%'.sr.ui...""c-r. ' awn-i’. -"'»“"a. 5.3.‘? Iollllgllailyflluldcdlfilillubonoytbolltnjdfllvufl. Il-Dsaryunilnnlvsnoinnuolnoaaoonqsouguagqag, ‘ iuonoar. may a. m: - nuviv ART EXHIBIT ' Art lovers will have an oppor- tunity of inslloflibg a most interesting collection of water colours by celebrated Canadian artists, ‘which has been loaned by the National Gallery of Canada. Ottawa, and will be on display, commencing Tuesday evening, at the I-tarris Art Gallery (Public Lib- rary.) The exhibition. which is under the auspices of_ a recently formed Art Society of Prince (Ed- ward Island, will be opened at 1.30 by Premier MacMillan and will re-' main open, afternoons and evenings, lor the balance of the week. The exhibit, which includes 39 paint ngs, mcstly of Canahan scenery, has been selected by the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour as representative of its annual exhibit held in Toronto luring April. 1934. Larger Canadian cities have greatly enjoyed the first travelling exhibition of water- colour-s. which was arranged by the National Gallery in n sinilar way last year, and the present collection will no doubt be equsfiy well re- ceived. Certainly the opportunity of ieeing the exhibit in Charlottetown will he of unique value to stude ‘ - and should prove of general public interest. Traielllng exhibitions of this kind ' are rapidly growing in number, and __ are an important feature of the ' work of the Natonal Gallery in ' ‘stimulating public interest in Can- . adian art. " A word of commendation is mer- ited by those who have taken the initiative in fonning an Art Socbty In this Province, unfer whose _ auspices the pictures will be shown. The Executive oonslsts of Mrs. P. A Creelman, president; Mrs. John A Fraser, vice-president, Mr. A. I... v Wright, secretary; Mss Doris Gill. Jtreasurer. The committee members 5 ire Miss Ruth Miller, Mr. James If. Harris, Mr. Jack» Cameron. Mrs. Donald Gass, Miss Annie Watson. Miss Mary MacDonald. Miss Ruth Heartz, Miss Edna Gordon, and Mrs. James E. Harris. LA WRENCE AS AUTHOR "Lawrence of Arabia" is dead. The inan who won over the tribes of Arabia to the Allied cause during the gGreat War and who became almost a fabulous figure by his spectacular exploits and adventures, succumbed to injuries received in a. traffic ac- cident in Dorsetshire. R184 Just as he had begun to settle down af- ter his retirement from the Royal Air Force. A sketch of his amazing career is given elsewhere in today's Guardian. Many of our readers, ‘doubtless, are acquainted with his book "Revolt in the Desert"; but the real story is said to be told only in his lengthier volume, published privately, “The Seven Pillars of Wis- dom." Copies of this book are now exceedingly rare. Lawrence's own at- titude towards his books is revealed in a curious letter now in the War Memorial Library founded by Pres- ident Hoover at Leland Stanford University. California. It is address- ed simply "Dear P." and it reads: "Dear P.: You must have this rotten little book, ‘Revolt.’ I sup- pose, as we worked together for two of the years during which the big book (‘The Seven Pillars’) was nn the stove, but I grudge it you. There's no auwGPBPh 111 "- 5W1? copy of ‘The Seven Pillars‘ was sign- ed,‘ and no copy of ‘Revolt; will ever be signed: because it was a dishon- ut thing, delil-e , produced by ' , myself to sell $0.000 copies and pay my overdraft. i “At present on the edge of bub- iioation. I'm afraid that perbaPl " I've made a bad estimation of the ‘ public appetite. and mama of sol- ling £0,000 copies, I'll sell only a,- ‘Nuandbaatilllcftin the mud. In ‘ cooler moments, I'm sine ‘that there ..ia' plenty of reserve in hand and first I'll have to put into operation a guillotine clam of my ‘contract ten ma: air-m emu Pillars” between llbbruary and Juno, i918. in Peril. and an eighth in tendon. How the manuscript‘ of the eight books was stolen while he was 0110118188 trains that Christmas Dro- vided news for ovory newspaper in Christendom. Only the Introduc. tion and the draft of tho ninth and tenth bolts The second Wflliul of‘ the loitmaniucript oc- cllllled not quite time months, baw- renco turning o8 fromybstween four and flvo thousand wcida a day. Book VI