"ili1. Bea ~ " >'.IITw<,~‘ . o, PAGE roux Ilia oljurlntotuvircusrulan lvodlllk lvlilkflaflsz-nw" I. Hal-Ill- ‘ IIQQ- I‘. I» v handily. lJQIC-PUOL I. M Ilollllol- D. l» 0- 7.253‘ ""_“w"'.|'...’; 3¢'5.""=."¢Z;J'-.'* lull-g Dolly (founded ll?) IIJI lit III! (ll IIIIIIOL Qollvpqq. “Jo to 0nd: rum! novman a m» “Now It Can Be Told l" This from the current issue of “Canadian. Business,” published by the Canadian Chamber of Commerce: “Distorted. by election speeches, Canada’s foreign trade figures should now be viewed dis- passionately. “For the past six months our exports have showed an average gain of about 8 per cent while our imports have risen about 6% per cent. This i: significant in tic-w of the absolute stage nation of total world trade." I So significant, indeed, that it completely answers the partisan misstatements which were chiefly responsible for electing the present Ottawa administration to power. Considering the result of that campaign one is led sadly to reflect on the truth expressed by the poet: "lV/lctt all it: work is done, the lie shall rot. The truth i: great, and shall prevail;- When none care: tvhether it prevail or not.” Buy A Poppy i Today and tomorrow have been set apart for the sale in Charlottetown of Poppjesfor Remembrance Day, which falls on Monday next. The sale, as in other years, is under the auspices of the Canadian Legion, the flowers being the production of disabled ex-soldiers who are trying to support themselves in the Vetcraft Shops which are administered by the Canadian Government. It may seem a little thing to buy» a poppy, but if every Canadian does so it will be a great manifestation of Canadian sentiment. Between 1914 and 1918, 600,000 Canadians offered themselves for the service of their country. Over'6o,ooo of these the poppies-blow. In 1935 there are still 170,000 men who bear upon their bodies the marks of sacrifice. It is in recognition of them and in tribute to their suffering that Poppy Day has been set asidewto __ afford all Canadians an opportunity to express their participation in a national fellowship of remembrance. Memorial Scholarships The system of post-graduate scholarships and of bursaries set up by the Imperial ..Order Daughters of the Empire has become, through the years, ‘one of the most outstanding of the memorials of the Great War. According to the report' of the national secretary of the Order, $475,788.15 has been contributed towards it, and from this fund bursaries in Canadian uni- versities were provided for 174 young Canadians whose fathers were killed or disabled in the War. Further scholarships have been provided for‘85 graduates in Canadian universities to take up post-graduate study in a British university of their own ChOOSing, ' _ The year 1937 will see the last of the bursaries but the benefit of this provision to its recipients and the benefit of the scholarships continues through the years. In this history Prince Edward Island has a right to take pride since her bursary and scholarship candidates have taken high place among the provinces. Speculation On Tariffs The food industry is now speculating on what the new Ottawa Government will do with tariffs, says Canadian Grocer in its current issue. In his pre-election campaign talks, MACKENZIE KING repeatedly affirmed his intention if elected to revise maity duties. He did not particularize so that it is impossible to state what food pro- ducts, if any will be aflected. Take sugar, for instance. There, is a tariff of $1.89 per cwt. on refined sugar. If this were reduced, there would naturally have to be a corresponding reduction in raws which would affect farmers who grow sug- ar beets. There is a duty of four cents under the general tariff, against California raisins which used to command the Canadian market. Austral- ian raisins come in free. Canada does not pro- duce raisins. But then we sell Australia much more than she buys from us, making the problem of tariff reduction difiicult, The four cents per ‘lb. duty on British-growntea is naturally for revenue purposes as is the three cents per lb. tariff on foreign green coffee. Not long ago the BENNETT administration on the advice of the Tariff Board removed .the 2o per cent. or more tariff against biscuits produced in the Old Country costing 2o cents or more over there. There are also substantial duties against canned fruits coming ln under the general tariff. s0 many years back we imported considerable quan- tities of peaches, pears, apricots, etc., and=tbe bulk of our canned pineapple consumption is _still represented-by imports.