Ilia 4.‘. CR , n NORMA AWFO RUSSELL SHEARER -‘-i- JOAN RD R 0 S A L I N D - MARY ROLAND hilarious on the mount! museum's nus onus!‘ MUSICAL 36 weeks on Broadway! Now more exeitinqmmore Grand cast o! hundreds ' .. .with Mickey and Indy sinqinq and swinging their way right into your heart! _ THUR. screen! V <1 wit CHARLES WINNINER GUY KIBBEE 0 JUNE PREISSER GRACE HAYES o BETTY IAYNES DOUGLAS MoPIIAIL v RAND BROOKS "LENI LYNN o JOHN SHEFFIELD L SING OUT- AMERICA‘! ‘Whore Or When" "I Cried For You" "Babel Iu Arms" t "God's Country‘ ( "Good Moruln "( llll LATEST wan NEWS cocoon CARTOON “Blue Danube” t stress. .22 cars ssseuss,s,..ss.ssgsnr, ass: . LAST TIMES [o DAY 2 Bright Boys - _-- _. FRI. I SAT. CAPITOL-Thur ulletsl. . lund-grubbersl bombshell! . . Routing y; =21 on... Rvssififit mnnionlr REYNOLDS m ..an--..._.--.. IT IS A PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCE “BABES IN ARIVIS." It unquestionably provides Mickey Rooney with his roost- outstanding role, shows him not only as a. splendid actor but. also as a dancer, singer, pi Jnlsl, and an extraordinary mimic-someone will develop hystcricg when he mntaiu Clark Gable and Lionel Barrymore. Judy Garland is again at her helt and a host of youthful newcomers are shown to excellent. advantage. In my opinion “BABES IN ARMS" is the bcsl cal ever made. I have certainly doesn't like this picture, l would lng their objections because, at opular musi- nevcr seen bot cr, If anyone very much appreciate hour- present. I completely tail lo see how anyone would find "BABES IN ARMS" anything hut excellent. F. GORDON SPENCER. Resident Manager. §4+§+§Of§-O+§4 i Today's Short Wave Radio Program mu rum u Eastern Standardii +o++o>o+0~+++o+++m++v4 WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER Z9 BERLIN . 31x) pm.—N€WS in English. DJL, 15.11 mes» 19 m; DJN, 0.61 zneg., 31 m. MOSCOW 4:30 p.m.-News in Englsh; Music. RNE. 12 meg, 25 m. umuun 4:45 p.m.-Talk: "Matters of Moment." GSP. 15-31 H198. 19-3 m. BUDAPEST 7:00 p.m.—Hungaran Sngs. HAT4, 912 meg., 32.8 m). ROME 7:30 p.m.-News in English: Angelini Orchestra; Touri-t Notes 2R0, 11.81 meg, 254 m.; 1R1“. 9 B3 meg., 30.5 m. , CARACAS ' 1:30 p.m.-Tenor with Orches- tra. YV5RCU, 5.9 meg , 51.7 m. TOKYO PLUMB CRAZY L“ roiéroiftisfiéaiiioii; "I" 8:05 p.m.-—Vioiin Solo. JZK. 15.16 meg., 19.7 m. M-‘IIIUII a;25 pm.—News in Engish. EAQ, 9.86 meg. , 30.4 m. BERLIN 10:30 p.m.-News in Ehiglish DJD, 11.77 meg., 25 4 m.; DJN. 9.61 meg., 3i m. LONDON 11:00 p.m.-Program to be an- . Tuberculosis Lea izue, l and five yet it is then that the present, germs may be beginning the des- truction of the lung tissucs as well as infecting others. The presence of tuberculcsi; can be detected by means of the simpfe and harmlcss tuberculin skin test, fvllozved by the chest x-ray in positive reac- tors. This requires funds-Buy Christmas Seals. CAPE TRAVERSE WOMEN'S IN STITUTE The annual meeting of Cape Traverse Women's Institute was held at the home of Miss Evelyn Bell on Thursday. Nov. l6. New officers rvcre elected as fol- lows. President; Mrs. Melbourne How- att. Vice-Pres. Mrs Vernon Mut- tart Secretary-Treasurer: Mary Hunt. Directors: Mrs. Joules Campbell. Miss Nona Wright, Mrs, Douglas Bell. Auditors, Mrs. Harold Cuicllffe, Miss Evelyn Bell Five dollars was voted to the Rlcd Cross, three dollars to the five dollars for Christmas treats for shirt-ins, dolars to help with Christmas treat forschool children. It rvos decided to buy yarn from the Red Cross to knit for the sol- diers. New committees appointed were: Buyhiz committee, Mrs Melbourne itoxmtt, and Mrs. Verzicu lvluttart. Sick. Mrs. Nlelbourne llotvuit and Mary Hunt. School, Miss Evelyn Bell Mrs. Raymond Harvey’. Program. Mrs, Douglas Bell and Mrs. Harold‘ Cutcliffe. Lunch, Evelync I-larvey, Mrs. and nounced. GSD. 11.75 meg., 25 5 m_; GSC, 9.58 meg, 313 m. ‘ PARIS _ 12:15 mm —News in Englsh. TPBll, 11.88 meg, 25.2 m ; TPAi. 11.'1lmeg., 25.6 m. Christmas Seals" Spread Knowledge __,,-....r~_,_-t.»-.-v,..