f1.’ i a 0%?! TES BY THE VlllY Haldane On Eugenics Dr. lgglidcnt—“'.ss(lrr:ellilflr"ilhfghirrgslllbkh‘ uumyligel-‘Pseelgenb-J’. B. Burn!" Ggrmsuy with the load or miil- (me New York Bel-am Tribune) . Emm- a?“ “may” Klfefklohidlli ‘liurltifirfrie “rum 1m“ ‘mm h" back might I ‘ Between-the 11171399115” °t Du" Associate Editors-brink a er a ‘ . . L ‘ L u upon curt“ t! wk“ "origin O! species» and that ‘the German people only had the of his "Descent of Man,” 8n . 1331 5.00 er your (in advance) delivered. Mgigllnlmlrjaiuefreulil:nfégunce)nffllltdpl" ""1"" "d Umml 5m"- » . -- | r do nt of the stores offices and boufellrivlflldlrilnrdilrlml‘ldirfifillteiloifinugluncr? by IlEgstCCOIfice deliveries.’ The I10!" j offices aro likewise included among the "householders," so that the "nah", 1s 1-,.“ h‘, |,|-u,-||¢;|||y gvgry wurrinvhlle home in the city. The Glilifdliill goes by ruuil daily to n0 per ceut of the rural route bu! uvaers and in uluny crises, neighbors share their paper. The Guardian ll M pnwllflhn] In every rural home in the Province. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Uxrrvn S1‘.\'l‘i-Z.\‘—'l‘in\ ran-awn» film-vial Axwvy IM- New York Ccnfflll gunmn; w Yufk l‘lly tinncrnl Motors Building, Defro t, Interstate Bull!!- urg Karl is (‘ilv, Wlllflllllllhj’ 'l‘o\rer i-iuiirliug, Chicago: 4-130 City‘; Glenn [fl-lfllllg- Atlanta, liuss Building, San Francisco; 1135 No. Beth Street, hlladeiphia. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1932 BRIGHTENING SKIES 1m new functions mmlv u I it is an ‘encouraging sign tlliihdementanzma Hoke". sewing no he exhibitions heldpurpose except that it would be i ihroughout the Province , il “ f h the Year have been successful. Bothijiojdszfhmziiebfl: ‘Lofii-‘igimou In attendance and in number andl various quality of entries, the Provincai, a h m1 I - r Bxmmuon was markedly so’ Thhprecia on of even t e s per oms fairs held at Georgetown Sourlslm genuine music‘ and Albcrton have been well up tQIK "n must be admmedfl wit“ the standqrd n ,5 expected amiProfessor Smith, "that critical list- thatthe Central Srhool Fair, on Sop‘. gcmng w music is dimcum Music is 22 and 23_me first m“ of its kind the most abstract of thelarts. It has w be held in Canadarwvm be wide - been well said that whle much is 1y patronlzéd and that‘ its qwultsdeft to the seer 0f a picture and Wm be f“ reaching in the stimulus,’ more to the reader of a poem, most it will give to the industry. The M an 15 demanded 1mm the hear" ' ' t k l t increased emphasis placed this year,“ musw‘ Y“ I do m” hm h.’ | on quality production ,5 bound w-such demands belongto the category react, favorably, and this factor,“ nowledge‘ Form‘ ma!“ s’ ab“ mould bc gfvcn more and morfm w recognize dmerem themes’ attention by all concerned. Thcfkeys- °h°rd5' may help; but m‘ the time has gone by when farming O,.I'most part these are not essential. livestock ra‘s’ng can be practiced inflrechmcal equipment may" be neces- ‘ haphazard manner Now that we-sary for the critic, for he should be ' l "e finally’ as Colonel Mccregonahcad, as ft were, of the public. txpremd it in his presidential adw But it is not really indispensable for tress nt the Chamber of Commercelmw “an”? “gene's enhymem"! convention. "on the threshold of l“): m u“ mam’ ‘he dmennce be- m, upgrade}. mere shoukite a cgnwtween e. critical and uncritical list- lemd 6mm w improve quality and ener is, that the receptive imagin- background-a "drowning, draining.’ Hitillation" tends to stifle all ap-l £00m B) jams W. Barton. ".0. A STITCH IN TIME FROM HEALTH STANDPOINT will and the Intelligence focal)? tallze upon her unique delivery from the Frankenstein of arma- ments. Yet Germany is making the skies echo with demands for "equality in lrmaments." Lookins at the other nations bowed to the , earth under a crushing load of ar- A family of four-father, mother, moments, she sends forth a. despot" l and two boys 16 and 18 respectively ate cry, "I want some guns to car- '—apparently free from any afl- ry, mo." The Germans must be the meats, were discussing health one cram»: people in e. crazy World. day. The father was working every _ day, the mother doing her house- The situation in British Colum- work without difficulty, and the two bla reminds us that it is Dr. Tol- . boys were attending school reg- rule's misfortune that his broad ufarly- shoulders must bear the brunt of The "m" “wugh h‘ w“ n“ a financial situation which has helm"? as we“ a‘ “sun ‘m the mad u n r removed Not only been developing Over many years telephone; the mother thought that this m we e - l or pwjshe also was not hearing as a ‘uwcssmn l v n th t n a little more miers. Perhaps he should have seen’ “e and a s e w“ - . ~ t l tired in the afternoon than she had hrixgascufrsd baurgszftretnigeldcoiiierglya; been: ‘me ‘my’ recently recovered , and under _ ‘from “flu found that he got ‘dizzy’ h- » 7W“? Wm“ “me °“" “u ‘wit; 1t was decided that despite the British Columbia for many yews- fact that none of them were ill, h“ Spent beyond “s means , i“, theywould go to the family doctor T°hnle is m’ m0” to blame than-Wind be overhauled from head to McBride. and Oliver and Bowscr, ‘not and others who held his plaice be-I what did the mmuy doctor find? m" hlm- 3m h“ 15 hddmg the‘ He found that the hearing of the b8?» father was less than 50 per cent in ‘i l the left ear, and was only about ‘l5 1f- li lmdsh" i" m” ‘m’ °f 5°“? per cent in the right car. The trou- Jiinglish and in the effective pr°‘ ble with the hearing in the left ear {nllnclflilfln 0f 800d 571811511 whim was because of a chronic throat ‘B088 far to explain the prvfefemfflconditlon which interfered with air lshown by educated Canadians for getting up through the mouth to [English Plays and We'll 371181151’! the middle ear, and in the right italkies. There are, of course, many‘ cal‘ it was due to hard wax lying iiiiterates in this country who prc- against the car drum. lfer the Hollywood brand —of stage The doctor made the ordinary Icraft, and who always go out of test of the eyes and found that his ltheir way to sneer at all things - glasses did not give him the proper fgngnsh, but attacks from such‘ vision for reading or distance. quarters will have very little 1n~| .The doctor found that the hear- fluence upon the good taste of ca. ing of the mother was being inter- nadian readers, a great majority of, fered with 1n both ears simply by whom appreciate the undyhg fact hard wax; and the tiredness was I that Old Engnm 1S a source o; likely due to a little pus pocket be- Austrlan monk named Johann Gregor Mendel published in 1866 f the results of studies in heredity imp which the flowers of his mon- astery garden had provided the material. Though Mandela obser- vations had no such sensational efleot upon the sciences as Darwin's bold hypotheses, he did lay the foundations and supplied the lab- oratory methods for the science of genetics which have since developed more baffling, and therefore, fas- cinating, problems than almost any other. Into these problems the lay public gets few [glimpses except through such a by-product of the geneticists laboratory as Luther Burbanks wizardry with plants. The layman is, therefore, in no position‘ to know what he ought to think of attempts to apply genetics to human relations through what are describ- ed as cugcnio principles —whether he should take such efforts very solemnly or whether he should class eugenics with astrology and alchemy and get. facetious when the subject comes up. g l _ With a Genetics Congress due to open shortly in Ithaca, the por- cminent scientific company. Froml an interview with a distinguished British scientist, Dr. .1. B. s. m1- danc, who will not attend the eu- genics congress on his way to Ithaca l . it is mode plain enough that there are geneticists who are too impa- tient with the eerie flights upon which amateur enthusiasts have led some cugenic groups to sit in con- ference with the eugcnicists. There is some justification for this attit- ude, and yet there is a touch of 1n- tellectual snobbery in it which prompts one to go to the defense of what ever is worthy of defense in eugenics. Literally. l interpreted‘ eugenics plexed newspaper reader is about I to discover that, which ever attitude l he takes, he will