3'.’ m a, v. l; l»! ll “i it. u 1y Ivodlnll. luau-dot. i. ohm-v l. nun. a‘): o. ' ' ‘ . .' . . .| "'“',........““m....""'"i.‘&’i‘?'.u.' il’3"i‘.'ol'.fl.. Admiral-pa‘!!! I; .12 “halite-donned,- all Ulhll. Itali- TUIIDAY. IIIIUAIY l. 1086. A Solemn Treaty prove that the Fathers of Confederation “build- ed better than they knew," and that it may not now be amended unless or until consent is given by all the parties that merged their sovereignty or any part thereof in the ConstitutionQ “A prevailing opinion," continues the Guatte, “is that the‘ right which is about to be asked for (of quashing the law of reference to the Imperial Parliament) was actually estab- lished under the famous Westminster Statute of 1926. The question of giving it effect now is one entirely of domestic expediency. Because it involves an enlargement of powers whereby the Constitution can be amended, it is more than ever essential, if the contenlplated action is car- ried out, the provinces shall be alert to safeguard their rights so that the change may not after- "wards be used as the thin end of ‘a wedge to ob- tain freedom from other valid limitations set by the British North America Act, and to assert a “status" which appears to have given some people a somewhat false conception of Canadian nationality. One precedent creates another. In the‘ instance, it is to be hoped it may be taken for granted that the Minister of Justice and his colleagues on this “committee-of study’_'—aware of the danger that when one example is set it can be cited to justify more dangerous methods- will make assurance doubly sure that in new powers that may be proposed to amend the Con- stitution not one shall be elastic to be possibly stretched to give to the Dominion Parliament some time an authority to amend the Constitu- tion at will. “The provinces need to stand, now and ever, immovable against any change which would tend to weaken the provision that commands their united consent to any and every amendment to the Constitution which may be proposed. The late Sir GEORGE Ross, a former Premier of On- tario, in his book, ‘The Senate of Canada,’ makes an illuminating study of the Constitution which is pertinent to the present study. He stresses one pregnant fact. It is that- the British North America Actis a treaty. Its provisions, there- fore, may not be regarded as though they were a matter of mere agreement. They have, and should ever have, the force of the obligations of a treaty. Particularly applicable is the re-_ minder that the doctrine of ‘consent’ established under these obligations, ‘stands at the threshold,’ and constitutes the ‘fundamental character’ of the British North America Act. ‘The doctrine of consent, in fact,’ theauthor insists, ‘is the flaming sword of the Constitution that turns every way and forbids progress till consentus clearly established.’ It will be the responsibility of the Hon. Extras-r Laromrs and his commit- tee to see that nothing in the movement now m evolution shall menace the perpetuity of the doctrine of consent as applicable to changes in the Constitution. Even as a. concession to our pride of ‘status,’ we may not lightly abandon the clause of the British North America Act calling for ratification of all amendments there- to by an act of the Imperial Parliament. In no event should it be abandoned unless positive precaution is taken against all possibility of the precedent being interpreted at some future date as constituting a law which may be applied to overrule the other limitations to constitutional change. There is force and right in the contention that whilst the Constitution cannot be regarded as like steel and iron and ‘never change; never- theless it ought not to be disturbed unless there are more than common reasons for doing so. Statesmen will be slow to propose, and legislators will hesitate to pass, any measure which would seem to incur the danger of taking away from the sacredness and the inviolability of the Con- stitution