A>..._DA.4......_.._..t_H_H-_.u..._,., PAGE FOUR . . ' .. THE CHKRYTOTTETUWN GUARDIAN . . c trawlers. “Take away the beam trawlers and give the poor fishermen a chance," Mayor Fen- wick Kelly of North Sydney said. In his opinion the trawlers glntted the market and kept down the prices paid to tl1e fishermen. ' A 1'r|~~l1l1-|1|. LlvuL-Cnl. \\'. Cllellor U. ftleLnrc \: ‘rc-nlilrllf, J- ll. llurnelt, I". J- l- ulr~(‘ul. lJ. A. Dluvlilnnnn, l). S. 0. lnjg Director, J. ll. Burnett, F. J- l. As-un-niu- b11111 n, l-‘rnnk \\‘11lker and l). B. Currla. 11111111111,- Dull)‘ 11111111111-11 1111111 $1.00 per year (In nth-bani ,Rcll0lllllllll “illlllll ycar m llmllcc was 1”?’ dwlin-rml 111 111,-. 111.1111 11.11 ,\t'lll" 1111 111111111111 1111mm t. tlicted h_v .\l1lt-r1nan (1eorge Layton, Algmrqnl, 1n print-a l~.1l1‘i“:1“r-i1||vdlalapilhn"‘Zphxnprltfnlliaingmur: 111111.11") ghcf: courlse an agltlresis on tlhe gilllxjpilglrdimflgc‘ _ __ __ g e ore tie imv rauct of t e am tan e" 1i i Nay". Self-' t t - . \\‘El).\lit5D.—\\, SEPTEMBER, 2s, 1113s l Fear of a ivar and l m ms and w! m at their headquarters. Kill AnJQTaTiZYI-Tififié; 115g?‘ 111111-111. tliitario. stiggcsts l‘ oi flit‘ King Govern- 000,000 housing jitilicy, "hlcil those willi the sur- 11=111i1i1- in certain eoinp-, t8 years after the Great \Var. 9k 9K 5K It 1's understood the services of Mr. 'I'hon1as= Coleman. Alanagitig Engineer, have been retain- _ _ _ ed by the Montreal Iingineering Ctlllipflll)’, the ""l-'jl/i"_l~ Wllllcill 5C1lll‘l'lne\v owners of the Associated Cras and Electric ‘l l“ ‘ illlllllllllcclllmll‘lCtinipanVs 32.000000 stock i11 New Brunswick ‘ “““l'l "ll ll'~"l"°*‘l"."-la11<l Prince l-fdwartl Island. I\lr. (‘olematt has 1 ‘~l“'-i1‘ll1"'111‘>' PFC‘ lhcen associated with the business through its l -"‘l»"l"." l" lll“ lylldlllb’ variotis developments for the past itinetecn or ‘l flhlll ' ‘and inure worthwhile (IYUHHCS to pt-act- aiid pros- »: _ and _\lIlll{1<llllL‘ , m-em‘. vcarg 1.1 l1 l,01i"1' l1-.111i'11 .1.ii1l.\lo11it'1':1.l; ' 3K 9K 51g ~‘_ l l if‘ y‘ "l “t” - i The League of .\fltlOl‘lS IS more essential today i ' s .v- :'1~ .i:is 111-vii :1 lirii- - . . . _ , than it was titteen vears a o. It matters not ‘ l j yllllll "l ‘llllllll Llllxllllllll it failed in sevcrzil niagjor respcctswit has f l “l l '1 r‘ d.‘ llvl‘s"" “UhlT-;'l>'lp1"o\'t~1l a brake preventing Europe slippifl‘ heed-l l‘ ‘l l ‘,l‘l" lxlllll‘ l‘l‘lll lcssly to pl-rtlition. It can still serve the al-l 4-71‘ lll‘ ll“ ‘l l ll 'llll“l“ " ‘lllllll tnirhtv urioie of .‘lil\‘lll' fi ll."l.'l(‘I' 1nd ‘l l l" l lll ll l 'lllll“l'll~ll llllllll "if-ill"- thltl wlorld '1 Ulljlllft‘ tlil) rliwiiii ilsiolitl foot- - . - M11111ll11~1\\'11i1i:i1'lt-‘7 S 1 < l l a “l i l i _‘ _‘ ‘ _ ling to t-iialm- 1t to retraci- its. >It'])<, or to seek new ris . 1 1‘Iiiii..‘\lit.\ll ti t1. l1‘ ' l _ . ' lpcrilv. 1 i "e l 1 l"i'.-1- lll'1'~~'i~ that ' 9g _. _ Hlplilllplllllxllflllllllkylitllx’r This is a ivord picture of_thc fioveriiinciit , , _ _ , ‘. _il.eadci' 1n the Spanish Revolution; Senor Largo ll l ‘ l ‘llllli llllllll lLlaballcrti is iundzniicntztlli‘ a commander; llis "01" ct-m- -1 .1ll-l it de- ' 1 idace is iii the forefront 11f the. struggle fllllflllg‘ ll l l lllcllllle ‘lllbl l llllllll‘ lllvllllll lsoldiers and gener. s. exercising his genius for‘ l’ plell _ ‘ vl_l,_;l .‘ _ ,t’1Cll(Ill. 111- iii a Blinistcrial oitlicc giving orders. l l ‘ll l9 ll l‘ lll‘ " llll lll lint not on the l'.'1rli.'1nie11t benches dispensin" i . ‘Ill. -'_11'1~1~ilit'ill. rcs- i, _ _ . S ~ Ho" , ‘gunk in, 1sul1tlt> rt'1t~1\ll5 and legal precepts. llc is the re- verse 11f what the dlepuhlican govt-riiiiit-iits have wi- lcd to he: he relies upon instinct instczitl of science. tipon force in place of reason. iaitlt in-1l stead of programme. l 1\l.l\.~. Ute; fltilr BtlQp-IPGS ‘payers who are maintaining the of a revolution were manifest among llarisizins.’ said Mr. Llwwil. as he gave genera] impressions - part, if any, she ls to take in the of the France seen by the pilgrims this summer, preservation of peace. Against an . velopnicin through all thts_,t,nrm011 Wit that lnigpipt-s can \v.'i‘\"s titlti-i" than their 1". n11 <.'llt‘ at the l-ixhiliitliiii in Tiw-rviiitf» i-iiinil :1 t1-.11l_v 1nJtrk1-t. - iii 1w brisk after the in- ‘l ~11 which a iiiutilier of lin-l t11 11nt1~r tht-ir pen viiiiiiuli when hag» i-avirig. Such :1 les- st upin czittlritit-ii and 1111- standard rqniptitcut. . \\lli"i‘t‘ :iii_vtliing that . lilriit :11 .\lrint— il :11 i1l:1_v passen- vilt -11.'1ii 111111111 lint-r. “lllziiv- ‘i 'lll'__' l1u~i ess requiring .1 l i". his jil't‘4|1'\‘llji.'lll(1ll -1'-»1l_-: tli1- piper absent- t‘l‘.~l oi the pier :11 .1 . . pl _ and all. The la‘fer a fr . 1.‘ c rcuiii . ice for the in- flaft - "11s s1 1W1 -l as :1 liie-pr1~=111'vt-r and hold l 1'11 11'1"‘ he \~..1s rescued. llad it riot 1. ,1 been i"~r the 1pm the tinfiwrtunate inan lin- Houbte-llv uould have been drowned before the iycs of the p," 1* tigers. Thus a it u" arl ivost important use for bag- ‘ ~ l'.t'.(‘fl. It is hardly necessary yout fl d the piper been performing on a saxorfzioize w ‘n he fell into the water he would have lieen in grave danger. A saxophone will support i‘~' oiisnvr while he is in a jazz band btit is (‘lTllfTlV u=clcss for the purpose once he is h deep ivatr-r. i: Ilolyjrt 4 How Fortunes Go ll ‘vlldflltlf C, Dl‘l{.\.\"l‘, once the possessor of g fortune ('~llfl1.'\l("l at $l20.000,000, has turned I. 3250,1100 building he built i5 years ago into ll. food market and will manage the market him- self. llis fortune is gone. , lt is, t-oiiiniciits the (Jttaiva Journal. a turn of fate; 1111f [nluslldl on this continent. In Europe, and 1ft 11w p;trii1-iil.'irl_y' in England, family fr1rttin1~t Q11 1111 ironi generation t0 gencrilliOil- ITl-tv l? -li11111i ivonld think of speculating with i} ll. rtqztrrliiig it as a legacy to be hzintlvil 111i. lllllly may gamble with their sur- plus l't'\t‘littt'~ 1-1- uiriiiiigs. or gamble with a P61:- ppntqlQp 111‘ 1311111, 11in ihi-ir capital, or estate, lS for iii'.1-11-.:1-11:_ wrnrity- the main objective. [y j- tliifh ii-z" 1111 this Cnlllliivlll. TllC adage pf lllllhtt" Qtlli‘l'ii‘.l1ill~ ii-oni shirt sleeves to shirt Ql(".“.'t‘\l’ lists lztld trifv in the United States, or n111-tlv 111111. l‘lli'.~l l11-c:111s1-. the .‘\l11Cl'l(‘€lflal]ll:t- lii,» 15,- I-p - 1111. has been wont to spen 11s capiwil. 111- 111 1-i_’,- it in speculation. placing quick 3,14 15:1, yi'illl'll~ above sccurit_v; and secondly ],(-1~111.--_ 111i this t-iniiinciit. wealth has not al- “_1_y-. i11-1.11Q]~,1 .11 sen-c of pulilic responsibility. i,_\;p11-E1~11~1-1l liitlllsrfs‘, prudent investors, hold {pp I, “m, pwct-“iiig .~1'r1-:1so11.'1lile amount of wealth should l1:1\'1' fit lO-‘lfii (l0 P01’ (‘Cm- 0f ll l" gilt tulip,- iiiiis-"niciit, :11 per cent. of the balance on the l111i"1l1-rli11t~ between iiivestnictit and sprriiluioii, ;1111l 111-vet" more than 2o per cent. in n,,1.;11111.111n sptwdllitlltlll. Yet very few, it 15' ‘ugggsltul, fmiow such grutlllfl advice. Editorial Notes ‘\lt’lt‘(illli‘ to the repri-sciitatives of the Mari- Lilze hiisiiiws roiiiiiiuiiilit-s. ' ‘l: "f The .\lllll\l\'f‘ 11i Finniict- will not be talking rm; t1 nights »l1ut business. Pol l l + a lltllr. Peter Sinclziifs conscience must have been priclting him last evening when he recalled what he said about taxation 111 that Belfast hall 'y°‘ll‘l'llll' er 111 ale At the ‘Maritime Board 0f Tfilflfi Slim)’ ‘Vlll pbmit a rewlution fo <_ n lb the l/illtlnii Advertiser witlv T qr, i t1, 11.. heard from in The good offices- of the ]_(1_1,gu,. Hf Nmpm; an. 1m._,,.cm1' Mos, of 11mm womb, ‘Tenn. in the Joumai of Allergy ‘n1 flil lllllllllll "l lllllllll“l1li:itll\' \\‘1'\Ill(‘(.l now if an aliliarcilt contradiction i like 10:. Foster of Ohio ho > llelcllblng a cafe llllllell llls Cllm in the news and 11' ' 1 ' ' pls ° lsmtesi; . i l" (Vllllblllllllllll Ol CCHYS r the abolition’ at the ‘llC excused. .