cnsnlosrown cusnuun Ifilldilll-W. Conakry-Linux. Col. U. lleLuee. vlee-rrsnaeuvp‘ u. our-m. D. A. llaosiluuuu. D. I. (l. ' FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1929 -~ OF BEMEMBBANCE. 1! fitting prelude to Armistice 'qhich falls on Monday. tomor- ._ been get apart for the annual h as I>0Pl>les in aid of unpensioned ‘ und children of war veterans. _ pies, which are made in the .. rt shops throughout Canada, 1' 1:51pm on the streets tomorrow .35.... will thus have the op- t‘ lty of purchasing those mom- for the Armistice Dav cere- , which takes place. as usual, at ‘ Qlonume it at ll. o'clock Monday 'g. In Summerslde. Montague, other provincial centres similar {will take place, and it is ex- V ' met s substantial sum willbo ' for the beneficent work of ‘veterans’ organization. The sale. g heldunder the gracious Dat- . f,‘ Jof their Efxcellencles, Lord and willingdon. .5‘ in; the eleven years that have pass- i l wince the first ArmLstice ncymaav i _ ‘t. gigs have occurred to dull our ‘ i’ ifilqfy pf the War and the sacrifices ch it entailed. Yet it will remain l iputstandlng crisis of our history. l, iiexperience set BPBTT- 1mm a“ his: experiences. It is thus that sport. mm which a man sets physi- Notes ByThe Way Trafalgar Du-y and the death of :9- Editor 1nd Insular-J. B. Buxuotv. Anoeiuu IOIIIITD. l. Curl-Io. Lard Nelson. "canny ‘ungnsed ‘ A _..’." hi??? .i.‘.’.'.....$§"'i'..‘.'.. 29.17"»? .°l'-""‘2...“I'i...‘.’..'1'."“ ...".‘.'.‘.‘.‘ "“°“‘*‘°“‘ m‘ mp“ ‘mu m’ HI death of Admiral Kempenfclt, which occurred at Bpithead in i782 under very different but equally tragical conditions. 10rd Nelson had entered n. B W . B the naval service when he was i2 - "Ham" ‘rlomup Quurs cal fitness and learns endurance as well as how to win honorably or t0 take a beating with good temper; co-operation because it forms the habit of subordinating self interest to the common good and may be im- enfelt had been contemporaries the service but in different fields George, met their awful fate. years of age, in 1770, so he and Kemp- naval activity when Kempenfelt, his crew and his flagship, the Royal service. hundred years. of great teachers Under the leadership education. In selecting them as the cardinal factors in training, the schools have unconsciously interpret- ed the English mind. They are there- fore representative of a. national ideal which has slowly unfolded itself and been colored by the duties and power of nineteenth-century England. Is it because we have gotten away from British ideals and tradition in educational methods that we are "lacking in prophesy, cursed with divided loyalty and quibbllng in the ranks. badgered with routine, and harboring a sense of futility," as fir. Sexton trenchantly declares? At any ihlve chosen to commemorate it. ighe Peace Tower at Ottawa. in a {y of the canadlan contingentsin 4 i War. The crest or emblem of lg-y Canadian regiment is there, ‘ "52, the centre of the chamber, i] beautiful pedestal, is a casket . mining just one treasure — the w l: of Remembrance. in which are -‘ u»... the names of fifty thousand And throughout Dominion other memorials have i erected, all reminding us of it we have pledged ourselves never wgorget. V1 Monday we shall have the sol- = '3» privilege of again paying tribute P 068.8005! Chamber °5 Pu" 5°’ and disciplined freedom is ' 8t’ its lwelieii’. 0Y1 B ma")!!! tab‘ significant. since without these ' Herquisitely engraved. i8 9°15 the we shall develop only a genera- Novo. Scotia plebiscite has given rise to the suggestion in some quarters that the Rhodes Government delib- eratcly “bailed things up" so as to ensure the defeat of prohibition. This curious alibi is diSPOEBd of by the Sydney Post, which says: rate. the emphasis placed by the Har- row headmaster on religion, culture tion of spiritual and intellectual ain'- ccmpoops. WHY BRING THAT UP? The complicated ballot used in the "The Government's first inten- tion. as shown in the original draft ‘he valour and sacrifice of our s. The poppy was early chos- thepeculiar symbol of the su- e velour and sacrifice of those fell. We wear it humbly and . tly, remembering its origin It! meaning. By purchasing the ‘tomorrow we are fulfilling a r as citizens, small indeed in com- _ son with the duties which our lers performed cheerfully and _ lily during the War, but one nev- I leless charged with poignant sig- “ie-nce, a civic ritual which. for i!