Morning Dnlly (In ntlrd 1881) “.50 per your (In anlvunm) p530 n: your fln nlvnnec) dellvertl- lnnllcd In (in and United Utlfll- Mullen! W‘. (Elector M. Mltlillftl Vice-fro Cont, J. ll. IIIIIIQlI| p - ‘Sn-ervlury. hlrnt. Col. ll. A. Mnehlnnon. ll. S. f _ EIIIII nnul Dlnnulrr. J. II. llurnelt Anloclate ltllltor, ll. h. Curric- Ncw Yolk Ilellvnenlntlve-ltrunk It. Northrup Ci|¢.‘Q llnprelcltnllve-JL‘. J. Power Th, GUARDIAN nlny be obtained from the lollowlng ngenln In Chnrlnllelovvll Mnylfl-Q tttnllonern, ‘ 5t. l’. 'l'. Dlnrphy- Prince St-v Grocery Cnrler a 0o- oue s1. l- P- DIIY- 9"" 5'- 1- ---~-- -'---- "-:t"-'--.v.'.2=.-#.:.:~.::."::'.. “when Ilully. I rlln nd ll- 0-" t Prod Humid. Grant GOPIQ 59015 1' 11"” "°°"""" xrutu. Grnlton aunt. .\Irn. L. Duurotto. 39 50""! 15'“ Rd’ ‘1- n TUESDAY, NOVEMBE I l8. 1924 -c0ST OFLIBERALISM [the henceforth useless llnk to Port- |lantl? Is it going to be scraptgetlll IIad tht- eastern sccttou of (he To [he culinary uuproressronrrr, Island Railwdyitflxpayer rt would appear as 1f mt; tvltett it sltuultltnrotlus operand‘ 1n m“ confluent)“ be fully explained bclll‘? tiollur expeudllurc i! Canada. at pf-r- Prittct- Etlwarti ht: u statttlztttlictl bad the work tieeu done should the million Itave boon dtt-rittg would ltave saved the potato grow-- mo“ tlte past sututttcr. if proceeded \vitlt. P“ 0r [he Drown“,‘uauythflusamls sent has no millions to spare on of tlollztre. The great difficulty in the vote purchasing escapades evvu vuuttvt-ziott with ‘B911 P911110 when every allowance is made for bttsittvss, as ewryotttr knows. islrhe necessities p‘ the King govern. (hat putatous tuttst ht- sltiptiod too mean As the mutter. ha“, aprrhrrrh t-arly in tho fail to suit southern [he he“. rrrrlhouyduhar (qcrhlur at ‘V1111 1' 5111111111" “"111” Halifax will be a useless monu- hvttse at (icorgctuvvtt, which is alt mem wirrberar corrupuun and 9X. it-u frt-t- port as Iatt- as January.‘rruvaghrrce or the (;_ hr R [m], u, ptuttot .- cottltl hr stored there tlttr- Porrrarrd Wm he scrappert l“ any iug tht- tuouth of lh-cettthvt" and has‘, rue whore situation shhum h,- sltiptitwl by stealth-rs tlttrinfi lN-vt-ttt- cleared "h hhfpre thr- °,»(.r-h“|~,|eh. hcr atttl at [cast tbt- first half oiled rrrxrmyers are saddled with Jattttatrj‘. 'l‘l|<_- Potato (Irtuvt-rs’ As-pnorhor rrrmron dollar, rrlevrrrurh sot-iatiott had plztnttvd this tni-tltutl| bttyw-rs. mo} THE catmnonnrowu GUARDIAN Notes By the Way 1 "It can hnrdly ho expoctodfl’ says the Toronto Globe, “that the taxation wnforence at Ottawa wIIl reduce taxation." In the same Ia- sue of the same paper It Is stated that "there are still nearly two, ‘ ntillions of lust year's Toronto tax-' es unpaid." These statements as to future prospects 9nd present conditions tn the populous capI-tal of Ontario seem to be the reverse of cheerful. Ebat £11112 of i Quays Behalf-De? Iglnnnn THE BLOOD CARRIES LIFE AND DEATH Sir Henry Thornton talked to the Boston City Club on Wednesday last and among other things told luu hearers that Canada in bigger than the United States. that they have 110000.000 of people and Catt- zttla seouooo; that they macho.- 000 ntiles of railway and Canada 40.1100 titties; that Canada produces‘ seven billions of wealth yearly and the States ninety billions. and that You renmmber that n keeps ‘he on a per cupita basis the average trssues always bum up‘ by rbrmghrg Cattadizm protlttccs S795 to the av-lrrrmerrars [or ,h|,s huudfnm m an erage 8815 produced yearly lICI'0SfiI1ygur plggueg Did you ever realize that ‘that wonderful lite Slving stream. your blood, carries life and death within It at the same time? You know In a general way that it ls flowing around Inside _ your |body. and that with any little cut. or tlnlttry. some of It pours out on the surface. You think of it always wonderful life giver. as the the bordetz. “We absorb 15 per You nwv rentqmber that 1111 111° w“ or yum exports... he Mm who“ 101095 tn digesttton. t-he saliva In the tnouth. the gastric juice In t|00.0lt0 a year. The Uttftctl States stomach. bile itvliver, and so forth. buys $350,000,000 of goods front ttsjger a" “rah. rmrrehhrls from ‘he sztclt year, . Ottr situation iatylqotl also, that confronting any railroad In a illut how often do you tltlitk about he“. cormrrra Arm our history Wm the other side of the blood s work? ._ _ _ _ __ ‘I tuean that Just as it carries these be (ht htstoty of the railroads we st me giving marerrarrikyes ma“), ‘)1 111° 31155153111191 115 17111" °°111111Y Iii." itself-to all rhe tissues of your develops. (lanadtfs sole problent is body. 5Q ulst) (1093 it carry death that of population. tr we had zrtuutflgivttts 111=11er11r1s~.