m FPAGE FOUR’ Hf BHlHlIllTEllIWN Blllfllllll {Notes byline Way l 0MB of the disabilities under which Canadian railways are laboring were referred to by Hon. THE CHARLUITETOWN GUARDIAA ‘ mild! New Jobs "for fir?» l Old Metals 0 {Condensed from Po)ul.".r science Mussolini \ Conducts Fascist i i NOVEMBER], New “JO per you (in ulnnol) nailed in Canada and United stolen- flptmlnj Dolly (huldod i881) one we your (In advance) doiinrod. George P. Oral-lam in addressing 8 Ervllp of freight agents at their; recent convention in Ottawa. Mr. resume-w. clmw s. Iplinro. “es-l tQIIOIOIIO—J..B.. Graham having served as Minister I . 3113"“? $11 ddifu and Manager-J. It. anal. Baden. MD. ‘l of Railways for several years shouldl Press Orchestra J. v. McAi-ee, In ihe Mail and Empire ‘tMonthly lSeptember, '26» E. E. Freon A country where eight-tenths of! the workers were always lookingl for Jobs would probably not be pro-l Mussolini in the i-ole of humorist Savoury-Liv" Col. D. A. IMO-anon. D. B. 0. be well qualified to speak on this ornes FOR‘$Derous. Yet that is precisely the; e cores one of his most emphatic Bunch. Anecdote Editor-D. K. Currie subject, Among other things he l COLD WEATHER. CL MEN lsituation of the empire‘ of chem- Successes, and it is in this role, which SPORT. l! PORT, menta-i-aizl Dllyslcal-‘flml we use the word in its broadest sense, meaning play-is as essential w all round health as are sleeping and eating, Like sleep, it must be taken in ‘a clean atmosphere; like food, it must be wholesome and nu- tritous; like both, it should be tak- en at intervals, and the more rei- uiarly the better. To the young of all animals, in- cluding the human. sport is a nat- ural instinct. Men and women WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1928 addressed to the self-esteem of Americans and the envy oi others, it rings from cover to cover with the raucous screams of the Ameri- can eagle and it is invariably an abominable book. The I.O.D.I:‘..con- sider it a dangerous book; if it were well written, it might be a peril, but mercifully it never is. Indeed, it could not be well written without the elimination oi all the features which make it objectionable, so there is the less cause to fear its eflects. All countries produce these horrors; they lend themselves to never grow old while they retain their instinctive love of sport. Whe-l mass production, and in this occu- Iiatlcu the Yankee excels. There is ‘alluded to the unprofitable charac- l I wonder how many years must mr of the passenger service, of which‘ b I m h m pass s ore men w s ow- e same ‘nany_newspaper readers may notlamount of sense as women in re- be ‘mnco, M“ Gmham did m" gard to the clothing worn indoors quote statistics on that point, bllilduring the e001 weather? the Montreal Gazette tells that he, What one should, ,cr needs. t0 - m ll ll fwcar outdoors, may differ with the xlecrzldwsa 2W7 ‘time so individual, but there is no question y ve s mm 9w very but with the warm houses, offices, serials h“ been me Slump m pas'land factories, there is no need for scnger earnings and passenger traf-lmo heavy clgthing new worn by fie during recent years." The grosslmen. receipts from passenger service had‘, DT- E» Frelilbergerllllilsl beenf 99m‘ been $102,732,189 m 1920 and had gfgzffflcfnheenfilfltleflflfiellggu: fallen t0 $78,193,692 in 1925. ilflflllltlralgl-lt homely lll-lllhi l have since but slightly improved! A man, aged 33, height 5 fee _ The number of passengers carried inches, and lwelght I35 poundlsslls v3 I42 compare WI l a woman 8B9 - had “m” °fi ‘mm 5‘ 18 2 m height 5 feet. s inches, and weight 4_l.458,0|84. And, happily, substan- 125 poumh tlal gains had taken place in both The welgm o; the man-s olothlng about ‘seven, and the volume of freight business and was fennel to be the womans less than two. Pounds. Now aside from this difference in lthe weight of the clothing, what The cost of equipment for thevabout the degree of heat or tempelu passengefservice is much greateryalurp under me clotlllng-l resultant earnings therefrom." LITE W85 to, owes so much. fits him like a glove, that he ap- There are 90 known elements~ pears in his address to the journ- workmcn upon whom the chemistlallsfs of Italy to mark the end of must depend for everything he does, lslx years of Fascist rule. He began Only 11 have found