PAGE FOUR ~ TllE CHAR LOTTETIJWN Glllllilllllit Jluriiing llully (Fuunilrd i881) . ll. linrlli-tl F. J. l. . J. N. lhiriirlt lZ-I. I. B11 - l . I). .\. "HPKllIlllIlI ll. .\'. U. 1111111111111» |..|iior.-. ri 1k \\':ilk1-r unit l1. h. liirrio .\l l‘\( lill"l'l().\' If \Tl-I.i main |ll‘l" _\r'1|I' iii 11111 1-) ili-liu-n-il lo (‘ity $l.1ii| 111-r _\ ‘ll‘ 1 iihiiiu-i-i I iilvil lo l’. H. ‘SARI 91-i- _»1-..r 111. 11111-1111-1-1 iiiiiili-il Io 1'1 Atviiiiii-is Audit |llll'l‘llll of Cilitor llllll \l.| \\' F SHAY. JANUARY 36th 193B z “The birung/cst fllt-moi-y is Wfllklfl‘ than i [he “111/rest Ink." a’ r -~-—-~—_-~ 11- 1;»- ' ‘ - b . A 1 Dtlilllllltlll TdXdlIUIT l. I l One of 17.1 11111-1 ir1-11t101i1h 1111111011 1ili-dgcs. . 1 ginii i11 '.l1-.- t"1-1l1-.1l I ilk-rd ';1i11n1|.'i11-.- iii i035 1 “it: "r111.i1":-.1.- .11 1..\.11:1»11". l: \\Zt> alleged 1 1111111111 i1.-11:-. 1 1.1-1.1. - 1i 1i 1d 11111111-011 l10:1\"_v Q l-.1:1111.-. 11 111-1111‘1-‘.i11tl1l1.i1 h)‘ .11 \1.:11lIt1t.-:iii1. \\|~1- |i1;1i1.'1'.{<—' '; 11.11 .~".r.1111111 t1..-i 11111-11011- 1 l. l ..111 "...\.-1_111 1111-111-1111111111- '1‘ 11.. L. 1.. --. 11 i--. ..11l. 1.1111 that lll>|l'.'ltl of : liixiiifldl 1 l-...111-1i :'-...- 11.1.0 iittn lllCi'l'J'i\\‘s all . - tlie 11110, noi..11.1 :11 the Sales and income i , 1 ' ‘i 1 17.1.1. 111117. 1111l1li~l1~l z ' .- 1 lll-illlli .111 lili\t‘i'llllll'lll. 1 ' , .11 1"111111-.i'1'.1li\c iigiin-s 11f V‘ 1 l- "i-- 1.1 . 111-1111 31111-11111 i - 1,1 1 111 1111- 111-11111-11 :iiiii1!11i~- ‘l .111 .-.;1--.. !.1\2lll1-l1 uii- .\'_-..\._=_;. g ' ' lii-uiii-lt fvqglllitfi 't 4 ‘ Hi" t1 1 .\‘_'1\'./'/_. I .. c. ‘.1 11\;i 1111. .\_§1.7ti_-—:t1i 1 .‘..i o1 5- 1:1; 11\ 0r 1l10 last (011- l. f. -1l-_l .\l;i'r_1'l1 ‘ti, 1111;; \\'(: " -- .\...i-- lax 11111110; 57.55 1: :11 $1.31 n1 liiconn- tzixl ;1, l .:=11i'_-:1ll11c;i111111 of the l\'c- .11 1'11," 11.1." .\'1..17‘7.7l-5. " 111111. i11 11137 from this Pro- '<1>'_Z, oi" b‘; 111-r cent of i1i~t $1_-.-\'o_1. or .5: in liglllk“ l'r'111'i'\t‘1'.t< It \'('l‘_\' l1ic,11i..0 ' 1-=1:...1.1.... filt- l‘1 l‘. l‘11§'l. ~1111‘ -o1-.-1" 1111- figures for any c1». llit- 11137 figure, of course, 11- l'\‘L'll|'il. a.- d-ies the figure l'1i1i<. 111 1'10 111-1-1-111 cxorhitiiiit Sixth-s 1111 I- to .\’1><-1"i"1-i1t li_v the Kitty; 1111-1. _l. l.. lhlov, lliiiister of l1I1i-:1."111. n1 .'l 1111-111 'l'11r11i11o lltlilfCna. 1 1111- lo deny that this is a t\i'l)lli'flll(1l1§. tlllfl COHHIHIH“ 1 11101-1- llic iiv-iuht. n! this tax in l1l'(‘.v'.~. governments for ad- . 11111 to U1‘(‘\I‘t11 izovcrtiments a1 expenditures." 1.1 " i'1"11i11 tlie Lilit-i-ail canipziign 111111-11 111' 1.11» ' :1 half yi-zirs ago, in which 1'1". 1.11111 rv-lui. was 1'1-11r1-~1-i1t0d1 as being 1w". 1111i 11,1 i11 "it'll-id rt-licf to tl11- over-i 11:11.1 iic-l 1:1\11.~i1:"~_ l>1‘1 zi- :1 1ll'.‘1'lll.\' of "iiiurtuix- 11;» 1~,.- i1‘.-.1.11,1f.- 1h.- (‘Iifllltfllj/t‘HIFII/ ofl I111‘. "I - -.-.-1"11'11 111 11111 lll‘ found incor1ior-l 111 1'1 V- 1'11 ‘.11 Liberal 111'111,'1':1i11i111-, 1ntlilishctl , 11111111-1 1i;1"-_-." iiuriiig thi- lll>l 01111111111131 l1_\‘ our‘ local ..-111-.' 111-111111"); ll!1'll'l' 1111- hczidiiig, “Alain l ‘h? 11f l.il- ral l‘l.'1tf11ri1i." 'l'--‘< :i-1.1-.-i of the siuiation is something . wl 5.1 1.1- 1>1"1-~.-i1t01l vcry" strongly before tlie l\-.»-.\'01l (oizinii-Ji-ii, __________ _ The Bacon Quota ' ‘if the \"."1'-.i. of :i1111u:1l [iroiluction is accept- ed :1.- 1111- 1: ~ll|'i‘, 11v {.11- tht- inost important food .'1l‘.‘11I.'1l duct-d in (fanailai is the hog," writc- .\|1-. l. ., .‘1lc|.1-.-in. 1ir1-sirIt-n1 of Canada l‘.'1c!.1-1"~. Linn-111 :11 111- 11111111111 review of the liw-Iiir-ic in1iu ‘ "\, l-l-iimi-rs in this Province. “"1111 l1.1v1- M1111 inn-d iiiziteriiilly- through the Bri- tish 11.10-11.- 1ni111.. olititini-rl iii 1032 by the Ben- nt-[t tb-ii-i-iniii-iit, will JtlllifCtfléllt‘ the force of tlii- ~"t- 11-i111-11=, l.;i~"t year, ii is >ltfi\\'fl, there was pro-lucid :11id l!l7ll‘l\('l('l.l zihoiit 7,000,000 hogs. 'l'l11- -- llllll‘l\t‘l ivi-ight ivas 200 potinds, .- 111-11-1- f11r lllL‘ year approximate- ‘; c0111-. $11 1111- veiiir- of pigs 1ir0duced 011 L;1-..-i1l1:i11 fZll'1i1~ 1'11 11.137 \\';i.< $115,000,000. .-\\i "- 11111-1 1.111 ei- than iii the war and 1,11..1--.\' " 1.1-. with‘ :11. hut i11 evtwy other 1-0-111-1". 111,1,‘ \\.i- tlic 1111111101" year for hog pro- duction Z1. 13111,. .\l.1i"e hnq- u-erc produced; i110 .-i\1-i-:1:;i- 111 .1 11-11- 111-tier than ever before; :1 111111-11 1.1140: 11111! 