SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1930 PAGE NINE/ ) PAPER PRINTS (7S LAST NUMBER dian Recorder Suspends Publication After 117 Years of Service HAAG) NK, May 17~The Acs speed pub obtion on May 46 on Ma: following the death of g, C. one family had own« poner wince 1887, Under alifax Institution," ft nakes yal tory In part as lollown: "Tha passing of smoch vistoriy newspaper as the Acadian Recorder with all that its name and rAiwtory imply, could not he contem. yinted lig! Hx. The more than a rent of Hn existence has wit. orous changes in the Hose For Sale AT SACRIFICE 301 MASSON ST. TERMS REASONABLE For Particulars Phere Owner, 7381 ar 1834 pubMeBing eraft in Helitex, o Ms contemporaries have cessed oxint; thely names and styles or owners, been constant as/a fixed star, maine taining, without break, tinuity of its name and, for close upon & cantury, one family=---a d shares with sueh great newspapers us the London Times, the Spring: field Republican and the Montreal Gagette, was ang of the the Government The Necordey haus hoon In the pos wossion of the pines 1847, a connection which wag Many move have changed their The Recorder alone has the cone its ownership' in istinctiop which it Is Valedictory With the exception of the latter which was established in 1788, The Necorder in the oldest newspaper in Canada, It was founded in 1813 and its first quarter sheet of four pages, wes issued on Saturday, January 16th, number, a modest 1819, Its founder was Authony Henry Holland, the namesake and, as Murdoch the historian surmises, the modson Anthony Henry, who for 40 years Ridin Ghaotie' vy Lue of Nova Reotin, of King's Printer, ligation of the Dinekadar famity broken only half a month wgo when ©, ¢, Dackadar passed to hig reward after more than half a con. tury of dally activity in its service. The bstory of the Tecorder in virtually the history of Nova Scotia during the century that is gone, It has linked the days of the fav off past with the present, Lis files {which have been entrusted to the government 'of Nova Heotls In pers petulty) nre a veritable freasure Rause of the lite and times of n by gone ago. Especially is this trun with respect to Halifax, for the Nes carder, always hag hoon essontinlly uo Maliax Trstitution, « While It haw kept 'pace with the modern demand for an expandipg news service, its nrimary and distinative feature hus heen the faithful and reliable ree- ord which 18 qonveyed to successive generations of readers, of the our rent happenings In the city of its birthi the Joys and wmorrows, the sports and amusements, the dally walk and conversation of the peo- ple and all the manifold activities in polities, business and religion of the community in which ft 'lived, moved and had its helng.' Halifax Tradition * "The Recorder may be maid to have bhaen the very embodiment of the Halifax tradition aud of the Mallgoniun spirit, ' It gave first in the oalender of patriotio annivers airies to the Natal Day of Halifax oh June 21st, a day which is held in veneration and unfailingly celohras ted, ns marking the founding of the first. British town In the Dominion, "The Regorder has heen assocints od with gent names and great events In the history of Halifax and, in a Josser degree, of Nova Scotian, Tt was in {ts columns thas the famed letters of 'Agricola' gave the first veal Impetus to agriculture in our Provinge, When the youth. ful Prove Wallis 'of the 'Shannon' walled inte Halifax harbey ou thet Sundsy in June, 1813, with tie hes, o a8 8 prize of wey, the scordor was here to tell the herole story of that memorable duel in the waters of Boston Bay. Two yesrs Inter it spread the glorious tidings of Wellington's victory at Water loo. Hocorded Stirring Events "1 was its privilege to record the brithiant exploits of ' wraws of Willem of Kare, lugs at Luck. now and Wolstord and Parker in the Medan, It reported the mailing from Halitax of the 'Koeyal Willlamy the tirst steamship to make the At. lantic aorossing under her owl steam, and the arrival of the Brits anni' the ploneer ship of the great float founded by Samuel Cunard It printed the news of the great feat of the laying of the first At- lontle ouble, and In these later yours It has witnessed the achieve ment of wireless 18lgrantt, the marvels of radio and the spanning of the Atlantic hy airships, And not Teast, all the movements of po- litlenl reform, social advancements and religious freedom, the estab: Hshment of responsible government and treo schools, tha wonderful de- velopments in transportation hy vail, motor ony and steswship, the transformation of Halifax from a mare military town and trading part into a modern olty with # great ocean povtenil these things the Recorder has seen and In many of them 1t had no mean part, "Phere Is no need