bill's-a w. can. ha?‘ Initial. THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1926 D. A. Ilallnasgll. l0- Anubis Notes by the Way Congratulations from all aldeg will pour In upon Hon. J. A. Mao- Donald, of King's. who has had the honor of being selected one of the three representatives" of the Mari- time Provinces in the Meighen Vlss-IcalljI-IIIIIII‘ IAttanILLOaIIIQ ‘CHE new casmcr. Guided by the experience of the past four or Jive-years. the chief lnteresf- of Canadians in the new Cabinet will, be in the personal charactQr qtihkits members. Not for their ististeilesa in winning elec- tions. doctor the cleverness with wbichlthey manipulated their cou- stituencies in order to win their support. nor the adroitness with which they negotiated sharp political corners will tiie pcopie of Canada scan the personnel of the new Ministry; the question and the for Government. As remarked in this ter's right hand to assist. lcoiumn when recording the fact Stevens as Minister of Customs that Mr. MacDonald had been sum- spells the doom of the smugglerlmoned to Ottawa, no better repre- aud the boouegger and junkeuugalgenlallvQ of the Maritlrnes could of the Revenue Cutter Margaret, have bee“ chose“ “Id M! 5919c‘ tion reflects credit on the constitu- which will henceforth be used in emy that elected mm and the the Customs protective service ex- Province as a whdm clusively. lienuct as Minister of} Finance‘ Tom“? uelmufsier oi Ag-lwlll soon he announced. it will be ‘mimic m bauonal DeJa struggle fraught with tnoinentous fence, .\iuuiou as Post Master Geu-ronsequences w the mm", of can. crul. Qhapiin as Minister of Trade adu [or it will determine whether and flmmmrcc‘ Rycknm" as yum... this Dominion is to be put in pos- ter of Public works; patenaude aH-session of a sane and stable gov- ernment, possessed of a clear maj- >ority and committed to definite policies or if the disastrous record The actual date of the election ricuiturc. Sir George of State. Minister of Vustlcc; Perley as Secretary mflflflilre W111 11° 31"’ the?" "ma" Jones as Lisbon-these and the "On-lot incompetence, chicanery and men. are they men to hc trusted. -portfolio rucmbcrs appointed con- corruption which has marked the afg they men whose past rccord in Smut‘, a Cabinet from, which muChIt-areer of Liberalism in office under public and private life is a guarair, tee that. in any political cmcilwlifi’ so"... uppnluungnig or for the sake of bani-lint! "11 1" which will he announced later. office, they will not descend to dis- H“, llifr. Mackenzie King is to be re- suiued. This politician is now busi- to be made‘ may br- t-gpecied. There still are ‘ly engaged in throwing out smoke ll\.screens tn' cover his. varied delin- 111"='1"11m° 1711mm“ 1” 1° he “Dlliqucncies and to distract the elect- honest or crooked ways. 111111 11""? granulated on having a Cabinet oforate from delivering a lust ver- Wlli HOt “11011111111 W111‘ (""0115 “m1 clean. honest. capable men wnhyiict upon a career which has smugglers and bootleggers“ to fur- Ne“, prospect of being su-Unyylbrflughl 1101111111! 1W1- 911111119 111111 ther their own personal cnds. istry this will bt- the standard 11.1‘ which cvcry true and loyal (‘ana- dian will be guided. booking over the list of new Ministers, as published in yester- day's Guardian, we feel sure that be ex- general satisfaction will pressed on this score. Ever!‘ "i911!- her of the new blinistry‘ is known by his record in public life. some of them personally known to many of oi our readers. Against not one them has the finger of suspicion been raised; each OPlIIPRl has a rc- cord in the public service, a clean record and a record also for cap- acity, efficiency and mitstanrling ab- ility. There still are men in the party who would as worthily fill ministerial Iilll 111")’ could not all be taken into the Cab- ln this wealth of men of hon- positions. inet. or, character and capacity lies the strength of the Conservative party and lies, also, the hope of Canada. Probably no former (Inlbinet in the history of Canada presented such a clean, strong, capable front as that