lriFThe Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest rue", ‘i- anunnu, ulna u. m; A Loving Couple Believe it or not, this is how the Halifax Liberal retircsctltativcs trim each other in to: House oi LvlJllllllfJllS, as reported in llanzard. blarcll .‘l : 31,; 1n,“ ‘"114; 1min lllclllber has tlladc the statement l uellt to Halifax with the Nat- ional llarbiurs lioard. l must ask him to with- - - 1cm, bacillus.- it l: incorrect" . - thin l will say this, that lily labil- ‘uilieague was an lialilax willie lite lmard nele ‘there, whether or not they went on the samc l train l do not know, but he was present at some of the meetings that were held, .'\lr. lsnrlr: "'1 hat also is incorrect. . .\lr. lcmn: "Then 1 will say that my hon. cul- lmlgue was present and found out just what was “hat. .\lr. Speaker: "Ortler." .\ iexv minutes later: Islr. lwlllll’; "l cannot but express my surprise that fllfllC hon. members who have taken par: in the tic-irate today apparently do not know what the situation is in regard to employment.” .‘-lr. l-inn: "Ilear, hear." Mr, lsnor: l do not know whether the hon. gentlelnan who says "hear, hear" knows what the situation is at the present time in regard to cm- ploymerlt on the Canadian National Railways at Halifax." .\.lr. Finn: “Better than you." .\1r. Isnor: “l certainly do not wish t0 bring personalities into this discussion; this is not the place for such tactics, and I would not do so if l had not been more or less put on the spot by the iloll. nlullllrer who is referred to as the senior " "InClIllICT of a urlain coll.~!illlelil;;.'. lt is illlmatcr- ial v.1 .cr he is senior or junior; l do not think that matters very tnuch, because the members Are not interested in it." Mr. Finn: "I never said so." Mr. I=nor; "The fact that the member speak- ing at the present time managed to procure 840 ' votes more than the senior member does not make the junior member any the less important in the cyes oi his constituents.” Mr, Finn: “Where did you get them P" Mr. Isnor: “I have said enough on that point." Mr. Finn: "Hear, hear." ll Culture And Knowledge Cowpcfs pedestrian style is little relished by readers of poetry nowadays, but he achieved a tour dc force in the lines, quoted in today's Poet's Comer, in which he distinguishes between know- J ledge and wisdom. Perhaps it was this assagc which Professor H. W. Swift, of Shefflc d Uni- versity, had in mind when he spoke recently on the difference between culture and knowledge. The subject is one which goes to the roof of all ,,, our educational problems. I-lerc is the result of the Sheffield professor's cogitations: A cultured man, in the simplest etymological‘ misc, is a man who has put some work into the garden 0f his mind and raised from it a harvest - of varied knowledge. But the process is in practice not quite so simple as this metaphor i UIlPliCS. A man's crop of knowledge will not be ',' of much use to him, except for purely specialized '., purposes, unless he is able to absorb and digest _ it, so that it ceases to be a mass of raw facts and comes to be fruitfully related to his life and character. We do meet sometimes the type of scholar who has amassed a great deal 0f cultural knowledge and yet does not give us the impression of a cul- tured man, for his knowledge becomes active only when he is alone in his study, and nothing much flows from it of benefit to others, except perhaps through the printed word. Knowledge, indeed, always has to be in a cer- tain scnsc forgotten before it can re-emerge in a livingly creativeform. We first acquire labor- iously some new capability, mental or physical, and only when its practice has become largely in- l stinctive are we really its master_ Then we have if. 8S the phrase goes, ‘at our finger-tips,‘ and can exercise it fluently, with very little conscious effort. _ _ y , The mistrust of book learning prevalent among craftsmen, and other persons who have become skillful in some field of activity by patient prac- tice, arises largely front a feeling that such learn- ing often stays in the mind and fails to reach the fingers. 