B-w-uvs-u-QIFO! l i p 1 IFQETR THEJZFIAEI-QILTEIQWNI .. 9UAKPl'.‘-_N_ m Tho‘ Charlottetown Guardian Lil-niacin. W. Cheater I. Mel-nu .1. n. flururlf, l‘. a ll. Prlllilrlif. \ .1 .-_t'r1-- 5w r01 fr; t . L .~\. sluvlilunon, D. l. 0. 21d. Editor and U11 .‘\\~lll|.ll\‘ l n. glut; Dirt-Mn: l. Ii. Illlrllcll, I‘. I. l- l. \\ age: and D. K. Cur l0. ) s 0o pvi- year (In ndvnnen) i. llilll} ll mini ll mnvrrnl tn 1.11; .00 |Il'l' your uu udvunee) mulled to l'l'llii‘n Lutniiil Irullllll. $.00 per your (ln IdVIlICU) .\i.n1.~1 in iiainiiln um] Lintud Staten ~>-— — - — mi \\ltl{l).\!, DEL JIBEIL W, 1936 ._________ ..__~_.___. "lilac CLTriKcis l|1 China ... his tllrl mcc t0 judge of the . 1 f l.'l‘ c~ . :1..- llnlléltlllllg in China, mid I . ll <11 1,5. 11 llc‘\\,\. 11nd propaganda bnw-ui 1- . l\'-.~1\111l_v n >l'll‘_\’ was broad- Célrl, p111; .. .1 I. an. KT111.\.\"1;I\'.\1S111:1; Ch 1p ». 1 ' 1 lltll-li-t-llll‘, had bccn r.\~1' 1 ' 7 1 =11 l.1\\v,"tl1e_v11t1i1g‘ n1.:1~i . 111h~l .\l:1.1=rl111ri:1 as wflr Lin; ‘l - 11 - c ~--'.1l1'cicll in the lwttcr ni- ~ i1. tivc Province hcrc a5» i 1 ti. 1: ‘--.-1u;1r_\ scrvicc in (‘H .111 .t llr-‘illl the llfOiltlclLsl d on‘; on rumour, bcczitisc Ill k‘ . ‘ '. .- ' ~ 1-. ulnch the Xzinking (inr- pf t .1- kfftlllell‘. _ miortiizitinn. ll is “(all to b _.1- 1 p1: fact in mind. So far its 1'~-.11-i1 at issue between the rival _i'\"‘~ . .c~:111 ., this svcms to be pretty c|.-:1r. l1 is 1.1m» 1,.1u~= '1 111' \\.-,r with ja- pan, Dim-w; Hsnt >1 l.1\xo "~ :1 hwrcditary on- ctny pi "11- _l.'."‘1;1,-41:. l: is clllllh ll that the Japa- tn-‘c k. i‘ ~ Lstint;'Ii.~11].1r\,l1yblo\v- ing 1;» 1 . f-nlou about 19.48, and they - lllélISllJl from his Man- ‘s. (ll late, CH-ANG ap- , v1! himself at the head of the "t i<t-. who had fought their \\"a_y' 5111113., with tn Shensi, and now he 1'1. m 11 ~ w-anzs v.1.’ tr "w litllf-e wirh his old foe and ewen m1 m1 pi m chi.» the japanese out of Man- dink-no. <;.~..~.§.1~\1. (111111; K vt_ Sntax. who has been at ‘ the lax: l of tiu- (dtiiw-at: iloverntncnt for the past deoarlc, l"l§ follmirrl pretty consistently the,» polity oi :1~ 5 g pence with japan, and thin, (min; 11:1 gltyujs 1~111i+v1nis;n, has not been easy. Ci-isiwt. ‘ wl his plliey on his knowledge of fapnn = , 11-!” lmd studied military tactigs in "fol-n - _ 4114 (lays-and on his realiza- tion hi l“ was vast rcctiposative powers. He ‘ “1 a rinl uar. Claim. would have no inn-i" chance r. .?'1~t tlv- lnpaiiesc armies, but he felt that if he r "131! only gget his country time to recovrr 11111‘. 111915- burst-Ki, he could build up in hef a ‘ifffllijf-ll m ainst which the Japanese would beatlu vain. In line with N: policies he has at times yielded to Jamar-e prCIOHSlIiIIS and so has lost 111cc “I111 s 111w of his people. He still wishes to lmcp the rue-we. In this connection the Van- ivutvtzr l*"1">\§'1\c makesa point of far-reaching wrtriucc. l'~vvr~ between japan and China 1 “My uwc». a1 the moment, peace between _1 win mil hit-l 1. peace between Russia and 1am‘, and “i t lmows what elsc? The F's fate, tiu-rcf vrc. may hang on the outcome c DtQIMIIBlIHYII .11 (‘fir-off Sianfiz. l-‘nre And llr-atllior Warships "I I rnci- zunong the world's g swiitt-r and swifter, ac- -- e-Eml-n 11f _];.;1-.»‘5 Fighting Illill SllC l5 HOW ill. lfillsl ygafs of age and eu- titlcd to celebrate hcr silver wedding. 0 . . .* I‘ T 'lhe average minimum price of 11 1-2 cents Icy lbbacco Growers _Association and representa- lives of various townships. M1". \\’altcr Atkin, sccrvt-"1ry' 0f the association. said reduced prices i in the lowcr grades hclpcd t0 bring d0\vi1 the l average from last year's 1.2 cents. Most of the l crop is grown in Kcnt and Essex, while thcrc ‘l arc a fcw scattered growers in Elgin, Lambtoti l and Middlcscx. l x Ill Ill l I11 tbc Rlziisun Czinzulicn inurdcr acquittal, in I which vlllllllfi Cohen was found not guilty by zi invcstigziinr and a lcaitling Crown witness 1n the trial of tfoht-n. zuhnittcd in court that his cvid. cncc in thc cat-c on thrcc occasions showed (lis- crcpancics and mutual contradictions, Cohen was chrniqt-d with murder bccztuse three fire- men dicd in an explosion (luring a fire at Cohen's St‘. Catherine slrcct cast store on August I7 last 1 it was