l j PAGE roux I ‘fir: clunlonrrown surname yiumukw. Chock! l. Isl-urn. I. I. Vloo-Pruidnnt. J. l. Burn“. l‘. J. l- Sccretnry-Licnt-Ool D. A. Isalinnon, l). l. 0. . Editor Ind IIDIIIII Dlrootpr—J. l. Bnrnrtt. I‘. J. l. Anoeinlo Iditnrn-Irnlk Wnlknl. and l). K. Curl-lo. Morning H.450 pl; your (in THURSDAY PRETTY GOOD REASONS Mr. King in his" Charlottetown speech had very little to say about the Empire Trade Agreements. There was a reason for this-many reasons, in fact. Here are a few 0f them? In 1930, under a Liberal govern- ment the United Kingdom pur- chased from Canada slightly more than 113,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1933, after the completion of the Empire Trade Agreements, the amount increased to nearly Dally (founded lll7) 86.00 nor year (In advance) delivered. advance, nnlled to Cannon and United ltntco. SEPTEMBER. i2, aster when they are crossing the stream. This is the real issue before ‘the ielectors. All Mr. King's talk about do» “p5, about his grand- father's alleged martyrdom in the cause of freedom, about history re- peating itself and the danger of Canada going to war with Musso- lini unless he, Mr. King, is elected to power, is just so much poppy- cock. Mr. King knows better, but he is in the unfortunate position of having nothing constructive to of- fer. His economic ideas, embedded board. The famous Blue logic rc- glme. which had been pretty well p‘ ‘ ‘ some time ago, has been omcially declared dead by the NRA. It may be true to say that the bird parres, unwept, unhonorcd and even ‘by its l>°1itical parents. In politics even c very religious man is justified in using strong language when the occasion requir- es it. Mr. Danton Massey. the con- ductor of the largest Bible Clcssin Canada, was addressing a meeting in Toronto when an interrupter shouted that the Massey-Harris firm was "the biggest scab-strep in Toronto." "I no longer have any- thing to do with the Massey-Har- ris Company," Mr. Massey said, “and neither do I own one single share of stock in it. But I see red when a man like you stands up at a public meeting and makes up such danrnable lies." There was a heavy export of farm Notes By The Way‘ Then 066ml l0 In g dlgpfillgu in some quarters to assume that because the electors of Alberta have so enthusiastically accepted "acc- ial credit" therefore this much. advertised panacea for all tho ills that presently beset us mus; b; sound and those students of eco- nomics all wrong who denounced it as a cruel fake. w. Aborhart probably at this writing wishes he were ss sum about it himself. A Soviet chip captain who cnt n burning tanker adrift, which action resulted in the loss of 27 lives, has been sentenced to death at Moscow. The U.8.8.R. authorities evidently expect ship masters to live up to the traditions of the sea or else pay the extreme penalty. They are ex- acting judges. As a sovereign state, Ethlopinlrac THE MANAGEMENT 0F V-ABICOSE VEINS There seems to be a tendency to- wards varicose veins in some farml- ies, while other cases are duo to overweight or to overiifting, when the veins are small, cnusc no discomfort, no swelling or other symptom they should be forgotten as mere is no need for treatment. When, howeyer, there is discom- fort or uhe veins are unsightly, their removal by the injection treatment the right to do anything it pleases in its own territory, says Emperor Selassie. In practice, such a, pol- icy may be correct. provided inef sovereign state is strong enoughto’ uphold its convictions. And thatis“ a question which Mussolini is dis-7 or by surgery must be considered. Dr. J. S. Bobo, Gadsen, Alabama, in the Alabama Medical Association Joumal, describes a method now in use 1,0 find out if treatment should uc given. A tourniquet (tight band) is placed round the lower part of RIVAL T sarrarvmsa 12, 1935 PIPE snorrmc osscco 1s voun srsr arr Its mellow old Burley leaf never lets you down and it has an extra freshness bc- cause if. is manufactured in the province by~. . . HICKEY a» NICHOLSON in a book which he wrote a dozen years ago, are now as obsolete as the dodo, and would be as inap- 151,000,000 bushels. While Belgium, in 1930, imported 1l,900.000 bushels of Canadian implements and machinery in July, the value being $1,123,963. Amongst the loading purchasing countries ' the thigh just tight enough to ob- putmg at this “ma iisiruct the retjurn flow of the blood ' in the veins ust below the surface I“ m‘ °"“""’ m" "m" °' 5"‘ ‘ oi the skin, and the patient is al-, USE PUBLIC FORUM '11:‘ ‘i’ v 1g .; , w g s‘! wheat, in 11933 she imported over were the following. United states tish rule, as in the quarter centuryé . 