""‘ifii;‘bt;fiifiié;i=i'éiiai.igiié. " A i . with the Government. srnment inattempting to adminis- ‘ mai- adoption or the principle cf thc a phone tourmaline- l ‘lei ell’ nae flu é The Liberal organ erroneously, ates that from May 26, when the, ow railway time-table comes into Oct, the first train for Borden will ave Oharlottetown a half hour ear- Ier than last year. It will, on the émtrary, leave a half hour later- 130 a. jflw-“Ihlfih ahould be a decid- dd ‘convenience to passengers. Elbe-only other changes over last dimmer will be the ontinuance or the Georgetown train on‘ Thurs- Jlr. and the operation of the motor doach between ‘Emerald and Sum- airersido instead of between Char- lottetown and Bummer-side. Last your this coach left Summerside in the afternoon, coming through to Char‘ tetown smd nnecting at Emerald Junction with the train leaving here in the afternoon. It then left Charlottetown in the even- ing for Summerside and cted at Emerald with the last train. Un- der this summer's schedule, passen- gers to Charlottetown will not be inconvenienced, but there will be no motor coach going out from Char- lottetown in the evening. The reason advanced by the rail- way officials for these changes is that of economy. They state that two or three days a week are suffici- ent to handle all the traffic on the Georgetown train, and that during eunlmer months the passengers a- vailable average only about two per train. There is, of course, the question of public convenience to be consid- ered. While our people realize that economies are necessary. ‘they also feel that this Province is by no Ineans over-supplied with railway transportation facilities, and that it is much easier to cut down on ser- vices than to obtain concessions when added facilities are necessary. Any curtailment in train services, therefore, for whatever reason, is unlikely to be accepted without PW‘ test by those vitally affected. OUTMANOUVRED TParliament, writes the Ottawa bu. respondent of the Montreal star, ‘witnessed one of the moat curious performances by apolitical party in many years when, the Liberal 0p- position. after having two amend- ‘ to the budget ruled out of order by the speaker of the House, tumed around and helped the Ben- nett Government to defeat a 6.6.1". lllrltlldflllilt and then let the main budget motion go by default. It was the first time in recent memory that a budget has been adopted in the Commons without a recorded. vote, or without the Op- position putting the Government to a test o: strength. Jeers and taunts from the Conservative benches-and undisgutsed laughter from Premier Bennett over the Liberals’ disorgan- iaatlon-merked the failure of Right Hon. Mackenirie King and his fol- lowers to‘ divide the House. .&rlier in the day, when their amendment was thrown out by t» speaker, the Liberals did divide the Chamber in an appeal against tlfiruling and lost by a vote of 91 to 4a, sii the c.c.i='. except A. A. Heaps (North Winnlpcs) voting “Later the Liberals secured rev- edge on the cor. for this failure to co-operato by joining with the Government in defeat their amend- ma... tothe budget motion by 151 to 14-lalnioet, but not quite. a record majority for this Parliament. The amendment was to the effect that "this House. while apprcclatlhs thc unusually diiiloultrltaek of the Gov- tql the ,, ‘ system, regrets the delay in takiii the necessary dicpc folding 10,8110 redistribution of our alsundaneeamong the Canadian W599i“. » . ‘his rectum of tho day w not cc much therfact-that it marked the close of one of tile briefest budget Qlbatea in some years and the for- Plnance wnisters proposals or a. fortnight ago, but rather the min- aiir in which the ubersl and o.c.r. gionps remained at one mother's chip-its thrmitbouc the sitting. Tlfiir first encounter when the 6.01‘. lsucceedectin havlfli ll" atiimn amendment o. the midget tlliown out on the ifullhlll "ill ll raised ,an