| 25'_1,i)Z8______.__.__v. _..__ THE CIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDQN i costs so very little . cover old, scarred ors with Congo- um Gold Seal By- e-yard— .- ., even charming patterns solectfrom . . only 70c. rsquare yard .-, . and' aranteed the sameas ongoleum Gold Seal ugs . . . by the same akers. . _ \ \__ cli-Qklriflll coucousuM CANADA- LIMITED," Mom-rue“; maroon. HOMBWiAT-LITTLE/EXPENJ; Dr. W. J. P." McMillan, 7i the time to go and get it when it ls Speaks On Draft Address .. (Continued from Page 9.) it is terrible. “Under Prohibition, now,” they say. "see how little is being drunk; see how little business there is being done at the vendors’ offices." They do not take any no- tilce oi’ all that is being drunk other- W se. - I Doctors‘ Experience. A very common experience with doctors now is this: A person will come in the office and say: "I have some sickness at my house, and I want to get a ‘scrip’ for a bottle of whiskey." He is told: “I cannot give it to you. We only get fifty ‘scrips’ a month." (My hon. friend from Montague will say that is hardly enough for a man with u. big practice, where there is o. lot oi sick- ness, especially at this time of‘ thc your.) At any rate, you tell the party you cannot give him a ‘scrip,’ and what is his answer: "All right. then. I shall have to go to the bootlegger.“ Did you ever consider the result of Prohibition? Did you ever consider that when you cannot oblige a great- many of those people they are going to get it anyway? What is Prohibition for? My hon. friends will tell us it is our first duty to look after the welfare of our bro-- thel'. In this Province thereilre not many who are sunk so low in the moral scale that you would class them as drunkards or persistent drinkers. I suppose that is the class that should-be protected under any prohibitory law. Do you think thc Prohibition Act is any protection to them? No, not at all. They are get- ting all they want. You penalize the decent, respectable people, tho kind whom my hon. friend from ltustico had in mind—those who keep it in the house in case of ill- ness. Because, after all, ii it is any good in case of illness, that is not in. from door mats to the largest room size. range of designs and new low prices are sure to satisfy you. lland see yourself. You will be convinced, PliiiWSE Bii0$. LIMITED Is Here t» i-hc galrtlcncfs rum-y turns w llwnshts of lvlanlln: lll" lifll aml quite naturally. a supply of Vl}(,ll*}'l‘ABLE and FLOWER SEEDS rom CARTEIVS SEED STORE t‘ lhc lirsi. slop to be taken. Procure a copy of our SEED CATALOGUE, consult its pages and tho rest is easy- MRLOTTETOWN and our Agents all oyer the country. carrylllw ll!" T111189 0f patterns and sizes in Gold Seal — ideal place in which to enforce Pro- "YeJ, we cross Cabin Clan every Jummer" “THE Canadian P116550 Cabinshipsglvelllfll/W- ~ thing we _deslrc——coml_no- / dious cabins. charminB , salons. and rest rooms. 8W0- " ions decks, a widely varied ‘and telnpting cuisine, and ‘~ ' ' attendantstrainedinatradi- tion of faultlessservirae. Our crossing is alwa s a restful holiday-wind. _ 09- '0 meet so many delightful pgoplfl. Oh, yes! we always l"\ f cidents despite the fact that their tourist trade has shown a large in- m“ up m]; Ac; M, Qngg, crelw- My h0ll- Tflelld 1mm 31'5" seems to be a great deal of misun-Ythen should they agree to any com- tico spoke of the amount of liquor dgfgtgnding upQn this point, cross Canadian Pacific. Make reservations early. For informolion oplily your loool , or G . \ d1?" O. BRUCE BURPEI}. nlnt Pauenler Alwnl 40 lilng fit. Siliul John. h. ll \ I <1 if nan-o ennnr nun "I"! needed most; there is no time then to chase up a doctor and a vendor and get a. prescription filled. You are ‘just diverting the liquor| sales into the bootleggers hands. That has been the experience oi every Province; that is one of the fatal weaknesses in the Act. We are going to have that remedied, the Premier tells us. because Prince Ed- ward Island-mark his words—ls an hibitlon. An ideal place! We shall find, probably in another year, just how ideal it is. The moonshiners, we are inform- ed_by one hon. gentleman, are now “taking to their holes like rats" Drinking of moonshine is sixtyper cent less in his vicinity, says an- other hon. gentleman. Wonderful statistics. "We are enforcing the Act and we are sending a great many to jail." Yes. and there are an awful lot more to send. my hon. friends. It is a big proposition-the biggest that you ever tackled. Mr. LePage Again. v __ The