‘—_= >~ -0 00¢- ‘=.'_...d, L€..__ _ ~ _ l. MQ-OO-Q+Q¢GM¢A+A;IA4QQA.,,,Q..L.. .... . . .__‘.‘.“r..._.e‘> __ 2161-0-11- n1: p CHAIILOTTETOWN suttnnutt blunting Daily (Founded 1887) Prt-sith-nt Lu-uL-Col. W. Chester S. McLuro \icc Pkesidenl .I. If. Burnett. FJJ. Secretary l.it-uL-(.‘11I. l). A. hlac-Kinnon, D.S.O. Editor and hlauugving Director J. If. Burnett, ELL Ahrutiallc Ldilor Frank Walker hlllStplilPflUfi l(.-\'l '5 $5.00 pt-t- \"1--.\1- tlfl advance) delivered lo Clty 51,00 per Jt. 1' 1m atlvaut-t-I mailed to l‘. EJskuld $5.00 pt-t" 31-111- 1m autauee- ntuueu lu Lanaua. and U-S aft-tubers Allllll Bureau uf Circulatluns “The illt-intvfryi lillcdkcr Hu- lIeaI-"est Ink.” -. --———: l-'l{ll).\\'. XUGPST 5. 1938 @117 - . -_,_._. _. H Anolln r lilterbttl Protest _. , .... ____ I," (I --..11i-11 with 1111» ln-art Iiov- (r1. 1n ‘1. z 11-1111-111111 ~1v1l1~ t1» 111- gl'1-\\'- -, p, 1'“. . "4 n11 1"11-11<11.1'1--111 1-1 l‘t"1-uliel' 1. V - ‘v 1.11 1. 1;|1,1t1-11t party sup- 1W I _ .'_,--111, \l:. \p1-:1l11-r llrhlut-s - | . “r11 1 s 1w-1-1- :111\\."1r1l. .\ll'. t\ ,\l l. \. 1-11 Charlotte '_ - "g111"1"1.-l_vsp1-:tl<- 1 1- :1 ‘rt-l-t-II l am .- 1.1‘ - 1. 11:". l>_1:1~" .\lr. l\1.-a.\. ri- , 1 . ; :11- ,\:11tll _l1-l1ll ilielt-graplt l 11' ' - " ‘"' -;1-1l 111- 111111 "ll-t CHIH- i." " i ‘ '1" 1-1" 11--'. h1- w11t1l1l fol- ‘ 1 i1 1 1'1 thlwateuiui; to leave i "--". that "thuugs were " 111- 1--111~t11-l<-111j\". au-l 111:1! 1h1- :11"1"ou111s of 11111" (‘.111l1"1-l Hoard “.11_ -.111l hlt". "l\'1-zt_v, - 1111- s1 1.1111111 is there. f \-.1-t1'-l 111- 11 of infonllatiott rt-gardittg . ~11-~ .-1"‘i\'ili1"-', and the frt-cly ' - of Ii -1.11111l11-11t \11p|1111't(-l's in ‘h-s r11 1 , 11111 111- r1111! with particttlat" in- '1 _- 1,1. 111-1". Iltouuh 111 a null-h ll-wved hy the (‘amp- 1111- srrappitlg of the 111: 1111- la-cislalure. and the q-ritel of inf1-r11lation as t0 111-1" sale activili1-~, the pow- . ‘ -‘,,,-.11_ ‘c 1 \‘-1-l 2hr (Xuupl-l-ll including 1 til as :1 l-l-tlrt of in- ‘11-11 of the Prohihi- .1i2l1tltftll('f(‘I0. X0 s" 111 anv detnocratic coitu- 1o‘. 1-111- 11f our thirty Lil)- ’ es has had the lemo- 11» 1111--~1i--n 1111s- zt-uoeratic pro- ‘ i11fo1"1nati11n which t1- increascrl salt-s . l}- l-l-verzlges accruing 1o 1' "-1.: 111.-11l‘ lhc Utnlpl-ell 1lispellsil- Pl . 11g ~' ' 1-111-11- '-- - "-' ¢1~1.,..._.-. 1'. "1 -~ 'l-.--‘l-:11l t-xrtlnple-of thc. Canlp- hp“. I 11ml 111-1111-1-1 thc llysart Cov- 1'1 ~11- -1-.-~ 11-» liquor hoard :tccounts. P11111111‘ [Iv-art into :1 pt-ck of I 1111-‘1-111, rtl any rate, his party ~1 -" l1:- 1f a tip-re itldt-pcndcnt 1-1:‘ ‘o-"Ill 17111-1111 <t:1l\\"arts.-n1orc ' tig‘ '\ 11f 11-1-11 (‘1111-1111101111. a1.‘ ‘- 1 "1‘":-._' 1-'11".'v 111111?‘ s. v Yisilinq Schrtttllloys l... A T>I1""»' wh-u-ll-rrvs are touring (1111-1111. "111-11- slay ill the llotuiuiou tlny will 1 - mz-p for a wet-l: at Tltnncll hloulltwi" 1-1. llalii. 'l'h11-1- they are to ht- jniae-"l l-_\‘ r1 prtrty 11f (ianadigln st‘ll1111ll)1>_\'_s and l cr-ulp 1:11-11 Xew 11111111111. The visitors will lee verv little of the lloltliltion. cast of Toronto. "This idea of s‘-11'1\\ 111g tltt-st- ltoys ottly tlu- central and \\1~'.1-1"n province,” says the §aint _l11l1n (‘ixiw-n. "11-1‘! ltardh- git-r- theltl a trul- pic- ture of all the 1‘1"11vi111"1-=. Pvt-n in the .\lari- times 1111-1» rtrv- some things tllr-st- hoys ntiultt 11c l11t1-1"1~=i1-1l in. I11 illl‘ early 11:11a- of colonization in .\n11: "11. the Atlantic Prov-inccs were much iu the 11111-111‘ evc. .\l:1n_v per-plc from France, 1711;111:111 r1111 111'1cr l-‘lu-opr-au countries cante- helc, l1‘. f: tl-is i= 1111- section in which a lot of I'(‘.'Il 111 vans nizldv. Acadia, which in- cluded 1.1.1 .' '» 11--\v the \larititn1- Proviuct-s and part of "-.t< 11-1- c-cent- of early French \1-.=--.. 411-11, foo, thought a lot I-Juni-lv, if f11r_nr1 other - -1‘11-,- s1ar111lltovs shotllll havc 111-1-11 ‘ ‘1l11-iti111e-3" svtll» :1 of 11 1.1.1.1 ~11- \\’l1y No 7115111211811 7 A ln-fiqlt-a-l 11--\-~p"1|-1r asks w-lty it ls that 1 _;1 -1-_1.1.111-11-‘111-1 win-at crop heing har- , -, \\ 1 s" -l-- t"1 is 1-11call f111" ltarvt-stl-rs. I1 rtofl- 151- \-.'1;1--1, 111111 a wheat crop h0- 11111111, -, ,- 111-1- 11f 11-1111111111-11 \\"1-ul from the .\l."111t11n1~, I__'111l11-1- au-l ‘Hilario to lwlp cut it. (1119 antw-n .1|-_1-_ft'~l-' thr- (7tt:1\va Journal, i5 11-1-1111-11 "11 i111111--\1~1l1--111<. 111 tht- “it-st 1111111)‘, fut‘ .-\.11,- 1- iouu-l uhat is lcn-nvn as the "11--1.1-t1-r :11--l 1" 111111111" '|'lu"1-e 1111-11, opt-hating a 11111-1111-11 .0111‘ 1-11-f11, plus a grain wagon, can L».,1|.pl.1.11- l1;.1~\-1~1 1o a1-v1-1 11f 11111-111 a day. a in], 11111: 11-1-11 11 11---11 111111 111111-11 more ma- ¢l1111~rv 111-; \"1-'1r~ :11\_’o. \\'l11-"t rs :11"1- 111w l-tlal-lerl to ltarvt-st “ht-a? 11-1 1111111 1151111111 l1."1\"1- nla1l1- whcal- Ltfnllillf: 71111..._Jl.‘.-- :1 1l11-a1l1- or two :1_1;o. lu 1111- 11111 11-1-11 1l1-l11'1n1att1-r whetht-r it cost t; 1.1- :11 1.. -_11-..