S3fJ$I$EEER .2 58 $9- to r0. be 1r. Le lit we be lei wl i.n ax 'sir.vrt uas appointed for. PAGE r0111; ‘The Charlottetown Guardian President IJQuL-Cul. W. Chester Ali-Lu" Vlris-Prrbldienl .1. u. uni-um. r- J - I, J. l. iei-rrlury Linn. (.10! l.) lllrlilnitou l). 8._ 0- Auucluto Editor: trunk “I|l9f and U. It. (""18 ll I I) I (Founded M117). _ 55,00 pg} fiLnlin ‘Indiana-e; deilieri-il lo ‘UIyI. 81.00 per yeur (In ndvunvv) mulled 111 P. ‘h. lltknllljtl-a 5.5.00 per year iln advance) llullril to (unuiii n . . snvanav. ivoviriimzit, 6. V1937 1 More Liberal 0piI11011 The l‘..1.~tcrn Lltrotticlc ililtrrali itbtects {r11 .\lt'. llenttett critictstitg the P11111111" lmli-“Pllle of 11),. RUM-t] r'..111111i~si1111, but it has criticism 0f it; 111111 111 111101‘. lf >1l_\-\Z_ p 4 ! “lo tl1i< pupcr 1111- peculiar 111111.: 1* 91111 Nova Scfiliét L11‘ ill(‘ llaritinte l'l‘1t\'l'li\‘.t‘< arc 111.11 “ton,- 1'(‘|1l'(‘~Q1nfll .111 1111- tjomtittssioti. (1116 t- illfillllcls i- .\li". l1‘. .\. .\l:1cl§a_\'. an Utt- ;,_;_.1_111"e1l 111-11ic.>~111" 11f ltisturv 111 11111111111901 11° 11 be :11“. ablc 1111111. 11111 11 “111 1“~“‘11i1"'1,111 {Or 1L ._ 111 gtpi1t(t“iitlq the fcchtigs 11f i111" l.111<‘:“i11‘ r-f .\'111..1 Scotta 1111"" 1111‘ ‘“l’.1““1- 11 11"‘ 11m“ *' i1 it-il 11v l.llli'l'l1.l~ that .\o\".'1 $011111 \\'1l>' ‘k111i i and llilCtlllFllllllll1Ylfill\' and 1111- 1 1l~1;1.--'.l11111l1l 111- righted. $11 ithcn .\lr- THE (THARLITFFETUWW (TSEARUlAAN that Mr. La Guardia has been a consistent aci- vocute of most of President Roosevelt's policies, the controller of the purse strings of national patronage could hardly go further than he did go to involve the New York ntayoral election m :1 clear-cut New Dcal issue. Even so, he may have gone too far to please President Roosevelt, now that .\lr. Maltoney has proved a '1‘-'l111111-111)' 111111. The McIntosh Red 3113s \\'ecklv", to deprive Canada of tltc 1101111111” of being the country of origin of the Mclntitslt Red apple. which has won so 11inch fztiite lpt‘ the llouiitiion. Strange to say. the culprit is 1-K‘ New York State Agricultural Dcpartnient. C11111' titcitting oti the popular Mcltitosh in a 260511 statcntent, the Department remarked that [11111- tilar l1:-lief has set the origin sonicwhcrc 110111‘ Caiiadizitts arc vigilant. 0111,1111», learning of llllS-Slillélllfilll’. at pointed out that the 0112111111 McIntosh -'1l‘l'1@ iree was 1111 the farm of 101111 “6111111511- 11 pioreer settler at Duiidcla. 111190 0r 171111" itortlt of tltc St. Ltuvreiice River. adding 1111? present occupant is Ilarvcy Klcltltosh. fl (1559-"1" tlaitt 11f the (ltseovercr 0f the» hlclittosh 1113111’!- The original trcc stood until a few years ago. 11-11011 a ntottiittit-nt was erected 0n the sttc to 31-11111-1’ wt- railing 111111111 tltc l1'*1111\‘111 lllllifilll‘ gin 1,1‘ 111- 11.11i1i1i~.~i11ii there were mrtitv 1.111- ' ia who 1-1111 not like lls wo- _\11\;1. $1111 w, __ ,,-1_ T111» 17111-1111: r1111re<etitwti\"c. -i11 r1"1re~t1tt1ati\'e_nit-l 1.111‘ hlilliiittllli T1“ 1 all iii('!l wt-ll 1(Il1't\\1l itt the 111111‘ l . 1-1 11r11\il11'1'~, but the titan, l11'*"‘»'1'1‘ y .11." the Til riii111e-_ i\ :1 >lFIilIQFF to tit-Pl 1-1111‘. -11'.11.11. 1111- lkillllllttllw 11f Nova fic-ttkrl 1-\_.111- 11-“11111 that 11111111111 111 it that r1~v11li"e~' 11111111111 l1iiil11ll\l(.‘ bniversitit" 131-." .\'1~1v tila-grwv l.iber."tl Cillllfllllllflflifi‘ 1111-1‘ another coziiplaitit. with r1"l-'1-"1 11‘ 11"‘ illlllolni‘ 1111-1111-5 .\l1' lattte< .