fleolloelbasofll. Iensfl IJJ l-W ChelIIlIOl-Iaqll. I08 LUIl-UOIDL Ile- l. ref-an- ldllor and lounging lllNIiIh-J Q ‘granny ,| laaorlale Hillier-hull Walker all II l. mmu lnllvdd. Ioealng Belly (fended IIITI I0 D an I'll?‘ 1&1. a4 I0 no: ray up savanna) u \ ylllfllainnaa) filadaeldlllld TUESDAY, JUN! l. 1N5 KING'S Bmmngy 8n: conditions from those that have existed for many yea-re, and H, W‘ HE ~,-_ e, ‘The holiday observed yesterday mcaplbl, o! 50pm‘ mwmemw é the nnusii Empire on Wm, m” the occasion of trio 10m birthday of 3m, m, mom mmue, m E‘ Majesty King Geo p V. was by some anxiety until it was d definitely that the slight ill- i~ sees contracted by nu minesiy last f week had passed, leaving him able to participate in the anniversary ac- '_ tivitiea. This Empire-wide concern for His Majesty's health was mani- Canada break down because Par- iiamient is incapable of grappling successfully with any constitutional question involved‘! 'l‘his is the ques-, ton which the people of Canada are asking. The revelations of the Price Spreads Commission have shown that unethical business prac- -tices exist, and there is general 'l'°- dim" u" "mum °i 5°fl°"5' conviction that such practices must ma“! "14 “nvimwenu thmuih be abolished. capitalism must serve _ which he passed. It was an extraw m, new“, no; wnml m,“ y ordinary tribute to the esteem andi Th, Dommm 51-13mm; h“ _‘ affection in which the Sovereign is. Mae;- consfltuflonn powq“ than 7 held by his subiects; and it is doubt- u“, Unymd may,” congress, and ful if history affords a parallel to the the people today B" 100K153 u, ma; imivemlity and sincerity in which elected representatives to use this these sentiments are felt by all pow", drlsflcguy u rgigugafy. m classes o! our People. is all mus of winning the battle for economic re- the Empire. Certainly no monarch {om-L ln modern times has reason to feel such assurance of his. people's good- will, or has expressed more feelingiy, i z Z» 5 i i EDITORIAL NOTES 3 by ‘mm’ “d by dam m‘ sen” We will now have s full month's of responsibility and of devotion to res‘ 1mm public helium the interests of those over whom he _" m!“ The opening of two new streets 1 between St. Ava-id's and the Lower St. Peter's Road is providing a number of beautiful lots for build- ing purposw. ‘The properties eon- cerned are those of the PEI. Hoa- pital and the Connolly estate. UNANIMOUS CHOICE 4 It was to be expected, of course. 1- that two such able and popular re- l pnseritatives as Hon. H. F, MaePhee and Mr. Leslie Hunter would receive unanimous re-nomination at the I Cardigan convention on Saturday. The Conservative electors of the ‘lhird District of Kings have reason E to be proud of their standard bear- r era, and confident that they will - again carry the party colors suc- , eemully in the coining provincial y election. _ Hon. m. MacPhee is one of the flblest debaters that the Province has produced. As Minister of Public Works in the first Stewart Govern- “ ment, and latterly, in the present 1 administration, as A‘ rney General, .-. he has shown outstanding ability. 1 Mr. Hunter is also well qualified by _ experience and ability to represent his district. c Incidentally, it may be mentioned that both candidates are returned soldiers, and have served their coun- tryinwaraswellasinpeace. QUIT MAIL SERVICE ‘ Of greatest interest to all sections tapas Province is the news, re- ’ posted in ennui-day's Guardian, that , a contract is being entered into by the Postal Department, Ottawa, with, ' the Canadian Airways Limited re- ‘quiring that company to operate the f air‘ mail service daily except Sun- ‘ by throughout the year, thus pro- - viding a. continuous rather than a . seasonal service, as heretofore. ', '1‘his important matter, as will be _ leen from correspondence in today's ' Giurdian, was taken up some time ago by Premier MaeMillan with the ion-operation of the federal Conser- 1 yative members, Hon. John A. Mac- " Donald, Messrs. W. Chester S. Mc- Lure, and J. H. Myers. Mr. J. F. ‘Arnett, Summerside, also co-opera- ' tedin urging the matter upon the yPostmaster General. The result of such united action has been decided- iiy satisfactory. Our Boards of Trade and business interests gener- .' will be particularly appreciative ‘ q the improved service, which "means another step forward in ob- . aiming modern transportation con- venlences for the Province‘. 