in: BHARLOTTETOVIII annulus "gamut-av cum: s Hail-In. a w} ‘fllowalnrr-l-lslt -CoI. - Morning Duly (Iouulld llli) 51111; POPPY APPEAL 53in Flanders fields the poppies blow." fire years g0 by. and the maimed and crippled soldiers in the Red Cross shops grow fewer, but still the story of the poppies oi the Grsat Wdr does not stale. They grew anfld the guns and the debris oi that immense conflict; they flower- edglong the roads that led to death, and were brave and splendid in their blogiming above the sodden graves Qf old the sybmol oi Oblivion; we haie taken them for the flower oi Reienibrance; for a sign and token that we have not forgotten... They come to be associated with our de®est thoughts on Remembrance Dali, and the wearing of a poppy on that occasion has become one of the sacred privileges oi citizenship. tliciannual Poppy Sale is being held today and tomorrow. In stores or on ihqsireet they may be oozained, and every citizen, young and old, should puryhase one and wear it proudly and reverently. It Ls such a simple thing to do; yet it means so much to the men whose fingers lovingly fashioned it, and to their comrades and dependent: who are in need oi thelasslstance which the proceeds oi this campaign will provide. r1112 PICTURE 11v B. c. In the course oi his address st the annual meeting oi the Kings county Conservative A iatiou orr Wednesday, Hon. J. A. McDonald, MP. noted that in Nova Scotia and British Columbia the electors have already become disgusted with Liberal rule and that before m. other year the same condition will prevail in Saskatchewan and On. tarlo. In each oi these Provinces Lib- eral elections were won by “p103. ing the world depression and on Plpmises utterly impossible oi ful- riiniehz. The dissatisfaction with the Mscdonald Government iri Nova Bcotis is pretty well known here. The British Columbia situation is "l!" illmmtd "P in an Ottawa e:- changer ‘when British Oolinnbis elected s Iiiberal Government a couple of years ago, put info office Premier Pattulio and his bright young msn, the vwvinco m. back and waited f0!‘ tho miracles. Mr. Patiuilo hsd P"9m1=°d met things- riia prede- Wflvrl had been extravagant and kl ud lentils Dlfnnton-J s Asoonlsto ldlfOrI-lflnli Wlllor all D j Curtis. ll 00 per you (In advance) dsllvuod, ‘till per you ill udvunne) mulled in C FRIDAY, NOVEMBER. l, ‘IBM. l’. Vin-Incident. J I Burnett. I11, D A - llllsl. ll I 0 Iirloll. I‘ J l. anode and United Shins. follow upon the destruction oi s free press in thus countries." EDITORIAL NOTES Ccrtainiy this Province has held the liflwllsht on the front page this week. ‘Ihere was Judge Arsenault! oyster stunt in Montreal; Mr, A. P. M¢R8<¥s $5.000 tom tortoise-shell cat k011i 01101‘?! Vnlbyi Ind Mr. H. H. Shaw's "Self Help" address as President of the Canadian Educa- tiori Association in Toronto. A" “Pills will bc put up for suc- tion st the Canadian National Hotel here on apple. Saturday. November l’! It 8 p.m. by Provincial cam. missioner Warren. Reserve bids may be made in advance to Pro- vincial Secretary-Treasurer- R. 0, Parent. The first received has been $5.00. The news feature of the October apple days in Ontario was the sale during an suction on the steps oi the Prince Edward Hotel, st Wind- 5°1'- by Commissioner Col. E. S. Wiglc of one apple for"8l00.00. It was bought by Wallace R. Camp- bell oi the Ford Motor Company of Canada. Another sppls was sold to Mr. Harry Gignac at $50.00, and 0M 101' $30-00 to Mr. Ben Kov- insky. A number were sold st $10.00, and ten brvught a total oi $360.00. Regret is heard on all sides at the announcement that Hon. John A. MacDonald, M.P., has decided to retire from public life at next elec- tion. I-lc enjoys the confidence and esteem oi the whole community, and notwithstanding the storms and stress of political controversy has never been known to "hit below the belt," or to descend to unfair tactics in handling sri opponent. Mr. MacDonald has an unsullled reputation, and is respected by pol- itical friend and foe alike. Senator George P. Graham, Mir. " “ King's right hand man in the Senate has no illusions about the “rightness" of Mr. Ben- nett's action in accepting Mr. Stev- en's resignation. Addressing the 20th Century Club in the King Edward Hotel, ‘Ibronic, the sen- ator said: "Cabinet solidarity is absolutely essential. The safest way is to let the prime minister do the unri icing and the minister