3O ‘it i‘: s»: s s s combustion =o:rcn=2eHmUm¥? ‘g ?":* "_'_"’ T71 2* -._..~... -..--.- u _..- _..--A- 1M1‘. LHAKJ I ll A d. lUW Pl ’.. X1 l) A34 Vice-l nldunl J. u. llurnotl. l‘. J- l- Idltnv lml Ill nun; rum-lav J. It. Burners Iocralnr; l. (nl u A lluKIunon ll. . Alltwllllfl Hllllun trunk Walker and U. IL. Olllrlo E Morning ll-Jy lfnnnded Ill?)- $0.00 pet yen un advance) delivered to City. “.00 ut-r sour (In indium-r) llllllfll ll I’. l. lllnll. $5.00 usi- w»: m) uduuu-e) lllllrd to Con“: all U. l. NOVEMBER 24 I931 “Begame Yankees? Are \Vc To A significant cdiuwrizil appears in the Montreal Gazette on the pruposctl new trade truties be- tween the built-d States, Canada, and Great llritain iu which it implies that these are to be the foundation (If a political union between Can- Jda and the thin-d States. Our Montreal con- temporary emplnisizes the economic advantages of surh trcatics to manufacturing industries, makes light of the sacrifices Maritime interests would lu‘ callctl upon to make, and proceeds: "The King (iovcrnment is understood to have pretty wcll made up its mind not only as to how far it will go in clearing a path for the United Shite.- in the British market but as to the pre- risc character and extent of the concessions which it is prepared to give the United States llf'l'lt“l' a revised reciprocity agreement . . . “In its broad scope the enterprise upon which the British, United States and Canadian gov- ernments are embarking is of world-wide signi- ficance. If it sucecds it will bring the English- spcztkiug uations—:'\ustralia and New Zealatid are to be included later on-onto common ground mnmrcrcially. A new link will be forged be- iween thc British Empire and the United States. Where thcre is s common interest there is not only an opportunity for. but an incentive to com- mon action. A political structure may ‘easily b} arched upon a conmierriol foundation, and this‘, we take it, ix no! only the though! in the minds mi fth-e got-ermnanrr roam-med but the motive n-ilit-Jt flu-y on Jffkfllg to realize. It may be the first step in consolidating the political and econ- omic strength of the English-speaking world for the preservation of democracy and the restora- tion and maintenance of peace. No one will say that sitch a goal is not worth striving for, not worth some sacrifice on the part of all the peo- plc concerned, Through it, the world may again become civilized." Thus is fired the first sliof f5? ‘the extension of the. ljuired States over our 4,000 undefended hotmrlary’ into Canada. This may be called "peaceful penetration". We are living in strange ‘limes when the standard of virtue and patriotism of past generations is discarded as freely and as siiguificantly as gold in economics and finance. and an undetermined standard of "democracv” proposed to take its place. Thus is the policy ‘of inter-nationalism to be substituted for the policv of nationalism; Anglo-Saxon democratic social-l ism for llilterism, Mussolinism, Stalinism and Fluids-m". Will it succeed without a. bitter struggle first httwccn one form of dictatorship and an- other? _ .. _r_ ,- Lord Halifax's Visit Apparently Lord Halifaxb visit to Hitler has not borne much. if any fruit, the prospects of which his lordship could carry home. And the, majority of the Conservative Party did not ex- pect it. (irzmting the desirability of trying to appease Nazi (iicrmany with regard to colonies, can that be done without making a bad situation wmxse? 1f lliltcr is now able to threaten the States, great and small, what will he do when his power and influence have been extended? Atlmittiilg the evils of Versailles Treaty and the mistakcs of post-vvar allied diplomacy, it is es- sential to recognize that the Reich's grounds for just complaint have steadily diminished over more than a decade. About the only provisions of the treaty which remain fully in effect are those which dclinlit the present frontiers 0f lhei Reich; and these cannot be changed except by force, with injury to many other peoples and , Prairies. at the ])I‘\'C of a general liuropean war. Ileuce, Should (ireat Britain-by a pledge or assurzmze j of ticutrztlity-encotirzigc (lei-many to expand at ‘the expense of ("zcclioslovzikia and Russia, it would be inviting the vcr_v rlisztstcvr it socks t0 \\'Ol(l,,_ Empire Preferences ' "In the lon- ist of concessions granted to Elnplrc. count. by Canada tn the way of lower inlport dut cs oi lien entry, it, would be difficult to find a i J10 nczn that ls likely to affect ad- versely an). Maritime Province actlvlty. 