he _._-- -. mam-mgr“,- PAGE FOUR THE ciiluitonrrowii GUARDIAN Jluriiing Dally" (founded Ilsa?) President. IJruL-Cul. H. Cl. let S. MCLIIXI bllil‘ Prr-zderil, J. H. Burnett. EAJ~L _ Stcreiary, LlvuL-L ul. D. A. hlaclilnnlln. 0-5-0- idltor anu .'».'.lii.l,,iiig Director, J. R. Burnett. FJA .-\~su(i4te Lclitur. Frank Wlkllcl’ SI BSL 11H’ [ION RATES $5.00 IX-r M: r in auiaiite» delivered la (fly. $4.00 per yr...‘ “Ill auiaillti mulled to l’. ll. 5.00 pcl _\t‘.ll -i|| uuiuiiiei IZJ-II(.‘U lu Lalllda and L-l Qlemliers Auuit Burt-an of Circulation: “Tlieihlru/lycst Jlemory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink " -—- — - "s" >.*_..* ....__. 1939. \\’lr.ll,\'l.~ll.\i. mo; NOVEMBER 9, ‘A (ll-cal Convention l (‘rifl- in the “ that have '. and Can- \\'cel-cl_v, a ngflatirl, says: i} mostly commercial types which ‘tn-came unair- worthy and had to be stored 1:1 zllriivist every military air station across Can More than ninefyengines were bought rec - lift sumf of these craft into the a:r zlgzliiz. l ..._v of tbc most suitable --f ‘ ' junk ‘heap \\t'2't' reserved :0 be flown by RC Al‘ fliers Rep’. lll1~_\' in "civil air operanozis‘, in c CLiITII-Cilil-lll with com- mercial air transport -nl~cf'.'<".l'>. '1 .11 lack of modern aircraft of any mi ary type brought training in advanced m rv flying {u a virtual flfllldolill a few month.- 1 Editorial Notes I Edward \'II born tllzs (fate. 184i. i i I ¥ In \\'ashington they are now preparing a - ‘- e Presi- t. : of Alussoliiii. or even of C 3111b m-al t0 Mussolini to i" - ‘ x is x an active .;-\ erziitzent. Blajesties 1e of the t al capital. llo 5i K‘\:"ll' The Canadian Pres" f“ t-xilf stay in Cover 43111)‘, h' -- ‘rs and the vluestftm of . A _ T07‘ onto and Ii ' :r l~ r c-iniecture. _\i_.;o a m; , wfwi is. to be the lzctitt-nanz-g- vernor . ilk‘ l K1116?" taming? I i U Tentative prograntme fir the sixth Imperial Pm ~ .. 319mb 1. l "z Cattrttla in I940 ' ‘ rt lllfiffllllfl f ' i tltree days in Ut- i a tour iii III’; I) . . n inc-n crust to Canada was hos; to the second 1m- Press Craiierence in 1920. The Cuutlcll e Iirnpire Press lfrzion in London, accejttifl! Ila} invitation. silqgested August or bcp- tcrrziier for the coniert-ncc. " Q i U The export of Canadian meats in September ‘ s somewhat Iv-ivcr, amounting in value to S2.- i" fiLtjSl in tile previ- ' ‘ last I year. fi I I i! ' ‘ It is now understood Col (morge Drew will be the snccc stir oi .\lr. Earle Rowe as leailcr of the Clntzirio Conservative p:lrt_v. The con- vention for the selection 0t a lcrulvr will be held early next month. but _l')l'l>;]l( ("w candidates have one by one retired lesiviug " . Drew :il--nc in the field. The sl-lectilin (l-ics not nicet with unanimous approval, however, its many of the L si-czn. are im- wliicli Cnited for more conces- ‘ice of certain food iaYin ziiid ham, and ' izzrlina; flUt~ ' that under; was‘ given at maximum of .:. Obvfoilsly‘ an expectations . less it has been mlian production. nzo the United . . in 193i to 182,- l 1.01.2400 Cwfs. in 1936. w= l be hanged for the ' Ameri tn trade agree- l- v ll The wire worse if u: Y- men: tiiiq nnge were seriously lessened. a understand the anxiety with v.‘ ' cljing the course of nt-L" ~ e motor trade, it ‘at Canadian industry (‘f the Uttawa agree- ~l Ftates capital and All of factories in Can- ": 1o the llrifish market iniznts." of Hon. Ian ' iaila has been (t; Fri-c Press s rlco that Can- l prl-t :ir:tivitics riilrl a start - rll-frilse of "t-rs? No. i; wt ("l/rm in the ~~ ~!~:' - They paid this Minister of De- \\'h_v (lows the . 31"’. grit the mili- Tlii-rl- is only one ' 2i spl-nt a quar- .i~.g ltinada the l {~11 Yet it was to and pre-t-nt. of the i ‘llP Xlini-"lcr turn- pir" l"lllfll‘_\' voles he wish- q- --~--4-'riio~ivl.a-“military - vlefensc: ' " l'\'l' ll(’l‘ll \'fllf‘ll iii this li is the efficacy of the honesty of the Il‘.