PKG! IOU!- llii Biilliillllillllill lililllllllli Notes-by the Way era know, was left incomplete when Pncldnd—I.Cluelnl.Iqlgc. Yloo-Pruelilon-J. l. Burnett. lavishly-Hoof. Co]. D. A. Inckinul. D. U. 0. Idnnnndl I,‘- ' Editor-D. I. Currie the (bmmittee of nine rendered its‘ report to the House of Commons. That report startled and amazed the members‘ were supporters of WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER s, 192s ARE THEY WOR-THY? Mr. J. “Sinclair was a membert ‘é . of the Mdckenzie King Cabinet an h ‘ . _ . t eremre h“ a pa“ up‘) “mthlshould give him no more than they his future usefulness as a repre sentative may be judged. His con- nection with the proposed frost- prooi warehouse at Georgetown ha not been forgotten. about a year ago. in a letter pub-' the signature of Senator J. J. Hughes. ilshed in The Guardian over that the appropriation for a frost proof warehouse at Georgetown was‘ cut out of the estimates by .\lr Sinclair. farmers of this province it be diiilcult to estimate. it known that potatoes shipped to the‘ Southern States by water during the month of December are worth ten to twelve cents a bushel more than ifshipped earlier by rail. For this loss the farmers are indented to Mr. Sinclair and the port of Georgetown is. indebted to him for a deadly tilow. .\lr. J. J. Johnston- vvho last year repudiated .\ir. Sin- clair. is now hand in glove with him and assumes resmnsihility for his acts. past. present and prospec- live. What do the 990111505 Queens anti Kings Counties hope to gain by voting ior two such representatives‘Snfneililni! 50F nothing 11101191 a of the t-essetsih which he h, inter. as these’! And we have it on irery ggqd attthgrit; that the people who eral candidates are upbraidlng Con-‘nnndffade 11112311)’ 111101111 BS H1111 think fai-orably of their chances for $971311"? 591131915 101' 11311118 11111- runnmg’ election are rapidly falling off in number. ,- .‘vlr Sintlair was a Cabinet Slinis-l ter when many hundreds oi thou- sands of dollars were growers oi the Niagara Peninsula.‘ where they were not needed. his interest in Prince Edward‘ Island was Show“ by his cutting on The Premier of Quebec expressmifrlord satisfaction to Mr. Duff anc ‘O 6T5. a. few paltry hundreds for a protec- ted warehouse at Georgetown which would have been of infinite benefit to the farmers of his native pro-l-forced. it was doubtful ii an)’ '91 with fruitful results. This miici vince. voted for repairs to tho Souris lt was stated’ would is tday. The turn in the Province of 1.0 5w ‘Quebec alone will be suficient ‘give Rh.- Melghenm sufficient ditJrlly, even if the other province idid in 1925. leven better. i’ In the face oz‘ these factslwha ‘jis Prince Edward presentatives on the Governmen of .t tplialanx‘! side .Ottawa to support our claims ‘i irew Rae Duncan's comments on the situation in Print-e Edward island show that very favorablelrccorn- _mendations' are going to be made .with reference t0 our claims Premier hieighen f0.‘ railway service. _has expressed himself very favor- ‘ably on Aiaritime Claims and wcfand 5o on, have his definite promise that onrvjere made that when seizures were Igrievances will be rectified as far, as possible. it is now up :0 the people to express their confidence in him by sending a solid fourCon-t servatives to the Capital. ' j-aoi THAT OLD-AGE PENSION FRAUD. The promise of being given popular appeaI. That is why Lib- etl the Old-Age Pensions Bill iutro- _ duced by the Mackenzie Knit; Gov- ernmcnt. ' That measure was a frauil- it) voted frirtprovitied that lialf the cost of old- it ‘sec-tits exert-sand Willingness w . ' - - i‘ frost-proof warehouses for the fruit ‘fir? 11911510115 $110010 11‘? wnlrlbulenwsllf) an" m? demon‘ out of the Dominion Treasury to Yet an)‘ P10191161! “'1111n'5 l0 Conlflnnln pended further hearings until aftei the other half. ed public resentment at this kind. of legislation; his Government did have their hands. not propose to ‘the provinces would have availed-has been made clear-"tne mess" in 1on5 (he tum ht ygrtorio was-themselves of the legislation. But ‘P111011 1110 910110 0140110111 l" "C1931 iii any province did. half the cost breakwater. (Jwing t0 the iilnessfivonlll 1131'? 