P AGE FOUR ' TilE clllllllorrirowll lilllllllllii ylca-Prelldant-J. B. Burnett A0 long a5 the former Kaiser of President-W Cheater S. lleLure, ll. P. slecretary~l.leuL-Col. D. A. llaclilunoal, D. l 0. llilltor and Managing Director-J. It. Burnett Aamciaie Editors-Frank Walker and D. K. (‘urrio Uilflhflfl Dally (founded 1881i 85.00 per oar (In advance) delivered. $4.50 per year (in advance) mailed in anada and United States. ADVERTISING IIIIPICISINTAIIVIS , UNlTED SWWFES-The Beckwllh Special Agency Inc. New York Centre- Uillliliug, New rcrh City General Mutora Building Detroit interline Build lug, Kananh City, Willnugbby Tower Building C lcago: Syndicate Tron lliillilliig. s1. Luull: Glenn llulldlnanailanla; Holladnoek ' g, San l-‘rilnciavn: 113.5 No_ 65th Street Phlllill-iphla Morning Maxim In many cases, shorter hours for work will mean longer hoara for sorry. MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1932. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ‘auras BY ‘HIE IIAl‘ . = Mist 80hr of Quilts 0.1m; w. BIUI-"D AETHMA Germany lvcs, he will have friends In Germany, says ah exchange. there will always be someone who will be demanding that he return to the Fatherland to re-cstablish the monarchy he left 5o suddenly on November 10, 1918. There is littlei use for the omclals of Holland to get excited about williclm. Heis at Doom, not far from the German border. and he is ever within caii o! my mused appeal [or m5 ,,e_ I recently mentioned-the Inter- mm to Germany No doubt he 5s i national Congress on Asthma that wmmnuy hop ng me request Wm , was he'd at Mont Dore. France; Aberdeen (A. s. .1. s. In the wlnnlper 1'1“ Press) Preconcelved ideas are frequently shattered by first-hand knowledge. "The Granite City," for instance. is apt. to surprise anyone who has ac- cepted too readily the traditions that have gathered around the city . and its inhabitants. Perhaps it is the physical aspect of Aberdeen that lends color to the legend of exaggerated thrift. Other Scottish cities-Glasgow and Edin- burgh to wit-have a weathered, somewhat dngy look; the mellow- ‘ . ’ DECEMBER s. .1932- A WELCOME VISITOR ‘ iioiilliy endorsed. the United SW98 come. Nothing the Dutch Parlia- Charlottetown today welcomes a distinguished visitor in the person iime “.5, deb“ qummt It Wm n_ -the loyalty of his followers nor the ‘fuse the request of Great Britain hopes o! himself‘ “Maud coma de- will demand its pound of flesh on 'ment can do about it, will offset k » war he became a school inspector "Toronto Royal Winter Fair for the of Hon. Hubert Weir, Federal Min- ister o! Agriculture. On Saturday Mr. Weir visited Sumlnerside, where he was enthusiastically received, and where he showed, particular in- terest in the evidence of progress made in the siivcr black fox indus- try. Today he is a guest of the Provincial Government at luncheon ever’ the" L, nothing in the ‘at? Z1222 5.3.1233 “Jjilfi i m“ or“ "or Hall on subjects of vital importance iEmbmy at wwlmgton on Thu“- » day to indicate any such intention. m “‘m°“1“"°' Payment chine scheduled date Hon’ MI‘ wet“ care" is an ex- will mean increased taxes to the ample of what can be accomplished firefly overburdened British" and by hard work and intelligent ap- . ‘urmer remdauon o‘ European plication. Born ona farm in Huron prosperity. But "I Wm mean “l” Zi::tf£n?l1°'dm;e:v:r piayugls: more trouble for the United, States; it will mean a reduction of its ex- way through college. Graduating port trade through necessary tar- r th Ul it fT t,h mm e “ ms y ° m“ ° ° iff restrictions imposed against its became professor of mathematics roduce men l“ u i In the Collegiate Institute at Ra- p » y amen um gina. That was‘ eighteen years ago, iust before the outbreak of the Great War in which he enlisted and law service overseas, where he was decorated for bravery and promot- ed to the rank of Major. After the and the other debtor nations for post; ement of the Dec. 15th pay- imean, as the Free Press cartoonist ipredicied, that some of the debtor icountriea will be placed irl the po- sition of