have eflects in general legislation and ‘be-J kou- v-~-- livaaldanb-W libutn a. ass-IF" Invent] -L\rul (at u ldlaoo Ill flanges-d. It llavlfll sue oa- nu u» advance) mm- ‘gug. hall; (hauled M81) ll-dln a n" rvoalnou- » I llunsvls blrwltlnnnal ls a 0 \annrnls K\I|ll|r—~ll la I'll-run ll balsa us. Untied asaaaa p. you lln surname) lellvosaa MONDAY. APRIL 7. 1930 More Double Dealing The school teachers and others in- terested who helped to get increases in salary, if and when, the additional subsidy is obtained from Ottawa, will be sadly disillusioned as the result of the discussion on the proposed plebis- elte. 1t now appears that the Govern- ment is very doubtful, indeed about getting any additional subsidy next year, so that the teaches-s case is not likely to be considered until after the proposed plebiscite. which is not to take place until 1931 when the Saunders Government must, perforce, go to the country. Shouid the King Government in the meantime, in a spasm of unwonted generosity, grant our claims, either in part or in whole. the teachers are not barred from participation. But the indications are that an unspeci- fied referendum will have to be the decisive weapon. This new de- parture strikes at the root oi rep- resentative government; it relieves the Administration oi responsibility, and throws it on the shoulders of the people generally who may, or may not. be fully cognizant oi all the es- sential facts in the case. The Saund- ers Government has not only "double crossed" the teaching profession, but has made a precedent which may administration never anticipated or intended. The first effects is to pro- long indefinitely the teachers’ "hope deferred.‘ l Preferred Prisons --__._. Canada is to have two new pris- ons. One is to be in the neighborhood oi Kingston’ 0nt., the other at St. Vincent de Paul. Que. There is a pris- on now at St. Vincent de Paul, and one at Portsmouth. a suburb 01 K1118- ston. But the new prisons are not to be extensions or new units oi the old ones, and they are not made necessary by reason of the increas- ing prison “population. The new in- stltutlons, according to an announce- ment made by General W. St. Pierre Hughes, superintendent oi ,eniten- tlaries. are to be preferred-class peni- tentiarles, and are to be models for the continent and P06510137 f0! “i! world. One oi the great problems oi law enforcement in every country is the reeldivist-the case-hardened crim- mfl who goes back to crime again md again, and is sure, sooner or lat- .'Qqgupmprisonorlce more. ggywayyoutabehiimheisalul! and a liability to the country. His crimes cost money. It costs somethinl! to protect citizens against lum- lull there are the arme- of mum“! himwhsnhaiseaught andofkeep- inghlmwhenheiseonvlcted. Under the eiroumataneeaitcannotbe wond- aredat thatu-hninolnslltshavegivan a great deal of attention to ms re- eidivist. Sometimes they have ood- dlad him and sought to reform him hminiorcslnaeveraloithastatca oithellmaricanoaiosnisansttemlvt todsalwltbthereeldivist. Itaute- matisaliyimpoaasaliie sents-ncaon trauma er mum conviction. and became oi its automatic earliest!“ and inflexibility hi! N“ "VIN! ciety‘s enemies his heroes. In the pre- ferred-typo penitentiarles which are now to be erected, there will be no recidivlsts-cnly the beginners in crime, and every effort will be made, as General Hughes‘ latest, report says, to reform and educate the young of- fender, to teach him a proper useful trade or occupation so that, on his discharge, he may be "fit to take his place in the community to lead an honest, law-abiding life, and be a profitable asset to the country instead oi a liability." The new penitentiaries are to be reformatorles, in the best meaning of the word. They are not to be schools of crime. Fur Sales The Department of Trade and Commerce at Ottawa has this to say about fur sales: ‘Towards the end oi February two auction sales were held, one in Lon- don ancl one in Copenhagen, oi par- ticular interest to fur breeders. Pric- es at the Copenhagen auction declin- ed on the average 25 per cent. writes m-ederick H. Palmer, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Oslo in the forth- coming issue oi