?AGE mutt" f THE CHAR LOTTETUWNY GUARDIAN l illurning Daily tFounded I887) V rfrfltlffll Lu-uL-(ul. W. (‘buster S._.\IcLure Hus Prosldclll .I. R. Burnett. I-JJ. _ Sccrrlut") LicuL-Iitvl, l). A. Jluckintlon. 9-5-0- Edltor and Alundgnlg llu-votol .I. RV. Bumcll, F-JJ- Assoclau; Ltlltor l-rank Walker >L'll>L RIPHUN lL-IIES d c‘ $5.00 pcr _\t-.|t tin ¢Nl\-lll\'l‘l dt-llwrl: lo l’! $1.011 pct" your tin lltll-llltrflll-AIICLI to l’. Llsluul ‘ 530v pi-i- your i111 Jll\LAllK'l.'/ ulallcu lu_ Ldllaflll and M} .\I\.'|llUL'l‘) Jllllll Burtuu of Llrvllhlllvfl-w 71m siliuityt-slLuann], it. llealver than UH.’ Hort/vest Ink." _ v s ' ’l"llllf>ll.\\, 111.1‘ 2s, 193s .__ Mr. linickul lll The blnrititnes llll: o\\ll “political scli-respcct." \\ hvn tltc Hon. _l0hn Archie Lanlpbcll erupt- cil iii our local Legislature last session, he con- io-sotl that ho coltlthft say all he wanted to be- cati~c ltc fol: “i1icri111i11ate<l" along with nic rest 0i his cahtnet colloagttcs. lle dill ‘prc-ttv well clltt~i<lv1'il1;_' thi~ ltanrliczltz, hut .\lr. lfriilgcs has zttloptcil a holder autl ntnrc cftcctivc Culllrt‘, by walking i-ut ztltrvgcthor, Editorial Notes IJtTtl Durham died this tlatc, 1840. i‘ IF _lul_v is maintaining If: bad reptitcition for autu antl other accitloiits. I I 1K l? i i The new .\loon (lid tho trit'k,—or, did it? >l< v v >o= lt <oeitis the liIxltiltitimt will fit in nicely for tho lill'll‘.t‘l'.\ this year. tlttt- tr: tho tlvlay" in hay- lllilhlllflf Zlllll tlic sylonrlirl progress of grain and rill-t (flips. I t i i .\tt‘ltl'lllllll tn tho J/rililrrtl/ Slur, ll-ln. (i. .-\. r 111;; i~ tllrlnlting ti) rt-vut-t-rzltt- ltis lit-Jtllh :11 .. ('71 tiiittlttry. no! itt l‘riltco liilwriril l-lantl. llti §~ oxi-ovtt-tl tr» irwtvt- t-ztrlv in .\ttgti~t. f. n i’. _ » _ i‘ _ i‘ _ I i . titaxtnttntt ~11 uittm ciitit-n: lll ttr-n i ..i-l11ill\' t'llt'\'~t‘ I-‘l- lttclt ‘iixi-tl ll_\' l-t- .. ' -ii-t1iev:I at 43 poi‘ vi-tu. tho Frill-till .\;_'1'i- , - .ll'\' ll'liitl‘lllll‘lll Zlllllllllll.t'~. i i 4 , , if \‘4>]l\,l‘~ front a rc-ilh-tuil ~t~ctii~t1 , ',. . i y I ‘it’ tho t'll_\' with rc-QJlr-l ti) tho ill-j. -ii~ l)!‘ _ _ i jfillliflflll. lthn {ro-i-zts- ~11 it'l\‘-‘I1~ H1111 L’Ill'll<‘l7*- _ y ‘ ’ l,1,,...ini< ztti-l flvélfftllllg 111i plant» I i this lvlllll. if Fllllf-t‘. tilt-iii l)t* ttiii-f iriiuv, crlnipli- ‘Kttclt a high :u~,-l ti. u" ‘ Z l liti: .\lr. ll": ~- 11, rtull E~ rol-ilrt 1 I 3111c l‘1'oi1t§1»r~ in ill‘ i" i ' < ' is llftllilvlllfliiffll. liven luv-into rliathtittl of of a corti-tiii \\':~<ti-rtt ii-ral li-ziitiit! llccattsc. - W» file at’ Piw-tt-ctioii ‘ll lion for the {armor- in: prnilttcts, bonuses. tax- i . out: flfltl sttrlt liko,"— lEl-cralisnt has al\\':1_vs ap- llrairilw n1 lh-ttllltlittg its‘ '~ :i v11! leaning; in the Fast. lia- iwzoi-jii w" twr ll ‘i'." Registration Of Motor Vehicles l\l~"ir vi- 'c'1e rt; rations itlcrc-asctl 79745 dim.“ !i,_1f,:it"vi1t‘tl;11g t0 ]ll't'llllllllfll”_\' figures ftl"7:~tll h; the llliittitli-iti llttriatl oi Statistics. T]... p; ,1 ii;__ 1.310170: iwiiitiaroil with 1.240.124 in 111311. All ;ii_-i iltclrs recorded gains river the hi pTtYltlllS yl'i'll', t to llflfl’, of lllClTIP-t; lloint: as iolliiis: l't':'nct- Ft. -ll'<l lslrltrrl. 5ft,‘ NOV-l ' tizl. 3,4; Now i"tt1l~\vil‘k. to. [Qtiohoty 0.0; ilm. “.11: .' ttuliolvan. 2.7; ,\Z,ii-,-t;i_ 3.1; lritt-"h (<1ii;i1ilv'a_9.t: anrl tltt: Ytt- kon Territory’, 0-7- I)i~,<i=i':¢ the gain notI-tl in the llllllll)l'l' of iti/itnr “hide; n-Qyliai-i-tl, tho l‘t\'t‘llllf‘~ wort» ll|\\t'l'. [mriutttiyig it) .Q_’_;,';¢|_§.l;t\§ clltiriiitrl-ll with $20,- 493,902. Tho rlrnp w‘ _ "Cfllllllvfl for h)‘ a tlc- cline in Uiitarivfs roqistrzttiriti Ttlillllvs, till!‘ to the rlocrt-aso iii the rate, the total for that pro- vince lit-mg $11.04: $38 ctttuparo-l with 511.144,- 956. Iihe roluatiniig [iriivint-os wore iltl\'i'l'lli>‘t'1l over I035. The nine ltl"l\'lll(",f‘€ of fllt‘ llrlnitlitnti repnrtetl hlgltct‘ orilloctions of the gas-ilitto ta.