l] rsfdaroulz- I I _ nmcuannolluarowltouanornsu '. - . % 1 ’ Gmmmpsongco" TIIE OIIARLUTTETOWII GUARDIAN Notes By The Way I i Keysérlins 14nd , i /. IMITED’ President-W. Cheater n. aloLure. ‘WPIO-Idl-He It. Burnett. with. GM.‘ emu-aha “ulnar u e U S. s ee Queen Street Secretary-Lion. Col. n. a. Ineilnuau. n. s. o. undo“. B. a g. lulu“ Ilene: nnd lineages-J. B. Burnett. Associate letter-II. K. Carrie. dlggugggd in MQQLQIIYI (o! October 15 by B. K. Sandwell. is of timely in- --- Count Hermann xeveerlinr i’! 5"‘ many, who is rated as a philoeolihfl- ' ‘ ' advance) mnlleu in Canada and United Allgélon Sales ism moo nu nu u: ndvauee) m“, l“; m,‘ Th“ ‘mm- mug“ RAW l-‘URB that it is possible for Canada to pro- y Shipping bags will be furnish- duce too much food. In its‘ simplest has been visiting the United Bil-W and expresses his views of the people m4 their ways in a manner more e‘ without charge by appiyilil form the great fallacy is that Canada W 3- T- 191m“- ud" 5'1"” ought to have a greet many more critical than philosophical. He asserts. eltntea. ti.“ nu year (in delivered aiornlug Dally (founded TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1929 . ‘ By Inmes W. Burton. M.D mes-aide. l’. B. I. Represented by Alfred Fraser, Inc. 212 Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. OUR WINTER EVENINGS As Autumn merges into Winter the perennial question arises, what are _we to do with our long whiter even- ings? Already arrangements are being made for the formation of the usual study classes. lecture courses. debating clubs, amateur theatricals, musical organizations, etc, and it is gratifying to note that this movement is not confined to the urban centres. Many oi our rural districts are also making preparation along similar lines, and there is evey reason to be- licve that during the coming winter the number of mutual improvement organizations will exceed that of for- mer winters. While such organizations as those mentioned are helpful, and in scene cases lndispensibl. it will be found in the last analysis that the greatest benefit to be obtained from the Judi- clous use oi our winter evenings, will depend upon individual eflort. His- tory abounds with the names of men and women in all ages and in all civ- ilized countries who have laid the foundations of brilliant and useful careers by study in their spare hours. Some of the world's greatest scient- ists began and continued their stud- ies during the long winter evenings after their bread-earning hours of duty, and the road to such fame and success as they have achieved is open to‘ every one who chooses to pursue it. The ability to read, even in an DUVAR SCHOOL Honor Roll of Duvar School for theg month oi September: Grade VIII-l Avellne Gallant; Z Albina Blanchard. Grade IV—1 Helene Doiron; 2 Ma- rie Blanchard; 3 Prescillc. Doiron. Grade IV—l Catherine Gallant; 2 DliveAGallant; 3 Bert Pitre. Teacher, Marie A. Doucette. Primary Department: Grade IH-l Eveline Gallant; 2 Pheodore Gallant; 3 Joseph Blanch- ard. ‘ Grade l‘! (a)—l Rita Pitre: 2 Clar- lsse Blanchard; 3 Marie E, Richard. Grade II (bl-l Yvonne Gallant; I Emmanuel Gallant; 3 Marie Doi- I011. Grade I (a)-‘l Rose Richard; 2 Pius Pitre; 3 Robert Doiron. Grade I (bl-i Alice Blanchard; 2 Joseph Blanchard; 3 Bernice Gallant Teacher, Helen Gallant. Homing Onlrillnn, Founded 1851. SPINNING £=i WEAVING {rtieg intending to have Spin- ling and Weaving done must have their wool at the Mill by November 15th. Wm. LANDRIGAN, Souris. 9200-1045-17-l9-22-24-26-29, ._.i__.__ sound-proof. Just what all this means in this age of cold storage plants, refrigerators and apartment-houses. can be left to the reader. The Regina venture is the result oi much research in both Canada and the United States. In this coun- try the economic ‘ , ‘tion of cereal straws has long occupied the atten- tion of the government, the Canadian Pacific railway, the National Re- search Councll, industrial develop- men boards, boards oi trade, and other public bodies. Many thousands of dollars have been spent in experi- ments, with the happy result that tie utilization oi western Canada's straw crop is now a. possibility. Careful tests have proved that for every ton of wheat grown there are produced two tons of straw. Some of that straw, to be sure is used by 0111' farmers as roughage for feeding live- stock, but most is put to tho torch, Burn straw in the open air and the result will be‘40 pounds oi ash per ton. Submit that same straw to e modern chemist andhe will produce chemicals valued "at over $250 per ton. Which means that $2,500,000,000 is being lost in fire and smoke every year, a prodigious loss oi wealth. In Canada great interest has been manifested in the utilization