11w ma ISSUE The names of two Prince Edward Islanders appear deservedly in the King's Honours List-Mrs. Uucy Maud Montgomery, of ."Ariu of Green Gables" fame, who is made an Officer of the Order of the Bri- tun Empire, and Miss ‘Mona Wilson, Charlottetown, Supervisor of Nursis and Red Cross activities, who be- comes a Member of the same distin- guished Order. I Here is s. worthwhile fish story from that voracious centre Ottawa. Oscar Faust, 13, and three others claimed to have caught a. fish that retrieved a ring young Fasist lost Saturday in Palmerston mo. They said Fhusifls silver ring slipped from his finger as he trailed his hand in the water. About s minute later Russell landed a large grey trout. He found the ring in the fish when he opened it. Sir Robert Borden has no doubt the Bennett government is pur- suing the right course in imple~ menting by legislation much of the Price Spread Commissions recom- mendations. In the matter of hours of labour, he said, criticism had been levelled in the Senate against the proposal as something eman- ating from foreigners in Geneva. As a. matter of fact, said Sir Rob-_ ert, the proposals emanated fromi Washington, drafted by a commit- tee ori which Canada was fully rep- resented. Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, Can- adian High Commissioner to Ion- don got ei! a good one on the Mother Country the other night. Hr: was pres‘ “ at a banquet in honor of the new Governor-General, lord ‘Pweedsmuir. "In one sense," In said. "Canada is Britain's senior. constitutionally, all the autonomous units of the Empire are today equal sovereign states under one King. They are Dominions and of these Dominions Canada is the oldest and Britain the youngest." naugh- ter and cheers greeted this remark. Careful attention should be given to the’ announcement of i Revisal Courts in connection with the Fed- eral voters lists. These courts are lurid by the Registrar for the pur- pose of providing for corrections, transfers or the addition of, new names to the list. For instance. a man or woman may attain the statu‘ y age before the election is held and be entitled to vote, but unless his or her name be added at there Revisal Courts he or she will be shut out. Similarly any neces- sary correction must be made now, as when the lists are closed they must be strictly and ciceely adhemd to. . r | lCanadians, says the Mail and ' finpire, will wonder why a P50?“ ‘ pmflessivo and democrati- as ' Americans are content to, have illicit destinies controlled by the hand of the framers of m! ivféienoon Constitution. =8 Iuldefi l a majority out of nine Bu???" V‘ judges. The REA. has had us, grwpoft of a tremendous mei- ‘ " in the House of MPPWBW‘ 4' of a. considerable mli- ‘ in the Senate and the em- _ approval of the President of unitoesmoa. Not since the fiat-time legislation has there been ' ‘ other that seemed to have be- iepstrong awishbythe . . .peopie. But the court held Gnomes. or uie president. President Roosevelt 1a undeniab- lydepressed by the Supreme Court's interpretation of the constitutional law, and took a whole hour-arid-a halftoadviaethePi-esloftliefaet. Wbateanbedcncintlhmatteris inilniiesmal and will take a lofll time to accomplish. as any altera- tions in tin constitution must first be ratified by the individual states. To depend upon the industries af- fected carrying out voluntarily the NRA. policy is to relie upon a broken reed. The mate selfiahnel obmany, and the brutal offset of competition mean that Uflnoiflfl rill In t in the world which has no need for a mass anny. and every reason to Yelei-‘fi thé military system founded on the outworn doctrines of Von Oiausewita Germany. The War only made the discovery that an army of 4000.000 men was essential he about a manila circulars edit- ed by the German Consulates some. and translated into English, have been