-.._- -..—~u——...._- .. PAGE roux TIIE DIIAR LDTTETOVIII G IIARDIAII Morning Dilly (Founded In 1381) President. I.4I'!|lI.-COL W. Chester 8. Mcl.uro Vice President. J. IL Burnett. I‘. J- 1, Secretary, Llcut -CnL D. A. llthclflnnon, D 5. 0.] ldltor and Mnnaglng Director .I. I1 Burnett. I‘. .l. Associate Editor, I-‘rank Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES 35.00 per year (In advance) delivered to Cit»! $4.00 per year tin advance) mailed to P. I. bland l5.00 per year (in advance) mulled to Canada Ind U-I Members Judlt Bureau of Cu-cnlntlnm ———— "— ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker U100 the Weakest Ink.” j I FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER, )5, I939. I . 4. Penalizing Queen’; County \\';,;,;,,.y_ pr.--tll1l.tlilv\', for the appointment of Hort. ll. \\‘. I.t‘I'IlL’_C to the Lieutenant (io\'ernor- chip the (:ti11pl1-.-ll tiuveriirnent delayed rc- (ll’"'1lli/Ill" since the proviucirrl election IIIIIII 5‘ " N , V ve»ti1'1l;1v. \‘-lI(‘Il the I‘rcrn1er announced the new Caliiiiet Illlvllll. I{~pl:1eii1g Ilon. .\Iessrs. I.eI’:ig('. _.\i',,.,, “nit 1',-..w.e are three new members wi'tl;.i1ir pt1i'tfnli1», t1.'1iiu-ly, Messrs. Iloracc \\',-fut”, lion-;:1l1l .\l:1cl{i11r1im, and II- II. COX. Tlli< g \k'\' the new L'abir1et setup by Qountits ful i.\~: 11;-.';,,_-9 t’..mri_\-; l‘r:-niier (‘[llll]vl)('lI, Iliin. \V. ll. llenni-, IIUII. .\I:1r'i11 Gallaiit, IIOI‘-. IIUFHCC ..l v . 51>‘ llun. M. R. Klcfittigan, Hon. 1 , .‘ «ill. kn '5 L‘1»iiy~'_v: lloit. l, I’_ :\lcInt_vre, IIOrl. A. (~i'.IIll‘illl'lI. l|ivit- II. II. Cox. I: will he lltIi\‘\l., in the first place, that (hit-1i1'< C11i11'\', with the l:1i‘g(-st imptilation, has ijiilv tit» (izzhzi-t i11<-it1l>e1‘s as .'1<;:1iiist three for l\i1i_;"s flllrl fmir for l'i'ii1ce. This reverses the rule of rent‘. - ntzitinn in the llouse of Com- l[](')l]‘ [['l‘lt-‘F \\Ill\'ll Qztt-1~ii'c ('11u11ty holds two 51-ats as zigziiiist one seat each by Prince and l\’1 s Cottitlitw’. _ lriis rank discrirriiritition against Queens Couirtv reveals the partisan attitude. of the n_€\\' C{\t1t1)ltt‘ll tiovernnient. It is anornritotts begin- ning, and is particularly nbjectioiiablc in view of the fact that tltis Province, like the rest of Canatla, is now at war and every effort of the GU\‘L’l‘lllll€lllC shoulrl be directed to giving non- parti-an ailministrzitiou. It will he ll0ll‘(l also that both Liberal mem- bers of the St. l‘eier's district, Ilon. I’. .\lc— Iutvrc and Ilon. II. II_ Cox, have not tlnly cab- inet seats but additional emoluments. l\Ir. Mc- Intvre Il4illIS his former portfolio of Plllllic \\iiii'lts and lligl1wa_vs while Mr. Cox. without p"TlIl)lIIt, is appointed to the Treasury Board as well as to the boards of Falconwood and Ed- LlC:Illt)ll, while he also falls heir to Mr. LePage‘s salaried job as chairman of the Fishermei1’s Loan lloztrd. Contrast the plums that have fallen to this one di~tricl in I\'ii1g's (‘ourtty with the niggardly freatiiieiit given the whole of Queen's by the Caiitpliell li(J\'t't'lllll(‘l'lIl To rlcstrilie the new regime in terms of mod- ern \\HIl4l politics. one would say that it is dom- Ill'll(‘fI by the (iatiiphell-XlcIntyre “axis"» The cnpitgil t'imut_v of the I’rovince, which showed too much ii11l< peiivlence at the polls to suit these [>l‘t)\'Itlt'l.’lI <lir't:1tor.