1.1012 rout: r11: 01111111011 crown GUARDIAN Morning Daily tl-‘outtdcd I337) rresident, LlcuL-Cul. W. Cheater S. McLIIIQ Vlce President, J. ll. Burnett, F..I.L Secretary, LieuL-Col. D A. Mac-Klnnun. 0-8-0- Edllor and Managing Director, J. R. Burnett. FJ-l Associate Editor. Frank Waller SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 per your tin advance; delivered In (It). $4.00 per year tin advance) mailed in I’ B. Island $5.00 per year 1ln advance) mailed l0 081M411! Ind U-li Munbers Audit. Bureau of Circulation: “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” MONDAYP NOVEMBER. 21.. 1938 Denouncing Canada Now Canadians will rub their eyes with astonish- ment 11) 11-1111 the 1111111511‘ lcvcllcil against this c~1111.1_1- in 1111- .\'11'/.i 1111-». charging thata "vaitt-pzdgii 111' 111111111" 1111s bet-ti "unlcaslted" 11g- zlinst Mc-izittiv 111 the l)11111i11i11n. l'111..11li1111< are 111111 ~.,‘.-, i» "11111111 tl11-i1- 111111 l1ll<lll1‘i* 11110 ciz1~e 1 . g 111 thc affairs of other countries of 1 . ' '11o\v nutllittg." 'l 11-. 11'. , s111lc1111-111 appears in (linu- ~r ll-.tI1-r's 1111-11 111-11spz1pe1. and so llllbl be taken 11s l1]\l'c‘<-.'11¥lllf_f 1111- 11111111110 of 1111- Ger- -11--111-11-:1r1l.~ tlzis cotintrv 1t i< an 1111-1411..“ 111' 1111- 1111111. '" of 1111- 1111111 .~ 1111- fate 111' l"lll'1)1.-C in 1111: balance. we c1111 claim to 111111- actc-l as inoffen- - .111_\- 111111011 111 the 11-1-1111 ltHYHTLlS Nazi 11.- 111-1-1111111- in its latest 111-11111111-"1111111111 of 11:11‘- barf \\'1- 11111~ said nothing 111 1111 officially. lttdc-c-i, 11c 'l'~1-11...» f. 1c- 1111-1 .\lail complains, 11-1111 some >11111v 111' jt 11111141-‘111111: .\Iinisrer .\l1cl.1-u,-.i1- bin; was lax in failing to indorse lq-p-Il 111 11*.» 1-11-113 1l1-111111eiatio11 0f the tri-atnn-nv 11f 1i1-1:11:.111"'s pl-11i-l1 1111110111)’. BE 11.1". 11s i‘. -1- 1 111i~ 11111-1w1" -1111l attack on Can- ada in the ll: press 511-115 110w impossible it is 11- live on tcri1z< of :1r-.1i1_\' with a state which re-r-uzs 1111)" crzpiw~=i~u of the spirit of demo- .“ . - C1-Zl1‘lll(l(‘(l an agrec-metit at 't'f reductions arc given ~nt_v—six in all, with which 1111111111 treaties. These 1's "an ominous 1 {s imlicy of “appeasement” gc-turc should so quickly be 111g in our faces of Ilcrr ' the .. 1. "1-1 fF-t. 1-1.1.- CriixuO—f acis' .\'- 11- 1l-r11 1111- sniolte has cleared away, the f- 1111111- of the new {HQ-Canada ' lip-Ft" clearly disccrtted. This is . - t'111111<l11 011131115 reductions in 1:1 "inns in 1111- lfuite-l Slates tariff . or “frozr-n" level for the dura- 1-11-111-111 on 73 additional 111-11121, =3. ~ : 1-\.-1-.:111-1<: 1011111111111 in duty on ’-\'_‘. 1 1111- (':111-11li:111 tariff. including a 111' 1111-11-1111111111, fisbet-ics and 1-1 1111111151111 to binding 141': items 1 'r ]-t‘('-t'llt rates. .-\lso she ici- 111' 1111- tariff Iireferetices . . . 11111111111111 ]1l'l>(lllL‘('l'< in the l-lri- . 1?»r.1i111-1l 1111111-1‘ 1111: ()tl11\\'a__11g1'ce-H 5-111 is 11-111‘ these changes will affect with our American neigh- SllrnV 1 L‘ C 1.11s. l. 1'1<4ur1-~ front \\'11.~l1ington 111111 111-111-1 1111- r-xi-llltg zlgrt-cittent, Czmadzfs ex- lWifI> 1/1 1111- 11111-11 51-"111"; ilcclitlccl out of all 1.111 1o ‘1- llCCllllC in imports. They in- [n11]! l , the return of the very condi- .. ("Ittzuva treaties were designed to rectify. and this at the moment when the bene- fits of tl-c 1>t-:111-:1 treaties are on the point of btzixig 1:111 fiwl in part b_1- new agreements. 1-1 ‘the f1 >1. 111111: months of this _1-1-ar, accord- ing 1o tl. \\"1.~hingtoi1 figures. Canada sold the Unit-yd 5 - 11-11111- valued at $1l§5.375.000 com- pared 111.1 $_;1_-.;1,)_;.r1r1<1 for the. same period 111-". 11-111". 111 1111- nine tnonths, this year, our lllll-Hrl- frozn 1111.- Liniterl Flatt-s 11-erc $359015,- oon 1-11.11. a _1-1~nr ago. $3S1f13o.rxx). 'l'l1i\~ 1111-11» 111111 Czmada, which had an un- f'11'11r11li‘- ll7li11ll1'1‘ 11f 11111111- of $69,000,000 last ym-ir. ‘111 11111a1-orabl1- lmlance of $175000,- ouo ~11. 