v l‘ petl to _ wet-l; T10 dozzctt are ~ettt over. as and this num- ber will be tncreastd ett-rv st-cotttl week in thc ttcar future. lirrtttt-rs itt the Itrovtttcc are rc- _ ct-it-ing z: In :4 cents per llt)'/.(‘l'l net, GOSH 0i pk year disclose a ltighly encouraging situation. pcomparcd with 100772.430 cwts. in 1936, fell z‘ ‘bout 7 pcr cent to 7,77_<.572 pounds. Im- ttt: cttlctontatowtt GUARDIAN Hunting Dally (Fuundau_llI1] __ .->.~.;~ .11 . Irolldaut Lleut. (Jul. W. Charter 5. McLuru Vlcl Prominent J. B. Burnett l". J. l. Idltol and Aunughtg ulntctur 0.1%. Burnett, F. J. l. lnhtnry Lluut. Col. l). A. lluektunuu, l_l. B. 0. ‘um-lulu Editors Frunk Walker and l). h. burr-u ' BDBBURIWPION HATES ll lfvuu- l tlellvcntl to City “milsc-t-paibnx-Eiiiu ulflrltlnucr) ‘azullod to l’. Ill. lnlund - “Jfl par yrur qln utIrunc-e; mulled to (Juuutlu ulul U. B. llembent Audit Bureau of Clrnulnttonu “The? Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest lnk.” THURSDAY, Manon a, 193a Helping The Farmers Atldrtrssitlg the recent annual Vttteetitlg of thf‘ P 15.. I. lige atttl Pottltrv" Assoctzlttvfl- Ills Mm" ister of .\;._.icttltttre stressed the ttced‘ for co- ttpcrttttott and said. we can accoutitltslt SUllk- tltittg alttttg co-ttttctztttrt‘ lines we can Itnd u way out of our tllftcttltics." _ 'l‘lt'.tt st-ettts to be what Ilte Quebec (J(.l\'(‘l'l'l' ntettt is d-witt-J ttt tlte tnattt-r of egg shtpntettts to the Uld Cottnttjr. .\s a result of a lllilll built-Z applied by thc tittvertttttt-ttt a total of tlumt t" ' front (lttvltuc farms ltarc been ship- Ptwlatttl dttrittg the past six wcclts. liaclt intent and stez-tttrt" living paid by Cattatlzt shit _ _ itt co-opertttttltt wttlt the Que- Pztclters. watt-kitty; bcc Ilorertttttt-ttt. .\'n dottltt other provincial govertttttcttts could tnalct- similar rtrrattyientcttts with Canada Pack- crs if tltcv tortf; the initiatirc. as the DUPlQS5“ (iovt-rntttettt scents to ltarc done in this case. Western Liberals On Warpath Western Liberal tttetttbers of Parliaulent arc .cportcd to be out for tariff reductions this ses- sign, _\t a Gort-rtttttettt caucus recently tltcy made thetttselres lteard, as all Ottawa dispatch expresses it, "in no uttccrtaitt tottcs." The com- plaint of tltosc “freer traders" frottt the Prairies is that the liittg Gorcrnntettt ltas retained too much of thc llettttett tariff structure and they dentand dowttwztrd changes such as will ulakc the Liberal fiscal policy "easily distinguishable” from that of the Conservatives. The promise of lower and always lowcr tar- iffs, colttntcttts the Sydney Post-Record, has been tltc crux 0f thc Liberal catnpaign appeal 0n the Prairies as far back in the years as poli- ticians of this generation can remember. In thc election of 1935, Mr. Kittg gave the specific pledge that. if fCtLlfllCd to power. he would tripe out all thc allegedly “unwarranted tariff in- creases” the Bctlnctt Government had intro- duced and would rc-cstablish the customs struc- ture as it ltad existed under “the Dunning'bud- get" of I930. The Prime ltlinistefs failure to implement this pledge is said to have already weakcttctl his Government greatly in the \Vcst. On the rttltcr hand, the Govcrnmcnt’s capitu- lation to the low tariff demands of its Western stalwarts would Ittrtt all the solid interests in the country against it, and would certainly meri- ace its political lifc 0n the occasion of the next appeal t0 the constituencies. Never in Canada's history has a serious, clear-cut, generally recog- rtized tariff issue in a. Dominion election been decided otherwise than against the proponents of “freer trade.” whctltcr it took the form of reciprocity, lower customs duties, or bald anti- protectionism. Canada is a protectionist coun- try. The politicians who have not yet found that ottt must surely be written down as being incapable of conning the clear lessons of re- peated experience. Our U. K. Trade In- I937 Canadian cxprtrters; with few exceptions, iave been able to develop their sales in the Bri- tish market in 1937 and to introduce new lines, writes Hr. Frederic Hudd, Chief Canadian Trade Commissioner in the United Kingdom, in the current issue of the Commercial Intelligence Jottr-nztl. Board of Trade statistics for thc Canadzfs share of the total wheat imports, which amounted to 96,883,523 cwts. in I937 as by 4o per cent to 34.248724 cwts. Her share of the barley imports, on the other hand. increased by 7o per cent. to 2.