PAGE roux Socrctnr_v-LiciiL-Col. l). Editor niiil lliors-Firini I-K Prsaldeut 2 I I o. .. -i ___________. __ ____________ _._ Morning lmiiy ifounili-il ) {L50 pcr your iin advance) inn UNITED S'l‘.\Tl*l.\‘ gnlldtnlr. New York i in‘, Kansas (‘it_v_ \\ Building, St, lmlllli i- Irunclsoo; I135 No, 05in gliiiy .illl Building. W. (Ihcaier S. hlcliiiio M. P. ADVERTISING REPREUENTATI be lleckivlth Special A31"?! UPlIPfiil Motors Buiidinit, Detroit 'l‘nwor lliiililing- i GHARLUTTETDWN GUARDIAN Vice-Preaident-J. B. Bill!!!" A. AlaoKliinoii. D. & O. Aliinnging Direrton-J. R. Burnett Walkcr and D. K. Currie . __________________i_. $5.00 per year (in advance) delivered. lled,ia Canada and United States. VEB Inc.‘ New York Central interstate lluiid- Syndioate Triis! Sill Chicago: Aiiniitu; Aluuuduock Building, .\‘trcut_ Piilluilolpiiia Morning Maxim No woman wants her nose to be a shining example. '._ i ANiVI VERSARY . On the 17th 0f Sept. 1351!, The . [slander ncivspiipur ironiiiincd the. "“ following paragraph: “We are much pleased to be ' enabled in announce to our rezid- i " ers thiit 330 liunilics of telegraph wire iirrivcd ii‘. fill}; Thursday lust in lllt‘ inn from Liverpool. ‘This ivirc is intended to connect this Island _ with Cape ‘liiz-rucntiiio in the ‘ shape 0f‘a submarine telegraph i 5nd next spring we understand l, ‘will be ciiificrl fruzn lliist Point a to Newfoniiilliind.“ 1 V. w». Under the direction of the New! York, Newfoundland and London MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1932 believe in the British Empire- Moreover, while he uses the expres- sion “British Commonwealth" he defines it in such a. way Is i0 =1‘- cliide every bond of British union. even the bond, as we have said, of common allegiance to the Crown. So obvious is this omission that ‘our contemporary, while it quotes the Prince of Wales, Lord lvlllner, ,Cclonel Amery and others on the ldcal of a. commonwealth of na- ltions within uic British umpire. docs not again attempt to quote the distinction Ml‘. King 1111115011 draws between Empire and Com- _-.-..i.c-r~ap+-wp¢vm-wprv-.-<-w- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN lIilTtS BY Till: Will’ The Government has made p38 slble a tremendous expansion in cx ports to the United Kingdom of} our natural pcduots and that, iif ' for all, is as much as any govern ment can do. Private initiative and energy must complete the plcsure. _ The experienced. British market r will be content with nothing but} Bi: I'm" w-Bflmi-M-D- the best, and Canada is in a post-l DIET TREATMENT 1N RHEU- tion to meet that demand. But; “Lu-ISM AND AnTl-uurrxs there must be no sharp tricks, n0 packing the big pples on top, no 500011100 01 quam-Y t0 mmPmmTi-cci underlying cause of rheuma expediency. Every person eligligcdjusn‘ was mknowm The", were in P10000195 80005 10*‘ m0 Ummlfmany theories, one of which was K111800111. Everymle ¢0Yl00m°d “m. that it was due to some form of or- packing, handling rid shipifilill. iiilgnuism, 1i Very dliwt 501150 has m0 Ema.‘ That rheumatism followed sore commercial name of Canada with‘? throat was known and it was only in his power. Iiinturiil to lyclieve that the organ- isms from the sore throat caused ‘ rheumatism. ' As a student I learned that the Ten days after Mr. Kink “'11.! d0‘ featPd in I930 in a Caiiurliun gcn- Lattcrly while attempting to find oral election he was our of office,‘ the cause of rheumatism there have his successors were iusiailifll. Hi5 been a gin-at many suggestions as administration accepted ilic voto to treatment some of which un- of the people as an instruction to doubicdly relieve the pain and qulg without tho lczis; delay, and symptoms. While the drug used all in the lntetvening ten days, while ovcr the world now ls sodium sali- Mr. Bennett built the new Cabinet, cylatc, there arc other forms of the Liberals carried out only the treatment other than drugs, that most necessary routine \V0i‘l(-——l’lllldt3 