--‘¥nk...r..,»a.. ..i._ . t DECEMBER 29 19 PAGE FQUR THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN T A, - 36 ' I . . w ' i llS existence. home of these statutes have The Charlottetown Guardian é _ __ __ _, _, time 5 Th; a =9?“‘l“f.‘,;“{,1f3;.'%filtfigg“ ',11;,‘,=;,";,§j,-.°",;§;: l l PUBLIC FORUM CHECK YOUR BEARINGS! Pftllllelll, LlenL-Col. w. cam» s. Melmro 1 ‘L "L ‘ “‘ _ v ' I. w ~ . _ » . , . a. B t. v- J- l- ;t;t it's are ~t i1.t:mtlv' beui assed. From N“ 5°11“ u" "l" will “m” "1"" "l" "' "" . , loeretfnllye s. lliiroiiflinnou, D- l- o‘ rllllillll" these nLlziilv (lthirlllllt-JHISKCIIIETECS the writ’ casnadI-r: Wm wit“; $851k xclceizvfiiglli grim- ‘: We travel ‘an on fthe dloumllay of “re, striving ___ . -~ —-- - ‘ f. , . -. . . er. some circes e . a n: ' Editnruml natal-in; Dlrecalr t.’ Ii-ndlbiillfiizt; {Jil- m, 1mm], constitution. _The rest is _based ,5 m“ that. time h“ "rived ab tzr-llw-‘zixil: ‘rum to reach i; haven 0 glhflfiletll 8n¢%h bleqfore the .»*~~""'"“' *“““"_'_'_j1”" ‘la-l ~ —' upon oral tradition, tradition so luunured in the ready, but this seniiment is by no n! wrmwllfltl- evelllng 9 o as}! 0e a 5 us; e 9W Year utT-FIIfuyTiEi-uoa um; $5.00 n" 1"’ l“ ‘d'u°°) minds of the llriti-h people that for sheer ef- 111"” lmmlmws lthfwfllmm m” comes’ another mllestone’ and blds us Pause and - ll d U0 fltelhrrrllv n m» ill-n "";§_fl§"p{,l,",'§,1,',wctii ‘This... Prints lzrlmxlill-d snub-d“ “Id “m”, ma" T . . . - ' i936 Tl‘l-.>D.~\!. Dl-UWBL" "i" "uzzi...,*fi wasiiza Otherwise Dominion. One thing, however, reems certain: that if and when t Canada sees fit to reopen her , doors to overseas immigration, 1 there will be a. much more string- ent policy of seleczion put into force z check our bearings. The road to independence is plainly marked __ the highway of life insurance. Why take an un. known road? You can ‘purchase a Great-West Life Pension lcrtivt-ucss it might well have been cast upon all lilhographefs stone. To understand it all one must go back to the battle of Runnymede and the .\l.'l_{ll."l Carla which KlNG JOHN signed in 1:15. That (locumeilt laid the foundation for thc cstablislimcilt of the supremacy of the will WINTER FAIR WINNERS Sin-The Hon. Mr. Dennis. Min- ister of Agriculture was quoted by the press that in his opinion P.E.I. BLOOD PRESSURE AND THE than has been carried out at any, EMOTIONS exhibits o; 1m, flock a; m, Am. time in the past.—3alnt John Tele- I he,“ wmte; pgh- this year were _ .. t-wiiai are you XTZKliIlB- m)’ 191d? "words, ivouis. \\\11‘<1>~" of the people. During the reign of KING (iuoxut; Ill. the Cabinet, in its modern sense, graph Journal. , A candidate for insurance re- the best for many years. Hamp- or Endowment at. age 60 or 65 for a very moder. —- Wm“ m!" ‘m’ u“ medlm a‘ shi a Kingston are claiming are premium. It. protects your family too. Let r *H“mle‘- came into existence. The modern cabinet is ‘mun M“ "em “y” m“ He” ammalmn “d immned his “mm theli- galore of the honors in the us send you pal-ticujarm . t (lllltbCS of V ‘ . 4 Dr. Goebbels has banned a German that his blood pressure was so hlgh now-m ‘v l - . l -- lcsclllltil a5 W91’ crsomtit-il in the Crown m hose nam t - HM" Dlvlsmm “d me m g l lnlintp nave M" * ~ I b‘, W wmgunlcd and] l'_ ~, _ i l‘ e_ 3C5 publication, called “Ores Section,” that the doctor refused to accept copy taken from the May-lame ; onph,“ “ i, .“ liilfllilvt ll»; v ‘vtilifid: gum‘ l-mnlu u 0t llarlllzliiiout tarp paisetlinvvar and plciace fpage, ggcagorizlylerlofitits articlesapontfiimli- lieigtuéormlltusugaélciéyliut told him to Farmer of the prize-winners at the ' & co" , noun”, u‘ i. l lll‘\i'T c o). - p k r’ apt jus ice uic er. ou . n ie persona I y o 1c were m 1010 Si’ - Anmerst winter Fm Justina their _ _ v plmrpyv M, tl,:,._.,,,_1 _-,. d mum. tut-r tllcf (llllllr; grown. in turn, l5 the king or Queen reguant. £512]giggx§lblzliliilzlélfis$fliniléfiléczflzgvl ,1 wgnrgllllfldstefigilihecrgainoldnaligirgnsug contention, provjnua] Manager; _. Chgrlgttetown ' r- ,. . ..- '.~;_.- 1c‘ -~ .