the endorsing. No cabinet minister has ivotes By [he Way 0h Mllllflly the Judge sitting at the Cambridge Assiaes was duly re- ceived by the Vice-Ch llor and Jeads of Houses, and d y listen- ed to the regulation nve minutes sermon by which the opening oi the Assiscs is habitually preceded. The judges have strong views on the duration or this discourse. "If you preach for five minutes," one o! them said recently to the om- cistlng clergyman, "I shall consider it a good sermon; ii you preach for seven minutes I shall still list- en; if you preach for ten minutes I shall commit you for contempt of courts-London Spectator. As restrictions upon the circula- tion of gold coins became more and more rigid, the notes still represent- ed gold and in theory, at least, the holder of the notes was the holder or owner of an equivalent value in gold. Now, with the nationalizing of gold. even the theory has been abandoned. Governments, entrusted with the safekeeping oi gold, have appropriated it by law in the name of emergency and public wel- fare. Not the rioteholders but the governments became the owners of the gold, the governments doing nothing more to cam this right than to store the gold and print the paper money-Jinancial News. The sum of the matter is that under present conditions the French Canadian stock oi the Dominion is rapidly overhauling the British in point of numbers, and, in the ab- sencs oi a revival of immigration, is bound to exceed it within a ceri- tury. It may still st the end oi that period remain a minority oi the total population, but it will be the increase oi the European Con- tinental stocks in the West which will have kept it in that position. It is not within the province oi this article to attempt any ap- praisement of the political, social and other consequences of such a developme as is iorecasted in ic- gard to Canada's population, but obviously they cannot fail to be oi far-reaching importance both for Canada and the British Common- wealth-Tha Nineteenth Century. The tendency oi women who have passed their youth to under- state their age is a never-failing foundation oi humor. But when the allotted three score years and ten have pased there is an opposite tendency. It is not merely to qual- ify for old age pensions that claims of extreme old age are made. Men aspire to reach the century mark. The Registrar-General of Scotland reports that out of thirteen alleg- ed centeriarians only flve succeeded in proving their oases. In England old Parr is said to have lived 152 years, 01d Jenkins t0 1'10, and in Elizabeth's time it was said that Thomas Cara lived to the ripe old age of 207. The system of register- ing births was not in working order until i837 and records beginning before that time need to be ex- amined with care. In France, in the middle of the nineteenth century, we had. what you would call a Socialist revolu- tion. After a iew months we had Louis Napoleon. Italy went, after the World War came to an end, through something which again you hioflioignt, but n» 13d on “y, ‘ rum to “y: “I & man" o, pobimight call a Socialist revolution; 7Q‘ 4°n°"°1' 5° 9|‘- Wll WMIBM- icy, speaking for myself, etc.‘ ‘rher-e‘ lionmmv was to replace lsvishness, tunes would coma down, there was D0 be work and wages for cvcfihody "and an and to depression. ma, somehow things have not worked out that way. The provin- Icisl debt has increased, is approach- ing $176,000,000, and nine millions hays been borrowed from the Dom- inion Treasury since Mr. ‘Pattullo took over. Another thine millions will have to be borrowed next. year for unemployment relief. No provi- sioj} for sinking funds has been mnle inthspasttwo-bvidgetsflrheie is current deficit oi about a miflion dollars. mterest charges ihafe increased by almost 8600.000 a year. "The municipalities are clamor- ing for more money. Roads have been’ neglected, arid more must be spent on their maintenance. Where to get the money is the problem keeping Cabinet Ministers awake nights, and there is tan: of a high- er provincial income tsx. The peo- ple are disillusioned. The Premier is in the midst of n bitter contro- versy with the Union of lvlunicipsl- ltles because he flatly refused to tee a delegation from that» body. ‘flier-e is no relief in sight for the fburflened taxpayers carrying the load built up by over-free borrow,- ings by a succession oi govern- ments, and Mr. Pattullo, despite his