“" *-~/---~=.--@__.¢@.,»m_ PAGE FOUR THE O HAR LOTT ETOWN GUARDIAN lllurning Daily tl-uurldcd 11537) President, Lieut.-(‘ul. W. (‘lwter S. McLllru Vic.- Preslllt-ttl, J. R. Bllfllltl!» l‘..l.l. Secretary, Lit-uL-Cul. D. A. Marlilnnon, 0.5.0. Editor and blanaging lhreclor, J. It. Burnett, FJ Associate litlitur. Frank “alker - st IHCIHPIION RATES $5.00 per year lin atlvanvel delivered to (lty. $1.00 per yvar tin advance; tnailed lo l’. E. bland $5.00 per )v.lr lll] atlvanve. lnalleu to Lunada and U.S blulnhers Audit Bureau of Cirvulalious "The Strongest Jlenlory is Weaker Ulall the ll cake-st Ink." i131... . .._ >7; 'r1'1~ sun’, OCTOBER ‘Z5, 193B. ll 1i 5.1.1.“... t. .\lr. ll. _l. l‘ 1.11:1 :11 .\l.l‘. for Iluron Norlil, v.1.» - . 1- .1 lhi~ l'I'4)\‘lll\‘t‘, writes ;l.l».-u1 u.‘ iv tll- i... .:1:.. >111‘ in :1 >1)lIlL‘\\'ll-'ll pat- roni/i: f; 11‘ ". 1'11"}: 1p~ :1 lotigrl‘ stav. and a l1l<1l't‘ . . y oi tln- .i11<-~1i..11~t he under- lni. ~ ' 1.1.1131 12:11.1 rt-ultvd in :1 more suuU 1.; U. l-‘..1' !£.‘\lt‘_ out‘ can only 1111.1. .'\l:' llllllixr our ilariia~ 1.1.1.1..“ ~1 1.1 3-111‘ 111.-111l.c1's of the ll.- -1 1 ' ' - "d. t. " .\‘-.11.'1!.>rs 1s "too 1 \~ _; . 111i 11..~ uivcn public- . -1' - w- .1 1.111.111! 11 ma; into the . 7 " - ' ' lwiilt. 11.11 the rvasotl _ ~ .' r11 l't*p1‘l-~1‘1l1.'l- - - ‘.1 int .\ct. ‘.1 i‘. - l l.:.~.".11'l vilt-cketl it _i,.. 1' 1' ~ . \\.- givl- tlll: ls- l - ~ ‘ s pcr capita vc ill the Do- lltilclllllllll hasn't . . 1' l’. .\lcl111_vrc l . lrians 1m this .1.-.1. l._v 1'rt~1nier . wuisioll, in which ..l.11.1>t l‘ltllC\ll\>ll5— ' . - lidlvzlrtl Island ll. ailiuioll 'l‘re.'1.<ur_\', y :~.'~ 1.. the other 1'1‘..- .. z". ‘2111- b.1111 l1ct1t-t‘—— 1 .; 1 1:41.11... Lila-val 1110111- 1.1-7.1". commitiillg him- .1 s 11*". our Island far- trcd from high taxa- . . . 1.. . 411'. profit.1l1‘._v have cou- sull...'. 3':- "1..\.:\:.-l 1.1 the 1.'....~<-1l Com- i. ‘ {r1 which the fnlltnvitlg :1 The l‘ro\inct‘ has ex- " . 1 ".115 of raising a pro- \\<1l‘ll\ oi criti¢<_ stic- ‘ - l‘1"ovi11v.; have lax- ell .1 c . - 1111.1 il1la11gil.~lv. It will be I‘ ‘ '.-~ 1‘~111l.vr null variety 0f pro- l ' * i vnvc ls t111t1~u.'tll_v great, ' ncl: of taxation our r, and our scale of . - , ..._,-~-‘ - mr l"r .14 zlrc rvad widely in \\’.--tvr11 Lanatla, '1' Liln-ral a11- ' concep- s lli<:1<l\'.111t- 111w from his 1.. .1. ~ 1 -. v. -~v duty it 1111s v. ..- ;.1'...\~.rd 111th the fullest in- “kak ls Miserable" " l l1 lit? h‘ 1 1 v _ l ‘ f‘ '7 gully News, pub- lhl‘ :1 .\»c1t-ty 0f the Leil- " nnietecnlh as- r~~4 i“ .- .' 1.. ..~,1'.:11c's ‘ . ~ "' .1 1.1.6:. Ilealiug with af- ' urts l’.\l1l'(‘.~<('(l that a "1 .11. arrl- a conference \l~o. fllt'llll)(‘I‘S were any opportunity to . pztitl to an 5nd," r..1..i.l<.r.'1tio1t of Far v..~ul.l 111.11; as if som¢_ 11:1» .'lli(’ill‘,lll‘ll, foi- ii i5 *1‘ Fl wqrvol to invoke article »l‘1" ' 1' ‘ '1 '1' -. of China." _ l1 "l " - .- 1.. do with the MlWPliCTIllOTI l ' s. t-wrzlv-tly desires. :l~\.111hl_-'5 action, it is t helpful for that sorelv- - -.=~" flour: was to assure l..~.;ut- 111:1‘. it was free to ' 111"1~1lrr-~ provided for 1"‘ c111 be no “co-c-rdinat- l” ' ' ~ --.1t such lnt-slsttrcs," how- '_,“__ x . _ ..,': ‘.1 'l;:.’. rll elements of co- ...~v<\~~nr_v were not yet -, U,- "lT" '- i u 1e I . ‘ ~ ~ u. m lyircn. however, that "China, 71 "' 1* WI _ ‘ I viauule against the invader T(l§lvl‘~ ., i:|4\r"= 1.11 l.;"..l ‘loft-ti ‘Itfeviougy-‘t dpclared v .1 1.1111‘ 11- l» 1.11m‘. l, has the right to l” ‘ "llvlilgf .111" mi of other HIPIIIlJCTS of the lA'.'lL't'1' " l 1 ‘I? 1'1 dill is‘ not. unfortunately, the +11‘. 1. ~ w wtzuq it. ‘.111 consciences “Tr” “i” I i‘» "V1" ‘ of n-urcl “lllfll Fl -‘ll""lll‘ 1' l" 1 -' 111-l llt‘ :1]"l>1etl. which wot: ll 1" ~ . . 11'.“ . t:.l~..~1. lllort‘ efftrtiyg by brunt; ‘ 7 -. _‘_ Lilla rnliun And The \Vesl lull‘ z‘ 1:- -s 11p r11. of a 1"1...:.l con- vention o: 1' li‘T.1l1.'l l.i".r'.l .