/,R..:\ /\A (Wm-oi r 8:45 . y... ..- w- q - ir-aiu“ . - 0____...._,., _._.‘. '..-c»@_ x \ . c.1230, =1 c-5311» sac ..l_._-,.~.._..|.‘ - -.< 1 lrl_1t.flfln m‘ GUARDIAN *1_>_:»._oa roux I 1 ____ Tin; (JHARLOTTETOWN ""' . ~ P '..W',t'h't ‘ m: BIIARLUTTETOWII Gllllllllll ores u m: u» m... ""ll.°.t......;. °" President-W Phi-star S. “PIANO, ll. P. Vla- . resident-I. B. iluruett Secrl-lnry—l.ieut.-(‘ol. II A. llar-Killnon, D. l 0. l-Iliitor and Managing Associate [Mixers-Frank Walker and D K. (‘nrrie Director -J. R. Ruruetl Morning llnlly tfuunilr-d 1887i 8.1.00 per year (in atlrauce) delivered. $4.50 nor year tin advance) mailed in (‘anode aud United Slates. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE! UNITED STATES-The Beckwtth Building, New York (‘ity General Motors Building Detroit lug, Kansas City, lvillougllby Tower Building Chicago: Gi-nn BulldinthAllunto; Francisco: 11.1.1 No_ 05th Street Philadelphia Building, Sf. Louis: Special Agency inc. New York Central interstate Build Syndicate Trust Building, San lfonsdnock Morning Maxim Woman haters are the easiest marks. ‘ITIESDAY, NOVEMBER. fl. 1N2 ~ CABINET CHANGES The changes made yesterday in the portfolio of the Provincial Government will, we believe, give general satisfaction. Since the death of Hon. Mr. MacNcill; Min- ister of Public Works and High- ways, the control oi that. import- ant department was borne by Premier Stewart. A new minister has now been appointed in the person of Hon. G. Shelton Sharp, Wllg relinquishes the portfolio of Agriculture which goes to Hon. Thomas MacNutt. of Malpeque, Councillor in the Legislature for the Third District of Prince. Mr. MacNutt is a practical farmer with wide experience in legislative af- fairs. He was elected to the Legis- lature in 1022 and was again re- turned in the gr-ncral provincial el- ection of the following ycnr. In the ‘ Britain must pay 3 1-2 per cent. in- he terest for the next 55 years, whereas suffered defeat with his party but: France, now paying only 1 per cent, substantial, is not obliged to pay 3 1-2 per cent ‘lmlll 196s, and Italy, now paying il-Bih of I per cent, will pay no Liberal landslide of 1927 was returned with a nlajority 1n the general election of 1931. Mr. MacNutt does not profess to be ll. speechmaker, but those soclated with him in politics aware of the wide extent of his knowledge of agriculture and his practical experience and judgment should be a. decided asset to the Government in his new capacity as Minister of Agriculture. 8.5- Of Hon. Mr. Sharp's ability re- ference has been made on other occasions in these columns. A year ago, on the death of Hon. Mr. MacNcill, The Guardian suggested that Mr. Sharp would be an ideal appointee to the position of Min- ister of Public Works and High- ways. He ls a man of wide execu- tive experience and practical know- ledge and has been an out- standing success in administering the agricultural department. The same measure of success, we Dre- dict, will follow on his new ap- pointment in the Public Works De- partment. The portfolios of Provincial Sec- retary and Provincial Treasurer have been taken over by Premier Stewart. The Premier is now re- covering satisfactorily from a pro- tracted illness, and his zeal and ability in an executive capacity are sufficient guarantee that the new duties which he assumes will be discharged thoroughly and well. i Altogether, the change is most Iatisfactory, and should result in Itill further improvement in the ndministmtion of the affairs of the Province. _ In accordance with an amend- ment to the Election Act, passed at the last session of the Legislature, l. lay-election for a portfolio min- ister is not necessary provided the minister is already a member of ‘the Legislature, as is the case in respect to each of the appoint- ments made yesterday. 