Pal‘ a . I ‘Ilstnlarllacllillanlayartnmgem- ~l-¢£aurat¥- ‘uni ballast-w. oaaaaae L-Illby at. Vlas-hqfid, LI. fillatfl Li) , , on. a. .m_ga-.., . . . I808 QC Dismal-ll. D ‘:51. Infill all ltl. Olivia. Ieralsg Dally IQ) Q.Q deliver-cl. (flooded (Dallas! llflpaayaeatllaevaaaalnalladralaandztalgdloaoaa. fi- IOIIIAY, JANUAII ll, ll‘. I rum srsaxuvc Iaaninterviewgivm atalontreal. all pfilid lnWnIIYI Guardian. phsals m the difficulties fad!!! the industries of agriculture and fish- erieainthisPr-ovinoe, andcnthe tact that the Maritime Provinces’ governments are doing everything in their power to curtail expenditures. Ho instances the much heavier ex- penditures incurred in the Western Piwvlnces, and lt is well that this dds of the question ahould be thor- oughly grasped by the political lead- era 0f Central Canada, who too fre- quently in the pant have levelled the charge of extravagance at these At- lantic provincu, where actually the per cspita expenditure on govern- ment has been considerably smaller than in any other part of Canada ‘The Premier is quite right in put- ting the case for the Maritimes, and especially for Prince Edward Island, in the sti i possible light. 1t is only by emphasizing the difficulties under which we are contending that recognition by the other provinces will be obtained of our right to fair treatment when the question of un- employment relief and other rem- edial measures affecting all Canada comes up for consideration at the conference at Ottawa on Wednes- day. Political leaders in the Western Provinces have taken every oppor- tunity of gaining the public ear in the matter of their financial diffi- culties. The Maritimes, which cer- tainly have been much more econo- mini in the matter of government expenditures during the past few years, have had less to say publicly about their financial problems. Plain speaking on the part of Pre- mier MacMllla-n and his Maritime colleagues on the eve of an impor- tant conference of Dominion and Provincial representatives may therefore serve a useful purpose in oflsetting the altogether impractic- able suggestion, which is always be- ing revived in Ontario, that the Maritlmes would get along all right if only they scrapped their existing governmental machinery and form- ed a political merger. OTTA WA CONFERENCE Prince Edward Island wu have three provincial representatives- Premier MflcMillan, lion. Mr. Sharp. and Hon. Mr. MoPhee-ln attend- ance at the Dominion-Provincial Conference. This is as it should be, since “lg Conference promises to be an important one. While there are many subjects on the agenda, its principal purpose, aocordng to the Montreal Gazette. is to endeavor to ranch an agree- ment On a Dominion-wide works programme aimed to definitely as- ablt in the general upturn of pros- perity by taking thousands of un- employed ofI the drect relief lists and putting them to useful work. Calling the meeting before the ‘federal Parliament and the various provincal legislatures settlg down to accomplish the work of the an- nual sessions is opportune. It is as- jurned that the federal authorities have some concrete plan in mind for financing the contemplated works program. Otherwise, there would be no program to discuss, as the prov- inces are not in a position to assume ‘eater liablitles than already have by them been assumed. ‘This also marks the substantive result. of Canada's aeal And signat- bre to the agreelrtent reached at the World Economic Conference in jlsmdon last year that 5 per cent. gold coverage ia sufllcient for nat- ional currency. According to official Ilium recently published, federal assistance to the provinces since the fluent Government, was romp“ b power in 1m is in seam of INODNRW. Home of this matey > has been spent on coasts-naive Jodi. but the malt!’ wart has been devoted to direct alistenoe to the ‘gains. Added to this, Mr. Sinclair InndonIcooomioConfsrance af- fordaCansdI-rooliforanaapanslon ofbercumncmandthareforesha ranthomore readilyiloanco tbs oontemplatednowpablicwortspro-i gramwithoutresortingtoameaa-i ureofinflation. Canadabgoldoow‘ erage todayh approximately 60' per cent. monuments» the Oovernmentmaydecideonanis-v suanceofnowmcney,pomnlywitn| areducedgoldbacklbQlstheout-i comeoft-hieweekaoonferencedv? oidedlyaddatotbeunusually lea-i portantoharaeterottboforthcomfl ingmoetingbwwomleadingregae-i sentatives of the federal and pro-j vincialgwei ts. i BA N K PROFITS ‘lhoee who have attacked the‘ Canadian banks as making too, heavy a lew on the public will be’ interested in reading the following paragraph from the address made. by 0am.