" ls the title of an attractively illus- h. u?» . alwnlan~lsna OI. ll. l. In “ mo. an Invasive-J u. nee-m. In! um mi aye-on nails ' ' IIII (handed nil" C10 FRIDAY/MAY 9,193.0 snout GliAlllli , ' Iuo-atraaldeah-d. u. amok l n I. ll. Qluusslnlv Cantu-n It linen no Gounod ;;II_IIIIIO1 nut» our one M define ldlueoi ‘Liberals and Queen's The local Liberal machine is in a quandary. 1t u now‘ definitely set- tled that the vacant senatorship-is, to go to Hon. John a. Sinclair, not; lo much’ because his claims are greater than those of some others, but because he had little Prospects of being re-elected as a membe of the House. His weakness proved his strength in this case. The Govern- orship is to remain in the possession: that unless it is framed for-the n'a-| of the l-lon. Prank 1=t. Heartz until after the election, when Mr. R. H. Jenkins if defeated will have its re-f fusal, having by that time run three' elections and thus justifled his pre- fennent. The question of a successor to Mr. Sinclair as candidate is the cause of the Liberal quandary. There are several aspirants. Mr. S. A. McLeod would have been a popular choice, but he has definitely decided not to allow his name to go forward. Other local 33y mentioned are Mr. H. M. Davison, M’. Mark R. McGulg- an, Mr. E. T. l-iiggs, l-Ion. W. M. Lea. Any of these it is understood, would be prepared to make the grand sac- rifice of carrying the Liberal ‘colours in defeat. But while these are in the running, and the strings are being pulled in their favour, the flat has gone forth fromOttawa that Dr. Cyrus MacMillan must be the selec- tion. Naturally the local Liberals feel rather sore and distressed at being deprived of a free choice, and if they do bend the knee in humble submission it will be with sore hearts and dejected spirits. Oi course, there are other aspir- ants, including Hon. Peter Sinclair, who would have no objection to step- ping into his brother's shoes, but the rank and file think the l-lon. John is more than sufficient to represent the family at Ottawa. North‘ West Territories "The North West 'I‘el1'itories 1930" (rated handbook which the North West Territories and Yukon Branch of the Department of the Interior has just issued. This work is a con- cise counpendium of general facts relating to Northern Canada and has been prepared to meet the de- rpand for authentic information con- Iprain; these regions to which so much attention has been directed iecently through the exploits of tlerial prospectin operators and the lifting ‘.0! the Copper-mine mineral reserve. Much valuable information is given respecting the extent, topo- graphy. Population, resources, clim- ate, transportation facilities and governmental organization oi the Territories. A brief historical sketch is included and outlines are given I k Kpansion of the fur trade. the work oi missions, the activity of prospectors and other undertak- ings. Particular references are made torecent exploratory and scientific expeditions carried out by 011168" 05 the Department of the Interior and of other Government organizations. The oconomic ‘situation of the 1n- dians and Eskimos who inhabit those regions. and the‘wild life, on which they are so dependent 101' "W" "l" iaience, are dealt with in consider- able detail. ma‘ wild bison of Mac- xenzm District, t the barren-ground caribou, the ‘musk-ox, "the ‘fur-bear- hhmlmale, the‘ fish and the aquat- [g mum-rials cf Arctic waters are de- nribstLfrl-ie Government's ' ‘m’ the recent discovery of the iieatlnl the ilus Goose il brieflY Mme“, '11“ jmlncral possibilities aeeaiaitwitnandthemlnih; and. Mufti» h mull" "P Q “h; i i! . Govemmentb responsibility for the welfare oi the country‘: producers. Morley must be found for carrying on the public busines, but in raising it Government must have regard to the ability of the People to bear such taxes as it imposes. To enable them to afford tho taxes it lays upon them the'Governm_elit should do what it reasonably can to promote their in- dustrial prosperity. Ifisoientiflc tar- iff must be rational, and it cannot be tlonal good. it must be a measure of national policy. The difference between a qualified (‘Notes BL The Way “ ' .