.,'_._,. .._ “an brink! 1' ‘I --_~.....-.-..a-nscrm-Lcmun-rud » filfihfiihhfiif? 'rnlldnnt~W. Cheater U. IPLIIO. l- l‘- Ildltor all Iallllll Annual! litters-Isa! I dad ll") m-fftf, llaualdvanco) Dllll Page Lenin “Record” The Lea Government is B90981‘ ng on its “record.” It is also appealing-unofficially? -nn the promise of old age pen- lions. t As lvn. M. w. wood pointed Ohl at the Winsloe meeting, the Lea Government's record with regard to its old age pensions plank of i927 is an absolute blank. ~11 you people were to vote for them on their record/h said Mr. Wood, "how are you 801118 l0 8°! 01d gge pensions?" ‘ ‘ The Liberal cndiclates did not attempt to answer this poser. The Conservative candidates, other hand." had no difliculty U1 showing that the Hon. J. D- Stew- art. having kept his election pledges of i923, will implement to the__fuil hjspolicy of i931, which includes old age pensions in this Province through cooperation with the Ben- nett Government. Quite So "The City pavements. costing several times more than thg McIn- tyre highway per mile," says the Lea Government apologist, "are be- ing patched and repaired and holes are in evidence all over the works." This is further convincing evidence that the construction of such high.- ways without any proper founda- tion is a. waste of the. taxpayers‘ money. The City must keep up its hard surfaced pavements. whatever the cost. Moreover, there was never any necessity of repairing the City _ pavements one _month they had been opened to traffic, as was the case on the McIntyre highway! But the fact, cited by our con- temporary, that even the much more permanently constructed streets in Charlottetown are in oc- casional need of repair, will give our farmers an idea of what they will have to pay for the Iiea Gov- emmerlts extravagant borrowings in connection with its election high- way policy. ' ' Seeking A Free ‘Hand A party without is. platform is a party that seeks election without binding itself in any way, without making any contract with the peo- ple and therefore without any' sponsibility. ‘ii. elected, to adminis- ter the public services efficiently and economically. And this, as me HOD. J. D. Stewart pointed out at the Clifton meeting, i5 preciggly the position in which the Lea Gov. ernment faces the people; "No platform but our rec0rd,"_is their cry. It is possible’ that they imagine the people can be gulled mm acceilhlllg such a ridiculous Proposition? A record is a thing of the iii-st. a Platform is a_ line of Fancy fol‘ “It? immediate future. If the Lea Government means to im- ply that ll is appealing an 1w" 1m platform. then it namlis that that- platform has not been implemented. Bllt the Government candidates contend that their platform {our 9"“ “l” has hwi implemented "to the letter." What, then, does it pur- Pm doing. if elected iol- another four years? "we are 50mg to carry 0n 1n me “me W335" they "Ply. In other “'°'°-‘- "l"? arr coins to "im- piement" their i927 platfonn hll over again! ‘flint, is the mo“ gem erous construction that can he platted upon their present Campajgn attitude. - 311$ B glance at that famous 1927 platform suffices to show that l; his never. ~ been ' piemented, A texture was made in the way h: Implementing a few of it; plank; at the last session of the ugly“. ore-but it was only -a geatm-Q. wlgh. lelilelllcnt. rigid enforcement 0f the Prohibition Lew. assistance to the any platform-in this Province. Ho fruit amwinl industry. u» oduca- bacon his ma. b _ _ Ilea- ln-Ivtary-Lioal. COL B. l- Ianllnaalq: SATURDAY, JULY 253051’ OflcthE. who rant ‘it-taxi: r. ~.:*-r-......." urinal. us amt-a lhlaln ‘. '_ tion, to the flstverrncn of the Brew. ince-littleor uiotllllll- 5'15.