distributed in all British Dom- inions appkvinl for answers to the following qiresticna: "Do you listen regularly to the German stations? Is there any foreign station that prevents you ‘from hearing our broadcasts? Does the time of our broadcast suit you?" Every day fromatoodclockintbeevenmg" the German radio pours its waves of propaganda over the British 1hr- pire, which is divided into air zones: Bombay, Sydney, Auckland, south Africa. and Canada are thus bom- barded. Speecbns and information are given in the purest English- Aux Eccutu (Perla) The. dicta cl Canadian social credit are rendering a very poor service to their fellow-citizens in persuading them that‘ tlie-‘Stst-n can deliver them definitely from poverty. we have never had more need of couragement to work, to effort. to severe disdpline such as has made Canada what she is and such as should preside over her development if we want her pros- verity to be built on a foundation of rock and not of the land d ad- venturous doctrines.- lf the “comment gets too cocky and withholds funds from Louis- iana the'State may retaliate, Huey 11°11! hints. by refusing to pay Federal taxes. But if the State could 80$ by with iii. wouldn't the Government be a substantial win- ner in that kind of uncompiimen- my exchanee? in fact, with Kiley in charge down there, isn't mm. iana a heavy liability to the whole Wilfliryr-Kansas City Times. The resolve of the Brlthlr Gov- ernment to match Germany's air stwnsth is the practical sequel of Stanley Baldwin's assertion that "Britain's r ntier is the Rhine." But coincident with this ww pro- Erum surely Britain will ‘try again to brill! about a reduction or stay of the armament race. admitting the right of all the great Powers, including Germany, to s, position q! WWW i1’ they will 10in in a Euro- pean security pact. M Hw- Gem-re P. Graham ree- ellily remarked that he teams up betimes with his wife and wipes the dishes. An Ottawa newspaper declares the men of a nearby town were debating the degeneracy of the Senator when a. prominent lady EH12!‘ exultantly offered thg gugggg- Wm that wiping the dishes had beenl more or less a. man's job 5111459 very early times and if the men cared to prove it all they were re- quired to do was consult II Kings 21. 18. They straights/way procured a Bible and this is what they reed: "And will wipe. Jerusalem as s mm Wilitih a dish wiping it apd turning it upside down." The men lust said “soshP and disc ly disbanded. It l! a mistake to assume that Wfl-‘Wribtion in time of war is nec- essary for the United States. It f; not. We are the one great natim and Schamhorst in Department ' to the defence of America after it found itself in the World War, 1c knows today that we don't need an army of this kind for defence of American soil and it doesn't expect to use it on American soil. It ex- pects to um it in another overseas War fought on the same scale as the last war. The Nye committee would be on much stronger ground if it told the American people jugfl what it has discovered about the purpose of mass-conscription and asked whether this is what Amer-in; wants. The answer, we are certain, would be emphatic. The only way to prevent war profits is to pmvznt war, and the sooner we realize this the betten-The Nation (New York.) It is easy to denounce capitalism and big business. Yet there are over 4,000,000 bank depositors in Canada-all capitalists. Most of the big corporations like the C.P.R. and the Bell ‘Telephone Company have thousands of stockholders. It is sur- prising how widespread are the stocks held of the big banks-Lon- don Free Press. In recent years has hem more remarkable than the develop- ment of the trade in cut flowers, which are now to be seen in almost home. It is difficult to see anything but good in the general spread of so refining an influence as the love of beautiful things, and at the present time the ,.urchase of cut flowers leads to an expandi- tun of nearly 215,000,000 annually. anincresseofwperoenhinthe last l0 years. Since the imposition of duties there has been a marked expansion of home production, and over 100,000 people are now em- glgiyed in the industry-random es. It's the inner some whlch Ia I essential in the appraisement-ol human character. The miter form and substance of a mar is very de- ceiving, and spoken worth often are but a blind, but f1 that inner senseofamaneahbefathomedmll else becomes trivial. Iimersonohnd- ing at the grave of ‘Thoreau, e8- plaincd: "He had I beiutiful soul!" What lovaliei’ tribute to a friend! unmeeimymninulo mints. This. in the long flmyfaeana that the hour! foeshortt II?