‘r " ‘mimic ' TllE y BIIIRLDTTETOWII lilllllllllll Si‘ _ Morning Dally (Founded in 188'!) 9 Authorized as Second Clan Mall. Pout 08100 i Department, Ottawa. a llha Guardian may be obtained at: Hub Tobacco Shop, Moncwll. N. B Tho News Shop, Moncton, N. B. George McLean Plctou, N. 8. Walker‘: White Spot, 111 Salter St., Halifax, NJ- Metropolitan News Agency, 1248 Peel St.. Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurier Ottawa. Ont. B. Aitken, Lord Elgllfa Hotel, Ottawa, Ont. J, Fine, 354 Bay SL, Torontu Ont. Wolfe's News Stand, Sudbnry, Ont. Old South News, Cor. Milk and Washington Sh. Boston Hutaling’: News Agency Times Building, New York. _ “The Strongest Memory is- Weaker Than , the Weakest Ink.” WEDNESDAY, Juur s, 1m The Poultry Industry To wlittt cxtcnt may the poultry industry develof) £15 One of Catt-adds agricultural re- sources? 1111s subjcct is discussed iri an in- ‘tcrcstini; zitticlc in the current issue Of thc Agricultural lllillfltlt‘ /\’c:-iw:t' by Mr. I. R. Cavcrs, proiv>>or of potiltry husbandry, Cni- vcrsiiv of _\l:tnit\»l>;t. The author emphasizes the rolc of the pttllllfY industry in converting raw. ntzttcrinls into products 0f tnnch greater vziluc. lll titztt rcspcct poultry flocks are an important ittctor in tltc marketing of Cutiadiun grain. Yet tltc _\c;irs of cheap gram, (luring the thirties, fttiletl to establish the industry on a y sound and business-like basis. Present pro- f duction is Considvrzibly’ beiond prospective dom- ' cstic rcqnirentcnts, cvcti though these may be _ hcld zibove pro-war levcls through improved l ' quality of products along with improved condi- tions of cittpltwytncitt and greater spending ' powcr. hurlltw dcvclopmctit, Mr. Cavcrs be- licvcs. itiust dcpcnd tipon outside markets. Czntadat must continue to have an OutlEl for a lztrgc stirplus of spring eggs, or else re- verse the production curvc. Specialized pro- . V ducers in evcrv province are able to get satis- l factory year-round egg production. But farm flocks still tend to lzty in a ltigghly seasonal fash- _ ion, dcspitc the improved feeding and care that . has resulted from the more encouraging prices for their products in recent years. One hopeful trend, so far as thfse flocks are concerned, is in the tctztlcncv towards semi-commercial farm flocks. “iltcrcas a smrtll flock may or may not receive the bcst of feed and attention, no one can afford to kccp a flock of several hundred hcns without thought for efficiency.‘ Sticaltiug of the future of the industry, Mr. Liners stivs that it has two alternatives- either it must eventually leave the export mar- kct and revert back to something approaching prc-\var sizc, or it must markedly stcp up its cfficicncy in all branches, including the con- stimcr anpr-nl as to price and quality of its pro- ducts. This is primarily a challenge to the poul- . trv cxtetiston workers in all govemmeng and "t. college dcpflrtmcnts. and in indnstrv, as well as to the expcrintctttal workcrs back of them. t‘ “Some m.'tv aver," he snvs, "that thcrc is still a third illlCfllllllYC. Ihrt; of sithsirli/crl production or subsidized €X|'W\t'l>. he that as it may, the potiltryt industry would thcn have to compete with other agricultural lincs for favor in m5 higlrplaccs of govcrnmcnt. Votiltry and c951 Pf"- (lurllon is onc of Canada's agricultural rc- soitrce: that has wide possibilities for further CllPVElOPTlIPHY." B.C. Verdict T116 vlflvry‘ wt the two Conscvratne-Coalition candi/lnics In tiit» Yztricrtttvcr-lfioint Grey b)" eltcn/ui lilnl ncck is rcgztrrlctl zis a further in- divzti: . uf iltc tlWllHc of the C.C,li'. brand of bi/vhtlrrt; in llHtx-lt Lfoltnnhin, whcrc it was a sci-tons lidflvi- tui- punt-r R15 far back as iO ycztrs 3.2". il lic (.(_'.l". \\.'l.\('fl in strctigtlt mt the mast \\l11'11 its I't"t"\ll1l'-1Itl.'lfy pfHQHililiilC was a dead- lcut r 1n nil ilk- lC-l of ttnimlzt, zmd it rcncltcd tlic fllIlHILi of its zt-cvnt by wtntting no {cw-gr thztn llt ;\.ll_~ m the liflllr-li Lhltimbigt Legisla- _tnrc which \\'.'l> l.li>:‘tl\'('(l lfisl September. ln the Provincial ('l€‘t'lt<>;\ of the follow-inc months, its rcprcstnt tn was rcrlnvctl to to _\(‘ZilS, all but tlircc or IVuir bcinu wuu by _\ll]]l and prc-(‘gfinitg ittrtrgins 1n xnulii-wvlcrl cotttta-ts, 1hr» ln-vlcvtituis have bccn llCltl since, and both hzixc rvctwrrlcrl siggttificaitt (lvvlittes in the vounc strength uf tht- iteo-Nicialistic C. C. F. grflttp. Th;- \'rtn<1iti\cr-Point (lrvy liv-clcctioti \\':i.s llfitllwlfll hct<-s.