~ .. - - i » . oi eititjv m lint as in tut cl t o ut [The hing sits upon U16 Tllmlle b)’ the Grace is certainly one of the sweetest was still high. Afurther delaly was standard Bred‘ 4 lrc ‘l bt-uviit oulv to those who Xinvailziys, ll'L'Ql_\Ill'l\ ~. \\ pv [ll u~e them. of God," as He expresses llis will through the voice of the British people by way of their Par- phrases that even the Third Reich has ever invented. It ought to be sugsested. In the meantime, the examining Gordon Newson, Kingston. Stallion 1 year and under I: 1st J. M. Nicholson District Manager at Summerslde Allison McLean District Manager at Montague ll-l“ l‘ ~ - - ~ M re or filly 3 years and over: . ,_ . .. ~ dable to all who can innmn “d its Cqh-nct useful, too. Hereafter, when you P11Y$1¢111I1 kflvwmg that the candid- a \‘\llll l t. i1l.ll >kl tt ant __ i. a - 1 - d - w“ < 1st Gordon Newson. --r ,. _ _ y . , ,, .~ ,1“: My ont like the way an opponent is . a d a friend who was a medical *— read, it 1- 11-11 _\ lmlwrmm" l” on“? arguing in wntroversy, bemustflexaminer for another insurance Reserve‘ Gwdm Newsm‘ _ ,, ' Prlllllt‘ iauulizu- trill-ul- , . . there is nothing to say in answer company, sought out this physician Clydesdale: _ i; , 01am)“ lmnks ‘HAY M from ,,,.,50,,;,1 (lupcs or Edll0fl6| NOIGS w hppolms_ you may easily dis. and suggested ma; he can at the stallion 2 years old. 2nd Gordon . a propvr i|l|\t‘l'\'Illl\|ll u, lilo u...“ tip nothing, as h. d giulgsfilhiilrrtiénelzelfapftiigaypiéyguysiltasg; fiiollrfliillxilfiéll€(iuhithfiialiépexls:énteo biulpadszy Neptsioinbf 1936: 3rd Gordon New Mr. fea p0" says: Ciiixxixi; has well said, but guilt-rate a Gladstone was borli Olhl.*l5 ate I809. ___-__ - mg and dropped in for a minute) Son‘ ' . learned full). ’ _ _ _ Census figures show ‘there is no with, of course. his ‘beg in his Progeny 0f dam: 3rd Gordon New- a of liiglulv, oi course. the public library cat¢f5 The PC1105 of the world hangs in the balimCe- foundation for the common belief hand. The candidate would likely son. _ M a ,,,,.,",,,v H, ,_,.,,._._ I, “.,,,,;d be snobbery w r s s that the Indians ofCanada. m a suggest that he take his blood Stallion l year: 1st Ihbbert- ninjuq t,’ [tfililll]! for Qmust-metit and euteflillu- fllt‘lllj~~llilll\ which are quite as legitltllllifl. uithm rvtwu. as thc urge to acquire kuiuvlctlgt or fllllllll‘, (Hi0 “my be laburioils in reading . and stu but tht-rc l.\ no guarantee that he will h’: \\l‘(4 ,1 “m, luiglu, cm the other hand, tilt-re is m doubt that an uuluixwl (lit?! 0f llillll reading is the “bra pivssiblc preparation for tlic vanishing race. Latest figures Furriers are searching in vain for the prophets of a long and severe winter. U 1F ¥ More uueiiipln_ved now officially admitted though heretofore the Government spokesmen and Press have bt-t-n trying to delude the public by claiming considerable reduction. , ll! 31 ¥ show thera- are 122,911, of whom 112.500 live on reservations. The censu, which is taken at five year intervals, has shown a substantial increase in each of such periods during the pant. fifteen years- Victorla Colonist. Speaking of dignity in debate, the preslure, or he might casually in-, troduce the subject himself. ,1 expected, the candidate sugg- ested that his friend the physician take his blood procure. The blood pressure was normal, and when the physician announced this fact the candidate, greatly pleased, said, “I got examined for insurance re- Trcmere, Hampshire. Geo. C. Kltson, Hampshire. OX1. - : ‘ . te H - cently and the doctor told me my (xi-rm 3rd Gem J s wan’ amp Stallion 3 years and over: 5th Foal of 1936: lst Geo. C. Kitson. Roadsters mare or gelding under . hands high: 4th Geo. C. Kit- Clydesdale stallion 3 years or 0r Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN ange Peltoe Tea . - , i - , . ' . King to Wl‘ -St d d blood res re w t hi h. I . qnprvipriiit of good literature. I _ ‘ _ u A coroncrs piry at lllhll), l\.S., Saturday “Yhatsm: out?“ 53131211 trzgliigiogsf went thpe seélond fine ‘find lgtwas Filly l. year old. 1st Cecil J. l1 i; ilt‘Dl'E>\lll,'-: lo see the avidity with which‘ found Camille L iniii-zitl, 17-year-old Little the Toronm Telegram referring to f‘ still high. I thought he was wrong Stewart separate harvest of trefl-suw-QVOI! trashv hooks. chit-fly melodrama and “best scll- Yrs" are il('\'()lll'(‘(l by mail)’ library patrons; when there is so much finer tuaterlzil, 0n every subzvct, “llllill eJi-x" fvIiCll. ' There is fillfillluriflfhS. whose penchant is for light reading. but who are on the look-out for cvt-rv nculi- rccoznuleitdcd book-be it of fiction. pnttryq plllllI$Ol\ll_\', or what-not; who “keep sbrr-zi-t of the tinles" by ivztdiug through, or ‘Siflmllllllg our. an enormous mass 0f current literature e\cr_v month. 