the Crown's contention the fire was sct. x n- Sir Ian ITIxiser, who lost his sight on ihc Somme scat in tho British Hon-c of Commons, follow"- ing his appoinliitciit its govcrnnr of the British llT0flhlCll>lIll§ (.orp1-r;1111111. Sir lttn is a (‘ouscrva- i011 is not dictan-tl by compulsion but by cou- scicnce," h1~ cxplziiucd. “I bclicve it to be in the itubhc itncrc-t that governors be impartial and lHHlll-‘Kllcd to any political body.” Mr. James llallfln, the other new governor, is a. prominent Labor olitcian and is “larder: of Toyttbec I-lall. Governors of the BBC receive a salary of 1,000 pounds ($5,000) annually. #1011! The British Communist party, the Independent Labor party and the Socialist League have form- ed a “United Front”_ to combat Fascism and aid the unemployed. Joint document has been sign- ed after lengthy discussions by officials of the partiesconcerned. “All three organizations \vill maintain existing independent identity, but agree to_conduct public agitation on certain definite points," the London Daily Times says. The paper predicted there would result a serious split of the Socialist ‘League and “awkward questions" because of the active association be- tween Labor party members and Communigtg, ‘i! A comprehensive syndicate headed by the Bank of Montreal is making a public offering of $5LIlI,0O0 Province of Nova Scotia 15 year 3 per cent. debentures at a price of 99 and ac- crued interest yielding over 3.08 per cent. to ma- turity. The debentures dated January 2, 1937, will be a direct obligation of the province and will be a charge upon all its revenues, moneys and funds. The proceeds of the issue will bc used to refund maturing obligations of $3,094,- ooo and to cover highway expenditures. So that Premier Angus Macdonald makes no bones about borrowing another $2,000,000 to hard 5m- face Nova, Scotia. roads to bring them up-to- date and in line with those of New Brunswick . Kc tndnuzil 1111 all vessels rc-huri l 1-» tltl: public last wcck. Not \\ zu", 5111c: 1l1c.\lf}1'~<1 \',:1r1~11 11d has ~1i11111Ql]|1c-\yt()n-; flag/s hue-H H11“- -11/< 1t ws \\.':1< done this year, ac- to p. ' clwth fizgnrcs that by 19.10 1f‘ llJlHE hccn placed in scr-‘ -‘ ~1-.\\: loll». y rs to hc sening a fast The ll".l.'1"< (if lllUYL" t ll lard, i11 tic plwcc-‘s .1 111 bc shultd, are list- ' -hip< are included more 1s pee f~1r 1‘..~ 1 Hr than w» r. " " ‘. " 0f 1Y1?’ m} in ' d,” l » t... I -. aw}: I111 ' nrgraut. tjcrtnxuiy", 1110:‘ mi ti‘. Fritcs arc zilsia 11n- p: grants 11f more 1 wllrl‘. in lhv num- ll. < 1.1m’ lit‘: draw» |I<1 con- » 1.1.1:: l-ud to war it-t-lf. ‘tyqu-c :1: I. t Zl-llillllltf; ldllPllS I111‘ guild or ill. ltulil". p 1 l 1::..1 u:d number of changes this )'.G'{ll‘ n1 tin: ilritish .\'.'1\'y, the. ycarbouk 111011- tipns that, hc7l1. 1'1» battleships King George and [he l-‘rit vc lli Wales, thcrc appear for llic first time 1111* llI‘.l'i(‘< of two aircraft carriers, scvcit cmit-‘t-rs, tliirtj: our destroyers, eight sub- ‘ boa and more than forty other vessels. ,i ,en of the new destroyers will be of a heavier type. Editorial Notes It is the day AflCTVCkIIFISQITIZIS. 1! W I‘ Now wc begin to look forward to lengthen- ing days. a n- Wtis it not WOFllHVlIllC alter all, 3- bll 0f i nuismicc, of course, but §lill wortlnvhilc? $1 * W I Tbmorrmv pro-t Christmas Sunday and the last Stmdriy of the year I936. >11 1k >r Natty riiicsuqiul homes in Ontario and the west. as \\'(‘ll as the wholesalers generally throughout Htnzirla arc oh-crving this, Boxing Day, 3S 3- Hrtnfiiw. i F U _\t]11.n1f ihnw cxicurling greetings over the wlin tn 1l1<~i1 friends and admirers Christmas Fur and vcstcrday wcrc Mr. J00 0'Bl‘l_€fl and ‘ 1 l\’1'11h~n Macllmialtl. 1i 11 i -1 sci-ms scarcely credible but a New York n1:111 has her-n lI(‘lIl(‘!l the opportunity of prov- ing that hc was a legal husband. But he ltap- wned to he a Vaudeville artist who vflnted Mae - that lhc increas- :1 _'Y,.l.l.n \\'Zll':~ll,l1T$ 111‘ ail: and Quebec. u m a Decrease in the number of persons afflicted with certain crippling diseases w,“ noted by Dr, j. A. Nutter, in an address in Montreal. He. spoke on the problem of treatment for crippled children. In his address, Dr. Nuttcr said tub- crcular hip cases were among those in which a drop had hccn tiolcd. He thought pasteurization of mill; 1h: cause for the decrease and said that prcvalcin ltutnvlcdgc- of the value of cod liver oil and orange juicc for children was largely rc- stwonsiltlc for :1 rcduclioii in thc number of cascs of rickets. llifortititzilclv, hc stated, the germ 0i infantile. paralwis had nnt yct bccn istdttlctl. .