1m; POUNI) or FLESH President Hoover has refused to advise Congress to postpone the war debts payment due on December 15 by Britain, France luld several smaller European debtors of the United States. With the exception of Italy, they had asked for a morat- orium pend ng a conference with a view to a revision of the debts set- tlement. The President wok the un- precedented step of seeking the counsel and co-npcrat on of the man who is to succeed him in March. but nlliwncntly Mr. Roosevelt refuses to ta"? the rc-"ponsibility of making s: dcciscn until lic is installed at’ ti Whin- House. Mr. Hoover qualifies his refusal by r ring his propose‘, rejected by l ca: last year, to appoint a l"Sl0Il lo discuss the problem he rculltrys debtors, after is hzxc bccn made next Ho proposes, not for the first l. hit/t the dcblcr nations mght any rate, by providing wider markets for United States exports J-Ie also suggests that countries whose cur- 000. ; the present Congress, the 72nd, will cancellation of the debts, but. as its term expires in March and many oI its members will not return. it may refer the whole issue to the 73rd Congress. There is not an economst lor financier of repute in the United States who will not say that. the present arrangement is so full of inequalities and anomalies that. it must be changed. For example, more than 3-4 per cent. at the Deals. are beginning m 1960_ Britain w” thfmonlugue, Canadian Trade first debtor to settle, and in her anxiety to preserve her credit, agreed to the Unted States terms without demur. fiance and Italy made a poor mouth, and fared much better. Although in interest and prin- cpai Britain has already paid near- ly 8,000,000,000 (mostly in interest) she is required under the agreement to go on paying $190,000,000 a year in gold ‘for 55 years to come. It cannot be done, as President Hoover him- self knows. ' MR. KING DEPLORES Mr. Mackenzie King has discover- ed a conspiracy. He says there is an attempt in the newspapers and in Parliament; to stifle discussion, and to prevent the knowledge of facts which. the people ought. to know. He says that at no time in the his- tory of Canada has its press been so much under the control of special privilege. As to Parliament, he is just as gloomy. and he monks in the accents of despair. But then, flslng to the height of h‘s great occasion-it was at a Liberal ban- quet-hs summons us once more to the assertion of our lost liberties. "Are we afraid of the truth," he cries, "the truth which alone can set. us free?" "Poor Mr. King," says the Van- couver Province, "In the genial warmth of s. good old-fashioned Liberal ‘ ‘, all among friends and with no rascally ‘Tories there to poison the air, he unfolds like a rose in June. It seems a. pity that the Pres conspiracy t0 sup- pras the truth that sim-le can set us free should not extend to a suppression of what Mr. King says when he goes off the deep end at the little social affairs of the Grand Old Party. For it seems that the conspirstor press that m. King is talking about is none other than the wretched Tory news- papers. "So large s. part of the press is null-Liberal," sghs poor Mr. King. "and you can not hope to get through the Conservative prfik! an exposition of Liberalism." The "conspiratcr press" n3 we en- deavored to show in yesterday's com- merits, includes also such leading Ottawa Citizen and the Winnipeg Free Press. These papers have all ‘ expressed views diametrically opposed to Mr. King's expressed opinions about the Imrcrisl Economy; con- ference; and it. was m the Imperial Conference chiefly that Mr. King was alluding. How is it that today the Federal Liberal leader is being b95198“! by 80 much adverse press criticism? The press represents pub. lic opinion. Mr. King's eomplalnt about the "oonspratm- press" n. wives itself into a complaint of public opinion. The Imlgg o; the- °'d lady flying to sweep out the North Sci with s broom would ap- propriately represent m. King's present attitude g5 oppqseq to m; xencles are depreciated might pay the December installments 1n their own currencies, a suggestion which, if carried out, would reduce the Britsh payment by about $30,000,- No one ventures to say whether agree to any concesson. It is on rec- ord as opposing either reduction or Engineering reports that approaches for one first train-ferry service are being constructed and the ferry boat is being built in England. The ferry will be across the Yangtze Kiang river, bet/ween Nanking and Pukow. thus inking up the Tientsin-Purkow and the blanking-Shanghai railways. The six penitentlaries of Canada have at the present moment about three thousand five hundred 1n- lnates. The jails hoid today