o-vmvav ain't‘!!! Innis. ruun ihe Gharlottetcwh Guardian President LIouL-usl. W. Ohnlor l. Ie-Lno Viva-President J. ll. Bllrloll. IJI Editor uml Managing lllrnrlnr J ll Br-rnfll V J Si-crvillry Lh-iu. (‘oi u A llulllnnon. l). I. 0. Aiwllvlllle Etllrure Funls Wnlllel and l) K- Currie 1;.) an... [Hill] ttniiiiusii men M00 p» you (ll adrenal) .r.iiii.-..-.| ti. (‘ily $100 p" year (in numb nailed to l-trrimnr III tl $5.00 per your (In advance) their-tr tn nnnslu and United Motel 'l‘l‘ESD.-\Y. OCTOBER 5, 198T l Print-ls Hon. Mr. Bennett's Visit ("liarloili-ttiivii has a distinguished visi- g._,,- 1min’ iii‘ tlii- [sci-till of the Rt_ HOn. R. B. ,.\._.,,..;_' L. _-..[.-,- m‘ [llrj Opposition in the House nf tl-uutziiiis and former Prime bliniSier 0i cuiiulzi. .\Ir. llcuiictt is no stranger to this lq-oviiit-c. and it iloes not require to be stated that he i\ out: of the foremost statesmen in the lhiii-h Fiiipi 1 and a platform speaker of 011i- rtbiiity. The meeting which he will ad- i the Strand Theatre this evening will be " public, and all our citizens who can l-l take this opportunity of hearing ' i l‘ l‘ luard Hand lps never had a belle!‘ - lii a: ldtélwl. than Dr-Premier Bennett. w.» \\".~' hardly a request which the Pro- iii.l i. iiri\er‘vmi“e Government, under both .~lr S: .rt and Dr. MaeMillen, made to him. but was granted. Indeed, the experience of ihiS Province: under the Conservative administra- li~n of which Mr. Bennett was the ableand dis- tinguislierl leader was exceptionally satisfactory. \‘.'e were in the fortunate position of having a c-iniliixritiort here and at Ottawa which W0rhed hand in 11love, Especially after Dr. MacMiiian took office as Prentier, the 10ml government hid just m maize its wants understood at Ottnwl and .\Ir. Ht-tirtt-tt rourctlctl them. At least that is the» i.»~l' that prevailed at the time, and looking (ivrrrmigllfi Pi-‘flittl since, we eiq see, by compari- sou, him barren of regulto M! been the term timing which Premier King and Emmier Camp- bell have hem rrt the helrn._ ~1- Tlw l'i-o~.iinci1ui Conlefiatlvi Gonvlnticn. ‘which i; ti..- occasion of H. Bennett's visit at this time, will take place afternoon and has been Ofilhwfl Ufiiffiy for the rpooe of appoinl- ing a iii-oi. incial leader. The idgatce i! attend- {Vice will he representative ol al seeticpe of the PFUViHN. and there will be an opportrglity of dis- eiissiiig party renrgatf ‘tion at‘? reviewing the itfa"':l‘it political sitmtiork _ ‘ w ,- Lest we llorgei \V.- have quoted ¥ Fable, but it iS worth ntriin rccrtlliuq wliot Premier Campbell had i0 5a.- in m3; about Federal income tax collec- tions as rcportcd injhe local Liberal organ 0f ' lfiJll thatwa ‘i w’: “It wc time the single instance of income tax l 1.11 lll this Province, 1t seems hard to believe; .1 lllililiéfll, Mir. Speaker, when I heard the ‘q But 1n 1934-5 for eleven months of this t; . are toztil lticome tax collected from Prince '1 til Island by the Dominion Government t _ 5413.000. For the year ending March 1934, s‘ . v ma) Au increase. Mr. speaker, d more than 1-1 (Jf‘l1l.. an increase over the previous year t. ., 11.137. so that during the put. year m" Ii uioii Govemnrent. in income taxes alone ~11... tax-ti from this Province an increased as- ‘s .i iii: of more than the amount which they ‘r, propose to return as an annual subsidy. ‘it! ti if we consider the income Ix which we used fro ,ii.._\- lll 12:30 thc situatiml l5 even more alarm- l-Lz. Would you believe it, Mr. Speaker, the! in ‘I'm tin», tullll income tax paid by this Province ‘it. the Dominion Government. was only $42,649.45 scat-roan 10y eleven months o! In past year the ‘ifKli income tax has ingneaaed from that $42,- .I.>:iu m s$13.