i l i l t react; mutt IllE CIIARLUTTETUWII Glllllllllllll Bhutan: Dally (Founded In I88‘) 1m- lrlenl. Limit-Col. W. Chflfler l. MeLnru Vice-President, J. IL BnrneL, IJJ. Secretary, lJeuL-Col D. A. Waelilnnon. 0.5.0. Editor and wanazin Director. J ll. Burnett. IJJ ,¢ ant-late Editor. Frank Waller. SFBQFIPPTION RATES 8s )0 per scar itn advance) um” k 01h $4.00 pPI’ ~93: I advance) mailed m P E lslnnd stub pr" vr-Jr In advance! mailed to Canada and [LB llemhnrs Audit Bureau of Circulation! “The Slrtmgvst Memory Ia Weaker llldn the Weakest Ink.‘ i——— '—_——_-~ : _ 'I fEajDAY, DIARCH 19- 1940. Ignoring QueeriTsii-Counly 1Z1 reminds Queen's County of the Commonwealth Air be six hundred t0 eight 0i which. Canada will ~. and that it provides for ‘t: training, air observ- tral maintenance, and for suitable airdromes, over m: already completely func- boning. ‘lt- n~;"-~~t<-l =0 tell what has become of the ‘ i1 of the use, free of mu air port for train- =_1l1 of the war. This ion Government .. . factory answer Bleanwbile our young g air training must go He they are consider- tn of being non-resi- the lJllalfi€a$ they are rents and relatives ' lnco. reniertce and ex- r .\laritime centres have ‘g in the scheme, Provltice is again t r - l t_ .. \ 'I LI ‘Y catirldates explain why? Do campbells view that only the Is‘.and—if any-is eu- t? Time For A Change to "W4. the local Liberal organ as the “political bed- miburn of Ontario. llcp- ‘IwTHIQYVS eyes, represents n of political life, yet it is rice it was landing him to .trn remains what he was ‘ e Liberal Govcrntnent of l lsctlfellows are Liberals they are! M221 Dt-nnnioit general election is a Prrne Minister Klackenzie King \ fir‘ qrnznent should get a vote did before the war and has .. ztl'ltlt(i be given absolute power n to go on doing what it likes. The "i in tile Ontario Legislature, the (Ytnnd.:t, more than two, the king (jovcrnnlcnfsj "d it was not good enoughfl -:e comes up anew in Ontario with K flt-e, and the Liberal Premier of '~ iith the full approval of f; that resolution of con- ir (iovcritmctit; that he and . ha! the King Government s hncn lllfiiiC/lllflffi. And yet the Hep- wc-lcrvmcs back Mr. Nixon H e Kirq iiovcrnitictit is all right; :2 eivltrrtces .\lr. Hepburn who g (iovcrnnicnt is all wrong; and m fall into each other! arms on *‘ t‘ nhliouglt Premier Hepburn thinks n“ ‘}w\"-'rrtiit>tit docs not deserve con- “ r, still .\lr. llt-pbtirn is all right ‘id that .\lr. Nixon and every- ‘ st-s to stipport .\lr. King about fight with I’renncr Hepburn. is :t clcnti condition for some- . wzt i: b" a good thing that a politi- ~ ' vita-st‘ chief leaders are mak- ":11 should be given autocratic m- lmuitiirtn at the present time? ' ' for the people 10 transfer 'l‘."‘i‘ sort of political out- ." lt-ztvlrrs at Ottawa arc ti: Liberal lczttlcrs at Tor- they be good enough? liberal Election Forecast ll _ ~;,tii 1'?" ztppetring in .n oi lht- Il’<'Il(l of public sen- ut< n11 the political situation tur/lity-R‘ is=ue of the Montreal :.l‘t’ w Stnwlu/J, :t put-r with strong Liberal bias: "i-Utt- ~11 Slfl-i iht: 5 lrlrtl corrcspotitleitt >Ii ‘vrtl ]|:w»;;ii~-tit"rit|>t's on Parliament .~ lmtillo tn tnnkc ztny predictions"; but flfjr ronc-vit-il that in Nova SCIIIIII the , ,- ufl lo-i- "wine" seats and that in New livun-w "' ': lful~l lntlf of the CHIISIIIIICIICICS‘ nrt- li-i-tl in thvir doubtful column, for varying v -. 111w’. . rt - “prrtntituut political figure" is quoted as 1 thru 1:," ('uii.-»rvnti\'t~s will be rcturttctl -~ Lihcrzil- with tht: bitbtnct- of seats going ('.( zutd .\'t-\v llctitocritcy. The most ‘w l. ivil prwlivtion is that Mackenzie ‘l h.t-.t~ “it rcdticctl tnajority" while ‘ tunnpititgu lenders express assur- i .'unwbcre front I25 to I40 - quoiwl its being ccrtain of big 1 \\'l~t<~rt| (fttntulit and in the blari- fl» llnliillnl a big incrcrut- in Ontario. l '- tl to "i\I‘ l,‘lt(‘|'iIl candidates "a stiff 1.. ‘ l'| \~t.. .