11nd 1'1 n" P310 113" n11 n.‘ the trintractor. work was tempor- (3811843- arily suspended. During the aes- Thc Winnipeg Fret- Press pooh- But it is now known _.that thc other provinces will do islands dutyYantl Western sections of the Doni- Are we ,0 have a m“ quma o; re_ inion that had not been covered. the House or a brokerr We need a solid four at for tiootlegginz .much needed betterment. Sir And- What this meant to the‘ lDui! is a wealthy ship-owner and it the King Government. Everyellflfl was made by Premier King. his Ministers and supporters to obtain ‘as mild a report as possible. but ‘the discussion thereon so impress- ,ed the House that the Government was expelled from ofllce. Only a part of the field had been covered by the Committee. and Chief Justice Lemieux. of Quebec, was appointed a Commissioner with full power to investigate the con- dition snd operations of tie Cus- toms Department in the Eastern S l The Commissioner has already tak- en evidence in Quebec city, Halifax and Saint John. with the result oi further uncovering smuggling and operations conducted on a very extensive scale. . t: Customs olficial: were not found to be implicated to the nme extent as had been disclosed in other sec- tions before the House Committee, but very large losses of revenue were indicated from smuggling of ‘liquors. tobacco. cigars. cigarettes. fnarcotics. silks, stolen motor cars and many complaints Emade. the smuggled stuff was order» ed to be released without payment of duty or fines. the orders coming from those higher up in the Depart- rneht at Ottawa. There was a loud call in Nova Scotia for the examination of Mr. Dull’. late .\i.P. for Lunenburg. >.\1r. was more than suspected that some ested were engaged in the contra Be that as it may, .\ir. Duff is probably possessed of much information that would be of in» terest t0 the Commission and tr the public. He is busy. of course. with his election campaign, lJU‘ The Commissioner has now suc- September 1~i, which will no tloub‘ At a later date the Com mission is expected to hold fur- tlier sittings in Eastern New BfiliiS wick and Prince Edward island The Customs Probe n our read-i the country although a majority of THE CHARLCYPIEPOWR. ' GUARDIAN l i THE NEW NERVE SPECIALIST There was a time when we thought of a nerve specialist as an individuQF- entirely different from other men and from other physic- ians. ‘ - ' His sun. life was taken up with the ditlereiit types of paralysot-nand the differences between the various forms of insanity‘- He wasn't supposed to cure any of the above cases. but he was called when the family physician was ll.'l doubt about a case. The treatment was placing the patient on the regulation measures for any form of paralysis. and lend- ing the other type of cases to the hospital for the insaned , How different now is the nerve specialist. if he is in charge of an institu- tion he doesn't look upon all his cases as hopeless incurables, but sets about to study each case is to the causative factor. Sometimes severe nervous strain. other times an infection from teeth. tonsils. gall bladder. or intestine is causing the "strange actions" of the patient, and he is able to send a good per- centage to their homes. cured. And the nerve specialist in priv- ate practice is now a very “meet- abie" individual. because his great- est asset in healing the large num- ber of nervous cases he meets. is his knowledge of human nature. This very "naturalness" on his part gains the confidence of the patient, and the greatest obstacle to the treatment has thus been- his patient. in one case he assumesi a very firm attitude throughout’ the examination, making the pat-i lent’ realize that he is the master“ will bring about a cure. but must; ner- t "With another he sees that thisl "master" attitude will cause ‘"re-. gradually that he knows his case thoroughly 1nd can help him. But iri every pgflty" toward the patient. that the‘ patient instinctively realizes appreciates. Thus our nerve specialist, as a Swiss physician ably points out, is wards. Hence his success in these cases’ that formerly drifted gradually to- wards institutions. +04+¢+ FOR up" had overspread the Maritlmcs. The. reek and odor of it extended gits condemnation of the King, Griv-‘ ‘ernment with the same loathsome- characteristics all over Easternl not. ht 192i; this vote mg dfgpped, poohs Mr. .