v1.91". rout: The Charltitetown Guaiiihn Prehli Llruf.-('u|. U‘. (‘healer N. ‘IPLIIPQ 1 ~llll‘lll ,I, If. llu rll. l- J. lillilqir iiliil i lur ,I l l". J. l. . ll? s», "-1.11, 1 =11, . 11111111111111“. u. s. o. 4.11.14.11.- 1-111111». Jvriiiiit 11.111.11- 111111 l). K. (‘urrin 11111.1 111i 111 I 1111171 vii-Jib ||1~r _\‘|‘Lll‘ (In minim-rt 1 in (if; y lr 1 1 1111111111-1-1 unfit-if lo Lunar-l |I\‘|‘ your tlu intluiun-a) M11 lid tn ‘Jlllllldl. ullll l lliln-il Slulvl \\'Ll).\ ..\'U.-\Y, MAY 5, 1937 he "bee-d Potato” Quota (In s1\-.-111l 111'1‘.-~lt11|s llit- tiuairiliaii has t-iii- ]Jll2l.~l’.l‘t! 1111- 1-11113111-1-111111- iiiiitiix- 11f lllt‘ 11111110 rc-tririiiiii. <11 s.. l 1- -1._:,11-s Quit-Flu: 111,- fpjg. e1! Sian- ui 11- 111- \.‘..-‘1i'11g1,1ii 11'..1l1- agi-i-c- 111-111. 11-1! il 1 1. 1 i‘ -l:s.11i\.-.111.1_-1- 111 which this 15111 111-1- .- .1~1l l1y 11-11-1111 111' 1111i" lzitc crop ~12 - 111. r :_~11l..1i11i1s 111-1111111- fut‘ a 111111! _\1 1,1:1~'.1 -~1 ,'_111.1;111i liiisl-il». th1- old r:111- 111' 11s. 1 11-1 iiis. living 1"1-.l1ic1~1l on li‘i~ .'1:111'=‘. 11 11 1 511111 lli-t-iiiiii: i" i 11> lllk‘ 1-111! 111 l .11; 1 l vis. 111-111 .\l:1r1"l1 i 111 .\'-1\1-: 11 .1ll_\_ 1l11 .11iii 11f all ~l1‘11-t-i's ‘s 111211 1' l1.1-1 iii 1i111l1-i- 1111- iat- 11-1" . l‘ 1 1.1111111 \\ 1- 111';1v1ic:il!\- t-\li.111~.1_l1.. ' ..1 111-i1i1-- 11f Xoii-iiihi-i‘. leaving lslaiiil s y s 111111 a l, 'l'XllOl‘litlllfl surulue 11f ~ l 11-1 l,\'ll' hand» l‘lii< _,,,~1,1,|< if li-i" ~ - "1 l-u: ! iii 111'1!11' 111 1-1111-1" l1l1(lt'l‘ 1:‘ ‘ ~1'I-11 11'11- ~-11~ lll 1-1l:1-r1»",‘o\ii11'1's 1111- s 11-, - l1 - 3.111 |11:is1i1-1l. 1111- i". 1 t r111 1111 1111s .1111". up 11- .\l.11"1"!1 '" p 1 in‘, 111" ‘:1 1 111-1" (rill of 111- 1-11111 111,-; 1.111 1; 1. 1:: s 111-1111 1;-.l,1ii up. 111i,- '<i~ .iQ.'.1ii~1 l 111" 1 111‘ 1l11- t‘l'1.ll1| 111111111. $05 111-1- 1-1-111. 111' 1h.- 12. - 1,111,111. aiii] 11.3 pt-i- 11-111. thi- !1:ii1l11i- 1|1i111:1. lii 11tl11-i' \\"11i1ls. lit-fort" 111's" 11mi- ». w! 11-1 .l11L‘1'111i l1£1st‘\'t'll lict-ti 1i!:1i11- P-l. *1\-'1‘11l11'i"1i1' 111' tlit- 111111! 111111111 llll(‘llfll‘(! to apply :11 11:1 \1'--1l1- st-asoii. l1:-\ 1111-11 1-x11;111.1,-,l_ Th1- 1"1~iii;i-'i1-l- l‘ 1s- likclv 111 l11- :1lis11i"l11"<! lit-fort- 0111- l\ll~i!*'! 111 11157 l-laiii! sci-l has" 11:11! 1i Cliullft‘ 111 i1111\1-_ \\i1l1 iiu- rt-siili that liv 1hr 1-111! 111' 1hr- _\1-.-1:" 1li1- zicriiiiiulaiioii J1\\'£llll1lQ"('llll'_\' inlir flu- l' .\' .\l.1r!\1-t 1i1-x1 _\1-.-1i- will he itiuch greater than l! 1111- iii l)t‘\'\'l'lll1('|" 1113a l1» 111 1111- 11l'\‘~l'I!l_ tiaiizuliaii product-rs have 11-1-1! 1hr 11$. s1-1-1l 1111t:1:1i 111111111 almost exclu- §l\t‘i_\'j liiit 1h1-r1- is 11o gikirzi-itt-t- that tht-v will roiitiiiiu- to do s11 iii 1li1- \'\(‘lll of ltlllldl" scvil exporting i-iiiiiiiru-s inzik-iiig trade zigret-iiic-its “uh 1111- iiviuliliiiriiiq republic. |'r1-ii1i1-1- Kin-g, in WE-ititiiii; lllt‘ \\;i~liii1ut11ii 1r1-at_\'. failed t0 1111151111 :1~~1ir:11i1"1--ili:1t the 1111111:1s \\1i1il<! not ap- plv tn (1llll'l' C11l11|l1'l(‘>' as- \\1-ll as (aiiadzi. lii the (‘Zl-t‘ 111‘ 1111- caiili- ipioias, inlit-r t-oiiiiti"ics are ‘l!1'l'il(l_\' 1-11_i-1_\i1i1_1 1l1is.,"11l\"ai1t:1,qr. \\'l1.'11 was siis-gi-sttwl iii. ilii-st- CfillllllIlS last _vc:1r<—:1i11l 1111211 iiiir imlt-rzil ivpi-u-c-tytatiu-s =h111il<l hzivi- 111-1 s-t-d for v-.-1-_\- siroyigly" in Parlia- -ii1-iit—\\';is a changi- iii the regulations to pro- vid1-, eiilii-r i11i- :1 more satisfactory" 11110111 ar- r-‘iiiut-iiit-nt for si-wl 11111111110.» or ('l>t’ :1 flat tariff ratc- rt-rluviioii all tht- year ftlllllfl. ln view of thi- failure 11f the King (iovt-riiiiit-iit to olitziin 1'1)" tariff c11iicr<sioiis 111i fox 111-lts and 1\l1iri- 111111- fi-h and other 111-111lu1-ts, this ivould sure-l) 111-1 h1- ati 1ir1r1-11s11iiahle request, as" an offset ‘i1 the many z11l\":1i1t.'11;t-s which L'i1itt-1l Stairs pi-iiditrei-s" and 1l11llllllIlClllTCYS are enjoying un- der the 3gf('(:11lCllf_ The Borden Highway I-Ion, .\Ir. McIntyre will he rt-licn-d to know, on the authority of his own party neivspaper, that the Conservatives were not such bad road- makers as he claimed they were. when he criticised the condition of the Borden highway from his seat in the Legislature a month ago. As .