race roux lunlorrsrown GIIARIJIM .Vo‘tes By The Way cue-w. 8ooIfllII—L|olt-0OI D. Morning Dolly‘ (founded Ill?) r1, 1%.; m, . *,~,4~'_ The $150,000 subsidy increase un- der the White Commission report. ‘wcays the Iuberal press, should have . flgpeen madeaetroactive. ThisJt-says, ii “the subsidy question in brief." Made retroactive to cover the l. ‘ have not had, for many years, a . to present one very important claim. , *“n mo. l. llnelllnnon, D. S. 0. FRIDAY» JULY 1.9. 1935. 8. Iol-uro, ll. P. Vice-President. J. B. Burnett. l‘. I. l. can.» n‘. lhnagllg lumen-J. n. nurum, r. J. 1. Arum-lute lfllllllk-"Illlll Walker, and D. K. Currie. 85.00 per year (In nflvlncoJ delivered. “.50 por year (in advance) mulled to Cnnadn and Unltod Staten. Melly oi’ tho nnmororu folnonterl of trouble throughout the country back up the Communist leaders of - relief camp strikers in their de- -‘ " mand for the repeal of Section 98 of the Criminal Code. It was on February 1.9.1933. that Sir William" M01063. Chief Justice o1 Ontario. delivered the combined judgment. of the Ontario Court of Appeal i» 10 . u: _ your: 1a.. W, RaPIOILM-D BLUFFING 1r our ‘I years of neglect under the Macken- I. hie King Government at Ottawa, and ‘ the Saunders-Lea Government in ' this Province! Years in which the "financial interests-of this Province I were callously sacrificed for partisan political purposes. WHAT A SUG- 5 cmsnou TO COME FROM ma LIBERAL PARTY ORGAN! ‘ ‘Like its party leaders, it-regarcs the subsidy claims question as a joke. Elsewhere in the same issue, it re- fers to the astounding revelations in . the Saunders-Robb-Mackcnzie King corespondence as “a red herring v acres the track.” T Across what track? .2 . "All these matters." it says, "have been fully discussed and satisfactor- fly explained." Where? Certainly not in the Lib- eral party press. Certainly not by Liberal candidates on the platform! .7 EASILY ANSWERED “Whoever heard," asked Mr. St. Clair Trainor at the Charlottetown Liberal meeting last night, "of de- pression under Liberal rule?" Answer: Mr. Mackenzie King. He received a long and informative let- ter on this very subject from Prem- ior Sounders in December, 1928. Mr. Saunders complained bitterly about .g“our sad and distressing circum- stances," and cited harrowing in- stances of the dffliculties under 'which our farmers were laboring while the rest of Canada was en- _1cying unprecedented prosperity. "I Ireally believe," he wrote, "that we worse condition than we are at present experiencing." It was im- possible, (notwlthstanding the fake surplus announced in the Legisla- ture.) “to make revenue and ex- penditure moot.” Nothing for Pub- lic Health! Nothing for Old Age Pensions! Nothing for roads! (“N0 gravel on the Islandi") Noth- ing for the teachers, who were threatening to strike! Nothing for anything atiell. In fact, as Mr. Saunders eloquently put it, "unles we can get a substantial increase in our subsidy I honestly think that our Island might all well hoist its anchor and drift helplessly out to sea." A long letter-all about the "de- pression under Liberal rule," which Mr. Mackenzie King said could never possibly have been written in i. single day. Everything that Mr. Saunders said in 1928 was substantiated by Mr. Lea In 1980, (down to the absence of gravel!) in the brief which he presented to the Audit Board, asking for over four hundred thousand dol- lars as the “minimum subsidy m‘ crease" required by the Province to balance its budget in that period of Liberal depression! Kllvcs HEA VIER TAXES Their sorry record with regard to subsidy claims does not prevent the Liberal party candidates from criticising the amount of the Sub- sidy increase received by the Mac- Miilan Government. Great arm.