Vtiuli m-.. . ,_. c ..........- ........-.._-.~.w-~ufiu.=.....k-uw~.._-Ac c. ....... -..._--.. 0...“... .. . . .. PAGE FOUR l'NE BNARLOTT ETOWN GUARD IAN Murnlng Daily (Founded I887) President. LlenL-Col. W. Cheater S. MCI-ll" Vice President, .I. ILBurnett, FJ-I. Secretary, LRcuL-Col l). A. MacKlnnon. 0.5.0. Editor and Slunuging Ulrector, .I. R. Burnett- FJ-A Associate Editor, Frank IVn-lker JUBSCRIFIION RATES $5.00 per ycar tin advance; delivered to Uty. $4.00 pcr yvui" tin advance; trialled to I’ E. Island $5.00 pcr year" iln advance) mailed to Canada and UAL Alcinbcrs Audit Bureau uf Circulation: “The Strongest illemori; is Weaker than pile illealcest Ink." WIBER 14, 193B The Xove. Sc-itia cozil industnv is zidmittctlly" in .1 1nd war, and lll>l wt ck cztmc n-"sistztiice from (ltlawu iii i'tc \\':i_v iiirtxflisctl coal suliven- tiunc, ' Ilk\\' ‘ pas-ed by order-in- l'.l\('\ the llln-Xlllllllll sulivcmions pny- Liblc w, l e fu-lciiil ll‘0Il~lll‘_\' from $1.50 to $2.00 21 ti-n.‘ 'l‘l~.- lllll\llllllll'l p:i_v;ible on coal for rail- u" iy e wus incrcziseil from $2.00 to $2.50. T ls in effect a restoration of the former C\i‘..-:l VdllYf‘ suln eiitioiis. The ilClli-ll was llllltlf.‘ necessary by competi- tion, since last February; of American “distress" coal into (Jzitztrio, which btctime so kcen that the C: itflldll nnots were unable to meet the foreign nd lllllt‘ was a. distinct falling off in de- for the Ciillilllllill product. Another factor [llc dcpiw-ssion in the industry . in denizmd for coal in the . zi- wcll as the switching from to fllcl of? in ll"‘ll\' pulp and paper mills. * otxli -' applies only to Nova lll the New Brunswick The {tress of the hitter il discrimination." “The ick," it is claimed, “are We to a policyt which will ' of Cttlll mining industry l in the end prove dc- -n~.cnt of their own coal i‘: lllfllfE sense. But there of stilli- to ‘ l"t'll the -'..' "z- t< it-iut, t»: is’ stviti-tlfiiq else that doesn't make " Tilt" manner in which professed cling to >“'I‘0r_v" protection the going gets rough. Ac- lifnx Chronicle (Liberal) Pre- cdonzild was preparing last wcek ntii-n to (lttziwa in the interests "iiia cozil industry, asking for i bvctitions. application 0f (lump- is on itixportcd coal, atlministrzition of a fuel p ‘Icy by a. national fucl board, and vc u-e of Czinzidizfn coal by Canadian Yo: a word about "liberation of ex- . ", 0r the “strangling" effect of 2 weritiotis, and dumping duties, which 1e of so much Liberal abuse of the ' criiinent at Ottawa. tlirce years . policiw" nhttii: r1 to the l Illlrl’ .\i‘.;'u< ‘l-- ternul tariffs. Boy Scouts And Apple Day C/ne important rule of Scouting is that no begging El]t“"Ili5 may b0 lllllfll‘ by the bovs; the funds rcir. red f -r itiiiiiiiig the (irgaiiizaliini must be curred. ll"'!I‘(' the in~titutivm of Apple Dziv, and its v.i'~c bnzh to tht- public, who get thtir monej/s w ‘i. and thc boys who get first-hand expcrwnie principles of sound business. Incidental’ = annual czinipziign serves to pop- ularize a .iss ltome. product. Only Prince Fdivzirl Isn't fies nre sold by our Boy Scouts and these a. . . "ted for their stipcrior quality. This year v. ipm Day falls 0n Saturday, Nov. l9. The br-ys are already hard at work, pre- aring for the campaign. The public response in the past has lwcn generous, and it is hoped that this year will see an equally successful sale. The proceevls go to l, cause which is of vital importance in connection with youth training and the future welfare of this Province and country. A“ Damning Indictment A scathlng indwtritent of the King Govern- ment's negyirlct of its pclge to (leal with the un- employwnv-nt problem appears in a front-page editorial in thi- currt-z issue of the Financial Post (liu qalcnt ldlitfllll). Denotnicng the lack of political leadership, the I’ost says f’.'l‘.ltl't_\'ll"l(’llt figures show that iti- dustrizil c: " e has done what it could to create new i d restore old ones, the num- ber of writrc c. it. s at work being almost equal to the toiiil in l'|_?