"r --.~=<,.._. ._. 1' v I i \ . , 050th: I. III-III. leenlarwfleot. CeLDA. llaeklanel, D. l. 0. IigQ-l. I. Impact. t t ¢_-<_._. known’ astronomer, Mr. writing to the Nineteenth Century Mn.“ tells that the present year h“ Vleo-Prelldnl-ul. l. in-g three‘ months past. Judah! from local experience and reports. we would not conclude that the re- Aseoelsta ldltelv-D. I. Currie. for matoorh iiiaplay. and a well- Dunning. been notable in that respect dur- -oi flours his-u W- Bu». ALB 1 t” WM‘ Notes by the Way ma, ‘ll-e “’§§hfle-n¢rAnd NW. lltlilliii Blliililllii ... m, - " ' (w. t.. Cotton) The fine weather of the autumn just ended has been the subieot of remark by many persons, 311i ll was not unusual. Here is a fact from the record: "On the 24th of‘ November, TBBS-ftkty-three yell’! ago, Mr Theophilue Crosby of . - THllRSDAY, DECEMBER 2,1926 cent season has at all marlcable in that respect. But the THE BACON SEASON. , d’ This is the bacon season, the season in which our bacon and our bacon reputation are in the unalt- ing. Our hogs are being prepared for market and on the manner of that preparation depends the fut- ufe bacon market. I The packers are insisting upon ‘hogs being "finished" before being slaughtered. The reason they give "is that good bacon and good ‘hams cannot be made from under- fed or overfed hogs. and the reason will appeal to everyone. The bacon market at home and abroad is look- ing for the best quality and is pre- pared to psy the price for it, and ‘refuses to take poor qualiuvutany price. The conclusion is able; our hogs must he properly ‘finished if we are to imake our ho; business as profitable as it can be. Canadian bacon is becoming pop- ular in the ‘English market wlieie it enters into competition Wll/l the world-renowned bacon of Denmark and Poland. competition is due to the great cure exercised by the Canadian packers, and the insistence upon the proper finishing of hogs before being mar- keted. it is to the interest 0t‘ out farmers to cooperate with the packers in this respect. The pack- ens do not want. unfinished hogs; the farmer wants to get the boar. possible price for his hogs. lliore- over, be wants to get the bee". pos- sl-ble price next year. This can be done only by supplying hogs that will make the heat bacon and build up a. provincial reputation. There is no province in Canada which can as completely guard its products as Prince Edward island. The province Ls teompuct ililll iso- lsted. There is but one main ilonr through which raw material can come or the finished product go [There is no possibility of mixing writh the products of any other country. We have the situation in our own hands, we can make or mar our reputation and that repu- tation can ‘make or break us. Individual responsibility for tho preparation of our market products is necessary. Every man doing his best, selling nothing that is not fully up to standard, will give us the kind of reputation that will make an increasing demand for our products and i-nsure ‘for us the best prices the world's beet markets are willing to pay. We have a unique opportunity for making this repu- tation for ourselves, and if we lu- dividually assume _the responsibil- ity. the Prince iEtlward island trade mark will give us an entry into the world's best markets. inevit - Our success ‘in this SO -—-—-'<o¢---- OUR WASTES. -lt has long been claimed by econ- omists that we waste -more than wc actually imake good use of. This is probably true of the country as a whole; it is probably true also of the individual-barring only the mlser who hoards up all and uses barely enough to keep body and soul together. The individual who compares his expenditure for actu- oi necessities and actually neces- sary