._._..-. . kin-w.- .>_.._._.-_ 259E FOUR The Bharluttetown Guardian Prw-ldi-nt lucuLCoI W Cheater I Hui-Ill‘ vn-r-riislut-ili, .|. u. ullllllll. k J l- Aowretary Llrlll- (‘.11. b. A. llmiluuuon. D- I» 0- Idltur xnd aialiligllig Urn-rut! I. B Burnett. I. J. l. nnormu Ltnliill, trunk “ma” and D. IL Cont; llflrlllllg r- l, tlilllllllvll 1mm fooo oer yi-lu in: lilvln") it-livi-rrll I (If) s ‘ . 31'!!! iIn tlflvhlldg) Ill-HIM! to Prtnrn liiluiill l-d . $9.1m pl‘! year (In odvmoo) Maui-.- u» rlfnauu lulu tutteu Stine! alilxicit, APRIL 5. 1931. Fcailitliilg ‘Ihcir Nests - v kiliilic ;\k.\'~illllls of the l"ro\.llr<- fill‘ fl- ,- -' year iitdiczlics pretty chnlrlv lli I ill. i. " liil\t'l'lllllt'llt lizite uu llllilli-lilll til ' '.. 4 ,. hliilv“ in lulplclilcui- All i: p~ l H in; tliil". , . ii'.._' pliligrs. i nor tkxdllllilt‘. .\< .\l- lio .ils 53.0110 r5500 inure l, .\- l’l'ciil'l-r. 51,001». .\s > ‘,._.:_~ 'll..l~ilr. r, $51k). In 11d- i~v~i~ w- during the past . . Yuri; and other places r Sfi-o. which with ill: l_\ brings his rciiliill- 4H7, ._ l.i~l‘.iqe. \\'t' recall it .1 1 of ill-it gcliill-inzllt iii it lIt‘ got nothing otit of ll‘ "u- ~ ~» l!.:l inilililiiiiiy. llow l..l-i ‘Hull. as Prcsitlclli .. received $1.100 l ~‘!‘il' l‘llli’._\_ pl:l~ $115.00 travel- ililli~t‘\'l‘l2lll11ll)lC amount ulipiriilail of the Fishcriirs ziniliil- cxpcilscs"'of l'..,.l- l" . t lllliii\ \.'.'l'il llllill in- l'i'o~,l" illlllill l 1.. l r- ‘\t'.t|' lt\l.lil‘il ~12. w.‘ ~ii~ _\';l,,| _i__,,',_. 41 rilii-zllii ':ji t i u... __ “its 1i. the last pol... liliiv» l: oi Ziii l.. 112.1"... I't‘ ill .lllll'i'.<iii liil; <-\i~i. -. 1' ‘.- inr Ill» ., ._ l.-i.lli i1. til: fills l‘. . _ -l7-i" which nothing ivas primal-d in 1'11 .' »"ili.lil~=-ilii:1llcd $1,052.37. .\t‘\'1'i-l'. lil - \\t .~ll.ill hate his bill for Zlllvllill‘ 4 i‘ t ~ ill-n. - lloll. ‘lily .‘il llllllt‘, lll Itllillllltll to his in- (lidllllll ' l >1» '4? d. l‘lililic Works Mili- islcr z. l ~ ~,;_-_ t'\ll\’l1‘\'>, plu- his new car p-m... .- l‘ l. [,i\li.'l_\'[‘l'.\', rt-ceivril all- oiln-r > Pill . .‘.illll'i{ til (Jiialva. .\l1'_ .\lc- lntyre u-i’ lli i.=l. llii-l: excursions “picnic trips": Illz: \"1~ \\ll‘.ll he ioas iii Opposi- tion. lll~ ilololl tltil iinni ztilyihilig liiiw; hc jtlsl ch.l"..- l..- lib‘ il,.I and drziiv- hi.- cheque. Lk)i.i.i~,;_; 11. ill-ll. .\lr. livlillis“ dcpartulcut, the f.i'-.i ll in; \\\‘ iil-tzli- is that ilisicatl of the esillnlw 1 _" $1 -i iiali-pl-ritliiilii vxlicilsi-s for his of1lri.1l-_ >31. i.,,l,_: iizl- vvpi-inliwl last year. So nllicii i-il- llli llliirzil "ilc-inillily” policy of scrapping uiiliw ‘Q nnlilil" cars! The _\lEiil~ii-l' lllllhClf has hall his salary in- CFt'.'i~l‘/l~—~.' r “llv Villlililll any lt'L’l~lZtfl\'C ziu- ;]y..rii_.i__|l.,... . uvi i.» .<_',<,>oo. Originally", of cililrsr. ii \\ t\ ..~.l~,.l<-_ hilt $500 oi this hail to go to .\lr. I.‘ lhlLil’ \\lli'll llit‘ calllilet shuffle took plate. Xlwi. l‘. hli- lWQll restored. .\lr. Le- l’:igi~ h.'l~li'i gHill n up by any IIIUIIIIS. bilt .\lr. I)t'lllll_~ uicccv-li ll iii “citing an extra $500 S01v6- \‘,lit'l\ tl-w. lli all-l lilsl, of Coursi: he gilt his SflK) iinl-liiiiil». pills Slgo travelling expr-nsrs. plii_=, .\ll_-,..o l-\ l-rii-il-lillg the hiiyal \\'inter lint" and ,1 “ril lllllll‘ ll .‘illiii-l"i~nct' at (ltiawa, plus a iillill-si .l'lliitllll fill" zuiclnhllg the .\|llhcrst 1F;.|i-_ 1l.- lii-illi- {i trip to Xcivfouiltllaild ilfClilllllftlWil by All". .\|cl»~.'i.ic. .\l.l...\-. ulliCll (Itlcé lli1l.~L‘t‘lll 1o IlQllTG in the Public Ac- lilliiiis. ll “ill ‘n- yr-yili. .1 ill-i at the September i935 session, .\lr. lllliiii. rwiiiillih-rl his collczigiit-s that ihly ll \’l pr- llllrl ll to zllioli-ll the pol'tf.ilii) of Pilhllt" l 'lh_ lll\li".lil of doing this, how- ever, they l“ll'- mil lllltl "the. pllrillilill heretofore held by illr- Minister oi’ lzlililcztiiilli and Public Health >lllllllrL ill\'ltlt‘fl lnio two si-p.'trzlte port- folios ivliilst- lilvhlel» fillilll lie styled respectively “Minister of lldilczulon" and “Minister of Public Health." Hon. .