g, 4 l co - llolme. 00l- Innoce- IldlceeedInenv-qnl. , ‘DO-PIJIIII-Qa I. Ilrldl. D. A. Ilellllol,‘ II. l. 0- Aaeocup Idler-D. I. Ouch TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1926 E REV-IVIFIED FARM. 0n the illustration Station at Montague, conducted by Mr. Fred McIntyre, a potato field of two acres prodhced this year 1.018 bushels of Irish Cobbler, certified need potatoes. This farm was vis- ited by a Guardian representative last August and was described at that time. it w-ill be remembered the‘ the potato field referred to ‘l GbOYOe-WBS 0110 0f U18 DOOIBBK B80- tions not only of the fann but of Mr. Mc- Intyre applied '22 tons of barnyard manure and 1067 pounls of 56-9 fertilizer mixture. The potatoes were planted in rows 32 inches apart and sixrinches apart in the rows to prevent the tubers being oversize for seed potatoes. Tllc crop was wonderfully uniform ill size and free from disease. Potatoes were not the only thing on this farm. On a new meadow a yield of three tons and 620 pounds per acre of cured mixed hay was harvested. On anotlu-l- section of four acres there was a yield of three tons 1100 pounds of clover per acre. There was a yield of 30 tons 1853 pounds of turnips to the acre, a yield of 10 tons and 1807 pounds of sunflower per acre and other sim- ilar yields. Such results as these from a the whole community. 187m which a Yew YPMS 1180 “Ymliralvvays attached to .\ir. Mackenzie guano” across the border is like “cal flehy not produce enough to feed a shecl) King. He has never been regarded ly and which 113d bee“ abflndimed (“Hus open and above board and the Rtipublign“ that account; should set our peo- ple seriously thinking. Why are there vacant farms in this pro- farm in the province that could not , within two or three or four years be made just as profitable as the Jaf" Mcllltyffl farm 8! Molllflfillfl- Tfilfi-Iprovides reason for the suspicion the Experimental Station and Dominion Government were behind the venture until it became sell- sustnlning. Could not the saule forces 'gct behind any young man who would undertake to revivliy one of these vacallt farms? We. in common with the rest of Canada. are spending millions oi‘ dollars try- ing to induce immigrants to come. _ who never come to this part ofthe Dominion. Why not risk a ie\v thousands ln trying to induce our own young men to remain and grow. rich in their native province? That with a little backing to begin with any enterprising young mon could make a good living here and have something to the good in the end cannot reasonably be doubted after the experience gained on tho illus- trafion farms now flourishing in the poorest part of the province. .._-_-<0>-—-- QUVING AT HOME. The difference between buyltlg at homo and buying abroad is the dif- ference between helping the home province and helping some other province or country. it is also the difference between keeping the home market for Canadians and letting it be exploited by foreigners. ‘if our province is to prosper us it ought to, as it has unexcclled prospects of prosperlng, we must tlrat of all, buy from and sell to our own, keep up our own institutions. ‘. patronize our own industries and if we are not encourage them. loyal to our own we cannot prosper as a province or as a people. We are sending millions of money out of our province for goods which we are compelled to import because, we cannot produce them at home When we add e single dollar to this which we could leave at home when we huy from departmental ltorcl in other provinces goods which we could buy from our own merchants we are committing the crime of disloyalty against our own homes and our unperdonable own province. ___-_-.