\liiiist1-r of l-‘uhlic \\'orks his" unfontulcd statements at that time were. to say the least, regrettable. Let us recall them: “fliere was no gravel at all went between the cl,'iy' and the asphalt. That asphalt is simply lying on top of the clay. Thcrc is no insulation lit-tween the clay and the asphalt and ivhen the frost is coii1- ing you, you must realize that there are tilaces that are going 11-, he very soft when there is no gravel to lltlltl it up~ lf there was gravel it stands to rvzison you would have a better foun. daiiun. .~\s it is. that road is" apt to go t0 1iieccs." .-\s poiiiti-d out iii The tjuardiiizi. the defects i-n the road w 1-1-1- due not to Conservative con- iitrtiction. but to subsequent faulty drainage and ditching liy .\lr. .\l1-liit_vre himself, who was responsible for voinplt-tiiig the joli in a [iroper mziiuier. ~11 a- to lll'(‘\'t'l‘ll. the seepage 0f ivater tinder thi- pau-iiiciit. After this fact had been called to his atten- tion. .\lr. .\l1"li1t_\ r1- discovered that his earlier criticism had n11 basis in fact and announced— again from his st-zit in the llouse—that instead 11f "going to yiii-ct-s" the mad was indeed stand- ing 11p u-ry well aftcr a particularly bad winter. 11 makes a lot of difference whose ox iii being gored! Annexing The Yukon \_\'hil1- tlir Yukon is protesting vigorously against living ziiiiit-xt-il !l_\' llritish Columbia for reasons ivliich h.-1\1- all tl11- earmarks nf liciiig iiispirt-d liy 1111litival iiiutiu-s. tli1- Witiiiipcg Frec- Prt-ss tl.il11-i-;1l1 coiift-ssi-s to living taken by surprise l)_\' ili1- aiini-xzitiiiii move as an- nounced l>_\" l'l‘l‘llllt‘l‘ lhittullo. The Yukon ter- ritory, it figures, will inert-ast- llritisli (‘ol1iiiiliia’s area liy more than fifty per 1-1-iit. and its pop- ulation by sonii- 4.11110. .\lr. Pattullo evidently thinks, says lllf‘ Winnipeg 1iap1-r, that his pro- vince can llliliLlll enough ltiriii-fii from thc de- velopment 11f iiiiiiiiig iii the Yukon to offset the cost of adiiiiiiisiin-itioii; and he would hardly make the 111111111111-1-1111-111 111i the cve of a pro- vincial 1-‘1-1-111111 if l11- did not think it ivould meet with tvidi: :i1ipr1-\,'il. The l-l:1s11-rii l’r1>viii1-<-s will lie interested in this furilii-i- coiiiiiii-iii; "“l'lie ('Xl('Illl0II of the !::i11ii':1r_v 111' liFill-ll (‘oluiiiliia tip to the .\rctir fl1"‘."ll 111111" sr-{Ji-sl 111 sonic-thi- sanii- rinir-c- 1m fr: l1-1I'l 11f 1li1- l'l‘1'1il‘ltf l'r11viii1-1-s and thus tlic "v~ii1.'tppi11g. stmii- flay. of the \\'lllll(' of Western L'aii:1-'a." “Iliis will certainly not happen." adds the pvt-sent iiiipecuiiious coirditioii. .-\iid it is liy iio iiicaiiis certain that it will cvur happen. 'l‘r-c smisfactiuii uf any yirtniiicial vanity by a large territorial expansion of Manitoba would not be very wise unless it were clear tli:1t the pro- viiicc would reap a definite, net advantage by taking in the northern arc-a, valuable only for its minerals "The Ytikuii has been in course of develop- ineiit for forty years, btit the DOlllilliUH is t1: pay llritisli (oluiiiliia $i_-5.0o0 a year for the next five years" for taking the territory off its hands. lii the long run, it looks as if the Do- lllllllllll ivould save money". Last year, the ad- niiiiistrsitioii of the Yukon cost it $97,000, and it spent ziiiiiilii-i- $60,000 on highways. “Mr. Pattullo apparently thinks that by couragiug development he can increase lit-iit-fits ltYflltlCr liritish Columbia,» But it cost iiioiiey to stimulate (lcvclopiiient, as 1111111-1- itt-iii of $110,000 for roads indicates." Th1- grcat value of the Arctic territory is that it is part of the yire-Cainbrian shield and proli- alily Cltillfllll5 ialualile niiiierardeposits, not only 111 (in-at llt-ar Lake and along the Copperiniiie Riit-r and the ivt-st coast of Hudson llay, but at various other points. But the development, exvt-pt 11f the richest minerals, is seriously l1.-1ii1|_ic:ippt-d by disniiice and transportation dif- , l-iriiltit-s‘. Priiiiiit-ia! 1-11iiti"1"il of these areas may prove1 a good thing. btit the point which the \\'iiii1ip1-g e11- the will the 11:111t‘r ignores". in contemplating further possi- lllt‘ territorial expansion by wcsterti provinces, ,is 1h1- rig-ht of the other 1ir11vinccs of Cllllrhlil liu deciding tlic matter. The lloiniiiiun (101-0111- uiciit has nut the right to [icrniit British Colum- liia or any i)lll(‘l' province t0 annex northern i1-i"ri11ii"i1-s without the consent 0f Parliament. The Yukon Council is 110w (lemaiizling that 11o change iii the status‘ of their territory be madl- iiiiiil a tilcliiscite has !)