- e advance) ' l ‘i-miilaiat-w. Cleelu- s. aruinu-o. —\IJOI lnwl tuinnlii “y; “g1; an,“ p: you (in advance) _ . t. Col. 11.}. Ilaollinnon. "- 5- 0 “Waiter and IlBllh-J. l. Barnett. L Notes bulls W4)’ r American habitually “i1”? M" Staten Anti British it ll "J everrdly 'w""‘ attitude and policy. The New York American is a link inblona Qhilm I01 newspapers ‘which stretcher {across the continent and is owned -_ and directed by William Randolph Cairn!!! and United vios-i-sssitisut-éd. it. lluruett. Associate Editor-D: K. Currie. Till! wesr INDIBS MISSION E Canadian Government has inaugurated a new service 0f the Canadian National Steamship: ‘between Canada. Bermuda. and the [British West Indies. frhis is a move-in the right direction and cannot fail to have important con- sequences iorthe Maritime Provin- ces. and ior Canada generally. The Canadian National Railways has taken up the matter in its usual business like way and may be de- pended upon to do its part in assist- ing the development oi this new ser- vice. ‘The service will be inaugur- ated on the iinitlal trip of lime. “Lady Nelson." and on this voyage the interests oi ‘the Maritime Prov- inces will be represented by an oi- flolal party selected by the Canad- ian National Railways. Ontario. NewBrunswicit and Nova Scotia are represented in the personnel oi this delegation. which wiliconvey to the people of the West Indies informa- Iussnay. becomes 11.1928 ' Hearst oi New York. The agsreliiie circulation oi these papers is very , tlarge and some thousands oi them ‘ ‘ ’ ‘are read daily in Canada. Because viously are of small interest to the tum Dammmn m u British qomtry, WW1‘? “mum “nest itself as ‘h? [and has a Governor-General who is pmper course‘ for our Governmentiappointed by the Klng. it is a rare t0 pursue i! this Province is to igooiilthmg to find in any of the Hearst tip with the parade. ‘joumais a word oi commendation ______.;,>_ ._ -,ior Canada or its people. But just TARIFF RETALIATION qnow, strange to say, Mr. Hearst is i " mleased with Canada. S ME meek and timid Liberals, I . wi=-i~i~ zmrztznaz: have put forward the urgumentlerlcan: that i! 35'1"!" “m” a “rm Great Britain owns~Canadain against the United States the IatterI a sort o; wan b“; the Unmd will retaliate. On this subject Lu; States gets much more profit oi Patric, the Montreal newspapenes-I callild“ ma“ England 4°55- tablished by the Tarts family as u! - “m” 1925 m 1927 m" “we , with Canada was increased Liberal organ during the time of Sir not“ ‘uoalmmooo to slinof Wilfred Laurier, says: No country is menu Durlng the same pa, better placed than we are to receive iod Great Britain's trade with this threat with complete equani- Canada dropped from $474,000,- mity. The prospect of a tariii war 0m m “2°'qoo'oo0' v During those two years our with the United States cannot in- mere increase of commer-ce with spire us with any terror. With our northerfr neighbor was their present tar-iii in- iact our nggfly as ma; as the 9mm, {neighbours have already shut the Canadian business with Eng- cliloor tight on our products. except to those that they cannot do with- tion with respect to the desire and the~pospibilities of- the Maritime Provinces to extend their trade with the Islands. d to bring backio the business people of the Maritim- es further knowledge oi the oppor- tunitiesihqt are there for the cx- tension oi that trade. I It is to be regretted that the Canadian National Railways, insel- ecting its representatives, did not -‘ see fit to include Prince Edward Is- land. This Province islrepreserited on the Railway Board by a shrewd and experienced business man in i the person oi Mr. Nelson Rotten- bury. Our long continued trading with the West Indies makes it yes- pccially important that