111 11110011 was exported than in 1111" 1111-111111- _1...11-; ;.111l llllb<l ii111iortai1t of all, Li111.11l.'1 1~ :11 1>1‘l'~i111 111-ire firtiily t-tilrcnchctl as a source 111' >111111ly o1 llritish bacon than at any PrPYlnllF llllt’. Th1- ri-ii-i-ii." ",\ll 1~i tl1i-_" writes Mr, .\lc- Li-zin. “i- tllll‘ t1» 1111- |':1ct that during the last tivt- \1-"ir~ t :.i1;i1l.1 ha- 01111111 d a preferred posi- tioii 111 i11-n 111111-11 |11:1i"'i.1-1. l'i11l1-r the term.- of tilt‘ 'l1t'i.\;t .\ur0i-t1i1-i11~ lirciit Britain set 111) :1 pol-cv oi 1:oi1::"1»ll111g'l11-r illi|ltll'lill.itrll\ of bacon by 111111111. .\n1l. out of ii111ioi't.'ilio11< from n1] cotiiiiitcs of :1111»1"o\1i1.."1‘1l1 1o million litigs. Can- tidii \\:i~ zo-iqiiiil :1 111i-11:1 of 2Y1) tnillion hogs." This ~_v-t1-n1 of 111111121 rt-g-iilatioti is what .\lr. illacki-HYH‘ hi"! iii 1031-35 Ili-tioiniccil as “econ- onin‘ ln11i1r1.'-h-111'. llut lct us ri-tnrn to .\lr. hlvl.i:.'iti\1"1-111-:"t. "'llii=." i11 \\ r710». "1\.i~ 11111 all. \\'lien ~he ldopterl the ipioizi \\\l\'t|l. liritiiiii at llll‘ same time launched 11.1.. il 1111111-1- of stimulating 11m- duqtinn n1 11111110 ll‘. i11.'il<in1_f pig raising profit- able to thi- 11111111 i-11-1n1-r. 'll1c method ‘adopt- ‘Ll was, by 1111111111;- 1Il1171il'l>. to nizuiitaiii the price. 'l'his rifitlt 11.1- 111-1-11 1111111111011 through- out the ltht ll\'t‘ "- :1i-.1l 1111- (aiiadian pig product-r h:i~ shin-d lii-nt-fii- with the liri- ti-h pity piwliit-t-r, '|'l.i- :i~~1iri-d Iiutli-t ‘for 214 itillion h-wr»! 1 'u~ the Il‘-~lll‘l'!l price. are the two ,1litlillilfy I4 were as follows, with figures for f-pto- v-l-ieh have so stitiiiilzitt-il pig 1irorltiCtiOn in (mau- 1\lr. 11011-1111 predicts ilvit tlllfilltY lll(' 111-vi tlirci- vi-ni-s, a- :1 rwiilt of 1111- rctcntion of lire, 111...11-_'1.";_» production iiiil lllltllllllllPlllV r_-11i,~51|l profitable. 111-t tl-i- d111- not nicziii that (zin- add has now achieved a safe and uniissziilable position in the British nizirkct. On previous oc- casions, Canada's disappearance from the Bri- tish market wzis due to a single fact, namely that Canada could not ltllllalillld the coii-ipeti- tioii of Denmark, and it is not tlnthinkable that if, today, tlie British market were again open to all comers, Canada nlight once again be forc- ed out of that market. The Canadian livestock problem which transcends all tithers, he believes is, (luring i110 years of the (lttziira Agreement, to place hcr pig itidtistry on a‘ hasis i11 which she can compete 0n even terms with Denmark. Tariff Protection Essential rnr; UHARLOFITETOWN GUARDIAN limes av TIIE WAY Whenever they (sailors) luvs iflrlcvflillcch tuna the iuisatisfactcry- t working COIICLIUOHS on mum’ 811195 are becuminiz a matter 01111011111101! kiiowieutze) they are at. iull liberty to present. tneii‘ demands in an orderly way. nut 1i tney indulge iii a sit-down strike at sea or in a ‘tore 1m port. in defiance 0t their oiiicers. they must face the FY05- uect oi iloinil to prison. Rcsponsioe organizations of seamen wili not. be handicapped by this ciartflcation of ‘ their rights. On the contrary, they gitould be greatiy benefited. Only tlie irresponsible type of orBflfl-ll- ation. more interested in/ 881w! 0K1 than in real improvement, oi condi- tiuns under which seamen work. 15 Need pf a stable Canadian tariff policy irliicli lniured by the verdlcta-Washingion will pfLH/ldt.‘ essential itational revenues and give adequate 1irotection for the inaiiitcnance-and cx-1 paiisiun of secondary industries, is 111-merited in 3 comprehensive stirvcy of the national economic 1 structure just compiled by Ford Motor Coin- puny of (aniidzi, Limited. (if particular interest to all Crinarlizins di-, rectly o1- indirectlv couni-ctctl with the anio- t1ltili\t‘ ii1dti>1r_v. this booklet rt-vicivs the d0-, velopiiiciit of 11r0~0nt tariff policies front prc-| (Iinif0d1-1':itioi1 d:1_\-<; (Illllill\‘\' tlie expansion of1 1111111 1ll‘iilllll'_\' and si-coniliiry- ililll1>ll'l('.\ and dczils“, specifically with the Vxiiizidiiin iiutonioliilt- iii- ilihlijv as a nliolc. l "i11 recent _\"0.-1i"-" thcrt-‘has lit-cu 1i lllJll'l\'(‘(l lt‘.\~('l1il1;{ of 11r111ecti11|l 11. (Xiiizidian ii1du~t1"_\". i11 l cluding 1111- Zillll-lllllltill‘ industry. (111-r :1 111-r ' itid of 1011-1111- tht- r1110 of ilutv on illllt1lllt|l>il('>' has lit-cu rcdttccd from 3; per cciit to i7'_. 110i" c0111. .\n_v further reduction would ~eriou~l\-' jcopardizt- einplin-i11011t i11 the ziiitonioliilc indus- try i11 Canada. 11> the present protection is iii- (l(l(".