(157.33. A little unmet-lo will easily EllHV! thin. the Bennett Oooomspent. has multi- yp. d more than seven talmes the tncot-ne tax wiuiizc u-iiith u; collects from the Province of Pflllce Ijdivand Island! _ kcfilfipfi Premier Campbell will tell us what he ktiililiw‘ of the situation today. For the six ‘tanoiiiiis of the fiscal year ending September 3o, ytihi- tlwirlwttctoiiin district is credited with in- Qqowii- luX rectipts of $598,728, an increase of ‘s. _i_<, Hi t over the preceding six months, or about ytlziti. times the figure wliiclt so "amazed" Mr. qt Jlliltil u’; {Q55 under the licmiett Govern- fmttu. , if the tax» hners will ilii "a littlc zirithmetic" P l ,o1i the basis indicatcil hy .\Ir. Llamphell at that time. fhey will find :1 truly zistoitisliiiig mulli- pii. itinrf 4i incoitic tax collections. Then of Course, as‘ Prcnlicr Caulpbcll re- 1i rl tlii- Lccislaiiirc iii i')_§_§. there is also the His i.i..\. _\i tlizit time it \‘.'(l>' six per cent. . . . . , I air-s‘ uaiiilfii; the fact that "reduc- .. iii" \\.'l\ out: of the Iilanks in the p.i'i.i"iii iiu which .\lr_ Peter Sinclair "1. Tili. liuiiiiiiiifs predecessor .\Ir. Lar- llUViPfl to Parliament. ll inlcr, \'. i-"i The Christian View 'l'f~.cre are two ways of regarding religion. - the llioiitrczil (iazelte, the world's way and _~ K 1.1:" l I way. The world (locs not hestilate ic il .".\ a “lcial i‘|(‘LIt'S<il_\'. Sir Robert 'il‘l4‘li to have said, “it is not prudent t - trust yourself to any mart who tells ~ doc» not lielicvc in a (iod or in a iltwuli." liut the Church is will! this. The (‘ltiirch treats re- . :i< ;i ill c. “Ely to iiiau. not ntcrcly- because .- lit‘ timhlcil to do his tlutyutqltis h c:u1-t~ without it lit- cannot iul- - to (iiitl. ill'il’l‘(i, iii the tiliri" ian ilzzty to Howl comi-s first. Christ wi lilll-f "Thou shalt love the Lord all lib.‘ litflirt, and with all thy "- all thy mind. 'l‘|iis is tlic first -~: rui-liiieiit. .\liti the second is . l i."'l Jiiilt liivt- thy neighbor as thv i .- t: <1 coiuiiiaiirluietits hangs all the » Irv-j." M." that is in say. 'ii ltecp- i "l fulfills his duly both to (ioli 311i] tr,‘ _;':i...y_ ‘ Liam iii (tliawn (Inbinel ' il iiiMiiiit-il (ltlzuvzt correspon- -' ‘ ' ' ' fi- ll‘ i. ;. fairly -i.lii| opposition "'i‘i:iil:i's rl-icrtsirtg iriiaiti it!‘ ft-reiiccs on ripples. lumber ‘i. wt ti. facilitate the trade treaty Both i"\\'(!'.’l iil'i.'iil] and the United States, Nova Scotia and British Columbia could be re- lied upon to hotly fight this proposal, evcn though it is known the plan is for Canada to get from the United States. in a sort of three- cornered deal, the long sought concession on codfish, a large quota on Douglas fir, turd more generous conditions of admittance of western cattle to the American market. The Prime Min- ister, on the other hand, i5 believed to be sold on the idea that a formal commercial pact more closely uniting the United States with the Bri- tish Commonwealth, and indirectly with such other of the few remaining democratic nations as France, in these times when democracy is being so boldly challenged by dictators in Eu- rope and Asia, is worth almost any pricc to en- sure Anglo-Amcrican co-opcrzitioii, ccoiioitiical- iy and politically. Changes in the ll.l\'.1\. Act are likely to await the report of the Royal Com- mission on finance, as zilso will the establishment of an unemployment insurance scheme. As for selling war materials to Japan, that is likely to remain undisturbed unless and imti] Japarf 1,5. comes openly hostile to Britain oi- the British Antipocles. Editorial Notes I‘ I The anniversary of the disaster to Airship R-ror in r930. u is is u Prince of “lilies College will tiever be the same now the "Doc" has liiiuscli niatrictrlzitetl as member of a liigher College. n- v u - Welconre to the Rt. Hon. R. ll. Bennett who honours this province by making it tlic starting point for Party reorganization, 1F i F 1K h Paris, of all places it is definitely asserted by the President of the (Tliaiiiher that there is no immediate prospect of war. For which thanks bi. . ##1## If the worst comes to the worst in Alberta, the newspapers there can be published over tlic border in