issue which ‘hadjlready ygiggyqtad doynoarlier in the_ ethical. Then the third party did some smart maneuvering and act in the Irvine amendment on their own account. with the result that when mural ma: nine wwicd aim u; --'- l Iaaa-(Iaaivanaaaisleude knot Ilfldbau. ‘-- saruaoar. auy u. use.” fil/IIHER TRAIN SERVICE It 1a fortunate indeed for omadl wire to weigh a pound. Special ma- > that the Opposition grpupe, jointly chinery has lately been installed to or “may. u" m "cl, howl," make this wire and further mach- Tu“! Tamas N“ a To minority that their political aquab- 331M353‘; Gigi?" ‘l?’ ‘ggigmg; " “Y bling.’ while it may occasion delay which 11", g, 1.41m Hugh,“ u; 9g m, yum-mg o; puyllgmgng, ‘e111 only two ten-thousandths of an inch. not materially affect the vitally lin- tore-trail: (tended lIIl ll.‘ advance) aaflled ernnient is dealing. ISN'T IT AWFUL? quoting it, we may assume that our local contemporary considers recent lpeech on the Budget: "The conxrvflflv’ policy h“ ‘tanned 0d and policy." Every householder 0111i’ ZlVlIIK ldvlcfl as t0 the brush- crlPpled business. incfllécd knows what boah this is from per~ ing of the teeth, removing tartar, unemployment, ruined our transpor- sonar experience. Who hasn't en- trcallns mflamcd sums (pycrrhccs). 1,110,,’ huudluuppgu uul-luullulh l-‘_ countered the pathetically incom- Telllwlll! the pull! from “ousplcious" petent “generaP-tlie welpmeun- geezha and extracting teeth with in- . ,, ing young woman who makes a hash 9° e roots. but he also outlines the ccuntry tc the verso cf bankruptcy. u; “m, uomusuc duty sue lakes kind of’ foods the patient should eat. In pleasing contrast to this blue- on: Or the jobbing gardener with Thus the dentist is teaching you ruin cry of the Provinces sole Lib- lllc fatlsuc ccmplex who is never 593p? lillle-‘lllrgctyml!’ W691i 1:5!- d! ~1 t t1 1 '- -1 chslsed twice in the same place? Y§°lil1 . cflchlhs you ow to m‘ represen 9 VB n "name"? And they have llleu- counterparts preserve your health, yet without in. every walk of life: briefless bar- I199 59"“. "w" Wculd ‘be mcrc than vote one way or another on the ulster,’ “limo” without clients‘ wor ' for dentists and doctors. bill W Pfiwldc lllflfllelillli boards doctors without patients, salesmen for our farmers and fishermen-we who cunt hold Jvbi. lilrllicrs who preserving teem l“ ‘llscllveled b!’ huue the golluwlng lulu“ olllclul fail however good the seasons may 2mm“, is xillnfiillbyn and the Drs. Cod liver oil and some other fish Total exports of Canadian produce m, mulls“ "belmvlor of bankers’ oils are the richest known sources of ll! ADIll, 1934. were valued at 831,- but because they are unable to of- vitamin D‘ n’ l5 Plesfl" m 199 95h 501,851, ah increase of siislomo fer service-i or products that any- 3;‘i‘,,§1§;;" mm“ m‘ °"°'~’l“ m“ over the April, 193s, figure. ' Total value of goods entering Can- Am“ . does not like the ides, of cod 11 11 ugh they refu t d t ""9 add durins April of the present year its reaction on humanubeirlgslnighlil- “mmugh the 9°" "M9995 °l P"- was $34,815,447, as against 30,457,- adclpilia researchers have develop- 2B4. in April, ma. This was an ih- cd a vaccine which cures monkeys crease of $14,258,158 in favor of this °l ‘ympwm 9’ infantile Paralysm- pontglnml; the vlgumln D_ The natural foods containing vita- . . weaker as th a.l 1st i; 1t; A mt morgue or $339037; l“ cub course and, lozmléalihgsuse ‘s’! their min D. with. which calcium (lime) toms and excise revenues collected lunbs, lay almost inert in their l l d kk u, dull“; 591-110; 11,15 yen!” gompgf- cases. When the vaccine was re- filfuucliegse‘ yo ‘mmg met’ bum" ‘ed with April 1933. duced our levenues and brought our who bolted out of the House rather gainst $3,541,642 inADril,1933. This mm mb t _ was an increase of $2,168,094. o my u e to President R00“ Second in importtnoe in the cus- gul- Wlyj’ Th, London Telegraph toms and excise field was