\ __ race roux iTilE GIIARLOTTETOWN GllMilllAlv P z d t—-W. Ci l s. aicliuio, M. P. Vice-Pros! ant-J. 1L Burnett r l‘ an Secli-‘iaeitly-Lllcululbal. D- A. MIcKIIIIIBII. D. B. O. Editor nnd Managing Director-J. B. Burnett CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . Tieing Up London ilfbat "- (Winnipf! Free Press) Qnhp THE ‘NDTESIBY TIIE wiv , I . FEBRUARY 9, 1933 av aeolian " l t sons Your complexion will rs. ifect the great superiority at Traffic in i; populous section of Ansflvinie lciiiinriis-glrivrizialuowaiker and f). Rd. Ci!!!)iid n d. In New york 1”; “up "l, p1. ' m, capltal of the Elnipiirfdwiis P s n M4 ' r l) ‘I in iided l l . per year (u a Vince e vere ~ t {Ttlillubcr ayelii-‘(iili advance) mulled in Canada and United States. mm“ Fan’ Inc" and the United ‘ ‘stalled’ To say u; m” t it “L; auvnnrisino nur-nnauxawrivua Irish-American Societies lodged would be a. mild sta megsgl “tin RABBITS ARE RUNNING d A d tmrruo STATES-The ui-iiiwitii special Agency inc. New York central protests with the authorities against . blocked. A woman c: ng e ___. n Blldl,i\' yiicii_o aiMii-Biiui_0eiiiiiitirullo iilg. lléfifliilzwcllgl: lvillyililghellllgr Tflwtfo 'Blil|l:i|nln‘Chi¢:I°0; syieidleliz: Tlrusi lhe nature 0f the Dilly: which are tstreet had screamed. some said Under the ground where the “one 'Bllili‘llfl|,', s1. hciiia; Glenn Building. Atlanta; aiouadiiock Building, Ben Francisco; 113.’: No_ 65th Street, Pllill delphil, Morning Maxim she had been attacked, some that she had had a fit, others that she ought to have had. But the 051159 being shown on this continent by the Abbey Theatre Players. It mat- ters not to these agitators that the floors quiver And the floodgates burst with the great steel river, Cucumber Cream By lame: . Barion. MD, .' EPILEPSY DOES NOT OFTEN we mint have examinations or one may sink with alaciuiesa but it is Abbey Theatre m Dublin ts subs“ tte - wgman had sudden] “m1 I gave a little Th“ W155i“! is I000‘- . nssuur nv MENTAL DECA did m‘ m” " “ l“ ‘l- y’ nliiea II dilcflm possible to make them better criterion: than in the Put. (“zed by the De vale“ Govenh I magma-L shiver. women eyverywhe :8 THURSDAY. FEBRUARY a’ 1933. ment. They have asked that Gov- The scream terrified two motor-I Under the ground when the may D0 u“ be ammo‘ bit of itakludtoproiect you. akin in oold weather. Tm, exceptional face and sun cream has proven n favoriig ‘wherever It has been tried, It softens the skin leaving it free from irritation. Try Penslnr Almond gm] Cucumbe Cream yourself and There seems to be a. general feel- ing that anyone with epilepsy is really afflicted with a. slight mental condition or is likely to go down hill mentally. sooner or later. This is not true; at least it ia not true in the great majority of cases. It is true that a. number of very eminent to withdraw the subsidy on the ground that the players are libeling the Irish peoplo,and the Irish character. The challenge was promptly answered by the director of the Irish theatre and by other representative Irishman on this side of the ivater to which an exchange. isis, They jammed their brakes . nant av and ciillldegh otgie; Wzllllilllwbzvgs; l Roared withc of}. iiiiiiidei- of the on- scream n8. ey n0 - coming wave, Some one said, "Rabbits are run- ning on your grave." ' Hush, little ti! you suddenly realize q" ‘you have allowed your H 00l| supply to (lwlndle. We can provide you with the very best, at reasonable prices, and on quick delivery. tural life of Saskatchewan. He was one of the first Progressive mem- bers of Parliament, entering the House in the general elections of 192i, and was re-elected at the gen- 'A ONE-MAN IIISCUSSION The following editorial under the above heading is from the Sydney Post-Record. As with yesterday's It didn't matter; they Somme‘!