<_)3(t.ot3 cwts. out of im- ports totalling 18.101354 cwts. Shipments of oats front thc Dominion last year. amounting to 1.041.903 cwfsu rcprcsettlctl almost Q0 per cont of thc total importation. but showed a drop of nearly 1,000,000 cwts. as comparctl with I036. Tltcrc was little variation from I936 in the flottr inzport trztrlc—Cztttzttla supplying 4.043.724 cwts. out of a total itnttortatiott of 8,540,802 ctvts. lntpttrts of rolled oats front thc Dominion. amounting to 432,151 cwls. registered a. coll- traction of some I4 per cent. , Canadian packers continued to expand their sales of bacntt and hattts in thc United King- wlotu during the vcar under review. but landings of live cattle from the Dominion were only altout a quarter of tltc number rcccivctl itt I936. Annual intnorts of chccsc amount to nearly 3,- monrlo cwls. of which New Zcaland supplies more than half: Cattarlzfs share in I037, how- ever. increased bv some 2o pcr cent to 722,277 cwts. Tttthorts of fresh apples from the Doin- ininn increased bv 8 per cent to 2,134,263 cwts. There were sl’"ltt increases recorded in im- ports from Canada of canned salmon and lob- ster, while frown fish imports from the Dom- inlmr-ncnrlv’ all swlrtton-amotlnted to 77.380 cvmt. an increase of 3o pcr cent over I936. Althotvrlt thcrc was an increase in I937 of 2o per cent in total itlmrtflfi of stripped leaf tobacco Cattmlw amino-titted hr-r supplies at thcsame level as in thc previous vear. shipping 874,168 pounds: total imports ni thc ttnstrinped variety showed l} decline and (‘nnrtdian shipments were reduc- pot-n of lumber and timber and of non-ferrous Telling Premier King The Winnipeg Free Press (Liberal) docsrfti take lying down the denunciation by its party. leader 0f “reckless news stories and uncousider- ed comment on questions which easily arouse, acrimony and friction" with which Mr_ Mac- kenzie‘ King accompanied his explanation in Parliament the other day of Canada's vote at Geneva. in favour of Spain's re-cligibility to the Council of the League of Nations. "Lct it be quite clear," says the Free Press, “that Mr. King meant this newspaper." Our Winnipeg contemporary continues: "The Free Press has no apology to utztke to Mr. King. army and um uunorms. nuns orjilanea. has onstratett ma terrluc sI-IYIIIB DOW“ or 3 decnstve war when people fight backs to the wall tor tnelr homes and their Incas. tattcreu luIlItIa of velobed oftenslve power as dIn our own tattered Contlnentals; lemlnd- ea the world that Napoleon had hevolutlonary mob-s of Paris. dIssentIons that are deceptive. ,peu.Ic function. They anu draw oft mternal poisons; tn perpetual process of controversy Y TIIE WAY om- Mcre. tne Mudrlu has de- _ the armles of 31101!‘ orlxht In th The dIvIcIe democracy they have a. thera- ease tensfons Q m The facts are these: “The Geneva correspondent of thc hlanchcs- tcr Guardian, one of thc ablcst jottrnalists of Eu- I rope, reported to his newspaper thc fact that ‘ and compromise Is a better basls for national runfty than blud eon and terror. Dlctatorshlps are ails, and we don't think the Inmates wIlI bc any too anxious w lay down theIr lives for the dear old wardens-New Canada had voted against Spain. This dcspatclt reached the Free Press which, in view of the source from which it came, had no hesitation itt York P 0st. Is commonly supposed that publishing it. The Free Press Ihcn don correspondent to Gettcra to rcfttscd to say anything. firm or dctty. eeptctl ntodc of news dissemination all right to satt snntcthittg—latcr. Parliztntettt tratttcd the give it there. has only himself to ltlatttc. stubborn formalism ill-fitted to the democratic country such as Czmadzt. able to do so. reliable sources just because it docs Klllglil ‘innit: to do so? What was lwfore