Over 38,000 people Guardian, every day. while home Edward Island. ' r h-c-hmu-ir-Mawuw... Can. SubjectOfAddres Hon. R. B. Benn-e-t-t-Discusses portant Matters Before Toronto - Board Of Tra_d_e._ (Qnsdh Inn) TORONTO, Jan 23—(Cansdian pressl-“Unlus something unfor- gem lyypeas, Canada cannot. dare not’ inflate its currency," Premier ii. B. Bennett stated gonight in an cadres before ‘the donate Board of Trade. mIRONIlO, Jan iii-Hon. R. B. Bennett was greeted with an out- wstofcheeringasherosetohis Board of crude. He paid-a stirring tribute is the work o: the Board of Trade. m the early days trade was con- ducted by barter and "there is evidence that some would like to return to that method," Mr. Ben- nett said. "Wedsomotimes forget how vast g market we have _in our own pouniry for our products," he said. t‘, found in the Dominica's exports, but Canada had come back to fifth position as an exporting country. There was no problem so great end so little understood as the railway ploblem which the Prime Minister said was "one of the greatest and darkest clouds hang- ing over this country." There was a tendency sometimes to blame the east for the railway Problem. but this Wis not right, ilnce three great agricultural prov- inces had guaranteed part of the transportation system. ‘Iliere was also hundreds of mil- lions of dollars in the harbor and canal systeens-sllmbilllt‘ lb niain- tain Canada's trad, and for its promotion. It was}. tribute to Canada's vision, but the iaxation was so great it was -s tlemend 4 ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS, . MEETINGS, ETC "Announcements are llejgflgfl in this solemn at 2 esnta per word, "PM"! payable in advance. "Card Party, Holy Rledee ei- Hall tonight, Good pi-igeg m "Doubleheader at Mt. Herbert Rink tonight. 7135.11 "Concert in Fredericton Hail, Thursday evenins. Jan , ma. nls-i-zi-ei. "Come tc the Whdale Women's institute Concert in Uigg _ ‘iull- January asth. 1120-1-24-11. . "Bl! ‘ ion it “"" league game. Hunter River Royals vs. Wheatiey Riv- ‘I'm-ii "I-Blilue game at Milton tonight, GWBOW Imperials vs. Milton 3011MB. Skate after. -7'T3U~1| “Carnival, at Brackley Point ‘Moder nishtglamissiou 1o cents. 7737-11 "Hockey at I-Iighfleid, Brighton. JQM-hs vs. Second Granites at. Hishriein tonight. 7139-11 "Wanted-Loon fowl for Wed- ursday. r. a. my ‘l @- 'l7l2-1-2_8-2i "Burma chicken and fowl Wed- 2§.i‘.‘.‘";.."‘,...“ “m”, "W" “ "ndmwn. P. Jfliloywdrogg mum’ 7712-1-28-21 "Come to th Auction and Dance ' - Hall, Tuesday, o'clock. flao-l-u-li. 0 ‘The Annual Meeting cf Ken- i-“Jdtathmhm. s. filtiwtf: "when of ma. . wza-l-si-ii. "Reserve Wednesday January 35th for Fiddlers’ Contest and lia- “Pl-ainment. at Rollo. Bay. vesa-i-el-il lnetothe Concert than. -__-.. ‘will’! Crises "Iuusry 24m at a I!‘ iilbicn m“, m I ailgnutrv 24th at eB-‘flsfi. IO-l-id-ii. ~“Mumc Jum- Club main‘; “uuerv no. oi-aen booked r "Melons and clam sesd. Meeting: p. m. I-fog lair prise "um-r: its 1 “m” distributes. v-ise-i-a-ii. uilmittt.” ‘that’. . _ a ,_ #313- in r. 06o. r. ‘P- it All nafitfibd. ' us.‘ this Province.-- 8.000 in the .City -- Read The The Guardian is read in practically every. worth- in Prince Pro blems’ m . y ll 8f burdsl. The country had also built h t. ’ financial system, while it was sometimes open to criticism, on the whole it performed well and called forth the admiration of other countries. Before any effort to establish s. central bank were undertaken a careful lnvestlgatio should be made. ' Banks, he pointed out, were ” rteried for i0 years in order that the government might hold the control. It was a matter o! pride the banks had dlscheriied so well their responsibilities in these herd times. hue, there were com- plaints against the bafks at times. "Why there are even complaints against the present government," he said as the audience laughed. H, asked his listeners. if. when h great diminution had been, the bank refused a loan. whether they would have done otherwise with their own mozzey. Banks could not lend money recklessly, he said, in