this Prov- inoe should be represented on such I] mission We have for many years carried on a fairly "extensive Vbusi- ness with the West Indies in pota- toes, dried cod, ham, butter, cheese. etc. It is quite certain that this trade could be further eirtended and other commodities added, PrinceEdward Island. unfortun- ately. has of late been overlooked in many ways. Itshquld be pointed . outto the Federal authorities that this Province is still on the _map and Isa part of the Maritimes. and al- thoughpimallest lnextent is still a considetable factor in the Railway trade. Possibly our Provincial Gov- ernment might do a little awaken- ing in this respect. The time to have ‘sutured representation on this mission was when it was being or- ganized. It would be interesting in lrnow, what wu __ passed ‘ een the Provincial and Federal Governments in connecti s with this matter. or ii any request had been forwarded to the latter ford reprmentation. While other Maritime mewspaperls have been boosting this mission, it is some- what significant that =the Govern- stint organ here has maintained a "sphins-iiits attitude mg the subject. It has bdtn observed that since the Mill aiiwllillision under; Sir Andrew Rae with its reve- Winn: and the ipaftialfulillment of its recommendation, there his been I Iorillfllilwbkulimiandan optim- basics-wars movement in our two was "nifiieir Govern- iavettqarrlbptinitisn oi in- ‘Wi. i" this "'14 - m- wlth ~- we cannot wsiiavo ab- Jf5‘ ‘ with ‘l r I b * to eiirowrr 150mm ma; thinnest/u anwavtivrit, t ,- i banger-awn to our“ land, and today Canada does three times as much trade with _ ‘us as w . ith the Mother Country. e’ “he papehand 19' which ‘hey England may have conquered ire forced to leave facilities for im- gonads and brought it dip to a prtation. Besides, since the elec- on of lvlr. Hoover. they have warn- qd us that o. still more hostile tar- ‘E _n it is quite clear from the above ANYONE who-reads the New York ‘ c 7 ",3 a An ‘Immprtdl -< , n: £00 By James W. Barton. MZD“. v ‘CURING SICK MINDS l You will remember how distress- iiit; it, was just a few year-g ago 1:4 some member or relative of thei family was committed to the‘ hosp -| al for the insane, the asylum as it‘ called. . _' ~ ' ‘ Occasionally there would be cases showing some improvement and they would return home. some of them mentally clear, others having to re- -turn to the hospital at some later date. - s, - Now although the number of men- tally uribalanced individuals is in- ooosihs. it is gratifying‘ to know that many thousands throughout the United States and Canada are at their daily work. and living o. nor-I nial life at home, who just e/few years ago would have been coli- denmed to a life in an hospital for the insane. - What happened? p An observant hospital super- tendent noticed‘ that a. girl- who had been a patient in the mental hospital for two years, became nor- nial mentally within two months aiter some decayed teeth were re- moved. Following this idea further he was able to get, rid oi nearly rd - 5991f. ts, Voyage -_-_ I The mohiorv of Ooiitainlsames Cook. deservedly called the, greatest or ocean explorers, ha; been honored this autumn in connection with the‘ n. two hundreth anniversary‘ oi his birth. Canada, and other British Dominion: owe""mucii_ to his indo- iatigable seal in dbcovel-y. Yet, m- markable astwere his voyages round "i? ‘World 111 the cishteenth century when such Journeys wéie vastly more difficult and perilous than they are today. ‘there is another voyage recorded in authentic his- tory that has even greater signifi- cance. not only to the British Em- pire, but to all the world west of teen centuries ago, by s, Hebrew Christian coming the Gospclto Western cimizatiop by bringing it to the capital of the Roman Empire.