- chair economsts, their leader, at the last legislative session, charged the Government with “neglecting the added cost to consumers through the additional taxes put on by the Bennett Government in 1890." Mr. IePage, of Rustfco fame. figured that these increased taxes amounted to $425,000,000. His state- ment was anaiyred by Hon. Mr. MacPhee from the authoritative figures issued by the Dominion - Bureau of Audit. The result is in- teresting. It shows: In 1931. the first full year of the Iennott Government. the amount o! customs duileo pold by tho cm- ‘ollcn people 'wol llllMlMl on 8150.93.91! in 1m. In mi If was $104,192.07‘! so nnihu 171111.905!!! in 1m; in 1m it woo INIIMIO ll alolnlt 0119.393" m1...» of the Opposition." airman. ran-Who otlves." Mackenzie Mark McGufgan, Liberal platform; abbatoir might Crops never looked general. tion. here? Pi. the “red." The experience considerably. Conservative majorii ation cf the of 10 or 20 years. ices the Liberals have the most part our newsprint exports. udiotfng Mr. Boulter’: the from the people of Canada by lhll mode of taxation 32120000000 more than was collected by tho Conserv- How much of this did Premier King give to Premier Saunders when he wrote complain- ing about the "sad and financial conditions" of the Pro- vince, and begged humbly personal interview to discuss sub- sidy claims settlement? theory or relativity, the result is the same. NOT A RED CENT. MISQUOTED According to the Liberal press, Mr. .at the Mount Stewart meeting, promised "that the Liberal Government would establish abattolrs for the. farmers which would make them independent of monopolist private companies.’ No suzch promise appears in the and no such promise was made by Mr. McGuigan. The Liberal candidate merely ex- pressed the pious hope that a public be established — which is a. horse of a different color. What can be expected from a Lib- eral press which garbles the state- ments of its own party. candidates? EDITORIAL NOTES better. Hay-making is now becoming Three more days-then the elec- What is finer than a day in July If Italy does not go to war it is not for the lack of preparations. Political lying gets no one any- where in the long run-except into An active Liberal prepared an election slate showing a certain three with a reasonable prospect of five.‘ It is more than satisfactory when‘ opponents make such a prediction. yof There is every prospect of a. boom in building as the result or the oper- new ‘Housing Act which permits a prospective home builder borrowing a hundred per cent of the cost or his new home repayable monthly over a period The retirement is announced of Hon. James Malcolm, former Lib- eral Minister of Trade and Com- merce, who has represented North Bruce, Ont... for 16 years. He real- not ghost of a chance of gaining power at the ensuing election. The Japanese Cabinet has ap- proved a. surtax of 50 per cent. on commodities constituting Canada's chief exports to Japan in retaliation against alleged Canadian discrfmn ination of Japanese goods. The new measure will not become effective until promulgated by imperial or- dinance which is expected to be to- morrow, July 20. This will affect for lumber It was the Charlottetown Board o1 Trade, with Major MbcNutt as President, and Mr. R. E. Mulch as chief spokesman, who waited on the government asking it to rep- udiate Mr. J‘. W. Boulier’; hog in- spection resolution which lost us the Nova Scotla- market for our produce. Yet the Hberel organ has had the audacity to blame the Maoltflllon Government action. Misstaiements regarding amount paid members of the Pro- vincial Marketing Boo-rd were made at Mount Stewart Wednesday night by 1k. Potor Sinclair. The total for l Opposition candidates have had at the public meetings has damped their ardour for rep- the case of the King against 11m- “h? Buck and others. The judg- ment then pronounced confirmed the verdict found at the tml in a 1"" wil" before Mr. Justice W031“ and a fury. Thus was brougth to a conclusion one or the most important criminal cases that has ever occupied the attention of. a Canadian court. The result of the‘ Judgment was to outlaw the Com-l munist party in the Dominion 0f Canada. by nourishing food and exercise. “Is there any similar help ally?" m‘ LllC answer is Yes. W5 ‘l0 not think of the air we breathe. We take it for granted . Worked out by arithmetic. until some moment when we find Wm‘ a bmke“ 19B “s95 sPums and algebra, geomet y or Einstein's Ourselves in danger of suffocation. crutches ‘mm the bme b°°°me5 