‘ But in view of the fact that the Canadian fruit season isrmmnclr shorter than it- is in the United States, with higher canning costs, a problem is presented to any government figuring on lower tariffs. Editorial Notes Have you bougit you; poppy? Nobody was advertising for potatoes this time last year. ' ‘ Monday does not uire to be Pfmlilmed i holiday; it is uneasy: ‘eral statute. The city ununployed are beginning to make ' their presence felt, Oh, for more steamers to load and unload! . Q Ir ' Mn. Ravens GIIINQPAR, Manhattan's man offilttlqualtes who makes '1 ‘psaileqafaruate-na .t j. prior to landing the newspaper men were busy making preparations to interview . MR. Kiwis blessing, as leader of the Provincial ' cerity_of‘the League of Nations in insisting ‘ that-Altair real names are alsmrecordedoThus, . its observance. For instance: "When I drive at 111a- cnaanorrcrowu- ovannms. Y . prddiwtlldbne which shdolehis Greenwich Vill- age residence last Tglulzday night. ‘Hon. Vmcenr lllasscv sailed yesterday to relieve Hon. flow/mu Fcnousou as High Com- missioner in London, Prospects for the ne Civic election are lining up forces. In the Mayoralty two prospect- ive candidates are already mentioned-Council- lors B. Rov Holman gndifiPencv W. TURNER. A5 was anticipated Mr. I. W. DAl-‘OE has declined the appointment of Ambassador to Washington in succession to Hon. W. T. Han- RIDGE. He prefers to remain in his editorial chair at Winnipeg as guide, philosopher and friend of Westem Canada, ' . If 3K Wonder if there is any enterprising can collector here such as Mu. Samurai. Rosorr, millionaire subway builder, New York, who has applied to the city for the tin can concession. He wants all the _tin.cans picked up in the city garbage dump, but whathe will do with them only M11. Rosorr knows.’ . Our local and Federal members are to be the happy recipients of Bibles in the near fu- ture. The Gideons are so impressed with the necessityot‘ Biblical enlightenment on the part of our present-day legislators that they have de- cided to place Bibles on their desks that they “may quote from the Scriptures to support their political or moral opinions during debate." Irnph! ‘ ' 5K if 3K It appears two per cent of the total estim- ated national wealth of Canada is invested in schoolsvandluniversitics. The Dominion Bureau figures oncvery conceivable subject, has just estimated the amount of capital devoted to train- ing young Canadians at $579,571,187, roughly two per cent of the country's total assets. Ma. and Mas, A. M. DOUGLAS will have the heartfelt sympathy of the whole community iriithe irreparable loss they have sustained in the death of their only child, Donornv. MR. and Mus, DOUGLAS have taken an active part in so- cial aridireligious life since their advent here, andhe himself is well and widely known since joining M11. T. W. L. Pnowsr: in the manage- ment of the businessofirPnowse Bnoruers Lro. The new Governor-General is hail-fellow- well-met with journalists to which profession he himself belongs. On board the S. S. Duchess of and photograph him, iwhen, in full uniform, he quietly stepped into the room in which they ‘were-locatcdwsmiled, and asked: “Has any one of you boysc cigarette .7.” There was a scramble to fill his request. 3E 3K “Mitclfl dearly loves a sensation. It has been his. life blood ever since selected. with Liberal-Party in Ontario. N0\v MR. KING gives hint th'e,'pafting kick ..with- the cynical remark: ‘TA sicl-nman is of little value to himself or the country and the sooner people realize this the better}? “Mitch” might quite reasonably retali- ate to the Prime Minister: “It is all very well to dissemble your love, but why should you kick me down stairs?" . it 9K Hon. W. M. Huoncs, Australia's war-time Premier, is another politician who “put it in a book" and is sorry for it. He is now—-or was— a member of P11511151: Lvous’ National Govern- ment, and wrote a book of recollections and reflections, in which he commented on the sin- upon sanctions. Penman Lvous has called for his resignation on the ground that his attitude on ‘sanctions differed from that of the rest of the cabinet. i! if 9K According to eye witnesses at Quebec Loan Twacosnuue, Govemor-General, is slend- er, leanfshavcn and of medium height, His complexion is dark and he is ruddy of feature. A high forehead accentuates his penetrating, kindly eyes. HER EXCELLENCY L/mv TWEEDS- Mum, on the other hand, is fair, and it is after her ..that the flaxenhaired