and rendering it liable to future change under stress of party or political exigencies." Massachusetts Pays Tribute Of all the tributes paid to the memory of King-GEORGE V. the following is assuredly one of the most significant, fll‘l(l_fl0 doubt expresses the-sentitucnt of our southern neighbors, not only in Massachusetts but in all sections of the Republic; "State House, Boston, Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Journal of the Senate, Jan. 22, r936. Remarks by the President Hon. JAMES G. MORAN : . “Fellow Members of the Honourable Senate: “Since the date of our last session, death has terminated the reign of the sovereign of the - British Empire, His Majesty. Kl"; George the Fifth, a reign lasting twenty-six years and chur- aetenred throughout that long penod by high ‘ regard for constitutional government and sin- _'ou to the welfare of his people. A weighty editorial comment 0n the pro- posed amendments to the British North America Act appears in the Jan. 3r issue of the Montreal Gazette, which merits the serious attention of legal authorities not only at Ottawa, but of all the Provinces. The Gazette first emphasizes the f_act that the B.N.A. Act constitutes the charter of the Dominion’s rights, privileges and liberties, that a national experience of nearly seventy years under the rule of the Act has served to framers of our Constitution." British Ambassador at Washington." Editorial Notes aryf ha". orac n,,e i“ a“ a" one solitary member, ’ 9K 9K 9K of his_native land. 9K 9K 9E hitherto the custom has been to collect duty and vclopment is expected to cost about $4,600,000. Ni its 9E partment is going to be death on “pot hunters" at exhibitions, the professional “exhibitor” who makes a business 0f showing prize stock share of prizes and blue ribbons, is an unfair competitor to the average farmer. Mr. A. W, in the Maritime Provinces, who gather up car- loads of stock, disregarding farming operations bring them to the show, and take home all the prizes.” That was no help to the development of practical farming. All is peace and harmony once more between 5K 9K 3k . Party discipline has been restored at Portncuf, Que, and the Liberal nominee Dr. PIERRE GAUTHIER has received acclamation as successor of Mr. LUCIEN CANNON’, M.P. Two of the independent Liberals failed to nominate, and the third, the Mayor of St. Augustun, withdrew at the urgent representation of straight party supporters. Dr. GAUTIIIER was defeated in the November 25 provincial election by Bonn Dus- SAULT, Action Liberale Nationale candidate and river pilot. His acclamation will preclude an "invasion” of the county by members of the Canadian Alliance for Women's Vote. Miss IDOLA Sam-r JEAN‘, president, said women were ‘up in arms" against Dr. GAUTl-IIER, because it was his six months’ hoist motion on the Wom- en's Suffrage Bill which killed it at the last ses- sion of the provincial Legislature. 9K 5K Ii sought to have his marriage to Eveum Rrccs, Catholic, annualled because the officiating clergy- man, Rev. LACHLAN A. MACLEAN, minister of the United Church of Canada, was non-Catholic. His Lordship added that “a person who does not believe in or adhere to rules promulgated by the canon law of this province, and who belongs to a religions sect which combats it on each oppor- tune occasion, may not reasonably avail himself of it in his own interest (Iarsqne son interet la commando) ." 3K If BK or mo. no amt-run fir‘ w-s-I so north" which I time within the ancient landmarks set by the At the request of the President, the Senate then stood for a moment in silence. On ‘motion it was voted "that the remarks of the President be printed in the journal of the Senate; and that an engrossed copy thereof be forwarded to the We are getting January weather in Febru- If We do not get what we are entitled to in the way of public works and subsidies it is not because we have not sent the Prime Minister sufficient support-four members of the House of Commons and three Senators. In both the Legislature of the Province and the Parlia- ment of Canada, the opposition is represented by magazine and the Jam and mm; matches around too recklessly 1n that re- gion. Ibo Ruastaua profess to re- gard Outer Mongolla l. a. barrier between Siberia and the Japanese 1n Manchukuo. The Japanese pro- fess to regard 1t as a Russian spear- head almed at Munohukuo. the Mongollan; think appllently dots not matter and maynot uouut for much lf there la a clash.