\ rtx-‘ult of thc succc-sfitl trcalnicut of ctipplcs, the spczilrci" said, had hccu rcstornn lion In lhtun m‘ :1 sense of cquztlily- with others." thus reuniting an i11fcri11rity' complex. 1<d<>l= l According to tho lloinrczil lizizcltc, U1". Ln- ‘pointls rcccnt statement that "our struggle is , _ , , , . : . .~ , ._ , ion over nere prevailing that ‘ ouc of. uinitnoit . scusc .1g.1.1.i~t_) iioluuc and GIT/m m “ms on me pom‘; or n; ‘!ll>l. ('\]|l0li(\ll<|ll oi ldHCll) 1s onc- ’\\'llll being ovcnvmlmed by a gommun- which cvcry citizen, including cvcry responsible Cmployfd‘ of labor, will agree, and they will \vcl- conic the zissurancc of thc Alinistcr of justice that “I Shall always side with you in putting up a fight against Comtnunismf. Nevertheless. this assurance is just a little puzzling in view of the responsibility which the hlinistcr himself as- surncd in regard to the repeal of Section 9S of the Criminal Code. The attitude of organized labor in pressing annually for such repeal is equally puzzling when contrasted with the ur- gent anti-Communistic plea which was made to the Government on Friday. The repeal of that section was and is strangely inconsistent with the present stand of labor and with the present stand of the Minister of Justice. 1105i Snuff-taking in the old country is noticeably on the increase. One of the converts to the habit has just declared that all his life he had bccn "humiliated by frequent streaming colds,” but since taking his first pinch t8 months ago he has not had a single onc. The great decline of snuff-taking set in in the eighteen-fifties‘ fol- Jowing the report of a Special Commission which discovered a number of contaminating materials i.. the snuff of the period which poisoned the heart and nervous system and caused chronic nasal inflammation. A great deal of the snuff was being taken medically for various diseases and as a preventive of malaria, whooping cough, and measles. But Dr. john Abernethy, a fam- ous Aberdcn tnedico, who lived at the height of its popularity, had a contemptuous opinion of the habit. Ilc was one day asked if the motl- cratc use of snuff would injure the brain. “No. sir," he answered immctliatcly, "for no man with an ounce of brain would cvcr dream of using it!" West to admit that hc married her in i911. The court ruled that Mac has neither residence nor domicile in New York State, and therefore could not be civilly sued. But fancy the ignoniiny if the juvenile Mae ‘nad been CUlllpCllCfl to admit a pound for this year's 9,50o,ou0-p0und crop 11:1» bccn set at a conference of the Ontario Bur- i11 1916, is taking iminotlizitt- steps to vacate his. tivc. Fcprcsctililtg Si. lfiiitcras-Nortli. “My (10.45. , continua on a war wi Notes By The Way People who tune their vvlreleu sets into any one of Australia's multitude of wave lengths must often wonder how. or 1f, their con- trolling authorltles think. It is not; often we are privileged to see into their minds. One hOWBWT- has given us a fleeting glimpse be- hind the vet! by admitting candidly that, be ls sometimes disappointed ‘with some of the broadcast Pm- ' guuris, and that he thinks croonln! ‘l is "deadful stuff." Ebrtunflw. 01‘ ~ easy t0 P10959- 1! l"? Wm’ l5 only dlsappomted sometimes. and then only with some o1 the _.pl08!'flm5-, He, however, reinstates his reput- ‘ atlon m: artistic tastmwho de- ypyjbgg crooning as dreadful stuff. “Dreadful stuff” is a very moderate and forboaring estimate of that mom exasperatlug and. dolorous noise called crooninfl- ‘The may 1W‘) I,~I\,.,H_.VR Mm“, Jury. FYI-f N\'lll1l1lll. Chief Fire Undcrivritcrs really satisfactory terms for it be- long to the vocabulary that custom ant‘. the police rel-llllflk-‘JP-‘F {m {'0' pcrtnit. in print. for Pub-l“ c-"cma" tun. The language of mu- Lrocpe m Flanders, _of the bullock driver, and the goncr can ull. produce suitable estimates of crcotitnt; S1069, hovcver they are forbidden, “dlTfl-d‘ m1 spurt" or, 1a,)’, “abominable noise" must suffice. feeble thouBll the; Bird-The Australasian- In the prccftt-duy world oll L5 one of the most important oom- nnitlltics. It entcrs luflfel)’ 111w m9 ptncclttl life of 11.1 civilized nallflns and no ClVlllkXfd nation could 1on8 th another civilized "nation-nor, in 09110111 circumstances, with a sava59 99°‘ ple-wvithout n. supply of this com- modity. Control of 011 500F068 811d insurance of supplles ls thus 8 matter of vital concern to all the greater powers 1n particular.