Saskatchewan and circulate in Alberta- ns usual. Fortunately “Father” Aberhart docs not control the postal system. is is it m The pondorotrs, strictly materialistic Mon- treal Gazette "jokes wi’ deeficulty, but it is a sign of regeneration that it jokes at all: “His- toric Douglas Castie-Sc0tt's ‘Castle Danger- ous'—is to be demolished to permit the working df extensive coal seams which are under it. No doubt the coal discovery is important, but it seams a pity", remarks our contemporary in its editorial columns. n. w =v Since the Ontario and Fctlcrai Liberals ap- pear to have kissed .'intl made friends, Mr. Hep- burn's professed dislike for Mr. Biaclteuzic Kings Liberalism may not, as once seemed like- ly, either win a large number 0f (fouscrvativc votes or lose many Liberal ones. By and large, therefore, says the Gazette, Wednesday “will witness a fairly straight party fight in Ontario, with the clearer partisan zituiosphere likely to favor the Conservatives more than the Liberals and so afford the formcra hotter chance to prove whether their chances of sticcess are as real as today they coittend they are apparent.” a at >|= * Mr. D'Arcy hiarsli, editor of the liamiltoii Spectator, addressing Montreal Advertising Club scored the propaganda ciuployctl hy Rtis- sia, Germany and Italy. lic said a controlled press imposed a \\'il0iC set of ideas on the Ger- man people when Hitler caiiic into power, and consequently the 38 per cent, who had opposed the man’s ascentlcncy to power ltatl not been heard from since. lie believed that such a method of, maintaiiig control was a (lcciderllyi tin- reliable one, and if ever tile tmderstirface feel- ing were allowed to give vctit to their natural course. the Nazi regime would tindotihtedly crumble in blood. is i is 1k >8 Speaking before more than 2,000 llll(lf‘i" gratiuates, faculty members am] parents in the chapel of Princeton lfiiivcixsii_v_ Dr. Dodils, Pre- sident, declared the world “finds itself in deep- ening fear and increasing tcitsion," [irimarilv because of the “(iC\'(‘iO|1lll(‘|li of a collective dis- trust of intelligence and the exalhition of emo- tional iiuptilses". "Over with: expruiscs of the world's surface, ‘prwsioii lcail-"f iiilcllcct can iz-tily fi.llo\v'," he said. "itivisou is for. feeble, wc arc told, for the respect of strong men. \\'hcrc pa- gan instincts have gaiiictl :ist"<'iiil:iiic\'_ it is but natural that those laborioti~sly zicipiircd stanilarils and ideals which ai-t- the lialliiigi-l; of a il'll(‘ civi- lization should be rlcrirlcrl illlli 1ict".-<~t"titcil," 1K IIK >if >0! One of those who took a protiiiiitiiit part iu lite Coronation has just p.'isscd .'l\\'.'l_\' iii the livi- son of the Very hey. \\'illi.-iiii l-lixlc.» Norris. dean of “festminstcr, rtgt-tl scvciil_v-t:i_-.glit. Kiiriun as one 0f the. most popular‘ (hutch pt-rsotialititis in England, Dr. Norris combined the talents of artist, business man. art critic and "ivatcr ilivin- er" with clerical \\'0i‘i\'. l-le raist-d 50.000 pounds for the restoration of iil(‘\\'ill1i<\\\'S of York .\li'1- ster and criticiyctl the “iiiozistrosilit-s" erected in cathedrals as iliPlllltri-‘liflll the famruis ilcail. llis art talents, which won hiui rcgtilzit" honors as an exhibitor at thc Royal .\c:~tlc|iiy, once got him jailed in it.'il_\'. \\ill‘i'(‘_ while sketching, he \\':is arrested as a siispcciiwl Austrian spy and only released after" il'l(‘ll'i< ililli prover] hi. identity, s s >i< a ' lliholtliug thc rii-fcnci- pica r.fj||,1iff;.l,l.- provocation, a .\ionti"c:il (him of king‘,- nymph jllf)’ lllldcr Chief lit-lice lin-cii-liii-lrls .'tt'<|iii|tc(i JOSPPI‘ ifurntcs. .\illi(‘i'iii'ili'li’li Spauizirtl, who was charged with wilfully causing ilaupagt- lo the picture of Adolf llitlci". hung iii the oiiicc of the (leritiait constilate there. The jury do. liberated only 2r) minutes. but-rites admittt-itl‘ go- mg to the office of thc ticrman cniistil lune I to seek an explanation of lill‘ l...iii|.;.r.