- 5F" done. " . -~ v This is the "record" oirwbidb the Lea candidatu are apnflllflKl-Aud having failed so miserably we"!!! out their election promisuof 1927,. what confidence can the ~.electors. place in them now when they come with‘ no platform or “pdlloyjbf- ‘any kind, asking to have a blank cheque drawn out in their name 0P" on the treasury of the Provnice, to be filled in, cashed and! squandered by thmc irresponsible gentlemen after the election, in anyway they chooaol ' Foxy. Mr. Sinclair An illustration "of ‘petty-campaign tactics is being furnished: atrthe meetings in ‘First .District..of Queen's by the Hon. Peter Sinclair. Government member without port- folio. and apparently without much conception of thedresponsiblliticsv of his office Holdlll; in. his "hand _a copy of The Guardian lcqntaihirlg the Photographic reproductions of i“? ‘m? W“. 99"?” i“ r3" M” ‘Intyrc bunny... MlmBlncllir. in- vites his audience w. "drive .’dVQ1‘ that road and see if camflnd as many in it p5 upping; in ‘rhertiucrdian pfcturgr-H ‘ U Mr. Sinclair is, orcoui-uc, on}; that ‘after the phqihgl-hph, 1,5, 98km‘ for "I‘he ‘ ‘Guardian _. by the Cook Studio‘ on July 9. a hill-pied nuwhln: up of~thc highway cracks took place. The patches, if any. "llnfl- l" 196B permanent, even than the cracked portions they n. placed, but‘ roi- the present-Awhile the election campaign u on-thcy serve to camouflage mugl so“. dition of the highway in smug places. 4 _‘ _ _ Sinclair's‘ invitation u» the liluwrr- lhrrflqreifie. llrlvsfivcr h.“ “mm-FY 5'54 "llhd shin-ill’ cracks" as were ‘revealed-on Juli 9 by the camers,_ls_jus_t one gel-ll; "Foxy Grandpa?" tricks, ingenious but contemptible in cipulilic ‘mo... which is brought {or no {um grill-pose than p-rool the. people. ‘ '. H. l. . _. Editorial Notes The inauguration of .l better ‘transportation service "begins on Monday, when the new car ferry star-tron her regular route between Borden and Tormmtine. We ommend to the‘ prayerful perilsal of the Hon. B. W. LePage and Mr. ltfcPhee, ‘cham- pionnludolinicm the cadences.‘ paign, the following editorial com- mentfrom the Lea Government or- gun. ."whcn ‘political agitators make ugly ifacu and sling mud it is a sure sign thttathey have no real ‘ammunitionfthe an.’ "used in party warfare by genuine states- men". .4 correspondent‘ in inc‘ Public Forum wants to-know what Hon. ‘cynic Macmillan hm to gay of the $100,000 paid the Mackenzie King Government by the "acouhomcb menlpulowm. Thia is something the public have aright tot-know, Ag- Wfdlhklo Premier Les. at the time of the Dominion election Dr, cpl-u; was Hon. Mackenzleliingu’ "not," thus, in addition glow“; , mm. b" Of the Cfikefl-llflcnt, he wag 5Q inner scorch. of organisation.‘ will he tell the Jclcciol-c, how much,‘ of his election in Queen's? Pstrictrelders witty-attended the Wlrwlve memos will read -with ss- en io a Government monum- on Moreover." ngmin and again he near- ly‘ brought "his career to an end by bluntly refusing to do things which he. was" "certain" wcu" greet 1088171111! without compen- sating "advantage." the tidy surn "oftwenty-seven hun- dred million dollars as the cost of closely associated with Mr. King as the mutiny back in 1557. 'l‘his may to be in a position to share m1... {bean prolongationof the dispute between the British Government and the native Indian leaders. lhll £100.00) Wls. uni to finance a solitary honaciIBf Kna he felt the rebuff sokeenly that he had liter- cllyto be forced to his feet by the iuiiicncc tn make his rebuttal g g g _ ipcooh at the close of the meet- wnishmcnt that -_ "Huh, _ Russell ind. 0hr contemporaryk garbled Clark, the flrlt speaker, was vvarm- version of the Winaioc meeting and "KW iv 1h mqst important pro: ly applauded." m. Clarkbrcccp- it; lurid frilsreports of other meet- "l-iloh-vwld use pensions, iubaldy tiim was