_ ‘\‘~J-..4 PUUR IiJTES b: iin; mil 4 Mo» w f‘ _ ‘ __ w? €.e-II%—_I. (‘henn- l. lloLuu. ll. r. $4.50 on your (in ndvanre) mulled in ~ ~~ - Disguised Propaganda M‘ _The high standard of the Canad- ,,_,,,.‘._|an Press for accuracy and impar- im- u-ciality is not. likely to. be enhanced by a summary of the election issues in the coming provincial campaign, written for it by Mr. Reuben Mac- Donald, editor of the official organ '0! the Lea Government which is appearing in lifziritime newspapers. Net only are the arguments of Lib- r€flil candidates featured and em- e" ~ C’; TJZTZZQ ' “his ,ciiiiiionriowii GIIARBIAI ‘ Surrinry—laii-nt. fol. i). A. Inclilnnun, l). Editor nnil Managing Director-J. ll. Burnett Alcoa-Into lcriitorv-lfrunnjynligrgmnd D- ii. Currie Morning- Dniiy (founded IBM) “.60 per you (In ndvlnre) delivered. THURSDAY, JULY 16. 1931 ceased citizen contributed. Some of the floral decorations were between seven and eight feet high. On Bun- day they had poured into the strick- en home in such numbers that it was necessary to move them into the back yard to make room for later and perhaps more ornate tok- ens of grief. ' geous rites were a tribute to Mr. Daniel Iamascia, whose claim. to fame was that he was the lieuten- lmmigrntion into the Unit“! States says the New Yorll Tim" has practically reached the van- ishing polnt. It is the end of All epoch. Never again will there b9 such vast population movements overseas. South America. which m; been our-nearest rival in hos- pltality to Europe's homemakers, has followed our example in twin!" ing the gates shut, though not $0 emphatically. Elsewhere, in Aus- tralia, South Africa and Canada, established policy argues against immigration swarmlnl- F0!‘ ha" B century emigration to the United States was a big $00181 and econ- omic factor for the populations of Europe. They must now will!“ themselves to the loss of that out- let, 1t is a problem, incidentally. which in the longer view may be as important for the prosperity 0f the Continent as the question of Y ',. ‘Vtecsfropldogt-BILI? Burns" Cnmuln and United Hinton. But the truth is that these gor- THE(I|i_§§i(l,1.I_i_t1_il -.--'__..¢>_ __ l llthat £0113». of fiuurs B) Iona W. Barton. MD "(NV ABOUT YOUR HEARING You have perhaps been noticing that. your hearing is not as good as it should be and quite naturally are much concerned about it. If you find that you can't hear the ticking of an ordinary watch at arms length in a quiet room, it would ‘be worth your while to have your hearing tested. If you find that a cold in the head affects your hearing it may be that the inflammation in the I the little tube runnnlng from back \\'\i__.'_L)i<in.\N ~ SELKIRICS DIARY 14803-1804 , (Continued) rent due for a farm which was let- MONDAY, AUGUST, 15th- Notlto the Governor by an absentee u‘ .. i Canal/id's On T719 Upgr-ggfp (Toronto Mail and Empire) - p m . nose and throat has extended “P being able to settle the situation of the lots till the surveyor has made more progress, I resolved to return to Charlotte Town. Mr- Shaw re- mains on account of some appear- ances of a contagious fever among the people, whatever may be Dr. McA's medical acquirements, he has not now leisure to attend to the patients. Before setting out I agreed with the McMillans and McFee to build a log house 25 x 16, roofed so as to stand this winter, for which they are to have £5, and promise to fin- ish it in ten days- This is for a store house, the expense of these buildings depends in a. great meas- ure on the timber being near or for. the spruce logs are at a distance and much hauling by the oxen it the rent I proprietor. (Loyalist also) who had appointed Laird his agent, Throckmorter of Cherry Valley. This farm he had held ‘l years. the rent promised 15s per annum and not 1E yet paid- The Governor has now left it and everything gone to ruin though bound to keep in re- pair, this is Lairdb account. The farmer fences, e'tc., I saw as I pass- ed and they are certainly in a shockingly neglected says the Governor was always very friendly to him till he demanded This farm of 5 or 600 acres and 100 or 80 at least clear, a good house, orchard and mill, is the same that J- Stewart told me was on sale and might be got for about 3002, was offdred by the proprietor for 500$ Ex. C. It is now untenanted, state. Laird Faced with a serious may take comfort from .1 ent United States statistician, Dr. L. J. Dub] Metropolitan Life Assurance Co poguititictm