'l‘hc>e are the victims of Vfilnfjlllr)‘, reading "huge works to boast what thev have rrztd." and to disport their second- hari-l stuck of i-lms and information over the!‘ ICJ-CLlI-s nr IllC bridge table. Among them are. many who i ‘Affect all books of past and modem ages, And road no further than tile titL-pnges." Such f('1t(l'.‘l'.\_ if one may’ dare say so, are like i Aesop} (law in l)riri‘0\\'cd feathers. "No bul-l»;."__sa_vs l\'L‘5.-l\'lN_,, “is_\vorth anything! which is iiot wilrth much; nor is it serviceable lllllll it has burn ri-ad. and reread, and loved, and love ziqzliu; null marked, so that you can rcii-r to thc l'il~\llQ(‘ you Willll in it, 11$ a sol- dier can wi/e the weapon he tietwls in an arm- our)", r-r a liotist-iviie bring thc spice she needs from lur store." llerc \'.l‘ hale thc key to the truc "realm of gold" which i- l.ll\'l‘-'iilll'L‘. lt is not the illass of books rczirl. bu: the thoroughness with which. they are dtgc-ttlrl, that develops taste and ap- prcciattou. .-\nrl thc- valut: of a public library in every commtmuy is the extent to which it dc- vclops taste and :tppreciatiilil_ The rt-st is frills Brook youth, met death accidentally Christmas cve when he was struck by an automobile whose driver was blinded tt'lll]ltrl'ill'll_\' by the lights of l another car. Sorta-thing must be done to cilforcc dimming or nobody will be safe. i * >3‘ There was an increase oi about $12,000 in the import of cheese in Xoveiliber, amounting to $09,400 compared with $57,402 a year ago. The inlport of butter \\'.'l$ small, valued at $309 com- pared with S598. The cheese came mainly from France. Italy, Switzerland. Ynitcd Kingdom, New Zcaland and the [Tinted States. ' we s =1 _, l An arraugcnlctit ltas lltTll come to between Canada and Australia and the Mother Country that troops shall not be sent to Europe unless the Mother Country he" t-f is zlttackeil, 0n tho other hand all the food stuffs possible will be shipped to Britain COl'l\'O_\'L'(l by men of war, 'I‘he, explanation given is that (‘itilzula or Attstraliay’ deuuderl of its armed tnan-poivcr might prove irrcstible attraction to _l.'ipau the expanioilist. a- 1r * llon. \\'. L. black-citric, King is not the only Premier in Qlnzidzt cnjiuiug bachelordolll, Hon. \\'. _I. Pattcrsoti, Saskatclteivziifs bachelor pre- mier. revealed on Cllflillllflfi fl1l_\', with consider- able cnlbzirrassilieut, that luap year had brought him six proposals of tuarriage, one from Ger- many, and that he ivas loulgiilg for the present week to pass so that he might escape further proposals. X I i Cases are not llllCtlllllllilll of (lealcrs being] cilnvivtctl of (Wfilldlllfglllg in giving a custom-l’ and pruilclla. lbs-re is no doubt that since thc institution of the (Iarncgie Librar_v in this Pro- vince there has been a steady development in‘ this proper direction. (in the other hand. itl must be atlinittcrl that mauv art- wastiug their time in idle and frivolous bouts of reading at the public expense, 1 “ ' r . 4 Those "Balanced" Budgets I Back in i932 or i033 the average ncwspaperl reader, says the Herald Tribune, had becomel pretty sceptical about speeches and statements‘ to the effect that prosperity was "just around. or light weight. liut iii Bloutrcal niilktileli are being [lrosceilted for selling cheap nlilk. Thcl other day n0 fewer than nine nlilknlell were fin- ed $10 and costs each for tuldercitttiilg the price = set by the Quebec Dairy Commission, Mr. j. li. Lafontziiuc, rcprescilling the Dairy Colli- mi. ion said that thc commission would be satis- iztd with lllllllllllllll penalties of $10 and costs. 1U * l? “Qasllington is beginning to experience the buffctiugs of limpirc sway, The Pltilippiile de- fense plan approved by the \v\"ar Department and supervised by the military mission headed by Lleucral Douglas .\lac.'\rthur is criticized in .out by . Britain's , London, of course, the Premier of Olrario as “Hep.” l But what does the Whig-Standard,‘ think about the Premier referring; to the dignified Evening Telegram 3 a the Herald. 