\' which totallt-il $3R.3;3,947 cotnpztretl with S34,- 532436 in i036. More Liberal "Harmony"- Hon. H. F. G. Bridges, Speaker of the New Brunswick Lt lattlrc, has tcnrlcrcrl lll: rosig- nation to Prcnticr Dysai-t anvl annwuttct-tl that tn future he will sit anil act as an lllflvptllfltlll member until the (lissttltttiiin of tho pro-Gill House. I11 a lottor to thc Premier, .\lr. llriilgcs gays he takes l‘.\’L“(‘l|llflll to thc zrinitiintiiioiit of I-lon. Ii. _[. llf'llllt'llt‘l'l'_\‘, llll‘llll)L'l' tor Stunt _lol1ti C“); a5 l)l'('slllt'lll of thc laxcctltlvc (JlllllCll. 0t) the grottlitl that "it is zni ftlllltllllllll('lll‘lllfll 1s unfair to tlic tjottiuics of (harlliito, Rfqlgfllllfllf’. antl other Cltll~lllllt‘llClt‘-' ill tho l’rl1\'ii1co'I‘; butt {hi5 l)' no lllt'illl> l‘Xllilll~l\ .\lr. llritlgts ist 0 grit-valiccs. llo says itirthor: _ "The solt-rtitin in‘ mintht-r calunot lll(‘llll)t‘l' front Saint john ('it_v wttni~~ ti» nit- HJ- tho cul- fllillflliull of a lung scrios of cvoitts._.~rliito of which art: as tltlliiits: Your anti-K'1-11to<lor:ittl-11 “mm. which i; disrupting Ilniititiinti-l‘rn\'1i1<‘tal ctittnts of the .\'<‘\\' _ Board a; prtuitist-tl. your lnrlttlgr-nrc to tltosc w]... “m1- iint nut‘ frionrls in tho last clovtlfltt anrl failure to ziptlrvfiitlll‘ l".\‘-"l l""l'l.\‘ 7"lll]l""'l""‘- ' ttr rchtctzinrt- to twn-ttlt |ll('llll1t‘l’~ l)lll\l1lf’ Vltlll’ 3U , t . m mam-rt- nf lirilifV. vuur lack of gnvmlmicn illto st-rintil:irv rtlllrlsinf this Prov- ‘imcnlflfn tnint,."_.,i_.c n; HZ-QHQP: (in automobiles. m; piytirliitritit flllrl prnhihitivo rate. ~ \ l'<crit1lin:ttioi1 against llculimllfllf‘ ("will ‘Vmr U‘ ‘I '1 (i rolicf fttnrls in tho winlrr in tho illslqrl llllll ilhnloprqtic ‘vmifin of M." H”... of Iniz/iii‘ i lie‘ i 1n hl‘(l('T-ll'|—(‘I)llllCll. in Klarch erninotttI1n_|_»,i:~1;itz";‘ iurv f”; mm mp (bum... I033 flVl-dullligi“ ‘irmh. ‘(sylyr-itrlititrcs ntatlo hv, (‘If RoJYQHtll ll I.’ kfnlmiwd FUN", for the nfrl flK- R()\i/ll'(i.lI]'.l1 I-I\'_IYI' “Phlfirm COIN“. in tlfiQ of a faitulvvv] my‘ llfin»n M“ nnzmhnflhsi‘. m“. cntmly, lvhu It ‘rtfiltfi rmchc-rmmtv Cnnhti] at (lmlmd by.’ n ‘c ‘a ' lTforonco tn reason- i“ h“ Foiqstmnifmllicvhiigtiilititis of this cnnstitu. nhlo rol|ttP§ 5 ‘l ' ' QTICy-jr , I “m, H; Tlrirlqos assures the .\f‘lor this llrriarwnl EH9. qIpnrt" Fnppnrt m PW,"ivrtniiiTllvrielolrislalion which may ho intro- nnv firm" * , ,‘ . ., ' ducvll h)’ ."”'" flill""lv“glflrnt'l)l1i f. p of the effort WHO nfiiik liitiv: ttltiriiilniiiidfiltttro.“ hut he 9 is ncttlu I l _ .' - m t- rectors wlll at least igtue him rrrir ;x;=oengt;lrtwflglw‘ hwhinantlt-iioo m’ fllfillilllrflvif: fwflkm." nf 'qu)r('l§dlm1,.' In 111v caso to. m‘ it necessary l9 19%|‘ W‘ "' “d” n “am” rclzlliiyns’ yum. Mimi-.- It) ll|lll~.(‘ iltllvllt‘ tho ac-i lrttnnvick lJflllfll‘ (otltrol zitovl. 'l'h<- aztctitinn trf the police is tint-civil :0 the manor. 1i i ll! It! little export sliipttlonts of cattle aggrogatt-tl i353? lit-ml vzilttt-rl ;ii Slitlliaf); clunpart-(l with 305111 lit-ml at 91.370.41.12 in _lllllt', p13,‘. l" tho lllllll iii tho latost iiiolttlt tho hniti-tl $t.'ttl‘~ took "n74!" llt‘-'lfl attll tho Lin? i? klllfltlwlll g =3. Tllil- tlitrtl inolttiloll 1.14/1 huiil iii ]ttlt't; hrotl catth for tho llllllffl\'t'llll'lll Iii ~tnck \':-.ltt<--l at $1115.13} of which tho k‘llllt‘<'l States ltllllv l.l()l ltcml. 1v m v >1 Canarlittn visitlir~ tn the hnitoll Ftatos tittlst sifglt a ctistrtitis rloclartitioii thattl1t-yl1avcro=i<l- crl iit the States 4X hours ht-itlro tltiy can avail thoinsolvos of tho itcrtni-sirili to vrtrry $100 wtirtlt of grlotls (llll_\' frl-o hack with thorn to (Ilmula. .\'nw the l'niteil .<ti'lto= ihtts atlivptotl tliie- satuc rule rogrtrrliitg (zniatla. Sittco .\lrli1rl:1_v'nf this wcek it has grille into offcct. anll l‘.1~\\' in lirrlr-r to claini personal exeniilti/ut .»\t11l-1'i<at1s tints’. prw- ent a signer] statlnictit that he nrslit- ltas lltTll in tltnztila at least forty-eight h~nr~. I I i i The ttniversrtl ttnseasr-nahle weathor of tho prcsoiit month ha~ iiiwillnccil tlto tt-ual crop of invontirtns an-i utggi-stilitis tr) hnpruvo i111 nature. In Xlolhrittrno. .