be in at least some i . i ‘FEPT Bank ofntrelczl fHasA DistinctPez/sonalify ” A sau an old customer of the Bank recently: "ln my opinion a bank has a personality just as positive and dis- rincr as that of an individual." " “Yliéel Tat I The personality ofthe Bank of ltlontreai, created by its founders and perpetuated by their successors, is reflected in the substantial charac- ter of the clientele the Bank has drawn to it, and expresses itself through more than 600 Branches, Established 1811 The elements which have gonelnto that intangible bu: very real thing -the personality of Canada's oldest bank-include the Bank's unwaver- ing strength and conservatism, its helpful, eificlent service, and in thorough knowledge of local coo- dirions wherever it is represented. BANK o1= MONTREAL TOTAL ASSETS 1N excess or $100,000,000 which are so many ‘points of com, m: with the people and the com.» merciai life of Canada. Charlottetown Branch: S. R. FINLAYSON, Manager the University of Toronto. in the holler than thou attitude. Thoug have any musical kncwl ge he is, willing to listen cttentivegy, he a? willing above all to hear s. piece‘ more than once, and he is sensitive! to the feeling of its eflect." I 1 the agreements negotiated at the Imperial Conference, from which Marit. me agriculture will benefit enormously if it canmcet the re- qulrementsinthcmax-kets of Great Britain andother Empire countries. ‘n is precisely because ‘Jazz makes “is United Kingdom is easily the no appeal to the "receptive imagin- worid's largest importer of such atl°“"_b°°5“5' it “wurages wmmodlucsv as butter’ cheesm pm. critical listening-that its popular-i mved milk; eggs and egg products‘ ity ls viewed with such grave con- md the fact that preferences have “em by “w” wh° b5" the mter" been obtained by Canada for these e5“?! ""15"; it hm"- prociucts in the British market should inspire a determination to profit to the utmost extent by "It opportunities thus opened for intra- Enrpire trade. The first business of Parliament when i‘. convenes on October 6 will doubtless be the rati- fication of these agreements, and their successful working out will then depend largely upon the lnit-liijedeilrzdotlebjnmetzgfly 5122:” b‘: . r - letlve and entcnprise of our farm- g per mg communities. tween the Civil war and the pres- There are still, unfortunately, a gm day’ The outstmdmg ‘Mt '8' ‘cw hackers and grwchers who vealed is that in the last sixty- prefer looking on the dark side of three years divorces 1n the neigh- things. For political or other refls- wring republic In" “hmny m’ ons, some take pleasure in being creased “n,” p" am’ a‘ sum“ pessimistic. But the great meloritv “n m°'°"” °t my ‘m p" “m” of our people, including the lead- the “m”, °‘ nun-ml“ and m1 in commerce and industry, arE an mmuLof only 30o p" cent m satisfied that the tide has definite- "w p°”“1"'l°“' Leg“ “P“““°“’ l, turned. one has only to read have multiplied five times as rapid- ehe inspiring address of Colonel 1y u mum.‘ McGregor, published in yesterday's th:'h°c:;$e1;°f°fattte::ts 32113311213: Guardian, to realize that we are _ indeed on the threshold 0r new and ‘Md’ b“ he “m” ‘m’ ‘° l” °' better times and that the hard lcs- a wry obscure complex character’ “m! o’ thekmst few years can be and he emerges from the discussion “med to excellent “count if wealth no very satisfying conclusion. ‘pply the expeflence we havelThe growing prevalence of divorce the {across the line is what might be ‘lfllwflcd in a country where there is a wide-spread disregard or the law. The latest omcial report from Wflfilllngtvn is to the effect that ____._ one marriage 1n every seven ter- Jazz music has frequently been mlnates in divorce or some other‘ defended on the ground that lts:fonn of legal separation. The lesson noise and rhythm can be enjoyed for Canada, states an exchange, ls without serious attention, that ihthat we continue to observe the law, fulfills, in short, the function of’ anIto cultivate the higher moral qualg easily-taken stimulant. A forcefulltics, and get back to true religion‘ answer to this argument is contain-Has a purnfying and beautifying