PAGE FOUR .i'res.lleut-—\\' Secretnry-Lleuh-Col. it. l-Iiiitor llnd Managing Associate i-Itlilors-i-‘runk lfhcller S. AicLure AI. P. ‘ii "iTiiE cllllnionnoifcunnnuu Vlcs-Prenideut-J. B. Burnett A. tisckinnnn, D. l 0. Director-J. R. Burnett Walker nnd D. K. (‘urris Marlin; llnily tfnundcd 188T) $5.00 per your (in nrlrnuce) delivered. ffulldiug, New York (‘iiy Gent-rill Lin! $1.50 pui- year tin ndrsnce) mailed ln fanudn sud United States. snvmn-risiso REPRESENTATIVES UNITED STATES—'l‘he Beckwllh Special scenes inv- New Y"! Cent!" orn Building, Detroit interstate Build (Tllicngo: Syndicate Trust Aiouadnoclr Building, bun ' 11-1: Knnsrls l‘li_r, Willuugtlhy Tower liniilling lluihlinlr, st, Lnills: lilnnn Building. Atlnnfu: Francisco. 113.‘- No, 05th Street Pull! dolphin The time when a man makes n Morning Maxim fool of himself is usually the time when he "tries to make a. martyr of himself. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, I I932 OUT OF TUNE As shown in yesterdays Guard- ian, the vote on the Imperial Con- Zsrenz: agrcelnclits found the Lib- eral forces hopelessly divided. This division has been evident all along in tbs Liberal party press. The following example 1S a striking case in point. Is it any wonder Ml‘. King's followers were vusited by doubts, and showed thcir indecision by voting opposite Lhc Rhodesian agreement? ways 0X1 THE PATRIOT THE GLOBE Liberal organ of Lending 1,11,“. Charlottetown al organ of “As Mr, King Canada. quite properly "The policy stated inspeak- of obstruction lug before the Ontario Liberal A s soclation, ‘when you find p u bllcations which should be fighting above all for freedom of ex- pression in re- gard to all pub- lic policies, ap- pealing instead to a political party to be si- lent in Parlia- ment, not to go into dis- cussion, not to keep up debate on a great question which binds the in- ‘terests of . the g people for years - to come, then q I say that the -ti.me has some when we must recogniu that there must be forces behind what appearson the surface!" adopted by t he Oppo- sition par- ties in regard to the Empire trade agree- ments will strike many people as ill- advised and contrary to t h e public interest. By dragging out the debate day after day, and by fight- ing the treat- ies, not only in principle but clause by clause, the Liberals and Progressives have alien- ated a con- n i d e r able volume of independ- ent support and disap- D o i n t e d many of their own friends." ' THE WAR DEBTS Ihestolyofmswsrdebtsmthus IQV-EWM b? the Christian Science _ Monitor, which favors rwision, if l f ;;- not complete cancellation: Until April. 1917, Britain was gen- fr .5111 694mm some nations had ' smwus rim Aurlnrica. mm ‘Nflfll. 1911, when America miter!!! the II. war costs strained allied Iesoucc to the breaking point. inmerioo emu to the rescue with loans totaling about 010.338.000.000 betwom men and November s0. 1920. 86998111119: M, i919, Secretary of the ‘rresnny Carter Gias, in view of the foot that interest on Ameri- can loans wu s11 being paid out of new loans, slmounced s morator- v tum on interest payments for about three yesrs. In 1922, Britain, in the Balfour note. suggested a general debt can- cellation, which came to nothing. In 1922 the Glass moratorium ex- p‘rcd, Britain alone resumed pey- merits. __ June l9, 1m, Britain, first of the big powers. signed an agreement to pay the fll"l amount and arrears in 62 annual prllnp-nls ldue Dcccmbcr 15) with semiannual llllerer: pay- » merits 8t flfi a‘ ruse interest of 2.1 _ per cent for z‘: . tvhcle period France signed the debt IHZYCCHWIIL, April, I926, with no interest for five years, -. - and average interest. for the whole ' period of 1.6 p01‘ cent. Paly soiled. in 1025, with nvcrrigyc lnzcrrst n1 (1.4 per cent. L In 193i the lvllcio financial sfruc- tllrc collapsed. The zlllcd powers had money for German reparations unis largely }<nt, by America, At ill: tlnlc when America stopped lending pri- II‘ f? bate money 1o Germany, early in ‘p i931, Germany collapsed and the t; general breakdown came. t‘ .