\\- :1 l-tl-hel 11f whr-at. \\iith prim- 11f rlosv- to two dollars. there 111' ;11"--fi1 for 1-v1-r_\l-1-1l_v. lt is dif- l-Hrnpl- 1'. growing a lot of its nwn - :11"1- -1--u"n: rust, drought and pests f11-1-11Io- ‘l-l-r-Y - T-V-r- 11-w- .11% -f< 11 \\'1~st compellt-d to adapt itself 1. ~-;.11 1-1»--1l11€1111~. .-\ \\'<--t rt-s-ortiilg to 1:1 -1- -1‘-11'111-1"v: org-auizt-rl and stahiliz- v -" iiu-wrisd l-asis, ll may 1111-1111 lr-s= -7---11-"111-1 11:1r\-1~st1-rs fol‘ a nloutlt u- 111111-1- profit for wilt-at Qrotv- .-.,- . M- 1 1'1- 11-111-1- 11111111-1- for tl11- railways 1-1 ‘ 1 -- =1-1l for 1-:t1l\\"."t_v eluplovcs: 1-11-1- 1 -- 1 1111- \\'---t from the Fast; m1 *- 11 1r . for t1l:11l_\'. 'l'1111» -- 7-. 1= .1111 1|l\\":l\~, with tcchltological impr-a-tt-l-ttt |'1-1-pl1- mav 111- thro\vn out 0f 11111-1. 311 .111-1_~Z11l 1-- nt-ztrly always there is more work gt-netally. u, 1 An Imperial Policy More to the point, as a declaration of “Elnpirc and lmpt-rial Policy” than all Mr. Nlttclcettzie kllllkii Idilllllltlitlolls statclnettts about our “na- tional status" and indtpeudcttce is lllt- follotving rt-solttliotl passed at the recent Canadian Corps reunion at lltrttnto. “ltt-solved that while rccoguizitlg the status of nationhood won for Catladzt during the (hm-at \\'ar and for which the Llauadiau Corps is" e11- titled to no litllc credit. we urge ilntnt-diatt- and pul-lic adoption by our Dotniniott tiov-t-rnlttt-ttt of tlu- priuciple of close co-operatiott 111 all tnattt-rs illllcllllll the best interests of the British llltnpire 11nd in the interest of world peace, and that lII furlherattcc thcreof Catladzt should “(ll Provide for the cost of atlelplate na- tional dl-fcnsc; and "('21 .\lainttlin the non-permanent naval, air and military forces of Canada on a 111-11pet' hati, consistent with the c-xigt-tleies of the 11111135. "Rt-solved tllat the Canadian Corps Associa- lion 1lt-tltztttds that the special and incrert-itlu 111-1-11- 11-111» of (‘tlll1l0'\‘lIIt‘l'Il.i peltsiotts. hospitalimlion and wvlfztrc of ex-st-rvicc 1111-11 he gin-n intnledi- atv. coustztnt and prt-f1-rr1-11 1111011111111 11y (lov- vflllllvllt- alld 8lIl]tl(>_\'('T~'. to ettsurc that the ex- st-rvict- 1111111 and his (lvpvlhltllts will not c1111- tiuue 1-- l-e at an ttnfair 1l1'~."1dv.'t11t:tu1- thrl-tlgh the s:t1-1"1fi1-1- which he willinulv accepted ill the scr- vice of King and Country." J‘ Editorial Notes j 1t horn this date, 1850; and ‘idalt died, ISS-‘w’. u n1 a- u Guy d1,- Maup tlent-ral l‘. N. Sh (Jtviug to vacation, thc Rlarlu-uzit- lfing Gov- eruluent is finding diificttlly in uettiitg a quorum f11r (ahinet nleeliltgs. \\'h_v 111-1. >11, in at :1 ‘phone c1111fert-nce? a y 1- n1 llay ltas heen savcd to a c1111<i111-1"."1l-le r-xll-tll. though not in the hesl of coltdilioll. l'nf11l'tuu- Zlll'l_\'. those with sntall crops and who rut 111-- fort- the recent rains, will h1- practieally ltayle-s the coming wintcr. 1- a1 >1- (ioods news for topt-rs, of whom, of course. we havc nonc- here. being Prohihitioltist. i tern dislillers announce a lo’? cut 111 prict. to British Ckwlutnhia Governnlt-tlt which is passing it on t0 the cottsuutcr in the form of a cut front five to 25c pcr bottle on rye and front 15c to 351- pcr hottle on gin. Doctors’ s-ort-ly ili-trl-s-t-d pati- ents here no (Iouht will be delighted. at the pro- spcct. =01 n- 1- 1r If it he true as (leclarcd iu thc llritislt llottsc of Commons. that the cost of llritislt ship-l-ltilrl- ing- is excess ‘c. what tcrln can he applied Io (‘attadiatl costs when wc recall that Xlaclteuzir- King tytve thc orrh-r for thc F111‘ l71-rry Char- lottctmvn to a l.e\-1s firm, whose tcn1l1-r exceed- ed liritish tenders by thousands upon thousands of dollars? 1k i! 1k >9! A utunher of Australian (“runnnutists 11111-11111 to 91111111 .\nu-r1c:t a 1111111111-11 vvilrs ago to found :1 new l'topia. lt did not survive the fir~t gctt- oration. \'o\v lot.- 1111-11.. wonun and children of 'l'."tsnlallia arc ahout to attt-ntpt a similar experi- ntt-ut on the island of .\'ul<:1l1iva. fourteen hv (’l('\'('Il mih-s in ditni-ttsions, 111 the §oulhcrll Pacific, 'l‘hc_\‘ dtclart- 111m arc tirt-d of llll’ strain of civilized life. like their prcllt-cessors, they will soon tire of living hy 111-11154 1-111- anotltt-Hs laundry and chores. ~ a- n- »- 11- Accordingito Dr. Louis I. Duhlitt, if the pres- ent rate of suicide in the L.'..<._-\. is maintained. eighteen out of every thousand white utales horn, five out of evety thousand white ft-lnales horn, will kill themselves. As might he expected, the rate goes up with increase of vears. Some races cling to life more than otlte1"s_1lo. Negroes in the United F-tatcs are about one-sixllt as liltely to commit suicide as thcir white hrcthreu are. The ivt-oplc of the Irish Free State. lI('l\\'(’L‘I1 11131) and 1034. had a suicide rate 111111111 one-Iwt-lfllt that of Austria. The japant-se and (ierntatlic races lead all others in their tetulency to do away with themselves. But the indiv1dtlal's risk of (leath from sill-side is not great in any country. It is so sntall that most of us can put it out of our heads. If the truth wcre told. ucarly cv1-r_v one would probably ltave to admit that thc stlicidal impulse has c111ne~perl1aps after a he- reaventcnt, perhaps during illness, perhaps after some kind of worldly disappointnn-ut, perhaps from sheer boredom or a disinclination to gel up in the tnorniltg. By the same 111111-11 the intpttlst- is either illusory or is shaltelt off. 