iuoosr 4, 192s liiiliillll >.____._______ _,._________ 1... B)’ 300455 M-‘RTIN Mill-EK- District President Fulton was nt- lllllllfll 510W“ (“Weill-tacked savagely from many of the l" N1!" Zefillllld llllllpulpits of certain of the Protestant (Former General France.) Copyrighted in United Stains and Canada.) I-‘RITDERICTDN, N.B.. Auglist 3. —’i‘lie ltevcrend Dr. Robert Li. I\‘ul- ton was for thirty-two years one oi the iuost prominent uiid influential ministers of the Gospel iu the l)o- ‘ iiilnlou of Canudn. He has preach- cd iu_ some ofthe leading churches oi‘ the United BLBUISuFQIYHDIIIG years he was a Methodist Bishop for thc New Brunswick and Prince Edward Isliuid urea. In Canada. however. the high ecclesiastical (lint-n of Bish- op is named President oi‘ the Con- Terence iii that denomiiiutltiu. ii. is the some with the three years old United Church of Canada. the silt:- cessor to the former‘ Metlititllstuiit» Congregational and a part of iill‘ Presbyterian Church. Dr. Fulton occupied the same prominent pori- tion ln‘the new United Church that lie liiid llllcd for iiciii-ly a tliird ofa rt-ntury in the old cliiirt-li of .lohn and (Jliiirlcs Wesley. He is ii high mason and a member of tlic Mystic Shrine. Dr. Fulton is a sou of the famous: oarsnian. Robert Fulton, stroke of the Paris Crew and who won ihi- championship of the world on the River Seine in 1867. - iinsioivi-zn ciluncu POST. Lost year he resigned as minister to l)l'I'UlIli‘ Chuinriaii of the Liquor (Youtml Board of New Brunswick. Aliiulugh lie resigned from the min- lfilllv. lu- still retains his parchment ns uu tirdained minister of the (los- pel, hut iinw warships. with his fain- ll.\'. us a lay member of one of the clinrcln-s of his (lcnoinlnutiou. hcrc in llrerlerictonhthe capital city (it Now Brunswick. I spent the day wllli him nt tlic (lr-i-i-riiim-nt liquor slorcs and ware- house with branch stores. already established throughout the province. A leading preacher in Saint John who liud been closely associated with Dr. Fulton during‘ his minis- trriiil eorecr said to me: “When I first heard that brother Fulton was going into tic liquor business 1.~.dld' not believe . Icouirl not. ‘Phemumprs were so persistent. however. that»; mediati-ly got in- io touch_ " m. When lie coii- firinrd it.‘ soy that I was iluzcil. is to express my feelings mildly. IN WOLFS CLOTHING. "I went away from him quietly bet-misc I was speechless. I said to llli‘ wife and church associates: ‘l-Icre ls tlir- eloquent and forceful Rover- eud Fulton, whom we so long thought was serving his Master's i-uli. und the church so well. who ll" konc astray and put on thi‘ vicious wolf's_clothlng. Wf‘ have illWBYB taken pride ln- calling our Prqvincc and Canada a Christian mlllltfl’. that has now gone into the ncciirsed liquor business. glvcn it legal sanction. and h bribed tho "Over oi’ oiuacbriuiin .minlai.ry, to fit-he arch devil of this wicked trai- c .. . ."R!'ll8l0 circles throughout the Maritime rovincea. the New Eng- land of Canada. were dazed and “lllllned by Dr. Fulton's act. and Mme-of us haven't gotten over it Yet It is the wom calamity the Church and the Christian people of llllfl country have ever encounter- . "l." said tiiicpreocher and ardent. Prohibit-Milka. SAVAGBLY ATTACIIED. Filmer Methodist, Minister nadcandl of men in t ilEV. R. s. illllllfiliilllbliliIiliiilllNl INTERVIEW 0N llilillilNii or i vs Pllililllllllllll _w_ (i._'l‘.'U.iAnd S0 Called Roformers Severely Critioised. MINT Billilll churches, but not. from the pulpiis of the Anglican, Catholic and a few other churches. The local newspap- crs made no attacks iipuii Mr. Ful- toii, but printed WiLilUlli. comment thl- Iiittci" words oi ('.0l'i,iiil\ preach- ers who deiioiinetrd him from their pulpits. While the excitement within cei't.iiiiieliurch circles has. died down considerably. ilic radical preachers and some of the. trhnrtrli members are still very critical of Dr. Fulton. recent pastor of the large and aris- tocratic Centenary Methodist Church tuow United Cliurohl of SulntJohn, 10.13., lli. u salary oi‘ $4,200 a year. Mr. Alfred M. PULOTS. lllillliliiifl‘ of tlir- Iiuuk of Montreal, is nu official lll(‘illl)(‘l‘ oi‘ Centenary Church and its Sunday School 1;]||i-'|'illl.l'lldt?lli.. Mr. Peters