"‘4JOQ>QIEQQ-QG-\~ - - .-§-§-§§O-O-§§O§-§6-bb-AAAA4.LQ44J-Q4'01h . .' . . . . . . -» 1 1.. -.- _ 1 / "' PAGE FOUR CHARLUFTETOWN GUARDIAN THE CHAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded 1887) - President LieuL-Cul. W. Chester S. lllcLure Vice President .l. It. Burnett. FJ-l- Secretary LieuL-Cul. D. A. rtlucliinnon, 0.5.0. Editor and Managing Director J. it. Burnett, l-‘JJ. Associate Editor Frank Walker Sl'lSS(.‘l{ll"1'lUN RATES $5.00 per ycar tin advuiire) ilcliu-rt-d to City 5-1.0!) per year 1iii advaiicr) mailed to l’. EJsland _ $5.00 per year 111i advance) mailed to (‘aim-la and [L5 Alerubi-m Audit Bureau of Cireulatluus ".'l'Iie_.$Lrony1-st Jlemoip is’ ll'edlrer""thuii tI-c ill-alias! 11th."? :;.-‘_-- -- .. "-733: S.\'l‘l‘lll).\\', Alli-PSI.‘ ti, .1938 :€_K-.:4:':‘YLE . _ . ...._. ..D*—-———1 Sine The 'l'ree.1> "1_'1111\- 1.1- 1f -~ 1110 11-101."1.1:11-11l-.--;1i1--." (',.;,,,1‘,'1,-_ *1 1.11.11 111-1 l'i‘111-11-1.1l 11-11-111 is 1111-l-11:1-; s-iilt‘ lllls l-.‘1-1- 111' l\\‘.1_\‘ Ezizite '-11,1'-\111-,; .l\‘il\l. -111 :1 1\l:1-'..~ 1‘ 11-,-11l~'!-l1"s 11-11 h- .1~ , >11~.-tc'110. uli-llg --1-.1' ‘.l'-‘t \ 5-111» . ;;'-,.-_-_ pi-ui-"n; ‘.11:1l~ I-1-,.1..1--i--11~ 1111-111 is 111' .1011‘ traf- "1- 1- ‘1‘-1\ 1i -- l‘l 1111101‘ -"--\-'~. 111 1111- 011111111; 1l1-\\‘11 1-.-11.'i-1 {h1- cxtt-nt 111111‘ '-".‘111 i-ilh-n‘ 211-‘ l-Fllll" K l‘-111tllllIl'-\1",'< l1_\' llli‘ Z 711 1111-11‘ \\'.‘1l\1-. _ 1. .1-,' 1111- 0111111110111 th-‘v .'1r-‘ 111311111111: y-nxitlsidt‘ 'l"-11'1'. sccnis a ,-1i1-11 14 as i111- 1 .1-11-,11-1-11-1t_ ;1~ 1111- r--a-l< _ 11-0 ;1---.-d srifo roads. 1111'. “i11- we Jioull <acrif1c0 .1, 11111-11 '\10 0:111 have 1111111. .\ll cxcrcisc of mI-rc carc and -11 1."1~=. -. .1-, 11 i. fp- His Health Comes First ---- 1110 1'.11.~1 1l1-1t llon. \lr. lhinning is _,-11 111-1111-d rc~1 21rd 1‘--c1ip01":1t1o11.I1 ‘ from this ‘n 1:11-10 11114-(1 \l.~ '.h:il 1.11__._ 1;, \1,-..11;1“1,-., 111111‘-1l\;lQ<‘-$1'1‘l\(‘l‘$. ,.,_-- , " ,,',111-1,~,1-<_ _1-c1'--t.'1ries 11f st-rvlce and ‘,11 _ ,»;111-,;1.».-.-1-.-, m1",->g1':111l1-l1--11111l<. c, V111. 1.'-.1-.1-_ '11_\ ;1---l c11- otlicr \.l1‘l1-t_\‘ of tht‘ 111.... 1_ .11 41-.- 1\‘,-.1 1--.-l11 ril_\' \\‘--11l-l h1- s-a-luu-g 11-1 1'1"’ '11‘ -11 itli I111‘ l"lllIlli1‘t‘ .\li111~t--t'. ht‘ r1-— '1»- force if 110-"- 1"\‘-—~1'r-11t1 111111111114 111 1-0-1111": that “if and 11111-11 .\lr. Duu~ ' . h1- 111- :1ll->\\0d t0 lllYll‘? .11-1i.'111-l 111l1i<.1\\11 goo-l s'1‘1i.- --l his |~' ‘ -,. ,-,1 d111,; .-1- -,-,f'-1-‘.\:1-. y, t1.- “ F151,.» 1-1111-111-1-1 islanders are 011F1- ._,,. _,1-,- 1.,,11}1 1:1 l1-‘1il‘\'t‘ that this ivrirniitzf 11,1-,-.~:1r-". ll11\\0\‘--1", i1 0:111 11-1 1111 '.\l1'. 11111111111-41 collapse \\a~ 1'01)‘ l1--:1\'_\' ft‘<1l'>ll' z-it-‘l his rt-c-lv- 1-0 is not pcr~ c--1"--- -l =11 11-1-1 ‘.1. 1111111 T11 111111.11 h. lav-it" 1i1-":1~\'.r-- 11111-1‘. ~l1.-111l1l1-1' .. .1, H1111- (liu- i1- 'li err 111:1‘! 1-1- s?‘ 7,.1i1\l\" 1‘--11‘-.1"1l1‘1l nmhw] h, ,.. ,._1 \\-‘,1,-,1 11,1. 111,~~1.1-,': 111'11t-r1-rl~ r111ll> 1-‘010 rad '<---:l11~‘-111. ll1- l1.‘1~' a rifll? t" "X- pcrt this <1’ |'1"--1-1 lli- H1111 c-nisllfit-‘iits, as \.\,.11 n; (1-1 1110 pulf- 141-1101111111. \\'0 are all 1,‘.1---1-l 1o l1 111-11 l-1-1-c. 11-11 the right thing to = for-qr" that 110 is h-‘re. do 111:1 now (P11111111 Press Tribute I .._ .._.__ I111; \1‘.11'1n 1.11‘ n11- fr11ni 1111-, llllzuva 111111111111 --_\w1.,-1.1,g.~._1 11' 1-.,-.,1-1l\, and \"1lll1'l)11(l_\' al1v.-1_1'.~"1 ' g --1 l'-~'--l'/l~, 11111-1- is 1111: zist-uiisliing 11‘. 1.1.11 1, l‘1-i11---: l-I-lward island. -. .\l1". l11~1iv1~ .\. l".. .\1'.sc11:111lt ope-It'd .11; 11-111". .--~~i/.--~ in that c-"itnity. and 11-1-1- -.-,-.r-- 11-1 \‘l'lilllll7ll c.'1.~"--s on 111-- 111s -,11--\-1‘11---l with the 1111-1111-111111 'l‘:'--- _|11-l-.;1‘, in :1-"l<1i-1\vl1-d-_--~1i1011f. h--. i-.-;‘. Roi-fin;- a\~i/.1-s in Kin-J's 1.111s and in all that ti111-- the . i11-‘111-lcd :1 rriniinal chart-v. i‘. l. a 111-1.; l'1lll11l'l\'Ill1l(' record. one 1, ‘h-d in (Etna-la. \\'l11-1'-.-— r 11f 1111110 giro-w i111" his ‘w l.-1:"-'-.~l111,1 '_-.‘1\'1i tlu- court Jlll ad- "-1‘ t-u-rist- 11311111‘. "lu- t'll\llllll had iu-lgr- 111.‘d.i|1_1_- :1 spcccli t 1 15 511- " ca~- <1. l ‘-- J-l. --f ‘.111- 1-1, .1 "'1 1- -----‘1~1--11<. "l- 1 11-: 11s t-1lr1- 1-1 1»\|-l.‘i1n l\'i11--_'s ('-11---‘-.' --1‘ 1"'---1l---.11 fl'<1li1 0111111» of ztssi/c- 1‘--1',1"'. 1 "-1i‘11‘11‘ lili- 1-01-1111‘ -1l' 111111 111's‘?! 1,|11,-_\ -- -. - 1-111 -'--11'- 111111-111 that 1i1.1lt1-s ;1'11l, .~,- - 11-1 1---‘11t 11f 1111111.. plus-ills. 11;» ' ' 1-.-",1,1 ---1-1ll 11-11-11l't1--11 111i .1 11-, 1f 1',:-l"1 11- -,-1.1-t5-"1l -l1ll--'11ll‘<-~ i1- ll‘-‘" 111v 1-1 1 -~I11‘1 --.I111:11.-l rzirerr. \\"l1.