which was sworn in on Tues- day night last to the destiny of Canada. we trust. rule over for many years to come. in the distribution of seats illnnllg the provinces the utmost ioirfies! For the Maritime Provinces a gratifying fact is the appointment of Hon. W. A. Black. o: Halifax. as Minister oi Railways and Canals. Apart front the Public Works Department, if cvcn that may be expected, the Department of Railways is tho most important. the in cfflcicucy, fairness has been shown. and especially important to Maritirnes. and business expcricnce, Mr. Black may well be looked upon as the right man in the right piaco. the claims of our own ‘Province I14 the A gratifying recognition of appointment of lion- .1. A. iilamlon- aid to a scat in the fiabinct. True. he was not accorded a portfolio which. in view of tho largv-r claims elsewhere, was to h»: cxpcctcd. but the Government glVPFl him prestige and his position as a member oi influence which will unquestionably ‘be exercised for the bcenoflt of his the at. large. We heartily congratulate the Hon. Mr. Macdotisld on the honor I'll‘, has brought to his consti- Province and Dominion tuency and the Province. As to the ot-hor members of the new Ministry liltlc need be added. Some surprise has been felt ovcr the fact that Sir Henry llruyton bus entered the (‘sblnet Without posi- folio. Sir llenry is known to be one of the ablcst mcn in the public, life of Canadp and his acceptance of a seat as a private member of the Cabinet is only unnilior proof, if suoh were needed. of his bigness. Although any position in the gift of the Government and of the party was at his disposal, he was eontent in step aside and Jeave the offices if omolument to others capable of filling them. He takes, in the mean- time, the place of the Prime Minis- ter. while the latter is conducting his campaign. and in every possible 1“ endorsed at the forthcoming elec- taklng the measure of the new .\lii1- 110m act of mischief. a public rebuke inc"- court is a very severe punishment and almost sure to be to him for ldisuster to his country. Last October Mr. King on the excuse that efficient administration and the pursuit of settled policies lwere impossible without a clear T0 H11 11011111111119 1111? W11"- Pefflmajority was given a dissolution i REPRIMAND . hapa unthinklngly, has done somelfor the avowed purpose of securing But the electorate declined to ‘respond to his appeal and sent him back with his following in the ll-louse materially lessened and half all time to comc. an effective anti- hi“ Cabinet beaten M the will A dott- to iniHPhiBi'-1I1Hkiiii-1. To tho boy normal sense of the decencies n‘ t}... Su-gep the my w)... raven; politics would have decided his im- of in rmsvyfifl- and lawlcsflnpssv a rcymediate resignation which the wis- h er minds in the Liberal Party 1 counselled but Mr, King has an in- but as rain drops on a (hit-it's burial-grained “eh-er ma, he 1B the pup Tile fonmcr nccds the reprimand 1 udpsnnpd saviour of ms 0mm“), and remind him of his uumanly act; iolrlccitied to cling to ofilce. primand in court or elsewhere ' , i d . l‘- the latter a repr man means any] Lord gym’ ‘he Govemr General. ant showed the greatest consideration will probably "get away with it"the for him fllld 81111W9d 111111 10 111891 next time. To the former the re- Parliament with a program which primaud is a cure; to the latter ii 111111111911 11 11115111 111T 1181881111115 0D- ‘eratlons with the Progressives who _ _ _ lheld the balance of power.» He n“ (“mg nmwhlef‘ ‘achieved what was known as a 11' ‘he "arems we"! hem resp°m"|working arrangement for continu- ible for any mischief donc by their m"; cooperation with (ha; patty recalcritant sons, made to pay toriand with their aid contrived to um damage they dkL whmher malpistruggie along through the early months of the present session. His Government presented an tinedify- g‘) a “mg way mwards correcting lug spectacle; it muddled imost of its legislative enterprises; it in- dulged in continuous deocits and false pretences and it alternately cajoied and duped the Progressiv- es. But it ‘managed to stave off sncttial defeat until the report oi the iCustoms Committee was submitted to the House of Commons. that he has escaped tigain. is simply an encouragement to go iclously or tboughtlessly, it would much of the evil charged these days against our errlng youth. The boy problem has always been a difficult one. We make a serious mistake when every boy who commits a crime is All the circumstances connected with a juvenile offence we conclude that a criminal. This report presented such a ter- rible picture of incompetence and political corruption in the highest places that a number of the Pro- gressive party found it impossible to condone the offences disclosed. Accordingly alter the report and an amendment of diroct censure attached to it by the Conservative party had been debated and three divisions on preliminary sub-amend- ments showed that enough Progres- sives were conscious of their pub- lic responsibilities to defeat the Government. must the carefully weighed by the trial judge and his task is not an easy one. The purpose of the Ju- venile Court. is to save the boy who steps aside from the legitimate path. but the need of punishment in -mahy cases nmst not be overlook- ed. if a boy has any honor he will not vrantonly see his father pay for his wrong doing. if he is the kind of boy that thinks it all right t}. "take it out of the old man,“ a term in jail, or better still, a whippifig. might bring him to his senses Mr. Mackenzie Kind. desperate to escape the vote of direct con- demnation which was Imminent, sought out Lord Byng and flfli/Ised an immediate dissolution. His ac- or drive him f-urther into criminality. This brings the case buck to the place of commencement. the home, where the boy Icarus to love and honor -hls father or to regard him as "the old mun" who is supposed to bear all the expenses. (frlminality in the greut majority of cases begins at home. hove also begins at home. the love that, would at any cost shield the father from the consequencies of a son's nits- chief-making. EDITORIAL NOTES Prince Edward island is now looking its loveliest; everybody says so. The frequent. rains of the present slimmer, while interfering some- what with picnics and outings are helping to make the bumper crops 11181 1111 8TB 110mm; for. in any case there is plenty of time between showers for picnics. it is pleasing to note that the number of visitors tn the province is larger than ever. Let 'em all come! They can't find a better place in which to spend the sum- mer than in the Garden of the way be will ‘be at the Prime Minis- Gulf. tion was a. piece of gross affront.- ory and even Mr. E. J. Gflrlflllll who. since the resiilnflliflfl 01 M1‘- Forke -has been spokesman of the Progressives and is supporting ‘Mr. King on certain points, declares that he had not the slightest moral right to it. Here was a Prime Min- lstcr who, having failed to secure the endorsatlon of the 616010111111 at an oloctitm held nine mont-hs be- fore. has carried on under suffrsncc and eventually failed to make good the fundamental (rendition of his continuance in office that he could retain control of the House of Com- mons. He was faced with certain defeat upon a vote of censure whose passage must have entailed his rc- slgnatlon, and he sought to avoid his doom by seeking a dissolution. Nobody but a politician, whose mania for offlce blinded him to all considerations of public decency. would have proffered nuoh advice to the Crown and faced bord Byng with the apparent alternative of accepting it or departing from what some people regard as the tradi- tional British practice. However, Lord Byng did not hesitate; hav- ing satisfied himself ohat _Mr. Meighan was willing to undertake the responsibility of Government, and halilhalumable Meant-cg or o .10 - l" HORSES IN CAMP Sir,--Some time s80 the IPreven- tion of Cruelty to Animals Society asked the City Council for permis- sionto build sheds on the Market Square to shelter and protect the truckmews horses from adverse weather. The head of this society should take a walk around the Light Horse