was written in the twenty- four hours betwcn sunrise andipuni- rise. and it contained about 34.000 words. But the whole volume was carefully rewritten twice and its historical accuracy checked by refer- ence to documents and with the help of friends who had served with the Arab army. He employed an ax- pert illustrator and spent £13,000 on the edition, losing £10,000 thereby. Over a hundred copies were sold to subscribers at thirty guineas- each. and half as many were given away. ‘Thus, it was to pay that debt that he published the abridged “Revolt in the Desert." ‘This boob-not- withstanding the author's contempt- uous reference to it in the letter above quoted-has been hailed as a classic. Mr. Graves says that Lawrence would not take a penny for him- self from any writing concerning the ‘Arab war, and his army pay went to the expenses of the cam- paign. The gift of a "Seven Pillars" with a note. "please sell when read," has been worth as much as £500. No doubt it would be given to one who needed the money. Indeed. Lawrence was a good friend to Graves. who must have done-well by this biography. written, as the preface tolls, by request of the pub- lisher, Jonathan Cape. and with Lawrence's permission cabled from India. Lawrence's literary gifts were as astonishing ll his other character- istics. He was a master of language. One of‘ his achievements in this con- nection was a prose translation of Homer's "Odyssey." acopy of which is in the Charlottetown Public Libr- ary. It has all the" "surge and thunder" of the original; at least. it is said to come nearest to the orig- inal in this respect of any English translation. ' nmromaz. NOTES ‘The spirit of Florence Nightingale lives on, as we are reminded by tho Charlottetown Hospital nurses‘ grad- ustion exercises which take place tonight. And so John Buchan becomes Lord T~ ‘ . This, ‘ an exchange drily, will relieve the strain on those nervous Canadians, chiefly in Toronto and Ottawa, who feared that plain Mr. Buohan at Rideau Hail would tend to dissolve the ties of Illnblle. " The recent announoementby Hon. Wesley A. Gordon. Minister of Mines, that the government is to undertake an extensive geological survey t“ r the T‘ ' . should be hailed by all sides as a wise move. Canada's mining in- dustry h been in the vanguard of the mare toward recovery since the dark days cf 1920 when stocks crumbled like a rotten wail. The Dominion is rich in mineral wealth. Mr. H. H. Stevens recently hauled Mr. A. O. Dawson, president of the Canadian Chamber of Ccmoiom. over the coals for criticising tho Price Spreads Commiuicn mart. He reminded Mr. Dawson, a Illi- treal millionaire, that the textile in- dustry of Canada. along with banks. insurance companies and farmers of the welt had found lflflfllllfllll 11l- terfcrenca a "Godlandf. llauy co- ganizationsowed their present u- Navy routed what no conidcrod llvfimergtucy," a Wilson gave orders that such .0’ n thing was never to . with tbaorbent when necessary. as a fed hot n president. l-lis meals his holidays few and far between. “ ea," says the commentator, “Mr. Wilson was always on top of his ligork; w. Hoover always behind scratching, or blows monest. There lN'0f lam-tin rhayre in The Ellgllfll Review (London) says: only on the surface has Japan changed. adapt- ing her spirit to new conditions and as diphtheria, measles, wh problems, whilst holding fast to the cough. worms, typhoid fe ‘antique samurai-cult of loyalty and blood Might. “We are a mart el people,” her War bdfaister, General Senjuro lfayashi, insists." "-'We were created by the Sword. And sog long as we hep our weapons. the llifiustrfes of peace will continue to flourish." A London. England. journal has been collecting information as to the popularity o1 various topics for humor. Motheis-in-iaw head the list. Next in order come jokes about Scots. These are taken in good part by the subjects. and indeed it is said are largely of Scottish manu- facture. Iendladies. especially at the seaside, occupy third plam. This type of joke 1a not common on this. side of the Atlantic. condit ons bc-‘ ing different. The henpecked hus-‘ band seemed to have gonr: out of fashion as a. joke. but he stands in fourth place in this ltst. Other