2‘.- 3A DPT f<ll PM??? FOUR. m: clunlonlsrnwll culinul ,, , _,, __“-_ q .4. 5 \i-i. l1e_ Li. i‘. ViCQ-z resident-J. R. Burnett 11's d l st~l~lr-1il(l:_\'~ Jt-urfi-(Iol. l). A. MlcKillnon, D. S. O. ll-iilur lillii llllllllging Director-J. it. Burnett Hlflii‘ illiiilltf$—ei"f‘tllik Walker iliill D. If. Lurrle 51ml“, ‘lull; iii-undid] l..li S100 per year (Ill advance) delivered. Sim. pi-r yl-ul llii lliivilllcc) mailed in (‘unads sud United States. _1-l,,. [lppkwiih special Agency Inc._ New York Central iv-m-rui Motors Building_ Detroit interstate Buiid~ g ‘Power lluiidiug_ Chicago; Syndicate Trust 2m lluiivliin. Ulnntn; hlouudnock Building, >San r-‘lrucl, Pillitlllijillilill Morning Maxim livlost men wouldn't care for the return of their youth If they had to talu- their ignorance of the world’s ways that accompany it. ~. l. l; 111:’. Sig tifllll DIONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1932 House of Commons yesterday that sixteen countries had expressed their A little nolicscllse, it has been desire to enter into tariff 116801-15- -5iil(i, is relisllccl occasionally by the 110115 W111i- Gleil» 3711-3111- H“ wisest men. To quote another Britain remained dfifcflctifitl 011 authority, the best of mortals arelthe tariff front and had there none the worse for the Hallowcenibeen no Ottawa. Conference, it 15 dlllip which put Trim o‘Shnntcr's'5B1c 10 $9)’ 1-1151 n01 5'3 91' 1'11"‘? grey mare into h ‘ speed geariClliifil-T-(BS W011“! W511i 1795-1195 Wm‘ i i HALLOWEEN hard by “Ailownys allld haunted 1119 M91119’? 00111117)’ tfitdily- B111 kirk." It is when “ghoulish Novcm- G198?- 311141111 1-5 110 1011891’ ‘$119 bel", with foggy cough, is rattlingiilfilfliivs 6111497911"- 5119 15 913K135 at the llacr-knockur" that the ‘ 11nd choosirig- she 1155 B81931 5° 191' sprites anti wiicllcs, the banshecs, J10 1198011819 only W111’! 1-119 M891111119 brownies, olvcs and goblins like —1191'81‘9315°"1h 551191195" "lend- ‘ro make tncrry under the moon/find 1119 sandman!“ 111mm“- Bu‘ jrto nsscnllllc ill lcric places for the'1119 W01“ 15 011 119T d°°1"519i1- ._ . i ' mm hilarious‘ We are entrely confident, pre- pslltonlinrc. To participate in the diets the exchange above quowd that - . revels, or cvcn to glimpse as much [Canada Wm find heme“ m me “me i c .. . i - of _h m 1s Tum gl mpscd of cap iposition‘ so 1on8 as we had a time ‘ c ti‘ . -. - bring u 3 511i’ tlilough the kirk land docile Government m otmwm performance of windows, one needs two pricelesr President De Valera imagine-s and asserts that Great Britain 111F135 1-119 part of aShylock—why? Because the British Government is willng to go to arbitration regarding De Valcrlrs refusal to pay money which the Irish Free State agreed to pay. And he imagines (and asserts) that Great Britain is petitioning the United States for s. cancellation of war debts —why? Because the only facts s0 far are that Great Briton was the first nation to agree to pay “"111 debt to the United States, and agreed to pay a higher rate than any other nation has done, and has cancellation, and is the only fliiiliiry which has offered to cancel all W81 dew, although she is owed more than any country except the United States. ' Cgnsdg a; g, whole will appluudl Mr. Bennett's declaration at the end v of’ his elucidation of the trade psct.s' reached at the Ottawa Economical Conference that the Empire dole-i gates did their work well. Four agreements were presented to the Canadian Parliament for ratifica- tion, but naturally chief interest will centre in that with Great Brh‘ tain. lvllaking full allowance for the optimistic claims advanced since the conference the Calgary Herald be- licves that Canadians as s whole’ will be surprised and gratified over‘ the far-reaching results achieved.