--I.on- After putting through a deal to advertise a brewery by a. beery stallion, and promising the Temperance Federation delegation “most ser- ions consideration” of their protests against the laxity of law enforcement, the President of the Council (plus legal Premier) hies himself ofi to sunny Florida to escape the rigors of the winter Canadian commentator-l at the present ttme are xemarklng on the fact that two men 1n one country are holding the important l of provincial premier at an. early age. Here 1n Ontario, Hepburn 1s but 89 years old ‘and the recently ‘chosen Premier for Prince Edward Island his reached his 40th year. An English newspaper records the fact that the Brltlsh House of Commons has member-Mr. Malcolm MacMlllan, representing the West- ern Isles, aged 22. Cklng still fur- ther examples of the entry o1’ youthful men lnto the august: as- semb‘y, the writer asurcs his read- ers that Mr. Macmillan once would have been accounted a. senior for, "In the days of James II, the Commons Included as many as 40 minors, several of them under 17. Lord Tasrlngton, afterwards the Duke of Albennarle, was only l4 when he not only lat but spoke f0 1n the House and with plquant .llp- pansy. Taunfecl by an opponmt with prezumlng to legislate before he had sow-n his wlld oats, he re- p‘led that he could conceive of no better place for the purpose than tho House of. Commons, where there were so many geese to pick them up."—I.ondon Free Press. The Roosavrstr Government has introduced an innovation and created a precedent by estab- lishing a free port at Stapleton, Staten Island. A free port, technically known as a foreign trade zone, is a place where goods may be received from abroad, processed and reshipped from the United States without payment of duties. Free ports are historic in Europe but‘ they have never been established in the United States where pay drawbacks on re-export entries. The city of New York may build a seven-storey warehouse at a cost of $3,500,000, and the entire initial de- Evidently Nova Scotia Agricultural De- at all the Maritime fairs, carrying ofl.‘ the lion's McKenzie, agricultural superintendent told the N. S. Farmers Association that: “We have men A rcader of the New York sun who has been a motorht; slnoe the beginning of the twentieth century has submitted to that newspaper nine ample rules for alsty which are well worth passing along. In brlef they are as rallows: drive on the right-hand side-of the road. Go slow on oulves. When go. lng up hill on hlgh, cut otf and float ovu- the crest ready {or a qulck :top. Never cu. on. of line to pass a cur uness you are sure of ample room. Never pass 0n a hlll or a curve. Slow down for sl"e- roads and crossroact. Never nun your head while drlvlng. L’ the other pazengers enjoy scape. Slow clown as 1t gets dark and keep below thirty miles an hopr after datle-Provldencg Jour- na . Dr. RIDDELL, League of Nations Permanent rep- resentative, and Prime Minister KING. The doc- tor has been in Ottawa and has explained satis- factorily to the Prime Minister the incident about oil sanction proposals which created such a stir throughout the country a few weeks ago. It is officially stated the episode which resulted in the Government issuing a much-criticized statement was due to a misunderstanding. Dr. RIDDELL will shortly return to Geneva and will continue to occupy the position he has filled for several years. Meanwhile no information has been vouchsafed as to whether Dr. Rumour. or Hon. Mr. LA- POINTE was the blunderer, The bigger the olty, the gllllfl- the things it. doec. flpparently New York 1s at present wsglng a m; In the 811mm: Court at ssoo a day to recover damages amount. 