-;tr\ by the l’(‘C(‘ill tlczttlis of lltc l’1'<;ics-\c l7iti~t't'\';tti\(* lcztdcr, R. L. blfililillitl, l\'_l‘., and his rwlltztjqut‘. l. ;\, Ptttnn. who had won the constitucncy in October by impressive tnajnritics. The successful Con- sEr\'rt1i\'c-Co;tlit1<inisls wcrc I)1\l)OS(‘(l by two C. C. l‘. czutdttltttcs, onc llcnuwral, and one Liberal- Inclttstrialist. The 1W1) (Jovcrmzicnt candidates polled a total votc far in cxccss of thc aggregate of their four nppoticrtts. . The significance of this OnC-sidcd result in a consttttitrticy where the , industrial vote tircdrmtitirttcs, nccrl hardly be t? emphasized. l - t. - More Farm Help Needed {Decision 0f the Dctwrtrttncnt of Labor to stop paving unemployment lHSllfHllCC to single rrmn , who refuse to do farm work if they are cap- '» i able, says the Ottawa journal, will remove one bf the complaints of farmers. At least it will if the decision is put in operation and actually makes some farm help available. lVitli hay- ing and harvest at hand in liastern Canada far- ‘ mers are up to their earsjn work, are in desper- ltc need of asoiitav/c, and becoming increasing- ly bitter a: they sec able-bodied men in the cities and towns drawing unemployment insur- ance and refusing to accept jobs which are avail- able. . Whether the department's ruling makes more. f farm help available remains to be sun. The ' mutt likely depend: 0n how tough the regional ‘-' bffloers ‘llmcomc- The ‘thousand mgrpDeptttv ‘ "Minister MacNam-ttra zpbke about will hardly mnlréatinntinfliealmtionupractleall farm in the country needs help at this season. This inability of Eastern farmers to get help is having one vcry serious effect on dairy farms in particular. A great ntany dairymen this year planted little if any grain, partially because of adverse weather early in the season but also because of lack of help. They plan to depend on feed grains front the Prairies. It will work out if the Western harvest of coarse grains is a good one, otherwise a big drop in milk produc- tion can be expected next Winter and many more cows sold across the border. It’s not a healthy trend. =-. EDITORIAL NOTES 1- As a matter of fact, the by-clection in Sas- katchcsvan rcstilted in the C.C.l‘. Government candidate, .\lr. Gibson, being rcltirrtcd on a tninority vote, he obtztittitig 3,105 ‘mics against 3,500 polled by the Liberal and Conservative catididates jointly. 1F ll‘ Fl‘ Notwithstandiim that the mittee 0f the House of Contmons decided to eliminate lllg phrase "wilful concealment" of illnesses suffered before enlistment, the King Government whipped up its majoritv to have it restored when the proposed amendment came before the House as a whole, in order to dcprivc veterans of pension rights. 1F >8 h" Veteran's Com- * Herc is news in the rcalm of prophecy which tnakcs one fccl good. baron luvcrchapcl. the new Brjyigl) _'\1nl>35>;<t(l0r t0 \\'21>llin;1lOl1 told a press conference iri New York of his four ycarsf experience as Ambassador to Russia. This con- vinced him there will be no immediate war bc- tween [he \\'e5tem Powers and Russia which, he said, requires peace for at least two genera- tions. Even then. he could fflrcscc n0 conflict. * A‘ 1K Are Amcrican farmers, or at least the live- stock brecdcrs, rcallv on strike for higher prices? The agriculture (l€[)£ll‘llil€lll in \\'aslz- itigtoti and liconomic Stabilizer Chester Bowlcs say that farmers are withholding meat animals, anticipating possible higher prices. Packing industry spokesmen state if the price ceilings on livestock expire lune 30 the big packers will get their normal share of animals. 'l‘hc_v say they could outbid in open competition the buy- ers who now are getting the cattle. >l< * >5‘ 1F Quebec founded this date i608 by Sieur dc Moms; 1534, Cartier had formally anticxcd the country in thc name of the Frcnch King; the colony he tried to establish, with the aid of LieuL-Gcncral Robcrval, proved a failure, as were also settlements made by Marquis dc la Roche in i598 and by Chauviti and de Potitgravc in the folloivittg year; in 1004 Sicur dc M01115. established a scttlcittcnt at 5t. Croix, afterwards removed to Port Roynl in Acadia, and thence he proceeded to found Quebec City and Nlon- trcal. i >k >l< Ii lt is n~w Cliilillfitl that Agriculture hlinistct" Gardiner would he tlle Liberal Party's choice as a "caretaker" Prime Minister in the event of Mr. Kings rctirctticnt bcfnrQ a national convert- tioti. According to the (lttmvtt corrcspondctit (ll Su/ttrdnyv Nit/Iii, ncitltci" .