1n this country as they proved to ' f K, G - I mowed to walk about the room for, Inl- cola-a u Opol for nat- 18000000 b“ hels- “"1 l“ 1°34 $310,055, Argentine $333,444, Brit- gassedfihflflféiefflflgrj; several minutes to observe i1 the| gj-"aiaghgv “gxyzf-flgn-e 0mm“; perm; nearly 14,000,000 bushels. In 19110 the Netherlands secured from Canada only 6.000000 bushels, while in 1933-34 the yearly amount reached over 16,000,000 bushels. France, in 1030, imported slightly over 6,000,000 bushels of Canadian wheat, while in 1932 she purchased over 20000000 bushels, and in 1933 over 15.000000 bushels. Canadian cattle exports to the United Kingdom in 1930 were n11, while in 1931 over 6.000 head were exported to the Mother Country; in 1932, 26,700 head; in 1938, 24,300. and in 1934, as a direct result of the Empire Agreements. over 54,000 head. ’ In 1980 only 24,000.00» pounds of bacon were exported to the United Kingdom while in 1934 the amount was 94,500,000 pounds. Butter exports to the United Kingdom in 1930 amounted to B00 pounds, while in 1932 the amount had reached over 8,000,000 pounds. In i930 Canada exported to all countries only 1.309.000 pounds of butter. while the amount in 1932 was nearly 11,000,000 pounds. In 1930 Canada imported 41,900,- 000 pounds of butter, while in 1934 the amount was only 2,600,000 pounds. The ‘grand total- of Canadian trade for the three months ending Junc, 1935, was $291,945,000 ss compared with $283,100,000 for the Corresponding period in 1934 AVIATION PIONEER The Edinburgh Scotsman makes, the interesting statement that one of the earliest attempts at flying was made in Scotland, and the achievement is being incorporated in the film, “Conquest of the Air," scenes for which have just been shot at Stirling by London Film Productions. The attempt was maaefiby the Italian, Damien, who floated about the Court of James Iik», and eventually decided w float; oiI the battlements of Stirling Castle, having first fastened to his body p pair of wings made of fea- thers. Damien, though he seems to have been encouraged by the king in his scientific researches, which then passed under the name of alchemy, appears to have been something of a Court butt. He was, however, made Abbott of Tongland, in the steivamy of Kirkcudbright, and Dunbnr in his "Fenyett Freir of Tungland" satirlses Damien's at- tempt to master the air. The Ab- bott was lucky to have escaped on that occasion‘ with a broken thigh Dunbarls picture of the “friar" is anything but complimentary. I-Ie imagines all the fowls of the air screaming their protests at the poor man, whom he generally re- _ Ilfds as an lmposwr. And evir the cuschettls at him _ 11B . p-The rukis him rent, the ravy- -» his him drugglt, The hudit crawls his hair furth ruggit, The hevin he micht not bruke. The myttcnne, and Scnet Martynis fowie, _W_end he had bene the hornit howle, Thay set aupone him with a yow e, And galf him dynt for dynt. New more than four hundred years after- ths event, Damien has some into his own as a pioneer of aviation. KING'S STOCK FALLING The fltcs which seemed to look kindly upon the Liberal cculo in Canada, says the Hamilton Spec- tator, are now turning their smiles upon the Conservatives. The lie- plicable to present day conditions be in the Old Country. A younger man than Premier Bennett, he is constitutionally incapable of mov- ing with the times and adjusting his outlook, as Mr. Bennett has done, to the problems-of the rising generation. ~ THE FIGURES \ Figures do not lie. The latest bulletin of the Bureau of Statistics shows that while in 1931, the first year of the Bennett administration. the agricultural revenue of the Dominion was estimated at $839,- 881,000, it jumped in 1934 to $931,- 347,000, an increase 0f $91,466,000. Every province in the Dominion recorded an increase in agricultural revenue during the period in ques- tion." Prince Edward Island's rev- enue went from '$11.414.000 in 1931 to $12.979,000 in 1934; Nova Scotia from $24,029,000 to $26,525,000; New Brunswick, $22,189,000 to $24,611.