‘ PAGE FOUR z-f TIIE IIIIIIIILIITTETIIWII GUARDIAN llorning Daily ‘(Founded In I081) Antho“ ’ u Second Clue Mail. Poet 08100 Department. Ottawa. Prenident. [an A. Barnett; Vice-President». Wns. It Burnett; Seep-Tron. G. M. Burnett; Editor use Managing Director, .l. l1. Burnett; Annotate Edison Funk Walker. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than tho Wsakeet Ink.” Fic-inlifflsisrraiimm 11-1941 Mr. llsloy’s Visit Regardless of politics, our citizens will ‘ex- tend a cordial welcome today to a distlrlglllil" rd senior member of the Dominion Cabinet, the Rt. Hon. J. L. llsley, Minister of Justice. H! will be better known and remembered as Can- ada's wartime Minister of Finance. . Mr. llsley is the gentleman who, during the war, piled an the taxes in such staggering pra- portions. As Minister responsible for the Prices Board and the Government's general anti-infla- tion policy, he was the man behind many other irieasures which aroused complaint even ltflm his own party supporters. He it was who regu- lated almost every form of our economic war- time activity, and‘ probably sat through more criticism of his policies thcin any other Minister- Today, however, Mr. llsleys great service to the country during the war years is recognized bY all parties. If he is no longer, PIOWIWIIIY mentioned as Prime Minister Kings likely suc- cessor, that may very well be because he has no ambitions in that direction. Mr. llsley is a native of Somerseb N. S., where his father's farm overlooked the great apple orchards of the Annapolis Valley. He is- of course—a lawyer, and achieved early suc- cess in his profession before entering the King Government in I935 as Ministe_r_of Natlflflfll Revenue. He became Finance Minister in July, I940. A strong party man, Mr. llsley is conceded to be conscientious in his convictions. Conserva- tives have not forgotten that in I932, he alone of all the Liberal Opposition voted with the Bennett Government for approval of the Em- pire trade agreement negotiated at the Ottawa Imperial Conference. The pgreement meant a lat, of course, to Mr. llsleys constituency; but one feels that he would have voted that way in any case. Politics may have brought Mr. llsley hefe on this occasion, but Islanders generally will welcome him for his own sake, and will hope that his visit, though brief, will prove a pleas- ant one. A Conservative? Speaking amid the scenes of his boyhood at Waterloo, Ont., the other day, PHI“! Mm" ister King gave his audience his mellowest re- flections gleaned from a long public career. "ln a closing word," he said, "let me warn you to beware of change just for the sake of change; or what, in national affairs, is even more dangerous, against. accepting at its face value any untried Utopia, or any procllqimed panacea for social ills, real or imaginary. This statement draws the following com- ment from the Ottawa Journal: "Not there the Mr. King we all remem- ber; the action-happy radical who, in the days of his first rapture, used to thunder for reform. Only now the elder stutesmamtaught by the years that change is riot necessarily pro- gress, anrl that there are things in life which wisdom tells us to conserve. Mr. King, ending his public career, has become a good conserva- tive." Huge Expenditure According to o Wellington despatch to the Ad-elaide (Australia) Advertiser, social security measures are now casting New Zealanders near- ly $l00 a head. Biggest expenditure items are family benefits ($2 a week for children under I6) costing nearly $50,000,000, old use boost-u ($8 a week) costing $46,000,000 a year, dlrtl medical and hospital benefits, totalling $25,- 000,000. This, for a country of l,75o._0°° P°P"lP' tian, is equivalent of a social security expendit- ure by Canada of $l,2°°,°°°.900- will" ‘l means is that in order to maintain such o_n elab- orate and costly social services organization the New Zealand Government needs to maintain production and employment at a peak. Whether the New Zealand Government (a frankly Socialist Government that has held of- fice for I2 years) can contrive to do this re- maiiis to be seen. lts efforts, and what comes of them, will certainly be watch-ed with interest. From Tho First The Eighth International Exhibition of Film Art, which opens at Venice this month, will pre- sent an unusual "pre-history" of motion pic- tures, going back as far as the sixteenth cen- tury. The display will be‘ sponsored by the Cinemathsque Francoise, with the co-operation "musical shadows." animated puppets, Punch and Judy shows, French and Russians. A special hall will be se given to the Russian Alexeiff’s "Night on Bald Mountain." .