.1 1 i one.» and '~ T111" PAGFMEOLIR The Charlottetown Guardian ll. Burnett. Ii‘. J. l. Slin-lilniuin, U. S. 0. _.... . ._ .. ________i_i____ Erin.» 1111i 11.11111; 11.; Hirer-tor, J. u. IIIIIIIP", F. .1. l. - l-atitois, [rank Walker and l). Ii. Currie. il I101?) $1.00 per yeur tln advance) . suuo 11.-i- )0“! 1111 llll\l.llll'\'l Illlllllld to i-laiul. 51.5.0 per yi-nr (In utliunra) I ltl illlll l tilled Sllllfll ', OCTOBER l3, I936 Nova Scotin Follows Suit T111‘ fir‘. .\-il11 ilvii “nothing succeeds like surf-w!‘ \\ ~ 11.-t. i" lit-‘ki-r illustrated thait iii 1110 (111-Her ii-ili-ri adopted 11y the 11111111111011 lii1\'t‘l’l"' ll"- lT-iviirt- lill11<'rll1(‘l(‘l'lllS of d11- ."._-1 - . "=1 _-__i-1 1 iii |i1_*.\', Xotiiitlistaiiiliiig :1::.t 1i 'ilt"i 1. 1- 1.111 ilizough 11y Liberal‘ 3.1a. 1i - ,‘ 1 r-l pifitiriaus were no sooner l ll 1111,1113 than they lie- ii--n to 1l1e leas-j . coiiiiiiueil all,’ 111' tViiis-riativi- .ii1ii1iii1~tra-_ =1 “i. 1.~1 >t‘--!i1ll 11f the Pro-l in :1 ?'t‘~1'1llll<tll was a-l 111:. _\'i"i i1i.i'i1's zictivities 11"» ‘117111111111111- 11f private U 11511.11tliiitiiiissiiiii. -. "1111 11:11 nir-etiiig of the] \s=o1"i.'ition at llitle-l iiliiluritiiig 1111- r1_\"<11-i' i11- ‘1 1" ‘ - ' i-ng <.~i1-in was" strikingly i1 t‘\-ii-i:11i. w".1< quoted l1 1': 111 1111- 1111:1111)" 111' the ' 1111-. .\'1"ii'1' 111111111 111111111" .\1ii: ter of, ' '1r111i"1--~ in which 111-l . of roiiiiiiiiiiig private ' :.l l1l't’~< joined iii ap-1 1' i ‘ - i -- .1 '"-1".'1-il tinder this policy. \ .11i'i'l1l\‘lll 111.11 Nova $511- 151 ‘ ‘ " - 1' 1-.\."i1'1 l~l:iiiil'.< lca1l 11y] L.‘ I " " ‘ ' - lW-iiiii-t-ii all it- iivster area's.‘ , . \\'l 1111113 1111- iiiilti-try .'iliiii_q l 7~ viviircii-iii to note thr- l--‘.t"."1 s iti-iiiinii-sii1ii of l t'-'-‘ ‘i1\1'.1iii.i.\\' was a 111'- " < ' ",' l '13 llit‘ leasing juilicy ‘1:'\<_v 1.11111." had 11.-en -, ‘.1111 within a couple rif- " ' 781mg of the agreeiiietit lie-j ' ‘ ‘ "l -"11\"1iit"i:il 1tllllli1l'lll(‘<_ -" tliiiiiiiissioii 10-1 "v 1.1 (i‘i‘~l1'l' areas should ' i uals '11‘ companies at . r"~i:iii.liiig that a cer-. 111-alone i111 the heds F1111 of :111 lll~ll'llt‘lt)l' 11-111 1111" the purpo<1i_ 111:‘ piililic fishing in 1'1". under strict regu- 1111- 1"~1;1l11i'~'li1iii-ii1 of ‘mill-l solve lllllll_\‘ of the "Vt iii riiii~<i"\iii_; :iii.1 de- 1"“? " ‘- .i highly l'L'lll‘.i1l('1'.'ll1\'(‘ 11:11 of l.11lt“l'.'ll politiciansl 1.11 private leasing \\'.'1<l ."l\ 1' tiii- 1112b‘ IlQFPPHlPlll, l1 .1111 r11 1"'i-li1-1'ii‘s t'r1|i'ii1ii<-,-j,,n 11o such niisapprehr-nsion. 1111111-1‘ Threshing Old Straw comment we have vet 1 wilder: 111 l’iii»i.\iii:i< l\'i.\'<.'s Geneva - ihiite-l 11y ilie Flllftllrlfll Post, (lu- T117111. lt re."iils.' 1 .- 11- tear aililre~s lia< aroused sortie "given a life THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUAR l)lAl\ us} under the Reciprocity pact. It ivas notorious that ivliile M11. KING failed to get tariff coiicc 111s oti fox furs and Alaritiine fishery produt... and was but llltllllCfCllllY successful w-ithggi-icultiir- Ill tariffs. lie did sticceetl in getting the full iiiax- ed Sti- Percy Vincent. 10rd 111111101” llllllill reduction of fifty per cent iii tlie tariff on Canadian whiskey entering the l'iii1<~il $1;11.~<_10ne was the Roz-icy Mountains, The result has been an export of nver 31.2557. 000 of (fittiarliait whiskey into the l'nite1l States in the first eight mouths of the present _ve:ii'-— an increase of about 100 per eeiit 0V0!