lilo. Glisrlctteo sriila ‘surance will offset much of the subversive Lib- wv " PIOIIGQC, Beth-COL I. Chester I. Hal-ITO. Vlee-Preeldeo l. I. Burnett. I. J- I- leeeotuy, Honk-Ce l). A. lonltlnlon, I), B. 0. Lidlicr and lleueging. Dircdor. If ll. Burnett, I.d.l.' . Aleoclute Editors. Prank Weller and l7. l. Currie. flnrnllg Daily (founded llfl) 86.00 per year (in advance). delivered. $4M per year- (in Idvnnne) melted to Oiled! old limited Stake. scum: nee-smear: ms WNow ll Can Be Told" Mr_ VINCENT Massey, Canada’s new High Commissioner in London, did well to tell the people of the Old Country that "the progress of Canada during the past year has been steady and unbroken." It is to be hoped that this as- cral propaganda in thefederal election cam- paign, in which Canada was depicted as being on the verge of bankruptcy and ruin. Indeed Mr. Massrzv, as Liberal campaign organizer, no doubt had something to do with approving the Liberal slogan “Kim; or Chaos” which was plastered on billboards and in newspaper ad- vcrtisemcnts from coast to coast. It was fitting. at any rate, that on the first opportunity the new High Commissioner should set the minds of the British people at rest. It is to his credit if, after the election, his conscience troubled him as to the means employed to exploit the de- pression. It would have been still more to his credit if he had dissociated himself from any part in a campaign based on such misrepresen- tation of Canada's position. His assurance of the “steady and unbroken progress" which this as true voice, is essential to make known." Meanwhile, the Mail and Empire states “on good authority" that Mr. LAPOINT! issued his surprising re udiation of Dr. RIDDBLL with- out consulting r_ MACKENIIE Kmc, who was holidaying in Georgia. Mr. KING, however, has not improved matters by his so-called explan- atory statement. According to the Prime Min- ister, Dr. RIDDELL is to be replaced not by a member of the Cabinet but by another civil ser- vant. Critics of the Government cannot be blamed for inferring that it thus shows itself intent upon continuing to hide behind the skirts of an employee. Should another situation occur at Geneva similar to that in which Dr. RIDDELL figured, the Government will once more _ be able to disavow any responsibility in the pre- mises. This is not throwing the full weight of the Dominion against war‘ and in support of peace and disarmament. - Editorial Notes Community Concert tonight, it it 3K Friday, the thirteenth,‘ again l i ‘i! l! The roads are good for neither wheels nor sleighs. iii iii k There was to be no secrecy ivhcn Mr. Kim". became Prime Minister. Thatis why the Con- ference has nothingakdeinifi to report. Still the taxpayers are being denied the names of the competitors for the Province's $500,000 bond issue and the amount of their bids. Notes By The Wdy Whiter cornea to Gel-molly. It brings privetiona to many people and scarcity to everybody. There is no butter and not enough llllllflr- ine. The popllllr poi-k and sausages cannot be got in the big cities, end the canned meet ting mostly con- tain boiled water. Ibcd is going up: wages are going down; every one is undernourished. Often we heer dictators , ‘ ’ on the ground that they can do far greater things than democracies can. That is often true. But. they can also make fer ‘ blunderm-London Sunday Express» “Personally I believe we will never be able to shake off relief in New York City, or in any other city of the country. It is a problem that is permanent." says New York's deputy commisslo of welfare. we iniaitnuinirrown GgARDiAN cs1..." W. cam-Jim TWO NEW MEDICAL SUBJECTS: -Allergy And Endocrinology That about one in every six in- dividuals suffers with hey fever is now an established feet. And hay fever ls due to the pollen of plants. ‘Ihst certain foods cause hives (urticaria) is likewise an establish- ed fact, That many cases of asthma are due to certain foods or other sub- Marcover he might have added that stances, 11d that leaving them 011B never in the history of the world of th: or avoiding them pre- has the problem of relief. been non- vents att ks of asthma is present. The only difference is that whereas in former years it was ad- ministered independently by chari- table people and societies, now it is l recognized es