\~~ <i..lio11 at \Vi11ni|~ 1'11 l\".1.g'~ l"‘..11'-'. ~lllilllyrlpr§ IIPPPIV‘ 1'- '" l" ‘ .11‘. of 11111111. The "Wlllli" i \\<-~l1‘rn I.il.- Frill‘ <""‘- . 1 » lln-y tlvlllflllfl shall hv s .1 7.1.11; ll. lin- liu-l of "the lliiii. 11hr; i.u.‘~.~r 1.1‘ 11.11. " ll...‘ 1., tin-v ll ivv-valc tt1t1i11g..il :13? ‘l... 111-H1'l-f<.‘l<lll.'\'ll1r\ mi]- lPtt fi1.\.:1'"11"‘. l t"‘ll\' ti" ll-lt-uafl-s rtvnrll- lll/ll‘ ill.‘ ' I ll I f .1 lT-iillllon i3] 1‘l'§_i]]Lr UHF ‘irhult- 11:." ' 1.1-1.1 HUI/ll‘ tta-xtv would rt-ull 1. “t. " 1'. ~11 1.» ?.\.I~ l..:-.l.l1.‘...) l“. ihc ,1 1,1. ‘. ll y ll». llil'll‘_llll illdll‘ xu-Iqiflrt . tin ~11. 11 of 1111* |\l't ~vl1t l-hrlr pt r (‘rm lax )2’! i1l1]1.1:‘l~_ Tlnsl- dit-lloptticllls, ~‘1_\\ lll‘ Fr.‘ r luai- Q.».-.-.~.l. o". how great a gulf .~.l- .1:at<~ \\'c_<-l tern Liberalism from the Eastern section of the party on the tariff question, aild also how big a problem that (ptestiozl presents to tl1e King Min- istry. Thc origin of this schism is not far to seek. The Canadian Liberal party ltas gradual- ly shifted its old time free trade ilosition to a point not far removed, if at all, from the pro- tectionist policy of Conservatism, but this ad- vance has not been uniform across the D01nin- ion, and \\'estern Liberals in particul: ' still ad— hcre, lnore or less tetlaciottsly to the fiscal prin- ciples 0f their fathers. It is highl_v improbable that the new reci- procity pact with the United States will af- fect greatly or even appreciably’ the gcitcral Can- adiarl tariff structure as it has ex"led for the t1ast dozen years. Events are conspiring to des- troy the low tariff illusions of the remaining free trade element on the Prairies. \\'hc-n this disillusionment finall_\' takes place, there will he a serious break in the solidarity of Lianadiztn Libcralisln. and the time may then strike for new party alignments in the field of Federal politics. I Editorial Notes 1" Chaucer died. 1400; Aginconrt, 1415; Mac- aulay‘ horn, 1800; Balaclava, 1854. ' ' n. a u. .1. Iihey have been ltnving a cottplc of days of snow in Northern Qucbec. >1. x 1. a. According to the (fanadizu. Medical Associa- tion 400 doctors graduate catch _\'L‘Zl1' and only 300 are absorbed into the professioil. \\'here do the other 10o g...‘ v v v v v The improvemt-nl of the \\'alcr Front before the advent of 'l"ht~ir Alajt-sties is a worth while undertaking. tlwngh it tnight be advisable to leave some work for the COll>‘(‘1'\'£tll\'L‘s when they come into power after next election. >r >t >1. \\'ith regard to the proposed supervised play- _L'TOllll(l for Charlotletluvn, the citizens will ltavc to decide, say’ by special rcfcrcndunl, before the City CUllllCll can agree lo t1ntlerlakt~ the expvlnli- lure necessary \\'hcn this nlatu-r was prcviotis- 1y at issue a sting \\':1.= slrtlck, uluclt lnay still l1zlvc to he contended with. viz. 511111111)" open- ilttf. Previously it was clailned r1111: stich play- grounds to he of much good should he opt-n on Funday from noon t0 l) p.111. >1 >1. >1. v Dr. Eduard Belles. fortucr President of Czechoslovakia, has accepted the invitation 1t. llt'COl'|I€ a visiting professor at the L”1li\'ersil_v of Chicago. It is expected that 11c will lecture on democratic inslilttlions. l‘rt~<illent Rolvcrt .\I. llutchins said that it was tiucevlail. \\'ll\'ll Dr, Bones would arrive. The invitation to join tho university faculty Ava ent to him on Oct. 8 lllr°ll§ll M1‘. \\'llbur Carr, 1' Q. ;\111l1:1s>:.d.11' to Czechoslovakia. Dr. lll-nus” rvllltlllcrzttioll will come from the (“ltarles R. \\‘:11_1rvcu Foundation. set up to encourage the study of .~\111e1‘ican in~ stttultoils. ‘l!!! The first cattlious venture by the staid Ilritish Broadcasting Covporatioll into .