it published its report? tn Mr. King's argument which, in finding of the Maucltcstcr Guardian. and ltc, in due course, reported that, according to thc bcst information available. thc Guardian was correct. The Free Press published that also. “Mcztntrltile t\lr. King. who had come ttttdct‘ 1 ha“; criticism as a result of these dcspatcltcs. flatly" He would nciflter cott- Tltc ballot, he said. was sccrcl. llut he addctl, with a lofty disdain for the ac try. that he would aslt" thc League if it would bt- information. If this ittcrcztsctl the suspicion the German. but any IflImpSC of Its and uncertainty of the public tttind, Mt", Kittqt It was an attitude of j times surprised how It can work at is emphasized by the fact that, when .\Ir. finally did impart thc information, pressed doubt as to whether or not it was suit- “Is the press of this cottnttjv to dcnv its rcacl- crs important information which rcacltcs it from l Lllelve Years‘ lmprlsmment- do? \\'as it to ask tltc government's permission This is implicit It. . L _ whereas the democracies act, If at 50m I15 Oh- all. slowy and after much muddle ruched‘. ti“. , and superfluous and Irresolute talk, the dlctatorshtps work wIth clever, concentrated purpose and the ut- lmost raludlty o. decIsIon. The democracies. It Ls snld, do not know Ithelr own minds tIf they :an be sald to_ have any). while the dlc- "BLUFSIIIDS know exactly what they and how to get It. It wfll be found that these assumptions when ; critically examlned ar , not, all well founded. The appeara ces are de- cco ‘Ive. for the atmosphere of infal- ltbtltty that surrounds. because It Isl ,tnade to surround. every dictator and the secrecy Impcsed by eenscrs and terrorists conceal all the human Iveatcncsscs from which even dicta- tors and tltefr associates are not. cxcmot There ls not a dlctutorshlp In the world more efficient than dcspatclt in thc coitu- and that if he trottld inner wcrkings will reveal}: state of such confus-cn that one ts s0me_ mmpw of a \ aIL-lvlanehestcr Guardlan. and n“ w") It will be; no comfort to the res. l\tttg . pemable‘ Brltlsfl householaet" to re- Ilect this week-end that birds of a feather flock together. For he learns that. his new ally In the challenge of the American gunman Is-the Eng- lish buttgtur. A.n Amerlcan has been tsentenced at the 01d BaIIeyC to on- cerning thIs It Is statedtltut Scot- land Yard has been asst-sled In I way on Invadmg gangsters by In- formants In the London underworld Itself. It will be Interpreted, accord- Imz to the simple faIth or cynicism of the observer, as an outstanding instance of patarIoiIsm or an Im- plementing of the slogan “British he still cx- not suit Mr. the press to ltztltler form. ts slon. made a flamboyant appearance last Suttday itt Berlin when Plcrr Hitler declared ltitnself ‘op- posed to the almost intolerable incitement of the press in those countries uudcr thc pretext C London Sunday Dispatch. rIbs for British cracksmert.” — There is one thing which the of a free expression of opinion.” I Editorial Notes Sir Henry Wood born this date, * w 4- at it means to neglect the first law of m it at l- Rowell Commission, in t: l! Ill tion. It is light early and late nowadays. m it at x The pacifistic Chinese nation knows now what The onlooker sees most of our faults these days, distance not lending enchantment to the view presented by Premier Campbell to the Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennetfs bitterest political opponent is the old Montreal Gazette, yet it was in thc Gazette’s territory that Mr. scored the biggest victory since thc general elec- Rowell Commission wIll not be able to remedy any more than the gov- ernment. which trIes to curry out; Its recommendations-that Is the de- mancls of the public. An energetic I government. could perhaps correct _ what there Is that Is defective In our institutions. as In our system of I869. taxes and In the sharing of pubIIc revenues between the Federal Gov- Provinces and the municipalities. But, the political power whIch tries to correm the hablt. of the public of demandIn everythtng from governments an