11 11-1 of r-rl ink involved in that extra 1111-1511111 nrilliosi-iirld dollars. Where are we g0- in;,- 1o 1-1-1 "11- exchange 1o tnakc it good? \\'e 1-1111 111d" i- by swlling more goods to some 11-1111- 1-111 ..11_1- =11 CulllllYlCS than wc buy from ~1 1-11-1110 a favorable balance. \\'ill .,_1- citable lls to do this with o11r .~\n1- 1-rzir-in 1 lilo-rs 11f‘ will it zicccntttzttc the 1110s- 11-11- 11"-.1_v 1111110 lmlaiicc against us? 'l‘l1.'1t i- 111-11111-41111 11:1 which discus-ion will hinge in lZ-i-lu-r. -1.1. 1111-1 upon which, 111 present. Ottawa ccninn1-iniitors arc strangely silt-nu 'l'i1l-:" 1 111cm. ziri-l 3111-11111‘! e111 Function Of The Daily Press Th1- :1<-11-~p:1p1-1 publisher 11f 1111- near future will strive to c-tabli-h his newspaper's circula- tion :11 a level 1101-1-1111 which it is sold at a loss, .\'lr. 311111111 llot-i-lci-l, 1111-1-1-1-11 of liditorial Re- .~--1-.r1-i1 l\’1-p1»1l~ at \\'11~l1ingl1111, l).('.. said in fl l’.-u1l 171111-11 11-1-11111- :11 \'.-1l1- l'ni1-1-rsit1-. 111111111-111111 cl1.'n1g1-~ i11 1111- .\tucric11n press are to b1- 1\]11-1‘l"1l l1~-1-.-1u~r-1-f llll‘l'l\lllf1c‘11sl of news- print. .\lr. 111111-11 Zl\\t'l’l('fl. .\l: s ci_r1"ul.-1tion. he fvlllllllvbl, i: 111111111 fllllllify (‘ll'l‘lll.'llliill, which is 111111- 111-1111111111-11 b1- 1111- .‘l1l\'('l'll.~(‘l', 11nd tht-ri- is a 11-1-11 41111111111 for t11‘\\'~p;1]1crs that do not have [h1- cirvus aspect, art- not 11111rkc1l by sensational- i<1n and 1111 111-1 111-1-r1lran1atizc nt-u-s. Pi-‘cr-s of nt-1v-print, he pflitllt-rl out, have risen from F5111 :1 11111 in 103;’, 111$5¢1a ton in 103,8, an [Iflfflfl-l‘ n1’ 23 Int-l‘ 1-1-111 in thru- y<-.'tt'.'<-~;11trl 11111.1 of this i111-r1-:1\<- has 1101111- flllflllg‘ the 111st 1-1w1r. '.-\ 11-1111-111111 of .25 pt-r ct-nt in tlu- 1-1 1st of imp“ ,1 1pm ln-d _v<_-.-1r.< ago produrerl the “penny ppm" of 1111» 1-11111111-1-11 'l'l1irt1es and lforties, 11-1-51-11 laid the foundations for the nmss press ‘If Tf-fl'l\'. “'[{,,-,'¢ir1~ii_< aspect of the tnodcrn newspaper," _\1’r, lliiccltel cntuinuerl, “is one 0f the results of the striving for circulation. Scnsationalisni, Qypnh-Hnulfkntfinn 11f news, is attotltcr. \\"_itl1 (he prcssttrc for more and ever more c-rcul-uwn removed, with the development of a demand for more intelligent treatment and interpretation 0f the news, newspapers in the future will give more attention to the primary function of the (laily press, which is to provide ‘the knowledge it is necessary for a free 111a11 to ltave’ in a democracy-f‘ ATI Awkward Situation Complaint is made by H011. F. W. Pirie, Min- ister of Lands and Mines in the New Brunswick government, that potato shippers 0f New Bruns- wick are ruining the provincial export market by price slashing tactics, and that as a result the province will sell less than 100,000 crates of seed potatoes to the Argentine this winter where last year it sold 700,000 crates. “Legislatiorfi, said Mr. Pirie, “must be put into effect that will give some control over these chiscllers or scalpcrs." ' .\[r. Piric as a staunch Liberal no doubt spoke and voted against the Bennett Governmenfs market control lcgislzttiotl, which 11-115 an issue in the 1935 federal election. Such an Act, how- ever, would' precisely meet the difficulty the .\'ew Bruustvick potato imltistry- is now experi- encing. Of course. 11111111111111 legislation could be introduced but it will bc somewhat awkward for a Liberal government to sponsor such a measure after all the criticism levelled against it in the Liberal catnpaign. Ediiorial Notes Admiral Lord Beatty received the surrender of the German fleet lllit- date, 1918. x v v x I‘ I Both merchants and customers were highly pleased with the success of last week's Dollar Days. 1- a- l1 n The mildncss of 1111- weather has enabled most farmers to get all 1l11ir l-'11ll work completed and 11 good bit of their 5111-1111; work as well. l‘ i 1K i! The three per cent surcharge on goods sent to Canada via the U.$..