. _-F. a--'—-'- -»-I.-1~ v ~ e a ..—..~.I "LP. F .9 "' a a P-\(il-' FOU“ use cnnnionmwu auannnn f“ President-W. (‘healer l. MrLure. M .F- Vicn-Prnnldcne-d. B. Burnett Secretary-Liam. Col. D. A. lholllnnnn, I). I. 0. ltiliior and Managing Direeior-J. It. Burnett Acorn-into ElilIflfI—-l"rln|l Walker and ll. K. Currie Notes ByLnw Way Jules (hltonguny, chief electoral officer for the Dominion, suggest-l that steps be taken so that there will Ella! llurning ll-lilv (Inumlrri U187) 86.50 per ,Vl‘ll|' lin nrlvnnre) mulled In Cnnudl and United Sllitl- MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1930 $3.00 per your (in advance; delivered. of be a shorter‘ election campaign. Whether Mr. Castongnay‘: suggest- ions are feasible or not we do not know, but politicians and the public w-ill hold up both hands for a shorter lgjgnpllflerhmlb~ The Vice Regal Visit All our citizens will unite in wel- coming His Excellency Viscount. Will- l‘ ingdon and Lady Willingdon on their I visit here this week. It \vill_be gretted, howevz-r, that the Visit i5 the nature of a farewell tour. His Bvcellencys term of office in Canada s drawing to a closeviscount. Willing- dcu Ls in his fifth year in Canada, appointed tn August. having been at... 1920. and in MAD normal course rvents some time in 1911i the King will send a new deputy to Ride Hall. iherc have been thirteen Gover- Iors-General of this Dominion, most tf them very able Ion. some of then nzghly distinguished men. It is too ierly, says the Ottawa Journal, to fix the place in history of Lord Wilin lectod, as well as his will no doubt fully supporte tion law that has ever taken pla here. There must be Justice tempered with mercy; too often has been so. Bootleggers, hom re- in main true to out of business. Mr. Saunders‘ confession of failure to put. the boctleggers "out 0i au slon of the Legislature. confession of his inability to g was made at the Ellcrslie conventl at which Mr. Campbell was nomi g. realize that the country will look for the most rigid enforcement of the Prohibi- no more winking at violations of the law. must- not be too much brew makers and sellers and smug- rtirrs of liquor. if the Liberals re- their "pledges and true to their nfliliations with the Temperance Alliance, must be put business" was made at the last ses- Mr. Lee's satisfactory prohibition enforcement ated. when the present Premier at- campaign. A two months’ campaign in a country like Canada is a heart- break for political leaders. It is a tremendous strain. Both Hon. R. B. Bennett and Rt. Hon. MacKenzie‘ King were worn out by July 28th. As for the public it was sick of po- litics by the end of the election. In addition it means two months of un- certainty for business. All concerned would welcome any action that would make for shorter campaigns. I5. i5 thought oi‘ is some medicine urug to reduce the temperature. C! it as JUSL a sign that SQDIBUMHI e. is wrong. something is wrong and someilnng is what is ucdy to raise its temperature order to fight of! the tnlng that WYODQ. And yet it is only about twen th That the coming by-election in second Prince will afford the people of this province opportunity to. pro- test against Mr. Bennett's imposition of sky-high protection will scarcely go down with thoughtful electors. "The sky-high protection" is of. course a Liberal invention. Perhaps our Liberal friends mightventure to suggest why it was that every pro- vince in Canada endorsed Mr. Ben- nett's pre-election promise to intro- duce a protective tariff in order to his of ive m1 ..'. G. Mactlallum. n. 11m cnaawifrl-zrown sum: w . A - . ' i i3???“ 5- 1.950 ___ _-:‘__-h=-_-F I‘ a . >4“ .