1113 l0 844 for a lamp post broken in o. traffic accident. 'I‘he pos smashed ln I931. and the Incident forsotten by a'l but the litigants. No doubt the explanation is that "1t ls the principle of the thlng."- An example of bow Eastern men have contributed to the building up of the Western provinces ls con- talned 1n the birth peg Free Press. Congrat- attended to 51x prom- bans. but not one of them ls r. nstlvo son. One hulls from Nova. Scott». one from Prlnoe Edward Island, and th, other four 11mm Onttarlo. The fneldenoe of _ _ rsolel orlzln-lf nam A Protestant married to a. Catholic before a. thins-also 1s no Protestant minister in the Province of Quebec, cannot complain of the competency of the offic- iating clergyman and ask the civil court to annul his mixed marriage on the ground the ceremony should have been performed by a Roman Catho- lic priest, Mr Justice Foaasr has ruled in Super- _ ior Court. The judgment re j e cts suit, may first of its kind ever raised in the Province of Quebec, by which Geonce Garrrrrus, Protestant, toworthy.‘ Them la a MaoKey, a McLean, a. McKenty and a Graham-Stunt John Tele. Englishman moving Canada was staying 1n a wayside hotel. One night lt no very cold, and the tourist feellng 1t pretty . came downstairs early next morning to get warm. At the some time a trapper. who had been out looking at his trope, came 111.“? the door. Iclcles were hanging from his moustache, and with u pltyln; expression the Erlgllsbman looked at hlm and exclaimed: "By Jove, 01d mm, what room dld you sleep fnW-News of the World. ' —§i—d_ Time was when the dldnotthlnkofsmoklngenyklnd of plpe except a. "clay." pfpes have become cheaper, the cli- arette has helped to 1n¢ habits, 511d most pl would think 1t "obealftn be seen with the old-fuhloned clay. Glasgow there 1s '1 nrm, 130 yuan "l"°" s" “as. ca. an coy ppes l. year, u . . o these belng exported. Many ‘ to Canada, for a r:- Italy is learning to make her creditors work for her in spite of prohibitions. A long list of import prohibitions recently issued by Austria is believed by Austrian merchants to be design- cd to assist Austrian exports of war ‘materials and other necessities to Italy and to obtain pay- ment which Italy is unable to make. Austria's frozen credits in Italy are reported .to amount to Ggopopcllo schillinga. Austrian imppréelrrltap- ‘ or icenses to irn goods w r ay gltzificer find themselvespiéaftied‘ with retpsal uu- m lees they order from Italy. Sums’ thus obtained are, not ‘transferred to Italy, butuuder the penluioutthunearolnndedovurttmzatrialllyd 5 s , . , _ Y *0 90' e uni-tartar; = iflpofidh l3 u: r lonalnwrreroww l GUARDIAN if Notes By The Way _.__ The portrait o: Ml‘. which ‘Lady Gladstone ented to the Prime Mlnlater of Canada. 1s a. cow or the famous Mlllals 1n the national Gallery. Thls picture once belonged to tbo Duke of Westmlnster, who turned 11a face to the wall when It; sub- ject introduced the Home Rule Bill. It was another peer of the ume who refused-to per-nut a memorial tablet on Mr. Gladstone’: muse ln Carlton House Gardens. These victorious may have been grand old men, but they behaved curiously llke children sometlmes.—~ IIOR, DUIIQGM-‘Iflblfi? 1n London Obeerv ' Qlillat flab? . of yours Pv Jszlsl w- P212".- lav-- to grow. older brother was less dlssatlafled. nourishment. You can see that with a short body, narrow chest, small lungs, and a good generousfood supply neces- sary to maintain strength. 