__, ,s.,.....-_., | n GUARDIAN wit: cnnntonerown President-W. Cheater S. Malian. Sorretnry-Lleuf. Col. IJ. A. limnlnuon, ll- i- ltdifnr nnd blnnagrr—J. M. Burnett. Vlco-Pnlldonb-u‘; l. IIMIOIG Annular: rumor-D. l. Cllllll stint" tar; .:;:..::""".::;. ca" i-iirfmr» TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1929 . , Co-operatlon in 2st cndeavor on the part of the pat- rcus and careful management of fac- tories, together with rigid irlfiiieciwn oi the product, has gone for incl/mid the hope of its founders. Our Potato Growers’ Association also has achiev- td notable success, not, only in the prorltablencss of the business but in advertising the Province and its cap- abilities in this line of production. Our Egg and Poultry Association. which began in l small way, has placed the humble hen on a level with more pretentious agricultural activi- ties. The successful co-opcrativc marketing of live stock in the Muri- (imcs is another case in mint. All these activities show very clearly virhat can be done by llli-Yiiigiim 9°‘ operation; but we have mt, reached the end oi’ the possibilities in this drection. Tilcre still remains some- thing to be done in our marketing, especially oi polatoes. There is still the danger of being ouidistanced by. more aggressive competitors. still the danger n: gliliilng the market. of being at tire mercy of outside specu- lators who, to suit their own Purim!" es, are prepared to cut prices to a point ivhicll practically means ruin to the producer". Yvlha: sccins to he required in the potato industry is a co-operative mar- keting board. Such a board. made up of local, shippers and producers, should be able to control the output and iced the market in the most pro- fitable way. It had been hoped that such a. board would have been or- grinlzed in time to care for this sea- scnks product; but the season is now well upon us, and nothing has so far bcrn dune. It had been hoped also that steps rivvzzi]. be iakcn ere this for a wider and morelniormatlve publicity cam- We note that in New: Bruns- . ‘r Department. of Agriculture is u... awnk: to the advantages of advertising their products in every practical way. The result is already noticeable in the fact that New Brunswick potatoes are featured in leztiiilrg Western and Central Cana- dian newspapers, and the demand has lncrcmed correspondingly.’ Our provincial Department of Ag- riculiure more than a year ago pro- mised to provide suitable literature to accompany our potato shipments, drawing attention to the best meth- cds of pi-cparing the tubers for the table, etc. This literature, together with wider newspaper publicity throughout Canada, would do much t0 enlarge our puotato business in the hoznq marl-art. The fa": that Prince Edward Island potatoes last year commanded a higher price in these markets than any others was due largely to their superior quality and to the fact that brokers at points of delivery. recognizing this superiority, found it, to their own advantage to feature the Island product. In view 0f the intense competition this year among Canadian producers and the extensive advertising campaigns put on by our competitors, we cannot af- ford to depend solely upon the repu- cation we have already achieved. The power of advertising being in direct proportion to the quality of the pro- duct advcrtisednwe have everything to gain by broadcasting the already ‘recognized merits of our potatoes. ‘iAlong with up-to-datc advertising iphould go more careful attention to other phases of the marketing pro- blem which the suggested marketing board could deal with. such as attrac- tive packaging for the city consumer, opportune shipping, co-operatlon with Boards of Trade and other bodies in securing better freight rates and shipping facilities. etc. As in our sister provinces, the res- ponsibility of initiating practical measures far publicity and marketing rut; with the Department of Agri- culture, villeli should have intelligent oversight of all agricultural pro- blems. ..1 t“: case of our pota in- paign. ucnrcumuaar. CO-OPERATION. est itself not only in the “will” '91 the lines which in the advancement of the whole p0- have adopted it in this Province has tam business, and this interest should ‘been quite satisfactory. Our co-op- extend beyond the problem of pm- ci-azivc dairy business, through hon- ductiOn to the Bssflciflibd FY0519!“ 01 the Potato Growers‘ Association but advertising and marketing. upon which ultimate success must largely depend. THAT DUNCAN REPORT- The annual meeting of the Mari- time Board of Trade will be held at Saint John on October 10 and 11.0110 oi the questions of major importance on the agenda. will bq that of the un- lmplemented provisions of the Dun.