“ “lune, 108m ‘t the ,in a crop, but a horse eats part. of it. annual meeting of the Canadian Bonk of Commerce: N "The average net annual prof .ts of , Canadian banks for the past ten. years were shown by the report tof be 6.36 per cent, and the dividends i actually paid 5.98 per cent. on the ' average investment by shareholders‘ —oertalnly not an undue return.‘ compared with that obtainable i from high-clam bonds during the} same period. In i083 the return to‘ bank shareholders was, of course, muoh lower than the average I have mentioned, being very little more than tpercentflfbeause ofbus- iness dcurafion is not to be found in interest rates, but in the slower movement of commodities and the severe reduction in prices. The law of supply and demand still deter- mines the levels of world prices and of birsiness activity." Four per oent. comments the Mall and Bnpire, cannot surely be re- garded as an excessive retum for the services rendered by the banks, particularly as these lnsttutions have played such a remarkable part in carrying the country through four years of unprecedented world dfipression. Though every bank in the United States was closed last Spring, and though international exchange has been subject to violent fluctuat ons, the Canadian banks have been able to finance the country's foreign trade in effective manner and thus to prevent my interruption in the execution of new orders by Canadian exporters. ' SINCLAIR SACRIFICED Commenting on the ousting from the Ontario House Liberal leader- ship of Mr. W. E. N. Sinclair, the Ottawa Journal says: Mr. Sinclair's Liberalism was of the school of Mowst and Blake. Be- lieving in the two-party system, he had no use for opportunist alliances and intrigues, hated the compromise of principles for porary political believed in f ble parliamentary oo-operation, never subscribed to the dictum that the sole duty of an Opposition is to oppose. Thus in the session of 1033 he pledged sup- port to the Government on all “constructive measures." To a party under the leadership of a politician like Mr. Mitchell Hepburn, and which in its drive for office, hesitates at no alliance, such things were unforgivable. The "new style" called for extremes, for reck- leaa attam, for no show of such weak things as fair-nus or aqueam iahness in the prooem of capturing the Government. Ir. Sinclair was long ago marked for slaughter. BRITISH ART An historical exhibition of British art was opened at the Royal Acad- ‘rrada Cunmlaalone: has furnished ‘ considerably subsided as: the ll- tiab trade conditions by I'll-l Majesty's senior lo much food for optmiatic reflec- tion as does 8i: ‘Riomu Ainsccughs last report for 1982-33 received iii India by the last air mail Many factorsoontrlhrlte to the ‘rrade Com- miliooerb when that the outlook in India's imwrt trade at the mcsent time is more hopeful than it has been at any time during the past three years. The collapse, o! m; boycott movvment, the grad- ual clearing of the polrical sky, and the fact that racial bitterness has among the most important, and the whole- sane effect of this change of at- mnmhere is reflected in many dir- ections 1t has, fortunately, been aocompaned by a slow but steady improvement in the economic sit-l uation. ‘ a bulletin a m Horse anew‘ tion of America, says the Christian Science Monitor, that on March l there were some 15,250,000 horns on the farms. This h ap- prommately 1,150,000 more than in 1930, though still about 4,750,000 fewer than in i930. In thong days the tractor was proudly showing its wnc-rioritv to the horse by iulpiu; raise bung-tr mops, bu; today the horse is modestly showing his su- per.ority to the tractor by helping the farmers dispose of mam. A tractor has no subsequent interest i ———— | The disposition to follow ao-mll- ed public opinion instead of try ng to make it is seen in Washington. where it has been decided by the authorltes that this is no time to, introduce the resolution irnplem-i enting our adherence to the World Court. The situation in Ihlrope, we are told by Senator Riwinson, is "too crit The patient is so ill that nothing must be done lest his, fever subside. Some people would conclude that, the situation was; so critical that we cannot afford to delay action on the World Court raolutlon, but not so the consumg mate pol.tician.