- ,. -_. w.» s-._~.-_~..:-.,_....___ h- ...,_ s.“- __ _,_......,_' m," ... ...._ 4- t-‘Qnnfinl III .- PAGE FOUR TIiE cuinionsrown auliiiuii President-W. (‘healer B. llcLun, l-P. Vice-Prolific!‘ :.:. Blllfll», I-J- l Srcroiary-Lieuh-Col. D. A. Ioclilnllflio n- I. Editor and llnnuglng Director-J. l. Burnt"; 7'0‘ m Anson-into rliilluru- funk Wulksr and III-l:- lll; d "uni nursing Dally (founded isam u-w U" H" i" ""°' ° "f" "" "tintlsrllsrrs "a: '.-:.::..:-.-.-::.-:: “m. "‘“' UNITED slams-rs. Bockwlth swim Agency l"; 1",‘! u" ‘P’ In! llnildlnl New York City, ‘ Halon I m Bu“ Bnlldlnl. Kdnnnn CH7. “ilinullllry Tnwcrngmctlllliuah 6;?! ugnau.‘ hug, Atlanta; Monnduock Buildlnl- 5' 5 ' ' Philadelphia. TUESDAY. AUGUST s. m: l VIII film bu shown the way- WELCOME VISITATION gains“ m the m‘ Before A welcome visitor to the Provlnci many years are past, I 110W 1° 5* yesterday was illc Han. Alfred Du.r- ‘event m-igisb king recreated, to see nnleau, LLL, K.C., Federal Minister we“. ‘not event in our history of Marine and ‘Fisheries, Ottawa. Show“ upon the screen. I hope to and party on board the C. G. S. ‘Ce Richard I buwhn-ms pgggm in "Lady any," Though their stay “he Holy Land, w m m, gamer, m4, was regrettably brief, Mr. Duranleau magmflant Henry n, tuning hi; had the opportunity of visiting one a“ to the wan md mugwring oft the most important fishery cen- ‘Shame on a_ ddeawd U“; when tres of the Province at Rustico and zihe learns that hi‘ beloved Mm has of conversing in his native language fscmmed “m”, mm; I hope to we with the Acadian fishermen‘ there. ‘that son mo King John’ w we hm I . fhough particularly interested in ‘ _ lflghtins his great fight with the the Island's marine and fishery ibarons and bemg trapped at Runny“ problems’ he M50 grfean): at: lmede. There is no need for me to iractcci by the CHCILIICES o ag.lcu in,‘ the even“ o! our mmry‘ The tural advancement and expressed _ imim is lileimuustible. 1t u zwd much appreciation oi the fine ap- l pcarance of thc forms and rural residences. All our citizens will hope that Mr. Duranlcau and family will lime an opportunity of linking a further and , courage w b68111 *0 did 1 ‘There are other kit!!! 17651“ Henry. We have every type of mm and woman in English history, from [that at last. someone has had thel more extended visit to Prznce Ed- ward Island ill the near future. Having sccll the Province in its sum- mer beauty, there is no doubt that they will desire f0 do so, and that the same warnl welcome will n\v'z1it them. CANADA IAI THE LEAD ‘ when judgment is‘ based 1111011 facts arid figures, rather than theor- ies and publicity ballyhoo, it be-, ccmies evident that natural forces, ha“; hrouglit a greater measure ofl business recovery in Canada thanl has been ach evcd so far in the Un- ited States through the employ-g merit of virtually every form of ar-l tificial stimulation that the imag-j [nation can conceive, points out a contemporary. In the past month, for example, the index of factory enlploywnent. in the United States advanced by 4.2 points while in Canada the Si!“ W35 of 38 points. ‘Ihe United Stat-i es, thus, can be cheered by the 110-, tion that ifs rccovery in this par-‘ ticular direction is at a. rate of‘ four-tenths of one point more rapidi than in this country. But tlicrc is a little consolation‘ the noblest to the most villainous; all kinds have helped to build 0111' country, and they must be broushi upon the screen. It is our right to see them. We, the people of E08- land, must demand t0 8B9 them- “We have had enough of drunk- en journalists, of smart colle8° b°Y§ and gangsters, of crooked lawyers and gold-diggers, of caburets and murder trials; we have had enough of the fut‘le and ugly world that the USA. has forced upon us on the screen. We want something more, something greater. In our moment of depression, we need to see the great men of our pastJto be re- minded thai. England now for many hundred years has stood for the greatest power in the world since the days of Rome." JACK MINEIVS WORK Extraordinary variety in the travels of mallard ducks is shown in a