Wstatc; and it was this fact, perhaps, which 041-2103 ‘Qqfq PAGE FOUR The Charlottetown Guardian Prelfdenl LlouL-Col. I1. Cheater U. llrLllro Vino-Brendon! J. If. Burnett. 1-‘. J. l. Idllor and lhuugfug Director J. It. Hururll. I. J. L Gen-rainy Lleut. Col U. A. llu-Klmmn D. B. 0. Auoclalu Edlforn lfrunb Walker and U. Ii. Currie llornlng Dill] (Founded llufl). [$.00 per year flu ulvunrn tlulluarrd l0 Clly. “.00 per year (In mfunvr) mulled to P. I-l. lnllnd. [$.00 per year (In nthonce) llnllrd tn Cnnnllu and U. i. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1931 ”Lest \Ve Forget" Lvenvonc suddenly burst out singing; And I was filled with such delight As prisoncd birds must find in freedom, winging wildly across the white Orchards and dark-green fields; on; on; out of sight. Everyonels voice was suddenly lifted, And beauty came like the setting sun, My heart was shaken with tears, and horror Driftetl away . . O, but every one Wa- a. bzrd: and the song was \vordlcs.-, aiflglflfl will never be done. — Siegfried Sassoon. and the 1-}: ucrc the thought» that inspired ullt" liti- l: ‘.- v..i.r pv-ct onihc fir~t Alain-tire Day, uillc- lt scented at that tltuc that "thc t- ' l: ltxtr» agll uar t» ciul war" llltll llccn >llL'C€.~'~lLllly fought. that taut tin- gcucrati-ilh, at lczl-t. would au- l-thcr- "qrhl rlllthrcrlk nccln", with it‘ incvitablc: 1'4 -u':- ~f l»U»»ll~_llc(1 and aificriaq on a colus-zil s-rtir‘. '1' l uc are nut s1. 5lll't'. \\'c have i: ".',_‘<‘ 1l;'(qi'c.~<ivl~ \\£tl‘_ Jzull lifhcrs "l cit-ii <frifr~, Zll‘l'.tl'l'lili\' with littlc MW wit" the \‘1lll~t‘l|il"llt‘l'<. ll h.'ts hcclullc lunre ' ' u.- rc difficult fur plwlcv-lwviilg deut- llvrric3= ‘o imp lint 0i \\at'. 'l'heir ideals as lvll as thcir llllt w-t. an; bciizg li!l‘t".'tl(‘ll(‘tl, and i‘ i: to l’l"(‘l this threat that the ilatir>ll< of thc l'-rit' ’ (piiull-~il\t'c:lltl1 havc ltall tn cnlharl; on ~c'll-" pr-lurnilune of rcarntrtnlcnt and lt §< thcrcfnrt; with lm inclination to "bur-t r-wt .< lttitig" that vsc celebrate tomorrow’ t5" anuiac i": m’ .\rtui~tice Dav \\'e have from.» . v ' ' A i ....._.\ cnangcil the nature to Rcnlcltihvailcc Day‘ and llcrlicatcrl it to thc iuciuflrv of our ll‘ i=0" Dr-all. \ it a lic-tl»‘l\< crlu=c in which thcv dic/l? V.“ It.’ lICilt'\".i ln spite of Itlblllllt i5 ‘I I'll the Wlrlrl ind-xv. we czuumt believe That faith nration of the pcacc tnovcmcnt in .."..tll-'t i: co-npr-ratlti; q the pfcggnt ll“ via~ vuircrl in lulforgcttablc lincs by “l “l” filw" “lblicr pncts. Our: 0f (‘if ltafijvil tha‘ their sacrificc wa< in vain. Up is t“ irl til c. yuan; them, writing to hi- littlc llaugltter at home, l"lt‘ll "the ficlll F“ itltlher ,;_ \"'llll'l llflliftl lim- 1i r- "And ohl they'll give you rhynm And reason: some will call the thing sublime, Ana wme dccnvh in a knowing tone. 1e. while tne mad guns curse overhead, Amt med men sigh with mud for couch and before (luillemnut. Somme, ltllfl". foresaw the time whcu QPll-r up and a-k whv l](' had alum. to IllCC’ with death- fools. now with the foolish rlea . . Died not for flag. nor King, nor Emperor, ‘Bin [or a dream. born m a herdsmanis shed, And for the secret Scriptures of the poor." An Empire Figure Passes ' \\'h.".lcvcr judgment posterity may pass upon the Rt. llun. ltaulstly .\l:tcl)0uald, whose dcatll is announcer] in today.» columns, thcrc can be no question E1: to his great qualities 0f heart and nnnil. 'l‘hl'cc times. Prime .\linislcr 0f Great; Britain, rhlnuq pr-rilnlg of cxccptiuual 511-955 and strain, hc (lid hutch to prlnuutc cu-upcratiun and grvitllvlll with uthct" countries, particularly thc United States, ultcrt: ltc was knmvn and cstcciu- ed as a state-titan of the Abraham Liticnln type, who hall flxCll from pnvcfly and obscurity by native ability to the highest govcrninctit office. .\ Rilfllfill in his younger (lays, .