c oiiiiiiiorrcroiiiii euiiiiiiiiiii Morning Dally (Pounded In IBBT) Allhorlled an Second Close Mall. Pool Olloo Department. Ottawa. _ Proeidopt. Ion A. Burnettr Vice-President. Wm. I. Burnett; Soon-Tread, G. M. Burnett; Editor and Managing Director, J. R. Burnett; Associate Editor. Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory la Weaker Than . the Weakest Ink.” BATURDAY, JUNE 28. 18;’! riiéir Golden Jubilee All across Canada this year there will be oelebtoted the Golden Jubilee of the Women's Institutes. This is a big occasion indeed, and the event will be duly commemorated in Char- lottetown next week when the thirty-fourth on- nual convention of Prince Edward Island's Wo- men's Institute takes place, July 3-4, in Prince of Wales College hall. The Provincial conven- tion will be an important one in itself, and pub- lic interest will be enhanced by the fact of the Golden Jubilee falling on this year. This is the first time there has been a Do- minion president from Prince Edward lslond— Mrs. Allison C. MocMillan, of Fairview, who has long been associated with the local Institute and was vice-president of the Dominion organization on two occasions, and a member cf the executive for a number of years. Mrs. MacMillan is scheduled to address the Island's convention next Thursday evening, and there is no doubt that she will be given a rousing re- ception. Other speakers on Thursday evening will be Premier J. Walter Jones and Mrs. Mary Don- cld Deans, of Keen, New Hampshire, and Lit- tle Sands, P. E. I. The latter will speak on "Haiti--Where One Waits." Mrs. Julian Her- ring, president of the Provincial organization, will preside, and there will be presentation of F. W. I. C. life memberships to Mrs. L. H. Fos- ter, Marshfield, Mrs. John MacGuigan, Stanley Bridge, and Mrs. William Mutch, Rocky Point. The citations will be read by Mrs. George Mar- tin, of New Perth. At the opening of the‘ convention on Thurs- day morning there will be an address of wel- come by His Worship Mayor MacDonald, fol- lowed by a luncheon at noon and a busy after- noon session which will include addresses by Hon. W. F. A. Stewart, Minister of Agriculture, Mr. W. R. Show, Deputy Minister, and Col. E. ,W. Johnstone, Long River, also various com- mittee and other reports, and musical enter- tainment, The concluding session on Friday will be followed by a garden party at Government House, where the delegates will be the guests of His Honour Lieutenant Governor Bernard and Mrs. Bernard. It is expected there will be between 300 and 400 delegates in attendance at the convention, representing the 270 Institute branches on the Island. The first branch formed here was at Marshfield, in I913, under the stimulus given to the movement by the Mothieson Govern- merit. It was on February I9, I897, ln the village of Stoney Creek, Ontario, that the first Wo- men's Institute was founded by Mrs. Adelaide Headless, of that place. Tho idea spread far and wide, until there are now literally thous- ands of branches across Canada, doing work of lncstimable value in the cause of education, public health and other matters of vital con- cern. Nowhere have the Women's Institutes made more gratifying progress than in this Province, the movement being ideally suit- ed to an agricultural community such as Prince Edward Island. Well - Meriled Boost For P.E.I. From Hon. J. G. Gardiner, Federal Minis- tor of Agriculture, comes a high tribute to the superior quality of Prince Edward Island pure- bred hogs. His statement appears in the Han- sard report of the House ofiCommons, June I8, and is therefore a matter of official rec- ord. lt was made following a query by Mr. Mc- Lure as to the hog production figures for this Province. The Minister had quoted figures for Canada at large, for the Prairie Provinces, for Ontario and for Quebec, but had omitted ref- erence to the Island and even the Maritime lProvinces. He expressed regret that he did not have these figures available. Mr. McLure then pointed out that Island farmers were taking great interest in breeding a select class of Yorkshir-es, so much so that they could sell prac- tically fifty per cent of tlieir hogs to the other Provinces for breeding purposes. He mentioned the carload shipped a few months ago to Manitoba, and th-e fact that buyers are here now from Saskatchewan and Alberta. " Thereiwas