fi.\ l-TA. _. w. 5- ... -_ L QQ-‘wni w}. n- 016;; 1' 9.1a a .0 ' 1 I i 4 a swoon-fill. r »' ~ "AGE SIX PRINCE EDWARD M-tl 3.15 Tl’ etilhlf.’ Ibo. “7"°“*""' "" Adults 26c. c "T501" an Night 1 s- kis‘ 0% B ‘A v-eue'fll_ 361', 37c, 45c. V ~ I ha“ k n» "Slruhlna Susie" Cornelia! CAPITOL NOW PLAYING Matinee 3-—Ilc, 26c. Night ‘l and 8A5 26c, 37¢. COMEDY AND PICTORIAL NANCY CARROLL RICHARD ABLEN and ll London's Iunniui Policeman Trm-elogue Mimic! 9onglmliallflllllffl Matinee 3.15 filiPlTllL l PRINCE EDWARD THURSDAY THEY wan: so HAPPY, like two love-birds... and then she was framed by the agents of the Night-Court! WITH annulus or FIXING AND FLIJTTEMING IIIARTS- f, IT'S A TRUE TAKEN FROM LIFE! STORY REAL A w o m a n "framed" by u corrupt judge. And Fate that traps the Judge himself! T h e m o s t powerful, mov- ing and thrill- ing drama oi’ Night; 7 s; 8.45 ...... 26¢. 37¢- THIS war T0 THE BIG snow llrlll$glgg fl-lE CHARLOTTETQWN GpARDIAN , , , 11o, 20o. TNIIRS. l? Tl-I RILU! LAUGH$ I DRAMA! \ HOBART BOSWORTH emu mcs MARION suuuuq WILUAM COLLIER. SERIAL AND BETTY BOOI‘ ‘h’ W“! n. sun cAsr at’ unit-n HUSTON Aniln PAGE 1k Phillip: HOLMES Ltwl: STONE i: Jm-IIERSIIOLTJ-nh-MIUAN . {have about; two dozen foods mafi- ‘l ufucturcd, the prin ml ones being cheese, b11111", 1c." cream, condensed ' |milk, milk powder and many oth- ers, as well as ideal foods for all farm animals. Then as milk has lso many varied. uses and may be produced on all our farms. does it not prove to us a veritable Gold Mine. I Now under existing conditions the C. E- MMKrnlie ‘lower we have manufacturing costs When prices of raw matcrlalsfhnd overhead th nearer we are 5X0 300d. i5 (i995 11°F EFCQYU‘ mfli- lto making ends meet and possibly t9!‘ Whlth line 01' fflrmins One ffll- 'u profit. Therefore the writer feels lows but when prices of these art- Ijustlficd in giving this article the 'icles have almost reached the van- Ytftle at the top of the page. b ‘ Iishing point farmers need to stop, 0f the two dozen articles m. e Brimln’ 10810 nails of women‘; .lc0k and plan to adopt the kind from milk there are at least five ‘hm m“ "l" Uni“ 5mm’ a“ of farming which will bring results llhat it -would be difficult m: us W039 In“ °Y W“ m‘ “m” W“ ‘as well as add to the fertility of ‘aw get along without, as man with felt upper! from 5'9“ Bflmm" ltheir farms. lall his inventive ingenuity has fall- Chlldwrfs footwear came mostly‘ Of all farm lines, dairying is the led to get substitutes in more than SPORT LIGHT AND SILLY SYMPHONY IMPORTSOF LEATHER FOOT‘ i WEAR I Tho Farmers Gold Mine Leather footwear imported in October was of the value of $82,063 compared with $100,711 in Septem~ bcr and $158,880 .n October lust year. The value of the import from the United Kingdom was $43,737 and from the United States $35,320. l The feature items were 17,550 pain of meals shoes from Great be sixty dollars per cow which would be supplemented by the value of the skim milk say at fifteen cents per hundredwcight plus her calf would bring gross revenue up to almost seventy dollars leaving manure to offset care. Now what other branch of farming offers bet- ter opportunities? Canadian Banke , Says Crisis Over TQRQNTO, out, Nov. 28.—-I_n B- careful and exhaustive review of Canadian financial conditions made at the time of his re-election as president of the Canadian BankersflAssoeiatlon, Mr. J. A. Mc- Leod, general manager of the Bank of Nova Sootla, declared he believed the worst of the financial crisis had passed and that, both in Canada and the United States. 