u Z‘ ‘F11! l H. "\|\I‘| ‘V... t, v'i‘.%'l’o'. .7 Ins-w mlflll I ILQ- t. e21. a lumen-J. I. llurane. Vlu-Peuallcaa-i. l. Iurneta Ialllllnaa. II l-ll- - lanniasq ldlaelbll. l. Oink an maid an United upon: gal you ill advance) Qaltvalao AWEDNESDAKGFEBRUARY. 12 mo _ . Civic Election ‘Dag Our citiaens will have the privilege M687 oi taking part in the election cg the incoming municipal govern- ment, and it is a duty as well as a privilege to do so. ‘lhestiuidards oi government, civic, provincial and iederal, depend upon the intelligent interest of the electors in the issues which they are called upon to decide. The ballot is a safeguard oi democrat- 1c government only when it is used conscientiously. In the present in- stance there is no outstanding issue beiore the electors, and the excite- butit hasbeenurgedthattheDo- minlon ts being handicapped indul- trially and commercially because oi the Government's refusal to raise such duties as are now too low, and has refrained from adopting a policy which would provide the Canadian people with the means of developing their own natural resources through all stages oi manufacture. The Moi/arts Report In his review oi the civic activities . of the year i929. Mayor Yeo touched merit which has frequently accom- upon many improvements which hive panied civic elections is lacking. Nev- been B- illstillci? 8559i! i0 9115719“?- ertheless, thc importance of the oc- v town. and which have been comment- casion should not be lost sight oi, and; ed upon favorably by vlrlibrr» Noi- it~is hoped that the vote will be a: iceable among these have been the large and representative one. progress made in permanent street 8o far as the position of chieil work, in the methods oi street clean- magistrate ls concerned, there is no’ lng in summer and snow clearance in contest, Councillor Prowse, chairman winter. In this connection the motor- of the Finance committee, having driven snow-plough has been a de- been elected by acclamation. ‘There are, however, a number oi candidates (or seats in the City Council, and it is irom among these candidates that our citizens are asked to choose. The record of the outgoing Council is be- iore the people; the various com- mittee reports have been published, as wellas the financial record of the past year and the estimates for the coming year. It has never been the custom for the press to comment edi- torially on the merits, political or otherwise, oi candidates seeking civic honors, nor shall we do so on this oc- casion. Our readers, with the iacts before them and with the election cards oi tile various candidates and the policies which they are advocat- u... appearing from day to day as a reminderof the privilege and respon- sibility oithe ballot, will form their own conclusions and will cast their votes accordillelv- A Disappointing ' Speech Finance Minister Dunnlng‘s much heralded address at Regina last week has been a disappointment. The pub- lic had been given to under-Stand that he would make a constructive and worth-while contribution to the» _ l discussion of economic af- fairs, and would provide a lead which :..*::J members and their support- ers. already preparing for a general election, could follow. l-le did neith- er. ‘Fhwpublished account oi his ad- clded acquisition and has made pos- sible s. greatly increased automobile triiiiic during the present winter. The street committee has been Well advised in its undertaking crthu necessary work, and the manner in which it has performed its duty in this. respect is creditable to all con- cerned. The splendid appearance of Victor- ia Park and the public squares of the city, as well as the condition of our public buildings, was also properly commented upon by l-lis worship. For this the public property commit- tee was responsible. The method of street lighting, which is under the di- recticn of another committee oi the Council, was noticeably improved by the installation oi a large number of modern lamps and the extension oi lighting facilities to diflerent parts oi the city. ‘lhe market com- mittee also, whose duty it is to keep ‘the meatet building-in good repair. has periormed its work commend- ably. The Fire Department and Po- lice Department-two very important branches oi civic administration, maintainedyhlgh standards oi etiic- iency and received due comme -d-- tion. Ills Worship also referred to tho satisfactory handling oi the city finances as well as to the public health activities under the health committee and the supervision oi Dr. W. J. MacMillan, health oflicer, and Dr. Croken, meat and milk inspect- or. These improvements generally, we dress contains neither evidence nor suggestion that Mr. Dunning’! 