election promises. has not been able to do much about it." NO NEWSPAPERS Mr. Frank Knox, editor and pub- lisher oi the Chicago DsiiyNcws. spent several months in Hirope this year, and the other day "upon his ar- rival horns made this uiniflcmt statement: ’ g ‘y i _ “In neither Italy, Austrin, Gor- msnycr Russia is than lsft s Ilnlll nsvnppsr ll tho lapse in which we mothsttsrm. Insiliourcountrics tho material published ‘is subllctcd m; mi) w‘ rigorous cmsornhip is colorant-i! mailed n bl nodul- es iarbrémrzmn ‘moaned b. is_ no such animal. on mat- ters ofpolicy there can be no ex- pression of personal opinions. It is all right 1m- ministers to disagree among themselves but public an- nouncements must express the viewpoint of the government, not of the individual." _ "Writing to the Iondori spectator, Dr. Lydia M. Stewart Henry, Mon- Jnal. Asia thsdictinzuished author. Mr. Beverley Nichols right on the question o! ’ cation administration in Canada. Bhs says: "With refer- mcs b0 his book, Ory mvoc, Mr. Bev- ment oi Canada. alone has issued orders to msks the study oi the book compulsory in 8,000 schools throughout the Dominion.’ Although 1 m; not in s position to dispute that statement, I can say definite- ly that the Government oi Canada has no control over the schools of the country. ‘fliers is, in fact, no Minister oi Education in the Can- adian Federal Cabinet, because. under the British North America Act, Education is entirely within the Jurisdiction or the several Pm- vincial governments, which exercise s very jealous control over it." »ThsUB.A.iseo ‘ roundtcre- ciprocity with Canada as the im- dmibtod ‘result of Mr. Bennett's fiscal policy. mcommendation that reciprocal trade 1168MB“!!! N‘ twsm Canada and tho "NW1 60st»! be instituted without delay was and: in a resolution approved by the rational forolln trade con- vmtkm held in New Tort this vnck. In ih' film! declaration. imsnirnovrsly adopted st the con- clusion of to stat annual gathering. this cllivlflthn oomlnmdod "the accumulation‘ of his 5cm om- lsas-fiiihs States committee maintained by the nmcti" Ohm- lbors crloainmom, to tho affect that pig roclprdml trade negotiations should ocmssoiqseniacpriiiciob of affording _ _ sudicthfls masts, comistont withrobflnllilsprotsctionrctncir rsspsuyiveindusrriu." erly Nichols states that “The Govern- 5 arguments with m. addition- the result was Mussolini. In Ger- many, the Socialists practically ruled the country for fen years; and the result was Hitler-Anter- national Affairs. The aiusal oi the Radical S0- cialists—who should not be confus- ed with the 5oclalists—-to continue their support of the Doumergue Government would plunge France into another period oi political tur- mcil which would play into the hands oi the‘ extremists, either of the Right or Left. The continent oi Europe, in which France is the last great democratic power, could not afford it. Elaborate civilian air defense plans calling for construction oi a as and bombproof cellar in every Berlin building were announced last week. Superannuated buildings will be razed and subterranean "safety isles" will be built in the main traffic centres in the "safety first" program disclosed by Emil Van Ioeper, air defense league lead- er for Greater Berlin. Construction of a cellar for the average Berlin apartment, Van Ioeper said, would cost 500 marks (about $800) and would alleviate unemployment. Judging by the shrill and nasal tones so common, the trainers will have their work- cut out" for them. The American voice has often been contrasted urifavourably with the English, not without justice. One exploitation is our climate; but that seems hardly sufficient. A musical voice is to some extent a gift of natureyriorie the less it may be cultivated in spite or rebellious vocal chords. Getting out a high-class family Journal is no picnic. If I print Jokes folks say I'm silly; ii I don't they say I'm too serious. If I publish original matter they say I lack var- iety; if I publish things from other papers they say I'm too lazy to write. If I d0n‘t go to church, they say I'm s heathen; if I do go, I'm s hypocrite. Ii I stay in the office I ought to be out rustling news; ii I rustle for news I'm not attend- tion of federal moricyo that may be expended in that province in the future. No details of the plan have bean made public but it is known that following the announcement that an emergency grant would bo forwarded st_once and a formal plan submitted later. Ilnsnca Min- ister B. N. Rhodes worked out a plan to be submitted to council. The intention, it'll ‘,.