(‘L‘i1 taken. (iltherivise. ZlllHCXillltJl] by llritish Columbia would lie a "violatiiiii of their (!t‘lll(l\‘\‘1'lllC rights as Cati- ailiaii citizens." l1 this what we have come to uiidt-i" Lilicral rule, ivliich 1iroiiiiscd so much. 111111 ha: pt-rforiiicd so little, in the interests of "deinociacy"? I Editorial Notes I ‘Napoleon died this date i821. i i The l\‘.C.I\l.l’. get their safe all right and ultimately‘ get their man. i 111 II i The llolibics Exhibition has made a good start, and deserves‘ the liberal 1iatroiiage of all thus-c interested in the “Y" and kindred i11- stitutioiis. ¥ Our National Park has developed sufficient- ly to c-nalile the officials at Ottawa to tell iieivspapci- correspondents it Wllllllllflllllc 2o lIlllQSi oflaeachcs, btit evidently not enough to warrant ourlTt-inier telling ithc home people 1inythiug about it. I it 111 111 This is really a wonderful 1iroviiicc the wit)" it. is run WllZlIULII direction‘ At tin-sent the (lov- erninent abscntees are—the Premier, the Presi- dent of Council, tlierMinistt-r of Health am! l-Iducatioii, Financial Adviser No- I and the Di- rector of Education-not to mention the Election Organiser and Director of Publicity. it 1k Glasgow apprentice engineers have returned to, work after a month's strike in which they delayed the building of the sister ship to the Queen Mary. Their alleged grievances are tc be investigated, but meantime what a needless loss t0 allconcerned. It was the same with the Oshawa strike, it will take years to make good the losses sustained. No Ontario farmer can afford such a luxury. and those iii the vic- inity of Oshawa-at good farming centre - have been made to bear a considerable part of the cost of the recent one. it i A new record was set up this year on the Charlottetown-Magdalen Island Airways ser- vice when a total of 35 mail trips and two char- ter trips were completed between January 11th and April 6th. The must trips made previous to this year was in i935, when seventeen mail trips and one charter trip were completed- Ap- proximately 17,800 pounds 0f mail were carried, which is an increase of approximately 4,000 pounds over the previous year. The assistance of Ur. A. Stocker, radio operator of the Radio Branch, Department of Transport. greatly facilitated this successful operation, says the Bulletin. i lii It is now a matter of common knowledge in Federal political circles that the first defence program which the government submitted to the Liberal caucus at the session of Parlia- ment which has just closed called for a five- year preparedness plan, with an expenditure of $75.000.o00 in each of the five years~ The proposal was receivedwith such hostility by English-speaking supporters of the ministry, as well as by the French-speaking representatives fronrQtit-bctr, that the Government made haste to amend it. In its final form the feature of the five-year plan was abandoned altogether, while the expenditure for the present year was cut from $75,000,000 m $35,000,000. U I I The Bulletin of Canada’s Airways boosts us thus: Although Moncton. New Brunswick, and Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, are im- portant aerial centres. traffic at these points is almost entirely inter-city. Both in “The Island" and in the mainland province excellent roads" provide easy access to fishing and hunting ter- ritory, which ranks with the finest in Canada. Throughout Prince Edward Island good sea, brook and rainbow trout fishing may be had at numerous points within a radius of 75 miles of Charlottetown. There is also deep sea and cod fishing off the north shore of the Island. 11111-11 season, brook, sea and rainbow trout. 1W1’?! l5 f0 Srpffmbcr i5. Along the 20o miles of shoreline of Prince Edward Island the hun- t1-r may obtain his full bag of geese and duck 1 A fainilini- practice in some parts of . ing of lamps on the graves of those buying price of gold. Gold shares .fe';1 "in value: other shares tell; there was complete uncertainty. ' wages and ._l1itcs Ey The Way l When Mr. Edison was asked, “i. U11.