eighth» ltepubgic is an ' a wi in ess t an fort ears it w’ stationary. the death rate equailihgytiie birth ifzliltebififre 1970 he believes unit there will be a further decrees, '9' the birth rate and n rapid decline in the number of pa, in occupying the neighboring country. He specifies ‘phe cause of this decline as decreasing fertility, comb“, e with birth control. ed These statements have a profound interest for Ca ada. Up to the present time this co ntry has always be confronted by the theory that no lim t couldbe placed e the growth of the overshadowing colossus to the 501R: of the international border. Always it has seemed iii g the population of the Republic would expand indefinite? to two hundred million and three hundred million ma’ four hundred million and so on; that, conseluentiy p, manufacturing industries would f ' economic situation, look at the future. L Mr- Canadians _All emin. . m "f the mpany, predict that {he losing its power of inc..ense _, phasized and the Conservative o. -. . argument; slurred over or omitted ~'"~-' in this article, but actual misstate- “~" ' " Iients occur, as. for example, in the ‘following rrimige: "Through the use of modern machinery, the purchase of which “i was condemned by the Conserv- iaiives, a far larger mileage of i| better roads was improved nt a lower cost than under the. prev- 1011s Conservative administra- tion, it is claimed" Jinx-r .77 - 4 _IvI'o t... s... INu- I h- e - ""' It was to the manner in which 01hr: fact, surely, of which Mr. lifucDon- lid was well aware. It is also stated that "Dominion politics have entered the provincial campaign." The correct statement would be that the Liberals have '1' endeavored to inject Dominion pol- itics into the campaign. . i - --<- ‘.Y.‘\1 w~vvwq>yrr~§ this machinery was purchased. without authority of the Legislat- ure, that objection was taken; a ant and bodyguard of Arthur Fleg- enheimer, alias Dutch Schultz, a gang leader who is now in the hands of the police. Both Chicago and New York have become more or less familiar in recent years with the gaudy obsequies of prominent hoodlums. The funerals of,0’Banion and Jake Lingle were the most largely attended that Chicago has- witnessed in recent years, although in the case of the latter many im- portant and worthy citizens attend- ed under the misapprehension that they were offering a tribute to a popular newspaper man, who fell in the discharge _ of his duty- Later events showed that Lingle was as much avgangster and grafter as 0'Banion. Iamascfa, like most of the other thugs who have risen to eminence in American cities, died with his h E war debts and reparations. ed States in studying the causes 0f youthful crime home training first pllwe and inef- ficient juvenile courts second place- Naturally the home is, and always has been, regarded as the centre of influence, whether for good or evil. but to put down juvenile courts B5 a. prominent factor in the contin- uance of the evil they were design- ed. to prevent is somewhat startlind The explanation apparently is this: If s. court, in mistaken kindnea simply pats a. young rascal on the be a good boy, he remains unpim- ished and unrepentent and will al- most invariably come back again in different than ever. vacating undue severity it must be manifest to every scnsibilc person that evil conduct should not be a1- lowed to go unchecked. Real con- trition must of throat to the middle ear, and as this inflammation partly closes the tube, the inner side of the ear drum does not get its full supply of air to balance the air on outersidc. When the cold clears up, the hear- ing should be all right again. If you find that you can hear the watch ticking as well when Y0“ place it against the bone behind the ear, as when you place it directly over the ear, then it is likely that the cerum or wax in the ear has got hardened against the drum. Now don't try to remove this wax in the old fashioned way by using a hair pin. This may irritate or even puncture the ear drum. Your best plan is to see an ear specialist who will remove it safely in a few minutes. As this hardening of the wax may occur from time to time, it is possible that he mfly show you how to do it yourself. The wax is first softened by put- ting a few drops of one part, hydro- gen peroxide to two parts warm water into the ear and leaving ft A social organization in the Unit- gives absence of cad and tells him to go home and short time more brazen and in- Without