\'ot only liuropc liut the \\'orl1l. is aflatite with passions. In New York (iavdina! illaycs —\\'(‘l\‘0lllll]g delegates to the third zniuual national convention of the lloly Name Society yleplorcd the (lecliiie of patriolisiti and said: "\\'e , [may have to battle here in .\l1l(‘flCll for the flagl ‘that flies over our heads. The word jiillflfilislll i scents to be an obsolete word just now tin our; ‘own country. \\'e are informed that even in 1 our schools and our colleges and oiir iuiivt-rsi-l ‘tirsl, instead 0f patriolisnp- we licar- Lloninniii-ll ism . l 3E *5 3k l Miss Agnes hlacphail, .\l. l‘. has 1111f formed a , ivory favorable impression of Russia. under the; lSoviet, which she visited recviitly. “l would lnot like to live thcre",. she s: r and ivhile ad- i lritiitting progress has been made. since the 1111f" l ircvolutiiin she declares living conditiiiiis are "iaij .l11-low the level iii this country". .\st1i the dv-l iltlPflllOf of the people‘ themselves she saystl TThere are no smiling people there, no gJllPl\',l 11o, whistling on the streets. lany individual liberty, there is no sign of it ap- lparentf’ Yet these are the people .\lr. liingl ,kindl_v invited t0 compete with zuir (‘Hill andl dumber industries-to reduce, n0 doubt, thel Maritimers to the same standard as the gluin, de- annoyed at the vain attempts to give French, Spanish and German pronunciations of the names occurring in the European news. Similar exasperation is felt in England, if we are to be- lieve the London Daily Express. The B. B. C. has gone all Spanish, it says, and 110w gives‘ out the names of the Spanish towns as the Spatiizirtls are alleged to pronounce them. \\’hat’s the idea? They don't call Paris "Paree", nor Vienna "Veerl", rior Rome “Roma", nor Lisbon “Lis- boa", though that's what the French, the Aus- trians. the Italians and the Portugese call tltcir capitals. And even the B. B. C. donlt refer to Spain as ‘_‘Espana," though the Spaniards do. To the English, Badajoz is just plain Badajoz, not “Badahaz." It says “a mouthful." 3K» 5E 5F The Hon. Michael Dwyer. N. S. Minister of Mines, has been telling Montreal Board of Trade a few home truths about the significance of Confederation. "Not only must we live t0- gether in harmony, but we also must trade with- in our own borders and this can best be done through the assistance of our neighboring prov- inces," he said. “No province can stand alone. We must have a united Canada and not think of inter-trade relations as regards immediate yialuc. hilt rather with the vision of a greater Canada". Mr. Dwyer continued. "If it was not for the policy of building a lietter- Canada hy o11r Nova Scotian pioneers, with their visions add dreams of self-sufficient Dominion, resulting in etior- mous coal and steel resources available for use in the Great War, the history of this conflict must have been different.” 3|! 9K 3K A misunderstanding of "King's English’: has led to an unfortunate Society mix-up and inter- national. to-do. Miss Sarah Churchill. daught- er of the Rt. Hon. “llHSfOII Churchill joined, against the wishes of her parents, the chorus of "Follow the Sun", a musical revue_ playing 111 London last year. One of the pflfiflflfll-I W“ Vic Oliver, an American artist. \Vhe11 the company broke up, Oliver returned ‘to l\e\v York, and successfully produced other plays. Miss Churchill wrote him for a chance as dancer on the American stage, and recently he needed some girls and had his secretary writedter. “.1\c- l cept your etigagetnent," she cabled. That Iuvluil ‘ “professibnally,” of course, but the report got abroad that it was a matrimonial engagement. so when she sailed by the S. S. Bremen, "U" ‘la? her brother. Mr. Randolph Churchill, took pass- age by the S. S. Queen Mary to intercept [ht-r and stop the supposed marriage. Meantime 1,- thc people ha“. hunting for possible burglars when 1 h.s pressed citizens of R. S. S. R. 4 91g 91g 5g vmce. Everybody