- 000; Quebec, $161,614,000 to $180,- 257000; Ontario, $293,224,000 to $300,348,000; Manitoba. $49,695,000 to $71,735.000; Saskatchewan, $105.- 036,000 to $129,986,000‘, Alberta. $136,935,000 to $148,593,000, and rat-rush Coiurnbia, sasnaaooo to $30,313,000. An increase of $128.40l,000 is in- dicated for 1934 over 1933. Revenue from all items are higher, the greatest being in field crops, farm animals and dairy products. Evrrorrmz. zvoras The third epistle w the canta- lens by Mr. Bennett is the best yet. The electorate is not warming up to the Liberal candidates. to say the least of it. Dr. Gus Macddnald and Dr. Grant joint issue at Cherry H111 to- morrow. Mr. Larabce 1s quoting the price of butter in 1930 as 40c. As a mat.- ter of fact iihe Montreal market quotation in July 1930 was 29c. As Prime Minister Mr. Bennett will bid the departing Governor- General Godspeed, and welcome his successor to an enjoyable term un- der his second administration. The Conservative candidates in Queens will announce their series of meetings as soon as they learn who are the Reconstruction candi- dates they will have to contend against. ‘Nut! said. The old time custom of the out- going Govemor-Gener-al passing the incoming Govemor-Gencral at sea may be maintained alter all. Lord Bessborough is scheduled to leave here round about 28th inst, while Lord Tweedsmuir is expected to arrive October 10th. That means he would leave England about the 4th or 5th before his predfcessor had time to arrive. Has prosperity returned under the Liberal-Conservatives? How is this for evidence? Amusement tax revenue in Ontario last month to- talled $230,978, an increase of $198.- 000 over August 1934. When people can afford to spend more than double on amusement icxes,a mes.- sure of prosperity must no longer be “round the corner," but actually in their midst. Thanks to Mr. Ben- nett. Mr. Stevens is going to have op- position in Kooienay East after all. Captain J. Blakley, who hul been adopted Liberal candidate before Mr. Stevens became Reconstruction leader, withdrew, and there was no one in light to succeed him till Hon. R. R. Bruce, former Mouton- ant cot-emai- of British Columbia. returned from Europe and volun- teered to enter the lists. A Lib- prssslon. upon which lion. W. L. ‘Mackenzie King relied to carry him inlo cmce, is beginning to lift. The iioliclcs of the Bennett Gwomment Ire beginning to bm- fruit. More Ind more people are asking thorn- lflllillll, ercl convention has been called and his name will be placed before it. And now the 1m pf the much vlflhd Rocaevrit recovery pro- commit-quiescent which Liberals urged I Isuwittooolminsgonobyiho ish South Africa $187,753, New Zea- land $64,840, Australia $57,219, United Kingdom $28,551, Denmark $27,148, Uruguay $25,813. Imple- ments also went to Egypt, Spain, Russia, Belgian Congo, Portugese Africa, France, Gennany. Mexico, Peru, Chile, Italy, Colombia, Brazil, British East Africa. Newfoundland, British India, Ecuador, French AI- ricc, Jamaica, Belgium, Portugal, Roumanla. and Yugoslavia. This from the Montreal Gazette looks ominous for Liberal prospects: “Mr. Mackenzie King makes no progress in attacking the Govem- ment as being highly protectionist. Mr. Bennett has a complete answer in the fact that economic nation- alism has become world-wide, that almost everywhere tariffs have been raised, and that for Canada to ex- poze its industries and its indus- trial labor to the competition of countries where standards of living are lower and where currencies have been demcralized, would be ruinous and roolish. It is still true, and will always be true, that apro- tcctecl home market and the main- tenance c! a. proper standard of living are essential to the welfare of agriculture." " Bright spots of the current week, as compiled by The Canadian Press, are as follows: Toronto: Building permit values in Toronto for 1935 to date about double the total for the corresponding period of 1934; Ottawa: Income tax receipts in fivo months of fircal year totalled $01,- 289,412, an increase of 35 per cent over collections in same period of last year, Minister of Revenue re- ports; stratford, 0nt.: cuslomsre- ceipts continue to increase. Aug- ust returns up about 15 per cent over those of August last year; Vancouver: Value of building per- mits issucd in greater