"fF-lfiriurn ‘EWYFXEZI-Ff". r1101: r0111; The Charlottetown Guardian |-.....i.i1-1.1 |.1.-..t.-i-..i. w. cur-nu s._.\i1-i.1m tire-Pr 1.. .1. i1. llururtt, i-..i.i. 111111.111 r .1 n iii . . l) I). K. Curl-Ia .1 11111-11... .1 t1 I . Autumn-lulu l-ltlluuru Hunk “ullwr I" T C r i 1 111111-11 Quito p" your on ildrunre] uni-Mn‘ IN"!- i "$11111 uri- yi-nr (In inch-inure) mullrd 101 ndvunrol 1 a1~i11.-.-.-.i 1.. 111,1 _ 111111111 511111.111 i..i.....i 5.11111 iwr m" ll" fi§1iE§TiimC.Ii¢'5 A114 whéiani 'l'h1-s1- 111111 11111- 111111-11-1-11 'I'/11- ti1i111".I11'11n 011m- 111-111. .111 1l_1 ‘11-1. .-v11i--11»i'i:11i~1i1 i-s111- :1t'c:1\\'-\FL‘ 11111 11111-h1sis 111-1: 111111-1111 s1-11-l_1 1111 tl11~ 11n- liriY-h 11.111111: "1' -.\'11"l1 11111‘ ."11'11:1-rs and 111!ll‘l' 111-11111-1“) 111.\111-l'~ \\1'l.- 1l‘~1-1-~ EV-lillmlvi r1111“ 1,1 1,1.-,,.,,1 1.. ,1, 1..-1--‘.11.-.1, . 1-1-111 :11 tribunal.- <11. ‘ ‘ .1 .1.1-11 1.. 1111-111111-111 org-ari- s1)‘. t1. say uhiclt l1 .-'-1:ii r1~-11l11r~". 1.1 :1111l \'-ll11 11.- i11.11i"1s-11-ii tllftt 1.1.1.111 JE1-111 .1. 1- 11111-1". 11:11 lv-‘l- \\' 1-1-11111111- 111' 451t- -‘11,...1-\\l1..1-1t-i 1-l11l1,‘tl'l'-'l~~lllQ s 11111-1- i111" 1h.- 1'- l .-1,111111.l '- :f- 111v 0t‘ 1._ _ 1 . 1 1 . . 1: -' 1/‘111/11 f i1- J-xr .- 1- -- 1.- ~ - 1J1; ..'--..-11..-1'i1'11’]' ‘m 1 ,, , ,, 1 1, . . , . 1:1 1W 11 s 1 191111.11 11:11-11. it‘. 11,1; ‘"1 1' 1- ‘.11 111 11111 11. 1-"1- 1- 11,1 . .11 1. '- " " ’ 1'1 11 . <1 - 1'~1;.11- 1111-11-11") 's" s! 11 -11:1-- .11-11--.11s1\1-r, l1"\‘11ll1l 1' 1- '1 11s1 -' .- 1-"1-11 1.1- 111 r1-a1l1-r will 1".-fr' 11'1-1'. 11-1 1‘1-. . -.1--1-'.11 iy-tiuz. 'l‘h1- r1 11-1 to s- 1 11‘111-r1'11-_11- l11tr:1_\s 111-- -111- 111's- 1-:1s1-_ or at r111)" 11,111 is 1111-111’- 11-11-1. an: :111- 111-1i1i-11i1-rs 1111.1 :11".- asl-1711- 11 of tht-ir riuhi 11s- l‘.ri1- i~11 - 1-1- 1-1 1-1-11-11-11 i-11-ur courts o1‘ _iusticc to 1111-" f-vui-"l 1'l'11l'1‘ stiv-iigly- lllilll c\'1'l". More Truth Than Poetry 'l_h1- 'l'-1:"--i111 \'1/'-11'1/.1-1- .\i 1111/. which 1is11'1ll_\ 11-1111- t';1\11:1r'1l1I\' t-1-.\.11-l~ -L1l11-r;1l 1111li1i1"i:1i1.<. ux11r11-s1-s :1.1- 11111111 1111.1 \\ll.'1l1‘\'1-1' 111- 1111- 1-ut- c11i111: 111' 1111- 1111 r511 1~l1-1-i111iis, i1 nill not nican a sw11-1- f--1" l'1"1i-ii1-1- 1l111l11ir11_ “\\'1- :1r1- 111-t 1-11l11\~"1l 1-1 his r1-1-l1-.-ti--i1," sivs llir? Tor-mid 111-11111‘. "11111 we 111111111 iil\t.- t11 >111 his maior-ty 1r1-l111--1l 111 1"1-"1~-111;111l1- 111-1.1.11rti1111s. 'l'h:11 is l1111-.-11is1- w1- d1. not l11-li1-vt- in 11n1~p.i. 1' g11\1-r1i1u1-1it 11111 in l1\11'11:1'1'l\' g11v1-r1ii1u-1it. For '.l1'lll11t‘l'.'l\‘_\' to function lll its 1111-111 forui. :1 111111- stautial l1111111sitiou is as" n-ucli a rt-11uisitt- of £11111] Q11v1-riii111-1it as a stihstaiitial iii;i_i11rity- of the party lll 11..\11-r." 1111-1111 111- l\'ll()\\"l-Yl) "The ii1:1_i1irit_v that .\lr_ ll1-11l11ir11 posst-sscs at the pr1-s1-in tiii11- 111-ri1ii1s- llllll not 11lll\' t1. sil- Eii-‘e cff1-1-1i\11l_v Zlll critical 11r111111sals from the‘ (llllCl-‘ll ‘ll1l1-1~1t1--11. 11111 .-1ll critical 111-111111s:il.s" fr111ii tiiiiioritics 111 his own 11.'irtv as" w1-ll. . .'l‘hc reality 111-hind 1111- tl11-11i-y1 111' 1111111111-1-1-11-1- is that mcii tliiulv rin-l act diffi-rvittly and got-111 govcrti- mcut. is thc rccoiicilizuioii oi 0111111si1ig points of view." ____.