. an»; wscxrsfclhtzss". ....>_ h, _,_ _ , _ md-Jnwrasw Canndz Monda confere the Re chair. Ht “ [she , Hr ' f; prnc .. _ .__.-~7_ _@ mun TIIE GIIARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN yggflkg-w, Chum Q. Helms-Q, Ll. P. Vioa-Pralidcnt-J. B. Burnett Boorctlry-Jrloub-Cnl. D. A. llaclllnuon, D. 8. 0. Bdllpf “Q Ilnlglnl Director-J. B. Barluit. Anoclllo EfAIAQII—YI'\IIIIl \V\ilfer and U. K. Curris Iornlng Daily (founded I881: 85.00 per year (in advnuol) delivered. HM Do: 70a: (in advance) mailed In (‘unad- and United Staten. TUESDAY, JUNE, 14. 1932 We here will think all the more 0f the British press for the indiB" ‘Al “l8 dlW 0f “l9 Imperial ECO-inane“ they are expre§1hg ht the ‘mm mnfemme “limmazhes dishunethical practice so common in tile ‘Emu “gaming m“ issues atlname of law and justice in the “t” u‘ bewmng “w” mtcnse" Republic to the south of us, and Moently the question of tariffs has’may may that our mu,“ and db 5°“ “may superseded by Lheipartments of justice may never be question of currency, it beng felrmmted with nthhd lhat tariffs must take a secondary"lmethod_,_ place when the rate of exchange is| It Itake. Canada, of course, i5 on‘ the gold standard. one of tile few| remaining OOunlriPs to adhere to it. While a French writer wnrils the Our neighbors to the south fife also world against Bolshevlst Russia. the n the gold standard. but at is in-iSOi/lefi Government organ Investin- Ilmated that before long they n-llllchnrges Japanese elements with abandon it. Indeed. lil all interview 586K118 Bil lllVfl-Sioll 0! 33519111 on Saturday, General McRae, whoiSiberia, to facilitate Japan's prep- is now a Senator, inLlmatEd that thcIBTiiUOIIs for Wnr azninsi the United muted Slates would be forced off Sims by 115ml! the rich natural m, 801d standard “uh... a yQQTIil-esources of Asiatic Russia for advancing in support of this thojniilinry purposes The Russian case [we hhgt the present, rare or de-Ps slated more fully in an article arcane fn the gold reserves is such by 8- COYWSPOIldEIlt 0f U18 Milli- pmg they W111 have no ajgerhauvehchester Guardian. The writer says Re iI-werffld that thcr reserve ohfihat the Soviet Government, in- J1me 1st of 61.4 percent W85 at the ivhi umn bnrryinil out the five- lowest point and was 9 1-2 percenJyeflr Plan, is 10th to make war, and loss than two months ago. This|l5 uniikly to fight unless the fron- hchr-g our», tho rumours current in tiers of Russia are actually invaded. financial circles of Montrral a Many Russians fear the Japanese month ago that, the Unjggd SQQLQSIB-TB determned to seize Northern would go on the ggld Smndard on Manchuria and in order to con- w about July 15m. But Generaksifllldale their positon and combat GOLD STAN DA RD degree" JAPAN AND RUSSIA IIUTES BY TIIE WAY Von Papen Wll expelled from the United States upon orders by Welland Canal. much to say that his activities plus those of his confederates, had much to do with taking the United States into tho war on the side of the Allies. Today this once bellig- erent captain of the old German Junker Empire stands at the head of the German Republic. But what is even more strange than that, he evidently heads it as an enemy oi extreme Germaz. Nationalism. as the foe of Hitler and all those who would scrap the ‘Treaty of Versail- les. It is a remarkable illustration of the changes that come within even a generation. A leading Nationalist is authori- ty for the forecast that President von Hindenburg will resign office on his 85th birthday, October 2, and recommend to the German people that former Crown Prince Wilhelm von Hohenzollern suc- cced him. The picture thus grows the more complicated. The repub- lic under the presidency of the Kaiser's heir, of course, would cease to be a republic in every- thing but style, and it might not be long before even the pretence of republicanism was dropped. Germany is generally depicted as bitter against the Kaiser. While that is so, it is difficult, consider- ing the temperament of the Ger- man people, to believe that they are antl-monarcllist. In any event, if there is any chance of an Hoh- enzcllern again ruling Germany- with what title does not matter— Paul von Hindenburg is the man, probably the only man, who can “sell" the former ruling family to the Germany of today. Mannie does not consider cansdscommunist. influence there. they mould follow suit; he argues the vvnni w vbinin possession bf the other way. He says the new Imperial 3415515" Pfvvihvefi lying between cinrcrlcy should be backed by a Northern Manchuria and the Paci- ‘014 reserve together with a Cemrajlflc Ocean, in which province Vladi- Bank with an Inlperiai Govem-TWJ-‘wk i5 sil-iiiited- T7193’ TBSBTd m; 30nd, behind which “mud bQVladivoslok, which is at present a pjued we present gold r959.” 