Vancouver in first eight months of 1935 three times the total for same period of last year. Good harvest prospects are ex- pected in the west after all. Cut- ting is general in Alberta, aside from the Peace River district with 57 per cent wheat and 37 pe: cent coarse grains completed, and ready for threshing. Manitoba claims a percentage o1‘ 94 already down. Rains have halted Lhmshlng and only 30 per cent is done in Mani- toba as against 91 last year. Yields are reported from a few bushels to 35 and grade from 3 to feed in Manitoba and southern Saskatche- wan due to rust conditions. Feed is generally plentiful for livestock although southern Alberta ranges wouicLbeheiped by more moisture. British Columbia} apple and late fruit crops are of excellent quality and are moving in normal quan- tities, Kelownc reports heavy movement of onions to New Zea,- land. Late vegetable crops are promising. A newspaper opponent of Mr. Ben- nett cculd scarce forbear to cheer when it read his exortstlon to the electors to deal with the basic is- sues of the campaign "as if each one of you were the sols arbiter of your country's destiny." This, it exclaimed, expresses the true ro- sponsibility of every citizen who exercises the franchise, a respon- sibility which never made c greater claim upon right-thinking electors than it does at this time when the issues are so confused and when the n chlse ls in the hands of so many people who are incapable of intelligent discrimination and are wholly unfitted for the proper dil- chcrgc of the highest duty of their citisenship. "Vote," tho Prirnc Minister advises, "not for your Plfty. but for yourselves, your chili drrn, your welfare, your country. vote cs your duty to thus compoh you to vim. Otherwise you will‘ assuredly vote wrong." wmch. i!!- but through weal and woe the mind o1 the people has rested in the knowledge of the e-"sential justicel of.British rule. Fair dealing be-l tween man and man and race and‘ race to the highest boon a people,’ can enjoy, and of this blessing Cey- lon has had abundant proofs.-_ Times of Ceylon. The roadside tree is at last, oom- ing into its ocjn. Those that have survived the ravages of modern trafllc are being protected and new trees are being planted along shadeiess highways, Ancient ene- mies of the roadside trees are tho sign and bill postenthe road build- er, the lineman and the land owner. For years they took an appalling toll in trees, but all are now on the defensive, if not vol- untary co-operation in the preser- vation of trees along the high- ways. There are times when the removal of a tree or a whole row of trees is necessary to eliminate a dangerous curve or to widen a highway. Under the old order of things such trees were removed and forgotten. Today trees thus re- moved are either replanted or 1e- placed by new trees in most in- stanoes-Aylmer Express. In a trans-Atlantic broadcast re- cently Commander King-I-iall said he had never seen British public opinion so consolidated as at the present time on the Italo-Ethiopian situation. The newspaper organ of the Right, the Morning Post, and the Labor organ, the Daily Herald. could exchange their editorials on the subject. The British people are absolutely behind the government in demanding that the League of Nations Covenant be respected, and that the League be upheld as the chief pillar of the‘ collective system of security in Europe. The Roth- ermeres and Beaverbrooks, enemies of the League, simply do not count. —l'.nndon Advertiser. The unanimity of the suggestions that we are launching into some- thing entirely new, and the amount of attention paid to the venture, is ‘lettering in a way. It shows this province is the focal point of nation-wide interest, with the spot light blazing on our part of the map; and all the other prov- inoes wondering what is to become of us. with dark mkgivings that it will b: something quite difierent from 835 to $75 a month for every- one and no more taxes to pay.