5mm m“ Unuvd Kingdom‘ only one that is one hundred pcr 1on0 ease also. '_'—'_—" ' cent at the present time. Notwith- I do not wish to go into figures Jealousy may be a green-elm! ' monster but it makes many PEP farmer with a good milking herd ,tinent fact that each of these five sons see red. is sure of a monthly income how- ‘articles. namely milk, cream, but- skim milk to enable him to growlmoro largely into the diet of our young stock poultry, hogs and ‘every day life than does any oth- calves. or five articles of food, There is also another pertinent; Then is it not up to the dairy never has any trouble to dispose ter mother of mankind and make of his product as creamerles are ‘her more cffic’ent still, and by so‘ only too anxious to call at his door ,doing we will have advanccd not for his trl-weckly can of creamfonly our own interests but the. and as our butter and cheese mar- jintercsts of the ‘whole human racc. kcts are able to absxb our lvholej Now for a fcw flgrures to show 0115 P11?- the dairy farmer need not ‘llrat cvrn when prlccs are at the worry about market gluls. , lrbb as we have ihrm at tho pres- Aga€n practically the whole crop ‘illt time, one. if he has the rlgh? ' is fed on the farm and returned ‘cows and fonds intelligently may ‘Plvl’ TENN to the soil for future crops thusistill beat overhead and make a Lynne‘ If“) ciclivcring the farmer 0f the wDf-lSlllfill profit cvcrjvthing cwnsicivcred. FOX FED ry and anxiety of finding sufflc-, In coa\'ers::t'0:1 with a loading lent extra capital ID enable him l0 l‘ll"l"f.'lll'lll not long ago I learned purchase costly commercial fertillz- flint ilus man will this your have (r5. 1:1 r~vcirie from his ciai_ i lv-rd of Simcsmc has Slllfl Llliil‘ milk l: zihuut twu-lvr- hunzlrrd rloilurs, an UV.‘ 0H1‘! Turk-c‘. fwd." Slicers has of one hundred (lollurs a prrrccl this: ihcrciore the (lalry- . ti". i‘l‘.(l that, the only outlay mun 0i tutti‘: is |)\l.'\.~ll)l_\' the _",’l‘\‘{ll- h cl v._:|=. to!‘ lvilniczsl ccrliilg ‘est. manufacturer the world has about one liunzlred dollars; this ‘seen. For instance from milk we proves that with sufficient clover, gyrcen fecti and roots that a farmer can make dairy-Jug pay cash and then some. The great advantage being that he has-fed practically v his whole crop and has therefrom , . flici fc i‘ c . lilEltlghilBElt tthe Ranchtegs that (llspttlsefd 10f i! ..§.‘.“...'ilf..'.if..i“l'lf..‘ti’; l elr ms as year in e ear y par‘ 0 tie season received the HIGHEST PRICES. In all [rrobabllity the same may happen this year. Brinw you! Furs to SAM ISAACS at Samuel Kennedy’s, 134 Kent Street, who is prepared to pay you SPOT CASH. N0 offering too following yen providing nature large. and other Our prices are the HORSES live Stock. lowest. For sale at our Serd and Feed Store. l; Garter & 0o. Ltd. QUEEN SThi-JET av. l. docs her part which she generally (lees. From enquiries I find that the average price of milk to the far- mer ths season will be about sixty cents pcr hunded pounds. Then if crcry cow milked in this province would average ten thousand pounds of milk per year the revenue would ALFIIEII EISENBAIIN, Inc. FUR MERCHANTS 218 West 30th Street NEW YORK CITY Buyers of all grades of Silver Foxes-Best market prices paid. Headquarters - W. K. Rogers Agencies Limited, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Also at R. E. Ellis’ Ofllce, Summerside, MERCHANT S . ATTENTION I we B" 0min to buy for c3511. Sticks of Merchlll- dise. lnrxe or small. if you. want to sell out your business consult us. All correspond- ence strlelly confident‘ , Phillips: Sales C0 standing the prevailing prices the on this instance but it is a per-‘ ever small. He also has sufficient lter, cheese and ice cream enter. ‘ his fact about dairying rvamely one ffarmcr to further develop the fos-J there were definite signs 0f SW11!»