l I'll‘. ‘vflfilfl LU I Let A HOLMAN‘ Stove or Furnace Keep Your Home Warm And Comfortable! We Gan Supply the Proper Heating Equipment For Every Need, At LOWEST PRICES! ’ “Homestead ” Wood Heaters Similar to the “Air 'l‘iuht“. Has cast iron top and bottom. T “Silver Moan ” Base Heaters ‘Con-tructetl to tgire great heat and to hold the tire U!“ "hm , Plain N0. 2Z2 — — 12.25 i‘ i‘ ‘ i Fancy N0. 22 — -.- 18.25 INDIRECT DRAFT Plain N0. 25 —- — 11.20 N“. H _ _ _ _ ___ 39m) ljllll-(QY 1S0. -— — , N0. 12 _ _ _ _ _ “m0 llaiii I\o. -0 —— — lti._a Cabinet Heaters iWell made Big llurly Ilezitcrs i I i ‘i hezflllll- zihundance of “Air 9! i ~ _ H. ‘ ‘ 1x0. 1...i mini and woof] HEATERS blitck_ for coal - - - No. 60 Open Front. ‘ Coal or Wood - - - - iliuilt of heavy blued steel and fitted with steel inner 38.50 _ gets t .- -.~.-\'-1--~-r-.1W.f . . 'l l‘. I \IV\' N UUAKUIAN i DlSEASI-ID TONSILS AND BYE I INFECTIONS i I have spoken before of an ex- , pert air plot who began to make poor landings. On reporting to his medical officer it was found that he had infected tonsils. After the tonsils were removed his landings , were perfect. i Unfortunately, unless an tlhdl- vidual has a sore throat from time to time, he does not suspect his tonsils of causing trouble; though small, they may contain pus which poisons the blood stream. Dr. M. Martyn Kafka. Brook- lyn. N.Y., in Medical World says: "There may be such complicat- ed cases from infected tonsils as JCLHE arthritis (rheumatism), .it.‘Llll.' middle ear infection; acute heart disease. acute‘ bronchitis, anci acute sinusitis. lf the infect- ed tonsils are not removed. the acute complication tbronchitis. sinusitis, inr llc ear disease) may become chrc '- and iluis make a periodic invalid of the patient." Among the eye conditions found by Dr. Kafka due to iiiircted ton- sils are inflammation of the eye- tiids and eyeball, interference with the lens thus affecting the eve- sight, and disturbances in color vision. "In order to test properly an eye disease it is not only necessary‘ to test the effect of treatment on the eye disease itself but one must also search for the possible point of in- fection elsewhere." Patients are urged to get rid of this other in- fection before the eyes are treated. There are. however. patients tvho refuse to have their infected ton- sils removed. In such conditions the treatment for the eye condi- tion fails. When the infected tonsils are large and the patient says that he frequent colds and sore throats and that usually he tired and WEilk, he is lliillflll)’ wil- ling to have the tonsils removed. i Wlicn the infected tonsils are not large and sore throats do not oc- cur often, the patient is usually . No. 05. Open Front, . v . _ lining. i t oal 0r \'v 00d - - - - 34.95 .-::t"tu..=;.":'.. 31.00 Ziiiiii‘. ZZZ I ' ‘ ‘ ‘Iii’. . ,,. - - _ _ ‘got;- lliiood - - - - - - 24-inch size — — — — 5.50 i foti: {lined - - - - - - Q“ "' i‘ 9) “Quebec H EATE RS Well built heaters. not- ed for their, good heat. suitable for homes, schools, halls, etc. “ Hot Blast” Fitted to burn coal e5 Grates 21.50 “Herald” i Flffllllflii ' No. 310 Grate BOX stove i ; .'o. l0 Grate 1 For Wood i "copper" for Cozil i The "(lid ltfilllthle“, N0. 50 22-inch Black 7 Splen did for schools i Ba-qkei 6'71"“ " M‘ i w tnuunnv stoves Yo. l'_’il Enterprise - - V4.37.- No. liil Enterprise - - 21.50 "Franklin ” No. 12s _ - --15.t;5, H E A T E R S ii : : 3112‘? t N1» 1e — — — 1w No 2s _ _ - 10.50 i jf-ltli". 7, — — "" — - 7-§5 No. 165 _ _ _ 22,35 Gives mt- effect of a cheer- xi» s5 - _ - 22.33 i Chm" — — - * -' 9-°°_ iul opt-n fireplace. "'l‘ll’ ~'l‘tll‘ "CHEERFCL" 17.95 25.95 “Radiant” Globe H E A T E R S Complete with Drum Install An Enterprise Furnace For Complete Heating Satisfaction ! 