"fr: w-s- ' ‘ y decodes. ... ». pun" leek-W. ceme- n. luau-d Hw-Prelllelfi-i. I. Burnett leeretery-Llent. Col. D. L llullflnneil. D l. 0. . I Iltte’: end IlIlIIr—-J; I. Bunsen leeueietr Editor-II. l. Onrrie. Isl! oer yeee (n. edyenee) meliel lento; Deny (founded hilt) “.00 per nee ill advance) _- In tinned one llnltefl ltltee N,’ !_lVotes Byllle Way 1 The way ls rein: prepared m: sarlnslns I. Dominion election dur- ing the comics session of Parliament if certain conditions HIM. A Blotting of liberal Bdnators and Membereof the Government and House of mom was held the other dey inn-p’. mier King's office to deal with the organization of the party ‘for the i nosrox-old Bonih News: .\'E\V NEW GLASGOW, BUAIMERSIDE-Ilunter Boon IORTAGUIl-fl’. A. Johnston. l. ll-"twn. Poet Office. I. D. ‘Ruler, Grafton Street. Fred Gnudet. Greet George Street. llnrltlm Statlonerl. I. Thomas White, 120 Elm Ave. Carter k ('11.. Queen Street. : I. Whltlock, (Irene George Street. Xruul N. Keys, I. Andlernnel, t“ Tromont St. l'0IiK-llotellnge News Depot. SUI Wen 40th 8t. N. B.-i\l. B. Fuulknkr. Store. I IIIMII. Co. NNIlllB-al. S. Acorn, TIE (IUAIHIIAN run be obtniuell from the following agents In Charlottetown- b. YWIII. Richmond Street. Alex. MePherlon, Queen Street. h’. Tworl. In Are. Jomllne O-oeery, Cor. Kent I Bortiford J. P. Duffy, Queen Street. ‘ enundu \'e\vl Cm. Dezwt. Kin. Jacobson, llo enter Street. l0 llilllhnre Street. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1930 The King's Biography . The Biography ‘of King George V 1y Major C. F. p. Kipling, which will Pr,» published serially m The Guard- ‘Hen commencing tomorrow, contem- poraneously with‘ the publication of zhe book in England, ls of unusual v interest and should make a very __~ strong appeal our readers. His k Majesty's careerpfronl earliest in- fancy, has been crowded with drama, pegeantry and color. He has been in a the centre of international events V: since childhood. Countless ar- 7 ilcles have been written about him but the present occasion is the first on which the authority of Whe Royal household has been se- cured for the publication of an of- ;flciel biography. The story, as told ‘ iby Major Kipling, contains a wealth , iof material of extreme interest to T ‘Canadians and will be found an in- i. ‘Mlvalueble source of information with which all should be familiar. Teach- ers and students especially will find ‘this work an illuminating comment- ary on international events, particu- larly during the past two momentous The chapters, from the m-st installment, are thrilling and are ‘I written in a charming and intimate ‘istyle. I Mr. Hoover and Mr. King. The manner in which‘ the King f v Government has shirked its repson- ‘w sibility for the unemployment condi- ' tions existing in Central and West- ern Canada. during the past few Olnergetic action of President Hoover in averting an industrial crisis fol- lowing the recent debacle in the , stock market. It has been well said 3 that m. Home: and Mr. King faced the same general set of circumstances t lest November. Mr. Hoover grappled j with them before they could develop. The King Government dug into the " cyclone cellar and left the country to Providence and to its own devises. While Mr. Hoover was moving the i‘ Ihflle forces 0f his Governmgnt 5mg] i, fitting his will and energy to avoid é i catastrophe, Premier King was ' hunting through Western Canada, in _ln effort to make up his mind p; m e propitious hour of appeal to the people for re-election. _ , And the reaction is precisely what. ‘j might have been expected. In the States today,_joumals of all - ‘political opinions join in endorsing leadership which it. is thought has fMUhd o panic comparable m the W?" 1X1 hiswry- In Canada, on the ‘ other hand; strong‘ Liberal papers ' like the Manitoba Free pm, 1,; tho OttawasCitizen have united the Conservative and indepen- oemmency in handling the situa- tion. _ v . Ill! from