an incre- "y: one cannot lay down the vol- “e o, ‘lynx-lull, the m; umuuu; ums without a real admiration for buslne“ 99cm“? a great leader since l irni t “m9” l" C9119" collected through the Excise. These mm“ worth whim s‘; lwfilwrnxgia; Unjtgd 519,1”, The 911mm Qoygm- ccllwllch! lldll mmlll FY9999“ 93" toh's often critical Economist says mm“ 99nd” l“ 614,448 as compared with $2,431,118 many of Itoosevelts messages re- the “allmlal "ed"? "l9 cilllldlllll call addresses of Lincoln. The Lon- llldlmme‘ 99d l" ma“ "Bu". mo‘, u "m m u” don Post suggests that European MERCY FLYING In nine long typed shoots mining areas and isolated districts met by methods taken for granted in the older regions. notes an Ottawa exchange. Akiavik hospital. Temperature to hospital.” “Sick miner." pounds food dropped to miners." "Sick child: case." “Sick Indian princess starving even than the spectacular which are front-page news do“ continuation of a service of this nursc the baby and prepare sup- 1°" "l" °l1lY kind over a long period illustrate the status o1 modern flying and out the progress it has made in the field of transport. "Mercy flights," it may be noted. EDITORIAL NOTES The Crimean War seems very far from New Zealand that one of its to move a straight want-of-conil- dance amendment in the Govern- hient, he wutoid that"!!! "l" °l the budget debate die not pcrwlt of tgo amendments. but ill-It- cl" and each-emollient. blocked in this endeavor. m. xlna and llll iy celebrated his 104th birthday ih loilowera thereupon turbid "W" lglrggy, group and boiled‘ the Government.» run the steam rol- Iinar than a human hair, wire h now being ' manufactured at the Prescott (Linea-shire) Works of British Insulated Cables, Ltd, which has a diameter o! two-thous- andtbs of an inch. It requires fif- teen and one half miles of this trigger, there was no telling where It is an effective answer, says an ed by “changes of financial meth- be. These unfortunates have no purchasing power, not because of body wants. The monkeys became weaker and lecled. BYE-dually the animals recov- tor: British newspapers pay exira- veitin reviewing his new book, "On lcdders. "not excluding Hitler," tional year. the end of the season's for their services is to be. Quite lottotown, and the benefit of prompt (ma, m", 1, haul“, gnd ffg- measures- has been to dampen bus- friends to mid 8 1 treatment af- quently fires get out of control "1988 l 1 ‘ m 1 d” In "s, m” Th“ l, “.1111, m1, 1g 301m on range pann rig and llonnal long- pougha. were seeds. 03am, $119M“? ‘emu which tcrm capital investment. "It is re- plants, etc, that he mkht’ carry ‘ e Mrs. Oliver strachey in The Con- wshlzcd that a 40 per cent. dol- something of higlish horticulture‘ ll llflflvlnl °l 9v"? “mmelldnlllll- temporary Review (London) says: lar depreciation may in time prove into the land of his adoution. My At thg present moment there 1g g more inflationary than it has thus own country." Carey called India in gl-ggt Q51 0g blttgl- gngggmngm t, far, but uncertainty as to further this affectionate manner. And no naturally man ever did more to strengthen she and her husband alone have the confines long term commitments the ties of friendship between the ‘right 1D decide ‘$111.11, gouge lg the to things of the most liquid char- Hindu peoples and the British comes ‘but {of their familykeAfld if ttrhi: 113$. ‘(lather .words, while the nnpire than the luamble Kettering s admxizd. the con ntcm a B ll B Oil's survivors, William Freeman, reoent- married women, by taking work, frankly one of experiment and op- keep someone else frOm getting it pcrtlélrlu-Bgi. ishlfti‘ ilnfwm month M» W u» i» w m iizzmszixzsizsrziazt:airs: '.':r"....,.r:"~ " c" marina Ill lilo mcdllc- llc cclcrly . . . The whole position is riddled While the lgmq of his birthday cake. He with inconsistencies, because so few decrylhs Iflwlllll’ “i m, bombuql-ugnl o; ggbuw, people care to attend to it serlous- stability 0f l" ly. The onl clear and coherent makes every Wlltllrc 01' the P“ 9nd n" mllkln‘ Wm?