jobs really suit- by saying that it is only in the past ed LDlthHl‘ power. The other '79 are two years that the problem of the lslllll Sllillllg around waiting for_jobs,prcs:a has been faced and practi ally lor else they are industrial misflts-_ settled. and that in what he ca s a lnot quite suited by character or abll-funitarian regime —by which he {lily to the work that industry hasjmeans his own dlctatorshlp—the llflfllfld llflflll them. press cannot be extraneous from the Iron, useful as it is, is one of theselwhole. This is rather an elegantl lmisfits. Paint ls its badge of failurelway of saying that since he isl lMllllY 0f its present jobs require itlrunning all the country, it is nec- lto stand out in the weather. This rosary that he should run the press‘ lis something iron cannot endureltoo. The prime rule for the press is‘ The rust bill of the world has beenlto avoid what is harmful , to the l-estlmated at five billion dollars zrrcgime and to do what is helpful year. It is rust and not use thatlto it. The regime, again, is Muss-‘ lwcars out railway rails and ruinsloli i, and he also is the judge of lfarm machinery. It is to resist rust wl at is harmful and what is help-l lthat we pay an enormous paint billiful. The press is not the judge. A lIlTm Vwllld have 0111i’ 1115159 jobs if Fascists organ might say something lchemists could only persuade some which its editors honestly thought lather elemental workmen to tukewas helpful, but their honest‘ overvits side tasks, lthought would not prevent them! I This ls the real business of then-em modern chemist. On his desk lielMusgehn1 Iscicntiflc reports like letters fromlv1ew_ listry to which the world already though he is unaccustomed to it, I did not take I having their shop closed if, the same: in stations and cars than for thel In the man the tcmperat _ _ of Job-seeking elements. On that same. ..- In a Price Range from $15 to‘ $35 sop THE Armistice Dance MONDAY, NOV. 12th ther on the campus, in college halls, one way l“ whlch Canada olm car,‘ 0i‘ 0n i118 Dllbllll Dllllwrmi Sport-i falnly not develop a national liter- elther competitive 0r dl-‘lllollsllfl-l Etliff), and that is by inlitating the tlve. ls sport In competitive SP0"- Yankee jingo 0i‘ I01‘ that matter the Golden Rule is not necessarilylany olllol- ll-llld of llngo n, may be lived llfl 10- The Student Wllllse propaganda; I deny that it is efli- gofll 1S the 801d medal l5 ilmlllledl clent propaganda, and it is unques- ln 110mg l0 031675 Whal- 1-1193’ 5T9‘, tlonabiy not art. It is to be regret- trylne to do w him. not merely as; cod that some Canadian publishers he would like t0 hill/c l-llfllll 151° HMO‘, and some Canadian writers have hllll- Yet. ll he 15 l1 T931 SPQFT-Slllllll-i sinned. grievously in this respect, he welcomes the strongest cvmpe-lbut it is not too late for them to tition and would disdain to win a repent of theh- evil waysf‘ giizethrough the deliberate mercy The aim o‘ the Canadian Allth. 01' hi5 Ollllollelllls- In Qlllllllellllllll ors‘ Association [in inaugurating each one is expected to do his best; Book week is gwoqohl 1t, ls om. but to do it fairly and honorably. phatically but the purpose to make and 1n this case the defeated lwganycne read inferior books on ac- cepts the verdict gracefully. slvlne count of their being of Canadian full credit to those who have shownwzlqin, The intention ls— themselves better men. First: to introduce the multitude The quality of sport necessarily "x210 do not read books at all to the varies with age. A wise man of olddnrlpoakable pleasure and manifold said: “When I was a child I thought! advantage of reading good books as a child; but when I became alnf any sort or origin; and man I put away childish thingsffl‘ Second: to induce, among those meaning, no doubt. that he had onlylCanadians who do read books, a changed the implements of enjoy-lclear recognition of the fact that rnent. The baby finds much en-‘, today their own country is produc- joyment in shaking a rattle, but as‘! ing a rich literary harvest, of which he grows older the implement islthey should be just as proud (or changed, and at each successivel prouder) as they are of her wheat period in his life he makes a dlI-ECTDP. the produce of her orchards ferent kind of nofse", but the sport‘ and forests and mines and factories, instinct, if he be true to himselfflher material development of all never leaves him. ‘kinds. her wealth of material re- As stated above. to derive the full}$0ll1"~‘l‘$ Still to be developed. and benefit from sport it must be in-lilcl‘ unrivalled natural beauty. dulged in 1h g wholesome The first of these objects needs phere, and only at times. to be Alfred the Great. over a thousandl, Brewed 110ml?