\<-~.;i t, .<|_\- tbc hitmtlurd. arc ti ~ it; t? ‘*“l‘\.'lii\'l' cnutlitltttcs as C. B. m- with b. .\. Donttltoeds con- cuu-litticncy; Percy C. ..itt- (lppo-ilion lender in the .. L-ttnblv tht‘ past lwo sessions, v. ill is rurmuig in (iunbcrlantl, and Col H. H. .\-> tiotied by the Sumtftirtl, is .\l:t_vor \\'. E. Landry of Antigonish, for mrntv ymars a well-known ntember of (he l.llll‘l'.'ll pmtv wlvv nccntly ac- vv-tvtell Il-'iI\'|l-llll'l1 as .\l‘ll\vllil llnvrt'tinicitf Hamid:tl-b-xuvr l-tr \ni _'--in.lt1 |H\ -l|~I]‘(\_ In New ltfl'llll>\\i(lt one of the Ill-Ma! colorful individual tnssels is taking place in York-Sun- bury, where Hon, R_ B. Hanson, K. C., who succeeded llon. ll. ll. Fteven; as Minister of Tirade and (bnvmr-rre in the llcnnvtt (fabititrt in 151M. is running aqntzist l'c'.er ‘l, llught-s, KC, \\ll~111 .\lr. Ilinl-‘on tlefcatcd in l'_).:5. "he last ntentber was \\'. G. Clark (Liberal), wcaltlrv Fredericton business man, who was uatncd the other day as itcnant ljovcmor. dzird grudgingly, "is one of the five conszt tencies where the Con- servatives, continuing the partial comeback which they began in the provincial election, may register a gain." Another, it adds. is 51:11! _l0htt-.-\Ibcrt where Liberal member Al. n 1'}. .\lcAvit_v finds him- self opposed by D. Ix Ilazen, K. C., son of the late Chief _lustice > DOUQlZIS Ilazen, who was at one time Federal Klinister of .\Iarine. Saint john," c-i-tict- itdard, “is a fickle election city. ' be that it will switch back to the Conservative side." In the provincial election the city picked four Conservatives." A third "doubtful riding” (from the Liberal standpoint) is Victoria-Carleton, where the last member, _l. E. _l. Patterson (Liberal) was beaten out for the nomination by Michael .\Ic- Cluskey of Grand Falls. This is a "potato war" for .\lcCluskey is chief clerk for F. W. Pirie, Ltd., while hi opywoncttt is ll. ll. Hatfield. Hartlntitl, another oi the big pv-tfito exporters of the Province. Mr. Haticitl, warden of Carleton County, is conceded by the Standard to be “a strong vote-puller and a widely Pbptilar figure.” Another place where the C.»nscrvatives ad- mittedly "hold high hopes" is Rryval (Kings rtni Queens). There Col, A. _l. Brooks, the only Ilaritime Conservative mcntber in the last Par- liament, is opposed by his already titres-times- deft-atetl Stissex town< ‘.5111, D. \'. \\‘l~.5te, The fact that _l. I’. llztrnv, Liberal .\l. P. for Nortlttittibcrlzintl. rvccntly announced his inten- tion of running as an independent candidate in this election as a result of having been ousted by \\'. _l. Maloney as his party": standard bearer, has, says the Standard, "made the out- look problcmatical in that conszittictiov for the Liberal Party." The Conservative candidate is j. Leonard O'Brien, Speaker of the New Bruns- wick Legislature from i925 to 1930. In the last federal elcctim New Brunswick candidates inclnrlctl nine Ive-constructionists, all defeated, “hose votcs for the most part were obtained at the expense of the Conservatives and (though the Standard docs not say so) may be expected to count this time in favor of National Governmenh No attctnpt is made by the Montreal (taper to size up the Prince Edward Island situation. Liberal prospects here are probably too discour- aging for analysis! "'l'his," cvutcerlcs the Emergency Visitation Nothing could better reveal the King Clov- ernrtteitfls awareness of its tintrointlnrity’ in this Province than If trmce .\li:ii-lcr llalstoifs four- rlity \'l>ll at this time. Urn-r lcztdiitg tucmbcrs of the Cabinet are ranging far and wide over Canada, speaking in the larger centres; but so tirgctit is the tired of .\lr, Ralsrrm"; prcscttce here that llc must dcvntc- prnctzvndy all his remain- ing timc to bis own C'>l1~lill‘.