' s ' race FOUR ’_I‘_HE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN this week, haircuts will cost 40 cents and shaves 2o cents throughoupall Toronto according to the The Charlottetown Guardian l \ -- ,- \__!/? nit-i“ A..-.S.._.~,. President, Lh-uL-Col. W. Chester S. lleLnro \.1r|--l'r\'.~id\~l|l, J. ll. Uulllell, l". J l» Serrelnr) l. ul (ul. U. A. llucKlnnon, p. s. o. llurliitt ll-liit-rt-il i'rinw Lilitartl Island. SL311 per yeur (In \l.1|ti-il In lllniula illlil [Illled Stall-I l-lllllAY, SEPT ‘MBER 25, 1936 Steamship Subsidy Restored t v tlccntt- Vs. zttioit of llUN. .\lR Tot iuce ; ~11? ' .' ~‘- ‘Q j.t.1r the 'e 1-\'t '1‘. Protince and n_v ihousaittls lllls ‘till lt1ll'lt\\'ll by s were tztlled rh no of- l-j l1" s f;1cto1'_v cutl- \\'hai is . .A- should '1 t1 Lkunt-rvative .~ t-t "join" in con- " 11v. 1'. appcarctl to be (fnnznit r4 1- Chamber Activities tail-tress on the actuities of :1 fur of tfl-nuticrct‘ at this ll i.::'d conzmwiiioii. this‘. l 1:1 of tlte Lhui111ei'ct~ ilzificult for anv colter» 1. ‘:1 whole ll“ ‘til 1_\', thzvxtiqlt ' "tirttztda and tilicr col- .. inkntg in i‘. llfllltlllitl i111- - t'.\'Tt‘i'1l"l\' .111 11 ‘to’. s as‘ \\-' r wxtllctl that wllcit it was ' r.l1 .\tncrica .1 of indirect - ihrotigh its . t‘ to gather action of busi- cut that re- ' ' which Se. "ilihe ' ittldtil Ivlit. Mvt- 11d and we i11:1_v ‘Flinn of Catnadiztn result." of the allegation in .\'o1:att-'s action in this "l partisznishiyi. l that in 11,134, when :1 1111s -1*t lip. a hoard Of (li- ~ of the geographical inter- " s cho=eii by the sharehold- "tt ztntl leadership of the ' iii l\1i11!11i*t‘ce. although pre- wl llfil“. the voting o1‘ share- ' 1:1 ctinfti-"iou. and in the elec- zvn from only Lentral Can- ‘l '3 ~'. ." 4iv\| 1'1‘ Pipers In Clover 1,. .. l1“ to nott- in an English contemp- ' and civilian pipers iii Lon- ttwl that the sltirl of their -ill be dtnuitntting in the in 1511' Coronation procession Jill‘ sure. because the King is t .l love of the bagpipes for ~i1rt from llis Majesty's and his tribute to the h‘~ personal composition 1': tact", for them. The tune 11-11 l1_\'lllt' Scots Guards as liuig. as l’rn1ct- of \\':iles ‘i {W11 years ago, handed it to "win of the Scots Guards. But ‘u lit-til by the Scots Guards. l'_\' band room of llighland ~ lt was at llis Majesty's 111- t-au-l- played so prominent a t , . 1111.. was the King's pCfbOIlZll - Prince of \\‘ales and is also _ l1a< :tcco1np:1t1ietl him t0 .\l.tittr llarry licirsyth, who 1 tie King. Editorial Notes RF form It" l/‘Itqui- hv the exclusion 0f fill gppoJ-io-i 7 duplicate our Legislature. llraisr-u ‘W11 l’ l - (lb. I'm! ‘xlwti-‘ii/it- King rintlvl orate like Dnuttiitg and at1li< ~.'111u- tinn- call a sitadt- a lprtdt-l d4 d‘ ‘l4 l‘lltitll\‘l'. st lf-ailoptod island- .\l:1ritiiu<- business men to Ilotiks were Tl11-\li11i-tt‘t‘itf Qt‘, ctnnpttc- 1hr" “faruuir. in their .\un'la_v suits". leceiiful met‘. ‘ The llt pltnru liovt-riiiueut has gained and lost favor with cousidt-rztlilt- sections of its support- ". 1,‘. Nun,“ m, order to all barber shops to ob- lcrve :1 lialf-holiilay' each \\'etlnestlay and stand- ardize prices for shaves and haircuts. Beginning ll (it). $1.110 p»: seni- tin nlhullee) mulled lo ntlvwnel) .\ i .1 l.-.-' :t_-t1 The tiuardian expressed this time‘ would re- but a inattci- of great iu1-, 1- i :~ 1 t‘ .1 t and turnip shippers. \\'et ' livllllcll tiovern- of 533mm; a s and ship-i i\‘ll*l.<. ,. ..t “int; a griev-‘ ltciort- thi- oi"-‘,.'1niza-- government order. 9K 9K I. It i; r00 had that the Spanish Island, Mallorca lpipe march 0i his tiwn composition. The slcirl ‘may have heeii too much for its sensitive ear and languorous habits. fit 9K Ni Building for the future, both spiritually and materially. was the l\'L‘_\'t'lOlC of Mr. ])ullui11g's eloquent address at the Board of Trade ltitittplvl. It must have gone right home to many in the audience when they recalled the nantts of 111au_v ltusinesses itt LharlottclOwn alone. 