defaulters. So far as And this at a time when the United States Government is faced with the problem of raising more taxes and drastically cutting its expenditures. The issue, therefore, is not so Simple as the opinion expressed at Washington would seem‘ to imply. Informed public opinion in the United States, to which body, as well as w the politicians, the Brit- ish statement of Thursday was ad- dressed, has yet to be heard from. If Postponement is actually re- fused, Uncle Sam may find himself in the position of the man who cut off his nose to spite his face. In Saskatchewan, but, his health having been‘ impaired at the front, he looked for outdoor work. Resign- lng his educational post, Mr. Weir homestended in the rievcly-opened Carrot River country, ‘in northern Saskatchewan. As this was a bush district, he made up his mind that mixed farming would gray. Purchas- ing three Hereford cows at a sale in Regina, he started to learn about cattle and deli-ping. Next he bought Percheron horses, Berkshire swine and Shropshire sheep. He had now struck his proper sphere and gait, and in a few years astonished ev- i eryone by carrying off the first prize at the Chicago fair for the best bull, and the gold medal at the The real issue, therefore, is not whether Europe can afford i0 pay, so much as whether United States, in the circumstances set forth in the British note, can af- ford to receive payment h; the Present time. This is summed up very clearly 1n an article in the current issue of the Financial Post. Sensible Americans, in the Post Writer's opinion. feel that if cancellation entirely of way- debts best ‘group of Percherons. "June," his original gyey Percheron mare which he had bought for $225, brought him in $3,000 in prize mon- ey during 192.5, y, would lift the world even moder- Being caught up ih the national “fly out of the depths 1i- would be movement led by tile huh. a. n. worth more tot-he United States sh Bennett, Mr. Weir was persuaded to fibre? years than the. entire sum stand for the Mriford seat in the tiwt would be received over the! u m ‘a 1930 federal campaign, and, though whole temi of the various debt-iund- _men who made the war’ H by a he entered the field late in the day, ing agreements. Seven leading U,.S. put up such a vigorous fight that economists have said that an iri- hc turned a Liberal majority of crease of one per cent in American over 3,000 into a Conservative vic- ‘national inwmc “mild amount to, 9°73’ 01 We!‘ 115094 A5 Miiliit" 01 ‘twice the current annual instnJl-il Agriculture in the Bennett Govern- menu on [he w“ deb“ merit, he has shown marked initia- tivc and ability, a. fact which was testified to by Ell-Premier Lea. of this Province on more than one oc- casion in the Iiegisiature. Irrespective of politics, therefore, Hon. Mr. Weir is assured pf a hearty welcome in Prince Edward Island. His llddfflss this cychlhg in The oiteXoio-sssd views of British Rochford Square Hall is being look- ‘and Eiimllfllll w0li0mi$ts are Well ed forward with great interest, par- ‘kimwil- They "Wile 110 YE-‘ETVWORS Icularly by our farming population, in their Si-fli-flflelil- thflt 616M111! with whose interests the federal away the war debris wll dilfnltedi minister is so closely associated. aid world trade. But if we write off their views as prediudiced, if we call men like Stamp, Keynes, With- ers, Beveridge, etc, mere propagan- dists We still have to consider the Important fact that the best-inform- toon On the war debts situation. ed Americanuwhoarsnotinpolitics, lt depicted the European nations are almost unanimously in favor 0f clinging to the side of a sheer war debts revision-many in favor cliff by a. ropo which had almost of complete cancellation. Leading parted and which threatened everylAmerican economists are on record minute to Blve way and precipitate that insistence upon full payment them into the gulf below. The_of these loans will have serious gulf was marked "Default"; the economic and financial COIIABQUGHCCa the "Hoover Morator-‘for the whole world. If. the". Plospflrlty is worth more