<u11d:1_v broad- casting of dance music brought a quick decision by the I.ord‘s Day tlllservanve Society to “pro- test with every nvrvt- and fihrc of our religious conviction." illf. ll. ll. Alartin, sccrvlztrv of the society’, calll-d the twenty miuult-s of ll-llllll- ficd lll” Ill fllllrvlldillit- an “inllt-f. n~il>lt- and dc- lllorablt‘ dest-crzllion 0f the Salvhath." The l’..l’.. (I, a government tnonopolyg put Charlie Kunz and his baud on the air at 11.45 a.m. without calling it a dance program. The orchestra avoid- ed crooning and extreme jazz. lintil now lhc BJLC. always had clung to classical lllllr-lt’, if any, on Sundays. a. n. a a Following are the final returns of a New York survey of reaction l0 the Munich agree- menl: Do you believe that England and Frame did the best thing in giving in to Gerlnatly instead of going to war? Yes 59 per cent No 41 per cent Do you think that Germany's demand for the annexation of the Sudeten (icrman areas in Czechoslovakia was justified? Yes 23 per cent No 77 per cent Do you think that this settlement (agreed to by Fnglarld, France, Italy and Gcrnlzlny") will result in peace for a number of ycars or in a greater possibility of war? Peace 40 per cent .. War 60 per cent Do you think the colonies taken from Ger- many after “lorld \\'t\r by Ihlgland, France and japan should be given hack? Yes ._... 22 per cent No .,._ 78 per mil a n. >0: The death of Mr. E. C. Segar, the corres- pondence-school cartoonist who created Pop- cye the Sailor, will not onlylhring grief to all spinach lovers, but reveals the fact that I’op- eye, despite his brawn, was only 8 years old, having walked into the strip which made his fortune almost by accident in I930. In the past these comic characters, like the retainers of As- syrian kings, died and were buried with their creators, but Popeye, as a valuable personal pro- perty in his own right, will continue his career probably for many years. Front llls ]]t*\\'§p;|p(-r5 Popeye graduated into the lnovies, where he bvcalnc the l’aul llunyal. of the screen, just as Mickey Blouse is its l)'.'\l'l.'lf_{llllll. lfivpcvl-‘s onlv food. so far as an_vl>oll_v l\'lll1\\'s_ i; ',<,,i,,,qi~1i_ thontyh his friend _l. “Q-llintglon \\'i1.1pv has a deplorable marlin for hrnnhnrgt-rs. vb. Pop- r‘_vt~'s spinach, consumed directly from the can, 1s the nlore powerful nonrislnnent of the lwo. enabling him to lick ton linll-s his weight in dlvuann.» F0 grateful for this propngalida on lrt-italf’ of the dark-green vegetable is (frvstal Lily, livxils. spinach-raising ccutrt- of the coun- try, that :1 statue of l’npr-_vc is now the town's chief lnouunlcnl. lhipcyc grew lnellow with age, for lllH-lllvrs complained originally in 50g“, [lint Iht“=a1lorn1a11's pttgllllciollsncss was constantly‘ lvlliluru 1l1(‘ll' sons into battle. Thcllccforlh Pop- IVH‘ still vonlnntvd to fight, bllt never just fm- ‘iu- flu. of 1l‘:1_11rl zllvvzlvs in a good cause. 'l'h:1t llus 11111 not llljllfl‘ his ywpularity is attested by lll!‘ if!" that today more than six hundred trade- "l“rl\"”l "Fllflfs. from pencils to sweaters, are H-‘Hltvll after him. l11cidv11l:1ll_v, Popeye did l"'*'l'_\' “Tll by .\Ir. Fvgnr, mo, having boost-d NOTES BY THE WAY It ls not too curly to remind motavlsts that closed cars and closed garages often bring with them the perll of carbon monox- ide poisoning, qulte freqpfntly with THE CI-IARLOTTETOWNWGUARDIAN - OCTOBER PUBLIC FORUM Thll column ll Opel for the dllcululou by currclpouleutl o! quentloul o! lnlercll. Tho Chur- lotto nu Guurdlnn doe: not le- oulurlly emlurn lho lwluloul of unrrupondonlr. fatal results unless or» and fresh air are promptly at hand. — Brockvllle Recorder and Times. That there are radical students and radical professors in Canadlatt universities ls beyond dlspute. If there were not, Canada would be unlque among all demoncratlc countries. In the Brltlsh Isles, the universities . are, comparatively speaking, infested wlth Labour partisans. Sociallsts and the like, and perhaps a few genuine Com- munists But whoever hears of Britain trembling when this well known and universally admltted fact ls brought to public notlce?