\"es death 11se1f— 000 people we would have tliffitvttl-lw1111111 115F111 tics but our problems would have ‘M51 mmk 01111111 1°.’ 1' '.“.°"""'"1' H ' Iu the one stream ts lite and tilsappvzttetl. rhrrnhr - ‘And Just as faithfully as it car We W111 not question Sir Henry ries, life, so llkewist- (1006 tt carry Thornton's figures. No dottbt ottudt-atlt, bccattsc the waste tuattor 111.000 tuilcs of railway might pay within -it is really dead, is really if w" had the population he speaks 11111511111111” "M1 '3 119mg earned but thc narrow gauge zttl the -o|t- ' ‘ ‘ EDITORIAL NOTES it‘l|llt'|l| transfor from standard to narrtnv gtltlgv cars tuatle it impos- Tm, “Th5 Should herrcm "m, $1111“. .»\< a result thousands ofhhe weekend rarrL Illlshvlh‘ of potatoes \vIt't'lt 1 tuight bavt- bee“ shipped will rentain on1y (‘IQVPFIIOT 1161111131 121111011151)’ 10 tht- till tht-y will ho too latc for (he suutlt-1111UC11 KPDFQCWIQU 11!‘ 5911011175 111111 ortt sci-vi tnarkct. Island ut-xt spring whenrPfilllffi 01 ‘V3195 901mg" W111 11° jparettts alike. This" is" but ont- of thr- burdens 1 At the recent British elections alone utttlltlte blood catt reach tltc or’ but we have only on“ 11111111 or places iv-here this poisott-—tbis that number. and it grows slowly, deayh__chh he [hmwh u," or your very slowly indeed, There has been body. . 4, [m-ritm. hmkage which h; 5m] g0. Now Nature has atrrttttged all this ittl: on. ll‘ railway httildittg could so well that the simple act of Itavc populated (‘attada and stop- brezttltittg gets rti-d of some of the tnost poisonous mate-rial. Your kid- ped tht- cxotlus we should now have hers separate our from [he hhmdt (lotthlt- tho ptipttlatiott we ltavc. Bucutltot- ntaterlals equally poisonous. railway building utterly failed M11118 11119511119 11119111 1111mm“ 11°95 that rt-sttlt and ltccatttc a httrtlottl1" S1'1u‘c'.und the 6km by persplr‘ msrcad m, ‘r help tn: gcts rtd of the- rest. ' ' What (I005 th-Is knowledge mean; to you? - laid upon Princv l-ftlwttrtl lslantlt , the canvassing and checking of through tht- nt-gligcnco of its "solf voters as they entered the pollst disstatisfaction1 ‘rl four" Liberttl ntctitbers and the IQTPKIGII SO Hllllih ittalxiliyv of tho Kittg government , that protests against the nuisance! have ltcen to do attytlvttg witlmttt the con- lodged suit of its toasters. the Progres- _S 1rd F H iernment. o o r . - I u are the polling clerks be rcqttiretl to sives, llut the tit-airing tht- end of their unprofit- -. , post otttsitlc the station the register zl _- , -- - ,1 ‘ . ‘f 1 1'1“ “1""“1‘1“1'11J 111111 111‘ Prmirv” number of voters who Itave polled tvvcs are “ottt" with the King gov- ' t-tuuten. so the t-ntl of our political rogrrrrnn of voters r0 he rigidly night is not fur off. The $100000. suppresserh ' voted last sc-ssion, not by r(\(lu()5[' | t of the "Solid Four" but after the ‘every hour or half hour. the litter-- Notbwltltstantling the cottftercncc’ press hilt] tlravvti altr-ntion [Q jt_ [m-ron Taxation by the King Govern-I 11H‘ standardization of the rallwztyz ment nothing has resulted but ad- is br-‘ng bold to do tlttty uttrtng the tIItIonal~ expense. The Ottawa coming x0 Journal says nothing else was lu- tluttht the work will [hgn he hfitentletl by the Government or ex- gtttt; it will be a lIOOIl to the prov- pccted from it. Ottr contentporary in“, h", n whhnm help [he Krugsays a smile flittetl over the faces of the members of the Hottse of tCommons when Mr. Ilobh mentlott- ‘ed that the Government intended election catnpaign. Kl) vcrttttte Ill. .___ __¢ ._ TO BUY NOVA SCOTIA summoning such a cottfercnce be- cause everybody knew exactly what ‘I'ho tnilliott tlullttr vlt-valur hm“ . ' .\Ir. ICiug meant. isctl to lhc city nt‘ Halifax immr-Il- mum of coursj. ‘: t vI - . - _. . . 