4K7 u;- .._-.__-_,g -c_._..._...j_.._!»._.; 1- . . , r 'rs::_"* Save your hands and lessen your house - clean. ing work by allvays using 61d The so ft, flat, flaky. particles cover lots ul’ sur- incc and erase the dirt lv".h little of- fllrt. and ensure Iwaltllful clean- lincezs. wolf‘- rllughen or red- dcn ille hands. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll. MADE IN CANADA . y,’ w“ ~~‘:ll\\\\.. ml.» = . . .5 hi0 ulRll,-awlri-9l=-A¢l llf Wllllllll IS n unl null Allsorlllne .Ir. enables you to shut the door quickly. ' The skin is Nature's own protection lgainst germs. When it is bruised, broken or cut, that protection is With- drawn. The (lPOf is open. As quickly u possible .\'.'llurc closcs it by iornling ‘fiat we lnll a slinll and rcnllcrs you l-Iwfllilllfbi)’ sale against infection- Bul. this hull- sometimes takes days to form and until it has fully sealed the wound. even until the wound hsl thoroughly healed again you must fur- nigh llll: required rotection yourself. A il.-w drops of Xbstlrbine Jr. in the water lull give you an antise tic wash that will kill all possibility o infection and help nature to heal the wound. As well as being aivery powerful ermicide, ‘bsorllinc _lr. will draw out! e inflam- mation and bring instant relief. Absorbine Jr. is antiseptic, germicide and lininlent in one container-handy to kccp always in the house; easy to carry around ii you travcl._ " $1.25 at your druggllfl “SAVE THE FOREST" Be sure your match is out before you throw it away. Matches have heads but they calftthink. Do it for them. i.‘ "i Carters Seeds l ‘Grow About two hundred Mer- chants on Prince Edward ls- Iand sell Carters Seeds. If you cannot get what seeds you want from them send to U8 I .57" {Lila Our Seeds and Seed Grain are tested at Ottawa for pur- H ity and germination. _ i No. 1 Q Ask for Carters .“Nlokel" Timothy No. 1 Mammotif Clover. “Quuen" "Rose" Alsike Clover. Nol 1 N0, 1 Early Red Clover. No. i Seed Wheat, Seed Oats, Barley, Field Peas, Vet- ehes. Fodder Corn, Buck- ‘. wheat and a iull llnc of Vegetable and Flower Seeds, _und Field Seeds, Shallots, Onion Sate, Potato i Onions i Early Seed Potatoes, Dahlia and Gludioil Bulbs. c. Don't neglect the Lawn nd Gran Plots, ule eur "Evergreen" Lawn Oran and Lawn Fertilizer, Garter & c... Limited Sulllmon to" the people of‘ “Willi llllillllllllllllllllllll ll , 0P furl. that those were the years ‘to see that that liquor does noi ‘ l think if the medical profession - tinn put up to them, and if tllcj. a fen? n mun who uuys he has a lbsd cough hall the ltime, s dollar. or, as the flee is properly (Continued From Page 9) Prohibition Commission was ll it. Commission of c rgyrnen of the Province. and th ublic records will that those ciergymen must first years, when you would natur ally think that there have been too much liquor sold. Hut at any rule, we linll lll~.\'l. lwu years thl-rl- was u 4ll‘(‘lll' ell izlllng 011' in TOVtH-lllfi. fzom $530.- mlll to $23,000. Ltllll linully to $13.- 000. 'l‘lll_- Lcudcr (ll till: (Jppol-‘iliun liill not attempt to explnin tha; ill said hl- cnullln‘t. 0t course, l linlft knowmthc explanation l-itlll-l lull l would like vl-ry lunch u. knllw it. There is one tiling l <lll know: that since the present Pro ,hib|t-..on Commission took over thl [managemenb during the past yea: even. they were able to avc $12,006 or $13,000 in expens s, over the management of the previous Com mission. We might llnvl- hnd lllu. rl-lellul- during tlll- Ins: tllrl-c grcnls 0t Lilli-rill lllllillllifiiri! tilln, or during the wilull- lune zlll-g wl-rl- ill powl-r, hnd the szlulc cl-lnl only lll‘\‘ll exercised. l llu not know wlletllcl‘ \'\'(‘l'_\'llll- ugh-vs willl tile pulicy lit" llll: lul- l'lllllllllSSlilll, Ul‘ sunll- lll till-m. All lrllfil. lllnt not onl- llllllur of rl-vl-nu» Slllitllli llitVO bl-l-n ulnlll- llnl n! liquor. but W4“. know. us n lnnill-l which brought the bootlegger and moonshiner into prominence in thlS Province, which established them and gave them a firm foot» hold. 