“mflfimiifllfllln. . ‘a BIIARLOTTETWII an Obeseuemld-wnl-P O-OOID- TBUIIDAY. JUDY ll, 1085 iwslwsslvn COMMENT Commenting on Tuesday's election vaults, the Moncton Times says: “During the last three years the provinces o! British Columbia, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, and lastly Prince Edward Island, have changed their admin- istrations from Conservative to Lib- srsl. Change of governments in these six provinces has not been due to any particular fault the peo- pla had to find with the administra- flgng, especially 1n the three Mari- time Provinces, but rather has the lesult been dueto the unrest and gwpnteni engende ed by the de- pression from which Canada, ‘ll’! common with the rut of the world, has suffered during the nest sir years. And while the Liberals are clsmorously relolclni. 10¢ it b! slid that tc ‘General Depression‘ must go tbs credit for the recent sweeping victories rather than to any achieve- ments oi the Liberal party in the past or what it maybe expected to accomplish, in the future." Predicting a Conservative defeat. the Sydney Post-Record oi Tuesday morning says: 1"In Nova Beetle, Ontario. Sask- atchewan and New Brunswick, the , pcenomic ravages of the depression flnply explained why the electors voted for a change. In Prince Ed- wuf Island an additional political facts. enters into the situation to uiake assurance of the Provincial governments fate doubly sure.- ngmgly the peculiar ‘ nden oi the Mrs. Gertrude Fisher of Saskatoon, people of that province to change their Administrations at every op- portunity. At every election since that of leis, there has been a change c} Government in the Island Pro- vince The Conservatives were ex- pelled from office in 1010 and the sibei-als in ms ‘The Liberals won in" 1am and lost in 1931. An over- ti... in Prince Edward Island today will register the fifth change oi Government _in 20 years. What other Sifovince, Dominion or State in the British Empire can show so con- sistent a record of unwavering dis- approval oi those who have been dolled upon from time to time to lidminister its aflairs? Mmifestly it [g neky to ‘possible for any public men i» live up to the high ideals the Islanders set for their admin- istiutcrsl" 3c. 1v. s. IMPROVEMENT The importance of the Canadian National Railways as an index to leonomio recovery has frequently Qéen emphasised. m m4. for s:- smlpls, ilhe total freilht transport- qgbytnacxrtmsmeunteaic 04,710,471 ions. an increase of ibhtem w cent, over the lire- esdlng year. During 10M the av- erage number of persons employed by the Canadian National Rail- ypys was 74.441, and the wages 51a them came to almost one hundred nriliion dollars. This N9- gesented, both as to number em- and amount of 017W“. i"! hvance over 1008, and practically whole increase in WWI!!!“ due to re-empioynlerit of those ‘phase services had previously be“ dflpensed with owing to lack of .19": During 1984, the system carried over 10,000,000 pessensers. this W" also an increase over i033. -'I‘hese Muses show the vastness of the public service rendered b! the Canadian National Railway! ‘and the importance which the sys- tem plays in the national move- iaent to diminish unemployed and restore industrial activity. Every which the c. s. n. makes in Z slnromu. lvoras i etaiorship by any ctasl- name. GIIIIMQHQM. 9 Z-rls nowname oftbe noun. aiilsslytebsheyalclnsdianred- Police in ecntro-distinctim police mess. when Dlnator-I. I. Iurutl. I‘. I. I. _. *1‘ 1 ‘ all‘ use ale-Ilsa.» your ' ‘all peruuyela’: (it-advance) mailed"; Canada . Visa-President. l. l. Band“. I‘. J. l. A. Iaeiinaoa. D. l. 0. (In advan ) dfllvarods and U led States. opposed by s straight Conservative candidate. The Prince oi Wales in an ad- dress at a Conference on Scientific Organization oi Agriculture and Industry, claimed credit for bein! both an Erlgllsh farmer and a Cah- adisn rancher. I-Ie is a thorough believer in scientific research, and in that connection asserted that the development of modem fann- ing technique and equipment is of the greatest importance, because it produces new problems in its ap- plication. "Get-rich-quick" folks are still to be found notwithstanding the lcs- sons and experience c: 1029. D. S. Paterson, Toronto, former head of the Dominion-wide brokerage house which bore