A - ssaszsea-sssltiiseaséfi? g4 amsaeizcsss assesses "P" 9192! RS1? EQZI. _ nannp-sfla-.. ...,._.._.-_.. ____.,_._ _ , ? PAGE FOUR . ‘L TNE GNAIILOTTETOWN G llllllIIlN‘ come. As for the Duncan has had to be defended many times r V lce Prealileu Morning Dally (Founded in IBIII President. Limb-col. W. Chester 8. llelmro t, J. R. Bilrllell. I. J. l_ Secretary, Lleut -t.'iiL l). A. Macklnoon. 0 il- 0- Iidltor and Managing Director J. IL Burnett l‘. J- I Associate Editor, Frans Walker eral politicians. The chief persions was a brief Government, SUBSCRIPTION BATES 35.09 pg! yell tin advance) delivered to City $4.00 per year (in advance) nialled to l‘. l. llllllil “.00 on year itn advaneei mailed to Gumball DJ Member; unlit Bureau of Circulation: lug for a new‘ nhnsi- 0f it. his Department are there to do. to many people that hi< ilectsion is based much more on the idi-a lll stiviii; his Department trott- “The Strongest Memory is Weaker "It"! UZCWll/Ctliéilllke" NOVEMBER Z3, 1939. Red Cross Exemption Needed 'l‘lic Minister of National Revenue. Him- .l- L- Ilslcv, has refused a rci|ucst made by the Can- mlim} ltctl cfl-uss Society for the exemption from sales tax of purchases made by the society 0f supplies to be ivurksil up by its helpers. ‘ r-tvs the “limiting l/ri-e Press, is a matter which sliotiltl be rccon-idcrcil the manv llltltlriilllils‘ of men and women who are now coiitrilitiif-ig funds and doing work for the Red Cross “ll UYQI‘ (he cottntry would perform ln additional service bv calling this matter to the attention of lilcll‘ local member and in press- tlccision at Ottawa. ICIISNIIS given by the Minister for his de- rision are, in the main, related to difficulties of sdntiuiteriiig llll‘ exemption without trouble and llut that is what the officials of press and was embodied at tedious the brief ivhich Relations. This was the thanks Macmillan got from his work on the Duncan Commission! Miles EDITORIAL NOTES i= \\'ithin a month of Christmas Eve. i i If U ,1‘ This, Rubinstein born this date, 1829. "The ‘only letter which Englishmen write in capitals is I. This I think is the most pointed comment 0n their national character." 1i it I U “The Day and A’ \Vha Honor It" will be res- ponded to by Rev. \V. Goodwill at the St. Andrew's dinner; while Dr. \Vendel Macdonald will respOnd to “The Land o’ the Heather." - s- s n- with promptness, and When the artillery leave here we will have no COIIsIllCTHlJlC unit to represent the Canadian army in our midst. \\'hy should not our Highland Regiment return here for winter quarters? Be- lt ivill seem lfi- ihzin of lirlpinv and cncciuraging a vast “WW Ill?" are “m” (m 3cm“: dulY, l!‘ N0“ 5Com“ willow-i of \'rillill“il‘y l'llltil‘ lfyfily Offered m a whereas they would be only training here. ‘_ " . . “ ~ ' a m m 1r vital, lllllllfillllllldflll c.'iu~c. _ , , . . l-\'(‘ “m, “mum 1"“, i» S‘ .5 thc Free press‘ There are t\vo neiv offices in the City Council "that the lliflg Priiviiicizil Divisions of the Red ("rim and its \illllllli'll lleailqiiartcrs would not (‘i|-(ll.t‘l'.'l‘(‘ fziirlv and lioucstlv with the Gov- iurtnucni in maltiiig this exemption work, yet the unli- in ft-rcncc that can be drawn from the blin- ilieris ilecisitin is that certain purchases would lii- made of goods which would eventually he di- vvrtcil fro!" the channel of Red Cross distribu- \\'<> \'('llltll'€ the guess that such an infer- ence i: cutirelv unfniiiiiled, just as we know that a vcrv lllfjf‘ number of hard-ivorking patriotic people would be happier in their war work if they felt that cvcri-tliin 11w’. lic uiirlrr the sales tax levy of eight per cent." timi. L Hitler's Responsibility Qmldrt- r1 the .\l:iritime \\'omcn's Club in lllimtrtiril, Sir titrzihi Campbell, l\'.C.I\l.