~'. has been penalized, in vio- lation of t‘\'f'l”)' principle of detnocracy, for the defense of \v'.1ich our gallant soldiers are now being l’(‘t’l'1liI('tI. And we looked in vain for one word of protest against this glaring discrimin- ation in the columns of ottr local contemporary! Red C ross Meeting Av direction of the National Commissioner of the Ciiriadiart Red Cross Society, the Prince Ed- ward Island Division is taking measures to ob- tain the co—operation of leading citizens tlirouglioitt the province in the formation Of Coiiiitiitti-es to carry out the many duties de- volvittg upon the Red Cross while the country is at urrr. To this end a meeting has been called to he held in the City Hall, Cliarlottctotvit, on )[n1iil;1_v, Sept. 18, at 8:00 p. in. At this meet- jng [hc rt-[in-~t‘lll£Ili\'t‘S of this Division attend- ing a st.-s~i«>r1 of the National Council of the So- ciety to be held at Uttatva on the l2th. instant, will r<‘p«>rt the l”(‘t‘<llllIll(‘l1lli1ll(lllS of the (oiillclli ilerisioiis will be iiiadu as to the general lines of activity to be <-11tere<l upon here; and the ne- Ct‘.\~.'\l’\' ('oi111iiitIet~.s will be appointed. The lie-l (ross has now for tnauy years been prr-ocrtipietl with its pezice-little pmgranime: but \\‘llllt‘ it is llII[l"tl to prosecute this work without iiiii-rrirpiiiiii it must be remeuibered that the or- iginal p11rpo<t- of the Society was to mitigate as far as l)ti\~llllC the suffering caused by war. and when war breal<s out the Red Cross is called upon to put forth every possible effort and coir- Cl'l‘l‘.l’Ili(‘ the force of its great organization on war wi1i'l<. All ll(‘l'\ttll§ and org:111izations willing to give their i~1.nnci~] and advice or assist in organizing the work are urged to attend the. meeting on the filth. ivistant. (‘lt-1'qy111ei1 and officers of assoc- iations are specially rerptested to attend and give the matter publicity and use their in— fluence to secure the attendance of others so that the nret-ting may be as representative as possible. The Italian Pendulum A writer in the New York Times su;:f!C5l5 that one of the first major casualties of the war may prove to he the Rome-Ilerlin Axis Secret ncgotiatimis hetivcen Italian and British dip- lomats during the past few days lend support to this surmise. Mitch may depend on whether Italy, the pendulum of Fatrope, swings east or west. This is trite even were Mussolini able for a time to maintain the neutrality the Italian people desire. In Italy's geographic and political position it would have to be a benevolent neu- trality toward one side or the other, and that would inevitably involve participation in the conflict. _ Undoubtedly Britain and France are working THE CHARLO’l'I‘E'l‘0WN GUARDIAN hard to influence the decision. Rome has be come the diplomatic battlefront. For the ques- tion involved is not merely the guarding of the French-Italian frontier or the opening of a path via Italy for the Franeo—British Amties to push into Germany. It is not merely a question of the Pyrenees frontier, although the attitude of Nationalist Spain will be affected by Italy's. The position of all the countries in the Balkan peninsula, the alignment and character of the naval war, in the .>\tIantie as well as in the Med- iterranean, are bound up with the Italian deci- sion. It would be Mussolini's choice, no doubt, to hold the balarice in suspense and keep Europe guessing. If he were free of all €lllal'lgI(‘l‘Il(‘f‘IfII it would appeal to the aptest pupil of Machi- avelli to exploit this errvizible position to the limit. But he is not free. Ilis tie-up with Germany forces Ililll either to denounce the Axis or to sup- port Ilitler- If smite secret condition in the agreernent does not release him, the Nazi—Sovict pact supplies him with an "out" if he wants one. Ile is bolstered tip b_v a Mediterranean agree- ment with (ireat Iiritain more explicit than the pledge not to go to \var with England which hound Italy in 1914. There is good reason to believe, n11-reover, that France, which gave more to get the support of Turkey than Italy asked in Tunis, the Stu-7 and Djihuti, is no long- er averse to a “reasonable. settlement" of Italian claims. It would not be fantastic, says the Times writer‘, to inizrgine tl1:1t Italy used the Axis as a lever to pivot ll(‘l’.