|l to usbt the mnvinco to meet im- mediate roqutnnrents and co-oper- sts in s dltsnninod effort to put mskstclrswurs finances on u more basis without further ro- to ‘l! Q I—n W. MEAT OB VEGETABLES h". It is interesting and sometimes amusing w hear the arguments of the meat eaters and the vegetarians and the raw food enthusiasts as they argue about the proper foods for man to eat. It is generally admitted among trained food experts that a raw food diet doesn't quite fulfill the heat or caloric requirements oi the body, not so much because the food isn't nutritious but because oi its bulk or size enough is not usually eaten. This means that not enough pm- tcid (body builder and repairer) is taken into the body daily. However all trained food experts agree that most oi us should sat more fruit, vegetables and salads than at present. Dr. Walter Alvarez, Mayo Clinic, who has done a great amount oi work upon the intestine says, "Man scans to have been designed to sst all kinds oi ioods as is shown riot only by the pattern oi his teeth but by the nature and size oi his diges- tive tract. In the herb oi vegetable eating animals the bowel is from 25 to 100 times the length of the body, while in the cat and dog, meat 0st- ers, it is from 4 to B times that length. A giraffe who lives on rought tree tops has an intestine 100 timm its body length. A cow has on intestine 100 times its body length. A cow has an intestine 27 times its b0iiy lefl8th. What lesson can we get from com- paring the digestive tract oi man with that oi a meat eating animal like the dog or cat, and also with that of herb eating animals like a giraffe or a cow? The lesson would seem to be that man was meant to eat meat, eggs, fish and other animal foods and likewise the foods eaten by herb eat- ing animais-fruits and vegetables. That is as man's digestive tract is longer than the meat eating animals and shorter than the herb eating animals, his present diet oi meat, cereals, vegetables, fruits, and fats is really best suited to his require- merits. However it would be well for us to remember the advice oi Prof. Mc- Collum, Johns Hopkins University, that we all try to eat some raw fruit or raw vegetable every day. ing to business at the office. If I wear old clothes they say I'm a slo- venl Ii I wear new ones they say I must be making a. pile of money even ii the clothes aren't paid ior. What in thurideration is a. poor editor to do anyhow? Like as not somebody will say that I swiped this article from some other paper. So I dimi-‘(loderich Star. Farmers And Golf (Montreal Gazette.) Farmers, even those of them who learn the game late in life, make excellent golfers. They are good men of their hands, They are ac- customed to tools and use em with accuracy, One oi these, a re- tired farmer of sixty, alter listen- ing to the usual instructions about standing thus and so, addressing the ball, keeping his eye on it, per- forming the orthodox swing, con- centrating his attention, and the like, remarked quietly that he could he aimed at nine times out oi ten. He therefore believed that he could raised it on high, took stride toward the ball, and without ment, either mental swung his club with mighty force and sent the ball in glorious flight straight and far drown the fairway. Today he continua to play the game in his own way and is a redoubtable antagonist. For individuals less gifted, how- ever, instruction may be helpful and indeed necessary. In varying pro- portions and with varying degrees oi success instructors mix theory and practice, abstract exposition and concrete illustration, do and dbifl; reprooi and encouragement, sarcasm and compliment, stern au- thority and sweet reasonableness. The most successful oi them con- trive by one mearis and another to imiprlnt upon the tablets of the learner's mind a series oi moving pictures of an accomplished golfer in action with the several clubs. Feminine psychology of golf is another story. If the men have an inordinate desire to achieve dis- tance, the ladies concentrate with the part. Her motions are correct M. any te fro-duh. Sechsr-lihsststucstsrxlln silent PUBLIC FORUM rsls coll-l is In: in lb: llllllsslon by candor-hail of questions biddi- ‘lip RECORD TUB-NIP Guardian headed