1°"! years’ experience in the Federal Goy- ernment has broadened his outlook or has enlarged his grasp oi nation- al problems. He devoted much of his time to a discussion of purely local niiairs, his ehlei concern seeming to be, not with the interests oi Canada ' but with the position oi the Liberal opposition in Saskatchewan. What the public did expect from the Minister oi Finance, says the Montreal Gazette, was a statement which would indicate, however cir- ._cuinspectly, the willingness of the v Government to correct a trade con- dition which is lnlmioal to the indus- . trial welfare oi Canada and to the ‘continued economic independence oi the Dominion. it was not supposed for a moment that he would antic- ipate his budget, but it was thought. "and the thought was eneouraqd b? preliminary iiespatchea from Ottawa. ahatamore aggressive intereltillillb ‘pup; commercial situation. V! "W . _ lulu-ii . tumbles-unlim- autism- ybelieve‘, have been appreciated by iour citizens, as they undoubtedly ihgve been by visitors. Charlottetown Jtoday has‘ a reputation among the towns and cities oi Eastern Canada of which our citizens have good real- on to feel proud. _\' ___________. Editorial Notes The tributes paid on Saturday by Mayor Yeo and others to the work oi the City police force were well de- derved._Chai-lottetown has soodgilv-ie to be proud, both oi it! 0°11” "l5 “d ilro departments. r "in Prince Edward Island." says I Toronto exchange. "0111! W! 4min‘ has been sought since Conledflfimll- But no doubt a confidential curve!" of the inhabitants would illrlllell proof that statistics can be mislead- Honl soit qul mal YMM- ‘Under the a bootlegger is in iaii his occupation ‘isiiotnecenarllyibilfl-"mw" ggflhdOnhyllilWUOtifhMlli-BU‘ 'ggeectate, while hail .~ waged ‘at the public expense. t U.‘ . Saunders regime. Will " ztbetbeeauueeetedtiietiorurl f; _ beiabdatlirlgelimitior .. lexisenupeneimueueutapiiqs. Premier Iarlhon has announced certain changes his Govemmefitjm- poses in inakrln connection with up legislative machinery p; out-sis; n. future member! obthe. legislature will be elected for a term of live years lurked vi iour you: as sentinel-e. ‘Phe five year term has been adopted in dnoet oi the Canadian provinces, but Ontario and Prince Edward Isi- and have till now adhered to the shorter traditional term ,of iour years. ' It may strike some persons as ra- ther singular that this change is to be made by a government which dis- solved the previous Legislature three years after it was elected, but there was a strong reason for that action which was iully explained to the e1- actors at that time and heartily ap- proved by them. very frequent elec- tions are both costly and undesirable. Another proposedclaange is that oi raising the salaries oi the membe s of the provincial Cabinet to $10,000 each. As they control a. population one-third as large as that of the en- tire Domlnion, the change seems not to be unreasonable. Ministers will re- ceive in addition to their official sal- aries the ‘ demnlty oi $2,000 paid to other members oi the House, making $12,000. As salaries go in these days a great and rich province can well ai- iord to pay its leading public ofllc- ials generously. The deposit made by candidates for election to the ‘Legislature is to be raised to $200 which will be returned to him ii he receives half as many votes as the successful candidate, but not otherwise. A similar provision is common to most legislative bodies throughout the British Empire and has proved to be very useful in pre- venting many entirely useless con- tests. The amount of the deposit var- ies quite largely in different sections of the Empire, but the underlying principle is a sound one. The Globe, mildly criticises some oi the proposed changes. but expres- ses its opinion that they will be adopted by the House and be very generally approved by the people. And that seems to be quite probable. M. Grattsn 0'Leary in Macbcan‘: tells that many citizens figured out on last new years day that they had spent too much money foolishly dur- lng 1020. some of-it in the stock mar- ket, and otherwise. and they resolv- ed that this year they would devote themselves to work for their own f ughout the, twelve months. ' "But they ‘ won't." writes» Mr. O'Leary. "They won't work twelve months for themselves. They won't start working for themselves until the morning oi February 1s. Until Canuck-ior the State. They will work 26 days for the Dominion, l4 daysior the municipalities. 