[ll£ilt' to equitlizc 011>ts of 1irod11c1ion in (‘an iiila with relzitiit- C0>I$ i11 the 11111.11 States." the p1'1-f.'1cc states. l1 i.- poiiitcd out 1li:1t .\l1t1l1l(l 1110 tariff h1- so 1011110011 the governiiiciit ivould 111- forced to i111~ 110-0 :1 rcvcntic dut_v to 11101-1 fi-czil r0r|1iir01110111.<, which would he at least ri1tt.'il to the present tariff. The proiltictioii miuld h1- tmnsft-rreil (in whole or Rtllhliilllllll part) to ziuiither conn- tijv with the 111111101111111- effect of 1l0.~tr1rvi1ig the taxable ciip.'icitics of "whole conunutiities of existing l1'l.\'[)2l_\'(‘l‘S. 1 Editorial Notes I Foundation Day of .\nstraliz1, 1788. * i< >11 1v It was a real Scotch dinner last evening - tlic (fziletloiiiiin Clzitisrncn got in free, butchzirg- ed their wives a tlollai" ahead, Post. A Washington official has coined a new word—poliopoly. I! 01w mm or one business dominates a trade situation so as to be able to fix prices in that Lrude. that. he points out. properly is called a monopoly- Tuereiore. it" several dlflei-ent indi- viduals or businesses. working tn cahoots. achieve the same rcsuits, that. lie argues is polyopcly. P0 Y‘ opoly poor" Greek, but as Shakes- peare remarked in regard t0 the rose. another name does not. cnatigev tlie SlilOiir-WiIlIllDlZ-Q Tribune. Nini- natives were killed by light- ning on christmas night at a mrm iit-ni- Carolina. Transvaal Province. $111111 Africa. One of ten natives sittiiii: in a liul decided to 80 Qut- A5 1 lilfbat m» of Bouts fluiI-filitll-R . MORE ABOUT CATARRHAL DEAFNESS TREATED B! XRAXS When a patient bard of hearing has submitted to months of treat.- ment, perhaps to operation, and finally has settled down to get what comfort possible by wearing some form of hearing aid and then hears of some furtlici- method od restoring hearing, he may do one of two things, ta) grasp for it. as a drowning man will grasp for a straw, or 1b) make up his mind that n0 method can help tum in his present. condition. I believe therefore that I should again record the results obtained by Dr F.W. O'Brien, Boston, recorded in Radiology. 01 a group of 140 pflliflilS af- flicted with hard of hearing and i731 were improved by this fcrm of treatment, and it is only fair that those who are hard of hearing he stopper! at. the doorway a flush of , or afflicted with head noises should lightinn: struck the hut and knock- ed 11.111 into the open. He was the only one left alive. tlie icmiiiming nine being lmllalltly‘ killed by t e litziilninir-Ioondon Times. Whi-il are we going to clear out 0i 01111111.- uur sit-p was puilh. We 111MB prowcstcu. ‘lite ufllJtliifiae have iltialLal-{iadil- int-y nave oiieieu 11n- ucilllllty. winit iiiuie do M: wait»? 110w mtiiiy more notes are we going to write and iicw iiiany more ‘studies oi iiie billiiillull are we going to undertake. Upon what some are we llelgliillll, the Japanese apo 011165 to eiiaoie no to dec de wiicii we get oiie iieuvy eiriougn? Jun-an can't, apoiogwe the Puiiay to the top of tlie writer and it can't anoiqgize the dead American sea- miiii puck to hie. 111i: controversy over whether tlie Japanese-apology- tliitt-tvas-uivcn — to-our - Ambassa- dor-bclore-Japmi-got-oui- - demand wits siiiliclcnt or not, would be tar- cicai were it not. so dangerous. 1f the State Department. wants to study something, we recommend that. l1 study me terms of the Neutrality Act. We recommend that. it usk the President to invoke that. Act. put; an arms embargo on Japan and China. and clear out 0t die i-ar EastFNew York Post. In view of the amount of trouble thin. Saskatchewan had on its >11 11- * =i< (7110 thing is beyond pcrarlvcnturc—tl1c Kitig Government's kindness to big law) rs in [irovid- ing tlieni with fat appctil court cases and Royal (Itinmiission jobs. " 1o- »: =11 1v 'l‘h(-Vv do things in style in New York. lllr. Grover \\'halen, l'r0sid011t of the \\'orld’.~ Fair‘ to he held tht-rc next year. is drawing a salary 111' 2i"5,o00 per anniun and $-5,ooo for out of ])llL'l\'(fl. expenses. a- Stocks 0f United States grain i11 Catiada on 1F I the corresponding date last year in brackets: wheat. 1,070,818 (nil) bushels; oats, 3,461,879 (25-137); rye, 6113.706 (nil); corn, 618.365 (i390) soya beans, 39,635‘, (nil); Argentine corn 385.215 (51757118); South African com, 3.- 181.613 ((151,308); Argentine flaxseed, 379,914 (11,002). lklklkil CimadrUs domestic exports during the calen- dar year 1937 increased sttbstaittially over those of 1936, the total being $i,o99,724.651 compar- ed ii-itli $1,015,205.35. The total in i935 was $8”§,.28.1,II4. Domestic exports to the United States were worth $451171 3,546 compared with $4()6,664,567 in I936, and to the United King- dom $404,524,876 compared with $399,830,985. x * u 111 A motorist of Buffalo on a drunken driving charge has been convicted on the “scientific evidence" of a young doctor. 