‘1l1‘\"--1' 1'11" -‘\11l;1l1"1'i--1 '."--" l\'1, X 111111111‘ 011111‘! 1101s It -f .1 ‘"111 for 1111- \(‘\‘-'llll‘1‘lllll i. a-nu-‘l-nig for 1111-1111111 " i11~t-‘.--l and 111.11 -1, 1, 1,111- 111;1- 1111.1“ -'-111t-1i11--11' llll<lll‘.(‘l'[1t'(‘l\ 111‘1__-;<~ .\r.~--n1- . ~l‘llt‘lllf“lll 111011111111 that. there ll7l\‘f‘ l1--111 1:1 ' llllfll tr-als in 1110 tU-uuvy for <i‘\'f‘llll‘l‘l "~- \\ll-‘i‘(‘.'l~ 110 was 1'1‘fr~1‘l'l1l<_‘_' -~ I1\<"l‘ which lir- pr0~i1lcd ill ' 1'0 ‘-,‘1\'1- 111-011 -1---".'-si--1i:1l criu1i~ of 111-: only 11:11 ".-'1 '11 111111-11 r-thi-r 11-1-11il10rs F11p1-11111- (--111't l-'-'1<‘11 pl‘ it'll. .\'1-\'f‘t‘lll-"lc<e_ ill-- r1------1 -'< .1311 -1 .1-11~1111311 11110. pr-ilirihly ull~ 11-"11-11 i" --1-~ -~1-‘ of (‘zni-t-la. and justly nicrils 111/; 1111 11-1 3 11-1 -1 7- 3-1, 1111- 1n:ii11l:1u-l 1irr-ss. All Prolr-r tioiiisiv Now 1.\"- ~ ?_1 1'1 (‘-,11'1-l:1 is onc to fin-l cor-i- ~.7.- ~ 11- "- 1-1~-1i1-11i.'-‘ (‘i-rtaiyilt- uni in 11"‘ l ‘ ‘ l --1-1-1--1' 1'1‘ (‘V711 1. whose 011111-01"- ? ~ - ‘ .1 f‘ 1- 1- policv of tariff 11:i1'Q.‘1i11- ‘~11 -- ' - - -11,--1110r-l 11v 11-111. hi1‘, lh1t1~ '"' at "1' 'l'l1i- 0111112’ - 11110 11f 111.1111" adopt» 1 .,,,.,.,-1,_ 1 l ' T 1' _ -1».- 1.111" 1-01-11 cr111101n11r1r.‘1r\" -» " “ ‘ 1 11f 1'--1- tin-rs," ‘.111 what zl- ' " til-H- stai- 1- --' -‘- -,-- . it <r‘l‘lll~ llirit (11-11; :1 1 1-1 .‘-1----111r-'-1:{f-1-- T‘1-11l01-ti11n_:i111l 11:11a- l-v-aiqh‘ 1-:----1-i~ 1 11-1 11-1 t-11---:11- 111- ‘l-r- hing Government to sec that they get it. The fir-rm the subject: taking that action. l-rani ‘lu-pnry Commission Report rgggmmgnd. ed ziganist such an action, and the Prime .\lin. istcr zinnouucerl that his_Governmcnt was 11m. part-d to follow the advice of Judge 'I‘urgcon. \\ l-at cruise-d the. l-ovcrnniciit to change its min-l and rccr- te an active \\"he:-t Board? Principal- — ‘ . 1 - ., ," _ ~ l_\ tn,- p- lslelltt. \\1tli \\lllCll the Pools remand- c-l lwI-I-‘cl-on for the “cstern-gra-n producers. l hr‘ dplcct-irates of the Pools are \\'(‘Sit‘i'l'l farm-- Pl"- //"‘\' f"? H"! IHI/‘Yrtv-vz-d 11y llir finer/nu! -11'.-r111.--‘11/.1" 111 favour of m1 11/1011, mif-rnl-"clcr! 111111-1-1-1‘ 1.1111] l-Ifmi rt-r-rrliif- of 1/10 frm- nf .$‘11/-/-I-- 11-11! lh-lzi-z-l-i. 'l‘hes1- n10n are rcalists. 'l'h1-_v 10111.11" that 1111d-=r 1111.11.11 conditions an open mar- l-Pt \\"--ul-l inr-an ahysmallv low prices. 'I‘/1r1- .- .-‘/1..-/ lbw-lr/lioii ix 111-1-1/011 l-v 1hr 111-11131 f-rn- l-vl ll-ri- arr iirlrrl-tincri lo g1"! all Ilic /'*'-"-'-"'-‘11 -""~Y-\‘ll'l-‘ for I/ir rt-cslrrn _fr1r11.1rr." as zuni-uinccd in yesterday's 01111111 111s; \\'l10at prices arc to he pegged at - ~ :1 l‘l1~h0l_ ‘ -f1’t1'-‘l‘\‘, l\’c~'11'1. 1 Editorial Notes I \'1‘lr1s-|11-"/ rlic-l this date, moo. ‘ * 1 C 1311-1111-1111‘. S111 bun-lay after "iirinirv. I 4 1 U It has l-ecn suggested the hest sanctuary for the lion. and .\l1"~. lhinni-ig while here would he 11-,-\crii1n-~11t llou~0 whcrc deserving and other llClli-itfills could he kept at a safe distance. 1F tll 1K * “Yishiugton statistics released last week dis- closed that 11111-1114 the past l4 months the US. has sold $1_1.,'-)5.--o11 worth -1f finished war ma- lcrials 11- (liina, $1),3$.1,0oo to jz-pain. No 11-1111- d0r the lied Cross cantpaign proved a failure. 1r 1r »- x 111111111411 the generosity of the Carnegie Cor- 111111111011, .\lc1iill Liniversity‘ has embarked on an .\<lult l-Iducatiou scheme confined to rural Que- llcC. Professor l1’. .-\. Sim has llf‘('l’l appointed di- rector. and will make l1is headquarters at Len- noxville. >1- 11 11- 11- . The stock i11.'11"l<rt jitt-‘rv cc-ndition through- out lituopc- and the Continent is a reflection of the. international .111‘1li1ical situation. Few real investors are seeking stocks-or honds; and very 11111111‘ who have tin-m are RlTfli-l of the consc- qtn-ncf-s of an 1111thr0al< of hostilities. "(iive p-"arc in our time" should hc the earliest [WliliUil 111' all iii an_\"\va_v associated with the storlt mar- lccl. n- 11 >1- 111 lfiftyfive co11n1ri0s \\"ill he represented ivheu the Youths (‘oi-gross opens on August l6 in New York. Germany and ltaly alone will not sen/l 1l--l0g:110s. liighty- dclcgates are expected from llanarla. 5; fro-u iritain, 25 from France, 25 from (‘zeclu-sl-iiaikia, :5 from Chile, 13 from 111-: Argentine. 01c. .-\ girl Scout who crossed the _1:1p:1110<-- lint-s at Chapel to save a heleagitrcd ‘hint-so 1111tpost, is heading the group from 11111111, while .\'pain is sending l2. including a girl of 1.1 who has fought in the barricades be- fore .\l.'1d1'id. =11 1- 1- >1- lt used to he said hy Upper Canada politicians that the amhition of most hiaritimers was a free ride on the lntercolonial. Evidently the idea still pr-rvails zimoug certain youths desirous of get- ting on in the. lloiniiiion. \\'hcn they pleadcd guilty to 1'l(‘k‘Ll.