'l‘lll-y are n lll-uplerulw llll-ll lulu. llllw. nnd u good lnzlny pl-upl- lwill l.-ll you that if liquor is going Ito be sold it is better to have ll .come through vendors where there will be some guarantee-Wis to it- dllality and purity, rather thar ‘have those bootleggers plying their lneiarlous trade throughout the Pro -vince and getting rich, and with r system so perfected that wher. ,caug t and convicted and put oui ‘in jail to serve their terms, they .have an alternate ready to carry Ion in their places. " lCvt-l-y :lll.li't.l\’0l' was mzldl- illll‘ fill; lll.- 1.l.~:l yl-llr to curry llut lll ‘provisions m‘ iilt‘ Prullillliull .\cl We kllllw our Prosl-l-utnrs. 'l‘lll fl..~Lll|l.-l' ul‘ llll- Opposition is qllill , 4h! in snyillf: that they are uncr- igl-tlr unll zealous, trying zllxvuys Ill ,lln their duty. There were more ‘prosecutions pushed to convictions last year than ever before; there were more cases tried and I thinl- it was a fair comparison which the Minister of Agriculture presented Irecord of the police court for the city of Charlottetown and proved that the convictions for drunken ness were less last year than any year in the history of the city, o'- which there is any record... (Al) llliillfitk) Where the Loop Hole ls. l will tell the Leader of the Opposition where the loop hole in our Prohibition Law is,‘ and that 'ls that too much "liquor is allowed to come into the Island. it is the duty of the Dominion Government come here. If that stuff could be swiped we would be much better off. We all admit tllul there ll m0 much slut! coming in and toll nluch sold outside 0t the vcdors. S0 ll-ll‘ as doctors‘ prescriptions urc cuncerncdf there has been n grout deal of ridiculo- and critlcisn cast on my profession ever sine: this Act was put on the statull bunks. Sonlo of .ll ma) bl? just probably, but vcr; nlllcll of it is unjust. Till doctors ucvcr asked to be the clls tolllnns of tllc prescription busi IIPSH 0i‘ the Prohibition Comnlls slull. They were llcvcr consulted hnll been consultl-d and the sugglrs (‘Ollltl have seen all the trouble-an: inconvenience that we have ha: from the time that Act. was lnstl lull-ll until tllc present — peopll l-oullng lnlo your ofllcl.» at nll time.- lll‘ lllc day nnd night, culling you up on lllc telephone. sending you written nolcn, messengers, ulternu tivl-n, nnd so (ill »— l llllnk l knovl wllni. tile mply of the Illltilllfill pin fl-nslnn would be had this llcel proposed to them. lin you tlllnll that the ‘i608 we receive from lllzll suurw- nrc worth lili.‘ trouble? in you think it ls not flllr to cbalrgl When a lman comes int. ynnrllflllrc nnd you talk to hllll for rl ll-w nlinnics nnd discover at Ills! thn wlln-t be wllnts is n prescription to. liquor, nnd you write the order Yllll really spend lmore time than ol nnd wants something for lt. You can wrlto a cough prescription lll and be will not sol nnyllllng to you if you charge hllr sot down. two dollars for such z service. If a man has lndlgestlot and you write him a prescription nnd chargers dollar. he will not so) anything. But the man who comw ln and talks for s few minutes: says hs ls elck, lbut rlocsn't,_wlsl~ to give his symptoms on_t delifllnllo ly as the other moor-you mull pry them out of hlm-—snd wind.- np by saying that lle wants a pre scrlptlon. and you give it to him: in that not worth anything? Should the doctor be asked to do all t at llllN. llll. llcllll stalls llPPilSlllllN lEAlJEll operation, who were in chargc of blamed- tell you how much lliquor was sold in those two years under the very same system much last year, all we can say is. got a great deal too much in th= lll ll during the first year the Liberals were in power they were able 1° get from the same source $51-9°°.; and during the next year, nearly‘ $50,000; but lhllflnlnl. 