t ,.‘~| in. . (,1 L. A iTllE BIlARLOTTET-OWII GUARDIAN -__-_- ___~-_-..-:.~r....-.r..r-... Parcels 0f Tripe . _ . (Vmeouver Province) i4‘.-. , . g lusts - -,- mm-s-an-iwh .'" Word comes from London that the Liberal members of the Na- tioasl Government, except Mr. Waiter Runcirnan, are likely to Wider their resignations. They are t" molten-Ar. HAY. l. 1081 opposed to _s high pus snent \ tariff. Word comes, too, that Mr. ‘DISGRACED SENATORS election year 011-000-000 0! WW1" Ramsay MacDonald, in failing - ' more than usual, pruumably from 11011111. will retire from public life party friends. "111 1111111 the Government will be reconstructed. The most common deduction from these reports is that the reconstructed ministry "W111 119 Dlirely Conservative, with Mr. Baldwin as Prime Minister. But from prlvatc and better in- formed sources stories come of the intention to make Mr. Runclman the new Prime Minister. Mr. Runciman. of course. is a Liberal. and a very important one; and it 15 arsued that his premiership would hold a large group or 1,1. berals within the Government's following- Mr. Runciman will be one of the delegates at the Imper- ial Conference at Ottawa in July. President-W. cumu- s. sensual. r.- Eastern Canada is dllilll 591119‘ thing that Vancouver could never bring herself to dc. It is taking Ian Mackenzie seriously. Vancou- y... has known her Ian for a ions time and has accepted him, with a sort of hinused tolerance, as one of her political playboys. The rush oi his Celtic eloquence divert- ed her, at times. but she never made any pretense of not seeiiil through it. Even when she elect- ed him to the House oi Commons. she still didn't take him seriously. but cast her ballots as a sort of cruel joke on Harry Stevens. 811d sincerely regretted her action as soon as she realized what she had done. But in the East. Vancouver's Ian is having his fling. His ,_ '“ on the front bench to the left 01 m, Speaker gives him prestise- He is a good talker. He has the ability to put his best foot forward. and his ten years’ trainins 111 111° British Columbia legislature as I supporter of the Oliver 80W?!” ment made him an adept at orat- ing with an air of sincerity and keeping his tongue in his 011801! cams . rel- ‘tli.“‘...‘.",“.’..“.'i;'i;¢.l2§' ....'“'....’3 ........""' “‘..'.i'.‘.':i.°.’.. ‘£112. _ arsrics rnisrs if’. Sing of nun tans-n lens. Then shall thy work outlast all ' m... " . a - 3g g; g child on Beauty's And list not tothe N119“ N01‘. 0r modern fop who vainly tries ‘To write great verse on books-and- eyM t _ ‘ii DEAl-‘NESS AND IIIAIJ 501335 FROM SLUGCISII LIVIB. ‘The Senate, vctius on strictly N147. lines, adopted the report of the nesuharnois Investigation Cona- mlttee censuring Senators Mc- Dougald and l-lliyiion and mildly rebuking Sediaior Raymond. As the sequel to the adoption of this re- port, Senator MeDouslld im- mediately tendered his resignation, which had been written before the report was adopted and handed to Senator Dandurand, leader of the Liberal Senators, who passed it to Senator Meighen, Leader of the House. , Although the vote in the Senate Ies along party lines that must not be taken as representative oi Lib- eral opinion in parliament or out of it. In the House of Commons the Beauhamois Investigation Committee unanimously reported against the three Senators in ques- tion, and in the subsequent debate on the report the Hon. W. L. Misc- Kenzie King took occasion to pub- licly dissociate himself and hls party from the offendrig Seriaims. “The Liberal Party is in the Nalley of Humiliation. Many on this side of the House have broken hearts" Mr. King said, his accents Perhaps W11 11nd that your hear- lns is not as good as it was; that there is a ringing or singing in me 011's; sometimes a little dizziness. You consult an ear speciuiigt gnd he cannot find anything wrong with the hearins apparatus, or the nerve that carries the sound to the brain, He likely sussests that you may be ‘run down’ and that the deafness and rlnsins will disappear when your selwral Physical condition im- PIOVCS. ‘ When you study your condition a little further, you realise that you have been having a ‘tired feeling’ a 800111! Portion oi the time, with headaches, and sometimes a feeling of nausea, and even vomiting, What is likely the cause of your deafness, ringing in the ears, timq. ness and other symptoms, Your - hyslclan will call it tox- aemla, which is just another name for Wlsoninz. - This then is the cause of the symptoms,'n poisoning of the system, resulting in the gen- eral symptoms of p0is0ning~t1r¢q. ness or fatigue-and the special symptoms about the ear, as men- tioned above. What about treatment? It is generally agreed that when ear symptoms, headache, and nau- sea, are present, and not _due to any ear condition itself, that the poisoning has been going on for a. long time, and that it will therefore MARITIME PURTS W|l|l IIOI Illlllefill m“ _w"h Illl"! 