\lr. MacDon- ald ntclllnvctl with years and rmpunsibilitic; of accounted largely fur the hittcr rcscntluent he aroused among his further collczlgtlcs in flu: Iithlltlr Party. lt was lllllPPfl a long stcp from the. “Apncllc of fhc bell 'I‘it~", {is hc was known in hi; Pflflv (lays in Parliluucut, in tllc. cautintls gtatcuitati of latcr years, the lr-zt-lcv of a Nfllifill- n] (j,,\.,.,-n,ncm qmwifllillg largely of (Ynnscrva- tivf-x‘ llut hc held always that evolution and not revnltition must be lhc mcane nf crmitlr; social itijusticcs. _ For a man who hall lived so lrnlg lll the pub- lic eve. .\lr. Rlzirllultzllll rcmzliilcd untisitallv shy an(‘il'(‘~gl>f\'(‘ll_ 'l‘llc<c qualities carncd him ill? rppulfllinll of being stanrl-nffnh. llr~ mire trlld q" uudipngp Ill <tutlcuts that thc lcet "f lift‘ l‘ whclhcr a tuzul can spend llis lci-‘ttre illnuc. 11,“.- was m. lllllllll that he pYPlPFFPll l0 ll"? ml the mnutltaiu lIIllQ with lli< ideals. if not “lane at 1(-;\<l with but a fclv chnscil friends. and. his belnvrwl ln-nlva lhit hi< sense of puhhc rc- sprltisihilitv drove him v-n. lli< rclirclllvllf fFOf" active politics a vcav a2» was ucccssitafcrl bv ill health. and bv lhc itch“! m?" Vlllllflr should- ers wcrc better fitted in carry thc burdens hc had bniliicllis pase-"itlg the. llritish Fmpirc has l0<t H" hutstatlrlipq nmpc. and. pcrltane more important than that. a statcsnlail xvhnee lovaltv went flPPfl- er than lip servicc tn British Prl'l°ll‘l("‘-_““‘l“'h° never shirkcrl dutv for pfwfil"! lmlmlimhv- The Two-Minute Silence Fvcrv year, when the anniversary of Aflflii- I'm: tT-(IIIICS around, someone is sure tp ask, "Wlluliriglnatcd the idea 0i "W 1W" "mm"? filmlce ?" This qucstinn is not casy tn answer-mot h0- cattse there is no answer, but rather for the rm- srm that fhr-rc arc s0 many claims tn have first suggested this snlciun national rite that it is lull easy tn ascertain which should bc given pfififllfl lt has cvrn tween claimed that King (icllrgc V nligillatcd the. ldca 0f the twr» minutcs’ <ilcncl‘—— i Fitzpatrick, in terms which were not only gett- aristocrat to marry her, l! thriugh, til llC true, llis lalc hlzljcsty ll(‘\'f‘l' 1t“- sucizitzlrl hiln=clf with such a claim. As a matter of fact. the King scented tn have no silcb tllntigbf about the matter, for bc nncc cxjlrcssll’ acknowledged the (‘laitn made nil behalf of a Soillh African ilutablc, Sir Percy '1"? l5fl:°\_".l-lllf!lllllQWN wollfililiAf.‘ __ tvovumum r0. 1931 erous but unequivocal and coilclusive. This is ivhat the King's private secretary wrote to Sir Percy Fitzpatrick: “The King desires me to as- Sllffi you that he ever gratefully remembers that the idea of the two minutes’ pause on Armistice Day was due t0 your initiation]. There are, however. says an Old Country ex- change, other people for whom the claim is still put forward, and among them is a journalist, Mr. G. Honey. It is true that the period stig- gcstcd by Mr. Iloucy was five minutes, not two; but it is not in doubt that his proposal was nut forward in an article which he wrote and pub- lisltcrl in May, 1919, and which at once at- lmclcd a flreat deal of approving comment. Fcotlpntl, however, might reasonably assert an carhcr claim in this connection. for it i; an updlnibtetl fact that a private in a Glasgmv Ter- ritorial Battalion stiggested a period of Sllgtlt homage to our dead in a poem which he mm. Pmfd R5 if!’ back as r916. "\'l"llc(_\\'rltcr was Private \\'. llutchcsrln, nf (t ."'“If="l.v. 17th Highland Light lllfantr‘ . lllwln as the Chambers of Commerce Balm. lion. and dubbed hv the wits as “The Feathrr. hi"_l<"l. who was killed in action in blcsriltntanlirf Ppvatc llutcbcsnn bad a poem. cntitk-(l "Tn Iiilr-ncc", in the issue fflr flptctnber. lrnfl m’ the battalion magazine, “The fiufpost." i flbcrntrsc the idea of a Cnmtnenlorativc sil- cnfc l= not: new or crl-eval only with tllc Great .\\ 1r.’ Til 100i the Attsfraliatis nbstwvcrl a ppr. Wl u! ‘ulcllcc on thc occasion nf the funeral nf OI???