'l'h1- will to live- is alulost inseparable front our cousciotls- Nature endows us with pain and ft-al‘ to ltess. rentiud us that our lives" arc not our 11\vn. .-\s a whole, the race acctpts her divlunt. lf lhert‘ wcrc not an appH-cizthlt- avl-rage ncl profit ill ltcittg alive, ltumanity would ltavt- 1111-11 out long ago. The oplimisfs hcst argunlcnt is that he is here at all. i i‘ d! fi The controversy over thc mill; qut-stiou re» minds us tht-re is :1 "llrinlt .\lor1- .\lill<" caul- pztiun being carried on in Y\'1-\v York !\'l:1't1-. lt is fostered 11y ths- milk industry and :ti1led hy :- mttltittldc of chain drug,- storr-s, noveltv stores. smla fountains and lunch countt-rs. The direct 1wl1jr-ct is to gt-t thr- 111-1-1111- of .-\1nc1"i1-a to cou- sume. the r-xtra quantity of tnilk which cows pro- duct-. at this season of thr- year. llut the indircct ohicct, which is thc better ltertlllt of the citizctl. is in all respects meritorious. l-Yvcn qralttittg that thc chief purpose of the canlpaigu is to lwttt-fit thc fartucr and the dairymatl. the fact remains that thcrc is much to he said in favor of drinking mort- milk and littlr- to he said auaitlst it. provided. of coltrsc, thr- nlillc l-otifornts to the required ltr-alth standards, Phv-icians nun-I.- that the majority of persons vroul-l 111- ht-tter off physicallv and probably ntr-rttnllt- if thr-y drank more tnillt. Thc coltsutnption of 1111111 per t-auita is increasing. Last yt-ar it was .33 pint pr-r day, contoart-d I11 al-out one-half that antotutt in Fug- land and still lcss in Francr- and Certnatrv, w-ltcrc. ltotvz-vcr. ntuch larQr-r proportions of the ntillc ‘produced go into thc manufacture of chtv-sc. llut Fwitzcrlaud, also fond of rhecsc, (‘ms-tunes ucarlv a quart of 1111111- ocr canita f‘\'l‘l'\' dav and §tvcdvn 1 1-2 pittts. The Swiss and Swedes are notoriously healthy. - " ' - CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN lllJTfiS BY TIIE WAY A decided swing any from Lob- our w-tts revealed In the trIennIal 11111111 Ipal clectlons held throughout New Zcaland. In Auckland, Wel- lluuton, and Dunedin. the Labour Party suffered severe setbacks, Cltristchttrcll being the only metro- politan art-a In wl-tIch It, galned 11111.1. The pOlIIIIB ranged generally bl-tw-t-ett 60 and per cent. of the voters, and In vlew of the Pat-lla- mc-utzugv general election to be held tau-l- in the year the result of the tuuntt-‘tpal eIeetI-ms Is thought to be of solut- slgnlfzcance. -New Zea- lautl Press. -!\lout-y talks, as the laying 1:01., and wt- add that It. screams. 1t sIn-It-ks. It kzcks up tuore fuss than a fire. This refers to the daily siivt-l- pilrllilt? up West St. as the tt't1:k with sIre-n-shrlekltlg police escort carries its load of silver bars from the vaults somewhere around Wall St. to the new bullion depos- itory at West, Point, The silver rldes In an open truck. and from the window onc- may try for t1 thrill by Zookitl: dawn at about $400,000 trot-tn at a time-not much more tomatltic to see than a load of coal. t1 ncat. pile of darkened metal l bricks. eat-h one llke three or four sash 1111-1111115 melted together, - New" York World-Telegram. In a ruferettce to the poeslble In-, troductlott of conscription In the event of war, the Prime MInLster. the R1, Hon M. J, Savage, sald that WIIPII urascriptlon started It would not begin or end wlth flesh and blood. It was a fair thing that when mt-n fought to defend theft‘ country the wealth of that. country sltuukl be levied upon to keep them I and their families from starvation and distress. During the last. war a, deb: pf rotlglvy £80.000.000 bud been aectuuulzltr-tl. said Mr. Savage, andl tvlttlt- men were dying other were bt-ittu enriched. That was not. go-t Int: to Itappen again while the ])I'9.~(‘Ill Government. was In power. Tltc- fzulttitlg men would have \\'l\£\lf‘\'£‘I‘ was necessary to keep them, tht-lt- wives and famllies whlle --"1- doing the nation's Job, would not be called upon to pay a debt that accumuIatt-d In their absence. —Australla Letter. A Natal mun living In Harris- tnitll claims to be the "hottest" man iu South Africa. Five years ago it was dtscovercd that he was “runtnnt: a tctnperaturg" He was put to bt-d, the diagnosis belng ‘flu. He did not respond t0 treat.