‘ June 30, i931, the Hoover maxil- h for um went. into effect. Britain up ‘till 1.11mi had paid $1,911,798.25”; l stucco. $230,015,891 and Italy s91,- 1 ‘#114,422. n: I ‘am: 30, 1032, the Lausanne" Con~ “c i e. propo Cal by Britain, scaled f‘ a (lerman annual payments . -fru..3 pward of $386,000,000, to y nothing for the foflowln! m!“ i years, afterward approxlmliely '0 $43,000,000. By thLe plan the ma"! debtor nations sacrificed the repar- ations money with which they had pad their debts. They are now seek ng a, general debt revision. AS U. S. SEES IT The New York Times has this to say about the new Eimpire trade agreements: “A protective tariff based on Dre- ference within the Empire is only one step in the development of Brltsh policy. n has been clear since England first determined to aband- on free trade, in n. world bristllns with barbed tariff barriers. that I second step woilld be the nesfilllllii" of reciprocal agreements with un- tions outside the Empire. These countries would not be Elven Pflll‘ ileges equivalent to i-lwiv Blamed the Dominions; but they would f?‘ ceive substantial concessions if they were willing to grant others in re- turn. How rapidly this second phase of British policy ls being develop“! is shown by the fact that even before the Empire treaties became effective nineteen nations notified the British Government of their intention to seek reciprocal agree- ments. Dfscuxions with one of these, Sweden, are now in progress in the olllces of the Board of Trade. Neg- otlstloru with five others will be begun this Winter. 1t is expected that next Spring France and Germany will send ‘commercial dele- gatloru to London." This is one of tne best answers yet given to the critic: of the Ottawa aITUCIIIOIIII, and it comes from. an ‘independent source in s country that has been decidedly hostile In its tariffs to the Empire and to Cannds especially. ma: PART SUPPRESSED A Liberal orator once remarked of s. bill before the local Legisla- ture that there was “something in it which hsd been left out." The same can surely be ssld of our contemporary’: version of the Cau- ndian Press report of ‘Tuesday's voting on the Imperial Conference agreements. A truer inlpresslonof the scene would have been convey- ed to our contemporaryb readers if it had not suppressed the follow- ing salient paragraphs: Conservatives cast derisive laughter acrou the floor as Lib- ersl after Liberal voted for the Rhodesian sgi ‘. But their comments took on more sarcasm and their laughter became more uproarious when the next vote was called. It was the treaty with the Irish Free State and it produced n scene that delighted the Con- servatives. The Liberal leader first announced he would support the treaty, then changed his mind and opposed it, taking all but one of his followers with him. Gov- ernment members pounded their desks in unrestrained merriment, Liberals for the most part were glum and silent. EDITORIAL NOTES The R. C. M. P. are making it easier for bootlcggers to get mm Queens County Ja.'l—by way o1‘ the Police van l Our contemporary points out, mp1 Liberal members supported it, Which side of the fence did Mr. A. E. MncLelm take? Ithat "J. F. W." our evening con. pemlwrarys special correspondent, 111 New YOTK. is the Postofllce Inspects;- of Prince Edward Island who, 9101180 0n his retiring vacation, is still receiving his salary gnd 1,5 51,111 in the service of the Government? If so, since when has s postofllce official been pérffftted m write 1,0 the newspapers criticising the de- partment and dealing with politics generally? NOTES BY TILE YlAY "n was u» United sum um started the taziff war and now i: 1i for the United States to take the first, steps to an armistice, for the entire world needs an armistice t0- day quite as much as it needed one in another sphere fourteen years agofl-Llirvenement. The third Bound Table Confer- ence on Indian affairs is now in session in London, The work of the conference is somewhat similar to that which confronted the makers of Canada at the time of Confed- eration. A new constitution is in fact being modelled on lllat of Canada, It 1.5 to be a federation, with a. central Parliament and Provincial Legislatures, n (iovemor-Gellerai and a. roster of Lieutenant-Govern- ors. There is also to be a dstri- button of executive and legislative powers between the Federal and Pro- vincial jurisdictions similar to that in Canada. The chief difficulties will be in defining the electoral fran- chise in a country of nearly 300,- 000,000 people. only 10 per ccnt of whom can read and write and in conserving the interests of the Mos- lem minority and of tllc “Untouch- ables.