There is not complete freedom of speech and writing even now, but it is almost complete in the great democracies as compared with two hllndltd V6815 8x0. a freedom un- known under dictators. aside." and Surgery. As if to contradict his Irish friends who have declared that the political future of Lloyd George lies behind him, the Welsh Wizard announces that he is in poltics again. At this distance it does not fl-Dpear that he has ever been out 0f Wlltlcs. Be that as it may, his declared aim in the dramatic "comeback" he is staging will be towards "peace and reconstruction." Lloyd George will find he has a dif- ficult task on hand if part or his purpose i: to reconstruct some of the pieces into which he shattered the old Liberal party. . into its best shape physically is ailments. - tion, which ial or unimportant matters, The Nazis have just celebrated be free from lznorance. the first anniversary of the "blood . purge" which turned the stomachs of civilized people. Germany's dic- tators are so stupid that they will not even let the rest of the world forget what a bloodthirsty lot they rep-London Advertiser. nights with unrest. No amount of subtle reasoning or specious. argument can brush away the fact that a Democratic House of Representatives handed a Democratic President a. stinging defeat when it voted down the "death sentence" clause in the util- ities control bill. Nor can it be said that Mr. Roosevelt did not invite and deserve this rebuke. His ob- stinate insistence that his personal demand be granted and the crude lobbying methods he used in an ef- fort to beat the Congress into sub- mission were both reprehensible in the extreme-Boston Transcript. thing for them." health. Happy is the in his work. would be happier and healthier. In a report to the League of Nation-ii. Japan denies it has forti- fied its mandated islands in the Pacific ocean. A recently published, first-hand study by Mr, Paul H, Clyde says that a year ago the islands had certainly not been forti- fied. In fact. says Mr. Clyde, only six out of the 1,400 islands can be of any real use as a naval base. It is important that we should have the truth about a situation which may be used to inflame passion in the U5.A.—I-lamilton Spectator. thought necessary. to “work out our own salvation" ions. the Grangers, call for It need not be anticipated that the police will go out to look for trouble in connection with any sit- uation that may arise in Regina. The police prefer peace to conflict. When the "police act in a situation such as may arse in Regina they act only on the instructions of the civil authority. If the police are de- fled the State itself is defled. Those who attack the police. even ve:bal- ly, especially where the police are acting purely on the instructions of the civil power. at once place themselves under suspicion of be- ing advocates of force, violence and grumted revolution-Regina Leader- ise to reduce expenses, but wealthiest man is he who one that has the most great wealth nor the The national debt is now reckon- ed in billions; annual budgets look like the old national debt; new means or railing revenue have been discovered or invented.‘ Third part- ies arise but how different from Spectator. the waste. New Brunswick farmers are lining up in a solid front to com- bat the worst plague of cutworms in recent years, and one of the worst in history. Already some 25 per cent. or the mangel crop has gone. threatening feed problems for livestock and poultry raisers. Even marsh hay and cats have been af- fected, while in many areas farm- ers have had to replant cabbage and other vegetable plots as many L; three times after cutworms had mode o clean sweep of young plants. Nothing can be done for this year, but the Department of Arfculture is seeking means of preventing e. recurrence next year. but I1 Duce will look after that. D9118. nlpeg Tribune. and able. The , the watch trod "Cm Liberalism survive?" is the heading of a striking article by luv. Charles Herbert l-Ieustis, eolmrior on the editorial rm of gross. but by the hundredweivht. The ‘Ihrdnw Star (Liberal) In his . opening paragraph he remarks that: “Canada not excepted, Lib- eralism as politically organised, is bankrupt." Tile second , ph oommoncos: "Just what do we mesa by Liberalism in politics? Professor the ‘of teeiturnity. I too shell b! I Ufbklll Illlfll. 