~ _~_ - cw. '21-! _ 1 AFPUR 1;;- w-rhf xv» - PAGE FUUR THE CHABLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes BL The Way President-W. (‘heater l. lit-Lure. 3|. P. Her reiavy—Lieut. Col . D. A. ldaeKinnon, D. l. 0. Editor and Mnnsging Director-J. It. Burnett Associate lCrlitorsv—l-‘runi1 Walker and l). K. Currie Vlcn-Presidenh-J- B. Burnett The decisive tariff action taken by the Federal Government at Ottawa can leave no doubt in the mind of Morning Ilnilv (funneled will) 8-5-00 Iver year (in advance! delivered. lhbl) Der your (in advance) mailed ln Canada and United States. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1930 anyone but that they are going to give Canadian Industry a chance to show what it can do to help over- come ‘ yrrrent and lead Canada out of the trough of depression. It is many a long year since substantial tariff protection has been recognized in Canada, as being necessary and the i dbm ' 800p M £01m B] lune: W.‘ Barton. Al-D WHY MEDICINE IS STILL USED ___. Airships Of 1950 (Manchester Guardian) Colonel Richmond has admitted some doubt whether it would be I0 or 40 years before the British Associa- tion delegates arrived for their an- nual meetings by airship from the United States. But he was quite sure lihlt 11118111118 1111111111 b8 l-ht 19811111‘ '11- condltions exist in other prisons; mflhod 0! 11115911891‘ trflhlpflrt in the There is a state law which requires l 116111‘ future» H! Dlvtufe-S them 85 ‘hat every prisoner be provided with a l 1.ooo feet, long and zoo feet round the ? g Dark Ages In New York (New York World) There are eighteen penal instltut- i ions in New York City. Every one of J ‘Hem, Commissioner ratterson ssys. i = overcrowded. ‘The Tombs was built to house 446 prisioners. It had 801 wisoners at roll call yesterday. alrni- , . _ (_)(J'l'()Bl£R 9. 193., The Unemployment Grant 3°" 1111"!‘ ‘letter- ment walked the Mackenzie King Government, According to a Canadian Press de_ spatch from Ottawa, Prince Edward Island will receive sootoo from tlic Bennett Government to be expended on a programme of works and con- structions to be carried on jointiv between the municipalities, the vihce and the Don-union. It will also, i: is intimated. share in the 54.0%.- UC-O fund set aside for direct relic: of ions. IG- Dominion! A Contemptiblc Defense ‘ilnemploynzent. 'J.‘l",-‘= ~"""-"!i'"c""\i1t —i . . ~ k bi editorial C'i"lll€ilE furnishes abundant proof, 1f such I“ a wmar a e L“ b ' ~ ' ' . _'" ..tion.t e. Li - were needed. that the Federal on me plohlbltlor mm ‘ Government does not purpose to dis- criminate against any uranium‘: slun- in short, would it have been“ had the Lea Govern- plnrik with the and both administrations been replaced by governments capable of harmon- co-operation, mutually pledg- ed to aggressive policies in the inter- 05L; alzko of the, province and the era‘. organ professes lo find gratifying evidence of better law enforcement results of the drastic inital actioiil Wheh W11 l-ry t0 think 0i’ how old help but wonder why all the centur- p les had to pass before we learned Mr. Baldwin is regarded with pride the real things about the body. the as the typical Briton: calm. set in his 11111111. 811d their hflflhhfl- ways. averse to unnecessary publicity.‘ Th8 "Ollble 0f Cour-Se Was that srorhing the petty wiles of the politic- | each generation did practically the tall. and animated by an intense lovc ' $111119 HS the Pfvcedlhg 0116- Thus of country. It now is common kiimv- ; we continued to have horses for ledge that during the dl5tr955f111‘ transportation. and candles for light. period following the Great War Mr ‘ And medicine was somewhat’ the Baldwin quietly donated to the State j same: each physician dolns what S"me 20 per cent of his private means. had been done before with very little This was done without any flourish. change in method as the years pass- and the identity of the donor was not ed. discovered until some years after-j ii-lowever, there are always thinkers, ward. It was carried out in the, bssiders doers. and it is to these modest Baldwin way-tho EnglLshzthlilkers we owe our progress in will be awaited with deep interest. “ken