-- Edmonton Bulletin. If there had been m; “"1", what would be the position now? Almost certainly hopeless The 1418804! may not be able to prevent E11 WBYS. especially if any party is determined on war, but it does make sure that in every dangerous dispute the mafhinery of concilia. tion, arbitration and ngggfjaflgn 15 ured lo the utmost limiL-Anthony Eden. All that Mr. Aberhart, has g0 m; now is to find the irreducible mini. mum bonus which he promised to pay the peop‘e of Alberta, whether they are employed or not. And Mr. Abcrhart may learn the bitter- lesson which we learned sometime ago-that everybody is very pleas. ,ant until you want to raise money, and that when you do it's a piety tough old world-Hamilton 1hr. aid. The effect of the "dlaplucmrent" of men by women is much discuss- ed in most countries. Germany's rulers claim to have reduced un- employment 110m five to two mil- lions by the elimination of women from gainful occupations. How the women have fared in fact, as dis- tinct from theory, no one outside Germany knows; the statistics are scanty and far from informative. In most countries women are en- larging their activities in nclrlyall kinds of work-Calcutta States- man. Grown from the Iced of an sp- plc Kclserwiihcim ate in 1912, a tree in Sussex, Iklkland, has just blossomed for the first time. The owner is tire-Rev. Roslyn Bruce. He was in a 008mm hotel whenhe mot the Kaiser who remarked that the apple he was eating was the but he had over tasted. The cler- gyman asked for the core. He rold iivcofths seeds atcsscch for charity and planted the sixth in his garden. B! i014 it was six in- ches high but, it remained the cuno hoillrt all through the World War. and only Ii-lrted to grow again in i919. The owner hopasto by: his cm cpplesprrom it in octo- l POI’ “II fiscal year ending Jung l0, III, the allotment to the Noon! Department of Agriculture ingintorpmteflllionlllydlfflj working notwith- l deep veins are tihe f rlflllfillllg this band around thigh. when there is little discomfort, no pain, no cramps, and no distinct bulging of the varicose veins, it snows that the deep veins are doing their work properly and it will therefore be safe to inject the vari- cose veins lying just beneath the surface of the skin. If, however, there is pain, and the varicose veins bulge out beyond their usual size with marked discol- oration of the skin, iihcre is an ob- struction to the circulation through a failure of the blood in the veins to find a channel by which to re- turn, and the injection then of the surface veins should not be done. When the case is suitable for in- jection the patient sits on the end of the table with the foot resting on e. small stool, and two or three in- jections to the veins in each leg are made at each visit to the physic- ian's office. The patient wears a bandage for support and reports in one week for further injections, The support should be worn for a month or two after the injections are com- pleted. The above test-putting the tourniquet or bandage around the thigh w see if it gives trouble by interfering with the deep circula- tion of the blood-enables the pat- ient and physician to know before- hand if the deep circulation is all rigurt so that the injection of the varicose surface Veins can be done with safety. , MISCONCEPTION Charlottetown flnnrdinn do“ not nooollnrily ondoru lla opinions of cowrclpeldlllo. crrx‘ COUNCIL rrrorvnsrrs "Sir-Allow me a small space in your valued paper to offer a com- plaint about our street. Some time last spring, the property owners of Upper I-lillsboro Street. signed a petition to have it asphalted and were promised that it would be commenced in the fall. The fall is here and no street work yet but this winter they will be dishing out the dole again. and the citizens taxes will be going for nothing. Should we not have all our streets asphalied with the money that is , being expended on the dole? I hope we will not have Io men- tion this again, because it is not helping the present Councillors rc- election any. , I am Sir, etc. RESIDENT '0!