elTllE clunionelovill Gililllllllll PAGE FOUR _ ..Ch l.lll. _i|.r. Vlee- '11." rand!“ wsEClf:l':Tr]~—T:|:lI£lf‘?Ol. D. A. lflclinnon,‘ D. S. O. Editor and an mag Di etor-J. n. Burnett Associate Editors-Fran! Walker and D. K. (‘urrle Morn nl Daily (founded i881) 85-00 oer ear (in advance) delivered. 54.50 per year (in advance) mailed is anada and United listen. ADVIITIIINO IIPIIISENTATIVIS UNXTID MATES-Tile Brckwiih Special Agency fne. New York Central Building. New York (‘Hy General tfutora Building Detroit Interstate Build ing, Kansas City Wiilonghby Tower Building Chicago: Syndicate Trust Building, St. Louis: Glenn BII||IHTII-ATIRTITI: llousdnocl Building, Ban Francisco: 1135 No, 06th Street, Philadelphia Morning Maxim ‘lhe hairdresser holds the key to runny a look of hslr. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1932 ST. ANDREWS DAY be lnmwd by two. from fourteen --— toiixtaamuiaiotalbortaiaia- The festival of St. Andrew, pat- ron saint of Scotland, will be duly e ‘ ; that of Manitoba will be creased by one, from sixteen to sev- Ililltii BY TIIE I Y ' " “ of yrnerins the is- sue of irredeemable paper money. lt may be employed by a Government whose credit is exhausted and which is obliged to resort to the print ng Press to 11nd the necessary currency to meet its immediate obligations. It was resorted to by the Southern States in the War o1 secession and by Germany and many other nat- ions durLng the Great War, A value- iess currency was the inevitable consequence. Nor ls “controlled, in- "ltliln" l safe policy. The difficulty about inflation is that it gets out of control. It is like dram-drinkhg. it crows by what it feeds upon. Once started, it is hard to stop. THE GHARLOTTETOWN cuhapmn Chat 80hr of pours By lane: W. Baton. AID HOW NATURE PBEVENTS IDES OF BLOOD 1f you can thlnkof everylittleocll in your body its a tiny fllll- Y0" will get an idea of how the cells are able to live. Just ‘as a fllll f0 live, so also must each body otll have fluid about it. The fluid in which the cells of must have water-a fluid-in order PUBLIC FORUM, no enlnlan ll arm l" ll" discussion by correspondents of questions o! Interest. The Charlottetown Guardian 0°" not necessarily ""31"" m‘ opinions of correspondents, TRUCK! Sin-Due to present low mar- ket value for farm products the worried farmer is casting about as to whom he should blame. Not beins well versed in econ- omics oi’ market changes he nat- urally bl the agencies through which he sells for the mes-Ere P11- ces he receives for his hogs and lambs. If he is s member of a. co-operative shipping organization 0F SPECIAL INTEREST T0 LADIES One of Canada's Largest Furriers will make a SPECIAL DEMONSTRATION of Ladies’ Fur Goats in all the New Models at l S. A. MacDONAI-IYS STORE all Day To-day and Thursday Premier Bennett does well to ad- here to the policy oi "sound Money." the body live l5 the b1°°d 9nd Th9 Not by the easy way of the prlnt- lymph which "work weather to log of irredeemable dollars or oth- , carry food. wit" 5nd “We” er currencies w.ll the world be for: 8W8)! "m" n"? mm“ 5min" o‘ stored to prosperity. the body and to deliver these ne- lccss-lties to the cells at the molt ' distant part therefrom. From these cells in turn they bring back to the moist surfaces, in the inns! and kidneys, the useless wast-a from the cells, and the lungs and the kidneys ihrc-w lhem out oi’ the body in the perspiration and urine." ‘ The blood passes along in little iubes, whereas the iylfiPll mill“ more slowly filling in the ohifllifi and finally it also is Gathered m“ tubes m be put back into the blood stream nailin- You clin readily see then that this fluid-blood and lymph-l“ really life to the body, and so NB- ture does her best to prevent it being lost. as you know tho small" u“ prick of a pin will draw blood, showing how every Part l5 We“ supplied. How is the body fluid prevented from escaping from the body? When the skin is cut you will no- tice that in a. very short time ii little clot will form, a sort orlclly like substance,- which prevents any more blood escaping. However when severe bleedins occurs it has been shown that its more blood is lost from the body. the blood that is left in the body clots more quickly, showing that Nature is doing hei- best to We‘ vent further loss of blood. lhlole DrS. w. s. Cannon and W. I... Meiidenhall showed that it u-as ilic juice from the adrenal glands, (situated