1h big airplane base and may again crest Britain and n1».- donlnions. becvnle a big naval base, as a men- aggregating at H15{lff‘;i€ill.ill’ll0S0lllC_3ce i°_ Jfllian- and ihel’ ("Wei the $g'()()0’()()g_ The Enwh-e is me hrihnrich coastal fisheries of the marl- cipsl source of gold production and time provmm W" witch the" in this Canada piays all importantqhave been disputes between the part. Our gold production in 1930 lscwiet Union and Japan during the was SQMLOOO in 1931 f,‘ morn» jlast ten years. A quarrel with Russia m to $53.301,000 and it is estimated “’°“’d be "imsmwd by Japan’ 5° production for the current year is some Russians 53y’ as 5 fight m‘ ‘BOIOOOVOOO with a prospect law and order against communism. of i . . $100,000,000 annual production flvchland so strengthen Japans posflon ilfl the opilron of the world. years hence. The establishing of an _ _ imperial tummy with such a gold hatuisiz, tszy: the Guardian writer. reserve, General McRae argues, pend lavishly to pre- “mm enable us to pay our pare against the danger, its resour- nuuumu b0 the United statesyces have been strained and it has “mom discount for it been compelled to modify the five- year plan, changing over the met- a u c n us o - b0 safely assumed that the n m a] I d t I hnpufal currency vnll be on par _ g W r w“ put moses. RLISlQ, ls now concentrating, with gold. and ibi r . .1 m Doss y a q s g the flower of her forces in thc‘ wammm‘ East. The weakness of her position lies in the neamess of Vladivostok to Japan and its long distance from European Russia, while at sea Japan would have an overwhelm- ing superiority. Nevertheless, Vladi- vostok would be s, far different proposition from shanghai. The Rusians are particularly strong in tanks and airplanes. WhereasAJap- an could produce only about 300 planes n. year, the soviet Union» could produce over a thousand. Moreover, owing to the hilly nature. of Japan it is difficult to give the Japanese aviators proper tralnng‘ the ‘and the Japanese air service is poor. CED LINDBERGH CASE The tragic death of a servant girl h the Morrow household, and the quldm of her sister, mother maid, h I4c\ don, England has created sl- mmt an international situation. The New Jersey polce are naturally anxious to find a solution of the mystery of the kidnapping and death of the Lindbergh Baby. so far they have been absolutely unsuc- cessful. In applying the "third de- gree" methods to the unfortunate girl, who has taken her life, President Hoover, because of the peculiarity of the American politi- cal system which. while designat- ing him the chief executive, ac- tually makes hlm powerles if log- rolling politicians in Congress want their own way. has been unable to economize as he probably would wish to do. Hence the American people have a further billion of taxes added to shoulders already creaking under the strain of ex- isting levies. “Just 100 years ago," says a wri- ter, "the only foods known in Eng- land were bread, meat and fish. There were hardly any vegetables and few fruits.” And due no doubt to the absence of the proper foods, see what happened to those Eng- lishmen of 100 years ago. They're practically all dead. The whole question in Germany is really how good a politician Hlndenburg is. On his own au- thority, without giving the recently clcctcd Rcichstag a. chance to utter a syllable, he has turned out a ci- vilian government". and installed a military junta. Elections are to be held at rnce; and, in the mean- time, Germany will be under an army dictatorship. Hitler-who locked so sentational and explo- sive a few days ago— has been badly deflated. It seems most un- likely that he would have dared to seize power against the will of the Reichstag. ‘No one save Hinden- burg could do that. The impression in Berlin is that Hitler has an un- derstanding with the President as to the part he and his organiza- tion will play in the elections and the government that will be form- cd after them. l-le has little choice except to co-operate with the new military camarilla. They have, in lpoker parlance, “raised" him right out of the picture. He must follow them or be leftJllgh-and-dry on