only brie snag with reference to the selling of this valuable breeding stock, Mr. McLure soil; namely, the long freight haul from Prince Edward Island to the Prairie Provinces. He urged the Minister to consider giving an al- lowance on their freight rate to western pur- chosers. The Minister replied that at present pure- bred stack gets a freight rat-e of one-half. He added frankly: "l want to agree with everything that has been said by thc hon. member. Prince Edward Island stands right at the top in the production of quality hogs Their hogs are being utilized all across Canada to improve our hog population. -I do not think anyone can say too much by way of eulogizing the effort which is being made there." The Minister, of course, is pware that this valuable Island industry is threatened by the proposed 30 per cent increase in freight rates. Let us hope that the Board of Transport Com- missioners take due cognizance of his statement above quoted, for it is vital to our case as pre- sented at the Commission sitting here last month by Mr. W. R. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Agriclulture. "The value of Prince Edward Is- land breeding stock," Mi Show said, "is well recognized throughout tho Dominion, and a par- ticularly good market has developed in West- ern end Central Canada. Our supplies gt reg- istered hogs are only now under process of do- velopment. New breeders _have established herds during the present year with the hope of taking advantage of the expanding markets. Unfortunately freight costs to distant points are high and in shipping boars and sows, cars‘ . have to be penned off and usually an attend- ant must accompany the shipment. An in- crease in freight rates would strike a very def- inite blow at this market and would injure ma- terially the swine industry of this Province and prevent the industry in other Provinces of Con- ada from securing the excellent material which we are in a position to supply. At the present time Island hogs are grading about 50 per cent A's—while some of the Western Provinces have a level of less than 25 per cent A's. The influ- ence.of this trade on hog quality on the Prairies or for that matter in any port of Canada would go for to improve and encourage our bacon sup- plies and consolidate our position in the British market. The importance of the British bacon mar- ket has been the theme of Hon. Mr. Gardiner's speeches for a long time, and rightly so. ' Surely lie also sees the importance of getting our superior breeding hogs transported to where they are required at the lowest possible cost. The Minister is known to be a most effective champ- ion of his own departmental policies. Here is a matter in which we hope he will interest him- self with his custoinary zeal. The Late Viscount Bennett In the death at his home in England of Vis- count Bennett the British Empire and Common- wealth has lost ‘one of its outstanding elder statesmen. As Prime Minister of Canada dur- iIlQ the years of world depression between tho two Great Wars, his dynamic energy, courage, and sincerity were qualifications of supreme im- portance in bringing this country through. Dufing his term of office Mr. Bennett stood firmly by sound money, integrity of Canada's credit at home and abrocd, and the meeting of all obligations strictly in accordance with con- tract. This involved Canada's retention of the gold standard after it had been abandoned by Great Britain, a decision which Mr. Bennett inade himself in the absence of his cabinet col- leagues over a holiday week-end. His Govern- ment also brought in the central bank (Bank of Canada), nationalized radio broadcasting and social reform bills which were the precursors of much of lthe advanced social legislation of to- day. An outstanding achievement of his regime was the agreements reached at the Imperial Eco- nomic Conference at Ottawa in I932, where Canada for the first time was given tariff pref- erences in the United Kingdom markets and increased preferences in the markts'of he’ sis- ter countries. A native of Hopewell Hill, New Brunswick, Mr. Bennett never forgot that he was a Mori- timer. Among his many bane-factions to these Provinces was his gift of a complete set of Everyman’: Library to the then newly formed Prince Edward Island Libraries. He had many warm friends here, two of his earliest and most intimate being the late Mr. A. A. MacLean, M. P., and the late Mrs. Charles Hyndman. After his removal to England and eleva- tion to the House of Lords, Viscount Bennett continued to maintain close connection with Canada, which he revisited on several occasions. His sympathies and interests were, indeed, Em- pire wide. Like Britain's wartime Prime Min- ister Winston Churchill, he was a staunch cham- pion of British lmperialis-m, few men in the long history of our Empire having served that cause more faithfully or effectively. r- IZDIIURIAL NUHL‘) F! Tomorrow the Feast of St. Peter, and Fourth Sunday after Trinity. 