the-moat chilling sver giv- in“ is the haunt, admission it canmakc of the hopclcuncsg of the ii:irrsiiiveiiirfs ‘n, “y; the nhumcr. l‘ lilo’ York moo u» icccptirll mi ' ‘expinditilre "of millions of dollar». Ql-rfgpdh programmes and calml: ' cure that the‘ listener must n00 b1 ffburdelicil", by any part ‘of the colt- ggg ‘pow boiltlltlqfhby the 00m‘ gflfin-ggmgyquestion ‘of John C. director-general of the gpgaqcuthrlg Corpof-fltion! ‘*1 (font find lnyone who likes the advertising talks ‘on the radio; Why biiritlnuc w" have theml" "fplqlnnh, -- h. ‘terrible loll in the Great War, says the Boston ‘nmcrlptqllci- greatest misfor- in rnvdcrn times is not rc- so much in the unemploy- ment, or in‘ ihcconaltloi. simulat- ingpoupci-ism, which is revealed in thedcpendence of millions on the dole, but in the sacrifices of the finest of her youth. the material of ‘future greatness, in the Great Wat's slaughter. But at least her census, revealing resiliency in the population, carries an assurance of recovery. Her ship of State, “still under steadfast men," sails bravely on. ‘The Englishmen is still there. ‘Jinan, a, country which is even lrlore densely populated than is Chili, anlwhose agricultural ter- ritory is. limited by four-fifths of the’ country being mountainous, is elllporting rice to China. Until the year 1929 Japan was not growing enough rice for her own people dndwas forced to. import large quantities ir~~ China and cuc- where. m 1929, owing largely to solpntific methods of cultivation and the liberal use of fertilizers Japan, for the first time in recent years, producw osurplus and l5 ltili'_looking for markets abroad for hcl-‘aagricuiturai produce. investing ‘public of Britain for the first time ‘has fought shy i}! an Indian loan says the Calcutta Qrglishinm, andthe underwriters have been left with two-thirds 0! the‘. $10,000,000. 6 per ceni, issue on their-hands. There] is no doubt whatever that the result of the pre- sent loan emphasim the funda- mcntailmportance of incorporat- ing adequate financial safeguards in any scheme of Indian self-govern- ment. lite-British Labor Government shamefully neglected the West Indiesiandiothcr sugar colonies in obedience to their devotion to an outworn fiscal creed; and we shbulcr "htii- with delight ‘the day whicirmarked the end "of an ad- minlstration-ithati has been n0- tcrious for its loud professions and poor performances, a Government absolutely indifferent to the means by which rproduct is brought in- in the market as long as those who pill-chase, can do so at s, farthing cbedper ‘than they had previously paid for. it," a Government which professes the highest standard of huimanitarianism, yet in practice shows "acaiiousi indifference to the labourgof "tile" sweated. “Thewioallaollcy of the Govern- ment isnsclcsr ascrystal. Its in- tentionis to encourage the use 0i Canadian-mined coal in Canada at the EXPQIIBB"Of American-mined coal. In so "far as it fails to substi- tute Csnadiml-mhied coal fcr Americammlned-coai, it hopes t: open the "way- - to - British-mined coal. That i.-,~l' is a policy of "Can- ada rri-istr- iii-st and-of the Empire a close second, "with the foreigner nowhercw“ ' ‘MIIGPGCIICIIJ, the Rt. Hon, J; E. B‘. Seeley inihis book "Adven- tures"'"after' speaking of novel methods-adopted to protect life. writesrwinother Canadian com- casualiiry saving devices, was General-now Sir Arthur Currie. He hadaimost fanatical hatred oi lmncoessary crisualities. 0f all the men that I knew in nearly four years on the. western front, 1 think Ourriewasthr man who took the moat care" of the lives"of his troops. result in Novvthe Indian Congress claim! lisucelonh-om the Liberal mina- pom. '.",‘?\.",‘1"‘f",‘7il‘.' .-.