‘ The treaties themselves reveal that a definite scheme of closer inter-Em- ‘ plre trade associations has been sores av IIIE will never petitioned or asked for any. THE __(_J__IjIARLOTTETOWN illihat m» _ » of _ your: 1 y lame: . Baden. MD- COLDS AND PNEUMONIA l The story is told of a certain physician that he never lost a case ui pneumonia. According to his patients and neighbours he cer- tainly had a. large number of pneu- monia patients during the course of a year. According to his fellow practitioners, every case of simple cold, every case of simple bronchi- ltis, was called "double pneumonia," ‘and by his “skill" he was able to pull them away from the Jaws of death. As a mutter of fact the story is not. likely true, but it might not be a bad idea. if physicians were to ad- vise each patient with a severe 001d that if he were not careful pneu- lmonis might readily follow the present illness, and deaths from pneumonia run about 10 per cent of the cases. If you could think of the ground floor of your home and see how ‘water entering the front door or ‘vestibule can easily flow into the Sitting room, dining room, and kitchen, you can-see how easily a cold entering your ncee and throat can pass along the bronchial tubes lending from the throat to the lungs and thus set. up first bronchi- ,tls, andthen pnelunonis. As long as GUARDIAN 7711's Spooky Hallowe ’eni ('Ilhe Gazette, Montreal) Halloween is classic. This much. as n. is to try ielmlns. a ladder “l1 can be said in its favor. At least one against the mist. And many 1°11“ delicious poem has been written in in these hag-haunted times are its behalf, and it comes from Soot- coming to much the some conclus- land, the home of fine sentiment ion about politics. 1 and solid philosophy. If we are to, We are tattooed with superstit on. believe Robert Burns, Haloween is Dr. Johnson troubles himself to give “thought to be" a night when , eight definitions 0f Whit 511991811" ,witches, devils and other mlschief- ‘ tion signifies. "Punecesssry fear," making beings, yare‘ all abroad on i he begins. Yet he retraced his steps ‘their baneful midnight errandslln the street to touch a post for particularly those aerial people, the good luck. “Heart-chilling supersti- fslries, on this night “are said" to tion," says Coleridge. Yet who W85 ihold a grand anniversary. We de- it wrote “The Ancient Mariner" imur only to those wretched and: with its dead men pulling at the discounting particles “thought to} ropes? These authors are not con- be" and “said to be." For this same I slstent. “My right 6Y9 11-91195. $01119 Robert, who himself is responsible good luck is coming," quoth Dryden. for "Tarn 0' Shsnter," tells us that; But. for s. down-right broom-sweep his chief instructor, “Betty David- i and witch-like pinnacle hat exper- iposscssions-youth and imagina- ttioll. With thcsc, anti with mask and pumpkin-lantern, lot him inulitcr foltli or, l-Iallolvcen, and iexpectnntly‘ nwrlit the gthnt. shall befall. i Nowadays thcrc is lcss merri- fnz-lll: and more mlschirf afoot on {Halloween than when we elders iwcre young. Go, at least, we elders yliflilifltfilll. S0 has it been main. ltalncd by elders since Mcthuselsh ‘tyres a youngszcr. Let. us. hopc this lhoury complaint; is but a chron- ;ologlc'o1 illusion, and that the mature of this ‘evening's fes- v ltlviiies will prove we were wrong. ‘At- any rate, much innocent fun ‘can still be enjoyrd on Hallowekan willlout indulging in mischievous iprvnl-zs, and this fan‘. should be Vburne in mind by all who feel in. clined to celebrate tile occasion. T119 Dolice will be on the alert to sec that. the bounds of propriety ‘Ii-re not unduly overstepped. ' adventures which never thought of Ntaliating when our people were struck, we were struck with impunity and with an almost thoughtless carelessness. Our big neighbor to the South hard- ly knew when we were hit by his actions. There was nothing to call his attention to the circumstances. We never did anything to showthat we felt it necessary m take defen- ive measures. If we did not mind. why should he? If his politicians could curry favour with a section by barring out our copper or our lum- ber, why not do it? They would never hear fmvm Canada about it. But now that Canada has adopted what the Americans call a "retel- iiory" tariff and‘ now that the Ottawa agreements threaten to cut down American imports by many millions, Uncle Sam is taking not'ce. He is not angry, for well he knows that we are only following his example. He freely admits the justice of