11m cnsnnorrrarowu i. oven ' GUAD _ STRENGTHENING OUR MENTAL HEALTH ‘ When the body is weak the nut- ural method of strengthening it is for those who are weak or ailing ment- "lf a case of physio or mental in- sufliciency is severe "or far advanced the services of a. trained nerve spec- ialist may be needed at first to help the sufferer in getting a foothold on more solid ground, much as a man SHORE again and then lays them I am quoting Dr, Geo. B. Lake. Chivaso. Editor of Clinical Medicine Now we know that infection- teeth, tonsils, gall bladder, intestine -—wil lower the health of body and the mind also, and getting the body great step forward in curing mental ‘Chief among the factors which cause mental ill health are; ignor- ance. fear. self-pity and other iorms of selfishness, idleness and supersti- last is merely over- estlmating the importance of triv- and lack of a. sense cf humor. "Ignorance 0f physical laws kcpt our savage an- cestors in a constant state of peril and terror.” You and Imust increase our knowledge of the world, learn to put first things first if we wocld Fear is the child of ignorance and the greatest bar to the achievement of happiness. Thus worry is peally fear in a, chronic form; worry fills the days with foreboclings and the selfishness is the next great bar- rier to mental health. The cure for selfishness is an eager and kindly interest in other people, constantly fed and stimulated by “doing some- Idleness is the next bar to mental man whose heart and mind are eagerly engaged T0 fight of! superstition, know- icdge is again needed. We take our- selves W0 Serlouily. If we would or could laugh more (at ourselves) we To be doing something in om- spare time that is worth something in ourselves and the community will build mental health as exercising the body will build physical health. The thought then, ‘is, when It is consult the nerve specialist, and then learn u, by trying to follow the above suggest- the Patrons of In- dllfitry. the United Farmers! Their programmes for political reforms and the amelioration of condition; moi-eased expenditures. Their notions as to how these ex- penditures can be met are vague and conflicting. They do hat pl-Qm. they h0ld out illusory hopes of raising the money by a painless process of juggling with the currency and credit-Toronto Mail and Empire. There are some people who an be happy even when destitute. Per- haps they have learned that the has fewest desires. But for the major- ity the middle state of life is the blessings. They do not have the anxieties of cares of srindinc Poverty. ‘Those who can‘ Ema"! Poised timid great respon- sibilities are as few as those who can be cheerful in rags-J-lamilton The Emperor of Ethiopia declares that he cannot give assurance that his wild warriors will not mutilate and otherwise torture Italians who may fall frlto their hands in the event of war. This will not tend to promote recruiting in sunny Italy; It is quite on the curds that the ‘future will see Mr. De Valera the strongest supporter of the British connection and the chief foe of Republicanism. For did not Lord Fitzalan, a former lord ieutenant of Ireland. say of that country: "It is the impossible that always hap- the inevitable never."--Wirl Japan wants Canada in buy more of her goods and talks of retalia- tion if Canada is not more agree- extenslon of Japan's trade is one of the amazing phen- omena of the time. In s book pub- lished last year Blr Philip Gibbs, visiting Switzerland. the home of c, told how cheap Japanese watches hed paralyzed the trade of the Swiss watchmak- ers. These watches are handled by exporters. not by the dozen or the “Greatly content, shall hour the sigh wind across tho lone benign abalone-lam. PUBLIC FORUM 1 A PENSION PUZZLE! sin-As a humble tax-poyen-one of "the forgotten men." I em puzzled by one of the present campaign in- cidents on which you can perhaps