'A lasting investment in Heating Comfort, A sizg suitame i No. l0 _ _. -- - —li..‘l5i v for every home-scientifically built to economize on fuel. _\,,_ 1;; __ _ _ __, _ 2L5‘) (lur furnace men have had years of experience and can Y" H __ _ _ _ 27 _0 give you better service so that your furnace will do a satis- - - — --'> actoiy heating Job. Lets talk over your heating prob- lems and show you how to SAVE. Heat Your Home The MODERN WAY ‘A/ith These New. Modern Di! Burning Heaters No Coal! No Ashes No Kindling! No Dirt! No Smoke! No Dust! No Fuss! Just Clean, Steady, Even Heat Day And Night! Forget all about carrying coal and emptying ashes. install one of these new Oil Burning Heaters and en- joy real comfort and economy. These heaters burn cheap fuel oil and can he instantly adjusted to any degree of heat desired. See these new heaters now and let us explain their many superior features. A Size and Price For Every Home 19.95, 47.00, 57.00, 67.00 69.00, 72.00, 89.00 I SUMMERSIDE cuaatorrnrowu i i unwilling to have the tonsils re- ‘Imovcd. These are the patients who are most frcnucntlv in danger iduriiuz tin eye infection: pus can lusually be squeezed out of these ‘small tonsils In these cases Dr. liKafka advises a v-cry careful .search for other possible points ‘of infection so that the patient finally realizes that the infected tonsils are the one and only cause of his eve condition. “Infected tonsils should be re- moved whcn a chronic eye condi- ‘ tiorl is present" I MT. lll'(‘!'.-..'.-\N tvo. en's ‘ lNF-TITUTE The Mt. Binlianan W. l. met. at the home of Mrs. Joltn Nichol- ;son on Oct. llth, for their rsgtilar monthly mes-tine. The prc-itlcnt in the. chair with an attendance of six ntenibcrs and one visitor present. Meeting onenrcl with the Ode follvvrt-d by the C c. Min- utes of last. meeting read and ap- proved. Committees eavc reports and new ones appointed —St~lic.ol. Mrs, John Morrison. Sick. .\ Donald lVfacKitinon and M Peter Macdonaltl. Roll ctill \\'fl\ 1~. - spondcd with 4i “Thanksgiving Verse.“ Next place of meeting at the liqme of Mrs. J- D. Murchi- son. Report of School Health lrspec- tion was rcad and discussed. ‘Iiielicstcss. put on an inlzisest- ing contest —First prize, Nfrs. Kenneth MacRue - Consolation. Mrs, Mitrchison and Mrs. Morrison Tied. , The meeting closed with the i King, followed by the usual pleas- ant social hour. Mrs. Nicholson served (itiinty rofresliiiicnts. CONSIDER YOUR. CORbETS Consider your corsets. What do you do about liicin‘! vValk into the shop and buy a belt uii the count- er approximating to your measure- ments? That. won't do. A corset should be tried on iii front of a long minor, and when you are try- ing it on move in it, bend, stretch. twist yourself. See that it is not only comfort- able but that it controls your fig- ure in the right places, and gives you that stib.le, evcn line upon which almo 1 any frock will hang correctly nil look elegant. Some woiiiin like an "all-in-one" corselet, as this, under scanty undies, gives the best line. Get two or three while you are at it. and never weal‘ one pair longer than it week without laundering, Contrary to general conviction, washing lenglhctis the life of (‘0l‘$€l.5~lt is wvearing them wcck in, week out. | that trauscs the elastic to rot and |sag—. and the whole garment to be zcoiitrtillctl by your hlTilPL‘, instead of the slmpc of the garment con- trolling you. "YOUR UNDIES" Having got a perfect foundation see that you build it on with equal t care. Make or buy panties on the jbias, as tlt‘s way they fit more snugly across the hips and don‘t. | wrinkle. Also. you can make a bins- ciit pantie from as little as a yard 'of material. 