f: r. I; I ll (l -- >-~»-.-.--> jl ‘IZEKI IHBOEE vactcmgotic THE CHAN LOTTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally t ‘oundcd 188:1) President. LieuL-Cul. W. Chester S. McLuf-a Vice Prcsitlt-ut. J. R. uuructl. F-J-l- iecretun‘. LicuL-CIII. l). A. Mut-Kiunon, 0.5.0. Idllor and Muuaglxfg Director, .l. R. Burnett, F..I.L Associate Editor, Frank Walker SflléCllllWllUN RATES $5.00 pcr year tin utIvunct-J delivered to Lily. $4.00 per yuan: flu udvuut-cl tnuilvd to P. E. Island $5.00 per pear (in advuucct nmilcu tu Canada and [LS Nlclubcrs Audit. Burt-nu of‘ Cirl-ulations "The Strunycst Jlunury is Weaker than I [he lleztlrrst III/r.” I938 <-—_':—__zu s" “THUS \Il \\', S II l"l‘ F .\I Illa‘ R 28, Erst\-l\il\,~‘ llorllfsls All For War .t _l'1llt'll;\l, is the 1 t pztrllt-s iu livi- t-»ft-t~t"\"att\"cs or b-nttui-ts, wcrc l":- lktltttcrstou, x of the "lin- . . '_ -, .» ~ . t \\tlt~l<'r'.~ "man- ‘ ‘. ' " tuud lllt" world. t, » - ,- lhgllljtltrll- . . I l llri- 1-‘ I -~ t. ' '1 _ . l‘ its clvrlz-(l \ ou tut- llartliv, .\f- "icv- itztd fai- t-t qtwttgtltctt ‘Lj . \\'it~ u .\ltt-‘~o- ~ l..tltt»".'. '.\t'.',;\"l- ~ duff.) Jill. W‘ to l’:trl< and "~-."-.~tu-.-ut (a pluu ' [Nun tic-truc- rt icw tltft-t-tmttivc ~j~'l. wt up such a out of office. lit- pcoplc who ztll oft". to "stop Hitler," . ltavt" bcrlt tltc lt tguc and "collvctlvc lh-x llovd (icorgc for mil‘. Xcvul‘ *u~'. pztcifists. lltat 4.Iltrl'\ ‘t... t. .11 Mo» ‘t; ‘ vlrts tltt u» ‘ t": lll(‘\t‘ -.'t".'t" t < ttt t <ut tuva-"ttrcs to "stop ll"~"." ml l-"I httgutttd ttuprcjlzlrctl. doostt‘: at all 1f .1“. r. l.~~l<" L’ fl‘ ‘l t‘ ii“v‘-llj\, tlxosc who want war i" t» :t\vt'l it, our (ilttawa W» ll~llri‘i~llllllll‘t at thtr re- oatultcrlaitt, sou of ‘plutprriltlist; llali- '-t lloavv, spcztlciltg for t‘... s» s. ‘tlu m arc the l.ou- dtlfl 'l‘,it,tt,»,_ vt-r: Ilu; flu/Iv Triv- grtrfft, ~pt" l '".<-~= ulvu zlutl tllz‘ "cs1." fl" "wt 1hr tuost ltcllicosc nt-wwpa -r in buqlrtu“ l."l'll lica\'c1'ltrttol<'s lflfrrrtt‘ art". ‘st but ‘ ‘I ‘of. liarvitrs Xnn- dmv, ()1. 13,.’ ' /\l‘I'.'\_\'-~l (v it" l/lltot‘. must Ill the truths t l quot-la", the lmctgtv- zr l " "". V pt-ttjtlt". Cou- slffvgjflyfl "' ~ - ' l v lidwu and Lord RtflKWl (it qr, it .'t“-- fwtrt‘ lllct‘ \\'ll\< stou tflturtr " , wot :tr<- such pnpctfi as the old '\l"=~ . ~" fUWFI/illll, a paper that oppo-cd d? i‘. that has always fouqtp ftr yo" , m ,\'t ztar-(‘Itvnttfrlr 1. l.lllt'l'.ll<j the flail)‘ or party‘. wccldy re- fwmott and Xnlfnlf, Fun I<~ci:1ll<ts. and the .\‘l,~t_ Hrrnlrf. orutr of view! like W» repress “My, o," rgttucltttlr-s the Ot- fawn his 1l"=j>1-t"rtte and en- oru: to save peace evcn at heavy c.- to f "t" up to this" attitude. ~ "Mu and precedent : ‘cr, hc no dottilt wt-iulit-rl tho con- ltnt a fqtultl Illilll. and his own and hi5 \/\'l1»'-n liP .. and =t-f or on l‘- cottntcrl t‘".-- ~ se-tptrnct“ rf ' I grc-wt tut-x - pm mtttt~rfi< fut- m it, lt was a ntaqtttficcttt gruulilr. “A, mic mrttrot", whcu the cablcs from Fu- rope arc lrtdvu with lfiztcl: pomcftts, (lnuubcrlain, ‘thouult b1 m v ltt- on :l-,t~ ltrinlt’ of ltcart-brcal~'~ int: failurc, \ hi- lt-tjttt." rrztsltittg :tbrfttt him. ntust still hwv/ tlwtit-tt in his heart that if ho fails l" v-‘l "u it»: fwil uoblv. tzrautllv. Conic ultra, p" "I, tlatlcltt ~- "ad tlvfltlt fltlvl sorrow ovcv Furttw- "t I will iwvcr stain Xcvillc Chamltrvicti»: = - wit". t.,,'. The? Ftflurcffilfi-Lileraltlre by audit-flees is diminishing; and sccontl, the in- dividual liberty of the artist is threatcttctl with present restrictions. Some believe that broad- casting and all possible advances in the tcclvltiqtte of spreading entcrtaintuent by electric vvttvvs will produce a new art comparable with tlu- olfl great art whilu briugitvg the tuastcrpicct-s of art and litcraturc to thc people. Against this" it is. pnintcd out that the hook is the basis of uni- vcrsal culturc. There will always be an ztristo- crzlcy of the mind: and the book, the writtr-u