_._..PAGE FOUR fillfilll-QTIETIIW" ""55""! ' l._ lelran, I P. Yloo-Iroelllll. ll. Darla“. I-I-I- floarolalT-Lllnll-Col. pa. Ieellnaol, 2.0m. 4| In“ Direehr—J.I. lunch, II]. 11235:; lithium-grant Walker all D-l. ‘Currie. Notes By The Way There are a number of fallacies which are accepted by the PR5!“ _ generation and which pass without ~-. - - much protest. Perhaps it would be - -~ - better‘ if more frequently a. check ° . o - - w i - . - ‘*1 ‘Te’ yifflfie ,Haberdaslz,ery,_.’..’ _ , Incident-E? . r 1a m" I" ...._._a.l_s...__...zsaznaa.sm.s>aa.s-a.-. ‘ ‘ . -.-1*=1s-.‘~"~'2"-‘ I V were winter, loss and inconvenience .00 I!!! (ll MIVIBI) I are‘: us? PQQ‘;IO,II“:I:IIEK.IEIIIE:1))E“IAIOG You“; and United FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1934. iwALruY PREJUDICES . £19. his preface to a volume of ar- ‘ltles on contemporary 221131111111. published a few years ago, Dean Inge wrote: “I have tried to be undid; I have made no attempt whatever to be impartial. I love my country dearly . . .” Few writers, and perhaps fewer readers, have given thought to the distinction thus aptly drawn be- tween candid and impartial state- ment of a personal point of view. Impartiality in such cases is achiev- ed only when the writer is at lzeart indifferent, to the issue involved. Even Lord Bacon fell into the error of advising, in his “Advancement until after the election. We n18!‘ reasonably hope to be able to rec- ord a larger inflow of British cap- ital to Carlsda by next Domnion clay." - EDITORIAL NOTES Still room and time to tidy 11P- Busines better than usual has been the slogan this week. San Francisco's general strike has petered unsuccessfully out, though the leaders would fain have us be- lieve the spoil is with the strikers. Quite a hub-bub in Toronto cf learning," that men ought to talc; “an impartial view" of theiri own abilities and virtues-a sug-i gestlon quite impossibfe of fulfil-i merit. This is one of the rare in- i stances where substitution of an- other word would have improved Bacon's meaning. Newspapers are sometimes cen- sored for’ being partial editorially. to one or the other political party. The fact is that they cannot be otherwise if they hold any fixed’ political principles. Their duty to their readers is candidly to avow guch principles in their editorial columns, to present both sides fair- ly but by no means indifierently to the merit of the questions at issue. ' Modern times have seen the rise of such anomalies as the "independ- ent" newspaper, meaning thereby a. paper which might be described as Mpolitical invertebrate, with no decided views as to whether, for example, the policies of the Ben- liett Government are beneficial or otherwise to Canada. These papers occasionally parade their so-called freedom from party prejudice, and by straddling every controversial is- Buaseek-after the manner of some of our politicians at Ottawa on Lire Marketing Bill-to curry fav- our with all and give offence to none. Their object cannot bei achieved with readers who them- selves have any fixed principles or opinions; who, like Dean Inge, “love their country dearly" and hold it no virtue to be impartial where they believe their country's inter- ests are concerned. l BADLY NEEDED ft will be welcome news to our Jbtato growers and shippers to learn that among the Dominion contracts let for unemployment relief is the heat ng of the potato warehouse on the Railway Wharf, Charlottetown. The contract has been awarded to Messrs. Bruce stewart and Company, Limited. ,'I‘he cost, which is about $3,500, in this case will constitute a real economy as well as provide work for a deserving local firm. Last year, and in fact during every sev- were experienced by rcascn of lack of heatng facilities in the potato warehouse. The neglect to install this equipment when the warehouse was rebuilt is now about to be rem- -Qdied. The contract calls for the installation of a. low pressure heat- ing system and the construction of a small boiler room adjoining the warehouse, the work to be complet- ed early this fail. "‘NEXT_ DOMINION DAY” “Canada? that excellent weekly flournal published in London, Eng- land, has been following with in- creasing optimism this country's emergence from the worid depres- wlth Mayor Stewart pulling one