p41,‘ penny,‘ I, ...£‘_-.,j4_.~‘ -. . .. . \. unusual...» .v‘§.--..... vIr-l-e-unl-u-tll tr ma; 323G333; - Zibtslnlhg a echo‘ ”".' "Iron-autumnal t" v ‘within, the Carnegie ‘PAGE B. ._ ,_ . Qi I. in‘ Iikrblalllt-Ofl. an: cum A »r.n=:=::uvt'-*'** Illlll _ - jflaq- Dhadflhd I. krleQ I-I-I. 1.3-" Ialiur and Ill. Oilfi- flai- ".i‘!l‘___ t»- “7- CARNEGIE GRANTS ‘P! i d; m ma: hrlletin a the Do- ~mlnimmneauotatatlstce¢ivesa luminary of the remit d! I-ll Cl!" Wmgie Corporation for 1m which ,,hofspedallnte invewotthc llrary demonstration inaugurated ' last year in the Province under " o1 a Carnegie grant. M mtst "'01 our readers am aware, the headquarters oi the corporation an in New York, where is admin- , grayed g, gpeclal fund set apart b1 — Andrew Carnegie, the Immdel‘. 101' _ the British Domnlons and Colon- _- }es. The report cf the Corporation ‘for 1X33 records the appropriation a! about £150,000 from tlrs iund b: the advancement of education- -»~al activities in Canada. The great- "Tlr part of the sum gces t0 the "riuilding up of university and col- lege libraries, and to the endow- mQnL o! some of those institutLolls, Fgilbut sums are included for the ad- ._.izancement of public activities and Tether forms oi educational servzc- “fee for the ordinary citzen. IIZJThere is $60,000 for the inaugur- ....ation o! a public library servzce to ---'cevar the whole of Prince Edward “Island. A similar service in the Valley o1 Britsh Columbia was introduced as a demonstration in 1960, at a cost oi’ 8100.000 to the "fiarncgie Corporation over a five- ._,.year period. There is aim $18900 ~---tg the 1933 EPDIOPIAUODI to be “""lppli€d toward the training of lb- “ The report on Canadian library conditions and needs by a " ‘Communion of three Canadian iibrariarls was completed and pub- lished during the year and is being iguana by the ‘Ihlstees roi- their .._.guldance in grantng further aid " ‘to library development. is also made in the appropriations for subsdizlng Canadian museum programmes to tho extent of 840.- 000, in accordance with some of the recommendations put forward Ln the survey of Canadian u. ums film. was made in mo: by Sir . _. Henry Mien and S. F. Markham. . ,. More strictly w.thin the field of radult education, the report records ‘ the completion of a. survey o! workus‘ education throughout the ‘ggnritish Empire. This survey was made by m». o. o. o. Douie of “flniversity College, London, who allied all o! the Dominicans. The repay is still in confidential form, 5pc u being studied by the Trus- UU.AnlTNitnrldetotheWork- on’ mutational Aaaociatlon of 0n- hrlo a few years aao was exhaust- 'Iala1@,batflieruport0ithe Anocisekm m: 19:0 records that _ pl. Donia was very appreciative o! . wort that the Ontario W. I". A. " "' I doing. ‘lhmib lie medium of the Am- _-~ clean Aaaodation for Adult Edu- lane-guard aalledlll) Jafll-yttllalvllea ) finds to tale a number of Oana- lan eduoatlonista w the Bcandin- aeian countries in the last tum manners, to study the BPOVISAYII made there for adult education. Dmmart, Bweden and Norway are recognised la having much to teach the Western nations in this re- spect, especially in educational provision for the rural population h their folk hllh lchools, Ghdlo ‘who had the distinction of under the terms oi’ the Carnegie ‘rant .in this connection was Professor Lloyd Shaw, at Prince o! Wales College. In addition to sharing in the Carnegie benefactions above noted, this Province, through the instru- mentallty of the Provincial Minis- ter of Educator: m co-cperstion with all’ educational authorltil and officials of the Corporation, also obtained the magnifi- WM Filli- 0! $15,600 for the endowment of a chair of eoonom. la and sociology in Prince of III- malladh Provlsionflm IIIIILI, IiUAIY l. UM- thaaama, to poundm h (lraledpotlliytblflwnh, tartoldcenfqonelU perdoaemandonhaytolb tomwoolwtofloentaa potatoesfloflltaperlfl orrlsfll: ‘I mutton I farm woduets, fish and moot forest products were practically shut out 0f t& United StItU market, but ' ‘the King Government, so fat as is known, made no protest. When the Bennett Government N reached power importation o! fann products of the United States info Canada was greater than our ex- portation to that country. On the per head basis Canada was buying something like twenty times as much from the United States as the