\lr. Cainplllll explained to the House at that tlnic that the Uiivernnlent contemplated attaching the Pill-he Health ponfillio to an- other portfolio 7.“'/ll‘l"iI ndril/ilmlil rmlluiicrallon and [hP iimliri-"rlcnl V-Olllll be alllninistlcred by the Pulilir llthtllll iliiirer wlio would have the title of Deputy lllnisit-r. Ln ilw lily/l Accliiliii- we note that while Hon. Mr. .\lct ilVgizil l1‘i"‘l\tll the former salary of $1.- 000 as .‘\liv...i<»r iii‘ lwlilifftllfin. plus $150 travel- ling exp+l.-e~_ hi .6 ii received $521.00 as Min- ister of Piiillic ll"'iill\. Tmvellill; L'.'\'l'l‘ll~' ~ in the Public Health De- pa-rinle-rit l‘Xit'"Iil"'l the estimates by $1.455. Afl- mheq (7nd; oi ljlii-ra] "economy" in abolishing offici..l~' lli-llill‘ can. apparently. AlIoQvillI-l", it winilil sol-m that our “budget balanci-rs" ziri- doing pretty \\l'll by theiilselvi-S, however iatlly" l'lll‘_\' may be in implementing their t*l(’f'liiltl plllgt-s. Liberalism In Ontario M a cillllliiciitary on “the decay of Liberal fdvallslil" a llirllntil paper cites the passage throinh ilic finial-ill Ligi-lattlre of Iilill 11o, “lillluio hall ;tll lnilociiutis enough label. l-t \\'éi> an act to aliil-ild ihc Ontario Securities Act. But this lltzlilih- Ill gt-niility- courted an ogre. The act gltcs llll‘ t_'.iliiiiet [lilwi-i‘ to investigate znly trllll-ziciliiii i‘\\'f‘ engaged iii by any person uiiilcr zany circizinsialitvs and for any purpose. In a fi-w iylwillllllnl .~L'lIl.('llt'C.~. it s\\'t'L'|i$ away the pvrslinal plltilvgvs of the citizen, his rights to privavy- iii ln- l,l-l\<iil:1l affairs. to a fair trial by lIlIl‘ pipe.» in l.'l\V. to assurance against per- secution on I|l'.ll'>lt_\' evidence, to protection against the iliii-l decree. "Stich a liill slliinlil have shaken the legisla- tive llllllllliiQ 1H lllt'll' foundations. The statues ' of grlwli i‘i'liil'lilt'l'> >lllllll(l have turned in alarm. The \.'illt“l'\ of noiv-l-iislu'llicd Liberals should haw; fllllllllFfl IiIll alinvt- the tumult of the cham- ber. The ]ii‘i'-.s of IlIlIilflO should have been vivid \\lll] lilnrzigl-d rlubti-oustil-ss. “None oi‘ IlHNL‘ things liappenr-il. The bill "urn: llnililqll lll l- ..n Ztt'l to pi-rlnit ilic (liversiuu (yl Siiiiili - (r1 » l,, ">1. lwll dill - lwlflllllll lilll-riy mean in these (l,,‘.~~ ll." liw l~.i.lii-c_:.iii state, of rcgimentcd liii-eilr-~._ oi d - lll$ll!l‘-l thiiilcillg, 0f the per- scriiiilili of l‘l-il“iilllli>lll and rewarding of iii- dolcnrr l" tdilorial Notes / I Cuilsiiiiler- goods, President Roosevelt says, are toil high in price, and he describes thcsc as food stilffs, “Plitflllg zipparcl and tobacco. Bk W It \\lJtil\I sccnl as though Coronation visitor: In London lllll~l take ihcir own autos with them. The bus strike if it materializes, would bc ipiickh" fulloilcd by a taxi strike. in i: it This l.\ the Plgltly-futlfil] birthday of the llou. George l5. llll_Q'Il(‘s who will be receiving clingrlitiilzitiolls from a host of friends and ad- lllil't‘l'.~. lle still takes a livcl_v interest in pith- lic afklirs, and kfeps well abreast of the times. i iv a v Prcsiilvili Roosevelt “br0kc" the stock gamb- ling racket by nlcrckv telling the puwers-that-bc his tioverililicllt was done with stccl bridges and such like for sollietime. The I’.\V.D. at Washington henceforth will devote attention to (lrainage and ditllllillllg. - u l: in aiicliipting to control the manufacture and sale of war materials to prevent undue private profit. the (iovcrlmlent has sticcecdcd in put- ting iliili the control of the Government the greatest patronage cvcr. Now those in the inside tract will practically monopolize the contracts. i l‘ I .\li inlpliryl came from Montreal the other day for l\\i> cars of potatoes. The price quot- Utl herc was considered too high, and the Mou- iri-alcl" ulrcd Fredl-ricioit, N.B., with the re- sllll that .