- atmos-i Khlgimore and more every day years ago, made a division of time] ‘which the ages since have not im-‘ ‘proved upon. He divided the twen-l ty-four hours of the day into three‘ periods of eight hours each; one of ‘ ‘these was devoted to work, another to study and devotion, and the third to meals and sleep. The age- old division is, we fear, more hon- ored ln the breach than in the ob- lservance. The sleep and recreation period is usually pretty well ob- served, although not llmltedasKing ‘Alfred of blessed memory suggest- ed. The boundslare frequently ex- lltended until they encroach partic- ularly on the period designated for ‘work, and even for study and devo- tlon. l. ' BOOKS UDGING by first reports, Cana- dian Book Week is being well observed throughout Canada, and ‘ Canadian literature has been more m the front than ever before. It ’ has been remarked that there is no nationalism as yet in Canadian lit- erature. Probably there never shall be. Canada is made up of different Provinces; each Province has its distinctive coloring and type, and each will very largely retain for “many years to come its individual- ‘ lty. Many years hence there will ‘ probably be u. merging of these in- dlvidualitloa, and then. possibly, we may look for a measure of notional- ’ inn ln our Canadian literature. ‘n As a Canadian critic points out:- ‘ “After all, the truthil very simple; llthereorenoeuch thingsaaoona- ‘dlen boob or English books or Am- boob.’ than m only m I WILL ram! TELL us’: SOME of our Liberal contempor- aries have declared it was “fool- ish talk" on the part of Hon. Mr. Bennett to refer to the low duty on coal, fabricated iron and Austra- lian butter. Will some of our jour- nalistic Solons explain to theh- mines, its business and its wealth of iron ore, to import a-mllllon tons of coal millions of pounds of butter, and millions of dollars worth of iron and steel? Let us have some the people Just what Mr. Bennett did say? 1mm EDITORIAL NOTES. False modesty is a miserable vice, but to take oneself too seriously is almost fatal. Social evils may be uprooted or they may be rooted up. The differ- ence lies in the reformer. It is only ‘by not paying ones bills that one can hope to live in the memory of the commercial classes. As long as war is looked upon as wicked it will always have its m- clnatlon. When it is looked upon ll vulgar it ‘will cease to be popular. One should not deride and befou! what one intends to abolish. says a phllaophor; one ahould place it ro- mobtfnfly on, u», again autumn, In ma» ma meantime ~ to»; ~ e.» m" conaidorotionof tin‘ mt that u ‘ l a. readers how lt-can benefit Canada, with its practically unlimited coal slowly growing dairy "wise" talk 0n this subject.’ Why not ten freight service. It was a questionE whether passenger traffic could be made to pay, even before automo- biles and electric trolley lines hatl from passengers, an this cause has been very serious. In some of the states across the bor-‘ dcr many ‘branch’ lines, dependent‘ largely on passenger business havc' been abandoned and altogether. thousands of miles of track navel been taken up throughout the Unit-l ed States because the motor bus has absorbed the business. And the in- crease in gross receipts from freight traffic which the railways. have Ell-I joyed has been largelywounterbal-‘l anccdaby the outgo upon needed‘ extensions and bettcrments, Wages have been advanced in al-- most every department of the Can- adian railway service to meet the‘, demands of the various brother-y hoods and organizations, or to close-' ly approximate the pay on United States railways. The latter have she advantage over Canadian rail-l ways in various ways. They navel cheaper fuel, convenient of access in all parts of their country, and less outlay proportionately in clear- ing their tracks from snow. Their railway lilies serve a much denser population than the Canadian lines which have been extended north- ward into regions that are very sparsely settled, All these are to be taken into account in consider- :ng our present transportation sys- tem and the outlook ahead. The Dominion is committed to complete and equip the Hudson Bay route to the open sea at great cost, and this will add another disability in one way or another. son Bay route to be successful and pay its operating cost. must have an enormous carrying trafllc during its short season of two or three months. If it is thus successful all its traffic will be diverted from the railways and water transport -syr.