listening in on the Radio must feel Canada tourists ‘Visiting ‘he lFraiice and Great Brltatn ask Y-lwl- Notes by the Way It may be sald that we can eon- tribute nothing toward our own defence, that. the taxpayers are hard up, and so they are. But not. , more so than the British tax- pect both say that Canada should reach sore conclusion as to what aggressor bent on conquest the few “We Ellnboats now on our coasts would not be of much more avnJl than so many rowboats-Torontp, Telegram. The news from .Ru5sl3, that People are being made to play 15 reminiscent. of the regimental Sergeant-major, with his cane tucked underneath his arm, corn- manded recruits on the Saturday sports day to enjoy yrotuselr, damn you! Reading the news day by day, one might well come to be- lieve that. the decade just past has developed tiothlng but war scares, tiiteizipioynient relief, higher taxes, class conflicts, totalitarian states, econonizc deadlocks. The truth 1,5 that the really outstanding de- ltas been the Calgary‘ Alberta. habit of play___ "Cilmlllfl". iuimonishes the than from Ohio. "you fly your flag and l“ "5 Ill‘ Our own," and he nddsl eczema have been found to be due certain foods and other substances, so 1t: Ls believed now that migraine —-one-slded headache-ls also due 1n many cases to a. senslttveness to various substances. workers have been able to tell us / iliibat £11m’ at Qnurs fi-bclllllamlln AN EXPLANATION or somr: CASES or MIGRAINE- om: smsn HEADACHE ’ Just as hay fever, asthma and 1n many cases to senslttvenws to What Is Democracy? (Winnipeg manna) In Anglo-Saxon countries demo- cracy, like the weather, has long been taken for granted. We think little enough about. 1t untll we find that sometimes it. does not work out to ourtndtvldual advantage. We then talk 1n superior fashion of the need for a. strong man at. the head o! affairs, one who would soon put a stop to all that sort of nonsense. The strong man we visualize as one who hold the same opinions u ourselves. The bloody struggle between Fas- cism and Communism now g0lfl8 0n tn Europe ls causing concern tn all profemlng lovers of political freedom It constitutes a. challenge to the prin- clplies to which they at. least have That. many of these sufferers with It ls only recently that research; migraine. Just as an the vise-like pain under the larle-sized , that. henceforth he and his party “111 "1511 "Darts of Canada that. are nct apriitg the An1encans_-1 n 45 good advice. Tourists from the United States are not flattered i spasm or partial closing of,‘ when they see their flag floating lsllcll a slllelllllg lllllll llll lllllln over .1 591.11,, of o"er_!]ig'lt cabins to be too large for the xny, s i1 . or El lmlrdo; stand, because they ‘know the purpose is strictly com- find tlizngs different, here, like to y M‘ flying the flag of their hosts, 1 march consciously o1" unconsciously for the "British atmosphere” whigh Mr. Foster found lacking in Tor- onto.~Ot‘.a'.va Journal. Disclosure a1. the conference of the British Medical Association at. Oxf:rd that three dogs had saved lllfll‘ mas-tors in the Qnetta ea1'th_ quake last year 11.5 revived dis- ilplllll ' ‘follows. The pallor subsides t-ussion on the mystery of canine | "sixth sense." The revelation atl the conference was made by Sir l lV-Ffil‘ T. Holland. for thirty-six] years chief of the Quetta lyiission Hospztitl. He related how at. Qiictta, an army itistructor was ptillcd from his bed by his dog twenty-five tninules before. the tarthquake. and was in the garden house crashed. Two other dogs, he cxplaincdfone called Whiskey, belonging to a soldler and another owned by a deaf woman, also pulled their owners from their beds.