his Western (our and ;*l‘l0rlted b! ‘m; wnic eir of the filth. Premier King wee assailed correspondent: to know whet he icing w d0 about unemplwlnent _vm1d be take e lee: the hoover book, nets spread -r_nonths is in striking contrast to the. 4. has been besieged with appeals from cities apd provinces, as far east as Montreal, as far west as Vancouver. l-lls answer has been to burrow deep- er into the cyclone cellar. He sends his Minister of Labor occasionally to the top to quote statistics; but the Minister's job is a thankless one, and he too retires under cover of the statement that the Federal Govern- ment has no responsibility in the matter. In the meantime, the com- plaints grow louder, the demand for governmental action more insistent. And tl\e fllll responsibility,’ as every thinking“ Canadian knows, ls upon tho King Government, in that it ha: permitted upwards of $500,000,000 worth of foreign manufactured goods which could and should have been made in Canada, to flood Canada in the last twelve months thereby de- pl-lving Canadian workmen of labor and Canadian farmers, gardeners and dairymen of the market which those Canadian workers would have given them. It is the King Government alone that has created and encour- aged the present conditions enabling foreign capital to exploit Canadian resources from foreign labor in for- eign countries and then to exploit the Canadian market with foreign manufactures. * ~ Laughing It Off iver, of New York, to discuss the sub- ject of prohibition from an angle 'that is new and in a better-natured ' manner than is usually adopted on either side of this everlasting ques- ftion. Speaking in the U. S. House of Representatives, Mr. Oliver liken- 'ed conditions under prohibition to a i rcvolutioru-a laughing, sporting. toasting revolution. "The most potent force that the Government must conquer," he is reported in the Congressional Re- mrd as saying, "is the sense of hu- mor of America, Near January 1 ‘ i920, America woke up in church, took the pledge and resolved to do v better than our fathers. By the l Eighteenth Amendment, Uncle n Sam took a plea of guilty to the I charge that for 150 years he had been drunk and disorderly. On the ' morning after Uncle Sam laughed, I and the whole world laughed with him. Judges smile, juries smile, , the police smile, statesmen smile every time the evidence is produc- ed. We have tried by law to make a tenth-rate heaven out of Am- ‘ crica. but have discovered that paradise is populated not by angels but by human beings." Part of this statement, suggests a Canadian exchgnge, may be true, The whole of 1c is not truh. Accord- ing to figures cited by former Sen- ator Wadsworth in one of the recent public debates on prohibition, during the ten years that the dry law ‘has ‘existed there have been 250,000 con- pm-u i“ "W"!!! "19 K1118; victions for violations of the law. 5d} q-“mmmt m‘ i“ ' "l"! I114 in?‘ and. 80,000 persons were arrested iduring 102D alone for prohibition jviolations. This is something _It which few judga, juries, statesmen, or even politicians, will be inclined {to mile. Ividenee produced in this _lthll is provocative of anything but mirth. .....,._____._... Editorial Notes {acidic hrllylestyeerruul cpecpceuuccnwuutdiwcd ydeleeecvlmsmue. my»... ‘Itlfifltolmhialrer. ‘-wirlteennetcreelcleteefe aahnesuaessen. tens e , flaunt-too; no even ' l It has remained for Mr. Frank (BT- coming ' u. Them ' l t- ed nearly all day and discussed ‘e arrangements for the province of On- tarlo. An Ottawa despatch to The Globe states that a lively scallion is expect- ed and that as to the date of the election "much will depend on the attitude of the opposition during the coming session. If Mr. Bennct and his followers obstruct unduly the Government may dissolve and appeal to the country for e mandate." The Globe finds that "the Conser- vatives are'displaying keen interest in uevelu-ments and watching for signs