by the Bennett Government? this world of ours is, you cannot i1ilddle-twice the size of the present ' largest dirlgbles-and he expects thatl the several hundred passengers will: find them smoother and safer than‘? the liner of today, and. in some ways, ,even more comfortable. There are, of ‘course, limits: a roof garden. for in- | stance, he regards as an unreasonable ; luxury to expect from a "flying inn. Thisprosy view of the future of the airship may be perfectly Justified. The immense technical difficulty that arises from the weight of the engine in the case of the airplane does not- trouble the alr-ship-bullder, and Colonel Richmond made some re- markable suggestions for dealing by providing it with “scales or feath- r-eparate cell. This lsw is nullified by force of circumstances. Prisoners are ‘oubled up; Sanitary conditions be-li come unsatisfactory. It is difficult. to maintain discipline. possibility of salvaging young crimin- nls disappears and prison becomes a very perfect school of crime. Commlmioner Patterson is an able and a conscientious executive who hu l , made excellent use of entirely inade- quate equlpment. He deserves more support from the public than he has The last“ W11 bib had. ‘The barbarous conditions which exist perforce in many of the city's prisons are s throwback into the} dark ages and a shocking mon1i- j r’- ment to the indifference of the pub- ivlth the airship! pecular problems 1m I l ULUQHRUJLUJIJJHHA-U-U-QCRQMOJIJRJJHLQMQLIXKA-Kvuulgfl 1 .; ‘rlzv . - "-1 lg: because ir. happens to have l"i 01'- flcc a ltvz-cil Lzbcral Fortunately fcl Ex-Prcinicr Mackenzie '~' be the bmis under the Bennett rcclme. It is .l'l‘i‘l't‘flilbl“ government of any pa}; ' that however. Coilscri the pro..nccs "is Prince Edward Island- which fiflillilliElfiillllll. Prince Erlwizrd ls- lancl. the “not a nickel" sitccch of more in lint- wiLh ti". _'.' cf federal aid to’ m: 110v.‘ in power in‘ The amount. the provinces receive undcl"; TIPS‘. election m’ the. Saunders-Len Gov advanced that 5 e brew makers and sellers and smug- glers c! liquor. if the Liberals remain true to meir pledges and true to their affiliations with the Temper- Alliance, must be put out of business." Now it has become a RHCC in the steadily increasing number of arrests. and convictions for drunken- Wc wonder what the sincere prohibiticnists who assisted ln the I eviiulsnt will have to say to this ar- ‘lmlple- 111911151111! gunient! No longer is tlie contention “bcotleggers, home the unonlploylilciit np1il"cpl'l.1ti0l1 is; dependent upon tlzc willinclicss andi ability of the nllllllClDI-‘tl and provm- cial ilcinlinistrriilorls to co-opcrrite inl whatever work is undertaken. How much ‘harmonious co-opcration can ‘business’ for the police officersand magistratesl It is unnecessary to expose the fai- lncy of such an argument. There is. we adlnit. a class of people to whom it will appeal. "Phat class includes a formidable army of bootleggers and bzlcchanalian shock-t r o o p s will coiltiiiue to vote for political pro- hibition as long as they can stag; ger to the polls. But to the great ma- jority of our people. Liberal and Con- servative. this brazen whitewash the Government's notor- becxpectcll from s, p:"o'.'iiicl:il Min- ister of Public Works who actively campaigned against. the FP-lEFHl Govemmcnts policies in the elec- tlon of July inst. or from a provin- cial Premier who is still busy cam- paigning, presumably in preparation fit the next federalwlection five years hence? How much co-opcratioii can be expected from a newspaper. the mouthpiece of the Provincial Government, which on Sept. 11th condemned the grant in which the Province ls now to share as "a Tory cure-all." ‘fa type of compulsory charity." "the method of a quack doctor," "a. superficial ointment," etc, etc? New that the Hon. Mr. McIn- tyrels hand has been greased with contempt which it merits. duction in convictions for drunken- ness should be self-evident. Appar- ently it was evident to our contem- l matter oi pride that the victims of l the txailit are furnishing so much ‘fore mrtoss celebrate their one hurl- who attempt to lotus maladministration of the