0n the (lthr-r hand preferences on the Empire markets, partirtllnrljv in the United Kingdom, are 8mm“! on prnt- ‘filly the whole range of Canada's nat- ural produce in when the Marltlmes are vitally nlttercsted Lumber, fishing, minlng and agricu- Luro all rrcvlvo preferential treatment under the new tariff schedules." It was in thcsewvrlrds tbartheGalmdlall PINS in Uclhbcr, 103.’, summed up the effects of the lrcatics m-ggitlatctl by the llcntiett. tiovcrtnttcnt at flu" tlthuva (Iunfercuce which marked, as was well said, "the first forward step in a definite schcnic of t'ltt>t'l' ccourmtic limpire association," 1t is well to recall this non-partisan summary bf an :wliicvci11<-|1t which l>llt)\V definitely threat- encd by the ])l‘t)])tv\t'(l Anglo-l-Mnericau trade pact in which (‘illlilllll will be expected to sacri- fice some at least of hcr preferences in thc llrit- ish llllll'l\l‘l. Another thing that must bc borne in mind is Prune Minister‘ King's attitude on the pollcyof limpirc prt-f~'cnccs. Aflcr listening to his critt- cisms in. lhrriiamt-ut when the agreements ivcre going through, .\lr. llennett said: “He (Mr. hfntkenzlo King) could not dlsgulse hls stilem that‘ there snou d have been a success- !!! '.".\'.lr"l'£’ll1.‘0hlll Canada ln which he dld not. take pittb. Th." vas not-hing he could do to 1 c u. use that he dld not do before 1'. '1 urac- mas no platform on which he ma. n.- dld not endeavour tn some us)’ p111,- r1 fficult for the government cf 1 t) rcp.e.=;:nt his country at thnt 00H- "c Ln; ll’) t rlcd of time at, which r in: l2.- uld not throw dl-ttrllflt. 8nd .1 the conference as to whether l’. would f" “ “i411 K i t i‘ . 21.4 The Iii-srlvltvlvwll lilllfllllll tzi."airtr,.rzl*t.zls.azrr.r.arz "of; By m; w“ . i on his side looked at him, trying to discover what Pl-olldonl lJoIL-rul \\ (‘luster l. IFLIIO h‘ meanL n‘ u no wonder the country, when i; reads what he says, will find lt, difficult bo know what. he meant." - It is equally difficult to determine from Mr. King's‘ latest utterance where he and his govern- ment stnnd. One thing seems pretty certain, however. That is that the Maritime Provinces are more likely to lose than gain by any tariff readjustments negotiated by the King Govern- ment. It behooves our farmers, our boards of trade, our political representatives and all con- cerned to keep a watchful eye on further devel- opments at Ottawa, London and Washington. If sacrifices must be made in the interests of “eco- nomic appeasement" and closer Anglo-American relations, let us at least keep clearly in mind what these sacrifices may involve, and the poli- tical motives underlying their discussion in sounding rhetorical phrases. ‘ r Editorial Notes 1 'I‘asmania discovered this date 1642. I I Now we are within measurable distance of Christmas and all that that joyous season im- plies. a a n- m The large concourse of mourners at the fun- cral of “God's good man" yesterday testified to the universal love and respect in which he was held in‘ the community. s- s: a n “Law enforcement,” says .\lr. I. Edgar Hoover “in any community can be only as effective as the citizens in that community demand.” There- on rests Prohibition. 1r n- a n- Lieutenant-Governor DeBlois, who has gen- erously provided the purchase money, $575, for Camp Buchan, Eldon, the new campaign ground for the Provincial Boy Scouts, is outstandingly the best all-round occupant of the office we have had since Confederation. May his shadow never grow less. w a n n There was a day when we could count upon all our paid members of the Government being at home on the job together for some consider- able time, but not since the Campbell-LePage outfit took office. They seem to be “picnicing" more-or-less all the time at the taxpayers ex- pensc. at w n- a The British Government, states Rt. Hon. Neville Chamberlain, has no use for the radio broadcast of Parliamentary proceedings, and still less for television should it come to any de- gree of perfection. “To see oorsels as ithers sec us", evidently has no appeal to Prime Minister Chamberlain and associates. * a 1k at If the people on the \Vcstern plains of Canada failed to find ways and means of living there, somebody elsc would is the comforting thought lion. James t}. Gardiner, Federal Minister of .t\griculture, conveyed in an address at the ban- quet of the Central Ontario Area Women's