of an election. They believe the Government will appeal to the country in the near future if the time seems auspicious and the issues promising." ’ That s Dominion election is not far of! has long been apparent owing to the lapse of time since the exist- ing Parliament was elected in 1920, but the instance cited is the first in- timation from any responsible Lib- eral source that a. dissolution may come during the course of the months that make up the probable duration of a session. "1f tho Opposition obstructs" is n phrase that goes for nothing. Those who oppose the Government of the day are constantly being charged with obstruction whatever party may- be in power. Mr. Bennett and his followers will not be much alarmed by the threat of dissolution. It is their duty to insist upon full and free discussion of the public questions that come before them. The threat to the Opposition is at. the same time an intimation that the Government is seeking in advance a. pretextfor dissolution, to be ready for use any clay. By so much it brings dissolution out of the ,ossible and into the probable column of who‘. is likely to happen. It becomes more evident as time passes that the Government in its perplexlty and varied troubles has become convinced that it has lost ground in public opinion and has de- cided to appeal to the country before its chances have changed from bad to worse. 0f course, any Government will flght‘for its life, however hope- less the prospect may be. Since 1926 province after province has fallen out of the Liberal column ‘The short grain crop of 1929, and fal- ling prices for wheat yet unsold, have mllitated against the Government in the West where unemployment, which it refused to assist ill-relieving has gone far to alienate the support which the Government received in that quarter in 1926. in the deliverance of party after the meeting in the Prem- ler's ‘office to consider organization for the campaign. out by The Globe was sh admission that Mr. Bennett had been more al- ert than the Libcral Leaders in get- ting ready for emergencies. An air of depression and foreboding seems to have been a. distinct . of the gathering.- By [emu wJiertemuD. HOW THE BODY DOES ITS WORK As a student I was satisfied to learn about the structure of the body; about bones, nerves, and blood ves- sels, ancl about the various orgltns. and also how in a general way all the different parts of the body did their work. I learned that the mouth, stomach, pancreas, and bile made digestive juices; that the liver stored up sugar; that the skin regulated ‘the heatf that the heart pumped the blood and the lungs purified it. And that all these various process- es wcre governed by the brain and nerves. Now Just how these various actions took place, how the body stored water, and gave it out to the‘ tissues when needed; how the sugar and other necessary materials were muln~ tuined in the proper amounts in the body, and numerous other processes, were not taught because they were not. known. But now our-patient physiologists arc working on these problems in] physiology and erldoavoring to get at the exact methods by which Nature regulates all our needs in the body. ‘ Dr. W. B. Cannon, of Howard says that no matter what is going on about you, the atmosphere, food, clothing, water, the day, the night, the sun, the rain, heat or cold, Nat- ure has to regulate your body, (that is the inside cf your body) so that it cannot be influenced or injured by any of these things about you. For instance you have to do some hard fvork and what happens? Sugar must be used up by the muscles and more sugar thus immed- iately given out to the blood by the liver from its storage depot. Pcrspira- tiorl or sweat is poured out. by-the skin to kee the body from getting too hot. c blood vessels in the lungs enlarge so that the lungs can take in more air to purify the cxtra blood needed for the hardwork. The blood vessels going to the internal‘ ‘organs actually contract-decrease in‘ size-so as not to allow the bloodto ‘go there instead of to the muscles and lungs where the blood is need- army»- » ly- I ‘* ue lnteaesp cannot q I __ _ ma‘... The PubilcyFpruiri-t dun-us "eel-respectful: an unlqurrous 1 l 5 conaasroun \ ‘Sir.