Cht/rt/ttt-tt-t ztltt-t- rt-tit-wzttut-theraspectsof the |-1v-l-l~t11. "are :tl| \\itl1 the thing the pacifist \\:111'.s to llt- til-r we all it-zttlte and hate war as .\11tl we can conceive of tltttes sttunl by an 111- nutvlt 11s ltt- ll--t'~. when the dl-st-lntt- paw-fin tlzttdual 11...t l-t- :1 tmgttitteettt pvt-lest. Hut v.1 1:t1=t; 1: tit-t bring tittrst l\\'s to e-nntnentl that §t.11.-.l .1s .1 ]1.'11'll;111-i inst rttlt- :11 all titties :1ttd for tll p---1'.1. 'l his t11.'t\‘ be llttt- to :1 defect in our l.tl'.i1. <11‘ >11 11111111 11 ntztt l-t-tl1:tt.l1l\t-l%:tl:1a1n’s 5111-1-11 \~.< s11‘ dttftettltit-s tl1:1t ltztve escaped ti.» l-1-'l-.11-‘.s l.\.lill'l visit-it." A Cabinet Split? ."- '11s l-t-t-tt t.'1'.et1 he» l‘ ttttt-vwft-g ii true s the statement by the l. 1:<.-1tt‘--t'-~:~-1,-l-t-1t-ftltt- lrittattcial l"-~t that tin- t:1t-.1-l-.11.i-l- -. goon :11 the imperial (1-11- fH-pt-H- “H. .5.l.: 11-1 :l11_~ tptt-sti-nt nf tw-ttet-rlittg to the 1~vn1~ t1.‘ tlt- ptw-pt-s-tl ,\t1:lt-~.\tne1'iean ‘rtt-le 11-11-1111-111. l’1.t11- 1-1 tltt- l t-ttiert-ttee, the l"it1:1t:-"i;1l lV-st ltzt-l first to stale. 1111 1;-.-\1;1111l,t\ pin-ll :u1ti1t-r1t_v. that l'1"i1111~ .\li11istt-r \"-;".\<nrit- lvittg \\11lllll ;1-'t :1~ 11-.~ tllt _"l..'\tt‘\ .11‘ .11t-l1 :1 treaty". Xntt- it set-nts tltat -- liit- ‘INT ‘li-tistt-r llnttttittg, \\'llr1 is fact-d with l-- t-rr-vilwl prnl-Uttts t-f tre ltrttjwtilttttg, the nw-p- <~l 1-1'1's1-ttt"etl greater rllliettltitts. :1ttd that rlwhfdlliltl h“. unavoidable during these tnontlts, which \\'.1s.‘t.'11;1t-11 :1tlt11i1tistr:1tit>11 in urging the lwett trying for all concerned. there ltas lteett an to the United States, which his leader was pre- pared to tnake as a gesture itt the direction of "economic appcasentent." Extttttittatittn of the precis of the proposed .\nglu-.\1nericat1 agretrtttettt. s.-1_vs the Post's cor- respondent, revealed to the Cattadiatt delegation tlte extent of the United States de1n:1tttls.t'or a share of the Uttited Kittgdottt tnarkel, now so largely reserved to Dominions” products uttaler the t lttatva agreements. tine of the ntajor requests ntadc by \\'::.sh- ingtt-tt was for equality of treattttettt in the United KillgLlUlll tnarket ft-rfl\111eric:1t1 lumber and frttit. etl not that it be given nterely a restriction of the preferential entry now enjoyed by Canada. but that the prcfcrrnrl.‘ on t/tesr fret) mttjur rt-tttutolli/ics be ref/ted on! vnlirrft‘. lit-fore tlte United States and the United Kittgtlotn can enter into any arrangements whicl would disturb the existing status of Cattatlittxt l preferences in (ineat Britain it tvill he necessary H-m m_ 1 tl-r those two cottutries to approach Cattzulzt. lhed “hm! he “'35 17- A 5'91" 1MP!‘ I t\ l 5 ‘l.\ntl Canada will insist upon a suitable quid }pro lpt-r. The sttttation, says the Post writer, is 1111C W, t irttttultt witlt grave dtiftcttlties and the neet-tizt- t - s I tit-ns between the Littitetl States :1ttd the United 1l\'1t1;_~l--111 :1ttd the tntetllary ttegtgtizttitttts with l Latin-lit tnust inevitably‘ be turolt-ttgetl. Unt- tlttng is lacking in the Post writer's suin- tnztry of the situattr-tt. That is the fact tlte llrttislt delegates were t10.1n--t't- f.'t\'tu';tl-l_\ ntclutetl than .\lr. Dttttning tt- scrap tTtt: ztdtatttztges of litttpire prelerettces for the bene- ttt 1-1 1111- United States. .\lr_ Mackenzie King . mm p hum‘! ~<‘t'ltls 11- have been the only one not eoneertttth \\'lll'| retaining these gltl\t'llllilg(‘>. lle regard.