subjects are motor cars, especially cheap ones; golfers and anglers, presumably those who exaggerate their catches; absent~minded pro- fesscrs, children's sayngs, and women's dress. enza, catari-h. forms of heart trouble. Thus as "aomg "Nose bleed may be remedy, or a disease." w- disposition to nose bfeed individuals just as predisposition matism. eczema. berc ._. other ailments. Naturally these dividuasiahould avoid those‘ which cause Picking at the hard, ‘violent sneezing, tight bending the head over when trig or playing. heart disease nose bl Therefore, it is _ cause most cases ' of themselves. l However when a short time the edles should be used. Zhoulgers Srfllld be held rea n The installations for production through ‘m; (E513; 0! hydro-Gimme power in Canada, back of neck or over at the Ibeginninz of the present hold both hands above the which,.is more than double the in- 1 110! 888111“ the stellations l0 years ago. The larg- septum for ton est installations are In QuebecJ 5°19!“ Wit-OP with Ontario semnd. umbia. third "nd Manitoba fourtlhlml i! "Nelly i, Irr the case c‘ power resources. yet °3 t"°"'tm°m3 4“ undeveloped, Quebec ls the leader with Ontario mound, Manitoba, however. leads Bzitsh Columbia. in resources by a small margin. accord- ing to present surveys. The total known msouroes of waterpower in the Dcminon are estimated at 48-. 700.000 horsepower.- cf. which only a little more than l7 per cent is being utilised by present installa- tons-Iondon Free Press. ent cotton to it will be more effective. sary, to call ply a styptic nose. Telcvialou may be just the corner but, aocordingto the ndioi people. it will be ‘slow in making the turn. They arewatch- ing closely the latest developments of this scientific wonder which some day may become a ' ._ ‘ tor. The British Broadcasting Cor- poration has secured an interest in some of the television patents and intends to experiment with" their practical uses. The UiS. Government statisticians say that there are more than twenty million people on relief in the United States today. It Ls in.- teiesting to note also that unem- ployed “ ‘ is quite as conspicu- ous as unemployed labor. The de- posits in State and National banks of the country last year amounted to about 80 per cent. more than those of 1017, and the fetal re- sources of the banks were about 48 izr cent. greater than those of 1917. It does not take much abil- ity in.‘ finance to figure ‘out why banking is not very profitable in - such circumstances. THBUSIIIS The City Financier walks in the gardens, stiifly, because of his pride and his burdei. ‘The daisies, locking up, observe ' only a self- rcspecting curve. The- tiirushe; only see a flat table-land of shiny hat. He looks important about him, 1y while all the spring loos on without him. A Question 0f Two years ago the United States f" ‘ 0f l‘ . terrified. and the United Stains Senate, im- Grammar potent. turned to President Roose- velt. Arid while Roosevelt has made many mistakes, as was inevitable. he did face his recovery task with N resolute vigor. brought the country from chaos. N . when the hopc- mop; less dspair and confusion of two m years ago have largely gone. and there are clnar signs of improve- ment. the people who cried to Roosevelt demand that he let them alone. It is an iiliuninsting com- mentary upon a phase cf human natures-Ottawa Journal. ictencotothcflotthatthclvvom- u, monthadateppodinatatiuiecf memhcaaid. ' one has well ‘acid, a warning, a There seems to be a tendency or in some others have a to hay fever, rheu- tu and m; the nose to oleed_. nose. blowing it too collar, work- Now a little bleeding from the nose cannot do any harm; in fact in cases of high blood preuurg 0g is really a measure of safety to the system. not considered wise to stop the bleeding immediately be. of nose bleed atop it does not stop in usual “home" rem- Head an elect. and be done entirely APPIY ice to the nose and nead. year, totalled 7,547,035 horse-powen; Pressing the bleeding side of the central cartilage or minutes is often suf- the bleeding. Pressing British Co]- some absorbent cotton-up the HOS- successful method _ fact it is some- times necessary to pack the absorb- the very back part of the