I-kllli. ' fleo-Predlsho-J Iutlallsaaqlhflil. _ Asleddlllllolh-D-LCIIIIA. °"' Shirts ma‘: yes; mo. these attacks upon his life occurred in the present year. 0n April 1th last a demented English woman shoved a revolver almost against. receiving $4.40 a day. are asking m; a“ b“; m“, mung w M; for $6 a day. - his nose. On September hlth a t‘ - , on local ‘(mum manble cutter from France hurled ‘enloe’ no" mama‘ “A: a d”. a bomb, which exploded after strik- km m, n H d‘ lag the car is which the Dictator ‘m’ u 5 ‘ ' 7' trode. The sixth-known attempt Braltemen on local freight ser-lwu m“, u Quay,“ 31,,’ n,“ n V106. 110W T6061"!!! $4.88 a do)’. eighteen-yehr-old youth fired point “k go,- "g4 l d‘; blank at him, the bullet cutting conducm" on thrown new“ through his coat, whereupon the aefvl“ new ream" ‘s so ‘ d“ maddened crowd beat and kicked ' " the would-be murderer to death. are asking for $1.34 a day. IPlagmen and brakemen on through freight service, who re- ceive 84.48 a day, are asking $5.84 a day. Yard service foreman, whore- ceive $6.32 a day, are asking i $7.64 a day. Yard service help era who receive $5.84 a day. are asltin-g for 87.16 a day. Yard service switch tenders. now receiving $4.40 a day arc asking $5.72 a day. In support of these claims epeailt- ers for the conductors and train- lllkt All Illllilt-J.‘ I. ' TUESDAY, DECEMBER t, 192s WELD 1'0 OR GUIDE? The " ‘Mi Coll! v a ‘of the Church oi Elllllnd, at a re- jcent conference, decided to permit iSunday games on lands belonging to the Church. The decision raised iquite a discussion in the course of which the Dean of Exeter is re~ ' ported as saying that Sunday recre- ation. whether they liked it or not. - had come to stay and that it was impossible to stop it. The real question. he said, was whether the church should oppose the movement or seek to guide it; and he was in favor of the latter. Without refer- ring to the wisdom or unwisdom oi the decision, the point raised by the Dean of Exeter is perhaps of more importance even than the question of Sunday recreation. We in this rapid age ‘have seen many things "come to stay" that had no place to stay in even a coin- paratively few years ago. Things stay it we permit them to stay. Sunday is not the holy day it was a generation ago. Political corrup- tion is more openly practiced than ever before, even the Speech pill into the mouth oi His Excellency’ the Governor General at the open- ing oi Parliament has been known ‘to make statements which looked suspiciously like preparation for an ielcction. lias it, too, come to stay’? ~l=l it ,like Sunday recreation. till- preventible and can we guide it? i What is the driving force behind Qh . - .- i!" tathu-wmustan J AIR HUNGER lnieresf Rale- lllti A’<').“Si. Vlliiil F8611)? - _~ tn Life insurance. Q \ .~. n 11% KW" paid less than t 6%intcrcltonprofit. Ind ‘policy proceeds‘ V- - J51‘ with the Com. pany, and is in excellent ‘position to continue a high rate in the future. Compare this record with ' anything else in which the security is absolute. The Grcat-lMcst Life is able to pay this high rgmj -,, . of interest becauseof the care observedjin selecting ' its risks, its economy of management and the high ' y 1 rate of ‘interest earned. This means low cost of protection. The great needs of the body u you know are foodmnd drink. An expression is now coming into general use that. allows how phyaiic- g inns and laymen are turning their’ thoughts toward another need, that is the air. For years the matter of air was taken for granted. it is-ell thew. you, and you breathe it continuous- ly day and night. However despite the tact that it costs nothing, many indivldnah iind itlhardto gator in oaher words they are hungry