people of that country were buying 1mm us. The Bennett G07- emment declared that ii the United States would not trade on fair terms the beet policy would be to meet iarlfl with tarii! and ll a result our importation: of turn products from the United States were reduced to less than half and in some eases to less than a fifth of their former proportions. At the lame time Premier Ben- nett and colleague: wmt to 1on- don and urged tha adoption o! the policy of mutual preferential trade within the llnpire. They were not ‘ "‘,luoceashllbutat the Ottawa conference, which follow- ed in 1. the policy o1 preferen- tial Empire trade was adopted by Great Britain, all the Dominions and molt oi the Colonies. As a re- we sea train loam o! Canadian products pasing over the Canadian NI-tlonal avery week this winter for other part4 of the hnpire and train loads of Empire products landed ll H5111‘! Dleainl over the read for all parts o! Canada. When it comes to the testing POlnt fllfle fin belittle dolbt as to Ihith volley will be vmrenea by the people of Canada. SIMPLE]! THAN NOW From its filq of thirty-six year's 88°- i-he St. John's (Newfound- land) a ‘em-am recalls that the ofler oi the Br-itish Government to send a Oouanlnion to Newfound- land to ' i", its \ costume- and ru financial ma» lems was rejected by the Assembly olf 1%. “It i-I when." are the at. John's Diner, “to disarm the les that mliht hllve been averted and the Pwmflity flint mlcht have result- ed i! the opportunity aflorded had beenseisedatthattlmenug mm can be little question tint the ht fedna the Cunsriisslonerl at that tine would have hem im- t 111N111!" than it is to day. Tafiling the quqflm; g m. dmtrial development then, the Ovmlninlonen would have found a clear field in which to operate; forest lands, to all [intents and 11119059! Vlfilll Ind unencumbe ed: water power: and mineral m”, Wm v-M by Ineculstom the "W"?! Ilminding in fur and 811M. I Nlble unafleaed by the “Infill-lino: methods first have been inknical U the Dir-it of in- flvbmdenoe, and the mountainous Qi-ulli-lflllllflmeasauehaa lllbd f")!!! ‘hut tqflmg, lflwmpetemv. and need" _Al h‘ a BOURASSWS TRIBUTE beenarnemberofthellouuo o: Commons for many 3111M m; timehewaasl/berahbugpdlate Wmhe haabeen independent. fibeaklnlintireheulaafew day! AJoMInBotlrIQpaIdthelbnpy- in: i-flmte w Prime armam- nea- vprrut. csnamrvmphnaa-aaaatau tmtbahaaadfinflefaloda ; 1W0 roucms ' fllflw-Idhevnuaesnalca ; .___._. daalfloflfilnaruqj lnlraaaluanyranicaamwm the Ienrlnouramotllonmalhaa l.’ at ‘=5 §=i=§?§§E g5; gigs?“ s! ' 5‘ would help lo develop both these, which should be of value as the Dominion increases in industrial. commercial and financial stature. Iiitaeatabliahnlentls notsthing to a-row wildly enthusiastic about, lt is certainly worth watching with interest, as it sets about perlorm- lng the functions with which it is being lnvwed by Parlament-Jrhe Auckland Weekly News. Almoet llmnltaneorhly Great Bri- tain and Italy lwve made public their new armaments proposals. Both Governments suggest conces- sions to Germany on condit-on of herreturntoGenevaandLheDis- armament Comer-once. The lnndon memorandum makes an effort. to reconcile German and Preach de- manda. wlilinsnm s enwweed to proceed further in providing guar- antees of security to France. As re- gards Germany a ‘basis oi oom- pmmise" is put forward which, it la adnitted, falls short o! an idea-l arrn ‘ Th9 ,_ r ll WOi-lld concede to the Reich Government stipulated rights o! Iftdlu-l rearin- ament. 1mm plan is meta dedu- rte, it being suggested that Ger- many mould be permitted, under a six-year convention, to bring her army strength up to 800,000, while France retains all her armament!