<.<lf into the present position in respect to her old allies. Supposing that Italixtn ii1t<-t'e<t.s, liltc Illiisc of every power ii: l’.11ropt~, drive her to oppose the expansion of Li(’l‘lllflll)', wliv \\'Ulll(I she not manoeuvre her- self into a place ivitere she could throw her wt-ight on her own -ide on better terms than in Ii)r_=,? Tlie .'l'l~\\‘t’f to this vital question, which holds up the ziclioit of I.oudon and Paris. and Ill"._\' nialte all the rliif<-rvnce in the future course of Il<‘l'llll, will snort be forthcoming. So will the :in<iver‘ I41 the pu7./.le of l{ussi:t'.s military move- lllt‘lll\’. 'l‘h1~ fronts are not yet formed. and un- til tl1e_v an-, the rlecisions of the so-called neu- tral: are alinost more important than the moves of the belligerents. EDITORIAL NOTES First balloon ascent in England this date, 1784. not it an The population of Great Britain today is 5 per cent greriter than it was twenty-vears ago, but the 5lllfll‘lll\’ in high scliorils and universities have more than (I()lll)lL'(l. at It n- at This \\'(‘(‘I\' the gallant Illack \\'atch Regiment, and ])llIL‘l\)' Sigiial Corps, left our Island on the first lap of their ll(I’4tlL‘ war service. IIere's to :1 speedy and safe return! 4 in -u u Unless we have an independent Patriotic So- IIOTES BY THE WAY Mu: near Meuord has a team of horses and met: comoined age is 70 years, which sllggesw it. is time they were allowed to sit. on the porch for a while In the al- ternoon.—PetA=rIxJrougn E.xa.m1ner_ 4 Although all of Europe Is now ablaze it. is still possible to pick up 9. copy of the New York Com- munist newspaper, the Daily Worker, and read that the Nazi- sovlet. non-uggresslort pact. u might. weapon in the struggle for peace."—New York World-Telegrurn. The pedestrian, according to I Chicago court. ruling, has me right. of way even when the red light. is against, him. Oh, well, that.'ll give the poor sap something to munrble about. while they're cuttzng off his clothes and getting the unaestlietlc ready.-—Windsor Star. An agitated housewife who had canvassed department and varletv stores in a vain effort to purchase tlnv American flags for a patriotic party called the Oregonian. "They havervt. snv,“ she l'€‘il{)I“.t‘d indig- namly. “They say that one little American flags are made only in Japan. Is that true?" An in- vestlgatlort Indicated that ll. was t.rue.—-Portland Oregonian. One of the most cheerful Items reaching the Tribune reecrrtly was a publicity letter from Berlin in- viting us to the Olympic ski eon- tcsts at GIIIITIISCII-‘P£ll‘iA3lIkll‘CIltfYI next February. The cancellation mark on the envelope C£ll‘l‘l(‘t’l the slcgan "Travel in Happy Genn:2r._v.“ We mean to, some dny—-to l-lertin. ——Wrnnipeg Tri-bune, Out. of the British White Paper emerges the picture of u Jittery, wilful man whose irnpnticrrce l'~ as extreme as his luck of any sense of responsibility. Mr. Hitler's :11- terchaiiges with the British Gov- emrnent. boil down to the sunpiu fact that he Illllsl have his way without. interference, and that 111:- less he has his way at once he \v:ll blow ut.Fand blew up the tvorld l‘.l the process. It is doubtful if ever before the head of a :;re’ riat:on has takcn on himself so 1 ' 1 the full and sole i'espons1ui11t_v for starting a wz1r.