declaring 4,000 banks had closed in the Unit- ed Stotes in the past 18 months. "The reckless banker is no friend c! his own or oif the community." "Our banking-system-in ever! part of the globe is regarded as sound and w; should be proud n0 bank of ours has closed its doors." In 1929 trade had been dislocated because of the speculative era. "In 1930 we began to realize all was not well. 1111931 we began to think .a.ll was going well-then The as Papa I 00 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAYvIANUARY 24, 1933 Dean OfBroadway No one living has perhaps known more actors and actresses intimate- ly than Daniel Frohman, America's best beloved leader of its theatrical world. He has produced more plays than. he can recall and yet has found time to he president of Dam- rosclfs New York Symphony Or- Fund for thirty years. Sen. Bureau Passes Away I MONTREAL, Jan. 23—(C.P.) Hon. Jacques Bureau, K. 0., member of the senate since 1925 and a former blink-tor of Customs and Excise in ihe Cab- inet of Rt. lion. W. L. Mac- Kenzie King, died suddenly in his hotel here today. lie was ‘l2 years of age. OTTAWA, Jan. 23—With the death of Senator Jacques Bureau the number of vacancies 'in the Upper House of Parliament is in- Britain wcntoff the gold stand- ard, not because she wanted to. but because she had fought with might and main to avert the crash." ' There was s. dramatic, u, trem- endous story behind Britain's ef- forts to remain on the gold stand- ard, the Prime Minister proceeded. Great Britain's pride in her ability to back up her curronol’ with gold had suffered a severe blow. Universal depression had existed in 108i. "It placed upon u! YBPW‘ sibilties we had never expected to face." It was not the government's fault, but the help sud Sympathy of the Canadian people “have help- ed us weather this storm." Canaih. was still Pmdlml"! Mm‘ print and wheat. which could not t: was in the same situation. Oth- er countries had, by b01111! I114 subsidy, created markets within their borders. This sill?" 1W1 4°‘ velopod and "you found it Just that much more difficult to sell uined, he said. Every coun- . creased to eight. Three Senators have died Within the past month. Senator John Daniel of Saint John died January ll and Senator Irving R. Todd of Milliowii, N. B., on De- cember 27. The standing of parties in the Senate is now: Conservatives Liberals 41 Vacancies .... 8 Total .... . . . . . . . . .. 96 As Minister of Customs in the first government of Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Senator Bureau fgured prominently in the charg- es levied against the department and the subsequent investigations. The "Customs scandal" as it ivas called at the time was used by the Conservatives as their chief weapon in the i925 general election. While the Limroi strength iii the House of Commons was coll- siderably reduced. ivir. King was able to carry on in office for near- the aid of the your products in thqse countries." ngnew countryoranold will" try continued to buy more than ii could sell it must become insolvent and hence a. favorable trade bal- ance must be created. Canada, had done her utmost. difficult es it wail. to obtain this favorable trade 1181' I208. Additional tariffs had been il- posed solely to obtain this favor- able balance and had been "W95" ful. at the besinuina of W! "W year there was a aurlllli! °1 “he” left over from last year sufficient to take care oi this year's Mu!"- menits. ‘Ml’- Bennm solutes! Wt- IDNDON, Jan. as - (AP-l -— Ichn Galswortli!» Bfmlh M“ dist and Nobel M" ""1""- yns decidedly IQ!" "m!" and his condition was olllllll grave concern. Mr. Gllfllmh! i, m at his home in unmasked- ngq-h; from anemia which followed a heavy cold- "Hccke t lidarshfield Tuesday. Jm, 3|, “rahfield vs. Dlinltaff- aags. league some. Iketuia alga‘ aaggjflpn Rink tcnite. Married an: vs. Single Men. Skating fol- iellnl ___ “not huwlguiu" "ill" "'4' ‘PHI-Ii and ly a year with Pl-ogresives. In, the meantime n Royal Commlssoin had been ap- pointed io investigate charges n‘ gainst the Customs department and made an extoizdcd inquiry from coast to coast. irregularities in the department were found to be of long standing dated back to times before Senator Boreau assumed offTceJno stigma was attached to him personally. The investigation. however. load to a. thorough reorganization oi’ the Deparbmmg and the name was charged to the Department of National Revenue. THE STIIBBS I N ii ll I R Y (Canadian Pres!) wmmpmci, Jan. 28.