‘and moonshine, you their ‘kitchen. ‘ only misrepresenting conditions, ‘j uuu rid it of its abuses. Pro- lQIdfly-IJQS. ca. n. A-Innllllll his. o. ‘like: and longer-J. l. Burnett. Alloolnh liner-D. K. Barrio. And myself replied to me, And the questions that ‘i then put FRIDAY. JUNE 17} 1927 l y THE CHILDISHNESS OF IT. “GOALS TO NEWCASTLE." 1-‘ our political parsons saw a man oragang of men frantically} trying to prevent n stream running into the sea by dsmming it. theyhzxtravagance. wbrrld-‘unhesitatlngly call the man, or the gang a fool or fools. Yet! this is the great polltlco-religi-1 oust?) workln which they are uifm this proving present engaged in this Province. The stream which they are so irantically- trying to check has its source on Parliament Iiill, Ottawa. Millions of gallons of whiskey, bcerL out; and wine arc helng manufactured. l i"GARllYlNG coals to Newcastle. i to where there are coals this extravagance to uu unpardon found anywhere on the continent i in Canada under license from the, Federal Government. Govcrnmc-nti ofllcials stand in the breweries and‘ nt the Customs Oillccs to ensure: that every gallon of liquor nianu-; factored or exported 1iays its toll to the Government and from thisl toll. rightly or wrongly, the lJonl~i inion of Caitadu raises a revcnuci of'many millions. This will give us a faint idea of the task under- taken by the political parsons and; the Temperance Alliance. Theyi are trying to dam the stream just barb. pumpkin. jams of various kinds. the raw material of which _ we can raise here as well as they as it enters the sea, the great sen of human thirst. lf they were sincere, if they were can be raised anywhere. We have bakeries which can compote successfully with any in Canada, yet we import bread. cake. biscuit. etc. We have absolutely pure water, yet we import aereated waters from countries in which the quality of the water is doubtful, while we have the machinery and the skill at ‘home to meet all our requirements in this respect. Every dollar sent out of this coun- ‘try for anything that could be made honest. if they were possessed oi‘ ordinary horse-sense, they would go to Parliamnt ilill, Ottawa, and persuade the Government to pro- hibit the manufacture and importa- tion of all alcoholic liquors. if they could induce the Government to do this, all they would then ltave to do would be to look after the men and the women fscture whiskey and home-brew who manu- en out of the pockets of our own people, a dollar wasted, so far as our people are concerned. Why are these things so? is it because of want of enterprise? is an industry is started here we do not patronize it ills we ought, preferring to send abroad for what we need? in any case the matter is well worth think- ing over. If we come to the con- clusion that the habit of buying abroad what might be bought or made ‘at home is an unprofitable and an uubusinesslike one, there is at least a partial cure for it which we all may apply. that is, to ask for the home-made product and, if we can't get it, lake no other. ptovea throughout the country, a task which they could carry on m the course of their pastoral and ministerial visitations. As matte]; now stand they are making themselves ridiculous in the sight of sensible men and wo- men, disrupting their churches, advocating a system which has not only failed but has raised a verit- able army of bootleggers, criminals and hypocrites, who pretend to be in sympathy with them. The stream cannot be dammed, It is legalized at Ottawa. it must be legalized and controlled all along its course, otherwise it will do ivhati in; Mississippi ltlvor has what the unlegalized stream done all over (Ianadu, and tilt! Unit- ed States; it will ovorfiow its banks spreading desolation and ruin along m. course. The uncontrolled liquor Stream has already done this in our province as has been disclosed by the recent survey iuiChnrlottetown and by tho occasional revelations oi‘ smuggling, bootlcgglngitnd moon~ shine throughout the province. What la