way and Premier Hepburn an- other. It will be a miracle if the Communists do not get there oar in also-then what? A first class program has been were given to these false assump- tions. Among these fallacies we may place the assertion often made that freedom consists in do- ing what we like. License is liberty. The absurdity of this position is recognized if one reflects upon any field of human activity. To disre- gard fundamental laws and d0 as one likes never secures true free- dom. i Le Devolr, Montreal: llc (Dr. Dafoe, who delivered the Dionne babies) is of that meritorious cat- egory o1 which one hears so little. the country doctor. Night and day at the disposition of their clientele, seven days a week, they do extra- ordinary work for hygiene and pub- lic health from one end of our country to the other, notably in the regions where distances are long, the population dispersed over great expanses of country, and where the roads, until the last ten years, were not always in good shape. What can be said of the calls made on these men on winter nights in farm or colonisation regions where they must travel mile after mile in cold and tempests at the best speed of a horse driven to exhaustion, since autos cannot travel at that time of year? The category of the country doctor is one of the most honour- able and distinguished and most laborious of the profession. prepared by those in charge of the Jacques Cartier celebration. It now remains for the rest of us to con- tribute to its success by getting be- ;hlnd the program whole-heartedly and enthusiastically. Wonder if Premier Ramsay Mac- donald's visit to the Maritime Provinces has anything to do with the Japanese Naval spokesmens visit to Washington. It may be re- called that when Britain was carry- ing on important financial nego- tiations with Washington the mys- terious Mr. Montagu Norman, Pres- ident of the Bank of England, found it convenient to holiday in Nova Bcotia. It is an unintentional but none the less deserved testimonial to King's County, when the Grand Jury's deliberations result in the recommendation of new pots and pans for the county jail. 'I‘here is not even a hint or a "moonshine" or “bootleg" menace in this prac- tlcal suggestion for the comfort of the prisoners and convenience of the jailer. __._. Moncton is rpromoiing kyak, or‘ home made canoe races for boys at shediac. Why not offer some- thing of the kind here? Under proper safeguards it would get our youngsters water-minded. Mr. Bob Davis is not the only one surprised that our youths should spend their time motoring on our dusty roads in preference to inhaling the health giving ozone of our magnificent harbor and tidal rivers. Truro is not getting away with its claim that it has the lowest per- Predictions of “unlmaglnablfl distress in Russia famine cenres this year were made by Dr. Ewald Ammende, secretary of the Inter- confessional and International Aid Committee for the Starvation Dis- tricts in Soviet Russia after his ar- rival in New York last. week. He declared that Cardinal Innltzers committee was convinced that as many as 10,000,000 persons would starve in Russia in the fall and the winter, and that only then the world would realize the extent of damage clone to Russian crops by the Spring drought. Dr. Ammendc declared that the most tragic fezt- ure of the 1933 famine was the fact that while "millions of human be- ings were dyng of hunger in the Ukraine," and other sections of the country, “more than 1,700,000 bush- els of grain was exported by the Soviets to acquire foreign money. Christian Science Monitor: Man's inhumanity to man in the Chaco has lpIOVBIl too much even for the wild beasts. ‘They are reported as fleeing to Argentina. The story reminds us of a rhyme in wh ch a pig lay in a gutter, a drunken man fell there and lay beside the pig. and the pig, with porcine dignity, “got up and walked away." ams, ‘my many readers or‘ e. news- paper thlnk about the unct. who gather their news for them each day? It sometimes takes years for a reporter, or special writer, to gather certain information of In- terest and value to the public- years of training in clearness of expression and alertness of mind. There is an impression upon the part of many that almost anyone can be a