1f his small intestine ls short he may not get enough nourishment to fight ofI uug ailments ln which food 1s 1m- portant. On the other hand, the long bod- lonl; intestine, may out; so much more than he needsfor the llttle bl. may readily attack hlm. Remember, lung troubiedn the short. body, and heart, bloodvessel, Jver and kidney trouble 1n the long body doesn't; need to occur when Electric Music ' (New York Tribune) Selective evolution works ln biology. Back of the present pianos, organs or instruments of the orchestra are ghosts of thousands which have had their day and lost: strange-shaped serpents, he hund- reds of klnds of plpes as far back as Hero's water organ or the uncl- ent. plpes of Pan. A slmllar evolu- tlon will choose and perfect, we Lmaglue, the newest klnd of musl- cal Instruments worked by electri- clty and radio. One family of these uses electric vibrations ln radio tubes themse w.» a taming of the howls stlll sometimes ldulged in by radio sets. Another type ls based on modifying electrically the sounds of ordinary plano strlnis. Still a third type makes sounds by passing tiny light beams through holes 1n M01"!!! opaque dlsks and feedtng "1080 ChOPPeG-up rays Into phofo- successful. we gather, are the stlll different eleetrle organs worked by tlny electric motors reversed and run u drmemos. The idea. ls lngenlons- Driven by electricity of a. constant fre- quency. these small mocora run at accurate rates and drive electric cloclu. Turned around and driven mechaulca-lly at dlflnfte speeds, the sauna mot work as dynsmos and yleld electric currents of def- lnlte pitches. Passing these 61h‘- rents Into a loud speaker gives musical tones of the same pitches as the currents. mu, however, 1s not all the problem. tones an not pure vibrations". On the contrary,‘ any‘ acceptable tone produced by musical instruments contains many pitches culled over- tones which provide the tone color and the pleaslng quality. Deslgn- ers of the electric organs must arrange to provide these over- tonu. to rmln a. number of their tlny dyuamos for every tone, one dynamo to slng the fundamental, the others for the needed over- tones . To provide as many different tone colors as an ordinary organ however, another , resource. By modern acoustic instruments sound may be changed lnto wavy lines gap‘: phpthrspb, not unlike the ll it; iggigi g § i? g it é ggrg. s; ii gs ssliiii ti’ sag s. THE LENGTH OI‘ Till BODY ‘No brothers were being examin- ed by the family pbyslclan, thelr ages being 18 and 10. The younger boy was about an inch taller than the older, and the older asked the physlclau 1f he thought be would grow any more as he didn't llke being the shorter. Beatdes, the younger one would lfkely contlnue The pbyslclau had them both slt. down and see thelrhelghts 1n the mlrror. The older one was more than one Inch taller than the younger brother. "There ls the ans- wer," smiled the physician, "You resemble your father's family who had long wide bodles and short legs, and your brother resembles your mother's family who were lean, and lanky. You should be the stronger: physically because you will have plenty of room for your heart and law-makqu. finding themselves 1n tously‘ ‘eotedbybhevlrluof their like late-crust. made but to be broken. m: war "mmouon ‘I'll I ‘ woons _ Theyehutthrmud throlllh i110 700d! “f "'7 “hmm” mum” :1‘; have lmdone 1t “n! unnmsdm s11’- " ould m- know " cumstancu 1n Jilly last, our thirty %Enmy°&; . ma‘: ghmugl; ms woods a. position to ebvern unoppwd W!‘ 5;; use planted the trees. five years, huv; become quite ur- n lffflum’ in the Wplllbfl and. heath, own potency. Being 1n an unohnl- And the thln anemones. lengeable position on the floor of Qnly the keeper sees tho House m- such s lengthy per- not, where the 1111x410" "0061. fod why uerclse restraint? Polltl- And the badger rolls at can. cal-promises they well knew were Them wuonce a. road thrclllh l!