“ 2:‘ factor as yo: seems to be the pen- ness man ementlafly ipcculltll! - llllfl P. Q alisation of married women, and Twelve Apostles to gireyent it fall- that is a serious menace indeed. We h‘ m” u‘ hi‘. M m‘ All“; m are allowing a real social revolution pie who are important, not only or u m” to tak I lth t thl kin f it themselves-but because they e pace w ou n go . W" Plum» n" i 7 and in consequence we are injuring the mothers of the next genera- aialillionpeoplmlaldthqarepeo- tlon. \ Ntes y 17w Way: » lflllftnha pursued Ofhiinlthaaboensaid filuaasU.laha.l.l PRESERVE ‘I'll ‘EDITH Osler, the greatest physician of u... .. — it“? "*.""...."..".‘.'".:“' e dna Ia in Fort Worth, 01' 9P8 l1 Y. l!‘ P999999 "m" "ml "lllllll "l! 5°“ Texas, were will; by a woman with llll ill-flue l8 mpollIllllfi. (llfccl-ly a pistol. They probably considered and indirectly. fcr a 1am amount discretion the better part o! V310,, of ill health and unhappiness than for if she had ever pressed the In!’ Will" lilllil" th ‘Oihservgtiillnslsliligw thaxt‘ 05 per cent “WT e shot mi ht go, and thus an 9 9 99 9° 9 "n .9" cm" rrcih the sin of the type used in on, o, themlmlgh, be m y (decay), and almost ioo per cent of adults have either pyorrhoea, decay- ediqor dead teeth. . . ow your dentist cannot sate “your A E m u temrznlm“ exchange, to the claim of theorists teeth any more than your doctor - - ° "l ° 9 m“ and vote-chase" that evegybody can save your heart or rather pro- which the Prince has a right to s fixed income 1mm tect you from heart diseasegif you Qgunty l-gpl-gggnguflvg mud, u, 1,13 a national dividend, and that the do not follow the advice he gives ' dividend in question can be achiev- Y0“- To-day we flnd the dentist not Paulensbury, If“ mlinster. shop he found a. small collection pf And the greatest single factor in b00113, 3e devoured However the average Daring it and presenting it to the public make it much easier to take. There are however natural foods and vitamin A. are often associated, . Where cereals are used it is ad- l The major increase was recorded érliglnth: §§§§,,§’,‘,,,l‘f§°§‘,‘,’§}°’,§,§,§§ V1599 m“ mm‘ 9*‘ 9"“! 5c fl-llilcil m custom duuu Dunn‘ 1m Aprll appeared m be mo cured. as cereals are not bone builders, the net amount realized from cus- toms collections was $5,619,737 as a- Blcclc in christian Science Mimi- Mr. Dennetfis Way _ (Mail and Empire) It is everywhere conceded that markets for Canadian “PM” at ‘L under the British flag and else- Wll lull lmbflfl lffldc "id “WW1!!! should “all lhe book and "learn where have been more effective collections which is truly pheno- 11W l1’, done]- The Munuhesul; tlihlin the rcvcluillclld-IV Rbcwvcl- Quulqluu h“ hlgl, l.“ r Mo,” an programme. n the Magazine n. m" an ._ v91“ gull; tw,.l,§’_mof,,‘l’,_..mt of Wall Street Mr. Charles Bone-- Mr" “Mum u “n effective example of democratic ‘m9 "mall" "ml lllllwml 9-999999 “my Unblu"! "Wk a“ l9 79°" lejdgfghb m pospwal- you";- and 10,000,000 Americans are still gross in a highly satisfactory direc- seleet preacher. out; of work and supported at the The end of the social and educa- expense 9r the Pllllllc- He adds “After more than s. year activities for clubs. associations and 91' “m9” "infill organizations for service brings exwllnlellmllml —- lllllcll 0f many "ports, elections, graduations 999ml’ lmPl'°"l5°d - "l9 lllm ll" the and 50101-111, All these provlde um_ come to pause and reflect. Canadian Airways lists. as a matter pie material for discussion in the mlll" Well "lmllld fllllccll/N "ill t “we mm“, . clan“ 1mm groups directly interested. However, the K°l4l "lllc °l llic @1011" ° l’ ’ 1 g the annual exodus to the country already 9"" llclileclfllld by 4° Dci‘ its records which show the pace o l‘ m occupy,“ many minds m“ mug Th“ ln use" ls the airplane as an instrument in nothing else counts. Even some 28,- 9315 ggldgoilhyilliay should further u, ll;_ Th wmg 1mm new 000 young trout are going out in- l‘ em ll ll be miide when “v 5 ° °y to the world from the shelter u! by": cider» lac-s not taken hold? U161!