ince. Ii: ' meat, now Pret / Shares listed London Stock market Detailed mill t f its ggetpogmliined \ electric poggrgtiaxtigons in _th capaci 30mm doubled on comp etion of ° B9188 of the Ghost develop- . ,_ y. v A i‘ C818"! Power 6% Preferred lants exceeds on of all other __ under way. \ We oiler u} desirable investment th c o ' I 9. gallhfs 7rsCumul accrued dividend, to yield These shares rank senior to Common on the Montreal and particulars of this investment supplied upon request. value of ap e Prov- willbe ative Rie- at 98 and 6.127,. Is-M this is not wholly beesussitiwbrkq lags are unimpeacably However excellent it may stll, he'll: essentials. there are surely" alterations which experience or al- tered conditions would show to be of value. The provision by which} new elected congress normally ‘rc- msins excluded frmnpower until_a year has elapsed can, hum, 3mm. tate the task of legislation." Nor can it be saidithat the benefits gained ‘by the exclusion of Cabinet ofilcials from the leeielature predominantly out: Wish the disadvantages of this m”. tioe. Yet eflorts to alter these fes- tures have met with no success. Part- ly the explanation lies in an inherent terror of any political change; but no less powerful is the mystic rever- ence with which the Constitution is reruns. 1t has ceased to be a more fact and has become a symbol; to alter it would be to destroy a vital portion of the faith by which Ameri- 3119? Bulldinl. Charlottetown Telephone 822 Q Royal Securities Corporation . A _ Limited - ca lives. _ , The extent to which the implica- tions of this attitude can be" carried has recently been shown in the case of Roslka Schwimmcr. nu. lady, after the required period of residence, “ for citizenship . Though _ an acknowledged pacifist, she was willing to swear to defend the con- i 3k; sun} ._ \ ' s uHA.‘ “ "Eastern Se _ strum: BRAHM V, . 1s THE FINAL CHOICE ‘- WI RAVI! 0N HAND A LIMITED AMOUNT 0F CITY till of clllnlolltlowll . \ '01‘ OHABLOTIITOWN BOND_S BEARING INTEREST AT 8%, l!‘ AND 5 PER-CENT. MATUBING I940. 1945 AND flee n! ssocoo DINOMINATIONS wnlcn PIIOII T0 YIELD FROM 5% to~v5%% curities Compan LIMITED us. RICHMOND crush CHARLOTTETOWN MONTREAL BUMMEISIDE i“ it. 1. w?“ rnxnsarcrou y IN 1. ,l_'- v- WE OFFER AT I HALIFAX monarch A~ Tea Full of Strength F!“ WY .gour Kids Need Suaar And Fine Flavor in tiled, Airtightfackageafl; 1 l“ ‘a itqsuuoiles bodv fuel "'f.'"\ufol"flhc enersv that , ' teens them some and erowlne. No need to i stuff or setfat and lelv- f», ueof wnlctsvfs tor f , ,. sugar and flavor. and l . ff y. know ruddiiv the bovs e y . ., 1 ‘p. l .4" ' (a. . ~ l p. _ ieeorelrle‘ respond. it's thejnéw. scienti- '1. i lreaitti-bulidiha. iruglcgtgfsi your? g A xaaaamaa stitutlon and laws of the United States. Under further pressure, how- ever, she admitted her reluctance per- sonally to bear arms indefence o! these institutions. There was no likelihood that she would ever "be called uponto do so; indeed, the sig- nature was scarcely dry upon ‘the pact by which America proudly led the world in the outlawry of wit: yet the Supreme Court decided that her attitude made citizenship in that great Republic incompatible with the spirit of American institutions. B0 far has the hunger for pathetic! translated governmmt and its nu- strurnents from the intellectual to the emotional sphere, from an expe- dient of civil society to the chief among the Idols of the mos, ‘ It ls naturally at election times that this attitude is ‘most clearly shown. Then is the "power of emo- tion over intelligence made manifest: then is seen the strength of sym- bols and the impotence of mere ls- sues. and the recent election is in- , , because it brought symbols and issues into sharp conflict, ind the victory was overwhelmingly on the side’ of the emotional appeal. Flor it is the , culiali- asset of i the Republican party that-git has appro- priated- all the effective l is to itself. Not since Bryan's ‘cross of gold’ in mes have the ntmool-ao ohrcatened that ly. When the Republicans point with pride. it" is chiefly to the wax-kinks of Gcdaiid Nature; when the Democrats wsw with alarm. they are concerned with mere human failings matawareu the sympathy rather than the" oss- damnation of the voters. 8o stofdcs typed has the process. become that facts and arguments are, of little avail. It is not merely that opini- lons have become fixed. I _ Md this is that still more ‘significant phenomenon, a stan‘ dixation ‘of emotions; and that standardisation has taken place along ‘ _ L publican lines. _ ‘ Take President Hoover's campaign. ‘ With great prccience he avoldedthe discussion of issues, which the v of the "average voter had never ln- vested with any political reality: but he was fervent in his reverence for those symbols which have become part of the political creed. It made no‘ difference that; these eymboli were remote from real conditions. His pecans on Prosperltywere no lies effective because the farmers were unproaperous. no adulation of the mu dinner pan ad's the full eel-ass produced no‘ audible rlbaldry amour ill-ism” I'm?!" .v~ " *1‘ ' (‘NARI .