needed now more than uny- thing else is common sense and honesty, not the frantic efforts of, possibly, sincere but misguided men to do the impossible. We must con- trol or be controlled by the liquor tritflic. , Premier Stewart proposes to coil- trol it and he has behind him the sane, temperance sense of the peo- ple.. Opposed to him are a few, doubfii”! sincere, men and women who know practically nothing of the actual conditions, but are pin- ning thoiréaith to the word Prohi- bmon’ 1h°fln5 m“ m" m" it i’ where. As it is they are getting rio- °§l¥_ ‘n- ‘mp1’, wmd’ m" 11' h“ where and drawing their churches never prohibited and-never can pro~ with “mm hiblt the making, selling and drink- ing of liquor. Practical common uiiuu‘ now prevails throughout the provisos. Mon and women who lliivaibbenfdiaturbod by the frantic appeals of propugondiuta who not qniyidonot know but are deliber- it because when done, has »-oo>~--___ EDITORIAL NOTES litareiy has tliero been, oven in this favored isle, better working and growing weather than we are enjoying this season, and tlic grow- ing crops show it. There is ilothlng new in the clo- quence of the imported political We all know the evils oi’ intemperiitice. That is why we want to abolish prohibition which has multiplied the evils of intem- peranee and added other vices. persons. The impossibility of enforcing the prohibition law lies in the admitted fact that the great majority of the people are opposed to it. if the ministers who have turned their pulplts into. political platforms, preached temperance rather than prohibition they would get some- .__..__.- Resigning as special counsel to the inland Revenue Bureau, after an experience of eight years, Wil- liam L. Tauari, of New York, says “there are in this city alone ovsr 100,000 spenkcnoios," that in, one to ovary 60 inhabitants. In Detroit, it is estimated there are 16,000 places’ salligg liquor,‘ or one for every 8S inhabitants. And yet the political prohibironistc toil us that prohibi- tion bu been a wonderful instru- ment torvlootl in. the United States. "iftlioll; ~ in 1'00: now m the light and will support whiter Stewart and hie cundldqtea colic rlort to control the liquor Baldwin's advice to the people ‘ Britain duxihl the aliuput ‘ - "of_ iffy ' y‘ "i wedding more than! eighty years 11,; ago and Jlblifltliiiltfi. has ever been 16811111911 lias unjustifiable and unbusinessllke in this province we are $11111!’ I11; able degree. For example. We 111W!!! e abundant! of brmk] pic smoke or drink? Full of health clay of as line u quality as is to be .yet we are importing thousands of ‘dollars worth of brick yearly. l111.\'-"11'1111"-' heavy transportation charges and sending out of the province money tvhiclt is needed among our ,own people. We have made a very‘ a dfluofs mescflpuon? creditable record in raising poultry,i Yet we import YiZ-arli‘ large quanti-i 1'91‘? 111119 131111 i11 1.1111101‘ 11's t1 medl- ties of canned chicken. although ww ihave the facilities and the skill to .can our own chicken both for homei__a amulet-u] form or hypocrisy‘ consumption and for export. This,’ is equally true of many of the other, 11111111011? calmed goods which fill the shelves,‘ |nf our gr0cerles,—pea€, beans, rhu- or bought, atbomais a dollar tak- H t0 myself, With the answers. -l give to thee. Old Rhyme. ]uestion-—Uid you drink or smoke when you were Ybung? I Answer—.\‘o, except that l took ‘a sip from a glass of wine. at a did not like it. Other- wise ’l never drank anything intoxi- lcat-ng or made any use oi‘ tobacco in any form until l was forty years ‘of age. Q.——-D0 you still approve of that ., course? 1 A.