- can Report on Maritime claims. It is over three years since this report was submitted to the Dominion Gov- ernment. and, as the Sydney Post points out, no steps have yet been taken to carry out its recommenda- tions for the relief and development of the coal and steel industries. While there are other measures of importance still unimplemented, these are, by common consent, the most vital to the economic interests 0f the Maritime Provinces. and were made the subject of strongly-worded reso- lutions unanimously adopted at last year's meeting of the Maritime Board of ‘Zrrade at Halifax. Similar action will doubtless be taken this year, and probably some definite campaign to force the matter upon the attention of the Federal authorities will be riuthorized by the Board. The ques- tion is Onq in which the Boards of Trade are vitally interested. ‘The restoration of the coal and steel in- dustries ln Nova Scotis, would mean a. larger home market for local pro- ducers and would stimulate business in the Maritimes generally. THE ROAD HAZARD The publication of statistics ofrail- way accidents for the month 0f July snows that thirty-eight occurred at level crossings, involving n loss of twenty lives and causing injuries to 280 persons. The deadly crossing still takes a terrible toll. It is ap- parent from the setting forth of the causes of these mishaps that in the "85P mfliority of cases they ought never to have occurred. Care and caution were neglected in most in. stances, and the result, w“ tragic, 1n one case it was found that the auto- mobile driver who was killed had been deaf. Commenting on this in- cident, the Toronto Globe insists that sooner or later the various Govern- ments will have to prohibit deaf pgy. sons from driving. and refuse togrant a license to any one suffering from a physical defect that would increase the hazard of operating s car. The margin o! safety on the highways of the country is too small today, with the tremendous traffic on wheels, to take any chance with a men or wo- man not in full possession of every mental and physical faculty "with which the raoo has been endowed. EDITORIAL NOTES Ottawa may "retaliutb" nggimt u” United States tariff on agricultural products by adding some duties on cutlery. i Fifty thousand boy scouts at Ar- rowc Park jamboree and not a. single scrap to mar the fun. Says the Saint John Telegraph-Journal: “Not many peace conferences nor religious can- ventions have a record like that." I L. M. Montgomery's new book, "Magic for Marigold," is attracting favorable notice from reviewers. J. H. M. in the Halifax Chronicle. writes: "Once again it depict: a Prince Edward island family ngllnst a Prince Edward Island homestead- the flesley Clan this time, and Cloud of Spruce ls the homesteadVYou will like these Lcsleys ffmn Old Grand- mother and the great-aunts downto six-yenr-old Marigold, the heroine, whose adventures, whose happiness md Imhlpninens. comprise n story ‘m’ bow a) bfimu" ""5 @510" that is u refreshing as a gust of wind over ‘a Prince Edward Islmd “up,” dultry, thefi-qartment should _ tor-i and dune." In told m n; dubmnnu i?" liote s_B_y_j._o» 0mm,»- cum. tub-month e! falling leovunof-lengthgnlnl "m- um ma nkuqutcuuvvrllt-len New! the _hqme_ _ _ . "wttsll. i“ 9'.11'i!i“.'.-‘ih_°°1 i" sofa. round. and while the cup that eussn but not inebrllte: waits on ma"; so ‘let unwelcome peaceful ev- gnlng 'm." S6 WIOTB CGWDQ! M hG "Bing the soil." , y; grunt-ll! an cujoyoble month in our fair Island and we may hope will be so again this year, Once, sixty yem" ago; on October 4, 1809, it brought a fearful storm along the NorthAtllntic coast, still remember- ed on the mllnlnnd as the Saxby Gale. Never before, nor since, in the mommy of persons now living, was the Bay of Fundy. Neither the gale m; m; tide were of particular note in Prince Edward Island a lucky "- cape. ' “Women can win" is the headline article in The Globe of Friday last, referring to the election in Ontario. That; paper evidently hopes that if the woman vote can be consolidated in the Liberal column a victory pro- hibition and for the Liberal party may be achieved. Wherefore it praises the women and omits any re- ference to what is apparently the strong motive in the minds of The Globe. and the Federal Government at the present time. ‘By n strange coincidence, the next artleleon the editorial page of The Globe, following "Women Can Win", is entitled “The Gangster Problem." Hero is the opening paragraph about the gangsters in the States: One of the worst features of the crime situation is the presence of ‘gangsters’ in practically every large city. The members of these gangs are generally young men, often with criminal convictons standing to their discredit. 