PAGE FOUR THE_ (‘HARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN! Tin, Charlottetown Guardian Prrllilent LleuL-Fnl. \\‘. (‘holler 8. IIILIIIO \'li'e-|'r1-ni1lvnt J. R. Burnett. FJ-I. 121mm um] tliuinulng Director J. B. Burnett I‘. l. l. ai-vri-tnry l.lt~ut.~(‘ul. I). A. MncKlnuon. D. S. O- Assuvluliv Ellllllfl Frunk Wiilker and D. K. Cunlo 11.1mm; nnny irnnnimi 10111) 5.1.001." you‘ (ln ndrlnwl li-liii-rt-rl In (‘Hy 114.00 pi-r yen (In advance) mulled to Prim-Q l-Jiluiiril hiluml $5.00 per your (in nrlvnnoe) 3111 leil to (‘nnniln and United Slalel SAITJRDAY. MAY 1. 1931 . The Imperial Conference The prest-urt- of fc])rt‘>1:‘l1[t1li\'CS of all British Domimtms in Lotidiin makes it obviously con- vcuicnt, says :1 CUllltlllpOiflTy, t0 open the new Imperial (‘tmft-rcncc on May 14, two days af- tcr Coronation. lint it is not without signific- ance that the first great ptllllic event after the crowning of the lung should be an Empire meeting to discuss the mutual affairs of the whole CttiiilllOlI\\‘t‘flllll. Tihat foreign affairs and dcicnse should stand first on the agenda is natural. How does the Empire as a whole stand in its relation to far- eign countries? To what extent does it repre- st-nt an organized system of mutual security, and in defense of what? Does Britain stand alone iii respect of European affairs, and only ternity- While the Fellows are primaril con- cerned in these meetings the wdwle pro ession are invited, and they are extended every privi- lege and courtesy the College can command. So that virtually it is a get-together 0f all doctors, whether they are Fellows or not; and not only doctors, but hqspital superintendents, public health officials, and prominent men and women both in Church and State, whose work enters, even indirectly, the sphere of curing and pre- venting disease. ‘U. S. A. Farmers Smiliiig Down in Oklahoma the farmers have the broadest of broad smiles 0f years. The heaviest‘ rainfall in eleven months soaked into thirsty Southwestern soil, giving thousands of drought- llfirafiscd farmers high hopes of harvesting the biggest crops since 1931. The rain, varying up t0 four inches, was heaviest in Oklahoma, btit reports 0f adequate moisture in many other sec- ‘non aroused agricultural experts to forecast a normal crop year.“ Mr- K. D. Blood, Federal crop statistician, predicted that Oklahoma far- mers would harvest a "normal" wheat crop in every section excrmt the panhandle. “The wheat crop planted last fccemlier has enough rain now to swing it through t0 harvest," he said. “The government forecast April ,1 indicated a wheat crop of 46,000,000 bitshcls. 20,000,000 over last year. This min ivoultl indicate a~ better Crop associatcd in respect of more distant interests, or dot-s the association unite the niumbers of the linipirtr in respect of all its problems, as it rlid in the \\'orld War? Questions such as this cannot be zmsyvt-rctl by a simple ycs or no. it l> the (‘SSCIICC 0f the British Empire, as now coustittittd. that it consists of complctelyi st-itidi-tcrniiiiiiig nations who have absolutcf il't‘l‘lll'lll oi ztction, voluntarily tinitctl tinder thr- (frovu. Yt-t in foreign policy, it will be (ii-tuwail, wt do in practice act together with an C.\'ll'ZlUl'\liiI.'ll'_\‘ tlt-grcc of unanimity. In practice we llllYt’ little difficulty in presenting a com- mon front in rcgzird to the major political questions confronting the world, for the sim- pie reason that we think alike and have the same interests to serve. The problem, then, of a united Empire policy, thank, to the give-antl-tnke s0 well understood, may almost l».- said to solve itsefi But what of the provisions for security to maintain those common objects? It is clear that at the present time Great Britain is carrying the giant's part 0i the burtlcn of military expenditure; and that, it may seem, is not unnatural in view of the fact that the dangers against which provision is being made lie in Europe. Yet it has to be re- cognized also that the security of Great Britain is of more than passing interest to the rest 0f the l:ji..pirc. T his its, cct of the problem cannot be isolat- ed from the others. It is bound up with cer- tain constitutional questions which have to be considered-for example, questions of citizen- ship—the status that citizenship of one c0t1n- tr},- in the Empire confers throughout the Em- i 1c. 