‘ last year's corresponding figures. T1115 is liy far the largest ton, .___________ Editorial Notes Next day’ off. \\'erlnesda_v, Nov. ii. l-lollywvood tlliuks iii millions as we do cents. Ill l ‘l! .\1r. lohn F. \\'hear, _l. IT. aitd Xlagistratc l.. 11. .\1ellish have "put it up 1o" the .\11ornr~_\ General to make the next move iii the llorgain Duffy case. The new" 1111s service to he inaugurated lie- l\\"8f‘ll here. Suitiniersirle and llordeii may lie the thin end of the wedge iii keeping that highway open all winter. lii all their 1.500 word message to tlii- Finitli- - srilllitll liistitiitiiiii on lieiiig preseiiteil \\itl1 a 1111-1 of the late Lord Kelvin could London scieiiii<t~ 1i.'i\"e_s."iirl any more than the lidiiil1urgh scii-ii.‘ fists in their one word cable “felicitations"? I Plans for revising the laiiguzigc of the l)iiii."i_v- lvhcinis lziiglish New TCSIZIHICIII for 1\‘ri[1|;1|1 catholics of the United States are Zllll1i1llll1‘(‘11. .\t tlie national religious education eonvt-iition 11f I111! (oiifrateriiity 01 Cltris1iaii Doctrine in .\l-iv \ork, itwvas announced ohsulett: teriii~ :111»! fortnsrwill he eliminated and all :7 l1oi1k< of 1111- .\cw testament recast into modern l-fiiglish, hev. U. L. New-ton. secretary of a l'(‘\'l.\11iIl committee of .30 tlieologiziiis .'ippointed 1,-1.1 j)... vffliihcr 11y .\lost l\'ev. l5. \". (Yllara. llisliop 1.1 lrreat halls, _\1niit.,‘ni."i1le. the statement. l-‘atlit-i" .\ew"ton said the_ langllish‘ version, Pl'L)[ll\jl.l,'|l1-(1 ltv the Roman Latliolic Church in i;.\‘_1_ 11,111 been revised only 011cc sinc0—hv tisliop that. loner ‘o1 lfnglaiirl in i741). The w-‘ork of re-xis-iini, he ‘llld- l5 9x17961011 to take 111-tween two Jlllll three years. \\'lien the revised work is com. lllpuid “ml ilPl""'t\'tl‘tl hy the American lll(‘l'.'il't‘ll\', it \\'lll lie issued to Catholics of the 11111111! plates as the standard 1)riii.'iv-l\‘lieiiii~ .\l-w" lestaiiicnt with a 01164111111119 ,.',,,,,,,,,.,,,_.H.\,_ At Cortiwall, Ont, a former inavoi", (w-iiivict- vil of criminzil iiegligetice \v."is fineil $31111 _ suspeiirletl sentence. proviiliii; refrain from operating an automobile. 1111- .\l.'iyor, Adam t‘. and 111“ _ ex- liettt-rly, had been tried on ;i charge of manslaughter, growing 11111 m‘ m, lllllOlllfilillr‘. accident ltily 1. when .\li1-1i."iel tilt-e- KH". local canal worker, ivas killed. (.11. justice Alil-ltlllfi", presiding at 1111- Slllifl-pnr-l Ultrt of flntario l'all assizes, said owing to, lack of evidence as to the exact cause o1 filer-Q spas death, he would not permit the inaii. s atigliter charge t0 go t0 the _]lll‘_\'. lle iiidieatt-rl a criminal negligence charge might stand "Diu- to carelessness of the local coroner iii failing nil hlzive a post morteni performed. there is n11 evi- ience as towvhat caused this man's death." said judge Klaykins. ‘lle might have been frightened to death. lliivvtivei". ‘ _ _ _ w _ _ ln announcing sentence, pup". d1" 1v iii 1..e ll1"!’l< o1 manv 1t11]1l'(fjll(lt(‘(_‘(l 0b- Maltins said lie considered Fetterl" was‘ 1N1‘ ' 1 . . 1 . 4 . . ‘ - l 1§ 5(!1"1i"1'.~j. lll‘ 11»! tint 1111- prime minister, in his the age when he should he drivini m, “HULL, emphts . 1's ziirlepeiirleiice and coni- bile. In view of his previous f(‘<p(%(‘l‘£ll)llll\' he para 1., ‘.1- tiic impresssion of a rlis- did not feel like sending him to prison. i’ I unity in empzre pulatit-s that does not, in fact, are, 11¢ at must. r a v_ _ Despite Germany's efforts to free hersvif .