\ieighen‘s alternative tin-Canada. And Ontario. the Prairie- Mr, fihtlair wag not than in the dcrtaking, that he will call a con-‘land Border m“! me Pacmc Co“! the Lord BS U681 110118111 1n 11111111 Cabinet but he vi-err- both on the jobatthe time. They did nothing to secure thislthem. because. the Free Press 8M8.‘ _ "Of course the provinces will not‘ Th’ °°umrY 1' awikwm“ ‘mm, re-vnte. Why should either one or both of these gentlemen be voted for‘! Electors, think it over. -————¢o>i—t— THE NEXT PARLIAMENT it is iiow a foregone conclusion that Premier Meighen will have a substantial the next parliament. it had been felt all along that the Maritimes and Ontario, Liberalism had been almost wiped out at the last election, could not be expected to do much better than they did in the 1925 election and that Conserv- utivo hopes rested upon what Que- bec and the West would do. it is where now definitely" known that the Marl-l times and Ontario will return even more Conservatives than in 1925 and that Quebec and the Western Provinces have taken a very decid- ed swing to COHBCPVQHUMN ‘flit; onthusiqptic reception given the ‘M: Hon. Arthur iiféignlii. 'ih Quebec last wehk hiiivshyatthildylhe last hope of Liberalism in thstiprovince. His meeting in Quebec City. a re- port of which appeared in yester- day's Guardian. was a demonstra- tion without iparallel in the history of Canada. it was not a gathering of curious sight-steers, it was a ‘gath- ering of tfflpds with a kindly greet- ing and h mutt admission that they believed‘ in Mr. Meigheu and his policy. _Mr. Meighoifo other meet- ings in Quebec. and he addressed many. were of a similar character and the belief f|’rvery prevalent thot-tliottfiloabrhloh has turned so and Mr, Jqhngtqtfference of all the provinces and enact any scheme agreed to by all agree and this is the nigger in this particular woodpile." The nigger in “Mackenzie King's woodpiie was just that also. but blacker, because it was contrary to all fairness. i-‘or instance, that ii tOntario and Quebec did not intro- tduce old-age pensions they should 111550141)’ 01"" 811 inlpay the major share of one halflfor this is apparent. in every Pro- ithe cost of old-age pensions in lylanitoba or any other province tthat did not adopt the scheme. z WaoKenzie King's Old Age Pen- ‘sion bill was a half-baked proposal ithat had no merit except to be used 1in an election, as it is being used. ItMr. Melghens ides is to go about Ythe thing in a commonsense and businesslike mannerfTi-ie does not favor taxing the people of one pro- vince for the sole benefit ofthe people of another rprovince. I ~ EDITORIAL NOTES t '1‘ Mr. .1. J. Johnston played false with the iBsil GovernnieuL; -Ia he to be trusted again? What did Mr. John E. Sinclair do for Prince Edward island? There is an outstanding Ibiii of $17,000 against us. that he had something to do with. What else? A politician should have s good memory in order to ‘be consistent. in an early part of his speech Mr. Mackenzie King characterized pat- riotism u the "lust - refuge of o ecoundrol," then in his perorntion he waxed nauseating in his ultra- pctrlotlain. pointing dramatically to towards conservatism in t .5” the Union Jack which he fled from} unlin- to the‘ outstrip... ti. ‘t’; Qf . . , _ . .' l t thave yet to be heard from! it Evvould appear now that only half ~ he damning story has yet beentold. its apathy, which was apparent in the first stage of the campaign. From every quarter come reports in! a grand rally to the standard of Laurler days and “ichsbod" is writ- ten in its stead. The mongrel King Government is down and out. dis- credited and in disgrace. The party is weak compared with what it was last October. weak in its smirched leadership. carrying a load of scan- dal and wrong-doing, which was then unknown but since revealed. its roll of candidates in every one nf the nine Provinces is weaker now because of the number of, pro- minent Liberals who have declined to face the conflict. In .0ctober Int .