When your ~, Children Ci)’ for It n» There is hardly a household that hasn't heard of Castorlai At_ least five million homes are never _wlthout it. If there are children in your family, there's almost dolly need 0f its comfort. And an night may find you very thankful t here's s. bottle ln the house. Just a few drops,_and that colic or constipation is relieved; or diarrhea. checked. A vegetable pro- duct; a llahy remedy meant for you folks. Cllstoria. is about the on? tiling you have ever heard iloctora advise giving to infants. Stronger medicines are dangerous to a tiny baby, however llnrnlli-ss they maybe to grown-ups. Good old" Casi-HUM Remember the nalne, and remember to buy it. lt may spare you a sleep- less, anxious night. It ls_ always ready, always safe to use; in emer- gencies, or for everyday ailments. An ilour of the duy or night that Baigy becomes frctful, or restless. Caetoria was never more popular with mothers than it is today. Every druggist has it. -Y CASTORIA ::An Oil without Alcohol-Some oils and many medicines have alco- hol as a prominent ingredient. A lilldicious mingling of six essential oils compose Dr. Thomas’ Eclectrlc Oil, and there ls no alcohol in lt, so that its effects are lasting. CITY SCHOOLS TUESDAY, Sept. 4th Carters Bookstore Always Ilcadquarters l0!‘ School Books and School Supplies A larxfl rmse i"! Wm" BOOKS, scalnalklans, EX- MOVEMENT ‘ PADS- INKS, PENCILS. BOOKS. the blsmt stuck l" have cvcr carried. - A“ SCHOOL BOOKS SDI“ at prices fixed b! PUBIJSH‘ EB, BIN] SCHOOL BOARD. Our BOOKSTORE 01w" each day till s 001.001: for School Onv-‘nlns Wt!“- Carter fa’ Co. Limited. THE [ifliiiillii iIWii iliiliiiililiii 84.50 DIP 16hr (In advance) /|n-lkd in (Innndn nnd Unltsd Status. alornlnl Dslli (founded 1881) $5.00 [or your (In advance) delivered. M-IE CHHHJOTTMOWN GUARDIAN Notesnbyftho. Way THERE an tzjtnlrm Liberal provincial governments still left, Quebec and Prince Edward Island,- _two out of nine. Of these two Que- Edlfor and llfnnnger-J. B. llnrne Presldcnb-W. Chester S. IeLnro. Secretary-Noni. Col. D. A. llncllnnon. I). S. 0 VIno-Presldent-J“ B.- Burnett. u. Asbnclln senor-u. '14. Cnrrls WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1928 OUR PRIDE. l ‘l THE Labor Day Parade was some- thing of which Charlottetown and a finer looking lot of animals has seldom been seen here or else- ed, not only by citizens, but by many strangers who witnessed it. Prince Edward Island has‘ always been celebrated for its horses, and Monday's display of horseflesh was one that will rcr‘vc the hopcs of ‘lose who are looking forward to a more extensive business in horse- llrccding, and an end to the import- ation of cheap horses from the West. We have always been able to raise good horses, but the mod- cm pursuit of cheapncss has in- duced too much importation of the unreliable cheap horses from the West. Let us raise our own horses and look after them as the Char- eral resources of the country are being unearthed and manufactured and the gospel of “Canada for the ls being preached and "my we“ be Pmud- This 15 959cm‘ believed in. This gospel is the only "HY ""9 °f the trlwkmelv“ hmsesthlng that can hold the immigrants Canadians" who comc here and can hold our . own Canadians. Tariffs and policies when The men “I59 I°°k9d m am‘ for the sake of party will never rc- buslnessllke, and altogether the par-‘ sun m any good m cal-lad,“ and u ade was one that was greatly admir-l 1s simply “mum; w find bushes,“ mcn who still cling to the idea that the more we import the lower will be thc cost-of living in this country provide work for its own p-cplc. -~—-—<0->-—-- AL. SMITH ON IIYPBOCIBSY Page. paign in the United States. will recall occurrences during the campaign preceding the last general election in this Province. The follow- ing is an extract:- lcttetown truckmen evidently do, with theirs. ' r The sports, also, on the Exhibi-i tlon grounds were most crcditablcd The happy spirit and real merry- making, cvcn during the keenest contests was something well worth while, and the good spirit prevail- ing among the contestants com- municated itself to the spectators, and the day was thoroughly enjoy- ed by all. {Oi-i CANADA'S TRADE. l-IE Hon. Mr. Forkc, Minister of Immigration and Colonization, in a recent speech referring to the unsatisfactory situation as regards immigration, said that if the British Immigrants do not come and re- main with us, it can't be helped. Why do they not come and why do they not remain with us, is the question which Canadians are ask- ing today, and thc reason is easily found. The Minister