3mm I Qosvn LLfl@_IfI_‘Hw'—1F\Q °'° 2:1 ::r:':1 z» $1 = zrcrnZiv-as-gm <.......~..- -v,lIAl'!_'*1 Ii n in m. _:&‘._I'l- PAC-E FOUR THE A l CHARDOTTETOWN l GUAQQTALN The Ctiarlnttetown Guardian “i lhnnlrl U. .1 it 1111:1114: Ii. , Hlrvrlul .1 11 umiim l- a | y Li. 1111 1| A lhlvklllflllfl U_U 0 - r-iiii-r- i-riioi. “into-i lllll l) It (‘vino Ill-Lu" J-l “mom; lklll.‘ iiouoiivii 1X11“ ' l i uo-r non lln n11 rniu-il morn 'l‘l'lri.\'l).\\'. .i\l‘(il'.\”l‘ 17, 1937 N1 y» Royal Commission 'ii1 : ~ .111:i llt'll>l'(' l'reiiiier "itier part of .\p1'il, it - i "y l;.f l lltll' ~ iviiulil iiitcrvieiv pro- i-.: Jtlfil i-c-iiii.i..i~1s in tire-at liflléllll i l .1 chairman and pos- liior sonic reason ‘hes’: the conflict 0f ideas '. the Post says that one i ' iEc-nrous of restricting ii ~"iii,il_v 1o an examination 0f l i e11, ._ 1.- "ii ‘iii- '1 --il.i r aisc of the existing source c. ".l.1- liroiiiiccs enjoy‘. Other . ‘iii: ciiiiiict. however, \\'i=he(l the "~ "iiiroiigli-giiiiig and t0 (un- . the entire fabric of _ . t iiiiisiili-riitiiin given to the iii .\' r- 11- lietwceii the Dominion . . ' ‘i s ‘r > i ', :1 ~ wf h li is inade in the rclatiixiships anl ilie Lllilllllllttll ivill, - an .'iiiie1ul111ei1t to the ‘.131 toiisiderzible point .lllli‘lll of the ministers iliil instrument must be - Vlilii, the occasion should be rli iriiiigh overhauling which in rev-tint years. On the i.‘ er llVlll-QPYS were said t0 be just ‘ r uiiing lll'v\'l\llll the straight finan- grouiiil that once it is tran- _-‘il" rif provincial rights is bound viirviiil that any such political ‘iiii- -'i--ii'-l lir- avoided, as thev would ilii- iiilue of'1hc Commission's -,,.i.l ,,_ .1". 3.11. it will be noted. has been powers of enquiry into the (‘till-ll t’ i-..--iioo oi revenue sources, in- ‘lwllvl.’ "\ lion. lloolitliiss :1 full opportunity iii?’ lii- giii 1i of l c: i111 everv side of the ques- tiiin b~if<ire f1l'._\' ri-ciiiiuiieiiiliitiiins are submitted _ to Vii-‘iaiiiiiiit, wlzicli. in the final analysis. ivill have tii take the l‘t‘§lttill<lllllll\l of accepting or (electing the (ifillllllls-lllll findings. "A Political Monopoly" Cii-lcr ll16‘.;lltO\'L: lieriilii " ihc “iiiinipcg Free Pr. ss (Liberal) has the fiillinviug interesting if \"'\‘\‘\\'il-'ll belated, coiiiiiieiiti "\\'liile. the. experiment of a no-pzirty legis- lature is litiiig tried out in Nebraska. tht-rc is a (Iiiiiiiilizin Ill'|1\llll't'. iii which there is iiow no Uiipii '-n ix. ihe Legislature, and the result is iire-iiiig. ln Prince lidivtiril lslantl s :1 _-i. thirty l.llI(‘l'.'ll\' were elected and iriaiiii-s, lt is not a ttri-liarty- Legis- - lllfll 1211i l-lziiiil l'ii"i-i.iii.ci* has, lint a one- ‘.i'i<‘. '5- \lll"l'.l1tl1 due to a tidal wavc in? ill lt happened as :1 raihcr Yzii uiiilii" the old electoral system. I". i ii i ii _ii _:_:f electors who voted Liberal. '1' 10.3511 who ioti-il Conservative. ls llI!l\l1('lli"(l lo hiivc a niajtirily . iii ilie iliirtyi constituencies. The ~ ‘i\l'>l were .11 per cent of all lhc ~11 il iiolii-ilv iv iul luck. this lieats the lfcileral l.ili- ii! .1 lltlll4>l'll\' of votes at the elec- tiliii {ii l*i‘,5. iiiiii :1 .~i.iei-piiig majority in the ll ii ~ f i iii :iiiiii-, and ilii- llritisli Columbia l/lii-iii‘. ii iii lift‘ l't‘l't‘lll prtiviiicial election -.§ii iil iii:1iiiri'_v iii llie Legisltttll’? '.‘<‘l'4‘ very iiiizch iii a minority of . o‘. tlw- poll. liut it is all liick, illll siiiii~"-iii . ilii- lllFit one. 1]..» oily-r \\','l\'_ "\\ hi"! Il 1' l.lllt "I|l~ of l'rini"i- hilivlird ll>lfttlfl got ‘W .itlI.'t/l'lll"lll at sweeping the iri-l 'il;‘l i1 was ii-it legally ."i .'i i'1l~to1i1_ tii have an oppo- i;i»l..i'iii"i-_ and the elected iiiein- i"'ll \\l‘lt'll hits been enr- ilii dw-"i-iiiiig .'l\'~i~lfl|l(‘(‘ of it. .,I,p..-rt1.‘. to -._'il :iliing without an oppo- ."ll\' goieriiiiieiit? \\'hilr- = iiiililic iii ~1ii of the li1i\'(‘1‘ll11\,('|1l l-l iturii iif |'riiii~i» lidwfiiril Island and .. i; i- l\!"lllllltlll\' li:iriiiiiiiiii11s. there are (Ivlsel Vivi’ . "liiir l Pl'.'ll~ ii '-,i i. \i ilLllt tl:.i ti.1'l i,..:.i 1.i_i-i' i »i.:.i it L1“"'l fii \'I‘1"I . 