- "ee-ttt-ttttic lntperiahsnt" with dist: '. That is what be cttlletl the lintpirc meterettce pI-ltcv wlten it was initiated by his ptetleet-ssor, 1'11»! tnier llennett. to tall it to the end of the eltztpter. and that is what he \\ill ctnttttlttt‘ 'l‘h:11 'his iactt-r itt our trade recovery, is seentittglt of less intp-trtztttet’ to .\lr. .\l:1cl<e11zie Kitty; than the iact that i-t is ittsepztrztltly Jl~>L|ClillCIl wttlt the reputatit-tt of his political t-ppullettt. Editorial Notes f ./' Scapa Flow, 1919. ‘ i U Q Coronation Day. 1911; _lttl1ilee Day. 188,". it l‘ i ln a letttr to .\lr. D. A, .\lztcl\'innon. Session clerk. Dr. R. Mnorheatl Legztte. St. _I:11ne~" tuhttrclt. states that his ttttcle in Urt-heda. (1111111)! i Dr-tvtt. has (lecided not to resign front ltis pttrislti for attotlter year. l\'ev, D13 Xlt-orhea-l is '15 _\e:tt's oi ztge. been an ordained minister for l-t‘ tears, and tninister of Drohcda for 1-1 _veat'<. lle is still hale and lteartv. and as viguvotts l1tulll_\' :1ttd tnentally as one a tptarter of a cen~ lttry younger. u u a lt is evidently not safe for a drinltittg t11:tt1 to pass through Alontreal en route ltonte 11-1111111-11; (‘ttrt-ttatit-tt, if we are l11 judge hy the ettst: 11f‘ tierald .\u.stin I\'0\\'o11, Rea Lake. Ontario. lle \\'.'l.~' itt .\l--tttreal witlt ltis" wife on retttrn front la-ttdon. standing in front t-f a ltt-tel when he was seizellhy a number of men :1ttd placed 1:1 :1 retreat for ltttl-itttztl drunkards 1111 the order of his wife, lle appealed to the Superior Lfourt, and .\lr. justice Curran in ordering lll\ release said it was a case for faintly cottncil, not con- tittemettt. at n- r 1n an effort to seal the ranks of tlte Social Credit party in Alberta which ltas been split wide open for ntotttlts rc-ttttiott pledges were distributed at a (iovernnteut cau- cus and ntailed to Opposition tnentlters. The pledges wnuld bind ntetttlaers to stand beltind the Social Credit planning board of the Legislature and its technicians. They would hind tnetnlters to avoid “recrimittziitvtts of the past and provoca- tive utterances in the future" The party rttttlt-s would be united only if o0 per cent. 0f the 1111-111- bers of the Legislature signed pledges. but members of the Social Credit board said they" were confident this quota would be exceeded. “l am hopeful a vast ntajority- of the tncntbers will be signed," said Glen MacLacltlzttt (S. C. Coronation), chairman of the board. i It t The Aherhart budget passed the Alberta Leg- islature after Social Credit ntemhers united to swamp a non-confidence ntotion directed against the (jovertttttent by Liberals. Indicating a 1111i.- ed front itt the Government ranks. the ltutlgtrt. which almost led to the defeat of the adtninistva- tiotl and cattsed adjournment of the Legislature in April, slipped through with a ntinittttttn of (liscussion and without a recorded (livisit-n. Several leaders of the insurgent movement. who were loud in their attack on the budget in April. were absent when it finally passed. At that time. they criticized the taxation increases and 1t- tackerl its orthodox form which they claimed ltrttl no relation to social credit ntottetary principles .