about four thousand inmates. The refor- maforiea for sentenced young men and boys contain about three thous- and. In the past ten years the num- ber of conv ctions for criminal of- fences has nearly doubled in Can- ada. (from 24,000 to 40,000.) The number of convictions for all of- fences bg and little, has far more tha-n doubled-In 1920, the number was 162.000; in 1930 it had rise-ll $0 365,000. asserted in documents now public at Washington. Where lost the war for lack of money. Japanese activ ties in Mhnchuria. Japan is not only disposed to chal- Manchuria, but ls not. at all anxious to join in naval disarmament. The situation in that quarter is still ex- tremely delicate, and the League 0f Nations has on .ts hands a grave problem. One of the most. remarkable fea- tures of the economic development of Plllesllng since the country was placed under British Lfalldaic after the Great. War is the growth of lhc citrus industry, writes Yves La- Com- missioner at Cairo, in the forth- comhg issue of the Conlmcrc a1 In~ tclligencc Journal. During the 1926-27 crop year ex- ports 0f oranges totalled Z.2l4.000 boxes, apart from a few hundred cases of grape-fruit. Exports for the present. season (1931-32) are expect- ed to reach from 4,000,000 to 4,500,- 000 boxes. At the present rate D! growth, it is estimated that by 1940 Palestine will be in a position to export 9000.000 to 10,000,000 boxes of oranges and nearly a million cases of grape-fruit. In ilnc with the action of the Canadian Pacific, the New York Central lines are taking on 1,500 ad- ditional men five days c week in their car shops. Work will thus be given, it is estimated, to 1,000 other men in factories supply ng material. During the business depression the railways have been allowing their rolling stock to run down and re- placements and repairs soon will call for the employment of many men in all lines of industry. Mr. Bruce Barton in an American magazne says: “The present effort of the world for peace is ridiculous beyond description. We propose to establish thetriumph of that idea with s few kindly Old gentlemen. a piece of paper, a blotter, and a. foun- tain pen. We pray. We utter pious speeches. We weep at the tomb 0f the Unknown Soldier. Bub when it comes to money we Americans spend one bii1'on dollars as interest and principal on our debt (chiefly the cost of the last war.) nearly one billion dollars in pensions and ser- vice to the veterans of former wars, and more than seven hundred mil- lions to the‘ army and uavy- But only a fountain pen for peace " According to a report. from one of the big observatories the sun 5110B have been gradually growing fewer In number and less in sim and from all indications we may be f?" 510m any malign influence from that supposed source for a number of years to come. By the middle of next year his face wilbbe almost clear of blotches. And if a. part. of what has been blamed 0n him is true, We may expect an era of good feeling and happiness from this time “mo Llbflfll "BWBPBDHB as the memo on for some time to come. Tin-eat Globe, the Vancouver Sun, the °I W" Wm W856 "id the" ‘s eve“ hope that the radio crooner will pass' with the depression. chins l5 making progress. London Berets which look as though they were nailed to the hem-l are the latest. fashion. Many heads lend themselves to this treatmcnt.— an alarm clock that doesn't go off? asks a corrcspanclmt. One that docs, make future payments. in part at expressed voice of the people. —The humorist (London). t That American money prevented the collapse of the Allies ill 1917 i5 male did the money come from to avert the collapse of the Central Powers in that year? We have yet to hear the theory advanced that Germany lenge the world in the matter of Punch (MIIIIOII). Canada. The French-Canadian threads in our national fabric are "What is more exosperaiing than stout and colorful. ‘They add 80hr DI I p , Quilts 1 an-slw BcrkunMD STOMACII ANI) INTESTINAL ULCEB. \ Although we know that Nature is "‘a. friendly force’ toward mankind nevertheless there are times or conditions in which this friendly force is harmful to that body of ‘yours. One of these conditions is ulcer of the stomach or ulcer 0f the flrfii inch or two of the small intestine into which