\'c\v Brunswick got the order not only for the two cars, but lO cars ziddiiioilal later. Xuw \\L' find prices slumping. and those who were holding "for their price", will bc lucky ii thcy- get a ulzirkt-i. w v in lt is reported that the [Qing tioverlillii-nt in- icild resuscitating the Biological llilzirrl of Can- :lrl:1 under ih<' ilalue of the FISIlUTIUS Research llllarll. It is filrthci- repilrtcil that it will be ilivisiollal in its operations. the three Mari- tililes to be one division. lt is still further re- ported that both the Hon. B. \\’. LePagt- and the lloii. \\'. P. McIntyre arc mentioned for ilic Iiosiiioll of Alaritinle Superintendent. If .\lr. LcPagc gets the job, .\lr_ Uacllltyre will hold hiliisclf in rescrtte for the Federal Liberal noiiiiuatiilii in Iiiugs, as it is regrettably learn- l-rl Dr. Grant will be unable toaake any further part in politics. >l< 4i y ;\CCOl'LlllI,‘_f to the King Government the flag to he flowli iu London as that of Canada is the Coat of Arms with the Royal Crmvu at the staff. lt will be the same Coat of Arms as used on the Red Ensign. The Red Ensign with the Arms of Canada in the fly is used 011 vessels of the Canadian Rlurcalitile Rlariile. The Blue Eiisignis used on vessels belonging to the Do- minion of Canada. The authority was given in 10:4 to fly the hcd Ensign with the Arms of Canada iu the fly on silitltble occasions from all buildings owned or occupied by the Dominion Guveriiiilcnt situated outside Canada. This flag is ilotvu from the lligh Commissioner's office in London and the Dominion Lcgations abroad. l? i II‘ .\lr. Pierre (Jautliicr. .\l.l'., for Purtncuf, has been infrlrlncrl in the House of Commons that the present population, as officially estimated, is 11,100,000, quite a respectable number, all things considered. Far more than half of the total live in the old provinces of Ontario and Quebec, the furllier lczldiilg with 3,690,000 and the latter having 3,096,000. These are Dominion Bureau of Statistics figures, as for last year, and there have been increases since. Saskatche- wan, by the same estimate, has 931.000 people, and Alberta is fourth with 772,000. British Columbia is fifth with 750,000, and then Man- itoba with 711.000, Nova Scotia has 537.000; New Brunswick. 435,000 and Prince Edward Island 92,000. The Northwest Territories have a population of 10,000" and the Yukon Territory 4,000. Ill it it Saint John, N.B., has been having its own police troubles during the past eighteen months and apparently they are not over yet. The Com- mon Council, the equivalent of our City Coun- cil, recently adopted a recommendation of its personnel committee for reinstatement of E. M. Slader as chief. Accusations against his ef- ficiency and character made and acted upon by the previous Mayor were found to be without foundation. The council decided to request the resignation of the present chief, D. P. Guptill, who succeeded Mr. Slader almost a years ago. He, however, declined to resign, as he had given up his position on the R.C.M.P. force, in order to take the new job; and so the Common Council has dismissed him. The next move is for u-Chiof Guptill. U Q I Mr. G. G. McGeer, M.P., succeeds in keep- ing in the limelight, notwithstanding Prime aliilisiilr King's well intentioned efforts to sup- press him. At a service clllb function in Mon- treal the other day, Mr. McCeer criticised the failure of the Government to make good in so- cial legislation. After looking abroad and see- ing what was being accomplished in spite of destructive activities, “we might well ask why we in Canada cannot go in for the constructive programme we need.” Mr, McGeer consider- ed that the relief hill of 5o million dollars was not large in view of the fact that the national income ivas about 50o million dollars. He ad- vocated changes in the money system along the lilies suggested in the report of the Macmillan Commission together wit-h a scheme to stabilize currency. A working example, he thought, was to be found in the British set-up with its complete and effective system of managed cur- rency through which the value of the pound sterling was maintained. There, also, there ex- isted complete co-rlperatioit with the merchant banks to further the reform programme tinder- taken. If Canada