u’ . I § :<m--= 0-1- | .. >i~ li ‘r-ivtvua: FmuuDDa-J-i /A,R..;< _-. r. _ IIQ QI q Matt-ma w»- aiau aim-bras a -,- 4F, - ‘ ~...__ ".4. ' j :35" . PAGE FOUR nit cluniorrsrovnl summit 3 - '. h i S. M l. _ It. P Viee-Prealdent-J. B. Burnett P: “MM “ SSc:e.iiielfy—l.i:ut‘.J-:ol. D..A. MaeKiiinon. D- l- 0- Ediior and Managing Director-d. It. Burnett Associate Editors-Frank Walker and D. K. (‘urrie Morning Daily ifounded issri moo ver y!" (in 10'1"") ¢@ii'=l'=ii- $1.50 per year (in advance) mailed in anada and United States. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES ' UNITED STATES-Tile Beckwiih Special Agency lne._ New York Central Building, New York (‘lty General alotora Bulldlng Detroit Interstate lluild lug, Kansas City, Wlllnughby Tower Building icago: Syndicate Truat Building, St, Louis: Glenn BuiidingnAtlanta; hiouaduock Building, Francisco; 1135 No, 05th Street, Philadelphia Morning Maxim There is more satisfaction in being a, cog in a machine than a loose nut. SID TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 193$ \ MR. WEIIFS VISIT Hon. Mr. Weir, in tlie two ad- dresses which he delivered in Char- walk of one hour out of should be the rule". exercise is taken regularly, a daily doors rm: Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN runes av ‘fiiE mu t‘ The sirnpe tact. “Y8 an exchanll. ; s that Washington must in“! H" realities of the situation. ll. must recognize that the war debts w", never be paid and. will never be paid in full. It must come to sec that insistence on payment wouxi preciptate the world into H8811 econonic disaster and indefinitely delay the recovery of nvrmai "We and business conditions. 1f the neighboring republic wishes to save use“ and M515; in savhg llic rest of the world it lllllSi. P0=ili°ii° in“ collection of the debt piilimifn“ due on December 15 and then proceed-W a radical NVlSDXI of the debts 85 a whole. That is the only u-ay nui- To this undeliabic fact American iltbat . Bohr of _ your: Berton. MD. By [ulna W. BEING SENSITIVE TO FOOD! The fact that certain foods will cause hives (urficaria) in some in- dividuals is of 0011759 801101811? known. That some foods cause asthmatic attacks and also eczema has also now been proven. A5 these foods are usually very ilourishing, and contain vitamins ‘lottetown yesterday, showed that he is indeed a practical farmer and that his reputation for initiative and ability has been earned. A flu- vlii =l>caker, the Federal Minister of Agriculture is also a man of wide exileriencc in ihc whose interests he industry over now presides, and this far-t was evident. in the shrewd comments and suggestions hc made in the course of his re- nizirks. Of special interest in ihs con- liccfion was his outline of the changes in exhibition management. lie complimented the exhibition auiliorltlcs on the work done in the piri, and ins sled that there should be more co-opcratlon on the part of farmers generally, with a view to arranging the prize lists to suit the practcal requirements of agricult- 11:0 in the COlIlJllUnliy. Those con- cerned in this work, he said, should project their vison into the future and arrange their plans with a def- inite objective of achieving certain standards of quality. The prize win- nlng exhibits should be representa- tive of the best from a producing standpoint, and not merely “show goods." In the emphasis placed oh elim- [nation of effort and expense in agricultural actvities, as between Federal and Provincial officials Mr". Wcr also showed his keen grasp of one of the basic problems of the industry. This ‘was a point which “he particularly stressed at the Ag- ricultural Conference in Ottawa inst SCDtQIlh-FCI‘. As times goes on, the poficy adopted at that confer- ence will show more and more evi- We can live in winter so as to enjoy health. There is no reason why the spring should find us run- down. Freah air is to be had for the taking, The bedroom can be kept filled with fresh air by hav- ing the window open wide enough to allow for a free circulation of the sir every night. Rooms can be kept at a proper temperature (about 68 degrees) to enable the body to get rid of its heat rapidly. Extra clothing should be worn out of doors, and taken off in- doors. Overclothing indoors causes perspiration, dampened clothes and subsequent chilling o! the body when the cold air is met outdoors. Overheating is to be avoided. The weight should be watched and the food intake cut down as phy- sical activities are decreased. economists and other testified. eral