oi \ H11 ' or 4. rei c" Pr: l! ' 1r- [rc V‘? -_ _.. _____ .. _ u-e-Qu-“xq qeaJ-Ofln-O». so.-.“ .... . as! one: an“ u as; inumvs-u- ... A» _..,._.-r...v.-._¢-=.s- - - b- Wvs-iw-a-A... 12. -_.;.:::'_"7'.-.uf-»:'..:i-i . PAGE FOUR i'ilE OIIARLOTTETDWII GUARDIAN , lll, I‘. rmm"‘_w' n. A. SI-elflflaflilli "-96?- l-Iilltor and Managing a- - - a"; l Antllclnln Ellllflrl—l'l'lllll Walker and D. ~ I" 9d n d. Mom," "my (founded 1557) 55,00 per year (In advance) e rere viee-Preqldent-J, B, Barnett , ' , the far east. Mr. W. M. Birks, of- IJE C NOTES av nu: wiivi A new light has been thrown up-l on the Chino-Japanese situation in Montreal in an article published in‘ The Coinme LU of the Nation rec-i =-~* ’ttvit,tli"".iif~rt§cr.‘éiffiiirisvi‘ HARLOTTETOWN: GUARDIAN -- ~» i Film Censorship (Exchange) 1 on This newspaper has on severe fact that a film shown throughout Canada must undergo censorship occasions drawn attention to the. ‘"50 "" W" 1'“ “hum “NM m on.“ “d nun?‘ mum entlyattributes the trouble to the riot TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. 1933 ous conduct of. Chinese students. Be stating during the commencement exercises of Northeastern University 11-! 51134118: “It is the ‘half-baked’ and riotous students class of China who are largely responsible for the PAVING THE WAY, CAMPAIGN FUNDS ' I-Iow some political campaign ‘funds are raised was shown in the tBeauhamois investigation at Ot- ltewa. last winter. Both M8101‘ 1911"‘ ies in the United states Bfe Just commenting upon last week's con- ference of Agricultural Ministers at Toronto, the Montreal Gazette says 1h” ‘result’ promscs w be very 1m- which led to the unfortunate clash “ma” ‘*5 “ “w” “ma” “awn”; now reported to be having difficulty oi’ arms between the l‘.\‘:i i-ydntries the farm iiidii-try‘ iii this country toim mums money ‘or legitimate at shanghai. . [new cpiliillllll lll order to takclpurposes‘ indeed it i‘ said the While certain Canadian Liberal the fullest advantage of the pref- irciiccs offered by Great Britain funds are at a new low for thirty years and that many activities will ‘m1 "m" units of the mnpire under 1pc curtailed. Governor Roosevelt for ".110 forms of the lmller1a1 C°11191":the Democrats h” h“ upon a now} idea, issuing a. “bedtime" appeal the free trade Manchester Guardian on the other side of the Atlantic complains that the agreement arriv- ed at is altogether one sided from - i _Th iBritaiifs standpoint. It is natural over we radio for sumzrlpt 0:5 meuhat free traders, here and in the - "ill E-cnoinic Conference in Democrats are ‘at s on 0 elunned Kingdom should be angry hum“ ‘to u ,$1-59°-°°° 1116! 115k 191' “m1 the m‘ lover Britain‘; adoption of protection. their effort secure s w. ei- mar- ket in Grout Britain for Canadian biicriii. lay in an objection put for-i \\':irti by the United Kingdom rcpre-i 9:100 iigiccriiciits. one of ihc difficulties encountered‘ by the Canadian delegates at the company in New York has beeniprefercticcs. It is notable, there- unable so m‘, to cone“ on a loan fore, that the great majority oi’ re- d-t th Democrats ‘our years sponslble newspapers in England 5('l‘.'.l\ ‘((5 tlint the Canadian pr0-.ma e o g . 901111119113 ‘V1111 5119118 31111101731 11F‘ _ ago and this, it is thought. W111 duct lucked lllllf0l'illlt_t' and could on what was tichcvcd at Ottawa, k d m“ m“ tend to make other institutions and that they accord most liberal not be iiiai 0.0 SUCCL~S y asa fwary c! such financing. m this corp ‘ ; z d praise to the Canadian Prime M111- tlie ll‘l§1l.»