9? 'Oxford Periodical History of the PAGE FOUR THEDCHAKLQIIIQWN GFAZLQLM T E dom of the spirit and weaken the citizen's re- ' H sponsibility to\vard that conscience and that rea- . son which are tlle gifts of God _-_ u “There are a thousand directions in which Maud,“ pa“, (founded h, 1331) communal powers may be rightly used. But coffmlfofrilys iiiiridli-zirtigfieliieiiirsihiiililiici “HUNB” these powers are ot value only lnsolar as they of 111a that alone we can abolish ___ Ire ldent. LIeuL-Col. W. Cheater l- MIL!" Vlce President. J. ll. Burnett. IJJ. Secretary. LIvuL-Col D. A. llacKlnnon. 0.5.0. mm),- .111] runnugln lllrectnr. J. It. Burnett. FJJ. r snriule Editor, Frank Walker. SFBSCIVPTION RATES 15.00 per your (in advance) iellvera te Cllv $4.00 per war I . advance! malled t0 P II Island ioJlU pcr \'t‘2lI' lln advnllvk‘! mlilflll l0 Clllldl llld U-s lllk-mlvi-rs mnlil Bureau of Circulation: "TIie Slrortgest Mcmoryjs Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ L‘; ' - v ~ —?——— —'—'- ZYFESDAY. “ARCH 26, 1940. .. _..A_______ 52-. ltiliuenl Reminder ..: t’l has been published by the illslllllle of Canada, with the ;_,. L '-ll“ne Motto of the Lle- -, lilmg readers xvhat the . ~, _l..-lm llainpden, Jacques um‘. other great men did, in the ’ ‘llilicS, in building up the e possession of every Can- . i< pointed out that the re- . ~t‘l‘\'lll;_' these [nrivileges rests -r;p_;.ni. “lf we now say, nd act, or rather fail to act, ilulili; iliiesliolls, we risk lOS- ze in the fields 0f civil, t-rzy. .\'o one can take __ \\‘e are all, in reality, " not we are enrolled in Lllllltl‘, \\ a face of N: '- }-;ili"i:ii~:‘_l' v.1 udan cillen n‘ spculnl» i on fir: wt rr-miiult-r, at this time of . criliczll wiir in which we Ki lltinunds an alert electorate AFC 111W C‘ eager to d "rug possible to ensure victorv for llril-il ililfltild and the highest ef- fit"c:;ct' n; - ‘union at home. All forms t: Cxllnll. ~i be clinlinatetl, every duty of Ulllmt‘. srliipllluiisly‘ pcrfornlcd, per- » < he subordinated to national 1 in a democracy every voter f gotcruttieulal activity cali- . rlxlli/ctl. If the spirit of prtliuls n‘. a. time like this it is a ilic suite, which cannot fail to ll. _ y!‘ 14;‘. P." 0n Election Night swirl c< llt‘l'l~. l< an u=-t i The ftlllnvzrig from a mainland exchange is worth noting- \\'hcn rtx. w sce the letters "C.P.” attach- .i:l'll folloiviilg the date line ile or no attention to them. t (llliltllilfl Press" has furnish- czui come from London, Paris, rgion, or any place in otir own i' will be attached. I ‘vvzornl llificcr of the Domin- ion. limits klthlllllQllibV, hns tnnde an appeal to every tillllllY returning officer, poll clerk and cniiilillntcs with: in the Federal election to re- port ruin s smut as they are compiled to the rcp: tiuive of The Critizulinn Press. We think it rigrr to drzlw attention t0 that to show the unique lhhliillll this organization occupies in the litlllllllillll and the complete reliance which is placed upon its work. If it \\'<‘rc not for the existence of The Can- adian l‘rt‘<s there would be a long and disagree- able wziir after the voting before the returns were made available. The radio would not have the information because the radio stations have to secure the news from the organization o\vn- ed and operated by the newspapers. This countryr will be covered from Atlantic to Pacific on election night in its 245 tidings with their 32,000 polling places, and Canadian Press will have the results for the people to such In extent it will be known which party is to be in power before it is rime to go to bed. There is no other organization in existence to furnish such service. History ln The Making L- a.