1 They are for the most part .without principle or scruples, and think little of taking human life if their evil ends are to be promoted by so doing. It has been a matter of thankfulness the/c the Dominion of Canada. has been so largely free from the terlbitsm of such organized gangs as have plagued the cities of the Republic. Now here is rlchncssl! The great- est prohibitioncountry that evercwns. plagued with murderous gang- sters in every city, while Can- ada, mostly . without prohibition is free from such‘ terrors; and yetthe chief press organ of "tem- perance." sobriety and orderlnCan- ada calls frantically for prohibition in one breath and in the next breath bewlils this appalling condition of the neighbor nation under the Volstesd law in the way it came to the border- land. The great prvtrus of aviation and the prospects of its rapid expansion are set forth on every hand. Al- ready the globe has been encircled by the German Grsf Zeppelin. Two British airship: of larger size‘ and carrying capacity are almost ready to take tho air. Millions are being spent on airports and lighting up the air routes of America and Europe. In‘ the meantime great hopes are expressed in the scientific journals m" "10 ‘Kyfflllane will soon mark a revolutionary era in the way 0! Protreu in flying. This novel machine can rise Oralight pgfpgn. diculnrly, can remain aloft poised in a. stationary pmition and needs no @080‘! strum. From a broad. flat houseroof, or a, roadway. 0: levglfleld it can take of! and land again, prac- tically on the same spot, it u cum-f; ed. -With further lmprovementssuch as have been effected in other air- planes, monoplsnes and biplanes. and will doubtless mltcrinllae in gyro- plane. its possibilities seem to b: very great. ____ Senator Currie, of Amherst, says the Maritime! m entitled to the Ont;- necto Omll, and will get it, if they g0 after it. r They have contributed their share-of fllmoemooo in building can- liljrl Upper Canada. of which every 0m h” free use. He does not see why such n. serviceable water route as the Oblgnecto canal would give should not be established for the Pro- vinces by the sea. ' Medical science mikes pmgresg in "I! prevention nrwell as the cure of 01d 439ml. but hu failed in many other causes. The flu, formerly known u influenza. has become in- "fulfill! prevalent within a low decades put, and cancer is still in- srsuingtho number of its victims. notwithstanding some hopeful disew. cries of remedial agents. ‘ ' Infnntildpsnlysis of which noths in! Ila known sfew yearn ego, has "ithln I My rem nut become qum alnrmfllllyymvaient in certain lo- calities. but. it nu bebn found Imm- maauru-nnd marrow. Just new, e990!!! d0- Way uni-Q mun a, gale or such a tide in m ‘mm new‘ “ummu” “m” u‘. the neckel plate mine of time prov- And jubilanco of bird and beast, Jostle each other in the smoke and For leave to labor at the beck __of gold. Yo herding fools, Come out. and nil the earth's wuta Mike howling deserts hulh with Turn sombre woods to green rejoicv Dot the mt lonesome plum work for younelveq-livo healthily On products of your own. lf yo- The 1m cunt Anarchist wul quit the time, nu signifier-m; ‘York.- Timl new; melodies replace old out, l min-g. W.Barlon.U-D,___ player, now a player. who was always bothered with distension of gas before the game and during the rest periods. Once into the game hg, seeme’ to be all rilhtv; Ap- parently forgot nbout it. In his cue it was due to the swallowing of air, as the gas expelled from his stomach through the mouth was absolutely without odor. However most of the gas which dis- tends the stomach and intestines is not due to this swallowed air but to some other cause. If it, doesn't amount to much and there is no distress it is justbs well to forget about it. If, however, ‘it be- comes a, "constant companion" then it would be wise to try and locate the cause, Now food is naturally the first thought, and there is no question but that food like onions, cabbage, raw fruits, eggs and others just naturally cause more gas than other foods. Then there is the lack of chewing which is one of the commonest causes of gas distension. Ifthe food is well chewed, moistened. and mixed with saliva or mouth alkaline digestive juice. it reaches the stomach in the right condition for the stomach juice to do its work, and very little if any gas wilLbe formed. Sometimes l1: is a low or "dropped" stomach which causes the trouble. Food lies too long in this low part and gas forms. In the small intestine sometimes food moves too fast or the intestine doesn't absorb the food soon enough and this causes gas. Frequently starchy foods, by not being broken up in the mouth by chewing, go through stomach and small intestine, and reach large