ins: roux THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Gllarlnttotoliii yfinarillan ...,.,_”_ 'donI.l-D‘.-(bl. menu:-3.:-an. .- ‘ ‘Vlao-Pnddllt. J. I. Iurnotl. I. J. L lam-u. Llnubool. n. A. Imx1...u.v 9- 0. HI I.‘ I!|noh..I.l oC0.I.J.l .‘l‘,:.'..:: .'.'r.:: ...' ....' ...".:. . 0.... : I -- llornilu may (lulled tun use per your '(ln ulvuuo) 1 dbllvend In Clty. ll.0I nor you (In odnnu) nnllod I0 Prllu Iialvmrd .lvdaIrL use nor you (In odvuoob Inllod to Clnulu and llnltod Elston SATUIIDAY. ‘JULY. 4. 1986. Those Pensions Promises So difficult is it to find alibis for the CAMPBELL Government on any ground what- ever that it is not surprising our contemporary, every time it ventures to speak on the Govern- ment's behalf, puts its foot in it. Old age pen- sionsis the latest subject on which it comes to grief. ’When it says this was not an issue in the last election campaign, it ignores the state- ments of its party candidates, many of whom criticised the amounts paid, alleging that the original Liberal $20 monthly plan had been re- duced to $15 under the Conservatives. This was also emphasized in the federal campaign by the Liberal candidates. The aged people were un- iqustionably given to believe that by voting Liberal their pensions would be increased. . But this was not the only Liberal pledge with regard to Old Age Pensions. Plank 14 of the Liberal platform read: “Urging on the Dominion Govcruntent its obligation to pay the full cost of old age pensions." In the manifesto read by Premier C.-\.\II’BELL and published in the Patriot of July 5, 1935, we find this assur- ance reiterated: "The Liberal party, if returned to power, will urge upon the Dominion Gov- ernment its oblig.-1tio11 to pay the full cost of old age pensions in this Produce." \\'l1:1t has been done to implement this promise? We note that our contemporary has not stopped short of garbling its own previous quotation of Dr. I\L\cl\l1LLAN’s statement about old age p(‘llSl0l‘lS and the Liberal pledge to bal- ance the budget. The Doctor’s statement as quoted by l‘rcn1ier CAMPBELL at the Bloomfield of July 13. 1935, was as follows: MAC;‘\l1L1..-«N said in Tignish that we can’t bal- ance the budget except by increased taxation, cutting out unemployment relief, the old age pensions." answer, as reported in the same issue of the Patriot, was: “But I say to you that we can and must balance the budget zviihattt doing any of these tI1ing.r.” It is scarcely necessary to remind our con- temprary that this solemn promise has already been violated. Taxation has been increased on chain stores and on public amusements of all 1 kinds. And a great effort made by Mr. i CAMPBELL and his associates in conjunction with the KING Government to obtain power to impost- additional provincial sales taxes was pre- \‘t'lll(‘(l only by the vigilance of the Senate. 5 t‘ f The Silent Majority Noting the conclusions reached at the Can- into some farmers’ hearts. N6 ‘inferiority complex.’ This section reads: ‘The judgment of the Court shall, in. all cases, be final and conclusive, and no appeal shall be brought from any judgment or order of the Court to any gourt ofappeal established by the Parliament of Great Britain and Ireland, by which appeals or petitions to His Majesty in Council may be ordered to be heard, saving any right which His Majesty may be, graciously pleased to exercise by his Royal prerogative.’ “Appealing to the Judicial Committee is carrying a grievance ‘to the foot of the Throne,’ a privilege granted not by Parliament or the British North America Act, but by the Sov- ereign. No one is obliged to use the privilege; so why try to work up an ‘inferiority complex’ over it ?" > Editorial Notes Girl Guides in Camp. 9K 9K 3K Independence Day, U. S.A if 3K ilé It is an ill wind that does not blow optimism 9K ilé It has now been decided the Federal Liberals will assist the Godbout Government in its election campaign. ‘>12 ate are Emperor HAILE SELASSIE, like others who have lost their crowns, wants restoration or compensation, but alas his appeal reaches only a sentimental depth at Geneva. 