'i‘h:it, again, leads to the question of mi- 1i'.'.ii0il. which will he increasingly important in lite future. A tiled series of questions on the 1. ylltlll CUVCPTHS iirupirc trade and its organiza- tfi :1, * l c1 .1 p 1.3:. civil air communications wions in general. s have to be faced, in gen- at the Imperial Conference, ~. zsk this year is to show that the ...,ll it-ztgiic of frce nations is organical- ly tutitctl and n1 working order, sliippi: Guilty o. Not oiiiny": ."\'ho but it trained l:1\v_ver, asks The Econ- omist, London, could have worded the simple penetrating svulcncc \\'lllCll ticcurred recently in a shunning-up delivered to a jury by one of His .\la_it:.-t_\"s judgcs?~ “Quite plniulv, in my view as a lawyer, I cannot find it very difficult to sct: how you can fail to find that this 11111411111 is not guilty of ntan-lttughter." \\'i“' thP-‘v word- ritiging in their ears the jur 1121-11 rttirv. 1.111 us follow them discreetly into 11m jury- ronn and listcn to the discussion (not vuj." i‘it-.'tri_v ivirili-il, alas, since thcy are no l:1\\"_\i:"~1 which springs from this direction. “it? 1 ~11 ("ewr ,'tll_\'\\'i1_\' that ht- doesn't want us 11 , i; i» i c Piuubtcr.” "\\'..1:1- u» u to! li~ said wc tnight." “liirilon n11; but _\111li' incitiory is at fault. i u. ‘iiltld/i f 1}» . i. . Ct‘1'('illll_\’. He. said that he (~<ii1l‘11'1 1 1.1 i‘ "lflctilt 1o sve how we could fail to luv] 1h 11 i_ not ' ‘iltyf’ "ii:,:i‘i_\', (wiiiiufl ~11’ 1111.} 1l0t gtiilty. TWO ni-gsitiv». 1.1.11 l\\11 1i1".'.'tli\t'$, as all educated tin-u kno-w". 111:i'(~';1 po-itivc." “No. .\'o. lt'- no: two umitives. It’s three. liYiii i.- a lil“_'€1li'.i' orb, \\'i11-i1 he said ‘not fail In find‘ bi- lii'.'1.11. ‘not 111i find.‘ So there's an odd nuiubt-r of ni-gritivt-s, and thc rule is that an even number of ncgzttives make a positive and In otld tiumbt-r r1 nt-gativc." “Negative who. - “Why, of course, a negativc...Oh, I don't know, I'm uitidrlled." Here a 1l.1r1l voice breaks in. "If you gclillvlncn will allow me to say so, you arc both wrong. There are neither two ucqativtrs nor three. There are fo1ir.. In this context the word ‘difficult’ has the force of a negative, and what hc meant was that he could see that we could not find that the woman is not guilty” So, says The Economist in irotiical conclusion, we leave them steadily moving under skilled guidance to inevitable truth. For Our Local Doctors Our medical doctors and surgeons will be in- terested tn learn that arrangements are well ad- vanced for the Maritime Sectional meeting of the Amcricati College 0f Surgeons at Halifax n" M“. 2131;. .'if‘l(l 21st. Since the time of the ‘ii hfaritime hledicai Association. Whose pass- 1 y: many reqir-t to this day, the sectional meet- ng of the College is the one medium through which the members of the healing profession. from every part of these three provinces by the than expected." “Nor1nal" agricultural year in Oklahoma means $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 from the twenty-four principal crops, compared with 35941009000 last year and $124,927,000 in 1935. ~ . I Editorial Notes 1 The merry’ month of May and Coronation, a i1- w H.R.H. the Duke of Connaughfls birthday, born 1850. =1- ii it “Sour grapes” makes us hate to be in over- crowded Loitdon for the Coronation. at it =11 What about these decorations you intended ordering for the 12th? , 1F ti‘ I! These Provincial road machine men have had the audacity to cut up Fitzroy Street almost right in front of IflETMayoFs residence. l i‘ i‘ The greatest obstacle to a London busmen's strike would be-the busmen. A London bus- man usually spends a holiday going the rounds with another busman. l U i Our Ottawa Correspondent in “Behind the Speakers’ Chair”, suggests that unusual activ- ities on the part 0f everyone in Ottawa in- dicates that the Government contemplates the possibility ‘that some extremely important na- tional legislation will have to be passed as a direct and immediate result 0f the momentous decisions of the Imperial gathering in London. Ii 1i l » In Woodstock, Ont., they have started wor- shipping the golden calf, 0r at least a modern substitute, a metal cow statue. it is t0 be unveil- cd in August, and is a life sized model of Springbztst, Snow Countess, the world's greatest life-time producer of butter fat. It is being erect- ed as a “lasting memorial" by