‘ This Jewish voyager was undersized in body. Probably. but he was of gigantic spiritual stature, the like oi which has not been seen in the} world since his valedictory: “I have fought a good fight, I have finish- ed my course, I have kept the faith." Aiong chapter in Acts is given to an account of his voyage. It was written by a man or established scientific accuracy. Luke the phy- sician. Navigators have made a critical and detailed study oi his account oi the apposties voyage to Home. oi the terrible storm that was encountered. oi"-‘ths nautical Asia. It was the voyage, some nine-l ‘ ‘ , ‘DECEMBER 11,1521; fffnfl Hqberdoshe qr . ' Q J'- l hsli the patients admitted to the hospital by the simple method oi removing infected teeth and ton- sils, and draining sinuses,‘ gall bladder. nhd correcting oohstiim- dr-omatic account of a historial U011- cvent. It may truthfully be called it , Ahd how Dr- J- L- Dwourov ro- classic in its combination oi divine ports that he operated on fourteen inspiration, supernatural interven- mentally unbalanced patients W110 “on. and hunmn. expel-knees and had the severe type; of goitre, the Vsoumefmmss _ _ i’°l5°“°“$ WP‘?- There is a famous book, written by‘, The mm“! sympmms we" ex‘ s? Scotsman almost a hundred years tremely pronounced in the majority “o. on “The voyage and shipwreck of cases and yet all but two patients of S,‘ Pauly James 81mm’ mm m were able to resume their former Glasguw m 1782 w“ the auunna mcupmkmt" ‘ . His father was a West India mer- Tbev, have remained clear men- chant’ and the so“ Mame a m,“ “my m dam‘ ~ trier-in the house. but lie never tel-ms used in detailed description oi the ship and_its plight. and have been amazed at the record. ‘The chapter is well worth reading as a ‘dole with the way in which we can ntknce, ii any. L DOmIIlIOII, but the Unitéd SUM,- es has annexed it economically. iii policy is to bn expectedmJYhn‘ United States cannot hurt us in our fin-sign trade in any way compar- hath serve our own interests and lflrt theirs by one and thésame step ~,'-by closing our doors to American iirticles. ____<_-0&-_-'_- ‘JTHE TORONTO WINTER FAIR r_. HE Toronto Winter Fair has de- veloped into a national institu- tion, open to every Province in Can- ltda, and it ‘is encouraging to note ihat every part oi the Dominion is taking advantage of it. Our own =lProvince made an excellent showing Iin foxes and cattle especially extract why Mr. Hearst is just now Jeascd with Canada, but the facts above stated and other facts oi which he is cognisant and finds took place was from several months to a year. _ ‘ So once more, we, must thank our observant physicians who have the care oi these merjtaliy unbalanced folks. , How different this is to the time so recent . when all that was done for the patient was to remove him from his home and see that he didn't harm himself or anybody else. We thir.\~ oi mental cases now as pleasingfcan hardly be a source oi pleasure V to patriotic Canadians. Canada's jug-handled trade with the United States is increasing by leaps and bounds,‘ especially on the side of Canadian imports from the neighboring States. Is that. a good gimp“. sick minds, many of which reason ior Canadian rejoicing? Or. can be cured by the same methods 1s t; a source o; New“ c to sound that are used to cure sick bodies. Canadians that our trade with 1 ' ' l ossst Britain fell ofl’ by_s54,ooo,ooo in the same two years that it in- creased so tremendously with the United States? We would be sorry to think that Premier King and his Guardian Readers ministerial colleagues rejoice in these anomalous trade conditions, ‘+ “*“ .