<2lliOllS of stealing rides on the 1'.\'.R. trains from the liaritimcs to Kiontreal, 11 youth fron- (Yaniphr-llton, .\'.1i., and Sydney. .\'..\'., were fined $1 and costs \\'itli the option of r1110 day in prison 111' 1111110 'l'r-trcan in Montreal F111101-ior (Eourt. The group was arrested at 3.30 in the 11111111111: when thc. (TNR. police-scarchcd a longduiul freight train at the cit_v limits. 11 11- 11 1- Prt-niicr llnpl-pis is not at all rlisturhcd 11y the rc~cl0ctio1i of Vi‘. Godhont as loader of the [jut-lice Lihcrals. and told him so the other 1iight1 111111-11 he challengcrl him as head of the old 'l‘a.s‘- chcrcau gang to allow one, o1" other of the Lili- '.<l2lll\C men-hers t-1 rcsign and run in his 111.110. lluph-ssis claimed 111111 his (iovcriuiicut ill two hricf years had 110011 ahlc to aCC-unplislt a grt-zit 111-111. it hall promise-l to malt-e agiicul- turc 1110 l\.'l<i\ of its. policy, and who ivould, or could dcny that this promise had 110011 kr-pt lo 111011-1111‘ :111-l spirit? 'l'lt01'0l1:11ll1--01i \"11t1-df§..'7.~ 0011,0114- l'--r rural vrcdits. and this had rchahil 111-1111 1"u1':1l lift‘ in thc 1-r-1\‘i111‘1-. ll had 111-11111 that 0-111101111111-111 was 11-11111; rarricd to thc farm 111.111 nun-iripzil zin-l sclii-ol lav-s 1v1-rr- 1-1-1111; 1-; 1. tl-‘il 1111- flow 11f 11-1-1101‘ iv-‘nl from tlu- rurzil 1111-1-111-11. to 1110 1"i1_\. '|'h0 0nd of 1'11t‘.‘1l cn-dits ha-l not 1100i- ~001- shouid furlhr-r moncv 111- 1"<'--|111'1'0-l. said the Premier. it was 0==0ntial that thr- fziruicrs he kr-pt on thc land: that was the first task for a Government which under- >111111l i1: 11111)’. cral l (‘in I‘ ll! ill l! 1t The reality of the war situation in "Britain is \'1-r_\" manifest, notwithstanding the fact that cver_v- thing 1111twarrlly is going on as usual. Thr- coun~ try has hcen divided into loo parts hy the liomr- flfficc s0 that in event of hostiliti s any one of thc lhrcatciicd districts may he 1 110d of air raid -lal1:_'0l‘. The llomc (lfiicds air raid prc- cautions -l0p;1rlii10i1t has rlrzifte-i a code of four signals to 110 use-l in .‘\rp (Air Raid Prcvcntion) work in cvcnt of war. llv lhc i.'o.sl (ifficc d0.- parln-ct-fs 1011-1111-1110 system the .-\rp office will scnd only one ivor-l for each drgree of warning. 'l‘h0 word “yr-lloiv", sent confidentially t0 s01- r-ftc-l 11011sons in the threatened area, would warn 111-1111 that a raid might cit-veto;- in thcir terri- tory. if the local authorities rcccived the. word “re-l" they ivould <01 all precautionary measures in action. sounding a general alarm with sirens or whistles for two minutes with hlasts broken cvcry few seconds h_v two-second silence periods. 'l'l10_\" would slaiid h_v'on receipt of the word "arr-en", lvnoiring that the raiders had passe-l i-ut rr-niz-iuing rc-miy for their possible return. 'l‘h1- word “wl1ite" would put them at casr- again .1111l prompt th0m to sound thr- “ali cl0ar"_signal of a continuous whistk blast lastigg tug and Ranch Review, Calgary, has this to 53y on _"lher_e lS no doubt but that the persistence with which the Western Pools have agitated for an‘ active \\ heat Board and a. minimum wheat price this year has resulted in the Government Certainly the Turgeon Royal NOTES BY TllE WAY After a hundred and fifty yeln of peace with Canada it ls unfor- tunate that u difference has deve- loped with Bermuda, our even old- er British neighbor on the south- east. Bermuda, for Americans, is tlic land of perpetual honeymoon. A squabble 1S the last thing we ivisli to import in exchange for our animal crop of brides and bridegrooms. An American-flag ship line, establishing regular serv- ice to the islands, inaugurated the practice of accommodating passengers aboard during the three day stay in the harbor. This a s- t-d Bermuda liotcl ouaiersl ‘flie l_'(l\‘f‘l'll0l‘-g0llf?l't'tl urged a. bill on tlic- local parliament outlawing" the arrangement. Our stale depart- ment promptly protested to Great Britain that this ivould be dis- crimination zigaliist. American ships. The bill was lliereupontab- l0-l. but. Bcrmudafis sending a dele- gation to Washington to settle the "hotel ship" if possible. 1t is dif- ficult lo set- wliy. After r-ll, we sent Bermuda quite a bit of bus- iiu-ss-aboul all there is \il(‘l'C. 0f last year's record tourist iiivas- iou 55.687 cum- by ship from the, United States and all 110.111. to ho- tels. Hotel life in this Atlantic Eden ls tilcastiiit. 