10:1 fvflll" [WU U} \ to this House when he showed the ‘wm f°rT4° 9" mm lmwgr °"' ‘/ ‘r ‘U- ‘an uflicc call; and here you are tlems. because they ‘l don't should be Take it out oi our hands n, wag ufldGr the control of a tomorrow-we don't want lt—flfld(,p;)slli0n, however. suggests closing the best known put it into th Aland: of someone - llelll ng with ale put into n see why the ,at class. doctors c else. ll put bably the doctor knows he slluulllu now in °perat|°n_ |f ya" yufinl] t: get Olllfi. ‘yell? llelfisneuilusixd Hill; :5 INF-teal], toiy-etyuibul an 511i‘; selves upon the ma ler reflect upon the feceipQ‘ o a; pa any slmp Iva n; o .ona ~ampa gn s nec ss P H T A i I year you will also reflreclt fin htge IiOiIOTLT Oiltfllllgalllzllolhitllcpgffiin0llg thunllghgou! Vltyflilnrgéllaci- m 218:: The a ax II n management of the w 0e r0 _ I‘ 11111 l4’ >1 ; V l D6090 09 l- 0" l l0l1 I ¢ h h m ~| t i.“ gncepflom And 1f w; got no can. -\ _' m l" ' ~' "w lc e pro em our em ' sl clpl-rillllcsnll‘ this kind; nul u-nnl lilu . hllnilll ls Hi nil. would not Education ut-lcrnoon st-s. on, lion. Dr. lllillzln lllXl look up the subjl-l-l u zl-r before the (lnverlllul-nt. m be 0r.- ully llllwlnnu-nl. 'l‘lle Leirle \ln".'lliillll tinvelnnll-nt ill 1910 lln. .llll'tly "plnyl-li" w.lll our ullllczl tlllill prr/hlclll. .0, they at least played n cllucntlonnl my Lill- salaries. 575.000 till-ll‘ lllX ul lcall-llcl s Lilli. l)l~..\'.\'l:$: \\'l: llcvcl‘ snlll il. HUN. Uli. .\lL'.\lll.L.\.\'I Yun lllli liy ll; ll in no u... Ill contradict- .n_.; il now. ll .s llllSilllliriy true. ..\ppl:l-l ' ) Jill, lJl-JNNIS: l .:.~l~.~ ll! u puin; .l ulllcl‘. \\l- didn't .;l' il. l 'l'lll-. z~ll'l<.‘.»\l\'l-.ltz 'l'lll- lllm. lnl-ul- ... l’ lo. (.ll.‘il'lUl.lt'lll'lV|l llns lb..- llllllr, .lllll lll- ll.l.s' lllzllll‘ n rllilil nlclll. lull uust ncll-pl llll- lllnl. gl-ntlc-nlunfl-l .lnll~nll:nl. llllllULlfsUll npplausc.) lll).\'_ lllt. .Vll-.\lll.l..-\.\.; 'l‘ll.ll nus Hit‘ 0| lilln two l‘ll'l nll planks l_ii Jlal [llllt lncllul-ll slllllril-s tu til" zl-liclll-rs willluul at cl-ul ul illitli- lullnl taxes.‘ 'lllc utllcr was n (ll-- JilllL‘ lilillll lll‘ lbu "lnlcrnzliscllclnu" prnpuscd by llll- .~\..s.-ll;lnll Liuvl-rn ~ .nlul, llll- good llnlll policy. Those he Arsenault Government, that were going to ruin this Provmce. 0y the Liberal candidates, the Lib-l .ral orators, the Liberal press,andl by everyone who had anything tol Jo wit the electnon of 1919 on the ..ibel side; every one of them mthout exception and it C-ANNLYI‘ JE -C()N'l‘lt.\l)l("l‘l§l). UPON |'lll)Sl<. TWU l'l..\\.\'l(S 'i‘lll-.‘i .\'().\' Tilli lil.l'JL."l'lU.\‘ Lil" 'l'll.-\'l‘ YloX-Ul. mpplnuec.) lilu just us" soon us llllf)',l7l)lllill' -ll power they luuull out as tllcy ind ulwnys dunc llllil they llzul nu urzllcl; lldt- fur the election pull- ul.ll which hnd semi-ll thcnl so .\'L'll at llll: pulls. That is all the ..ibera| party ever wanted a plat- Fllcir plnllol-lus have been llisczllli- 1d nnd lnlgllttell null lllc.r elec- lon pmlllisl-s bmllcn without nn lllcnipl ill lultillnlent. ‘Flint is .ht-ir record. The prcnlnt Lendcl" Jt’ the Olllltlillilill is one uf lhl: very .llcn who “l'zllllel'l‘ll" lllc ill-ll ’l'1lx \('l, according to ills own words .ll- suw llle necessity 0t it. be says. He was one ol‘ the mun ill- Sillifllfllllil in lcvynlg nn addition- ul $200,000 tax upon the people of ills Province, in direct contradic- .ion to their pre-election promises. 'l‘lle Lezldeuot‘ the Opposition lglTHS with the Premier lhnt we ulvc not been gutting as much "ulue lur the expenditure we are uniting ill l-ldndlition as we should. flint is a very proper remark, blll nillllllil tllnt foul" years ago. whcn .llcy sverc going in pay '$l00,il00 ldllitlonul lUl‘ education, illl ill- mensu in the expenditure in thnl lcpnltlncnt nl practically onc-lllirll —that was the time, before that noney was expended, to have ad- lpted a proper system whereby ‘hat new expenditure would give .he best results. lint instead 01' mprcvenlents thby made nlistakes. inl» 0i tllclr worst mistakes was n changing thc old systcln which lull Ill-cu in operation for mllny 'l.