word. will cvcr be ncccssttry for litcrztry culturr. lmprovotucut in tangible cottditiotts and stau- dztrrls 0f living will not of itself produce cul~ ture. Comfort and lcisttrr, it is iusistcd, are not enough. and luxury is surely too much. We may rcflcct on the nutltittulc bt-ywtntl count who, from lmtucs of poverty have, by tllcir own alt- stctuiotts efforts, won higher education and rul- ture. But an established culture ou a ltigh lcvtrl depends upon lrsscr talents also. and upon rc- spousive readers. "The art of lcttcrs which rover livcd far from povcrt_v, was mwc proud and frce . . \\'hcucc can dt'li\'cr_\'r<tl11t*? Not from mccltauisnt nor calculable propagmvlil: not by lectures or ltoolt-lttttcltt-rvtts: still loss from tbc tyrants in political uuifortus or from tut-rc spctttlv-rs of tuouov." Ftrouq faith and persis- tcttco alouc can avail, for tht- old cuchztutntout is" not dead yct. “It is tho tnauicizttts tlu-utsclvus who utust resist corruption and dcsjltur." I Editorial Notes J The Earl of Yprcs born this date, 1858. *- N‘ >1 1k Prime Minister Chatubcrlaitt has callcd llerr Hitler's bluff, and it is for hitu t0 take tho cou- scaplvsllivci. 1K 10! * ‘k Wonder if .\lr._l. Wztltcrloucshcard zmything of lion. l-Y. .\l. llactlttttaltfs ultimatum during his roct-ut sujoltfll in Ututwa? 1Y- d‘ 1i’- ‘M I’, is tjtttu- cvitlt-ut that thc llou. ll. U. Bloc-- doualtl of Pictou, is not going to takc thc aban- donmcttt of his ltoutc town by thc Govcruturttt lying down.~ Uh. that wc lutd an lid. Blac- doualtl linking ztftt-t" the iutcrcsts of Clutrlttltc- town in the stunc cffcclivc wavy‘. 8'4 >l< ‘k >l~ The Central School trtttt- protuotcrs now real- ize that tuwxwpztpvt" atlvcrtisiug ‘lays. Futlcr tiu" Stewart and .\lztc.\lillztft govcrutttt-ttts. the Fair was ztdvcrtiscd cxtcusivcly in thc news- papcvs with cnuvdccl ztttctttlztttccs rcsttltiftg. Un- der the prcscttt rcgimt- .'tpparctttly thcy" econ- omizc-d" in tlfc wrong direction with deplorable rcsttlts, illkfll According to a usually wcll-ittfortuctl Ottawa corrt-spoudcut. one of the fczltttrcs of the ttcgo- tiatiotts hctwcctt Canada and the Yultt-d States is the attitude of Ihc lattcr country toward Cau- ztdzfs prcfcrcttcc sacrificcs to llritain to facilitate the .»\uglo-zhttcriczut treaty. lt is bclicvctl A111- crican officials takc the position that what Cau- adzt has to give llritaiu and Britain to Canada is their own affair. which is auolhcr \\'."t_v of say- ing that Canada will lmvc to look clsmvhcre than to the Ynitctl $tatcs for the compcnsatiotts shc rxpccts for hcr prcfcrcttcc rclcasc to Britain on such natural products as apples, pours and dairy and meat products. ‘ N‘ ‘l K 1N Paying editorial tribute to the latc Sir Audrcw Klacpltztil, the Rlontrcal Star says: ".-\ son of Prince lidwztrtl Island, to whose soothing laud- scajwcs and glorious" beachcs ltc turucd your ztftcr year for surceitsc from his arduous labours in his mature ycztrs, Sir Andrew catnc, ‘.\'llCll a youth, to this city, whcrc he was (lcstittctl to achicve his greatest successes, and for some time served as a ltumblc newspaper reporter. Herc and then he laid the foundation of those brilliant literary gifts that won for him renown in later life." (Not exactly tho "foundation." That was laid carlicr,—in an oldititne Prince Edward Island grammar school, and in Prince of Wales College.) it w at That is a dreadful picture of our laws and Legislation painted by Mr. W. F. Bentley, KC. “The task of cndcavorittg to asct-rtaitt what are the statute laws of this Province." he said. “is hercttlean: it is more, it is impossible. Lcfl‘ islators thctusclvcs may not realize it, aurl possi- bly some lmvycrs may not lmou‘, that thcrc are instances of statutes bcittg repealed, which had already been repealed, of statutes being amend- cd which had never come into force, of errors. repetitions, iucongruities, even absurdities. which have made the condition of our statutes a by- word. the