'l‘li0i"c is no rea- son to think those who can afford Dr. Manion’: Self-Portrait ("J. B. M." in tho Winnipeg Free Press) journalist. whose somewhat pen left sore Dafoe, ls editor-ln-chief. ' Mr. Mc- for “sofhsoaplng” the new Cori- servative leader. This makes his graphy doubly interesting.) Dr. R. J. Manlon has delivered several speeches in Ontarlo- since last month's convulsion of nature at Ottawa made his leader of the Con- servatlves, and probably every city in the country 1vlll have a chance to see and lu-ar him in the next year or two. Meantime it Ls possi- ble to get a, pretty‘ clear picture of Dr. Muiiion from his book. He has, in fact. written two. “A Surgeon in Arms" came out short.- ly after the war and ducrlbed avoid it. Restricting ' ‘villi! obliges them tn sleep on the slu "ould not force them univillingly ashore It would only keep tliein home. So litniteda. , hospitality might even .\'-ll' a i-nild resentment in nioro fortunate Aiii- r-ricaiis, nnv." llz-riru ' most. 1 ardent advr :. S "cly that. isn't the road to rcszprocit)‘. On such an issue we liopc the island will not remain “tlic still vex'd Bermoothcs. New York Times. Forty-eight tat huff envelopes have been posit-d from nu office herr- addressed to Cli-arlie Chap- lin-but the great c-inicdiail will never get them. The same thing applies to the 3'1 fat buff envel- opcs sent out, zi-ldressezl to Stanley Baldwin, and 111 1110 ll) addressed to Winston Churchill. Not one of them will ever plap ilirougli the lctter~box0s of either l-Jarl Bald- win or suitcsnitiu Churchill. l-‘or the envelop were 11011-1" 1111-11111. m reach "the" Charlie Chaplin. "the" Stanley BfllllWil‘, "the" Winston Churchill, only 41.1.17, and l0 other Cliaplius, Baldwins, and Cliurclulls, respectively. 'l."li1-se bearers of famous names are among the 2'7,- 0011000 workers on 1110 lists. of the Ministry of Labor Records Office at Ken", which has just issued new unemployment. insurance books to about halt‘ that number. The rec- ords reveal that there are nearlv 800 V/altei" Scntls and more than 150 John Bolls in Britain to say nothing of 406,000 Smiths and 305,000 Joncses.—Christain Science Monitor. “T-that Reporters Harry McCormick and Maurine Osburii of the Dallas Ncivs found out it was possible to make as much as $18 a day selling pencils 1vli1le posing as blind iiiendlci-nts, 11-1: wonder how they managed to i t what must have been a strong temptation to swap report- ing for pcncil peddling. —Sh1ning Lilies. Premier informed a United Australia party rally that. a sudden federal election may be precipitated at any moment. As the last. general elections u-ere held on October" 28-lr1sl, and the Govt-ru- meut, comprising the United and. Country parties, was returned with 45 members, one less than be- fore the appeal, and the Labor party secured 29 seats, the Prime Minister's statement is a bit puz- zling at. this distance. Perhaps the Australians like elections on any 0XCllS0-——0l‘ none- Montreal Ga- zet-te. Over_a. ton of apples yearly has been picked from a trce in the orchard of Mr. T. Gibbs. near Darkan. The trcc, over twenty yours old, has grown to great. height, and many of its limbs are thicker than the butt of an ordi- nary applc tree. lt i5 expected to produce another ton of fruit this year. Mr. Gibbs once offered two employees a ease of beer if they could strip the tree of its fruit in one day. Commencing work curly in the morning they trierl to win the wager, but tit night, there was still a mass of fruit on the tree.- Australian News Letter. The government of the United States will give no aid to lit-r re- turned volunteers from the Span- ish elyll war. The acliuinistratton in Washington has moperly announc- ed that. it fins. no official interest. 1n the fate of tlic nicn who left; that country in order to further Communism, whose avowed objec- tive is the destruction of the eon- stitution and ilie sovir-tizatiou of the Uliiteti States and all other countries 1n which capitalism still prevails. Between four thousand and four thousand five liundrccl U. S. volunteers 1v0nt over to asist the governuiciit of Spain. All wore YCflS. All hut five of tlicsc, who paid their own wny to Spain, wr-re Wlll "V" 11)‘ the Communist 1iarty in the Uiiitr-ri Stan-s, or by 111w“. cies connected with ll. As it. costs about $2011 tn sn-l 11 man from that 0011111111‘ 111 thl- l-‘iaiiiro-Spatilsli border. Aiin- "an (‘12111111111111-111‘ and their .s_\u1p:1ti11‘.:ci.; liavo 11111;,» Fill-lit. around 511111111111) n1 1ir-1iiiotiiig the 01111.10 of Moscow in the Span- ish (‘lVli war. Some of it came from public collections 11111101‘ humane l‘fllll0\1l'l‘-\'t;f‘l=- Tlrr-ndnn Daily Sun. ‘Great Britain is our leading for- eign market. Lust -_vear we sold he!" nearly our-sixth of all our ex- ports. This is nearly as much 55 we sold to all the‘ countries with which we noiv have trade agree- ments, except-int! Cuba. which is in a special elnss, nnd Canada, which would eventually be in- volved in any