\lr. ll-lw nor llr. St. Lnurctit are in the running, due to their pcr- 50ml reluctance to undertake ncw and heavier responsibilities than they now carry in thcir respective offices. Jil >l< >l< >l< The atomic bomb has done its hit, and now we wait the verdict 0f the militarists, scientists, othcrwisg as a destructive agent. to be borne in mind SllCll 2t bomb can not be tentioit and running thc risk of being interccptcd en route. \Vhcncvcr a new destructive clement i5 introduced there is certain to bc a counter- balance within a comparatively short time. vi * >l< >li The expected is happcuing in rcspcct to httbv Bonuses, It “'35 prcdictcrl by Christian social economists that oncc the State was pcrmittcrl to intrude in the lHllfiFlfICIllClll of tlic filttlllV ltfc, an Euglishutnifs or Linzitlittirs hnutr- would no longer be his castle whcrc no nulnrlcr may in- trude without conscnt, Now it is to be the rule that the (iovcrnmcttts, Fcrlcral and Pro- vincial tntty at any time mid a ltomc to discover whvthcr the. Baby Bonus is lWlHQ used accord- ing to law. .\lr. (flaxtoti, llitiistci‘ of Health, has just told Parliament that lll€,(.‘iOVCl'lIlfiCtil was seeking rtrrangctnctits with the Provinces "whcrcliv the use of family allowances could bc investigated", and urged the Dflssiiflfi of a votc of $300,000 to covcrthc [ttilCllllIil cost in llk- life- svnt financial ycttr. This figures out at $5 pct‘ visit for thrcc out of every too familics rccciv- ing allowances. ‘l1 1k i? Lady Bztdcii-lknvrll now visiting us" sztys that had stood the tcst of time and remains today a complPte one for body. ntintl and" soul, she continued, suitable for all creeds in every part of the world. This movement in the world is in the United States where membership totals more than one mil- lion, she notcd. Canada the tnctnbcrship {tow stands at 67,000. Mentioniug that this is the fift-h visit shc has paid to Canada, but only the third time she has toured the country, she said she "came across" in January to attend- a Guide conference in Cuba, the first ever to be held in the Western Hem- isphcre by the Western Hemisphere Sub-Com- mittee nf the Girl Guide World Committee. The Guides throughout the world, no matter what color uniform they wear, or of what race 0r creed or nationality, are linked by common ac- tivities, law, promise and the ideal of goodwill and friendship to all. i. The idea behind Guiding is better citizenship 1n one’! own country coir yiemy pied with world Jrienduttip, ab: concluded. and powers-thztt-be regarding its future value or lt has always carried ltitltcr and thithcr without attracting at- thc Guide program, founded in England in 1909, as “valuable, uscfnl and suitable as cvcr." As it was originally (lCslQttPd, the program is still races, classes and is borne out by the fact that the movement has been embraced by youth of various creeds not only.in India and China, but the world over, from Australia to the Arctic. The largest Guide In (ircat Britain Guides num- ber approximately one half million, while in mt: CHARLOTTETOWIL GUARDIAN Notes By The W0)’ lite whippoarwill hal a mouth In theory this mouth uliarly adapted to catchl z nsects. for the bird does its l~ sect. hunting at night and on t n W108’ It has to catch lots of 1- sccts in a hurrv, for 1t does ‘t spend much time hunifn Mist of its time is spent mak n with the big mouth ‘Ithe wh ppo r- wiil docs not sing If you are oh r- ltable about such matters, you call its noise a culli but 1t 1s ab ut 0n a musical par with the gq-u n}; of an nngreascd wagon wneel, as piercing, perhaps, but mm-g Derslslent. Competed to the call of a whfppoorwill, the screeching hoot of the most raucous owl 1s sweet and soothing. Bt-sldes, owls pattse for breath. The whippoonwll doesn't — N(‘\\' Yolk Times. The successful use of penicillin by the United Kingdom d0clors 1n the treatment qt mastoid 1s report- cd in Lmtdorv newspapers, accord- ing lo The Kitchener Record. At)- plication during the early stages of the llltiess 1S stated to have very good results, eliminating a difficult and dznigcrous operation which was formerly the only remedy. Penici- 1lin_ 1s given for mastoid in norm- al injections into the bloodstream. It is reported that. a nine-month- uld babvwas cured with 66 pen- icillin injections over a period of three vtetics Dresings of the wound after the operation lasted from six to nine-months The wonder; 0f penicillin as a cutntlve agency con- nnue to be reported Hope will n01 down that America —wi11 some dxv develop good gratid opera based on American themes. Opera able to hold its own as an art form with the French, Gcmmn Italian and Russian says The Baltimore Sun America nolds u/p very well when 11 comes to ballad or folk operas, musical plais. o 1'- etms and even ballet, but her est. 1n grand opera ‘is trifling stuff, in- deed It is not for want of trying The Metropolitan would love noth- ing more than 1o have one good American entry in its repertory, and in the hope of finding ll, has triod out a sizable lisl But, for all its pains, it hos conic up with nothing more substantial than such stiff and l1Iili1S=pif€d stuff as "The Maypole of Merrymount". A survey by a United States in- sunancc