__ I The first of a series of booklets entitled “The War" has been published by the Oxford United Press, Canadian branch, Toronto. It covers the back- ground and origin of the present struggle in Europe, specifically the period between Hitler's access to power in Germany in January, r933, and the Nazi invasion of Poland which brought Britain and France into the war. The publication is sponsored by the Canadian In- stitute of llllkfllfllillllill Affairs. The author, Mr. Edgar llclnnis, Professor of History at the University of Toronto, is a native of Char- lottetown, and served with the 8th Siege Bat- tery in the lust \\’:lr. Mr. Mclnnis handles his difficult subject in masterly fashion and pre- sents a vt-ry ro-idnblc, as well as authentic, out- line which will he continued periodically dur- ing the conflict Not the lczist valuable part of the work is lhc tllil‘lllll(‘lll.'ll'_\' appendix with its extracts from ll'<‘.'lli(‘<, speeches, comniuniqiics and offiriil snurrr-s of all kinds. Spiritual Democracy The follotiinq excerpts from I speech deliv- (red in log; by Lord Tiiverrlsmnir to the stil- dents of lin- l'ni\vr~Ei_v l-f Toronto go to the root of llll‘ i-~uc ilnolvcri in our present struggle with l\':l7i (il-rinzwuy": “Let us con-iilrr llu‘ meaning of this spiritual democracy wnlwmt which no constitution, how- ever lillcllll in form, is more than a lyrimny and a boil/ingl- "It lllt‘l'lll‘?, if lmiy ri-lc a (lCflllill0l1. the safe- guarding of 1hr pli-oiunlilyi lt is the human soul whirl: todiy is in ilnngcr, its integrity and lllll(’1lL'llIl»"l|\'l'. “lWq-nbu- i~i~m< nf q-lverntnent have no value lpd. ~. ‘l1 y f. '<r in much inilividtlnl lhc power rd lllizuy b . w If. of ‘Jflllllillg squarely on his h» and oi li\ n;- his lifi- according to a law whit-h is ~ilf impo-rd bccnir-c it is willingly ac- €ep1<~l . "\\l-;.y u." Hills‘! bnld inst to is the lruth that no milclune can be permitted to impair the free- safcguzlrd and fulfil the life of the citizen, and give to him or hcr a richcr. nlore responsible and lhciltforc fret-r life liificicncy has no luean. ing for lhc Siaue except insofar as it fosters human values i "Spifltiial (lClllUCIilCy accepts natural grada- tions; it cull have nothing to do with vulgar arti- ficial ones 1t llIlS :1 charity which finds noth- ing coumlon or uuclcliii n poncr of looking at life with such clcar and conlptlssionttle eyes that it can find in its ironies both mirth and pity "That is one side of this democracy. The other side is that it stands for complete free- dotn of thought, for the liberty of disinterested speculation. 1t will not tolerate any tnass coer- cion upon the mind. The most august authority will not he permitted to dictate to it its thoughts and dreams. lls wzilclnvurd is Plzltds-"Life without the spirit of inquiry is not worth hav- mg. .- EDITORIAL NOTES -—. Election Day. m a- e Prime Mitiister Mackenzie King has obtain- ed cold comfort from Alberta. »< k u- 4- In Sackville the Retail .\lCl'Cll3lliS Associa- tion have decided to begin the weekly ltalf-holi- day on the first \\icducsdny' in June. .1011!!! Lord ltloyor llrn-s (‘roslrv of London com- mitted to the Tuucr of ills‘ llouse of Colntllous for defying the. llousc, this tllllC, 177i. w n- u a The people have a Lioil-givcn opportunity' t0- day 0f standing up for thcir rights", privileges and the safeguarding of Dcnnicrnry. \\iill they take it or will they lct llnckcilzie Ring “put it over them"? u n- : a lloiv much of the millions now being spent, even squandered, by the Mackenzie Killg gov- ernment, is coining to this province? Unless in bribes to buy electors direct, not one solitary cent. 'l'hink of it! w a n- n- Queries have been received by The Guardiliil which indicate that confusion exists in some minds with regard to the voting in Queen's County. All electors are entitled to vote for TWO of the four cnudidzitcs on the ballot, no (listiucticvn being tnride hvtwvcn propcrlv and franchise volcs as in the provincial election. ll Ill i‘ A‘ The Directors of the Toronto Royall Winter Fair stiggcst the resumption of that evcut 1lt'.