—l do. Wily should young 1ico- ‘and vigor, drinking or smoking is ‘for them as senseless as whlppmg ‘in young and spir led horse. Q-~-l infer that you sometimes A, Very rarely, illways in limited {quantity and no: at all for n good while past, ‘Q-~‘Have you had occasionally 11-34111191111108. not often. ll have 1cine and l beheve that most or 1111959 "$011018"- as they are called, ‘are obtained under false pretenses Q-—You were an advocate of pro- A-—Y9-“l, Mien it was the only al- 191111111119 flgflillst the then existng llaw under which anybody might 15811 liquor by paying $50 tax w the Provincial Government. The Se]. ller had to have his shop ltirontng in all gall bladder cases. but ac- of, ‘1 Bylaws lV-IIQID. v tell us about nine hundred cases of gall bladder trottble,-something of interest to every household can be learned. L. Bortz of Philadelphia report that during the past il\‘c years. nine hundred of these patients have been treated in the one hospital. Of this number there were two females to every male, This is a dif- frent proportion from plcVltiusT0-1 ports. in that text books and prcv- 1 ther or not this is due to the incl that the high corset is no longer worn is not stated. but the splint llkc effect of the corset ceitalnly limited the movement of the boil)’ in the region of liver and gall bind 1,- der. And also the high corset ]ll‘€',¢ 110111911 111300 11111111111118 which “Wlllitiipcople whose interests have been have ltelped to squeeze the lit-ens descrlptlotls of_the symptoms pain in lo\ver right chest extending lThe majority of the ron the street and ‘the windows ‘ without lblttids. ' Q.——iiow did the tax plan work? ' A-Certainly there was no hy- lmoderate drinkers abstafners would tolerate It and ithe law was quickly repealed. Q-aivha-t is your candid opinion about. prohibition as the law or the pland? A.—At first all sober, thoughtful P901110 were very hopeful of it and a .12‘??? 1111151,, §°_!11Q__h8l‘l11_a11ent__bene- g t- Then gradually tame the ‘great declension, a lvbirion-the law, the magistrate and the police were to make men sober and keep them sober. Q.—-And then what‘! A.-—-'i‘hcn. came the “bootlegger" and the homebrowerf‘ word-s .1 had a not heard lbefore. The rum-smug- ¢ gler, while not altogether new, was 11 operating on an insignificant scale compared with the present. Q-——Do you think it lmpossilih‘ to unforct- prohibition‘! A»! do. -Wc have about. Loco miles 0'1] coast on ‘this island iti- olittling czsttlurics. VWth scores oi‘ disilleis and brewers licensed by the Ottawa Government and other make prohibition prohilft, The only possible form of prohibition with any chance of succession! oper- ation Vii my judgment is proh-ibi- tlont otlhe manufacture, importa- tlon and sale. ‘And even that. as tried in the United States at enor- mous cost with n big fleet of arm- ed vessels, seems to be a sud fail- ure. ' Q.—Wl1at then remedy?‘ A.-—As wit-h a flood oi‘ waiter. we must/strive to control what we caninot prevent. No one doubts that the liquor flood is upon us. iii ‘our eo-callod reformers-imported or otherwise, have any faith- even in the Unftod sates plan, ‘let them go ibnck home, storm the Rum Cita- del on Parliament Hill and make them stop licensing brewers, distill- ors anddmporters e15 intoxfcaints. When ‘they do that f am with t-hem 1, heart and soul. Till they ‘try to do that l1 not them down as hypocrites. u Q-Gtate control of the liquor trade with educative and persua- .:'s your proposed stand of force is the method you ap- prove? ' A.—-'Yes. it ‘is thronly remedy that ‘is now in glgh-t. tit oflforu is better safeguards for the young of both‘ sexes than they have error had. They should be taught self-control. Amid a thousand ‘tomptltionffihoy will moot. m mush: and dign- which operation was performed. _ sists for a long time, with belching Public oplruion strongly ‘in its flavor. nausea. vomiting. and so Ar. ‘tltatrstage itflwuc o1‘ both 1cm. should be investigated from the that’ it is"iib't' cancer or ulcer is re- Thmle “'11° 113d from the gall bladder, and npprop~ brought 111 the law at once counted riate treatment given. Friday, June 17th. 170a; Addison died. 1719- man, and both are outlived by the tortoise Stephen. ilehiml the hosts of silns and stars. The rushing oi‘ the chariots of the wind. illty of adopting new methods of licliind all noises ltutlnll shapes 0i 11111910111115 