1 -'>"‘>‘-$ ‘ff . 3 DAYS Tunas. rm. ssr. 8.15 d; 3.45 I 4 AR D _ TODAY ONY - ae”: r0 ROMANCE" A mun swan m.» NINO MARTINI — scuu nmnnamk - ANITA LOUIE! "zvr 1:1" o . . NEWS ANDTBAVELOGUB on . _..~ , 4. . Asllllie its WAY Til SENSATIIINAI. urw nrcnnnsl The thousands whefve seen it soy this greet picture is worth every dollar I ' ol llle million Werner Bros. spent to bring you Rcloel Sobotini’: amazing IOIIIGIIO: of Illa lovable rogue who mode his ngme the tenor of kings! Illfhelevdyflenelnelhevlcfieloelei ‘Captain Mood“ bottles Illa deodllesl mende- mnneltheplrwh mulnlupoelercieneltlhbenuty when love once um Nu u flu mun nail ~ > Elllilll. FLYNll - OLIVLAWII: llAVlLLAllll jiiliiiljlllll! BASIL nllliilbllf-"lzoss rinumnrn - our um: ' PRINCE EDWARD- ‘ V 7 _‘ . ‘K I) annan canroou siren-um- -»- t» » A 3.15 - 7.00 - 8.45 P. COLQB) “TlmE MATINE EVENING a 16c,26c, 26c. 32c. 37c. an cnhunotrr“ a s» i ,3. Capiiol- mun mum ‘DAILY IJb-‘IM-GAI r. u. Frances Ledereh-fianoee Dee ' Ii v ‘II ALSO...NOVILTY a- rurru arrmo MUSICAL SllI-IY-Sllli Tllflwwlll‘ llllliulvllldlllllmwisl __-.“"'revflfi . ADDED . . COMEDY And BUCK JONES < SERIAL CRAP. SIX ITALY BLOCKS NAVAL PARlEY Hopes Fade For Four- power Agreement. (By Harold P. " , Agoflaw] Press Staff Writer) (A- P- B)‘ Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON. Feb. z-k-Hopes for a projected naval agreement to re- Dlace expiring treaties faded tonight B: authoritative sources said Prem- ier Mussolini refused to sign as long as League of Nations sanctions are in force against Italy and the Brit- ieh fleet in the Mediterranean. The attitude of Ll Duce was'dls- closed by members of the Italian delegation, these sources declared. and confirmed previous unofficial predictions. Naval conference circles inter- Meted the expression as a blow to the proposed treaty. The British also have made no headway with the French in dis- cussions oi ways to get around .the French objections to German par- ticipation ln the conference. London Set Up For Ice Cream LONDON, Ebb. 25-40?) "— Warm weather ice cream fashions are being determined at the Ice Cream and Dairy Exhibition at the Crystal Palace, The News-Chronicle remarks: _' "This summer, it seems, we shall consume at least 50,000,000 gallons (l? ice cream-so that the rehearsal now in progress is thoroughly justified. "It will be bought from penny- lri-the-slot machines, in special paper bags. in tubes of chocolate and in he": waffle-wafers, which make it look as if you get more ‘gar your penny than you actually . "And lt will b. better ice cream. The Milk Marketing Board has ar- ranged for ice-cream manufactur- ers to buy milk at bulk wholesale prices. Milk powder from abroad has been widely used so far. "The immense engineering in- dustry that has grown in recent years to 1 t. the needs of the big milk distributive combines should give those engaged in the milk prices inquiry some idea of where the money goes." ‘ Alberta Horse Dealers Happy (By The Canadian Press) CMOIJW. Feb. I — Alberta horse dealers an jubilant as prices soar to the highest level in revere! years and demand continues steady. .6001! farm horses find a rend! market in Eastern Clnade and llEAli AND HAVlllI BAUSEB BY FllllllJS (A. l’. By Guardian? Special Wire) KANSAS CITY, Feb. 24-—Snow- slides. floods and grinding ice floes-—loosed by warming winds that swept a major part of the United States-took a reported toll of at least 13 lives today,- The same winds, rushing in to fill low pressure areas over western Nebraska and northern Wisconsin, scooped up soil from bare fields in the southwest. creating scenes rem- iniscent of last year's bllghtlng ‘ o1 it. whereas m the ohms emu series of dust storms. Swift melting river ice and head- water snows combined with fore- casts oi’ watershed rains to carry flood threats to a dozen states. Ice gorges were blasted and blasting preparations made throughout the middle west. Giant Snowslide The historic Camp Bird mining property eight miles from Ouray, Colo. was the scene of the greatest reported disaster. Frngmcniary ac- counts told of a glnnt snowslide that roared down a mountain side, engulfing