said: A WPAIINCII SUI'I‘()II'I‘I~III. t “I uni heartily with Dr. Fulton as are iiiuiiy church people. ill his stand lor reui tciiiperuiitwe. Some oi" the preutriiers, however, I regret to siiy,_opptisl- and coiuleuin him. Only the liiuiilies who seein to believe that. every uinu who opposes the priiiiiiiilt- of prohibition because. ‘as they :aay. lie wants a glass of beer. or is u (lruiikurd. regardless of the truth. made ii furious noise when Ur. Fulton tool: this slop uud some of them im- still talking, much to the (lisgust of il large proportion of the church uicuibcrsliip who silent- ly put up with ii and await a better day lor the church. “I happen lo know the well tlitniglii. out reasons which induced Mi‘. Fulton to iuke ihc Chairman- shipof the (lovt-ruuieut. Iiifllllll‘ Con- trol Board. lie, us well as nil of us, have witnessed, tiuriui; our t-lcvcn yicars of the prohibition luw. the things it has failed lo do ivhlt-h its propoinriils pminisiid ii. would accom- plish, and the viriousiicw. and law- lessness it has brought. uboiil. ivitlia monopoly of ilic liquor business, taxes iii-e. in lill‘ liuiitls oi’ the smug- git rs iinii the bootlegizers" and the tiiiderworld of criminals co-luliornt- lug with them. ' INTO TIIE PIILPITS “But more than this. perhaps, Mr. Fulton. as We ull know. ri-nllnctl that prohibition hud gotten lulu politics. whore it doesn't. belong. and ilie and tliiiit; about the situation was that the politics of prohibition liiid been projected into the pulpit and the church with u vengeancei. “It seemed nt times that the rc- iigion of Christ hud become second- ary in some of our churches. to pro- hibition. Ml‘. Fulton ileslreil to kick polities out of tlic piiiplts and the tiliuroli first. and second lo get pro- hibition out, of politics so that the law-makers and Government offici- ils could have time and moans to attend to the vital questions before Parliament and. the Government. And already the new Liquor C ii- trol law has largely removed pol lcs from tlic pulpit. nud given the inw- niakers and law-enforcers time for their normal duties. NEVER AGAIN. "The "prohibition qiiestion- is how settled and the professional reform- ers have abandoned ‘their efforts to mgim peflplc good by law. It is safe to say we will never again adopt prohibition nfierlour bgvtliietr and dic- i e wcr once . angogiitchlil: vfllth a kuowfcdflc Ol ll"! facts when I any that the‘ Marl!!! u; ta of Canada employ Ill "ll- m m he branch banks in every town throughout the Dom- inion are positively opposed to pro- liibition in the light of our experi- ence with it, and have quietly ex- erted Canada to bring about some mcas- o iire of Government control and take weuldn-t use it‘ and endorse m, u" their influence throughout. the monopoly of the liquor business by others» Sure’ m. several minim, out of the hands of the lawless and “m5 “mum have turned to Sol-muting criminal elements into which pPO-ielsm Bu‘ set the “a; Aspirin (a; any d and the word genuine printed in rod: hibltion placed it. “Personally I do not use inloxicat-t lug liquors in any form and do not want to antagonize the preachers 0f our church who are fur from being practical in their radical and un- rcasanlng notions on this controver- sial question. Myself with other lay members make it a point. not to dis- cuss prohibition with them. hoping to pullihe church out of the mess. IIAS MANY FRIENDS “Dr. Fulton has for more friends. who are sympathetic with his views. on prohibition, and as the head of’ the Government's liquor selllng,and controlling agencies, than most of the radical prohibitionists imagine. Premier Baxter was wise in select- ing such an upstanding and extreme- ly able mun of the highest charac- ter to head the Liquor Control branch of the Government, as Dr. Fulton. Some of the extremistsl among the preachers expressed themselves as believing that the pro- per man for the position was some characterless bootlegger or smuggl- er," said Mr. Peters. Some of the other lay members expressed themselves in a similar way, but took pains to say they were not discussing prohibition with their pastors and dill not want their views printed. It: might "hurt busi- ness." DRAFTED FIRST BILL. “Dr. Fulton is the