"I 1 .. T ii i,» p i!‘ | r i I ii I I i fi tot; mnch for quality and not enough for sub- i‘ rauptelsandardyllthough the‘ are now improv- in 'maligihtly different from, Canadian. Heavier ii- _ c" llltarettetuwl uardlan President. Lint-Col. I. Cbsnsr I. Islam. VIM-President. I. I. IIIIOM. I. I. I. Isa-stay. IJQICa-UOL B. A. Ildllnlll, D. S. 0. a insects; Director. a. I. smut: 1.4. l. used:- nuns, nun Wlllu nu n. x. bums. IOIIIII Dally (landed 1H1) IL“ I0! Your (ll minus)‘ dollvsrod. Idefldpewysnsa-(laslnnosl-nllodto Canada nll SATURDAY NOVEMBER S» 1036 The Fox Show It~ is fitting that Prince Edward Island, home of the silver fox industry, should maintain the lead, not only in quality pelt production but in the exhibition of live animals. This, during the past six years, it has done through the initiative of the Silver Fox Exhibitors’ Association, and it is indeed pleasing to report that this year's annual show at the PATON Pavilion, Provincial Exhibition building, starting on Monday mom- ing, promises even keener competition than on previous occasions. The programme and other information about the Exhibition appear in The Guardian's special Fox Show supplement- -—an annual feature which has been maintained by The Guardian since the Association's organi- zation. The Show will continue daily until Friday afternoon, when trophies will be presented by His Honour Lieutenant Governor DeBlois. Not only those directly interested in the fox industry, but all classes of our citizens will find the exhi- bition of great interest and value. T00 Many Liberal Premiers’? The fact that there are eight provincial governmfnts bearing Liberal banners aloft while a Liberal government is in power at Ottawa may not be the blessing to the country that some people think and it may prove a major source of embarrassment to Mr. KING. This, at any rate, is the opinion of the Financial Past, which cer- tainly cannot be accused of political bias against the party in power. ‘ Canada's major national problems cannot be solved without eITective co-operation on the part of the provinces. But—says the P0st,— eight Liberal Premiers are more likely to be ask- ing favors of Ottawa than offering co-operation. And as there will be provincial elections in all the provinces before another federal election is The F‘... Show Monday. if § The Weather Man has continued his good offices right into thskelgenaah month. The worst earthquake shock this Island ever experienced was not an earthquake at all, but the result of the Halifax explosion. 3K 3K X As “jimmy Walker" has just returned to New York, could there by any chance be any connection between that event and the earth- quake of which New York was the centre? 3K ii 3K No, Mr. LARABEE, is too experienced a mer- chant to count his chickens before they are hatched. Like Mr, ASQUITH and Mr. KING he prefers “to wait and see” what is in store for him at Ottawa. - ¥ l! 3K The City Police and R.C.M.P. were so well organized for Hallowe'en that rowdyism had little scope; indeed, most of the paraders re- turned home early disappointed that nothing un- toward had happened. fi X 9K The Prince Edward Island election and the Federal election results must have been prelim- inary indications of the Halloween quake pro‘ ducd by subterranean volcanic forces. Nature has its own way of making its presence felt. iK 5K 9K The new Old Age Pension Commission will find that the number of the recipients of their patronage is increasing; the tendency being for pensioners to" live almost interminably while new applicants spring up in numbers every year. 5K it 3K Sporadic attempts are being made by writ- ers to justify the Government's recourse to Gov- ernment control, but they are half-hearted and lack the impress of conviction. The fact is most people like the reputation of being Prohibition- ists whether they practice it or not, and the gen- uine ones are the salt and leaven which make it pass muster. If 9K fi That “little fleas have lesser fleas upon their backs to bite ’em" is being illustrated once more in the case of the Social Crediters. Premier ABERI-IART is running in High River-Okotoks in order to get a seat in the Alberta. Legislature, necessarily called for, the temptation will be strong to accede to