number of charts drawn up by the Jack Miner Migratory Bird Sanctuary covering the unique tag- ging oplhations of this well-known Canadian institution. from places as far apart as Alberta, Florida, Texas, New Mexico, Montana and for us in the fact that our index wmxmsm dud” hi" been “mid has been built back to the new high ‘Iwlth the Mm" 91$ of 84.5 of normal, on the basis of i926 figures, while the U.S. index still lags behind at 64.8 of normal, bank-f °f m" Ede m unique 111 with its figures in terms of the 1923-25 level. If the two were adjusted to each other, the’ Canadian ndvantagc would be event more impressive, and it is probable largo!“ 5'0" Besides the duck thmis‘ such an adjustment would also show our inlmcdiaie gains as equalling those in the neighboring country. With factory employment rate 19.7 points ahead of that in the i United States, there is still room for the view that our future wll be more surc and morn desirable if we cling to tho fundamentals of the old school cf economic thinking. rather than berc-ming hypnotized byl OUT the supposed miracle working pow- ‘_l‘5 of (lllll§“l‘OilEly-I‘|’I])0i‘l1129111231 flI duh." FILM OPPORTUNITY English tnlkIng pcture producers arc now reported to be turning their attention to historical subjects. Commenting on this as a hopeful‘ indication, Mr. Pliziip Lindsay in "The Bookmim," says it should g.ve British pYOdUCCfS a great advantage over Hollywood competitors. United States producers, he points cu L, have “no historical sub- jects left to film, for ob- ' viously they dare not touch the‘. The tagging operations of this sanctuary at Kingsville on the their extent and have been increas- indexes frlg since the first black mallard was tagged in August, 1009, and caught three months later at And- ands of Canada geese bear the Miner tags, yielding valuable infor- matlon that is turned‘ in to the ot- tawa Department of the Interior and also the Department of Agri- culture at Washington. Remarkable sights may be wit- nessed on the ponds of the sanc- tuary as flocks of web-footed mig- rants congregate safe from the shot of concealed sportsmen. Around the ponds are thousands of pine, spruce. cedar and nuaple specially planted to the tastes of the val-lug visitors, while jungles of hazel trees, Russian mulberries, spice bushes and acres of buckwheat are all de- signed for the feeding of every kind of feathered fwi from the Kentucky cardinal and the mourn-_ ling dove to game birds such as the pheasant and bob-white quail. EDITORIAL NOTES The sum. of $120,000 has been subscribed in the United States to lay the foundation of the "Univer- sity of Exile," which is intended in War of Independence lest theyl be s refuge for outstanding schol- snger England. And from the Civil ars who have been driven from War to modem times, Hollywood Germany by the Hitler tyranny. has covered every inch of American The rpo ' of this enlightened history." enterprise are Wilbur L. Cross (Gov- "Imaglnc," writes Mr. Lindsay, emor of Connecticut“) John Dewey, m“, gicrious panorama that a his-‘ the philosopher, Herbert Bayard Notes By The Way “I luv," II]! a writer in l. con- temporary exchange, "a crowd in 8 to it to see what all the excite- ment was about. A man was stand- ing in the centre of the group. sud g clerk was putting nice creases in the man's trousers while he stoodinbcnandtriedtoflpiie" u. = Gone forever are the happy days when we used f0 PT?!‘ our pants by putting them under the mattress while we slcpl- We none of us sleep long enough any more to give cur trousers wen a sznoothed-out lPDcarauce. During the past week the Do- ‘minicn Bureau of Statistics has made public surveys and figures which prove beyond any question that conditions are improving and that the improvement is substan- tial. No matter what the yard- stick, whelier it be car-loadings, industrial activity, decreasing un- employment, the position of com- modity prices or bank clearings, the result is the same. There is a. gen- eral betterment. No one need hope, nor sensibly expect, that this im- provement will be uninterrupted. But while