'; Vi‘. \ ‘.1 Jwecp of provinces. It has made the outlook m: the Federal urns. ‘cnt prospects, the Social Credit [n-evaiii 1 enthusiasm for theesuac con. ing a number of Ioderql tidings. "I 1t 0N1 hold the (NIH! proper: - of the stflnlth devel- oped at ‘ '9 polls on Aulurt 28 un- Jtll Octo. -' i4 it Ill loud several members .0 omen. nut-ruin» havnofln y-doctamnmgddflihnpsw-b looroturyh-l-llul-OOI D. _ ultimo-JV. Cbutu I. leLun. l. P. flea-President. J. l. Burnett, I. I. l- A. Inekinaon, B. l. 0. adjustment . . , b. Morning Dally (founded U81) 86.00 per you (ll ndvnnceJ delivered. ‘ ' - 14.50 pa. you (in advance; mulled h Canada and United Mateo. Tris R-ETASON wur As a free-trader, Premier Ger- er of Saskatchewan had much ' say in his Montague speech bgairlst the Bennett Government ‘tariff policies What he neglected to‘ explain was the situation which iieoessitated these policies when the Bennett Government took pow- er, This situation, the result of Qlght years of Liberal tariff tinker- ing and kowtowing to Washington on the part of Mr. Gardiner's fed- eral leader, is thus summed up. from the ofllcial figures, by the Mail and Empire: "Canada, under the Underwood ‘hriif which was in force in the United States from October I, 1913. to May 27, 1921, increased her do- rnc/itlc exports to the United States .from $139,725,000 to $542,323,000; the exports of farm products in 1920-21 wtalling $190,790,000. This was under the Borden andMeighen Governments. Under the Under- wood Tarifi 88.4% of Canada's ex- ports to the United States was al- lowed free entry to that country. The Liberal Government of Mr. Mackenzie King acceded to oflice. Under the American Emergency Tariff, which came into force in Ina-yo 3 c-:_ P. TE Iuliior and Inlagllg Dinner-J. l. Auoclntc Elton-I‘ ‘- Walkor, SATURDAY, SBPIYEIBEB ll. 1985 urnott, l‘. I. I. D. K. Ourrlo. ious danger of elimination. The same observation may be made of the 0.0.1". group of Federal mem- bers fromthis province. The Re- construction party is in no better plight. Its flirtation with the vic- torious provincial party ended in a decisive snubbing, and now doubt is expressed as to whether or not it will present candidates in the Calgary Federal ridings or in other constituencies throughout the pro- vince." EDITORIAL NOTES Hon. H. H. Stevens f-‘amepsaw, but did not conquer. 11; ha; been s, glorious summe, and so far a glorious September. Sunday brings respite from poli- tics; at least platform politics. Yes, Bennett's strength in the country is growing the more his policy and platfonn are becoming known. He is a winner. A leading Liberal yesterday pro- tested lt was too early to start campaign meetings five weeks ahead of election day. So. Messrs. Sinclair and Laraboe discovered to 1921, and remained in force until September 21, 1922, and under the Fordney-McCumber Tarifi’, from September 21, 1922, t0 June l8. 1930, Canada's exports of farm pro- ducts (chiefly raw materials) de- creased from 91901190000 in 1920-21 to $92,134,000 m 1929-30. Under the Hawley-Smcot tariff, which went into force on June 18. 1930, while Mr. Mackenzie King was still Prime Minister, and which was practically a, prohibitive tariff in respect to farm products, Can- ada's exports of farm products to the United States declined from 892,134,000 to a little over $3,000.- 000 a year. Under the increasingly adverse American tariffs enacted during the Mackenzie King regime, our exports of cattle to the neighbor- ing republic declined from 295,279 in 1921 t0 5,624; o1 poultry, from 718.919 to 10,247; of sheep, from 184,661 to 1,239; of eggs, from 191,- 258 dozzn to 539 dozen; oi apples, from 48,107 barrels to 3,213 barrels; of wheat, from 42,324,894 bushels, to 51,910 bushels; of oats, from 4,- 765,202 bushels to 18,897 busheis;of wheat flour, from 1,187,750 barrels to 634 barrels; of hay, from 162,763 tons to 4,280 tons; of fresh beef, from 358,383 hundrcdweight to 1,- 691 hundredweight; of meats, from 62,421 hundredwclght to 1,200 hun- dreciweight; of fresh milk, from 1,- 5011618 gallons to 1,178 gallons; of cream, from 1,671,000 gallons to eight gallons; of buttez‘, from 59,- 838 hundredweight to 44 hundred- lwcight; of cheese, from 59,023 hun- dredweight w 6,195 hundredweight; and of potatoes, from 4,204,684 bushels to 625,451 bushels. Altogether as a result of the hos- tile tariffs which came into force in the States under Mir. Mackenzie King our exports of farm products