- Klngston Whig-Standard. One of these early errors (in "10 West) was the openlnz for home stead entry of large areas of land far removed from existing railroad, highway, educational and other faculties. It was associated in part. with the plans of railroad‘ promoters and the rim-ruin! °1 l railroad charters. It resulted In the ,' scattering of 290,000 farms over a; huge triangle stretching on its aide i 1°;- 1,2oo nflles from Southeast/cm Manitoba. to the Peace River b10611 in Northern BPILISII Columbia. Another mistake made In the West's early d , from which we are now suffering, was the throw- ing open for settlement of large areas of submarginal lands unsult- i able in many respects for grain growing, where failure or, at best, I ‘ precarious living was inevitable. , No‘ serious Mtcmpls were made at , that. time by Dominion authorities , or anyone else to test; the soil‘ scientifically, or to determine the ‘ sources and amount of water sup- ply. Thus was sown the seed of the grave drought. problem ln Southwestern Manitoba, Southern Saskatchewan and Southeastern Alberta-Winnipeg Tribune. Anxious to hear the latest news from London, an Edmonton man sat up tintil 1.00 o'clock the other morning in order to tune in the B.B.C's first Empire broadcast of the day. beginning at 8.00 o'clock London time. He lteard Big Ben strike the hour and then the pleasant-voiced announcer started off somthlng like this: "We are pleased to be able to give you the cricket scores. from Australia . . ." whereupon the Edmonton listener went. to bed, confident that: the Brltlsh were remaining calm 1n the crisis-Jsdmonwn Journal. Washington has taken the initi- ative ln lowering mountainous world trade barriers. Half a dozen importatit trading nations have already cooperated. When the pact with the United Kingdom is completed, Washington's new trade deals will cover more than one-half of this country's forclgn business.- Buslness Week. lamlmpnlledbyaletterlnfhe fiuly Telegraph on the effects of the Press censorship In Germany. The writer has travelled 6.000 tnilcs m that country in the last. few wccks and found the Impress- Lsl; revolution. It was useless to protest that the idea was fantastic. "The reply was that. slnce the Gennan Press unanimously atsert- ed that Communism was a. serious danger in Great: Britain, and there- fore to Europe, 1t must. be true." Quite so. ‘There are still people who belelve that. if they see zit ln print. it Ls s0. But why do the papers assiduously dlsxzminate this legend? Obviously because they are told to. And why are they told to? If Germany's mfsslon ls to fight Communism everywhere there Ls something a little sinister 1n this studied attlrlbutlon to Great Brl- tain of a Communlsl; danger which has never cost a living Briton a. wink of sleep-London Spectator. A modern freight locomotive on the main lines of our Canadian Railways wlll pull about 3000 tons of freight in one trip, the equival- ent o two hundred trucks with an avers. of 10 0on5 contents, which la high. Our Class "A" Railway lines are those which haul over 8,000,000 tom 1n freight trains per anrum. This would be the con- tents of 800,000 trucks-moo per dayn-Engmeerfnl. Three time: u many motor can are owned by families with Incomes below $1,000 a year as are owned by those whose incomes exceed $3,000. Three-quarters of all car- ownfng families have incomes be- low 02,000, while only 10 per cent... are owned by those whose incomes exceed $3,000. These flgures are hired on 9. study of mowi- vehtcle ownership made ln nine represent- ative clttes by the Department of PUBLIC FOR UM Illa cola-n In In: In nu- dlpgjpllg- p; oorruponlnllo