-.'lrs. wllcrcby n teacher COillli lUl llrnw first class salary lllllilSl-l lull-hing in a first class school. Fill-y dill away with that nnd in- ;ll-:lll of using the school unit as n llillillllfil till-y zlgrecd to pay first -lu.l.~l snlnry in ally teacher who ould gl-t n supplulncnt from llll- llslllct ul $100. it was u good hing for till: tonchl-rs. nnd l for illl: do not lilegrulllzl: lilllfll l-vcry lullnr they cnn got; but ll. wns lnur business on lllc part llf till- iovcrnnu-nt. lt was not ill the lust lnll-rtlsls 0t Education lll this ‘rovinl-n and it is a hard thing to rmlldy now. The Small School Problem. The Leader of the Opposition lays thc school with an average lttendunce of- less than flftol-u lhOUlll be closed. Thnt is a much nmc stringent statement than thr- vnn which the Premier made ln we; lro/rvnothln’? Even liq-t l ‘ maximum lee o two dollars ls charged, it ll the Nllllin- too for / p. 1 -.uunl$ the dovlm" ill ll vBryllenlla-nte ol less than fifteen. l nasty position when one of his pati- cDlS comes for u prescription; pro- lllHl-Ycchoois can be solved. havellfi “'31? lilt- llol-lurs its a bull)‘ flflllsuy that lllCTQ zlre any first class lllllllll‘ lllvavlilllllonlll-ucllcra ill schools of less than Continuing lllxl debate at tllcl Mc- l-Zllnl-nlinn. Fill‘ nlnsl inlpnrtunl mut- ll‘ lllc Opposition cluilnrli than the B"! if "lit W¢Fflcrllnlcnt less and it would l-ltst the ibmlflscllool districts less. aoard fairly and squarely with the zeople. ill presenting; illt‘ lllcll lit‘ t0 int-leased ‘flint wan.- lllrll-ll down ill llc pulls, liL‘('llll.St' ()1 lllc lWlHIllSl-S ll the Libl-l-nl lllcnlllurs lllcll in n1..." more w." do s‘, on“... ‘pm. llWll)'l-‘_l1ll$'ll@°" will the P9“ 1"“ Jlflllifillioll I-l llill‘ 111v illll'E-‘l$L‘ l" vinl-cs and other countries, espccl- w“ 4m"! by ‘he farmers and m“ all lllllhvls wnhcul increasing ully un- United Siilicél, (Olll? of ule- "e!" “Ymm- “m! m‘ Y°'“' l W" ans by one cent. 'I‘hly l-luunvll l.ll'lli‘:s‘l t-ounu-n-ll n. adopt illl.‘ mm“? '" m“ “mm "g““”‘ m ullc was vnllnkll lllllllvl‘ n1 till.’ slllall sl-llool Sysltllll) um nlnv (iltle m0" "- Th‘ nliw“ “MW” ma‘ aullliv Ill-usury w do that. with cnlllillg lllu old nlmllou l"... un- l" °""'°“°'°“’"' s"'".""""d°' M‘ .lwllt'l' “K011011131 new one of consolidation. Mnssa- berm" and the “h” mwrporatcd were the two things proposed byiml JCCOTUIHQ to the da:trlne preached-Np,“ THE QHARibhfifibwltfGUik-RDIAN speaking on the Duh address. when he said, simply. that m small echeele with an avenue qt "l" than ten or fifteen it did n0! make any material difference whe- ther they'had second clan teach- ers o!’ first class teachers. My hon. friends tried lo read into the Premier's remarks the intention on the part ol the Government loaupfl plant til-st class by second class. and second class by thzrd clslss lcachels; but that was not the ill- elation nor the purport or his statement. The Lender of the 0p " I ‘ i $5‘: rel-k Thetvwu one 0! the M: detects. one o! the wlyI b)‘ tion mounted very 1118b. We dill not believe that this Yrovlnce was getting value tor the money and we closed that School, audit lie-Lilli?" we have established Short Courses, an by [he people, upon the most important hoes, auclu as black- smlthiug. wood-wvrklns. dnlrylns and cheese-making and the com- mercial courses lll connection therewith. These Jllqter courses. we believe. will lbe as effective sud will lprorlde the technical educa- tion at a vely much less expense. However, we will leave the people o1‘ the PlOViXlUe to judge for them- utl the schools with an average at- thiuk he added-the proviso that those pupils mlfllt be taken to a ‘l larger centre. l think. in that. he lt. is on lllc floor again and l nnl b€ginnlllg‘l0 believe that we will never hear the end of this “most lair and most equitable lax," as llle Lender ul llli.