Giant Turnip wherein it was stated Charles Graham. Bir,-—We notice in this morning's thlt Ml‘. l \ Gsspsroaux. P. E. I, had forwarded tc the Guardian a magnificent specimen oi turnip Wfilkhilll 35 P0111108- which was grown on his farm last season, and asks ii this establishes an Island record. We think not. And while it is certainly s magnifi- cent specimen wo have in mind that a iew years B80 "W" W! grow-n cm the iai-m of tbs lsto J3me; Far-quhsrson oi Bouthpont n - turnip of the “HIIBIHPI Imps-ov- ed" variety which tipped “i0 6010 at 2a pounds This turnlp was weighed on the scale st Carters Seed store, and a photograph of it was taken which we still have. Up to that date it was the heaviest H. hm Berswlngismodishstrictlyw- turnip rovvfifi ‘ We are, Sir, 000.. CARTER Q C0. UID. T0 ENGLAND No lovelier hills than thins have laid My tired thoughts to rest; No peace of iovolles- ysllsys made Like peace within my breast. Thins are the woods wheaio my soul, Out of the noontide beam, Flees for s refuge green and cool And tranquil a: a dream. ‘rhybrealfins seas like trumpets Thy clouds-how oft have I Watched their bright towers oi sil- ence steal Into inilnityl My heart within ms fsints to roam. In thought even, far from thee: Thine be the grave whereto I come, And thine my darkness mo. --Waltsr do la. Mare. Japan Once More (Exchange) With the world's attention diver- ted for the time being from the Saarland and the relations between Francs and Germany, Japan and her intention in the Pacific Ocean come to the fors once more. Two matters are agitating the Great \ Winter Season. L We take great pleasure in announc- ing that a representative of one of the largest Fur Houses in Montreal will be taking special orders at this store on Monday and Tuesday. If you are planning on a nun, Fur, this will be an ideal opportun- | ify for you to choose one of the new- est styles as shown for the coming s. A. McDonald NOVEMBER 9. 1934 FUR DISPLAY M ONDA Y and TUESDA Y November 11th and 12th j Powers, one is the ‘ ‘ " m 0g g petroleum monopoly in Msnchou- kuo on the part of the government of that state, alleged to be under Nlpponese influence, and the re- ported fortification oi the Ladrone Islands. a Pacific group mandated to Japan some years ago by inter- national agreement. In both cases Japanese diplomacy seems to have scored. Manchoukuo in spite of ths slleg- ations 0i being a puppet state under the control of Japan. is nominally at least an independent nation with its own soverign and government. Tokio disclaims arm connection with the declaration oi a stats monpcly in petroleum and refers the protesting par-ties to Mandicukuo. Great swing an axe and strike the mark 31.1mm and the Unwed ma“; an, ment, Ool. Colville stated that the the nations affected. not officially but through commercial organisa- hlt the ball. He seized his driver, Mom, a, 1g; 15 m; 3mm; “mm ing the number a single Petroleum Company and the Btan- than any other Government dard Oil Company of New York, any apparent preliminary adjust- which are concerned. The state of which acted B5 or physical Munchoukiuo his notified them that time were the imreawl Wfnwi" it is the intention to take over their properties on a basis of adequate compensation, as the stats desires to conduct the petroleum business in the future as a state monopoly. Japan states that the "omn door" agreement is not violated ss no favoritism is being shown any nation by the declaration. The hadrons Islands, although uiscussed today by ths League of Nations Mandates Commission at Geneva. does not come under that body as the mandate was given Jap- an through an agreement of ambas- sadors. Consequently no order can be issued by the Commission no matter how great the irritation. Ambassador Ito merely informed the objecting members that he would notify his government of the matter. Balpan, Tinean, Piggy] and Rota. which the complainant; state are being fortified, are not far from U-S. possessions secured at the time oi the \wr with Spain. Tho United states, although not a mem- an excess of seal upon mere form. be, f the “nah Wm t1 h __ ..._-_ Everyone is acquainted with the beeneible to bring 1cm amprtztestn.