3K 9K 9K A Montreal autoist escaped paying $3.000 damages for a street collision, because a crate of eggs which he carried had not a single shell cracked. The Court held there could not have been negligence under such circumstances. Bl? 9K 9K Imports of raw sugar during May amount- ed to 130,103,100 lbs., valued at $3,121,991 compared with 93,098,700 at $1,598,089 in May last year. The May import came from the fol- lowing countries: British Guiana 42,522,300, British campaigti meeting and reported in the Patriot 575,300, South Africa 3,238,700, Barbados 33,- jamaica 1o,oo6,ooo, Trinidad 2,431,100, “Premier Fiji 10,817,700 lbs. BK 5K 3K There are no flies on Prime Minister or stopping BALDWIN, even if he does go to Chequers for And Premier CAMr13r.1.L’s a week-end snooze Unlike the late President COOLIDGE he does choose to continue to run as chief executive, and serves notice that be him- elf will determine when he should lay down the leadership. That is the sort of backbone English- men like their leaders to possess. ?K BK 9* The most remarkable thing about the re- noval of a nail from an Australian child's lung 11 a Philadelphia hospital, is that the distinguish- d surgeon, Dr. Cl-IEVALIER JACKSON, who per- ormed the operation in seven minutes, wears a grizzly ‘beard——almost unprofessional in the United States, though more-or-less customary in England and on the continent. BK BK BK The Hon. C. A. DUNNING before sailing with Hon. W. D. EULER on the Empress of Bri- a1'll,1|| Congress of Youth assembled last month tain for London declared he was “willing to talk at Ottawa, opposing, among other things, cadet t and militia training, The Legionary, official or- o the best customer,” and explore other avenues for the increase of Canada's trade. He would gan of the Canadian Legion, comes drily to the not admit. in an interview, that the plans were conclusion that “the growing generation has very already drafted to make a deal in Canada’s little help to offer the older generation." wheat for England's woollen textiles, though that But perhaps it is unjust to the younger gen- has been freely rumoured in Ottawa for some eration to assume that they were adequately rep- time. resented at the Canadian Congress of Youth. The fact is that it is exceedingly difficult to get ‘BK 9K 3K Soviet Russia has made artificial restriction a cross-section of the mind of any section of child-bearing a criminal offence, while, on the from the utterances of a voluble minority. The majority of the youths of twenty years ago who _ enlisted for war service when the interests of 1 other hand bonussing large families. The (lov- great mass of the growing generation do not at- ernment will pay 2,000 rubles a year for five years tenrl Youth Congresses, any more than did the after the birj A similar aid at the birth of each succeeding child, h of the seventh child, and give ncluding the 10th. After the 10th, 5,000 rubles their country were at stake. If the same need will be paid for each new baby. The law was arose. again, if the issue were as clearly defined, made retroactive to apply to all families which we have not much doubt as to the response. "The lnferiority Bogy" The Dominion Day editorial in the Toronto have already qualified. Public nurseries where mothers may leave their children while at work are to remain open for 16 hours instead of eight. élé 9K 9! A challenge to Premier MITCHELL HEP- Clnlrr, lending Liberal newspaper, is devoted to ‘“’R":,‘“' “Y Cablllet membF"v lo 5l‘°“’ 3 ml“ answering pretty effectively the arguments of fi”""l“"‘l "P0" 0'5 the P"°V'“Ce~ “'35 "fade l’.V those favouring the ill-fated Liberal scheme to H0” ,E"RL’5 ROWE» lead” °f_”‘e O"l3“° CW‘ scrap the B» N. A. Act as an Imperial statute. 5'3""““"3 Part)’: 35 he made hls fi"5t 3PP°3"-"lice \\'c quote : he olvscrring its Dominion status in a condition t of ‘mlouial ulferiority complex,’ to use the _ S‘\'I1r<l3 resut-rel-tcrl by Senator DANo1'RANn in a ‘ l‘t‘(‘(‘|ll .Kp(‘('Cll. :\ml the same thing must have been qoitig on for sixty-nine years, even though the I)o1uiniou was created and provided with :1 rl1:1rtvr by the Imperial Parliament—an ogrcish and fearful institution, it would seem, with which we should have no truck or trade. We are l>L'.