¢Q§--__ NOT INPETINO MUCH. meme are they who do not ex- poet ‘latch. for they ellsll not in“; m, mmqmflh‘ “"3 that the day, and the number is steadily increasing, who are in this blessed state of unexpéctancy with regard to the King Gdvcrnment. From the outset political sharpness has tak- en the place of statesmanship. The political game has been played with loaded dice and the dice are still loaded. ‘Prom -the Customs probe conducted by a parliament- ary commlttee representing both political parties the King Govern- ment emerged brulsed, blackened and disgraced. It was decided to continue ithe probe and, if poe- slble, to clean up the mess. For this-purpose Sir Francois Lemieux, Chief Justice of Quebec, was ap pointed to conduct the inquiry and to get at the facts. He was regard- ed as eminently fitted for the posi- tion, a man who would not be turn- ed aside by political or other influ- ence. ‘He began his enquiry; other appointments the commission were nlnlle, cvicntly for political to reasons. (Jhaugcs in tile person- nel of very evident that the enquiry was not intended to be a bone flde one in the interests of the general pub- und it is generally Iiclievcd that considerably further than that pub- other business." | Suspicion of sharp pyarticc has prevailing opinion regarding the continued inquiry into the adminis- tration of the Customs frauds may suspicion. The fact that the two judges added to the commission by ‘Mr. King are political appointees iluiury will be a mere whitewashltig institution to save what is left of the Governments TUDUIGLlOIl. The Commission is re- presentative of and is ucreation of the defendant. tbc Government. Who is to represent tilc plaintiff, Canada? HE HRS HIS REWARD. Tile lion. Vincent ftlassey has. by Order-ln-Council. been appoint- ed Canadian Ambassador at Wash- ington. The appointment recallsa cartoon which had considerable vogue some time ago. ‘ll. fell“? eel-lied zt boy with a blackened (We. hat torn, shirtsleeves rliil-icd 0H- ln the distance was a Win18 Ell‘! with head uplifted und lleughtllv walking off. Under the boy's pic- ture was the legend, "l don't cure; l kissed her anyway!" The tlion. fMr. ‘Massey W03 0°‘ physically injured in his recent ei- forts to got into public life. ‘It is not known how much it cost him otherwise, ‘but it is firmly believed that be contributed handsornelyto the Llberalcamnaisn funds H! ‘he last two federal elections. He was appointed to the Cabinet by Ml“- Mackcnzlc King, no doubt in ETBi-e" ful remembrance of his generosity, hult the people rejected him and he did not get the coveted Cabinet seat. Not to be outdone, Mr. Mac- kenzie King decided that if the people would not elect lMr. Mas- sey. he would do .lt himself, so he disappointed. There are many to- Notes by the Way Ohlclqob drainage canal which turns a great volume of lake water into the Mississippi. has become a serious international question be- tween Canada and the United States and also a matter of grave controversy between Chicago and six ‘States of the lRlepubllc which halve a frontage on the lakes. These six ‘States are deeply interestediu vmelntaining the water level in their lake ports and all the way through the River Saint Lawrence route to the sea.' and ‘they have their complaint now pending before the Supreme Court of the United States at ‘Washington. Evidence already heard gees to of the diversion: that this has re- for each inch of fall during the av- erage season groatly increasing the cost of water transportation. The Canadian complaints against the diversion are not before the Su- preme Court. but are, of course, grieved States. - Contra evidence denies that the change in the lake levels ls materi- ally due to the drainage canal, or that it is nearly so great as has has got its canal open, is now tak- ing four times as much water as is necessary for purposes of sewer-i age, using it for power purposesin operating factories and is more-l m” (hmmiflslon made n 0Y9!‘ 1118111118 U10 enlarged 01111111 i1 of animal organisms. [proper ‘drain- cllannel for water transportationon a. large scale. What the final out- come may be can only be conjectur- ed. Canada's complaint would count for nothing against Chleagcfs the reason for his resignation goes semsh greed were it not that “Wm! “mon an “m, knowledge, number of rich States have an _ .. . ave. llcly glwen by himself. age and equal interest ln maintaining the hphe physician does Ms best to water level of the lakes. The result of the Congressional to prove embarrassing to the Government, which, al- though it retains a fair working majority in the House