9p cream on mild morning; 51i- nenry Thornixai prefers Portland. Maine, ls s. wrt to Bt- John and Halifax. Ho told the Committee of the House of Coin- mans so. 8s gave no reason other than that of s. shorter hlill- ‘F110 fact that it was a forelsll port and that all the employees on the rail- ways in the States and It the har- bors were foreigners did not count with Sir Henry. It evidently never occurred to him that discriminat- ing against Maritime Ports means the curtailment oi revenue to the railway and of ploymeni, to good. honest Canadians. He fiippantly re- marked that a tourist steamer to Halifax or St. John would spend more money in those cities than could be obtained from the freight on all the wheat that could be shipped through these ports. It is evident that Sir Henry had in mind the transient trade in the cities concerned. The building up of nat- ional ports, the building up 01 national railways and the building up of Canadian employment for sing of the heart of old mankind, The deep distressel of tM mind, sing of the dreams that haunt the few, , 5m; oi the gentle and the ‘true, And weave thy vowels with a vow That thou shalt ne'er to Ihshion bow. Ills llilCdaala Ultlt Canadian Wings Illl “NABIAN stillborn wiiur commtv, u; way before, and hi; skin is getting thick. Itwaspart oftlisgame that he should paint the subtle conceitof the Premier, though it is something new for the Liberal opposition to find subtlety in the first Minister. Usually they des- cribs him ss a bull in a china shop. and they made a tremendous _ ‘ ‘ u a m. amount cf capitalcut of his sug- fxtxsz‘; 3:111 must-g: in deilnoand section that he would blast his u mum meeting, m , o, way through to foreign. markets. and is even called upim 11 11111" 1° Bu“ '1'“ m‘ mnunu‘ '1'" mmmh entertainment M, 8am"- gests that ,_the Bennettgovelrnment ings that are non-partisan. He 11 1111911" 1° 111° K1113 31119151113111‘ went up to Toronto to address the because. while the latter- reduced Canadian Club the other day, ac- 111° 11511111151 1101*- 117 0357-0904111“ quitted himself with credit and re- in l1" yea"- 1110 10mm‘ 11111011 ceived a pat on the back from the 3307300000 in it in 0181100011 Glow months, he is talking pure and And now he has been at Hamil- 1111111111100100011 1111115 51111 11 111° ion. giving a political ‘vaudeville sood Liberals of Hauultou swallow peflommm 1g w” n11 right, the stuff, even when sweetened poi-naps, that he should reach into and tastefully colored by Ian's e10- his prestldlgltatofs hat and pro- qusncs. they are more sullible than duce a. caricature of Mr. Bennett we take them tobe. Any govern- ment _thst" was not criminally , "lfllllit would have reduuq ,, nlflODfl-l dfibb by hundreds o! h“ lions 1n tlw _five years . 1935 and 1930. N0 ggve “h. 11151 Ally consideration (q- ._ welfare of the Dominion .,,, have helped increasing it in H vast eighteen months. m, ,, , 11mm and 1115 P1111!’ were lucky in being defeated when ,, were They saved their tion. w. Mackenzie has been Inch his political venture so far. Bu; , must not test his luck too and it is testing it too much produce parcels of tripe meg u , llll been handins out in the P1118! of‘ sincerity he knows so bow to provide. Even the .. of Ontario can not be fooigq the time. l Sing of high tuinss in m... form. Then shall thy ‘ W011i 01111111 storm. - 4cm Davies. in tau Welsh ..._._. s British magazine, ‘The llng- 1711110011 ‘ 11511 R800." says in its April issue: “Great Britain is spending 24,000,- 000 pounds a year less than she did in i914: and the United States. who made the Kellogg Pact, is mend-ins 313.000.0110 pounds more on armaments than in i914. On the question of personnel. we have re- duced cur naval personnel from 152,000 officers and men to 92,000.