a .Jf4G"'.‘:‘_F;QURT*B1f' Y . You can worlc harder, play better, prosper more if you have the right kind of sleep. _ hviarshall con:- fort means perfect renni- _i ion, complete rest—truly health-giving sleep. Feel like a ‘new person Guaranteed for Five Years , several departments and alleged . was forced to resign on the initiative ‘ taken by .1 the late Hon. W. R. Warren and , supported by several of his colleag- ,-‘ ues. An Enquiry by Royal Commis- 3 ish Elnpire Steel Corporation were w Squires was summoned for having Records 01d Man Sunshine Fox Trot Vocal George Olsen and His Music Johnny Marvin 21566 21609 Chiquita Waltz Victor Arden-Phil Ohman and Their Orchestra goll and Kiddie Kapers A novelty record for grown ups and children For Trot My Angel (Angela Mia) Vocal Franklyn Baur Organ Jesse Crawford and llis Orchestra Thafs My Weakness Now liclcil Kano Nut Shilltrct and The Victor (lrchcstru Vocal Fol Trot Also the latest Red Sea! records by famous Victor Artists. Victor Arden-Phil ()l11’11i1fl and Their Orchestra 21591 21630 FoxTrot PaulWhitemun 21388 (ANGELA MIA) 21557 21497 Jeannine, l Dream of Lilac Time Vocal Z1564 " Waltz Nat Shilkrct and The 21572 Gone Austin Victor Orcht-srra Victor Talking of Canada, Machine (Jo. Llmlfld __. .?_.._. Hi5 MASTE R' _ Sold in Charlottetown Only by MILLER Bll0$f., Great - George Street. 21513 21588 PllLllEllIZEli liiiiissioui For the Land CRUSHED STONE ' sit" * For Road and Concrete Purposes. gyggenflhififiu ‘ a . L _ m dfilibsglm .... ...::.."-'l':i... - i ., .-,*.-;-*~'~~.i-, i l. laud“ I _ 0 _ - -_ ' v_ re cos. w I . - v . .. Brwkville Manufacturing Co. _ i. ... amiss . LIMITED John's and HlfbOflr Mlin District. can,“ ,, i“ m d . g g1 i Mme, us: ll happeh irj , event '0! t a '“‘“°'.i°.'?.‘»°'li.“."l'.3“i..""“v*&"m@ i ‘iw v i W“ A 'Brookvll1e,N.B. excl-M",- - i a - is ..i - i’ V a». . V a » , l ,- Ahwfoundland General Elections (By Canadian Press) 8T. JOHN, 26.-IN the i in Newfoundland on October 2 til. the Government, known as the United Newfoundland Party under the leadership of Hon; F. C. Alder- dice Wlllbe opposed by the Li l Party led by su- Richard sq _. _ ‘ Sir Richard Squires was Prime ‘ Minister from 1919 to 1923 when as a result of reported irregularities in ulislttanagement of public funds he his Minister of Justice. slon was undertaken by T. Hollis Walker; K. C., and in his Report he found that the charges made against the Prime Minister of mis- appropriating funds from the De- partment of the Liquor Control and of receiving moneys from the Brit- proven. When brought to trial be- fore the Supreme Court the Grand Jury found no bill. Later Sir Richard failed to pay income tax, convicted, and fined. In the present campaign the Unit- ed Newfoundland Party headed by the Prime Minister, Hon. F. C. Alderdice makes the keeping out of power of Sir Richard Squires the one issue in his manifesto, a. sum- mary of which follows: The Leader of the United New- foundland Panty stresses the moral issue in his opening paragraphs, and the importance of preventing the destinies of Newfoundland being controled by men already proven unworthy of trilst. With reference to the Fisheries the Manifesto promises removal of duty on lines, twines, dory oars, and other fishery accessories. It declares that "no government control (of fish markets) will be attempted “but that the eitwuragement of fresh fish trade, the utilization of fishery by products and the enlist- ment of scientific msearch will be employed to advance this trade. The whole question o_f bait freez- ing establishments will be thoroug- ly explored with a. view to extension of thb facility. Natural resources of Newfound- land and Labrador will be conserv- ed to the Colony. The practice of leasing timber limits for a nominal sum will be discontinued and the leases