‘ cnu o1 eiqcti-ical invention neat- y reacried?" his reply was! “Then: is no end to electrical invention; ‘ ttiere is no limit to anything." A gi-ea. tneoaigaau 0111-0 wicite a book; and the thought he developed was: Tue joy of studying Astronomy and ueolagy and Physics and Botany and Chemistry and the secrets of nature throughout. the endless ages oi eternity. Tne book is Dick's “Ph i- osophy o1 a Future Sate." (It wit be remembered that. it. was the reaming of this baok that started David Livingstone on his remark- gal?) career.) —-Rev. M‘. J. MacLeod, A contemporary has published a 01.1.0115 story from Rawalpindi. The tomb of an Irish Lieutenant Col- onel's wife buried 60 years ago has become a place of pilgrunage for v llagers who put lIglLCd cand es on it. Something has made them be- lieve that its height. and breadth are increasing, and they thus show their I appreciation of the marvel. lite mind named. or debauched. by science is 1111111110 1.0 enter into these reverent. simpiicities, though in most countries the rest ng places of the dead are set aside as holy ground. India when night» falls is the light- . ,- 111.1. .211: .11". 11:11.1: made an imp ‘BSSIOH on the public memory. In some place this tribute ls pald to Europeans who are remembered as great men. I11 others i1. is pa d to forgotten men and women about whom legends have grown up for no cause that anyone knows-Ca cutta Stfilfllléll. British Columbia. expects to see a lot of new road work under way soon. There is a provincial election in June. and 1‘. i. IIOLJYIOUS that. Government candidates like t0 travel over good roads during a campaign!—E.1n1unLoi1 Journal. The City of Lotidon and the fln- ancial section of New York behaved last week like t mid and hysterical scltoolgii-Ls. Word went, round that President Roosevelt was to alter the Nexi. day came a denial from the President, that, he had any such in- tentions. Up again went. the market. vanzes that hail so sharply fallen. F0: small lnYfhLOTS the lesson is tiia: they should not be frightened 0111 of their iiivcstriieiits by sudden p ‘ s. Nobody should invest. mcney w -ul. taking adv ce. Having bought on good advice investments that are known to be sound, the iu 1- lCY Illhlllti >30}; equally good advice before he sells at, a loss.- Ssixlay Dispatch, London. Mr. John lieaellytn Lewis an- nounces that the General Motor sit. down strike is the grratest 1.1-i- uinph for labor ever won. Natlwally M1. Lewis docs not cry down his oxvn wares, but to the impartial ob- server it, ivouitl set-in that the decis- lon was on the lines of half 1i loaf better than no brad. If the United Autninoble Worker get B. raise 1n the right, to organize. General Moors still litres whom it pleases and keeps an open shop.- MOIZIPCB! standard. "Why ls it not possible, even in the mot \.'CLD1I-'; sports in which our red-blooded young men take partfo sti-Lve toward a national consciousness of fitness, courtesy and sportsmanship based on our glorious traditions of play and ad- aptable to our Canadian cit, mn- Shlpilf" That ls the idea‘ towards which all who have the true int/er- ests of Canadian sport at. heart. should strive. "To love the game be- yond the prize," in Newbolrs 1m- mcrtal words. is the true sports- matrs motto. It. is one that may be commended sincerely t0 all who are engaged in sport throughout the lands-Montreal Star. If a company has 1,000 employees and they begin to mutter because they do not like the boss. 0r think their wages are 1.00 low or because they fear they may lose their Jobs through no fault. 0f the r own, H011- ble is ln store for that. company, trouble which may not. be cured tor a generations. There is hardly P1 human being who is not believed by at least, four other PC0118. When 5,000 people begin to talk, the bad news ls heard near and far. Con- tented employees meim that a Com- pany's public relations problem 18 half-solved. — Canadian 13115111985 (Montreal) Happenings on the mining mur- ket. during the last week or so have provided i-mpressye. if pamful, proo! that the genus homo. 0M9 bli- ten by the speculative bug. l8 vir- tually incurable. The mtntni 8W6!‘ decline caught many unsuspecting investors unaware and hundreds of 1101111111 ln paper-and real-profits went. by the board. Again. as ln the hectic days of the Great. Crash, though to lesser extent, nerves were strained and the pocketbook Jeop- ardlzed. The spectace indicated clearly the dangers of the "invest- ment" business. It should serve l8 a wamlng-but. it probably Will 11011- -Brantford Expositor. The author before his typewriter. the reader ln front, of his news- paper, know immediately and de- finitely what it. ls advisable to think and not. to think. Lo like and not to like . . . Nowadays the clfmnX 0f inielectual nobility is never f0 tnnk but to leave to Hitler, l0 MUS- sollni and to Stalin the care of dc- flnitely thinking for everybody- that. ls to say, as 1on5 as that. plena- w the dictator. ' . 