- 1» lbs. s an increase in their own R1111" without previous intimation. The M!“ and Empire says. "that Premier Ferguson himself stated in a speech delivered in the course of the election flmlralgn, that the salaries would begaised and ought to be raised on [account of the increasing demand upon the time and attention oi min- isters.‘ The people had fair warning H! The‘ Cowman-ma purpose, and. if they disapproved of that purpose, they 001114 W16 lfliiilst the Govern- melll- 3111c ‘voters. gave the Ferguson Government about ninety per cent. oi the seats in the House, The glgg- tion was over before‘ the beginning of the present fiscal-year and, as that opened on the lsl. of November the increase was made effective from that date.“ Forty-four stations oi the-Fisher- men‘s Federation of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick and nine packers medical practitioner and a quack is l and dealers, all of the former pro- tiflc, whereas the letters methods are at best directed to the removal of a. troublesome symptom. ‘The or- thodox physician proceeds constitu- tlonally, having regard, that is, to the effect oi his treatment, not upon this or that particular symptom, but on the ailing person's constitution. He may take some time in bringing his patient back to health, but when that is achieved the patient is usual- ly in an all-round better condition than he wasywhereas the man who has been treated by a quack may be the worse for such treatment, though no longer troubled with the symp- toms that had led to his consulting the quack. The Dunning tariff is as far as pos- l ‘sible from anybodys conception oi a scientific tariff, and it is a notable specimen oi what is meant by budget quackery. 1t is not based on an idea of national policy. The finance min- ister disclaims any idea of it being an antidote to the ill-effect of the United States ultra-protective duties on staples of Canadian production. It is not the result oi a careful study of the needs oi our producers. One‘ element in the queer compound is a t that the farmer's methods are scion-Mince. havt Joined 1n circulating b; pamphlet entitled: "The Trawler is Not Necessary, to the Successful De- velopment of Nova Scotiaa Fisher- ies." Sir Frederick Stnpsrt believes that the day will come when weather forecasts will be absolutely correct. In that day Old Probs will become Old Cert whereas at this time they might more accurately be described as Old Poss. When the Prince of Wales becomes Klllg of England he will be the most widely travelled sovereign that ever graced a. throne, and he will be as popular as he is widely travelled. In 1910, Just after the war, he came to Canada and the United States. In 1920 he went to Australia, in 1922 to India. and Japan in 1933 to Canada aceln, in 1924 to the United States: irl 1925 to Africa and South America; in 1927 to Canada; and in 1928-39 to Africa. the lasttrip being cut short by the King's illness and completed this year. in this last trip he tra- versed Africa from Cape Town to Cairo. What the new United States tariff does to the Canadian tanning indus- try it will also do to the Canadian farmer. Canadian hides and leather, soothing syrup for this or that local more effective than a poultice on a nosis of what ails Canada, but there is a tacit confession that the country has suffered greatly from the King] Government's former unwisetinker- ing with the tariff. That is the dis-i tinctive feature of the Dunning bud- i get. It is a cold-blooded admissloni that what the King Govcrnmcnt prb- fessed in the past and what it prac- ticed on this unfortunate country was but so much economic quackery. There is no repentance. There is no humble attempt to make up for the injury the Government wrought in the last eight years against the peo- ple of Canada. A few drops from the Conservative toriic has been slipped into the mixture. but that will neith- er mend nor deceive our suffering industries. The Dunning tariff is of no economic use to this Dominion and it will prcve oi little tactical value to the King Government. l laQ-A-a- Editorinl Notes ‘.thc famed Bhaedagon Pagoda, at Pegu. Burma, which was damaged by earthquake this week, is "on the road to Mandalay," immortalized -by Kipling. A local organization which has for twenty years or thcntabouta. have ‘the result that a large export trade has been built up in his country, to broken lfm~ TM" ha! ‘"9" "° 51"?