intestine. before being broken up. 1111s is the causeof a great deal of the gas distension in lower intestine. Also if the passage of waste through large intestine is too slow, there is a great deal of gas fommtion, So if bothered by gas, try to locate the cause. Try to remember foods that seem to cause it; chew your food well, lie on your right side for ten minutes before eating; sit, down for n, few minutes after eating; don't est when tired; spread your meals well apart. If gas formation persists, consult your doctor as there may be some liver condition causing the. trouble. QfiLQOl/J-YJM; THE MAN WITH THE HOE Ye bookworms pale, Why point at my slant brow and rug- rlYWlreizrl-dib." TIE CAUSE OI‘ GAS FORMATION I spoke ones before about a. hockey professional Is Supreme Gllzbe) i q "Them hive been a number, of ipuuulu addresses n the snub“ 91 the American Prison Association, B"! meeting at Toronto. One of these WIS wu delivered by R. L. Calder, K. 0-K of Montreal. Mr. Calder is a. student o: criminology, an excellent sebum‘. and a mm of wide judical knowlcdsi gm experience. Then he spoke as one having a it, his audience knew, which perhaps helps i0 explalin their repented requests for him to con- tinue, though he had said some Im- flattering clings oonoernin: the administration of the law in the United States. His remarks resardins the enforcement of the llw in Great Britlnn and its effect on crime in the Old Land should be pondered 0n this continent, and practicflll-rly bl’ the people of the United States. "In Great British," he said, "the llw is triumphant-that" is why there is 16$ grime there than in the United States". There may be nothing naw_iri_ this statement, but old truths lose, none of their force through being oft, N- pentca. “English common law L! triumphant. in this great fundament- al principle." Mr. Calder sand, "that the individual is innocentuntll he is proven guilty. He is not made, by the modern methods of United States police, to ‘confess’ a crime." The root of the‘ whole matter of the control of crimp and annulus u contained u: these words. In Britain the term "the majesty of the law" means some- thing. In the United States, unfor- tunately, it. has come to mean little, asimany of its outstanding men and leading newspapers have frequently confessed. It l: not that the British criminal is one whit better‘ morally than his confrerc across the Atlantic. ft simply means that the former has a deeper inbred respect {Orfllb law of the country that exercised n. re- st/ramt on his evil , deeds. while the latter believes that 1:119 II-W can be circumvented andrhs can "get away with it." ' The greatest safeguard tothe Inw- ubiding people of Britain is the air. solute impartiality with which the, law functions. There is no respect of persons where the enforcement; of the statutes of the land are concern- ed. Rich and poor alike are. compelled to new to the line, and wherrau of- fense is committed punishment fol- lows surely and swiftly. ‘There is no evading the penalty through the cm- ployment of astute lawyers ntihuge sums to find verbal flaws and tech- nicalities, such as has been done on so many occasions in the United States. A British Judge is not im- pressed by l. quibble. He looks upon thsprlsoner befom him an an in- nocent. man, and is quick to condemn the employment of illegal methods to secure conviction-which is rm- ly done. But when the evidence is heard and guilt, proved, nemesis u- suredly follows. The United States is rightly exercised over the ‘grave crime problem wnfronting the Republic. She can look for little improvement until law and justice are onthroncd in the hearts of the people and in the courts of the land. AT j ' ‘ALL AUTUMN MODE ‘y,’ l, ée . 0 l i= , $4,” V PRICE ~‘Sqclc"ioltlnnn69th,,l0wflnlo.Andimwnnartlyltwlllharmqnllewitlitho flnlnbodmntci-lillofwlnhebooh. nu utuweunum u» Anfumnlnllinury .‘..VIONIIAIIIII¢VII. Ufllblcu-nc of! tn... . .100“: blah. . vol-the- forebculout. _' y 0 nawmm brown ammo! rurviv "l" "i! _ nnousa “can »_ rum pills NAVY blue Velvet ‘A Hats Matrons l Hats Chiidrenb Hats Very flinch in voila this In Velvet’ and Iolh- lovely “"1! Children's m. In nu. sir mm- moduls- r ' "W “I M » v $6.00 $3.75 to $7.00 $1.25 t0 $1.50 I L»~<i»;=_Le#-r Tl... Handicapped Boy l (BHQIILUBIIQII m») ' ' LONDON, Auk. .2a.