'I‘hiiik what a wealth of lovely silks and satins a limited purse can run to on so small a yardage! | Make peiticoiits, too You need | about two-and-a-half yards of crepe de Ch ne plus lace and sew- ing silk. Ge going and make your- self hnlf-a-dozen. Ponder to your personal prefer- ences in the matter of under- clothes. If you're the kind of per- son who has a weakness for frills and furbelows. but your type de- mands to be "tailored" indulge yourself over your undies. Have thcm in flowered mater- ials, with flicks and gathers. or trim them up with lace and little ribbon bows. If you're the “fliiffy“ tvpe who envies your tailored sister, have your undies made or plain heavy silks, simply cut and _ untrimmed. - | ,_ nusv WEEKEMD fences varying from looting coal causing grievous Hi3 J harm in the busiest weekend loc pOIloe have had for years. NORTH SYDNEY. N. S, -— Slit- teen persons were arrested for ni- btxiila nut cnimici PAVED HAY run MilRE BUSINESS Deputy Defence Min- ister Affirms Re- sponsibility For Agreement. tC.P_ By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA. Oct l7 — Declaring the Bren gun contract paved the way for British wax-plane orders and the brtrigln of other business to Canada. Maoi- General L. R. LaFlecho Deputy Mlniater of Na- tional Defence. toda affirmed udith pride his responsibiity for advan- gilrig the agreement to a conclu- l1 0 . The Deputy Minister, completed six days on the witness stand at the inquiry into the John In lls Company contract to produce ‘I, Bren guns for the Canadian Gov- ernment before Mr. Justice H. H. Davis of the Supreme Court of Can. tida. Appointment o! the judge as a Royal commissioner to Jrobe all phases of the contract f0 owed an attack on the contract by 13mg. Col. (ieortze Drew of Toron‘o in an article, published in MacLetirrs l tittgu "iiii;;' magazine. At fldj0ill_‘llf‘lllllll. until Monday General Lalleclie had completed lll5 evidence in chief and been cross-examined briefly by Aime Geoffrion, counsel for the Inglis Company. On Monday he will be cross-examined by C01. Drew, prob. ably at. length. “I look the responsibility and I would do the smite again," declared General LnFlechc after he had askcrl permission to mcke a state- men‘ on the approval of the Inglis contract by the iinterde itmental committee on the contro of profits in armament contracts Oihcr 'I‘cnders Suggested Hc was chahanan of the commit. tee and one of the iimtteis raised by other members when the Inglis contract W88 under review in Jan- utiiy February and March. 193B, was a proposal to invite tenders 0m a selected list. of firms other than the Inglis Company. Gent-nil LaFleche ivas opposed to this and took responsibility for re- commending the award of the con- tract to the Inglis Company. with- out tenders on a cost plus basis, "I_ am On solid ground in every Particular," he declared. adding that or ecomonic reasons, because of the pressing need for guns a.‘ an early date and because of precedents in both Canadian and Br tish prac- tice this was the DWDH course. The witness declared he was nev- er in a position to call for tenders on the Bren gull until January. 