subject srnt tur- frottl all parts of Camula during the thirty years l ltavc hr-ld the posi- tinn of secrctarv-trcasttrer of Ihc l.a\v Society. How any layutan can possibly umlorstmttl the laws of this Province passes compreheustotl.” a w t: w I known, for l have reccived and had In answer innumerable letters and tnqutrtcs on rm: (THARLQTTETOWN QQARDIAN NOTES BY‘ THE WAY Mr. Chamberlain produces his voice from sumewbt-re ‘m the re- gion of Ins collar. It is thin and scum.» "tutu, um. It is a comptletefv false fuctcx of‘ the mun.» from the ufauchcstcv Lituvvtllau. lnvcnliou has been so fur out- distancing toe ability to assimilate, amt m some cpzupfcuous ways ls becoming so (lcsuucuve that. even uetnocrtvttc governtncnts are asu- lng whether freedom will not be better served by sonte t"estraitlt.— Frcxtx the Christian Science Mun- not‘. There Is a rumor current In Ottawa, we lteuvu, that. Ruuci- mun was sent to Czechoslovakia to gain rxpcrictice as t1 prelltnl- navy to comtug to Canada to settle the difference between Mr. King and Mr. Hepburn. An archbishop, staying at the house of sontc friends, was greatly Impressed Ly the fact that. each morning, before brcukfust, he lteurd someone in the kltclten singing n ltytnn. 0n congratulat- ing ms hostess on having such religious servants, he was told". “Oh that's the cook's llvnm for boiling eggs. Two versts soft. flve verses l1a1'tt.—(3lnsgo\v Citizen. I A gratssltnppcr one Inch long ran make a standing jump front '15 to I50 timcs its ovvu length; and an ordinary flea, with legs but one twentieth of an inch long. can make our jump carrying his seven for’. m the all‘. ‘To equal tho lat-l tors pcrfortnuttt-c, n traiurtl athlete with legs three fcct long wouldl havv to jump over a building 500 feet higlL-Cltrlstlaut Sclcuce Mon- itor. When the Nnrmandic pushed her nose, last. week, into the French port, of Havrc, she had on board fourteen stou"n\va_vs—clcven Amcrl- cans, two Estouinus, one Mexican. Their capital. m Amrricatt (lollars, French francs, Estonian kvoous and Spanish pvst-tas totalled s17.- 85_ I-‘rcuclv ltuc officials disturbed by the it ldcnt, suttl the number of stowawa, sot an Atlantic crossing record,—l\‘c\v York Times. The removal of the Inonring musl- fol" dirfgtblcs front St. I-Iuborfs all‘ base at Molttrcatl closes Can- ada's part In turslup ltfstorv. It; was erected at. cousirlorttblc cost. when cntllusitmtt ran Iilglf for un airship service across the Atlantic. Only one airship was cvt-f" motlred In Cttlmvltl. The flrsc and last was the R-IOO. 'l'.‘hut was only olght. years ago this tuotttlt, but disasters to the giant. craft lmvv st-otnlngly stopped the progress of clir1ulblcs.—- Brandon Sun. We never expected to live Io see the day uhcu young Filipinos would be found ptckvuug In a strike an old cstttbltslu-tl Antt-rican place of busincss, but we ltuvc wit- nessed It. more than ouct: during the last four vcftrs. San Frau- cisctms of old Amoricatf stock, have you 10st your tnmthootl‘) When Dennis Kcurucy began ltolcl- ‘mg tnctztings on Nob Hlll, gletuuml- ing that the rcsitlsncc- erected there should be seized by the municipality, hr was titrnwtf luto jail. and his followers soon desert- ccl him. If the Sun Frant-tscttus of today had the guts; that their au- cestors possessed. thorn arc :1 few’ little Dennis KCllflltflVs of tho pvt-s- ent hour who would gct thrown into jull. Some of our readers nurv not agree with us, but we are nmre and ntore convinced that. eventu- nlly we shall all src that, the only hope of preserving," American tlentocracy will ho found m grttittg out our guns anti swords and using thcm valiantly -- San Francisco Argonaut. Chicago's learned Jutlge Borrclll lately gave those ht-a\"enl,v' Iwltts, corned bcof uuvl caumttgc, the ac- colade of lus (ltslingulsltetl favor in a case before his cottrt, Au indign- ant ltouse-vvife hart brought, suit. against. u ncxt-ctoor neighbor because a vcttt-iltttitig fan in his kitchen blew