t PAGE 101111 I112 Charlottetown Guardian 1'= Paton-m r.11-111.-1-»i. w. cin-mi- s. M11...“ Vlc-u-Prenltlt-lit .1. n. 11111-11111, rum. 1 Idltur untl llniiinzlnir lllrrctur J. It. llurnrtt F. J. l. 1 1111-1111111 LleuL-fnl. n. .1. 11111111111111». u. s. o. ' Armin-lulu 1211111»- 1-11111111 ivunu-i- 1.1111 u. 1;. Currie llornlnx Ilnlly tfonlulml ltlllii $1.00 per your (In admin-cl lli-llvvretl l|| (‘lly $1.011 114'!‘ year tln nth-uric») mulled to Prince Etlunnl l~I1o11| 5.7.1111 per yi-nr (in ndmnce) Milllell tn Ctlllllthl illlll lillllrtl Fllltl TUESDAY. MAY, 4, 1931 1 Booming bfaritime Business According to t110 llank of Nova Scutia ,- lllonthly l\'1-p1111 lnisiiir-s in 1111- .\laritin10 l‘ro~ viiiccs \\1'l> notably 1101101 during the first 1111a!‘- tei" 111' 1111- _\1.'11 111.111 in 1l_i1- c11111-s1111iidiiig iiiontlis 01' 19511. 111111111101111-111 \\;1s r0corel01l in both \\'li11l1-.~:111-' .-111-l 1-01:1il 11.11112 1111110 grcztlcr activ- 11y 1n 1111- 11111111111114. 111111» :1111l pa111-r and iron ¢1i11l§1c0l lll1lll-ll'l1's' 10-11111-11 lll an ii1c10.1-0 iii e111- ,, [Jl1I_\'lll1‘11l 111' about 5'), Lllllll1\'!'|l|t‘ll 1111- 11111-11 to riijoy 11111- of 1111- liest >0a~11iis 1111' ~111110 _\1-ar~. \\'0.'11110r condi- iltlll~ 111-11- s;11i~1':11"11>1'\ for logging and the e111 1111- 11111111-1-1111111; l:11;;1-'i' tli:1n 111111 of last _\'0z1r. Stock.- 111' ~ltl\ll 1111111101 art- virtuallv 1-.\l1;111~11-1l 10111111111; l10.'1\_\ .\l|1]1l|lt'lll~ to llritiiiii 21.1111 111c- l'iii1e11 -\1.111‘.~. .1111] price.- llZHC increased. _-\s 110111111111 1'1 m 1111111 1111-1- lll1ll'l\1‘l,~' continues sow-no. 1111- 1-\;11‘-111 1111:1111 11 1111-11111111- iavour- 11111- 1'11?‘ 1111- 1111-1111 -1.1<1111. ' 'l'li1- 111111 .2111 ~'1-1l 1111l11~11_v has 110011 ~1ill 1111110 .1011\1- 11111211; 1111- 11.1w 11111-0 months. 'l'l1c 011111111 111' >l1‘ll ni-‘ls 11i- \ir111:1ll_v 1-1-:101i1-1l cap» ricity aii-l 1-:.-.111~_111-111 1'11 1111- iron 1iiin1-s iii .\'1--.\1'111i1111l:111§ 1111' x311‘ 1111111 :1 year ago. .\ larc-c 1111111110 111' 111111 is on 11111111 and opt-ra- tiinr- ;11'1-. 11111-1) 111 011111111111- at current lcvt-ls dur- ing 1110 1'1-'-11:111.1l1-r of 1111- year. Coal production (1111-1111,- 1111- 111151111-1 exvc1-1l1-1l that of the" saiiie period in 11._;-1 aii-l the 11111111111. is t-ncourzigiiig. 151111111-1- have 110110111011 1111111 higher 1irices for 1111t:11--1~.‘1l:1ir_v pro-lzicts 111111 grains. 'l'11e potato c1111» 1-111-11111111-11-11 a 1111111 1ii.11'l<1-1_ aii-l the 1111111 10111111 will 1111111.1111v t‘XL't‘t'1l that 111' 1.'1st 51-11-1111 11_v more 111.111 5111f. 'l'h1ni1_1l1 1111- past _\'1-.'1r 1111- a 1111111‘ oin- 1111' .'i111111- growers, 1101's 111110 11111101111 \\1-ll a1i1l t-arly |1l'11>|1L’L‘l$ for the nt-w c1111» ar0 1'a\11111.1l111-. .\11 increasing e111- phasis has r01-1inly 111-1-11 placed upon dairyiiig. klutter aii1l cli1-1-se production 1111111111 the first quarter n-as c11iisi1l1-ral1ly- gn-ater than a year Ego and pricvs 1101c higher. Fox fanning, too, 1111111111111-11 to 111- a 1ii-oiital1l0 s1111rce of revenue in Prince liduard l>llllltli ltigh 111111lity pelts have thus far f0t1-l1c1l higher prices than a year ago while 1111111a1i11i1s for inferior grades have bpcu slightly lo\\c1~ New-Old Epoch Tradition The new King and Queen will ascend tlic throne with a git-at tradition ht-liiiid them. The tradition goes back a thousand years. But its p-111tilzir phase s1a1-t1-1l with Queen \'ictoria and sirengilit-nccl 111111 the late King tit-urge» lid- vvrird s11c1-1-1-1l1-1l his father and brought still grout-r 1111110 to the lll'lillll't'1l_\'. The dramatic l1a11111-ni1i_4~_ uhich ev0111iia11-1l in his zilnlication and the transfer of tl11- Crown 111 his brother. have in 1111 nay 110112111011 from the inipia-ssive pagcziiiiijv nor 1110 ii1111or1aiice of the event. l-'or the Coroiiinion is a rite. lt is a symbol of lllL’ unity o1 1111: Empire and the continuity of the 11111111. And it is this aspect of it ivhich is \('(’l'l by Sliiltsillllll and scholar. poet and peas- a111, or 11y tl11- Oriental 1iotcntat1: whose turban- ed lit-all and picturesque garb decorate the slrt-cts of 1111- metropolis and the tribal chief fioin the tropics who excites the interest and admiration 01' the passing crowds. 