%m. the Executive Committee of the k.'"""" Party decided that a convention â€" Ser the elec Yom of a provincial leader could ?M.‘-uhmliâ€"fludfl 4 several weeks, agoâ€"and agreed to appoint a before the end «it the year. Additional members ‘ wer w appointed and progress made erganization c ¢ the party. The newly elected + ï¬.w.vmï¬mbmï¬â€œ is hindered zntil a new leader is chosen, wmhmmbuynm course to be pur kaed. A statement made by Eâ€hhumhï¬uqmï¬uflvh decided to retire } mis provoked a good deal of ervative party in Ontari> I will continue to ;.mum.mgmdcr__h_ulmednt-h- s decision to retire,â€"‘he said, had been reached m it became obvious | to him that the party, if ped to be successful ;st the polls, must have a t who could have the; . wholeâ€"hearted support of the rank and file and J yders of the party." He wolunteered the stateri ent that he was being â€".“mgalmlfl'fluu‘- r“hmiimb\fl‘.m,q red of the leadership an.} it s responsibilities now I have decided to retire, but having reached decision, which I believi: is in the interests of Edinburgh University a few ks ago. His address to convocaâ€" was one which any Scot would woud to hear, any Scot proud om or premature convep$ion.. 1 hope that ink and file of the Comuservative party will sufficient time to pr spare and organize a ation which will truly ret‘lect the considered ent of the party in the 1 wo vince." the question of The T.rlegram "What was y responsible for your dec.isi on to retire?" Mr. ;w'mmuowmthtvu it and the selfish interest af some of those y associated with our party‘s prganization in ist election but particularly gre disloyalty to arty itself." Further, he declare d, "The Conâ€" p.meuumm-oddxmdm ie to success at the polls unles s there was lete unity within the ranks of the | party, as no r'.'hvï¬m-nhdm.' *% toast, "God bless the higher matics and may they never he slightest use to anybody!" always sound in the depth auty of its phrases: my own undergraduate genâ€" s stamina and the fortitude fathers. That I believe to y untrue. | have always reâ€" ow moaning to shallow, We e they lack the enterâ€" The Natural System for Lord Tweedsmuir At Edâ€" University Convocation TH\ YRSDAY, SEPT. 8, 1988 estions. Who were the "perms is closely with the party‘s organization". to whom one was now grave, now eneration; jere m ia d lno doep calling to deep. HiLY\ YARD F. CHAMBERLAIN, Manager. WL %/A V. PHILLIPS, News Hditor. WEYHE RETIRED â€"WHILE ADDRESS EM ty O C Vn L-â€"*).' Legal l:.‘.ï¬:h: %0 per Ih.h.-h.z ; ie measurement, 14 lines to the inch). Poliâ€" is right. Suceess seldoro, . or never, v; six months® contract, 360 ; 1 year contract, are adepts in the KS‘ study of this simplified system will ghve .I-n‘:l :v? m-a':u to 100 wor d 4 wondss which is adequate for all purposes. _ _ _ SAN SYSTEMS sph oo dhoeey : o y hor dlgg hx it «C Z instruction until you gradus ONR w__‘u "*â€"Note (All ces. on a rate of 60c I cost le per word, also 10¢ ‘and Guide Office. Auetion )}, furm stock and tmiple s e d wies~ c ~’<,Au% ut F \a ', > WING S 1 ‘i'. a ) .‘ o | ~eey * / the signed . for their to justi‘fy "disâ€" eration as vigorous and enterprisâ€" ing, but. it ;":lflt:.:m t::t‘ the ‘eneration & ,M ie a shich would have lelt as _ ‘The new © Chancellor is known to all lovers of good tales, well told in robust prose, as John Buchen. He is soometimes known as Lord Tweedsmu i1, Governorâ€"General of Canada.â€"iV.ew York Sun. Aboard _ tt KM.S. _ Nascople wh-lth(t(.‘q:ï¬ll{q_h trip to Bovad M Cns net 3ob» nopams . Com m mul. Baltiz:ore, Md., who inâ€" ends to test ey es of Eskimos for "‘s?-;hw- who have normal m t night. ar.C_hq-h flndt;eem_qeof‘?s-wfl- treatment which wi‘ll effect a cure TESTING EYES OF ESKIMOS m“'., that the ordinary tdn.