to the Unted States than the cash value of the debts, the only real point for argument, is whether or’ not postponement, revision or cancellation of these debts would in, filly way promote world recovery. THE WAR DEBTS ISSUE YE- OBI‘- The Winnipeg Free Press cently carried a. significant rope was lum." Uncle Sam was standing by at the top of the cliff, with a sound new rope ("FwtPOHBIIICIlC") iii his hands: but though the po-i sition of the others was obviously, mtical he seemed undecided what- to do. The cartoon was headed: ' l 0th Rope?" w“ He Drop The er problem, American eoonomhst de- Completc cancellation, besides be- ing politcally unacceptable in the llnited Staten, is hardly necessary. Postponement of current payments; drastic revision of totals; establish- ment o1 flexible schedules of pay- ment will in themselves solve the Great Britain is concerned, how- ' iport Wilhelm. But he would only "g0 as an exile to some other country. From there he would be in close yif Holland threatened to oust Mr- FHohenzoilern, that m gilt tum‘ the tide in favor of his return to Ger- many. Seldom now, says an exchange, ln any deliberative assembly is there ‘heard the impassioned oratory o! other days. It may be but further evidence of a hurried age, that people have lost interest in studied eloquence; but, whatever the reas~ on, public mcn of ths period are ireiuctiirlt to "let themselves 80-" Speakers who would hold their aud- iences aim rather at brevity and clarity of expression. The fine, round ‘ed periods have lost their charm. If the effort of the Disannament Conference succeeds, Europe will be ven that breathing space from political fear wh ch should enable producers-in the British market. - her—and, indeed, all the nations of. about the many causes of asthma ~ and the many forms of treatment. ‘ However in any can of asthma, Dr. R. L. Benson, Portland, Ore- gon, reminds us thbt the first thought Ls the treatment of the attack because relief from the dis- rnent and this undoubtedly may “touch with events in Berlin In fact ‘ tress!“ cough mu” be obwmd" , . . ‘ if attacks are present they must be relieved by epinephrine (adrenalin), ‘ephedrine (the Chinese drug), atro- , pine or other drug, but never with morphine. As soon as possible the tient is started on a regular routine of! imeclicill treatment consisting of isodlum iodine, tincture of bella- '<iorirla and sometimes solution of potassium arsenite and tincture of I nux vomica. By the use of these i remedies, the severity of the attacks imay be so lessened‘ that it is not necessary to use epinephrine or ephedrine. This however is treatment only, given simply to relieve the patient while the physician is searching for the cause of the asthma. These causes as mentioned before may be a natural tendency to asthma, some |sensltiverless to certain foods or ypoilens from plants, some obstruc- tion or other condition in the nose, near that belongs to ripened age. But the "Silver City by the Sea" dis- closes a harsher exterior; the bril- liant, rah-washed granite, defying the corrodlng fingers of Time, pre- sents the illusion of perpetual youth, and seems a fit habitat for a keen and resourceful people. It is always dangerous to jump hastily at conclusions. So two of Us found when, arriving in Aber- Their appi/iess Is deen, on a wet Sunday in June, we set out to find somethhg to eat. ‘~]' d y ' J ON At a modest hotel n the principal g a ' a’ Mnemfm-l-“HégffisgtblPPXcu-‘i ill-viral . "Q Life luaurnyra The Greiltdl‘ t, ll- l ted ,buslness strec i a we appon Hmrm'“_‘n“_n thlupiélo to you ‘? dining room, served by waiters in tien please tun. _ ~ y, e chill! . -. c ‘ psi-cy- correct attire with no menu non- 1i‘..l’.