(|ll('>\'-, that must be i- ~ ill‘ tl-iulvi whether Cali- qrlpmc- qr. ~ ~~ ‘u; il.» wiitll! of ihirir mouc_v." Th1- ‘.\'=~.. " g yuv-i" l"('(‘flll~ lll(‘ llcfvnsc Alin- intone \i"ll ~.i l l’: (v Il7\'\'~ lino that the l)(‘p.'\l'l- nirrit "lin i3. ‘til zoo tiirvrzifl". Where, it agkk‘ m‘: llw-i wiiiil? "Trzic. lll.‘ will I'\\"l _vc:irs ago flint (hero were 182 31 ‘ H!" and ht- could llll\'f‘ nrldcrl that \v'|ir'|l l‘ , l flay I't"l'l lilw ll|(~ (‘lllfllllflllC of a lflll-Plllll of i.'.<<.‘.~. ]tl(("'~, (July ihrt-e (if llic whole fliwl. uvrw iii nrvirc ruling, null although 410w- lllfll’ ui-iw- l('lll]i1>l'.'|Tll_\' defective, they were (,6 sop. 3;;- (lt-ii|l~(' of (I irirla. “The i-c-i (if ll|(' plant's were bought higgbv- last nine- _ IIUTES BY THE WAY of an ammunition factory in Prztoria that will turn out 10.000,- 000 round of ammunition annual- ly-Wirirupeg Tribune. Nations do not go to In aud- denly on an impulse, as we have well learned out of our experience. and though the first step ls often unnoticed. the others follow nut..- matically until a situation devel- ops wluch makes war inevitable. The nation must be ever on guard against the taking of that first step. We repeat that the American people have a right to know what. is golng on. -Detrolt News. Not long ngn dlphfherla w» u common disease claiming hun- dreds of lives, usually young lives. each year in Canada. Today an outbreak affecting five cases Ls considered news. And there would be no need for even flve cases lf the preventive measures which are readily available were adopted. -Brockville Recorded and Times. The farm of J. W_ Smith, of Middle Barney's River, occupies a. unique position. It is on the dlvld- ing llne of the waters of the prov- ince. The drip from the east side of the roof of the barn flows into the waters of the St. l\far_v‘s River, and on to the Atlantic Ocean, and that from the west side goes to Join Barneys River and thence in- to Northumbsrland Siralt. - East- ern Chronicle. Lanaaa u now tne second largest gold producer ln the world. with an output. at July rate, o! over 5,000,000 ounces annually. Canada leads the world in nickel platinum and radium production. It ls second in gold. fourth in lead and zlnc. third Ill copper, _slxth ln silver Canada has the largest out.- put per caplta of base metals of any country: It ls the premier Em- plre supplier of the non-ferrcua metals essential to war and peace. —Glace Bay Gazette. Women had been accorded jury service in England. upon a ground Lord Finlay‘, in a speech to a Wo- man's Club at Ottawa, expressed the vlew that he did not believe had been Justified. It has,been though that in disputes between men and women in the law, wo- men jurors would be arixlous to do justlcl‘ to the women, but the reverse nearly always had hac- peried. Men generally weep with the weeping feminine complainant. but women harden their hearts to them. ls the English judge‘: slze- up-Ilcthbridge Herald. Every schoolboy is famllar with the copy-book maxim that one should do things oneself if one wants to make sure that thzy are clone properly; Modern business, however, steps on that maxim a little bit more firmly each year 'I'he new idea is that you should never do anything yourself that ycu can get someone else to do for you. For the young man holding his first -job, of course, this is poor advice. But fol the exzcutlve it stztlwarts rc-‘clit tlit- (‘Fl nielK dl-scrfinn of .