In‘ u _.__- s...- NQponents is based on the ground .1. Q13! 11ml w. t ' n l. (billed III) l5 Illllll DU” ‘I. llilil uIII “I “w "DlndOli-ull annrvs—-"~ lard-miss. Isllmsnoun. oars-u. llporyvcfhnlnnvblallvcd. Quanta Oalnfl and Ilalal llama. walmasmlr. Ann. l1, nu. "§1'sscur:1zs' SALARIES‘ i. o importance of the teaching csslon is nowhere more fittingly iled than in this Province. re the present Premier is also ter of Health and Education and was active for many years bifore his entry into politics, in pro- lflotlng educational work of all birds. ihdeedm. may be said that a lSrgc part of the criticism to Whifih ifi has been subjected by political tgat he is too much concerned with lrlalth and educational matters, to t§e alleged unnecessary burdenlng d: the taxpayers. With this critic- iil we have dealt before, and it has bien answered very effectively in Qe recent legislative debates.‘ we mention it here, merely by way of "phasizing the fact that no gov- eilmeht leader in the history of fiince Edward Island has shown ngpre untiring zeal in the Chime 01 education and public health. Ellie present occasion of the an- niial convention of the Teamers“ Byderation should not be allowed l0 piss without a reminder of this fact, bith w the teachers and to the pub- li£ generally. While joining with our lqial contemporary in welcoming the tdlchers to the city, we cannot but regret the obvious attempt which it mikes to capitalize for political pur- poses the question of teachers’ sal- axles. mThe teachers owe to the MacMil- 1m Government the fact that all o! them earning $600 or over per veal- did not receive a salary out in 1933 ween the Estimates were being pdssed in the Legislature on that #635103, Mr. Lea, leader of the 0p- ‘ itlon, seconded by Mr. McIntyre, vcd an amendment which, i! adopted, wuld have had this effect. Every Liberal member voted for it; every Conservative member voted against it, with the result that the flnion was defeated. frico fact that the Government stood firmly by the teachers in 1933 was used against the administration politically, as was the expenditure nfsde in rebuilding Prince of Wales Qllege in accord with modem and fQture requirements. At the time, such propaganda Was deemed a 800d "vote-catcher." But the Govern- rient, headed by a Premier who really was more concerned about education than political criticism, stood by its policy. Today we hear nothing about reducing teachers’ Linnea in i934. 11100311 if; exact erwnt is not yet known, available data indicate that the total for 10M was probably not above $l80,0ll0.000. Up to 1033 the percentile drop was much greaterin Ontario and the Western Provinces than lri QlWbW tuies have generally been brought to a very low level, and teachers’ salaries. in the provinces for which i934 records have been received. show a three-year decrease of about one-third. Reductio ’ have been nfuch more severe in rural schools than in towns and cities. A short- age of funds has led some 60mm“!!- ities to shorten the teaching year by a few weeks, but very few schools have been continuously closed for any considerable time. “In these abnormal times," con- cludes the Halifax paper, "such a result might well be anticipated. With the betterment of conditions a reversal of the trend may be cl- pected." ' EDITORIAL NOTES In England not only have they a balanced budget, but have reducez! income tax and increased civil acr- vlce salaries. The endat‘ is of the Price‘ spread Committee have al- ready boosted prices of pedigreed live stock in the A The centre of attraction for agri- culturlsis and financiers tonight will be the Board Room of the City Hall, where Mr. M. A. lVlacPhei-son. K.C., Ottawa, will discuss the lib-rm- ers' Creditors‘ Arrangement Act. Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett is like a certain gentleman who shall be rlamelessdlf once he gets "a foot" out of bed nothing in Heaven above or in the earth beneath can prevent him emerging in the full glory and vigor of his accustomed good health andallkressiveness. Dr. L. P. Rby. president of the Association catholique de ls. Jaun- esso Cansdienmz, Quebec, has issued a report of a study conducted by members of the association on conditions of youth 1n the city of Quebec and neighboring towns. The report showed that 45 per cent, of young men were out of work at present. Of 8,672 who had left school recently, 3,678 were working salaries, and very little about the ex- penditures incurred at Prince of Wales poliege. An attempt was even made at the last legislative session by the Opposition members and 0P- pwltion press, to repudiate their motion of 1933, so far as it concern- ed the teachers. This attempt fall- ed, because the records of the de- bate, as published in both newspap- ers. are on file, and show conclu- sively that the Liberal intention, at"- that time, was to cut the salaries of every school teacher and gov - meant qrtployeo in the Province earning $500 or over. The Liberal press is now attempt- ing deliberately to mislead the teachers with regard to its PKWY-l attitude on the question of salaries. It says the Conserva- tives platform of 192'! promised an upward revision, conditional upon augmentation of the present revenue of the Province. and that this pledge had not been implemented. it imits to say ‘that the platform in question was turned down by the electors. that the succeeding Liberal Govem- Wll-h 2.994 out 01 work. The following is a newspaper price-list furnished from Rich- mond, va., 85 years ago to an en- quirer: ,"'1‘he market for slaves. is rather dull the last few days and- prfccg perhaps a littb: lower, but it will be only for a few days. No. 1 men, S800 to $850; boys, l5 to l8. $100 to $800; boys, l2 to l4, $950 MI $650; No. i girls, l6 to ll, 8676 to $700; girls, 18, l4 and ill, 8W5 to 9&0; girls, l0 to 12, $400 to $470; No. l women and one child. $725 f0 $750; N0. 1 women and two child- ren, $850 to I900." . Canadian bacon is making rapid‘ gains in the British market: there was an increase of '16 per cent in the quantity imported in m4 over the previous year, with a value of roughly $17,250,000, and 390 per cent as compared with i002. Can- ada tops the list forapple imports, approximately 50' per cent of the apples entering the United King- dom market during lass being of msnt did nothing to implement any promise it may have made in this connection, and that the present Government assumed no pro-elec- tion obligation, and received no mandate from the people, with res- pect to salary increases. With nothing whatever to say about the attitude of its own party members, our ccnwlllllilflry M"! ~‘° give the impression that the inc- Mlllalr Government has been remiss in not increasing the Estimate for teacher!’ llllrlcl this year. This seems to be the point. and the whole point, cf its editorial comment yes- tcrday. And itls, in the" circum- stance! and” m view of the Liberal criticim in i088. as mail-lone a massacres could concoivabl! l» Canadian origin. ,.,. ‘mately two thirds of the oat ‘imports came from Canada. Canadian canned sal- mon ia also meeting with the favor of Britishers. them ‘being an fu- crcase of I’! per ccntin imports of this commodity 1084 In compared with iflafilmporta of froun Om- adiarr salmon lmxelsed I per cent. for the same period. Outside of mahogany, walnut, oak and tuk, and the Malitlmes, Capital expcndl- m’ Canada made aubatantlal Midas in. Notes By Way‘ tsrior has added to the various ox- planatitms of British citizenship. R0 saith. “A; cltirpns of Bouth Africa we are Union nationals, but ws also have the common status of British subjects. Because of that status," the minister co “ ’, “we cannot be regarded as aliens anywhere in tho King's dominioos. Because o: that status we may expect squads those dominioris the enhancement cfprestlge which is accepted as due to a British subject. That common status? is-a hlthstatus, _ Itwosw-lthsonriousslrofsat- fsfaction, and even triumph that . Bliiw Dvpartment announced the other day a diplomatic agree- ment with Ganada. It was of the most preliminary kind. Both count- ries simply aimed to start negotia- tions fcr a reciprocal trade treaty. Since such a diplomatic parley has been the strong desire of our State Department for more than a 312M’, it might seem u if the bus- iness were advancing pretty slowly, if we have only got so far as to spy that it might now be discussed. In one rwpect it may prove that no Brest amount of time has really been lost, inasmuch as there has been opportunity to study the trade trail-sections spins sh between the United States and Canada under existing. tariffs. If we are going to modify them, it is just as well to sec why their operation makes a change seem more, than ever desir- able-New York Times. The _ 1 ‘ , of - tlon in all Western civilised States is in reproduce itself much more slowly. and almost everywhere birth rate; are declining. According to statisticians, the British popula- tion will begin to fall in 1042, that of France in l7. that of Germany in 1946. and that of the United States about 1980. This tendency should be kept steadily in view in Bil-Killing scry" legislation. It has an important bearing in such dir- nctions cs housing ' policy-for twenty-five years hence the number of children will be half what it is today.