father of liquor Control laws now adopted by nearly all of the Canadian provinces. It was while he was pastor in 1910 of the leading Methodist Church at Char- lottetown,- Prince Edward Island that Dr. Fulton drafted the first liquor Control Bill intended to be intro- duced in Parliament. Dr. Fulton suggested to the Hon. Chief Justice Mathicson. then Premier of that Province. that; the only method oi" handling the liquor problem was by an independent; commission for the enforcement; of the Temperance Act of that Province. The commission was created by Parliament when the Premier appointed Di‘. Fulton n member. on which he served for three YGIIPS when he ivas called by his Church to a pastorate at Hall- fax, Nova Scotia. So it will be seen that Dr. Fulton ninde a close study of prohibition in all its complexities, from a close-up inside. I-Ie came to realize. as lie expressed-himself to mo. ‘chat the only way to handle the iiqiior problem was through some kind of llqiior control and regula- tion. by the Government. ‘ POPULAR PLAN In 192i the Province of Quebec practically adopted the system pro- posed by Dr. Fulton and closed up the open saloons aiid bars. The plan has since been adopted by six other Provinces. until all of Canada. with the exception of two of its smallest Provinces has repealed its prohibi- tion laws and adopted Government Control with Government liquor stores, of which system Dr. Fulton. Methodist preacher; and District President was the originator. ‘The liquor interests‘ had nothing to do with it except to bitterly oppose Liquor Control as did the prohibi- tlonists." Dr. Fulton said. EXPLAINS CHANGE “Why did you give up your career as a minister of the Gospel of 32 years standing and become the head of the Government liquor stores?" was a question put to Dr. Fulton. “Of course. my severe critics in the ministry. many of whom I have been associated with as the warmest friends of myself and my family for n. quarter of a century and more. will scoff and rail at my explanation. I have only charity for my many critics in religious circles. most of them sincere and splendid people- “But prohibition. among the other evils it has produced is the creation of a fanaticism on this one subject among otherwise normal people within the church. thllii hi“ 0°"? the Christian religion very great. vio- lence. Some of these ardent prohi- bitlonists are of the most intemper- ate people in their fanaticism. OPPOBED _T0 REASON. "I want to soy in all kindness thni. the prohibition radicals are not amenable to reason or common sense. They even 010F988 "mm- selves in the mum savage hatred. in honing that weak mortals. who are addicts of the concoctions of the bootleggers wiii amp dead when they touch it. and‘ all dieyolf. Bootlfil! liquor under prohibition was mak- ing new addicts of oiinil people. constantly. The reco I show this. Now this was not ‘Christ's wav. H» loved the moat licoiaibd sinner and teaches its to help hlnrlnnd have him. not by law but by If! love; real _, ‘noes cornea from‘ within. and cannot be proilliccd Iivthc brute force of law. Th! church ha: driven from it. with hatred in their hearts. the very people ltirthe church's mission to save. DEPLOIIAILE STATE. taken Aspirin’s place as an antidote THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ruin: in nothing that has ever i- pain. It is safe, on physicians rugsiore) with Bayer on the box, AIDlrin in the trade muk {unilateral in Camila) dentin: liner Mnnafneturu. Wbllc it II ‘Ivnlti knogn flint tAhIDIYIIAUIIIIB-lllznlatlzli mm - IB H! IIIIIIB 8.8!! 8 III g; “ratin- will be imam ‘s... ma: "Iliad " lndo lurk. gotten into our churches-war tem- ples for the worship of God. And I tear many church heads. and some in the congregations, have been God. Many of them permitted pro- fessional reformers and political ad- venturers to occupy their pulpits and capitalize the prohibition zeal of the splendid people in the pews for their political devices. A large percentage of these office seekers. after the church vote, were political drys and personal wets; they were drinking intoxicants, getting possession of liquor illegally and were more des- picable than the bootlegger who sold the liquor to them. I have witness- ed the religious