oi straw in the manufecture of newsprint, and the Canadian Pacific Railway has sponsored certain experiments for the commercial use of flax straw in the manufacture of high grade paper. farmers than she has. Another way oi stating the fallacy is that there are too many oi every kind of P001118 l" the country, except farmers. Plenty of people have advocated the appli- cation o! persuasion and pressure to those who are not termini. to in- duce them to become farmers. "Back to the land’ came into vogue awhile ago as a slogan to the people‘ of our rapidly growing cities. In the meantime the city popula- tion has grown toward equality with the country side at the rate oi some 50,000 yearly. It also transpires that the average farmer in Canada, by the use of greatly improved machin- ery and methods oi cultivation, tills much more land and produces amueh larger amount of foodstuffs than did the average farmer in the years be- fore the War. And this is true of all the great wheat-gowing counties oi the world. Official figures compiled byMr- Sandwell from the Cans“ - Year Book and. from reports of the League oi Nations. prove conclusively that the possible wheat consumption of the world ls rigidly limited, andthet it can onlybg expanded by a drastic fall in price which would be ruinous to the wheat-growers of the west, if not to Canadian agriculture. It is not only in wheat, but also in meats that the averagefanner pro- duces much more than he formerly did in the great agricultural coun- tries of the world, notably in Argen- tina, the far-south British Dominions. as well as in Canada and the United States. And the increased consump- tion oi meats, poultry and eggs les- sens the demand for wheat. Appar- ently the world is being surfelted with a massoi foodstuffs in unpre- cedented magnitude. Do we need more farmers to pro- ustr or slusu. mu-usrma anssovun I often speak about Nature's care of us in spite of some of the foolish thingswedo. AlaooihowNature is always Just a little ahead oi our needs. Ihrery organin the bodyis capable of doing much more work than is ordinarily required of it, and when everything extraordinary is re- quired that body of yours is usually able to withstand it. Thus you may live with Just one lung or kidney, or about half the liver, and so fort-b." ' And now we reed of the surgical remov..l of almost half of the small intestine. As you know it is into the small intestine that the stomach empties the food after it has churned it for two to four hoummixiug it with the stomach digestive Juice. Just after leaving the stomach the food. is met in the small intestins‘by those other two digestive Juices-the pancreatic Juice from the pancreas, and me bile from the liver. After being mixed with these Juices it is ready to be absorbed into the blood. Now in order that it will haveplenty o1 time u, be absorbed it has to travel a. course of iwent. feet. up.and down little hills and valleys the surface of which is covered with little projection; which select and absorb the food into the blood stream. yet l! Dr- A. G. Breniaer. Charlotte, N. 0., reports s case in which he removed‘ 9% feet oi the small intestine, and made a side to side Junction of the gmgll imagine with the large intestine. Liquids were given for the first four days, and a soft diet for the remainder of the three weeks m the hospital. The int- ient returned for examination in three months, having eaten, erm- 51x P d r for example, "singularly lacking in l. sense oi hu- mor," s. charge which, coming from a Teuton and a philosopher, ought to make even etolid "Main Street" alt up and laugh. any the noble and refractive count ‘has been keeping in his travels, but the retort which will doubtless sug- gest itself to some of our American friends is that, if he talks as he writes, it is scarcely to be wondered at that the high-brows of Boston, New York and 4"“ him rather mirthless and dull. For, who could be expected to betray a sense oi humor in the presence of one who solemnly declares that "he only has humor in the real sense who knows how to give profound and even tragic opposition from the point of view oi.a benevo- lent and serene mind?" serling has gone to the wrong sourQs in his efforts to discover what evid- ently he had been led to believe was a. highly developed gift of the Ameri- can people. To one who defines hu- mor es "a sense oi proportion ruled from within by a keen appreciation of spiritual and intellectual values," the effusions of Life would naturally seem flat and the Jokes of the highly papers somewhat ‘ ,. the German sage had looked in other form of American humor which is none the less amusing because it lacks what he terms "the keynote oi intel- lectual