—"l'ne Baltimore 8un. lf the Government, aaya the New: York Herald ‘Tribune, is fortunate enough to acquire the new ten bil-l lions at the average rate of interest , of the existing national debt, it‘ will have to add $360,000,000 a year. ' exclusxe of amortization. If, as seems more ldteiy, the average will ' be higher, the increase. in tntercstI char-gs on the public dent will be; even greater, running somewhere between $400,000,000 and $500,000,000 a year. In any event it is pranc- ally certain that, beginning a year from June, our budget will carry the item of over $l,000,000,000 a year for interest charges alone, m place of the $689,000,000 in this year's budget. Mr. Bcl-eveit aaya that "it, is but an extension of the challenge of Woodrow Wilson for us to propose in this newer generation that from now on war by Governments shall be changed to peace by peoples." The phrase ls a fine one and a memorable one even if the prmes- ses by which the change shall be brought aibcut are not entirely clear. How can ambitious and deter-m ned leadership £8 curbed by Popular dis- sent? ln the case of Germany, Herr Hitler, who is certainly ambitious and determined, finds the people going ent-hus astioolly along with him. ‘Peace by p80p.BS"—fl00d en- ough! But it is not always easy In prove that leaders and peoples in the matter of aggressive aspirations are far apart. The announcement of l-lon. Bob- ert weir, Federal Minister of Agn- culturc, that freight ratos on feed- er cattle from Ontario and other Eastern Canadian points to Mon- treal, Bt. John and Halifax, for ex- port have been cut in half means much for both Eastem and West- ern Canada. It is only as a result of sustained effort that the M.n- later has been able to secure this concession, which will ssnount to a saving of $30 a carload to any On- tario farmer shipping feder cattle to Atlantic seaports. It s clear that the concession should improve prices for ranch cattle from West- ern Canada, which are shipping to Ontario and other eastern provincm for feeding before they are sent to the Brltah market. These develop- ments harmonise with the far- reaching eflorts of Hon. T. L. Ken- nedy and the Ontario Department 0f Agriculture w facilitfile the sales of Ontario farm products, not only in the other provinces but .n Great under the preferential in England and that of the in continental oourrrtea in the met»- ter of peace and war. Baring before many audiences 9. 5 l i is t, i as 8,, igigiigigaigrsfiri fs t, Ii Crut srltatn m," 26c Will Buy Be Will Buy 2 tina Pineapple 25c 1 Red Bundle Broom “p, , u...» g ‘I-w-wun z u‘ “u”! a 25c 1 Cora all for formc we; in fa-- u” 1 Tomatoes UISIAQHITORIIIJg-Qmanl m“ “mum-u” ltlasllaefioi 3e anrovao lnllfficfetglstmldllpolthltlmr sthaflalnoe 1o u; wmggunsmat Amotberremarsadraoaatlythagawlsthalineefinaoasxrg-inooun 1°hrl5°'P-L¢ll\°X--Z5t removingtonsiiahadfioneoutofhyasalvagaaystambywhichap- ~ IpKRRDOtI laahlawamlase n; qongmqpailingamotmts otunpaid taxes 41kg. Dales gmzgckuurm“ 2* whether tonsils should over be i-e- m! l» HM We" m: an I Ketchup, large, Heinz 19c z u‘ “my 318mm ‘ "-93? a gfig“ ‘gnfiuwf f‘, "f; 1o u». Rolled om " B‘ ,,,,,,",f,,,,:g,,g;,,,,m “if; m; -~ y, s r -- - m”, s n». Can Honey 55c 1 pk. Cooking Apples n. formerly, bu“; ‘ m", “my m” isms a; mind that why; Congreu. Take IIOI/Ill 1 lb. Peanut 25c g0 its. (gar-relies . . . . 19¢ b! ‘ a! “u”, 1 muzmmubk mutating,“ and 01:: "my pa,‘ w, m “ma” we o! t-illwlmnolalbla to soannthe pa: Brittle, only I ca es ear oap 19, r:..-*-*~*....-.- ".2"- ---"....."“.."‘~"“=- ti...“ “s..'."..~:"..:*.e".....-"-" end-cadres‘ :2:- M‘... IDA ' Y D3: a F, Mam‘? mam E, M11934‘ he‘: ‘Izwggndnm, m” ‘bmmtwmdmmwm g Start the New Year by leaving your orders at i‘. J.s. mriitlyéoélifgintrzf, w; gamma“? mm‘ m“ 0mm “w”? mn."‘“°hucfcy“°m“_ Iwnmx ti“: Free Deliverfi J M N Phoie; 888 8: 88!. °“°“°H‘°m“°p"“m'm“' fliereianodeertbofrneansform n aclx) A‘; ,“fifl“f,,}’,y,,_,‘i,‘,‘,"‘,f;j’".g‘.