services and worship set aside to accommodate some pol- itician or professional reformer. Be- sides prohibition had become the paramount one of all church and political issues. Prohibition has no place in politics but it was there. and left little time to the law makers necessary and vital issues. and the normal functions of Government." WANTED T0 IIELP. “I wanted to be an humble instru- control and regulatory law. and thus stamp out the lawless bootleg- ger and smuggler. and take the fin- ancial and political power that: pro- hibition had given him and the criminal underworld he had created under prohibition. away from him; for it was demoralizing our young people and threatening the very foundations of the Government. and of society. “Then I wanted to see the churches purified and get back to the funda- mental principles for. and on which, the church was established; to get sordid politics out of the pulpit. the church pew, and the trhurcli home. I have witnessed the bootleggers and their criminal classes advocating the continuance of the prohibition law for the money there was in it to them. if cuiuous CONTRAST “They always, since the law was adopted, voted and worked for the hrohlbition ticket. They worked hand in hand. though not openly, with the good ladies of the W.C.T.U. and the sincere church people. When reminded oi‘ this ardent prohibi- ticnists will sputter: ‘I don't: believe it.‘ or ‘I doubt it.’ These forces of the worst lntemperance and vicious- ucss we have ever known. voted and worked exactly as did the sincere temperance people for the defeat of the Liquor Control law. so the IIIOII- opoly of the liquor business would continue with the criminal bootleg- gers. and the monopoly not be tak- en over by the Government to drive them out of their lucrative business. “The booilcggers swindled the Government out. of millions of rev- enue and those who would have liquor whether or no, nod no protec- tion from the poisonous concoctions dispensed by the illicit dealers. The bootleggers were active in drumming up trade in every part of the Pro- vince. And the good prohlbltionlsts would shout at the Government: ‘You could enforce prohibition if you wanted to. but you don't want wsee ii. enforced,’ which, of course. wasn't true. “At the same time they were. in the most extravagant and absurd language praising the ‘constructive results’ of prohibition and were quot- ing from ridiculous books. by a the- oretical professor on ‘Prohibition at its Worst.‘ But all that is blind and unreasonlng fanaticism. which is always very articulate and illogical. ORDER. OUT OF CIIAOS. “I iim appreciative of the confl- dence that Premier Baxter and the Government reposedin mo by giv- lllll me this aoncintment. I feel sure that I am in a position to bring order and a respect for the law out of the chaos and anarchy. that eleven years of prohibition has brought us and get. it out of the church and away from politics. While the liquor control law has been in effect only since last Sep- tember we have already largely broken up bootlegging. home stills. cmwgling and illegal possession. In our Government liquor stores. the sale of whiskey and other ardent spirits is gradually decreasing. while the sale of beer and wine seems to he taking the place of hard liquor. We encourage this. Only one bottle of hard liquor is cold at one time to "The pdlitfcc c!“ prohibition bad: purchaser. i-Ie can buy a c“; 91TH. united ' .‘ tolerate any excessive drinking. Some of the extremists among the preach- worshipping prohibition more than. and the Government. to take care of ment in enforcing the new liquor beer or several cases at one pur- chase. This is done openly and piib- LL£°°Q rwmmtlxmw" ‘mmmfl Th”? WM "9911 °1' “hm; to keep the farcical prohibition law fmnm“ “m” 55°“ "'- °l' “w” on the statute book! the one honest known to have been intoxicated are ' ‘ cut oflfrom making , k v sentences are certain for those . Jail hav- ing illegal possession of liquor. Par‘ chases must be made from the Gov- ernment Llquor Scores of which we now have 34. Others are opened up ggzgualiy in districts that ask for are mistakenly trymg m d“! Wm] RESPONSIBLE MEN i "My two associates on the Coin- ' lesion are Mr. EJR. Toad. who is n active