and manufactures of farm products to the republic dropped from $175,- 000,000 in value in 1921 to a little over $3,000,000. These figures should enable our farmers to realize the chief reason why they have been hard up dur- ing the past six years. They should enable them also to realize the benefits of the Empire trade agreements obtained by the Bennett Government at the Qttawa jimpsrlal Conference in 1932- agreements which gave them a sheltered, preferred market in the United Kingdom when no other Iiarket was available, and which has started a definite upward trend in the prices of many of their pro- ducts. ' POLITICS IN ALBERTA The Calgary Herald thus sums up the present political situation in “Alberta: "The Alberta election result has done more than block the Liberal candidates uncertain, and it has dampened the confidence of the Reconstruction party lieutenants in this province. According to pm- psrty proposes to capitalise on the _ Judllnl b! tin-veto in the mnu ‘districts m the provincial citations, the 01A. tbeillcun which "rebel" Liberal organisation Ir. Paul Gouin, son of the lite Sir 1.0mm’ Gouin, for 15 years Premier of Quebec immediately prior to the Toschereau regime. ll president. citinenalnholthasbsmpow- .1", lssnsttrolmlidadlonhuvieo their cost. Our evening contemporary is all worked up over the flop in the Liberal candidatos’ ‘campaign. Something has gone wrong, and it feels a sort of personal responsibil- ity. It should worryi Toronto Globe severely condemns those who actively oppose Thanks- giving on a Thursday; and declares their duty is to observe it and if found unsatisfactory to let the Government return to a Monday another year. The Bennett Government has granted a temporary loan of $2,- 235,000 to the Alberta Government, not to finance its social Credit scheme, but to relieve it tempor- arily from the financial‘ embarrass- ment in which the United Farmers Government left the province. In Poland they have just had an election in which the Government has been sustained by 190 to 15 on a S0 per cent recorded vote of the electorate. One curious regulation tending to this is that no split vote was permlssable. In a two seat constituency the voter had to mark his crosses after two of the same DBFW. or the vote was disallowed. Evidently Uncle Sam is setting his naval house in order in view of present world conditions, for contracts have been awarded for building 23 fighting ships, includ- ing aircraft carriers and a. 10,000- ton cruiser. This will bring ‘the U. S. A. navy up to the full Inndon Treaty strength. Our contemporary quotes an ar- ticle accusing the Bennett Govern- ment of “pampering the Western Provinces." One example cited is the assistance given to the grain growers of Saskatchewan. Is this why Premier Gardiner is stumping Eastern Canada in the interests of Mackenzie King? Now Mr. Ralston, Mr. King's for- mer first lieutenant tells us farm- ers would have been satisfied with a minnmum of 75 to 80c per bushel for wheat instead cg 37% set by the Wheat Board. The surplus goes into the pockets of the farm- ers, he says, and cannot econom- ically be defended. Oh, yes, m. King is a great friend of the farm- ers when the farmer does not want anything for himself. That Premier Taschereau fully recognizes the threat to the con- tinuance of a solid Liberal faction was evidenced at the luncheon of the convention of the association of Junior Liberal Clubs. "We do not want to excommunicate any- one from the Liberal party," he declared. This statement on the part of the Quebec Premier result- ed, it is believed, in the fut that no resolution was presented at the convention during the afternoon to “reed out" of the party numbers of PAction Liborcle Rationale", of Kr. Wesley Ircet- has just left for his new sphere in the U. S. A Diplomatic service amidst the good wishes and godopeod of Montreal wbarcverhohlsurvltnnd to without destruction? JTher-c gym g few principles that seem clear to me- 0110. that any change based on hate and revenge, and wan-om ed by them. is bound to be illusory. " “. that the maintenance of Qolll-inlllty is an ‘ "cpensablc pert of a. safe social and political policy. Third, that moderation and an of. fort, constant and vigilant, to re- move anomalies is an imperative part of the working creed of every 800d citizen. And. fourth, that only if the multitude can be animated with real and disciplined intelll. genre can democracy be so worked out as at once to conserve what should be conserved. and at the same time to adapt what should be adapted.