—Ne\v York Herald Tri.bune. War brings with It. Its Infamies and degradations, and our earrr-est prayer as 3. people must. be that Canada's record Will not. be mar- red by senseless intolerarice to- wards innocent people. Let there be no witch-hunting and perse- cutlon of any of us who bear tron- Ang‘.o—Saxon names. her not the Slns of one mad man be vislwd upon the children of German Can- adians unto the third and fourth neratiou. some few rr.-:.ple sllotlld interned. Their records justify If because they could not be ll'LlS'.- ed to refrain from trying to do the work of the enemy Ill this coun- try. The Govcrinn:=.nt will attend to this. but if is to be assumed that. the aulltorittes will show moderation.-—Wmritpcg Free Press. The Master of the Girdlr-rs‘ Com- ciety, as in the last war, fighting for our mil- itar_v rights and interests as a province, we are lil<el_v to he treated at (lttawa as though we were liicn-ly a b.'tcl{wi>o<l settlement. 2- It no: It's just a year ago since Adolf Hitler said it at .\dll‘t‘Illl)(‘l‘_LfI “I ti'ii.<t that no mother will ever l~avr* c:1u<i- to weep in conseqttencc of any actioii of tni1'.v.” -in it =0: :1 Mexico has caticelled a $20,000,000 oil deal with .\lr- \\'. Ix’. I):tvis, New York, who had been sliippirig 75 per cent of it to Germany, which sent riiercliandise to Mexico in exchange. Mexico's under-sccretar_v for Foreign Affairs says his governnient will now sell oil and other products to belligerents "which deserve our sympatl1y"——l%ritain and France presumably, who soon will have the Iiuropean monopoly of the seas. u in. In It- Over L000 Canadians in England have ap- plied at the Iligh ('on1rnissioner's office, Lon- don, for enlistment in a (fanadian Expeditionary Force. Applications coine from originals of Priticess l‘;1trici.'1's (fariadiaii Light Infantry. One joined up August 7, 1914. Indeed, the whole tenor of these present applications is reminiscent of the raising in t':111:r<l;1 of that famous regi- ment in the e:1rl_v \veel<s of the last war. when l1:ri'dly a private was ac«e\,ted who had not held at least lltlll-ColllllllS>I0ll('(l rank in the Empire's previous wars. 'l‘lie_v clamored to go overseas i1nmedi.'1tel_v and they went to achieve imperish— zihlc renown. It or -or :- Ilfr. Pien Citlow, general secretary of the US. (iornnittriist party from 1022 to 1929, testified before the ('i>ilgi'e-<5 cnniinittee investigating uri- .1\111<~rira11 :1(‘li\'iti(‘s that the party received $100,- 000 to $I_=.o.tx)o a year froiu tlte ('ornrnunist In- l(‘I’llillltlllPll in .\l<i.-cmv during that period. Al- thrniigh he had no fil"~‘l-llfllltl information as to wlietlier the [l:l}'lll<‘lllS have continued since, Mr. liIllll\V derlareil that the party set up and activ- ities (“>ll\‘lll('(‘fl him that the subsidies were still Leing pairl. 1\lr. |\‘l1ea \\'l1itlev, connnittec corin- sel. said later \\'illl(‘R~f‘S would present evidence to this effect. II! it -or in Patrons of a night club in traditionally dry Kansas were pictureil recently in a civil dam- age suit as “cavorting cavemen", "pre-historic playboys" and "circus clowns.” The descrip- tion was given by an awning manufacturer in an- swering a suit resulting from collapse of a can- opy at a Wichita night cltth. The defendant as- scrterl the canopy was con-tructed “in good and workmanlikc manner" suitable for “a place of decorous and decent amusement” and had been weakened by customers of the club who climbed and swung on its framework. "On the night the clitb opened," his answer said, "more than twenty cases of whisky were sold and consumed on the said premise. "' “' "' The results produced on the customers Il1IlIC5IlC(I this was not singing or vocal ivhiske.y, neither was it wildcat nor fighting provcn to he squirrel whiskey. The canopy was built In witlistand the ordinary wear and tear of civilized occupancy but not to meet the stress and strain of cavorting cavemen, circus clowns trqd colossal celebrations of prc-historic playboys." The awning maker pointed outv officers had raid- ed the club and arrested its operator. V __V whiskey, but by the actions of the customers was. puny has sent the Lord Mayor :1 basket of mulbetwles picked from the tree growing in the garden of the companys hail in Blsirtgiiall street. The tree is of .sr.