- metlt, and the next diagnosis was a CllfOllll‘ case of appendicitis. The appt-ltdix was rvmoved, but the temperature remains. and his tonslls and n fistula operation followed In" quick succcqsslon. Still the tempera- ture renutltttledThen commenced a round of the leading heart. nerve, tropical disease and other special- ists ‘tn Joltnnesbttrg. but the ten-.- pex-atut-e t-cmaltted. This was follow- ed by a period In the Johnnesburg Gutt-ral Hospital, where other specialists examined him, and eventually he was handed over t0 the Sautu African Institute for Medical Research. but there, too all tests, blood counts. and so on, proved to be negative, After five years the doctors Itave come to the conclusion that he is a freak, a man who walks around with a. tem- perature which every day averages anything between 99.2 and 100 de- grees-n tcmp-sl-attlre which would send any normal man to bed — South African Press. The town of Goderlch ls to be coltqt-atttlatt-cl for getting rld of its own t-aiIw-ay- debt. It has shown fortitude and crslstettce In meet- ing an oblizat on which, events show-rd. was Ill advised. Thirty _\'0f\l‘,s ago, bottds were issued for $150,000 to subsldize_ the Ontarlo Wcst Shore Railway. The road was tit-vet- completerd, but Gode-rlch lIvc-d up to Its end of the contract and Ilas Just paid off the last, of {he debt. litter-est amounted to $225,000. so the town is out of pocket; $375,- 000 for something of no value to It. unless the experience 1s counted an asset. Goderlch, be It. noted, dld not shlrk Its responsibility through either good tlmes or bad. It has patd up. wlped out the debt. with clean hfllKlS, a. clear consclence, and uttsullled credlt- Probably the good people of the community ltevet- thought, of beutlng the creditors. although they were beaten by the promoters of the railway. Itt my event, they have re- tained a sound reputation and set an example In Itonestry for other Italulplclpallties.—'I‘or0nt,o Globe and R 1. —D1-nmark'x 19-year-old swim- mlng stat". Jenny Kammersgaard, who entered the Baltic Sen at. Ged- ser. South Dr-umat-k, Wednesday evening, this mornlng reached the German coast at Nletthagen, about flvc ndlr-s west of Warnemtlende after Iaetnc In the water 40 hours and 9 mittutes, She rccelved numerous telegrams of congratu- lat-Iotl. Includlltg one from Klng Chrlstlan and one from Chancellor Adnlf Hitler. MLss Ka-mmersgaards ability to tnaitltrtln normal body tcmtlt-t-atttre, despite long immersion Is a btolotzlz-ztl w-onder. I‘. was further ontpltaLsIu-d today when an ex- umittntiott on her arrlval In Ger- many sltotvczl even her flngerttps I-etaInt-d flu-Ir normal temperature. —Ncw York Times The mlossal sixth-century Bud- dha. which was a landmark at But-Ilugtolt House three years ago during thi- famous Chlnese Art Ex- Itibtlnn. Is now donated for keeps to the British Mus-cum. This Is a characteristic gostttre by the Chin- r-sr-‘Grwvvt-nmr-nt, who even amidst. tlwu- rlotncstlc ugottv- have rememb- t-red an nccnslolt whlclt gave Intel- l(‘(‘lIlf\l China much gratlflcatlon. suw- the exhIbItIon the Buddha, tvhlrlt w-r-Iuhts 20 tons and necessi- tatcd snot-In! strengthening of tho Burllttutott Holm- floor. has re- Dost-d I11 flu- Poyal Academy's vaults. Th1- proct-eds of the ex- hlbtllott u-et-e dlvlded 50-50 be- tween thr- H. A and the Chlneae Government. and the latter have dr-slred to dedicate to the Brltlsh Must-tum 11 part. of that revenue r-qttn. to thr- £l.000 whlch the R. A. on Its part. gave towards the Museums Eumorphopoulos collec- tlott. Prttttcn also has a graceful hand In the szlft. The owner of the Buddha. a. PnrLsIan art dealer, In vlr-w of the spcclal clrcumstnnces, let th" Chtneso authorttles have It for £1,000. though It was prlced at I5 111110.- thnl. sum. So the Buddhu works out at £50 a Ion. -Ottu,wu Journal. Still unable to brlng Chin: f» Ila kIlPPF. .Inpcm must now Increm- ltullv rccknn with powerful govern- ments, Including our own. no long- cr wllllttt; 1,0 permlt the Jttpuit-ge mllltnrlsls to vlolate even- troutv 01111111111111 111 wIIl. And wmu m3 been svald to Toklo so far Is only Dt-rlIm-nary to the guarantees whlch shmlld be exacted from Jnmtn vipen theltlmga comes for g 11ml ac Tentent n t e For Eastn-Wnsh. hlhn i Qfbat £0112 of ‘ p111; Q Jan W. bavfon. MD. KEEP HEAD LOW IN PAINTING SPELLS One of the mlstakes well mean- Ing Indlvlduuls nmke whetvany one faults is to try to secure a. pIllow or folded coat to put under the vIctIm's ltead. The ralsed pIl- low ralses to some extent the chest also and as the heart should be at: practically low-est: Int. to enable blood to flow easly back to It, no pillow should be placed under the head. In fact the head should be kept level wIth, or low- er than, the feet. In a large department store when a ntetttbel- of the sale's force or t1 customer faults, the sale's force are instructed to place the feet of the victim on a chair and the head on the floor. 