- Slgnor Mussolini also provides a place {or the funotmning of his pet roux-Power Pact. The proposals do not seem to have been received with marked enthusiasm anywhere. and, in the view o! some observers, alreunlikelytobeeflectiveaam effort to "lave Geneva." Addressing the Ieiehstag at Ber- lin one ya: from his LSILIDPUOII or Germany, claimed three trite-l merits for his reslme, one was that it hsd rescued Germany from the ‘ it was ti» “ w-th as a result-oldie partisan bickerini and comrplaon of its public leaders in the year; following the war. The second was that it had rescued- the nation from economic suflomtion. The third was that it had warded 0.1 the menace of Communism and re-establishe’ Germany on a ‘baa-a oi new national ideals. Hitler's vio- lent attat: on the Mo shows conclusvely that the Hohenr aollerns have nothing to hope f the new regime. His political < gram manifestly does not con -. plate a restoration of the lwinnmw. The enthusiasm with which is speech was received by the m - bers of the Reichetag shows ‘fie grip he has on the destinee o! the country. Using the forms oi demo- cracy, Hitler is as complete 4nd unrestrained a dictator or Germany ll Mussolini is of Italy. Possibly the moat effective can in; without. aha yet this is b t a negative remedy. Much be flt mhht abo be derived from the cul- tivation of the things which e for happiness. we mght profi iy 5 2 i r i 5 l‘ melanoma the other day. "Bill" i fourdosenroaaapictsd out ooualonalnrnatlonaalleart E i. ‘$55K? $252552; us: ll till "i; mended a reserve hank suggested it i‘ or omoe. Adolfl lrliltler, Cilanoeilor ' concentrate on such pleasant con- n aylvaula Station. Iii at home with m, rocmved a large box contain- ‘m, 5 F i; ‘figs tE§5§5?‘§ E2 ' E? E255 tgifzié fiili E E i l 5E Eéiiiiilliii s_E?§é§E, little? i; Eiiiéiiifii .t= §r§r§$§§5l8 m: become ouplaee. Health is as important from the social point of view as from the individual, so that Eiiiiiiligi“ zit a iii Etgi 122i i l? ii l? oor- snob at Kin:- floflilll o! wis- ggggégggréat E53 i. E it ll: " oi the enquiry has will é i Z 5E i 555% s E" r is it E sion ends that they are forced give up their course. Just as long as the qrirltclman must live or be housed in the human body, jastsolongmustthatbodybe kept at its best i! the spirit ll to be hampered or interfered with in its work. hnandtdonolmsince onlynow rag? 5&3? douthPolesyuuwill notice the ohanaa in the climate. At the Ihuator it is very hot, and when youaraurpinthepoletl-retanper atureleeisctideryandxyouget moreu-ptho pollyou will feel colderandoolder. yo]? HIIJTAG "Llllfl 0d llfltllb dlld Illlllhldd l arousefulforwhenyouarelmt Tobeapoetistobetormted 7mm°""h°"7°“"'- Byjprdlejyflimmiggddg, "lhflilloffllghtsaaldthatne all-e‘, man could be thrown .nto Parlia- Uncsptured fancies, droamiuphm mint without trial. This was a invented, coat with forward in tbs world- flretteasemdbmntltemlndlle wMdBrMm-lwfiee- quencltleunrn. "lady Jane Grey sat m the Itistogmpeinanmlahforaword tbu-nlorafew days only, and lbbringwannbeautyfromaneet- whenqlsecnlliaabetlaremovedber lnlelrth; andshawaaeaeouted aha died Tosnareatonehaliatrlsohasong pyqiglhadgg-ryeayqlgyq; 31mm bsveaarvedme yeuwonid have Andsuflerallthesearinllllflilofggmqgqmguqo, Wm- "Hmcaa Illlllllllfllfillfllll IfltPl-IIIIO .rthitflnfzellkepasdzmnuutyaquu¢mf.mmmkmgwt Alldlifilenzrifllmdthdblfldhbilfl- loan" M“. m ' , eouldoomewl inllvemiieaolhlr To ahaguiltlleflrxgds despair. its “n”, “flu w!" h‘ ‘wed m‘ Andbeawyior- every dumbdls- win", mhmdno “ma-mt tress; ' Toseelmmortel lishvaprmldmya- mdijl‘; terlea, - And}; “.1 _RIIIIII$NHIUIIMIES pifimLfn ° “m” "m “a Defective Velblsonewhlcb __A1mu°uh|asoaldantallyloatalvmeo( its ln ulllialamw “Ibtbe ofthsmetarait Hadrianb Aqueduct w- wwaew. a a» m» a- u» the organ of the University Cor’ llrlv 11 due to his foresight in providing for his eoldsrs‘ needs in advance.) _ the firm stand "I will do i £5555 E 5 is i their native country-a very sig- nificant fact. ‘m any student ol hidory, thing is very noticeable, and that is, that never in any ease. "education" of xsel! prove a salva- corlcerned. Gmce is an mitstand- in: example oi this lamp-they be- came so very highly educated that they became lost in a male of their llisatlon is slowly drilling lntd the same condition, we are not sure a- bout anything, w be oandid—we see both aides of the argument too easily, and we are not convinced of anything-education, ct a Qttih kind. has caused this uncertainty. Education will never save map kind from anything or for any- thing, untll we recognize yna main truth. and that is-that education must be coupled with a training in Christian character, and must be auxiliary w religious leaching and should, in no case, be given the paramount place. By‘ Christian character, I mean, the proper dl- . velopmelit of a czharaoter along the Christ-like llfe—a reverence f .