1 l! l What took place at the heart of-l the Empire pulsatcd to its utter- most bounds, and the British peo- D185 everywhere emerged from the Deriloufi situation with a greater confidence than ever before in the efficacy of parliamentary govern- ment. Thus the institution of the "Wmfclly survived the greatest shock that it has received hundred years. This is something to think about in a dily when 5o many other nations have been led away from democratic rulaz-Brant- 1 ' s ford Expo itor. The Boston Transcript points out that the League of Nations is‘ 11°F lfléfhly regarded in Fascist countries, and that it has many failures on its record. At the some tlmevit refers to the statement of Foreign Minister Anthony Eden to show that Britain is again on re- cord as determined to Jave the league. and says: The effort may be successful, for this organization; designed to make the world safe for democracy, has a. certain vital- lty which enables it. to overcome doubt and disappointment.’ Mr. Klngsspeesh shows that Canada is behind Britain in this effort to rebuild the league as a barrier against the terrors of another war. This is one subject upon which there is no politics in Canada. Rt. Hon. B. Bennett and Mr. King are united in the support of the league-London Free press, One of the notable things brought constitutional crisis now happily passing into history uni the supremacy of Brit.- l-ill Provincial newspapers. There are some good newspapers in but it was the daily journals in Manchester, Liver- Pool, Leeds, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow and other provincial towns that first and continuously there after expressed unerrinelv tlle Britt-ii mind.- Ottawa Journal. because there is nothing wrong with me or my blood pressure". The physician reported his find- ings to the company physician and. , J. Stewart. Get of sire: 2nd and 3rd Cecil Stewart. Progeny of dam: 2nd, Cecil J. though it might be but small. his work, in which he managed alo to interest some of his friend-l Undaunted, Dr. Hawes continued “Telym-shatfm-d Beacon ‘ sure enough, when again examined Y the company doctor the pressure was found to be normal. Now the reason for this high blood pressure at the first examin- ations was the excitement or anxi- ety about getting examined. Thus. |whfle exercise will raise the blood l pressure a number of points, will also food, alcoholic drinks and certain drugs, the emotions of an , individual can raise the pressure‘ in a higher than any of these. “The arterial tension or height of blood presure is so easily moved or affected by so many variables, tlch as emotional stresses, the tirrounding temperature, digestion and mental activity, that one must be very cautious in importance of moderate changes in its rise 0r fall.” Standard bred two animals pre- viously shown: 2nd Gordon New- son, Kingston. Roadsters mare or gelding 16.2 hands: 4th Gordon Newson. Roots mangels: 1st and 5th Jas. G. MacLeod, Hampshire. Roots mangels: 2nd Cecil J. as Stewart, Hampshire. Last but not least Charles Willis of Kingston, whose winnings are so many in the Swine Class that space will not allow the writer to print them. Naturally those exhibitors may feel proud of their winnings at the ,rccent Amherst Fair, and many were the complimentary remarks heard at the ringside when the and in 1774 the Royal Humane society was founded- It is interesting to learn that his descendants have taken, and con- tinue to take, an active interest in the organization, and that some of them are among its presflllt 801N111’ ors. And it is pleasant to be able to pay some small tribute to one who endured financial loss and libcllous slander in order to save life, instead of seeking fame and glory by dB- stroying it. The Ottawa Meeting esllmflllflé.’ the above Clydesdales and Roasters were exhibited. 