5 issssrc" "£13.22; < - -_u_-__-@- Qwu-nfxu-xu-Ql.’ a an: cililiionnowli GUARDIAN Li Pnullrnb-W. (‘main n. Irluul. Vln- President-J. l. Quint t‘ Iorinlnry-I-lrut. fol. l) A hwklnums D l. 0. u ."' lilfhv and llnmuII-J- il- "I'M" nun-lulu lqfllor-II l. Uurrlg (In cannon mulla- Suin- -.'.|-| "g", (Inn nrlod nu mm ‘can ’ ll Unnad nun Unlul lllln par you in alum-oi luliniul MONDAY, APRIL 28. 1930 The Fruit of Tree How striking is the analogy be- tween prohibition and crilne ill- crmel Premier Saufidvrs‘ mfwim‘? -"°‘“ m“ “w L“ °““‘“"°“"“"‘ published there are 08.431 larm trac- about the overcrowded jail situation‘ deportlnwt- mid 1n Ifllfrvmihc 10rd , m“ in us, 1,, m, m,” pfglflg mo- in this Province finds a paralicl in‘ the statement of the A[l.0l‘h0_‘l-G£‘ll~ eral of the United States, Mr. Wih‘ liam D. Mitchell, vrho appeared rcc- tile Senate Committee‘ on Judiciary and iliscusscd the crowded condition of the federal‘ prisons. llc acinlittcd that rarely’ could llc prosecute ollcndcrs against‘, the law ivithout a feeling of doubt; whctllcr he can find a place to put.- thcrn if they are convicted. Mr. Mitchell cited statistics to show the great increase that has occurred in the prison population of the Unitew States inrcccnt months. lll illne- months, he said, the number of pris- oners in federal rind state institu- tions has increased 6.277. He fur-J ther expressed a fcur that in some instances the limit of the numbers of men who can- be crowded into a given place had not only been ap-r preached, bllt actually exceeded. Stimulation of prosecuting activities will, he said, “get us int-o difficulties." It is declared to be realization of this fact which hm led the United states Department of Justice to temper jus- tic with mercy to the extent of handing out paroles at the rate ofi twelve to fifteen per day to make room in the jails for new offenders. ently before The Laureateship " The death d: Rpbctt Bridges. poet laureate. has given rise to specula- tion in llicrary quarters as to the choice of his successor. The office is more or less of an honorary one. but has behind it a noble tradition. The laurel, in ancient Greece, u-as sacred to Apollo, and as such was used to form a crown or wreath of honour for poets and heroes. From the more general use of the term "laureate" arose its rcstriction in England to the office of poet attached to the Royal household, first hcld by Ben Jon- son, for whom the position was created by Charles I. in i617. The laureatcship was really a develop- - merit of the practice of earlier times, when minstrels and vcrslficrs WCYE part of the retinue of the King. Sil- William Dlivcnant succeeded Jonson in i638. and the title of poct laureate was conferred by lcttcrs pzltclit on Dryden in 1670, two years pension of £300 and a butt of Can-' ary wine. The post then became a 113222: Eastltutlon, though the em- oluments varied, Dryrlcns successors being '1‘. Shadwcll (who originated annual birthday and New Year odes), Nahum Tate, Nicholas Rowe, Laurence Eusdcn, Culley Gibber- (satirlzed by Pope in “The Dunciad.,), William Whitehead, 'I‘liomas Warton. l- l. He, Southey. Wordsworth, Tennyson, Alfred Austin and, in 1913. Robert Bridgos. The office took on a new lustre from the" personal distinction of Southey, Wordsworth and Tennyson; it had fallcn into contempt before Southey, and on t Tennyson’: death there was a con- siderable feeling that no successor was acceptable. Eventually, however, the undesirabllity of breaking with tradition foi- temporary reasons. and thiu severing the one official link bstwccn literature and the state, l “'35 Eeneralll/ hflPPY 111 M5 “umepf What a revelation would be brought 1 ous pocms of this class. As already about if all. or even the greater part noted, the emoluments of the post have varied. Tennyson drew £72 a Stcwal-tfs in lieu of the "butt of sack.” 1f, as rumor has it, John Mase- field will be the next appointee, the office will be in safe hands. Mase- ficld is intensely