(‘1l\‘_\' ztn-l to anstvt-r- in; the SOS call from the Qutclfs County Lib- eral catitlidatcs. - EDITORIAL NOTES — tcr election. Four working tlztys till .. Ill if l I Evidently the USA. Arnbassarlor knew whereof he spoke when he dvlclnrt-d whtlt lay in store for llritnin within tbc 1ll‘.\l two tnonths. l‘ $1 i i Accu-iug the Prime .\ll2ll~l(‘l' of "witltling thc ship” when the thrccdmtir Parlirtntttnt was dis- solved The \';tntwu1vct' Fun ~-:\ Libt-rztl p.'tpt-i" rcmarlts siqnificmnlv: “When llac govtrnuttti: sztw tbc atlditors ci-nmr; ill/tug lli“_\ hid tht books." I I I! i The local Legislature intcn-l to “tvitr_v~~;l" Fill‘ political agitation innnclli:|tvl_v aftt-r kw]- cral election, lint will mutt: (but we will |~7 in the lllfnCS of political tw-utroivrqv" for un- otltcr three wcvks at lvnsi. Iliilil! will malt».- up for the short clecrioit catnpziign zfllowtwl by .\lr. Mackenzie King. 1i if ‘l1 ‘l’ ti‘. t..l .-\t an iinporlztitl tnilittiry vonfcrvuvc in lln Prime .\litii~'tcr's office. s:t_\~ ("limit-l llrt-w, who was prcscnt, Ucfctwe .\litti,-tcr Rout-rs sitt on a sofa swinging his short legs, nltiitg no part in the tliscussioti—lvccntt=c he had no opinions he could cnlllflblllc in ihc tirc-t-ncc of muster mintls. Yct bc \\'Jl~‘ perfectly qualified to allo\v war comrncts to br- given to bi< private secre- tary's firm-the rli-linctiml bl-twccn a states- man and a polilicinir w >t< a >1- Sir Richard Ilrztitcis llurt-ut, “Arabian Nights' lintcrlzlititttctits", born this (but: I821. joined Indian Army in 18.12, and rtpplicd himself to the study of Uricntzll life and lmigitages; made perilous pilgrimagcs to Rlccczi: cxplorcd the in- terior of Stimalilanrl; and tritnslnted Arabian Nights, 1885-8. Tlu-sc are a collection of tales (lcsccntled from a Persian lmuk, llezar Afsane (the thousand tales). In their prcscnt form the stories are saturated with hlohaitttitctlan ideals. 1k m “Coming events cast their shadows before." The Ilinistcr of Transport, llon. C. D. Howe, says that if the King (invcriiiitt-tit is defeated he will nffcr his services as a dollur-zl-year man in any capacity that may be assigncrl to him in an effort to aid Canada's war effort. Mr. llowc, who was born in Mrtsszttihusclts, is a nat- uralized Catttltliztn, and like nntny tilltt-r Almeri- L‘.'lIl~' Wlln have sclllell in this vunlllry‘ bis patriot- ism is equal to flint of many :1 native hon. As 'l'-.-int‘nt, who is running in the Colchester- ll i iroug Mention candidate not men- \ “a tlnll:|r-a-_vcar man" this practical engineer would doubtless be thinking of svrvivc and not 0f a personal $40 pcr day “t-kpcilscs." wm‘f‘"'qfi-“Ptfitn"vrr,;srwcue vmrvrw, ‘mun-vac i I 118m ll-IE "CHARLOTTETOWN ‘ QUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE HAY Thanh heaven. (he multiplication table ow n't change. It is the only thing a mother knows that I5 the same as when she went to school, and which she can speak of wim- out b21213 corrected. - Guelpn hfercur)‘. It ts to be hoped that Ihe gossip about. the ncgonatzcn of a new commercial treaty with Japan, wnth svould condone all Japanese ambitions and tactzcs In Cnzna. pa-L and persenf, L! Just badly L1- formed gue swork. Such ncgolla- tzons would push American pres-t ge in the Pacftc wv-ll below zero and would cos: us more naval building in the unmedzaze future than the most ardent bg-navy 1mm has ever comtemplated. - New York Herald Tribune. Just what guod was done by pas- sing of an amedrunent to the Criminal Cale makrtg slot. ma- ch" e5 illegal z beyond our under- standing. Up In Bracebridge me Regal Macnne Service has agreed _to pay a lzcen e fee to the town of $4.140 for the privilege of opezal- zng fifteen of these machme- tn thlt m-nlcxpallty. In Barrie the counczl decided to license mechan- lca‘. devzoes for amusement and set the fee at $100. Rather a pecu- liar