of Represen-I small body oi recalcitrants in the “no”? The": is not m‘ abandoned b‘? “m-leclure‘ U“? “sum rm“ M Senate who will hold the balance of power between straight dtepubii- cans and Democrats in the Senate. The situation is remotely akin to that which existed in Ottawa before the election in September last, when a small body of Progressives held the balance of power in Can- ada. Democratic hopes of win- ning the ‘Presidential election two years hence have been greatly strengthened for the time. The long hoped for settlement of the ruinous coal strike ill England is still held up. The strike has now continued for eight months and although over 300,000 of the miners have ‘been compelled by want to return to the pits, these are but a fraction compared with the number who are still idle. The loss and cost of the strike is be- yond all precedent in history. lt has greatly obstructed lllrltlsh in- dustry and trade, reduced British exports and produced a coal fain- ine on the Continent. Surely the Mother Country is encompassed with a sea of troubles that should call forth patriotic sympathy in _Bl1cnu W. Bqflflll. ID EGSARY l-N MEDICINE The idea behind" tlhe practice of medicine just a very few years ago was that it was to ba-ve a lkuow- ledge of the body‘ Jul sickness, so ‘that sick folks could be properly treated ‘ In daily practice the lphysiclan learned that there were certain ail- ments chut he was unable to lhetp. chow that the water level has fall- and when the diagnosis was made, 3:?“ en from four no six inches because we mule“ “d ‘Physician simply stract. we have not yet reached awaited the end. This applied to tuberculosis or duccd the verso veracity of 400 consumption as it was called and we t ' h 1 , th - lake vessels -by from 80 to 110 tons hundreds of t-housuuds of victims an§,,§':,.:£,',,y§,ewrfilfiyzerlllfplflalli. died yearly because hope was ab- andoned. Similarly with heart dis- ease auddiabetes. New tuberculosis lspreventcd. is arrested, and actually cured. Also with insulin. the majority 0f those suffering unlilh diabetes can new live comfortably with the equally strong Wm‘ ‘ma’: of the agWiennlte assurance that they can g0 hat and the walking-stick in bronze. about their rlaily duties, and live the ordinary life, ‘by simply taking their daily dose of insulin. . lln lheart disease, while no cure has been attained, once the l ivl- dual is made to realize tha his. heart is simply muscle (under nerve control of course), he can also go been alleged. -ln any case Chicago about 1,1,, daily work. just as long stance of the Vera” nuns... men. that is romantlclzed to tho limit of ‘Alllfiflflllfl ingenuity. as be does not cw tally or physical . And no medicine has reached the Frelntlooliedlq Condensed mm Au- (June, '20.) George ‘Marvin. g e train pulls into Ts ruml. lfyo, you may see a ads near hat, character of modern clothes; it ‘is congruous to nothing attractively omtraditionally Japanese. ~ l And yet it is utterly Japanese. It is u huge ‘tflbute by Japanese to. ‘American standards of success. The statue was raised by popular sub- scldption from a quarter-million 0t‘ Japanese, in gratitude for cheap public services created by the tireless enterprise of Solchiro As- Although we in America bow to commercialism in the ab- the point ohbymbollzing it in illi- perishable bronze. in adopting their expressions of the new faith. Asano, now 78 years oi‘ age, and with many motor cars to ride in. keeps up the habit of walking for pleasure. Ho, prospects his mining properties. his hydroelectric plants, his shipyards, on ‘foot. Hence the titantic knickerbockers, the slouch We talk about the romance of business as if it were a western monopoly. But in Japan, more than three centuries ago, the founders of the llionsc of Mltsul broke away from feudalism to make a beauti- ful "ling out of work. And Aesop's life history is a peculiarly exactin- kind of document Asano prides himself on the fuct Industrial Magneto ntic bronie statue against the sky. Sur- mounting a steep hill stands the colossal =flzure of a man with soft knickerbockers and walking- ALL lnounu KNOWLEDGE 945g. stick. The efllsy proves the heroic tativcs. will be at the lmercy of u c that he hus “arrived" by nothing else than sheer hard work. This is tile doctrine that he tries to "ge' 110F088" 10 young Japan, Darticulztr- l!