1' 1 y 1'01"" 1111' 1'11“ 111/"1111311111 They are vory particular of tho re- thurc and abantlottctl after the rlew f tptttations of candidates In British III. fth-I'l-- -, . . _ It t n t. ,1 p ral utndltlatc, har-It-Iecltons as was ovttlencctl by an w: o. '~ , . <11. WW1 (fill Iht, planet attl interruption anti sequel the otht-r spoctftcatlotts are rs-atly and tcu I- I ‘titty. Sir Henry Cowan, III. I’. for f‘ ‘S are t I 1 - Ila - - . r r“ or” l“ "1 [or 111111111111" M01111 1511118l0n was ‘cltld-IOSSIIIK a l('('(I I» , d‘ t" _ H 1’ 11° 111’“1‘11 ‘91110110111- meeting when a Labor opponent 11 "c. . . “ - . . H v ‘r I~tnn of Ila-lifax. Tlttltn we augmhce "Sh, mlllng for Icntlcrs is tttttely that Henry (‘owan is . , ' ‘ - / a man ts. work nn tltt- elevator will he in progress on the cvc of the forth‘ coming gvttt-ral election. This no doubt. I. t .I a ,. l *1 tum tlcrttl good pollticalwr summonerr shouted divorced and his wife a (livorcctl woman.“ Sir Henry retortetl—~"lt itt an In- famous lIc." and had the Interrup- The magistrate t- ct’ - - . d m! on [he m“ or nu‘ mm; said It was necessary for private KOVOHI l? m n" and public people to be protected How docs II ltmk to the 113st 0f , front rash and wicked observations (attatltt, that Ix, u; mo“. who are 51111111! t0 be Iaxctl to pay tho, m“. lion tltvllttra? of the kind and imposed a fine of £5, which carries with It tho de- T , v . : . . h"! 1N prlvation of defendanus vote for several talvvttttors in Halifax at [jrfigpnt Th0“. five years. rwtvlct-s are nover tittult- 115p or, not. a bushel of grain grips tbrottrfh Emma Goodman was Ilfl Inter‘ 111111" 1° 1110 “"1111” “mrkew 115 1111 national Communist. She wrote 17111111111811 FY1111‘ “111011 “"1110” 91151’ and preached and practised (the-o;- W11Y11 K1195 lhrmlgh 111" W11 °1 P"1‘1' ctlcally), Communism and Labour land. Maine. over the (Yanadlan porqcrrurchrrrm she 11°11 01 11w c- "1 ~11" 11111111111 1111111 from Germany because of her ac!‘ through the United States. Grain Rhymes‘ she w“ expehed "om- belnfl shipped via Portland because, the United States, "the land of the unfortunately for Canatla- It Is ahree-h because her speech and Con. shorter haul than via Halifax or St. duct were detrlmenra] m the com. -1°1"1- "1111 °°1111°‘1"“11'-1Y 1111911119“ mun-weal. She was shipped to Rus- 111 111° 9110"" "d °11911'P°1' 1°11" eta where her Ideal form of Gov- Y11l P07115511 1° 17‘ “11111111011811 111 ernment was In active operation. order to nccomodate "the was expellcJ 11"’ Emma has now sought shelter In Liberal elevator at Halifax‘! h: therEngland and declares that W110"- Cnnadlan Nnflonhl Railway to In- cal experience of Sovletlsm has sat cur the additional expense of the longer haul In order to furnish another name for vile slavery and work for the Ihallfax elevator‘! And, its accompaniment. the whlpcord. If thin be the pour; of the govern- Another example of experience y. mcnt, what Ia going to be done with teaching fools. , . lsfled her that Communism Ia just -' ' .1.-. . -..~--y with the Gov‘ It is now suggested tbat1ltave. . - It m ,v mean hothln because ou One of our troubles with Str Henryrhw “mane mo M, ‘Ewing whirry; Thornton. It's Board of Directors mm germ“, some exercise m me and the King (lovrrntttettt is thatymsh w“; - tltev all wattv, to lmIltl ntnre rail-j '1‘1116 1-‘ P911113‘ @111 that Nature cX-1 h, advance m- pohulhriorr Sufgpeftls you to do.‘ because the food1 . .eut to support tho railways we M11118 up 81191111111111‘ 11nd 1-1131 “m” A rs, H h »b.t of outdoor exercise, burns up _> _ n‘ 1" 91111’ 1111111 911111" the \\‘1ISI.CG tuslde, and st-itnulates‘ nffctals refcrtctl tn are looking to the“. “Qlgtp y-Qhyovjn; hrgahs n, 1bat portion of (Zanatla which lies work as much as is needed. to re- beyond the Lakes and rhar on“, move these poisottottu wastes. |as the region of future prosperity for Canada. It is there’ that they O§+FO The Seven Deadly ’ Sins of Marriage Excerpt; from Hearst‘: tloml (Aug. '24.) Intarna (Kathleen Norrie) Money would probably come first. The husband worries about It, tho wf-fe wastes It, they never seem to have enough. They are scarcely reconciled over the bridge debt fight when tho question of repairs to the car arses. Money In the form of hills, extravagance, dis- pute, ls a festering grievance bu tween them . . If both will be fa?r, and the wife be given her just