'l'he conviction marked the first time in the city's history that a jury upheld “evideiic-e" obtained from tlie de- fendant's own blood stream. Police pinned their case upon the testimony of Dr. Walter W, jet- ter, chemistry instructor in the L7iiivcrsity- of Buffalo Medical School. Dr. letter told the jury that tests of 1\-lcs'si1ia's blood the night he was arrested showed a content of .28 per cent alcohol, This .28 per cent represents 10 to 20 drinks of too-proof whiskey taken in quick sticcessitiii,” he explained. 4- * i Great Britain is cheered by reports of slight- l_\' increased activity in two departments 0f nu- tional life that evcryhody-Hlias been worrying aboub-building and babies. lt has been fear- ed that a decline in the construction industry was a sure sign of a bad time ahead while the steady decrease in the. birth rate inspired prophecies that the population would decline to 5,000,000 in half a century. In 1037, however. there were 14.9 live births per 1.000 population which is a r1n0~tcntl1 of I per cent rise over I936. Dur- ing December permits were issued for 9.764,- 000 pounds worth of new construction, which is 12.5 per cent more than in December. 10313, in- dicating that the consistent decline of the 1irevi- nus nine months has been checked. 11 v 1t _'l'l1t- latgst German r,o()0.00o,000-ii1.1rk pub- lic government loan. for which subscription has just closed. has her-n so \V(‘ll nvcrstthscribed that “"1 liovertiiiicnt has decided to raise it to r,- 200000.000 marks in order to nicct "the tirgciit tlemands for additional Treasury bills." This achievement. vi-liich raises the total of lotig-terin government loans floated in the capital market Sillffl I035 to 8.362.000.0110 marks, is liziilcil as tlie greatest financial success. and as a new token of public confidence in the gnveriinictifls 1volitical and economic leadership. At the Stllllt‘. time it is indicative of the total government expendi- ture that the government coiitiiiitcs borrniviiig at an increased pace despite the fact that tax revenues have risen to an estimator] 18,000,000 marks for the current financial year, w-hiclt is .with a auruus or 113 hands last year, it is surprising to leiirn that the province, notwith- standing this, contributed $1,800 for flood relief in the United States and another $800 for flood victims in western Ontnriu-Brcckvtlle Re- corder and ‘Furies. Uneasincss about the internation- al situation is reflected in Holland's decision to continue reinforcing the army not. on.y at, home but, also tin the Dutch East, Indies. A year ago, coincident with the strengthening by Britain ot the Singapore base, Holland undertook strengthening the Eflst, Indies. A new plan pro- vided for the practical renovation of the naval iilr force and a con- siderable extension of the military air force. Early this year, the pro- zriim was further expanded. The defence budget for the Dutch East Indies was raised from £147,000 to nearly £2,000,000. The new ali- de- fence proizram submitted to tlie Volksriiiid in Bauivia, provided for; am addlton of 200 bombers and re- coiiiiaisiinde aircraft. during the next. three years. Dornier flying boats capable of carrying 3,500 pounds ot bombs ivere included in this number. Witli the completion of this program, Holland hopes to commend tlie strongest, air force of any European power in the Far EasL-Timcs of India, We may confidently hope that not only \vi.l the Minister of War see that tlie right. men are promot- ed to their rightful place but; that he will equally insist that they are Riven technical resources not. tinfer- 101‘ 1H quantity or quality to those possessed by any other army 1n the world. Am admission that the Terri- tor a_l Army ls obsolete tn equipment was implicit in the announcement c-iily atew weeks ago that Britain's fliii: "civilian force" was m be cup- plied with modern weapons and maternal. Better headway has been made in arming the Regular Army, but at. the present rate it will be Iona before it possesses the fire. power and mobl ity esscnt al in wai- to-tliiy._ What prokress has been matte‘ with the supply of the Bren machine-gun? How Iai- has mech. animation advanced? How many tanks are years out of date? How eflicient 1S the transport branch? These iire _ among tlie questions which active men with resilient minds, if promoted to responsible posts in tlie Ai-rny. wil ask with- out delny.