'I‘hi.< (_'1il‘U1l'1ill1ill differ.- from previous coron- Btions lit-cause it marks the crniviiing not alone of the King 01' liritain and its dependencies. but also of the s1-li-govcriiiiig states of the Coin- fil1illl\‘t‘illll'l. which are entirely independent of tach 01111-1. 'l'l11: i_-tl1 day of .\la_v hcgins a new epoch in do far that 1111 that day will be crowned the fir-t Kin; of Canada. ljndcr the 'l'rrat_v 01' \\'1-~1ini1i~11-1-_ 111- lit-gin our separate existence with litttiljJt: \'l 01' England and l 01' Canada's fixings. Keeping The Heart Going Th1- dis1-o11-1i1- of sci1-i1c0 th0~0 days appar- ently 1.1111111 no (-1111; 1l10_v 1-1-111111 in upon 11s with seeming n1-v1-r ending triumphs 11\'t-r tht- cus- [Illllitlfy ll‘? Illlll \\‘1)lll I)‘ E'\'('l"\' (lily E\"lC‘l'lCe. \\'herc these :t1111l_v 1o thr- c111i1s0 111 existence they arc of mort- tlian ordinary importamce. atid tliiis it is 111111 1111- lll‘\\' macliiiit- demonstrated before the .\iii1-1"i1-:11i (ollegc of Physicians at Si. Louis. in which tht- 11111111111 heart is revived after death and made to r0~um0 its normal blood- puinping functions. i< attracting universal at- tention in both 1111- .\t'it'llllllt‘ and ordinary evcry day world. llr. \\illi;111i B. jounlz of \\'ashing- ton L'ni\-er.~it_\- 1l1-s1-ril11-1l 1111“- lit‘. had brought more than loo lii-zirts hack to noriiiitl functioning lfter they 11.11] 1111-1-11 ht-rttingin tlit- human body for as long as six hours and induced them to again take 1111 their rhythmic lu-ating. - lle dt-scribetl the tit-vict- as different from the "glass lit-art" 111-1-1-111111-11 by Dr- Alexis Carrel, Rockeft-lle ln-titutt- i\'11l11-l prize winner. and Colonel Charles .-\. Lindbergh, The Carrel- Lintlliergh device acts as a pump to carry nutri- gm 501111111115 to a piece of tissue to make it con- tinue living. l_)r. joufitz declared. In the \\'asliingtoii University apparatus. how- ever, the heart itsclf is the pump which forces blood through a system of pipes and reservoirs .;;...1|_...- 10111011- of the hotly and a recent modific- ltioii llIiihPS it possible for an entire liver, kid- m-v 111' 1111101 11111111111 111151111 to 110 connected to the artificial t-irciilation so that its behavior may be studied in w-rvs not possible Willll" the 19°11)’- No effort has been 11111111‘. the Washington [Ynfygygjty- <1-i1-..1i_<|< said. tn determine how long '8 revivcrl lit-art \\‘Olll1lt‘()lll1llll€ to beat after it has ln-en started. "\\'e gens-rally stop them af- , for about six or seven hours. at the conclusion ‘ of an experiment. The vigor which they show 1%.».- ~ ' - paratus gives some idca of n-hat a tough piece of muscle the human heart is." It is proverbial that human life is just as long continued as is the heart is in action. and if by scientific means it can be kept operating for six hours there seems to be no reason why that period should not be extended. But the question most laymen are concerned about is—\\’0i.1ltl thc pali- 0nt with the renewed heart be able to g0t up and g0 the ordinary rounds of life, or niust he for ever lie 011 his back abcd? King Government Protect Radios Amending anti-combine legislation introduced [at Ottawa by Hon. Norman Rogers, minister of labor. will not affect the status of the Canadian radio patent pool. The Financial Post is inform- ed by a spokesman for the pool. The patent pool. it is held. is only protecting its own pro- perty through Canadian 1iatents 011 radios, and it i5 claimed that without this protection the radio industry in Canada would cease to exist. .\n11-n1l1nent.