‘PAGE FOUR The Charlottetown Guardian _______ Prnldnnl l.Ieul.-(‘0l. W. Chanel l. IrLIn ‘ Vlno-Pnuldonl J. ll. llurllll, l7. J. I. Editor lml llnulilll] vim-nu J. It. uunnl. I. l. I. Bea-rein; Lleut. tail l! A llurlilnnnl D. l. . Annoclutu l-Idltuu trunk Willie! and U. K. Clnio llornlng luzly (founded llli). 85.00 per year (In advance; delivered l0 Olly. “.00 per your lln udumro) mulled In l’. l5 I630 per yell’ (In n 4'9) lulled to t‘ nude MONDAY, ~ xovnusi-fi: —l,_l931 Another Liberal Volle Face The TU-roiito (jlnlic auil Jluil (Liberal) quoted hy our evening coiitemporaryt as ile- .\lr. lit-nneti for his condemnation 0f the i .ri 2m udturt- oi" the Rowell Commission. Two months ago the (flolic and Mail itself out v It criticism on the same subject, l via-ts ipitttc-il in llie Guardian at the time, iiti-il in lll<‘~f' columns a few (lays ago, as frilloxa-I ‘L-l mistake liar been made iii '1;- fniririiw; q [nniiiiivnrioii all of tcliose members lirizr l‘(i‘ll Li/trriilr iii politic: 0r inclined toward ],,:t.,~,i,,] f,-,,-,,~,fi,~_r, The fliilllllit/X mu; Iiacc to no lief in‘ -l Ltiilfffifllllle Gorrriimriil. Iii any r11 iit, lbw; lirrriit- it till parties, rcgtirdlvx; of political fre- dilccfittiir." Tilie iflolv ant] jliiil’: complaint at that time was that the commission personnel was all Lib- lral. Mr Bcrtflclfls‘ complaint is that it is composed of “a pack of fjritsp" What's the difference? The (fl/Mic mi/l Jlriil’; suggestion was that the ‘ Commi==ioii should have included leading Con- Ff‘r‘s'flil‘»'l"'s. among them .\Ir. Bennett himself. Mr. lit-uizeifs suggestion is that all political partu-s in Parliament should be represented. At the time the Globe and illail editorial ap- peared. Premier Hepburn had but rec'ntly re- pudiated his federal leader, and declared that he “was not a Mackenzie King Liberal." Fivce that time, however, .\lr_ Hepburn and Prime .\li sir-r King are reported to have set- flrtl 'l" r difft-rriicrs. At anv rate. thev are no lmlflrl‘ l'l'l'lll_‘.' tit loggerhrlatls. No doubt this accounts for the voile face the Gil/alt." and Jlail in first attacking s l Commrssion as a partisan appoint- ment. Jirtrl suhscquentlv attacking .\lr. Bennett for making the same criticism! The Globe and ll/"ll- ll m"? l)" Rfltlwl. is Hepburn’s strongest rirtvspripcr supporter, This riIght-ah/iut-fnce on the part of thc Tor. onto Liberal Jiournal may account for our local contemporary-s lilundPr ycsierdav in reproduc- "lfl ill" "Four! Clo/v: mid Mail editorial as evi- dence of “gtirlilingll on The Guardian's part. Z71? Guru/firm’; quotation was from the firs! Globe rnirl Jlnil editorial, It was impossible to ha“? llfifirhlcrl" the second One because it had not then appeared. Fitir contciiiporaryg of course, prefers to quote the loronfo paper's “second edition" Of it; 0min, ion of“ the Rowell Commission. Wg flat-c‘ m objection to that, but we must strongly ohjpq to it: false implication that this was fhe onlvf expressed by the Globe mid Mail, or thiu . Iir Guardian excerpt from the earlier editor- "l Waf W". ls it professed to be, a brmii fir!“ quotation. L "Ralph Connor" Passes flB-‘lfli tit “iinnipeg of Rev. Dr. Charles y. (rordon will, he felt as a national I055, ,\5 llfllPll Connor his name was one to conjure Wflin} in literary circles during the early _\'L'Il.“$ n tie pri-svut century. Ilow this psi-tidoiiym was assuini-il hy the young “skv tuilnt” of the Rocky Iloiiiitiiin foothills makes an interesting story’. llis pzirish at that time comprised the “lllllli “l” f""l" Ntflilm. l.’..C-. to Swift Current cftslvtittlicwnii, null it \\.is to acquqnnt the I)(ln_ Pl‘? "f ll" (‘llllflili with thi- roblems ant im- 1 . ' ' ’ ~ p Polldll” "l "llllmllfi work in the new \\i'cst that lhllbdjlyfillifl hi-ciime an author. In Toronto, maklllll a "W"! to a church committee he coni- plainctl of a lzittk of svnitizitlrv and undcrstttntl- llrllf-ll- l-‘lllltis A; Rliirtlrinaltl. then editor tif ie istminister, a f)f".(’§l)_\'f(‘l'lZlI1> Church paper, :intl later erltfnr of '11“; Tnmmo (11059, aflvisfitl him to tell his- sfrirv in fiCfiOn fnrm Gordon returned to \\'iiiiiipi'g and wrnu- -',\ Tale oi the §(.'ll\'lf'l-;§." a short glory which he sent to Rlzicilonziltl. 