\u~tralia. whore they lntvt- llflfl tlrottght instead of rain l\\'<I hiig soliviitos I!) pre- vont tlrl-itqht wcro CtllllillllVfl iii loin-rs receive-ll by the (Frazier? liievlcral Liounvil. Unt- was, a llUlfl plan to take lrlatls of <<1lltl and salt by [tlilllt- .'ihnvo the clllttrls. \\'hr1i llrollpcrl, it Wils ~t:lt<-tl. the ntixttirre would forct- flUWll tltt- rain. The uthot‘ schv-ntt- prwvillorl for soon airplanes tr» git up with hig tanks full of wzitor which wottltl ho sprayed out llvor rlry parts. 'l'l1is. tho lr|\'('lll4)l' saill. wiutltl Hist ahllttt Stooxxxxoot» a year. af- t<-r an initial $j5rhrxxvntx> liar] hot-n spout. Tilt‘ (frittiicil was not llll|)l'l‘~’Sl'tl. 1k 1|! * i‘ .\lr. Paul Gnuiit ‘has rlecirlcll to rem from tho "Qlrl nin apart liizuig" (inrlhrlttt Liliorals. at1<l has reorgaiiizetl his own lotion Lihoralo .\'a~ tiottale party. l-lo >illfl his pruqriuittno was an anti-trtt-‘t. It inclttrletl platform planlts ziintml at the “ntilk trust," through PFf.'llJll<lllIl('lll of rlairv co-ripcratives. at tlio “ltecr tritsts". through eiicnttragontent of the cider lllflllflf/V, at the "agri- cultural machinery trust" and tho “cl -mioal fertilizer trusts," at the "chain stnro trustis," znltl the “electricity trusts," “nlnrl finally." he sairl. "the trusts of trusts. tho keystone of all econ- omic dictatorship, we'll iigltt the hanks tlirnttglt cstahlisltntent of rrerlit t‘rl-Ot1t'.~l't'1ti\'<‘.\ witlitho lllHCllitlPTl’ alroatly set up h_v tho people's saving hanks. aftor having iiiatlc all the ncccsstn-y guar- antccs." ##1## During tho war. whoti tho ("nntuioutvoalth nf Australia proposed to ltniltl =lll])< at ltrinio. Rtlll arranged with the Vtiitotl Stan-s for tho stiititlv ni steol plates. l\lr. llughos. as llriltit- Xlitiistel‘. calll-tl m1 tho ltearl of tho l'nitorl $tato~ Stool Trust. .\lr. Schwah, “l hurst in upon Schlvnll tltlfillfl a cviiiforottcc.’ .\lr. llttghos saiil. “ll: trllrl mo Altstralia rnttltl nut havo stool as .\n1- i-rica clutlrltrt sparo it. l sairl '\\'o art» u-iillilio you whoat anrl wool. I'll ~oo you iti ——-~--~--—— hofrtrr- volt got anrithol" httshol of wheat or halt- nf wool.’ ‘llut _\'I'll can't ill) that.‘ rliclztroil $rl1v:.'ih. ‘tho .\n~tr.'1li:lt1 l‘:trli:tl1t<-1it auri-i ll to it.‘ ‘Now look horo. my 111an.' l sairl shaking lll_‘,' lfllllllfllll pen at him, ‘this is tlto Parlianiout of Attstraliah" .\lr. llttoltos got tho twlatr-s. .\t loas‘ this is what .\lr. lluqltos tllltl tn tho Xlztrinos. or at loast to tho roturttr-tl <nltliors til hi~ hunt-- town, ffl\\‘ll‘~\'lll€, Quooitslzinrl. I I 1! U v Is this Province trailing hehinvl tho rest of Canada as quality hitttor ant] choow i-riivlttcors? Tho httttor antl choose iiratliltg torm “no ygratlci“ has hoon roplaoorl on “ht-low thirtl grallo" by 0r- rlor-in-critilicil on roconttnoiirlation of tho llairy Prorltiots Marketing Divisirlit, .-\grict1ltttrr' Ile- parttttettt. Tho reason for tho ohaiigo. lllt‘ rlo- pIlFllllPHl sairl. was a llli\llllllf‘l'~lilllfllllfi’ ~11 tltt part of some purchasors of luittor as tr) what was meant hy “no gratlc." (‘l-nsunion- \\'(‘l‘(‘ hoinq lorl tn holiovo that "no gravlo" iticant that tho hut- ter roprosontod hy this torni lirirl not Int-ii grail- ed. when actually it was intonvlotl to convoy tho information that tho quality \\':t\ .11 llllljr that n gmrlo was nnt plat-oil upon it. Tho trratlo marl. irlust ho placed mi tho itiaiit pant-l of tho, wrait- per antl al<n r-ri the carton (whon ~llvl1 is ttsotl) and is a guivlr tn tittroltrtsors nf lutltor. lnfrwni» ing tltotn of tho linalitv of the pfltllllff contain erl in the iinrkngo, l".vwr_\i tirnvincv iii Camilla. with the "Xlvli-tinn of Princo Fllivrtrll lslanrl and .\'r>v:1 Scntia. has rnrtrlo it (‘olntutlsnvl hv law to hand each print or hlnoli 11f rronuit-rv ll‘ll't‘l‘ with one Ill fly tgrztllr- tltrtrlis as Ill‘~l"l'll|(‘(l \\'h(‘t1 Ol- fercd f9!’ qle 9r sold t3 consumer». .a~|w.>-. up... THE GUARDIAN ‘lloilss 11v TIIE wllv The retrograde movement oiftho pttst few months 1s mfortunate, cspvcltlll)" as 1t glves ground _for Ill): kllflfmlSlS who, for polltlcal purposes, have been ralslng the cry that another "slump" ls at Iltllltl. We must make allowance lul‘ the fact that two obstlnately- Colllttslcd wars, one ln Europe and Ollt‘ in the Far East, have been raging. the former for two years ant. lite latlcr for one, causing ntuili dislocation of international tratlc. At the same time, ln the in- terest. of the world ln general, a united effort to deal with the var- ious obstacles which are lmpend- 111g commerce between the nations is urgently necessary, though it does not follow that. It. should be along the precise lines of the rot-clnmentlations of M. van Zee- litttu. In the meantime, to con- zioiun the Governments of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for ' ' ey could not possibly" have prevented 1S a. crude political manoeuvre un- worthy‘ of serious consideration.- Bclfast Telegraph. Thoughtful Americans wlll ask themselves ltoyv long this process of borrowing and spending can oontniuo. and what the end wlll be. The end, as envisaged by the Roo-ovolt Atlniiitistration, is a bus- ' b 0111 to be generated lgli tlic vigorous use of the Llt.t:1ti1il-11i'.s "spondlitg power" -— so largo and so long sustained a bt- boom that revenues wlll ' needs will decline, ex- in-ititi t-s can be reduced and tlio btltlgt-l can be brought into baliiiiro ittttuiitittioallv. But tlicrc is flll0llll'l' and better way‘ in which to attempt to generate a buslness bonni tlitin by gambling persistent- ly with tltc natnnnl credit. That WA)‘ ts to tamer-d one-sided laws. to restore business confidence 1n tho methods of the Government, to remove ilfllIlClRl obstacles which block recovory, to put the na- tion's finances in shape so that the ltmwv burden of taxation can bo cased. to free private enter- prlso from ttniteoessary" handi- cap» and to got production start- otl up agillti. Now York Titties. (‘anadn as fl whole ls not lso- lationist. alvltoitiih lsolationism ls oxtremely strong She ls not ready to atlopt a "British Front policy” and is recoding from it. The re- cent actions of the Chamberlain (‘mvo1'11111c11t have weakened faith 1'11 Britain. The aldottr of Can- atllan supporters of the co-opera- tion of lllPll‘ country with the Cnmmonlvoalth and the League has been sadly damped. British actions in spaln have brought dls- may to Liberals and, although tvoloonted by the Roman Cathollc French Catindlans of Quebec. have not affected their isolationist sen- timentflone of the most import- ant influences ‘on Canadian foreign policy. So Canada wlll go her way;- dotormlnetl to do nothing to dls- turb her close friendship with the Fnltotl States. determined to lllflllllflln her connection with the Cnnitiiotitvealth, but steadlly in- dctaontleiit in tho mattor of any risks of becoming embroiled ln ivar nverseas. 'I'l1is does not mean that t-o-cpr-ration fits in the arma- morlt ortlors announced recently) will lint bc forthcoming, but it moans that it may have severe limits nntl that the British Gov- ernment cnnnot take tinythlng for granted. ~Mancliester Guard- tan. "Two more bodies of fighting men ltave boon sent to Palestine by the British Government: two crui rs wore already ln the coun- tryZs largest port. and a third — one of the most powerful in the British fleet, has also been des- ])llf('.llf‘(l for service there. "Great. Britain has an armed force of sutur- 10.t)00 men—~ 8.500 soldiers pullcentelt, and other corps—ln the land which was mantltited to lier by the League of Nations. But even then the necessity of reln- forcing tlie fighting strength of tho land was felt. "The point ls that. Arab agitation, maintained tliroughottt the inst year in splte of all attempts at concllititloit. has lately‘ threatened to become a thing of more