(IAND C ONSER VA TIN = R A L L Y ‘A meeting of the Conservative electors "of Charlottetown and Royalty will be held at the Committee Rooms Thursday evening at 8 p. m., (Daylight Saving Time). Candidates and dress the meeting. a . . ,,,, ._ Classified other speakers will ad- ‘ 5573 oas» Advertisements 1408f Teachers Wanted Ear-slam n: onaaaorrn- sscoun casss TEACHER. no; town. Finder please leave at ihll Dromore School. Supplement see. oflice. 55594-3341- D. J. Hughes, Secretary. .----—-.—-—-—- ssso-r-za-sl. Male Help Wanted — WWW"- wANTED-A MAN T0 EBECT A fence on- East Royalty School grounds. For particulars apply to Pliers Pe-la. 0563-7-23-31. HEN WANTED TO LEARN THE barber trade throush W! Ipeclel short course- Ewart traininl- Par- ticulars free. Molar Barber College. B79 Harrington Street, Halifax. 7-3-tts-2moa. For ISaIe .. ___________._.____._.... ‘you SALE-MY rears! noun. ' i Apply Mrs. Wm. Partridge, York. ssel-r-sa-al. - ,_,_...______--- - IWO COOKING STOVE! I0 sale. ApplyNR-iehford Street. 6562-7-8-21. * 1'08. QUICK SALE PIANO $75.00. " Apply W. V. Purdis. ~13 Sydney Street. 5650-7-23-31. ....__..._------.---_ roa SALE-IN ACRE FARM WITH crop. cheap. Reason for sale. ill health. Benton Dawson. Kinross. - 0507-7-23-21. .. ._ ' PROPERTY FOB. BALI A'I.‘ KEN- WANTED-SECOND CLASS TEA- cher, French, for 5t. Mary's School, Lot 22. Supplement $100.00." John J. Dolrcn. Secretary. 5580-7-24-61. TEACHER. WANEED FOR. CABLE Head West School, Second Class. 0100.00 voted. Protestant preferred. Duncan McLaren, Secretary. 5585-7-24-01. WANTED - TEACHER FOR. EG- lington School, Bay Fortunezsup- plement 8100.00. Midsummer vaca- tion. Mrs. Fred McKenzie. Sec- retary. 0582-7-24-21. MABGATE SCHOOL DISTRICT having been disappointed in a teacher, again call for applications. An experienced teacher preferred. Supplement $200.00 for first class or $150.00 for second class. . 5500-7-23-31. Miscellaneous JonN anaitltn MnoDONALD, nan-n Surveyor, Box 20, Hermanvilla. 3570-5-0-1mc. _.._._____.______-__ POTATO TAGS FOB TIIB SBA- son's shipments on short notice. Guardian Central Printery. llnxlon. House and barn in good repair. Lot 75 x 130. Apply Fred —-i—i—i———-——— FOB. SALE, TO LIT. BOAR-D AND Shea. 5430-7-22-31. _ room signs on hand at Guardian . ma sass - an ur-‘ro-na-ra 01"“ l‘ ' cottage, all modern was ‘ and nice barn suitable for gen- To Let age. Apply 1.7 Olebar Street. M00-7-15-tts3wks. h FARM son SALE - n‘ LONG TO LET-JN A NICE Il-ESIDENTAI. locality. Desirable hot-water heat- ed residence at 53 Ellston Street. Possession about August 1st. Apply 5i Euston Street. 5541-7-32-01. Oreek, 40 acres of good land, well watered. convenient to schools, churches. shipvlnl. ete. For fur- ther particulars apply to owner, Neil H. MacKinnon, 63 Winslow Ave. Somerville, Mass, or apply to E. D. MacKinnon, Canoe Cove. P. E. I. 0568-7-23-121 - _ . Wanted WANTED-RON‘! ‘DOOM BEAT- ed. Write G care Guardian. o538-7-22-tf. INJURED MAN DIES - Struck by a hay carrier on the left side oi the head Monday afternoon. Mr. Fred Weeks, Fredericton, died in the Prince Edward Island Hospital last night as a result of the injuries received. Mr. Weeks suffered from an open wound, s. fractured skull and from slight concussion. -—- WANTzn-prmmgggp 300mg, island's Liuimeut for all Strains. two bedrooms and sitting room. ' APP?! this office. 5589-1“ -__-.___- . wmrap so nsrrr nousu o; lblrtmant, furnished. Apply Box x we 0mm“ ‘wgbndL Salesman Wanted A well established Businus Con- cern, requires the services of a man to represent them on P E. I- Good remuneration to the right man. Apply in confidence giving age, qusllilcatons, Boa B 110. __ WANrzn ro nam‘ - MEDIUM tiled house. modern conveniences. APPIY at this office. b547-7-22-3i {ii- Female Help Wanted ;,+.