PAGE FOUR TllE OIIARLOTTETOWN Glllllllllllll 'ily (l-"uundcd 1887) Morning President, LieuL-Col. W. Che-Aer 5- Old-ll" Vice President, J. R. Burnell. FJ-l- Secretary, LicuL-Cul. l). A. hlaclfiinnon. 0.8.0. Editor and Alan-aging Director. J- ll; ullrmu- F44 Associate Editor. Hank “tflker SUBSCRIPTION HAYES ' $5.00 per year tin advance) delivered l-of. IL $4.00 per year tin advance) mailed to l’. h. Island $5.00 per scar tin advance: niailcu Lu Lanada and [Lb Alumni-rs .\llllll. Burt-nu of circulations “The Strongest Jlemury is Weaker fhan the flea/vest [full-fl FRIDAY. UCTOBEII ‘.31. 1938 all’ iliLlllltVl-llg Their Trust ftnhlztni. tal rich! 0f “YPYY 1,. .,..,- miirts of law—a right I l..-;~,.l lii\\\'I‘|llll\'Ill Of lllh 1'_~,.- ]“<~i§:t li-utd .\ct zuid the, \.-¢ .,i.- lfivlfillldllll) Lawi I_Z ~:~._\~: "w to lie a ‘- ml L‘, Discu-‘J i: lla- ‘ll l.‘ II‘ prvvalv-nt idea that Ctllllilvlt‘ iinpi-sitioii i...-...'t_v ttpnll the wl il<iii~cr1ic\' is cX- .- y. '.1’<'~< rt.» :5.‘ rights of flit‘ _; that ln- ~‘.~..ill only he o vouuiii-il the confidence ‘1.tll‘.'.\lIlIfi*. It is bccztthc ynwnlult‘ Ul Elflflill- , that the (‘ottris must rights of the -» t '.\\ is. lllll ,-i' tlu- \ -‘ »,i.~.r.i.’*r u-irvrn- _, ' ». Toll’! {lrr militi- . i 2 If is unlv ' , nf flit‘ 51o."- , I'i‘.rt'!'f¢‘il lo,’ ‘JHIUH/ Tiwfffll’ Tumult, fllrii i! ‘Ill is mi longer . .. iltrlfifnrzr/iif." “l . -- ‘d! i-f what con- ,- _ t '~ the zictioiis of 1; _ ,_> ‘, i, . .t- a glove. ; Railway‘ lapnttuiies l)“ gf-q-Y ; -.-_ a. r of Railways, was n, V,‘ ti‘. . ,» - - _} t-.~..i».~-i-*s iii the op- P!’ w. m" y i .\'..ti~: d. Not (l.\ a < qxing, Tilt cfiirc. \\llt'll 1:", vii‘ 1i would iiffcr no solu- pr-dilcni, ‘fut that thi-rc s“ W. iv s » I i i" Illcll-Ilfih‘ bcnvt-t-u tlic n. , . i t It or. in coustiltatitm with L‘. ~ " t Y‘. ‘l » "dill tltv ‘- l1lIl\\'Zl>It\lII‘IlIll S _ i -. »: r...- tviilvnfc flllucll i, s "it-s iuiptiry‘ info the r. he ~.un=' coii-‘ltisioii. 't I t: ll‘ t": n fllll‘ 1,, , ilpoztit) mitt-red no '. . ' ‘ i; ».< and just as readily t,-,» . m. cit-HIM‘ itiixg. l - I i {tiilfwfl acct-pt the claim 1p _ n1 o1‘ thvw-pvlatiwtl Ciiltltl :3 i‘ ~ . a ~.i\lllQ of Sjgaxxttxxi an- ni; , ~tv“.'\ I'i.‘.~"ll.litl_\' clf-zir is tlial c- . ~ttrv~ con-tstrnt with q. i - i . would liriizg about Knit K .i Ill it...» For Defeii se f" ~ 11H ttnieiit this year will p. i _ . ‘JYWMOOO. lt will spend lu the circumstances, . I" """ti‘ll't can no longer treat hipirnia-nt as of little consequence. CifilliitilICL’ to study de- ~i~e policies; to find out wt: _ I . Ate ttXtIcf res are about and whe- ther d: ciiu try is ceding value 0r likely to get value for w... it is spending; to look into con- tracts urh as the Bren gun contract. If sttch a im<<c<<cd shortcomitigs, the answer must he tlnit no defects it could possess would be COlilpIIlTlhiC to the method of a House of COIIIZIIwYIS rushing through defence estimates In the closing hottrs of the session, and ticces- sarilv without anything of adequate considera- non. have a s and I-t Nazi Threat To Christianity The camisaign of persecution Hitler has latinciiefl a; -t the fearless Czirditial Theodor Inniwcr oi \‘i'I‘.ll£l .~l‘.'illl(l, says the Sydney }’0;t-I\'¢<,>rrl, do more toward awakening the world to ‘t- rt-ril significance of Nazism than RlI\"lllIlQ ~e \\ll‘\ll has entanated from Nazi lli-rttn. iwlunil lnuiizt-rk sole offence is that lit: ills 11:. i‘. to d n \llll\‘<‘ tyrantvv and persecu- tion fr~n is piifpit. Any cIt-rqyuiati in Bri- min, limit-v. 6.? l'nit-~d States or Catiada itiittlit llrPlFll iunitmt-rnl-le sermons similar to ;i-_....- for whirl. (Yiriluril I‘lllfl'/.t:F is tlireatetictl \\i'.li tlte v iti-wntrzttton camp, iiitlzottt even gut- ting llll~> thv l’l‘.l‘lillll s of llll! m-ivstiiipers. But it has in Ill: irwi-oii in .\ti<!ria.tiIiw tliatit en- joys llit' h.