-Premier King hoped to gain a straight Liberal ma- jority. The Progressive props had proved unreliable and too exacting in their demands. The hope in which he dlsholved the House was dashed on election day and he needed his Prairie props more sore- ly than before and leaned on them until they failed him utterly. Now his best hope ll to get enough Lib- erals and Progfeesi-ves in hillreiri to embarrass the Conservative Gov- ernment. 0n the conservative aide therein strong and growing confidence. The party in united - - r flicked- ithe Maw". Goverhmgm‘ The 0p’ As i tiziimselflsh conquests peace position have grown alarmed and! were foumt almost panicatricken in striving to yet hugtes 31am and sperm; emit; hold the few seats they have in the the sound; Msritimes, in Ontario. Manitoba Cold are the ashes following nverr “Dd 8mm‘ mmmma‘ The cause Anti llgzlnlfs long silence comes to every name. V1110‘? 01 1110 901111111011 14100131 But there are lives which are con- members who got elected in 1925 tentment-crowned. have declined to accept a noniina- Wm‘ 1°" imrpasslug 111°" °1 111° tion this year. rflwwned" ' - ' A destiny which asks for no ac- “The glory has departed 1't‘°"‘"‘° And tlilghill is: to face the setting Liberalism that flourished In the gun g g Daily Selections t (iuai-tliaiii Rcatlcrs O-O-4-O-0 September 8, 1926 THE LOH US DELIGH T-"Hath offerings and sacrifices as in obey- lng the voice of the lsord?" i Sam. 15:22. PRAYlIi-lnrd, Thou deservest not sacrifice, else would i give it. LIFE'S HIGHEST ossrmv‘ Men talk 0i destiny and dream of Anti see your children, strong and clean and true, Trained for the world, with all your doubtlngs done And no remorse ior aught you've failed to do; No greater bliss can lilo on us. bo- stow, Than the sweet pride triumphant parents know. --By Edgar Guest. GUN RUNNERS CAUGHT WITH ._CARGO OI ARMS. M-ANAGlJA Nicaragua. Sept. 4.'-_ The go ernmlappreports that its forces arms alld forty soldiers negr Tomi pisqu. Strong forces have been sent to the east coast to recapture Capo Gracias, Rio Griyide, Prior-to Cabezos and Les Perlas, points and Empire. Sin-it is a question in my mind moved ‘whether Canadian; living in theiflstatda border at the iimtanco 0 own country realize to the full the the Minister. importance and fur-reaching result the American smusslern 8011161111118- oi’ the outcome of the general eleoiAnd so. in order to get a camDn15n tion to beheld on the 16th proxiino. fund, we have seen the 1111190110" There is some difficulty in seeing tlon the whole insue when one is toojmanufactures of all kinds perm"- close to the seat or action-like low-ted without payment of dnl)‘. I111“ ing the pérspectivewhep being-tooidrlrlng out of buslncs Canadian close to the screen, but to Cana-‘planta, the workmen leavins 1119 dians living in the United Statesicountry in hundreds of thousands. and feeling the interest here and as homes broken up, niin and 1058 011 expressed in the utterances of pro- every hand in order that .\ir. Kins minent men. and the editorials in ‘might plume himelf a while 1011861‘ the papers. etc.. one can readily see and 115s friends, the Americans. 111°- TllE VBTERS’ CHANCE AND llllTY l0 SAVETIIEIR BilllNlllY Aging- ' To the Editor of The ‘Toronto Moll-en. 0n the other hand. the B09411 ‘Canadian (Mounted Police were re- Quebec-United from the that there is a great deal more in‘flt thereby. the issue than that which shows itv self on the surface in Canada. t man first and a pllyflifilnn 811°"; veeuptured‘ q boatload o! _ Reciprocity.‘- tioii. however. bravely asserting world that she intended to carry out her destiny as part of the great British Empire. Then in the election the cry of the Liberals. Fielding and Patterson, tripping Washington to find out what the Americans wanted and in the nego- tiations there géttlng very badly trimmed. came back to Canada to cram a one-sided deal like that overcome. i . h i , fi~ And so as he makes his examin-jitzztr; ‘u; 1,2221“ glafegtzeniadtllaigiar ation he estimates the “make up"of'p|a,n_ In this eleéflon the (in, 1135' shifted a little. but one easily re COEVillZES the 01d traitomus scheme. bow would not one imagine that 111w? being defeated twice, the that he knows what is wrong, llflflbqiiestion would be dead? Yes, t-er. ing