hon. gentleman from Rustico boasted the other day that thlsfiov- bootlegger in the Province. from one‘ end of it to the other. i non. MR. LEPAGE: Correct. ‘l DR. McMILLAN: What wonderful intelligence is behind that remark! The hon. gentleman can see into the booths where those ballots were marked in secret. and come out and declare on the floor of this House that not one bootlegger in the Pro-i vlnce voted for the Liberal Govern! mcnt! I do not think he believes that statement any more than I do. If it were true. \ve might as well; abolish the ballots altogether. Thelrl perhaps, we might scc how sincere! sonic people are! i Among the stock arguments usetll against Government Control I rc- nurlnber one to the effect that thc bootlegger need only go to the Gov- crluncilt store and buy his supply. and then retail it to the public at much less risk to himself. We hearth that argument many times on the‘ stump. It does not seem to be work- ing out in Ontario, according to the statement I have quoted from the Attorney-General. Mr. Price, in the "Saturday Night." Contrary to pre- dictions. there has been no increase shown by the records for drunken- ness. I am taking the province of Ontario because our proposed Act was framed after theirs, and not after Quebec or BritlshColumbia. as many of the speakers in the campaign have declared. That was just another oi the many misrepre- crument never got o vote from one ' sentations made in that campaign. ___ I wish I had one cent foy every one firs; month my; system was in o that was made; I believe I would be oration? The hon gentleman does: candidates who suggested. “You hm‘ better not pin your faith to Prohibi- The article I have cited showing The Government’! Responsibility to tion entirely. You had better have.‘ l1 "We 5m"! "l1 this Gllvernmenli It has been said that we on the. to deny it—ln this letter that wasithis-lettcr out to the women of ‘Cllllllfll Wmewhelfi" And that is mm Opposition side cannot speak for the sent out as a "feeler" to his political, Prince Edward l-Slllld M lhlt "I116; W113’ ll» Was- This Pleblwite was “iCcnservatlve party on this questionpfriends before the election cam-Hilly didn't I10 11011811"- lhem? Thlll’ a millionaire. or a billionaire. the conditions in Ontario under Government Control should be a conclusive answer to some of the not reply. Enforce Prohibition. This Government came into power Dominion R0311! Con! Balloons em- lmdy much that you cannot sec on the suvfnce. Materials of tiichighest qua - lity, experienced workmanship, exciu - rive processes of manufacture devel- oped only after years of research. Latex Atreatcd web cord takes more rubber, but is well worth it in the extra strength and durability it gives t0 Dominion Royal Cords. CHARLOiTETOWN W. B. PROWSE d: SON f UNIVERSAL MOTORS n Ia. D0 you know the correct air P" solne one in that caucus of Liberallmcate mmsely fro,“ . l. pressure for your balloons? HEY are designed for comparatively low pressure. ' That's the reason _ why the pressure of balloons must not be allowed _to drop even three pounds below that-specified for any particular wheel load. Three pounds makes a vastly‘ greater difference to atire whose correct pressure is 40v pounds than it does to a tire with a correct pressure of 65 pounds. . Under inflation means premature trouble-excessive wear entire walls- bruises and breaks in the cord fabric that lead to blow-outs-treads worn out before theirtime. - . W w _ Three pounds under pressure will do it, and you can’_t judge inflation that closely by sight or by kicking the tissue-You must gauge the pressure- not guess it. - Dlrop into a tire service station once a week and have your tires inspected for minor injuries and inflated to the correct pressure. Ten minutes service by an expert will add miles to the life of your tires and cut tire costs more than you would believe possible. cc MONTAGUE SUMMERSIDE \-\ It. T. IIOLMAN LIMITED w ' A. HORNE 8: CO. ' who party was consulted or nwot? Charlottetown. are to consult some lt might be replied that probably of the leading Liberal workers in we consulted our party the same way every place. ls that consulting the Premier Saunders’ Tactics. _ as he did~althongh he would like Liberal party? Why dldnt he send sllemems made by my ‘mu-friend 0T1 the definite Prmnlse that theyiglelll ldelll mere i5 m) quesmm ammtthat we have no authority to speak. lmign. “Don't let our Conservativfiislll’ ll] Wall the W°l119l1 Wh° mmed from Rllsl-lw- T310815 We" 17101151110 would enforce the Prohibition Act,l1¢_ conditions which We" dflwfl l" that they would introduce amend-what r Qgnnot slwh bold Ind llllll"! @1110" l" ll" ments to make the Act “more Work-Who Temovrflnw Illllenw would 1181'"! servative party. The Premier him-‘would be the best thing for them m They were the ones who did it. but people of this Province during the abky election campaign. Now we have moss amendments are, the l-flllh 0f "l9 mlllkl- In“ ‘"5115 been a great deal of confusion. be- have believed that any attempt to he know? Does he know whether‘ been read by my hon. colleague from in Ontario I Swill!’ llllllflwflllllllll 0' cause it was supposed that theldo away with Prohibition was mor- conditions. 811d ""1 l0" 1110"" l0" Government was going to have at ally wrong. They were so absolute- Fall Session of this Legislature toily right that there were no two Therelsides to the question at all. Why sold in Ontario. and he figuredup Tgmpefflncg Alllgnce, 1 the quantity oer cevlte- Wlll helell thought that they were going m do1 determined m put in their platform us how much those 850.000 tourists it. The Premier says No! It wouldl this Plebiscite in 1929; yet they con- from the United 558W! dfflnli- D0 have been better to have put theisented to support them and went they not drink anything when they thing down in black and white: to=ont and made a. lot of statements. 80 there. 0X‘ m" flflYl-hllll 110ml! have had a sterlographer take, itlthroughout the Province which, ac- But even the "statements? cording to the Premier, they had no different t0 011i‘ Dwllle- W0 V011"! which a stenographer did take dowmauthority to make. and they made | bfllll 801m b01110 ll W0 Wllld- M l1 seem to be disputed: they are notzglaring misstatements and sweeping mfllltil‘ 01 lfllll- ll l8 "17 dlfllllllll t0 binding upon the Government, we charges against the Conservative tell Whether the 900910 0f "19 PPO- are told. If the Premier wanted to partyjs policy which, if properly an-- | vince of Ontario are drinking H1019 put out some private opinion of his alyzed, would not bear the light of with them? If they don't they are down, liquor or not. and my hon- friend own. he should have been very, very da either. knows it. sh were they issued to tourists? I sup- the tourists largely outnumbered careful. l-le knew that he was others. even natives..in J-heir appli- pose there was a conference o .4 The.‘ promise with the Government? They believeufonnd that the Liberal party was hat was the wonderful campaign RON. MR. LEPAOE: Statistics leader of the Liberal party: he:wc had in 1927: and I do not won- ow 1g knew that he might be Premier af-E der that the Leader of the Govern- DR. McMILLAN: Statistics show ter the election: and a man speak-vment is uncomfortable now. He was the number of applications for per- ing as the leader of a party‘ must in a very ‘mcomxmtlbh 110834011 lihl mits since this system was inaugur- be very careful of his statementsfother day, in trying to make his ex- ated in Ontario: but were those per- because he is not speaking as a pri- illlmfltlon l0 thl! Hfilllle- 811d he ‘Kill mile’ given to natives of Ontario or vate individual then. At first I do not think there was time- pose my hon. friend, who is so well any question of a Plebisoite. Therelbelleve hi‘ "Will 00111110 l8 l0 80 w posted, can tell us whether or not was no mention oi it in the Tem- Bummerside. s0 0n the Bench» 111d per-once Bulletin gt first, But I snp- get clear 0f all this trouble, because f thethe certainly has created an awful bottom lqypgggllqmunng the yery party. and there must have beenWYW-‘l-‘I R H1688 mil lW Wlll "W" 9X" lbQ in discomfort for quite a long That is the worst of iti I It W95 l‘~ Wl-mderml iden- Bmi The Stewart Government, they saywfriends know anything about it," nethis elecllflll- “The Womellwlecled “ndusllmd is Whylhad no right to speak for the Con- cautions. it was to find out what this Gllvefllmelll- 30d bless lllelll" We shall Wall Ind s." Wll" l» ll: becflufle- Slllely» l! ‘he!’ We" self made the statement; that we,do. Whonl did he consult? The m- the Premier ‘did notconslder ltworlh The“ h“ slows ln tl1@l\'l>Yl"¢lPl°s-"1@Y "1"" didn't consult the party. How doeslstructions in that letter. which has while to so out and ask them. ln (Continued on page l2.) fi-m fweim -_--. eifiileour .#P Reach “.5.” safely: mm numeric... a Trlllcolltilontnl Anny; p“; Soriiler pose fol-Qthtlruptctaroglfyello wing the Fetrcllild Mroplande automaton tefijig _ . . w. N. J. NICHOLSON ~ ~. “J; - »-.-»_<~l-Q£UIIBVIIF < 1 f, 11n§f<-(..£-~.