——Ncw York Post. Great Britain plans foi- next month M. Singapore one of the Rretitest. naval demonstrations the Far East has ever seen. Sue will be joined by the United States, France, and possibly the Netherlands. As 1'11 énnB-zvsflyel 12o alapan théss degnonsfra- c 1'30 wor - amen-Exchange. o exp an Burdens weflialil-Tnust bear, but Sllpflrflulty ls a superfluous burden from which we may rightly n51; 1,0 be excused. We labor under a super. f-"llY 01 meet-mils. of addresses, "Wechfll- BBPIYIOIIS. anniversary ex- ercises. How would it do to Ian an entertainment which should ave as one of its brtnicpal ends the demon. titration that such things can be done ivithout being overdone?- Chain-nod, Apropos of tiiclttngm New y“, honour list. it is of interest u) note that. out of 30 Canadians kn izhted between i911 11nd 1917 only 12 survive. They are s11- Alan Aylesworth. Sir Herbert Holt, s11- omas White, Sir Herbert Eu one grief, Sir John Aird, s1;- n.5,,“ urmrt, Sli- Herbert Ames. Sir William Hearst and Sli- Hem-y Drayton-Caliztiry Herald, m"! 79°"- llbflll- vllpuhtlon 2,377. has been running 1L5 affairs 1111i the DilY-BS-Yoll-RO system. with e result that it concludes 1937 larize as last year's itiigohlylifmii that of 1935. The town's debeiture debt. $321000 ten years am. is belntz bald of? at, the rate of $22.00 an. mnallv and now stands at only i100,- ono. In vii-w of this i-ecu 1t m 2hr profit Premier Aberhirt to took for iin adviser In Red IDeer. riittii-r than tn places ontslc-e of 3. 23f- per cent of tlie estimati-il national int-omi- or consiilr-riilili- l)(‘_\'lIll(l the 20 per cent char- acterized as the danger line. Canada. certainly the civic firhei-a seem to know their municipal bust. nestw-Monclon Time. know about i1. Dr. O'Brien reports that frcni 1929 t0 1935 he ire-a ed 140 11111101115 Willi. catzirrlml deafness 11nd heaid noies by the Xray. Of this unin- bei" 73_yv0re helped. 65 we-e not improved. and 2 ivere made worse. Of ‘the improved group sixty- seveii had nine treatments 1.0 each ear, and six received onflv eight treatments; nine treatments W85 considered the correct number to give The exposures to the Xrays lasted five minutes and ware given once a week for nine weeks. No patient had been followed 1e s than u year. the majority for more than three years, and game as 11in: as five years. The part of the head put under the Xray extended from the tip of thr- nose to the lower tip of tlie bone behind the 12:11". This means that the whole hearing structuie- itcsc. lllftfdll ovitli little tube carrying 111i" up to iiinei" sitte- of ear drum), the spongy tissues be- hind the ear. the middle ear c011- taiiting the little hon s running from drtiin to the llcilflllg nerve. and the hearing nerv-e its-clf-tvi-rc all put under the dirrct. effects o1 the Xrays. Dr. O'Brien makes no attempt lo explain how the Xray treat.- ments bring about unprovcmeiit in cases of chronic .01‘ 01d cases of catari-liiii deafness. The pain-ls to remember arc that all thzse cases were due to ri cnt- iu-rhal condition. a‘l of them were old cases, and all those that had been improved had been Follow-ed for fro-m one to seven y-etirs after the Xray treatments had been given. so the cures w-ert- really cures. Warning From The Bench (Ottawa Jouniial) Chief Justice Rose of the High Court of Ontario spoke slernly mid to tlie point tn addressing a T101110 grand jury on t-Lc subject. of Manslaughter cases art-jug tram traffic accidents. Careless drivers, he said, are “pests that mu t be extermiiiuted.. “Persons breaking the law must be certain they will be punishcd. Per- sons on our highways are going to be safe as soon as we 1111 inake up our minds that reckless driving is going to stop..." His Lordship found no fault with the laws. but rut-her with the 111.11- tude of the public towards their en- fmocment. Traffic rnfely would fol- low, he said, if all u! us were "ready to assist in tlie enforcement of our laws." In the mass we show a shack- lng indifference to the drmdlul re- cord of traffic accident». In Ottawa last year 18 through the operation of motor ve- hicles. We say i-t is too bad but what can we do about it! If Lliiit mmiy persons had been killed in flies, or industrial accident". o1- by the street. cars. we shrtuld find thmgs to do. ways and means of improving so black a record. Inevitably the courts DOTOss some. t-hing of our complaisant attitude towards a deplorable sit-nation. li‘§‘Sl— lzate