}_5Z)~C~(3rIi1.Z@C1 Dnnish tra ejinectlon a New York paper says: “In ism,’ on the fme handy as to M,“ "micro “as aso the gu.ding deter comparison with the $100,000 spent Stanley Baldwin on the other. iiriiiitioii on ilic part. of the United to elect Abraham Lincoln m 1860, Kingdom mznisters i0 protect theiiqsllsooyooo seems a huge gwn (5101:: fiqdnstggeregegjrficiilf; Not until the Garfield campaign of 2111f! i! 35 Cil 1880 did th Re blican national bacon and ham quota of 280,000} e Pu campaign fund exceed $1,000,000. pounds, and in order to take ad- d th b o l $100000 The Dem . . . E ll I - ' vantage of this opening it is desir- an ts tlgaty y had $350 000 Four ra ear . - able that the Canadian trade should 0c l t 5h collected $2 350000 . ar a e e . . cOmpCtO on as nearly as possible ye s r y KIWI tmns Wm the Danish pack an amount larger than the Repub- . ‘ . ii h o, d c 'r Cleveland ers. NaLuraJy, this was one of the cans a an row Eublects (“cussed m Toronto was elected. Doubtless the largest where an announcement was made campaign fund w“ m’ McKinley U11 behalf of the Canadian meat i“ 1m‘ Rigid 1?“ m’ nun“ w” ful and kindly act on the pert 01 Y)'1ckgv-s m, my “.,,,,1d “m, u, a P811111 @XP¢11<111111'@s were 110i "W" Mr. Baldwin, the head of the Brit- ,. . . .. . , ,bt dinto ti dl.ti.t tdthlshn system of gracing on the rail in m “me u accor g rqpmal sh H?‘ on o a cor 9 or v _ t h $16,000,000 was collected by Mark to the son of the famous depaftéd the yglllOlB packing plants, of ert e Hanna to repulse the menace o! smtesman to whose efforts largely’ hogs mm: been slaughtered’ instead Br anism Four ears o the Dem- in years gone by’ the Ottawa Con‘ of continuing the present practice y ' y a’; fcrence became a reality. ocrats spent $500,000 in an attempt ~ to elect Alfred E. Smith. The "Re- publican fund was greater: by sev- eral millions. But conditions are far different now; If, owing to lack of money, extravagance is pennan- entiy eliminated from campaign 1 expenditures, then some good may have been accomplished anywayj" The closing of the Imperial Econ- omic Conference at Ottawa was in- deed an historic spectacle. In this conference the dream of Imperial preference, envisioned by the Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, more than thrtygvcars ago, was fulfill- ed. It was indeed a thrilling mom- ent when the Rt. Hon, Neville Chamberlain, son of‘ the great ex- ponent Qf imperial preference, sign- ed the agreement between Canada and the United Kingdom on behalf of his government. It was a thought- BmOLITI-i. of grading animals on foot. This i8 ‘the Danish method, and its adop- tion is expected to strengthen Can- ada's position in competing with Dzizmark. The grading, under the proposed plan, would be done by Gcvei-nmcnt inspectors, thus giv- ing greater confidence to the pro- ducer, and, it is expected, to the consumer also. It is noteworthy that the proposed ducts. is approximate- ly seven times the present Canadian It should be undcrslmd that the Government cannot afford to remain n. benevolent institution which met all demands upon it. no matter how The spirit of self-help has alreidy been aroused, and its scope must be expanded. The independence of the country and the security Cf. the people demand the most earnestco- operation betivcen the public and the Government. This co-operatiofi involves sacrifices on all sides, but A MESS IN MANITOBA A serious shortage has been dis- covered in the endowment funds of the University of Manitoba. Misap- . trade was at its peak. The spokes- _ _ h i - 1 n Most shopkcepxs attribute i er man for the packers has urged that 2:32!‘ B in o! ti,“ funds 0i anZIpTODICIIlS to unipaid bills. This is, of in Order t0 time tidvflnttfle 01 @1118] l‘ away‘ 5' esp cable M ' an lcourse. a universal complaint. The wide opportunity there should not bring‘ i“ n‘ "M" mismrwm’ “distress or competition has comnell fl , only be a change in grading as 511 "1118 10 Defslmi W110 QESBFVBx-d tradesmen to open many more proposed but that a leaner type o’ no such fate. Misappropriation incrcdlt accounts than their capital I connection with the endowment iustmes- and the" ‘m’ mam’ c’? hog should be developed and a , 1 t 1t fund o, l umvemty stands out cellent reasons why n he major y °°1'1'¢11111°115 811F913! 