- A street car jumped the track-l when its driver pulled up sudden- ly to escape ramming the line of shadow-feet stealing . . . . know how delightful it reall t t - t) ., b t_ autos that had bumped one anoth out from cover, _ y v ‘ quo n ions on ic swine su J60 oral elections of 1925, 1926 8nd 1930. retons the ‘vays of some Free stab nervous individuals who come o‘ er The passengers m the street Dance on the so“ earth, ]eap_h_°g_ “The Nhflmum o‘ it, , t‘ “Jmmenl- 15 SCMCCU‘ 11*“~‘°55““Y? The third member of the new Board em are past finding out; They are lnervoiis parents or grandparents ca; Screamec, may tried to Bot gin; over, . Heat” The,“ notm" m “Beth t 3 l_' ngi-latviing Uspokvn yéulatiliacly ‘to: is Mn Charles Hebert He ,5 a m” not sumclenuy welmntormed m. I are afilictcd with epilepsy and may out but were was,“ room m the I Nibbie in the warm grass the young yum“; l" fol for chapped hands. ‘ , ; Elfl RIB fllOll kill BT90 8 ' level-headed to appreciate the pe- “her need mental treatment- Thu-s Gummy fine Work being done by a number of mental patients with their own national theatre endow- i epnepsy 0r epileptic patients Wm‘ tive of Montreal, and a graduate of green cmver- McGlll and Oxford Universities, crowd. been asked by a St. John resident - - Irhe policeman ‘ -l ‘ - to co-opcrate in calling a meeting to discuss the question, Mayor W. D-liillifliiiu 0,, pom, duty 35o ann 50o BpTTLEs, .. lDance, little velvet-feet, dance, for . . ' d ~ < i . . . . _ having at the latter institution glv- . t i ental .iii nts ar tr ated in blew ms whistle‘ To Show they h“ | 5°01’! . ,_ t‘ S. Stciiart, or CIlJIIOLiOtOWlI re ed though it 1s by the Dc Valera! n q n? e e our heard him,‘ everybody elther- Over m 1o ound drifts a ‘mow t | i i pllcd iilfii, as iiic leaders of both en special attention to economics administration And they do not mental liosp tals. ‘This is perhaps, e W m l; , W - . - - » . - - , . screamed or shouted. The crowd] __ g I t i_ political panics ill his piovince and palm”! 8016mm _ m2 a 00d treat V Mm Gr t what staged the idea that epilepsy I, balloon I *1 ' we“ “gains”. m“ "TWP"? IIPlIIiPB geffzgl "v1 g me MIC it a will lead to mental trouble. ' b°°°m° lmmenm ‘vhere a h“ You shall lift long cars right against CENTRAL DRUGBTORE t _ could be gained b_v iiisciusmg it. 1‘ a i‘ ‘ w" y 1 ‘ " 1),; 1-; A_ paskmtp Chicago’ states hundreds had been in motion, the moon. - The only iiiiiig lcft to bc cxplain- crl is why Mayor Stewart smrtcd a discussion from which nothing thousands were standing immov- able. that there are a large number of I . i “m. a stun!“ and roman“ persons with epilepsy who adjust THE (ILOBE'S TRIBUTE Under the ground in an iron shroud. could be gained and then ap- career as leader or the German themselves to their work family 771° 1'95"” mm’ arrived l“ m“ Josned and hustled by a ghostly "—_ '__' pued we closurei- v ' Fascist party, known as the Nation- _ ma‘ o‘ Mule“ The inspector’ 0cm. crowd, " . , _._ A“ elllflmdmflry ‘lalemem m" al Socialists, Adolf Hitler has fln- sgtomif°irdlyiiiufifig ‘Qitifiwgz: Dying a mt by m. dttve, o; the Suddenly, joyolisly, I laughed out ~ 1 BOOM IN SHIPPING cmly appeared m the local Liberal any achieved his suprmne ambmm menial health never seems to fall leading van, saw the While EWVCQ mud‘ ‘ Qrgan, 1t had fgfefencg to the To- of becoming Chancellor of the Ger- ' ' O I I ‘As Empire trade grows, return cargoes both ivays will cut the cost enabling im- ports to come in more cheaply and the cost. of transportation, Canadian products to reach world's markets at lower Scotch anthracite is coming iii by the shipload to rcplace American anthracite. When the readjustment of trade lines to the east and west route has progressed still further, Canada's national ports will be able to handle Canadian cicports and imports even more expeditiously Lnd at lower cost.” The above is one of many stimu- lating predictions made in the cur- rent issue of Shipping Register, a. weekly journal of world-wide cir- culation published in Montreal. The issue Ls devoted to featuring the advantages of the port of Saint John, N. 18.; and it is evident from the tone of the articles the Saint John shipping authorities are look- ing forward with the greatest con- fidence to a phenomenal revival of this industry on the Canadian At- lantic seaboard. Already, we read. Saint John has more shipping available than for many years‘. There are twentysix recognised shipping lines operating at the port. The Cunard Line, as a defin- ite outcome of the Imperial Con- ference and the increase of Im- perial shipments expected, trans- lerred their A class boats from New York to Saint John and the Cairn [Ans from Portland to Saint John. The grain shipments are steadily hcreasing due to the abundance of opsce on the liners. and at least one line has put on extra boats for the cattle exports. Moreover, {United states shippers are finding lhat Canadian transportation is payable in Canadian funds, and so 3n ship ten to fifteen pcr cent pheaper than by other routes. These are factors which should lie enoouragingto every section of flig Maritimes. There is no ques- lion of the benefit which would ac- . .