allowancu monthly for house- hold expenses, ttncl the budget be respected. then that particular pl-t- fall disappears front their path. Second in the vvlls comes the fantily, both sides. The young hus- band and wife agonlze over this, sontetintes for years, yet it ls not properly their problem. Tho famil- es are hsually "to blame. Each little new matrimonial craft should set sail all alone. And mother and dad ought no more to drop In for dimer, or voluntet-t- criticisms these things to casual neighbors. As for living \v.th the family, eith- er family. It calls for superhuman qualities on all sides, and is ul- tuost nevus a success. Thirdly. there are the friends- It ls inevitable thttt Betty and J.ntnty shall cordially dislike some of each others friends. And thvy can't tell their friends 40 leave them alone. So the friends remain a burning prohlt-ztt for yetre, perhaps. Fr ends interrupting the actual honey tuuott. Friends dragging them to places they hale to go, expensive places, tlrtng places. Friends in- vtnglittg them into eating utttl tl-t" nklng too much, entertaining loo Iavisltly, friends suggesting thtt-t Iht-y join the golf club, that they ubscrtbetl to the hospital, that they lakc out tuort- instttntttce, that they htty itt Ilu- new Manor Plsfutes. And for a fourth dcudly eitil, there is ‘amillttrity. Marriage is in its csscttce ttttitttale, yet the tlifferrtt- co htawecn a marriage tn which Itttsbntttl and wife preserve a utttt- tt.I deference ttml respect, and u tuarrittge itt wh ch nothtng is sar- red, cvc-rytltittg coursettcd and ntatlc conttnorrplacc, is the differ- cttce betwectt what is bcattttfttl and what- is loztthesottto. , In the novelty and frccdout of fittdng herself tnarrtetl autl ittdc- pcutlttt, many .t young wtfc ntttk es th s tit-stake. She revcfs In im- tnotlcstles of tlruss and spoeclt and thought. she talks itttllscrcetly to- ltct‘ friends, shr repeats confidentl- ally phrases and \\urtI.-t that ottfihl to hi‘ holy, she delights In the jokes that her httsbantfs men» friends arc ctrcttlzttittg. As a result presently nothing re- mains. All the bloom, the s-tcretl- and advice, than they would do - y... Can't Buy It All", Condensed from Hlrpor’: Magaz- Ino ‘(Allflllll '24) (Frederick Palmer) At tho msort hotel where I was Ia-st winter I noted that the 181k among groups which gathered on the verundu after dinner was usu- ally of money. So It is wherevp: you g0. Last summer on one of_ the palatial transatlantic liners I moved from one group to another In the smoking room, listening, and learned that eight out of ton were talking In terms of money- Lately. I have often- recalled the remark of an old Buddhist priest In Japan 20 years ago: "I don't worry so much about the tulsslon arIt-s Chrlstlnnizlng us as about the money-tnndness of Western civilization which is engulflIn-g the whole world." When war cante In the Far East and the world thought that little Japan would be overwhulnted by the wealth and resources of Russ- lu, some of us who knew the com- bdffllllfl merely retnarknd. "The leans usunlly win over the fats.“ ._ When the war was over a Japanese officer said to me: "We've won-end lost. We've lost the old days. We shall look back to them. thinking how wull off we were, It. is the money age. Now Jap- an will have money." - The Russfan fats tlltl not apply the lesson atlministercd to them by the Ja-panuse leans. "We did not know how well off we were." one hearsfrottt tvfttgee Russian aristocrats who betrayed their re- sponsibility and lost their lturittage by the lust. for money and ftlettuttr- es; and one ltears the some phr: front Germans who have seen tlt suvittgs disapptur into thc Iuflztttwl currcttcy of the Stittncs dynasLv. Mr. litiont-Bottut, as I trailed hint. was cutts;1ir=tt‘-tts1\' our of the fats at the rekort hotel lust wintcr- "Alt this ttoiso." he explode-d ahottt the stmutorittl ittvest-Ygatiott, "was be cuttst; sotucbotly utadc some tttotttgv. and that tu-atic ‘people sort- who were not in on the deal. Isn't that what everybody is aftt-rmtttottt-y " . . . If we are all like hlntutvu .t< Ing to make ntmtey any way wt- cttn~1wt> shall not wait long before seeing U10 old priest's propht-‘zv fulfilled . . lioottt-llonttt- hatl a wife. Her tuotl-‘sto, ltuirtlresner, and tnttnicttrlst. assured hcr ttppcarattco ht dinner in a gorgt-otts varlcty of panoplios. She had a good tnomory -—-f0r the cost. of her goutns. Qnu evenitt-g some of the young proph- of the region catnt- to tlaucc at the hotel. “llow tacky those Ktflli dress," said Mrs. lloottt-Iittuttt in a vrfco which sountlcd like thu rttbh- ing together of tiIt-sesof uattdpap er- "They sure tl'tln't gct their gotvtth on the Avenue-All togethur. they wouldn't cost the price of ottc de- cent gown.