\'[ No- vember. It is uljgcil as a tnvluis to strengthen nnd fortify the position of agriculture, and to help in guariitilccing .\ll§cil food supplies. The second rcnsciti is thrlt the linsic imltislrv of the country-the one. lczist rczidily chnllgictl and ailzlpterl at Sllnrt n-ilititi-rlcmnnds its rcsiuup- lion as pzirl of the uauionnl schculc lo safeguard the geucrnl fzlritirrs‘ inlcrc-ls in the illllllCfllllltf after-war period, it wits pointed out. 1k It‘ i 1|! Returning from klontrcnl after 1 conference with officials of thr- tf:ui:i<li:lii Car and Foundry Company, Mayor .\l_ l\'.'lllflll€lll and Mr. R. D. Crawford, town clerk, of Amherst, made a report to members of the town council. Efforts were made by the civic delegation to speed up the start of operations of war industry there. Various proposals were znlviulccd to the coin- patty‘, it was stated, but llltksc will ltave to be considered by the firm's directors and if ac- ceptable by them will then be referred to the ratepayers of Amherst. u- » a m The Liberal-Conservative party had ss its basis the National Policy, and Sir john A. Mac- donald said, he was proud to believe and know that he would leave behind him a body of men imbued with the great principles of Canada for the Canadians and equal rights for all. The Liberal-Conservative party was the party of Pf0g_r€§5—th¢ Canadian party—the party of patriotism. These words, spoken fifty years ago, are worth remembering and lit-oiling toilav. when unity is needed even more than in l\fncdonald's time. Let us carry-on with a National Govern- merit. o a u Canada's enlisted forces, totalling 90,000 and of which about one-third are overseas, may up- set electoral calculations in s number of coilstit- uencies when their votes are counted and the re- sult made known about April I, or eight days after they have completed their balloting, as compared with three months delay iu I917. liven though there will be ticnrly 6,500,000 on the vot- ing lists, the votes of the 90,000 enlisted men will affect the rcsillt in some ridings, whether urban or rural. While in the I917 wartime elec- tion soldiers wcre free to designate the coli- sliturncics to which their ballots ntight be al- lotted, this time both those overseas and those in Canada will vote for the candidates in the riding: in which the stildicrs were resident at the time of enlistment. ~--~ a- » n a Your l.l.S..'\. imports are to cost you still more. The decline of lhc vziluc of the Canadian (lollar in terms of lTniterl Slates funds will give United States residents an opportunity, begin- ning March l9. 1n buy for $88 a money order worth $1117 in (illlllltlfl. The Post Ufficg D5- pzirlulcnt at “hlshillgtou zmuouuccs all increase from 10 to 1.! per (‘cut in lhc (liscotmt allowed for money orders drawn for payment in Can- ada, and in Ncwfouiidlnml as well. At the out- brnk of the Will‘ (Enmdiini and United States money were on a par for money order purposes, bill there has bvv-n n grmluzil invwasc in the dis- count since that linw. The l0 per ccnt rate has been in effect since llvccmber 4 hast. For three months prcvioils to lhnt (he rule was eight per cent, but SR8 irorlh of purchase front Uncle Sam for :1 $100 (kmndinii FHIFPIIU)’ is too lunch of a good lhinc- hurl will have to he remedied by buying at home or in the Allied markets. crime on any considerable scale. Until then, we must still have the c-risniuals wr deserve, - The late lLivelock Lilli." m llle Rotnrlan Magazine. Man ln Vancouver, said to have confessed to stealing $26000 worth of Jeivels, is reported to have offered to return 80 percent. 