understanding" limely that the Americans are We are not told the kind of comp- seemed t0 Jessica to a Our suspicion is that Count Key- ald columnists of the big daily news- ing. nut if _ irections he would probably have- eached the conclusion that there ls a and is sub- conscious. To find it one has only in read Saves You Money positively the lowest priced and Here is most satisfactory “B" can buy. Thousands of rad o owners battery er you praise these flat-celled Layerbilt Bat- . teries for their astonishing‘ and dependable service. long life ext time you buy “B" batteries, get Eveready Layerbilts. You'll save money. Look for the name on the label- POTATOES DAIRY‘ PRODUCTS POULTRY AND, LIVE STOCK AND FOXES EGGS have given Prince Edward Island a Dominion wide reliilil‘ tion as a leader _ln the" llfillhlifl- Th“ wum‘ M "m province is steadily increasing. To protect and conserve it! homes and business adequate ilre and life insurance should be canted. . We have splendid facilities for effecting all classes 0| insurance. i Hyndman E»? Company! Ltd. The. Oldest insurance Agency in P. E. Charlottetown some of the editorial comments that' appear in New York and Chicago Journals on European politics. Or it may be enjoyed in still fuller measure in the pages oi the numerous weekly reviews and literary supplements that advise the great American book-lov- ing public whet it should read. The standard of many of these publica- tions is admittedly high. The con- tributors, as a. class, are writers of re- pute and, in some cases, of rare abil- ity; and considering the pace at which they have to work w cope with the rush of new imitates reviewers cannot be blamed if occasionally they , nod or are guilty of a. lapse. Where the humor manifests itself ls in the utterly false sense of litefary values so often displayed. in the ire. illient distortion of historical facts, particularly W110i! they relate to other countries and remote periods; and in the assumption ‘of a knowledge on the part of some reviewers, concern- iiil certain departments and phases of literature of which it is very evlg. ent they know little or nothing. For the purpose of illustration, e rew m. elementary way. opens the door toe storehouse of knowledge and educa- tion and culture, and to the things which most matter in life. The world is full oi books and every conceivable subject of usefulness and uselessness is within reach oi all who choose to take advantage oi it. The matter of selection will depend upon individual taste and inclination, and the wise young man and woman will select wisely and profit accordingly." Companionship with the world's best men and women oi all ages is pos- sible to everyone, and m-en and wo- men are always known by the com- pany they keep. The company is not confined to the immediate environ- ment, but may be selected from among the great in all ages and in all countries, and intimate association with these cannot fail topoduce such ' greatnem and usefulness and culture as the best have achieved. weeks. practically a full diet. His Weight bad increased from 102 to 172 Pflllnds. Now why do I write about mp7 simply to show that you and I were given a small intestine ‘ l; we; "Noted that we‘ would use all the lillse muscles covering the body. This would mean that we would new plenty of food. Further that food would have a large amount of mater- isl that would be slow in getting ‘b. Wfbfid. and the long small intestine would give lili-‘nty, of surface for this DlITPOIQ- - Nowadays we eat food that.“ f,” from much of this material and we do not do much hard phyglcg] work Hence it ls Pflssibls to get along with about half the usual length oi smell ‘ testin . duce more food. to their own undo- ing? Do we not rather need more artisans in our cities and towns to expand‘ other industries than those oi tilling the soil; to create home markets for farm products at the farmers’ doors; more consumers flu ther than more producers of the pro- ducts of the farm? Bureiy this would be a good thing for the farmers of Canada. Like coal, straw is "bottled sun- shine." Chemists have achieved much with coal: they have produced per- fumes more fragrant than flowers and colors more dazzling than the rainbow, gas to drive engines, and drugs to ease pain. From the sticky, repulsive coal-tar they have created an empire of useful things. In wheat straw these wonder-workers have dis- covered similar and unsuspected treasuresl l’ The wheat straw we burn with such enthusiasm at the present time can be transformed into dyes, gas, paints, disinfectants, fly sprays. auto-top dressings, antiseptics and who knows how-many more things. At least that is what chemists say, and that is what their experiments