» ~ “Fa-Mu. PAGE FOUR i2? .TllE SHARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN 4_ Chant" l. llcLun. I. P. lnretury-Llrut. Cal. l). IrruldelIh-W. Anorluto BdItorr-Wrnnli Vlm-Prnldonkul. l. Bums“ A. lhclilnmm 0. l! 0. Editor and llnnnglng lllrn-lnr-J. It. Burn?" Walker ond u. IL Cnrrlo uqfnhl‘ Dflly (founded will! 15.00 par your (In ldvlnce) dellvorecl I-Lbb per yew‘ (in odvarwu) mulled ln Cunldu and Unllul Stolen. m» MONDAY, MAY 18, 1931 % A Cordial Welcome Irrespective of class or creed. our‘ citizens will extend this evenlng-al lubst cordial welcome to the Right Reverend Joseph A. O‘Sullivan. D.D., Bishop 0f Charlottetown, who will be installed in his episcopal office atSt. { - Dunstans Basilica following his ar- ‘ rival on the early Borden train. ‘The occasion has been most fit- ' tingly chosen, today being St. Dun-| starfs Day, the patron feast day of the Charlottetown diocese. Bishop O'Sullivan, who received his appointment in February andi was consecrated in Hamilton, Orr-l _ta.rlo, on May 7th, is distinguishedi as a scholar, an orator and an ad- ministrator, ancl his high attain- ments will shod added lustre upon the responsible office to which lic has been called. The reception to be given will no doubt be participated in, not only by members of the Roman Catholic body but also by our large. The arrangements, as outlined ‘n Saturday's Guardian, are now complete and the reception and in- stallation ceremonies are being look- ed forward to with great interest 111d expectation. citizens at Passing The Buck "At a recent meeting of the Al- ‘fance. n statement vias made by a certain gentleman that he knew of twenty-five places in this city where liquor is being sold illicltly . . . 1n discussingWhe enforcement of the Prohibition Act, it must be remem- bered that the present Government entrusted the enforcement of the law to an independent Commission. the chairman of which was recom- mended by the Temperance Al- lianceJL-Patriot editorial, May 16. 1931. “Now that the battlc ls over, we should all settle down to business. Mr. Saunders, the incoming Premier, and his executive when selected. as well as his supporters, will no doubt fully realize that the country will look for the most rigid enforcement of the Prohibition law that has ever taken place here. There must. be no more winking zit-violations of the law, Justice must not be ‘too much tempered with mercy; too often it has been so. Bootleggers, home-brew makers and sellers and smugglers ‘of liquor, if the Liberals remain true to their pledges and true to their af- filiations with the Temperance Al- ‘ lience, must be put out of busincm." —Patrlot editorial, June 27. 1921. The Radio Hearing Little is heard from our local con- temporary those days about, the radio hearing at Ottawa. The man nei- in which this Province was made to‘ figure preliminary pro- :ecdings-much Leo's surprise-will be remembered by our readers. The mystery surrounding that transaction has not yet been cleared up, but the value to our taxpayers oz‘ the money spent on counsel foes may be judged from the following comment which ap- peared recently in a lending editor- ial in the Manitoba Free Press: "Hitherto radio in Canada has been controlled by the Federal Gov- ernment. This control Quebec. with the approval and support of Ontario. ls challenging under clauses of the British North America Act: clauses framed sixty-four years ago, when the word radio was not even part of the language. Quebec. however. claims that these\ clauses give the provinces of Canada the right to set ‘lp and control radio stations within the provincial boundaries. Radio waves, my the Quebec lawyers, are no nare subject to Federal control than he winds, or the smoke from n. foe-l my chimney. The provinces, come- in the to Premier ihority may retain control of anotlv er sort. This is the position which has been seriously advanced in legal argument by counsel for Quebec. "Radio, of course, is not only a strictly international phenomenon’: it mayyery soon be intercontinental also. A radio station broadcasting in Winnipeg may easily have its trans- mission completely destroyed by an- other station broadcasting from a city in the United States. And a radio station broadcasting in Quebec may jam the uh" oil over New Big- land. To prevent. these undesirable occurrences control is necessary; and with such a subject the form r-f cnn- trol seems obvious. It has to be con- trol by the State itself. which is the only authority competent to deal with thellnternational ramifications from radio which are inseparable