a unicipal duty. and so treated-Chadian News. Them h nothing truer in this world than that statement: "It is more blessed to give than to re- _ ceive." If the idea became univer- sn established fact. Some years ago a physician giv- ing much of his time to this sub- ect allergy ‘as it is called-had die- eovered stout forty substances to which he found individuals were sensitive. To-dsy his list o! sub- stances is at least ten times this number. The result of these findings has ' been the establishment of a course cal, in practice, all our ills would 111 $18113’ l" B» number 0! medical be solved - and instead of» living 8 in a world of doubt and fear, we cliools, the graduates of which will have some knowledge of this sub- wmnd be wglking around in the ject and will be able to treat peti- millenluml A Germs-ri-‘vsbc-‘cer teem played against an English team in old ents with hay fever, hives, asthma. eczema abdominal distress this stimdpolnt. from L. Harrison Trumpeer, once otottawomayprove to be the kind which hoe token the Fathers of- Ccafedersticn met at which the bones will be provincial more to keep the machlnerunning signed. opinion that it would be a simple Canada In Conference - (Vancouver province) The Dmninion-Provinciel Confer- most irirportant gathering of the place since Quebec end Westminster .0:- ' it may degenerate into a dog-fight in rights and financial considerations. lhicrything depends upm the atti- tude of the men who are pflishe pert. Will they be there us Con- sdlnnc or as British Columbisne and Albertans and Nova Sections. etch pulling for the things that will bring him votes and kudos in his own capital and his own con- stituency: And if they arc there as Condslsne. will they be steadfast. for principles and comp on details so long ee the principals are maintained? The confoxen . which has been lung in pr-ospeot..hu been called to see what can be done to make the machine y of Confederation-a. mod- el of 1867—-is in sore need of rebuild- ing. ‘Ihlslspretty generally admitt- ed. But there is no intention of tek- ing up the arduous task of l econstruc- lion at this conference. That, it is presumed. will come later, when the Supreme Court and the Privy Council have passed Judgment on e. lot of the social and economic legislation of the last Parliament. The job the present conference has 1n view is until something better can be de- tee In the course of the election cam- paign, Mr. King expruscd the country has made “during the past year" is a belated recognition of the achievement of the BENNETT administration in the face of unpre- cedented world economic difficulties. It cor- rdborates Mr. BizNNi-zrrk campaign siz..:inents; but where does it place Mr. KING'S pre-elec- tion utterances? Not, certainly, on a very high level of statesmansliip, or even of patriotic citizenship. tlifng, with a Liberal government at Ottawa and Liberal governments in eight of the nine provinces, for s. conference to come to decislo which would be beneficial to pro- vinces and. Dominion alike. Indeed. he went further and invited the electors to return him to power so _ that Just that desirable end might be achieved .We hope Mr. King was right and that the conference. which will be almost a Liberal con- ference. will be a true love feast. with Mr. Aberhsrt not too much of s. skeleton or wet blanket. But. knowing something of the different brands of liberalism that will rather about the confercncetable and of the policies or promises or fads to which they are committc‘, we confess to some doubts. The premiers of the provinces are going to this conference with s. lot of demands. and some of these de- mands are so reasonable that they can not be properly rejected. At the same time . they are of such a nature that they will make a serious drain on the Dominion treasury or on the federal IOSCU-F" oes o! taxation, and it is _ " able whether s. conservative finance minister like Mr. Dunning will countenance them. The provinces, too, while they have demands. have shown no disposition to yield any- thing fn consideration of the grant- éli 9K 9K Toy manufacturers, in convention in New York state that through the influence of the DIONNE quintuplets, dolls will be the stylish gift to children once again. . i! K 3K Having practically no more streets to gravel