\rr1t- age, and was probably planted just af- ter the Great Fire. tvn‘.-n lIl('. hall was rebuilt. In the «ante gr: en a small but bcriu ' laid-out piece of ground sit ctriirieil by a high wall. are a fig tree and a grape vine. The fig tree is lit- variaibly pl'0IlIl’3 in foliage but seldom fruits. The g:'a.r)e vine oecaslonallv does so. Tue oldrsl mulberry tree in the City is in the garden of Iii: l.).'apet's' Cantpany, and Is at least 50'.) years old. It. survived the first in l6(s6. amt was flourishing many years before that dlsastmtis period in the city's his- t.ory.—-London Times. The family album is back-—liut not on the arlor table. It will be on fashiana le femlnlne heads the coming season. It. will hang sus- pended froim slim walstlinos —- be- hlncl and before. Not, of course. complete with all thtise stern ic- tures of Grandfather Brown wirzn he was the responsible head of the house. and of Rover who always was on hand when the surrey turn- ed in at the gate. and of the be- whlskered ball team whose redoubl- able first-fbasemnrt was Uncle Rod. No, the family album is to be taken apart. and ctfstrlbuteci tlirouglmiit. the Woman of Tomc1'r‘ow‘s ward- r0be—-ta bustle here, a muff there. and hats that are called (as if it, were news!) anzazzinlz. One won- ders. of course, what the 1940 rutmrble-seat girl will do with her 1880-style taffeta rumible tor woift. they be te.ffet.a this year?l. To what. dewrous straits will that erstwhile ladies‘ game, tennis, be confined if our Alice Marbles and Kay St.ammcr.ses become affected by the nostalgic Whlnls that rttsnt from the scine's mist each year about this t‘tme?—Ch.1'l.stlan Science Monitor. There Ir; no sense In II. I sup- pose, but it fnse'nat.es me to read of Impending events about which I .can do absolutely nothing, In the constellation Casslcpoela, for ex- ample, there is a variable star that has been rtettng peeullnrlv of late, leadlnt: some a_st.i'onomer.s to be- lieve that. It may suddenly turn Into 3 nova, that is, explode, shed- ding a Lrernertdcus If temporary, ;1¢ht.. Scariewlrat the same feeling ENDS me when I read such 8 book as Dr. Howard W. 0dum's recent. "American social Problems", He cites again thn figures. frequently published before, showing the ex- raorcllnary fcciindttv of the south I: compared with the rest. of the GOUHCFY. The blrt.h rate In the southern states is far above that 01 In! other section. That is not, contrary to a widespread Impres- Slofl. characherlstlc of the south- Om 119F095 Only. but of all south- emers. In at least four southern sI.ataes—Alabams. North Carolina, Tennessee and Text-15-not only Is the birth mte away above the na- ,t.fonn1 averatre. but the death rate is below It. The answer? Obvious- ly. that. lllit. as the star may ex- plode. eventually the southerners may take the gountry. Il.I"ld them seems to be nothlntl that can be done about ft..