__ ‘Giildrdian oi‘ 0001c: reservations, " r 35c Premieres. ma. 7030-8-30-31. Sweaters in Brown, Scarlet and Sand Brest LN. 76J0-8-30-3l Prcwse Bros, Ltd. ‘i. POTATO MEETING at New Pith --ldessrs J. W. Boulter and B. G. Pep- Din will be present at New Perth Hall, ‘lhiesday, Sept. ‘and at 8 p. m. to discuss the potato industry. 784-4-80-31. CHILDIIWS TAM! in plain and fancy colors. Special price for the school kiddies. Price 75c and 81.00. Pfowee Bros, Ltd. luso-a-ao-sl. I S ’Szde Man . s. Has Complaint " Re Fox Show The following letter, under the beading“ T0 him that hlithJhI-ll be given," appeared in the Aug, 2B is- slle of the Island Farmer, Summer- side: Mr. senor,- Those r with the Book l_relu which the above is taken without dif- ficulty will complete the excerpt and in ‘doing so may perceive that __there is an affinity between the general principal enunclation‘ ‘” ‘ and the action of the Provincial Govern- ment in its treatment of the "Big/Fox $_ PnorasSbIhQTOIIIIPs MUSIC lfllllillwilleopanlluesdly. Bent. 3rd. 1689-8-80-31 ‘hora sub clans School Hose m , Black ‘ms Brown." Special meals "runnovsa and Coat 5W8!‘ s in Scarlet. Sand, Tln-cuolse, Grefi. Melon, etc. Juetthe thing for school wear. Price 01.00. Prowse Biol. Ltd. 1830-8-30-3L KIDDIBB all wool-pullover school Sines 30 to ‘d0. Price 01.10. Prowse war saarvan-rsalss While Beret ‘rams. Price 81.00 and" 81.05. leio-s-au-al. 600D QUALITY BOII for both boys and Ilrls in Q“ “B! and shades. Special price im- schoal kiddies. Price 49c. Prowse Bros, Ltd. 7630-8-30-31. KJTTETOWN G use province; the grant of $10,000 to- wards the construction of a Sanator- ium snails maintenance. ‘rhere may Motherssndnodoubttherearabut st the moment they escape our mem- 017. These and the forgotten ones will not tend to bolster up the fin- ances of the province when the final yearly accounting is made. They would “eut" a surplus were there any such. they will “boost" the deficit whlchlthere is every reason to fear will be shown. That is something of the creator and the condition of its " finances. What of the grantee. The Canadian National Fox Breeders As- soclation? This aasociati is stated and the iilumlnt is credited by many, is questioned by few if any, to have-in its treasury quite a tidy sum, estim- ated conservatively at $200,000. The source of this sum is the registered fox owners of this and the other provinces of Canada. ‘rhis is‘ quite s nice sum standing as a surplus in the treasury of so young an Asso- ciation and the ordinary layman might be excused if he expressed‘ " " as feeling that, with such a, surplus, this Association could very- well have finanyed this "Big Iibx Show" without calling upon an lm-l poverished provincial government to _ borrow money to assist, the "Big Show." Our provincial government, behind in its finances, paring to the bone here and there and even deeper to the detriment of useful and vital pub- ..,- " ~ .4 _ Pl-Z FIVE tan-ting school’ right. .i. aWatemsanS . To equip your school children with the best fountain pen available isa wise investment which pays large dividends in better, school marks. Watermanb, of course, is the world's best fountain pen . . . sturdy, me- chanically perfect, and guaranteed to give lasting satisfaction. It will stand up at all times to the wear and tear of school and college days. \;:<\\>"{ Ask your dealer to show you the famous No. 7 Pen, with its seven pen-points, at $7.00 or the No. 5 at $00 2/ 1 m "Use . Wntamanwllg $5.00 . . . and there are -also the ill q 1,11,,” P popular styles at $4.00 and $2.75. up i >1’ ifs’ ____~ m.‘ 9 Watermans Service and selection sf 5,500 Canadian Merchants gr. . ".