‘ The United States in the same period has increased hers from 67,000 to 100,000." Some U. S. New Taxes (asouoton dimes) According tosdvlces from Wash- ington ihe Finance Committee 1111-1 turned-in drinkiill. sanibllns and various other luxuries in its search for revenue to balance 1110 T040101 budget. The Committee 1111900911 l ten per cent tax on I11 D11111111111°1 tickets to hit the horse-resins 011' thusiasis. and also severally 1110"“ ed taxes on "home brew" 11181911‘ ients, soft drinks. and yaw" 0'" the House bill. The horse-racing tar it was estimated. would P101111" $5,000,000 a year. The tax would b0 “Ten millions idle, ten millions receiving some relief, ten millions working on short time-empty pockets. empty stomachs, empty prospects." Thus Mayor Curley _____________ "111111111118 is the hardest .. anyone can doP-l-lenry Ford, 1 .= i ' 1H1 11 . l‘ ‘ i i. hoarse with emotion. continuing the Liberal Leader said-lie believed some of the things done by the of- fending senators were "wholly un- Uustlfiable and cannot be defend- ed." Dissociating himself from the offending Senators Mr. Kiflg claim- ed his friendship had been betray- ed. "All of us have our friends" he said referring to the Liberal Sen- ators implicated. “Are we all in fbe rmponsible always for the .action of our friends? Is a. father jto be responsible for his son, li Canadians did not seem to enter hlsheadButtiseti-moiscominsnif it has not already come. when the government and railway officials must take things into consideration and must come to a decision to use Canadian ports and develop Cana- dian industries. What is the use of having Empire Day celebrations and "Canada First" resolutions if the powers-thst-be dissociate them- selva from. movements,’ casting sentiment and national interwt to ihat son brings discredit upon iilmselfll-The boy may break the gathers heart but no son can Streak the father's reputation. iThen, if in this close relationship, jsuch liability can not be accepted, one side, encouraging the use oi’ foreign ports because it may suit a branch railway in a foreign coun- try and the pockets of some wheat of Boston in an appeal on Monday evening for Democratic support for Franklin D. Roosevelt as Presl- dential candidate in the November elections. A Republican picture of conditions would not be quite so dark, but it also would have its shadows and the hint of deeper gloom under a Democratic sky. Something must always be allowed for the imagination of the artist. And both Republicans and Demo- crstics in Con, since December have not yet been able to let many rays of light into the gloom. There are times when the party wand is a rather useless bit of fur- niture. New York papers gave a lot of space the other day to the open- take considerable time to rid the system of the poison. Thus any infective process-in ear ,nose, sinus. gall bladder, or in- testine—may be the underlying cause. However it has been found that the ‘king of the organs,’ the liver. is very frequently at fault, as it has been unable to filter the poisons out of the blood and hence these pois- ons are carried everywhere in the body including the ear. The thought then if you have the symptoms described above, and have no organic trouble with the ear, that you undergo a, gengi-gl 9;. 11111111111011 by your doctor and den- tist. while they are trying to locate paid by the ticket buyer. B, of an unsettled internal row over inclusions of tariff ileum and the difference of opinion over 001110 911' else taxes in the House bill the com- , m mitten probably willrtske four canvases. 11111 t1"! 11° °°111111°11 five days more to draft its bill. Mla and 111 1°11“ W" °1 “m” The tax on wort. l 111111 Droduct._'l1111°1'1¢l- was boosted from it centss Iallflll; m m, m“, bu; to m “m, a gni- , Kenya had a heart-breaking exp§r= ion. and the malt syrup tar wasili-‘Me- '11" °°'°"‘“‘°"” h‘: “l”; changed from 35 cents a gallon to consideration a scheme in urn 0-; s. ‘s gent; s. pound. which it is esti- custs into a commercial product in, - mgtgd would amount to 4d centsiho shape of food for cattle, but T I’ “no” we have not heard the results. M010 fixed at 44 cent-s a1s1111°11- 111° House rate on-tiils nwdilbl. widely used in home wlne-niskins. Was 40 per cent ad valorem. The unfer- raier