~'ct‘cl1c<l to show that we have become too big, proud and independent to be subservient to either the Mother of Parliaments or His Maj- estyis Privy Council. On Canada's sixty-ninth birthday it is unbecoming to express our nation- ‘ al entity with an inferiority complex. “Arguing that the privilege of appealing to the Privy Council is a mark of national infer- iority or a reflection on the ability bf Canadian I jurists is but common blather. It is as unreason- ’ able as to say that the League of Nations or ‘“ the Hague Tribunal discloses an inferiority '7 complex in the member nations. The fact that Cnnada’s Constitution has functioned admirably r for nearly threescore and ten years is due to the “large number of interpretations coming from the Judicial Committee at Westminster. Only re- cently it has been demonstrated that it play: an rs-onsential part in the country’: administrative af- "'; fairs. Is it evidencejof on lnferiority complex 1 that the Supreme Court ‘could not pas: ‘satisfac- ' gory judgment on certain social legislation? ” ‘ "Sir Aium Annswou-in pointed out dur- ,_: mg the debut: in.fl1ehS6Ia£te¢l1at1Pf0‘:'ii‘:Ihces ha: ‘stem ritsoapeaw,ann flmmlgh tofyby iesolutlonpor statute of Par- 1 i mall, » form "pf a courier . . .. $I‘X.lIl('l1“; w .11‘ it ‘ 1.. to at :1a".":"1L " 5 on a political platform in Eastern Ontario since --‘,\,.m,.,1;ng to those who “mum abolish ap, his elevation to the partydeatlersliip. No finan- pmjq ,,, the pn‘\.y Council’ (-vanada today must rial report had been submitted to the electors of he province since the Liberal party came. into office, charged Mr. Rows. “The province is go- ng into debt $147,157 every day except Sund:1_v." aid Mr. Rowe, “and the Liberal Government 1215 addcrl $100,000,000 to the $88,000,000 debt that existed when it took otlicc." In 17 months the Government took $3510oo,ooo from the mot- orists of the province and gave back only $11.- ooo,oo0. he said. In regard to the Liquor Control ’\ct, Mr. Rown declared in Toronto taxi stands and restaurants had been turned into saloons, and 11 another city he said a tabernacle and a beer and wine store operated in one building. It 3|‘ ill In view of the recommendation of the Grand Jury that pedestrians should carry lights for self-protection against autos, i‘. should be borne in mind that pedestrians hav~ undisputed rights of way on streets and roads. Pointing out that crossing a street at a place other than the intersection is not an act of negligence per se, removing from a pedestrian right of action to claim damages, Mr. Justice Fmaxs SURVEYER in Superior Court, Montreal, confirmc-l ‘a jury ver- dict awarding $11,250 to Tnomts DAVIS for in- jury suffered when struck by :1 bus of the Col- onial Coach Lines, Limited. In refusing to grant the Company’: appeal to set aside the verdict of the jury. Justice Sunvnn noted a Privy Coun- cil ruling definin the powers of a jury. in which it was held: “When it is decided that 1 case is to be ltied by a jury. that trlbuml is the only judge of the facts, and no up llate tribunal can sub- stitute its findings for tliirof the jury. The ap- lns a function to see. ffirzt, gltltenlsnn jceinsu o te .lsy ‘yj ; and ‘ whether f,,fiIn,tulyl II Mn one which ran- uu,-amlgln can go." .-‘I Notes by the Way Btmuh mlziltrates uncnlly In adopting the coune followed by the Bristol Bench of charging vhzrunts. who have money found on them 30 cents a day whlle in prison. About 2,000 men and women are sent to prim.) annually in Enginncl tor begging and other vau-rancy ol- lences. Many of these have been seen to have considerable sunu nec- ieted about them.—Calza.ry Herald. Great Britain and the other countries or the Commonwealth at least have no temptatlon to force the pace (in rea.rma.ment.). owing to labor consclptlon and low wages, Germany can make a pound do the work of a £5 note in the Unlted Kingdom though costs there am much lower than in the Domlnlon. But. so tllsquletlng is the world out- look that hardly anybody now doubts that increased expendi- ture on armaments can only be avoldcd by running terrible risks. British policy is to recognize that in this age I:he‘a.lr arm is pam- mount. and to build up such offen- slve power in the air as to deter I would—be aggressor. Most. of the domlnlons also scent danger and are setting their houses In order. The Union's defence plans were completed ‘long ago and are rim affected by the new B1-ltlsh pro- gram —Ca.pet,own Cape Argus. Titled persons resident in Am- erica nrc belng sought. it seems, for tz '1"radn Union of Ncblemen now in PI‘f‘CI.