a shore from which the tide has English ha‘ s”! ‘omethmg l“ theffhe Russian, on the other hand, Qfwflded- datum of abject persecution by the good; and “my have a big fleet of New Jez-sy authorities. The "third lmgmm” bani". h; film” is abhorrent to Britxsh ideas wad.,,..flok_ of justice. law and fair play. No representative of justice is permit- ted 00 use any means whatever of getting an individual to incrimin- m himself or herself. Brltsh jus- ‘planes EDITORIAL NOTES Here is a story. presenting a nice If what is done and resolved at Ottawa can set on the road to re- covery the quarter of the world which is under the British flag, the other three-quarters will find their recovery made much easier, both directly and by example. It may wcll be that the greatest ser- vice which the Governments of Moe is so insistent on this that if it problem in economics. which has the Elnphe mm render the worm came out in court that, undue ln-'gone the rounds of tho financial nuance of any shape or form hadIpapers: A man paid forhismealirla been med for such a purpose iheIrestaul-ant with a cheque for $1- mcueq Wm,“ b, jmmqdihlply get afhThe restaurateur bought. a necktie liberty. No court of appeal wouldiwith the cheque and the Ihaber- Iustsin any verdict obtained byfiaeher used it to buy a shovel- mob means. Brtish justice lie-Twenty pebble in all accented the’ mjflfll ma: lblolute fair play be cheque and passed it on. The [hen the accused on the principle twenty-first presented it at a. bank that ft is better that nine hundred and found if was no good. So the Ind nhlty nine cfminals go ductile: twenty, each of whom had Bbgrty than thn, one should be made a profit of 20c on the trans- mado luffcr unjustly. Having these action whereby the cheque the British prml that a poor un- dollar m the m... left holding the fortunate girl should be driven to-bag. men considered he had made such a state of mind that she was 15c on the deal or a total of three prepared to take her own l'fe rather dollars. while the int man lost. mm continua to endure the nsonv. nothinl. when is main-lbw? came, ""15 “d knowing the Drum“ m m“ h" hum’ ‘Fused themselvealcnce. It is a crime that will not be . I prim]; pour-ts, u; appears hideous to ‘five cents each and gave a good fol-shah them | at the present time is to make Ottawa a success.-London Times. In one way and another, says the London Daily Herald. every poa- sibility of a far-reaching measure of disarmament is being destroy- ed. Ten years have passed slncg the solemn pledge was given at Versailles. The urgency of the need is admitted. Lip-scluice is paid everywhere to the ideal. But there is no rcnl effort to convert, m; ideal into reality. Thcrc is the very reverse. The politicians and the experts are strangling the Confer- I These 18.000 American-Liberian negroes, who rule-as a civilized Christian community-ovgr m m- President Wilson for preparing on: invasion of Canada and for parti- clpaticn in a plot to blow up the and it is not too‘ THE GUARDIAN iiiilat l $1M of r.- your: By lame: W. BnelomALD P" HOW T0 SPEND YOUR. DOLLAR 0N FOOD Just how to make the dollor go the greatest possible distance occupies the minds of the family provider, and the member of the family who has the spending of the dollar. As food is the most important item, because food is health. is life itself, it is of interest to every- bodymkrlow just what part of that dollar should be spent on each of (he different kinds of f0od_ Some years ago I outlined the method of Miss Campbell of the Department of Agriculture. QNIWB. who suggested that the dollar should be divided into fifths. one fifth for each kind 0f 100d- Rccently the Child Health Bulletin, New York, issued a chart, compiled by Lucy H. Gillett show- ing how the dollar should be spent if the best results from a health standpoint were to be obtained. Miss Glllett suggests: "Divide the money to be spent on food into fifths, one fifth more or less for vegetables and fruifs, one fifth or more for milk and cheese. one fifth or less for meat, fish, and eggs, one fifth or more for bread and cereals, one fifth or less for fats, sugar, and other groceries. I believe that this is a fair all round guide for the average family, and might wcli be followed, but it can readily be seen that some families w-lli be all adults, some will have some small children, and others half grown children.’ Where the breadwinner or bread- winrlers work hard physically there can be no lessening of the amount spent for meat, fish, and eggs, if strength is to be maintained. Where there are a number of children the amount spent on milk might well be increased. Milk is 1m all round food for youngsters as it contains all five kinds of food, in- cluding the valuable vitamins. Miik of course is a good food for everybody and its price is reason- able, but when children reach their teens it 1s necessary that they in- crease the amount of meat, fish. and eggs in the diet. There is no reason why they should not con- ism... drinking milk, but the pm- telds-meat, fish, and eggs are needed for growth and repair be- cause these cl-llldren are entering the stage of manhood and won-lan- hood. Miss Gilletts chart is a good general guide but the little points mentioned above must not be for- gotten ' l i l “My tendency to giggle has made me undependable in crTsisF-Wil- liam Allen White. POOR. WISE MEN Why do the poor wise men in every age, Muslcarls, artists, scientists and such. ‘Dread the world humbly, lacking bowl or crutch which would support chair modest. pilgrimage? why fares the fool more softly than the sage? Why to the knave is 8W9“ the Midas ‘touch? Their audience which smiled n01‘ listened much Thunders its plaudits to the jester’! stage. Votes-fies of truth and beauty, 00d will keep From them, perchance, the sum of small desires. Keep thcm forever striving. flats unfurled, ‘Illclr souls pricked into pain which hinders sleep lest they should leave their lonely altar fires chase the phantom witch lights of the world. -—Elsi¢ Fry Laurence in the Crucible. To administration. They are in per- petual friction with tha natives of the inferior, when confidence they have never won and who refuse to pay their exactions. Then follow punitive expeditions in which vil- lagaa an burnt and too often the natives are burnt with them. We now hear of forty-four villages burnt and 150 villagers slaughtered —measures strictly necessary, ac- Tlle Ottawa (BY 81R EWABD DAVSON. 8T.) Conference III The Chairman, aft/er referring to the conclusions which had been ruched by sir Edward Davson after a, r ' -' and serious study of this whole problem, said he believed in looking ahead, "and if one looks ahead, one must be not only en- couraged but insllilfll "id 9331"!‘ ed." We were asked what Wfla the outcome of the Ottawa Conference u, mean to the Emplfc? Statesman in Great Britain, in every vnri 0i the Empire. agreed that it was the first essential step to the recovBYY of a sound position. Fioreigfl 601111" mes were taking n greater interest in British trade than ever before- why? 13mm” they realized that, if the very essentials of this great Empire should be knit weather. We were going to have an organization of an economic and social character that would lead the world and be able u) dictate policies and develop progress. 5o it was that foreign countries were making all kinds 0! overtures to Great Britain in the hope that they might anticipate the conclusion cf this Conference in their own jntcrests. Explaining Canada's idea in becoming a tariff country, Mr. Ferguson said:- We want to build up a great or- ganization-al nation if you will-in Canada. If we are going to Provide comfortable, satisfactory homes for the people that come to Canada. We must enable them to get jobs in Canada. 'I'hey cannot have jobs if you allow the goods that are manu- factured by people with lower stan- dards of living than oursto come in and compete with the product of a higher standard and a better W889- We pride ourselves in Canada, as you do, that our people have a splendid scale of living, that our workpecplc enjoy everything esen- tlal for happiness and comfort, and we want to maintain that sltuatfon. not only for ourselves, but so that Canada will be an attractive place for men from this country to go and work in If you are gong to transport British people from here to any of the Dominions, you must look upon the Dominions as a new field for your surplus populatcn. Do you want that to go to foreign soil, or to come to some other part of the Elnpira and 1o be with some other portion of the family, to live under the same happy, prosperous, comfortable conditions that are pro- vided by the standard of wage and of living that you have in this country? Canada saw that she could not in her struggle resst the destructive influence of the invasion of cheaper production, and she said, if we are going to keep our people here, we must bridge