In- stitutes, at which members of the Federated Wo- men's Institutes of Canada were guests. “That country was given to mankind to be turned into homes,” he said. He suggested that a. “pay-as- we-go” policy would he advantageous in pre- venting recurrence of serious situations such as that confronting the drought areas of the He made it clear also that he did not favor moving the people from these areas to 0th- er parts of Canada. He recalled that Nebraska had been “dust blown" like the Prairies back in 1893, and his family had moved away as a re- sult. Similar catastrophes had struck it at vari- ous periods since that time, yet when he return- ed there last summer, indications were that the people were as well off and as comfortable as anywhere else. n» s i- n- Mr. lk-uibrokc Stephen, special correspondent of The l.o.it‘;>;i Daily Tk-legraph in Shanghai, went out to cover the fighting in the Nantao quarter. llut he (lid not file his story. A bul- lct or a hit of shell wrote “thirty” at the foot of the page -— the ncwvspaper ruan's obituary. Newspaper readers may stimetirtlcs think of corrcspuntlcnts as men apart from the events they describe. 'l‘hc_v are not. The good report- er, at home m‘ abroad. goes where the news is. lf tltcrc is dnuglw", it is in the (la_v's work. lt is his business to lct the world sec through his c_\'c that it may pass its own judgments. llis voca- tion is as honorable. the deuiands on his courage and endurance. often as great as in thc case of the soldier under firc. lu a sense he is a soldier of peace, for the l. argument for peace is a realization of the nature of war. llc nccds mural cottrage, too. .\lr. Pembroke Stephens was a correspondent in (icrmauy when the Nazi terror began. He was ex-pelled because he dared-to re- port that Ccriuzmy was “secretly rearming." Now he has bccn put out of commission by a i111) stray bullet. 1k X >l< i The Gcltcral llanagt-i- of the Hank of Mou- trcal, .\lr. Jackson Dodds is keenly interested in thc young, and frcqucutlj' called upon to address gatherings of the rising generation. At such a meeting in llmitrcal the other day he spoke on "Opportunity and Success". making it plain that. with good character always as a first essential, the secret of success in life is for one to be evcr ready for his or hcr opportunities when they come, and that preparation to take advantage and make the best of them is simple fidelity to the (htties which each day brings. And by success, of course, .\lr. Dodds docs not mean the ac- cumulation of worldly wealth. Everybody knows the falsity of the idea that success means ivcalth and that money spells human happiness. yet the idea llCfSlSlS. The considered counsel that Mr. Dodds gives in this regard, therefore. is pertin- mw, Wealth, properly secured, he points out, is a source of happiness only if properly employed. ‘Whilst atlvocatitig Cnlliilfilll and earnest applica- tion to attain material success he ctuitioned id ad w not. He “as alWlY-i Pill-id"! l" lnnviclttl .‘. thxzpplng one here and there, felt pt-'n:lvrn.i:rc th i. should be a conference. Now that om fins been held, he comes before the House and makes a 537986111938 PllY. seemlfll w show with his tongue 1n his cheek t-hlt M I'll!- a against malt-lug the accumulation of money their sole ambition. “Always before you," he said, "the truth that to be successful you must be good citizens and do your duty as such." _ Grills after crisis has swept over Europe .but me ultimate horror of I. genera-l oonflagratfon has been averted. That much should be sold for a continent which other- wise falls tzoconunmd admiration. None of the big powers wants s. war, at. feast a war with a. fellow its own size. The powder barrels are there, but the spark to set them ofl has been missing. Once upon a time the peace of the world was at. the mercy of a. spark an incident. The only incidents that now count are the Japanese kind, which are not Incidents at all but deliberate per- formances. lbrmer genuine incid- ents-an inept. Foreign Ofllce re- mark, a. frontier skirmish, an as- mlnb bullet an Ambassador in suited or assaulted a small war ex- pand ng into a big war-no longer count. Nations and governments have ceased to be thin-skinned. It in the new international life fine words butter no parsnlps ,tt ls also true that harsh words break no bones Governments call each other bandit pirate, scourge of humanity and enemy of civilization, but they do not. fight. Let us be