-t- sincerity of those "*fanits | other matters of . J5¢" ie made clear before w is held. Only then F%:: tor united support ash in advance; The Conservativi Blincls «es Will Be Investiâ€" believe that willinguess to accept the offer of a seat in Mr. Hepburn‘s cabinet, and in so doing completely wreck, if not destroy, the Conservative party, was an act of disloyaity that" should not be forgotten, story of the coalition proposal should now be told that the ordinary voter may properly judge the sincerity of those whom he trusted. These and other matters of a purely party nature should be made clear before the convention to name a leader is held. Only then will the person chosen command the united support of the party as a whole. The Conservative party rendered great service to the province in other days. . With wise leadership and a complete organization it will do so again. Wise leadership is not possible while the sincerity newspaper executives, whose loyalty is always in at the annual meeting of the association and, recently stremgthened has the opportunity, and, we position of usefulness it so long occupied. It remains to be seen how it will measure up to its (Globe and Mail) Alffluhdmwmmm trend of taxation cannot be considered apart from public debt. The growing mortgage on the country‘s resources should cause real alarm even to those of the population who are continually calling on the Governments to spend. At the end of the 1937 fiscal year the Federal funded debt, less sinking fund, stood at $3,285,066,671. In 1917, after heavy war expenses had been added, the net debt was $879,186,298. It has multiplied, although the population has gained little more than 25 per cent in twenty years. The debt interest for which the people had to provide money in 1917 was $35,802,567. ‘The interest in the fiscal year ending in 1937 was $137,410,000. ‘The Dominion had a net direct debt last year of $3,083,952,202, but it also had an indirect or guaranâ€" teed debt of $1,212,447.201. Railway securities of $756,163,072 were guaranteed as to principal and interest, besides $216,207,142 guaranteed as to interâ€" est only. There were $30,965,595‘ other securities gusranteed as to principal and interest and $209,â€" 111,482 as to interest alone. The amount of railway debt for which the Domâ€" inion is responsible shows how recklessly Governâ€" ments went into the transportation field. The Canadian Northern Railway lost its identity in the Canadian National long ago, but stock and bonds in its namie continue to stand on the books to accuse. There is $25,000,000 in 6% per cent bonds due in New York in 1946 and more than $17,000,000 deâ€" benture stock at 3 and 3% per cent payable in 19§3 and 1958. Debenture stock of the Canadian Northern Ontario Railway Company to an amount of nearly $35,000,000 is payable in London in 19612. Three million, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the Canadian Northern Alberta Railway debenture stock is payable in 1960. Grand Trunk Pacific bonds valued at $83,980,800 are due in 1962, less $40,000,000 already bought by the Minister of ‘The $216,000,000 debenture stock issues on which onlym&gunnuodmmaudmnï¬tiu‘ sold by the old Grand Trunk, Great Western and Northern. Unless some way is found to make the railways selfâ€"sustaining the interest charges will also be perpetual for the taxpayer. The Dominion Government‘s debt has accumulated because every one seems to think it has endless sources of rexemue. It is expected to pull the Provinces, the municipalities, the railways out of the hole on demand. It is expected to help every one in need or not in need. With Confederation it started to compensate the seigneurs of the old regime for their property and still owes $11,827, carrying 6 per cent interest. So it goes. HOW FAR CAN TAXATION GO? Included in the cargo aboard the Hudson‘s Bay Company l:{'p]y ship, which sailed four d:II ead of schedule, was & carload of bufâ€" fale, moose and elk hides for northâ€" ern natives. | 000000 0 _ ilies aboard at Cape Dorset, 750 miles northeast of Churchill on Eï¬â€˜im{tkwuï¬â€™""’"ï¬p of Baffin island. Twenty families will be taken to Fort Ross and the remaining six plan to join relatives who migrated to Arctic bay on the northern end of Baffin island two years ago. namber of American tourists were making the trip and that the ship‘s passenger accommodation was comâ€" pletely filled. REQUIRED LITTLE THOUGHT Even the best brains sometimes lag and are stupid. A very clever gtm.hvhalioldthmd lenel Rivett Carnac and the enorâ€" mous mahseer he caught, made this remark following my statement that the scales with which the fish was weighed, could not register momad ‘ans n the