of qnltlcn of Illcrout. The Charlottetown (hulls: In: not a one the opinion of cirnopollnll. WAKE UP. MR. VOTER! Shy-Please forgive mo for ask- ing so much of your valuable space but I feel these are important is- sues that must be kept. before thei peopie, and the only way that. can be done Ls through the co-opera- tlon of the press, which you have always xladJy given me, Now that the holidays are over again (maybe, for one never knows these days when you will be called upon to celebrate someonets birthday), we are getting so many holidays without pay now-a-days that a. man or woman with steady employment can't make a decent living. Why couldn't some of our King's be born 1n a Leap Year, so; they would only have a birthday cicry_four years, and now that England has come through an- other crlsia without the shedding of blood, which could not have hap- pened one hundred years 030,1 shows that we are living 1n a, better world. ‘Ihere 1s much we can do to make ft still better, es- l pecfally certain sections of ft. so- let us see 1f we can't make Prince Edward Island a lfttie better for-l all of us. I am pleased to sea that our premier while in Ottawa took up many problems with the Dominion government for the betterment of our Island, but merely talking over these problems does not usually get lngs and we have proved that quite often right, here when taking up matters of Importance wltb our provincial government. It‘ you don't fight you can't set any- where, and ff tour Province expect: to get anything from the Dominion government he must fight, and not depend on promises. But I tun afraid our pre- mler hasn't got. the ability to fight, or he wouldn't let any man crack him on the jaw and let ft. go at that. What he wantslsallttie Lrlsh injected into hlm, and that is Just what. I am trying to do, then we will get somewhere. I know o! no man on our Ia- land‘ that has had n. better oppor- tunity of becoming popular than our present premier because he 1s young, smart, well-educated and there is so much he could do to improve conditions on this Island and. make 1t a better place to live in for all of us. This would make him very popular, but. he ls so tight and has surrounded himself with such a bunch of henchmen who are even tighter than himself and who evidently are trying to push him out. to get his job. He unfortunately seems to be listening to them until he 1s now losing the respect of men and women ‘all ov- er this Island. 1t 1s any wonder the cry Ls going up for a. third party? He still has a chance to re- vive himself as he still has three or four years to give the people what. they want, unless he is look- ing for a judgeshlp, and this has happened too often among our premiers to the detriment of our Island. Instead of laLking third parties let us gel; away from this Rip Van Wlnkle stuff, and inject some ginger lnm our government representatives so they wlll revive ‘both old parties and bring them back to where they once were. Then there won't; be any more talk of a. third party for It ls just ltke prohibition-ft. won't work. Well some of you wlll say, what. do we need; There are few of you who can't answer this question, for many promlnent. business and pro- fessional men have been Invited to this Island to tell you what. is needed here to keep us Ln step with the rest; of the world, but. it has all gone in one ear and out the other. This ls caused by the people being so sympathetlc with our government and listening to their cry of no money. Well, there are lots of much larger govern- ments that were supposed to be broke financially yet they have built up their country and has nncl ta still spending nullfons and b11- llons of dollars preparing for an- other wm- and where dirthey get the money, well there are many ways of doing It. take our neigh- bours across the border a ‘tow weeks ago they issued seven hun- dred mllfon dollars w-orili of bo._ds and these were oversubsc;~lbed four times in one day, brt. you w l! say they have the money all rght, so have we all that is needed for our needs; we don't need seven hundred million dollars but we could- get. a nice start. wlthpne million and that ought to be easy to get. if the government wlll go to it. 1n a bus- lness like