Prohi- bltion law will be received with the That satisfactory prohibition en- forcement necessarily implies a re- way. I everything. And s0 one thinker began to trace ‘for the enthusiasm of the eXpeft 9h- the‘ circulation of the blood and its jlnrgiiig on his special topic. ‘There is cnuse: another the digestive pro- n long way to go yet. The 11-100 cesses; another the way the nerves recently reached the Canadian coast controlled the muscles and other tls- from Cardington in 47 hours; but one sues. [must remember that she had waited New York woman who has just cei- rbrated her 109th. birthday. attributes ‘her long life to hard work. plenty of sleep and no worry. Hundreds of many children. lgreoted the aged woman on liar ;birthda_v and all she asked ‘was that ‘Pme of her friends give her a bottle oi wine. of medicines or drugs there had to,conditions. and even with the greatest be slow and painstaking investiga- skill 1n negotiating air currents on iuon, 0r mun-e cal-gain drugs were her way she suffered severely in the llianded down from one generation to hut stage or her East-tO-West P555" another because actual results were hilt- H91‘ 19111 $11116 W55 h°t 47 11°11“ seen from tile iruse. although why 3113 47 hill-ITS P1115 Several Wlfiks- W9 ____ An exchange sag. . Willie a railway centenary celebration is in progress at 3111311001 the anouncemsnt has been they gnve such results was not 71F"? triumphed W" H" 1111" bl"- 5° made that. 90 railway stations are to known. far. not by 8111' 11195115 5193111191! "- be clcsed to passenger traffic because And iha is the reason now that ' of motor competition. And lone, bc- ,‘ all tile drugs that have been used for I gencrr-tions are being put to all sorts dredth anniversary it is quite likely of tests. Some of them are being |tliat there will be something else. ‘discarded entirely and others are Fprcducezl in a refined for making. them more exact in their action. As a matter of fact every physician would be pleased to tlo without drugs. . ' There is not onlyuthe drug itself to be considered but just how the partcular patient may react toward a drug. However when a log is sprained it is given rest by a splint; when slung Higher Education (Ottawa Journal) If a mass of detailed statistics are What a. wnrlvl! lf you say some- thing everybody believes. its a plat- , itude. If you say something new it'= heresy. If you don't say anything a: all you're a clumbell. According to the Victoria Colmis’. American estuaries have discovered that Debbie who use their brains ‘ diligently live long. The great ages attained by newspaper men are an _ example in point. The terrible disaster WhlCh over- took the worlds greatest dirlgible the R 101 emphasizes once more the price we are paying for progress. The path 0f Progress. blazed through the cen- turies by brave, daring’ and gelf. sacrifizlng leaders, is literally drench- ed in blood. but the sacrifices will neither daunt nor check the daring. The lhhewht 1118c to go forward is a wholesome state in the ‘ilgher education. IFor the figures show that facilities for scholarship are vantage of them growing proportion- tiely in number. 'I‘i1e data is from {he Bureau of Statistics. It is interesting to know that there are 23 universities in Canada, all of itplini, or the nerve supplying it is i cut or put at rest; when an intestine { are undenominational and endowed. iis too active it is given a rest, but the rest , may need a drug to quiet it for a lit- lCatholic. Anglican. Baptist. Ltle while; when a heart is worirlnglrinlteachnreir. The total teaching too fast it needs rest. and so a drug ' staff of all these numbers over 4.000, is given to slow it down: when iixnnd the gross enrolment is 57,254. stops entirely a drug is used which , There are 97 colleges, mainly devoted {has often been able to start it beat- 1V) the Arts hhd Thefllofl’; 111114 110l- _ in; again. lwlthstanding the great difference in What is my thought? That we can do without many islands all 25-139- ' crs." But one must allow something And then when it came to the use fir!