~.;-~ie- -¢~. . MBHGFYIhO WHIVBIY “ten IJOLH ' the farmers that the way to reduce their deficits is to pay the ‘hired man more wages, says the San Francisco Chronicle. The standard; on the Ford clperinrental farm is so a day for sight hours’ workntfogv i l Quilts B: 1m‘. w. n.0, PHYSICIANS AND IIEALEBS Perhaps you wonder why physic- ians object to other cults or healers treating patients. You think it un- fair that .a physician should wont to have all sick people consult him be- cause you actually know of discs that have gone boa physician, to a number of physiclansin not, with- out obtaining relief, and have been really helped by a healer who has spent little or no time studyingthc body‘ and its ailments. Now that some of these healers have helped people cannot be de- nied. They have listened carefully and sympathetically to all the com- plaints of the patient, have learned that he has seen many physicians, has been under supervision, and re- ceived many tests in hospital, and rightly guess that the only wayto help this patient is to agree with him that he really has some trouble and gradually "cure" him, , Now many physicians consider this dishonest, because, u the p“. lent, really has no ailment, there cannot be anything to cure, These physicians forget that the very fact that the patient feels the need of treatment, means that he really should be treated. If the phy- sician would be sympathetic enough to explain to the patient that after careful examination he can find no Ofnnlc trouble, and have him come to the office two or three times for a short check up or examination, he could likely remove the "ailment" with which the patient is suffering. The average physician disdains to do this. He thinks it quite unpro- fessional, whereas he would be giv- ing the patient permanent relief from his fcarI. ' Why ls it unwise to consult "a healer, instead of a regular physic- 1 fibril-l uuniilgiaflljéif. g ‘wharf F V. . ,3 . ~. U Mf" Mid Empire) . _ . ._ _., . l. .. . n " ‘ ‘ '3, ~ v-Liifli - 5. Issue . Lao-za- J "r ‘Iii’ dlaciiislflg ‘the Beauhafilols case we can only g0 ori'the' evidence‘ produced. From the sworn testimony to " datetherlollowhlg ithrec main political facts stand out: . (1) Tlllflilhlllflfl! of the federal Liberal party received $720,000 gqrwganrpaign fund purposes; (2) a proposed do- nation’ o 8200,0001!) the federal Conservative organiza- ticlrwaa‘ nofconsurillnatcd; (3) a remittance of $125,000 to‘the "Ontario" Conservative organization never reached its propoactfdestlliatlon and still remains in the hands of Mr. 'J6ll‘n‘f‘Aird."'We hive already advanced the theory that ‘having received‘ their colossal rake-oh, the managers of thrfcdefdFLlberul ‘party, who- were on the inside in flgguhgjlflqlg..gfllflj, sought to involve the Conservative pgrtycrguriiggtioilyqaa means: of covering their own trail and that they‘ lamclitabiy failed in this devious attempt. _‘ ~ Thereiie a" concerted "agreement by prominent Liber- als _arid__-_thc-:Lib_er‘al jpreseto deal with the Beauharnols slush fundns havlngbeen distributed impartially 1n both political partied,‘ They seek tolump the Conservatives with the JQHIGKIJS; to place them both in the one box; to make itiaflipear that both sides are equally involv- ‘ed in theunaavory scandal. Some of our Liberal contem- poraries,‘ moreover, take refuge in moral generalities re- flecting‘ uponWthc-‘wrongfulness of campaign funds, though everyone.