to apply with full force the measures at. their (lispusizl. The Judge. the lawyers. ‘the juror-u the witnesses, tn an automobile cuss, all drive cursor have cars 0r hope to have curs. or have relatives with cars. and it would be "uprising 1f t1h1s' tact dtctnot tinconsciousli- at- fect their posivon towards an ric- cused driver who is. they are like- ly to t-hlnk. lust one of themwlvi." but not so lucky. There are not. lacking. however, signs that at 111st. the pu-‘sflic are be- ing aroused. Newspapers are sug- gevtlng that; the courts are not doing their part tn nut, don-n arr-l- dents. Thus the Wind=or Star dis- cusses a fatal accident that occurred in that city. One rvi-rson was killed. n second badly lninred. A coroner‘: jury held the driver of the cor re- sponsible. nnd font- cbrmzi-s were laid attain-at. him-mtinsl-uichter. driving wiille drunk. i-ccklexs 111-iv- lnz. drlvln-z with defecttvn brakes. But. without exnlqnatinn all these charge-i were drc-upi-d in i-h- Wind- sor police coin-t, and accord-inc to the Stai- the Attnmt-y-Gonei-nlis department wants to know why and how lhLs came about. STIFFNESS Plenty of Mlnnrd’! wall nib In n warn Into: hm can. ' You'll noon llmbov up I (a ifiiiiiniyg Klllll llf Pllll" 'l--LN_LIJ_E.N.I. head noises. at least half of them 1 ‘ underlying reason for its remark- perscns were killed- Boy Scout’s Anniversary (Si. John Telegraph Journal) Great Britain has given ma!!! 1111113,; of value to the world. but. periia-pi no movement; originating '1xi the United Kingdom has pene- trated to so many countries of the earth, nor exerted such beneficial influences upon the lives o! you-is people than has the Boy Scout movement which to-day observes m, thirtieth anniversary o1 its foun-da tion . It was on Jamie 24, 1908, that l Sir Robert. Baden- well formed the first troop of Boy Scouts in England, following a trial exper- mentai camp the previous year. The movement_ spreld WW1 N“ markable rapidity, and by 1910 there were 123,000 members in the British Empire alone, and two years later" the organization was granted a Royal charter. More than 100,000 Scouts or former Scouts sewed in His Majesty's forces during the Great War. 10.000 of whom gave thetr lives. Some 23.000 other ' scouts under service age rendered v-alll- aible assistance at home, principally as coastwiitcbers, relieving coaut- guai-dsanen who were called up for service afloat. The motive behind the move- ment ‘is the training o1‘ boys in the e sentitfs of good citizenship. The method adopted—and this is the able success and for its appeal to youth-dc that of nctlve ss-‘i-ex- pression and tlie desire to learn on the nrirt rf the boy, rnth-ci‘ than his passive reception oi’ instruction. The scope is unlimited by class. creed. color or political distinc- tions. The movement 1s non-mill- tary. non-class. non-political and interdenemiiiational. Honor i1; set out as the high ideal of the bays. The scent 111w, on which tlie move- ment hint-s. and which is binding on every scent. was taken from the cod:- c1f the knights. - With thirty y-rars of fine service br-l-inrl them. the Boy Scouts-And of course, the-Ir junior branchs. the “tn-If (‘,1ibs—c:~n 12o fit-ward to i11-enter rit-lvevement, Their cauc- Ls worthy of general suunort, and as thr- value of their wonk is more and more ftDDTUCi"lCfl bv the nubltc, the greater wt‘l be this support. 1 Bank Chat . (Financial Post.) Death of Sir William Stavert closed u. career which few Crin- adiziris have equalled for variety and usefulness. Born in Prince Edward Island 76 years asp. W11- liain Stnvcrt did wliat many an Island‘ boy has done-became a. banker and at. 2c befitm the type of work tot- wliich ne afterward became famous by actintc as 11- quiuatoi- for the Pictou Batik when it was taken over in 18156 by the Bank of Nova Scotia. Three years later he broke new ground by being the first. manager of tlie first branch of tiny Cair- iidiun bank to be established out- side Canada. Great Britain or the USA. The occasion was the open- iliR of the Kingston, Jamaica. branch of the Bank of Novn Sco- Lia. From the outset it. proved a profitable venture. After further service which in- eluded Newfoundland and Bos- ton, Wlllliim Stave-rt became gen- eral manager of the Bunk of New Bruuswick—latei- he joined the Bank of Montreal as superintendent of branches for the Marittmes and Newfoundland. inenta from an uctive banking career to assume presidency of tlie SIJZHHSII River Pulp and Lake Sup- erior Paper C0.. he acted as 1i- quida-toi" for the U. S. Banking C0. in Mexico and