< to patent legislation would be 1111- only nit-ans of permitting Canadian radio deal- ers to import foreign radio sets for sale here, i‘ is claiined- Llndcr existing conditions radio sets may be imported by itidividtials but not for re- sale to the public. Radio dealers admit that without the present patent protection dealers iii Canada might import ltnv-priced. mass-producctl radio sets and undersell the Canadian retail radio trade~ Canadian Radio Patent Ltt1.. the iadio 11:1t1-i1t pool of live radio companies, was nanu-tl 11y llon. l1. l1. S -vens at Ottawa last ut-ck iii 1liscussi11n of zuiti-combine laws. It was clainictl 11y llon. C. 1'1. Caliaii that an or- ganization such as that described by ,\Ir. Stevens- would be illegal uiidcr the amended Combines THE (THARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ilotes By The Way There are many of the illustrious dead, former member of Parlia. mom. merchant princes. early cap- tains of industry, physicians, 13w. yers and the like resting in plots which defy description. The Chin- ese, we are informed. venemm their ancestors. Canadians, on the fofllet them-at least insofar as care of their graves is concerned —untii the time comes when they are interested in genealogy and desire to trace their family trees. —EX. Every effort to impress union 111E Pimple of the country the hor- r01‘ as well as the folly of war is commendable, although it is hare‘. ly conceivable that the United States could be forced into a war not necessary for its own defence and, alien to its interests. But. de- votion to peace does not. require advilnce P19111505 Rgfllilst combatant service under all circumstances, pledges incompatible with the duty to defend it to which the country foi- its salvation must hold all its citizens. It is entirely consistent with support of a programme for adequate armament of the coun- try. Armament of a peace-loving democracy serves not only national safety but. world security against aggression- Philadelphia Bulletin. What is needed is a thorough and discriminating application of the knife to the mushroom agencies which have grown up under Fed- eral auspices (luring the last four Investigation Act. I Editorial Notes I‘ lluxley born 18:5; Livingstone died 1873. 3 i l‘ Local Coronation celebrations are now tak- ing concrete form, 1r w \\'h1-r1- the l’.\\'.l_). has been on the job the roads are good. it w w In the passing of Mr. Sixtus l\IacLellai1 the St- Andrew Society loses one of its original and most devoted members. II! i1 i! III One consolation the Provincial delegates have is that there is no need for worry over the loss of penny fares when they can af- ford to take eighteen pence taxies. fi U # I1 is [acrhaps for military ethics to decide whe- ther the Spanish battleship Espana was sunk by an enemy air bomb or a “friendly” floating mine. The substantial fact remains that the bat- tleship was stink in action, and some 700 lives lost. w w w Mr. C. L. .\‘lacLachlan, chairman of the Al- berta Social Credit Board is en route to Lon- don for the Coronation and to persuade hlajor C, ll. Douglas founder of Social Credit to g0 to Alberta as technical adviser of the Board. “I think the prcscnceof Major Douglas- in i-‘tlbcrta is absolutely necessary.” Mr. lvlacLachlan said- l-lc did not think Major Douglas would return t0 Alberta with him. w w w Nearly 358000.000 will bc spent on Nova Sco- tia highways by Premier Angus L. hlacdoiialds government during the current year, it iS learn- 'e1l. Capital estimates totalling 338.323.19.75 1'01‘ the year, were ratified by the Nova Senna Leg- islature prior to its close recently. 