8 days for the Provinces. ‘Not until febril- ary l8 will they earn a copper ior .themselves." For those who may deem this ian- ciful or absurd Mr. 01.9w quotes oi- ilcial authorities in an interesting way. Sir John ‘itucdeueidm ilne olll hope at Earnsclliie, Ottawa, has been purchased by the British Govern- meht 'as a dwelling and oilice for its l-iigh Commissioner to Canada. Many would have much preferred that it v should have been acquired by the Conservative party in Canada and occupied by the leader who has suc- ceeded the grand old party Chief who lived for years within its walls and died there. Ari it turns out Earns- cliiie will be less a party shrine than it once was, but still in friendly own- ership. 0 Nothing can he made o! Hon. ‘Mr. uunningu recent speech in which he touched on tam! matters except this: it was a speech veering toward iree_ trade. and in tone it was in ‘strong contrast with what Mr. Euler had said-before. A double minded Cov- ltil-wayl. i Premier King likable leading col- leagues in the Government ~hae no more stable viewathan they. It ls cults impossible in get iom any one . cum moisten a decided. or dim- cutopinionaa towhat thetarli! CUTTING DOWN 0N‘ ~A phyalcan treatlnga cblldjor dia- betes noted that‘ the amount omn- giu- in the unue during the day was- considerable lm than that whim was passed durint “h! night. 4 {this was eicplalned. by the iact that the youngs‘ was about during the day walking. and poeilllly playing some. Accordingly _ giving the child . a ‘ oi , 1F every day. and found that lme su- gar <was found in the urine, as the sugar u-as used up by exercising and the child began to ieei better. Continuing the exercises the physician found that lie could give the child an increased amount of sicrchyiood. without, having to lniect insulin.‘ Accordingly the plunlrirn hes WW 151d out a, ‘system 0i treating diabe- tic children which is proving WW successful. , Insulin is given daily until the child gets strong enough to take ener- clses. ' Then exerfiscs such as walking. cum-biog, running and gymnastics is given,- and the amount of insulin began certain e physician V haioriciuj , ' m. pang/ltd. true theme o ' dunno-i in. income: u. I _' , fmdweituowthet iebcut 1m a.‘ icy hundred i-iigb; lenders migrated to the, Mohawk Valley in Newlicrk State. and sitar-I wards . ‘ to Ontario, following upolrthe outbreak oiths Revolution- ary Wgr. They settled round about the ‘ -, ‘ Glensefly district inOntarlo and they and their descendants did yeoman service ‘for the British Gov- ernment in the Revolutionary‘, War and in that oi 1812 ‘ . deed... we learn that in moo about ioo persons were evicted mm sud-ire,- fuaran, in Arlee-lg. but there do not seem to have been any other evictions oi‘ consequence in Airlsaig and Mot- dart before 1810. The most of the early emigrants to . lower Canada. then". left for econo- vmlc or religious reasons. ahiglly the former. Some years ago. while looking over a copy oi the "Boole Magazine," published, I think in 1772 I came ac- Pbualetterwritteninthatyearto the editor by someone whose name! that time they will work.i‘or Jiick .‘ eruiiient in action is unstable in all have forgotten. de the trouble caused in the West Highlands by the tsVksmen and better-oi‘! farmers sel- gim as much exercise as possible. In- a“ thmmutgd‘ ‘Mcfwgd is‘ Qt‘ s ls not given before, nor alter "M" “m”! ' "5 ' mjs-exemisa At noon he a Ewen vmWihQ 8. IIIIO amount 0i clpitll i111 mostly ruis (milk. cream and butter) u" °°“""YY- UP i" $13M "l" 1i Willi! and proteins (meats. eggs or cereals). m"! m“ m9" °1 u" Winn" h“ In the afternoon asmail umbudtcr evnvw WW cm new the Ilnlied starchy food and a little insulin is Billie: vi Anwrlce. and-Lord Selkirk given, and in the evening a large WNW? in 1305. Ill-lied m“ W,“ amount of starchy food and insulin. 