(i. Bri- tlsll l litlcrs P" future." the naked truth." black peoples of of moving pictures 0n and India which which they were ____~j______ Cabinet Representation An attempt is made in the local Liberal press to misrepresent. Hon. john A. MacDonald) as having “opposed the Duncan Commission as being entirely unneces- as our Mr. Senator sary." The fact, knows, is that in Parliament, gard to (itimmission. was‘ on this Commission iizitinn. To say that and more rt pri sciitritirili. This nltack sooth. we \\'('I'(‘ resvntiiiitiit until the with the Nlachlillan g bought for them iliil llitih Commissioner told of having asked l..,>ril l-l;il<l\viu last April whether war was like- ly, and said that he received the reply that there would not he ivar “unless Hitler gets into one oi his black moods"; if he did, Lord Baldwin fear- ed a world catastrophe. pencil at a time to have “a poison through his veins" it was having an effect on the lives of itiillions of people. the llllfll CLIHIIIllSSltJIlCF remarked, to say that llitler had misjudged Poland and did not think that the British linipire and France would fight u =0 ——"and yct is that any consolation to those who may have to mourn the loss of a life that means more to them and the wo Sir (Jerald added: got to take the present, and wonder about the ges that had takeh place ere "from the shadow to the stibstance, from mystery to reality, from a certain amount of htinibug and hypocrisy to Sir Gerald wondered if the Africa ivould continue to hold the white man in awe when called on to help kill other white men, and he spoke of the effect the natives of Abyssinia showed them that the evils for rebuked were matched by oili- crs practised by white people. Radical chart in the last 25 years w MacDonald, members of the tlicn Conservative pressed on the King Govern- ment the necessity for immediate action in rem- edying Maritime grievances, particularly in re- transportation rates. coimtercil with the proposal to appoint aiiother This not only meant initial delay, but the likclihovd of the Commissions being shelved for an indefinite period, ground rpirstioiicil whether the mere appointment of a ivas stiiiicient to meet the Mr. MacDonald, or other tjoii-‘i-rvzitivc mcnilicr opposed the Coili- mission “as being cntircly unnecessary", when a: a matter of fact they were urging prompter effective :ictioii, is rm Senator lnunchi-vl lav our contemporary because, for- nlilo in show hleiglirn and llPllllPll Governments this Prov- ince eniuvvil i-oiitinuotis representation Ilflllllllliall (‘iibiir-t, whereas tinder (iovvrviincnt it has been a matter of cxpeilii-ncij (lur itontrmyiorary cites the Hon, john Ii. Sinclair (now Senator Sinclairl, but it snrclv has not forgotten that while Mr. Sinclair u-rts .1 member without portfolio in the first King Gnveriimvut, "reduced to the ranks" when the King (lovem- mi-iit came back in September. 1926. Vroisincc remained without any (lying: days of (‘rllIHPlH/lll tlieifall of i930. (hi the return of the nut‘ (‘riliinct representation was putt lwinrf nblv filled by I-Ion. Mr. hlncllnnalil. who among other things co-operated effectively (iovernmcnt I _ ing the :ipymiminr-ut of the White Commission. under which this Province received an addition- —-_\ssistant City Clerk and Assistant Engineer. Bur there are no new appointees, the City 'l‘ax grillicrer and ‘Street Forcmait discharging the respective iluIics--"a ruse by any other name," etc. ' I I U i Toronto board of police commissioners have granted Chief Constable D. C. Draper 3 months leave of absence on full pay so that he may g0 to LOIIIIOII to offer his services to the British (lov- eritment for active service in the war. The chief, who holds the rank of Brigadier-General, left November 22, Chief Draper has directed the force for 12 years. lle ivent overseas in 1915 with the 5th Canadian hlfllllllCll Rifles. i U ll i Tourist business in Quebec Province decreas- ed 2o per cent in 1939, according to preliminary figures, Mr. Emile llcnattd, secrctary-trcasiirer of the municipal tourist bureau and managing director of the Quebec Auto Club, announces. A total 0f 400,539 automobiles carrying tour- ists have entered the province so far this year. The figure represents a decrease of 117.133 when compared with the 577,731 automobiles which entered the tiroviiice last year. 