-\. has been wiped out. This was [iracticztlly- a 51111-1111- to Montreal, Hali- fax. Saint John, and Vancouver, for it necessitat- ed foreign goods for Cattadiart colts-timers being shipped direct to these ports. i‘ >04 1K i It is too bad the bootleggers have refused to co-operate with the Campbell Government neces- sitating the i111portatiun of expensive under- covcrs. Is it not possible that the break is due to the fact that the bootleggers found they were being dotible crossed by the Campbell Govern- ment entering the bootleg business themselves? =11 m x Dominion Bureau of Statistics reports cold storage stock's of creantery butter 011 November 1 211.62, 33S, 814 1115., compared 11-1111 47,763,204 lbs, a year ago. Cheese stocks totalled 43,493,- 595 lbs. on November I against 36,562,193 lbs. a year ago. Cold storage eggs numbered 5,146,- 790 doz, against 6050.315 1101., a year ago. l7rcsl1 eggs total 285,836 c102,, against 208,543 :1 year ago. v >1- 11- 1v .\lontrc.-1l's City Cotincil have joined hands with the fjovernnients of the provinces of Que- bec 11nd Ontario in their drive to legalize lotteries. Out to get revenue for 1111111icipal charity pur- poses, of 1111c scriotlsl- zlffecterl by dcprcssioit, (Pity Council Leader A. 1i. Goyette 11101-1111, and councillmcn ttnanituouslv adopted, :1 motion ask- ing the Quebec Government to tnakc representa- lions to Ottatva to have the Criminal Code zuncndcrl to make lotteries possible. a a m =11 Officials of the Lorltltced Aircraft Corpora- tion, Los Angeles, announce that an order for fifty reconnaissance bombardment airplanes with \\-'asp engines placed by Australia has been con- firmed by the Conunontvcalth Government. The antount of the order, exclusive of spare parts and equipment for the fleet of high-speed, heavy- duty bombers, is about $4,500,000, This was re- ported to bring the Lockheed backlog to :1 re- cord peak of $28,500,000. The order will be (lelivered in 1939, along 1vith an order for 200 similar ships for Etiglaittl. ~ >1 w w n1 It appears that the women rule the roost in Ontario homes. Miss Byrnc Ilope gauntlers, a Toronto magazine editor told a service club that the average Ontario husband has l5 cents to spend out of every dollar he earns and his wife handles the. rest, basing her statement on information gathered in a provincial stirvcy. lVotnc-tt ha1'e the happy faculty of “ltanging on” to money, but they also 11:11-11 ability in making it, she said. “l a111 astonished 111 the 11111111101 of church tnortgages that ltave been lifted by lcrtton pies and frillcd cmbroiderics. After hours spent in preparation for a charitable function the wo- mcn turn 11111111111 and bttv each other-ls efforts back again." She said utijtist criticism had been fllfCClCfl toward women in the business world, for a survey of fifteen countries showed that 63 per cent of the "working" 1111111011 supported dependents, .22 per cent were sole suppnrlers of ilependents and rmly l5 per 1-1-111 earned salaries for their own use exclusively. * I! i‘ I Some here who have been guests of the Mac- kintosh of lllaclrintosli 11-11011 visiting Scotland will regret to ltear of his death at .\lo_v Ilall, ln- vt-rncssshire. The Xlztckinlosh of hlackitttoslt, whose mother was a .\l:1cl.eod of Dalvcy, play- ed 11 prominent role in l-lighlattrl affairs- for more than 50ye11rs. llc retired a ft-1v years ago from the chairlnansltip of lnvt-rnt-ss County council. .-\ freeman of the burgh 0f lnvtsrticss, the blac- kintoslt was 11 colonel of the Third Cameron Highlanders (luring the (ireat \Var and perform- ed valuable military service at lnvcrgordnn. He is survivctl by his widow, :1. daughter of the late litltvarrl Priest Richards of Plas Nmvydd. (ilzun- prtgansliire. 'l'h1-ir only son died in (ianada. known as “M11r-:111-'l'rni<i1-l1" in fiat-lit", the .\l-ae- lt-intosh 1v.'1s chit-f 11f the (11111 (Ihaltan, an old 11111111111111 cottfcderatiott dating back to I609 11nd r-mln-ncitig eight separate clans. I-lis estate in lll\'(‘l‘l‘l(‘SS wvercd 1.24.000 acres and his resid- rtice, .