English. His pat- riotism is not of the flsg-uiagginy kind. but is deep and reverend. l-lls "August, i914" remains possibly the greatest poclu inspired by the war. in his “salt Sea Ballads," and in ills longer poems "The Widow in Bye Street," and "The Everlasting Mel'- cy," he has touched the hearts of the common people as the late poet laureate. highly gifted in other respects, was unable to do. Mase- field, like Joseph Conrad, was a scaman in his younger days. and saw "strange lands from under the arched white soils of ships" bcforc settling down to literary work in London. The Reason If the Canadian farmer is turning protectionist, both for the sake of keeping the home market for him- rself and of building it up by the creation of new industries, says the Winnipeg Tribune. it ls hardly to be wondered at. Intelligent self-interest has made him an advocate of low tarifis in the past. That was not be- cause the tariff affected his cost of production materially, but because he hoped to secure wider markets. With so much and such pressing evi- dence that the market is contracting, rather than widening, he cannot help bllt see that his economic theories have collided with economic facts and arc now getting the worst of it. if he is turning to protection it is because the logic of events is driving him there. ' That Barmccide Bill "So fnr as cducatlon is concerned. we know that this Government has done nothing. We know further that the Government is not 8010B to do anything in the matter 0f education. They are. to use a very common expression, simply “passing the buck." 'I‘licy are putting legisla- tion through which will not in any case become operative until after the after. nut election; and we know where Davcmlniis death, COllplCd with a‘ i this Government will be then.“--Mr. H. D. McLean, in the budget debate. Editorial Notes The Literary Digests prohibition poll for April 20 records: For en- forcement. 1,002,745; for modifica- tion. l.l05.683; for repeal, 1,507,683. Total ballots returned so far are 3,705,742. out of 20.000000 sent out. As far as duties on leather pro- ducts are concerned, Canada may as well "let the tail go with the hide." The new United states tariff re- moves hides and leather from the free list and imposes duties ranging from 12% k1 20 per cent. Adopting the policy 0f the big irli dustrial companies. Chicago gang- stcrs are reported to have organised a merger. Gang wars are to be abandoned and the racketeering prevailed. Austin's appointment be-' conducted on a strictly commercial "l! made four years after Tenny- lona death. ‘his pout laureate. bclng a court “Mill. was considered . _ m; lfl"fll’flllllfl-fll {Ofmll Ind flppfgp- i rim ma: on birthday! Ind mid m lu- mum: in this has varied. mil-am w cir- basis. The amalgamation will great- ly reduce the "overhead," cost of mu- nitions and elaborate funerals. 1n accepting the Conservative nomination for Vuicouver North, Major-General A. D. Manse, M. 9., described the Conservative party as being better prepared for n Domin- ion olcctiolftllsn at any time In the l8 yam. H0 may hm added vgbzhiilfihtlbllélflflllllvhlflflfl far-no a 0min .a ‘ > ‘V I s7__—_ Notes ByIhe Way l The recent coltl wuthcr has in- spired the minor weather prophets to announce with more or less u- sursnce that the coming summer will be an exceptionally cold one. The rest of us may console ourselveswith discovered a means by which the ately determined beyond twenty-four hours, so we shall Just have to wait .until summer comes. 'cf the farm machinery used in Can- ’ ada. were manufactured in this coun- itry. According to statistics recently vinoes. These are distributed as fol- lows: Saskatchewan 35,003; Alberta 18,791 rind Manitoba 14.551. In dd- dltion to these there are also 7.126 harvester-combines, as follows; Sas- katchewan, 3,871; Alberta, 3,584 and Manitoba, 27f. Alberta alone spent $3.l98,400 in the purchase of new tractors and combines last year and. . if " ~~ ~.' ~ii;- of the used machines be added, it is estimated that Alberta $15,000,000 so invested. Practically all these machines are manufactured in, and imported from the Tlllitcd States. "The reduction of duties on im- laments of production," which the Liberal Government boasts or having accomplished, makes this importation possible. iii i.'