——--—--- MTED BY avousr m coun- "7 "1 '0 hill? with housework. write J. Glilldilll. MZQ-I-IO-CI. 7-24-81. FOR WHOM To VOTE QUEEN'S If You want to return Hon. R. B. Bennett to power, mark Your ballot thus in Queen's County: n: R- nsliotn JENKINS {if W-cunsrnn S.McLURE x i l? fgllitus MACMILLAN | NI-LMYERS x | P- - Mali: no other mark of any kind. Y“; KING'S If You want. to return Hon. R. B. Bennett to power mark Your ballot thus in King's County: THOMAS w. GRANT | loam A. MACDONALD x | - Make no other mark of any kind. PRINCE If you want to return Hon. R. B. Bennett to power mark 1°11!" ballot thus in Prince County: . _.l.rnanx ARNETI‘ x | ALFREDEZMacLEAN | ~--....___ Make no other mark of_any_ kind. _______ ___ - Central Guardian roxom cnnuc at Dr. Mathia- 8011’! 031w. Springfield. Saturday, Jill)‘ 38th It 9.30 A. M. 5580-7-21-21. BENNETT WILL BllTOlI-l Tlli grant to ‘highways which King took from us-Vote for McLure and My- ers. ' TOXOID CLINICS. —- Dr. Mc- Ini-Yrffs office, Montague, Friday, July 25th 11.30 A. M, Murray Har- bor North, 2 P. M., and Murray River 3.30 P; M. Fifteen minutets allowed for each clinic. 5087-7-24-11. BENNETT WILL RESTORE ‘l’!!! GIANT to Agriculture which King took away from the farmers-Vote for Bennett candidates. AFTER SCALPS-Arnong ths vis- itcrs to ths city today was Abbie A." Murphy enroute to Halifax after , “ two weeks holidays it his home in Georgetown. While 1n tho city he is endeavoring to arrange baseball games with the Abegweits of this city. I-Is is manager of the Dart- mouth, N. 5., team and is anxious to show his wares in the city 1p the near future. 1,300,000 PEOPLE HAVE LEI‘! CANADA during the past eight years Canada can't grow under King, so vote Conservative. SLIGHT ACCIDENT-Yesterday at about one o'clock two cars were proceeding along Queen St.. between Grafton and Kent when the leading car without warning turned into the curb. The other car struck it on the side smashing the running board but otherwise not injuring the car. Both cars had but slight injuries and could proceed under their own power. It was questionable who was in the wrong or right. SCOTCHFOI/i.‘ MEMORIAL PIC- NIG-An opportunity for renewing auld e ‘ ‘ was afforded by the Scotchfort Memorial Picnic yes- terday. and fully. three thousand a- vailed themselves of it. A special train leaving the city at 2.15 brought a large crowd to the scene of festiv- ities while the remainder, the maj- ority. arrived by car. Games occup- ied the attention of many. The re- freshment tables were well patron- ized, and the entire stock was sold out. lvlr. M. A. McInnls, a. former Island , Editor of the Oakland Maple Leaf. California, gave a speech. - BENNETT WILL RESTORE THE GRANT for Technical Education taken away by the King Government. rvote ‘Conservative. msrlnrlvu ADDRESS-Rev. CharlesH. Pennoyer, post office box 113, Chelsea, Msssachuseti , head of the Social Welfare Commission of the Universalist General Convention, addressed an interested audience in the Strand Theatre last night tak- ing ashis subject, "The Fullness of Faith." Rev. Ivlr. Pennoyer dwelt up- on (a) the principle of God which cannot be put into words: (2) the spiritual authority and leadership of His Son Jesus Christ: <3) the trust- worthiness of the Bible as contain- ing a revelation from God: (4) the certainty of just retribution for sin: and (B) the final harmony of all souls of God. I-IJs eddies was a fervent and eloquent one. leaving his auditors much food for thought and inspiration. Mr. George B. Schurman, who has been visiting his home in Summer- sidc, has returned to Moncton, N-B. —S. BIRTHS BISHOP-At Mt. Buchanan on Thursday, July 7th, 1930, to Mr. and Mrs. David Bishop. (nee Sadie Mac- Iean) a daughter. Thelma Jean. MARRIAGIS STETSON-WOLLII-mill - At the residence of E. H. Ramsey. s1 Upper Prince St. city. July 23rd, 1900. Mary Catherine Wollridge, of Duns- taffnage to Leslie 1110mm Stetson. of Marshiisid. DEATHS KlENAN-At P. E. Island Hospital, Wednesday, July 33rd, Mrs. Roderick Keenan, aged so years. Funeral from late residence at Murray River. ,No- tics later. WEEKS-At the P. ll. Island Hospi- ta July 33rd, William Franklin W . Sr. aged 06 years. Funeral from his late residence, rredericton, Friday. 2 p. m. (Standard time). N. D. MacLean UNDIITAIII IHIALII CIIIHONOIIIIIOIIOIIKIO ms CIIARLOTTETOWN ,_ GUARDI/ibl Grit Continued fromiPsge i1 centpiecospaech.