our course. But he also realizes that he can no longer destroy a bwlltht about on a basis mutusllyljthe cold stays in the nose and beneficial to all parts oi the Empire. throat; where 1g l; fqugm by the ' mucous membrane or lining of the A Professor of Psychology at the lndSe and throat, recovery takes Unilverslty of London, Dr. F. Avc- iplacc in a few days. If the cold lifig. "Magnetic and other cosmic goes farther down into the lungs forces undoubtedly influence the then all the forces of the body, processes of our bodies and nlind. I particularly the blood and the heart Electrical storms, for instance, in- have a hard jobclearing it out. And fluence us very much. The emotlon- the organ that finally wins the bat- al state of mind affects the electri- ile is notthe limes. but the heart. ca; wmmlon o; the body by in- When the lungs get filled with creasing or decreasing its being, and P10311915 P10311995 by 1119 c0111. the of course, if a person believes that|‘119i1l'11 has a hard 10b not only in by sleeping with 11,5 head to ghgpllmping blood to the lungs, but in north insomnia can be cured, he 89111115 1119 1110011 Purified P1011911)‘ will bring about a state through “Wing 1° the “<=°n8¢8i1°n" 01 the auto-suggestion which will encour- lungs. age better sleep." If then every doctor would treat every case of severe cold as if it According to a central News dcs_ ujcrc pneumonia or sure to lead to Pfltch from India, there has bctu <‘l’1‘)ncun“n'na' he Wmlid 891i 1119 D31- new outbreak of terrorism in Ill<liu.;“?m 1° 19mm“ in bed 1°? a mimbel‘ A number of girls and young “W Loft days, and thus give the hesrt men employed in Government oillc- igisihclisnsc ‘t: dclear tihe cold es have been seized on the streets imam,‘ shim‘; 11:“, 3f“ 11:11:: and forcibly subjected LO hyporlr-{hcqlixvillbe 5mm ‘ e 0° ' B mic injections of fever gcrnls. irhov, " _ ‘gmstmd of being are, in the main, European ancl-“vaxmled duilism ‘y: 1:133:25! m; o Anglo-Indhn sllznograpllcrs. They iméimlig on b . are at present in hospitals lllldfifmmng m bed Remember the heart _ _ _ ils uskcd to do from three to five observation. If this report ls collfirln- Lmncs 1S much ‘vork when you are son," had the largest collection of tales and songs concerning ghosts,‘ brownies, witches, Warlocks, kelpies. oantraips, wraiths, dead - lights, giants and dragons to be found in. the country. And we vote for Betty! Davidson. We need the folk who, “see things." Second-sight is better? than short-sight. Has anybody yet probed every nook of this cosmos‘). Nothing can be spookier than radio | and television. Those who have read i Mrs. Crowe's “The Nightside of j Nature," or Sir Walter Scott's tres- tlse upon “Witchcraft and Demon- ology," will be hard put to explain thkwell, "We leave it to the judg- ment of the intelligent reader" is the proper phrase used about most books, and the Hallowekenie brand of literature is entitled to the same consideration. For s11 we can see the eerie omens connected with Halloween, the black cats and mop- lng owls, the fairies that dodge day. light and prefer dusk, the ogreish; things that arch their backs under f the moon or yowl on the tiles, the beldames who ride broomstlcks and yammer down the autumnal wind,‘ are making Just as good s. heft of their peculiar vocation as are the the grave selgnlors who wear court dress ‘and sit st. round table con- ference to straighten the crinkles out. 0f a massed-up map. In both instances things are not what they seem. The word "speculation" equally befits the Treaty of Versail- les and the dictum of any Parisian clairvoyant; and perchance the main diflerence between, say, the fifteenth century superstition and our own in this age, is that we have managed t0 put our vaunted "three R's” into horror-scope instead of the original one. Francis Bacon says that superstition is logic "in there- verse." And perhaps it is. But it ls as futile to argue about Halloween i lence of spooky adventure we must go to that master of weird dreams, De Quincey. Here it is: "Under the connecting feeling of tropical heat and vertical sun- llghts, I brought together all