'l‘hi-n he cfin§|lderctl me llmlll-‘ll’ "Xl"”“‘5l'lll> lll‘ fiscd might offend his conservative friends so he Mir-graphed \p,(._ drnialtl: “Sign storv Ciiiintir,” The n-imc con. taiiicd thi- first 3s_\'ll.'l—l}l(‘S of (jargpjiqn and N0rit!‘_ “Tfl- "Whlii sort of name is (janitor? ex- filpfuiiyrl bliicflonalil when he read the telegram, ~ Rlfl? 1f (ouiior and he must have n fit-q mime,‘ (Bill him ltzilpli.” “A 11th: of 111,; 5,5]. lflrlf‘ “'51- tilililislicd in "The \\'cstininsicr" find (Jordon was" rtrirvailcil upon to follow it with others’ lll serial form. Later the stories were coiisrtliilaiii-il in his first novel "Black Rock" WW1 spectre-i in "we. The following Vtflf‘ lll‘ llrflllf-"f t-iirei-ss “The Skv Pilot" camclout It sold moii- than a million copies, l l It is ilifiiciilt even vet to assess the gm.“ ll'll,ll'll’llll"" "f llF- liotllon to the religious zirid "will lIPllPYHK-iit of Western Canada. What is llfjfllltl <lolllit is that ht: was an outstanding man 0f his time. Literary fashions change, and hi; hooks may have ceased m ha“; ma! ra-p-pea] whph they had ittr pos-i-\\':ir generations; hut hi; ()\\'n varccr will ]iI'f|\'lll(‘ material for a truly inspir. lng lii-igriiphyq Canada's Mineral Wealth "Mzuiv tieopli- look at nickel, of which (‘an- nrla product-s 87 per cont. nf the world slip‘; they dith it il wiir Itl(‘llll and clatnnur ll) have I . prnductiviu tiud shipment suspended. Nothing mulij be tntift‘ lllll't';l~ltl"llllJlC than this attitude. Tlicv niiglii us" \\l‘ll ll>l< that all flic metal mines of the connirv lll‘ closed. livvti if they sticcrcrl- ed_in this", lllt‘ world at war or preparing for .v."r ivnnltl find ilii- csscntitil stipplics elsewhere. With the (Znridiiin prodiiciioii cut off the Priffl of hsist- nii-inl- \‘.tilll1l soar-the output of this roiinii~_v~ i. vital to cvcit the |l('-’l(‘(‘-ll|ll(' stipply- mt] tl~<pitsiis [ifvviilllslv (‘tilIsitlt'f'P(l tuiccoiitiinic ivnuld lii- opened to fill the 15:’. Hines now in nroiluctiuii, JlS in Rhodesia and Katanga, in Nflfllllif iii-rite the xy-mpalliy of .iil- ~ lTweniies, took the public platform the 0f Chile-and in Russia could tremendously ex- pand their outputs." The forcgoitig statement is from one of many interesting articles in the annual number of Tl-e Xnrl/icrii lliiin. just received. The issue runs to 16o pages, with pictures, articles and figure tabulations revealing the full sweep 0f the Can- adian mining industry in all its phases. In presenting its annual number, The Xorlltrrn Miner reports zt record production from all sources, which should approximate a value of $415,000,000 for ilie year. The figure com- |pares with $36i.0o0,ooo in toys-which was _ an all time high. , Immense advances have been made all along ‘ the line, especially in gold, nickel. copper, zinc, ~ platinum, asbestos, aluminum. oil and structural ‘ material, the pcr cripita output being now higher l than that of any other country. i Speciai attention is given tin Th9 Xprrlip-n l Miner review to the tremendously rich mineral l heritage of the ljzimhrian shield, which stretches from Labrador to the .-\rctic Circle. Some ofi the most striking sticccsscs of the year hflvfi come in the Xorthivcst Territories where gold, ilisclostires augur well for future development. ‘The hinterland is lit-iii: conquered with nir- crait. river craft and tractor. .-\ir photography" has mapped 250.000 square miles of the un-l known North for the guidance of the explorer, l the engineer and the prospector. 1 Editorial Note! I l All fouls Day. U Lyons & Co., Ltd, Loiidoifs Tea 5h0p>1 have just placed an order for 7°i°°°t°?° l“ cleflm I spoons with the firm oi John Lewis Industries, Ship llarhour. N5. This .\l_ziritiine_ firm "ll"! give the titniost “I llilCtion tor it is the flffli order of the kind that has hcen entrusted to them. ll I l! t 1 t l .