there will be checks and temporary reverses, solid reason ex- ists for believing that net gains will continue, that most of the ground won will be held and consolidated. Whether it will be consolidated more securely than the advanced positions held in 1928 and 1929 is, dlpwever, another matter. When the French and German Ambassadors at the outbreak of the war, returned to their own count- ries, the former was forced to pass though Denmark instead of travel- ling direct to Paris. He was charg- ed for his train out of Germany a sum which made it necessary for him to borrow cash from his staff to settle- the account. The German Ambassador was courteously and gratuiticusly provided with a spec- ial train to Berlin, and the Ger- mans, by way of acknowledgment of this gracious act, commandeered the French train, and kept it! This action violated what Si: Austen Chamberlain rightly calls “an idea fundamental to all British parties," and reminds one that Germany, in more senses than one, is not a cricket playing country. The first Lord Northbrook, grand- father of the present peer, used to relate an amusing instance of ig- norance on the part of the librar- ian at Seville. A great collector, particularly of Spanish and Portu- guese books and manuscripts, secur- ed permission through a friend to make a. copy of a. manuscript of Antonio Ferez relating to the wars of Granada. The book was copied in a fair round hand for some 16 dol- lars. After the copy was made the librarian said: "You may take away which you please, the copy or the original." Naturally the original was selected. When the collector's lib- ray was sold in I842, this manu- script was purchased by the Royal Library of France, for a very hand- some sum. Ths uggestion put forward by ULnited States experts at. the World Economic Conference for an all- round tariff cut of 10 per cent re- quires close examination. Such a fiat percentage cut would leave every country in the same position, compared with other countries, as it‘ was before. It would assist world’ commerce in some degree, but in failing to differentiate between low and high tariffs it would leave un- touched the existing disproportion. Great Britain's tariff molehill would still be overshadowed by the protective mountains of ugh-tariff countries. Under no circumstances could this country consent to such a situation. The real solution of the problem is to secure reductions in proportion with the present, height of tariff walls-Daily Mail. Those who inhabit the wild have few problems-rt they are ex- quisitely happy. as evidenced by their calls and. songs and industry. Most of us are all too blind to beauty-which is scattered every- where. The commonest things in nature are often the most signifi- cant in truth for us. The artificial- ity of scores of people about us is evidenced every day of our lives. seeking to drown their dullness and‘ stupidity, they reach for the fool- ish and the inane, and often dissi- pate precious time and ability un- til it. becomes dull to all response to the finer calls of life. Gruening, Robert M. Hutchins, Professor R. M’. MacIver (formerly o: mronto University) and George A. Plumpton. The money already raised will provide for flficcn Gor- toiy or England would make, start- l‘ Swope the industrial magnate, Pro- lng perhaps with William I and'fessor Edwin R. Seligmln, Felix’ ending with the last war! What Frankfurter, Oliver Wendell Holmes material is‘hcre, ready for a filr-, (retired Justice of the Buprune sighted English producer! The new ‘Court 0f the United States.) Ernest man scholars at $4.000 a year for two years, but it is hoped to take care eventually of 300, and funds ‘will be continually solicited until the classes ‘ self-sustaining. stpre the other day, and went over ‘ A fifbat 50hr of Quilts B» 1 w. an». no. CURING STOMACH ULCEI WITHOUT OPERATION It is only natural that everybody dislikes the idea of an operation- bospital, anaesthetic. operation, after care-and would sooner put up with a certain amount of distress and pain than undergo it. One of the types cf cases where