@-u9 from a revival of the shipping "industry in these plOVlIiC/JS, and ‘the fact that this revival is already .In sight and is being heralded by Iuch publications as Shipping Regis- ter, is a. news itcm of major im- porter-ice. NEW TARIFF BOARD It is a striking compliment to the Maritime Provinces that of the ronto Globe, which was cited as the newspaper “from which our mom- ing contemporary generally receives its inspiration." No more damag- ing admission could be made in a Liberal partisan newspaper. For the Toronto Globe, which our contem- porary complains is now furnishing inspiration to these columns, is the leading Liberal newspaper in Can- ada. It has stood for Liberal prin- ciples through thick and thin, and refused flatly to follow the lcad of its omcial party leader, Mr. Mac- kenzie King, in his endeavor to stultify the Imperial Conference agreements. Moreover, the Globe, while still upholding its Liberal principles, has no scruples in paying tribute to the able leadership Pre- mier Bonnet is giving Canada in these critical times. This attitude was irenchantly eccprcssed in the following recent editorial comment in '13: Globe, which we take pleas- ure in quoting: "In such times as the Drowni- auy statesman who haipinncd to be leader of the Dominion Gov- ernmeut would be entitled to the sympathetic consideration and reasonable patriotic support of evcry intelligent Canadian. But the Right Hon. R. B. Bennett has won for himself a higher position in the esteem of the public. His indefatigable devotion to duty has become proverbial. His energy is unprecedented. He i5 doing his utmost for Canada, ill: Empire, and humanity as a whole.” Such comments from the leading Liberal newspaper are indeed an “inspiratiOll," not only to the Con- servative press but also, we believe, to the Prime Mizi-iister himself. They show that responsible public opinion, inespective of politics. is cognisant and appreciative of the efforts he ismaking. No statesman can hope to escape partisan criticism, es- pecially in times o: great govem- mental dimculty; but such criticism rings hollow indeed when it is repudiated so emphatically by the leading organ of the Opposition party. EDITORIAL NOTES A writer observes that a crooner has to take great care of his throat. So many people would like to got man Republic. He has formed a. cabinet without including represen- tatives of the Centre and Bavarian peoples’ parties, which will be ask- cd to accept his ministry, or else be, had gone down hm mentally; the Reiclistag will be dissolved. Chancellor llitlcr says Gcnnany em represents "the fiche-ll and m°5t t It was found, as mentioned above, i that the ones that did not go back- liviird mentally came fronvfamilics who were less troubled with ner- vousiiess or emotional disturbances. Another point was that in these cases where there was no family iiisiory of nervousness or mental ailments, the epilepsy started later in life, and their attacks of epilepsy did not occur so often, This then nisproves the idea that epilepsy is a mental ailment, and that most epilcptics will gradually lose their mental alertness or mental balance. In the meantime for all cases it would be wise not to have too much excitement or so much mental or physical work that the ordinary habits of life—sleep, food, and rec- reation-are disturbed. The best known treatment at home or in institutions isz-less fluids, less starches, more fats, and iumiual as prescribed by the phy- slcian. Witch-Craft In Alriczi (Winnipeg Free Press) Witchcraft persists in many parts of Africa. in spite o! the coming of the motor and the sight of the air- plane. British justice iii East Africa was confronted ivitli an extraor- dinary case last year, and had t0 formulate a. sentence that would comply with the criminal code ivhile defying ridicule. and it had in the end. to subscrube somewhat lo nntivc intuitions, and reprieved ihc fifty or