Company's grounds. if they do they should hang their heads in shame. At the grounds at Brigh- ton there are -i0 or 50 poor dumb animals hitched to a fence with no shelter from broiiing sun andl tor- rents of rain a pitiful sight for hu- man eyes to look upon. if the Gov- eminent wants to make holiday camping grounds for those troops they should provide a proper place for these poor dumb animals. There were the gallant Light Horse 00m- pany from 1914 to 1920. We did not see many such poor light horse equipments between those dates, overseas or overseas. No, only in time cl peace do we see such cruel- ty as this. 1 am. Sir, etc.. Horse Lover HISTORICAL EVENT AT AN- NAPOLIS ROYAL. a Sir,-Wili you kindly permit me tn acquaint thepublic through your columns that "Neptune's Theatre" at Port Royal, 1606, the birth of the drama in North America, will be commemorated lby the Historical Association of Annapolis Royal on Monday, August 2nd, 1926. At 2.30 p. m. that day a visit will be made to the scene of the play, and at 8 p. m. a meeting will he held in the Town Hall at which the following programme will he car- ried out: Address of Welcome from the Mayor and Council to His Honour thc Lieutenant Governor and Mrs. Tory. Presentation of a. bouquet of fimvers by the Daughters of the Empire to Mrs. Tory. Unveiling of Memorial Tablet (to be placed afterwards in Fort Anne). Paper by Dr. J. l). Logan. Translation of Lescarbofs play, read by the translator, Mrs. Rich- ardson, of Cambridge, Mass. Paper on C-hamplains "Order of Good Cheer." by Rev. S. J. Wood- roofe, who will conclude by read- ing MeLennaus fine poem on that subject. lit is hoped that Mr. Jefferys’ pic- tures of the play and of the first stronghold of Port Royal will he ready for exhibition at the even- ing meeting. All are invited to attend. L. M. FORTIER Chairman of Committee. Annapolis Royal, Nova, scotiu, July 14th. 1926. commanding a majority in the House, he refused Mr. King a dis- solution; when unprecedentedcon- ditions arise it is absurd to sug- gest that precedents which have only an informal sanction should fllilily and Lord iByng acted in what in his judgment were the best in- terests of the Canadian people, The high authority of the Deputy Minister of Justice had certified that the status of the acting Minis- ters was perfectly regular and forti- fied by abundant precedents some of them created by Mr. King him- self, but the latter proceeded to challenge their authority on a want of confidence motion in the House. Somehow. he managed to converts number of Progressives, who had previously broken with him in dis- gust tc the notion that some con- stitutional precedente had been vio- lated Ibut even then he would not have secured s majority for his motion if one Progressive, Mr. Bird, had not broken his pair and record- ed his vote for the Liberals. How- ,ercr, the (lovcrnment found itself actually in a minority of one and obviously could not carry on and fulfil its purpose of completing the business of the session. So the sooner a general election came the better, and Lord Byng accepted Mr. Mcighems advice to dissolve Par- liament on July 2nd. Accordingly the issue new goes before the people and s definite clear-out verdict is greatly to be desired. Meanwmile Mr. King has been pouring out statements couched in the most inflammatory terms whose object. is to induce forgetiiuiness of the mnititudinous errors and mis- deeds of his wretched Ministry and make the voters believe that the principles of responsible parliamen- tary (lovernmeut have been violat- ed. that Lord Byng has been a de- liberate pccomplice in their viola- tion and bat a great mnstitutional issue has een raised. 