\l1-1}. Mevvart. KC, Of rtnaii of the board of g-wvernors 01 Litivcrsit)". a: C(1iltl~'\‘l to the Com- , T1111 {gist of the contplziitit is that All‘: 9M1 1i"1 i-" a Conservative. ".'\'cen1inglv." says the 1 l .- ‘i *1 the zippoititincitt was niadc "to F1111’? 1' liriiitcifs" 1"1-ii.~1"i1"t1cr‘." This is a curious‘ 111' rattling it, sittcc. if there has lteen a111- ..; 1 1' con-entice. it lllllnl have bccn oit tlzc ,-' 1111,10 111111 made the appointment. . ..1i1irh and nnashanicd in its partisanship. the l-Hening chronicle L‘<')lllf‘§>(‘.\' that the idea of a 'l‘o1-1~ Cfiflllitfl on a Grit Commission is “politi- callv tirr-ncrviug.” “One wonrlcrs," it says darlclv. "who is responsible for these things. The. nevi; F/lilliivl for tlte Commission has 11o peer ant-l few equals in legal training and abilitj‘ l he i= ltighlv capabltxntrtr do 11c place otir corn- 1 mete“ eutirelv lipoii the ltiisis ‘to the victor be- - i 11111 it bits ltrtck to the trarli tiort 111' , 111 the struggles of the past and to uhat th se Liberals who ntade the part)’- stood rtnd ltattlctl for." l The Fasteru Chronicle. at anv rate. scents to ' ltri\_r-~no doubt as to what 1111-.‘ Rowell (ioittnzis- 11:11 lonqw 1hr ~1~1»tl~'. "Buy A Poppy” Starting llondav and coittitiuing until Re- mertibrance Day. ihe Canadian Legion Poppy Sale campaign will he on. and all oitr citizens, young and old. will be expected to “do their ltit." 111' rcspotirlinq t11 this ntodcst appeal on he- '11.'t1t' of lllCillliiVlhilfltl 11:11" \'t‘l(‘l‘Zlll\. Tltt" 11111111)’ l-‘LIllTl has been the itirutns of distributing (711m- fort=1r11~rl vieces-ities in many ltotttr-s thiwwiighoiil (Iintrla. \1 hose lifFflfldvlliilFfs, by reason of tlteir mire, are ltanrlicapped plrvsicallv. The. 1-.;~1;1i~~ themselves are llllitlt" in Yetcraft shops, 1111-1 111.1131" sale is conditctcd by volunteer work- ers who feel it to be a privilege as \1\'(‘ll as a rlutv to participate in this l‘l10\‘(‘lll(‘lll, The. (fan- adian 1.0111111. which conditcts the cantpztigit in coittutemorate its existence. and to mark the . - ,1, ~ ~. act spOt whori- the first McIntosh grew. 11th statunent ivas surely circutttstatttizil enough, yet the only comment the New York 13011111111101" ,1-11i1l-] niake was the somewhat criidgging "id- 111i<~i1111 that "even if it did originate iii Cau- ada. the klcliitrtsb has heroine one 11f the lead- itij-I iarictics of New York Nate." '1 Editorial Notes 1 Bfailztm Curie born. ' * 1K There should be comparative peace iii Europe ~ - ' ' i‘ 1 ‘ ‘ 1 '. ittitil atter the celebration ot hetttcmbtaiice D1) IF >11 l? i‘ For the fifth time in succession. a cow 01111- (d bv M1. T Tluuiipsoit, Portland, Australia. has Ltivcti birth to t\\'iil.~‘. Tihoinpsoti says 11 should be a world r1‘C111'11- n; 1r 1v >11 There is ntunov in ahtttiintitii evidently, for .\fr. Alvah K. Lawrie, of '.l.‘ll0ll1‘1iS\'l1l€. (1-11 ltcad of the Aluminum Company thcrc._11~"15 11311 an estate of $14,000,000. the bulk of which £1105 t1) his widow. 1 18137. ti‘ i tilt’! Tle large attendance at the funeral of 111111- t'ic-."1. 11'. l-lugltcs yesterday testified to the rc~ spect in which hc was held in both city tilid crlitnlrvt where iti tuldition to 111-111;.’ 