“. " ~ Deceinhe ll, 1928 Daily Selections for ‘through the enterprise oi our most successful breeders. Mr. Peter Brod- ie, of York, who is himself a suc- cessiul exhibitor particularly in po- tatoes and swine captured several prizes at the Fair, but complains that there should be’ some better system for displaying Island pota- toes. We quite agree with Mr. Brod- ie in this, and have already pointed out the splendid work done by the Government of New Brunswick. In addition to the special display of potatoes at the New Brunswick booth. there was also a. large entry oi New Brunswick potatoes ill the open competition classes, the Prov- incial Department oi Agriculture ' ., assembled these potatoes at Fredericton and forwarded them to Toronto under direction of the de- parment with all transportation and other expenses paid by the depart- ' entries. . Oilf 0WD GOVCIIIIHEHY/S IIGKICCC ill this respect. its ofllclal organ trumped up-sorne childish excuses and lat_er flatly denied that the New BHIDSWICK GOVCIIIIDBIIC hid any potato exhibit at the Royal Winter Inir. This statement. though shown to be an absolute falsehood, has not ‘JOSH flbllbifid 110i‘ hll IDY-IpOIOQY been offered to its ready-s for this bran: attempt at deceiving them. It is bad enough to have a dorm-h- ing Government in omca, bu ‘what hope is there ior bsttermentwhen its oiloinl ornn. ‘denmdiois m- on tbs ci-sduiity or‘ ignor- ance oi it: readers. openly w ,, its neglect and condone: its blund- ers?‘ ' riorroaisr. icons , —-—- I oilsrved tiiat-iiiesieli allusion merit for the growers making the When ihtiouardlsn pointed out which are the fruits oi their mis- THE PURPOSE OF JEHOVAH "m" m“ P°“°Y~ ‘—Yet is pleased the Lord to bruise - him; he- hath put him to grief: when , thou shalt make his soul an offer- Mr. Hearst exulis in his belief his for sin. he shoii ooovhis filial‘? that the United States has already :31? (Sxttlgngnfi 5:53’ lgggrrgreig 1S; “annexed Canada economically." , hand-Isis‘. 53:10. Cali it be possible that the King PRAYER.—My soul: thou i0 Cabinet shares in his exultatlon? 1t “ilk Geihsemili’ “h” “e Y° m‘ is apparent that it is playing the the tempterb power. tariff and trade game quite to the PROOF-READERS, PLEASE NOTE satisfaction oi Hearst and of Wash- ington‘ Republicans’ Democrats and "We‘ll begin With bolt‘. the plural l5 boxes, all on the other side of the bOIdBf-‘But me plug-a; o; m; should be oxen It is equally apparent that the 0t- not oxes. tawa Government's policy is injur- om “wired” aims“ bu‘ “m are ious to Canadian farmers, dairymen Yet thiaplulal u‘ 510,156 should never and fruit growers, that it promotes be moose. - the bleeding exodus of Canadian workers to the States and is rapidly reducing our trade with Great Bri- tain. You may find‘ a lone mouse. or a whole nest of mice, Yet the plural oi house is houses. not hlce, , Ii the plural of man is always call- ed nien, Why shouldntthe plural of pan be called pen? _ The cow in the plural may be call- ed cows original But a bow, ii repeated. is never call- ed bind‘ The Liquor Control Act came into effect in ontai-lo June l, i021. It had been in operation ior five months when the flscal year closed on 31st October, 1927. and its iii-st full year closed with October last. At- torney General Price is quoted in the Toronto Globe as saying that the sale-oi liquor had not increased this year notwithstanding ‘the great increase in the number oi liquor stores from 35 to 100. If anything. it had decreased slightly. he said. Profits from the sale, he added, had been about $000,000 a month in both 1027 and i928. ’ And theplurali of vow is vows, never V‘ vine. t. _ If I speak of a‘ foot and you show ine two rest . ' And I gave you o. boot. would a, pair be called beet? If one is a tooth and the whole set are teeth, why sbouidntttttis plural of booth be beet i h W If the ‘ginguiafs this. sndstho oiurol 93¢». - Should the plural of kiss ever be written insole‘! ' Then one may that, and the two A movement to abolish the doom will"? hi! Ilincd strength" from i-ho one or Oscar Slater‘ who had u"! ‘W115 Built? of murder and VII under sentenoepi death. His lontence had been afterward com. muted. and later be was releasedas the authorities beeping ggnyjneed that he was innocent. It is revolt- ifls to think oi a man being hanged for a crime in which lie had impart. 