member of my own church and Mr. F. J. Robidoux, a leadinil’ barrister and our icgni adviser. n. ‘ Roman Catholic. i ployed nt the liquor atoms are roc- Ali the men cm- pcctable church members. _ thirds of them are Protbiitants and one-third Rbmaxi Catholics. Our liquor business is conducted hymen of character, however humble his or her position. Our employees are not permitted to drink in the stores, but are granted the right. as other citi- zens, to make purchases to take home with them. But we will not ers attempted to discipline and have expelled from the church. their members who accepted positions in our liquor stores, but did not. get very far with their threats. the Christian ministry into this p0- sltlon. Friends of a lifetime have be- come alienated and I have been threatened with social ostracism. I have given up preaching, of course, but um still a member 0f the church and worship with/my family in the church of my denomination here. Some of the radicals in the conference demanded that. I be ex- pelled as a church member. THE W. C. T. U. “As to the Women's Christian Temperance Union I will say this: flrhe ladies making up the member- ; ship of that u- anization are for the ‘most part. spiritual and ideal wo- men. I have long been associated ‘with them and closely observed ‘their work, have only the klndlleat feeling for them and high consid- eration for their sincerity as indi- viduals. However. the W.C.T.U. is today made up of elderly and middle aged women, mostly old ladies, and are not being recruited by the younger women. These good ladies of the W.C.T.U; have fought the cigarette and tobacco. as well as John Barleycorn for these many years. Some of them have not been able to save their own daughters from smoking cigarettes, and their own sons. brothers. and husbands from drinking bootleg whiskey. Cig- arette consumption on the part of girls and women has become gener- .111, Our Canadian railways, tokeep up with the ‘March of Progress‘ are now providing smoking apartments for women as well as men, in their passenger coaches. We all remember how vigorously and persistently the W.C.T.U. fought the cigarette and demanded cigarette prohibition laws. Indeed some states passed antl- cigaretbe laws at the behest of the W.C.T.U. These laws were exactly the same kind of a farce that the liquor prohibition laws have proved themselves to be. to all reasonable people. GENEIIOUS ADVERTISING. “The newspapers have always thrown their columns wide open to the‘ splendid, yet impracticable lad- ies, of the W.C.T.U. Hardly any other organization has been given as much free publicity by the editors. They have advertised the cigarette and the dishonorable John Barley- corn for generations; particularly since prohibition. Now the W.C.T.U. has laid oil’ on fighting the cigarette and the cigarette makers are oblig- ed to pay for their advertising. “It is not an attack upon the good and sentimentally nice ladies of the W.C.T.U. to ask: ‘What construc- tive thing for the good of society have they ever accomplished?‘ Isn't if. true that the evils they have ask- ed m have eliminated for prohibited became far more dangerouatoman- kind while they fought and adver- tised these evils? Since the W.C.T. U. and other refonners have been making war upon the cigarette the use of them has grown from 3.000.- 000000 a year in the United States arettcs have increased 33 times while the W.C.T.U. and others foug them and had them prohibited by law in several instances. DEAF TO WARNING. “Young girls and boys. working girls and society girls and women are smoking them everywhere in these prohibition clays. The younger generation has been deal’ to the warning and entrcatlea and prayers of the Wotan. Or did the lectures of the W.C.T.U. arouse in the giriii. BOYS; women and men. that organ- izatlon was assaying to save. the human spirit of contradiction co they defied their warnings? flu the W.C.T.U. proven that. these dear ladies have any knowledge of pay- chology? \ “I am hoping for the day when the professional reformer: will make up their minds to give the peoples long needed rest from the don't; and prohibitions we have been harping on so long, thereby contributing to make bad matters far worse by con- stantly