‘ knows that legitimate campaign funds, created _by the. subscriptions of party men o_n each side _of their own partyexchequer, have always existed. The campalgnhfundwvhich came out of the Beau- harnois enterprleeqis o: an entirely different character. If the testimony thus far given by men on the inside of the company is to be trusted, only one conclusion is to be arrlvcdutQ This conclusion is that $720,000 was paid over to thepartyotreasury to make sure that the late Gov- ernment would-not block the enterprise. _ Stilliinother unwlloiesome development ls the sugges- tion put forward byjufominent Liberals and}: section of the Liberal press, that the Beauharnols investigation ghbuld be. abanglpned, fora general probe into the carn- palgltfunds Inf both parties for some years past. The _ln- tent behindjthia-euggestion is to distract public attention from-the scandalous episode lately revealed and to inaug- urate a geneijalrflshing expedition which would occupy months of, into and soobscure the present issue. This ls thcnatura Precoursc of ‘accused politicians. We have no objecticnlto a royal commission on campaign funds later on,butforiillejireaent-the obvious duty of Ifarllamcnt ls to proberBeauharnois to its depths and to brlngout every factobtainable-frorn every possible source without re- SpQ¢t-.t0_¢_ll,hQ_l'_pllfity or to any individual. '_I‘he country is angry overtly!‘Beauharnoisoutrage and _w|ll put up with nosulrterifugeop side-stepping. The inquiry must be pur- sued to he utmost limit, regardless of what heads finally fall in.__t chasket. . _ . _ . It, imay'he_.pnly. a coincidence that when Mr. Gardiner, thcProgrcsslve, liekedfor an inquiry into the Beauhar- i i ian? Because the physician has studied the human body-knows all the_ organs, nerves, muscles, blood vcs? sels and so for"- anatomy; he knows also how -a.ll the diner-cut‘ pal-ts work when they are in health' —physlcloey: and has actually been: how the different organs and “ appear and act when they are not‘ in health-pathology. - f Thus he is albino give the proper treatment. - q. : Unfortunately for the patient,‘ thi? healer does not know these things about the body, and it is thus only where the patient thinks he has some ailment that the healer can help, because the fact that be thinks" he has the trouble can greatly undermine his health. The healer has his place, and many conscientious healers actually work withphysicians in hospitals, but it is certainly unsafe to consult a healer when there is a possibility, (and there is always the possibility) ' that there is an organic ailmznt , . ‘FROM "MEADGWS lN SPRING" But close at the hearth. Like a cricket, sit I, Reading of summer And chivalry- _ Gallant chivalry! . then with an old flflflla I talk of our youth ilow ‘twas gladsome, but often Foolish forsocthi But gladsome, gladsomei And sometimes a tear Will rise in each eye, Seeing the two old friends S0 merrily, So merrily! And ere to bed Go we, go we, Down by the ashes We kneel on theknee Praying together! -—Edward rlimrala“ Note.—W".'itten when Fitzgerald was twenty-one and signed "Epsi- lon." Printed 100 years ago in the Athenaeum, the authorship not discovered until more than Mysore Henry Ford has let out to show let the farmers ‘dept the lbrd Pr!“ qjclimyg]; Ill Great George Street ccrilatiorl and get rich. They will" collimation" , mu on... dim, m”; need the riches i! they eontinlll- " . . w Attention the m ‘ ‘ a§c"m;'~thl;;.._ present. = i. !. discuss thb sitlimtioli. compare notes ‘ Lheir workfisnot firiate. You must secure ‘resliltsas goodis your op- ponents, ‘ ‘but lYcu lmdeietand’ the‘ sitdation, but .' do you take-the best poooibic ad- i vantage of it?" ‘You cannot achieve victory rby ccmpluccnily- watching other: dodthe work. Act without hlabecnustz" ~'""~ are not now won by prayers alone." Butdbc. lute not _to__ neglect‘ your prlivm- ‘lbgy ihlllt mats-curvilin- mir» hhieiliive rwil- ‘he vlirlr- woik, " work, (and, that your later. There are l3 stanzas aboutoid "filth"; 27°F“! i108! likewise. Nest Cream flair Remover croniesgossiping. " '_ Z IiBLSir/etc", L . . . . . . 5c 7' ' ' ' : " . VOTED. ll-Basin for removing hair 0P9"? will?