one on WP °T each kidney) that hastened ill"? clotting process of the lll°°¢ And cvcn when no adrenal Juice is present, it has been found ‘that the action cf the liver cells helps ihc blood to clot more rapidly. Surely, the“ forco behind ma‘ body of Yours is a “frlerldll” 0119- romniemorated this even ng by the l Caledoninn Club and by kindred organizations of Scotsman through- out the civilized world. The occasion is one which serves admirably t0 keep alive the weaitlh of tradition and history associated with the Land o‘ the licalher. One of the most interesting of these traditions relates to 5t. Andrews interment in scotland. The sa.nt. who was one oi the Christian apostles and a brother oi smon Peter, is believed to have suffered martyrdom at Petrse by being crucified upon the "X-shnped" cross which bears his name and which has become a famil ar symbol in all Christian lands. It Ls said that Maximclo, a lady of high rank, caus- ed the body of St. Andrew to be rmbalmed and honorabiy sepulchred; that afterwards, early 1n the fourth century, his rc-llinins were transferr- ed by the lihnperor Constantine to bmd- Wh“ 515° W55 a Macdmlald- Constantinople, and rlhally, in or I'm" 4M l“ 1m- Whlle °n e W" about the year sea, they were by a ‘to Pslhdulh. some mics away from p-ous monk‘ Regulus by name, com her married home, Kingsburgh. The veyed to the eastern coast of Fife, “mm G- 3' 5”" ten-l m? in Scotland, where a church was m” °r m“ she” “P” °“ by m‘ ‘new on the spot where arose me Prince, how she carried it to the famous city and cathedral of st. “m” stat" m‘ ha“ “w” m“ lmwrtflllve ts involved» Public in- Andrews. it might be her winding sheet. Arid tel-est is gelieraly ssilsf ed by a _, so, they mapped her dead body in statement of the location of the ac- lts @165, and a company o; stmngpcident and i1 list of the killed or young Hebrjdemm cam“ the t? injured. Such occurrences mount ‘up mo» a ;:;,:::".*.r:;"‘;:*:s~.::* i2§§i§.‘““.‘§; lay in state for a week. Thousands pious and mnccuous rem“ on ma, from the Islands and Hghlands at- something ought to bu dom- about tended the funeral. lt- Slle had been married forty years and left a family of sons and daughters. Hei- husband followed her to the grave in less than two years, and together they rest in an ancient burial-place of the clan in Kilmur. The funeral procession which fol- lowed the heroine sixteen miles, svas over a mile long, Pipers from the MacCrlmrnon and-McArthur col- leges imSkye attended to play the Coronaoh. The thousands of "guests were liberally supplied with re- freshments, and we read that of ‘mountain dew’ alone, 300 gallons were served." In spite of that‘ funeral and of the Prince Charlie adventure, Flora. Macdonaidb grave was neglected for nearly half s century. Not even a "rude stone" marked it. A marble slab in a freestone frame was set up by Morals son, but had bEen cracked when landing on the beach: and in s few months, tourists carried it sway, bit by bit. Then n granite crou, erected by subscription. blown down and brok- en. was restored. Today, a granite slab covers the grave, and the tall white Ionic cross at its head can be seen far out at sea; while 5t. Columba, Poi-tree, has a sta'ned Bless window, and Inverness a statue on Castle Hill. 0w enieen as it now is; that of " kntchewnn will be twenty-one as it now is; that of Prince Ed- ward Island remains at four as ‘it now is, by reason of the 1915 amendment referred to; that of Nova Scotia will be reduced from fourteen to twelve, the result being that we have e total of 245 mem- bers as the house is now constitut- ed the small percentage of handling charges “ an unnecessary ex- pense in his eye. Regardless oi’ his signed contract as a. club member he has his live stock trucked lo market, and be- comes his own individual salesman, slipping back into the rut of bygone days. Thus be becomes an enemy to orderly marketing carried on by shipping clubs. If he becomes pos- sessed with the idea of saving the small costs of charges, the simple and uncalculating farmer thinks he is getting very much ahead of the game. Besides the costs and“ charges for trucking there is also to be taken into consideration s. heavyshrlnkage in transit. It is quite evident that whatever advantage the farmer believes he obtains by trucking hogs or lambs it is quite negligible compared to the loss of the possibility oi’ taking advantage of wider markets