followed suit the answer to the question, "Where are you going to get the money?" fur racial lqgislation. public works construction and so forth would be answered," he felt. 9 THE UHARLU'I'I'E'I'UWN GUARDIAN Antes By The Way There is hardly any holder of the eyes of nllul more b indbig than the visible, the mere slglu. of u. tiling:- A primrose by the river's brim, A yellow primrose was to 111m, Amt 1t was tiuillulg" more. And what more was it? “In the woods, and along the lanes what. is a prlmlose but, a primrose? And yet. some will see in the yellow flower a world of botanical lore, a herald of Spring, and will be plompted to “thoughts too deep for. tears.” The eyes are alter all only l windows, and we are not always standing at the windows-Ex. England is the place where a King-Emperor may abdfcafe almost overnight, but. by and large Eng- land is the place which uses up its public men with least speed. It is the country where most of the names 1n the news are long familiar names. Austen Chamberlain 1's eu- logized by Lloyd George, who was Chancellor of the Exchequer 30 years ago. If and when Stanley Baldwin leaves office he will be suc- ceeded by Neville Chamberlain, brother of Austen and son of Jos- eph Chamberlain of the Jameson Raid and the Boer War 40 years ago. In the navy debates we see intervening one Winston Churchi 1, who was Flt-st Lord of the Admir- alty when the World War came. Except possibly in the smaller coun- tries, nothing like this is to be seen on the continent, where there have Even been so many clean S\\(‘L'[)S, m France the out. i are post-walx-Fvcw Modem art has hit its stride at New York. The latest 1s ivhat ls known as surrcalislil. Brougiii wnli- in the plane of average understand- ing, it comprises such subjects as ‘dreams. One can readily imagine the type of the pictures. 1n fact the situation is so ivido open that at the recent exhibit the pliinlings of insane persons 11nd ClllldYCll were included. One picture was a fur- llned beacup and saucer. Another was a bird-cage full of lumps of sugar. The title of this inspiring gem was “Wily not. squeeze?" Peo- ple of fairly normal nlcntal equip- ment have been wondering about this modern art. Tlicy are mildly puzzled as to what it is all about. The New" York uviilbli. is something 1n the way of all atisvvclz-Wolld- stock Sentinel Review. "Bltliflfl I15.‘ said Soars, Roebuck vmployces in Paducah, Ky, in a llllflYl-er-pagc ad, "we were surpris- ed when the company presented each employee with a check to cover our personal losses occasioned by ficod water 1n our homes." Thanking the COlflDJlly. they con- clude: “We also wont to lhmlk you for paying us our Weekly salaries during the entire flood period."- Business Week. The roads have not. kept pace vvith the grniiih of motor ilalfle since 1930, “Hint growth has been bheizomenal. and was not even in- terrupted by the great clcllre. 0f 1931. For every 100 motor v91] les m use oil the roads in 1930, there are now about 140. If tile DIP-sent rate of growth is main- talnefl. by lhfiffjfljl of 1940 the nulli- her of vehicles will be k\'.'l(‘(_‘ that, of the 1930 figure. Unless there is a great expansion of the road sylsiciii during the coming years. Wiislf‘ and cutlfilslon will be illdescrltlable,_ London Daily Herald. Rt. Ilon. Stanley Bnldtiiii scents to have remoiildvci tIiP old prmerb so that it now roads "Whore there is hope there is hflpP," u.- “'38, He. en“? quoted RS szrvilig: "So loni! as our own country and, Inlay add, our own government refuse to lo~=e hope there is certainly 110110 for EuropeP-Winiisor Stnr. This notion. as if mare, of trying kindness in the "im-ulciitioli of road-sense" in Great Britain seems to be the sensible thing. "Rodd. sense"—-thnt Is a useful word of Sir John Simon's-is no doubt mainly a matter of native intelligence, but, just as certiiinIy it. is also to some extent an extrn sense that has to be ‘fllxiulred. ‘There is a Wchnique 1n the modem use of nu,- m;1(1_ to which the motor vehicle hflS brought new dflnkers and new responsibilities, and it is a technique which every road-user. 1n every capacity, has to leam.