—'1‘wenty- iive thousand -. have sinned a petition now being circulated in Winnipeg asking that no further action be taken llflinst Judge L. at. o. Stubbs, a Judith! enquiry 1n- to whose conduct on the Bench is n“ in pgogreefl hers. The petition is addressed to the House of Com- mons. Oitawa- _ 1t requests "that no further ad- verse action be taken against His Honor, Judge Btullbli Wit. rather- that he be leit secure in his office that he may continue to "render to the ceriediah people the invaluable . eninl. Orou Bill. Tickets its lotteries. ' Till-ill services of an able" and conscientious chestra and head of the Actors’ and as many of the major abuses . (Ancclsted Pros!) TOKYQ. Jan. 28—The spokes- man for one of Japan's pflnflpgl poliical parties declared in the Diet today that unlm relations between Julian and- the United States are improved they will pro- duce renewed armaments compeu. tlon and possibly a world war, The statement was made by Hitoshl Ashida, fonnaliy d chosen spokesman for the Seiyukai party, who delivered the boldest criticism oi the ciurent military domination of Japanese diplomacy heard in Parliament since the Manchurian conflict began in " ‘ " 193p In response to Mr. Ashida/s as- sertion that “a gloomy situation" rules relations between Japan and W.--» s-..“ ea i vers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew‘ b THE WEATHER Fresh "QYUIWESI. and W051 Wlllllr-l,‘ "WHY fair; not much change in tempemturc. ‘ Jap Speaker Predicts War Gloomy SituatiFrl-Rules Between JapanAndUnitedStates,Declares Spokesman F_Q_r_Sei_yukai Party. the United States the llbreign Minister, Yasyua Ucliida, declared that ‘there is n6 uneasiness con- cerninfl our relations with the United States." Risinz in the Diet to question the sovemment concerning its for- BlEH P0116!- Mr. Ashids pointed out that when the Foreign Minister- addressed the parliament 0n Satur- day he did not mention American relations, which Mr. Ashlda con- sidered "were not in a condition warranting the contention." The Séiyukui spokesman ques. tioned the desirability of the army's " "lm-ofd“ ,andas- Btftod that the public was afraid lthat "We are being dragged blindly ‘into. an uncharted pitch-dark I abyss." of humanity uprooted, populations of three southern villages deported in entirety to the doubtful possibility of life in frozen Siberian lumber mmips, filtered through from the Black Sea provinces to Moscow Thursday. The reports related how every faanlly, man, woman andchlli,» in the three villagm was exiled by the Soviet authorities as exemplary punishment on charges they failed to co-opemte with the government's programme of increased agricultural production. The mass movement across Russia to new abodes in desolate lands near the Arctu: Circle involved no less than 45,000 persons. the 1929 census showed. ‘rhey will mvbflibli’ be installed in lumber camps or the mines, there to be given the chance. ir they survive, of proving their loy- talty to the Soviet Union. Those who ‘do may some day be admitted to membership in t-he unions and re- gain the coveted pmletarlan status. The mass deportation was not mentioned in the Moscow press. ~More Than Entire Population. Of TIireeRussian Villages Reported Sent‘ To Exile Mosoaw, Jam 33_A hush mg Hwevm ‘newspapem at Gomv, 1,, The present one is the last. the area. affected in the south, play- ed up the drastic move at length under ‘scare’ headlines. The (Jossack villages involved were Poltavsaya. Medvyedevsky and Ilrupskaya. Every living soul in these communities was deprived of his lauds and homes, and ordered