‘ fflfltlllg D0116. Wlth their feel- y‘ n 9e v w 9n we envlsll¢ "15 in the Olhlflllll "will "m" meal‘ mgg m; gl-gdugggg from sulluol and huge credit inflation that is now cal and hospital facilities are lim- university will have some sympathy. lmsslblel- olll‘ it th cannot be The graduates may even envy the gold holdings are capable of sup- “! “d e “new!” trout to the extent that the latter Willis a volume cl cred-it far sur- ero Sure to be sought after and Pa-‘lslll! filly tempted with attractive lures. Per- 95°" "Md? These “ambulance flights" aft lll hill?! ll- Wgfe Well. however, to re- m m t m . f N rm ll_ member t e lurking hooks. Life is w’ l‘. ll Ough the days work o the o ern p m" 0! ‘moon. states already recently re-valued nt of credit ever The difficulty is, continues the has lent of in- , flation. it is a. frozen BIIIRClYOII. The the Th", 1| m 11ml; to hum“ m_ reasons why it is frozen arise from variety in this work, and offer a genuity, as is made evident by an “M95918 "Ill mllllllllcwry forces of the splendid human ser- advertisement in a Melbourne news- lllgfiedmllillg! ‘which have been re- vice rendered, “Woman taken to Enapgllmgi; 12m“ w??? fietfisrslg one haul-l? wencacigtglnlplgtle r2311 50 bfokg by ggtuydgy wlll excllunge flationary measures as the $3,300,- clegrees below aero." "Sick Indian small loans with a person who is 999-999 llllbllfi “mo ipaid on saturday and is broke by the direct Thursday." through the Federal Reserve; the ....,.,......... ,,, , u, c, ,, ,,,, , i251???‘ {;‘.Q"‘.Z$ZF.’Z°.."ZK{?°P“ m‘ Ill am era. was n - 8 - (or doubt 35 1,0 the wlsdom o; “omen the other hand, t-le cry for reform Smith houplmly And so om Beyond gill/ill: arairsactgehpgrt min politics llisggiltfsd ‘fir; such defiaiionary dculit mc-hy Ill/cl Wm “"4 be‘ gligyegrne new Z,,f,,,,,"5°.,, 9:: Bill with its regulation of finan- cause the ’planes made it posibie control of politics passing to mu cial markets and the free horiz- for ill and injured persons to le- aentier scx. whose organizations are 1118s °l industry; the Sccurity Act “We attenmm promptly and MM‘ m... “ti... 11..., those 011m mm of ma: with its throttling of new would go solely towards the mis- .- m h“ men he plulnlluely remark“ d; do financing, _and such measures as sion work itself. He translated the poem, a. work of art. Had it been 3 not know what men d0 W111, 11ml,- the prohibition of consolidated 1n. New Testament into Bengaiese. At better art he would have taken a n: time. Maybe they stay at home m come tax returns which will occas- Sci-ampere he established a church, chance with it. I think. Had it. been additional taxation a. school, arid bought the materials one of his best poems instead of his per," How the pimghul-gtg o; u (or. but readjustment of holding com- i0!‘ Md 607- up d- Pflfll-lfld PR8! 101‘ mei- generation would eh1oy that puny organization in the middle of ithc puhllclticn of the ocniptures ‘i i a year." In addition, the SO-Ham- and philological works. These in- proposed. unem- eluded grammars and dictionaries “wag” i, m, 1.1-"?! out 1,, Co,“ gioyvmeint insurance to be paid for in the Mahratta. Banscrit, Punyabi, s n nope, or lstan u, its modern- Y RX "8 DBYPO s ired name. the Fire m artmcht is must be classed as hi" bull mule ""111 "h"?! ill"- eglied gg quickjy g5 P2551518, bu; legislation. Finally, the N. Ru A, translations of the Scriptures were ing the past two seasons by the before the firemen go to work, the llwll’ in so far as it tends to m1“ all edited by Dr- Oflrey, who kept at 6mm!