\liz. l\ 11s HCWS on the potential reform from the shackles of accepted lianlin 1i ~' of the 11""; e reasonably expressed and no ples she has been compelled IIflClCfdllE 111521“: dntibt 1‘~.'_ 1r d-w-iivof (jaiiailians, if they were of inexorable economic laws’, to fcturnl p, to read v .\l -.. l\1.\'c, hail to say On this point. thodox practice viv-iiltl a;_-:'e1- I11". eoiriplr-i ' l1 him in very large measure if .\li:_ l\'i.\'c. knows the league ._v to i1, 111-is quire right in refus- _ .: commitments under it. more to criticize in his ad- ' . 111:1: Mn. KING went all the " v.1 m irilk about something that is t :11 tli-s time. Canada's status as .- hn-iivn to the world and dogs i111 reiteration and amplifica- l upon Canada's independ- .~ hardly necessary; and it t‘ie impression that the Brit- ‘ 11111 lie relied upon to stand to- 1.- if :1 crisis arose. No one lit to independent action. mrrectly- the history 01' of the present knows 1111-" will all be on the same 1 1:1 concert if and when the next ti "-.. '1 1.1- 11. 1].“ ‘d Fl1l('.'l1l(11", war c .1111». Q * y, f" l‘ .' " will.“ lmlmll lam" l” Pm" Tl" Rffiilblicane are making an issue of the ln . "1 .‘.li-. l\i.-;r; had emphasized the depreciating effect of re ("ited i con = - 1:1 p111" i» i- 1-11 piiarr- r11 the léritish nations loans on savings hank accolitiits insiiiiziricrimpiirlt lll-lt 1'1’ 'ii‘1-1“,_' \r 111 -ll _~ ; - , ’ ' ‘ ' WW1‘? _, l’ " l c l” ‘lrlw. 0f 11165. and iniesments generally. Colonel Frank King's (Vliivkey 1111i En-rladngered’? f hi," 1.1m? 1. - " -i liiilitl"\' i‘l"i‘t‘llll_v called atten- iltlltrt‘. lt is here now," said ('01. Knox. at tion iii " - I ' n11‘ 1.. lioiigh Vroliiliition is no Plllsllllrflll. P- A. The valite of the savings lrii1c1i" i1 l" ~-,i i111 111111-11 States as a national flfillarfi and the life. insiirzinci- dollars ha; l](*(\|1 moi "11-. i '- .. litill \'lltll a reii ll of the Clll "early 20 per cent. since the present zidniin- d1)‘ 1M1 - 11." ri-r-iii 11111121114 "av- to throw istratirm took office," Knox said. "ln addition, a 11"» v 11. 1 T .:,-.. 1H1- l1i|i1ri1' and beer 111- the interest rate on savings accounts iii those. dil- tiri a = " 11~ i.‘< j|11r1l'l1l.'tl11111 on a rr-pnrr in H1011‘ dollars has been reduced. . .and ilivirlenrls 111 ‘l1. l 11;’ 11 v~.'|_\~ that at present Ala- on life instirance Policies have been drastically #11’- ' - - ---1=i‘l<: l\'iii~._i~". (Iklahoiiia, cut. The Chicago publisher said; "The inrqrcq l1" , -. Iiuu- »~1-i- pi-ruiit only lieer, rate rin bond investnietits has her-ii ilriven to l1. . ; - - our-.- 111» r .1111] 1111111 wines. and sitch low levels that the retitrii to hanks and iii- 1,11 :111-111. :1 111-z. "n1- “dry stink" wifliiii thirty- surance Cotllllanies is not enough‘ to permit 1i » .1 -- >i.11-:_iii-il1-i" local option. and they them tr1 give savers and policyholders what they ‘ "v1 l‘»,'~ " l h1- eziziipztigii for lllllltlllill pro- got before. As the endless flood of the firiverti- "i- oii ,'iQ.i111 iii full swing, merit debt pours nut of the treasury. the assets l ‘tr-W ‘We; hut the :iii;gle of of the hanks and insurance (‘ontpatiies heroine ,I- ' " l ." ' " . 1 .'"ir .',s ("ziinida is (‘HIP iticrczisiiigly gorged with lmv-eariiiiig federal i '" i-l --. v ' '1" 1'!"1 11"." our local (‘11111011111- bonds. 'l‘hey_n1tist keep on l1ll_\'lllglll(‘l1l_ to ki-itji 1.1- \‘.. ~ - 1 :11 11111-1 this campaign is their abnormal market price from collapsing." liki-li tn .‘...i. i ii l‘iii iiiicii l\'i.