1 am, Sir, etc, OLD TIMER. l “'1'? o I Conrad’s Courtship Origin Of Humane (Winnipeg Free Press) Soclety The death of Coilrad‘ ‘d is . announced. Since thes iilbv:list's (Gwbe and Mall) , death m 1924 Mrs. Conrad had Among the evcilts which pa sed “Tum, mo boom “Joseph Conrad unnoticed during ‘recent months as I Knew Him. and “Joseph com was the 200th antllversary of Dr. on Conrad. llshed rad and His Circle." one, she corrected all the misstate- ments and false impres ions given by Ford Madox Ford in his book Jessie George. a Young Eilglish- woman. made her band an ideal l1 love-match after six quaintance. In 1-896 he had pub- “Almayefls Folly", abandon- clpmate. It was a William Hawcs of England. To most readers the name will convey little; but it is that of one who has been instrumental in sav- ing possibly more lives than have been destroyed by Mussolini, Lenin, l In the first; or any modern militari t, for it was Dr. William Hawes who, unaided, brought into being the Royal i Huniaile Society of Great Britain. y Born in 1736 the good doctor be- I came interested in work which was genius of a hus- weeks’ ac- : but it reiterates that in the light of public finance problems facing this ‘ country the conference was a fail- (Financial Post) Federal auhorities do not seem to be in agreement with our state- ment last week that the recent meeting of the National Finance Committee was a failure- O.ta.wa points out that consider- able progress was made on various items of the agenda and that much was accomplished in the study o! more scientific taxation and the elimination of multiple taxation. The Financial Post has no desire to belittle the accoplishlnents of the National Finance Committee, ure. The conference left the major problems untouched and silent its l time discus lng administrative de- , tails which might well have been i left to a committee of advisers and officials. ell SQB-fflriug and wrizten "An Out- cast of the Islands," which was to 1 have been on the market the year berm‘? but for an accident. Mrs. w Conrad gave an amusing account Of the proposal and courting. Con- rad arrived one evening with the mllflllsfifibt and asked her to read > aloud from it, “right away. He sat a few feet from me, his compelling eyes fastened upon my face. I was even then conscious of something restless in him, of a sort of in. ward fire that robbed me of near- D being done life to the apparently drowned, a which was crisscrossed with canals. that he would pay a stipulated sum as reward to any person reselling and reviving a nearly drowned in- dividual along a certain stretch of the River Thames, crude life-saving apparatus placed at convenient points. in Holland to restore ork much needed in acountry As a result of his sittidy of the l utch plan, Dr. l-iawes announced and he had l however, the Dominion Govem- i - meut is not entirely to blame, al- lmore expert as ‘rappers and m we [though the public had a right to expect it to give leadership. Each province must share a portion of :the blame. sentatives put too much stress upon their immediate problems, what they wanted to get out of the Dominion instead of looking at the rituation from a national point of view. For the failure of the conference. g The provincial repre- ‘ll DOD One good thing did come out of 0F THE ITME BEFORE There was nothing them I But an empty hail , And a lost name No one would call. There was nothing left But a dusty stair And (caught in a. crevice) A golden hair. There was nothing now Of what had been Save a yellow lea-f The wind blew in. Plucked from the maple Standing, still, By the empty house On the quiet hill. -John Dillon Husband, in “Spit-it.‘ i coming of the paternal palefaca the Government believes that thA moment has arrived for an educ- ational uplift. Then there is tht , matter of hunting. The fur trade l says the Government, is one of the oldest industries, is still one of ths largest, and its producing field i: inhabited by Indians. This appeal-l to be accurate if lacking somewhat in originality. But this latter ob- jection cannot be raised muons the proposition that although the Indians by heredity, inclination and training, are the most skilled workmen in the fur trade, the Department aims at making them care of furs. This appears to be 'an ambitious effort similar to that of instruciing one's grandmother ‘in the most elementary method oi egg consumption. Still. govern- ments do that kind of thing upon occasion in this country. One o! hem not so long ago urns bout upon the education of manufactur- ers and traders in how to mfmll- facture and how to trade. Never- theless, it is only fitting that the i the