agreement with Great Britain. ‘The United States is, at_ the same time, Grcat Britains most important nou- Empire market. Bot-h countries clenrly have much to gain from Roy “fires-meat that would fncll- itate lrarle ‘bctsveru thcm.. Th0 dlflflflliflllflllfi of thr- Analo- Amcrican treaty arc inurh rom- pllcntrzrl liy cniiflir-lnu British and Dominion ihl(‘I'PSl1'~'. But. tht-rc is H0 Tea-son to rrtznrtl the problem as insoluble, and evrry reason to hope thataysolutlnn of it. \\'|li be found. Britain and the United States, sharing between them a fourth 0f the world's international commerce. have too much to gain from an economic point. of view to risk f-itlurc. Moreover, the suc- cessful negotiation nf a trade agreement beta-eon the two lending democracies would, even ln its lim- ited field, serve as a needed reaf- flrmntlon to the rest of the world of their common tradition of lib- ernl ideals. ln-tlt-nir-rs; nnd c1il- uirc New York Times. . Medical Corps. ‘in about twenty years of his experiences in the Carine-tan In i936 he pub- lished "Life is an Adventure", sub- t-lt-lcd on the cover “Autobiography of the Honorable Dr. R. J. Manion. MC." It was the product of leisure time he had after lir- lost. his seat in tiai-liament in 1935. his only defeat. public life. This second book is highly recom- mended to anybody who is curious about the nature and quality of Dr. Mar-ion. Without being exact- ly confessional. though lie is can- did about lapses from grace, it is a complete self-revelation. ion does not write brilliantly bu‘. he is fluent. Hts words tumble out ln a cascade. He ls never stuck for a story or a comment. The book leads as though written at high speed. with no pauses except to look up u, detail in a diary or rack the memory for a name. The re- sult is what photographers call an informal portrait. To write an autobiography at all. fluent or otherwise, is an unusual performance inCanada. Not many Canadian politicians have done it. Of the five prime ministers since 1900, only one-we write from mem- ory-has so far produced mem- ories and he bad reached his anec- clotage at the time. Dr. Manion brought out his self-portrait at 55. There are many men in Canada. he say-s by way of explanation 0n page one, whose life-stories would make “entrancing reading" if only they would sit down and write, ivho have encountered "most ex-cltlng adventures" on their way to success. “It is indeed a. pity," says Dr. Man- ion, “that more of these leaders have not told their story.” That remark, on the opening page of the book. ls possibly a key to Dr. Manlon. l-le ls chiefly inter- ested in personality and character. A psychoanalyst. would likely say. after reading the autobiography. that. Dr. Mani-m is a pronounced extrovert. All through the book he seems to be in the company of a large number of people. He re- of their hair. their accents, the funny stories they told, the effect he had on them. and their effect on him. A few of them he disliked violently, some he loved. He seems to react. strongly, in one way or the other, to most people he meets. That ls by no means true of all have held the prime minister's of- flee at Ottawa. since 1921 are both, we would say without having a probably neither liked nor dislik- ed a. great majority of the people he met but never noticed them at all. Neither Mr. Bennett nnr Mr. Mackenzie King ls in the least gre- garious. It. is hard to of beer. Dr. ter a few glasses be constantly Manlon seems to swapping stories. man race. He ls n convivial per- son. That means simply that he ts closer to being an average man than most party lenders Canada has had recently. In fact, after going through the autobiography. one might say that Dr. Manlon IS the average man-greatly ma-tmlfi- ed because more energetic. cleverer and bandsomer. All his tastes. emotions. opinion and aspirations are 100 per cent. normal. There isn't an oddity or quirk of any kind in his nature. Not. in his book at. auv rate, and no man can write 357 panes about himself at. Dr. Man- fan's spend without giving himself away. About the only unexpected item in the whole autobiography ls Dr. Manlonls oplnlon—as a physi- elau and as a light sleeper himself ~-that. the ollzht-hour-sleep theory is a myth. Five or four will do just as wcll. says. Dr. Mflllif)" ft ls a matter of habit. Apart from that. Dr. Manio normality itself in every particular. Hr is a strong family man. He zirlnilrrs physical Di'0Wf“5 a-ncl de- ilzhtr-d u-lic-n n youth in his own expertise as runner. high-jumper and h-ockey player. He. is a great- bc-llevrr in common sense and in thr- snvtnz lzrace of humor. He en- joys the beauties of nature. parti- cularly sunsets and the Canadian ivoods tn October. He believes that most people. including