of Lands and For- ests in the Ontario Government at a recent meeting stated that during the past year, 1,000,000 tons of iron and steel and the products thereof, in forms such as are produced in Canada, were imported from thc United States. Had these commo- dities been manufactured at home scores of millions of dollars would have been kLpt in circulation in this country and profitable employ- ment provided fonlhousands Bf Canadians who arc now seeking em- ployment in the United States. The fabrication of this imported iron and steel in Canada would also have provided employment for the immi- grants who now come and find no- thing to do. Many of the immi- grants no doubt go on the land, but they are not all farmers who come, there are artisans and trades- men of a vcry desirable kind, who might bc induced to leave the con- gested countries of Northern Europe including Great Britain, and remain with us if there was work for them‘ to do. The importation of manu-, factored iron and steel is only one of the causes which have made a debacle of our immigration policy, For Weak Stomachs and have caused the continued exo- dus of our people. We are import- ing millions of dollars worth of other goods which should be manu- factured in Canada for which we have abundance of raw material and For loss of appetite, weak- or disordered stomach yo! need Evcnb Stonuch Mix- tnre. ' This ls s preparation that strengthens and tones np the entlrc dlrullvc system. strengths: the stomach and Improves the appetite. It has worked wonderful results in hundreds of cases and is en- dorsed by every one who ha! ever naed it. Try a bottle 35c. I The 2_Macs Drugstore _ an Great George camel P’ flail Orders Pmnptly y amuse. 1 ism the cure of our iiia may be in- definitely delayed. There is new; growing spirit of optimism throqhl W! Glnldl. vfppl everywhere have .1. . 11".!‘ .'i'“"d'."!.°.h“ ""1 the mln-_ the hunter! had very good luck. . which according to all the mics of good business should be anufac- turcd irl Canada. A curious and not creditable feature of the pre- sent situation is that Liberal speak- era and Liberal newspapers are dc. fending a low tariff policy which they cannot help knowing is detri- mental to Canada, and this for the sake of upholding a political party. This is the unfortunate part of it, and until there is a change in the tone of our present day Liberal- |was at both the National Conven- A New York newspaper man who tlons at Kansas City and Houston told the writer this summer that in both assemblages the delegates from states most emphatic in insisting on the maintenance intact of the Eighteenth Amendment and the Vol- stead Act, were those who gave most evidences of being pickled. At the Democratic convention at Houston, the group which gave the most evi- dences of sobriety and decorum was the Tammany Hall delegation. They may have been as thirsty as the rest but discipline had been strictly en- forced among them, whereas at least one of the prominent Middle Western Democrats who urged that nothing savoring of antipathy to the Eighteenth Amendment should get into the Democratic platform was so intoxicated that he could not finish his speech. It was the same at Kan- sas City. A great many of those who refused a hearing w‘ the vet- eran Republican Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia Unl- versity, and an advocate of the Canadian method of dealing with the liquor traffic, had obviously been "celebrating." Dr. Butler, the most intellectual of the delegates present, and the ‘one who had given the most sincere thought to the liquor problem, was squelched on a motion by an old gentleman whose sole claim to dis- tinction was that he was the son of General Neal Dow, a typical piece of hokum. The Republicans who snubbed Columbia's President must be rather uncomfortable now that Governor Al Smith has issued a let- ter of acceptance in complete agree- ment with the ideas of Dr. Butler. Prohibition in the United States has from the outset been organized hyp- ocrisv and Mr. Smit-fs flank deal- ing with it is the flrri uiieranc: of its kind by any candidate for public ofllce in the United States and both rcfrcshlng and courageous. Every observant man who has visited the larger United States ‘cities knows that places of illicit sale far uuia umber the saloons of the old days, even in the States like New York where at one time there was no restriction on the number of places legally entitled to sell liquor. \ EDITORIAL NOTES. The sports on Labor Day indi- cated very clearly ‘the absence ‘of commercialized professionalism. It