—1nndon Daily Mail. .1 What a vast number of failures are strewn throughout life because of the lack of just a little more ef- fort upon their part! Thousands of 11S have been pushed to the break- lng point in our nerves, in our pa- tience, and in our work. But that is Just the momerl‘ that we should re- fuse to give upl "The line between failure and success," wrote Elbert Hubbard, “is so fine that we scarcely know when we pass it: so fine that we are often on the line and do not know it." A 1mm more" courage, a little more will, a little more effort would have saved the day for many a. man who gave up just this side of winning, A few days ago the great Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes went to his long sleep. He was in hi; 94th year. Bill Olvflrll years ago, upon his re- tirement from the supreme court of the United states, he remarked that he was then ‘living on his mo- mentuml" A grand example of a glorious character. we never know when the turn will come in our discouragement, so we should ever be expecting it, and believing in it. We are always defeated within our heart. That man is never defeated who refuses to acknowledge it. He who merely strives-wins! l 111cm will be old-there who will enjoy handling a. 800d. old-fash- ioned “cart-wheel." There is some- thing pleaslng in the feel of a sil- ver (l liar. In the hand it givres a generous impression of being “real money." But two or three of them will weigh a rnan down and play havoc with a trouser pocket. ‘The odd silver dollar will be interesting w help. perhaps to keep as a mem- ento, though there is no likelihood of these coins permanently replac- ing dollar notes to any large de- pee-Montreal Btar. ' According to Professor G. B. Henry of the -Rcyal College of Sur- néohs, wisdom teeth are responsible for many human ills. He cited cases of delusions, asthma, and. moral turpitude being cured by the ex- traction of wisdom teeth: but he did not try to establish the old wives‘ connection between the of- landing molars and wisdom; That connection doubtless grew up from the fact that wisdom teeth are in- cident tomaturity. But few people with any knowledge of the- world would connect the two. Maturity too often mez-eiy confirms lfnorance. It south arrlesb-lnisussnasls. like thefish. are only able icact when. thelr-surroundlnga-the fluids in whlchtllcy exist-are oftha right temperature, are alkaline, have the proper amounts of oxy- gen and other substances within them. The blood is put of this fluid or water1yltcm. Thus if anything: hlppehs l0 this fluid or liquid surrounding the cells then Na-ture- exerts certain forces within the body which tend to preserve the amount ind the quality of this. fluid. For instance with severe sweating from hard work, an attack of diarrhoea or u sentery, or the loss of blood from an injury could all make a differ- ence tc this fluid if Nature did not so control the fluids that the body cells are kept well supplied with this life giving liquid. Prof. W. B. Cannon, Harvard, in his book ‘The Wisdom of the Body.’ says. “A teworthy prime assurance against extensive shifts of this fluid is the provision made of sensitive automatic indicators or sentinel: whose special work is tn set cv- “ pl in motion to prevent the loss of this fluid im- mediately there is any slight dis- turbance in the amountor quality of the fluid. If water is needed thirst warns us before any change in the blood has occurred and we immediately drink some water. If the blood pressure falls and the nec y oxygen supply may thus be interfered withp delicate nerve endings in a portion of the blood system send messages to the brain centre controlling blood prea- sure and the pressure ls raised. If by ‘vigorous muscular move- ments blood comes back to the hea-rt in great volume so that the heart action might be embarrassed and the circulation checked, again delicate nerve endings are affected and a call goes to the right auricle (the part of the heart receiving this extra amount of used blood) that results fn speeding up the heart rate and‘ thus hastening the blood flow. If the blood becomes less alkaline than it should be and is altered ever so slightly towards an acid condition the sensitive part of the nervous system which controls breathing is at once made active, rapid breathing follows and the limes quickly pump out. the car- bonic acid and bring the blood back to an alkaline condition." 