‘ 10m: sakes, o'e- canot afford to only one quesiion on the ballot of tllc Plchiscitc Bill. whs to print bucd with the obligation of social These five essentials Dr. Norwood finds in the best tradition which has shaped itself in the great English public schools during the last these schools. in different ways, have used these five esential instruments of an English men. there were 200 visitors on boar all of whom shared a common fate. Eight hundred of the brave, Whose courage well was tried, Had made the vessel heel And laid her on her side. A land breeze shook the shrouds And she was overset, Down went the Royal George With all her crew complete. It was not in the battle, No tempest gave the shock, She sprang no fatal leak; She ran upon no rrck. His sword was into sheath. His fingers held the pen. When Kempenfelt v-rnt down With twice four hundred men. Prrlaier King's claim that the Can- adian national debt has been "enor- mously reduced" will not bear exam- ination. It rests upon the absurd na- tion that the National Railway debt is not a part of the debt of Canada. The railway debt is truly "enormous," but it is endorsed by the Government of Canada and the Government of Canada is liable f0r it all. In like manner the Premier's claim that his Government has largely re- duced taxation is unfounded. In the tariff changes made since the King Government came into power there have been both increases and reduc- tions. The reductions have mainly, like those in the sales tax. a lowering of taxes laid on by his own Govern- ment. Of the additions made by his Government the Premier takes no account. The sort of figuring practiced by the Premier during ills recent plat- pzlper.~na.mely, whether or not tho N. S. T. A. should be retained. But tilt; was objected to by the prohibikoll leaders, Whose request urns complied with that the 81ml‘- nativc of Government Control should also be made clear on the ballot form. Their idea seems to have been that the average voter would be less likely to vole for the repeal of the N. s. T. A. if it were known that the result would be the enactment of a. (xmtrol law. In this the event shows that they were mistaken. The vote polled for CW1- trol was more than double that polled against Prohibition." form efioris in the West-treating a The poet Compel- has pictured in graphic lines the salient features of the tragedy. The flagship was under- going some repairs, and although the poet only refers to the crew of 800 m SWOLLEN FEET of ankles. the instep. d However without tight shoes or straps, while ,to visit your family doctor at once. It is usually due to a weakened heart. This swelling. or oedema as it is called. is due to a poor or sluggish circulation in the capillaries or small vessels that lie between the arteries and veins. and also due to poor cir- culation in the veins themselves. The swelling may also be due to the fact that the tissues do not ab- sorb the fluids fast enough. As you know the kidneys do the most work in so far as getting rid of fluids frxl the body in the form of urine. Physioloflisis tell us that the kid- rreys should throw out not less than 60 percent of the fluids that are tak- en into the body. ~ iWhen swelling occurrs rest in bed is the first and most important form of treatment. This immediately helps the circulation and the kidneys get rid of an increased amount of water. If the kidneys continue to do this it is considered s. favorable sign. whereas whore the output of urine docs not equal 60 percent of the in- lake of fluids. it is unfavorable, and strict diet and medical treatment mustbe undertaken. _ In regard to diet. the chief points to watch are the intake of fluids and salts .'I‘he_ patient must take as little water as possible and do' without salt. In reaard to drugs that of. course will rest with your physician. The usual drug, as you know. is digitalis which not only slows and strengthens the heart. but it is one of the best drug! known for stimulating the heart, kidneys to action. However this is up to your doctor not to you. ' So don't ignore swollen feet or legs. If not due to tight shoes go to bed and send for your doctor.’ One of the conditions which may make you feel a little nervous is to have some swelling of the feet and Now a number of these cases occur from tightly laced shoes. or shoes shoes that have a tight strap across a swelling that occurs not always serious. should cause you gurec n. a laudable effort layman in the wonder of s scientists from time to time presen impressive figures illustrative o n. . States for at least a million years. We are also told that the drift of electrons around the earth's axis of rotation constitutes an electric cur- rent powerful enough to melt the great cables of Brooklyn bridge in a thousandth of a second. Again we are informed, in connec- tion with a recent experiment at Schenectady involving the separa- tion of helium atoms from a portion of the radioactive metal uranium no larger than a five-cent piece. that it would take five trillion years to use up one-half that amount of ur- anium and that the atoms are so small that more than a quadrillion of them could rest on the head of a pin. _ Astronomers, however, are partic- ularly free with their proceasio of numerals. Measuring apaoe in light years or in miles is to the ordinary experimenter with the multipication table a breath-taking proceeding. He is quite ready to accept the astron- omers‘ word for anything over, say. a billion miles or a hundred million light years. . Our ancestors did not think on such a scale. Earth and the heavens were a veritable cozy corner to them in comparison with our enlarged conception of the cosmos. Yet learned men in ages past had some ides of both the infinitely great and infin- itely little. The schoolmen, it will be recalled. had a memorable argu- ment concerning the number of an- gels that could stand on the point of a needle. Lest, however. we be tempted ufsmile at the simplicity of those sevants it is well to know that modern mathematicians likewise use celestial beings in their calculations. Prof. Cassius J. Kayser in his "Math- ematlcal Philosophy" has a charm- ing discussion of what he calls “the infinite group of Abelian angel flights." But the mathematicians‘ angel. sad to say, can fly only in straight lines. Shorn of its imagery, such an "angel flight" is really what is nown in mathematics and physics as a vector." It has been said that "philosophy PVhen‘ Science Fi- iobp . to interest the earch and immensities in both the macrocosm and the microcosm. Recent news despatches tell us. for example, that the earth is a huge dynamo generating enough current to supply all electrical needs to the eighteen largest cities of the United ‘NOVEMBER s 41929 t i’ p", in the present store for 40 years. It erties on Main street. Work on the l new building will start at once and ‘ spring. The property has more than ' a 30-foot frontage on Main street and extends 100 feet in depth. pied by Blakney st Son. Omar Her- bert and Mr. Bass. Whaaevecyourpiamfee the future, the smug- ut foundation upon whichtoisuiidiceyscem» atic saving in the baulr. rE-IE Bank of Montreal oft/s’ fer-s safety, convenience and compound interest for those who build up their savings accounts here. BANK OF A L Eiabliihidfmi‘! IN BXCBSS OF $900,000,000 Charlottetown Branch: G. FILLITER, Manager F TOTAL ASSETS L Trust Company have purchased the y wooden building of Harvey L. Bass, ' . shoe merchant, and will erect a three or four-story building on the prem- ises. according to an a unceme made by C. L. Beazley, local manag- er of the company, today. Mr. Bass has carried on business is one of the oldest leasehold prop- _ will make it , warm for you is expected to be completed next The present building is now occu- An ENTERPRISE Pipeless Furnace be examined 1:1 Parliament at its next sitting the financial critics of the Opposition may expect to have some rare fun with the Prime Minister. I g bakes no bread." ‘rhe- same. in a. .______ part of the facts as if they were all h ~51 g sense. is true of many scientific i the facts-ls easy enough and could v " r ,3: speculmmm Bu,’ theymay at least M_; be utilised by a small school boy. but ' ‘ be tolerated m a pragmatic l” on l can hardly prove convincing to in- ‘ @m 01/” “F? the ground that they stimulate ‘ telligent. adults. When it comes to ---__ a, jaded imaginations, turn our B I I THE ROAD CALLS. The white road calls and I'm long- ins The two Canadian statesmen who have distinctly advanced their repu- tatlon, influence and popularity in Canada within the past twelve months are Mr. R. B. Bennett and ‘Past the snake fences a-windlng ‘To thé dim-green fairest aisles, ' 'I‘o follow its dusty miles, Where the sea-blush blooms in springtime . thoughts from purely mundane things and give us some insight in- to the vastness of the-universe and the power and scope of disciplined human minds that plumb its depths. COMPANY WILL PUT ' k .