-— Ottawa Citizen. Indicative of the perturbation caused throughout the world by the conditions of affairs ln Europe. ll stated that, Greenland ls moving away from that confluent at the rate of titty feet. per annum. -Toronl.o Tel 1mm Germany ls l1 Fascist nation Mexico approaches Communism. Mexico CODfISCZlIEG without com- pensation the Mexican oll holdtn s of American and British Cllplta. Now Alexico is trading this Oll to Germany in direct; barter for newsprint, electric goods and other products whirl. she formerly botlgltL off the United Slues and the British Etnplrv Mexico ls ntuotial- ing with llalv, atmther FllSClSl; nation, to trade petroleum for rzuvon thread. —Saturday Evening Post. , A eampaigxt against noises in blg and small cities ls starting in many parts of the world. human beings finding lt too Efvfll R filfflln on their nervous snlr-nls. There was a time when Hill-wt‘ was con- sidered s_v11on_vn1o11.< \\'l1l1 progress. Now it is consul. red t1 relic of antltitlitv which st-rvcs no useful purpose. The strain and stress of life have made hunmnity" a bundle of nerves. People fly off at a laiuzr-nt at the least interrttplion to their regular trinn of thought, and some are thrown into hy- sterics by any unexpected and un- connnon nuiso-Clluthflnt News. The present Klng has been here before. In the year 1913, when he was still a mldshlpmalt and Prince Albert. no pasled down the river one morning aboard one of the R. x O. steamers which paused at Brockvllle. A small crowd was in waiting at. the wharf to greet him. The Prince opened u door leading to the deck. saw the people on the wharf and. with characteristic shyness, immediate- I_v retreated, He will 11ol get off so lightly in the way of a pllbllt! au- penrance if no comes here next your. -Brockville Recorder and ’l'i11n:s. lteptirts have been received of "five cw beaver dams along the Ranger Lake road" and there are indications that beaver are coming hark in other parts of the district 11:; vvclh That is an encouragtng dcvolop111cnt, but if it 1s to con- tinue and if the beaver ls to be brought back to its oltl importance in the et-onolny of Northern On- tarlo strict protective ntcasures are essential. The Ontario Depart- ment. has shown an active interest ln this l)l‘Ob_l(‘lll latterly and 1f 1t and its officers are given real public support the illegal slaugh- ter of these valuable fur-bearing aninmls will be given a severe CIIIJClL-Sfltlll Ste. Marie Star. complalns that hlm down. but not runny ever thought. of tying clown their house I11 a little vll- lage in Cape Breton. Nova Scotla. ltowcvcv, that's Just what. the householders do. Their houses are built on a high plateau overlook- ing the coast. between Cheticamp A man often hls house ties and Margaree, where the wind blows so powerfully that 1t has carried houses right. off their foundations. To keep thelr homes from blowing away the owners now zmcltor them down with n. cable slung over the roof and fastened securely to the ground. ——Chrlstlan Science Monitor. Where can you match me mighty muslc of their names?- The ,Monongahelu, the Colorado, the R10 Grands, the Columbia, the Tennessee, the Hudson (Sweet. Thinnest); the Kennebec, the RflppBhEllIlIOCk, the Delaware, the Penobscot, the Wabash, the Chesa- peake. the Swannanou, the Indian River, the Niagara River (Sweet Aftolu); the 5t. Lawrence, the Susequchatlna, the Tomblgbee, the Namunulu, the French Broad, the Chattahoochee, the Arizona, and a few of their princely names, these are a few of their great, proud. glittering names, fll. for the nntnetlsc and lonely land that. they inhabit. Oh, ’I‘ibcr! Father Tlberl Youkl only be a suckling ln that mighty land! And as for you, sweet Thames, flow gently till I end my song; llow gently, gentle Thames, be well behaved, sweet 'l'lllllll€S, speak softly and politely, little Thames, flow gently tlll I end my song-Jfhomus Wolfe ln "Of Time and the River" Long idleness, broken only by the number of hours each month the city calls them out. to "work oll relief," has resulted ln physi- cal and spiritual deteriorlatton. 