\lf‘tlCl\'L’ll, literary I the her day to discourse on the American language. In response to a question, ‘the author of_ The AIm- erican Language" predicted that hliddle “fif- tern speech will prevail in America because it is clear, distinct, extremely logical and “not un- musical." Mr. H. L. titan of it i i The Canztdizm _\l<"'llC<'il Association executive meeting at Ottawa last week handled the ticklish question of the Confederation of {he Qfgafllla‘ tiiin. All the Provincial Associations had as- sented on tirinciple, and it was for the execiltivfl to (levise a. scheme that would meet with 3C- Cqmncc h). each of the ninc local associations. Evidcntlv thcv struck a snag for Orlc 0f ill-B spokesmen ileclared; “\\'e are just begihnin l0 appreciate the iliffiictiltics the llillllfifi of On‘ federation hzul." l i! i 1k Tlicrc is" no heating about the hush when GOV- l!‘ crumciit mom-v is ivaiitctl for the Cily 0f Ol- l tawa. Ordcrs-in-Ctiuncil have just been passed i granting contracts for $130,000 and $86000 1'9‘ spectivclyi for a museum and laboratory ffillec‘ tivelv for the Department 0f Mines and Re- sources. When we want it National Park W? have to pay through the nose for if, and 6V6" then deprive the lznid (iwiicrs of 166055 f0 !l1¢_ Cottrts to (lccidi: a fair and rciistitiable price t0 he paid. ' a: tk is x .\s might hzivc lit-en expected, lady Baldwin, wife of forini-i" Prime Rliuistcr, has little "if for childless or next-diior-fo-it marriage. "Let ‘cm all come" is hi-r motto, and at the opening nf n mittcrnitiv hospital in Xltiidsfone, Kent. sug- gested that in nt-edv families t-very fourth 01' subsequent child should lll‘ “Hhsidilcd Or a £73m should he made for ii ccritiin period. Lady Brilli- wiii said that thc stiggcstitin might he rcvfilll- iionary hut thzit it might strip “illegal irregular- itics." if i! i! 'l'lii~rt' is tillt‘ thing liiitzitvzi liiis to thank Prc- mier Aherhart for-the ticqiiisiiirin of a duly certified copy of the lliiiiiiuiou (iliartcr. At Edmonton on Si-ptcnihcr (i, thc Alberta PIT- micr dcclzircil: “Nowhere can tlicre be found the original Ctipy of llitr lritish North America .’\ct—(.':ii1:irla'.s ffonstittitiiiti." The HHfhOFiIiQS got busy with the rt-sttlt that a photostatic copy of ihc l’..f\'.¢\. lillflllllfifl in lntitltnt now lies szifc- ly tiuilcr lock and key in ihi- Archives ilcpzirt- iucnt tit (lttzitvzi. it V This" is Chet-st; \\'cck. and we are iill supposed to patronize that product of the farm in ti greater extent thriii usuitl. It is remarkable how little rhccsc is mitt-ii in this zigrictiliurnl country famed for the qiiziliiy of its- prnduction. l: is freclv admittctl thiit (fziniiilzi malt-cs thebest Cheddar cheesi- in the world, yet Canadians cat less cheese than the people of any other country. The per capita consumption ofclieese in Canada is only 3 3-4 lhs, compiircil with t) 1-2 lbs. in tircztt Britain, whi-rc practically all Canadian cheese that is i-xporlcd finds a ready market. l.cf us sample (tiniirlitui chi-est: at Our n-iidday and cvr-iiiiig iiit-tils iluriiig the rest of the week at least. 1k Ill 1V ti!!! It is come to this'—tzihloiil oysters. ttghl-At the Chemists’ lixhihiiitin just opened at the Al- licrt llzill, Loiiilrin, a fttlile displays a "deep sea oyster conccufrzttc." The cxploitcr declares that thirty-six tahlcts coiitziiiiing this “conceiitrutn tistrcac" can hc ohtaineil for $i.i2 and are equal to 108 oysters tit 2 pounds, 5s. When somebody observed that “it sccins fl soulless way 0f eating oysters" the columnist of The Morning Post item" tlii? critic si-vcrtil l)(‘ll(‘l' and wrote: "Con- centrate, indi-cil! As though the essential charm of fhc oyster were not tlic delicate remoteness of its flavor, the faintest hreath of the sea, a whiff from the mtrriiiaitls’ caverns as elusive as that of a hctinficlil in the dusk! Who wants his oysters in tzihlct form? Can you see your- self sitting down to a dozen tablets, carefully (lahhling them in lt-nioii juice and tabnsco sauce, and thank-lug your stars flint at last there i5 an 'r‘ in the inniitli? The oyster is not a mere fliivor; it is a rite. :i sacrifice. whether lifted de- corously from the half Sll(‘ll 0r zcstftilly delved I Hamilton in approv‘ schools than they were running a: .»-r-. -. - . .- .1. . THE "nni-i.o'i'i"--"iiiw-i Armed with corn knives, more than Lhreescore neighbors of t-‘aui uuy desoendea on ms thirty-ax.