‘ in} the Gary industrial School- which hc founded at Tsurumi and ‘now finances. Although almost so, he begins his day at five o'clock in the morning, and his son, managing director of many of his interests. must appear daily at his father's now m extras: ,l‘.l::::l::~ .fi:;::.':“.::-,‘. ytzlirioustcoéilptanies keep him busy e res o ' " bring this to the ‘attention of the mm the nlggte day and 0mm n" public, but he should really go fun, Asmm was born the so“ of a pm" tller and enter public life, the 00"‘ country doctor. in a norllrru pre- vvince. As a. boy, gossip o." the 0D- lf he did, then thls necessary p?“ Dcntunities in the new era o.‘ com» grBSs in clvllllfli-lflll WOUMMZO 8110811 nlerce and industry just then open- by leaps and bounds whereas it 1n; go.- Japan stirred NHL as h has only been by the loss of thou-seeped back through‘ the provinces sands of lives, t-hat necessary medl-And at 21 he made his big jump al and sanitary liiglsla-tlcn has for the seaboard chances of Yoko- hama. After 15 days‘ walking he reached the city without ‘fl yen and without even an acquaintance. He became, as he says, "a cooiies coolie." peddling drinking water tc stevedores on the water-front. The folk and neighbors at home hafl given him up as no good. Then ht ran ‘into a man who was peddling scya paste. The stuff was awk. ward to merchandise, sold ln"gobs‘ and carried away in greasy paper For a song Aseno bought bamhot and made containers wherein tc peddle the paste, and here he mudl his first minute success. lie hac thought out something new nut next to ncedfui. in the evenings 11B Dflwed over the slag plies out side the newly started gas works flicking np fuel to keep his slqvi burning through the cold nights. And raking away nightly, he realiz ed the existence of utilised heat uni-tsén slag coke, thrown out a; refuse. "He went to work and quictl: secured the solo rights ‘to all thi refuse from the gas company. Th gas company gave him the rights as a convenience to themselves Asano profited accordingly. iii: was tbc original ldou of iurnln_ waste-ml a country where for gen erations, supposedly. there had beel no such waste-Auto wealth. H< got a small organization iogcthe. and ‘hogan to manufacture coke on a steadily increasing scale. Coul- tar was n by-product. Along came point nowWvllerc it uses nil the knowledge of the other scleneefi. that is electricity, chemistry, study ego for homes, heating. ventilation, and g0 forth, all with jilst the 0X16 idea, not that of curing the -bllt of preventing sickness. Pro, Vault-look of Chicago, states that the destinies of the nations de- come into force. DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH ly W. L- Gordon J WiORDS ‘OFTEN ‘Nll-SIISED: Don’t say “modes? if you mean "bashful." One may be modest but not at all bashful or shy. coin-IN tvutsnno-Noulvclzo; sal- ute. Pronounce the u as in "tube," not as l‘n "rude." OFBN Jlil-SSPEIJIJEDZ squirrel; two r's, one l. '. lSlYNONYMlsz youthful, young, juvenile, boyish, girlish, adolescent. pueriie. WORD STUDY: "Use o, word three times and it is yours." Elset us increase our vocabulary by mas- tering one word each day. 'I‘0de.y's word: MFJDODlOUS; agreeable -t0 the ear; .tunefu‘l. “l lnever heard a more melodious voice." l Daily Selections eon Guardian Readers ‘ our fortunate und more prosperous Dominion. _ The Rhodes Government has made a survey of farms In Nova Beetle available for settlement by immigrants. Out of 6.000 farms found suitable a list of 3,000 has been chosen and complete inform- ation in regard to each of them has been forwarded to the Agent General of the ‘Province in England. Premier Rhodes says that “every care will the taken to smooth the way of the expected immigrants in the opening years," after they are settled. This looks promising. addition it is proposed to secure a suitable Ifarm on which 250 boys will he trained each year in farm work. In IPremler Ferguson and hie col- vwvvvv vvvv v Vvvwvv 1920 all “ lc of cholera. und Asano found a market for his coal-tar. then lflrst used as n wholesale dis- inlfectant. Iln 1076. tile government oi‘ Tokyo started a gas-plant. After it had November iii, WHAT JYS MAN ?