11551111111- T119 111-5‘ of cases debtors cannot be sued for cussioris also include methods for fvenltabove the rest‘ The true 1m‘ payment of overdue accounts. But the development of the export beef W“ y’ a‘ a“ “mm” ‘"11 553's- arising out of this discussion is the “we and a committee has been up 18 111019 B1111 lust an advanced high question of the extravagance which mud to consider improvements school giving preparatory courses is so general throughout the world, p0 ' for hm," engineer!‘ lawyers and and which finds its basic cause in in beef production. Poultry and eggs security salesmen It should also be the ease Wm, which credit may be and milk products have also receiv- ' secured, 2d Mtcrlon and the conference prepared rm 31" lemershflp m h“ (Discussed ways and means o, meeting the problems of the day. ‘margins sales o, these products to The lead given by that defaulting the Unmd Kingdom’ whwh is now omeer of the University of Mani- taking only 3o m, cent of m egg tobn. and he is in high standing a- rcquiri-ments and 25 per cent of its mo“! mo“ mm guide the destinies dressed pouury “om Empire mum of the institution, can hardly be w. held as conducive to that aim in its On the whole it seems that this beat sense. meeting has accomplished u. very use- ful work. It has accepted the advice given by the Hon. G. Howard Fer- guson, Canadian High Commission- er, in the address delivered by him at the opening of the Central Can- ada Exhibition in Ottawa. The Im- perial Ecohomic Conference has provided wider channels for the export trade of this country with the United Kingdom, but if those with prom reflect upon Acme of he, channels are to be used to eflythlnk own “mo” m4 spank”, whm, approaching the limit of their cap-gnaw not been calculated to pro. acity, Canadian producers and l mote good “cum. between the “m. 511mm“ “m” °°nr°nn m “Ming class and others. standards of quality acceptable to ____ the British consumer, must adept gum}; g3 won to hgyg a ygdhlm their methods <71’ plwlilns t0 the1refinery. The site has been select- menu adopted by the United Stat- needs of Briitsh dstributors nudged in the town of Port HON. 011' ,0s not one has 111081955911 11'1"" 111° buyers, grid must maintain oontin- @3110, 51m, mu" c“; o; Toronto,:submisslon stage to ratificationh in uity of supplies if the work 0f the according to the Natural Resources?“ 11:“ gr Yirjmwguraztfrs- ma‘: Toronto conference produce! PPae-‘Departmcnt of the Canadian Nat-igiggfitlo: amendment “W at tical results in the enumeratcdpionai Railways. It is understood thstltncked was summed u, the ggggeg branches of the agricultural indust-‘large quantities of chemicals will be Decembc, 1g, 1917, and became ef- ry. Canada will derive far greater required for the treatment of the fective January 16, 1920. benefits from the preferences lf- pitehblende ore, requirements in this forded» by Great Britain than couTd respect outwelghing the ore which possibly be obtained throusii s con- will be brousht stoo miles from the ,11*ar111a;;:°€1;°“ 1:'c1;1l‘=1;iv1;1”w:‘ Sig: tinuance o! present methods and workings st Great Bear Lake, in c m 5' by sido with the report of these dis- export volume and twice as great as the volume exported when the be only one end*disaster' Right Hon. Stanley Baldwin in a broadcast the other day summed up the result of the Ottawa confer- ence as follows: “The fact is that the conclave, summoned by the Canadan Prime Minister and ‘car- ried through to a triumphant con- clusion by his initiative, organfzTng ability and driving power (see the speeches mode by the heads of all the visiting delegations) accom- plished a work which should be fru’tful of lasting benefits, not only to Canada, the United Kingdom and other Empire states, but through the force oi’ example, to the rest of the world." EDITORIAL NOTES Miss Agnes iwsoéhsii, M. P., states that there is bitterness in the heart of the farmer, a feeling of resent- ment against those who are sim- posed to lead him. If there is such bitterness and Milss MacPhail is anxious to ascertain its cause, 88y! the Montreal Gazette, she M1811?! Cumbersomc and antlqlllfefl 108' islative methods in the United States make amending the c- titutlfl“. 