- Ind racco- evn-t‘ iiuintuu ‘a fencer list of rm- Notes By-Tlie Way“, has filvnllhiillalb. I Till SYSTEMATIC TEINININ‘! ~01’ ACNE 0B PIHPLES I write frequently about acne- pimplea-becauae it means much In the appearance and thus to the peace of mind of our young people. That the cause of acne 1a eon- nected in some way with gland d15_ turbance is admitted as it occurs generally as boys and Iirls are em- ergins into men and women. That is should persist as it does for a numberofyearsafterthisageia also of note. It would seem to be a simple mat- ter to correct the condition then by administering gland products but for some reason these are of helium only a few cases. I have mentioned the beneficial effects of vi in a number of cases in Chicago and of the benefit derived in other cases by cutting down on starch foods-sugar, bread, potatoes, pastry. Int foods-butter, cream, fat meat egg yolks-seem to be to blame in other cases as fat foods “slow down" digestion of’ other foods, and fats themselves are often not com- pletely used up and cause akin irri- taticn In addition to gland conditions and to food that doesn't get digested completely (perhaps owing to gland conditions) constipation, a sluggish liver and gall bladder, infected teeth (Jr-tonsils, foo much alcohol, too much tobacco, tea or coffee may be the cause of acne. At the Cook County Hospital, chicaso. acne is treated in a aya- tematic An v‘ ‘ la made to locate and remove the cause and suitable treatment then follows. "Foods rich in sugar and fats and oils, particularly the vegetable fats, should be taken in very small amounts. Foods that frequently cause distress should not be eaten such as pickles. rich cheese, pork and sausages. Those thinsa Whiflh cause congestion or redness of the face such as very hot soups or high- ly seasoned foods should be avoid- ed." This doesn't mean of course that plenty of food should not be eaten. ‘Ionics containing from, arsenic, , ' ' e, strychnine, diluted 118K110- clcric acid and yeast and liver for keeping bowels active and enrich- ing the blood, are prescribed. Vac- cines help-Slime cases. local o rexternai u atment con- sistsintheuseofordinaryaoapand water. The blackheads or comedonea should not be squeered. After the skin has been “s0f‘tened" w hot water soaks for half an hour the blank heads should be removed with a. special instrument. Various ointment: are~used con- tainlng zink, sulphur. and moraine!- The X ray treatment by a well- trained operator is however consid- ered the best “single" method of treating acne. ' SOUTEWOU) Down the long estuary creeps The silent tide; along the muddy marge Dun sandpipers with little running IMP! Search in the brine, and whimper as they run. Up by the (Lukas. like spectral images Th, herons wait in silent, terraced rams- One lifts his vanes and with slow fumbling flight Shifts to another station, whilst his Peel‘! In monumental patience still ables, Watching the ebb, grey phantom fishermen. The silky air is threaded with the cry » Of redshanks, wheeling, veering to and fro Or dropping to the sedge; as each one lights He ceases from complaint, head up-wind, With immernoriai gesture folds his wings. In the near covert a cock-pheasant calls with and, ‘.14 flab?‘ manque-mono ingtomglandwiefoeecureahil loan on the British market. Can- ada needs cash badly and it would nave been a very real M19 l0 ill W have been able to borrow a aub- stantial sum at a reasonably low rate of interest. . It was planned to carry out the conversion of the $130,000,000‘ loan due to mature shortly. but m‘. Ben- net found, when he approached financial authorities in Inndoo. that Canada's credit had been very seriously damaged throfleh $110 Nil- udiation action taken in British Columbia and Crtorio. 