‘ Opposition calls it. Why‘! Because it leached every- one, the property holder. the farm- er. and especially the younger men who owned no property, who were not lurlncrs. who ball no sluke in the country nnd who did uol other- l do not lcn 01' an average attendance. lbut llllt-le urc some ill schools DPIWQBD lien and fifteen. and there is abso- lutiy no question about ll out that lhc teachers will do better work, _ and the pupils as well, il a few of l these sulall schools can be lirbugllt Znln suitable centres. Whl-re per- . Imps five teachers are cngag...‘ now’ wise l-Juzrl-bute tpwurds the ear. 1' ;llu work could then be (lOll-J. and new” ‘if manna"? “g m? (ioverin. be“... ‘lone’ h). “"-,.e_ There ment. lllnt was vlhy it was s0 fa r. l it was nll right, l udnlll. ll that Wele u llul- statement Oi tact. but wining to an anallycle of the col- lection of that tax we find that the very class that l.t was designed chiefly to reach the young men who Jid not pay in other wayglnto the revenue of the Province-these i! did not reach at all. There ls no guinsnyinp, the fnct. Our argument would be more competition llmorlg ill(' classes. ll would cost tllc Gov- We have made several rndeuv- Iirs along llull llnc, in trying to induct» pnlenls and school lrustees to sec the benefit of consolidation. s.) llil‘ u lew have gone lnm the Stlltlllt‘; l hope tllc time is coming lllllltivlihl was Olle of tile first States to zlllllpt the slmlll sclfool systcnl. un.l one of the ilrslt to give it up. lllcrc is nlbsnlutuly no doubt but lllul [ills ls one wny whereby butter ll-slllts can be slecurelt lrunl our" lu\lil'll(llllll'l5 on Education, 'l‘lll- lllntll-r of school hunks was rl fl-lrlell to. l quill: agree w lll till‘ .l.l-;llll r of lhc Opposition tllnl it fr: n VUI'_\‘ sl-rillns question nllll til-.- towns throughout the Province dur- ing the years that tax was in operation, some $7,000 0r $8.000 was paid in on Poll Tax, while the farmers and property holders of the Prov-Inca paid $80,000. is not that conclusive cvldcnl-c as to wllu was pnylllp, tllnl tux (Applause) 'l‘llen, lull, the Poll Tux was lull lair on nccolltll 0t‘ the diiilcullyoi‘ collecting it tlom the vei-y ones it was intended t0 reucll. All ill nil. ' for doing five or elx which m; expense of that institu- wllicb seem to be very, well YGCBlVt IIGWIIESS. Ziifiil ing. lbilllf-Zt’ 0t‘ much expense nnd hard- slllp on nlnny of nur peoplc. A fl-w YP-‘lrs ago a bnrgzlln was lllfllln. with nu Ontario publishing firm to lluvl- (lllinrjn school books brought we consider that it wns N01‘ n fair lull equitable tax, nnd We do not lgree with the Lender of the Up- uosltion when ill: suys it was. Fol" lulu this Province nnd sold at u ih“'“,""“"m' we mlomified m" PM’ Inllnillluln oi‘ cost. That Wllfi in op- ple- l1 “'0 WON? elected, that as {Mun-On m, some yours bu, i, loun ill-l wc lloll an opportunity-thin lax wuulli be repealed. it lluslllecn nnllcll zll our beads: Wily didn't w appeal it right away by Order-ill- t nuzlncv lll tllnt bzlllgllin if pos- 00am“ as 5mm as we were elem“ B", i, h, a "ma, 'mom d“ all? lint tilc people who suggested mu], “m”, m get a bargain of thin. .-'ncb n tiling know very little about llillli l'l‘lll.-\Vl‘ll alter it bus lapsed me (‘arr-Vmg o" of govermuem if scl ms lllill the ('0ll‘[l‘ii(!l was allow- tn lnpslo, Ellililill/OTS are now lllrllll: mnlll: tu secure a further con» obtained. We believed that as general rent-Its were cone l-ned. the institution did not justlty its y‘ . , - , - thcy"illlhk that. we had power to i m‘ w hue mnmnml n‘ a! appcnl a ‘Statute by Ul-der-ln-Coun- fill " " lslluulll have lbl-en (lOIIll, nt the pro- |.n.