“ woods. Since a Prohibition Oomlnlaalon Yet. 1111mm“! w‘ "001 had necessarily to bear some semb- 01’ I 5mm" "will? I'm and was ‘thus more or less of a nuisance to honest gentlemen who dlctlon. the quite obvious thlng to lungs lri the chest, and also plenty of room for your stomach, liver, and intestines 1n the "omen." .'I'he It ls an interesting fact that the lndlvldual wlth the short body and long legs Ls more llkely to have a tendency to lung weakness-tuber- culosls-because of his narrow chest. Unfortunately also hls small intes- tine, the tube which receives the food from the stomach and prepares it. for absorption lnto the blood, ls often a number of feet shorter ln length than ln the Individual with an average or long body. This means that more food should be eaten or rather that meals should be eaten more often to supply Thus two fndlvlduals of the same hplght." one wlth a short and the o..her wltb a long body might; have the short body having 20 feet of small Intestine and the other 30 et ' led lndlvldual wlth blg appetite, and of work he does," that liver, heart, bloodvessel and kidney allments p ordtnary cure and common sense ls music no less heartlessly ~han 1n the mes, ‘he harpsmhords‘ thethe publlc, was to ascertaln what ‘Patriot was that the Federation's electric cells. Commercially most bated lu such fllnuy argument? As a mutter of fact, relllbla records show that Government Oontrol does not mean fewer bootloggen. My 5" tlon and Government Oontrobverl- f and add to the llllclt flow, a flood Neither was the fact or their pro- test, lf any was made. _ Th; next; step of course would be to ebollsh the Prohibition law Itself. If ‘twere. done when ‘t1: done, then ‘twere well 1t were done quickly. Woulch they not have the lance of impartiality and aotlvlty when the mill-Bl’ °°°" “l l“ trout-hurled Pools ‘Where? the otter whistles hf; mate. desired u» admlnlstrltlon of liquor 1"” ‘m’ w‘ m" ‘n m‘ "°°"‘ m few) laws to be tmdfl‘ their own jurls- gaff?“ hgxfafbea, o, , hum.‘ feet d°. W" l° "l “'1 °' u” Wm" Andthoawtsh of asltlrt m u.» dew. sion. ‘Ibis was done without any steamy canlflm; ml-ough . delay or hesitation. If the Ibmperg The mun, 5011mm“, anoe Federation was consulted the A, though lhey perfectly knew fact was not widely edvertlzed. Th, 01d 103; mad through the woods . . . - But there IS no road through the woods! —Rudyard Klpllng. benefit o; Legal Beverage sale m, never made publle.” (Of course this llve year-s; and would no, my, be has nothfng to do with the known a sumelently long period for any opposltlon to cool 011? _ A special Sesslon was called. Money was needed by these econ- nnd unknown). Such Inconsistency! He virtually admits a free flow of lnroxlcunta to be the cause of mo- tor acclden and murder, and 1n the face of that he would unloose mnlaw‘ “w” w“ mm‘ u’ “m” the flood gates to trap the citizens “m” “will,” °.' mm“- It "mud of Prlnoe Edward Island 1n a de- hardly do to pass a new liquor 10W vastutlng current of liquor deallng at: that Session. That would have Germ“ death, gpffupflon, broken 5*" “W111i ‘"1011 the B11400"! 01' heart-s and homes, dlsease and des- power-lnwxleated legislators. It trucflon on every hand, People of Prtnee Edward_ Island. would have aroused too much op- position, and besides there was Mr. ARISE! Balsa your volce against Lea to reckon with. Action was such cunulng trickery and wholesale therefore deferred. _ betrayal of all that la good and A: a prellrulnary overture to the honorable and abiding. Demand an new opera the Patriot’; columns earnest effort to enforce the prohlb- wen gllmwn Qpgn u; ‘mm-s again“ ltlon law and thus remove the temp- Prohibition, Anqnymlgy w“ no o; ration for thousands- We cannot may,“ 1; “gym. help“; Under m, legislate the tndlvtdual to sobrlety gulre, citizens, venturing to speak but we “m ‘emwe “w m“ or m “m, in favour o; nombb Hundreds of victims are hoplng “on could be attacked personally, that we may STEM the tlde. Wives their style ridiculed even the ab- “d mmwm m“ “d duughters‘ sen“ o, pmmmflon mum m fathers and husbands wlll thank thalr writings held up to obloquy. So glaring and so gross was thls abu:e of the usual loumgllgtlq amenities, and ‘so clear was the ass-nus i’ fie, " t i”? flu- M ll 0 S Hg Worm Powder y a A very effective treatment l; l warms tart‘: and "Dfllflul 1| the time for treatment l, . worms. Recommended ' atglnlon