\lr. E. Tremblay (Lib, Grouartl), proposed the nott-cottlidettce tnotiott, enlisting the support of all Liberals, Conservatives and jantes llztnsen (SC. Taber), who was read out of the Social Credit Party last winter, The vote was 40-7. - a Lord Bcaverbrook during the war gained dis- tinction, place and power as the result of his uttirpte skill as a first-class propagattdist, livi- detttly his hand in the interval has lost none of its cunning if he be credited with the respons- il-ility for the official press publicity of the Duke t-f Windsor, as the following announcetnent shows: “The Duke and Duchess of \\'1'ntlsor wish to take this opportunity of expressing to the jottrrtalists their appreciation of the courtesy which has been for the most part shown to them in unprecctlented circumstances. They would like it tn he on the record that although inac- curate statements and reports seem to ltave lteett lt:1\-'e evident willingness to contradict them. .\s re- gards the future, the Duke realizes that anv :1t- l'|t|\'|)lI(‘f'(‘ of secrecy is lllli-‘lllsf-‘lflt-Vl’ :1ttd will ttltvavs be prepared to supply any news of int- ltt other words. “Xtshittgton has ask» p 111.11 . ' adrift in a world where at his best - or some ttttkerttt: with the currency policy‘ was Canada's slteet-ancht-r during the de- , .5 1- ' , ' . . . . _ . I zimmlul mum prt s1--1t,t1at t1 tottttnttts to in tltt 111--t 111-11111 Notes B_y_lhe Way away Zeolit- ot " lBours An aged and dodderlng gentle- ntun was on the Witness stand m a case involving the inheritance 01 a goodly attd long-litigated estate. lt- vtets necessary that the tact 0t the existence or non-existence of other ltezrs than the old gentleman‘ be es- tabttslted. "Have you ever had any brothers or sisters?" asked the at-. tomey who conducted the direct ex- l - I gipcttatéltptt. l‘; netfir had p) Lsistler," by Jqmg} w. barren, IfLD. ct c o en eman. “ u \- our tn-otners-g-g-ts may brother! sififi APPENDlClTls svtnrroms _l1vntg?" "No, be is dead." “When EVEN AFTER APPENDIX HAS‘ ldid he die?" "About, about-let's BEEN REMOVED l l 1 1 out. 1 see-it was about one hundred and ——~—— ;f1fty ytears ago." "I asked you-you ' mtet lmve misunderstood me — I lfwlivfl .\'0u when your brother died?" had a printed sign across his ab- ‘"A11d I told you about a hundred dome-n which read, “In case 0f and fifty years ago." "The witness accident ptease do not cut out my ‘may ltave the right. to set himself‘ append»;- 11 has been removed ‘right, tf possible," said the Judgal three flnlxs alreadyy t ."\Vr l. your honor, my father mar-‘ what atom these individuals : who had .the'1- appendix removed: f Tlte child cited within three months, §“‘:el§:fc-‘iti§§m1 m“ attacks of fafillerthi-hlaliiizitiiidgleauntlifug:i DThere is no question but that.» Woman to whom I was born a‘ yeai.‘ nattsezrand vomtltng pant 1n the later I am 1to\v.95 years of age", aplwnmx region occum .m.a. mm‘ , After profttse apologies the examln- ‘lldhrflble hhmb“ of ‘ndwlduals 3110f} p1~o¢e9;t@d__g;x_ whose appendix has been removed. l I And they will toll you that the pain and other sytnptonts are similar, What is it that gets on the work- to those which they suffered be- , e1" mtnd and makes 111111 dream of‘ fore the ttptaettdix was remved. < la fairer and tnore decent world? Dr. M. Feldmatt. Baltimore. inj The mere fact that he ltas 10 work Radiology tthe Xray mawazinet ; with his ltttnds and earn his lving {@115 of (Inpounlpfing a 1mg? “pm. lhl’ thf 5\\'£‘f\i 0f hi5 b1‘0\\"-’ N03 B! her of adult patients whose appen- ail. No wottlrv tnztn feels aggrieved dfx had been renynfpd 5993.159 or because he has to work for a living. pavmq hm a number of attach of The real trrttble 1s the feehngpof appommms ‘chmmc ap-pgndicitasl jhelttlossttcss. of tnsecttrtty‘. of being ms“, W, m“ had mo" apppmp ic"is svmntoms. Naturailv the patient may