situation. The domlnton- law says the machines are Illegal and the mutuczpality offers to let them operate on payment of a considera- rnn. known as a license. - Action Ree Press. The English ctb-ational lys- suitered for titcadcs trcm the ccn- tx-iruort of educauon, winch put a i) mzum on classical studies and red courses with predominantly u::1.tar:an values, Only since the Great War has there been n more ratzonal orientation of policy. But If it tvns a mistake for the "bus- lvl o-cou c.ous" Engizshman to .. e appropzatted wholesale the classcal Llxldiion of a bygone age. It. was monstrous for the Colonial dependencies to have copzed, with- out atiy preference at. modification, the s_ 1cm whlclt obtained In Big- land. and it w.l1 be many a long day before the crippling effect of this error as eradicated. - Trinidad Gunrtkan, (Port of Spam.) Slr William Beverfdge, a British economzst, pOinls out that only In reps-ct of fat/s 1s Germany heavily detxtttient on overseas supplies of foodstuffs. Durzng the last few years, while still zmportmg heavily, she has developed home produc- tion so that her total supplies of fats have increased from 1.820.000 ton: In I933 to 2.101000 tons In 1938. Every year 5mm Hitler came to power there Ins been more fat. in Germany-Jag fat. butter, mar- garine and other VZITLGIICS; but every year there has been for the German people less fat than they waived and less than they had pre- vlcu ' bern able to obtain. Com- .es meant to sustain human life have been 1l~cd to produce gly- cerine as a basis for hlgn exploi- u~e=. On these facts alone. It is clear that it 1s not tne British blockade mat is hurting Germany but the an zstence of the Nazi leaders that they guns should be fed before- the‘: people. -- Auck- land Nvnvs. This day (March 41 22 vein ago the United States naval c 1- llcr Cyclops ciqnarted hvgt Bar- bados for a pa". In ' e Unmtd States, with 309 creiv and pas- senzer. and a cargo 0f ntangatzske from RIO tie Janexo. $11109 mat day there has b'en no word from her, nrr has a sngle splinter of wrcckaze been rcrrrtrd. The Navy Ix-pnrtmrnt and the State Deparl- men’. adc-pwti all the m'asure< 1h search for the Cycltps that v19: sugge-tecl by the situation, h t. they failed to recover a boat, hatch, a lzfe prrserver or any othc of the vessel or hr-r eqwpmentl ' her late is tmttnown - a 1 a- it was when her ncn 1 first. cursed ccnwm t ngton -- N w York Sun. Iiave already We and everybody knoyvs - why thTi ccuntry 1s civctctl 60311011110111)’ bv sacking pohtical and ecrn- pciwtcit. M-‘ntn rsh p of the" explained . xnval h of ittttnwsittirtico \\'l1(‘Il I5 ap- tllcfl bv pfflpie 1k» the Dutch 1Z1 South Afuctt, and It 1s . t . Fll“ S. FOIISIY c winch . tne mass 01 Intua llJClIl-Jflyl. The sttuvnd Hulltl “In his come ‘to tn.- Atnclztznl ti.o,.l.. It ndttl as an tn/ccl no Ittngct‘ uni Dc cvcni Lllcllfllllg exc. 01;, astzutl Vastly nnprovttl facdlues 01 re- pcrinig Ila ghastly progress have brought. It into practically every home in the UILWO States. MJIIOIIS of our CIILZGHS are followmg each SUCCCSSZVB development. of the sn-ufiste in the pres» Recently they heard by radio eyewitness dtscrlp- ttona of the destruction of the Grat‘ Spec at MontevLdeo. News reels showtng the bombing of Helsinki are being shown In local theatres. Camera studies of bat- tles on land and sea. taken from planes flying over the scenes of conflict have been reproduced In weekly pictures magaznes. Wire- detits are appearing In newspa- pers. The whole heartrendmg trap gedy Ls being chronicled u nom- zng of the same character ever was before. - Washmlbon 81m’. The home for many yup of Rudyard Klplutg - Battetnau s, But-wash, East Sure)! — has been left to the National 'I‘ruat by Mrs. Kipling with an endownment. of 5.000. Descrlblnz the property. t e Tmst states that Bowman's w a moderate-sized sona house WII-Il