‘ some weeks for favorable weather" any basis fer Judgment. Canada ls in ‘wihich are ewentiallyi waning factors matter of ‘i: modern life. l ‘I Fdueationists ‘this; apparent defect in our education- rapidly increasing, those taking ad- lal system. and "seriously discussed at educational con- l denominational-Roman.‘ ‘the number of colleges, the enrolment; l. soon or‘ this "ointment," we may ex- pect criticism of s, different tune; but in the meantime the hostile at-l titude of the Liberal press, its refus- al to accept Premier Bennett's as- surance that this Province would ne- eeive the same consideration as oth- er parts of Canada, its insistence that our people "will pay their share but they have no unemployment," and its prediction that the Prime Minis- 'ter. “with his usual holy air." would tell us. “it is more blessed to give than to receive," must have been anything but helpful to the delegates who went to Ottawa this week to secure a por- tion of the federal grunt in the in- terests of this Province. 127.: Barnett Government might well have said to Mr. McIntyre 011 this occasion: “Your party press does not expect Prince Edward Island to get, any share of this money. It says you have no unemployment down there, and therefore have no claim specifically voted for relief. It says fur- ther that a. money apprvvrhi-wh would not cure unemployment if you did have it. You yourself have in- dot-sod the policy of your federal leader that ‘not a five cent piece‘ should be given to an "opposition PTO" vincial government for unemploy- ment relief and that in the matter of highway construction, for which you purpose expending a portion at least of this money. assistance from the federal government constitutedl s thoroughly vicious principle." i 'I‘lie Bennett Government mlShl- have said all this and more to Mr. McIntyre; but it did not do so. On the contrary, it heaped coals 0f flré up-‘m his head and sent him home with the assurance of its financial support and (so-operation, But how much better would it have been for the Province if we had had P701411‘ rial-representatives who could all- proach the Bennett Government in friendliness and not in suopiciflh. upon a grant unliaioymont nth dignity and not as surly peti- 0g cum“ w“ m bunnuu, Th“ l‘ secret that I told you not to tell‘! llonen for "compulsory 011181101"! porary in the last; election campaign. In an editorial dated June 18, 1927, it stated: uriconquerable and men will pay with demands. To the men in the street ‘drugs and medicines of the past but.‘ their 111/6! the D1196 Which P100855 there ave those whose worth our pat- To many people these things stan as merely figures in the ordinal-y zintistical wny. but they have an im- among educatlonists themselves, and ,5, efforts are being made to restrict the number of students entering instltu- i Q tlons of higher learning by a selective ‘ 3 nrcces: but this is bound to be largely _ thwarted by the ambitions of parents to give their children certificates of ,1 respectability in the form of a degree. l "other, we are afraid. for social than 3 ‘otellectuai purposes. i In Canada the same influences are Q1: work. hence the difficulty of mak- l firs; a selective process operative. No. ltwo human beings are similar. or at ‘ ‘mast the same. in their ndaptabillties. l The original purpose of theuniversity, ‘i and the present theoretical purpose, 1 is to give those with special abilities j an opportunity to develop; but to run . them all through the same educa-l tional mould is not calculated to de- velop individuality and initiative. f themselves realize I nothing is more; venticns all over the continent: but l little has come of it. A solution i seems to be next to impossible where there is so to speak. mass production. ' u is too active it is given rest by a ‘ fairly high standing, several outstand- i A teacher with twelve pupils can de- l ing. Six of these are provincial. Your: vote his attention to individuali To get the real refreshing flavor of teal BRAHMIN Sold Only in Red Airtight Packages Th NEWER MUDE i l nlibrs A New Genuine Cast Iron Range of improved design. One that you will flnd in be a visible express- ‘ion of the good taste that you show in your home sad all of its appolnimen‘ . 