carried out. 121111)“. Then why are we having‘ not be interfered with in any man-la retietition of this question? The issue of the 16th inst. presents answer is plain. There is the urg- t-nt necessity on the part of the Un- itt-d States monled interests to se- sistance on the part of the patlentficiire cnnrol of Canada's natural re- h" bee" 51"" ‘he 110e1>1113 01111911’ and so he explains everything in sources. and as long as there is in "n 119811111 the simplest manner pQggjble‘ and power in Canada a Government so]. where they have so far failed to “persuade? the patient Jilly (lanadian all through, there is 8135i) 1116 1111110111111" 0f 111511110115 no chance of their manipulating mailers to suit themselves. Given case m5 gt-eafestva Government in Canada favorable profit and not the benefit of the help toward cure is a real "sym-ll" their plan and the rest is easy. 0111111111" 1119i’ 113"‘? bemmi-l "ewe" Imok at the situation as it prc- amhsems itself to the voter today. who 111°“ °°°‘1“°"°"“~ is the late PT€U1lEf'Whl) has been qjggpon-glble (m. 199513.10“ tn can, for "Canada by protecting her inter- iida for the last few years. Wil- iam Lyon Mackenzie King. grand- en of a traitor. late employe of 1110 ‘Standard Oil Company, grad- uate of Harvard University, U.S.A., and one who praics‘ about the en- croachments of Downing Street and autonomy. Autonomy! God save the mark. ii we are to be hossetl by some country outside of Canada, 1n heaven's name let it be Grciit Britain whose interest 15 800d 0f Canada and not the United States whose interest la only that 0f an exploiter. 171111112 the last fmir yeam. 600.- - 000 Canadians left the home of their ¢1I11d1100d and reluctantly went to 1118 Unlled States because they ¢°1111l set no suitable employment in their own country. Six hunrt. red thousand. the population oi‘ Toronto! It is estimated that one 111M} rs worth $5.000 to the country he lives iii. On this basis we have 1951 10 1119 Unlletl Slates three 01111011 ‘dflllaiiv in human assets During theiste war, 600.000 Cans- dians went to fight their country's 111111195. and about 540,000 came back. The loss in man power was 0111i’ $0,000 men. The men who went to the United State; will not come back. and the loss to Canada is nine times greater than was the loss due to the war. We lost two and a half billions of dollars fight- ing the great war. and three bil- lions supporting the late Govern. ment of Little Willie hiackepzie King. The customs scandal. which has lately convnlsed Canadads just an- other instance o! the policy or sen. ins out to the United States. The issue here is clearly defined. and the Government of Mr. King deeply involved. ‘it is asbsolu-tieiy jmpog- aible that such a condition of affairs would prevail. and the entire Gov- ernment not know of it. Why, may W0 6311- d0 W9 880 the spectacle of a Canadian Government openly 3g- llntinx foreign exnloiters to break the law of Canada and ruin the citizens‘ of Canada. The Govern. inent ‘was so low in ‘honor and pat- riotism as to nlnv into the hands of American and other crooks, boot. loggers and smugglers. One word from the Minister of Customs hm] the whole mess could have he“ stopped. That word was not gpok. ‘~ blunt LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon Jos. Pulitzer. of thegesources. and also New‘ York World, Burke Cochrane. the well-known Fenian oi those-sources which are not now to be oh- days. and others put up a fund said rained in this country, ‘and realize to be a million dollars to net.) the that the day is nrnr at hand when Liberal party carry its election. sirQCanada will be the Only source of John A. hiacdonald carried his eiec- supply to them of a large list of} It is, therefore. simply} that "A British subject i was born good business on their part to s0; anti please God a British subject 11113111911181? 111811915 1118! 