‘ > - strong indictment, but the learn- , ‘pg; we are carrying in our . to learn that a volume on -- this country. a... lined freedom because free- , '. should fit a. man for life ‘ect- EDITORIAL NOTES EDUCATION“- mEAl-s A blast of cold comfort has been walled from Ontario to the fling fliusirless mounted on a thorough- Government. ‘ and education astride aClydes- “Any young lady," says an exchange, "should resent being called out by a honking horn. It too closely resembles a. dog being wlristled for by its mas- ier." ma, of Halifax. in his presiden- Qddress to the Canadian Educa- a1 Association oll the situation of action in this country today. It “Scnatrlrfl has been suggested as the designation for women appoint- ed members of the Dominion Senate. It does not seem to convey the im- portance and dignity of the high of- fice. doctor's address would be more Jill l! he had indicated with ‘ rugs the nature of the excess and college curricula and the aims and objects which we strive to attain. In view of Premier Baxter's denial of the flit! other recent criticisms on Quebec rumor that the three Marl- Iducational methods. most of time Provinces had agreed on a. basis fmfortunaicly of a destructive of Union was hardly neoeseary- A than constructive nature, itis merger of Quebec and Ontario. says the Sydney Post, is precisely "5 Pm- bable as the consolidation of Nova Sootia, New Brunswick and Hinfie Edward Island into r. some Pm- vlnoe. h, Tradition of Education g been published from the pen Oyril Norwood. Headmaster of School, the contents of which repay study by educational- Mr. R. ll’. Jenkins, M. P., has re- turned from Montreal bearing the familiar news that tenders 1'0!‘ ti" new car ferry will shortly b9 "i194 for and that it is hoped to have the steamer in operation by the fall of 193W; also that construction of the new c. 1v. a. hotel ' is about m be commenced. What Mr. Jenkins failed to announce was the reason for the delay in appointing a. successor to Lieutenant Governor Hearts. and the date when we may “Boot I Norwood fixes the reader's on five points as being in- in the English ideal of educa- flve essentials are Ro- plgclplmed Freedom. Culture. ‘ and (Jo-operation. Religion be- ‘ft hlls a man his place in the ‘_ 3nd gives sanction to vir- guarantees individuality and ~~- guard; it from licence: cul- Mr. J. Howard Ferguson. Mr. Bennett leads the Conservative forces in the federal arena. throughout the Domin- ion with entlre satisfaction to his Near the star faced trilliunls white, And the birds nest in the summer, A-slnging from morn till night. many able lieutenants and his party.’ Mr. Ferguson reigns without a peer ori a rival in the big province which’ contains one-third of the Canadian' people. And millions of loyal and pat-i riotic Canadian men and women are: proud of both of them. President Beatty of the C .1’. It, a very careful critic of Canada's de- velopment, recently. said: “In flvc years Alberta. will have greater pru- ductivity in industrial output than she has then in agricultural." Mr. Beatty sees that the wheat-raising West is beginning to unearth tre- mendous resources in oil, coal. metals and water power, says The Mail and Empire and "the manufacturing East" will cease to be set over against the "farming West.” A great industrial change is coming over the Prairie Provinces, and it will soon produce important results in other provinces of the Dominion. Canada's economical life will be rounded out. until more and more she will become a self-contained nat- ion, not dependent upon. O: submit- ting to be dictated to by any com- petitor or rival. The Labor Government in England, assisted by Lloyd George and the Liberal contingent. have succeeded in securing a majority of 25 in the House of Commons in favor of resum- ing diplomatlc relations with Soviet Russia. When and if the measu e passes the House of Lords, ambass dors will be appointed at London and. Moscow. In the meantime the Soviet has been