-:: rrrzvvru-‘u m - “nu-l c-s __l' c- u us‘ warn-Ir i-dvfvaibfnti ~< ‘. "or: rout: lliE GIIARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN. ‘resident-W. Chnlfrr B. lfcLul-c. I. l‘. 5"."-|,",_Llrut. Col. l). A. llnlflniicn, ll. S. 0. Editor 1nd Manning Auclurlnfn Edllurc-Fruni lfornlnl u,“ pg: year (In ndvnncc MONDAY. JULY 20. 1931 ‘The Issue Glearly Defined ‘ Beyond its cracked highway pol- Icy and its sorry record of broken‘ pledges and promises, the Lea GOV- Q bsolutely nothing to‘ present i ernment has a offer the electors in tllc campaign. The conservative party,‘ on the other hand. has a construc- l tive platform which it stands plcilg- 1 ed to put into effect. Its 1923 plat-z form was implemented to the let-l ter. and its 193i platform will also‘ be implemented if the Hon. J. p.‘ Stewart is returned to power! Moreover, the effectiveness of the Conservative campaign is enhanced Iy the fact that it is ii". close and sympathetic touch with lhc Con- Otta- wa. Even under an adverse federal administration, the Stewart Gov- ernment was able to obtain from Ottawa an annual increase in sub- sidy'of $165000. Iis platform at that time was to obtain a subsidy increase, and, upon obtaining such servative administration at increase, to reduce the taxes. Hav- ing obtained the increased subsidy. it immediately fulfilled its pledge with respect to tax reduction, al~ though at that time but a small portion of the subsidy increase ob- tained had actually been paid into the treasury. The Conservative platform today is to press for a final adjustment of all our subsidy claims. Mr. Stewart's convictions on this point are well known. He has made a profound study of the whole matter, and he is the one party leader in this Province who is qualified to carry it through successfully, As Mr. Stewart well said in his masterly key-note speech in the Capitol Theatre, this subject of subsidy settlement is the most im- portant issue the campaign. More‘ revenue, it is admitted by both partles,_is essential. It has to come either from the pockets of our farmers and taxpayers, or from the Federal Government. 'l‘he si- lence of the Lea Government cah- didates on this point-the fact that they admit having no platform of any kind-indicates clearly enough what the taxpayers may expect if the Lea Government is returned. in Their record with respect to our subsidy claims, despite their elec- tion promises of 1927 and the fact that they had at Ottawa a govern- ment in line with them politically, is an absolute blank! Not one cent of additional subsidy, in any shape or form. were they able to secure except from the taxpayers of the The only windfall they secured from Ottawa was the un- Province. employment grant of $90,000, given them by the Bennett Government- a grant which, according to their own party press. they were not en- titled to receive because we "had no unemployed irl this Province," and which they have repaid by the most vitupcrative abuse and mis- representation of Premier Bennett and his administration. Moreover, the Lea Government has so bungled the matter of our subsidy claims that no one knows ,what, if anything. they believe these claims to be worth. They have pre- pared several “brlefs," each for dif- ferent amounts varying from four hundred thousand to three and a quarter million dollars. The prc "presentation" of these briefs have cost the taxpay- ers thousands of dollars. The re- sult. as we have stated, has been absolutely nil. And they are now asking the electors to indorse their record, and give them another four years in which to carry on in the same incompetent and irresponsible lmnnerl It is almost inconceivable that any body of politicians would ex- pect theelectors to be gullcd by a campaign so shallow and silly. The contrast between the attitude of the two parties, indeed, was never $0 clearly defined-on the one hand the straightforward‘ assurances, backed by his record for truth and integrity. of the I-fon. J. D. Stewart Ind on the other the Lea Gov- pnratlon and 10.00 (la a Iwe) dellvcrcl. Dally (founded lltllzuled “Mzém “alumna ‘nuk , Vlcr-rrecldcnc-J. L IIIndO Ulroolor-J. B. Burnett Walker and l). K. Gurrh ernmentks sullen silence as to s‘!!! programme or policy. and its cbuac and misrepresentation of the pol- icies of the administration at Ot- tawa to which this Province must look for any final settlement of our subsidy claims. so important to our progress and development. What Did He Mean.’ The uncalled for inslnuatlon of the Hon. B. w. LePuse again-it a respectable order like the Loyal“ Orange Association, that if there was much liquor in the Province it would have been noticeable at the recently held Orange Tea, can- not pass unchallenged. What auth- ority did lvlr. mPage have for the statement, which he made at the night. that "lf there was so much of it, surely there would be some- body taking a drink on Orange Tea Day above all other days, because the Orangemen would be feeling probably a little ‘better on that day”? ' Our fraternal organizations, both Protestant and Catholic, enjoy de- servedly a. very high reputation for morality and good citizenship. They are law abidln; and there is no reason why slurs should be cast up- on them by a. politician seeking to evade responsibility for his prohib- ition pledges by citing, u prime facle evidence of the absence of ll- liclt liquor, that the members of one of these organizations were sober on the occasion of their an- nual tea, Why should a. ember of the Lea Government insinuate that they would be breaking the law if they had the opportunity? The fact that they were sober on that occasion called for no more comment by Mr. LePage than the fact that he was himself sober when he visited the tea. It called for less comment than the fact that he was presumably sober when he made the, lntemperate statement referred to. The Gasoline Tax The Lea Government candidates are labouring to show that the 1n- creased gasoline tax is not costing the taxpayers anything-that it is being paid by the tourists, and that. since it is being funded along with the auto license fees to pay for highway borrowings, the high- way work is not really costing our people anything, There is no need to go further than ex-Premier Saunders for a rc- rutatlon of this argument. Here is what Mr. Saunders said in the Legislature in 1927, when, with his Liberal followers he was in Oppo- sltlon: “It is all very well to say that the zBsoline tax comes out of a particular class of people, that it is a. special tax, it is intended for special expenditure-the patrol system on the roads. Well, the patrol system on our romk is part of the public fecesslties of this Province the same as schools, etc. The fact that the gasoline tax is earmarked docs not make it any- the less a tax. If it does, I would suggest we had better earmark the land tax and the income tax so that the people will realize they are not paying anything- if that is the idea." Now that the Lea Government has boasted the gasoline tax 100 per cent, and the taxpayers are paying six cenu to the Government on cv- ery gallon used, the shoe seems to be on the other foot. Editorial Notes "It is absured," says the defeated King Government candidate, spoken- man for the Liberal candidates in the Fourth District of Queens, "to say Mr. Lea has no platform." Well. it was Mr. caJlum Bruce who acid Canoe Cove meeting on llrlday_ mes ilv TllE fir Gandhi has recently pmblbly without tcntlm, one grout weakness of his Conlress ~ . party. It is neither I. popular and democratic puty in the Western sense, nor the enthusiastic follow- ing of a single dominant force. Gandhi pictures impatient coa- grcusmcn- u asking, "How icing must we wait and‘ bear this?" H: In- awers. "You must u long u the work- ing committee think necessary." At the bent the Congress party in c011- trolled by m oligarch)’. and 9M working committee ll not dominat- ed byGcndhi althoughit lsheper- soirully who brings to them n"! majority of the sorrow adherents. which incidcntly l Jcsenfa lea! than one in every thousand of m- an's 350.000.0110 nwplv- mum!!!’ Gandhi is not India. E. new: reference to the “New Zealand treaty‘ appeared in thil column Friday. The reference, as the context implied, was to the new Australian treaty, by which very favorable tariff terms have been secured for Canadian producers, without in any way jeopardizing the interests cf our farmers in the home market. nightly or wrongly, but very acutely, millions of Moclems dia- trust Mr. Gandhi and his l-lindu hosts, take but little Block in "l9 decision of what ls known u $1M Indian 008181966. Unless and until education and conciliation can bring about more understanding between these two factions, no amount .01 goodwill It Delhi or in Whitehall or the India office can solve the India ,.mblem. mm wllilngdon, in his recent ad- dress at -Simlc. rcvulcd a sure grasp of this truth, and the speech of Sir John Simon, who, cs former Ohnlnnan of the Indian Statutory Commission, knows as much about Indiana any Englishman, makes it more clear. ' ‘In the circumstances, how fool- ish it la for outlmders to think of the Indian problem as a dispute between Britain and India, as acme- thing to be settled between 011E British Government and Mr- Gmdhl. If it were merely that a.- lone, if the only condition necessary to bring ‘tlement was the good- will of Britain, peace would have wine lofndh. 10118 I80- Thc Union of South Africa. clllw of age this year. says the NEW Advertiser. When the Ufllvn W88 ‘born in i010, it wls born, we think. in a _ " temper of national hope. We all meant well. by each other: Dutch by British. Province by Province. party by plrtv- m" wasaproper temper ‘ ‘; 9' temper that, played upon Win11’. might have gathered strength as the years wore on. That tempt!‘ today does not exist, or lf it c1088. itno longer broods over the scene. A movement has been ltlrtcd ill Britain to bring about a material reduction in the cost of litigation- The two main causes why iuflflfie is expensive are laws of evidence and the high chute of eminent- ‘ The laws were made mI-ny years ago, when communication was difficult and the great masses of the people were uneducated. Un- der those laws every fut udvan- ced and every document introduc- ed had to be attes by wltnesle! attending personally in the courts. In future, this will be materially modified, and such documentary Ind other evidence will be accePWd in many cues without the corrobor- ation of personal testimony. Shcrtalghlcd lndlvldulr in this ‘country, says the Oork- Examiner, may be inclined to look ukcnce at any important increase in Canada's trade with Great Britain, lest Can- adian produce might add to the n.1- rendy serious competition that our ‘producers have to deal with on the British mnrkefo; but actually Can- Id], is never likely to interfere with our markets, and any improvement in British trade le bound to rebound to our advantage. It fr by their own chlnefer that that the D6091: of South Africa must shape their careers and help to build up the nation, says the Owpc Argue. A great country is l country that is great in character. Al Mr. Baldwin once put it, "the fortunes of a nation are determined above everything by the quality of its people." If that la l0, South Africa‘ nu much u: commend it. What it sometimes mm: to lack in l. certain breadth of view and openness of mind, a certain mag- ncnimlty and fairness. lit-unique unme- hlrcuc M, the wood - ' -' math“: uniqlfllfl Ch! hi’!!! 3701M bill in g; , Housed Oommohl the other is ll s“: we hm“ ‘ w‘ ' ”"‘"°"“' m. Mackenzie King travelled buck an was his colleague Mr. IAn- . mu], m "u! M, . ‘peach mm bee, who nld, at the some meet- delivered by the Honorlblc Hugh ins: "We are appealing to the pec- Outhfléwllc milled thll ION-fw- ple this time without r. policy." Dr."‘°""m:m“ln':f7;$ whdgih Cyrus should get nu marlonettel '"“'°:°$£‘;"M,m Jam" W under better controll ed w “m, in“. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN. (Continued) Laird alleges that all trees die outright when girdled, and that the contrary is owing to its being imperfectly done-I think he ll in the right, for I examined sever- aly trees that had been girdled and still retained leaves (particularly maples) and I always found some comer of bark that had escaped and kept up the communication. Glrdllng if not m general practise in the Island for cleaning but i sec in the Island for cleaning but I ace side roads. Laird argues that the Island lands in the Island cannot be set- tled with advangtage to g, farmer where they are beech lands, ‘ on such he says he may raise wheat and potatoes and maintain himself, but cannot keep stock for want o! hay, if he has no marsh, nor swampy or sappy land capable of being made into meadow-Clover he says ‘ be depended on, for when the winter is open without snow (as for two years put) the young plant of clover is destroyed. Timothy requires sappy land, or else much manure, which cannot be procured where there la not already l. simply of hay from marsh 8w. This does not seem very 300d rea- ' for even if clover were lin- practlcablc there are other rmour- cu for raising manure-Straw D81‘- ticularly Peace etc, etc, however this shows the ideas of the country. Laird is certainly very much above the common view of the settlers- we cannot therefore wonder that the ordinary gner are wedded to the Marshes. Mr. Cambridge 1s one of the few proprietors in the Island who put a value on Inland lauds. He says he would not part with 1t under 2a. -pcr acre-The Stewart: seem all to reckon lt as nothing-they do not seem to calculate much 0n any rise in the value of land. Timothy grass ls here much in esteem-the hay is reckoned particularly good for horses. Mr. Bracken has found the Timothy the second year pro- duce a heavier crop than the clover the first. M1213. has cultivated a small farm near Charlottetown to great advantage and has brought it into a fine hay land tho‘ in different soil) by means of the town manure which few other people have been shawsslghtcd enough to see the value of. The Timothy seed is not selected, but all random hay seeds are sown along with English clover seed. Angus Currie-a ten- ant of Gov. Ewing's lot Sit-pays 55 a. yecr—2 brothers pay each‘ as much has only a. short term-as the Gov. will neither sell not let for perpetuity-on that account he has but few tenants, and giveathem a great share of marsh-me once used to demandhalfproduceofhay-Our rle however has a good deal into his bargain. Currie reckons 25 shillings per acre. current prices for chop- Dlnfl- “ind junking an acre of wood- to chop is to cut over the trees- Junk, out into lengths. For piling and burning, 25 shillings more,- SELKIRKiS DlARYf803-i-l80if ; l‘ 'with en nu industry-Hun. many years-fa or ‘l I think) before no himself with tho atom, and could not get free-could not deny him- self luxuries, and being involved was obliged. to dispose of his produce at an vmder vclue, Ind this was the longer pin clearing himselL-A Hlthlander beginning with e. little ‘IOIIJG be clear of the world in two ‘yet/m. but at the and of eight, he would-hove 6.01- 7 acres of clear land lnrtcadof 50. Ilhser-g- semi-Highlander gqugt. ter on Int 5'! son of Soldier Loyalist-In infant when his fath- ccme to the Island, now little r hove ‘lb-act down in June 1801, and cleared a amt-ll spot-planted 5 bushels of potatoes, but the crop failed and he had not 20 0f return -ln i800 he planted l2 bushels, had about 100 of clopr-but for what of accomodatiun in preserve them lost most of them. he has 110w o 800d appearance of crop, has planted 13 biuhclr of pfltatoea 1 1-2 bus. wheat-I barley-with some Indian corn and turnips. By pacing his clearing may be} 1-2-01- 41cm»- acy 1 1-2 or 2 pocs 11-4 wheat 1-2 acre Barley-Id acre 0f other things This crop must. put him out o! reach of want. He hi8 of cattle a Bull, l cows, 1 of which yell. 2 year olds-4 calves-cuts cbmit 12 ton hay.’ McLeod another squatter has about 2 acres cleared 0n which he. has 12 bushels potlwesphnfad. B-Qfl ing small woodcut it ln_ 6 ' dcya—_ he is a good akeman, has been 1on8 in America-he was about ab; days putting up his house-He only bc- nn last spring, and had not pro- ceeded fnr when he heard of the sale of the Int and 'thc Colony coming out, which checked him in his improvements-he has notyet built n. chimney lo-hls house cw. He however is ,, , lng to go on with that and other improvements, on my promising that if he does not get the land he is on, he shall have an allowance for his improve- menfs-Iwlth which promise hc seems quite satisfied. (To Be Continued) By [can W. Bum. MD. INJURY T0 INNER. SIDE 0F KNEE You rend from timtfo time about athletes who have what is eauea I. “trick knee." ‘rhls consists in the majority of cases of a. little tearing of the cartilage or cushion that ls ‘ ‘ between the two bones that form the knee joint. Owing to the fact that the upper bone runs inward from the thigh to Some easy lands are done for 20 shillings and 20 shillings Currie reckons 6 or 8 days for chopping md junking an acre. He reckons that a. man may (besides all other work of the farm) clear 3 or 4 acres annually-of which one half could be burnt in time for potatoes-the cutting he would do in Winter. but as it lies in the beginning of spring-pile the logg and burn in P1198 a! much as possible in Spring 7°? DOtatoes and barley-the re- mainder in Summer and sew with Winter wheat, reckons the potatoes without any other manure Lhpn the ashes to produce 20 for 1, 25 for 1 is frequent, planting I0 bushels per acre Currie speaks of 3 or 4 acres Der annum as an exertion, and the work of an industrious marl, few do 1t in the IslimfL-he himself being only on an uncertain tgnul-g wouldn't attempt lt-and even o; th06e who have permanent P055855- ionr, few are so anxious to extend their improvements a; to 41° this "(flint for two or three of the first years. Carrie's ideas may perhaps be l-lktn I! a. criterion for com- nlrihc the Hilhllzld settlers with the Americana. Laird in 8 yearn has cleared 50 acres-l. above 6 "Y" I Yfill‘ at m average-or double Currie‘: estimate of good Wmiw-but if the American h best It working hard-the Highlander belts him at living hard-Laird _-__-_. Lord Morley. outstanding Liberal, who on one occasion being question. ed in regard to his change of vlcw acid: "I gdmlt quite candidly that 20 years ago I entcrtclncd many ‘opinions which I do not now em P.‘- tlin, and if myonc can derive any satisfaction from my discarded opinions they are entirely welcome to do so." This impromptu reply was so effective that it left nothing more to be raid. Mr. Guthrie is an ornament and strength to the 00v- crnment aide of the House. Hc hu character, personality and prestige which constitute a definite auet of the administration. 11c ls N06! in ddaltc and whulnr with the _ the majority of cases it sllpc right ,the knee and the lower bone rum a lltN outward from the knee to ankle, the inner ligament at. the knee holding the two bones tn- gether gets o. t. mendcus strain upon it, and so in over B0 per cent of the cases of knee injury this liga- ment gets torn and stretched; some- times the cartilage comes out of place and it get‘: a alight tear or tears in it. Usually the cartllage- slips back into place and the ligament heals up l but often the slightest blow on the inner side of the i...» ‘will stretch l the ligament holding bones together ' and the cartilage between the bones | will slip out of place. Fortunately in ‘ back again but the inner side of the knee keeps sore and weak for some time. _ When the cartilage slip; out of place and stays out it is usually wise to have an anaesthetic given which loosens up muscles and the cartilage can be put back into place. However ln moat cues of this in- lury to the knee if immediate rent and support is given relief is soon attained. . The first treatment la to apply about six one inch stripe of adhesive tape from the knee ocp in front around the. sore spot on inner cldc of knee, to the back of the knee. Have thrknec straight as thll ll done. This taping mould bc rc- movcdinforidayqandufrcah one applied. When the second one is NIIWWG, the kncc should be lup- ported by a factory cotton bond!