1n his mad (‘hlkrin a losing control of the reins of war he is ready to go any length in denunciatory langu- avge and pl tform a-sitatlofi-‘and he has airead performed the lament- nbic pubii disservice of involving the repre ntative or tho crown deeply t a political conlruyorsma thing w bout precedence in the Dfllitk" " annals of any ihltish 0min Leave no drop undrunken of the llibat no» of Qours YOUR BUILD OF BODY Our insurance companies are do- lug some wonderful work in the preservntion iof health. This is then- business of course-but as near- ly everybody carries acme 11131-11" ance, the country as a whole d9- rives the benefit- lIl-iowever one 0f the factors in the build of the human ibody that they mi] to recognize is th t there are different types oi‘ people, an<l_ therefore they are no; correct in saying that all men of a certain height should be of the same weight. The French are more nearly right, because they meaure the length of the trunk only, instead of the legs ‘and trunk. A long pair of legs 011 a short body, makes a type that cer- tainly should not be expected to weigh as much as one with short legs and long body, and yet. as tail as the other type. l Another point that is tor-gotten in: llils weight or overweight business,‘ is that all fat people do -not acquire their fat in the 581116 manner. Most folks acquire their excess weight, in the very simple manner 0f eat-' ing too much. With this is assoc- iated the other extreme. that is un- derworking or underex-ercising. The excess food i5 stored as fflt. and just does not get worked off the ‘body. There Is the 011191‘ U119 ivh-cre the ducticss glands do not seem to be working together properly, The" thyroid gland in the neck is not manufacturing enough of its juice for the blood. or the secretion from the little adrenal glands situated on top of kidneys fails to do its work. This is the type who usually in- hcrit their tendency to overweight. in these cases the gland products have been of help. Those who acquire their excess weight from overeating or undcr- exercising are not usually bone t- ied by gland extracts. ii-lowev-sr overweight, however ac- quired. is considered a bad risk by the conditions are most-frequent in fat people. Overweight folks usually llave poor muscles, and as the heart is Ollly a muscle it becomes flabby like the other miracles of the body. The heavy abdomen pulling the spine forward with it. is a frcqucni. catise oi’ backache. We can't all have the same build but it is up t0 us to do what we can with what was given us, not only for appearance‘ gflkfiylllll. from the standpoint of health. ,_ Daily Selections FOR "Guardian Readers July 15. 1926 ldAiirlLY RlEJOlCl-NGS —— "And ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God ,and your eons, and your daughters, and your menscrvants, and your maidservants," Deut. 12:12. .PRAY’ER—— We will rejoice in the Lord always, ALL IN A LIFETIME Thou salt have sun and shower from Heaven above, Thou shalt have flower thorn from earth below, Thine "shall be foe to hate and friend to lave, ‘Pleasures that others gain and Ills they know, tAud all in a lifetime. and Heat thou a golden day. a starllt night. ‘Mirth and music. and love with; out alloy? delight’. Sorrow and shadow follow on thy Joy- "Pis all in a. lifetime. What if tho battle end and thou hast lost? Others have lost battles thou has; won; Haste thee, bind thy wounds, nor count the cost; Ov-er the field will rise to-mor- row'g sun. 'Tis all in a lifetime. Laugh at the braggart gneer, the open scorn—- 1O I 25's» / - Every package of Winchester Cigarettes contains a poker hand insert card, Save these inserts—-they are valuable in exchange for packs of high grade playing cards, etc. ‘ clined at times to fret and worry- you are generally sweet-tempered, loving and kind. You possess a quick wit and are fond of fun, You will be fortunate in your choice of a mate. Cultivate hope, and live out of doors so much as yeti can. IPrQVC yourself a true friend. Your birthstone is the ruby, which means contentment. Your flower is the water-lily. Your lucky color i-s grecn. Daily L essons In English By W. L. Gordon WORDS‘ osriou xviistrsni); Don't say "he generally passes here 111111115 111s ‘111011111183’ Say “usually." OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: mediocrity. Pronounce me-diok- pit-l’; the e as in "hcf all 1'5 as in 11. 0 as in "oil accent third syll- able. OETEN ZiIISSPEIiIJED: supercil- ions; cili. ' ‘SYNONYYMS: proof, 1891111101111. certainty, conviction, 793501 “FORD STU-DY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.’ Let us increase our vocabulary by 111351.91». irlg one word each day. Today's word: FANATICISM ; extravagant or frenzied zeal; wild enthusiasm. ‘He died- a sacrifice to the fanati- cism of the times." evidence, conclusion. We breaking ord- ers for Hard Coal now for delivery f 1- n m Schooner W. H. East- wood due to arrive next week. This cargo will be the best qual- ity and the price. A. Pickard'& Co. Phone 240 lowest ‘Ware of the secret slab, slanderous lie; For seventy years of turmoil thou wast ‘born. Bitter and sweet are these go by. ‘Tie all in a lifetime. the t/hine till, Reckon thy voyage well, and spread. the sail Winrl and calm and current shall wrap thy way. Ctillipliiin hall set thee false, and| char. shall fail; Ever the waves will use thee for their play. _ ___ ‘Tis alil in a lifetime. Thousands of years agone were change and change, Thousand of ages hence the same shall he" v Naught of thy joy and grief is new and strange; Gather space the good the/t fails to thee! ‘Tia all in a lifetime! a Liaisons In all pflig,’ W’. IULY 16—Yba ill/YO keen pow- ers of observation end a vivid ira- aaination. Although you ars in. .u| FLIT is "sure death" it kills with. out fail, ' A F11". Mosquitoes, Moth.’ m” “$511M. Roaches and lilo destroys their a"; £05K“! with mouth gprgy. I Pint Tins, 75o. ""16 snrlym. 50c. We have a complete line I Fly Catchers and qqnroy"; Fly Tex. ell alzea, 1°91. Wilson's Poison iflssct Powders, lllack and many asks", nu: 2 macs DRUGOTORE 149 Great our“ Street Telephone 315, Ta ngle- Pads, Flag, ST. PETERIS NOTES .\ir. Albert Quigley bus purchas- ed a new McLaughlin car. V lift". J. E. Power, of Emerald, Is relieving Mr. P. T. Power, station agent, who is on n well-earned two wceks' holiday. Mr. R. it}. Ross and Mr. Carl An- derson made a flying trip to Bridge- town quite recently. The section men of the C. N. R. are busy preparing for the standard .4 gauge. _ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Qulgleys Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Quigiey apt tlic week-end visiting friends relatives in Kensinlzipn. , _ .\ir. Douglas Dandorson is n. tarring nets. Miss Alice Mclaean is n irequ visitor to Ashton this summer. Miss Ruth Sterne of Brldgeto P, E. l., was visiting friends relatives here last week. Mr. Retailer Merchant! With the exception or our insurance business, our operation: are confined solely to the Retail Merchants. We make our prices attractive and endeavor to ex- ecute all orders efflclently and mrornptly because m recognize that the success of the Retail Merchant mung "' OLII‘ IUCCQII- Carloads of Flour, Cracked Corn, Como/teal, Rolid- l" Oats, Oatmeal, Molasses, Peerless Beverages, Salt, l‘ Cement, Sugar, Feeds of all kinds. etc., In stock and arrlv- " m5 daily. We have salesmen covering the territory rcgulgrly, See them or phone us. The Foundation Stone of our business is "COURTESY" and SATISFACTORY SERVICE. if you do not receive it you will gonfgr g ("our by reporting promptly to the management. i DeBlois Bros. limited Wholesale Merchants, Exporters AND Fire Insurance Agents Phones, 698 and 699 Cleaned Up - -- Cleaned Out Johnson farmed guggggfluli y for twenty years ending with l b11111?" "'11P l! high prices, sold his farm and retired t0 the city to live. in flve years. unfortunate Investment! left him with practically nothing, When you retire, retire with an "assured Income that noth- "ie can disturb. You can purchase s Great-West tm Monthly Income policy to pay ' n ‘fly gun-Mg lmeunt mmlthly II 1°"! II you live. to commence n any desired d110, or to pay the same amount monthly to your wife ii you die. 1 Provide for'your retirement now. Write m- partlcuilrl l: llyniiman & lid. Provincial Managers ‘I’. of our various monthly Income plan Charlottetown, P. E- 1- FREE , A GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR. With Purchase of A 35¢ TUBE or PALMOLIVE ' ' snavnve ~CREAM sEI-Tounjwmnow The White Drug Store l. G. ‘IA "ITESON . DI t - / OO-vv-vvvov VQIvIOO» -»