~...., » <~<-—<~—"—' Mr" .4 A r ~ A LOURENCO MARQUEE. Mozam- bique —<OP) Sequelra Bus?» chief of the Maritime Departmen of this Rortuguese colony and one- time aide to the President of Portugal (new rationing an operation for ap- pendicits. __ Diamond Drilling We wish to advise we now opt-rate Diamond Drilling equipment u well as Churn Drills for water well work. Our Diamond Drills are modern Longyear machines. Our drilling crews are ex erts trained in the gold flel s 01 the North Country. Get our figure on that test hole or prospect hole you want put down. TRASK WELL ' Company Limited ABRAHAM PETERS. North American lIoteL Charlottetown VAUGHAN If. 0800M. Mgr. for Prince Edward Island Sumllenidl of Tuberculosis "The Christmas Seal campaign,‘ said Dr. P.A. Creelman " of t/‘ir Provincial Sanatorium, in address- ing members of the publicity oom- mittee of the Anti-Tnberculcs league," i: not cnly for the pur- pose of raLsing funds to fight tuberculosis, but also to famlllariz" the public with the three hasc facts in this fight. 1, Tuberculosis is not hereditary i bill. contagious. l 2. As in any other contagious or infection; disease, the pnticnt must be isolated. ‘ 3. The early dkcovery of tuber- culosis disease, is most important "Time was not so long agm‘ convnued Dr. Croeimwn." when i was taken for granted that tube" culosis is a disease that" rum in the family" and as such was n pretty hopeess promsitlon. Mos people now know that tiIbCFCliVFl.‘ i: caused by a well-known germ an" is no more hereditary than ar~ dtptherla. small pox. or scsrlc fever; Like them, tuberculosis l." an infectious or "catching" dis- ease and as in their ease. patients suffering from tuherc-‘lrsis musl be kept from contact with others. Isolation tn n hospital or sch‘- torium not only prevent/r the spread of the disease, but. l: the place where the patients cure can ; best. be assured l "In regard to the third point.‘ the early dLscovery of tuberculosis unlike most other ihf"c"‘rii.s d‘:- cues. weeks or month: may pas". during which no symptoms are Raymond Harvey and Mary Hunt. i Round Trip Rim BARGAIN FARES TO Mo“ Montreal 15-15 Ottawa m5 Toronto i North Bay Ont. ".25 Quebec Three Rivers 13.20 Que. From All Stations 0n flRINCE EDWARD ISLAND l —GOING— FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8th L ~‘ATURDAY, DECEMBER 9th —RETURN LIMIT- Iuesday. December l2. 1939. JXWIN Toronto d: North Bay, llffilnvsdoy, December 13, 193:. Children of Five am under Twelve ycaw ul one HALF ifARls Tickets Good in DAY COAHIES ONLY For Further information Consult any Ticket Agent ANADIAN NATION l IIYWNIHI’ (ANIIIIA llu Canadian National Manny (More hr 84M! and Convenience. muir Yesterday A stirring adds-ex on Canada's war aims was delivered yesterday afternoon by His Excellency, Lord Tweedsmulr, Governor General of Canada, before the Women's 0on- adian Club at Toronto. His Excellency ex raced his pleasure at the priviege of od- dressing, for the first time, a Wo- men's Canadian Club, He then oceedew "A Governor General, ls you know. is very limited in his choice of subjects. There are many matr- ters on which he dare not touch. matters of controversy, above all, matters pf party controversy. Po- litics in the ordinary sense are forbidden him, and that does not make it easier for a person like myself, who was a Member of Parliament at Home and to whom politics was a principal topic. So I am afraid -I am very much afraid—that in my many speeches since I came to Canada I may have sometimes bored my audience by harping on the same subjects. There is a story of s. new minister in a Scottish village who reached his first sermon there, an an 01d woman in the congregation. u cele- brated critic of sermons. was asked what. she thought of hlmJ-Ier an- swer was "I thouht nothing of him. He was neither edifyln’ nor divertln”', I fear that too often I have bs-an neither edifying nor diverting! “But today there is one subject of profound topical interest on which n Governor General is permitted lo speak freely. It is the question cf the war. He is at liberty to sneak because whatever may be our (liffcrcnces of view on the incid- rnts which led up to the vrnr I fancy there is very little differ- rnoe of opinoin on the necessity of winning that. war. Now