through our ship- ping club and depriving loyal mem- bers of obtaining the grip of mar- ket values of which we stand so badly in need. The trucks in this respect have a demoralizing effect besides depriving our railway of much needed business resulting in an overwhelming burden of debt that at the present faces us. There- fore it would be well for farmers to think where they are heading for.. Special Orders will be Taken. This is another rare opportunity offered by S. A. McDonald's to the Ladies of Charlottetown and Vicinity of securing ‘ FUR COATS AT MANUFACTURERS PRICES Demonstration Begins at 9 A. M. To-day. A report from Shanghai staTes that the masses in China are in a state of desperation and long for stable government. As civil tvar has followed civil war in what used to be the Celestial Empire, their de- sro for domestic peace can readily be understood. The remedy will have to come from within Chlllcsc borders. i stale; L; asked to fol-give Greet admlsslonin his Autobiography that igain we have built up mum,“ Ewan he wrote for money and turned out and branches of industries to m“ One of the worst results of ‘ Wash- hi! "W915 t0 l‘ “"5 5nd n“ "h" ‘tmcknw-‘lnll’ 17° M" "will lio- mgtonls mgstence on pgymgng l; dule of hours was disappo‘ “--g to stroyed by the tariff whims u; w, that the Lausuune “moment g0;- his admirers. Times change and si- American neighbors. Do we - virtual ounce-Juno“ o; qunuun gep- milar statements by Wallace fur- to continue the series of bumps», “rations, which was unload ug lust nished profitable publicity. Yet, in- Are We content to be always u" summer_ 15 likely to be upset, cldentally, Wallace left his family economic tail of the American do; thus throwing the continent of Eur- penniless. After Trollopes death, on joyfully wagged when he is in | (Jpg once more into turmoil. ‘rile December e, laaz, fifty years ago, buoyant mood and dressed in ill, Lausanne agreement, 1t will be ra- and the appearance of his Auto- mud when he is in the dumps? p member“, was m,’ m be ratified biography, his popularity quickly we could get some assurance thai until Germany's creditors had ob- waned" the new trade "its pmpmd ll tamed satisfactory settlements Wm, 'l'he autographed manuscript of build would have some permanence the Umted swam As the Unxed his life story has recently been pre- that would be different. But boll States is not able to see its way clear, Zia-Md}! a’! "wt Brlmllalt Muiellm “Rim?” nlplfced l" "it r setup. oug e irlsrumenta yo Mr. Di! 01111 B Do <18 Party? Tia It§enngf1k:hes%£tfa::£gfi:yachaeved Michael Sadiier, a. Trollope author- Dill-Norm may change. The party at Lmlsanne may be 10st me ity. Recently Trollopes lmagina- itself is sure to no out of oflia ma." responsibility for m!“ we» tiva county of Barsetshire has been 800116!‘ 0t‘ lit"- w fare thus rests upon the Hoover ad- visited by uunwm“ “mm read‘ mnmrauon and upon Congress‘ ers, Mr. Sadlier and Mr. Hugh Wal- There B some ground m, hope that pole, among present day writers, me new congress with Presuenb have striven valiantly on his behalf. elect Rmseveu m the saddle may Although Trollope wrote on the ex- . consider the situation. But, in the ‘Pmfl “W” °' Milli?» “m °f| mémtune’ the whore worm wuwmis characters are strongly drawn in a position of uncertainty, which Pype" character‘ which h‘ ‘MW- is dsturbing and economically in- Wm‘ pm“ and ‘uccess he we“ m" jurlous. . mam“ m“ ‘"°°°°d“‘¥ ‘Wk’- ‘that in loai caiiadas agricuitlui The altitude o1 Washington 511th”? n°n°p° w“ u“ 5°“ ‘l’: products were valued at $1,630,000,- threatens to render futile and nug- a“ mum!’ “m?” lllflhi"? Tl" M1 000; that the domestic mam awry the tonhcommg world 9Com outed authoress of Widow Barns-i consumed ‘Laooflomm worth n‘ omic conference, upon which the na- by. _ with her caustio feflemllm "5' that the surplus for export vl tions have built high hopes. Irrface Amerlllm ma-lmllm did mum T" worth something over ililtiooojif-d of the unfortunate. and upon the Drotraot the estrangement between‘ Th1; illustrates the predomlnsni whole dangerous, situation thus American and English peollle- The; importance of the home market 1i created, the New York Times puts L°nd°n 17m“: W55 9' hundred Yell" also shows that with‘ a little moi-I the Dian question: "How can a na- "@- "Pm! ""19 at I New York industrial eh, nsion in Oahu! “on devowd to peace and m, theatre one night a nlan sat inthe the farmers of this coulury wil comlty of peoples refuse to view the. b“ Wm‘ m‘ bad.