-m. we iufu- ' aduzwuy talcum‘ High School and forced m tum brag. ‘winner-many a promising youngster bu been surely bum. tistlc people? yen, No? Well, nnylicw. quite a number of artists 5nd sculp- . tors who 11W by- Mlling us their pic- tures and sculptures usuzsus moat scornfully. thatwc are pbillstinu who know not art. when we soc it. They may be mun, W0 buy their pictures capped through life by lick of education ' ‘fhsbiggel-prizegln nlmcsteverymlkoflifoulusliy m1 t- the men with university training. , ‘why not mqko _- certain now that your boy will have on equwlohanob with , the rat? For n moderate premium you con purclugg n, Great-Welt w; Educctionnfrolicy ma" will mm funds and their plenary-which fact‘ is. perhaps circumstantial evidence. l- Al this ubjeoqu» m. nation m. - honor tbejnemory of mold statue toliim. Ibllowtng ou- "M. the authorities hive selected a Mnn of Art, who lnvturn, bu produced, ever is the carat word) a grlvenim- use. Bays nqto the public-drum ue of ma. mitt’. Ana the uuulci-io- decide, says that it is even no. Now consider; _'I\\is statue was in- tended to be memorial of a. mph known andmdmized by counties thousands, even millions, of men and women the wide world over. It should Marshal Bil. Hill by erecting .11 or evolved, or manufactured (which- ’ en bns—_“hqro,_i| on equestrian atat- ,- ies, exercising their divine rum. w l for his university education, whether yo}: live or die. Full ‘j puticuluswillbomalledyouonrcqueatto ‘ I Hyndman é’ Company Ltd. I Tlloldflilhlllrlllwllfillvillllll ‘ Provincial Mnum -~’1'ha' Glut Wm uh Charlottetown (o I anmoelonooooofofooo- @ , ‘BEFORE MAKINGANY' DECISION . i as T0 THE RANGE on srova , ‘l, YOU INTEND BUYING, ,1 g i SEE OUR LINE recall to us, military or civic, by his physical manhunt, the man ‘he was and the uunn which m did in a time of greet national tribulaticxt! so that in time ho con-m we should.‘ “Hat's Hail!" _ . so much for our inteqtic But may no; says she does’ not recognise in this image her dead hus- band; so also My ' other mem- bers of his family.‘ Again, not one; in ml or a, hundred cfdtbme who ms seen the desiln either in theprlginnl or by photograph, fund who knswnLord Haig. recognise him. though tneydo very generally lmcclve the lines- ments of Bismarck 1nd other equally amiable gentlcmen of Blood and Iron. , _ _ , ‘rbentocgtharesrothoaa whom skilled in the anatomy of the, horse. These swear obit no such quudrulifld as the sctiiptnr nu inn-glued; m: dwelt on earth in equine form as for as human knowledge goes, and they add that 10rd, ‘Hui: wouldnl soon have ridden n. minoeercs 01'} XIII" nroo. ged hands, a Why wonder at ray-shoulders bent and WTy? l Full well ye know that I support the world Whereon ye feebly crawl. Great Atlas I, Kings, nobles. millionaires, all hang on me: I, self-sufficient. have no need of them, ' They, should I leave them, would starve and die. soon Yo pinched and pent in cities, look at me, I breathe the dewy freshness of the earth song while yo grime come out where the-re is room, places up_ running brooks, ing fields, ' with cheerful homes, - content do thus, ‘ globe, --ltrlclDuncon. in “The Blob » fishermen.” ‘ r 1 ~'>'.~r:=iu~*~,wc= -=.-. a and leimtiflc march and medial another very fetal mgr“; gggjzgpmqggalnghgg; “my; m m. ~ ._ \ refinery treatment. Arsenic 1| DIM. in the manufacture 'of parts , green, lend arsenic, J1me nnennte, dips ma other insecticides. uses are found in the manufacture or gloss and to small drum. in medicinal and Most of the market, is found in the export trade; United Staten use: quantities u a mean; poi-mimic one boll-weevil which is so destructive of the cotton crop. 1m: LAND w: LOVE . Iy ruwirmsn i ABBENIC ' IN CANADA arsenic in Canada? A. Arsenic is produced from Can- ndian ores to the extent, of nearly 0,000,000 lbs. in 1928, vainod at, 1200.000. White arsenic and arsenic bearing speice residues are chiefly ob- tained from silver-cobalt om smelt- ed at Dolor-o. Ont, British Oolumbil also produces u. lesser Amount" from ince, which‘ is shipped to Twang, for sheep Other phnrmacaltical preparations. ‘i .3 o. What u the production or. Now we'll 11AM! to tlwI-rtisill: "Oh" they any, "mu u not nu we nug, nor is it like n 11069.10 llift mnlnt ~<> m. Thewholo 3m»; a symbolic. It is Art. Art sprillfl from the wi- mitive urges of the human mind." km um corn wml universal-uni >- pus by and any to our children; . 3 or High Class Stoves and Ranges uAIlin the Popular a , “Modern Finishes Fawn, Pearl Grey d? White y Our prices can compare with any on the " Island. Quality is the main feature. A housekeeper equipped with one of our Ranges mult be ef- ficient. Four different styles to choose from. Ranging in price » From $48.00 to $88.00 SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY ‘t i ‘The Rogers. Hardware Company Ltti- I t A POPULAR TO0Til PASTE w. uilmnntloonoawrs room lklTlill-mmfof-lln‘ but m" new» pup-m- roan moi n: over been bisection the nurht autumnal-bummed; ferrous. ' hove n dcslfllvwlaeidbivilelnnvn nennnoneywlltidltk‘ catacombs-marge ‘ammonium I lllfcrlfililipliu “m, summit-Minolta"; ‘lsnboaty. drab Co. l , ‘ . Plflfilullllu