- field of standing com at. UIDBLB, u., the other any and in two and a mu ' bouts cut. and shocked the entire J crop. Sickness and death in the (my had prevented the farmer I. doing his own work. suen instancts j of nelghborliness deserve, ihougii ,‘ they seldom get, as much newspaper l space as stories of scar, murder, tape t and doth-W ndsor Star. Secretary of State‘ Hull received a , far more enthusiastic welcome in oiu t Ontario (as he deserved» than did’ his famous namesake, iviio came picitnlslng Canadians "peace, liberty l and security” away back in 1812. , But. men, Cordell Hull cud not also ‘ promlse us "freedom from the BIZ‘.- l ish yokeJ-Ex. The citizens of ‘Brantford arc deeply interested .n the action of the Board ofHealth of the city of the action u! Dr. James Roberts. medical officer ‘of health, and Dr. J. Edgar Davey, his assistant, for the manner in ‘ which they handled the epidemic ol poliomyelitis in that city. These ex- perienced admin strawrs of public health dedded early when the ques- , tlon was " raised of whether the t schools should be reopened that the z‘ children were safer under the super- vision of nurses and doctors in the large. Only eight children of school age contracted the disease, and not one developed paralysis-—- Brantford Expositor. The days are growing longer — longer by 0,0037 second a century. This Ls the finding of Dr. H. Spenc- er Jones, the astronomer royal. The increase cannot be detei-m ned by , _ terrestrial clocks. but the action will 1 continue until the earth aways turns the same face to the moon. "when the day will be equal in length to the month. and each will equal fatty-seven of our present days." Dr. Spencer Jones explains. that one of the causes of the longer , dav ls tidal friction. particularly in narrow, enclosed seas. This ‘acts as a brake and slows the earth dovm. and the slowing process is only CB1- culable by astronomical observation. —VIctofla Colonist. A great need of the day ls a full- er appreciation of what it. means to be alble to choose those whom we feel are best fitted tn make Rood laws. protect our health, manage the affairs of our province on a. sound. -bu.slnes-s-llke basis and provide the beat facilities for the proper educa- tion of the "rising generation.-Kit- chener Record. If l man walked around nur‘ streets yelling "Hurrah for high tax- - atltm," he would soon be mobbed: ' but many walk around advocat ng measures that would riecerssitate high taxation. and few appear to‘ observe that they are ready yelling. for that. which would cause them to be mobbed lf they stripped their; minds "naked for all to vlew.—-Argon- I but, San Francisco. Mussolini has declared that he has no political or strateiztical aims‘ in Spain, despite his intervention.- and Eden has seen fit to believe; him. Apparently we all have been, condemning an altruist. But it‘ seems unbelievable that any one can any longer believe hlm sufficiently to base diplomatic groundwork upon as assui-ances.—I-Iamtlton Specta- r. Even lf the President does no more, he has at ‘east used his pres- fge and his eloquence to challenge the validity of this theory of Amer- g lean security. He has warned the- Amerlcan people that they live in a modern world which steadilv izrowzsl smaller. He has reminded them of‘ their rich stake ln the neecc ofl other nations. tn their internal .ta- bllity. ln fhe'r markets and in their culture. And he has raised the issue, , whether or not he chooses finally to i press it to its logical conclusion bc- ‘ tween a policy nf attemntlnq to 1-s- capc through flight from the con-l tagion of modern war i-ird a policy of seeking peace through ccrieerprl ‘ action to make ih" oufluacal: of war l ltse f less likely-flew York Times. l "I have read that In thr- high t dllluns to be found when an livaii-I tlous move. or even a s-udflen loudl excltimaflon, may sfart. an rival-l anthe That is just the tondii on in. which we find ourselves tcflc". fl bellcve, although the snouv li‘fl_\' be pei-Yously poised, ft has not yet b.-‘ gun to move. By exert-i. 1': iaiitioirl and patience and self-resiralitt we‘ mtiv yet be able to save the 120.102 of EuropeT-Britlsh Pr me Min sier. The professor anzl his “ifc were doubtful abcuttcttiriilng to ilirl farm on which they had passed the previous summer. because they had been somewhat annoyed by the] proximity of the p gsty to the howte. Finally the professor wrote to that farmer and explained the object-i lonable feature. He received fife fol-l lowing rep1y,."We halnt had no hogs on the place since you were were last. siunmer. Be sure you‘ come."