cooking snu-lls into her bedroom, Having lteard the evidence of all"purtu=s, the judge wont to the scene of the artiflcully impregnated breezes and sniffed the kitchen odors (ltspetvsetl by the cle- fetltlunt lb lllS unnpprccuttive neighbor. They were readily ident- ified as the vcrltnble nrotna of corned bccf and cabbage. The judge brcathctl Hum invcsiallcally. Returning to his courtroom in t1 blissful ntoocl, ho jarottoutlcod a legal bettedictlolt on those pur- adlsafcal odors of which he had parlaken. They were desirable odors. The)‘ worc uppotlziltg odcrs_ Presumably by pcrvaclitig tho com- lniuanfs bedrootn they wore cou- dttctlve to happy tlrmuns. Cm-"c dis- missed. After that Solomonic dec- lslou he would be a rash, a cou- tumaclotls, lndlvlclunl who should speak dcrogabory ‘words of that. supcrnnl confection, corned bot-f vlrtuouslv wedded to cnbbngc. —— Clticago Dally News. Out ln the Irish Sea, half-way between Emgluttcl mid Itvlnnd, the Isle of Man seems to be witness- Ing the passing of its uuciout Manx lattgungc. A London curn-sjloudeut who has recently visited the Island wrllcs that fifteen j'eu1"s ago, 896 out. of a total populuLott of 50,000 could speak the mauve ltmguage. Prrscut t!€~t~.,-..r<:tt. in flu: realm of litcrattlre Japan's Gqvqmmgnt has issued the following Eydlfiitlgté flgtlre ltpdofngltztt towiii . - -‘ . l: »..i '< '~ - - - - - ' - ~ _ n "r m" can. I050 l5 ll" "ll/l If“ _ f" l" fill l" Ullmllllll tustructtons with a view to mamtmumg the na 65 years um m“, up when they l" i1 “Tl” "l -- ‘ll ill“ _l“l“'* [Mmllly ttonal morale: have passed there wlll apparently Supplt-tltutjt.‘ flow‘; l,» tit. wrttpr, can we t-X- I: Flvm-y mm-‘nfng. give prayers m the 1m- gsmllttetilg llttilftzrelbmtgitlry: ngOtlcolz/fxtltjtcéllt: pt-t-t ltopt-ttt". ~- .1. .tu :t;,{1- of maximum and 9mg] grand shrine and pray for the safety of cm value, me ‘langungp seems fies. ~ f"! ‘l t a. T. ' v ;'.l t‘. l“: t "nit " war ‘rics? ' ' ' lined l0 lflde BWIW llllfi P1 tllémflfy p\tr ttltt v t; v ‘ti’, ‘tit It‘: “ti: W] V m“ the uupcrtal family. l n i ‘d: o‘ the days when Mmmmen “gem a ‘ n "nwl" in "w liiil i‘ l ‘ l] "k I ' 2- Hm“ lllc nalmm‘ "l: Prflllfly on l" race apart from the English. tlu- v<r_v uttwl _ to" -.,~ --tt and Instr, arc re- (jm-g It} top pgoffclints are doing thelr gardul vult t-»|,t t‘ t, 1\ u utthhlugu, h}. s0 3L “rm-gm; m? domes and Pndrmnr for the lnlzgguéaggcarle asepposlstittgrgf: ‘lllccngld "lflllY- l“ ‘l " "l will" "l “Wlllilrhllll harmony of the family. nble John Kcwlcy. Archrlr-acrltt of u-ult “out. o _: t i rl tttzut-ttztl txvcv-"stttcs, or 4_ jjvg (m. a budget, pay cash, save regularly rglfnllrlllélfél;tgkfiaaswfl‘:‘a: ‘mf If‘ llbllllfll l ‘" “i ‘l "l"l"‘<'l"""l Wlfllflfe and buv national bonds. ctent Parllnmcnt on Tynwnld HIII » t] - ' it gt N w l ‘~ ~ I .'-- -l "."t' t, ' , v- y ‘ the‘ a d avo.‘ for‘; n_ In Manx. although vuyv frw of hf: l u pro p t“, up t “HINMIII ‘np-cpgtilitltta ‘5. \\ I311‘ Htflfllf‘ c" l n l‘ g thousands of ltcnrerst could under. <‘-l*_l‘- ' flllp i " ‘l ‘ H”) ‘l “l‘<\_ “_ 51W‘ hi“? tlT¢§5\"fl-_ stand hlm. Today he has reached soctrtv anoint; tttttn of unjust m- 6, Observe wcddtttg, funeral and other home a compromise and now roads In p‘ ‘l_‘]v",ip_, t. H W; ‘im Iv but mkmniv Manx only the tIIlcs and (tales I " ~ - _ , ‘ _ 3 f" - - P . - .- when they rt-celved the royal suma- Tbc qttr-ttltu ' '\~l~ -‘- f H“ R ‘WW-l! “"4 7. Reform the. had custom of late to bed and are oldnpfgnx race belonged. flouri-lvtlg culluw I‘ . 1 foruttlrlv hos ht-t-vt pm- m rise, _ gofdellcebsrlczgtrhsflaflfleglilllsflllltltff; fo-tcrwl to (‘ooztlvu-ztw v sulwtl on‘ or m sntall 8. Fconomtze on mctal. wool- cotton. Pall" Ifsheirmrn hml llttlo trouble In con- aud jlll\lll‘ft‘l_l t"\'<< "N"! f"lllllllllllllll"~‘_ ll“ and fuel and utilize waste and other buried Xgaséféenflgglpigflkgfg fo<tr~rr=d lll lw- t=t rtud vtwtvvtuz: cI-IHHHIIHIIPF things. It easlor to make themselves-under- nf putt», w at. wtr-lt- ~~ ,,ttt,..tt.t.