111v strength of Mr. Baldwin bu always been on his preaching aide. Though he likes to figure as B plain business man and no orator. he "s, in fact. an artist in words. Place his published voiumea of speeches beside those of any Prime Minister during the past, century, and they will sustain comparison 1n P011"- 0! literary style. More. he in an artist in emotions. H's greatest orutorfcnl successes in the House of Com? mons, from “Pence in out time" speech downwards. have always been achieved in cases where he could make timely appeal tn a deep well of common sentiment. deeper normally in hlm than in his aud- ages 50311, prese ‘ 1 Patients of the mutual benefit circle by beginntn ecially in cases of dementia precox successful in the above forms of ‘Itierell be no haunting pain TREATING GROUPS OF MEN- TAL PATIENTS AT ONE TIMI A number of years ago 11 univers- ity student, third year in medicine, came to see me about some "diff- iculties" he was having with some problems-religious, medical. scclal. While I believe I copld be help- ful to some degree I re erred hlm to a medical mei-niner of the staff who was unusually well-equipped to deal with this student and his piobleme. It took a nuiiifber of in- terviews and a number of hours to straighten out. matters in this student's mind, but it was done tn the great, relief and satisfaction of the student. A mind was saved and safely directed for life's work. These hours of tfme that must be given to these mental or neurotic pat.- IEIIIS mean that our mental special- fsts- tmychiatrists -—with only a limited numiber of hours in the day cannot give all the time they PUBLIC FORUM - {his Olll-I h "In III Ill- uuquplg; by oornopculnlln 0| uI-flou- Interact." The ubuldtolnn Gurllal loan an n ulna Oh Opinion o! olnuupollci IIIBQUOTID Sun-In making use of an old school-boy xpxeufon of irritant: I isquoted it. The line should have read:""Doel your mother know you an out?" B111 in this use the political irritation would have been more appropriately EXDIBL-Séd by the logs’: Do you know your master I- om, Sir. m. ' ELECTOB TIE WHEAT SITUATION Bin-Your 1mm ‘of April 15th can-lea aome very balanced a:d wise references to "The Wheat. Situation‘ from the pen 01f "JJEW," I lmlllne your nuden woukl now find the following twbie ("Wheat Studlu" 01f The Food Re- search Imtltute) a revealing one: showing the amount of wheat, avail- wbk, excluding Raisin, since 1930: would nke to give to every case. What may prove a boon to men- 1 tal patients and phychlatirlsts ls a method of ffifl-Ellillg or treafing a group of patients at one time as outlined by Dr. L. Wender. in an article "The Dynamics of Group Psychotherapy and Its Applica- tion," in the Journal of Nervous and Meryal Diseases. "Inasmuch as a large number of causes and-symptoms are of s. smllar nature grotzps of patents were formed by Dr. Wendel- and, lectured to. The effort was quite‘ successful for additional advent,- themselves. group formed a to help each other. A social athl- tude was developed and each pat- ient saw that there were others like himself. ‘The method was most successful when the intellect was good, esp- tpersstent. dream state) ln mild zleuresslons and in neuroses (where DQ116111 believes he has an all-- m-znt when ncne exists)!’ One of the reasons that this “group" method of treatment is milliftl illress is because the pat/- ient feels himself as on: of many suf 1erers tiis-“ad of being one who 1s "it-eculiar." The g-rouu usually consists of slx or eight of the ‘same sex, and the lecture explains how the early "drives" to do certain things came out in us later. making the ‘coa- flcts" which cause symptoms. the mental ROBIN! SOUND TIMES RETREAT! Sweet. May, you're here-again! Nor shall we weep again Your tco b ief stay. ' Into each moment's space We'll crirvd a year of {trace From your bright array. T111 when your fading voice Leaves us the sorry choice To wave g0od-bye— No futile sad refrain No bitter zlgtlt- "Had we but known she'd go. We would have loved her s0- Time, you're a cheat!" Sweet. May, we'll Time defy, Eons. ere you must. dle Robin. sound Time's Retreat! —Ruha1mah Scheinfeld Hank. capable at that. chosen meme appearing to them no less than him to have the quality of 1m lntt- mate natlve convict/on. But. on the side of action Mr. Baldwin's strength was