51, l’1""¢t1‘~i""1 ‘mlitiebur I111 was a physician and bu>iitc>s cori- stiltant as ivell. >t¢¥>k=k lt recalls thc old Scottish pioneers, who were driven off their farms iii the homeland to make room for deer, to read the advertisement fit that progressive Englishman, Mr. Sydney Rati- ittau, who has been driven off his farm at Stati- hope by the Campbell Goverinticnt to intilic room for a National Park. 1r =11 >1: 1v Priiitc Minister King states ilcfinitely and \\'llllf1iil. equivocatiitu that whether the Govern- ment go to the country before the ci1d1 of their five year tcrnt “will 111111111111 upon what trill littppcn (luring the. inteiim", which, 11t.'1tig1_1'1~ tcrprcierl means only a war would prevent 111111 taking advantage 11f the llppositiotfs present urtprepzirctlitess. =1< 1v Professor Arthur" Lehman (ioodltart. foritier- 1y of Yale University. has just been elected (Ihairiuan of the Law Faculty of Oxford U111- versity. 'l‘ltis is the first time that any A111~ 1k 1k Canada. i: only one unit" of the British Empire Fervice League. .\'ext week, through League. effort=. poppies will he sold to fellow llrili-"h- ers in 01111-1" corner of the globe. Dr. Stewart's Address ericriu or, for that matter, any foreigner 1111s laclticved this distinction at Oxford. 'l'hc 1111s‘. 11~11rrespr1it1leiits roughly to that of (l('lill 0f 1111’ i law school of a Canadian iit1ivei".s.ity. >1= >11 111 >11 Mr. l). Kirkivood, Labour iiiettibci" of tlic Thur-rhv. .\'r1\". ti, is Rcittentbiuttiee l'1.-1_v. the r1" of the Armistice which brought 1111- \\'1—,r]rl \\'ar to an end in 11118. The whole 111' next itcel; has fittingly ltccndesiggitaterl Peace \\'er-k. and ."i nation-uirlc campaign is being i11- aiigttraird to emphasize the futility of thr- stif- frrinj; and \a1"t"ifi1"r-. which \\'ar inevitably 1'11- tails. 1 lit ll.'~ connection :u"ratigeiiieitts have bten 11111111" bv tlic l.11.l1.l"i. for an address to be 111'- l-xirittl lv-re r111 'l‘t1e.-‘dav evening, .\'11v. o, in British Parliament, deplnriitg the ltoiising cott- ditiotis in tilasgoiv said, “No wonder 1111‘- 1711b!‘ 1 of \Vinrls0r said when lic saw’ such conditions. ‘ ‘it makes inc almost ashamed that I am an litig- ilislttnztnh" Perhaps that is why the Duke quit 1111s job, and is now interesting himself in Cer- 111111 and Anieiicati housing conditions. liar Ii.\'1'1'i_\' hills are pi"ovet"lii:i1l_v grccit. 1v 11- 111 1r \\'1i:1t is rlaintcd to be the perfect English tclc- phone hell is incorporated iii the 1938 telephone, to appear on _l.'illllill'_\' 1. lt ivas chosen by It F‘ 1‘1"11i1'~ 11:111. l1_\" l)t', ll. 1,. $tc1vart. of 1111- I c-pqqjqllt- 1-11g;|1_1¢1] jufy of 11111siei;1t1s"_ nflei- livt) 1111-1 11 l'-1~11'-r,~:t_\. ubose subject. will be itt ‘to-tr; 11f tests with 11111111111114 bell metals". It is lrH-iuu 111th the l'11'CZl.\llIll, .\ silver co1l1-e'i11i1_-,l1-.1~1-i111-¢[ its‘ having a pleasing silvery iiotc of 11111 l1‘ 1.1.111 1-1 (l<‘ll'1'i\' cx11¢11~c>1 lt ls zuiticipai- 111 -diinu pitch, but zivcrzige volume, which can ‘"11 111"" 1111‘ 111"1‘1111.J: “'111<'11 011ml‘ "1 3-3“ 11-1“- be heard well but which will ticver iittike a iicr- will b» \crv largely attended. Those who can do so. tl1eref111"r-. should arrange to go early. llr. .<te\vart is well known in ('.'l1."i1"lottcto\vn. both pPl'~‘1I1l‘l.'tll\' and through his widely ltroad-y east rarlio tall» 1111 international ziffziirs. llc is 1, at all tintcs an eutertaitiing speaker, and bisl adtlrew in ("l1:1i"l11ttetrt\vit ticxl week" should‘ pro-re o1‘ ext-optional interest and importance. A Tammany "Dud" \\'l_11l=* 1'5. \. l‘ostituister-lir-neral Jiilllvs" A Farlev, the big patronage man for the \\'a.<111i1.¥!" {on Adntinislratirtn New Deal, helped .\lr. .\l:i-‘ hour-v in the New York hlavoral campaign. lic (1,311, not 50011‘ to commit the Roosevelt Atlmiitis- Qration to 111.11 course. B111 he catne close to it. "New ‘York (itv in the next four years." 