\'i.'s whiskey deal he said. - at the University series of I2 public lectures given under the aus- Montreal. Sound banking filllglQ-‘lmPlfi principle known technically as the Pljmclple Cff liquidity,” Mr, Baudin ' This law laid down that the use of bank funds was rigorously determined by their origin. In other words could not be immobilized for long without men- alclng lhfi Stability 0f a banking institution. lie P°5t“"a1' P¢Y|°<‘l. German bankers displayed disregard for liquidity. Money, mainly American money, had been files 5° lhal "1 I030 half the current accounts in ierman banks were made by outsiders and Mr. Louis Batidin, profcsgnr of Paris, said in the fifth of a pices of l’Institut Scicntifique Francc-Canarlieu, practice rested 0n ,1 recalled. it meant that short term loans In the operation of the principle 0f _ and British obtained in enormous quanti- 1931 theft were still three billions of foreign d]: P051“ after enormous amounts liad been with- drawn. Knox, Reptiblican vice-presidential nominee, do. clared that the _Ad1ninistration's financial pol- {9195 lB-‘tve "no insurance polcy secure, no sav- "1115 Kfmlllt! F1163’ "This is not a matter of the l 5111101101‘ Notes by the Way Two things in particular imllfflfi 0f London, 8S he crossed Canada. laud the oihet'~"minlng of the lpralt-ie witeiitlarids." Regarding the latter remark, it recalls the ob- iservation of an Indian chief when l he saw 5o much grazing land turn- iteni iit tlie whole coninioilitv" li-t iiii1ler'<‘<l 1M9 \\'l1l‘?\'~ FWPCJEQ- "U511!" he 1 the agreement signed bv _\li<_ K1,“; at \\'_-._.h,‘,,g_ 1 said, "wrong side up." The settlers litter reinetitberecl the red man's wisdom when windstorms blew away most of the topsoiL-St. Thomas Times-Journal. Adult‘ Ilitli-r is right when he sugeests thzii democracy is not efficient. It is anything but. But l tionc can admit this and still de- clare, wiihou: fear of sticcessful contradiction, that it is infinitely to the systems which Hitler and Mu~soliiii extol. What; we lose under the democratic system. we gain in personal satis- 1 faction, personal freedom, personal Opjimlllllll)‘ 1o call ones soul his own v» \vlZ§(l>0I' Star. The lift- of a Communist in the Ilniterl 51310:: is full of iips and iliiviis, Th." eiliir day Earl Brow- dr-r, Cniniuui t ('flil(llflfllC for pres- ident, ivas arri u-d in Torre I-laute 11:; a rajzrztttt. A feiv ll(‘ had his pit-int:- taken by the side of aft-s". Ogden Iteid. wife of 1111- owner of the New" Ycrk Herald- 'I‘:".li".iii:-, \\ll'1.-(‘ guesi he was-Rial 111111 Elllhlft‘. - eieal fort-e, terrorism, de- _ vii-ho: iii-itiiiijihslt the high 1. wlizr-li ('.\'lllZIlllOll aims. Iiiteili. 111-e .~t‘.‘illltl iimral standards and ‘he .~pi:it of .~(‘f\'iCL‘ c1111 do s0. aIwziys have (ii-111- s11 11rd will 0:11- 1.i".1;r" lo do >11. I‘. is tor these that. the eiitll -" war w".igc:l.'»—Nicliolr.s M tlfffi)’ In the last year nrrn, particularly " when $111.1‘ .\Z‘.-.v 1 Hider ab- ruptly 11- of llI‘ V1 iiounccrl that were re- 41111111111‘ Geri . , ..1:1 crises ltare developed with iitci-eaitig fre- quriir-y. Iii 11m 1.1 L few months, inrlcr-ii. 1h'_v 11111,? lzeztin to burst upaii 1h.- ivai-lil i.i rapid-fire fasti- ioii. Eltxte men 11o longer itave time 1o .~':.i-, azij‘ sting themselves to ose :-. iipli lI’.