- ems that now curry it down in the sea by their present route. Th: Gov- ernment seems also to be commit- ted to the construction of rm en- larged waterway from Luke On- tario to tidewatci" via the St, ‘baw- rence, either as a national or filter- national work at tremendous cost. With but the merest fraction — if ouythlng at all-of our war, railway and canal debt yet paid, Canada is face to face with the prospect oi a vast increase of national indebted- ness already far too great for our limited population to carry. The Hud- Inlerest among Canadians in the Presidential election has been larg- er than in many like contests in years past from various causes. Onc oi the causes is that radio broad- casting has enabled tens of thou- sands of Canadians, in their homes. hotels and clubs to listen to the stlrrinf speeches on both SICIEELCIUT- ing the bitter and exciting cam- paign. Prohibition and credal mat- ters discussed so largely during the past months are not without inter- est on this side of the border, and never before during the tourist sea- son dld so many Americans visit Canada or so many Canadians visit the United States. In this commlngllng of the people of the two nations, as in the Canadian press, the election campaign, its pro- gress and issues formed a promin- ent subject of discussion and con- versation. As the Presidential campaign closes there are indications of com- ‘lng political activity in both Great Britain endlfllnldal IIheJmperIa‘ ‘Parliament has met may» 1m ses- 5-"2112-1“ Wmmuwlwl-lw ilearly 90 degreds Rwhereas with th l woman it was found to be 80 per cent. l Then as to the humidity or mois- desk are other imploring letters. “Frees; in the worm" from elements that are overworked} New Frocks 1 leaving the heavy ‘like tin, lead, and mercury; elements desperately in need of help if the , “no and ll, the woman lust work of the world is to be well done. ' en Precisely as ordinary employment iagents- try to fit their human job- ens to their open jobs, so the chemist tries so place each of his lidle elements in some work that it ' course is that rotect-Jlfln d0 W811- 101T 2251:; fire cold of winter? should‘ vOne element has sat idle since its be cblalned by heavy outer gol-mentsldlscovery-for 139 years—as able tube removed when indoors. lto work as iron and perhaps as Anclllel. polm he demonstrated plentiful. This is titanium. Its idle- wes that with modern womans ness is not easy to understand. It IS dress loose unlined, and of thin orva tough, hard metal, reasonably pcmus malerlal‘ belloilclm [lghtlworkable agd reasonably rustless. It l-llys can penetrate to the body,,can be use to make tools and im- {whereas with men's heavier cloth- lllcmonls. Itniight even support mg these llghl lays have difficulty buildings, as iron now does. There l“ pfmrallngl -_are vast deposits of titanium in a It is now up to garment or cloth- dozen countries. It IS true that there ing manufactures to supply omen prc no known alloys of it as useful with cloth that is lighter and more as the alloy of iron we call steel. loosely woven, to be worn indoorsJBut iron, too, was hard to work closely wovenlwhcn it was new. It needs centuries toc urc of the body under the clothing. In the man it was found to be enjoying the cool of the Alllfi- f effort by smiths and chemists to ~ th ter garments _ malarial‘ fglllmocilsudlllll-ll; the mm perfect the modern uses and variet- gics of steel. weather‘ Two elements whose history sug- ah more comfort! l hkelihood of thefgcsts th industrial “floater? gett- ldool-S causing a ling job fter job. only to lose them. - rve sulphur and iodine. Sulphur ‘once was needed to make gunpowder ______<..