luxuries, with his outlay for the unnecesaaries and the useless, will generally find that his income, big or little, would provide a much more comfortable balance at tho end of the year than it does. The wastes in our public life, the expenditures which are authorized by wrernments and which have to be mode good by the taxpayer, are enormous and generally un- justifiable. Since the war we have been talking In millions and fbilli- ons. The public debt of Canada. in: example. n now O2,8l6,000,000. Our politicians during election cam- of placing the figures or a trans- fer from one account to another. The taxpayer finds that with, all creased or, if they are reduced on one iitein they are increased on another. The total tax burden is steadily increasing, whether it be in increased cost of living or in in- creased direct taxation. In the past several years enorm- ous expenditures have been made on IRoyal Commissions, on public works to help some government candidate to secure his election,on Jobs for deserving supporters-all of them a. waste of the people's money. Look at the ‘untold milli- ons to he thrown away on the Hud- son ‘Bay folly, simply to-secure the support of some western provinces. Much has already been expended on this folly, as it is now commonly called. By the time the road is completed, the terminals built. :1 harbor or/harbors dredged and lights adjusted, this project will have swallowed up a hundred or more millions and neither the wes- tern provinces nor any other part of Canada will ever reap a dollar's worth of benefit for it. To make a route to England via the Hudsoifs Boy, u newflect of special ships a meteor which fell and buried lt- er's farm only ten,» lagtirom his tsttiik. This leads our Toronto contem- porary to an interesting dlaserti- tion on meteors, fireballs, shooting and falling stars. which are identi- cal except as to size. We do nut know where meteors come from. but we can in some cases dig them up and find out what is inside of them which is mostly iron orstonc. with other metals. They exist iu countless numbers, the smaller ‘ones to the estimated number of 100,000,000 being burned up yearly by friction as\in their swift flight they pass through our atmosphere. Meteors oi‘ many bone weight have in time past fallen on the earth. Sometimes they have ex- ploded before striking. One of this sort detonated at a height ofabout 75 miles o\'er the city of Blooming- lOll, Illinois, in December, 1876. The explosion was so tremendous as to shake the city like an earth- quake. Frngments of the meteor foamed n cluster oliilre-bulls five miles wide and forty titiles long. The main portion of the meteor, with a rumbling roar like thunder. passed on cast over the Atlantic seaboard. in February, 1896, a re~ murkable meteor exploded over the city of Madrid. Though it appear- must be built, n new high rate o.’ insurance on ships and cargo musti be established and the chances of‘ the route ever being adopted arc! exceedingly slim. These and similar follies for pol-. iticnl purposes, to gratify certain: sections or to help certain politi-I ed iii the daylight, its brilliancy ivas so great as to dazzle the eye- sight. it exploded at a height of fifteen miles and so violent V was the detohatlon that it was heard and its tremors felt over a radius oi‘ ilfty miles. Premier iaxter of New Bruns- ['8- Toronto Mail and Empire tells of self in the earth on George Turn-lhemfl‘? Wmm- “d “m” M“! ‘hamngumr’ frost poreiiiac 0m] tat-lo. it’ it had at "Wills home the reductions his taxes are not dis-fine gunmen mid“ M76‘ fimved ex. QHOULD TON~8iL8 [Cornwall brought to Charlottetown BE REMOVEWIa luscious ripe strawberry picked ln-om his garden two days previous- ‘A Danish physician reports bluntly". This fact! proves that this he massaged the tonsils 1n eighteeuyear of grace. 