0N HIS BOOKS 3y sucking you the wise, like bees, do grow Beeline and rich, though bhis m” do most slow. _ Because most choiccly; for as great a store Have we of books as bees of herbs, and more; And the “m, Erect task to try, ' know, tbs good, '1“ dllwfli weeds. and judge s: wholesome food, I5 0 1"" Willi- Derformance. Ior man dies 0ft ere ‘tie done, while the be; feeds and flies. But you were all choice flowers; all set and dressed B? 01d 588a florists, who well knew the best. —-l-lenrv vnishnn (rm-oi). -——%%.__. _ Canada’s Forest Production (Monefcn mules) 1t has beeneatlrrafed that Olll‘ total forest production in i003 in- volved the cutting d'2,02'l,f114_090 clpic feet of standing tlnflier. This nstitufes only the annual deple- tion for use‘ and to i; must b; added the volume of material an- nually destroyed by rte, tl-r knowledge that comes with maturity brought wisdom. the world would be an earthly paradise-ls. The mlnllthst has been lnlncd to be calm has already fortified ft- self against petty worries and ir- ritatlnr trifies. It is almost impos- sible for any of us to pass till-cum a daywvithout these pesky trifles facing ua-but at the ‘close of day they should be dismissed as of no r l? to rfifllfl $1.0M‘ Ilplflmllfi , when “gm the dcvariurc oi exceeds $80,000,000 cubic merchantable timber gnd m; young growth on 550,00) acres 111mm. fungi and windfall destroy annually at least 700,000,000 cubic feet so that the annual drain on our forest recoil-cos in was was considerably more" than 2,000,030,- 000 clbic feet. i l ~ The latest available satin-late places Canada's fonet reaouroes at Mum million cubic m; a stand- ing timber which is capable of vieldlns Mason million feat board rrleosln-o Jown timber and 130E800 thousand cords of pulp- wood ties, polar-and other unall- crrrlnterials. - tioaa of these Wale. Our r ~ . " mitlock upm things, our attitude m toward life. measured almcetln- drcdblyi- Hardly s day now but a aaastho adoption of some new pqkcyohcrtcreed or ploposlLmficlhld - one o eomenewagencmw . ‘II-II IIIPOITANOIJDI‘ '.l‘lllqmy‘ggqygggqq,wqndhgve PW!" Bllllfllllflillifi been unthlnkabl . s nation or m- IODY TIIIIUIU- fumed hummer. “mm”. t ' n a career pa . II Physloiolills liken the cells of gun-unarmed. and the liodiflw tiny-flail. those cells. with an adventurous abuidoo. E § i Z s: 3 3' licv nomorwhctaeemstobebe- lleved. is the opposite. It has come to be thought, or thought by a majority, that there can be such a thing s; a ' = economy, that natural lows and forces may be controlled, that existence can be charted and card-indexed. that society can be graded and regimen- ted into better living. Whether the new thought is right. with all of history wrong. only those who ilw in coming generations will know. There are those who confess skcpticimn. They believe, and with something of reason, that natural forces ‘must continue to operate. that not all of man's wig nor resolu- flion can overcome nor much change those biological rules which have seemed to govern ‘ fence. Planned economy, so much on the regard as a delusion. Pointing to the truth that the basic needs of life depend almost entirely upon natural forces-upon such thins! as sun and rain-they hold up this as the answer to all plans. as the certainty of their failure. In all efforts towards control they see little but futility. ‘ Whether these twtios be right o;- wrong, this must be said: that. the world being what it is today; oi-"government what it la. their afatallan mint be ignored. For while many lyraay believe that the speed- fest and most effective cure of the praent depression would be in society's abandonment of its chief victims. such a. policy is unthink- able. llor better or for worse. WE haveadoptedtheueedflistwc