-Seckvll1e Tribune. | Governments, through efflclenf“ administration of wise law's, 0f" through sane executive acts, may do, mucn to help us. Btit the notion that, mostly through the use of un- llmtted money garnered from somcl mysterious source, they may shower ‘ us with blessings at will, planning; us all into prosperity, making our ' needs, hopes, ambit ons, passions, impulses, prejudices and sorrows‘ their constant care. ls the essence of I the irrational. Yet it is a. notion that. t Blows. In this age of swift change‘ and of loud demands for swlfter. all the writers and.a11 Ufoplas every- where or at. any time have been out- done. and no man with a panacea neeti ever lack an audience. Never before have so many among tus been w emi- w listen. to take the pro- ximate at their worcL-Ottawa. Jour- l J Mitch In: been hen-d nbout. the uei nquenc es of mlnlaters’ sons and‘ dllllhtera. but, the real reason ts be- cause they are exceptions. It. is the exceptions and not. the rule that re- ceive attention and cause the com- ment. It. has been clearly estab-| llahed that the children of ministers hold a. much larger proportion of' for in the steak and kidney pudding.” mouth-while ncoomphhments than nuicinr llll; "All l s HEADACHE ‘ Mussolini has shaken Europe. The mounts ns thcre are scmcbmes coii- , ' ‘ZUA '-'.')'.\N lllhat lfiulip of Bouts 1S A SIGNAL A “WRNING 01-‘ TROUBLE $01119 Wars ago by the aid of textbooks, a medical looselea; sys- l tem. a medical encyclopedia, my own experiences and those of other tilt}; ' ‘ans, I tried to find ‘out how many different conditions or ail- ments in the body could cause headache. I found over one hun- dred and twenty causes, and yet when one gets down w bare facts, a headache Ls just a symptom of trouble somewhere in the body. It Ls as if Nature were trying to fell the ziidividtial that there was some- thing wrong, or he was doing somethzitg wrong. and the head- ache W35 the red light—the warn- lng-fo make him" stop and 1n- vetgate. Nov.’ a headache may be due to same simple cause such as gas pressure from stomach and tn-t testlne, eye-strain. or to some’ serious condition such as harden-I lng of the bloodvessels lfl the brain t or a brain tumor. The headachel itself is due to the irritation of the , brain caused by either simple or‘ serious conditions. _ “A headache then is not a disease , ln itself. It ls onlv a sign and a‘ symptom of a disease somewhere‘ in the body. It may denote some- thing ins ntficani cr it may be the ' sign of a most serious illness. For this reason physicians regard headache as a serious manifesta- ron of a disturbance in a human" being. It ls- a warning on the paid of a body which says to its Owner. “There is something wrong v.';tli me; go to a physician and find out ‘ what it is". Physicians investigating a head- ache fake into consideration the age and habits of the individual and look for the commonest causes first-liver, bowel. eves. blcod- ves-els. When a motor car stops the motor mechanic first. looks to see if lt. ls out of gass, or if something has gone wrong with the electric or wirinc system. Similarly the phy- sician investigates the digestive system. the circulation of blood system. and then the nervous sys- tem itself. The point Ls that when you have an occasional headache which you can trace to eating too much. ea’.