mullloned win own and brick chunne . Jacobean In style. The porch bears the date 1634. and the house appears to have been built at the befllnnlng of the seventeenth century. Standing In a once busy centre of the 81am: Iron Industry. the house had chang- ed little except Ito name (whlcn was probably lame Bridge till about 1760) when th 0 Ktplfngs found It. w. Klplh‘ time! Ml Na ions- Wwas quickly followed up photos of specially important IncI- MW As stated editorially in The Guardian last week, the special leleetion-time furlough order of the Xlackenzie King Govern- ment, combined with involved and impractical voting regula- tions applicable to our Service Forces on furlough, makes it extremebv difficult for many Canadian soldiers to vote. "his applies especially to provinces such as Prince Iid- ward Island, with a large rural population residing at consider- able distance from Charlotte- town, the military centre. The regulations provide that soldiers on furlough may vote tat military units. Many will be at their homes in localities at a considerable distance from mili- ltary headquarters. If under twenty-one years of age, as many of our soldiers are, these young men will be disfranchised unless they travel at their own expense to a military unit to vote. Strong opposition to this re- strictive regulation has been taken by Dr. Robb, Dominion organizer for the National Con- servative Party. The publicity given Dr. Robb’: protest in Th: Guardian has resulted in the establish- ment of a voting booth for act- ive service electors at Summer- side, as announced for the first time in yesterday's Liberal organ. This, however, still leaves large sections of the Province unprovided for. Another sequel to The Guar- dian protest was the following telegram received yesterday from Mr. Jules Castonguay, Chief Electoral Officer by Mr. john F_ Connolly, Returning Officer for Queen's: “Your: today. Active service elector: may vote u civilian electors In the ulna dlvi-slon when they woud be expected w you If they were n01. on ac- tive service. This generallv means weirbordlnarv place of residence prtcr to 91111511119111 for active servkze. ‘Iherefcre in mrnl polling divisions an active service elector may even vote under sec, 46 of the Elections Act If his name Is not on the list. In urban pollln dtvrtslctis names of active aewce electors must, be on to vote as fivfllm electiorsl. Ari-five serviie ectora on urOuk ml! "I 9 In any unlt spevlllly Quint!!! [or that pu so stationed In the place I ere they hllPllsll Io be while on furlollllh’ (Slgnedl It will be noted that unless the soldier on furlough votes at the prescribed military unit (which may be thirty or forty miles from his home) hs ""15! vote as a “civilian elector." No civilian elector under twenty- one years of age is entitled to vote. Hence the disadvantage which our younger soldiers are under, with apparently deliber- ate intent to disfranchise them. Dr. Robb's summing up of the situation remains unchang- ed. He said: "The Government must have knoum when it i:- tued special election-Hm: fur- lough: that i! would make it difficult for the soldier: to vote. Then i: no escape from I/w conclusion that Hi: Government tuant: Io discourage thl soldier: from voting, berauu they know foo much about it: restricted and bungled tear efforts and becmtse they know 10o snitch about lack of uniform: and lack of army equipment and other condition; of incampetency and inefficiency and half-hurried- ness in the Govcrnnmtf‘: pro:- rcufian of flu war. PUBLIC FORUM fhlo column ll open for the dlleunlol by oflnnponlolll of question o! Interns. The Ci» ltmotown Handful loos an Io- cuurlly omiorn the oplnloln of “elnondenh. RADIO NUISANCE TAX SIIIr-If, would seem that Macken- ale Kings administration of radio broadcasting In Canada alone is suf- ficient to condemn him to defeat