conference that should perhaps t be empliauzed. This was the de- finite assurance that the Dominion Government intends to balance its In a little while, not only had the rewards claimed made serious in- road:- into his private fortune, but a report by the Foreign Policy Association as ciltlangcrillg the Amerivcati withdrawal policy and risking iirvillvt-nlent with Japan. Viewing the, .ly all my powers of speech. I read 011. stumbling over the corrections that interlined the closely typed white man, having learned all he knows about trapping animals and dressing furs from the Indian. Among the great ones in the the corner." He is just as sceptical now about human family an old Cornish similar statements concerning a “balanced butl- , . __ ‘ . ._ 1 _ _ woman, I01 years of age, Mrs. pages. Sometimes he tnget-r {My he found himself the victim of h 1d 1 t h- k wlcdge gel -_ But. there _is one (llliLHflLC in his ut- plan as cmmg for crr-gtirn"; of a strong Am- ‘Susan Robins, must be counted. urging me to disregard this oi-lpthat flllulnfllflll-‘i attacks by various per- budget and will not be swayed $00111“ ongoing ngrgltlicenssgioe c” ‘nude’ “ "h bufilncss lmllmwid- as ‘t has ml“ erican nlilitarv aud naval base in the Philippines, The °l-l191' dill? Shfl gave a sketch of pencilled sentence, ‘Thai; 15 not sons who imputed evil motives to from that 911F995‘? by mcrewmg Dense may l"? involved, but why roved during the last two or three years, he is inclined to become lcss impaiiunt, rather than more so, and to wOrry less and less whether the Treasury ever docs bring its expenditures into balance with its receipts. .-\t Washington, moreover, the election has hrntight the same waning of cnthusiastu by fnrtut-r minded politicians. \Vhat should be for the_he.t1clfi.t..4.1f.._ll1°‘ ' present conditions with mild genera about “a balanced budget by 1937” is that those who make such generalizations are not talking of the same thing that those who listen to them have in mind. It is now abundantly evident that if we have a balanced budget in the next year or two it will be balanced by adjustment on paper only. The British Constitution I r‘ In the preface t0 his La Drmnrrnlfc en fdpneriqzte, Dr: TOQUEVILLE calls in‘o question the very existence of a British Constitution cm the ground that no such document exists. Tue idea of course, says the Canadian Financial Bureau, is fnllacious. BAGEHOT in England and DR A L LOWELL, former president of Har- vard Llniviersity in the United States. llflvfi COW 1 ibuted perhaps the most thorough allalYsm 0" the British Constitution, pfllvlllg b"Y°“‘l all sh-“iow of doubt that such a constitution docs exrijit’ in Cqnacla with the very definitive Bri- ' hoNuSi-th Aimerica Act of i867 (51lPPl°me"'°‘l "S O ,. t b the Westminster statute of to 3m; egnilrlto {Tilt neighbours in the United 10-1’. ‘delll Sums “m, we gqtially_defmgtiveuezlgilaampryily document of 1787 =fu1g1e1tsBsgszeqconstitution is ments. the mailer lzfiffiwit m understand_ perhaps. at 1111195. _ _ h feat" ltiucli of thc COIISYlIUIIOH-tfigu far the not part_is actually wrmefllh t sift of the con- written in one Plam- a p (‘COfiOllly- not merely for local defense, but as an outpost of American power in the Far East, the re- port describes it as amounting “to a covert con- spiracy to keep the United {Qtates in the islands." The report. written by .\lr. David l-l. Popper, of the association's research staff, also holds that the defense program “would be a potent weapon in the hands of President Quezon Sl1011ld hc consider it necessary to quell unrest by dic- tatorial methods.” ' l! i 11¢ Now that the Southern Hemisphere crops are made, and world supplies (leterlulncd f0!