- ing when upset. or perhaps to over-using this eyes, the use of powders or tablets may glve the needed relief; but when a head- ache ls constant or occurs frequent- ly. you should remember that if ts a sign. a signal to you that some part, of your body is 1n trouble and needs attention. The Outlaw Bands trlamllton Spectator) Fifteen years ago a band of black- p sliirtcd fascists began to march to- ward Rome. They were still a semt- l outlaw band. dedicated to the task ‘i of stifling communism ln the‘r_ country. The march ended on October 28, when large doses of: castoi‘ oil were given to all who ‘ showed opposition. And on Octob- 1 er 28. Benito Mussolini was sum- , moned to Rome by King Victor‘, Emmanuel, to become premier. | The fascists have gone far since I then. One of those who led that march, Michael Btanciil, ls dead. Three others remalii-dfalo Baltzo, Erttilio de Bono and Count de Vecchl cli Vtil Cismon. One is gov- l ernor or Libya, one ls known as the l conqueror of Adua. the third lsl governor of the Dadecaiiese i lands. march, so far. may be regarded as , having been pie-eminently sue-t cess .1. t One gioiitt should be noted. Xn 1921!. there were some 200,000 f1 lsts in Italy; tO-dby there are, 2.027.460. It Ls uitcthzr proof oft that old \ s9 adage, that sitc- C1‘.‘-;.$l!ll . u. %uls are eticcnipass- e11, no; by 1n involuntary explos- ion on tli- putt. of a papuiudisii, but by tite vvJl-ptiiztieu at: fitles of a‘ ..e.l-u;gaiiized minority. One Oc- tober, a. few years pcvlously, Liemn nxitl Trotsky, with another outlaw bind, 1nd seized control of the Krttnllm and tltz-"rmtfter of all the ltti-sas. We are, indeed, inclin- efl, to fnrgri. tiiat the hlstcry of Russ a wit. changed as much by the mllitiiiy gettius of Trslsky as lt was by the organizing genius of Lenin. It. is worth remembering, 3L", that more than a century previous- ly a certain m'liia".'y adventurer from Corsica (who was laying siege to the heart of Josephine. the friend of Barras. who headed the decadent French directorate in Paris) decided that the time was rlpe for another sort. of seize, and the history of notice was changxf by Napoleonls military genius. So lt goes! The thinkers weave their ideologies and their political theories. but the men of action, the reorganfzers, bridge the gulf be. "We" l-lleflfl’ and practice. Andko, We Sllfibect. it will go for a long time to came. those of any other class. The sons and daughters of parsonage." the rectory- and the MBDSQ have ever men among the foremost tn educa- tion. in the professions and worth- tihlle cltfzenshp-Port News Chronicle. The secretary of the Ontario Medical Association Ls on safe ground in assenlng that state health insurance will come ln this country. It. will arrive. with or without. the assent. of the medical profession, because the people at large w ll de- mtmd, as they are already demand- lnllnsome relief from the heavy fin- ancial burdens accompanylnq sick- ness and hospitalization-Brock- ? so boisterous in attack "W11 5°!!- 1 the answers i them something more. He showed i them how this adjusting apparatus Arthur ' NOVEMBER 2, 19a? 4-H l PUBLIC FORUM question: Chlrlutuluuvl Gulrdll d ‘ l... annually endorno the ID! of oornlpolde“ abtsi: or tau-sonnet: sin-The Liberal prevartcators, R. B Bennett's intent on to probe the partisan abuse. °l lmtmlule- seem to have their SW15 $111394 b)’ ‘ to their eiarflvflilfll charges against Conservl V95- [n a'lbi', or offset, they lWN-"l out the names of Liberal relief of- ficials as references. aripilllnfl "M" Ceaser unto Ceaser. or to the very apyzpointees in question to lWlllY their own existence. It would be much more ‘ntereat- int: if they would publl-Bh the "5-5 of actual disbursements. and PB!- ronage recipients. How many Liber- als occupied places in the Provincial Building under Conservatives. I should say about 50-50. But when the salaries are computed Liberals wcie the white headed b0Y5- will‘ two exceptfousi the heads and h gh salaries went to the Llberfll Olflfl! hrvders. The scoop was theirs. How different now? Almost. a to- tal clean out, "root and branch!" As a worker at last election I was up against the tid- of protest against the Bennett-Macfvtillan p01- lcv of sharing the patronaze re- ‘Yardless of party leamngs. Voters tri-re dinning into m,v ears their i1 now believe just fled) anger at scores of Liberals workinz on high- ways while “we Conservatives who worked to put our party in power cannot tzet the work belonging to us t» keep bread and butter for our families.