the Holstein- Friesian Association of Canada. w u at Indicating the gastronomical wclconte that awaits visitors to the United Kingdom this stim- mer, Canada has dotibled potiltry exportsin the first four months of the year. Officials of the Agricultural Department say the increase is due to heavy purchases in anticipation of the Coro- nation tradc, producing a paucity of domestic fowl. Since Ian. 1, Candaian shipments to the British market have bet-u 3.000,000 pounds aver- aging-ten to twelve cars a week- The nearer the LTot-onation approaches, the larger the de- mand is becoming. a x attest By The Way Already between 10,000 and 10o,- 000 NEW Brunswick children have been Protected by lnccu titan 83811151 dlphtherla. There l; a. pIxSlEIVG cure for diphtheria, out Prevention ls infinitely better than cure. It saves expense, worry and distress. as Hon. Dr. W. F. Roberts, provincial minister of health and labor. expressed l1. in renewing the cnzripalgn to lmmunlze all chadren 1n New Brunswick. Statistics may be Produced to prove the value of inoculation, but those who mo.t need convincing are probably these who rarely read statistics. Suffice lt to say, therefore, that. through inoculation the death rate which stood at sixty-five per one hundr- ed thousand has been reduced t0 two or three. Dr. Roberts says: "Personally, I regard it as man- Slllllglliael‘ when I hear of a child or anyone dying of diphtheria. It means that someone has fallen down." — St. Join: Telegraph Journal. .The earth trembles-gat Detroit. Madrid, and elsewhere-under 1i battle of books; Adam Smith's “The Wealth of Nations" and Karl Marx's "Das Kapltal." “There present rivalry is a shining ex- ample of the truth that since the nrt of printing was intrcdrced hardly anything of moment has iiappened in human history whloh cannot be traced back to a. book."- The Commentator. Please let's have an end to the ttommy-rot, about l. "Red Plot” hem t0 start strikes 1n time for Coronation. Who wants to be out that day on strike pay when the odds are that he can be enjoying himself on a holiday with pay As for the Reds being behind any labor unrest here. athetstfc Mos- 00w has recently developed an un- holy awe for the right and proper thing and ls now engaged 1n “llquldatlng" the last of the Bol- shevists who subscribe to the theory o! world revolution. Why, l! Stalin could retire (like our Mr. Baldwin) they'd probably make mm Earl of I-Ioscow, or something- London Dally Express. The Catholic church at Victor: Harbor was destroyed by fire so the molester-it clergymen went to the priest and bold him that he could use the Presbyterian and United churches for mass until his new church was built. And that ls the spirit. This co-operatfon among church people gives those 01' com- inunlstlc tendencies in this country sometlfng to think about. A unified front is a. front that ls hard b0 break through. From what we lvve already seen Ln this town the same fine spirit of church helping church obtains in Trenton. -— Trenton Courier Advocate. ' At the Baa-good Police Court (Giant), a short time ago a. women nanwd La-Inlb W85 fined for st al- lng a. piece 01f beet! from the bag of a. woman named Veal. The women were strangers from neigh- boring vi"ag"=—-Yours etc, W. H. -W1LLIAMS. Police station, Btu-g - ed, Glam. --~Lett.ers ‘In London Observer. Among the many things whi h Italians now must render unto their Caesar are more babies. I1 Dnce, displeased about the brth rate, is considering a program of rewards "and punishments looking to more and more bambini. Henceforth every Italian work- er will receive a pay increase on the birth of a son, Newly wedded couples under 26 years. 011' age will be entitled to "marrfiitge loans" o! from $52.70 to $158.10. Ppayoble partly ln cash and partly in new- born babies. Drastic measures are being consklercd for punishment of bachelors and oiivrs of the wilfully cb“"‘""" ' lttle bonuses might seem small for parents wl: bzgrt mm‘:- chlzlreri Mr. Harry Foster may console himself with the fact that he obtained more publicity from- Adjudicator Michael St, Dcnis's frank, adverse criticism of “Nocturne” than he possibly could, had he been in the class of Winnipeg and Brantford, which merely “enjoyed some praise with qualifications”. At Ottawa it took Van- couver in the extreme West and Charlottetown in the extreme East to hold the limelight. Mr. Foster