- ttt-tt-tupt-tt scll- q, Fndrnvm’ to prevent fire and prcparc for 2200;;irlgalzheiflagglisggjrfgrgpps than éojtct-ittvu-tt owl tht- irt't\f~'fl~lftv of lllt-ir IlC- aft‘ raids. l " ___.__'_. ' wimp? '|'ttt~ ftutttw ttt’ liw-rxttttr". it is sttggt-st- to. Rcar thv- children to be strong in mind Collections of ltrrrln: twain In ,. , t. . . 1.. -t , - jf ypvvjllyp m. thud _Nt>w Brunswick last year amount- 'l- 'l'"|'ll‘ s '1‘ ""1 l ' -‘ l‘ “l- l s" _ - 7m‘ Y- _ _ _ ed almost to 4.200 hundredwelghts nm-tttf- i.» tj. Iflllldl: (or "uhat fhc llltlllHllS do n, l-lnve bodily exercise every day to tram sup lht; slfttttlxes chad azmarketed tt-ft w» d "w ill div ttlll lilcr tlrc dorlo.” . the mind and hody_ ' _ _ ' ,,f‘a}‘,'j; gm us‘; mvfge glflhrifillléc$g Tut» lt~tl ..,,,|,g~~p< of tnatoritlt-"ttc ctvtltzn- f2. Fconomlzc m drinking sake (rice wtno). of pearl essenct- which, In turn. Is tlmt av~ tpi-tt-tt tull :t~ touching the fulurr of t3. Be friendly to neighbors and help one fgfg L1nm:lif""e1c_ "mm" Fell"!- literntttrc; f'.'>', tltt- capacity for mental effort another. f‘ f < I!‘ p __ p f??? W " 7-1 . “a I A t} ' dirt it- , i ‘ I r A Naturalist’: , Calendar For l’. E. Island Compiled‘ during the years 1910-1937 With .1: short. check-list of’ Insects observ- ed durlng that. period.) tBy BLYTHE BURST Sr.) (Continued) NOVEMBER. “October turns the lctwus all brown, November blows thc leaves all down," say the Danes; but in our part of the globe chill November's surly blasts blow through trees leafless and bare. Nevertheless we ltavc irregular sprll.» of flut- ' "In- dluu Summer —.s0mc time during Notctnbcr, It may be only for a day or two, m" It. may lust, for o\"t-x' a wcck; and it must. be 100k- ed for. tthc ultclcnts tell "-ts> "just alter the first snow fllcs." When the wind lvauLs to the N,N.E., whth it often (toes at this time of the yrar. the snow It brirgs is “Eng- lish snow" with large moist flakes. altogether (llffcrctlt from the dry T)O\\'tlL‘l‘)' snow of the N, W. drift. It ls becoming more and more the custom to tlclay taking the turnips Into shellcx‘ till the first or even second wcck of Novctubcr —a very risky proccctling, Thctc is a blllrf that the Eng- llllll Novstnbrt‘ ., "cry gloomy ntontlt. and pcrltttps this impression has bcctt created by pessimistic 5- a poets. like the one who wrote- "No flo ‘ s, no birds, no bees, No-— vembtr!" In France they neld the bcllof that tht‘ gloom of the month ntatlo the Eitglislt tue1attcl1olj' and Inclined to suicide! The fact ls the Nowmtbsi- varies with the yrar and wc in tltc North had wot Nov- embcrs some jw-avs and fine ones in othrt" ’ rs. Tho fiut- November's oltvtt ca it'd a suggrstloft of frost rinu‘ in tlw tuoruiftgs. but never did thr ground become ltartl. We thus had um t-xtra tumult of frtrmhu: weather Iouc in Spring and one In Fall» while the young cattle could lie out all \\'lI‘tl(?I‘. But to come back to thr- Island. Nurctttbcz‘ 1st ls tho Feast of All Hallows or All Saints, in com- memoration of thc faithful tlcjlart- ell. Nov, ‘l, ISIS», wlnrl south, flue wcnthcr. [armors taking ln turnips. In the fields on Nov. 3, I927. I ob- served the following in bloom: Yarrow". Fall Dtutdclion. Shcphcrdls- purse, Barlrvarcl Daisy. Rod Clover. Crcc-pittg Buttcrcuj: and Piucnjlple Wcrtl lMatri arint. These had withstood the ltarrl frost of Oct. 28th, On Nov, 3, 1924 we had the first sncuv of the sctvsolt Nov. 5, l92l; this night a great. gale blew down the rafters of the Orplmuagc thclt in course of con- struction at Mount Herbert. During the mild wcuthrt" of Nov, 7. 1928 I noted a routmoti bat. hawking In the dusk and swooping round and round mo hottsonFitte ucather and flurrtcs of snow alternate-d on Nov. ‘l, I916. Drift and snow from the N.W Nov, 8. I015 This day, Nov. l0. 