(W714 _-....... Bahama-eunuch- 0 Usplta .'Us l‘? main zit tooll of the I ml ed by barn. only I er agl 31291110» pcrien The ‘three said ‘ just‘ I brown his m Indcel as I pglet smack Pigs fifty 1 two l’ The wth eggs. ‘the h of th feed l To ing w ginge: pectir stcpp louse up al recov stepp the f Up t0 llvcrc. hay could subst e the EH wlaer In mcsp folio‘ Grce thfil! ‘hi0 "Htd PAGE roux [IIE BIIARLOTTETOWII GlIAIlIIlAIi Illa-res av TIIE vnlv v _ q ,1. sld t-J. R Burnett rruldem—“‘Sgiiliflliliyilkiiidlu-lfilluldaA. MICKiKI-Ifltl, Sfili). P "rlr':;-..':. 1:12.‘... " Assnclnic iillltnrs~lrnilk a Pl‘ - - -=-——¢—— . i” 7,00 per year (in advance) delivered. -. vhlflfllill“ Imlly (flvuullill 1x47) 7' a _ _ I s‘ , _ '“ H.511 per your lill rulrnneu) lllllii-d i“ LIB-d‘ “d U“ t“ a o. DYHIKTISING IKEPIIERENTATIYIS . - , . . . _ ' , I . h‘ w York Centrll I! -h.““-."~ i-Jtilt,“‘llhflfilf..0‘f;.?°’n=i§»l= "'1 "i-'- - "“' ' . ‘.- H“, ("bleairr 1-130 City" olehh 1llg_ kahuna i \\liil'lllflllll__l 4Iu‘\\<r_ lllli: I. _ ~ N ' um- s! ' Building .\tlnlll:l_ ltusa Building, bun l-rnncisco, 1135 o rec, Philadelphia. t Morning Maxim ' A man-s phqpaqglcr may be more surely discovered from t-he letters ‘written to him than from the Ictlers he himself writes. ’ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1932 WHY AVTI-IIIIITISH? In»... l0 to 14 bushels and Only an Our local contemporary‘ goes far ‘sum up 60 per cent Ofthe 157m?" afield in its efforts to knock lllfilare solidly PYOSPGIOII-‘l, 35 P" 99m results of the Imperial Econunlic 'wlll get by nlwiy Mid 15 per 09M Conference. As a leading editorial iqr less will find the going ilafd- o" 1n ycratcrdihvs issue it reproduces ‘lggp of all this it is Stflifl-i mai- m? a despatch by the London corres- {Government will balance its budlei pnndent of lilO New York Times, sagkatchcwan In fact, is in a satis- in which the hope 1S cxpi-csscd that ifagmry state, especially as COIHPBT‘ BYinASiA hratcs- red Wm, 15$ year. and the 9909i‘? men “are going to put the brakes can regard with hope the six w on Elnplri- scntinlcnt" and that rf-lgghg hundred cars 0f grain a day "to cn-culnvcnt" ma; are rolling out to the markets- lrl cnmiizg months forts will be made 1hr treaties negotiated lrrtllruli -~—-—————~- ‘ . . ' NI N Grlil: Britain and the DfilflllfliOllbii BRITISH 0P, 0 ’,l'll<- whole tone of the article lSl A recent issue of the London Ob- server, edited by the Brilliant Jour- nalist. Mr. J. L. Garvin, declares . Liam“ I that the United Kingdom is pleased States, What is surprising is that ; Wm] the work wcomphshed by Mh C“““d“ ‘imid i Baldwin, Mr. Neville Chamberlain. ihink it worthy of pllbilCllllOll, or i Lord Hahsham and the other arm should accept It in preference to m‘ delegates at Ottawa. They the statements of reliable British proved the" breadth of vision’ then. newspapers, none of which have devotion to pnhcham They vmdh ever suggested that the agreements Gated bheh, loyalty to ‘he ideals of entered inlo at the Imperial Ccn- Empire. Ottawa h” shown to the ' fcrence were not binding upon the world m“ the Empire 15 a ream), cr-nrracling pin-tics. Of ccurse, the and that hs spiritual unity, always United States and other foreign visible to the discerning, Wm countries would frankly welcome ‘henceforth have a mo" explicit any course that would stullify the land concrete slghmcahce_ From benefits accruing to Canadian pro- how oh h Wm make a dmmct du_ llucers under the trade preferences fetch” to every producer and ev_ obtained at the Ottawa conference; en, trader on the m“ o; the globe, b“: “i” Sim“ °'" ma‘ Willem" whether he Is inside the British pom“, be so eager w g1‘? publicity“ Empire or outside. To establish t‘) Such anti-British pmpagand“? that identity of interest was the vital task of the conference. Henceforth, continues the writer, the producer is more to be con- sidered than the consumer, and the citizen who pays his country's taxes comes before the outsider. niltl-Erilish. This, o.