the stomach enters. The digestive juice of the stom- ach which helps prepare foods for digestion is rich in hydrochloric acid. It is this hydrochloric acid working on the walls of the amm- lach and intestine which actually prevents the ulcer from healing. In Chin; ha; approved and’ Japan’ f th i r distress which is has rejected the Lytton N110“. The an e pa“ O spokesman of both have been heard when me hydrochmlc "m in the at Geneva, and each flatly contra- dicted the other in the matter of ‘always found in ulcer only begins |dlgcstive juice reaches a certain de- .grec of strength. Thus the object in the treatment A rem“ “m” ‘mm T°ky° m“ of stomach and intestinal (duo- ldcnai) ulcer is to prevent clamcze from the hydrochloric acid. How is this done? | By the use of alknlies which check ‘or neutralize the acid-hydrochloric lacicl. Hence the best known treatment, and got into the Premie“ house. liar ulcer, the Sippy treatment, con- l -l sists in giving large doses of alkal- ics after, and oiPbeEIadonna before the feeds. and in using milk and cream as the basis of the diet. l Notwithstanding the wonderful ‘success of this treatment which is mow used all over the world, there are some cases where it, does not af- ,fect a permanent cure, and surgery ‘is necessary. Just when, or in what cases ‘should surgery be used? Surgical treatment must be used in cases of perforation, that is whcrc the ulcer bores its way right through the walls of the stomach. 5 Surgery should be used where there is frequent bleeding from the ulcer that cannot he controlled. Surgery is necessary also when the scars from the healing or healed ulcer obstruct the flow of food from stomach into intestine. The thought then is that the use of alkalles and frequent soft or fluid meals will heal the majority of these cases, but in the special con- ditions above mentioned the patient must be ready to undergo surgical operation if a cure is to be affected. The Canadian People (Vancouver Province) Addressing an audience of stu- dents at Queens University, not long ago, Senator Rodolphe Le- mieux, former Speaker of House of Commons, dwell; on the value to Canada. of the two great racial strains in the Canadian People, and urged that the men and women of the two races should work together to complete the work of nation-building so ably begun by their ancestors. Everything that tended to divide and hold apart the tlvo races that comprised the major part of “the Canadian popu- lation, the Senator said, enfeebled national unity and hindered na- tional progress. ‘Illerc are those among us, of course, who still lament that steps were not taken at the time of the conquest to scatter the small French-Canadian population and extinguish the sturdy national spir- it that hawdevelopcd on the St. Lawrence. Had sterner measures been adopted in 1759, Canada. could, possibly, have been made wholly British. At least, the cng- tion of c. fairly solid French Quebec could have been prevented. But at what a costi The first cost might easily have been the loss of Canada altogether, for it is well known that while Benjamin Franklin's propaganda, at the time of the American Revo- n, prospered somewhat among the English-speaking residents of Montreal, it fell on stony ground among the French-Canadians and did not even sprout. Atslhls time, and again in 1912, the French- Canadians remained faithful to the British Crown, which had treated them as worthy subjects and not as dangerous enemies. The second cost must have been a. poorer Canada. Left together on the St. Lawrence, allowed full lib- erty in the matter of religion, ac- corded even the boon of the French civil law to which they were accustomed, the French-Canadians developed a type of their own, fru. Bal, industrious, resourceful, faith- ful, independen‘, conservative, that has been of inestimable value to strength to the weave and gsiety to the pattern. Without them, Canada. would bc less of a nation ledly, given us a more flexible form the i (Manchester Guardian) --There is a house in 1-0000" to which no one has s latchkey- n is No. lo mwnlns street. W moat. famous house in London. Mr. Ramsay MacDonald and his flun- ily never need to think about latch- keys when they g0 out intendlns to return late. There is a door at.