11111311 “was 111111111 111111’ And men, and deeds. behind was. ~ And will be: it is never more nor Nor glad, nor sad. its Power walketh high: and Misery Amd Down in thehourgluss: Around the dial; and men wake, Live, strive, regret, forget and love i And know it not. And at the last it beckons, and And still the rod sands fall within And And still the water-clock doth drip And this is all. ' 1-119? ‘become a bond and mortgage 11 not w ‘it-mo with ‘them. o loaot until mutum h J-ptfljllgh rive methods as for ll possible in- 973cm, o! $114.41”! ed the ‘those of maturer yuan! or tlhan fl can aver hope m be. "p"? God and koo il-fis Gimnundmentl." ‘ti-toner the H in; and obey 1th; to" 0i‘ ifbo lnhd." "Nothing in They give great credit Now Drs. Deaven and Bortz statcl d1 111M 111° dye 1°51 h“ 1"‘°"e“ Coidfew years in the passing of provin- reot in 95 per cent of the cases nrclal town pmnnmg “as pmcucuuy iall over ‘Canada-"These town plan ning acts gave enabling power to the towns and cities, town planning initiate V would exercise wider and more in» - The, 1M1, telllgent azontrol _o_ver the disposi- tion of land and buildings in urban areas and ensure more orderly. ef- ‘flcient and healthful development. The point -for us all here is that ny case of indigestion that per- forth. all bladder standpoint; ssuring, hut the tiouble may ?be 1h“ View‘? “O11 111111 991111911 DPB-fli- __ _____‘ appointed a Commission t develop. cally all educative and persuasive ,,,,,, . a vomprehotisivo plan for he ‘($111111 work. The 91,11,115 ceased 1,, . . tal ‘City. War conditions interfered, ,. .1 u ,1 d1 -__ with the project and nothing was Th“) and‘ If fililvnpflganbe w THE done to carry it into operation. S on” cease“ ° “Ho” e wlnpef“ S For u. number of years the aspir- ance. tiialls WUPO closed and their CRAP a110,“ o; me “m, .51,- .w111-,-1,1 U...“ mt-tirbein-ihip dwindled, The ‘only ——— lor to make the ‘Capital (my "t. temperance preaching m- wadnng A SERIES OF LITERARY tractive and beautiful was exemplr in Protestant communities was pro- QUOTATION‘ FOR fled by 1119 Ottawa qmpmvemem BOOK LPVERO Wesley born Nothing Is true forever. A man rid a fact will become equally de- Fe repit and will tumble in the came itch, for truth is as mortal as the and crow.—Jamcs ii. behind C“ things, i"? the —blaze of kings, less. name is Nothingness. doth crawl: the olopsyid-rs. drips; the sands fall and d th un e 8e on shadows sweep and sleep. and hate. ' This spectre saith, ‘i wait.’ they pass the glass: _ still the shades around the dial sweep: and weep: --tvlwon Meredith. ..-. ._ reek away front ‘in early tlifo u pun the future. , The only safety Q--A.nd what would you say to A-—'l‘he best answer u cln give 111 1119 Word! 0f men much win- . ottn m but ‘iiwwbotl acumen‘ ~ ‘w. I . 1 ‘ern "Fuwn Platinltig-tvhiclt is _ fined as the scientific und orderly "disposition of laud and buildings in use and development with a view GALL BLADDER $YMPT°M5 ling economic and social efficiency health and well-being in urban and _ “T1611 a 1110198801‘ 111 911F881‘! B1111 rural c mmunities-—may he said to a professor ill medicine combine to-have 1-(1 eived its first impulse fiom the visit in 1910, of .\ir. ‘Henry Vlv- tan, founder of the English Co-part- nershlp Housing Movement, as the guest of Earl Grey, then Governor- Dis- 301111 13- 131111191‘- 111111 Ei1\\'111‘11‘General and himself nn enthusias- tic advocate of the mote orderly planning of towns and cities. characterized ‘the growth of towns and cities but thorough ious statistics gave the proportioirsqua1or and have 118 10111‘ 1811111195 10 011B 1111119- “'11'~‘"conle (lirect causes of social discon- tent. crime. ilodern town 1ilatiniug is dir- ecting special attention to these areas and is‘ building up a science of the social organism intcntlctl to 111111 0111911’ 1119 H5111 .11111<1<1e1'- T11i‘11_1to meet the exigencies of motlorn 1 "1 traffic, gall bladder trouble is mose lnttar-i 6511115- _ JCoitsuitlng Engineer and Sociolog- You may remember that jailndictnnst. has been a Student of ‘he mom” _ uncut for some years und about this to shoulder and gnawing sensa-imm, began the dthuflolnne,“ of a tions, were supposed to be 1n-escnt,,,,1a,, 1-0,.