thankful for that even if ll brings peace scares tn the stock murkeL-New {or-k T mes. Economists agree that a large- sca‘e home-building boom would just about put this country over the top in its push toward prosper- lty. Therefore lt. is more good news that President Roosevelt has called buslnes leaders to the Whit: House for a. new co-operatlve effort. to clear away the legal, flanclal labour and other barriers. A rich field for private enterprise lies beyond these barriers. We need to build at. least 80,000 new dwellng unlts a year; we'll be Zuoky lf we bulld 250,000 unlts this year. We should be spending 53000000000 of private capital a. year in home construction; we are spending around $1,000,909.- OOIL-Buffalo Times. The Pattullo Bridge over the Fraser River at New Westminster has been opened for traffic, and as ft. has four trafflc lanes and n ped- estrian walk there should be a big revenue from the tolls that. rvreto pay for its construction and ma n- tenance. I lhlle Selassie ls reported to be in such straits 1n England that he is trying to sell not. ony his house but his car. The unfortunate Em- peror without. a throne whose cry to the League of Nations went un- answered, may be driven to wLsh himself batck in Abysslnia as a servant. tn the house oi the 00n- queror. In England a worthy matron met. the county mlddfeweight. flstlc champion on a London street and t/old him to stop paying attentions to her daughter as the glrl did not desire them. He made a felnt at. her and she responded with a right. on the chin which sent, the 011811155 b0 the road ,where he was picked up by a. detective. A charge of assault. was dlsmfssed but the incident shows just how much members of the fair sex are able to take Olive of themselves these dank-Brant- ford Expositor . If every bachelor in Canada. he- tween the ages of 20 and 35. made up his mind to marry, but insisted that he would not enter lnto con- nublal bllss unless the young lady was a. Canadian, or at. least a resid- ent of Canada and providing also that all the young ladies 1n Canflda between these same ages were wlll- tng, there would not be enough brides to go arounci-Brockvtlle Recorder and Times. Can the assurances heard so fre- quently from Europe that America (including ourselves ln Canada) is no longer lnvulnerable because of the scope of war planes be true? Here Ls Nagasaki, but, 500 or 600 rnlles at the most from Chinese alr forces and as yet no successful’ raid on Japanese cities has been repart- ed. How then could enemy planes make a 5,000 to 6,000-ml1e flight to and from EuropeY-Ex. return Difference between business and international politlcs as played ln Europe and Asia ls this: That when two partes slgn a buslness contract they understand that. the instru- ment will be subject to a common Interpretation. But when two na- tions sign a treaty one, later on. declares its allenabic right. to give the pact. lLs own private interpreta- tion. This would not. hold good in any court. of lBW.—l‘lf1mlll.0l\ Spoc- tutor. ls the full meaning of freedom generally recognized in Cuuarlti‘! in who recent. municpal elccziorzs in London for members of tut: Conny Council a fascia. candidate polled but. 21 votes. Not, a angle fascist candidate was returned by any 0t the 29 boroughs and only one Coni- Jnnnlst. Mentlonlng this, The tawa Journal trusts that. Catiadians, and more particularly a certain type of Canadian, wlll note it. wcll. For lt carries a tremendous lesson. The attention culled to the restilt. of the London borough election by The Journal is well drawn. Bflllll.) has been well called the cradle of freedom and in this ls contained the toleratlon of freedom of expression of tho vlews of the lndlvldual, be it. pol tlcal, religious, or other mut- ters, so long as this opinion docs not. lead others to acts of v.olcr.cc.- Lethbrtdge Herald. S0 China has been let. down by the Fur East. "peace" conference, be- cause every nation ls unwilling to back up lts condemnation of aggres- sfon with force lf necessary. Yet. _ untll the nations of the world cul- ' tlvnta as much a sense of collec- tlvo security as exists on an aver- I age clty street, aggressions will c0n- | tlnue, and they may perhaps he the next. vlctlms themselvesz-J-lam .t.on Spectator. Whether the new regime In Brazil ls to be regarded merely as another dlctatorshlp of a famlllnr pattern or as an entering wedge for Fascism tn the Western world, lt seems clear that lt. owes lts ex- istence tn large measure to the ec- weslth ,t.hat country has suffered hggyfly depression. It! great.