'I‘hat thls simple method of re- storing the. circulation Is useful at. all tlmes when the cfrculatlon fails Is recorded by Drs. S. Welss and R. W. Wilkins In the Journal of Clinical Investigation. "The failure of the circulation —collapse - occurring In pneu- ,monla and other Infectlous dis- eases. perforation of Intestine, shock from some substance tn which the patient Is sensitive (allergy), ls due to widespread dllatatlon or u-idenhlg of the veins carrying blood back to the heart. This dilatation or widening means that the pressure of the heart. Is poor and so not enough blood gets back to the lteart to keep It pum- ping properly.“ "Placing the putlent in the horlzontal position. or, if neces- sary, In the Trendelenburg posI- tlon (head and chest below the level of hips and legs! will In- crease the blood flow to the Iteurl: and result In strengthening the weak, fast pulse and raising the blood pressure." It should be remembered that this raisin: legs and hips and lowering the head Is for cases of fainting when the face Is pale, breathing rapid and pulse weak, It should not. be used in cases of head Injuries or a stroke of apop- lexy when the face Is flushed, breathing deep (snorlng). and the pulse full and slow. In these cases tlée head should be slightly rais- e . In falntlng. smelling salts and sprinkling cold water on the face Is good treatment. In cases of In- jury to_ the head or a stroke. heat. l5 Implied to the feet and patient; kept as quiet as possible. FRANCIS THOMPSON Among the meteors 11nd the stars e e, Seeking for refuge In the cloudy caves Where ghostly bodies of the gods lie ea. - He (‘owercd under golden archi- es Raised by the sun and shattered by the moon In tlmeless alteration. Down the abysnt, 111KB Lucifer. he plunged; then, doubling soon, He fled m where the ralnbowk slender prism Sprung from the crystal gates. And stlll he caught The Dizléeetbtu-sutttg of those patlent Pant-Infi wilth fear, eerthward he ed and sought ‘Ihe lgfis tlaafl Ctoveut Garden and e ee. Yet aweped in laudanum, or soar- Ing free, He heard the VoIce behlnd him: "Come with Me." -—~Francls H. Nethercot. Foreign Policy “Realities” (Ottawa Journal) In the course of three able articles 0n the "realltles" of Canada: for- eign policy, the WInnIpt-g Free Press says: “When Mr. Klng says the Parlla- men wIIl meet. upon the outbreak of war, to settle the questlon (of whether or not Cattuda partIcI- pales) he knows that the starting polnt. of the dlstttlsslotts must be a. statement of Govt-t-ntnent. pollcv. Mr. King and hIs colleagues wIll have to declare for one of these courses: Neutrality and complete Isolatlon; passive belllgerency; par- tlclpatlon In the war to the extent. that Is acceptable to lhc PBfllB- ment and people bf Canada. "Thus freedom of decision, eltlter complete or In large ntcmsure, rests with the people of Canada." Is this true? , If the Judgment of some of m! most. emlnent of cottstltttttonul 1m- thorltles be right, It. Isn't true Conslltutlonal authorities hold that Canada cannot be neutral In a war In which the King of Canada Is Involved as Klntz 0f Great Brl- taIn —t.hat Canada under these condltlons would be at war. If that, be rIght, and if the enemy of Great. BrItaIn dectded ‘hat war upon Canada was War upon Great BrItaIn. where would our "freedom of declslon“ come In? In "passlve belllgerency"? 1n par- tlclpat on In the war “to the extent that Is acceptable to the Parliament and people of Canada"? NM at all. If we weren't neutral. If we couldn't stay neutral, then the extent of our gal-tfclpatlon would be determined y the enemy, not by us. It. would be determined by the enem alr- men who came over here a-n drop- bomba on our cltles. That Ia one "reallty" of our cal- tIon that. the Wlnnlpeg FY66 esa seems to have overlooked. HOLE IN ONE (By The Canadian Pram) BASKATOON-J-Ionor for sfnklng one of the longest. hoIes-In-one In fbla cltyls golf history went to Paul Kowel, Saskatoon hockey olawr recently when he sank a -y-ard tee shot. PORT WIIILIAM—NIne-year- old JImmIe JHYVIS Is startlng early In Ilfe to collect hIs rare fish stor- Ies. Exhlbftlntf skillful trolling. Jlmmle landed a l4-potmd trout. I - s1‘. 1‘. from Lake Buperlor aft»: a [not m-u. .. .._ _....v. AUGUST 5, 1933 nocanuunnnnnnnnn Canada At War " TWENTY-YEARS AGO TODAY n a v oooooosoouoo‘ oncooonoonooouo 00000000000000- wrmm for The Cnnndlnn Pren- br Cnpt. W. W. Murray- ‘Ite transfer of Corps from the Arms front. to Am- lens during the first week of A118- ust, I918, with all the Intended de- captions whlch accompanled the move for the Purpose of mlslead- Ina the enemy was one of the most successful ruses ever cart-led out durlng the Great War. Widely advertised as destined for Fland- et-s, there to carry out an offcn- Slve agalnst Kemmel Hill, We Oorps was withdrawn from the Ar- ras sector and by a series 0f ctr- cuItous moves nspo - lens. How the first stage of that; Was effected. so far as one Can- adlan unit, the 2nd Battalion. was concerned, has been Indicated In the Immedlately receding article. Entralnlng at, t/It I-Iouvln. near $1. Pol, on the nISht of Aug. 4. the Bt-tttfallon was conveyed In a wlde are