“ ""4 l" "h" mil‘ WWMI Y ‘i an. ua,.itli_il;~u.-n.. ilihiatcr of . riohcriccinf-thc nboi-nl- Govern? mcnt led by-tbo w. r. nois,affair at the regular session of 1930, Mr. Bennett, then leader oftheflpposition, backed him up very strongly; that Mr. Mackenzie. Kinbas Prime Minister", refused an investigatiolhand that on‘ achieving ofiics Mr. Bennett had fllaggommittee appointed which has brought out all the_ reccntiaetounding revelations. This is an aspect of the case to whichthe Manitoba Free Press, most import- hnt of western Liberal newspapers, draws attention. _ “ ' ‘ablfsupported by his friend. the ' "- ' Editor of the Patriot. who is a1- ways in the "know" of his party- But let me ask Dr. Cyrus why he lid not tell us on the platform" u I , -. . _ . ydon, the ‘i hat Senator Andrew Ha 9‘ ianager of their Election Fund or Xliil _ i. ,, ' -- - . “i ‘h Blood Money had received a pres- !" - 3H0 of s1oo.ooo from the Beauhar- lois Power Co. officials for favors _ _ granted in taking away from the vii-ir- "°"°_""F' “"9"”? 3123i.” 3022i .,‘l’...°?.‘;i‘§.“ .321’. ' h j‘- and the money would be used to help buy his way back to power. Why dld he not tell us that Ben- ators Raymond and McDonald- all Liberals-of the strongest were parties with Senator Haydon in getting this money. Why did he not tell us that Senators are supposed to be men of honor and take a-n oath to uphold the Honor and In- tegrlty of the Senate? Why did he ;not tell us that his leader Hon. W. sirewilli. lh " Filth"? "M" who scrmuch-xio my nbvllt “Look at your milk cheques." sus- gest to "Chester and John." that the services of =a Peccntlyuwphmled Liberal D0111’. Promoter be disamb- ed with, because. the aerlwlthral departments, Federal and 10081. l" wertaxed with useless officials? The runners. _of mt Royalty mid appreciate, ii’- the Patriot Ed- u- would tell us what this Uberll House of Commons the Prime Min- ister, Mr. R. B. Bennett. travelled from Ottawa to Toronto to address the members of a large Bible Class. In doing so he was following some rather distinguished pleceden‘ . The late Bir Oliver Mowatt, one of On- tario‘: taught a Bible Class for many years and the present Ontario Premier, Hon, George S. Henry still finds time from his duties to walk to the little suburban Church where he worships to instruct. a izroup of youths in the Bible. Bennett laid: age of distrust, an age in which faith is questioned; an age in which some would substitute science for religion. That cannot be, for science only discovers exists. And science hua not yet dis- covered the soul. men, what are we thrown back upon? What are we thrown back upon but the faith of our childhood? That is a faith which means every- thing to us but it can't be explain- ed-‘ii; cannot be explained scienti- fically or philosophically. All the learning in the world, cannot ex- plain that which rests on faith." words with the poem "Trust." by Whittier. Reading slowly and in a vibrant voice, he said: ‘I cannot answer them. In vain I ‘My soul into the dark, where never ‘The lamps of science. nor the nat- 'Of Mason's sun and stars! I cen- ‘Their great and solemn meanings, ‘The awful secrets of the eyes which ‘Evermore on us through the day ‘with silent challenge and a dumb tue triumph as they did in the el- ection of R. B. Bennett, so this scandal could be aired to the Can- Genuine comfort pleasure In Confidence During the present session of the most famous premiers In the course of his address, Mr. ‘This is an age of suspicion: lln that which really "In this age of doubt and distrust. b Childhood Faith The Prime Minister followed these ‘The same old baffllng questions! O my friend, send bum ural light not learn I nor discern turn and night demand, . ‘Proffering ‘Questioning the c their veils of sand! ‘I have