organization on the spend- ing habits of Ilia nation shows that, ta en till routid, the little woman who nuts the home does 86 per cent of the spending, including the ne- cessities of her husband and sons. Wife or mother looks through tine paper every day to see what the stores are selling She not only buys her own personal needs and the fix- ings around the house. but she plays an important. part, the survey found. in the choice of her hus- band's or son's clothes even the sporting equipment they may want. She also fnfluertccs the choice of a family cur. Dad may fancy u certain make and a certain color, but mother fancies another kind of car, SllbjUCl, to finances‘, and an- other color, what she says goes A mun may not like the pattern of the tie his wife influences hLIn tc. buy but after all. she sees 1t more than he does Thai is why women wad advertisements so closely ana go window shopping. Advertise- IDPHH should bear the woman's point of view 1n mind If she docs not do the direct buying sne influ- cnces it in the rlircctlon she wants. —St. Thomas Times-Journal. Fifteen yrars ago Jack Law wen! up to tho River Murray, DPHIIllESS and fed Io Ihc buck tccth with city life On Ihc rivet bank he built himself a homNof plaster and sap- lings, making it look 11kt- a white stone house The local council decided to charge him five shillings a vcar to live rhcrc He put in a system of ropes and buckes and a chute to draw up his» water from the river He also built. a windmill. a weather recordtng device, a firth-- ing system and a canoe to cross the river for stint-lies Today he m fit and happy ht ovvcs no one any- Lhtnsz and admits that he “has a lztlle bit tucked away" I-ic lives by shooting rabbits and catching fish. Bells on his. sot lines toll hlm wht-n ho has a fish. one. and the tinklc what sort of a fish it is H’: docs his own cooking. mending urrl Itotzsciavork. And his dog can climb trees after grime. -—Autstralian News miter. steadily beaches and other Sum- mer resorts ln this dlSlIlCl are growing and are becoming comm- orclallzed since more and more ertplc arc acquiring cottages at hose resorts, thc change must met-l with the tip royal of a great mim- bcr of poopc Tbcre arc, however. some who dosirc solitude Tliorc than crowds Aren't they entitled to some consideration? Is there any good reason wny some resorts should not be dfilllfllPly and irrevocably set nsidc to suit the tastes of these people? As things areWoday they are ticvci‘ salt‘ one “enteiprisinrfl” lhfllvlflilfil can change the whole character of a resort. lorcltifi ‘he pionrers, those who first discov- lo move on i0 new crud its charm. arson would territory No sensible sn est that. riding s bles dance ha btcyclc lit/cries, shooting ttallcrles bowling alloys and similar amusement resorts should be bim- ncd from all resorts. But. ls their: any reason why a few spot/s, not. at escnl possessing any Sihlfl estaiishments, should not be so: aside in i; zone which would never (pawn, this type of thing? -Owen Sound Sun-Times zwfi Kg» _ t PUBLIC _ FORUM This column in open lo- the fllltilllllbh by wrre spondent: o! quentlonn of inwrel Th! Chlrlofialown Guardian don not neounr- , liy an‘ the opinion at . wrrnapondenln. ' .. -._-__-._ _. .;-. ~ o VANOOUVE. P151, CLUB 31;, _A number of former Prince Edward Islanders now msidlna in Vancouver nlatv on Orgflfllzill! I Prince Edward Island Club. Anyone having friends or relat- ives in this cftv who Knight b8 interest/ed. kindly Wmnllln-lwle m“ ADA MnoDOUGAI-L M45 West, am Ave. Phone: Be-WIW 5437-1-- D EPLORABLE ROAD S sttq-I was wondering it you and the people in other parts of Prince Edward Island (also our M-P-s) are aware o! the condition 0f the road in this section of Eastern Kings County, that ls the East Point section which inciudesfrom the South Lake, Elmira crossroads on one side to the North Lake. El- mira crossroads on the other. There has not been an)’ "all" work in this section for the last six years with the exception per- haps of a Government machine ivhicn docs more harm than good by gqraping a smooth path in the middle of the road which fllls u? with water during rainy weather. For this reuse-n thejmilel‘ has J10 choice but to drain cown the mid- dle of the road, digging huge T1115 and thereby giving large trucks good reason for gouging out lavke holes. Iricidently this Government drag hasn't ap eared this year as yet. Then aga there are wavel trucks that haul the gravel from our shores, break our inadequate bridges and culverts. but nrver put a crumb of gravel in the ruts. We were of the opinlonall along that the company which has done such a fine job on the road from Sourls to Red Point was also go- ing to straighten, widen. and sub-grade the road