northward to Abbevllle, then southerly vIu Calais and Camach- Es to the village of Nesle Norman- dalse. Thence the unit ntarched seven mIles to a small place named Aumature, which they rewched, on the evening of Aug. 5. They were not, destined for any rest; there. ltowevmb. The unit hIstot-Ian whose plcture Is represented as Illustra- tive of what. occurred ‘hmu-Zhttllfi he Corps. wl-th the Infantry at least, continues the narrative: "At 6 o'clock In the evening M! urgent message was received to parade In half-an-hour, and to be ready for a move to a cross-roads a shot-t distance south of Aum- atre, ‘Yhere the batftallon would embus. No Indlcatlon was glven as to our flrtlshlnpl pon . "The troops Ml been allowed t0 scatter throughout the Immediate neighborhood; but, the Battalion butlers went far affeld, sounding the ‘Fall-In.’ Ax the appointed hour, the entire Battalion was present. Platoon and ccmpany In- spections eliclted that. no equlp- menf was mIssIng- and a few mIn- before '7 o'clock we marched 0 . "At lAhB cross-roads there swall- pd us a IOng lIne of buses. and Into these we tumbled, A lone mo- tolr-cyclfst pa‘: the only Indlvtfgual W10 568K119 any BU O!‘- Ify, He admit-ted he was the guide, but there hls admissions ended. He refused t0 disclose whether he proposed to guide us. Baffled In their Inqulrles, the troops made themselves as comfortable as they could. and In the dgscendfng t/wl- lIght, the long serpenmfne column rattled off, c» Columns of Buaei "WIIM; route was followed, through what towns and villages we passed, no one knows. The road must. have been cIrcuIt-ous. how- ever. The column swung on through vhe night, Its path blazed onlg by the solltary motor-cycllst. ay- break found us thundering through the narrow ed streets of a city which some recognlzed as AmIens. But the buses dld not. stop. South- ward we went Into the en coun- try, leavIng Amlens beh nd. over nan-ow mud roads and Into broken, hllly teflltnry. , “At, the vIl age of St. Fusclen the column stopped. This, said the motor-cycllst, was as far as the buses went. However. a staff officer of the 1st Brigade was present at the dIse-mbarkatlon point. ‘Ilte Bat- talion. he Instructed. was to march to Boves Wood, blvtvustw there and avwalt further orders. "Glad to stretch their cramped llmbs, the troops descended. M St. Fusclen the 42nd (Black Watch) Battalion were already In billets, mom-nlng the death on the prev!- ous day of thetr Commanding Of- flcer, LL-Col, Bartlet/t McLennan. killed whIIe on a reconnafmance of the forward area. “'I'he march to Boves Woods was short, chiefly. through narrow lanes. and for the most part down. hlll, At one point. we-passed some French artlllery cndss-ona, drawn by gaunt horses and driven by sleepy pollus. Thls Indloated we were at he isputhern extremlty of the BrIt- ne. "Boves Wood was an extensive clump of brush and sapllngs, stIIl very wet from the night. dew, and already contalnlng many various units. All were concealed. About an acre of brush was appm-tlcned to us, and there we were bold to make ourselves comfortable. The warnlng was glven there must be no move- ment out-slde the wood In daytime. Fires must not bellhlestthe smoke betmv the presence of troflps; and at; night. no lights were to be shown. In other words, cold bully beef and water were to be our por- tton dut-Ing the stay In Boves Wood. But, we were told cheerfully. than. stay would not be protracted. We were ‘golmz somewhere else.’ “The next move came qulckly. Dut-Ing the day orders we're recelv- ed to send a party of uIdes to Gentelles Wood, just off e AmL ‘ens-Raye Road. a few miles south- east. of Boves. and to move the Bat- t-allon forward that night. "Nearer the lIneI Somethlng was surely ha nIng—-lmt what? The whole bus ne.-ls was stIlI shrouded In mystery. Obviously we were o- Imt In-to a ‘bltz show,‘ but when "At nlghtfall. the Battalion par- aded. swung out. of Boves Wood to a road choked with troops and vehicles of every kInd, Guns, am- munII-Ion llmbers, transport. wag- ons, engInee-t-Ing supples, motor tomes, mam-all were packed Into that. narrow rlbbon of road Ieadln through Boves to Gen-tellers W .. It was not a match but. a crawl. Hour after hour thfs ertdlws _col- umn wot-filed Its way forward. Not untll well after mIdn ht. dld the straggling oompattlea pck up theft- guldes. who conducted the-m to an flrea not. quite no restricted as Boves Wood-but vastly. more In- res ng. "Genwlles Wood. the last stag- Infl Dolnt I'm- the eat. Home of Anuens. woe n reve tlon. (kl lye 0f Blflle .."2----1--..1-1- - u- -----.....- utf. . . uresen n - tn-cle Much no one who saw It. can ever forget." Thus contlnuea the hlstnrlan 01f the 2nd Canadian Battallon In deacrlblng the prelim- Inartea whlch preceded the great. Battle of Amlena. Using the e t-I- encea of thl! uutt. In Its move rom the Art-u Sector m Gentelles Wood, about eight mllea south-cut of Amlem duxlnl the mot week of Ausust. one notes that those are genemlly Illustrative of the Qkpefl. ences o1! the Canadian Infant?