impressive propor- llOllS. "Palestine has been anest of hardships for the Brltlsli. It. was hoped that satisfaction would be given everybody by the division of the country’ lnto two arts. one for the Arabs and one or the Jews. But lf the Jews accepted the pro- position, the Arabs protested vig- orously against it and for the past year this has been the cause of the agitation by the Arabs who are soc-king m gain their point as dlffl- cultles continue." —Le Press. The klnd of advice which the middle-aged successful man really onjojvs giving ls public ad- vloe-wvhcn presenting prizes at his old school, for instance. or opening the loclil boys‘ cltlb. This ls pure bliss. Tlils is ttnmltlgated fun. This goes a long way towards ntaking 11p to him for his dwindl- ing. ltair broadening waistcnatahls shortening breath. his lengthening handicap. 'I‘rue. the young may 11ot be paying any attention to what lio says. btlt lit letist they are compellotl by good manners to look as though they were. And their elders. his contemporaries, are certainly" listening. and sn are the pross reporters, All ho has tn do is to lot llllT" lf go. In t comfort. 111g keii-rv- ~-- "MAI p g.‘ anstvei- hlin back. And let. self cor he does, especially in hls pvrnftltlnll. The main body of his spooclv-thottgh, cnntnlnlng per- haps. rtitlioi- ton much reminlsc- once. rather trio many anecdotes- mav snorted 1n br-ing reasonably rostrulnotl; but when lt. comes to tlio slimming up. hls deslre to be pithy at any price is almost cer- tain to lend him lntzo the wildest generalizations. the most flagrant half-truths. someone ought. to make an anthology of apophthe- gms for tho young compiled entir- ely frotn the clnslttg‘ sentences of speeches such as those. It would be an amazing fnrrttgo of conflict. int: opinions. some ldenllstlc. some worldly tvlsc; encouragement; to boldness side by side with ex- ltnrttitlmis to prudence: “nothing venture nothing win" cheek by lowl with "look before you leap?’ instructions to burn the mldnlght oll jostling with pleas for "early to bod." It yvntild be doubtful whether the young themselves wnttlrl derive much beneflt from such n contradictory collectlonbut to those who study thfpsychology of success lt would be most reveal- ing. And lti tt a special placl should ho (It-voted to a superb ex- ample which has lately come from Nazi _ Germany: Here Jullua Stretchor. sprnklng a few dnys ago to an nudlotice of 25.000 young ponplo at. a Slimmer Solstlce meet- ing. let fnll the following com: “Be Iionllllftil. gotlllko, and nat- ural." he atlvlvsd them. Just that. Nut ltrnvn, or clever, or patlenl, or inelustriotts. or any of the things which thl Youth of other coun TON - EP INFECTED DON'T gills T00 LONG A mistake most. of us make ls to expect too much from an opera- tlon. Perhaps a condition has ex- isted {or years~fhfillfflflllsmi 8811 smite or kldney stone colic. valvu- lar heart disease or other-find We flnallv decide to undergfl 0179"‘ tlon, ‘Now all the time the condl- dolng a certain amount of damafle to some particular part or to the body as t1 whole, Much of this damage wit] be permanent despite the operation and we Should therefore remember this whlle we followed by recovery in 72 percent are avoiding or POSIPQMBB B" operation. Know the For instance. man!‘ ._.___. “Swinging” Elections (Exchange) 1f Old Klng Cole had ever had to go electloneerfng ln Texas he grobably would have won hands soul}; Lee ‘Donlel, running for Governor of the Lone Star State. called roi- n nurse. and he called for some pensions. and he called for hls fiddler; three. When the returns came in they showed that he bad won the Democratlc nom- lnatlon for Governor by a whop- plna majority. The result, as a Oanadllm ex- 1 f “on has been present n has been tchanze says. seems a cear proo of the power of music-at least the l klnd that. comes from hlllblllv fid- dles. According to all orthodox political reasoning. OfDanlel should have bad about. as much chance of wlnnlng