‘§f,‘j"ff ,1 w: wumwu whim in wmm .;‘é‘.".:t"..."r.;'l imfieefii? ° ° doubt in the minds of responsible observers that diseased tonsils should be removed. The question of removing all or part of a tonsil has been effectually decided in favor of removing the complete tonsil. Of course there are special cases where this is not advisable, as in earlly in. fancy, old age, general debllity, and oecause other ailments are also present." In discussing the methods of re- moving tonsils Dr. MacNsughton admits that the coagulation meth- od, the X rays. and radium all have their place, but the surgical removal is best when it can be done. Another point of interest to pat- ient and physician is whether a general anaesthetic (putting the patient of! to sleep), or a local an- aesthetic (injecting a painkiller in and around the tonsils) is best. The .5. tages of the general an- aesthetic are: (a) there are many people who do not wish to know anything of the operation until it is over; 1b) the possibility of pain during the operation is prevented; ,. (C) adenoids, if present, can be removed. The advantages of local anaes- thetic are: la) it ls less of a nerve shock; (b) the nausea and vomiting which usually occur with the gen- eral anaesthetic is prevented; (c) special patients who are able to take a general "‘“ because of some physical weak-non such as heart or lung disease, may be safely omrated upon under a loc- al anaesthetic; (d) the patiem is about sooner and may go home at least one day earlier than would have been pos- slble had he had a general anaes- thetlc. The point then is that diseased tonsils should be removed, that sur- gery whenever possible is the beat method. and the choice of the an- aesthetic in most cases rests with the patient himself. Ill- Forty Below (Winnipeg Evening Tribune) “Forty below“ is cold. 1t ls, as the weather forecaster puts it, de- cidedly cold. It is extremely cold. It is, in fact, cold. Winnipeg rarely enperimces forty below. Temperatures in the thirt- ies oorne along - ionally, in a normal winter, but 40 is abnormal. And 46 is terrible. When the omcial temperature re- cords forty below it does not mean that over the city as a whole and the suburban districts that is the minimum tcmperatilre. By' first- class, tested and regulated thermo- meters there is frequently a varia- tion of several ,, registered in d ffemtperts of the city. Btlnethfng lUDIrcntly depends upon altitude. exposure to the wind, proximity of large furnaces and buildinp, and possbly other factors. Forty below by the ofllcial thermometer may mean anywherermmbototobe- low nero over the city as a whole. Wednesday night, for example. Winn peg Bzach registered 5i bel w i and Winnipeg Beach had the some wind that. was blowing over Winni- P98- Forty below. to the majority of city people, means only passing discomfort. They Lve in ably heated houses and flats, work in comfortably heated omoea and stores, and are exposed to the cold only for brief periods while they dosh from office to street oar, or walk a few blocks. But there is a minority. and not few in manna-a, to whom it means real dsoomfort. - "WWII. Postman, delivery men, street-car men, workers, adopted, There is the same recourse as that of the private merchant in collecting his bills. It has met with little complaint from the brain centres of practical bualnem; it satiaflm the intelligent merchant who does not aim to enrich the grafter at the expense od’ his pa- trons; why has it ever been ignor- ed by our civic machines? I have known in a single instance of a lump sum of 810,000 of unpaid taxes being "written off" by order of authority, with a few stro‘ of the rod ink pen. Those unoollected accounts were as a matter of course added to the already heavy taxa- tion of honest cltlsens who had a‘- resdy paid to the last dollar th.\' full quota of tax liability tn the city. Why is this to be perpetuated? Are those not as liable to bear cl- vic responsibility as are the paying class? It was not because that ten thousand could not be collected. for it came in the category of money that could have been collect- ed-lf collection had not been wantonly neglected. That old sayinm-"Where the old ram leads the sheep will follow." is applicable to tax defaulterl. Open up the fence for the chosen few to evade paymetrt, and the scattered ‘ ‘ soon " to r the area of honesty into the green- er field, easylmmunlty from the tax collectors presence. Permitted. and even encouraged neglect- to those in favor, making privileged defaults, is emulated by others claiming equal rights, and lo ex- ample leads the way of many who would have been otherwise honest to swell into an unwieldy and f0!