in- rd in an article by Prof. Leo Smith,'fluence in all the relationships of lecturer on the Theory or Music at’lffc. There is no room here for any h: current issue of the Queen's Quart- we are a, lbng way behind the Unn- erly. This writer points out that, as ed States in divorce records, we are no "stimulant" can preserve its p0‘ not by any means spotless in this tency indefinitclv. the result is thatregard. DIVORCES IN U. S. A. The political science faculty of Columbia University, New York City, has issued a. volume by Albert Cahan entitled "A Statistical An- alysis of American Divorce," which gained to the problems of 111M119. / THE JAZZ MANIA wlnningsucoessive general elec- tions. At any rate the situation to- day is that the Canadian National Railways owes the National Trcas- ury $1,250,000,000, which might as well be written off, and that the public treasury is, in addition, committed to payinginterest upon another $l,300,000,000. 1n 1931 the taxpayers had to find $98,000,000 for interest and capital account, though this year, by drastic econo- mics, this bulden on the country will be greatly reduced. The British Government has been extremely anxious to have the United States attend the World Economic Conference in London. To: what has happened is that the lUnited States has been asked w lpraotioally dictate the question the Conference is to consider. Some ‘months ago Mr. Neville Chamber- lain observed that he could not see how a. world economic confer- ence could get anywhere if it ex- eluded a question so obviously concerned with world economic conditions as war debts. Mr. Cham- berlain was undoubtedly right, and any conlerence that attempts to ig- nore the reiatlonship between ta- riffs, governmental debts and for- eign trade is not likely to achieve much. Iivflflflng a speed of 2B Jmots Der hour during a trial of 36 hours. the new Italian liner Rex has de- monstrated that she will be in the race for Atlantic passengers. With 9911118113’ and France making Ercat strides in Atlantic shipping, the Italians are throwing their hats into the ring. Great Britain will soon have to buck uplf she wants to maintain her reputation as a leader in commercial shipping circles. It is true the British have some fine boats, but they are not as new as the crack German ves- sels. The finest boat afloat under the British flag is the Canadian Pacific's Empress of Britain. The giant white vessel will hold her own with the best. That is why ca- hls entire appearance, aside from "crowding" the lungs and prevent- ing prcper breathing. I believe the lesson is quite plain. You go about every day and be- cause you are not really sick may be satisfied to put up with little “inconveniences? or a little “tired- ncss," whereas if you would let your family physician spend one whole hour on you, you would not only enjoy "real" health, but pre- vent simpie but unknown ailments from becoming a serious menace to _ . 00129014201." FROM "STIRRUP CUP"_ What help is there for all our blun- daring? With mumbling feet we stammer up the hill: We cloud the pondering Our blood is sand, and water is our Wi!l. sun with witless Is there no help at ail, no dream Than this mad terror and this voiceless crying? Isman a shallop on a mouthless stream? Is he a false dark word beyond denying? O Beauty, stir among the ancient embers For one red living fagot that re- members likeiier O Light, O Beauty, not Dray. Not for these bodies broken on the road, But for the glory of a final day. For the white splendor of a last abode. because we —Barbara Young. _______i________ on war reparations account. But nadians are so proud of he". As everywhere - expected, espe- cially in Germany, France has re- fused to assent to increases in. German armic: and armaments. The next movn is up to Germany. And ns all pal-Yes in Germany are agreed that their country should, tear up what remains of the Treaty of Versailles, there is not much‘ doubt of the outcome. Kurt von schleicher has already told the outside world that Ger- many intends to rearm; and that they can either like it, or lump it, Germany paid tremendous sums l I she paid allied