the nomlnotlon as ‘a Re- publican would have of wmntnlz the election-and a camel has an easier time with the eve of a tonsils to remain after repeated needla Th“ “id oiDflnlel didnil attacks of tonsilitis and it is not I ha“? ‘my money‘ untll rheumatism has done some permanent damage to the jnintor to the heart that they" are willing to undergo operation for their re- ITIOVRI. An abstract in the British ‘Med- ical Journal reports the results obtained by Dr. K, Vctzel In the University" Nose and 'I‘l1roat De- partment of the Charity Hospltal. Berlin. by removal of the tnnslls for the relief of clirrmlc tonslllitls and general conditions such as rheumatism , The figures showed that tonsil- lectomy (removal of tonsils) was of the cases of artlcttlar (jolnt) rheumatism and by improvement. ln 15 percent. The recovery wlas as high as 94 percent in case of acute trecent) particular rheuma- tism. whereas l11 old cases only 52 percent yvere cured mid 30 percent were improved after tonsillectomy. Prof. Vugel therefore concludes that; frequent sore throats and abscesses of the tonsils are effect- ively prevented by removal of ton- slls provided no diseased portion of the tonsil ls left behind. ,In affections of other parts of the throat, nslde from the tonsils, such as the ibaok part of the throat. the larynx Ipart where we speak), and the upper part of the bronchial tube. the removal of the tonsils dlcl not give much relief because of damage already done. "To be really‘ effective. tonsil- lectomy should therefore be per- formed as early as possible. By the time that chronic rheumatism, ln- flammatlon of the kidneys. and inflammation of the lining of the heart have become established, the chances of their belng cured by tonsillectomy are comparative- ly small.“ It. ls generally agreed that fon- slls should not, be removed ln children unless they are diseased or catislng obstruction. Ordinarily they “taste away after ace of l5. When they remain they may be the source of serious infection. frequently causing rheumatism and heart disease. Commonwealth Defence Each of the articltts dealing with the overseas Domlniors and Indll He had no ma- chlne behind hlm. Hts prepara- tions were so badly made that he couldnt even vote for himself be- cause he hadn't bald hls p01! f-HX- But lt took more than that to stop the blllbilly flour salesman. He went on stump through the State thumping on his platform that included the Golden Rule. the Ten Commandments, old age Den- slons. and a purge of the politic- ians at the State capital. Most of those blanks had been 1n polttlcal platforms before. and‘ have sagged uselesslv. What dld pile up the mottntalns of votes for O‘Danlel was hla blllblllvjandjltaf stricter llmits than in ore-war days on Great Britain's ability to send ‘out forces to non-European danger zones. These llmlLs. bot-b to What the Domlnlons can do 1n a mllitary way outside their own boundaries and Great Brltaln can do toward sendlnR Protection to wldelv dls- tributed areas, are set. by the "ceiling" of total defensive power. by the added vulnerability of Great. Britain herself. and bv the impediments safe movement. The order ln prloi-ltles ln defence ls laid down by The Rmlnd Table. That order ls the same for Great Britain as lt Ls for the Dominlons. In relation to Commonwealth de- fence. Great Brltaln and the D0- mlnlons stand on much more nearly the same footing than ever before. Therefore, says The Round Table. when lt ls suggested that the Domlnlons should be regarded 8s separate sources of strength ln relation to all-Commonwealth dan- ggrs and llablllties. this is not an attempt to shift duties from shoul- ders that can and should bear them to others that ought not. but a practical synthesis of national needs and national abilities. in the current issue of 'll1e Round Table invites an attention that vent allusion to the more const1m- lng subject of defence. Since the Manchurian aflalr showed that sanctions could not be aDDliBd without the rlsk