1801i the people in Skye nod such a Now why do 1 talk ubcut this? bent for emigrating in lilmline that Not that I want. io prove the value .110 emigrant shlphsd eit fikye ex- og insuun may,“ - -- p, ,,,,,,,,'cept with settlers for Carolina. thousands or young lives, and preser- ‘ ,Th° “l” v'°"°l . viug older onosxlt has brought happi- The earliest vessel leaving the We“ 11955 to homes when, fypmmy “m... Highlands with emigrants tor Canada was oniy blank despair. 5*!" i” m” bee" m‘! Altlrander. But becaqm it slwws, in 5 dramatic (containing 210 settlers from South manner, that exercise will burn up U155 llld "lb 1510111518 mli-inlilld-“lll the starches and prevent diaibetes. emisrailon was sponsored by the than This means that under ordinary Iialnloi Glenadele, 089391" 591.111 Ml!!- eircumstances the pancreas can supp- Donald, and the emigrants ‘were lia- iy the amount oi insulin necessary w Icobites or their descendants. The ves- keep up the heat. oi your body and sel came to the Island of 5t. John give you energy. (now Prince Edward Island). How ever if you eat more than you , and the desoen’ ‘ of iheeesettlers need, then your only sole plan ls to “now number very many, thousands. take more cxeririses. Alsoexercise rc- From 1M2 on the movement increased places lat writii muscle. and you are .ra'pldly. There follows below a listy.oi illfit illllii much stronger irhyrieelly- the old vessels which took out these . » y emigrants on their long voyage across the Atlantlc:—_ mz-ship Alexander. landed at vsaotchiort. P. E. I. in July. Had ab- _out 21o pasrensers 4mm south Ulst and the malnland._ ' mid-ship Hector sailed-tram Inch Broom, and arrived at Plctou. Nova Scotia. tin September l5. There were about 100 passengers from Ross-shire \ ~ and Loch Broom. The master's name mm was no magic ones in Shakes- was John Spears. / , ‘ DOB-N's name: . lilo-Name of ship unknown. The No placedof pride was his beside the ‘vessel ‘ was wrecked on‘ the north PM" i shore oi Prince Edward Island. There No pomp or heraldry with trumpetsiwlsolllyasmllliluniberoiemigrante bud on board, oneoithembecoiningla- Rumvurni his praise berm-e him as he ter Chief Justice (Stewart) of Prince came: , llldwlsd Island. He passed Iwlth little honour Ol‘ ac- ,1 ivao-Nime of ship unknown. This vllllll, " Ives-sol wptciued e large number ot Aoommonmailellwngthecoinmon emigrants who went out to Prince crowd: {Edward} Island, accompanied by Rev. Y“ "i" "in "Yllflhlp over life en- w. Mace “ u “(afterwards msiiop dcvwed. ‘of Prince admu-d isidndyrhe sett- Aud fills by light divine his lers were the wetttm meuud °1 "lim- I [the gdjolning mainland. and T" "l". "i 11"" mmstiiauded at ecowhiout. p. s. 1. ‘ " l ' - I‘ iioi-Jrwe vessels. names unknown Thegods come not inshapcf oipow-‘mlvqg Y‘; ‘my; with ‘ er "or dread, _- \» ' But clothed inlieoll. the sport oi time and fate: , Not till they rise nudge-come flash oi wings. some sudden vision oi the crt/wded 31°"- ' Humble: our hearts. and mabea ill wisetoo like. —8t John Adeoch. gradually decreased. In the morning the patlentrecieves a large amount o! starchy food. and‘ RECOGNYKTION do... i brides. Thaqnoet or thesepecplere- imoved filrihereastaicngtlseeltomoi " i , ‘l v reel __ ' Slflvhvblvllghxtytjtst m. flplsran .,io.l>ie‘idu,'_le. s. . f‘ 180i _Y p Pilsfilblbilfit a small numlieroi atom to lliotou. " mi-nivupaata-qrakbrmieht settlers rue LAND WE LOVE “c'““"‘~ “v °" M“ I) FIANI IIIOII QuwheretsltePasi _ , A'Jfl !‘§ Or Pii u 5 ad" mining town in orthern inuitcba wmcii-uaireedy eciuetcbeitdmva itirfc oi mo. with unveil; ilshtlnaiepil-‘lifi y iuaueeifliulirrliiv .. with Home lllllpfibflilf settlers from the ne- ¢ "ilm emit-vie. to Anucoubh _ -l- which inrcur; eciuiuue. recently. ‘Mfijrd. . siueieu. ' nounclnp definitely upon’ itz] The Senator ' vltes these "gentlemen t5- unoie fully." when "they may perhaps Ghllllotilvelr opinions." ' A lu other words, anyone who d... B01? lgrilp with the Senator's qonolu. 111M881! 