- QL‘ pressing his" ideas ln a form ivhlch CLIMATE AND HEALTH No matter where you llve you’ may have the feeling that some other climate would be better for you—whethert sick or well-than the climate 1n which you now llve. That. the cllmate affects you physically and mentally cannotbe dented. In the arthritic (rheu- matism) ward of any m-spltal a dull, rainy day or a day tn which there Ls a great amount of mola- ture ln the air will bring more camplaints from the patients than when the air is low 1n moisture. Similarly where there ls a hls- tory of colds, asthma. bronchitis, or any lung condition, alr low in moisture, air with the "healing properties of the pines Ls best. Thus the air of Western Canada or the United States, the air of Maine. the Garollnas and North- ern Ontario and Quebec provide an excellent climate fcr nose, throat, sinus, bronchial and lung conditions. What about the cllmate in I-"los rltla. California and other parts of the South? shouldn't one try to spend some time each winter ln the sunshine of these climates, even ff the alr Ls heavy with mois- ture? The sunshine of the South ls good fsr everybody. in that It breaks up the term of cold weath- er and gives a glimpse and taste of Spring and Summer that. ls healing to mind and body. Further, the very heaviness of the alr and the heat of the sun. while not good for arthritic or or chest conditions, Ls of the greatest possible value to the over- worked lndlvltlual of the North for the important reason that no matter how active mentally and physically he 1s naturally, he is quite willing lo be lazy when he gets into the climate of the South. It is this feeling of laziness, this ‘willingness to let the world go by, this casting away of worry with its tenseness that counts for so much ln restoring to health those who are tensed, tlned, overworked and worried. However once full mental and physical relaxation has been at- tained, it ls not wise to remaln too lonr: afterwards in this moist warmi climate as the haemoglobin (iron) tn the blood ls apt to be- come less and one may become quite willing to llve this lazy llfe life thereafter. THE PASSING OF AUTUDIN ‘The wizard has woven his ancient. scheme; A day and a starllt night; And the world is a shadowy-pen- cllled dream . Of color, haze, and light. Lllke something an angel wrought maybe, To answer a fniryls whim, A fold of nn ancient. tapestxy, A phantom, rare and dim. Silent; and smooth as the crystal stone. The river lies serene, And the fading hllls are u. jewelled throne the Fall and the Mist, his Queen. For Sllm as out. of aerial seas. The elms and poplars fair I-‘luat like dainty splrtts of trees In the mellow dreamlike alr. Silvery-soft by the forest side- Wine-red, yellow, rose- Tlv: wzaid of Autumn, falnt, bluc- eyed- Swlnglng hls censor, goes. -—Archlbaltl Lampmati, The Greatest Physicist lLondoti Spectator) ’fhc death of Lord Rutherford has robbed the world of pcrltaps its greatest. physicist. Rutherford. while creating the modern view of matter, yet adhered to the tune- teenth century tradition of ex- could be visualized; his work, therefore, had a greater appeal than has that of the many great physicists whose ideas have been set out ln abstract mathematical reasoning. He ls responsible for three discoveries, each of which would range a man among tho scientific immortals. In the tlvst place, tn collaboration with Sodcly '~ ‘Ibis cbluhl In III! III ll" w PUBLIC FORUM ‘ Mun...“- 5; oorrnlwldolto of qua-tion: o! lntorut. TN uu-rluttemvm Guurllnl IIOOI Ill nwolurfly endorse the Inlnloll of correspondent‘ Tin-z sawanstxrzren REPLY Slf,—Tll€ Patriot. has tlw 00¢ argument, the one and only’ I11- swer to every Indictment. of lb: party's perfldy. It ls this, Didn't. the Liberals win ln 1035 and wipe the Tories out? _ Didn't. Mackenzie King gain power by promising to abolish the Brftlsh Preference, and to open foreign markets to Cnnadaln farm- ers, than, when ln power do the direct opposlt: by , ‘ Can- '..J‘v’;'5f._‘ a1, 4—— —-i Fox FARMER Itfs the looks of ‘the Fox skin, the feel of the Pelt, that determines the sale price and profit. f There is nothing that. goes to make a fine skin ! the equal of our skinning and cleaning “Nu M3110" way; You'll sell your pelts better by having us do your Fox skinning and cleaning. Our Prices are low. 0U!