aortas-am. They had been born sun lived in the fertile urban region on the Black Sea, in the far south of the Soviet Union, and none was believed fitted for the rigors of life in the sub-Arctic north. Their lands and pioperty were divided among memibers of the So- viet Red Army, war veterans and other loyal elements, in payment. of loyalty to the Soviet cause. These new tenants, or owners, were select- ed by Moscow to transform the ya- cated areas into model Soviet ails- tricts. The action apparently was in line with a recent decree, which went into effect last Sunday in Moscow. and other large cities, de- signed to effec-t an enforced shift- ing of surplus urban population to the soil. I00 ' Persons Injured Over Week -End In Troubled Irelann DUBLIN, Irish Free State, Jan. 23 -More than 100 persons were in- jured over the week-end as violence flared at political meetings in wide- ly separated areas where Republican and Nationalist spokesmen sought to gather votes for Tuesday's gen- eral election. Riots in Killarney and Tralee brought injuries to at least 10 per-l sons today while seven others were hurt yesterday in Dublin. The first serious riot broke out at Tralee, County Kerry, tonight, where police charges a crowd-oi demonstrators after stones had been thrown at membe s oi’ the “White Army" guarding former President William T. Cosgrave. Mr. Cosgrave was forced to abandon the meeting and fighting continued for several hours before order was restored. lillty pen sons were reported injured, Trouble In Dublin The trouble in Dublin began as the meeting of Cosgrave support- ers was about to disperse. Groups o! youths attacked members of the "White Army.’ otherwise the Army Comrades Association, which is Buardins the Cosgrave mistings. Sticks ’and stones flew about and the iightinz spread through the ad- lloenii streets. Seven enthusiasts were removed to hospital for treat- ment. _ In County Clare the Laborits; Pwick Hosea. tries in vain to get a hearing. Police baton charges W" Moolllf! it llooncoin. Kil- kenny. and at Iiiltowei in North Kerry. At Listowol, while Mr. Od- lfl" Ill walking, a large Emil! o! Republicans maintained constant iufili" .the police charged and in the re- sulting stsmpede a number of wo- men and children were knocked down. A policeman and a specta- tor were injured. Two were also in- jured at Mooncoin. President de Valera and Mr. Cos- grave, chief protagonists, spent the Sabbath with four big meetings apiece, making swift-mctorciir jour- neys from place to place. Mr. Cos- grave, in far-famed Killarncy, said: "The Fianna Fail told the electors they will not go hat in hand to the British, but I am prepared to take my coat on’ and go if it is neces- sary to do so in order to obtain an advantageous settlement for the Ir- ish people." New Industry - (Canadian Prbss) AX, Jan. 2.'i—Cod liver oil, extracted within an hour after fish are landedon the decks of the trawlers, is brought to Halifax for a new, industry established by Na- ticnal Laboratories Limited, a sub- sisisryei Maritime-National Fish Limited. Using spceial apparatus, the oilnpanys trawiers produce the oil atsea aha place it in lined, sealed Containers. It is brought to port and aim being tested by the com- pany's chemists undergoes a final Roceseing and is ready for the market, ‘ The cil, obtained from the livers of the codfish taken from the old filters of the North Atlantic, is Mine. uuseyaeuiuseioceeist eeaitomhighiuvitmufa and um: iiucis in BE ELIMINATEIJ FROM in 60W. New Administration Will Henceforth ‘Take Office Two Months After Am- ___.::: pii mu iieiiim-si 50.00 u anii IJ_ S. A, $4.50 Warns Against Glutting Market With Potatoes Steady Market. At About Pre- sent Price Level Available If Supply Is Properly Regulated, Annual Suhsi-ri Ii: Mali Cieuisil o PA_GES e r i c a l1 Election. States Hon. J. A. MacDonald, Systematic feeding of the pstaio‘ of (light, adopt a policy omit r25 marketing I béiilzve the m:ii'k»~i>‘ ivill M 0 n Simarket so as to maintain a steady To Elapseisuppiy without, glutting the market Under- 01d System. WAsSdHNGTON, Jan, 23—(A.P.)