'l'otirist trade has been almost at a standstill since the out- break of war. “Since September i customs of- fices which usually hand out hundreds of holi- day permits each day saw the figures decline to zero." Because Hitler hap- coursing It was all very well, It i! The government crisis in Rumania was pre- ceded by an attempt on the part of Germany to bribe a Turkish newspaper. Hitler's representa- tives in lnstabul offered the Tan a substantial bribe if it would drop the anti-German cam- paign it had been ltrcssitig in recent weeks. In a recent edition the newspaper charged that Franz von Papen, German Ambassador to Tur- key, promised the Rumanian Ambassador, Vasile Stoica that Germany would supply Ru- mania with materials and munitions tiecessary to construct a “Siegfried Line" on the Soviet frontier. The German news agency denied this charge and accused 'l‘an of seeking to weaken the German-Soviet accord. s is v u If Canadians ate more codfish they might do much to promote a large scale cod liver oil in- dustry in the Dominion. This is the opinion of Captain Frederick Wallace, of Ste. Anne de Bellevue, an authority on Canadian fisheries, and editor of “The Canadian Fishermen." Al- ready a serious shortage of cod liver oil, an es- sential food for children,_is forecast by the Child rld than fifty thousand “Now we have r MacDonald (now al annual subsidy of $150,000 for all time to Commission, its report in these u against aspersions cast upon it by Lib- source of these as- prepared some years ago by the present ltlinistei- of Defense in the King Hon. Norman Rogers, and sub- mitted to the Jones Commission in Nova Scotia. Mr. Rogers claimed that the Duncan Commis- sion failed to carry out their terms of reference because they stuck to practical issues and re- fused to ivandei- into the controversial field of tariff incidence His partisan criticism on this point was quoted approvingly in the local Liberal length in Premier Campbell presented to the Rowell Commission on Dominion-Provincial Hon. Cyrus party friends for his rim Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TNE WAY n, medical fraternity Iill long‘ ‘l been in doubt about the value oi tonsils. one viewpoint is that they are useless, because they have n: function in the body and ixequently become infected, causing variety of troubles. The other vlewixmt is that they do perform some useful IIIBIOPIOII, the nature of which has not as yet been difinitely deter-l‘ mined. Dr. I. S. Pohl, e Berlin biologist, reports experimental {work on animals which indicate that the tonsils have an endocrine- igland function and that they con- {tribute a hormone that aids in _growt-li. Using fish and salaman- ders as experimental subjects, he 16¢ 0119 FWD 0t’ emh with dried substance from the tonsils of hogs, and ‘control groups were given the same material after they were treated with X-rays. of control groups were given dried ttsues of the spleen of hogs. He found a much greater Increase m size in the annuals receiving the normal tonsllar material than in the control groups. - St. Thomas Times-Journal. London has erected moot of its sandbag rampart; in a strictly utili- tartan frame of mind. The City has been conscientiously “sacked? as one British puts it, and pillsged of a great: deal oi its beauty. and of course, no one is inclined to re- sent that: but: all the same credit may g0 to those few propretors whose motto, in protecting their defiance of the eye, shade fo green, have pleasing effects. The idea, how- ever. that has undoubtedly greatest possibility comes nature. For there are sandbags in Bond street that are chtckenweed, and others, close to the Strand. are grern with