has been regions of Africa have escaped their A few months s50 1110 9010M 01: a “colossal egotist." The Pre- carlcatured that . Try . . ~ Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. Sddolllyllileilllrllllitfieklgfl. . The ‘up, conuntmgq t“ was may be expected from the investiga- tions of Italian scientists in Somali» land and on the borders of Abyss- inia, where there is reason in be- lieve that one kind of locusts has British, Hench l tszwss liiteddis headquarters. $31k: $1111.12“. gallon. The and Italians are working together “x,” cuhomkd was," w“ dd- in locating the breeding grounds vanced from 3 todcents t 8011011- "1 1-1113 1”"- "ld m‘? “ltmmely Th, 51,111 wgtgg tag of. 2 cents a succeed in destroying it. gallon was ‘ ' ‘ Grape irate , ’ ‘ c0110a1l11¢18 WNWV!‘ the trouble you can cleanse the liver somewhat, and relieve it of some of its load. by small doses of epsom salts daily. cutting down on cream, butter and fat meat, and doing daily bending exercises from side to side, with knees straight. exporters, who, at any time, can recompense themselvesby making the purchaser pay for freight rates. Senator Dennis in an interview in ‘roronto put the matter in s. nut- shell when he told the Canadian §how can it be in this friendship of lsomeone trusted through that, . rlendship alone." -‘ That is the conclusion arrived at and the attitude adopted by the Liberal Party in the House of lng of a new prison. It was, in fact, a considerable social event. and one Gotham reporter wrote that "the list of guests would do credit to one of society's best pub- liclzed debutantes." This, it ap- pears, is a sort of prison de luxe. J i. i s i .‘ iiirrsisiiiiuirrv roan i O-O-O-o-O-O-O-OWVV.‘ Commons, when the matter was de- bated there. Since then the Liber- al Party has been wholly "in the {Valley of Humiliation." This attempt in the Senate to get the party out of the "Valley of Humiliation" by making a party issue of the question must _ be obvious to all. Out oi their own mouths, in the Committee in the House of Commons. and in the subsequent debate in the House of Commons the offending Liberal Senators were condemned, and.’ nothing that can now be said in their defence will remove the stig- ma by as much as a hair's breath, Senator McDougald, had at the eleventh hour, the good sense to realize this and resign with- out being formally expelled. It now remains to be seen‘ what action, if a/ny, be taken by Scnator Haydon. C. N. R. EXPENDITURE It can hardly be wondered at Chat the Canadian National Rail- ways got into deep water under the Liberal regime. The L'beral direc- tors were spending the tax payers‘ money lke wsicr and to a large extent on the "higher ups." So far the investigation in the House of Commons has disclosed that Slr Henry Thornton, the President of the Railways, was receiving $149,- 000 per annum remuneration, and in addition the use of a residence rented from one oi’ the Liberal drectors of the railway at $15,000 Per amnum. It has also been dis- closed that in the last pre-electfon year the railway bought $52,000,000 worth of supplies more than norm- al requirements. Here we have three self-patent facts staring us in the face. The Liberal directors allowed their president $39,000 per annum more than his contract called for, leased from a Liberal director a residence at a rental of 015.000 and handed it over to the iiresident for scqppstiqg; and glllvlllilfl 111 01'9" Press that "the United States rail- way men and water front workers were being provided with employ- ment, handling Canadian grain, while the great Atlantic Ports of Halifax and Saint John Were idle as regards Canadian grain traffic." WHY SUPPRESSED? On Tuesday our local contem- porary quoted what purported to be a. complete editorial comment (Liberal) on the Senate IBeauhar- nols investigation. Ilior some rea- son. however, it suppressed the last paragraph, in which the Free Press states significantly: "What strikes the public as grossly improper was the par- ticipation by senators in any such enterprise as the Beauhar- nols exploitation in view of its dependence upon favorable action by the government. The con- ’ “ of “ ‘ MacDon- gsld on this point is not too severe; and that of Sensto Bay- mond not severe enough." EDITORIAL NOTES This from the Toronto Globe: "Hon. James Malcolm declares Hon. H. H. Stevens's treaty with New Zealand is ‘excellent.’ When a for- mer Minister of 'I'rade and Com- merce says thls of the work of his successor, a political opponent, the treaty must be all right." The teaching of handicrafts. par- ticularly fabrics, has been under- taken by the Quebec Government. “Though the Maritime Provinces have not as yet gone in for govern- mental instruction," says the Tor- onto Saturday Night, “their tourist bureaus have so encouraged handl- crafts that locally made hook-work rugs are sold in ‘almost every vil- lage of that part of Canada." Here is a home industry of which other Provinces are beginning to take note, and rtiich is certainly worth developing in Prince Edward Island. where there are crsftswomen sec- 0nd to none inthis lino of work. Erected on Manhattan's Welfare Island, it is to be a. house of cle- tention for women. and, Judging from the description, it‘ will never be much bothered by attemped es- capes. Hot and cold water in every cell, shower baths, metal mirrors, a radio in every ward, the blessed place sounds as palatial as one of Canada's new observation cars. Truly, our neighbors are a wonderful people. It may be of course that in giving jails all the best points of a good hotel they right. But on the other hand .isn't it Just possible that in pro- from the Winnipeg Free Press‘ viding prisons with all of these little luxuries, a lot of solid citi- zens in these hard days will deem it profitable to take to crime? There ls no sign whatever that the Japanese are going to recede from their intention to gain com- plete control of Manchurla and to use their position at Shanghai to force the hand of the Chinese Go- vernment. They havc succeeded in maintaining their attitude in spite of heavy pressure from the League of Nations and from the United States. If there is no actual starvation anywhere-even Chicago reports that "food is adequate and no one is suffering from cold"—therc is everywhere misery and want. More and more workers have exhausted their savings; available relief funds are running low. Spring and summer may bring seasonal im- provemett in ‘ dustrial conditions ln some localities. as in Detroit, but no one expects it to solve the problem of relief. From the view- point of the welfare workers the real crisis is still to come. The most important question Ibe- fore the United States today. says The New York Evening Post is: Why do they spend our money? Washington does not realize ihe revolt that ls brewing in this coun- try. It is not a radical revolt. There is no Bolshevlsm in it. America has been the most patient nation in the world about the de- pression. But now there is an upper middle class revolt amongst us. It is the revolt against the continued spending of our money for things we could once afford but cannot afford today. Why can't they see m Why do they ksep on spending cur money! The Shanghai Bomb (Toronto Globe) The attempted assassi " of several Japanese military and di- plomatic representatives at Shang- hal is almost certain to have a profound and unfortunate effect on the general situation in the Far East. The killing of an Austrian prince at Sarajevo was the match that set aflame the powder maga- zine of the Great War. The ei- plosion in the United States war- ship the Malne plunged Americans into war with Spain. The-present case is not parallel. But it is sure to prolong the existing deadlock at Shanghai. Its consequences may be much more tragic and far-flung. The irony of the Shanghai vio- lence seems to be that Korean subjects of the Japanese Emperor are themselves responsible for the bloodshed among the Japanese leaders. The Japanese anny ls in almost complete control of the whole Shanghai area. It might ap- pear to be unjust to hold China responsible for the dastardly act. But human nature is much the same everywhere. History show- ed that Serbia was not responsible for the midsummer assassination of 1914. History showed that Spain was not responsible for the sinking of the U. S. S. Maine. Yet ware rarely wait for the historians to sift all the facts in advance. For the past seven months real war, if unofficial and intermittent, has been ~in progress between Ja- pan and Chinese troops-either in China proper or Manchurla. For the past few weeks war between Japan and Soviet Russia has been an ever increasing probability. In other words, the entire Far East is like an enormous powder- msgazine-where one minor ex- plosion may detonate the whole. Outsiders can but wait and hope for the best. --_______.. "Comedy and tragedy are always the same, no matter what the gen- oration may be.