>__-- fbut smokeless powders were invent- .,¢¢“‘¢¢+¢+o+»»uo++o+;ed, giving that job to the element v _ lnitrogen. Then the doctors hired é Modern Etiquette lsulphur to do odd jobs of cleaning ‘ By Roberta Lee ,up the germs after epidemics; but .¢>o+eo+++o-o++0+vvH-0+*¢* This would me indoors, with less cool weather ‘ou chill. improved fumigating materials came along and sulphur lost another job. .Meanwhlle a new process of extract- i . ll, the “ole express-ing sulphur cheaply from deposits . lwgglggogsef a gift to an in- was perfected and the worlds sup- ‘Pllfjl’ ' Eply, preciously obtained chiefly ‘a1 ‘ ‘from volcanoes. was increased until mber of his‘ family. s‘ 1G5 the proper way to ad-‘now there is more than anybody d_ P‘ q member o; mo pl-Qllegt-Jntlcfln use. At the present there is 'e“s ‘ l heal. the mlelpromise of employment in fertiliz- cmrgy if he does no but sulphur is still looking for Q. Is it permissible to have en- cores at the musicale? A. Yes. {was fired only recently. A few years ‘ago tincture of iodine wasthe badge |of carefulness on every cut finger ‘Now new chemical workers do this Hfllijob more effectively, and iodine ex- +¥GOQ+O%§OO4OQ-O n+0 .. ters. D.ADI:(KM1.YI 1c full-time job. o ' ‘ From one cf its best jobs iodine l The old idea that Fascist tyranny! suffocates the freedom of the luress says Mussolini, is now entirely dls-. “The: in the . whole world. Elsewhere newspapers} ', plutocratlcj ‘ groups, from parties, from individ-_ fuels; elsewhere they have been re- - duced to the melancholy state of ex- ~ and he proceeds: press is the frcest credited, Fascist are under control from changing exciting news. the per- petual reading whereof saturates the; - ‘public mind with a. kind of stupe- iaction, with signs cf atcny and llmbecility; elsewhere journalsarc ‘grouped in the hands of afewindi-l ‘viduals who consider newspapers true and. personal industry like that oi iron orieather. Itallanjotlrnalism is lfree because it serves but one cause and regime; it is free because within the laws of the regime it can and does Iexercise functions of control, criti- Icisnl, propulsion .. All who read for- eign journals of all countries in the world know how grey, uniform, stereotyped even to details is their; press. Then turning to a muscial| slmilc he said that he regarded Italian journalism as an orchestra. i ‘ Tile Press Orchestra l Then he proceeded to say that as an orchestra is made up of different; instruments, so should the Italian, press differ according to the temp- erament of the editors and the needs .of the readers. Some papers should‘ lbe extremely solemn, with perhaps lan official tings; others should be ,printed for “assault, warlike, head- *long.“ it would be absurd for prov-v lincial newspapers to bore readersl with whole pages on world foreignl policy. Papers should make a spool-l lalty of matters likely to interest andl linform their readers and at thel same time indulge the inclinations: l f the editors, so long as they rc- ‘lmained in tune with the general lorchestra. But some of the journals he regretted to say, did not serve lthe regime usefully, as for example ‘lwhen "they abnn don themselves tol llaudatory adjectives, singing some lmost voluptuous laudation. Daily Lessons rists in quantities enormously great-lobllgatory rhyme for convmllonal er than ca“ b‘: "Sod" I" *5 a by'p“°'1purposcs about every act and fact .duct in the manufacture of Chile even of Small lmpolll ol. every man, in English By W. L. Gordon isaitpeter. | Like too many human workers h f it. t ti f ""‘V'"H"'.H“.*“‘ ‘duality gudgjogslfrligrc islgililerdjili]: WORDS QFTEN MISUSED; De cal element so violent and temper- not way “who old ‘you give the amcntal that few care to have it Dupe}; ‘to-w S“ “whom all-L" ol-_ around. This is fluorine. which bites “To wlmnl dld ‘you glw, the papel-S-y-leverthlng that comes near it. Onc OFTEN MlSPRONOUNCED; fowl-used to write on glass. Another com- orite; i as in "it." not as in "bite." FIE LL D: it I Gaol S_N MISSPE E SEEM y ‘lfrosted electric lamp globes, for SYNONYMS; decay’ (lelellomw. fluorine dissolves glass and comes about as close as anything known ‘to being that long-sought "univer- d sal solvent." But most of the time fluorine sits about in wax bottles, without a job. One of the most romantic stories decompose, rot, spoil, wither, put- refy. WORD STUDY: “Use a wor three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by