- tendant mom and day at Ne‘ 1°- It. was not so. I think, before Mr. Lloyd George's time. At any rate, there was up to that time a little wooden knob, hardly perceptible, on the door near the knocker, and attached to it raised the latch, and you entered. This simple village method was done away with dur- ing the war. 'I‘he retiring Premier, therefore, does not have to hand over the latchkey when delivering the seals of office to his successor. There is a legend that the refus- al of a. latchkey to No. 10 arose from the fear of former Premiers dropping into the old house when so disposed. Old Lord North after 12 years’ rsidcnce could not rid himself of the habit after resigna- tion of wandering into No. 10 and sitting down and musinll there. ' just as Wren used to do under the ‘dome of St. Paul's. It was em- barrassing to his successor. It ia- an intriguing idea, however, that up to the first year of the war it might have been possible for a stranger to have pulled the little knob and raised the latch What a subject for Mr. Le Queux or Mr. Oppenhelm-the foreign spy quietly entering in this way and settling down under the Cabinet table with his typewriter taking a note of fateful proceedings, and so on. - than she is. Without them, Can- ada would not he the same "sort of nation. The necessity of adapt- ing ourselves, at every stage in our constitutional growth, to the needs and demands of our French-Can- adian fellow citizens has, undoubt- of government than we should otherwise have had. The very dif- ficulties of the situation have work- ed to our benefit, making us more resourceful and more tolerant. This raises at once another ques- tion. The basic strain in Canada's population is, of’ ' course, Anglo- Saxon. The secondary strain is French. But there are innumerable other strains, German, Scandinav- ian, Italian, Polish, Russian, Czecho-Slovakilm. They all bring something to Canada, some vigor which has preserved them through- out the ages. They bring their languages, their customs, their arts, perhaps traces of their in- stitutions. And we set to work im- mediately upon their arrival to smother out everything they bring and make’ them ovcr intoCanad- lens. Are we wise in doing this‘? Are we not in too much of a hurry to extinguish all the racial char- acteristics of our new settlers? Do we not make trouble for ourselves with our hurry, as in the clise of the Doukhobors? And do we not lose something in richness and variety and picturesqueness and in- by pulling the knob a string inside‘ i K odéflowla... Speed bonnie boat like s. bird on the wing, \ “Onwardfl the sailors cry; "Carry the lad that's born to be K1118. Over the sea to Skye". l Though the waves leap, soft shall ye sleep, , Ocean's a royal bed; Rocked on the deep, keep I Watch by your lowly head. Flora will Many a man fought on that day Well the claymore could wield And ere the night silently lay Dead on Cullcdenb Field. Burned are our homes, exile and death Scatter the loyal men; Yet ere the sword cool in the sheath Charlie will come again. Speed bonnie boat; like a bird on the wing, “Onwal-d" the sailors cry; “Carry the lad that's born to be Kins. Over the sea to Skye." ‘Note-This song and its melody were carried down the generations, and not reduced to writing until the late eighties of last century. Moscow’s Mare’s Nest (Toronto Globe) The latest series of legends man- ufactured by Izvcstia, organ of the Soviet Government, would be really amusing if less grave issues were involved. The Moscow journal ac- cuses the British Secret Service of concoctlng a heinous plot-nothing les than a plot to show that Stalin had a hand in fomenting the recent unemployment riots in London. With characteristic lack of logic the Red newspaper proceeds to set; forth two contradictory propositions. It proudly admits that Stalin la the “ideological" leader of the world- wide movement for Marxian revolu- tion. But: it resentfully proceeds to declare that Stalin has nothing- whatever to do with the physical manifestations of the "spiritual" movement he admittedly heads. The recent demonstrations in England were, of course, organized by one Hannlngton an avowed Communist. The demonstrations collapsed immediately following Hanningions