1926. is not. at all‘ indeed. so lately, as the gentleman passingf ‘Square .wtlivlte oorpuscles lint the blood de- Y9!" 1934- a creased somewhat in numbers. You lhfvilth Queen I pugcjeg u“; flgmgyg markedupon ‘lthe beautiful green of against undl this 6J0 gnawed mung”, Nevertheless, "November winds “m; some m m, mum hlaw cauld" at times in Prince Ed- am, Md some fishy,“ for u“, m. ward as elsewhere. ‘Such disast- ‘tean, because fewer white corpus-m“! @195’ h“"'°““°9 and m" cles were necessary ‘when this tton- “do” a” h“ recently “wept w” s" substance w.” w ed m“, me some parts oi’ the United States ‘throat, and “ms “no m6 body mo, Western Canada and the West c953“, lndiaafllséanids thfgflfimggn howetj/aert, , . hand was" prev e n s ce. n wgilefiedifxsid 30min, ours is, it must be admitted, a very ma number o, ‘value carnage,“ m breezy little Island; and occasion- me mood as “hey had m as,“ the ally a gale makes the surrounding poison “vim the mum gulf very rough. Rarely have we This “mud answer {he quest,“ a storm that bears destruction on “Am “he ‘numb or am, we m me its wings. git the galeiof 18511 body... was a no e except on. t . Apparently healthy “m”! by M caused shipwreck to many Ameri- m... .» discus, ...~...... 1...... f“ gclgw; "$3183"? “ygegblgg theworkoftliehlood andttlmtnte ‘u o u 0r o’ m n9 m u 1mm} 't an h and much damage to the towns wgfkmg gang of m?‘ ° 1 e and villages throughout the Isltand. _ The day before the gale was warm Bum-l“ mm“ “B “NW1” “M” and mild. and the Gulf, it is related are not only lit-qt a. help, but an act- liad “a strange glassy look". On m“ hlndrame’ a “"39” h‘ ram- t” the night before the storm the the body iprocessee. "darkness cculd- almost be felt." Take heart ailments fotr instance. mat-lug a. storm and apprehensive It is a well known ilact the/t nheu- o; danger‘ the 113MB; fleet up“; mall-w" 15 l] °°mm°n “"89 °1 mull out to sea", But many of the vea- iheant conditions. and the catiee of $915 turned w‘, hm, and were a“. rheumatism itself-is very frequently t-rwards» driven ashore. fifteen‘ fill“ '00 1M1 lmlflllfl- vessels were stranded in the vicin- -A Finnish physician made u. four jty 0g Sgvage Mgr-bur, and between Sewn-l fvllmv ‘up Si“!!! 0f thlfly-dve savage Harbor and Richmond Bay acute and recurring cases of arti- l seventeen ‘fveasela were driven 9111M‘. 01' 1'01!!! Ilhflllllflflil-Bm- upon the beach. Twenty-two of These wees had all been given 0 the vessels lost. the whole or part thorough examination. Not: only tou- oil their crews. Altogether it was sillltis, but all dither lnfiaimlrmatory' stated at the time, seventy four processes of the mose anidl throat vessels were stranded and a hun- liad been given thorough tmeatmeait.'dred and sixty lives were lost. He makes vtlie following state-l ln 1855 there was another storm menrt “A favorable influence was disastrous to shipping in the Gulf; unmistakable, especially in. the and "in 1-867 a notable gale, accom- nmte cues wi-m high teynperagure, panied by an exceptionally high “titer-e um mean, W33 affected)’ ‘ tide swept 3110b}! sea. and land. He noted further than: the persona New vessels, not yet launched, who dmvelol, flwummjo tmgecflon. were floated from the blocks upon Me 0.559,,‘ not Qfwayg, moryy “our. which they were built, and many 13119.5, m“; compiun o; indigestion, boats were dashed to pieces. Fish- wn3flmuon_ 733,13, Mme, and one mg establishments along the sided. heads \- _ coasts were invaded by the impre- [so the idea um,‘ is m WW9, u“. deceit-ted tide. Eight vessels were’ tonsils. wrecked outside of Georgetown Ii’ they aro in good. condition Harm“ Eleven