his name, has been sr- rested on a charge of theft involv- ing about $1,880. Bail was fixed at $25,000. Mr. J. M. Godifel’. K-Co Ontario Securities commissioner, says the arrest followed three weeks of investigation by the com- mission. A few days ago, he intim- ated, the licence of Mid-Canada. Exploration Company was cancelled. The United Iihrmers of Alberta have specifically declined to sup- port Mr. Steven's hew party. and now the United Farmers of sas- katchewan by resolution have de- cided on complete severance from political activity 01' any kind. This decision caused the resignation of president o! the women's section, who. having strongly advocated continuance oi political action in her presidential address. felt un- able to continue in cmce when the association d’ssented she will con- tinue her activity with the 0.01‘. and merely maintain her interest in the U10. The United Farmers of Alberta having rejected the Stevens plat- form and party it is not much oi a capture to have lined up the On- tario United Farmers organization which is notoriously the lame duck o! Ontario politics. Like the Siev- ens party, it started out with high ambitic and an all-embracing programme designed to work politi- c-al and economic wonders. It was elected with a force strong enough to command administrative power, and the big administrative mess it made in little time is writ largo in the political annals of the prov- ince. Ontario's ‘memory of the Drury Government is not a pleas- ing memory; and the burden it left on the shoulders of the taxpayers was intolerable. Its experience should be ominous to the party in- to which it is now to merge in vir- tue cf kinship, and to which it does bear the resemblance 0t a political party striving to be all things to all men. Voluntary ag. ment has been reached between the United King- dom, Australla and New Zealand, covering supplies of mutton and lamb to the British market for l8 months including December, 1936. For the first six months, ending December 31, New Zealand will send 1,578,000 hundredweights and Australia 050,000. During 1M0 New Zea-land will send 8,000,000 and ‘Australia 1.750.000. provision being made for adjustment upwards or downwards in the light oi later estimates of capacity oi the market and o1 UK. production. As regards beef and veal, Australia has agreed to regulate supplies for the third and fourth quarters oi this year so the total quantity will not exceed 1.100.000 hlmdredweight, oi which 100,000 will be chilled beef. New Zeaiand will keep her bee: and veal shipments in the same period below 470,000 hundredweight, of which 06,000 will be chilled beef. The net result is to ease the weight of imported supplies in the last three months of the year when heavy British supplies come on the market. .- In an editorial forecast of the election. the Montreal Gazette had this to say: ‘The issues that were Joined h the campaign are essen- tially local. If the electorate re- turns a sumsient number of Liberal candidates to enable the Hon. Walla ll. Lea to form s govern- milt, the result insy not be con- sidered as one which reflects the general trendef political feeling throughout the Dominion. but rather as one merely main- tha psnluluinofbiiliiiiliiilbflfld- anoiwitbwbathssbsecmeasus- mleyriiiuascwaramisusaurins isspssimcscssasnciscw- gdvbnture, the Conservatives are molested w silos. the mi" "i" Notes By 771a Way The rbts in Begins. when a city policeman was beaten to death. show to what extremes these men will go if not checked 1h the Saskatchewan capital the public agitators and a League of Vigilance Executive has been formed. with a large membership. to combat sedi- tion and disorder. In the recent civic ‘ “ - in that‘ city Labor candidates were ’efeate'd‘ just ba- cause of this trend. and in Win. iiipeg there are demands for the formation oi a group of “A ’ 100g. ed citizens to drive the reds out." Such a uievement is hardly neces- sary now, in view 0f the popular attitude, which is for the preserva. tion of law and order through the regular machinery. At the same time, such expressions of indigng. tion are proof that thepeople, up. ed oi the trouble-makers. are de. tegnirlcd they shall not have their w . If all parties proposing 1Q gnu;- theelection campaign carry out thezr intentions. then