30h“ it in argued that it is batter m” F" “u” W! shall unpara- tlisr-tiisiioneinnooaritiuanshaubs h hinted. 'I'hoooniiio1arly‘isann1q-. one. It has tamed. combat where t r “Pits! punishment is the law oilgn-lolu‘ ‘hsieoomuremnstincoatinuugiigtgrj 0"‘ in reduced inimberi. and if it is w! lilo!" hornet-s increase. in m: rethren. =_ " _ But though we say mother, we never My in? ‘ rhsnthe _ his. and him. < . But imagine the feminine she, shil . and shim! 1 sothellinglisnithink youallwiil is ." . i . item the would/be those. _ Yo; hat. in the plural would never I i ' ‘And the‘ plural of cat is cats, and . _. 36$ 0°99. . ' We speak oi a brother. and also of‘ b , masculine pronouns BfGIhO: ' a’ the-"iunniestll-iilillle, m ever», Jme “m” duflng which mmvery shared actively in the business, fol- lie was u. born seniarer. During the winter oi 1844-45 he lived on the Island 0t Malta, where Paul's vessel was finally wrecked and every one on board escaped to the island. A dozen years ago Mr. Philip E. Howard, President of the Sunday School Times Company, published in his paper an article. on Paul's voyage and shipwreck, and told something of James Smith and his book. Smith was s. scientifically inclined yachtsman, an elder in the Church of Scotland, and a kzenminded observer, and when he had finished his study of that im- mortal voyage he had produced a book of which the noted archaeolo- gist Sir. William M. Ramsay could say: "It is one of those books that have done, completely and forever. a particular piece of work. It will never need to be done again." And no less a scholar than Dean Alford wrote to Mr. Smith: "When we commentator are deservedly ior- gotten, you will be known in en- viable connection with the Great Apostltfs course of perils." A bit oi Mr. Howard's article is worth quoting here: “Luke's narrative gives the de- tails or what they did to weather the days of blow and strain that followed. They ‘Wrapped’ the ship with cables. drawn under and around hei- strainin sides. In such o. gale the one h mast might almost tear the heart out oi such s. vessel. No doubt they took in the big squasesail and rigged a storm sail. for they must try to keep some steerageway on the ship to overcome the drift toward the dreaded quick- sands oi the African coast. the Syrtia Major and the Syrtis Minor. They iwould- therefore head the ship in a northerly “ ‘ion, so that the wind would blow over the star- board. or right, side. and so avoid an unbroken southerly drift toward the sands. "Ithinkiilhadbecnon board thatgdriven and pitiful craft I should have hung about very close to the little evangelist during the next fortnight. I should like to have seen his face as he gazed out over that wild waste of waters. I should like to have seen him as he braced him- sell sturdily against the roll of the sea-swept decks. and bright-eyed. night and smiling. oontsniediy starv- couldnt be used and everything was water-soaked. And when the seams oi the ship were ppenins. Hid the almost three hundred people on board were sick and miserable and lfing around half-starved and more _ half-dead with fright, I doifi: know what I wouldn't give to have been near when he simply took charge by sheer God-given author- ity, brushing aside Home itselt with his commanding assurance of ulti- saiety, ii oveibody wduittiuat "'°"."’