“ When the United States granted a moratorium on foreign debts, the action was merely a postponement of n probiem, not a solution. In the intervening year the problem has simply increased in complexity, and now the time has come when a solution can no longer be m": .3 ~ Toronto Mall 11nd Elnpirv. A hotel owner at Weikeiwci, North China, in Montreal last. week told n newspaper mall that twelve cents buys a chicken where lie came from and a native lives on seventy cents a. month. There are 300.000 natives and only sbet-y Europeans in Wcikcl- wei and the people there have not felt the piesent depression because that is the normal condition. Each province has a governor, each gov- ernor having about 200 personal soldiers. The governors 80f no pay but just help themselves l\ what- ever they need. “Britain is the keystone of our Empire economic structure, and without a prosperous Britain with a high purchasing power all Olll‘ efforts must. fall," says Mr. Stanley Bruce. That is a. sound. point of view, adds the Melbourne Austral- ian, though it is one which many Australians have failed to apprec- iate. We canmt sell to advantage in our best, markets unless people there who are anxous to buy can do so; and they can only do so if their economic circumstances are favorable. The making of concessions on our part is therefore a form of enlightened self-interest." Dr. F. L. Barker in a recent speech said that medical science has greatly increased the average life children and young men and wo- youth is little better of! than his seem to be massed against two sec- tors ln the human life line; the sec- tor reorhing from birth to the age of 15 or 20, and the sector which begins in the late 50's, On the first sector, medicine has erected splend- id defenses. It beats back the as- sault of the shock troops with grcal- er success each year. The child m the cradle today has a. far better chance of reaching manhood than the child of a few decades ago. But in the second sector, thhgs have not gone so well. Medicine has struck telling blows at such foes as tuberculosis, dabetcs, pernicious an- emia and smallpox; but aflcrlo- sclerosis, cancer, Bright's disease and the-various afflictions of the heart remain as menacing as ever. The Attorney-General of British Columbia scents to be something oi a Solomon. Two boys broke the liquor laws of the Province. The Mag- stratc inflicted fines of $300 each, or three months in jail, The parents mm“ regular lmymmll“ m Alllcncu"; elvvcu Liberals voted against the were unable to misc any sllcll The money for illcse came large. _v l Rhodman tremyy whm, ML Mac- sums. A jail term would have meant from Gcrnlan rcpm-ntionla. Tlvzikenzjc King and the remaining poverty to the widowed mother of m, Arman or scorned and subject one youth, Thc Attorney-General intervened. and substituted old- iash oiled spanking, under police supervision. How many hundreds of lives would have been changed if substtuted for the jall or terms so often passed on boys? prison Hate And Fear tvallcouver Province) Cipi. F. Yeats-Brown, who 11101,‘: "Lives of a Bengal Lallccr," has bccn vslting say-lei, 11111513 “m; reporting his findings. I-lc twp, re. turned canvinczd. he says, " that the Devil has had his innings in spam-by cutting clown deaths among men. The man who has got past, his grandfather was at a. corresponding period. The shock troops of death . Qnurs By Inna W. Bolton. MD- mscnvn ruvnorn GLAND CAUSES CHRONIC AILMENTS Drowsiness, dry skin, loss of hair, especially the outer third of the eye brows, constipation, headaches, muscular pains worse at night, and chronic eczcma,—these are the symptoms that often arise in an individual in whom the thyroid gland is not manufacturing enough juice for the needs of the body. You often sec cases where the thyroid has been too active and the individual