11 lticlt are now no more, because their proprietors did not build that successive generations would couiinut‘ to iflourish b)‘ their example of itidustry atul enter- prise. ate ate tlé , Dowti Iiallas way a taxi driver. tlisgrutttlctl‘ over a traffic sumniotis. complained to his farezi l “Lousy policcnieti, just waiting around to hand , tamed unma- >nph disnbnmm some poor guy a ticket". Alighting, tht- pass-j euger gave him a 15-ceut tip "for coffee and; doughnuts to cool off on." and handed l1i111 al card reading: "Police Chief h. I,. (Rubi _Ioues."l "\\'hen v\'tllll\'fi cooled off." said the chivf, llgtl‘ ljto that policeman and apologize for the things, ‘you have called hint and tell hint to report t jto inc." The traffic charge was dismissed. d: “K ‘k ‘t The‘ international llroztdcastiiig (foitfert-uce‘ ,‘il'll(;l\' a snag on the issue of religitttls broad- .\ft<~r the Austrian delegate had ttfferc-l .1 resolution to prohibit anti-religious ltrtta-lcasts, the hussirin lloerschelntanii. objected, pointing out that the Soviet constitution prohibited hint ‘ froiti signing such a convention. lle also said the considered the religious issue outside the ,.scope of the conference. which was called to ad- ivocatc ct~ssatioii of inflannnatory political broad- ‘casts. The United States Government is reported to be contemplating recognition of Japanese control of Mzuichukuo and the Italian conquest of lithi~ opia. "In this event", says rt couteniptirarv Wconilitious will remain exactly as they are now ,in l-Tzltiotiia and .\lIlllClll1l\'llO, and if the suggest- ed action is riot taken it will make no differ- ence." P-ut it will make a heap of difference at t (ieneva and wherever confidence in the resusci- tation of the League of Nations is being reposed. I 1 i \\'e were almost persuaded that the da_v of the paddle steamer was done, hence the tlisjtctising‘ with it as a ferrv. llut it is not by pity nteans so. The l-‘airfieltl Shiithuiltling and l-Yitgiueer/ ing t“... Limited. tiovan. have received an order for the citustruction 0f two paddle steamers for the London. Midland and Scottish l\‘ail\v:1_v Cotnpaity-Ys services on the (lyric, and the ves- sels are to he completed in time for next season. llozlt will have ati over-all length of 33o feet, a moulded breadth‘ of 3o feet. and a sjtptnl of ,1}' t-2 knots. with accomniotlatitui for some ‘ 1.200 passengers. , .\la=. and alack, the woman drinker has fonn-l a tihatnttiou in .\lr. Frank. .'\'. .\lcl\'o\vne. pvt-si- tlem of the llotel Statler Conipatiy. lnc., of New York. attending a convention of the .'\111eric:t11; llotel Association in St. I.o11is.“l.iterallv luind-i reds of women of impeccable i-efinemtiiit and character now drink iti public places", .\lr. Mc-f ‘l\'ll\\'ll8 said, “and their presence has clcvalctb the tone of such establishments far beyond that 0f more priidish days." In well conducted places. he said. repeal had resulted in more mrmncrly and genteel crowds thati tinder prohibition. .-\s to I the others——\vell. Mr. McKowne leaves it to our imaginations. 3K fi * A son of Hon. Arthur Sauve, former proviii- cial Conservative leader who was later Cztttatliziu Postmaster-General under Prime .\Iiuistcr llcti- nett, Mr. Joseph Patil Sauve, has been appointed speaker of Quebec Legislature. IIe \\'.'ts first elfitted to the provincial House in a by-election in r930 after his father had resigned the Two IVlountains seat to enter the Dominiri field. lie was re-elected in the general election of 193i, but met defeat in 1935 by jean Rochon, Liberal. Mr. Sauve regained his seat by 40o votes iti the election of August 17th. A lawyer. the new Speaker is 29 years old. born in the county he represents, and educated at the University of Montreal. i! it 9K A motorist has been fined at Aberdeen for failing to stop at a “I-lalt" sign and the judge's observation that "Halt" means “l'lalt" had in- duced some votaries of the wheel t0 raise the question whether “Halt" means “Stop". The dic- tionary gives the meaning as “to stop", but it also gives it as to “liesitate". In niilitar_v plnwts- ing “Halt" has but one tneatiitig". as anyone who disregarded a sentinelIs order would learn to his cost; but "halting" has s0 generally been regard- ed as “limping" and “hesitating" that it does not seem to be the best word to itse on a Sign “lwrfl ptvivvYdfttt of throwivifliws""<1¢ttnita"§taf>"is'"rrqtitretr:“Iiieaiajecrraa“w “stop" in Scotland. it scent/i, is that it does not sanction a restart when it is seen that the road is clear. 5K it 5K For Canadians to pay Harvard a tribute, says the Montreal Gazette, seems but just and right. for the number of men trained there who are now teaching in Canadian universities is corti- paratively large, and the number of Canadians ‘who have taken their post-graduate work in this American university is very C0l1Sitl<'l'.'1l1l('. Hut we might reasonably go further :111tl,-—~\vhe11 thinking of the 3.000 miles of border line which is a symbol now of peace. where the only niarlts to indicate that the imaginary line divides are the skirmishes between customs tiificers and greedy travellers-ask the extent to which such iiistitutioits as Harvard University have aidt-tl in preserving this gratifying situaton of "sivt-et reasonableness" between neighbor nations. There has been a reciprocity in ideas between Canadian ‘and American universities \\'l'tiCl'l has done much to make for a happy solution 0f problems that a- irise amonguiatirms. especially acute when their ldestiuy brings them so close together as are Ca- lnada and the United States, should have gone Italian Fascist just after lviitg, Ii Edward had honored it by dedicating to it a i111}:- Notes by the Way j Disquieting news comes to me from Dublin about. the slate of Mr. De Vulerzrs lieullli. Earlier in the j _veai' he underwent an operation on L his eyes a1. the hands of a Zurich j specialist, wlileli was reported at the ‘illlnc to have been successful. But. tippilrently the trouble has recurred uilu‘ there 1S at the present moment. i gtxtve fear that in the course of the next year or so he may suffer the pat-mu, if nut the complete, loss of twessght. Even the President of the Council's mos; itiiplacable political . Opponents would agree that it would be a tragedy if he were com- Delietl to rc-iire froth political life j for this rtutson, as be very ptqbgbly would be--:l1e office of President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State not Delllg one easily 5115. At. the same tune, 1f he chose not. to rtslgn he totilrl probitbly remain ln office for 111c- rest of hi5 natural lzle, as the t-tutcep‘. of a blind lead- er would possess a symbolical at- traction which 'the Irish electorate would 11w quite unable to resist.— Loliclott Spectator. The (‘ivil Liberties Union in [m1]; 1111s u. lurtfi‘ Zleltl for lllIIlOII-buildjttg activities oiiectly appropriate w 1L5 per jit1rpost\ and to its founder. lentls comprehensible ideals. If it lrlckl these problems of the ntll. 11011. . goes for the tllfljor Evils o; pllfflllll sand it‘ it tneets the growing clentuiitl for rclzef from the country- tvltie bondage of tnarrtnge and (10th ‘Ylflfilslizms. lt will have begun an intitie-gse and lasting service that, has never yet been aittcmpted on a really asiaetory’ scale. If it; iQHOFCS tli se questions, and if it suggests that the privileges of g, Llllllll and vocal class matter equally or more, it will vindicate the aloof- iiess of those who at present, 59g a, good deal of liunibug in 115 very I1.".lT‘.C.—CIllCU[lil Statesman. The Lisbon Governtnent has as- ttxrcd the British Ambassador that Llie tirms embargo will be itiade ef- fective, but the reservations which tlze Portuguese Government has ut- tzichetl to llS participation in the "rorl-iiizerieziliou" agreement. and 1.5 delay 1n accepting a pressing in- lllllOll to 10m the Louclon super- ry committee lllllnl. arouse grave ivmgs. For 1f any loophole ls t which cntlangers the effective- :.1~s.