-— After tcn wars oi trying, and a ‘hundred of waiting, the United States modernized its political ma- chine today by eliminating defeat- ed officials-Aha "Lame Ducks"- from Government. A. twentieth amendment was writ- ten into the Constitution declaring that after this year both the Presi- dent, and the newly chosen Con- gress sliali take office the January following November's election, and- that the old time-short ses§on' which for so long has clogged the political machinery with its inef- |fectlveness, shall be held no more. 'I‘liirty six states of the Union ratified the amendment in less than one tenth the time it took to con- vlnw Congiess that the country de- manded abolition of this lumber- ing antiquity. Though actually part of the Con- stitution from today on, the amend- ment will not. be proclaimed in force until the Secretary of State IBCGI-Vflgvtllc thirty-sixth formal rec- ord of state action. By its own terms it will not lake effect until October l5. Had it been in force last October Franklin D. Roosevelt would be in tho While House to- day. . After this _vca;- when the people record their will at the ballot box tin November, the men they send to ,C0Il81‘e88 will 11min _.to function within two months. Hitherto the new representatives have had to twiddle their thumbs for thirteen months-until Dccoiubcr of the next year—while the country has been given legislation sponsored. framed and put through in part by men who have boon specifically re- pudiated by the voters. Piiiiilliliii wiii MEET NEXT? WEEK (YITAWA, Jan fill-Parliament re-assembles one week from tomor- row. With tile exception of lion. C. H. Cohan, Secretary of Stale, all ministers of the crown will be in their seats when the Commons again gets down to work. Mr. Cah- an is representing the government at Geneva and negotiating with France for a now trade pact. Amendments to Canada shipping Act will be lengthy. ‘They will cover safety oi’ life at sea and] regulations oh the use of Canadian, ports by United States vessels Dill‘ the Great Lakes. A British Col-' umbln lawyer has been giving at- tention io the drafting of the am- endments; and iliesc will be iii-| iroduced in the House shortly after rirassembling. The bill on tilt: Commission. report is still ill Senate. Dill i‘ Railway the D content, and freshness is said to he (Ina of the important features in the company's plans. The new industry is essentially Nova Scotian, based as it is on n natural resource that is almost ex- clusive propcriy of Nova scoiia. This is the lirst effort to manil- facture medicinal cod liver oil as 8n entirely Canadian product, and it is said to be the only oil manu- factured whereby the entire process from the catchnig oi the fish to tile bottling of the product is con- IsoclaiJon, which opens m (his city ‘will insure. between now and the’ end of the season, the absorption. of all stock available in both Prince Edward Island and New Bruluwvick at about present price lcwls. This was the opinion expressed by Hon. John A. iviacDomild, M.P., who re turned Saturday fmm Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and other cent- ms. . Hull. IWJ. hint-Donald iittrzildecl the Dominlcii-Provllicilil Conference at Ottawa last week and visited other centres for the pulpose of making a. first-hand survey of the potato marketing situation. New Brunswick, he pciinis out, held off shipping early in till‘. sec.- son because it could not cohipete with the low rates by steamer en- joyed by ‘Prince Edward Island shippers. Lntterly, however, consid- erable quantities of New Brunswick potatoes have begun to more, with dcpresing effect on the Montreal market, where last week the price dropped five cents per bag". "From all the information I was able to obtain," said Ml‘. MacDon- ald, "there is no necessity for dumping at the present time. If we Another Low Fare Excursion To Boston (Special in The (iuurdinni MONCTON, Juli, 23.