‘ l the advantage of the farmer and of the Canadian tanneries. Exports of Canadian hides to the United States last year amounted in value to $7,- 766,590 and of unmanufactured leath- er to 5.634.116, a total of more than $l3.00il.000._ ’ . Twenty-one thousand tons of coal from Soviet Russia have been booked from that country for discharge at Halifax and other North Atlantic ports of Canada and the United States during April, May and, dune. The Maritime Provinces, with their vast supplies of coal and with min- ers_ eager for work in producing it should not have to look to Russia for coal supplies. And if it is necessary to import coal into these provinces from across the ocean, British mines should be able to supply the need. The stories that come from Chicago of "Scarface" Capone's attempt to Icontrol not only organized crime but also to dominate and bring under his subjection the entire city through control of eivio departments would have appeared like a flight of fancy too ridiculousto be accepted as a reasonable plot offered by a fiction writer even of tho most melodramat- ic school. But they are offered not - as fiction but as fact, and experience in recent years has presented plen- ty‘ of evidence that, in Chicago at least, fact still is stranger than fic- tion ‘ ' been doing much tonscien“ous work is the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The organization functions without any governmental assistance and it is largely due to the generosity of Mrs. J. B. Jenkins that it has been enabled to continue here. Mayflower! are being sold on ‘ venture is outiuieo and the story of ‘ the streets " on Saturday in the in- terests of this Society. and it is hoped that our citizen! Ieneralll’ will makes generous response. The Liberal organ 11's: not 79$ made up ill mind whether the Kin! demands‘: volley II M" "I" »°' jimselfifl! . ' Tuna» more protection. "You P!" W“? non‘, ‘ad yg“ m“ Yflllf GHOIDQ." me only thing it. is sunofiathatthe midget "is in all rglpoots a Liberal ’.pt|pn." one insert to omino- ’ Qpeilfl] lhhgoollliflflllie American writers are commenting ‘ upon the situation which exists ‘today Iin the prisons of the American Re- »piiblic and in those of Great Bri- tain. The amazing situation of the British authorities closing prisons because the criminal populationhaa been reduced. and the contemporan- eous situation of prison rovolm in various parts of the United statehto seine extent because of over-crowd- ‘HQ and to a much larger extent due to highly developed criminal organi- sation, has jarred many thinking men of the United states and caus- ed them to och tilt attention of their countrymen to t situation which thcy consider deplorable. if action: speak louder than swords, tile state of Britain in regard to ‘law-billet’!- ance is much supsriorto thatfcfitht oolteo states. if 'mte' "Iii stronger than piatlmei tam ii more - - _ lldmlnro I . _ that mem- " bers cf the Ontario legislature votgq. trouble, for which it will be littlelb°°“ “p” ‘h’ Am°"°‘“ "°'““-"m‘ » c, lune: w suoan AND ‘sign: alumina-s Perhaps you are afflicted with some persistent form of skin allmiillt. It may be eczema. acne or ‘ pies, itchiness of the. skin,. psoriasis-the ailment that looks llke- spots of- plas- ter or mortar on the skirt.- ' ARDIAN’ I ‘Australian lPolltlcus l ,,.... ., . ‘ mfflg ago, owhen ‘the grett v star-aide strike took place‘ in’ southern Australia. playing havoc with the wholeeccnomtc sflruoture of ‘the Oofiimonwmlthj and throwing thousand ofvl-orkers out of ,‘ - merit, ‘the trades unions suiidred a. ?h5??ii!i '=3l*ibriiii __._-. . a . | '~' ma our: stream " '1} it” 5°‘. i5’?