ns-snaauua-Au-e i5".-$5£E>.-€*2'.5.9' it‘ V‘ . I h: WI le ti’ st oi Pi w t! at‘ w I ti .1 D I‘: it I» I‘ ..s....-.¢---nn a .-..>,..__._p.__, f This statement of Mr. Kingls is PAGE FOUR yriaident-u". _ Scvrelnry—l.icut.-Col. l). Morning Daily (founded i587) $4.50 per your tin uilvuncc) ADVERTISING RE Iulldlug, New York (‘iiy g, Kiisnn Cit_v_ nllding, St. (Zciieriil llolo 0liARLOTTETOIlN GilAlllIlAh lfliealcr S. Ilclniie, M. 9.. Editor and aluniiging Director-J. ll. Burnett Associate Balfour-Frank Walker and D. K. Currie a $5.00 per year (in advance) delivered. ninlled in Canada sud United States. UNITED STMPI-IS-‘fbe Beckwlth Special Agency lnc._ New York Central Wllloughhy Tower Building Chicago; Louis; Glenn BUHIIIIIK-AIIIIIIIE: Francisco; lillfi No_ 05th Street, Philadelphia. Vlcs-Prealdent-J. B. Burnett A. lilacKlinioii, D. 3 U. PRRHENTATIVIS ra Building Detroit lnreratate Build Syndicate Trust Monadnock Building San Morning A lot of political deals are made from the bottom of the deck. Maxim § > MR. KING'S ATTITUDE According to our local 1n the following words: _"Thc issue has become one of i cqmniomvcalili or empire. We be- lieve in the British Common- wealth as a COfllllllllllly of na- filpns free in their sovereign Tights, free with respect to fiscal policies and all other matters, free to develop as they think best but in no way interfering with the autonomous rights of other parts. ‘The Conservatives arc seek- dill; to create instead an empire with imperial policies which ul- itiir.zit<;ly' will control all its parts ‘from a commoircentrc under an Imperial sovereignty." peculiarly revealing. lf it means anything. it mcans that he is an anti-Impcrialist, and that he ac- knmiqcdges no bonds of Empire, not even the bond of allegiance to His Majesty the King. The primary meaning of Empire, according to \Vcbster‘s Dictionary, 1s a group of nations or states un- der a single sovereign power. "We understand by British Empire and by British Imperialism," says an luthority quoted by the dictionary, "a confederacy of many lands un- ‘dger the rule of His Britnnnic Maj- lety." ‘Commonwealth’ is defined ‘ as ‘a body of people constituting a Itate or politically organized com- miliiiii’; a body politic; hence, a Stall‘, (‘Slllfrialkv one constituted by a numbcr of persons united by CQ-nlfllift or tacit agreement under K one form of government or System 0f laws.“ It has been customary in recent tiiiics to rcfcr to the British Ein- “a commonuxiultli of na- Tliosc who usccl iiic ex- pression simply intruded L; convey U"? Blilfiii 01' unity (‘Kisliilg between the various units of the Empire. M‘? Kill‘! 8110s much further \\‘ll0{l| he denies thc existence of the Brit- ish Empire and assumes that loy. 51W to the Crovm is a question o; party politics. . This, surely, is a strange issue (or the leader of His Majesty's Loyal Opposition to raise in the Parliament of Canada. It ls only a few months ago that the people of Canada celebrated Empire Day. Does that mean anything to ML King? We hesitate to believe tha; the Opposition leader's disloyal utter. ‘me "fbrescnfs, as our Cofltelllpor. "y claims, "the Liberal attitude." n’ 15 simply the attitude of Mr. Mackenzie King, which, a5 the Toronto Globe has frequently point- ed out, is a horse of a quite differ. ent colour. DISCORDANT A LISIS Q‘. A. E. lilacbean, M. P., ooh- Uibuifis an article to the Summer- sidc press this week on his reason for not supporting the Conference his olxstructionist attitude negotiated by Ilriinctt Government. What flit)‘ HICQSUFO co: bet Ilibi. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1932 British delegates. He justifies this contcm- statement by endeavoririg to show porary, the difference bctivecn the that tho British manufacturers may Liberal and Conservative parties is take advantage of the agreement “to aunimed up by Hr. Mackenzie King cxpioit the Canadian consumer." urday‘; issue; for on the following Tuesday it came out with the counter-complaint that the Bennett Government was resisting the Lib- » a. fairer market." concocting an albi, make sure that it agrees ivit-h the alibis of one‘; fellow conspirators. Mr. MacLearYs alibi for failing w support the preferences obtained by the Bennettfirovernment for men were not smart enough for the Our contemporary evidently real- ized the blunder it had made in fathering ths statement in its Sat- eral efforts “to give British producers deal in the Canadian The moral is clear enough. In one should our agricultural producers in the British market would be more