for air at times or even all the time. (Now anyone who hasbadtbisair hunger will tell you that the feel- ing of partial suffocation is most distressing and alarming. In former days -we thought of sir hunger as being due to some de- fect of the lungs which oltiher pre- vented tlhe fresh air coming in. or the impure sir ifwn going out. This might be one rto the nerve supply w the lung, or to mechanical disturb- ances. [Perhaps the composition of the blood itself was such that it inner- fered with the action oi the nerves of respiration. ' diowever when a physician is called to relieve ah- lhunger. his first thought now is aha-t the heart is not doing its work gnoperly. but {m a mustn't-hoot! tact, the (heart and _nngls toge r, and. the chaise of titled. and are not. colllmvillilffllit ':"':::"' :‘:'x""::'$:°th°:‘;;?e: this air hunter may be due to either Ell W ¢° 5 B ‘heart or lungs. Wm‘ ‘he m“ huh Co" o! Imus‘ endowments of leadership and a Dr. Hoover of Cleveland its-s been That the actual daily wage oi we“, “puny (or organization and pointing out that it he finds in ex- lrslwvortstion employees does DOi-‘ndmlnistratiou. in a brief space he ziifinfhzixllfiifigiifittfg: a’ compare favorably with wages paidyhas made himself one of the forc- ‘s M multaecaum “we ma" ware for other classes of service demand- 111°" 53"” ill-me wmm- “iannmg I10! 601118 its W010i ii- ‘WOHH 00¢ Kei- . at first w the statesmen oi other the blood to the eurilace so l 1. mg experience. ability and, ii necesrcapitals m“ ms own‘ but m“ m To prove m,“ pomtvmvlma. “so -. . . f-Cl vei d. lh d i method sury. personal sacrifice in the per new m“ baton, and yet conwmb o“ (Qumran-lug aishaegetazdrgss 1mm “THE NEW formance oi duty. our as a great comet among the the lungs. ti. That the financial situation fixed stars. ‘in n normal person the beat loss “iii-Tit”? Pfliifllilfifl Pi-‘iflflfll t0 ' - by the lungs is 10 per cent of the 1 Y ° 11m“ ‘Ill; PTODO" 009 oi the railways in Canada was now tow] but when ‘the beam is M we p“, played by Pram,“ King admittedly better and warranted footed it may be up to 25 per cent. fiilatllzizteggiltllfil: SYIIITZTEIEO are] so 1 That iihatth-lo tn t. " ‘i Bummellvfl- the advance asked for by the rsil- by way Tsar; 8km “B. 12;“ "he; is‘ halve leached the point oi the way workmen. much and so the sltin in heart e.il- ‘J n d“':v§1",°,-nt°ry;¢ <13 utilise"! ~ e res To these arguments the spokes gfigli- "he" ‘1‘°*°““"J‘““'¥°'l1‘ such silly putts as 121:?‘ DKM? men for the railways have replied: m“ about m,“ {or you? ifriflgfllzaflh Dgltllggtllnlllgglsflgutsltte 3 1. That the present rates oi pay I! Y0“ i111}! .W“PB6lf b11118?!’ iii" ,1 m springing up M,“ mushroom gthern? Public opinion sanctions me M high as may would be thew a11- jt may be due m nenvuugniesa, ‘ i . ' ‘or denounces mnzv: o“ Itdsaxm lbeing no change in conditions since . e . ‘med ‘he’ my’ _' ezsrnce mmnyilezo to justify an increase. have us‘ “ma! i: p“ m {i 2! That the wages actually earn- “d what forms XL one n v u“ ied are in many cases higher than Pfllildity. our “great Canadian", has “tihiilii Fin- lmazer h wershadowed “w mwem‘ “m” may start something; if he has al Jar (nuisance tr When you give an Ingcrsoll watch you make a gift that is appreciated all out ofpro ion to its cost. For, there's no" fi like a watch, nothing used so much, consulted so often, carried so ‘long. And Ingcrsoll Watches made for over 3o years, have a reputation for dependability and enduring service that is world- wide and thoroughly deserved. ~\Wrist Watch SM . Wrist ladioihe ifi-M /) ii food scorches you should reg move the tkettle from the stove and; place it in another pan of hot Some of his followers inferfrom these escapes