grass, of which the seeds have bcen contemporary well like other Opposition lVelfare Association owing to wartime restric- tions in European waters whence comes a large part of the supply. Canadian maritime ivaters teem with cod. S0 the question naturally arises why can’t fishermen in Liaspe and the Mari- time Provinces produce a high grade medicinal cod liver oil to meet North American market demands and to help bolster their always pre- carious finances? Premier King l-epon is is n- a and It At the fiftieth anniversary of Barnard Col- tliat the Conservatives lege for women, New York, Dr. William A. Ncilson, president-emeritus of Smith College challenged the attitude of the youth of today in the States towards democracy and race continu- ity. “It is all to the good that we should con- sider the foundations of our American institu- tions. But for the moment the attitude of our academic youth seems to be so largely self-en- tered that one ilotihts whether the form in which pacifi=m ivas brought to them during these years was the best for their spiritual health. ‘Their young men shall see visions and their old men shall ilrram rlreams,’ but the young men todav seem to be largely concerned with safety firs? and the old men with $30 every Thursday. These things for keeping one's country out of ivar, providing for tha aged, and so on, are nf coiirsc admirable. but the difficulty with re- gard to the pacifistic tendency of American youth today is that it is so short-sighted." Train- ing tmvard a longer-ranged point of view, he as- serted. ivoiild have led to yntitlfs realizing "that to seek peace by itself, irrespective of what lay| unrler it, was not a long view. Peace that is notl the crown of justice and liberty is a peace that cannot last, and it ivoiild have been more in- spiring if our young men and women today sit- any absolute mis- MacDnnald was that under the in the King political case 0F the (1021-1015) he WIIS and this (Tabinrt rep- the Gov- llennett Cmvernmcnt blown from the counter of a mar- by shop. "What a London there; would be." writes a Irndoner to the Monitor, "if men were to aid nature here! A London that. by inext- Spring, with grassy banks booths, would shew hc-w green may grow a city." - Christian Science Monitor. It ls common knowledge that dur- ing recent. years the major heavy industries of this country; wh’ch are so vital to the naxion as the fighting services, have undergonea. thorough transformation in organ- ization and productive facilities. Many examples have bean provided lately by these industries in show- ing what they can do by way of high outputs when the necessity arises, and althorgli rtarmamcnti has been pushed forward in the‘ past two tears, the full re ‘ources of British industry have not yet been utilized. There ls, therefore, ade- quate elasticity for expanded ef- fort vrliich gives a sound basis for confidence in the abiliy of Br t-l lsh industries to see the country» successfully through the war. Ship-i building and the asocfafed in- dustries supplying the Royal Navy their house tn order some years ago and their position today is ln striking contrast to the circum- stance of 1914 There ls greater ctr-operation than has ever been known in the history of shlpbuild-l ing, which will gv far to make the maximum use of the tndu tryflsi resources. Another favourable fac- tor is that practically all the Work on the stocks in th~ shliayariis is of immediate use, iiliereiis in 1914 there were many vessels under construct-ion which had to be fin- ished off in order t» i-rvtde ac- comodatton for lav n; down essen- tial tonnage. - Glnzgow Hera d. i When the war started ln Septem- ber and tlie stock market advanced, sensatlonally on big volume of transactions it was nattiraly as- sumed ttiat, at least for the dura- tion of the war, speculative activity would contmue on a broad scile. But October, the second month of the war, was a great