enlighten me. Our Federal Govern- ment grants a generous ion or living allowance yearly unt death to all Civil Servants and other em- ployees under certain conditions af- ‘ter they have reached “the age of retirement"—-a fixed age when they are considered by the Government as having outlived their usefulness. and when they are withdrawn from circulation as no longer considered competent public servants. Part of their former salary. thereafter called a pension, is continued to the end by the tax-payers, irrespective of party. Now, a former Post Office employee. long retired from active work and drawing a good pension to which I and others of all parties contribute, is still active enough to stump the country in partisan role in this election campaign from Bradalbane to l-ligh Benin-a stren- uous feat in this mldsummerheat. Did he retire. too early? If his ser- vice and advice to the Post Office B Department is no longer considered useful, what of his advice m the public now? If’ he is still capable of useful labour why should we have to contribute to a pension for nim? Does the same law of neutrality and non-meddling apply to pensioners as to active civil servants? That is my puzzle. Will some one ask the Civil Service Commission or .the Post Office Department? will the ihree musketeers of the retreat from Rus- tico. Clair Campbell, Peter Sinclair and Holmes look into it? I am, Sir, etc. FARMER- Can War Be Imcalized? (Winnipeg Bree Press) Abyssirlia may be s. long way from the so-called storm centres of the world, but as the crisis be- tween Italy and Ethiopia deveicps, as Mussolini rattles his sabre more and. more loudly comment is not lacking that an outburst on the plateaux or North-east Africa may easily bring the uneasy structure of world peace down about our ears. Even the possbillty of such an issue should be enough to make short-sighted citizens realize that the world has grown too small to allow adventurers to run loosely at large. That subtle, imponderable thing known as the balance of power in Europe apparently now trembles on the verge of catastrophe. Mus- Isla;1dSub‘sidy czar»... - FVitally Dependant I a Return Of Conservatives I l .4. Haberdashery?’ j I, Sale The most significant Liberal statement in the present election campaign was made atMontague on Monday nigh! by Mr. Thane A. Campbell, Liberal leader, when he admitted. ' that “a balanced budget does not necessarily moan no in-_ crease in debt." The whole Liberal appeal making revenue and expenditure meet. announcing the first Liberal budget ON ORDINARY Why was this done? Liberal record. Fake Liberal surpluse on ordinary account have ‘ ‘ INCREASED DEBT. Ex-Premier always resulted ln Saunders, who produced fake surpluses in 1928-1929, writ- ing to Mackenzie King in December, 1928, complained that he COULD NOT MAKE I'I‘URE MEET, Hie succes fake surplus in 1930. presented claims before the Dominion FOR THE PURPOSE OF BAL- ANCING THE BUDGET. The Audit Audit Board for $438,000 hack to Ottawa, said: “The Prince Edward Island showed DEFICITS in their Public Accounts.” These deficits were paraded as Liberal press i A continuation of this policy is the only panacea the Liberal party has to offer fo If. resulted under the debt increase’ of $1,177,000, which was incurred in their ThaLperiod, they say, Canada’s history i It was, according to Ex-Premier Saunders in his letter to Finance Minister Robb, “THE OPPORTUNE TIME” to have pressed» our subsidy claims at Ottawa. WHY DIDN'T THEY PRESS THEM '2‘, Not only did they fail to press our claims, BUT THEY REFUSED T0 CO-OPERATE _ WITH THE OTHER MARITIME PROVINCES AND WITH THE BOARD OF TRADE, WEN A JOINT PRESENTATION WOULD UNDOUBTEDLY HAVE FORC ED THE MACKENZIE KING GOVERNMENT T0 TAKE ACTION. The loss to‘ this Province, through their criminal dis- regard of everything but par on the basis of the $150,000 the MacMillan Government, ERS OF.A MILLION DOLLARS. During that time, the paying more taxes info the have paid under the Benne sohnf, unless he is carrying out a gigantic bluff, is determmed on war. The reason. it is said, is that the internal condition of Italy is no longer