51111131815‘ Hardware . Phone 757. “THE FRIENDLY HARDWARE STORE” "wculiarilies, but with fifty o: sixty ‘ ‘.2: literally cannot. That principle and ' applies all the way through from the I A B (‘qclass to the grwluatlng day in University. u Evening in | "During the eriod of license, and to the survivors of a slower a“ ‘lent investigators ‘have been able to _ Drove: so don't hesitate to use medi- (iortant. an almost grave significance. i will receive no return because from 1877 to l 80 inclusive. the convictions were 1600, or on an av- erage of 400 a year. In one year they amounted to 737. "Under the Canada Temperance Act and Liquor Regulation Act. from 1881 to 1900 inclusive. 19 years, i the average was about 250 a year; and during that time the Liquor Regulation Act was in iJrce for five years. and in every year of the Liquor Regulation Act the number of drunks was above the average. “During part of 1901. Prohibition came into effect and the number of drunks for the year was only 200. "From 1902 up to 1996, under Prohibition, the average fell to 170 a. year. In the year 1918, when the Prohibition Act was consolidat- ed and amended. the number of drunks was only 88. Last year (1926) the number was 127. and the year before 131." In 1928. the first fur: year of the present government, the number of drunks arrested and convicted in the city of Charlottetown increased to 334. In i929 they totalled 324. For the present year, up to the end of September, there were 226- or twenty- the price seems out of proportion to I cine if your doctor orders 1L flSLudsnts to the number of over the progress achieved but the price | .;B2,000 would be considerable of an shun be Pam and progress Wm E3 l‘ ————-_-____ ‘crmy 1f gmployed f3;- mfljggyy puf. ' forward uncheckfli l (poses. and enrolment of that number 11- Q21 entually means an annual prcdug; With regard to the protection cam- paign in Great Britain. Sir William Morris, chairman of the proposal National Council of Industry nuzl Commerce. declares that a protective policy must be adopted that will safeguard every industry suffering: from competition [mm imported Ribbons of ruaset bacon, crisp and manufactured goods. He insists that' sweet? fladuam have found the... w" to Protection does no necessarll le A“ 95$ m"? *1 891119" 11111118 1h uh“ ‘ ‘ to high prices, and Ems the mgr/arc: ivory moat; ‘the United States and are American industry as an illustration. Great Toast “k9 l‘ maple lea’ or navourws I Ficlfsilzlhstlixzutltorl-iesr lift/its: ‘Eiilftcile- 315332;.325213.?T..I.“F.."L‘SSZ.Z"ZE; B‘1l1‘~:fieaat..l‘P11uw 11111111 ripe 1n the ‘bleeding ground m educationannd capable of efficient and enthusiastic: throat; isftlzegxggzitso’ Ash: 13;: 0302:2211‘: Wurk- He predicts that, zlven sound? “m” a‘ “s” a‘ °'°"°" “mb” “sine total income of the universities "111111811111 111d freed from the 10s 01s "w: in lino-is was 115cm oas of which Party politics. the present state of de- . Cream like "mm" "ea": "g" H“ K5 was ass was sup lieu by Govern- Dreslslon can be overcome and Britain ' ‘km: I ' ‘ p _ , luent aid. 1988M he!‘ lJfe-Elhlhehf- 1105mm 111 i Cnfigfe‘ a 11380“ or garnet’ but“ and We are undoubtedly creatinfl s. . ar: ‘ ' the world. Grapes m“ ha“! purple music misituation which will be difficult to ' “' l ‘hm m,“ ‘ ihandle. The same problem has al- -_--z@-—s -..._ ,1. l c ‘ To A BPJIZAKFAST I '1 find su table p sitions, that _is, .positlons for which they have been specially qualified. In recent years,‘ at least sixty percent of our university six more than for the whole twelve months of 1901, the year in which the Prohibition Act came into ef-. fact. irig. therefore. and by the only stat- istical comparison available. drunk- enness has increased under the Saunders-Lea Government to a greater extent than under any ad- ministration since the Canada Tem- perance Act came into force. This is the sum and substance of three years of Liberal “prohlbitlon" government. the net result of all the pledges and promises given by Pre- mier Les. and his colleagues in 1927. Can they expect any verdict at the rency 811111101! "ll-h I 1119"! l°h~lfl°h that will not burn. This would be fine for the safety