'll‘l'll‘\ittll~_ aiiil ilonhtless =ou1o liiiiiiii-il I’l‘l‘l<'l-lt1_ in the lll'l\'illl‘ caucus of thr- 'll"lltlitls. .li‘<i*t“llll'__' to :1 writer in (Uiiiailizin liinttilmitt. who -"ii s that the real issues lll\'lll‘f‘ll in ll-c 1i.i~i1ii_i of hills, litt‘ \‘iilili'_' of tniiney for liil-lll‘ ivi irl. -. »...ir,~.-_ ‘tlltl iii Jill lllll‘\llllll< of general ~ tt"iid iii the caucus. lle proceeds- ‘i=1 lt i. ‘i.it Charlottetown citizens may pa_'.' to ill" lerzlfaturri but they ivfll ii iiri: l'11‘KZ. The atmosphere 1s som- P"lll 1. and the voices of the mr-mlacrs. ln a low ii ‘\ 1111c. 1111111 fall to reach them. But. 1n the I‘.>ll‘l"'_\' liiioi: siio that tho lftzhls are on 1n the t . until far into the night. This 1'11. at work bchlnd closed doors‘. “\ll lillluilliiltl ("ldllel-lll of the (iovtiriinienf. as lbi-i ‘\ i'ii' s. i< tioiitiilinlial. l‘.ut there is §'Ill,'(‘ nliin <"‘li"~lll of t'ii- tioiiernineiit outside tli" l y‘ ‘.11. ziiiil iii lili- the ('|1.'1rl(.\tteto\v11 (Iii "ili ii_ ,. l oiis-rialiit- journal, plays a lead- 41'." i "iliii Ni-iiorziti- zire :1 trifle uneasy without 31' i ' " i- "i711". iirc-irililicr to the same writer. Ap- rir !‘i- 'll‘l‘ of rui (llipositon shnui-ing 1o ii.i iii-i» so: of llll‘ (ioveriinieiit or its iiliiiii villi-n. does not incline the people to b" mo easily’ s-"ilistiriil, 'l‘lic feeling that they are not getting both sides of the story might natur- xi 1m per you ltn Idvlnrrl H" lln uilvunrol vunllod OI qdvnnnl {- ally lead to doubts and questioning on many matters. .\l1tl this is exactly what would be ex- pected in a province ivitli the past political rec- lt has swung freiltieiidy" from one side to the other since. thi- And it docs it in whole- ord of Prince lildward Island. turn of the century. hearted fashion. "lily huge majorities the Conservatves won in I012. the Liberals in 101i), the Conservatives l!| The Conservatives won by 18 to i2 in 11131, and then came the 1023. the Liberals in 1927. liberal clean-up of 1035. , , z “\\'ithout predicting just what will happen at the next electon, which will be within two years, ‘ it is safe to say that an OlIlIOSIIIOH will again v mg rayon“, i,‘ \,_,_L,,._h_\-5 ‘lpgplllglies, a‘ take its place in the Legislature, and that the ‘,1 ddvil ti) lloii. Newton \\'.' llllifcnl nlnllldmb’ “'ll0_\'<‘d ltv out‘ barf)’ is hilt .5, U,- .i,,,;,,-lo_ has llnallyi‘ an uiciileiit 1n the political life of the province." ltoiiiiiiioii liiivcriinit-iit tol viii-hips. betivcen the‘ ‘iftllllg to lllt‘ . paling the 11p- ,. .11.; (illllllllsslltll niciiibcrs. ‘ , 1 Editorial Notes 1 l Coronation medals are now being ilistributcd. _i.iip..iiiiiii.-.ii, w.“ (luc- 1Q al t-tiimncncing with the members of the respective ., H pnhiiiet circles over the‘ provincial executive councils and their wives. King ‘ l Disseiiters‘ Xlarriage .\ct, making legal cert:- Anglican clergy was passed this date 1836—lust a luiii- i i i i‘ monies celebrated by other than dred and one years ago. I i a ‘perpetual memorial to the late inventor. ll II i‘ i and shipped. C. Cunningham, expert on potato marketing. m a a a tral portion of the Province, in many cases not over 75 bags fri the acre. The late cr0p_ of Doo- leys and Katahclins appear very promising but supplies during the next six weeks. ' =1- » w it what you can do for world peace," Rev. DI‘- Richards. of Birmingham. Eng, told the Can- adian Institute on Economics and Politics at Lake Couchiching. they control Q3 per cent. of the world's nickel supply. I11 the interests of world peace let the Dominion of Canada buy 11p the nickel mines and hold them under the League of Nations in the interest of world peace." a iii a w “The. future of the potato man of New Bruns- wick does not depend on increased acreage. be- puty minister of the Dominion Department of Agriculture. speaking before the visitors as- sembled at Fredericton Dominion Experimental §tation on the. third and last day of the first At Home of the farm. Rather. the speaker tirgeil “concentrate on quality.” There is room he said. for a greater expansion to new markets, espe- cially as regards seed potatoes, ai =1= >1- ii- A proposal the Federal Government buy sur- drnught areas of the been sent to llon. j. G, Gardiner. Minister of not less than three tons per acre, zinil many far- crop. Read, Ml’, said. l ll i i forty spotted mice, \\'hcn he noticed this inof- continued to trot along hehinil him. ed scvcral times. looked back. and cried. "-.