|.n.-n¢ of his native town by the (icrmaii ivarship Dents- chland in what was s.'titl to he .'i rcprisal against ibt’ bmnbiug of tht- ship l._v Spruii-li iirrialist air- planes. lie szii-l ill‘ lii-i his hcail \\'lll'il tlit- ' " iiig consul. lic-ftiricli Sclirifluuisi-u, [ailm] 1,, .__ ,1.- hmi an explanation, ziuil hi: piclmil up :i chair and smashtrl :i lifc-sizt-ti phologripli of ilic Ger- man iitit-hrt-r. 'i'li<- actual chat-g» against Ftp-pp; was 0f having wilfully catiscl rlaiuagc to the picture of .-\1irilf Hitler. valued .<* $20, the pro- perty of the German Government, Till‘. \.ilAKl.U'l'll'.ltiWN (iLiKRHAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY “Money is what money dues," say the economist=—and it, is. perhaps, one of the best definitions which can be given of that. [JUZZA- ing commodity. It matters nor. | whether “money” takes the form 0f gold. silver, paper, shells, beads, or what have you-if 1t ceases to do its job of buying commodities and moving goods, it. is no longer of value. One of the mysteries of the present age 1s the ability of nations to spend on an extravagant scale for war purposes when, by all tokens, they should be facing bank- ruptcy. There are expensive wars. which still continue, carried on by states whose citizens are suf- fering from the dlrcst. straits of poverty. and one wonders how lt is done and how long lt. can continue. But. in tpii-e of all the juggling, economic laws cannot be flouted forever. The point comes when “money” ceases to function and the game 1s upr-(Hamllton Spectator.) of his old familiar youthful ex- uberance in Cheyenne, where he said: "Don't let anybody deceive you; the Government of the United is now going broke.’ It is true that the breadth of its taxing power makes 1t almost impossible for the Federal Government to go broke. It has no checks upon it, as States and cities ltave. The Federal power to tax not only is tintimited but. as Marshall said, it involves the power to destroy. And when 1t. tax- es to destruction 1t drags down capital and labour, employer and employed. buyer and seller. Vlrhat matters it to the broken individual that. the government responsible for his condition has not met. his own fate?—New Yorik Sun. Bow these dictators love to raise bogeys. Hitler and Mussolini de- clare the Rome-Berlin axis "Im- pervlous t.0 any attempts to wreck Italo-Gennan friendship by play- ing one. nation off against the other." Who wants to wreck any friendship? There la all too little anyway. Nor would there be any need to play off Fascism against. Nazi-ism. They will eta-operate just as long as it seems to pay and no longer. Either dictator would play the other false any moment, if it. seemed of advantage so to do. —lf.‘xchange. Scientists informed the American Chemical Society, 1n convention as- sembled at: Rochester, N. Y2. that their researches show that. the world is at least a billion years younger than had been supposed. Dr. E. Keith Brewer, of the United States Bureau of Chem- istry and Soils, works out the age of the earth through the study of the loss of potassium. Chemists will understand ho\v it works out to a billion years less than prev- ious estimates. Others may not. However. it ought to be a great surprise to the earth to learn how young it is, for, if an earth. like a man, is as young as it feels, the earth must. have been feeling awfully old lntelyt-Exclrauge. The night bomber, the submarine and the spirit. of extreme nflllOllfll- ism have done for irresponsible itatlotrs ivliat. the sub-calibie machine gun and fictional prohibi- tion ciid for the American gangster. He could assassinate his competi- tors and officers of the law and intimidate witnesses and jurors and ride rotigh-shod over the commun- ity tn swift moto: cars-until the peaceable people (the “cream puffs") got. tired of it. Then we had federal intervention and the rise of local anti-racket. move- merits such as that headed by Dewey 1n New York. The forces of order assert/ed themselves. The analogy is by no means perfect. of course. but. there is one; and it may improve in pertlnency if mys- teriotrs submarines whose sotuce everybody knows ,but. won't tell continue to prey on neutral ship- ping in Etirope. or if undeclared war in Ala floiits the right, of out- sidei-s too fla,i;t~antly.