\lr. j; excellent, _\[any a good execu- iim... i. a. a with 21.2.2325 lies. ‘lJZZ-‘l lsflieralis they admit that hi< pnliu on thv (Ill). ques- grc-at value, in a fight with a party le-l by Pre- mier Hepburn. \\'hat pr i stlpport Col. llrew receives will lie of inxpr». ice, especially" iri Tor- zmrl Mail and Premier Hepburn. Incidentally", it ivoultl leave Premier Hepburirivitlioiit a news- paper in Toronto, unless The Star, which he once read otlt of the party, can be made to for- get Heyiburns lectures. K i v i i Ill-fate has an unfortunate way of dogging the footsteps of literary men and popular com- posers who, for a time, enjoy the plaudits of the multitude. There has just gone to his ac- count in Chicago, Iloger (lrahtlm, who twenty years ago was music hall song writer N0. 1. When Mr. Graham wrote the hit tune that starts with "I ain't got nobody, and nobody cares for me," be was riding the crest of popularityg and stars of the stage and the old silent screen were his friends. On Friday he was forgotten and alone when he died. His body was taken to the county morgue. He was head of the Roger Graham Music Publishing Coiripairv, which had offices in the Loop until i922. Thereafter he conducted his business from his home, "I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares for .\lc";, “Shim-llc-Slia-\\'ablilc" ZllTl "Has Anybody Seen Corinne?" were (he three popular song hits of twenty or more ye rs zigo for which .\lr. Graham wrote the lyr llc Zll~0 wrote the lyrics of "Canadian Capers" and "Livery Stable Blues." 8 Detective Inspector Shipp of Scotland Yard made a visit to Paris at tho tiui<~ of the Infer- nritiiinal lixrvc-sition last year, partly on pleasure anil partly on business. Tllf.‘ latter made him a convert to the French custom of crime recon- struction. His comrades of the (III). latighed at him until his sticccss at the inquest of Charles E. Yarnl-y, a theatrical nianagirr, ihe other day caused the coronerls jury ti. change their verdict from "death at the hands of zl pcrson unknown" to “accidental death." The forincr had almost 'llCCl‘l‘l'UTl7l?l’€"fl'bll"Ill§' 'f(‘§lliliffil_\‘ (iii UrJ I7.‘ II. Camps, the pathologist, who hzirl said that the revolver shot friini which \'zirnt-y' had died "could not possibly" have bocn self-inflicted". It was after the testimony of the silspectt-rl widow that Shipp got in his fine work. “Mnrvellously hzitipv" as the widow said, “zit the lllfillglll of his lhvzitrc rl-otil-nintg," .\lr. Vflrncy wcnt to a trunk in which he kept his tlrr-ss clothes. 1\ revolver iii in- the lrtmk tlisclinrgcrl, the bullet passing through t lie hiil-ler :1 ii rl t r u n k a n rl entering .\lr. \':irii('_v's chest. I) c t c c t i v e- Inspectl-r Shipp thvii look tlic stage and sriirl the revolver containt-il five live cartridges and our: spciii cartridge. Sonic object had pass- crl through the curl of thc holster, and lhcre was a black mark rm the inside of the trunk, which was huh-d. 'l‘his was consistent with the offered. This wireless provide light luncheon! or suppers, s moderate came to money ln trenches. -—Ir'lsh Inde- liantlliiig of details in the hands Zion was the right (illi; and Rowe! wrung. (Yil. 01' his subordinates. -Gl191lm - - - WI rcur" Drew is an alt-it and resourvctul campaigner, a ‘ e i’ man (f \\'lll'llll resence, rn-vts which are of ‘ ‘ 2 l’ ' Over ln Ken! County. where there ls a heavy crop 0t bog cran- be.rles in districts bordering the coast, a new venture in disposing of tlle crou ls being tried out. for onto. The (ilobe and .\l:i:'.'s support would in- me m“ “me [mspyear m B, Co. .‘ l . .' ., .. . 1 . - Th ('1 ,1, operative marktung scheme. eunbl-l ‘Miler! {M Mum Knlcen e J1 c Boxes of 25 pounds which have been slilpptd w the Montreal mar- ket have brought as hlgh as $3.50 per box ln competition with the famous product of Cape Cod. News of this klnd which tells of put- ting money lnto the pockets of the producers ls the most cheer- ful kind we can read, for money in the pockets of producers means a healthy demand for all the pro- ducts and services of other types of buslness. In the Pennfield area of Charlotte County rock cran- berries, so called, are produced in quantity, but