“.iy»u-M-""""' °' mm. s-la-l. Just try to figure out what would happen to them if they were suddenly deprived of your support. How long could they stave oif actual want? Can you afford to take chances with their future when you can positively guarantee their safety for as little as 51c a day? If you are under 35 years of age it will cost even lees. for 5lc a day is the rate a man age 35 would pay on a $|0.000 Great -West Minimum Coat Policy-the cheap- est form of permanent life insurance you can buy._ The Great-West Minimum Cost Policy sense of dressing up homely fare in is. foregn language, we despatched an excellent Ineal of unusually gen- erous portions; and the pr’ce, for a place with such an "air.” and wait- ers in "soup and fish" was decidedly reasonable. If, in the back of our minds, there lingered any suspicion that, being tourfsts, we were fair game, it was soon dissipated. Before nightfall we had secured lodgings within easy ac- Name ................. >- Fromlum Rate: par SL000 of lneuranc Premium Ago Ago 0985 of the business section, on very enables you to obtain the greatest possible amount of ' 1° moderate terms, and thenceforth permanent protection for your family for the least “I: ":5, 5 V, money. Lift all worry 'ber of them were relatively young. ‘the world-to concentrate upon tile ivitally necessary work of economic}! uecomtruction. In the event of fail- ure it is much to be feared that political animos ties, begotten of fear and lack of confidence, will pre- Whilst Yeliei/inll Fm Btmcki- Di‘- vem the Canyng out o; economic I Benson suggests that a thorough reconstruction. Inthis sense the suc- exnmlllatmni be made 1n ever!’ case C685 or failure of the World Econ-i “Ind a ldetabled has“)? fiwuld tm‘ omic conference will depend in , cude “I a ‘mt t e “m Y m5 m’? large measure upon the outcome of m‘: ‘m1!’ as regards “thma but the Disarmament Conference, Sig’ hwndfit?“ Sign“ lgmgma‘ . , ay e er, vec ma an ron- chitis. Sometimes asthma will skip a generation and one of the above ailments will occur instead of as- throat, or bronchial tubes, some nervous or hereditary condition, .may also he due to the weather or dimate. No nation, which stooifto lose any thug by the process, has been more ready to contribute to the iiquida-_. tion of the financial her tags of the, thlna‘ wB-T- N9 "BMW has d°n° "w" mi Any nose and throat condition the Way 9T Pribticfli disarmament should be cleared up by a specialist and none is readier to do stiil more i as them is no question but that a so 1on8 8S Belieiiil "Yedllciiilil 11nd certain percentage of cases are due limiation" can be secured thcreby- , to these chhuitiong Within the short space of twelve‘ ' . months we have changed our fimmi Then all the tests for allergy on position from one where coi- Lizixlllfgbl/Jinizigg 0955:2315 fleubzgaxi-‘tfjl i inent one wilerci - » - ' izisiogmatrllrgs o, Ibis“ progreesftioned before, at least 40 per cent have already been laid, we haveiof all cases of asthma are now changed our country from the dump_ thought to be duc to foods, pollen mg ground of the ‘worm to the or‘; from flowers, and, other substances. gmator of practical Schcmes rm. me Some patients are free from asthma extension of ecnncmc stabiIityJWhHSt ‘Mug m the mum?!’- “d throughmlt wide and we, “dd” others only suffer when they go to areas of the world-London Tmcs. the country" The thought then is that while immediate treatment should be given to sufferers with ashma, sys- tematic search should be made for the cause of the attacks, and if possible these causes should he re- moved. It is not uncommon to hear young people blame "our parents for hav- iing got. the world into the muddle it is in today." Especially it is said that old men "made the war" from whch young men are suffering. The ls meant the men compcsng the Governments of Europe ill 1914, are by this time either dead or old. Ull~ denlably. Bllt in 1914 a large num- bifocal)”; THE FOWLER Had the "old men" who composed Asquithls Government rejected the appeal of Belgium in August, 1914. they would have had no heavier reckoning than w tli the young men of that time. Without the flaming patriotism of youth the "old men" could not have “made the war." lt is, in any case, a futile business for any generation to throw its respon- sibiiit es back on its predecessors. All the past generation could have ~45 "l0 Door fowler's cunning net Pafimily day by day is set T° 91191119 for man's