—Vancouver Pro- Ulzutetl States experienced much grief through confusion of the l $100 duty exemption during the early days of the new regulations. It. has now been revealed goods to be imported under the exemption ntust be within the classification of baggage. Furnace blowers. bath-tubs, and refrigerators were among the articles that some visitors to the United States tried to bring back to Canada duty free. Customs officers report that. there is now a better understanding of the regulations and less disapp- olntmenw-North Sydney Herald. The military service decree rats- mg the active German army to a million men was preceded by a. violent propagandist campaign against Russia. To many observ- ers the Russian menace to Ger- many is more chimeric than concrete; dragged in for popular conscumptlon tn order to further the Fuehrerls methodical effort to control the biggest military power In Europe, an effort which oom- menced before Hitler became chancellor and which will take a. few more years to complete. A quotation from "Metn Kampf" furthen amplifies this attitude: "If we speak of new soil, we can but think first. of Russia and her subject border stutesP-Magaztne of Wall st. Let the civlllzed nations who llve in the enjoyment of peace and power come together and appeal. first, that the warring forces abate their ferocity and exchange their tniscnets instead of shooting them. Then, if there is any response at all to this appeal, let a truce be called, and let Germany and Italy take their part; tn calling 1t. I! the war be humanized and that then a truce be called, can Ger- many and Italy refuse? That; the civil war has dangers that. tran- scend the frontiers of Bpaln ls rapidly becoming clear. That lt ls a horror afflicting l whole people explanations have been offered, and everybody has drawn breaths of relief, except the \ellow Journalist. who u; a good nary 0902M like an agonizing cancer and a .1 is appears blanched and a “'51 defmed 1 ppallor is noted bcore the onsrt of1 l the pain. The pain begin". ovcr the lright, eye, gradually spreading over lthe right, slcle of llle head. She lavoids light: and all no"s':s. As the seventy-two hours and then grad- nally disappear". When the attack passes over sleep. apparently exhaiistd." every rain, also about ten fills that. Dr. Alfred M. Golfman. Memphis. ‘ “F01- twenty-folir hours before zthe headache comes on the Dflllflll. 5&5 languid; her eninnlexioti at first saJlow. but af‘er a time he‘: face vomiting and the face appears fl‘d5l1"(‘l. The process omitinues from twelve t0 becomes severe, l she goes into a deep This patient was found to be sendtive or allergic on skin-testing to wheat. mtfk. cheese, barley, 00m. celery, lobster, crab, oyster. scallop. shrimp, almond, pecan. cantaloupe, ooeoaniii. ginger, grano- frult, chlckern feathers. duck featherr‘, goose feathers and dust. lettuce. parsnip. codfish. squash. cabbage. This appears to be a. large llstl of substances to when the patienti was allergic.» but Dr. Goltman states 1 that symptoms by treatment fmm the allergic standpoint-omitting Lain foods, avoiding certain stances or gradually building up a resistance to these substances. she was relieved of her cer- sub- PUBLIC FORUM Till column h oven for lhl fl|gg||lllgj by norrupnadunlu ll quntlnnn o! l Th8 Chlrlnnotown Gurlln no: not nooennrlly undone lie opllloll of onrroliollultl. ST. PETER/S ROAD Sin-Residents from the Brackley Point Road to the Suffolk Road are wondering why repairs t0 this road are being delayed so long. There are several ponds of water after should be made up at. once and graveled to be passable this fall and next spring. Immediate action on this end of the St. Peter's Road will certainly be appreciated by the public gener- ally, I am Sir, etc., RESIDENT. dent. The civilized nations of the world have one immediate task that. ls urgent, above all others-to stop the clvll war. Is not this a task in which the people of this country, whatever their varying vtews about the Spanish conflict, can all stneerly join-Manchester Guardian. There ls not much natural and inherent difference between 11 one- man Fascist. rule as in Italy, a Nazt rule as in Germany. and a almllar one-man rule as ln Russia. In all three cases it is