are our brother's keeper. that the Old doctrine of the survival of the fitt- est must be put away. And what- ever hlswry may tell of these times. whatever errors of mind it may point in, it will scarcely be able tn tell that humanity in these years lacked in good intentions. or in a. spirit of brotherhood. All of these things we are trying, the boards and bureaus we are setting "In. l-hil agencies we tax ourselves for, the plans and charts and graph! that rain uponms. the bureauc sts that rise up to regulate om- living-all evidence one things. may evidence a more h spirit among men, a groping for more of justice. a greater compassion and pity for our kind. i ‘Iherefore, while many among us nny be skeptical of the 0m 01 much that is being tried, or frankly dislike what is being tried. 19¢ 110M of us become enlbittered or too peulmintlc. If life at beat be a hard anwafirn with some lost battles. lndifuflmlabebutadfemthat should not mean refusal to strive for betterment, nor even refusal to mu. fresh hopes vrith a Spirit 0L tolerant inquiry. It may all end in futility and failure, in defeat and disillusionment. but. if so. what of it‘! liven in failure, where there has been great effort. there is soma- thing fine and gallant. other countries whose supplies have been reduced to a u ‘ extent than our own. The rate of fnvtruction from fires and other agencies is also very uncertain. The fire hazard tends to increase with the immense of population and the extension of lament unless measures are taken to pre- vent this tende During the last; tow years, forest fire damage in Canada has been maveriallv re- duced owlng to favorable weath- er conditions and improved meth- ods or detecting and fighting for- est fires. medit is also due to the general public for a mater measure of co-operaticn in the prevention of fire and to the various organizations which have carried on educational canvpaigns for forest conservation. With about $0.000 square miles of accessible timber in a glowing condition, an average annual in- crement of 10w ll clrbicfectpor acre would be quite possible under forest management and would ooyer the present annual average depletion. In view of the destruc- tion of young h which occlm and the detcriorlition of the for- denoo that this increment is being imcduced the insult time lips of reformers these days. they‘ Oanada, although par- ticular areas are producing 1n ex- rtizan. Either he approves or he d‘ ._.. , he n. , he can be accused of favouring the Libvllls, lfr he dlsapproves, he may be suspected of Conservative in- clinations. He must appear- partizan in older to be intelligible- "For a university professor to be gagged in regard to major public issues, merely because he is a unl- velsity professor, is rkhculoua. Furthermore, this situation brings into prominence a more fundamen- tal question. Is the Canadian radio system to be a medium thromh which opinions can finely be ed- plessed? 0r is its utility to_bc limited to the dilllhatlon of rapid peaches and the songs of crooneral" , . It will be easy for Professor Stewart. whose bias for Liberallan is well-known, to satisfy Mr Oharlesworth that his criticlnn of Premier Hepburnb indefensible l power legislation was notprompted by political partisanship In any event it has never been an accepted rule at nslbolssle that its Professors must be lltllllmllrlpl- Two at lees‘ of Dalhouslc’: "full time" Professor Commons with relinquishing their chairs at, the vereltiy. And both madefinchofeaacrs aswelllsusc- ful manners of Parliament. _ . . TEAOflERS!f Waoalrryacomplctellnoof TollotAi-tlslca. s£§y'}r°:"r$““mla°"' mall's nah a) gull.‘ no lino racism. - occupied seats hath; House oi . TTHIS SlHHF'Y1)lHRcEU\SflHERL S YOUR clothing budget limited? ‘Then you want a suit that will give you the greatest wear, that you can wear on all occasions. That's why we suggest ‘you make the single breasted, semi-drape, your Eailer suit. It’a as smart as can be, yet there's nothing ‘tricky” about it.‘ Fine long- wearing fabrics, plain or patterned. I s. A. McDONAL THE ISLANDS LEADING STORE. . lSUIT $ Q_ i wmr rwo rnoussns nls Mr. Tea Pot says: Use Beat Quality . T1534 BRAHMIN ORANGE“ PEKOE EMPIRE TBA Sold only in red airtight pkg!!- ii iiwiiiiiiiiiri INHUNEST PIPE TUBACBU! BRIGHT The Province ff“l'he ‘smoothest. Smoke” . i tobacco .061.» "ligfrc; ’ y . Cfharlottitownf