won-l tier if ttppcttrllx were really re- moved. or whether there are ad- heslons llitttnz wall of abdomm and eovrrinu of the organs st‘ck- in’: tMrthr-rl or whether there ls‘ a pazfil! (rbstruction present, "A thorough toainstaktttg Xrav examination o‘ thr- stotttaelt smal“ intestine. gall bladder. large intesq tine. and. it‘ necessary‘. of the l(l’l-‘ neys and bladder also, should be made in every sttstx-vted case of; chronic appt-ndiruts. ‘ In a study of 115 cases of so-eall- 0d chronic appendicitis. follnvvint." the removal of the attpenrlix. the Xray emu lton showed ‘other conditions — soonsible for tbc- sytnptonts in stotnaz-lt and intes- tines. Peptic ulcers rulerrs of the E. H. Burttman». 111 lns diocesan Iet- stomach and 5mm‘ imsstinv’ WW6 _ ._ , Able for 36 wrcottt- gall tor for April det-larr-rl: ‘It 1s a mad t ‘mpom V _' ' u-nrlct No wonder babies refuse to‘ bladder nollbk‘ rm 2" lwrcml" and be born into it. Htnuan folly con-l kidney find blam-"f "hum" f” 5 tntucs: to pile up ntotttttains of sor- l lwwfm- rotv for the lnnnan race. Europe isl Rmhemh" “W” °h5°$ W”? _°_hl supposed to be the tnost enlightened , m‘ (‘hwhlh 95'" °I flllllfhfllfhli pat-t of thn-tvorlrt but it now ap- 1 "Pl the Klimt‘ 91M’ WhPYP- if "PF"- pt-ztt-s tnore like a s11 ride club on at "Oh l5 h"! DPThlfmPll in time. the large scale than a culture looking Patient may die. with confidence- to a distant future. It is gratifying then to know that Herr in Attsstralta we dope ourselves‘ the Xray examinatktn of not only with sport and amusemcttt and the stomach and intcstntr-s but o! catnblttt: to enable tts to forget. the gall btadqiptg kidnpy; and 1-195]. T11: stop us from thinking about dor is nnvv lx-‘nc more tzanr-"allv dbrttlfevable lhltttzs. but they are used before oporattntz on those Oltlt’ ltlfqe-Sffl Pvflfillf’ which ht-‘W cares of sit-called chronic. appen- t-hv maturity of ctttzons from t-aktnz dtx, anv srrtotts interest in the urcent ta-"orw-nts of c tlzt-nshipfi-Austral- inn News Letter. A honorous story of about 10 years back lsof the individual who his w fe bore him a child and died effort. his fidelity and his industry mav no! avail to sate h m. He may be frugal attd industrious be- yottrl all nteasttre: but 1f a depress- tnn. a war. a sittntp in foreign trade close.- the tat ' where he works, 1t1r1t 1s vat-v little lte can do about 1t “Calgt y Albertan. There are few unmixed blessings. Vvtt-tupeu raised 84.000 b_\' holdmg a zaa-day". $110111‘ tt on otltntz the mos- quito grounds. Then eatne ltcavy rams that washed tho oil away but y left Alanttolta with improved crop [)!'O;ll(‘L'l*. Almost a question of hav- iutz both ntosqutocs and wheat. or ltztvtnc neither-or having another tag-tiay.—Ex. The Bishop of Goulhurn lRl. Rev. The fart is that world trade. has th" habit of 201F111 largely by British bottoms. that British ships and Brit- ish crows lmvc t1 rt-ptttrrton for statntcltttess ttntl stability that are asset's" of immeasurable value in eztrpo eotnpc-titiott. British sh p- bttllditttz. itt the doldrttms for some post-war years. 110w is enjoying 1:::.';1"1::.‘.1. tfritr; ‘t’... :11"... ‘ill? ;P,*;;§;;§";f-§, plote the absence of discipline rm “Sgt-l, Emma ‘Cad- “Though among the crews of many American g m as a mmd‘ ‘ slntvs, the lack of respect shown to The “on c0 chm h v _ v offzeors and bv officers to their sup- In barren Sacks htlsegffibfzlvsthe‘ ertt-rs. Recently a tvr ter tn an lm- He part5 me ca ms V. h l ._-l ‘ I pottant United Stat-es magazine He stares M m: as 2m’ bl}? Paw proved rather conclusively that the ‘ 3° 3' ' American merchant marine was in “a had tvtty” for other reasons than the lessertittg number of its ships.