Hon. ALASTAIRC BUCHAN, Their Excellencies youngest son, takes. "The young man, who has the build of an athlete, may attend a Canadian university—eith- er Toronto or McGilL ll! i l The Conservative party of British Col- of Statistics, which searches out and tabulates ‘ Notes _By The Way The general vluvr of lfllttluuu cone the poealbb effects of the Italo-Abyaslulau dlsputeoa the pollttcal oltuatlon In thls oountry ts rather well summedup In an article ln “Al Glhad" from whloh we extract the follo : “If war actually breaks out between Italy and Abysslnla, it will serve u a good practical lesson for both Greet Britain and Exypl: on oo-operatlon between them." We may not agree with the nest of the aruungentl in the article. but that phrase ls slg- nlflcant. A spell of. worklng slde by slde with a, common object, however different, might be the motives tnsplrlng the two parties, might bring about a closer under- standing between Brit-tau and Egyp- tians for the greater benefit of both and for the rnore- peaceful progress of thls country. But, to have its ideal effects. tt would have to be the sort of oo-operatlon "that 1s spontaneous and due to apprecia- tton of the justness o1 the cause and the mctltude of the attitude of the oo-parther. It would lose much of its moral value if 1t were the result of bargaining-give me this and I'll give you that. It is the spirit of co-operat-lon, not so much the material fact, that would give the best results. The material benefit-s of mutual confidence would follow automatlcally.—-’I‘he Sphinx, O There are probably few people who have not at some tune or an- other begun to keep a diary-it is a phase through which almost everybody goes, like keeping rab- bits or reading Swlnbume-but there must be equally few whose dlarles have survived the first flush of enthusiasm; who have not been discouraged by a dearth of events or overwhelmed by a plethora. The born dlarlst is an enthusiast for whom the wrltlng of his daily rec- ord ls a sacred task not to be for- gone from stress of affairs or wear- tness: the last engagement of the day, it. ls the one which he never breaks. In some such spirit of last- ing enthusiasm, fortified by the habit of a lifetime, must Lard l-lalg have written his war diaries. which run to no less than 800,000 words. Even for a. prolific novelist this would be a large output; as the work of a busy soldlerhs odd moments 1t is simply amazing.- Trut-h, London. \ It ls said that the Gennana are very sore with Mussolini for bring- lng on an armament race. Hitler and his associates have been straining the resources of the country almost to the breaking point. 1n order to build up another big war muchlneand now the Ital- ian assault on Ethiopia has bestlrr- ed all the other nations to increase their defensive and offensive weapons so that the Fatherland is llkely to be much displaced ‘by comparison. Dictators never do consider each others feelings any more than those of the people un- afar their rule-Brantford Exposi- I ll ever the world needed spiritual substance, that time ts now, How war and selfishness crush ll/from men's heartsl The hungrlest, peo- ple ln this world are not those who cry for bread. People want encour- agement, understandlng, and bush- els and bushels of kindness to set their vtslon ahead, and help lift their chins just a little higher so that. they won't stumble and fall. Every tlnt, of lhls lovely Autumn season ls colored with the breath of G . This alone should give to us al a happier Uplook on life!- Exchange. Anomaly: North African Algeria. has plenty ot money In its banks. Capital ls abundant. Harvests grow year by year. Wine crop last year was exoeptlo "y hgavy. But-Al- geria ls ln a sorry plight. The ad- ministration ls ln debt. Its revenue dwtndles. Smaller- wheat and wine growers are overburdened with debt. Many farms are being sold up to pay btlls. Reason for this strange Irish-sounding case (re- vealed 1n today's report by the Brltlsh Department of Overseas Trade): France after the war took ninety per cent. of Algeria's ex- ports. Now France's own harvests are plentiful; her stocks of wheat. grapes, overwhelming. Bo Algeria suffers because she has lost the markets which made her rlch.