vekn-"iflss. - YCI_I§I‘ i .. -—---_-.....__ .-»_, __ _ “xv “J- A H‘... in .112 1:|;l;.=|ls:s.,|s'iuin; -¢._. "Hitf"."l l 1513-, PAGE FOUR THE BIIARLOTTETOWN vw-qv. Notes By The Way rv-w-s GllAlllllAl humus-w. Cheater a. rum". Secretary-Liana Col. D. lliaol and Hauler-J. I. Burnett. lensing Daily (founded i881) 05.00 “so pa: yen (in advance) Irelle THURSDAY, JULY 11. 1930 It was John ‘Nllht who laid “Th! nation in every country dwells in the cottage; and unless the light of your Constitution can shine them. HD1965 the beauty of your leflllllllw Ind the excellence of your statesmanship are impressed there on the feellnfll and conditions of the people, rely rupon it you have yet to learn the dut- Vlee-Preaidenb-J. L Burnett- A. Iaellnnon. D. l. 0. Associate lditowl). l. Currie. par year (in advance) delivered- d in condo us United emu. '41! Maritime Righter: Now! The non. Cyrus ‘Macmillan has been claiming credit to the liberals let, the granting of Maritime Rights. 3 proves an effective lev- g m attaining an objective they cer- hinly deserve credit, for no um- paign received more bitter and kins sustained opposition than did M811- time Rights from the liberals, PR8 and politicians combined. m his recent address in Nova 5co- tiacoi-ndrhlrmey wove!!!” Qnclusively. Not only did the Liberal Press hold the agitation up to ridicule and scorn, but dacribed as “Irnbecile Liberals,” those of their party who got behind the movement Promin- King in his i925 carn- psign, asked cynically, "What ARE Isa-clan mam-n" and a. the fol- lowing election, i926, hi! lieutenant and Minister of Railways, Hon. Mr. Dunning, replied that Maritime Rights are, "birth. death and a free ride on the nicer-colonial". ' Mr. Wm. Duff oi Lunenburg, who was a competitor with Mr. hlacmll- lan for the Fisheries portfolio, de- scribed Maritime Rights as "a Pol- itical‘ balloon, filled with Tory Hot Air“- The Ecol. Ml‘- Crerar, the new Min- ister of Railways, described our claims for preferential rates on the fnflwny as "e proposition that is to- tally absurd." The Hon. M)‘. Malcolm, Minister of Trade and Commerce. not only en- dersm this view, but added that it would be “a fatal mistake for us to discriminate at this time against the Atlantic port of the Canadian Na- tional Railways," meaning Portland, U. S. A. This is a sample of the "support" Maritime Rights had from the Lib- erals before sir Andrew Rae Run- can endorsed the Conservative claims. The Conservative Party welcomed the Duncan Report at its convention in Winnipeg in ‘October 1927, and went on record wth a pledge to fully implement each and every recom- mendation made by the Commis- sions. So far the Liberals have failed to implement ten of the sir Andrew Rae Duncan recommendations, and Mr. Macmillan, though a party to the report. is defending the Govem- ment for its breach of faith. The S. 0. S. Call The deplorable condition into which the Liberal party has fallen is evidenced by the fact that Macken- zie King has sent out an S. O. S. BU be k Toronto Globe and the ‘Ibronio Star to publish biased re- ports of his meetings throughout the Western Provinces because the effect of the unbiased reports nl the Can- adian Press was to depress. and dis- courage the Liberal party in the East. It may be mentioned in passing, however, that it does not require the unbiased reports of the Canadian Press to bring about depression in the Liberal ranks. In the Maritime Provinces at all events Liberals have been more or less depressed since the beginning oi the campaign. and the depression was added to very consid- erably by the addresses here oi the Prime Minister himself. He has gone to the country withoutuannideal and without the vision so necessary to encourage and enthrall a leader's followers. The whole scope of his speeches has been to discount the pol- icy of his opponent and to offer noth- ing substantial on his own partto off- set it. He has been on the defensive - all the time and his blunders in leg- islation. adminimation and diplo- macy have been so very numerous and great that it has taken moat of his time at his respective meetings to explain them away. I The reports of Premier King's meetings in the East must have had a doprossing effect, in the first in- nanee. on the W009i §QQQ Q9 {'1' is of government. __.