—1 have come across the Pet- riot of January 27th and find that its King's county. correspondent is still busy minding other people's business. The parties referred to won't thank him fcrteiling through the prcss of their departure’ to other scenes, but when ho dips into the private affairs of 50012:! our most respected citizens who still In the prime of life, and refers to them es "old," he leaves the impression that he is on the high road to dotage. It is hardly fair that the every day af- fairs and shortcomings of c. respect- able community should be published iuplaceswhere even their names are unknown. If this ddlesome writer would leave his neighbours aloric they would certainly have a better opinio of him. a , I - '_ I am, Sir, etc, - J. F. FARMER BUREAUCRATS Sin-Your editorial today on civic affairs was timely and to the point. we are fast drifting into therhands of bureaucrats in both City and erovinclal governments. Everything almost is lc-it ta cmcials or lg”! or two int/eroded parties, who pull the strings for their particular advant- age. The encl- of this is not. dimcult to for-see. History may not repeat it- self exactlydbut similar causes pro- duce similar effects. A thorough in- vestigation into the finances of the city is necrslsary. and this cannot be, carried out unless the detailed ' 1." years of are their own declared balance}. wheth- ercwlect_orotberwise.._- - An 1m the deficit wee reduced to wit.” by 820.000. from . tahgblllk. ay-"rlehvwlug $00,000 there lnictnhayebeenehendwmom- ' plusmrials Joufwas desim:‘lted_ l "special" one to Offset, unpaid taxes. but it-is noticeable that those taxes when collected were not thus opp“- ed, for we find in 1929 another “special ice-n” to credo: an election year surplus. We find then $16,500 bonds issued u. ma. cell thousand of this was paid the-‘Ubruy grant, the balance ‘diverted to ordinary revenue, to help make up that $256 surplus. Prue City Council may My,“ O" w this- "we redeemed 37.400 debentures" Tolthis I would rejoin, What m- came of the sinking funds, provided |to redeem those debentures? Have cse too been engulfed in the maelstrom? I ‘Then what of the improved (‘l’) methods of increasing tax "; and what of the future? It is no secret that the Council have a man err-the job depuied to bring values up high er, with the further promise of still higher next year. _ . These are matters which citizens should be pemurtted to , in press and on platform. Those who pay the bills should have some small say as to what they want, and are willing to pay for. The big stick is too much in evidence,’ and the "rights of the common pzople too much ignored. Amongst these there 'is ho wonder as to why the veil oi privacy is drawn. or why the retic- enoe in bringing the record of the last two years into the limelight, I am Sir, etc. TAXPAYER. - OUR CLAIMS Shy-Mien I addressed the Board accounts are available - for inspect- cl ‘r-‘ade in Charlatictown last mtmih ion. I admit Dr. Yeo has been a~ re our Federal subsidies, I strongly splendid Mayor and conical out the recommended a Royal Commission to duties o! his 0mm mdlwbly. but adjudicate our claims. similar w the he m not the whole shooting match. commission that heard and adjudi- The councillors have their duitesicated the claims of Manitoba. and responsibilities as well and thelMgssl-s, Sinclair, Duffy amzl Riggs electors have a risht i» haves-n op- ‘opposed this recommendation, stating pprtunlty of hearing from them _on'tl~.at the findings, of the Duncan account of their stewardship. b W015 601118 5° l! $0 0mm 5115910100 upon which to rest our case. 1 doubt with probably no Bufllvient mund- whether these Gentlemen had given ‘ A11 elect" "-5 “W118 m We 0! ~09!