“ TIE FISHERIES‘ POBIIFOLIO “The Prime Minister came to ... Th distinct cl srls betwee the e e o n Charlottetown about four years ago policies of Premier _King and Hon. R. B, Bennett with respec‘ to British| preference‘ was strongly stressed by, Md m M. w» or». ....:::.::::~::-::;.rt*:: that a bargain which l, all one-sided i hm‘ w, mun,“ u m alum ca“ "W" b‘ utl5hdimw 79 9mm cies of an election didn't prompt him lmny- to feel that he needed to get votes on “Even looking at it from a patrl» m, hum], 5° h, brought down . W0 "endpoint. lllfl it flllr dilly i! man from Montreal. lie says: ‘This build up Canada as beat we can for wii be your nominee; I don't care Canadians?" ha askld. "If we leave’ about your convention; You needn't can“; p, weal; ling in m; chglrlwiiilld it at all. This will be your p, “we; m, whole mm!" wukg-‘candidite.’ Mr. Macmillan has been Th, u“, o! m, 0mm _ m4 m, a res ant o Montreal for twenty- channeu thrown wmmtryn us", l seven years and all his interests are m the cm" mncem o! my “Withers. He is a former Islander. We ernment. While w. MacDonald‘. 2° m‘ criticism‘ mm ‘i ‘u a‘ ‘ believed u. 1°...“ mute“ w u“ acher of English but r think that largest possible extent. he believed “m h’ "m" "m" “m” "' m home make“ Wm mo" ‘ma? l flirl. about the practical administra- ‘tlcn of a department. would not fill Y- is wry lam book. Yet this is the I representative! Rs practically pro- a_4 man that is taken down here. For what reason? We have had men that the Liberals of this Province have "’I‘hare is one remedy. and one oa- thought worthy of nominating as ly, if this country is pin; u; u,” 1n candidates. We bad some of them the dairy business. and that u pro- already elected-Mr. s. n. Mclean, ted ‘b6 home make“: 1L“ Mah M!‘ R. H Jenkins lIlfi HOD J. E. Donald conunuei "we u" m“ Sinclair. There was also the Liberal "mm" cum“ be carded on "b candidate for this constituency who cum,“ w| dflmn‘ W5! dilly nominated by his party. “m! yNmmoélzahnd “a: “First of all it was an insult to the Island to say that there was no man th a -’ 23:“ ° "uh °' u“ m" “m” in the Province fit to sit around the Council Board of the King Govern- M" mwmald dent ‘m’ "mbment. (Applause). And it was a the dwllna in wool prices ioliowlns [particular and direct insult to the u" ‘"15 “WW1”! °1 $119 Kins four men that I have named because Government. there is only one inference possible He referred also to the poflgtg jp- aud that is that Premier King did dustry- Last summer Cuba. put a "i- Wllllfler any one of these men prohibitive tariff on our potatoes. i" M the M!’ ' Ihiswasan illustratiinofwbatwa are exposed to any time if we have to depend on foreign markets, The advantages which the United States and other countrlu havg rallied as a result of tariff protec- tion were convincingly illustratad, THE ONE REMEDY PROVINCIAL LEADER.’ ADDRESS "I do not thing it lies in the mouth of any one who has recently been a member of ths present provincial Government". aid Hon. Mr. Stewart, referring to a statement by the Lib- eral candidate "to say anything about the condition of the roads in. day. I have driven over them on several occasions in the last two weeks, and I have not felt any the better for it: and 1 am sure Dr. Grant was not either. I am sure, too, that it has not helped him any in his canvass. "On twc or three occasions in his SEED POTATOES “rake our seed potatoes in tlla Southern Statel. What has the King Government done to opfii up that market or msinisin it for us‘! They have absolutely failed is do n sinsle thing. Worse than that, w-ltb. a upper,‘ 1' and‘ m“. m“ slipleasure, who kept interrupting the “d "h" d“ h’ "Y ‘Mu?’ ("mutt that the King Government would in the ialt few weeks the tariff a- Klimt us on this market hag b°en increased 100 per cent. Don't you think the King Government, ha; failed in that regard’! They have knuflkled down and readied to Waahin“ and all they got wag a speech the Liberal candidate referr- Conservativa leader from time to time in a. vain effort to “raise a laugh." OLD AGE PFNSIONS "The Liberal candidate told you illrflbably appoint a Commission to “decide which was the best way to ,pay old age pensions," Mr. Stewart continued. "The next thing we wll] hear will be that he will be appoint- ing Commissions to help him make up his mind about everything." “We have two alternative proposi- tions with regard to old use pensions before the people, and they are very concrete and very clear. Under the lesislation passed by the King Gov-- ernment the Provinces must payi mil! per cent of these pensions? Hon. Mr. Bennett's policy is that the. Federal Government pays 100 pcrl cent. In this Province we have no‘; hops whatever of ever having an old , age pensions scheme under the King ‘ Government system because our pro- i vincial treasury is too Poor. Which| 1101163’. then, is the best for Prince. Edward Island? That is the question -‘ which you will be asked to decide on i Jilly 28th. and I do not think you will have much hesitation in coming to a decision." (Applgugg), SUBSIDY INCREASE Mr- Stewart then took up the im- portsnt matter of subsidy increase.‘ He said in part: » "There is no doubt that we are en- titled to increased subsidy. But will" we get it with the present Govern-i ments in power at Ottawa and in this Province. and if so, when? What is the history of this question’! I am not going to go back into ancient history with regard to the different amounts that we have received, nor shall I take time to so into the dif- ferent purposes underlying the pay- ments of subsidy by the Federal Government. It is sufllcient to say that since 1926 we had got an in- creased subsidy to this Province of $165,000. Dr. Grant stpted on one occasion that we got all that as a result of the Duncan Commission re- port. That, of course, is not correct, because $40,000 of that amount was obtained in 1028 before the Duncan Commission began to function at all. It was obtained as a rwult of an in- ter-provincial conference held in Ot- tawa when ths matter cf railway taxation was dealt with. "That was the position we were in when the present local Government ed to the present Minister o’ FM” i came into power. The Duncan com- erles. He has said that Hon. Mr.‘ miss, , on had functioned. and reple- M‘ nnumn‘ ‘pmmmmm’ i‘ 3°15’ w sentatiorls with regard to increased hem mm‘ wan’. I c“ “my n7 m". subsidy were made before that Com- if Mr. Macmillan can do that he isl mission M’ Charlottetown by my”... u‘ "i" m“ m” “Mt M ‘u mink representing the Government of this he is. siaphitihefacflBoltlsfairtosay" ‘“ ‘Province, and their report with rc- ‘gard tothcse representations re- that their policy has absolutely fall- ed in this regard.‘ "What are they going tn do q- bout it? The United States is look- ing out for their own people, u, L», our business to look after our coun- try. If I laud any voice in denim; with the United States I would go to them and say: ‘Here, we want to get our certified seed potato“ and other natural product, o; om: W, Your markets. You are raising the tariffs higher and higher gums, thflla products, and there is only one alternative. and that is this: we y-lu take a. list of your manufactured 206d: and shut them out or make ii mill“! exp°nsive for you to get them m" Mr. MacDonald dealt trerlchantly with immigration and with the en- ormous increase in expenditure not- withstanding the shrinkage of rev- enue. r OLD AGE PENSIONS "Three Years asp." he continued. Old Age Pension; was a livs issue in the provincial election campaign 1n this Province. what h", y, heard about it sine‘? There are two gentlemfli here on the platform, the Present Liberal candidate and his Winnie. who were active in that.