‘ In the course of those slrrlng ys. The nrtlllery dld not share them tn such a ntcrloua extent. for the uns Ira-ve ed by road with all dee- Ina-tfons noted from "Clentellea Wood In; fllled with "(Xvos and motel-Ill." the h contlnues. "But mtg the cloa- esl, attemlon of e fnfanftpmen were the malts. Bug-e sue-old mIJMI/erfi. they were cur-rounded It. all time: b1:- awe-ltt-Idten ‘foot- IMwu-a.’ It hm In ha: can descenslon, poured nto ears extraordinary storIes of the capabllltfes of theIr machlnes. Ein- bow-ered with branches, the tanks were carefully concealed from aer- Ial observatlon. “Heavy guns, equally well camou- flaged. pushed their muzzlee through the fringe of the woods besides them Inunense stores of large calibre shells. The Canadlam had never before seen so man guns assembled In any one spo. Llglm artfllery s-wod xeadyl for a further move forward. I was bustle and excItemert-t, the atmo- sphere whlch pretends the approach of bu; things. “Ehrly In the day the Whfllfl Yell of secrecy was drawn aside. The Commanding Of-flcet- assembled his Company and Platoon Comman- ders and unfolded a scheme whose magnitude and unexpected-Ms sun-ed the heat-t. - ‘The lung and disoouraglng era of defeats and-ratIre-tnents was ov- er. The Aumy was going to leap m the attack, and the spear-h of what had t-he ect of turnlng WWI) out to be the most shatter-lug low ever delivered on the Wes-tern Front. was the Canadian 0031s. Be- neath the shading trees rough whose fronds the sun fIl-tereti In delicate pat/toms, the junior offi- cers listened as objeotlves, dlsposlt- Ions, tlme schedules and all the other particulars of the coming battle were detalled. Await Zero ‘Hom- "The ambitious nB/ture of the op- erations evoked thelr adznlra-Ifon. The fectlon of the preparatlons. 0f whifiih they had been kept In complete lnorance. bespoke the Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious‘ Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN Grange Pekoa Tea wI-Ih not n, llttle fleellng of con-- c. .. 1 PUBLIC FORUM ‘lhlc column In opal for the IIIGIIIIOI i1 QOn-olpondonlo of question: of Inc-rut. Ila Obn- Ioltdowl GIIIIIIII: don not ne- nonnrlly undone Ibo opinion: of nnrrunondmfl. GOVERNMENT HOUSING BIr,-It. Is encouraging to flnd so outstandmg a, paper as the Mont- real Gazette with courage to lay open the defects. If not. 118811355- ness, of the Government. Housing legislation. It appears to be a bor- rowed offshoot. from the SOIdII-rs settlement plan, but. mlnus Its ad- vantages. As a. measure to relleve depres- Ialnly does more hat-m than g . e snort. vIsIon of Its plo- Jectors deslgns that. In structural work It wIIl gIve employment. That Is so, but at what a cost? Other- wise It Is without a redeemlng few- ture. There Is not a benefit con- ferred which dld not exlst In priv- ate enterprise before Its adoption, It makes no retense to create homes for the ndfgent; and unem- ployed. Its best boast. Is that It. hel those employed, and those wit money at. their dlsposal. to build homes upon publlc securlty. wIth money seeklng Investment at low Interests rates these same clus- ses could at any tlme get. almost: the same advantages. wIthout. post?- tlve and wlde spread Injury to thu Investment of commerce. Persons of ordinary Jud men vIewIng the Iucreaslng num er o slon It highest eff clency of the Cattadlan Corps taff. The scheme was noth- ng short, of a. 'bX‘0d1l{--lhl'0U%l:e-- that brcak-Ihrougp whloh had n pt-omlsed from t. e days 0f Neflve Chapelle In March, 1915, on. Many tunes It. had been attempted; al- ways It had falled. At Loos In - tember 1915, at the Somme In J 1y. 1916 at VIm Ridge In Aprll. 19 '1 -1uI 11m m en short. But. thls- "The confidence of the offlcers Infect/ed the men. PursuInG the tune-termed practlce of communi- cating all relevant. partlwlam ID 1-118 men and thus enooumgln that, In- Italative wblch was t-he p de 0f the Corps. the officers ex lalned the details and assist-ed t e various duties. The reaction of the troops was Immediate. Confrontlng them was the prospect of a battle 0n I glgantlc scale. not n. mere ft-ItteI-Ing a1wa,v_ of energy In trench-nlbbllrtfl- Beyond the rol Ing hllls to the east were vast. spaces 0V8!