1r O fi I The wholesalers and their employees are fortunate in being able to close for business from noon today to Wednesday morning. i I R I With the arrival of the new generator one more worry is removed from the minds of citizens. There should be no interruption of power next winter. i Q it i Treaty of Versailles, which followed the peace conference, signed this date I919. To all intents and purposes, Germany treated itos another "scrap of paper," and we paid the con- sequenceiin a Second World War. Will the United Nations Treaty sliare a like fate or be productive of a long enduring peace? i’ ‘k ‘A’ i’ It seems Premier Angus L. Macdonald of Nova Scotia went to Ottawa last week for the double purpose of attending the Marian Con- gress and interviewing thc Finance Minister on._tho proposed new taxation agreement. He foiled, however, to contact Mr. Abbott, and so departed for home without his second object being accomplished. i I Q 1 A major need of this Province is a second- aiy market for potatoes in years of surplus. One possibility is a distillery for producing industrial alcohol from potatoes. lt could operate norm- ally on culls and also take surplus seed off the market. In effect the farmers would be growing their own fuel for their trucks and tractors. R 4' i i The much esteemed Mr. D. A. MacKinnon, retired manag-ar of the local branch of the _Bank of Canada, has, as there is ample evi- dcnce to demonstrate, a sympathetic heart so far as children and the handicapped are con- cerned. He is, or was, likewise of portly mien, so when he read in our columns the reproduc- tion ofcn advertisement from The Times, Lon- I 1m: (IIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN 'ltotes lly__tlie Way Those o! the older genes-adore who remember Mae Marsh. It" of the silent movie, "The Birth o! 4 tsutlon," wtll be Interested W Joarn that In addition to bolrng I Igrisndmother, she has Just com! Into fame as m artist. Her collec- tion of oll pointing: ls now on exhibition ln California 811d ll drawing a great deal of favorable attention. some thirty-three years have passed since she was the talk oi, the continent. - Fort Wllllflm Times-Journal. The great mnlorlty of automobile! accidents are not. caused by 180k of skill, physical incapacity or hon- dlcapo of drivers, nor by fallure of the car mechanism - the Steel-Bil- percentage are due to tll-temPel‘. gross bad manners or bad Judi- nient. - Winnipeg Free Press. | We can't take tourist Influx for granted. American families who are mapping out vacations will be bombarded with fempfins public- lty from all sides. To hold and build up Canada's tourist Wade will require a continued energetic endeavour, on the part of both or- ganlzatlonii and individuals. — St- 9 PUBLIC FORUM r 111k eolunn b open to slip alocaeoton by corro- pponaenta ot questions n! laterals. The Cllnrlottetown Guardian doee not nooeaear- ll; endorse the oplnloo ol correspondent. ' (Vhl\'la'la'o%'a'h'd' BRUII ENELL ISLAND MONUMENT Bin-May I be Prlvlleged bhrougll I would like to thank those w o Mr Baxibour, Minister of the moi-i work w l; nell Island. For those who are interested a few copies of tlhe booklet on t e Jo-lm Times-Globe. 4 centenary celebration and unveili g of the monument. to the Braden lil floneers are available from Le It h tastier-eating to note that $0.