..l‘ “As ngalnst Great Britain's total unemployed," says" an exchange. “Great Britain has today half s mil- lion more people in industry than at any previous period of her history." There arc at least two city councils in Canada that administer a larger the thought that they don't, know _ anything about it. Science has not yet i weather probabilities can be accur- ,' most of the pain in that region ls th- budget and handle the affairs of a larger population than seven legis- latures out of the nine Canadian; provinces can boast. and they do it‘ with s comparative small member- ,shlp. and with only a fraction of the noise and fuss the legislature quakes. Says the Sackville- Post, "there ls ‘a real good Job going begging ovcr .on the Island. it is that of jallor at Summerslde. The former jailor re-, ‘slgncd after he had been beaten upi It: prohibition prisoners and after ‘they had set fire to the jail, and made things generally uncomfortable for the official. Another man was ap- l pointed and accepted. but after a lit- ‘tie considzration decided he did not ‘want to be ilillor at Sumrncrside. I Whether the government will be able to find a man who can stick it for any length of time, is a question." With wheat quojed at $1.07 a bush- ,cl, there are about 200,000,000 bush- 5cls of the Canadian wheat crop of 1929 still in Canada unsold. Premier Ferguson o! Ontario fav- ors the abolition of dropping exam- inations for entrance to colleges or high schools. "We don't want to be drain- ing the countryside all the time to rill these schools," said Premier G. H. Ferguson, minister of education. speaking to the college and secon- dary section of the O. E. A. in ex- plaining the motive of the govern- ment in extending collegrwork into high schools. The premier pl nounc- ed outspokenly in favor of changing the examination method by iiubsti- tilting-the year's rccord for the writ- ten examination. "The department finds by a survey of the results that 07 per cent. of those who get s0 per ce . on tha entrance examination ge their pass on the departmental examinations." said Mr. Ferguson. "We think therg are benefits to be derived by a change. The pupil is put on his own, and he realizes he will bc marked on a year's work instead of on one written examination spasm." At the end of h‘: lcrm. Lord Wil- lingdon will return, "a free man in fact as well M in name." and “the cork will be out of the bottle." he promised members of Vancouver ser- vice club at s luncheon meeting. The governor-general alluded to the dif- ficulties of his office. which entailed many addresses and u many more limitations upon the subjects with which he could deal, "I am longing to pour forth my opinions, but must refrain." said his excellency. He recalled that a short time ago, following s trip to the West lndfss. he made an observation which to hint at the time, seemed perfectly harmless. "utter 1 learned from my newspaper that. certain gentlemen felt. that i should not have said what l did." he humorously remarked. "At the and of the form I-hope l can renew old ncouaintincosfi-Jie continued. "And when 1'00 coma buck. r will teiiymi everything f think on matters of futurist." ‘rile governor-gums! nooliod his mnoinrvioolorthumwitfl bavl lino long yuan ta public m- ma and when l Mill l for twisty llilwtit_ 801MB msillisvuiiuinswsyuorlirnmc iviw oiviilinllw r... lolly ' ' of t 3on1- l B; [sum W BarIQnJLD ANOTHER. CAUSE OI‘? HEADACHE. Headache is such a common aLIment that vary oftcipits exact muse is not investigated. 