that he bears a charm- sd life immune from ballets, bombs, or lkl-“YQB. ll-ie meets them coolly. After the first attack he announced that he had chosen as his slogan, “Live in danger." which has cer- tainly been his lot since the won- derful revolution he brought about began. As the attempts to kill halve become more frequent he must be conscious that he lllflY 11°! always escape. and tilt? 119"“ 0| his followers are in many cases strained with suspense. Mean- while a swift and terrible reckon- i awaits the assassin who ven- men have argued as “mews: 1:5... in any public way to take the 1' Th“ “M” Pam are m" s“ life of Mussolini, and this may go ilclent to maintain them in the rea- (m. w secure h“, Bflfegyg sonable state to which they are en- Branch Office for Prince Edward Island at Charlottetown N & COMPANY, LIMITED, MANAG Agents at all principal ,. ‘nts. HAYNDMA ERS ‘Pitt, Palmerston, fi-ladstone and at first acclaimed with.‘ ,1 y“; D-sraill! shout, as s. woude ul panacea (or ilear, 0 ye unbelieving "lCauad- Canadian ills, but t more it is ex- ianites" and forever hold your nmlned, the more ltdefficacy dwin- peace fur a mighty man is among digs, l < Yllll- Mr. K'n ‘s peech t th This mighty man iind a "crow to banquetfwghensdives a o 558550“:- pick wlth- L0H! Byllil but he for- orical frills and trill i , is but am to "nick". His orisilml "Con- an admission that While the Con. siiillllonul question", he was care- fgrencg gutted 1,, mime m n", ful to let it alone as severely as a charter, it confirmed the old one! monkey would a live coal. Yet the surely this is like the case cl its Patriot says substantially, that laboring mountain and the mime. King gained his point! ‘ l nm Sir, etc, "The New Magnn Chat-in" was, REM)“- _a-4 The Public Forum 2 This column la open for the discussion hy correspondents o! questions ei interest. The harlottetown Guardian does not necessarily endorse the op- inions o! correspondents. MAGNA OHARTA" i To-morrow Do you carry the insurance you would wish you had the clay after a firs? I f not, see Hyndman & Co. LIMITED. Established 1872 Charlottetown, P. E. \ The Board of Railway Commis- alonera is hearing ml-UTHBH‘. about railway freight rates. British Col- umbia conteads that the rates over the western mountains are too high, Just as the Msritimes affirm that the rates between the Atlantic and the St. Lawrence are too hlSh. And in this the "Easterners are believed to have the support oi the Duncan Commission. JBut the Railway- Comlnission has ,the higher WWeY-_ alt can within certain limits fix the rates. Over all is the Supreme the minimum quoted’ a check Otlpower of Parliament, and the West income tax returns for a doligflfllzjn the past has wielded a strong ed territory oi one of the Canadian gnfluenqe in Parliament. National Railways showing aver- ' _ age payments of $2,667 to conduct- as never before. leaders who will n1 d‘ l i teprs, $2,090 to baggagemen, and- feariesslv and °lP° Y his: mhimhlzstsss to braltemen. between the m n“ w c ha cum‘, 3. {That there has been a reduc- “d “hm” m" ‘m’ “d w ° w tion m living costs since 1920 the things that ‘have come to stay, and that were regarded as undesir- “Iable or even siniul a generation or ' Have the old sins lost were our Most Acceptable Gifts" We have the following: two ago‘! their helnousness, tor ‘forefathers wrong in denouncing v Bath Dustin g Powders Houblqanta Quelque Fleur . . . 