‘ r ' III! u!!! are members of a Government that absolutely fall- ed to implement that pledge givfip in 1911. Ii.’ they have an explanation I think the people of this district mic/ht ask thorn far it tonight, u the Liberal candidate failed io m. pFraent his pledge in this regard, if he ignored the mandate handed to Um ll 1917. what can you expect fromhimifyouhnudhimalargeg mandate? Are you not jugtlflgd h; kbinking that he will forget all a. bout his pledge now just as he did aftFr he was elected in 1.97.7?” (Ap- plause.) Mr. MacDonald stressed the delay of the King Government in implg. nienLng the Duncan recommenda- tion for a second car ferry. He referred also to the discrimin- ation exerciacd against King's Conn W by the King Government showing that of a total vole of 8137.000 for public works for Ihs Island, only $1,000 was earmarked for King's. "When you look at those things it is not surprising that the Pfluia Minister of this country who can Illoll NI i O adopt such an attitude with regard Wdiltrichtilatditllliltolfllilbfl- A QUEBEC PORTFOLIO I ‘commended that an immediate in- "We do not azsparags Dr. Cyrus MacMiilal-i at all", Mr. Stewart con-i tinned. "I would be the last to do that. I appreciate his ability; and I . know that in his own walk of life he ‘is a credit to the Island Province in iwhich he was born. But the unfor- ltunate thing is that he was taken out of his sphere where he could do igood work and placed in a. sphere for which he is altogether unfitted. "But while he was born in this Province, every one must admit that Dr. Cyrus Macmillan is not now a resident of the Province, and has not been for a quarter of a century. I-Iis home, his property is in Montreal, Quebec, and his means of livelihood, are there. Wby was he selected as Minister of Fishes-in? Simply because Quebec is a large Province and it is entitled to have large Cabinet re- presentation. They lud up until re- cently the most important portfolio in the Cabinet. that of Minister of Finance. On the death of IIon. .I. A. Robb, however, a successor was chos- en from one of the Western Pro- vinces and consequently Ml‘. Mae- kenzie Kingpin order to keep the balance even in his Cabinet and to satisfy the great Province of Quebec, which bad been sending him so many members bsd to . ognise that Pro- vince aud so he appointed a resident of the Province of Quebec in the , rson of Dr. Cyrus Macmillan of McGlll University as Minister of Fisheries. That is the whole story; and he comes down here in order to get a seat. Probably he thought it was easier for him to get a seat hers than in Quebec, just as it was easier at one time for the Prime Minister himself to get a seat in this Province. "There are fishermen in this hall tonight. and I want to put a straight question to yeu- Do you think that a Minister of Fisheries in Montreal is golagtobeofaayaioreserviasto you, that he will be any more aa- cenible to you. that you will be able to get any nearer to him to present iterim annual subsidy of 0125.000 should be paid to this Province. But that was only an interim payment. It was further recommended that immediately. or as soon as possible, a complete readjustment of all the provincial subsidies should be made in order to do justice to the Maritime Provinces. "There is not any question that as a result of that recommendatlcn_ we are entitled to receive a very large increase in subsidy; an increase sumcient to satisfy all our legitimate wants as s. Province. But what has been done during the past four years to gain that increase in subsidy? Ab- solutely nothing. The door was open-_ ed: 5125,0000 on account had been paid and received by this Province.‘ In 1927 a conference was called by‘ the Provinces and the Federal Gov- ernment, and if ever there was an‘ opportunity for presenting our claims it was at that moment. Nevertheless our claims were not pressed I un- derstand that Hon. Cyrus Macmillan in dealing with this matter has stated that all these things has been done in pursuance of a brief presented by the Provincial Govern- ment in 1927. That statement is not ‘correct. Not one concession of any kind has been received by this Pro- vince. in. pursuance. of the brief presented in 1927- It was taken up by Premier Saunde n and presented at that conference,. and. there. it stopped. Ne pressure was brought to bear. This brief died still-born, and it hllt- never been of one cent‘: worth of value to this Province. PROVINCE “HUIVBUGGED“ "We have the Prime Minister's stcttment on the floor of the House of Commons that no representations had been made by the Provinces for increased subsidy; and we have near-ti contradictory statements mac's on ths floor of the legislature. We have had the flit refusal of the late Premier to fila or present to the House ths record of what‘ had been done, ‘ he said. it was not 7913f I‘. . ‘l9 t .