mak tesins sterâ€" ed that weight, and some to spare. "So," said my friend, "they never found out the weight of the fish." "But, of course, they did," 1 said. "Hew*?" he inquired, _ ed each pisce separately. They then “‘hmw-flï¬umd Mvuunwdgtof fish, which was one and twentyâ€" one _pounds." _"I had not thought of that," said the scientist and mathematician. Yavlgmuyhr-bfld Sir Issac Newton and the two holes he had cut in the door of his study to enable the cat and the kitten to His Funny Story ‘The elevator was not working, so hm-&h'lhflqm to the 50th . One of them sugâ€" gested that they should tell funny stories «o they would not noi They had reached the 35t n o an ve -_l_iv:{-_-%'!-# get in without the door being openâ€" Mh‘l:hdflo.&lln %lv- third man‘s torn. -‘%3'."" r%--hl that tell as," #Mnmmfln last he told them: *L have left the key downâ€" The supply ship will take 26 famâ€" Are Sometimes Stupid g‘m‘“‘tï¬:aup Bunleo-nlldumfl: honmbu."dthc.u-. found out, seems to be good policy to beware of the stranger. ‘The Noble Swan (Durham Chronicle * Humans are slaves to We admire the noble but of uwhhth:::‘hn-dhpd- tioned customer for his size in the animal kingdom. The swan is not to be trusted, has been known to Early Restrictions * (Hanover Post) Members of the Free Methodist Church refuse to even work in the church rules that members :: snuff, chew, smoke, grow, facture or sell tobacco, and in an earlier day the discipline of the Primitive Methodist Church trote t mm paanen wea ow P a attending theatres, bumm union of 1884 these restrictions were removed or discarded the United Church makes no to enforce them. e An Affront to the Ontario People (Toronto Globe and Mail) It was ‘the duty of Ontario‘s Premier to extend common m‘ tesy to the President of the United States when he was in this Proâ€" yince on Thumhx. His place was in the front row down at Kingston and Ivy Lea to represent the pm of Ontario when honor was extended to the President and when he took part in an important hisâ€" toric event on Canadian soil. If he was not formally invited the matâ€" ter could have been arranged simply. His absence was an affront to the Ontario people, a violation of public amenities, and an inâ€" civility toward a very distinguished visitor. Mr. Hepburn has not shown himself averse to mingling with and entertaining : other American citizens. Could he not take the trouble to greet and welcome the head of the great American nation ? ; Engineer Is Quite Confident Highâ€" way Would Be Feasible continent except Australia was forecast by Donald MacDonald, Fairbanks, Alaska, engineer, and supporter of the proposed United Statesâ€"Alaska highway. _ _ _ MacDonald, "outside" for the first time. in seven years, told interviewers at Seattle the idea of travelling "is entirely feasible and as natural as evolution. It‘s no PNEC MTUBITY guDonsld said a motorist some day would be able to travel from Cape Horn in South America up the west coast of that country, across Central America by the Pan American highway system, through Mexico and into the United States. Using the sed Alaskan highâ€" “ni thmggmï¬lh Columbia, the Yukon and Alaska, the future motorist weuld cross the Bering sea into Russia, travel on into Europe and across the Suez canal The Bering strait between Alasâ€" ka and Siberia is the only "missâ€" ing link" that ï¬?k“m. any serious g:oblom, the A an engineer said, t he explained: "The road from Fairbanks could be extended to Cape Prince of Wales, the distance across the Bering sea to the east cape of Siberia is only 53 miles, the water is shallow there and it could be bridged or tunnelled." Airâ€"Conditioning _ Of _ Hospitals Eliminates Danger From or. 2 â€" P ‘ v‘ï¬el\mgmblehcmottha r of surgical operations, for which no satisfactory preventive heretofore has been found. It hapâ€" pens after six to seven per cent, of operations according to a survey made by the K-meï¬uuiu General hospital. _ 2e _‘ s % Commenting on the decision to‘ discontinue issue of the Toledo NewsBee, on account of "greatly increased mnetion m-t:‘ d:: ‘: Press Ns "Costs of production cannot be # I :-p-ï¬'."' f out making it for a ce t TZ:â€" haand diye® Covige P is foreed to merge Ridgid control of