around the East Point suction, but lately we have foamed that the road is to be fixed only as tar as Elmira and down the north side again to St. Peter's. Now. we are paying taxes too, and I believe that we are a: progressive as the people of Ei- miru, The train and bus terminal are at Elmira and we have a five mile trip to the station over our only means of cntmmunication~ the road. In the very near future the road will be fit only for pedestrians; in fact, some people are afraid to take their cars and trucks out now in case o! an ac- cidrnt. It is high time our members be- gan fulfilling the promises they made the last election, or they wi-ll lose a good many of their supporters in this section the next election. One of the principle promises our members made while ivaizinr: their alection campaign, was. “paved roads for Eastern Kings". We have seen very little of our members since. Evtdently their consciences are guilty; 0r perhaps they think the people of this section are not deserving at u decent road. I think that you will find it true that M.P.'s to a very’ large extent make breaking promises a habit of theirs. I no- tice that the Government can spend money c-n less important things. Now I invite anyone to see that I have not exaggerated existing conditions. and I urge the people of Eastern Kings to complain more to the proper authorities and less to themselves and to their immediate neighbours. We have been patient too long. I am. Sir. etc, A GRUMBLING GRIT. DAYLIGHT SAVING Sir.- I have road with appreciat- lori the letters by Mr J J Gillies re. Daylight Saving He certainly spoke the truth. If those employed in the stores o1 Charlottetown and Summerside are so overworked that. In must have an extra hour afldaylght to s11 on the lawn or retire to some quiet s t. and trv out a-new front fly ‘whle sampling a fresh supply of liquid TBYNShmPHCS, how do they expect lhe farmer to produce more food for the hungry ones 1n Eur- 0D? They are appnrantly. not int/en estecl 1n the farmer only for what they can get out of him. Not. 1on3 ngo the write-r spent some fljng 0n the mainland, culling upon the small stores and in almost every case the merchants were operating on Standard Tim- er as one quaint.- iy but it. "Sun Time". When asked the reason for this backward stop he replied: ‘Sun e is good enough for me and 1t suits my cus- tomers". surely this was a true merchant. working tn perfect har- mony wllh his customers. Not Ion busy keeping his store "up to date“ that he cannot pause and have a kind word with old Mir. Smith 1n- stead of passing him witn A nod iou: olhct: at alcohol. The Prov- Iicc entered Confederation in i . Five year: aftfitwardl. 111 1878, tho danierou: effect o! the ule of alcohol was recognized throughout the Dominion. A state o! national emergency existed. It has been :0 declared‘ by the Privy Council (the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. ln London). To meet this national emerxency regarding the use o! liquor, a statute was passed by the Parlia- ment of Canada. The statute was eminently fair. Wherever the em- ergency existed the Act could be brought into effect. Where no em- ergency existed the protection of the Act need not be invoked. What was the principle of this Act? The purpose of the Act is declared. It was “to promote temperance in the Dominion." This was stated to be “very de- slrable." And how was this “tem- perance" to be promoted? By pro- hibiting the traffic ln intoxicating liquor. The Act declared that. wherever it came into effect no person should sell or bttrter or give. to any other penon, any intoxicating liquor, or any mixed liquor capable of being uaeu as a beverage. Traffic 1n liquor for beverage use, that is to say. to be used to lntuxicate. was definitely and expressly forbidden. This was democrat. ': method of protecting the peope from m- taxicants, wherever the need of such protection existed. In order to prevent the lnternperance which resulted from the sale of intoxicating liquor, its sale WOI forbidden. The Act was enacted 1n May, I878. The same year it was voted into effect in Prince County in this Province. Next year, 1879, it was voted into effect in Char- lottetown, and ln Kings County. In 1880. ft was voted into effect 1n the other parts of Queens Coun- tY~ ‘Thus we have democracy ruling: First, the citizens o! Canada. through their representatives in Parliament, by declaring that wherever it was desirable that temperance be romoted, the sale of liquor shuui be prohibited. Parliament dld not nay that Wherever it was dellrabie that temperance be promoted. the sale of liquor be permitted, and that. its intoxicating eflects should be "controlled". To control the "f- fect of intoxicating liquor afterit had been consumed was beyond the power even of Parliament. It war not Parliament's method at approach. It required the invent- iveness ol a later age to pretend to perform that task. The Parlia- ment o! 1878 knew that intoxicat- ing liquor intoxicated, and that temperance could nut be promot- ed by selling intoxicating liquor or by giving lt or by drinking lt. To prevent its use. Parliament prevented its sale. There was no other way o! promoting temper- ance, according to the vlew of Parliament. The Dominion Act of 1818 was voted into effect, and was later voted should be continued in r»!