__ Mr. King. says the Ottawa Journal assures us that there are not another ten men in Canada quite B8 800d is his Cabinet. Wont it be terrible when these people die. tagonism with which he was receiv- edwhen he visited that land of the free and independent. His appeal to the Toronto Globe and the ‘Ibronio star to provide antidotes in the way of biased reports for the future in- dicates into what a pass the leader- ship oi the once great Liberal party in the Dominion has fallen. Opportunlsm may be "smart? -in the American sense-but it is not of the texture of stateamanslup. It may tickle temporarily the depressed spir- its of devoted partlzaa-is, but it will never build nor buttress public con- fidence. The voters like to know~in_- The Guardian has given conclusive , deeti they must know u they an m evidence that several outstandins m intelligently-not only where the recommendations of the Duncan ‘leaders of a political party ml? bil- commimon have “mo, been com- l‘ ance themselves precariously for the moment, but in what general direc- plemy ignored or but panfwy 1m tlon they are travelling and toward plemenwd by me King Gmemmen" ‘ what goal they Journey. the present assurances of Hon. Cyrus Macmillan to the contrary notwith- standing. Herc is another, a most, important one to the people oi this That Duncan Report . Disraeli. one oi Great Britain's ‘greatest prime ministers once said: Provinces: i “Unfortunate will be the condition oi The Commission recommended i this country when its leaders pursue m“ u me 5mg“, w {my a line oi policy contrary to the prin- ‘ciples in which they themselves be- servlce was unsatisfactory, and that v u lleve. 5.5 the Railway admitted there was‘ need for either a second ferry or a m the Se,’ a“ mm are equal, says special fflrfi’. the matter should b9 ya recent humorist, though they dif- gone lute immediately with a view fer surprisingly in shape. In a batfh- ” a ““S"“‘°" "m l“? Si."LTTR..TL“ZFJ..LZEQ’ZT..SZ That was in September, 1925. The i“ “ ° our of the Darwinian theory. And “Ilium 1°‘ “' new “fry w” not ‘it is iorthis reason that merchant awarded until March. i930. and "W" rirlces. international financiers, and P is now no prospect 0i the being completed this year. _ Moreover, the Duncan Report (pages 27-8) adds: "We further recommend that, so far as the ferry service is concern- ed, it should not be run as part oi the Railway operations, but should be run by the railway administe- tion under separate account for the department. We feel that. by reason of its association with rail- way' accounts this service does not get the attention it should re- delve." Will Hon. Cyrus Macmillan ex- plain why this ommlerldatlon. which he made with his colleagues of the Duncan Commission in i926. has been consistently ignored‘? Ignoring The Issue The Liberal candidates in Queen's County have not yet made up their minds whether the New Zealand treat-y is beneficial or otherwise to Canadian dairy farmers. When chal- lenged on this point, Mr. R. l-l. Jenk- ins frankly admitted that he didn't know, and his portfolio colleague Hon. Cyrus Macmillan would not commit himself beyond saying that New - Zealand butter wasn't a major issue in the campaign. In view of Finance Minister Dunning‘: prom- ise, if elected, to negotiate a separ- ate trade treaty with New Zealand and his failure to give any guaran- tee that our dairy interests would receive any more protection under the new treaty than it is receiving today, it is surely important to our farmers to know where their party candidates stand. so far as the Con- servative candidates are concerned. they stand by l-lon. R. B. Bennett's pledge to see that the rights of all agricultural interests will be safcguarded. 0UP Recon! Vs. Cant The Patriot's misrepresentations are now a daily occurence and of such barefaeed character as to indi- cate it has lost all sense of self-re- spect and is fighting a losing game. Yesterday by leaving out the first part of a paragraph and publishing the second half, it claimed The Guardian had proved the Hon. Mr. Macmillans attitude right on the Subsidy question. One might as rea- sonably clalm that Mr. Msemillank recent recent on the countervailing duties on potatoes was "can “. “Dropping The Pilot” It is too bad to find the Patriot 301111113 with many other official Liberals in attempting to ignore the candidature oi Mr. B. H. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins has been a Liberal for at least five years, spending; great members oi the Upper House are rarely to be seen among those gam- lbOlllh§ at the ocean's rim. Realizing ‘the extent to which a. bathing-suit can unmake a man, they prefer to do their bathing privily behind ior-ic- ed doors. The Hon. '1‘. A. Crerar says that if Western Canada can produce 500,000.- 1000 bushels oi wheat this year, and if ‘we can market the crop, unemploy- ment will practically have disappear- ,ed in Canada in eight or ton months. EThere is much virtue in these two "its." and all parties will ppm. in hoping their virtue will have all pos- jsible reward in due season. But what fthe unemployed, whose existence Mr. ‘William Lyon Mackenzie King and ibis colleagues are beginning to rea- ilile, will ask the Prime Minister is: ‘What do you propose to do for us in the meantime? The winnlpeg Tribune observes ed- itorially: "The Prime Minister used several thousand words in explaining his position on unemployment. Against all m; explanations the fact stands Federal Government to aid in this necessary relief, even though the Federal Government ls almost wholly responsible for