- Ottavvtt Jnttrnal. IN WASTE PLACES As a naked man I go He would pay upon my trade If he tltottgltt I was afraid! If he knew my ltardyt face __ Vetls the terrors of a maid. He rises tn the night-tune. and He stretches forth! He snuffs the alrt t He roars! He leaps along the sand! He creeps! He watches everywhere! There may be a lot of Babbflvy about the service clubs. but they are a sign of the times and have contributed much to the commun- lty life of the present day. London, as well as every other clty in Can- ada. would be poorer wlt-hottt the sort" ce clubs. They are a recogni- tion of the fact that the business man of today realizes that. he is his brotherls keeper and has a respon- sibility for the underprivileged. the sit-‘c and the indigent-London Free Press. Hts burning eyes. his eyes of bale 'I'brougl't the darkness I can see! He. lashes fiercely with his tail! He ntakes again to spring at tne! I am the lion, and h s lnlr! I am the fear that fright/cits me! I am the desert of despair! Anal the night of agony! Night or day. whateer befall, I must. walk that. desert land, Until I dare my fear. nnd enll The llon out m lick my ltand. Tlu- bill signed recently by Gover- nor Lelnnatt permitting women to serve on juries adds this state to twenty-two odters which already have siml ar provisions It is a step forward tn the interest of a better turcragc of intelllgettce and prouity in talesmen and marks at. least, a partial victory tn the long struggle carried on by women's organ zattons and by women legislators for com- plow: actuality before the law. Bar 8550C ations have approved the change and, one by one, inertia of the Slates ts being overcome tn the interest of progress.—New York Herald Tribune. . _-Ja1nes Stephens. son o! boofleg sales. b1... bct-nttse, In some cases, only wholesale prices are available. The Temperance Ad- vocate. however, uses the avnllnbc dam to arrive at a fttlrly accurate computation. and its flgttre for the year 1936 (twelve months tn the case of each province, but. not the calendar year; ls $154.132.440. The Advocate does not. glve this on a per caplta basis, but. it appears to mean an average of about $14 a year for every man. woman and clttld tn the Domtn on. Or, on the assumption that. little ls consumed by those under twenty. lt. would mean an average of $24 spent on llquor by everyone over nineteen.- Toront-o Star. G. Albert Haskima of l-‘all River, Mass, was surprised when a dele- gation nf neighbors and elty offic- tnls waited on him and gave hm a medal. The call and the token rec- ognized his services tn keeping his sidewalk scrupttlottsly’ clean for slx- teen years. Mr. Haskins modesty depreciated his record. He felt that. he had done nothing but. his duty. That ts very true, but, when duty of this sort. ls so generally stacked, he who does ‘t. faithfully and wall stnttcts out from the common herd wtttt something of the Aura of greatness-Minneapolis Journal. It may he that the success of the airplane has prepared us for craft to travel at n speed of seven mlles n second-the mtnlmttm required to escape the earths gravitational grtp—and reach the moon tn about. ten clays. And tt may be that. so many "tmposstbttltlea" have crowd- ed upon us-mot. on pictures. radld. televtslon—that we are ready for anythlttg noun-New York Times. poison: and wuh undo-yu- nat In lficly alluring, he. At the Int |||n 0| Brhoy lirblc own eongtlfillly to D061’: Klfiuy l-kr on! I a century I The amount spent by Canadians "bun-d" B”, "Hfi" ‘H upon lntoxtcntlttg liquors ls not ens- te s11--11_:_'_v tt-sistttl the prt-pusetl concessions pnrtance concerning tltc Uttcltess and ltitttsclf." l port recorded that. both ‘ casion. refused to return to duty ‘ piece. ‘ft ‘s Great Writ-tin ar-cm-tl- Dodcf: Kidney Pills‘ lly contputed-and th a not by rea- Where Lies The Truth Globe and Mall As iltttstratton o.