agitating and advertising them. Above ‘ all let our splendid churches set back to their original province of cleansing people's hearts and making them good from within. OPEN TO CRITICISM "The churches. I fear. have laid themselves open to injurious critic- ism on the part of unbelievlng crit- ics. who claim the phurches have failed and ‘admit failure’ in their pronounced work of salvation, through the religion of Christ: in their resort to the Civil law to force people to be good and have habit; that are arbitrarily lppIWOd by the and sincere. with good motives. but men (not drive them) “It was a sacrifice to jump from cflotricofboth the Other corrupt and vicious. think- ing only of the money they make. A MISTAKE" VIEW. “Many preachers and reformers mankind as they think mankind ought. to beinnteod of with mankind as it is. These conilmentallsts have hoped up in their imaginations a s rigid mold ‘for human conduct: that. I N0 Tea, which? has the sameFdEIIciouajliivquiiac" nv-w- . sumo ORANGE pesos. every man and woman must be made to fit into as to their habits and ordinary conduct, whether they want toner not. And we all know, if we are practical, that humans re- sent. this intrusion into their per- sonal affairs against. it. "The spirit of the Holy Scriptures and of Christ's many examples, is to deal with mankind (free moral Me.‘ A SIMILAR SITUATION. “The vigorous antagonism of the Prohibition forces to Government Liquor Control and the passing of the Act bringing into existence oflI- cial recognition of the liquor traffic is not unlike the controversy which exists in the church concerning Modernism and Fundamentalism. The churchmen recognizes the ex- istence of sin, but the churchmen who is a Modernist says Education and Scientific teaching is the solu- tion-lt is salvation by Social Evo- lution and Education The Funda- mentalist. on the other hand, says salvation can only be brought about by renunciation and the acceptance of time-honored creeds in their plenary statement, and the strug- gle has not ceased. CONFLICTING VIEWS. "In dealing with the liquor trafflc the mental processesare similar. The existence of the traffic is recognized. It. is seen everywhere. The ultra temperance man. or. as he is com- moniy known. the Prohibitionlst, says the only way to deal with it is to deny or refuse it existence. to de- ny li: any rights. to disbelieve that branch of science and medicine which speaks in its behalf, to refuse recognition of its right to any po- sition, socially, scientifically or mor- ally. The proponent of Liquor Con- trol admits what the Prohibitionist denies. He also admits that the use of liquor may be carried to excess and it is new that he writes the word-CONTROL in time letters. He works at. the problem of Control and at the some time asks the co- operation of the Socialist, the Edu- cationolist and the Scientist aswell as the Churchman for that cam- paign of education which will event- ually bring about that Utopian pe- riod, all good men hope for. A pn-"ricoirr oocsriou “In I927 the Province of New Brimswiok adopted the Control Sys- tem and I was asked to accept the Chairmanship. Ii; was not an easy question to decide. For thirty-two years unfsltering loyalty had been iven to the program of the Metho- dist. and later to the United Church of Canada. N0 words of explana- tion could satisfy many of those who for a life-time had been close and dearly loved friends. It meant breaking with many of those and the accepting of a position. the im- portance of which hundreds of Churchmen would refuse to acknow- ledge. It meant more—-eleven years under Prohibition regime ‘had brought the condition of lawlessness and illicit dealing in liquor which would be difllcult to overcome. But unless one was prepared to stultlfy oneself there seemed no other course open and the position was accepted. CHANGED CONDITIONS "The Board has been functioning less than a year. The bootlegger has already been driven out of the Pro- vince, the flack in the hands of the boy and girl has disappeared. The Provincial Police have worked tire- lessly at the. great undertaking given them, and today it is practically impossible to buy liquor in the Pro- vince other tlian in the stated open hours of Government