are proving very effective-heat, no appointments, reg n0 Qgntrrlcis, massage, diathermy, electricity, and A Vital ‘Empire Day 111g 3103c, Toronto, iliibcral.) ‘i November 15 is on the calendar of the British Empire 115 a div-B 0i vital moment marking, as it does, the day of Royal assent to the Ot- tawa. trade agreemeents made ,by the United Kngdom, and the auto- matic suspension of preferential treatment for the Irish Free State because no agreement was made. The undertakings of Great B11585" countries, some of which, including Canada, have not yet implemented them. so far as the National Gov- ernment is concerned, Ottawa's job is completed, and the way is opened for commercial expansion within the Empire, the "foundation laid" for closer association and greater intro-Empire development. The Free State is in the anom- alous position of being both in and out of the mnplre. Trade agree- ments were made with some of the Domfrilons on a preferential basis: with Canada for one. Her trade re- lations with the United Kingdom are those of a. foreign country, i188!!!“ which aic levied 10 per Cont. lid valorem duties on mafilliiiciillfed with the Dominlons are in force. subject to approval by the latter} ‘Telegraph Company the stcamcri "mmveanhi which he says i‘ In 15' "Ellen Ciisboruc" arrived with tlie..5“e a5 between the Conservative first submarine tclvgixiph cable. On‘ and Liber“! pmlcies" Like many avoided commitments. A United States admuilsirution gcis cvcn a worse beating than Mr. King 511i- goods, besides heavy duties on cat- tle, poultry, dairy and i108 liwdil¢is~ This unfortunate outcome of the high enemas, or colonic irrigation as it is called. proposed by Right erwsc i; nzziy become their duty to ivitiidiaw the preferential canoe..- flons. | Undoubtedly it was the hype and expectation of the framers of these agreements that the direct trade! benefits would not be the end. This is shown by dscussion of methods of economic co-operatlon. Empire con- tent, and other points requiring more detailed and prolonged con- sideration than could be given at the Conference. Even at this date there is evidence that the spirit of the Conference has taken hold in. a broader way than is required from the details of trade bargains. While not an outcome of the Con- ference program but allied with the idea, a movement is set under way in England for inoperative tradng by food producers and distributors,‘ under the chairmanship of Lord' Stratlispey. It calls for the control throughout the Empire as far as possible, or the production of food- stuffs 1n order to stabilize prices to producer and consumer, promising 20 to»25 per cent. more money t0 the producer without penaiizng the consumer. Although the movement has been in formation for two years, it is somewhat in line with that Hon. Neville 'I'hat food is a factor in causing rheumatism or at least in prevent- qualrel “'5' ‘mmlmes ‘S B‘ blow w Chamberlain when he suggested t0 Tornirniiiie. Company Oil HS the 22nd of November 1852, the end of this cable “T143 landed iiti Cape Having bceni] made fast on the Ezind the cable, was than laid to Carleton Hcadfl Prince Edward Island. l It was the first ocean cable lairli Ind operated in Amcrzca. l "The first operator was Mn‘, Michael Quinlan, und Mr. C, A, Hyndman was appointed the first superintendent, in 1854. ‘The Anglo Aincrlciin Telegraph ilCflulrcd the rights granted the New York, Newfound- land and London Telegraph Co, and Mr. T. C. Jame-s succeeded Mr. Hyndmiin as superintendent in this Island. 