—tl3a‘tlmore Sun.) Gci'nrart_v...suppusad east as the jiltetl pitrtiiet" lll the Fascist. alli- ance, has greeted the Align-Italian convursaituits jubiianlly. They are, she rays, a vtctory for the Hillel‘ flies‘ of the strperiorlty of bil- atotxril pacts over all methods smacking of the principle of col- lccllic security. Secondly, she firm- ly lJCiiCVOs that. the Rome-Berlin axis ha. proved itself to be sound- ly based upJn mutual stratrgic 1n- tcrests; she sees the Anglo-Italian negotiation; as a sign that. Britain is willing to do business with the Francists and not. as an indica- _ ticn nf the departure of Italy from her German love. Thlrdly, it ap- pears probably that; the final out.- camc of the present discussions may well be another four-Power pact-between Great Britain. France. Germany and Italy. This would isolate Ru sin and leave Germany free i0 pursue her own ambitions in the East-a type of British foreign prficy Hitler has long been playing for. The German have good reason for their pleasure! --Ctirrcttl. l-ilslory (New York) em of course argues that. Great Britain as “till as the United States stands to gain economically from ii reciprocal pact. But. in addi- This clcmrnt (British free irad- , iiifiat yours Qfbfllflkifltm-Dx TONSILS SHOULD BE REMOVED L. WHEN It seeriis only reasonable not. to ‘ remove tonsils even lf large, if they are causing no symptoms of obstruction or infection. Most physicians believe that. 110115118 should not be removed until a l i selves a constant source of infec- ‘Sling Those Spuds! ticn to commercial advantage Mr. Ellen's present position shows that. Brttlh statesmen are keenly aware of the great. political advantages of an economic rapprochement. with the Uli.i(‘(i States. No one knows beher than the BrltLsh Foreign bfiipsrcr how ndvmiiugmun it. could be. not only to Great Britain but. the world geueruly. for the two great English-speaking nations to make common came aizain-t. the enveloping chaos by a constructs-e co-operation in favour of less restricted trade. Working at. crosa-ptrmoses. neither nation youngster has reached his teens. at. which time they gradually be- gin to disappear. as 1f Nature fell that they were no longer needed- all diseases of childhood safely passed. The tonsils have a. definite duty in filtering out. pOISOILs in the blood and destroying harmful President Roosevelt had a flash I 0112811151115- Tl-iere are however. some very definite reasons why tonsils and m, vgfy 511mm;- growth at back of nose-adenoids-mhould be re- moved 1n many cases. Dr. T. T. Higgins in The Plactltioner states. “Removal of tonsils and adenoids is oel'ed 101' when (1) the enlargement 1s so great. and persistent. as to be tn- PUBLlC FORUM nu whim- u w" I" "Ir IIIUIJIIDIIIIII by ourrrnphudlnll ol uuulluna of Inter-eel. Tin Ulnsrlultetun-n (iuardlnn doo- Ins neoelnlrlly endorse Ibo onllllill o! mrrnnnndentn. KING VS. HEPBURN Sin-In the event of Hepburn winning in the approaching elec-; tiou will ‘t not be a slap in the ‘ . face. an endorsement. of Hepburn as ' |against iris avowed opponent Hon. Mackenzie King? These that are not for are against, and approval of Hepburn will surely be a con- demnation of King. I am, Sir, etc. , unqurrmn MALPEQUE ROAD CONGESTION Bin-It. is apparent that. the Government; intends connecting the main highway with the lower road at. Queen Arms Corner. Malpeque Road, as trees are being cut. down and the road widened. Surely this is mistaken policy as the better plan would be to contlnuq the pavement, from Douoe's Bridge to the Queens’ Arms Comer. The distance is no greater, and it has already been mactwlarruzed which gives it. a good hard-surfacing. There is a large uzctfon of country west of the terieriug with health, and (2) the N, U R. “you h Cornwall tonsils and adenoids are title Cenfirfll B;Lfia“,l“g§apn,“ii‘ ‘lglcwfla’ NJ“; Wm‘ or cause °f Gimme ma“ Wlltslrlre, etc, which would be tion," some degree of enlargement. ls considered normal during child- hood, arid if there are n0 531ml!