“- ’ uess and tuysL-ry arc gone. J m says anything he likes before his} 1\\'lfe. 11111111111085 1111)‘ 101110. HHPSHIIP, tht-Ir voices are so pletsttttt. any oath. ' From the cottverstttlottttl side of; It, they rapidly tttove toward an tttt.| er (Lsrt-gard of fineness in each} other. Jut never pushes up hot" "l hadn't noticed their gowns.“ I said. “they have such grace. such anti they are altogether no charm ing." There watvsotnething Mrs~ Iloottt-Boottt lacked other than youth. that you cannot htty at tnou- NOVEMBER 1s, 1924; -_,.: t? the Fox Breeders Fox breedurn who intend poftlhg floxn for fur m,‘ uouon would be wall ndvlaed to prepare their akin; 5,, the but condition possible u u to command top pm,“ Some bnodorn are Iiwv boqlrmlog to pelt their fox“, Thin In not In tho but. Indy-onto of the fur trad; q,- m, Industry. Quito a number of poltn have already 1mm offered for ulo. Thu. show an lblolutaly undurpy-lm, condition, both on the akin aide a‘: well as on the fur, The ukln shown a blue or dank appclrinoe instead of being white. " In an underprime |kin_ tho guard fur .1 not properly secured to tho pelt and consequently the lkin wit»; "or dreu when In the hand: of the fhtr dreamer. This i; a distinct loll to the furrler and roaotn 39am» ‘h, h". breeder. -* ‘ Th; fur lldo of the pelt shown n dnticienhy of "my" fur and a lhortnoio In length of guardfitr. This season nll fox broader; ghoul}! proper: the! r akin; for the market In prime condition.‘ We have the best uilver fox fur In the world ‘and we must put our furs out to the trade In the bent condition poutiblc. Sliver fox fur In rarely prime unti‘! about December fifteenth, If the season Is mild reduce the feed so a; to raga," color. Many fox breeders say that their foxes go overprime In color and that they rub; both these conditions can be overcome by careful feeding a-nd a little extra attention to housing. ' Do not overfecd foxes that are to be pelted; just sut- fment food to maintain health. and avoid too muzh fats. soft. foods with vegetables preferred and just a small pur- flon of meat. Keep thoanlmals healthy, not fat. En- deavor to assistnature by proper feeding and care, Keep plenty of fresh clean wheat straw In the houses; this Will keep the fur clean and 'avoid rubbing. Overfeedlng of heat producing foods w'l| cause the fox to rub the fur. By watch- ing out for these condition; the fox brecdem can add ntzmy dollars to the value of their product. When the pioneer. of this great industry, Sir Charles Dalton and the late Mr. Robert Oulton were ntarkctutg pelts they realized good prices, and their furs were looked upon by furriers as perfect specimen; and excellent color, free from rubti ng, nicely finished and ‘not. over stretched. 0f course they did not pelt early, not until about December fifteenth. or even later. If your foxes are good take the best of care of the pelts and wait until nature season primes your furs. Poor foxes can be killed any time. but by all means do not ktll your good foxes for fur untlfthey are primc_ This industry is worth many thousands of dollars to this province. It can be made much more valuable ~n the future. Let all ‘endeavor to make our furs the attrac- tion of the fur trade that they have been. ' There is no doubt some people are of the opinion that isuas‘ or Itave applied at h ea u t_v the furs lose in color, but watch your feeding and your chair, he nterrttpts her In C()IlVOI‘!~"|5hQr)§_ And if was not lllfngpthrt; vI-1011- 111? 11111811! 1" 1191' 0911110119. 11¢ Bootn-tlissatisfyittg to observe that. fox pelt should qaln In color aowell as in length of fur. look for growth rlvallittg‘ that ofz‘ . . Dally Selections 6 FOR » the States west 0f the ltlisqiserppi.