‘ the confusion out. of which ltistory ls sometimes perhaps too frequently. writ-len- there Ls the controversy over whether or not the Canadtm troops refused to stay and fight the Russians at Arebanzcl in 1919. A report or a. series of them just released from the files of the State Department in Washington provide the origin of the feud. Minutes from secret meetings of the "Big Five" tn Parts have Lloyd George on record as telling his colleagues that “Canada has decided to withdraw her troops because Canadian soldiers would not agree to stay and fight. the Russians." The United fiates Charge zTAffairs at the Russian French and American troops had. on oc- at the front. Prom Ottawa Captaln John Hundevad. a. British officer at Archangel. exonerales the Can- adians. Giving detatls of the dis- tribution of the forces. he declares that discontent among French and United States troops led to ovaettation. and that on one 0c- easion the Canadlansharttoshelt these revolters while entzaged with the Reds. There is attotlter version of tnuelt earlier date. The chronicle-r is intpartlal, He relates that the troops nmved from_ the Western Front after enrlv association with the "White Russtans." recognized the situation as an unhr-lv mess. As earlv and added disrouratre- n-ent there- tvas the mall from Rnzland re-rountinc the Arm-slice scenes in Hlieht-v. The allied forces derided thev nrcht hotter For Vitality always 11“;- BRAHM ORANGE PEKOE IN? TEA Bookkeeping systems ggression against peace in the world shall not plunge civilization into chaos. “ltave done with the intposstlxle.“ sroner than later. l It ls pnssfbk‘ that amnue thci half-donut t-“ttntrir-s rnnrcrttcd there are at least several other vervons of what occurred. No. doubt the files in the Brulsh Ivar Office :1ttd. tot-titans those nt nttntvn have something tn eon- trtbttfe by wav of cnmnlirating or rtearlmz up tho disntttc. And if the Canadian Government told Lloyd Gertrzr- what he is allcaed tn have said he was told. there should be a record. We sustts-ct that he. as the lnst of the “H?! Five." the source of the astwrslons and a writer of tvar historv has somethintl to say The nntnl to he tnade. hrtvever, is that somehow thr- rvr-r-rrh should be put strnutht and wit-h 1t a lot of other contra- dictory data about the war. - . "rttatttfs Stand Vancouver ‘Province Amour: tfno friends o’ the Loamto of Nations. at least among the nomlnal ‘fiends r-f the frame two distinct voices are to b» lteard, Ono nrofnttnrllt- M- crets that this rzreat nrlvetttttre in irtealis-n has fallen so far short of ‘is aim The other hart-‘os 911p fp- trret. if it ls retreat. with the jibes and flonts and Sheers of re- rritttinatintt. Nothing will do those r-t-tltrs-sanrl the-rc- arc- a few of tbs-m tn Cattarta-ttttlcss Great Brttnitt ls made thr villain of the lng to thl: net-verse thr-orv. that has Fimtallt- failed the Icnvt-r. It ts Great Pritain now. at the Im- perial Conference ln London ac- r-nrdln: to the latest version nf this perverdtv. that 1's sabohnltttz tvhatmtcr hope remains ln the Learztte. It l= useless tn dentin" with thew People to call the rnll and cit!