- tect, through voting: of the countries or municipalities on many occasions. There were six votlngs in Charlottetown. In four of these the Act was maintalnud; in two. the Act was not maintain- ed. It was voted out 1n 1801. voted in 1n 1804, and voted out again tn 1897. As soon however as the Act was voted out, the Pruvinc-ul Legislature. speaking for the Prov- lime, passed an Act to protect the public from the unregulated sale of liquor in Charlottetown. The citizen: o! Charlottetown by vot- lng against the Act left the public without any protection whatever. Not :0 the people of the Province. Democracy declared that some protection was necessary. Alcohol was too dangerous a product to he sold without regulation or pro- tectlon of some sort. "The Char- lottetown Liquor Regulation Act" was therefore the immediate uns- Wer of democracy to the indiffer- ence of the citizens of Charlotte- town with respect to the injuri- ous effects of the sale of 31202101. 'I'he protection of this Act was very inadequate. and shortly a1- terwardr, democracy went furth- er and declared that wherever within the Province the sale of in- toxicating liquor was not prohibit- ed by the Federal Act of 1878. lt should be prohibited by the Pro- vlnclal Act. The Act. was passed ln 1900 Thus came into effect the Pre- vincial Prohibition Act, an Act. which was intended to prohibit the sale o! intoxicating liquor. This meant that no one should sell intoxicating liquor to be used as an lntoxlcant; {or of course the beverage use of liquor ls its use as an lntoxlcant. intoxicating liq- uor which does not fntoxicate is a contradiction ln terms. That sort o! liquor does not exist. whether lt be "pure liquor" sold by a Gov- ernment or impure ilquor sold by a bootlegger. Throughout the counties of the Province the Domlnion Prnhihlt- ion Act of 187B remained in force from the dates mentioned illllll 1906, when by the mandate of the people, expressed through their votes. the Dominion Act was vot- ed out for the sole purpose of having the Provincial Prohibition and a scarcely audible runt. Those merchants on the ma nland have not lost ‘he common touch The ardent acvocates of Dflyllght, Saving have shc-wn by the subtle method used in "slipping it over".- by the problems the tanner has to Act take its lace. So far as emocracy was con- cerned. lt had not failed to qgam its protection against the intoxi- cating effect: o1 aicothol, 0y de- claring that intoxlcatlng liquor must not be mid. An experience Just how much they are concerned] lace. It ls strange how their inter- cst in him ceases when they havcl sold him their goods and have lhel profits in their pocket. No wond the Cooperatives are expandm year by Year Bqnrng the above facts in min the farmers who have had to aux - er by tins gross injustice have o alternative ut to patron l e fullest extent the ootmtry mere i- Enls and the mainland mail o t BF. NOT REMEMBERING I shall not call upon the iinlvflw! Nor bare my soul with groans ard lntless terns; I aha] not listen as the days re- hearse The end by due-k and dark through endless years; Hence, when the aun has Bet. am the lone bird Sing; a sweet requiem from whis- pering treefl. B9 non remmtbertng the voles you e Saying he loved n11. event-ms and! B-l GM. Be not remembering a: the Autumn Comes with its withered leaves of Y Falling “ulna painted rain, that he co Solace lira wilfilih, lt-lesat, so he . m ' , Bu: learn fdruttin: a: the ashes (In >. n fl‘. ‘amber: a m: umv l w’... . s: “mm-u -9dten gnuinfio 1 There was a‘ time when our to met-diam: endeavored to assist, he tanner-s in averv possible way t that dav has gone bty. Too In l1 prosperity during the years of ar ns mused than to forget nut a riculture la nttil the backbono this province. How tme are Goidunittva lims: “Ill fares that land, to harienin iiir l WW. where wealth accumu- ale: and man deco ". r s w, m "lnenvnmun. "wnu or rm: smar- Sin-In 1778. the eopla o! Prince Edward Inlliid, t rough tho iegtnhture. declared. in ellect. that the unreltrlctcd ule n! m- toxteatlng liquor we: quite def?