\'hoo. all of you." llut iii vain. The fantastic cani- pany crowded in his wake, ‘jostling each fllhrr and treading on his heels. .\t last the nian slop- ped (lf‘.’1Il, faced them. and said in aloud. firircc voice: ".\'ow, then. all of _vou.. .get this-if you don't leave iiie aloni- I'll take two pills aiiil l1l.'ll\‘f‘ you all disappear." it =01 1k >1 lliiles and skins were imported to the value of $646,319 during _llll1(‘ as coiiipzircil with $358,412 in June, 1930. Tlui United $151104 ivas n16, followed by the Argentine ivitli 511157.326 New Zcalaiirl $137,016 and Australia $121,311: Cattle skins ainoiiiitcil in value to $467,127 as compared with $103.02.‘: and sheep skins '$<ji<).- Q61; compared with $38387. Domestic exports of hides and skills amounted to 20.531 cwt. worth $230,273 compared with 26.765 at $211.- 554. 0f which 16.507 cwt. ivorth $180.35}? went to the Ihiitcil Hates. Cattle hides and skins were worth $151,161) compared ivitli 211182.290. and sheep hides and skins $33821 compared with $15,154. a a in n1 Not the slightest indication did Mr. llepburn give as to the actual date of the election. when he addressed his constitutcnts. and was re-zidopt- ed as Liberal candidate. liut it is stated on ex- cellent authority that a decision in that connec- tion may be expected shortly. Of the three dates which tlic Cabinet is said to he consdiir- ing. O-"t. to is the latcstantl possihlv the likclisf .\'ccd for further protection of ll_\'(ll'O tiscrs against any adverse final decision that may arise out of the present llydro contract courts litiga- tion. and need for tinhamnered authority to |1l‘!‘t(‘(‘I‘(l with collections of the some $5o.ooo,ooo in snccvssirilt iluties out of whcli, the Frontier Pl1-'"'_HP=. Ontario has been "ilnfrauilcd" tinder previioiis Tory Administrations. ivere, lie an- nounced. his further reasons for now going t0 the country. _-\ jagged bolt of lightning struck the Edison .\l€‘l11f)|'l21l Tower at llenlo, N.]., and YOlIDlPd the 13o-foot structure to the ground, but mirac- ulously did not extinguish the little model 111- cadcscent light set in the base of the tower as Mr. Fermarido Blujica. plant pathologisbin the Department of Agriculture in Chili is touring Canadian potato growing areas studying pota- tQes and conditions 1l11fl(‘1' which they are grown lle is spending several weeks in New Brunswick under the guidance of Mr. G. The Ontario early potato crop is practically all harvested and the second early crop is now commencing to move. The yield is good in South- ivestem Ontario, but disappointing in the Cen- the yield will be dependent upon ample moisture. “You people in Canada are always asking "Let Canadians remember cause of the increased competition from other sections of Canada." stated Dr. H. Barton, de- plus llritisli Columbia hay for cattle in the Prairie Provinces has Agriculture. The hay crop this year should be niers still have large quantities of last year's lt would be more economical for the Dominion Government to provide the prairif’ cattle with British Columbia hay than to con- tinue its practice of moving the herds. blr. Tom A man in evening clothes entered llyilc Park llllTES BY THE WAY The London Morning Post ll the olucsl. daily newspaper m the Brit.