was an afternoon of real sport for sport's sake, and friendly rivalry. The recent rains have checked harvesting operations somewhat, but the grain is almost all cut, al- though comparatively little of it has been housed. There is a bumper all- round crop and it will be well har- vested. What we need is a country that will IN a leading article on its front Toronto Saturday Night ideals with the Presidential cam,- The scenes depicted at the Conventions bec was the first to go “wet," and Prince Edward Island the last to re- main "dry"-—and not very dry at that. Drinking prohibitionists-and their name is legion-manage to get enough to moisten their drought from the vendor on script, or the bootlegger, or where the stuff is on tap. Llbcrsl propaganda would have us believe that Canada is prosperous from coast to coast, and, by impli- cation, that the cause of this abounding prosperity is" the King Government at Ottawa, assisted by the Saunders Government here and another in Quebec. How much have they clone to give prosperity to Can- ada? A succession of bountiful har- vests has been the fruitful source of much of the prosperity that pre- vails. Governments do not make the sun to shine or the rain and the dew to fall. Governments did not make the Canadian soil and climate what-they are. These are disposed and ordered by a Power that is above any earthly authority. Busy husbandmen, co-workers of Supreme Goodness, had also some humble share in the production of these bountles. They toiled in plow- ing and preparing the soil, in sowing ing the crop. What had the King Government to do with all this? Yet these foolish propagandlsts would have us believe the Governments at Ottawa and elsewhere had a prin- clpal share in producing good har- vests. Every old rooster in the land hops from his roost in‘ the morning, flaps his wings and crows to bring thc sun up, and then crows again when it rises. Perhaps the hens be- iievc he did it. Not less foolish are those persons who swallow the Lib- eral prosperity propaganda of the day. _i There is another lesson also in this succession of plentiful crops in Canada. 1t is fouFi in the story of Joseph in Egypt. The lesson is to treasure up in the years of plenty for the coming years that are pretty sure to follow. What are the King Government or the Saunders Gov- crnment doing in the way of such prudent preparation? Here our lo- cal administration are borrowing and spending on a scale of unpre- cedented extravagance. Ottawa is well-known places the seed, in cultivating and harvcst- l f ll lame: W. Barton. MD. A LONG LIFE AND A FULL LIFE Our insurance people icll us that less than five per cent of folks who reach the age of sixty-five are in a position to support themselves fln- an ially. I is naturally gratifying to see how civilized nations are attacking the problem of looking after elderly people. However the real truth of the matter lsthat we have more old peo- ple in proportion to the whole popu- lation than at any previous time. In India, we are told, the expecta- tion of life at the present time is not more than twenty-five years. “Life is hard, and the great major- ity ‘are cut off in infancy, in child- hood, or in early adult life." Few reach old age. But under conditions of Western civilisation, life is much more favor- able and large numbers survive to old age. Even in 1840 the expectation of life in England and America was forty. and to-day it is fifty eight. Half of the population born today may expect to reach the age of sixty six; and one quarter to reach the agc of seventy-seven. You can see then that the prob- lem of caring for the aged, calls for real statesmanshlp on the part of those in authority. Now my thought in speaking bout these elderly people is that the reason so many of them live t0 such an advanced age is because of the great advance that has been made in medicine. Some folks sit back and say that it is because the world is getting wiser; it is learning more about sanitation, about the benefits of personal hygiene, about the right quality and quantity of food we should eat, about the benefits of ex- ercise, the need for rest and sleep, the benefits of air and sunshine. Now this is all true but all these advances were made in and about medical olleges, departments of chemistry and physics, and the physiological laboratories of our universities. It is in these institutions, and by the bedside of patients, that all these things have been learned. However there is this important point to remember. If so many of us are likely to live to old age, why apt have it a full lift