___ Baby flour! RAIMN G YOUR TEMPlllATUll-ES As you know when a patient has a nigh temperature tne first thing that And yet pnysitnans are now begin- ...ng w tlnhu ui a ingli tcuipcrature wrong inside the body. The high tem- perature itself is not. the thing that causing the years ago that. the idea that the in- creased temperatures of the body was v really a help to the body in time 0f Scotia. :l.ncss was given to the world by Dr. His belief was that. the increased mmpcrature developed substances in the body that were able to flght or which has cradled the Royal Family , decessors in the vice-regal oflicc lcft tempted to place the responsibility for his failure upon the Prohibition Commission. If. Mr Campbell is still able to entertain the idea that the inn but it has been apparent for months that no one of his twelve pre- enable Canadian their products markets. in their own producers to sell , home i musing trouble. l have, spoken before about the fact combat the organisms that were enforcement of the "entirely satisfactory," he must be a class himself. this country with the intimate knowledge of Canada and its people which is possessed by the present in- cumbent of Rideau Hall- ’ There are few Canadians, as a mat- ter of fact, who know their own coun- try as well a! it is known by Vis- count and Lady Willingdon. They have travelled extensively in every section, and they have given more than casual study to national prob- lems and social conditions. They have sought to learn the dominating influences in our national scheme, _..___._.____. Unemployment Claims ister of Public _Works, Hon. the department, scuss ways and means with regar law has been It may be observed that the Min- J. P. McIntyre. and the chief engineer of Mr. H. H. Show. have gone to Ottawa on the invitat- ion of the Benn-rtt Government to to unemployment in the Province. It Although diligent efforts are being, made to discover possible evidence of l-iigher prices under the recently enact- ed higher duties, all indications point to producers keeping faith with the, Government. On the other hand-y and this is far more important at the_ the praent time-evidence accumul-J aies that the new tariff is bearing substantial fruits. Large industries have announced that they are pre- paring to take on additional hands. Closed plants are to be reopened. Old factories are to be cnlargcrll New plants are to be established by outside capital. attracted by a pro- tected market. Ln i cl malaria. malaria. recovered from paralysis. the maralia itself that d I the “chills and fever" of malaria. The mal- ‘ I aria itself was then cured by quinine. especially 1am size and sllnerwr Later it was felt that lt was nofflavor- had caused the cure, but the high temperature "W93 the Qllllln 0f 5"»! 115m? mlsecret’ ‘that. the body was subjected to bylary of State for the Colonies in the the thoughts and visions of the new lands of the West; they have spent months in Quebec that they might have an adequate appreciation of the ls quite true. as Sir Henry Thornton stated on his visit here, that Prince Edward Island has fewer unemploy- ed than any other Province in the Di By D. A. R. To Annapolis knyonc desiring to view the Anna- polis Valley by the easiest and most direct route should take the D- A- R- train at Halifax, and he wlll be can-ird through a wealth of delight- iul scenery that is probably un- equalled in any 0th" vert- o! l!" Mnritlmes. Not that 1t ls zrmd 111d gorgeous, nor that it is rolling and meadow like, but there is a combin- ation .of the two that is most Pl!!!- joys kaleidoscopi changes. It il also‘ a district of historic interest and the very names of the stations through . which one passes, at in leisurely gait‘ brings to mind the very foundation of J the history of this great Dominion. | Bedford, for instance. i! H!’ after the Great Duke of Bedford. who was Secretary of State for the Col- onies when Halifax was founded in, 1749; t‘ Mountbnlacke is named after the. emintnt Honorable John Richard: Uniacke. who was Attorney-General‘ in me ggrly part of the 18th century and whose son. Richard John, Jr. was the 1w; to fight a fatal duel in Nova , Oi‘ ll. in is W Windsor. of course. is remllliwfifll ‘c: the family name of the King and zQueeen of England. they 1mm‘! Rd‘ opted it from the castl- of that name. since the time of the Stuarts. ’I‘ho _carly settlers called Windsor by the ‘name of Plslquid and it was not until that. a number of cases of paralysis 1764 the name was changed by Gov- AVCCOVEICC after undergoing an attack crnor Lawrence to Windsor. j Falmouth, of course. takes its namc That set physicians thinking, and from Viscount Falmcuth, and was so in numerous institutions 1n uiifer- ent parts of the world. many of these cases were artificially infected with ‘called in honor of the famous Ad- miral Boscowan. who was the 3rd. son of the last Viscount. It is more In some institutions as famous in tht FY6591“ day ‘Wm m‘ many as 25 per cent of those infect: d fact that the Northern Soy apple is grown in this district and is of an Weymoutb is another station tho.