“- iteiy hnrmlu. and that the peopll stood in need o! protection from it: use. For the next a d year: various mxpedient: sorted to. the purpone of publicity livon was to prevent such injurious el- lectl. Ioalctla: [or the romotion- t?! teizpvrucfn cud nob y M‘ I b0“! "Tl tuniin and tun and much m Wur- of the injurious effect of alcohol which ante-dated 1773, and against which effect: other pro- tective remedies had been tried for upwards of a hundred your: and failed, left democracy Wllhn other remedy than the remedy u prohibition. Since the year: 1B1 to i880. with the exception o! tw short period: in Charlottetown, democracyfi, aim ha! been to ‘p!’ - tect. and to protect by complelg prohibition. It wa: recognizyd that alcohol u: an intoxlcnnt could not lull to measure up 0 itl qualities. Alcohol was m; 9 for me one pumone, namely. th t it would intoxicate any persun who would drink it; and its use could hive no other eflec’. Fr m the eminence o! democracy’: polnt of oblervatlon over : period of nearly two hundred years, demo- cracy ha: recognized it: obllnt- Ion t0 Iulrd than it lhoukl pro- m tact from the u» oflnuch a poison. It ha: done this through the pow. er o! iezhintion. wfltmsfltiilfs Note: ' ' The-Int lentonco o! the, fut preceding letter o! this lerle: should have road: ..."‘.'.:;::::... ttztn 1"‘ ll“ a ro deletarioun affect: of smell ‘ii-rues; 1moox-<cr_. , mnmtuvmfsrn$ilngoifti Wnluwhltnyiltblntlfg; Lincoln’: Inn 5 . 590% Dding in the Harr- ( y nigh ey lawellournnli 11 Many of the molt tumour British divine: were at dhe time or anoth- er chaplain: of Lincoln's Inn. But the best known o! all was much more tumour for his etry than hi: preaching. John onne. the seventeenth centur poet and my:- tic who was chm ntn at Lincoln’: Inn from 16116-1 . The Chapel bell l: older than the chapel, for 1t was brought from Cadiz in 1697. Before the war o! 1930-1946 1t used to ring a curfew at nine o'clock every evening and this custom has just been reintro- duced, although nothing much happens at the ringing of the cur- few. But the custom was kept up for the associations that went with lt. and in that respect was t lcal- o! re-war Uncoln’: Inn. T31 the en 0t last century, for instance, a servant used to a ear attha door of the hall at twe ve o'clock every day and shout "venez manger", though there was nothing to cat it you did come. The fourth side of this square 1a taken up by the old hall, a charm- ing brie building of the early six- teenth century set on a green lawn. This nld hail doe! not look its age. Its bri-cks were preserved by a coat of stucco that was plastered over them in 1819 and only taken away in 1838 when the faces were repolnted and the hall was solemn- ly rte-opened by Queen Mary. For three hundred years (until the present Law Courts were open- ed ln the Strand in I883) the Chun- cery Court used to sit in Lincoln's Inn hall. Anyone who has rend Dlckerfs Bleak House (Dickens once worked as a lawyer's clerk in the Inn) will remember his account of it on a foggy autumn day. After that Pt was used for lectures tlll the Court 0t Bankruptcy moved there for a time in 1844 after its own building had been destroyed by a flying bomb. Ever since 1846 the members o! the Inn have taken their meals in the new hall, a formidable muck Tudor building in red brick, which forms one block with the library 0t 75.000 books, the only library in the four Inns to survive the bomb- ing o! Ixmdon. The new hall and library open onto l terrace overlooking the garden and behind the terrace there is a continuous flower bor- der backed by cherry blossom trees. The opposite side of the garden ls eighteenth century; a range or! stony buildings in the bland clar- sic style of the 1780's. They bear the monogram of William Pitt. Prime Munster of Britain and 'I‘reasurer 0t Lincoln's Inn on a sundlai that records the data of their completion, 179G. The planned march at eighteenth century buildings was intended to absorb the old brick courts that cluster round the eastern gateway, so that the Inn should 1n time be- come one harmonious entity of Palladian proportions. But the pro- cess of the eighteenth century re- building, like the mogress of the eighteenth century itself was abruptly arrested by the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. This spared most of! the Inn's ancient buildings. The northern halt of what ls still called Old Square, which dated from the early fifteen hundreds was burnt out in 1877 and rebuilt 1n the manner that that generation thought beautiful and convenient. so that Old Square ls now the newest art of Lincoln's Inn, But while Oi Square is new. New Square, conversely, is old. The garden that the houses look out on was once the tilting ground o! the Knights Templar. The hous- es datt- from the years 1682 to 1891. New Square ls in