‘ m m” P" m‘! have little to Ito!‘ from lllltllli question of the war debts in the Wat tail-s hanslnz over, as Mrs.‘ foreign tariffs. Meanwhile the m “gm o, new ‘may. us; u; s” Qfiollope had sketched __one. The, tuwatrade agreements have spill lastly that we have not given up audience lmmediatel raised the cry ed new mum-e markets for iii hope that Washington will yet see ‘Yrollopel Trollope!" and the Times products of Canada's farms, or the light, and treat the whole ques- reported on authority of the Atiien- chords, grain fields, ranches ill lion of post-war obligation; in u aeum that every violation of “bien- dairies. manner helpful, not only t0 the ‘semcan-imd b'h'vx°7""wa5 balm! American people themselves. but i0 “u”? 5 Tmuwe- civilization at large. ‘ A SKYE‘ HEROINE A timely subject for st. Andrew's Day is ‘the account of the death of Flora Macdonald, the heroine who took Bonnie Prince Charlie over the sea. to Skye, when appears in the current issue of "Chambers Journal." The article describes Floris later life alter returning from the United States to the Hebrides with her hus- Poverty brings pain and suffer- g and hunger and deprivation- but those, after all, are things that can be endured. ’l.'o_v are Things comc men have even hero cnlfy in- vited. What mukes poverty a cursc is that .t destroys life itself. 1t re- duces lis victim to a, machine for eating and sleep ng. It is n thing that must illlV-"LVS stir a think ng man to tllu profoundcst indignation. It is an indictment of public opin- ion that it has neither time nor ln- cl nation to be lntcrvzicd in auto- mobile accidents. They have become merely incidcnis in the routine of a days news. Unless someone of The Farmers Market (The Sydney Post) Addressing the farmers in a tendance at the Royal Willis Fair in Toronto at a banquet 1i week, Premier Bennett pointed pl I am. Sir, etc, W. D. ROSS Kim-ass. REDISTRIBUTION Washington May Consider War Debts iMail and Empire) Perhaps a. mill on of the best-in- formed people in the United States know that the war debts should be cancelled or drastically reduced. The trouble is that this truth has not yet got home to the conscousness of the great mass of Americans. It is not that the people of the United States wish to be unfair; the dim- cuity is that they do not visualize the true inwardnes; of the world crisis as the British nation do after tho Napoleonic wars, and again after the late World War, as it does today. After putting Napoleon on St. Helena the British forgave the debts of their allies in order that these al- lies might resume business, tnd the world might, as soon as possible, re- turn to prosperity. Just so_in_l922, the British Government of that day Wis willing to forgo the amounts, owlni W 1t from Ellmpe l! motion in the English language, a1- Unlted States would forgive its l though Wallace, with modern me- debtors half as much. The proposal j clianlcal assistants, overrun his re- then made by the late Lord Balfour l cord by a wide margin. LlkQ wul- showed that the Mother Country lace, the quality of his work was re- understood world finance and world maykably even and has” w“ not affairs much better than did or do pul-gwuiariy gppgyenf, 31,91,311 neg- the politicians at Washington. Who llgence in literary workmanship. His constitute the majority in Congress. What makes matters worse is that ~ ~ _ when the debt, to the United States ' ’ Max Factor s were incurred the prces of muni- tions, provisions and war materials I were at least double what they are wday. The decline in the value of the pound has accentuated this d's- a crepancy. The pgople o! the United States Created by Max Factor “we not grasped the fact’ that the“ Hollywood's make-up genius: foreign trade and the trade of the who m. m“, yen,‘ h“ bu“ world are stlfled by the chief cosnietician to the deb“ It m a case o! the creditor screen and stage profession. finding himself up against it. The Max Factor llrelllfltlolll do» _"‘“Y l» ,5; i: ‘ii: 32.2.12’, sacral: mium, but Amer-Can 8°" P p of the celebrities. at home for Weill °l *1 “m” Some of our lines include United States vaults may be full of FACE POWDER FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN b TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM gold but American industrcs, rail- wuyg 5nd shipping lines omit their ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are devidends and dismiss their em- ployees. ‘The probability is that she republc is suffering more to Y htn~nleh=~=ovlllfllmm°v i231‘ .';°::..