- to have been born in Prince Ed- ward Island‘! You will still have to find him. at Montreal or at Ottawa. That is tbs " l‘, ‘ t Mr. Stewart painted out that the duty on tea, which the King Gov- ernment takes credit of having re- duced, was imposed simply as s war measure: and it was in the power of ths Government to have removed or reduced this duty at any time during the past sight years. Re also cor- rected numerous misatatementa of Dr. Grant iuueis tn the letters dia- in the public mterest. So the people of this province will have humbugged for the last eight years by these gen- " who " us in 1927 that the only thing that was necessary in order to get all our provincial rights was to put two Liberal Governments In line. We have lml them in line for three years and how much did they get? flow much better ofl are we today‘! iLoud Applausei. PAGE‘ THREE 75c 35c Vacuum Whisks Bottles Good Guarant’d Quality .49 .23 I 25c Kodak Films 3 for '69 FREE ! $1.25 value for 50c tube Lavender Mcnthciated Shaving Cream with every purchase of Langlols Lavender Shaving Lotion. s °¢=Z£'8.".l" You save 50c CLEAN YOUR TEETH WITH It is designed to reach and clean other brush does ' Price .......... . TOOTH BRUSH ‘ wan-ml Pom-tau’: L \ A DR. BONNELL every tooth as no and worth it. 25c 59¢ ~25? . Listerine Squlbbs Ilnolla Forhau s Tooth Tooth Tooth Tooth Powder ' Paste Powder Paste .19 .39 .19 l .49 RQSS-DRU meeting the legislature last session. and he went to Ottawa and made some frantic representation to the Government. What did they do? They referred the matter t0 the Audit Board? Arid who comprise the Audit Board? Three offlcials, three bookkeepsrs, of the Federal Govern- ment. who have no authority to make any readjustment of our sub- sidy claims. Thaf. is the position the subsidy question is in, and there it will remain so long as you have those two Governments ‘in line.‘ "mat ls the hope that they extend to you of getting ths old age pen- slons: because, under the King Government, we cannot have them without increased subsidy. You can- not have improved roads, you can- not have any great provincial facili- ties without increased revenue: and you will never realize that hope so long as you have the conditions you have not at Ottawa and in this Pro- vinca. Mr. Stewart in ‘conclusion dealt convincingly with the Conservative policy of federal grants for highway improvement and with the need of a straightforward policy of tarifI pro- tection that will build up a properly balanced population throughout the Dominion. DR. GRANTS BON MOTS Hon. Dr. Grant, the Liberal can- didate, in his opening remarks con- tended that the King, Government gave the best administration Can- ada ever hsd. v His opponent, Mr. MacDonald, he said, was “sore" because they were beautifying Ottawa at present. “He thinks that what was good enough for him should be good enough for me!" he jested. A sign of the Government's prosperity, _ Dr. Grant insisted. was that its experlses were increasing. “The farmer who ls in the rut pays no taxes; but the farmer who l! PY°$P¢IlYl§ pays more and more. Why not apply the same argument to Government," he argued. The increased subsidy, he declared, would be received "some time this fall; and no douot this winter old age pensions Will be granted.