of war. the de- mocracies have been forced lnto taking measures for which they termlned to be defensively pre- pared for threatened eventualttles. e Dominlons cannot escape be- lng enmeshed in any world mlll- tary convttlslon. The consequences are dtyvelt on at lengtlh among the articles ln which The Round Table treats of the causes of offence and of the moans to combat them. In theory. at least. part of the re- sponse to these wider facts must. be to match wldelv distributed de- fensive liabilities with ltvldelv dis- tributed sources of defenslve Slfvnflih- OTJZHTHZECI ln relatlvelv small but ntoblle units with a bllzl-l ratio of machine-power to man- power. In assessing the problem. n fortunate accident ls that the de- Vfllbbment of the Dominlons‘ tn- denendent defensive capacity has marched with the development of their independent political rights. That they should be responsible for their local defence ls the core of all Dominion defonce pollcles. But The Rottnd Table savs: The defensive responsibility of the Domlnlons, as tho greater number °l m9" Dvottlo recognize. canno‘. as a matter of moi-o national in- terest. be confined m local datence tn the narrowloi- settse. It is, m" that Domlnloti opinion as a whole repudlates the idea of sending great cltlzen armlos again tn serve can. hlm- l trlel flonP-Jbe tit-w on distant battlefields in Eurone. , and that ln tho new strategic situ- ation this mlclit be neither destr- ntt-le not‘ mwtvo. n-ii‘. Flynn“; L; ‘n06 b)‘ an? moans the omv danger zone for the natlons of the Com- monewaltib, though it is today the most serlous: there are others ln which the several Dominlons are much more closely interested. (is it matter of purely national concern. _Molreover. while their willingness or thelr ablllty to send forces mav be__lt_mlbed.__there__are also much are so frequently adjurerl to be; but beautlful, go llko. and natural. It ts a commandment audacious ln its simplicity-The Lottdon Times. "The peraecutlnn of the Jews ln Germany and ln ancient Austrla, creates an international problem with whlch many nations wlll have to concern themselves. At. the present time 32 democraclets are belng represented at Evian as the questloni undergoes study. "It ts stild that several millions of Jews are affected and that the question wlll be flndlng of rv-fuc" for the‘ greater part of them. "It ls qulte l clear that the democracies are not prepared to absorb so many pen- ple at. a tlme. It ls necessary m make sure that no unbalance en- ters lnto the affalr for any of the countries-and again. the present economic state ofaffnlrs ls not such nstobeof any great nld towards solution. “It ls ltoperl that tho rm- tlons‘ lenders wlll-be able to reach could be given if it would not. ore- ' have not much taste. and are dr- ‘ respect? Your customers are looking for your announce- ment every clay in The Charlottetown Guardian. Old-Time Advertising was an‘ ‘ APPEAL TO BUY MODERN ADVERTISIN MEANS OF KEEPING INFORMED REGAR NEW MODELS, NEW PRICES ETC., this service. The Charlottetown Guardian offers its adver- tlsers IDEAS, COPY, CUTS. LAYOUTS, ETC. FREE Phone 132 for ~- new 3 r PER FIG a satisfactory snlutlmt tn this pro- lem~whloh ls n direct rosnlo of . It mnv be true that the people mt-rl mistakes ln Germany: but thnt rlnes not can. sflltll! find rr"="lu for nr-rsnru. Y -~- ‘ HICKEY‘ and NICHOLSON F01‘ Vitalitq alwaqS 1159 BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TE But how does your advertisin and the modern buyer looks for The Ladies complete ltook We on a of Mo?’ illaclor’: Bgguly Alds lucludln the Powder Foundlulon ream. Cleansing Cream, Skln uul Cream. ill-“acgcfirwger in flve lhldq | v dudes fifilcl. ine seven dude: Br lllantlrzzs and Eye B"?! Pencils. e . l; complete llnn zzieEsenilnillrlllyPlrlo-Alhfl of Roses-Darn ‘o Society went everywhere he went and set the votem’ feet. istamplna at meet- ln: after meeting. When they went to wrestle with the compli- cated voting machine the Texas