—-Varlcouver Province. l! a man were to bet 817000.000 against $1 that he could toss a booklet into the air. and catch it as it falls. he certainly would be thouitbt to be fooliish. He probably would win, but the small gain would not be worth the tremendous risk. By the same tclken, the pedestrian who risks all the remaining minu- tes of his life just to save a single minute by crossing the street reck- 198M). 1s an exceedingly foolish man-Vancouver Times. ‘In the speech he shouted at hls Fascist followers at. Rome on Tues- day, Premier Benito Mussolini is reported tn have said: "To the bad faith of others, we shall oppose our fndestnictlble will; to (lie castles of lies of others. the mists of our 1m- petuous and tempestuous truth: 1o the blind hatred of others. our con- 5¢l°l15 COYIWmDL" Press criticisms of Fasciat. Italy he described as "a tempest of printed paper and an inundation of turbid ink." and F‘as- cist Italy itself as "a strong nation of imperturbablc calm." All things considered, "fmperturbable calm," token with "the gusts of our 1m- petumm and tlempestuous truth." is. an Ham‘et might any. ‘ 00d, very goodP-Sydney Post-Record. Britain has. In the year; since the Great War, made two gestures towards peace. At. first, by precept; and example, she worked for din- annamenti. directly. The plan fati- ed. Now, an indirect. approach is being made. Britain 1a making o. bid for peace, by making war too dangerous for those who think war might bring them some [Blur-VEH- couver Province. flowing worked for three any! with a dislocated neck, an Austral- Inn doctor had the dislocation push- ed back info position when he was flung six feet after receiving a 11.000 volt. shock from an x-ray intemril-coiiibustion ‘ mmhtno. ‘Ihldwwl’, I resident. PUBLIC FORUM ‘lhll column ll 0mm ROI U" ilnuiuulon b! cannula-dun If urination: M‘ Inuit-out. The Charlottetown Gandhi don III noulurlly uulnrlo Aha Grill"!- af oorrnpnldelltl. SIN KING FUND DEFICITS Sir,-A bond issue of $250,000 on 15th May, 32, for 5 years matures on the 30th June, 1937, for the re- payment of which a striking fund of H170 was ovlded Instead of 18%, with the r ult that the ac- cumulated 5% at the 81st Dec" 1936, amounted to $63,995.89 to meet the $250,000 becoming due on the 30th June, 1937. It will there- fore be necessary to raise approx- imately $180.000 to meet the short It 5'! m n l- if If, l: . ,_. -1l r a 3 3 ' t f t lsl. May, 193a 1st May, 1943 $253,000 3% 814% 512% 1st Nov., 1923 1st. Nov., 1943 150.000 l%% 3% 1‘,i% 1st. May, 1934 ISL May, 1944 300.000 3% 8'é% 5%?!» 1st Oct. 1924 1st Oct. 1944 350.000 Hi7?» 3% 1% Isl. Oct. 1924 1st Oct. 1944 150.000 112175 3 15% 15L Oct. 1925 1st Oct. 1945 1,250,000 ' 1% ab)“: 752% 1st, Oct. 1925 15b Oct. 1945 150,000 1lé% 3% 1% 15th Feb. 1936 15th Feb. 1946 500,000 3% Bl-Iflli 5% 15f. NOV. 1926 ISI. NOV. 1946 40.000 11.5% 3% 1'5: 15th D90. 1936 15th Dec. 1946 250,000 3% B',&% 5% 15h NOV. I927 1st NOV. 1947 60,000 3% 1% That is to say, no less a sum titan $178,750 is being short. prc» vided annually as sinking fund for to meet the several bond issues at maturity. l.e., $152,465 instead of $331,205. The Provincial Auditor's certlfl- cafe to the sinking fund statement states all contributions during the period have been made in accord provision of alnklni fund. Another bond issue of $116,000 on lat. Sepia, 1022 for 15 years ma- tures on 1st Sept, 1937, for the re- payment ot which sinking fund of l%% was provldedtustead of 0.4% with the resulrflmt the accumu- lated sinking fund at the 81st Dec. 1930, amounted to only $74,088.81 to meet 8175.000 becoming due on the lat Sept. 1937. It will there- fore be necessary to raise approx- imately 8100900 to meet the short provision of sinking fund for this issue. 