- God and s development of kind- ness, sympathy with suffering ht- ahity, charity in all things, and a determination t0 place Christ first, —-the ability to ask ourrelvq the question, {What would Christ have acted like in this situation?" And s. lleuulreniacmaci CBTIIIID PUIHO dalvsnulv socrlr! or cos‘! ACCOUNTANTQ ooauussroun 10a rasnvd srrmavrm m rm; scram: oouar or r. a. l. r. a. l. IIPIIIIITATIVI rrr: CANADIAN cams; aaaars nun association. ran-ran. can: or nova scone nounnvo cassuonrrowrr, r. s. r. I NBIIZI- P. 0. BOX 8i. Aoocarstlagayateanopanadlpalldravhed. Labernvllsgoflieaielybfifivhllad. Ooatleeendraglmtitdlllelllspoafilreqairemmu lurthlyqaartalyaarlannaalaldita. Balaaoarheebsnlhndtanllmlccolaiapawd naoelaeTaxroturnawr-ittmapandlhl, Iwndalarrangarsenfa undo bdwei debtor and United Unblllty Companies Incorporated. ‘III-BYRON! 137 6. 146 Richmond St, T5. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass ‘Insurance H at Lowest Rate. elAggent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown m. the theologians arm and dl-V bate over "dogma" but let us by n‘ all means ever remember Christ's answer to the lawyer as to the great mmarldmentzte paraphrase His “Love God-and the second is like unto the first, and is ‘ therefore of large importance, love‘ your neixhbor as yoursell." It is said that our present civil- isation is breaking up-I say let it break, because m 1t first things have not been placed first-our educational institutions have plac- ed dry theories before the young, instead o! ever and always em- flhazing Christ and his teachings. Who. in looking over the holocaust of European politics, among edu- cated Inen-would dare to suggest that education would save any thing-rather it ls a positive dang er union controlled by Christian principles. This world will never haveanything approaching perfec- tion until we, each and every one, detarmine to make our country, whichever it may be, a Christian state, in fact, and not in word only, as heretolor. I am Sir. etc, HAIIINGTON YOBSTON. THAT GREAT LIGHT eta-m that dladem of Civic Rqxma, that, o! the mectrical 1h- , it would be unkind negletfi to pus with neither admiration or critciam those lumincill jewels, (ew but rare, by which it is studded. ‘Bide not, the light under a bushel, nor divert, ita ofiulgrnce into the altadtwy P58¢bn holes of eold ator- age forgetfulneaa. Ikrlerg rig from that vbtcrioua contest with Mr. Donaldson we film him holdini "P the following gun, reflecting from different an:- lea the daydream of conjecture, the dictum of fact, the illogtc of reasoning and the darn; of ero- isrn; please give it study:- "There are still over two thousand meters mlnlrd up in his way in I ' ~=omoxs. I iv time. Clocks guaranteed. L... i-u_u_- _ .And how lortunate it was that it was sol It was a midnight nre and the blowing o1 that iuse shutt n; of nelglboring lights was the lire warning bringing the firemen to the some. thus by promptuess saving 1mm greste dea:ructinn- perhaps the entire block. ‘What wouldhavabeentbodsssteritilad beenotherwise And ifastbere- 11011 declare there are two thous- and of these in the City. i! they an dangerous what is inspection for? isn't it tune for another o! thaae valor-nus attacks upon the Quxote windmill? Inspection ia supposed to elflnin- ate danger. m practice it t: M times the reversal ncreasing dan- iSomeihingNew WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A SHIP- HENT CONSISTING 0!‘ TWELVE DIITER- EH1.‘ MODELS 0F CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC TELECHRON E L E 0 T R I0 As the Maritime Electric 00., Ltd, have recently installed a. master clock in their Power House in Charlottetown and'we are now re- ceiving what is known as regulated frequency current, Electric clocks are accurate and gov- erned by the Master clock, will keep perfect , We invite your inspection of these beautiful 1 models and whether you wish to purchase or not, we will be glad to allow them. Our new line includes Mantel type, Kitchen, Boudoir Dressing Table, Desk or Electric Alarm. All Chappell & Company * Electrical Contractors, 178 Grafton It. i . m It is believed that Krilbsiiu? Will be pruent in greater numbe in the Nicola Valley, B. C. this y aha that much poisoniml work " the egg beds will have to be don next spring. Radio llot Working MacIMSTER Eafllslk HI Kali Si. on levelw Phone Ml- , coups z PIIQO nfl elective N!“ u cum-a a can» W“ a n W -"'=-.-u..°"ii‘ his anldmlflll‘ ‘lac’: Syrup TIP