- er industrial activity. "The lowest point of the depression," he said,‘ actually to have been Conditions now they , "seems reached In June. ,are perceptlbly better than were." _ But Mr. McLeod hedged about optimism with a warning against undue confidence. We could not be sure, he said, that the sustained recovery so long awahed tors principally responsible for the f depression were still active 11nd,; being of international origin andI scope, did not respond to local. remedial measures. The prcssing' problem of war debts remained un- settled, and until some solution for it was found there could be no as- surance of complete recovery. Add- ed to this factor was the need of some general tariff readjustment, the removal of exchange restric- tions, etc, and action on these ur- gent matters could not be post- poned merely because buslnrss was better than in June last. Mr. McLeod discussed various other topics of financial concern. He looked for the outcome of the Imperial Economic Conference to give an effective stimulus to Em- pire trade and regarded it as a forerunner of the World Economic Conference which must effect a settlement of great outstanding ln- temotlonal problems. He pointed out that the railway problem in Canada was a very serious one and must be dealt with decisively. He discussed proposals for establish- ment in Canada of a central bank, and while taking no definite stand at this time, pointed out its limi- tations within the special circum- stances of this country. Finally Mr. McLeod dealt with taxation on the basis of disconcert- ing facts and comparisons. He told his fellow-bankers that recent re- search undertaken by the Univer- sity of Toronto showed that where- as in 1928 out of every dollar of Canadian income no less than 12% cents was collected through federal, provincial and municipal taxation, in 193i the figure had risen to 13.1 centi, an increase of 45 per cent. Moreover the deadwelgh: bur- Prince Edward Island. lit). llox 5'24, Halifax. N.S. \ den of debt charges had changed ‘has put int/a effect lower rate! l CUDJIIIIIET. -.\lrs. Lloyd Robbins .. Ganada. Has Taste 0f Lower Taxes crrrawa. Canada. NW- "H" bring the excise tax on Canadian- made cigarettes and 0011'"! 111w, conformity with m! Dlaemn“ granted on these PYMWI" "m" imported from the United Kins- dom, i... provided in the trade treaty signed at t!“ 0'39"" Om‘ ferenoe, the Dominion oovernmvnt- wh'ch have been passed on to the The duty on liquors lrgwrwd Jmm Great, Britain was cut from !40 shillings m 82 shillings, and in |accordanoe with this chum the ‘domestic tax was reduced from 86 ‘to 28 shillings. P91‘ proof gallon. @ [U18 basis of this reduction the pro- vlncal liquor commissions were ‘able to mark down their Prim on r all such goods. The excise tax on 013M809! PW‘ duoed in this count?! W" W‘ “m” §24 shillings per thousand to 16 ‘shillings, following a time in the lduty on British cigarettes from 165 5d per pound in 14 rshllllnss. The tariff against foreign countries Iwas left unchanged. The immediate Ieffcct was to lower the retail PYIW- ‘The great bulk of Canadian cl!" Earettcs, which sold at a shilling roi- ‘the package of twenty, new retail at ten pence for the same pack- ‘ age. The Government has sharp reduc n in the revenue |from cisaret in the put couple of years-boo, 00.000 fewer consumed in th first eight months of this year than in the some per- prlces by encouraging consumption may overcome this loss. There has been a heavy increase in use of cut tobacco. which pay! a much lower tax, from which it appeared that many cigarette-smokers were “roll- ing their own" or had taken up the pipe. It is thought, also, that the new rates will tend to discourage the smuggling of cigarettes from the United States. ' Protestant Orphanage .cialtsts in America; found a b01238 lod In 1930—and it is felt the lower, REVIEWS T!!! ABM 0F GOLD (Ralph Connor's Newest Novel) The scene of his latest novel l! Ravanoollsh. a lovely Cape Breton village, clinging to the hillsides that run down to the B"! @915 Four hours away, the great smoke- ‘atacka, from coal-pita ma steel- funmcee, roll their sooty clouds l0 blacken the clean blue of heaven. Between these two extremes, flow the lives of the actors in the dre- ma. Here religion and scepticism, the‘ sweet culture of gentle souls and the fierce