has got a. start, and with (lctcrntinatiott and perseverance may yct, in the ivords of D'Isrzieli, after his first inglorious attempt at oratory, compel his critics to listen to him. >1= l! =1: 1 Our old friend and “successful Islander abroad", hlayor Andrew I. (Bosscy) Gillis has attained front page once more by climbing a‘ fire ladder to the third floor of his adopted city's 1 new $500,000 high school t0 lead more titan 2,000 persons on an inspection of the building-con- trary t0 school board orders. The red-haired Mayor tlcclarul plans for the inspection had hecn rcjcctcd by the school board. (iillis found tht~ building locked. lic ordered Fire Chief john .\. Doyle tu bring up a hook and ladder truck. .\11 lllll(lCl\'l‘(l window was discovered on the third floor, and lllt: .\layu1- climlit-r up lo the cheers 0f thc waiting crowd. lli: unlocked the front door from the illsitlt: and lcil the crowd through the building. Object 01' th1~ inspection, he contended, was 1o show failure of the con- tractor t0 adhere to specifications. in at m The gross value of commodities produced on Canadian farms in 1936 is estimated at $1,061,- 624,oo0, representing an increase of $112,084,- 000 over the 1935 estimate. The depression low was established in 1932, when the gross value was $766,794,000. In 1930 the value was $1,- 235,319,o0o. Values for 1936 were as follows, by provinces, with 1935 figures in brackets: Ontario $354,380,000 ($314,728,000); Quebec $189,724,000 ($175,079,000); Saskatchewan $181,751,000 ($160,127,000); Alberta $143,- 648000 ($137,356,000); Manitoba $77,066,000 ($18,901,000); British Columbia $41,459,000 $37,430,000); New Brunswick $29,767,000 $25,398,000); Nova Scotia $28.437,ooo ($27.- 261,000; Prince Edward Island $16,392,000 m, can meat iii professional and social tn- to rear in over-croivded Italy. But the parents may have some- thing more glorious to look for- ward to. A picture just sent from Rome shows Premier Muss litil bestowing a personal reward upon an Itrlnn gold star mother whose son “'11s killed in the Etlfoplan campaign. 1t was spat. on the eheck.—h'cw York World Telegram The Chalhum News notes that fruit. trccs have wintered well and is satisfied that. the annual chest- nut about the ci-"p being ruined cannot be sprung this year. As a matter of 1a~t and record the lr'"it crop of the Niagara Peninsula has never been ruined except 1n the Toronto newspapers since the year 1914. There was ruin that year. one in wh‘ch the world genertfly took 1t. on the chin in August-St. Catharlnes Standard. v The National Safety Count-ll re- ports that an increase in traffic deaths accompanied mlH ntlnter weather ln the first two months of 1937 1n the United States. ‘There were 5,500 deaths 1n the sbtty days, an increase 0f 1,050. compared with the same period 01' 1996- Thls ls ln keeping with the beuet that the better the road conditions the worse the castuality list. Yet speed limits are being raised in some places! Last year's fatalities on the roads of North America. totalled nearly 40,000. This year's may be worse. judging by what ulnady has liitppened.— Montreal Gazette. For Miisaollnl the worst of lt 5| that his troops at Madrid really were defeated. The tout, for it was a rout, was on a. limited scale, 11nd no one can yet say whether l1: was an llolatzd episode of whether it was characteristic of the fighting qualitiy of the Italians with fiance w1th'n its limits it was serious; all and therefore likely to recur. But the more serious because it in hu- miliating, and Dlvus Augustus ln his own country. must not be hu- miliated. ‘Phat. 1s why the Italian people are told nothing of the defeat by their own press. That 1s why Blgnm‘ Glayda, Mussollnlfls mouthpiece, is telling the public that the Italian troops at. Mndrlp-i (Stamomv). have been "rectifying their front," Was The Press Justifiéd ? Canadian Printer 511d Publisher gave the views of a num- ber of astu newspaper edlwrs in regard to the silence malnta-ued by British and Canadian newspI-P‘ era during the events leading up to ttie abdication of K1118 Edwin! VIII. They gave their opinions on the question alter readlnl "w article by Beverley Baxter 1n lbs Flebruary issue. The ecllwrs, respec- tively, of the wmiuiws Tribune and the Charlottetown Guardian differ, and are given herewith. Mr. Baxter held the view that suprea- sloii of the news was a blunder. Edltor MacTavlsh of the Wlnnl Tribune, whlle favoring publlcaton of the news, behaves that It would not have had any influence 1n helpmg people to come to a. cor- rect decision ln the matter. On the other hand, Editor Burnett of the Charlottetown Guardian takes tlio view the crisis passed with the least possible embarrasement and that the wisest course was followed. 