of making them bear the responsl- bIlIty o. all evIls that. happen that. Dower wIlI be committing suIcIde. . If that continues democracy wIlI de- cour Itself. If we want. democracy to survive we must understand that governments are Impotent. to create wealth and that. what they gIve us twIth one hand they must ave first taken away with the other as taxes. —Le Solell (Quebec) "It is useless," says Dean Inge, “for tlte sheep to bass resolutions In favor of vegetarianism so long as the wolf remains of a dlfferent opIn- lon,” and these days the wolves are ernment. the nature; Bennett mat-ign- Premier Campbell boosted thc gas tax at the expense of the autoists. Premier Angus Mac- donald boosted the tax but negotiated a corres- ponding reduction in the price. Premier Dysart has just made a similar arrangement; so that we are the sole victims of “outrageous fortune” through gross mismanagement by our Gov- ernment. =0- n- at In the Saskatchewan Legislature now there are 5o Liberals and five C.C.F. members. ln the previous Legislature there were 23 Conserva- tives. four Progressives and five Independents fortrting a co-opcrative government with 26 Lib- | erals in the Opposition, and with five vacancies. The Legislature was rcducctl from 63 members‘ to 55 in I934. In view of an approaching elec- tion. tltc Liberals allege thc Cottscrvativcs arc arranging a “saw-off" with the C.C.F. in ordcr to avoid three corn-red contests. I U i! 1k In the Argcntettil election. the Liberals rais- ed oncc more the race cry with a view to rally- ing thc voters to their support, but all in vaiu On the eve of thc election, Mr. Hcott, the Cott- scrvativc candidate declared that if clcctcd ltc would endeavor to continue to further the spirit of racial harmony which had always existed in Argcutcttil Cottuty. The candidate charged that paid agents of the Liberal party had been sent Io Argcntettil to create race differences httt sai-"ll he was confident that the people of the county would not be misled by these otttsidcrs.,And as the rcsult showed his foufitlcttce was not belied at The Attstralian Press in general deplored the resignation of Mr. Anthony Eden. British Foreign Secretary whose statesmanship and ltiglttnintlcd- I ncss it warmly praised. But nevertheless the rc- , signation was regarded as a victory for realism. I which will permit foreign policy in the future to‘ be shaped according to the hard facts of that international situation. Premier Chamberlairfs wise desire for a rapproachcmcnt with ftalv‘. was regarded as having overcome his natural reluctance to part with a brilliant lieutenant who preferred. in one writer's words, "to adhere to the idealism of yesterday." a n a 0 The United States is at present the largest market for Canada's exports of domestic pro- ducts as well as the leading source of the Do- mtmon’s imports. scpond by a large margin over all other coun- tries. After these two countries. the largest mat-- ket for Canadian products duringthe last nine months of I937, for which an anal sis of Can- ada's trade by countries has recent y been issu- ed by the Dominion statistician. was fumiahed. hv Attstralin. with Japan fourth. As sources of Canadian imports. the corresponding positions metals and mzwttfr-cflirrrs from the Dominion ll I937 showed substantial increases. were occupied by the British West Indies and Australia. Izamzln l dreams of power that. express them- tseen In the HIstorIcaI Museum on The United Kingdom ranks’ R DD. Every few days one or other of the up-Ispnd ports reports the de- parture _of a. deep-sea. frelghter loaded with our best fir logs, golng out of the country as unmanufac- tut-ed tfmber to supply raw mater- Ial for mIlIs and labor In foreign countries. This export Is at the ox- oense of our own Indus and labor. It Is procecdlng whIe our forestry officials are warning that we have only a dozen years’ sugply of first trade fIr timber Ieft.