__________ finews Of War ‘Money is u-liat 1111111131 does," say the econ- 5mists—ai1d it is. 1i1-rha11s, one of the best de- finitions- which can be givcii of tli:1t puzzling commodity. It matters not whether “money” mks; the form of gold, silver, paper, shells, beads, or what have you-if it coast-s to do its job of buying coiinitodities and moving goods. it is no longer of value. (lite of the tiiysterics of the present age. s.'1_\'s the llatnilton Spectator, is the ability of nations to spend on ati extrava- gant scale for war purposes when. by all tokens, they should he facing bankruptcy. There are expensive wars- which still continue, carried on by states whosi: citizctls are suffering from the dire-st straits of poverty, and one wonders how it is done and how long it can continue. But. in spite of all the juggling. economic laws can- not be flotited for e-vz-r. The point comes when ' "money" ct-ases to function and the game is up. It is said that japan must achieve a quick vic- tory if she has any hopcs of success in her vici- otis onslaught on China, for the simple reason that she has not the tueans to continue the struggle for any length of time. The stock market rcflt-cts the anxiety of itivestors in jap- aucse bonds; when confidence declines the secur- ities arc correspondingly dcpressed. What will the japs use for mom-y when their present stip- plics of u-ar itiaterizil have 111-cu usr-d up? Lfltimtttt-ly, it coma-s down to a rpu-stion of financial strength. (Err-at lli-itziin and the Unit- ed States. as peaccdoving, dcmocrzitic nations. have a tremendous tlrlviltllagc nvr-r qnunfrieg which apparently liavc tlic will t11 conr1iit-st_ but lack the resources". Hritisli 1111|ic_v is 111-signed to put lit-r iii the position of say-lug; "\\'Q‘ve got tlic ships. u-ifve got lll(‘ int-u and we've got the 11111111111. too." And it rctiiaiiis the fact. also, as thi- ol1l song zissi-rtr-rl, that "we don't want to fight." llut if. iiottvitlistantliiig sticli (lisincliua- tion, lritaiu should become involved. the eco- nomic factor is liable to prove of decisive iin- portancc. Liberal Criticism This" from Th1- l-Yzistr-rn (lironicle (Libr-rall: "'l'li1- (';1-1:i1li:u1 Nation-d Rnilivziy- is atl-‘Iln l" 111,. 11,,,11l,-..\- l|l|sl|]('\'<, This- tiuir- its officials 11-1- fooling. 11-1111 a c11iitr:1piioii in the form of s fyfssClljPf car that will l'llll eitlu-r fill lllf‘ Tflll‘ 111- m1 1111- lii1_1l1\\-;i_\', l‘11ssilil_v if lllt-v put .1 ‘(PM 111 it :1ii1l s‘4'.‘Il 1111- 11-11111111 it “T111111 54'7"‘ F" a f-i-r--1..111t. \\'l1:1t is tlu- s-wisi- of all this? It's fivsllllfl tl11-usai1d= of d11'lai's that a hank-rut“ 1.3111111... (11111111 nfford to socu-l that way. ‘ i111 11-11111 11.1w on. siificriiig slct-piiit; siclvut-ss lll .\l:u1it11l1;1 is t-stt 1 7'1 11131111 111 _>_; 1o _111 111-r cc11t.. 11i"11vi11ci:1l .\Qr1:ul- - ".~\t present the C. N. R. has "1011! T3115 1113" it can successfully cover. It is abaiidom 1g railways in some sections. in others it has miles of unfinished construction. Now it would scent as if it wanted to add the higlnvays oi th-J Dominion to its railway- bed. "This 111-w thing has whet-ls f11r rails 11111111 which it Qlidcs merrily- along, 'l'hcn you pull a lever and a set of rubber tired whccls drop 1l(l\\'ll. thc stccl wheels are hoisted tip out of u-r hc confiucd to the railway. maker stick to his last." , . . $1011.00 llu-rc sci-ins at least t11 he lllls‘ iiiucli ground 1 .11 . for thc Xova §coiia l.lll(‘l‘ill‘ll.'l]l(‘l",s ctiticilii The raihvay- wciit ahead iii coustrttctiug this‘ 111111 11f car without considering that the bus} cotnpxuiics ltad the highway franchises. 'l‘h.'1‘..l at any ratc. is what happened lll tllis Province l 1 Editorial Notes I This day \\'\'Cl-\' labour 13a)’. =11 >1 >11 >11 \\':1rr<-11 llastiiigs dicd this date 1318. =11 >11 >11 >11 .\'1.1v for 1h1- c1111 of a pcricct 111111"i.<t lll(lli'll. It‘ ll‘ * 1K 'l'lit- grain is pFflCllFIllly‘ all saw-d. and lllv crop might have bccn \\-1-i".s"<-_ Y1K >l< >l< >1‘ [Hircliast-rs of \\‘1-.st1-rii liorst-s" must h1- filfl" . .\lort:1lit\' 1111c aiiioiiq hots-as 1 l...111- 111' gutting the ilisczisc- 11111111‘ 0111111111. ll \\'.'ls' stzitwl. 1 >1 x x 1 l'1-.1t'c11s1-11- _\1l11-r1.. d1- hu-fznu, f11l‘lllt'l'ullllllflll1 uiiiiistci- of finauci- and until l.-t11-l_v :1 t11ir111r1-1-1 zi-liisor t11 tli1- (lune-c 511111-1111111111. 11111li11s_1i1 ' ‘111-1-“1111 $1l1n-vl.'l1>.'lllt‘<t' c11t11li1-t \\1=11ld 1-11d lzui" 1-111-1111 :11i1l built-d Flatt-s "slwvl-‘ll ]1l'l\'ll".41'*" l"- tliinn :1i11l bring :1 tiuiu-d lillllll'\'t' ii:11i1111, 'l'li1.s, 11.111i1111, he s:iid_ ntight c1111c1-i\"al1l_v j11iii with _l11.