'l‘l1c National. Elnployment. Com- nnsiaon recognized the extent of llns collapse 1n tnorale, and classi- fied 101101 recipients lnto "employ- ablez." and "unumployablcs." What. ls true here, ls true both East. 11ml west. The governments have a large responsibility for creating 1111s huge mass ol uncmployables, little ot which ever will be absorb- etl by lll(lll..l.l'y. The dole system ls to blanle. Governments adopted the policy of direct. relief because it cost loss than work-for-wages. Now the country 1s paying for that mls- take. '1l1i.s docs not melm that clvlc zuinnnlstrntors must accept the situation suplnely. Every effort should be mnde to put those who can at. wot-lg If there are unscrup- ulous persons makltig rellef a rnckt-t, they should be weeded out’. by tln- inspectors employed tor that. purpose. But it would be most un- Just. t0 brnml all those on relief simply because some chlselers are ltvtng on the taxpayers. —Ed- montnn Journal. Presldenl. l-‘ranklln D. Roosevelt 1n his appeals u. I-lerr Hitler to stay 111s military hand so that Eumllfmfly be spared bloodshed, ls not only glvlng voice to his own eonvlctnns and hopes, but, l3 liv- mu up m fmnllv trndltlons. n was President 'I‘l1eodoro Roosevelt who hrolwlll. Russia 11nd Japan to see llll“ 1'11" 1| $100,001; salary besides his royaltioqigi,‘ and w “mum. m‘ adv,“ “FREEDOM 0F SPEECH" AND "PROHIBITION" sm-r became interested ln the J. W_ A. Nicholson controversy only 0n reading his remarkable state- meng-“The present government's handling of the liquor question ls neither much worse nor much better than that of lts predecessor.’ Where does he get his informa- tion or upon what ground of evl~ deuce does he vault headlong lnto this conclusion which has neither dladcvw nor substance? Can he pro- duce a solitary fact. or figure to s t his illusion? n matter of fact, and in every Vestige of court stutisflcs and vls- lble evidence I challenge hlm to Olnt. to a. single partllcll of efflc- ency to compare the prrsenl. apol- Ogv for performance with the rec- ord of the Macmillan Government whlch he so fllppimtly refers to. Except ln the matter of revenue, for rum-selling pays some big pro- fits. there is no room for compari- son: the evldence is all atzainst. the present sysem. Even here we are without figures on which to com- pute, for. unlike the "predecessor", he government refuse to disclose the salient facts. no stronger evl- dence being needed to convince the sensible render tha‘ the record is too daumitltz, to puvnut uubllorltioit and too shameful to disclose their hand. If it; were otherwise docs any sane person bellvc that with a pride of aocomplifsllrvlellt. and jubil- tmt with success. and 1n lhelr star- vation dearth of vole cinching 11w- paglmda, their platforlns and con- ventlons would nut resound 1n paeans of self glorification, and their ress headlines stand 1n bold out’- lnes in boast and praise of their promised 100 pcnccn l-nforcement? It is because they have lwlllllltl good to offer, no plausible excuse to give lbw their spokesmen and press are silent as the grave. “flint of magistrates. and police records as given throuul. the press? These are evidences which cannot be hid. Who‘ of 1hr: drunks reeling through the streets. loo vast ln number for our llnntctl nohcc force to (rather thcnt all 1n, which clonot figure in the rcccrds of convictrons or dismissals? What ol the visible cuttings of rum on an unprececlen - ed scale to the government distri- butors of booze? All