-r time. We know there hnvc pbecn change-s in scllonlfllooks from lllull- tn time. ‘tlfldqliirhllpé some bl lllusc chnngcs have not been for illt‘ llcltlsr, ~ 'l".l_- sclviccs of lilo present Sup cl-lnltlndent 0t’ l£(llll'l1i.l0l’l are ill-lug, usl ll to n certain cxlcut as (Jonsull- lllyhlfillflllltPl‘, and (lbjectlon has lbl-cn taken to this by tile Lellllul lit‘ the Opposition, who says that w;- rcqnirc llle lull scrviclg of Mr. Sllnw ns Consulting Engineer. l nlllzilt nllswul‘ in this Wily, that wl lllllille lllc services of Mr. Shaw as Supel-lnlelldcrlt of Education. i0l‘ when it comes l0 choosing ‘be lwl-len the relative importance ol the two positions, so far zls l am concerned, l intend t0 lbQ on lb‘. side ol‘ Educalioll. This Govern- ment appointed .\lr. Show Chlel Superintendent of Education lbe- cans-.- we .l>cl.ev0 that lie is tht mnn ‘hunt titted in this province at the. present llme to iill the most lesponsiblc position. lllo not llllnk any very serious objection can he taken if some of ills knowledge lllltl expellence as 1m engineer can be used as consulting engineer. ll will be one way oi‘ trying to econo- mize ~21 matter which has been .])l‘(5liCliGll to us a good deal. Al least we arc going l0 snvo u big portion of one salary in that way. Technical Education. l do not know thllt l nccd refer to the comlllercial course in the Prince of Wulus College. For some yours pust considerable criticism has been levelled hi llli’ currlculunl oi‘ the College. Probably a good deal o! that criticism when analyz~ ed and qsunllcd to lls logical cun- l-luslon has very lllllc behind it; but lllerc was one pulnt an which we tell that Prlncc or Wulcs Col- llege was n1 u llisulllzllltnge—ill not lluvlng ll commercial] course. Olller normal aclluols nnd universities of u like standing in other, Provinces Lhroughmlt lthe llnnllnlon have lllusu commercial courses nnd i wlul in ordcr to glvll u chance to lllc students coming from all over lllls Province tllnt n start has lbgen nlalle in giving tllc course here. A great many-students coming lo tile (‘allege do not wish to lblecllme public school tellclll-rs. and lnlllly nre nul in a position to go on to higher institutes of learning, Quite a number are desirous of entering commercial life or lu. least of sc- qulrlng that ‘hllRillOl-lfi and commer- cllll education which is so neces- sary nowadays. With the inclu- sion of that course in the College l-urrlculunl we src going to give those pupils that lulvanluge, and we think that it will help to make the system generally a little better and more satisfactory. - Along with tile matter oi Educa- tion cornea the Technical School question, which has been referred to before. The policy of this Gov- ernment has been stated vary de- finitely, and we have acted In ec- cords-nee with our policy. We he- llevecl than the Technical School as lt was carried on during the years ol l/lberlll administration was coit- lng the Province too much money for the results which were lbelng so fer along lest your with very leg; an. of tlhe wagons bed wilt us oleen lam-e ea. nd l‘ ha", ‘mi-l; co do in one.’ f. morning again moot with ed lwltll ago l llltuslluuplsns: Who ever BUZ- gostell it? mill friends throughout this villce. MR. SAUNDERS: I never hcnrd t in this Province. HON. DR. McMlLLAN: Well. ll may Poe something new to you. lbul F ll. is public property for others. i-lowevor, whether‘ the ‘llon. gentle- .nzln heal-ll it 0|‘ not. we appealed he tax on the first opportunity ‘be- cause we promised to do so. (Ap- plillltw.) Pru- Roads and Road Work. Roads me very inlportant to nny Government, and we have been given ll certain amount of-prsise iJy the Opposition because we fol- lowed llhc road policy of the Bell Governlnentf ll‘ we built good roads lust year, they tell us, it was due to the wisdom of our immedi- ate predecessors. notwithstanding the fact that the first policy 0t good roads ever preached in this Province. was enunciated lby Pre- mier Ansenault. He was the man lvllo instituted the lgood roads policy. and. as I said before, the Conservative Government was de- nounced for this policy all ovcrthe Province by the Liberals in every term imaginable, from the slight- est crltlclsm lto dubbing it an ill- lernsi scheme which was to be the ‘ruinatlon of all the farmers. Tlhe Leader of the Opposition says the debt of this lProvince to- day ls nearly two million dollars, and he has grave douzbts it we will get the value we are expending on good roads unless there is a policy of maintenance. 