“ \ irtnria; and (luring ll". fir," “var i, W“ W‘ frhlotti 0f thc South African lllltlPf< ti» Maud barchczlrlctl for a tnruncnl at "mm. PM], ivli‘ ¢l= a sign of rcsncct for their rlczul mm. "'7" “ll/I hilll bccu killed in action, Editorial Notes I I Buy a Poppy! e a 4- n- (lliver Goldsmith born this datc 1728. ll‘ i l I! Ilaving ticd the ltantls of the Stipcndiar_v Rlagistratc, the City Council now look to sec how hc will extricate himself. v a- 4t x Irtpzui not yet having declared war on China the fall of Shanghai may be looked upon, inthe terms of-thc Insurance Companies, as “an act of God." x v w w A Canadian poet's daughter, lion. Angela Grcciuvootl has just bccn tnarricd m London after serving as an assistant in a Charing Cross book store. It would have taken SOlllC courage a few years ago for an aristocrat to bccontc a “camtcr-loupcr” and still nlore for another 81$ 'l‘hcre. will be nothing but commendation for Mr. Olivcr Dionne taking time by the forclocl: in buying Christmas presents for his big little brood at Callander, Ont., but why should he trck all the way to New York for thc purpose? Why docsrft he trade at home, where he expects his Quints & C0., to be fed, nourished and housed? 1f 8 1K’ 4K The Mayor’s request for strict observance of thc Two Minute Silence at 1r o'clock to- morrow morning should not be necessary, but unfortunately in the past this solemn period, about which the whole ceremony of Remem- brance Day centres, has been interrupted by traffic or other llflit-SCS. One such llllCffllllllvll is citough to mar the proceedings. ’ 1' U I i Is Quebec beginning to mend her ways? In a judgment in Superior Court by I\Ir. justice Philemon Cutisincziu, Mr. Joseph Arthur Cou- lombc, former blayor 0f Ste. 'l‘l1crcsc, was dis- qualified and barred from sitting on the coun- cil of Ste. Therese for a. period of five years. In cviclcncc it was shown that Mr. Cottlombe, during the time he was Mayor had received nearly $10,000 for contracts given by the llllllll- cipality and had taken profits in violation of statute 107 of the Quebec Revised Statutes, r925. e n- \\-"ith regard to economic conditions in Can- ada, sltys the hlontlily Rcvicw 0f the flank 0f Nova Scotia, there is as yet no evidence of a recession, though there has undoubtedly bccu a pause in the upward movement. Complete data fur August and preliminary returns for Scptczu- bcr indicate that business was well maintaiucd. Inclcctl, viewing the summer quarter as a ‘whole, it appears safe to say that business was better than at any time since I930. Employment has been steadily increasing and the rclicf rolls have bccu further reduced. Production 0f Ilhuus‘. everything except wheat was substantially larg- cr this summer than last and carloatlings, Zlgillll excluding wheat, bavc recorded appreciable gains. Exports have continued to rise, albeit at a slower rate, and thc tourist trade has been consitlcrzibly greater than n. year ago. The valuc of imports has been increasing at an ac- celerating pace, partly through higher prices and Illlflly in rcsponsc to improving living stan- dards and greater activity in the hcavy indus- ‘lflCS. >k It! a a n: u The United States Tariff Commission has gone on record as being whole hcartcdly behind: Secretary of State Hull's reciprocal trade policy. “The l-lull program attempts not only to in- crease the volume of world trade," Dr. Henry F. Grady, Vice-Chaimian said. “It aims to ncu. tralize the marked trend in recent years of countries to throw off the established economic and political rules of the game and establish their own rules of economic and political conduct. It seeks by precept and example to induce the countries of the world to co-opcrate in the re- cstablisltmcnt of the international economic system. Such a consummation will not only tnakc possible the cvcr-iitcreasing flow of litter- tiatinnal business but will check the tendency fo- ward attfarchy flllfl titilitarianism. (The total- itarian Sfatcs arc those which seek to maintain precise control ovcr all the activities of their stibjccfs.) You cannot well have the_ inter- tiatinnal systcm properly rc-cstablishcd and a number of States (lcdicafetl to the totalitarian principle. The international system inherently implies international co-npcration