- the chronicle. but. thrv must not he nlwwed nevertheless to p0 unchecked tn their slanderous and mischievous cottrse. ‘The fact ls that the Tram-n has P-"vt as far as lt has failed. not by any lvfrtwrv‘ activated m- rondortorl bv (‘rent ‘Britain. Prom the bemnrtirttr the honest friend and prlnelunl snnnnrter of the Learute ha: tmi-n Grrtnl. Prltnlrt The Covenant has been retrav- M‘ Y" but nnt bv Great Britain. Sanction: have fnllerl! Yo; b111, not tbrrattso Great Britain dld not ltottc=tlyt attempt to rally I111.- mr-mbm- nations of the Ietvute on the side of sanctions. Collective srrufitv. ht- way nf a Lea-rm- tn arms to surmort the obllqattons of the Covenant. ls no louver a realistic uollcy on tho starv- of world policy/l. It. is as true as trttt- can be, and lamt-nlablv trut- -~httt it. ls not. tho doing of Britain. ff there were nnthinc- else to snt- ln refutatton of this caltnnnv that Great Frltain has betravcrl the 101112110. there l: thfls; that Great Btdtaltt led t-‘m world in the experiment of disarmament. Great Flrltain lo-l u.» t----'-= the effort to guarantee collective secttrllv 1w n nrorzreuttti- hpfltjvjz "7 sown-s info pruning hnolu-and 3 No policy townrdsthe ‘ulure of the Icazue! But there is no League remaining in the original conception of a ‘world council l chamber of the nafions. Japan ‘ and Germany are gone. otttrtght. and Italy ls gone in all but of- . ficial withdrawal. The United 1 States has never been in. - If the voice of Cattada is now l without authority to avert war or compel international justice-to prevent a conquest of Manchurla or Abyssinia. to confine the flres of Spain so that. they do not. set Ettrope afire-t-hen something else must be done. Great Britain ls attempting tn do it. She ls at- tempting to do still what lt was once the hope of men of goodwill in the world that. the League might accomplish. Mount Of Olives (Exchange) A proposal that the slopes o! the Mount of Olives outside Jerusalem should be taken over by the Govemment of Palestine and preserved as a national trust for all time has been made by Pro- fessor Norman Bentwtch. former- ly ntrbcrrrtey-goneral of Palestine, in an anttcle contributed to the London Times Jerusalem at present. is tinder- going n building boom and some 0f the buildings are no ornament to the world's most venerable cfty. Dttrtng the lagf thru- years. says Professor Bentwtoh Jerusalem has grown on everyt side. save the ease. when the gorge of the Ktdron and the steep ascent of the Mount. of Olives and Mount Scopus still afford a precarious check on the activities of the speculative bttlld- er. It may be hoped that the check will be effective tong enough for the reallzwtlon or a plan to acquire the unbutlt-on area of these slopes as n park for the city. Jerusalem must be, the only Important. capital without a park ;and tt ls strange that, while the many religxaus and philanthrcptc bodies of every creed and people are concerned to endow it with institutions which only appeal to a section, none of them has yet. had the tn- Splration o0 endow it with a garden for the whole populatlo. _..