4 . You simply take aspirin, or some other psln killing drug. Ind obtain! ed, be,“ can“ "The Mann," 1m relief. Now as mxlnlilflllfiilbvflllbli-lhtgstitute." "mowed by the “chumth hood can ache n many pacu. atnown Debating clubs, in which n“ very top. at sides, at, the back; in forehead. _ H°W°Wr l‘ L‘ m‘ mm m mnhud 5 displayed their qualifications to be- that I want to talk rbout, because ought to be "due to the eyes, or pu- haps to some intestinal disturbance- dyspepsia and constipation. Some- times also the trouble is in the frontal sinuses-the little hollows in the bone directly over the eyes-making the well marked lumps in that region. Now it has been customary to non- slder that any pain in those sulusds was due to pressure of pus from nil inflamstion of the lining of the sinus. However hose speclaliskhsvc hul cases referred in them who have boon exsuilned by eye specialists and cyc- sight found normal. and yet there was no sign of pus in the sinus as shown by the lights which are now used to exam-inc this region. The sin- us appeared to be perfectly clear. However when the opening from the nose, into slnin was investigated if. was found w be nlusgrd up. and this was causing the pain. ‘ Why? Bécausc the sinuses adjoining the hose ue supposed to contour sir. You can readily soc this tf sir docs not get to these sinuses that there will be tremendous pressure on them mosphere. As you know the middle ear has Ill‘ REMINISUENCES or‘ CHARbUFFETOWN is: a unusual xi. nurses imam-nos. MUSICALIU. no. My ‘recollections of um»: and Literary Entertainments. Plays, Oper- ss. etch in the Charlottetown Ama- teur world do not extend very fal- back. The name of the earliest or- ganization I have heard of was long before my time, where anything verging on decimation was attempt- eral of the rising generation of busi- ness men, politicians and lawyers come public speakers. I can recall at least ones s year the Club gave a Utsrary (and sometimes musical) entertainment in which selections 1mm Bhlhsneue, Bums. Byron and other poets were "recited" by several young men. Concerts. sacred and secular. were frequently given by City Choirs. in which, at times, clas- sicll music was well-rendered. both vocal and instrumental. Occasionally a comedy-drama or farce was pro- duced. An annual festival given by the Free Masons was always eagerly lookcg forward to, the Market Hall being generally secured fol- the en- tertainment, which consisted first of a Tea, prepared by the wives, daughters and friends of the Masons, followed by a concert. which in turn was followed by a dance. This was one of tho enjoyable events in the seventies and cightlts. Then, begin- l should hm satisfied you 6r u» m. 1' i un._'l._srsos aunts slim-Hy oiplsastibu of ‘rhursday Mtqrezuliritv '0! an Commission's PQYmInt “lojhg Alliance. ll it surely will to every right. thinking PQIIOIL 3"‘ 7011 come back to infer that "is Mourns ' mien to the (i927) “Mien cxbensu: that the Alliance an notvomcfals of tho Commission, and that Jho Plrticulm should be Published. I I ' In answer-to your flllt,—'rhg Am. slice had paid every expanse of their, election campaign, from pubug “m. ~ trlbutlonl, berm this money w‘ paid to them. ‘ SeconcL-{rho greater expense in securing evidence against “IQ-flou- tors of - tils Act, apart from salarled| Inspectors, would not of necessity be i w Yelrlflsrlv émmi diilrisls. Thii-d,—"'f'l-io penalties forfcltures and fines in money recovered under , this Act shall be paid to the Bccre- ' $811! of the Bonn‘! of Commissioncm . . and the nme shall constitute a fund for the enforcement of this Act ‘ and of all laws for the prohibitiol-u, .egulstlon or restriction of the im- portation, saleor’ manufacture of l.