om-ots. most of them. anyway- btlxiched for 0'Danlel. the man who had the band. That l5 the story of 0'Danlel.lbe contemporary says. who dated w make his purpose known wltb blll- bllly muslc. At. the some tlme we hate to Lhlnk of what. wlll happen 1f the fashion spreads. Tben around election tlme the Unlted‘ States from coast. to coast. will litter and sway from the vibrations of hlll- billy bands and swlng bands. sym- y Three Sec- refs-Three Flowerl-Gqnfl and Ynrflleyb. wk ik ilf it MAC’S HAIR RESTORER phony orchestras and massed A delicately perfumed Pfe- cholis. In Canada people with pgrllinn which, restores and strange enough platforms have al- benullfles the hair. n wlll reowlre new h-lr w it i no] co or- ‘iii-iii llalr luotorer pro- mo”; a new and 51113071"? growth when the halr In full- lng and l: remarkably useful in prevetlng dandruff and destroying arisltlv halr [till- g|1_ 1.1.1 f0 low the direclono carefully and you wlll be amazed at the results. _ writ, o; phone Codi)’- rmcr: so ccrcrs. THE 2 MACS DRUGSTORE ready won elections. We hope no candidates wlll have to go beyond hillbilly speeches to lilllbllly music. sonner My logo] llke a spring among the l Whose brimming WBLCIS m8)‘ 210D But pouraiiitgnlgnent through the 149 Grout George Slim! ways that w.nd Mall 0rd!" Rlwl" 7mm” Attention. i WAS FATAL FEAST c adl n Press) Juizirurginvtminaiaa-Ten mm- hers of a. marriage DBTW l" 3°“ ‘Biiliti dled of Cholera after the wedding breakfast. DIl-‘FICULT FIRST-AID wn to“? garden; there thegrose Its iieétar; there a tall white llly Nlghtbwxtlg. anointing o! two lovers. Dumb. deaf of body. aplrlt. and of mln From breathless blendlng of far- sundered wills. Long ere mv love bad reached you, hard I strove To send its torrent through the barren fields; _ I wantted you, the llllecl treasure- (By The Canadian PM!) THORPE BAY, EnglancL-Crawl}; m“ on hands and . knees tthmulro sewer 0191118- DT- J-Gtwe‘ ‘an “gen first-aid to two men. ratmeo: t sides of i; trench collapsed- 9 ° the men died- rove _ or innocence, whose dear possession‘ y e Immortal izladness w my heat-t a nows - How you surpass the llly and the] rose. _. -R.dbe11 Not-wood. Professional Cards ll. F. ARBIIIBALD Chartered Accountant I10 Richmond Street REAPPOINTED IIABITANT MANAGER MONTREAL. July 2'I-(CP)- Presldent Ernest. Savard of Cana- dlens of tthe National Hockey League chose one of the warmest. days of the summer todav to an- nounce that. Cecil Hart bad been re-avvolnted l-labltant manager for Fhono l7. P. 0. B0! 13- another two ylears. Hart has been with the club eight seasons and has landed lt in the playoffs everv YEA)’. McLeod 6. Bentley ‘ w. a. BENTLELLC. .I. A. BENTLEY. u. c. ,,,..,°~..‘- ““il’r.f.‘.‘i..‘;‘".l’t.- g1] " ' . “Molina: ro 110w Phone a 10-22 _n 1-22. Bell 6» Mathieson out n. t. minim-l. l-l-li I‘ n‘ Barristers and Sollclton l ' mourn: T0 LOAN l ' cgmgron Block, c~ latlelowll-P-ll Mactiuigan as. Irainor 1:. iu outotw to c. 01.1111? Tlmmoli. B. A. Mr. Merchant We understand that you are selling up-to-date mer- chandise, manufactured by modern methods, and MARK C. ST. supplying the demands of the present day public. Ofllce: Over Provincial Bill. 1 kichmond_h‘t.ljocli_Qhrl-l'l°flfflf= Palmer 61- Haslam B. .I. PALMER. K. C. . A. .I. HASLAM. B.A., LLJL , BABBISTER, ETC. i Bonk of Nova Scotla Chamber! Charlottetown. l‘. E. .I. MONEY T0 s0 ‘n. F. mouse, B-At K. c. N OTARY 8w. BARRISTER. SOLICITOB BIHI_BIIIIGIIIII. Chltrloltetoll g compare ln this G IS AN ESSENTIAL YOUR CUSTOMERS DING NEW FASHIONS, MATERIALS, NEW Cutcliffe 8. Andrews RAL DIRECTORS "fin EMBALMERS l Hunter River and Brmdllblllfi- Dg;and__Nlght_ Serving: Well Drilling. Communicate with ‘Trask Well 00., Ltd. Vaughan H. Groom, Summerside l Manager for P. E. Island information about IIPER FRVIGE IT WILL soon BE EXHIBITION l TIME BUT ANY TIME IS THE RIGHT TIME TO BUY A GOOD TOBACCO. YOU CAN'T DO BETTER THAN STICK TO THE OLD FAVORITE. HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING Manufactured by