—Baltlmore Sun. 5500305 0! not by soviet trick- ery and Nazi bribery. Whitehall has replied to fzhe latest tum In European events by asserting firm adherence to the only course honor dictates. While expressing belief that A war can be averted, and of- féflnfl assistance to reason, Parlia- ment In summoned to pass emer- toner measures for Implementing the pledge to threatened Poland. An amicable rrolutlon has been made man remote by Moscow‘: Bombs Over England No Longer A Terror (By J. V. McAree.1n the Globe and Mill) Germany has made her first all: rald on . and Na Gilded 111 failure. 11. been O1P°CI4°d 00‘ fore the war that lmmcdltttely the final declaration was made bounce would be dropping on London. When they old not drop the Idea was that. Germany was either I00 bu.-ally engaged In Poland or that her strategy determined that she would injure Brltaaln as little as possible, so that she might. more safely propose is peace after Poland had been overrun. But there is smother idea and 9. cheering one. It is that British protection against. aerial raids is now close to per- fection. It. was Ithfl lack of this protection that spelled our. word M~u-ri-I-c-h last. fall. A year ago all: manoeuvres made glaring- ly manifest the weaknesses of this mm of defense. Those held with- in a month showed its stmteth. In a year tremendous Improvements have been made, and these, per- haps more than am’?-hlmfdelse, have explained the quiet. conf ence with which the British people, and es- pecially the 1oncloners._ accepte the issue at war and awaited the onset. As Nigel Tamgye said In the Spectator: pessimism that Impeded our efforts twelve months ago has given way to a stimulus provided by the as- sured ultimate defeat. of heavy raids. and this encourages us to perfect our weapons of defense so that: the enemy's raiding power is smashed at the earliest stage of the war" Costly luldlng This Ls not to tie that there will not be raids and at heavy dinn- age will not be done. But It. Will be done at a. disproportionate cost to the enemy. It I: calculated that German resources are such that they could. assuming weak opposi- tion. maintain raids on Great Bri- tain at the rate of 200 machines a cav. But the latmt. peaicettrne air manoeuvres showed that the Brit- ish could count on disabling 10 per cent of the raiders. Even If this reasonable estfmate should be halved it would mean that the mid- irlg forces would have to be re- newed entirely at the end of three weeks. It. would mean that an of- ficer's mess of twenty pllots would be reduced to ten In the same num- bar of days. Such a casualty list. would undermine the stoutest. mo- rule in a short time. and the cas- ualtv lI.st rnlght. well be greater. Nor is there any reason to suppose that German morale will be high after a few alr raids. The German airmen have been arrogant enough In the past. few years, bellevtn themselves to be Invincible and their equipment superior to that of any possible enemies. Morale Not Stout possible substantial apposition will dissi- pate this feeling more qufoldry than if It had been more moderate. To illustrate what is likely to happen to German morale, the story is told by an eyewitness of the ll-mplna In- to Gibraltar of the Deutschland. after it had been hit. by two bombs from a Spanish loyalist plane. Six men had been killed, but. the atti- tude af the crew was as If they had Just survived a major engagement. This Ls not. said to underestimate their bravery. but merelv to show that they were shocked and un- ncrwd when they found tut they were not lnvulnerable. Their atti- tude Is that expressed In the his- rorlc exclamation of indignation and horror “Good heavens. they're llrlniz on the G'\l&I‘d5l" The state of British seurchllght batt.erfe.s some time before the war was man. tloned as a weak link In a power- ful chain, but we may take It for zrantecl that this weakness has been repaired. Once a ll ht. has