that dfference by a tariff-because we do not propose to lower our standard to meet the other. That is one reason we have tariffs. The other is, we live alongside of the greatest, the most highly organized economic force ill the world, the great Repub- lic of the United States. and we have to protect ourselves against the surplus product which they would throw over our garden wall at any price. Those are the two factors that have played the part in Canadian economic life that has brought us to establish a tariff system. We could not live against the competitbn of Russia in Can- ada; an we put an embargo on against her goods. and we are the only country in the world which has put an embargo on against Russia. We do that in a, more modified way with tariffs against other countries that effect us seriously. With regard to this Conference, I am entirely in aurord with Blr Edward. Do not let u; expect too much. Do not let us think that any gathering of men. no matter how able, can take the whole category of products, both primary and second- ary, and adjust them between all and make a complete success of it to begin with. We have to lay down certain broad principles, and there are a number of fundamental pro- ducts upon which we can 8Ql€&-l thing like steel that Sir Edward talks about, I can see no reason why we should not. We produce steel. but we have not the market for heavy structural steel that you produce here, and we spend two or three hundred million dollars every year buying from the United States. We would rather buy from here. We put a duty on American coal so u to enable our puimla to use Welsh coal. and we built up last year a market for about 1.000.000 ions of coal from Wales. That will go on and increase. ‘Tilers is no place in the world where under normal condition! they can produce as fine a type of forestry or a! BMW!!! l! in cording to the Liberian representa- tive on the mmitice, for the dimnous population of 2,500,000, have a shocking record of rnal-' maintenance of law and order.‘ London DIILV Telegraph. British Flumlfl. Do you ever snwkc Rhodesian tobacco? If you these Dominion: and this country, ' bacco. We can 9'95"" m m‘ w‘ bacoo you mum Wiibin "i" Empire, just as I11 W! "ml"- TA“ fruit: every month there ll fruit ripening in some part of this Em- pire of every iylw 1nd vnrieiy. ample in supply the people of thew islands and all the rest of ti"! Empire. There are a great umber or products that can. without my difficulty at all, be satisfactorily dealt with, and it seems to ma that that would be the way ti“ 0°"- ference would approach this Pfilb- iem. In other words. it is not a quin- tion of bargaining. We hope that nobody will go with the spirit of bargaining. and I think it is pretty well settled everywhere that the Conference shall not be approached in that spirit. Let every Dominion, including the Colonies-bbiiflllfifi they certainly should be included- put its economic map upon the table, indicating its products and what it does with them, and let us readjust this thing; it is a. read- justment of distribution and pro- duction that we want and not bar- gaining between members of the same family: that will only create irritation. If we approach the prob- lem 5n that spirit, I am sure we will have Ilo difficulty. This country has given ample evidence of the splrlt in which it is approaching the thing. Take the abnormal duties. they do not apply to the Dominions. Take the question of treaties with foreign countries, no trade BENE- ments are to be made with foreign countries until» this problem is dis- cussed and dealt with with the D0- mirlion. Could any country so further than that? Then, when you come to apply a tariff which is avowedly for revenue purposes, and ordharily would be thought to apply to everybody, this country very generously says, “We are not going to apply thatto ourDominlona at all." So you have three important. not. gestures or overtures, but three important concessions given to the Dominlons as an earnest of the at- titude of this country towards this great problem. It is true that the Dominions have done things too. I cannot speak for the rest of the Dominloris with as much knowledge as I can of Can- ada. We have approached this prob- lem not merely from the sordid economic side of ft, the material side, but from the spiritual, social, national side of it. One hundred and fifty years ago, when some Englishmen started a little tea- party in Chesapeke Bay, they