so sentences oi death that had been passed. But- witch- craft is in common practice. though it is difficult to prove. Per- haps tho most recent instance is the strange native poisoning in Swaziland, a British protectorate ‘in South Africa. The special court trying this case last month got a rude reminder that witchcraft siiil have cited the fact that iii seven days twenty person ivere killed and sixty dangerously ivoiiiided in poi’ litical riots. The Hitler culture car- ries its own trade-mink. However, his announcement of policy this week docs not suggest any desire to shake the world. And there is to be another general clcctioii on March 5. And in any case President Hin- denburg has to bc reckoned with in any proposed departure from sane policy. There is a rumor that Hitler may demand the return of German colonies. Iii ihat event ihcre would be serious complica- tiolis. President do Valera says his Gov- ernment expects the question of a imited Ireland io crop up iii the Anglo-Irish discussions. Lord Craig- avoii has cicciarcci Ulsicr will not consider union for a moment. It is hardly conceivable that Great Bri- tiiin would attempt to bargain Ulster out of ilic Empire, and. of course, tic Valcra WOUIKI iml con- sider coercion. ' The control of a moioi- Uill‘, says the London Spectator, is an expert accomplishment. and some people will never mastci‘ it. They are not hopeless enough to b3 refused a lic- ense, cvcn if a qualification test were demanded of applicants, but they lack that road-sense ivliich is only partly a mnttci‘ of experience, for it involvcssomc quality innate and not to be acquired. But bad driving in general rcvolvcs itself down to half a dozen faults, all of them inexcusable and capable of correction—-carelcssncss at cross roads, passing on corners. mislead- ing signals or no signals at all, cut. ting-in too soon after passing. Speed is not a great danger in it- self, and there arc no grounds for A study of 304 patients in private practice who had had epilepsy for over six years and in some instances for twenty, thirty, or forty years re- vealed that only 20 in all this num- the rest, that in 284, carried on in the world the same n; their fellow hand of the policeman at the cen- ltre commandingly raised. The in- spector was relieved. Law and or- der were being maintained. The hand beckoned, and traffic drib-i bled in one direction. ~ 'I‘iie slow motion was becoming regular be- forethe inspector with his re- serves could reach the Bobbie on the point. The inspector demand- cd an explanation, later to be set out in detail in ivriting. “A mouse," said the policeman, succinctly. i He had no time to say more, but turned the back of a right hand immaculately gloved in white cot- ton to stop [he trickling traffic in one direction, and with the lan- guid lordllness of the London po- lice smiiingly, efficiently, released the stemmed flow in another rectlon. The information confused the plating changing the traffic direc- tion once ' again, said, “Yes, a mouse." The inspector was irritated. "A mouse ivhat?” he snapped. The policeman lei; the traffic trickle. He took a moment off to! turn to the inspector. .“A mouse crossing the street was seen by a woman. . - ." The inspector was amazed. Ho. repeated unbclievingiy, "A mouse crossing the street was seen by a woman . . ." "And screamed . . ." added the policeman, looking in his note- book. ' “The mousc . . ." thc inspector was beginning. _ “No, the woman," explained the policeman. , The correction annoyed the in- spector. "Yes, ycs. I understand. but where is she?" ‘The swollen traffic again dc- maiided the attention of‘ the po- liccman. This set in motion, he told the inspector: "Down the drain." The inspector was shocked. as shocked as _couid be an inspector in command of a detachment of fidgettlng reserves of police. He let holds sway in some of the rcmoler regions of South Afr‘ca as well The story or the case ls told by the Cape Times. \ Bambata, a. native whose wife fcli sick, consulted a witch-doctor, who assigned the cause of the ill- ness to the machinations of pec- pie in a neighboring kraal, Bam- bata, accordingly, consulted a nat- ive namcd Sllwane. who seems to have had a sinister reputation for regretting the abolition of the twenty-mile limit. but there is no