even If there were not. qmer and greater reasons in his Ineffective agmmistration of Canada's war e ort. The annual‘ radio tax w-aa bed enough-q: nuisance tax to the well- to-do and a Iiardshib tax to the 17001‘ man who on ‘nis five dollar radio set has to pay exactly the same as the rich man bays 0n III-S wonderfully elaborate thousand dollar machine. But. after all have been forced to pay the tax, no prohibit the broad- cast of city political meetings when mpassible roads prevent tne IIOICIIHR of and attendance at. meet- ' throughout. the constituencies to discuss and expose the govern- ment's record-surely that, 15 the .a.st. straw; surelv that Is a tcanda - om situation which wIII not be tol- erated. Fortunately Dr. Manlon the cure and has announced that he will rovtde iwabolltlon of the tax. an British freedom of speech and ax-emblv-crxtended to the ra- dio from which Mackenzie King barred It tn the hope that such ac- tion would serve his own and his party's ends. I am sir, etc» ELECTOII. PARTYISM WON'T DO Sin-Tatiana for the Liberal party and the Liberal parfv heel- know: t-rs." Liberal speakers are not prone to emphasize this as their sl "In and atlootcd pol‘cv wifh h tn \v'n the wn. but Mac- lc Km’: and llfS IIEIIIEPF"! Iv: Mtrkcnzie up and hn p- "flllv nothln! of the s cf tvu" cvot-nduurqs is be- "! tl‘"-"'fhu rd Put who has Iva d c‘ 1 . ~s'~rv~‘ivc artful: nnv‘h‘nq ycf the 1'22!" that ‘s bei"! snrnt and a'~~o""n~ to rcvrorls those of In- d=""“<'"il Mani-nus can't get their l-sre‘ “ms mid orcmntlv? l Put In the ctW-r nrovlnces with fr" * -‘= of the rwnkters and Lib- c. l mm" of P1 liamsnt anI t't"lr run" sscretttrlrs In , ‘f'crrcd n""t‘on= there ls plenty tzonia on. The Bren Gun scandal by the lensing of a building In Montreal for government purposes for a per- lcd of ten years at a total rental of $237,000. which the landlord had just bought for $62,500. some pro- fit. there! And then came the buy- ing of a private home In British Columbia for use as an officers’ mess for 894,448 Th t wasn't to help win the war or o help elect. n National Government. Nor was winnlmt the war the reason for awarding a defence equipment manufacturing contract to a firm of three Insurance agents without a factory, one of the three being ‘atttrlesident of a county Liberal on, Then there was the buying of that small building for $18,000 only slx months after It ad changed hands for 112.0(1). e contracts for additions to t air at ‘Puritan from which Libero slush . Thou are merely 5am ea from moron the country. Mac nzle King know: Ill about them. And he condonea and con- tinues In office the vQIWlrltoI-a of the bare-faced steals. e war “mass it: flndlnl. the Installation of heating. electric ht, and so on, and now he start- therg "Puck of Pook’: B111," In which It! Iurroundma up rc- bected. The estate, all of which nu been left to the Trust. wu Increased by the Klpllngs to mbou I00 uni. -— monomer Gamma. “the liberals and Ubecal rty heel- ers will not. work. A na on at war needs a National Government and the only way to get l. National Government is to first defeat Mac- kenzie King and his candidates who want, everything for the Lib- eral party heeIerL-and make no bones about. . I am, Sig, etc, FAIR PLAY. HIGH GRADE BREEDING STOCK Ski-In Saturday's Guardian you gave particulars of a. sale by buctlon 1n Perth, Scotland, of a fIrst prize shorihorn bull for which was bald the handsome sum of $8,200.00. , It ever occur to IIIQPTOVIXI- clal government and those Interest- ed In the breeding of _hlgh tzraae livestock that opportunity 15_ knock- Ing loudly at. the door of Prince Ed- ward Island and that, use Lhls Province Ls separated by water from the mainnsnd, Prince Edward Island 1.; particularly fitted to enter In a large way upon the raising of the h. nest ades of all kinds of dom- es 1c tangible. including horses, cat- tle, pigs. sheen and treats and. that 1n axwthersyear, when we snail have our ocean lpplnrt connections es- aolished. we slwuld be able to work up a very valuable export, trade to at! parts of the world. At first sight the above mav ap- peels: to be a fairly ambitious pro- ct but It. L» one that 1.9 well unth- in the ran e of_ Ibillty because of our health uI c. ate. splendid pas- ture lands and REOIZTBDIIICEI isost- tIon right. On the ocean front. there- by r_educ.ng freight. charges to the minimum. Furthermore, from such a snmll area as ours there is b10581.)