s f V , MAY 1.1930* -, _ --uns uriAl<|.ufl'l‘E'|rowN GUARDIAN -, ‘ ~ ' ,AGE d r Y f /- fbi #1 >_i` _*.1 |*"f“ Canada,” Carriages- Nickel-Oroide and Genuine Rubber Mountings. _ _“DOWSWELL” Washing Machines and Clothes Wrlngers. - _ __ _ _ _I “ANKER-HOLTH” Cream Separators from 300 to 800 lbs. capacity. _ All of which we_ are selling at lowest prices for cash or on approved credit "A. HORNE 69° CO. ` WHOLESALE & RETAIL ...‘.il-4 ..... .. y = _ | , We have just received a carload of the above well known Carriages consisting of Stick Seat and Auto Seat 1 Wagons in Straight and Arch.Axles-Standard Buggies -Auto Seat Buggies and Express Wagons. A ALS() IN STOCK '"` 'A nice line of “TREES” Harness- in Nickel--Solid ‘ i Q _ ' I l 00000000-#0494000-OQOO-O00-O4-O-O§OOO"O@O-O-O 00400040400-#O-O 'v eoooovsowoéoeoov WHEN' YOU BAKE USE t`vi0ilARt`ill BAKING PDWDER All WHITE STAR YEAST -0 0006400 OOO *O-00000-000-OOO-OO-000055-O »»4»»~o»+v-opsa-+0 ».* .._;...__.._._.-_,,.___...___ ‘.1 7'/Y`nEV»4lL Z/KE /7' ` 5 ,A ._ . , __ .»:?.’7\"__ `_"~"l7"" `f f__l_“? ""_ JQI J _..,,.,- -, |\\ 4.. ty, as fo QUE. tico and __ Pt. Road 2-Marguerite Crosby, Bonshaw. _ 3 Dorothy Dixbn. DeSll.ble Melvin l-lyde, Cornwall. Following are the results of W. C. T. U., course examination, the tcmperarlce lessons, which peared in the Northern Messenger, for the province and for each c 3-Mabel Swallow. Dundas, Emma McGregor, Red Point. ‘ 1-Margaret Woolner, North WINNERS IN W. C. T. U. TEMPERANUE LESSON COURSE the on ap- oun- llows : PROVINCIAL Senior i-Lewis Woolner, North Rustlco. 2-Marlon Frlzzell, Central Bede- and intermediate _ Rus- Allison Bryenion, Brackley and Junior 1--Edith E. Cameron. Hampton, 2-Ethel Bl-yenton. Brackley. Ars!! . : que. " Q ‘- __-ini- Q Jimmie Jingle Slyitl ln mansion large or °Q"B¢e small lt`s hound to please ypu one and all. ` -Sicwart’s Bread. `-' ~‘ _fs-¢r:3T3 _ finnb “\lflr=-,» --,rf .fr »~.~'f-A' “~-'»',*:: “ ;'\il;n0_Rl2 Sufwws A _ _ M lla l ` Smartest of , Stockings `~»-ff."-’e» 4 L li | 113551? I hope for in the per- " feet stockin%&AThen see how well YSER meets the standard. Woven of lawless pare 1 Har_dwood,“~. Floorfingiit °‘°°°.".°°‘_.*‘_°1~`°°-*fo in ialolmaesul sims an tllrhd alll, |005” 'Mil in oolor heel mat ankle slimneaa; te ~. , 'in'ii"i'&’3,Ff““'- ‘."_ "" _ _ _ .50 $1.95 lorvlee, Medium Servloe, _, or Chllen. 3-Eric Sheen. Sumrneraida. QUEEN‘s COUNTY Junior 1-Edith E. Cannon, Hampton. 2-Ethel Bryenton, Brackley. 3--liiiriam M. Vessey, York. - Intermediate i-Margaret Woolner, North Rus- tico, Allison Bryenton, Brackley Pt. 2-Marguerite Crosby, Bonshaw. 3-Dorothy Dixon, De Sable. 4-Melvln`Hycle, cornwall. ` Senior 1-Lewis Woolner, North Rustico. y 2-Mildred V. Brown, New Glas- gow. ‘ 3-Margaret .lean l-fowatt, New Glasgow. ,_ Dorothy Dixon, De Bax, and Elizabeth Ruth McKay, Bradalbane, wrote junior papers andu intermed- iate, but they belong to the latter class. - PRINCE COUNTY < - Junior 1--Eric Sheen, Summerside. 2-Helen Lord, North Tryon. 3-Marion Lord, Central Bedeque. 4~Elizabeth Nelder, Tryon. Intermediate i-Muriel Laird, Central Bedeque. 2-Ena W;-lgster, Central Bedeque. 3-Ernest rd, North Tryon. Senior 1-Marion Fi-izaell. Central Beds. 2-Gerda Carr. Augustine Cove. 3-Leah Lord, North Tryon. xmojs oouwrr Junior 1-Elsie McNeill, Red Point. intermediate _ "11' 1--Martha E. Garrett, East Baltic. 2-Roy W. Cook. _Murray River. 