0f the 1001. L1 police will drc-l: the chores. He's almost as generous as I-Ltler in his peace otter! — Owen Sound Sun-Times. "It requires from two ta ten times as long to h’€‘llper8l8 alter you become tired as ll. (1055 1t you rest- when you b:g.n to tecl tired," says a pliyszciazi. A sure way to avozd fatigue is to rest before do- mg a 10b and t-hcn not. do lt. - Kitchener Record. 0n both sides of the Atlantic men arc determined that the next mm- lstice shall precede a peace that. will permit 0t nothing but an ordered Europe —- one 1n wh ch peaceful change will be as puss ble as 1t is desirable, _ The Pleasures of Publishing, New York, A tax rate of 37 mills for 1940, I reduction of 6 1-2 nulls 1n the last two years, is about. the best. ad- vertisement St. Cathnrzncs could receive. Comparisons might be invicllous but there 1sn't a mun:- clpalzty ln Ontario 1n sounder or stronger filtanclal position than :5 this city. -- St. Catliarmcs Saintl- arcl. The virtue ol’ tHs open-air game ls that. Wllllg 1t might be almost. 1m- possible l0 prie a man out of an easy chair with a 1N6!‘ with an lu- vltntlon to go for a four-mile walk. that same man will leap out of ills‘ chair with nlacrzty at the nicrcst suggestion or anyone who offers to llck the tar out o! nlm at a game of golf.-St. Thoma: Tunes-Jcur- rial. To most. of us the drastic restrict-ion of our butter consump- tion ls tho harrlrst p~rt o1 ration- lng, Yet we mlph‘ console our- selves wnli the reflection that at least a third of the lunmn race mamitze vcrv w"ll wturut nnr butter at. all. The Chlnee and Ja-umwcse nlY-"faui 1W1" l“‘l~' " ~ for. and cheese, and that 1t 1s argued accounts for their habitual gravity. while the Tlbctans, who indulge 1n butter freely, even drinking 1t- 1n their tea are a laughter-loving pro-pic. It was the race wlfch now loudly procloims its preference fcr guns which introduc- ed butter to Roman civilization. but the Romans seem to have used it as an unguent. ard fr medicinal purposes rather than as a rclllllill‘ article of diet. They were RIIIPV. d at the Gct-miiti fond: s»: lrr 1ll'"r "cow cheese." 1n the mnklllg of which blinded priscnrrs of war were employed to churn t-lie mill; -Manchester Guardian. “What. is gain: tn happen l0 that mun tlitless we \v.n this war?‘ That “n: llnv qu-vstzcn but lll/ Mr. Oliver Stanley. BHLISlI Min s- tcr of Wnr, at n r.c.ut n0? Ill zit New astlc. It wxxs a rh torutil questzon, but a touch ol gem s tievcrtheles». For th: mlu 01 whom 1L was asked was on micr- rupter who lind made lrins 1f suoh a nuisance that. the 0nd‘ “KW to carry on thr- meetitzg WJS to throw him out. He was thrown out, and then Mr. Stanley auswzred that question alrin nun \\'l1lt'll comes home 1.0 all of us in t-lus wax. "What would lile be for him under the system we are fighting? He has gone out of here into the streets. He ls tree to go whtre lie likes, Under the other systzm he would have gone out of licre 11110 a. concentration camp." That was a very good and K-Pllillg cxeiuplilici- tion of a working democracy in b:- L-ig _ even to the thrcwng out 0t the man who wouldn't let Lllc 0.119!‘ side get 0n with thelr meeting. - Vancmiver Province. I wouldn't mlss the Book Club meetings. no, not for‘ anytlilng, I‘ve never missed one of Mrs. talks. Last, week we revzesved "Beware of Pity" -- ever read It? You should! Well. 11's about. a glrl. You know she didn't want urn-one to plty her and 25s klznl of funny You should rend l1, really. ‘There is .20 llll't'll 1n it to You see — this 3111.... 