the plant whcrc 45 men were at work and killing nine. Many more were reported injured. A rescue party of 30 on horseback fought 10-foot snowdrifts towards the scene. Four were reported drowned and many driven from their homes by high water in the Stockton and Oalrdale district of California, This rcgion bore the brunt of early flood troubles with 35 000 acres under water and agricultural dam- age estimated near $1,000,000, The Sacramento River started falling today. Farmers Captioned Farmers in rich lowlands in oth- er sections were warned to be Dre- pared to evacuate. Reading, Pa., made plans to care for 1,200 rc- fugees in anticipation of floods along the Schuylkill. Pinker was averted in the Ohio River Valley ncar Evansville, 1nd,, where even more serious difficulty had been feared. Giant ice gorges above and below Evansville. broke -freeing many miles of the rivcr and virtually removing serious flood threats. The second dust storm in as many days fogged skies over puts of the Texas and Oklahoma P5111. handles and Kansas and Colorado Wind velocity roaa at times as high as 50 miles an hour. Visibility ranged from one-quarter to three. quarters oi a mile. i’ to understand them, "looks c mil; Wllllfill.’ Bald Dr. Henrietta Ander- son in an address here. '.li‘he English method u u» mic the rational and make it behave in an irrational manner, while iue United States humorist takes an irrational creature such as "Mickey House.’ and make it behave in a rational manner. Humor of men like Mark Twain and Bret. Harte. however, had uni. "M! awed: and mglilh humor, subtle and leaving much to tbeim- agitation. appealed to sophisticatcs of both nations. Scotch humor the lpeaker defined as comelous and in a class by itself. The Englishmen takes his humor u he takes his sport-for the fun it is n more serious bulimic. Dr. Andersen selected Prilned for War‘ China Takes On National Pride NAKING, Feb. 24. (AP)—Chlna the peace loving, proudly paclfistlc nation oi many centuries is no more. In its stead is emerging a people trained in the art of war and fixed in the belief that a day, the day, is coming when China must and will fight to preserve the longest continuous existence of any nation on earth. - Two million Chinese were under arms when a few‘ Japanese divi- sions took over Manchuria, practic- ally unopposed. Few of these 2.000,- 000 shouldered a rifle when the rising sun banner was carried through Jehol and hoisted on the great wall of China. No call to the colors was heard as the Japanese nibbled at the inner Mongolian Province of Charhar, and gained the upper blind in the once im- pcrial province of Hopei, where the sons of heaven once ruled Eastern Asia from the dragon throne. - China did not fight to prevent the loss of a fifth of her territory, and many were the excuses offered —lack of modern military equip- ment and training in its use, civil dlssension. But strongest of all excuses -—the tradition of ages which placed the soldier on the lowest rung of the social ladder and convinced the man of ability that he was too good to fight. One by one Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shel: has eliminated these excuses behind which China has been hiding. Half of the national revenues now go directly into the military coffers , and millions more find their way there by round-about Ways. To aid him in transforming his unwleldiy and often untrust- worthy arm‘ - legacies of the warlord era-into an effective and disciplined national force, General Chlang Kai-Shek invited the best military experts post-war Germany could spare. American airmen laid the foundations of China's air force. Italian fliers continued the work. From the United States General Chlang bought airplanes, and soon will buy more. From the leading armament firms of Europe came cannon, machine guns, tanks and other instruments of war. Most important of all, General Chlang is injecting into the un- warlike Chinese mind the will t0 fight. Every method of p; nda known to modern civilization is being utilized. Newspapers, magen- ines, the radio. the moving picture, bill» boards, school text books-all are