—-‘"wd10 A111 ‘i, 0 10rd God, and what is mine house, that thou hast brought me thither- , . fgfingoftfionnmfibs; f... , i'.'1l "4 , , .. ‘Offer 251151-35‘: Tile coal also went out to sea-l to Iilldia, to Chitin. Java» the Straits Settlements—as Asano's coke had gone and his cement. These heavy, ireights voyage now ill Asano's own ships. ln'1806 he started his lnost ambitious sea venture, and inaugurated the present fortnight- ly service between Heugkong, Shanghai, the Japanese ports and San Francisco. He built his own shipllullders. ancse war, he built four huge ships. each of 22,000 tons, for the inst- growing iPacltic passenger trade. He also bought fronl E. H. ‘Harri- malfs old Pacific Mail Co.. the sister ships Koren and Siberia. Harrlman and Asauo, incidentally, had much in common. and were close personal friends. At first the commanhers. the chief engin- eers and several of the other ofiic- ers on hoard the Asano liners were foreigners. generally Englishmen. Now, with the exception of an American purser on every vessel, they are all Japanese. it required many years for the Japanese {let'- sonnei to learn the ‘lug-shipping game. The Japanese are great beer- lrinkcrs. As long ngo as ~10 years, leer was being brcwcrl ill Japan. mt it lnude slight, headway against mported Inuit liquors. Asnno sent l. group of texpcrts to study brew- lrlcs in Germany. Then he and Baron Shlbusnlva bought the great Sapporo brewery from the govern- ment—llke the cement works and :he Tokyo Kins ‘Co.. it had been 'ullniug at n loss-and, combining .t with another company. formed he largest ‘brewing company in Japan today. Asano seems to have adopted the antlre reulnl of business as his leld of human endeavor. And ul- lvays he secs lueans of saving vaste in either methods or inat- sriuls. ,_.-__. Wheat Crop Is ' ' “(Canadian Press.) lWINNIPPIG, Nov, 1b.—-"l'ors0ils whc ‘have the idea that western lagged through nlore than a year 0! dBV010Pment..Asano organizeda corporation and took over the plant. That was the beginning of the Tok- to." l-Chron. 17.16. LPitAYEIt-O Lord, Thou loudest, ThY-llwille like a flock. yo Gas and Coke Co. of today, one 0i 11w lflrflel" Public-service cor- NIY AIM porations in Japan. Asuno has been able to supply gas at a remarkably low rate because. 25 years ago, he ‘orzanized the lshikari Colliery Co. and made a contract between that corporation and the TokyoGns Cm. whereby a supply of coal was guaranteed for a term of 60 years at a rate which is today about a third of the market price. l ‘Ventures in coke led to cement. ~ The Bovernment had started a ce- ment-works. Asnno with fuel and began to study the cement business. He saw the flaws in its peufunctory government dil-. fif any litltle word of mine May make a life the brighter; If any little song of mine May make n heart the lighter; God help mo speak ‘the little word‘, Ami take my bit of slinging And drop it in some lonely vale To set the echoes ringing, if any little love of mine May make a, life tihe sweeter; if any little care of mine May make a friend's the fieeter; if any lift of mine may ease supplied it 1 had him appointed Ambassador by Order in Council. The appointment suits Mr. Massey; it will be worth $50,000 a year to ‘him. So the money goes. --—-¢0->—-—- v EDITORIAL NOTES." of good reading np-if there la time. 1....