master-, ing one word each day. Toda ‘s word; CONS RAlNll-D; marked {moi job hunts by the elements is that constraint; f ced. “I have been con- ggrggrogariae ‘Zllgqgg’ fllfsthggzmgg 5 .. . ‘trained by circumstances‘ ,ever used in industry, for it was at least 6000 years ago that it was gathered iin the deserts of Central Asia and brought on yaks and camles to the civilized town Babylonla. one of which was to be- ber 21, a featurqof which will be speeches of five and ten minutes each delivered by 61 prominent speakers. There are stirring political times ahead. famous Ur of the’ Chaldees where Abraham was born. Here the King's goldsmiths used borak to purify and weld the metal of those beautiful crowns and headdresses and neck- Potatoes are moving rapidly across the Straits in larger volume than ever before. It is something newto 5111p 52 car loads from Borden to Upper Canadian Provinces on a Sunday morning. Without boron those marvelous ex- amples of the world's fist iewelry might never have been made. For many centuries boron held found better helpers, and boron turned to purifying welding iron. ‘These jobs, too, prov- The wily Premier Hertaog has got into trouble with a refractory colleague who refused to resign‘ when asked to do so. A Cabinet crisis has resulted. There will be but little sympathy for I-Iertmg in Conservative circles ln Canada even should his political sorrows and troubles increase. The scalding tears of commiseratlon will fall only from the eyes of separatlonlsts in Canada. acid was much used to prevent de- cay. Sanitary officers finally chased was found ln making soap and coa- metics such as berated talcum pow- few years boron the bathtubs and other plumbing fix- nbtb In North and South Poles have been discovered and visited, but Commander Byrd wants to-‘ do the South Pole over again.’ This time he will carry a British Flag in honor of tin memory of Scott add . lllldfllfhedlli him w.» will stand cooking heat. Among tlfe elements that are over- worked fnstead of underworked the his Ioudelt howls from tin. Tin can! represent. perhaps. the aroma la- v; » p» we» M \- t .- °l finding a helper for tin. come twenty centuries later thatl laces dug up from the ruins of Ur. that job. but in time thegoldsmlths copper and ed femporory and boron! next try was with the canners of food and the preservers of meat, where ~boric boron out of this job, and new work der. Some of these jobs boron still fills auccesfully. Within the last has found two other big jobs-helping be make ‘b white enamel of modem turos and making glassware which chemical employment agentg get; even oi modest stature. You musty ulcilate and keep your distance Nouns make adjectives superfluous.‘ ,With this advice everybody can ‘agree who knows anything about ,thc art of writing, and the structure‘ of the Italian language makes the; advice easier to heed than if it were‘ ‘addressed to a different national‘- lof its compound ls that eroding ink group He rebuked muse who gave so pmmd l5 used t° etch the inside 0f excessive attention to crimes and a rauc ‘little attention to the make-up of the papers and proper headlines. lllussollni/lhid Nero, Fiddlers Y7‘ The gem of his llarangue was that in which he explained how, “part from strictly political questions or iron. but so many cans are used that the known deposits of tin ores are almost exhausted. There are very few chemical problems crying so ulrsently for attention as that of A few years ago platinum was a standby of the chemical industry be- cause it will stand hlgh- heat and resist acids. About the time of the war platinum got a new job in mak- in: Jewelry. This paid better and platinum walked out o! the chemical industry completely, which is why chemists Still get mad whenever platinum jewelry is mentioned. The chemists‘ employment emcee have had their successes. too. Only B 19W years 88o aluminum an tungsten were aittin: around with nothlna to do. now aluminum is the basis of one of the dreatest industr- ies of the-world with a thousand iobl. Tlllllng from construction of Brent airship; like the 1m Angeles to the making of tubss-"for tooth paste. ‘Tungsten. as everybody knows is responsible for the modern electric 15ml‘ 35°" Nwlllly the element Olllllllllfl an. used as a war weapon. was put-to work bleaching most of "l! Diner and