|'\, the tire-depression peak. But the poptilttit-ii has iiicreziscd. Boys who were ten years old in logo arc lllPtl of i8 today, and they \\'Illll .i chance to serve Canada. “Mr. l1: " recalls the Post, "iron an elec- tion on a 1 Q _' of employment as a substitute for unemi-loy-mcnt. In i935 Mr. King said that prflyifllll! ¢"il"_.il'i\'llll'l‘lf ivas the nation's N0. I prnlilrlll. l‘. \\:i.\ .o ~i‘l'l4>ll$ and vital a need that tln- l"E. e \l:-v ~r <'\ll!_'llt the aid 0f a repres- eimnive corinik-iotf to help work out the prob- 1cm. “The FRvsitnK-lon took its task seriously. It (ll‘ll“l!l1l4‘il :ni'. ri-coiiiiiii-iidcrl action. It made two-w spwific‘ rccoiniticndrilions for sufliig lincinp _ viii. for wri-zitiiiu jobs. "It l‘l|llI.'lll"l~-4~l the Government to have sovncoiit- |il'l~i"ll it with a programme. A pro- grzniuiic vpzi- otmctliing suggesting action. Mr. lying th~ l<'.'lll“l' nf ilic iiution, the captain of our ship ni snne- |il'l'll'l'I'('!l to lct the ship drift in still \'»'.\l4 r- in~t<-:id of steering it. against the storm, lit\\‘lll‘ll ilic harbor of national greatness. \\'licn the lltiiiiiii~~ioii iii _lul_v, i937, published lls iitliritii rt-pml, ll r~ll1>\\'(‘1l thiit the (inverti- nictit had itgnnr: d or diclvcd most of its pfzuis lo elizriiizuc pnlihc w:i~tc rind rcducc idleness. "Tho l'i'iiii<- Aliiiistcr curly lnct inn-ms; in “riding this iizliioiizil \\'.'l\lC of idleness," ihg Tm. mm pn r charm s. “True, the Commission was illowi-il lo Uitlllllul!‘ its findings and ll11ll\’(‘ .i final rir-irl. lnil no steps were l.’ cu to CllllllC hi- (ion-nil {on with ndiiiiiiislrzitivt- p:t\‘-'(‘l‘\ such is \\‘l‘|l‘ p iirflicd to it bv stntutc." (and promis- :d in flu l.lllll‘ill ylitfvrm). The one excep- tion to fl.i~, the l'l>.~t adds, was tlic Ilomc. Iiu- "Wciticut Caitpnigii. ilpart from that pro- l-. gramme, "the Cllllfillihl-"tll was lllihle to realize‘ that POllClrF- of action were uuwelv-"Jnic at Ot- tawa. Its report when completed (at 2i cost of $300,000) was lllllflil)’ tilnced in the zircliives." The Post recalls tlizit in concluding its report (hq gonrmrkl,“ priiltllcslcill “To lczivc this work in the hands of officials already’ overburdened with their regular duties is to cusurc a. failure t0 solve this tnost urgent PIIIISC of iiatioiitil prob- lem." This is what lizis liuppciicd; illlfl 110W. ll"? Post complaiiiis, "ilrifi \‘4lllllllll(‘.\' as the basis 0f national policy. The prospect of hundreds of thousands of idle or uiitrztiuctl mcn and ivonien finding lizulpiucss zuid strength iti useful work luis been inilcfiiiiti'l‘\' tiostpoticd." “Public (ipitiioti in Llttizidzi is tired of drift," the Tbronto pnpcr concludes. “It would welcome leadership and dircciion from its Prime Minister. Policies of action ivould bring UillllllSlilfilll, imag- iiizition and zibiliiy- to this great iizitioiinl lllilf. The plziiis ZIIC tlicrc; llu‘ work is ivniting to bc done. \\'liat is l'('-lllll'(‘ll is a government tlizit will lead —not follrnv." , The Post >ll0l1lC now get strongly behind the new Co. wrvutivc lczitlcr, Dr. .\l:inii.»ii, who is not only plc-lgctl to give this country" (lflltlll, but \\'ll\t>t’ record in public life is a guarantee that lie will keep his word. i a I Editorial Notes I Roberts of Kandahar died this date, I9I4. i N‘ I lli Premier Duplessis is to be the guest of Pre- mier Hepburn at the opening of the Toronto “linter Fair. 'l'liis does not bode well for Prime Minister King. N‘ N‘ if Ill It is gratifying to learn that .\lr. Dunning has now been stifficiently restored t0 health to be able to supervise his ilcpartmcnt and to attend cabinet cnnticils wlicn matters relating to his department are under consideration. at n‘ - Premier Aberhart retained control of Atha- basca in the by-elcction on lloiitlayt last when Mr. C. II. Tlnrle won the sent for the Social Cre- diters in a close fight with .