i . \'t||ld0l\—-W. cumin‘ 14% 1a.; ldlltl’ IIPI\I‘MI(> ulvaeryaavb handle . Ylowflallbfl. ll. Iurldfi IJJ. .A. Iaellnaaa, 31.0. flvaaael-nllol Iouuavnnaimnnmina. ;_ ‘A GREAT HAN PASSES News of the dilfll on Satan!!! morning of His Honour Identical-ht Govamor Dalton. haaomasioned the deepest regret and a sense of very personal los, not only in this Pro- Vince but in other parts of the Do- minion. No representative of His Miiycsiv the King was more deserv- ing of honour and esteem, or moie conscientious in the discharge cf ha: responsible duties. Though nppOllltfiil to office at the advanced agc of eighty years, his zeal and uid isiry were truly remarkable. ‘liit- late Lieutenant Governor was who’. has so often been described as a self-made man. In early life be conducted a drug busi- ness and his interest ia chem- istry was stimulated to such an filltlll. that he invested his hard- madc PJlTllDgS in order to advance his knowledge of the subject-a knmniidge which proved of out- r..\iiti.i1i; advantage to him later in lite. u.» W35 also keenly interested lri mzitfitiinatics. and developed his Ialcnt along that line with the red suit iiiiit in after years, one of h pliiasmiicst pastimes was to set mathematical problems for his friends to solve; and no one en- loved the joke better, when he was able to "put it over" some distin- uuwhcd mathematician who imag- ined such problems would be easy of solution. Hon. Mr. Daltorfs genial disposi- tion and kindness of heart were pro- verbial. He was one of nature's geriilcmcn, and never would will- ingly hurt the feelings of anyone, or permit an unkindness or discourtesy to be committed in his presence. Out of the wealth which he earned through his initiative in establishing thc now famous silver fox industry! he gave largely and gcncroushj and he Will be remembered flS one of the Island's greatest lrinrifactors in this connection. Hon. Mr. Daltoirs interest in lit- emture was COllSldFTRblP. llti was well versed in the common English rlassirs, and nothing pliizised him bctlcr than to sit and discuss a nov el arid its thcinc with others oi ron- ccrilal disposition. As a. sportsman ftiiv twnlri match hiin in skill and cxiicriviicr His 7F‘.~'. for outdoor plUlllllPS rcmaincd '.\llh him through lllP, illld no doubt contributed largiily to the splendid htwilth which he Pnjn_\t'd_ A former president and collcazuc of members of the staff of The Guardian, Hon. Mr. Dalton for many years was closrly in miitact with the conduct of this newspaper. invariably his attitude was that of encouragement and considcration, and won for him the appreciation and esteem of all concerned in its ' management. >- The Guardian joins with a host If friends here and elsewhere in mourning the loss of one to whom Hun Province owes a great debt of gratitude and affection. BUFFALO RETURNING? Buffalo have returned to the Iaskatchewan plains and old lndl- an: are all agog, according to a was pespatch from Wood Moun- tain. in that province. least half a doaen animals compose thewmall herd that was sccn in the Elm Spring country. The Indians see in the event a return of thc happy hunting grounds of their forcfath- us. but the Mounted Police arc doubtful and cxprcss tho opinion that the buffalo camc from the Montana rringc country tind belong l0 l. private raiichcr. According t0 Jho Montreal Gazcltr‘. tho nurlcus 1:1 the grcat herds of buffalo that how loam in Wainwright reserve and in the overflow territory llkc- wise came from Montana, and have multiplied enormously under Gov- rmnent protection. Indccd, a cou- pb of thousand have to bc slaugh- lerwdevery year, and their meat is m: I10 in the winter in Bi-PIC Can- adimmarkets. An suthri-rty on the Iuflalc, who died but a few years! a’, was Charles Mair, and he read a m! entertaining paper before the loyal locietypf Canada on llay II, 1Q. Lu Ila-tr’: youngei- days in ltarfnd with the first thaw. the herd: swept forward Blim- and U! in living torrents which no Obstacle oouldturn aaida. In croling the two Saskatchewan, the pncirdto river bank: were often of frightful destruction, the rel!" herds: pushing tho vanguard over with ir- rssistible force. Myriad: perished in the huddls and by going through the rotten ice. Ono traveller coun- wedilpwoftbeanimalamlredata single ford. In their movements the buffalo moved