1n 1873 a new cable was laid be- tween Cape Tormentine and Cope traverse, In 1913 the ivcsTei-n Union Tele- graph Company took charge of the P. E. Island lines and Mr. James ‘. retired from the office of Super- intcndenf. Ilr- v s succeeded by Mr. A, E. ui Superin- tendcnt. ‘ The Provincial Government of‘ which lion. Mr. Iifathloscn was then lender, éntrriui into iiicgo- tlations with ihe ivcsiern Union Company and the Public Works Department of the Federal Govern- lnent for the purpose of co-ordin- sting to tho extent that was pos- iiblo the telegraph and telephone Services in order that prompt com- municatlon with all the more dis- hint pans of the Province might be obtained, and that night letters, lay letters and other additions to the SOTVlUB might be quickly cle- lptitchcd by telegraph and tele- phone at a minimum of expense. i As s. result oi those negotiations Ind cxtendcil operations including the Bilpiiliv‘ of llll extra four con- ductor cable bctavccn (‘ape ‘for- mentine and Cape ‘li-ii-vcrsc and a‘ two conductor cable ivcizvccn Woodi Islands and Piciou IriTHKl, fast day hlegrams, day lcircrs night 211i d other issues Mr. King has raised, this one probably is not intended to be taken seriously. As leader of His Miijestys Loyal Opposition, however Mr. King must be held responsible for the language he uses when he proclaims his anti- Imperial views. There are other significant cv- idences of the Opposition leader's repudiation of the Empire senti- rrients he expressed so eloquently at the Imperial Conference of I923. Readers will not have forgotten that it was for a. “Co-operative Commonwealth," modelled, as the Prime Minister pointed out, upon government administration in‘ So- viet Russia, that Mr. King and his followers, taking the lead from the to the food products of Canada in‘ Socialist _member for Winnipeg North Centre, voted in opposing the ratification of the Imper- ial Conference agreements, Readers will also recall the Op- position leader's sneering refer- ences at Winnipeg lost January to “economic Imperialism," by which term he chose to designate the aims of the Empire statesmen who were to assemble at Ottawa; also his assertion at that meeting that flCanada must decline to become a subsidiary unit of an Imperial holding Company." mint astonish- ing statement, delivered on the eve of the Imperial Conference in what was recently a centre of Commun- ist activities, has not yet been ex- plained either by Mr. King or by his Dress apologists. Premier Bennett summed up the situation when he declared Mr. King to be a star performer in the dual roles of Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde. At present the I-lyda char- acteristics seem to predommum DESER VED PROMOTION The appointment of Mr. A. V. Saunders to the position of 1n- spector of Pixital Service ln this fered, but under tlic American sys- tem i; remains in offlcc until March 4 next-almost four months. For that. period Mr. Hoover con- tinues President, although the poopl let it b known most mllhiill- cally that they want Ml‘. Rooscvelt. He guides tlic nation nlilioiizh hi‘ and his policies have been rejocvd» with great enthusiasm. ing recovery from‘ rheumatism is now well established. Formerly it was thought that meat was a cause, but now the starchy foods have been found to be more to blame. Drs. R. Pomberton and E. G. Peirce, Philadelphia, believe that food is the principal factor in the succcssfill treatment of a large num- ber of cases of rheumatism, or ar- thritis as it is more generally known. Not, however, that every cuse can be helped by special diet- ing. They have found that by keeping the food intake to the lowest pos- sible amount, to an extent sp- prouching almost starvation, not the United Kmgdow _ only may the active symptoms of from duties now loielled, oi hereq nmmms subside but them may be an“ immsed‘ ‘hny “mud be WOT also im absorption of the exudatcs pared u’ 3° ‘mmter m“) ‘he s“b_‘ioi' deposits around the joints, even 39°?’ and mdeaw)" to gwe to the l when these joints have become quite British manufacturer some lncrcas-|Sufi_ ed advamaim ‘m’? his imrelgn “m” In arthritis thcrc may be a. wast- peuwrs in the mmkcts °f Cmauiiig away of the bony surfaces of ‘my This ‘is “Xacny the 5mm’ mi the joint, or- there may be deposits that has be?