~~-inqs of "cold ;\II\<‘llllI<§", for any- one err-u to fllstlbfi tlu- tn-nd of llllllll)l'.'ll public Iioliv-y. Th: fulfil: 'll'l\l‘. mite. wlirtlii-r Nazi, Irascist or lit\l~lll‘\'ll.'. (illlllls \'-tllll\l"l(‘, tiu lupittorl, un- rlvlmt .l-'t' '~ii"i~ri:_v 4|\'I'f' tln- life, vdn "ail-m. lll(’ [nirwihrll Jirll‘ ifii ~ ritiil t'\i‘n IliU.El)f.’.lLl;Ll-..]il‘ut'l:a>€$,. of t-vi-rv our of it- <‘i"/"n~'. laldvi‘ ~itch a rc- gime. liu- iiiil-viditzil IIl"l'(‘l_\‘ vxi~l~ for the pur- Dose of t‘,.<- ::..=~. Hitler's i-iltiivitiotial system, for example, :iim< to tat-t every fii-ruiati, every Austrian. <-\<-r_v yivr-on ttndi-r lll\ jnrisdictioti, in the Silllli‘ "N.ir'i' mould. .\ud out of that mould is to i-VIK‘ a mere automaton. fabricated fence between Catholicism and Protestantism, nothwithstanding any conflict of ideas there may be with regard to the correlation of secular to religious education. A church which cannot train its cliildrcit simply cannot exist. Nazism (lcuics that right to all branches of the Chris- tian Cliurch. Iiascistn has not yct progressed as far as Nazism toward the (lc-Cliristiaitiziiig of its people, bitt its tnethoils are the same and it is clearly headed Ill tlic Stllllt‘ dircctioit. Partisan Interference Strong complaints have been received from both eastern and western sections of the Prov- ince of political iutcrfcrcucc in the matter of the Campbell (itivcrnmeiits liigliwziy undertak- ings. In .\loiitro.<c—in the Premier's o\\'ti dis- trict-it is allcgctl that a local patronage coni- mittoe is “running the show" and that tio. one can be employctl without their SII_\'-5(I. Similar coinplziiuts have come from the (icorgctoivn district. The taxpayers, who are footing the bill for these expenditures, expect the work to bt- carried ottt with at least ti. show of fairness and iiupartialit_\'. Editorial Notes I I Battle of Trafalgar—-ilczitli of Nelson this date. i305. x u w r Keeping the. Montreal (lt-tective ltaiigiug on hen.- indcfiiiitcl_\' is costing the Province a pretty IICIIII)’. u m a n- \\'e don't like the idea of an alleged German spy pleading guilty in New York any more than we do a Soviet allegcd traitor admitting hi; guilt in ,\I.,_.t-o\v. Tllffftf is somt-tliiug fishy and tuireal about it. ll‘ I * ¥ President Roosevelt has tendered an invita- tion to Prime lliitistcr de Valera to visit tlic New York \\'-»rld Fair next year. Failing King Ceorge \'l. perhaps the President will sec his way clear to invite Prime Bliuistcr Cham- lHTlilIIl, n- u 1r - lirom authoritative sources it is learned that .\Ir. Dunning has been told by his doctors that he must not uziilcrtztke any worl; ivhich would catise {i strain. It is likely wlicti he returns t0 his desk that he will ltave to .'itl_iitst the intensity of his wtirk. Prior to his illness the Flllllllff’ Minister workctl l2 and l4 hours a day and zippartiutly’ cujnyvil it. ll‘ S 1V i 'I'lie police force of the town of New Glas- gow", N.S., is suffering from what the Eastern CIIIWIIIIVII.‘ describes as “a plethora of officers and paucity of privates," TIIC force consists of fivi: men, “a chief, a dvptity chief, a serge-tint, a corporal and one policeitiztn; cach one zictiug on his own with little display of co-operation." he- sult: tlic chief and thc sergeant have been sits- peudctl pettditlg an investigation, by lllC Town Council. 