besides a long c. must be well. And to keep well you must Just watch those three essentials, sleep, sufficient .food and no more, and some daily exercise in the outdoors. This, with a yefiy examination by your family doctor so that be- ginning ailments may be prevented planning vast new expenditures in ship canals, the Hudson Bay route, its equipment and the building of new railways in the West. and in needless and costly embassies at Washington, Paris and far-off Jap- an. Prudent persons see the un- wisdom and folly of such a course. Our present rulers take it for grant- ed that next year shall be as this year, only much more abundant. The Labor Day holiday has come and gone, and now there is only Thanksgiving between us and Christmas. It has been a marvel- lous yeah-gloriously fine winter, mild, early spring, brilliant summer. and the prospects are for a delight- ful Fall. What other country can claim such an all-round flne climate as our own? The tourist trafllc has slumped dreadfully since the middle of Aug- ust. Up till then it was about the same as last year, but all of a sud- den thcre was a flop and only an occasional car crosses by the Hochelaga. The second half of the month used to be a bumper one for tourists. Wonder what has gon wrong? There ls hardly a better place for people to visit in the Fall than herc. Of course, the farmers are all busy, and the usual work of the year is again under way, but there is al- ways\plenty time to entertain visit- ors and enjoy their company. It will be a great pity if the province is go- ing to be sidetracked as a tourist centre in August and “eptember. Preparations should be made for the visit of the Inter-Parliamentary delegati due here about the first of next month. It will be a. great thing to leave a good impression up- on the minds of such important visitors, including as they do legis- lators from Great Britain, Austra- lia, Newlealand, South Africa, Irish Free States, Newfoundland, India. Southern Rhodesia and Malta. The schools re-opcncd yesterday, and great was the surprise of par- enta to find the School Supply sold out of certain books required by pupils. It is quite evident this coat- not say "I propose to show you why I did this." Say "purpose." cert. Accent noun meaning wilder- ness, and adjective on first syllable, noun moaning merit and verb on last syllable, tion; not all, nor aul. unchsste, shameless, indecorous, im- pure. won!) sunny: "use a word or properly treated, should give the full life. ~ iii’ vwoawwwocwwwc 0404+ Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee 6§-§—O-§§+O+§§4+44-O-O444+O44— Q. Who should be the first to re- ceive [LEWS of an engagement? A. The relatives. Q. Is ‘it obligatory to send a re- ply to an invitation to tea? A. Not if one intends to be pres- en . Q. Who should write the invita- tions to a child's party? . Tile most pleasant way is in have the child write them. i‘ WOI-iii O 6-0 0-90-00 O O0 iQ-Q-QCO-Q 044640- The Land We Love ~ . General James Murray Q. Who was General James Mur- ray? A. General James Murray is a famouse name in British-Canadian history. Whcn the treaty of Paris came into force in 1763 and the Government of Canada was chang- ed from a military to a mil one, General Murray was appointed Gov- ernor-General of Canada, making the nineteenth, counting from the eighteen under French rulc. He operated under an executive or ad- visory council and proved to be an able and wise administrator. Mur- ray Bay and River preserves his name in topograph. >++ow0+++0++oc+++c++co+u DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH n; W.L.Gordon “c-ww-o-woowco-nowcco WORDS OFTEN MIBUBED: Do O MIBPRONOUNOED: de- OFTIZN MISSPELLED: dcfalca- SYNONYMS; immodest, obscene, three tlmm and it is yours." Let us And a full life means that you I g But save it is truly won covered asbestos, mat. cleans the iron. scorch the iron cover. AINPUANEG BRING U-NUBUAL Worcester Smilflh of this eflty lilac lllflilllrlht a complaint agalimst the and the experiences xchanged re- mind one of the flsh stories which one hears from the occasional mn- Qflnlfl. Making" dlldhigflcg for exaggeration, it wou Duck shooting began on Saturday ‘upped that the ly department is a white elephant, and should be got rid of without un- necessa y daisy. When atablished, it served a good and valuable pur- pose, enabling parents toget school books at a cheap rate, and without delay. Now parents pay as much at w our vooablulsry by master one word esc day. Tiods ‘s word: IRONY; the use of wordsyto signify the opposite of what they" would usually sxprem. ‘There was i 'll -t MGM school Supply as st ordinary M»- M We wwisrn-ll ,7 h .. . . ..