'l‘herc arc persons without book learning who in a narrower sense are cultured; they are sure of themselves in all matters relating to their daily work and have made their performance of it a satisfying art. We ought, nevertheless, to keep a distinction between this kind of culture and the culture of the rnind,,only remembering that mental culture will remain largely sterile unless it finds a chan- nel of expression to enrich the personal relation- ship: of daily life. i r . . Paging m. Km? tboiWinnipt-g Free Preu, (Liberal) review- aturbed conditions ln Europe and dilute of the Lllllft ofNulom, ha this m, I .111. l, :. ,. . ’ ntdflhe, , d! under}; It remain: . , {inn IlIlIIlDfiOf ucred docu- boy b plum 2 == §, iliigici E g p textandmeaning erDoniinionspokenatthattlmeasdldNc-w 5 a g5 influence could make itself felt for peace. The League as,a debating society? Yes_ As an inter- national discussion club? Yes. As a useful body the o infomiation on drugs, trade and labor condi- we stand today among the wreckage; as we wit~ ness these l3:l >ad efforts to re-crcatc what has been destroyed, Canada can assume a full and ‘$661M?’ ‘n13! discrcditable share 0f the responsibility." carrylnga Literary Royalists amen.’ A storm of protest has followed announce- ment that Franklin l). Roosevelt has sold state a newspaper syndicate and a book publisher. Financial Post, alone is reputed to have involved a sum well over Shampoo-perhaps even double the salary of $75,000 paid him by the nation for a full time service. Part of the profit will go into dent himself in the form of increased royalties, and the rest to charity, or as Walter Lippman puts it: “to the President in the form 0t the satisfaction of being a philanthropist.” 1170M W38 royalists has commercialized every kind of per- to profit. “"3" "'4 Presidcnfs wife. At the top of the list has been the But apparently the spectacle vlnion. and re. ial documents, confidential reports of his [IYCSS the Chief Executive of the nation, is considered and 5mm‘ Yorker. Beethoven died this date 1827. S‘ i! I U Now that the contracts for all the road pro- for the Clerk of the \Veather t» "do his stuff," "5 w“ “l that work may be commenced. tlon a x e n It is reported that the extensive additions to V considerable interior alterations and improve- ments. The more work the merrier, cspeclallyat election times. ‘ t l’ ' g agilt. It was The Honourablcs Creelman MacArthur and ]. J. Hughes quoting and comparing the Scriptures rung. dred Isl-ill ln ill.- c. tzlclc, Not often is the Bible a subject of dcbat in our, or any other, parliament these days. U 3 l l The Federal Government advanced $7,252,283 in 1937 to the Canadian National Railways for capital expenditures according to a return tab- lcd in the House of Commons. No capital ad- vances were made in 1936. were $3,798,461 for general additions and better- ment, $2,603,822 for construction of Senncterrc- hangs ln Japan It T rans-Canada Air Lines stock. igg‘, rulerwhoeast for religious reasons by persecuted, God-fearing gflmhp Th“ United Empire Loyalists were an undesirable alike refuted by Wm_ Perkins Bull, K. C., 0f Toronto, in an address to thc United- Empire Loyalists of Hamilton, Ont. Mr. Bull noted tnched t0 it. some separatists from the Church of England went to Amsterdam in search of better times. Finding