—- Ic- mrfa Dally Times. At the moment It Is doubtful whether Hitler Is the real. or at least the active, ruler of Germany. More and more wrapped up In hIs own obsesstons. more and more oca- cular: more and more pursued by so ves In projects tor rpetuatlng his memory In monumental srchl- tecturc, more and more Immersed In moody sIlence (though some times broken by outbursts of pas- sionate speech), Hltler llves more and more In hIs drcam world and In accordance with hIs pseudo-div- ine attrlbutlons rather than In the world of practical affatrs. The real ruler of Germany at the moment Is General Goerlnlz. It does not follow that some day Hltler wIlI not. re- emsrlze and determlne German pul- Icv anew or It may that. Dr. Goebbe s, now In eclipse. wIlI be at the full attain. General Goertng. Is, for the tfme beln . the resultant force of many czn used and varylng forces-Manchester Guardian. The first telephone exchange In the world was Inauzurated at. New Ila-en. Conn" on January: 23. 1678. It. had 8 lines and served 21 sub- scrlbers. Hugh C. Baker establtshcd ' the first exchange In the EmpIre at Hamilton, Ont... two months later. It served 89 subscribers InItIaIly. A model of the first Hamllton switch- board together wIIh ot-Iglnnl sub- scribers‘ sets of that period may be Is C. B.‘ ' C. Heading For BankruPW-Y? ‘- (li. h. Hilliard In The mommy ftumtes) l] -- n A lurvey o!‘ the most ralllbln source: brlnls t0 IIzhr. the swung DOGBIDLIIW that. the Canadian Broetdcastlng corporation may be on the roan w bankruptcy. It Is poratfon Is ffnsnclally embarrassed and. when ftgures are announced for the fiscal y In: March 31. I038, they may show thls to be true. ‘Xhosa close t0 the sItualIon vlslnn the Corpnrotlnn eveggtllally “‘ mun In a mu e com e propor Iona e y t0 that. In w“ the C. N. R. finds Itself. This. It ls Bald, Is the ex- planatton for the " Invaslon of Amerlcan commercfals, In a last. desperate effort to balance the year's budget. Atho h revenue Is not. reatly Increase mom that avaflube for the Commission tasltde from loans), admlnlstratfon, salary. station o r- atlon. station maintenance, nut n- al network matntenarttze 0nd, IIkely also. program costs RBI/B all risen, whlle major expenditures have been made for statlons as never before. Futures have. In some cases, oub- lecl and trebled as compared to Commlsslon ffgures. Tlme on the aIr of the network, with a conse- quent Increase In costs, has dOUblCQ. Revenue From Licenses For the vear endlng March 31, the first complete year of the Cor- Duration. revenue will Include $2,- 000 from Icenses, acoordlng to a ‘statement of Hon. C. D. Howe, hamster of Iraztsport. In addItIon to this will be the amount collect- ecl from udvertlslruz. no more than $500,000 and probably a urea: deal less. Total revenue, therefore, wIlI not exceed 312500.000. exclustve of a $500,000 loan front the DomInIon. For the veal- ertdlnz March 1936. the last complete year o. the altzady betnatsafd In some quarters Th th t ma Cor 3L 50,000 watter, OBL, gIvIng as much locum trln beyteen WWW" '1‘- OBI-WI ll necedury. ‘Ru: opccutut», department Is In Toronto. 9118111 In M0 d C0 . magi“ “itndttiilniitiiaitviaélsht Him-i Cos-a 9 one nun“ 1mm m’- tlons I 000 watts In power. amounted to $91,000. Power of nll statfom to- t ed 15100 watm. The corporltwn l have tn Include the cost of, oueratlna two new 50.000 watt at»; tIona for the last '.0ur months oz, the fI-scal year. and costs of the amulet blunts (taken over from the Commission) for 12 months In Its stntfon oneratln exnetlses thIs year. Therefore, Ins ltd of payfng for 15.000 watts, the tl wlll be be watts. T Ia elbecw to good englneerfng author-fay, w more than double the $91.0 (Ig- ure to 8200.000 for the flscal year whIIe. allowing for 12 mottlhs of op- eratlon of the two large stations, and Includlnlz the small ones, sta- tIon mats for the Corooratfou dur- Inlz a year could well amount to $300,000 Seven 50.000 Watt Stations Stu. says . Howe, Canadlv must -have seven 50.000 watt sta- tlons to keep a gentleman's agree- ment made at Huvanall One can well Imaglne what a slIce of the total revenue wIlI be taken wlth 365.000 watts to bay for, compared to the present 115,000 watts and the 15,000 watts under the Com-| mIssIon. And the latter, together-t with private stattons, gave