creatures, birds, beasts, reptiles, trees, plants, usages and appear- ances found in the tropical reg- ions. I brought EEyPt and all her gods under the same law. I was stared at, hooted at, grinned at, by monkeys, paroquets and cocka- toos. I ran into pugodas and was fixed for centuries in secret rooms. I was buriedfor a thou- sand years in stone coffins, with mummies and sphinxcs in narrow chambers at. the heart of the eternal pyramids. I wns kissed by crocodiles, and laid confoundedly with all unutterable, slimy things amongst the reeds and Nilotlc mud.” All this and much more, simply because 'DcQuincey had s drapple 0C1‘OBE§>_3_1_,___1932 ORANGE PEKOE BLEND, TEAS "Fresh from the Gardens” Charles Lever put Andalusia iii Portugal, and the usually correct Sir Arthur Qulller-Couch placed Bombay on the Bay of Bengal. 955mm coast of India, instead 0f on the Arabian Sea and western. coast. Even ‘rhiers, the I-‘irench his- torian, slipped when he mote ‘of B great European battle: "Through- out the day torrents of rain poured down and twenty thousand Aus- trians bit the dust.” Tact In The Army (Banffshire Journal) We all know what tact is. One who found it difficult, to define ft briefly enlarged his explanations 01 the term by declaring that it cer- tainly would not be tactful t0 start s. conversation with St. Peter on the subject of poultry- T119 M9‘ jor in the club the other night also found it necessary to give at some length an explanation of what he meant: “Speaking of tact," he said, "the best way to explain what I mean is to fell you of a simple little hap- pening that befcll a. regiment I had too much of the stuff that fired into such monstrous visions some secret i filament of his brain. We do not! commend the experiment. We are content to point out that when chest-nuts crackle on the fire-bars, or a sooty flake quavers there amid the dancing lights and shadows in this twilight world of ours, when the wind croons and sobs in the hollows of the chimney, then some- thing is going to happen. And in this conclusion we are perfectly safe unless the cosmic clock suddenly stops altogether. But; if any Hal- loween votary should wish to con. suit the candle-flicker or the tea.- lcavcs for some sign as to what po- tion the fairies have in reserve for love-lorn mortals, let them go to it. It is as good a. guide as any other in such a crisis. And in love affairs, argument is of no more use than re- charging o. battery to nfl the sunrise. If the greatest, love is also the spookiest thing in the universe. i Canadian business with an off-hand gesture merely t_o quiet some clsmant llocsl interest, with vomplete con fidence that he will lose nothing by it. Those happy days are over. Canada has called to her assistance the powemlf commercial interests oi the great Empire to which she be- longs, and Imperial agreements °Y m“ m‘ b‘ ‘llli-"iwd “"11 have been reached which will “my “mm? m“ ‘mm “*9 staunch the wounds inflicted by “In” w u” f“m“y' They ‘Washington and strengthen our nted rather n. gross enlargement. “bum, w "take our mm pa,” f trade in which the members of family would share. ‘This fact is IIIIDhS-iiiif-‘d in a Montreal exchange iwhich points out that the foreigner ihad long believed he could cisp In a brochurow wimp by M; hostile duties and regulations on the H. o. Seward, head of a. well-known importation of British goods with advertising fimi in Imam, reg“. punlty, because free trade Brltaln1ence is made to what is "virtually no weapon with which to defend a buyetrs’ strike,“ . m4 British erself. And the foreigner llndollbt-,manufacturers are urged to do ly acted on this theory. He did1everything humanly possible to in- nalize British goods whenever it duce the public to buy more freely. uited him ut home without thlnk- The method suggested l; advert-sing, g ra- a moment how it mght ‘and gtetlstics are submitted in sup. ,‘ ffect his exports to the United port or the ‘y-gumgng m“ m“ kingdom. The British dog was aimethod ls successful even in the tient animal who would submit period of depression, and m” 1g g any amount of beating. profitable to those who have i. But when Britain armed, fiscally, recourse to 1t. is change was at once seen. Foreign One of the interesting feature; of tions grew very anxious. Theyithis brochure is a some; o; chm-g; cre especially alarmed as the date one of which shows that mpngy. 