11C said, "will receive a substantial share of the fed- 5-31 “bodies for shim clearance and low-cost 1,...,_.,',,;;, 1 .1111 1-11111-1111-111 111111 judge hlaltottcy has the abilily- lo expend this money wisely." hlr. l-Iti-lr-v did not ‘sill’ that .\la_\'nr La Giiardta \~.-1"1i1l-l not‘ be a wi-e spender. Astute politican. he inferred tlrzt although it “as certain a good ‘mnoiitit of federal money ivas going to 11c W11! to New York, it ivas highly probable that 111111711 more would be forthcoming if therc was surety that it \\'0lll(l he spent by the 'l‘amntai1_v cari- rlidaic rather than by a mayor who makes a boast of his political itidependeirce. Knowing vous subscriber jump. At the Research Dc- partment whcic"“tlfé"lesi's"\vcrc carried out 111010 are machines for subjecting suspected telephones to “lifc" tests, and there is a machine that hangs the earpieces about to ensure that they are "oof against the ltad-teitipcred subscriber 11hr) flings them doivii if he ltcars that his number is engaged. 11- hlr. hlario listrarla, who has been surveying potato conditions in the U.S.:\. and lierc in be- t 1k 101 W, half of the government Mendoza Province 111111 the Biienos Aires Pacific Railroad, reports that about 400,000 crates of seed potatoes of Catt- 1 adian and New linglanrl origin are being ship- ped this year and that they represent about $1,- j 000,000 value. The problem for the Argentine , grower, where there has been a potato fal111l1¢1 , Mr. ir-Slfiillll says, is to obtain greater acreage , yields and this is only possible by using certified ‘ seed, imported yearly front such countries where carcfiillv selected seed is obtainable and guaranteed by’ scientific institutions. .-\s the principal coiniticrcial crop in Argentina is plant- ed in October, North American seed ltas been ar- riving too late for general use, but if shippcrl before Oct. 15 it arrived iii time for Novcntbr-r planting. To obtain, in illfly. Stlfficicnt fifil general stock of certified seed for general com- mercial planting. about 500,000 crates 0f I10 pounds arc needed . , .. 1r . _ .\1i effort has actually bccn made. s11_\s C1111 . the sitiithcrn shore of Lake Ontario." lloivevci‘. . A resident of Iroquois. -‘ once 1 llOlEl 1111111" WAY There have been seasonal de- cltties in some lines ot" busuiess. The CUTLBUDIEHL in $l€€l oruers in the UIHDCCI states last week, offer- ed B-S one excuse tot" the general selling. 1S attributed to heavy earner buying in anticipation of price rls- es. 11. ls true that the rulings and ‘tiolicies oi the RO05€V9lL_Aflllllnl.$-1 1 trutioii have kept people guessitig,1 ‘while the increase i.u margin re- .quu"einents tins reduced iradltig and made the ttiarket mot"e vulner- able when a. crack started. Yet the trash has coincided with President k Roosevelt's announcement. that "the return of prosperity" means less uoxcriiitieiit expenditure liereatter on re 1:1‘ activities. The combination o: oputnisin and pessmisnt doesn't. - make serise.~—'l‘oronto 'Globe and i Mall. ll the elxpericnce of Abyssinia 1 sliovzed anything, it. showed that. illVCll the most effective saiictlottsl ' take u long time to operate and that 3 they lflllel be backed by the threa". of armed force. Wlio is to provide . the force? Btltzilti alone c0u.d not, _1 even it site would; strategically, we tare at a hopeless disadvantage ln l the Far East. Out" only IJOhSIblC ally is the United States, to: of the otlisr League powers oniy France has a fleet capable of lighting .n the Poodle, {illtl ravines \\.ll certain- ly no‘. send it there in tne present state of Eilhlipl‘. liven if we oli- tuittcd a promise oi Attierican sup- port we would 1.1tl'l ltuve i0 send a large part of our own fleet to the P2111" East, for we ctttiizoi tight Jana’. ivlili Livo cruisers and ha f a dozen tleetrrrvers. What ivould then hap- pen "ii the Alcditetsr. 