ad- be brought about convenient. I went up Orwell Bay in a boat to the upper part of Lot. 57 where three or four settlers have taken possession of the best spots. Went up to J. Lairds in Vernon River, a Loyalist settler from Carolina who lent me a horse and agreed to show me the way to Charlottetown. Four fine Rossshire lads, Macftaes landed me hauling the boat through the mud in true clannish style. I had been talking my best Gaelic. and divided my dinner with thern, which seemed to have won their hearts. For their encouragement I explained to them part of what Laird told told me of his situation, he began here quite bare 8 years ago. has now 50 acres cleared. much upland hay, a good stock of sheep and cattle, an orchard, a com- fortable house and plenty of every- thing. He values his improvements at £400. He has 200 acres assigned him as a Loyalist under a bargain would come to more. Here they are Vernon River and had a glance of y - “The financial position of lPririce Edward Island and the “roads policy of-the Government," Iwrites Mr. MacDonald, "are im- poriimt factors in the Liberal , ‘campaign. While the other Can- -ad‘an provinces, excepting Quc- “bcc. had large deficits last year ,anci made big additions to the ‘public dcbt, this Province had a iSllfplllS on current account of --"!T101‘e than $15,000. and her per i-wv ii ~<i - ri u.» iu Ir. boots on. He was not the victim of bullets while he was trying to shoot himself out of an ambuscade pre- pared for his employer. This em- player and his friends, no doubt, paid the bills for the rich obituary ceremonies at which’ law-abiding New Yorkers were invited to gape. either by powerful moral suasion or by the rod. Then, with the penalty to some extent paid, there is the slow and tedious process of build- ing up the shattered walls of char- acter and making sure there will be no further lapses. All this de- mands men and women oi the fin- est calibre and an efficient system of organization that wiltmaintain adequate supervision until the of- val racketeers, but fell to police there for four or five minutes. Then a solution of ordinary baking soda- s, teaspoon to a pint of warm water is forced into the ear by means of a large glass syringe. As the warm baking sods, solution comes back out of the ear it brings out the wax with it. If after following these direc- tions, the wax docs not come Out. do it all over again, first Using the . canita debt is the smallest of any province in the Dominion, declare Liberal candidates." ‘One would imagine that a sense moi fairness would have impelled the .\\'l'liCl‘ to give equal prominence to the Conservative attitude with re- ‘, ‘the Province. “ ', “mentioned that instead of a sur- -plus of $15,000, the Conservatives fmaintain there is a deficit on cur- “sp-‘ct to the financial condition of Yet it is nowhere Undoubtedly there lay behind the display the plain suggestion that Schultz is a. powerful figure, as ready to reward those who are his allies as he is to punish his enemies. There is also, comments the Mail and Empire, the very obvious sug- gestion that while the way of such transgressors may be hard it winds through pastures where the vegeta- tion. is lush and where there is plenty of money to provide $20,000 it fender is safely re-established in paths of right living. to his former Sir John Simon, was a bitter one, showing that these disertatlons are getting "under Liberal leader. In the last analysis of “the little Welshman" is losing much of its force. peroxide and warm water, waiting five minutes, and then syringing in the warm baking soda solution a- gain. It will finally come out. Many persons are’ missing good concerts, sermons, plays and so forth, just because the oerumen or wax in the ear has become hard and is lying against the ear drum, thus preventing it from vibrating properly. The farewell of Mr. Lloyd George political lieutenant, the skin" of the must be evident that the wizardy _.___--__i__.