question that light cars are driven today at a. speed beyond their brake capacity. A too-sudden stop may moan a. skid and a smash, but a great many pedestrians killed in the last year or two would be alive still if brakes were better adjusted and more often overhauled. their fingers smund it. Will Rogers, who worked up pre- Sorne of the things that have been put on the screen 1n recent years and represented as typical "newspaper pictures" have been a “getting rid of undesirable people": and as a result of their visit to the neighboring kraal the headman his wife, and two of the children iudice against the revision oi war debts because the subject lent itself to wisecraicks, is trying to make libel on tile profession of Journal- ism and the business of publication. These pictures arc always good, died. Both Bambata and Siluane have been sentenced to death; but does lhat subdue the fear of witch- the fresh informatbn pcrcolzitc, which it did slowly. “Down the drain . . ." When this had regis- tered he was perturbed. “Down the powers of their ruling chief as a rain-maker. Perhaps Archdeacon Watts plac- es too much importance on a, be- lief in a rain-maker as an indica- tion of benighted resort to witch- craft. The people of Medicine Hat. it may be recalled, paid homage for several dry seasons to a rain-maker and even laid at his feet burnt of- ferings amountfng in value to a .very substantial sum. Still. not many other evidences of the delus- dl- - inspector. “A mouse . - ."1'1e P1“ peated. The policeman, busily contcm-' —Marion Brown Shelton. drain. GTBBI’. heavens!" claimed. The policeman strove to console him. “still down there, I'd say." hO added. “You're sure?" asked the inspec- tor. he ex- The policeman said he knew nothing to the contrary.‘ The inspector at last realized that here was a situation he would have to take in hand. He gave or- dcrs. "Divert traffic off this side of the Circus while .1 have the Department of Works come and set the woman out . . -" The policeman interrupted him. “She's gone . . -" , “Down the drain you told me," said the inspector. “In o. taxi," the policeman added. The inspector looked sharply at the policeman, and then he said slowly, solemnly: “You mean the taxi with the woman in it went down ilie drain?" The policeman raised another hand for traffic _ release and laughed: “Not the women, the mouse." The mspcctor wiped his fore- head: "What?" he asked, “the mouse was in the taxi?” The policeman could afford to be patient with a. superior- officer now that the traffic was once again under his control. He ex- piaincd, “Not the mouse, the wo- man." Tiic inspector was baffled. He ivould have been lost had he not been comforted by the flow of traffic rounding the island on which he stood beside the white gloved dissolver of the mBFs- that had become immovable when B mouse‘, or a. woman, crossing the street in London, had met, and one, or both, had disappeared, in a taxi, down a drain after the wo- man (not the mouse) had scream- ed. So there may have been a mouse. A little negro s-choolgrl down in Florida in answer to one question. "What is anatomy?" wrote the fol- lowing: - “Anatomy is a human body. It i8 divided into three. parts-the held. the chest, and the stummick. The‘ haid holds the brains, i] there is any; the chest holds the liver and the litcs, and the stummick holds the entrails and the vowels, which are a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes w and y." UR. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. Noted Physician, treated suc ccssfuliy and obtained pcr manent cures oi‘ Stomaci Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. ' Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown A Pure Tea ' Brahmin Orange Pekoe 501d 011i? in Bed Airtight Paiolnga. iiicusveiiiciioisou’: BLACK IMPERIAL FOX FOOD from the cash register standpoint, because the public is interested in three members comprising the per- Vlonnel of the new Tariff Board, two ion having since been particularly noticeable, it might be unfair to craft on the part of neighbors which is widespread among the amends. "Elngland never stood high- Cmldlilon!» “eh as lmllses . Regularly fed throughout the winter season iion, Dyspepsia, Sour Stom~ 1. ‘mum be “Bu” Marmmersl The’ er in American opinion than