4 s a n- Uuofficiril members of the Dominica Legisla- ture ltavc expressed in the llouse alarm over the possibility of Fluted Statcs-groivtt citrus fruits entering the Canadian and United King- donl markets ditty free as a result of tlit- im- pt-iitling limited Stati-s-(‘zmada-lfuitcrl Kingdom trade .'t_;rceiiicnts. Speakers lIl'f{(‘(l rcpresetiia- lions be uiritle tn the Colonial Ufficc expressing their grave concern over the threat to the is- land's citrus industry. I I l i Boy's will be boys and students will he philo- sophers and reformers. Over in California the electorate are being asked to vote on $30 per week pension scheme to all over 5o years of age. The students of Lost Angcles have gone one better, and opened a campaign for $50 every iveek for everyone under 50. “Since the idea of $30 a week for pcople over 5O is to create wide-spread prosperity," they state, “we propose to give $50 a week to people under 5o to create still more prosperity." Tll€y_OllfllllCd these cam- paign arguments: I. Younger people (20 to 50) have occasion to spend more money than older people. 2. The pensions would give to those under 50 something to do while waiting to become 50; it might be called a dress re- hearsal. 3. It is more democratic to give every- body pensions. Milk bottle tops of $1 denom- ination would be used for circulation and week- ly pension payments would be made with them. Every time one changed hands the receiver would pay a penny and punch a hole in the bot- tle top. "Thus a top would be self-liquidating,” the proponents of the new scheme explained. By the time one changed hands I00 times it would have done away with itself, as well as paid for itself. "The plan, of course, Wlll at- tract practically all citizens of the United States to (faliftirnia. That's just what we want. .\l0rc people mean more purchasing power." The man who once summed up Mr, Cham- berlain as “quite a good Lord Mayor of Bir- minglianP-in a lean year” might IXTIIIIPS be (lisposed today to reconsider his verdict. Tilt‘ llottse of Commons speech on Wednesilayi will staml as one of the great utterances of all his» tory. says Janus in London Spectator. Nothing could have been simpler or more tiuarlorned; in that if resembled Grey's specclt of August 3rd. i9I4. Nothing could have been more human. Nothing could have been more tuia-stiuiiiig. Compare the use of the personal prouoiin “I" in the Chamberlain speech and tlic Hitlen-eipcecb-dtt the Sport Palast on .\[onday. If from the speech half a. dozen sentences lcap to the eyic and impress themselves on the mind that is due to their content, not their form. And yet the vcry simplicity of the words gives them sometimes an tinintcurleil emphasis. .~\s stipreuie example of that I would select this first: “Then-upon llerr Hcnlcin flcd to (icr- niatiy." Tn which may be added, among those I have untlt-rliiicd in red for my own conveni- ence. “llcrr Ilillcr ilcclared categorically that rather than wait he ivoulrl be prepared to risk .1 world war." “I have no doubt looking back that my visit alone prevented an invasion, for which everything was ready." Mr. Chamber- laiu via; manifestly striving throngliotit to be stttdioitsly‘ fair to llerr llitlcr. Actually a more damning indictmcitt of a national leader can pig 3 blind iiutruttivnt, with no freedom of 31,011.41“ or . twin. with no statidarils of conduct or idrals of lifi- which tnay in any ivziy conflict witli tlii- piliviis or purpose of tla- lil-\'l'f'fllllf*lll. This. :ii:i'iorit'iri:tii ltlt'.'l of "cilnrzitimi" tia- titriilly liriitg~ NIi/E-ni and Fzuci-iii. as \\'fll as llol-lit-viun. into dir-ct rotiflivf with the (‘lit-is- tint church. l)t‘I'Tlll*(' rdiriiu- tit-fruition, iin- jef [hp fll[~lII(‘|‘§ rif lll4\~t' wit.» luliwvu in it; IPIICIIIIIL’. is 11f lllt‘ \"'l'_\' <“*' "'"' "i ll“ l'Xl~lt‘Ill‘(‘. On this point tlit-rc is no fttitilniisutzil differ- ntrcly have been drafted, TI-Ili‘. [TI-l A D ‘I flflwwmflllrnv ‘new flbufiififfifl NOTES BY IIIE WAY In fhls Domlnlou we have learn- ed to reallze that. while one may justly hate national political forces and policies, one 1s never justl- fled In hating peoples When Can- ada was co-operatlng In the Im- position of sanctlons on Italy durlng the Etnloplan conquest there was nevertheless no trace of animosity agalnst the thousands of worthy» Canadians of Italian extraction within our borders, In- deed, there was no liner-mass against the mass of people of Italy who cannot be considered re- sponsible for the measures of their totalitarian regime. — Chatliam News. At. the end of’ a lightning 12,000-mile tour by air to a num- ber of Royal Al: Force units In Egypt, Sudan, Kenya, Palestine and Malta, Captain H. H. Balfour, Under Secretary of State for Alr, has just returned to London Im- mensely impressed with the “very liigli efficiency" of the places visit.