Canadnt B5 per cent, covers. e, according to a survey conducted y Mr. Charles- worthls engineers, the best- In the country. Now we find Toronto's neerln: no tment and emecutfvId-oxpfgggl Amerlcan coverage as Canal-flan. New construction of the year un- Commfsston. revenue totalled $1,- 702,000, Including $1,500,000 from, licenses (voted by Parliament) and $200,000 from commercial sources. | The Commlsslon carrled on wIth. a staff of 130 persons. salarles for| the year amountInR to $233,000. The (lorooratlon has Increased Its staff almost. three times, to 350 persons. excluslve of artlsts, whlle some of the tco salurles have been Increas- ed. For Instance, Hector Charles- worth. chalrman of the Commls- received $9,800; Gladstone Murray. general manager and Augustin Frlgou, assistant general manager of the Corporation, re- celve $13,000 and $12,000 respectlve- 1y. Thus salary costs ntfght easlly reach a future of’ $700,000 this year. Administration Costs AdmInIstt-atlon costs have more than doubled so asl/o now compare with the hllzhly criticised figure of the British Broadcastlng Corpor- ation. Therefore. compared Ito the Commission fItzure of $85,000. the Corporatlon apparently will Show $200,000 expended In administration thls year. Contrlbtttlng to the In- crease Is the scatterlnz of deport- ments all over the country. . Every time the chalrman of the board of governors. Mr. Brockfmzton, wants to dlscuss policy wlth the manager. 80KB THROAT. RHEUMATISM AND ucnnr ntscnsc 501116 Wars ago It. was common i, Dractloe In a hospital near my‘ home to see children attend s. throat cltrtlc Saturday morn rig, have the tonslls "snlpped" of: and the youngster back to school the following Tuosday or Wednesday. large tonsIls were all removed In those days. To-duy whlle a. great many youngsters have their tonsils re- moved, It Is usually because they have a. sore throat, often, or the tonsils are lnterferhtg with their breathing. Most physfclans now be- IIeve that the tonsILs are of value In filtering poisons from the blood and that, they are best left Itt un- tII the danger of all the dlsesase of chfldhood has passed. What about tonslls? Why should they be removed If Nature has a use or purpose for them? Does re- moval of tonsils prevent diseases or make them less dangerous If they do occur? As rheumatism and lteart disease are the serious ailments followlng Infected tonsFs It would be well to consider the effect of the removal of tonsils from thls standpoint. A report of the research study of 48000 school children by Dr. A. D. Kaiser. Rochester. N.Y . who has dcne a great amount of rc- search study on this questfon Is gfven In the Journal oflrrboratory and ClInIcaI Medicine. Dr. Kslser states that. whIlc rheumatlc dls- ease occurs In chlldren who have had their tonsils removed. It Is less likely (by 25 to 35 oércettf) to occur In these who have had thelr tonsils rcmovrcl than In thc n. who stIll have their tonsils. It. was also shown that when rhteumatlsm did occur In those whose tonsils were removed the chances of developing heart dis- ere were ‘eas. Flnallv, the study made of 597 rheumatism children rhowed that the detftl. rate among ohlldren -Jobn IIlIlI-DIYII. MT»; am attack ofittgltmatlg. der ‘the Commlsston amounted to 885,000. and allthls wasTpaId out. of current expendltures. e Cor r- ation In Its ffrst. year has pile up a $500,000 debt wIth the Domfnton government to pay for Its new con- structlon ttt Montreal and ‘Toronto. with every Indlcatlon that there Is no end planned for the oorro . untIl CBC becomes ttopelessl In- volved flnanclal y. Hours on the national network have been doubled from six hours oer day In the Commlssfon days, to twelve hours under the Corpor- ation. Plans call for this to be In- creased to 16 hours shortly. ‘rho sIx hours cost the Commlssfon $680,000 annually and, while I2 hours probably doa not double the fllrure for the Corporation, It. mhgolat well run to a figure of $1,000. . ot- half as much atzaln. Programs cost. the $500,000. At least this be expected to be shown Corporation whlle. wlth M, hourl I: to fIlI In