Stores. Hotel keepers report. that drunken carou- fully supervised by the Provincial Police and the reports being re- ceived show a decided improvement. in the public and private lives of the people. “In addition to this, the Province is receiving the revenue which for- merly went into the pockets of the bootlegger. meaning that. a revenue which will ultimately run well upto three-quarters of a million dollars a. year will go into the Provincial 'I‘reasury and more to the Dominion Government, instead of enriching criminal bootieggers and smugglers. and financing a menacl under- world. as under prohibition. LAW REBPECTED. "After ten months of administra- tion. this Board claims a recognition of law. such u has not exletpd in the post eleven yearn. an elimina- tion of hypocrisy which was under- mining the moral life of’ the people. The liquor traffic baa been brought out into the open. If a. person de- sired to purchase liquor legal oppor- tunity is given; if the law is broken the‘ vioiaiiorgoaa to JlilMThe boot- logger and his customer have ex- actly the some standing. as crimin- als under the liquor control board. “Btii! sentences are given those guilty of an infrlction. a fine run- ning from i100 and two months in llll l0 00.000 and a your in Jail. for buvlnl or coiling liquor illegally; i100 and from one month to ab: month: in mi for hlving illegal nonunion of liquor. or for drinking in cipubiio P1606. In lddltionw this diction-not lcnllv. but Province wiilr-byvmichlfltiashowninflie radical and arrogant reformers. “It is plthetic to wiiriaia cert leaders in‘ the c oiidthcw memoi- tdoiirtortoflib siéibruncnmdrinking . fl‘ ’ none time: altiaflctlon of a J of n County that any one N lliiiicnmia locum ht co bfillh. t!‘ in- mundn. minor I Wllfllllll we nan o complain aylwin of mmr- by ’*H iScientific Factsi and rebel vigorously »-0++v0+<+o+o+v+++oo++¢o NEWEST NOTES or SCIENCE. An orange tree of average long- agenta) as mankind iii and to lead evity bears 20.000 oranges and u to ‘Follow lemon free 8000 lemons. Experiments in Germany have shown that brown coal dust can be used as locomotive fuel. The movable jaw of a wrench patented by a Michigan inventor L: held in place with a wing nut. Lignlte is used exclusively for fuel in an electric power plant in the Silesian city of Gorlltz. A keylesc combination lock for residence doors that can be operat- ed in the dark has been invented. In proportion to population Sao Paulo leads all Brazilian cities in its expenditures for education. Patented by an Illinois man, a motor vehicle tire is made of spring steel and has a renewable rubber tread. English manufacturers have pro- duced theafre seats, table tops and some other articles of furniture from rubber. Lead pencils of any length can be inserted in one leg of France has legalized the lllO 0! the typewriter and printing prcu- ill the preparation of notarinl 1008.. heretofore required. to be hand. written. ‘ . ._ A non-refillable carton for radio tubes patented by a New York ill- venwr enables the tubes 0o be talk ed without breaking a seal on the carton. ' Made in the form of a flashlight, cartridges have been invented by an Englishman to be loaded into fire- arms to shoot. beams of light l! targets. "Proper Food and Elevator" By ARTHUR A. IIOGOVIRN Former Physical Director, Cornell Medical Collage. When You Are Tired‘ Be Sane and “Stop" I-IEN you are tirad- STOPl That cenle of fatigue which follow: over-exertion is Nature’: "traffic wp." lfyou would escape the _ effects of disobeying this b11381, pull up abort and Lake a. rest“ When we force our bodies In carry on beyond the sane stopping point, we are only callilm 0n than io- do fhe i ,ocslbla. Our bodlll require rent. _I have alwayl found that man who are nuccellful are for draftsmen patented by a Maine inventor. A Russia l scientist claims to have transmitted thought by capturing electromagnetic waves emitted from persons. A San Francisco inventor has pat- ‘ented a flatiron as wide as an iron- ing board and which does not. need to be liftcd. An electric flashlight and meni- a pocket have been eombinedby an English inventor. An Iowa man has invented a Air. light lfllnts. established in Prague. Oil and gas burnersthat may be used together or