‘.‘::."“::i.‘..f“'.'i‘.: “wit” v °Tl w” debt 9537mm“ mony shades, to blend with. We have it. moreover, on tho all“? individual complexion color- ... a. a a ll=-.:".:l.l..<'l::.-:;':.n:l:l: editor l" ti" N" Y“ Wm‘ m“ loll, mo. w, peculiar ad- tho mslish "t"! to "e W" hesive o iriizo, make it "stay debt, settlement with the United on" and "sling" under moat Bu,“ m the mm Conviction thug 11 trying conditions. Ame"; gubseq tly granted more visit our store and look favorable terms to other nations ::::“t’l::; line of tot et pre- she would be given an adiustmtflt _ THE 2 MAGS in keeping there with. Such read- m Great Gentle It. ‘ustment has never been made. It is repeated that in order to clear up Mall Ordeal Given Prompt "Attention. In moving second reading of the Redistribution Bill in the House of Commons last week Premier Ben- nett referrcd to the method of as- certaining the unit of representa- tion. bust-d on a constant number oi‘ lucmbcrsfrom Quebec, and also to the reason for Prince Edward Is- land being exempted from this rule which otherwise would necessitate, on a population basis a reduction to two parliamentary represent- atives instead of four. The Premier first referred to the exception yprovidedln subsection 4, sec. 5i of the British North America Act, which deals with the diminution in population and providu that where the change in population does not exceed one-twentieth, there shall be no change, but where it does exceed one-twentieth, it is competent to reduce the number of members. "The second exception," said the Premier, "is to be found in the provisions of the ccnslltutlonal amendment of 1915. It will be re-- called that after Prince Edward Island came into confederation, the number of senators from the three maritime provinces re- mained at iv/enty-four. Two sen- ators were taken from New Brunswick and two from Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Is- land was then given four senat- ors, so thllt Novn Scotia had ten; New Brunswick, ten and Prince Edward island, four. But it was provided in 1915, in consequence of the representations so strong- ly urged iii ilic liousc nt. that time, that a. change should be made by amending the constitu- tion and, as a resillt of the amendment which was made it was provided that the representa- tion in the liousc of Commons should never be less than that in the Senate. So Prince Edward ' Island, which would be entitled to only two members, is, by roa- son oi the operation of that pro- vLsion, entitled to four and the province of New Brunswick lhnt would be entitled to only nine nlcmbcrs, under the rule set forth in section 61 of the British North America Act, will be entlill-li to ten members because it has ii. representation of ten in the Sen- are." The old Blarney castle, built five hundred years ago, was-according to immcmorlnl trndit oii—thc object of a siege. and the lliell owners parleyed so adroitly with the besieg- ers, playingon their credulliy and their avarice by turns, that they lct pass the chance of capture until it was too late. Tmc was ou [he dc- fenders side, and lie madc use of It. Hence that alleged Irish gift of lngratiating eloquence which comes to everyone that visits the hstorlc spot and kisses the historc Stone. Social team-work, for instance, needs to be improved anddeveloped to the point where there will be enough of the good things of life to go around, and that each shall get his proper share. When, says one writer, we have stabil-zcd employ- ment and have assured a living wage to all who are able and will- ing to work for it, we shall have taken a long way toward the Utop- ian goal. Unemployment insurance has been suggested as a means to that end, and the scheme as out- lined by social economists does ap- parently point the way to surmount periods of bus'ness and industrial stagnation. Self-reliant people, care- ful and thrifty. have provided their own Job insurance, but others are too 301mg to, have had time to surround themselves with defenses against unemployment. Klimt; THE CLAN S 0ft has been written their valor- ous story In pages and fragments, both thrill- ing and gory. The Campbells, McFnrlanes, Drummonds and Grant, Each answered the war cry, when