spotted’ a plane and can old it, the flgntlm plane can almost ccr. talnly be brought. down by the eight machine turn with which the detfendlmz plane is equipped. Llllle Preclalon Bombing But even If thls weakness per- sisted. thus encourag enemy planes to attack In the dark. they would be undertaking g. thankleu task. for they would in most cases be reduced to lndlscrlmlnate bomb- mfls. 95 It Is rarely possible to do precision bombing at night. The-y might at the bertinnlrriz of the war be Wllllnw to waste thousands of gallons of gas and hundreds of tons of bombs on the chance of a lucky hit. but ‘they could not ndford to K961) it up. The cost. of modem viar is so vast that wastage of of. fe e effort: cannot. be treachery to the cause of peace It has so volubly professed to up- hold. —— Toronto star. Itiassy stomachs Relieved Every peron who II Ironbled wlth gas In the stomach and bowel: should get. 3 bottle of Dr. Evan: Stomnch Mixture and see how quickly It will re. Have all dlxtresllng symptoms. sharp palm In the abdomen or about the heir! no often due entirely to 3:; pressure. Dr. Evans Stlimloh Mixture taken at mall time not only ni-events all bud effect from no. but It . mole: Ibo fune- Ifoml sctlvrtr of the Ifolnuh. I data 1!! at on and Improves the nppet ta. Dr. Evan: stomach Mlxtnn I: sold onl at the Two Mun at 850 per me. Get Your Bottle Today. BATEING CAP! We Inn reached 3 new Ilmaly of thin: can ma - leach In the my men Itylel I color. Price! from In In Il.o0. SPECIALS DODDS KIDNEY PILLS 39: per. box PAILUM 45¢ per box VINOLIA CASTILE SOAP I0 CAKES 25¢ d not. without reason as mains. nec- “The dead weight of rest FALSE ALARMS IN HEART DISEASE Gone are the days when a heart murmur alarms the phY51Cl8-H and In most. cases the patient. also. Yet, during the earl part. of the Great War recruits th 2 heart murmur were rejected. as were also those who did nor. have "perfect" vision In both eyes. A Ewart. with a slight tear and eyeslgh that can observe features or colors at. B reasonable dflstsnice give no cause for conoem. However, now that heart mur- murs cause no alarm. Dam In the heart region does cause alarm and tort.-. and coronary thmmibosls both cause pain at or near the heart‘. on That. there are many false alarms In heart disease was reported some weeks ago In I-lygela. t-he health ntagazlne. by Dr. Ernst. P. Boas, New York. Dr. Boas states that in many Instances such conditions as heart. murmurs and In in heart retrton, dreaded symp of heart. disease. may mean very little to one's health. In other Instances while the health may be affected, other organs than the heart are re- sponsible. And even when there is true heart disease, it Is often not. so serious as many persons sup- The so-called heart. murmur may be 9. true heart murmur due to a leaking valve or It may not. arise in the heart at all. “U the mue- mur Is not due to organic heart disease it is a motor of less Im- portance ln his life than whether his halr ls dark or blcnde. whether he is tall or short.” Even 11 due to a leaklmz valve, if the heart. muscle is doing its work, the mur- mur ls not Lmgiortant. What about heart pains? Dr. Boas points out that while path In heart. region may mean true heart disease, many disorders of the chest may cause pain. “Often the dlsczvvery that the naln has noth- Iniz to do with the heart. I5 often enough to make it disappear." I remember 3 case Where the patient Inslsted on havmrz three physicians In attendance at one lime because of her heart disease, whereas, the cause of the severe pain was neuralgia and myalgla. gain in nerves and muscles of the est) In heart. region. Netimlgla of nerves golnr: to the heart can also cause pain over the heart. so also can gas pressure from atornach and tntest.tne_ tenanced. Precision bombing will be far rrwre difficult. Luau ever it was because of the hlghlylngenfous methods devised to ccmoulflage mil- ltary objectives and alrdromes. The maligned l!.