“ or a firm elastic bondage for at least one month. , n the lnjurycocurl lilln it would bewtscwhavcapluelcrcartput on and worn for flvc weeks. ~ Thll allows the individual to gct- around Lllrllhtbutofcdlltlcthckmell prevented from bending. Somctlmcc this fails to affect c complete cure and an operation ll nccunry. This operation formerly gave vcry unsatisfactory rcculh 1n a number of cull. but fortunately was out of debt. he began hue bad to get provisions on credit-involved er formerlycettlcdin New York __ A . . All pleated-lid ul- Pvollcyhc ago. -, -. #1.... ‘lhvllvy ,0. 1 Imprcqnablc financial pcsilion_ lasgcfi for policyholders» Qxgggd $45,000,000. A Canadian Com. pony, established over 50 yo"; ELEflTl0ll llllillWAYS continued from page 1 that there is no propeifl foundation under the‘ road. It is this which causes the asphalt surface to buckle and crack. And lf it does this in midsummer, just a month after it has been opened to the public, what will it be like at the end of a severe Prince Edward Island winter? A rough estimate of the cost of the Lea Government’! experimental work on the two and one-eighth miles of high- way on the Malpeque Road, sections of which are repre- sented ih these photographs, would be well over 050,000. The so-called McIntyre Highway alone-which is less than a mile in length-cost over $26,000. The taxpayers of the Province paid one-half the cost, the other half coming out of the Dominion unemployment grant. This grant having expired last month, the Government's present road making activities on the St. Peter's Road; where a ‘similar highway is being lald, will have to be paid for solely by our people. The Lea Government has neither platform nor in this election campaign, but it has signified its intention of continuing to build such speedways as are here illustrat- ed, on borrowed money. The claim is made that while the initial cost would be greater than the building of clay o even gravelled roads, the work would be of an “endurin nature, and that the present time is most opportune in which to make further and bigger ‘borrowings on the cred- it of the Province for this purpose. ' The proposition outlined by Premier Lea at the last session of the Legislature, was that the Government for the purpose of such roadwork as is illustrated in the views taken on the McIntyre highway, should undertake “a three or five year programme of borrowing with expenditure of one and one-half to two million dollars, or an annual ex- penditure of $300,000 to $500,000.” Premier Lea was figuring only on the initial cost-not on repairs. Since he made that announcement in his last Budget speech, a new section of highway has been built and has already fallen into disrepair! How many more hundreds of thousands of borrowed money it will take to keep these roads in condition he did not say. Our farmers and taxpayers, with the photographic reproductions before them of the cracks and crevices caused by the summer run in the newly completed work, ‘are just as well qualified to form judgment on that point as the Lea Government. Who pays for this borrowing and squanderlng of the public revenues? Let there be no misunderstanding on this point! The Lea Government's attitude is very clear." It has given no pledge not to increase taxation, for the simple reason that it cannot finance such costly "experiments" without digging into the taxpayers’ pockets. The Lea Gov- ernmenfs intentions on this point were revealed in an il- luminating statement made by the Hon. J. P. McIntyre, Minister of Public Works, in the Legislature on April 15, 1929, when he said: "When I hear the Opposition any to reduce taxes, to cut down expenditures, I any that It w time that both parties should BROADEN OUT . . . We should get clear of this SMALL POL- ITICS and say: "WE ARE GOING T0 SPEND MORE MONEY.” It would be in the interests of the FARMERS themselves IF THEY WOULD AGREE T0 PAY MORE TAXES, if we spent it on the roads and put them in good shape. Let our readers mite for themselves the "good shape” of the newly constructed McIntyre highway as revealed by the camera, and then ask whether they consider such work to be worth $27,000 a mile of their hard earned mon- ey-or