‘- midable list of deficit creating non- tax payers Don't blame the weak-minded child who steals the jam. But rath- er place responsibility on tbs shoul- ders of the negligent guardian of the pantry who stirs the aroma of sweets into active attraction and then leaves the door 09th to the jam pot with its fatal enticements. This is what our civics are doing. I am, Sir, etc, LEWIS P. TANTON. it ,5? ogdZfot/rwt. OUI. AIRIEN . Hidden by rain-clouds they forward go, . ’T tempest. and fog, and snow, Over the mountains, the foe, the sea, "Dwarfs when highways of air are M; Pearlesaly forward they cliinb still higher, Wheredliglietnings hurl dread darts Where storms are forged and thun- der: roll, Where Nature unharneaed holds con . Forward and upward where wild winds play, Flying in darkness they keep their ‘VI-Y: Thestgibytdsy is their-comrade The stars their companions in the The air our airmen cleave how MINI _ Their faith and courage how strmg and sure!" A stasm from a poem by lured Bmitladn the Btroud Journal. II!‘ ‘ll Grocer i "i ll. l. S. IIEIIIIIG, B-A-.C‘~P.A-.C-G-A CIITIFIID PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT HIIIIB OI‘ SOCIETY OI‘ COST ACCOUNTANTS COIIMISSIONII IDI- TAKHO AITIDAVITQ IN THE SUPIIIII OOUIT OI‘ P. l. I. P. I. l. l-IPIEBINTATIVI TIE CANADIAN CREDIT KIN’! TIUST . ASSOCIATION, LIIITID. BANK OI’ NOVA SCOTIA BUIIDING CIIAILOHITOWN, P. l. l. Money?’ “Hoover Appointee New Head of I. C. C.;" "Will Close H. O. L. C. Cape Office?’ "8'! Country Of- these skeleton forms in American Jotn-nalism. Prom a practical point of view the excuse is a very consi- derable saving of mechanical labor and newspaper space and. what is perhaps of greater importance, a saving of time. Nevertheless the practice is extremely irritating to many readers and there is at the same time a tendencytoobocurethe real significance of thenames for which there letters stand, a signi- ficance which can be expressed in hundreds of millions of dollars and in the employment of four million out of the total six million United States citisens who are now draw- ing pay from the Federal Govern- ' merit. Here is a list of the so-called a “_ _A - ‘Iii-Ill Iaboraavingoflicemetbodsinstalled. Costscovantlnglnstltutedtessitapeclalreguiremaata Monthly, quarterly and annual audits. Ilalancoalaoetaaliohofltanallasamcountalroparel. lneonoTaai-etwrns “‘ lpaaadfllal. Ifnandaln-rangoments made between debtor and new alphabet and the titles for creditors. which the letters stand: - _ _ NRA National Lccovery Admlnls- United Liability Companies ' oration. ' AAA Agricultural Adjustment I. 0. 80X $8. TELEPHONE i316. Adminidration. RFC Reconstruction 1-" anoe Cor- poretion. RCO Railway Credit Corporation. NEG New England Council. HLB Home IDA]! Board. DIP Deposit Insurance Plan. PAC Pbderal Advisory Council. ACC Agricultural Credit Corpora- tton. rma Federal ram Orddit Ad- ministration. . now Homes Owners Icsn Cor- poration. PIC Federal Trade Commission. ICC Instnstate Commerce Com- mission. - TVA Tennesee Valley Authtrity. COC Civilian Conservation Corp.‘ IAB Industrial Advisory Board. PWA Public Works Administra- tion. CWA Civil Works Administmiou. CLC Commodity Loan Corpara- tion- PBRC Federal Surplus Belief Cor- poration, DMC Daily Marketing Corpora- tion. SOC Surplus Commodity Corpor- ation. ‘ NBAPC National Business Ad- visory and Planning Council. CAB Consumers Advisory Board. . OCA Civilian Conservation Ad- ministration. PAB Petroleum Administration Board. ACA Alcohol Control Administra- tion. NLAB National Labor Arbitra- tion Board. ' VERA Federal Emergency Relief Administration. _ NBC National Emergency Coun- cil. EHC Emergency Housing Corpor- ation. K301‘ hgeral Co-ordination of n t . 381A Electric Home and Farm Authority. Habit removes stains. Fur Receiving Station 135 Kent Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. g Our Pelt Receiving Station at 135’ Kent Si, Charlottetown, under the flleetlolfof Mljor A. S. Robertson ‘and W. F. Burke, will be open for the balance of the season for the benefit of eastern shippers where both members and non- members can be accommodated. . CANADIAN NATIONAL SILVER FOX BREEDERS’ ASSN» FUR MARKETING DEPARTMENT. m1- — . R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summersjde, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown 4.- l s§ A Ilnlrfa “TE surprised afa man lIH/you joyriding on a Sunday,” remarked the busy-body in the hotel coffee 100m. "Joy-riding!" rewrted the loll‘! motorist. "I'll have you understand tsfiiiTte Radio lint Working 0*“ llhtgl§tlllll onamotortourwith "" my e." IIacIASTER n} latisaatc on lepain. HI last It Phone s“, n. Eye-Sight I or A Child ‘m0 . H0101?! ‘i -. . i