‘ course. is not surprising, since it was fonconsunfption ill prepared tile any newspaper in OPTIMISM IN WEST The Winnipeg Tribune is publish- ing a series of arzicles on condtions in Western Canada, its special cor-respondent being- W, L. M‘ac- Tavish, In one derrpatch from Re. Rma. the capital, Mr. AIacTavish furnishes a remarkable account of the recovery made this year by Sas- katchetvan. That province; he states, films staged a ninety per cent ‘come- fback in one short year, and he pm- ceeds to g.ve detailed facts in proof Iof his statement. first, he regards ilhelp for the population: Last year mic-fourth of the people required 1:02am?‘ an: assistance in food and ter of trade The advantages of ue, , - ' man ‘Li? Zjasiwfeqalfigeéoitieigi K preferences will disclose themselves we“ the number is less than four graduailyas traders in every part of lper 08110, and their chief require- gtfetjznpgitivtihr’ the Wzibiigiis _ . agreemen . 0- lpzijtstsgeccgggaxlrgilteliailigt iticians will attack the treaties, but 000900 Wm be Bmpm This year a great work-a work vihich 83in 11,000,000 acres were seeded with inure to the benefit of the whole heat, supplied by th Gov t. W e emmen ,Empire and of every part thereof. Iwhile next spring the seed require-l ments will be but 100,000 bushels. As ED[TOR[AL NOTES ylto families, last year 57.000 needed In its monthly ‘r ' summary ifrclief, while this year there will be the Bank of Montreal finds “there is accepted in every comer of the flies. This is the franchise of the Empire. There can be no more convincing pledge of Imperial brotherhood. Nor is there anything in the results of the conference to conflict with the wider objective of world trade. The conference, in- deed, has shown the rest of the world a splendid example of inter- national co-operatlon in the mat- only 9,000, and this number in- lcludes 2000 who moved last spring,has been this year a notable growth W) 111B 110mm“ {Pillar of settle- of trade between Canada and Great llrnent undcr the Government's $500 Britain, a tendency certain to be ‘loan plan, and they require only alincreased when the Conference con- llllttle assistance. The remander arcicesslons come into play." an the southwestern area of Sas- katchewan, which had n. couple of m, Ho“ w_ L, Mackenzie King’ fbad crop years, and even they need four of his colleagues in his late ‘floss assistance than in 1931. Taken Cabinet, and several Liberal mem- has n whole, it is further statcd,lbers o; Pgrfgmgnt W111 weak m fnlnety per cent. of all the farmerslghg south Huron camphggm south i111 the province are able to mcctlnuron has a pronounced Liberal tthe current year's taxes. repay the rum-d and the ex-prgmjer and m; fiovernment for seed, binder tlvinc former collgggues dgubfles; fee] magi and bind" TOPMTF. Day flll the QX- the election of a Conservative would pcnses of this year's work and have be a bad blow for them, espedany enough moncy to 1.'.'c on until theljn View 0g the 09mm: o; pan“. iharvcst of 1933, and they will be nwhg a; an early gum ‘an a. posiUon in the spring to do‘ lthcir own seeding. The economic situation is review- sixty pcr cert. of the farmers will ed current in the monthly letter oi in addition hillfdllfillfly enough tnliilll‘ Bank 0f Nova Scotia, which‘ bu): normal necessities and to make endeavors to give an "objective pres-' Furthermore, i eighth fell to an average of 10- T0 The principle of preferential entry. earth over which the Union Jackl l whllg the nations an tslkilll. peace Germany is building llrtfl imd powerfully armed battleship! ‘aha Italy is prenarlnll i" l‘ “"3” sham aerial attack Oll the city of' Rome to take place September The announcement says conditions akin to actual war will’ prevail 1h the clty- M celm" h°‘"‘ 28-9-30. during the evenlna 30m“ Wm b‘ will rush to shelter, automobiles will extinguish their lights and ‘m’ in hallways of nearest buildlnfl- During this period the air fleet will roar over the city. dfilpPing hum" less bombs, to add reality t0 the ex- periment. Pedestrians who fail to participate in the mimic attack Will be punished with fines. An under- ground tunnel, two miles long. 1S being constructed as ‘a place of safe- ty for the populace in the event of an air raid. The “.1 uhh of Chinese Mah- churia by the Japanese is of course due to the necessities of the Gov- ‘ernment; at Tokio, with a rapidly l increasing population of nearly sev- enty million people in a group of comparatively small islands off the east coast of Asia. Manchuria has ,32,500,000 acres available for culti- vation as compared with 219,000,000 for Canada. That thirty