humidity, keepâ€" ing nTE' at 30, eol::-nd with the 90 humidities ‘which have been "scorching" the eastern United States this summer, appeared to be fully balf the cause of improved A world highway linking every t But at "O&rey mn,i with ';ir-condl- oning, tions a year renltedtnon?yoneuoeolpon‘ mnï¬w pmeumonia. Recovery in case was quick. _‘ AROUND WORLD BY CAR Very Few People Have Any Ides Of Expense Involved gives him the news of the entire world while it is still hot, seldom dollars a day it costs to collect that mh:n,b'ltnhh to run it off the presses, to mn-mmu; homes of tens of thousands of sab« «cribers." o4 Prorkie in 10B fegrees"""""‘> PRODUCING A NEWSPAPER of the river, and "The man in the street, who Beware of Strangers (Acton Free Press) MEDICAL DISCOVERY CS Other Editors Pneumonia for a *"Even while Mr. King was :ukiq‘ his ddn'u.u' thoDh?lll games rew many "â€"Daily r report on ;ddpr:s by Premier W’i Pearls of wisdom dropping Pearls of wisdom thoppilzg.(ut: Each one brighter than the lastâ€" _Lukz"" is this farâ€"flung nation Iï¬:"i one of such ou:il«lm! thet men 8 well as s ;flr-ninm Ain‘t got a thing Outhemn‘nowhousg\nnbut Dictators storm and raise a fuss, And rival armies make a muss, Diplomacy is in a tangle, As all the big shots rage a: Frag? While mighty nations rise and fall But none of the great Command the gate + Of the man who swats a ball. A thousand swindlers every day Rob widows and get clear away; Crime in waves floods o‘er the Oppression rides us from our birthâ€" And all these things we bear without ‘The slightest peepâ€" What rage we heap On the man who just fanned out! Disaster stalks in many lands, All is changing; nothing stands. When the y:fpcn we have mulled, Our sense tragedy is dulled, Until it‘s wakened up anewâ€" f For while away The other day, ‘T‘he home team lost by nine t The moral of this verse is none Save this: that watching baseball‘s Adolf Hitler, who once foreâ€" swore painting for politics, openâ€" ed Germany‘s 1938 art exhibition with a declaration that democraâ€" cles were welcome to modern arâ€" tists he classed as cultural Neanâ€" derthalers" but that Nazi Germany them tne CLANaACISN DOj®, and paraoed T subrer aiincued cublem. fututies: ] with them to the Calais high school, and dadaism and lauded the Nazi) headed by the massed Union Jacks cultural program. He said Nazi| ad Stars and Stripes. cultural prepaganda . doubtlessly mnnnmmmimamenmme would be recognized in the end as}\ Transparent resin, oneâ€"third the "on the right road," thereby asâ€"|\ weight of glass, and unsplinterâ€" saulting anew "the front of interâ€" able, is being made from coal in national Jewish culture mongers". England. 10 Years Ago Pretty wedding is solemnized at home of Mr. and Mrs. S, H. Hill, Wutor} when their daughter, Helen Jeanette, is married to Wm. R. Maguire, son of Mrs. Maguire and the late Wm. Maguire of Toâ€" ronto. Rev. Mr. Long of Toronto officiated. NAZI CULTURAL PROGRAM Elizabeth Frances Traplin passes away at home of her d-u_!hur. Mrs. J. R. Berry, wife of the Townâ€" ship of Etobicoke Treasurer. She was in her 90th year. At home of John Bennett, Crescent Road, North Weston, Miss Annie Baldwin is married to Tournament st Brampton last week, a rink of Weston bowlers captured the Eaton Trophy in competition with sixteen other rinks from Toâ€" m’ ephen Bennett. Rev. Thos. Radâ€" e performs the ceremony. Weston Bowlers Win The Eaton Trophy _ The same Troph to Weuten Tast Fogh, being won by W. J. Inch‘s rink. _ This 4 .uq ya es 2. nethy, and Gr;‘uh% It is announced that date of the holding of the byâ€"election in the Federal riding of West York, made necessary by the appointment of Sir Henry Drayton as Chairman of the Ontario Liquor Control Board, will be made known shortly. J. Earl Lawson is declared to be Tory party candidate in the coming w-clecticn in the Federal riding of est York. Hardington Ratepayers‘ Associâ€" ation is to be congratulated on the completion of renovations to the Community Haill. Night school classes in Weston|pital suffering from . guns Vocational School will open Oct.