manner. There must be several million dollars horcled away on this Island 1n safety (le- poslt. boxes, old tln cans, tucked under the bed, and many other places, which is not and. never has been put to work. Now thls money could be put. to work if the people owning 1t. could be given a. safe and sound Investment. Who ts it that. does not believe a government bond ls a safe and sure invest- ment, Why not try putting out a million dollars worth of these bonds, and see how quick this money will g0 to work. You are trying to save a penny here and a penny more, and by doing so ne- glectlng our public works and everything else, letting our roads and bridges go to the dogs, yet spending more money than you are taking in and running head and ears into debt though still do- ing nothing to better conditions on the Island, or trying to bring in a revenue from outside depending on the taxes of a people that are barely able to make a llvlng for themselvw. Unless you wake up to these facts you wlll never be any better off than you are today. Every once in a whlie we hear n. cry go up, what. can wo do to keep our young men and women on the Inland, especially on the farm? Do you expect to keep them here to starve? They must get. married and nlu families. How are they going to do ft ff you, the govern- ment. won't. help them to make u llvlnl. ~ Now what can and must be dsm- l C 1:51.»... IKBMMJLD. 1 uow THE NATURAL APPETITE . 1s cnsamn An advertisement for a food pre- paration shows a yollflfl-ilel‘ Wm‘ 5 ‘ plate of food-mieat. WWW" DQ55- splnach, beans-An front of him. with the mother standing beside hlm trying to coax hlm f0 65F some of the food from a fork She 1's holding to his mouth; The 100k of distaste on the young boys face is the “point? of the picture. 1'10 has no "appetite". Now some of the reasons whY l youngster has no Bppellle "e l“) not getting enough foods contain- ing vitamin B. which create; 8n. appetlteflPhunes, oranees. nlllkv beans and peas, tomatoes, turnllfl. parsnips, (b) the, over anxious mother who watches everY 111011731‘ ful and insists on or coaxes the youngster to eat all that ls 0n this plate, whlclt means that there Is often a. "battle" at mealtime when everything should be calm and peaceful, (c) overtlredness at meal- IJJIW, (u) teeth that cause 1min when food 1s eaten. However when the young-Ell!‘ comes home at 4 o'clock from school feeling hungry and wantlng some food before he B065 911l- 9° play, the mother who refuses 00 give tomb-bread, butter and sugar, a banana or Orange, a. piece of taffy or chocolate bar-because she ls afraid "he 11 have no appetite for his evening meal" Ls making I- mistake. What the youngster needs is some “starchy” food such as sugar, catnly, syrup, or bread to give him strength to play. Al. a University with which I was connected ll; was not usual to to see 600 to 800 chocolate bars sold every afternoon. On this "stigar" or starch the students played the seasonal games-foot- ball, hockey, lxrkclball, softball. lacrosse, swunmlng and jogging around the indoor track. This sugar would be 111cc! up playing the games and the student would be hungry again at 6 to 7 o'clock. It is natural for an active youngster or adult. to use up the starch and sugar 1n his blood and tissues, and for the blood and. tissues to demand more starch and sugar with which to “carry on". It 1s often this very lack of ax- erclse which causes constipation and a reverse 0r upward movement. of the intestinal walls which. carrying waste upward Instead of downward, upsets the stomach and causes lack of appetlte. The thought then for tbme with- out appctlte—chl.ldren or adults- is to play or exercise which, by ua- ing up the sugar in the blood and tissues, crcates a. demand for more sugar; that 1s, a natural. demand suoRr COURSE l Commencing January 11th, th W t - Branch of the Department of Azricglllieiiles vilillslmute duct in Prince of’ Wales College a {our weeks Hi2‘; Economics Course for rural women and girls, Those wishing to take adva t f ' should make application to the Sliiffffvidor iilfllviiriiurle Institutes, Box 123, Charlottetown, en s 4 . - .32..f&".'."2§2l.