as happy as it was; end when dictators find all is not well wfth‘n. their time-honored device is to create a diversion elsewhere. Having embarked on an Ethiopian diversion, Il Duce has discovered that the dark-skinned monarch of that feudal realm, Haile Selassie and his advisor from Wisconsin. do not bluff as easily as expected. But now Roman prestige is at stake, Just as it was many centuries ago when the sons of Romulus and Remus faced another African foe across the sea at Carthage. Does Mussolini dare turn back? O O O But what if he embarks on a greet military campaign, in the teeth of the advice given him, it is said. by his military advisors? A1- ready 123,000 Italian troop; have sailed for the African coasts, and there can be no doubt that every Bfllklm and Danubian capital-Jo 58y nothing of Berlin-is seething with the news. Italian forces sent abroad necessarily weaken Italian Stffiillth at home; and Italy is not without foes across the Adriatic and beyond. _ A year ago, it wil be remembered, at the time of the iennese putsch, when Gennan Nazi stood ready on the northern frontier of Austria to assist their brothers in exploiting their initial success, it was Mus- solini who rushed troops to the Austrian border on the south. It was generally recognized that Ger- man intervention in Austria would mean Italian action to keep the scales in balance. Austria is heeded in the Italian scheme of things. But would the German Nazis hold beck again if an opportunity pre- scnted itself to take action when Italian troops were wasting their strentgh in the torrid deflles of ' the Ethiopian mountains? Would other neighbors hold back? Hitler is re-arming and for what? It seems unlikely that he mcditotes an eastern adventure, at this stage of the game. Russia would be a $011811 nut to crack; xoland lies across the path to Russia, and Pol- and loves not Germany and dlltrusts her well. But an outbreak to the south suits the Hitler book to por- fection. and run thought is pledg- ed irrevocably to re-unite the Teut- onic r oples. What if Hitler set up h‘s ‘banner in Vienna? Creche-Slovakia would be in peril. and the ' Mugyors ‘of Hungary would be quick to take advantage of it. ltumonie.‘ would boyondengered, and the Balkans would be aflame. Would Ju o-Biavia ho tempted to seine upon he turmoil to increase her sway over the shores ofthe Adriatb? would she extend herself towards the Italian coasts‘! What 0mm Murray writes; Allison! Prnnltllierart methatknowl, _ u... WIN"- s- u...» ~- w-,,g-,,---,,-g;~» missus "a;l::"r..s':i. light and oven more light. no muwwlgmtkr; had not sown? with the Balkans mummy-owner ~ ~,,, rsvn".r.i.i":tz.‘it..rtm w, ~ m" m” ‘M ofluropeon security would col- frontiar incident mils away in Wal-Woi on Ihloaim whine This is “Past history!” say the only concerned with the future WHERE WOULD THE FUTURE FINANCES BE BUT FOR THE THREE INCREASES, OF $100,000, PECTIVELY, OBTAINED SINCE 1912 AFTER LAURIER HAD “BARRED THE DOOR”? ' Where will it be in the lo implement the findings White Commission. which increase on the ground of fl Mr. Thane Campbell, who jn the event of a Liberal next Liberal Premier, says the nlinority report of the White Commission is valueless. The “final and unalterable.” vicfory is likely to be the last settlement, he says, is VERY WORDS USED BY The policy of the MacMiilan Government is to press THAT IS THEIR PLATFORM this additional claim. The policy of the Liberal party is they have consistently igno past. THAT IS THEIR P word about subsidy claims appears. The smoke screen of irrelevant issue's has cleared away. The main issue stands out clear and unmietakeable. THE CONSERVATIVE POLICY OF CONTINUED (IO-OPERATION WITH O MARITIME PROVINCES, record of achievement, is PRINCE EDWARD ISLANDS ONLY HOPE ! ACCOUNT. were deleted from the subsequent edition of the platform. Obviously to fool the people into believing that this would not be a repetition of the past Saunders-Lea Government in_ a I FlililAY -0011. i¢SITORBAY. $15- 81516-50 Fine Worsted Suits’ to clear. Worth dol. lars more Friday and . Saturday $15 8: $16.50 is based on the promiseof Mr. Lea, .lrl