--(Prof. W. F. Osborne in Vancouver Province). Much more serious than Mm- evllnP-l enmity toward anuun is Fascisms challenge to the world's deuiillw Pelee and security sys- tem. The nations set up a League to banish war and afford collective security and Justice, a league that threatens to collapse as a msult of "16 I-HOBanoe of Fascist nations. If the 1.998116 is to survive the nat- ions that compose it must stand $086581‘ against powers that set out THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By TheWay tt“ Canada Prmpenng ----- ‘ ~ (St, John Telegraph Journal, Inge- It ll not within the wit of u... ‘The monthly left: of the Canad- , I!» It ion-es Bymldwm WIBIIIQI. “i. STOMACH AND INTESTLVAL ULCEB N WI.‘ U SHALL Y DANGEROUS TO LIFE when you read about peptic ulc- er—u1cer o1 the stomach and also of first part of the small intestine iduodenum) into which the-stomach empti you may naturally think of it as a. very dangerous condition and that death finally results. As a matter of fact from examination after death of sixty thousand poo- ple, about one in every iW enty showed healed or unhealed ulcer. Now ulcer of the stomach or duo- denum although so common is ser- ious enough for the patient because he has “lndlgestion"»a great part of the time. However in 1435 cases re- corded by Drs. Edward S. Emery and Robert T. Monroe in Archives of Internal Medicine, the death rate was only 6 per cent, and line aver- age age at death of this 6 per cent who dies was the same as those who did not have ulcer. Unfortunately although treatment to plunder and kill and be a law unto themselves. The alternative is a world plunged into a frenzyof terrorism and doomed to experi- ence a succession of devastating wars.—Toronto Star. Italian Racists have taken away Primo de Camera’; passpqft be- cause he allowed himself to be beaten by the colored boxer, Joe Louis, at a critical stage in the Italo-Abysslnlan conflict. 1t is by no means impossible that Mussolini may later be called upon to pay an even hlsher price than Primo for the folly of challenging p, m1- ored Emperor. Fascist sportsmen would certainly not regard 11 Duce’s head as too high g, price p, pay for defeat in Africa._.1,ond°n Sunday Referee. ' A striking but not unusual feat. u," 0i tho Present campaign speeches is the mahneq- in whmh the pebble-or Canada are being Warned flafllllsi v00": for “the oth- er fellow” if the country is to be saved. In some instances there 1; truth in the warnings, so 1g “mam; for the electors to think carefully °f "hi" 15 b91118 said and vote only for safe men and sane policies, The civilization of our day will cut a sorry fiKure in history if it Permits Italy to despoll Abysslnla, A storm of protest should be sweeping over the world at; this 111011191“. but religious and moral leaders seem to be singularly 5|]- PM. perhaps because many c; them made the rash vow that never again under any circumstances would they countenance wifl‘,_-'IY)[\- onto Star. After all. says the Toronto Globe, the point about Tfinnksglvlng Day is: Should it be regarded as s, pm- moter o1 busines and pleasure, or as an occasion for serious chunks- giving to Providence for many m- vors? And even in periods of do. pnessions these favors are numer- ous. -It.aiy's behavior the Lean"; Council is reminiscent or a, preco. cious and spoilt child in g, may- ground. Whether Italians know the Home of musical chairs and can therefore appreciate the mirth they "e 910115108 in Great Britain is not known: but it is at least worth SE91"! whether they are so far gone in self-importance as to be unable to recall that he commenced his oa- reer here in 1912-13-14. He did yeo- men service for the Fox industry, b61118 really the first outstanding personality to see its real import- ance, prospects and significance. Mr. Frost will now occupy the United States Embassy at Rio de Janeiro, which is a. very important, and. Perhaps, the most coveted dip- lomatic Dost in Latin America. He succeeds the Hon. George Gordon, who has been promoted to become United States Minister to 11am, Nobody who knows the character and qualifications of Mr. Frost, the earnest resolution and the ade. quacy with which he carries on his functions, will doubt that his pres- ent transfer will be the forerunner to further promotion in the United States diplomatic service. Serving