Dept. of Agrlqnl. MACS CONDITION POWDER Torus: up the system, cum m Bkln Troubles and glveg l glossy out of hxlr. For swol. lea lop. pllrllylng the Blood and u an eradfeator of worm; 1t ll an unfelllng remedy, MACS BLOOD FOOD For Pale and Thin People A combination especially valuable In the treatmeul o; Iron diseases when: their origin ll traceable to an Im- povorlsbed condition of (h, blood. One of the greatest remedies 1n the treatment o1’ Rheum. tlsm For ‘those who have lost tbcll- appetite Mu Blood Food wtll prove the restorative. MACS HAIR RESTORER It will restore gray bah- to llr original color. An excellent but: food tnntn; lip I-lld lnv1¢oratln|_ all the glands, blood vessels and nerve: ol 1h; but: and scalp, thus produclng a rlch and abundant growth of bulr. Promoter new growth where the halr 1n falling and ls re- markably useful In preventing dandruff. Get a Bottle today- Prlce 60c. THE 2 MA Co‘ Great George Street Mall Orders Promptly Attended to. I“ rlptlom a Specialty their God for the day the flery ser- pent 1.1 removed from their midst. Do not be led away with refer- ence to the Quebec lav‘. tespace does t 1t to “PM ‘md ‘ib-lecl’ ‘if m5 em‘ Zipofigiliie pgiseslng tlirgughméum: wlle organ o Prohibition that even by ‘ram gum“ 1t p, say that on “he Tfmwml’? Wdemmn W“ two occuslons the railway coach I “iml-"d- was travelling 1n, through the use It held l 11.108711! with the Gov- of llquor on the part of several trav- emment on Friday last "to ascer- ellers, was made, to say the least, taln the Government's attitude on an unflt place for either lady or the temperance question." as the gentleman. Upon speaking to the Putrlot expresses ll. 'I‘he Patrlot no conductor about the aflulr, he sald. doubt knows. It; editor ls one of “Our orders are to tolerate lt as the "faithful" (l) While ostensibly 10m; as they do not become too the Federation brought to the at- Y°WdY-" "T°0 Ywd!" "We- ll 1°" tension o; ghe govgmmen; some to the dlscretlon- of a. slngle 1n- matters of which lt made complaint dlvldlml- W0"!!! Y0" V010 101' m" in the admmmfraflon o; the l“, condition on Prince Edward Island’! and some condltlons with which Referring to the Quebec plan. On the Federation was dissatisfied, its Sept 6' 1933' a Masaachuset 1°53‘ real object. as the Patrlot informs latlve committee, which had been sent to Canada to lnvestlgate the w“ the Gowmment,‘ "nzuhlde" on celebrated Quebec Liquor Ooutrol the temperance question. W8: the Govemment for or agafnst Pro- plan, reported back, "This plan ls a failure, 1t fosters bootleggers." I hereby declare my rnotlve for hlbltlon? The answer of the Gov- can?!“ on t0 the be“ o’ my amp ernrnent as also reported 1n the lty a temperance educational pro- gramme, and for ndvocat for requests‘ would reoelve "most Bef- more stringent enforcement of tho four consideration." prohibition law. The excezslve use The Fbdsrlllmfs "request" (for of mtoxlcatlng llquor 1s breaklng information obviously.) will receive down the moral and social stru-ture “most serious consideration," uns- of our clvlllzatlon. Children as were Messrs. Came-bell and lbepeze. young as eight years of age have Clearly the Fekrutlon 1s left to do been found drunk on our streets its own guessing carrying liquor. o While the redmuon speculates Save the child and thereby boost over the Government's “attltudfl $110 mini Swfllllwl- Th8?- ll m! perhaps I may be permlttgd la m. motive. It ts your responstblllty as other letter to refer w the “brlef” "s" I! mim- whlch the Federation subrnltted to the Government. I u-ru Sir, etc. W. l. BENTLEY rnorrmmon BIL-If the readers of the nudi- ulvram T0 SMELT nsuunnun ale-there 1s plenty of talk about I am, Slr, etc, C. WATTBBWORTI Educational Sedy. ‘Temperance Ibdontlou. fairness to our fishermen but. not erous letters appearing 1n these ool- “n umns were assured of the motlveb l‘ Wm '° t“ "mm u“ mmmwu‘ m“ by “mud “ma!” opmlom treatment of smelt flsberlea 1n thla and diverse policies, I am sure that much more Interest. would be amus- DB8. The loss to smelt flaben, who are deserving and mostly 1n great need. $533’ ggglm’ ‘Qfmfgflggg may well mount lnto hundreds of be “wed w ‘ ‘nd thOUBlDdl Of dOl-IIPB DQOQUIO OI "IO more satisfactory and. handicaps which they suffu- under. m m. m,“ w“. I h: o“, h“ and not applied to any other part to be lmpreuud wlth u» atuoerlty °' °'““"" of a writer over a "pen-name." Today No. 2 smelt: are quotable 1n New York at 4c. to 5e. per pound. Efi..