11 necessary step if prohibition is leg- ally ended. an extermely 1195b" business. First a. new amendment- supported by two thirds votes in each House, must b; submitted to the states by Congress and tliéll ratified by two-thirds of the states. in their legislatures or constitution- al conference. Out of I9 amend- fn Iowa a violent farmers‘ strike quotes the ruler of North China as ' agitation against the Japanese and: the destruction of Japanese trade' newspapers argue that Canada wasi ipublicans are no better off. A trust food taxes and reciprocal Empire, , it could’ not stretch properly when unreasonable they may have been] ‘careful life _if he is to prevent a without these sacrifices there can, ‘very much in the manner oi’ the |lcading automobile manufacturer not less than eight times, Prince Edward Island alone of the prov- lnces maintaining no board of cen- sors. This process adds to the cost of ii film no less than $153,011 top of other charges. The Toronto Globe recently said: “The fact that eight of tho nine provinces main- tain separate and distinct boards of I censorship will surprise few Canad- ions." Itaiso says: "If $153 were actually the cost of censoring the pictures there might not be "any just cause for complaint. But the p I I §outfs ‘By [amen W. Berton. ALD- HIIGII BLOOD PRESSURE EARLY AND LATE You hear about some friend whose blood pressure is very high, he is forced to go to bed for a time, then take things "easy" for a few weeks, and nnaiiy he is out and about playing golf, and apparently in the best of health. ed any exercise as his doctor in- forms him that exercise may cause 2i "strokef ' Why is it that the one indivi- dual wlth very high blood pressure gets back to normal life and the other does not? _ Because with the first one the high blood pressure is due to some passing ailment and the blood pres- sure increases in order to fight or protect the body. If the blood pres- sure did not increase when. the blood was needed at every part, the ailment might seriously affect the body. So when the ailment passed over ,ihc infected teeth or other in- fection was removed from the sys- tem the blood pressure came back to normal. . ~ As a matter of fact the elastic tissue in the blood vessels was not really damaged to such an extent fact that cven educational films prepared by the Dominion Govern- ment are subjected to the censor- hip fee." ' Saskritcheivnn has given a shy lcad- in the way of reducing at any rate the number of censorship shoivings, but has not reached the point of hnving o. joint board with Manitoba. The provincial boards of these two prairie provinces sit together in Winnipeg and see the films. Of this the Winnipeg Tri- bune observes: "Protests have been heard for years over the duplication involved in maintaining eight cen- sor boards for fen million people. The provlnce- might nt least get together rind save a little of the taxpayers’ money. But it should be notcd that when Saskatchewan, mainly to get quicker distribution, moved lis censors to Winnipeg, I am the oldest of things that are: 11hr thirtyriverc 1 have been the bridge; With Cochulnin I stood H9011 the ridge or battle, and with Maeve 1 wept afar, . I fought with Finn upon the yellow sands; With three wild swans I fled sprees the fen; After the centuries I feel again The blood of Usna's sons upon my You hear of another friend or fact is that tfie censorship is used 111m“- ucquaintance whose blood pressure a". a disguised tax-raiser. More than I WEndGIed Wm‘ 05m‘ 1hr“ u“ 1S 111811 8i- Bbout i116 881M Point as twice as much is collected for cen- 1°“!- the other, but he is forced to rest a wring as the censoring costs. The 0mm“? 9mm‘! the shadwi‘ I 800d P511 01 the dill. 15 new!