‘ Guardian Readers lt is there that more railways must1 be built—to Hudsoh Bay, to Peace River and wherever a Progressive Wranisbed. ..._.. .. .._;.. ., _ -.. ntettthrr of Parliament asks for one —when the country west of the Lakes has already thrice the tuile- age per head of people that Eastern Canada has, It is idle to talk of the National Railways being kept out of politics. Its Board of Directors ls nothing If ttot a partisan hotly. Wherever It suits the King Governtttcttt, or the exigencies of ‘ts existence tletnatttls thc bttiidingcf a political railway in tho Wcst. Sir llcury and his Ilircctors approve lltt: project. Thn I\’.iug (Ioverttutcttt pnrptrttattrtl soc- Ifututl freight rates itt favor of titt- Wcst during their whole tcrttt of power. while the same government with its partisan directorate has pttrsttcd the saute course itt rail- way building. An Unholy Alliance ‘s at the buck of it all! Not since the Dominion was formed has such a rotten cotttlitlott devuIopt-tl itt (fattadtt as tttttlcr the King govcrutttont and thc throe- purty system. This Is trttc alike in federal, provincial and civic fairs. The record of the Drttry govertttucut was a disgrace to (Zan- utltt. When hcforc was utt cx-Prti» vfnclul Trcttsttre-r sent to tho petti- tenblury? We need not cite tho Home Bank defaults In the saute city. or the wholesale stealing hy civic officials In Hamilton, 0r the shocking revelations of police dc- prnvlty In Montreal, pravlty at the top which has come the group system In our federal and provincial affairs. advance along the name line. H1210!!! and intolerable. i; 1 Already. on plane ftlvi wbednv-lald u f- Such evils flourish In the shade of political de- In like a Iluml since the advent of like the provincial election In On- tario a your ago. all Indicate a de- sire on the part of English-speak- Ing peoples to get rld of the cor- rupt and corrupting group system. There In reason to hope that at the next federal election the people of Canada may make a determined A further contlnuanre of the present rotten condition of perpetual bar- ter to kéPp n weak and wobbling government In power would _be vo-oavoo-vo-oo- if , yQQ-o-ooo-oo-o-ooooo-os-owom l 1 . NOVEMBER 18. 1924 THE GOD OF PliA-CEH-Nbw the God of Peace, . . . ntake you perfect In every good work to do His will. Hebrews 13: 20. 2i. TRAYEIL-May we. 0 Lord- daily 1nd definitely strive by Thy fzrace to be perfect. even as our Father In lteavett is perfect. NOVEMBERISH As no one canto to visit ht-r, she sought them out Instr-tall; Au tto one brought her uttttttttn flow~ tern, she took t-hem bcrrlas red: - As no one spoke a smiling word. she stirred her memory wcll, Atttl found a dozen funny things to other folk to tell! As ulI soetttcd so NovctttberIslt-uo (lull and grey atttl flat“ Stu» tlonttcd hor newest coat and sktirt- pttt on her latest hat! And when she'd paid her rottttd ‘o! calls, in spite of mist. and rain. Slto lcft such bracing lilllLllls bo- thInd-folks cried. "Dn t-nme again." lllun (lard. {Om- I I NOV-IQM-BEII 18.-~Yott arc jusl and generous, fondot‘ ctllerlaltttllig, and beloved of your friends. You are steady and reliable, and ac- complish wb-at you promise. Your home ltle wIIl be Itappy if you ab- stain from jealousy. Live out '0! doom a great deal. Your birth-atone is the topaz, The recent elections In Great which "ream hdehry Britain and the United Stator, Your flower Is the chrysknthe- mum. ~ Your lucky color In grey. to buy up Prince at the general election of next year. The people are to be prom- lard the boon of titantltrrtllsntlon of thcltttllway In the eastern sec- tIon of the province. Having been tlcnletl their right In this matter by the King government during fta entire- tertu of power turd only of- feretl It at last as an election brlba its purchasing power may be doubt- IuI. Edwlrd Inland ignores ltct‘ cotttmettts. She ncvcr ltas flowers frottt him now, a signif- icantly sympathetic glance; ull tho cottrteslcs And Betty tufsses them satlly- any woman does. It. may be hur own fuult. but she didn't realize It un tll too late. Jim cotttes home, r=ttlcs thedockctl door of her dressing- room in a fttry. And ltow can Betty,l flttshng with shumt- ttttrlcr the dress-thinkers keen eye-s. 9x11111111 that she never kept up any nice- tles—~ttevt-: asked any cottcesstotis to her sense of (lif-thlty? Out nf all the tuttrltal problems the third person occurs only rarely. Most ntarrlages don't go on lhl‘ rocks hectttse of artotht-r than, or another woman, although all our fiction anti all cur plays are 1111111 about. that s tttatiutt. lIttt tho ort- gdh mun or woman teutermg the problem is ottIy au effect. The c-Ittae lics elsewhere. Yet 3911101111! may well be listt-tl fifth In the outs 9s of unhappy nturrtages, for tuauy a silly woman likes to ntulw her ltusllattd joalotta_s‘|uply to gratify her own vanity, and many a IIIJII forgets how sensitive ts his wlt love for him. and how t-aslly Iutrt. He knows that he in faithful. cvcu .n thought, and ho laughs at. her sober face and filling eyes. lItt‘. alta- guflers agonim, while the other woman innocently claims his gull- antrv. and tllt-tpluyu her pretty pow- er ovcr h-ltu. anti something lturtttfttl is tlotte to the wife's Iuvo and con fidencc from wh ch it ncvur re- covers. If yott want her to love V1111 J1‘ ways, never hurt her fucllttg... you gootl httshnttd. Be as curvful of the them as you would of those of a milder. loving little daughter. And sixthly, is surely cleanliness. A woman who wants Lo keep he." httshnntl ntust be clean. be always fresh afttl tlulnty- The plalttcst wo- man, the simplest, Is more uttrac» tive If she is always tut fresh 11S a Sunday morning chi-Id. than any frowsy, spotty ttttublvti beauty can be. You can have onlontt fttr dinner, and sweep the porches, and put the attic In order, and still when the mun of the hottse gets hotnc- tllff- use that. flue, gracious, well brush- ed. soapy, powdery atmosphere that marks a gentlewotttan. Unplea- snnt. little adore drty finger nulls, crumbs In the corner of mottths. egg spots on vests anti wrinkles In collars have a strangely forceful fashion of sickening persons with their life partners. lnslgnifcant an thuy seem. Wh-Iny voices at the t ' , , loud and vacuotts laugh- ter, audible yawns, manlcurlng In public-ulI these are not the trif- lee tthey round. . And Itutly, and firstly, and all the time In the deadly evils of marriage, context too tnttch talk. Too much discussion of mooted points. too mtcny unkind things raid and remembered. um nntch quoting. too much arguing, too much attenUnn paid tn what others any. Once. the bitter thing In said. It remalnn, a foreign mutter wedged Into the matrimonial system, to be rentovetl I. despite Boout-Iloottvs money ' “s gowns. they were m i. 0t‘ fltllttif-ttt-Kirattltt-x to themselves by the gttestst 1111"‘ except by a few who were helpless-l ' [ly of their own kind and they w petttlantly bored. Sontethtttg and M“ This information is passed on to the breeders from 13¢“ Gathered from marketing of Silver Fox fur and from remarks of the great fur dealers in Silver Fox furs with 0 the hope that It may be of some benefit and assistance to l.‘ L which you- cannot buy is escape front boredom. And boredom ls al- most '\v0rse than beittg shot at. Those girls were not hurt-J, not" their partners, and I have seen many girls and partners of the fats -boretl.l'l"alllng civilization? Nut while youngsters of the leans can bv charming in such tacky gowns! Northwnrtl bound, with those youngsters fresh In mI-hd, 1 was the more sensitive to the hurtittess of the fact-s on the "Special" where fats altountletl. In the observatlott cur a mun told me how he hatl tnatlc his money. Some of his meth otfs scented too Ituckneyetl to bt- Interesting tmd too rough to ht- dc- cettt. . . . . l ltttvc a sense that tho fats lhetttat-Ivcs flttd that they luck variety of cottvcrsatlonal FESOIIFUQH. ODIIUP-lllc mo was a woman who wnrc a fortune In jowcls\nnd talk- ed of how tuuch she was going to spend at Palm Benoit anti ltow tnttclt she was going to spcttd In Ettrotte ‘this sutttmcr. Her contplexlott was ltzltl on steel, and her voice sound- ed Ilku llle clluk of coin Hl-lyltlg, "it's 3 carats, my dear." Then tht-rt: entered the car a wotuutt who did not wear her diamonds In the tttortt» tug. She was not obIIgctP-aet 11H‘ other woututt was-to do it ulI with mom y. Whcn she spoke to thu porter ho served with'u sensc of rmognltititt of her charm. “pl-MP, and considerate-nests for others fore greatly ‘Increased. the time to take this procaut’ 61 Queen St. Qoovoo-Qv our fox breeders. - wj