-Marle Dressler. "Being happy in this world is no lighthearted affair of chasing pleas- ilrsF-Harry Emerson llbsdick. Jliflll Bllhl’. ! tlvu and those used in msnulwi- E ure of food and soft drink were , exempted. increases made was not know-n. The estimate on malt, wort and "I111" , concentrate taxes in the House bill was 346.000.1100. beverage taxes it levied. on boats and yachts lmlfledvhy substituted s. graduated scale r1118- ing is the stock 1.1111111" W1- Th9 the Senate committee is a 4 cent a “y, ti“; a vast cloud of locusts South Africa at the rate of 100 miles Government pounds trying to fight the invaders. of the cars taken to destroy ihe vision indicates that the sci-mists were niishken or relaxed their ei- forts to destroy the plague at its source. ' ' _"In a single liietome science has earth. As for given us more power over nature sfossalodusts than in all recorded historyP-Bir P118118 hrdlifllt 011 3w much Qddltlflllll revenue the while 010.000.0011 would be derived from the other roi- the flat 1o per cent sales tar the House the Senate Committee ing from tic to e100 with 111a 011 doubled on eisn- built WW1!- All silverware and silver used for religious purposes was 01011111111“ from the jewelry tarumis 01 1110 most controversial items still pend- l-louss levied a flat 0110-4111111" °1 1 per cent of value of 51410! 5010-!- A compromise finding favor with ghlre tax on stock up 10014 a I111"- with d cents above that. The Tress- ury recommended 110111111118 1110 present 2 cents s. shard- Locusts In Africa (Exchange) 1i despaich from Cape ‘T111111 estimated a. stretch aims a 000- mlle front in a 0011111011 "1 150° miles deep is advancing I010" s. day. Aside mm thedsvasbalbb caused by these insects their resp- pearllloe will be a great dlsspwm" mmt. Until recent years the 17111011 spent millions of and scientists thblllht they had 10- cated their breeding place in the Kalahari district.‘ Since then the country has suffered little because immature inseetsruhe present 111- s French ac iitllio expediton gm." go my; discovered one of the: brooding grounds of African locusts; in smesai along the Nicer bend.‘ gtops will be taken to destroy this- IOUXDI W!!! s; a-plagtiewhich has ai-l m, ‘ "m. peoples of the were nsmsqylrnttaonatiitai-tsnn . GAIITIDII FOX UWIIERS AND RANGIIEBS ' Now that litters of young are arriving daily, what pre- caution are you taking for the treatment of worms? I A great many of the leading Veterinarians strongly recom- mend either nurtaonons s. ‘WELCOME 00.. (lnndcn, Eng.) WORM CAPSULES _..()r_. NEMA WORM CAPSULES put up by PARKETIAVIS 8: O0. Both these remedies Worms, Hook Worms and Stomach Worms. DON'T DELAY. Price 15o and $1.00 Per 8a.. THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTOBI! Shave Every Morning With GOLUIIIAL CLUB SIIAVING CREAM This preparation works into a rlch creamy lsther that does not dry on the face but retains lta moisture until the shave i1 completed. It ls plat up in tubes which contain more than doable the quantity of I-lly 35c Shaving Cream and it certainly makes shaving s. pleasure. W0 l" slvlns free with each tube of Colonial Club 51151111! Cream. one of the 0111 streams which greatly adds to the life of your bladd- ilc for Cream and strcpper. Get years earl as ti; are moving fast. y i c, E. A. FUSTER CINTBAL nauosrou are ' ' guaranteed to destroy Round ‘vv%‘-‘¢¢ vv vv~ Puppy Food ' may be Box 446 Charlottetown, P. 1E. I. The success, following tire use of this popular “Imperial” product during past seasons, has clearly proven its merits to our experienced ranchers, who are planning on feedlngllberslly this year. Our formula ls specially suited to the needs of the young and-growing, foxes, ls rlch in vitamines, and a sure preventative of rickets. ordered either "Fine" or "‘Coarse" to suit the ranchers requirements. Order early so as to be sure of receiving your supply in good time as a heavy demand is anticipated. imperial Biscuit Company, Ltd. Phone 721 Trusty as an old sfriendJ-it never fails fto lea" . 1 with its