- ' 6&5: thanfitheiostl Liberal __ “the heretofore‘ enthusiastic ‘admirer and l idefendbr otuthetj "eobzlomeritloh or sharp setback, and a ccallticn oi the imoomlswnpgqfi‘ known}; m, ggqg; Libe-raiand. Country par-Lies our ed the labor Government from powen; Fifwfltdilsfiifilefi mm this Pmvm" _t;‘ve fact; 5o “plainly and clearly atat- _ indicate that once more the pendul- ' ' um has swung towards the llsboi-ites, andlt l; erlflmated that when full rc- tilrns are tallied they will have twen- ' der; Government, Hliasf nothing to ' say in reyiy _to. tlimarray oftacousa- ‘ed in “the Qlfeifiperance‘ Bullelinl. ‘Since’ the clays ofldudas, ha; there. _cver been a niorslpalpabl: betrayal? Like him. they kissed the pure-and A tY-rdx seats out of tlhe feriy-si); of the ' m‘), “mm o’. pmhghgtlon’ ‘m; mm “W” P’ Axmbly- ‘he Liberals 5"‘ | alas! for the sake o0 power-and" 911' All- forms of treatlncnt have‘ been tried: arsenic internally. and sulphur. mercuryhand zinlr pr-otlier drugs ap- plied to the skin irritation. ' . | You are discouraged. because just when you,th_ink,you have .thc condl- i tion" cured, and have discontinucdl treatmght, it remains. and, ypu’ have l to begin trsatment all pver a_gairi., As you know the body is “often ~ compared witha steam" bbiler. The boiler ‘takes in fucl-‘-co_al~_'_-a_rid gives i out heat‘; the body takes on food and I heat is createdf However the coal| never becomes a part of the steam | boiler, whereas the food you eat be- j comesa part cf every tissue of your f body. ' ' ' ‘ i And so it is to the food now that l our skin specialists are turning in an edort to prevént these common ail- ment: ctema, acne, hing and so forth. ~‘ ‘ ~ They discovered that such foods as pork, preserved, salt,‘ canned, or pot- ted meats, and fish, crabs. uhrimps, lobsters, veal, goose, and fresh bread, hot-- cults, oatmeal, cheese, pastry, sweets, fried meats, fried breads, "1911 Wtatoes, in a small percentage of individuals seemed to aggravate the condition, whereas the majority of people can eat the above egcelient foods without the least trouble. ~ However it has been, found that another factor enters into-these skin conditions and that is that in some the sugar is not storcd in the liver as rapidly as it should. be. . ‘ Dr. A. R. Sornerford . investigated 120 casespf skin ailments — eczema, acne, itchiness, psoriasis and so forth, and found that 23 per cent gave nor- "111 598m‘ readingsfrhe other)?! per cent, more, than threenuarters. of all the cases, ‘showed some wariation from the normal. In most cases it‘ was thedag’ type, an abnormality ‘that points to some defect in the way Quin: lsjwged in the liver. g ‘ _ l. ._,. . ' L, _. \ This means lheltthdtkthoscnafilet- ed with skin aliméhts would do well to cut down ‘on the intike 'of ‘starches —pastry, bread, sugar and-potatoes. Also that ‘they takesome eiiercise, outdoors u possible," and’ to‘ burn up some of .thc starches eaten. ‘Ilia ‘out doors with its rich'supply‘of oxygen will burn up stai-eliy foods vti-y "p. idly and thus rid the system of its cxoess-starch-‘and help to cure an prevent ‘skin ailments: ' ~ -‘ 5 . ' a aono. or clowns In the heart of a man Is a thought upfurled: ‘ Reached its fullspan it will shake the world, And to one high thought" ls a whole race wrought. Not with vain noise ‘_ The great work grows, Nor with foolish voice,- But in repose; Not. in the rush, But in the hushl From the cogent lash Of the cloud-herd wind The low clouds duh, _ ‘ Blown headlong, blind; , But beyond. the great blue Looks moveiesa through. I 0‘er the loud world sweep y The scourge and the mdl But 1n deep beyond deep , . 7 _ is the stillness of ood,_- ' At the fountains‘ of Life No cry, no strife! g -- , -c. u. D. Roberts. I‘ flares ‘Bouthdoan rams and three "t! tremfllns Game‘; flock have beenment from England to Ken. tucky . . 