=< " ’~m1ntlon in New York. The arm‘ 0' tr thl;- union are slightly dlfferort ‘maps from those of’ others-—nt least no mention is made or higher pay. But the member: are concerned with such consider- ations as recognition. the closed shop and protection of members against unfair oractlces. Their con- tention is that peerlsh prestige has suffered heuvlly as a consequence of the actlvltles of phony lords, dukes and marquesses who impose upon hosts, hotels and helresses and thereby impair the standing and chances of the bearers of genuine titles. The league will undertake, according to the press accounts. to examine the claims of applicants and to issue proper credentials to them Needless to say. the organization will be along craft. rather than industrial lines. It remains to be seen, of course, whether the members wlll adopt the weapons as well as the form of unionism Maybe we shall have to watt untll the next time a. bogus blueblood makes the grade and see whether the certified nobleman with decorations appear en muse on the plcke line with cautionary placards bearing crests ma mus. ink motloes from the Almanac de Goths —Baltlmore Sun. The Irlsh universities are um. slfintly the subject or lll—ln!oz'med crltlclsm. some cnltlcs think a uni- vemity should be a glorfled technl. cal school. others lmnglne 3 um. verslty function is to ‘promote this or that national policy; othm are apparently under the ':npres- sh... that 3. university education is a waste of time and money unless it is the passport to an immedi- W‘- appointment. The universities lh‘-mselves are in part. to blame for these mlsapprehenslons. They do llttle to enlighten the publlc as to the P311 the)’ l>1fl.V. There ls, so far 35 We are aware, no comprehensive report on the unlversltles. cur. lectlvlv or lndlvldtuillyg nomg°,m,,- “O” 15 given to the public as to the tendency to overcmwd or to neg. le:t. as me case may be. the varlous faculties; no help is given to pm- f‘r11t.s and very little to employers, I this could bn rhnnged with m. L)» effort. The Intlversmes must “"158 to bury Lhr-lr heads in the illiha/t £0112’ of goats I4JcnalD.Ia0u.lllD. SELECTING THE PROPER POLLEM TO PREVENT HAY- FEVER Although the hay fever season starts earlier tn the South than in the North. ' the season generally‘ speaking extends Irom July to October according to the date at whlch the ragweed or other plant matures and the pollen from It get: carried away in the Air. There are 3 number of pollen: whlch cause hay fever and the putt- ent who is seeking relief from hay fever symptoms expects to have tests made on his skin so that the special pollen ca. ‘ ,, the may be sound. Oren 0. Durham In his book “Your Hay llvver" says:-—The main points for the selectlon of 5 partl- cular pollen as belng the likely cause of your partlcttlar symptoms nre:—. 1. The pollen must. be one that is being carried tn the air by the wind. If it Isn’t carried by the wind it will not ordinarily reach your nose and therefore not cause hay fever. There Ls thus no need to treat with pollen of goldenrod daisy, dahlla, or slmllar flowers Visited by insects. ~ 2. The dates of maturing and the carrying away of Lhe pollen by the wind must agree with the au- son in which the hay lever symp- toms appear. 3. The plant. from which the pollen com/es must be present. in ' general locality m which the patient. is mccttswmed to suffer. 4. The pollen should have been shown tobepresenttn Lbealrm sumclent. amount to cause trouble. The actual amount or concentra- tion at pollen can now be measur- ed. 5. And flrmlly, of course, the patient must. be shown to be sensi- tive to that pollen by skin test. or by other means- It. is by using the above common sense rules that the proper pollen for injection is selected in tmncto prevent. hay fever in my partlcular case. There are the three systems of giving the tn,lect.lons—bodore the hay fever season starts, during the hay fever season, and at two to four weekly intervals during the en- tire year. Results would seem to Show that. glvlng the injections throughout the entire year gives best results, before the hay fever season starts gives next best, and during the season good results but not as good as during either of the other periods.’ The success of the lnlectlon of pollen method, which gradually makes the individual less sensi- tlve to the pollen causing his hay fever depends upon the amount. of his sensltlveness and of course the amount of pollen in the at: In his partlcular dim-lct. some cases an cured in one season. sortie take as many as tour or flve, and A car- tatn percentage apparently can- not be helped by this method at all. Politics In N. B. (Moncton Times) The Fredericton Gleaner, which has been a consistent supporter of sands ——Irlsl1 Iitrlnjwnrmm Dubun """‘ ll‘ 5 T3” TN’ You to loss off to your nst.o11l.=I.vd friends: Lass um" 20 l'>l’l‘rP11t of Canada's 3.700.- 000 Square miles has been mapped. The demand for maps is lnrreas. lng at a startling pace. The Topg. Qmphlcal and Air survey Bureau of the Department of the Interior (what. a tltlm distributed 38,882 maps in 1931-32 nnrl over 100,000 In 1935- 36. With prosprctlng nnd aviation expanding rapidly, the demand is not nicely to diminish. The evolu- tlon of many or the modem mapsl has enzrnsrlnz stories behind them. HllllSfln'S Bay (‘.nmnan1- and North- W"Fl- C°ml‘8m' maps were {re- the Liberal party in the Province for more than :1 dozen years and should know whereof it speaks, had some Interesting news in its columns one day last week per- talnlng to expected political changes In the Pmvlnce. Judging from the Gleaner artlcle, it would indicate that the Province crut. is being badly buffetted on the polltcal seas and the leading crcwmen are abandoning ship for a comfortable londlnll. With rc- spcct to the slttuntlon. our Gnpltnl City conmnpomry says: “While only time will tell when announcements are made. rum- bllngs of political shlfta within the P1-orvlnclal and Federal sphere l’l‘lt‘I’|'-l_v llw lw1:'11111lncs and like revlslnn-: or famous dictlnnm-$95‘ they have born built. up and evo1v- l ed to meet the requirements of tn- day. There is an area east of Ox- ford Housr. nstride the Manitoba- Onmrlo boundary. which has sud- dvnlv become E pre-Cam-brlrm l'ln.p- ml huntlntz ground for prospectors. The best. map available of the am: last. yl",a.l’ showed two lakes; a new man just. lssued shows more than three thmisand l1=.ke.s. That's the "ny we llke our stat.lstlcs—bold and swceplng—’1'he Beaver Win- nlpeg. Roger W. Baboon. nulonnlly known In -"it. statistician, sold at. Boston recently. "A: a. hedge ngnlnsl 11 Fuclst. government in the Unlted states. I advise hnvlns a. small nest egg In good Oanadfm oecurltles, which about! he left. In Canada in case of I. Montresl bank." Butcan therebenginnntee that Onnadlnn at-cur-ll.le.-., comlder-. edgoodtodamwlll beugoodu year from now‘! Alberta bands were noted high, but the “Social Credit" victory l; the last elections Ind the new Premier‘: arbitrary partial rqaudlntlon of Alberta‘: bonded debt hlve implanted a far that other Oanndlan provinces may go to unpudlotkm. At. this time thouah. Canadian‘ munch: nnusoodbet.Rzeoove, {swell under any. and has Droireoaeaj without tntcrrupuon for many mom.l1s.—apnknnlllAlcunun lu- vlew. ’ in New Brunswlrk. lnvolve the retirement possibly of two mem- bers of the Provlnclnl Legislature and the third a. provincial repre- sentative at Ottawa. “The Pravlnclul Government whlch yesterday was slated to meet today has been postponed untll the seconu of July. Two matters or major Importance for their consideration are the award- mg or the contracts for slx small bridges and the re-organisation of the New Brunswick Public Ut.lll- tles commission. "E. R-. Mcbonsld. K. C .M‘.P.P., of Bhedluc. who represents West- morland Oounty in the Provincial Home It the present time appear: to be the choice for the chairman- ship of the Utllltles Oommlulon and 0 Allan MacAvl£y of Saint John :5 o ember of the Board. The third member unidentified at the present time will npresent. the French-apuklrur lntoresta and the choice will likely full nmonu uavml possible candidate: In the Northern parts of N9! Bruno- wlck. ‘ "W M. mm. M. P.. of hint John. is mentioned I: the suc- it in on at ivhlle ineriiluky one W4 “*0 Pm‘ ridge. pens, Kings ” sure in b0 one Of PUBLIC FORUM _ 1-up oollnl |I 0!" Munch: uniifll an IIQ l—l| 0! guulon 0! “.3: onions cu ovllki‘ u oorruiollnlt : NATIONAL PARK. I10. sir.