“ "catcd 5V the ‘m’ about these surfaces. In both con- psrial trade agreement b."f\\.'i‘(‘l'l Canada and Britain. Had Sir Wil- frid Laurier lived to sch 111i". (lay he would have understood that. his hopes had bccn realized and ilicr: 3am“, of me is no doubt that the COIlSiEJiPIICY ofl Cause the n-oubh, his wen-point on tariff maticrsm-un-ius have would have led in his SllDDilYZ ofii,nl,,-o\-cnicnt by lessening 111s {Wfllles iivilviiiiivd oi iii? Im-iaiuount of fnod eaten. The vita- porial Conference. ‘Tliril. i/ifl, i tliQ i miiis, those elements in food which viewpoint of many Libools \ still believe in the Luuicior iitiiiudc‘ affect/int! Imimllfll ll1'0f0TFilCY‘-"' i sufferings of rheumatic patients. The Vctorla Daily Colonist. The late Sfr Wilfiid Laurlrr in 1902 said: “If the Canadian minis- ters could be assured that the Im- perial Government would acccpi the principle of preferential trade generally, and pziriiciilaisly grant ‘exemption starvation process has given bene- ficial results. It is thought that [ITOCOSSCS experienced to cut down on the do so; ment. Bombay Times‘. is advantageous- to India. not in the sense that ivliai she gains is greater than what she she has gained are solid and sub- stantial advantages. What India has given in icturn can be given without detriment to any riiiiinnal interest. The preferences extruded to Britain do not involve a depar- ture by a. hair's breath from the, established principles of Indian tariff policy. - Nation a1 Ideals (Mall and Empire) In an article entitled contributed to Queen's Quarterly The election of Pscsldcnt Rouse- velt has been hailed ivilh enthus- iasm in Japan. The Japanese gen- ‘ boon infiiicnved by Ontario. eraily assume that the Democrats] Far Eastern altitude than ivcro the doing without vitamins lessons the which Persons with sharp the ‘i110 make foods do better work in the body, sccni to actually increase the ' Tllf‘ diet treatment then is simply entire food The Oil-ova azrrcmmt. sax.- thcliiiinirc ici- as long as it is safe to a sort of starvation treat- givcs, but in tllq sense thag, whaflschool. Readers And "School Readers As An Educational Force," ‘President Fox, of the University of Western Ontario, attempts a partial explanation of the character of the people of this province and of those in the western provinces who have For about twenty years iit the be- wlll be more conciliatory in their-shilling of the nineteenth century s. igrent mnny of the schools of the United States and‘ of English-speak- Free State trade, the end of which cannot be forseen unless it lJTlDBS pressure on de Valera for a more favorable attitude toward Great Brita/n. The Free State's great m0?‘ ket for cattle and most of the other commodities affected we; in England. On the other hand, more than 80 per cent. of the Free ‘scheme undertaken. the Committee on Monetary Affairs at Ottawa "the regulation of supply rather than of importation Into the United Kingdom," and promised the cooperation of the United Kingdom delegation in the promotion of any Thus it may be. theidca of Em- pire co-operation will eXlNind Y0 1T1- States imports came from Great Brltan The general result is a, dis- location of trade both ways be- tween countries whose commercial interests heretofore have been complementary. The Daminions. however, which regard the Free State us still wthln the Empire, evidentiy have hopes that the itroucle with the National Govern- ment will be settled amicably; oth- clude many problems not speclfcal- ly laid down in the agreements. This iscertaln to be the outcome once it is firmly understood that the welfare of the Empire units is of concern to the whole Empire. Royal assent to the bills at Westminster mean; more than the implementing of agrements. It means soildfying; I the Empire 7n promotion of tlhe COIHIYIOII 681139. First Supreme Court Of The Dominion (Fred wurrms. in the Toronto Mall and Empire). _ On this date (November B) in dltions this reduction of food or 18.15 the