- ish Empire. It. has been published continuously for 185 years. It. has always had prestige and has com- manded respect. But after the war, when British llberalsm and labour sentiment increased, the Morning Posi. became even more reactionary than 1t bad been, fought every soc- lal reform, even when Lbe Conser- v ie Party was the sponsor. It railed at a lenient policy wiiiard Ireland and India, objected to hous- demanded reactionary “imperialism. pure and unasbamed." The Morning Post will be merged next month iv th the Dai y Tele- graph, a progressive journal-New York Post. present/ed by the i International Labor Office of the league of Nations are very inter- esting 1n view of the German and Italian talk about the need of more territory. Here they are: The Uni- ted Kingdom -- England, Scotland‘ and Wales-has an arc-a of 95,000 square miles and a population of 45,000,000. Italy has an area of 110,000 square miles and a popula- tlon of 42,000,000. Germany ha; an area of 186,000 square miles and n PODUlflIIOn Of 65.000000. Great Brit- ain, although she has rich dom n- 1011s and colonies, is more crowded than Germany or lta y. Her people prefer to remain at home. just as do the Italians and Germans. Ap- parently. remarks The Boston Post, colonial expansion as an outlet for Eiuopes crowded millions 1s a. joke. Some figures When the expression "night. life" l5 used. some of the old consarva- 1t vaguely connotes flaming youth ln :t.s most inflammatory mood, or unreecnerate age wining. dfnfng 5.11:1 dancing when it. ought to be at. home in slippers, or perhaps in m- tlrement. Yet the opening of the night swimming season when the 1°¢B1 Park 110015 and elsewhere sug- gests another sfde of the picture. Thanks to improved lighting sys- Vflfis. almost any form of sport or amusement. 110w is possible after- dark. and 1n the list of the recrea- ln Allegheny county $2,500,000 p" month 1s being spent for direct. and work relief combined compared with little over a million a. month at the peak of d stress in 1933. despite present industrial activity. Pennsy- lvan a has relled on lridustrfal re- vival to ease the relief load. If’ conditions 1.11 the western end of the State are correctly reported and should become more generally prev- alent the prob em of the unemploy- ablus for whose care much of the relief funds must. be used. may turn our. to be more acute than that. of cushioning industrial setbacks wfth lgolviiernment aid-Philadelphia Bul- e n. l-Iow long the Japanese Govern. ment. will be able to obtain through taxes. the money it needs for the war 1s questionable. Probably there wfll be no protest. whatever from the taxpayers whlle the first. flush of enthusiastic patriotism lasts. Even after that. the taxpayers as a whole are likely to consider it. a matter of duty and necessity to foot the war bill as far as they can. But. 1t has been the experience of modern governments that wars cannot be financed out. of taxes alone. Ulti- mately therefore. lf the conflict lusts any length of time ,the Jap- anese Government must. resort tn new borrowing. It. may be that Japan's credit. can stand up under tbs extra strain for longer than most financial students believe pos- sible 1f not ,this second Sine-Jap- anese war may well be decided, not. 1n North China. but 1n the count- lng rooms of Tokla and Yokohama. —Balt.lmore Sun. Vancouver had to fight and fight. lIlLLl for the grain trade which mime her. during several years. the leading wheat port. of the world. Now, ft 1s apparent, she must Mm SEMISTARVATION DIET TO RE- DUCE HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihh “In-n In opal h! n1- dfuuufol i! urns I qnuflnlu 0| lntornt. Tlu Charlottetown (Iurdlna dun: I04 nouuully one Ila oplnlonr u! sorrows III- MORE MUD ROOTING Sin-The Patriot ls stfll rootfng 1n the old dried up mud holes for propaganda. I1 harks back to the $6.000 South- port highway and 11s never dying shadow of the MacMlllan mlllfon One of the gratifying findings, ln the treatment of ailments or.‘ diseases ls the knowledge that. the l use of certain foods or the avoicl- anoe of certain foods can relieve- me symptoms_ 'lhus 1n epllepsyl avoiding or cuttLng down on starch l foods-bread. potatoes. sugar, andl also on liquids-tea. c011 ee. water. l milk, soft arid bard drinks, and the eating of more fat. foods-butter, cream, egg yolks—w’1l prevent or greatly lessen the severity of the attacks. 1n pernicious anaemia the eating of liver, beef, kidney- h0g3 stomach will prolong life. As the eating of food raises the blend pressure, treating hlgih b'ood pressure by putting the patient on a starvation or scmistarvation diet has been tried with considerable success, Dr. J. Hartsilver tn the BrftLsh Medical Journal reports the results of treating 48 patients by semlstarvatlon with the following d1et:—-8.30 a m.