these requests, in order t0 help the party locally. Solutions of some of our chief Canadian problems are in danger of foundering on the rock of provincial ambitions and provincial non- co-operation. It will be necessary for the pro- vincial premiers as well as Mr. KING to be states- man, if we are to get anywhere. Already some of the provincial Liberal premiers are making it clear that they look to Ottawa to stand behind them whether their pol- icies are good or bad. Mr. HePBurtN, for in- stance, points out that Ottawa will not interfere with his policy of power contract cancellation because a Liberal government has been elected there. A policy of “We Liberals must stick togeth- er" would be all right if the governments were co-operating to solve national problems without regard for partisan fortunes. But sticking to- gether to achieve purely political advantage is not what the people would approve, U. K. Market Still The Best Inst returned from a trip overseas, Dr. _I.H. GRISDALE, formerly Federal Deputy Minister of Agriculture, emphasizes once more that despite "the Ioo per cent. increase in Canada's exports to the British Empire under the BENNETT agree- ments, Canadian exporters are not yet ‘taking full advantage of their opportunities under the pacts. Dr. Grusmns draws attention also to the desire of the people of Great Britain to buy our horses, dairy cattle, cheese, bacon, honey, chick- ens, turkeys, and other products. But, our pro- ducers have not put themselves out to please the buyers. ' Speaking at length on impressions gathered on a visit to England on behalf of the Cheese Patrons’ Association of Ontairio, Dr. GRISDALE said that Canadians, like sellers the world over, are too prone to think only of their own end of the business and to forget the special tastes and desires of those to whom they wish to sell. He demonstrated that, under the British Mark- eting Act, which created the milk pool. milk production has increased in Great Britain, with only to find that he is to be opposed by a nom- ince of another new party in the province, viz. the Single Tax Party, an association of which has recently been organized. § 3K 9K The new Premier of Saskatchewan, the Hon. WILLIAM joaN PATTERSON is still on the sunny side of fifty, having been born in I886. He is the first native-born Premier of his Pro- vince, his birthplace being Grenfell, Sask. Like Mr. BENNETT and Mr. KING he is unmarried, a war veteran, and an insurance and financial agent by profession. He has been in the Legis- lature since I92r, and held portfolios in both Mr. GAnnINERfs administrations, ' 3K 9K IK The heirs of the original of “Count Suoar- TALK" of “Pickwick Papers” have given intima- tion of an action against the Government of Australia for $630,000,000. They claim that the Count, a Pole, was the first explorer of that country and had been given concessions which afterwards were sold by Australia as gold claims. Premier LYoNs informed Parliament that while he had been advised of the intention of the heirs, he had received no notice of action. A member suggested that they might “swop Australia's public debt" in settlement. 5K 9K 9K A leading French woman writer, Miss MARIE LE FRANC, has been painting a doleful picture of the people and conditions of the Gaspe Peninsula. She says “the whole population of Ioo,ooo was in process of degeneration, about 5o per cent. were tubercular; fish was purchased from them at from one-half to three-quarters per cent per lb.; they earned only from $4 to $5 per week; it was no exaggeration to say each fisherman was ‘lined’ with a smuggler; that bootlegging was rampant, but “the landscape \vas the most beautiful and picturesque in the world." Another case surely of where every prospect pleases and only man is vile. 3K 3K Politicians in St. John's, Nfld., are finding it irksome sitting idly by and allowing a. non-po- litical Commission to run the Island. Our neigh- bours are themselves largely responsible for the the result that home farm cheese is being driven ofi‘ the market by the inferior factory product. Canadian cheese now ranks high and he is con- vinced that in future the good cheese will be coming from Canada. At present, consumption ls ‘24o,oo0 tons a year, and Canada ships only 