most of the crop ls disposed of at home with little left. for export. —St. Crolx Courier Most business men In the East wish to see a resumption of lm- mlgration. They wish to see our farm lands all taken up and cul- uvated. Loglcally, then, they should wlsh m see Western agri- culture sufficiently prosperous to make it attractive to new settlers. The way not to do that ls to make Western producers pitckhorses for other interests of one klnd or another. Even more Important than bringing ln new setJers ls the need for preventing tco many of the farmers’ sons from leaving the land, by giving them some- thing to llve for and showing them that they have some prospect. If the Western people are to be told that they must fend for them- selves, it ls qulte clear that some ' of our Eastern friends wlll have to change their ways and slop trying to impose tribute which makes conditions in these provinces harder and more discouraging. It is said that we should face real- liles. That ls sound advice. There should be ii facing of realltles all around. —Wlnnlpeg Free Press. During the recent wnr lcare In England there was so much talk about. trenches 1t occurred to some enterprising persons that there was money to be made out of them, One lady announced that she had a lovely trench ln her garden, with room for three or rjour ghrsons besides her Iamlly and servants. Terms for seats, or perhaps there was standing room only, were flve shillings per hour. and with recollectlons of the old song, "My Lodgings ln the Cold, Cold Ground," she added hot wu- tcr bottles for feet, half-a-crown extra. One ls left to wonder wheth- er there was an early msh for seals, and lf the trench was book- ed out. the flrst day. Probably the offer would have been made more attractive by stating hhut money would be returned if no alr rald took place during the booked r- lod. Indeed, there seems no mlt to the attractions which could be good lady proposed to glve the use of gramophone and set free. Another might standing buffet. ln fact at grlces. Certainly, ll’ war ngland there would be piggly," the Frye Press charges, “and were revolver having been (lisclizirgcd while inside the trunk. pendent, Dublin. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Darkest Africa h comm; Into’ the full benefits of uvlltuuon. A . news story tells of the completion ' Rattler, Lhey go one step at a time. i ASLliMA-A NEW ‘l'!tl'.'Al.\ll'J\'l‘ FOB SEVERE 0B DANGEROUS TTACKS A: medical students we were taught that as no cause had been found for asthma, all that could be done was to give a quletlng or ‘IGIBXIDZ drug. Llatcr it was Lund that asmma was due ln many .cases to certain substances ln the galr, to defects in the nose arid whroat. or to some infection -- ‘teeth, tonsils. In addition. a new remedv-adrenalln-extract of the adrenal glands situated one on ‘top or eacn kidney, given in 5 w r15 drop doses by hypcdermlc ln- jection, would usually stop or fSllOlK-Jl the asthmatic attack. However. mere are cases where ithe attacks are so severe than ptdrenalln and even morphlne have ‘little or no effect and the patient , may become completely" exhausted. death sometimes following. It is certamly gratify-lug to read, there- fore. of a new meuiod of stopping these dangerous attacks, as out- ;llned by Dr. Abner M. Fuchs. New .York, ln the Journal of Allergy. i “The picture in these severe -,cases ls one of severe collapse, [with difficult breathing to the polnt of exhaustion, and adrenalin Heplnephrine). the usual aid. falls to be effective. When attack 1s due to pus m a sinus, chiming ,out the sluts wlll often check the ‘attack Often putting patient 1n a ‘dust free room (in. hospital) will sto the attack. When all methods fal. and the situation becomes palarmlngh and morphine used, the ioutcome may be fatal." | In a serles of asthmatlc