1 curled myself up on the cnester- field and pulled the coffee table up beside me and every time I got. sleepy I ate some nuts or chewed a candy". I rend until tlit-ce o'clock 1n the mornuig. Oh yes, I can concentrate. I absorb a lob. Now this girl in the story. she wanted to get. married. Let me sewam I getting tnzs mixed with "The Grapes of Wrath," no, I'm not. Yes, I read that too. 0n. I read a. lot. You should bnong to the Club - really it's so edu- catlonal. Glad I inet you. I for- got to tell you I was sick for thrte days after I ate all that Junk, but. I was bound to finl=li the book before the meeting — you've got to be lntelllgezil; about. t-hc books dls- cussed, you know. Good-bye, Good-bye! -- The Toronto Narra- tor. Sir-Mr. Oldmeadnwb letter ln your last issue 60mm as B ray of light. in a (larketiod world. He shows us In a few words how to finance the war. "When I buy s dc/lcn bottles of SIIBITY I 3N9 the revenue {l 4;. out-aud-out the sherry gives pleasure to my few black-out callers; I strengthen my country's export position: and I do a bit for antl- bolshevist Spam " S0 say/s hls friend. the "plum cltiwt" whom he quotes with approval. Could any- thlng be simpler? We have omy to drink more sherry, and. 1t there ls a. limit to our caps/city 1n that d1- rwtlon, smoke e great deal more tobacco. and all Sir John Slmonfia dlfllcultlcs will vanish. But. a great dcnl can be done w.tli slurry alone. There must be at lraat twelve trul- llon persons ln Eng pad who, if they realized 1t. was a patriotic duty to do so, would drink a bottle of sherry a. day. That would mean a million dozen. or £1,200,000 daily Into the Exchcquer. An 9411151 amount could probably be raced by heavy, patriotic smzkng. we cmild thus get yearly the equivalent of a lcan of 860 mll- lion; without any llablllly to re- payment. Meanwhile our export trade would be working to full CRPBCZI)’. for the sherry and l0- bwtw mun be mm for. Our wine i without. a scratch. One t-hln Sin-I was glad to see in s re- cent. issue that. the Hungarian Part- ridge have w1ntered_ so well. Of about 200 I know oelng fed this winter every one came througl: intrigued me was the writer wanted ti. shlft the short- age off the real culprit. onto the Ilawks and Owls. Willi one Charlottetown sports- man alone accounting for well up to 200 blrds, does he think people are foolish enough m believe they were as thick at tbo end as at the beginning Mm hundreds of hunters shooting them? Perhaps the Game fflcer of the R. C, M. P. would ook over hls diary and tell us how many days he wits shooti them. 110w many hundred he sho ‘l tf all report: an true. I am, Blr, etc. ALEXANDRA MR. KING'S RECORD SlFr-MUCII has been said and tvrltten about. the issues 1n the bl: election campaign. All agree that. Canada's effort ln helping to win the war 1s the first. consider- ation. ‘mere isn't the shadow of l doubt. as to Dr. Manlozfs stand on that issue. That has been proven by word and example. Mr. King now pays copious 11p service to the importance o! our war effort -devotes n column to 1t. 1n Mc- Lean's (Mar. 15th)—It was not. ever thus with Mr. King. No me doubts his personal loyalty, but there have been times 1n his long and cliicuiwils career, when his legislative actions were open t0 grave suspicion. In 1911, as a mere strlpllng 1n the political arena he fought aq- ainst the proposed building of two drvazlnnughts to supplement the Brll-ish Navy. In 1936 he fulmln- iitcd against the principle o4’ Can- adians helping the Elmpue 1n any wnl" to pYCSOITB the status of small llfll-IOIIS on tlto continent of Eur- npc. 1n 1938 he ‘was in the “dol- drums" 10:‘ tlwcc days of the ses- siou.