entirely tactics‘; Long-range strategy was not for him. To occupy (metaphorically speaking) strong ground; to lie low and hold your fire and not, let your- self be tempted out by your assail- imt; and at. the right. stage in his proceedings tio prostrate hlm by n volley timed b0 the momentP-that. was the Baldwlnlan formula-Inn- don Spectator. SPRING TONIO BLOOD PURIFIEI, Mac's Blood Food | A combination olpecillly yg. ublo In the treatment of - thou dlneneu where their 1orlgin in trlccablq u, m in. , ppverlihed condition of m; l) s One of the [rental remod- leu in the lrentment of Blun- - Inatlnu and n guanntodd op- petlte restorative. Get a box mo-day. Box of §0 tablets 50c. DR. L if. EVANS lf you have guy "only with your stomach not: n Indigestion, dyspepsia. now Jtomnch. heartburn, gnu-lo dhtreu, 010.. then don't delay getting n bottle of Dr. Bun’: staunch mixture Immed- lately. Evan's Btomub Mhuuo h a prucrfptlon of Dr. L. II. mam, noted English Phy- nlchn of which II have the solo rlghk to lllll since moll- . ‘In; It have received numnouv . tofllmonloll from nlhdod “rohlsell. Try o bottle 00-day. - ‘.5 cents. 1.: 111a ims Mill Order! Prom Allelldodfo. I‘, l Prlcu Free Press, "with the Prairie l.'10\‘ii1CC5 iii their open season September 15 t0 November 15. fence, but. common enough to be i The NewiMr. Bennett —4M11l. 308-): 070D Om? 11MB] ibbl Y9"! Stock: luppiles 1930-31 8,702 901 4623 1931-32 3.074 1,010 4,684 1903-38. 3,715. 1,002. 4,717. 1933-34. 3.638. 1,106. 4,744. 1994-5. 3,3313. 1,159. 4,497 1935-38. 3.367. 916. 41,283. 1936-37. 3.2V]. 1'80. 4.027. 0W0 . Sir. your correspondent 1s entitled to "lean heavily on the promise that ‘while the earth re- mainetii. see-H-"me and harvest shall not cease." Notwithstanding the shameful propaganda of interested grain traders dealing with the surplus situation, the render will have little difficulty in coming to the ooncluslon that. it was the same l0 per cent. of eincess bushelege which was permitted to ruin the price-level for myrlads of worid wheat" farmer; across the depress- lon year. It is an interesting ex- ample of the old adage that what ls everyibodyb biuslnesdls nobody's business.” Urban industry does not operate that way, and the fractional "sur- plus" woulfl soon have been divert.- ed into other markets or into “new non-food fndustrfal channels." So far as the future bread-er-in supply ls concerned. It 1s in the hands of the weatherman to a degme which undoubtedly has elements of dang-er tn it. Even ff we take the estimated 659,000,000 bushels of U. S. W‘nt.e: wheat. for granted (a large assumption. Sf. even today) the key 0f the will)!’ situation lies with the Spring wheat yield wiroh, normally, could gve us B, further 5003300000 bushels of North. American bmadsratn. That seed is going ln-to the ground now! I. Am Sir, eta, FARM READER. 18y Bruce Huitohlsmi») O'i'I‘AWA- Tffiecanadfan people imagine that, ff there is One ma“ they really know, it, is Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett. They don't. They mil-y know the o'd Bennett, f-lw B611- net of the depression Will's, ‘J19 lonely. desperate Bennett, who ‘arooded over the capital like a. kind of perpetual thunder doud, with occasional lightning. for f;ve years. But they certainly don't, k w the new Bennett, who has e back here from B. world tour and a year of enforced leisure, an entirely changed man. Even Ottawa hasn't learned to know the new Bennett yet. though it has heard rumors of a new mel- lowness and genlalfty. in the House, to the pubiicJhe is much the same- tremendous in his elegance, his extravagance of speech, his uncanny grasp of detail. But when you spend two hours with hlm ln his blue-uplufstered office in the southwest. comer, you find that time and Ilfe and mortality have done something to Mr. Ben- nett. He had bad tune M. lest to look back over the fltful fever of his government, to see when it. was right and where 1t, was wrong. to evaluate his own career. He has a new perspect, e now that he ls out of the fight, 1nd he looks at. Cim- nda. at the world, at. the future humanity no longer as a, rough- and-fnimbie poifticinn. but‘ a sane elder smtennnn, not as n man " ,, something from the world, but as n man who has had all the world can give lfld knows what it, is worth, that most of it, lsnt, wort-h much-not. u I young man, but as an old man. They My lure that he will retire before the next election, and, while thll 0mm to be 11f: present mood. no one natty knows: and tmnorrow. with one of those sudden bursts of enthusium. those streaks 0f uvy shneu that u; the most at- "Wfl-W thin! about, this strange and unprecedented creature, ho ml!’ plunge into the fight again. But. for the moment he sits back tn his chair. He throws his leg over the um of the chair and lounges OM11? 