patients upon whom various types of surgery were performed using avertln (trlbromethanolv the free- dom from asthma folowfng the operation was observed. In wa- thus lthought that avertln might be of help ln treating sevsrc attacks. Therefore. at the Metropolitan H's- pltal, the avertln fluld was slowly ‘injected up the rectum ilc-"lvcr end of large bowell of rasthmatlc patients. “The muscles Jelaxed. the breathing bscame less jdlfflcult. and the patient easzd ilnw a natural sleep. The patients Vslept 1 to 6 hours and up:n iawakenlng were able to breathe lwlthout effort and no after-'ffects were noticed. once the crisis had been overcome, patients frequently were free from asthma for days and even weeks. and sequlred no further urgent treatment." Fortunately. the usual remedies wlll ease or stop attacks but lf ls gratifying to know that when the attack becomes so severe as to en- danger life. thls avertln treatment ls available.- PUBLIC FORUM Thin column ll open for the dlnunlon by respondent! of queltluln of Infernal. Th: Chur- lohntowiu Gnnnllnn duel not ne- cnllrlly endorn the onlnlonn n! nrrellnonlnnfl. doom rm: navcx. "NEVIIRDIORE" Slr,——I notice in a recent issue where a gunner shot. along with a gozd bag of ducks a large raven. We fancy the latter would make rather poor eating if eaten at all, and we wonder for what purpose 1t was slim. What mzlslactton can one get out of cxmrmtnatlng a rare species of our feathered friends? Very few residents of this Prov- lnce have ever seen a raven or heard him crcak his “Neveririore" and she pleasure one gels from hearing this uncanny burl of the wilderness ufitcr his hoarse cnll can hardly be described. The raven has steadily receeded before the advance of civilization. and is now seldom seen. A: Hawk Mountain Sanctuary where large numbers of our Northern birds of Drey, bliss through when migrm. lnil. only’ Pnce. lf we mistake noi has a raven been lluléd and lt created uulte a sensation amongst the large crowd of blru‘ students, naturalists and others watching, even more than the (xxtaslonal Bald or Golden Eagle, qr bl3¢k and White Ger Falcons Surely a raven looks better and (‘Ml Rive more people pleasure when izllve than szuck up in 55mg persons parlor and we thlnk some move should be made to edugaw our young folk (lf we can do noth. 1BR with our older ones), a5 to m; glue of our fast dicamiearlng wfld e. I . Slr. . ONE will‘) CAREEMS. BY THE MARGIN GREAT DEEP 0F THE When the breath of twilight blows to flame the mlsty ides, 511 "8 vflparous sapphire. violet 810W ma. sflvenglentttuu- ..__._. Wlth melt magi i flood me through the gateway of the eyes; I am one with the cwllghtfs dream. When the trees and skles and fields are one l.n dusky mood. Every heart of man is mp1, within the mother's breast: Pull of peace and sleep and dreams 1n the vasfy quletude. I um one with their hearts at. rest. and home and love Bfrayed away along the margin of he u tld thrf-ll me far above Word or vouch from the lips beside. Aye. and dccp and deep and deeper let me drink and draw From the olden fountain more than light or peace or dream. Such primeval being as o'er-fills m; . can, with awe, Growing one with its silent stream. Prom our emmorfal Joys of hearth, Sails In The Sunset (Hamilton Spectator) No one has yet comes dong with a plausible explanation for all the trouble that ls caused by such ap- parently harmless contests as sail- e on the roll- mg waves Llut. would cause a mm to turn u sour u a mlnority or rusngutodgvuc-heeleré! nor mould! .tne es c ugh; a vesse ‘suulmng under full canvas belle ‘Whll seems w be a dark damning of plots and lllbls. Yet Lb: aver- age race, lnternatlonnl and unher- vnsc. seems deatlned to stop Just short of armed confllct. The Blue- nose and the Gertrude I... The- paud are the latest exponents of t A good many D0001: ralsed