for _interna- fional ends and purposes." "F nuns 0v nus vm The Gods never lau|hed more ironically than when in sending nineteen persons to death in the crash of the United Air Lines "biainliner," they included a pilot who had flown 1,000,000 miles tn war and peace without a mishap. a bust- ncssman who was taking his first fl ght, and two nelvsreel photo- graphers who were making a picture of "The Safety of Transcontinental Fflylngf-Harrison in Windsor Star. A young man has been shot by n dog while prowling in the country near Cape ‘Town. A party of four was returning to Cape Town after a neck-end in the country when the dog, scrambling about the car, trod on the trigger of a loaded and cock- ed saloon rife which went 0E and wounded one of the party. He clled before he could be got to hospital.- South African News Letter. There are two excellent reasons why the provinces and the Domin- .on should take over the social ser- l. vices and relief. The first is that they have the means while the auutiicfpalities have not. They have various sources of revenue; the , municipalizies have little more than ‘ the tax on real property, Their rev- enues. because there arc various sources, can be varied according tn raced. The municipal revenues, as a rule, dwindlc 30st at the tme the glen-ands Uptil them arc heaviest. , The second reason that in throw- ing excessive btude ‘ cu the muni- cipalities and so f.) i the lmpml" Lion of_ high leaves on Pl property, Dominion and Provincial Govern- mClll‘. are ititerfcring w til the PTO- per dove opmcut of real property- Vancouver Province. The Grand Mufti uf Jerusalem fled to Syria when the B.'itish au- thorities moved against the Arab terrorists, his friends. France still exercises a mandate over Syria and it. is not likely that the Syrian Mos- lcms u ant to be involved as a body in the activities of those in Pales- tine, although some of the young hotheads would enjoy it. The Mos- lem leader will be happier in Libya where his friends and paymasters, the Italians, are and thither he 1s said to be going. Birds of u feather. -—E4~.changc. Germany is said to be building IOU-ton army tanks. This would be two or three times the weight of a modern all-steel rah-cad car. Smce the French already have a. 'l0-ton tank with armor that can tum buck a 3-inch shell, the new German mode‘. is only a step forward in a procca of evolution lllllCll may yet give us so-called tanks with 6-inch armor, like the battleships of not so many years ago. Actually these titan tanks are movable fortresses. 0n their great. cateipillar treads they can be shunted over com- paratively small distances. But a small distance may mean a great deal in modern warfare, as we know from Shanghai, where the fighting is from house to house, or from the so-callcd Unversity City at Madrid, where the fighting has been actually from floor to floor in the same building-New York Times. Mussolini has not paid for Abys- sima yet, orders a. 10 per cent. cap- ital levy-to meet the bill. That sur- prises those good people here who think that Italy is so strong, and also those who think that Mussoluil is the heaven-sent defender of pri- vatc property. It does not surprise tlmsc who know that the oppos to ls true. The Abyrsinia auncxatlotl cost Italy not. less than 121500001100. 'I'he total trade of Abyssmin. is worth about £2,000,000. 1r Italy collars the whole lot it can only yield hcr less than one quarter of the 00st of the war: debt charges. Is that. good busincssit-London Daily Express. Tourists who are anxious to cover a lt-t nf territory in a. few days will be interested in knowing that a mo- torist driving 45 mics an hour steadily for 10 hours a day would require 13 years, 10 months 0nd 21 days to travel all the improved roads of the United States. So 1t: can't be done on one vacation, after alL-St. Thomas Tltnes-Jotirnul. A dvszpafels felling about u man being taken into custody at. Inger- snll after having caused gncvous bcrill) injury to an officer, con- eludes with this amazing statement: “It was shown there were some 2t) convctions against; him during the 110st. 20 years." Anzl in the course of events there will likely be another flddflfl shortly, which will make 80 convictions in 20 years. So that means that cu an average this man has been in trouble each time eight months rolls around, and he has been keeping that up for 20 years. It. would take a confirmed optimist t0 believe there will he any change ln the man's llfll7lLS.