1938. because utitil llirn he did not know that the British War Office was prepared t0 buy 5.000 Bren guns in Canada, By having bo h or- ders placed wit-h the same firm the capital cos: of setting up the nrc- essary manufncttii-ing equipment could be spread over a producdon 0f 12,000 nuns, thereby reducing the 00st per gun as a: illllSl a prt duc- tion of‘ 5.000, Genet-ll Lsil-‘lcche said the to have called for tenders then. would on the authority 0f Sir Harold Brown. Master General of tho Ordnance iii the United King- dom, have jeopardized the British order as it wcu d have delayed inat- fcrs several months while other firms wcro making studies prepar- ory to stibniission of tenders. Sir Harold felt there had been too The arrangement by which the two governments co-opernted in re- gard to the Bren gun paved the way for the British air misszoti to Canada. he added. and opened tip it prospect of a real. munitions in- dusfry in {Jana ll with the United Kingdom co-operating and thus obtaining sources of supply remov- ed from danger of attack. other Orders Mentioned Possibility of British orders for other supplies from Canada was mentioned iii ati exchange of let- ters between Sir Harold and Gen- oijnl LtiFlechn l'1 January xvhicli ivas laid before the commissioner. Sir Harold informed ttie Cana- dian official ho was "very anxious the‘. lie should as ii matter of priii- ciple use the firms with which you yourselves aic placing orders." Tirs yen.- iii reference to an interview Sir Harold had with “Mr. Janin, president of llic Montreal Coli- sfriiction Supply and Equipment Ltd." He. added the National Steel Car Company of Canada was gett- ing on well witha British order and he thought it wise to keep them going. In reply General IaBFlCCllC wrote favorably of Mr. Janin and said- tlie department was not, purchasing machinery for his, shop in which shells would be made. He said the contract. awarded the National Steel Cur Company lind raised some big fllllblllflfls amotlg cnmidinn in- (lustrialists and his ntight not be a bad thing. - This exchange followed cables sent to London arising out of the nrccecduigs of the inteidepatttncnt- al commitfce. The committee had n cable sent to the High Coiinnlss-ion- crs’ office in London asking iiifor- ination on the cost of making Bren muis in England and tho War Of- ficels; attitude towards inviting lcn- ders from a selected list of firms. General LaFlcche was opposed to tthe dcspatcli of this message but met the committees vrishcs. At the some time. with the know- ledge of the committee. he sent a personal cable to Sir Harold ex- plaining the se-iip of the committee and its (luties and also stating the Defence Department was satisfied with the Inglis contract as it was submitted to the committee. He did this to avoid misunder- standing on the part of Sir Harold and in his subsequent letter as- sured Sir Harold the representa- tives of other departments on the committee were sincere and there was "no fight between the mem- ers." 0n cross-cxtunination by Mr. 000011011 General LaFlc-clie said the war record of Major James E. Hahn. president or the Inglis Com- glmy. helped to satisfy him of Ma- Or Hahn's loyalty and discretion and fitness to receive confidential information on behalf of the gov. ernment of Canada. Among return- ed soldiers Major Hahn! decor- "$10M. lllc Distinguished Service Order and the Military cross, spoke for themselves. Earlier evidence showed Ma or Hahn had 8011c to England tli letters of introduction to the High Commissioner. bcs baking an m- tree to the war Of ice in November, 1936- 0Y1 Miller Halm’s arrival in London word was received the War Office could not give information ,. i. l iii’ iii iiigiiitiliiiiitii iii t i .41 n. iiil i A cigarette'e chief purpose in" life is to help you over the bumps. Black Cat takes this responsibility very seriously and goes to no end of pains to a . much delay already. ,' smut GAINS unugiiuu IONDON. Oct. 17-—(CP Htivas) -'l‘he strike of porters. ticket puncliers and service employees of the London. Midland and Scot- t-isli rallwa‘ threatened to extend to 6,000 ltllllitllt as workers of the Broad Street lcrntintil voted t0 walk out at midnight. Five thou- sand already are out. _'l‘he strike, u'liicli__startcd __'I‘ues- they might treat Major Hahn a5 having that status. Reviews Part In Contract I" hi8 51X dflyi of testimony Gcneml LaFleche reviewed his ptirt in the Bren gun matter from the ‘time the department first became interested in the Bren gun about 1932. to tliefilttnini! 