working hours longer and standards o ether vantage of London capitalists‘ offer to finance an to make we expedition to North America. left Delftshaven for England, where they picked up 67 emigrants from London, and landed on lantic. The anti-British attitude of Puritans generally pcrnlcatcrl the colonies, the speaker me pointed out. Hence the logical result was the Revolution that split the settlers into two camps and drovc into exile a large number of the stable better-thinking colonists, amon wvbom were the 10,000 or t 5,000 who came to pper Canada U I U great today. general population of Canada have been issued f“ M" by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The Cen- m“ ~11, to compare with the living population in Order that probabilities of ‘dying could be reckoned. In lg, the past Canadians have had to rely on insurance m: tables. or table: of the United States or England, _ or on private calculations. Now we hm- the ex- toke airman pectations of lilo and the probabilities of dying for men and women separately In Canada an I it mum m; Many intern ' flctp I from In eftlmllh ation of lhflll. _ a t Canadian boy of‘ five “m; ' can look forward to 62.30 yearn of lifeptlio Enr i "I MW llsh boy haupnlyadon: yearn, and tbcAmerifln [If 59.38am]; . '1'~ ‘flu. I. i. V ' expectation of llfetateadlly c ~ Canadian tlt menu h , toll rm. 75's fwtlfklnn v.7 i, , ‘r, . u» of Great snail. m; , f ‘f IOTE$ BY. licy of Great n i ' ' l” lblrulllg %'. ts c: percussion issuing strains. Al‘. settled back chairs. and all had noblv restrain- ‘ _ _ ed every little cough and rusth for Tne present White House crowd of literary quite a while. when they became aware that the ladfs buttler was _ _ lllng determinedly sonal statement or opinion that could be turned doorway. She ha! u lrtt Cannes! Church. Wimbledon. vicar. prayed "that thieves mu g _ brought to a better stale of d.’ the Post Office building are to be followed by The church had been twice mwmd P908. and the Ofl lZO Si)‘ England and New hl-Vg at least om thing in are sus of r931 was the first in which we had deaths azélglcnitfgpnglwm lit i; E UR l: Mr lzmed his of ' “t. thc rtlnely For the first time official Life Tables for the gloldltlld, l: f; Md l eodfortypgi-oentoft-lw eexpem a IN In Ollfl whole and in elclt at her five regional diVlllflflli ll§&n1.ll.lII lama-n , . E a the l . Eli t: i E for the collection and dissemination of valuable l""°-—F°"‘ m‘ “m“'m'1"' _ _ _ _ If n]! the small than: rezister tlonsr ‘it's. But as a weapon for peace, .\'o! As ed with the ‘lbronto 9011M I"! distributed tomorrow and carried on the mp. even tenth you me: on the street wouid be forgetting the pcssfhtiitv that women might have a few Many wailld still defenseless. Thev large numbz: or antique n: cup-Ind- . pistols, now owned by colec- . were popular in the days of Wellington and Napofeon. v _ _ _ g _ _ The majority would _ha-.e servfoe- papcrs and Hresldenttal opinions to a mziglzlnc, able WYIPCIlF-Zllflfi 9M1 Were “R4 in the Great War c: are being used , , , at present by law-enfoxement offl- Une ol those commercial transactions, szu/s the cerls or tent by banks and other business houses against lioldum —G!obe and Mall. A Icfermlned hostess of Plrk Avenue cave n dinner on the evens _ _ ,_ _ in: of Tcscanlnfs final the pockets 0t the publishers; part to the lfrcsl- and after coffee and lioueurs led al‘. her gue-ts to the radio, which even as the party came into the ' symphonic in their be armed. but wculd be protection concert from a warn-rag 0 the mdh. but the but er didn't go away He _ ‘ _ _ _ p _ retreated about three feet outside or the pftfzlflftllf hpnsclf commercializing ultlc- the 110W- Y-MTW-"YYI ‘he 0T l re: _ _ ,_ _ _ _ _ with insistence. FinaYy. the lady's lronlerencc and sllnllar nmtcrlal ulllle hc ls still husband. who is known in business as a man of action, said. "Well- speak. up man. Wlnt. a bit too thick. The public docs not like it and 15 it " ‘Ber! pardon, sir." s~td the is saying so emphatically. bull" “but you are listening lfl lhn wrong atatlcn. We have _ _ Tcscanlnt in the kitchen and what 1 Editorial Notes 1 you've rot u WQXRP- e New Because no carcasses bu! been washed ashore to afford tan evidence of sea momtots, was no reason to dlsbelfeve in them jccts have been settled, everybody will be anxious lhc Swltlv gnaflglllcfll mew-Rh led by the The largest ball ln the world vul present of on empress but it was never hung not It wclgzrcrl ntnu; two nun- tons and was broken wléwl: ln the Senate must have been an edlfylng spec- greet fire which strep; Moscow 1n L‘ e 1731. But, the people used ft for a chapel, entering through the "door- way" nmde by the_ fracture. The world's largest-ringing bell was l gift, too; 1t. hangs ln the Kremlin and weighs about tons. It WI: the gift of a czar and 1n the Ivan Tower ntcng with over 30 more gift bells. ‘The _ second largest bell m the world The I936 advances la 1n an ancient Buddhist tempe ls literally th tnscrlptzons and _ of those who contributed Rouyn branch line, and $850,000 for purchase of cost. A native lung - udahed to be remembered u the largest bell. tLl-lkfl one hundcrd DOV ofBurma _ ‘H14; Great Bell of Manda-lay wu The idea that the United States was founded "W" lntgxgfllgfrxgmlglmggtlgfifl; ton bell f5 people, and the United States contention that the 51B ‘p7 the fir‘: no e en goes- e . slve walls of n5 unfinished pagcda element and no loss to the rebel colonies, were "a bur-led one hunger; image; or 218mm“ gimme itimliitiaguyledech 0110 tn O , "- [Cl of Pekfnsgo ha: u tragic legend ut- ' China ordered thtdhe bellllmfirgh that soon after the death of Queen Elizabeth “we we can,“ “fled N110“ w; Emperor was XIITlOdlJS. glib tlsreaenedmtb; the] Olin El‘ EB . G 801T _ _ _ l that a famous living lower than in England, they took ad- gstrbipgr tggufiousfifzfllféga n ,. . u‘ bell hold to ther. The 35 lllgrlnls so f0 rave her father's ll e. one “.l°l.‘“l‘é.i‘ll° ‘li“i..f’°‘lr§".élli.‘3 erse o Pl h R k f f ' h h A l‘“°“‘ilu2“oi.h' “l?” 9i.“ iw°°i m t oc a tel- our mont s or. t e t- note. 111m ear e WM 0 y o“ the little gin. Just in in the days of old when the hoy man called cple to worship with u. little han bell. so the churches through- out the ward ring belle. little or Brunswick dv of the iii l it tere. namu to its l I00 j , . RIG Dill! the ble ' be 8N0 urine. ‘n; 0:42.12: Sgt 5,5? Ea 5.8. a E F. s F5 E a g5 i E g at -= Ell _llisigiér.t..téirErlii§i.:sirEiiE i”? tzfgonfnb, N. 8.. I n}; an any a word or nptredntlon of what he Government and especially th Department of Akrlctllture d1: for us. I would like to com- mend the very fair and sane nun- ner ln which they ldered the applications for these courses. both Charlottetown md tn Anug lsh. ‘the selection: were mode, 1 believe without mp tion n: t.» creed. not onnlfty or poll- tlcal alliance was vex-y interesting and instruc- ltilve nxtlid thou: who followed fl: ave. odculnbeen venn good insight into tho wot-Eng of the neat oo-opentlve movement which I lm. 51!’. 0%.. EXTENSION STUDENT. Kelly's CHE, P. I. I. THE FAIMEBS IANDCUIIID 5115-! have read letter on cream Boar farmer who ls pofd two different rl the factories. cape country, who pate “a eachgrndese yn to: orpeclnlundtvo. “W” ' thlabem rm coursd liven m ‘at. r. x ‘ brill!" * 2,». Eel ti; l nine. mama- '55 Si: N. Ana-tan Canadian, Ellglllll and Conpunles. min of’ min-us; mums m - LIFE . AUTOMOBILE - LIABILITY . m all Casualty Lines llyntlnan 8t Bompany Limited Lower Queen /Sf.reet — Charlottetown J. u. urcuocson. nuum Manager, s - ALLISON MeLEAN- District Manager, £3.12?