ruthlessness of mod- ern commerce, materialism and‘ idealism, pure love and hideous lust, mingle and work out, their various destinies. Across this broad canvas march the characters to the trumpet calla of love, ambition, faith, duty, pu- slon, greed-in a magnificent ma which Ralph Connor has never equalled. The story opens with the near shipwreck of one Vivien Marriott. and her rescue by Hector Muc- Gregor, the young clergyman of the district. Shortly after this incident there arrives in the village an Am- merlean millionaire, one Russell T. Inman; his daughter, Daphne; her fiance, Doctor Wolfe, conceded to be one of the greatest nerve spe- and their chauffeur, Steve, a man of mystery, all bent on a camping and fishing trip. In the minister's household. where the fishing party takes re- fuge from the storm, ls Logle, the minister's sister, and his shell- shocked brother, Captain Jock, who course the doctor immediately takes charge of the patient, ordering him to Boston for a very difficult and expensive operation, This brings about the question of finances, which provides the real background of the story, for of course the poor but. proud clergyman refuses the proffered direct aid from a Yankee millionaire, but does accept his of- fer to play the market, and thus earn it for him, There follows a series of "get- Annual Collections Central Royalty, pcr Helen Douglas Mr. Trowsdale .. 1.00 Mrs. R. H. Coulton . 1.00 Mrs. G. Lewis 1.00 Mrs. Major McRae . 1.00 Easton Bros. 1.00 1.00 u... t." - .75 Mrs. Ed. Hambly .. . Mrs. James Roper .50 Mrs. C. M. Jenkins .. 4 Kenneth McRae 4 10.05 Southport, pcr Mrs. Stewart and Mrs. Match rRaoul Raymond Ernest Mclnnls Harold McKle Samuel Maehin .. Perley Mutch .... Lorne Kelly . . . . Charles Stewart Hope Mutch Gordon Webb ............... aPercy Wood I Arthur Burke . 2.00 2.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 iwas actually under way. The fac- hWilllam Sinallwood . Ernest Burke Miss Duncan Mac. McDonald . Henry Wood Mac. Henry .. Stewart Henry .......... Sylvan Plppey Harold Storey Mrs. Sam Wood ..--1.. 20.00 Klnross s. Uigg, per Mn. D. H. McPherson I Mrs. D. B. McLeod Rev. H. H. Pierce Mrs. James H. Glllis .. D. J. McLeod Mrs. J. S. Martin .. Mrs. John Campbell SPECIAL Klnross, Ulgg Women's Institute, $15.00. Esker St. Continued Mrs. Everett Platte 1.00 gate of interest on non self-eup- porting capital expenditures, to- gether with Governmeut liabilities through Canadian National Rall- way deficits, and regarding this aggregate as "burdensome debt," he found that in 1028 these charges amounted to three per cent of the national income and absorbed 2i per cent of all revenue from taxa- tion. In 1031 these charges had grown to 6% per oent of ell in- come and absorbed more than 35 per cent of the proceeds of toxe- tloa. Mr. McLeod called these stat- istics "startling and depressing," and yct, be mentioned, budget: were not being balanced, new debts were incurred. The remedy was, of course, simple in words and difficult in application-dras- for the worse, from the standpoint of tbe tlwflver. Taking the aggre- tlc economies in government serv- ices of all lotto 1.00 | . tor to rich - quick - Wallingford" events, wherein the whole village specu- lates on the stock that ls earning ,the money for the brother's oper- 'atlon. Inman becomes so attached ,to the natives that he launches a great co-operatlve scheme which is to put the whole community on the road to fortune. ' The story continues with the col- llapse of the stock market and con- sequent ruin to the good, simple folk who had been taught. to gamble by the Tiger of Wall Street, who has by now returned to his ‘lair and once more assumed his real character, a cold-blooded, mer- ciless villain, and it falls to Hec- come to New York and - preach a sermon that reforms In- man and his partners, and they offer to return the riches so wick- cdly gotten from