- l Q1101" (Sec. 94>. _ ‘ . i "Subject to the provisions lurgln- l alter contained the Board shall have , 1v" authority and‘ jurisdiction in sll ning in the seventies. the Odd Plcllows of the city started giving concerts and entertainments which were sl-i ways well patronized. Several o.’ these literary and musical entertain- | mcnts contained a considerable, sprinkling of the comic elcmcnt. and. ‘when a Mirlstrcl Show was on there g from me outside pressure the ct- ' w“ m“ to b: a packed houm M hibnion Act if it were otherwise. l the curtain rose over the circle of colored gentlemen with the interloc- com-lng up to it from a little tube "in the throat so as to have air on the qambo» n the enmh ‘he accmrmW-lwl’ rccclvé. and could not expose outside of the drum to counteract thHh-om the audience w,“ such u to the "itemized" details which you , alr pressure on the outside. When this ' tube gets blocked the drum lets driv- en inward from the outside pressure‘ and as l‘, rennet vibrato ‘b0 boa-ring ls affected. The thought then ls that whore there is pain immediately above the‘ eyes. and it is not due to defective‘ eyesight. to digestive disturbances. or to pus in the sinus, it may be caused by the closing of the little tube which permits the passsgemf sir fmuijpe nose t0 the sinus. Every headache should be lnvuti- gated as to its cause. ROBERT BRIDGES 1844-1030 Not for you the muffled drums, the steady martial trad; Not for you the purpled flags, the pomp of soldier dead. For you no muted bugies, for you no trumpets ring, For you no thunderous guns crash out the requiem of s king. Your kingdom was the realm of thought, Of thought so fine and high, That fcw ulere they who study sought ‘ Your throne set in the sky. Not for you the people's cries, the noisy silouting din, Not for you the wide acclaim of na- tions or of kin; For you no idle boastlngs vain for you no cheap appeal. For you no pandering to the mass, no bending of the siccl. You dwelt alone among the hills, The hills of truth and right, Tathcm alone you bent your head, You felt their silent might. Lllnvol. Now freed from the body, vantshed in ‘im- . h: from tho world that so oitca fqraot. Your words will livs on, eternal bo- qucst ' To the ages, your i‘ ‘ of utcr in the centre and "Bones" and‘ give cncouragcment to the perform- ers, and help each one do his part to the great delight of his hearers. Then “Mr. Johnr-lrsz." i)» interlocu- ter would ssy-"Gentlemen, be seat- ed." The entertainment would than‘ open with s lively overture by the. orchestra in which "Bones" and‘ "Tiirnbo" would shew their skill in handling the bones and tambourine. ‘ll-ien would follow a conundrum or a joke. Next perhaps a sentimental song, such as "Hard Times. come again no more." Next. some further side-splitting joke or local hit, and so on. Some of the favorite songs wcre-"Yoi Yahl Yo!" "Ring dc Banjo," “Carry mc back," etc, etc. The comic song which made the big- gsst hit in those days was an excsed- ingly lively one, without much sense, however. It is almost forgotten now except by ii few. such as Mr. s. N. Earle. who was Musical Director at the time. The first verse ran like this; "Tapioca." "When I used to work upon dc levee. Many happy darkles del-e you see‘. Cotton comimfn so berry hcsby- Oh. gollyi dereb lots o’ work for me. Black mall a liaulin‘ in do cargo, Sun a. berry hot upon do head; when he done. he dance a i011! i!!!" Oh! rum-tum ‘banjo. den to bed. Tapioca! Tavllokuml Pompey, can't ych pick a peck of oskum- Yahi Yahl Golly. ain't. de levee nigger free. workir‘ ~ ~~ " won Boat-ten shil- lln‘ a dav- - ,cn pick upon dc banjo! Oh! me, Ohl ml’. . Mammy. mummy. mommy. don't yeb head do baby flflfl" Of course it. was all u. bit f?! mm‘ sense (as many of the Negro "SP1!"- ugh" are today) but the iilt and happy action of the thing "took" with the audience u it would YB!"