Supremecourt o! Canada Hon. Tclesphore mummy’ and Hon- was formally organized. The 80¢ creating the court had received the royal assent in lip-ii. the convivi- mcnts were made during the sum- mer, ancl on November 8 the nom- inees go the new court met in the Senate chamber their offices. Hon. W. B. Rfchards, selected as —< to iiie method of the McGufIey ser- ies, President Fox thinks that pos- of a certain moderation which has become one of our Canadian traits. The Fourth Reader is particularly illuminating. Strictly speaking it ls not Canadian at all. but rather cos- mopolitan, with strong rsmiitlscen- ces of the British Isles. Its tone ls seriously religious and moralistic, but not maudlin. It emphasizes the importance of a wide range of in- . formation. Compared with the Mc- Gufley readers it exhibits balance, of the United States. "Surely it is not straining the imagination to see to be sworn of had been Attorney-General in the sibly we can see in them the origin l H ‘Judge Ritchie. a native of historic ‘ restraint and completeness, and is the very opposite of" nationalistic. President Fox thinks this accounts in large part for the fact that Can- adians in general have today a bet-w ter “foreign sense" than the people in these readers the source of a. iProvince is one which will give letters were wppiicil spool-iii ‘ ' ‘ l i , , . T0095 and T00R03’ vias irruisfcrrcdigencra 5a lstactlon Mr snundus fll Republicans. Hope for stable trace in Manchuria ls, to that extent, in- creased. The sliuafon in lifanclinr- number of our present Canadian virtues and deficiencies." ‘ lug Canada used the same series of renders, those compiled by the fam- Gliief Justice, who had been sworn a. month before, administered the loath to the pulsne judges in in" order: Hon. William Johnston-Rh chic, Hon. somuel Henry Stroriz Hon. Jean Thomas Taschereau William Alexander Henry. They were a tYuly representativt body of leaders in the law in the Canada of that day. Chief Justice Rfchards, botn at Brockville in 1815, HllICKSMOIlII administration in E1850, was appointed judge ‘of Ccm- ' inon Pleas of Upper Canada in I853 became Chief Justice of that cour‘ 1863, and Chief Justice of Ontario .1368; he was knighted in 1878, To fired in 1879, and died in 18B? Annapolis, where he wr-as born in‘ ‘i813, had been educated at the fr‘ mous Plciou Academy, had been M. L. A. for Saint John, 1846-51, pulmo- judge of the Supreme Court of N:w Brunswick, 1885, and Chief Justice of that court, 1865; he was the sc- oond Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. in 1879, was knighted in I881, retired in 1891, and died the following your. Judge strong was bom’ in Dor- setshirc, Eng, iii 1825. came w Ca- nada in his you‘h, was called to the bar of Upper Canada when 24 years old, was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Ontario, 1869, and was transfer- red to the Court of Appeal, 1874: he was the third Chief Justice of Canada, 1892-1902, iviis knighted, 1905, and died 1909. Judge J. T. by telegraph to and from all parts of the world. On the retirement of Mr. Ziforris- on in 1924. Mr. J. M Murlcv iViiS‘ - i jromotcd to manager. I Since 1029 the service has been, operated by the Dominion Govern. lnent as the Canadian National Tclegmphs, The past eighty _Vi"IlT.'; have seen? grout progress in iiio (IPVPIOIJIIIODE of the teLgraph service as well as of other means of communication and iffllifilxlrtniion. n ls fitting, however, at this anniversary to rc- call the substantial achievement of the pioneers who first linked Prince Edward Island with the mainland and dcmonstratcil the praciicnbll. lty of the first submarine cable on tliLs continent. JEKYLL AND HYDE ' Our local contemporary quotes uuihorills-s in an endeavor to jus- tify Mr, Miickrnzic King's declared , nnil-linperiiiiism, but it is slgnff. . icaiit that iii the statements quot- ed the crzprcssion "British Empire" crops up rcpcriicdlv; and Mr. King has