__. which was made between the gov- ernment and the grantees of this Island several of wliom agreed t0 give up one fourth of their lots to be divided among the refugees, gratuitously-this they ‘did with a view of peopling their neghborliood so as to improve the value of the rest of the lot. Laird had bccn for- merly scttled on another lot but after 9 years, it was discovered that by a. mistake of the surveyor he was set down on a lot that was not his own, and he was obliged to remove without receiving any compensation for his improvements. He docs not seem at an end ‘of his troubles, for last year the Government (now pro- prietor of this general lot) brought an action of ejectment. on an alie- gation of a similar ermr though Laird says he holds s patent sign- ed by the Governor himself, the Chief Justice however checked the rent account of $32,882, increased i _ liabilities of $234,581, and a not in~ crease in dcbt under the Leo Gov. eminent rcgimc of $753,994, While the roads policy of the Lib- erals is presented 1w the strongest light by the Putrim. cdigm-I ms .1..- vq. l. y!“ l. w» » n‘, Conservative lcaciai-‘s contciifiioi] i‘>n~ - that enough money has been ‘squandered on roads by the present ‘ administration to have met the ex- W penditure for old age pensions is 71.. 1 »_ discredited, as much as possible, by Putting the word “squzindcrcd" in quotation marks! Other instances could be cited Llthroughout the report, indicating clearly enough the political bias of 3 the writer. The article is a {ch35}; of an article which appeared some M; time ago in the Montreal Star, but '99,... altered. in almost every paragraph, vw to the advantage of ilic Lea Gov. “T” crnment. l It is unfcitunaie indeed that ilic _ l”, ,._Ganadlan Press should be exploited m.» ..ln this manner for Liberal propa- 'l"'-’-' 857141111 purposes. The organization "imm is non-partisan mid the greatest '3“ care is usually taken to kccp an ‘m, .eveii balance (luring pglitigal n“. campaigns. Had this care bccii cx- ‘fi’ ' crciscd in the present iiisiziiicc, both ‘the record of the Government mid W the 0011C)’ of the Conservative par- k...- Jv would have Bliimflrcd in acliffcr- ‘qv“<'t'ant light. gm i_ l! b» It; , uni-us .' a ‘fun. u ‘.- a1 can» Li‘ A Gorgeous Funeral U ‘ A stranger in New York’ City, it," rhad he chanced recently to be on ‘ one of the streets through which ii funcrnl was passing might have "l; _- been forgiven for supposing that hc ...,,, was witnessing the obscquics of k w-somc noted citizen and public benc- "' factor, The coffin was made of Ger- man silvcr and cost about $20,000, ‘and it was committed to a vault 4,1,; "while a $25,000 mausoleum is being u‘ ‘V?’ "Yliuilt. Forty carriages were required ' "*3 filo contain the flowers which menus and admirers of the de- jl-IYUVIJ f“; c nu coffins. Canada, fortunately, has a different method of dealing with gentry of this kind. nccd of candidates to champion its cause in the coming election cam- paign, has drawn extensively upon its paid officials and cx-oflicials as nominees plainly shows. For ex- ample: date for First King's, is ex-sheriff of the County. didatc for Fifth King's, is eX-deputy Pi-othonotary. colleague in Fifth King's is still n, road supervisor undcr the Lea Gov- crnmcnt. didate for Charlottetown and Roy- imder the Lea regime, candidate for Third Prince, has been law clerk of the House under thc some administration. candidate for First Prince, is At- torney Gcncrnl. clutc for Thirds King's, recalls the ncy General under Liberal regime. abusive smcarcd all over our contemporsryb pages yesterday, showed how suc- scored at. the magnificent meeting in the night! It was indeed a signal tri- nmph both for Hon. J. D. Stewart and for the Charlottetown Con- servative candidates. A world census of automobile re- gisterations undertaken by the automotive dlvisi-in of the Depart- ment oi’ Commerce of the United States shows an increase of 2 1191'- ccnt in the number of cars, buses and trucks in 164 different nations and dependencies during 1933. On January 1 last there were 35,805,- 632 motor vehicles in the world. but most of them 26,697,398 in all. were registered in the United Stat- es. For every fifty-four persons in the world, according to the depart- ment's report, written by C. F. Baldwin, assistant chief of the automotive division, there is now one automobile. In the United Stat- es there is one automobile for every 4.59 persons. Among other countries Canada and New Zealand shared first rplace, each with a ratio of one automobile to eight persons. Their Last Resort The Lea Government, in its dire Elnnce at the "case history" of its Mr- Edwin Reid. Liberal candi- Mr. James Condon, Liberal con- Industrialists and British univer- sity graduatcs are now coming to- gethcr in a manner undrcamed of before the war. The proportion 0f these graduates entering business, which was only three per cent. in 1870, rose to 30 per cent, at the be- ginning of the century. At the