- 000 young pheasants are to be turn- ed loose from Ontario habcherlea this summer. Also that arouse are making B, comeback Ln the Ontario landscape. Even without the boon for the hunters, this would be l good thing, because these blfdo are enormous weed seed eaters. The licensing and lrolnlng of tloh and game guides Is also another for- virard step, lf wild life is Io become the tourist attraction It should be. ~81. Catharine: Standard. We should like to make a plea for p, more discriminating use. of the word "home", which l; 00m- monly used nowadays an a genteel synonym for "house." How often we read that. "new homes are being built" In sucti-and-such a place. when We know very well that houses are being built, which will not become homes until people lIve Ln them and make homes of them. A “house" Ls a dwelling, which may be empty or occupied. happy m unhappy In its atmosphere -a structure of brick and wood. But p "home" l; p place where some body lives In o special way.-- a place of complex associations. — Peterborougli Examiner. In Montreal l, late eminent Judge was noted for hlii reluctance to use the language of ordinary mor- tals In tibeir ordinary lives. On one occasion when he felt com- pelled to omP1°Y a word In popu- lar usage, lie took palm to make evident his aloofness. It was n mar- riage case and the judge said: "And then the two young persons went. upon what. I am led to understand is commonly referred to as a hon- eymoon." The law moves tn Ito own l way and In no other. It. Is little wonder that lawyers oddrese each other as “my learned trload." - Montreal Gazette. t The Governor General of Can- ada, has come to this province for will welcome hlm warmly for at. least three reasons - because he is the King's representative In this Dominion. because he ls a great. and brave soldier, and because h: ls on angler. He visits us this nz/t Ln his official bapacity b p.11 angler. And he may be as country, a special place In our. IAGHTLS for the disciples of old Izaak i who loves to cast p, dry fly over a‘ trout or salmon stream has quell- ti-es of mlnd and character not- given to other mortals. In his trip i der is following a. vice-regal trad!- Llon. Several of his predecessors at. - Rldeau Hall have fished the fam- ous pools of this North Shore liver, whI-ch has tliefinest stretches of silver salmon water on the North American or any other continent. —Satnt John Telegraph-Journal. Proponents of the phllooophy that theres’ nothlng like a wlle and children to help n, man wln success, wlll receive a. Jolt from disclos- ures In the House of Commons. According to an Income tax table tiled In answer to a question from a Saskatchewan M. P., there were 67 Canadian bachelors making more than $100,000 o year In 1946, as against only 42 married men who earned more than $100,000. In Canadian business, apparently, the race goes to the men without fam- ily tles. Considering the foot that: i both the present prime minister and his predecessor In office are also bachelors, It, looks as though the single state Is preferable In politics, too. Many years ago Si-r Francis Bacon wrote that. “he who hath a wlfe and children hath given tic-stages to fortune." 51c Francis knew what he was talk- ing about —-and hls thesis seems to hold just as true In postwar Canada as tn Elizabethan England —Van'couver News-Herald. A izreat many prolemlonal people use books as a mechanic uses tools. Books and periodicals are the In- struments of their trade. These professional people Include: teach- ers. lawyers, doctors, engineers, clergyman, joumallstii. They all buy books and periodicals. read them and then elther keep them for future reference or throw them away. The cost of professional ll- braries and their depreciation are Important Items In the profes- tlon, of o gentleman of similar. build, appealing for wearing apparel, including evening wear, to fit "a 47 inch waist and ditto chest", he recal- led he had a practically unworn dress suit of said dimensions, with "toiIs" and "Tuxedo" both. So what does he do, but up and despatches it clonal men’! budget. Yet the In-I come tax people treat the libraries In two ways. The doctor, the lew- l yer. the engineer, whose Income come from fees. can. claim deprecia- lion and set a reduction tn his tax. The teacher, the clergyman, the to the advertiser in care of The Times. We are sure the recipient will be both appreciative and surprised that -Pri:::e Edward Island has heard his cry of distress and sent over to help him. Journalist. who ts on a salaried heels gets no allowance. He ll I shining mark roi- the QoIJGéWJ-T - Vancouver Provllsot _ , undersigned. farmers who have mull their gates, to put. their names arid addresses on same, but with few