3-George Bruce, Red Point. Senior 1-Mabel Swallow, Dundas. and Emma McGregor, Red 2-Roto E. Ferguson, Mm-ray Riv- er. 3-Marion Higglnbotham, Cam- bridge Road. ` J. M. McLEOD» - Provincial' Examiner. RICE UUSTAID PIE. Mix two cupsboilad rioe, one and one-half cups of tcp milk, 'tm egg ` yolks slightly beaten, one-forth cup ofsugarandgratedrindofaiemon. Lino pie plate with plain pastry, bake ten minutes, fill with rice cus- or until custard is fiorn.Make a iros- taird and bake twenty-five minullaa or lmtil cuetttd ia film. Hake a :mating of one cup oonfectionerh sugar and one tabh-apwn water. add one-fourth teaspoon lemon ax- traot and spread on top of the oool pie. Decorate with fine strips of angolioa or othvn to nanuent stems and leaves and nalvue of uandied ohtriaa out to look like flowers. » ‘ - ~» Bhipyarda of‘tho United Btataa made the graktost- relative gain in ‘ _ ministered To Third Prince. Continued fron Yestel'day’s, Guardian W-lilllll ltarmarked Funds. A8115. on page 19, part l, there is an item of $0,500 credited to the in- terest account on over draft, taken from the automobile fees. The car owners have been paying these fees, and they have been told t t/these amounts are pledged , the bonded interest; but t have taken out $5.500 of thla amount to -pay the ln- tercat on over draft at the bank. They have also taken $1,000 gasoline tax, which is credited in another part of the Accounts, though the gasoline tax was pledged for »thc purpose of looking after our roads and paying for the machinery that was purchased. And all the car owncrs, when the gasoline tax was raised from three to five cents a gallon, were assured that every cent they paid would be expended, on road improvement and maintenance. Can you wonder, Mr. Speaker, in the circumstances, that they have called off the external auditor? Add- ing up all the interest items, as shown in various parts of the Ac- counts, we, find that today this Gov- ernment is paying in interest, and interest alone, the sum of $161,000. Yet they go on year after year, spending and borrowing, borrowing and spending. And instead of ,lus- tifying their conduct in this House, they come here boastlllg and brag- ging, as much as to say: “We may be going into bankruptcy, but at least we will have the satisfaction ol praising our own virtues and admir- ing ourselves.” Is it not time that we called a hall? In two years and a few months this Government has seats ts tae debt' or tnurnwlnes $538,100-over halfa million dollars, and “still going strong." Arid, in two years more, when this Government shall have completed its full term, we can expect, at the rate they are going now and showing no signs oi' repentance. to finden increase in the liabilities of the Province .of at least one million _ dollars. This Government, so muah boasted- about by themselves, will have placed a mortgage of one million dollars on this Million Acre Farm. Conditions are surely more serious, Mr. Speak- er; than a good many of us would like to admit. (Applause). ' Taxes and Subsidies. Mr. Arsenault then.went on to re- view the subsidy brief presented by 'Mi-_ stewart ina himself st the ,ln- “ter-provinclal conference of 1026. nd also to the securing of $40,000 a subsidy in lieu of railway taxation and $125,000 interim annual subsidy aa Commission. l-le also reviewed the pre ‘ claims. recommended by the Duncan sent situation of. our subsidy Answering the criticism that the Conservatives had depleted the rev- enue by withdrawing the poll tax and Arsenault went fully into the rea- sono out reducing the land tar, Mr. for these reductions, pointing that in 1920 the Conservative: When you want ` iTY'\=&s %§i\.a “Am :S K. o r ig* ' *sr- th 'll i.;'1'.§.“Z|'.Ii’i’i‘..°f'.¢.° |'I1i{2;’i'.§'.. 1. have all the f amqus PEP lug. ,lust enough bran fo be sail y lalllive. rad tha_nonr|e\\- '.....-»‘ -'....-~--::.° _ w _ _ for Elly. Hula by Klllvll ill n, Ontario. felis? construction, furthe wyld laat year. , onnlurrsinaugn. 'f _I NNN Fl-*“E§` Mr.iA.