-. EDITORIAL NOTES — this evening. i fl i i Justice Minister llsley is going to have the nominations at York-Sunbury tomorrow. i A ‘I W deprivation of much needed rations for the brave people of Britain and elsewhere. Selfish- ness is at the bottom of the trouble. i "k k i‘ Eastern Kings excelled itself in its Exhibition on Wednesday for which they are to be con- gratulated. The County has always been a ban- ner agricultural community ond is living up to its reputation. e si n It is an ill-wind blows nobody good. The hold-up on farm livestock for canners should benefit the trade of chicken raisers and fishermen with retail stores and consumers gen- erally. I I i i Wild ducks, geese and sand cranes are so abundant in certain parts of Saskatchewan, es- pecially in the vicinity of Lost Mountain, that farmers reporbextensive damage to crops. The game commission hasconsequently issued per- ‘IIIIIS to farmers wishing to take protective measures against the birds. A permit will also allow a farmer to obtain the services of other parties to help him in his campyaign. Happy hunters—unhoppy farmers! I A‘ i 7 I Women nurses had better look to their lauiels if they want to continue in the forefront of a profession supposed to be almost exclusive- ly theirs. Four men, Army Medical Corps veterans, are enrolled in the MountSinai HospitalNursing School class, Chicago, the first male nursing stu- dents ever. admitted to a major Chicago Hos- pital. Thirty women are in the class. Miss Giadys Sandbig, director of the school, said acceptance of male students was taken at the request of Veterans’ Administration officials. They said many veterans had desired to con- tinue the work they learned in service. 1' R 1' fi The Earl of Oxford and Asquith, British Prime Minister, born this date I852. Was u brilliant lawyer, coming into special prominence during the Parnell Commission; entered House of Commons as a Liberal in I886, and six years later moved the resolution which brought about the fall of the Salisbury Government; became Prime Minister in I908, remaining in power until I9l6, when a cabinet conspiracy led by Lloyd George resulted in his resignation and substi- tllliqn by Lloyd George.- He was more phil- osopher than politician and most deliberate in all his actions. His most famous reply to mem- bers asking questions in the House was "Wait and slee." He coined the phrase to "plough the sands as descriptive of the barren policy of hi; °PP_°"9"I§; 0nd "a pretty hypothesis which ex- plains many things" i.e. a proposition assumed merely for the sake of argument, I i’ i‘ Here is something which Prohibition asth- mutrcs and high blood pressuritos should ap- preciate: Successful treatment of some c0535 of high blood pressure and chronic asthma by injecting alcohol into nerve cells alongside the FPIIIE is reported by Dr. Lawrence V. Lindroth of Christ Hospital, Jersey Citv, N.J., in the Am. erican Journal of Surgcry. The alcohol blocks, or interrupts the nervc impulses of some of the sympathetic nerves. The blood pressure drap- ped and bad effects fsom liigh blood pressure such as dizziness, headaches and nausea dis- appeared, Dr. Lindroth said. He added that the ir.jections apparently produced permanent rath- er than temporary relief. T_he alcohol does not" produce intoxication or any other effect on the patient's body. lt destroys certain cells, called ganglion cells, which renew or repair the nerves. This destruction prevents regeneration of the nerves, he explained. This alcohol injection method, he said, is simpler and less drastic than surgery. I‘ i i‘ f Socialization is beginning to show its ef- fects in increasing cost of living. Family Al- lowances, which were originally intended to pro- vide extra benefits for the children receiving them, are in actual fact eaten up by the rising of the Museum of Modern Art of New ‘York City, and the cineteca of Milan. Great Britain, Bel- gium, Czecho-Slovakia, Denmark and Poland are also contributing original materials and documents, which together will illustrate techni- cal developments in the motion picture field from the earliest known experiments with magic lanterns to the latest animated cartoons. The exhibit will start with displays of six- teenth century optical apparatus and the earl- lest experiments in dark rooms and the