operation is put ofl’ as long as pos- sible is in ulcer of the stomach. By the use of small soft meals, and the use, following these, of regular dos- es of alkalis, if persisted in long enough, often does away with the need of an operation. However there are cases that des- pite this treatment do not do well, as the ulcer is too deeply seated in the lining of the stomach or in the first part of the small intestine, to- gether withan overabundant supply of the acid digestive tuice of the stomach. In some of these cases sn- other method of treating the ulcer is undertaken before resorting to operation. Some years ago a. method was tried out in the Toronto 601181111 Hospital; this was by means of a tube which was inserted through patients‘ nostril or mouth, down past the stomach and first part of the small intestine (the duodenum) to the jejunum or second part of the small intestine. ‘Ihrough this tube soft food was poured at fre- quent intervals. Thus the patient was able to get his usual nourish- ment without the stomach or duo- denum having to handle it at slL As you know it is the movements of the stomach and the pouring out of the stomachs acid Juice which prevents the ulcer from healing“ With no food going into the stom- ach the stomach walls, nerves, dig- estive processes all get a complete rest and this complete rest enables the ulcer. to heal. The tube can be fastened in posi- tion to the nose or mouth by ad- hesive tape or other methods, and is left in position usually for three weeks although in mild cases one week may be sufficient. Remember, this treatment is not given in simple chronic cases of ulcer, but only inthe more severe or complicated cases mentioned above. ' . This method is of use also in severe inflammation of the stomach where real rest is needed‘ by the stomach. It must be admitted however that there are some cases where only operation will bring results. CILARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN many Bristol-born men arnd women PUBLIC FORUM Th]: column ll open for tlu dlscunlon by correspondents o! question of interact. The Charlottetown Grvrdlnn dz! not noculully endorse e Iplllflll of oorrupldclh. msi- 10% nrscoum‘ 0N ELICIBIC LIGHT Bin-Slice my last letter I m» contacted with other electric bills andhowensyitisfcpulithewool over some people's W“ i! they d0 not make a minute scrutiny of their bills before paying them. I saw one bill which was for 29 k.w.h. and it charged at the rate "a. is company" $2.08, that is $1.00 service charge and the first five watts free and seven cent-s a watt for the remain- ing 34 watts. On the face of the bill, they added I0 per cent to the sum instead of taking it of! and the figure then was $2.94 instead of $2.42 as it should be. When the bill was paid, they merely took ofi’ the 10 percent which they had added on and the consumer went away thinking that he was getting 1o Coast per cent discount. I wonder how m many consumers were hoodwinked ‘ C into the same camouflage. m” _ and I also wonder if such in action of the Company could come Canada under the heading of “obtaining money under false pretences." They ' pretend to take. of 10 per cent of the NEWFOUNDLAND. bill if paid before August 10th. l-nd IAMAICA. their method of doing ft was to CUBA- flrst add 10 per cent to the bill and 795R" 31m- fikoinkxlligeoilltr‘ 111a ttllilgrssesvaarliredfig ngggvwfié" will have to get somebody to give . the sentry a prod. “w ‘mm 1 am. Bfr, m. “"5"”- nosmlv, N A PRIVATE CO SUMER LONDON. ENGLAND l NOVA SCOTIA OVER A CENTURY OF BANKING SERVICE 1c... 1%» DOWN through the years- since it was established in 1832 -'-The Bunk of Nova Scotia has. steadily kept pace with the advancing needs of Canadian industry and enterprise. Today, as in the past, it offers to sound business not only complete facilities for the performance of every banking function, but more - an individ- ual attention to the needs of each client. t O World-wide faciliuties in every department of banking . . ‘line BANK of i; Much is heard of enormously in- creased production in Russia. Mos- cow's latest is