19x9. commenced :1 work of lovely wcrtthcr, with the wind South, In- dian Summer? Nov. l3, I915, was a clear day with the ground frozen at, mutt A flock of snow Buntings (the “Suotvflakrs" of Scotland. and (To Be Continued) l fllbat but of p bouts " 0v James l0, Barton, 771D. THE COMMON COLD AND TllE ALLERGIC COLD Perhaps you ure afflicted wlth frequent colds but you notice that while some 0f these colds seem to last only two or three days nncl remain up In the hcntl, others last for a week or more, and you cough and pzet up much mucous. If such be the ruse It. is possible that the light cold or ‘head’ cold Is not really a gemtlue cold. or cold due to infection. the symptoms belng due to some substancc—pollcn of plants, house dust, or some chem- ical Irritant. Dr, Louis Tuft In his book ‘Clinical Allergy‘ states: "colds are not. acute lnfoctlvrc colds-woryza or the common COld-—IlIIl85S thcy bcgln with nu Irrltntlon In the nose: general nmlafsc-prostratton: discharge from tho nose, at first n thtn mucous, and later becoming llkc pus; nntl Irvvr," "C0lds” beginning with sneezing, followed by a ‘watery’ discharge from the nose, obstruction of the nose, pcrltups a cough, with no fever, are tnore likely to be nllcr- gic rltmIIis-rluc to allergy or sen- sltlveness I0 various substances- posslbly associated with ustltnta." A description of this allergic, running nose, asthmatic type of cold due to scnsltlveness to sub- stances should help us to rllstln- gulsh between It. and the "true or gcnulne common cold. “If sneczfttg Is followed by nasal obstruction (nose blocked), watery discharge from the nose, shortness of breath, wheezing and cough, the condition Is more Ifkcly to be a sperlflc nllerglc type of asthma, than If there ls cough, expcctora- tton from the throat and bron- chial tubes, followed by wheezing which ls more likely to be due to orfxzgrlilsms causing the common co . "'l‘he time of the attack of this allergic or senslttveness type of asthmatic cold Is Important. If It occurs at night. more may be something In the bedroom-dust. tulrtlm powder, feathers-wauslng the symptoms; whereas. If the nt- tack occurs shortly aftz-r a meal, food allergy or sensftlveness to foods should be suspected." The thought. then Is that the genulne mmon cold may begin with nose Irritation. Just as with the "allergic" cold", but. the com- mon cold ‘puts you down.‘ pros- trates you, the discharge from the nose ls thick. there Is cough mm expectoratlon, and then In l 1100 hmperatwo. _ _ mu “Snow birds“) observrtf on Nov. 14, 1929: they came early that year PUBLIC FORUM mu nun ll um h! ‘l’ m,“ p; uuupnntlutu 0| qnenl lulu-ell. Th Ohm- lothlown Gnu-dim don not le- nelurlly anion: lhn nvllllml 6' norrelnondrnlu. THE BULK ACT slta-"Ntx Gamble“, In Monday's Forum, takes a falr and senslble vlew of the milk question. Strict. fafmess to primary producer, d15- trlbutor and consumer ls all that should be required. The primary producers. mostly fat-titers. have to invest. capital In lands. hams. cattle and vehicles. He must be on the job at, or be- fore sunrise, washing udders. brushing cows, cleaning stables, ntlllung and conveying the pro- duct to the door of the distribu- tor. Fbr this he ls paid 2 l~2c a quart for raw mllk, delivered to the dealer. The dralet" bottles this, and delivers to consumers, for which he exacts 6 I-Zc per quart. r1115; pasteurtzes It, he demands -' c. Is this falr to any one? And If’ the primary producer complies with IO pr-r cent of Inc Civic Reg- ulutions where would his 2c or 2 1-2c per quart leave hint? Yet his 90c to $1. per I00 lbs, ls a price almost cotttlnent/wtde. fixed by the inexorable law of supply and de- mand. Butler. at almost a. Can- ada wide average, ls 24c pzr lb, Bllitcl‘ fat. at 27c per lb. v3.7 pr 100 lbs. mllkl barely allows the farmer the $1 urltich ho gets. And as putter fat controls the price of milk. that Is Its actual value. I am In fullest sympathy with "Nlx Gtmvblels" contention In fav- or of the farmer, but fall to flnd a remedy. It the higher prlce col- lected In the City went In the farmer, which It. does not, It could only benefit that small number who are fortunate enough to en- joy this patronage, Ieavlng the GYPM mass of producers out In the cold. And. making It worse, this S11"! 