first financial ex-i perts who hide their currency in the parlor stove in the summer-and for- get it until after the fire is started hands of the people but one of con- demnation snd repudiation? Editorial Notes The New York Times. in its cabled report of the Imperial Conference, says "R- B. Bennett, Prime Minister flfl H’. IIIIMWI II] . i wt". ~:=' ' ' ‘out. h“ almost doubled 5mm 1913, China and pewter and glass and s. 0n the Liberal organ‘: own show- l and in 192a amounted to £l70,000.000. b" °' M" l N o N There w“ '1 Mme when England was l A rose in a Wedgewood vase to save’ predominant in that market. but her v ‘ trade may is only “out h.“ what "I And all Belshazzars feasts wilt like| was in 101s, while that of he-r princi- ‘ p“ competitors h” rm" bylaws and Before the sturdy brilliance of this bounds. quarter of the world's population. and -Emest Hartwck the ‘gale-n. Are 7:: :15 Sir Ernest points out that even a!‘ isfied with the one you very small rise in the standard of are wearing? Does it fit living in so vast a population would mean s great expansion of inter- national trade. edhiifmelnewil». We hear a great. deal about the dis- d‘, L; 1 th U ‘ted s, t rurbanm in China’ and it is therv ‘These on a linen cloth as blanched filler; It L“; Yam“; of grave tang: fore interesting to learn that the.‘ _ as chalk‘ country gammy “OWL Her import i With pears and apples in an earthen trade. Sir Ernest Thompson points MW!‘ k . » f.’ 82.000 to be thrown upon the world .- - _ of realities. l '_ , l It is difficult to know how all of :3- . 0% 0m‘ , iiiem, or even n. quarter of them. are , it RCPOC’ Q " cc Paris Toilet E i Preparations Ow We are now showing :1 full line of these superb Toiletries including- O0 I Face Powder. Perfume, Talcum, Rouge, etc. For a short time we are giving away a bottle of Evening in Paris per- fume (50c.) with each box of Powder, the price $1.00 being for Face Powder only. resonance ....>¢~...-......».r>nnr.r~ Prepaid i0 any address ‘i? l —-\\ BLACK rwur” F Mam . Look up zit this sky'- scraper, the size of ,t-ll6 good twist you swap n. few cents for when you ask for - H ICIQEY NICI-IDUDN CHEWING E. A. Foster Central Drugstore L-uur-u»-r<~»<wn~>rn>r»wturuunmruunz,“ uuu the soul- Truss Wearers To those of you who are a-rfortnnste enough to have a flower hour! China contains about a comfortably or is It Ill Inti- quted and out of date style- ont grown its Usefulness so to speak, thus esnsing untold ag- ony; then why continue suffer- ing when we can alleviate the clue by offering you a perfect flit-lax. modern and up-to-dste one, from the large consign- ment of American Trusses Just received. All sizes and styles at prices to suit everybody. Come in and enquire or phone and have us send you some for fitting. The Two Macs Headquarters for Trusses, l4! Gi- George St. _--_ Gennlny is producing s paper cur- | li(ilii"i'.§“ 0h, That's Different Burl-Why did you tell saith that i‘ A ' ' Helen-l didn't tell her. f lust ask- ‘ “ l! '1!" y‘ .. ,,, u I . I EEK-ll" A i-‘reil ii. Trainorl inn-suntan i HEATING if you want I Expeditions and Expert workmanship Send to 80 Grafton Strut Opposite Prince Edward Theatre Phone 398.] —' BULBS! BULBS atoll TULIPS, INOWDIOPD. FBEESIAl elm. eh» all at lowest. prices. N! POSTAGE on all mall for sale at our BOOKSTORE. Garter 81 0o. Irf, l. i~.1"'1"" orromrnv is s specialized scirntt- concentrating all its rt‘ sources to the end ihli Defective Vision m: 1" restored, Eye Strain relieved Inf Muscle imbalances W1‘ rooted. Any one o! the!” “m: may be, and nearly 11"” ll. the cause of We have jut received and opened our annual fsll ship- ment of flowering BULBS dir- ect from U583. HOLLAND. OI: she} of BULBS are all iargejrn sire BULBS which will produce large bloom and giveveey mach better results than smaller and interior Illbs sold elsewhere. IIIACINTEI. TULIPB (Dou- ble and Single) DARWIN long DAFFODILS. ClwCUS Severe Headaches u troubled with lie-u; aches. we will be git-d t investigate the condition I '3') pyqs, and if noel-seal’!!- furnish you with FY1111", fitted corrective llflfllw" B. F. IIUTAOIIESiJN OPTOMETRIST NAIOISSUB, We Bend for one Bulb l‘si limited