-- London Express. Barcelona has been cleared of street beggars by a decree which empowers the police not only to arrest the beggars, but to exact umbia is planning reorganization. Da. S. F. TOUMIE, former Premier, is still leader of the provincial Conservatives, but he informed the association after the I933 elections that, having been appointed leader by a convention, he would present" his resignation to a similar assembly whim lit was called. It is now announced such a convention will be held in Vancouver on June 1o and _11, Meantime the party will ‘contest seats in the two hyi-elections of Vancouver-Burrard and Ominser. ' " ' y ~ as an an hWhat, after all, isia man's name but that by "which hechoses to be called? After much hem- ‘ming5%'n<f"l1awing,-the State of New York El. eetion Board has ruled that the followers of FArnen DIVINE, the Harlem deity, may register and Vole by the'“he'avenly" names, on condition the Harlem election lists will record such voters as M11, Gaanrrap Love, MISS Giucious New Heaven, Mas. Lovscmass Rear and Miss Bsatrrrrvr." Deuonr. These are all Negroes, followers of the Black Divinity, who baptizes them with such Milfioniih gesignationl. The majesty of the law counts for much in 5o m.p.h. When I" am driven by u unifomied me I-‘arn frequently ‘overtaken by ears at 45_or 3o.m.p.h. in my private car with my wife beside policeman I have no such experience."—-MAJoa M. 1.; lions, Giief Constable of Southport. On flnes on the spot from persons caught glvlng alms to them. As a juatlftoatlon for this strong meas- ure, lt ls said that a great. many‘ of the beggars are "pmfesslo ‘ " who deserve imprisonment, and that proper provision wlll be made for those who are really destttute. In our ovm streets begglng ts an offence. but. the people are not very strlct tn enforcing the law, and any attempt to extend tt to the public, even when lt ts plain that they are bestowing their alms imwlaely, would be warmly resented.-'I‘ruth (London) A determined attack should be made on the accident problem along three lines; better roads. bet- ter road sense, better and more strictly enforced law. For the last two hundred years we have eon- stently been outgrovvlng our rold system; the tyne. capacity and speed of our road vehicles has changed faster than the roads could be rebuilt to sult the new require- menta-‘rhe lloonou-ilat (L-ondon.) Cherlemmobene remarked when he first vlalted this oontlnmt that me outataudllj ohsrumerlstlo of Americana was the lnfrequenoy of their laughter. He observed that they pursued thelr biuln so ln- teotly mt they had lttt time to season their dolly attain with any manlfestatlonl bf uetsty. Perhaps the reproach could be extended to- day to cover the entire North Ame moan continent. Oertalnly the people o: Oansda and of Vancouver thcojth Itnnddbstll lists-MM W“ 91m - beyond! do not m: ._at . run ABDOMINAL SYMPTOMS KAY FOLLOW THE EATING OI‘ CERTAIN FOODS That certain. foods, pollen .0! plants, horse halr. the fur-of unl- mals cause attacks of asthma, hay fever. eczema and hives has been amply proven. This la called allergy That eertaln foods may cause dls- turbances 1n the abdomen ls aka known. but lt ls now believed that some foods are blamed when they are not at fault. Dr. J. A. Ryle, London. tn the Brltlsh Lancet, says that no abdom- inal or blood circulation disturbance should be said to be due to allergy- sensltlveness to foods or other sub- stances-unless two or preferably three of the following conditions or circumstances are present. l. The symptoms should closely l emble the usual symptoms riue to “semm" sickness; that la alight fev- er, rednem of the skin, the form- ation of hives, intense ltehlng, and sometimes swelling of the glands, pains tn the Joints and back. 2. The patient should have "sen- sltlvenes" (that is have some of the above symptoms) when he ears certain foods, uses certain drugs or comes In contact with certain sub- stances. 3. There should be other condi- tions such as hay lever, asthma. ee- zema. occurring at the same or at. other times. 4. There should be a family hls- PUILIC [DRUM $1.1"- "-5 a: ’ aocounonarruo recum- rlomsrs j 5lr.--I road with Interest the ro- solutlol: planed by the Temperance Federation re Prohibition and the letters of correspondents on the same subject tn the Patrlot and the Guardian lately. I have been in- terested for several years in the many phases of the "llquor ques- tlon". not only tn thls Province, but tn Canada and the United States as well. It. seems to me that the d1:- paaalonate study of this subject gives one a fairly good grip on the peculiar characteristics of our race. In this connection I do not think I can do better than relate an 1n- cfretnt 1n which I played a mluor P ~ ' . Some seven or eight years ago I had occasion to motor with a friend throw a conatd nun: part of Queen's and King's counties. Stop- plng one publlo holiday for dinner at the hotel, in u nice clean, ap- parently prosperoua village, which ~l shall call Tobemory, we found the landlord to be qulte u polttlelan and his wife to be much. more ardent and expressive than he. After the introductions, I being a man of some political note ln those days, we received a typical Highland wel- come. It may be inferred that we all balanced to the same slde In politics. The landlad, told me she was sorry the local member, whom I shall call Mr. Smith, and who llv- Outstanding Valugs dressy coats. 