these thintzs were ‘clean and above beard under tlu-‘hrlo govern- ment. Receltvs. vxpcndit-ur . quan- tities and volume of liquors bought and sold were always laid before the public. and without reserva- 1.1011. Does Mr. Nicholson remember that, shameful cplsouc of a year or more ago. when a formidable 1111111- ber of the stnnmonvd walked out of the magistrntt-‘s courts 1n Prince County, free of all charges. because 0f the character of the ilnpartctl detectives on he job. and has he forgotten the tragedy that was so arlroltlv hustled the victims bodv still and l ' sen’. qtuctlv to Montreal. C. O. l 11d he facts hidden not murh unl 0 the vvil of secrecy that bhlnklvs #0 11111911 0i prchllbllioii methods which he so Sebks to excuse? 'I‘ht*r.> 1111s ll0ll0vfif that, nor of Present day detective court dcfaccmcn s 111 tho records of the "prcclccessot" tl()\'t‘l'lll"llt‘lll. I tmlte no 01.11111 ol onforcclneut which I would call sufficimv under the lat:- or pvt-conning (qovernmctrts. There was room for a urcater offic- lencv. Yet when 1 sec statements so rantloln. and so wide of the tnnrk. as those quoted abovt‘. I Hm consraincd to sf\_\' poor as it may have been. that the lcnlpcrance rec- ord of the Jute tzovernnlent was as far altcad ln straiflhtforwartlness and efficiency. us davlluht ls in ad- vance of nluht._An<l ll was at least clean and tin-hidden front the pub- llc sight. and not secreted fromthe judgment of the people I gm, S11‘. eta. I.E\VIS I’. TANTON To The Beldings (Hamilton SpectalOr About the nlettticst germ on earth l: said to have been "isolated." By no means the most deadly germ, lt is true, for not; the slight- est. aura of menacing nobility; sur- rounds lts function. N0 Pasteur wlll be given the plaudits of pos- terity for lbs discovery; no head- lines will herald its ebldemlc potentialities, and no rcglmented human endeavour will (lrlve mo]- estlcallv for its extinction, Yet it ls the germ that has pro- bably caused the urealost nnls- once to human beings since the Aryans moved into western Eur- ope. It has thrown clouds over rising generations of the young, and made front line troops think up excuses for avoiding a show- down with lt. It makes lmy fvvcr seem like nothlnt! 11ml measles look affable. It has transforlnetl brave men lnlo shaklntr cowards, and has made otherwise well-meaning men who combat lt looks like twres out of the shades. It ls sullen. vlndlctlve and persistent. It l5 no hstildmalltlen of death. vet lt ls a un verso ln- rlck. I ls 9 ti"? dlRs 3.01.5.1 ln tdethtth germ e5. they say lt n found, woe betlde those discoveries an]? they are fooling us or lying, 01v; some embelllspmonl to 11mi- name, 7%}! All?’ will be remembered as e er mvln colors (v 001cm“ ncrge n1 ink-nutty o1- lng. dentist and 111's 111011....- Ltltelllfi L. J’. Beldlna‘, physlplan a 11C ed to the Uttltrd Stat-S at n. .. Rte the allowed lsolalllorfflsilgngcff lZPrm that causes tooth I demv which. they snv. ls nurtured l‘ foods made from corerllw mom“ wheat, corn and oats Th“ y menlnllon of thcsv foods can.”- flflld ln the saliva llthov sag/eta Which attacks the tooth cna-mg-l‘ The zerm can be eliminated m...‘ 81W‘ 11v nrocr-s-lnlz tho corral Naturalv. ll, ls loo mart‘. to be m"? 9f anyllllnll. Amateur scum,“ lr-ls mllzhl. t» l "It" the Esklmiivislcgavi: lath“ ball: teeth ln the world on their i-uQ-i, of Whfl-lt‘ and seal blubber and 12;’..“?‘.'.‘.l‘.°.’