~; of the nritis embargo it is open to the Alittlritl Government to com- tilinn not only that its lawful rights l e been ttetiied to it by the Euro- , i Powers but also that the rebels have been itllmvetl the assistance which 1t ‘nus been refused. Portugal will ' oarctiae the traditional 1 of this country if she clots no: Luke prompt szeps to do he: prawn-Manchester Guardian. lt is the enemies of the Soviet. Union who are delighted, its friends who are dismayed, by the new ter- ror. For tieurly twenty years now the British Labour Movement, has seen with warm sytnpathy the ef- forts of the Soviet leaders, in the face of appalling difficulties, to bntlu a new Socialist order on the ruins of ‘Isarism. . This new dictatorship is not “of the proletar- iat": nor is it Communist. The old Communists, Lenins lieutenants, are gone. Of the first. Political Bureau. of the first Soviet. Government, only Stalin remains. The new men are Stalinls Own. The Communist Party has become Stallifs instrument, ae- cepting the "Leader prlticlple" as utiqiicstloiiingly as do Fascists or Nazis. Stalin is spoken of in terms of subservlenee and adulation which Lenin would have scorned, whlch have not been heard ln Russia since Tsiirdom fell. It is a profoundly dlsappolntlug, a profoundly disturb- lng change: most disappointing and most disturbing to the warmest. sympathisers and the warmest; de- fenders of the Soviet regime, For it. ls their hopes which are being des- troyed.-Loridon Dally Herald. lii the comparatively short period of its operation, the Labour Depart- ment's scheme of New Zeland for .Pl.'l.Cl.l\8..Ll.lJ£mpl0yEd men in posi- tions for which they possess quall- ficutlotis has proved remarkably suc- cessful. The Government. and Mln- ister of Labour deserve credit. for infusing a more active and pi-atlctzl splri; into the department's labour exchanges by inaugurating the clas- sification system niid appolnttnl placement. officers to work on the 115:5 tmtl interest. prospective em- ployers. In the course of a 16W ‘tvrtks 700 men have been placed tn normal employment, over half beln! found tiermanent positions. This LB ti. real contribution toward the r8- ductloii of unemployment, far bet- ter for the lntltvitltial and the nation than pnlliutives like public or rellet works. If the restilts continue to be good, the saving to the" tdXDflYvr wlll be substnntlaL-Alwklimd News- Great. m-itiun ls mhrldlllns "a commercial avtntlon comliflfllvfi 1115i- The taxpayer tn Great. Brttatn may not. feel he should bu!‘ m! WNW ZElJat but? at yours lgJaulDJainILl‘). CANCER 1S (‘URABLE “Educatlon in cmieci‘ is the sys- tematic development of that. know- ledge that will lead man out. of the darkness of fear and despair re- garding this dreadful scourgfi" And can the middle-aged or eld- erly individual be blamed if down ln his heart he worries about. a “clironic" indigestion, perhaps a slight bleeding from the bowel or discovery of blood in his urine, or a mole that becomes angry and re- sults in a sore that, is slow in heal- ing. For the middle-aged man and woman knOWS that. next to heart- dlseast- cancer causes more deaths than any other ailment. And now research physicians are finding that eaneet‘ stems to run in sonic families just its dues asthma. hay fever, mid eezcunt, and that itt-ittlliori of a siufzict- ‘.11 these indi- \'l(llllIlS may cause cancer. This knowledge likewise is alarming l0 a great many. However this is the bad or the worst side of the knowledge about. cancer that, is now to hand; the other side, the good sale, should be maclc equally well kiioivu 10 all the" norltl. Dr. Ira. J. Kaplun, clinical professor‘ 0f surgery, New York Util- vcrsity, and Bellvite Hospital Medi- cal College, fn