nose, almost into the throat. If the absorbent is dipped in adrenalin fidelity, . l. P 4a4aahk=¢k¢a nan‘ ‘Am; a Irish Pres State, referring to the _ Canadian Constitution (undcr the IIQ UH 00m" um rtain ail- ments which can: uoaeoblced such w“ 007108 . bllh pressure. inflammation a! the kidngvs, anaemia (thin blood) fnflu- tuberculosls and some t of before," never been thought‘ of in seventy years." would ."result in civil war and Canadian bankrupt oy," and so on. ~ . I also referred to Judge Stewart's as he claimed, parol or extrinsic evidence rule. 11F mltht wall have been assumed t after re instances wh "fiscal need" use would have been con- tent to lot the matter drop. that he would tryto-ovold making more faux pas. Not so. however. In a letter to the Patriot on Thursday last our Solon ‘returns to the attack. He suggests that I had become "quite ill at ease" over his "criticism" of the bdinority Report. He again refers to the statement d in the as "unwarranted," namely. that when the financial terms of Union were being first ‘ =6. the "‘ , ad ‘ was that the Dominion was to grant such subsidies as would en- e-blo these Provinces m carry on their-local administration without resort to direct taxation. Judge Stewart's “criticism” con- slated of his own bare assertion. My reply consisted in copious quo- tations from those who took part in thaCouferenoe and quotations‘ f the moat eminent of Canada since. every -whicli affirmed what tho If these home measures do not stop the bleeding it may be neces- a physician who will ap- or completely plug the any of the quotations I gave: Some persons. not . familiar Jvith the Iuelflal characteristics of the- ex- Judge. might belnclincd to won- deij how he_ could now refer to the statement of the Minority Report as having- been “unwarranted? The explanati of the riddle may be left to the, curious. Judgo Stewart ~ does refer to Hon. George Brown's statement, however, and tries, to obtain con- solation from the use of the words "and other sources" found in that statement. My previous letter was sufficiently longwithout increas- ing. it b! quoting Brown's speech more at length. Judge must have read "at. least ports of the Sllflfihillllilfldld mentions the year lWI when it was quoted at es." I will leave itto any one to read Hon. George Brown's speech and than claim, if he can, that it boars the meaning hinted at by Judge, Stewart. I shall not char- acterise Judge Stewart's method. Int while Judge Stewart docs not refute or question the "litter- anccs" I quoted (in fact he admits —-Hllmbeft Wolfe. “A more tyio in the law," he tolls us, "knows that ' nta lbiettzen Provinces are cons altered in any respect by the speeches of dividuail no‘ matter how the positions they hold.” Ilethcnmferstothcrulc ro- "n had BJLA. Act) has stated:_ "Canada is, in foot, the great ‘example today of the truth of the statement that no man can act bounds to the onward march of a‘ nation, oven by a written constitution." _ Judge "Stewart, apparently, would have Prince Edward Island return to the age of the ox-team and the horse-drawn vehicle. From the ranks of the supcrannuatcd he proclaims, “The Island is fast get- ting the reputation of never being satisfied, like unto some trouble- some children." But all are not in the happy position to which “His Honour" has attained. ‘rhero is still "fiscal need," and plenty of it. From the ranks of the workers we say to the Judge, "We will continue to agitate for our rights, sent our case. The British North “Y America Act was amended before. It will be amended again. and not- withstanding the rules of evidence you refer to. The Constitution of Canada is. and must ever be. a living reality, not an outworn shell. With Burke. we would say of the Constitution and political sys- tem of Canada, as he did of that of England, it is ‘never old, or " -...d or young: but. in a condition of unchangeabie con- stancy moves on through the var- ied tenor of perpetual decay. fall. renovation and blvlreaoionfl" \ ~Ramsay MacDonald has told us that Canada is developing a soul. ‘That soul had its origin and its birth in the Constitution brought into being by the British North America Act. The Soul of Canada will never be fully developed