- ed and a conviction that the fu- tu-re would see large-scale devel- opment In the use of big troop- carrying alrcraft. Object. of the tour was to gain first-hand In- formation of these oversea unlts. their work, their conditions, their needs, their llfc. To complete the program in good time Captain Balfour, who was accompanied by Group Captain W. A. Coryton, utilized one of the Air Councils special coinmuuicatloti alrlltiers In much the same way ins the yacht "Euchautress" Is used by Lords of Admiralty. Altogether 8'7 fylitrg hours were contpleted during the three-week tour. Itinerary travers- ed all manner of different. cllmatlc conditions — from sun scorched deserts to mountain ranges top- pln 10.000 fret-yet. the sum of trouble experienced was a punctur- ed tlre and a worn magneto lead.- Brltlsli Aircraft, Socletv. ' A lady Is just reported to have lived for eighty-eight. years In a vll- lage in Bedfordshire, England, with- out ever liavlng seen tlie sea... It. would be interesting to have her reactions to that remarkable Hill.- urnl phenomenon. Her long-maln- tained Indifference suggests she is the person to out it in its place. The sea, of course. has been the silbiect of a good deal of comment. in its time. Most of it. has been adultot'_v—inder~d. almost sycophan- tlc. Sailors have treated It wlth respect. and pot-ts with admitti- tlon and awe They have empha- sized its vastness and its grandeur. "The multltudinous laughter of the sea." said Acschvlus more than a score of centuries ago; and poets have gone on like that. ever since. It must. all be very trying to ivliat- ever sense of modesty the sea has. -ChrIstIan Science Monitor. A couple of days ago Cordell Hull observed his 67th birthday by going to his office Lo rend the latest. diplomatic advices from abroad. due Secretary of Stale, wlio Is a peaceful man, ls very happy these days because of the removal of tne war threat in Europe and the- universal approval which greeted Americas handling of recent world affairs. Secretary Hull is tiiirloubtedly one of the ablesf men who has ever held the portfolio of Secretary of State. In Ins quiet, unassuming way lie has steadily moved oti to great popu- larity. and he is respected and ad- mired In nll the dlplomntlc centres of the world. He Wlll have the wishes of millons for many more rears of happiness. -Boston Post. Sklmincd milk ls nuw permitted In New _York after a legal bun of nearly fifteen years. Uue of the reasons IS advanced technology. skimmed milk can now be ap- plied to legitimate uses unknown a decade and a half ago. Some of these lie within the boundaries of the food industry. Other uses would astound Little Buttercup who said that things are seldom what they seem and skimmed milk masquerades as cream. Sklmmed milk now masquerades as buttons, if memory does not. err. and, for ought we know, as ashtrays and fountain pens. We live In an age of man-made plastlcs when the amazing soy bean can be put to every conceivable use except, pos- sibly, singing tenor In a quartet.