5:111? There ~ tsmperature and pulse utas a slight. In Jan: ID. Brion. MD. dill‘ 0H1‘ YOUR "FEET WHEN YOU FEEL A CHILL u A physician arose one holiday tnornlng, had breakfast, and walk- ed down the street a Iew blocks to make some necessary purchases for the day's holiday trip. He was gone about three mln- -11tes and when he returned he re- tnoved his clothing and got into bed. The family were surprised and disappointed. but lie simply said, ‘I feel all right but on my way uoivn the street I had two or three severe chills: there's somethlng wrong and I‘tn getting off my feet until I find out wltat- is causing the chills " As his pulse was 100 and h‘s temperature 102 degrees, he sent for a. neighboring physician to drop around. Hi5 physician found the pulse 130. the temperature 1021-’.- and blcod pressure up about 20 points, but. 11kg the physician ltittisell’. he was unable to find any trouble as tliere was no pain attywlierc, no nausea or vomiting All that ivas fiund in addition to the increased alter all, still a ct" s in Spain. It. is argued c0tivi1ielttg._ that Japan " could no; sustain a tttajor war for six months owing to her economic weakness, bu: six tiiotiilis would not. b: necessary; if Japan could last tzvo weeks. there ivottld be trouble in ELll'0[lC.-.\’l‘.1llCl‘lt3Sl.Cl' Guard eri. Tlic London [lei-aid reports than the Mufti ot Jerusalem, who tied to Syria from his lild 11g place in the lllozcuc of Omar, is going t0 seek the ltclp of Alussoliit in harassing the British zidtiiiiiisttzittoti 0t Pales- tine. It is not surprising that. lie should tutu to Il Ditcc, but. any open zissistrttice would be liiglilyl protocol ve 11ml will only be given it‘ lie, \1"itlt his associates in Germany anti Japai. are now prepared to set the world ablaze-Momma Trans- cript. Di. l-‘redeilrk James Alway, noted agroiiomist, tells an Edmonton llil€l‘\'lP\\'Pl‘ of his couvictioti that the cycle ot city years which has ruined prairie grain lands in recent ytats is ovri" and that beginti 11g urxi. year we tiiav cxpcct a success- inii of bountiful crops. “I am pre- paiec to state without. ltesitat-ioti ine sayst that; next, feat" is likely to be one of the ivettesr, most. pro- ductive crop years in decades." About the saute time Majoi H. G. L. Strange, an Alberta wheat, champ- loii before he iveiit in exclusively for research work with the Searle Gtala Company, made known ltls opirron that. rust; has disapmnred fioni antoiig the wheat growers’ datigeroiis enemies. _- Calgary Albertan. Governments, through efficient zidtiilttlsiratioti oi wise laws, or ilnough sane exertiflve acts. may do much 11o help us. but. the notion that, i1iosll_v' through llio itse of tin- Jtllllflfl money gathered from some ntyrslerious éOlllTt‘, they may shower its with blessings at will, plantilng us all into prosperity, making out" needs, hopes, ambitions, passions, impulses, prejudices and sorrows their cotistzitit care, is the essence of the irrational. Ycl. .1, is a notion that. grows. In this age of swift. change and of loud demands for swltter, all tlie writers 11nd till Utop- las everyvrlicre or at. any time have been outdone, and no man with a panacea. need ever lack an audience. Never before ltave so malty among us been so eager to listen. to take the prophets at tltcli" \vo1"d.