convincing if it were not flatly contradicted by the alibi of the local Liberal organ, which also professes to Siwlk Hum‘ Qritntively on matters 0i’ Liberal policy, and a‘so is seeking to defend its action in knocking the Con- ference agreements. REDS REPUDIATED One result of the United States election of possibly greater signifi- cance to this country than the Democratic victory is noted by the toward the gives tits particular article a special .n- WIT-it is its striking identity, in content and piiraseoiogy, with B, purportedly original cditornl whch appeared ln last Saturdays issue of our local contemporary. The views expressed therein were so much at variance with other arguments ad- vanced in the same newspaper that their Joint authorship seemed in- able. Now the mystery has xplained: our contemporary her oven stealing Mr. Macbean‘: It "s to Mr. Mocbean, it seemfi. that credit must be Bivm I01‘ "it? gomplglnt thlt the Oflhldlln states- Ottawa Journal. It is the fact that out of more than’ 40,000,000 votes polled, the. Socialist candidate re- ccivcd less than three-forths of a million, and the Communist, candi- date less than three hundred thous- ‘and. And this at a tme when 10,000,000 American ciiizens are unr employed. This, notes the Journal. oukhi i" assuring us that this continent is imperilled by Reds. Not a single Socialistfor Communist candidate was elected to any ofllce. SocTalism. In fact, fared worse in this election than in any presidential contest in lsliil the fears of those Who kceP i i recent years. A host of reasons may be found for this situation in the census fig- ures of both Canada and the Unit- ed States; the figures of people who own property. People and politician»? talk about huge corporations. Who owm them? Accord ng to the latest census figures they are owned more than ever before by the common people; by the average American and Canadian. Add to that. We mil" ions who own their own farms, or their own land or homes, or who have some other stake in the country, and there is the Bil-Wile? to the failure of Socialism. 01' Communism. Farms, home's, savlnfls "sank deposits, the highest per ciipita of insurance in the world, the highest per capita income in the world, a pioneer continent where individualism must almost ecessar- iiy thrive-these are our barriers against Communism. trade agreements. 1t i5 no new “m i" M“ “MM-in i” express EDITORIAL NOTES his politicallvlcws in the press, _ neither is there anything new about An American weekly, in its no- tice of a recent biography of John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States, says that “personally Adams was without question the most consistently and comprehensively disagreeable man who ever held high office in this country." It cites the biographeris reference to "his sour and peppery temper. his quarreisome ' ' ion, his instinctive imputation of low motives to others, his long memory of real or fancied affronta, and his stubborn refusal to meet sug- gestions of conciliation half way." Men of this temperament are usu- ally an embarrassment to their friends and a nuisance to the pub- lic when they obtain office of any kind. lures av THE wiiv Europe has obviously wl-li lwn- ed the lesson that it should 110i bother an American President while he is running for re-elecfon. When- ever any of those "rwsi-w“ 0r cw‘ tankerous persona-who really know nothing but are always driv- ving vociferously from the back sear-tried _during the last few months to get a hearing in any Eil- ropean country on the fascinatin! subject of inducing Uncle Sam i0 cancel the war debts, he has been immediately “shushed" into silence by his own Govemment. "Wait un- til after the elections", he has been told. But now on almost i119 "er? next day after the elections. the European Governments have come to bat. The British Government has sent a Note to Washinitio" whose contents we do not Yet know. The French Government is quite frankly talking OVCl‘ imme- diate action. They adiii“. the “con- versatioiis“ but 01PM 111m “court- esy demands absolui" reticcnce and discretion." So docs common sense. ' So far as Jamaica. is concerned. we shall receive something substan- ital immediately, with the new 0f an extension of benefits later on. Whirl; are we paving fill‘ 111:8? VPIXV little at the mo-sf, from any pilrvii‘ revenue point. of vicw. Vile are Qli" ing a market for a market. And. because lhcrc is no fiiialliy in ar- rangements made. because those ar- rangements do no: represent cwfl’ thing that can be lion." iii ihi‘ ‘Y3?’ of reciprocal trading. we may justi- fiably look forivarrl to a larger marker in Great Brlttiin.—.lainalrzi Gleaner. Premier Bennett's warning, ln his Toronto flddl‘(‘.‘5 oh Vilcdncsdaiz against "left wing agitators" who attempt to capii .zc the day's un- rest was timely says the Toronto Globe, notwithstanding the solid foundation of Canadian prindplcs. There are a number of movements in ‘the country, varying from mod- crate socialism to rcvolutionan’ communism, all intensifying their efforts to bring prcssute on public opinion because the field seems ripe for cultivation, and counting among their disciples a wide varic- lg of class interests, from some dreaming college professors to ihc tliliat Mb» M Bouts By lama W Barton. MD- CONTENTMENT AND lIAPPIIEBS PREVENT PEPTIC ULCER why is it that clinics in the cities of the West and South of the United States show better results than the groups of excellent surgeons in New York and Reine, Italy, in the treat- ment of peptic ulcer-ulcer of the stomach and first part of the small intestine? The explanation, according to Dr. Witten B. Russ, is that the people of New York and Rome live under a more severe strain than those in smaller or less busy places. Also it is the thin high strung ziervuus type, not those who are thick, iicavy set. with protruding abdomens, who usually have ulcer. “Experience and. common sense both sceni to point to the conclu- sion that tho mystery connected with the cause and behavlor- of pep- tic ulcer is in some way connected wit lithe patients nervous organiza- lion and his physical make-up.’ Iii iiicsc thin nervous individuals WllO are what might be called pre- disposed to peptic ulcer, (that is they are more apt to have it) there is ample evidence that emotional sii'aiii,‘o\'cr\v0i'k, infections, tobacco, alcohol, dict. and all the rest, cause ulcers to develop, or to occur again after having healed up for a while. Other iypcs of individuals who are nut predisposed to peptic ulcer, may unticrgu all the above condi- vicns-cmotional strain, infections, overwork-and may have an absol- utc iircakdouni in health but rarely, it cvcr, have a peptic ulcer. This is the reason that. many of these peptic ulcer patients become so discouraged. They undergo medi- cal treatmcnt—diet and nlkalies- for a number of weeks, the ulcer heals, and they are naturally much pleased. They then go back to the cares of life, again undergo the strain and stress, and the ulcer re- turns. In desperation they may undergo operation for removel of the ulcer, and with it a portion of the stomach, only to have the symp- toms return again, once they re- suinc their old manner of life. peasant immigani. from Europe. who has not yet learned to talk English. Even iinproviileng people are compelled in be thrifty on the laixl. They canno’: in ac. ial fact get to the end of their resources, for a hanzl-io-moulh life is impossible for tliciu. The process of farming makes the faunci‘ piach his invest- ments in tho soil. Every improve- men‘. to his land, every grain nf seed. every furroiv, cvcry sod which one one has to work hard, not stint bread to its workers. Paul, breaking out in at work among ‘tho unhappy in mates. As long as only one of detention was concerned, it wn possible to hold the vicw that few prisoners cwoivcd with a. cer created diraffccfion order given by agents who hnv the entree into these two pent/en tlaries. And these agents are prisoners themselves. itzelf, says the Manchester Guard- ian, and Mr. Dc Vnlcrzvs cconcmie policy—pcrhaps the; most remark- able now being pursued in Eurcp’: ~must have its fling. The farmers must RCCUSiOm themselves to change their system of production and receive meagre subsidies latter endless red tape) wlfcii they must pay out of their own pockets. A diminished standard of living must bc adopted in the faith that if only the privations and sclfdcnials go on long enough a new Utopia will arise. Although full dlsiliusbnment may not come at once, the l-‘rcc State can rnfcly be left to settle with Mr. dc Valera without assist- ance from lhc British Parliament." Since It ls current practice among statesmen, says nn exchange to justify the selling up of subsi- diary states for poltical pirposcs b? describing them as “buffers against communism." it ought not to be surprising that Dr. Niiobe, of Japan. should use the same phrase to gloss over the creation of Mon- of earth raised is a. sort of cicpasit in the bank which cannot fail, and oh can draw cheques in kind, for the maintenance of life for a, considerable