in flies. following old pathsworndeepintotbaaoil by centuries of use. Adventures foi- lowed these paths and engineer: later found them to be astonishingly direct lanes from point to point. The great wallows were alllbt for the pioneer grain farmers. and whitened buffalo bones were to be seen on the prairies until quite re- cent times. Buffalo pelts by the hundred were auctioned in Montreal in the eighties and the robes were in every cab and sleigh until the automobile came into general use. Au mi; has passtd. but Canada is prggqfl/ing the grealkdl. herds in ex- istence. These will remain. no mat- ter what beoomes of the little band reported to be at large in the Elm Spring country. HANSARD Commenting on the suslr-‘Mlvfl which is bcuig made that i-Lansard, the official record of parliamentary speeches, should be abolished. a New Brunswick exchange suggcsfs that while economy has many claims, it is scarcely likely this llflOVtfllfilll. will succeed, especially isinoe the limitations of time and fwhits paper tend to cumin rather ‘than extend the reports from the I Press Gallery. This name for the official debates. FPDOFICPS and their product came 12mm Luke rfansard, an early Eng- llSh printer. Today there is no one of that name connected with the 1 r0p0ftlllg of the debltcs either in lCanada or Great Britain, in both {of which countries the term is used. {In i774 Hansard first received a Ecommission to print the daily iec- itmis of the British House of Oom- l mons. His three sons after him car- ,ied on the work. The original Hansard knew noth- lzng of shorthand. His daily reports [Mllliillltd s, record of the actual acts 30f Parliament and a sumrnry of ‘the speeches delivered. The reports inf the daily newspa/pes also assisted ihim. In Canada. reports of the de- lbates began in i667, at Ootnfedwa- tion, but at first speeches. as in lEngland. appears! in summarized lform. Two thin volumes sumoed for l i867. compared with mm.- thidr volumes, a total 0f 3464 pages, in 1932. Not. long after Confederation l shorthand: was introduced. ‘ When the reporter has finished i‘ his shift, he hurries to the Hanmrd room on the third floor of the Par- liament Budding and there dictates to a typlst from his short-hand. Three copies are made. The origi i B00: to the editor 0f ddlfiea. of the duplicates goes to the mem- borwhohass-pokenrfehal the irrivllrgc of editing his own speech- es and revising within certain 11m. its. A certain latitude is allowed in charisma T-he construction of mit- ences and correcting clerical orrors ofthe reportersfrhereisnosirnh freedom as with the United Btatgg Congressional Record. in which sip- pearr whole peeches newt delivered but to which "applause" and "huh. fer" are added if the Congressman so desires. EDITORIAL NOTES h: from becoming extinct, flag Indian population of Canada i: 108.- 012, showing an increase of more than 3,000 within a five-year period. They are adopting 10mg of m. health measures of the whites. The loll! acreage of the Indian reserva- tion in Canada ll 5,131,101 acres, of which only 236,761 are under cultiv- ation. The total value of the real and personal value of the Indians‘ property is $73,113.55. Their total per capita income la 8153. Commenting on the death of Lieutenant Governor Dslton, tbs Monctcn Tranwript lays: "An mit- standing figure in the lifl of Prim: Edward Ialand ha: been removed by the of Hm. Charla Daltm, Newman-Governor of the pro- vince; whose death occurred this morning. Noted as the founder of ‘l-IINICIIOX indurtmlnwfrichbc walaplooesizhehalatitiedclairm laalpleahdvlvanlby. tlnlbiauclbvaleank rt lnidolabasaidthat“ ~ abo E Illi- ti? ,2 g . M a sou iiggigigigsgisg igggigggifigz; IE %i=Ef iftgr 5? ..g.i Egg; *= At a-lancheon hold reoenlb in London 1h connection vmh what is President of the Board of Trade. was specific. "Who can say." he asked. ‘that a country like outs, in ‘which some 14,000,000 0; l5,00J,lJ0l) people hold between them at least fIBSDOODOO, is not a very stable industrial and financial concern?" The teat of a sense of humor in a r 5 ,l.. treating them for e Bill’. ll D01. simple akin disease any DUO; in but as simply an outward evidence of some inward condition. Dr. W. Scholtz, Munich. clalliiles eczema into three groups: (l) al- lergic eczema g Math; bacaunevery ixzfi? Nonmember-you can