- 11a1i t11 carrv out tlit- 11i-i11ci11lt- of ".\si;1 for '11-‘ _\<1',-111'1~._" il‘l'flf(‘s'sf‘lf dr- $t1ri':1ni. pi-1-1lict1-d ll‘- 111-11-111111 conflict would zisstimt- giw-rit 1111-11111‘ tious and (liiua would be ahlc t11 l't‘sl>[ 1.111.111 with proloitgt-rl succt-ss. >01 >l< >1- 1r .\iidrt-i Yis-lviiislvv. clticf l'..\'..\i,R. 11l'11.<t'1‘tll11l‘ has iiiadc tlic iutt-rcsting -lis1"11\1-1'v that i1-:111\ 111-.'1s':uit.s' were cxcctilr-d five _\1-:1rs- @411 "l11-ca1is1 1 11f a iiii~t:1l<1-." ,\s 1111- victims 111' 1111- error CW1" 1 i111t h1- 111-111011 now. Yisliiitslry- should pay 11'1r'i ciilar attt-iitioii to .lll(‘ ('.\'4'Clltl11ll-’ 111111" iii 1111-- grc-s in ordt-r 1l1:1t tiiistitlu-s of 1111- l1i1id 11111-1‘ 1111f occur 1111:1111. l-iiglit \\-oi-l<1-i'.s" iii l.l'lllll'fl'.‘.1l iactorics have rcct-iitlv paid tlu- c\'ll‘1-1111- 111-trait}- fnr ‘Wvrr-clviiig and murdering activities". llici-i- may ltave ll(‘l'll crrors in sonic 11f tl11-ir cas-cs zilsti. The charges. at ziuy ratc. s1-1-n1 fantastic >l< 1K 1K ll‘ .\ii all-Nmvfo1ui1lland agricultural and li\'t-- stock exhibition will he held th1- first \\'t'1-l; 1'11 (lctoher. the Dcprirtiiit-iit o1" Natural l\‘1-.s"11tirc1-. of tlic .\'c\\"fotiiivllaiirl (‘11i1i1i1i.s.si11n11f (Burt-I'll- iiu-iit :1iiiioiiuccs. l‘riz1-s totalling $3.0m will '11 offi-rcd during the three-day nit-ct t11 111- ht-ld in St_ John's, T118 last all».\'1-\vf11uii1llaii1l ex- liil1itioii was in 1910. The cxhihitioti is au- other iii a series .of Stt-ps being talccn 11y llll‘ Dcpartiiit-nt of Natural Rcsourccs and the 11c- partmcnt of rural reconstruction to ciicotiritgc- agriculture throughout the island so that thi- people ivould not be so Wllfllly dcpcntlciit 11111111 the fisheries for their livelihood. n1 =11 >11 >11 Cheaper Newfoundland fish is Ctlplllfillg the Brazilian market from Nova. Scotia exporters according to I\'lr. Lester S. (ilass, Canadian Trade (Iomniissioner for Brazil. The price of Nova Scotia fish would have to be reduced to eliminate a 15 or 2o per cent, price diffcrcuce if the exporters of Nova Scotia and Newfound- land were to compete on even terms, he said. Mr. Glass said Brazilians were mainly inter- ested in prices, and that quality was a secondary consideration. In figures quoted by the coin- missioner, Brazil's total intports of fish in to]; ivere valued at $2,412,000. Of this, Newfound- land's share was nearlly half—.“l51,189,o0o, that of Nova Scotia was $50,000. >1- : 111 >11 Expressifiifhopé" “uniting various Liberal factions,” Dr. A. D. Roberts. Satilt Ste. Illaric member in the Ontario Legislature. has tem- porarily stepped out of Ontario politics. First elected to the Legislature in i934 when Mr. 11111-1-1-211 1111- Afr-diicrranvan 111111 t1i1-1-1-'.s criticism in London be- ,rl':"t iuriiisli - ovi-v-atar. or nvcr-watcr ‘ arr- used as Hepliurns Liberal forces upset Mr. George S. Henry's Conservative government, Dr. Ro- berts clashed with his leader 111-at the end of the last session. He objected when Sir James Dunn. head of Algoma Steel Corporation, an- nounced the government's plans for an iron ore bounty. Dr. Roberts considered such an an- nouncement should come from the nicinl1cr of the riding. Charges and coimter-cliarges were hurled by the premier and Dr. Roberts who was finally read out of the party during a hec- tic session_ 41 41 a1 >r Mr. E. R, Harriman, chairman of the Na- CHARLOTTETQYQN G_IJ_1‘_\_l_\_D_IAN utlTES BY r11: wn lllbfll ._._.__ It has been made perfectly clear to latllulla‘ occas ons 1111.11 ten months that. 1 may be public Sympathy ulihln the while there " with |s1rntcs and strikers, that sympathy soon cits-appears and f/UXTIS I0 liosulry when votlence enters the the \\'a_\'. and tlicrc you are. A group of of- 5111111" lljlclufe- —Br00kv1l-e Re- ficizils- at .