the next Par. llsment will be a mixed one. Them will be Conservatives. Liberals, U-FJXS» Lemme-i. Communists. G.C.F'rs, and Stevenltss. It will be quite a salad. This note from The Ottawa Journal will make the aver- age man wonder ii this multitude of partzes will lead to a condition where no group can control the House and where government will be impossible. It was such a con- dition that led to dictatorships in some European countries. On the other hand the Anglo-Saxon peoples have a genius for compromise which will probably prevent such a devel- opment in Cansda-Sault Ste. Marie Star. Another earthquake has brought deathand destruction to the people of Formosa. In China the damage done by flood is terrible. Nature seems to be determined to sdd to man's distress. Perhaps the best way to take this is as a challenge to drop all the conflict that is seeth- 1118 and threatening turmoil within nations and among nations. Man can iind plenty to do, plenty to struggle against without raising trouble with his fellow man. The way to serve cne'a country hast as a soldier is to observe care- fully all the international courtes- ies that promote peace. So said President Roosevelt in an address before the graduating class of the United States Military Academy at West Point.—-Detroit News, The result of the aldermanic elec- tion indicates that Regina. cltrens are far from 100 per cent. behind some of the claims and arguments advanced by the strikers and those who climbed on the bandwagon when it arrived at Regina. Regina citizens are sympathetic to the plight of individuals. but there is a form of extreme radicalism that makes a mistake when it gets the idea that it is the boss of the com- munity. Regina. has indicated, in its civic vote, that it is a representative Canadian town. neared in Canadian traditions, wedded to the British Principle of democratic authority and not to be stampeded into s hysteria that would. in the name of an emergency that did not exist. throw overboard the things that are essential to the building of a society in which man's life and property are reasonably secure. Professor Einstein ' that all he has done in his latest discov- ery is to evolve a new pattern in the structure oi space and matter, linking the atoms and stars in a unified universe and harmonising the relativity rules with the Quan- tum Conception. Why in heck didn't he say so in the first place'!—Wirld- sor Star. During battle practice oi the fleet. carried out under the eye of the King, the expected test of the "Queen Bee" robot piloted plane in attack on capital ships took place. Two qf these planes were to have been used; one crashed in the take- ofI. The other penetrated the anti- sircraft defence barrage and pass- ed over the Rodney before receiv- ing a direct hit. On a very rough computation it is said that one thousand planes can be built and maintained for approximately the same cost as building and keeping afloat one battleship. If it were ac- cepted that one plane out oi two can register a hit, the plane wins hands down. An apple tree grown from lbs pip of an apple the Kaiser ate in 1912 has just ‘ med for the first time in Sussex. By i014 it was six inches high, but it remain ‘ the same height all through the war. and only started to grow again in lint-London Sunday Ihrpreu. Already the Italian sick list is growing. In tropical Africa sick cas- ualties are always expected greatly to exceedbattle casualties. When them begin to mount there will be other side cf war brought home to them personally, and if this hap- pens tc any mnsiderable their resentment will fall on Mus- solini and then his undeniable ser- v‘ces will be forgotten. But the chief thins’. perhaps. al- though an understanding may have been reached with the French gov- ernment, is that Italy Manda con- demned beforehand by the public opinion of the nations. And that opinion exerts an influence so powerful that it is questio if any natio can resist it in the ends-Citron! e-Tslegraph. quires a his?