30,000. There is not much place for Canadian butter, but bacon prospects are improving. While Denmark has gone down, Canada has gone up, and, with the English bacon producers unstable. Canada has an excellent chance to establish a good reputation. Honey and poultry offer fur- ther opportunities, but there is need for market- ing them in a sane way. i _ Dr. GRISDALE was greatly impressed with the opportunity which recently opened for Can- sdian horses. In Glasgow, 6o Canadian _worl_<- fig horses sold at an average of $265. aplcce m ugust. The opportunities are especially good Scotland, where the farmers have been going . Shire horses and Percheron: are be- , jig‘ more popular. While the dairy cattle rho: i; opening up, he warned his hearers that "e. Cutadiad‘ shipments have not been quite and pointed our that ritish requirement _ characterizes herd in (W!!! jfllitdin and most 0f lfllfhll: Iookyflt" ffilflht ‘ Canadidd tanner-swift wolbilllvlsed clause the dim twist m a rude 1m.- change in administration, for they ruled with the ever-open pork barrel to feed the insatiable appetites of heelers and patronage seekers, with the inevitable result that the government became almost bankrupt. The reforms and retrench- but those who created the necessity must take their medicine until such time as the body politic has been cured and returned to normalcy, which will be yet awhile. 3K 3K The London Spectator in its current issue devotes a considerable portion of its space to the Liberal victory at the polls. "Janus" says that when in London Mr. MACKENZIE KING "spoke in private with complete confidence about the election, Mr. BENNETT, as he put it picturesquely \won’t be left his boots to walk home in," "P.Q.R.” writes: “During the London Economic Conference a story‘ went the rounds that when Mr. BENNETT passed through Trafalgar Square on his way to Canada House Nelson's lions stood up and roared. If Mr. MAcxzNzI: KING passed that way they would .be more likely to purr- if lions do." That exactly illustrates the differ- ence between the two statesmen-Mr. BenNc-rr ‘blunt and outspoken calls a spade a spade; Mr. KING, an adroit politician, pussyfoots and hu- ards the opinion, for what it may be worth, that to his way of thinking, and he may be subject to correction, and if so, he would gladly submit to superior knowledge, though at time: it may be merely looking at the subject from a different eF."*"‘Y‘?"'.P‘?“'P' . “'.".’."‘“"" angle-it was an instrument d agriculture. I Notes By he Way“ ments now being carried out are not pleasant, “p” Newlyweds an. swan-ted is be sgkln going to Nlliln Falls for mou- * ymoons. If this urea-us they no also Intending to follow those other old-fashioned customs of llvlng strictly within their In- comes and keeping house In s mod- est way, It. mly be s good thing for the country. Illa lavishly of Beaver-brook, of the Express, to give him his due, so long and so loud that Brltaln ought to "turn her back on Eur- ope" and retlre Into ‘Lplendld leo- lstlon," that be suddenly comes up short against an awkward conun- drum: How can Brltaln tum her buckgou Europe and at the same time occupy. and be prepared to defend, two of the most; vital points In the whole o1 Europe, Gibraltar and Malta, the lifeline of India? J. L. Garvin, pontlflcel omniscient and infallible who guides the pol- Icy of the Observer has given the navy Its heartlest l ugh for years by his suggestion the Britain could not. stand up to the Italians on seal In the Mediterranean. 1f_ you m.‘ In the smoking morn of any West md club, an admiral or s. com- modore or p. captain slltlng by hlm- self In s corner giggling quietly, you may be sum that he ls think- ing or Mr. Garvin and his Italian half-Nelsons-Jsaltunore Sun. There Is an old French pmverb to the effect that the marlu of evll actions are lneffaceable. It may be a. long time, irrespective of the settlement of the Ethiopian dllflculty, before the o‘d relations between British and Italian peo- ple can be resumed. British tax- payers wlll feel that the burden for increased armament has b:en laid upon them by Mussolini. Pmof that the hunting season Is ln full swing comes from Nova Sootlu, where the chief forest ran- ger of King's County was shot In the lei In mistake