8o that. with the previous sitortalge of $180,000 referred to above, no lea: a sum than 8280.000 will have to be raised during 193’! to meet the short provision of sinking fund for the two issues of $250,000 and $175.00.! maturing on the soul‘ June. 11m End m Sept. 1937. respectively. Many of the issues falling due in future years are similarly being Insufllcienfly provided 1n the sink- mg fund, u follows: I%% APRIL 5, 1927 Behind The Ieadfines l At Bttawa By Dean Wllson It. was mvealed in this column 18st week that: a montent-ous l8!“- imnt. was being coutplebed between the Governments of United States. Great. Britain and Canada and which dlmdtly Involve! the 1n- tlemata of the witole British Em- Eve-ryone concerned tn these historical manoeuvres have ex- emised unusual care 1n keeplfls thou negotlatfon a: secret n; possible but in face of the fact that only a mere handful of naval and diplomatic experts have p05- aeased the details of this 818mm union of forces bebween these Anglo-Saxon people. yet ft- hi8 been possible tn infer from oer-rain provon facts that just such a shame was befnl ooncoorled the various Governments. It 15,110 exaggeration to state that Canada is plwvinz one of t!“ main roles tn this i-ftrernattonal drammand it is notacaae of senti- mlent only 1n so fir as‘ the Domin- ion Government is concerned. be- cause ti; may- mean that the wuntry may save many mil- lions as a. direct result. of these vital negotiations between these two great nations. I When the coronation ceremonies ' ‘ * in May. an Import- with the various statutes In force. Surely the statutes should provide for adequate sinking fund to meet the bond issues at maturity instead of the absurdly inadequate pm- vision at present being made. I am, Sir. etc, PRO BONQPUBLICO. PROHIBITION Sir,—What are the temperance forces domg. or propose $0 <10; W cope with deplorable conditions, and meet emergeflfiy? The Wan" lugs have been soundedl Often enough. and they must. be blind l! they fall to see what 1s m pro- spect. p A tender hearted farm wife. when about to kill a. chicken. would soothe it. with words and smooth- ing of fieathers-“poor dlttlle chzclcy, dear little chlcky," then off comes its head. That has been the method of Liberal decapitation of our Pro- hibition Act. and with soft. words they lull temperance people, while move by move they work destruc- tion to our oft. confirmed anti- liquor laws. with facts before us so plainly, jriibcillded into our reason, with i1 force that even stupidity cannot resist, 0f prostituting the temper- micc laws to the raising of revenues, with its consequent de- baitchlnent of raising generations, is there any justification for the zlpathy of those who have under- taken lender-strip in stemming the iiric of liquor traffic encroach- nicnts? Some ask the quest1on,4What can we do? We lire silpposed to b-i under r-olutitutional govern- mcnt- People's rights have to be protected. There are constitutional methods that can be applied. Fast, indignation meetings de- mlmdlng resignation of a patty who have proven false to election promises. Then, the country hav- ing by many repeated votes est- ablished prohibition as provincial law. application to the courts litght, establish 1f. as compellable t0 get the arsent of the people, to abrogato those laws. Otherwise re- sponsible government is a farce. Other remedies have been ap- plied 1n the past. Cromwell gave a. lesson to a parliament opposing the w" of the people. The fumed "Tenant League" in our own pro- vince brought recalcitrant public men to their senses when they Comllelled settlement of the land question. I do not. conunend these 1n our more enlightened age, but, men should be taught to mapggi; their pledges and £0 recognize the publlcs right. to riile_ I Am, Sir, Etc. PIIOHIBITI/ONIST. A COMMON- SENSE SCHOOL. STUDIES Sllu-Pennit another i on ""5 “IP10. Some careless reader might. think that the Guardian's Friday editorial, "Why Latin?" w“ a" Rfilllfllflnt- flsainsi, m? farther’: plea for eliminating certain uaelegg Bflblevtis from the common-school course. But. I” sfdent Butler of Columbia University and the New York Sun were dealing with m; more advanced ETECIBS,—“B. young lady in a Princeton High School," and “those following scientific car- eers." To impose such study on pu- pils in our common schods