'l'lie lnglnvavs item will see Nova Scotias highways practically all hard-surfaced by the close of the current year. This has been the tentative schedule ar- ranged for by the Liovernment. lt is under- stood work on secondaryi highways in different sections of the province will be undertaken. as well. This, however. will not be paving work. U I 1U A leading Court authority asserts that the av- erage cost of presenting a lady to Their Ma- jc5tic5 in London is $4,000. All de1)titztiitcs,_of course, do not cost this. She has k110\\'n_ girls “brought out" on $1.500. ln fact, one girl last year had only $500 spent on her, and she had a sLiCCCSSitll season, being invited everyivliero- B111. of course, such cases are the exccption- For $1.500 it is possible to buy a Court dress. give a series of small cocktail parties, 1n- stcatl of onc big dance, and still have money left over to buy tickets for charity balls where a debutante can meet her friends. w w w Coronation Day programs will he held in every large centre in ‘Nova Scotia, the leading 0110. naturally, being scheduled to take place 1n l-lali- fax. That old historic city will mark. the crowning of the new King and his gracious con- sort with an elaborate program that will in- clude a huge street torchilght parade. All the permanent units. both military and naval, will lead in the huge parade planned. Ten thous- and school children, Boy Scouts and Girl Guides will participate The evening programwill feature the lighting of Boy Scout beacon ‘"65. which» it is planned, will be lighted all across Canada. Loud speakers will be installed on the parade to allow for an outdoor broadcast of the Radio Coroporatioifs progiam‘ that day. - Sydney's over-crowding situation today il considered the worst in the steel city's history. blayor S- E. Muggah in a letter to the Nova Scotia Housing Commission comments in this vein: "lt is im ssible to exaggerate the seri- ousness of the housing problem within our city- It is becoming more acute as industrial condi- tions improve. At no time in the history of the City of Sydney had over-crowding been so apparent. The city is housing 7o families which have been evicted from private properties for which the city assumes the total financial bur- den." Mr. C. Fred Pearson. K.C., chairm: m of the Housing Commission, and his associates nave held conferences with civic authorities with a view to the arrangement of an acceptable plan when doing the work of pumping in the ap- for the application of the Nova Scotia Hous- ing Act to Sydney.» . years. We were told when those agencies were established that they were emergency undertakings and we were allowed to infer, even where we were not explicity told, that once the emergency was over they would be demcbilizcd. If the will to economy really exisLs at the White House and among the Ad- ministration's spokesmen in Con- gress. the sensible and intelligent thing would be to proceed with the demobilization now as a means of bringing the budget. into balance. If demobilization is too much to expect all at once. why not cut the mushroom agencies by twenty-five per cent. or even more in the case of some of them? -- Balti- more Sun. Coronation The castle of Kenilwm-th has been added to those famous piles presented to the British nation in trust for their preservation as land- marks of the whole English historic scene. The castle ruins are the most extensive in England. and in a fair state of repair. Now they are assured of the proper care and of such renovation as will render them safe for visitors in every. respect. Famed in history and in fiction, Kenilworth has long been one of the most alluring of Eng. land's stately homes for the visi- tor from abroad. to whom it is known through Scott's immortal novel. Here the great. Elizabeth was entertained by her favourite, the iii-fated ‘Earl of Leicester. Here tradition says the lovely Amy Rob- surt met her weath. The walls of Kenilwoi-th have seen centuries of historic pageant pas. 1t would have been r1 thousand pities if they had been allowed to into further decay. Now. thanks to the munificence of Sir John Sid- deley. who has bought the castle from the Earl of Clarendon. they will be preserved against the rav- ages of time.