‘ 1 the subject sumcicnt. study" to enable representatives on the subiwt the them to pronounce definitely upon n ‘other dB-Y. and “is i016 t0 11016 his a; the “ma; and 1g they Wm look 1mg“ “i he had m “m” ‘k ‘he into all the circumstances more fully, cd. The heart beats faster to pulnp the extra blood needed by the musc- destroyed in doing the hard work. I Just think, all these things are ‘done for you when you work hard, because the part of your nervous system, seeing the need, notifies all of thee processes to get busy. An hiswork is just one example of the regulation of your processes by the nervous system. I ‘Illa next step of course is to find No confide“, ‘,1. h”, o; “meg; out -what interferes with the various the ‘mung I processes and their proper rate of working. Because any interference 1s what you call sickness, illness, or dis- What was given ‘ BR89- AMSITION les to do the hard work: The spleen. men- m" “IQ BTW-Fest‘- $811765 50nd: out, more Qgfpugflgs m“, ma! this or any other country. were ifmmmn and the Turdwn commgssgon ‘blood to make up for the ones being’ D °°‘-“""'Y- L" l" "11 this “PYWW- they may Perhaps change their opin- tative.‘ and all who think as he dces ‘m; . ' I _ _ that the consumers, the working| The wordmg‘ o; m, 0,455.1“. “Council appointing ,thc Duncan Com- m‘ 7°‘ them the" "Wm be m cw‘ ‘is very different, and the powers of italists and no country into Whi0h:cach_c°mm15s1°n__were’ I flung i” ‘MW a‘ stake" ‘Wen it Qmes-w greatly different. Besides, the accep- eiecting representatives the working tame of mempon of the Tatum, m“ "m i‘ “ impmm‘ “s m” Commission by allthe interested par- mmtamt" m“ when n “m” m ties has entirely changed conditions, finmd“! u“ my ms mans“ “e so far as we are concerned. There- “e” “PM ma“ u" mmmms‘ .1.‘ fore, findings upon which we have l“ m” "wmm" WM “m” u“ hi“ built a fairly satisfactory cos? two or and ."'h° "fixing ma“ wmpmes 75 three years ago, might not. be nearly p‘ c" o’ the comunims 909mm“ so suitable now. Moreover, we have m m’ °“’Z‘”d““‘ “mm” ‘his’ hlofo in common with Manitoba and and M’ the electors 1mm upon, 3 .hc other prairie previous than we d “ “n” comm and not a bu?" ‘nave with Nova Bcotln and New cams”; am s‘: w: . iBrunswick, and if we bade. Com- ‘ ' " mission to hear and adjudicate our (we al:n;1n::£ru:A ;c-_' um by itself. we would be more likely - toget justice thanif we bad our counts we now ready and P” be claims mixed up with those of other gang? it the (my olym“ 0mm provinces. Ihave held thiswiew for ' ' a some years. and the more ~I study the question the stronger it appeals ~ w me. " s“ ___m. the mm o, your exo-eumt Further, the Duncan Commission \ CIVIC Mamas T0 ICommissiol-l gave us.a sumcient basis- “ ‘ ' h‘ -.'."i'.". .‘ s v Nerves! nervous eyetem and imPIQVQ your physical conditionP; Fellows’ Syrup contains mineral foods which feed and. so restore‘ the nervous sysh tem to a healthy condlticpn It: also has valuable ingredi- BM! ilhflt induce normal sleep,- aid digestion, and strengthen the bbdy; It cannot be suc- cessfully uuitated. hf‘ ‘I ‘ ..__ ‘FEBRUARY :7. 1930 3'09 much ‘exdneinehr. 1M much work, coo much worry, too mulch‘ pleasure-all over-- tax and weaken the nervous, system. l \ Pillar-down" nerves cause suffering. Loss of sleep, lack of energy, fretfulness, and di-l gestive trouble are, symp- “ tome of this condition. ~ Why not “rebuiid" your ‘Fellewe’ Laxative Tablets are specially for the rationals treatment of, and ultimate recovery from Nltltfpqtlpn,‘ d FELL‘0WS' l h ‘I’ do. The best leaf and the longest cure give you ‘ , the most-lasting and- dellclous chew when you ask for H 8: N Black Twist. You’ll have the time ~of your life trying to chew the flavor out‘ - of this fine tobacco. mcnrvc ‘Nltl-IQLSON general financial revision or readjust. ment which we are suggesting for the , ‘- Maritime