- ly no other ocean wnnaae that we can offer the would-bulk so large- ly. for It woul not be on y the tpace on shipboard occupied bv the ani- mals themselves that would count but that required for thelr feed dur- ing transport. A strong encouragement elven to the several livestock _BSSOOIB.I.IODS would no doubt, be required. whfe a Special imvetus could be elven under a system of control shared between the Government. and the teveral livestock associations, or all animal ntanngs. Under this p n there would be a gradual elimination of second class, so called "scrub". ani- mals of everv kind. A number of practical farmers bove pan have given It strong prove. their only misgivings that some farmers mght the restrictions necessary under sucii a course as an interference w.th their Individual liberty. To that ob- gcvflvn the reply Is that all benc- Ioen acts emanat from govern- In? I dies, having t. e general wel- fare as their object. cause restrc- tlons of one kind or another. bu that the benefits of such acts accrue to the peo Ie as a whole, Including most If no all of those whose liber- ties are curtailed. A course such u the above. so for at least. u Canada Is wou d be ble nly u latid. for e Inmgllnary Ines teparate th vinces 0f the Dominion could be crossed and recrossed at will. much on the bootleg principle so preval- ent those days. Just. as with four ratwhituz It has been proved that__proflt5 lle onlv_ In being FROM “LOCKSLEY IIALL: SlX'1\ YEABS AFTER” . - . All In White Italian marbe. looking still u If she Smllfidt Lin my and; dead In child-birth. dead e Deld- and sixty ears ago. and , dead her axed usband now — I this old white-headed drcmncr grouped and kissed her marble ro Gone pi fires of youth‘ thewfpglfes. a tea, urges, pm ona u: Gone like c and earthquakes of the planets dawning years. Mm that moot: me once. but now to silent ashes faren away. gleam of dylnl dnv- . OoId tipgn the and vo'cano sleeve . _ Jlvnnyao mot-her. dead me ‘ | THE SOLDIERS’ vans l, .at . no mp new; apers o that ca ls tor mg. for the as news items the scrlntons of all write winner-e Pcrtvin. om" of tit- readcrs vtho s-n (‘HIIZP m buzh grade -\._!0. k will favour n: tvxtlt an 82:92"!- FKPIL cl .11."): opnilon of Etc above pa . I am Sir, etc. II. K. S. HFJDIING Hard T0 Swallow (Hamilton Spectator) The resut. of the inquiry at St. "f1icnia.s_ as very mucn what mo_t, IQF-Dle In 011' .0 expected n to be. t mutt-et- Justdicu tne extravasant yllfl-lues of Premier Hcpaurti QJGUI a ‘violent d sturoance‘ at me R_C.A,F_ framing scltcol. ‘nor did It vindicate the blanket dental of tbcee charges by Hon. Ivonnan Rogers, the My“- ter of National Defence. And H! 5111i? 0t the storm of indig- nation tnat nas ‘ah-n on Premier Hc-pbtlrn, t. nugnt be . uggasLed that this tnciceut at least brovidea a pretty good illustration of the sort. cf mung that. Ls worrying the voters; simply that. suppot-Lers of Mr. King are ruvlnlgha senselessly roseate pic- ture to, e pubzc of the training and equipment of our armed forces, and ma: Iusopponents we burning up the hu tings with spectacular charges that catinot-cc-rtainlv in 50 ar as tne DLIDIIC platform Ls, con- cerned — be property anstvfl-flp P“- 1111mm! was the Dace for um. But m’? lament it now? he snap [IISSOIIIIIOII of the