‘(1 fict, audaci- lo mankind by 111.11 gnvcitiiiteiit, this rlx-iatoi" or before llli‘_\‘ a?" eonfrcntz-rl by an- otlir-i" iiztrl of mori- serious question The t‘.i>(‘:€ iii Europ? not only oix-iiap, but sr-eitiinglj" itave become one - Bahiinore Sun. Th:- smallest llilllllll$ have lit-- frniulerl l-Iiliitrpia in (he League of Natl Goon \\’l. . however, provided 1:11 rlt-“etiii- 11111111111, iliL- iii- varli- while it w-oiiltl be fitter-est- ing a1. to know" how" many of these small 1111110115 continue to do trade with Italy (fitting the s0- ‘talli-rl period of sanctions. There is some l‘l‘fl:Ol1 to believe the small nations really destroyed the effect- iveness of sanctions-Poi‘: Arthur Neivs-- Chronicle. For the layman, the best short explanation of \\"l1e.LFi‘8nc:- pur- poses doing with her currency, ts that the franc will become the equivalent. to five cents in United States money. It now has an ex- change value of 6 11-2 cents. Com- Dlex reports about trade balances, shipments of gold bullion, effects upon stock markets and the like, ar confusing. But anyone can 59g that with francs at five cents, an American dollar will exchange for 20 francs as against about 15 t-2 at. the higher exchange rate.- Minneapolis Journal. Eurup today, and this country as part of Europe. is living under the dominion of fear, It. Ls not, the same fear everywhere. In France there is fear of Germany. In Ger- many there is fear, genuine or artificially formcntcd, of Russia. The fear that oppresses us here is not the fear of any par-tlcuisr country, but the fear of war, and of a war that we shall have had no part in provoking. That pro- F-Dect oven-shadows every benefici- ent activity. Ltlfe goes on; trade slowly but. consistently expands; stock exchange values mount; un- employment diminishes; slums are cleared and houses built. But through it all penetrates ceaselessly the recurrent. through that, all our building is for destruction, all our wealth is being amassed, only to be destroyed in the work of des- troying, all the wise expenditure of the nation on the education and iir-aith of its children and the sup- port of its unemployed, its sick and its aged, will be checked or disastr- oiisiy contracted by the need for laying ourselves and future gener- ntloits insuppoitnbie burdens in lEPpflIf-IUOH for a new war, before the biisinr-si. of paying for the old has come. within the range of human vision-The Spectator. days earlier _ is to be 1111-, illl- 1 Qllljat 15111111 n1 goats QJQu l0. Ia-lnl. I'll’). FATS ARE GOOD F0005 i BUT DELAY DIGESTION Knowingi that fat". are good foods, and that they are the richest soume . of energy-twice as rich as protelnz‘ or starch foods-you may wonder‘ why you are advised not to cat wp . much fat, and not to eat much food t that is fried or cooked in fat. "The presence of fat tends to de- lay the passage of food from the stomach. FY5015 rich in fat. are held ‘ longer in the stomach and delay the sense of hunger. Because fats - leave the stomach more s‘0wly, a meal supplying an appreciable amount of fat is more satisfying to the appetite. Hunger does not as a rule occur as soon after a meal containing fat; as after a meal of - equal caloric or fuel value of pro- iein or carbohydrates.’ t If, then, fat is such a rich and ll tfsfving food why SlTOUlG it not; 11.-e eaten freely? Kathcritie Mitciieil Thoma, in her book "Food in Health and Dis- ease", says: “Pie ence of fat In foods. partic- tilary those fats not liqveficd at ‘ body temperature, tendx to delay or slow up the flow of digestive juice 1 in the mouth arid in the stomach- j the saliva arid gas r1: juice respcc-i 1 1 l 1 lively." - "This 2's the reason for the “in- digestibilitg." of fatty foods. Fats, and foods rich in fats. are normrfly oomph-few" digested but. the dgel-l ‘ion is ncmewhat- SIOWII‘. Fat in- ‘focds forms a protective coating: 1 over the particles. of pmieiit-aneat. . Tish. eggs-and aZ-"o over starch, foorls—p01atocs, bread. pasliy-and. prevents dtgcstloit until the food ‘rcachr the iiite tines where tie‘ ;fihn of fat is broken up b3" the,‘ ldigestive juice; in the intestine." 