the Commercial Intel- ligence Journal. It is reported that 15,000 pelts were sold at the more im- portant London auction, and of these between 600 to 'l00 were silver fox skins from Norway. It appears that prices in fcndcn for "extra dark ail- ver" and "medium silver" declined 1o per cent. as compared with the last auction, while prices for "dark silver" declined 30 per cent. '11! price for “light silver" declined s per cent. ‘ “The highest price realized for a Norwegian pelt was £92, but as the best Norwegian animals are being sold alive for breeding purposes, the average quality oi the Norwegian pelts otter-ed was not as high as Nor- way could supply." ____Z_____. Then and Now "Appreciating the action oi the Liberal Goverment at Ottawa in passing the Old Age Pellfilou A“ we anticipate establishing it in this Province in a manner consistent with our revenue." -Liberal pro-election platform. HON. LEIPAGE: "He (Mr. Mc- Lure) as much as said that we promised it. We promised it in this way. If our finances were sufficient to put the Old Age Pensions through we would do so, but our finances have not been increased and we are unable to do so. In fact the larger provinces, some oi them, under Government Control, have not been able to do so; so I don't think this Government can be blamed. I regret very much that we are unable to help the aged and infirm in this country because I know from experience that there are a great many aged people that need it; but I think this govern- ment have been as lenient to the old and infirm as well as any gov- ernment previous and we are spending probably new double the amount oi money that the pre- vlous government did along Ithat line. Fucing Both Ways Govt. "Over ninety per cent. of the people of the North American con- tinent are under Prohlbition."- Hon. B. W. MPIIQ. in budget de- bats. "There is Prohibition in the United Stain. at all. They can make all the liquor they can drink. as long as they don't sell it."- l-Ion. Dr. Grant, in budget debate. “The malorlty for Prohibition” (at the Plebisoite. 1m) “was not sufficiently large to make us feel very’ safe, in iact it was disappoint» O '" l" l" WN fil"fi'i. w v-y me Way, l‘ ' Ev the most effective history‘ c! the present Liberal regime in chi; province would be a collection of ex- cerpts from ‘the various speeches apologetic, explanatory and otherwise, of the members ’ c‘ the session. S-lch a collection would, no doubt, wt 8s a deterrent to future aspira- tions for political honors. The great naval powers are doubt- less making progress in the dinaction of the establishment of permanent peace in the world. Probably more progress would be nmde ii’, instead of the reduction oi armament, an ef- fort were made to reduce the inter- national jealousy and suspicion which now appear to be the great hindrance to the longed-for goal. There appears to be no concerted demand from the rural districts for further experimenting with the Mc- Intyre snovvplough. Those sections in which experiments were carried on seem to be quite satisfied that they have had enough. Now that all varieties of opinion, private, public and political, have been expressed with reference to the merits and demerits of prohibition, sincere temperance people will be in a position to arrive at definite con- clusions. Since its inception many men and women believed in its efll- cacy as a temperance measure. Years oi experience have proved that the hope wu iilusive. Notwithstanding years of repeated failure they were reluctant to abandon their faith. with what Emerson calls a “foolish consistency" they clung to the fetish to which they had pinned their faith rather than admit that they had been mistaken. Emerson's advice in this and similar circumstances is well worth noting. “Speak your honest thought today in words as hard as cannon-bails, and let , tomorrow speak what tomorrow thinks in words lust as hard, though they should contradict every thing you said today." If those who realize that prohibition has failed in every pro- vince ‘in Canada and in every other country in which it has been tried, would admit it and act accordingly, there would be some hope of arriving at a sane solution of