—-Rcpoi'is rc- ceived indicate that a large number of Maritimers will take advantage of the low fare excursion being op- erated by the Canadian National Railways in conjunction with con- necting lllies to Boston on Friday, January 27th, R. J. S. Wentherstcn. general freight and passenger agent Canadian National Railways here stated this afternoon. This is tlic second excursion of the kind to be operated to Boston, Mr. Weather- ston said and the first proved very popular, many going to visit rela- tives and friends living in Boston and vicinity ,An added attraction of the trip on Friday will be the automobile show which those taking absorb all the stark n\'il.l."il‘o ill illls Province mid Plow l3lLl.1.".‘.'.(Il'§ at a fair p 0-1 illbIy Iilmiit tile present low. .. I 110W and the mid, of the season In sillppzlt u; thin opinion Mr. MlicDmzilci said um; arc as'ursd my‘ ilie trade in hlonirolii Ilia‘. l are no Quebec potatoes on ilzr: m. ket, nor are i-hPlZfi‘ my: artfcIpawvl, the Qiir-boe crop 911(7)? ‘Ii quantity and poor ,n q». i; On- inluo 113s 5L1! some aim-l: l» um‘- kct, but ills quality also is voiy 1700i‘, than; lflllg 23 per colic 0t more of dry rot. in some cases. Evi- dcncg 0i me poor quality of the Oliizllxo product is‘ nhnvcn by ills prciiniuni uliili l~i mi‘. ‘of; have bton getting Last track Om. lfl inrainvs may?) selling at 65 i-riits a bog. as aimns‘. $1.00 :1 baa: for Island point: markcinbio isurt of Quin." tors will 1v» clcuizrii up 2a., . 5C8 on. M1‘. A r the 0nd of llic Donald predicts. He olzifllrislrllci U30 p141‘. ‘ha! lo- cnl. prcdilcovs lieu‘ li"'. i:~ slum- ped-rri into qivz-‘o iln- ~ tlcirt at the 171125011‘. time. {New Moves Iri g Debt Problem f WASI-HNGTON, Juli, 23—'(A.P.l<. ‘ New proves in the war debt problem tonight, brought lull): and Bflqium a illfcmzcilly‘ into the rapidly develop ing discussions that have ioIlcu-cd the reopening of clebi nerrotiritiurn with Great Brita n, Acting without imi his gOVCTIIlIIGlll. Airl: Department O\‘f'i' tliu hiking debts c.1111 of Italy liiacic iiiqiiiri States. Wlzen it pail il.. last. Dccclizbri" l5, tilt‘ F11 n: Cfllillcil lll a (lichirlltiiiii rd would be necessary‘ Li; mziviuli lClLOII; trill} (i1)? Rrsie prosper’. 0} ilio United n!‘ Ill" Sizitt (lair. due and ii; 8 new agrccmcxii tricyc- '11" acct payment is dun Jwnr if». »--_.._..._. the trip will have the opportunity to visit on Saturday. Three days are allowed in Boston, pnssviigors nl'rlv-. ing Saturday morning: mid having until and including hlonil-riy to rc- tum by regular trains. N. B. Farmers Meet Today (Canadian Pros») FREDERICTON, N. B., Jan. 23- Increased efficiency in production and the loivr-rixig of overhead cost in agriculture um slated to be among the princpril subjects coli- sidcred during lhn iifiy seventh annual meeting oi illc New Bruns- wick Farmers and Dahgvmclrs As- tomorrow. Delegates from sli fin-m- ing sections of (hr provimrv llPflilll arriving here today and it is ox- pectod the attendance ufill l'ilC‘Cll upwards of one hundred. morning. afternoon and night sessions ill'(‘ being held, with ilic meeting wind- ing up on Wednesday. Marketing o.‘ livestock, dairy pro. ducts, poultry, fruit, potatoes and hay will also come before the meeting, and it is exported illnl the general (llSCllSSiOil oi this im- portant subjoct will follow an ud- dress on "marketing and rim-oper- ation" by J. W. Boulter, Deputy Minister of Agriculture for Prince Edward Island. Marketing New Brunswick livestock will be among the topic of mi address by W. ll. w d ‘Y3 McEwon, mniingci- of the Canadian HE Bliikauer perm-v. is on: osiv his... Sfaizfeo if dist; Biiffim nun Wizm’ us: trolled by one concern. Livestock (Jo-operative. ..| .~i slim Jiilili . .‘ ‘i l|‘il'l|':l\ ._ . . . . i‘! (‘liurli-ii-in-u r. _ l. "q iu:.. . \ i Unwind \\' l, i, i i | l] Ilvvlliiil" w.‘ \ - i... f l ‘in-l. l. ll < m. ill w] i V] .i ‘ "J \\'...1u...|.u_., .i tulhil 1",, Suiiviui r-Lli- l l- w- lit w Y='r illl‘. I.li."lll"lii .i . il"iil wlimii i.\~ -i .. ,. i‘- l‘ . Jill! . l|,l_\'\' ~T»i‘fl\'ii\- l,»;~- ‘L-riuigjf .,.l tine L56 p. in,