“.""g'°" d.» o. But thl. l 11 9n“, r "lsceivri/ i»! riiiluné and Belcllnl; Mllke the Miiii-igi-h prlllltgecment. -seem.s too good u, be ablllty of’ c lll 11.1 exhaustive viiarlifre Tn lflst cftilytiflig result was the Treaty of Ports. mouth (New Hampshlrel, slgnm in 1905. Theodore extened his good THE FIGHTING OR DEFENSIVE FORCES OF THE BODY Nose specialists tell us that l! the llnlng of the nose ls 1n a healthy condltlou. lt can prevent harmful orgunlams ln the utr from entering the body and set- mocous lining can at rld of a group of organisms rom the sys- tem and be ready for u. new lot wlthln ten mlnutes. Slmllarly other tissues 1n the body and the blood itself, by pultlng up a dally fight against various organism! gradually gel. the mastery over these orlzanlsnxs. ‘fhetlssues and blood become immune" or proof against the ailments these vurlous organlsms would set: up 1n the body lf there were no resistance to them. “Most of the tissues of a healthy incllvidual have an immunity or can withstand the ntalorlty of organisms and destroy them when they gnln entrance to the system. Should such organisms flnd loulz- ment. ln the tissues, they frequent- 1_v prove harmless to the individual. Even when they enter the blood stream both the organisms and the poisons they make usually are rapidly destroyed by the blood." Prof. Myer Solis-Cohen, Unl- varsity of Pennsylvania Graduate school of Medicine, as uesl: edllor of Medical World. tela us that; this defensive power of the tissues and the blood may contlnue 1n- lact for years. Thls defensive power of the body may be lost. when the invading organlsms are cxcesslve ln number or become ln- creased ln their power to destroy tissue. or when the lndlvlduars local or general resistance ls reduc- ed or broken down completely through exposure, physical or mental fatigue, inadequate diet, bad lwgivne, n new lnfectlon. or n runcltnvn condttlon. Thus the organism which has been resting harmlessly ln the body begins to nvoulrc tho nbllllv to cttu=e dam- age and infection, because the bodvs ftghtlng or defensive forces hnvr- been weakened. The point then ls that even l! we are tn good condition physical- lv. there may be certaln ortzanlsms that can set; up trouble ln the body because our defensive forces have not had this particular organism to fight. and overcome up to this time. But even should they attack us. 1f we are in good nhvslcal con- rlltlon-henrt. lungs. kidneys. and (lluestlve system-and no other ln- fcction such us teeth, tonsils or sinus. ls present. we can usually put up a fltzht strong enough to overcome them. “Taking The Rap” (Sydney Post Record) Giving evidence at. Ottawa before Mr. Justice Davis, Royal Com- missioner who ls problng the Bren machine gun contract, Major-Gen- eral L. R. LaFlcqlte declared that. he look "the entire responsibility" for the deal with the John Inglis Compatly. “I was on sollcl ground ln every particular," he Wstlfiecl. "I took the responsibility and I would do the same thing again." even the forzmllty o! calling for garden, and then to go before a Yhl rap". lor the remltnm public orltl- clsm Mr. Iafleche surely lfles hln offlce with a nzeurtce. e envis- lons ll. 1n mch enormous proport- lons as to invest ft wlth pow-era that belong only to Mlnlsters of the Cmwn, and then only when those Mlnlsters act w‘ .h- 1n the authority conferred on them by Parliament. In flhlg cann pe comptiell: be rmltled tlng up diseases. Thls moist or mp_ but fall to make the publlc wonder why he is so eager to do so. SELLS INSURANCE young woman to venture into the north country 889m. Miss thinks the traders of ln the North West Temborles are alrl ht kind of to their attltu es, After that you get to like them a lot.“ sald Miss Slm- ard who came here from Montreal to take a positlon as saleswoman. up there, but. I got my share of lnsmnnce sales." Keep Mlnards in the home. * NGE PEKOE Commission and "take the the accred-fled mam‘? e take 51H But his noble gesture cannot worth, l. Ml‘. Iflflech O0 reams- IM- gauds that. that IN NORTH COUNTRY EDIWOITION, Oct. 24 — First as on insurance “Lucy" Pat Slmard tors mlners and the Ejellowltnlfe district oellent. I e . “Rough and ready fellows and i ; h untll you understand and m nd insurance mnd__ "There were a few male agens For Vitalitq alwaus use BRAHMIN A\r'OI§'V 25, 1938 -_....