theory of light. The eighteenth century is represented by optical plates, "metaphysical” games, and the Magic Lantern of the King of Rome. Among the forgotten picture entertain- ment devlcos of the early nineteenth century are typos of "magic lanterns" known as trauma- tropes, strelioscopos, zootropss, Irinmscopss, were instituted, says Miss Garvock. to figures issued by the Welfare Council, Tor- onto, the cost of living for on average family of five, numbering three children of six, ten, and I2 years of age, has increased $4.26 week- ly. Additional income gained by government al- lowances to the three children is about $415 weekly. weekly expenditure for necessities, which cuts further into the family budget and absorbs the total amount of the family allowance, cast of living, according to Miss Nan Garvock, dietitian in charge of the Montreal Diet-Dis- pensa y, a Red Feather service of Welfare Fed- eration. Instead of paying for "extras" in food, clothing, and education, the additional income does not cover the some basic necessities which were 'provided by parents before the allowancs According There is still an II cent gap in the Miss ._ fir!!! resists, nineteenth century also specialized in "optical jests," puppets, shadow theatres, rouloscopes and Through magic lanterns, shadow theatres, the exh bit will lead down through the centuries to the latest animated cartoons of the Americans, aside for lectures, with practical illustrations, of the techniques of animated drawing for films. Place of honor in the field of cartoons will be the According to an announcement in this issue' an important forestry meeting is to be held in the agricultural hall at the Experimental Farm No farmer will condone the action of the 995-" "sseiied Mllmm“ Packers and their Unions in bringing about the, possible endangering of farm livestock, and roach... Isggnnjl, ’l‘hay are n cggfgg- llotes By The thy called a, week-end. front end. —Windsor Star. mans aren't strong they fight. -Edmont.an Journal. A columnist says that toothache yo dream an Iklle cured by gglelerfuil thoughts. Egg? T: ‘yglcrjgengioplfidgjjfbegj; Above his pipe in blue tobaooo e ave success y rsen above ' . ‘ haze, the taothodies of many of our ffigsfiangyotggfmfiff dgggltlgglrfcrg?’ Ta hear again tlhe Roaring Fortioe friends by this method. -Peter- able w this terrible. curse o‘, scream ' borough Examiner. drink And bellied canvas spanking In the l Well. It was about time. Down as Craig slapped fines of $5 each on two d ‘ wedding guests. charged with un- busy week-end-addressing two meetings herelnecessary noise by loud and con- today, and then flying to Moncton en route for‘ glgwilg; gfgllengstéitsqgrgfiktlnléuzg lbe a nuisance," declared Crown Chatham, Magistrate I. B. {Attorney Bell. "It must be stop- rlnd It," was the comment of 'eous trio. Let us hope they gen re- ‘ suits from their campaign and that gthelr example ls copied elsewhere. l --Owen sound Sun-Times. j In Washington The Associated iPress has figured out it. will take I343 years for the present surplus to - y-ay off the national debt. What the United States will be at. that dis- tant future. we do not predict, af- ‘ter reflecting on what it was 343 years ago, or ln 1604. On that date git consisted of 500.000 Indians, a jSpflHlSh hamlet at St. Augustine = (sub-dlvlslon llnes were being laid out at Santa Fe), the London Com- pany for South Virginia, and live- yyear-old John Alden who was just Jearrilng to speak. Also a young ‘spruce which was the great, great, great-grandfather of the spruce which produced the paper on which The Associated Press figured It, will take another 343 years to pay the debt-St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The nlme “Pakistan? In artific- ial verbal compound, sold to have been invented by is Moslom Indian student in Cambridge, ls unknown to Indian history and was not cur- rent in Indian politics until a few years ago. It ls not a name which in itself can stir patriotic emotions or evoke mental images of pass glory and greatness. But what it really embodies for the zealots of the Moslem League is nothing else than the old Magus empire, the great monarchy which for a while did rule nearly all India and, long after it had ceased to have any real power, retained such prestige that even in the second quarter of the nineteenth century the princes sought. honors from the “Kiri! 0i Delhl" rather than from the Brit- lsh Governor-General. — London Economist. For several