0f the coiitiuct on March Jl. 1938, but especially the period since Ivlnjoi‘ Hahn visit- ed tie department in the summer "l 1935- 5"“ l1 Kiln Set tip and do- cldcd he could manufacture the weapon, l-or his cross-exaniiiia ioii on Monday Col. Drew asked the Gen_ Atlantic distance calls btrivcci the rlciittrtmem and illn Wm. 0mm. m. C01» G P- Ulflgic. a deptirtntriital officer otfiitlictl to the High cam- mbzsionerk office. in January. Feb- iuarv and Martin and bcwcen Sept, 1 lllld Oct. l0. this ytear, 11°11» J. L. Ralsitm, chief govern- iiiciv counsel, could not. sec the PUFPOSB 0! 1111111911"? into calls in September and October as the con- trtict ivns Slllnctl in March, Col. Drew said he lind questions to ask based upon thciii. The Commissioner said the ques- tions will be relevant and he could not rule Mzainst them until he heard them. i ii mi" t i eral to bring a record (if n11 (1';]]‘.§‘,-_ UCTOBER 18, 1938 with‘ I i i iii 1t ii make sure that every cigarette will soothe rufilcd feelings. Protect your morale. Have a Black Cat package always in your pocket. CARRERAS LTD, LONDON, ENGLAND (EST.llBl)_l_5il YEARS‘ REPIITAIIOH FOH QUALITY clay at St. Pancras station over employment of one non-union ticket chopper, Albert G. William: rapidly developed in other Iondon terminals of the railroad, The non-operating employee! of Euston Station. freight hand- lers at, the Smlthfield Meat ‘Per- .mln.al and Billingsgale Fish Mar- ket, and the Camden Town and Maiden Lane terminals of the line were on strike. totalling 5.000 workers at. the time the Bread Street terminal voted its strike o:- dcr. Meanwhile company officers and officials of the National U11- étén of railwaymen were deadlock- Altliotigh the strike was no: vi- ficiaily sanctioned by the rtnltvay Union. the organization intervened by sending a. note to the company asking them to remove the noti- union ticket puncher or insist that he join the union. Williams has obstinately refused to join the union. Replying to the union note. the London Midland and SCOtllSlI of- ficials did not. categorically" refuse to replace Wllliants but inststdi the issue ovcr the ticket puiiclter was not essential. Since the beginning, the rtiilwal‘ union has sought to discouragi- the strike and ordered the men to re- tiu'n to work. Hostility developed steadily in the ranks. and strikers meeting today officials were hissed and f0 retire from the speakers‘ when they rcporteti on re< negotiations with the (‘lltlllllj :.~. Late this afternoon ‘ti hundred building work~ int: n grievance siinilai the railrtrm’. employees. quit Work on the Air Ministry inlZ project in Berkley‘ and marched t0 Euston to demonstrate their with the strikers. Workers in the Kinds Cl'i">;.~ '1 wrap I z til’ possible strike, but no 1 was made, The company has aside it plain that any striker tvho tut.- ed to return to his post bi‘ ‘"l"°" row would be considered .\"ll-di5‘ charged. S. S. on the Bren sun tinless hc. repre- sented ill" (‘i » "'7 1'0 "rnmcnt 11nd the \Vi\l "hem “IMOGEHE” The S.S. “Imogene” will arrive October 21st from Montreal to load Livestock and General Cargo for Newfoundland. LOWER ‘RATES on all goods. Shaw Steamship Company A. Pickartl 81 00., Agents PHONE 240