la not like “suiting money away In a sav- ings bank" but rather like pouring milk fnbo a pail full of holes. Again, while Latin has entered into the structure of the romance languages. as ‘Butler said, and therefore will help those going on tn the study of them. m force it upon our younger pupils is '00 take the "romance" out. of school and study. and make it. difficult to re- cantui-e it in later life, The ma- jorlty never do moover It. Further, the Illustration from architecture, contrasting the Gothic medical officer of a Sydney hospital, collided with n man 1n the surf. Hts neck was injured, but only a alight. stiffness was felt. An x-ray of the neck was taken and, while waiting for the plates to be dev- eloped, the doctor continued his work. While he was assisting with the x-ray machine the doctor's head made contact between the aide of the transmitting valve and the steel casing of the momma,- Australian Prom Bureau. Cathedral with ~ the jetty-built. apartment house. does not touch the condition of the average citi- zen who will never be able to build the cathedral and does not. want an apartment-house. But he would dearly like an attractive and 00m- fortable cottage which utdeed ought. to be Mthtn his reach. Instead, having wasted his time and energy during school years on Cathedral foundations, he Ls driven for lack of opportunity to rear a miserable shack for his mind to live In all the test. of his life. Lastly, the plea. of the farmers and their supporters is not for a “dollars-and-cents" course as con- trasted with cultural studies. Their real objection 1s that the present course 1s not cultural tn any sense of the word. It makes real culture impossible. It fails to give access to any foreign literature, and it. prevents mastery of our own. Prom private correspondence as well as from letters 1x1 the press it is evi- dent. that. a. large body of profes- sional thought supports the farm- ers’ plea for a common-sense curri- culum. Let the educational authorities give a chance to our youth through the medium of our nattve tongue to explore the world 1n which we live, its structure, processes, devel- opment, resources, and trace the progress of the society to which we belong, its achievements 1n me- chanical invention, economlc enter- prise, political organization, and artistic and literary expression. as -an aid to making the most of their lives, and giving their fullest con- il-ibutlon to the community. That would, be real culture. A poor smattering of a foreign language, all forgotten tn a few years. is a sorry substitute for the reality- and the farmers and wage-earners of today know it. They will soon open the eyes of parsona, priests, pedagogues. professional politic- fans, and piutocrata. sham culture has had 1m day! I am. Sh‘. 9th. J. W. A. NICHOLSON. North Bedeque. CLAIMS STUDENT SAVED INDUSTRY Kentvllle.’ N. S. April 4-(OP)—- Th; “Danske Herald," a Danish paper putfished here, gives credit to Thomiarmorbjaxnarson. gradu- ate in fisheries from Dalhwslo University, Halifax: for saving the Iceland fiahtng industry. mac's IIAIR iissroiisit A dollcauly perfumed pro- pnnlol which Intern and bonnllfln the halt. It will noun [In lflr in Ill original color. '0 an» lalwrn DID-MOI o nw 1nd upnlor growth when the lulr l; fall-II] and In remarkably unoful In prcvontlng Juli hallow- thc direction awfully And yo! will b0 l-llod n ‘II Bollin- Write or phona 00-in- IIIOI COO Mac's Special Rx. 3l5 Oil H7" 0|! IIUII! IND CIIIOOIIII GIIIOOI COBB".- A no! Ink In COIIII. Calla III Grlppo- It ll hi“! than an all lull Ill" q thn not of won tho mnli on! no In continual inat- Ilfll it illll ID Ibo IIIOQ, h wltluhnl htno Mhei. A uphill! blood nl Ill!- bnlldl OOIIC h! boll IIIII and 0| who hi0 IIICI II-I l-nltfi-fi‘ Inn nun Irony"! 