politicians. are honest and brave. He likes ti-a-"elltinz and when he is abroad he visits with enthusiasm the historic sites and the art galleries. He is fond of poetry and his juogttggs m their work reventu them from netting cxerc se are in error. All the exercise they need grows out nf their household duties instead of being prevented by them. for the tests showed that. every year. with- out. leaving their homes. they walk a distance equal to that from Bos- ton to San Francisco, or more than 3.000 miles. Other distances record- ed were those of a golfer who av- eraged etght and n half miles do- tniz eighteen holes; of a dancer in a theatre who registered a mile an not; of a. chorus girl who covered fnur and a half miles a clny on the stmze: of n doctor in n hospital who walked eighteen miles daily and of letter-carriers who walked twenty-two miles and of u. police- York Bun. Th1- advlce given by the Humane Society not to bother do s in hot weather ts good. The lltte fellows 1n the fur conta must sometime-i fcr-l nlmost m1 happy m1 humans Unlawful " Q11» complain that would under the name circum- ("J.B.M." are tho initials of Mr. J. B. McGeeel-iy, brilliant Liberal we spots all across Can- ada. in his descriptions of the Rowell Commission hearings which he at- tended as a feature writer for the Winnipeg Free Press, of which one of the Commission members, Dr. GCRflhy, politically, has no reason analysis of Dr. Munlonfls autobio- memlbers t-hem in detail. the color politicians. The two gentlemen who psycho-analyst's license, highly in- troverted persons. Dr. Manlonfis predecessor-An the Tory leadership imagine either of them swapping stories af- He likes the hu- man fourteen miles a day. -New , 1n tbo book. alonl with bit-H 1m Shakespeare and Kean-s. 111011169 James Whltoomb Riley's verse which any: that. the man. while is the man who can smile when everything goes dead WWI-G. and that other encourallng stanza! ‘there's so much good in the worst of us. And so much bald in the best of us. ‘that it hardly behoves any of us To talk about the rest. of us. On the philosophical side Dr- Manlon does not get past. Mr. Riley and the author of the lines Just quoted. He ls what used 1.0 be called a. sanguine man, too nealtliy and full of red blood to be bothered 1much by doubts, fears and medl- tatlons. From his book it is evid- ent that he has always enjoyed llfe tremendously and will continue to enjoy it. Naturally he ls, like every- one else who becomes a party lead- er or writes an autoblogmpny, an egoist but his egoism is exprused in action and enjoyment of experi- snce. It. Ls remarkable, - “ mg that. Dr. Manion has been in politics slime 1917, howhttle argument or reflection on debatable questions is contained ln his book. One might have expected u-hole chapters on is- sues of the day. Dr. Manton gives his last fifteen pages to a state- ment of his political views but this passage reads like an afterthought. tacked on to the story becauseDr. Mouton, as a rising statesman. thought. it ought. to be there. In parliament he is known as “fighting Bob" and an able wrapper, but that DP» Min-.- —we think after reading his auto- bfogtaphy-is because he takes a healthy and robust delight in any kind of battle, not. because he takes debate very seriously. He thinks- he almost says so on several pages —tha.t- a lot of parliamentary ora- tory-ls so much hokum and wind music. Again a very normal opin- lon. 1 ' The book, we said already, is valu- able for its picture of Dr. Man- ion as a happy, vigorous and amt- able citizen, with an Irish temper to which he confesses, a warm heart and a gallant.‘ adventurous tem- perament. It is also worth read- ing for the story. Dr. Manion has had an interesting time. As a boy he was a member of a pioneer family in western Ontario. As a youth he studied medicine in Can- ada. and Scotland. He served tn the war as medical man. He was first elected 1.0 parliament in l9l'I —-n0mlnated while in Rance-and stayed there tlll the party debacle of 1935. Dr. Manioivs chapter on lils medical work ls a high point in the book and discloses another trait ln his nature. He is frank and without pomposlty. He mentions surgical mistakes and giving "in- nocuous pills to patients who need cheering up, says that, most cures like most deaths are from natural causes. and ls in general-though he has a proper pride in his pro- fession and its good works-more candid about the mysteries than many doctdls. There are quotable . passages from that chapter but this piece will wind up with snatches from Dr. Manlorrs observations on public life. His estimate of prime ministers is interesting. “Of the five prime ministers known to me." says Dr. Manion, “Slr Wilfrid Laurler was probably closer (closest?) to