years housewives have been protesting against the sale of peaches under red netting known to the trade as "leno." This year we see that a great many growers are covering their fruit with white rel- lopbane, which protects the peaches but does not alter their color. This ls a modest victory for" the housewife. Peaches are some- times put on the market so green that they rot, before they ripen, and are a total loss to the purchaser. Iri these day's of high living costs B woman whose job 1t is to teed her family as well as possible on a limited sum cannot afford to buy any fruit which is unfit, for use. she ivants to be able to see exactly what she ls buying. and to he: a deceptive vcll of "lono" is like is red rag to a bull. - Peterbarougll Examiner. About a year ago, when he was still chairman of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Donald Gordon ifssiired a delegation of Canadian hoiiscivlves that. the re- moving of the ban on ready-sliced bread has been “seriously consider- od" hy the Board. Apparently the consideration givers was not. ser- lous enough. At any rate, the con- venient inerahaiidlslng of the Staff of Life ls still not permitted, al- thouizh they say this is n free country. Are the housewives to deduce that the manufacturers of bread-knives have conducted o. quiet but. entirely successful lobby In Ottawa? Or are some other "interests" being served? Is the idea, in conservation of labor? (In that case. doesn't the hausewlfeb bread- carvlng chore count. for anything?) Or ls it simply another case in which the Red Tape Boys are so fancied in their own meshes. or so reluctant to surrender a bit, of aa- iharlty. that they have deferred the action Mr. Gordon contemplated?- Brontford Expositor. Our Enrrlish Inns have not, I am glad to say, attained that level of mechanized proficiency which the hotel Industry in the United States has standardized and spread. Ev- cry American is trained from child- hood to become a, health-fuse: no nation In the world ls so microbe- consclous; with the result that, their hotels suggest, not cleanliness mere- ly, but actual sterilization. The waiters in their white costs convey the impression of being hospital attendants; the waitresses suggest that they are put away for the night in envelopes of cellophane; the clinical atmosphere ls so por- vaslve that n major surgical op- eration appears imminent. Desper- ately do they seek to counter-ct, this institutional affect by the do- ilberate exploitation of the personal and the intimate. The officer on duty at the reception desk has his name and initials displayed In front, of him on a nest little board: one’; own name ll repeated with weerliiome iteration; sad the tele- phone opei-stor will soothe one We've often wondered why a holiday extending from Saturday afternoon to Tuesday morning I3 and now we t think we have ll. It's the week's The crux of the German prob- lem appears to be that if the Ger- can't work, and when they're strong en- -ough to work they always start a v Craig. "I'll bring In the grain and you riii-z ciiAiunrTbTowN GUARDIAN ' PUBLIC FORUM Tish eolnma in ripen to Mo dleenlalal by corro- epondarita of gneaslom nl interest». The Charlottetown Guardian doea not neoeir .crease In drinking, paper, magazine ‘and radio adver- isttractlve and harmless. However, peiihaps there ls some- thing we can do after all. I, for one, om going to the big Feder- ation Rally at Charlottetown on Tuesday. Sept. 18th; to show by my presence that, I am ready and willing to help. Hope many oth- ers will be there foo. I ism, Slr, etc, JUST A MOTHER. Bedeque, P. E. I. British Had Many Schemes For Palestine (United Kingdom Information Office) In connection with the report of the United Nations’ special cctri- mlttee on Palestine, with its maj- ority recommendation of pflrtition and minority advocacy of federal- ism, it may be recalled as is matter of purely historical interest that. the three alternative types of in- dependence for Palesdnc, partition, federalism, ii unified Palestine State. have eaeh been put. forward in one form’ or another (federal- ism in the form of prOVLIICIBI auto- nomy) by successive United King- dom Governments, cn-Iy to be laid aside in the face of intense oppos- ition from the Arabs or Jew: or both ._ laid aside because lt. was realized that none of these solu- tlong could be effectively intro- duced except by the use of force. to which the United Kingdom Government as the Mandatory were not, empowered, much less inclin- ed, to resort. Partition was recommended by the Royal Commission appointed, August 1036, uvfiich submitted its report. in June 1W7. The commission wrote: "ManI- festly the problem cannot be solv- ed by giving Git-her Arabs or Jews all they Willi. But while neither race can justly rule all Palestine, we see no reason why, lf it were practicable, each race should not rule part of it." The Pee] Commission proposed roughly that North and West Pal- estlne should rai-m an lndependrnt Jewish state and that: South rind East. Palestine should be united to Tkansjordan. Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nnrazeth, as holy places, would remain under British Mandate. The United Kingdom Govern- ment, In a statement issued sim- ultaneously with the Pecl rrport, announced its view l-lifli, a sChflme of partition on the general lines recommended by the Peel commis- slon represented the best and most, hopeful solution o1 the deadlock. 'I‘-‘.'ie Peel report was examined by the League ‘of Nations Mand- ate Commission. which advised em- powering the United Kingdom Government to explore the possi- bilities of partition. 1n due course the league Council authorized the mandatory power to prepare a do- talled plan. The United Kingdxn Govern- ment. nocordinfl’. in February 193B. sent a technical commission to Palestine uncle-r’ 1.1m chairman-I ship of Sir John Woodhcad. On the bails r-f the ll/oodhcisd report, the United Kingdom Gov- ernment decided that partition was impracticable. It should be nddzd that the par- titlon plan had that. with uiiccm- promising hostlity on the part. of the Palestine Arabs. In the White Pilpel‘ of 1930 the United Kingdom Gcvci-nmcnt tuxri- ed lo the solution oi’ a unif ed Inde- pendent Palestine state, to be es- lablislied ‘Wllllln ten years. It. was the Government's intention to seek the approval of the League Council for this pc-llcy. when the war inter- vened. Meanwhile thls policy tied been condemned by all Zionist op- inion. Since the end of the war the United Kingdom Government has made three more attempts to find l solution. The first was by obtaining the 387691119X"- of the U.S.A. to the ap- pointment. of the Anglo-Amarlcan committee of enquiry which re- ported in April 1046. The committee rejected partition lnd recommended s continuance of the mandate ending the execu- tion o1 a u ste sh p but. was able to go no further tour-do defining what might be the ultimate form of independence for Palestine than the eriunclstlon of two negative ' Ins, "The Jew shall not, dom- lnatrthe Arab and the Arab shall not dominate the Jew" and “Pel- estine shell be nelt-her a Jewish state nor an Arab state". Next. the United Kingdom Gov- ernment put, forward st the en of July. 1N0. the so-called "Mor- rison plan" for provincial auton- omy, with a central government, administered by the British High Commissioner, exercising exclu- sive sulhoflty in defence, foreign relation; and cllltioml. This sub-federal solution was rs- jeotea by the Arabs and the Jews. Thirdly and lastly, the United with the brisk friendliness OI h 1 trained nurse. 1- Harold liaison‘ I 1006i fioohtQ ._ l-I “IS s) I11 endorao the opinion of OLD ‘Ann. ‘°'"'P°“d""" ' No port ls striimger to his wea- v ‘manners-aw meted ‘we A. f. Who even now remembers days of LIQUOR CONDITIONS 5311i ___ The wars and yea/re lone down, the Sin-Like many other mothersl time "14 P18“ In this Province, I view with ever A“ blurred “d ‘Pmned Wm‘ N’ mounting dismay, the terrible in-' especially But now he seldom speaks, content As mothers we feel‘so helpless, so little we can do to save our children when by outside news- ‘ He keeps a battered box of “m” tlsinz. drink ls made to seem so‘ with mm Peel as chalnmen. nil jleavlng Ulgg school attended the ,Cent.ra1 Academy in Charlottetown ii i; g, magm- g1 ram-d ma; mp Liberal officials hastened to Otta- wis and returned with Reconstruc- tion Minister C. D. Howe. The lat- ter set, many minds at rest-in- cluding that of Mr. Poullot-by denouncing socialism in every way. shape and farm and re-rislslrig the standard of free enterprise. -peated tale. stays. lAnd trinkets sacred ainlly to his ' eyes: Strange cola-is, postcards. a faded TOSC. :A shell: such paltry loot s. boy would prize. But in these shabby treasured sou- venlrs Is fire enough to wsrim his thin- lng years. ‘ —I‘rederlck Ebright, in New York Times. ‘ax.