—-\vhcti asked to define can- ndlfs position in regard to Em- piri- dofrnce. hfanion was the vlr- tual leader for three days, 'I‘hei"e are inzlny other instances showing tnat he ls possessed of a dual peg-- sonalitl‘. He made a great mistake when the British All‘ mission came over lit-re with the proposal to make Canada the centre of building and trauiula air craft and aviators. He should have been able to see furthci" into the flli-Ul't3——l10t, stand "11 hYDOlhc-tieal constitutional trif- lva. He seemed to have been ob- sv“ irrational sh1b- of Catiadian independent-e. uldnt forget that the bulk 01 our Catitidinit people realize that, r- sliny ltes with the British "Plic izrciit statesman Sir Wilfrid Liiuilci- said "Vvlieil the Empire ls Canada is at war." French realizes it. In 1775, only ‘Jvllrs after Britain look ssion they rl-efeatcd the arm. ies _ol the American Colonies sent against. Quebec and saved Canada fvr the Elllplff‘ They saved i; again in the wiLr of 1812-15. Still they lznvc- been manipulated for 1N - expediency on different o." s oils. but it's hard to “fool all the Wfllll? llll tut- time." Messrs. King. Rlilston and 01,11. crs are complaining of "slander" bv National Conservative speakers and looking for sympathy from till‘ electors. Slander means "false report maliciously uttered". The inferences made are about the ad- ministration of the affairs or their offices. "It's the tlnlth which hurls most." at. the Canada wants n man hvfld ‘of its governmental admin- Lstratlon who l5 not s, puggyfoqtef or equlvocntnr. who has the 1n. testrnnl sffflllsth to "pursue the right rather than the expedient." I am. Slr, etc. J P Kenslngwn. WIND OF MARCH Not wind-this ls n c-larlon call March sends across the land, The stark and snow-enshrouded trees Awake and understand. Darkhprlsoned waters sllr and s n Against. their lcy bars In e erness for warming mm And rlendllness of sjtars. Cold roots entornlbed 1n wintry graves give lrieedlng tigst-he call; ie c ocus nu arouse and welt ‘They hear u first of all. f Always these tempest-tones belle The promises they brlng: A grim precursor this who cries "Mnke way—-m:tke wnv for Spring!" -—Lucy Gertrude Clarkln. In St. Dunstauls Red and White. LESS WINE TO U. K. MELBOURNE, Atlstralla —(GP) -I_os.s of the carefully-cultivated wine trade with Britain 1s threat. cncd by thi- lack of shipping space 1.0 carry Australian wines to the United Kingdom, s. wine-growers‘ meeting declared. ANCIIINT TIMEPIICI CANTERBURY. England ~16?) —-A Saxmi pocket sundlal. with some claim to being the oldest ex- lsllng "watch." was found llwo feet below the soll of s garden here. It ls of gold and silver, and scarcely tarnished. and tobacco merchants Would be marking vast fortunes. Our dock- laborers would have "Increased employment. 1n unloading me sherry and tobacco shllps. Think, too, or th¢ useful work for our gallant Navy — who are probably finding time hang heavy on their hands- ln esocrtlng the additional shipping outward and lnward. Thlnk of the happiness of our black-out callers. Thlnk o1 thg 10y In nnll-bolshevlat Spain. Yes, we should be fighting the bolshles. tool Whv send muni- tions to 1hr! Finns? Why not drink mow; sherry? some foolish people are still preaching self-denial. YOK flllllhfully, T. O. Mammal. Forum LABOR. IPEAKB FOB MULUBI As u all labourers that Mr. Mcllure was the reatest. friend labor ever had 1n tn city. when there ms a labor relief W019i". underwav 11° man was ever asked whether he was “m1 or mry-zagddilffféfinifngm Si: n W 3'5 iiy%sothen a. Liberal buli 1t. going w vote for a Liberal candl- ate this time because 1t will m9?" four or flve hundred more on rel}?! next. year-Jlonest labourers v. o want work and wages will vote for the National Candidates McLure anxd Hvndmau. our real friends. am LABOR. BIIAMEFUL ATTACK sin-What on earth 1s P. E. I. coming to when any person 01‘ party would find fault with Hon. George D. DeBlo1s. and especially with his actions while he held the honorable posh-ion of Lieutenant- Governor? I as l. citizen of Charlottetown and ln conversation with a mod many citizens know that when the then Governor was spoken of in any way. lt was