Association last Friday W118" he informed the delegates that thew is a conspiracy on foot to stifle dis- cussion ln Parliament and that “at no tune has the press of this country been so under the control of special privilege." i-iow absurd the first al- legation is the proceedings during the present Federal session prove. Parliament opened on Oct. 6 and discussion 0l'l the trade agreement between Canada and Great Britain is just ended. Evelypossible Liberal Qbjgctign down w the mcrcst detail. has been voced ad nauseum by Mr. King and his group in the House. Although Parliament costs the Can- adian taxpaycrs about $15,000 a day, every day it is open. there has been no recognition on the part of 1. Oppvsition grourm of thc need of expedition iii transacting. WAR DEBTS Nib‘. Francis W. l-Iirst, Englsh economist, reviewing the war debts, recalls an interesting historical par- allel. He Wilts out that "when the British Government was press ng for the repayment of pre-war debts due by treaty to British creditors from American merchants after the peace of 1783, they were also penalizing American produce and American shipping. No wonder that American planters and farmers were unable or unwilling to pay their debts. Wash- ington's Cabinet, which included Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton, pointed out in diplomatic correspondence that Great Britain had no right to complain so long as her tariffs and regulations pre- Turkish delight. man of thc same name was active at the various tho late Liberal Tariff Board Americans competent to judge have generally‘ The Right lion. hlaclionzie King assumed the rolc of alarmist at tile annual meeting of the Ontaro Lio- and ‘minerals, various methods of enabling these "sensitive" individ- iials to eat these foods without having hives, asthma, eczema, or other trouble follow,have been tried. One method is by injecting small it"! WAKING 0F A CITY 0h, I have seen the dawn above a mountain That floods the plain, Where life wells up, like water from a fountain, I All sweet again, I Have seen the world awaken like a child i With eyes of blue, i That stretched its arms, breathed l deeply then, and smiled That night was through. But cities have no peaks, they have: but valleys. No verdant breast, From restless sleep darkened alleys Today's unrest. On streets stone-curbed the grey shadows break, And lives stone-embed, crawl out of first I Tlfs coating on the lining of the intstlne The uslsn. has dismissed halt a dozen customs officials for violat- mg the immunity oi the perwflfli luggage of the Turkish ambassador. who was returning from a visit t0 his own country. The despatcli does not explain the reason for the ofllc- ials‘ misguided inqustlvcness, but it may be that they were search iig for Referring to the recently organiz- ed Nlitional Liberals Federation an BXChMlge says in part: A little fur- ther on we find that the National liberal Federation staff at Ottawa, includes one R. J. Deachmrin as economic specialist. It may be noth- ing more than a coincidence that a very hearings of as spokesman for something calcd the quantities of these foods beneath the skin and thus getting the sys- tem so used to it, that when they are catch no reaction will follow. Another method is to give very small portions of the offending food every day, so small that it doesn't cause any disturbance- hives, asthmatic attack or eczema —a.nci gradually increase the daily amount until it is possible to eat For at the dawning cltlcs do not wake_ They are disturbed. —-D0liEiaS Mallvch, in the Ailanilc Monthly. W. B. Yeats On Tour an ordinary portion without any (Toronto Globe) imiibie- A great Irishman has come to this In Paris, Messrs Blchet and continent’ “m. twelve years. a,» Coudcr have worked out a system of over-coming this sensiiiveness w foods in a simple but apparently very effective manner. They pro- fcct the lining of the intestine by coating it with paraffin oil or li- quid petrolatilm in a. pure state. sence, William Butler Yeats, poet 511d dYB-mfliifiii. and in h‘s rambles will be seen in ‘Inf-onto next Wed- ne-iday- His visit to New York co- lnclded with that of the Dublin Ab-l bey Players, with whose career he had much to do, and people are re- calling the stormy days before the Great War when this company was Ereeted with brlckbats and required the protection of the police. i At 6.7 Yeats apparently had, reached the apex of his career; though his devolpmenf, has been so long continued that few would say IE has not more