- New York Times. A chlnese educator, A C. Koo, told an audience of Detrolt. bus- lness men that Chlna cannot win the undeclared war Japan forced upon it. "Japan has superlor war material, trained troops and an organized army." sald Dr. Koo. "They also have more food sup- plles and materials; Chlna sadly lacks all thls. As the Japanese war machine closes relentlessly upon l-Itmkow It looks more and more P5 111011811 Dr. Koo may be right in this pesslmlstlc prediction _n5 far as military victory In the present clash Is concerned A Japanese victory In the field would not mean, though that, J5. pan has ‘conquered’ China or that 75.000000 Japanese can dominate 450,000,000 Chinese indefinitely. The Chinese Iirive put up a brave fight, And If their ability to servlve a.000 years In this competitive world means anything It; mean; that In the end they wlll oust. the Japanese from tliefr soll and re- cover that domlnant. posltlon In eastern Asfa to whlcli their num- bet‘ and thelr character seem to entitle them. —Detrolt. Free Press. The Financial Poul. hll Issued a booklet. contulnmg a. series of Illu- strated articles about the pulp and paper industry which were publlsh- ed during thls year. One shows the distribution cost. of the paper. Workers. It. Is said. gel. 15.36 cents 0f cverv dollar whlle 6.15 cents goes for administration. That Is to say, wages and salaries amount. to 21.51 cents In each dollar of gross pro- ductlon value. That Is a large sum In thls Industry - $40,063,000 In 1936 —and as a matter of fact no other In Canada has a ayroll of comparable size. The rafways had a payroll In the same year of 8182.- 538000. but, they are not list-ed In the Industrlal classification. The ratio of gross Income going for wages and salaries In the pulp and paper Industry at 21.51 per cent, compares wlfh only 6.2 per cent. In the mInIng Industry, elght er cent for meat packing estab- Ishments. 13.1 for butter and cheese factories and 17 per cent._ In the automobile Industry. But there are plenty of industries which spend a far larger share of thelr productlon dollar for wages and salaries. Snwmlls disburse 26 cents of each dollar In that way; hosiery mllls 30 cents, manufacturing of railroad rolling stock just. under 4 cents and the printing and publlsh- lng business 4 per cent. -—Wood- stock Sentinel-Review. rm: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN v n71: .S;*',fl‘r?5;‘.' u Jwnu l0. Barlon. YILD. T r»; THIRTY root) ELEMENTS xiticrsssaitv r011 HEALTH AND Lll-‘E In these days when you read and hear over the radio about the various minerals and vitamins that must be In the food If we are to remain well. br even llve. you naturally wonder whether or not; you and yours are really eating in a sensible or scientific man- ner. need all the vitamins and miner- als of which you road and hear. “There Is no less than thirty different food elements which are essential or absolutely tit-ccssary for life. If any one of these 30 food elements is loft out of l..e diet. or Is not present In suf- ficient. amount. the health of the Individual Is impaired, and death will eventual)‘ rcstill. This Informa- tion has been obtained after sicnrs of laborious and painstaking in- vestigations mid obscrvatiutis." I am quotlng Dr. Frederick F. Tlsdall, Toronto, In National Health Review. As an example of how new or recent some of the Iufornmtion on food really Is, Dr. Tlsdal says: “It. is Interesting: to note that one of these essential substances was isolated but a few months ago —nicotlnlc acid. This substmice, known t-o chemists for 75 years, was not suspected of having anv- thlng to do with ltumaii tiutrltlon untll some months ago when It was discovered that it would cure that dreaded dIscnse-ut-llagra _ of the Southern States!