—one cup of hot water or lemon water and sugar. liquor from stewed or tinned fruft; 930-10 a.m.—ora.nge or grape- fruit. lulce; 1.00 p.m.-hot. vege- table soup (1 pint): 3.00 p.m. — hot water or lemonade and grape-i; 5.00 p.m.-orange juice hot. or cold; 7.30 p.m.——vegetab‘e soup. No meat. extract. and no bones should be used ln preparing the vegetable soup. Use boiled potato water. Choose any or all of the following for flavoring, using a dassertspoonful of the dried vege- tables when fresh are not. avail- ablez-tumlp and onfon. celery. curl-Ms. peas and shells and beans. B011, thicken and add soaked dried peas or beans. Strain off solids. Salt. and pepper to taste. ‘The patient remislns on this diet for six days; on the seventh he eats what he llikas. This diet 1s re- peated each week so lung as the symptoms improve. until the blood pressure approaches normal or there are signs of increasing weak- ness. When the patient feels weak. tea or even brandy 1.11 permlsfble. 11f the pangs of hunger beccnnea too hard to bear, green vegetables and tomatoes may b; glven and the soup need not. be stralned. Headache and sleeplessnes dis- appear in three days, Hood pres- sum falls rapidly ln 90 percent of the cases, and glddfness and breath- less-less m commonly relieved by the end of the first week. The average length of time tihls dfet. 1s given ln severe cases 1s about six to eight. vaeeks_ By going on this semlstarvatlon diet. from time t0 time the patient. may ward off severe symptoms for many years. What Is Democracy (Ottawa Journal) A correspondent writes to ob- ject to “a couple of dozen M.P.’s" deciding who should be leader of the Conservative party, asks how this “fits 1n wfth the theory of democracy." The answer. of course. ls that a couple of dozen MP3s haven't de- cfded who should be leader of the Conservatlve party. ‘That. declsloon was made by a national convention 1n 1927. A11 that. has happened now ls that the Conservative lcad- er has decided to stay where that convention put hlm. That his de- bo keep her trade. In her best year as a wheat port she hand ed nearly 100,000,000 bushels. This your, ship- ments throuizh Vancouver have not been much over 30.000000 bushels. Even the. Peace Rver crop aivhlch has always. since there was a crop. early one morning, followed by two pink elc-l pliants, ten blue cats. a lavender giraffe, and‘ ley troupe he tried to ivave flu-in :1\va_v. liut lhe_v lle prius- . the chief source of supply ivitli a value of $180, l We film" knew m0" "Ml-V Wm‘- thut ft wn I dollberate teat to m bow many renders would not: the found a P‘f1"l(('l.'l’ll'[)\l‘!l'1 Vancouver. wen.’ eastward this year. And 110W the Albs-"fia Pool. iihlch has oper- ated Na. 2 elevator for several Yfflffi 11111101‘ lease from the Harbour Roard, has thrown up its 1085B. Tliere ls not. eunuch grain 0011117112 this vvav to keen the Pcolis own big elevator hniwv, 1=it More a based plan‘. as u"ll.—vnnenuver Province. Excerpt for the owners. there is n11 (‘flily more profess onaltsm 1n yacht racing than in tennis. So perhaps an eccentric suggrstlnn. prompted by the poor showing of the Br fish COJITDLliI‘, may be p'r- ml ted. Let Stipiilth arid Wmderbll change helms. the former sailing the Ranger and the ntcr Endeav- our Il over a spedal course. Then part. seamanship arid what part de- sign and coustiriicfioii. played 1n the outcome-Washington Post. There has been much discussion 1n Cnniuai of Lae merits or demirits of the probation system far both juvenile and adult oifcixlers against. the law. Ttie success of the system depends largely upon the thorough. ness and tact. w th which ft. 1s ad- ministered. An excellent ftlustratton is found in Manchester, England. No: only has the nor-k of the pro- button officer produced good results, but. fl. has been done a very smnl] cost. to the city. The cost. Ls only one shllllng per case compared with I22 5s. per week for scndlng a boy to a remand home or thirty-two to thirty-five shillings per week for m; .n prison or thirty-eight. shillings per week 1n a Home Office school. “P901115 k611i f0!’ i: period of five years show that eighty per cent. of the offenders who began their pro- bationary term ln 1932 have not up. peaied again before the magistrates although they have been free from supervision for three years-St. John Telegraph Journal. 0f course the graceful way to get out of Monday's “faux pas" 1n which Vlctor Hugo was given credft for writing Almiimder Dumas‘ The Three Musket would be to any clsfon was given. to a gathering of his supporters 1n Parliament doesn't. alter the matber. But what 1s our correspondenfls Idea of democracy, we wonder. Most people's idea of 1t. 1s supposed to be summed up 1n Lincoln's famous deflnltfon. Actually Lincoln's de- flnilfon doesn't. get us very far. Government of the people means l nothing. for any government, that 1s government. at all, 1s government of the people. Government by the people ln the strict sense of the word cannot exist. 1n anything but a small village and in a. large State would be tantamount to l anarchy. Why? Because 1n mod- l erri communities with their vast populations both the administra- tion of government and the con- sultatlve deliberation that preceds administration have to be per- formed by delegation: that ls by 1"‘}')1'l‘.$€nf1l'lV"< w h o, however chosen. ccnstltute only a fraction of a majority of the people. As for government for the people, tall government, however bad, clafms to be that. Actually. democracy ls but a slate of mind. an attitude towards law and order and freedom and the rights and dfgnitles of man. with these things sought. and ex- pressed ln various ways, and some- times 1n compromlse with rlizfd formulas which have become part of the democratic machinery. error; or one could wth dignity lay 4, mere clnlm to a literary lapse; but maybe ft would be as well just. m plead guilty and blame 11. on the de- vastatingly muggy weather plus the hoards of ravenous mosquitoes which sung a hymn of hate tn the edltorlal sanctum throughout the week-end. Anyway. the btoomer wu made and got by. Russia wants to make more use of her For Northern possessions, and no doubt ls glad to impress upon the world the striking efficiency of her present alr ‘ndustry. she hu rea- son to be pmud of the recent Polar expeditions that linked the Soviet capltul with our Pnclflc States. But we cannot help wondering about the future of aircraft transportation by way of of the frlgld latitudes of Ania. Europe and North America. Wlll Rural: be the only provider of Amt/c aerial semen-Providence Journal. \ i‘ Try n bottle tudly. i dollar debt. increase of 1935. It maliciously conceals the fact that. the prlnc pal cost. of the Southport experiment was fn the lnltial grading and foundation. and that. that foundation is still as good as ever and worth every dol- ar of its cost. Tru some of the icizecr on the surface was too meagre and crumbled away, which the Campbell Government, lnstend of replacing with a more substan- tial coating, has filled 1n with a few loads of dust and gravel. The net loss of that. top surface wouldn't. pay the extra salary grab of one of the "econom sts" fn the House. The Liberal roofer hasn't. a word to say about those other gfgantlc humbugs, the McIntyre Hlshways, costing orlglnally over $50,000. with rcpalrs since bringing the cost up to nearer $100,000 the whole fab- rlc of which. foundation as well as the top veneer, was a stupendous fraud upon the revenues of the Province. It further attacks the MacMfllan mil ion dollar debt. increase. but dlsbonastly refrans from mention- lng that a half million dollar Bor- den Highway, a new Prince of “Isles College, s. new Falconwood Hospital and other costly public works 1s ln evidence to amount for that. extra debt. But. with the same covert. under- hand ‘concealment the Patriot does not offset thfs debt -w1th the Lies- Campbell Government's overdrfilt- 01 a full million dollars when they left office ln 1931 imd left. nothing to show for 1t. "F rst. take the beam out; of thine own eve. m"! ‘hall’ thou see clearly to cast the helm out. of thy brother's eye. I am. Sir. etc» LIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE _________.. MIGRATOR-Y BIRD araunmous Sun-A few d-WB no whilst 1".