\loi1cto1i have hccii joy riding \\'i'h wit“ lines‘ 1 lhc thing. 'l‘hc_\1 and thi-ir iiiachiiics had lit-t» “111-n a country with not more Let the sh111-- 1111111111011000 populgtion exports- 11s products to the time of almost m Dunk of what Canada would bt- accomplishing, at home kllfluiltl, 11.0111‘ popuat on were §OlIh\\'ll0l‘tZ nearer what, it should be-say 30,000.000—-Toronto Tele- gram. Tho roots of one tree will never 111111-11 those of another under- gziound. This fact; was established b1‘ Professor M. A. Rattles, 0f llovvartl University. who for years lllLa investigated the matter. Fur- tlii-r. lie finds that in trees and 1111mm of the same species, the i-11c1sof the younger invariably bend slightly so as to allow the roots of a1". older piant; to pass. A st plants and trees are sen- sitivc. and Professor Raines thinks that the roots g ve off some elu- .sl-.-1- compound —pt'obably electric —\vl1'1-l1 rcpt-ls. Ho has trained roots to n-si-t each other. but when near- l\ diiiiu they itivariably tum -M1.>tiL1-1-al Star. 11.1 To most (‘tinailians, the formula v , _ U 1] _ fut‘ cr1- i211! a rlirrtritoi- rcqtiircs only _1111-1- 111-11111-11111-111 otiicmls 111-11-1111 \ 111‘ "1"" .111 a1-111.-<1 11111-isi111z. a march on wvatlit-r l1.'1.s" sloui-d up s11r<-.'id 111' lllt- worst Ronu- or a lJPPF-(‘Ol a1" putsch. Actu- - - , - , 1 , _ 1 . ._ 1z-‘lj. ihost- tliinus are itierclv. Actu- . P141211" "f “"11"” "“‘l"l"“ -\l“nll“l’1l_l"l-‘ U“ L? |r~l.11.1n of a 1011:: lircltaratori’ Pct-led 111-ri1-1ic1-1l. l11\\'cr tcllll-Pfillllll“ 1'1'1l1-1lll*'*l llll’ " l.‘ 10f plrrtiiu: and chicaiiery, a 1-11-11-1-1 1-341- of bii_v ng off and 111-pints .11 of rloduitig and playing 11-1111 loopholes in the constitu- 111111111 'a\v--Va1i11o1iver Sun. lis pati 111-1- exhausted by alr and .1111 a-“u-ks in Nlr-clitcri-aui-an arr-as fzir fi-oin S11111iish watt-rs, the Brit- i-li (lorr-rnmr-nt issiics a “shoot-to- ()l'tlt"l‘ ar-ainst submalns-s "-1111: Brtisli mr-i-chantmen. I1 Britain's notification tliatlt. ‘111-11111-1-11» to 111-cu its trade artery SGCUTG. cnusi- the oidt-r was restricted to - nriiv-s. Hnu-cvcr. it is felt that ‘i111 British navy wotrt ho able to hotivccti tindcr-ivater. craft ln 211-1 future- \\'ll"11 British merchant- lllPll are attacked. Wlwn the mad rln-zs of wai- arr- abroad. Britain Cfill\‘lfll‘l$ it wise to r-ai-rv a club.- Clirts-tlnti Scum-s- Monitor. Thr- l)\"n(‘\'(1l('7\f aiims of Japan ln "IE-tion to Chint- have won the un- :~"t tr-d admit-tit on of Germany and Itally .l’npa11's bltz nuns and bombs clvill-nlng ageuclr-sln Phinn just as were those of Italy in F311 opta Japan. Gv-rmanv and l Italy from a mutual admiration so- cletv the rrst of the ii-oi-‘d rewards asa meiinr-c to peace and good llfl-.'lll‘f'll‘llflfitl. and with 200d ren- so-i. ’l‘h.=- r benevolence fails to ring triu- --T1-.legraph Journal. Diclalorships ft-ci! on victory. Their ivliolt- system of logic ls upset. 11;: dz-fr-at. Not err-n thc traditional uncut-trinity of horse rzves can be arrr-pted if the result ls not in accordance with the plan. Failure of Italy's favoriti- ontrv. Donntclo lt.. to capture the Grand Prtx at. Paris was l‘c‘(‘l"l\'l‘fl wth chagrin at Rome Press explanations are in- tcrcstiniz. Savs II Gloi-nale d'Italia: "No horse wns able to dominate Donatello II. The winner was a good horse WlllCll happened to be liwkiei- than ours." It rather recalls Vii-tot Hugo's lntcrnst-lng elxrfnna- tion of an earlier ecllpse. “Napalm-on." wrote Hugo. “was never dcfcnterl. At Moscow lt was ire- at. Watcrloo. it was fatcF-Toronto Tclrgratn. The Gananoque Re porter. prompted perhaps by experlence. has bean looking lnt-o this business of netting things wrong. and here ls what» lt has discovered. An editor, who had lils attention called to a mistake ln one of his columns. d rln’t- fecl so atltlrleved when 1"‘- recalfed that on the same day there svas a letter 1n his post/office box that did not belong to him: be cal- led 98 on the telephone and got. 19B; he called for a spool of N0. 