“ As pel- lagrti affects the stomach, fntcs- tines, nervous system. skin. and eyes, It. can be secn how Import- ant food can be to the entire body. ‘It. ls now esltiblishcrl that tiny amounts of this arirl are necessary to Ilfe. II: Is found in many food substances such as wheat germ, lIver. and y"? “ A further Interesting and valu- able rllscovertw ivas lllfldf‘ In that If patients with iicllzitzra have some Infection prr-"ctit also. sitch as an ordinary cold. the amount nf ulc- ntlnic acid necessary to overcome the pellagrn is increased . many times The Iufe~tit~u increases the need for this stilrlntire just as In- fectlon increases the ll(‘[‘(I for iron In the system, Dr. Tisdnll shows also the tieed of each of the vitamins and other fond sivla-t:=iswn< "IKI one naturally asks himself how can It bt- known that. all these food factors tire present in the diet “Build up your diet around mllk. meat. eggs, vegetables and frult. add some vitamin D In the vivlittcr fccrf- llver-nil. butirr. Pvlwolk. mllk, liver, green veizetriblcs are rich In vitamin Df. and you can be stin- lhat you are gcttinu all of thr- ‘*0 food cletnvnts ncczvsaryr for health and lift‘. Index Of Business Th." Monthly Press Release Of the Bank of Nova Srotln. Oct. llfh states: The Cumulative Intle‘: of Bits- Incss In Caitarla ro-o slightly In August following flu‘- slvitp de- crease of the previous mnutlt. It ivas 92.1 per ca! of the 1025-29 avcraze as comr... d with 91.0 per cent In July ard 100,9 per cent. In August, 193T. Had It not Iron for the prououn<u~cl drop In Whole- sale prices conscqttctil upon the drastlc decline In the wheat market. the gain In Aucusl would have been ninth stibstatitlal The other four component Iutllces all showed lllIPl'O\'f‘lll’.‘lIlI in the case of Rcventic Cnrlondlngs the upturn was umrkccl wthilt: there were slriht to moderate Increases In the Rate of Ttirtiover of Bank Deposits. Employment and Indust- rlal Production. Clilefly owing to the lteuvy shipments of zraln In the Western Dlvfslon, Revenue Carloadlngs rcse by more than l0 pair cent. 'I'hIs brought the Index back to the levels of the early sprlng and was accompanied by a welcome Im- provement. In the cnrnlngs of both rnllroads. The seasonal falling-off In cheque transfers between July and August ivtis smaller than us- ual wlth the result that the Index of the Rafe of Turnover of Bank Deposits Incrrascd by llfllfly 4 per cent. The titiln was particul- arly notable In thc Prairie Pro- vinces. reflecting thc effects of the larger wheat crop both upon the market centre. Ivltinipcg, and upon general business In the West. The moderate rlse ment-from 102.5 to the result of conflicting menu: In different of Industry. In manufacturing \\“,\I"l\ had shown a reduction In Jilly. ex- panded seasonally In August. Tex- tlle mIILs, rubber and leather goods faclorlos and some other consum- ers’ goods litdustrlos took on workers, and employment In auto- moblle factories mse sharply as work on new models Ilol 11ml" way. On the other hand, the working force In Iron, and steel mills and mat-lilnerv plants was further reduced. Miiklu-g allow- ance foi- scztsonnl factors. employ- ment m. mining was wic-Il maln- falned and In both trnnsportatlon imd constructlon lhcrc viva-s 91ml! In Em ploy- l02.9-'.\ as move- birti nchos Employment. "ivoiiii oiir" Illlll WlllllllEll Drluinr lmmd each "§._ ‘k Q all! unnblu lo do lidneylfail Ilia amen clogtl with lllrniifigg, h u " {I- lg cc qimi y fella . Qoylil n Knlnay Pill: lie p clear flu lyaleiii, I""'I Illllln a clmico lo rulon health “d "WIY- Ell! blah. Silo. ||5 Budd's Kidney Pills As a matter of fact. we really do‘ THE NEW P.E.l. FERRY THE NEW P E l FERRY ----- (Sydney Post. Record) The announcement from Ollflwb that. the Publlx: Works Devi-rim?!" has Jus. awarded a $1.391 dredilflfl cotttract to J. P. Porter and Sons mimted. for the aeepemns or Owl- boo Harbor, Plctou Countgl,“ 1nd!- cates two tlilnis._0iw 16 l- the Wood Islands-caribou car-ferry de- velopment ls to be pushed to oom- pletion in time for next 3'95" traffic between Prince Edward 15- land and Nova Scotla. The other Li; that the Government has resist.