stopped a threaten- £510 qrun on the Bank oi Ontario in For his services to Canada. and the Empire duriniz the war, W11- liam Stavert received a knight- llOUCl. Dtiriiuz the late years of the war he was a. member of the Bri- tish minis-try of information and was accounting officer to H. M 'TX‘8flSllX,V. Most Canadians remember Sti- William for the. number and variety at commissioner-ships he undertook following the war. These included the famous Royal Com- mission which probed sviiges of Dominion Coal Co. miners in Cape Breton in 1921; his Job as receiv- er of Aliroma Steel Corp, and his tncltislcn as a member o! the Royal Commission which investi- gated and reorganized Newfound- lancVs finances in 1932. Another important task was that of financial adviser to the Quebec Liquor Commission, first of its kind on the North American continent in its earl. dds b . tween 1921 and 1924. IYIe l5 gredlbqged wttli ei-cctina- the financial struc- ture on which that body now func. trons and which has served as a model for other similar ventures. l i Before his retii-e-. PSALM OF THE HIDDEN SEA The aspen stirs in the quiet night, With a signing "Who KoGS there?" As the; e11lvei- noi-n of a wind let B A pattern upon the air. SWCGDtiHK the world it blows from a r. But on-y the aspen tree Aind the sons of solitude have heard The wind of the hidden sea. Sca of lost dreams and dreams un- born, with eddies of color unknown, With music genius can but guess And da-re not call its own. Whos h lift ll lis l Out. of fig iivctisrld untffi. ten n8 w“! Touched with the spriiy of the myw. tic deeps. He buims with a passionate will To leave in metal and wood end . 1”":- 0 wi- niz rom reed and string liintsofth b ti; 11 0 hidden wiiatdaiilsusisiigilt d m y “IF 81-11 lest an m of 11111111111» nu And thouizht is cleansed no more BY the Wind that veils u shadowy woi- o’ “"3 “Km B10118 your shore! The lumen stirs in the wuh of the wind. Fear not." 1t seems to I 81ml tlie psalm of aea. And I am here alway." Gwendolln Men-in, Dummmcfievléw. v xiii; hidden In ti; Y Destructive Radio Policy (Montreal Gazette) The Canadian Broadcastinl Cor- poration is Betting far away from the original purpose of Parliament in nattonallzlng the radio mrvlfl - . *1..."- 1:- ulti rom aua ve lsstiliiaiiig bets ndxiig DTODIGeIII-B- Uri! tttee. was not. the intention then tn create a. national broadcasting or- zanization which should become a law unto itself. which should cu into the business of established 1n- dustrles and embark upon an ad- mlnistratlvv pone broadly and profoundly destruc ive in its char- acter. et such a policy is now belniz pursued and unless Parlia- ment, at its approaching smion re- opens the whole question of radio broadcasttntz and M90588 B01119 very necessary limits upon the sin- ister activities of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. the out.- come of this nationalization pro- ject will bi-iniz disaster into a wide and important field of business. The Canadian public never ex- pected too much of this Corpora- tion. but they dtd expect an im- provement in the quality of radio entertainment. and a gradual re- duction in the volume 0d radio ad- vertising. This advertising lied be- come a nuisance. besides being, tn a. number o! instances, distasteful mid offensive. and it was tnturtnl 1m important. branch of the nu- tioivs business. The rwults have been disappointing, and quite re- cently the situation has been ail- m-avntcd materially by a substan- tial extension of American broad- casting tn Canada by way of the Corporation's network, this exten- sion beintz accompanied by n pro- portionate increase in the flood of American advertising over the air. This is not only objectionable to the owners of receiving sets. but: is highly lnjurous and dun- zerous to those lri Caniida who are engaged legitimately in the ad- vertising business, ii business which the Corporation appears to be de- termined to destroy. Thus we hove a nationalization project. which was intended to develop Canadian broadcasts of high quiility and to emancipatc the Canadian public who iiaii been to a. 18.1139 extent previously dependent upon the American broadcasts, and unable to escape the more undesirable features of those broadcasts. but which has degenerated into a cut- throat, competition with establish- ed business interests 1n Canada. The Coroporation, presumably, has found itself in need of more revenue than is provided by the present. $2 licence fee. To obtain this revenue it. appfiars to have de- cided upon selling advertising time