being used today to spread the doctrine of militarism. Ordinary soldiers killed in past revolutionary struggles are now cel- led martyrs, and have memorials erected to their memory. The page; of history are being combed for names of men who fought against foreign foemcn, that posthumous titles and honors mAY be conferred upon them. and material benefits granted to their descendants. Gone are the old days when the pale complexion, soft, long nailed ’ culdere and Bchoolboyk m Chiaatodey mun undergo military ‘tr-doing. murtbe u trdlcient in headline ma: es in‘ using slide rules or the cur. - . noun mien this miiiterhtic policy “.2'.“#.’:.t"“’""°“m'“:‘ ‘t; m ma: THURS. FRI. SAT. DAILY 3.15—'i.00-8.45 I’. “L. WNA column‘ The Central Guardian _ __._.... trrlllall°ihmfuouhul adv-ruin “I w" no may be All! '3 some e ward ntriclll Illlhll ll advance. conrunanarron urn mana- Anon, 11-0798-1-12-812. nacnlvas Deanna-Mr. Earle E. Ebers, 8.50.. MA, Pbll)" 80B of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Eberl. Cit! just received his Pll-D- (D0030! 0X Philosophy) dorm from Howard University, Cambridge, MEL, when he is a student, and assistant in the chemistry department. Earle received his 3.80. degree from Dal- housle University in i981 and his M_A_ dggwe from Harvard in 1938. SPEAKS A1.‘ ROTARY DINNER _.The guest speaker at the Saint John Rotary Club dinner on Mon- day of last week was Miss Cath- erine MacL-eon, who ia tempt! '11: employed by the New Brunswick Division of the Canadian Bed Cross society, as Junior Red Cross c 1n- "izer. Miss MacLean has spout two weeks in Saint John and heir": re- turning to Charlottetown, will visit the schools in Newcastle, Chatham, Bathujst, Dalhousle, Campbelltou and Fredericton. To ATTEND CONFERENCE-A meeting of the Maritime Live Stock Breeders’ Association and a confer- ence oi live stock Maritime field men opened yesterday at Amherst and will conclude. on Thursday. Among those in attendance from Prince Edward Island will be L. W. Roper, Live Stock Promoter; S. D. Irvine, senior sheep and swine field man; W. R. Shaw, Deputy Minister oi Agriculture; F. M. Nash, Poultry Promoter; H. W. clay. swine erad- er; J. l-l- Kennedy and Keith Bos- well. ST. JAMES LADIES All) SOCI- ETY-The regular meeting was held on Wednesday. Mrs. ‘Daniel Mac- Lean, president, in the chair. Plans for the Easter Tea and Bazaar were discussed and completed. It. was decided, in view of the consignment of native wares and novelties on its way from the Orient, that the Baz- aar should be carried out with eastern setting and scheme of dec- orations. It was also decided that the Tea should be held on the 16th April, and that the Bazaar should be open the evening previous to the Tea as well as on the afternoon on which the Tea will take place, thus lillPlTlll-liif" 21.21522: <_~;_—____ Ill MElillllilllM MB. JOHN McRAE Died at Rollo Bay West on Dec- ember ind, 193i», John McRae at the age of 74 years. Deceased was born at the above Place in 1862 and lived there all his life. A In 1902 he was married by the late Rev. Peter Curran, P, P,‘ h; st. Margareis to Minnie McDonald of Corran Ban and of this union there were five children: Mary E. (Mrs. l-lowlan Mullally of Souris River; Catherine in Montreal; Laurette, (Sister St. Catherine of the Con- gregation of Notrc Dame, Mon- treal); John J. and Daniel at home. He was a very quiet, reserved man, one whose advice could always be relied upon. In ail he was one of our foremost citizens and a most zealous member of the Catholic Church. His funeral took place on Dec. 4th to St. Alexis Church, where u solemn Hish Muss of Requiem was sung by his beloved pasto:, Rev. A. L. sinnott, assisted by Rev. K. C. McPherson, P.P., St. Margarcls, as Deacon and Rev. L. P. Callaghan, D.D., parish priest of St. Charles as sub-deacon. The services at. the grave were performed by Rev. A. L. Binnott. assisted by Rev. K. C. McPherson and Rev. L. P. Callaghan. The pail bearers were Angus D. McDonald, Wm. A. White, Fabian Hmvlett. Edwin Reid. Preston Bry- enton and Temple Whalen. l-le leaves to mourn his widow, the five children above referred to, and