1W. L. MaioTavish, Vice-President and Edltor-ln-chlef, The Wlunlpel ' Tribune The Winnipeg Tribune was, I believe, the first “ewfilifl-Pflra 1n Canada to open up 1n articles and news pictures the relationship between Edward VIII and Mn. Wallis Simpson. Months before the abdication we pulbllahed a. series 0f articles obtained 1mm the North American NBWSPI-Der Alliance tel- ling the story or their friendship and companionship. and published also a number of pictures relating thereto. Wehadhod prevlouslymz Isuppose most other Canadian newspapers had had. much other material from American smimes. Most of 1t was rather nasty 1n tone, insinuat- ing much and substantiating noth- ing. The articles we published wen of different nature, light and pleas- ant ln tone, representing the affair really as a quiet comradestilp. They nevertheless did enable our read- ers’ minds to grasp the significance of Mr. Simpson's divorce proceed- lugs. were our readers 1n consequ- ence any less shocked and astound- ed at the rapid development. of the ultimate tragedy? They were not! Nor did they find it any easier as the day of decision approached. to determine in their own minds which course was right and which was wrong. m. Baxter, an able Journalist. 1B in London, on the spot. He has means of sensing, as every news- paperman must, the reaction of the people of his community. I hesit- ate, of coinase, to disagree with his conclusions as to the reactions of’ the people at the heart ot the Em- pire. But. let me say this, that from my experience here as I have related 1t, I doubt. 11' the sentutierir or the people or the development of the abdication crisis itself would have been 1n any way different if the London newspapers nod chronicled every movement of the former king and Mrs. Simpson from the moment they met. The crisis might have come n. ‘lttle sooner. I believe that la the only difference. The prestige 0f the British press was somewhat. impaired by the course ti‘. adopted-adopted as Mi- Baxter says out of a sense of loyalty. I doubt t1’ l1: contributed the slightest degree either to the development o! the crisis or the ultimate decision. J. R. Bumett, Editor and Mann:- lng Director. The Charlottetown Guardian Wh’le.the primary purpose of a. newspaper here and elsewhere ls to give news, the distinctive stand- ard of the British press is to give reliable news, news free from any propagandist twlstlngs, or un- healthy exaggeration. with one or two unfortunate exceptions it is the aim o1’ British and Imperial joumiillzts t0 keep their columns c‘e1m and healthy. “The garbage 01' the gutter," in the words of Sir Robert Bruce, "should be left to the cleaning authorities, not laid out for sale. Nor should it be the business of a newspaper to invade the prlvacles of life." This is ap- plicable to the peasant as well as the peer, and nowhere are family skeletons more securely safeguard ed from public gaze than tn the British and Imperial newspapers. The royal family's skeleton was no exception, and 1t ls to the Highest credit. of Bfliiifih and Imperial journalism that notwlthsta-ndlnfl great temptations to act otherwise, the editors. almost without ex- ception, voluntarily refrained from paratfng King Edward's domestic troubles 1n their newspaper columns, so long as there was l scmtliln. o1’ hope that the differ- ence between Hts Majesty and his advisers could be amicably adjusted. When it was realized that it was the unalterable deter- mination 0t‘ the King to pursue his own course. the flootltlde of publicity burst upon the country, but even then little was sold or done to mBke the slvuatlon more difficult for the King or his iulvts- ers. Tho crisis puood least- posslble embarrassment to m‘ W11 00086111181100: to the body politic. Th8 0011130 pursued 59cm; to me the wisest and moot 00m. mendable tn the circumstances.» ISLANDER. nuownnn WHEN PULPWOOD PILI TOFPLES m iuvim ANIDOVER. Me, April ilk-River. men searched vainly here today for the body o! Joseph Bmlth. Rumford