absolutlam . . There have been blood- baths ln Russia, Italy and Ger- many. Leaders who live by vlo- lence perish by 1t. . . . It seems necessiiry for the Fasclst, the Nazi and the Soviet rule to demonstrate at. intervals, their utter ruthless- ness. It ls not easy to see evid- ence of Justice tn the ferocious punishment: inflict/ed. - Toronto recent, address, its sponsors as a moral or humane ,ldea1. . . . They accepted a. moral imperative older ‘hart Christianity namely, that human life has a value in itself and can not be used for purposes alien to humanity.” Under lthls when 1n given lip-service. To meet the cry that ls being heard even in the United States, the so-called home of political freedom. miirraine isorpk hm mentally wdknin democracy ls dying and um Physically h“ been "med but lheml only its funeral await-s, the Ameri- are just as many who work Just as hard mentally and physically Wh° is now earnestly directing lts atten- am not afflicted with migraine. can Association for Adult Education tion to the study of democracy. Dr. Charles A. Beard, president. of the _ _ [association has made a further 00n- .::?."i..:..‘:r.;:.i.°::“.:::::i 11 W s attacks of attack of angina, pectoris causes a1 spasm or parttal closing o‘? bloodvessels feeding o1- nourishing the heart muscle resiiiiing 1n a: severe bresvt bone. so also a spasm occurs in the region of the arteries and veins fii the bffllILl lThls lthe vessels 1:: then followed by 8- ‘dilation or widening or onenuig up, lot‘ the arteries and veins causing. Democracy? "Democracy." said Dr. Bea-rd 1n a “was conceived by the democratic theory, Dr. Beard continued, men and women could not be turned into chattels and em- ployed as the beasts of the fields for the benfit and pleasure of others. They have an equal right, all of them, to live liberty. and the pur- suit of happiness. This ideal, at least has been em- bodied tn the political institutions of democratic-minded countries, 1n forms of govemment and law. It is expressed or at least implied, tn freedom of opinion tn public discus- sion, freedom of the press. freedom of religioug belief. Equality at the polls. and all the safeguards of human rights Ln accusation trial and judgment. If Farcism or Communism should ever get, a hold upon the United States or upon British countries t1; will not be the fault: of their poll- ttcai tnstitutlons. The cause will lie deeper. Daniel Webster glimpsed looking fnto the fu- ture. he 111-mu» “The freest govern- ment. ff It could exist. would not. ‘ long be acceptable. if the tendency of the laws were to cream a rapid accumulation of property 1n a few hands and to render the great mass of the population dependent and "pOIIIIlIESS. In suce cases, the popu- lar power must break ln upon the rights of property, or else the tn- fluence of property must. limit and control the exercise of popular power. Universal suffrage, for ex- ample, could not, long exist tn a community where there was great inequality of property. The holders of estates would be obliged in such case either tn some way to restrain the right of suffrage or else such right of suffrage would ere long divide the property." This ls a. foreshadowing of what has happened in “Spain. The suffrage resulted tn the return of a Socialist government to power. Stripped of all side-issues the bitter Slflmllle now going on ls between the "haves" and the "have nets." A temporary decfson may come almost any day, but. the final deci- sion ls not between the gmndees and the peasants It. will be made by the people who come in between. which is the nearest practical 11p- Droach to democracy whleh ls ‘p05. stble in that country for many years to come. Cures For Insomia (The Calcutta statesman.) Early in the year considerable pub- licity was Elven both ln 11111111 and abroad to the case of a. RalBahadur Ramjldas Bajorla of Calcutta who had suffered from chronic insomnia for two yew-g - Through a. Calcutta newspaper the Rat Bahadur offered a. reward of Rs. 20.030 to anyone who could bring hlm the “gift of sleep." Shortly after the publication of this offer thousands of telegrams and letters poured tn from many parts of India and countries abroad. The)’ 99-1118 from doctors, Christian actors, authors- fmm men and wo_ "W" 0! 