million people should maintain an existence on such a small area of land is il- lustrative of the different living conditions in Canada and China. while at the same time it may mean that the Chinese, like the Japanese, are compelled to practice most in- tensive cultivation of the soil. ‘ Io is just as necessary for the expert driver to have regard for the highway regulations at all times as for the novice, for other drivers take it for granted that ‘the rules will be observed and govern their progress accordingly. As for reckless driv- ers, who are in a minority, the only cure for them is police action, and that is being taken everywhere. In Quebec more than 1,000 of them have had their licenses ca ‘led this season. When they are elimin- ated, and when knowledge of traf- flc rules is widespread and recog- nized in practice, there should be very few accidenl , and driving will be safer and more expeditious. According to Dr. Clarence Web- ster's Wolfiana, General Wolfe was carried from the field in a plaid belonging to Donald McLeod, one of the foremost among those terrible Highlanders, who was himself wounded, and who, when he heard that the general was mortally wounded, took off his plaid with his wounded hands and asked that. his beloved leader should be carried in if»; and he was. This Donald Mc- Leod was himself a Wonder. Bum in Skye in 1688, he was 71 at the battle of the plains. He helped raise the original Black Watch, was through the wars in Flanders and had fought with Wolfe at Louis- burg as a. sergeant. Invalided home he travelled to England in the Royal William bearing Wolfe's body, tool; Dart in the funeral ceremony and retired from the army in 1764, after having servedunder five sovereigns. He was married three times; twelve of his sons served in the navy and army: when he died, aged 11o, Don- ald's eldest son was 91 and his Youngest only 17, the latter having been born when the veteran was 93 Railways in the United Staten are Expected to send out notices before October 1st, calling for a 20 per cent. reduction in wages to become effective when the ten per cent re- dllfiiifln made in February last 10l- Oflfl your. expires. The brotherhoods have. not yet indicated whether they will accept any invitation o; the railroad managements for a single arbitration conference, but it b; confidently eXllected that they wm -—-._. Mahatma Gandhi declares u,“ he will starve himself to death rather than permit India's 60,000,000 Untouchables "to have separate re- presentation in the new Federal System of government which is now being elaborated forthe great 1n. diall dependency. Sixty million low- class Hindus! That is six tune; b; "m"? P°°Dle as there are in all of Canada and half as many people a5 reside in the United States. Yet, because of the Hindu caste system i319!’ are regarded by the over. whclznlng majority of Hindus as more unclean than lepers. To come Within the shadow of an Untouch- able is to be denied. One of these Untouchables was asked recently by substantial pnvmcnts on ‘whatever cntaticn" o; the facts wgghougiawsltor mm‘ ‘he Umied 595i“! "I8 dzlzfs have zrcumnlzlfcd in the leanadopii"! either a Pes-ilmlstic or OP-i year's. 't:'m'r.tic view. Nevertheless, there- "n10 corrcsponzlrn: give; a picture. viewers find real encouragement can hi m‘. present crop which explalnslbe derived from the recent trend of th" metamorphosis. Thl‘CE—E:Qhi.i‘lS'th8 Bank's indices of the value oi’ of the province yielded 20 bushels building permits and construction not Gandhi helping you?" The U“. touchable sometimes offers us lipservice, and that only in conversation with you Americans or other white people. When he talks to us he says: patiently on, resting in the hope replied; "Gandhi! He that s ch , ti , - or more of wheat to the acre. amrntractmfllld hflpeisvmresscd that’ Om 0w some me a “on Iarly high yield: on; fourth yleld- ths improvement will prove to beI Id 1-5 to 19 bushels; another fourth the precursor of sustained recovery. taneous change of attitude toward du religion and help me and my you may develop in the Hindu men- Swarajists to rid India of the an tality. Meantime, venerate the Hin- tunic British Government! plunged into darkness. Pedestrians cabs will deposit their Pisseiliers person from the man the mountain "Toll hm to cope with ill 1924." THE CHARIDTTETOWN GUARDIAN a. 1m w. Baton. MD- THE CROSS-BYE!) CHILD One of the defects often seen in former years was cross-eyes. Al- though it occurs just sa often as it ever did, there are not so many cases seen now. Why? Because parents and physicians make It their business to have the condition corrected. Dr. Oscar Wilkinson of Wash- ington, D. C.. tells us that the rea- son cross-eye is sometimes neglect- ed is that parents have the idea that It is ‘a simple thing which the child will outgrow. (It is not.) That lthe operation to cure cross-eye ia the small matter of "shipping s. little muscle.’ (It is by no means a simple matter.) That the operation for the cure of cross-eye cannot be performed until the patient has reached the age of fourteen. (When operation is necessary, the sooner it Ia done the better.) ‘That the repeated change of glasses will cure nearly every case. (It will not.) That cross-eye does the child no harm. (It does.) It usually causes the loss of vision of that eye and produces a hideous deformity which causes the child to develop an in- feriority complex and is a distinct economic handicap. His suggestions araz- - A cross-eye is a serious disorder that should not be neglected. The sooner cross-eye is treated, the more certainly it will be cured. The majority of cases of cross- eye can be easily cured if treated very early and very definitely. ' A cross-eye is often difficult, and may be impossible to cure, if neg- looted or improperly treated. To neglect a cross-eye usually causes the loss of vision of that. eye. - 1f proper glasses do not cure crossed-eyes in a few months, they will never cure them. If glasses and I the proper treatment do not re-' lleve the cross-eye in six months. the patient should be operated upon, no matter what the age. Every cross-eyed child 1n school is a neglected child; timid and shy. ' Above 75 per cent .of cross-eyes are cured when treated very early; few or none are really cured when treated late. The thought then is that in every case of cross-eye the parents should ask their family physician to have a consultation with an eye spec- ialist. Whether the specialist and your family physician follow all the sug- gestions above is not the import- ant point. The important point is that the cross-eyed child should be seen early by an eye specialist. Scaling Everest (Exchange) Sir Francis Younghusband was the chief moving spirit in the first Everest expedition and his faith is strong this day that an English- man will be first-foot on the sum- mil; though three expeditions have failed to reach that highest alti- tude of this planet. It will be re- membered that after the last tragic expedition, when Messrs. Mallory and Irving never returned from the last; lap of the ascent, the Dalai Lama refused permission for a fourth attempt on the sacred mountain. v- Sir Francis has telegraphed in the New York Times, the unex- pected news of such permission from the Tibetan government. And the Royal Geographical society, or rather the Everest u mnlittee which is drawn from that society and the Alpine club, has the moncy ready as well as the organization. They are preparing plans "on the broadest possible scale" and will select men "in no way inferior to the gallant souls who In 192i, 1922 and 1924 itrled, and failed to conquer this highest mountain. Sir Francis points out that the great heights are, in a. very real sense, sacred to your true moun- taineer. Arid the English climbers had an understanding respect for the attitude of the Tibetans. Dur- ing the past eight years they have wisely waited, “putting out feelers" occasionally to learn if the pro- pitious moment had come, and the mountain might. be disturbed once more. All the Himalayan experi- ence will be used in the expedi- iremembered, also, that n pilot find- War Ace To G0?