‘ W011‘ guaranteed EMMET GAVIN FOX SKINNING 8t CLEANING STATION ., Morel] Hotel Warehouse 136 Kent Street Chllflfll-tfilown adlan markets to the cheapest farm producers tn the world? The Patriot's reply ls-The ‘ ‘ voted confidence ln Mackenzie King two years ago. Isn't this a perfect (‘i’) reply to the question? Dld he, and Mr. Sinclair and others, promise to reduce the sales tax. and wlpe out, the sugar tax? Again the stereotyped answer. Look at the 1935 elections. What better proof ls needed to show that. he didn't. promise. and increased the sales tax to practically double virliat ft was? Dld he promise work for all the unempioyed (ln Canada) and after election took the work from Can- Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN Orang: Pekoe Tea adlan workmen to hand it over to United States and lorelgn work- ers? Is not the increased import. of manufactured goods‘ and farm products taking that much of labor from Canada's factories and farms, and handing lt over to U.S- an foreign unemployed? Then comes the inevitable grlt reply-Just look how the Tory government was defeated ln 1935. And so on, to excuse and to re- fute every perfldy, every broken promise. every sacrifice of the ln- terests of Canadian citizens. ln both agriculture and industry, "191? Oman trots out its one “dead horse" reply: The c o u n t r y voted confidence in the Liberals in 1935. they defeated the Tories. a. conclusive proof that the Dolltlcal betrayal was actually pre- ordalned by dellberate action of the people. 1n this f00‘s paradise they go on with their trade and tux Ina-sue bungling. I am, Slr. etc. VERITAS THOSE BITCHES Sin-Almost daily we read o1 dangerous accidents, and of the mall carriers rtsk and dlfflcultlsl caused by the deep and unneeded roadside ditches. What use ls there for two and three foot ditches to drain of! a slx inch stream of water? Why go to the enormous expense of dlg- - glng and delving to create canyons to endanger human llfe and destroy property? If lt Ls to provide Jobs for the hordes of un- satisfied Liberals, why not pay them the same money to out away the unsightly roadslde brush, or even as a gratuity pay them to plough their own farms. This would be infinitely better and vastly more semlblg mm wasting the money on the man trap dltches which ln englneerlng ls on a par with the McIntyre "hump; back" roads of a former Liberal blunderlng posse. I Hm. Slr, etc. MOTOR!!!‘ BROWN'S BIL], Sltt-I had occasion yesterday on Brown's I-ffll, 1151111311119, Th“ ‘Wk 1s done by any 1am- under road foreman Mr. Everett 11mm“ of Kingston, who ls No. 31-014 “Fem”! Bfibolntment since the Liberals came lnto power, 1 ha" read many complaints against-win. t" wad work in other districts, but after seeing those gentlemen Working. I am of the opinion them ls nothing 1n that argument, 1 expect that some writer will reply to this letter with an answer "0, they had to work or freeze." This small army of Liberals, as I saw no Conservative faces among them. had done more work for the short time they were working than I have seen a much larger crowd do ln two to three weeks during the past summer. Therefore I vlll not consider the argument that it WM Door Old amt; 1mm but the capable way of their genial road foreman. who showed sklll by twins master of the situation at all times whether possum-by we" ln sight or out of sight. And the two sifting mambo“, Htm- B- W- terns-.- and w. Angus McPhec are to be congratulated in starting this new system of winter road building ln this dlstrlct, I am, Sir, etc. HAMPSHIRE. from 1900 onwards, he demonstrat- ed that the emlsslon of "rays" from radium was due to the ex- plosirm of the radium atoms and, -n stlll more revolutionary notion -that the rndlum atoms were thus transmuted lnlo atoms of‘ another element. He proved, lnl this way, that the chemical cle- mcnts were not the unchangeable entttles that the nineteenth cen- tury had believed them to be and ! showed tl1at._the nlchemlstk bcllct | est crop. coffee. lass been a drug on the market. Its farmers have ex- perlenced bitterly hard t. mes. Home millions of its people, lncklng any earthly possessions, have been sunkl ln misery. The burden of its foreign lmfebtedness has been heavy and its external bonds have been fre- qucnty in default. Cnco more we have an Illustration of the fact that! aunt m , n n1 ld- t l d“ onomlc adversltles which have be- new-sifirsle ‘its ‘iieserefheofre: sicfioittire “mm” ehmldnlng m” “rulitu” °l set Brazil. Despite its great nut/amt of a onbentcd