0f the Emprc Conference in Ottawa fwage reductions have not kept, pace ‘drew ncar. They wanted to get in with the fsll in the cast of living, ‘early and secure trade treaties with !with the result that the purchasing brcst Britain before it should be1power of th¢ public has actually co lute. But the British Govcrnmentlrisen. In the case of the n-mleq orally postponed all such negotla-:mlddle classes, the fact that pm». . ions until she should sec to what chasing power has not decreased is I nt she must commit British fut- susceptible to further proof m the lire policy at the Ottawa gatheringlccntinuinl success of many my". .'.i‘his did not drive away the foreign 'tlscrs. That any general rm m suitors. ‘Ilrry at cncc asked for1expendltures on the ordinary n. places in the linc that would formlqulremmts of the public would be Uter- tlzc Canfcrcncc to secure new a benefit to industry and an aid to ‘treaties. They evcn went in for iemployment is not debatable, no; t; Bl-itll prnztlcal gcsiilrcs townrd galn- 'it open to question that while a inc, Br fish frlvor ns tilc Coprnhagen Egrcat many people are in distressed Itlhibiticn t.) promote the sale ofwllrcumstsnces a much larger per- lllitisll gcrd: in Dcnmnrk. -centage of the population has money But Dcnntat-l: an". not alone. Capt. at its disposal which could be turned Eden, ihc Undersecretary ' forlintb the ordinary channels of Dwell Afleks, reported to thcldomogtje m4. ‘HELPING WORLD TRADE 5 ‘H10 promoters of the recent 0t- wa Ecmronzio Conferences have Bind 118M along that their pur- e was not to restrict trade but increase it. They declared that ADVERTISING PA YS ed, India. has become iilc scene of| a. devilish kind of outrage oftenl depicted by sensational novelists and ' writers of mystery stories. Some of our worries, it appears have been all for nothing. Moscow new reveals that Soviet Russia is importing more wheat than she is , exporting. ‘Fhis has been the cslscl f0f the first eight months of 1032i Two thirds of this year's Russianf imports came from Canada. and Australia, Russia explains the sit- uation by claiming that it. was to her own advantage. to import these large quantities on account of trans portation problems. So many of as seem to think that the Government is pomcsscd of some magic wand which ‘it need merely wave in order to make business good and all of us individually pros- perous. Nothing, o1 course, could be further from the fact. The Govern- ment, after all, contaim. no miracle workers. It is composed, in most cases, of men just as ordinary as ourselves. It is merely u. commit- tee of the pepole, chosen for the sake of order and convenience, to handle affairs that are the bus- iness of ell of us. A Government is no better, no stronger, no abler than the voters who put it in office. Ml‘. do Valera, tiring of remaining in power through the courtesy of a. Labor group of seven members, may make a fresh appeal to the electors in the hope of securing a clear majority in the Dell Eiresnn. The American-born Irishman with the Spanish name will be taking his political life in his hands. The peo- ple of the Free state must be pretty thoroughly “fed up" by now with Mr. de Valera! trade war with Britain and the general unsatisfac- tory condition of Ireland's affairs. And Mr. Cosgrave, the moderate who made such an excellent Job of straightening out the Irish muddle and giving the people good govern- ment, is right on hand to answer the call in case it is extended to him again. The selection cf n: President and Congress is the exclusive affair of the people of the United States, whose national policies and the administration of their public bus- iness are the main issues imme- ubout on your feet as when you are rcstlilg quietly in bed. If it weren't for frightening pat- ients it might be wise to cull all severe colds pneumonia. It. would help retain the "reserve" of the heart. Untruth About Canada lfcronw Saturday