-—Ex. Pop goes prosperity when infla- tion has blown up the bag. Such Is the folk-fem‘ of this enemy of savings ‘and thrift. this robber of the people's wealth, that. a gov- ernment might declare war with less immediate danger to its politi- cal fortunes than it would have to risk if embarking on an avow- ed policy of inflation. But. so great has public opposition to war as well as to inflation become that no government. will admit its in- tentlon of engaging in either. ‘The relation between war and infla- tion. however. is deeper than need for euohemistlc staize names un- der which to make their public mp- pearances. ‘The United States has not. yet got. rid of the riustv after- taste of azrlcultiirai inflation pro- duced bv the abnormal Euro-wan demand for war wheat. from 1914 to 1918. nnr of the vnr-uiim that; mon-v advanced to finance dos- triu-fton must alwnvs leavi- ln the lender's strong box. — Christian Wit-nee Monitor (Boston). School boys are flliI-rl with mrln" fever a1 this fir". of course. but manv of them FY00") themselves to death nnr! lnlurv bv envmzlniz in the fnllv of hookiniz onto trucks to steal a rlrle. Manv of the bovs have a spirit of wanderiint. "Wiev want. to r-omi- into the cltv from the suburbs or vice versa. 11nd a ride on the back of a truck. nn- known to the driver. ls one moans of ohtalninv. transportation. ‘But In ciimbintz on and in dronnlnv off the trucks the bovs are awn-or! to the dancer M falilniz or befnv hit. bv automobiles. It. is the wildest. sort of foilv. ‘h-nck driver; shnulfl Item a watchful eye on these boys. —Boston Post. A nurse. an efficient your; lady named Pauline, was walking along Fifth avenue one bright IIIOICIDI. on her way to a private one. when she saw n truck rolling slowly down the street. without a driver. With no hesitation, she ran out. hopped on m the running board. and applied the hand brake. The truck stopped, and Pauline, want- ing to go right through with the thins. begun looking around for the driver. Just then a. man ap- peared on the sidewalk. and she sold to him. "Ia this your truck?" He acid yea, it was. "Well." Pauline aid. "it was rolling down the 1mm." “I know it. wu. lady.“ the fellow saldswistfully. “I Wll push-- in; iU-Tlu NII Yorker. Wither hand. apparently prefer to. Bil- '.§l._O. " .\ STRDNG WILL IS THE BIG- GEST FACTOR 11V SUCCESS- FULLY REDUCING WEIGHT A physician doing special work on metabolism (rate at which the body processes work) tells his patients that; very few overweights need any drug or gland extract; that the overweight is simply the result of overeating. and there is no use making any attempt to reduce weight. unless they are willing to cut down to a large extent on the daily intake of food. If they an un- willng to cut down on the food in- take for the sake of their appear- ance lie then warns them of the danger of overweight. ' Thus at the obesity or overweight clinic at the Mount Slant Hospital, Dr. Charles Markson gives every patient full information in printed form as follows:— “Overweight increases the strain on the heart; and kidneys. Ths extra strain often result-s in dis- eases o1‘ the heart. bloodvessels and kidneys. Overweight, aside from cuiiilxig f-atlgue anti bodily discom- fort. is also kuoim to be an import- an; IZXKLDI‘ in causing diabetes. These complications generally ap- pear after the age of forty. To les- sen these dangers and so increase your chances ' of health and long life. you must; beg n early and make a serious and constant effort t0 kei-p your weight at a normal level. A strong will is the first essential tn the reduction treatment of over- weight. You must Ieam to use or exercise this strong will, otherwise the result is bound t/o be disap- pointing. Drugs which help to reduce weight are very dangerous and must. only be taken when prescribed by your doctor. When tHlCIig these drugs you must report to the clinic as often as requested. “See that. you get. plenty of fresh r Do not take more than 5 glasses of fluid a day. to include any form of liquid-water. soup, milk, ma, coffee, soft or hard drinks. A steam bath once or twice a. week is help- ful. Take cold showers frequently; this increases the babyls energy ex- penditure. Keep bowels active with Epsom salts twice s. week. Exercise is essential. particularly for those who usually sit dovm most of the day. The ideal form of exercise is walking. Begin with a. brisk walk for one half hour, grad- ually- increasing the length of time by ten minutes a day until it has reached two hours.” A diet of about 1250 calories ' PUBLIC FORUM Illa alums ll uh II 0hr manna by urn-mm!