to expand the record, nov is this the time to ap. praise flually the worth of the ser vice of the Recordey ns a puhbiie journsl, I It were the occasion of writing an epitaph {6 might be sald, with all modesty and propriety, that for more than » 100 years the Acadian Recorder has horne an honorable name and an enviable reputation as an organ of public opinion, It has pursued a straight forward course in ith relations to public affairs, none making It afarid, 14 han 'kept the faith, It lias fought a good fight, It has exemplified integrity in husiness, it has expounded, without variable. ness or shadow of turning, the prin. olplgs. which are the sure founda tion' nnd shield of honor and prob ity In puble ng In private conduct," TRAINING PLAN GIVEN ATTENTION ments on the Unemploy- ment Prob -- London. --=The millions which wre spent unproductively in doles mean a direct loss to the community, hut W groatar, loss comes from keeping ahleshadied men in idleness enfore- ed lelsure In a canker. in the body I A A Ue & I lA --_ -- A ------ | . Make Paving Budgets Produce More MILEAGE 'Your community can afford just so much for pain MILEAGE resu pends on the mat Concrete, practically oli ingw os AGE. oa uch ney each year do- terial te msusuale ly spent for maintenance, refinishe nts, are released for the major appropriation purpose, Advocate concrete in your coms munity for productive and econe omical road-budgeting, for safer driving, for reduced on tires and cars, for wear and tear ed gas consumption and as an attraction to profitable tourist trafli Canada Gement Company Limited Phillips Square Monteen] Sales Offices Montreal ~~ Torontn ~~ Winnipeg Calgwry polite, which demoraliges v dividual and inlets Be is damage on the community, writes Sir Robert Donald In the fol Integy esting article from the Dal ail "Kmploy snd une 4 Id be the towards u mor volley, r, Greenwood, the Minister of Health, realizes the far-reaching impertance of this ley snd has taken the 'first apporfunity 10 inter ce It In regard fo men In receipt or religl, Writing of v pvigvattor it Hiner oh Pupaliald). dnd Mrs, vad | the wh] gh Ish wet i y the d " und fai m "| whom Mt degenerates /it: in ¥ nibbles y ut the profits of capltd) and pute the, onerous even of the whlost captains of industry inerogs- ingly at the mercy of farelgn' come e on, They wrath! hss 1h the reprint of the Minority. Repost ob the. Royal Commission on the Poor Law, for which they were, rg blg, ¥h probleil had not colonial vir klipe W Webbe on dl, but the wrote and reported vital elgmants are the Same The Webls, after advo tem of nations! labor oe ot clearing houses and deali the suppression of vagrancy, oe W. the partially employed und the lly unemployed should be dealt Ww Shetty esnence of the scheme is that un une employed in every class should be kiven some occupation, The present system af insursnce doe the *Mebb thesis, le, et should: be The unemployed tought and trained, "Which of us (they asked) Is ngt capable offmprovement by careful tenting and traning ?- We ean clogrly best utilize the period of enforced une eniployment by placing the men in traning," ) Training Sehaols I'hgre were te be. training espabe lishments, in town and country "Whether in town or country It Is essential to successful trobtmens that the training should take up the man's entire day He would begin at 6 am, and, with Intervals for recreation and physical exercise, he 'would go on all day im. praving his knowledge or perfecting his skill in the trade or craft to which he belonged or was allotted, He would obtain relief or the dole while it work Provision was alse made In the cheme for training men and women tor settlement in the Dominion, Residence at one or other of the training establishments will afford not only useful training but wlio « valuable opprtunity for proving whe. ther the would-be emigrant has such qualities und capacities as warrant the belief that he can make a nee cessful start in u new country wv hat shout the work-shys and the nalingerer? I'hey are not » In the Webb scheme Ther lcci ad detention golonies under the Home Office where the inmates would be treated for "a morbid state of mind" and for habitual laziness, I'he Webbs had a plan for rafarne Ing the unemplayables by training of a special kind, and also & system for men young peaple under eighteen years of Ager they would Le reguired to at. [ tend schools to be amintained by the ducution authorities I'hey set out a ten-vears program which included training on tke land, work on land reclamation, and the establishment of smallholdings their alm was the regularization of the national demand labor and maralization of unemployed, - German Example he Webbs held up the example of Germany and in particular in the City of Stuttgart, Today we