Night) For a publication which in its title proclaims its infallible ver- acity as unblushlngly as did the Juvenile George Washington, Lon- don “Truth" has a most haphaz- ard method of collecting its alleged facts. Long since it adopted as its crccd an adaptation of American pioneer opinion as to Indians, namely that; the only good Cansd. lan is a. dead Canadian. For fifty years it has consistently held to i116 0Dlni0n that we are bounders, brigands and braggarts, inferior to any race, white, yellow or black on the habitable globe. The method of "'I‘ruth" in 11;; commentaries on Canadian affairs is to publish only that which co- incides with its vestablished pre- ludlces. Any disgruntled English. man who has failed to get a job in Canada, has a aura way of earn- 1118 a few shillings by lupplying “Truth" with a paragraph dew. eatery toward this country. Thug in a recent issue, it __ b‘ a Paragraph entitled “The Truth about Ottawa" in which the editor My! he is indebted to e, Toronw 19"" f" newspaper cuttings which "fully confirm" "Tl-nun" views about the Ottawa Confer. ence. The method of the TOfOnfp reader to whom the editor is so much “indebtcd" has been to 1g. nore the enormous volume of fav. terest in the political currents um cross-currents in the neighboring republic. and as a matter of 1m the quadrennial Presidential campgin in the United States evoke; intgrqg in this country second only m time of a Dominion election. It is prob. Bbly the case that in this cam. cairn the msiorliv 9i’ cmmum are more empathetic toward Pree- ident Hoover than toward his op- Pflflent. Governor Roosevelt. Hoover is one of the most capable Presid- dlotely at stake. But the people of Canada always take a fnendiy in- entc the United States had had in modern times. _ ' "viiébivvlmeu elvTiE?§§"lus"wFiT-§l—l?ey . ‘sissy I 9' (From the New Yonk Sun) On account of the haste with which he produced most of his no- vels Sir Walter Scott was forgiven for many of the m‘stakes which hel’ pennibted to creep into his works. In one story he has the sun setting in the east; in another he glvesv two horsemen six days to. make a journey at their fullest speed and,‘ then a few pages further on he has the same distance covered in a day, and in "Ivanhoe" he set, ac- cording to critics‘, a. task for the mount in a tournament which no horse could possibly perform. In h's introduction to "The Talisman," written in July, 1932, two months before his death, he foiesialled criticism by saying that he wrote of e country with which he was un- acquainted. “I labored," he said, "under the incapacity of ignorance in which, as fer as regards Eastern manners, I was as thickly wrapped as an Egyptian in his fog." The guides on the field of Waterloo placed little credence in either By- ron's or Thackeray's description of the ball the night, preceding the bottle, but they will show the spot where Wellington shouted "Up. guards, and at them,” and also quote the Duke's wards: “Waterloo was won on the Playing Fields st Eton." When told that Wellington orable comment which has appear- ed in Canadian newspapers, both Liberal and Conservative, and send over a few cuttings from two pub- lications notoriously embittered against Mr. Bennett on personal grounds. On the strength of these excerpts, "Truth" says it is the “general opinio " in Canada that Mr. Bennett “bullied" the British delegation into the acceptance of "an unconsclonably bad bargain." It adds that in view of the “no- torious facts" Lord Hailshanrs tributes to the Prime Minister were regarded by Canadians as a "naus- ssy.” N0 one seems ever to have [Virginia must have been somewhat ‘with ports on both streams: ~"an overseer on a. Massachusetts reply, "Tilavs what the novelists pinned them down to who were the novelists. Another among the great novel- ists who confessed to mistakes was Thackeray, who declared he never reread a page of his composition but that he found "a. fault or two. a half dozen." His geography of faulty when he gave go the E3- monds the vast tract that extended from the Potomac to the James, he must, have forgotten his law when he has one of his characters living