will be sold at the full mar- ket price. In regard to limits held, which have paid the rentals but not com- plied with the conditions laid dovm. the law will be enforced without discrimination. While giving every reasonable en- couragement to new enterprises, no concessions that will involve sacri- fice of the Colony's interests or the revenue will be countenanced. Mining laws will be revised to prevent wholesale claim staking or holding daims without developing them. - Agriculture will be encouraged by helping the local farmer to sell his product. The Customs tariff will be revised so as to make the buden bear less heavilyon the working man and his family. The co-operatlon of women in. public life will be sought. To provide more employment by introducing further industrial de- velopment will be the concern of the. United Newfoundland Party. A scheme that must prove of- very great benefit to the people of isolat- ed Outponts is contemplated by the extension of nursing service under fully qualified nurses. This 1813110 0f the finest points outlined in the whole Manifesto. _ Old Age perslons are to be extend- ed to mcct the needs of many ap- plicantc. The extension of roads is t0 be continued. as they have already proved their value in the berrv in- dustry and in transport of. bait and codfish. The United Newfoundland Party‘ will continue the system of railway] control now ln operation, with free- dom from political interference. Continued efforts towards im- provement of the Public Service will be maintained. 5o far the manifesto of the leader of the opposition has ~not been an- nounced. With Sir Richard Squires in the present campaliln 11W DP- 5- General Elections which take p den THE clnatoTT-mpwulcuiinplm ;i..,,; Louoou LETTER .-_-- f - . b . . TEMPLE clnaiidmrs LONDONr-By nun; ‘ ‘ _ . I! ii . titouueuiilvfieulii imfi 7 I l ifiiiuiubeviriyiuihflzfiiinilus 1s it": . . A .. . X . . . .' B. pygmy; The conference of the held T942131 i Birmlng w, i. i1 .. l; iluoque,“ . requently. 111g? nearly to the sun’ the flamers ogllggiglllllihfiii w, me were at least ambitions “dun? seems. to have been lltwrod b0 v ]° d1 or’ to app l1. Y 5nd ldlCm fgvoufed’ enuufihl ers iiEnj0y i - lee d Syn w: t Owners are daily telling how much more‘ they. enjoy driving with two high speeds. Third-quiet and quick-for traffic and" steep hills; fourth-fa new smoothness and these ham ‘is hard factsloue of BHBIIIIT! facts w i - “"1"” "m the priicfraiheiu? ‘FY1359 110 fewer than B5 axticl and that, upon the most “co w M (inappropriate adlectlvel) ¢u“uv° “m °f lime» no man puwiivua- - could ever hope to see cne tenth lg , .. "m" Put into legislative force ev n i though ‘Dory and Liberal lions shill lie low-n with Labour lambs However. Methwelah lived. for 969 Years. and even in our day and gen- eration to use a cliche well beloved though overworked ‘by some‘ ‘<5: the Pa"? 011mm. the doctors are pm- iaréslng the normal expectation of so we ma i if ' _ and wait and t up our been“ Mr. "Jimmy" Maxwn, pmmmemi- 11°‘ Y0 884! vocifvtirliiiuswtii the Conference, certainly doe; '11s; at first sight remind one of M. Clem- eflceflll. but he may have that main s; "l el-‘leram in mind the other Glblnc at the famous ‘i 1111,69 Points" of the late Presldenlilowoodl: "l" wllsm- "W Tiger is reputed to have thrown up his‘ hands to Heav. en and ejaculated in tones o; ad- miratlon blended with (impair "Fourteen Points! My God! even the " Almighty himself had only Ten!" ' 7'1"” "Jim-ivy." drawing perhaps’ “D011 this precedent of speech and biblical reference, observed that “i; took seven days to make the world iltutnttl}: conference is trying to do‘ m" Alas for Mr. Maxtows reputation! for accuracy, he did not vertlfy his facts. for according to the 4th, ar- ticle of the Decalogue, "in ‘slit days the 10rd made