reporter. The fact is that few are fitted by nature and train- ing to be reporters or spacial writ- era. New York Times: The cross-ex- capita of’ unpaid taxes of any town of its size in Canada. The boast first appeared in the Truro News, was carried by Canadian Press. and now the Toronto Globe rises up to remark that it has another piece of news for the Nova Scotia town inclined to be proud of the fact its unpaid taxes amount to only $4.79 per caplta. First Har- rlston came along with but $1.41 arrears per head; and now its neighbor. Palmerston, not only lowers this to $1.37, but announces a two-mill reduction in the tax rate. Are there still better reports to come? There is something in our at- mosphere that is particularly fas- cinating to Mr. Bob Davis-its den- sity. He has no difilculty elsewhere in driving a. golf ball 200 yards‘, here if he drives 150 yards he thinks he has done well. In this connecton, he points out. dcrslty means health, rarity of atmosphere sion and its opinion is thus sum- med up in n leadmg editorial in {its issue of July '7: “Canada has made such substan- tial progress in the past l2 months that it is interesting t0 consider What the position may be on next Dominion Day. Export trade should again show a large increase in both newspr nt and timber, and dairy products should then be enjoying an increased share of the British market. Mining will certainly show increased output, and it is not. im- probabie that many silver mines may be re-opened. Recent legisla- tion will have had time to show ef- fect and the Central Bank will be in active operation. The world wheat situation will probably be clearer as the continuance of un- economic production in Enrrope connotes difficulty in breathing and "lung trouble. There are so many things about our province and its attractions we learn from disting- uished visitors like Mr. Davis that it is our bounden duty to encourage them to come and give us the bene- fit of their first-hand impressions -not to mention the invaluable publicity we receive from their con- sldered and informed views appear- ing in print elsewhere. We have small reason to corn- plain of our lack of moisture when we consider conditions elsewhere. Lack of rain seems to have been general throughout the world. Heat and drought, which have blistered the fields of Europe, are combining to reduce this year's grain crop sharply, according to re- may be measured. An improvement‘ ports from almost all regions. Lght, amlnatlon of Professor Tugwell, which discredited no one but hi; examiners, has made an end of this particular form of indirect attack ‘upon President Roosevelt. That is not to say that Professor Tugwell ‘gave no opening for the inquisltion He has written several books and many articles. He affects a trans- cendental style, full of strange words and phrases the meaning of whch he keeps locked in his own heart. The sin which easily besets him is to toy with theories in which he does not believe, but which he discusses as seriously as if he did. All this was apt material for those hs writings. When some of the suspicious passages were read to him before the Senate committee, he protested that they had been misunderstood. His struggles to make their meaning clear did not help matters. But the question was not 0f selecting him as a professor of pure and forcible English, but as After he had solemnly avowed his belief in the Constitution, his dis- belief in a planned economy, and his total oppositionto the intro- duction of Russian methods in this country, the case was closed so far as it concerned his personality and his opinions. The Prince of Wales. during a recent address to 800 members of an- advertising association said: “I don't pretend to be an expert, but I have studied the questions of; from statistics but from many years of travel, not only in this country but throughout the world, hearing for myself and far more unpert- ant, seeing for myself. Experience has taught me that, just as unmin- ed gold is valueless, so are articles and manufactured goods hidden away in warehouses and factories useless until they are made known and made desirable by the art of advertising." l-LRJ-I. not only pos- sesses a. winning manner but also sound views on practical subjects. I w-nler, says Geo. Matthew Ad-l who tred to scent out heresy in‘ an Under-Secretary of Agriculture! salesmanship and advertising not’ praying for rain, Spanish farmers o e o a; ram-coon” ' (“MIMIC lean-veil) THE LASTEgrAgDONAID I m ca“ EL N su t» rom - e - hi2’ fimutfis u. at. in 1w. On the evening of rebruuy 2. laoi "mn- wouldaecure ins end dwired I received a phone call stating the: Sir John Macdonald would Iliketo open ot the charge of beinB 1-111- see rne immediately. I had been at mated by a hatred of Canada. 