no answer (q,- ‘ "i ‘Resting in childlike in“, ,, perhaps, budget - “.1:- unkno "- EYGS of stone. thee. ‘Save that I learned mother's knee; ‘All is 0i’ God that is, mail‘ ‘And G0,} is good. u; us Itll], will ‘Who moves to His gym _, thwarted by the m; .l- Canadian Cult“; (Dublin Irish ‘rilncli: an" Very Q‘ Illfllerw I e riddle; or "l. wn, "i. ‘Like the calm nphlm will’ 51101111“: ill) Of all the Dominion; c ., the urgh. Yet, when we nlost up“ loyal to the British Cmwn, flcially, however, the akin rather to the Unim type than to the British appearance recalls New You,‘ than London, and the " Toronto smacks spectrally q‘ ...... enormous tendency town-g‘, ericanization" that they '- spired in other part5 of the. and how greatly their ' must be intensified in a, .. which, like Canada, is in ;.... lcal contact with the United a reason for Canada's ou .. imncs obtrusive. Will the m] adfan tariffs on foreign their restrictions on the United States goods, cause a new and more - -. type to emerge ‘l n Government Oil ~ (Toronto Mall and m A valued subscriber has asking why the Dominion '- ment "set aside 89.000000 i~ for the Imperllt Graves Commission." This ~ lustrates how far people go astray in regard i0 - - penditures. The Brant to tb Graves n, mmission for the. fiscal year is $290,000. it ~ added that the War Gravel mission was formed in 1B1’! ggestion of the Prince 0L An endowment of 5.000.000 (about $25,000,000) maintain in perpetuity tbs. and cemeteries of the dead in the war. Eighty per. this sum, or $20,000,000, Ill in the United Kingdomthc \" WM til _ , l... Mackenzie King knew of this adian citizens. ing $5,000,000 being shill-dill , nd doe . . fayooi‘ l‘ hm"'°“‘°fff " chm“; contribution and that he also knew r am Sir, etc, ado. and the other outlyilil- i fmderml n m!" ha‘? of it? The deal stinks to Heaven, ELECTOR. the Empire. '1 ' - . ‘ ‘ . for Hon. R. B. Bennett could not ~- ' Lam Sh‘, 006,. i I know of the rotten deal and refuse the pottege offered him, without the Liberal Cabinet being fully aware of the dastardly steal, the bugrke me “wuiwu 01' We“, acceptance of which the Liberal m] dam‘ the“ “mm” w ‘Hum. Govemment thought would place - ti‘ i victory-on election day’), Are tbBY- is: n power ‘or mom" me I" tdth t- Pmml ‘m’ '"d""°"~ r ' “ Instead of filling the Patriot with ‘- - '" ' her‘ r 1:22am?" tifiéeswziulz; reminiscences of a year ago, let Dr. - ~ i r’ Cyrus come out and tell u: all about the Beauharnols graft money he kept silent on. No, the people were not fooled as Dr. Cyrus would like them to think.-'I‘ruth and vir- "SPEBIALS MM‘! Witch Hm] Ore: J RQYQLTY l' V?‘ "ER t 4' horas yinvlsan __,_._ and give receive advice, to real- ize ‘their fcbjectlvc?’ ' u. ‘not, then ‘a1 ' little ‘Tbetter. and“ ‘adj-u m“ w“, bmther for Sunburn 85c B (W ‘i539’ ‘d99- 00c Hinds Honey and I and nu: only when the last vote mend Cream ...... .. 49c r Three flowers Creams . 5 Three Flower: Skin Fresl; Gllfl’ .-..... ............. 5:. 50c Ponds Creams ,,.,, 39i- Cute: Nail Polish ...,,, 35¢ Cale: Poliuh ltcmover . 85c . Cute: Sturilizcd Manicure Sticks... . . . . . .......£5cbot. You "will remember‘ that "elections 50c Liquid Odocono Deodorant Odorono Cream Dcpilatory Othlno (doable strength) ' for removing hocklu .. $1.1! m 2 MAGS . gftusi-fwbp roses": no: thsclsctm ., of l L U BRAHMZV TEA IVhen you want a Sold on I ~ story "lire. ‘ cheerful! H YWDMAN & i‘ HGUFT. " FUEIZHURE Q lNSURAlit-a I‘ a Household 1 up ilow much you ' uld lose if Ram for additional Insurance No Obligation delicious d Only 55 cents per lb. ly in redd. airtight Packages --' Has '_ .. lilitl) (‘Fgralvll Z Form and you had a y given co. LIMI The Oldest Insurance Agency in l‘. B. l- . Offices-Lower Qnoql ltnet _ g Charlottetown .2 ‘cr '“‘»--.;n: "3 >uaanka - "