pibroch did chant: Maclcods of Dunvegan, McDufls of Glengarry, Foul blows from the claymore, on targes llid parry, Mackays from the North, on Suth- erland heather Did stand ‘gainst the Lowlanders, shoulders together; Macinines from Lochbule Badenoch so fair, The Maxwclls, Macdonalds noble Sinclair, Macleiinans, Macphcrsolls, rocky Kintail; Their kin and their comrades, they never did fail, Mackinnons, Gienshiel, The Grahams, the Gordons, and Band's McNeil, McCnnns from Gfendochart, Mc- Gregor, the mlltchless, Forgusons, Brodics, stout- heal-zed and dnuntlcss! ' zzlntemally and Externally ii Good-The crowning property <l 0f The U» S- D08‘ m. momair Eclectric on is that! \ ' _' can be used internally for maul (Vancouver Pmvm") complaints as well as externally h om“d?"‘m u” pa“ 7° 79am h” For sore throat, croup, whoopllli “d n“ . emu‘ °pp°numue' °1 cough, pains in the chest, colic illi —-————-— Tail. The Trollopes , I (Exchange) Anthony Trollope was the Edgar ,Walla.ce of the Victorian age. He was the most prolific writer of fic- the of it costs little and there is no los oouraslhs- Asain and in always having it at hand. United st tes, and the results have not been and and from The possibility of a Hohenzolle as return has been discussed with keen interest by many foreign observers, but it is not surprising that It arous- es peculiar concern in Belgium. In Brussels the memory of 1914 keeps attention strained for that sort of news. Last week, says a de- spatch, the Begian cabinet sat late, and heard ominous warning from its veteran Foreign Mnister, Paul Hy- mans. "Restoration of the mon- archy in Germany," he said, ".5 not merely a question of time. It is im- mlnent. There is now delay only because of disagreement between the former Kaiser's sons and form- er Crown Prince Rupplcclit of Ba- varia as to how restoratbn should take place.“ lane's McKenzies, i ‘i ,' - l Roi < AA ITS VALUE PROVED , -. . I": i(A§'~ " A .7 cl The Institutional Advertising Com- mlttee of the Canadau Life Insur- once Officers‘ Association has pub- lished in handsome booklet form the series of advertsements featur- ing life insurance service which were published in 73 English and French daily newspapers and 1n French and English farm publica- lions during the present year. It has been demonstrated in Graphic style in this series of ad- vertisements that, tested by every major catastrophe, world war, world The -—J. G. MacLeod. _-._____.____ test against Mr. Hoover to vote for Mr. Roosevelt. Thomas voters would be understood to want a change of ciall-sm. The vote rewlved the whole system in favor of So- by Mr. Thomas indicates that his instructions were generally followed. Every dr "It"! the level of ho 5W3" 2t, but in wewv wait until the to? l‘ reached. " A I A Ch 'stmas Gift "w; @315; appreciated the whole year round. This year give JPJHLS. . l Were it not for the application of the exception provided for in sec- tion 5i, the Premier explained, there would have been a loss of epidemic and world depression, life membership in Ontario, but inas- insurance has proved its strength mucli as the census indicates there land stabil ty. It has been a veritable has been no diminution that ex- bedrock in the economic liie of the coeds one-twentieth, the member- Dominion and has met promptly i ‘n remains at eighty-two the fig- every obligation one hundred cents we now have. The net result on the dol'ar. During the present it the representation of New period of coon n. al-Vustment it .wic.. will be len instead of has, in thousands of ‘l tances, re- I my reason of the provisions of leved financial distress, guarded t. :tatu‘e of 1915; that of On- families and homes, and proved a tnrio will be eighty-two as it now rure protection against poverty and U; that of British Columbia will want. .5. .Q. $6 Mr. Sanford Evans o.’ Winnipeg has been gathering figures on gov- ernmental lnoolnc and expenditure. The Federal Government is spend- ing $134 for every $l00 of income, Lie Provincial Governments arc spendins $152 for every $100, and the Municipal Governments of Can- ada are spend 11g $124 for every $100 of income. 39!! .... ,.. During his campaign Mr. Thomas himself waxed indignant over the idea that the vote he would receive would be n "protest vow." Ho urged those who merely wanted to pro- ths situation Great Britain has for ten years been ready to ""8""! l“ debtors twice ail-much as the United