‘ 511°W- absurdity of this impost lies in the have Sea“ All. There is nothing that I have not been, Nothing that is not native to my 5011K. I touch my harparid straightway, onitsstrinp ' Move the dim fingers of forgotten - kings. -Ma.rion Grubb, The Commonweal. Ancient Man (New York Herald Tribune) The International Congress of Prehistory convened recently in London disclosed symptoms of vio- lent anthropological indigestion. Too many new facts have been crammed suddenly down the throat of anthropology. It will take time for them to digest and turn to nour- that it could not get back to nor- mal. These vessels still remained soft and pliable. In the other case however the el- astic tissue in the walls of the blood vessels was so badly damaged that there was no reduction of fees h-i either Manitoba or Saskatchewan. Alberta's local patriotism kept her out of the arrangement. This joint censorship saves the wages of one operator and a few incldentals-an- other example of the working man paying the shot‘ when economizlng starts. Dropping one of the cen-' sors wins of course out of the ques- tion, the censorship appointment’ being a piece of political patronage 1 ....evcrybody knows that the pro-i VIIlCifii censorship system in Can-l iida is a collection of cuckoo clocks, 1 but nobody seems to be able to do anything about it. And nobody, ever wil be able to do anything1 about it so long as the, busybodies 1 and the politicians work hand in‘ gloveto make eight little pork bar- ' rcls stand in a row." . Turning now to the capital, the ‘ Ottawa. citizen asks: “Does any- body in his serious senses suppose ' that eight censor boards are need- ed to pass judgment upon what isi fit and proper in the way of film ' entertainment for the ten million! people in Canada? Are the people of Saskatchewan so different in morals and. manners as to require two separate boards? The prop- osition is absurd of course. . . There is really no need for more than one board of film censors in Canada, as in Britain. if we are to have cen- sors. Stretchlng a point to allow for some of Quebec's peculiar ideas, perhaps Quebec is entitled to one itself. But to maintain eight is less excusable than having eight milkmen call at nine homes. We can't do without at least one milk- man." It will be noted that one Conser- vative newspaper, one liberal and n. third extremely independnt in its Liberalism in Winnipeg. Ottawa and Toronto have till much t\\ some idea of the situation with regard to these eight boards which sit solemn- ly censoring films for the people of Cflhfldu. draw snlnrics for so doing and add to the cost of entertain- merit. blood was pumped into the blood vessels by the heart. Nature in an effort to prevent the vessels from bursting put a lime-like deposit in place of the elastic tissue. This of course means that the blood when it is pumped would have to increase its premure against this vessel which instead of being soft and ei- astlc feels like a "clay pipe stem." Now when the blood vessels get hard in this manner, the blood pres- sure will be high and will stay high if the blood ls to reach all parts of the body. ' ‘“ This explains then why one pat- ient with high blood pressure gets back to health and strength again, and the other, must always live a stroke or other serious ailment. Aslong as the heart can keep strong everything is fairly safe. If the patient begins to get out of breath easily, the heart becomes rapid, or he feels an unusual “tightness" in the chest from slight exertion, complete rest is necessary nt once. Lessons Learned, In ll Panics (Financial Post) The Financial Post concludes a series of studies of a century of de- prcsslons in Canadian history. In- cluding some of minor importance, the country has come safely through ten-periods of depression —-eleven counting this one-in the lust 100 years. The world at large has also participated in each of these periods of sub-normal busi- ncss and panicky finance. The study has revealed a num- ber of things, to. which reference is mode in the concluding article this week. But these points stand out as well: 1-Every period of depression is accompanied by despair and by gloomy prophecies of funda- mental changcsin the social and another wasteful boom cannot de- velop. ii-None of the depressions has, , tainties of affiliation ishment. Meanwhile