1 may ltell him and the party to which he belongs that if they had played fairly with the people In 1919 and had held to their pro-election promise. they lbuuld never hays touched good roads proposition at all. Bu-t they "did touch .lt. It they hnd ml- hered to bile policy or -Premlor Arsenault, in paying most sltlenltlon lo drainage and to the wlvaste and llamrow lplaces, tea-ring down the lllllls and blllllllnll up the hollows, as laid down in his first lleclmrll- mon.-had lthey done this when they came ln-to power, a great muny dollars would “have been snved to the Province. We always took ob- jection to the methods pursued by tile Bell Government in lt-hls con- net-Mon. There wasloo much mon. lry spent. on mile after nllle of loads that llld not need the expenditure. We did not follow this extravagant metfhod ‘of the late Government and the bane-fit is that ou-r roads Just your cost no very much lless per mile than‘ under them. lWe nlw-lys Obfectod that under "I91? mflflflmment the engineers were Paid top much money, The Minister of Public Works will be in a position to tell how that we got pincer-s than in any previous year, and tibia-t s lei-go amount was caved salaries alone, ot- Wlfillfflfldlfl! the tact that we Iliad 115 miles of projects and the work your which they ' The headq- ot the Opposition an; ' reheated ‘his stato- glntllnlanoe when thaleue bull. r position is quite easily under- Iwllll- Why mould we My. oliiqllle r10!!! to Me Wenjprrl d. eudllolutely ridiculous ‘ete- nlqut, that ll- hld steadily improv- Thc Enginccrng Masterpiece of thcYcar ~ ~ ~ ~l . talked of Car on fFour Wheels OT since‘ the days when automobiles were N curiosities has the public showed such infer“! ' I in a car as they are showing in this beautiful and powerful new Overland with six cylinders. Everybody instantly admires this great cnr’s refreshing Its sensational power performance is‘ the ,main topic in automobile circles. of all other cars of its class in power . . away in lightning pick-up and getaway . . away ahead in beauty . . in luxury and comfort . . away ahead in economy. And it is away ahead in all these things because it is so fnr ahead in Itsrtow prl is all out of proportion to its great advantages. Donlt fail to see the _new Overland Six. . Don’t fall to ride in\it. Easy terms if you desire them- Tllc most ‘l u,» '. ! ‘W . _Aneth Sensational-l. i r5925 s F.0.B. P T ,- Taiwan,“ la the People say it is away World's Lowest Priced Four Cylinder 5 Passenger Sedan With Sliding Gear Tramm iulon progressive engineer- Standard Sedan 8i .400: De Luxe Sedan 81.635. F.O.B. Factoryy Toronto. Taxes Extra. PlicLAINE SERVICE’ STATIObl y -. irlml ull- lllhi-‘ll ‘Wrl-‘Zlondsiimmediately after the elec- ulnnls or ill-M sort; bllllt. in 1931. "ill" 1924. all?‘ uleltlon. 'llcll (luverulllent hnd been llctlanlcll, ill-n 186 GRAFTON STREET an absolutely rldiculou‘; statement for anypublll: collateral unll other man to get up and mekei llle llluls mall, Wt‘. llnll to ps-y atten- lll lill! vhyit ccascll to inlllrllve his! yr-"H-llulls- ill illi‘ Province; the bridges lion-ll because he did not see any \ ‘ he does nnl l I _ r ' _. l‘ "-1; i ‘so s llc bull lfolllll fnu l \\'Ii l "UN- DR- MCMH-LAN- 01" Llblhlill: (ilvu {ln-rly (‘rovcl-nnlcnt in that, they hall no policy ct’ lll:lillll'l‘-:l_l‘-,ln nnd he crlticiscrl this (luvl-rllllll-ntllhq for llle some tiling. llotlvilll inc the llact that the llllllstl-l- llflllllllll‘. Public Works olll rled cut. cloplnin. told him, llllll there \\‘»\S ll lllllll 3gp... hjglnvp-yg-l, l'of lll-aiutellnnce Illlst yjl-ul‘ initizlil-df .3)"; we unll ccnll bun, My allll because it was like a ploughed field." 