exceptions, It has been a fall- ure. In the Displaced Persons of Europe; sustained only by UN- RRA assistance and the hope of finding a. haven ln some pert o! the world? Deserrvlng of careful study are figures noriv here giving a preakrlown 0t qualifications of gcoverred In a survey- ; brief holiday. New Brunswlckers l icd in the minlniz. chemicals ' processing fields and 7.624 118d had “n” - experience In the secondary metal “t “l trades. Clothing. ‘Wed rubber, textile and wood workers that we have, In this part of the numbered 1653.1 FOR. WOMEN’S INSTITUTES Sin-I see by notices In e press that-the Women's Instltulliss of Prince Edward Island will in et in Prince of Wales College H I1, Thursday and Friday next. We have tried to persuade the boxes at We would now appeal to the ladlesbf the Institute to have this work done. We have always found that t! one wants o. piece of work well clone, One has to hand It to the ladies. We hope the ladies will talk this matter ovefserlously. It. would be a great convenience to the travelling public. I am. Str, etci, TOURIST. Food For Thought (Montreal Gazette) What; kind w! people are these camps available the 356,000 D. P/s House-hungry Canada should be Interested In learning that 21.000 were trained In the construction and malrnteiriace trades. Among hem were 864 architects. 1.826 brlcklayers, 5,618 carpenters, 3515 electricians. has plumbers 1.732 painters. and More than 77,000 listed themselves s farmers and better than 42,000 had been trained ln buslnces and; . commerce. Some 3,535 had formerly work- and leaf-tier, paper, Close to 28,000 D. R's surveyed , wvere trained workers In the com- walmn- we "all" that me manlfllllfllffflll0fls, transportation supply fields. More than Iwere listed In 28 separate categor- ies under the general heading of, special services. These ranged all t° ‘he R@5t18°"¢h'¥- 1M4 0161M- lthe Wily from harbors, firefighters, coo-ks. domestics and llnotype op- and 100,000 craters to photographers, piano tuners. slf-oemakers. watch repair- man, waiters and undertakers. Health and sanitation workers numbered 11,882. Theyi Included 1,209 dentists. 1.139 hOSDIlBI attend- ants and orderltes 4.090 nurses. 1,787 physicians and surgeons. 400 veterinarians and others In other groups. Almost l0 per cent of those sur- veyed were fro-m the professions and flue arts. 0t these, 3,500 were civil, electrical, lnrlutrial, mechani- cal or mining engineers. There were 5,446 agronomlsts, 1.136 ar- tists and sculptors, 414 athletic Instructors 1,357 clergyman, 850 dqemists, 685 child care workers. 1.01s uwyei-s, 212 librarians, 1,135 ' musicians. 106 recreation leaders, 134 social workers. 7,388 academic teachers, 974 teachers of arts and rafts, 707 technical teachers and pro-fessors. 43 occupational coun- sellors, 739 writers, reports, eu- thors and advertising men, and 3,465 In the smaller professional and art branches. The survey gtvee the best plc- ture to date of the types of per- sons now beating - without much success —at the world's Immigra- tion doors. There Is Irony tn he tact. that the countries which re keeping the doors only slightly e- Jar, arid Canada ls one, will con- tinue to share maintenance costs I om. Sir, eta, .| ILB. MacLARllNu Georgetown, P E..I. LIFE’! TIOUBADOUBS God, beep them sale. the merry hearts ‘that so advennurlnp- Gay ti-oubodoun-s of llte who seek 'Ilhe lyric ways of spnling; Gay F“""“I‘IX‘IIEI. of the coin ol the sit-Wm“ O1 W" W“ WP" Druiil: Wilih the wine of mil-iii. to make known to the public that Q guide them Qgd. m, “my” the proposed steps Kolng from thp shoreline to the pathway leadm to the monument at Brurlenell 1 - land have been placed. ' feet That wonder clea- the earth. Full soon the shadows lengthen and The llltlng stratum are dome; i have wntrlbuied I" any will’ t‘ For blossoms wither as each troll [wards L".clr erection and also the Leads mm"; the will“; 91m; Hon Public Works for his promise to And “m 19mph to mule; have the r0811. that l4 the old Nvf- O God, be patient do they stray, ton road. leading to merit machlned._ This take but a very short time a d will be greatly appreciated by the many planning on vkltrng Bruit-y Full soon the tripping footstepe lag And keep them safe the whl-lo. -—L'uoy Gertrude Olen-Ha. §O'OQ'Q‘.