16000400 til: niio incs are ant and fusion-making Imperial Conference will take place tn Lon- don, and one of the mouientous subjects that will be discussed by the wpmsentatives of the various Domlnions will be that of defence in the event of any future war, and it 1s certain that. the Govern- ment of the Unit/ed Kingdom will ask the Domltlions ‘ho contribute to the‘ upkeep of certain armed forces 0f the Empire. According to reliable reports, l there is a movement, on tom to revive a plan for the defence of the Empire as outlined by the late Lord Jellfcoe in 1919. who re- cnnmeindedl that. each Dominion should contribute a share of thel costs and expenses of the u-pkeeip of the forces for the defence of the Emlplre plupol-rlotlate as to popula- tion and to value of its foreign trade. Thus, the rate of contribu- tions would be: United Kingdom. 74.12 per cent: Australia, 7.74 per 0811i; New Zealimd, 2.02 per cent; South Africa. 8.02, per cent; and the Dohmlruon of Canada, 12.30 per cent. Defence experts ye asserted that. the DOmHIlOHIClamUBI, realm; that. the 5081301119 trade and Q91", merce of all sections of the Brit. i-sh Plbire hBs lncxvesed to Al VERMICIDE 1895, first for animals. Dose your foxes i the mixture No. 3 size. t’ The Price $1.00 box Ranch size, Prepaid to any addre l Used by leading Fox Ranchers everywhere i The)’ were first devised bv Di- as ‘he Original Combination Worm Remedy the of its kind in capsular form ever to be prodiiced now with the No. he“ “slum-All 7°"! (fr0m_2 to 4 weeks old) need 30 I Boxes of 100 Capsufes 2P2.“ f)... _ __ _ _ $250 500 Capsules — -- _. _ ._ _ _ $10M) I E. A. FOSTER, DRUGSTORE Sole Authorized Distributor for ffrench Animal ' Remedies for P. E. Island p,- may v- " “ extent. and coil. tequently this has izfcreased the demands on the ntwy and other forcas which guard the safe {T21715- port of the vessels which carry the wares of the Doimintons to [he numerous world market-s. But how does Canada, enter the scene? Canada has sought to take full advantage of her goegraphlgg! position as an moment. to lower her shat-e 0r contribution to any defence plan of the British Empire, and that really explains the itous negotiations between United stains, G-reat Britain, and the Dominion or Canada. which incidentally may lead to a union of all defence forces of the British Empire and the United States of America. ‘ Since our country Hes under the vdry shadow of the American navy and 0111‘ IIBIQhbouru-g country will BIWWB uphold the famous Monroe Doctrine. 1t 1s the intention of the Donunlon Government to present these MB-lllnents at t/he Imperial Conference as good reason; gm- a, smaller proportionate share by the Dominion for the upkeep of the Ilm/perial fleet or other tomes or defence When tihe reader realizes that fhé new defence estimates of the 11y Empire will require a definite w“- tribution from each Dominion m. writing to tile famous Jellicoe PIE-h. and that the outlay why reach the sum of $350,000,000 u ; minvmum estimate. with an an- nual upkeep cost of $60,000,000, and that the Dominion Government W111 be asked to XXI-Y BIS host l2 Der cent of this amount, then ii; ll; not difficult to understand why 9'91"“? K1118 and others members of the Fbderal Government have wcupled themselves with this serf- our problem. That is the real story behind "w busy days or ceflaln GOV/CH}- lnflltlfl officials in gnaw,“ Wflshmizton. and lmidorl, during the rust couple of months, and when the representatives of the various Dominion; gather in Lon- d°" ‘m’ 911° l-llflberial Conference after the coronation ceremonies, n Lslikelv to be disclosed In riilim e _. “TIRED” All. TIIE TIM III ' vit lit JLYLEl-"llll-‘lh. ‘st! " iii-am lbouflut a i... clul Ilutlod one!” an re sleep. Hoadacbe, Iuchcba, Iusifuilo and other nipu of faulty kidnap disappeared. I11 Budd's Kidney Pills CAPSULES Cecil ffrench in 3 size, and get s on receipt of price CENTRAL M For a Delicious Cup of _ Full Flavoured Tea Use Orango Pnliue Tea r. Tea Poll Says: BRA HMIN {i i} liartifioyd Public Accountant and Auditor Bookkeeping lymml Installed or revised. Profit and Lou Accounts Computed, Trustee llllllll tlio Bankruptcy Act Company By-Lan, Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prep I Administration of Estates a S; ecialty. MONEY TO LOAN. 88 Croat George St. Charlottetown, 9.8.1. 11.1., c.i=.i., cit-i-