that production is three times greater than in 1914. visit to the city of Bristol on July 14 in order to unveil a mcanorial, plaque on the house once occupied‘ by the first Earl of Durham, former BristoPs Connection _ ”" With Canada’s History Ca - - pital In Russia F R . . (Mail and mpire) (cu J _ B1 O PERFELI TEA FLAVOR Right Hon. n. n. Bennett paid a W“ “m ) -USE-- Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Sold OQIIInReGAIrf-ight Packages. Given‘ these figures are correct, it is a. striking commentary on the dan- gers of collectlvism that with all this increase there is throughout the country a serious shortage of all Governor-General of Britsh North America. The plaque, erected by the local branch of the Royal Empire Society, bears an inscription record- ing that 10rd Durham lived in km“ o‘ consumable ‘was. Bristol as a. pupl of Dr. Beddoes , , u and that “his famous report in- nefififlsnglwos; spliicd all subsequent British colon- “on o‘ private prom to In“ the is policy." . ' At the unveiling ceremony, Coi- gzgzrfiygtgalzpdaggui llifilbrgtgin‘ onel I/ennard, chairman of the lo- ten years and the result so n" is ‘*1 M‘°"Y' “mu” m“ W’ my that the Soviet standard of living was the headquarters and depot 0d 1s the lowed,’ m Eumpe what i‘ the the regiment. at whose head Wolfe explanation? u“ y”; or the tom fen m Qwbec‘ H‘ added that m national investment only 18 per the development of modern Canada cent was mpproprlaéd to um mm cluction of goods for consumpticml the whole of the remainder beingf devoted to export, operation expens- i 88. additions to plant and whsti might be 001190013’ termed "Cipbfial" ucccunt. ‘ have played their pdrt, and notably one, the Hon. H. H. Stevens, Can- adian lvliinister of Trade and Com- mcrce. Mr. Bennett said the claims of the first Earl’ of Durham upon the gratitude and affection of Canada an particularly strong, since it was Still another cause, and one that the dangers of suppressing THE ICE-CART Perched on my, city office-stool I watched with envy. while a cool And lucky carter handled ice . . . And I was wandering in a trice, FM‘ from the gray and grimy heat 0f that intolerable street, ' O'er sapphire berg and emerald fioe, Beneath the still, cold ruby glow Of everlasting Polar night, Bewlldered by the queer half-light, Until I stumbled. unawares, UPOn a creek where big white bears Plunged headlong down with flouf- ished heels, And floundered after shining seals Through shivering seas of blinding blue. And as I watched them, ere I knew. I'd stripped, and r was swimming, too, Among the seal-pack, young and hale, And thrusting on with threshing tail, With twist and twirl and suddsn leap Through crackling ice and salty deep- Diving and doubling with my kind, Until, at last, we left behind Those big white, blundering bulk; of death, And lay, at last, with panting breath Upon a. far untravelled floe, Beneath a gentle drift of snow- snow driftinc gently, m, mu white, Out of til. endless Polar night, Falling and falling evermore Upon that far untrsveilcd shore. Till I was buried fathoms deep Beneath that cold, white drifting sleep-- Sleep drifting deep, Deep drifting sleep . . . The carter cracked a sudden whip: I clutched my stool with startled 211p. Awakening to the grimy heat Of that intolerable street, -Wilfred Wilson Gibson. Master Klork Clmtwell left this individualism, is that in prc-war years nearly 90 per cent. cf cmsu- mable goods was produced individ- ually on the farm, in the home or during his term as High Commis- sloner and Governor-General of Bltish North America that he guin- ed the experience which he after- Evrnv BUSINESS MAii Whether an Individual owner of a Business or a partner, should become interested in some desirable plan of mating a Reserve Imnd. Life Insurance is the easiest mfl safest method to provide Inch l. fund which will llquidatolbuslncssfnferestl in event ‘ of death and. will not an a stabilizer or collateral in event of emergency conditions such as a World depression. Mostly every Business Mini many realizes the desirability of such provision for the