the City Council has sold out its interest in the Surrey gravel pit. In future, no doubt, hard siir- facing will be the Otllfifakflf géhe day. Chicago, gives o review in the Journal of the American Medical Association of the different medical college: throughout the United States and Canada that have el- ready established this course. Some colleges teach it in their pediatric (chl'dren’s) department, others in the medical department. and others .in the sli.’ department. A few years ago not much was known the uses in the body of the endocrine or duetless glands-the thyroid gland in the neck, the pit- uitary gland in the base of skull the parathyroid glands below the thyroid, the adrenal glands situated one above each kidney and others To-day the uses of these glands are known; thus the thyroid supplies iodine and regulates the rate ct which the bcdy processes work; the parathyroid regulates the lime sup- Ply: the pituitary among other uses revuhtes growth and the use of starches in the blood; the adrenal glands compensate or work with the thyroid gland the flow of blond to the tissues. When these glands are not supplying sufficient Oi’ tlv!‘ juices. extracts from the glands of animals are now used. so another science - endocrlno'cgy—-has been added w girl]: studies of the medical stud- It is certainly gratifying to know London yesterday while 60,000 Brit- ish spectators cheered. If the Ger- man phryers could only take back with them to their native land a ‘little of that spirit of sportsman- ship it wou'd spell the speedy end of the narrowness and hate which the Hitler- reglme is fostering-Ex- changed. x- , ¥ " Conference Opportunities The story that the Stlndad Oil Company has contracted to supply Italy with oil in the event of a League of National embargo, in re- turn for a monopoly of the Italian market, is fantastic on the face of it- The Standard Oil Company would not risk its business in 50 countries for the sake of one Mr. ANGUS MOWAT, Saskatoon City Lib- rarian, swears by this one: When a man picked up a gun in a gun store to test its balance, and said, “Bang," ANcus’s dog, “Mutt,” dashed into the More window. seized a stuffed bird and dropped it at the facet p‘: hi? owner. The Dominion-Provincial Conference now in session at Ottawa is described by press des- patches as one of the most momentous gather- ings of the kind in Canada's history. It should prove an epoclial conclavc, but, as the Sydney Post-Record suggests, this will depend on the concrete results of its labors. It certainly faces large opportunities in the making of Canadian political history, for never before was there so formidable an accumulation of crucial, uatioii- W'i(i€'pl'OblEll'lS pressing for solution as at pres- ent. Nor should this Conference be obstructed in its work by partisan distrust or political fin- esse, for there is not a delegate in attendance who is unfriendly to the~K1No Government. The agenda embraces three broad topical divisions,——relief measures, social reforms, con- stitutional amendments. Of great interest will The war In Abvssliill. moybeonly a curtain-raiser. In the wings may besssembllng the real actors in the liflle trflllfldy. In Central Europe stands Germany, having uttered strong claims to certain rights in this continent and implied the right tr her old colonies in another continent. Her wat~hing presence makes diplomacy strained, Herr Hilter would be no more than hu- man if he did not see in the Ififlfllis extremity Germany's op- Mgtgnllih-Iiondon Sunday Des- oa c . This is from the New York correspondent of the Montreal Giismc “Mrrciiizu. F. Hat'- BURN was a visitor along Broadway's midway last week.” Now we are told the Premier of Ontario is quite perky, being prepared torecon- sider his decision to get out of politics and re- tire to his farm. Ah, those political picnic jaunts, how they revive one’s drooping spirits and re-establish Ono's political health l 9|? 9E 5i? ~( I VUSEQ “ /"-~ BRAHMIN ma‘ .i__. The one topic of conversltlon at What is the most noticeable difference be- be the Conference's decision as to whether un- tween a Lowland Scotsman and a Highland the moment is the IhilghAbysshh Eggitwhlle W; {with deflllniz sil- ‘sling ‘best’ dmatlllgf-w m In: “ma! '19. smPloyluent relief is to be a distributed burden 56031118"? 