Scorn, or by mail. S “Chaateder.” ' certain substances). usuauy hands or face, coming in contact with certain substance: in the patients occupation or employ- ment, t3) the forms of ecasma duo to the way the body promises handle certain foods, or to an over- sensitive nervous condition. fcrent types or cause: of enema. what about treatment? In the first type-allerglc-dus to certain foods as proven by rubbing the food on a scratched surface of a man is h-is ability to tell a story against himself. That Premier Ben- nett has this unsuspected saving; grace seems to be established by this; "As he was p: cparing to leavel a meeting of the Professional 1n- titutes ‘of- Civil Servants, after thanking Dr. Cody, Premier Ben- nett said his departure reminded him of a story about a man who was seen walking along the street talking to himself. "Who is that?" asked one bystander of another. “Why. that's Pzemier Bennett holding a Caninet meeting,” was the reply." quoted Mr. Bennett. who seemed to enyoy the joke thorough-I 1y. "That's what I am going to do now." he remarked, a; he was leaving. "1 am withdrawing to hold a Cabinet meeting." One trouble with the talk over President Roosevelt's money policies is that so few people are willln to "it to discuss them on their me ts. Instead. 1esort is being had to the questioning of motives. to the stir- Hfgc up of vreiuuioes. "o all sorts of vivuperation, Dr. 0. M. Bprague tDr. Sprasue. by the way, taught Presi- dent Roosevelt eoonomics at Har- vard) dislikes with Roosevelt, and tells why. Immediately the Hetrst Pipers accuse him of being a tool of the Bank of England, this be- Bank of Eriglands service. Alfred l. Smith disagrees with Roosevelt and immediately another critic "goes 0n the air to say that Smith is thinking of the profits of his own bank. And so it goes. Instead of a discussion of issues and problems there ls resort to personalities." bird llewarl. speaking before the Biglish Association. rciciitly made a strong plca for thc use of plain speech. More than sixty ycars have Dflfied Hume Dean Alford published his little book entitled "Qureirs l-kigllsh" and in this he wrote: "Be simple, be unaffected, be honest in your speaking and writing. Never use a long word where a short one will do. Call a spade a. spade, 13o not call it a ‘welbknown oblong instturnent of manual industry." The clock cannot be put back, u. en were that desirflrlc. but is there not a possibility of reviving some of the old slllll-sthlt make for self- Wmclflflfiy? Lack of self-sufficiency is probably the main weakness of present day society, lack of inner Nwwves. the verbatim and com- plete reliance on outsiders for pro- vision of both necessaries and en- tertainment. There is a great deal of handiwork that does not com- pole with machine production and would not disturb industry, were it introduced into homes. Ila intro- duction would tend to daw the home together. It may be more play than work, and thus family recrea- Wm made an Important factor, fostered and directed by Community centre activities. Taking the life insurance basin. H8 lo a barometer it. is pointed out that there has beg“ a 313w bu; steady increase in ~ now business in recent months in (xnada, a deuease in the number of new loans on pol- icies applied for and a large lndmaae in repayment of sum borrowed on Pollciea This is another evidence °1 lmPfvvement which h very wel- some. QIIVIHIOII B8B!“ ill Pacific, “W111!!! to Father l-fulizard- au- cause at one time he was in the} the skin, the logical treatment ll t0 avoid that food or substance. 1f due to some necessary food mob l: iiicat, eggs. bread, milk, only smah amounts of these foods should be eaten, or small amounts of these foods before the regular mcaL Cut: ing out orcuttlng down on lit is often helpful. The use of calcluru-lime-in the form of gluconate of limo also clears up many cases. In the type of eczema due to con- _ tact with various substance: at mac's employment, only painstaking care, of the skin by the use of various ointments and pastes under a doc- tor's supervision will get results. In the third form due to some gland disturbance or to a fault of the nervous system, treatment does not seem to be of much help. Pat- ients of this typo should have lest in a not too warm bed. The diet should be principally