'i‘o quote the mime Minister's words: ‘The public credit was iniured to some extent by the so-called Vancouver incident, but whateve was left was completely destroyed by the action of the Ontario lLegislature in repudiatim Hydro contracts. We were prepared to cary out the conversion of the $138,000,000 loan which will mature at an early date, but in the Ontario Legislature, this matter had to he abandoned. . . . The loss involved intheDominion ofOsnada. . . will amount to $100,000 per annuln for the next twenty years." Our public credit "completely de- stroyed" and a. nef. loss to the Dom- inion of fourteen million dollars over a twenty-year period. and 811 because two men persisted in tak- ing the My 6f repudiation. 0f d18- honouring undertakings entered in- to in good faith! m. Bennett spoke * ‘,but ‘“ candoulst that he told the truth. The dam- age done may be even greater than he has estimated. unless some action is taken that will tend to restore outside wnfidence in this country. Canada's credit has stood so high in the Old Country and elmwhere that it is all the more gelling to find it damaged by men who delib- erately discredited their provinces in the face of ample warning and overwhelming proof of the certain consequences. if there were to be inflation, such as some lightheaded panacea-seek- ers want. The pirblic will surely realise the very Irave dancer and set their faces resolutely against any future ent cf the na- tional credit by the plundering of a few shortsighted and ignorant dam New U. S. Minister (Toronto Globe) Mr. Norman Armour, appointed United States Minister to Can- ada-. is the third occupant of that post since its establishment a few w“ gm by ms nppolniement of Hon. Hariford MacNider. Prior to uce- ' trio last Presidential election in the United States Colonel MacNider returned to private life in his own country. lie was succeeded 11y Mr. Warren Delano Robbins, a cousin of Bresident Roosevelt , who died recently in New York of _. eumonia- m. Armour may be described as "a career diplomat," having be- gim his work in Vienna twenty- eight years ago. Since then he has held important posts in the United a sequently the new United States Minister to Canadafis a man of wide experience in the field of diplomacy, and of high education l advantages, - While the new lvfinister will not find at Ottawa the subtle ipiomacy in operation at Vien . at Paris at Peiirogred, at Brussels, atTheflagueoratublrizminalloi which centres he has served his country, he will have important work to do; more specially at this time. when reciprocal trade ar- rangements between the United States and Canada are under dis- ‘oussion. And his appointment- which. sent to the Senate by Presi- dent Roosevelt. awaits confimia- tion by-that body-indicates that Washington realizes the importance of the Ottawa diplomatic post. His curfew twice, and his wings: The chittering tits make mischief in the firs; ‘Through the thick thorn a black- bird blunders by, A clucking scold, careering down t he Till he is-hidden in the hooded trees. So has it been along the river side A myrladuyears; a myriad years pass And still, through all the long, long afternoons The sandpipers will search, the red- s ree , The herons wait, and the revolving Enslobe the fondle-Ive like a ofyltal Clear, $6», serene, for time to gale _ —Eric Cloisgh Taylor. '3? iii? g Lg... employed. mm; due not an m m 910-.