always ln praise or his deeds and actions. And knowing Mr. DeBlols so well my- self I certainly felt assured that any actions he took were for the ignood of the people and the Prov- c0. They my that you have to have dealings with n man to know him. I had eight years of steady bust- ness dealings th _ DeBlols. and I know that my success 1n the grocery buslness 1n town was part- ly due to his good advice, nnd 1n thousands of dollars of business tlhat I dld with Mr. De- Blo1s,I found him one of the most hortorable gentlemen that I ever did business with, and I must say that I dld s lot of business with flmts here and away from here. To think that my gentleman like Mr. DeBlols would be attack- ed in our olwn elty under the pro- tection of the g-reat Libernl Party! I am. Slr. etc. RETIRED MERCHANT. Charlottetown, March 26. SOLID LABOR FACTS sin-In yesterday's Patriot a letter appeared bver the signature of Labor. The writer made sure to time his letter for the eve of an election. so that I would not. have an opportunity to reply 1n the evening paper before election. This ls Just another Liberal ‘trick of cheap politics. I wish to say that I can prove every statmtlent I made at the Conservative meet- ing in the Sporting Club. Why the writer tries to bring Organizcd labor lrito the controversy 1s nlore than I can understand. I want him to know that I am not censored by organized labor. I have the privilege of expressing what I know on any public platform 0r through the columns of the Ploss. One very remarkable fact is that the Liberals had no laborers, or- gsmized or otherwise to speak pub- licly ln their behalf. I can bell the writer that the Uberals did not by any means carry out their projects to the satisfaction of any kind of labor. On the Victoria. Park PHocct s. large number of men were ‘ignor- ed and did not get. one hour's work. They had one stool pigeon who tried to and partly controlled the hiring of the men. Political interference was used the siune as on the airport. Scab wages ivere paid on Dominion contract jobs in this City. Thebnly mjecl: under the Con- servatives at. paid less than 35 cents per hour was the Exhibition projec. which was an emergency employment. job, late 1n the fall, and the grant. was made with the assurance that not one cent of the $25000 expenditure would go for any purpose but labor. Labor rep- resentatives were called 1n and advised of this fact. alncl they agreed to the condltlon before the project started. Thé Conficfvatlves never brought politics into their unemployment projects. I have always stood solid behind the worklngmen o! this city 1n all their labor troubles. 1 will let the worklngmen Jildge for themselves who has Spoken the most. 1n their behalf. The Con- servatives both local and Federal Wm always solid behind the labor mdvelment. Mr. McLure has done more for “mlx rlitnolrs i" SOCIETY MAKE UP We have Jim received from Hollywood u full shlpment of Mu lbcwr Beauty suds. , Included l.n the shipment are such items ll Max Factor Skin and Tllsuo Cream Max l-‘Mtor Crelln. Mu Futor Clmmln‘ Cream Mu Factor Powdu- emu-lla- l-lon Cream ln three shades. Naturll — Rachelle _ Flesh. Max Factor Flea Powder ill the nullowmg |hldcl—Nlturll, Rachelle, brunette, Olive‘ and Sum’: Tan. Max Factor BOIIIO and Max Factor Lipstick. MAC'S BLOOD FOOD The Ideal Sllllll‘ Tonlo. A conlnhlfiatlon especlolly volu- a Illllllafl when their nrllln ll truealne to an impoverished condition of the blood. Tillie Plus are used exten- sively u g general some wlll improve the appetite 1nd lm pan strength and to no u» m; whole system. PRICE PER BOX 50 CENTS. MACS IMPROVED CONDITION POWDER IOI HORSE! The best that man can buy. PRICE PER PAC AGE 50¢. TllE 2 MAGS Honeysuckle Daily War Survey far short of brlilging the klnd of reaches toward them with s men- lng of the British attitude towards for transport of goods to Germany. ATTEllTlllll MITOISTS TEN COMMANDMEN TS OF GOOD DRIVING 1. Thou shall not. neglect brakes, tires. steerlng, lights. s. Thou shalt not. pus on curve-or hlll- 3. Thou shalt not. tum right. lulu l9". slaw down or IlOD will;- out slgnalllng. E g 4. Honor all truffle s t‘- bo long ln the Ian 5. Than shalt not kill. Wild! for pedestrians, onus“, winch‘ 6. Keep to the right. 