disappoint-l rnent. It. was the dullest October since 1934 and with that. excep- tion the clulleit tn l3 years. That either the regulations imposed by the New Deal or reluctance on the. part of the public to venture capi- tal in securities. or a combina- tion of both, have greaty redizced. speculative activity seems very apparent. For not only was OcLJber a very dull month despite the stimulus of the war, but the vol- 111110 of transactions on the Neivl York Stock Etxchange for the 10} l months ended on Oct. 31 were the smallest for any similar period in I3 years. There l; of course not much doubt. that the regulations on trading imposed by the New Deal have cut» down speculative activity. ‘Phey were designed to do this because the people of this country had come to believe that‘ excessive speculation and conse- quent vtolent fluctuations in prices of securities tended to demoralize general business. Most of the re- fomia thus imposed have now been accepted by Wall Street as salu-l tary. But Wall Street believes is much larger volume of speculative activity is warranted by the growthl of the country. the increased num- ber of securities available for in- vestment anif speculation, and by the greatly improved business situ- ation. A good many economists in and out o! Wall Street believe too that under present regulations more speculative activity would be beneficial in stimulating general‘ business. ‘They beleve the demand' for venture capital which even the.’ New Deal leaders say ls essential for Tull buslnes resovcry would be fulfilled if speculation was not choked off. The new regulations. restored. the had been mori- concerned with iustice and lib- erty than with their own safctyi." There was a burst of applause from the visiting college hcaslml the deans of (“oliunbin college and the zlislin-l guished guests, chow-ins; there was a general agreement with the sentiments expressed. in obtain- however. are not t-he sale and prob- ably not the main cause for the‘ dull markets. When taxes take from 50 to 8'1 per cent of the gains of the big fellows, who used to make markets, it la mt. surpris- inn that speculation lis restrained. -Bosiion Post. Another set. m premises, has been defense wltnutla-TQ sllll who, with ‘gawk, paint, or tarpaulln, or raffle, in admm 93mm,- Dhnnwowr’ Hand- produeed loook’ H ' ' m‘; Tutitle liav apparently died "om moved await No addresses are given and Iterraces to its streets, and l with verdant powers that were is! once no more than telephonel ,l'@-- baking Sahurm-ainls early and the merchantile marine put um I o a: n t I PIG-WORM B! Ming the moat effective ‘ o né - Shop - Keeping In Pioneer Days T“ ‘ll’il‘i¥r°§r”<l‘il’§°“"§ B! l. S. D. | Front‘ the Day - Book ol William Schumann, merch- ant. "on the Illlllfl of SI. John," beflln 1784 0o uedf 7‘ ’ (nth moms) __ya The consists of e range of groceries, hardware, cloth- ing, livestock, and farm ,1-i.is stock was doubtless at w“! 1n ipamt of the oir Bolriinman leg ‘cabin built on 1mm now occup- ted by m. Leonard Bahia-man (on tthe weer. side of £611,531! ‘to Billi- dwelll , d fwcirl i "aiwsdvil. ....~.'é.i"“....“°l." s . p - ma‘ tilligwbb it survived: containing as u (oier tum hundred opened dial-ran ooooimts lai film period 1784-181 ) ram tine general Bedeque region but. from as fair south as Tryan and Glpe CPraverse, and ‘ as far rim-till as New noon dist-let. Names such as Anderson, Baker, Black, Campbell. Oole. Grumman. Green, Hooper, Murray, MacFairla-ne. Montgomery. Palmer, . RIX- . Sillikieir ‘layioi- famll family names in 2a aim 26. while such families Biiamble Brflnwsn - , Moarlen, Niles, Noy Plugstey, sabtm, Salton, an out. or H». Pippin. ‘in U116 book, but names sucn as Clark. Dawson, Howmt, Ives, Kill- Hfflwlng cash, leikrd, Lard, Mutton, MCInIll-i, Pollard. Penman, Quinlan. and Rub- ear were those of Tryon or Cape Traverse residents. These ipeopl-e, no doubt, c wlvat. they could. Dflid