\lr_ C. R. White- lcn, Liberal. io- a- m m Premier Mitch Hepburn. a past master in the art of obtaining frcc front tinge publicity. refuses to confirm or deny‘ lllfll zi plot zigziinst his life had been discovcrcrl. Pcrliaps it is his political life he is afrttid of. l‘ i if i Not only had Prince Fdivzinl Island more tour- ists this year than lfl$l~——-'lll exception to the rule in C:inada—hut it is ril-"o zni outstanding excep- tion in having more lll7\l‘l(<‘l1\ltl(’ potatoes than any other province, being one of two oviiiccs, Sztskamlieyvan being’ the other, which planted and rezipetl a greater acreage thzni a _vcar ago. 1v 1k 1k The Prime Klinistcr told the Ottmva news- paper correspondents that he w..s unable to malt-c a visit to President lhioseixdt at Ilyde Park, but that he had gone to the thczitre to see Ray- mond llasscvs portrayal of .»\bc Lincoln. It must have done his heart good to see a Canadian make a real hit of his own beau ideal. 1F =l= i! l The King's speech in the British Par- liament made no refcrt-ucx‘ l0 the pro- posed Anglo - American 'l'r;ulc Treaty, and surprise ivris QXprc-‘sctl by mcmlicrs. .\Ir. Clement .~\ttlcc. l.('.\(lL‘l' of the (Ipposiiion dc- clarcd that if iicgotizilions h;id been dropped tlic Ilouse should be told. The (lovcrnmciit made no reply. n- n- m v Now it is the former vigorous pacifist, Rt. Hon. Ernest Lripointc, who declares his fears of invasion and his conviction that armament is necessary if Canada is to remain secure for all his former pacifist ssricialcs and followers. It is Lloyd George over again —— pcrsonel safety first out of office, fit-Q, vigilant tnilitarist with the responsibility of national defense on his shoulders iillfi Notwithstanding the fact that the Conserva- tive candidate increased thr- government vote zit Dartford, Iingland, from 33,242 to 42,276, the successful lady Lzibour candidate, who increas- ed her vote from 35.5116 to 40.514, claims that she won bccziuse the electors disapprove of .\Ir. Chzinibcrlziiifs foreign policv and tho betrayal of Czechoslovakia and lJc-mocr ‘ Tllillf is, 46 to 42 constitutes ivlitiltrszilc coiiilciiinrition. Per- haps if Mr. (flianibcrhiin tillitffi the Labour Party candidate at her ivord and goes to the country on the issue, a different talc will unfold. N‘ i‘ W‘ The warnings of the 1\Iiiiistcr of Justice (Mr. Lapointe) with reference to Canada's prepared- ness for ivrir are deserving of emphasis. He told theLeague of Nation's §oqicty' “that when the crisis comes, no legwl formula, no statute, stands in the wziy. Intcrnationril conditions change so rapidly that no legislation affecting foreign re- lations can have a permanent character. Peace cannot be assured through mere legislative pro- cesses." And furtlicr on lie said: “\\':ir today would destroy western civilization." Mr. La- p0inte's last sentence is as true as it is ominous. If civilization is to be saved its present frontiers must be made imprcgnable, and those frontiers are not on this side of the Atlantic. Canada's obligation in those circumstances is all the great- er and the task of preparation all the more formidable. n- : 4- r According to the Monthly Prcss Release for November of the Ilank of Nova Scotia, follow- ing the slight improvement in August, the Cumulative Index of Business in Canada show- ed a notable gain in September. It was 93.7% of the i925-i929 average as compared with 92.1% in August and the year's low point of 01.0% in July. The present level is 8% be- lmv the peak of the recovery movement which wavreachcd in September, i937. With the ex- ception of \Vholes:ile Prices, which declined, the component itidiccs all increased significantly. In the cases of the Rate of Turnover of Bank llPpo-‘its and Rcvciiuc Carloarlings, the upturns \\'("' principally