Hygeia. states, “Ob- servations and careful scientific study have nisclosed that. ul. the outset, cancer is a local disease, confining itself for a long time to the vicinity first attacked, and that a. cure depends oti the stage at. which the malady 1S noted and on early and proper treatment. Noth- ing is so discouraging to the pliy- slclan as to have to treat these pat- ictits after the disease has been per- ' mlted to run rampant for a long period." Just think about the above state- ment for, one minute; that is thutl cattcei" is, tit. first, just like any or- diiiary sore or lump-not. a general disease throughout can be cured just like any ordinary sore or lump, if treated early. the body-and “Generally speaking, any abnor- mal lump, sore or body friction calls for investigation. Sudden or persist- ent lumps in the breast, muscles or bones, irregularities in the monthly flow tn women; irregular bowel movements especially when blood appears in the stool, long persist- ent skin ulcerations and excessive continual 10s of weight call for consultation vvtth the physician." The point then is that; hope in- stead of despair should be the thought about cancer. Cancer 1s curable in its early stages. Cancer 1s neither infectlous, contagious, nor is directly inherited. "Only surgery, radium and the X rays can avail 1n cancer treat- ment. No other remedy 1s of value." fit,o towel/f THE OLD SONG When all the world ls young, lad, And all the trees are green; And every goose a swan, lad, Arid every lass a. queen; Arid round the world away; Young blood must. have its course, lad, And every dog lts day. When all the world Ls old, lad, And all the trees are brown, And all the sport, is stale, 111d, And all the wheels run down; Creep home, and take your place there, The spent. and malmki among: God grant. you find one face there You loved when all was young. —Charles Kingsley. of building up business for Imperial Airways, but the government ap- parently believes the expenditure la Justified. Every government, that. of the United States included, extends subsidies ln one form or another. The British merely are being direct. in their manner of handling the situation-Buffalo Evening News. ‘Wlll there be Ill‘ between France and Germany on account. of Spain's strife? Twenty years ago they counted up the dead of Verdun, the greitesl fortress ever garrlsoned 1n his ry. A mllllon fell, French and German. New youwlll hear talk of a. new Verdun. No, France and Ger- zr. it dtd its merchant marine. . . . l l many have had enough of that. There will not. be another one, for them, for n long time yew-London Dilly Ibrprul. Science And Politicsl (Vancouver Province) A rather illuminating contro- versy broke out the other day In _ London, before the two thousand I persons assembled at the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Sir Josiah stamp, bank director. railway manager and “myriad- minded man," presiding at. the meeting, proposed some sort of control of science. He was answered by Professor Lancelot Hogben of London Unl- versity, in terms of aeer-bity. The two points of view, as there presented, seem to be implicit.- and hence thwe presents-An the essential struggle now going’ on everywhere 1n human society of these times. 1 Str Josiah Stamp said that he did not wish to prevent or curtail t scientific progress, but he dld want , some sort. of control of it. He thought its far-reaching discover- les were too much fo rour clvlllz- ation, which found itself unable to absorb them. Professor Hogben, in reply. was seornful with all the scorn of the professional pedagogue for some luekless layman who ansivers back in the class-room. This, he said, W88- the "machine wrecking ment- ality all over again." This was the challenge of the politicians to the selerttlsts-“but young scient- ists will prefer to scrap an cut.