promised a balanced platform, The three last words Grey Flannel Suits $15. Pure Wool Grey Flan- nel Suits clearing at $15. Friday and Sat- urday. Fashion Craft & Hyde Pork Suits -- Cleverly Tailored worth $22.50, Friday and Saturday .. $18. HENDERSON & cunmonr L8508-7-19-2i REVENUE AND EXPEND- sor, Mr. Lea, who produced a Board, in reporting Provinces of Nova Scotia. and “surpluses” in the r our economic ills. over half a million dollars of last eight months. was the most prosperous in MARITIME _ Slur/c 11102159 BY BUYING GOODRICH “DOUBLE -CURED" CAVALIERS tisan political interests, figured increase obtained last year by amounts to THREE QUART- people of this Province were Dominion Treasury than they tt administration. Liberal party leaders, “We are finances of the Province.” CONSERVATIVE SUBSIDY $125,000, AND $150,000 RES- future if efforts are not made of the minority report of the recommends further subsidy scal need ‘I 0 Why buy single-cured tires when the price of double-aired Cavaliers is to low? “Double- Curlng" makes Cavaliers tough all the my through! They will still be “Burning up file Miler" long sherordinary tires have been thrown on the junk heap. Goodrich i DOI/lll-Cl/RID Cavalierg 1 THE LAURIER, IN 1907! to ignore this claim, as red our subsidy claims in the LATFORM, in which not one TTAWA AND THE OTHER based on the Conservative EDGAR WHITLOCK Vuleaniting FRENCH GO IN FOR DRY TOWI my The cmuinh rum IEMANB. France, July lB-An- city" has been the hundred others throughout France is equipped with everything but a “bistrctfl the French equivalent to other "workers completed here which. like the old North American saloon. Raoul Dummy, president of 1.500 fam’ly ,"city" here though not s. prohibftionist. a few miles for their drinks if the must have them in a “district? have our workers there anyhow he said. OLD VOLUMES IN LIBRARY 0f Mrs. T. D. Brown, Notional Bailey Dictionary. the French State Railways. explained at the opening of the railways‘ new that. he prefers to have his workers “walk "If o. man has to walk several lometrus to get a drink the chan- ces are that hell go home to his house and garden. We'd rather REGINA-In the private library m- gino, is a book of sermons preached by Thomas Bpratt. lord bishop of Rochester. dean of Westminster. It was published in l’!!! and includes sermonl preached before King Charles If in 1m. There are also early editions of “Beauties of I-Iia- tory.‘ “ Josephus lllsviue" and the Fnriottetown, P. E. l. Phone 909- ’ Unique Feature In Garden Here (By The Canadian Prose) ' VICTORIA, July l9—MI-I-Ilrl- Yuma, famed volcano of Japan. ii KID'S , lirlr Restorer whose fiery depths have been the funeral pyre for thousands of sons and daughters of Nippon. has been duplicated in miniature in the gar- den of W. H. Davies here. The four foot model has been construc- ted in a small l‘ly pond. Mi-Hara-Ysma is one of the l’ Oshima Islands near ‘mlryo. At its feet nestles the little fishing vil- lage of Moto-Muri. "They sly when you peer down into the crater you have a queer urge to jump in." Mr. Davies sa’d, "and many have obeyed the impulse. Nearly 2.000 people commit suicide yearly on Mount Mi- are." ' Mr. Davies and his famil spent more time on the l vol- cano than on any other port of their garden. The "island" has o ‘ bottom and the little voi- cano hos concrete sides. A red glow is out int/a the night by an oleo- trio light backed by a refine‘ , A deiloatoly perfumed pre- paration which restores. strengthens and besutffles the hair. IT WILL RESTORE GRAY HAIR TO ITS ORIGINAL COLOR m“ An oxcollont hair food ion- ln; up and invigorating all the glands, blood vessels and norvoo of the hair and real?- a rich and this producing abundant growth of hair. withepieccofopoouogioosootnp. Ilrgrowihwheretheluirll a pipe-line comm smoke. who: u! h l! Would-be suiridol'__ no‘ lilhouated in smooth: half: onthoblmkbrfncofhem. mhnnnhunuofi|m_ _ loll osnlully and will II at the _ to. Mr. Tea Don __ . ' coo a mo. today so cents. Recommends u d r a moi no wont rowan hin drink ' ','A“'wmuv¢mmo ma.“ " Items of worm. A BRAHMIN . Quince oekoe. frea ~as__-kw .-__