-Ot.ia\\a Jcurttal. ‘The problem of the rcciilivist. is largely a problem of the attor- treulinent 0t tho prisoner. It. ls not. enough to give n mun convict/ed ol crime a tirtsott term iiiitf zurn liiiii loose aga t1. The paroled 0t" dis- clturgm convict is at a decided dis- advantage wlien lie cmcrigcs f1"oin the shautiw of the prisons walls. He has bcei-iosltevltored uvltlle in prison; now lie is tlirovsu on his own t"c- sources. 1t, is not easy tot" ii man who has once gone uroiig to g1: :ttraiglit. Th0 wotid scents tigtiliist. liitii He is rcgtirrtcd as u jatllilrcl and ilnors are 1110:1011 to l1i111. The easy Lilllltl s 1o cirlli back t") his old haunts and tact-c into crime again. Vizncouvet" Province. President lwoscveltfs announce- ment of a somewhat broader for- eign policy for the United Status than has prevailed, officliily, for sotne years past, seems to have created some little furore in sec- tions of the American press. There is 110 occazslcit, luiwevei", for tiny surprise. lit spite of loud protesta- t. ons from certain political quarters about. “splendid isolation" and “tieu-' trttlity" and other attractive-sound- ing but impracticable and, con- sequently, tneaitlitgleas terms, no one knows better than the politic- ians and the press how impossible strict. neutrality would be-Brant- foril Expositor. 1 The lemons o! that. swift mobil- izutou of French and British fight- lng power in the "Italian lake" has not been lost on either Berlin or Rome. Significantly, German naval quarters termed it. a Franco-Brit,- tsh “rehearsal for an unspecified future emergency" entirely unrelat- ezl tio the Spanish conflict. Italy, ob- viously surprised and dlscomflted by the briisque rejection 0t lt-s and Gcrtniinyls objections, sought to rc- gain the lost. advantage. Its formal statement on the work of the con- ference was a notice to Great Brit- ain and France that, the Italian fleet would co-operate it permitted to do so on a basis of "absolute equality” with that o! "any other power." At last the democratic pow- ers had spoken a language under- stood by the dictators-New York Tlmel." . 111111312" - redness of the throat, The physician patient remained bed one week, during which time the pulst. rate continued at 130 and the temperature at 102 degrees. What was the came of this blitttding and lnctrasrng pulse ant nigh temperature? The cause was never discovered. but something -food, waste product-s tn the in- testine, or other substance ln the blood-was poisoning the system and the chills gave the patient such timely wanting that; he was off ltls feet five minutes after- wards attd remained in bed until pulse and temperature were down to normal. When the blood is absorbing poison from any source there is an instant need for more heal, when the temperature of the interior of the body rises rapidly a sensation of elillltness results since the out- side surface of the skin which is getting rid of heat has a. lower lfillherfil-ure than the inside. This coldness or cookness is immediate- 1Y Wlcgritplted to the brain which sends impulses to the little blood vessels of the skin to take 111 m- hold more blood. This extra blood flushes the akin and a feeling of 111111111111 1911111005 1111 1111111. Remember that a chill is a defin- lte 51st: of Eflme klnd or polson‘ng, and Nature is fighting it: oft‘ by M61111“: and Temllnllng 11911:. Get - $16.50 and Guards styles. at this low price... __/-/_ REAL Overcoat Values To start the season selling we have in- cluded in this