is very nervous, with rapid heart, and trembling of the body. In this condition rest, the use of iodine, and sometimes the re- moval of part of the thyroid gland becomes necessary. In some cases where there is too little juice manu- factured the individual becomes quite fat, and is sluggish mentally and physically. These cases are, of course, easily recognized, and thy- roid extract is often helpful. However where the amount of thyroid juice is just a little be- low normal the individual has the symptoms above mentioned-drast- ness, dry skin, loss of hair, consti- pation, headaches, muscular pains and eczema. Now you can readily understand that an individual with some of these symptoms, headaches and a chronic eczema, would not likely be thinking about the tyrold gland in the ncck, as being the cause. Dr. A._L. Anderson, Springfield, Mc., stat/cs that in examining pat- ients it would be wise to take a metabolism test just as the heart, lungs, blood, blood pressure, and urine are tested. This test, you may remember, consists in measuring the amount of work done by the processes of the body when the body is at complete rest, with no digestion going on. If the body processes are working too hard or too fast, too much thy- roid juice is being manufactured. If the processes are not working fast enough it is usually because not enough thyroid juice is being made. If then everyone were given this test. and it was found that not enough juice was being made, it would explain such symptoms as drowsiness, and why old skin all- nlents-eczema do not heal. In a routine examination of more than a thousand patients, Dr. An- derson found a number of cases of chronic ailments such as bronchitis and migraine or one-sided head- ache, and as their metabolism test showed a lack of thyroid juice, thy- rold extract was given and cures re- slllted. " ‘ This condition—underactlve thy- roid gland — may explain a number of chronic ailments. A LITTLE IRONY OF DEATH (Epitaph for the Lady n! the Manor) (l) Though not unkind in deeds n01- hard of heart, By old traditions she was loyally led. She knew herself divinely set apart From common people who must work for bread. Her humbler neighbours who, around her, sleep 0n death's too-levelling power should not presume. Their groundling graves a proper distance keep From the superior stone which marks her Tomb. ' (ii) And 0n the stone (by her long-or- dered Plan), With outstretched arms and quiet_ observant-face Is carved the Figure of a Working Man, race. To Him, from her youth up, she'd bent the knee, Her latest thoughts and prayers to Him were given L; 1t a 1M1, as cunenug, repofled‘ such sensible punishment had been And by ms mfluence she hoped m be ruin: Received with honour at the Court of Heaven. —-G. M. Hort. Russia» find that p0 regime founded on hate and fear can en- dure-" The indictment here is more impoitatlt than 1he prophe- cy. Is it true that the Boishevist cXilbrment is_ founded "on hate and fear"? PUBLIC FORUM __,____ This column in open for the (“lguj-Iflfl by correspondents of qusntionn of Interest. The Charlottetown Guardian don not nseennnriiy endorse the opinions of correspondents, A MODERN HORATIUS sin-Now that the great 0111111191011 of cheaper rum has two valiant wet warriors to "stand on either hand" we may expect a combat of power. bravery and skill, but it ls exceed- ltlgly doubtful that they W11 be able to hold back the great and glorious army of true temperance warriors, infuriated as they are by the crimes of the body and 5W1 destroying demon, old King Booze. On! On to the combat! Let the Dry Banner wave! I am Sir, etc. AN ANXIOUS srncraron CURE FOR. DRINK Slrfr-MEYDI‘ Stewart, Hon. W. M. Len and Senator Hughes having expressed their views on prohibi- tion, surely it is time the lenders of our temperance forces are heard from. Senator Hughes says- tllcy‘ should write over their own slgua- I tures; and if they don't their si- lence may be taken for consent to the views expressed by him and his friends. Tllcir contention is that by considerably reducing the liquor tax the bootleggers would be left without patronage because "the public would be slow‘ to take the chance of buying high