1 1 Similarly, fried food; are digested ‘all right, but dig-cation is somewhat slower. "If the food. potato for ex- ample. is put into the fat. at moder- ‘ate tempsiuture, and the iotato lbecomcs rat-her wet‘. saturated with jfat, each particle of tlEIYClI will be covered with a fi‘in of fat. T1101 lstareh will i101 tittdcrgo any c1 grst-l lion utitil 1hr- diggestive jlllCif~ have; lbroketi down 121's eovcinng of fat—1 lusually" not until '11. leave: the] ‘stomach and t"eaci"e;,- 1111-. iiuil‘. iii-l Jesline. If, however, titre potaoesi lwerc French 11‘i(‘(l—-~flt‘O]‘1)f‘fl into hot fat wihieh [oi-ins a ei"u.s._v "layer on the out-side and prevsiits further cntraiiceof fflh-illf‘ potato iii-ids is not saturated with fat. Thu< the starch in the crust of the potato: will be cooked with fat and it". ili- gestioti delayed; the s‘arel1 in thel centre of the potato wi'l be digcsted as quickly as i1 baked poiato.“ 11...? cdliflowwi. Mr. King At Geneva (Vancouver Province) Mr. Mackenzie Ktng has gone t0 Geneva and maide the speech he was expected to make, and after it no one can say where Carmela-or at least. the Government of Canada- t-eaily stands about the League of Nations. Mr. Kins. =5 his manner so often is, does not blow hot for the Covenant and he does not blow cold. Mr. King coos. If cooing could DW- s/five the peace of Europe, Mr. King would show them how to do it. Mr. King tells the other nations of the League that it is the Parliament of Canada which must; make the decision for or against war, “in the light of the existing circumstances." He holds, because of the failure of sanctions in the case of Ethiopia. because of the breakdown of thel Covenant, that sanctions have prov- ed to be unworkable. He talks sooth- ingly of mediation rather than pun- - isbment, of “full enquiry into com- plaints," of doing something or oth- er undefined to halt the race of armaments. The whole suggestion of Mr. King's speech-Jot‘ it ts all suggest- ion, imcl most of it can mean any- thing or nothing—-is that you can make a solemn covenant to do cer- tain things in certain contingencies, and then, when the time comes, you can decide for yourself whether it will pay you to do it or not. He does not; put. it as bluntly as that and contriiriwise he speaks of a general umvillingness to incur obligations which it may not be possible to ful- flll. But that is what Mr. Kings at.- titude on the whole question of in- ternational collective security comes to-that Canada may be in the League when the sun shines and out when the storm clouds gather. He ivouid not amend the Covenant, ap- parently, but he would not fight for it ‘ He thinks that you can not ex- pact the Covenant to work until you get, all the nations in the League- Meaitwhile, speaking for one na-tLon, our tuition of Canada, he tells the others that they need not count on us when the crisis comes. We may stand by the Covenant or we may not. It will be for Parliament to decide. Of course there is no realism in this attitude, as Mr. King ought to know and as he probably knows vet-y well. It. is a. highly plausible thing to say that Parliament in a parliamentary democracy must de- cide the question of war. In history