prove. WE'RE umv Lower Queen Street. Canada holds a place in a world bristling with high protective tariffs on every side, the highest of them all being that of the United States, in touch with our Dominion along a boundary 4,000 miles in length. ' Un- dcr such conditions the crude notion that Canadian farmers and indus- trial workers do not need pro- tection is too absurd for se- rious discussion. Our farmers need protection for their home market I-xainst invasion Just as much as they need fences to enclose their growing crops from invasion by their We are plentlfully supplied with all kinds of Coal. Place your order now, either for immediate m- futurc delivery. h! u“! "fly you will be assured of winter comfort. Saturday - Specials "rm: MAXIMUM or nan-r." JV. D. Gillis Co. coin. rnorm 11s BACK T0 WHISKERS Don't Forget Your mo“, m", _i_€r__________ We would strongly urge upon our young people everywhere the neces- sity of making good use of their long winter evenings, and of selecting specific course of study while they A league for the preservation of beards, sidebums, goaees, long flow- ing mustachios and whiskers of any geometrical form is being ‘ ’ f by a distinguished company of news- own cattle or those of their neigh- bors. Our ‘ need , ‘ “ against our next neighbors to the south. but Aitelowaoftrainofllemory That moistens green the sod; ltbiwel. picked at random, may‘ suf- fico. these columns upon the kindof Comment has already mg, m WEEK-END CHOCOLA TES look over our Tool displays be! starting that very particular lob! lm proved Tool design has wrought mail advances since you last looked 0v our line. Many new Tools have comi into the store-and into use, of 1M ballyhoo which stampedes the reading public into buying a; work; of any", Mk1 o! very mutual-y merit. u u‘ a form o! art. or imposiflon, that or. fers a somewhat sad commentary up. on modem literary criticism; and yet it has a ludicrous side calculatedm make even a German phileeqphu smile. There are times when actually he might be tempted to guffaw, Take the ease of a book, Just pub- "M cm wu- u- can.» DQT- CARAMELS iod of American history following the assassination of Lincoln. T0 5nd" > Regular Price‘ 60o lb. from the reviews and aria-acts which I» Tonight m only hi" lime-red. the work 9.1} E. A. Foster lurid exposure of political in- caurnal. nnuosroaa "rbrowuabyralnstocometothes, TQNIGHT .15! tired fest have trod. our pro-American Government at Ottawa has so far refused to raise the tariff against the American far- mer to half the height of the Am- erican tarifl.’ against the Canadian farmer. Nor is this all. By trade treaties with Australia and New Zea;- land the Ottawa enemies of the Can- adian farmer have opened mother sluice gate by which the Canadian dairymen's home market is being de- luged with New Zealand butter at prices lower than the cost oi pro- duction in Canada. Here's the most interesting show real mechanic would ever hope seel TheRogers Hardware Co, Ltd; i Limit Whooping Cough is dangerous and mast bi treated promptly i! serious oomplioatima. such as, bronch- ial pneumonla. hninmorbal" and. 315m elections are W l" The speedy control of soull- ‘ is moat BULBS BULBS paper paragraphers and champions of French culture. Parisians are beginning to look too much like the men from New York, Chicago and Philadelphia, is the la- ment of the organizers. The real Frenchmen always wore beards, the great kings of France were always "barbue." Such wcaklings as Louis XVI. who wore no beards wound up with their heads in the guillotine basket. have the opportunity. The opportunity is now theirs and every means is at their disposal for reaching out to the cultural and educational influ- ences with which the world of today is so plentifully endowed. Neiisons beat assortment. SALE PRICE -49c lb The cold rain of the north land Was of the pI-It a part; It drove with keen and bracing wind, Yet chilled mine inmost heart, The torrent oi the south land BWBPt o'er ms; yet its tide. Drawn earthward, left my pgmmn‘ soul The sullen swamp beside, UTILIZATION OF_ WHEAT STRAW gmflq '1; chucug‘ We have Just received and opened our Annual FALL SHIPMENT of DUTCH BULBS direct from HOLLAND. A very carefully selected stock of first SIZE BULBS, which we offer at lowest prices in any quantity. Thousands of tons of wheat straw have been burned in past years simply to get rid of it. This tre- mendouseweste of material is now, thanks to research and experiment- ation, about to be eliminated. One mile north of Regine, says a western exchange, machinery is making lumber. Boards of 14 feet long, five feet wide and two inches thick, are being created out of ordin- But the soft mist of Memory Now veils what once has