priced boot- leg liquor W110i] they could get; what they wanted at the Govcrn- Z merit stores." The Mayor says this j, is also the opinion of HouJMr. Lea, and it is commclldcd by Scll- I ator Hughes as "going to tile root of the difficulty of cilforcing any effective control of the traffic." If Prince Edward Island wercl under a system of government control these arguments might ap- ply; but what possible application can they have here under Prohibi- tion, where the use of liquor for beverage purposes is illegal? How do these gentlemen suppose the public is going to take advantage of reduced liquor prices at the Government stores, when liquor can only be obtained from such sources for medicinal purposes? To make legal the “curc" which these gentle- men suggest as the only feasible one, it, would be llccessaryfor us to abandon our Prohibition Act, which I do not bclicvc for a mo- ment we are prepared t.) do. It is not cheap booze but: tllc prohibi- tion of all booze that temperance people desire and in the past have strenuously fought for. Are our or- ganlzed forces to submit, 1,0 the new policy without protest? The attitude of Messrs. Stewart, Len and Hughes as expressed in the correspondence columns implies a confirmed disbelief in any method of counteracting bootlegging and the drink evil except. by competi- tion through the sale of cheaper booze. As I am not an organized tem- perance worker I prefer to sub- dsribe myself— I am, Sir, ctc., PROI-IIBITIONIST l i 1 Canyons In Ocean. Bottom (Exchange) A whole series of vast canyons, rivalllng anything tllni. the lvcst has to offer, have been found in the bottom of the cceml off the NW Fliisland coast during the season which has just closed. CW5!" 0073c, which created some- thing of a sensation a couple of YBBPS i180 when it was first dis- covered, proves to be only one feature in this new-found stupen- dous submarine lamrcape not, gar with of the Bay of Fundy. Th‘s summer it was decided to examine in much more detail some of the valleys in the corsair Gorge neighborhood, to see if they might be used as landmarks for naviga- tors. The last survey revenled an ares with such relief and irrcgu- larity that it dwarfs by comparison anything above water in Eastern North America and must rival the Fellest IOPOZWDlllc fcalurcs of the West. The area charted repre- sents only the uplm" miie of the I'm-mile lilsh continental slope. A preliminary contour map shows a 0 “ The Haberdashery ” M‘ DOUBLE DOLLAR DAYS Friday and Saturday, iiov. 25-26 ANOTHER TWO DAYS SWEEPING ssnu- ' -DOLLAR nsvs-rmnsr AND ssrunnsv The prices we quote are for first class merchandise and we can assure you if any of your requirements are listed below that you will save money by coming to us. MEN'S TWEED OVERCOATS $10‘ Not this year's overcoats, but very good quality coats Regularly worth $22. t0 $35. MEN’S TWEED SUITS, $9.00.-0ld stock. Sizes 36, 37, 38, 39 only, to clear Dollar Days at less than half price .. $9.00 ' MEN’S LIGHT WORSTED SUITS $15.00—High quality well tailored suits in light worsteds Regular up to $30.00. Dollar Days . . . . . . .. $15.00 YOUNG MEN'S HIGH GRADE WORSTED SUITS. $18.00. — In Brown, Black and White, Blue and White Stripes, etc.’ Regular value S25. Dollar Days $18.00 Only one or two Suits left in any one pattern, but all sizes 36 to 42 in. YOUTHS FOX SERGE SUITS $ll.50—Sizes 32, 33, 34, 35, long pants, pure wool Serges. Regular’ $16.50. To clear Dollar Days $11.50 YOUNG MEN’S OVERCOATS $15. Beautifully tailored in Black, Blue and Brown. Dollar Days $15.00 GREY FLANNEL SHIRTS, HEAVY $1.49.—Regular good value Grey Flannel Work Shirts. All sizes $1.75. Dollar Days $1.49 KHAKI, BLUE AND GREY WORK SHIRTS 95c.—Extra large cut Work Shirts, mostly Fieeced Drill and Chambray. Regular $1.25 and $1.50 value. Clearance lines Dollar Days... . . . . . . . . . . . ...95c HEAVY WORK SOX 25c.—l=leavy Knitted not home made but extra good sox. Regular 35c. Dollar Days 25c PURE WOOL HEATHER SOX 39c This is a good wool ribbed Sock and regularly sold at 50c. Dollar Days. pair- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 39c MEN’S FANCY sox, s.