today," newspapers and likes to think that, SWRZL and has actuafly 16d to charge the people of Medicine Hat nth, "gay-thug", Gum, ms. is mm“. Mr, Justice G H‘ Sm” he says. “That was tho cheapest s??? 11:0 them separating their kraals as far with being believers 1n witchcraft geifnzlljdtzntgy gag-attains‘; V} yfck, of the High Court of Justice "mdmd "mm" m" W" “pm lecting. Prlntlnl; and clisirfbutcllis ajiiltzssiibil: fiirfexilidgeimwzithegwxli-I hilt-ail’ $1133.? Igithlnifi “ "°"°".P"°“ "m" “'° "m Th9 In Ontario, was burn at Musquodo- And they Wm gal“ m the “d by m” news. We should like to emphasize 1mm’ i," a “m, volume on the cut. rmlitical" pimaceaa, can’ remotely K221i? of " however, that tho public has been fooled s seed many times in this WRY- Working, ucwspapermcn, sce- ing these pic..ircs, are the victims of mixed cmmlons. Sometimes iliey laugh, but Just as often they feel like grabbing a chair or some other Oblcct and ruining the production. - bolt, Halifax County. Nova Scotia. lure. Ila career at the Bar and on the Bench has been a notable one, and he is regarded as eminently fitted i“ = for the new duties to which he has t been called. Associated with him will be Mr. Milton N. Campbell, M.P., for MacKcnzic, Saskatchewan. ‘Mr. Campbell was born at Green- vale, this Province, in 1881; was cd- suggest the analogy offered by the Swazi, The latter arc convinced that no one dies a natural death, but he has been bewitched by his enemies. Somebody has played the evil part of sorcerer, and the logic- a1 ‘step is to find the sorcerer. The discovery is left to the wllch-doc- tor, who. in extreme cases, devises means to murder theone he des- guiity. The belief-in» aor- cery and witchcraft is widespread toms of the Swazi, has remarked on the fact that though the Swazi as a pcoplc show unmistakable signs, particularly in their language, of’ descent from n, relatively high and advanced civilization, they have de- generated largely as a consequence of the intense belief in witchcraft which even in these days, as pain- iiiily illustrated by the trial he Mbalane, enters into every derail oi’ their dally__life. They have a Since when has the practice of commenting oncontrovcrsial issuw before the law courts been adopl- ed by Canadian Journalism? Our’ local contemporary featured ylgg. icrday an editorial comment from the Otiaiva. Citizen on the case of Peter Verlgin, Doukhobor lcadcr, whose deportation back to Rims-la We alone have the sole rights on this perscrlption and ‘since selling it have received numerous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your atom- ach, serious conditions are likely to arise ll you allow yourself to lapse into a chronic state of gastric trou- ble. Get a bottle today. Assured Results in Reproduction The largest litters born last season 8N1 also the highest average of pupa raised to matur- ity were in fox ranches where IMPERIAL FOX . BISCUITS comprised a most important part 0f. the foxes’ daily winter diet. Line up with the worliPs successful ranchers and insist on having “IMPERIALSP the best fox food obtainable. Not a few observers take the view that the ‘United States holds the main key to an unlocking of the mated in this Province and also at 1s the subject of proceedings in work“ dmcultlezt It seems r0850” mm belief’ ‘or instance m the In ‘ma’ and m endlmmn l! n,“ “c. I / . I t Prince o: Wales College. Gharlotte- Supreme court chambers at mu able i080)’ that if the United sows __________________,_ m, o; ihggg m, 130695553 V“, ' i a town. Removing to the West at the fax. Since the Citizen article was w°uld mmigrla"? reduce "'5 °X""°m°' ' ' baffling to administrations endeav- oring to replace this hideous mani- festation of mediaevaiiam by a conception more intelligent and civilized. , ' THE 2 MAGS Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. ly opened to a dissipation of a large section of the troubles not only of iliaz country but of, the iiorla n: large, mm“ court proceedtngs have ly high tariffs and become an active party to a more moderate plan of fade this subject strictly ‘w,’ juw lkquldnting war debts than now ob- ce. tains, the waytwouid be immediate- ‘ opening of his career. he rapidly at- tained prcmincnce there as a public figure and as a force in the agricul- Charlottetown, P. E. L