- r‘ ‘union ll laureat- ‘Ill Ohllothilwl Gunilla doou In annually clone fin 031°" cl ouullpollui. FRIENDS IN NEED Bur-Eats ofl to our farmers. And not. to only a few. but to the many who like the famed Monks of 8t. Bernard dot our unpaved roads on their generous missions of mercy. In these days of. impassable Campbell-McIntyre roads, how thoughtful of so many to place sturdy fence rails on the roadside. adjacent to Government bogs and death trap rubs, that the motorist trapped and in distress may have the meam to pry the car out of the trade mark holes of Govern- ment neglect. To this public benefit, in many places, the farmer friend, in leis- ure moments. sometimes with com- pany, is on the spot to lend ahand .lti lifting the wrecked car to a place of safety. We cannot be too g-‘ateful forthis free and valuable service. and as one who benefitted 1 speak with sincerity. I think it was Mr. Caudet who said we need an autouriobiie asso- ciation. Under present conditions he is right. Ln past. years we had one. It died of ennui; nothing to do. Now it is different. There must be some organizatlontomake our roads passable. No use de- rpending upon the Campbell Gov- ernment. They will not do it. We know this from experience. Too much of our road money needed to pay salary increase-B. and pro- vide new ofltces for the inside elect. There are over 7,000 cars tn the province. An Auto Association might. get these together in action. If each one carried a pick and shovel for, say, one week, and with the Boy Scout's slogan do one good turn, or flll in one death trap [rut each day. it. would aggregate 142,000 ruts filled tn per day with- in the week. which should make the roads reasonably safe to tra- vel upon. 1 commend this for quick action. with an indifferent Government Ind a negligent self seeking fol- lowing it seems the only feasible course. Cant. some one get bus!’ and cut dawn the increasing soci- dent. andiatallty lists? I am. Sir. etc. MOTOIHST. IB IVHSSING DEERE’ BRIDGE MATERIAL 1N GLENCORRI- DALE OULVERT? Sir,—Your correspondent Tan- payer finds some difficulty tn re- qonciling the report of the divis- (about half the average diet) per dav is given and patients are ad- vised that. the first. two weeks will be the hardest: if they stick to it, the body and digestive organs will become adjusted to the small diet and after these first two weeks life will look worth while again. ‘I WILL TAKE MY PIPES AND GO NOW I will take my pipes and go now, for the bees upon the sill Are singing of the summer that. is coming from the stars. I will take my pipes and go now for the little mountain rill In pleading with the bagpipes in tender crooning bars. ‘Doun Bymeb first. poem-pub- lished in Harper's Magazine, 1911. —DOllh BYHW \\ \ \\\\: KATN‘ 57714 "Kc (Mi ‘we 21:11” °°=n 1110"" ‘i rqb aka \q tonal engineer of Queens Count»?! with the itemized -‘~ o! cost given in the public works report regarding Beers‘ Bridge. That. eight hundred and twenty- five dollars should be spent. for labour in placing twenty-three dol- lars worth of concrete slab and creosote piles in any bridge (whe- ther u. plain Beer or a. Black Horse Bee-r bridge) seems incredible. and Taxpayer is surely within his rights when he asks tn be show‘!!