conquests ahead. He is now regarded by many as the greatest poet of post-war Eng- land. When called to the stage dur- ing a recent appearance of the Dub- lin Players at New York, this was the impression received by a New York Post wrzter: He stepped upon the stage, a dis- tinguished grey-haired man, and eyed the crowded auditorium in a startled, half frightened manner. The applause increased, because, lifter all, it was Mr, Yeats himself, and not his play, the audience was doing homage t0. As one of thc greater figures in the theatre of his prevents the offending foods from being absorbed info the blood foo rapidly. It is because these foods gct absorbed into the blood faster than they can be ta- ken care of by the blood and the liver that these various systems occur. By delaying the absorption by means of this coating of oil, the blood and liver are not overworked and can handle these offending. foods without any trouble. Another Rencli research worker observed that a. number of these individuals who were troubled by certain foods were fast eaters. The symptoms or ailments re- sulting from these foods in addi- tiori to the eczema, hives, and asthma, are one-sided headac“ . painful dlarrhoeaf and dizziness. By means of this oil method cases that resisted all other forms of treatment for many years, obtain- Today the telephone enables 4-3 Years Before the Invention of the Telephone with his client in London, En - - Parallelirig the develop modem means of comm has been the growth of he Bank of Nova Scotia which - ay serves industry and cnterise with a Coast to Coast sys rn of Branches in Canada, old tablishcd world- wide banking - nnections and the accumulat ' experience of a century of ccessfui banking. 6’ 1931 ISK5 2-1932i5 will ii Ho! ilnlil I875 In: the flrsrpr» ticai telephone-a queer, crude apparatus to modem eyes-put into operation. Yer, by that year, The Bank o! Nova Scnria had been in business lor well or towards hall a century. This advertisement I: one o! a series commemorating the hundredth anniversary o! The Bank a! Nova Starla ‘The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA vented her American customers and debtors from earning their liveli- hood. Fior some years after the Rev- olutionary War the Government of the United States was unable even to provide cash for the trifling grat- uities it had promised to French of- ficers who had fought and b‘.ed for the cause of American independence. Paper money was one of America's ilcnccs of iis success. It will mean not only greater economy but great- er efficiency throughout every ‘munch of the departments. Thisyhas been Mr. Weir's frst v -;: to Prince Edward Island, but a? our people will hope he will find t‘ and opportunity to make a i~ .ier and more extended visit in Ill’) i. - ncnr future. In the meantime, cd a complete cure. The treatment consists of taking a dc sort spoonful of liquid petro- lnium at the beginning and in the middle of each meal. This must be kept up for a long time to effect a Cliff. Consumers’ League. To this rlziy no one has ever obtained any prcc sc iuformaton as to how, uheu and where this league nus orgauivcd, what its membership was, what constituted membership in ii, and when or why it u-as dissolved. Pic- sumably, however, it was strictly nonpartsan assocint on devoted t0 the interests of the consuming class as a whole and not to those of any poliiicll party. Still, Mr. Dcnc-hmnn, if it be the some man, has every N apole0n’s' Elephant (Vancouver Province) The story of Napoleon's elephant day, as a oo-foundcr of the famous Dublin company which had just performed his one-act play, as a poet, a dramatist, ari inspiration in Ireland's literary renaissance, and a stimulating theorist on the theat- re, his appearance was a. natural sgnal for enthusiasm. The one-act play performed at New York ls"‘The Words Upon the Window Pane" and the critic wel- comed the subsequent explanation l zrls uirlde an excellent impression l i. lie w ll trike with him, we trust, s me WOft-lllfllilé! information about aizr agricultural condtions and some mt illiitapyiy mcmorics of the hos-- pltalfiy of our pcopc. TIME]. Y ADVICE A ll-rlflct froili the Canadian lfilcdiczll Association says there used to be a question asked to music concerning the whereabouts of flies in wintertime. Thc leaflet adds: We might rial: a similar question as to what becomes of people dur- ing the winter" season. All slimmer and fall they spcllcl hours out of doors, but when iviiiicr comes most of them disappear and arc seen only when they rllsli i0 and from work, or when they are on their wny to and from some indoor amusement centre. There is more sickness, and peo- ple are less healthy in winter than during the rest of the year. This is not due to the cold weather, but is brought about by our changed hzilalts of living which accompany the descent of the temperature. To live in overheated, unventl- Iaicd homes and to work under similar conditions is to invite a loivcrcd state of health and a con- dition favorable to the develop- miit bf disease. An occasional grip of fresh air does not meet the b.