82-00 Cheramya Cappl $1.25 Plvera Azure: Pivera Fitlche ’Hudnuts Narolsle .. Hudnuta Vanity .. . . . . . . Hudnuta Three Flowers Yardlsya Lavender .. . . Yardleys Rose Vardleys Jasmin . i. :nanship of, not only, Balfour, As- fiaihgogfilizlwbe due iidbsifiuxlmn“ lulth, Lloyd George anti Baldwin, of the resen ' When you are reeilly ill and are p t day’ but M“ or hungry tor air tlhe physician dc- cidee just whether 1t ls heart or lungs and treats you accordingly. --——-—<o->-*-——— Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers December 1, 1926 VOO-OOQO-OO-‘GQ-O-O-OOHOOOOQ-OO- , DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon WORDS OFTEN ilfll-SUSI-JD: Don't say “such at man as him." Say "as he." OWEN JWISPRONOUN-CED: be- half. Pronounce bhe a as in “calm," not as in “ut." ifoilowing it becomes public opln-‘ ion; if he is ignored what might have become public opinion dies. The world needs leaders today Bond Offerings maml Silk Top lue Rose ‘Aohesofliosesm. Rlgauds Enhaume .I. G. IAMIESON But railway wages have 1"" 0°" _ gene up, and that means less net revenue for the railway. it is true of railways as it is of the afiairs oi an individual ‘that gains are often temporary- and uncertain, but ex- DIVERSIFIED list of Public Utility, indus- trial and Foreign Govern- ment Municipal and Cor- poration Bonds- yielding from 4.85% to 7.70% which we own and offer for investment with our recommendation, will be sent to investors upon re- quest. IASTEIIII SEGIIIIITIIS G0. LIMITED Bank of Nova Bcctia Bldg. Charlottetown Si. John Halifax dime-aft... ._____/. use sound and informed judgment in their discrimination. ._-_-_-<0-§--i- amounting to .20 per cent. 4. ‘That the extra wage increas- THE THREATENED STRIKE. As was expected, the threatened strike oi railway conductors, brake- men and yardmen, has been avert- ed by the Railways yielding to the demand made upon them. It will be of interest now to see what the trouble was about. A statement prepared for the Conciliation Board but not made public at the time. gives full particulars and may be EYES TESTED AND GLASSES FITTED New retracting room with modern equipment. Our experience la at your service. E. W. TAYLOR ASSISTED IY J. 8. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST! 142 Richmond Street a flggmAmA QALAQ Procrastination Is The Thief Of Time Don't put It off till tomor- row wh can he done today. Drop In and ass our wonder- ful display of Christmas Specialties. No left overs. All MW. and up to the minute. Something for Father, Mother, Sister or Brother, also evvaatbeart. Reasonable prices on every article tee numerous to men- tion. Coma and aea today. nit 2 macs DRUGBTORE 149 oreat George emit summarized as follows:- During the war, ‘ and for some time afterward, railway wages in Canada coniormed automatically with those fixed in the United States: and in 1921, when reduc- tions were ordered by the United States lLabor Board, those were also applied to Canada. in 1924 the trainmen of the United States were given a 6 per cent. increase, a. demand for a further increase oi aotne 1'8 per cent. has since been made, and a decision has just-been given ‘by a_newly established Unit- ed Ststes Labor tribunal for an in- crease of 7% per cent. The wage increases asked for in the United States and in Canada. per cent. over that which was fixed in 1920. The following is a state- ment of the wage increases asked for -by Canadian trainmen, as pre- ‘ ’ before the Board of Canoni- atlon in Montreal: . Conductors in the passenger service, now receiving I6.40a day or $192 a month, are asking 37.75 a do! or "$8.50 a month. Bag- gagemen in the passenger aer- I or 8136 a month, ask $6.16 a day or 0154.80 a month. Brakemen! Tdllplwlll 815 on ‘ I if granted, will, it is said. equalize] ithe rate of pay on ‘both sides oi themu“ “I m“ “idewflh ‘ma’ °'°'7,~0ll Mlid i119 810811181119 New York ‘vliue at a standard from 2o to so'”“°""°"“- es asked will amount to 818,000,000 a year, and that the railways have ‘not the resources to meet these de- -mands. Between these arguments and counter arguments it is diilicull: for the average man to discern the truth. One thing, however, is clear. 