Heaven and,‘ Earth. the Sea and all that therein is." However. perhaps politics and poll- tlcians and political conference were not incluided. It is quite likely. Nemtheless, much may be for» given w Mr. Ma-xton if uulyiul- his‘ saving grace of humour. i His general appearance in then flesh. of its absence, is sununed up, word "too." "Too" much hair, and‘ "too" long. "T00" cadaverous,‘ “Too"i excitable. "Too" fiercel " 00*‘ vehe-f ment. “To"---everything. l With these characteristics it! might be though certain that he‘ would also take himself “too" S€l‘-' . iously. But he didn't and he doesn‘t.i 0n the otherhand. he came ‘to a; House- of Commons where many~ mediocritlesrof all pull-ties. but not- $ll45 to $3540. Car illustrated is COLIN H. P IE5“ Five chcissis—sixes and filfillffl—" riccs ran in from P passenger Sdvlllfl. with ll-spcrd transmission (standard gear silifr), 351cm). .-\il pliccs f.o.b. \Vindsor. taxes-paid. MURNAGHAN BROS‘! Charlotteto wn Dealers Queen’s County. J. A. MacDONALD & CO.- LTD., Cardigan, Dealersi-Kingh County. swiftness when the road is open. ’ Qnly personal experience gives you a full appre- ciation of the Graham-Paige four-speed transmission (standard gear shift). A car is at your disposal. Nlodcl e14. fivc- i H w ‘ STEWART, Surnmerside Distributor , ' i ' i‘ j ably a. group of noisy compels-lots‘ ‘ of his continually dramatised their; won political emotions and saw themselves as others did not see them. They took themselves more seriously than is becoming for moral men and “Jlmmy" committed the unpalrdonable sin of laughing at them too. i Still its doubtful if there's apply) in the House of any party whmdoes not like "him. Yet. in spite of all that, nothing but his sense of the canried their exact meaning, and n11 furmy side of things distinguishes of it. him from a sort of Robespierre, and The tension of the affair may to the way of Robespierres is hard; es-j some onlookers have been somewhat yiecially in this country. so, both for relieved later in the House or Com- his own sake and OUTSr-LOHQ mayg mons when Mr. Ure gazed fixedly Jimmy laugh-mt himself and‘ at the placid "A. J. B.” made refer- others. . ence to the days when gentlemen “Termlnological inexectitude" is defended their honour with “their Mr. Winston Churchill's famousstrcng right arm" or someicthcr euphemism for the sort of lie which equally theatrical remark, The in the school-boys more sophisticub-' Hume iooked forward Jgyfully ed definition. is an evernresent iwln for a moment to the spectacle of u in time 0f trouble. Mid if the 805519‘ combat aoutrancc-fountain pen and of year ago is w be accepted it top-hat versus umbrella and blue- might have been the motto of the hwy, but is was (flsuppolnlcd, late Lord Strathclyde, formerly‘ and —-—--<+n>- better known as Mr. Urc. who dledi the other day. l CANADA Ilord Gtrathclyde seems to havel been under a cloud of sorts through- , out both his legal and his political‘ MONTREAL, Oct, 25__sir James Qllinicn of one of ills most dist‘ _ Elli-filled fellow Scots-no less a Spiel;- lquallllcatlon charged Mr. um with and calculated lie," and from Such SECOND HIGHEST COUNTRY IN 25 YEARS Campbell, Minister of Agriculture in his former administration; W.‘ Cave who was his Minister of Fin-j ancc; Sir W. F. Coaker who was; Minister of Fisheries and is the re-i cognized leader of the Fishermenui Protective Union; Dr. A. Barnes who was Minister of Education. and several others cf tllc rank and file of his party. . Hon. F. C. Alderdicr: was leader of thp Government in the Legislative Council in the last session of the Monro: Administration, and like his predecessor Hon. W. S. Monroe. this ls his first venture in a political with im and is a. member of his execu ve. There and only two oth tars of the late Government in- tlio United Newfoundland Party- M. S. Sullivan. who holds the Dort- fcllo c_f Colonial Secretary. and W. Walsh who continued in the office of Agriculture and Mines. Many or e candidates are in a Willi?