‘ iBritish Government. Fcnnerly it wrv Later organisms other than those 350W" 55 si-‘ilbfm- l! Mimi." ‘um’ | cruising malaria were tried and these ‘mfflllln! B‘! 31V" Blld "B5 0115118": The truth is that the new duties,’ were likewise successfuL have acted as a tonic upon businessi conditions generally. (to Weyrnouth in 1783. However it is certainly gratifying to‘ Glflfld PYB l8 probably next in know that. this "fever" can now be Annapolis Royal the best kllQ".'ll name peculiar place‘ of the ls barely a town in the taken thvnr message of nn acquired out none the less whole-hcarted and enthusiastic Canadianism. L-ord and Lady Willlngdon have been great travellers. and thus have founded a tradition which, it is hop- rd. will be followed by their succes- icrs. I: took them but a. little while >0 learn that all Canada could not o: observed from the w.ndo\vs of Rideau Hell and that the country Jould be known in its characterlstfc tspects only through personal con- tacts established over the length and breadth of the provinces. So Their Excellencies took to the rails and the roads, and set an example which great numbers of born Canadians could follow \v.th great advantage. _.__.______ Another “I'm Alone." According to the Hon. Thane A. Campbell, recently appointed Attor- ney General who is seeking election in the Second District of Prince, the present Government has "very efLc- iently enforced the Prohibition Act and fulfilled their promises to the people." ‘ Efficient enforcement, according to the Liberal organs definition in the election of i927, meant "the boon of a banished liquor traffic." Mr. Campbell must have in mind a new definition. In the announce- ment which he thorught it necessary to make of an agreement between the candidates that liquor would not be used for vote-buying purposes, he practically admits the existence of available sources nf liquor supply French pro- wince in a British Dominion; there v Marltimes or in Ontario to WillCZI they have not Dominion. Neverthelm, there b:nefit of this Province, atlves who have Shaw to convince the Dominion Gov- ernment that the scheme ls practic- able and that the money will be spent to the advantage of the Prov- ince as well as the relief of unem- ployment. Shocking Situation the lynching of negroes in the South- ern States have given ground for the hope that this savage practice was generally decaying and that it was about to disappear. But. the figures for eight months of the present year have rudely shattered that hope. There have been twice as man,‘ lynchings so far in 1930 as there were in 1929 There has been a lynching in Indiana, the first in twenty-eight years. There has been a lynching in North Caro- lina, the first in nine years. The statistics which showed that in the United States only ten negroes had been lynched in 1929 were accurate as to this fact, but wholly unwor- ranted as a base upon which to pre- dict that ten years hence there would be no lynchings at all. A reali- zation of this truth has led to the formation of a committee composed within the very constituency in wlvch he is running. Also, he must be aware that in the fcw months in which he has held the Attomey Generalship-an office which carries with it the responsibility of enforc- ing the liquor lavrs-Pthe number of arrests and convictions for drunken- ness in Charlnttctovxn has been greater than during any similar per- iod since prohibition was placed on the statute books. If this is what lfr. Campbell con~ si/lcrs to lac "effective enforcement." we suggest that he rc-read the fol- ‘ovsing editorial from the Patriot of lusc 27. i027, publidicil immediately j vm- 1".» "zrrsf. prulrlatinn victory" the Liberal P2P)‘ in that year: "_\ow that the hatiic is nvcr. we rcrklld all settle do. n to business. t s .2: Siuuderx. the incoming Pre- :.:.'