-Having spent some tuna 31 Queen’: county this mine. I cowl not. help but admire and cm! W wlde-awake people In that section. 'l"t.ev certainly take what. they “-3 get and ask tor more. The ,°°n“'““. in Kins: is depmllnc: no I00" money spent on mad: than is ab- aolutely neoeastry. even less. Yet I would wager our politicians. when next election come around. wlll do some loud cackllng about all the money they ma-M804 '0 39” ‘°’ Kings, money that would have been spent 1! they had never been mud on Why cacklo about the law puny dollars spent. on our roads? A mere dmp tn the bucket comp!!- ed to what is spent 11: Queens! And thlsroudxnoneylssupposedtobe for relief and to be evenly dlat.rlbu- ted. Queens should oert.a.lnlY 130 neatly relieved by this time. 10! may are uettlns 1 lane P01’?-1°11 01 that sweet. anaesthetic, "1-and mon- eyl" While Klaus--l Some of our Kins”: County NW!- sentatlvea put me in mind of is not hen I had when 5 chlld. Being a pet, I saw to it she was spared when culling tlme came. she was so Old the only egg she had lldd tor yell‘: was in imagination. yet daily she satlna.cert&lnnestandwou1dIl- law no other hen to sit or lay ln it; and as regularly nvo I hopeful oackle which ended with a. 1001! Of dojectlon when she looked at the empty nest. is lot of my pet, I boylshly decided to rive her something to cackle over. so next time I saw her on the meat. I slipped in porcelain nest: can under her: and waited results. The result surprised even my expectatlans. '1'heoId.lady wok one look at the pretty ess and- never stopped cackllnx for the best part. or un hour. she tooled herself and the other hens into thinking she had laid it real egg! so with our polmclun: they cackle so much about something we would have received anyway they fool themselves and the voters lute tlitnklng that they were the mom cause of this little government can being In d for them. They waste so much ti 9 crowing over what. would be spent. here anyway, and they have no time 101- anything else, such as relief money for roads, Natloml Park. ate. some may call me at park crank but. I can assure them there are cnmkler park cranks In the other counties t.ha.n I can hope to be now. Take for example the six hunclrad nu-es oflered tree in Prince; also 3 gratis otter from Queens. And hearsay has it the M. P‘: of Queens and Prince, from me ‘Premier down are scuttllng around like the on.- quoted hen looklna for :. nostr- zooklng for I. favorable site for the 5, park in tbelr own oounuu. no doubt they will make sure they have a. real egg to oockle about next election. 'I‘hey will make sure they have the rooster, head and Ill, and not 3 bunch of feathers, while our representatlvea aren't. even trying to catch a. tea.t.t1e.. They would sooner cackle over a. (also out Rumour once had it there would be no politics In connection with the choosing of the park site. But, look at it now, senators, Premier. M.P.'a. wlth eager fingers reaching for me forty thousand {or their supporters tt not for themselves. But. also. not a senator nor M. P. from Kings! “ vv, politics has gotten in the porridge pot. or ‘the National Park scheme, and , ‘ ‘ 1! K01!!! whaveasaylnthochooslnzsttaer 311, The porridge ls ates-mint: Ind seething. and a couple 01 00"!“-1°‘ to seamed and um um 3" mm W’ intlng tholr sores. and unless I mlncle hw- ghns a.nt.lc.s of our Liberal mem- here In this matter. especially. his geemlngl’ mterlorlty complex of our King‘! County Liberal. In beymd belief and my undentundtns. and almost. makes me ashamed that 1 am a llfe-long Llbeml u were my parents before me. I um, Slr, etc., VERNON L. DAVEY. 1 mrést mu, P. 2:. 