- if other nmteriul. was used. under what. heading he will find it char- ged. But: considering that. the echoes of the noisy and 11118181111 110831-1118 of the “even handed and impor- tial" iatributlon of the spoils throughout the various 110111118111"- islona may yet. be revel-berating through the nuw empty lerldntive charmer, it is perhaps not sur- prising that. Taxpayer's enquiry 0T April l8 i; r1111 without. an answer. surely Tdxpgyer would not ex- pect. so soon an admission from the incongruous thirty that their vaunted imnortlslltv 1111mm only in the dlstribution of the items in 1.1111 Public Accounts; but if TM- payer. while awaiting a more com- p‘ ‘- ' to his enquiry. will turn to page 266 of the report of the Department ufPublic Works ho will find an entry under the heading “Project No. ‘H-"Con; crete Culvert on G611 3°55 which shows eight hundred and fifty-nine dollars and wit! 09h" wu paid to the Canada. creosot- ing Co. Ltd. and chimed tn this bridge at Glencorrtdale in the first district of K1118! County. and l! 11¢ wiu turn min w 111m 54 h= will find the divisional engineer Kings County reports this so- calied concrete culvert on Glen road is in reality a. timber box d x 8 feet built of creosote and nutlvemnterial. and. is the dim- ‘ of the culvert scarcely 011-11 SPRING TONIC BLOOD PURIFIEB Mac's Blood Food A combination especially Ill- nnblo in the treatment of Mose diseases when: their origin 1| trlcelbl-c to an Im- verlshed condition of the 1blood. 1 One of the greateut remed- 1lu in the roatmout of Rheu- ‘mntlum and a mined op- lpellto restorative. Gel s box fo-day. Box of 50 tablet: Mo. DR. L. B. EVANS l! you have my trouble . hurt-b Illltefl. 0b., than don't delay piling a bottle of Dr. Bun‘: ltommh mixture immotl Inn's Stomach Mixture h I loll of Dr. L. B- noteil Illflllh Phy- dolan of whlch we have the lulu rlghto to lllll since nil- hg It have received numeral: fltinonhh satisfied uirchuarl. Try a bottle lo-hy. Mo; ll eenll. ‘Tili TWO IMGS rl n run ‘(this “pupil, 1 for $859.60 worth of creosote timber. Taxpayer may find that some d the missing Beers’ Bridge rmtertnl has been charged uphere in order to balance the scales of Liberal "impartiality" in the dis- trlmtion of expenditures between Kings and Queens Counties. Trusting the above information maybeofaolmnrvioetnTax- wsyer. but other district; report any other portions of the mining Beer Bridge material charged to them. I em. Sir. etc.. I QISILLUSIONBD VOTE. IIIBII INOOUBAGEIIENT Sir. W. B. Milttartls lettn I thotiht what l pillar of manna m would be m multil- tion if he WIIMQQIQG to lup- port hip protection; by action. To tench II pod, but practice 1| bat- ter than empty precept lfo riditly pronounces uor traffic the nonfat curse af- fecting himuntty". Then he "ox- preasod my cont-Alum for a Gov- ernment thnt would accept u bribe of than brewery horses from the enemy". Be protect-n and condemns tho Cavern-rum‘: fail- ure to implement‘ their enforce- ment pledges. demanding to “Let the Alliance cum-Oi". then du- tmyn evaryforcu of hIl argument. in those fatal woidpz-"I have not decided to change my politics". Outlaw the "(must curse ul- md with the suggestion, l ' "thu liq- - . _ ‘ WII ‘I'D I PLAIN. Aldo, Spud Flno<ut Inboard for rolling your own, l0: coo: cm! roncco oowmv, mum, ounec 0 Canadian 1111a Indopondonl MAY 4. 1937 Tho package. Government for its perpetuation of that. “curse". and coolly add I will support that Government. I am one of the large number who turned against my party. in general administration one of the cleanest and best in the history or the province, and fought hard to defeat them in my zeal for prohi- bltiou.,1 refused to support the "Greatest bui-se" and would do so again tomorrow. I am not, of that “neither cold nor hot.” that; “I will spew thee out. of my mouth”. If temperance is to prevail it will not. be by the labors of those who talk one way and vote the other. His lame reason for practising to kill precept is t-laatr-“We have not. forgotten that. dastardly at.