1t is that if the Canadian National Railways, with an already annual deficit of 820000.000, are called up- on to put up 88,000,000 or $9,000,- 000 more a. year for wages, that amount must mine out of the pock- ets of the taxpayers of this coun- try. Either that or freight rates will have to be increased. The only conclusion, therefore, is that in this matter the public is between the devil and the deep sea; and the only way out would seem to be some reasonable settlement until creased railway earnings arrive to remove the difficulty. 10:10am. Norse. ii ber is somewhat rare in this coun- try. - a decreased cost of living or in» A March snowstorm in Decetn~ peuse never fails and is most ai- ways increasing. ‘West and East pulling in opposite directions cau- nct tend to lower freight rates and the big Central iProvinces are nat- urally “more concerned with what is lbest for themselves than with the demands West. stacles. cailedflwet" victory in Ontario may tend to increased smuggling olCan- adian whiskey across the btu-der. regard to this illegal trafiic, to pro- lrent or suppress which involves a estimated expenditure of $47,000.-. 000 for the coming year. That Premier King la consider- ing the emotion of an Embassy Building ln Washington is the state'- tnent oi Mr. Wayling, who went over to the Inadon Conference as - stai! correspoxldent ot the Toronto 'Star. The ne‘w building will add t0 the kudos of the Honorable’ Vincent Massey, Canada's Ministerial Alm- bassador. With such an object in view what matters a iew hundreds of thousands‘ 0f dollars? We are ‘ll time. very distant past! Now we shall, like good citizens, have forgotten their bells on their first drives. This is distinctly ag- alnet the law, and the habit should not be formed too early in the sea- son, or it may become chronic and get some one into trouble. - The Dominion Parliament orpensiwhe have written interestingly on on n» m and will our em it is 1M "b5";- m" W“ l" "huts" time to go homo for the Christmas an‘ emergency character, in order; Ind lumen. passenger’ nrvievqto make it an extra one, but it ll-dllclillloll, Qon the 4th October, 1889, on her lvoyago from Saint John to Boston, 501116 0i U" Bl"? lifilsludriversmnd then and on several occasions since has written accounts of that event which were printed in the Portland ‘h-anscript. Saint John Ilwlegraph, and many other news- These fix the date of the i l I llpapers. ‘Baxby gale as 4th October, 188i). ls it not just possible that both Mr. Cotton and "An Ancient Mariner", as announced by ‘Mr. lllobb, act "i=6. now receiving $4.50 a day holidays. Bxotne effort, it appearmiPremier, m be a regular session, m4 been mule to ‘Ive this sessiollvNo doubt m imperial Conference“ will form a subject for considerable of_ the East or the iFreig/ltt reduction on the railways is beset with many 0b‘ Washington tears that the so- THE EYES 0F THIE LORD- “Mar the eyes of iihe timid sun to and rm throughout the whole earth. half oi them whose lheart is ‘perfect toward Him." 2 Chaos. 16:9. hadron-amid. ‘help as in sit =1- ways before Thee, for when Thou art on our right hand we cannot be moved. ' RECOGNITION (Margaret ISflIrEi-li-Ql‘. in the to shew Himself! strong in bhe ‘be- - Uncle Sam has his own troubles in ‘km u a 5mm! sums 9mm on Not l! a kvmm elsamto in its Christian -Hera.ld.)' Omit of llny need you come to me. O lMther, outlines, Whiting against the tumlult of the m: Ivhltlnr. you come to me in tihresda at music, And-lathe btessednese oi! whis- pared mlriihl Andinltiheclnslfluceotrrellgar- den flowers. lies across the OlItoimyneedyouWmetommO lhlther, when l can ecll/rcely see the filmed- It is your Hand that turns the Ill!