‘ [he Capital C11)“ “$111K m, .features as a basis for stimulating 601111118 10 111111 199°" 111911 “Sieipubllc interest in the subject. ln 93°11 111959111 111 01111’ W911i)’ M91912 the first provincial town plan- Pel‘ “e111 01 111° cases- i'ulng act was passed in New ill-uns- 111111em51dick. An impoitant town 1ilanziini-r 511"‘ 11 111511111’ 01' 1114159311“- ‘11""lconference was held in Toronto in comfoit in stomach, sour taste, biI-i lous attacks, distension and belch- ing. nausea and vomiting. 191-I. as a result of which ahe Dom- inion Government m ‘lwibolnt a TizwnlPlannlng ‘ladvisteikfol; Graham dye test. Before the use tifllifgxfailzgih an appmm ate S a 0 1.1115 ‘We’ 11191119511119 9111191199 “Town Planning Adviser to the ilrit- gall bladder involvement was foundl ipocrisy about it, but neither 11m in less than 50 per cent of the!“ nor the w“, cases studied by the X ray. If the A report was not positive then only ment operation could tell the story, U, ish Locul Government Board (now Commission, which has constructed many drives and boulevards and transformed waste land into beau- tiful parks and driveways. in i927 the powers and duties of this com- mission were enlarged and the organization was reshaped into a powers to extend its work into the region Throughout the Dominion there is now an active and intelligent inter- est in town planning method und few years many towns and ciiloii in sntion of the whole civilized world. ooooc GOD NEVER Wl|LL:—-'Now' also when l am old andgray headed, 0 God, forsake me not; until l have showed thy strength unto this ise, O 14rd. that Thou wilt never leave nor forsake us. ‘Lifted from narrow, earthly things To the beautiful land of Romance, The something that gets ibotb beg- And makes one feel in a trance- That's being in love- Wlien you don't know what ails And your heart won't behave, Add‘ could give ‘your life another! That's being in love. The tiny spark will soon burst into Will unfold you, protect you, and The hereon you were, but not quite Yes, craving for com/coho v Affects iitoyc boihq iu_ love. ,Wc,_buvojir_dldiloomnd~ . , ,1 . __TOWN PLANNING IN CANADA Active Canadian lilterest in Mod- ile- to obviating congestion and secur- Plnnning of some kind has always the absence of scientific method has tsually left neglected areas, which lave drifted into congestion and themselves bc- and inefflciency- disease erure (lecent living and working ondititms for the large masses of u largely neglected in the past und .\ir. Noulan vCauchon, Ottawa, agreed to n p. Mr. Thomas Adams. inistry of Health) was appointed. town planning educational move- was lnaugulatetl, which, ough much distracted by war con- tions, resulted in the course of a Q to appoint commissions. to civic legislation which in i913 the Dominion Government deral District Commission with surrounding the Capital. lu tixpctztcil that within tho next nadn will recognize ‘tho advisab- snid to have received the endor- Gtinrtllnn lwuders Juno 11. 1927 aeration, and thy power to every e that is to come. Psalm 71:18. PRAIYERw-We live in Thy prom- »BEING l-N LOVE gar! and kings. Y0". 7°11 11*" 1°°1|11ss that seem quite new, to have». 1111110. lend you its glow, 1110 IIIIIQ, ‘one inst no. , l ‘AA. H. PAGE FQUR THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN‘ Y ‘ I JUNE 192 y l Notes by the Way at Confederation And I 7 _ - ‘n? A A _ i A8 I walked $51211’ i Zalk-etl a l After Years i -“ ' ‘X _ _ ‘ 1,’ v Wham m m“ m,______,_ _ m into 39108111“ 1 The Haberdashery 1 The Fathers bi THE HON. A. T. GALT ‘lislier of ‘the Alexander ‘Fllloell Gait, consider- °"1°' ed us a ‘Father of Confederation} has a background from the other olltslntitling iigtirt-s w“ “"11 a 9111191116111 nmde ‘by Mr‘ who assembled around the iliHii)l‘lt'inl-Uwl1 3111191" 1° b‘ worthy of conference mm,“ and Home,‘ mub-‘pecial attention at this particular Dominion of Canada. llo wits con-ijmiclurejrhe question maybe very booted with ‘(Junurlafs Jlrst lt-nl l-s-ilwiiiiiiriy 111111911 W119i! Was our Pub- inle deal. A vast nniouni oi‘ 1-1-1111.