pain is inevit- able. - \ ' I One argument is over the Olda- way skeleton from Africa, its alleg- ed antiquity vigorously denied at the London meetings, but without any of the critics being able, to ex- plain how the relatively modern skeleton which they assume it to be came to be buried in ancient clay and sand layers without the slight- est slgn that these layers ever had been disturbed. From Palestine come two new discoveries oi un- equal importance: the lesser play- ing the chief role in the news. This is the claim of Sir Arthur Keith of a. race of negroid affinities occu- pying the coast lands a few thou- sand years ago and set down, not without violent diflerences o! opin- ion, as cannibal ancestors of the later Semites. The more important discovery is that of the young American excavator, Dr. Theodore McCown, of a much more ancient human race, apparently new to science, bones of which have been found in‘ the caves at Mount Car. mei. In China there are still uncer- about the Peking man. From _South Africa. and Australia other discoveries, still imperfectly reported, promise other upsets of conventional ideas. A decade ago anthropolgy knew but three or four varieties of an. dent man: the p Neanderthal, the Java pithecanthropus, the doubtful Heldelbtra species, the still sis. puted Piltdown remains and a. few others still more controversial. Now the list has been increased by at least three: the Peking man, the R1‘ ‘ ‘ i species from Africa and the new Palestine one. There are Ellmpses of still other creatures; as 1711911811 mankind 8 IIIIIIIOII or go Years 1180 may have had for mem. bers of his family almost as any varieties as there now are kinds o; “m- N°1 15 111111 any less Plausible the more conventional one or an l-lalgflrylng line of ascent punctu- Iinksuhmke and the" by “m-ssinfl I" "hmflllfll lrnl! Iulunrirs. economic machine. Every period Zegizlamiedazi hastily conceived has ended with the old machine Wdmnes pad f1“, °’ by “w” running smoothly in much the ' ' mns cred by oppor‘ tunist political or financial quacks. 1 4-110 df-‘Dression has over finally been ended in any country without action first being taken to streng. then public finance by economy and careful administration] ' ti-Movements in the price level‘ are the chief cause of booms and crises and some measure of general price stabilization, achieved in time through continuous refinement of our monetary mechanism in the light of experience. is our chm hope for comparfitive stability in the future. tl-The signal for the beginning of recoveryds usually as obscure as the signal roi- the precedent collapse but the ground work for recovery is stmngly laid when public and business costs have been adjusted to the prevailing price level; when excesisive debts have been deflated ry the process oi’ the insolvency or default and settlement; when capital loses its timldity and rea- lises the anomaly of low rates and locked vaults. The seeds or depression are sown in times of inflation. As on Ameri- same old way. Change and pro- gress are found to be constant, who advertises that he presents constant improvement but no-new yearly models. Z-The lessons of a depression are only partly learned, or they are learned by a. generation that is only partially successful in passing them on to the next generation. Thus the fact that the harrowing ex- perience of deflation has been undergone gives no assurance that record of how Canadian farmers’ Ofsanisatlons are meeting their own problems. Representatives of m; Western Provinces, the wheat pools B1111 i310 Milk-B. 1h oil-Operation with the Dominion Government, my; worked out a plan to finance this year's crop marketlne. The contrast between the Canadian and Iowan methods of meeting similar condit. ions is significant. In Iowa, the at- tempted remedy is conflict. In can- buhapcu appears th|_flIV,I._ll!!-EQP.. can economist hos put it, the time \ DR. |.. B. EVANS of London, Eng. "M" Pllylleluf-treated successfully gnd gbugmd permanent cures of Stomach Conditions Inch u llldlggg. 