building u great number of the most modern and effective war tanks, while the military forces are being reduced. At this distance the entire movement in these matters him 12' cum} to society} belated snvoinimoiii w i” mm- l 1e seams unwarranted and perilous. The long road calls and I listen To its ancient, gypsy lure For I smell tho winds a-blowing In from the heathery. moor, ' Till the city suffocates me With its pavements. drab and gray, And its buildings. skyward reach- ing. That shut out the light of day. The far road calls and I'm going with a lulapsack on my back. For the Autumn air is wine-sweet, Though there's storm-hint in the wreck: _ g _ But the scarlet groves of woodland Draw the migrant’: willing feet. And the boisterous winds a-blowing. Send a. challenge, wildly sweet. -Marlon Isabel Anglia. THE LAND WE LOVE By msrvrr yarou SIR. ALEXANDER. MMKINZII . Q. When and where did Sir Alex- ander MacKensie have his first sight. of the Pacific. A. A mem iui tablet erected on a rock wall near Bells, Cools, B. C. answers these questions with the following inscription: "This rock is the western terminus of the first journey across the Continent of North America. It was made by Alexander MacKenzie of the North- v west Company who, with his nine l companions, arrived at this spot on the 21st, of July i783. MacKenaie by observations, ascertained his posi- tion, spent the night here, and if- ter writing on the southeast face the words now out therein, retraced his course to Lake Athablsks. This transcontinental journey preceded Good tools are indispensable to the handy man about the home. You'll flnd them here in almost endless var- iety. amateur or skilled mechanic, such as money on every purchase. ‘ UP NEW BUILDING MANAGER STATES MONCTON, Nov. 7—'I'he Eastern 5 , 5K|DN EY /, f; PILLS FOB THE HANDY MAN Everything needed by the iscs, pliers, saws, files, hammcrl. etc. re here always, priced to lave you The Rogers Hardware by more than fen years that of Lewis and Clark. ' ‘ Attend the UNION COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Of , London, Eng. N01"! Physician treated sue cessfully and obtained perman- ent cures of STOMACH CON- DITIONS, such as INDIGEB- TION. DYSPEPSIA, SOUR. S T 0 MA C II, HEABTBUBN, GASTRIC DISTRESS and many other ailments peculiar to the stomach with u prescrip- tion which we have procured and sell undo: the name of EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE. WE ALONE have the sole I rights on this prescription and since selling it have received numerous testimonials from satisfied , chaser; DON'T FOOL with your stomach, ' conditions are likely to arise if you allow your- self to lapse into u chmnlc stale of gastric trouble, Get u bottle today. Price 05c. am.- Thanksgiving. s splendid rooms, Individual instruction. WM. MORAN PUINCTPAI. - loyal Bank Build!!!» Charlottetown Co, Ltd. - , 003041-041.- . f. The Enterprise the reason is, , and naturally the most durable, every nook and corner of your home \ joyful and comfortable evenings. h The most durable Furnace on the market, salvo for SPECIAL FURNACE CATALOG Make Your Home a Place of Comfort Install an Enterprise H0lman’s Ch"town is rliiilnr in popularity each-van lllfl “l ‘diliflflilfy service and duflbillty. The wiian are Ill heavy cast iron, the heaviest u. an ‘ yhlruueo Installation is Ill import- ant feature and this we are very careful about... You will have no trouble from gas or smoke with m gnumm, Dov and llllbt all during the cool nu days ms the In! cold blush of midwluier, .1. Enteprlse all cast Iron Plpsliu will your volume; of warm, humidified m h” warm and comfortable. It will transform your “house” Into u. "home" a place where the Ilmlly mg, 5w,“ m caulk“ u“ where friends and neighbor-g will delight to come and Ipfllil ll-l-fi-B-Si. Cb... ALBION NUT ALBION’ STOVI ALBION ROUND x ‘Imam vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv Let u have your order now. _ deliveries. PHONE 170 oowwo+o'o-n+09,-o+n+www+on4 c” can srmmr Oil-EEK!» sranvonnl. SCRIIINED mvaansss scassusb v COAL! DENIM to flll order; on u, u u“ “l. ‘ . . f l il Amaarcsu Arrruascvr: rmr msarcsu slvrnaacrrs srovu I ' . “m. u u,“ ; ‘so!!! couuucg lxperieu Teachers. up-to- ’ 5C0 90K! ' me e i. Bonita , clan I ru-raoaam con lmveetprlonurronfl W. n. GILLIS s» co. sxxxsvxx- sr-xskskskhxsx. ee e“-