the liquor prob- leualtisfinificanttiratinnopro- vince in which prohibition had been abandoned for Government control, no concerted action has been taken to resuscitate the former. That troublu never come singly is again illustrated in the West. Mil- lions oi dollars of crop damage in Saskatchewan will be caused this year by insects, according to a report issued by Kenneth M. King, oi the Dominion Entomological Laborator- ies. Cutworms, wire-worms, grasshop- pers and wheat-stem sawflies would be to blame it was stated. Cutworrns are expected to be unusually active and a grasshopper outbreak of at least moderate extent is looked for in southwestern Saskatchewan. Wireworms, which caused an esti- mated $3,000,000 damage last year, will again do heavy damage, espec- ially if the spring is wet, says the re- port. If July is dry, the wheat-steam sawfly will cause a loss exceedin tho $5,000,000 damage oi 1929 it is fore\ cast. More abundant than at an; time since 192i, grasshoppers may constitute a serious infestation if th. weather is dry. Cold driving rains im- mediately after hatching time or very wet weather continuously during the development period may halt the out break. "Uncle Tom," the central figure cl Harriet Beecher Stowe! famous book; which is said to have helped to pre- cipitate the American civil war, had his original in Rev. Josiah Henson. who for a time lived near Dresden Ont, a liects Elihu Stewart, of Collingwood, who saw the negr- preacher 50 years ago. "My earliest recollection of Josiah Henson is that howastheleadingmaninthencflro settlement known as, “The Institu- tion" near Dresden, which was made up almost entirely of negroes escap- ed irosn slavery," states Mr. Stewart. The narrator met Mr. Henson on board a beat near Sarnia, over half a century ago and entered intc eon- versation with him. ‘Ha strut me as being the type of negro that I saw much later in Booker T. Washington. "I asked him ii he considered that he was the landing character in In. Store's "Uncle Tina's Cabin," and What 3m oi 1 Quota By Iulnes W Burton. MD. HOME 0B HOSPITAL TREATMENT As you know ‘distant fields look green‘, and so it is with some lil~ dlviduais and their ailments. They get the idea that there something ‘diii- erent‘ about their particular ailments. and so they peas over their own phy- sician and perhaps even the specialist in their own city and g0 to a distant city ior advice. I nave in mind a chap who had in- jured his back. His physician reierred him to a specialist who adlusted a brace to hold the inlllrcd Joint in place, and yet permit the patient to walk about. Alter arriving home he took off the brace u»... a down on the floor with 1 bang, and immediately took a train to a city more than one hundred miles away. After consulting a physician there he was induced to get on the train at once, and accompanied by the phy- sician, he omvolledanother 800 miles to another oilly to consult a well known specialist. Here, much to his surprise and cha- grin, he had a brace adjusted that was exactly the same in construction and measurements as the one he had thrown down so disgustcdly in his home city. Dr. H. E. Rhodes, London, speak- ing about the European baths or spas, says that while the waters at these places cannot permanently cure high blood presume, nevertheless they are the means of getting the patient to good working order again, ‘The patient, removed from business md domestic worries, is amid fresh slu-roundlrws. and has tune for suit- able recreations and exercises, Daily aliendanoea at the bath. Ind regular visits to the physician prescribing treatment, give him the impression that something is really being done for him. and ‘thereby encourqes a hopeful outlook, oi great assistance to ,1. Patients will rnadfly as- senttodiotlnmwillretilreearlytobcd and carry out other IIImu ' uucu: SAM AND l-lslrl The aituallilfl ll the llhlid d 3% has curls to a point at vane the people oi libs Hails! Republic lava demanded naflosial oladhus. from the invfigating somatic} o! President Hoover oi the ‘Ulltsd States, ma." is new sittirq in the island. At a time when agitation is widespread in various parts-oi the British possessions and spheres