i i i r A ponsiderbtimi the hard work and the n bumps matter ' APRIL 2, 1921i - A Lesson . Personal. Hygicnc ' . This is the advice of leading doctors: “Discardmakeshift \ sanitary napkins- donh: risk good health.” M ANY mental and physi- cal’ troubles of women may be traced to inadequate sanitary protection. Peace- - of mind, physical comfort, can only come through using proper sanitary napkins. Kotex is advised unanimously by modern doctors. It is most comfortable to wear, it fits like a garment. Cellucotton absor- bent wadding is the perfect ab- sorbent for this purpose. And f it deodorizes by a special process. K Kotex is easy to adjust, t9 fit individual needs. And easy to dispose of — follow direc- tions in each package. Get it without hesitancy at any drug, dry goods oi; departmental store. i MADE IN CANADA KOT€X. WE no NOT SAY 3 C r0 wn Ted Is the best Tea you can buy. ' ' . ‘ We leave that to you to say when you try it._.f- 1pm PUBLIC FORUM ‘q-Continuegm page 4- hav; whispered in the ears of some of the women of our Women's Insti- tutes, to pass around petitions throughout the length and breadth of the province, asking the Govern- mentlto build a sanitarium, promis- ing them what assistance they coul-l ‘give towards the upkeep of the same? ‘Is it iwue that this same Saunders aggregation seem to have plenty money to vote towards the buildlns and equipping of a sanitsrium, to ‘replace the one which ,they threw put of their hands a few years llo. ‘but no; one dollar to add to the Ply ‘of oufi hardworking, teachers, now paid ‘e lowest salary of any class o! teflhers in any of the provinces of Gahada. never taking info their great expense every one of those teachers have to undertake before tiny-are qualified to teach in a. pub- lic school in this Province? Surely there is a. time of reckon- ing drawing near, when the Saunders aggregation will be at the mercy 91 those teachers. their fathers, moth- ers,_sisters. brothers and others in- terested in them, besides all the other taxpayers who will be oflfiflfll by this aaflltbflllmt‘ r proposi- tion. The electors are anxiously wait- ing for this opportunity- ' I am, Sir, Ste-n TAXPAYER Baldwin's Road. - . ‘ (Patriot please w?!) ; - ans-r scaaror raraa Sin-The declsio . of the teacher! of this Province to discontinue It the and of the Nut!“ mmlh- “n!” mated their demand for In I m‘ crease of salary. is ‘evidence among other things. that they regard 9161' vrri agreements very "dbl-ly- Ooxiflnets of any kind. whether writ- mpor verbal, are recorded by J“ honey-ab“ persons as binding and AMI in this relNct what W" known‘ u "A scrap of Raver." l"? of history- Th‘ agreement snteredlnto between, ti" ' ‘and uirboud- of school a ‘um m pfll as follows: l \ .flgdheg . agreesdlilielltl! and fflthfully m teat: and conduct l W”!!! ti." "it! .4!ll'.l°.l~. 4"”! bangs oaaooluhinu u IM filth A genie of duty. mu excusable only said district, and the days upon which the teacher shall be required or permitted by law s. by the regula- tions of the said Board of Educa- tion to close the said school. 6'This agreement shall continue in effect for the school year, pro- vided either party thereto shall be at liberty w- determine the agree- ment by giving to the-other party. three months notice at anytime. The terms of this agreement, as here set forth, and the obligations involved. are clear and indisputable, and it may well be asked, why" the teachers signed such an agreement, iffree to break it. at their own sweet will and pleasure. How‘ many school boards have re- ceived the three months notice in writing as here provided for; antl- what would be the result if school boards attempted to summ ily end their enzogement with teachers, with out first complying with the require- ments of the law. Needless to say the attempt would place them in o very serious position, as they would speedily find to their cost. An agree- ment is binding on all parties _to,it;_ and in this case, as much so on the teachers, as on those who employ them. Whatever the merits of their case may be as embodied in their re- cent demands, the course adopted by the teachers in- thus summarily and without due legal notice breaking their contracts, -is to any the least. very ill advised. By this act they have put themselves clearly and unequi- vocally in the wrong’; and wiildoubt- less forfeit the sympathy of many who might otherwise be inclined to support their claims. Public opinion has always been a powerful factor in determining such matters, but ithas never given- its sanction to flagrant b ches of eon- tract, that