it has always been, practtaliy it is almost impossible to see how it. can ever be otherwise, that the execu- tive of the nation must act first, ticivmg‘ no alternative and abide the verdict of the nation afterivards. “Parliament only to decide war" is a flue phrase in the language of cooing; it means iiardiy anything at alt in the world of reality. But. that is not the effective issue. The issue is that you either make a Covenant and mean it and stand by ir, or you do something else. You can make a Covenant, and break it when the time comes, and you can have a dishonored League for your pains, as almost we have now. Or you can say that the whole project of international peace by agreement In advance is visionary, has been AUTUMN SYMPHONY Dead leaves failing I-Ieaped in fragrant piles, Wood-smoke floating Down the forest aisieeq Wild geese calling Early in the morn, The high flight drifting Through the misty down; Slow river winding Frost; along the brink, Forest creatures stealing Softly down to drink- l-Ieartb fires gleaming, You across the room; Ltfo is full of living ’Nea.tb the Autumn moon. —Ja.mes F. Bryan. . FOXMEN FALL-FUR-RING RATION ls now available thru your Sunglo Dealers. A SPECIAL RATION I-‘OR DE- VELOPING GDOD COLORED Announcement JUST ARRIVED A COMPLETE LINE MAX ElACTOR SOCIETY BEAUTY AIDS Max Factor preparation: are 1n a. very large way res- ponsible for the splendid complexiun of the Hollywood Celebrities. Some of our lines include FACE POWDER. FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND TISSUE LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest Ingred- Ientc In correct colon, har- mony phiules, to blend with Individual complexion ‘ " ,, and ls delicately perfumed, Jo please the most fastidious taste. It's peculiar adhesive qualities make ll. “stay 0n" and "cling" under most trying conditions. Vlstt our store and look over this line of toilet pre- paratlons. MAIL ORDERS PBOMPTLY ATTENDED T0. THE 2 MA CS 149 Great. George tree! PHONE 315 PELTS. MADE WITH AND WITHOUT BEEF MEAL. EYE s I i1 in l“ EXAMINATION I-‘lttlng mil Supplying Glaslel Etc. l ll. J. lMBllll ' OPTOMETRIST 1 MONTAGUE. r. a. I. Ofllco Connected Wlth Drugstore. {I} =......___.___ We Pay Cash for Old Gold. V 5.5 2/. OCTOBER 13,_i_<>:6 _'_“-__‘_= Dlrzcu ‘tr/y: j a ‘ru/ 12.1.1.1; - ' Z7 ' 106,000,000 iii“. \lii\iiiiiiiii al 1111' . \~~1~1' , l orltr-ulq-ialllrni "lull! illllli l" Branch Oflice : UZrdZy/rQd/a t4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1~11>1 morn 1, Bank of Nova Scotia Building, Charlottetown- W. G, HOGG, Manager. 1111111 and has failed, ‘and had bet- ter be abandoned. Mr King. by his policy if not b)‘ his protestation, would abandon the League. Let’s Have Dignity More (London Advertiser) The suggestion made by Attor- trey-General Roebuck on his re- tum from a, visit. to England that all Ontario magistrates should don formal morning wear at court ses- sions has had a marked appeal, and formal morning coats, gray striped trousers, wing collars and black ties have broken out like a rash all over the province. This has been good for the haberdaslt- ery business and is also having the desired effects of increasing the dignity of magistrates‘ courts, The latter result. is welt illustrated by what occurred in the maElSlYBItYS court of Huron county at. Goderich when for the first time in the county's history Provincial Magis- trate J. A. Makins entered the courtroom dressed in the latest magisterlal garb. His entry was electrical in its effect. Coa-tlcss traffic officers scurried for their tunics and others slieked down their hair. Only the crown nt- torney, attiied in white flftlmClS, was tinperturbed. Spectators nudg- ed one niiollter and whispered something about swallowtalls. One called the morning coat a “Port Albert.