- worm order of society so asto make room for one that wlll not. misuse the gifts of science." Here, ls quite obviously either a. misunderstanding or a confusion of ideas between the man of affairs and the scientist, and ft is quite possible that lt. ls Pro. Hogben who is ivrong and not Sir Josiah Stamp. For the assumption of the pro- fessor seems to be that the sclent- y ist, is ln some undefined mariner an authority upon polities superior to the politician himself. But surley the experlence of’ these distressful times 1n the world l that science, They hey for boot. and horse, lad,- ls that all men become politicians , when they deal. with politics, and ithat. politics Ls essentially an art, lnot. a sclenee-the difficult art. in which human emotion plays an inevitable and as important a. part. as human reason, of human gov- ernment. This contradiction was even more beautifully illustrated by the remarks at. the same meeting of Professor William Cramp. presi- dent of the engineering division of the association. He said, flrst. , lending aid to mart , both in war and in peace. reeog. ‘Vilzed no moral obligations. And then he said that "if the engineers were left undisturbed by the pol- ittclatis, world tomorrow. abolish w“ and WE RECOMIMEND l MAGS Special RX. 315 COD LIVER. OIL EXTRACT WITH CRESOTE AND CUIACOL COMPOUND A real tonic for coughs, colds, influenza and grlppe, 1t t; better than ordinary cough medicines, for it reaches the seat. of tho trouble, relieves ‘ the cough and lllppllg; w“- tlnual treatment to hulld up system, to "fibula -‘ future attacks. A splendid blood and body building tonic for both 3'9""! and old who take reg- ularly. PRICE _$l.00 PER. BOTTLE MACS Hair Restorer A delicately perfumed pre- Pflratlon which restoru. strengthens and beautlflea the halr. It will restore guy hglr to Its natural color and produce a rleh and abundant. growth of liatr. PRICE 60c. Order by Mall TOGII. g THE 2 MACS they could clvllize the l Professional Bards Lloyd, Egan 8t Bo. Chntered Accountant: 140 Richmond Blreel Phone 41. P. O. Box l2. McLeod &i Bentley W- E. BENTLEY, K. 0. .I. A. BENTLEY, K. 0. Barristers and Attorneys-nt-hw MONEY T0 LOAN M. ALBAN FARMER B- A.. LLB. BARRISTER. aomcrron. rm: MONEY r0 1.0m BnnkolCnnadnBlh. clllflflltl n Alex.‘ W. Matheson BABRISTER. SOLICITOB. ETC Money to Lou Collacllona Ofllm 00 01ml (Home lino!» O There is a lot 0F satisfaction in underwear that fits, wears and launders well. That is why so many men wear Penmans "95" or hey Underwear . Penmans label. [I71]! insist on I?!” KNITTED UNDERWEAR o OUTERWEAR o HOSIERY override artificial barriers between l natlons." ‘, ‘The answer is-and it. lS the an- swer of St!" Josiah Stamp, and it scents to be the answer of human t fiXptlfl0llCe-lllflfi min, when they‘, seek to abolish war or to proiitote ‘ tntertiatiotinl goodwill, are not do- l t 1 lug anything which can be done by scientists, and will have to be politicians wlllynilly. A politician has to "recognize. moral oblig- ations." it ixt 5()_ 13m, politics, the business of human government, has to be moral, first an last. f l‘ , Please Note Our New Low Prices for l Balance of Season for Cash $12.50 ‘ Anthracite Dominion Coke Old Sydney Screened Inverness Screened Albion Nut and Stove Albion Lump Springhill Screened Springhill Slack Sydney Slack Fifty Cents Additional Charged on Above Prices for Booking After 3O Days. W. D. GILLIS 8t '00. . PHONE 176 Vialit aiwaus use BRAHMIN ORANGE EKOE TE Genuine Scotch Anthracite American Readings Famous $13.00 $10.00 $9.00 $8.75 $8.50 i _.___————*" Bookkeeping systems ll K. S. HELIMING, 11.11., 0.P.A., c.1114. Certified Public Accountant and Auditor Profit and Loss Accounts Computed. Trustee under the. Bankruptcy Act "mmpany By-Laivs, Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prepared. Administration of Estates ' a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. ‘:1nk of Nova Scotia Building Charlottetown, P.E.l. installed or revised If science is urimoral, let,