‘ the balance of the crop year, the principal issue in the current situation is how the division of sup- plies is to be made among the deficiency coun- tries. Needless to say, the issue is a unique one in the" light of recent experience, for the last genuine sellers’ market occurred in the autumn of i924, when prices rose sharply in response to the close adjustment between world supplies and requirements. In reckoning the world statistical position, the Argentine crop, official- ly estimated at 249.8 million bushels, provides an t-xpnrtable surplus of 155 million. The Aus- tralian cmp of 133.5 million bushels supplies, another 8o million from_the Southern ‘Hemis- phcre. Assuming July 3t stocks in 1937 in these her life to a reporter. "I worked 1n the nuns-s." she said, “when 1 was six years old, leaving home every morning at six o'clock and walked three miles. The day lasted until seven when I truged back again. About twenty of us work- ed on the dressing floors, and if we were late or dawdled a quarter was taken off our pay of 2 1-2d per day, At home I was often up early in the morning knitting socks, earning id an ounce. I never had a doctor. never took any medicine or had a holiday.” Her recipe for good health is: Hard work; early to bed and early to rise, and keep out of dangelx-St Thomas Times- Journal. The system of probation, wisely going to stand-never mind it- distinctly; if you are tired, say so; don't eat your words. You English are a1‘. alike, you make the same, round for every letter.’ ” Strange woolne. He took her out to din- ner and proposed on a basis of weather, like a sailor: “My dear, we had betier get married and out of this. Look at the weather. We will get married at once and go be ready?" . "An Outcast of the ma. i lip- peaxed several days befoe the wedding. Three weeks after, the bridegroom began "The Rescue" on their honeymoon. Evidently wed- used, is as valuable an is-trument for the prevention of crime as any at the disposal of a court of Justice. The same system, improperly used, is always useless, and often actively harmful. It is, therefore, a prim- ary duty of every magistrate t0 familiarize films-elf with the de- tails, the advantages, the potential- ities, and the dangers of probation. —Nineteenth Century. ‘The eye," Lord Twocdlmnlr do- clares, “is a safer conduit-pipe to the brain than the ear." His Ex- twn countries are no larger than at July 3i, 1936. 235 million bushels can be counted upon for ex- port frnm the Southern Hemisphere during the current crop year. Canada's Cxlmrlahle surplus this year is 215 million bushels: the Danube. 8o, million, and other countries including India» _4° million. These bring the total world supplies available for export to 570 million [for the cur- rent season. Etiropean import requirements _are 467 ‘million bushels. Non-European requirc- merits of 12o millions would bring the world requirements to 587 million bushels. _Whlle all these figures are approximations, 1i IS ll" QP‘ parent excess 0f requirements over supplies which has made the market so sensitive to ‘m- dications that the various countries pare seeking _ _ . he f "d in the many statutes flllglglwlty‘sPdilialnenliuthmufimut the h“: yea" to increase their wheat takings. oellency is an advocate of the written word. In the long run, he says, it is in the written word which matters most. If, he adds, we were ever to depend upon the , spoken word our minds would be y radically altered and not. he thinks. for the batten-Windsor Star. ThcUnltcd Btateelnthelutelx years has spent mm than any other country for arms-$3,9'l8,000,- 000. And in 1936 when Europe's arms race was hitting a new stride. American expenditures 'on arms still were well in excess of those of any other natiom- F‘ Qcienoe Monitor. _ ii ll i Illtlull. T0 HUI I‘ make up his mind what he their own way without his dic-, tatlori, and this they refused to do. “The Rescue" did not get itself into publisher's print until However, Conrad was not too deep- ly in love to finish the Narcisus." This was Mrs. Con- rad's favorite among all the novels. She liked to quote from it. When Conrad made that un- a promising proposal of marriage, told Mrs. Conrad that he had his hiunanitarian work. start three lines lower.’ After. a Th“ seems dllflcllll‘ w under‘ time he gavg a Short, impatient stand, until one remembers Dickens laugh and said irrltably, ‘Speak imbued out. in “Our Mutual Friend,’ that even at the date of which he was writing police author- ities paid no reward for the saving , of a drowning person, but did re- muncrate the finder of a floating and dead body. acters such as Rogue > Riderhood and Gaffer Hcxam were siipected of adding to their incomes by push- ing victims illto the river and then over to Frappe, 110w soon can ou lurking about to “find’ the bodies. ‘ y A150. o; course, the clothing of the jwhich covers Indian AffRlF-Jlflil find w s always likely to yield a o. few happy years together." And they did, in spite of illness. hard work and the irritation peculiar to I ded blrs prevented the exercise of creative Gefllllfl- MYS- Cflllrad DIE- genius. for the story was rhortly pared all the food, since he would l laid aside. Tile creator could not eat what she cooked else he had wimigd refused nourishment. She, herself, his creations to do. But who/t he came to be a sufferer, but un- wanted was that they should go complaining, owing to a fall which injured her knee. Yet she spent herself in making the ailing novel lists life m; smooth as possible, 1919. protecting him from all possible annoyance. Happily she had a "The Nigger of some of humor, which he had not. It was a trying life for the wife. but she won through with a smile on her face, saying the pain was he rad was well: not it. Things would go awry if we River ide char- luxury for indulgence when Con- "We take turns at l_ l-ng to live-“but such as his life both succumbed at the same time." was. he thought we might spend , listen to a pronouncements you would think i h we were a race of cripples and d crooks. But here comes the official “- l found him lot of the recent public l when recollected. One patient. and it shows immense ad- vances in the war on disease and , death. Fewer mothers are dying iln childbirth now than any time this dozen years. In an ago when every day brings news of an old re- cord broken on land, sea on air, here is a gully worthwhile record. threw his cigarette down "Don't come near me, I'm going to lie down." For twenty-eight years she endured the joy and worry of being the wife of a great and popular novelist. She with the love that luffcrot-lt long. Conrad was n "host What a mercy for her that she amuslnfi -certalnly day she eerd him call hoarsely, “She's ead, Jest" she gasped in sudden fear, "who?" "Why Lena, and I've Ministry of Health report on the got. the title, it's ‘Victory.’ " He end- loved him l Peder.” but j treastty, lLo, The Poor Indian in hand. so to speak, by the Gov- ernment of Canada and raised to a new lcvel of under standing so that he will be better fitted to be an Indian. The plan is announced by the Hon. ‘T. A. Cremr, Minister of the De- partment of Mines and Rcsotirces— for its principal object the training of the individual red man for his most suitable vocation, according to his whereabouts and his personal aptitude. It has been born in upon f the Government that nll cannot be successful farmers, or fortunate flshemcn, difficulties of soil cultivation in the barren lands and the inaccessibility of water 1n which to fish. Indians. it is understood. are unable to raise wheat or vegetables covered rocks, and despite their long familiarity with the varied moods of nature they have never yet mastered the art of catching fish where no fish are. standing the fact that these un- fortunate conditions have obtained from times far antecedent to the [demands for handouts from the (Montreal Gazette) His untutored mind is to be taken Indians i owing to the OH SHOW- Notwith- Phone 30.818. s l ‘ 1 ~"~':~.:'.'.~“="*‘-'-'-.i~""~ 1 rm: 2 M1105 l nauosronr i- not? Certainly nobody will que t- ion the propriety of advising i116 Indian brave in the matter 0f economic purchasing, a sublwl l" which every administration is fully versed; or in gently intlmatiug to Mrs. Indian that silk hosiery is un- suitable as an article, or pau- o! articles, for everyday use in the great northern wilderness. It ll ~ more than unuitable; it is ~11“?! nonsense. F f | _ llll. L. B. EVANS m. L. B. Evans, noifll oh!- llclan treated successfully and obtained permanent cures o! stomach conditions such l! mat -- , mspspsla. S0111‘ Stomach, Heartburn, Gaslflfi Distress and many other all- mcntu peculiar to the atom-fill with a prescription which W! have secured and loll "M" the name of Evan's Stnmlcll Mixture. We alone have the I°l° rights on this prcwflfilll" ‘ml since selling it have received numerous teitimonlall 1W1" ‘satisfied PIIIOHINPB Don't fool with your Item" "h, because conditions "l" umymmu if real": yourself to hm 1"" _ chronic mus of nil-r" W“ bio. on a mus mid-r- riucn on. mu onlorl noel" I'm?‘ attofilon. I