‘nizlIsh weather will 3.150. have an Gpportunlty of d0Il'lI‘l lt.-3 bit and justifying lts existence When It Is bud It will confront. the difficulties unless they are content merely to dump a cargo of lxymibs overboard and turn for home. Be- 5 cause of the balloon barraize thcv will not be able to drop below the clouds. ‘How high this barrnae will be floated In wa.rt.Lrne Is A close. secret. but. the Spectator writer. speaking as a result of consider- able professlonal experience as 3 It!"-e__h1m t.9J1.v_9n._nnL<>99as1_on..nt SEPTEMB The 2 MAGS . IDONOCOOIIOIIIIII ‘ n he this corresponding measures have been taken In tlsh and French bombers. can and their crews in up to first-class eighteen months 880. when a attackers with almost. lnsupera-ble . fller, says that nothing would In- | 5 Duck Shooting Sson Opens ER 20th. wnran GUNS ARE POP SEPTEMBER 15. 1939 T J/ ffidiifilsnr on oouuiion sauna Ifilt. where he mlizht. encounteri vfatblo death Iran. 1 Air Force st Concert Pitch It. Is not known. of course, whati Germany to keep on; Ign- u it be stated with authority that the efficiency of British bombers standard. It was far from so ht. n bad weather was the excep on rather than the rule In the RA.F.. when blind-flying instruments were attached to only A few machines, and when the best Brltlah xmchfne In each class could be beaten easily by the equivalent machine in the German Air Force or luftwaftfe. The Royal Air Force today is equl d with a izenerutfon of aircraft ust. a year old, while the Gennan force is using planes that were In ser- vice three vears ago. with few ex- c tlons. so it is not. too much an beteve, on the strength of these statements and those of Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowdlrig, that so far as the air over England is conoemed the slimal Is, “All Clear" SEEKS UNIFORMITY \‘I'l Ghosts may V,-nix L, D Me As surely as at mg m‘"'5-\'.V stones; warped bei11i.~ nenth -—F‘rederlck Ebriitlit Time DELHI-(C>P)-Mohandas K. Geri- dhl, Indian reformer. has suggested that all the “daughter tongues" of Sanskrit; should have a uniform script. Sanskrit is the oldest lang- fwa today. the Province ha and is used ln various forms with promptly. he throughout India. Q/’£‘~I>. . " 1 r 1 rt:-i uage of the Indo-European family, S;.n?£?o:g ‘,:m.,, to J. At.D¢nic ' vrcx rIlIII:)‘qvM I A l smevi/itoftriieemmfed “M I ‘ And silver Clllsliillvleg (1 min shafts of light fit. The last grain l . ed and gl‘(())II§]da_€° In ' The millmce now tin: ,, mm, _ Somctl;(i3rli:‘z of men}; lives is M _ More finally than bon(~5_ This dust, thls f'.l_cr,‘ 519 193303’ I01" pairvrii s ider Along with b0Zll(l.K lllnlpcreaskn no fun‘, arid doom That move when no uznttg new Ill preserving season \l'l'IS at its IlElEIl warehouse we will be buying and pctatoes. New regulations now call for table stock potatoes 1 75 pound bags; for a short time to assist farmers who hav not already been supplied with new style hairs we will accept whatever bags you have at the warehouse and re- bag same. This advertisement applies to the loaders. we OLD MILL 1rt.1.c.ay in , these i’ . statgr. be OM: v. I l anelng ._ ... New Y . detl since tli ‘ Frank B. Clarke Annoiinces That dating from this date on at our Charlntfefo shipping table stoc surrounding se tions near Charlottetown where we have loaders regularly loading for us. 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