even one-half or one-quarter that much! Let them ask how much, mor it will cost to rebuild these roads with a foundation apable of standing u‘: against the frosts of winter. Let them consider how muc has already been squandered in tearing up expemivcly gravelled roads to make ivay for this kind of extravagant hard-surface highway. Then let them recall how, in 1919, Premier Lea, Hon. J. P. McIntyre and other Liberal members then in Oppo- sition canvassed the Province, condemning the Arscnault Government's road policy, charging that the Government was committing the Province ‘to vaat expenditure: amounting to $875,000 in five years" under the Dominion grcgation damned that policy as “an infernal scheme” and called upon the electors to- “vote out a Government that, war attempting to bribe the people by building election highways at ruinous coat with the people's money.” Today the Lea Government is spending more money on one mile of highway than would build several miles un- der the Conservative administrption. And the result "is shown by the manner in which its work is already falling to pieces under the summer sun. TllE PllBLlflFflllllll BONBIIAW BRIDGE PLAN]! the measurement cf lumber requir- ed for the work, 2,000 fret, called for. . " - It is ll-IO not true that "the Pub- lic Works Department could mt _ Bin-I notice a letter llgned "El.- DGIOR," more likely the Govern- ment Supervisor, in Saturday's HlghwaysAct. Let them recall how the Lea-McIntyre ag- , Patriot, ulcd my rumour bcinl "ukcd what he would charge for hauling thlc mlterlll with hll boat and he acid it would not be lcu than I80." - I may ny that this ltotomcnt fl polltlvcly false, I was not liked for ncwacomplltaclmlacbtclncdln ltpcrccntcnduilmptovcmcntln hcnbgn, uprlcebyhim crcnynnc. The cctullfilullr ‘MCI-MN! mmuiobérhiu-nmmm ' mauumnminouia flMwhich . -, y wcllfcrthcboctflowcitlngwll in fact. required. The bout want to Bonphcw that day empty cf freight, whllclttookcwholowccktow‘ llvcr the plank by trucks, and the, work n. bola up by the MW which a quick boat transport have averted. I can Sir Mo. (CAPT). L31‘. HILTON. WVOBSI AND STILLS“) _ l Sin-A Government 011W’ one spell-kin: with Profeslcq , i oritv. in Saturday. hm ‘ e an 1 r > 00 _ the wholesale boodllng 1n with the planking (or Bridge. ' AI (D my diflfifflflcg [when boat owner and himseu, h Benton can lmwe. for othei-‘mattrrs of public m which his own letter prim“ Government deeper mm u,‘ deserve consideration, .. ,_ l!" 350111! Illmplcufmm ltlBI-l jobbcry may be Q0111‘ m over the Province. R990"! lly that the .. me urement called for gm ;' ‘hi0 l» IOOII mm y.‘ 90 0!’ I P710! 0n that qumm,“ R") new -. . t "$.02 feet of lumber, 1.. tlon to paints, spikes, m: id for out of the ‘Iream-y, So that‘ the political swab . extended beyond the men .. .. of frelghtr- An excuse t were so many core heads to l; paused, must apply m duh lumber, points be, as well q freights. It i! Pertinent 0t ash-Arc -. not core held-r in every pm; Province? Arc they all appegq this way? If ro- what is it the tcxvlyers of the Pmlncu, thilntrnfhcallnglneurqq‘ sore lpols in the rank and flu, to prevent the morally .» fabric of Government from .. in: into decay} ‘Ifithis is the situctionll be good policy for Hon. Lea to Put Ilka on hlr apokumen, and prevent the est punishment coming from cf his own political houselufl, - I lm Bil‘, etc., 1 ' ' WEST I 1-... What is the merrlcst pmmh May Flung o'er the dew-drenched - flowers? Tell me, you sprcy— Carol of birds between the » - on the pear i. What can life at its-brightest ~- Better than this on its b11811 day? How should we fetter the throat‘: win: Wild with 16y of its woodland Sweet, should love for an ~~ ‘delay, - Swift while the Primrose W" ounl What in the lover's roycllat Ill Oarol of birds between the ~- Thrccd the stun on a. silver - (So aiqfuiey nnr in B‘ " bowcrsl) en the ~- luna. Ocrol of bird: betwe .. . 41ml ~- SPECIALS] nueuvvlm. m-i vu- fcr Sunburn Mclllmlc lion!!! "d: Orcam Tii-BLLBS '1'; iii-ow n - nu-uunu-w-"' i (double hackle! Mirth for a little one. 871611".