pre- sent time it is at least 50 per cent. The university no longer frowns uD- on the factory as a place in which its graduates may cam a living, and the factory has ceased to think of graduates as fit only for the learned professions and statccraft. This change recalls the fight on this continent between advocates of vocational training and devotees of the old-time classical education. Statistics show that thousands of such British graduates are already holding big executive jobs or lesser key positions in the chemical in- dustry, engineering, the textile trade, oil production, shipping and railroading. Ml" George Savillc. Mr. Condon‘s Mr. Claire ‘Trainer. Liberal can- ty. has been clerk of the House‘ Mr. Sylvcre DesRochc, Liberal Mr. Thane Campbell, Liberal lifr. S. S. Hcsian, Liberal Candi- me when he too was acting Attor- Editorial Notes frantic misrepresentations. epithets and scurrilities The Canadian nation was found- ed upon a theory of real hard work, 5113s the Brandon Sun. The modern trciid is toward one of liesure. Everyone is dreaming and looking forward to a time when they can retire, gs {o Vancouver Island, Cali- fornia, Florida or other places and loaf. This is responsible for the agitation for shorter hours, shorter days,_untii the time is» not far off when we can expect to hear agiga- The essfuily the Conservative speakers Capitol Theatre Tuesday r odéflmnzm. proceeding and would not allow the action to proceed. Laird alleges that the Governor's motive for this was because he had dunned him for a. in order to keep it in repair. usual one here, is to cut down the trees in winter, burn them as they lie, which burns off the branches and bushes, then the remaining logs are piled andyburnt more com- pletely. This is done in summer and a crop of wheat may bc sown with only harrowing. It is more usual however to begin with potatoes if the burning can be accomplished in Spring and then wheat, with which he sows grass seeds. After 5 or 6 years the stumps come out easier by hulf than at first. but it is eight years before they are quite easy, sometimes obstinate roots of pine or hemlock remain even after that time. Laird accompanied me on the road from his house to Cherry Val- ley, having lent me his horse, an excellent stout pony of the Canad- ian breed. We would not make out Charlottetown, but about ten miles short of it turned off .to Captain Beer's at Cherry Valley where I got quarters and set off very early reaching Charlottetown abou i: breakfast time. The road from Laird‘s is for some istance a mere track—passes be- hind some good settlements and; considerable clearings. Along Ver- non River, are a considerable num- ber of loyalist allotments and their clearings joining each other give some extent to the prospect, there is a continued track of clearing in this way to near the saw mill at the head of’ tide water. Laird reck- ons 7 proprietors and 4 tenants on Lot 50, the proprietors are all on Loyalist allotments. These allot- merits have perhaps. been more gen- erally taken up here, on account of the navigable water. In other places as on 57 and 58 being not so well situated they have not been settled on, and as they were granted on the condition of settling and building in one year they are thus forfeited. (To be continued) TRU CE f have found it only yesterday In the breaking of the sullen Sky Bravcly into bannsi-s, and a day Quiet and gold and beautifully high. 1 have {guild 1t, peace as swift and cool As a wind that skims the shallow pool. lvllcmory is gone, and all dcsirc Gray as the ashes of a little flrc. Crumbled as browning fihfeds _°1 casual lcavcs, And quiet as sparrows dead in attic cavcs. Even the bayonets of the Slant?“ rain Are gathered back into thc sky again. Here is my irucc, this treaty in my breast, impervious to beauty or unrest; And here my territory. uudc and far, Of silent. days, and nights without a star; And only I, victorious beyond belief, quishcd grief. Sarah-Elizabeth Rodger. Fewer Scots (London Daily Telegraph) For the first time for a hundred years the population of Scotland hRfl shown a decrease. The causes are difficult to analyze. There is obviously operative that general rule which all over the world is ordaining that a population with a high standard of living shall diminish its rate of increase. The special factor appears to be that the rate of migration from Scotland, in spite of the diminished flow to the Dominions and the United States, has not