- toms of obstruction -—l)i'9fli.i1iii'! through the mouth (mouth open all the tlme)—the tonsils should not be removed. "The enlarged tonsils may, how- ever, extend lnto the throat passage enough to cause coughing- difficulty in swallowtné .0? 9"?“ vomiting. In such cases the tonsils should be removed." However when there are no symptoms of obstruction but the tonsils are inflamed it. is often a question as to whether or not. they are the cause of trouble elsewhere in the body._ When there is a history of re- peated sore throat loss of appetite | and energy, dlgestice disturbances. bronchitis, catarrhal middle ell-r complications and enlargement of l the glands of the neck, it t5 C011- sidcred wise to remove tonsils. Sore throats cause rheumatism and rheumatism causes heart dis- l we It 15 the-rem" bell" i°' in crapaiia fliid vicinity. spare the child the misery of 4o Kw" so Kw" rheumatism and the danger of a man", a mun", heart disease by having his tonsils Crapaud $510 $330 removed, thcn to leave them in charlofl,.lo,,.,, 2B5 3'85 because they may be of help, at Hunt-ax L75 23,5 some future time in filtering Tum) 1'55 235 pol=ons from the blood and killing Pick,“ 1Z0 L80 harmful organisms. And, as men- tioned before. infected tonsils have lost much of their power in pre- venting ailments and are them- tlon. - i (Fredericton Gleaner) At the time when Carnivals of Champions and British Empire Zone Track and Field Trials oc- cupy the public attention, it. ls rc- freshing to learn that. a, trial of skill based upon a most. necessary occupation is in way of being or- ganized, 1t is none other ‘than The International Potato-Picking Contest with a world champion- ship to be decided The scene of the international contest mentioned is Presque rte. Maine. and the datc October Gl-h. Chosen to compete because of thali- importance tn the potato- growirrg industry were Idaho. Min- nesota, .Wisc0'nsin, New York. New Jersey. Pennsylvania, Michigan. Nova Scotia. New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Potato-digging or potato-picking for many years had been a. recog- nized autumnal occupation which attracted men from New Bzunswick to the Aroostook potato-fields whore the potatoes were numerous and labor at. a premium. New Bruwwickers never were classed as being inferior in slinging the spuds. Should n. team from this ])TOVil"iCt‘.—i<'ii(il'ig it. for granted of course that the pickers will be organized into tetanus-enter it. should give a good account of it- rclf, It must. be admitted however that the depression produced the effect of reducing the RCliViLlCS of New Brunswickers in Aroostook fields. the opinion naturally being held on the other side that what. opportunity to labor ex‘sted. should be reserved for the native-bum. The orrzanfziitlon of the Interna- tional Potato-Picking contest. with a world's title the objective and Hi5 Excellency Governor Barrows of Mnlnc officially interested, may be taken as indicating rm easing of ccnrltiorl and a tmndency for the Caniick to be welcomed once more in Northern Maine's potato- fields. can do very much for world peace. working in ltiirmony, it. would not be difficult to draw to them the great. majority of the other trading nations. For anything favoring economic recuperation will also asist political stability. -Wa.sh- lngton Post. Write for "Sunqlo Service Slants" and get valuable practical information on fox feeding. Published six times yearly and FREE to all Fox Breeders in Canada. Write Today. INTERNATIONAL FOX