ean find an abject lesson In Germany which has perfected the Webb policy of moralixzing the unemployed. Take the case of Duesseldorf, the big city on the Rhine: Dr, 8, G. Wer» nary the head of the German Cast Iran Foundry Association, whe has Just heen visiting London, and whose hegdsquarters are in Dusselderf, in: formed me that unless the unemplay: ed work at the Labor Exchange in that eity they do not receive relief, hey raceive instruction and training v $a{iamanshin Every Labor Ex: change in the Rhineland is and a workshop * hoo! While no attempt has heen made to carry out the ambitious scheme of thy Webbs, A beginning has heen made hy Mr, Greenwood, by callin upon the new Public Assistange Conimittee to report on the rain in useful work for the able-hadied Unemployed and alsa instrugtion of a general or technieal kind, attendance to be condition of relief, This foreshad. aws the application af the system to men in receipt of relief under puh- le Sisiatuice and, nat the regipienta of the dole, which eames ) Ministry of Labor, o Vada¥ She But not yntil every able-bodied un- employed man and woman is given useful occupation can we cheek the omral and physical deterioration, lass of character and the fi work which comes Roni for MARQUIS WRITES ON OBSERVANCE OF SABBATH TODAY em------ Lovd Tairstock Discusses Modern Sunday Practices ------ London=The marked decling singe the war in Sunday observance is re. sponsible for a deal of disquiet ude in same religious circles, A 1 a Christian layman, I mest fran admit that it causes me na surp very little regret, and vo little ans lety, says Lord Tairstock, ) he people whose wd horror d aan rR wmpathy are the ve od folk, "ollovers in Tes apivation' of the Bible, army t t bh Or the Pour I often lang to they were really of theists, they would re 1) are not supposed to be living under the ten commandments of Moses hut! 1 tatment which Were dey in seven for rest "i 0 the two commandments of w v Christ: H Il your nd and Ty on soul fr strength," und "Love your elghbory as yoursell." : Origin of Sunday Even St. Feul realiaed that a Chris tn Ie po freed from the laws of which the ten commandments are + part together with 8 vast nimber t our fun, di ol lands dream oh serving Moreover, tifey themselves, bap, to b th Bar Rabati Rie A Not only dothe very few; of them «do manuen of work, after the rier ewish nc and obagr- i gd bell oR thority, the ven y (TH) y of vot and keer the hy "It Is our how fw people veu- lige that' the Christian Sunday hasn 416 origin nothing whatever to do with the Jewish Sabbath, It is neith- er more. nor Jess than the commen : ation, dup of 'our oie Re he. (i | gave us 00 ogo the wi To wite y He doh ito . abt, Of the Jewish Sablath, He p that is ohbervance nut dot made a fetish, but that it should operate #9 8 benefit to man, : sang student of theology! res alines that everything in the Od Tey. armonizes with the spirit and feich ne of Christ should be retained, an that all customs, etchics, and Meas whieh do not har onlse be /disgarded, The ourth: Commandment did not drop sirglght from Qteaven. 1t Is a com te praduetion of Divine inspira und the human mind, here Is no doubt that Moses was Jide when having one a Most Heat for the Money. | ides wus Jurgely the erention of his owr brain, Bike his enby granting of divorea becayse of the "hardness" of the people's hearts, Moses' experience of his followers led hin to beligyes and here, per po We canpot great ly blame him---that if he gaye them an inch. they would take an ell. Hende the rigid prohibition ef work of any sort or Wind an dhe 'savage penalty for breach of the commandment, which led, so the Bible tells wp, fo the stoning ta death of one peor wretch for the offence of gathering sticks on the day of rest oy of Rast In an age which aspires to he Christian we may as profitably rege agnige the inspired wisdom of ane day's vast in seven for all, as we nay refuse with good - reason th copy Moses' penalties for Sabbath-break- my, fine decline iy Sunday observance in no evidence of a decling in Chris tianity or even of u decline In the amount of virtwe in people who are not keenly religious, Churdlies which are really alive still get and hold large congregations, No ene hears, for example, of the dwindling con gregation of St. Martin's-in-the- Fields or at Miss Royden's Church, The Victorian era was character laed by a smug religiosity ; people went to church In large numbers he. caupg it was respectable, They spent very quiet Sundays because it was the thing to de and because thére were few alternative ways of spend ing them, But they were not for that reason any more like ¢Jsus Christ than the men and women of today The war did much to kill this reli glows ohservanee of form and Lah and on the whole it rendered u