.r. and his executive when le- ~4- ,. of eminent Southern white men, as- sisted by a negro committee, to make an examination of the whole ques- tion in order to determine what can be done to exterminate the practice. The idea is to discover the underly- ing cause of lynching first. The ell" will naturally be to civilize the Sou- are i quite sufficient to Justify a fair ap- propriation of the $20,000,000 for the In our opinion the two represent- gone to Ottawa should not be satisfied with less than $1,000,000, and if they obtain that amount it will go a long way towards improving ournhighways and prefer- ably making a permanent road from Georg-town and Tignish to Borden. It is up to Messrs, McIntyre and For several years past statistics of It has tlkelmsays The Londcn Truth. sons “in the field of radio waves." the Trades Unions a very longtime’ ‘ to discover that they cannot protect] po their hours and wages without pro- tecting the products of those hr and ivages. But the discovery has‘ come at long last, and is a very im- portant political event. if it. has not come too late. Mr. Joseph Chamber- lain, like Mr. Gladstone, was mentally o generation ahead of his contempor- aries. Gladstcne had teen in his oi stage but you can readily sce that grave twenty-four ycars when Irish‘, when it is possible to actually"‘con- Home Rule was carried. The failurehrol" the degree to which the phy. of tariff reform killed Chamberlain.- sicizin wants to have the temperature but the sons will see their fatherZsIrisc. the mechanism is neariy ready paradoxes accepted as economic plati-I for use by the family physician. iudes. Such ls the game of politics. or other infection. There is an in- ‘crease in the rate of the heart beat land in the breathing just as in fever from an illness. There are plenty of excuses for stealing: none for the callous indiff- erence of m-torlsts to human lite" Y the risks which they take are Purely, j I sclfLsh, and, what is worse, laurely‘ " m-___.“ ' foolish. As for the argument that Till-J tsnznm-i. “JJ the law! the pedestrian is at fault, ‘in Ypres '1 own the world goes by, should not allow motorists to drivcT In: bulkier; build, the l"ilOl..‘l'S run; a‘, a' pace which requires everyone] so on the roads to be cool. sure-| focted and capable of forming quick decisions and accurate judgments of time and distance. lvlany men who possess none of the qualities nexssary to safety in a pedestrian are valuable citizens; few motorists who habitually drive at forty miles an hour are any-I thing of the kind, Canadians generally will lire grati- fied to learn that the Indians are! more than holding their own as re-IO land, redeemed from wars red lncir ta .s its busy housewives p.y" And, tranquil in the Augus. sun, 'l"ne loug-toruicnted ramparts lie, , Like mcn whose toll is done. In Hodge crater thc roses blow, God's garden blossoms o'er the dead; And up the muddy ridge of woe ’I'c Passchendaele the cornfield; 1 spread: iDeailfs bitter fields of long ago Today are harvested. gards population and wealth, they‘ reign! now numbering 108,000. with anuOf British multitudes the grave; annual income of $10,000.00!) and per- l‘ They broke your salzents circling sonal property valued at s75.000,000.i chain, Their harvest last year was 1,800,000, Their brzzes your paths of freedom bushels sf grain. ‘They are educated. pave. and, in the main. good citizens. In I Like you, they, too, shall rise again, the face of these facts, Palm's famous a Who died your soul to save. lines. "Lo, the poor Indian! whose‘ untutored mind, sees God in clouds, or : _Fr°de"°k B‘ Macmm m Th‘ hi‘ ' hears Him in the wind." do not “Sh” cathedral Mwuim- apply today, so for as Canada is con- cerned. Our Indians farm. build iron‘ Glory bridges, attend schools and the verb‘ '—-— ous churches, g1» to the movies. drive ‘v‘"°°""°" Pmvlll") automobiles and play miniature golf. i 61°75’ l‘ ‘m ‘he ‘ldwllki "l! 1111 i! 1.0. the well-off Indian! mm’- . But flllt/llmn tints are not more lovely than the young, vlbrgn; m. In Canada. one million workers are camable of raising half the worldlflmmlwod m“ “ma” m h" “"15 wheat imports. But the solution oi’ ' pram l“ “u ‘”h‘°m' ' one vital problem has given rise in she 1' l My w m‘ ‘y’ ‘m4 ' wmc thern whites who take part in these‘ “the” society 10M mvei for a to