lot many coats that were worth dollars more. Stlvertones, Elysians, Tweeds, shown in Ragians When you seen these coats, examined the qualities of the materials you wonder how such Coats can be l C 0A TS By Fashion - Craft OVERCOA T ‘ DA Y8 Thesel. We have planned to make fhls- the biggest overcoat month this store has ever known, we have stocked the store with a fine line of eoatr and have marked them at unbeatable prices... A wealth of patterns such as few shops offer. ..Sniart patterns as well as the stand-bye... topped off with the excellence of tailoring that. is the final distinguishing mark of all Fash- ton-Craft Garments each an outstand- ing value at. its price... ‘Z0 111 $35 “We urge you to see these fine coats" s18. 1 have fine will sold “See this great Overcoat value" s. » w“ ixsrJ'-n<.1ayfle6vvvm-lvw ,1 .6. .1931 TWEEDS MELTONS Men! Settle your Overcoat problem this easy inexpensive way! believe this to be the greatest Overcoat value in town. spect those Meltons and Tweeds “you will like their smart appearance”. Raglrtns and Guards —- - - - _____ _- ... ._ $13.50 $15 We ..come in and in- off your feet when you lee] a cl1’1l. "d? SQUAW SUMMER November days are mild with lilnt- ed ram, And winds, that might-be winter. _ toothed, are mellow, While Ieaves, lke yellow lanterns, light; the lane And tn the yard chrysnnthemums are yellow. November skies keep something of June's blue, _ And from the woods a featured elf is flinging Handfulls of crystal song to people who, A month ago. bade farewefi to such singing. Yet. in the frost-tanned grass. the crickets grieve- They know this June mirage brings death the faster. This false Squaw Summer, pitiful reprieve Proserpine had won from her cruel master. l —John Himloti. MAKE BOYS AIIt-MINDED cars TOWN —(CPH) —One thousand South African school- boys aze to be given airplane fllghLs as part of a scheme to pro- mote uir-tnindedncss financed by Sir Abe Bailey's gifts to civil A TTENTION will! BREEOERS 1 ti M N0 ting!" niacin“ i PIG - WORM 1 by ugln] the molt effective ’ remedy on the market; Mac ’s Pig-worm - Tonic Powder ll will thoroughly nbollsh all true: ol worms, and irnllfll" the health or your herd- Price 35cts. per lb. Don't delay. Order by Phone or Mall. All order: promptly attended Co. Phone 315 ‘I'll! TWO MAGS Prescriptions A Qpeoinllzm Behind The Headfines lit Ottawa By Dean Wilson The recent dramatic collapse of the stock markets throughout Canada has shown to Ottawa that the man on the street; in this country does not; realize that: there is a direct relationship between Wall street and the Canadian bond markets, and also between these business indicators and the general economic and industrial life of this Dominion. The vast majority of the peo- ple of Canada are not. interested in Wall Street or any other stock markets, for one reason or another. but mainly because they have no motley invested therein. Yet, it is B1 fact. that a great collapse on these markets may have extremely serious reactions ln the business life of the land as. was witnessed in the famous crash of 1929 which inaugurated the depression that. is regarded by some economists in Canada as the worst tn the his- tory of this Dominion. Now the question is raised by everyone whether the recent mar- ket crash and present nervous state of these enterprLses is not. really 1m indication that Canada Ls on thc threshold of another" great economic depression, and this ls s. problem which ltns rllvlrt~ ed the experts into two camps. One group ls optimistic to tit»- ex- treme, while the other is pessimis- tic. The optimistic experts state that the depression which started with the market crash in 1929 is grad- ually releasing its hold, and since 1934 business has been on the road to recovery. T111; pessimistic school‘ of thought is that. an artificial re- ' covery took plaei, in the last couple .9! 