——P€l1!.‘l‘l)0l'OUEh Ex- umlner. It ls lutky that. Americans are not. a sensitive people, otherwise our pride would be hurt. at the way this continent was discovered and ex- plorcd by people who had their mind on other thlzgs. It began with the pro-Columbian discoveries. In those early days no one came here because he really wanted to, but. either he was looking for some other place or ese he was driven fur out of his course by a storm. These things happened to Lelf the Lucky. who was headed for Greenland, and to the Irsh missionaries on their way to Iceland, and to the Breton fishermen on the Grand Banks, 1nd to the crew of Chinese Junks. As one historian recently observed, America. was never discovered fn a proper sense, but: was only st mbled upon like a bedroom chair in the dark-New York Times. Consider the enormous hlrzm done to international relations by the sabre-rattling puclflsts even in the last flve years. They wanted to fight Japan over Manchurla in 1931. They clumored for war with Italy over Abyssal‘: in 1935. They have been caning hysterically for intervention on the side of the Spanish Reds. And in the present critical times fr- responslble cr es for "strong action” continue as everyone realizes that fl. ls not this country's job to pull other people's chestnuts out of the fire. Swift, unfalterfng progress in renrmnment is the i. slstent need of the hour-and especially rearmu- ment in the aha-London Dally Mali. ARMISTICE A Message to LieuL-General the Rt. Hail, J. C. Snzuts, 0.11., 11.0. DAY. I937. Youth from I value the pflvlltlfl of belnl once more invited by the league of Nations Union to give the Armis- tice Message. 1 gave a. similar mes- sage to the Schools of Great Brit.- tain in 1931. During the interven- ing years world affairs hay, tak- en a very grave tum. It, is unnecessary to I0 through the long list. of disasters which have almost overwhelmed us: world-wide depression and suffer- ing on an u- preoedeuted scale; now again China; the decline in melnbershlp and authority of the league; the abandonment of dis- armament and the Nstartlng of a great armament race among the nations; the violation of treaties and the return to a naked belief in force; ' the disappearance of popular self-government. from large parts of the West; above all, the loss of faith in ourselves and 1n the principles of our civilisation. No wonder there ls confusion and distracted cotmsel among us. We are like peop'e who have lost the road and grope around in dark- ness. All sorts of desperate expedi- ents are resorted to. Many have abandoned their ardent faith in the League. Some are for water- lng down the Covenant ufltil lit- tle 0r nothing of its vital prin- ciples will be left. Some are for out-and-out. Pacifism, even at. the rl k of endangering the very causes which Bfg dearer to us then peace or life itself. Many despair of hu- man nature and self-government. and seek refuge 1n one or other of the new ideologies There ls a dispersal of strength and aimless drifting. It is just here that the graven; danger for the future lies. In this crisis of our times, what ts my message to Youth? In the first place, I would say: let. us stick to the light that we have seen; let us rally to the Coven- ant which was born of the suffer- and still remains our noblest and truest vision of the future- In the Covenant of the League 11m fmperishubly e m. b o d f e d the road to the future of the world. There is nothing amiss in that vis- ion of a world community function- ing in conference and in co-opera- lion. Not the sword but the Round Table is the sign under- which we shall win. If the Coven- ant happens to be in advance of lng and vows of the Great. War.