5H‘ IAN HAMILTON “'35 asked at a i“ dispute’ In the clubs and n s i-mmcous maemm ma‘ some a ' 13B VGIUIN betas, diphtheria. yel‘ow fev¢i-_nm now cider control. less serious but distressing ailments due m food or other substances, or to 15¢]; of the juires of certain glands in the bvdy. can now be cured or relieved. U. S. Neutrality hOWl-‘I. in drawing rooms and even in the offices. the tall; invariably leads to the possibility of ii con- flict in East Africa. and u; 1; a matter for regret that at a time like this. when a crisis of such grave proportions is threatening the world. more people do not keeo a steady head instead of "talking O O I On NB‘. Mackenzie King. who. if not the presiding officer, will be the most influential figure st the con- ference, will rest the duty of en- couriigng and restraining. It is highly desirable that the confer- ence shall be a conference in the interests of Canada rather than in function in Aberdeen recently. His reply was: “Well, to my way of thinking, the main differ- ence is this: A Lowland Scotsman usually says what he thinks, let the consequences be what they may; whereas a Highland Scotsman usually says what he thinks you think he should think, and lets you take the consequences.” It must be , as between the Federal and Provincial Govern- a." u,’ l. n. “mm ‘in ments, or is to be made an exclusively national i charge. This question- settled, the scheme of re- ' lief administration will present a cognate prob- lcm of almost equal significance. Social reforms and B.N.A, Act amend- ments constitute closely correlated questions, all .‘1l<AlIs l ...___.._._.r_ _ ____ __; ferenee and explain their impllct- statesman might covet. But 1t W11]. tloris .Wo hope he will be as per- require ststesmanship of no mean susslve as he will undoubtedly be order to achieve it. well-informed. we hope he ‘will -___.__________ play the part of a. moderator as SANCTIONS KURT nuns l I 9f which have Ycierence t9 the oviirdaPPlng of home. i“ mind’ Pf course’ Eh” the longi hm" miityfitynevigs felgfizglit islipgm; the interests of the sections of Csn- well as of c. mentor at the confer- Federal and Provincial constitutional powers; experience of Highlanders m betrayals accounts mo“, dgplorable ma, the 5px;,’ (christian Science Monitor) m‘- Tl‘ l“ dmmbl“ m“ the m" ma‘ And we m” he wmisee i” PLYMOUTH- mllimd *- Mm‘ it that the legitimate demands of the provinces are not balked or poltered wllph. He has it in his power. if e plays- his cards with one _ skill. to make himself the dominant in; gig; §§°,§§’,f,‘§i§§,‘,, TQQEYZ. ti: father of the new Canada which my, N seems destined to emerge from the difficulties of the depression, as Sir John A. Miscdonald was the domin- ant- fother of the Confederation born in 11107. It is an honor any phasis shell be on federalism rather than on provincialisin. It is desir- able that there shall be co-opera- tion rather than division. There are msnv things which. in the interests of the Dominion and of tho PTOVID‘, ces as well, should be done, and which can only be doine bv the pro- vinces and Dominion acting to- gether; end Mr. King, who as n student of border-line social and economic legislation knows these than 100,000 pilchurds (small see fish allied to herring) were dumped overboard from fishing trawleis in For two months now the United States has been conducting another lablmliflfy test of neutrality. In 1798, 1812 and 1917 American ex. Deriments in keeping out or w“ broke down. since the World War, efforts to insulate the country Bkalnst the fires of war have been doubled. Last August, Congress’ Til-um! t0 agree on_s more drastic measure. provided for an embargo When by Great Britain is not ‘flaked upon in the mm nun. but lmlflfld. is retifllided by so many D9011!!! as "preparations for war."- Honr Kong Press. , If for example agreement can be reached to , amend the constitution so as to place Parlia- i ment‘s authority to enact such reforms as it as- sehted to last session beyond question, much 3. valuable time will be saved and a lot of expen- t‘ sive litigation avoided, in the process of getting I for their inherited cautious dissiiriulation. 