“ .0! h man yc . one porous p. o" advertisement Not an islnstiniesalsritycitacswiagcli-hifls siesutuisiassasloiiu iaatwlii has» a has definitely turned against the people in Italy who will have the m extent, in; 1st;- w. HOW FAST All YOU GROWING OLD? Two sisters were examined by a physician ;one was forty years of age and the other iiity. The phy- sician stand that the actual phy- sical age of one ag forty was mic fifty Ind oi one aged fifty was really only forty. He was not 80in: by the years as we know them but the actual age of the biid9—blood vessels, heart, kidneys. And so we iind physicians now trying towstimste the physiological age or health of individuals so that "i951 ml!’ live more in accordance with this age. Thus there is no lea- son why the individual who was born 60 years ago, thinking he is "getting old" and planning 3, rest. ful old age, when his blood vessels, blood, heart, kidneys and nervous system show that he'ls really in his forties. Similarly an individual in his for- ties who has never been rugged or who has been through much from infections or the stress of life, may 11°00 i0 Pause and Plan a less strenuous or more sheltered life ii he is to live another twenty years or more. . . Dr. Alexis Carrel‘ oi the Rocke. feller Foundation has given “life” a Brest amount oi study. He has kept the tissues of a chick alive for many years. In an address to the New York Academ, of Medicine he des- uibes various methods oi measur- ili! or attempting to measure age, arid how fast or at what rate the individual is aging. Thus during the war the rate at which a wound healed gave "sur- Drlsingly exact" figures as w the Dliifllfs age. ‘Ihesc figures were ob- tained in soldiers between the ages of twenty and forty-five. However the most exact method for All aces is by the use oi the liquid or serum part of the blood- without the wrpuscles. By compar- ing the rate at which the little cells are made to grow by the use c! "mm l! wmlisred with the rate at WhICh these cells grow by mg u; o! a salt solution, they obtained n, “uhit" rate of growth. It has been found that the rate at which man ages is very rapid at the beginning of life, but toward the end of life it tsloes place more slowly. This method isn't perfect because it isnt able to tell us the exact age of the individual but it does tell the rate at which he is aging, and mg changes that this aging brings about in his tissues. , Th6 ihvlllht for you and me then is that sood blood. enriched in “siowlnz" the rate at which we are skins. Television Coming (London Times) A double television service (or the Greater London area, berm the end of the year is now certain. It has been announced by no 1.355 g Person than the Postmaster-Gen- eral himself. Even the site for the station has been chosen-the Alex- mdra Palace. This is a site which is considered particulalry suitable. It is m Hishsate. in the North of Iondon, away from the most congested area (atmospherlcally speaking), 811d it Mina 306 feet above w; level. It is ,.roposed u; em; n, JOO-fcot mast on top of this, thus WWIdJXIC In serial 606 feet above sea level. This should be sulfi- cient, it is, thought, to provide a high definition television service for the Iondon area. Thus the first definitemove hasbeen madein the establishment of a service since the issue of the television committee's Nliort five months ago. There will be considerable differ- ence in the two systems to be timsmitted. but the Postmaster- General is insisting that arrange- ments shall be made for the sale of receivers which will pick up either transmission without unduly com- plicaied or en, ‘vs adjustment. Vision will be broadcar‘. on g wave-length of about 6.6 metres and the associated sound signals on about 7.2 metres. Neither of these viva-lengths is receivable on an or- dinary receiver such as is used u)- day. Moreover, owing m m; u- treme shortness of the wave-len- gths. the range will be limited to about thirty miles. Pherlome ‘ improvements in the l i developments of television itself meanwhile have just come io hand. Full slse cinema screen trananission is now an accomplish- ed fact. so that the ‘ ‘ pictures capable of being transmitted are no lvlilor, some six inches square. This result has been achieved by s 3m.- ish firm and they halve already giv- en one public dernonatratiorl of a cinema entirely worked by teletfi- Ths picture was first transmitted i? "mi 070%“!!! u. ~r I .--u.-.~,,.,m~qn will!‘ THE‘; CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Rockefeller (Winnipeg Free Pnl) . . There is. at perhaps this minute. m g, deep chair on a verandah at Lakewood, New Jerfly, l 1'18"!