1110i‘ ca“! will dle." The National policy w0nuf°111T°1 these sources of supply-and‘ anti Canada gave notice to all the 1n 011101‘ 10 110 11116- 1t 11 11111101111111] for the _ possesses in a few materials. that the Government of Canada he of a mind with them that this can ,be done. it is obvious to the most o; 1911_ simple-minded that with a low tar-i twenty years later. Reciprocity was iii. American manufactured goods‘ can enter Canada. and with a of; to friendly party in power no export‘ duty will be imposed on the raw materials going out. They want nothing niore_ but are willing to pay for 111st that. it is worth many millions of dollars to the United States to have a low tariff party in power in Otthwa, and hence they will resist the advent oi the Conservative parfl‘. which I bound to impose a strong national policy, supported by a sufficiently high tariff to insure that. policy be- Yoiir correspond- ent,_.\fr. Charles Harriss, in your some excellent evidence of what l am trying to say. To every people on earth there in every instance propaganda carried on by foreign interests, who seek only their own of wood and drawers of water to if Canadians do not arouse themselves to fight este in this contest, as her honor- ed sons fought in France for an issue not so close at‘ home. they will eventually perish, as being found not worthy of the great heri- tage of nationhood. Power $011185 to those who are worthy, to those who, seeing the "issue, niiinfully meet the enemy, and sometimes (Gontlnued on page 5.) ----¢-0->-_- , ++0$++4+0+++00oo++¢¢o0 w The Public Forum This column In open for the dliw-nullnn by “n-uponduntn of questions ol Interest. The Charlottetown Guardian duel not necessarily endorse the op- inion: of correspondents. RAILWAY FREiGHT RATES Sin-Should not the coming e100- tion be of more than ordinary im- portance to the people of tho island and the Maritimes? Do the peo- ple realize what excessive freight rates mean’! Let them ask their merchant. Every pound of produce shipped and every dollar's worth of goods bought pays freight rates. Very high freight mean higher cost for goods we buy and lower prices received for goods we "sell. The people of the west thoroughly grasp thit; hence \the Progressive Party. for is not this a party whose nole aim is to get everything pos- iiible for the -West even if at the expense of the other parts of Can- ada? iDuring the last few years have they not got it? The Crows Nest Pass Rates were first put in- to effect twenty or more years ago. Mr. King insisted these rates be rte-established by the Canadian National Railway for the benefit of the “Fest even if at a loss. We of the east must therefore pay higher rates to make up that loss. When Mr. ‘Mfllfillfifl intimated that the Maritiines deserved consideration in the matter of freight rates Mr. King warned him to “Keep his hands of the Canadian National Railway." Mr. Creriir ‘spegklng re. cently in the West in aid of Messrs K1nK 8nd Dunning stateivthese low rates in the West would mean living t0 them this year 0f Twenty mill-on. dollars and that it Mr. Mellhen was elected them was a likelihood of these rates being m. creased so as to make them on"!!! average with rate; in the rest, of tho country. ‘Think of it TWENTY MHJLION DOLLARS that we have t» help make up to give tho west. now held by the rebels. ___>_. iBritish Columbia. Monitohd, 0n- iiirlo. New Brunswick and Nov: Scotio, in which the party one strongly eupponod lut (kieober show increasing confidence of oom- iug victory now. How could it. be otherwise, since the Oltodol at 0t- tawc is already captured? Best of all le-flo friendly spirit everywhere shown to Preihlor Meighen I lill kkkkkkkkkkkkkmkkakakkkk rvwv v ,7 , "it WORDS OFF-EN’ MiSUSED: Don't say "i have a date this oven- ing." Sly "Ill engagement." a O-B‘ '1‘ E N MISPRONOUNOED: 1100111. Pronounce po-em. the e as in "men." not “pom.” 0P1‘!!! MISSPEILED: compli- ment. Don't confuse with comple- IIQIIL BYNONYMS: obsolete. ancient, old. archaic, disused. antiquated. worm s-ittiinv; "Use a word‘ three times and it is yours." Lot u ipcrease our vocabulary by mute Qflhl ' ll t If -. . W‘ ~ . t I t» ls " ‘ 1 leomn "fi J l1 r ' ' LE": "- ohm." : ii .‘t ~~' meetings f1: Quebec Province ~ sif-tamlrfleneoa. Ali-tho nine l’. _ lug one word ouch day. fhhyh et [of IWCLGIMULATION; the " " i ' '1...