“- lng the columns o1 your valued paper the attention 0f the will!‘ was drawn to the 511001-1118 1'93"‘ latlorls m: Migratory Birds f" “l” season of 1937. The question 111799!‘ most. 1n the mind of the writer It 111w present time, and 1 believe the same question is 081111111118 m‘ minds of many. 151 m“ wh° 3 rssponslble for the N061" drum Qhanges 1n the Federal $001158 regulations? Liastiyear (1936) the season was out. from a 1-2 to 2 months 1°! ghootlng geese and ducks; the Bel"- son on brant. was closed entirely; the use. of llve birds as dewyfl W83 prohibited. Hi5 Well 5-5 ham“? md chances were also made 1n b8»! limits, etc. It, ls not the intent-ton of the Wfllifl’ w question the "*4- 0r otherwise of these chances. but the first lnttmatton f-hfl sportsmen had of these far reach- lng ghgnges 1n the Regulations were when they picked 11D “I91!” 10011.1 paper. No information on as to who sanctioned these fill-fill! was forthcoming, although d111- gent inquiry was made 1n M5993’ slble quarters, and sportsmen were given to understand from a reliable source, that. no additional 01111186 could be made 1n the Rnsulatfoum of The Migratory Birth Conven- tion Act. without the sanction of’ our Provincial Govmimcnt truouih the medium of the Department of Agriculture. Although nothing def- inite was teamed these who were effected by the change. it 1918f some of them, were tacitly irfven to understand, that a 1 petition would not. occur. 1937 rolls around and exact-l? the same thing does occur. Sport-B- men 1n this province feel that. thGY are 1n the same position ls the iuckless Chinese. who wake up 1n the morning and 11nd mother rltce of territory gone. The chaos! 1n this last Instance was more, or less, minor, ‘as 1t effects relatively few gunners 1n this province, dealing as 1t. dld wfth the reduc- tlon of the season on s-nfps and Woodcock. No one objects to l. shortening of the season, but. they cut; ft off the wrong end, wiping out. the month of November en- tirely, the season when btrds are at. their best. and leavlng us the latter part of September, a month when snlpes and Woodcock are ii Ftiassy Stomachs l‘ i RELIEVED If you have any trouble with your immach such u t Indigestion. dylpepltn. uour stomach, henrtbum. purl: dlstress, etc. Then don't de- lay getting n bottle of 01-. L. B. Evan's Stomach Mixture immediately. Evan's Stomach Mixture In a prescription of Dr. L. B. c Evans. noted English Physic- lun of which we have the sole rights to and alnu nelllng ft have received numerous testimonial: from satisfied purchuen. Prion 850mb. v--<..-.. ANIMAL SPRAY "YLLS AND IIIPEL! FLIES. LICE. and MOSQUITOES Stocknld ll one of the but cattle spray! on the market and fl lbwlutely [plunked not to hlnt mlli. nor to stain. tilhter nor burn the hide or ha'r. Write. Phone or Cull for one today. . t PRICE PER 128 028.8130 l 111s 111m mics Phone Ill. Ill Gl- GOO. IL l SIOCKAID I i Dumbells wlll Insurance During your visit 10 the Exhibition w}... take time off to call at l l Agency in P. E. I.”, and settle any mob] I you may have concerning protecllo ‘ home, family, or business? 111111111111 s. 00., 11.1, Offices—- 61 Lower Queen St. thin and not. worth shooting. They are not. hunted during September ln this province on that account. Allin. in 1n 1936, no one has the least Idea of who sponsored the ohange- The Mfnlster of Agricu]- ture and the Presfderif of the Game Association both declaim any knowledge of this change in Reg- ulatlons. It. all boils down to this: Either there i". a “nigger l“ the Wwdirfle" or else an outsider ls dfctatfng the Federal Game policy of this province. No wonder the b1! question among Island spot-pg- men Ls: What. next? I am. Sir, eta, SPORTSMAN. The Dumbells Twenty years ago the Dum. bells. a. company of fourteen young Canadians who had served at least sfxteen months 1n active service on the western front, commenced an enterprise that led them from an improvised stage back or the Vlmy line to the leading theatres 0! London. Brussels and New York, followed by years of pm. fessfonul theatre success across Canada and the United States. Organized as one of the Concert Parties of the Canadian Cflrps to provide diversion for the troops mflns back of the line, The Dum- . bells. choosing thelr names fmml the ‘ fgnfu of the 3rd Canadlan‘ Dlvlsfon. played before thousands of Canadlnn soldiers for two years, under themanagement of Capt. M. W. Plunkett. and came home w become the most unique 11nd best known organization of enter- tainers that. Canada has ever 11p- pfsuded. 