~‘y needs, which are just as difficulties then, as it is one of Eur- ope's difficulties now. The result was that for some years Congress default- od on the public war debts i0 France, while most of the state gov- crnments wt! legislation to vpro- tcct private debtors agahst British pre-war creditors." Mr. ilirst maintains that a cied~ itor, whether public or private, who omlc specialist w-th thc as spokesman for ilic that party to have a va'uc. demands payment of a debt, ought not to obstruct payments in goods or services. past the lyree State farmer EDITORIAL NOTES exporters. Now the farmers of Aus~ . tralia, anada d New Zenland Professor Elnsmn‘ “sens that have sefurcd palftlmount preferences Euclid: concepton of geometry is on the 3mm, mameh The Free oi little use to present-day astron- state is reduced to the postion of cmcrs, which assertion, as a con- Deiimii-Tk Mid APEEYii-imwiilih i-hc m difference that whereas those COllll- , tries are ready to make any con- erpeual appeal to a host o’ "hod- cessions to retain a foothold on the 5°!“ "hi? hi" i171 m"! W" "m" British market, the Free State has 1y convinced that it is only n i-‘Oth- done her very best to lose it-Dub- eratlon to anybody. ii" ‘Times- tcmporary remarks, will have Resolutions condemning tlic Gov- The Supreme Court of Canada has cmment for this and that are. as dsmlssed the appeal of the eight Communists held at Halifax for dc- easpy passed‘ Those who draw them portafon, and they are now due f0 up and pass them, however, some- be shipped w m, countries m gnu-ope times find, when they are faced whenceyhey “my The Communists with the responsibilities of office, desired to remain in Canada despite their denunciation of this country's laws and mode 0i government, which they plotted to overthrow by force 1r need be. logically, says the Mon- treal gazette, they should not have fought deportaton so strenuously, for if they are believers in commun- said that the smplcst way to sil- is a sad one. The new mathemnt ‘col 8' L in winter as they are 1n- s ‘H81’, certain amount of activity is inl for health, the larger cs of the body should be put leaders. Hear they tried to set their ism they may go to Russia, where" crltcism of government is not permitted even by the political right to market his wlnrcs his econ- Liberal r Party if he chooses lo do so md if the experience acquired by him mysterious Consumers’ League is considered by If the Free Slate had claimed her proper position at Ottawa, she would btrprepar-ing to meet new and more l lirrorable cond lions today. For years has maintained h's place on the British market against the increasing com- petition of Australian, New Zeaiand, Canadian, Argentinian and Danish we have sad, easily conceived and, that d0ll1g tlrllgs in a different way is more of a problem than they had ever contemplated. It has often been encc a critic is to give him a chance to put his theories info practice. The awakening. in many such ill"ClllC(‘il, "Lrain" machine at the Massachueits In- stitutbn of Technology has solved over a thousand equations in some thirty problems, and now p‘ans arc under way for the construction oi‘ of Mr. Yeats in enabling the aud- ience to get its full meaning. comes from Budapest, and is in- structive in several ways. It begins, ,roundabout fashion, with Zara Ag- 'ha, that ancient Turk who claims to be thc oldest man in the world. It seems that Zara Agha has also been claiming lately that he knew the great Napoleon. This story has not been taken by Budapest with- out a grain or two of salt. Anyhow, says Bildnpest, believe Zara or not, the Hungarian capital has an in- habitant who lncontestobly knew Napoleon, and that inhabitant is an elephant in the Budapest zoo. Napoleon got his elephant, so the story goes, in Egypt, in his cam- paign there, where he told his sol- diers at the Pyramids that thirty centuries looked down 0n them, and where, in that view of it, thirty