people. It. comes lnlo u" "W19"! °f u" "m"? ""8 4"- pouei- on the wings of desperation. —New York Times. ~ jthe elements, though on so mlnuu l ln transmutation was not so wild s. dream. In 1911 he put forward and proved hls second great. uls- lcovcry, that mutter was composed of electrical charges and that. the atom consisted of a loose cloud of negatlve electrons, at. the centre of which was a minute dense nucleus 0f Positively -ch arsed particles. From the year H319 he attacked his third great. problem, the l-rtl- flclal transmutation of the ele- merits. By bombarding nitrogen gas with alpha-particles. he snow- ed that a few of the atoms of mt. rogcn were broken up and that, therefore, these were converted unto some other element. He continued this work tlll his death, by whlon time he had trai almost all , a scale that. the most powerful‘ mlcroscope could not. have shown‘ the quantity concerned. During nu ' at years he made progress w‘ flcult problem remains for his suc- cessors to solve. Real ‘Estate Agency H. K.-S.‘ HEMMING IS . Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as Agent and Manager. To BUY, SELL, RENT Properties in City and Country. To give valuations, arrange Mortgage Loans. Secure Tenants, Collect Rentals and Manage Properties and Estates. N0 CHARGE UNLESS DEAL EFFECTED ‘ Owners of Land or Buildings are Inked to Llsl Their Properties . Persons Desiring to BUY or RENT City Home! _or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call 88 GREAT GEORGE ST. TEL- 13'" Charlottetown E. R. Brow & Son ‘Fire, Auto, Life, Accident. Sicliness‘ and Plote Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Lloyd Lewis ‘l i- - ' zttetown Agent at Cummerside, 144 Richmond St. a business trl. b0 K to to ___ ifiiiilbers°ing°“ °“‘“‘i'i"“:’d““"m ToscaninPs Earnin s m“ °‘ l“ m“ '“‘"' P" l‘ n; ew winter road 0n g musicians, including nu fellow- contraetors. when he returns to America this season to conduct ten rndlo concerts for the Na- tional Broadcasting C y. hl (Exchange) It has been the practice 1n America. to reward star-conduc- tors liberally. The 1035-36 slate- mont of the New York Philhar- monlc-Symphony shows that of $120,700 expendltures, $520,100 was paid to the men of the or-, chestn. and the conductors; and even though ft dos not separate the smoun‘ glven to each group, lt. ls possible to do a little figur- lng which should prove reasonab- ly accurate. as far as Toscanlnl is concerned. It. ls generally sold that. he ‘received $2.000 per contract, plus the amount of his lncome taxes. During his fast. season with the Philharmonic-Symphony he conducted ‘thirty-nine concerts. s0 it. ls not untan- to estimate that he reoelv i an amount. approach- lhB 0100.000. or very nearly one- srkmo some nun nnoon rum-run Mac's Blood Food A oomblnltlon especially val- uable In the treatment of thou diseases where their origin ll traceable to an lm- polzedrlshed condition of the Ono oflho [realest remed- lu In the treatment of Rhon- msthm and a guaranteed up- pstlla roltonllve. Got a box 10-day. , Box of 50 tablets 50c. DB. L. B. EVANS If you have any trouble with your -l¢0ml0fl such n Indigestion. dyspepsia. sour stomach. holrtbnrn. gastric - distress. elm, than don't delay getting a bottle of Dr. Evan's stomach mixture Immed- lately. Evan's Stomach Mixture Ir a prescription of Br. L. B. _ Evans, noted English Phy- _ I|0|lll of which we have the ' solo fights lo and since sell- lng It have received numerous hstlmonllh from satisfied purchasers. ' Try a bottle 00-day. l8 cents. m: mo uses‘ Mall Order: Prornptly Attended to rut-s will be pald $4,000 per concert, ln addltlon to the amount o! hLs 1n- come taxes. Even without the cost of con- ductors, the malntanance of sym- phony orchestras ls a mighty BX- penslve business. None of o“! major symphony orchestras has M yer. reached the place where the sale of subscrlptlons and slut" tickets will wholly defray its cost According to flgiues assembled b! Arthur J. Gaines, manager of the 8t. Lou’: Symphony Orchestra. the mm cost: ot malntalrtlng 11 major American orchestras f0! the season 1935-36 was 83.95950“ BENDOR WORM POWDER AND TOIIIO FOR PIGS From Formula of Devl- of Agriculture This Veterinary Worm Powder ls a reliable re- medy for dispelling worms from pigs and is giving excellent results wherever it is used. Don't let this menace destroy your animals when they can be saved by using this powder- 35c to 65c 2 lbs. E. ATP/odor Central, Drug Store