128m. mainly through the pub- lic works efforts of the varloug governments and through the d9. mend for 11 Production of material; that In required for wai- prgpflfa. tions throughout the world, but that the depression which started in I939 has never been passed and the economic lite o1’ Canada is still threatened seriously; by 1111s en. emy. ‘Ilwrefore, everything b11115 down to one question. Are We on the "retreat-t..- -- - -l!g'l( angina" - _{. “ "' threshold of 11511111115011 a CUDMORE another great. depres- sion? Business leaders answer in a mixed chorus of loud voices, yes and no. Statistics indicate 111111 11.111111. business. finance and industry is slowly but surely improving since 1929, with no marked recession. save the recent. big crash in the stock markets, and the funda- mental bnckground oi Canadian enterprises is sound and secure, which pictures the whole situation in an entirely different light than the one which described the pre- depression life 0t the country in the "boom" years before 1929. Even at the beginning ot the cut"- rent year there was an actual scarcity of certain commodities in the Domttilon and consequently factories and businessmen had reason to feel secure. Steel plants had to work overtime to supply the» demand for this product. Can- adian pulp and paper mills ob- tained better prices for their pro- ducts. Mining enterprises saw actual prosperity, and there was -a great. demand for Canadian pro- ducts trom all nations of the world who wanted nickel, copper and other metals for the object of manufacturing ammunltlons and W111 equipments, and Canada sat- countryhiffiicifin these products. All these Canadian products were used by the Federal Government as a means to an end. and they opened the door for many trade treaties with various nations 0t the world for a large variety ot other Canadian articles. That. was the basic situation ol the economic life of the Domin- ion at the beginning of this year However, during the last. spring season a crash took place on the markets. 11nd soon a nervous ten- sion overtook certain businesse- in this country. Steel plants wet‘: slowing down in their operations Pulp and paper factories were 111 serious mood again, and they were discussing the possibility of work- ing less and less in the event that stock would not: be necessary 1 the economic chance that. an over- supply may result. Likewise, r - trenchmen: was seen in mam" Canadian enterprises. It was act- ually the beginning of the pre- sent market crisis. Many reasons have been advanc- ed for this tense situation. One Broup of expert. thought holds that. labour troubles explain every- thing. They state that “strikes (29%. 6* . bflgveryone ngu.u_11_e__t.t1 your}; (Continued 1111 page o. A Mr. [ea Dull Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured ‘Pea Use Orange Pekoe lea B RA HMIN We offer a complete and Casualty lines. lion. " Offlcesz-Charlottetown, ..1~§1111.1~ce_ The Modern Safoguardof lloino aniklliiiiieeéw" lines oi’ Insurance — Marine, Quotations furnished without obliga- llYllOMAll & OO., 11111111211 1 J. O. HYNDMAN, Manager The Oldest Insurance Agency in Prince Edward Island dependable service in all Fire, Life and all Summer-side, Monte!"