one's country faithfully rarely provides wealth and the case of Lawrence of Arabia is no excep- tion. His estate 1s valued at £7,441, proceeds of his pen and copyrightsl Bequests of £100 each were left to his two executors, his brother, Arnold Walter Lawrence, and John Snow. of Oxford. After bequeath- ing a copy of Shelley's poems and a small tract of land at Chingford to another friend, Vyvyan wan-eh Richards. Lawrence left the residue of his estate to his brother. The document was filed in the name of ‘Thomas Edward Shaw although the rel-l family name was 14w. fence. Lawrence had his hum 198111! flhllllod in Shaw after his Ntum from his adventures in Ara- bia when, he found it practically impossible to live unmoleated in England under the name of 14w- rence. The fllhts to Lawrence's fit- mous book, thflleven rum-awo- domflarefobeheldbythetrus- tees for a trust fund for widows to laugh at themselves. IIUISIHCGPEX. by medicine and when necessary by surgery cures the ulcer, the causes of ulcer-fatigue, emotional disturb- ances and infectlon—may continue to exist, and so another ulcer may form or an old ulcer may become active again. ‘ The outstanding symptom is pain -burning, cutting, tearing, boring- or just a dull ache. This pain may occur soon after eating but more often two to four hours afterwards, by which time the hydrochloric acid in the stomach digestive juice is very plentiful. The pain may be in the 'plt_’ of the stomach or over to- ward thc right side. 4 In severe or prolonged cases there is weakness and loss of weight. , In very severe cases the patient is put to bed and placed on a very strict fluid diet with alkaline pow- ders-—ba.king soda mostly-a. num- ber of times a day. When the ulcer is not too severe the patient is able to be about but must get 9 to 12 hours‘ rest each night, strained vegetables, very little salt. pepper or other condiment. and no alcohol or carbonated—soft—drinks. eat. chopped meats and The point then is that. a patient with ulcer is liable to have it be- come active with all its distressing symptoms, unless he lives very care- fully, watching partlcularly his rest and diet. Keeping as calm as possible al- ways and making sure that there is no infection in teeth and tonsils may keep an ulcer always "quiet." If they can, all is not yet lost.--Ex. The Red Cross announcement that 15,000 first aid stations will be set up along principal highways t0 aid victims of motor accidents is a confession of a condition that shames modern civilization. The Red Cross action is timely and ne- cessary; its wisdom is clear; but the shame lies in its necessity. It recognizes the motor car as a des- tructive force and its destructive- ness lies not so much in the weight of its metal body and the power of its cylinders as in the careless use or reckless misuse of the finely ad- justed control mechanisms that have accompanied every develop- ment of weight and power.—Roch- ester Democrat Chronicle. 0n the balance, after a survey ol all the formidable consequences, are we prepared only for slow eco- nomic pzossure or are we ready for the one dction that ccriainy would be effective-the closing by the British and French fleets together of the Suez Canal? We say "to- gather." for we take it that no re- sponfible body or opinions in this, country contemplate". single-handed British action. No action can be taken without a united League de- hlrlon following a declomtvn that Italy is the aggressor, and the pro- ject of clOSlllg the Suez’. Cnndl to Italy could only be undertaken by the joint novies and a1": fleets of Great Britain and Frrncc. To- gether they havc in the Mediter- ranean an overwhelming predomin- antrL-New Statesman and Nation. The world In general ls getting very tired of these dictators. They rant and brag and _)l.lt'p"S2|y refuse to accept ‘Laonaife suggestion-t made by othezs to get them out of difficulties into which their pride has swept them. They throw: their weight about for no better reason than to kcep up the illusion oi high and mlrhtincss with which they have invested themselves. They are in short an almost insufferable _ The prospect-s an bright. ian Bank of Commerce paints an encouraging picture of general con- ditions. These show an improve- ment along many lines. The sea- sollll-l eXbansion in certain indus- tries has come earlier than usual. "Cun- struction and metal mining lead in the recent advance, but the stec. and paper mills and some units c. the secondary group of industries l have made, or are about to max.