future. Commit. your nearest Great-West Life ‘Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. uvunmnn & 00.. LTli. Provincial Managers Lower Queen Street Charlottetown in small workshops. with the pol- icy of concenrra‘ ,, all production collectively under state trusts this wards utilized in his famous report. That. report embodied those prin- ciples upcn which was based much in our Imperial system today. For eight years he lived in Brfstol as a boy, and it was not too much to sug- gest that he derived great strength 0f character and breadth of outlook from his early contacts with the ancient city, which for generations ins been associated with the pion- eer Emipire builders. “Tradition tells us," continued Mir. Bennett, “that on his deathbed Lord Durham said, ‘Canada will one day do justice to my memory.’ The facts that I am privileged to unveil this memorial, and that the inscrip- tion was the work of a Canadian member of the staff of the Bristol University, are, in themselves, some fulfilment of his prophecy, but thorn is still miuch to do before his Imperial vision is equalled by Im- perial achievements, snd before the testimony to his genius is adequate." At the luncheon, after the Can- adian Prime Minister ahd received the degree of IlLD. from the local university, the Duke of Beaufort emphasized the importance of Can- ada as one of the comer-stones of the Empire. He said that since the reign of Henry VII, when John Cabot sailed from Bristol to make what was without doubt the first discovery of that northern contin- ent, there had been s very close connection between Canada and that city. Mr. Bennett, speaking cf its close relationship with the Dominion, said one could almost say that Bristol was one of the makers of Canada, for from that port had goile not only great explorers but also those who settled in the Maritime Prov- inces of Easterncanadaandinthe for west. ‘The tics that bound Can- sds to that port were very real, and he emressed special interest at_ hearing that o. daughter of the Lord ' appeared, and Russia is left with an actual output commuted on this basis of more than 60 per cent. less than in 1914. It appears, all the theories of Marx to the contrary, that the so- ciabsts just can't get away from Wllital. The question is which is better: our own uncontrolled dis- tribution of capital to industry as it is needed, and a fair standard 0f livlns. oi- its bumaucrutlc, inelastic wllirol by the state and almost un- iversal poverty? ----_____ Ono's own heart is the best place in which to store the fe-w things of life that really molten-Rudyard Kipling. Fries Take Leave 0f Values Hera are the best bargain: on Drugs and Toiletries you ever bought In your life. 15c Bottle Kruschcn Salk $1.00 Bottle Abbey's Salk 35c Bottle Hire’: Extn Spoollh - I Cakes Lemon ‘Ioiiet Soap 19c. 0 . . . . . 80c 3 Cakes T. b B. Toilet Soap (cellophane wrapped) price 0c R009 cakes for $1.00 bot Yardley Lavender 800p and 05c Bottle LIV!!- dor Wsior. Both for 81.00 75c Vanity Con: 85c 25c Tins of Talc-um 17c 05c Box Miiloh Face Powder .........-.-...... 00o morning on a holiday trip to his aunt Mrs. Heclsr Campbell, Lyrm,| TIIE 2 MAGS 14f! Great George Street Mayor is, resident in Saskatchewimi "Cars To Be Dearer." That would put some folks back on their feet! i peasant output has virtually dis- ' inn producer sin May amounted to 528 tons; in the preceding month 359 tons were produced and in May, last year, 423 tons were shipped. During the five months ending May, the production of feldspar In Canada totalled 1,658 tons or 55.7 per cent. below the tonnage ship- ped in the corresponding period of I982. FELDSPAR PRODUCTION IN MAY GYPSUM PRODUCTION IN MAI The, production of gypsum l ‘Canada reached a total of 33,40! tons in May as com ‘ with 424i tons 1n the preceding month and 32,242 tons in May last year. Th! total Canadian gypsum output dun fng the five months ending - o; was 40,955 tons or 20.0 Der can below the production in the corrfl pending period of 1932. Shipments of feldspar by Canad- a \/4 . .9 HICKEY s NICHOLSOWS stuck TWIST