l. ANIMAL FOODS, LTD. Iummonldo - flplguup lmieflted by the improvement. the iOWBl‘ road. . - itreaty relieve the congestion on they will give ungpetétliggptd allegh. the llppcl‘ paved road at the busy fmce to the Soc seasons l ill greatly enhance the pleasure faced. Will the Government arrange‘ their plan; to make this practicable? one of the leading Halifax news- papers has brought to light some interesting data on the prices paid for electricity tn Charlottetown. Halifax, 'I‘ruro, and Picwu. mtt me to submit the figures quot- ed together with the price paid appear that the price the people of Crapaud are paying is, to put it very meditating on these data in the silent watches of the night thought I heard voices from afar. It. was apparently the Public Util- town; they were singing selves to sleep and the tune they sang seemed to be that of the well known hymn Light". As their voices grew faint- er, another song arose; the North Tryon Electric Light C o m p a n y chorus: It. would also The lower road is one of thel prettiest. roads do: tourists, etcul that. section, and it would of he drive were the road hard aur- re- I am, Sir, etc. L. L. JENKINS.‘ CRAPAUD LIGHT RATE Sin-Recent. correspondence in Per- From t.lte above figures it. would mildly, exorbitant. While ‘J18- in Charlotte- them- ty Commissioners "Bleed. Kindly this was chanting in happy Otir manager bids its shine with a clear pure light Like a ’lectric light bulb burning in the night. a hundred shincrs he's hooked upon his line You pay all your light bill, and I'll pay mine. 0'r:r Oui- manager bids us shine first of all for him. Service charge a dollar. though our light grows dim. Eleven cents a unit tip to twen- ty-nine, You pay all your light bill, Incl I'll pay mine. Our ntartaeer bids tis shine their for all around Says he, "More power to suck- ers, thercls plenty to be found!” AS 1011i! as they've the money, everything 15 fine You pay all your light bill. and I'll pay mine. I am, Sir. etc... LUX FIAT. Crapaud, Oct. 2, 1937. - iisrsctXrTi TilE two mics Buyer's Aspirin 12's — — 13¢ Budd's Kidney Pills — - 33¢ Colgates Tooth Pesto — 19o Lars» — — - - - 33o Tooth Brushes 25c, 2 for - 33g Dr. Chase's Nerve Food 49o Compound Syrnp liypq. phosphites — - - - 93¢ Face Cloths 10c, 3 for — — 25o 15c. 2 for — - 25c Fund's Cold and Vanishing Cream — — — 29o and 19c Viceroy Hot Water Bottles —-——-———89candiiiio Bill Folds. 85c. 98c. SIM Each Eno's Fruit Salts 49c and ‘Ilia lrmlacd Yeast - — — — 05o DR. L. B. EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE For lndi " , SJpepsia, Sour Stomach. Heart Burn and all such troubles of the stomach. TRY FIVANXQ STUMACII liIlXTlIRI-I. PER BOTTLE PRIFF. litic 01' Vilglil fllWaU use ‘. EIMIN; nAtwcisi“ 1515x012 TEA ’ B UblUUbaK 5. 19.51 ~:——.—.--.:.:~:. ll Guaranteed Objectives » r foundation for I No investment other than to create an instant estate tection, which can be paid for by instalments l live, and iii which all rum. f l f through life insurance achievement. Consult your nearest A Provincial I Offices-Charlottetown - l celled if you die. Financial objectives programmed i The Great-West Life ‘is the Champion of Thrift and the Guardian of thousands 0f Canadian Homes. IIYNDMAN 8i 00., LIMITED life insurance permits you for business or family pro. if you er‘ indebtedness will be can. are guaranteed complete gent or write or call on Managers Summerside - Montague '-——-_-l Liberty Signed AWHY (Vancouver Province) Fifty members of the Alberta» w Legislature are reported to have sgiied a pledge to the effect; that. Board this act. ill and its experts- BY , devoted fifty would appear the have surrendered their functions as legislators. Hencefonvard they‘ axe Yes-men. bondmen, slaves of an idea, rubber slflmbs- Th9)’ W111, not legislate. They will merfllyi speak and vote. A robot with a‘ gramophone in us throat. and a marked ballot. in its hand would serve the purpose as well as any one o! them. , The system employed in Alberta} may be effective for getting things.