loud pecans o! praise to this “sallorr rice" as a rcllcf {mm the highly technical, blah]! Dllbllciud and rather scepucally regarded battles jof glam yachts. But no gooner was ‘ll. under wry than the rlvul skip- ,pe.rs were ln a lather of indigna- 3H0!) over wlnd, min and officials. lThat t-he Bluerwee finally won out lbrought the assertlon from her ‘captain, that he was through wiui racing in the United States, and lf ,hls opponent wanted to match lstrengch with hlm agaln they would run (o Bermuda and back —a test that. should emphatically prove sum , Yet this was only uie beginning of it all, 'l‘l\e Boston gatlierlng ‘that honoured Captain Walters’ triumph -who had Just announc- ed his engagement —wa.s informed f that the cup was mlslng and the __ prize money as well, inis been followed by isllence, l: i would have been bad enough. but ,the cup was finally located at.- -of all places --t.he New Eingland I Home’ for Little Wanderers! _so it must be conceded that ‘Blflhéf sailors have a): unusually ‘iadep; sense of humour, or there isomethlrig else afoot. and Captain lwalters will have to think u a pretty orlglnal nvenge lf the e- baud ever happen; to wfn ln Nova Scotla waters. As yet, no one has jhad the last. word. Coronation Dollar (Globe and Mall) In the press and correspond- .; ems the Governrnentbg being urged {<0 mlnt a special silver dollar in , honor of me vlslt of 1m King and Queen to Canada riex. year. Surely the Government is not disinterest-l a numbtr of ,vd. Apart altogether from the sen-l masnfl mnlfi timeril a1 value of such an issue. the. rrunlmg of it is good business. en fl. December, 1936. the Govemmentb; was figured out by this ing edltor, and the msul tonlsliing, at least (o as 80 per cent, fine, and ln every dollar there is three-fifths of an ounce of fine sllver, the balance being alloy. "This means," ft wesl streamed. “that for every ounce ofl silver minted there ls produced and issued $1.60 ln sllvw oolns, so that’, on silver purchased in the currenty world price of 45 cents an ounce a, profit of"$l.l5 ls made by ‘he Gov-H er-nment cm every ounce coined." l It was calculated that on the 500000-04: too few-sliver colris ls- made a profit of 3300.000. So why hesitate abou‘, i smnlillll issue? The demand ls as-l sured. And consider what the nur-l chase of approxlmately 000.0’ ounces of silver- duct» l0.000.000 dollar coins wouldl of this country. both in buslnma and ln employment provided. There was delay lri lsstilng ‘he coronation dollar, and the supraly wcl= totally inadequate (o the de- demand. The issue honorlnc the vlslt of fhedr Majestic: shoiPd be available to the public at least a mtm‘h before their arrdve. ere mav be apprehension that throw-inc much new mrmev on the market snide-ls of "inflation," hut everv coln would llkelv be our of nlrculatlon before fhe summer wa: over. A= the ‘Plmmlns Dallv Press sava fn dfscusslnv the proposal. ‘Ty-w of vou know that a NYIYYDBCIO" dollar was struck. Few of ymi well" that m few were struck that thev were far below the demand we" ‘hrvmrh "1"" were not issued tiNll srvme Wm» after the coronation." 'T‘li~=e eolns would be Mverlv might fhflymvhoill tho tbs-Han gnu,‘ n“! hv all Empire (vuntflss, In fact. fmm werv angle-e-nrlmenf. the souvenir- nervfl and nr-rvfl‘! nssitred m» nwaw-“s-nmv... ...-~-.~..i (.- "n nlrfmi-Hxrn that fiirthq- (Inlay in Mk- ire Ectfon will be hard to under- s‘an . ATTENTION Swine Breeders N0 In the time to (lard agulnn PIG - WORM by ulinl the molt eflecfl" remedy on the mlriel: Mac's Pig - Worm Tonic Powder u. rough] ubollsh l“ 3mg!“ storms, yund lIlIPm" tile hetllh of 1w hm!- Price §§_c_,l_;§_ per lb. . m‘ b Phone golilrlklllehkyu ‘lead-a ilromvfl! offended Io. Phone 315 THE 2 MAGS Preldrlpllolll A Specially Remember there In nolhlng betler for your Munch than Dr Evans’ Stomach Mixture PRICE PIB BOTTLI llc. MAIL OB-DIIS PBOMPTLI ATTENDED TO. —G. W. Russel (A. I.) necessary to pro-y ed 1 (NOVEMBER 9. 