‘ the time. lf the men and women of our um, cannot rise to the height 0f this lofty ideal, that l5 no reason for abandoning it Btlck i m m; League, even 11 lt functions 1m rfecfly and gives no security i for present. Stand behind the ' Covenant as our banner and ideal Men must. have a vision to livv by; for lack of that vision they l perish. and perhaps the disease we suffer from today ls Just this lack of vision. In the Covenant we Manchuria; Abysafnla; Spain; and have our revelation; there a. great light [has risen above the horizon o! history. Let 1t never set again. Meanwhile let us not be disheart- ened by present failures, for the iCovenant ls a long-range bust- tness, like Christianity itself. like lull the great human causes. Let _youth see to ft that this light of = the future ls not quenched in the reaction of our times. ‘ And in the second place, and as an interim policy, while the future ideal matures. let us improve the .atmosphere for it by fostering , human co-operation in every way open to us. ‘There are a thousand and one ways in which inter- national understanding can be promoted. Intemailonalism is in- creasing. The world of travel is opening out before u. as never before. We live in an age of con- ferences. In spite of friction in high places, the peoples of the world are coming together, world affairs are studied with growing interest, and sympathy and under- standing on the merely human level are growing apace. I have . the impression, notwithstanding ‘all appearances to the contrary, Where 1s more genuine goodwill among the nations today than there has been ever before. Here 1s our opportunity, here are our openings to push the causes which are basic to the League, and whose success will make the League suc- ceed. Let us not be deterred by national or racial differences, nor by political creeds which sound strange and unacceptable to us. let us get down to our common human level, and on that deep Soundatlon reconstruct a better world for the future. It ls espbclahy for youth to con- centrate its enthusiasm and en- ergy on this task of fundamental reconstruction. It may take time. but it will not be in vain. No Newfoundland Dictatorship (Montreal Gazette) The irrepressible Jock McGovern, fiery Independent labor member of Parliament for Glasgow, charges that Newfoundland ls ln the hands of a financial dictatorship. Mr. McGovern has again gone to ex- tremes. When the Dominion in question was on the financial rocks 1n 1933, the people calied for a. change and in November of that year the Legislative Council unani- mously passed a resolution from the Lower House in favor of a temporary suspension of Dominion status and recourse to Government by Con. mlsslo- under authority of the United Kingdom. Accordingly. a Commission of Government was established, composed of New- foundland and British members. The British Government extended financial aid as well as advice and in the meantime there has been considerable improvement both in Newfoundlands public finances and ln her industry. Dominfons Secretary Malcolm MacDonald, l therefore, was in a position to as- sure Glasgows representative in , the Common that when the island ‘ls more soft-supporting the "old Constitution will be reverted t0.” Theamswer should dLsubuse Mr. McGovern of the idea that West- minster ls holding theNewfound- lenders under a dictatorship of any kind. They are being helped along The road to complete re- covery. which was what they had ln mind when they petitioned Britain for a. Commission of Gov- ernment. Communistic Fascism (Chrlstlan Science Monitor) T'ho differences between Fascism and Communism are fast being obliterated. Fascism tn its infancy claimed the honor of retaining the profit motive and regard for prl- vale property. since Communism wiped out these vestiges of capital- ism, Fascism when it appeared on the scene held itself out to the business man as industry's saviour. Fascism rode into power on the backs of business men. Italian and German industrialists breathed sighs of relief on discovering they were saved from Communism. And yet in lmsclst cmmt-rfu business men are finding less and less scope for individualism and pri- vate enterprise. The dictator-dominated Italian Cabinet has Just announced a 10 M!