‘ (Montreal Gazette) During the recent Royal N" Force Q1918)’. many eyes were turned upward to watch Britain's future "aces" and fighting Plan" swggplnfl acres the sky. But will there be any aces in the next war? It is claimed that today's conditions are so very different from H1059 which prevailed in 1917 and 1918 that the individual will be given little chance of alsunsulahlns him- gglf; that the "ace" of air warfare ha; gone forever, says a writer in the National Graphic, London. To- morrow wings and squadrons will fly and fight together, each under the wireless control of the leader. progress tends toward mass attack] and mass defense, and tomorrow's "dggflght" may see a thousand planes in the sky. It is doubtful if; a free-lance pilot could exist in~ such conditions. The "ace" system was started b)’ i the French quite early‘in the war, as a means of stimulating IndlvI-f dual effort when individual effort] was all-Important; later, other na-I trons copied it In order to stir an inferior personnel to greater efforts. Great Britain, on the other hand, did not, officially count the victories, of its airmen, The air board was} opposed to the scheme, and rightly so. War was an impersonal busi- ness, and to point; to certain airmen as successful warriors was an un-l fair gesture to ,_the tinquestionuble, valor of the Infantry, the artillery,‘ and other ground troops. All did their duty; why make distinctions ? The designation of “ace, " while romantic, was therefore fundamen- tally unsound because it extended a. false importance to one ‘branch of the service at the expense of - another. Even today it is difficult“ to obtain information for publica- tion from the nir ministry regarding individuals, and the recognized high morale of the air arm testifies to the wisdom of this policy. In attempting to arrive at the‘ number of victories obtained by the‘ aces we are confronted by many difficulties at the outset, and the numbers must always be considered approximate. Confirmation was usually obtained from one of two sources, either from other pilots or balloon observers, or from artillery observers in the front line trench. Occasionally victories were con-' firmed by the enemy. It must be‘ ing himself getting the worst of an encounter would often throw his machine out of control and spin to- ward the earth in the hope of mis- leading his opponent. If lh_e win- ning pilot had to take on a second opponent, as often hnylacned, it was unlikely that he would sce his Iatc enemy recover control ‘near the ground and streak for home. For this reason both sides claim- ed a greater number of victories‘ than had actually been obtained, and at the close of hostilities the number of confirmations exceeded the number of losses admitted. Compared, the British and French figures show about three victories to each loss, The German official records show precisely the same superiority. -Both sides claimed three times as many victories as' had actually been won! ~ If the records are to be bclievedi m DBYBURGH ABBEY (1882-1932) though fell Time leaves here I and there a heap _ Where long ago stood a frequented ' What I lane; _ As some exploit transforms a name- less plain, Where lndust y her waving fields did reap Into' a storied place where strong men weep, So that dear mound within Saint Mary's aisle, The fortune-favoured remnant of this pile, From dull forgetfulness this shrine shall keep. And while the Eildon hills their brows make bare. ..~lh.»l his loved Twecdlts plaintive lay is singing; While on this altar-site men breathe a prayer, Or to these stones their hearts like vines are clinging, v Though its own voices have been silent long, To God this roofless fane shall still belong. -A!exander Louis Fraser. the some month, Oswald Boejcke, one of his pupils, equalled that score, and the names of Nungesser and Guynemer were heard. Ball arrived oh the scene and swelfii across the blue sky of France leav- | ing a trail of blazing machines in his wake. He fell in May, 1917, with a score of forty-three. McCudden, Collishaw, McLaren, Bishop and Barker were fighting daily duels, and Mannock, the British ace of aces, fiashed into the spotlight and destroyed seventy-three enemy planes during his brilliant career. Von Richthofen collected a "bag" of eighty. Let us glance at the conditions as they existed in the great days of the Knights of the Air, days that are gone forever. As the first glim- mer of dawn lightens the eastern sky a party of sleepy-eyed mechan- ics drag back the doors of a hang- er. The knlght of I918 steps out and examines his battlefield, the sk closely. ' Six hundred years ago he would have been clad in gleaming armor as a protection against the enemies‘ weapons; today he wears a