7. Drlve so you can lto (whether it's 4 feet, 0 feet. or 400 feet.) s. Thou shalt not mlmble your Illa pa other people being scum‘. and on nutomob es being _. "e0 9. work for sate traffic. and every measure that motors glve the utmost in service Ind ln safety munlty, to Canada. l0. TIIOU SHALT NOT OVER-DRIVE YOUR. EYE slder roadway, truffle, light, weather, your eyesight. Requlremems Are Our Interest llYllDMAll & 00., Limited Your l The Oldest Insurance Agencysln Prlneledlidwnrrl Island e Offices: . . . Charlottetown — mnmers olfleen and rules-that thy d!" m, ln the space yun an lee clelr shu¢_ wlll- 1 to our srorrr. Con. Monlsn. ‘lf-‘B-‘lfuhy. at Lowest Rate 144 Richmond St. §ERBmw&&E Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown labor than any other represents.- Fraxtce so far have observed m. ' tive we ever had and Mr. Ilyncl- provisions of lntematiptizil lllll’, Neutral protests failed to delet- man has always taken a very ac- tlve part 1n promoting the wel- Germany from fare of lalbon The Patriot writer ships an active part. at s Conservative meflihflflli V9689“ meeting. Although we both be- ruthlessl long to organized labor we haw ccrtaJn privileges. 01°56 l0 (Patriot Please Copy) cull. position of (By The Canadian Press) The end of the Finnish war fell way seen“ mace desired by Norway and uneasy. On the east the Soviet hammer ace for the future and on the west they are faced with u stiffen- tlie use of lhslr fvrltorial waters pnrllctilnrly lron ore from their noithern mines. While Nnzl German has con- siklently disregarded t- e rights of neutrals whenever ll. suited the and 1n the alr Great. Britain and 1 onlthph hlghziseas a pea/rs to b; very offended about. warring. n e Na campaign a. Mi‘. Rush and myself taklrig such Ell-inst. British suPPlv ship: neutral were elated s4 as belligerent Warships. 1f Br tlsh war vessels now draw Scandinavian territorial I gm, 51:, etc. waters lntsnxeffortllio close off the u guy, movemel o supp es Gor- DAN co G many the neutral States to the north sgaln will be confronted with the menace of war. Norway now has protested violations of its wat- ers by Great Britain. In effect Norway 1s 1n the dlffl- rotestllng at viola- tions by one be lgei-ent while the other belllgerent continues to pro- fit by similar violations which Nor- powerless to And this happens lust after Nor- way and Sweden together did the Germans a real service by refusing- Swcden. They are safe from hostilities for a time but still are l” Wm“ Bfllm‘ “M into troops to pas over their terrltorlel to aid the Hnns in their struftlzle against the Russians. FAMILY TYPES AT FAIR. NEW YORK —(CP) — About 5U "typical American families" vrlll llve 1n the World's Fair ns guests of the fair this summer. The fam- llles will be selected throuiilt news- pnper contests and will live 1n the rnnvenlence of 1p forces on sea “TOWH 01' T°m°fi°“'- i For a Delicious Cup of Orange Pekoe Tea Ml’. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea SOME SWALLOW ANYTHING BUT YOU DON'T NEED T0 STRETCH THE TRUTH ABOUT our ‘Twist’. The thousands who use lt would not accept any substitute for the old reliable HICKEY S f BLACK TWIST - CHEWING MANUFACTURED BY lllllKEY 8t lllBllllLSllll TOBACCO CO. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN ‘ \ 10c Per Fig <_ neutral wiihoitt prevent. French