\wounds. At the time of en â€ï¬‚th:lnnflwhmmu;m?u'ï¬bmm Sept. 20 21. ‘the Kodak Co., Mount EXTRACTS FROM OUR FILES 10 AND 20 YEARS AGO What Price Glory? VARIETYBILL Get the world‘s good news daily through THE CHRISTIAN SCiENCE MoNITOR THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIHETY One, Norwry Street, Borton, Manachusetts Regular resding of Twz Cunmriuw Semwcs Mowrres is considered by many a libersl education. Tes clesm, unbissed news and wellâ€"rounded editorial festures, including the Weekly Magazine Section, make the Mowrron the idesl newspaper for the home. It is 5 cents s copy, or 3 cents 1 day on subâ€" 2231 Bloor St. West, Toronto delivered to your doot, and is obtrinsble st the An International D 1y Newspaper to tbe‘ James Webb, corner Main and the EhcglchAn._ rec;ltm official m that his son, Pte. Sydney s l';?&:"‘"..«""‘:‘.""’ *Trom "* Famibit ston ering Oet.tm At the time of enlistâ€" Sept. 10. Don‘t 'iu,n." et, boys, the th:: is coming close for .nmr meet» ing. Give your officers all the supâ€" port you can. Weston and Mount Dennis _ All Scouts and Cubs in uniform will be admitted free at the Ex. on Cookhouse Is Built A cookhouse for the Wolf Cub section of the Galt, Ont., district Scout camp,. "Peacehaven," was built this summer by evening ‘étl;gxm parties" of the Galt Lions Card 21 Years Late A postal card notification of a local Boy Scout m in 1917 was recentlé received Scoutâ€" master G. C. Clark of Peekskill, N.Y. The postal authorities offerâ€" In response to & call from alarmâ€" ed observers, police of Levis, Que. raced to a Boy Scout camp, to,flnd a boy tied to a tree, his hel_l-'& guently covered with blood. lood proved to be crushedâ€"strawâ€" berry makeâ€"up for the "victim" part in a Scout frontier drama. aboard the 18â€"ton Scout auxiliary ketch "Endurance" was the sum« mer‘s outing of the Rover Sea Scouts associated with the Point Charles Yacht Club, Montreal. At Sorel "Endurande" was joined by the whaler "Dolphin," manned by four Rover Sea Scouts from ?boe City for the sail up the Richelieu River to Lake Champlain. New Brunswickâ€"Maine Rally . Two Boy Scout troops and a Wolf Cub pack from St. Stephen, and a Scout troop from St. Anâ€" drews, N.B., joined. eleven Ameriâ€" can Scout troops for the annual district rally at.Calais, Maine. The n)? opened at the international bridge, where the U.S. Scouts met the Canadian bocys, and paraded with them to the Calais hi:'h school, headed by the massed Union Jacks and Stars and Stripes. 20 Years Ago Fuel controller in the person of Mr. S. Barratt has been appointed for Township of Etobicoke. ton Bowling Club have corn roast with following in charge: Wm. Shiells, ‘President, T. G. lbï¬nin. "Toad" Farr, A. L. Campbell, A. M. Barton and Prof. Wade. â€" Roy Shuttleworth, only son of Mr and Mrs. Roy Shuttleworth, of 437 Avenue C. South, Saskatoon, is killed in action. His mother, torâ€" merly Miss Beamish of Weston Ont., is a sister of Mrs. O‘Dell of Thistletown and R. H. Beamish of An interesting feature of elochï¬ of Weston Fair is presentation a gift and address to Rev. Mr. Mackay, supervisor and instructor of community gardens, ? children who have plots there. Miss Bessie Cameron makes the presentation and reads the address. Thomas Codlin, aged 80, at home of his s::a Fred ml:, Malton, He had 1i nï¬:ll his life on his farm at Cla Surâ€" viving are three sons and two daughters. Some forty members of the Wesâ€" Rover Sea Scout Cruise Tooâ€"Realistic Makeâ€"Up 53 MAIN STREET, WESTON FREE DELIVERY â€" PHONE 4â€"447 ruicksHank BUTTER .: PRUNES TOMATOES SALMON YOUR â€" â€" ssini.uss (@f | ° cark 53= 351 wWITh | fafeen DUNLO PSE e cuassis _ "THE _ i *A â€" iverieation * MA tCc a L**~ ____C6""25¢ SPAGHETTI _ .:z>z. _2m21¢ Heinz SOUPS ssm 2w25 TOMATO S0UPâ€"2 Tins 23e WAX BEANS _ x:mw BLACK TEA _ \zxx. "®39. SHORTENING sssm¢s 2m. 25c Heinz VINEGAR mss 2w«25¢ WHITEâ€"CIDERâ€"MALT P ano G SOAP 3 s 10c TRY OUR NEW BREAD "CGUEST LOAF" #:#» #== 10¢ BREAD .m>sz>e. 2 mm 156 SPECIAL FIT YOUR CAR WITH aualt" meAls ~_ s ennith \-k“B w. YÂ¥ 4 **~ 156 SPECIALIZED MOTOR TUNEâ€"UR GOLD SOAP VALUES EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 8 "WHITEROUSE® HANDPACKED Bize 2}4 EED sockers 14‘s Tin 0T thod*28Fios BANTA CLARA To to 80 to the Pound Come in and h the vital points. GARAGE 3 Tins 25c Zone 4â€"387 p. 25§¢ 17¢