decreased in proportion to the falling birth rate. Depopulution of Scotland is, indeed, far off’, but irdepopulation of some of the rural areas appears to be progressive. There is no material reason why we should regret a diminution oi’ the rumbers on our island, but it is againit the national tion for forty-minute hours, four- hour days and four-day ween. interest that the decrease should fall oaths country-side._ Cry half my heart rway for van- l (Winnipeg The Worst ls Over Tribune) Officially that some 13,0 Juno lst than on May 1. substantiated employment figures: 927,437 employees. This increase in em eni iiiifcrence to the sit muniiics in which this allev have been experienced at all. muniiics in which conditions ihcy were a month ago. But what these figures throughout the Dominion. the situation is improving, oil than she was lust month. that recovery is in sight. F cwcr People In Scotland d (Montreal Gazette; British census for 1931 show that the population of Scotland is dc- clining. There are in the country 4,842,554 people, against 4,882,497 in 1921, the year of the former 00n- sus. The decrease in numbcrs is 39,943, or 0.8 per cent. The small decline was shared by both sexes, and there are still more women than mcn. The number of males this year is 2,325,867, as against 2.- 341042 in 1921; the figures for the females are,‘ respectively, 2,- 516,687 and 2,534,855. Analysis prov- es that the movement from tho countryside to the towns is marked. which is also the case as respects England. Most of the larger towns show an increase in the ten-year period, especially Glasgow and Ed- inburgh, the farmer's population being 1,088,417, compared with 1.- 051.527 in 1921. The cities 870W while the villages decline. VIt is stated that this is the first decade since the nunabering of the people was begun a century ago in which there has been a decrease in scotlandw population. The rule has been an increase each time, al- 00 more persons were Payroll lists of 7.865 firms June 1, ploymeni may make liti lliiil0l1. that Canada is dc They show, beyond doubt, that the 51317: figures from Ottawa show at work in Canada on afforded the following 940,879 employees; May 1, lo appur- Tiiere may be many com- iaiion of conditions may not There m are consi ay, in fact, be com- derzibly worse than do show is the tendency to- wards a gradual and natural decrease in unemployment They prove definitely that cidedly better worst is over and d. Sp."- ulation ashfci 1h 0811505 Elves no definite reason for the char-ring trend, although it is stated that the universal rulc'that B POII-ulation declines with a higher standard of living may be opcrng. ing today in Scotland's case. The London Daily Telegraph ventures to Suggest that the special factor alp- prars to be that the rate of mf- Kration from Scotland, in spite of the diminished fIOW to the United States and the Dominions, has not decreased in proportion to the fall. in! birth rate. Iii that event Scot. land is losing men nnd women in W0 Ways. that-is, fewer births and a continued emigration. The fact to be regretted is that depopulation of rural areas seems to be prog- "5511"? 8t a time when a movement blck to the land is being suggested in many quarters as a remedy for the industrial depression in cities and towns. It may be that the pce. sent conditions will serve to chock the movement from the country. side and that the census ten years hence may have mother tale to tell. If so, it will be well for Scotland, whose hamlets havs furnished itl cities and other part1 of Great Britain and the Dominlons with though frequently slight. It is the reverse nowunodltlic fact is b51118 some of their most upright and in- dustriou citizens. and Laird offered the use of the house during winter for nothing. Laird's method of clearing the industries inio the shade; an crowded nation, unable i Canada's cxporiable foods . the whole theory falls to the If thcse calculations authority named are to be the fact that Canada shoul Adequate protection for the Beaverbrook and others, we for our surplus farm and fact .tion of the British Empireis indicated maximum populatio have here in the vital public, and in the move two live inter-related subject adinns may well give careful _§i_x_oii it tigivith which it di The Public Forum This column in open lai- the dizcusion by corruppndents of quell-ions of interest. This Charlottetown Guardian doe not necessarily. endorle the opinions of correspopdcnf-I. MORE