“ for the first time. ' The present election: have a particular interest because of tbl tact that the women will for that first dine exercise the franchise Qt- tendcq to tbem by the lots Govern- . ha‘ e iw rwgfeleiltztfl w. or their unlit i cmitcst. Mr. Monroe is associatlll‘ " grown-u _|_. 1:6 u .... v fort ;‘a fovfm e “m “i- iiiiiliilliii 0110C Y _ life insofar as his reputation IOrIDunn, head of a London private-wt: hqd a. block of securities from n v banking flfm, who is visiting hercflsimilar Canadian company. The is- Abillty wa-scohcemed. Indeed, aftufprudicted today that in 25 yearsQsue was oversubscrlbed the day the giving all due respect to the tlme- Canada would be the second rlcllcstgsale opened?’ truthfulness as contrasted with his honoured maxim "de Mortuis nilnisi country in the world. ranking; only honum" it would seem that. the after the United States. Develop- cnarge against him in that res ct merit s: ‘her mineral wealth, ivatei- was not eritnly without foundl lulu. sewer flfifiWli-hftl‘ natural resources such at least WllS ‘the considered‘ will placeCanuda in such a position - » g ' i iccdrdlng to ~Sir James. ~ u. n’ l hold’ no l. us: v ‘ you vc ori ‘v “$5 f t serious, ' aifilfirttn; on needn't worry, Cuwria. A ode ls , and l __.... _*___ r _ ___ _-:-"ZTZ,I...“_" " “ (133048! _;._________ * " .14» | __. ___ son than The Earl of Balfour, the‘ Arthur James Balfour. usually tile‘ mlif-T- Polite and suave and un3g-gres_l v sive of men, publicly and without‘ Flows to Canada having utteredin a speech "n frigid, a master of expression the words'attltudc toward Canada has taken v it'is nion: difficul for us to get first ies, will ‘result from a split of the! Mr. Horne-Payne's visit is prim‘ ‘allti-Sociafisi; Unionist and Libernlarily to refresh his knowleqe ill vote. If Labor does win, it will notICanadian financial and lndustriflr represent u majority of the votes. ' British Capital activities. VANCOUVER», Oct. 25.-— Com- plete reversal of financial London's iplace in the past four years, ac- ‘cording to J. R. Horne-Payne, son ,of the former President of the B. iC. Electric Railway Company, and member» of a well-known firm on the London Stock Exchange. Mr, Jlorne-Payne arrived here recently ifor a visit, accompanied by his wife. | “The attitude of British finance toward Canadian investments has échanged gradually in the past three years-I might say lt_ has been re- lverscd in the past four years," Mr. Horne-Payne declares. "I cannot explain the difference‘ better than by quoting a concrete example. .Somc three years ago the firm of which I am a member had the placi g cf a block of securities for a firs -class. well-known Canad- ian industry. It took 1B months to [dispose of ‘them. A few weeks ago i Westinghouse Genzune i ADIOTRQN-S , U X- 20B '- B The new Standard- Rddiot ron Confidence 1n Securities s: E n The cha c. according to Mr. __ M _ lHcrne-Bnydxiltf, ls due chiefly to i119‘ (‘Otfpflfllflll . fact thug companies handling Can-i adlan se urlties have gained confld-| t l: gutpui’ A ence in wha ‘the are o erlng. To" |- _ that feeling must c added. of course; the fact the Canada is financing emany of her wn enterprises. “The factfif he states, “that there is much more money i: Canada‘ available for lnv tment means that for our clients. Some- ‘ y fault, for us to get‘ rat-class securities for the‘ demand. ‘ ‘ MrJIorne-Paylfle adds that thc iattltude 6f the firm ofwllich be is r I gemttzi-il- lfldalfiVflfll w: initial:- CI? n m s through I ' dondmuchtore- uonnuen ' ' class offe Fsfsslm Niel-wok Between now and the next gone-r- ldlcctiun in‘ nrliqm lint-n