‘ will. clllltul levy 0n Ill the country's corporations. but June - Italian workers were awarded n l0 per cent wage increase by the Mus- sollnfeontrolled Central Corpor- otlve Committee. In March, 1030, the Duce admonished large private industries. at the same time diu- cardfn: the Italian Chamber of Deputies. Although intervening‘ in industry only when it ls consider- ed necessary, the Italian State by its power to lntcrven, has made l. mocke y of the Judgment. of buf- neea executives. Italian business men may have been glad to see Fascism put labor under state control. The though of no strikes of lockout; ls uppenllng. But state diufpllne of labor hi8 been followed by state discipline °l emvloym and of ownm. What business received with one hand ft was forced to give up with the otlfer. The mlult 1m been that Qlihat 3MP of bouts I1 Jana ID. Barton. MD. A SIMPLE TREATMENT 'l‘l>lA'l‘ MAY PREVENT SEA, Ch. UR TRAIN SICKNESS 1t. is hard to understand why some individuals suffer with hay fever, asthma. eczema, the common cold, and other do not, dcqlite the fact; that. all breathe the san w. eat. the same foods, and c.me in contact with the same substances- pollen, fur, feathers, and others. Similarly with setucar, 0r train sickness; just. why some are af- flicted and others are not, on the same vessel, car or train, has never been understood. What may be a factor in causing sea, car, or train sickness is sug- gested by Dr. Wm. J. Kerr, of the University of California Medical School, fn The Dental Journal of Australia. “While treating cases of neu- rotlcs (high-strung. nervous -fn- states," Dr. Kerr found that. anx- iety states give rise to hyper or over-ventilation of the lungs, a state in which the patient breathes out carbon dioxide ln excessive amounts. Similar conditions of hyperventilation (too much oxygen and not enough carbon dioxide ln the lungs and blood) were found by Dr. Kerr to exist among suf- ferers from car sickness and may i apply to sea sickness and similar r "traveller's illnesses" where anx- iety may be a. contributing factor. In these cases Dr. Kerr discovered that by holding the breath the nausea. and dizziness would be re- lieved in about thirty ‘ ." By holding the breath the lungs would accumulate more carbon dioxide from the blood which had been all over the body and was now ready to throw this out of the body by breathing it out from the lungs. Dr. Kerr states that, the mental attitude of the patlenf, his anxi- eties and fear help to bring about this hyperventilation, as mind and body fail to work together properly during breathing. As tanks or other supplies '0! carbon dioxide are not available It is suggested that the individual breathe into a. paper bu: and re- breathe the ufr again and again. This rebreuthed air would naturally be rich in carbon dioxide which will enter the blood and be canted tn the nerve centres which. from lack of enough carbon dioxide in theblood, are causing the nausea Ihd dizziness. busfnus in Italy L; little freer than In Russia. ‘There ls still the sembl- unce of private property and the profit motive. But what is the use of awning u business when pro- ductfoncoata nudprfcea are reguluted, when profits ff they do Appen- are confiscated by taxes or dlviduals) suffering from “anxiety ‘or Vitaliti] BRAHMlNtt ORANGE PEKOE TEAl tlwaus u; , H. K. S. H IS Agent and arrange Mortgage Lna Collect Rentals and and Es PersonsiDesiring to BUY Nov. 12th to 15th. To MONTREAL—G0od go l T. B. City Ticket Agent 1B1 Queen Street Real Estate Agency Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as To 00v. SELL. RENT‘ Properties in City and Country. To give valuations, NO CHARGE UNLESS DEAL EFFECTED Owners of Land or Buildings are Asked f0 his! Their Properties or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call as GREAT ouonorfsr. Charlottetown . I EXCURSIONS ROYAL WINTER FAIR, TORONTO _ Good going l limit. December 3rd. FOR FARES CALL EMMINGT Manager. ns. Secure Tenants, Manage Properties tales. or RENT City Houses 1121.. 