CHESTER s. McLURE 193-1 t-taatat. t‘ If you have delayed placing flre property, or If you require an additional amount, now is Our service: are at your disposal. llyndman 8t 00., lItI. The Oldest Insurance Agency In P. E. I. b§O-§-OQO§OO—O-§OO§§-§O§§>C OQOQQOOQ-OO-OOOO-OOO0006460000 Ml-ll. QOOQ-O-O-O-OQO-O-O-v-QQ-OQQ-O-OOQQ-QO-O-O-O O-O§O O4 V9 O Stoves and Furnaces are going full blast again, and the chance of fire is there- Inxurlnce on your y manure. Charlottetown 0111011 “'11s not regulated by the amount of her tip. The something which tttont-y cannot htty Wat; tha- which she hurl-the something stttnt- thing which the yottttg people riiri—~— ttt the (Ittttcu posttcauetl. It was young wifc the untrue and unjust thing his taotltur chanced tn hilly about her. It Is his Ittuttl that itt-par- ates the two women he loves htul In the world, not theirs. When a wife repeats and entpltuuizr-s the u-ttfortttntttc word bu uued in speak- .ng of her sister, she la storing away future trottble for the fantlly as II ll. wern money In the bunk. Ah. If they could only be uilent— sllontv-sllelnt. The cause of their little fracas wIIl blow uwnyythey will forget. that they ever dIffcrt-tl- But the cruel wortlu remain. The accumulated, sense-less, acid words, that eat and eat Into both their- souls. To be able to forgive quickly. to be silent. to presently forget. Just. to listen patiently, until a cooler Judgment prevails, and the whole matter can be aettled In a, few dis- passlonate words. This L11 to reach a height of real sanctity, and that we don't very often do In these material days. Itoukc wltltottt u ttbstutt. itt a Itottau with 20 servants. Washington only registers sytttp- tomn. The real ztttuwer to the re- curring question of "What 2's the tuatter with us. anyhow?" lttu-t been partly reflectt-tl In the types of hu- man being-s we have just met In this human worltl, and In the con- ditions of tho Iattt nix yearn, we who were supposed to be the lur- gt-st. winners In the War may find ourselves the Iteaviost losers If the [tits continuum have their way- which they will not. The war had nwde us fatter than any nation In all history. Should not our elders then have paused to consider the dnnxer 01 adipose and how to tree-p lean and strong In order to get the most possible for the future out. of our treasure-trove‘! No, we must have more and more money! We would sell un- a world that must. flrat earn the But the marriage wherein a htts- wherewithal for patymout; we band or wife has reached this polnt would take the shipping of the In a happy marriage. And If both world from lean competitors. . . . might reach Jt. there would b» 1i little corner of the Kingdom. on earth. hove, pile-nee, gonerrmlty In little matters and big, with thé budget. and the family, and nooety all held In Ight and mode-rate pro,- portlon~th n that would be what Abner thinking In terms of the whole. we hatl the sharp reaction of thinking only of Individual for- tunnt- The wny to keep step with the procession was to Increase oneh Incotue. Social groups based upon occupations, education, weal- onIy painfully, or left tujeater m“ . _ . _ , "Wvhgtva lot/ht! son quntvn tn hln all 1narrlago lbonld be nut. qnlnlfe a rohtlonnhlp come upon nlrth. r l ex' th. taster, and pantImen-wvhlch had “Malt ever been broken down by tht- common 1 r breeding, which tntty flouriuh ltt u‘ ncrvatttt uttd bu‘ precedented quantities of goods to» on a tuoncy ratittfl- '1'11'1-‘" “h” choot-zo tttight again wear th-- t‘ 11111‘ tuotttls In tho tnnrttittg. All Io wlt<1111 (he ntottcy standard had Iwvll >11 IIITIIH‘. wort: tntJoyittt-t 1111' ‘"11 Ihr; tacllpsta. (Jun result 11'1"‘ M Dlthllc oxtt‘.1v11l111111"' 11'1"’“'1""“ [irlvtltc cxtrttvttgttntcv- . - - - rm“ Amcrlctitts give Iilrgttsi. llptt to endowments, withmttrsltlrlrh‘: This. bowt-vtvt‘, 11111)’ 1"‘ 11111" "nhrr. hlbltlott of tuoney as I1"“"'1'~4'r'm,_,, their confirmation of our ivthtrrkil-m for the money-stmlartl. and tuoncy as a ntcztns to t'ttll11”1rlrnu_ for Itettcr t-tlttctttlott 1-‘ "'1" 1' - t 1 l ‘Quite uother ls necking tuottl) ., -rt~ tllttplny and its a proof that 1:5,,“ keeping tht- tint-o. \‘v'111‘11‘ ___________ (Continued o" Pi" 51 efforts of war-were reformedup- --,--.-...-- QQ—Q‘QOOOQOO~OOOOOOQOQOOQOO