“ Alma" PM“ bnween chm gnd own" u; the 1,1,11,11,15 business costs ahead of profits is workaeardentlyaseverto the very the Minder‘ wand‘ ‘m! ch." must first agree on what the charge works ‘programme; loans to industry the position, Week Bill, the also deflatlonary. last, and in some The result of these conflicting letters to England the employment of married women. possible Government is loudl Centennial (Montreal Gaaetie) Baptists the world over are calibrating the centennial anniver- sar of William Carey. missionary to India who died in for forty years W!‘ hislabora of Christendom. His career affords s, salient example of the sort of faith and courage that sumounts all difficulties and wins out against seemingly overwhelming odds. It is M elimination to say that. there is no more inspiriting record of por- sonal endurance and self-denial to be found anywhere in the annals of humanitarian service. It was by bis own stintless endeavors and in. vinoible. fortitude C"?! flllifilllcil f0!‘ lllmlclf l POIll- Come to me in my dreams, arid ion of great eminence and useful- ness, one that will ever cause his By dgy 1 ghgn be wgll gggin, honored name to be associated with For then the night will more than the history of Christian missions chosen field of his The h ministerial activities. William Carey was bom 1n Northamptonshire, in 178i. His education was of the scantiset. From childhood he knew bfivefly in the severest imen of the "ibad old tiniest" Altawfoupteen, (“Name he m ‘apprenticed to the shoc- ma rade. Afterwa be- . egme lomwymn u, u ‘(flu a; Scott, one has a. choice of striking In ml, oobblerls titles; and I am yet in two minds in "Poet Padre" would look well, too. But one cannot get tgntg The bell; o; m, youthful mlnd everything into a title, nor pack a was to wards botany and travels. He would have become famous had not he found his chief metier in another direction. But his love of this sub- his lifetime. Captain Co ' ‘s v a s w“ u volulm m“ had a tremgdgfis padre, an embattled pal-son, effect upon his imagination. Carey joined the Baptists and for some years was a local preacher. At nine- teen. the question came up concern. ing his ordination of the ministry. He took charge of a congregation at Barton and afterwards at Moultoil, his stipend at the latter place be- ing £17 per year. Bubseque iy he officiated at a Baptbt church in Leicester. At no time did he receive a. stipend sufficient to release him from the cobblers stall. F0!‘ 80ml? yours he did duty as shoe- maker schoolmaster, and l,‘ combined. Twenty dollars a. week. even ten dollars, would have seemed to William Carey a liberal emolu- meint. Says. Mr. Morris: fortnight Carey rnig walkinl ten miles into North- t amnion with. his wallet full of shoes and them returirlg home with a. fresh supply of leather." ‘Iradltlon has it that he affixed to the wail oil’ his oobblefs shop a self- msde map of the world. thendom were black- blocked. Carey never ceased to urge upon his ministerial brethren the claims of missionary enterprise. His great Opportunity Nottingham, in 1792. Association met in May with Carey Is He took for his text. “Enlarge the place of thy tent and stretch forth thy habitations." Then it was he gave the motto which has ever since been a signal l, for Christian missions: great things from God. Attempt great things ilorGod." The subscript- ion raised at that meeting was slightly in excess of sixty-five dol- lars. The Baptist Birmingham raised $280 in aid of the fund and. some others followed suit with lesser amounts. the voyage. The East India Com- pany placed a. ban upon any other vessels save their own and passengers were obliged to get licences from the that year. Affairs all went wrong. Funds ab-ve out. Provision were exhausted. looked worse and worse. He pro- The whole party would have starved duced a. war-worm paper from his had it not been for the generosity, left breast pocket. unfolded it and of some 1-lindu pundits who offered mumbled it over in a whisper. tihern sloeite. later on a, Mr. Undy offered Carey the Teiinga. Hengalese and