Slr John Mac- donald, who was my ideal as n leader. Slr Robert Borden was the soundest. Arthur Melghen was the ablest dabater that. the House had in my time. or perhaps at. any time since confederation. R. B. Bennett was the most brilliant. And Mackenzie Kim: was the best politician-At by that, term implies a skill in Winning‘ elec- one. Of Mackenzie King he writes further: “speaking at far too great length, and often burying his argument in wordy detail He has never been very popular either tn the House or in the country. but he has been both very successful and vt-vv iucky, an opportunist pm- 0x001- lence-and. after nll,‘succesa ts the real measure of leadership in politics . Personally. he lacks many of Laurierfls qualities, such as the lat- tet-‘s ability to mix with and at- tract hls followers. nor is his sense of humorsohlghlydeveloped. though he is a very kindly com- panion in society and shows no ill will-indeed consistently shows real friendliness-to his political op- ponents. More-over, he is generous and thoulzhtful of all the members. as I could testify hv many generous acts t-orvard myself." And of Mr. Bennett: “Th0 most. brilliant prime minister Canada has ever had. but at the same time he is the most temperamental and explosive. possesslnu little. of that cquanlmlty which each of the nth- ors had to a fair decree. Prom a 0H9 “His trouble ts prollxlty F 1' Vitalitq alwt]; use BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA our clmpal n on insurance comps. ETC-IQ. Charlottetown Auto Accidental Increase Lut you the need of automobile insurance was forcibly dununntrate’ by t“? fauththaft. in spite of the most strenu- e pa o nieu against careless driving, accident; with violent death: and injuries readied a new high in Canada. Every person who drives a our need th pr t ti f insurance. An accident might ruin n. cilr oiiwner? fair ‘i3’ o financially-or create a tremendous hardship on the person injured — if there is no insurance. let u: aeiifl you a pain hlet- explaining the var-tom oqy- Rates quoted wit out obligation. llyndman & Company Limited Summerside newspapers, periodicals and 9-1. Montague THREE FLOWER PETALS What saw I yesterday walking 1h, ed3- B-Dart. In a leafy pltwe Where the cattle wait? Somethin my Barb- A little sweet girl ln a. garden g-a. e. Laughi ape lay in the gold sun's mg 1 And held for a target tosbelter er, In her little soft fingers, round and w The gold-rimmed fiwe of a sun- flower. Luugtilng she lay on the stone that stands FO!‘ a. rough-brawn step in that. sun- ny place: And her yellow halr hung down to her hands,‘ Shadowing] over her dim led face. Her eym fired-he blue 0 the sky, made 11m with the might of the sun that look a tfher. Shane laughing over the serried to keep for a. charm in Golden set, of the sunflower. laughing, for token she gave to ma Three petals out of the sunflower When the petals are withered and gone. shall be Three verses of mlne for praise of he , ‘Plan-t a rtender dream of her fa/oe mayerise, And lLgh n me yet in another our, 0f her sunny hair and her beauti- f-ul eyes, Lang-hing over the gold sunflower. --A.rchibe.ld Lampman. GIRL STflKE WHEN MAKE- Ui‘ l5 BANNED Protesting against a bun on the use of make-up, .more than 100 girls employed on the late shift at. the Thames Board Mills, Pur- fleet, Essex, stopped work for two hours. Arid the first gave wuyl One girl sal that. when they got to work the firm instructed them that. they were not to take their handbags, containing their make- up. to the washing-room. There were immediate protests and every girl decided to stop work until the ban was removed. Be careful that the refreshments for the children's party are not. too rich. They can be enjoyable without having to be so rich they are apt to cause discomfort to some youngsters whose digestion is not so hardy. Lemons that have been kept too long and have hardened can be softened by covering with boiling water and standing on the back of the stove for a few minutes. Natural string color in rough 11-m- 1- sQ-LKLL-Iievstgl- STIFFNESS "%'z:/riz‘is Cl-Mk Wellh- iuinta- e: relief 1min ain and ltlflneu of m. ritlu wit Templeton’! -R~C'n1 the medicine specially made to filht rheumatic ‘Ffi-"blll- Th!" Deni! In the treatment-keep Pllbl. um: your trouble-art}! you luvs it bent- in. dNlIllCl——50u nnd l.