operation. “The case for Federal Government control is s0 apparent that the pro- vinclal claims assume an appearance which is actually comic. Counsel for Quebec declared the Federal author- ity had no more jurisdiction" over radio waves produced in Quebec than it had over the winds in Quebec. or the smoke from the Quebec fac- tory chimney. If someone in Ontario set up a wind strong enough to pass the Quebec border and blow down a Quebec village, the learned counsel might ‘take another view of such transmissions. And if a Quebec chim- ney threw out fumes which devas- tated Ontario territory, the Ontario Government might develop ideas on the subject of provincial right which it is not shotvlng in this claim for provincial control of radio. "Quebec and Ontario have been the outstanding proponents of provincial rights. They are now asserting a claim vrhlch if it were valid, would reduce the sovereignty of the Can- adian State to futility. How could the Canadian Government negotiate international treaties for the use of radio if Quebec and Ontario could sit back in their own territory and ren- der the agreements nugatory by ar- bitrary radio provinciai operations of their own ? This prospect, however, has not prevented the provinces from bringing forward their remarkable proposals. “The Dominion will continue to control, as heretofore; and, if judg- ment is rendered in favor of Federal control, the Government should not lose a moment in having the Domin- ion supremacy made effective in the cotvstitution of Canada. If the judg- mcnt should favor the provinces. Canada will have a fine new prob- lem on its hands for further consid- oration." Conservative Nominations Further evidence of the enthus- iasm and confidence oi the Conserv- ative party workers was furnished or. Saturday at the nominating con- ventions held fn the Districts of Fifth King's and Third Prince. Both conventions were largely attended and the progressive policy of the Conservative party in the coming proviz-cial campaign was outlined and discussed. In Fifth Kings, Hon. J. D. Stewart, K. C, Conservative leader. and his former colleague in the Leg- islature, Mr. J. Howard MacDonald, were unanimously nominated amid great enthusiasm. In Third Prince, the unanimous nomination again went to Messrs. A. F‘. Arsenault, M. l... A., and Thomas MacNutt. At both meetings the fullest con- fidence was expressed in the choice of the candidates and ln the lead- ership of Hon. Mr. Stewart. Meanwhile, the Lea Government continues its policy of aulky silence. It has made no announcement u to the date of the elections, and it: nientiy. u it argued, should have tower to operate one sort of radio transmission, while the Federal nu- followers have made no move to nomlmte candidates. Like Macaw- ber of. famous memory. they In cv- Notes by the Way‘ The New York Evenlnk Pout pays the following tribute to H. R. H. the Prince of Wales: The Prince of Wales has returned to England from his South American tour with orders worth 850,000,000 in his pocket. The Prince of Wales is apparently taking his duties as the British Empire's ~ leading salesman more Séflbukly than ever. It is no slight service which the Prince is rendering his country. He has discovered a function for royalty which in an earlier age might have been considered undig- nifled but which today is more tlnm justified as meeting his country's greatest need. The Prince of Wales is a salesman because England's recov- ery from her economic problems is dependent. upon the expansion of her foreign markets. Vilhjalmur Stefansson once pointed out that there are three belts across the continent, a steed belt. above that a horse belt and in the still further north a reindeer belt. With- in each of these belts its respective animal can be profitably grown for human food. Stefansson admitted that people tn Canada and the Unit- ed States would have to be eduated to the taste of horse and reindeer flesh; but he saw no insuperable ob- stacle to success in that direction. The adoption of Christianity by his ancestors was delayed six hundred years because they preferred horse meat to a creed which forbade the eating of any animal that did not have a cloven hoof. Certain north- ern European countries today have extensive horse packing industries. whose products are consumed by their less well-to-do citizens. The reindeer is a clean feeding animal and its flesh nutritious and delect- able (once one’s palate become fa- miliar with it). From Peru comes a report of how an exploring party flying over un- charted wilds have discovered traces of a