“ Ontario, including Guelph and Gait, wort.- upem-J and settled under his und his fuili-i er's supervision. ‘lie was onu, pg- haps tile only one of the Confed- eration Fathers, who came to Can- whan luck tiirned against him, but“111‘111 (Iflrios oi “Go on. Go on") I who dug in-and fought off the hard luck and made his own way again. Mr. Gait was born in ILondon, Eng- land in 1817. His father was very wealthy and was a successful auth-ibee“ '1°““d 1h" ‘"1111 111° 1111119111111" 0,. and 80cm leader of the ‘my. moi Newfoundland and iPrince Ed- 1823 he father , . membters of the tlondon Stock Ex-"l ‘Pmvmcea are mum‘ '11"! ‘mm’ change to take shares in a great land speculation in Upper Canada. iPhe idea was to soquire waste and forest lands and sell them to per-i sons who would develop the land under the guidance of ‘the company. The father came out to Upper Cun- i adu and‘ purchased about three mil- lion acrelro! land-die directed the laying out of Gitlepit and spent money an lavishly that the Com- puny were rmj in difficulties. father wurecullcd and was claredinliolvbnt. Ho turned lBlin to literature dyd, Twas» able “to establish his cons i ' v ' come ouUwICnndda in 1885 and “'11 1111118 1811' 1-0 I -_. made u to tune speculating in ruutlvund that while QomGQTfihQ estate‘ ' ‘ Fannie. ‘restarted-the Brit- Kmlflflwloiltl 1111110111 ‘"19"? 119m s mor 11111" order uuu dividends. politics in 1.0401 ‘but’ ‘soon retired owinlh lhldliffl- or directing all his energies ,_to, the prognotlou of early flnnhdihn railways. Aninhih astute business mind result d in an increases? fortunougd he n to po iticu iu and live your: m; - I, later he became Minister of Fin- ,,.,,..'§,,'§:,,§' ma“), moo and introduced the decimal eyatonliflofcurircnuy into Canada. - .. cove s-cntrc energy to-putti ' the finch 1311mm‘ ' the public funds in order and when tiou 3c - »»- ' .» i ‘ in ohouu r3810 ' A of a. kind. mostly tweeds. 800d 311119 if YOU can find your size, 'lbtlhiil ‘Outstanding h In Men’s Suits $15. Most Suits in this lot are worth $22: Just one or two $15.00 Smart Tweed Suits Sill Very smart light colored Tweed Suite, ittieithet‘ single or double‘ breasted models. 2 pairs of pants if you wish them, Extra value for the money ..... . . . . . . . '. . "$13110 We are making a record with thoseaauits. Fashion-Grail Suits S25. Made by the best tailoring house in Canada. Your choice of many handsome tweeds in the newest models, designed for young men who are particular. Suits of this quality have rim. lysoldatthislowprice .. .. ...._._..,..'..‘A. ._$25_0Q Guaranteed Blue Suits S29. We are giving a special pricc_0f $29.00 on a line of quality Blue Suits. These Suits are very carefully tailored in three-button models, also double-breasted, wool serge .linings. A Stilt you _ have been accustomed to pay $35.00 for. While they last, $29. Sizes, 36 to 44 inch. nanosnsou s. CUDMORE 101 GRAFTON STREET a. .11 Camera Time l! Are You Ready? it matters not whether you 5 are an amateur or experienc .. "Z 125°" WPhLP-Wypu gaunt ‘have m‘; gohdito work with-a- a good Camera and hlph cine supplies. " “run ENSIGN” I The but on the market. We have them at prices ranging from $2.50 T0 $20.00 Jult look over our line. We can iupply you with every- thing necessary for successful and pleasant work- Devolopinq and printing promptly done. THE 2 MACS RUGSTORE ,. unto. ,1 When We Had N0 Debt HON. GEORGE BROWN, OUR AUTHORITY Confederation At Quebec Conference, i864" _ ~ (i-nsr-oruous) P l Now that we are about ‘to cele- hrata the 60th ‘Anniversary-dhe . Diamond Jubilee-of the Confedera- tion of iCllllii(lil-—li. is permissible. wc think. for us to recall some ‘,_ things ‘that were said at the histor- ic Conference held in 1864 on the, - financial standing of the contract- ips parties And t-hore is no fbetter 1ilnce to find a record of what was r1111! by 10114111: statesman than in _ the booklet reported, published and ‘1’ compiled by Hon. Edward Wbolnn. (entitled. “The ‘Union of the British ‘ frovinees." Among those brilliant ‘*» lspeeclles ivas one made by Hon- [tltorge liifOWll,—'E(1ii0l‘ and iP11l1- Toronto Gl0b9r—i11 !!