Vessels we“! though, hum and are 15m imerfe]. ashore between Malpeque and, in the‘. Wm remember m,“ the wmw cor. course of the Christmas season. re-' “imam; of any m-ML iilie grass” then growing there. I c/fl ._ - g-f" -=» ALBERTA COURT SETS WORLD RECORD-HEARS 111 WITNESSES IN ONE DAY EDMONTON, Alta" Dec. 1. -—~A new record in Alberta‘ Jundlcial iris- tory and one which it is belie d will challenge comparison w li any other court. in the world, was established in the criminal division o; the supreme court yesterday during the hearing of a charge of misappropriation of $3.228 against John Steele. ‘in all 111 witnessestdok the stand and gave their testimony and 6i exhibits were entered. "if any other court in the world can beat our record today, I would like to hear of lt." remarked Mr. Justice ilves in adournint; the case. The hearing was concluded this F clans in their election campaigns, are the main causes for the ever- Wick “mwlmced a year a3“ that w increasing w“ o‘ "we iYKZIZKKZZITZQ“5liZiZ.§’§.§“§§I§i And it is all in the politlczilday": impose dime, taxation on the en. WOPK- (‘all filly P81119113’ be found tire province equal to the deficit of for it? (‘an our people renlizethdt the preceding Yea-l‘. U115 Dolley 1° in order to have honest, economic be “mmlued "m" Ye" m Y9“- govemmenl we ‘must have hone“ But the financial position has since men at the bend of affairs. men who will not impose a burden upon the people as a whole to serve their own ends by catering to sections or‘; to Job-hunting politicians! ——-—-<o->—-—— HUGE MARKET AT HOME. Branch, Federal Department of Ag-I rlculture, Truro oiilce, slain that n carload of Ontario and Western butter is imported into Nova Scotls every week this season. The home production. despite the high prices, is not nearly enough to supply the local markets." I lt is further stated in the press report that on November 26 "a full car of Ontario eggs were shipped into Halifax, two firms there tak- ing up two hundred cases each." What about this? asks the Hall- tax Herald. We are told in some places to look around and seek “wider marketiW-to go out into the wide world and search-while right at our‘ doors, in our own households, are Imarkeis for prac- tically everything a farmer in this Province can produce—markets in- to which enormous quantities cf Ontario an'd Wes-tern products are pouring, while our ownagricultur- alists are looking on, and probably buying and using some 0f the Oh- tarlo and Western products. Will the facts stated-a carload of Ontario and Western butter into ova Scotis every week; and nfull the public mind and leave an en- during impression? What are we going to do about it? Ara we to remain satisfied and go on year after year repeating, or shall we dig down to the roots of this problem, solve-mud adopt the measures necessary to build up agriculture in Nova Scotia? carload of Ontario eggs-sink into‘ improved -by the contribution of the National Railways amounting to $238,000 and, with good hope ofln- creased revenue growing out of the Duncan report, he has new an- ounced that direct taxation will not be imposed. A seizure of alx motor cargaup- posed to have been smuggled in “Rgporig 1mm the Live gmcklfrom the United States was recent- ly made in Moncton. and two of lthem have since been released on payment of the duty without any arrests being made. lnspecto Veniot, who made the seizure, be- lieves that this cluster of smuggl- ed cars shows the work of a new gang, separate from that which operated at Amherst and vicinity. where 14 cars were recently seiz- ed. The preventive service and the Customs probe Commission have evidently much work yet ahead of them. It la bard to tell where the Marl- timea are in regard