\ lie works seeking financial aid from Federal sources, thinking, -' “inn and scheming to devise yet new and untried ways and means of increas- ing the revenues and bringing into a depleted treasury the money neces- sary to carry on the business affairs of the country without going yet fur- ther into debt, might well pause and think seriously before granting a sum for this purpose knowing that it must borrow the money to provide the he drawn the generous gift, but when it is necessary to borrow that one may seem generous, the Bcnerosity be- comes prodlgality and is inexcusable. Such would be the case with an in- dividual distributing his own largcss- es. When it is a matter of govern- ment scattering ruthlessly funds which are entrusted to it by a con- fidirlg peqple it becomes a more ser- ious matter and demands an explan- cd on the Dunning farm, whichll grown from the original homestc ll intc a first-class stock farm o; thousand acres. The Dunning; done well in Saskatchewan-thea- several families of them now-g. the secret of their success is work." picture of health, though not fully recovered from the operation which he underwent in June for appendici- tis, Hon. Charles A. Dunning, Min- ister of Railways and Canals, ls back at his desk. Alter leaving the hospital he spent about l0 days at Murray Bay, and greatly benefited by the bracing air of Quebec, but he longed for the old homestead he cleared with his own hands when he came to A haddock recently caught in ' é Firth of Forth, Scotland, had a s1. grant. The advocates and instlgators of this grant may seek to justify their actlcnby asserting that a great and wonderful benefit will inure to the province and its people. This may be countered by asserting that any good and benefit coming from this “Big Show" will not be universal nor even general in its application, at least not sufficiently so to warrant the “grant? Generosity may be shown and dis- played when there is an abundance or superabundance from which may nti of El! (Obviously some provision should have been made by the organizers of the ‘classes where foxes other than those Canada as an immigrant 27 years sleeve link in its stomach. ago. The minister, like millions of others has come to realize "there's no place like home", and it was in the beauti- fully woaded and watered country around Yorkton, Sasla, that he rc- cuperatcd on the farm where lie built his first log hut. His father and mother live nearby. Mr. Dunning, Sn. an old coumry stock farmer, super- vises the farm operations and the care of many horses and cattle rais- O11. S.R.B. A reliable ‘m. , Inn-rd’, llnlm::.l \OOGO-Q'Q§OlOQO-QO>§OQ-OO OO-Oi EYES TESTED ‘ AND ' cusses" FlTTEU l. WrTAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR Oniometrl-ts M2 Richmond 51m" soaooooo-oovo col-o 0-‘0000-64 xhibition to have one or two e Canadian National Fox Breed- Association would have a. chance.) DUNNING BACK AT DESK (Special to The Guardian) OITAWA, Aug. 29.-I.00king the o-oaveovoeoocci Show" to be held at Ph-u‘ “ his fall. i The uavthat the pro-- vinciargovemnlent has granted the sum of 82.500 towards this big show. Accepting this statement as true. even though it be admitted that some statements from press must be accepted with caution, it will be ask- ed ls this "grant" justified, is it fair, is it reas “ . is it excusable? ‘circumstances and conditions of the gmntor and of the grantee. Our Pro- vincial government ls noCroesus, no fails us miserably there was a deficit for the year past. This, the current year, holds some special and merit- orious grants. To cite a. few one might mention. the grant of some same to maintain the fair name of the Eastern mill workers, who had neither. For he was voicing accept- ed articles of faith; and when Gov- ernor Bmith was driven to appeal to actual facts. he fell into a political heresy which doomed him from the start. What chance lutd the man who assailed Prohibition against the man who advocated Prosperity. the man who denounced the oil scandals against the man who come out boldly in favor of the American home? He was talking about things which, in the minds of the voters. had existence but no reality, 'and the manwho advocated active meas- ures fell before the man who upheld the emotional concepts so nrmlyroot- bedlnthsamerican mind. . - some day. perhaps. a nsvcholoclsi other direction: certainly such awerk would never reach the Boston book- S ..--___.-.._._........ _ N ‘bx’ Icxi n! ‘n Y‘ fl§ Look at things as they are. examine I John D. Rockefeller. Unless memory| will draw his conclusions. whether " -hs wilfldaro publish the result isan- l Itscancassla and instant pick-up on buses-of heavy grinding wear on trucks. That’s the Dominion Heavy Service Tire. ‘ plies is a specially compounded heat-resisting rubber which welds the carcass into an- inseparable mass; Heavy ribbed sidewalls are proof against side and rut or curb sessflng. ‘ Scientifically designed tread gives free running without" suction or noise, and provides unusual mil -/ln long wear, and fl-eedosss from trouble. (Minion ‘ ‘Sheer brute strength. Rugged- " ness that stands up under heavy and con- f linuous service. Stamina that bears the shocks of sharp b built up ply upon ply of shock-resisting fabric. Between these ‘Photo's a tirethatwill give you your monefa worth "MTI - ' "cusanorrlrrowlc- vessalMotoi-s“ " .