violate the rules ‘of good faitln-an example of this is to be fpung in largo industrial establish- ments. wherework lapel-formed by union labor, and" thereto of wage! and the terms of employment. MM bywritten nafiehiiut. from mi- to year, ‘the attempt by either ‘port! W brook such an agreement by “strike gr otherwise. has invariablyibeen disastrous ‘those attempting it Aiidpublio. opinion m. been invar- iablysgtlnst it. _And>it it well that such is theoueifor the well bolnl if not the very existence of new And the wholnlh breach o‘; this ed intention ofthetoachers of thl-l provisos; reflects‘ but little credit on, their judgmontgtiil ion an‘ their m m. ‘young! u their youthfulnels audiuuptrunomy" ; 'nuttlsteswiiiflndlatlueno.u armaments-minority.- ‘ more than "mere scraps of paper." ’ to let the country know how much and the lnvlollbil"! °l '°°"""°- “ab: desiro to hide the truth from the people. Only under ‘Liberal ‘manipulation of public "accounts has there been weiiestabllshideodeasthtannolmo~ isenthat agreements are something ,. _ I am. Sir, etc. ' _ ' v "FAIBPLAY THE FINANCIAL PIE Blrr-“When the pie was opened, the blrdsbesan to sine" In that old "i111"! Yhyme it was after the birds were roasted that they began to 5m; but the Saunders financiers are singing in anticipation qr the mut- 1118. tolling time" by the forelock so to speak. They know it is coming lust as‘ surely as any guilty culprit KIIOWI that the law is on his track. That is why there is no External Audit. Offenders are not prone to giving evidence against themselves and, per law. sometimes they are not compelled to. Therefore they say to the Legislature and to the peop1e,_ we give. the balance it is not "in the public interest," or the Govern- ment's interest to let you see. And there sre reasons. About one million dollars of money have been borrowed under statutes which pro- vide that sinking funds for repay- ment shall be set aside out, 01 the Consolidated or ordinary revenues of the Province. In the statement of ordinary expenditure as published in the Patriot (I have not seen the official Blue Book) there is not one dollar charged up as having been set aside for this purpose. An external audit would tell Just how much this would add to_the_deflclt if it were included, as it should be, in the year's expenditure. This is exclusive of highway debt ‘which is provided for from motor vehicle revenues. ' 1n other years it was the custom of unpaid bills were carried over and how much of the liability b: the year was carried in government pig- ec-n-hole apartments. This the ex- ternal audit would reveah-but this year those r‘ eon-holes must not be disturbed, it is “not in the public interest." ‘ The accounts, as published, show less money expended in some de- partments than that voted in the "estimates. It looks fishy. For in- stance in "legislative grants," a re- duction is shown. Have the orphan- ages and charities in the generosity of their souls declined to accept the proffered gifts-or is it that they are carried over,. unpaid " The same may. apply to Falcon- wood where $16,314 less was paid out than in 1927. Did the inmates eat less. were they fed on cheaper fond. were the salaries cut (unusual und- er Liberal patronage) or has butter declined in price under New Zsaiand influence? Or is the meat and but- ter and eggs and salaries in the list of unpaid accounts, kept in holy preservation from the ruthless searchings of an external audit? Let us hope that the Opposition will be able to drag some of those hidden mysteries from their sombre places of hiding. I am, Sir, etc... BEARCIILIGHT EXTERNAL AUDITS the Saunders Government», out of the financial ditch the Patriot discours- es on Auditors in general, and Ex- ternal Auditors in particular. It at- tempts to relate history, butcareful- ly avoiding details. It has overlook- ed the retroactive force of its own argument. 5 innocently it says,-"A Conserva- tive Government had been in power twelve years“ previously (to Mr. Fred Peiers) with an auditor under its own‘ contain]; in no respect respon- ulble‘ to anyone except the govtrn- ment. that appointed film." Then it proceeds to sayy-"Mr. Peters and his successors ‘continued for twenty years utbfled with the work of tho » Pmvfneill Audikri." g , 0f course ‘those Llberalgovem- monts‘ were "satisfied" with the work of - the Provincial Auditor,»- pointed by themselves from the. Por- tisana of their own camp and ‘hinder its own control." ‘Theywere satis- fied for more reasons than this. It was a period. of Jncreasing debt. continued and appalling deficits, yearly incrotsfng taxation and finan- cial Jugglery to conceal the real stats of theflnencu from the peo- ple. That=is why-theywsre satisfied with audits wholly ."under.its own control." i‘ ' ' . l . -When Premier: Msthieaon" ‘took charge he‘ ibstitutedl an. absolutely msendentq audit. -_conducted by en of.th_e highest repute-end that‘ system 'was i followed without virfalion byevory Conservative pre- inier, every year from limmp to the present. They had‘ neither cause . . a‘....