\loy llztll, was :1 lligltlatld show-place with many historical associations. In 1746 130111112 Prince Charlie 1111s :1 visitor and in more recent limes King lidwnnl V11 and Kftlg George V were regular visitors (luring the grouse 11110011 $035011. notes av 111: WAY A flask of mercury, the first ever produced in British Colum- bia, has been shipped from the Bridge River country to Eastern Canada. British Columbia has ‘im- ported a lot of mercury In the past 80 years, for use in the recovery of gold. Now the rovlnce has a mercury mine of ts own. The shipment marks an interesting lf not an important point. in the mining history of British Colum- bla. The shipment la also another bit of evidence of the mineral ver- satility of the Carlboo dlstrlct_ — Vancouver Province. Never a day should pass that citizens concerned about. the future of their country should neglect to think upon the eight years of successive national deficits. This country is to have a deficit the ninth year. If; wlll be in the neighborhood of four thou- sand million dollars. In I940, when a new President is to be elect- ed. the national debt will be $40.- 000,000,000, and of 1t $20,000,- 000.000 wlll be the Roosevelt debt. All this 1n piping times of peace. At the moment there ls no other fact that. should so much concern you citizens. No other is so ugly and menacing. -Charleston News and Courier. A note ln the "25 years ago” column of The Ottawa Journal reports that". eggs were sold at 50 cents per dozen. ey were quoted here Saturday at 45 cents wnlch ln terms of the dollar of 25 years ago would make them a good deal less than that. The story behind the story is that the development of the hatchery busl- ness on a considerable scale, with early chicks produced by the thousand. has made fresh eggs at this moultirlg time of the year for the hens much more available than in the old farmyard, hen- neries. It. does not cost. any more to keep a pullet which commences to lay ln October than a pullet or yearling which cloesn’t - St. Catharlnes Standard. One authentic detail of the proceedings at Munich has. I think, gone unrecorded hitherto. en on the Friday morning, the time came to sign the Historic Cham- berlaln-Hltlel" declaration, Herr Hitler sald to the Prime Min- ister, "Now you must sign with my pen," producing his fountain- pen from his pocket. Unfortun- ately it fumed out to be lnkless. "Ah," said the Fuehrer. turning to the lnkstand on the table, "I must fllllt." Unfortunately the lnkstand turned out to be lnkless too. So the declaration was slgnecl ln the end with the Prime Minister's pen. and Mr. Chamberlain was left f0 reflect that t-he famous German efficiency could be found wanting on occasion. —London Spectator. A unique example of "flan out of water" was provided during the week by the arrival at the Zoo aquarium of some African Lungfish. The fish arrived Incar- cerated ln solld blocks of African mud. Lungflsh have the svvtm bladder converted into a breathing organ, by means of which the flsn can tide over long periods of drought. As the dry season ap- proacnes_ the fish burrows into tlhe river bed. where ll: constructs a mucous-lined cell connected with the upper alr by a narrow breath- ing tube. Here ll: is immune from the sun's heat, often over a period of several months. Lungflsh are collected for the Zoo by the simple expedient of digging them up ln their earthen cells and sending the so-obtamed foot-square solld blocks of Africa direct to London. 'I'he fish are eventually liberated with the aid of a chisel and hammer.- London Observer. ' The recent a nouncement from London that. flue British admir- alty ls considering the construction of a. pipe line from Turner Valley to Vancouver, in order to ensure a. further Empire supply of oll for the navy need cause no surprise. If there ls any one enterprise ln which the British naval authorities are interested, lt is the prcl-iuetlon of oll. There are few fields within the Empire itself. ‘There ls oll in Burma. and in Trlndad, but most of the oil for Great Britain's vast needs comes from Persia. from Mosul. formerly from Mexico and other fields which are under for- eign control. It can be taken tor certain that the last few years pro- gress ln oll development tn Alberta has been noted with a keen eve tn London. It ls mt long slnce Slr Fdward Ellington paid s. vlsll; to Turner Valley. - Calgary Herald. The great Golden Slate 0f California has no asset-cultural, artistic, educational or scenic-of greater value and