1111s month 1n Toronto. The 5188B a reunion marking the twentieth annivers- lry of their first performance ln August. 1917. A dozen men of the orlgfniu Dumbellls company wlll gather from all over Canada and the U. B. to stage their re. union nrosnim which wlll cul- minate 1n a wast-to-coast broad- cast, produced from the stage of the little theatre at. Christie Street Hospital, where many or! thefr old comrades stfll reside. Songs and sketches which re- call days on the Somme when mun had courage to laugh and sing when they crawled out of the trenches; skits which brought London's acclaim to the Canadian boys. granted special leave to play ln the British metropolis; music which delfglited smart. New York audiences for over three months after Canada had packed theatres from Halifax to Vancouver to hall them-these W111 be the Items that highlight the Original Dumbells show. to be heard over the na- tional system. "Biff, Bing. Bang" the original show, will supply the feature numbers. stars wlll 1n- clude Ross f-Iaanllwn. as “Marj0r1e" singing his first great hlt. “Cosey Comer"; Red Newman Inimitable serfo-contlc. singing "Oh. Oh, Oh It's a Lovely War"; B111 Tennant. beamed wftb Marjorie, sfnglnf! "Hello, My Dearle"; Al Plunkctt. suave leading man. offering his famous "1 Know Where the Files .1931, iIE C052 sixty Cenfll L Problems not nce eln§ l‘ 0f Your “The Oldest 1115111.. Phones 67 and 6S G0 . the Original quit McLaren. Allan Mllryalvr '35. Jacl Mo’. E. A. Beldlng 1.70’, PM Ayrc. who will be imisicglk (Jack of the revue, and Cam Plflreca mléfltnfronr the firs, i lmk nes in 1917, of the to m transcontinental: latilulfllvl was tb " l1 the troilpe- e gummg gull“! 0t The Dumbells‘ l umphs began at Lmonwar trl. Ambrose Small, ramoui magnate of Toronto, pron-Ste.“ run at his theatre. the old 09d t Opera House, 1f lllF Show in“ 1n the Western Ontario item” rest is history, The 170.6 y‘ Th‘ m!‘ lwelve years and ti; mum paper illes are filled wmlnew" stories. “m! Anecdotes of th worth recallfng, Kixiflllyllgan“ first costume, for lmlanglml was made of canvas ‘trlmmé absorbent cotton, Illlypede ‘m lodlne to make imitation qmwlmu One or m Wm by the last: frocks beautiful lady was a weduml creation which was boughtml: six hundred dollar. the story of the svuigléengggfilm lieutenant who "ft-ll" for the 11m 10R ladv. rushed her with Mm‘ and Rlfts of flowers... fine day. Among the tr still preserved 1n Martorte’; w“ Tobe 1S a necklace sentibv the Dukl z: 1112:." ii- i-iii The bo also their old yirlends llilaeiv lite roles were established. N01,.“ wanted to play t}... gm pm, “a the flrst. show called for ffve b0, and flve girls. So they iii-WM ...numbers for the boy; m. blanks for the girls. 11mg," the first blank. and the name . chose was 1n honor of a. beau . Montreal girl he left behind y .. he went. over vmh the 9m H a Artillery. These and hundreds of .. incidents wlll be recalled w .. The Dumbells Eflther 1n u... this month for their reiml 91119111.‘! Years after. qpi/ r. l’ , 1.. ' 4. FROM "POEMS" May sudden justice overtake Ancl snap the froward pen, That. old and palsled poets shalt Against the minds of men. Blasphemers to i caught. In far-flung webs of lnk The utmost ends of human vi T111 nothing! left. to think. trusting B11‘. may the gift. of heavenly i ii And rzlnry for all time Keep the boy Tom ivho. '" geese. first made the nursery rhyme- -Rnbert ‘i 0 Viitalilti always use BRAHMIN A . w at your work. The good workman never plat’! °ut as long as, tucked aw!!! l" his cheek, he ha: a bl! chew of that refreshinl. stimulating, comfortin! old iuciu-zvauicuotsoiifs LACK TWIST CHEWING I!