1n his superbly-out, clothes 111111 mu about, 11m. at sixty- seven that. 1a what a mm likes to talk about-life and the future of things which he will not see, the old mystery. At sixty-yawn, the things he struliled foi- even It sixty. the gllhwrfnl Drllu, the pubic rewards. Idem pretty small. - teem pretty mull to Mr. Bennett, now. I do not think he cues l whoop whether he is ever ime minister of Canada again. or whntthe public think: of hlm. He fa content to leave his reputation to the record, knowing perfectly well that, on evfl destiny hurled him into ounmlnd during a hurri- cane. when time no no time to buk and lclntillnte, no owortun 1y k man the k'nd of betfgn re- putation which comes to oom- muiderg fn time of peace and pm- Dperlly. " - He knows that perfectly well, of the Boxes of) 25 capsules $04404 “ffrench’s” I» I O , Vermiclde Capsules f " ' ' No. 2 Size (Round) < For the Cubs aged from 3 weeks to 3 months 1 They have always stood the test > _ and they stand supreme over all makes of Worm Remedies. , Those words, written by Mr. Edward Fromm, director realest Fox Rancliing Organization in the world, whose breeders number 14,000, represent a con. clusion based on the employment of nearly half a million Vermicide Capsules during the intervening years since he first tried them in the year 1911. No. 2 Round Vermicide Capsules come packed in Boxes of 100 capsules — - - — Boxes of 500 capsules - - - - 13.00 Prepaid to any address E. A. FOSTER Central Drugstore Sole authorized distributor for Dr. ffrericlrs Animal Remedies for P. E. I. OOjQ QQ GQ-O-OO-O-O-OO4O 6 O 5 —----—--$l.00 3.00 ¢ 404610000 QQOOOO-QOQOQO6O4OQ§0000a0naoaa¢0¢<¢aaQ¢QQQ4AA¢AAQQQOOOOOOOOOOQ M1. Tea p011 Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRAHMIN Orange Feline Tea Eg_11—iri_s%fe"b\7ck§r5uiid of his times. his difficulties and his 0D- portunltles. Arid he has little coin- plaint against destiny in general. It was good to hlm, 11-1) W We “m he became Premier. It. is good to hlm now. He is probably harder than he ever was while pursuing the gltterlng prizes. Yes. Mr. Bennett sits back, his leg over the arm of his chair. his hands folded on his vest. and talks. He talks uninterruptedliya without, break, without pause. without the least fatigue. for two solid hours; You listen not because you are quite powerless before this flood to do anything else. but because the man is fascinating. It, ls life 151M1- lng to some great. actor in B, monologue. That in fact, is exacfly what. you are doing. Unconsclously, Mr. Bennett ls a great actor, would have left a, world reputation if he had gone 0n the stage. ‘He hfls every instinct -of the stage. His delicate hands fairy flow into gestures, his voice rites and fafs, now soft, now nai-d and thunderous. He mimics a. stuffy British state-man or a 1've1y Wenflh One with a sure touch. with Just the right tilt. of the head, just; the right. tone of voice. Just the right lift of the finger. The sheer energy of the man is overwhelming. A 10mg interview- with hlm ls tiring but invigorat- ing, ‘lite a walk on a frosty day. Mr. King's office ls a temple of peace, a seat of learning. a class- room where you may learn much by listening to the able lecturer. Mr. Bennett's office is Yike a blaoksmfih shop, where the smiths Ideas are hammered into you. while hot, where there is always the ring of steel, now loud, now low. but ceaseless. Mr. Bennett's talk is ceaseless. but ft is not garrulous. It. is d'f- fuse. all-embracing, but. it never bores you for an instant. He starts out, at; your request. to talk about. Canadian politics, but, within a mo- ment he has lumped to the South African War sketched the entire British campaign, detailed the his- tory of the Boers, circled the gone. expalned the particular virtues of the pottery of the Ming Dynasty, outlined the career of Alexander the Great. traced the 'nll of Rome and quoted Theodore Rooseve Us speeches on the Monroe Doctrine. And all this almost. ls one breath, fn u. single surge of speech, _in an unwavering volcano of sound. Like the ancient mariner, he holds you with his glittering eye, 1t l8 