‘ Just Received A 1;... quantity of roam- ALIN, one of the beat preven- tatlvea known fur Smut or Bultunflrahr. A cheap but thoroughly ef- fective remedy. Grain growers would be wise to act promptly inordariobaveeeedploperly Neglect Your Fox Pup: Conservative iConvention A convention of the Consbrvative Electors of the SecondDiati-ict of Queens will be held in GIPTown, Tuesday lune 4, eta p_ m in the Board of Trade Rooms, Market Building t; nominate two candidates for the provincial eiec. tiun. The Dolls chairmanin each polling division in the said district will call a meeting of the Conserva- tive electors for the purpose of choosing five dele- gates to attend said convention. I Dated this 20th day of May, 1935. SAMUEL ICENNEDY, President R. R. Bell, Secretary. Sole Authorised Distributor for P. l. Island. Now we know what would happen c The Yardstick 0f Truth - counter-clings involving use Canadian National system, me Boa-rid of J. and pm nrtvmrm" i u w t? Well, mostly “WW flwfly- nothing. The Primo Minister. in: appears, said hainnan Wfla mo: to writing Canadian Nations-Ye capitaiimltian. This, which wasrvtat sJleztrom-din- ary seeing that hundreds of others ilINQ miditaud belleveihwas noth- inciocanieeviolem. Yet a lotof otherwise sensible and fair-minded men proceeded pnmipgiy to m something sinister in ft. to react in perfect nonsense. It is just an old political custom. Particulariyontheevcofahelieetion. Which reminds us of an excellent dents of Manitoba University. Mr. llmcTaivsh was warning his young Mldiwrs minor slOCI-ns and labels. and said: "No field of public tbnllsht and mctivi is so full of firowsy bunk- what believe the undergraduates but certainly nm the graduates or! this University would call honey- as the political field. It is a field in which labels, and catch-phrases, and in ‘ aw. and ahibboleths 0f 9-11 NIT-B. medominafe in all dis- mission. frhcre is evee-n a sort of special patter‘. or patoia, which We"! W b6 -.. ' n as necessary in which to carry on politics-l dis- cussion. The politician views with alarm. D0111“ with pride, swept; with reserve. pledges every fibre of hi! b91118. and indulges What may we about it? Well, we might accept tire-advice Mr. Mac Tavleh Cave to his audience: “Pmsflbly you have in mind a — 4- Conservative. Convention A convention of the Conservative Electors of the Third District of Queens will be held in ‘ BUIRII 0F TRIBE RUM“ Ch’tcw|i, Tuesday lune 4 at _8_ p.m. tion- _Thc_ polls chairman in each polling division in the said district will call a. meeting of the Conservn. tive electors for they purpose of choosing five dele. gates to attend said convention- Dated this 17th day of May, 1935. SAMUEL KENNEDY, President R. R- BELL, Secretary L-7690-5-18-8i Conservative Convention 4m iiisrnicr 'A convention of th .C t‘ E1 Fourth District of Queen: wiifibeeiwelldeat Heifltlogt o‘ t“ ELDON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5th AT 8 0’CLOCK PM to nominate two candidates for the Provincial Election. Each Poll is entitled to send five delegates. Poll chairi- men are requested to see that their delegates are appointed forthwith and that each Poll is fully represented at the Convention. SAMUEL KENNEDY, R, R, BELL, ‘ President.‘ Secretary, ~ L7551-fiay @1014 conservative . convention A Convention of the Conservative Electors of the Fourth District of Kings will be held at Murray lliver, Thursday, June 6th.- at 8 O'clock p. m. to nominate twp Candidates for the Provincial Election. Each polling division in the said District are requested to send flvedeiegates to attend said Convention. " GEORGE A. POOLE, . ' Convener.‘ % clear and uaie r of Nlitim and public affairs, Pos- sibly you have locked squarely at thus labels and shibboleths, though Your way through the prob they present wihhamindfreefrom prejudice. and formed honest con- V1°fl°m 0i’ your own. If haw you are qualified to be a t that y E 3 i? u S. an inligihtened democracy. at that. may I suggest, i? 2% it it i2 i555 that there are no ready-nude ions masquerading as met; in premises." ‘ ‘This does not moan that i s s: E? Mr. Tea Pot says: Use Best Quality TEA BRAHMIN ORANGE?- PEKOE EMPIRE TEA "' lold only in rad airtight pkgl. S l Itwllllflhhfi Kllrll lllafllllllloolel. t.’ on a mus-mew. l0 use. run menu o. ‘o. moan nun amen". us: an; g1“ 4mg; E i The “Premium You Save Today I Yiill Some liay Save the liay For You The Great-West Life is the Championof Thrift land the Guardian of thousands of Canadian omea. " Consult yourineareet Agent or write or call en- . ,I Established 1m Provincial Managers Street, -. Cll I . llYllliillli & 00., p iiulrrn .-"‘~_\u . " 1 ‘ ‘lllfloiiieioyfi! Jh\"~>| io u. w» to nominate two candidates for the provincial elec-