Wwdflmflh. who was drowned when the pulpwood pile 0n which he had been fltnndm WDDIed into the iwirt current of the Ellis River. Smith. who had been working here for some time, was o native of St. Theresa's, P. E. I. 1.11111 old rim-wiry which mime lloatulaopstlntbldnltwln- the “win! characters concerned‘ PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihh column ls own hr lllr illnunilol by correspondent: o! 1| iioltlolu of Interact. The Charlottetown Gurdln duel III unequally undone L» opinion n! correspondents. BEEBBB BRIDGE S'r,—One who signed his name as “Taxpayer" has had two very lengthy letters 1n the press o! re- cent. dates re labor and expend!»- ures of Beer's, Auldls, Livingstone’; and Kingston Comer bridges, and. no doubt he has covered all the ground to his own satisfaction with some llttle bias. I would suggest that he change his battleground to other parts of the Second District of Queens, for instance Colvllle Road 0. N. R. crossing and Inform the writer as well as others lf there were my excursions held while this grading was 1n . And l1 the lbemlud progress statement 1n the Public Works R4- port of 1930 has any items charged such as fencing and old outstand- ing bills. As this wmk was done under the Y‘ mployiment Relief and Assist.- ance Act 1938 kindly give the names and addresses of the fifty per cent (who wen in need of relief. As I understand, a sworn affidavit ac- companies thoae names sent to the Minister of Labor at. Ottawa. I am. Blr, eta, . VOTER PBDHIBITION SPEECHES Sin-It was, of course Impossible for such erstwhile prohibition ad- vocates as Messrs. Baville, IiePage, Wright and Acorn to remain alto- gether allent 1n regard to the gov- emment/s administration of the law 01’ the province which forbids the sale of lntoxlcants as beverages. They evidently saw they were some- what in the dangerous position of Artemas Ward when asked to speak upon Womeira Rights-they had long hair. Perhaps there was never l greater demonstration of loos 0t temperance morale than tn the cue of Mr. Sovllle, the self-acknowledg- ed father of prohibition, cradled in sobriety, trained 1n the temperance ranks and tried on the temlieflm“ battlefield. Alas! for the baneful effects 0t the sucoulant sweets of the Public crib. Now, that: old nursery rhim! with afew minor changes would suit his case: llttlc George Hot-nor comer, Eating his Liberal pie. He pulled out. a. plum. He saw more to come. What a. good Grit am I. utluhls Mr. IIePB-xe the Brent; I-iibeffl-l Apostle of Prohibition (when 1n 0P- position) 10st: no time ln nuttins hi! powerful temperance camp. 11nd" a. bushel. Now he thlnks the 8W- emment 1s carrying out the law b? selling only $19,000 of rum DB1‘ Y?" for medicine! What sac principles for selfish and Pfl-PW galn! Even the tieiu of a prohibition government with a. brewery to pro- mote drinkln! Sal/Q him 11° quill!“ 0t conscience! rtfloe o! Mr. Acorna speech bore evidence unit he felt. himself 1n the perflmw posltbn ofbelnz between $119 13"“ and the deep sea. H18 10116 611161911 from that o1 last year. Evidently he had been “hauled over the for his attack on the ministers who were striving for law ml‘- f Comparisons are said-w be 01110118. but Mr. Acorns comparison o! gov- ernment sale and prohibition ls ab- 2181:‘? and not. worthy of a. represent- ve. n I am, Blr, etc. LAW. ENFORCEMENT THOSE ELECTION BRIDGES 811,41 have been waiting patient- ly for some one to call the govem- merits bluff regarding the survey on the proposed Brighton and Rocky Point. Bridges. I was in hopes some member of the Board of Trade or perhaps the Patriot paper, who both seemed to be very much mterBBl-ed in these bridge projects a. year ago. would take this matter up. But. both parties seem to have shut. up like a clam. Of course, Trade tries 1n keep clear o1’ politics the Board of and fa always willing to help us when they can: and I am not even surprised at the Patriot, it. being a Liberal paper and strong for party politics. so strong that its editor will even deprive a. citizen 0X his rights to a. free press. Party politics has always been the curse o! this Island, and ls the one great stumblng block to our prosperity. But. the people are get- ting their eyes opened to this fact and are now demanding a 1.111111 party which would only mean an- other calamity. What. ls ‘ 3. la a revival o! both old parties and