1K1"- nl..l mllltfil‘ public works which they road work luui» \\iill l. \\' I‘ ‘done luntill up to tlw iliill nllsnlulely neglected during the middle of June. l do not Juolflhv jlllll‘ yours of ‘llllllir lCFlll. .l!l lll.'|i. wnlk the .l4€‘.l'dt3l“ of theJnne ins-t ‘your. bllt l think the ..-ll_l1lln gzl-ls up nnd charges llSvTiJfltl ‘work was done throughlllltlite vine; llnnu nothing for lnnln~plovlnec just as r-ltllectlveiy nnll as l s11)’ we Dll); tllut we ln- curly last your as in any other your; plan oi‘ patrol work for l know it to be a tact. But. that But my hon. triendnloes not dlean the; it -Wii!9 llflllfl ililulwl n lflnlnszl ll’ vl- nn eye that oversees EhlBIBHOlIld talke a more personal inter- and they should nllllr to hulk-o u statement of got on them early. There is s-lwallli llinle ‘before the lland is fit >10 work. Road was like a boulevard; in 1924 and that is the time t0 do l-t. 'l‘ll9rc How 1.. mo great a tendency to leave ed. and rapid the process of disintegration the road" work -\lh'lil alter-seeding he mess in one year under the Stewart and hay-llnaltllls. or hay-making llll-l Alder bushes had. —-—'—'—'_i SEMI-Till ll-IllIl/l. och stri 22' WIDTH MEANS BIG SAVING All rolls of Staunton Wsllpagcr are 22 inches wide. p covers more wall, fewer 'srrips are necessary. Also, withthewlderrolLpoper- hangers take less time to complete e room. these ways the Stsunton , 22 lnch width creates ‘worth-while savings. '/lI"l'l".'~ ln lin tllzll brief period, alldl (clmfllll-Wd 0" P109 13) the Home walls Juli/c. A~" DO you realize the magic powers Staunton Wallpapers p08- sess? Through curclul selection from their wide variety Stuuntons can make a dingy dwelling cheerfule-cpn light- cn dark corner$~£an touch the walls with the beauty 6f sprint;- ln fact, Staunton Wallpapers can make the difference between a home, orjust a house. ' Stauntons are constantly ransacking theold world and the new for designs and motifs to satisfy every artistic need. gThe best known designers of London, the salons of Paris; the eifcentrfl of New Xorlylave contributed of their best and the Staunton line, in its pl ntiful vuriety, awaits your selection; ~' - - For your guidance, we submit the following suggestions: t.» achieve s hall of dignity and well: ¢. N... rm or tom or a eunny llvingroom - Nomdll or I l A cheerful dinln - - - » No. 1M“ q- I07 A restful, ulct gdrootn _ . a "' _ , ‘To bright; up that dark room - - :8. g. And lurtlwr. the Semi-Trimmed feature of Stauliton eli- papcrs has a strong a peel. lt mean: n_ uneven eutt with" shears or knife; slmp y knock ofl‘ the cn and ‘the roll» ll pel- ieccly trimmed. ' _ . ' - - All‘ Y0"? dfllfl‘ t0 Ihdv you Staunton flelid-frinrnelWellplblfl for particular! and nammof necmt Papcrhangers should write Staunton dealer. it's easy to satisfy customers with Stuunton Wallpapers. v , _ ,. Mode ucluufvely by Sralmrmnfumlteil. Tf/Aituu from A i MMED ‘WM loll ill ‘Szlvl-s‘ It ‘N Hit’ / ‘iLVII/iIi/IIF" it‘: l/lr. lll face much was done until thenlllldlooi . i nnllllll‘: lulvc done anymul-ly enough. because the ‘b90010. We lllll tll0 best Weill-nil.- lliflUllllbL‘ "lll- didn't see, it. He generally and the lroad lnlaslle-rs under the clrcll-lllslnncl-s. the-y did nothing during their four l'lnv.l:l-.l,-_l‘l~lllll nnc and to the otherosl in the ‘roads years simply because they wanted-ill to take adavantage of the highwayHlnu liillll. grant .how much more would that be an excuse for us? We wanted to‘ take advantage of it too, the time had nearly expir wo had also to clean up t of 1923 after their most dlsgrace- Government! ful action in quitting work on theullnvn up “n. 192s (he says) the Western when the made are m to Work °"-= ‘