practically grown up with the postal department. He hes had over tivcnty years continuous service, three of which were spent in ,France with the Canadian Postal Corps attached to the lsi; Comm. fan Division. Since the war Mr, Saunders has been directly con- ncctcd with the Postal Inspector's Department and since 1924 has been assistant to Inspector when. ll:- is therefore thoroughly familiar with his new duties, Mr. Whear, who retires from the Post Office Inspectorship next March and who is now enjoying an extended holiday, has set, a standard of thoroughness and ef- ficiency in the service throughout the Province which we are sum his successor, Mr. Saunders wli. satisfactorily maintain, EDITORIAL NOTES MP- X11183 grievance against the Conservatives is that they are Em- pire builders. There is good news for the people o.’ Bpr-‘nshili. N. s. in the lfl- ncuncement that operations are to expressly declares that he docs not begin early in December to develop la is a fact. Japan is in complete possession, and shows no inclina- tion to lot go. Such being the arise. there are but ilircc ways of iit- Renovation of Canadian and United tempting to stabilize matters. Ja- ‘ States citizens solidly laid the foun- pan might be forced out, induced , diiiloiis of their intellectual and to get out. or allowed to stay in on ‘ moral life on the same English stan- tcrms acceptable to China. No pow- diirds. The differences between the Zr or group of powers .5 in a posi- iwo national groups were ail-no“ on to force Japan to ciacuaicwvholly differences in politics that gllflllCllilflil. There ain't be pence, had been magnified by the bitter- y conciliation if China 1s to no.1 M55 of armed 5mm The ma, db ous griimatlcal authority of-Eng- land, Lindley Murray. This meant that tiigygrciit-granrlfathors of this ‘my 00mi>0i1$0i10fl 1'01‘ h" 105'?‘ vcrgencc 1n manner of thought and “EMS- . attitude towards life began about, ‘ 1820, with‘ the lntlbdll ti l’ t There is not much to be saffl msuncuvely United stfitetagmei‘: ‘ n about the British and I-‘rcuch move} the Mcmmey series“ several decades to reopen war debt dlscusslons| late, Canada tumed away ‘mm the with the Unicd States on a gent-roll patch o! smelly English education basis that liiis not already has-n and blazed a new "a" by adapting said a score cf times. The Allies; and cream"; certain new types o! have obllgingly waited until that“, books‘ United States elections “TH! over, - not because they exprct morc from: dcxffltafreinrrirt: gingigfizgtes one president than from anotherhwas distinctly nationalism m’: e but because the domestic upset of M“ i, was quite otherwm; whm‘ a. presidential ciccilon is no time in} m m“ Egermn Ryerson ‘ en‘ insinuate international affairs of a,polnu_.d'supermtendent “w: ap- controvcrslal nature. Even now the‘ “on he tamed Mt u duca- time is no; altogether propltlousfaruash Isles to find “my "° m” Mr. Hoover, is apparently chlllhgknew school books Ir: Zlvs for his Mr. Roosevelt into consultation andi but,” w“ h” ‘reads; lancgngi; the situation would not brook much? ‘urmer delay‘ method she had successfully worked No. 4 mine. this “involving an as- Bl claims of catholic and 9mm‘ for the next half century." out for harmonizing the education- tant. A s f surancc of the fuiurc of that townl mam crfsmarlziiszrag?‘ 31123:: The Rycrson readers were the first to be authorized which even re- motcly deserve the name of Canad- ian because they were the first de- signed to lnstll definitely national ldas into Canadian youth. Their genuine need may be seen in o. sur- vey of the earlier text books as well as in the words of leaders of Con- adian thought during the period Just prior to Confederation. The Third Reader shows the influence of McGufley, the inevitable effect of v-Olilflilillby- As the series advance the influence of the United States becomes less uul icuous and that of Canada greater. The Fourth Res- der continues the good