especially 0t the Conservative and Liberal Associations, to sec that. they will not nominate men for election who are old and brainless nor also those that are more inter- ested 1n their own business than they m 1n the people or this pro- vince. when they do this we can BIRCH-BUD! 0 lucent. birch-buds, open ‘slowly, I uiiiimyl ho pi-tng wo not ve the S all by too soon; p I would not have the twilight- freshneu holy 0t mgirég mellow to the rlchut Keep still, beep atlll the hush bo- Ioro nwsklng when. virgin Nature holds tier breath 1n wonder, Before 1pm splendour, Innocence for- Bl I She dauntu ‘lush Bummer wood- lands with her thunder. trhen will aha shout, but new’ ah! whispers lightly To tlmld leaves and little shivering flowers. O cool truispcrent birch-buds curt- ed so tightly Wake slowly, slowly to her silver IHOWQN. -ilnnlnonurnoflllhllllh. 4-‘ v tneiidgo places with the rest of the , w . - or Now to get back to these bridges. Premier Campbell‘ has made the statement that a survey was made ind an estimate given what 1t will 00st; b0 build both bridle-s. Would Mr. Campbell be'klnd enoull’! '41 let the people how Just when and where this survey was taken H111 by whom. Or ls he simply $171118 to make u; beleve that a mm W88 '°“‘ "came °““"1..“€...“l°.$§; peme o era the river on the lee and call that a survey? Then to. tall. us it would coat around twelve hundred thou- sand dollars lobulld, these brldues and that we haven't. Bot 611011811 people to use these brldses. i0 thll such m expenditure would not. be justified. Doe-s the Premier expect the people to swallow such rot wlthoulrchoklng? Perhaps be would like to iiee aomeot us choke bu! he Ls not going to, though he was able to choke most. o! our representa- tlvu into passing laws of the worst type. unparalleled 1n the history o! th‘: Island. These hots are now wekln the people up, and I mean the LIT-tent people to demand that the government representatives take n complete change o! heart, m" th O '4 011100 before their term ls up. would advise m» Premler 1p set hie Judgeahipaaaoonu, bleeven ll’ he has to pemton some Judge to quit his 10b, and according to the way he has been nmnlng things tn the government he should have no trouble in doing that, for a. man fore l. crowd o! people and a. radio and lnvlto the people of another country to spend their vacation on our Island, and than deliberately 1 soak them extra. taxes 5nd com- pel them to drive their can ovoi- some tit-the worst. roads to be found anywhere ln Canada. Butch a. man cm do most snyt-hlnk. But the big bluff la this, the present. government tlilnks l! they can bluff the people imtll the next election. than. put these bridges ln their platform they would be sum o! going lnbo power again. But lit-hey want: to 11nd our the truth let them get around through the country and they will soon find out that bridges or any- thing else will! never put this some bunch tn power again. ‘Ihero ls only one man 1n that. Kfivemmexit that has u. chance of getting 1n again. and that. man la Mr. W. H. Dennis, Minister of Agriculture. He la the only one that la trylsig to do something for the fsnners, but he has no bed of rose: trying to get anything through a bunch of dead wood. I! spared he wtll de- serve your 811179011; when perhaps txmwtu have better timber to work Now Sir, than ls much mom I wouldllketo snyonthla brldtfl question but 1t is taking up 1.00 much o! your valuable space. I hope the people will wake up, get busy and call meetings as they dld last. year. Don't. be blufled by n lot of bunk your government ls spend- ing more money than they are tak- tnglmhxeamsvlngurxltvlng la going up, everything ls . and yet you are given no chance to earn l. decent living. How much longer can you llve on hot; air. It's up to you. Get 1n the band women for these brldxea’ 5nd for the People P.E.I. Potatoes ByLBLBelllLD. IX m order that foods contain mlequnm nutrition content, the soil in which such 1a crown. must- 0°11" taln all the e1 y 301‘ the mii-itlntum development ripe - trig and maturity o! its product 1n its native soil. Am plant 100d that ls not fully ripened and matured. where grown will be very defld- ent in food values. An example of this fact-perhaps more apparent to the visual sense! 1s found embodied tn the tomato. When the tomato ts fully ripened and matured in good soil, 1t de- velops a. deep rich color which ls positive assurance of a rlc 100d value content, especially of ita- mlna and 0t mineral matter. 