|l0 meeting ‘that was held in<*'l‘or- iii The debt of each Province was .1‘ m“. ml-[Brem n very important theme. This sub- point practicable and we found tiilfli the ‘smallest: sum for P11111311 {his 711C debt first contracted? When 11131111111111’ of 5111111111" '1 bod wo lNo 1l’ulllletl)obt? ‘in atliiwfii‘ '1’.f°"““"’“ crowd b” "iiirrltiitli 3i]! "i: to these truestlons we ‘let dion. Mr- ’“"1133-110°' PM“ 11"“; l? and “M1 "11. Brown give the fmcts-- ‘it. is worth 1111-611 311111111111’ 119 a u w - whue u, have. i 1, umphwhed_ settlement for locul pt1rl1° w m rIwhen celebrating such an import- P1°V1“°° “d I “m ‘$111,511., bean unt epoch in our history as‘ the 01x11” tzlgfotgsx? 3.1,,- 1gpulliii0ll in Diamond Jubilee of the new nation- “p131: Cmmaa m very ‘m?’ qt illt- villi-s iii swre“ "f ‘immners °1 11‘1“°"‘* a" P11110911 111111 111111111111" ""11 111111111111‘ H-Wm-“m 112:1 allii§‘(l)rr:ui-Il]li11:?ltllii illlli!) glaiigonmno wiwhorse qr Torouto- course we, a. handsome 9bariill plying a lawful trade, and sluiclng es, _ ,». _, old saying that a man may he down “A very important swhjebt is that iw° ‘"1111 11° 11'1"“ 1° walk: [he 5mm 1M0 every port and um, An immense. solitary b90011"! ‘ ' but not. out. ‘in this wonderful man relating ito the finances of the iFed- 11111111" 11111- 1105119 1101:1103 m", o“ or we “ma. and smugglers Mm waits. _ I Dilllp] holu-tions the present day Canadians linvo uu oration; ‘but as my hon. friend, Mr- mm” ma“ 111111 exm“ | _ _ 1t 1111B 1m Minute. it. bu» m. “mung exhibit of a trite "Calludlun A mp1] Gait ls about ‘to address you -l will 11111111111111 '11°“111°"" nu nun-runners coiltluctitig their un- 1t has FOR W110 (11.1 {m1 whine nnl i ‘leave this ‘branch of the etirbjoot t0 W0 irealltrllndtolieublutotl , , luwftll trade, it ls impossible to N0 place: it has no limt: lt is. und ‘ grumbiii‘ hero that a-tull 41111121111111“ “M” afforded-era ‘long ‘for 01°11’ mm ; lau to persuq an exact 00111’ -. ‘Woman's booklet- it is the M: and perhaps {he ablest work ikind yot published. -in a lotivf‘ v iProf- £11.»..- iiurvey. ‘PY°1°"°;S,, History Molflitoba 511x11 1'_ in orms 11 ' . has In?!‘ t now ready for d: , Iiflbution and it will 11111191" 1”“ - n a feyr dogs, - two pnuaiwsyn resumed their; iglnol d! 0. classic. 12111111“ ‘mm intense political excltemlelli» we believe furthermore thatfl". who road this M19111" °1 11 . ran the-r»: t 111°“ may briefly say. however, that all rho, debts und assets of the different Provinces are to be mirmled by the general government. It has aeveraflwnrd ‘island the debts of the sewer- induced iin proportion to their population. Newfoundland and llbiuce ward 181111111. have. however, scarcely any 11°11! fit 11-11; and we found a itfi- Wily ‘in associating Prov OQI which were free rfrom debt with those that owed large public obli- ‘Eatlons- lBnt we fell upon this plan. ‘We struck all Ivar d“. “W; die. _ ap- of ', the. debts o! fheuaverdl iProvincel ' t i. nzubuhwd Qumreb- 4t _‘ mount» finaanci%m _ M11111 ‘We mead that time whose M, u, debts exceeded the average. a,’ Tho,l1fly interest at 5 cant up y""m‘§ 3 , dc- into the public ekchomier, ile . those whaohse gm were pa: 11-h avers o i 6 ‘ ' - ‘like ri....i.‘i“rs’é‘?ii.l‘éi‘tll. ‘oh at “mm Ff “m mm‘ asi. Alexander ~ ~ h, “h, °11.,'.1'°'°"°~°‘ 11, fine, n"; “we, vtncos could maintain tMir i" 11°" 11M OGMIUYIIIOI‘ M unison. und in ordorto moatyiihoi‘ r,“ view! we were adopt is and, Qomuny wtho public cholt were other He entered 9 r do when we may __ able to cdonttlinnt caution to u r much greater cutout shun we ‘~ Vlt econ sin en- union wqcc account; lIPOOd to t” t Upper OnIldltIN-Ql, hitch/unz- m down ma! - n w‘ fury“ I . . ; s. .\ . vl/Y 1‘