- quite substantial progress," A1- though this is the quietest 53550;. for the utomobile industry, ths downturn is less pronounced than last year. “Newsprint paper mills, which had a record July output, have ahead one of their two most active periods of the year, although it may not surpass the latter part of 1934. About two-thirds of the secondary industries from which we receive regular reports are either busier than in July or have gained over that month, a notable improve- ment having occurred in certain textile centres as well as in the de- mand for industrial equipment." Fisheries are doing better on both coasts. On the other side, however, "for the time being, the outstanding ox- ception to a generally improved in- dustrlal and trade situation is in lumbercing. Production in the ma- jor area, British Columbia, fell 1n July even more sharply than was indicated in last month's Letter, and for the first time since normal operating conditions were restored following the storm damage in Jan- uary the cut declined below that of the corresponding month of 1934 and continued downward, at least in the early part of August. The conditions which have led to this‘ unfavorable turn in British Colum- bia, difficult foreign market devel- opments, are also reflected, though in lesser degree, in the Eastern Canadian industry. It should be noted, however, that strenuous ef- forts are being made to maintain existing markets and to open new trade channels. While the latest foreign trade returns show but little change fro ma. year ago, the ground lost in June has been regained.’ Crop development records are varied. In eastern Canada the bal- ance is on the right side, and on the prairies deterioration in August was‘ less than in July. All in all, the wheat sections cannot look for a bountiful harvest, and in other res- pects this is not likely to he a bumper year for the flamers. The agricultural report is extremely un- even. In some places there have been excellent crops, as in central Saskatchewan and Alberta, while in others the worst fears of the early summer have been confirmed. While not disastrous, it must be regarded as a sub-normal season. . Taken as a whole, the Dominica's industrial and agricultural condition must certainly be taken as improv- ing. The improvement, is far from rapid and doubtless it tests the pat- ience and steadfastness of the peo- ple, but it is sustained and natural. 1t should encourage optimism and continued faith in the unspectacular methods as exemplified in the Bri- tish recovery program; and it offers no justification for resorting to rash cxperimentzilism. Canada is travel- ing up the hill to prosperity and there is no need for her to take chances by attempting dangerous short cuts. Rogers with a line or two. It was a law of journalism not to give any free advertising comedians, and Rogerswos then doing his rope act in tho Zeigfeld "Follies." - law was broken Times because Louis Willey, then business manager, hurried gto the editorial offices after the meeting and told them the speech was the funniest thing he had ever heard. He sat down and tried to give a reporter an account of it, but was so overcome with laughter that he could remember Rogers had said. Between the acts at the "Follies" Rogers, who had spoken from notes dictated speech to the reporter and the Times printed it in full. Frank Munsey was than owner of the Herald. He was" in a tower- ing rage because his paper haxi not printed the speech. He was still more enraged when he was told that it was not the custom to print the speeches of comedians. Fin- ally, he learned that reporter had represented the Herald at the meeting. He had specifically requested a week before that; a. good man be assigned to cover the Mills campaign. ‘flue explanation that tho woman was one cf the best reporters in town did not mollify him. He had asked for e. good man and he would not let anybody palm off a good woman on him. He then ordered that stenog- raphers be hired to attend every meeting where Rogers spoke and to take down his utterances in full. The Herald would come out every few days column speeches of Rogers. The McNaught Wndicate soon became excited and sent Goldberg around to persuade Rog- ers to become a writer. The cow- boy signed up to a. series of Sun- day stories. The McNaught Syndi- cate sold the New York rights to these