a reflection of the larger wheat H" p. ln that of Industrial Production, the gain \\'§_IS concentrated in the manufacturing indus- trics. while the increase in Employment was fairly general in character. - NOTES BY TNE WAY "Get. yourself l. wedge 10b!" That's the advlce Walter B. Pltkln gives young people eager to get a running start ln llte. Lumber- jacks use wedges to topple mighty trees, says the psychoioglst. and author In the current Rotation Magazine, and youth can use the same device to crack open the doors of opportunity. "To get .1 wedge job. develop an accessory skill," Pltkln counsels young men and women. explaining that high competence ln a low fleld ls neces- sary first. of all. "You seek work that brings you Into close con- tact with some man at or near the top. The work must be humble. But your sklll at lt must be, as the niovle advertisements say, supercolosal, lf not positively mnstudontlc." Many of today's “big shots" started as aides to private secretaries, then executive secret- aries, and so on up, he says. For that reason mastery of stenc- graphy. bookkeeping. 0r a slmilar skill gives a young person with ability and ambition an unparallel- ed opportunity to learn about com- pany trends and conditions. As he makes himself useful ln smiill jobs, bigger jobs will come to him. La/w may be a wedge skill, ‘rlkln lnfonrns impoverished young at- torneys looklng for clients. By studying new and proposed laws as they affect a speclflc business, an able lawyer may create a {ob for himself. Facility ln writ. n3 may enable‘ a younw man to make technical reports and sclentlflc abstracts readable to the public and thus make himself useful to an Industry. Door-to-door selllng, mechanlcs, photography. and many another skill may be used to serve a. slmllar purpose. "No sklll. well mastered. ls too slim or inconse- quential to be laughed off, lf you think hard enough about how to use lt. as a. wedge." concludes Pit- kln "Use lt ingeniously, not to begin at the bottom and work ub. but to crack into the ‘big stuff’ with a very small tool." I have already told the beautiful and true story of the American visitors ln London, who asked a portly clty man, one sultry day on the Embankment, to direct them to Cleopatra's Needle. He kindly led the strangers to It, and, on ar- rlval, being exceedingly hot, took off his topper. 'Whereupon, ccm- pletely mistaking tlie gesture, those considerate Americans de- voutly removed their hats too. as though the Needle were a sacred shrine. But I can now go one bet- ter than thls. A motoring friend, ln whose unlnipeachable veracity I have complete confidence. tells me he say a stranger, whom by his appearance he took to be a Hindoo or something of that sort, making solemn obelsance on the Portsmouth road to one of bur A.A. road signs! There was no mlstaking the fact that the l-Ilndoo, or whatever he was, thought lt. must be a wayslde shrine. If he made the full journey to London, he must have come to the con- cluslon that vie are the‘ most re- llglous nation on earth. —London Correspondent Ottawa Journal. Among problems science has to routes operating through troplcal territories, ls the elimination of Insect-pests such as mosquitoes, which are, of course, potential carriers of disease. In conjunction ‘with sclentlsts, technicians and offlclal departmenks, Imperial Alr- ways has for some time past been conducting pioneer experiments vitlbh a vleiv to developing an 1n- sect-destroying equipment suitable for Installation ‘in airliners. ‘Yhe success attendlng this research‘ has just been illustrated by a demonstration at. the Imperial Airways experimental department in London, during WhlLII several hundred llve mosquitoes of a. potentially dlsease-bearlng type —- provlded by the London School of l-iyglerie and Tropical Medicine- were destroyed by the apparatus employed. This comprises a light- welght portable