for a moose. The vlctlm may flnd some comfort In the thought that at least. the hunter did not take hlm for a rabbit, which has been done In some other Incldenls of the klnd, and may be Main. The passage of summer has not witnessed the departure of danger- ous drlvlng days-they are still with us. According to the Mowi- Vehicles Branch, Ontario motor accidents reach thetr peak during the third quarter of the year, with the fourth quarter, October, No- vember, December, the next most dangerous. City accidents are usual- ly at their highest point during these three months. Death rates on the bests of gasoline consumption are higher during the last quarter than at any other correspondlnx tlm; of the year. The rate In No- vember and December of 1094 was 2am per ten gallons of gasoline, as compared with a rate of 25.5 for September, when accidents reach their _, ‘ frequency. lmrly dark ness, together with unfavorable weather and poor mad conditions, make s bad combination. The ac- cldent rate mounts hlgh on a. dark, rainy night, buth the greatest peak ls at dusk.—Bt. Calherlnes Stand- ml. Frontiers In Afrlea an often loosely marked and, If Italian troops crossed Into British soma- llland and had n. skirmish with a camel corps, It may easily have r been a. genulne mistake. Nonethe- less It Is a ufingenous mlstake and Its repetition cannot be tolerated. If armed forces of either Italians or Ethiopians enter British terri- tory they wlll have to be rounded up, dlssrmed and interned. If the Italians belleve arms are being conveyed through British territory to their enemies they must take steps to intercept convoys on the Ethiopian slde of the border, else there wlll be trouble. Britain ls not likely to be hypersensitive over un- intentional violations, but she cer- talnly wlll not tolerate advantage being taken of her good nature. The cost of the Llndbergh kid- napping eas¢ has been $1,000,000 all told, to date, and much more money wlll be spent before It, ls cloud. If It has the effect of pre- ventlng any more of such mons- trous crimes, U5. citizens should feel that the large expenditure has not been In vsln. If the full offlclal report, now received In this country, takes nothing away from the tragedy o! the Quetta earthquake, It, accent- uates th¢ reltevlng heroism. The authority had disappeared; oom- In with the outer world h“ been destroyed, and under the rulm were upwards of 30.000 peo- ple, elthor deed or, without help, soon to be dead. The descrlptlon of lb; way In which the army and etvlllm survivors faced the task of salvage reads like on eple. Day and night the rescuers worked. taking scraps of food where they could, but most of them having no sleep for days. One surgeon “P6?- f ’ one hundred and fIfty- seven major operations In four do!!!’ At the Indian Intlttsry boa- pttsl, fortunate! untouched, with ll: hundmd . it ll ‘“ ‘ ‘ that. between "$0000 and 5.000 patients" were trashed In the first forfiIlIhh-Mon ‘ “ n. to Consider the Immense harm Mus- soltnllsdolngftlsnotmmlye OIIQ of stsrtlnl In unprovoked wsr. The question runs for beyond polllblo Rsllsn oolonlutlon In Af- rIos on territory muted from Itluopts. What the Itsllon dictator husetoutto fsnotsoom- putatively week on helpless peo- ple on snot-her continent, but the wholl fLlIld of I004 filth smon: notions, so zen-scented by the oov- onont of the Inecue. m7 Isnlbls lhllll. If THE COMPLICATIONS or nu Is sfrutd of nothing. However, he All! SEILIOU 1; bggomlng s little bewildered about his policy. Ho has alwuwd It. ls during the cool or wet weather that Influenza or "flu" ot- tacks us and It Is city for us to give a little tliought to It before and after It anives tn our community. As a. matter or fact the orcnnlsms eauslng Influenza are thought to be always present with or In us, but something occurs 1n us, In a large number at one time, or In our surroundings or even the cllm-i at‘; that seems to make the organ-i Isms causing Influenza are thouzht. ' to be always present with or 1n us. . but. smethlng occurs large number at one time, or In our surroundings or even the climate that seems to make the organisms more powerful or ourselves weaker in resistance, and the flu spreads almost like a flre. Now the first point to remember is that flu In Itself Is not really a dangerous ailment. When It attacks us there Is a. “tired” feeling, body aches all over, there are rnlld chills and s rlse In temperature. Very often there Is an inflammation of the nose and throat-a “head cold." You are only sick two to four days, the temperature goes down, and whlle you stlll feel tired you are practically free of symptoms.