period. Naturally, but the earth is an employer which doe. The troubles at St. Vincent do much the samg way as at Kngston, says Lc Soleil, seem to confirm the fear that outside influences have been house 8 taln capacity for leadership, had among their‘ time. this will hardly admit of any other explanation than a definite not "The Frce State must look rifle‘ The thought then is “that ulcer_ patients are made worse by influ- ences working through the nervous system, and all other possible caus- es conic second to this, the main or iirst cause. They arc cured, if cvcr, by treatment that is success- ful in relieving them from emotion- al strain, niidthat makes them happy‘ and contented." - ma» fie _ edZiLQmu/l. v "THE FALL OF THE LEAF” FROM § ‘i Rise in their place the woods: the trees have cast, Like earth-to earth, their children. now they stand very last: Naked and dispossessed; The queenly sycamore, The linden, aspen and the rest. S comrades. There was no need, in moon is hung, this case, to presume any outside A cloud among the clouds: she giv- lnfluencc. But when, some hun- cth pledge. dreds of miles from Kingston, Which none from hope debars, another outbreak occurs . of the Of hours that shall the naked same kind, at almost the rame boughs re-flcdge among 3 Musing she leads the silent song, lucid queen of stars. ‘ chukuo. Like moot infections, the germs of communism flourish only in receptive culture med5ums. If Japan, or America, is ripe for oolrr munism through defects in indus- trial organization or an unbearable amount of human misery, then buffer slates will be of little more use ilmn lumps of campho: in an epidemic of influenza. rna cnaatorrnrown GUARDIAN This column II IIDIII l" ‘h’ flung-hm by correspondents of questions of Interest. Th“ Charlottetown Guardian do" not naeelnarlly cndarao lhl opinions of correspondents, FAULT! LOGIC Blf,_1fi5y01' stewart may rest assured that he will not convince the true temperance P801919 0! this Island, that laws making it eafiifli‘ to get rum, will tend to sobriety- It is too bad for the Chief Ma‘! gsh-ahyog this city, an ex-Judgc to advocate the execrable pern- icious ungodly doctrine that it i1 right and beneficial to do evil ihfli- good may come. _ Well do I remember conditions when rum was practically free. Ah! Island! No need. of bootlegs?" then. ‘Rum in every shop. Barrels of it at the polls 0n election day! What a panacea to propose in this day of instruction and education! I am Sir, etc. ONE ASTONISHEI / And Get It!’ (Toronto Globe) Surely Mr. P. G. Ten Eyck, Prc. idcnt. of the New York State Water ways Association, ls a Democrat Only a man in merry and exultant mood could advance before a Ben- ato committee at Washington the fantastic proposal that- “England" might solve, at least partly, her war-debt problem by handing over to the United States a. slice of Quebec, with Nova Scoiia. and Prince Edward Island thrown in. “Try south of the St. Lawrence would be international power along that river. In fact, that is what set him talking. and south of the St. Lawrence Riv- er from the Great Lakes to the At- lantic Ocean, and credit "England" with the price on her war debts. PUBLIC FORUM The hon-or of that past day 0n this _ a. part o eanc en rov nce /%/ Tht fth i tP l i ’ / , acceptable to Mr. Ten Eyck-who, , incidentally, does not think well of , development L Mr. Ten Eyck is a. cool customer. i He would “purchase? all land east‘ ONE TRUSTS, v AN EXPERIENCED CAPTAI '\ /. 4. ‘l "i? NOVEMBER 18. 1932 . I l! _ x During the past 65 years, The Royal Bank of Canada has encountered every variety of conditions. Through wars, crop failures, booms and panics The Bank has gained strength and experience and grown steadily to its established position among the great banks of the world. In o. stormy sea, one trusts a. captain who has weathered storms. Th CAPITAL $35,000,000 ° ROYAL BANK 0F CANADA RESERVES $39,155,106 AS551 Iii" $T25.000,000 W’ The Lives of lts Members There is some consolation in the 59¢ “K000 m9" 811d bad men. men evidence that Mr. Ten Eyck doesn't 0f chilrmtefi 1111961‘ 911d hilmllYum. want all this territory for nothing. "it?" But it all is so ‘simple: just a mat- 1190145. 