brother Joseph in Rollo Bay, und James in Woburn, Mass, and one sister, Mrs. W. J. Mcbougall, besides a large circle of friends and ac- quaintances to mourn their loss. May his soul rest in peace. (Patriot please copy) LORNE VALLEY AND VICINITY The people of Lorne Valley and vicinity are pleased m know that Mrs. Stirling MaoSwaln is reoov. ering from her recent operation. Mr. Aneu MacQuaid of Cardigan Head is in the City Hospital. The Burns Concert held in Car- digan l-lall on the evening of Tues- day 18th was a great success. Miss Bernice MacArthur of Lorne Valley has returned home from a. recent three weeks visit spent at the home of Mr. John Jewell. North River. 0n the eyenlni; of February filth, the Cardigan Read Dramatic Club entertained a well packed hall in Lorne Valley. They also presented their play in St. Theresa Hall on the following Friday evening en- titled “The Red Acre Farm." It proved a great success in both places. Ail of the twelve actors per- formdd their parts splendidly. Mr. John Mustard, M.P.P. of Cr:- dlgen Heed received u very painful injury ‘Tuesday evenins. Feb. 18th. when coming home from Cardilran. He put his shoulder out of joint. but fortunately before very long be W" Riven medical aid and the in- jury adjusted. making the Bazaar a two-evening and one afternoon function. ALUMNAE BRJDGE—A splen- didly arranged bridge was held in the Nurses‘ Home of the Charlotte- town Hospital. by the Nurses‘ Al- umnae, on the night qt Feb. 24. The spacious Home provided room for seventeen, tables in an evening of very enjoyable bridge. The prize-winners were: Ladies first. Mrs. L. B. McMillan; second. Mrs. Alban Farmer; consolation, Mrs. F. Walker; gentlemen first, Mr. L. B. Gallant; second, Rev. P. Mullally; consolation, Mr. J. F. Lieightizler. Af a delicious luncheon had been serv d by the graduate nurses, and the Hospital Dietician, Miss Eileen McQuaid presentation of prizes concluded a most. enjoyable evening. ANNUAL MEETING-The Marsh- ilcld and Dunstofinage Rural Tele- phone Company held their annual meeting recently. The financial report showed a small deficit for the year. owing to the fact that h ilumber of posts had to be re- placed during the year the dollar and o half for upkeep was found to be too low. The old board of directors was reelected, Herbert Thompson, President; J. H. Crosby. Alfred Reid, H. B. Dennis and C. W. Robertson. During the i8 yearsithis company has been in operation with 24 subscribers and about l0 milas of double wire many thous- ands of messages have been received and sent and always with the most obllging courtesy of the various op- erators through which they have passed. The directors were in-' structed to procure the services of an expert to go over the whole line. They were fortunate in securing the services of Bruce Judson of Alexandria, who put everything in first class repair, replaced about 1,000 fect of black wire‘ besides making other l replace- ments and repairs. some of which had been causing trouble for some time. Mr. Judson keeps on hand almost a full line of material for this kind of work. Alfred Stewart and Borden Boswell ‘were appoint- ed line men to make any necessary repairs to the wire line. Personals Miss Vera Roper, who has been under treatment in the Prince Ed- ward jislsnd Hospital, has returned to her home in East Royalty. Mr. Newton S. McLure oi Rustico has arrived home from a business trip to Boston. . ,Ml-s. Wallace MaoKey, Stanley Bridge, left Monday morning for Bcstonywhere she will visit her daughters, Florence and Eleanor; also her sister, Mrs. Simmons and Mrs. Kirkpatrick. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Aitken left yesterday morning for 8t. Peter!- burg, 11s., when they will spend the remainder of the winter. ‘lire many iricndl of Ir. C. Idi- eon McDonald who his bell eeri- oully ill in the Prince County or- pftsl for some time, will be to know his condition is Mr. J. 0. C. Campbell.’ Charlotte- town has returned nun a brief Makes Appeal For ‘ , Retention oi The‘ Prohibition Law -___. On Sunday. Rb. 28rd, at the evening lervloe in_ the United Church st Kensington. the pastor. aev. B. Chalmers Salter mad» I stirring appeal to a largo 0on8!!!