‘ within four years cf a century. Who looks like Ra-meses stripped 0f his munlmy-clcths. galvanised into life, and 59'; upright in a rocking . ' His longevity is only one of the reasons why there have been more wards than his billions written abput Jilin D. Rsckefeller, Senior. who arrived at in so young that men now nee-fl? Qillity have heard him called the world's richest marl since they were boys. m; 1s no longer the world's only mnmmlm having been joined on that eminence by Henry of the ub- iquitous Iibrd. He is no Jon!" among the masters of finance, hav- ing been in retirement for twenty- fqur years; his 1851i financial 0P1- umph having been to show Judafl Landls that he would have to get up much earlier in the mcrnili! if he hoped successfully to find John D. Rockefeller. After getting the Isandis fine set aside-that was in l9ll--J1i-in D. retired, to eschew all worry. eslt bread and milk, drink three quarts oi water daily. and P111)’ 8°11 H6 was then '12, and looked, to quote Ida M. Tarbell: "the oldest living man in the world—a living mum- my." That quotation iron-l Miss Tarbell is really the text cf this article. It means that at '12. when most men still look reasonably young, Rocke- feller looked at least twenty years older than his age. He was ready for the grave then. But instead of going to the grave, he brought the fixed habits of his life, frugality and regularity, into perhaps the most intense concentration ever witnessed. upun the men feat of keeping alive. Where other men have reached 96 by natural stren- gth oi constitution. Rockefeller has reached this age by s4 deliberate process oi cultivating longevity. Federal Housing Act (Exchange) There is widespread interest in the Housing Act passed by the Bennett Government at the last session of Parliament. Briefly. it is the intention that. a. hamebullder may obtain a loan up to 80 per cent. of the cost ior a long term and at a low rate. oi irliorest. The Government will not deal directly with applications. An oiIicial of the Department of Finance will have chaige of Government loans. but the applications will be turned over to loaning companies throughout Canada. A list or approved loaning companies to whom the borrowers may apply is now being drawn up. Several conferences have been held with representatives of these com- panies and a form of czntract is being arranged. The Act contemplates buildings of various kinds but used solely for dwelling purposes, and it provides that construction must be oi a high standard. Loan companies may 0i- fer up to 80 pel- cent. of the ap- praised-value or estimated cost, whichever is the less. Twenty per cent. will be advrmced from the $10,090,000 fund provided by the Housing Act. In this way it is ex- pected that building operations to the value of $50,000,000 will be set in motion. The details oi the ma- chinery of the Act are being pre- pared by the Minister of Finance and his Deputy Minister. Nazi Films And P0 groms (Winnipeg Free Press) Last Saturday Winnipeg was treated to a showing of German fllms frankly designed as propagan- da for the Nazi regime. They ex- hibited German youth enjoying healthy recreation. Germain indus- try humming and a large number of shots of Herr Hitler addressing his countrymen. patting children on the head and smiling benlgnly. Those pictures are part of an elab- crate attempt to convince the out- side world that Germany under Hitler is happy and blossoming in a new and richer culture. The effect of this propaganda is rather spoiledlf not completely des- troyed. by news dispatches like that which came from Berlin on A esday last. Bands of fervld Nazis invaded the Jewish quarter of the city on that day, wrecked bung. ings, dragged Jews out on to the sheets and beat them. These dis- graceful events happened in the rich and presumably civilized cen- tre of German culture. one of the Ereat cities of the world. What shocks and disgusts foreign obser- vers is that the-Nani hooligans be- have in this manner with official enroun lt. Dr. Goebbels. the ' inter of national enlightenment (I) and propagand... repeatedly antes speeches lncltin the Ger- man publio sainst the Jews. The London Spectator reports him as saying in public recently that the Jew is s man in the sense