loveliness than its great stands of redwoods. More than any olher single factor, these giant. trees have called millions of visitors over the years front every laud and cllme. Trees that were old when the Founder of Christianity roamed the olive groves of Palestine stand vigilant guard along some of the most famous highways and sea coasts ln the world-picturesque North- ern Callfornul. Despite the rever- ence whlcll millions hold for these giants of the forests, tragedy has not spared the great trees. Com- merclallsm, intensified to the polnt of rank greed, has taken deep toll ln the Land of the Redwoods. Un- mindful of the irreplaceable value of the great trees, the wooclsmarvs axe has wrought tremendous havoc every flne stand of Californian redwoods. Today, mlle after mile ln nu- merous nrens testify. by the stark nudity of the forests, the heavy toll taken by the commercla Wreckers of the state's greatest asset Mudh of the damage was permitted by lack of adequate lows covering these great natural possessions, and by promises that reforestation would be faithfully carried on. Refrestauon. however, cannot recreate for many decades matured trees of the lasting beau- ty and size as have fallen, and silll further threatened, by the saw- mllls, which are steadily eating their way lnto the very heart of many of the finest stands of red- woods. -snn Francisco Argonaut. The conical: between the Blue- nose. Nova Scotlifs big raltbank- er. and the Thenbaud, pride of Gloucester, should have been splendid things. They involved real races between real ships. manned bv real sailors. But at the close of this race. won by the Blue-nose, Captain Angus Walters came out to say ihls: "As long as I am master. the Bluenose wlll never race ln the United States." The master of the 'I‘hebaud on the other hand and; "Thqf gbqgfl -~ robbed of Q unfit‘ 1'3 THE RLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _ , ....._.._:_ THE MIDNIGHT TOOTHACE A moth may ache at time: dur- ing the day, but it ls often in the middle of the night that the severe attack occurs that gets the individual out of bed in a hurry looking ‘for a pain killing drui. or, lf a cavity ls present some Oll 0f cloves to push into the cavltv on absorbent cotton. As a rule this severe attack of toothache does not come out of a. clear sky because there have us- uall been some ‘rumblings’ of trou le for days or perhaps weeks previously. Had the dentist been consulted after the first or second slight. attack of toothache, this severe pain might have been avoid- ed. ' What causes this severe pain? In order to learn whether pain ls due to an abscess at one of the roots of the tooth, Dr. F. F. Smith, ln Hygela, says! "Is it a filled tool-h? Does tooth feel long? Does lt. hurt. when you blte on it? fl it does, the chances are you have an abcess. Try some cold water lu your mouth. Hold the water around the tooth If the cold water gives somerelfef from the pain then an abscess is present. Your tooth is hurting because of pressure. Inside under tha: large filling the nerve or pulp had died. Maybe the filling was placed too deep without an intermediate layer of insulating material. Metal fillings are good conductors of heal. and cold and any change in temperature ls easily transferred to the nerve or pulp. If there is no noncouductlng material to pro- tect the pulp this constant irri- tation will cause it to ‘die’. When pulp dles, ‘pus and gas develop and the expan lng gas causes pressure and pain as it cannot get out of the canal of the tooth. By applying cold water and thus reducing the temperature, some re- lief ls obtained for a little while. Dentists usually extract. these dead teeth that are causing pain. Dr. Smith states further that when cold v-ater, lcecream or other cold substance causes the tooth to ache or increase the pain, the nerve or ulp ls not. dead and that the den 1st by removing the fllllng and treating the canal for some weeks, may be able to save the tooth. FROM “GAICNERED" I have forgotten many thLngs But, no, the song the river sings Where reeds are growing; And 1n some dim and pagan way I hear the little tune today Pan once was blowing! I have forgotten many things- But 21:11 one strange perfunu: that . mils To beads of umber; Nor scent ofhouey in the 001mb- I-Ioney the 11-1111 bees carry home Where grape-vines clantber, I have forgoluen tnanv tlllngs__. The name Pharaohs and of 118s Amd K111111115 long-sleeping; But nhere are names carved on my neart $0 1118.11 may never more depart Prom out. my keeping. Illa-e form u! man" ‘p.811...’ ‘ 91d ‘krlefs anif blttiirithess found wings Wherewith to vanish; But rho-ugh the years g0 by-one n ht Ibuched bv the moon to silver white. No time can banish. And laid i111 rosemary and rue I Keep some letters, fled with blue, To still all aching Th things-oh, well I BY land d — h ' I 1 wlll be $111112?‘ "" m" 8% —V1rna. Sheard. i=1. _.--:£- -- — result ls susplclorf, bad feeling. It matters not a whit what. the truth ls.’ the real polnr. ls that. wsomethfing somewhere is ‘always Wrong, or made out to be wrong, With the lesson that International contests might sensibly be called off. 0r be confined to checkers and chess-and senlor golf_ ATTENTION Swine Breeders u the Tim; 1,, I ll a l‘ d against PIG - WORM by nslnl the moat effective remedy on the market: Mac’s Pig - Worm Tonic Powder It. wlll thoroughly abolish all true; of worms. and improve the health of your herd. Price 35cts per lb. Don't delay. Order by Phone or Mall. All orders promptly attended to. Phone 315 THE 2 MAGS Prescriptions A Specially Remember there In nothing hetier for your Stomach than Dr Evans’ Stomach - Mixture PRICE PER BOTTLE 85c. MAIL ORDERS PIIOMPTLY ATTENDED T0. PUBLIC FORUM fol-Ibo OOIOIIIII ll flu oilin- of o one a w. runnluh. AIRPORT DIHPUTI Sun-ll wlah to- ldtvln Wu that political interference la 110w pre- valen thumb city of- was factorily settled. that all labor-era would be from the city unempl ed list. On Saturday morning Nov. 19, several men without credential tickets were put to work. the some day other men with working tickets from the eliy were told that there was not room fur them at present. Mayor Fbster is trying to keep the airport project ln operation so as to employ as many as possible un- tll winter sets in. I hope the work- lrg men wlll appreciate his efforts. 1'1 anything should happen that the work in definitely closed for this year can put the blame on political interference. ‘There la no reason why the work should not be cor {nued if the selection of men were taken from the city un- employed llst. Every working man in Charlottetown should stand be- hind Mayor Poster and his work- ing committee while they are try- Ins to promote the interest of the unemployed. The writer of this ln- formatlon has no axe to grind, but I think at the particular time of the year that u city project should be left t; city men and representa- tives of Governments should be s11- ent and not making goats of the poor working men who are suffer- ing cold and hardship to provide for their dependents. Why not let the city officials handle the work for this fall and give employ- ment for those ln need. I am, Blr, em, _ LABORER THE PROHIBITION FEDERATION - Bin-Wu it merely a coincidence that. the Liberal Convention and Federation meetings were staged t0 meet on thew-lame day? If. was cer- tainly a convenience In that ll. n- abled the falLhful to kill 2W0 birds virlth one stone. newton "m" resolutions of mutual admiration at one and repeatlnc adulaMon of tlhelr idols at, another. The staunch old ‘Ibmperancn Alliance was asked to stand aside on the HUNG-flunk» of polities, and that they had incurred the popular leasure. to rive this new a5- Rreeotlon an Opportunity to func- lereste te tlou. ln the in ‘of mDer- anoe. Since its creation what: has What has lt even attem ‘ ’ b0 woo '1’ lip of mammon. To do its duw and play the nun-Iv part. ln su on 01f wrong was not an exercise conducive to pop- ularity. at least. not, with the of- fenders. their alders and abetfwra. Had they have crlnged to the traf- flc. or b0 the politicians behind the stand to‘ without, fllnchlng apply the laws of the land w enforcement it was to stand aside, and for what? First front llheir funds to fin- anoe the suuplanler. To apply Alliance monies, subscribed for betterment of prohibition. to pur- poses of the general public with- out visibility. Then comes this paradox in tesolutalonm-"flfhat this feder- ation reaffirms it's appreciation of the Government law enforcement nmgm-ln." and tlhen with a. start- Tlng overllurru-"Ilhat we express flhe hoipe that. the" Atlborney Gen- eral see to ll. than a. more deter- mlrmd effort be but forth durln: the coming year m make the en fotwnem of the law still more eflwilve?’ Why in the mane of common sense ask for anything more effective than that whicn has already received the blessing and. "appreciation" of this august body, and ‘that. cupreclatllon so richly reaffirmed? And this resolution was a. white blanket appreciation of the many evils derwuneed by honored clergy- men and others, those exhibiting some outspoken courage, at the meetlnfl. and of almost all the evlls l8 which temperance people. province wlde. have been gtenlpunclng for. nearly a century c . The old Alliance insisted any enfcreement. At their own expense they made bub- llc the facts. They had influence with governments to limit, the number of scripts. They were able W Bel almendments w stiffen pen- educlnlz to $10 the favourite offender, and the eXf-Pflmfl $500 for the less forbun- ate Through its officials and prlv- ate channels it furnished evidences invaluable ln securing clean con- victions. They insisted upzn and kept enforcement ln the hands of an independent conlntlsslon, out- slde of the political enclosure. They to have annual stato- IWIM 01 rwelnts and eXDmdlrux-es. liquors bought and quantities of ""811? o“? peovpl bu _ none cf that baeck doe: lTi-flerifi mi w . now -- ppre 11 " b tlt-fmfffiu wmsloweis ofctheeclleder! a on. Then Premier Campbell very ant-iv lwlled um natural law of contraction and enpa nslon, liken- ed to an inflated bladder. in whlcn ll. WCTQ I3), yet [n- creuslna the vendor; 551g; or booze from those oblltteratied booflecum. Are those cuswmeru of the sup- posedly exlermlnaied bootldruter no set-lonely lll that flw transfer of their trade to the ltovernment 00f- fm u entitled to such blah "ap- preciation"? f: it pom-lbw that they l" TM!!! lll. those now buying mm vendors. and um hhezv have been “influx the medicines of 4011b l qualify from illicit ven- dolv. wlilwtrt wr scripts, yet solved over with rovnl by n W? vhlmlm w t» at and in n1 for true - And whet n also In u-le face u» lheae rodly women of the W. 0. '1‘. 0-. those who know the evils of :10 trufac, end who without pen- M pill-by evldenes 03111111111111»... 11:‘: discontinued. and scrim b 50 new cent.” ‘more were n. that meeting nmemamvandwunutly feats made to whom honor is but CIGARETTES it would have stood better in pub- llc estimation l1 those protests had been " crvstallzed lnbo action. and not 11o and in a weakllng comprom- lse of passing resolutions directly contradictory tn their open and publlc declarations. l am, Si: .efc. LEWIS I’. TANTON. N. B. Above was written before Mr. Bentley's pointed criticism ap- peared. It might have been added lnklmz to. refresh minds. 1.11m i-‘ne detectives of 1913 were erm- il A oomimrlson Infant also m, been made between the clean 1111:. aetex-"of bh-cse Alliance detect: and tlml disclosed ln publlslliz evidence of recent trlnls. Thm was this other Important r1111". alum-In I913 Mr. W, E. Bentley was chief adviser pf the Alliam, and "the po-wer behind" wmu; made no ccmpromlse with evil, . L. P. 1 PIIEACHED AT 103 LUUKWEILL BRIDGE, England (GP) —R6V. Matthew 001d, Bri- ployed by the Temperance AI- llance, paid for from Alliance min’; oldest minister who preach- fundis. and not from the taxpayers ed his last sermon on his 101110 treasury. the present and past de- birthday last Febfllflflf. ls dead, posltorv for tlhe rich harvest 0f He bieycled when he was 93 yearn collected fines. old. 1_ i calls for it. money or "legal tender.” at any hank balance sheet and you will see for yourself that a lmk owns more than it owes. That is to say—lf all of its depositors were paid off and all of its other debts aid, a balance would be left belbnging to the shareholders. That should answer your first tion satisfactorily. And