‘ lower rates than vvo enjoy. two nil know of tho Hudson Bay pro- lecled route the ultimate can o: ‘Ch l! Qtilnlted lflyyhgrg (mm 3111? to Seventy million dollars. Experts have declared the route Indeed for ordinary commercial use still the West wants llllg money 090M. in their district. Mr. Dun- ning speaking at Winnipeg on gopt lat sold "If the West vented this‘ road the only my to got it was to defeat the Conservative party do- This must have coal of prison-made gOQdB 111111 Those of us who are living in the iinited States and at. iu stifflcently sortie of us can remember the close touch with the thought and general e ection of 1891, and thejleeiing here, know that the leading issues of r at time. Flaming posterslimintks here never lose sight of the proclaimed the “Continent-to-whlchqfact that they have wet-belong" idea and “Unrestricted'9n°1'm0n$ proportion of their "W" used up an that Canada instances re- .wishes. This 'will relieve i: mdnv. FREE. Richmond Street, I l When there is‘ no‘ Will the law must takeite courscin it; ' ' absolutely impersonal way; biit not . t‘- ncccsaarily in accord-once witgyyqn‘ . - j, T" w; l. Play safe. Make a will and streathq‘: t that will by appointing the Eastern-Trim t i Company as your executor and Rugtgg‘ and insure a wise administration of your 1 estate. Our pamphlet " Your Will" - contains most helpful and llnpotflhg in. formation upon will melting. -_ Said f9; EASIEFYR frlxttsr CQMPANY ’ c. n. n. Losoivoirrnjaetih; ma", uaan OFFICE-HALIFAX x s, Montreal, r. o. Saint John, a‘. p. S}. John's, 1.1,; "t Your wife of worries Chnxlofiohvrl, P. I. I. I The ‘Marriage He thc breadwinner, she bringing up a family. Equal partners? without support to shoulder it There can be no equality his full share of the burden, future safe for his loved ones. your circumstance: write Provincial Managers together through good and ill, partners in the great business oi building a hdmg and Sc it scorned; but eho Wag the homo, meet tho obligations his death had crested. where life insurance in left out. For particulars or llfc insurance contract luitahle to HYNDMAN s. c0., IJMITED. Partnership the liomekeeper. standing "sharing the burden-equal left all — earn the bread. keep in tho marriage partnership No man has shouldered until he has made the Tho Great-West Life ‘ We have juet- received en tx- tremely nice ‘new Compact to tell for NIFTY NEW DOLLAR COMPACT imposed upon and to have to pa)‘ high rates here in order that the tviest. may enjoy low rates at our ‘expense. To whom can we look for relief? Not to Mr. King or he would have acted 1n the past when he had ample opportunity. Further both he and Mr. Dunning in speech c5 made in the West Quring the present campaign have shown that. the hiaritimes can expect from‘ them in the future no different treatment than iii the past. I\\'hat of .\lr. Ziicighen? He has priibliclyfiiitated dthat he! consigiered t e Martmcs escrve cons era- tion and promised to try and 89i- l! for them and as soon as opportun- ity offered showed this in a prac- tical way by appointing Mr. W. A. Black. a Maritime Province man, as Minister of allways. ls it there- fore not up to the voters of the its- iand and the other provinces to cast asidc pfllltlcg in thh election for this if for no other reason and to support Mr. Melghen and his can- didate; and so give him an oppor- tunity to help us and for us to see what he can and will do. Tho three Maritime Provinces DOAIVB Conservative Governments in p0~ wer. These Governments must all remain in Power some years to complete their terms. See by your vote that you also give a Conserva- tiveilParty ptliwel‘ a: Ottawa so as ogva compete t in, - 1s:"t.t.'.i.:':"‘*1.1s1““11'i.ml1‘ s. s oppo un ty does not some often and l4; surely womb a trial. Tbls suggestion ‘is 011ml! by 0I1E'who ls very enxioiie tor fair-play in the matter ti! " i am. Bir, etc, A MARITIME RIGHT! i il- liliiiiiii'_\'y t '- - KIDNEY ' It l; on the email finish and in every way attractive. The White Drug Store .I. G. IAMlESON rived and‘ is ONE DOLLAR size, ellver Druggist 111W _ iiliiiii tioit '.Now is the time ,- buy hard coal. Tliti Schoonet-Theoline ar- discharg- ing a cargo of the vet‘! bestqualityn. You save money by bllylnii now. A. Pickard 8i 9°- PHONE 240 Piokli ng CHECK THIS _ fi-QVER 4o°"""" ESSENCE OI". NINEGAR Powde rd Ind Cu"! I I pleeo Whole Ginger levee cgyonne I049 And Ever-whit"? m: 3 M65 nItUGSTOBE