- vlng In a memorable- And how difficult it is to flX some memorable dates in the not The writer of these notes was wrecked at Ruin- ory's Bay, back o_f Eaatport, Maine, ‘ary stpndiiuselr _' sit evening, Into a em ot tluqabiug, pulsimz It ie your call that bounds across the marshes, it h your smile that couches iields of grain, Painting them with pale gold-it is your nearneas That makes me see new beauty. alter pain! Out ofomy need you come ho me, . ab, Notaaapresence vaataoltloreet and still. Bmtastfhatptlrpiemietttnatclinge. each morning ‘lio the slitn summit oil a pine- orolrned hill. ' OFTEN MXSSPEIJLED: chagrin. SYNONYMS: discretion prud- ence foresight carution circumspec- tion Judgment wisdom. WORD STUDY: “Use n. word three times and it is yours." tLet us increase our vocabulary ‘by mas- Wlills one word each day. Today's Word: CAVERNOUS; hollow like a oavernt "His calvernous black eyes Elva him tithe aia‘ of lpower." A NEW CHEAP FUEL Shipowners, Board of Trade, and Lloyd's surveyors and otherainter- eated in fuel consumption, witness- ed a demonstration at the engin- eering works of Clarke, Chapman k 00., Gateshesd, of a new fuel oi a semi-cake character. the ilnal pru- duct oi a low-temperature process of coal distillation. It is the joint invention of.‘ Mr. Byron Laing, son. oi the late Sir James Laiug, ship’ builder, Sunderland, and of bir. Har- old lNellaon, a. chemist. The semi- coke was burned under a boiler as powdered fuel, and a steam pres- sure of 220 lbs. was maintained. it was a very inferior coal, literally "dull" and therefore the cost was very low. flu addition to the fuel test, up to 20 gallons oi oil per ton o! coal and 7,000 cubic feet of gas are obtained by the distillation process. After the lay-products oi.’ oil and gas arc extracted there re- mains oibout l5 cwt. of solid tuel in every ton which can be used as semi-coke for power-raising or in the domestic ‘grate. The "slack" raw material is relatively cheap and the results very striking by this process of (“BUHBUOIL-"Slllliillllid- lug and Shipping Record. Starch made with soapy water prevents the iron from sticking and gives a better gloss to the linen. White oi egg is most nouriihlnll and should ‘be given freely to in- Druggisi: » TheBigFHitbf A D A ‘l HARMONA- TBD " RECEPTION is eakingCanada by norm. Ivazh is rods‘ - is’ toelm igldVllflzlO o any receiver on |the market- Uli‘: a tube of known rel ill as a basic unit FAD A dio scientists and engineers built and eption with the new Cone Speaker (in the enclosed models the new "Pi-rmonatcd" unit.) velids. Beat it slightly and add to tea. or coffee; or it may be stirred into any kind of iarinaceous food just ballot-e servills- . o. M. LAMPSON a c0. Not as a- vague and awful power tint ‘ Arms. Urgs and mrods and hurries me along- . T?! Milli a brick for an iron- ‘t? 1'L““"".'.'lit'°" mull‘ 1?‘? a‘ as re_'_n er ea much lonler "than w en o‘ ordin- 64 Queen Street London, i. C. 4, England PUBLIC AUCTION .SALES 0F ' RAW FURS Represented by ALFRED rnssslt 212 Filth Avenue New Yerlt - Provincial. , _ .. Y. r harm ized a. i-‘Tol .Z'&€¥.’f‘i2".'§.f‘§.‘.i’.f completiu, the link of" lu FE tar rova HBAIING ss- rod: n m ‘ v PADATIARMONATID RllCBP ION was the tflllll- a ad- vaa a in rs to to. . l-‘ADA now yo! long “$4100 f radio rsprod aqnaiity _ nevarlrcarglagfiore. Plloaathaneareatantlloo; lzed PADA deals: as‘ m "Zr-a demonstration”: f? " .- .|..”.2'.'..l. t! “new . ADA owners all over the would - havodoaa. A. I Jn-eflgnsalosstln ' ,: looms e first»; __ - l “caption . The slant tam not... ‘ ‘ ' ‘its ,