ADVICE Sir,-A writer in the Public For- um, July 13, notes a few points that are a benefit to the Conservatives. Having studied the conditions as they now exist, you must be able to judge for yourself. Are you, intelli- gent reader, one ‘of those that went over to the opposite side in the last Provincial campaign? Are you sat- isfied with your action? What. did you do? You forsook the party that always enacted and enforced laws' that were passed to serve the best purposes of government. The Con- servatives never condoned infrac- tion of laws to attain political ends. Of them, it may be said "Fiat Just- icia. ruat coelum." Now you have an actual opportunity of demanding to know, which party is the better able and the more likely to redeem all the promises made and to give such rule as will return prosperity to our fair land.‘ At the Joint meet- ing, each side will endeavor to ad- duce the stronger arguments to strengthen the schcmcs br prin- ciples that will be advanced to in- fluencc your vote. Teachers of Prince Edward Island, are you sat- isfied? If so, why do you leave the profession when some better iii- ducemmt rises in view? Lastly, let the supporters of Pro- hibition inspect the conditions that have obtained duping the last four years and really cxsilng today and sec if the glorious promises made to you four yccirs ago have been kcpt and if we have the "bone dry" coun- try that was promised. Watch from now up to election day to see if any intoxicating liouor is uscd or pro- miscd to influence voters. y You ‘have already been advised and it is not. superfluous to repeat- oi-ganizc at. once; put your best workers on your committees, and insist that they stay in the fight until victory is achieved. One word more: Conservative candidates, make no promises that you cannot see your way clear to fulfill. -Noth- ing weakens a. party more than fail- ure to implement the promises made to individual or collective electorate. So act today that tomorrow you will be able to implement. I am, Sir, etc, ELECTOK‘... i o feed itself, would take tuils. put forward by the American accepted they only emphasize d look permanently to her own _ home market and to the many count Empire for buyers ofher foodstuffs and manufactures. our manufacturing industries, wh cal arrangemenfs, such as have be R. B. Bennett, Mr. Stanley Baldw ish flag not. only in Great Britain, the world. Some of these British co and others have immense populat consumption can bcimmensely sti It is to be remembered that statistics of the neighboring Re. ment for imperial is that this Dominion is on the eve of n progressive growth which will cause it to measure up more and lation, stature and wealth production to th orever throw C d‘ d that before long tliigaovlg: all If the premises be wrong ground. ries within the British domestic market will help ile under favorable fig. en proposed by Rt, I-[om in, Lord Melchett, Lord may find growing markets ory products under the Brit. but-in other parts of untries are still young ions whose powers of mulaied. even the present popula. three times larger than the n of the United States. We economic unity, thoughtful Can. on. The prospect s to which considerafi more in popn. eotlier Anglo. vides‘ N orth_ _America. lronized Yeast bleta ..............., 98c $1.50 Aspirin Tablets 50c Aspirin Tablets ,1, 25o Aspirin Tablets .. ... 19o 85o A. B. S. in C. Tablets“ 19o $1.00 Bu: Three Flowers Face Powder and 50c Bottle Perfume. Both $1.00 $1.00 Box Coty’! Face Powder and 50o Bottle Perfume. Both .. ... SIM 50o Box Armand’: Face Powder and 25o Jan Vanishing Cream. Both 50o Bathing Caps 25o up to $1.00 60o Hinds Cream ........ 49o Water Winn .... .. 50o The 2 MAG-S DRUGSTOBE 149 Great George Street ‘ $1.25 Ta ilave You Thought 0f Your Liver? When you get up with a heavy dull headache and: bad taste in your mouth the ' chances are your liver needs cleaning. One of tho easiest ways to get into shape is to stir two tcaspoonfuls of Liver Saline into hall a glass of cold wafer and swallow it. lust before breakfast. The result will he a rciicvcd stomach and an active liver. PENSLAR LIVER SALINE is sold in one lice only, 5M and we recommend it in crci’! respect. It's a delightful . coolliig draught and main‘! you fccl good in-hot wcailwr- E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTORE When Thirsty Putronim Our Soda Fountain ‘U BRAHAfgIeN TEA _Wlien you want a delicious drink I Sold only in red, airtight Packages