the situation and Winnipeg has no responsibility for it at all." I Agriculture ls Canada's outstanding primary industry, having a produc- lion value oi nearly $2,000,00D,000 an- nually. As an industry it provides gainful occupation directly and in- dlectly, to more than fifty per cent of Canada's population. There are 121,450 voters on ihe lists in the city of Winnipeg, compared with 77.154 in i926. That is a re- markable increase. Another notable fact is that the proportion oi women voters is larger than in any previous list, municipal, provincial or federal. Under such changed conditions it would be idle to base predictions on the result d the present contest on the figures for 1926. The large new element must be reckoned with, and 1t will keep the parties guessing till the votes are counted. one o! the iodd features of the campaign in that city is that Mr. Woodsworth, the well known radical and Independent- Labor candidate, is being opposed by a Communist. Its-i‘: ident Coolidge Lg ngamsg hoarding in a period oi industrial stagnation. Buy that others may earn and buy, and so restore the bal. men. is his advice to the people n; this time. lfltue as well. At the recent joint 111990158 at Victoria Mr. Jenkins spoke M thirty minutes, and being u... first speaker has up minutes at the close of the debate. In yesterday's issue the Patriot totally ignores My, Jenkins‘ Inain speech, giving Qnly meningeal-swat at blaggl; deal of money not only on hi; own’ W» abort caracrach- w nu mm- W» out that Winnipeg has spent several ‘ thousand dollars on meal tickets for‘ Jobbless men in the past eight months and cannot get a nickel out oi the, GUARDIAN what 30hr of ' your! _ fly/emu. IKBQIMMMD- MORE ABOUT QKIDDIED MILK ___. You may remember the old story that when the farmer looked at the pigs as they grew. fatter for market. he used to smile to himself and 58y- “Nothings too good for them. they're the boys that pay the rent." And so all kinds of foods, all rem- nants of foods. vegetables and rfults of all kinds, were put in a mash. sometimes partially cooked, and fed to the pigs. And one of the foods that the farmer feeds his pigs to st-Nnltllfll and enlarge their bodies is skimmed milk. Now there seems to be a feelins in some homes that once the cream is removed from the milk the balance might just as well be poured down the sink. As a matter of fact the cream or most of the butter fat has been re- moved, and with it considerable of the fat soluble vitamin, but remain- ing in the milk, after the cream is removed, are some of the most valu- able food factors. Chief of these ls the protein which as you know is the constituent in meat that makes it so valuable as a. food. As the chief source of protein is from meat and eggs and they are rather expensive, you can see what a. cheap source oi protein then is found in skim milk, - Further, skim milk contains a con- siderable quantlty oi lime, and as the bones and teeth, the framework of the body. needs this for growth you can see why the farmer wants to give his pigs skim milk. He wai-its a big frame on them to fatten out for market. ' Now our baby specialists discovered the value of skimmed milk for grow- ing babies and lf you question moth- ers youll find that a great number of themare feeding their babies skim- med milk. Besides, skimmed milk still retains a little of its butter fat. which with the sugar remaining in it, gives the heat and energy that the body needs. Thus the child in gettingsklmmed milk gets proteins which repair tis- sue which has worn out by kicking, wriggling. squirming and crying; some oi the fat required for protec- tiorrof tissues: lime to give him bone and what is equally important to give him strong teeth; sugar to give him energy and heat. - The thought then is that skimmed milk is a real good food, and a cheap food. The use of it in soups, with cereals. or in cooking. would seem like good sense. THE ATHABASKA TBAE My life is gliding downward, it speeds swifter to the day when it shoots the last dark cannon to the Plains of Far-away, But while its stream is running through the years that are to be. The mighty voice of Canada. will ever calhto me. I shall hear the roar of rivers where the rapids foam and tear, I shall smell the virgin upland with its balsam laden air, And shall dream that I am riding down the winding woody vale With the packer and the packhorse on the Athabaska ‘Irail. I have passed the warden cities at. the Eaatem water-gate Where the hero and martyr laid the cornerstone oi State, The habltant, coureur-des-bois, and hardy voyageur- Where lives a breed more strong at need to venture or endure? I have seen the gorge of Erie where the roaring waters run, I have crossed the Inland Ocean, lying golden in the sun. But the last and beat and sweetest is the ride by hill and dale With the packer and the paekhorse on the Athabaska Trail. I‘ll dream again oi fields oi grain that stretch from sky to