-i- ~ -- —--—-—— iOld Charlottetown (And IKIJ.) MILLS AND MILLER-S About 1830 Donald Mcholsar. er- ected the first grist mill on the Orwell river, near hie dwelling house. about three or four hundred lords above the present bridge. It. was built by William Harris, a skilled millwrlght, from Devon, Eng- land. who later married the mlll- cr's daughter. A dwelling for the assistant miller was also built near- by. Today there ls nothing to mark this scene of early activity’ but. the scarred hillside and the re- mains of the dam built to Impound the waters. This grist mill was op- erated by Mr. Nicholson, for many years. and for a few years by his son Peter, commonly called “P31,- rlck stenscholl" by his Highland neighbors. from the locality in skye where the family originated. Peter leased the mlll b0 various tenants until it was finally abandoned. William Glllls, aged 83, now 11v. fng at, Orwell bridge. wocked In the mlll as a young man with Mr. Mec- lean. a tenant. He recalls that, llarge quantities of oatmeal were ground there at. that time. The fliime was wide enough to permit. vehicles to cross, and for some years it was used as the first pub- llc highway across omen rivet. Later, about 1840, a new bridge was built a few hundred yards farther down stream at. the silo of the present Orwell bridge. A half mile above this mill was a saw-mlll built and operated by George Gay from Lot 49, called by the Highland people "Galeissh Cam" who had taken up the ad- joining farm before 1829. His son, John Gay, afterwards occupied the form and sold lt to John Matcher. who married Caroline, sister of James "Yankee" Hayden of Ver- non River. He, about 1840 or 1845, built a grist mlll is few hundred yards farther up mlll subsequently passed into tho possession of John F‘. MiscLeod of Stnsthalbym. brother of D. J, Mac- Leod, Superintendent of Education, who added a saw mlll and operat- ed it untl] a few years before hie death in 1915, at seventy years of Bgfl. A son of John Fletcher, nsmed James H. Fletcher, whose wife was Miss Moor from New Perth. after about 1868. In 1869 he was editor of the "Island Argus." From Chis:- lottctown he moved to Pierre, South Dakota, of which state he was Lieutenant Governor from 1889 to 1891. Owing to economic phanges. and the deaths of the various owners. the lower mills had been abandon- ed and the dams swept. away. leav- ing ln operation only the mlll hlgli- est up the stream. This continued until about. 1910. when It,’ too, was abandoned and finally swept away by spring floods. Some of the stones of the Nichol- zion mll1 were donated by the own- er. Peter Nicholson. for use in the imposing Roman Catholic church then being built, in Vernon Rivet. This exhibition of Christian broth- erhood on the part bf is neighbor outside the pale of his church was is source of great satisfaction to the worthy parish priest, Father James Phalen. —From Macqueenb "Skye Plon- eers and ‘The Islisndk" (1921).) foregoing plan, providing for a five-year British trusteeehlp war Palestine, at the end of which Palestine would become a urilflod, independent state. The rejection of this by the Arabs and Jews decided the Un- liod Klnzdom Government to re- fer the problem to the United Nd- tlons. J This iunlmlu of the record of the United lclriirdom Government's efforts to solve the Palestine prob- lem shows that every likely oom- bfnailon has been given its chance. There would appen- ID be no panacea discoverable. Cert-sin- 1y the mejorlty and minority pro- posals of the UN Committee are both vnrlailonl on well-worn themes. ‘Iihe Unit-ed Nations, In approach- ing the problem, enjoy advantages however. that ‘were denied the Un- lied Kingdom Government. The milieu Kingdom Government strove alone for 2d years. vnlth their in tied by the irreconcilable condi- tlons prescribed _ln the Mandate. but the United Notions have or, Kingdom Government submitted by the Anglo-Arab Conference .of ' Islsnsy DH, e sum d tel their disposal the resources of av so countries. and they‘ meats for which he didn't care particularly had been that where- ously on national and international affairs, while responsible cabinet ministers stood silently by. Parliament's stormy petrol demand- stream. This ed of It and said so. Just what Mr. Poullot thought of it. was made plalri to the conference, party and Government when he spoke his mind bluntly at is meeting of Ham- ilton's 20th Century Liberal Club. The political view; of youtig Li- erisls were being subverted before their very eyes. he declared. on. is a, matter of speculation. But