great wall stretching for more than 30 miles and comparableto the Great Wail of China. Another item in the news tells of the discovery in Bohemia of a stone fortress thought to be about 4,000 years old. It is de- scribed as the most complete settle- ment of‘ the "new Stone Age” ever found. Nor are the results bf such investigations merely interesting and satisfying to the curious ones. A com- plete history of either one family, or of the whole human race, is useful as a guide for further progress. The three principal thing; for children to learn, 1 think, said. Hugh Walpole in the Spectator, London. are love for their fellow-men. a. sense of humour and a sense of propor- tion. Religion and a perception of beauty come from the first, modesty and tolerance from the second, wis- dom and courage‘ from the third. But children will learn nothing from their parents if ‘they are either bullied or potted. Children are oynics, and rightly so. They have been brought into the world by no wish nor will of their own. They owe their parents nothing unless they learn to love them, and then they owe them every» thing. No attempt to shelter them will insure their safety nor are they intended to be safe. Life is not. a thing to be safe in, nor is happiness the chief aim of it. ll. is true, says an “change, that there are big things in llfe—usually (he or two-but the big things are alvtnys made up of little things. The big things cannot be handled in the mass. 1f your big thing fr. the pos session of a freehold house. you do not sit dovm and patiently wait for your uncle to die. after having signed a bill bequeathing to you five thous- and pOUHd5~Bfld then, because he doesn't perform these two acts, com- plain that fate has been unjust to you. You begin to save. a shilling here and a pound there, you invest ycur economies, you study the sub- ject of houses, you decide exactly what kind of a house you want and where you want it. you find out about mortgages, and in the end you own a house. You do not reach the great end by one enormous and dramatic act. which startlea your friends into admiration; you reach it by ten thousand small acts. scarcely noticed by others, but all tending in the some direction. ldently w ,, for something to tum lip-something which they hope will obscure provincial mus and enable the Government to oldest!!! the rc- cord of its broken pledges and prom- ises. nut these Dromlsu were tm openly mode and too flagrantly vio- lated to bq forgotten. By them the Leo Government rnult stand or full; and what is there left of the Liberal platform of 102’! on which the Gov- t. or my member or support- er of the Government. can hope to rm". CHARLOTTE“ I lllfhat My? of yours . 1" B) lam: W. Bark-n, MD FOOD REQUIREMENTS IN MEN- TAL AND PHYSICAL WORK Just why mental workers think they have to eat much food as those who work with their bodies and hands, is hard to understand. “A distinguished physiologist has recently reported the results of painstaking investigations as to the amount of food or fuel the body re- quires for one hour's intensive men- tal effort." He tells us that less than half an oyster cracker, or less than half of a peanut, is all that is needed to supply that whole hour of mental effort. _ What about the amount of food necessary to do manual work? One hour of the hardest kind of work such as long distance running, moun- taln climbing, or rowing, would take hundreds of times as much food as for mental work. And the wonderful part about food eaten by man is that he gets two to four times as much energy from it as the most wonderful boiler or engine can produce. The ordinary locomo- tive produces about 4 per cent energy and 96 per cent. is wasted as heat. In the best. triple expansion steam engine the work done rises to 12V.- per cent. In man 30 per cent or more is pro- duced during hard muscular work. "Thus, muscle is more economical than the best steam engines; but the muscle has the great advantage over any engine that the heat which is produced is not wasted but ls used to keep up the body temperature, the fall of which below a certain point would lead to death, not only of the muscles, but of the body generally." Under extreme- effort such as sprinting-loll to 440 yards-Dr. W. O. Fenn, University of Rochester, has been able to show that a. man expencls in energy about 13 horse power. Men or women doing hard physical work of any kind every day are going to need ‘much more food than those whose occupation is sit- ting at a desk all day. Now the ques- tion is, just how much should an of- fice man or waxnn