Sidcot suit as a protection against the bit- ter cold of extreme altitudes. He stilllwears a. helmet, but, of leather, goggles, which he can raise or lower at will, replace the visor. Gauntlets of fur instead of steel, reach near- ly to his elbows. He carries no shield, bui: perhaps a fiash of color on the nose or fuselage of his ma- chine reveals a grim or humorous device In lieu of the coat-armour of his prototype. He carries no lance, but the twin machine guns mounted just above the engine cow- ling are far more deadly. He climbs into the cockpit; the engine roars; the cheeks are pulled away; the tail of the machine lifts -as It meets the wind and races across the green turf. Up now, and climbing swiftly, the knight thun- I . Judge Coal, not by what it costs, but by i what it provides! We sell only that which is l - . ‘ - SEPTEMBER 21.1932 known. to give the utmost heat per dollar of cost to you. High Grade‘: ‘ HARD COAL," SOFT COAL and Coke '5“ . Sold in any quantity at lowest prices A. PICKgiRZQ & c0. s It is amazing the quantity of 0L1) cow we have received-but there must be still lots more-Bring yours in. c. H. TAYLOR Jeweller & Engraver 5447-9-26-3i until one or the other, still fishtins. falls and, falling, dies. ~Thls is a brief picture of the “ace” the champion of the air. Ilikefa knight of old, he ventured rol-zhllhm the unknown, his ball- challenge to meet his antagonist In single combat, staking his life upon the Issue. . As time rolls on he may appeal asantlquated as his chlvalrous pro- totypes. Only the glamor of his ders away toward the field of battle. the Gflma“ "e5 “m1 "m" VMOY- isometlmes he returns‘ more often ies than those of any other nation; ‘Somm- or later he dées not ' pa; 3,392 victories are credited to 147 fi away in the blue dome of heaven aces. The British stand next on be finds the enemy champion the list; ninety-four pilots are gwgjflng and heads toward hhh . .. ..~ ’ - named as having dcstloyed many ‘For a moment they Jockey for hm enemy Plimesl and 199 8T8 mcll-lsitlon each striving to place his u _ ' ..:':*1‘;:..*"::: l""~°""’ ‘° t“ "m- t . n e u a lnction bc- or to obtain the higher position, for "9" "WW and "several." but ‘altitude has many advantages in each case the number would cer- i These r th tainly exceed five. i a e e tactics or a“ fight- shot down 2,847 enemy planes. French records rcvenl 155 aces a total has or 1.59s victories. --_-______.________ America, in seven months, claimed‘ 537 victories. The "ace" began to appear in 1916. Before that time there were: no scores such as we understood‘ them later on, but nalncs soon be_ gan to emerge from the mists of mystery surrounding nir warfare,‘ and scores mounted rapidly; not’ because it was any easier, but be-i cause there was more air activity, and the art of air duelling became' developed. I The name of Immclnlnnn was first I whispered in the summer of 1915_ He was killed in Juno, 1916, when his score stood at sixteen. During Sole Distributors 0_f This I Exquisite Line Of Toilet Preparations MAX FACTOIUS Powders and Creams. products of HOLLYWOOD are the high- est quality products on the - market. Used and endorsed by notable screen stars this line has already been received with delight In Charlotte- town. tlon of 1933; They know that they can be acclimatized at 28,000 feet," for one thing! "The stature _of Y Mount Everest cannot increase. but the stature of man can; and when man appears next summer on Ev- Some of our lines Include Whitener Liquid Honeysuckle Cream Face Bleach Face Powder Brush Cleansing Cream Skin and Tissue Creun Visit our store and look over this new line which we are introducing, You will not leave the store without pur- chasing some. m z macs i i I i i i ner unfurled, to cry his country's achievements will remain. Try Brahmin - Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price‘50cw per lb.’ Sold Only in Red Airtight Paekagu. When Prosperous Times Return MAKE THEM LAST BY PRACTISING THRIFT PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BRANCH The Great West Life Assurance‘ 0o. Hynclman & Co., Ltd. Managers Guardian of Homes and Champion ‘of Thrift 11%| Fox Ranching FEED 9"- For Success ln “IMPERIALS ” Acknowledged leaders in Fox and Fur Raising. Imperial Biscuit tlompany. Ltd. Charlottetowll, P. E. L