50 thread and got a spool of No 60; he got his mllk blll and there was a mistake of ten cents ln the oom- panyfs favor; he felt; sick and the doctoi told him that. he was eating too much meat. when he hadtfl. tasted moat for two months; the preacher turned in his church notes with the name of the society prest- dcnt m sspclled and the editor got the blame for it; the garage man said his cur was missing because 1t needed a new timer and lie cleaned the spark-plug and the fllvver has run flue ever since. And no doubt you can pick out a few more that could not. be blamed on the edltor.—- Globe and Mall. —We're going to plant. raspberry bushes. A lady of our acquaintance gets qulle a crop from her plant-s, far more than she can use herself. S0 she distributed dslies of them to her friends. So far this year alx of her dishes have come back, none of them empty. One contained a lake trout, another cookies, the others. rolls. a cake, meat loaf and tional Economy League has been u-ariiing the L'.S.A. that a continuance of the prcsz-iit policv of an tinbalanced budget would rcstilt inevitably in citlicr inflation or uiibt-aralilc taxi-s. and pos- sihly in bnth. Most of the new debt of lszo-l rxxxmrxooo acquired in the last seven years, he said. has been absorbed by their banking sys- tem thus furnishing the fuel for inflation. "So long as the budget remains iuibalauccrl 11nd the Treasury continues to borrnw- from lllc bruil-ns no constructive action can he taltcn to ward off inflation," l\lr_ llarriuian said. “Fat-h year the government goes fiirtlir-r into 111-lit lllf‘ grmitcr trill be the burden which future gem-rations- must carry The Treasury- holds $2.11oo.ooo.o1m in the gold stabilization fund and over a billion of ‘inactive’ gold in tlii- gem-rat fuiwl. To re- lease this gold u-hile Hit-budget is imbalance-l would only lead tn a further expansion of cre- dit inflation and result in an upward spiral of prices." little ptnk beets. Ab. the reward of vli-1ue! Yes. we're going to bieed raspberrles and glve them away ln blg buoketsl-Btratford Beacon Herald. Since Canada need! the Com- monwealth and ls benefited and strengthened by her association with lt. the slmplest and the d ‘ thing ls w recognize and marry out our obllgatlons and responsibilities to our fellow-members of the Com- monwealth. It la clear that we en- visage no situation affecting Can- ada from without where we do not expect those fellow-members tn cer- ry out what we conceive to be that: - responsibilities towards us. If only a fraction of the time and effort we have wasted trying vlrtuoualr W0 convince ourselves of the propriety of side-stepping our obllgatl were devoted w wrfvrmtna these obligations. Canada. would today be richer tn all those qua ltlea which exalt; a nation. And of these a not unimportant. wall notional 0,000 in a single month it‘ 1o us that this can be con-l something of an achieve-f lBohp WHY THE BODY NEEDS THE, DIFFERENT KINDS OF FOOD One of the miracles of life 1s to see how the average normal 1n- - dlvldual seems to eat what he likes. never measuring the amount of each kind of food stuff, and yet. ' remains healthy and happy. Nat- urally he scoffs at all the food speclallsts and dietitians and calls them “food faddtsts." f "All I do," he says, "ls to eat every day some meat. potatoes, and one or two other vegetables. some bread and butter. and a llttle raw or canned fruit." which, the diet. experts wlll agree. ls really an ideal diet for the average normal 1n- dividuab A scientific examtnatlon of the above daily menu would outline the exact amount of the foods eaten, foi- the different foods are tised by the body for dlfierent pur- poses. These purposes or require- ments of the body are (a) energy. 1 (b1 growth in children, (c) body1 burding to repair tissue worn out by the‘work done 1n the bcdy, and - by the body a5 exercise or labor. In our student days our phys- ‘ lology textbooks taught us that there were five classts of foods- proteids. carbohydrates (starches) 1 fats, sa‘ts and water. 