Com- mons invited the turmoil that Is lODU€d by such charges as that of bu". Henburn. Mr. Katgs suppcrtets can eaae IL in only one way. They should be quire frank about the de- flClfllCl-QS in our KXIIIIIAFY establish- lIICnh-Whlch are common know- ledge-whett war broke out. and having made atlmLssions of short- comings, they can put an intelligent Icture before the voters of what I185 en done, and what will be done, to patch up me gaps. Thev can be at east as frank as Colonel Ralston. who made a speech the other n1 ht whit-h was an adnrssfon In e ect that, in the words. of the Ottawa Journal, "far from hIIVIXIL’ zone over- seas ‘fully equipped‘ the Fin-t Can- adian Division lacked motor trans- port, lacked Bren gun carriers, lack- ed completed neld ambulances. lack- ed the most modern artillery, lacked the latest machlnegun. lacked anti- tankgnfles and anti-tank guns, lack- ed wireless equipment." The thought is emphasized bv this f the‘ world make a practice of inclutllngi names and de-j t citardiang i l Th 1v I10 I MARCH 19,1940 m ’ MAX FACTOWS l SOVIET Y fhnL-h 1f “e have ju t received from HUAJVNKLG a lu.I shipment Inn Intro. beauty a-us. M Included In the h‘ DIE hhlfl ILIBDI-S as s lvmfln Jlax Factor skin and Tis t; Iulflll lhax Factor (Jrram. ma» ractnr Llc-ansfn; Imam 4.2a racwr fllwull’ I-nunu, llvll clean: m tnree snatm . bamial — Rachehu _ Hem Max Factor race Powuer tn the Avhhwlll‘ SflBhC§—.\3l\ll'fl| hlC-afillr, unuueue, out-e and’ bum r Tan. Mu rauor Rouge and max l-acior Lrpsncll. MACS BLOOD FOOD The hull §flfllll Ton“; A comb-nation especially “in. able u: the treatment of Inns; msea es wuere lnur origin t; tracealm: to an impoverished fllnllllltln of Inc blood. These Pills are used exten- sively u a general tonic, “,4 Improve the appetite and 1m. part strength and who to the - whole system, PRILE PER BOX 50 CENTs, l MACS turnover) CONDITION POWDER FOR HORSES lllllllllelgieislgilillg‘ IIPAJOIZACGI-II Till: _rn: 2 mnc adv/ye}? firs? the wlgdsor Star: " e rmans ‘ - “Patti.” Emil}. m‘ 98°- e 0 0 i. 1 . 111g wIII be {DQ511630 u mm atnan people realize are anxious t0 zet 0n Wll-h the war of todav and never mind won‘. about water that 1s under the brI ." e nadla 5°11?) sucltle u] e doume i,“ ' se cons more palatable. m l, -'u'u'u'n"u"tfln'nl'lti5'n'd'ln"in'n'n'ln \f\'o'fa'u\n'fi‘d'fn'ul'd'u'n'n'u'-'u'h'n'n'u'u'u'fu"n'v'n'u'n'd'n'-'n'u'n'n'b'l|'l-'q'l' out signalling. t“ In: long in the land. . Keep to lllc right. _-| Sign f‘ mnfors munity. to Canada. The Oldest Insurance Agency In Offices: . . Charlottetown - u‘ JBHENF-HHHV-‘l-‘i- For Vitalitu always use BRAHMIN ORANG non I0. TIIOL‘ SIIALT NOT OVER-DRIVE sldet- rondvvty, traffic, light, weather, your eyesight. Your Insurance Requirements Are Our Interest HYNDMAN & 00., Limited I TE AITEIITION AIITOISTS TEN COMMANDMENTS GOOD DRIVING l. Thou shalt not neglect brakes, tires, steering, llghll. ‘I 2. Thou shalt not pass on curve-or hill. 3. Thou Shall not lum right, turn left, slow down or I'm! with- OF Ilnnnr all traffit» signs, officers and rules-that thy days may .'|‘ht>u shalt nnl kill. Watch for pedestrians, cyclists, vehicles. Drive so you can stop In the space you can we clear plund- lwholhcr It's I feet, 40 feel. or 400 (up) R. Thuu shall not gamble your life (m other people being sensible. and nu automobiles being perfect. _ Work for safe traffic. and every measure that will make Eire flit- ulmost in service and In safety to our com- YOUII EYESIGHT. Con. Prince Edward Island erslde - M with whom I have discussed the a-‘ regard ' SOME any sultsfituie reliable PEITPLE WILL SWALLOW ANYTHING BllT YOU DON’T NEED TO STRETCH THE TRUTH ABOUT our “Twist". The thousands who use it would not accept for the olt’ HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING MANUFACTURED BY IIIGKEY El NIIIIIIILSIIN TOBACCO CO, LTD CHARLOTTETOWN 10c Per Fig