gave the United States people an oppor- tunity of with-drawing from the British Empire altogether. There were certain valiant patriots who endeavoured to retain that country for the Empire, but failed to suc- ceed: they were fnld they could leave the country but must leave behind everything belonging to them. They trumped through hund- reds of miles of untrodden country up into Canada and settled there. At that period that was looked upon in this country as such sn act of heroism and patriotism that l. special edict was passed, giving those people the right for all time to carry the proud title of United Empire loyalists. Their descend- ants have the right to put after their names U. E. I... and that in history was the beginningof the movement for a United Empire. That is the first thing that. was done in Canada. and an important thing. Then, when we came to confedera- lll Great (largo lungs do, you would never want to smoke anything ciao-except Cam-dim fn-i , vvhv \_ l l i ..-/—— _ I . ' - WYWII-uueal-fnum GmLt , H YNDMAN & CO., Ltd. The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. i. 14""? Queen Street Charlottetown Be a Booster m better times by giving your small job; lo the unemployed. Phone 1249. lion, the natural thing would have been to carry our railways to the closest markets-Chicago, Milwau- kee. and so. We did not do it. We built railroads across the Dominion east and west to tie up with these islands. Nor is that all. It is 35 years since Canada, in its anxiety in encourage trade with this coun- try, gave a. preference first of 33 1-3 per cent. and afterwards of 50 per cent. on goods from Great Britain. I hope the response is coming now. We have not had much since. If we were w get down closer to the situation, I have never forgot- ten the thrill throughout Canada on August 4th. 1914, when the war trumphcis sounded and the Cana- dians asked the British Govern- ment, “Can we help you?" The answer was. "If you can send us 20,000 men, it will be s. tremendous help to us." We sent 30,000, 20,000, 20,000, not five or ten times but 25 times, and every month on the average during the whole of the War 10.0w young Canadians shoul- dered their muskets and came a- cross the ocean to fight to main- taln this Empire. I merely say that in impress you with the idea that the people in these Domlnlons are intensely in earnut. We believe that ill-liars w_e can link ourselves to- gether in one great family compact. each co-operating with all the others. that we will ‘gee the be- ginning of disintegration in the Imperial organization. An interesting dscussion follow- ed in which Miss Garden, Lh-Col. M. Savage, Mr. F. P. Burden, Major Holy Pounds, Mr. H. H. Beamish, Miss Eyfon-Jones and others flock part. Commissioner Lamb raised the question of migration and urged that while it should be approached from the human aspect, it oouldl accruing from the Canada-way Indie; preferential agreement, w... there for all the world to see, tradr between them having jncrcage. from about £800,000 to over £4,000, 000. An obvious example of who: might be done was provided by Mauritius, which since the war h“ lost her market in India for Sugar which India now gets from Java Meantime the consumption or Jay; tea in England is leflplng uh “u, he said, "we as an Eurpire, speaking as a consolidated unit, could make arrangements for the oonsumptor of more Indian tea. by protecting the Assam planter, we could reason. ably ask the Indian Government u give Mauritius a quid pro quo in common fairness to Mauritius ill view of what she has done for the Empire as a whole." Colonel sir Weston Jarvis pro- posed a very hearty vote of thank: to Sir Edward Davson for his ad. dress and to Mr. Ferguson for tak- ing the Chair. It was carried with acclamation. “At the root of the world catas- trophe is the immoral behaviour of manirindP-Felix Adler. “A nat'on is infinitely more diffi- cult to organize that a. domestic homeP-Havelock Ellis. 5* bio n 0's ' 1 Kl D N EY Z / 4 ~ ‘ x ‘ " r l l h-urwraou": 04", not be dissociated from the Problem l l Z? t Um ‘T's. lvllllllilwr 7 of the vacant spaces overseas which ' l" were a political doll!"- Mr. George Pilcher emphasized the possibilities of the triangular trade suggested by Sir Edward Davaon, showed how the advantages _ I Try Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. Said Only in Bed Airtight Packages. Trusty as an olci friend-lit never failqto [Please with its {sting flavour. §