at: rates below those chargeable by private stations, and this policy applies to advertislnll Whlfih 01*‘ trlnates, not in Canada, but in the United suites. Lt this process of uiiderselllni: is facilitated by use of the cmnmunications of the Can- adian National Railways System. the situation is Just that much worse. It: means. if correct. that an already unprofitable Stake enter- nrlse is being used to bolster up another State whet-prise 111 GETTY" intz out what. is really a. reversa} of tlie policy of Parliament. iinn doiniz it at. the expense of one of the leadiiitz industries 1n this country. The proceeds of a public tax. at imv rate. are b61118 “SH! 01' misused to this Q3141. and. as Tor- onto Saturday Night has remark- ed: “It. constitutes in effect a sub- sidy out o! the public funds t0 0116 particular form of advertlsinz. and to one particular class of adver- tlsers. to the direct. disadvantage of all competing forms of advertis- lntz and all other classes of ad- vcrtisei-s." Advertising is the blood and bone of the publishing business and of the Drintina industry in this coun- try, and the Radio Corporation is tiikliitz it away by Out-fall 00m‘ petition. The industries affected , 01* Vitalit I BRAHMI d ORANGE PEKOE JANUARY 26, 193g i MAGS Blllllll F001) I03 PALE AND PEOPLE A combination Qpech", Vllllllllb l.I| the treatment 9g those dlleuuea where not, orlgln ll traceable to m lm_ puverlllicd condition of the blood THIN One ‘of the greatest Nmefl- In in the treatment o! Rhea. inntiun. For those, who have Ion their nppetitc Mac: 811m] Food will prove tin; rest“, ntlve. GET A BOX NOW.‘ 50c. Hall Order: Prompt]; Attended to. Sassy stomachs RELIEVED If you have any trouble with you: lion-inch such u indigestion. dyspepsia, qmmdch, heartburn, sour gastric distress, etc. Then don't we. lay getting a bottle of Dr. L. B. Evan's Stomach Mixture Immediately. Evan's Stomach Mixture l; g prescription l! Dr. L. B. Evans, noted English Physic- lan of which we have the sole rights to and since selling it have. received numerous tes- timonials from satisfied pur- chasers. _ Try a bottle today. Price 85 cents. - lllE TWO MAGS represent a very large investment o; mpttat, perform an indispens- service to the public. provide gbirem-y large market for skilled l1i~ bar, and are large-scale _l)lll'Clll\S- ers of machinery. newsprint and other classes of paper. The 00r- poratlon strikes a very denial-Mill blow at that industry. and in or- der w do it. as Saturday N12111- he: aid, “is making itself an aflcncy for the promotion of the idt-iitit-al kind of thintl which it was crent- " ed to discoui-aize." Canada wai under to be modelling ill broadcasttntl system upon that. o1 tlie British Broadcasting Corpora- tion. Here again there has been a sharp departure, since the British corporation carries no advertising In the present. Canadian situation the commodities advertisednre ct American origin. a fact which tha Toronto Globe and Mail em- phasizes as unportant. thouszlrnot a; expressing the Corporanona chief aim. Parliament should iaks a hand in this matter, and ivith tlie least possible delay. The first Radio Commission was 11111111111 worse than a failure; the pretcii Corporation. if it. is to be niiitiqd on the policy outlined above. i! censurable upon much more serioul mounds. REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) _ Sonja Home, world's 101111111! woman figure skater-for ncnrli‘ B decade, won tlie Etiroperm 0111111111- ionshlp at Berlin two years zit-111 1°‘ dgy_ The petite 24-year-old Nor- wegian turned profes1=lona1 511011.31 after and now is starring in motion pictures and in iier own skaiiiifl ciimival. An Englishman in Paris had t0 visit the dentist. "And, m'sleur,‘ asked the servant in a tender tone. "W110!" fill-ll“ have the misery to announce?’ alwaqt 11$. " TEA E. R. Bro Fire, Auto, Life, A and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate w&Son cciden t, Sickness Agent at Summer-side. Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond at. Ch ‘ittetown 1 Agent and Collect Rentals and Owners of’ Land or Build Persons Desiring to BUY 88 GREAT GEORGE ST. {I Real Estate Agency H. K. S. HEMMING is l Offering to the Public a service in all branches of Real Estate as To BUY, SELL, RENT Properties in City and Country. To give valuations. arrange Mortgage Loans, Secure Tenants and Estates. NO CHARGE UNLESS DEAL EFFECTED Their Properties or Vacant Lots or Farms are Invited to Call Charlottetown Manager. Manage Properties lngs are Asked to List‘ or RENT City Hon-WE TEL. i376