vaporizer, and also a. method whereby lnsectlclde ls sprayed through tubes fixed round aircraft. mall and freight com- partments. The pyrethrum ln- ScCldCldE used ls of a special non- tnflammtible type, innocuous tn everything except insect. llfe. -- Imperlal Aalrways Bulletin. A correspondent wants to know 1f we could write a book. Not that he wants us to, so far as we can make out. but, because of a crltlclsm which seems to have dls- pleased him, he challenges our ability to do so. Let us get right. down to the answer. Frankly — also emphatically-no. We are nble_t.o say so without hesltatlon. because vi.'e've started lots of times, made some progress, even finished one a long time ago, and always .enc\ierl the concluslon that such talents ns we possess lay in other directions. If byn bnok he means a rinvcl, the answer ls ln the neza- tlve.-—Calgary Albertan A halfback dropped from the Loulslani State University foot- ball squad charges the reason was that he told his fellow players they rzeeded a labor unlon to pro- tect, them ugalnst overwork and long hours. This wlll strengthen the suspicion of many people that. football ls more toll than pcllny We don't. know what. lt, wou do tn the romantic features of the great. American college game lf all the beams werebr ‘ ’ b the 0.1.0. or the Al‘. of L. But we're pretty sure that football wouldn't. be u com lately de- lamorlzed as bull-f ghtlng ha; een ln republican Spain, where it ls announced that, for reasons of economy, toreadors hereafter are to fight. ln overalls and take their pay ln meat from the bulll they klll. --New York World- Telegram. It h polflblo thnt someone who needs to see thls, and who may see It. here, failed to notice lt. In tho news columns previous . Thlt. ls reason enough for reprln lngth following description, by Dr. An- dre Crottl of the International Col- lege of Surgeons. of the "warning signs" that may tell of incipient 081K101‘! "My sore on the akin and especlull on the lips which does not hen. any lum ln the breast orelsevlhera which persists, any abnormal discharge, bleeding from any of the natural orifices of the bod . tmd alatent "indigestion" III loss o appetlte which realnta medical treatment." cancer cnn be cured. if taken ln time. Do not. Mklect a warning alan- Beek med- lcal advice at once, lf you hnve I11? 0f these symptoms. —Det.r6lt News. _ 'en*. operation seems overcome, ln connectlun wlth air- THE CI-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM n," ulna! h open hr tho by uni-respondents of of lntnout. The Obn- Ounrdlnn don not nu- unully ondoru the onlnlcun of uorrelunndnnll. dlwu q but lrattotow A REQUEST Slr,-To all who befriend alcohol ln any way. especially to those who sell it in Sunimerslde, and par- ticularly to the one who sold a cer- tain teddy and drinks on the tragic night of October twenty-ninth. I request that you pause ln your mad caieer and consider what you ure doing, ‘mu hold life and death ln your hands-Which shall It be? Think this thing cut for yours-elves quletly—end prayerfullyt. Enough tragic events have already occur- rec‘. on this lmiutlfxil new lilgli- Wily- Othcrs may occur, but see to lt that YOU are not the the re- sponsible partly. I thank you Slr, for your valuable space. I am. Slr, etc., BEDEQUE "OUR ISLAND I-IYIIIN" Sirr-As I stood with barcd li-ead and listened to the band play "O. Canada," at the Cenotaph on Armistice Day, my heart was filled with unbounded pride and loyalty towards our falr Dominion. At the same time, this hymn to Canada, brought back memories to me of the feeling of loyalty and Pride, I expcrlerced when years ago I first heard the beautiful strains of "Our Island Hymn." This beautiful hymn. wtmposed bl’ the late L. W. Watson. one of the Island's foremcst musloans, ivlth words by Lucy Maud Mont- gomery ls a. lhlll’! of beauty and holds great musical and literary met-ft. . If I may make a suggestion