‘ F ws sau. sun “w” ““°"- RECOMMEND sec this fair damsel, swagger, de- Britain Forges i hair. Approach the fee and false her station them! h “h Forward M A s What easy vigor in or msnn ( ) °°~ flout-Colonel John Coivillv. u. s’.cil| nx- What cairn assurance in her port a i “mm,” new“?! ""1 vim‘ w’ the Department or’ Overseas Cod Llvsr ou nrtrrcz. with A "mm 9'0"“ f‘ "W" Trude. was a principal speak at Croosctc Ind Gulscol In stage’ m c-ommm "may ‘ooh, s National Government rally lately Compound. first six months of the year British exports to south Africa showed an increase oi three and a, half mil- lion pounds, and in Australia. Can- ada, and India. the upward move- ment wss beginning to be register- ed. lie had a veiy close interest in the qumtion of exports to the In- dla market; it was Britain's great- est individual “market. There had been a total increase in the exports of United Kingdom products of 21 million pounds during the first eight months oi’ the year compared with the same period last year. This showed that the Government» policy had been amply Justified- On the question of unemploy- National Government had made a bigger contribution towards lower- oi unemployed had Signs of done or oould have dom- a barometer st the post-office and the returns from the four big railway com- panies, The post-office increase was £28,000 more gross revenue each day during the first eight months oi the year, and the receipts for the railways were up four and s. half millions for 35 weeks compar- ed with the same period in 1933. Lacking In Faith (Regina Daily Star.) Premier Hepburn, of Ontario. does not appear to have much faith in the people of the Dorruinlon. in their loyalrty. According to the Mall and Empire he made the statement in a recent speech, that "I wish we could develop in Canada the same self-sacrificing spirit that Coldshlnlluenm and G It h better than ordinary cough medicines. because lt< roaches the Isn't s! humble, rs- nor does he place much confidence Aresltcnicfcr Cmlllll» rum-P nwlhl e trsdsb protection. but flulymmtc that's-II!!!» hr futurosttscks. Janina. Britain 1M m ha! blood and body-building tonic lisrpramisrplscosstlilfirstss- icrbcfliyolnsandoldvvho m=:"~........~' "*- m... e: -----=-- thsrnlultcsdirlctnolotistionsm IIJCIILIOYIIBMTLI tnspsreouacacvarnmons n. one mills. Jurassic-us 0 mm oitrsdc no 98mm was 11w Two Macs vlbtlyinpcvsitflisbflylott was dsnduaremrt oftho own Isnomn qrssmentmflio 00in agno- Asisnlolto. muntmlircmstsodl view. - the people of Great Britain did when may voluntarily sand in convert their bonds to lower in- tcrest rates. Grout Britain has shown us the way.’ It may be appreciated that Mr. Hepburn sees at least this one thing to admire in the British people. It is very unusual for him to see any good thing cmris out oi Nazareth. He does not want British trade for Ontario, so he closes up the Ontario offices in London, where the Old Country has always kept in touch with Ontario traders. This is practically the first time that the Ontario Premier has ever had anything ap- prectiative to say of Great Britain. It is evident that as far as his own countrymen sre concerned Mr. Hepburn did not realize that they also had capacities for sell-sac- rifice. But they proved that they had when they rallied to the side of the Bennett Government and over-subscribed the recent loan by a substantial amount, even though the rates of interest had been largely reduced. Nor was that thr first time that the people of the Dominion had evidenced their firm faith in the Dominion. They had dons it before, and to such an extent that the Government have been able to announce that a great sumhssbeonnvedtotheccunfry sogrcstlihshitmayholptoprww- lde s balanced budget and posibis reduction in taxation. Premier Hepburn-n sppsrveritiy does not realize that fact in his vie-w of the spirit that animsics iihe Canadian people. They have done exactly who/t tho people of Great Britain have dons, but he gives them no credit nor does ho to the Bennett Government which has put through these financial poeravticns. A mtscomb is the thing on W! of the roosters head. Hansom was the name of a fam- ous good-looking cab driver. The Pilgrim Fathers left the Dutch people on account of their language. Napoleon escaped from Melba. Edgar Wallace was chosen Klnl of Scotland by Edward the first. The Merry Monarch was Old King Cole. A Republic is a place where no- body can do anything in private. Lloyd George is the prime mix- ture of England. The Yellow Peril is a racing car- The three parts of the human eye are the pupil, the beam, and the mote. —From Latest Howlers. \/ l‘ ~ ON'S