0f the facts. The Senator is always rights-ergo, must be wrong. ‘It is unfortunate that the senator “Bilu-IP I “tier from Plgiiviruv Rim uaisdvoetitc study .' ‘be rubrlily question‘ betorb y "look into all the. circumstances, - ' sions. has not sufficiently informed ‘ _he other person _ 9' have, the oi this fine ,3 \ '. ’ 15 m "ll/Q"? °F dropping our claim as a provinceTor it share in Western‘. Lands, though Just what he means, by clai lug -"equali of partner-l“ ship" a the same ime if not so clear. -. '- d‘ The "one who was present". pt‘ Rollo Bayvthinks it is a pityythpt l! "l! Bouillon" ‘Wemsy consider ‘ ourselves fortunate that he is not,- at least, Premier qaunderais not go- 1118110 "drop" any claims, as the Senator advises. . to "proprietary or beneficiary rights" (whatever those are in Western Lands will never be eduiitied by the‘ prairie provinces. This fact seems to him to be ample reason for dropping such claim. Does the senator ,._ ‘ Manitoba to admit that shel has been better treated. eh pi-iiice sdwcrcrnuud in the matter oi subsidy? 1i so. he has never heard of Prof. Chester Martin. And i! not, then, ‘according to the Senator's‘. asoning. we might as well drop that claim also. The Senator wants a. Commission toadjust Olll‘ "edualityoi put-ther- ship" claim. but he wants to drop our "proprietary oi beneficiary". claim. Surely this would be a puzzler T01‘ the new Commission, even ii they iwere composed of Philadelphia law- yers. But possibly the Senator can explain. ‘ r I am Sir, etc, y \ 18164811» the three broflhem oi‘ Hull oameout to Nova sooth, mm Mme settlers. ‘ 1917"'53l1l> William Tell mm; out tpiuanso, N. s. with settlers ffmn Berra. ' iaia_siiip Victory arrived utric. “mi N- 5E WW1 Miller! from Cannzi ~ 1919-31119 Speculation came out to Nova Scotla, sailing from Greeh. Cl-‘k will! emigrants fronfiLochabc-r This “ship hm jyrovlgugly be". Qup. tured iromthc Frerichvin iihe ‘Nap- clccnio wars. > I "nil-Shin. Economy arrived dt ~Pict:u. having sailed from my“. nz-ery ivit-h settlers from the Hebrides- iilzl-Ltilp Hsnnony sailed from Barre and arrived at wdney, Nov.“ scctiewvithsso settlers hem Barre. i ism-ship‘ Tiuuarlin arrived at Halifax. v , _ ‘ INS-Ship oiGreotlock arrived at ‘Plaster Rock, N. s. settlers from Muck. This ship h cleared from Tobemloq, l824—‘$hlp . Dunlop arrived at Sydney. w. s. with settlers. MiG-Quip Nu) umber-land sailed from meeuccbkand landed at at Andrews, New Brunswick with pass- ‘engers irclmt-he Hebrides. Why 0i the settlers rein-loved later on to 1n- veijness County. N. 5.. dsao-"zip ramuriiuiarrived at Sydney‘,- N. B, wiith passenger) from North Morsr lead-ships Highland Lad Ind nova aijiannonv amivpdgat ricvu this year . . y y I’ ital-ship Aurora sailed . redia- seétimd and arrived at Hort ingn-"N I with plsamgue many-Idi- .. .- . . " . . i ' . gm-eblbflet-lsumwe fiewm-e 554i!‘ /_ - wit"). Premier Saunders is not such a min . The Senator states that our claim i settlers. f u“ the whole ggfililbroklfl ioi-ect. . setflelllfiflllfllfilljbillil along. » share tragedy . irom c‘ treelesl‘ country. or eoiiaiiw _' ttvei satiny ‘llifikllotlv mmwpvlrlmfl v -_ ‘it. “iii/ac delicious chew when you aekior H 8:151 . _ Black Twist. You?“ - i time of‘ your life’ trylnpfg ‘ chew the flavor out - tobacco. j . TWiT.” rvvulo KKEYE. iu.i¢_;uoiso~_ vvvvvvv v l BR 0 a 14c 1ii.t.....d, ,s...- Fi.e.\1.irc, Accident, ,s.'c'1...e.. and ~ Plate Glass Insurance atAgLowest Rate. » Good Strong Stock Compimonies Agent at Summerside, Lloyd-j vvis W a C Charlottetown 0'4- 1 1...... l-lnchp white with Blue Band Mixing Bowl. ii only Silver Plated Knives. ‘ Our quantity}! lim- -' itedsodont mlssthis opportunity! FROM _I<‘~EB. 3rd TO » 15th. any _NOW a .l0LilAil’$ caocniu nan. -Ch'town — Summer-side- yous unmet sun nephews mun PEBSON- . sure - nor-man's IIfiiTNIRflABI asruc-r IW-liI-nlWiH-fi \ ‘..' i s coon refill‘. lass-ship Amity sailed from pct, ermory and tbvksottieie toqpape Breton. N. 5., ' v / . v. law-amp ‘aibieireaiied from Ab- erdeen. and arrived itneiuiu with < wet-ham amber-camp. settlers ‘came out .» h i v and tiaariven One druid ofmaiirat settler-awn that "Al" l": "u"! "W's its “i119 Qliickeli- Bill . ot1tbs pioneer. with’! inkiova. any“ m is 1m u“ Mm - sourcepi ready money at that time. A of iumbe seems to bu" been » 4mm New BfllilfilvlCk into i and one reason rm" illi l" fgqjmmegod the pioneer settlers in we; that tiie vessel-l ‘ ’ bulged-to cquie out anyWlly 10* eiioceaici lumber. 1M it is well known, certain pill" »iContinued._-ou Parsing .Pc1scss [ARE ~. > Aasoitaap tilabeweia teécue clos- l wastai, are talned i;