‘ UPPER HILLS- BORO STREET THANKSGIVING DAY CHANGE Rev. Dr. J- W. S. Lowry Warmly - - Approves It. Sin-Contrary to the empty ob- jections and silly clamor made in certain quarters as to the change of Thanksgiving Day from Monday to Thursday. I wish to take off my hat, to Premier Bennett, for the moral courage and good sense which he has displayed in restoring our national dny of public Religious thanksgiving tn its rightful and historic place in our Canadian .ob- servances. _ I firmly maintain that its obser- vance on Thursday is much to be preferred to Monday for very many good reasons. Primarily and par- I busied myself to find a sure Snug hermitagc Thar suhtluld preserve my Love sec. e From the worlds rage; Where no unseemly saturllpls, 0r strident traffic-roars, Or hum of intcrvolved cabals Should eoho at her doors, I laboured that the diurnal spin Of vanities Should not contrive to suck her in By dank degrees, And cunningiy operate to blur Sweet teachings I had begun: And then 1 went full-heart to her To expound the clad deeds done. She "looked at me, and said thereto, With a pitying smile, "And this is what has busied you So long a while? O poor exhausted one, I sec You have worn you old and 111m For naught! Those moiis you fear for me I find most pleasure ln." ~Thomas Hardy. The Empire’s Open Spaces (Edinburgh Evening News) The point raised frequently in the tour of the Empire delegates is that of the undeveloped Imperial estates. Canada's population 1,5 in the neighbourhood of 10,090,000; Austra‘ia over six and a quarter millions; South Africa. 7000.000 (M00000 whites); and New Zea- lcnd about one and a half millions (including 68,000 Maoris). One or two of the D0m1li10l1s have their own special problems-that of Aus- tralia with its great empty spaces, and that of South Africa with its millions of nrtives. Probably the care of Australia is the most ser- ous, for at no great distance from the shores of the Commonwealthis military Japan, with a population calling for cutlets. The pride cf Austrmia is its white population. It is not being reinforced. Indeed, there has been a trndstill in the British Commonwealth which has intensified the unemployment pro- blem in the Old Country. An Aus- tralian speaker in Glasgow put his finger on the weak spot in his country. I-Ie said Khct they them- selves had 800,000 unemployed, and it would be unfair in ask British people to come out and swell that number. Instead of British people going to the overseas Domlnions. many have returned home. Two things are certainly needodtobring about c real revival in Grout Bri- tain-a great development of the British Corrunonweslth- and real stimulus to world trade. The combined production in Clnadp of all itemi '01 cou- ’ milk (condensed, 0v‘:- or showing an increase or th murmur in mam, ticularly “Thanksgiving Day" is a Religious institution, and the vcry oldest of the stated holidays in the calendar of Western civilization, and was undoubtedly much more properly observed as such, on the Thursday, than it ever has been since the change to Monday. In fact, it is quite apparent to any honest" observer, that the change to Monday, has resulted in largely de- stroying the religious significance of the time-honored Day cf Thanksgiving. The undesirable and irnfortirnaie change to Monday was brought about at, the instigation of men who desired simply to have a longer week end. and to appropriate Thanksgiving Day to their own pleasure instead of thanksgiving to God. The old ‘Thanksgiving Thursday was formerly very generally and devoutiy observed by our Canadian people all over the Dominion, not only by happy family reunions, but by solemn services of thanksgiving and praise in the snnctuaries of the land. - The great majority of our rural ministers prench three and four times on the Lord's Day, as well as assisting in Sabbath School work, and it is almost out of the question to expect them to repeat religious services on the day following, as ought certainly to be done in all our churches on the day of national thanksgiving. When the change was made to Monday, the religious press severely denounced it as “a. very bad move", and the results have everywhere confirmed this vi:w. Many ministers and congregations all over Canada at once abandoned its observance when changed to Monday, because of the scrious in- convenience and unsuitability en- tailed thereby. MF-Y I add, that "Thanksgiving Day" should be regarded as a spir- iii- EI1()’S ”FRHJ|T SALT” HANDY SIZE 47¢ HOUSEHOLD SIZE p.29‘ Th! Quality Drugstore OOLIHIIIQMIIKCEIE, pounds, o1- 17 per cent, over the comspondinl mouths cf V}. BRAHMIN TEA Johnson, & Johnson I loll! GIDWN only in rod airtight pkgs. on. aumvans - PALMER ELECTRIC haw STAND c 155 GREAT GEORGE STREET SPECIALIZING ON MOTOR SERVICE & . REPAIRS COAL BLOWER-S -— STOKERS I ALL COMMERCIAL MOTORS VACUUM CLEANERS — WASHERS ‘l. , OTHER MOTOR-DRIVEN APPLIANCES AGENTS FOR PERFECT CIRCLE PISTON RINGS & EXPANDERS & . c. s. B. IMPERIAL FURNACE