eat, and also the working man or woman. The first point to remember is that they E11 need a certain amount of food to keep the body processes 8011181 four fifths of the total intake being used for this purpose, and the other fifth for physical work. A man 5 feet 'l inches tall, weigh- ing 150 pounds, working outdoors, should consume 4 pounds of solids and 2 pounds of- liquids in the 24 hours. An oflice man of his height and weight should eat about Sig pounds of solids and 2 pounds of liquids, ‘thus cutting dawn his solids by at least half a pound, The May Festival (Montreal Gazette) How the month of May became so named is doubtful. Of much greater interest is the gay livery she wears. Chaucer coils May “tire glad month" fr. a good lead. We arc told that the May Day raditlons run back to anci- ent Roman times. Thty arc much more aged. They run bcck to the day at Eden whcn rpi-iixgtlnc first visited our earth. Cf a ccrtnln writer it has been said that he is more concerned with the shock of‘ loss than with recollecllon". of old‘ happiness. He lacked the fc..t'vc spirit and therefore tended to sm zlzc- TOWN CLIARHI AW The Public Forum This column l: 69GB l" u" discussion u; w" wndw" of questions of interest ‘Phil Charlottetown Guardian rlou not neceuarll! epdorle 1h! opinions of oomspondnnu. LIQUOR NOT~ SERVED 5ir:-»My attention has been call- ed to 5, reported statement. in Kilt‘. Patriot newspaper of the recent meeting of the Temperance Alliance that. at. public functions in Prince o! Wales College at Thanksflvhlll "J15 New Year's “liquor was served in the rooms downstairs." As the College is kindly made fl- vailable on these occflimni byihe Government and Dr. Robertson to the Legion for its dances in order to help raise funds for its relief and other worthy objects the Lesion 1i the responsible party. In order to prevent any mlsund‘ erstanding which may arise from such reported statements allow me to state here very definitely that the Legion has never served liquor at any such functions. It is not, however, the function or right. of the Legion (nor do we con- guests to ascertain what refreshments they may or may not have brought with ‘them for personal use. I am, sir, etc. 'r. EDGAR McNUTT Provincial President Canadian Leg- ion B. E. S. L. Charlottetown.» FROM "TB 1 W111 go pack to the great "sweet mother, Mother and lover of men. the sea. I will go down to her, I and no other Close with her, kiss her and mix her with me; Cling to her, strive with her. hold her fast: O fair white mother, in days long vast . Born without sister, born without brother, O fair green-girdled mother of mine, Sea, that art clothed with the sun and the rain, Thy sweet hard kisses are strong like wine, Thy strong embraces are keen like pain. Save me and hide me with all thy waves. Find me one grave of thy thousand graves, ‘Those pure cold populous graves of thine Wrought without. hand in a world without stain. —Swinburne. impart. As istuted by a discerning gossip, "All England seems to have gone forth to the wood: and mead- ows, as if it. were the proper busi- ncss of ll ‘e to listen to the singing birds and gather the breath and bloom of flowers." And why not? Spring goes to high festival in May, and these folk took. their cue from golden rlalfvdlls and pale priinrnscs and the fragrant vihlte hawthorn blossoms unou the rcrlgerows and the wild hyacinlhs "prccding that" blmtc across the mrzdcws, just as if the skv l-ad dropped a blue scarf in the grassy ficlds- So the milkimids troopzu from the byrc to trip n gladronie dry his readzrs. I.‘ so. he could i never have fittingly tackled the Miy I Day theme out. of which comcs more than half our drama and nearly all the best poetry. For almost in- stinctlvcly we in our minds connect May Day festivity with the clmrmful memories of Merrie England. Bluff King Hal repaired to shooter's Hill for a. gala clay. It is doubtful wheth- er he could trip the light fantastic toe. Queen Elizabeth "made sports" at Greenwich, and maybe for once she really laughed. Long after that. Pepys notes how his wlje and some friends went down to woolwich, ready at early morn to gather the May dew which was considered it sovereign cosmetic 1m- preservation of feminine beauty, a conceit that. our "So to Bed" chronicle pronounc- es to be “mightily diverting." And so it was. These folk had no philos- ophy about nature color. They could not botanize. They had no technical jargon about plans and blouoms. They ntver tried to hold up o smooth, polished minor to~ nature as it la slid the poets do. But they did better. For they brought "May u-homing" and sed the poetry, of springtime, and the Joy and beauty of the landscape got into their very blood and fibre. They knew how to deck a shaven pole with blooms And greenery, and. rncarure. and tlzc vi lagers chose the May qucin, .'a‘ir::‘_ amongst. the fuir, and m town tli: chlmniney-swccp". marchcd hilariously after “Jack-in- tlie-Grccn" to the throb of drums and trot of t‘"c flute, winding up the day wLli n bazzqtvzt as became this ancient and honorable order of ‘Z-Z To uivo Ono of the best preventative» known for . SMUT 0R. RUST ON GRAIN’ FORMALIN A cheap but thoroughly el- feetlvo remedy. Grain grower: would b: wise to act promptly, in order to have Sea! properly treated before lowing. Ono pint to every 40 gal- lons nf water. Full directions glvnn with ovary order- Aloo, a shipment of bl- chlorhle of mercury for the trained: of whim The 2 m opal doom 5km crowned with glrllnda amid o twirl of streamers gay. they fell to dancing with Ill the zest the scuba could , __ 7,3,“,- t-ws-ru-wmrrniyaqvvgynr-M All Mail Orders Glvun Prompt Atwnflofl sider it any person's rlBht) to so . through the pockets and clothing of » You book Into Your Future LL you see yourself still struggling for a living. .. a disillusioned man ... won-le .. . trouble-burdened? Or will you see a scene of glad prosperity . . . travel . . . your wife beside ou . . . your face aglow with happiness I Make sure NOW of indepen- dence at 60 . . . of freedom om monev troub for sports and travel . . . investing in The Great-West PROSPERITY POLICY It is sgecially designed for men who esire early independence. Example: Man, age 25, deposits $313.50 annually. At age 60 he has the option of drawing an bv month for lea . . . of leisure ' Set free my soul as thy soul is free.‘ income of $100 ever] life or a guarantee of earl ASS Hi. lump sum 0F $14,300-—plus substantial accumulated profits. In death, his family inherits the fu l amount he intended to save. The Great-West Prosperity policy also affords special disability privi legea and many other appealing features. ?~icREAT- wEsT Lin; the event URANCE COMPANY A[)4llii('E WINNIPL‘. the soot-cleaning brush. And the Morris dancers capped the pageant bytheir gleesome antics, so that- None returncth empty that hath spent His pains to fill their rural merri- ment. Rich and poor piped gully to a Britannia piiswnue at which the violets elffshly peeped from under the hedgerows. and on the tufted tree bough the cuckoo and the thrush became chief soloists "when April stands aside for May." We are aware of no lines that better express the tone and atmosphere of the May festival than those of Thomas l-lood- ' ‘Tis like the birthday of the world, When earth was born in bloom, ‘There's crimson buds, and white and blue: 1 The very rainbow showers i Have turned to blossoms where they fell i And sown the earth with flown-nu And perchance. amid the racket and inventions of a commercialized age, there could be for our distraught civilization no better gift than a l portion of the cheerful camaraderie crd simple joy the oldtime cele- brants of the incoming of merry Maytimc knew. Ill Ill i * :-: .,. . 1 | I . FISHING TACKLE . l| iii In order to take full advan- tage of the fishing season which In now on ft would be well to look over your gclr and put It in good condition, Ii 5* _"= 1'1 L? :15? ll ii ii ii ii ==_——- 1-: _—.-=-*~ We are well equipped with n line new stock of Bods, Lin”, Reels, l-‘llci. Cut, Gut you“, Slnken, Flank. Extra Tips, Fflrrvflu. m. m! would be planed to look after your n. quiremonla. Sue our $1.00 Stool Boll. It’: o beauty for tho price. We’ lpoolallu in the ecle- hnlul mllword File: and order direct from England. i . 'E. A. FOSTER‘; CENTRAL DIUGIIOII 7': The mo" Ifiljlctl hon the both: you will nu tho sum. Ei3%.3i zlci-tsicfxsi-zlsi-znszi You Can ‘Buy n. s. r. sucsn BREAKFAST BACON (Enclosed in an attract ice cello phone Wrapper) Manufactured from selected Island Hogs You are always assured of this Bacon in the best possible condition-ms it 18- SLICED DAILY and Supplied to Stores in Quantities to take care of their daily requirements- Ash for D. & F. Products DAVIS & FRASER . Charlottetown, P. E. l. Their Flavor will Win Your Favor i LOBSTER PACKERS SUPPLIES; l tva can surety YOU wrrn ‘H 5 Boilers, Collenders, Bath Trays: Sanitary Packing Tables All sizes in STOVE PIPE, ELBOWS and anything in SHEET METAL or PLUMBING FIXTURES requirefl for the Lobster Factory. Orders Promptly Taken Care 0f FRED. H. TRAINOR I PLUMBING E HEATING - 80 Grafton Street " g. i olllwsite Prince Edward Theatre l I l