1118b demo and in every walk of life. It," seemed that. insomnia must be one of the world's commonest tn. fitctions, for moat of the lay writers described themselves an fellow suf- refers. Many made no claim to the re- ward, merely expressing the hope that. the advice offered would atle. vlate the sufferings of a fellow being, Varied and novel were 5on1; of "It? Slwtzested remedtesbut the orthodoxy of the 1m! Bahndur ren. tiered the application of some of them impossible. Mr. H- d: Vere Btlcvoole, the nove- dermnmpnmnunntllflmnl- iltu- 1 limsdvm than»! c: ablwwm a ,____ ====l_=flrlv=u=irzr;z- 3. 1936 College Education GUARANTEED ! My father can guarantee his children n college education through The Dominion Life Educational Trust Plan. Small payments-started when children are young-— provide funds to cover college expenscs— whether the parents are here to pro- vide them or not. Get full details now, from our booklet, “Good Con» paniona". Call or write today. 1 MAJOR JJMacKENZIE, (LL-U. Manager 160 Richmond Street THE D s: l. QMINIQN LIFE ASSURANCE CQMPANY WATERLOC a t . ONTARIO For Vitalitu always me BRAHMlNt ORANGE ' PE KOE TEA l E. R. Brow & son‘ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness at Lowest Rate 144 Richmond St. l l and Plate Glass Insurance I Agent at Summerside, l Lloyd Lewis Cha rl ottetown K. S. HERIMING, Bookkeeping systems Certified Public Accountant .and ‘Auditor Profit and Loss Accounts Computed, Trustee under the Bankruptcy Act Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prepared. Administration of Estates a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. Bank of Nova Scotia Building Charlottetown, P. EJ. B.A., C.P,A., 0.11.1? installed or revised electric light bulb from which only a tiny pencil of light should be al- lowed to escape. The hypotlc 9mm, _of gazing at the slender benm in a darkened room, he suggested, was a sure cure for sleeplessness. A number of doctors ea-bled their willingness to come to India to take Charge of the case, and at zibotit this time newspapers in America pub- lished greatly exaggerated reports ivith regard to the reward that him bcei. offered. A more practical gesture was re- cently made by a London firm manu- facturing electro-medieal applian- ces. Without charge they dispatch. ed apparatus for diatatic treatment tn the hope that the sufferer might, ftnd some alleviation. This gift ls be- ing followed by additional electric- al apparatus. The accompanying letter asked only that. it might, be SHADOWS Are they shadows that. we sue? And can shadows pleasure give? Pleasures only shadows be, Cast. by bodies we conceive. And are made the things we deem In those figures which they seem. But these pleasit w vanish fast, Which by shadows are expressed; Pleasures are not, if they last; In their passing L11 their best. Glory ts most bright. and gay In a flash and so away- Feed space. then. needy eves On the wonder you behold; Take ft sudden as 1t flies, given to a. hospital tn the event 0! its ineffectiveness. For long the afflict-ion refused Lo yield to any kind of treatment arid the Rat Bahadur became tiesponil- enb. He then underyvent a rnursc 11f massage suggested tn 1i lctteer from a distant well wisher. Lately, 112s». he has undergone the dtatatle llTJl- ment. s According to a relative the 11.11 Bahadur has made some prourvfi towards what ls hoprd may prov.‘ ‘~11 be a substantial recovery. He has recently enjoyed short, fitfnl pvriillf of sleep and is able to walk short distances whrreas formeriF hf‘ ‘lllll unable to move more than 1i iv" yards, painfully and with thr hviii "l hLs attendants. 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