°‘ imam ‘lllvo%n§" iclt sum m! , a ung during the days when the 8811B! . Silk & Wool Sox . . . . Deeskin Auto Gloves Fur Lined Gloves . . GIFT or 111 Imported Silk Ties $1.00 to $3.00 Fine Silk Sox .. . . . $1.00 to $2.00 Linen Initial Hdkis. . . . Plain Linen Hdkfs. 1/1; day $2.00 White Silk Shirts . . . . Men’s Silk Umbrellas $4, $5, $6 'White & Blk. Mufiiers $1.75 to $4 Paisley Muffler Squares $3.75 up- Silk Brocaded Squares .. . $4.50 Deerskin Auto Gloves Broadcloth. Pajamas _. . . . Auto Gloves Gauntlet . . $4.00 up ...,'.-... Broadcloth Spats . $2.50 & $ Henderson & ACadmore‘ ll Plain Broadcloth ‘Shirts $1.05 up Silk Broadcloth Shirts . ‘$4.50 Fancy Wool >SQx“Ycagei-s” $1.35 Fancy Silk Hdkofs‘. $1100 Fancy GoliSweater-Sets . $8.50 Men’s Leather Jackets $11 to $15 Silk House Coats .. . . . . . $10 up Velvet House Coats . . . . . $10 up Wool House Coats _. . .. . . $10 up Silk Lounging Robes $15 & $16.50 75c to $1.00 ..... 50c ..$5&$6 . . . $4.50 W001 Lounging Robes $12 to $25 . $3 up Velvet Lounging Robes .. $18 . . . $4.50 Beacon Cloth Robes .. $9 to $12 Leather Club Bags . . . $10 to $20 Steamer, Trunks $10 up h Men’s Tuxedo Shirts . . . . $45 ..$5 3.50 o. seaworthy craft I forget good old James Smith, and my friend Sir William. and I want to grip what- ever I can lay hold oi on that reel- ing ship, and on this fourteenth night stand right by Paul and see the quiet smile on his face as the sailors curve their hands back of their ears and mutter that they hear breakers ahead. " ,"'I‘hen when the stern anchors are really biting into the sea bottom, and the sneaks among the crew try to get away in the one boat. I want to see the flame oi the great Apost- le‘s anger blaze like a torch against the black night, and then I want to see him in tender competitive od- aptiveness turning to minister to the starving crowd. “If you and I had been with Paul we should have gone ashore that '3 5A’ " THE ‘i I L4gl: fRKQsLtiU HLlJp-1ATI5I at" i‘ pl .llii1lY?..°$‘.lu.‘;‘.i?...‘l‘ . eirgallow yoarfid nlfar, , ycflfl P? ‘GIN! when by , . Aofs, ,. sYRU _ or TAR . h’ -AND'»_ ' coo LIVER on. MEN’S WEAR L I I ' l Jl l 5310K by the Salk-that broken. morning on perhaps a. b t oi wreck-.“i' bootoh 0nd water-loosed memory of age. or swimming with c can strokes tells me that we shall get there. life! Mfly we of these latcladays be‘ However that might be, I had rather, try for it on a. plank with lPaul, through the breakers than‘ in a mo- tor lifeboat without_ him-ii Paul, l. C. M. Lampson £0‘ Co. ~ rsinran. ~ B4 Queen Street London, E. C. l, England Public Auction Sales . .. , gm‘. Raw Furs ' Shipping bags will be iurnislr- . ed without charge by aillilvlhl “I lay aside James Smithsrare book, from which my mind has zone for sway down the» ancient ways of the wind. O blessed ‘gales. that drove the Apostle westward to‘ my ileathen forbearsJthrough buss‘ ietlngs oi man and weather, in the‘ breaking of their bondage and mine, by the Christ who was his abundanti BIZ Filth Avenue ouusht by the tides and the winds‘ ' New York. N. Y.- cf a passion for thesaving of-the, others beyond us who do‘ not yet! kliow Him!" CHRISTMAS 7H_OcdL'ii'l‘E IN DAINTY. BOXES or ‘ VERY NEWEST" DESIGN ’ ii we do s y It ourselves, we lrnmv that our showing oi Christmas Chocolates is unsurpassed by anything of its kind l" "Iii City- Our stock la absolutely mus and a neat deal of care was exercised in its selection. ' -No flea oi lllt year's dusk!!- Every one Is absolutely new. Kathi; display you will find mum fromdllc to $7.50. We specialise as mo». Neilsons an- stfstt. ass our assortment and malts your selection early. _ ' \ ' ' ' , EZAFOSTER, 3..,.,.y.;.1s t s Au Excellent situates-hair's Pam societies: rrom ii," _ i.