of influence, it does not oenn with any degree of disquletude to learn that other great nations which have assumed control oi disturbed / areas are confronted by similar conditions. The ‘ to see the mote in the eye oi the broilher while diregarding thebearnin oneis own, has been observed more than once in the Re- public to the south. The situation in Haiti which has been occupied by United States armed iorces for a 1w: time. has its humorous aide when taken in connection with Unit- ed States press comment upon India BM other parts of the British Im- perial posseaslolzrs. The two black rlepubllm on the is- land present a problem which is far from solution. The peoples oi each have not displayed any aptitude for self-goverrnnent. Under dictators they have amumed a certain degree i advancement, but frequent revolu- tions have dwtroyed all but the act- ufll Physical traces of such advance- ment. The resentment toward out- side influence, particularly that of ‘people oi’ the white race, has been such that only by armed force has order been restored or maintained by ‘external pressure. The bayonet: of United states marines and the guns of warships evidently do mt meet, With approval oi the people of the country who are willing to take a chance on disorder under their own government, rather than order under that imposed by the United. sat... There also are indic- ations that the senltlment of many people of the United States them- selves is in favor oi withdrawal from Haiti and eessaW-n oi interference with the admlnistcration oi the country. m l THE LANl) w: LOVE n! FRANK LIIGI I rQ which they would not tolerate at home.‘ - " ' ‘Home’ treatment of tuberculous eouldbe ilicvnrlplldndln a peat- many eases if the patient were willing to follow the regulations of the sani- ta-rilmr-rest in bed until the temper- ature is normal, then daily rest mom ins and afternoon. plain hour-idling food, a little exercise beginlng with about i5 minutes daily and increasing ituptcfivehoursbythetinrethe cure is complete. Now my thought is that the trip wflwllllflr Oltltiheirriptethewater- ing place, or rest home, and the trip t0 the tuberculosis nnitarlum are a1! ‘vvoriihwhildifthey getmepatientw follow his inst. ctions faithfully, something wirich he will not do if to” or/ZZLQowzr/u THE IAEBY WOODUUTTEI 111° 1M1‘! woodcutterb green, . Grey-grew and flocked with gold, slant and slatted and Jewel-cold. 6Y6! Li‘. \ rhe iacfi‘ woodcutters tools keen; Hlsamlssurmhishandasrelean And gnarl .1 with clinging u; lichen ed limo. Hrs chLv-UIQQ ouat shrouds all or him. On an ancient bole most cuunlogly, hood, With his Druid chant in this empty And his mlllu mlnstrelsy. as? ‘ti; l“! The leery woodcutter cranes, aswar ~ . | I ii With his nimble hammer, his scarlet CANADA'S HIGHEST BEACON LIGHT Q. Where is Canada's highest beacon light? A. Canada has the highest beacon l-Bht in the Dominion and one o! the highest ln the world, reocntly erected on the roof of the Hudson Bay Store 1!! Winnipeg. Rising to a helsht of 20o feet it will be visible on a clear‘ I nlsht for over 100 miles. It will servo as liflairway beacon. The Neon light! Jlumination will represent nearly 2‘ million candle power pointing its dir-l ction to a, near by landing field! ‘his light has the power to penetrate hroush 10c. ruin and mist to a mulled dBBRe- It presages the com- lu8 night aerial traveL PRINCE GOOD PATIENT, BUT DISLIKES TAKING PILLS I LONDON, April 5.——The Prince of Wales is just like any man when it comes to being bubied when he is sick according to Miss Grace Fuller, one- loi the nurses who attended him when | ghe was ill recently in South Africa with malarial fever. “He was a splendid patient," sair‘ Miss Fuller in a letter m friends in ‘London. "but he was a real babe ‘when it came to swallowing pills. when I gave him the pills the Prince said: ‘This is my barbed wire and gate-Jumping trick.’ " _ mains’- has WOIIIQTIIII Antiseptic "Power. , l lthem in their homes rather than ti: loaded with peanuts, left here con- Beer Parlors Forecast In N, S.