now or No. 2: Looka ainatabankbalanco lhoetan youwillseetbatin addition to the cash it holds, the owns assets quickly con- vertible into cash, or which can be used to borrow from the Bank of Canada. Experience has taught banks the amount of cash it IBEOOGG- aary to carry to meet or ina day to day demands, and all; the proportion it is necessary to in gilt-edged quick assets which can be liquidated to meet even any extraordinary demand. Banks know that it is absurd to expect all depositors to call for their money at the same time. That would be like saying that if everybody got sick at the name time there would not be room in the hospitals to take care of them. Or that if everybody who travels by street car decided to travel at exactly the same hour, there would not be enough ears to carry them. Or that if every person who Inn-lea life input-moo died on tho some day all the claims could not be met. Or that if every sen were drained dry there would be no ocean liners. Such statements are meaning- less when ou expose them to the cold light of commonsense. Where, then, does all the money come from ? That ea- tion can beat be answe by making this one: Who owns it.- md how do they get it ? Addressing ourselves io 4,740,000 depositors we answer: "This money is ours. You own it. When you I for it, you got it. When you ask any exia Canadian bank for it, do ‘on ever fail to get it promptly? We ask you, too: "Do you remd your deposit u figuresin I k 7" , In; with you._ Ho will be from the numdpolnl qf Tun 1111111111 1101s ALL THE 111011111 11011111 1110111? ORE than four. and one-half million depositors in Canada have "money in the bank.” They are satisfied to leave their money on deposit because Canadzfs chartered banks are ready and able to pay back promptly every cent when the depositor These deposits in the chartered banks total roughly $2,262,000,000—approximately 10 per cent. of which they carry in cash-in other words Bank of Canada Some people do not fully understand banking operations and might ask: LWlmeha thabanka cw mun: depodull they do notvchavo it all launch?’ m" 2. How can the banks repay our deposits, over 83,26),- 000,000, with the amount of cash they hold? The answer to No. 1 is: Look , If you are a wa a-earner, payi ing your way an depositing s little week h week in a savingb awount in t e hank, can any- body convinee you that your, deposit came into being by- vmting figures in a book ? 0r is- it not a fact that you can call at your bank and take it away with you-in cash! Suppose you are a farmer- let us use one acre and some round fi ea for illustration.- You use bushels at a dollar a bushel, o wheat, to seed one acre. You reap, say 20 hnelwlfll worth a dollar a bushel. leaving out your costs to simplify mat- ters, your gain is 181/; buelfel! equivalent to 18% dollarsm-luch you deposit in your bank; Do you regard this an just figures in a book ? It would be hard to convince any wa e-earner or any pro- ducer '0 new wealth, that hi! deposit which arose front lull labour and production, is any- thing but real money. He knows better, for lu- can bu things with it. ere does all the money come from ? Your deposit is the measurfl of our own real wealth. That wealth comes from thd marketing of your labour f0!‘ wages; from the a plicauoil 0f labour to the soil o the farm. 11f. to the standing timber tn I110 forest; from the catching of fiflll in the sea; from the wrestmg 0 minor-ale from the ground: fr"!!! the fabricating of raw material! into manufactured goodfl; 411d from marketing at home u! abroad this continuous produc- don. When somebod wanu l0 change all your usineaa III economic methods and by 50ml mysterious magic to 11:25 811ml‘ overnight l promised will!" of parity, ask what suwell nu a theorist has made 0T hen affairs. bcfofll ou ' eory- _ y Bunk deposits reflect 0551b‘, wealth produced. Every 49"" we to ou—-our depwio" 7-40 back by many dollars lll real luau. Canada's chartcrgd blllh 11°‘ only nerve the individual well, the an a t factor In 111° b 'din5ofi enation. THE CHARTERED BANKS 0F CANADA {ourlocalbrnnchbanlsmmqorwlllbcgludw gladtoonaooryour-l all: bunk- Noni, moo. _J