- (Oontinued onuilfi ll ' Johl m: LAND wet tovs n; run and: thought, - Lawrence P. Jones India mined burl! 10,000,010 pound of mics ion you Many lhflp Mid salable WI! i019. in his lover: mandarin in Ireland in March MM? 0f mlklnl m ilhlwrnonal flwcmimm lu cirrus. “I ‘min’ hills for in aim . lava-jun us: qusnrs IANGBII Q. Who ward the Queen's lung- cn! '. _‘ A. Tho moon's Itlnlln wu a famous miliiaryforcn thli. fillrrln early Canadian history. "PW-ally hi’ Upper 01mm. undoi- mo ~ Liam-Gwalior modicum: by * i llobm man is , i‘ _ auras ammonium-minim m, runs: of onmwsiilsflabitlila ‘dis- lcf the provisions of this Act." (Sic. 5| ' ' wlllvftv 15W Jurisdiction in all these 1nd those "itemized" details which‘ ~ pended. matters relating to the enfoi-ccniyngi . . \ Tim's the Gornmission have absolute matters: inwhlch cvcll the Govern- ment can not interfere. And it would a b: fatal to every'purpose of the Pro- ‘ Even the Commission and inspec- tors are prohibited from divulging the sources of "informatloil whic2i' claim should be published. Both the Commission and the Alliance adver- l tised that all informatics-is would be held confidential. There are of solid cnioyuieiiipsnd -,r"'eal, satilflictlqn, in every packdfgcvofl Rosebud cirtj. plug smoking tobacco, . . -. .' .. {l}; fpoker liantlinL Without this assurance, what safety would fllQ-Ifklldl of the Act have, and how many of them would take the risk of giving information? If these matters were made public new, you ask were published, the result would be equivalent in a repeal of the Act. * The public have confidence in the Commission in their proper handling of the funds. Particularly in this will! Payment to the Alliance which was the most. rcmunerative in inan- cial results and enforcement of the Act, of any sum of money they ox- I lm, Sir, ck. ‘s. w. tarsal: I - ~ (N0 beltinl about the bush by Hon. Mr. LcPlge will nor the fict that the ‘moo givcn by the Prohibi- tion Commission to-tho ‘Ilempci-snce ‘i ‘Alliancs for a nameless purpose was Jlvill- nu Uomnllssion his no righuwhatcver to give away its funds to any ‘rr aponsiblc organization, fal- less to subsidize stool pigeons and’ other informers to ascertain more or less raliable hriurmstiori/for which tne Commission otherwise pays an enormous amounfyearlvin inspec- ‘tni-s‘ uiariés and expanses. BQMCIM. Mr. Lenin cannot truthfully uscri j that the 01200 was for such purpose. 7 as the accounts of the Commisron ~ show {specific amount ‘ ‘ for, ‘riformatlori apart altogether from this expenditure. Nor can this claim l on the part pillar. um. in any wiiyrnltigaté the charge made in the logfslsturc, and not delfdd by the Government. that the $1100 was glv- ’ en to thrAlllailc: in connection with‘, their efforts lnelccilhg the Saunders Government in powsru-lbd. 0.) i l I _ ¢-.--__.._. _..._._ ___. PROTECT‘ g ,_ YQURfFOXE-S . .NcMA:,woiiiu. i l .. i> l the Province". -' _..-__ Prince Ediva;rii,.al§slanii’s “Golden Fixture” A Booster Feature To Stimulate Business and Business (Jim. diiinns in Prince Edward island. published ily The Charlottetown » Guardian We are Soliciting illc Cooperation of the Business Firms and Leading Menol Cliarluiicioivn. Summerside and Mr. Frank Walker, Assistant Editor‘ of the Guard- ian is editing this Special Feature Edition. which is now in the course nf publication. ind Mr. J: iii-Kirk- land is in charge cf Publicity. am: l for a GrcatcfwYPfbdiifce ‘tooovoooooooooooou-uom00000oopovoibodli$oubbooud +15. narrow r46 Richmond" $1.. r- ' i x i E at Lowest Rate. Charlottetown Fire, Life,‘ Accident, Sicknefss’ and Plate Glass: Insurance Good StrongStoc/a. Compiiriies Agent atSummel-siile.‘ Lewis *9-- -r.--.-..... .4 I ,_ ~93- O\OO€_O_QCO@ OOOOOOOUQOOOOOOCIOQO§OO0000040004000-600006060“ » “m: oniluorrnrown will-fill 0n ‘ ‘wiuuuudnqicrhri .,s»-.-i1~l- nsg; uw i w R Nitrate MacLurs ldacfiinuon, Charlottetown Royalty. Wt-Kslogecs, ~ " i * iotitliportil‘ i Ollci-lottetcwriji Editor-Cor. °““.12‘"F9"¥' '20“? . B.’B',Bru§. - Charlottetown. ioy_aity_ . ., ltrpiif .l¥.1i,131>1=_1*9' P”? a Taurus“? 1mm" . a ' H‘. v.5’ -l r w‘ 3 Polnis~~lirf1l§nigiilber BEST Lnosz.‘ rn-nn alirsmzzn rmsr crass, nnrncrivtsomlvcv rxA1rmfi-_fcx,.o,on,iiouri::s. . . i‘. i. l i The attention of those ilitc sted in directed to it! fact that Th: Charlottetown I'm: , readers Pr-otoctivs N» lzociation is in a more favorabla-phsition than ever to plv scouts an who tres pass on tha property of the under» mention: members: *' ' i l i i