OIL BURNERS PHONE 1444 WE STAND BEHIND OUR WORK REFRlGElI-ATOBS i 11-8751-9-7-10-12. itual treasure by the people of British North America, for it is of much earlier origin than the Puri- tan and Pilgrim colonization of Old New England. More than forty years before the Puritan observance of it was instituted, such a Day of public religious thanksgiving and the voice of melody in the sanctu- ary, was observed in Newfoundland in 1578, the first of such services being conducted in “Britains Old- est Colony" by an English Church clergyman, one Rev. 1W1". Waefali. who accompanied the expedition under Frobisher, which brought out the very earliest English col- only to settle in the Western World. The “Day" has been observed in Canada since 1798, and there is ur- gent need of its continuance. The most objectionable subterfuge Advanced in support of the Monday ‘Thanksgiving is that of those who declare that it is best for commer- cial and monetary gains by the sale of poultry and fruit. It would cer- tainly be mcre in harmony with the conditions of our time. and most agreeable to the purpose of its original institution, if we observed Thanksgiving Day this year in fast- ing and prayer, instead of in feast- ing and fun; humbling ourselves under the mighty hand of a cov- chant-keeping God and Saviour, that he would save the world from the perils of war and ungodly secu- larism, and grant us a revival of pure and undeflled religion. Schools and Colleges might read- ily make the whole Thanksgiving recess of Thursday and Friday n holiday period. as‘ many of them formerly did, and suffer no loss in their good work, Thousands of the people heartily approve the Federal Government's action in giving us back the old- time Thursday Thanksgiving Day. 1n preference to the tired "Blue Monday" of recent years. I am. Sir. etc. J. W. l. LOWBY... Presbyterian Minister. Canoe Cove, P11. I. Tin CanMessage To Lonely Tongan Cigarette-smokers will be inter- ested in the story of an Australian factory-lit! who placed a card with her name and address in c can of cigarettes she was scaling. The card contained an invitation to the le- cciver to wrilc to her, In duo course came a letter from Tonga, jointly written by s nstlvc of that South lea island and his wife. The quaint mlslivo, u it sppscrs in a Melbourne paper, has c charm all its own: "I fond r piece of eard- bocrdfl-writss the husband; "I was please, because I always want n friend to write in because our little place it’: c lonely little homcfllind tho wife adds 1n s neat handwrit- ing: "We would like to have n AUSTRAL DELEGATION FOR LEAGUE GROUP CANBERRA. sent 10—Hcedcd by High Commissioner Bruce, Austral- ia's delegation to the league of Nations Assembly in September will include Professor T. Hyttcn. 0i T85- manla, and F. L. McDoillall. the economic adviser at Australia House, Minister for External Affairs Sir George Pearce announces. Substitute delegates will be Mrs. B. M, Rischbieth, of Perth, and C. P. Smith, managing editor of the “West Australian", Perth. All the members of the delegation are at present in Europe. __q;_______ .___.. 0R. L. B. EVANS 0f London, Eng. Noted Physician treated suc- ressfuly and obtained per- manent cures of Stomach Conditions, such as Indiges- tion, Dyspepsia, Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dis- tress and many other ail- ments peculiar to the atom- nch with c prescription, which, we have procured and sell under the name of EVANS STOMACH MIXTURE. W‘: alone have the sole rlshl! on this prescription and since soiling it have received num- erous testimonials from catio- flcd purchasers. DON'T FOOL with Your stomach. Serious conditions are likely to arise if you allow yourself to lupus into l chronic state of gastric tron- bio. Get n bottle today. Price 85 cents. MACS FILE OINTMENT Giver quick rclicf in all He" cf Internal and External Piles. Brings instant rolicf. We found Piles conlll be cured by nling MACS PILI OINT- MEITIL Price 80 cents. MAcs sssaivcs: or vnnrolm Nurly double tho stroll"! of ordinary orrsncs cl Vin- Now is the time to were" for pickling. We have a com- plete line of your nerds. Run- ~rnibor Moss lcrenco of Vinc- gcr sold only 117 The 2 Macs mu Order! 0.0.17. Promo"! Mtonlsl h- Prescription A swell"!- ' 1710B‘ “IQ YMI IO YOU can M“ ill in» about your big cityP-Aus- Great cum lite“-