9K 9K 9K _ The well-known Halifax merchant, Mr. O. E. SMITH who died a year ago left an estate valued at $2,300,000, it was disclosed when his will was finally entered for probate this week. Under the terms of Mr. Sriirifs will the in- come from $1,893,230 will go to various char- ities in perpetuity. Another $448,450 has been ii. seems pmbnlie that when the present war crisis ls past. in Itaiv the Government will find itself “"5515 5111K irrossly redundant ship- ing accumulated during the past R E M E M B L‘ R The Santa Pals Fund Your Help is Necessary. these salutory measures into operation. Ineffective Advertising set aside as a trust fund to provide annuities fgnfsfl§‘_“’§,,’,°'af{glfj§f tilrmsport‘ 312cm tniiiiiiiiiilf-Tififgigl,” ‘i113 Si: matters very well. is ’ ‘H. fit- ‘ i} “Even large business enterprises," says the for a flulflbflr 0f lfldlvldilflh- Oi m? 111C010‘? worldwide evelderrce o! an $11.3 dlsmsed hm” “early “we” 55'“ bed to bring them be,“ the con‘ ' a p Toronto Glabr, “are ‘beginning to see that bill- fFOII} 1116 larger trust fund. Mm?" Alllsflli Uni- tion to abandon or at least curtail device was. Italy could make her '=""—l'==' board advertising alqng {hg higl-“vays is an of. versity gets i 5 percent, Dalliousie University 15 ‘fgglifllllshilllbfiltdly Sghegpes din- ‘lily’: ‘fa’; gigs?“ WWW blly- proflteers and awaken the public. - - - - - - ' ' e ec tc - h bee to , t . fense to public taste. ‘Nature Magazine cites the pfgcenlté PilleSHltll Hall, ionperpent, apd o, whim competition. Bmiilg’; Bu, m. much mo“, needed w” grip-snag; finned‘? indlfglw a‘; Rates-One way first class fare and one-quarter, also ., case of a Sari Francisco milling company that 0 e1’ 0V3 C019- .l 5'11"?“ 5111a 91' 941"“ 5- IhIDPiIIK. the only unsubsidlsed unit maleflal-‘l 5W“ B8 009901‘. cotton, oil, gnu, De em ha, 181m, back one way first class fare and one-thir for ~ - ~ are are are c. - W“ l} had a huge sign on a scenic section of a Cah- _ m“ °""°l"n1d» is for the present :12 1""- “d "Mk5- il“ Ulilw‘! on on effort to hvld merely "ab- the round trip according to the limit of the til. fomga h;ghway_ Protests were made to the cf. Canadian farmers harvested a heayy crop B" e1’ s. Vital lines of Em- a 5 “m”? “W!” l nominal normal" trade. This may prevent ti k t . . . . - - P!!! Oflmmunicstion between Can- “WW demt- Amman wmhml"! Am f becomin th i c e ' fect that this sign spoiled travellers’ enjoyment 0f the Bfamfimd llv¢st°°k_award5_b¢st°w¢d 3t ‘do, Augtyglfq, and New zuland and oil tanks became active and ea- Fuel-lawn“ 0% any o; an]; _ » of the countryside view. The company agreed th°__1935 CPYCQEO Iniflflilwflfll LlveStflClf EXl- fie-iiimdeersitined to fall intotliehands fizlilflwiifilvlilfllltlmlm “Wick m frank aggression on Ethiopia, but W K. R RS not only to remove the billboard, but to take P0513011. Whldl cl°5ed fewltly all" breaking 3| n c“ °' JWBWR Shipping ' m“, Th“ 4939M “maul it does not remove the danger of . . down all similar signs throughout the State. attendance records. With 30 states and five Can- Bxfslfwlggdmgglellilwi "m the $5?‘ vfgfidb "Midi" mud f entanglement. More. it'll-ll! even w ‘my Twkei Agent-Canadian National RBHWBYS “were ‘his kind of advertising of value the adian provinces represented in the display of mm m unable nllcglggg$rtzglpg “we my‘ the benygflgnufl-flnswuld gel m opt of thetwsytor tnpnoeneg 181 Queen Street Charlottetown, P. EJ. fine farm animals and crops, Ontario growers subsidised competition. -'I‘lmes of "i t“ ‘"55"’! "W" Ilfik- Th" fles- ep m ' w“ “as ‘- company would, it stands to reason, not have been so ivilling to do away with it. No doubt ihcrc had been realization that little return may be expected from advertising that is offensive, instead of pleasing, to the public. As the Kitch- cuer Record puts it, “Let advertisers discover that blatant billboards create ill-will instead of good-will and the billboard problem will be well on the way to solution." The action of the San Francisco company! provides further evidence pouroilonthe flamesofwsr. Is this the kind of "neutrality" Am- ericans want? ' Ideal XMAS Ceylon, Colombo. bite move after move by the Qqv- ernrnent to discourage any assist- ance to war-makers or any trade that would entangle Amer-ice. Secretary Hull has conducted a vlsflmirs campaign to restrain wer- caiiic fourth in the total number of awards. best- ed only by the great “corn belt" farming states of Indiana (first), Illinois (second) and Iowa (third). Ontario's total was 19 championships, and 44 first prizes, Indiana whose farmers cap- tured the lions’ share of the honors, took 57 championships and g lilueiiribbons. For the Scot there is llwlyg u“ 11W of compensation. When do. tested at home by New Zeglgnd WWW Dllyerc. he may turn to eon- t-emnlatlop of; the appointment 0g em nen countryman, John Bilchen, now lord T-eedemuir, es QtWflflI-Gflfldfll of Canada. ullillfliflllythat no seine This Christmas Belief that euthanasia is justified in rare '”"_ "'“' . . . tween Italy end the league and 1|; Cflltfldfl And SBIICIIOIIS mer Bishop of Athabaska in St. Paul's Church m,“ m; out a; "u"; £0 B“ ————— ' 7" ‘ Toronto, last Sunday. Oii the other hand, re: ish interests. but cant of the brescbl; “m. fofldw“ ma» ‘ m! um‘ FOR MEN ‘h. Resentment continues to be expressed on gar-ding the insane, the Bishop said: "I am ltlgenolgegimdtgrgpg: A m“ mhulph“ o! “mm will - _ - - - - no ca». u Meecow . are p ~ tron of Dr. RrnnsLt/sniioye appeared when rt Roosevelt regime will_be driven next month at h “my,” h“ :6 "W Md I799?’- tht ltrlbllr It your ma!» l" ;‘ was interpreted as initiating a breach m the a Democratic convention. Governor TALMADGB, flaking-mm” u, ma“ “m, who ma" bu, mm m. w“ ‘M that business men who have studied carefully the return from advertising are convinced that the newspaper is the best medium." all sides against Mr. Laromrifs action in repu- diating Dr. RiimiaLi/s course at Geneva over oil . . . . . Southw the sun. with a view mu gym-mpg“ sanctions, and in “Mime Dr- RIDDELL to the pitals. It would certainly save a great deal of tfmbitgdlyogmggeileofreplig m," ‘out mama." "m." c!“ other side of the world so that he will not_be present at the coming discussions concerning the imposition of sanctions. Nowhere has this ithispgreat financial burden." Ah! that money use the machinery prescribed either gunman‘ resentment found stronger utterance than in the instinct! ‘I ‘I ‘ l: gfmuggi-lzig émmmfl: "And iztaome wandering soul should w“ mm," “a Toronto Globe, leading Liberal newspaper, which in a further front-page editorial broad- side declares : . _ “The mischievious nature of the repudia- Empire front and in the 1&8!" mfiif- W11" the oil embargo was referred to as ‘Canada's down both Geneva" an circumstances but should be a personal decision made by the sufferer and carried out only at his Own request and not by consultation with others, twas expressed by Rt. Rev. R. J. RENISON, for- afraid almost to tell you the proportion of our population that is confined to our mental hos- money if some legislation can be brought forth that would enable the taxpayer to rid himself of Governor Eocene TALMADGE, of Georgia, has announced that the opening wedge in en effort to split the _"solid south” against the assailing the Neil Deal es “a combination of the worst elements of Communism end Socialism," i.....». WU‘ ~“' person in this country hes even so much es dreamed of 5n Anflo. Itelion Iver. such es some foreign- "! envisage. The quarrel l. be- fect, and it follows that the only proper basis of conciliation is some Pledge not to use war es en in- strument of notional policy, but to remedy for grievances or the: furtherance of legitimate ambi- tionL-Tbe times. London. FBAGMINT‘ INN! . A little shew of under-wood With these a hill, some trees, a llifllll. Remember poor folk wsyfering. fl! . 1p weigh your merry wood-fires D Y‘ Take illonui; your kitchen cup and e re You may en engsl entertain. GIFTS “Only ma... more endow ToboccoeOhrbtmeeWrlIIIl lllliiterylleirlrnhes Yardley Shaving lets . Potter l Moore Shaving lets loll: leach More. FOR LADIES gmudeunisteetlflh GIVE GOOD J eol,".-the o.» ma»... objected. And the statesacsll wlllbeimied within i0 m. for the “d 9'" Qfhf“ “» ° ' __,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,_ 1111-" M, 4'".- "Hire c; §ii$smi¢a¢o~¢1§ininuim that Canada had convention. Tlie;l.meetlng,;sxponiordrl by the rec- _ "1‘§,”'§“,,,‘.‘ ‘Lips quoted in "mislead All the any.‘ h pug, m, m“; g I, ‘another proposal-ibis time, not toshnd four- Citlltiy to ppiioiid , v gm be m: “u; w». “u, i t? ‘. arewitliGfdlBliNiflr"“ I _ '°°°?""'.“*l°"i ‘ " M“ ‘H '1" ' " toftllenereii email» f c Y? 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