that. we are in it. we have to see it through. The issue have clarified (item- srlvcs into mmcthiil: \cr\' simple which anyone can understand. We and our Allies are fighting to re- store" decency and order to the world. If we were d-efented it would mean the loss in life of most things that we hold dear. But we are not going to be deflated. Courage And Hope “To win we must have the deter- mlnation to win. We must have courage, and we must have hope. We must keep a stout heart. That applies not. only to our armed forces, but to every man. woman and e‘:ild in this Dominion. In old days war was a contest of armies and navies. Today it is a contest of peoples. In the last war it was the break-down of Ger- many's national morale which led to her defeat. In this war it is the maintenance of our national mor- ale, our civilian morale, which will bring us victory. I remember in the last war a famous French general who. whenever he pro- phesied ultimate victory, alwnvs added. ‘Provided the civilians stick if. outJ-Pourvu que its civiles tiennent. “So this afternoon f want to offer you a few reflections which should conduce, I think, to stout- ness of heart and cheerfulness of spirit. We have to face great dif- ficulties, but we have also great as- sets. We areliving in sconfused and tragic world but from thatvery con- fusion and tragedy we may win cer- tsin shining ‘benefitsAmong old- fashioned people in Scotlandl have oft/en heard the advice given that when things look dark it is a good plan to "count your mercies." So I venture to offer for your con- sideration, and tn order to cheer ourselves up, a. few mercies which I think we can count. A Lesson From History "First, as s student of history I want to remind you that in our long Iiisiury we have lived under skies equally dark, and our fathers did not lose heart. There are one or two special cases to remember. In Mar: ~ i918 Germany had no eastern .!‘nt to fight on, for Rus- sia. was in chaos, Rumania. and Serbia were prostrate, and Bul- garia and Turkey were on her side. she could move almost every man from the east against the ALtes in the west. She could get supplies of food and oli from the east, cer- tainly as easilv as she can get them today. Her peoue had been gliving for more than three years ‘under a heavy war strain, on ner- row rations and with an insuffici- ent lllpply of war material. She was, indeed, very much in thc position then in which she has begun the present war. Whathap- Bpened? Well. she attacked vioxntly ltn the west, and Britain and France went through a very tr lng time. Eventually the Amer can armies were in the field beside us. and in seven months Germany was beaten to the ground. ‘The sltu ation of course is not quite the some today: today Germany has a powerful army of young men, and America is not in the field. But it was not only the pressure in the field that defeated Germany in 1918; it was even more the fact that the long strain had told upon her internal morale, and that the nerve of her people broke. There is the same danger for her today. I find some comfort in that recollection. “Then cast your mind book to the beginning of last century after the battle of Austerlitz, when the dying Pitt salrl. ‘Roll u the map of Europe ' Russia ha ‘run out. and was an ally of our enemies, The whole of Europe was against us, and it was under the ir0n_heel of a great genius. Napoleon. com- pared to whom the present Ger- man leaders are the merestpygmies. But Britain did not lose heart. We stuck to our ‘cause, we refus- ed to make peace until tryrunhy had been defeated, and we won. Mlhy Bad Times ‘The truth is that we have come through many bed times. end often Faith c Coure Vital .Ass.ets "In l/Vinninine War Stirring Address On‘ Canada's War Aims Delivered by Lord Tweeds- i . summation _gai1'.cring round ' But the ordin- LORD TWEEDSMIITR many able and public-spirited men have lost heart. Early in last 0on- tury William Wilberforce thought the outlook for the country so dark that he refused to marry. In the ’forties Lord Shaftesbury, the great phlianthropist, declared that ‘nothing could save the British Elmpire from shipwreck.’ And the Duke of Wellington ust before hll death thanked God t ‘he would be spared from seeing the con- of ruin that was ary cillzm-Ahe man who matters most never took that view. and, because he did not. disaster never came. “But I do not want to refer mcrcly to famous historical epi- sodes. I want you to consider how harrl and difficult life was in earlier t‘mes for our own people. and how in the darkest moments they never lost either their cour- age or their cheerfuiness. The feet is that in our own day, and in our fathers‘ day, life had become un- believably secure and — an ease and security which can scarcely be paralleled except por- hsps for a. few decades in the early Roman Empire. In the nine- teenth century we thought this the normal state of affairs which was going to last for ever. But it has never been the normal state of af- fairs. Tcdzy in our troubles we are back again in what in history has not been the exception but tho ru e. "I need not reuilnd you of the herd and dangerous life which your ovn forefathers had here in Canada, dangers arising from the sava-gery of man and the cruelty of nature. It is instructive to read the record of some of the earlier settlers here and across the bord- er, and to compare it with the kind of conditions we live under now. Earlier Centuries "But I want you to look further back in history. Even the most unfortunate of us at the present time have no easier and safer life than the most fortunate of our forefathers. As you know, all through the Middle Ages Euro was ravaged by wars and pesti- ence. Do you realize that in one of the visitntlons of the Black Death two-thirds of the whole population died? Right up to the last. century epidemics were to be looked for every few years, and there were very imperfect methods of dealing with them, Let us take the seventeenth century in Eng- land-a great cs-ltury in our his- tory. All through it there were wars on the Continent of Europe, in some of which we were en- gnged, and which constantly threatened to extend to ourshores. l In the course of it we had ten‘ years of civil war in England and l in Pcotlnud. and there is no more terrible kind of war, Also. everv few years there was an epidemic cf disease- different. kinds of typhoid, small pox. dy- and a m sterious thin; the ‘sw-ea ing sickness.’ Fvcry now and then people had to I char out. of London and ntherl cities, and find refuge in country} nieces. At Ovford the colleges had rrrzuiar countrv resorts to which lbw fled when disease came. _ 'T_have been engined lately in‘ ~-'» --~ f1""l‘ some of the local re"- crs cf that century. and it ‘u "f""'=“'o~ hour neorfle liv=d ii worn-hot expwtntion of some 6"” lv dlsccrru Remember. too. '1' ' “c rw-"cal appliances for M" .“'""‘ =‘""ncss were extract-diner"- ‘mrcrfect. ‘What does that m-nn? It rM-l- q ihvt our ancestors lived a life r’ perpetual insecurity. War was 5'. W" "Tllmblln! on the horizon, 8nd they had the daily expecta- tion ofthe coming of some my- storlous malady which oould not be foultht, which killed its hundreds of thousands, and which died down only to appear again in a few Years. You would have said that such n life would have taken the. heart out o! any people. But ll did not. Think what we owe ta the seventeenth century. At the beginning Shakespeare wmu the greatest poetry in the wor'd. and he was followed by John Milton. Throughout it poets wrote some of the most beautiful lyrics in our literature, and some of the most cheerful. To that century we owe famous works in theology -lt wrs the century of The Pilgrim's Pre- tress; we owe it much beautiful music, and a great deal of wise l philosophy. Modern science began I then with the founding of the Royal society. Indeed. the thought of that century hu still s pro- , found influence on our intellectual i life. Moreover, if you study the io- all their troubles the British re- mained s cheerful people. ‘They csl r=cord| you will find that with} never their heart, they never lmoblenu. Seventy years ago the vet lining est. cloud. "First, for our own land of Can- ldl, o. land of which, as the King's