- ed the pressure of certaln Plctou County sectlonallsts. who have been urging that [miles be added to the proposed rows by makln rum landing, instead of Oar u Har- bo1'._the malnlaxid tennlnu-s. The water span o! tihe fern’. lief-We“ P. E. Island and Culibou accordlns to the Department's nlws BM speclflcallflni, Wlll D9 B 1mm over 12 miles. If the Nova Scotla term- lnus were shifted from Caribou W Plctou Landing, thls dlstance would be Increased to nearly 20 miles. "“‘“.."lll ”I.‘°.°°°.‘3l§’....°’ afiflfi Edwar an . 01‘ thLs service Is . heme esgabllshed are dead $881055 the elongated scheme 0f the PIN-OD Wlmclans- and the Dominion Government has ivisely dlsregarded their rfltlllwus ‘F 2 has-a- AJCTOBER Z1, 1938 ai Gila flizviimfioiz to discuss their banking problems with thi, century-old Bank. Our broad ex rience, ample resources and world-wide fact itice are available to those seeking a banking m“. nection. Worldwide/Militias in every dcpanmeru o] banking ‘The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA Executives of sound businesses are invited noun OVER A CENTURY or BANKING SERVICE Charlottetown U51"! Kenllnzfon Montague Olen; St. Peter's Summer-cl’ vlcmfll and sectional rein ""‘“"‘ Th? Qple Q1 Pylnce Edward Island may ii: wrong In expecting quick" w“ better service from a. l2 mile fer?!’ than a 20 mile one. but 1" this case they are the doctors and W118! they say has to 80- Music Suffers Eclipse At Salzburg (Canadian Press) t Not ions use your wrmtmde" aused for a short time In that ovely old Austrian town. Salzburz. which for years has been a citadel of music and mqausvst rend": ous for the worlds muslclans an music-lovers, writes Gladyi M- Arnold for the CanaldlamvPress. The "Sallrzurg Season d-IBW kings and International celebrltlas. writers, artists. actreaes and states- men. For those who could not af- ford the prlce of a railway ticket radio transmlsslon and relays Pm‘ vldcd acceas b0 "Ibhcnflflfl." m” Iticomparnble pas$aB95 0f ‘Tristan and Isolde." For Salzbitrg had to offer only —muslc! Its setting of green plnv forests and rocky peaks; the an‘ clcnt medlaeval c a s tl e-fortress domlnatlng fhetown and the pure mountaln aIr. echoed the stralns of Wagner, Beethoven. Haydn and Moran tinder the enchanted baton of Toscanlnl or Bruno Walter, The Brlstol Hotel bore the re- glstratlons of the Duke and Duch- ess of Kent, Marlene Dietrich, Sto- kowsky, Noel Coward. the King of Slam. the late Queen Marie of Rumanla, The air was curclled with conversation In many In" uagas. but. the subtect was always the same —muslc; n theme of Bec- thoven, a passage of Mozart" hadn't Toscanlnl taken that. “ii.rla" a little more rapldlv last year? Tlotta Lt-hmanrfs voice In superb form. Everybody talked music, slept muslc. wrote muslc and llstened to music. It was a sort of sacred trvstlnc nlace where people came to refresh bhelr snlrlfs In nuresl harmony, The strains of "Faust" and the “The Master Slnzers of Nurembertr" mingled with the notes of the great melodious orenn pirzprlng down from the mountain- s e That was before the Anscbluss. The day afterwards the Hotel Bristol was taken over a< the headquarters of the Nazf “Kom- mcindant." In place of the izenlnl “Lhlte-zloved doorman pickets In Improvement. On the other hand eiriployment. In logging was down sharply. while there was some contractlon In the merchandlslng trades. The decline of 3.8 per cent In Whnlssale prices represented the sharpest loss In any month In the Wlwle flepressltm period and bmvtlht the price level to the low- est nolni slnce July. 1936. white the break In gmfn prlcea was the maln factor In the fall prices of livestock. cotton, lead ii-d “m, were also lower. ' owlCK WAY "r0 RELIEVE lllfllltlllAl. IIOUGII Cfllllhl Coullil Coughl Thn persinfent. dry a: plili-gmy bronchlnl cough run you out. Check It quickly with Tamplutoifl RAZ-MAII Cap- lulu. Clam up choking phlegm. Relief from ll worth-or money back. Gel l 50o or ll box Imm your druuin. 