‘ .' Glace Bay. a deputation ' women from, Ball-ta: (‘salsa- tlons waited on flia last mm w m- a mail a commu- slon operated taverns 0Q fie gals of light wines and bosaitaasdiselosed. Provisions that no pang quviet- ed of an unease IIUIIIOIIUI.I. '1'. A. less than iiva years age he am- ployed by the aemudssin Ed that no store be established usar 6 march or school m» iavorably diseased by the committee. It was emphasised that men of the highest standing be secured. Canada To Spend $55 O00, 000 this, Year On Pensions SOLDIERS PENSIONS, TREAT- MENT AND Eli-ESTABLISH- MENT HEAVY OTTAWA, April L-Canada will spend $55,000,000 this year in pen- sions. treatment and re-estublish- rncnt of err-soldiers, according to Hon. J. H. King. Statement to this effect was made by the Minister of Pensions and National Health, in ad- dressing the Ottawa Women's Liberal, Club Wednesday. Appreciation of the measu u recent- ly introduced in the House of Com- mons by Dr. King in regard to sol- diers‘ pensions was expressed in a rc- solutlon adopted by the meeting. The bill, said Mr. King. was vflstlll different from similar legislation in other countries in that it would give grants to disabled soldiers to keep uphold the old-fashioned idea oi se- gregating them in hospital. Rosebud cutplug smoking tobacco has the quality that satisfies. '. . . . Save the “poker hands ” for valuab e presents. BIG PEANUT SHIPMENT , Prince Edward Island's “Golden Future” A Booster Feature To Stimulate Business and Business Con- ditions in Prince Edward Island. published by The Charlottetown Guardian We are Soliciting the Cooperation oi the Business Firms and Leading ,Men of Charlottetown. Surnmerside and the Province. ‘ Mr. Frank Walker, Assistant Editor oi’ the Guard- ian ls editing this Special Feature Edition. which is now in the course of publication.’ and Mr. J. M- Kirk- land is in charge of Publicity. Boost for a Greater Province ' VANCOUVER. B. Ci. ‘April 5- Basaball can begin anytime now, the game has been made safe for fans in Canada. A special Canadian Na- tional train, consisting of 33 cars signed m a firm in 'I‘0l‘0ht0. Bil- lions of the goobers are contained in the shipment and demon statis- ticians can figure out the exact. number, but in round dinlenslonsl the peanuts would cover an ordinal‘! city block to a depth of about one foot. “Play hall." EFF“ IENT T. ‘ l SERVIFI vws rw AMINED GLASSI surruan AND FITTED. \REFI'I sTrl-trrrlolv mvan n REPAIR worm J. W. JOHNSTON Registered Optometrist lienl slreet Phone ill-l (‘harlottetown u‘- O-O40-QR-OGO-O-O-O 300K BARGAINS! —Freé Catalogues- Thousands of popular flctlou- Reg. price use to use each. To clearl- a m v1.00. Many other Book liar-I gains. ‘ Universal Book Store 'OOO-OOQOOOOOQ@QOOQOOOOOI i055 Bleury St. Why Do You fig iSuffer From 7 ‘ATTENTION PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND PRODUCE SHIPPERS GsNrLaMl-znz- ,You‘ve got the Merchandise-I've got the marketing connections in New England. My specialties are mostly P. a. I. rorsrons and rrlarnrs. I'd like u. get mm...- Wltll You and pass your goods on to the many live operators in this section that l have made my regular autumn in my sixteen years in the Boston Marketa. It would he profitable to me and to you to have you flnd out that my performance backs my promises. Ii given the opportunity to handle your merchandise l assure you that your intesestawtllbe fullyrlrotectedln the hauls ‘oi a hustler who isn't afraid to work in _ tun; you thq high“; prevailing prices of this section of the country. Try ma out this season and I'll show you results. Write or wire are your offerings. r (icrdislly yours, ‘ Reference DAVI WIJNKILLIB ' Beacon Trust Co. Boatsmblaas. Bank of Nova Seotla . . . Yarlnoath, Nova Beetle Packer Mere. Agency Boston. Mass. Or Any of the Trade In General BOSTON, MASS. ll NORTH MARKET 8'1‘. “My Service. Department is Always Ready to Amiat Ion." AAAAT: wwgAgevAm AAAA ALLA AA ‘lo the Early House, Gleaner Briusyourlloasamsanlagraqatameahhsn and we will illltbeordeshwithaireahstoeloiltlhbaatirsmlarasco. "Muller's-w Park lluansuv luau. om. Pails. g lmmsrauaeasmm Bethune‘ Hardware 0o. ~ Ltd. its Gases Street hose ‘ill 1n: nmmu nsanwaas nous’ .m““$wvv vfi- _ 146 Richmond Glarlotyteiown l n». rm, Accident, $251."... and! Plots Gloss Insurance " ‘oi, ._Lowuil-i.Rara’§' A _----__