011‘ the Prime Minister's omce, with the which Sir John Macdonald trades. other correspondents, that after- There is an old aayinl 1.1111 "A" noon. but when the old chieftain‘ is rau- in love and wnrlflmd it IP- emerged from council at six o'clock piles equally to P0liti¢$--'I'l'1€ P8111‘ all that he had to say was “No phlst from which Sir John quoted news, gentlemen; no news." jso effectively had been put into I was at Earnscliffe with}: i'if- type in the oflice of. Hunter, Rose teen minutes after I received the’ and Company. a welliknown print- message, and was immediately usb-E iflsvnrm in Toronto- ‘A telesrflllh cred into Sir John's ofllce. lie wasY operator becomes so. 11100118111681 111 seated at his desk, and after givingj his work that in a few minutes the me kindly greetings he picked up purport of a message which has half a sheet of note paper on which’ Plfiwd 1111011811 111B hands is entire- ns had made a brief melnorandumJ iy forgotten. The same .1‘9,m"k 1P", This he handed to me, and I havei plies, as a rule, to the oomlflslm‘, it before me as I write it. I saw a’ and proof-reader. B115 1316111111" i" list of twelve newspapers followed the establishment of Hunter. Rose by the simple statement "Nomirla- rind 001119111)’. I YOURS 111001-1194" tions 2o Feb; polling 5 March." trr who realaed the damaging P05" Then 1 realized that the long-u- sibllitles of the Farrer pamphlet, pected had happened: the g0vern-' and he did not hdéitfliie $118160”, ment had decided to appeal to the! to pull an extra set 0f 1110015 and, country. [send them to Hon. John Haggart, Swinging around in lils chair to! Ikom this source, they reached Siri face me, Sir John said: l John Macdonald, who used them" “Cook, I told my colleagues this‘ with such deadly effect at the T01‘- afternoon that there was little we onto meeting. could do for our newspaper friendsf When the general elections were but the: I was deteim nod on this’ over the pilferer of the b10015 W115 occasion that they should ‘havei Eqiliifid ‘Vii-h fl- ciefk-ihili 111 1-119 what you newspaper men call a Depflrtlnent of- Railways and ‘scoop.’ I forbade every ministeri 331117.!» but 1115,. .5“ °n the?” w“ from telegraphlng or telephoning‘ far from comfo able. It-soon be- this evening the news of the dis-j Mme 111101111 Wh° he W" and Why solution of Parliament and, outside‘ he was in the department. 115-8 of my colleagues, Mr. Pope and conséquen he was eiven. 11191101? yourself are the only indviduals in‘ shoulder by all his ofilciaiassociat- Canada who know tonight what 95- 771911119011. in a. year or so, he has happened. The names of the deemed it wsential to resi811 i115 newspapers to which you are to post, left Ottawa and dropped out communicate the news are in your 0! 818m- " hands." r I glancedover the document and found the newspaper a.ed were the Halifax Herald, Sa nt John Sun, Quebec Chronicle, Mon- treal Gazette, Ottawa Citizen, Tor- onto Empire, Toronto World, Lon- don Free Press, Winnipeg Free Press, Calgary Herald. Victoria Colonist and La Minerve, Mon real. The names of the Hamilton Spec- tator and Regina Leader had been struck out, as they were evening newspapers at that time. Bevan out of the twelve were represented by me at Ottawa either during the session or the year round. Observing that one of the news- papers merit cned-igwas the Toronto World,- I askegfToronto World. Is that ‘r ght; st_a__.lohn." "Well, I thought about that," the Prime Minister replied. “One cannot, always be sure of ‘Billy’ (W. F‘. Maclean) and I don't know that he deserves particular consid- eration, but under all the circum- stances we will excuse his pecca- dilloes this time. Let him have the news." I said “All right, sir," and the World was not overlooked. Sir John then remarked, “I am