‘;'l§’.f'..‘.'.°..‘&'t"°'l‘l".t.l'3 811;; wgegmlcgh-pl-lgge ugh able moral or soelul couv ctlon 1n °° ‘m n ‘a ‘m’ ° the matter. eostof carrllle uly z ethod b!’ I riatluu o an e m o ‘ napo on. ‘gnfigglrlvfligtféfiffintgguéhitt ‘is; ls about. 45in per lb. They appear monled Interests while the other 1s tfirtgfng?vfl m ‘enfbwum m“ w fighting the battle for the common '7' good. "Oltlleu" ma, "I wonder 1f this argument. would appeal to Mr. gifiyuw" “mm (“k rfihpuiifv nsi°nttégg tance by express, wlth lower cost, On the mainland the strippers are toroars. booueum m“. mm money m and an elternatlve of shipment by he pocket of the average cftlzen." wonder 1f anyone would be Inter- own experience as an officer deal- ln: with ooudltloru under prohibi- fles the ststlstfcs. Burst the dun a!‘ legal rlquornppdfi tn Mmulde e people w strung m than tmpllcstlons, that there wom be more money 1n the pocket of the avgpn oltllonl . tb flllrd totbe records of al"..":.r..;'°*....,..."'"" mum *- e with the unknown In the lute i. i l A- Personal Effects Policy- . Is a broad form of Tourist Baggage Insurance- Poople going to Florida, Bermuda, Welt Indies. California, or on World Cruises, should secure a policy. lnaurlag against loll of baggage and va aablo articles of clothing. ‘Alla a lldrlvfllll accident pulley which can be obtelned at a very moderate colt We represent well u..." strong Compnnlel giving a worldwide-service. llyllllplallfllg, (:11, uulrrn Established um » mm. use-i sum the road. of many tons of smelts, otherwllu have‘ to pay the cost and suffer the say tn this? of Breadalbane 1s about to u! 50,000 acres of his lI-nd 1n the Dal- melly district. 1a a further remind- er or the way m which the m“ estates are betng broken up. restored to the 7th Igrl was reported to be e eat landowner 1n Scotland. holdlnl 487,696 acres. Th, been greatly reduced. for lest Y0" the pm 150,000 acresiof sporting rrwnd- W’ the exlsttn: estate extends to well over a quarter of n rntlllon acres- lmu with the Dllmelly landl. ll befng retalned. It stands 0n 100W ground where the OfOhY Md 3"“ flow ma» mun Awe. and» “Wk m; to tradltlon, lt was built by t-lw wlfe of su- Golln oampbsll- 101"" , der- of the family of Bream-ll!!!"- whllst he wla absent on u. 6111M: to Palestine. Now a roofless ruin. 1 u oherlabed us one of the srwd- "’ °‘ “Eitlllif-lii‘ 53”“ .35.- i? Wolhm m9 call the lines of wordswrlh ‘"1" tan after seeing the rulns ln 19°3- commencing:- Ber net. port Alsatian and w" her tlny home and lflfden- M's" If; Mulch advertised for a r1006 h° for the dot. wuma Mflmlrull. m. boy all"! the dog have become fast trifli- fretght, which we have not got, on- cept under perll of a nlne days m The immense New Bruurwllt fisheries can ship 1n car lots, wbllt our limited arena cannot. I KIWI good and marketable, allowed to p to waste, or be converted into for feed, purely for want of transporta- tlon facilities which other PPOVWI enjoy, but 1n which our flshermen penalty. What has our Board of ‘made in I am. Str, etc, ONE WHO KNOW! Kilchurn Castle (Edlnburgb Scotsman) The announcement that the PM when the tltle o.’ Marquis W" holding hlLs no! s 14ml Bmadalbane sold Klloburn Out-lo. which ls 8M0‘ “Ohlld of the Youd-throeted "l"! the mountain streflm Roars 1n thy item-ins: but l“ hour of rest n com.’ mg mo“ “l; sllent l3 thy age." non ouwonows HOME varroouvm, m. BAG-Pd Greet Dane, growths $00 ""5" o: the e2 persons who respond“ she finally selected Ill-Wild‘ _, _ 1 Phones n1 lltd to. s (fharlottetown