to the Times, without offer- ing them to the Herald. was shortly circulated through the Hemld offices that Mr. would prefer never to see the name of Will Rogers in the Heraid again. Retrospect And little with two or Prospect to professional of what I. W031i!!! MUIISGY TOBACCO ls voun mast m Its mellow old Burley leaf never lets you_down and it has an extra freshness be- cause it iahnanufactured in the province by . . . HICKEY a» NICHOLSON j USE , BRAHMIN TEA OIANGI 10B XIII GHYWI loll only is led airtight pkls. by the Wiped Cut! I 'Ask the man who has had the misfortune to be “wiped out” if you need Fire Insurance, and follow his advice. - Your Business and your Home need Insur- ance protection. Our Policies all include the risk of Lightning as well as Fire. ~ Consult our nearest Agent or write orcall liYiiliMAii & 00., umlrll Established 1872 Lower Queen Street. E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness‘ and Plate Class Insurance I at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown his Charlottetown three- Rube Word Australia Tries Air-Cooled Trains ceed this, for with a. policy, and nothing tangible to offer the elect- Broke Into Fame (The New Yorker) Will Rogers, in case doubt about velt induccd Rogers to make How Will Rogers there's it, was started on his literary career by Kermit Roose- velt, the lnte Frank Munsey, and the late Louis Wiley. Kermit Roose- speech in Town Hall on the even- ing of October 26, 1922, in favor of Odgcn Mills, who was running for Congress from the Silk Stocking District. The speech accidentally (By Analyst) Tommy-rot isn't an elegant ex- pression, but it often has an ele- gant application. If I were to de- clare that a. Liberal party “has no existence’ in Canada, every intel- ligent reader would clasify me 1n the list of fools-writing tommy- rot - the Patriot) it says,—“lt 1s said that Mr. stevens will split the Conservative party. How can it split something that has no longer existence?" The same embecile, in Writing on Stcvens- (I copy from “ crate, the newly organized parties are most certain to out more deeply into his following, and if he is able to get over thirty per cent of the total vote polled, it will be an accomplishment that the most pessimistic of Conservatives and the most optimistic of Liberals will co '"' as a chimerical dream. We cannot conceal the fact that decidedly larger vote will be polled for the six or seven newly created contending partim. Nor can we get away from the certainty that those defections will be from the old line parties. That many of them will get enough votes to save Air-conditioning of Australian trains 119.8 Cum i. equlllmen: having arrived from England for installation on the crack Sydney- Melbourne express. It is P19190595- to construct light“ Cor Ten" steel. cars in new express trains. Tho adoption of air-conditioning was recommended by lVLr. Harold ClaPP. head of the Victorian Railways, who recently carried on investiza- tions in the United States, Can- ada and England-Australian Press Bureau. ance, and this resulted in a sudden days. The dccorous patting of kid gloves had rewarded a series of dull speakers who preceded Rogers. When he started. he stunned his nudienze immediately by saying that Odgen Mi ls was the brother of Eleanor Mills of the celebrated Hail-Mills double-murder case, which was then in the height of its glory. v After dragging Ogden through this scandal for a while. Rogers informed his audience that Mills has been wealthy before get- ting into poitics, but that he had fioe. “I don‘t know added Rogers, "and that-is why to speak." After some other in- sulfs, he continued. "We Mills. This country needs a. man in Congress that owns his own dress suit. Our candidate," he ad- into a Fifth Avenue home without delivering something. consented to make a speech for IOBCEBY uinnnnsni the diarlatan, down the lane, Rosemarie, came singing Night was tangled in her hair; Her mouth was ripe Sh; whispered incantation; that as cherries. held me like l. chain; She branched my check with heather m . And bruised hi! lips with berries. with momma, the clurlatan, l ' yod a puma of chance. heart, Mills because Kermit Roosevelt had asked him. "I would moire a speech for Harding, if a Roosevelt asked mo." he said. M flrlt i119 ,oudience was mortified and silent caused some journalistic disturb- the Same tirade wflws‘_..The new party is endorsed by twenty-three increase in the cowboys