compared to the (Jommfsslons 42. It. would seem reasonable to expect that, In spttn of Imported commerctals from the U. B. A. a sustaIntt-tg features from both the United States and Great BrItaIn. program costs will be hllther than half u. mIIlIort un- der the Corboratfon schedule. "Statistics and the e ertenoe of physlclans study th questton mstlfy the mnovo. of the tombs practically every rheumttttc chIId; but the operatton should not be done durlng an acute attack of rheumatism." ‘ I halve quoted Dr. Kaiser's study before but I belleve the relatlon- shlp of sore throat, rheumatlsm and heart dtsease should never be for- gotten. PUBLIC FORUM ‘lhln column In opal for lhc fllnuulon by oorruponllutn 0t nation of Int-crank. The ghnrlotutuwn Gunnlton don not Manually undone tho opllloln of onnopondontu. “SICK ONTO DEATH" SIn-Wlmt Is the mutter wIth the Liberal Chantlcler? when Con- servatives followlng the usual court- ‘ esy of ttllowlttg n doun or more Cob- Inet Mfnlsters and outstandlxti leaders t0 be returned by ooclama- tIon, the Patrfot hue been shout- Ing Itselr hoarse over those wonder- fut party vlctortes, and (Immglnary) endorsements of Mackenzte King. are easy. "Wtns" of thls klnd and when no opposltlon Is offered the Llb. Is sure to wIn. Why, sa th the Patrfot that. marvelous feat of only a week azor-“When n Liberal was elected In St. John by u- clarnatlon." Of a. moral oertatnty they can wIn. there Is no oppost- tIon and when the people have no chance to poll their votes. But now, when Argentcufl, In the heart. of the Great LI-beral Quebec, campalgned vigorously. wIth promlss. a la LIbel-al, by the most popular French Canadlan Csblnet Mlnlster. who canted hIs own constituency only two years IPUDS . . i. malt... mild and lllQMI|l0|liC§I ROCK CITY TOIACCO COMPANY, LIMITED, QUIIEC I Canadian rolling your own, lOc tho pagltqa and lndcpnndnn! Mr. lea Poll bays: For a Delicious Gun of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN Orange Pekoe lea AN INVITATION TO a ttovA scot rot: COMFORT HALIFAX. NS. AND ECONOMY With most reasonable rates In the Dlnlng Rooms and at the Lunch Counter, the best In accommodation and scrvlct I: obtained at a surprisingly low cost. Th: Hotel ls Immediately adjacent to the Railway Station eliminating taxl and baggage transfer charge. ROOMS 535g ALL VIITH emu :_-_‘_ lb M1‘. subject adequately. m. Deaoh stamaneo respo humor, and yet wI/thout pa Dunnlng: And covet-I i l!) that was one of the brlghtest re- marks 1 ltave heard. It was an III»- nse filled with rig thc tneln: If hon, metttbern example 0f that 0 amlne ther own wm-k. I believe It mun. mtvollsh. Every color lay; AM sometime: add. But oftteneat takc away. It! hon. members would do that wit-h tltelr o a es; they would prepare more cars mid do a. little more wort on them, there would be no sugges- tlon of shorttenlng the ttlmehmlt ot- of msklltg many other regula- tlorts whlch could be . If we want; ex lets of fInc work In the art of pub Ic~ utterance, we wIltl flrtd them all amund us. Could anythlng be more sweeplngly sym- pe. hello than the shortest verse In the Bible, “Jesus wept"? Wu there ever a. more powerful speech de- livered, measured by results, than thmtrof Joshua. when he commanded the sun to gland still? And yet that speech was couched In fourteen words. Mr. Bennett; I mud It In the pa- per the other day. ‘Mr. Deachman: “Sun, stand thou s u ago, by about. 3,000 majorlty Hon. P. J. A. Cardtn has returned the Conservatfve by nearly three times ' the normal maJorIty of past. years, -, there Is no h1g1 black type heading,» no vociferous oastln n the GrIt. organ. so famlllar w en they get.‘ an easy let In, by wclamntlon. I Any fool can enter an o n and tutqurllecl rate, but. when he vot- ers. as watchman at thc portals. the story I: dlfferent, and the crow gels wheezy and Inaudlble, and a. few small type oonwfcuous enough to fIlI In the d y space. Sick onto death, pIty t, e Invalid. I. am SIr. . DOCTOR. porn Grlbecn; and thou, moon. In the valley of Ajalon." . .