sky And the little prairie hnnmlgtg w"; the care go roaring by, Wooden hamlets as I saw them- rioble cities still to be, To girdle stately Canada‘ with gem; from sea to sea. Mother of a mighty manhood, land of glamor and of hope, From the eastwa d sea-swept mam; to the sunny western slope. Ever more my heart is with you, w" more till life shall fail I‘ll be out with pack and packer 0n the Athabaska ‘frail. ‘Authors Of The I Preference And Their Sincerity __¢- lTcrmto Mail-and Emil-N) The chief authors of the new Brit- ish preferences. real and unreal. IN Premier Kins. Hon. Charles Dim- ning. Hon. James Malcolm and Mk. W. H. Moore. None but Mr. manning can claim to be animated by stroll! pro-British sentiments. Though his rapid rise toprominence since 11¢ came to Canada is highly creditable, both to himself and to the Domin- ion, his Cobdenlte English anteced- ents cannot be overlooked when we consider his Position in the present ‘controversy. As the chief spokesman for an extreme national status which almost amounts to separatism, the prime minister must be ruled out. Mr. Malcolm's role in the budget- making has been, in part at least to maintain adequate tariff protection for the furniture industry, in which h; has been such a prominent factor. As for the genial lifr- M00". h? wrote “The Clash" and is probably es outright a separatist as the re- doubtable m. John s. Ewart. Such are the gentlemen who have annex- ed the Union Jaek in an attempt to avert an overwhelming defeat at the polls. In view of his 2.1131151’! OfiBlII. M1‘- Dunning, as we have said, is no doubt. sincere in his insistence that Canada should ask nothing in re- turn for such real concessions to Great Britain as are included in the more or less llusory preferences to the United Kingdom. He is still hip- ped by the lalssez-faire conception of the old Manchester school, which envisions the theory that no country should seek, by tariff legislation or through governmental interference, to protect its own industries and work people. ‘That is why he revolied at the idea of two-way preferences, and why he rejects proposals that lCanada should go to the Imperial iConlerence in a bargaining spirit. Like the prime minister, he is a dis- tinguished theorist, much given to} academic polemics, but hardly happy as finance minister of a young nation in a. practical twentieth century world. ‘that party was the only one that had TlieDuncan Report And Its Friends (Amherst New! and Sentinel»... Those who attended the Llberll meeting in the Armouzy last ewnlnl heard a somewhat different aid‘! in regard to the Duncan WWW 91W thatwiliah washeard at the banquet tendered Col. Ralaton in Amhent l?! the Libero-l Association in December i927. At the gathering Hon. Peter Venlot was present and one of the moat important of his utterances was that in which he told of the fight made by Col. R-alston and him- self to have the Dimcan Commission recommendations accepted. ‘I'M-t fight was within the ranh of the government itself-it was not with the Conservative opposition for the simple reason that that party at its first caucus in Ottawa. at the 0W1!- ing of the session adopted a reeolu-. tiorl unanimously acceptihk the recommendations of the Duncan Commission and P1558158 "-991! l" work for their fulfilment. That it was within the government itself where the pposition was strongest was later revealed by Col. Ralston at the banquet tendered to him and Mr. Venio‘. by the Board of Trade in saint John when he stated that the Maritime members of the government had "to sell" the Duncan report to the mernibers of the govern- ment. There cod! be no other meaning to this expression than that some of the members of that gov- A SOUND PROGRESSIVE COMPANY Established in 1889. the Dominion life has has a history of uninterrupted Wilfred! and expansion. ‘lio- day, its 8061A total W61’ $23,000,000. Yolley loner-veg, amounting to $17,500,000 atthe end of 1929. were more than $525,000 greater than the sum fixed by Govern- ment requirements; and its policy holders‘ surplus fund. after provision for policy reserves and pronto an pollcyholderl, ems $2,046,511. That the Dominion Life ha: over $140,000,000 Insurance in Force. is a demonetra“ of the any in which it. has earned the good-will of the people of Canada. Consistently I ‘ ‘ large proilie to policy- holders, and with the background of more than forty years’ experience, it. is admirably equipped to serve you in every branch of life IIISIIIIIMK ' ernment were very loath to accept_ the recommendations of the Com-g mission in their ertirety. , The same line of suggestion was used by J. A. Tory brother of Lieut. 1 Governor Tory of Nova Sootla in an interview published in the Halifax Chronicle on Doc. 13. i927, when he spoke‘ of the "fight" for Nova. Scotla rnadeby Col. Ralston, and in the same interview used the word "com- batf.