Slr, It would be this: Have our Island Hymn played at the opening of concerts. thezitrlcals. b n n q u e t s dedlcatlons and memorial services. etc. This not to supplant “O Canada" but to supplement lt. We have a music club which oould do a great deal wwnrds bringing this beautiful itumbei‘ be- fore the minds of our people. The Little Theatre Gulld which possesses such a Illl" orchestra coiicl do much to popularize this hymn. The Pupils of our schools tliroii:‘i*_"iit' the Ishttd could be taught the wnrtls and music, so um: at school concerts this Hyttnn could open their mrforntatices. Hopltift that the organizations msntioned above mav take some action in this mutter. I am, Sir. et-cx. "TRUE ISLANDER‘ P. S. -Since printing the above I have been lnfoiwned that on oc- casions Our Island Hvmn h“ been 51mg ln the schools. That l." gratifying Indeed. But ‘vvhy make ll. a general tiractlce? i -—'l‘. I. FARMER S‘ CREDITORS ACT Sl-rt-Tlils Act was designed to glve relief to farmers having met with bonaflde misfortune. Its pres- to be as a means to educate in evading 0110's financial responsibilities Such has come under my own ex- perience, and in a larger office of business I observed an unreason- able flle of notifications to meet the Court of Review‘. ivliile ‘he ro- prlcwr wins struggling to a just scores of dishonored or partly dis- honored notcs. to keep his vim batik btiance atljusted. There are honest men 1n difficul- tles who face the situation tis such men should, ivho scorn to rob those who trus 0d them. and, though tnrdllyt, pay every dollar they owe. There is another class. those rtble to pay. but who take advantage of laws made tu help the deserving unfortunate debtor. and resort to such means to evade obligations. As an example. a farnter, on oc- casions, tu Impress merchants tre- qucntly displayed rolls of bills, hundreds of dollars ln offliiind paymen s of accounts. Liter buying goods 0n short teims, ls applytlim for tellcf under the Act. Wliiit means have courts of rcvlcw, or other administrative officers, of knowing liow mucli of cash such as these have concealed or hidden. w swell the exchequer after the court clearance ls obtained? The whole trend of such proceed- ings, the subomiitlon of the law, the false U505 to which the Act ls applled, ls to too great flIl extent an encouragement to dishonesty. Though It may do sonic slight good 1n n llmllecl sphere of cascs, on the whole it ls ii vicious principle of business and one which could be dispensed with to advantage. partic- ularly ln lt-s perversed form of ad- mlnlstretlcn. Before this ltiw wns conceived, there was ample provision for relief of unfortunate debtors. They bud the slime opportunities of relief through lelgVlmate bankruptcy lnws 8s the merchant and lndustrlallsts ln buslness. There was no impris- onment for deb., and ccrtaln pro- tection to debtors, ant] there has always been a fnlrness exhibited by creditors to the tlc-sérvlng tinlortiiri- compromises and glvlng helpful rcllcf, And those methods of the past were not. publicly constituted schools, under government patron- age and supervision to educate a enerally honcst Cass of people ln he arts of debt evasion. But let ll; be distinctly understood that I do not class all applicants A ‘SLEEP m um iisrnrsiirn Docldk Kldfiii Pilli RESTING THE TUBERCULOUS LUNG BY ARTIFICIAL METHODS ft ls only too true that. Nature ls the great healer, whether the ailment ls one of splrlt, mlnd, or body. As day by day passes, the torn spirit, the upset mind, and thelalllug body tlssues gradually IlEB. . Years ago, ln the early treat- ment of consumption or tuber- culosls, it was belleved that lt was fresh alr and good food that were the important factors ln brlnglng about a cure. Rest was considered necessary, of course To-dny It. ls known that lf the diseased lung ls allowed to rest, not used for breathing, lt wlll have lts best chance to heal. The rest required to heal a lung (and often rest falls to heal ft) always took months and often took years. To flnd some method of resting the lung and brlnglrig about a cure 1n a short time was sought. For years, serious cases had the lung braced or put ln a spllnt to give lt rest, by means‘ of pneumo- thorax which pumps ali- into the chest between the chest wall and the coverlng of the lung. This prevents the lung from expanding or taking ln alr. It was found that many of these serious cases made a satisfactory recovery r1!