l- RNY eye. under sandy eye- brows of enormous size and bristie, 1nd it lllhts up with 11 peculiar POWer when he Ls not: wearing his glasses. It. is in his eye that you see the real power of Mr. Bennett, and beyond n11 question he is the most WW9"!!! Der-Wniflty our public life has known in a generation. One doesn't know what history wiii say about his usefulness. his sue. 6658 0r failure. his wisdom Uy- his IMS?KEB. Oine doesn't. know whe her history will write hlm down as n. great man. But Ottawa will remember him always as i; unique mm, without, pmsaent, without spiritual kin. 1111a final phase of his career- lf it is the flnn‘ phase-ls the most attractive of all. Mr. Bennett has time now t0 100k about. to interest himself in other man. in the unim- portant things of life which al- ways turn out to be the lmly im- portant onea. The fire is 5W1 there, the volcanic energy. the encycb- pedic mind which can remember almost every fact 1t has even heard the freak memory whtah recalls at one moment the tionol debt of i911 and the inscription on n silver bug} belonszlng to n Boy scout troop in South Afflcn. The and ha iolvel hlatmy to judge hlm fire la still then. but, it is no longer a, consuming Ila-me. which offen burned friend and enemy 311k? and a1‘. but consumed Mr. Bt-rv’ :11 him- self. I Mr. Bennetlfs views on things as expressed in such an interview are not of course, for publication. But they are bold. titanic. as you would expect. cosmic in tlwlr 569D?» m!“ ing in not merely the history of his government. not mrr-"b" 11w fieid of world politics, but the prospects of our entire civillzation. the remote future 0f 0111' 1111mm! species. If they could be Printed they would startle and delight you. Now that. he has tlmfi. Mr. B1911- nett. should write a. book; 0r rat-her he should sit and tale for a couple of afternoons and let a stenographer take it down and write it into a book without u word changed. so that. none of the original fliwor would be 10st. none of the strauze, fierce fire which yet bums in 1111.1 man. Then, perhaps, history ivoud understand him, for his public 11-- cord will not reveal him. His 111111111: record may welt be the least. im- portant part of hlm, his worldly success B, sideline. The interestiiiil. the unique thing is not what B4111- net-t has done or not done. but Benita-ft. himself. we may 100k mi BTYalE-l‘ men, but not. on his like again. Coronation Costs _ (Brantiford Expositor) The Coronation ls a matter of patriotic sentiment and pageaiitv 1‘- Wzal symbolism and innit-rial demonstration, but. ft. ls also 11 business-like matter of pounds, shillings and pence. Thus English economists estimate that the 0\'1‘11l5 focusing on May 12 will result iii the releasing of the immense siiiii of about 8750000900. About 11.111 0f this, they figure will come [r0111 the pockets-and savings accounts —of loyal residents of Great Bri- taln itself. The other half will be contributed by visitors from 1111-. Dominlons, colonies and IOITXQIII countries. Whichever way 11w look at it. the Coronation ls Bill Business with capital B's. In the same connection, 0118 question his been bothering V01’) many people-for a time 1t gave British business men the ivi-fhl itightntiires they ever exprriciu-i-d -aiid that concerned the effect o1 the abdication of King Edwwd VIII on the plmsimd extiemii- tures in connection wltli 111s cor- onation which. of course. will nevi-i take place. Literally millions o! pounds had been invested in still- venirs alone and when the. nt-ivl of His former Majesty's abdicatirti‘ broke, the outlook for manufactur- ers and tradesmen mike sec-med foreboding. _ But they need not ‘have worried As one English writer puts it: "The economists reckoned Wllh’ out the sentiment of a nation. EX- Klng Edward became more belov- ed and ten times more romanllf than King Edward." Edwiu-diiiii souvenirs, instead of becomiii! a drug on the market. sold like 110i cakes. In fact many orders had 10 be supplemented. so that, instead of a disastrous loss, British mer- chants enjoyed and are still ‘H1- joyfng greater profits than were ever anticipated. Commercially the Coronation sif- iiatlon has already become I "gold mine" MARRIED 85 YEARS LEASK. 5111-111. iovi-ivir. 11116‘ Mrs. W. F‘. Grassland, of this LOW!’- 10 1111's.: north of Baaxatoon. 11B"- entnred their 06th year of marrie- Ilfe. They have 11 children- grandchlldren. l3 great-Erin‘, children and two greot-BTQMI-Fln‘ children. I