man for the whole day. Sunshine super-abundance of those things ienfly mom“: ‘ummne’ alum’ Now this is still in the experiment-i ‘n w'i1:l1 bcth mil-n and future 918i’ l‘ ivalley roazl between an avenue of trres we climb to the upper road Wolfv-ille but, created in the body by placing p“- on this route. ascociatcd es it is with ‘Longfellows Poem. Ez-angline. Every- With these short radio waves n 15 bodyis familiar with tn: st»..y of the sslble to cause a fever in [mm mp- Acarlian exil"s from Grand Pre. and I idly without great, discomfort, and to ifc-day tllflllfiflilds 0‘ mulls“ from an ""5; a decree nigh enough to‘ have the "PIN We “'°1'1d ""3 Gltmd P" be‘ some value as that, caused by mamflg - :uuse of its hhLoi-ie associations and ,Are.dian memorials. - | Wolfvljlc. v. 127v vlas the destin- fc ion of the v... er, is sixty H1395 Jrcm Ilrlffsx anti is r '4 202120 8/4 111'? centre nf the laul of Evangeline. II‘ rmerly it was known hy the. not Jy rtlst-Lc name of Mud Creek, but in i830 it was designated Wclfvlllz in kll1‘ll‘l0l'_\' cf Judge E. DeWlllf. B R037" Ialist settler from Connecticut, who tleft a lasting impression upon the llccallty. Wolfvile is the hcztdllllflll- lets of Acadia Unlvci-sity and Horton Academy. This University and seminary have risen in recent years it: (he front rank of educational‘ ‘institutions m the Marltlmes and probably have as fine buildings,‘ '\ faculty and curriculm as any in Can- lads. l At this tim- rf year Wnlfille i- p_ . -.--"~.. \vAr-5a~-|"" "for". and slazlrlrw nrd v="‘:.'"i", a \‘-‘1l"-'1?‘flll ppm-q- »~,-=-~--, :'-- --‘.t"~~ "in which was the t'm2 J" \'“"""l‘ \""-‘l"1 Gwle‘ "Tau Va"':y follraiirg a nlnclln", cor] 1 c"i"g to tile love" valley. ..‘-. rctd f: "ztrcly on: "mt vicrv of ti": C0311- ‘le side of the valley it. l-I-rc and these the 1 d“.‘.c:1 with crdiaiflls Wllh ,. ""1 Lznlfann row by row ,""Ls ccn." 1 w"t‘r the mggc" f-v-ufvv cu-l the small forests. ma‘: "1c?a'"'e"i'1:r-: vi"\'.'e'l at. a 1111811’?! :'Zl'l v.3. -~-.-t. Proceeding along the lower where one can view a more extensive nnrt of the country. If on: follows the road through the valley he would notice the sides becoming more per- pendicular and the tree line no wider overhead than at the bottom. ‘ where a river rushes through. At this particular time the river is very low‘ owing to there being no rain for so long. Standing at the top of the‘ valley one getA a glimpse of the ' scene in all its glory. This picture: of almost rainbow oolorl must he‘ hard to equal, a picture in which nature is the most important factor. I 'I‘he writer has not gone beyond no doubt, on another in; t4, the eye 0f the lrtlfi. Who 011-,‘ O*OOOOOOO-Y J l Fred ll. Trainor plied his trade in Montreal showed respect for the traditions of his call- lcss than $5 from his victims. magistrate who tried him. not to be outdo-e in courtesy, refused to give, YGl-rn which men most need. Now that super-abundance is here, millions still _ suffer deprivation and mlllldlll "m! E4110’ i"! Not" themselves without anything u, do] "'*" Thus. as never before. fate grimlyl A cowboy who ‘turned hold-up and ma“ n human stupidity’ I mass murders. ____________ "Thousands of people are living ac- HR by refusing t0 Mvépfi filly Wm cording to their convictions." The "Yes, the Jails are pretty full." "she has o, very magnetic personal- | ity. harnt she? he cowboy anything less than ten, “Y” anything charged." she wears through gossamer mists, lights her flee and strikes glinta from her hair, not of hct city streets, but 0c lhgdowgd mountain pools and ruaset leaves. Is she dark or is she fair, she comes vacation will be able to give some ids: of the beauty and hiltmic terri- tory through which the D. A. E. line, place! w its terrninua n. sailors‘ into her kingdom at the fall. ca“ I f. _ chrvulla“ " ,‘ '- _ ' the ,, , inmapnu-i bar butterfly- oeu. and made glory shine on the Office, store. and workshop find sidewalk. that she calls a smile from them as she enters, glowing from her walk in the morning's scented" air. Are you not for it? Lift up your eyes, man! fieauty wallq heed- high with you. clothed in ralment. Store windows, gleaming with fall ‘colors which woman has dared to‘ is wear for man's delight and her own , self-satisfaction. lave tempted lur. glory. _‘ a which the salesman! prosaic vombul- cry calls fall fashionl. but which your| awakeneduueswilltellywiefall‘ The Two Macs :-._\_ V I i i DEPARTMENT or Thane am) COMMERCE " OTTAWA, CANADA . October 4th, 19M. To My Fellow Citbenl, In Every Part o! the Dominion. To Give Canadians Work, Buy Canadian Products! 