-l.. n». . r entail moi Wcmceoter Alinpont, ma, fl oou-nt mend alflphnes to my over and a trace of irony in his vt." tbcpvwsnt them. ‘ - ' W In 10c and 15c packages O4+04+§4§§+O04QO4§4444§§ Dfaiiy Selections FOR ‘ Guardian Readers ‘HO-Ofififififi-Ofifififibfi-OHQ-OO- September 5, 1928 I A CLEAR, JUDGMENT—Wisdom strengtheneth thc wise more than ten mighty men which are in the clty.-—Ecc. 7:19. seek Thy PRAYER-Lord, we counsel and Thy wisdom. THE BETTER WAY It is better to lose with a conscience clean Than win with a trick unfair; It is better to fall and to know you've been ‘ Whatever the prize was, square Than to claim the Joy of thc far- oil goal And the cheers of the standers by, And to know down dcep in your in- most soul A cheat you must live and die- Who wins by trick may take the prize, And at first he may think it sweet, But many a day in the future lies When he'll wish he had met defeat. For the man who lost shall be glad at heart - And walk with his head up high, While the conqueror knows he must play the part Of a cheat and a living lie. ihc prize seems fair when the fight is on, , You will hate thc things when the crowds arc gone, For it stands for a false deed done. And it's better you never should reach your goal Than ever success to buy At the price of knowing down in your soul That glory is all a lie. *OJ-Q'O—Q-OCQ-O-O40-OO4-O-O-FOVQ 04% illoussl-loto SCRAP BOOK I nosznnl Lée +Hc+c¢ooo++o++o+c~o»oc¢o Children's stockings Stockings which are too short in tile foot are very often the cause of lngrowing toenails. See that both stockings and shoes are not too short. Ironing IIlnt For an ironing stand use a wire- It not only but it will not Preventing Mold On Jlelly St. Lawrence through Quebec and Fragrant! FILL up your pipe with Rosebud Cut Plug, if you want a thor- oughly enjoyable smoke. . Like its namesake- Rosebud is delightfully! fragrant. It smokes sweet, coolandsaizisfying, and gives you the biggest value to- day in package smoking tobacco. De-liclous. Perfection Ice Cream and healthful too; ‘ unusually high percentage of ious elements so essential to Central ilrea Phone pure perfect food for children and file they all Iii!!- < y PERFECTION ICE CREAM ls not only Princm Edward Island's standard-it's Creamlly smooth, delightfully flavored, the combination of finest flavurings and rich Gilli’! products by the most modern methods of manufacture. IS DELICIOUS inflection contains an vitalnlncs. those myster- hcalth and strength. A llleries Ltd. Wholesale Distributors 848 The children will soon llzdgcttlng away to sch‘ . Help them stand the hard work by serving them gdlcrously, plenty of Perfection. MONTREAL, Que" Sept. 2.-Can- ada's contribution to the Byrd An- tarctic expedition is now on the way in join the forces being gathered for this latest exploratory onslaught on the "Unknown Polar regions. It con- sists of seventy nine huskies gath- ered along the North Shore of the the Labrador coast. These dogs were Shllllled 13y steamer in Quebec arriv- 'I‘o prevent mold on jelly put‘a few cloves on top of it. Also keep a1 bowl of lime in the jelly closet. COURT AOTJON Woncesiler, Mass, Aug. ZO-l-larry and af- lisced nanonsutliul .- animations, n which he demands that the l! wcperty. smh- charges lillnt he shouts of excited spectators They were then Washingtonian th National train operating between Montreal and Wash handlinl this valu is an essential to hence their can fast trains on whic 210W‘: t0 Norfolk. Vi 0g travelling in a special on“ swut and wall ventilated than m; "WI m w crrsnsed that there a a max the cs with -a ing there today. i’ transferred b? Canadian Nat- IlBl in two waiting can and placed on the Quebec mgr”, for Montreal arriving this evening. transferred to ,th e crack Oapadiag lllltcn. B i able swam“: their well being W!" 1350M on h they are being Yllnis. Each um of sir available while EOOII ITO PQlIlIl 1Q“ vqpen lsal-eens 8pc - ‘ slid" am G , .. . ndanta ‘l lTl To Byrd Expedition "l fl. SAVE TH! VALUABLE "POKER HANDS" Canada's Cllnlribulio“ "Zflfiifilél? siiiii“éf‘°r..‘lii;ilrl Washington consulting vetcrin arian to the Byrd Antarctic expcdi tio II. C. CROWELL, .l~,- Evergreens keep on ' growinli B" winter long, when other trees and shrubs are dormant. For this reaso they need tape wsiicned at times l" the winter. There are always 50m Pleasant days when ithc water Wm not "freeze, especially in the middl mm aromat- °‘ ‘m’ i ' “ v5»; o ._4.)_ ~.\, Spoons!“ H] N EY i? “Hi5 g o, K Press Representative C.N.R.Railws - f. /.