representative, I um ud to call myself s citizen. In e last four yeerslthinkthotlimoyclntmto have uglier! over nloioet every variety of races, but we have I. variety of economic irmests terllta province e of neighbours and is sometimes in- clined to be jealous of them. Too few people think of Carmda as s whole. and of Canadian problems as all, the last resort, national Fathers of Confederation gave us union: we have not yet. achieved orrfect unity. ' "But thinvs are moving in the right direction. New means of transport are lessening our dis- tances: the sir, both bv the radio and the aeroplane. is fast uniting Canada. and familiaristng each pert with the other ports. Then I hink that this year the visit oi’ Their Majesties, who are the chief links between all the scattered part1 of our Empire, has had n. wonderful unifying effect. Canada realized the. King was King not only of Britain. but of Can- ui», and, being proud of the King and Queen, we became all the prouder of Canada. The different parts of our country are not like holes in a box, which are only ttogether by the containing walls of the box. They are like apples on a tree, which may be far apart, but which all draw their life from the some tap-root. Canada): Part "Now war has come. Canada has entered into it as e. free and sovereign Dean's. whollv of her own will-st no one's dictation except the dictation of her reason and her conscience. That. is a tremendous thing and it is bound to have a profound effect upon our national spirit. In the last war I think the feeling of most men who en- listed here was that they were fighting primarily for the Monitor" Country. which was in a condi- tion of great peril and stress. Now. I believe and hope, there is not. only that feeling present, but also the conviction that every one of us here is fighting for Canada, for Canada's dearest interests, for Canada's national future. If that conception is always before our minds it will be a tremendous force for spiritual unification. "Let me odd one thing. What is required of us is effort, but it may be dull effort. and slow effort. nothing brilliant and exciting. but s long steady strain. We shell need all our energy, but we shall also need all our patience, and that is often a verv difficult tih-ing. You remember the text in the Bible which says: ‘They shall mount up on wings like eagles. they shall run and not be weary. and they shall walk and not faint ’ To most people that seems a dlminuendo of effort, almost an mticltmax. But the truth is exactly the opposite. It is not so hard make one glorious sensational effort —t0 mount on wlnzs like eagles. It is not so hard to run and not be ' ery. to move swiftly towards a rirpose. The real test of stamina. national and individual. is to he able to walk and not be weary, to do the dull jobs iionestlv and pa- tiently without losing heart. The Blessing of Freedom "I was to something greater. something which affects not only Canada. but the whole Empire and the whole civilized world. For cen- turtes we have enjoyed certain blessings. We have had a stable law. before which the poor man and the rich man were equal. We ce E Tuberculosis. We dare not let up in our efforts. Chamberlain dlflpg instead of bombs to arouse the German people tn These little Christmll Seals u-e the bom Prtn dward Island to their great nu [lam hlell their a n ger, be to nroule the peopl 1 a immediate dlnier 11.1. an refifwiiat we pleased. to say what we pleased. We have had s. system of government which gave the ate power to the ordinary man end com lied s to govern aomrd ng to the people's will. We have been in the habit of deciding public questions by free debate, and, while adopting the verdict of the majority as the simplest. way of getting things done, yet at the same time respect lug the sacred places of any minority. We have lived by tolera- tion. bntional cofrmrolntse and freely expressed opinion, and we have lived very well “Did we value those blessings as we should have done? I hardly think so. We had come to take them for granted like the air we breathe. They had lost all glamour for us since they had become