___ __ W _ 51a legal. business anrfizr-nr-rnl contact. standpoint ho is flFO-hflhlV tho hr-sl lnformr-d of all tlic-t- named. Add to this a brilliant. mind. a fElPlll-lVC memorv. uulek wit. fluency, 41:11". Ruished appearance. and the com- bination undouhtedli’ makes him a. irl-eat parliamentarian: yet one could not help but fer-l at times that he would have been anevenm-eat- or hlzh ehurch- dlgnlt-ai-y. Being at heart. very religious. and having 1i deep respect for fonnalities and rituals. he would have made n great bishop . . Personally he can be one of the most lovable and attractive of lenders when in the mood — which is about half the time. Too often his temperamental explosive- ncss forces him to the other ex- tre-me." LP-l US hob-t. for the sake of the nation's stately, that. Dr. Manionb own explosiveness will mntinug to HHXiliCH results like these passages. That. would make him the moot orliztnal part-y leader Canada hub known in a zeneratton. WHAT BECAME OF THE PETTICOAT’! BY the way. what has beoome of I the old-fashioned irl who thouzht had luck would foil-aw her all day if she put her pettlcoat on wrong side nut in the morntng- Wind- sor Star. When in Amherst Stop at the ‘ "Churclihill Rest Cabins" Heated and furnished. R. 4 1 _ G. D. PAlgsONs, - ; . 1 - -Wanted ls there anything you need in the homo or on the farm? A Charlottetown Guardian "Wont Ad" will place you in touch with someone wishing t-o-.se|l the very article you need. The rot-e is only 2c u word u doy. Send in you "Wont Ad" today. lio- You Need Help ? if you require u mun, boy or domestic iilip, u "Want Ad" in The Charlotte- town Guardian will find you c reliable person. The rate is only 2c u word u day. Charlottetown Guard- ian ”Wonl- Ads" produce results. l 1 ii STAYING IN BED may up ram-Ly T0 BLAME ron caus- nvc. DEATl-l 1N ELDERLY reasons A newspaper item some months ago told of an elderly prospector who had (lied with his boots on; the way he had always said he wanted to die. “Dying Wit-ll m6 boots on" is Just another way of saying that. individual did not die lying in bed but was "on his feet" when he died. What about old people who ol slight. illness or lndispusltlon go w bed and, unless rooted by the fam- ily. stay there until they die? It it true that as one gets older going to bed instead of being an aid t4 health nnd recovery may result ll prolonged weakness and possibly dent-n? Drs. L. B. _Laplace and J. '1‘. Nicholson. Philadelphia, Journal of the American Medical Association state that. it 1a well known that when an elderly pah lent is confined to bed he is lia- ble to become progressively weak- er and die des lte the fact that the illness wbic put him in bed may not. have been particularly serious. In order to learn the reason why staying in bed led tn weakness and death in elderly pat- ients, these physicians study of 34 elderly patients who were confined to bed with Joint. or other ailments which made it necessary fur them to be off their feet. Careful ‘examinations were made, at regular intervals of the blood pressure, the regular-iffy and. sti-en th of the heart beat. time of elreuatlon of the blood from arm to luniz and from arm to head, the amount of air in the lungs, complete blood count, the urine, and the rate at which bodyogro- tccstsfs were working (meta sm 8S . 0f the entire series of 34 at.- tliem over 65 years of age, ap- parently cited because of their themselves and their surroundings. Lying in bed slowed up the circu- lute in the tiny veins so that. less blood went back to the heart and less blood and less power of the hem-t muscle became evident. All tlic body processes became slower particularly those throwing waste! out of the body, thus allowing pol- soris to circulate in the blood. The important part; of the treat,- ment ls to have patient take ex- ercise of some kind so that the action of the muscles will squeeze the bloodvessels. thus improving the circulation of the blood and thr- removnl of wastes. Black accessories with pastel costumes are considered smart. i The LfldiE-S We thirty a ctinplcte stuck nl Max Factors Society Beauty Aids lncludlnv tie Pointer Foundation Cream, (‘leans nlz Cream. skin and ‘llssue Cream. Flee Powder in five shade! Rouge in flvo shades Lin Sticks in seven nluules Brilllantlnes nnd Eye Brow Pencils, etc. We also carry complete linen or Evening in Paris-Ashen of Roues-Dernyh Three Sec- rets-Thrvv- flowers-Genny and Yzir-ileyb. “whit-d? MAC ’S ilAlli RESTOREB A delicately perfumed pro- Pflratlnn which restores and beontlflm the hnlr. It will restore grey hair to ltii original color. Mac‘: lhlr Restorer pro- mote- a now and nperior PWlh Where the hair In foil- ng and t1- remnrlubly useful in prevetlng dandruff and destroying urlnitin hair kill- era. Just fo low the direction: carefully and you nmned at the reoultl. Write or phone today. I'll-ICE 00 CENTS. THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTORE no arm floor Street Mall 0rd n . _-_.'."'tmg%t9.fifillfl tn the made a ~ icnts, 1'1 died. Ten patients, a of, confinement to bed. An outstand- , lng symptom was the gradual de- " velopmeut of a. lack of interest in ' lntlou allowing blood to accumu-