Provinces." Pbr reasorls which have been frcqueirtiyckplaihed -‘ » and which must be apparent) I to - everyone who has given the matter ' any study at all, our claim under this- head is much stronger and broader - than ‘any similar claim that could be but forward by Nova scotia or New Brunswick. In fact it stands‘ m p, different class. ‘rilercfore, the in- advisability of having it considered in the WBY suggested by the Commiss- ion must be obvious. I do not wishi to unduly criticise U10 Duncan Com- mission or its findings. That Com- mission snd its report wet; um "mpg, in fact an important ‘event, in the history of the relations between the Dominion and the Maritime Prpvlp- j ces, but it would be a. serious mistake ' to make the report of the Duncan Commission the first and last wipe-d in respect to these relations. as so OLD S ! Prompt and effective relief is obtained ill Coughs, Colds, Chills, Sore Throat. Whooping Cough and Bronchial ‘Troubles, Ill lllflllt and adult. by MACS SYRUP 0F TAR AND COD LIVER 01L COMPOUND Th!‘ preparation is com- pounded from pare drugg and nas been thoroughly tried and tested. Eradicete colds-quickly before they become deep-nested. time tending the euflerer to serious bronchial and pulmonary condi- tions. l0 CENTS PER BOTTLI AT ‘HIE szMAcs lmany of our people seem disposed to do, . Our claim that we have propriet- "Y °T 31611950111‘? rights in the'lands I "wchesed by the Dominion from the ion in hear our case, and providing Hildmfl‘! BBY Company ‘is strcngly Iwe presented it properly , During year: pert Ministers and their press have been broadcasting ‘a prosperity under their regime. which at beat was limited and spotty, till the spots multiplied and the bright- ness faded out. .We- hear less of the prosperity shouting of late because the more in- telligent of the shooters had realiz- ed that it is uselets to attcm ~ to songs to heavy hearts. Whom the political gods would de- stroy they first set ttvlriance with each other. This is shown in the dis- agreements and contradictory utter- ances of Ministers of the King Gov- ernment at Ottawa end of the mem- bers of the Saunders Government here. Once Mr. Sounders threatened to affairs in one of the Departments was not niece. But when o mliorit! of nu Oeliizlebrefueed and u». became cheer the“ despondcnt by singing, resign if n certain invcltigation of‘ "I had Ambition, by which sin “The angels fell; I climbed and step by step, 0 mm, Ascended into Hell. "Rctuming now to peace and quiet, And made more wise, Let my descent and fall, O Lord, Be into Paradise." ' —-W. H. Davies. fHE LAND WE LOVE by raaun YBIGB THE NAME GATINEAU P. Whert did the name ineeu" originate? _ A. When Champlain in his ascent of the Ottawa. River, m 101s, reached whet is new the site of the capital of tile Dominion, on June 4, he not:- "m," apparent tint my were tulle willinl ced a tributery coming from the that be should resign. he preferred to horth. The river wes the Getineeu. rhmain in office." Ill Ooyernment is and Champlain gives no pump‘ to u, editorial of Thursday, and a similar one of s, previous issuqthere "is the enigznafii; the current of street op- inion, that the conduct ‘o: on, s;- fairs for the lest two years id under the. ban of press criticism or cem- ment. ' Why are the City Accounts not pieced before m6 electors in _book form ls in former election _‘ years? Why is a public meetingivoldelfby the- ' " es feel-fully es‘ a mouse would node a irululy cat? W-hy is it met none of the few mt- lcfsms which do come to light ere never answered. either in the press or at the Council fecal-d? And why is it that in such rrivlte assemblies ls the Rote-ryfCluh- or such ls lest summer's banquet, the burden ortne spa‘; of HM won-nub. the only apparent spokesmen for ms council; u ofjth palm cri- ticisms. u he claims to be, of his civic eolleeglm? " " ‘ltvtheleire no eomvleiau, er was not, in my opinion, fair to Prince ‘Howard