8g 1H 01¢ villi-Be. ‘was notat home t at date. she felt sure he would be glad to meet me, and she was equally certain I would be delighted to make his acqualntance- Bhe as- tory of asthma. hay fever, or ec- zema- 5. The abdominal disturbances should occur at regular or similar intervals to any of these other "a1. lerklc" conditions. 6. Every care should be ‘ta-ken not to confuse these abdominal symptoms with some other organic (real) disease of the body. Thus where part of the nervous and sometimes the gland system is at fault, there will be sengnflong o; fullness. pressure. constipation or diarrhoea, chronic inflammation of the large intestine. Th8 Dolnt then ‘is that. it ls pos- sible to have abdominal symptoms or distress due to various substanc- es just as these substances cause skin. nose. and throat res " but that in order to make sure ‘that the-w Bymploms are due to these Special foods, two or more of the above conditions should be progeny Many find that they have n "5¢l1fl'Y” feeling ln the nose after eating a certain food, lust; never at. tribute the feeling of tenseness or abdominal pressure which may 9c. cur a few hours later, to the one“; of this particular food. . Mussolino’s Gold (Howard Wood in Chicago Tribune; How Dictatnr Mussolini has lllEttled his balance sheet to tn- clude 158 mlllons of vanished gold ls disclosed by computing the official Italian figures with British figures, which are. apparently, the result o.‘ an offlclal “leak" from the Bank of England. In its current “Bul1etln" the federal reserve board 1n Washing- ton presents an analysts of the Bank of Italy's gold posltlon point- ltlg out that Italy has been lostng gold reserves slnoe April, 191a. The reserve board's statisticians- by the Fascists estimate that It.- fllfs stocks of the metal at the end million dollars, s. drop o1 140 m‘]. llon dollars since the start of the your. v In London, however, flnanclal papers suddenly. discover that about I58 million dollars of Italy's sup- posed gold holdings not. only are not held tn Rome but are not avail- able to the Fascists at fll, This leaves Mussolini with only about 221 ntllltons of gold. And this small remaining reserve ts rapidly being dissipated as the Fascists, lacking foreign credit and having an unfavorable balance of trade, spend 1t abroad for war materials and necessltlesfor home consump- tion. Already the gold ratio for It. altan currency la below 2o per cont, and ls dropping rapidly as the gold —formerly used as backing ‘for the currency-ls Qpfinb. The awry or the "mum" 1st millions o! gold dates back m 1915 when the Italians rushed approx!- mately that amount of the metal to London as aectn-tty ‘ a big loan granted to Italy by Great Britain to finance war expendlturm. This uold, however. dld not vo- matn ln Inndon. It was transfer red almost fmmedlately to the United States as surety against the steadily mounting indebtedness of Great Brttaln to the United States. On June 20, 1N1, elm Italy's gold holdings had begun to decline severely. the Italian goverplment the amount of Italian gold hold by the m-ltuh vnu reduced from 1 tnlllon 00f million 11m to 1 bllllon ‘I72 mll- llon llre. ls Italy made payments on her Wlr debts to Greet Britain. the "Hoover moratorium? no European war debt ‘ wholesale atnee June 30,- 1N1. on the eve of ' sured me he was a most jovlal, soel- able, friendly man, who always look a drlnk himself and believed 1n glvlng one to his friends. She also told me that his predecessor, who had been elected once in that dts- trlet, was a teetotaler and a very straight laced man, who would neither take a drlnk nor glve one, nor would he make even a promise unless he was sure of belng able to keep lt. He had been nominated thetsecond time. but after canvas- sing for a day or two, both he and his colleague. a man from Char- lottetown, felt sure there was not. the ghost. of a chance of either of them being elected. l-le resigned the candidacy