- tiempt that the Conservative party made to thrust Government Con- itro" upon us, shows a venom lwithout justification. If he knows history he is aware that prohibition was only adopted by his own party. after much per- sunsiori, and in the trite words of the late Premier Lea, as “a plat- form to get. in on". He should further know that the late Premier Stewart, on the result. of that. election, publicly declared that. he “accepted- the de- cision of the people and would curry out. their policy of prohibi- tion. absolutely". And the records of performance, which was not secreted. but open to the public, disclose a record for enforcement. excelled by no other Government. He might even have read the tes- timony 01f statistics from the few items which the Campbell Gov- ernment have permitted to see daylight, that: the MaoMillan rec- ord of enforcement was actually. from the temperance standpoint, the best since prohibition became law. But Mr. Muttart is not pleased with the "best; his choice is for that. which he condemns as the worst, rather than change his pol- itics. We can be thank-fut that. this ts not the sentiment of the temperance people of this prov- ince. but. if it were, then God help prohibition. I am, Sir, etc, PROI-IIBITIONHT. THE SPIRIT 0F OUR PROIIIBITION LAW Bin-The spirit or real interest -of our liquor 111w is to prevent the use 01f intoxicating liquor as a beverage. It does not prevent its use for mechanical, sacramental or medical Rlghtifully the framens of the act. made adequate provision for the mechanic, the H. LAPThultix and L, S. STEVENSON District Minuet-a, I40 Richmond Street. Charlottetown All. PROFITS POI! POIICYIIOIDIIIQ “01' italit- alwauf ufe I3IlZk}lbllPJ .ORANGE PEKOE TE' cleric, and the doctor. It is 1.111 last. mentioned exception that. ha: so grievously counteracted tht whole grand scheme. It 1.5 quln reasonable to believe that not ever. Congress had foreknowledge en- lough -t.o see how the exception foi ‘medical purposes could be used 1.1 neutralize and bedevil the greai scheme of reform. Was it tlu spirit of the Act. to make it. pos- sible for any responsible govern- ment. to sell to 90,000 people om hundred and ninety thousand dol- iars worth of intoxieants in om year? Does the real meaning and in- tent of the Act allow. even a gov- ernment propcr, to enter into an agreement with brewery mag-mm ‘t0 furnish lntoxicants as bever- iages and to advertise their use by 1a loan of stallions to travel through the country? Does the spirit of the Act. pro- vide that. every rummy when in- tent on a debauch may get his rum by getting an order from 1i. doctor? Does it. mean that. anyone with a case 01f blues. a stubbedutoe or a toothache can get. a bottle of med- ical flrewater? Does the spirit of the Act, jus- tify a Premier and Attorney Gen- eral to substantially condemn the law of the land and instead of ex- tending congratulations to the el- ectors for their grand efforts to- ward reform, bewail it as a eon- demned policy, away behind that of the other provinces and the nations of the world? Does it allow him in substance to petulantly discount the sens! and judgment of the electors by the veiled remark-"Do you knoir your mother is out”? I am, Sir. ate, ELECTOR. RETURNED MEWS CLAIMS 8lr.—1Permit me space to 1°11»; my sentiments 1n regard to the appointment. of a. police officer on the City Force. I believe the ap- pointment is to be made within the next few days, and the City Council should deem it. advisable to consider the matter seriously and. not to forget. the aims and objects of the Veteran's Assistance Commission, and secure the ser- vices of a returned soldier. From the experiences gained iii my travels, we are the only city in the length and breadth of the continent with so small a repre- sentation of returned men in the public services. I am. Sir, etc. BUSINESS MAN._ A IIUTUII. CONCPRIUY IIORTII AMEIIICAII Solid as the Continent LIFE {a Will *5 CIDENT. 'A WEEK summc 1:10am‘. llYllllMMl 81 fooun; humanity". condemn a INSURANCE FOR $1500. RESULTING FROM AN AUTO AC- J A WEEK EXTRA IF YOU ARE CON- FINIJD T0 A HOSPITAL AS A RE- SULT OF SUCH AN ACCIDENT. For FULL INFORMATION CONCERNING THIS SPECIAL POLICY CONSULT- ~ SUMMERSIDE CHARLOTTETOWN MONTAGUE Give You IN EVENT OF DEATH FOR DISABILITY RE- FRO'M AN AUTO AC- 00., 11111111111 _