Island. The givinu to us of al25,000, to New Brunswick $800,000, to Nova Scoiia $875,000, while our railway expenditures, according to the some Commisslon,_ were three ‘fifths of New Brunswickb and half of Nova Bcotieis was never» come understandable. _ Agaihflri‘ " pronouncing upon our Y ‘lilill for additional pubsldy in lieu of public lends the Commission spcalu thus: "The claim is. of course, e. vdry belated ode, but it is adstenced, as we understand it, on broad equitable tract. We think it mugt beloohed at in the general financial revision or readjustment which we are suggest- ing for the Merl Provinces." . This was surely unfortunate ‘ntntpmentfi ‘nuke; end ‘r ‘cannot un- fill"! the making u. if, they Md bten seized of all the facts lurid eircumlteeces of the cue. m‘, or sixty lee ,_ _mort period m“. m- mpnm; if ell-map. er-udw n the ethire d: lmmu and resisted by every man from the prai- In the paper which 1 read before grounds rather than upon strict con- | rie provinces and by many from ‘the Board of Trade, I stated that I ‘Ontario. I am therefore, satisfied 'had omitted some facts and arsil- ‘fiot the claim‘ will never be admitted ,m¢fli-! which V0014 hflvc strengths"- bl’ In)’ inter-provincial conference 9d m! propositions, had I used tiwm- that may 15p cgnvengd_ 3 ham haw. I shall now mention two or ihcm. ever, never met a man from the West , 1st. whet: the United States organ- or from Ontario wm 1s m; Mm“; u, jized States out of the territories cansidpl- ‘wbeglm- “ma, Edwa,“ which sire had acquired by purchase ‘Isllndgqhoujd m; b, put on pen“, ;or conquest, which territories lmd qqunlgry with the other provinces of ‘been “ chm?‘ °“ ‘hi’ Peder“ ‘W the Y‘ million, and many o; them enuea, the older States were comm"- wp] “my; p,“ m, hi, m“ “gm. sated either by lands or money grants unqujgmpbyyrjnd n‘ the“ u [for ‘whet the new States had cost lgqmm- 5;,- Nm Ayle-nonhimrhaw them, and I think the money ilrants m, bu‘; commuuom ‘umwuy m ame a charge on the lands of thc °M§‘“_ I w“ Nmcuhfly ‘axiom i1 w States. At allevents, compensa- k, “r51, Ann.‘ opmon on the sum tion was given to the older States. m, m, u n my“, dmcun was,“ ‘and. In Australia there as pro- m ‘ Mnvenflbn "m: mm’ “an” ,vision in the constitution or in ti: o, m.- Fat dame“, ‘I mo“ m ‘ n- regulations established between‘ to: Dicce 6i purer "Should Prince Edward’ am‘, fiihmw f, 02,2“; 1015M ‘be put on equality‘ with m. which “mo, nah“ m m, an“, e house divided omelet itlelf, end cm- not mud. n u in mmmy hauls endthereilenotiiiemnuchlikeitin The first record of animate for the river ddéc not pecul- 14111108. n; m. 7811' Pleat-David Jones mode e re- port to Governor l-igldisnend on. the suitability o! lend on the Ottawa rec saupryflot imp-amide inventing provinces. dud-if our plum queen‘ witirideeijneotiiaeI dad uudse tom-led mfunm uwudeimdtas tion, why mp up dun peel-w» the inmiueceeiumrec, or, ‘uu "med fieewhoinnene and use larepr should uafeu: stupen- - ' ~- potion. _nue"lzwdesirbt‘»1ws_tes"lu m1. I. 1.. settlement. mentions conning E93? filfiffififil...“ "iii l mun” a‘ W’? h?‘ Din, iiruck out mayor-d "landless" eild wrote rm.» my qllfltlvnli-M word "undoubtedly." x. towards-scum: we should B. “u “V”!!! to consider carefully whether It Iouldhotbebetierformtoclnlm Qfllllllm of q-lertnmhlp, with the drop of unbchldlqu A M eulaYoi- ‘ otheg-gnildieu provinces of the ,D_om-_ or“). m“ m‘ ‘wmmgwe-D; m, whole u compensated by the ii Central. Government". Evidently w sister netienflete I high value on the principle of perfect eqllllli-Y 5mm“ ell the pompouent parts of the Com- iuonweelth. ..' , _\-l\musu'rew" . I» I. HUGHES q m: , L-identificdtifnd , - -- _ - ' for gtovgs, particularly MP“ 1* W “at h nut-m .r.ecitniity. tlvceeciefulbidlht briffthl 11M plantain: interests m m yum-u mu - . m. 0*“ “ "dd-u... l - .- . - Mo, , u, "Wfiitkslflll ‘.232 m - ...'.»“!l”W-_"!f-_b1tlltvej~it be.tig"itl|ui‘dtot8i‘NIfloftMWm°