work of fan- ning the flame of patriotism, but without adding the flery heat of Jingoism that emanates from the pages of McGuffey. One of its great merits is that it trained the gener- ation in Ontario that preceded our; i° “k0 it 101' floated that a. sincere love of one's country ls not neces. sarily inconsistent with a. high m. lord for the real worth of other countries. President Fox concludes that this "WY MI biwsht to him a keen conviction of the paramount power of the common school reader as a potential shaper of national thought and character. Who the makers of our readers are becomes, therefore, 0 "10"" 0f Brent national import. T0000". B-nd is in glaring contrast "100- Taschcrcau (he must not be con- founded with Henri Elzear Tasch- ci-eau, who succeeded him and was Chief Justice, 1902-06) had been a Judge c-f Queen's Bench of Quebec Iuntil called to the Supreme Court. He only remained at Ottawa for three years, then retired into pri- vote life in Quebec. He had two eminent sons, Henri T.. who be- came Chief Justice of Quebec, and bouls Alexandre, the present Pre- mier of Quebec. Justice Fournler had been long in political life; born in 1824, he was a Journalist, s. Lib- eriil leader in Lower Canada, M. P. _ wo- __ “OVHZMBER 21, iindependence. '- HUI OFFICE! District Manager for Cameron Block, Danger Line-fi-Age 40! FTER middle age men divide into two classes -the dependent and the independent. _ Your position in later years will not be determined by the amount of money you have earned, but by 0 the amount you have raved. The deciding factor 1s what you rave. An investment of fifty cents a day ‘in Endowment Insurance is the sure road to . an: I Manuracrunnns‘ Lin: INSURANCE QOMPANY B. H. HUGHES r IOIONIO. Cllllbl Prince Edward Island Charlottetown iiiciczvciuciioison’: BLACK TWIST TF©AC<ZC€© OWNERSHIP Love not a loveliness too much, For it may turn and clutch you so, That you be less than any serf, And at its bidding go, Be master; otherwise you grow Too small, too humble, like to.onc L0H! uispossessed, who stares through tears At his lost house across the s. Wild carrot in an old fiefcl thcrc, A steeple choked with music there, Possess, as part of what is yours; Thus prove yourself the heir, Your bnrony ls sky and land, From morning's star to the night's close; Bend to your need Orlon's hoimda, Or the thin fagot of ii rose. -Llzetts Woodworth Reese 0J4. Lampson8r0o. LTD. 84 Queen Street London, E. C. l, England for Bellechasse, 1870, Minister of Inland Revenue, 1873, Minister of Justice, 1874, and Postmaster Ge -| oral, 1875; he remained with the Supreme Court until 1895 and died in 1896. Judge Henry was the re- presentative of Nova. Scotiu, of which he had been Solicitor Gen- eral, 1854, Provincial Secretory. 1863, and Attorney General, i868: he was a Father of Confederation, having been a delegate to ghe Que- bec conference; he died in 1888. Although the Supreme Court of Cilfihdl. is now a7 years old. it has‘ only had seven Chief Justices: Bir William Richards, 1875-79; 8h‘ William Ritchie, 1875-91: Bir Bam- uel Strong, 18924902; Bir Henry ll. Tarchereau, 1902-08; Sir Charles Fitzpatrick, 1906-18: Bli- Louis Da- vlcs, 1918-24, and the present chief,§ Rt. Hon. I‘. A. Anglin. Public Auction Sales RAW FlIliS Dates of Silver Fox sale; to he held in London 12 December 1982 23 January 1983 ll March 1933 22 May 1833 27 September I938 Shipping bags may be ob- tained free of charge upon application to It. T. Holman, Ltd" Summeralde. For lull particulars In ra- garil to packing. shipping, in- surance and conditions ol Isle, apply to Alfred Fraser, Inc- Ill Filth Avenue, New York. N. Y, “‘-~;,.r i". . u DDERTR w“ "i" hi‘ H h 5 U M Ag” Mgililzliit 087 nii: P, iii" Max Pastor's Society Beauty Aids Created by lilux Factor. Hollywood's make-up genius. who for many years has been chief cosmctieian to the screen and stage profession. 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