1 Mort than 1.000 chickens were de. lffwod" in-a; fire recqitly mt m. serenade poultry breeder-r lei-m at Rudtwlck, Iiglgnq ~. both tbrmnch 990M! In! the "I14 Ii- llrle wrist then-each oc- -tem and served iiearflrisuestyhriilcrdertoshow cntben sea-is and tile Country Party m. with one contiucncy doubtful. ahe ccviistituency which for the past nine years has been represented by Premier Btu ler. L'b3ra.l lesdel‘ is llkc- ly to be wclrby his Labor opponcnf. The syvuig-back is decisive, and with the position oi the mil-Ital parties in the Assembly complyely reversed, it is thought. that t-‘sle Labor leader, Hon. Lionel Laughton Hill. will again be called uprn to c-fficiztt: as l_’rem‘cr. The out-leek is none too promising, (or although South Australia; by Lil's reactionary stroke. has beerrbrought info line with other states of the Comnzcnwc-aitii as regards Laboritc politics, the legislative enactmcn-s adopted and enforced by tile Au.i ral- ian trades unions havdbccn anything but beneficial for the economic and industrial wclfare of the Commen- wcaLh-as a wholeffn opt: of the oft- repeateti sfatement that Ailsrnlla is zhe w rising man's paiuclise. Labor members made their appearance in the New South Wales Hrliameoit in 1884. In1800, {they became a definitely organized party. In 1904. a Labor M'ni,stry'first came int-o power. ‘lb- day the trades unions boast a mem- bewlp of 950.000. They are powerful in the political realm, but Ilnfoitun- ately, (#1123711)?! deeply tsxnted wth alien-radical dogmas, ivlrch halt un- onthdinterctrs of the wage-earners rcgardlms of whether the economic status. o1 the Commonwealth can sustain a fixed wage rate along wl-h the increased costs of llvlns- , The Crux of The Problem ‘rlils ls the crux of the Audi-alien political problem. The Laboriies have established i; forty-iour-hour work week‘, c. basic wage for iihc brawl calmer,’ and have sought to attain. every possible avenue l, sub- _ Lori of indun ry. Meantime, the trades unions. have steadiy . resisted . ,1“ " peedlngup gt; production on the pa. of the worlcelvs. and ‘have backed the "a canny" syn cm at every turn. The result might have been iorseen. In 1914, factory olrput, as compared with 1915, had increztved 125 per cent, but the cos: oi labor 144 psi" cen"... and the coo‘; of living keeps steadily ahead of the wage scale. The improvement in the standard of living has been overtoned by the high eortol living. due solely to the arti- - iiciaifaofors tile tra/des union forces have intd-otueed into Ailsralltvs econ- ’ omie structure. To offset the troubles arising from this policy, arbitration THE LAND WE LOVE-I a: nan anion I . , THE HISTORY or RAILWAYS IN CANADA _ . Q- What is the history of railways in Canada? ' \ constructed in 1836 between 5t. Johns, Que. and Paprairle; it was sixteen miles long and was operatcd by horses, for which locomotives were substituted in 1837. The second roil- way was opened in 1047, and the third in i848. In 1850 there were onlyiw" miles of railway in Canada. The railway era propcr may be said to have begun in i851 with the in- auguratiou of the Grand Trunk sys- subsidlary lines throughout Ontario and Quebec. At Confederation these had grown to 7 ‘i399 miles. The next step was the building of the Canadian Prociflo Rflway, oolnpleted in i885, which madé the West an integral part of the Dominion. The Canadian North- em raliwayandthe Grand Trunk Pacino belong to the later era of the twentieth century, and their incep- tion ia tlluswltliin common mem- ory: With their completion Canada poslelloa the most extensive railway system oi-anr country of. its popula- tion, no other in the world exceeding us in, mileage per capita. u. -- I Heal the Sprain with Midst-J's. A. The first Canadian railway was I vilihbcdflfl¢n e-@_-.._-\ botraycditl- "‘ Substantially. - Urey, ---like Eteni- ‘ swore in the presence cl the e1actor~ ‘ ate thattheywould ‘M renowned‘ :oo4ooo-oooooe-eoewpeaoonooo-ee-ooopee-eon-oee-weeeee champions» of thegrzail cause. ani _ would make the island drier‘ than, e old fashioned gunpowder. But the.