‘ Mire‘ and tn-day the pneumothorax method ls being used on most cases where ‘adheslons’ are not present ln order to shorten the length of time ln hospltal. This method also allows the good or healthy part of the lung to expand but prevents movement ln the diseased part. Gradually this alr between chest wall and covering of the lung be- comes absorbed Into the blond and another quantity of alr ls Inject- ed. ‘These patients need not be confined ln a sanltorlum. While this pneumotliornx treatment may bring results ln n few months. Dr. B. P. Potter, ln l-lygela. says: “On the whole lt may be szild that no pneumothornx shoultl be curried on for less than t/wo years and that collapse inmost cases should be continued for at least three years. So helpful has thlsfimeumo- thorax treatment become in bring- ing about. results ln a short time that the Minlster of Health for Ontnrlo. Canada, ls now arrnnglng for many cases of tuberculosis to llve at. home or be provided wlth accomodntlon In private homes. when the time comes for another Injection of air. they go to their nearest hospital ,and rccelve the injection free of charge. 15¢ .1»? odJLQoi/zim. FROM “AMONG TIIE HILLS‘; Close drawn agalnst the hard blue s y . The peaks had winter's keenness; And, close on autumns frost, the VB. 8S Had more than June's fresh green- ness. Agaln the sodden floors ' Wlth golden Ilghts were checkered, Once more rejoicing leaves in wind And sunshine danced and flickered. It was, as If summer's late Atonlng for its sadness I-Ind borrowed every season's charm To end its days in gladnesswhit for rellef in the same category. There tire some. probably the mltior portion, honestly justified in taking advantage of the Act. Yet, without it. these would stlll have had other recourse. I urn Slr. eta. LEWIS I’. TANTON. ATTENTION Swine Breeders N0 n the time to Kllard against PIG - WORM by using the most. effective remedy on the market: Mac’s Pig - Worm Tonic Powder If wlll thoroughly abolish all truce; of wormn, and Improve the health of wu- hurd- Price 35cts per lb. Don't delay. Order by Phone or Mall. All orders promptly attended to. Phone 315 THE 2 MAGS Prescription: A Epoch"! Remember than l; notblnl better for your Stmnuh thul Dr Evans’ Stomach Mixture PIIICI I'll! BOTTLE 850. MAIL ORDERS PIIOMPTL! ATTENDED TO. F01‘ Vitalitu alwaus use I30Fll5kIHlIdlI]§l 9 ANGE PEKOE TEA tk He orders materials, sets men to work. As the job proceeds, engineers’ certificates enable him to collect from those with whom he contracted, and the work goes on. v _ The highwa finished, the bank is repaid. uch repayments enable the bank to supply credit to other responsible borrowers. A manufacturer gets a largo order, with an early time limit for delivery. _With only a liun- dred men, his factory cannot turn out the articles within the time required. With more men he can do it-but he lacks sufficient cash. Operating his factory, as a going concern, with a profitable order and having a re ntution for integrity, he asks t e bank to lend him what he needs to pay wages. The bank makes him a loan. He takes on more men. They get wa es. The goods are turned out, deTivered and paid for. The manufacturer re ays the bank with the agreed interest. He has his profit and can spend some money developing new business to keep his men employed. How does a bank make these advances —- where