‘ done. 8o 1s the system of the- dictutors. But: like the system of the dictators, the Alberta. plan is the negation of representative government. When a citizen of a. Canadian province voles for a man to re-l present him in the Leglslaturtm lie votes for someone who will go to the Legislature in his place and do the things he would have done were it possible for him to go there himself. In the days of the old Saxon moots or councils each free- man wfls his own representative. He attended in person, speaking his mind and shouting his “Yea!” or "Nay." It was the same in the old Greek city states. It. was the same 1n much later times, in the town meetings of the American colonies. The modern legislature, in which representstives alt, are a develop- ment Of the old councils in which the citizen took a personal part. in government. The citizen ricvcr dreamed of tying himself up by a pledge of allegiance to any board or person or idea. "e was a. frcc- man, and he prized his liberty of action much too highly to sign it; away. The representative in a legisla- ture. if he ls to be an effective and useful representative, must also maintain his freedom of action. He may have promised things before he was elected and ls right to re- spect his promises. He may regard promise and mandate will be in ‘general terms. They will not; gov- _9l'l'l the details 0f the representa- tive's conduct, and they will w..- dltfon but a small part of m5 activities. Numerous and various questions must arise in any leglslaturg on which the representative has m; ""159 l"? promises. He should be l" 9- PQSiUOn to deal with these question on that merits. The peo- ple who elect. him expect him to do that. Indeed, that. is the sole reason for electing him. It", for any himself as under a mandate. Bub himself-of his freedom of aEflF-n, his usefulness to those who chose him is gone. odé’ INDIAN ‘simrivrm These are the days when btrb eon! back, ‘ A veny few. a bird or in. To take a. backward look. These are the days when skies pq on The old, old sophiltflu o! time,» A blue and gold mistake. Oh, fraud that can not cheat he bee. Almost t-hy plausibility Induces my belief. T111 ranks 0f seeds their wiflfl in‘. - And softly through the altered fl Hurt-lea a timid leaf i oh. sacrament of summer days. ' Oh, last communion in the halo Permit a. child to 10111. Thy sacred emblems to partake, Thy consecrated bread to break. Taste thine immortal wine! _______.____ _ Silence Were Bette! ( Hamill-on opectaltnr)‘ condemnation by League 0f N8- tlons has become one of the mOBl subtle of encouragement!- A few hours as“ the R5819 0i Nations Far Eastern Advisory Committee forrrrally W149i!!!“ Japan's aerial bombardment q Chinese cities as having “arouses horror rind indignation "WW8 our. the world." ‘This resolution. disapproval “as flwiiml-‘lflflled specific references to the killing innocent citizens many of who were women and Children- Ii; is, we admit, n. difficult for the League. with its sho pg\\fefs gird its dwindling authority and to "vlcw with alarm." belligerent activities cf men. Yel each proclamation of official dis- may which emanates from Geneva especially when ll; Outlines horror of some current wt’. overt. aggression, emphasizes impotence of the league. Naturally, as long as it lasts. U14 magni- must. pass resolutions an‘ proprlai-e to whatever crisis it. h at. the moment incapable of deal- lng Willi. but. in view of 1M 7M WiCiOS-pfefld public concern record- ing the bombing of Chinese cmci the League would be well advise to give its academic resolutions H reason, a representative divcsts chew of '_TiiE TWO MAGS Phone 315. P. O. B0! Ill {l in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward yourself with a comforting l-IICKEY a. NICI-IOLSON’S l‘ BLACK TWIST" CHEWING little publicity as possible. The cynic might. remark iilQ to do anything except. to deploa _