cash for winat they ciatilid-irt, or else dict without. Tlie prces they paid are permit»; the miceif. imaieg/lillg pan 0f tine record. Tran atilltlns weie IJn pounds shllllflls amid pence, not for smite reason Sterltns. Ilaltfax Cur- Ro-blm, Small. Wouan ainn wright I PUBLIC FORUM Iain ootann so one hr ill “undo; by correspondents of questions If‘ liar-e. ‘llllllhk III. Ill i: '0‘: sh will"! o! norroupollulls THI ACTIVE SERVICE BOYS Sir, Recent comparison of the OABJ‘. with the first. contingent of the (LEI. of 1.914 has contrasted the earnestness or the present. force with the spirit. of adventure which prevailed in 1914. In spite of this. 1 feel that. the spirit of adventure is at least. as strong with the boys today as it was then. As one of the 1014 mob, (veterans will get "than vfiiolabflgikatugipo hvzas 18 years o . per psmy observations may be of value to lsome one. Naturally I hope ‘memes many, but Lf it hits just’. one soldier or family, then my let- ter will not have been 1n vain. ‘The izifiuence of home contacts is not. at. handtocombat the mans- {ortgzat-ion of the adventurous spirit n- ncter continues. Naturally his pre- lvioua training will have a. great ibeaitng on the outcome. Active service is no kid glove affair as we know and a man has to be. shall we say ‘liard-boiled." But tboys may be hard-boiled on the clean side. so many of us young- ' stern of 1914 made our first slip into the loo-called conventional sins wider the spell of our spirit of ad- venturing. Bo to the younger men say, "Be clean." To former sol- dters oil the 0.12.1". who are serving In the C.A.S.1“. "Guide Them Right- ly." While to those at home I would any: "Military life ta in the main a ffne clean character-bulld- iniz experience. but; ea I said above, the contacts of home are not at hand to Influence, So. in your let- ters, express clearly that. the love and respect tilwrv bear towards you lead you to expect without doubt “Clean Living." How your parents, wives and sweethearts can help in this way is something they will likely never tell you. I tLm, Sir, etc" Ex. 11.0.0. PETER, PAUL AND JONATHAN In other words a sliillin was twenty cents, and it is on this basis that the values 1n Schumann's account book have been translated. Whether this gtaridnaid makes for a. fair comparison cannot be asflertalned. In the line of groceries surely there were. and are, certain staple articles without. which even pioneer housewife could not set hiat- irugal liable. We think of flour, sugar. pepper, lpices and salt and charge aceoun-ls. as representative, it would seem that. only flour, tea, and pgp- per were prline essentials. And of l course mt. lillls time. even flour was not a staple dgropery product, it being ‘purenrse either from the m er s oi- ground in some poor Way at home. Sugar does not, gppea)‘ m the accounts till 1794 when it sold at. eighteen to twentycents a pound. The kind is not specified, but there was no white refined sugar, it belltg P111191‘ mlllle 01" west-Indian IJYOIHI.‘ A year later sugar was selling three pounds for two slilllln , and at one e at . (or 102) a pound. In 1813 1t was higher twain. selling during the war period 1812-14 at slx pound; for $1.40. Tea nus the popular bev- erage of the early pioneers. altering first place with rum. and then per- hops. for the older folks many cups of tea. were laced ivltih i; open, Demernra. Tim first tea in Bedeque sold for ninety cents a pound; later, in 1793. it came clown to 80 cents, but two years later was $1.20. Thlsl was Bolton tea (an inferior kind of black tea). In 1795 schurman oom- mented to itoek (the superior radc. "Shoushiang tea" wililch sod at, vflrvlritz prices of 9s to 10s ($1.80 to $2.00) arpound. Like all other Im- ports du 11g the war of 1812-14 Ififll advanced. s0 tihat. the better e not] at four dollars. sold at $2.40 a bound. Coffee is mentioned in the account book at iill- except. in the met