‘ e hIBeountrydounOt y of-tbe Dominion can where reason and experf “active of neutral! angling alliances. t circumstances cln this turn her buck on’ hleln. In formulating the f 0f thh coun ion favour those faces that uphold the clpls 0t democ . whe fn flielnnd ship. and where the citizen: ed robots master tn parrotllke em-"M- “am w ma agree that the stgytul y while Onnndn does not zrfere fn the nffnlrs of m l nation when the foreign phl of government demand of this Dominion ere with th Mn staould fl! the whole uro- mien try, there fa no that the leaders of political 09in- international W}? min- re l copied u a matter of fnctutlznt all possess rson berty. fnlllstfve, freedom ‘be! speech and the press. freedom of religious wor- of freeman rlsmherftqeofthepeole, and 06nd l0 tlonnl agencies which flbenfy opposed to the enemies of Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cull v Full Flavoured Tea Use BRAHMIN 0mg: Fulton Tea travel polfc on a. definite read, where freedom of judgment and action Ls possible. ence rulde the destinies of this country lnnmonnerthutslmaform without. en- tmder no fill ob- l1 Tali’; lanc- ue not l»! who are omn- pelcd to follow the dictum of n belong, Oil!!!‘ In ab- solutlon of the mm wwer and re- names. yet the entire sympathleg outn- on UIlIflG ll l IE1‘ - but I butter? Would not "Mulls? additional nae on the and what I ut the maker who fa overwor like our ‘I111 7 t ls t overland ’ ooun of wllhdtoo mticylt a won and no government shout out too much confidence ln resolutions. tn man! cares those resolutions are from small m . flpomumer any: dwhpn un o ° W” " w: whether on u the minority and‘ sometimes n vary worm own. I owlodn, war fill Elm“ o c: a u n. the strengt S o the principles of’ dem rn He huh a new IUV FROM ‘TIE TASK" III nrudo will: 8P0. 0W sun nlu pollcy? Knowtedgemnénd wisdom, m- from oft-Erin: no connection. In 118M! HOMO with lhwlhl-l of 0Q!!!’ fllnfll Willi!!! Ill mlntll IRON" lb their unprofitable elm-ruin! P ll!!! Ofllld “Ullllllll chnr- Wqfld- with n11 h and influence of this country concentrated on defending of the don Yllltll cnuntnss nu mall noon rnnssunn ure. ‘men fr no question but their blood 0b hive these Real Estate Agency H. K. S.’ HEMMING IS Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as Agent and Manager. To BUY. SELL. RENT ‘Properties in City and Country. To give valuations. arrange Mortgage Loans. Secure Tenants Cnllerl Rentals and Manage Properties Ind Estates. no CHARGE "unnnss DEAL nrrncrnb Owners of Land or Buildings are Asked to List Their Properties Persona Desiring u not or RENT City House! or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call 88 GREAT GEORGE ST. r Charlottetown 8T. JOHN'S, Nfld Much l- democracy. (c2 Onblfl-hrtel $111.11.‘: r with n11 cream ' I “Y- beefll. fthdfff bet n beboerv 1°""‘*°°“'°Wm*°‘““°°'* iloncentso mdeza befitti- bllwleg Grl%nfil0°0a ¢l%.°;.‘“’..“.‘,‘° w m "n" l?“ 11%?“ m‘ a. ‘ a an th . - mg lbw‘: fuel. fu- on mapdmalvtge salad} t: “S, lahtlipebend. Ind n reg-gel- M!!! ea special .‘u"neam“ wmérgh ‘rt Vzestern Hemls- M, u, umdbemzd’ Perkin,‘ ll Q l!‘ ch and t for ale in grater gen some But the "m. m“ OI IMIYS blood . chitin 11:53’ w I to ‘In’ hedmxlltelon cod. high Ono of the Macs finer. onrasox been HIPS » HLE TEL. 1376 moron mama MAN mono . ll‘ : ajgi-w ......'...-*-...:... n.-.~.-;.~.-s.~::~s-'~mr no lllllllllllill: SL000 F000 FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE I of lest ‘remed- lI In tho tn: meat of Rhcl" muffin. lfol- than. who luvcmlfll lull ‘ma: Paint“! 4 M. will