‘ However lt Is not the flu itself that 1s so serious, but the that come with or follow a er It- pneumonia, pleurlsy, heart. weakness, motion of the sinuses adjoining the is called. In severe epidemics pneu- monte with fullure of the circula- tion due to an overworked heart ls a frequent complication. It ls because of these complica- tions that Influenza or flu ls so carefully treated by physicians generally. Thus the biggest point in the treatment Ia rest In bed un- tll danger of complications Is put. During the first two or three day: with the temperature high plenty of llquld Is given-G or 4 quarts clally. Very little In the way of drugs ls glven except when paln or sleep- lessness are present. latterly it has been belt this! anybody coming In contact the, patient shou‘d wash the hands and gargle the throat. before mlx- Ing with others. The polnt then Is that as flu greatly resembles the c- rnmon cold, the only difference at first Is that the shows less white oospuscles In I'lu.l the may accompany flu should be re- membered and getting to bed and staying In bed should be the III-st thought when the cold or flu ut- taclcs you. Fair Quiet, have 1 found thee here, And Innocence thy sister dearl. Mistaken long, I sought you then In busy companies of men: Your sacred Only among the Society ls all but To this delicious solitude. No white nor red was ever seen So amorous as this lovely green. Fond lovers, cruel a»; their flame, Cut In these trees their mistress’ Lilli: alas, they know or heed How far these beauties here exceed! Fair trees-l Whereseer your bang No name shall but your Meanwhile the mlnd from pleasure lc , ss Wllhdlaws Into Its happiness; The mlnd. that ocean where each kind Doesmsgralght Its own resemblance Yet It creates, transcending these, Far other worlds, and other seas; Annlhllatlng all that's made sltuatlon on the mornlng of May To a g n in ht I ' 31 was enough to shakrfnphe sltronlg- shad? o“ n a m“ est. nerve. A square e 0 0 Y __And n: _ and doaens of villages had been “w mm "no w") out; police and all clvll —- ~~_.:-.______-:.-=;= tween governments Is a silly n‘. ment. we are at once carried buck an Alexander or a Napoleon. To lose all faith In the pllghtled word of a government, no mutter or whgt lwm» l! Kflldufly to undermine 800d filth In all life» . . If the rulers of a nation are to dispense together In their omclol they wIll soon be imposing immoral, or amoral, their sublecta In private affairs.- Nflv York Times. Bgjllfllqlsmlib. sense In In us, In a'0 fe ch Sll of llments to broneho - pneumonia, Inflam- b)’ I inf] at] p the lddl OX‘ Bhflll S0 lkflCh, BdVOOGtG B-dl/IBB Si? ronovzgambyog iimastoldiinu l‘: or petfend, shall be an unlawful ss- soc a on.’ of go to 0U with or 5y examination of the blood serious complications which FROM "THOUGHTS IN A GARDEN" plants, If here below, plants wlll grow; rude m name. n I wound, own be found. U I O Bur-Nothing ‘could be fIner than the boost which you given to Notional Choose Week and I om most; grateful to whet you have done. sumptlon of cheese In Canada was pound and we cannot but feel that the campaign which we ran had something to do with this. It wlll be some time before we know the results of this year; nre good, you can feel that you ltavc had an Important part. In ‘. society or corporation, whose pro-‘ poses ts to bring about any govern- mental, _fon>e, violence or physical injury to Person or property, or by threat-s of vocates, advises or defends the use slcal Injury to person or property, or threats of such Injury, in order l")! other purpose, or whIch shall such purpose or professed purpose, The above ls the first paragraph Crlmlxial Code. It Is repeated hm because there stlll appears to be a about the section, In fact, certain speakers and even some newspap- ers refer to Itvaa preventing "free speech." This 1s not so. Accord who advocate the use or