been; And thro’ that veil I only see A field 0f Iiyin‘ green, '47- 3- l-ilidliy, in "A Little Rhyme." _-Z_ ma LAND WELOVE ByII-ANI YIIGI The Ottawa authorities. looking to Washington with admiring gass, are apparently well content ii thefltates buy half as much from us as they sell to us, and the disparity continues to grow. It cannot be otherwise un- til either s change of heart and a hange of policy-a hopeless prospect —comes over the King Government, Maui and corruption - melo. drama rather than history; ygg we "0 liked to believe that the author, _ a New York newspaper-mm, who "m" i" "it I'M lDPIWed report-l ""81 lt-ylii. “baa restored history m e tbs commanding position that it enl jaygd 1n m, a" o; Human“ Pr.” ently firmly persuaded that the Com- ‘ monwealth belonged to the eigh- EDITORIAL i? This is the time of year many a father has to buckle down and start working his son's way through college. NOTE HYAOINTHS (Double and Single) beautiful colors. TULIPS (Double and Single) a splendid selection. DARWIN TULIPS extra choice colon. (Tall) . NABCISSUS, C R O CU S, FREEBIA, DAFFODILS, etc. etc. We ply postage on all BULB ORDERS BY MAIL. Send for our price list. PLANT fall BULBS during OCTOBER and NOVEMBER». OIDEII EARL’! while the selection is good. CortIer &‘ Co‘. Limited ary wheat straw, The straw is com- pressed under a pressure of 100 pounds to the square inch, is laced with wire, and presto! there's build- ing-lumber of unique quality. A company has been incorporated; Patent rights have been acquired. The lumber is being produced. A new lndustry,.promlsing to be of revolu- tlonary importance to western Can- ada, has been bom It seems that straw can do more than show the wind. Thanks to skilled chemists it is now being trans- formed into lumber. The tough, long, cellular fibres of wheat straw virtues hitherto unsuspected. The straw-made lumber is virtually fire- proof, and its only rival is * ‘ it is claimed to excel all know in- sulatinlifllmllll. and isalinoet “Sir Harry Lauder received $15,000 for a ie-minute radio programme. which is about eight months‘ salary for another famous Scotsman, Mr. Ramsay MacDonald." Mr. u-cncnem ls getting the limelight, but Sir Har- ry gets the shekels. The tie-up of the Western wheat crop is a curious sidelight upon the difficulties of Imperial trade. Here we have Canadian farmers withhold- ing their products from the British market until they get a higher price. and the British, on the other hand, holding out for a lower price. What would happen if the British tonne they could buy their wheat cheaply elsewhere? Or if the Cana- diansvfound they could all at a bet» tor erles elsewhere? - ’ ‘ the electors of Canada. And the hops for a change of Gov- ernment at Ottawa has grown bright- erfromyeartoysaraaprovinoeaf- ter province has fallen into the Coli- servative column. The evidsntalaim of Premier King over the situation at prese ‘ existing strengthens Omi- servatlve hopes, as well as their con- fidence in their brilliant leader. Hon. it. B. Bennett is rarely equipped for thetask he has undertaken; hehas able lieutenants in every provlnesoi the country, and the electors have heard him gladly wherever be has spoken. oeioberlehallgsneaadyetthere has beenseawaiyatolsehoffrost. {rheireeastllimainaiaaoettinirfeil cropqleeeearbtit one uightoifroat followed u; rain and tmsuuimmwtnnqeuee. oritisovorthrownbythevotesof of the keaos River! dently proapsrlng. IIAOI IIVII PIOIPIOT! .@-_-_ Q- Wbat are the present prospects A. Theresa River Districtisevi- itiastated-that tbawbeatcrwofths Peace River niairiotiuimwiliavsragelbuah- Riverliiatridtlilitablaforalfloultural purposes is estimated $41,000,000 acres. ‘ihhisineretbairtwieetbs ioteiareatmderwiieaterepiawsat- eott and Parkman." ‘when writer. makes m apps... "i" "'4 ll W101i by authoritative reviewers ll I llialterly peyeheloflu] study of the great soldier-emperor, Wllflilfllhiiliinanaapsotnsverbe- fore revealed.‘ ‘Ihejeig, m gm, u well as the nerve of the author, in. "M! lliiiaijaht when a correspenq. I!" pointsout tbatsomeotthemest "i" Pile! intba work acclaimed as a valuable sedition to Napoleonic literature have been’ aihbed, wwd re; word. sentence by confine. I mm Reuben‘: "Last Phase." ifltiflnthowsverymustgowihere. vlewlrwimiahinorher) lWTllsal eummitvnieiuesa romaaoeoi announcers-peachy,“ ifhepllmformixinlhumorwith teenth century. in the light of these and other lit- erary gems of mirth production, the assertion of Count Keyserling that the Americans are lacking in humor seems to be in the nature of a libel. points“ Kl [l N EY FELL?» nult n» cleared a! puma w" mucous. matter which w!" distress in the lay time all aleepleunem at night. -. mac's wnooruio cowl nnnn!