‘ which LIIOY could freely opemte-and there was ‘twtually some talk of uslng the r cave y. “Durlng the da some attach- ments were made the tank unlts Infantrymen being B551 ed W 9-"- as Ilatson wlth them. l railed- “There had been no prevlous re- connaissance of the forward It- Ions: only an area oonffned be Ween may oo-ordlnates and Indicated as the assembly point. I-n the greylng twilight of Aug. 7 the battallon moved out of Gentelles Wood. Ila cQm-panles regressing Independent- Iy, with r e a. bwach nltzht every-flung else 8M1 In IIWVQ- The IIg-ht. 11m Ietry 1m led out w their open emplacemen In the flelds; file tang began thotgamtunlns us‘; cross e o n shadows marchpegd wraith-like In he fioott-n-alt movlng forward. Zero our for the tat-tack was 4.20 a. m. on Aug. 8. "We found our assembly NW 0°- cupled by an Aust-rallan unIt; of the 5th DIvIslon. sourly the Dui- 1-5 viewed the Invaslon of ther omaln by the Canadians. They had no orders for reIIef. As to that. we had no orders to relleve them we Informed the Aussles. The Aus- tralians were perplexed but in It short. while LheIr problems were solved. Theft- neadquatters marel, Issued orders for Lhem to ‘set w and not to bother about. what the Canadlam were doIxuz there. ‘Ihe Diggers got out, happIIy but. atIlI greatly mystlffed. "rheu- departure lent. the adage entfrely m ourselves. Everyt-hlng wasnno-w ready for the great as- sau n 1 COW GIVES BIRTH T0 THREE CALVES EDMONTON, Aug. 4-—(CP)— Glvlng blrth to triplets may be something to be proud of,but Dalsy Belle, l-Iolsteln cow owned by Ad- olpl-t Busee. awflrently doesn't. thlnk so. Daisy Belle. who recently became the mother of two bulls and a. helfer, has refused to have any- thlng to do wIth her sons. show- erlng all her aflectlon on the daughter. Since their blrth, Mrs. Busse. peat. and Repeater. has fed and cued for the bulls. Multlple births among cows I: unusual but the fact that. all three are tI-u-Ivlng desplte the unusually higpt mortality rate makes them a rat- y. BIKE FAD GROWS (By The Canadian Pres) REGINA-Whether for economy or exercise, 131 more people have taken out bicycle Ilcenses here thls year than last. the ctty meme In- spector reports. So far. 1.700 cycl- lglsrylvuurclyietLtdhJ. sin;- _ llo You Need llelp ‘l If you require a man, boy or domestic help, u "Want Ad" in The Charlotte- town -Guurdian will find you a roliuble person. The rota in only 2c u word a day. Charlottetown Guard- ian "Want Ads" produce results. who named the offsprlng Pete, Re-~ vacant “to let." houses, the decreas- Ing value of rentable real estate, the Imposslblllty of selllng property at. any approach reasonable value, right. In our own Clty. can form for themselves an Idea of the dtsuster to property holders. and the severlty of the embargo It: places upon Investanent In property for rental purposes. Left to Its own natural channels, free from govern- ment bungling. money for bulldlttg purposes would flow as freely as eo- onomIc demand required, without: the dlspmcements that. the govel-rv- merit, system Is creating. Those able to pay rents, or pun chase propertles, are entloed Int/J government financed homes. those unable. and In many cases able but unwilling w pay rents. are dtmped over to the rIvate Investor to shoulder the rden of loss, who‘ "burnlng the candle atboth ends. ls saddled wIth the additional taxi! to defrey the loss b defaults In the Housing scheme. can point to many tenancles In thls Clty, selfl- sustalnlng under normal competi- tion. and easlly marketable when for sale, whlch today would be dif- flcult. to sell at. more than hnlf‘ price, and lvhlch do not bring an average of rental Income to pay even the City faxes. And this ta say nothlng of Insurance, the cost: _of eJectIng tenants. and the clean- Ing up of the mess left behlnd. and repairing the wreckage that follow: In the wake of defualtlng tenants- These properties. reduced In as» sassable value and In Income. ac- counts for much of the unpald Citv taxes and Inc-rt-aslng defaulterl list. It, must still Increase. as the government system contlnttes Its method of demolition. And the City will fut-thet- tax the propel-Mes they depreclate. to ay Interest cm the M01163’ borrow to wlpe private en- terprise out of exlstunce. If the same money was expended to meet. cIvIl needs. to gIve sub- stantlal relief b0 unemployment, It} a "back tothe land movement‘ there might be some practical re- sult, and certainly less of stupld manouvre. I am. Slr. etc LEWIS P. TANTON‘ mtv FzvFI‘ Cnudllnn evorywlnro find froednm from um-t-l lug. from more, inflamed, itch ,Wl!(!py eygn an runniné none by tnklng flmpleton’; IIAZ MAI! npculu, Tnltu llAZ-MAH be map-nu annual Aft II ue n1 hn it n . t Iltlck ltu n fake RAZ-MAH Cupgulrs In fut relief. T ey'rc,, ick-rlepen bh. It: r from 8 yorth-or money blck. 50a and H lt- Ill SJ The Ladies We carry a complete stuck of Max Factor‘; Society Beauty Aids Includln IL: Powder Foundation ‘ream. Jlennung Cream, Skin and lbs e Cream. Face Powder in flve shades Rouge In five shades Ll Stlcka In seven shades Br lllantlnes and Eye Brow Pencils, etc. We also curry complete llnes of Evening In Paris-Ashes of Derny‘! Three Sec- reto-Three l-‘lowen—Gemey and Ylrdleyk. Mi-féb 1111111 nssronzn A d ll l I rfumed - nrathincivletltythperestoren ‘Z1711 t Ito or!!! Mac: Ihlr Ballot-er pm- and nperhr h moles a new out]: when the al: In foll- snd h romarhbly useful In prevellng dutdruff nnd deflroyln nnrhltlc hulr klll- ct-l. Jun In ow the direction: carefully and you will 1- unued at the mum. Wrllo or one». today. Patel: on cum-s.‘ THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTORE ma: M‘: (glee: 23$ group! .Mlonflom Jk