centuries looked down upon troops who hnd had all they wanted of’ the sands of the desert. But, as history records, Napoleon extrlcated him- l self from the difficulties of Egypt, to live to fight on many other days. nnd to carry home to Paris his very bad-tempered Siamese elephant. with the right royal touch, when the elephant became an intolerable nuisance in Paris, Napoleon sent it as a present to his imperial father- in-lnw, the Emperor of Austria. When the elephant in due course became another nuisance in Vien- ha, the Emperor sent it as a pres- cnt to his troublesome subjects in 'Biidapcst. And there, if you will tnkc Budnpcstis word for it, Na- poleon's elephant has been ever since. Napoleon's elephant, reputed to be 150 years old, has tamed with the ycnrs, and has come to the pitiful condition of common zoo elephants machine is the solution of the Schrodinger wave equation for var-. ious atomic numbers, b, unwary procedure in developing the new his varied literary activities, is best known probably by his incompar- able lyric, ‘iThe Lake Isle of Innis- free,’ but he has moved far from the time it was written. Of "The ‘rower-f’ published in i929, the Lon- don Bookman says: "The music of faryland has faded quite away; in- stead of see'ng the world through the mists of a. Celtic twilight, the poet seews now only ‘Cold Clare rock and Gaiway rock and thorn.’ The man who with ‘reverent hands’ once brought his pale, passionate poems to his Beloved, spreading his dream under her feet, can now af- ford to smile at himself-not cyni- cally, but out of the deepest Wi5‘ dom-recognzng that he has come to . "Decrepit age that has been tied i0 me As to a 1108's tail," Thus, from the days of his dreamy youth, Yeats has advanced to the position or a fortified spectator who sees the actual world about him. being at the same time im- mune from its will to harm- i in general, spending its days beg- ging cakes from the Budapest child- ren. If it could talk-as we know that the elephant never forgets — how it might correct some of tlic legends and the chronicles. But perhaps very ancient elephants are really no more helpful than most of the other oldest inhabitants usu- ally are, and could tell us nothing much that it would interest us t0 hear. If trees could talk we could get first-hand evidence of events lmmemorlal altogether, and the re- cord of Zara Agha, even if it is true. is something that can be equalled by an elephant and outmatched by such a dumb thing as a turtle. We idea in physics. Without its aid the fuck would have consumed much Yeats, whose appearance supports - ' ivc llsc daily. A simple, prac- wilfs above the wshes of the t . and inexpensive way of majority of Canadians and lost. Lancing the large muscles into They will not be missed when they play is to walk, and if no other are gone more powerful such differential an- lyzers in the near future, Dr. Van- ncvar Bush has fold the National time. The differential analyzer- mgkg; Possible the obtain rig of the solu- tion for each atomic number in two are left with a reflection, half as old as time itself, that great age. when it is lncommunicrible, and has Academy oi Sciences. One of the most important services oi the new days with a sings operator at the machins nothing but old age to show, is hardly a blessed thing. - w. semi-i ‘* bq-xqlcxsu. Elephants In Uganda (Toronto Tmes) In 11's annual reports for some years the Game Warden has com- mented on the enormous herds of elephants in Uganda, which have been increasing since poaching ivas checked. In addition to the natural increase of the herds, it has recent- ly been thought that the elephant population in the Toro district has been augmented by "mmgrants from the Belgian Congo, where possibly they are subject to heavier shoot- lng, Elephant control has been in 0p- eratlon for several years, and the animals are kept down by Govern- ment hunters and made to respect inhabited areas. This oontrol has now been found to be insufficient Ill the Toro district, where there are large areas of’ rnouniari and forest which give security t/o the animals and enable them to make raids ‘m0 the settled parts. It has therefore been decided to shoot some 600 ele- phants in order to thin the herds and drive them back into the more Wmvtc parts of the Toro district. v@vv$”@ KIDNEY? Z /» z iUQ/H Plllsrs; RA L i \\\\\\\¢,sil =LDNEY D ., B.“ L..- . HACKACHK ti’ l‘ " _ “B: 0U’) I - .. "~=5rli-ls"ll'ili '-._ I -t 87 1115b. 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