1. Proteids-meat, eggs, fish (an- imalr, and cereals-oats, wheat, corn. barley lvegetablel. Protelds are the body builders and repair- ers. ‘ >2. Carbohydrates or starches — sugar. bread. potatoes, pastry, starches are the energy producers ‘ of the body. 3. Fats-butter, cream, egg yolks. ‘ fat meats. Fats provide. eitergy. heat. and "protective" duties for the body. 4. Salts or Minerals- calcium, phosphorus, iron-required in the structure of all tissues and fluids of the body. 5_ Water or Liqulds-Avnter, milk. tea, coffee, soft drinks-tised t0 help carry food and oxyflen (by means nf the blood) to all parts of the body. control ti-mperature. re- move wastes. and prevent fr‘ct"on. However. since those student days. the vitamins have been d-s- covered. those tlny sitbstat-ccs which seem to ‘have the power to make other food stuffs do more complrtc iivoi-k. thus giving more service. and preventing various ailment-s. And one other food material is nOw being stressed. the fibrous or hard ‘ndigestlble material found 1n fruits and vegetables. This fibrous material or ce‘lulost- ln sufficient quantities irritates the walls of the lntcstlnc. causes them to contract. thus prevcntmg con- stipation. It too mtich is eaten. colitis (inflammation o’ the large intestine. diarrhoea or dysentery) may occtir. Bell the Aldermen! (Chicago Dally News1 To protect the town's ivlld life. the alderman of Edu-nrrlsvdlle. I1l.. have just decreed that all cats must be bclled and llcomod. at. one buck per eat. Fortunately. Chicago's wild life ls not endangered by cats. Indeed. lt. ls simply protected by the politicians. Yet cats. like goldfish and canary birds, are one possible source of revenue which our alder- men seem hitherto t/o have over- looked. License tlhe cats, use t-he money to increase patronage, and hang the bells on the alder-men. Why not? , A Lack of Informa- tion (Moncton Transcript Mr. Aberhart. told ‘a picnic crowd that he had been advised by cable that mllllons of electors in Aus- tralia and New Zealand were fol- lowing his struggle with deepest sympathy. Typical of the cables be read was one from Adelaide: “Sup- port you. Cable Mackenzie King 50,000 South Australians resent at- tempt coerce Alberta people. Inter- preted here vlolatlon democratlo principles." Evldently tt ls difficult to makes proper appraisal of a sltitatlon at long range_ Mr. King ls not at- tempting to coerce Alberta people. Rather the shoe Lu on the other foot, and Mr. Aberhart la trying tn coerce the people of Canada. coercion la much more character- lstlc of Mr. Abel-hart than of Mr. King. Mr. King Ls not violating but defending the constitutional rights of Canadians. Including the people of Alberta. Premier Aberhat-t, who should KNOW bellfl‘. D8588 some o1 his ob- jections to the course Ottawa has taken also on a lack of knowledge. He says that. ln March. the Mln- lst-er of Justice declared that the power tn dlaallq no longer exists. What Hon. Mr, lbapolnte sold was that the Brlttsh government no lancer has t/he right to disal- low Canadian legislation. The Mtn- ister of Justice specifically added: "I Wtmld not say the some con- self-reapeot. -"Fleitrbolx, tn The Legionary. Safety bound lo their dentin:- tions. me units-Atlantic airplanes peas each other 1n mid-ocean, one on the "up llne" the other on the "down llne" like a couple of ex- press trams. The Engltahmen take coffee and sandwiches on their calm, evenness flight; the Amelctmp enjoy n flveoourae dinner. They shave up h the akv before landing to meet Mr. de Valera. who bu Just had hta own whiskers some- i; AUGUST 30', 1931 PUBLIC FORUM 1 THE GARDENS AT GOVERN- MENT HOUSE Sin-There ls a lovely spot on a lovely island-cool and fresh on warm afternoons, an enchant/ed grove on summer nights-the sweet.’ and gracious gardens at Government House- There. flow- ers, purple and yellow, and rose and white. smile and sway toward the blue river. and coral-tipped water-lilies float. on the silvery surface of a fountain exquisite enough foir a mermaid’: bower. Sometimes, on golden days, and star-filled evenings, charming ladies and handsome gen-t-lemzien. welcomed by the falrestof hostesses. and the most gallant o! hosts. stroll along tibe scented walks in friendly converse. Happy Gardens 1n a1 troubled world! A place to dream ‘EJ170116 when the white winter sets I am, Sir, etc, RUHAMAH SCIIELNFELD FRANK PROVINCIAL MUSEUM NEEDED Slr.—There has been increased interest in recent years in the preservation of local historical ob~- iects in the various provinces of Canada. Every province, except 1 Prince Edward Island. has a mus- eum. Many of the provinces have historical socleties. Is it not. time that Prince Edward Island began to preserve lts resources? Prince Edward Island has an 1n- terestlng history_ But the mater- ial records of this history are dflily passing into obllvlon. Ob- jects of great. historical import- ance are being carelessly destroy- ed by people ignorant of their value. Many can never be ye- Dlaced. Many have found their way to other provinces. It Ls time that the objects which are left. should be preserved. In other words. why not start a museum in Charlottetown. There‘ are, in the province, sev- eral ‘private collections of relics relating to the early history of Prince Edward Island. 1 have no doubt that many of these owners 111011111 be glad to contribute some or all of their collections to a pro- vincial museum. Many havg ex- pressed a desire for such an op. portunlty. The only argument Whlch 1 have ever heard used against the establishing of a museum ls that of lack of money. The same argu- merit was used in regard m the libraries. and we still have the libraries The same argument was used about the rouds.and the gov- ernment ls going gally ahead pre- P511118 for more pavement. Museums are like teeth. Ionizer they are neglected, harder they are to t1, It is advisable that historical "blects should be housed in a 111-e- Droof building. But. if that is not, Dosslblv, due to lack of funds, there are several places ln Char- lottetown which might be used as a museum. ‘The Harris Memorial Gallery. for instanunhas the Illic- leus 0f a collection. The mom 1,5 Small bl" 1t mlsht, serve as a be- glnnlng. Perl-ans some Charlottetown .110- flrtr might. if asked, undertake this protect, It 1111111111 be an m- wrfsunE and Drofltable winter's work. The the 1' am. Sir. etc, HELEN JEAN CHAMPION QI-earv. August. 2'1. 19:11 ._._.._________ THEIR FAITH UNCONQUERED Slr,—In these days of dust dmughl- wind and Grasshoppers, "WW people are asking: "flow mi the pmple 0f the drought area. standing up under the sledge- em dllflIlZ these past. eight Y°“-*" What keeps them still star-din: 0n 11.1111- mt with "We toward anotlfr a will" keéns them from 10.51.11; i121; ———-—--__=:— -——-_,-—-_______ ____*_____ dlm“ Wfluld flPPlY to provincial leklslatlon." and then went; on m say that the legislatures should be assured of control "within 1,119 sphere of their own Jurisdiction" and the COLIILQ Shflllld havg g @8110; to decide on questions of Jurisdiction. ‘Phat Ls precisely the practloe that Mr. Lapolnte recent- ly trled to follow. Gassy Stomach: RELIEVED If you have only frontal: with your stomach nah u fnillgeutlon, dyspqpula, mm- atomacb. heartburn, nitric dlstrell, etc. Then don't do- lsy nttlnl l bottlo of Dr. L B. Evan’: Stomach Mixture immediately. Evan's Stomncb Mixture I l [nuurlpllon of Dr. L. B. Inna, noted Enflllh Phyllc- lnn of which we have the solo rights to and ulna llllllll it have received numerofl testimonial: from natllllel put-chosen. Try n boltlc hilly. Prlal II unto. S T 0 C K A I D ANIMAL IPIAI YILLS AND IIIFILI H.118. LICL. and MOBQUITOII Qtoohld h ono of tho ball cattle spray: on the mortal and h nblolllely fool not to taint milk. nor to shill. plantai- nor burn flu tilde ct a r. Write, Phone or Coll for one today. FDIC! PII It! Oil. 81-00 “iii: iiiio M08 mime 81B. I49 (It 00o. It. what trimmed tn the Irish elections. Lmzdon Buns 10011111118 ’help them. the Mr. Tea Pott Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN tlranga Pekoe Tea City and Country. 