1' 2d u.’ opportunity 1e your: to render your_oountry a service of inzetgable value. And you can do l! absolutely Wlflwyl‘ pelt to [bursa]! in time or money. Exercise} little intelligent discrimination m your daily buying, and the thin} re done! As you know, thouundl upon thousands of your fellow Canadians are out of work. Unemployment, always a serious problem when i t occurs, is more serious than everjuat now, not only because it has leafed eo long and been so widespread, but because of the unusually largo numbers who, by reason of it, are being forced to sufier real hardships. And i t is all so unnecessary, so easily preventable! Every year for the pest {ew years Canada has been importing $800,000,000 worth of merchandise that she mightjust as well have been producing from her own mines, on her own farms, or in her own factories. Some things of course, like raw cotton and raw rubber, she must import. Bur making due allowance for such items, the fact remains that $800,000,000 of he: annual imports have been of a class or kind that she was quite capable of producing for herself. With the aid o! statistics giving the annual value of‘ Canadian factory production and the number of persons employed therein, it requires little figuring to show that every $5,600 worth of‘ goods turned out has meant a job for one person. Assuming that something close to that ratio would hold good as the average for all classes o! produc ta, r’ t follows that were we to produce in Canada the $800,000,000 worth of merchandise that we have been importing unnecessarily, we would be giving direct employment to 147,527 workers more than are now employed, to say nothing of the thousands of others to whom employment would come indirectly, as a result of this new stimulus to business in general. Now do you see how true it is that were we all to practise a little intel- ligent discrimination in our daily buying, our unemployment problem would quickly and permanently disappear? Every time we buy an imported article, when we might just as easily have ound a Canadian article to serve our purpose equally well, we are help’ g to do some fellow Canadian out of a job, and making the job of some foreign workman just that much more secure! Conversely, every time we purposely give the preference to a Canadian article, we are help- ing to create employment {or Canadian workers, and doing our bit towards making Canada as a whole more prosperous! Think it over! Discuss it with your friends! Study from the standpoints of patriotism and charity, of’ self-in teresta The farther you go in‘ to i t the more convinced you will become that givinj Canadian products a preference over foreign products is the common sense thing to do; ' it ifyou will not only but from the standpoint Very sincerely yours, fiasco, s Minister of Trade and Commerce- QOOQQQQOOQOQOQQ-OUOOOOOOOOOOOQQOQ@OOQOQOOOOOO§OOO§ —GYPROC— Just received direct from Factory-- One full carioad GYPROC and One full carioad TEN-TEST —Assorted lengths- -Prices low- L. M Poole Co. i’aoli’s Wharves LUMQINE AND f HEATING ii you want Expeditions and Expert workmanship Send lo QOQOO-OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ OO-QOOOOQOQOOO-OO OOOOOOQOOOO QOOQOQOOCOOOOOQO I / Q l‘ Look up at this sky- scraper, the size of ‘the good twist. you ' swap a few cents for when you ask for Hlclclav Nlcllollou e-\\ suck twin” t cnewmc 80 (lrnfion Street Opposite Prince Edward Tllciill‘! Phone 39.1.] EXTRA SPECIAL VALUE IN ULIVEOII. Now is the time to pre- pare for the rigors of winter by fortlfylng and strengthening the body with the ideal vitamin- coniaining tonic PURE OLIVE OIL which we are ceiling at a reduced price. _ . Large Size 57c Small size 29c ___._.._...._.i_ Father John's Medicine helps the assimilation of all foods includlngblive Oil. Save money by buy. lag here at 88c per bottle. \.. 1