fact the earliest example o! t: typical form of Eng- lrsh town planning, in which the houses built ln squares. terraces, or creaents. all look out on a com- munal garden. Thls one l: perhaps the most beautiful of its klnd in London and in the spring its mag- nolia trees, flowing shruhs and lrly pond often attracts strange fowis whose place of origin has never been satisfactorily settled. So these elghtacres (3.2 hectares) of Lincoln's Inn offer the visitor a composite of English history and Ehgll-sh taste. They comprise much that i: beautiful, and mo mtwh “W! l! "Sly. They display a ‘lno medley of Gothic heraldry, ancient 1110111910“. n! slate. and brick. and sundtuls and classic urn; and Stone. and tile. and grass, and trees. and flowers; and incidentally llvhfiy show the improvement of ombing technique between and 1946! m“ But, as the only one o! the Inng of Court to have survived virtually intact. Lincoln's Inn 1: perhaps most reclous for the way that it ernbo lea 1n brick and stone that essential and uninterrupted Con. "nutty or EnBllsh Law and English life (including some hideous mis- takes) that perhaps lie at the root of the Englishman's self confidence" a self confidence that. so often, particularly when 1t was least just- ified, proved invaluable in the moment ol his country's greatest dangen Canada's Growth (Kitchener Record Those wiho have been predicting that Canada's population will reach the Somtiilon mark before many decades have elapsed will find little ‘ 0r no comfort in the mtatiatlcal forecast that the uiatlon o! this county Wllll have M119 not 3mg; than 14,606,000 at?! the year 1071. “l6 Mufti. 0 course, are baud on the assumption mat both birth and death rates of Cored; wlli con- tinue tn decline a: they 4m bgtfggn I931 and 1939 and that no-lnrgo- scale unmllrntiun will min-n them. f In v10; o! the fact that aces a rinhte in population an hopes of a stable flow of a mute About the only oountrl m Eur-w. .:..*t~":.'.i..""7i""~= “=- so q century a u“ L“ l. a a Y n. ving Mlcglltiorw. the will’ Z?“ g “I film-WW...“ '7 BACKA i u. nus-ll!‘ JULY 3, 1945 Sassy Stomach: lialeiveil ..."':t."|._.“.°t.'l::’. ‘tum nhuld t‘ tleof Dr. Evan“ ‘uni-h: Mix y], in: Dr. Evan: Stomach Mixture, taken at meal time: not only prevents all bu! effect: from mubut lt promotes the iuno I activity of the atom. wh usiat (ligation and im- prove: tha appetite. Don't delay. Orrin y“, Bottia today. Price 85o. MACS HAIR- BESTOBEB A d ll u Ilmcd paratlgn“ 3M3“ res p” mailman and beantilie: the It will restore Gray Hah- to it: original color. ‘ Promote: a new Ind lupu- ior growth where the hair i: falling and in remarkably une- fui In preventing dandruff and dean-flying parultlc halt- lriileri. .. Fo ow tion: carefully and you will amazed at the rennin, Price 00c Bottle. A Dnlt disinfectant for Wheat, Oatl, Barley, Om pound treats 82 bushels. Get our pound today, It pan to um Cereaan. The 2. Macs will roach its ntaximmn population by 1970 and then begin to decline. Ln some European countries, m; period of shrinkage will coma 5000GT. Canada's population, it l; e ted, will continue to ow until 1 and. then, if large-sea e immigration has abfectedtg? change. the cafcuiatlon: lnfl be out considerably tn arttlclpa that tthe birth rate of Quebec tall more rapidly than. that oi’ othe! provinces up to 1990, by which timi Quebec and Ontario should be nearly equal. It. s pointed out that tion 1s not a factor to be ered too seriously since out o! an immigration gain of 4,300 this country between 1901 and 1941 no fewer than 3.6441000 p went from Canada to the Uni States in the mme period. Canada net gain from 1mm tlon, o- fore, was only 657,000 1n 40 years. Professional “Bards NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St Charlottetown Tel. 589 R0. Box U DR. A. R. SMITH ' ntnvnsz 175 Grafton SONG‘ 0lfloeliours:9to12--l\0I; ‘Ieiephona 82M. ‘ ALEX W. MATHIESON atuuusrnx. soucrma. mo. Office: W Great Gem-n Street Money to Lon: Collect-kn J. A. McGUIGAN, B.A. NOTARY. um BAEB-ISTER, SOLIOIIWI OURRIE BUILDING M. ALBAN FARMER BA. LLB. MONEY T0 LOAN BARIHSTER. SOLICXTOR, IN!- CHARLOTTETOWN Olllldian Bank o! Commune Bill GAUDET t? HASZARD Barrister: Solloltorl. Not-uric; Itl MONEY T0 [JOAN GHBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LL-ll A. WALTHEN GAUDET LLJK. Canadian Bank oi Commerce Bldg. Charlottetown. P. B. l. DR. W. R. CARSON Chiioprootor Pnlmer Graduate Charlottetown 201 Princn st. Phone 1m O-OXQO Charles R. McQuaid 5.1:. Barrister, Solicitor. Notary, Intern Trait Buiidinl. ‘ Charlottetown no» m1 0 OO-O-f9. sum. a MATHIESON Barristers, Solicitors. la- ~ t a. a. nun. nun. l n. :- iwrunson, um. M! IIOANI 0N AND FARM ITII COLLIOTIONB - 04'. liuflffllliand Bonpany Ofilflillli‘ l. I