- gatlorl. “Rise v9.10 men of God! Have done with Imel- thlnsfll" Speaking on temperance and takiniz for his text Genesis d: 9, “Am I my brother's keeper?" m. Suite: said. "Some time ago in discussing the liquor question with one who claim- ed that neither by way of exam?“ nor in supporting legislation to re- strict strong drink had. he any re- sponsibility towards others. He turned on me quite fiercely with a quotation from Scripture. ‘Am I my brother's keeper?’ “It was very fitting that one who sited up for the liquor traffic should quote this question from the lips of the first murderer, Cain. who killed his brother. Strong drink has killed very many. Philip Snow- den, former Chancellor of Britain. pmducc wealth; it destroys wealth in order to manufacture pauper-ism, crime, disease, poverty and death.’ "We know that it killed a man here in Kensington not four months ago. He gave his strength in bulldhig the new highway and when the work was completed he was rewarded with that which killed him. I have heard only kind words spoken of this stranger in our midst who was killed by alco- hol. and I would not speak harshly of any oi itsvictlms. On the other hand I freely admit that man! good men take a mink. Further, some of the finest youna m"! I have known have become drunk- srds, and some fill drunkards graves. Very often the victim of strong drink is the kind of man we like best, young, strong, confident of himself, kindly, friendly, generous, rather than the careful. selfish one, forever thinking of his own inter- ests Not-everyone who takes a drink becomes a drunksrd. but those who are most certain that they can take a drink or leave it alone aredn the greatest danger. Though Cain, the murderer. might ask, "Am I my brother's keeper?" we who profess to follow Jesus Christ must say, "We are." We have a duty toward our broth- ers and toward our children. Our full duty is not done when we set them a good example. We must fight this monster that produces pauper-ism, crime, disease. poverty and death. It never ceases to ad- vanoe. Recently our Premier said press- ure is being brought to bear upon the government in favour of changing the law. ‘rhere you have the advance of the creature that murdered the stranger in Kenning- ton four months a80- ‘Tls I 811ml’ creature that glides forward in the darkness. Sometimes we catch a glimpse of it in the Press. Yester- day. for instance, in an Island paper there were seven letters on the liquo: situation Pour oi’ them were written by honourable men who signed their names. All were in favour of the enforcement of the present law. ‘Three were un- signed. They were as stabs from the darkness aimed at our children. Two years ago in England Sir lkfgar Sanders. director of the Brewers’ Society, addressing the brewers, appealed for a great ad- vertising campaign. emphasizing that advertisements be given to newspapers on condition that the brewers be given editorial support. (Sea the trail of the serpent!) He went on to say: "If we can once attract a new class of customer. we shall see the brewing trade turn round and start the ascending scale. We want to get the beer- drinking habit instilled into thous- ands, almost millions. of young men who do not at present know the taste of beer. These young men. if they start with what beer they can afford today, as ‘they grow up will afford better been, to the greater advantage of the brewing industry." Brewers. in Canada have followed his advice. They advertise. Along the highways of Quebec one may see here and there the wood- en horse, advertising a certain brand of been In Prince Edward Island though, we are to have a living horse going from one end of the Island to the other-a travel- llflfl Buvcr lldmfllit that Will b0 talked of wherever horsemen meet. Along with advertising goes a lying pzopaganda which claims that our present law cannot be en- forced and that government sale will automatically do away with the bootlegger. Our law can be enforced if the people who hate that which manu- factures "pauper-ism. crime, disease, poverty