fame. ,, will get enough in reduce the ag- The Mills rally was an evenipg- eggsergiéggvrzdmoxgcmmfgaorsefihnti); gregate votes of the major parties, l‘ B dress affair. Formal clothes would twentyumme associations" that “no so that the assured .42 per cent ' ' ' have been obligatory at a riot in longer exms." Tommyqo, which’ Conservative vote can be relied‘ the Silk Stocking District in those under hm“ Influence, ‘fie weak upon as an overwhelming winner. mind expects to entice votes. Intelligence and common sense is displayed by the Daily Star of Wlncror, Ont., which gives figures and facts from public records in- stead of the home made tornmy- rot of the Liberal press. It the vote polled in 1990 for Conser- vatives 1,909,965. and for Liberals M1115 1,714,860, with 274,180 votes divided between U. F. 0., Progressive, La- bor and Independents. The registered vows show a pos- rible increased vote of 600,000 in grown vastly more wealthy in of- the ensuing election. This is hard- the man," ly probable from the fact that this apparently larger voting power is they have asked me to come here made up in part from parties who stayed at home lastclectiomand to need an extent are likely to do so in ' the present contest. bilitles are that Conservatives nor Liberals willpoll ded, “is the only man we can send the some percentage as 1n 1030, and that the large number of new par- ties in the field will absorb I larg- Rogers explained that ho hid‘ or per cent of votes cast than in l the last contest. Conservatives polled 40 per cent of the total; Liberals 44 per cont; other parties 'I per cent. In this Province, last month, Conservatives all?‘ 42 per cent. This represent- e their depositslis lmlikely. but they even though it might not reach the expected 45 per cent. The Windsor star gives 8 Con- servatlve ministries, 1 Union-Con- servative, total 9, and 8 Liberal governments to even matters up. But one of those creditccl as Lib- eral (1925) was only a minority Liberal government, having only 101 seats as against 110 held by Conservatives. H: held power by grace of 24 Progressives. Who al- lowed him to retain power so long as he was obedient to their whims, and when he ‘ dtsobdientto the whip they sent his government to the coluitry. So that instead of 9 Conservative and 8 Liberal, it was 10 Conservative to ‘i Liberal gov- ernments, showing conclusively that Canada has always been prepon- deratingly Conservative, and will Noted Ph_,sician treated nuc- oessfuly and obtained W?‘ manent cures of Stomach Conditions, such as Indiges- tlou, Dyspepsia, Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dis- tress ‘and many, other ail- ments peculiar to the stom- ach with a prescription, which we have procured and sell under the name of EVANS sTolvlAcn MIXTURE. We alone have the sole rid“; on this prcsorlptiorl and since selling it have received num- erous tutimonlais from satis- fied purchasers. DON'T F001. with your stomach. Serious conditions u; likely to arise if you allow into a shows 1th M1116" Q i n‘ m‘ grilling so after the 14th of Octo- {hunk ‘ha, 0:21;", tn“. ' I Uh. G6‘ I NIH-id today. [T160 ll cents. MACS I'll-E OINIMENT Gives quick relief in all cues of Internal and External Piles. Brings instant relief. We found Pile: could he cured by Illng MACS FILE OINT- f was the 13st to break down. The newspaper reporters who dismissed covered tho meeting 4min AVIHM. in "The Spinners.‘ ‘ Tm! Iifllt walnuts. rlplhle of %l hour. are to be built , Annals cont paint. Flxlly, somebody thought it was‘ u yandlau ed. Boon ever!- body WI! llilg hi“ Olddh H111! imum possible vote to poll. Th was no third, fourth or fifth parties to absorb the dis- whioh was included duplicated vot- es and purchased repeaters. _. If the Bennett government ae- cured no more than the Prince cont of the whole 0f Olhldl, it would irisum him a hlndlomo mu- font of seats over all intbo neat meat. Yet there is substan- tial reason for concluding that a "ll 011 1m- cent, reduclhl it to i! p01’ cent will be the 10104.‘) able Conservative Manor size I 47¢ HOUSil-IOLD size 1h Drugstore Jolmn I Johnson .fris‘cesnlltcutsu. HINT. Price b0 cents. MACS IBSINOI Ol‘ VINEGAR nan; double the strength of ordinary essence of Vlu- egar. ' Now is the time to prepare for pickling. We have a com- plete lino of your needs. item- ember Macs Iuenoo of vine- gar sold only‘ by _ The 2 Macs loll‘ Ordem 0.0.1). Promo"! Attended l0- A sped-lir- Groct been‘ 3m"-