0n the other hand. if the tomato be pulled from its vine while 1t ls very green color (which ls proof that. lt ls unripe and undeveloped) and then taken in the house and lettlnawatmroomtlllltusumeii obtained ri-om animal which 1n tum are nourished and 4811910091! b! Dliuit imd vegetgbi may be called upon to set out 11% fwd-ha ‘ utilized for its growth mmg-"J-Bo 5:108 11gb. solution s “l” h” "l" m‘ i” “and "9 M" that u m 130;.‘ o! qfllmment-u. and 1.1m Surplus m1, tar 1a washed and drained org n,‘ and dissolves in their which 1n turn ll canted Into large;- bodlen o! water. ‘mils dlssolvsq lnorslnlo matter being tn solution provide nourishment for growth and development o! marine veg». tatlon and matter which prov“. the necessary food mlfllle products toi- their growth, development and maturity. the fish have taken this into they syiieflls- they produce the able food elements necessary {q- liiimim use, I ” in scone part o! their organism-an the lenn fish as cod-fish 1t ls storm in their livers, sortie of like most essential ele- merits valalble an 1t usually Suppllcs . deficiency tn the regular diet. madkerel and herring and eel. this 8100.1: food element la stored up m their flesh. soil ls the source of all foods that are necessary to sustam life. of the quality and amounts of its cgntalned elements l-hl-i- "e "We-ism to produce the richest food content. duct. brief analysis of sors 1n general and of that o1’ P. E. Island in partlettlu. in order to have an lmderatnaidlng o1 all the factors "I69 Mltflbule to the development 02a perfect food product as tar as 1t can be obtained. of our Island. sand, gravel. humus e10. 1n vark I em- 511- m» able iii-enormous. which li de- I- W. IVIITCIILL Qgnnhmd “m, the 1nd or m“ New Dominion. from m” my have been formed and. tn what manner these ‘WQIQ IJ formation o! the soil from these elements. character 1W1"! v11! 1mm to light. 88nd] looms. Ina-ml are ctmatltuted by a mill-Hm of sand and clay contain- 11111 organic matter. matter 0181mm 011- mlneral content, such soils are known as pants qr muokil and are usually deficient iii mlnenl content. 0r heat can readily enter and ctr- o! which footers 1t la neoemary 11o Dmseulnorder thatplsmdevelap- It l5 being SMVSSBC more more. that all l'ru.t.s and product ol’ the ‘soil mint be 11.11, “pm and matured 1n its natural elec menbs. on its vine or tree o;- mm, as the case may be, in them to possess the food they are capable of Bqlllrlng when P709914)‘ 810V!!! and ripened, It ls thus vary evident um 1, the soil be deficient in m, c, sent-la! blunt food. the pin... an,‘ veflvtables grown on it will be d, flcieiit also tn food values m". when thus deficient they mno‘, produce optimum health w)“, they m. relied on b0 mode m“ lllti lilln factors tn -the diet. which i111 by annuals originate It la very evident that M5198. fruits. and nuts thug their orlgn. ' bQi/h man 3nd 3P0!!! the Soil fill Vegg. have All meats used in the dietary n, sources, “flamers...” "r so 1t can b, and develop. and and enters rivers and steam waiters, l 10A‘ all these Alfie! valu- and ls ltored laigpiy which conlnim for man. It ls cspelcgjjy In the fat. fish a.s_,=nimon_ It ls thus very apparent that the 'l‘hls shows the great importance nature and ' 0f its pro- It ls thus necessary to make 5 Boll: an made up of clay, silt lnthe (trlglnal 313N351! .1101 T! 8011s ountaln more 1n propvrtlon organtq b0 li-S tn- then c157 80115 may be so compact and dense that neither water, Bil, “We flimishout to particles u Ind-growth. may normally tabs Itflverydlftlctultttogotenyiat- Wwwrv results mm IllCh soils "l! method of motivation and are cultivated while they an wet 1t. maiy result 1n the top sur- face of 1t becoming "baked," with a. hard crust stir-lace. On the other hand too large amounts of ea-nd in loams and sandy loams may rendel sitch unable to retain moisture 1110- perly tn its substanog and ralnl (Continued on page 15) Efficient llYllDlMll 81 Charlottetown ‘or Vitalit] HANG I11 Are YOU the Owner who l _ can never have an Accident 7 Mao than ‘LMIMIN Aeddonh a g you on thin continent llluetruloo tlnonnorlnfhirtomobllolnmmnco. Claims Service ll the all important factor ln Automobile Insurance. IITAIIJSIIID 181i Slnnullllo BRAHMIN PE IQOE T EA B0,, 1111111511 IOIIIIIUI ' alwaus 1UP