the honest sons of toil. However, Hector insists on assuming all the responsibility for ,the transgressions of his people, ’and makes good their losses from his own pocket. SIR. WAIEER. SCOTT MANUSCRIPT STOLEN NEW YORK, Nov. flB-The d18- iappearance of the original manu- script of Sir Walter Scott's “Guy Marmerlng" from the library of Columbia University was disclosed yesterday when police sent a gen- eral alarm throughout the east asking for aid in the search for it. Thé manuscript, lodged in the library in connection with the Scott Centenary, disappeared some time during September or October, ac- cording to a. report by library of- ficials to the police. The disappearance of the manu- script marked the second time dur- ing the day that the name of Sir Walter Scott had broken into the news. The first was when the body of Blair T. Scott, 60, of Baltimore, Md, who was described by his et- torney as a direct descendant of Sir Walter Scott, was found on the fourth floor extension of a hotel. He had jumped from his room on the 17th floor. SEALS HELP FIND ‘ OYSTER BEDS Seals are to be used to locate oyster and lobster beds in James Bay, the lower arm of Hudson Bay. The plan of employing seals u oyster detectives was adopted after northern trappers had reported that seals caught in James Bay often contain both lobsters and oysters, EYESIBNT EXAMINATION limo‘ and llvllflll Gino- ll. J. illillll OPIBIIETRIIT Ollie Counted With hruniore -~ r"- .-m~~f.sl.nodlvfllfllfi-innrlarmv-l-iu...yv-l-~h~we.... ...... ,.,_ is lying at the point of death. 0f ' $50, $75, $100 or more is amazing what a wom guaranteed income come to YOU lnlyour any way. Nam: Addmv earning power will decrease and when a regular cheque would be very welcome. It always‘ comes on theflrst of the month. Now Momma gqn pay the s. ES, thanks to a husband's love and fore- thought, here is mother home protected by an Imperial Monthly Income Policy. Here ate two children who will have ‘cause to bless their daddy's memory. There is a widow who will breathe a prayer of thankfulncss each time the Imperial Life cheque comes, a pledge of safety amid a changing world. _ To ensure your wife and children an income of per month, should you pass on, might not seem much In comparison with what you are doing for them now, but it an can do with even a. small income, if it is regular. A few dollars saved every year from money you now readily spend or invest in other way: would make certain this to your family. More than that-the income can be planned to later years when your ‘ K Send the coupon’ today for complete information. IMPERIALLIFE Branches and Agents in all Important centres .-----.-.~--_-¢u--.--~-----s- ---- --- ---- MAIL TODAY Tm; macaw. IJPB Assurance Co., HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO, ONr. Please send me by mail particulars of the Imperial Monthly Income Policy, without obligating me in Agv says Popular Mechanics Magazine. By following them, it is expected fishermen will find the beds with- out making a search of the entire bay. =:Why mfler needlessly? Douglas‘ sure relief to scald feet, soft coma Egyptian Llniment brings quick, and warts. Relieves inflammation. Removes proud flesh. RAW RUBBER. IMPORTS Pract cally all of the raw rub» ber imported in October came vii the United StatealThe quant ty we‘ 2,692,142 pounds valued at $110,055 The only other source was ti" Straits Sztt ementa. the amount be ing ll.3".2 pounds at $490. Tin"?! relieves Stonmeh (‘railw- PIE DEIMIRI a wzouocmo BA 1% if A Palmer Electric Ltd. Automobile Stan-tins. Liable! Ignition TTE ll .— Fire, Life, Acc It 146 Richmond St., 1 ' E. R. BROW and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summer-side. LIOYd Lew“ I AIITO uuuuon , Let o: cheek your lnlition syltenl for Fall driving condi- tions. Carburetor work a 8PM‘ ioity. Electrically at your "WM- __________-—-—- dal ident, Sickness Charlottetown