011i i5 by sanction of Act. of Parliament. ' To me a well cultivated farm presents a finer picture than the richest production of an Angelo, a Raphael. a Reynolds or a band- scer. I delight in nature and na- ture's beauty, and more than tho average I lfonor the farmer and wish him the best. measure of economic prosperity. But I would have it. on a. substantial busts." which for the most. part It Is. and not like the balloon. Inflated by legislative wind, burst at the pin-prick ancfscalter llS debris I10 bcsvpattet" lumtanlty. Money paid tn produce prices. even though high If not; lmmoder- ately so. ls scarcely ever a loss, and more often a profitable In- vestment. fcr the farmer In Ben- eral, ls generous, enjoys as we all d0 the lancfits of comfortable llv- hlg. and that money comes back to the pockets of the merchant and artisan with the certainty of the “bread cast upon the waters". With Droflt and benefit. to both. labor ll is also true "Is worthy n! its lure." Those who distribute. particularly the small dealer, whom it is browsed to eliminate, are not in a paradlse of ease. Thev have to work, like the farmer, and contend against. hardships. For thlsptltevl deserve adequate remuu. oration. Yct there is nmongst. them and leading them a different class who are (femauclfng more than their reasonable hire and unjust usury, " Ix Gamble“ asks how is tho farmer's hired man to "get rich unless ltls employer- gets a large share of the yrmflhs?" There was 3 time when earners were encour- aged to save for a xulny day, for old M19. and for something to leave t1 dependent fatnlly. Those days have gone by. Every extort of gcvern-ntents has been directed to cmbatvzo and discourage such tltrlft and savlng. ‘Those who 1n old times worked hard, economtzed in spending, and saved for such purposes. are now confronted wfth the fact that a very large part, o1 their savings wlll be swiped Into government coffers, and that the“ Is mcre safety ln the “eat drink and be merry While you have the mmlfly. and when shelved from WW1‘ the "old flee pension" wlll lflkf‘ 0W1” your futurc. And tn mechanic and labor, which in ‘WWW (lays saved from each sum- mers wages something for win- l8"§..§ilil“".lll$ l“t‘l“?°’“.°“‘ ‘S “l” . ' e e the Idle m winter. A hand m In times of depression and un. SIR ANDREW MACPIIAIL god-now Service your surcggsg flit/er pain. To save. to hell). lo guide, your le goal. I No sacrifice too great; no struggling soul Sought you In valn. Servant, of Art, who felt no lor- v1le touch; Who sought the highest, and who suffered much; Yet. stiftferlng. knew naught. of cravcn fear. as 7hr: sllll but We who have known you In sad hour and gay would faln pay tribute. Natlght. tltat we can say Could please you better from our hearts this day: "Your friends are here!" —8- Morgan-Powell Ireal Star. In the Mm- IIMITOIIS GNEIFN KIIINEYS FlllST ll SEPTEMBER gs, m, when Money away , , Unexcelled facilities for sending funds to all parts of the world-in any amount—by radio, cable, telegraph or mail are available at any Branch of this century-old Bank. World-wide faciltie: in every depanntem of banking m... BANK 5r NOVA SCOTIA ""9 OVER A CENTURY 0F BANKING SERVICE Charlottetown Albflny Keuslngfoxl Montague 0'Leary _ St. Peter's Summerslde Victoria F01‘ "Vitalittj alwauf ufe BAHMIN" PEKOE T EA employment most etnployers and wot-lumen, Including farmers, are contented II’ they can earn and get sufficient, to llve in comfort and measure up to the reasonable economic requirement-s of living. I mm, Slr. etc. LEWIS I’. TANTON- The Sun Has Spots (Exchange) About a fortnight ago a learned Italian astronomer predicted that violent eruptions on the sun would have a marked influence on this earth. ‘Ibere would be,‘ he sald, a perlod of storm and stress- a very serious one