1376, Return limit Nov. 26th. To HALIFAX - MONTREAL -- OTTAWA -- TOR- ONTO — QUEBEC and THREE Good going Friday_ Nov. 12th. RIVERS - i ing November 23rd, return ROGERS Uan_ ‘Nat. Rye. Phone 540 iiLiw ‘A ‘i Fife» A1110. Life. Accident. Sickness I anti ‘Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest ' Rafe E. R. 3.0.0125’; Sort The Man Who Started It (Globe and Mall) The Dominion Bureau of Sta- i’§§i°.f.."°i“‘ $32.2.“ °.§.E" ’° “ 8e e minlon qStatlstfcfan was bom. Fifty years "t" he Wee appointed to the of- fice which has become a clearing- house for information on almost, every conceivable llne of national activity. ‘The Bureau itself was set up by statute 1n 1918, following an fnv tlon commendced alx years earlier by a C0mm1sslon on Statistics. It was made responsible for the statistics "relative to the wmmerfilfll. industrial, social, w)- mm"? and General activities and condition; of the people." It. col- laborates with all other Depart- ments of the Government. and has rlsht of access to Provincial, Municipal and corporate records. W687 there are a dozen Divisions lllnfmfillfl! "I168 In administra- ttftye head. and’ if anything ma,“ efr atte tl th nouced “f! 0n e public has not So, when flllin t. - Ed form telling all gliouat iigbiyliilgll- ess or farm or personal affairs, ft wean levies’ ‘my not be altotzeth 'l° "W"? the 10b oiir lrpgligiirltli; M"! l” R"- Qwfse Johnson and his wife. Victoria Cater. of An- "INI-l-l P-Oyal. in the year of Qugq imunumuuvcu nu i__ . Mother. with unbowed head Hear thou across the sea The farewell of the dead. The dead who dfecl for thee. 5"" "W"! 88min with tender words and grave, WI. saving thee. themselves they could not adve. ‘ To keel; the House unharmed ‘rhair fathers built so fair, Damn: endurance armed Better than brute despair, They found the secret of the word that. saith, "Service fa sweet, for all true life la death." So greet thou well thy dud Across the homefurremw " And be thou comforted Become they died for thee. h: on they served, but. now their deed ll done, m: evermore their life mdthfna. are one. l. Agfilf _at Lammerside, Lloyd Lewis H4 Richmond 5t. (Jll- flggetown Victoria's accession, although m. minty 1n later life as Dr. George Johnson he had much to do with starting this reglmentatton and re- cordfng which a. largo staff of statisticians is now conducting. On the other hand, it there ls anything you want to know, write the Bureau and give some thought to the credit clue George Johnson. who save up his Job as editor of the Toronto News to start the Statistical Your Book and pub- lished his Graphic Statistics lll honor of Queen Victoria's Jubilee The Dominion B u r c a u of Statistics, which knows evcivthiu: itself. is little know except lw nume. Yet it. ls one of the 1110.1? 91111034118. mos; formidable and most! useful Departments of the Government. It, delves into cvclgv- thing from birth to death, the activities of every business ia- stltutfon- However, when we sit:- Bcit writing the Bureau for Infor- mation we do not imply that con- fidential or personal data are made available. If. publishes statistics ml Dvpulatfon, administration, pm- duction, trade, transportation. fia- ance. education. and other subjects relating to the country's progress and sums up nll tn the Cenadn Year Bock. A T r E 1v r10 N ‘JilllE BllEEllEIlS ls the time l0 guard nllln" FIG - WORM by lulu; the molt effective remedy on the market; ac b Pig-we rm Tonic Powder u in! tuuwuhl: 1W1“ u‘ "ta-mu of worms. IMI lliltf°" tho health of your hord- Price 35cm. per lb- Don’! delay. Order by PM!!! or Mall. All order: prompll! . attended to. Phone 315 ‘I'll! W10 MAGS ‘Prioarfptlona A "Ipoclall! —Sfr Henry ‘Newbolt. ,