°‘;',§‘§l§;.f£'“‘“" "t b» “wusrv? :1 21c’: before January check our bearings. known road? CHECK YOU/R BEARINGS ! We travel fast on the journey of life, to reach a haven of independence, before the evening of old age dertakes us. The New Year comes, another milestone, and bids us The road to independence is plainly marked __ the highway of life insurance. Why take an u“. You can purchase a Great-West Life Pension or Endowment at age 60 or 65 for a very mod". ‘m premium. It protects your family too. Let us send you particulars. IIYNDMAN & 00., LIMITED Provincial Managers — Charlottetown J. M. Nicholson District Manager at Summornlde Allison McLean District Manager at Montague striving pause and I_I_" Mr. Tea Polt Says: For a Delicious C1111 of Full Flavoured Tea Use In HMIN Orange ‘Police Tea can't so longaa there f: graft In ft, and there fa more graft. In the bootlegging- buslneal than In any other thing. Then again so 1on8 as we have men u representatives In our government that will tell you we have no bootIeBKlng on P. E._Iela.nd or very llttle 1f any, than you can't: expect to have any bet- ter conditions than we have today, for food. scnlatlics qulf; fooling the people, they are getting wise to you. @ roll up your sleeves, go to work and give our young people a. chance m go to work also. Its a part of your business and you. can do it, flx up our disgraceful roads which are getting ‘to be the talk of the travelling public the world over. and 1f you c1tn't give us pav- ed roads, then put gravel on them. and by that, I don't. mean Island muck, which you call gravel, get imported gravel, ft may cost. more but you are getting somewhere with ft, and that has been proven where ever 1t. 118a been used. Then flx up our dangerous contraptlons called bridges and not waft until we have a great. catastrophe which you have been very fortunate s0 question of bridges let's get to the bottom of the North Rivcr bridge. men‘, is piannlut: on i-cpnciug that bridge wilh :1 itcw all stccl bridge which will carat in ‘the neighbor- hood or fifty thousand dollars or more New mcryono knows that bridge should ncrcr have been put there. The-n why waste money on it, why not move it clown where it l2“lf)ll_£’.“- now ll1ilf._\'.'tll have to b1!‘ a nrw lnldge. mid put ln the RrF-ltm rn-l Rock? Pnlvit. bridge? This wul cost. more money, but 1t must be done some day and you wlll be no better off than you are now financially, so why not do somethlng that will be a real blessing to the farmer, and the travelling public. and glve men honest; employment. which 1n turn, would solve your relief problems. ‘Then fin up our beaches and make this Island attractive to the tour- Lst. If you will do this you can get money, plenty nf ft. for the real tourlst wlll pay gladly for any ac- commodation you glve them. Then advertise ln a proper way for the tourist, it; ls the only way you can make money on this Island in any quantity. ‘Ihere are other ways of course, where money can be taken In on thls ‘Island. Mbetlngs have been called time and time again, and many of our prominent business men have suggested at these meet- ings. other ways of bringing money to lhls Island, but it izoes in one our and out. the other and our bus- iness men have the habit, of letting lt g0 at that, so nothing ls ever done. Here ts a new one to bring money lnto the coffers of the gov- ernment. e hear n lot of talk and rend u lo ln the local papers about prohlbttlon, but no one has yet stnzizcsted government control and why not? We all know lf we wnnt. to be truthful that prnhlblt- ton has never worked anywhere 1t ha: bccn trled. so why fool around with lt and make a lot of people rlch by selllng poison. This has linbpnicrl everywhere where pro- hlhlllon has been tried and ff It Wnml fw- trytniz to have ,,...:.:.- 31°" W" Dwbflbly never would have had the bcotlegger. 