111m- Bvsneivtls. sons- Stom- 111111. Heartburn, Gastric bis. tress and many our" ‘u. merits peculiar to the stom- "11 W111i s net-motion which we have procured and m] under the name of Evans Stomach Mixture. We alone have the sole fllhtl 0n lhll Ifcflflflpflgn Ind since selling it have re- a picture of human evolution than ceived numerous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your stom- ach. Serious conditions are 1111611 to arise if you allow yourself to lapse into a zhernnio stats of Ilstrlo tron. Get Bottl toda . u“ I 0 7 Prles to cure depressions is before they 1109f!!! “- ads the attempted [remedy i; m- or 2 uses, He said: W’ not only ended Erfjblisbed llllll OFFICE District Manager for "co-ms sc|<_ E WHEN theManufaofurers Li sentative returned, it was Unforeseeable physical developments had left him uninsurablev. earn a livelihood for his dependants. T0,, late now to protect their future. say "some time later" to the Manufacturer; Life agent. Let him tell you how to provid-e 887 against life's uncertainties. \ xr MONTH {e "elite. too late! his earning days, b h No longer ut ad could h; Don’t you ' ‘ll-ll Msuurscrunans, LIFE IISURAHCI COMPANY roaomo. CANADA B. H. HUGHES Prince Edward Island Cameron Block. Charlottetown. The Old Tin Hat (Vancouver Province) The sequels of history are end- less in irony. When seven hundred regulars of the United States mov- ed against the bonus expeditionary forces in Washington a few weeks ago, horse and foot, bayonet and sabre, field ‘gun and tank. they marched every man under the pro- tection of a. steel helmet known to the Allied soldiers of the Great War as the "Old Tin Hat." Within a. week of that event, a. commis- sion of the United States Govern- ment sat in Inndon to hear claim-t against the United States in res- pect 0f that invention. , Mr. John Leopold Brodie, en- gineer and British subject, claims 539,425 from the United States as inventor of the Tin Hat. S-peeific- ally, his claim is for a royalty of six-pence each on _1,537,000 "Brodie steel helmets," purchased by the American Expeditionary itlons. The Brodie steel helmet WIS the Old Tin Hat, revival under modem machine gun and shell fire of the body armor of the feud- al soldier, and like nothing so much as the casque worn by Eng- lish archers at Agincourt. The ragged men of the IM expeditionary force were not ing much of anything as head t tectloti, but no doubt, as the -. inee drove them down Pe vania. avenue, they looked . and remembered how they . worn the Old Tin Hat in ilicf est of the Argonne. Survivors our own Canadian 351M111 Illorce can remember further still how the first tin hats few and iealously 811111"1P<1 1W " nance," and how, when they relieved in the front line, v had to leavethe new and uii fortfl-ble iron bonnets for flit the incoming garrison. There were enough of them everybody "over there" later and it was a military crim of frequent commission amen!‘ British forces-not to wear i in the front line area. The Hat, like debts and bonus s Forces, from the "Brltlsh ministry of mun-f and other inconvenient remit of all that u: pleasariiness, sndi eluding the unsatisfied ‘claims its inventor, has surviv~d the There seems ito be some tiiii ence of opinion as to thi- will! sin. but Uncle 5am will insist ~- sinners pay their income fax them. 146 Richmond St, Retail price E. R. BR 0 W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd, Lewis Charlottetown Try Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea 50c per lb. Bold Only In Red Airtight Packlles. ‘ I Sixty gatlon. Yea rs Continuous Progress" For sixty years this Insurance Agent)’ 11115 been serving the Producers, Shippers, Industry incl the Home-and endeavoring to promote 111° trade and prosperity of. the Province. We wel- come, an opportunity to be of assistance in solv- ing your Insurance problems-there is no obli- mwoM/izve col, Ltd- Lower Queen St, Cltarlottetowni Fire, Life, Marine, ‘Automobile and all Casualty lines. I872-Sixtieth Anniversary-Nil?