“ All beholders agreed that Magistrate Makins, who most of his life has been a hardy son of the soil, wears his new clothes with grace and dignity. If the effects of the new sartor- ial edict are so good, it seems too bad not to carry the reform a lit- tle further. For instance, we have always felt that some occupants of the prisoners box display a certain lack of dignity in their attire and general appearance which detracts from the solemnlty of the court's atmosphere. If all prisoners could only be persuaded to have a clean shave and don aflowltig robe of some sort with immaculate linen in evidence, their appearance when they rise to answer to their names would be vastly more imprr-sslvi and, remembering that; a man l. Judged by the linen he wears, they might even 1 expect n. little ruori leniency from the faultlessly attlr~ ed figure on the bench. Think iilsi of the lawyers. If each of them wore a. legafgown and a wig, mam, a magistrate would be spared llll embarrassment of confusing then with the prisoners. The case of the newspaper r1- porters in attendance is siigiiti; more difficult. It would be hare to camouflage them in such a way that they would resemble anything but; newspaper reporters. Even ll they were decked out tn mortar. board bats they would probably wear them at a raklsh angle which would be a dead give-away. But clean white surplicea withaseribe‘: inkhom and quill pen suspended by a girdle at. the waist: would be em- blematic of their high calling be- sides adding immensely to the sol- emnity of the proceedings — or would it? The trouble about all these trap- pings, such as robes and chains of office for tniiyors, cutaway coati for magistrates, and uniforms iii general, is the fact that; the divid- ing line between dignity and pani- poslty is so thin and the descent from the sublime to the ridiculous is so fatally facile. The average CZLHHIllKIILfICCLISlOIIICG to the $011115- what ft"eo and easy habits anrIetis~ toms of his democratic domain finds it difficult to suppress iasmiie when authority starts “putting oti the dog." That sort of thing may be all right. in England, where .\lr, Roebuck apparently got the idea They are long accustomed to ciasi distinct-tons over there which an not recognized in this country, vvhere the doctrine is so tenac- iously held that "Jack is as good as his master." But if the dig- nity of the law Is enhanced by morning coats and striped gray trousers, by all means let's liiivi them. Let no prisoner go sadly w jail feeling 11s a military offt-udei would if he were sentenced by! colonel who neglectd to don hii Sam Browne belt for the occasion For Vitality alwausjute- BRAH ORANGE PEKOE TEA Ml insurance. llYilllMllll & WHY RISK LOSS‘? Some mishaps simply CAN'T be foreseen or prevented, but there's no need of fin- aneial loss when your property, car, valu- ables and ‘health can be protected by Better to be sure than sorry. The Oldest Insurance Agency ln- l’. E. I. JOHN m. mcuonsou, 01mm Manager, Summersldc. ALLISON McLEAN, District Mnnager, Montague. C0,, LIMITED SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL LINES 0F Watches, Diamond Rings, Jewelry, Etc C.W. PdttCTSOfl. Jeweller 130 GREAT GEORGE STREET We Repair Watches, Clocks 8w- I