1 lmow mm persona 1y who were nothing but bums down and out. foreigners of lluxvrnrst tyne who became lu- 'lf‘|)fll'l‘l‘.ll'/ rich tlirstiqh prohib- to keep these young peopln at Oommerocu-Kansu City 8hr. home. bet the government repre- Ltion. It hn; never worked and far 1n escaping. While on the I have been told that the govem- nc-ver wlll work anywhere, and unless some teeth are ut. into our laws. That ls what fey had to do In New Brunswick, but even then they had to adopt éovem- numt control, and now they are taking in nulllom of dollars every year 1n thelr government, and still have teeth 1n their laws. If a. man is caught. on the streets wlth an open bottle of whiskey, or ls drunk he 1s pinched at once, tried before a magistrate and given the full penalty, which 1s a $300. fine or three months ln Jail, and if Lhe Ilna is not. paid, three tnonths more, and l! they haven't room for them In the clty Jail they send them to Dorchester and stay there until they serve every day of their sentence. What a difference from our laws where for the selling of poison you are given a $200. fine or three months, and if you don't pay the fine, which very few do, you are taken over to the clty jail and nine time! out of ten that is filled up. l0 thaw flve you a. kick on the pants and tell you to go home. so you can start all .0791‘ again. As I have already stated while we elect men to represent us 1n the government that. are so blind or so olcl that they are not. interested in our welfare you m!“ BXDBM anything different. Then. again, why are the people 50 blind that they everlastlngly elem. old men to be their repre- sentatives 1n the government, pet- lllm It’: became they think they mddllzthemqufwmhonorbu hurting themselves. Well that klnd of honor never got anyone anything and never wlll. Bo why not get wise and stop fooling our- selves. There are hundreds of bright young men who would be glad to repruent us and who could and would do something for you w! this province. so why decor- ate our assembly balls with wall flowers. If we must have flower: let us buy paper ones, they m»; 6116mm- and would do more 800d. Then why do we need thu-ty members (molt of them wall-Low- ers) when ten 0r less would flll the bill and do more and berm- w”; Instead of them dttlng 1n session m‘ 01117 two weeks. elect eighth: W" 5118M Win18 men and pay them at least a half decent m- "Y. take the money that is now pald the other twenty m- mm-e “m; dlvlde it among these elghf; 0;- WD. and have them aft in session at least one week every month of the year, and keep tn much with “l!” l5 801118 0h. Then we can some the problem of keeping our Young men and women on the Ls. 13nd. and W9 Wlll Ill get g chm-we t" ml“ e llvlns- 1 wonder u ft would not be a good plan to put our premier and our high paid or- ‘M315 °" B F61"? of two dollars n day. or better still 25 cents an hour, for every hour they work. 80x19 of them wou'dn't make their g! '1 glib 96$ they have the nerve 0 l! u-s to work for such a rl- dlwlm wary. But. um u your o’: "u"- mflfl? 0f our people are 5° l‘ new °7 "Whey no seldom see pa: mrmey. that they would wo-k m’ l‘ qlmfl‘ I d0! lust so long an "A mbhev. and lhe. rovemmrnt. lgnwws It. and won't olve in any more m Ion: as we haven't mouth °' "W! 0110118?! t0 ask for ft, and fight, If and b0 for it. Then 1 wonder 1f we haven't cot a SOLlCL) for the prevention of cruelty n animals and why they doui. gel after our government for asking i farmer to work his horse all day In the hot sun for tilt-Ive can‘: an hour. If thin la not cruenv ui animals than I don't know ivhnt YOU 0011141 OI-ll l‘, 5nd l! LllLs goi- ernment bu no sham 1n 1t 1m cut their salary to the bone, and see how they like ft. W0 can do 1t. Mr. Voter, so get busy, mlp out of your dreams and put your Is- land on the nmp. I am. fir, etc. J. w. macaw. New Dominion. (Patriot please copy) HIGH TOWERS Oh praise the dream, be 1t forever praised! Be glad dfvlno unrest pervades lhl day: Flaunt latent fancy, like a abundant Let ft soar upward nun mavens! y. Empress no sqalntlon, or spirit mused Will nevu- flnd t/lw heaven of 1h way. Man's lofty slmfb and monmnentl and spires Are Jacob's ladders to his hem’: desires. —A1bert McMahon Qherwln, in "smug" XMAS GIFTS We curry a complete llne of MAX FACTOR YABDLEY IIOUDNUTS IOUBIGANTS EVENING IN PARIS THREE SECRETS BPRINGTIME 1N PARIS CUTE-IX MINTTS COLGATES PALMOIJV! any many other famous Toilet Goods. We also carry hrulh, "ml lllll mirror set: In chroinlum flnlnh for lullu. Mllllary Sela ln both ebb"! and chromium. Clnrl ""1 alga-elm, pipe; lllll tobacco- 0|]: pipe lfne Is the flllflf In the ally. "l"! Prices ran; In; from 50o h 80-00- CALL AND SEE U3- THE 2 MA CS PIIONI ill _._-