1. Family Reunions (Kitchener Record) The summer season ushers in those pleasant. events known as family reunlons. At. one time these assemblies of clans were hold in- rrequently, but with the advent. of the motor car. many of’ the BEND- gethers of ldth and tin have be- coma annual exenta, drawing at- tendants from 3. much lune fldlu-I- In keeping with the times fuully reunions have become well organiz- ed nftalrs. Various executives are responsible for psrtlcular ports of the program. This means no over- lnmtng and prevents grom errors being made In whatever preparat- ion: He needed to stole a success- ful gutherlnl. One of the fuvorltae pastimes of oldsters at funlly reunion: in the tr clue but or this on-,t.hAt mom- ber of the funlly tne. D-udlte peo- ple call ll: geneslocy. or somethlnc like that. The young members of the clan, u 5 rule, do not mul- fut. much Interest In how they lisp- pen to be I forty-second cousin to thst tsce Ippesrlng at. the fur and of the table laden with good thlnu to at. Genealogy 1: too much like IXIOIII». They would rather let thd pha:t:-outer be "1!" and let it as It ceuorlochled Justice 3. I. , rfi ()R.AN(.“-E great. convenience. llYllllMAll & Lower Queen Street, ‘or Vitnlittjalwnus use BRAHMIN PE KOE TEA we lletiommegndi A Refund Annuity-.- for persons who want a monthly income (pay- able by cheque) and find that present Interest rates are not sufllclent. to pay adequate income. Our Great-West. Life Annuities-—elther‘on a single life. or on husband and wife jointly-— provido complete security, For further particulars consult _ rmabumd 1872 E. R. Brow &Son Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness high return and 00., umtt-:11 Charlottetown Zj and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis vehanenu in lost. your’: election umvl-llrn. are that [V1 6110 W order-ln~oounc1l vs at the constitution. and that Parlia- ment must be conoulted on all questions tnvolvim the possibility to odnxlnlatrntlve rouuno nndtothe ‘ ; ottllhorlty with which the Ministry of the day has llunent.And ever!- one 11 now agreed that Canada must not go to war without Pulls- ment‘a consent. One ll then! shocked, not to say horrified, to find that Mr. King has fallen from grace on both thue crucial polnta ln his political creed. Just. as the recent. session was nearing its end. Hon. 0. H. Cohan startlodt-he I-Iouoeof common; with the declnntlon thst flu Kins Gov- e ‘ bad Imposed sanctions Intact Italy by ordu--in-council. am this actlon had been taken wltbout Parliamentary nuthorlty, that in was Ill-lily luloonstltutlonal and that ll: might have involved Canada in 1 nuopenn wnr. Premier King uclmowletted the corn. but Lrsued nut, 11 Canada was wrong, so also wla Great Britain, whose Government has done the some thing in the some way. Apfl-ft from the pawn: hlluzy of usurnlng that what. another Government. has done is a valid excuse for 3 broken please and 5 discarded owned. it is simply as- toundlnq that the leader of cm- adlan Liberalism to content to seek shelter behind the example or on unragenente Tory Adnilnlstrsllon In Great Britain. But Mr. Bennett was more charl- toble than Mr. Cohan in his ID- pralsal of Mr. Kinds txom consistency. Admitting that the King Government In: in this can faced with I tlllflcull: sltiuntlon be- cause the crisis had arisen when Parllunent was not in union. the Conservative leader found no fault wlth the order-In-council lanposlng sulctloria, but novetheleu pointed out that the whole question should have been submitted aubsequentl, lo the Home for In Ipproval. Seriously and without. questlon. M. Bennett to right. Where Premier King went. wrong was not tn no he did In on emer- gency. but In sfterwnnk allowing 3 whole uaslon of Parliament to pass without 3 dbcuulon of the Itolo-lthlophn nfnlr. Itwuucnoa when he band to polltloal earned!- onny. ended ,3 doblte he did not mush. and Incidentally forgot his hlah-soundlnl constitutional ure- About the or sgzgsggéggggi *_l§§;§ gill I ~ « 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown —' L‘ Feet Of Clay ““ :$dM pm --- sea Enter or Two nvpasfedly by gamma 3,. mt‘: Ooununs Wen Bridge. she ma non: previously left. llnnouth. The ltotancnt more appeal! Ib- moot. incredible, but It can be fully vouched M- SHADOWS Are they shadows tlut we see? And can “ ‘, pleuu c give? Pleasures only shadow: be. out by bodies we conoelve, And are made the things we deem In those firms which they seem. DI-rt. ‘Brought. heart . must length ft. in the -—l5nrnuel Dmlol. non: century)‘ FREE for RHEUMATISM nurm-rorrs nauumuo GAPS!!!-E8 (1--11.-cu) {no you [run an vain and MM- ol vhuuuthn ll 5 simmer Grovlng Button: for Pill -with or without dehytlnled 0009 non; sunglo No. I lotlon for Adi!" loses. 34 you mu-In all-or. Macs Blood Food