__~ TEA ‘ITHE THINGS THAT ARE ll EXCELLENT." 10m As we vvax older on this earth, Tlll many a. toy that charm“ ms us see Etnptled of beaul/y, stripped .01 Anid mean u dust and dead u Peflshed, shows Bometrecompehse the Fates hayg sen ; ‘Phrlce loveller shine the llllngg that. as , The things that are more ex. The grace of frlendshlp-mlnd 5M heart . Linked wit/h their fellow hem The gains of ucleuce, guts or m The sense of oneness with mu klnd; The Lhlrst to know and tinder. s A large and liberal discontent; ‘Iltese are the ZOOds tn life's rich hand, The things that are more ex. cellen . —Slr William Walsm, -o.... . ,3 out IENGLISII Introductory Offer! l-Lb. Can PASTE WAX and 1-01. Scratch Remover llldc than ugly lurulehu and nlclts ln furnlture null - l h (hi: n! woodwork w t w Serltch Remover lll workl likunngle! Get the fleneroul-llzed bottle with uell l-lb. tun o! flmulll Old Ellklllh Pute Wu MOPS and POLISHES MOPS 75c to $1.65 v POLISHES I 4 oz -2s.=, 12 02-500, Ouilrt-Sl .50 The ROOERS HARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED ._.._.- "The same thing" was the letttng of a contract without tender, to a selected concern not previously tn the business. for the manufaciure 0f_ 1,000 machine guns for the Do- minion Department of Defence. The precise expenditure involved 1s yet to be ascertained. but it will run lnto man mllltons of dollars. Genera LzFleches statement gives a curlous and startling turn to this whole transaction, other- wise rather remarkable 111 certain of its financial aspects. It ls surely something new under our system of representative government and mln- is erlal responslblllty to Parlia- ment, for an employee of one of the DGpMlm€nl.S,—G De uty Min- lstezg-lo arrun e on h awn for the spending o mllllons of’ the people's money, to do this wtthoul. Future. Canada was obscure. have followed has that faith wavered. MORTAGE CORPORATION Head Office... .Toronto Oflloel: Charlotte‘ , Btunmenlde, IFaith In Canada’s To lend money on Canadian real estate awn? back in 1855, when this Corporation was first established in business, required more than good judgment-it required faith. The future of Never in the years that erns the Canada Permanent policy today.“ i’ OANADA PERMANENT For loans In Prince Edward Island consult... HYNDMAN 8. DO. LTD. Montague It gov- Gnl "Ho! Alumni ll uuoo from lllgjfllhtfrngk to; brolnlh of u nu. l o em t ’ "muffs RAZ-MAH Cupluln ".2233; [RUM - undu- muztrurlzant 1...... s1 t.»1..w::»i1n:i"i't ATTIH] MA .......-... .0. Illve you trouble wlth your stomach. I! llu answer ll YB. then we ‘oak you to try e chokiu], whaulug, guplug IN Z O out treatment brinp utlnuu EVAN'S STOMACH MIXTURE EVLIII’! Stomach Mlxtun || 5 Dlvltlrlfptluu of Dr. L. B. Guatrlu. Dhtr mg m.” gtlzniltfaglllmenh peculiar h the We uk you onl to g n, m. will 1.. uetlgmlsa waft.“ results. PRICE PER. BOTTLE 850. -_-_i___ F MAC'S BLOOD FOOD 0r ul cl thl I. combilnuetlgf eapetnilmp 5.1.3 Able lu the treatment. of thooe wtlaere tlieir orlglln ls e . condition of Tillie s w! hllllly . ommeud Mun Blood Food for Ule treatment of rheumullnn and for thou “ho have lost thelr uppeme Mum Bl00d Food will pm" "lo reltoratlve. TRY I . rmcu of». ‘.38.?’ We wleh all our customers §°...Z.?°.‘.'..‘.-'1.'.i.2".="éi' $31.11.?! French Cull]; gqqp, now nu _ n, 1m A. S. Tulllell "r 49v oer Bottle u too hmmh" The Two Lin: Meets l" Prion. offlces tn arrest alnttphler: Frank. lln has acted to pfctllll. slaughter. -Monlrea1 Gazette, z mos Phone ill LET'S TALK TURKEY YOU CANT BEAT THE GOBBLERS FOR FLAVOR A N D GENERAL ALL - ROUND DINNER SATISFACTION AND AMONG CHEWING TOBACCOS HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST Has a S own mo. pteaellzaolngltallnx of its lasting Flavor is u"? bl! reason for its continued pop "larlty. Its a best. s e I l e r e v e r y where in the Pro. vlnce. - Manufactured by HIOKEY and NIOHOLSON CHARLOTTETOWN