busy just now on what I believe will be my farewell appeal to the Canadian people. You had better see Pope tomorrow and he will give you a copy as soon as it is finished." This was the "A British subject I was born; a British subject I will die" message. The copy which was put into my hands was the revised draft, with corrections in Sir John's handwriting. The original of the address, I understood, was retain- ed by Sir Joseph Pope. For years I treasured my copy until the pages became yellow with age, and then it occurred to me to have the document mounted on heavy board. Five or six years ago I presented ii. to the Bytown l-lstorical Musem, Ottawa, where it occupies an hon- ored position today. 3611111118 the message over I felt that its patriotic sentences would appeal almost as much to the peo-, pie of the Old Land as to Canad-v ians. I therefore wrote a thousand 111E. word summary and cabled it to‘ There should" be seine little show Reuters, which 1 then represented. of honesty towards our public men- Needless to say this "farewellflflt least in the holiday seasons created a profound sensation in when there is no contest on, and England That my judgment of its no call for the absurdities which news value was correct was evld-‘usually are the disgrace of low cnced by the fact that Reuters sent grade soap-box campaigns. me a check for $500 for my services! I am, Sir, etc., during the campa gn. In addition FACTS-a FIGURES to the “appeal" I was also gufgggs- --_-——--__ i111 in Betting over to London Mr. POLITICAL HISTORY no. a Blake's farewell letter to his old -——- constituents, without cable cost, ati Bun-The restoration of the 00n- whlch the Router people wgrgi servatlve party under (Sir) Hon. greatly pleased. lRobert Borden opened up whet Having launched the campaign was an epoch in Canadian history. from Ottawa Sir John and Sir 811d mdrledrlater into a world rev- Charles-Tripper started their speak- 011151911111 "$6111. efibnbmic 811d p017 ing tour. The Toronto meeting was ltical governments. As Sir John fixed for February r7, and l; was A. Macdonald’: accession introduc- suggested to me by Mr. Pope that: ed the N.P. and the National, if I went along I would 11cm- some- C.P.R., so that of Sir Robert Bor- thing "drop." Asking for particulars den bmllzht to Prince Edward Is- he told me that the old chleftain 11114. Whit W35 K116456191! 88 1111995‘ had secured possession o1 an m. slblo, a. most satisfactory solution vance copy of a pamphlet, wrmsn of our greatest problam-—"continu- by Mr. Edward Far-tor, who ac this ous communication" Iwlth. the. Do- ' time was on the editorial staff of, mlnlofl. ‘Winter I-nd summer" in the the Globe. lt was intended to be? fulfillment of his pro-election prom- sent to Congressman lfitt, chair-l law-tho establishment of our “Car man of the foreign relations oom- “"15" - mittee of the House of " preggnu- The "world revoluton" was the tives at Washington. iGreat War, in which Canada play- The tenor of this pamphlet will ed a conspicuous part. It. brought be remembered by old-timers, but upon us Union Government, to the to the younger generation little is 9 known of it. Sir John characteriz- to the lest. man arid the last dcl-' ed the suggestions contained in i111‘ b! linked 11D Wilh the MOihBFi the pamphlet, if canted out, as de-" (Xiuntry in a. herculean effort for, signed to drive Canada into the i110 Mil!!!’ of the world. This pur- arms of the United States. n rug-j D080 was accomplished but at un- gested the imposition of a. tonnage told swrii-ce of the flower o! our tax on all the Nova Bcotia vessels 11nd. of 1186111 P81111111!!! under carrying fish-the abolition o! tho which we still staszerand slrusgle. c t." 1i- ._...¢_ ___;_ i PUBLIC Forum ‘Ihll column In open for the Ilncnallon by oorrelpondentu of qneatlonl of Interact. The Charlottetown Guardian aloe! III. Iooenully endorse the Qplllanl 0i‘ oorrllnondonta. , CONTIQUPIIIBLE MISREPRE- SENTATION sip-Is their no way of muzzling the Patriot's falsification machine. In Wednesday's issue. editorially, it broadcasts one of its character.- lstlc whoppers to deceive its, road,- ers and malign the Provincial Goya ernment. - It asserts, without warrant of’ factmthat the pr p 3min; -. 