much of the white cloth that is made in the world. There are still many jobs to be filled. A Metal better than copper to conduct electricity is needed. Conversely. something that will re- riot electricity batm- than glass or rubber. Metals or substances that will slip past each other without friction would ive us machine boar- dcsigned so smartly and of su Included are Prints, Silks, tails. Bewitchingly young in lino and so young in feeling- made to float lightly over a. smooth floor to new music, all the leading shades with muffled skirts, long backs, fish. ch lovely new materials. Just Satin and Lace Frlpcks. In -_./ those fundamentally embedded in; the revolution, criticism can, with limitations be exercised for all dther questions." For example, as it should be permissible to say that "blussolini as a violin player 15 a vory modest amateur, so it should be permissible objectively to criticise aft, prose, poetry or ‘the theatre without any veto.” That we think is the best illustration of the frec- dom of the Italian press. It is per- missible to say that Mussolini is a very modest amateur, when the truth is that as a violin player he is an execrable performer. But how is the press to know that he is a perftxmer at all and what does it matter how well or ill he plays the violin? The fact may interest the Italian people but it cannot have ally such importance to them as‘ the public facts of Mussoiinfs 'life.| These, however, may not be com-l merited upon except in tones of the A liamstrung Press The press is not permitted to criticise in the mlldest and most courteous manner any act of 1'1 Ducc. Indeed the eighth command- ment of the Fascist militiamen is “Mussolini is always right," thus making two of them in Italy. So the freedom of tile press in Italy con- sists of the freedom to praise any- thing that Mussollni does or has done, to approve anything he ap- proves and to condemn or insult anything he thinks it necessary to condemn or insult, and even reaches that height tilat it is possible to y of a Fascist singer who makes ous "outcry on a concert plat- form that he is not so good. But if Mussolini is always right now, there was a time when things were diff- erent. In the great public library of Rome any citizens may read the books and magazines. But there is one must section of the library which no one must enter except with the permission of a high gov- ernment official. That section con-' talns the writings of Mussolini be- fore he became leader of the Fasclstl. , ~~o+o+++o wrwwo-obooo-o- Daily Selections for Guardit u Readers 06-00-60-004 é v November ‘I. 1928 _. t FEAR. NOT- ar thou not; for I am with th : be not dismay -", for I am Thy Cod: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; ‘I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness-Isa. 41:10. ‘ lPRAYEIt-lord, Thy mercies are Sure. and Thy compassion doth en- ure. T0 YOU You say the world ha: loot its charm since friends have proved untrue, And yet the heaven's shed their gold, The earth her blooms renew. Each tree that grows along the way Holds out o. friendly hand. And deep within each noble horn I think they understand. Each rooo upon its slender atom» . Ia blossoming jult for you: ingsahloto withou olLliveq ottbmb t " b, The birds trill out their happy an ‘still ring; to”, ‘ "'“ Why bums l?! htllflill 1-5 MEN’S NEW TUXEDOS ARRIVED s. A. MeDONALD m a vaerw cote ow Bmo. ‘J35 l, .w:. , B: Poem! oaom woe ell com. now -' You not only want to be pre- llared fliminst a cold winter, but. ‘"3"- You want your coal supply in before bad weather sets in. Be Ilflllicnt and place your order now. W. D. Gilliséfllo. COAL PHONE 176 , -~-._-'____... __,,__,, A FOUND That the consistent use oi’ PURE COD LIVER OIL will soon build up all run down systems. As a preven- tion of colds and coughs or as a Blood Builder if. has n0 equal. We would advise start taking it at once-now is the time. Just received a large consignment at prices ranfl‘ ing from 50o to 81.25 pol‘ bottle. All orders by mail 81"" prompt attention. 77w 2 Macs DRUGSTORE I49 Great George Street E0 __<-'° u. More than ‘B0.0®.000 pounds v1 rbycn will be produced in Italy "115 year. . The Government of Chile may build a modern hotel at Antofaflfl-l‘ ta. Italy ls nowlthe largest producer of rayon in Europe. ," ‘1“‘\\‘\ a nonn's"’<», ‘ KID N EY. I,