Indeed. It dld not. seem at the time llke a partlcularly reck- less forecast and there have been plenty of the ktnd before. So con- vlnoed are many scientists now a- bout the effect of sun spots on harvests, rainfall, lndtvlduul tem- peraments. anfmals, fowl, dIplo- mats. wars and dlsposltlons, that we may be up roacblng a, stage where we can st. back and measure our crises by solar phenomena. It wlll be qulte relaxing. It, shows, In fact, that the old Idea that the moon made us crazy —an allbl that‘, had romantlc lauslbllIty-Is outworn and belongs o lImbo. The moon may be poetic, but: It; has nothing to do with ‘crises. And t0 put. a final nafl In the cof- fln of the lunar theory, along comes Dr. Ernest Brown, of the Smfthsonfan Instltutlon In Wash- ington. to afffnn that. the moon Is even less tlpsy than the earth. It Is the rotation of tltls planet that varies —-not the moon's, The fact that we only lose about one sec- ond per year wlll not alarm any one. or glve weight to the once popular notion that some time In the distant dawn of time we were struck by another planet; and put off our axis. But we lose a second and at. times the earth adds about flve Inches per annum to Its girth. So It. must go back to the sun. It ls the culprlt. We wlll have to blame It for our troubles, and say, like the polttlzlans. that our lunacy ls "due to clrcumstanms entirely beyond our control." What Canada Did (Windsor star). 13111108 the past few clays, many cltlzens have discussed what Can- ada could do In the event. of the Brfttsh Empire being Involved In a war. If that happengd, cm“- dltms would be at war, because whatever Involves the Empire automatically Involves Canada. Canada could do a lot, Let us look at: the record for the Great WM- Not only dld this Domlnlon send men w fight In France, but Canada supplied materials and‘ money to help the cause of the Alltes 619.636 men vrho Eta? Iwefle en e n h C 1 these. saw ivergnlfftiiaifl yiugti o“ 59"’ f-‘el A d 424.589 outside of Ctfftada, men served Five hundred Canadlan factories from Halifax to Vancouver rowed by the Dominion ment ftom the Canadian people. AI least half of that sum was used t0 establish Britain. 62,000,000 shells overseas. were valued at; $1,100.000,000. Sixty-five million dollars “a, speut on the rapid construction t»: various vessels, ers, submnrlnes, other craft, Including tram, fretghters rut: Some $l.'lfl9,0000.000 worth of food supplies were hi b l, chiefly to ‘Brltafu. s PM u m“ Over $2,000,000.0000 WES bor- Govern- credtts to Grt-m, The cost. of the war to Catmds has been placed at $4,000,000.000 which does not. Include the cost la human llfe and sorrow and suffer- c. when that. tabulation Is re- viewed, It Is apprecfated that Cun- ada. dld her part. And. In the event of another war, ‘Canada wlll be called on again. :"'r—- .:._. ,.__ mil-t, ATTENTION Have you trouble with your staunch. If the IIISWBI‘ Is 3'95. then We ask you to try EVAN ‘S STOMACH MIXTURE Evlfllb Stomach Mixture ls fl- nreflsrl flnn of m. L. n. Evans o London, En land. and In sold for the m; mgm of Indigestion, Baal-chum, UYSIWPFW- Sour Stomach. Gastric Distress, u“) mgny 0"!" fllllnflils peculiar Io the stomach We ask you only to lry n, You wlll be delighted wllh the results, PRICE PER. BOTTLE 85c. MAUS F BLOOD FOOD or pale and thln o le. A Combination especfttpllyp valu- able In the treatment of those diseases where their origin l: lraceable to an lmpoveris‘ Condition of the blood. We highly recommend Macs Blood Food for the treatment of rheumatism and for those Mao have loaf; their lPPMItv Macs Blood Food wlll prove file restorative, TODAY. TRY IT PRICE PER BOX 50o We wIsIt all our customers l0 know that we now have In flock Marslllea 129;, Genuine French Cashlg soup, Budd's Pills —- 39c per box A. S. A. Tablets _. _. .-_. 49c per Bottle of I00 Remember The Two Macs Meets all Prices. THE 2 MAGS Phone 315 HICKEY’S BLACK TW 1ST CHEWING Mmuracruasn BY HIGKEY and NIONOLSUN