and will never rest satisfied until tho demands and fiscal needs of its constituent parts are met and so adjusted that its provinces can carry on their affairs-not as of the days in which Judge Stewart would‘ have us live—but iii keeping with the dictates of modern pro- gre. I would have ended this letter at this point had it not been for Judge Stewart's pretence that he had answered my statement that: “If Judge Stewart examines the Confederation compact he will search in vain for any state- ment on the subject of whether the subsidies provided were sup- posed to be adequate or inade- quate for the purpose for which they were intended," this pur- pose being to enable provinces to carry on their affairs without re- sorting. to direct taxation. Istatod "on that subject there is complete silence," ‘Ito this the Ex-Judge replies by l quoting section 11B of the BJLA. Act, which states that the subsid- ies given "shah be in full settle- ments of all future demands on Canada." He then addb that my "challenge of complete silence doesn't seem to hold water." The section Judge Stewart quotes deals with the finality of the settlement. It says not a word about the adequacy of the subsidy to enable the provinces to carry on without taxation. “linality" and "adequacy" are two very dif- ferent. matters. It was because it was the opinion of ovary one at the time the amount of the aub- aidy was arranged that it was quits an. L. agevius of London Eng. queen's County will bllilll ll 11h! Board TUESDAY, EVENING. noininstinl candidates fulfil‘! Provincial Eleetlo - Each Boll lo entitled to lend flvt requested to lee that their-delegates i each Poll is fully ripreaentcd ,' Samuel Kennedy I 1' PRESIDENT l " ti» altim- MAY 218T, at eight at the Convention. 4AA‘ ) rvvvv w w . “i. I ‘ . are appointed f0 ii. It can SECRETARY - a AA AAAAA a a ‘AL a a AAA‘ of u». taint-cit; of llooi. Cit, fulfilling. on o'clock, for the purpose of candidates. Poll Chairmen are rtliwitli sndtiiat L-‘ldli-d-ld-llil <_.; Conservative ‘C0llYGlltl0ll A convention of the Conservati THird District of Queens vo Electors of the will he hold in 6h’town, Tuesday lune 4 at‘ 8 p.m to nominatdtwocandidateo for the provincial aleo- tion- The polls chairman in each polling division in the said district will call a meeting of the Conserva- tive electors for the purpose of choosing five dele. gates to attend said convention- Dated this 17th day of May, 1935. ~ SAMUEL KENNEDY, President R. R- BELL, Secretary L-7690-5-18-8i . K i mi {x adequate to meet all provincial needs (which I have have shown in my former letter) that tho statement was made that the sub- sidy should be final. The “finality” however was based upon a mis- as “ “ ." How "final" it was, and how much Judge Stewart's parol evidence rule was listened to. may be seen in the fact that subsidy increases have been given on many occa- slons. By the way, it is somswha‘ odd, to the uninitiated, that Judge Stewtlrt should lay so much em- phasis on this parol evidence rule as an objection to any consider- ation being given to the Minority Report, while making n_o objection whatever on this ground to the Ma- jority Report which he highly oom- mends. Yet both Reports. recom- mend a change‘ in the amounts of provincial subsidies, which recom- mendations. according to Judge Stowart._would be in violation of his rule relating to horse-trading agreements. Verbum sat sapientl. I am, Sir, etc. ~ PRO IONO PUBLICO A Sixth Sense ; ( ‘mebeha h Scotsman) of dogs is often in- ewiicabie ‘ with ' many WBYI The commonest form is the capac- ityofadogtofinditawayhomc from great it may have been t car or train. Well authenticated instances are on record , cvcn though n away by where! 1.4:‘ ¢AAAAALA ‘a t .AA_AA ‘ a Leaded ’ Renewed At Reasonable . Prices ' we MANUFACTURE m: New RICIDBAAR GUARANTEED TO LASTrA LIFETIME BIIVIIESS GOISTIIIIBTIOI Contractors and Engineers PHONE 1441 Estimates gladly submitted in oo-operstilon i, with your architect or direct a: desired. iii rinricllou lti entail- f has l ricilur aha m- ‘ with Capo (tho publllher) which lfilblollotocallcffthcaaiawhen- alone fpleuo. let's boot so; a tall is§E Parliament resumes Premier Bennett in his a: 0ft! f g it? i; {$3 5E ,2; ‘B E