arrest. It is quite true that large numbers of the du- D95 who participated in the so- w-"Bd “hunger march" had no idea. that they were being used as pawns in Moscow's game. But it la equayy true that every Communist out- break, in London or elsewhere, is directly or indirectly the result of policies or orders originating 1n Moscow. _ In the trial of the Canadi Com- munlst leaders who are now sewing terms in Portsmouth Penitentiary, it was shown that the Berlin office of the Communist organization gave direct orders to Canadian Red-i; and also furnished funds to terest? The value of the French- Canadian strain, which a happy accident. has preserved and devel- oped, should be e signpmt for us. The rather indifferent success which the United States hashad in throwing everything into the melting pot, might prove a. warn- lug. Max Factor's Society Beauty Aids . Created by Max Factar, Hollywood's make-up genius, who for many years has been chief cosmetician to the screen and stage profession. Max Factor preparations are in a large way responsible for the splendid complexion of the cclebritl . Some of our lines include FACE POWDER. FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN d; TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest ingred- ients in correct color. har- mony shades, to blend with individual complexion color- ing. And is delicately perfum- cll, to please the moat fastid- ious taste. It's peculiar ad- heslve qualities make it "stay on” and “cling” under most trying conditions. Visit our store and look over this line of tnilet pre- peratlons. THE 2' MAGS 149 Great George Si. Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. can-y on the revolutionary work, The Berlin office is, in turn, con- trolled by the Comintem, with headquarters in Moscow. The Com- fntcm is the creature of the Soviet Government. _ ‘Illeorlsts will argue that the Com- munlsi; movement originated in Pensiar White Pine AND Spruce Balsam (MENTHOLATED) This preparation will soon .id you of that harassing cough and the relief will be Fnnsnent. I It. is a healing remedy com- pounded of White Pine Bark, spruce Gum, Tamar-so Bark, Mid Cherry and Menthol. All well-known ingredients of ' recognized merit. This effective Cough Syrup helps you throw off your cough by reducing the In. llammatlon of the sli- pg;- sagca promptly and without any after-effects. Try it and see how quickly it acts. we and 50c BOTTLE. E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DIIUGSTOII Psnslsr Cold Breakers Knock- out the worst cold In M. hours. 25c bottle. x 7 I 4- , i Y v a e "- \l'...4/ NOVEMBER 29. 1932 ~_..\ Via zi We all know who.‘ should be done but few of us feel we are the ones to do it. A Christmas Gift that will be appreciated the whole your round. Ellis year give THE GUARDIAN First delivery will be made December 24th together with your Greeting Card. The Charlottetown Guardian PHONE 132 England; that the pre-war work was centred in Switzerland; and that even if Bolshevlsm were driven from Russia the movement would continue to exist elsewhere. Such arguments are true only in tho theoretical sense. A small group of world revolu- tionaries in 1917 saw; and took, their chance to seize power in Rus- sia. They have steadily strength- all the material wealth of Russll that they have become a. formidablt world force working to undernllns t the old foundations of society. The British Secret Service would be unworthy of its name or cost ii it failed to reveal evidence of these truths from time to time. There ll no need to invent evidence so plen- ' tifully available throughout the " whole world. Britain docs not ened their position there. It is by forge "scraps of paper." She Bland! reason of their absolute control of by them and acts accordingly. A Pure Tlea Brahmin Orange Pekoe Sold Only in lied Airtight Packages. Lower Queen Street W. A. M. McRae, Pownal would be disastrous" unless you are reasonably protected by Fire Insurance. . If your home is not protected, write or call on this Office, or our nearest representative. I llYllllMilll 8i 00.. LTD. The Oldest Insurance- Agency in P. E. I. l Representatives in Queen's County : W. D. Ross, Kinross Charlottetown C. E. McKenzie Milton lllclcrvcluclloisoll’: Bl-Aa‘ TWIST