“ I-Ie insisted that he had not forgot- ten his promise to make good reads in the district. Launching into an culogg: of Hon. Cyrus Macmillan and his fitness for the Fisheries portfolio. Dr. “Grant was halted by a question from the audience: "Why didn't you get the job?" "I am a different kind of a doc- tor," he retorted. Then. pause: ‘ilie is a doctor of Letters: that's ths reason he is Minister of Fisheries." (Laughter). . Voice: “That doesn't catch any fish!" “I know; but I think he's the right man for the job," the Liberal can- didate replied. “If you had a fish with its leg broken. I might be able to fix it," he added. ‘There was more laughter. As he proceeded, Dr. Grant was subject to further bsntering by the audience. "I think it's a very hot. night to be talking about wool." was his only after a _ G-UNITED Successor to The MacKinnon Drug Co. "HOME OF BETTER VALUES" \ I would be canvassing you wit pigtail on me." Again the audience roared- Mr. MacDonald had declared that what Canada wanted was a general building up. "That's what I tell a patient when there is nothing much the matter with him," the Doctor scofled. "How much dc you charge for that advice?” the audience came back? The Conservative statements about unemployment were answered by the Liberal candidate with the conten- tion that it was only the "bums" who were unemployed out in British Columbia. - Mr. MacDonald had ‘asked what Premier King did to implement his pledge regarding Senate reform. "I think Mr. King did reform the Sen- ate." said the Doctor; . "because if wins a. Tory Senate when he took it over and it's a Grit Senate now." "Will they put the duty back or. fertilizer when they get in?" he ask- ed. "Of course they won't." And throughout his speech he made fre- quent references to what the Con- servatives would do ill." The audience got another laugh when the speaker declared that if the Tories had reduced the duty on baby carriages twenty years ago he would be about $400 in pocket. Venturing into a discussion of rall- way matters, Dr. Grant was inter- rupted wlth the query: “What about the Murray Harbor standard gauge? Will you give us that? "Sure," he replied. "You will get it this summer. We don't give it till | after the election. Voice: “You wont have the chance after the election." ' Further interruption followed. which the speaker finally countered with the retort: "Shut your mouth." “Anybody that says the Austral- WI “when they get ed, "is not a friend of humanity.“ Old age pmsicns was dismissed with another Grantonlan epigram. “There's none of us need old age pensions except a. few old people. per- ‘haps one per cent." he argued. Endeavnrlng to explain what his ‘policy was. the Liberal candidate ran lirro another rattlingfire of inter- iruptions from the audience. l 1 hgve just as good friends a- lmong Conservatives as among Lib- erals." he shouted. "its only ignor- .ant men who would niterruut my speaker! I can go to a Conservative house and est my dinner lust as iwell as at a Liberal house." "And get a better one!" shouted a luckier. “That depends "on who cooks it if it was you l wouldn't like to eat flit," was the candidates reply. Again referring to Mr. Macmill- ilarfs appointment to the Fisheries ipnrtfolio. the Doctor declared that "Cyrus Macmillan is worth three hundred votes to me in this County.‘ "Therm seven hundred is coma though! said a voice. The doctor's only (Omebatk thil "time was a thoerful 81'1"» . ~l6‘-'[ svrrour LIBERAL 1W ~~i CANDIDATE Mr. P. A Scullv, M L. A. spealv ‘ing in support of Dr Grant. also had fan ireatv was wrong.“ he maintsln- _ comeback to Hon. Mr. MacDonald's.“ m,” h“ Con“. “mush frequent alg ments about the decline in uoolmom, mteurupflnu,‘ H! advanced u“ prices under the King Government: lrusmmaw HAM“, arguments 1n my H‘ "puma m‘ “awmem ‘mm theipnr‘ of the New Zealand treaty. the “menu "wk up n” cry‘ "R's a hmireriuucticn on tea. the countervail- mnm“ ‘ling dukes. etc. landing I-Icn 03TH. “our "rm “w” “M” s" ‘mimiiliarmlllanr. appointment to the Cab- MacDonalcl was the same as under l-“ and defend,“ the deny m S, - "What have they done with that matter now? Mr. Saunders became very much alarmed when he was the Chinese; he built a Chinece wallf our,“ a “may Nldiustment around us," Dr. Grant continuedl "And u m" Wm? hi4 W"! in 3°59 Ilmarl . lJlila-l age all Itrnlna. 1.1%.}, y. L“; qfv".