24a .29"; n1 rd;§;,%h§.g roads; ‘ff that" he "BONDED DEBT" exoee s $4,900,000. It broadly declares that they "borrowed through the issue of bonds $2,450,000" This added to the Lea Government debt in 1930i makes a total of over five million as above stated? And then it im- pudently asks “what have they got to show for it." Now sir let me challenge the Patriot to prove its base decep- tions. Let it prove the: our debt is, as it leads its readers to be- lieve, irrexcess of $5,000,000. What does that paper expect to profit by these exaggerations? Can we have no vacations, no closed season against these unscrupulous political slanders? Are the clean, honest men of the Liberal party golngto stand behind their organ, in the! season, when" false pro a-g 88111111- Silfillldifdt lébstliave a rest: and play up,.t_o these unprincipled broadcasts? Is it ignorance of what the word “bor-rowing" implies, or want of capacity to understand _the simplest principles monetary Jeirbhange L and interchange. It must-abet eith- | er this or a "deliberate determina- tlon to falsify facts and attempt to create partisan scandal out of noth Britain u. withdraw her wank». without leavin! the United $141990, ' vast discontent __.1._. Clearing. a iQ/e an Black land». White.’ Brow-i» N h“ i -. It.“ $13.50, $115.00, "$18.00 MENSFINE cnuY on FAWN FLANNEL SUITS worth up to {ISIIXL-Clédldillg ......_.............................. MEN'S DARK- WORSTED SUITS, smartly tailored in many dark"5g_§|i,¢5_' ' Si“; up to 40 chest. Clearing at .. . . . . . . . . . Hypjljjpjpgjllqp -rxsi_nou CRAFT surrs up‘ to M Clearingat v..."encounter-neu-u-nu-cfr-f""""§ ,_ , -. Henderson & Cudinore MEN'S WEAR $13.50 $15.00 MEN'S ENGLISH ‘WORSTED SUITS in many handsome dark stripes, avy, etc., worthluupizfp-JYHSEE-‘M-l U‘ - amt-I, kL-fi95l-7-l9-3i. V " _ His policy of "Conscript'on” 33c too many enemies for PETW safety, and the elfectof this upon a vast number of those 09905611 W» conscription was the 0111105116 ‘l! political strategy. In those days the spoils system was accounted a leg- mmate heritage of party followers. His divergence from this Crfididd amongst faithful bu; expectant supporters. These th ngs became the wind- falls of profit to Liberalism. Ever dependent on dissatisfaction and gamblers luck, like the swinfl 0f me dice, it helped them into the seats of power after every scheme- of fis- cal policy had fallednlt contribut- ed to reversed support from Q118- beo, from which Conservatives are now gaining gradual reoOl/BIY- 1i antagonized party followers of the Hepburn-Macdonald school of thought on the subject of “dism s- 551,5" from omce, who in resent- mentchanged their traditional 10-, cations from Conservatives into" Liberal camps. After/the Borden decapitation of the “patronage.” system Conservative committee rooms were (as described by Sir Geo. E. Foster _“_ empty as, c c; koo's nestsgin, i:§_’,‘j.'."..,,,.,. P In 1920 Sir ‘Robert Borden resign- ed as Prem er and was succeeded by 1-ion. Arthur Meighen, then Sol- icitor General. Premier Meighen had two serious handicaps to con- tend with. By virtue of hi3 office the enforcement of conscription fell to his lot, and he had to carry the odium of its reaction to discontent. In his own party monied men de- manded that the Government sell the Canadian railways to the CPR. guaranteeing exhorbitant interests on the bonds for a period of 25 years. Hon. Mr. Meighen was too honest to sell his country's largest asset to the st. James Street in- forests. These, united with lead- ing Liberals, joined issue against him, resulting in defeat of his Go"- ernment in 1921 and promclon of Hon. Mackenzie King to the Pre- miership. . < . . The King Government held pow- er until 1926, but finding ton muih opposition in their own ranks. ad- dcd to the powerful Progressives and Conservat.ves, to ,deliver the railway goods, the st. James Street support withdrew, and the Meigh- fin Government was again installed. N01 11814113 a working majority he dissolved Parliament to meet defeat that year and the King Govern- ment assumed the reins of power 5811111. holding them till 1930 when Hon. R. B. Bennett became Prime Minister a position in which he is entrenched behind a large major. "Y 111 parliament and with a series of economic and fiscal policies ed. mired by the world, intimated by 1118113’ governments, and undoubted- ly approved by the master thinkers amongst our Canadian people, Liberals freely admit; themgglveg wthout a constructive policy. Mm- donald in Nova scotln and Hepburn 111 01118-110 in hundreds oiflcllsmis- sals from office and public employ- ment display the only one sign by" which they hope to conquer-the loaves and fishes. And unless these Prevail. and internal dlssenslon ferments within the Conservative counsels, they know that "chafing, of facts and history are against and that their one employ. ment. in the future asiri the pres. c111 will be to zvrate and obstruct, ;::.