193a i gi-"bzizdliizess A genuine desire to provide the community with a helpful and friendly banking service has been a fundamental policy of this Bank for over one hundred years, since 1832. Wordlf-uide irr any at... BANK of NOVA SCOTIA "W! ovEn A (ENTUIIY or BANKING ssnvlcz . Charlottetown Albany Kenslngtun Montague 0’Leary St. Peter’: Summer-side Vlctorh -._t_____ l Orange For a. Delicious Cup of l Mr. Iea Poll Says- Use BRAHMIN l Full Flavoured Tea Pekoe Tea l Terror By Radio (New York ‘rltricsl Radio ought. to act promptly to tltlon of the vnive preirerit a re of panic 1n w lch riatlon Sunday night. by its "realis- tlc" attempt to transfer to the afr ' G, Wells's horror story of a I-I. mythical from Mars. The ln hand that they fact remains that pfQfit on a P0551519 gmoooylog 155M. one end of the country to the other. 1-‘5 mind were frightened out of their wag u. sea, starting an incipient flight of the layman, mysterical refugees from the desig- The Canadian sllver dollarlsknown natied area. taxing the police and hospitals, confusing cho murilcat/lon. What tertalnment" might ended ln disaster, Common sense might have warri- ed the projectors that our people are just. recover-W lng from a psychosis brought on by fear of war. goes much deeper than that. It ls .lnherent ln the method of radlo element of the should jolri Radio Ls llew ‘but n nits Bdllll. responslbllitles. It fse vertrlslng. plainly marked. In invcslon late. to ocmpre- l were listening w, the account of an lmaglriary cat- George v1 wmnw astrophe has its ridiculous, even its non 511v" do m- “~85 proposed m pathetlc. aspects. But. the sobering ng the usual means of com-i d lf orttgile material lthusets. It _ 1 i oes many Ilg5 which e news- mean to ‘he my” mlnm‘ mdustry papers learned lonc ago not to do. such as mlxlng lts news and ad- Newspcpers know two must be rlgldly separated and ‘The War of the Worl " blood- curdllng flcuon was offered in exactly the manner that real new: would have been given and - terwoven with convincing aczt. les, such as an ordinary dance pra- lt inundated the gram, a definite locale and :ne tltles of real officials. ' Radio offlclals should have thought twice before mingling this news technique with flctlon so terrifying. Horror for the sake of by creatures Inability of s0, €_ 9- 3 o :1 § Q E‘. :1 l? n. n 5 Q 5'5 searching ln American broadcasf- 1H8. . thousands, from Worry Saps The lervous Syslem l Worry over business or household i duties, sudden shock, the insatil quest for pleasure, the foolish at- tempt to put a. week of normal lifo into twenty-four hourl, feverish ac- tivity, the demand for umsational literature are all conducive to the aggravation of wear and. tear on (b! nervous system. If you are tired, listless, nervous, and worried why not give Milburn‘: Health and Nerve Pills a clmnre f0 help put you on your feet again. They are a body building, nerve strengthening tonic containing the essential elements for the ncrvoul system. h , t e Th0 T. Mllburn 00., Dd. Toronto, Onl- trafflc and began as "en- readlly have of this broadcast But the troublei which every radio Industry has riot master- t-he broadcast of Agent ER. Brow-d’: Sonl Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness, and Plate Class Insurance 144 Richmond St. at Lowest Rate at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown i iZ;“'-i~— All MISIIGE WE REMEMBER WITH PROFOUND RE- SPECT THOSE CANADIANS WHO FELL IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS AND ALSO THOSE WHO RETURNED AFTER SPLEN- DID SERVICE TO CANADA AND THE EMPIRE. WE HOPE THAT THE ANNUAL POPPY SALE WILL MEET WITH ITS USUAL SUCCESS. IIIGKEY and NIBIIULSUN MANUFACTURERS OF HICKEY’S BLACK "TWIST sen- iii l