~ . If hon. members wnnt examples and magnffloent ones-they wIIl nd them In the utterances of As- quith. Kqutth exhIbIted a model of condmsatlon whfch might. well be followed by hon. members In this 0t- a. hcvtm. 1 ask you w wml er, a9 you watch a show, whe- ther I'.- be o. movf Blown or I nrontatfon on the 03f mote stone, conduct- the amount of work mills before the ftnllhed was exhtbtted. ‘men 0cm! et the any gofnc. lackadablcal sort of Ilfe w! lIve hare In the House of which we ‘lay s lot writs“ I It Wlhennf ituelitiilttlshdpm “mm ' P" ' ' great statesmen th straws: ti» m” M men In IIterat/txre fInd the some when they come m ex- has want l- _ kIml of humm- Irt one of Cunadsl y wIII find I’. In Brookvllle, whn has mode some of the brIg-hest re- marks which have ever appeareu 1n the Caxwdtan press. Yet I venturt to suggest that not once In all hIn many years has he abused anybod! In the remarks he Ina/dc. llottttd Trip BARGAIN Ffltgess MONCTON —GoIn[— FRIDAY. MARCH 11th Return Mom, March 14th. “'"" $3.20 From CHARLOTTETOWN l Year: a! age HALF FA/rb f Tickels 600d m DA Y C0146 HES 0N1. Y any Tube! rltveu! Aluaomu Nanotvlt VII IVIMYWNIPII IN AANAIUAI hnnmblolmllmywun ‘which "t4 rowan-t a. ATTENTION tn 2001,11 ,Be H I1 B Ildl 1t Iélfgncpeal. ts cities; tiallly ‘lexcerfl 125i; his} fzii Frank Statements tut very mm t den‘ m up ay-vs ora are weoome. — g | 1 we g am p, e ‘ ' 7° °°h°ne N9“- gvxflflfgxlghellspsvet: out atolfiie n30 From Mr" Deachman ttllm I: an “wing-a: Chancellor llltler, opened Berlin's (min the Ofllcrlul Report of u» vutlon ‘may comemfro 0h- "T iiiiiiti‘ ~°"'*ili*'i"'iiiniii "iii “°“‘°°‘°°“'°‘°”"°' ""’““’”"’ °‘"'"‘°°°’ can: Wtmrri NOW '- a.» his": ‘riidnynwfllelerdrl ‘ tiie tigfomcbti; m;';"g§5';,.'°§b‘9*‘§p““k§%"fl Hu- mt mm m» um mp n- - m " ' Industry. With reference to tho lat- m u‘ ‘m t‘ ' no?“ “Md °l 31ml)?» l" I Dlwl ,, r. we fancv It w be qum some m“, ‘l’ w‘ m!“ “Mill! W! UM- nre the result of m. fIme before the Amer-Icon motor ‘ l” ° "ll"- "9 l!“ ltldfihlfiflm m"! , come fro \. b, ‘m. ‘o m,“ ‘mom, CBI‘ Industry n toppled’ from rim I revision M’ the minds o1 the mem- at mind vrhlch has nave dove . m“, m u’ “m. lace. One of the brine out reasons hers. some from mto who fear at ' tIes In the not that the gnu-at TWILIGHT SONG 501M 1W1!- molnbvr-I: Hm. hour. ho Inuit exhtblt hI- own a nag bubllc In the Unltted sum In a --~ . Delohlmm mm I n the eplfhs of m; mm M86? Pig -_ W01’!!! nos Ion buy cm 5nd operate (Prom "Do Interval”) vlu wmm; m: the page: of sn- ‘s; _ - them-Windsor Bur. and and by ‘chance cane ttcrou a than In a touch of humor In them TORT‘! PDWdEP _...__.__ The mountafn pools but m their pqgnph, 0| m; o; my, own they “one. “mm ._ Modern uchln 1m mam _ A ~ ea. r dtd not. rocogrln It at 1 malt m. House m ltl - It will mot-unity obolllh u! tfewer people topro uce more on the oooa-nlmtl- - , the lanauule wanna on mum of the lnunor mttsttsffn ma: u mm, ma tmvfl" fnrnu. This hu tnevftnbly been ra- And the lomt dtadown of the wood: 5 _ 5° 1 "m o“, n u“ N, a“. chum," m om 000mm , u. “m. M "I, “m; ' floored on the vlllmos. But there In Would fafn for lhndlenffi WW1‘ mug m4 M w; hm “M. . m n. u.‘ m“ a crowing reallzatton that urbutfs- at: u: m4 1 m“, t; ‘m mum m", my "mhmmmd ‘"3 C2 350128. '10!’ - gm gt‘; If qltflfllmlgg ‘fivw Thggmg; gI-gtggttggyggggvg, a mm. m: when x m of u» opptnttmt t l" ) m, . ann es . - a _ > - _ slit: ca: taut" ‘us: iuhratttl..rt.rat..tt.- '$1°‘*~l"~‘=-~iih-‘ fi-mmlwfi%tiftititlhtrrtt 3°'ii-"'-"“°-i'*i-'i""'"’ thehllhtomnnd atmtlThcoxuu , fowlw' . h“¢°°""l°“-"°*W'-N¢Mflhttlntormrau ‘lwn-“u ofmoaf .mdunt.ry wags-summit- n nrnrmmwwg“ fim‘ ,,",,9,,,‘,"°,,'“"‘d§'"°M-mmmm phone 315 “PM 01111111221 ond ml rl u“ m“; r bu.’ w .Ror_|_)ond!|hntiI-. many o. the ulvant once poc- sweet Knob your noul from hem "l" Mal; llblmfl h“! I B“ 91mm. they: ha,“ 1931i: iii i: iiifit siitmtitii’ ‘$225; Good-hm! gotta-alum lg: memwn inn-rural timid tr In?!» iiiiiinwlut'm'“dm?¢ t r-cttt- w n» broblmm- ' m a mm m-uttm of Ih m. h- ‘ mlauuaymttafmn littm‘ “fi”? ‘I"'°"'” Learns - turning". vcnturtionqfllltl "‘ hulmlinnntzLv Law 1mm rrmn o!’ '-'!t'nut C/uldren u] . .. ..t under 7104/11! For Furl/m lnr/nnnalwn (onrull i