useful i inn rea! sense Divinely he saw the desirability o 545555 -- (a CONGER'S grade fuh we oh tb w ong urn. ing and oiend high heating J. Co, Li Anthracite Coke Pocahontas Conger Lehigh Coal 82 SE naa Kins H31.68YW ager, but his method of kiving effect to his | ¥1 Soyr Guelph Lady w wi my friends," p Tl he neys, If they are kept strong the Impurities Dodd's Kid: s Kidney Pills condition to do thely worl purifying the blood, n women Weak, a trial at once. They bring speedy ¢ me 9 ed ha ie Sot Loi % In good o gon ve Dodd's Kidne Pils Good Remedy for Kidneys and Bladder : ho Used Dodd's Kidnay Pill DODDS ad to good heal voudh the' road to go ples Ya though the Rid: KIONEY PILLS 0 KIDNET lief, | Lg Rg hd i od | er, VVHAT a colourful array, and what a formidable one, were the crusaders wha fought to free the Holy Land from the Saracens. Mail-clad knights, with plumes nod. ding from their burnished helmets, rade forth on gaily caparisoned chargers, eager to break a lange with their foemen, To-day Brantford Roel. ing leads a crusade against ugliness and the Fire men. ace, Brantford Asphalt Slates with their vibrant colaurharmonies are banish. ing forever the drabness of old-fashioned roofs, But they are doing more than giving unsurpassed Beauty to roofs. They are Vy Ig: d Roofs Brantford Roofing Co. Limired, and Factory a a oy srvice, Veople=and there were many of © em=who "lost their faith" us # result of the war never had a faith worth keeping, Thelr Goll was an al« mighty Deposit, To those 10 whem God was revealed in Christ as 8 auf fering martyr, the war could present no diffieulty whatever, If there is less religion today than in 1914, that which survives is clean or and of better quality, This is sll to the good, The churches which are empty today are those which deserve to play golf in place of attending « chitrch service egnducted in so un- helpful a way that it is a vexation of the spirit for any true servant of Our Lord to listen to it, Sunday employment is an evil in so far as it forces people to work seven days a week and prevent Christians from attending Divine worship, and this should be recognized by non-reli- gions people as well as hy chruch members, Ek to be empty, bocause in them there im little love und little life, Thelr form of worship Is archaic and often to some extent un-Christian, The ser mons are dull or delivered in lgn- guage largely incomprehensible to The unedweuted portion of the congregi- tion, It churches ave to he refilled ministers and chureh workers mist get down 10 the job of earning an in crease in church attendance by more Christ-like living, by more Christ-like enlightment, and, most of all, . by more thorough teaching. She dgnorance of the average young person, after going through the whole of his chureh's educational program, remains absolutely shysmal on pearly every important aspeet. of the Christion faith, He cannot ex- pound a single page of Christ's teach- ing fully and correctly, answer cons vineingly any of the major problems connected with religious faith, nor ive evidence of any sennd appre ation of the rules of successful pray Waste of Time pathetic to hear ministers ex pressing & fear that Sunday cinema will affect thelr church attendance, Jf a man eannot hold his congregation against a cinema it is proof positive that he h r succeeded In teach ing his pepo Christianity, The whole question may be sum med up very hriefly, Nothing whieh is right on a week-day can be wrong on a Sunday except in so far as, for Christians, It involves a waste: of (ime and Increases Sunday employ- ment, It would he wrong far a Chris tian to play golf on Sunday afternoon if he coul! he mare usefully employed in God's service by taking a Bible Tt Is "Refreshing Sleep from Clean Pillows" Washed in soft water, feathers, covers and all, and then dried, fluffed and thoroughly aired, your pillows will give added pleasure to your night's vest, No spring housecleaning is com- plete without this being done. Qur charge is one dollar per pair. We also suggest our service for blankets, rag rugs, bath mats, etc.=~all the heavier articles that are so hard to manage in the average home laundry. We have five different kinds of family wash service from which you may choose-- all maderately © priced. Phone to-day = or ask any ane of our caurteous drivers for our prices. "PHONE 768 484 SIMCON #1. SOUTH class or attending a study cirele, But it would not be wrong for a Christian reducing Fire Risk t0 a negy Mgible quantity. Flyin sparks and flaming brand cannot ignite these slates. dathage sph are impervious to rai sunand snow, They curl,'bulge, shrink Their remain un after yean i ] le by x h th and / : ) i vow RAH + Write for (toy "Beauty wi \ tegtion ve treatise on type, desige wd 0 Jobe Nl W. J. TRICK & CO, Limited