year when it sold at. the reasonable price of 30c a, pound. (T0 be Continued) DISCIPLINE EVER ROCI-IDAIIE. -—England —(OP)— Complaints of ARP workers here they “figfiwaslfpl-‘Ilffig tgnbylute mili- - . o. finer; brouzlit tihe old axiom "fliers! must, l“! dl-‘tflibllne of some sort among 2°“ men» some only partly iii-amour Swine Breeders Ska-Peter, Paul and Jonathan are the taxable factors (or shoud be) of the City Corporation. In benefits, however, they are in re- ~ verse ratio to their share of enn- tribution to the costs. The less they Pay the more they get. Peter works bard, stints him- self of luxuries, saves what. ho can and invests in real estate in pro- vision for the rainy days, and old age. His savings are a. public bene- faction, giving work tn the building and yearly repairs, and tenant homes for the less thrifty, who must have shelter which the street does not furnish. And then, in very B19111’ 08-565. the City tax eollecbor, in annual rounds, demand; of him the entire income to maintain the civic institutions, including fan- tastic prodlgalty and reckless fl- nancing. Paul, by integrity and attention to business, works his way up from clerkship to proprietor of a pros- perous business. He too, to a less extent (proportionate to his wealth), ls a benefactor. He gives employ- ment to many, by credits helps pa- trons over periods of scarce money, and to u. minimum extent contri- butes to the expense of civic gov- ernment-. If he ls a 3209.000 man he Ls assessed at. approximately 530,000 for taxation. If a s 03,000 man his percent-age of asaassment rates slightly higher, and on the ascending scale the less lle has the hlrriwer his tax rating until with r200 worth cf stock, and an old $50 delivery car he ls nss"s=ed over 200 per cent on his actual holdings. ollllfilllflll comes next‘, the colon of mllllons whom the gods of tax- ation have clothed with a cont of mail which tax collectors can not pcnterate. I-Ie is n most thrifty ae- cumulator of wealth where he has not strewn, who stores his harvests in safer places than the "Napkin". in safety deposit boxes or other repositories, where, like the “wid- dow's cruise of oil". it increases and compounds those increases, yet serves no beneficial public in- terest. This is wealth, just/ as much a personally m the goods on the merchants shelves, or the exposed buildings of the unfortunate but lépnest tnxpaying owner of prcper- The amount of this type of “per- sonal property" will score lln i-o mil- llons'of dollars. It is hidden away in recesses of safety, contrbuting nothing to civic maintenance. con- , Attention r Now ts the time to guard al st. remedy on the market, MACS PIG-WORM TONIC POWDER It will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms and improve the health of your herd. PRICE 35 CENT5 mm 1.3. We carry a complete lino of Cattle Remedies. t-ributing nothing to the public ben- efit, drawing interest (sometimes to the extent of extortion), reduc- ing money circulation, to re-lnvest. in further securities, The Jonatbans, contributing noth- ing to the cost are usually the fore- most 1n Clltmfifll]! for civic ex- penditures; $60,000 or more to ed- ucate their children, landing places Guaranteed Objectives No investment other than life Insurance permit, you to create an instant estate for business or family protection, which can be paid for by instalment; lg you live, and in, which all further indebtedness will be cancelled if you die. Financial objectives programmed through life insurance are guaranteed complete achievement. . The Great-WestLife ls the Champion of Thritt and the Guardian of thousands of Canadian Homes, Consult your nearest Agent or write or call on NYNIIINAN 8i 00. LIMITED Provincial Managers Offices — Charlottetown, Summerslde, Montague l Fora Delicious Cut) of T? Orange Felice Tea Mr. lea Pot! Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown for their aoquatlo sport-s, pavements . to suburban residences or clubs, police force at their beck and call, well lighted streets to guide them at night, health systems to shut of. disease anr rancid odors from their sensitive nostrils, high salaries for relatives in offices. But when it comes to paying the costs, they disdain this idea of tithes. Hand those over to the "bewers of wood and draiwers of water," those docile owners of property who are skinned to the bone to give them that which the real taxpayers are unable to afford. I am, Sh‘, etc, '1 n“ A'AA\I nun-I 14A! AIUUIADAJUB: The flower-fed buffaloes of the 8P1‘ In tihe days 0f l Ra-nsfld Is swept away by wheat, Wheel? and wheels and wheels spin riucriivnn 1 the yspflaig that till is t. ~ Britt the flower-fed ‘buffalgefll the l‘ Left ussplong aim. meygore mmormtbeybclluwm Ithey trundle around tlhe hills no IRON Wllth tlhe fileckfeet Whig low, with the Pe/wneas lying low. —Vacl1el Llndly. The Kaisefs Dream (Ottawa Journal) Former Kaiser Wilhelm, watch- ing his life's sunset from exile tn Doom, is said to be dreaming o! a. Hohenzollern restoration in Germany. He had better turn HONOR THREE over, wake up. FOR. WAR WORK For four years the earth ran blood and millions of men died be- ‘ VANCOUVER. NOV- Wl-(CP) ~e cause the Hohenzollerns held n lzlvfinbfg ‘galfvllfimnglillllglgvl: Gemmn throne‘ Th“ minions lbeen honored for their office eer- sbould die again to put- the-m back ‘vices to the numuy forces‘ The’ on that throne, would be the bit- m“ M“ Marjorie Mcwn M,“ terest. irony of all history. M Miriam Hafiz, and Tliys ‘There were those, twenty years gym-m- who my; been working ago (they included the late great every day, holidays included, since Lord Birkenheadl, who thought Aug. 26 in the Bessboroudll that t/he Kaiser should be brought Armvrlw here. The! were W‘ before a world tribunal, tried for 591mm LI~€°L G- u}? “a; war guilt. A year or two before that “slg-garfim t; 81W‘; fimcmigdlan Lloyd George ran and won a Brit- Mfikry Greg, an brazen,“ lsh election partly on the cry of "Hung the Kaiser." It would be a MP WIT“ WEE; mockery surely. of all the profes- lgv§$oNfiolawmn°n beenml stuns o1 this present war if its known that. 70-year-old Ftrederick result were a return of this same May, a shoemaker. was “lonely. man or of any of his family to and bad a ring waiting for a bridle. yulgfghjp over Ggrmgny, he received 500 letters from viti- The best: that. can be said for " Women- tlie Kaiser, in comparison with Hitler, in that the Kaiser at least was n gentlemen. He was a man ‘RINGS INSTANT ‘l’. of education and background. knew something of government and history, Hitler. an uninstiructied up- start, product of the slums of Vienna. and the beer tavern of Munich, ls every other inch a gentleman, knows nothing of either history or government. So it would be no victory for either freedom or democracy which swapped Hitler for the Hohenzol- terns. Whatever be the fate of Germany, it will be something bet- ter-nnd safer-than that. .____._____._ Use Mimi-db lor dandruff. Gassy stomachs Refieved EV"! pflifln who la troubled i with gas in the stomach and ' bowels should [et a bottle oi l Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture and see how quickly it will i-e- 0 lleve all distressing symptoms. Dr. Evans stomach Mixture taken at meal time prevents all bad effvcla from , but it. remotes the fune- ional aeilv if o! the stomach, assists dl est on and Improves the nppe te. Dr. Evans stomach Mixture ls sold only at the Two Mace at 85c per bottle. Get Your Bottle Today. The 2 IMBS I49 Great Geoiie street Whether you are bagging the odd duck or coming home empty-handed there ls n" reason to spoil the day Gllllffil!" b!’ for‘ getting to take along with you .- HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10c Per Fig EVERYWHERE IN THE P R O V I N C E NICKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO C0" LIMITED Charlottetown