Bhotenta. defiationgry dialects Twenty-four oobber whose career and character shine out to this day, ifuture leneratiom. heroic and gentlemanly service and a signal of inexitlnguishable light. While Canadians continue to administration has met a prolong- ed world crisis with policies much better aulied to the genius andi requirements of the Dominion. William‘ Carey's We are buying live hogs each Tiieg. day and Friday forenoons only. Davis & Fraser point at which ho h was always dark by a yellow mare lg g 11nd find in the dark. But the usually found her. when u, somebody else did came when she was discovered all M.P. and reported to 111g and the Padre was officially ed of cruelty to dumb anim was a laugh-but the Pad: too deeply shocked to 1gp had been accused of depi-lv mare of food and water_ malice aforethought. mare! Why. bless his would have given her h his own dinner, if she pressed a fancy for either. was on the ARM. The Padre was known for 111g courage to and among buy, mm He was one of the bravest. l-lis cour. age was not due to r belief um ha chlcyed divine protection, igl- he knew that he did not. He hag wounds to prove that he was u easy a mark as the next man. And his couradc was of the spirit as wgl] as of the strong heart, mu ml nerves. One of the most pitiful m4 beautiful legends pf those deformed and monstrous days is that of ll,‘ Pedro's search among the degd g1 night. by the my of his electric torch, for his own aon; the discov- ery, the identification by megng u‘ a finger ring; the donning of can- onicals there under fire and til; unhurried service. I heard it from ouun sedan‘: a “ii-c i.“ c" w; “g . ._ m mgflaghgm Pgrtliyen the night will more than moreforthepeopleoffndlathan did all other influences which have PAY - The hopeless longing of the day. Come‘, as thou camlat a thousand times A messenger from the radiant c es, And sails on thy new world, and As kind to all the rest as mo. Or, as thou never ca.m’st in sooth. . most violent, he would .have read it to the Kaiser himself had the op- portunity offered-or I don't know the Padrel But why suffer need- lessly for bad Ill? For seven months I had the hon- our of being a. mess-mate of Can- on Scott in “0" Mess, H-Qu Can. Div. That was no ordinary mess; and" without the Pedro it would have been less extraordinary. You don't know what I mean, so let it go! "A" Mess was more dif- ficult to crash, and "B" ran more heavily to spurs. but “O"' poss ed a loose-jointed, dashing style that was all its own; and its out- standing member was the Padre who, even then, was the senior chaplain of the division. So high- ly was he considered as a chaplain the General and the 6.3.0. (l) t at he washumor- ed as a poet to ihe extent of hav- ing his verses published occasion- ally, in Divisional Orders. Can you put your finger on, or cven call to mind, any other poet who ever en- l°yod s. like privilege? But all this did not save him from a run-in truth. And part my hair, and‘ kiss my brow,_ And say-My lovei ,.why suflereat l‘ that William W BY opcless ‘ “ _ of the day. ~Matthcw Arnold. The Red ‘Patch Padre Goodrige Roberts in Saturday Night) In writing of Frederick George bag with everything on top. My first awareness of the subject of this slight expression of appre- ciation was of the poet; though at a m our first meeting in the flesh—Val- k yea mm mm flhxoughwt cartler, August, l914—he was a The Padre had a yellow mare- yeilow and a mare, if my memory serves me; and it was his custom t.o ride up as far as riding was fairly safe, there hitch the convenient cellar or shell-smashed house. and continue the advance on his own feet overland or up oom- municating trenches, might be, and so into the trench to pass the time of day with the front-liners of his congregation. Always welcome on fire-steps and in forward dugout, he took his time; and when he had talked to every man and officer he knew (knowing them all). and