504 ATTENTION Have you trouble wlth your stomach. e answer ls y”. then we ask you to try EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE Evan's Stomach Mixture I.- l nrescrl tlon of Dr. L. h Evuu o London, En land and la sold for the fru menu of lndlgestlon, lleartbu n "ynwnlil. Smu- Stomach. Gastric Dlutreu, gm] mg“, other ailment: peculiar h thi slomnelg We at you onl fut It You wlll bu dellghlzd wltiiytbe rcsulfl. PRICE PER BOTTLE 85o. MAC’S BLOOD FOOD For pnle and thin people. A comhlnltlon especially vllu. able In the treatment, of those dlreuee where their orlgln ll ‘Plllfilblo lo III lrnpoverli cundltlnn of the blood. We hlglily recommend MIN Blood Food for the treatment of rheumatism and for those who hlu lmt lllclr appetite Macs Blood Food wlll prove the restorative. TRY l'l‘ TODAY. PRICE PIIII. BOX 500 We wlnh all our summers lo know that we nmr have In flock Mumllleu 72% Genuine French Clllllg gimp. D0011’: Pllln - 30o r ho! A. s. A. Tahletl _ ._"°.. 49c per Bottle of I00 Remember The T“, M“. Meets all Prices. THE 2 MASS Phone SIB brown shirts wok up the guard llke carved Images. One wakens now to the sound of the trumpet which‘ drown out the gentle Peal"!!! ° the bells In the onion-shaped church steeples. Not that there Isn't stlll a “sea- son" and the hotels stlll crowded. but. the audience has lost Its Inter- natfonal character, Toscanfnl re- fused to return; Bruno Walter dare not. even if he would. ‘Spec- tators now are Germans, Germans and more Germans. Adolf I-Iltler and Dr. Goebbels made It plafn to cltlrens that It. Is thelr duty thls year to provlde a blg season -sO that. they may be able to announce a bigger total of visitors than ever. To be sure the muslc of Wagner floats out over the old roofs. but It's a husky militant Wagner with a much of march tlmc In It. and It. lacks that finesse and wooing lightness whlclt made It. something unique and precious in the rever- ent. hands of Toscnnlnl. "Phat Iieavy. steady rhythm Is the soTird of a reglment of army boots on Ilie cobbled streets. for Salzburg has been transformed Into a for- mldablc garrison. The organ has stifled Its voloe, shocked into sll- ence by the rumble of guns In- stalled In the shadow of the for- tress walls. The house of Stephen Swelg. celebrated Austrian ‘writer whose books were ivrlttlen there In the calm mountain solltude, Ir closed, That Is. Its owner Is in exile Stephen Swelg Is Jewlsh as well I15 Austrian. In the old days every aftenioon and evening the doors; were open to wrlters‘ and poets of the International world, They gathered there to discuss litera- ture and music. but. now those doors are closed. THE JOYSV 0F ’l.'llE ROAD Now the plays of the road are chm ly I ese A crlmson touch on the liardivooq ces; A va antfs momlng, wlde m; iie In early’ fall. when the wind wall; A shadowy highway cool a“ brow-n, Allui-Iniz up and Bntlclmz down From rlppled water to dflpplfl swiunp, From purple glory to scarlet 99ml); The out/ward eye, the quiet will, And ape hrfirlding heart from litti o 1 ; ‘I'm; Iempfcr apple over the fence, The cobweb bloom on the yellow quince; The pallsh asters alone the wood- A tyi- c touch of the solitude; An open hand. an easy shoe, And s. hone to make the day rii through— _ -Bliss Carman. Because an Insure oompaiw fall. ed to pay them after two fires, volunteer firemen of ftfilnthortm, England, struck. l-Lb. MOPS and POLISHES MOPS 75c to $1.65 POLISHES 4 oz -25i:, 12 02-500, Oliart-SLIIII The ROGERS HARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED Can PASTE WAX and 1-0:. Scratch Remover YOU MAY BE IN A BIG HURRY But there is always lime to sIOP for a moment and ask for that old favorite with Islanders In Prince Edward Island- Its hlgli quality has never been unchanging for ha“ l‘ century. Hickey & Nicholson HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING A|w5y5 fresh ll ls sold in Pram’ cally every SIM“ 10¢ PER FIG Manufactured by 4i "vi