and Mr. Smith was induced to take hls place. Immedi- ately everything changed. Same lt- quor was obtainable all through the campaign; a fairly large supply was available on election clay, and both Mr. Smith and his colleague were ~ returned with good majorities. She further told me that Mr. smith reallzed he owed something to every one who voted for hlm, especially to those who worked for him, and that the very least he should glve them was a- promise. Aooordlngly every- body 80f a 800d Promise for a Gov- ernment poeltlon. and Mr. smith was unbeatable ln that district. After dinner several of the ladies and some of the gentlemen of the vlllage dropped 1n for a chat. They were all neatly and respectnbly dressed and looked well, particular- ly the ladlesA They repeated what I had been told already about the member elect, Mr. Bmlth, and add- ed that he was u. member of the Temperance Alliance and often spoke with fervor at the temperance meetings in the village lodge. They informed me that I resemble Mr. Smith m appearance and from what they had heard they believed I had a good many of his character- lstlcs. I assured them they were using the official figures given out »mlstaken, that I could lay no elalm whatever to Mr. Smith's versatility and ability, and that while I was of September total)“ “out 3-,; not a teetotaler I had qulte forgot- ten to put. something 1n my grtp when leaving home the day before. and worse still my companion had been equally forgetful. They all seemed to regret the feet an won B5 I, but we part-ed the bostgof friends, hoping to meet. again, 1 ett-tnz, I _thin_k, some lnalght tn human otflelal "leak." ' Bays the London Financial News in a recent issue, copies of which were received here recently: "Th6 ‘Present status of the ‘gold doposll.‘ ls thus quite clear. Untll Italy 1 "umes the service of her war debt to at Britain, no further reowme ‘of the security wlll be made. Btu resumption of the ser- vlee ls probably contingent on the “lenient of the Inter- national war debts problem-which ts as for an ever from settlement- Italfl ‘ROM held abroad‘ remains an intangible asset which ts as tn- lcoelslble to It-Lly ll to Abylllnte." llll. l.. . EVANS of lulldlll, Eng. psychology upon which I have of- ten pondered since. come to the conclusion that on this question, we, in least, don't. reason, that u large mu- jorlty of us, probably four-fifths or more of us, want. a fairly generous supply of liquor with our Prohibi- tion and that we want. the cheap. strong, pungent variety, that we feel tn our throats as it. allps down and tn our "innards" afterwards. Hence army, and what would be the neat way to cope with the ‘ we have ln the handling of this momentous-m‘ 1 101 GRAFTON STREET And I have this Province at the existence, the popularity and the ubiquity of the smuggler, the bootlegger and the moonshlner. I have also come to the conclu- eare much of what it. cost-s the com- munity to malntaln the army of smugglers, boot-leggers and moon- ahlners and what it costs the tax- payers to maintain the second army of men we have on land and on sea to prevent the activities of the first free. the y I'd reach mendous tears, evil. We seem to attach some ln- nate vlrtue to the word “Prohibi- tlon" and a correapondlng vtce to words "Government, Control", for- getting that if there la any control at all 1t must be government con- trol. But worse perhaps than all, er theme, questlon raised hypocrisy, the moat - ‘ table of vices. to the cllgnlty of a Provincial virtue. ‘Drying to understand the ques- tlon and trying to understand my attitude towards it, I think I can truthfully sub-scribe myself, Doctors Ghee tr-L. Kidneys Flrst mmmmm mnwnrwi mo... '--,-=i, "*“"""'"a""- M fiwmkofidta-u ,|| J "Ago" duped-u a who render-Ill! ' ' amount-um rQedy-r-babllm-oafe. l2 om- Connected wm. DoddsKidney Pills ""'"°" PRINTING SERVICE month's billing Guardian l@ITllII§H And the finished job never looks like a “rush” job '. . . that's one reason you will appreciate our‘ thorough efficiency. lfhone at. any time, when you need printing, or drop»lu audirraugsflt et~ your convenience. Phone 133. f‘ A7113 Haberdashery ” In QVERLCQA TS FRIDA Y & SA TURDA Y $13.50, $15. and $16.50 AT $13.50 piire wool cheviot Overcoats in Browns and Greys, nicely tailored. Very exceptional value at .. .. . . . . .. .. AT $15.00. 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I'd follpw ln my dreams the and "I And etch upon my heart Etemd Spring- -_a.amons More, in “The Spinner!’- zi- EYESIGIIT Job o J