separately are in- cluded in a furnace patented by a Los Angeles man. The government of Bolivia has opened its private, wireless fele- graph stations to the public to facil- itate communication. A metal sleeve has been patented by an Idaho inventor to protect poles from decay below ground and from grass fires above. A government concession has been granted in Egypt. to a. company that plans to educate natives by the use of motion pictures. Patented by a Tennessee inventor, a support for highway guard cables prevents vehicles striking posts on which they are mounted. Of the more than 18.000 tractors used in agriculture in Great Britain it is estimated that. 90 per cent. are of American manufacture. A Louisiana inventor has patented an automobile tire that gives an below a definite India's railway will be increased by approximately 1000 miles a year until between 6000 and 7000 miles of projected lines are constructed. terrupta the peace and happiness of his family.’ the Board may make an Order of Interdlction prohibiting the sale of liquor until the stores are as I have already stated, a. marked and encouraging improvement in the moral life of the Province. ABSOLUTE CONTROL “We now have absolute control of the liquor business. The bootleggers and smugglers by the thousands have been driven out. of the business and their (in effect.) allies for pro- hibition, the professional reformers, pretty nearly extinguished. We are now very nearly rid of these twin nuisances although we hear echoes of the ‘death rattle‘ once in awhile from the reformers by the civil law. rather than to reform by the moral and scriptural law. "We understand that several of our most piiobperous former booi- leggera have joined their fortunes with that gentry in the great coun- try that has not. as yet, reformed its ‘greatest of all reforms‘ as we have. The ‘THIIDQPMIW 14881101‘ and other reformers have now disbanded and ll!" Elven up with the exception of a few die-herd radicals who can now only exercise their vocal chords in making a noise but their voice: are Ruin: fainter u each Sunday goes "Trohlbitlon hu ceased m be a cubiect of discussion in the home. 1M church. the lodge. on the rail. the street. u formerly, Th m}; "9" qucnuon with u: is. aimed Vi! titinl. In hotel lobbies and on ibi- "u m» Pllllflll. in conclusion. ' p orandum pad that can be carried in machine for home use for smoothing dents from fruit jar covers to insure The first factory in Czecho- slovakia for the manufacture of matches and wrist watches has been further ordered. The result has been, I I l I! . '- moi-n‘ PEEL ALL ‘ MUST BEA-LL prone to take foo many clinical where their health is 00110811104.‘ This question of sufllcientmelt, or. guarding against over-exercise, ill one that cannot be brought fo the attention I00 often. As one of your most important health maxim, ro- membei-Awlien you are fired- STOP! Diet to Gain Weight BREAKFAST: Stewed fruit, un- sweetened; dark cereal; cocoa. chocolate. milk or coffee substi- tute; dark bread toasted with plenty of butter. Between break- fast and lunch, one glass of wafer and one glass of milk. LUNCH: A thick cream soup; vegetable lun- cheon; dark bread; gins! of milk; gelatin with whipped cream. Be- tween lunch and dinner. two glasses of water and one gins of milk. DINNER: For dinner. broiled lean meat, chicken or 01h; a green vegetable; with plenty of butter; gelatin salad; dark bread; cocoa or wool: tea; for dessert stewed fruit or tapioca pudding. Between dinner and bedtime, one or two Bllllil of water. ' ' © A. A. McGovern. Addrua all letter: to Mr. McGovern. N0 41 Baht 45nd IL. New York City. _4-|—x.— dibl i ' -— 00 100.000.000.000 a year Wllll l1 PPO- sals have ceased. public dances, pic- $1.1m Zeffgfsg“ when "'8 a" We’ P°Ti=l°lll1l>9 lKICPBBSB lfl Cflllflllll- ClE- nic and holiday gatherings are care- amount“ O The Aviator Absolute dependability is aviation’: first law and that is-why I on dependable Chain Spark Plugs. Clum fonhtlibettorcpurkphg beau: l: h» on melanin dill- ."\t modern high-compac- nionenglnmnAdllounew patented lo cotpyct ' plkn-culthln-omlllb nbcolntlly Inc-fight coda high complia- lion. Special lnnlycll clectrodeflvhlchlhm 1M ' » ' -- _ A CANADIAN-MADE PRODUCT 1 baked potato T