111111 giving way to dark, despair? what k€cp5 them from 50mg insane as they look out on barren fields for the eight-h suocesstve yeti-l‘? What gives them cont-Bile B5 lhey stand amidst their worn out 1m- plemenls and decayed homes. their bare cupboards and threadbare clothing. and whispers to them: "Try again?" My answvr t0 all these quest-ions. an answer that I have found to be very satisfying. is found in one word. and mil- word is GOD. I am glad to find that, ‘my answer ls corroborated in a lllittlfi poem entitled "My 1937 PEWT- written by Gertrude Wood. Presl- dent of» the obthorpe Associate Society, Saskatchewan. It is 11 poem 11.111 breathes the spirit- Of Fall-h and Hope, Courage and Cheer. and finds “nu-ouch Faith's clear eye; that God is Love." It ls ln the hope that. this llttlfi poem may prove a blessing 1,0 many. both tn the drought aa-ca and in other parts of Canada that I send it forth. Lorri, help me to forget the bare brown fields. Storm-tortured. 111.11. wind swrpf- bereft of yields. Let me not watch the stock de- jected pass: The sloughs are dry as rock; there- ls no grass. Let. me not t-litnk all day of garden plot - Where dusty ridges play, but plants are not. Let, me but Sec the trees, their leaves are green And blrds still nest ln these and sing. serene. Help me to raise my eyes for this ls June. See white puffed June-blue sklel and htim a tune, Though as I aaze dust. clouds- a yellow pull-- Sweep up and with dlm shroud envelop all. Yet Lord. my heart. must rlae these clouds above , And find til-trough Faith's clear eyes that, God ls Love. O With such a spirit of Faith to people of the drought area wlll emerge ttrlumph- ant. I am Slr. etc (REV-l J. T. GAWTRDP. The Manse. Radvllle. Bask. "Real Estate Agency H. K. S. HEMMINC IS Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as Agent and Manager. To BUY, SELL, RENT Properties in arrange Mortgage Loans. Secure Tenants. Collect Rentals and Manage Properties and Estates. NO CHARGE UNLESS DEAL EFFECTED Owners of Land or Buildings are Asked to List Their Properties Persons Desiring to BUY or RENT City Houses or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call as GREAT GEORGE ST. Charlottetown August. 23, 1037. To give valuations, TEL. 1376- BAVABIAN GENTIAN S Not every man has gentlans m n; hours in Soft September. at; slow, Se,‘ Michaelmas. Bavarian gentlans, big and dark only dark darkening the day-time tiomh-ltki 1 with the smoking blueness d 1 Pluto's gloom. - ribbed and torch-like, with that blaze of darkness spread blm down flattening into points. flatten- ed under the sweep of the whlu day torch-flower of the blue-smoklm darkness. Pluto's dark-blue daze black lamps from the balls of Dls burning dark biue, giving off blackness. blue blackiiesl as Demetei-‘s pale lamps givi off light. lead me then. lead me the way. Reach me a gentlan. give me a torch let. me guide myself with the blur forked torch o! this flower down the darker and darker stain. where blue ls darkened o1 blueness, even where Persephone goes. 111a now. from the frosted Septem- be r to the slghtless realm where dark- ness ls awake upon the dB-Yl and Persephone herself ls but I voice 0r a darkness tnvlslble enfolded l! the deeper dark of the arms Plutonlc. and P191014 with the passion of 691151 gloom. among the splendour of wit-hrs °l darkness. shedding darkness 0b the lost bride and her BT00?"- _D. H. LBWTPHCQ Eastern Guardian . FROBDV HOOD FLOUR mullet . d. lovely llzllt loaves of old at your work. Tho 100d workman never plays out u long u, tucked owl? l" his cheok, ho has a bi! chow of that loft-cabin!» stimulating, comfortlnl “ Fitniwiiiis" CHEWING