“FiArsendult In Budget Debate ,Wholesome Tonic 'to The Fulsome Praise Of Liberal Members Ad- Government By L Conservative Member -For _ collected $89,081 in land taxes, while in 1929, under the present Govern- ment, they collected $14,000, or only $14,000 less than the revenue from this source under the Conservative government. But what did this Gov- ernment get in excess of land tax? lu 1929 they collected a personal tax which they introduced when they abolished statute labor, of $17,030; a horse tax of $0,400, a dog tax of $2,800: or in all $29,000. or 515,000 more than the Conservative revenuc in 1926. THE BELL TAX ACT Tile Premier (Mr. Arsenault con tirlued) stated that the senior mem ber from Charlottetown (Dr. Mc Millan) and the present leader o the Opposition had said in 1917 that o the people should be shown that they were not paying enough taxes for educational purposes. These tw gentlemen, at the time, were not even in politics; they were private citizens of this Province, and why statements made at that time? I be- was absolutely correct; because it riculture. When everything was tax- ed, *tangible and intangible," there was no further need for anybody to say that the farlnerswerc not pay ing enough taxes. Arid hafe again, perllapsji should make an exception of the Minister of Agriculture. I be lieve he stated since that they were not paying enough taxes. I have shown. Mr. Speaker, that ` 3 ' ' V t »- "5 _. ---- '»_ ,mr-ea =~_ __ _ _ H" _/ ` ` __ _ . '_ .',vn‘i " , , ,fs , "_ I l ;k ASK for demonstration today-'-now. should they be bound, politically, by lleve, however, tllat their statement D68l€1’S was made long before the‘famous _ _ _ V Bell Government Tax Act. When ' ' - o that Act came into force, no man - would ever advocate increased tax- _ . _ U _ ation in this Province-except, of V E course, the present Minister of Ag- ' f' ` Fly on the Ground With E _. . __ . _._ » _ ',_.__¢,i_'_.-~.... . _. _ _ ,.,, 3 _ R, ` a»a»m~'o¢-.~ ;; r Ennio per."-f»il‘ii}sl!iT;i§;\“T’ __l f :_ ,___-__ ._ . _, _._ _C ead _ f~l`;'i_,i' it ,I Offer/ 2 i _ _ , - "3 ' _ » I vi :"1 We Wi" bring 'ali EBSY t0 your home any time you say. r . _ Then - with your own clothes; with opportunity to see fdr ,', It y°‘“"se|f5 YOU may il1V€Stigate ’to see how thousands and thou- sands of h ' - " ' ‘ with alllgflglérggfivlves. eve1y\vhere._es_cape washday drudgery This is W1’ Way of introducing the Easy and there i . . ._ - sno i’?ll8atl0l1,f0 Purchase. Of course, lf you wish you may keep it. y0u don t we are glad to have shown you just the same. Pl'iC€S $110.00 and upward--Termsarranged ‘ |- R. T. Holman, Ltd. Cmnwn K ' ` The Home of Good -Mercfuzndiae for _ _ ' ’ - - ` ` -' _ _ , ._-_-._.__.___ .___ instead of a surplus the deficit. last year was $246,000. I have shown that this Government increased the lia- bilities by over half a million dollars. '1"here are also a number of ur9ald bills which should be taken into ac- count. Wc know of $20,000 that is to be paid to the Sanatorium Commis~ sion, that ,was voted last year; $30,- 000 was voted altogether and only $1,000 was expended. If that were taken into account, their deficit, of course, would be increased by that much more. Pulling Different Ways. Tile Prclnler, in his Budget speech, announced to the House another deficit for next year of $88,000; but _he "hopes“ to surprise us in 1931, when he anticipates receiving a large subsidy increase from Ottawa. He has given us two speeches on the subsidy brief that he prepared and filed at Ottawa last January. and he has also told us about a brief that was prepared by the Minister of Agriculture. At first the Minister himself, when questioned on this brief. seemed to have very hazy ,ideas about it. The Premier came to the rescue, and in his Budget speech undertook to criticise the Opposition and to accuse them of '»~ ~ r. - f- , _..._ -~-- __ I prepared when he went to Ottawa. who was then bragging about pre-i That-5 the way; keep ug in the 9, , e pr l-1o seemed to be absolutely unac- 'sentilig-'our claims, that he should, but Jun expccf, 5 _-,m-pi-iss in 1931., qinilnteu with its eonwnts or its ssl: for a board of experts to be an-l --NU, in mg public intsi-env; _yvs will '_”_"°°“ ''''''' ""°°°-“ purpose. That is what we were pointed that would go into ourl hc, 3 m,,,.