‘ pairs m $1.00. Smart new patterns, fair weight. Dollar Days, 3 for . . . . $1.00 KHAKI AND BLUE COMBINA. TION ovmmnnsi sms- Extra good quality, well made combination new low price $2.25. Dollar Days $1.95 Same quality Zipper front . $2.70 MEN’S BLUE or BLACK OVER- ALLS, $1.85—These overalls are made by Goodhue and are splendid quality. Dollars Days as an extra special $1.35 MEN’S BANNOCKBURN PANTS, $2.75, regular all Wool Bannockburn pants, Monaton Tweed. Regular $3.95. Dollar Days . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.75 Men’s Heavy Black PULLOVERS, $1.35. Crew Neck style, a. good Iook-‘ ing sturdy sweater. Dollar Days . . . . . . . . . .. $1.35 JUMBO KNIT COAT SWEATERS‘ $3.15. Blue and White, Red and Black, Black and White. An extra special wool sweater Coat. Dollar Days ._ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.15 BLUE, TAN AND WHITE BROAD- CLOTH SHIRTS 85c—A good quai- ity Broadcloth Shirt with Collar at- tached. All sizes. Dollar Days .. 85c FINE ARROW SHIRTS, $l.50—Tile world's best fitting shirt, two separ- ate Collars worth from $2.00 to $2.75. Dollar Days these fine shirts will be . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.50 STANFIELUS WOOL UNDER- WEAR $l.15.-—Stanfields pure wool Underwear, Shirts or Drawers, re- duced on Dollars Days to .. . . . $1.15 FLEECE LINED UNDERWEAR 59c—Good warm fleece lined under- wear, Shirts or Drawers. Special price Dollar Days . . . . . . . . , . . . . . 59c ' GAUNTLET WORK GLOVES 59c— Gauntlet Work Gloves, horse hide palms, mule hide backs. Dollar Days, pair 59c Special Discounts on Goods Not Listed Henderson l8. Dud more MEN’S WEAR series of steep-walled canyons cut thousands of feet deep into this escarpment. The least of these is deeper than the Yellowstone Can- yon and the greatest must be com- parable with the Grand CanYm of the Colorado. some geologists have attempted to show that submarine valleys are not the product of river erosion, but the valleys under discussion have every indication of a. fluvial origin. They have the typical sinu- ous shape of river valleys, as well as the branching tributaries and the V-shaped cross sections char- Max Factor’s Society Beauty Aids Created by Max Factor, Hollywood's mskelup genius, who for many years has been chief cosmetlcinn to the screen and stage profession. lilax Factor preparations are in a large way responsible for the splendid compiexl of the c lchrities. ~ Som. uI our lines include FACE POWDER FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN dt TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest ingred- ients in correct color, hsr- mony shades. to blend witl. individual comple color- ' ing. And is delicately perfum- ed, to plesse the most fastid- ious taste. It's peculiar nd- hesive qualities make it "ltny on" and "cling" under most trying conditions. Visit our’ store - and look‘ over this line of toilet pre- psrntions. THE 2 MAGS 149 Great George St. Msll Orders Given Prompt Attention. scterlstlc of‘ canyons cut streams. Since the valley floors are traceable to depths of at least 7,000 feet, it is evident that during the valley cutting stage New England must have been n. plateau at least a mile and a half above sea level and part of the Maritime Provinces must; have been elevated similarly. The steepness of the canyon walls, probably exceeding 45 de- grees in places, makes it appear very probable that they were cut in solid rock rather than 1n the soft sediments of the ocean floor. The finding of fragments of weakly ‘er! conglomerate on the wall of one canyon partially confirms their rocky nature. The outer por- tions of the valleys have hummoc- .bvl l ky topography suggestive 0f land: slide accumulations. A Dutchman had a clerk whfl struck him for a rise of wages. Sfi-lti the Dutchman: Hans I dnks I bull you pretty clear already. Oh well, said the clerk, of coum I get a good salary; but you know I do everything and understand e1- erything; in fact, you couldn't all along without me. "H1115, said the Dutchman, w‘ do if you die? Oh, well, of course, if I dlcd yvil would have to get along wlillulll me. The Dutchman smoked in sllenfl awhile, then: Veil, Hans, I dink! we gonslder you daid." lllcusvculclloisons B l-AC K wwlk IST