Poullot, beismed. a splendid speech. And the young people were very nice and very promising." tors. And there's no time present for suing that your coal bin is filled, ready for the first chill don't wait. We are unloading cars of both Hard and Soft Cool. O§C Wanted Until further notice we are buying Live Fowl daily except Saturdays at our plant on Longwortli Avenue. Prompt Returns Th Royal Packing (to. J. o. JENKINS (Prop-l Pouliol Blasts Bureaucrlls (Monti-ea! Gazette) Quebec's inimitable Jenn Fran-y cols Poullol, who hiss never been known to speak a kind word for bureaucrats or social planners, re- turned yesterday from the nation- al conference of the Young Lib- ei-sl Federation st Hamilton well pleased with the result of his un- rehoarsed and unexpected crusade against the "socialist" instructors whom he claimed to have found at the convention. ‘ The stocky. zealous Temiecouata M.P. was as cheerful when he caught the train for home recently as if he had snatched a headline from a cabinet minister or thrown the Liberal ranks Into is turmoil- both of which he had, ln fact, accomplished. From his own account: of the event, Mr. Poullof would seem to have been something of an unex- pected visitor at the meeting; de- elsmd to educate future Laurlers Ir. the Liberal doctrine. l-Ie decided to g0 on the spur of the moment. but from the moment of his ar- rival, he plunged into the series of lectures with all of the enthusiasm of a delegate. The thing that troubled him, Mr. Poullot recalled, wise that most of the instructors at. the confer- ence talked an incomprehensible jargon which he had previously associated only with confirmed so- cialists. Most, of these instructors. he said, were "college professors and bureaucrats." The latter is Poullotese for civil servants. "My suspicions were continued later when one of these professors admitted to me that he was a gen- uine socialist." the Temlscouista MP/tecalled with is glint in his eye. Another feature of the arrange- by "these socialists" orated copl- "What do you think of that?" We didn't know what to think What happened from that, point “It, was a fine conference." Mr. “Mr. Howe made He didn't mention the instruc- WINTEIVS AIIEAII , like the day. Order new, l. tlolisril I. 0o. SEPTEMBER 12 j, l 35 Barristers, etc. i, Collectlonl. - Money to 14m g 90 Great George Sh”; q Charlottetown lloaeyioLaaa. J. A. McGUlGAN, ILA. Illl. W. R. CAIISU In Prince 8t. NOTARY Ion! Bunk of Canndd Cliamlw H. F. McPHEE, B.A., K.C. ooo-o-oooooo-ooooooowoq44 “ouch” e400 0004 9°‘ '” l I l; Ihrilers. sown-r. urn-rig causes PFDIBSSIuIIBI cm '0 ii. n. bonus Chartered Accofinlhg-j, II Grlfton Stress ' Ch: l new Phone mo’ o "B" ' landolph W. Mlllnlng c? PUBLIC STENOGRAP Illllmrrlohlng ma. u... cljél veneers program cununum Wins and bookkeepln ' IIILEN GIDDI-JN ' Tdilillone 1890.; ‘P'- No. l. (‘onriaughg ‘ Pornul Street 5P1: Y4¥YP6 l NEIL w. HIGGINS Chartered Accountqnj Currie Building Charlottetown Tel. I636 P_Q_ 30,, 452 '\€\¢\. o. €"‘<4\I ' ‘ ” “ ‘Nkmzx MORRELL and courxn, Uhlrterea Aachen...“ Intern Trees Balldln; PIIIIIIQ I007 - Bu; g“ CIIIIIOQIGMI"; l. u srArse, on Resident Ins-m" s-sm <Q-.,. . MATHESON and ram l-‘W- MATHESON, 1Q A- H. PEAKE, B,A_, u“! ‘D30 JOSEPH R. MacMlLLAN, LL_| Barrister, Solicitor, Er; 75 Queen Street PHONE 776 Money to Loan - Collection DI. 0.8. NORDLAND Veterinary Surgeon Mount Edward Rosa Charlottetown, P.E.L Phone B04 A. Vlalthen liauilet, LLB, Barrister, Solicitor, m. Phillipa Building I11 Grafton 5t. (‘.0 . ... 0000000000000 CHARLES R. McQUAID B-A. nan-um, SOIIBINI, Notary, Ito. Intern Trnss Building, Charlottetown Phone 1711 o0o4&§-ROOQ09§04+004 NOTARY, ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOII CURRIE BUILDING ______________ M. ALBAN FARMER ' an. LLB. nsoivriv T0 LOAN ssiinsiisrsn. SOLICITOR, isro. PALMER 8. HASLAM- A. J. IIABLAM, B.A.. LLB. ' BABRISTER. ETC. Bonk of Nova Scotia Chninlien Charlottetown, P.E.I. MONEY TO LOAN BELL 8. MATHIESON Barristers. Solicitors, ha. B. B. BELL. M.I,.A.. D. L MATHIESON, I.L.B.. n.0, Attorneys-lt-Law LOAN! 0N CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES I50 Richmond St. Charlottetown. P.E.l. Chiropractor Psirner Graduate (Hlrlotteiown Phone I FIBILIIB A. Large. K.C. BA IZRISTIIR. SOLICITOR. Charlottetown. P.E.1. Successor so - George J. Tweedy. K.C. _ NOTARY. ITO. BABIISTER. BOLICITOII I Charla i- EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. 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