~:..";.:; "r - 1m- r ss a-n Canada. pmpeflw o! ' ifv I am Sir,_ m} POLITICAL STUDENT How Elephants Die .___.. (“Our Dumb Animals") It has often been said that, no white man in South Africa ever Se" a dead elephant. that u to say, an elephant that has died s natural death. How then does an elephant die? A traveler answers the question in a most romantic way. Ho tel]; l ounce-gun KEEPING COMFORTABLE DURING HOT WEATHER When we read that the inhabi- tants of some countries stop work and rest or sleep from about 11 o'clock in the momlnz till 3 111 i119 afternoon we wonder if this resting is really necessary or whether these people are "lazy". Asia matter of fact, resting or getting away from the outdoor heat is a. necessity in hot countries. The reason that sleeping or rest- ing ‘enables us to endure heat is because the body does not create as mu res 'a.s when we are walking about“. When the body does its ordinary work—breathing, digesting food, pumping blood, getting rid of wastes and other jobs-it, creates heat and 80 per cent .of the food eaten is used up by these body processes. If, then, we lie at complete rest as in sleeping, practically no extra heat is manufactured to be gotten rid 0t’ by the body. But in most countries, work goes on; stores, offices, and factories cannot close down and so when hot weather comes something must be done to enable the inhabitants to continue work despite the heat. Naturally. as food makes heat in the body, the first thought might be the cutting down of the food in- take, but as 80 per cent of the food goes toward maintaining the var- ious processes of the body-breath- ing, circulation of blood, digestion and other processes-certainly at least 80 per cent of the cold weath- er intake must be continued. And i! the individual works or plays hard in the warm weather he is going to need nearly the samé‘ amount of food as during the cold weather. Some foods are more "heating" than others and so fat meat, but- ter, sugar and potatoes might be cut down but lean meat, eggs, and fish repair body tissues and should be cut down but little if at all. Fruits and salads should be in- creased. ‘The next thought as‘de' from food is to try to keep the home, office, or factory as cool as possible. If any little draught can be maintained, without opening the doors and windows to the heat from pavements and buildings, it will move the moist air away from the body and thus enable the body ' get rid of more heat. That is the reason that the elec- tric fan, by breaking up the moist envelope of air that surrounds us, "oboe is an Orchard, the Saint salm To meditate on life and death. With a cool well, a hive o! bees, A hermit's grot below the trees. Good is an Orchard: very good, Though one should wear no monkish hood Right good, when Spring awakes her flute, And good in yellowing time of fruit. Very good in the grass to lie And see the network ‘gainst the sky, A living lace of blue and green. And boughs that let the gold be. tween. - The bees are types of mp1s that dwell With honey in a quiet cell: heat. within itself Wiltfl.W£.m‘.m7f@/1g flaws gommly Th . e soul's perfection in God's eye. Prayer and praise in a country home, Honey and fruit: a man might come, Pied on such meats, to walk abroad, And in his orchard talk with God. “Katherine Tynan Hinkson. CANADA PROVINCE 0F PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND NOTICE TO CREDITORS OI FIRST MEETING WHERE ASSIGNMENT MADE. In the matter of the Banknote! of Howard Yeo. Notice is hereby given that HW- ard Yeo, of Higgins Road. in Print! Edward Island, mlde an aalllnmwi on the 9th day of July, I934, 11115 that. the first meeting of’ creditor: will be held on the 26th day of Jill! I934, at the hour of eleven obclotl in the lolenoon at the Law (101111! Buildings in the City of Charlotte- town. To vote then-eat proofs of claim! and proxies must, be filed with 1M prior thereto. Those having claims against 1111 estate must. file the some with the Custodian or the Trustee when alt- pointed before the distribution ll made, otherwise the rroceeda of thl Mlale will be distributed among 11:1 parties entitled thereto, without re- gard to such claims, Dated at Somme " . this 1W1 day of July I934. Address of Custodian, I’. O. Box 3B, Summers , P. E. I. FREDERICK J. E. WRIGHT. L-6862-7-16-20-23. is so refreshing on a hot. day. Remember, keeping the intestine active is also helpful in enabling ;ir_q' to withstand the heat. , And finally, if at all possible, don't eat when hot or tired, as the digestive and protective juices are‘ at a low ebb, and pain similar to "ptolnaine poisoning may result. l errlngly the path is trod", "Instihcjg guides him to the great cemetery. Somewhere near 1411c Nyauza. it is believed, lies theamazing graveyard, the goal of ‘ the dying elephant. It is a vast p't. filled with blackness into which for ‘ thouslnds of years dying elephants' ._have cast. themselves with the last remnants of their ebbing strength. Arriving at the pit, we are told, the monarch of the African forest raises his. trunk high 1n the air, snorts defiantly, and then hurls, ‘himself over the edge. His last Fae Answer T0 Boils Pimple! Skin ‘Diseases Sallow Complexion Nervousnesa Loss of Muscular Tone Anaemia Impaired Appetite Run Down Condition Stomach Disorders started harvesting the biggest wheat crop in the history of the nation. in general conditions in the Untied! scattered rains recently have irn- States will have beneficial effect in proved promote blishtly. and in Canada by increasing the price of some nations have quieted the fear‘ 31°11 OWFVWS estimated 11110111 commodities and enlarging the o; a food shortage n"; winger, 55,000,000 metric quintals (about tourist trade. ’l"he Tariff Board But generally it is held by asricul- 92-°°°»°°° bush“) of Wheat W1" be should be working smoothly and‘ tural experts that the rains came ‘Drddllced this V981’ wmpflffid With expeditiously, and possibly the re- too late to bring the grain yield about 511000-000 quintals last year. vision of the B.l‘,A. Act may have to normal. Spain is the only nation Vifillfliiy BVWYVIhPYP 0151‘ in E111‘- been brought before Parliament, offering optimistic crop reports. 0pc drfllllht B1111 1108i have 10ft though this is more likely. to wait While mammal dnvlww Wm "w" bllflmml "mt- bonding privileges; the cutting of, and of political party sacrifices to‘ m“?- When an African elephant death e17. am the traveler, vibrates the connection of the Canadiai IPDel the stand pet's of party. be“ u" pain‘ °f °id 5E9 5min"! ihwuih "19 8"" 1018-51. 11nd U011! Pacific with United States terrlt-' While Conservative and Liberal "m" ti" "fit vnersy of which h? "@1111"! 1h" “VFW "$611111 “WW ory at Sault Ste. Mnrle, and the participated in these losing games, i“ ""11 111151111 101 so manryears , into greater darkness while refusal o; the right u; Cangdlgn the Conservatives by virtue of lead- “e 111°"! BWB-y from the herd, smaller animals crouch as if in rev- vessels h, use the American cuig1|emhlp suffered moat, 5'0 much so 5'1"" the air. and then with soli- erehce of the death of something at the Slilllt. rthat leaders of party opinion con- t i"! d°i°m1111i1°1t makes his way swat and splendid. It this awry Mr. Farrer said that "Thcsegterlded that Borden had chloro- 51""? "Id WNW/fully to the lp-|'i'10I11 Lagos. Nigeria, is true, it is mcthcds, if adopted, would rouse formed the conservative party. His Wmied P18" 0f dBAtHJQfIheJour-lat once s telling example of the the full force of Wes cm Canada association with rankest Liberals in n” hem" hi!" 111W?» il-flwllih Wqfldflfl of instinct. and a moat influence against the government. his Union administration was clalm- or a year, "but in majestic solitude ‘touching instance of the pathos o_f It would be better still to 0111180 ed lumen! to be of suicidal tend- the way is plodded, lll- deal-b. 2.3.1’. lronized Yeast The 2. Macs VDRUGSTORE i Great George Street g‘;-