Governments by reborrowlng larger sums from alli- ed banks and investors. For every $1 repaid on war reparations Ger- many reborrowccl $1.90. now holds more than $4,000,000,000 of foreign money. In the language of the school boy, Germany now hOs the Allies exactly where she wants them. At Lausanne‘ the war debt slate was virtually wiped General clean, as far as Germany is con-' ccmed. Now she gives the Allies their choice between meeting her demand for rearmament or facing a general upset in European stabl- iity. Gennany' cate for the selection of some par- tlcular type of person as the “fit"; and he would, like Adolf Hitler if he had his unscientific way, deny to all but his pet freaks the right to have childrenyThis is the "dogma.- tlsm" against which Dr. Haldane is presumably in revolt, not because the enthusiasts’ standards are right or wrong, but because of the intol- ‘crable infringement on personal ‘liberty which lawmakers guided by ‘cranks might impose on society in the name of science. Well founded as is this fear in American experience, the excesges of the faddlst arc no adequate ex- cuse for holding up m ridicule 011 studies of human heredity which would reveal how human ills are hocdlcssiy visited upon the third or fourth generation, or would show ' why a man and woman in marrying should give intelligent thought to the kind of children that they are "k013i f0 bring into the world. Since these legitimate and often urgent ends are also in the field of eugen- ics, the unqualified disapproval which Dr. Haldane has expressed 13 not altogether open-minded and, therefore, not altogether scientific.- ——_____s__._ Partisan pbje-etion T0 PHPtISHIISh-ipj/ (Sydney Post) 1n its Round Table column the PM‘ Wdfly prints an editorial from the Vancouver Daily Provlngg on the Pffipnscd Coa‘.~'.'.".>n Government for British Columbia. The art'cle “W5 how Imnossnnen is to get HWBY from partisanship oven in an appeal against jaartyisnr. incessan- ilal element in partisanship l5 bias, and this is the circf weakness in the Provinces argument, which ls as extreme and radical in content a! the iii/Brake campaign oration. "Party in British Columbia," says the Province, "has been o, nuisance and an obsession. We want to get l i \._~.\\\\\I fnonns HI?‘ ’ v "I but fl- "XIO-Pflfl-y Gfivemmelll." flllithem. Both \vil1 continue to exist it visions an Administration in which as long es there are twovgldeg to g the "party will be submerged al- question, " together in the ‘public interest." Itll yearns for a condition such as Mac- 1 aulay pictures in one of his "lays of Ancient Rome": i “Then nOXle were for a party and,‘ all were for the state; Then the rich man helped the poor. and the poor man loved the great: , Then lands were fairly poriioned and spoils were fairly sold; The Romans were like brothers in _ the brave days of 01d.” The license Macaulay took wm history to produce this pretty poetic picture was no greater than the ' on. L. a. rvnusd 0f London, Eng. Noted Physician treated successfully and obtained permanent cures of Stomach Conditions such as Indiges- tion, Dyspepsia. Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dis- tress and many other ali- ments peculiar to the stom- ach with a perscription which i Vancouver Provlnws idealistic vls- we have procured and sell ion of the condition that could be “"5" ‘he Mme 0f 5""! created by the abolition of party-j swmach Mum"- lSm. and the setting 11D 0f 8 GOV- We alone have the sole rights on this prescription and since selling it have re- ceived numerous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your stom- ach. Serious conditions are likely to arise if you allow yourself to lapse into e chronic state of gastric trou- ble. Get a Bottle today. P1160 c. ' on 2 mics ernment of independent, disinter-‘ ested citizens, obedient to no mot- ives butthose of undiluted patriot- ism. ~ All will agree that the party sys- l‘ tem has grave defects, but sensible‘ people realize that any alternatlvei system-indeed any human institq utlon whatevezy-would be certain to develop similar "and perhaps more serious weaknesses. The funda- mental