vegetables and without salt. Coffee. tea, and aloo- hol shoud be avoided; lime is also helpful here. It is certainly of great help to have this classification of eczema made known to sufferers with that distressing ailment. A New Racket (Canadian Police Qizetta) Only l4 ycnrs of age, a girl has eczema tpeacina in one part of the, body dire to that part of the body. ' Now that we know the three dlf- l’ SAVE THE L PUBLIC FORUM ‘Illa cola-a ll OIOI NI’ '5' dlaouolal by oaneaplllelfl n! aaeathal of laureat. TIP cbarlattctowa ardiaa do» not aoaeaaarlly alias-Ia ti! aplalnaa OI THE CITY DISPENSAIY Sin-During the DIM twenty- five years perhaps no organization has done a better work than has the Anti-Tuberculosis Society. For many year: i; was the advance guard of the force: flghtlnl llflinll tuberculosis in this Province. Ind was the chief advocate of milk and meat impaction in this City. With tn, coming of the Red Cross So- ciety and later the establishment of the Department of Public Health tho work of the Society ha: been GIRCICGIIIO@UOQBIBUQIOIO\II poor and may of all dflwmlfl ationa. - Many are the word: of appreci- ation expressed by the needy of the city iegardlnl the loud work .bet~n arrested at Le Mans, France, ion a charge of marrying three men w.thin 10 months, despite the fact that she was already, under Span- ish law. the wife of another man. The girl crosssd the Franco Spanish frontier at Hendaye last summer and gave out that she was the daughter of the notorious Spanish prisoner, whose frauds are known the word over. She declar- rd that whoever married her would have part share in the fortune de- posited by her father before his ar- rest at a railroad station in Paris. Her first victim vrs an English- man, with whom she went through a form of marriage on the under- standing that. he was to defray all the expenses of reclaiming a valu- able cloakroom deposit and an ex- pedition tn rescue her father. from his Spansh prison. ' She obtained several thousands of dollars from the "“ “ahman af- ter the marriage ceremony, and to- gether they set out for Parts, While the tnrsting husband was diaiming at the Gare dfAusterlits the valiae containing the supvpoled t. re, the girl vanished. and when the vallse was opened it was found to contain nothing more valuable than a few old papers. At Le Mans the girl found two other victims, both Hench, with whom she went through marriage ceremonies in different names. All three "husbands" lodged com- plaints with the police, alleging false pretenses. The girl is laid to have made a statement to the po- lice in which she admits being a member of a gang working the Spanish prisoner fraud. She says. according to the po- lice, that the gang had lent her into France to scrape acquaintance with likely vlct'm: in the lulu?! mate's and on the train: between the frontier and Paris. The Span- i:h police are being asked to oo- operato in tracking down other members of the gang operating an the Spanish aide of the border. The girl. at the time of her ar- rest. was in communication with another Englishman‘ and had pro- mised to go to England to marry him if he could obtain the necfl- ary landing permit A man was presented witn an ac- count which ho had good mason lo believe had already been paid. "Haven't I paid thi: mount?" M asked the boy who brought it h him. . "1 don't know, sir." n: the nply. "Does your master know?" "No, air." "How do you know that?” "1 heard him lay n” "And after mu he had milli- I done by the Dispensary through its devoted visitor Mia: Earle. At present there is a shortage of fund: to carry on this work, but the poor must be fed and clothed. and at this season of the Y"! W! ,little ones must be shown the , spirit of Christmas as fully as pos- 1 sible. Let. there be a united Christian endeavour this season to place the Dispensary in such a financial po- sitim which will enable it to pro- vide adequately for the deserving poor of the city. and give the ex- pectant children a gift from the long ‘ Dlspe y Christ- mas Tree. Int us send our contributions to Mia: Earle at once, and so make easier her most difficult task. I arn, Sir, etc. ONE INTERESTED. ISLAND CUIIINCY Sin-I fear my friend Mr. Bent- ley has misconoelved the point of my argument on this subject. I re- ferred to f-hq difference between the fixed values. a: correctly shown by him. and what i: known a: the “Bt-reet" or trade value, or its pur- cbaaing power in the field: of commerce. 