that the flea is an animal and that Germany wants the Jews no longer. A stop to speech-making of this sort and an end to the anti-Jewish pogrom would be much more eifect- ive than moving pictures in per- suading outsiders apt the long is a cardinal Nasi psinciplemnd brutal mistreat- ment ofpennan Jews gets official backing. no quantity o! of Adolf Hitler accord a spirit of mutual appreciation and guilty between 11900100 is worth n05 "2 , W“ wit; l... l N s») IMF v H. s can be none while th i-Packhiifi 14m ‘ Honest Tobacco I'I&N’s Has the support of Island V o t e r s IN EVERY POLL GADABA Shoulder to shoulder, firmly press- ing forward I-‘tanks close-locked, from vanward to the rear, Steadfast in courage, steadfast in loyalty, The strong swirls of Gadara know not any fear. A lone voice lifted. a lone voice call- 8. A lone voice warning of something seen ahead; Stern swine cf Gadsra turn upon the traitor, Silence him, savage him, leave him there for dead. Strong again in confidence. strong again in loyalty, From cowardice and treachery and fear set free; Shoulder to shoulder, fiercely press- ing forward. The swift swine of Gadara go rush- in to the sea. -W. N. Ewer in 'I'hs Sbectat . OLD MAN KANGAROO TREES THIS HUNTER MELBOURNE, July Zb-Attfloked by an old man kangaroo while rab- bit hunting a mile from Macedo . E. Russell sought refuge in a tree. but nearly three hours elapsed be- fore he was able to descend from his precarious perch. Although he treated the incident lightly, Russell said it was a serious business while it lasted. "I was searching in some thick ferns for a rabbit burrow when the kangaroo appeared from the ferns nearby." he said. "He rushed at me and I sprang for the nearest tree, about two yards away. I lcst no time in getting to the low- est branch. The kangaroo stoorl at the foot of the tree while I clung to the. trunk. and both my feet just touched his head." Russell's calls for help brought his two dogs, but the kangaroo grabbed the smaller and pushed it into a. creek. Neigh” n finally routed the beast- ten timesmore. of that there LPL’ RED ROOSTER KILLS lyle heard a commotion JULY 25. 1935 A PPRO VED BY , PUBLIC OPINION For its smoothness, Flavor, Freshness, Fragrance and Slow-burning qualities. 0H & N’: BRIGHT our “TIfE SMOOTHEST SMOK "\ HIBKEY & NIBHULSON chicken yard. she investigated m4 was just in time. she said today, tn see a little red rooster deliver Q TWO-FOOT BATTLER LES. cal. July 24-—Mrs. mo. car- death blow with his spurs in a twos in her foot rattler m I-Iovv Fri-rich‘ béuéi- it is i6 buy ill-Q best and have the peace of Rind thud always follows. Storm protection the lowest cost means only one thinfl l. . dependability; and every and thrifty builder will tell you thai dependability means Brantford. Car-b ritte asphalt roofing. Plain. and slate surfaced. it gives you the izaticn of complete satisfaction at I price that makes friends with ovari- pocket book I Your local dealer invites you to see Brantford Cori-ind all-Maritime products ‘and. gain full information about them. _ IRANTFORD CARRITTE PRODUCTS INCLUDE: AIPHALT IHINGLII» PLAIN I ILRTI IUIFACID AIPNALT IDLI- IOOFINGI, AIPHALT I YAIIID III-TO, DIY AND TAIRID IHIVATNINOI. IYC. FOR THE FINEST BUILDING TRADQ aniiord Carriiiefonlpanl; Llllilitii Br FACTQRY. COuDBROOK-N "- _ __ vvAL-LFLHOU5ES.COLDBROOKJMH..r1#\\_|l AKI-l i DIITRIIUTID IY II ' Fonnell s. Chandler, Charlottetown. Sinclair s. Stewart, LtdqS Poole lb Thompson, Lid., Montague. Peter MacNutt i! son, Kens German gov- eminent not merely ’ but instigates racial persecution through its official spokesmen." Dnemlerlofillbfis Cuticuraflismss: USE BRAHMIN TEA’ OIANGI ‘ P10! miz hic loll o!!! ia no sumac vies. a‘ actIcnQIIhQOII _ ‘ r i a is long as then shampoo with a suds of euro Soap and warm 1n _ cleanse the scalp and restore the hi0- uralglcu andvigortotliehair. Rinsa I thoroughly. h‘ ,_, : Ir Agorsolm, Luis, m. I ‘ ""2n“'§..‘f-'?l sum. w., menu-cal. l ' WW8 llalr Restorer bl i The llnanimous Verdict 0f Successful Ranchers “We have never fed anything to equal I IMPERIAL FOX BISCUITS and IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD in promoting healthy and normal growth of pups and developing sturdy bodies with superior pelts oi lustrous sheen, thick-kissed and retaining their color.”