too familiar. Indeed it was the sign of the intellectual to be rather critics‘ of them. Paradoxical young men questioned the value of free dis- cussion, of tolemtion, of com- promise. They acquired s. cheap reputation by sneering at the toler- ant spirit in politics, and advocat- ing new ‘machine-made systems. They had not a great following. pmhaps. except among people like themselves, but it al ihelped to lower the prestige of s free demo- cracy. "Now things are wholly changed. w. have seen those pr nciples on which our life has been conducted challenged in the entols, not by a. few paradoxical phil- losophers, but by great Powers supported by great ‘armies. We realize that there is an imminent danger of that freedom which we, and every sane man, took for granted, disappearing from the world. It has disappeared among notions who once were civilized. Remember that among its enemies there is no question of toleratlon. Thev are determined to root it out of the wor‘d. for thev are fanatics i their blind and foolish creed. 8o we have suddenly discovered ti t what we took for tfne endur- ing presuppositlcwss of our life are in danger of beintz destroyed. To- dev we value freedom and tolera- tton as we have never valued them before, for we realize how terrible the opposite can be. Now that is a have had the freedom. within that law. to believe what we r‘ ’ to promptly. and values. You ADVANCE BIDS Goods offered will be on display Saturday, Dec. 2nd'at the Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau, Queen Street, where advance bids may be made on any article listed. No article will be definitely sold before the regular auction over CHCK on Thursday evening, December 7th, starting at 6 p.m. Call and see the articles offered, note the values, aid Rotary charities by tuning in and making your bill.- - tremendous advantage. Just as a man never values his home so (1310 on Your Dial)‘ Get Good Entertainment. Behind psrlismen‘ cellent But it merit and many details and not we era fighting thing which lie are essential freedom within tlon. the whole Surely it is realized that? Euro w llze what ‘Still’! interest France. It may intact on decline and World The challenge is ‘(weather ghat. we g ony or s a thing coiled democracy. v we y democracy sn way running is I technique Principles. for greater-the behind democracy, tihe thtnga which ue the civilization, the things we believe to humanity—lsw, even if liberty were crushed Europe it could still be maintained Am That is not the things in this world are held un- der s. perpetual challenge. and if that challenge is refused they will die. If of life went down in the its prestige would decline and very soon would wemken in the New World. much as when he is compellérlto leave it. 8o now we realize the in- eattmlble blecoirw! which we my, n“ the put when they m Democracy are not We think our ex- a country. of govern- of its details are What or today is some- things bnsisof the law, tolera- decencies of life. something to have ‘lihe Dictators in have done civilization s in making us res- se oe are its foundations. "Remember that this is Oan- Just as much as is the interest of Britain and be argued that in ertcen continent. truth. All good our free wsy Old everywhere to all free peoples. and this free Canada of ours must be ready to meet. that challenge if it is to retain its freedom. League of Nations “Them ll another advan tago which we may reap from our pne- sent troubles. At a hope and an present it is only aspiration, but I trust that it may develop into n serious purpose. At the moment the world is in anarchy. If we are to have peace to possess our souls. peace for reap the fruits of thought and science. standards of life peace to raise the for everyone, then (C011 tinti on SEVENTH ANNUAL ROTARY R4010» iAucnou In Ald Of Cflppled Chlldrep A ‘lhursday Evening. December 7th_ 6 P. M. OVER CHCK A full list of goods offered will be published and dlstri buted, giving details of articles offered-names of dono": KEEP THIS LIST FOR REFERENCE ON NIGHT‘ 0|" AUCTION. l a Greatly Aid Crippled ‘chums. Get Good Value For Your Money. e B Col I)