does the money come from ? Banks, havin branches throughout Canal a, mobilize the surplus funds of millions of depositors, large and small, and, based upon them, make credit available throughout the coun- try as may be required. Millions of little sums repre- sent the toil, production and lifetime savings of Canadians—— your fellow-citizens. Safeguarding these deposits is the bank’s first care. Deposits of $1,000 or less— most of them much less—are owned by 3,770,000 out of Canadzfs 4,084,000 savings de- positors. The total of all bank savings deposits in Canada is nearly $l,584,000,000; thc aver- age savings deposit in a bank is only $387. Wisely safe uarded by Cana- da's chartered banks these de- posits furnish credit that kee s 'mcn at work” when used y Canadian business and industry —producing new realizable ing with you. ADVEMBER 14, 1933 “MEN AT WORK!” The most cheerful sign on the road "k "MEN AT WORK” is an encouraging, chem-fut sign upon the highway. It is the happiest sign on the business highway too. Business enterprise, making wise use of banking service, is the mainspring of employment. The contractor responsible for that "Men at Work" sign gets the job of building that stretch of highway by being the lowest responsible tenderer. Not always does he have the ready money to buy all rhq materials, pay wages and build it out of his own resources. Ha goes to the bank and, having auela undo good reputa- tion, he negotiates such advances as ‘he may need. wealth from Canada's great ra- aourccs. The country and all it: people benefit. i In the field of business do. sits, out of an averags d 60,000 "current" accounts, 596,000 amount to $1,000 0| less. Savings do iu are, rinm-L ly, the basis dfiwwhich bapnke can make loans. only the confidence‘ of tho ople and their Willingness m cave their money. on deposit, enable "a bank to lend motley and-at small profit-margin to itself-weave the community. We have mentioned the con. tractor and the manufacturer. The same process stimulates employment throughout the whole fabric of production, in. dustry and commerce. Loans to agriculture and for marketing a icultnrtil roductu totalled in F637, $88.2 4,000- 9.0 per cent. of all ordinary bank loans sliown on the return to tlio Minister of Finance, October 31st, 1937. ' - Of this sum $57,490,000 went to farmers, cattlemen and fruit a riisers and $30,804,000 to grain dealers, seed merchants and grain exporters. Other bank loans went to municipalities and school dia- tricts; wholesalers, retailers, manufacturers of and dealers in lumber, pulp] and other forest products; fie ermen; fish ack- ers and cnrers; public utilities including transportation com- Harries; stockbroker-a and bond ealers; provincial lgovei-nJ c1 merits; mining men; urclies, parishes; hos itala; and to cliziri- table and religious institutions. Canadtfs chartered banks de- fend and protect the safety of the funds of depoaitnrs—tlie millions of thrifty souls we have described, whose life-savings they entrust to their banks. No Canadian depositor, through the world-shaking events of recent ears, has hail to fear for the ea et of a single dcAlar lodged wit 1 Canada's chartered banks. The funds of depositors are their own——-not a pool from which everybody may draw at will for any and every new fin- ancial experiment. THE CHARTERED BANKS 0r CANADA Your lnml branch bank manager will be glad to tall: bank- _ "n! will be glad to answer from the standpoint of his own experience. in this scrim. trill nppcnr in this neiupnpe . your questions, The next article Watch for n. _..\1,»- +5.1,- w! ARMISTIOE WEEK WE REMEMBER WITH PROFOUND RE; SPECT THOSE CANADIANS WHO FELL I FRANCE AND FLANDERS AND AL S0 THOSE WI-IO RETURNED AFTER SPLEN- DID SERVICE T0 CANADA AND THE WE IIOPE THAT TI-IE ANNUAL EMPIRE. POPPY SALE WILL MEET USUAL SUCCESS. NIOKEY and MANUFACTURERS OIl‘ HICKEY’S BLACK WITH ITS NIONOLSON TWIST