¢|,," on npr p|-mince, laughing at, that the Minister of claims and come to some definite' :ut don.; uk lu my “sth” “ou Agriculture should have kept his conclusion. Immediately after thei "_-. That 15 me gmtude which the Hated To SQG leader so much ,in the lark. Are leader of the Opposition had spok- Prcnim. ,_“kes_ and I ny ig, 15 5 very' they not on speaking terms? Do they en,the Premier announced that he €,x,_ra0,_dhm,.y mm ' never consult one another on pub- was going to get a board of experts (Tn Be Cnnunndy lie policies or matters pertaining to appointed! (Laught/crl. in fact. what __ the betterment of the Province? Why has transpired since proves that he Amencan ae,.0mu¢A¢,1 nqugpmu-,l;_ should one Minister of the Crown `dld make .some effort. to get ti1ls,5h,m,cd W other counu-|¢s 1”; year prspire a brief on our s ldy elalx-ns'board appointed; and he came home : was mrec “mes th" of 193g_ _ land another Minister pzrare anoth- not very 10118 B80 with U16 3"' -- ` er brief at the same time, without nounoement that a special board had Tm, Ngthe,-und, new have 5,000,000 the knowledge of his colleague? been appointed to go into our claims.: p°pu|mo,,_ ,wording gg 5 recent est There is something vcry strange Unfortunately, the Premiers state- ,mam ' about it, and we on this side of the ment was not correct. and he had .___ . House have surely a right to laugh to take that back. New South wales, Australia, spent at the sincerity, or the tact. or the Senator Hug es. ‘ eo-operation they displayed on this gentleman. also had a brief prenar- construction last year. occasion. L ed ou our SUUSNY Clilms- “WY 4° _. - "laughing" at tllat brief. Far from “3i;_____ __ _ \ _ lavshins at Such 11 dvwmfllf. Mf~ ,,efh,,pS, we Wm get ssmswhm-,_ copennsgnn luis n lnillrllni; boom. Speaker,'we realize the ability of our Too Many Promises. when wc questlgneg the nmgunt --- iZ°°d fflfndithe Minister °f A¥ri°“]' [of work performed by the Premier T0 increase the use oi .Swedish ture; hut what we cannot under- » Last year, during the budget de- ` in pressing those claims, what ans- household and ornamental plasswarl stand is that the Premier had no' bats, I recall that the leader of the wc, did 1,.; give ug? -'14, l, not in ins throughout the world, 15 of the lar knowledge that this brief was being 'Opposition suggested to the Premier, ,,\,|ic |n¢¢|-ess, nn- you to know." gest manufacturers in Sweden have ` Unless my hon. friends unite, un-_not seem ,to be workin: t0Ket\1°f palm. lesa they exert all their energies and very wall; but of the three I think their efforts in unison. they need not,`the_ Senators brief ls ‘the most con- expect to obtain very mach from ,vinclng. 1 hope they will endeavor Ottawa. That ia the lint iesaon that to forget their differences, strike an' they should learn. (ADPIIUM). Iaverage, and have one good brlef_ ., _ -M '° __ _ Monitor Gasoline Even inexperienced drivers notice the quick pick-up, great power, and fast starting qualities of MONITOR “Straight Run” gasoline. ' Motorists who have driven for several seasons - who are _ _ prepared to judge car perform ance - come from far and near , to fill-up with “Mol1itor.” Why? Because they know by exper- ience .that this gasoline has “so mething” extra - something which puts the “G0” in their cars. The most severe test of any gasoline is just this: How many seconds after you step on the st arter does combustion start? Monitor Starts Immediatelyt MONITOR GASOLINE H. AITKEN OIL COMPANY (Jharlotietown, Prince Edward Island P d rk form d a emotion organi'z.°_tion. Time Coming Fort William, (ht.,l lnHored WM1 at not oat ar. all, heal, h another Liberal more than $50,000,000 in nighwa 335.5 ` iid? _.si instead of time poor ones Then, _ ___