and death" will bring suf- ficient prouurc to bear upon our [VVQUUHGXIL I do not advocate a sneaking underhand pressure from the darkness, such as the brewers and distiller: use. but an out-and- out straight-forward appeal, and demand that our present law be strengthened and enforced. Many in the government will welcome this pressure. Govern ‘ sale competes with the bootlelger but does not put him out o! business. - Nine years ago I was minister in Antlgonirh, N. l. There and then we had prohibition, partially en- forced. The mast notorious boot- leggerflfud from the town to escape the plnitenti . Later I wu celled to some. N.‘ where we bed lwfinment ule__1 found that the bootleglu who couldn't live in An- undsr prohibition wee el- iu llicnotca undue m0 outinhie waseeufarulullsaaudper- true. and! com- says: ‘The liquor traffic does not . Tin-r is advice an dumb-t gym crawl"! Yet: for ate 10:58:74 0! din"; ‘poo e it is advice that carries wi it a camoa 711F101? "F" ll elgeuulullid: us tanlifobo de- gu-oygd," I110“ C5118 and imwallei inwork uP Wwgrllolll‘ $133.} .£l...l..'. begins.” a» mk less you use exercise) your muscles they tan h) l" d You don't care for your m Don’t ilblldll unznvrgnw 1"" that. Another wnyr: Alloelll. and organs are interrelated through the sympathetic nervous we ~ "n. -' lea-gs iuwfia.» Your soft» I557 muscles must favor soft, flabby vital organs, ineiudirlt 7°"? h "W" “than t: m vigorous n - lwlllldi your lieu-L Butrf postal: ‘*° “r ‘hill? 33% ‘ii.- 1353x212... blood. Yonr heart: mgy not able to circulate the viseidiropy blood resulting from conventions acid-forming foods- . The correct foods are too many be listed but I shall fiadl mail you a list: ofth them ree 1°“ ' em. I2: fad ourself as I ‘feed mysc f you wil wantjo exercise, thrill and ecstasy will b» your! with each efiort and movement, because you are obeying a sup me law, pf being: "SUWIEAQ, "to overcomin ls the law 0f PET-Aw‘ tion," Yie din , coddlmg, resting is the way to p yalcal destruction. If you are tooundolent to Wfllb me or do anfiiung else, at least use Roman M1, Bflklll-Pllddy. “id Lfhmfii w...""€.‘i§‘i€‘l.‘l?lit galllcllddifior three months. After um; 1 shall not have to argue with yogcnd for free booklet “How to Keep Well" andother literature- loom‘ Exhaust? ‘i936 The above l: from a pholngnmj, of Rabi. G. Jnckuon, M.D., Ialrgn In Me 77|h year. address Robt. G. Jackson, M.D,, 59‘I_Vine Ave" Toronto. optima Mackinac/n- Sheppard’ Nap tia-ls The followim notice appeared in the Ottawa Citizen of February 3rd. The marriape was solemnized at half past two o'clock on Saturday afternoon of Miss Margaret Isobel Sheppard. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ernest Sheppard, toRev. Murdoch Charles Maclqnnon, M. A,. B. D., of Windsor. out, con of Mtr. and Mrs. Dona-id D. Mackinnon of Charlottetown. P. E. I. Rev. Norman Coll of Parkdale United church ofllciatad at the cer- emony which took place in- the Que- bec suite of the Chateau Laurier, and he was assisted by Rev. Daw- son D. Elliott of Perth. The Wed- ding March was played by Miss Marlon Mnclean A. '1‘. C. UL, and during the signing of the register. Mrs. Cecil E. meter sang “Still As the Night." ‘ The bride was given in marriage by her father and was attended by Miss Elspeth Smith of Perth as bridesmaid. Mr. Hugh Blair of Perth was the best man. . A lovely gown. of Viennese blue chiffon. cut on long, flowing lines with a softly draped coat to match and with a. sash of a. deeper shade of blue. was wnm by the lovely bride. Her‘ twas a braided halo of matching ffon and she carried an arm boquet oi’ Talisman roses and lily-of-the-vailey. Miss Smith was gowned in sbdli pink crepe and she wore a hat of ialt. She carried Briarcliflc roses and stevia. A reception was held following the ceremony when the bride's par- ents eived with the couple. Mrs. Sheppard wore a Illaekahirc model of Chantilly lace with a shoulder knot of Templar rcses and lily-of- the-valley. Ho hatwas a Raboux model of crepe and, stmw. Mr. and Mrs. Macklnnon left on a trip to Quebec city, the bride travelling in a smart black cont of French cloth trlmlmed