‘ public chantlclore had scarce ilap- ped hi; wings when they were found‘ prostrated before the rum sod! 5t. Pater saved h’: soul by 1111s re-, pclntant tears, but/who has seen any: tears fallling from our lo3al "ere-i tenders"? who has; heard any lam-i entation at thepolltleol "Wailinf- Wall"? Those Ztmembcrswerc el-. ected mainlydhrough" the effort; of the‘ temperance pmglc. was there one of the number; stalwart enough, when he saw, from day to day, the promises broken and t':e cause bc-i frayed‘, to turn awaytcrh- tlicm or evento remonstrat: cgrnst such perfldy? “ ' .' Cnialmost every street in thi: city there erodes, where this body? 0 and soul destroying fluid V is dzaltf e cut-some o‘: thenfbelh; within a 1 giggly-g. throw of th: Pi-ollibitlcif: Headquarters! _ I 9' The temperance people must with5 - out delay de:ide what mostb: done? Must a temperance party be organ, lzed? Oi- shsll we do as the torr';er-| anee people of NcwBNu-iwlck have ; decided to do-votc only forprohl-i . I i (QQQUOOOOOO-OOOOOOQOCOOOO-OOO-OOOOQO-OO I i bitlcn stalwarts? . - I am. Sir; etc. - ONE OFT]!!! BETEAYED courts have lzsen established in all the statics, anzljln wnnection with the federal Coven-neat." ‘But the trades unions» applaud tlie-verdlc; when it leans on their aide, and resin; the cision when it goes couple to the‘: desirssi Writing upon. this situation. , an ‘Australian ebr-reenohdent in close , touch with afrnlir- lhflthet country 5 says ithat the ' " didattlflwho pro-roses - lmoosribilltxer and g‘; fianereue barr- owing pojlcy is iiiostjiikely to b: el-'. eobed. But with a. hiuonol deb: of I hundred miilionsgto be faced, and ex- 1' ports of coal and manufactured good; cut down 1o almost negligible pro- portions, it scsms“ceria’n tin: the Laboritc policy is WFICQIZ and _t‘:|a.t Usopien experiments cannot mend ; matters. What is ncededds some Ira; tlonal compromise whereby "capi n1 ' and labor can work hand-in-handi for the industrial progrera of the en- E uire Commcnweallb. _z--4-‘. '4- CilARLOTTETOh/‘N, "P. ‘E. I. RETAIL Drugstores, . Sell - All “lhatetitl Medicines At Prices Locally, Advertised c. mineral -. . ~ JOBNSGN- s- sonuson llaaoan woann ritio'iéiiloe' ltaluklns’ ' s. u. JAMIESON . . .- nuonlts DRUG~CO.- -- - .1. canes: n. woarn vucroa corps‘ 4 ' RSLZDIN BROS. 9000avooyoayyoooooooeoooowooooo O M‘ OO.Q§~O§-O-O-OO4-O~O O-O-QQ-OX-O O O4 O O O-Q-g-QOOOO-Ofi-O-O-Q-O-m Tl".- atteniiori of these interested "in directed to 17d: fact ‘hat The Charlottetown Fox Extenders Protective As- _ EOOIClI-ltiilniii l_ll a l’11Ql‘B favorable position than ever to pro- sccute any who trespass on thi property of tbs under- menticned. members: " - 3 Points to Remember BEST nasal. catam- aa-ranian rutsr crass oaracrwa aoairor freeman anooonouuns ' manure ajrdozxlnoon, Charlottetown Royalty. - W. K. Rogers, , Soutliport. Charlottetown s. a. For 0b., _ Charlottetown Royalty E. B. Brow, Charlottetown Royalty THE onaatorrzrown rox "sasansss rrto- rscrlva association. O coo» oooooee-ooooeo-wo~>uoo0oee +0¢ filflUND One of the beat preventative: " known for - ’ ‘ SMUT OR RUST 4 0N GRAIN A cheap but thoroughly q. fectivs remedy. Grain Grower-s would be wise to act promptly in order to have Seed propgfly trolled before lowing. - 0|" Pint to every i0 gallons of water. - Full directions given with every order. _ FOB SALE AT The, Two .Macs . DRUGSTORE d“ Great Cenrge Ctr-est All Mail Orders given prompt Illeatioii. Ptvllnllla, m "El-Tilli If ycclwant hhflim-lifllifi‘. » ‘. t. n n.¥-i 3 i § g and Plate Ultras ‘lnsntijridntce Z i 5 ‘ '. ‘ooeeetloe E‘. R. BRcJW A ' ‘Charlottetown it Fire, Life, ‘Accidentr genre» . 14o ltiohmond st. ._...-.-- _ at Lowest _g A Good Strong Stock. ‘Qbntporties- Alia-oi ul Sumlnttrti-iiit-‘ll- ‘iiioyd :- - . been oeoobqoeeeboido 045004-000! . . . . omooseoouoocfeqdq; t uov <4~ih-~v-.“ I Til-tho Early liousarillcaner iiirini ‘Sour llcou meaning rczqkufrlmcqiieijicfvland we trill in: tile order-nits "a fresh Whltnlfla. Plaaintarls Billing‘; ,..du'i ‘fiiuulrarjllrusbn ctr; etc. ,1 I p; I. ‘Biélllllbili luftiarebjimt "x _, wnrratasitt fusion t ,4,“ s..+..;.i't... -. 1.5,." "mar-tn. v .,_