__.._;____ Another Gain (Fvedertcton Gleaner) Reference has been mfldg w me Showtnw by t-h-s 1201111111011 tn the trealm of external trade for the first four nwntlts of this year, a5 a holding of the gains rogisbemd during 1936. Another recent re- 11101-1. from Ottawa shows that the same t-rend wns stilt operative 10;- tthe fifth montth of 1937 as re- gards the export of commodities from Canada to other countries. The total value of Canadian pro- duct-s sent. abroad durtmz the month of May was sosasrrssa. an increase of $15.6'l7.6m over May 1936. In this export. business. decllnq were shown by both when and her people are feellrte the conse- quences today tn the heaviest. b"r'*"r~ cf tnxttVr-n to pay the SHERLOCK HOLMES WAS A STUDENT OF TOBACCOS BUT IT DOES NOT REQUIRE A SPECIALIST T0 DETECT THE QUALITY AND RICH FLAVOR OF ONE OF THE ISLAND'S HICKEY and cheese. but Increases which more than off-set that, drop were Show" to all other principal commodities: K. S. llEMMlllG, Certified Public Accountant and Auditor Profit and Loss Accounts Computerl Trustee under the Bankruptcy Act Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statement, and Reports Prepared. Administration of Estates a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. 88 Great George St Charlottetown, P. 1-2.1} prlce of rearmiimentfso‘ that. the’ 8.1.. c.1=.1.,~e.e.1fl installed or revised netvsprtiifsreatsfitahtrs ‘ am boards. copper and IIIPKOI 31' showed marked increases both tr quantity and n1 price. ‘ In this not-ed revival of tt-orlc trade. tn which Canada is shay. in: lg such a ntarkcd degrc-g d“, regard must be had, of cottrse, tr, seeking to find causes for the er. fects 0f the armament boom Bow directly and indirectly the 1am sums that. are being 51mm bv nit. lions or the world in building u; "defensive" vquipmettt affect the markets. Thus it l5 quite p0$5lb1£ that, there are grounds for tn. more pessimistic interpretation o; the present satisfactory conditiom 35 Tfsllhfl "P011 an artificial base That lurking spectre in the back~ ground will not, prevent. of course all possible efforts being put tour to take advantage of the oppor. tunttles for increased sales otter- ed. But it might be to thr- baits-fat of all concerned if the om optimistic view does not become too prevalent. Efforts might. 11-1-11 be ‘directed towards thr- consoli. datton of existing markets. and tthe avoiding of commitments- and expansions that might- not hq Justified by future developments Surely the world has hart an mitt too recent lesson in what 113111“; when a boom collapses. ___________ tsvefiititi EXAMINATION Fitting and Sunptytng Glasses Etc. ll. J. MABON OPTOMETRIST MONTAGUE, P. E. I. Office Connected With Drugstore | Ale You Troubled With LUMBAGO on SORE BACK If rm we have one of 1hr lu-st remetllen In offer. funnel)’ BACK RITE TABLETS Especially offer-the fur lnnt- bnin, lclulleu, Ilrnrltin. 't ntnnettlnr and other rheumatism which lrnnlmentl lull to rent-h. PRICE ‘PER. BOX 45c DR. L. B. EVANS Every person Ivlm In truttltlt-d wlth nxcrunlvo (an ln the 11111111- neh and hnwoln nltonlll Kef R lmtlla- n! E1111": Ntuttttteh .\||\- tnro anal nee how qulekly ll will rrllevo nll (lintrrnnlltg nymp- Coma. Sllnrp pnlnn In tltr- nlrtltnttrll or about the heart are oflnttlun entirely to Inn urea-lure. Evnnn Stimuli-h Mixture-taken at mettl time, nnt only ltrruutl! all hurl rffreln. n-nm_ Inns. lv-If Ilnn promote- the funellntltll uellvlty 0f nu- llnmnell. its-m IHIPIIIIIII 11ml Improve the lllpelltr. nlt. l.. It. l-‘.\'.\N.~" s'ro\l\l‘ll MIATITIE IS SOLD l).\'|.\ AT Tlllfl" 2 MACS DRUG. 511""; \\'RITE FOR UNI". Tl)-li.\\ PRICE 8M‘ THE TWO MACS ‘ » i CHARLOTTETON‘?! P. 0. BOX. 5l2—l'hnne 7H5- MOST DISTINC TIVE PRODUCTS Black ntcttotson Twist 10o Chewing m1; Tobacco YOUR TASTE WILL TELL THE TRUTH CIIARLOTTETOWN