with Per- sian lamb over a crepe dress and her hat was of sticknd taffeta. They will take up i-eslden at 211 Vic- toria road. Walker-v le. The out-of-town threats included Mrs. Alex Blair, rm Hugh Blair, Rev. and Mrs. D. Di. Elliott. Miss Isobel walker. Miss liflspctb Smith, Miss Isobel Phllp and Miss K. E. Phiip. all of Perth; Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Sheppard of Clarletcn Place. sad m. R. A. Sheprprd of King- s n. - . . The bride's boqueti was’ caught by Miss Ila Bslharris‘, daughter of Ex-Mayor J. P. Balhamie, of Otta- wa. -' zzfleady-made Medicine -- You need no physician for ordi ills when you have at band a e of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric= Oil. For coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchial troubles, it. is invaluable‘ for eoeldl, burns, bniises, sprains lt is unsur- passed; while for cuts, sores and the like it is an unquestionable healer. It needs no testimonial other than the use, ma that will satisfy anyone u to its elective- nem. ' l i bar business." The board chairman explained that it ll the belief of authorities that when drape an fbflflmllll i'f."&'.’.'.'?"'°°'"“~ Pt o» M the same mater- w, Plan to Offset Sunday Politics CALGARY ANGLICANS DISCUSS MEETING THREAT 0E RADIO PBOPAGANDA-URGE EARLY ACTION v CALGARY. Feb. ail-Broadcasting of Sunday Anglican church services to offset similar services by other religious bodies was beiofe a coin. mittee at the 26th meeting of Cal. gory Diocesan Synod. The step was suggested as a re- sult of the contention that politics was being injected into services during time that "should be set aside for the spreading only of Christian propaganda." Sixty-five clergymen and lay delegates at a meeting last night voted ‘ ously. for a resolution asking appointment of n. committee to investigate broadcasting. Plea for" early action was voiced by Hugh Farthing, K.C.. former Conservative member of the Alberta legislature for Calgary. who said he was not concerned with the ques- tion M whether political broadcast- ingon Sunday was right or wrong. but saw danger of the practice spreading if the church did not take steps to meet "this Bllfldny com- tition." He said two parties already had made extensive use of Sunday broadcasts; two others had refrain- ed because they believed Christian people would be opposed. but these two were now preparing lo enter the Sunday broadcasting field be- cause of the church's apparent un- cern. Sunday political gatherings were criticized Tuesday in the report of Rev. G. G. Wcbber, Edmonton, sec- retary of the Alberta lord's Dill’ Alliance. His Nport did not men- tion broadcasting. HEALTH INSURANCE (By The Canadian Press) OARDQIUN, Alta. Feb. 25 - Sponsors of health insurance piiiilS can point to Cardstonk four KP!" old medical contract scheme lb!‘ support in their arguments. Pleascd ‘octors and satisfied patients prove the popularity o." the project in it starts its fifth your. ‘ Under the plan a person pals $25 1n advance and in return that por- son or anyone of his family will receive medical care throughout the yen- without further cost. The con- traot provides medical care for from one to ten persons in a fum- ily. On an average five W110i“ have been insured under ench coh- tract. _Durlng the last four W11" 50° persons have signed contract-S. Tflk‘ ing an average or five persons un- der each contract, 3.000 WW” have obtained medical service o! a ‘minimum coat of ed par YB"- Advanoe payments which atsurcd doctors a regular monthly 511W!’ from the ‘ committee hi! pleased the m: dootore. Between Jan. 1, ma, and Much i a W’ open period when anyone can 101" person will have in writ until Sci)?’- ill before another Ofllfltlunitl’ i" ioin is presented. City, Deccan. ‘rho color i8 W‘ . Mill "".....""'gi.":".."i.w.r °' P" . A Frlenrl§to mo» end mun m» ma» t» now ovidreeuatebreskdrwebllhw‘ I“""' the. Aged As theQYeiare Creep 0n Intlniehryeuljcfliiewententolnoothll The blood do" k6; ll Jl"m"$'¢muo in on ti" ‘ acme not jelly M! W‘ vigor fllateiethnlrhsltbfl ‘tiiqireargyekouuignnllllburrvrfii-f FOUND successrlm - the contract, but smi- March l t.