worked his way back tobattalion headquarters and swapped yarns withthe 0.0., and thence back to brigade, the chances were against his conling out at the in spiritual authority over troops. He took his duties very ser- iously, if cheerfully but his author- ity lightly. He believed military authority to be a. good thing, but the authority of his sacred office to be even a better thing; and so, be- tween the two, he went wherever lie wanted to go more or less when- ever he wanted to go, and there did whatever it was he wanted to do-and got away with it. A general might say, "How did you happen to go over with the first wave morning, Padre?" And the Padre, smiling artlessly, might reply, "Why Sir, it Just happened, as you say. I was there, talking to one of the lads about his sick mother in Owen Sound, when the whistles blew- and there I was, over the top with he othersi-and I kept on going, of chdeaoon now-oblong the Venera le Frederick George Scott, OM11, D.5.0., Iilhll, 14111, .C--something like that! But 1 cflll-‘tflt think of him as venerable Venerable? It does not 508m to gg with the old Red Patch which 1,. wore so long, so honorably. so cheer. fully, courageously and tenderly. For Full Strength and Fine Flavor U BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA One moment, please! 1 don't seem to have this thing synchronired. I have said that I was first aware of Frederick George Scott as a poet. " That was a long time ago; and we had not a great many poets then- all pretty good: Lampman, Carman, Charles Rob- erts, and the two Scotts. One of my earliest memories of Canadian poetry is the line- “I saw God in his workshop, TRY iiiis TEST Wrliedowntheamountulyolaryeaentlifeinluranoo. strike out the laat three oipllers, and the result. will be the approximate amount of weekly income your family would derive from your insurance, if invested at. 5%. of 810,000 yields barely 810. a week. came when at the The poet must have been young, probably a curate, when he wrote that, and did he dream then, I wonder, of what devilish crushing of God's handiwork he was to live Pignreyoar inanraueeintormaoffamiiyauport. The least you should carry should be enough to yield a sufficient income for their malnfeiianoo. Lot us allow you how this can be achieved through our monthly income plan of Even at Vaicartier, in 1914, the Padre had a red hot war-poem all ready for the encouragement of the troops. 1t was addressed to the unclericai language. Our hardest 0"" "°l' boiled platoon commander ‘I'll GllAT-WDST LII ASSURANCE liYiilliMii a. 00., LIMITED Kansans-r. s. r. ly. It rode around in the Pedro's left breast pocket; and you did not §i€V6 to aska toTllzave it read to you.. me passe . e Padre reached India-House heroic they couidcmbark France ih the spring of m5; and passage money was put to The t _ moo‘ ob n‘ or he was a an advanced dressing 0 ll°°ll°c "clued station when the first as-attack libbclcfld. but in June. 1793. Corny was put over. g with his’ whole family was on his egmg buck on the lulu some o; oul- way to London: he had cvcrccme own gassed and wounded were car- llwlr ccmplcd- The party embarked ried in. sh M.O. advised ihe Padre the cion Princesea Mania. and to beat it-unlees he fancied the landed at Calcutta in November of idea of himself as a prisoner. "Not a step!" said the Padre. He stuck around; French Colonials CEDAR ISHINGLES We have just bought 14 CARLOADS CEDAR SHINGLES -Contaiiiing 2V; Millions- "But perhaps it would, be unwise From very Bu‘ Make" naguement of to be captured with this on one's an indigo factory. l-le gladly took person," he murmured; and he tore which placed him that tough poem into harmless upon "easy street." He gave notice to fragments. the Mission Society that he could support himself and family and for the Germans did not get all subscriptions they might send through behind their gas. 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