‘ These expressions were brought out so prominently a‘. the time that the News made comment on them and said that the plaee for Col. Rals‘on to be ‘W85 within the ranks of the Consrrvatlve party since given wholehearted adhesion to the recommendarlons of the Duzean Commission. Today the line of strategy isbo represent the Conservatives as being Moreover, he left Eingland too‘ soon. If he were over there now he. would find farmers, bankers, lndus-l triallsts, Laborites, Conservatives! and most people except the emaciat- ed Liberal party, led by Mr. Lloyd George, converted or well on the way to conversion to the new policy of protection, ‘even on foodstuffs, with preferences for Empire products. Mr. Dunning should be fighting on the side of the Conservatives for Bntish concessions to Canadian farmers, which would mean salvation to his constituents on the prairies. If he were not committed to the present budget, he would not keep repeating, parrot-like, that there is no use ask- llng the British for a preference on floodstuffs. The last manifestos from ‘the erstwhile strongholds of free trade in Great Britain concede taxes Report t0 the Liberal antagonistic and to give the whole credit for the acceptance of the. party alone. It is doubtful whether such a line will succeed. People's memories are prcverbially short in regard to politi- cal matters, but they are alive enough in this respect, for“ there has had to be constant pressure and agtation to have the recommendations of the Duncan Commission carried out. Even after four yrars a large umber of them remain to be implemented. The one relating to the bounty on steel- products was only made effec- tive a few weeks ago. For police use a device has been; invented to hold a revolver on a dashboard or at any other convenient place in an automobile. on foreign foodstuffs, with prefer- encea to the outlying parts of the Empire. O Brigham Young i i (St. John Telegraph Journal) A review of a rucent biography of of Brigham Young which appeared ln_a London daily should prove in- teresting to New Brunswlckers. Brigham Young was one of those sons of New Brunswick who achieved fame, possibly some might call it notoriety. The biographer ls Mrs. Slma Young Gates, one of Brigham Young's daughters. Since he had nineteen wives, she is probably but. one of many daughters. Of Mrs. Gates‘ book the reviewer says: “Religious considerations ap- art. the career of Brigham Young. as hm set down, forms e. remarkable ate?! of constructive pioneering aehie ' " ' latter owars uninlt ing s: the d‘ 312W n is no- cents Youn child whic‘ Lake wive flthl Purl men ' Bmii "it pl acoe 9 m” . Ohu . You} who ninfi fifty fam. 1dr‘) . 4m ' l women had no Oriental tradition of polygamy to aid them in supporting such conditions. and there were fre- quent stoma of fempirlnent. In- deed, it would seem that the success of a Mormon elder depended on his tact. more than an aribitrator in the disputes of his collection of wivu." To aid in flying and landing at night, a. German aviator has install- ed powerful headlights on the front of his airplane fuselage. herself‘ is ltfra. Gates’ phrase) and one to form another attachment. The account of the working of plural marriages. is often rather naive. Young seems to have made a success 01ft. and the description of oom- munal life in his home is almost idyllic in tone. But Mrs. can. confesses that in many cases there were difficulties, since American and often »he laccame little giiDolvllulou LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY "QED OFIICIl WATIRLOO. ONTARQQ OUR CHARLOTTETOWN OFFICE: Bank of Nova Scotia Building .1. A. MacKENZIE, Manager A course in the construction of mall lea some boats has been add- ed oLthe curriculum of a Florida manuel training school for boys. France has become the world's , second producer of superphosphates, ranking next to the United States, and Italy occupies third place. A new camera for aerial photogr- raphy makee four exposures at a time, one downward, one ahead and two at the aides of the line of flight. A biological research laboratory will be established in New Zealand to safeguard the country's forests from insect and fungcid attack. - Ripening of fruits by the use of ethylene gas has been developed to a high degree of success by a Univers- ity of Minnesota professor. Nearing completion. a. new railway will link Ban Salvador. near the Pa- 01110 will» with Puss-to Barrios ca the east coast of Guatemala. The easkatehewan Power Commis- sion will spend about $2.000.000 tliil year for extension of power lines lain rural districts. Mr. Cy G. Hughes. C.N.R., Mosc- ton. and Mrs. Hughes are visiting the $011116?! Parents. Mr. and Mrs. Cl. A. Hughes, Prince St- Life Insurance All plans, from the cheapest o! all-temporary protection polle- iee-to the moat Accident naive investment contracts. Insurance ‘Policies free fronrconditinna, double for accid- ents and increasing yearly in value by bonus additions. 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