‘ These Grits (they told met will work and vote against you to a man. and we Conservatives will v0‘e for the Liberal candidates who promise us our share of work. And 1t was so that the Conserva- tive candidates. in both local and ‘eiierai elections. lost. hundreds of votes because of the patronage ltanded out to Liberals. But those Conservatives. all of them. and countless Liberals have learned since the true value of Liberal promises. Although they have swept the pub- lic service so that from deputy head to scavanger not a morsel goes to Crxiservatives, and though promises of reduction of services were scat- lerrtl to every wind. there ls a big- ger pay list, more money squander- cd. and thousands of the t.‘ ’ of work and plenty unfulfilled. The best. settler of the question \\'(illl(l be fnr the government crock- ens to publsh a compete list show- iniz the number of Liberals employ- ed by the Campbell government. and the number of Conservatives. lf any. with the total amounts to each party for services rendered. This ls it challenge to produce which you may bet your last dol- lar svill never be taken up. Such im unholy carnage of’ partisanship la without a record in the history of Island politics. I am, Sir, etc.. ELECTOR. The Slot Machine (Halifax Chronicle) _ A high school principal in Okla- homa, who believes tn a. little practical demonstration. managed to get he'd of a slot machine and took it. to his school. The pupils were assembled and one boy fed iilckles to the machine while l. Second jotted down the results on the lfackboard. There would come a spurt of wins, and then a flow of losses, but the lcsses were more than the wins. At the end of a. period it wax found that the ma- chine had sixty per cent of the nlckles played. ‘Then a polce officer, who was had in for the occasion. came for- ward and took off the back of the machine and showed the lads the machines innards. He showed them an adjufslng apparatus which was adjusted to a 60-40 basis. S0 lt made no difference how long they fed, if with nlckels, the resu't would be 60 to the machine and 40 to the players. The machine couldn't lose. Then he showed could be regulated just as a watch ls regulated. A touch of the operator's hand and the percentage C0llld he changed. In some cues machines had been adjusted to 95-5. "You doiri ltave to study mathe- matfics to see itwugh that," was the vierclirf of the boys. Don't ‘t ' h , h i- i-Jiillcif-Sé “Sifts. ‘rtffkttul? Capsule: Thought; u. than u, m“, ‘"°"l"“l "F? Ind "on neniatant bruaehlnl "mill" "Vfiflllllli- Elly to t-nkr-nolmokal n: a 31:51". no snuff Sula hot habit-for f . lief-or mnney back. _ 50o and BI n u lurChmiuc lironchitllJoo. q n’: HA2 I! N Gclullfl ‘wlttfat’ YL» _______ NTTENTION SYJINE BREEDERS ls the time to guard ngnlnut PIG - WORM l1! using the most effective remedy on the mnltet; Mac ’s Pig-worm Tonic Powder It vrlll thoroughly abolllh Ill trace! of worms. and Improve the health of your herd. Price 35cts. per lb. Don't delly. Order by Phone or Mall. All orders promptly attended to. Phone 315 TllE TWO "MAGS t-fptlona A 5mm” “PLEASURE CRUISE" To Alil Crippled Children vire Recorder and Times. m VERMIGIDE for the Illlllllg season" E. A. FllSTEll Dr. ffrencifs No. 1 (Oval) For all Cubs and Adult foxes from the age of three months i on. The world-wide fame enjoyed by Vermlclde Capsules h due to their outatundln; efficacy and “My. Their re- gum». eomblnallo formula embrace; both lflxflflve Ind unlqle worm elllnlnatln; ingredients. Employed uteridlly with utmost success by the most Incom- hll Fox Ranchers everywher» , D051 ngflqfl to glve your foxes thclr final dosing before the winter net: In, thus insuring it good healthy condition No. l nvll Vermlclde Capsules come packet! In Boxes of 20 Capsules ~ - Boxes of 100 Capsules - - Boxes of 500 Capsules — — Prepaid to any address on receipt Slle lnthorlzeil Distributor for flrenchls Animal Remedies for Prince Edward Islam! tfPlebsure Cruise" To Aid Crippled Children t’. CAPSULES s 1.00 ' 4.00 18.00 of price Central Drugstore i “His-to??- Aiiili— Hollywood i p (New York Times) l To mmy of u; this gaudy age. must. seem the fevered dream oil some mud moving-picture Blnius i Few other periods have produced, such a melange of romantic, tragic, ‘ hemlc and villainous episodes. 