troubie is that we have to‘ depend upon mere men to run this‘ mighty world, and the Old Adam | r marketing methods. These questions 3mm °f u" ‘m9 l5 ‘MW- whqe m sweetness and “gm to jibe whole tween the gum and one of the means a study of the problem of . received consideration at the con- ‘h? “her l“ l‘ mwtlv‘ The mun] civilized world. {mm teem- bBlnB "W911 born." and in this sense ‘ lemme o! Agricultural Mmlste" ical hears only with the ear; music; i The 51121114355 0F 71990955 °l all races have been applying its rid of it. We want a. Government anshlp is a natural characteristic of’ .04 9Q oo-rooow»; ‘to hlm is gfmply e sensorlal stun-i The present railway situation in which 011° °f "w “Y5 “mlmlned principles byrulc of thumb since time that will devote us whole attention the human mind. held T969113!’ in Tmlmw- and’ as . was clue to too much exertion too b u 1 l ' , y _ umuom h“ 0mm o; mp6s] 15 puw Canada 1s no doubt. traceable to “B. m n k t fl - egan, unt many of them have to the demands of the Prov mo.’ There may be many good argu- " “sum (‘rgallzatlons “m be mm‘ 1 B, H m h m ‘h the fact that the Mackenzie King Soon a r e a ac ° u‘ now been incorporated into state I101‘. one which must devote nine-vmenfs for a Coalition Government AND ‘d in every Province ta gather dam y M" ‘ e at ear.‘ o w‘ Government encouraged the public I“ the ‘mler ‘my nothing wrongflilld national laws which check the tenths 0f its energies to satlsfyln; in ‘Brltldh Uolumbia, but the con‘ and consider ways and means of|th° inn" e“- °n the “h” ham’, owned system w pour out hundreds xziatrmlggartmoreyffikgsariutnt: marriage of feeble-minded and un- the requirements of parties. tention that partisanship, orveven ‘ TAYLOR _ achieving this end. The time lslregards mush‘ as ‘m mtemgem‘ of millions cf dollars all across the should-‘ers were "round" and his heialthy persons. The faddist in this The Vancouver Pail)" (1065 MlPpartyism, is "a nusance and an g: TAYLOB _ u _ r’ I n ° particularly opportune m ‘yew “enjoyment. Though he may not county-largely for the purposecf head was hdrwping,“ thus spoiling fled has. howevvl". become an advo- want a BWO party Gfilvemmefli’. cbseslon, 1s certainly not one 0! ophmurm. I42 Richmond Street sw-o-eoo-ao-oooao-ooo-eoaeu TAXIES " l JIMMIPS TAXI i Phone 525 1'13 Queen Street 50 9- ~1'l-1 IIIOII . Allison iiuestis Phone 440 or 323 L- The Queen Tn]. Professional Bards Stewart 8t Lowthel’ J. n. srawaar, K. o u. w, nowrusa aamusreas, soucrroas. l"- 84 Great George Street MONEY r0 LOAN MoLEOD & BENTLEY, 1. s. BENTLEY w. a. ans-rosy, x. 0. Barrlster and Attorn=y'°"u" has not yet disappeared from the race. , Critical situations may arise and may dictate temporary departures. from accepted methods in the pub- lic interest. Coalition governments‘ have occasionally; been establishedi with greater or less success, to meet such situations, and it may be that British Columbia could with profit resort to such an expedient in its present emergency. In Italy they trod out Fascism, in Spain, dlctat» orsifrp and revolution, in Germany revolution and Junkerfsm, to save, the country in a crisis. Just now; they are experimenting with a Nat-f ional Government in Britain, with results which, for the time _belng.' at, least, seem to Justify the expecq tattoos of its proponents. F The point ls that all these expedi- enis are obviously of a temporary" character, designed to meet an ex- ceptional, pass ng condition in the life of anallon. To cite any of them as deveicpments of a. per- manent chnracter, or as proofs that complete national co-opc ation can be substituted for the party system. is obviously fallacy. There never was a Coalition Government, or e. Gov- ernment of any k'nd, to which, strong oposition did not develop. It] is an axiom cf psychology that MONEY TO LOAN Oflioe: 1B0 Richmond St!!!‘ DO IT NOW l For Winter Warmth Lock ahead to your fuel needs NOW. C0111 l weather will be here only a few weeks hence- ’ Make sure that your fuel bins will be filled with good‘ Coal byplacing your order with us-Slwn- A. PICKARD & CO. Phone 240 "consciousness is seiectve" which is ech- o’ m w» aim