delight the rare Elusive creatures of the air So too the poet, fired afresh By hope, spreads out his wordy played that game and carried it - mesh backwards to the serpent and the To catch those stranger, air-lei- Gardcn of Eden. It is .11 the nature broods- Moments and memories and moods, To make a random dream endure, Or one small fleeting thought sec. ure, . He'll Spend upon a single phrasg Uneasy nights, tormented days. of things that we succeed to an un- escapable heritage which challenges 115 to make it. a little better for those who come after-J. A. Spen- der. were treated with the utmost consid- eration. ' A peculiar feature of Aberdeen is the "wynd; a. narrow, winding lane, frequently connecting streets of dif- ferent levels-a device which owes _ its existence, apparently, to the con- tour of the land; so many sharp de- cllvities bridged by vladucts. Cor- rection Wynd and Back Wynd, for instance, are tortuous lanes, flanked by walls of almost solid masonry, black and forb ddlng in these lower levels, whch lead to important streets. Some of the most pictures- from your shoulders and theirs. ‘ Mail the coupon now. B.Ed.i"'5.§I.i-i. EAD OFFICE VVINNIPEG IIflQIIAM/Mfl/vzavvrn/Nwenv-‘INN.mlvdwadrflirmuzdaxsaulaAauuwzovnvzAunwv two or three years ago. A great, soap firm that is following a. very' que parts of the city are seen from the viaducts above. From Rizsemourit one glimpses a scene which should be the delight of a painter or of anyone who has an eye for color and graduations of tone (the soot and smoke in some of the mearier ‘streets quite prevail over the weath- . depression began. i18§ressive policy in its advertising m \\\ this year, is also showing a sub- Q stantial increase in sales. Both of these firms have increased their advertising appropriations since the_ ' Their advertis-i ing is very strikingly prepared, and L p, . erman's best efforts.) These old houses with red-tiled roofs flanked~ by lofty structure; of shining grey grante, possess an irresistible charm. But they are being gradually demol- lshed; as potential, verging on ac- tual. slums it is not to be expected that their esthetic appeal can out- ‘ weigh practcal considerations. i The city is rich in memorials- statues to the illustrlousdead a-- bound—and many of the public buildings arid institut ons, such as Gordon's and Mariscllal colleges, are I commemorative. But dearest to the heart of the Aberdonian, and doubt- less to other Scots, is the memory’ of Wallace, whose statute, of hero'c proportions, looks out over Union Terrace Gardens, the vigilant ot- titude highly suggestive of the fa~ mous national leader. A visit to Aberdeen, to be com-i piete, must include the fish market; i and this demands an early call. By 7 a. m. the trawlers are unloading, f and on the cdfiffete floor of the market, extending in an unbroken l'ne for an immense distance, the ' fishermen are depositing every var- iety of fish found in these northern waters: cod. plaice, herrinil. whiting. soles, halibut, turbot, haddock etc.‘ It is the cleanest fish market in the world (so you are told); scrubbed out every morning. You feel some- how, that this is not Just a fish story: against the background of “the cleanest cty in the world" it i, sounds perfectly credible. Aberdeen is one of the cities‘ which still cling to the old-fashioned _ bathing machine-we have clung,’ desperately to them ourseif in youth- i I Hell leave his love to weep alone Willie nil the ecstasy they've known Ho with his linked lines purgugs Lest in oblivion he should lose one ("OD of sweetness. Or he'll find By some blest quickening o; the mind All uraont truth, ungucssed before: Aild then for liim contents no more Till in a net of words it lies Beneath mankind's incurious eygg Thrla-“bflbby he whose toils have If the Opposition, says an ex- change, had rema ned true to its traditions and followed in the foot- steps of its greatest lenders, the entire House could have shared in the triumphs oi the Conference. But the leaders of the Opposition decided otherwise. 