‘..'.. "-..',..='..~ an.‘ .4. udtlu . aiflffllflfldilflfiilolltfiiltobitl~_ This much o1 the public accounts ‘ Slfr-Ifl a labored attempt to pull l _ (p? “cimatorrarowu mmnnrw x 4 I Lux eve: coast to coast, investigations show, use Luxl LOUISE BROOKS, BEAUTIFUL FILM Sraa, wears this silk lounging suit, typical of pretty clothes shown in her pictuics. "I learned by experience," she says,—‘ zccps that new look in clothes." ... _. That is whywomen y.vhcre-—8 out of l0 in representative homes in cities from ovely lothes of p, .. MQVieS Y wonderful Million-Dollar j" ‘ that only And ev_ Pas . struts. “émirabas i‘ c t. .11, Ramsey i... L... / cry" New York Musical Show -l f Famous dressmakers - - Buyers for great r) department stores also - l- “Tlre original loveliness of our clothes can actually Le Re-Newed again and again—and ‘they last twice as long-through tile use ofLux.” VERY WOMAN knows how hard it is to keep pretty clothes like new in spite of everyday wear. Then" imagine the problem of the movics—-—with beautiful clothes that must look brilliantly‘ new through’ the hard - wear of production. ' i. Now the studioshavg ‘solved this proBlern-Pevery woman’s very own problem-after experiments with many - different cleansing methods and many dificrerit soaps. And they .fin_d_that: “Lux actually Rc-News, ‘again _ and again, the original beauty of fabrics . . . Andwith I Lux, lovely clothes-whether sturdy or sheer—la'st more than twice as long.” ‘ Now every great studio in Hollywood uses Lux-—t0 double the life of fabrics! Simply follow their rule—and you, too, can keep clothes actually like new far, far longer! “WE CAN'T AFFORD TO RlSK USING ANYTHING BUT LUX," . says Adrian, costume director of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. “It is a matter of dollars and cents with us! We find Lux keeps clothes like new through‘ months of production-so they can be re-crcated into new costumes. Naturally, we insist 0n Lux." Why docs Lux keep things new _ 80 much longer? Because only the purest materials known . . . and a ; special costly process . . . are used ‘ in ‘its making! Lux contains no harmful alkali-as many soaps do, whether flakes, chips or cakes- and with Lux there is no rubbing to weaken and shrink. coat $1.00 a box." ~ 1.... - any variation from this straighifor- Lsrcd Accouniant from the maln- Wlrd GOUFBB- In 1930 tllfly Willi/Gd to ,land. What a contrast with that of fake a big deficit against their Csn- ' the Saunders Government employ- servntlve predecessors. No hon:st'ing a partisan Liberal worker in banker could be induced to so dis- ihis n15; Audit, and [his year dodging hollorflble 8n eel-loll. and S0. to Bfi- the outside audit altogether to avoid compllsh this, ihe External Auditgts disclosures? was dispensed with. This year, be-l cause their own accounts will not, bear scrutiny-they avoid an Exter-i nal Audit. i The Patriot, in ifs excuse makingni claims that.—-"Durlng the past six-i I am, Sir, etc. ACCOUNTANT PREVENTING T. B. ETC. ' Sir.--".Ah ounce of prevention is teen years, the auditor has been ln- [ivorth one pound of cure.“ dependent of government ..influencci I thought of this old saying while and control." If so, who made it so? i listening to a conversation concern- It was the Conservative Premieriing the proposed Sanitarium for T. Mathieson who passed legislationin, patients. ' making the Auditor only responsible! An institution of this kind would to parliamentfand not removeableibzi a real blessing: but it would be from office except by atuzo-thirdsln szill greater blessing ifhaif of vote of the Legislature. iihose who have T. B. had been able But hbre again, in order to break ‘ to avoid contracting it. down this independence. and to de-i For years I have lived in board- siroy this safeguard against flna ;ing houses and the iresuits of my clabnunipulatlon. at lilo flrstjesq Iobsorvatlona may be a little help to elon of the Saunders‘ legislature, an 5 those who are worrying against this aitempt was inade to wipe this pro- ‘dread disease. faction from tho statute to make the.’ In my first boarding house. we Auditor's term of office "During ‘had a T. B. He ale with us and oft- pleasure," so that he would be liable ien took severe flts of coughing at to dismissal at any moment. This table. wll a bareiaced attempt m bring The student who sat next him has him "under the control‘ ‘of the Gov- ‘since dHVBlWQd U!!! 5W"?- 511d ernmentpand though the at‘ , ‘small wonder. u the sick man's proved abortive -it was a brood hint dishes were washed in ordinary Wlfm to‘ the Auditor as to what the gov- water with ours and the cups were Immont woilldldo If balance sheets often chipped. became ted exaggerating, Well, when the sick man left, his Wlltohhfifiill stewm wok chargefllllofl. hnvyqnfltl. etc. Wm but m gig-ism; m; .4154", h, amid"- |back on the’ bed and not as rnuch as ymegggdqngm gmplqgq. Qh_Q[-""4—\l1 ready for the next board- MUSICAL SHOWS like the gorgeous “Rosalie" stoning Marilyn Miller (above), all use Lux to double the life of stockings! They i: say, “We would useLux even if it underthings mannequins - Frances ' Greatest groups of expert-s ever consulted " ‘A _. -. .-* . “LUX DOUBLES THE LIFE OF FINE FABRICS" FAMOUS DRESSMAKERS of New York insist upon Lua: for above glimpse of the salon of CWW- _ . Best. 92% and stockings worn by -— as illustrated in the Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto crl ' My next boarding house looked: nice and clean, and all went well for, three years, when I left upon learn-f ing that three persons had died of‘, ‘cancer and three of T. B. in the‘ house. I also learned that three, young people who had boarded there ‘. at various times, had developed '11; while another had escaped with tu- bercular glands. Old cushions, mats. carpeis. etc., that had been in use while the house was full of disease -were still there. I found an old at- omlzer in a bureau drawer, and tho lady of the house mildly remarked: "That is -—-'s atomizer, just as she left it ' <. Then again, I knew a chap who came home from N. Y. in the last biages of T. l3. Arriving in Charlot- tetown. he decidbdto rest for a week before going to his home in the western part of the Island. would you have liked to have tak- en his room in that hotel Ind B1999 on his pillows just as he left them? Of course not. Yet somebody did that? ' Then there are people who hoard up old sofa pillows, etc. lust be- cause they were last used. or were the work of some loved one who he's passed on after a hopeless fight against T. B. Again. ,0 personified of can- B., and died shortly after leaving. c |I| DEPARTMENT BUYERS of these experts interviewed in 112 leading stores -—- insist on Lux for their own things. (Above) Buyer of imported sweaters for and Co., Fifth Ave. 419$ Some medical men will tell you They would require to see-it done. that you can only contract these diseases in certain way5—'W°ll WW5 all right, still, we know its mlginj; hard to find a doctor who can curc you when you do get them. I don't know a doctor who would let his own child wear clothes belonging to a person who had died of cancer, T. B. The greatest specialist on the con- tinent, speaking to a friend of mine about cancerladmitted that he knew very little about it as yet- 50 it 15 lust as well to take no chances. Fur- niture belonging to a person who had T. B. for ten years was offered for sale right. in this town. As long as people are slack about those Qings. we need not wonder why we have T. B. and Cancer. '1 believe doctors should see to 1i that everything used by a person who has died from any of these ‘iseases. be burned at once. cer, T. B.,or worse. and their clothes are bundled up and given to the enough torture without having death bandedouttoflnmintbiswq.‘ poor. Goaziness knows the poor have p As good as Nonstick sum kolisl " Noun-l Llnnel. Team ,.~onsuch Stove Polish * Liquid and PJQYQ \ otherwise-it would be sprinkled with a. little carbolic ‘solution, and kepl, given away or put on the dump to be salvaged by the very poor as happened in one case that! know of.‘ ' I In closing, I must say that Char- fltttetown has far too manytrees. I love trees personally. but I know oi houses when the inmates never have a ray of sunlight in their homes except in winter. ‘ ‘_ I A mother whovis tied to the house with small children would feel j ioi healthier and happier if siiecmild “let a little sunshine in." Iledlcll men tell us there is a curative pow- or in the sun's rays, so the cits health department would do well "t! look around and cut down or this cut trees that are shutting out too much light. I am, Sir,- etc., Mud: la Canals 0' 7 Q-W fit