in America arrested in church for debt, an unlawful proceeding, and he casts some doubt on the Dean of wlnchestcrb good deed in writ- lng a letter in the ninth chapter of "Henly Elemond" after he had him die in the sixth. Dean Swift wrote that Pennsylvania. “wanted the shelter of mountains", since 1t was open to the northern winds from Hudson Bay's frozen seas, and a writer of the last century wrote of the honor to be connected with 111 France in 1916. We had been taken out of the trenches and were ord- cred to billet in a little French vil- loge from which the Boche had just been ejected. After his beastly manner he had destroyed every-i thing that was destroyoble in that unhappy town. Well, the first thing we did was u» take stOck to find , out if anything had escaped his notice. The two most desirable, things were a milk cow and B patch of strmvfbclries in a neglect- ed corner of un orchard. Naturally the colonel took the milk cow and the sdjutllnl; the sirawbcrrics, and everyone was satisfied. Yolfve 901? _ to be in the British Army. Next morning the udjiltsrlt as the senior "ubordlnatc officer, had to go out‘ with the men to the outskirts of the village, leaving the colonel at, a puzzle to many other novelistli1 O Love builds on the azure sea, And Love builds on the golden sand, And Love builds on the rose-wing. ed cloud, And sometimes I.ove builds‘ 0n ti; land! Off Love build on sparkling sea, And if Love build on golden 5mm And if Love build on rosy cloud; To Love these are the solid land! O Love will build his lily walls, And Love his pearly roof will rem 0n cloud, or land, or mist, or sea. Inve's solid land is everywhere; -Issbells. Valancy Crawford 1101119 111 Possession of the whole show. When he came back he went down to the orchard to 100k at m, strawberries, but found SOmGOm had been there. Now, yo“ Can‘; m]; your colonel a thief-at least my in the British Army, and s0 he had to use tact. So he put up this no- tice: ‘Anyone taking siruwbcrriel from this patch will have his cow shelf." Because many recent highway accidents in Czechoslovakia are raid to have been caused by driver: while smoking at the wheel ull op- crators of motor vehicles have been ordered not. to smoke. Stabbed under the right breast, a man in Mbstsr, Jugosluvls, cred be-; cause his heart was cn thb wrong‘ side, and a post mortcm shoiveo that he had onfy one lung, the place of the other being. occup'ed by his stomach. 1 1v ltfinnrlfs Llnlment vuha out Pain. ‘ Printers of coti/an plantation." Geography was MMVS PILE OIIITMEIT 61M Quick Relief u. all cases of internal and Exter- nal Piles. A safe and efficient remedy in the treatment of this "achfi- "14""!!! and oft- times stubborn disease. It The Charlottetown Guardian Everything HERE is really as much difference be- tween‘ styles 0f 1111111‘ ing as between two styles of handwriting. It is by choosing the RIGHT style - "w neater set-uP - the appropriate iylie '- that we 111mm“ the most effective job- Sept. 21-wfm-3i __-i--—- "Ill-n 111mm instant relief from the itching, buy-Mn‘, 111118111! sensation of pile; and is a positive cure. There has been for years an effort to discover dome ma] ‘Pa-imam by which Pilu could be cured without re. lflfiing to an operation. Such I ""1941! has been foam] in our ointment. eous example of lmperialistlo hum- bu”. '.i‘here can be no intelligent Canadian unaware of grotesque falsity of these assertions. But ‘Truth" is evidently as proud of its "cuttings" as any barnstoiming actor, and is entitled to whatever hfllinineu it. can derive from them. It! views cannot affect the issues. W0 Positively guarantee the cure ‘in! this disease if the ‘ direc mu are rrlql carefully. o. u‘ Get a Tube today. Price I00. THE 2 MAGS Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. 146 Richmond Sh, i__ BATTlzmc “CHARGING QKHAIQI - 111 11in‘ @ E. R. BROW Fire, Life, ‘ Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis ' a hlty. _. 11Pa|mer Electric Ltd. T Charlottetown AIITO IGNITION Let u! cheek rm 1811111“ system for Fall driving condi- tions. Carburetor work a IP99‘ Electrically at your servicfl- Automobile sums:- New" Ignition