to railway mst- ters just now. The Duncan report recommended a reduced rate in our favor which the Government is pledged to carry out. lnthe-nrean- time the Board of Railway Com- missioners have been investigating the question of freight and express rate structure for a year past and an Ottawa despatch tells that the investigation is now in its final smge and that Mr. 111.1’. Ducliernin. of Sydney, has been named to pre- sent the case of the ‘MHPHJIUGI bo- fore the Board. That la not all. ‘Parliament from time to time makes and unmakea freight atop-witness the Crow's Nest. ilt looks as though our right to lower freight. rates is being toss- ed about ifrom pillar to post pur- posely fo delay or defeat anyremeq dial action. Where there are so many oillclal cooks the broth is pretty sure to be unpalatable. ’ BIX MEXIOANS WERE KILLED IN BATTLI FOQA RANCH BROWNBVIIIJUE. Texas, Nov. 30 -I8ix Mexicans were iii-lied at 1AA ranch, 4 miles north oi EDITORIAL NOTIO. pains, that they have re- aaqti the a»: by some button. The‘ mustn- uneasily a 1mm . t. I a One half #:5107111 does not know iaowthe other half lives, and it is perhaps as well that it does m‘; ..v...atl,lili Matamoros. Mexico. early today when Asyarlans attempted to seize the 8,500 acre ranch of the J. P Fernanda: gtstate, an American owned props y. Three or the agrarians were kii» led and three ranch employees, in- cluding the atslatant foreman of the QNUIIW. -- _ H lug with the breathing, they should be ‘left uilonc. H diseased, mhey not oniiy make it necessary for ttlhe blood to keep up a continuous iflgllt, when it has other workup 4k! [but they are o. frequent cause of heart disease. ma? ~¢* c v v+o+vo+oaeooowovow DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon wioflns orri-JN insusnn; Don't say "1 should admire to go very much." Say “l should be de- lighted to g0." 0 F T E N NUlSPROlVOLWCED: proof. Pronounce the o0 as in “food,” not as in "stood." IOIFIWEN MISSPEIJLEDZ griev- ance; ic. SYNONYMiS: opinion; judgment, belief, concept, conception, idea, impression, theory. WIORD STU-DY: “Use u. word tlm-ee times and it is yours." die-t us increase our vocabulary by lug one word ehich day. Today's word: PHYSIOGNOMIY; the face or features as revealing characteror disposition. “Her mall slenlderness, combined with a remarkable phy- siognomy, arrested my attention." Da-ily- Selections FOR Guardian Readers December 2, 1926 THE GOD 0F lil-EKCY——“O Lord Gddi of Jamel, there is no God like Thee in the ihieavon, nor with all their lienutsfl-z Chron. 6:14. in Thine awn strength; so will we shtg and praise Thy power. THE UNEMRLOYED ‘llhe dead men to the llvmg call: Brothers at old. how apes the day? is there ripe fruit on the Souths wail . Do they fling roses for your feat? The living heard them ' Hopeleu. tmwnnted. old How go the can‘, tihe dance. mirth? ' 9o you are warm. lapped in nupmetrafle" earth The viotcrseiand in the ~ plsoe ' ‘ North cape: “m” V9558“, wme morning with 1'2 more witnesses. 'PR.AYER-—~Be Thou exalted, Dork’ Brothers of tihe neat brotherhood where thtly stood lid-ls, or tritdged the mitileu And no man gives itlfln wine or ‘brandy stranded on the shores of Rich- mond Bay. tin the year 1879. there wan on the 29th of October, a. storm of ex- traordinary violence. The tide,’ driven by it. was so high that it covered fields of potatoes near the’ shore and still-unharvested. Many bridges and wharves were wrecked. and many shipping disasters were’ wharves were broken up by it. So that though there has never been a hurricane to compare with that by which Miami. and Florida, wins destroyed, though the latest‘ autumn has been remarkably free [mitt gnles, we no doubt have cause to boast that Prince Edward [gland is free from disastrous storms-mother we have cause te build tight willed houses and barns, and use iron and concrete in the construction of bridges and wharvee. But to be dead, to lie alpine! Never to know what we have known: With dreams to keep: with d-reams to-kcep. mom? rSanta Claus has adopted the m°d° of travel or royalty and arrived in London this year in a coach and | him for rvv ted. O rage “Saxlzly G-alehof 19:5 is tige ' ' f t ta s orms l’ ‘its 11.11.1113 base-been visited. ’ CHILDREN A large number of bridges and t mm- answered: it is well: so elesr- ' Steele is charged with getting ad- vertising for a. railwnymens time book. Witnesses told of having paid the advertisements, al- though it is claimed the book never appeared. ' ' / \WAMPOLE’S ~ ' PREPARATION . COD LIVER OIL NOW Healthy robust children meet winter's Ilia, cold, ctc., without trouble. After an at- tack of measles, eroup or whooping cough it ll the very best tonic and builder. We . -' it for children. , Just as good for older people- $1-00 TH E BOTTLE rm: 2 macs DRUGSTORE 149 Great George street ‘Liephone 315 v vvvvvvv$vvv xxxx four. dis chi 0n Your Mind ‘ istmas . .-.start means choosing from I J. (i. IA Why not do your gift bIIWIE-BRIIY Mill it»; avoid the usual weeks of puzzling? T0 in now on your holiday shopping ‘A A ilifwts at all Prices l . Make it possible to meet all purses. DRUGGIBT i the complete lines. MIESON f l-IIGIIIEGRADEQEONDS p. AT ATTRACTIVE PRICES I‘ i?‘ Price at Yifid CANADIAN NATIONAL‘ RAILWAYS 5%Boi1disduel<‘eb.1,l936‘....... .......4.90% PROVINCE 0F NOVA scorm ’ Sit-Bonds due May 1, 19-i3;",.................. 4.85% PROVINOE 0F’ ONTARIO 6% Bonds due iDec. 1, 1935 4.95% PROVINCE OF ONTARIO, 6% Bonnie due June 15, 1930 4.95% CITY OF OTTAWA 5% Bonds due July l, 1945 4.85% REXTON & RICHIBUCTO ELECTRIC 5% Bonnie due Jame 1, 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . 6.00% CITY & COUNTY OF QAINT JOHN 5% iBClllds 11MB July 1, 1944 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,. 4.87% CITY OF WINNIPEG 5% Bonds due Mai-pi. 1, m4 4.05% PUBLIC llTILITIES iivoN RIVER rowan 00., LTD.- 5%% Bonds (hie July 1, 1956 5.80% CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY 5% Bonds due April 15, 1984 ................ 6.00% CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY 4%%B0l1‘tl,a due Dec. 14,1944 5.00% GATINEAU POWER CO. 5% DoindsdueJune 1, 1956 6.86% GATINEAU POWER CO. 6% Bonds d-ue Inland 1'5, 194i. 6,05% MARITIME TELEGRAPH & TELEPHONE 6% Bonds due January 1, 1941 6.20% MARITIME TELEGRAPH K7 TELEPHONE .-. 5% iBonidadue January l, 1956 5.30% MONTREAL LIGHT, HEAT & POWER_ 5% nomsoueoefioiiari. 1951 5.00% NOVA SCOTIA TRAMWAYS & cowl-m c0. - " , 0% Bondedue December 1, 1m 5.05% SOUTHERN CANADA POWER 5% Bondsdtue October 1, 1S5!» 5.15% CORPORATION , ACADIA SUGAR REFINING CO. ‘ 6% Bonds due Jruly],19-i6 6.85% ALBERTA PACIFIC GRAIN ’ 6% Boundsdue June 1. 1946 6.10% FRASER COMPANIES LT-D. 6% "Bonds due January 1, 1950 0.00% MIOIRS LIMITED 61.5% Bonds due Jlauiuary 1, 194s 0.40% ST. LAWRENCE PAPER COMPANY 6% Bomlsdtie March 1,104s,............-.... 6.15% Orders may be telephoned ctr telegraphed‘ at our 0mm"- Eastern Securities 00., Ltd. 81- John. N. a. Charlottetown _-, , Halifax. N. 8- II PERIOLSTO‘ en m m. on lend, peril or lire, of automobiles, of aeeldom‘. of sleltneae- . _ . In our modern Ilia we are surrounded by perils. and pretest m .1»- that ta why we employ the ayatam of insurance to us. .~ ,- ' ~ - ' w l aitl u vlila mplau ltlluranel service‘, :21! Hag?»- xur emit-II;- gr adviaa‘ and in- formation. V__ ~ -;5,,¢¢,~;-- " g _' _ ‘F, . > . I ' z-yfir ‘ ililhllll 8...,- ~ Llil. i _ otsaatfinaiinnea ta i. til. ' Levm on.» Oil-eat A " Jr-mis- ~=r . ' v w»...