0‘ care?" iimwned ‘Tm-h (gr of making a, treaty and nun-b success, disgraced by infamy, buried ing off a few millions owing by "lid" John Bull to Uncle Sam. N0 doubt the Republic would like to annex this beautiful and pro- ductive territory; but let the Wat- l erways President, or any other v forces in B human DQYSUM-iiidfl", bright, humorous chap, try to get. it. of valor and of chicken- failure-an ever-rolling stream of all the impulses which enabled men to achieve by listen- ‘ing to the call to duty, _envy, vani- ty, loyalty and the other motive Yet these men, not the Kings, made Parliament. They are woof and warp out of’ which is g _ . made paliamentary history, a task Parliamenfs SIIOYY Ill bcirtg undertaken by a committee of {he Btitisli House of Commons. It is a. task that is unprecedented, the Above the graves where lie their Each pointing with her empty hand And mourning o‘er the russet floor, Lo, there on high the unlighted In seasons high: her drifted train Grave mistress of white clouds, as —R. W. Dixon. (Winnipeg Free Prcrs) Much that men say ment. Thirty have sat in the 200 summoned before the Queen Elizabeth on their, Parliaments? their biographies, to be the passing of a pageant of mance. but when done will present a new bulk of material from which to ivritc political history with an un- i“ Pama’ dcrslanding that will be entrancing. ment ‘is reported, but little about The need is very mesh“; Pam,“ them is learned from what they say. Take those in the British Parlia- thousand members mcnis are being filched of their prestige, but must not be demean- ed- Some in other countries have, ?ar“am9“t5 bccn broken, and in Great Britain, death 0t as has been whispered in our own mid i" the 55 country, Parliament mm” smmmwd d°wn m the and for between the “wind of the de- of 1832. who were these members and what impress did they leave {MOI-p m}, people Wm not What like forward to posterity were these men? All kinds. To read 100k backward to their ancem-t i515 M This is what the British parliamen- their lives and their ways and their idiosyncracies, would be to ivatch 8-, “mung ro- Mi" min-SW M96590“! tives which influenced them. These says that could you see those mcm- nscermyted, be“ 0i “Billy 59° Yell". W“ Will-lid parliamcntry reactions are simple. needs caring magogue and the vanity of the die- look who never tary committee is doing. It propos- in the stories of the lives of its past membe a the mo- the analyses of the Those‘ members’ of Parliament comprise a fresh field for the study of ‘ English political history. They are ‘the resarch source of the mo- dern historian. Knowthcm, _ and you know their acts. Go back to the 1300's and ask, Why did people de- sire, or otherwise, to be elected? why d'd they desire to be repre- sented? How came the invasion of the House of Commons by lawyers, by adventurers, by social interest after social interest? How came the creeping in of plrtronage, the pay- ment, of salaries in members, the development of freedom of’ thought and of conscience? Seek these, and you find them in the multifarious human ehzvacteristics of the per- sonnel of Parfament itself. It is th’s unusual type of history that is being compiled by a. spe- cil committee of the ‘British House or commons, under the chairman- ship of Mont-Colonel Wedgeivootl. The herculean task was given un- stlnted support by Mr. Ramsay MacDonald in a recent address. Three years have been spent 1h 39,. thering initial information, includ- inc B complete list of memibers from 1264 to 1832. Another seven years or more will have to pass be- fore the volumes can be completed for publication. They will be unri- vallcd, both as an undertaking and for their interest. But any, every. Parliament would be viewed in clearer, and, intruer, perspective if the life stories of the individuals who sat in it were told. The Brit- ish Parliament will be. So would our own. During the week ending Novem- ber 4 some outstanding features oi the Canadian wheat situation were large increases in export clearances and stocks over those of the week bcfcre, together with decreased mnrketings in the Prairie Provin- ces. We Insist In Properly Fusing | Your radio when making repairs. Its for our protec- tion as well as yours. We unconditionally guarantee all parts we install for ninety days. V. C. SMALL WOOD Radio Service 122 North River Road 50 Piece Jig Saw Puzzle FREE llere is a wonderful oppor- Max Factr’: Society Beauty Aids Created by Max Factor, Hollywood's make-up genius, who for many years has been chief cosmetlelan to the tunity to make your child happy. Dozens of children have been looking at these flnc puzzles, ever since they IlBVt. been shown in ourwlndou and enquiring how they may be obtained. With each purchase of a PRO-PIIY JAG-TIC TOOTH BRUSH one of these puzzles is glvei. away free of charge. Tho. 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