1n his last letter h, confeues that "it l: not. clear what i: the issue between my good friend Mr. intention to create any iuus and in common sense fact there i: nma. I sought to implement hi: informative letter with additional matter from my own earlier years. He placed our cur- ,riancy on its statutory basil; You DlftN llllli |UIlilll' a... Y... Will. my». 31nd; "runner F1NE cur Yauacnrallylavanoaayw Wine smoker: an taking fill advantage complete set oiglgoke: It pays to “Roll Your Own” with TURRET. ~ FINE CUT CIGARETTE TOBACCO P O K E R lnpdhlTolslmoflollrlllrolCllldltl-ilill ‘hnton and myself." 1t was not my bu“ aowooataiasmcco oftlrllo \ the givgflfinoli tobacco for, " h: “ma. Poker Hands which are u- jn-o-g): a wide choice ofboautlfilLuaaful gifts: A at our Poker Hand Premium go booklets of “Voguf! or [m in exchange for an HANDS Dream: are but. interlude: which Fancy mains; When monarch Reason sleeps, this mimic wakes: f Compounds a medley of disjointed thlnu. A mob of cobbler-s, and a court of kings: Light fumes are merry, grower fumes are sad: Both are the reasonable soul run And many monstrous forms in sleep we see, That neither were. nor are. e'er can be. Sometimes forgotten things mt behind Rush forward in the brain. come to mind. The nurse's legends are for truths received. And the man dreams but what the boy believed. Sometimes we but rehearse a for- mer play. The night restores our actions done by day; As hounds in sleep will open for their prey In short, the a piece. Chimeras all; and more absurd, t: less. nor long and farce of dream: i: of -iohn Drydcn_ Canadian Bureau Of Statistics (Ottawa Journal) One paragraph in the report of the Royal Commission which in- vestigated the finances of New- foundland should be a matter for pnde on the part of the Cfuadian Dublic. It was the paragraph in 2:11:11 the Commission recommend- "Establishment of liaison with the (Canadian) Dominion Bureau of Statistics as an aid in collecting "‘*<I'.r “z narokflbrrottlnak - My" I Hockey contest WINNERS Twenty free tickets have been donated by the Char- lottetown Forum to winners in the Hockey Contest. Tlll first five named will receive one dollar tickets and the others will each receive a seventy-five cent ticket. The winners of seventy-fiveeent tickets may obtain dollar tickets by paying the diflcrfllw- Orders for these free tickets may flblfllfled by 1h! winners on Monday at the Guardian Ofiica. Scott C. Sinclair, 114 Prince Si. Beryl McDonald, 70 Uppelklllllfil-IOTO- Elmer McDonald, 220 KenFSt. Marjorie Bulrnan, Wheatley River. Chester Reid, City. Bernard McCallum, 3 Douglas Si. Eileen Higgins, 171 Kent St. Archie MacFar-lane, 31 Grafton St. Reg, Whitlock, City. Robert Dslling, 146 Hillsboro Si. L. A. Cairns. 85 Elm Ave. Gordon Duffey, 149 Euston Si. Ruth Hood," Grafton St. D. Farquharson, 99 Upper Prince St. Frank Brennan, 24 Longworth Ave. Earl Galbraith. Grafton St. McFadyen, 203 Euston St. Edward Younker. Brackley. Arnold Yeo, 50 Greenfield Ave. Glen Mathesoyr. 37 Upper Hillsboro. public man and every industry in tains a complete statistical with!" Canada knows, l: one of the finest of the Dominica from Fl!‘ V! Y"! and most useful of all the branchs issues a Year Hook which comvll" of our Federal Government. Hend- favorably with any nrnllq’ Dubllf" ed by a man whose standing as a . tion issued anywhere in the world statistician is acknowledged the It is a aervice to Canada-to W" world over. staffed by experts, the litlcal-- and industrial Cami" Bureau of Statistics issues daily which can hardly be over-estima- bulletins which are models of con-led, and which, we greatly "l" l’ ciss, dependable informatiommain- not sufficiently agrpreciated scour-sh lnfor . m ever! branch of the island's life." ‘rhianfaraaws know,ilf.hg first occasion upon which any cum- mission or official body. deliberat. lul upon matters of public concern to a cot-mt-ry. ha: suggested a liai- son with an official organization in another country. Certainly is is an unusual and magnificent tri- It-is not an undeserved tribute. fir: the Canadian Bureau of Sta- tlstics, ll cvery ngywapgf, egg, UQZFJI cm s“. it. 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