- him and not worth a dollar to those who Day ‘l-iave you mapped out a course for the winter months. New ll the time to )tudy There is a full in the political situation, a sort of ominous expect- lsaguee make a strong plea for popular cuppa-t on the financial re- cord of the Conservative Govern- ment. The big deficit of $15,000,- 090 left by the IDrury Administra- tion has been reduced to the van- ishing point. and this year a bal- anced budget is promised with a reduced income tax. The ‘Ferguson these new taxes the revenue has year. provincial debt of $825,000,000 is to aacy. The public mind is strum! up with anxiety as to whet shall conic next. This in especially true YOITI. ._-___ moat this pod chewing and than Government was compelled to im- pose new taxes in their -iirst year, but over and Above the product of been increased by 86,000,000 this The repayment of the tblg begin at once with the expectation that it‘ will all be repaid in forty Unfortunately for the Govern- Tihe ‘burden of another: God give me ‘love and. care and strength To help my toiling brother. ection. When the prefecture was about to‘close down the works on account of continued losses, he promptly secured a lease on the factory. fair promises as to the provincial finances seem to be quite, over- shadowed in the public mind by the liquor question. ‘By the policy of Government control as a leper- ate issue the Government will he sustained or defeated accordbng to present prospects.‘ the late liion. Mr. Tarts once laid: The estimated colt‘ of the new office of oanadlan Minimu- at Washington for the tflrst year is $50,000. That is only a starter. As "Wait till you sec us next year!" That 860.000 will he multiplied live fold before long if‘ our present ment became permanently fixed us less hands. I “If. southern island of Kyushu. lactating himself with a group eeuione covering about IVIIOI’. ‘apondtilrift rulers ‘are continued in 1,000,000 fqfls. » i _ later. he bought it. 0e- a profitable industry in his tire- lLater, two branch works were built. At the timeof the earthquake in 1923, the combin- ed Asano cement plants had reach- ed a capacity of 8,600,000 barrels Up to 1M1 all the factories around Tokyo and Yokohama were dependent for coal on mines in the‘ At. times. ‘there was n shortage of fuel. Asano went “out on foot with‘ his geologists and engineers and discovered coal-fields in the neigh-_ capitalism, he obtained mining o:- , 0 corps. and formed a company which new has an annual output of over. Cunadaswheut crop has been sor- iously dagnugetl by wet autumn weather, are all wrong," declared [Charles Murp y, general manager of the Can. Pacific itullWflYB. nest- lern lines, lbere‘ yesterday. Allega- 'tion that there had "been 110N011“ shrinkage in volume, he said, llnd been disproved by" the fact that begwggn Aug, ,1 and Nov. 11 the C. P. ~R., had deliveied to the ‘lake head 14,000,000 bushels more grain than during the snmc period 0i‘ last year. Of these shipments fifty seven percent guded contact. In Your Blood Makes Health Probably the most import» ant tlealtn-qlvin element of blood and bone. hen the nyl- tem lacks iron, it leeks every but support for good-humi- In our IRON TONIC PILLS we dffer pure metallic lnen1n Inimitable form. Jdlghty clever for tonic effect, so etnngtnen and purify the blood and to generally put the eyltcm right- PRIOI UOKOI-NTI lOX J-lrgc ldx One Month's jreatmgnt 01-00. - IRE} MACS DRUGSTORE . s»... .4 "’. fife». it?" l ship yards, and iulported steel and v v¢vv covenrmzur, MUNICIPAL AND Punuc UTlLlTY aoulos “ ’ J. M. ROBINSON ANDA‘ sons, urn. Investment Bankers P. O. ‘BOX 404 CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E-‘L, PHONE ZQl-L AAAAAAA After the Russo-Jap-r Not Damaged J A h,» 0IdéHrme_ emtzman e Co. “wONfi the few great: pianos s. ofiihe world," is the way ‘ musical celebrities voiceptheir opinion of the Heintzman t Co. Piano. Its warm and sympa- thetic tone has earned the approval of musicians claiming both local and international fame. Visit our Music Salons and inspect the various models. An illustrated cafglogue with prlu" lln will be nut you Ml rcquuf. MILLER BROS. Great George Street Jamieson’: Carnation Cream gives you all the good there Ie In any ekln preparation, no mgflgr what it colts. CHAPS BllTllER ‘ Yllll i it curse. Curse quickly and there's not a thing about .1! you could object to, V I No greats, no stickiness, nothing to injure. Ajentie healing, we]. lnq lotion that keeps the akin like velvet. Price 86 cents. The White Drug Store J. nxlllllifiill ' i lssill‘illscs.""~‘, -ALL stuns; . AT llowltsr marge oousldrenr wml ucunrrv mo eenvlee, . lmlullnll a We‘. Lin.’ surnames-co 1m. . omkn LOTTITOWN. f . .-E.\_»l.. \ tow-en cu i... nan-r