'I'liey preferred to fight the Laurlcr policy of preferences and to pin-prlck-they attempted ‘little more-the surfaces of these magnifi- cent achievements. The political re- i suits were inevitable, but were more “WM- the work of a. misguided Opposition Unhurmed- the ‘lliiveliil! birds of ithan of even a wisc admllfstration, But grail?“ and continues the exchange, Mr. o‘! k';l°°'d“m"°d- ""086 liwk Bennett takes his holiday with the wh i 1 comfortable baggage of c. sense of ere he d bu‘ “Pm”, "like! him duty well done, an enhanced pres- Drag ikm’ tiae as an Imperial statesman and a g “is them d°wn "m1 bmkfill renewed hofd on the confidence of And 0:12?‘ m his own Canadian people. They will smgped mat‘ .n° "w" w all wish him a thoroughly good time, the complete rest he so greatly needs and a happy return, ready for He" 18 my ravelled net of words: Where are the birds? Where are According to Saturday's de- cm‘ matches, which have yet to be of- . ful days on the Bristol channel, when the driver would start with a. sudden jolt; but on this occasion the North Sea. had gone out with the tide. and the evening was chilly withal. The sad sequel is that some- thing or other always intervened i whenever the opportunity for a swim occurred. Well, the North Sea and the Atlantic will Just have to wait. Keeping » Business Good (Exchange) l-Iow is business? Such a question is apt to rub the average merchant the wrong way these days. Yet we do hear of firms that are actually increasing their business irl 1932. A well known concern which makes the arduous labours’ of the rest of the birds? the session. —Jane Struther, in the spectator, l. popular lin¢ of breakfast food is. we understand, doing a much bigger bulinees today than it did i consideration. ivertising will help him to do this. it is all the more outstanding ow- ing go the firms‘ competitors hav- ing pulled ill their horns. After all. the average merchant's overhead expenses have been reduced very little with the depression: it is his sales that have lagged, pulling down the profits of the business with them. To keep tile volume of sales as high as possible ls the big And the merchant who gives this matter any thought will realize that live, aggressive ad- It takes more than a coon coat and rolled socks to nlake a col- lege mall. Your Christmas Problem is SOLiVED This year give THE ' GUARDIAN First delivery will be made Qecenlller 24th together with your Greeting Card- Y The Charlottetown Guardian PHONE 132 Q V» To keep his advertising working strong for him is even more im- portant now than it was in 1929. Two boys were looking at ihc mummies at the British Museum. and one of them wasmiich puzzled by the labels explaining their age. "I wonder what those figures mean?" he asked, stopping befor" i"! exhibit marked B. C. 1500. “Don't be so ignorant," rekorted his pal. "Ihatls the number of the motor what run over 'im." , E r 1i i Max Factor’s Society Beauty Aids Created by Max Factor. Hollywood's make-up genius who for many yearn has been chief cosmetlclan to thr screen and stage profession. Max Factor paper-hum, are in a large way teaponslbli for the splendid complcxl of the celebrities. Some of our lines include FACE POWDER- FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN b TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK i} Another shipment just received of the new SQUARE GREEN ALARM CLOCKS at $1.49 Made by Westclox and fully guaranteed G. H. TA YL OR Jeweller and Engraver ‘lliheie preparations are ma e rom he purest ihg d- '5“. . t - lcnta In correct color, llizr- 68024244“ 4 mony shades, to blend wit: individual complexion color lng. And is delicately perium~ ed. to please the most fastid- ious taste. it's peculiar ad- hesive qualities make It "stay on" and "cllng“ under moat trying conditions. Vlslt our store and look over this line of toilet pre- paratlons. THE 2 MAGS 149 Great George St. Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. ' BATTEml: IEO-iARGING Dipsioi ii “iii ‘AUTO IGNITION Let us check your Ilium" system for Fall drlvlnl W!“ tlorls. Carhnretor work I 81W‘ tally. l " ‘