‘. Old Charlottetown (And n1.) CIIOIII When the Confederation Fathers met In Charlottetown for their famous tlrei. Coiuerence of 18M, another event bulked larger In local public interest at. the tlme. This was the visitation at a ctr- cusl The incident Ls related In "The trfarltlmes and Canada Be- fore Corstederstlon", by Wl-lllam Menzies Wltiltelow, Ph.D., aaolstont professor of hlst/ory at McGIll University, (1934). It appeorottiot the Nov-a Bcotls. delegation, which reached Char- lottetown on the “Heather Bell" on the afternoon of August ll, "were not officially met on land- ing, but made their way as best they could to the Pavtlllon. The Prince Edward Island Government later justified Itself In this seem- lnkly dlscourteous neglect. by clalmlng that the Nova Scotlans had arrived unexpectedly early. Several Opposition papers, how- ever, charged the members with having been at the circus when the delegates arrived, and the charge was not effectively answer- .. Again, we reed that tho Canad- Ians arrived at noon orn September l on the Canadlan Government steamer “Queen Vtlctorln’ and were met only by the Provincial fiecretory, Hon. W. ll. Pope. “who rowed out to meet them ‘with all the dignity he could.’ As the only staunch advocate of Maritime union, It was perhaps fitting that he should meet this unofficial Canadian deputation to an ofllclal conference on Maritime unlon. The Canadians, or such of them as could be accommodated, werel directed to tihe Franklin. The oth-i ers remained aboard their shtp Here too the Pi-lnce Edward Island ' Government explained that lnobll- ' tty to flnd accommodation for all the Canadians woo due to the fact that p, larger ‘number had come from Canada than had been ox- pected. ‘The truth seemed to be that the ctty was full of Islanders who had poured m from the coun- try to see, not. the Conference, but the circus." TRIANGLE ISLEB The Island of Howell ts roughly 90, '15, and e0. 25o YEARS OLD Magnesium has been known to man since 169B. FD. P. oemps until the reactio- ment. In which they are now ro- luctant to participate had been ‘low and green. triangular In shape with aides ot lIT LAST WE ARE ABLE TO OFFER DLD SYDNEY 00AL Sorry the price It hi erlbut, glad to have a go quality cool for our customers. Your order will have our pt- tenflen. A. rioxiiiiii a. co. I-IIIITIII morn m HAIAIIIIT According to a leading authority, the feet contain "linings" not "arenas" and with: pods tntio shoes to build w "oration" I NEE-IRE! IN BRONZE "Jacob Epstolnw latest bronze — o head of Pundit Nehru - hoe been added to the perimanent oat- lectlon of the Central Musesun, Le- hore, India. - nanny naxmanins The fastest recorded speed or an R.A.!" carrier pigeon ls 68.7 miles an hour. BOLIVIA’! FLAG Bolivia's flag oorislsts of lsorlaon- tel bars of equal width of red. yel- ;5¢.{.{6¢¢i..ii.i..rii., for“. chums-Ir w; man sn- , . a d Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills 'l'el. I636 Z9"! -.Z8.'_t941 ~ .~—§§ Professional cm. l. U‘! 0.5. NOBDLAND S loans Elinor-Era’; Charlottetown, p,“ Phone 80o PUBLIC STENOGR ' APR“ ilolflltlllfll oartll and w" new" orosrama. cone-son...“ typing and EIOUNKQQD“. "°\ HELEN GIDDEN Telephone 1pm.; 5M- No. 4. Connaaght A,‘ POIIIII Street _ . '*"- MeLIOD Bi BENTLEY I. I. BBNTLIII, L0, I. A. BENTLEY, Lc, Baerletero and ‘Attorneys-n Law llPlheoltreoe O§§§§§§§Q§Q§O§40@4444§~ NEIL W. HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Currie Building Charlottetown P.0. Box 4g H. R. DOANE B. CO. Chartered Accountants . l! Grafton SW06 Charlottetown Phone B080 a‘... p11 nanaupii w. manual}, c4, MORRELL and COMPANY Cllarterod Accountants lantern ‘hntlrllalng Phone 1m - Box m ' Charlottetown a. u. anus. cA lefllent Partisan -ovoeooo0009vO &Q§O§§0§" CHARLES R._ McQUAID I-A. larrhter, ma», Notary. Ito. lantern Trust Bilkg, Charlottetown Phone 1711' ,‘AAAAAk A A A GAIJDET a. HASZARD Barrbterl. Bololborl, Nohlles, IQ, Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg, MONEY TO LOAN GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LEI.“ Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. Charlottetown, P.E.l. BELL 8. MATHIESON Barrtotera, Bolloltorp, no. B. B. BELL, M.L.A., II. L. MATRIESON, LL.B., 5.0. Attiorneys-at-Law DOANE ON CITY AND FAIM PROPERTIES 1B0 Richmond 8t- Chnrlattooawn, P.E.l. ii. r. McPHEE, an, x.c. NOTARY. ETC. IARBISTEB. SOLICITOB ti. 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