force, vIo- lenoe or Ierrorlsm, are doing some- thing unlawful. It ls doubtful If one approve of the use of the revolver, the bomb and the torch as o menus 'of. Section 9a of the orlmuidl Code says that It ls an offense to Incite people to vlolenoe In order to bring about a change In the government laed for such purposes ls unlawful. It says that. people who belong to organizations formed for such pur- poses are liable to imprisonment. tlon 0B would first of all rend It carefully, less loose talk about It would be beard. Humor At Medical dinner Graduate Medlml Asaoelatlon qr North America, at Detroit, other day, Honorable Dr. H’. A. Bruce, Lieutenant-Governor of On- tario, Bald: known province In the world. There one flve reasons why I belleve this no be true- 'I‘he Qulntuplets. I can recall a time, before the tolkles ar- Amerlcan hlstony was presented to us on the clnematagralph entitled, "The Birth of a. Nation.” In the light of what has happened alnoe then m Callendnr, ohm-id. r sus- pect that. Mrs. Dionne also saw the challenge. It seems that. one day after the trained nurses arrived Mr. Dionne knocked on the door of the room In which his daughters lay. He wanted to see them but was re- fused admtttanee. the nurse. “You haven't. been lined." f other. Una Mlnnrd’: for Blfel NATIONAL UIIilBI WIIK have Y?" f“ Last year the per eapltl. con- creased by about one-quarter If they i- rz-cantpllshmerx-t. I am, Blr. ole. A. C. I'll-ASHE, Secretary, National Dairy Council of Onnodn. Lanna, Oct. 30, 1935. “Section 9s" (Edmonton Journal) "Any assoclatlon, organization, ssed pUPPO-ig or e of whose pur- Industrial or economic ange wlthln Canada by use of eh Injury, or whlch teaches, ad- foroe, violence, terrorism, or phy- accomplish such change, or for any means prosecute or pursue the famous section 98 of the ad deal of Inlsund tending the section only those persona SPECIAL SALE 0f. odd Pieces of China I In order to‘ make room for new goods, we are clearing out. a lot of odd pieces of China at at 69 cts. each- REGULAR Pincus s1-oo T0 $2.00 BEE OUR SHOW WINDOWS W. W. WELLIVER Ltd.‘ JEWELERS SINCE 186s E. R. BROW Notice Is hereby given that the Insurance business re- cently carried on by the lute E. R. BROW will be continued as formerly under the name of E. R. BROW & SON. This opportunity ls taken to express appreciation for your valued patronage in the past and to soillclt the tlnuance of same In the future, Assurance 5 Kl": careful attention/and coflflldefflllil" WI" l” acwrde W“! interests at all times. I: or every 10,000 Canadlans would securing control of government. In the economic or Industrial stem. It says any group organ- If all those who argue about Sec- Dinner (Mall and Empire) In commencing Ills speech at, the of the Interstate Poof the I come from probably the best ved. when a. great spectacle of lm and accepted it as a personal “You mustn't. come In here," "YouTe telling me," replied 91C iii- __.____.....___.. the Inlematlonal standards of the relations of wIIh morality sl. acllon, thelr Ideas upon ."nbnn5* ;KIUNEY . gsstrle trouble. BR. L. B. EIIIIIIS of Lulldllll, Eng. Nolod Physlolnn treated Ille- Dvlvqnh. Heartburn. Gntrte Distress and many other ailments peeulhr to the stomach. Don't fool _wlth your atom- scb. Sex-Ions condltlons wlll utse If you allow yourself to lope lnlo a ehronlo stole of We ALONI HAVE Ihls fun- ou London Phyiolsnb pres- Try a Bottle. MAC’! IIDOD FOOD For Pole sud Tllln People The 2 Macs HoIIOrdersOIO-Ikhslfll! Mhndsdk. M all: IaQyQMAmMw J AS. B. BROW. , l “Time Tries the Truth f a ' Y’; 1n Everything Time Is the test which tries the worth of a man or an Institution. Two hundred and twenly- . five years of time has solidified the reputation which the Sun Fire Office of Lyndon, England, has maintained throughout its existence as ‘The Oldest Insurance Office in the World," Founded in 1710. Represented at Charlottetown by IIYIIIIMAII & 60., LIMITED _ Provincial Agents v , l The Oldest Insurance Agency in Prince Edward - Island. James B. Hughes-Special Agent and Inspector. Mr. Tea ‘Poll Recommends as a refreshing drink ORA N G E P E KO E T E A -_‘.A- A better tobacco snd a better cure-that accounts for the popularity of our isucs Iwlsr IZIEWING cs3‘ IIICKEW; NICI-IQlSON