1t Ls melodrama in the raw. A king renounces the throne for love of a lady. Spanish men-of-wat- ply the Main. The Shanghai Express rolls through the night with a full plement. of soldiers, handsome secret- agent-s and lady spies. Searching fingers of tight sweep black, death-laden skies. Slumber- lnl towns leap inf-o air at. the touch of a bomb. A heroic, hard- piuaed people go to their doom. and a Spanish general pardons a Yankee ivlatbr at the plea of a statuesque blonde with baby-blue e . I i yea. Bo it goes. The Kn Klux Klan ls hauled from its grave. ‘There is tn- tt-lgtte ln high places and clamor iv the book streets. Mare Nostrum is again n. topic of conversation. Steel rings on steel. Chinese ' junks are bin-Med and sunk. The skull-and- erossbones flies from the masthead. Zoundsf There are plratespexiles. beautiful ladies tn distress. firing squads at. dawn. secret cargoes. tattered millions on the march, and hundreds and hundreds of Rupert of Hentmua dashing into other people's wars. It. ls magnificent and terrible. It is colonel. Surrender Not A Solution (Globe and Mall) Hon. J. G. Gardiner, Federal Minister of Agriculture, has ap- proached the Western drought pro- blem from a new side tn suggest- llng transfer of settlers from the stricken areas to idle Eastern lands. This movement ls taking place voluntarily on a limited scale, and lt ls doubtful that the Minister views the proposal as mote than an expediency. Ii. would he discouraging to think of Prairie development tn terms ot flight. If the suggestion serves to draw attention to the need of a more comprehensive andprnctlcal un- dentandlng of the fanning situa- tion it may prove constructive. Why ts Prince Edward Island "JQOUIIQ vainly for people to operate 150 farms and why are other Eastern Provinces dotted with so- called abandoned fin-ms it the land would be a boon to the dried- out Wutemei-s? Would B. trek back from the West. ensure great- er atcblllty here ln agriculture unless something 1s done to make farming more attractive? Presumably Eastern agriculture at prsant ha; an advantage over the Pratt-tea because of its diversi- fled nature and the proportionately llfler home market. Under rea- aonnbly favorable conditions)“ _ farm family can get along tn Qn. tario. €fljO)1Xl._; I1fe‘s social ameni- ties with a healthful occupation It is usually said no one is moit independent than the farmer; ~Rarely is one found in want. Un. der the ctrcumuances. there mus‘. be conditions within control ac- counting for abandoned farms But. the larger question involve: the West. In this part of the coun try we have little knowledge of m, trials endured by Westemera vvht would welcome a chance t4; 0c. cupy farms considered here ll not worth operating. At the same tfmi we cannot believe a. large-scale tmiufer it the solution. Ways luv: to be found—and undoubtedly can be —to make the Prairies pq as weil as Ontario lands for pg;- manent settlement. The facts seem to be L11,“ g colonizing the West little attention was paid to the development of | consuming population along with a producingbne, and to the m. trodiicflon of a type of agrteultun that. would make the farm houit as selfsiistalning as in the oldu Provinces. The latter featun 1| now being xemendled by Icing a! circumstances. In time the change to diversified farming with mung; holdings should bring expansion ll urban industries and provide the popu ation balance needed for home markets. Policies leading u; this appear to offer one way out of present difficulties. When mine hour ls come Lei no teardrop fall And no darkness hover Round me where I lle. Let: the vastness call One who was its lover, Let me breathe the sky. Where the lorrlly light ' Walks along the world, And its silent. tread Leaves the grasses bright, Leaves the flowers uncurled, Let me to the dead Breathe a gay goodnight. —“A. EJ-(G. W. Bur-sell; Mr. lea p0“ Says: -F0r a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN Orange Feline Tea We offer a complete and tion. -INSURANCE- The Modern Safeguard of llome ' and Business dependable service in all lines of Insurance-Marine,‘ Fire, Life and all Casualty llnes. Quotations furnished without obliga- llYlllllAll 8i 00., LIMITED J. O. HYNDMAN, Manager The Oldest Insurance Agency in Prince Edward Island Offleeiu-Charlottetown, i "Pleasure Cruise" To Aid Crippled Children Summerslde, Montagu?