1 _ ness. Neither The Guardian nor its FIBE=hr~-'"+:' -- Tlifizilillli‘ it Ll OIL 05.90 III you nfllod- ll Ollnfln 5nd Ulltod ltotoo. Indian-WI. Omen: a. loll . “l;- A. Inolilnnon, D. U. 0, Illlor lll lhlllnt-d l. Dunn. Auoolno Ellltog-D. K. Ulllrlo TUWN illlfflllli (1! lflvlllol) Gillian]. ‘vlso-rnumt-o. at. Dunn. A FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 192s PROVINCIAL LEGISLATURE. HE Provincial Legislature is now wéll under way. and the members are beginning to warm up and to say things. The policy upon which thevSaunders party secured fts ma- jority and placed it in power is be- ing warmly supported by Liberals, wet and dry. lnni is being held up as the only way to temperance. On this assumption they denounce as advocates of free rulll, as promoters of drunkenness and 'all the vices these who, having seen the complete failure of prohibition here and else- where. believc there is a better wily.‘ Oi course. The Guardian has becll denounced ill all the tenses for its advocacy of Govcm- ment- Control. denounced as an in- consistent ruin organ and an advo- cate of iIlLCIXllJBTIlDCO and lawless-l moods aild friends. and the latter are ilicrcas- ing daily, feel any uneasiness this score. The throughout‘ its existence bcenn con- sistent advocate of temperance and its readers all the and beyond it, are perfectly awarel of this. Neither fanatical scream-i ing nor political considerations will swerve it from its course in ‘respect. It is humiliating to men and wo- men of integrity and honesty to find in the legislature, the public platform. in the public press, men who are in no way temperate them- 0T] Guardian has over province this Oil selves and who never miss an op- portunity to indulge in n drink of liquor. denounce those who dare to believe there is a surer and better way towards temperance than pro- hibition that does not prohibit. Temperance, under whatever sys- still a favorable balance. and it is still substantial. Why? Because we are exporting. enormous quantities of raw material which, under a national protective policy, could be fabricated in Canada by Canadian labor. Imports’ of iron and steel. especially ironl continental Europe, afford an instructive example of lill- reasonable competition. During the eleven months‘ period, free imports of iron and its products from all sources rose from 328.707.6111 to $37.- 552,857, and dutiable inlports rose from $172,088,590 to $186,067,339. Much imported iron and steel comes frolll Belgian Mills which have been rebuilt and thoroughly modernized since the war but which still have the advantage of cheap labor. plus low assemblage charges, their coal and ore being near at hand. The average weekly wage ill Belgian in- dustry is between $4 and $5, us; against $19.20 in Canada-the figure cited in the International Labor Rc- vicw, published by the International Labor Office of the League of Na- The Belgian mill laborer. lives more cheaply be- lions. l‘."lOl'60\l'0l'. cause his standard of living is lovrcl". Belgian mills. with these marked advantages, export large quantities of burs. billets and wire rods lo this country. rods being laid down in Montreal at $32.35 per net i011. and the bars (for reinforce- etel at $32.90, underselling Canadian products. Every condition conduces to cheap production in Bel- gium. including cheap labor; but the Canadian steel industry. paying nearly four times as lnuch for its labor, deliberately exposed to competition of this character. The steel and iron industry is only the lnent. is tem it may be carried out, is tem- perance. wmnen have sought to promote it by prohibitory laws. others by nt- tempting to control it. but all teaching temperance as a rllie of life and conduct. The latter has been thrown aside by thc prohibi- tionlsts of this province. and they now pin their faith to the big stick. This is not temperance. Even if it were possible to place liquor beyond reach of our people so that there could be no drinking, it would not be temperance. To refrain from drinking because there is none fol be had, is on the same plllnr- as rte-i Well meaning mcll andl 0Y1 onc of many showing what Canada iis up against through the tariff ‘itinkcring of the King Government ;and its fiscal policy under which lCanadian industry can never get on ,its feet. and because of which, while ‘it continues. Canada must remain a hewer of wood and a drawer oi water for countries which safeguard the interests of their olvn people by protecting them against unfair and unreasonable competition. _ Protection is the policy oi the ICOIlSCTVRiZlVC Party. It was adher- ied to in practise by Lauricr and |Ficlding. Liberals. 1t suited the political ambition of Mr. Mackenzie Notes by the Way IlllAT Canada is prosperous has been and is being widely prb- ' claimed. The reasons for such pros- perity as exists are worthy of con- sideration. Two of the principal reasons are apparent in the succes- fliiilat 38012 of TWO ViTAL SUBJ ECTSi SHOULD Cva-IKND-IN-IIAND The Venerable Inns 0f Old England (Iondenscd from Travel Dlarlnicl MeDermolt lilstorlcus. As time runs along it teaches les- sens which are of incaiculable value to the human family; and one of the most important to Canadians In our world of here today and sioll oi bountiful harvests at home: and the world-wide revival of trade; abroad. These conditions cannot be‘ counted upon as permanent‘. Har-i vests have not always been bounti-. iul even in Canada. and any person; of mature age can remember the rc-' currellce of successive periods of al- . £01m: . Barton. ALD. FAT FOR WOMEN. BUT NOT FOR MEN Bu lame: In these days when our women folks and some men also, are en- deavoring to reduce. sonle words of gone tomorrow. it seems almost in- conceivable that the English coun- try inn has had a life of more than 800 years——eight centuries! In the era of the Norman kings England was a purely agricultural nation and its villages were little or nothing more than gatherings of thatched and clay-walled hovela about the church and- the manor house. Like many of the European at present is that‘ Education and Labor should go hand-in-hdnd on their Journey through life. An edu- cated worklngman only needs work to demonstrate that he is a superior workman. and commands higher remuneration. all else being equal, than his fellow workman who had to face the world without education. It does not follow. however, that the uneducated mart lacks ability to lens the Empire and yet is encourag- Crushed 01mm.’ as no ironing is n“ most universal trade depression. wisdom from a. great physiologist Bad harvests and trade depression are worth considering may come again, we know not- Dr. Leonard Williams says "N0 when_ mun has any right to be really fat, [and no woman has any right to be In the days of 1874-78, when Alex-z "eflslyygfiirgéglow the glory f n . ‘ oama. vmtkemw Km‘! “d” [Ihzxiis his physical strength. This means: l ls cl, lilies were lar . an. 19.1.1151; the muscles of his body are put forward the Just plea oi badiwell developed. and development, harvests. stagnant trade and dc-i0l111l05 110111 110111 01‘ 011010156. creased revenue as an excuse folflvofigglgllzeifleigeris 15061111511111?‘ 11°" - , - _ ' _l ‘ ' mue room llllltlClldly deficits. Iic passed an if“ ‘an A “me m; when c)“: ..¢.lvenc5 Act. and thousands of mcl-im-cise has been omitted for a 1mm lallts throughout the country|while is not a bad sign, because it sought l'elicf iliidCl‘ its provision's.i$110W_5 that the body functions are In 1904 there was a poor harvest llllriltililélt}gt 321111213’ “Edd 511111110 a . . . r , a m ra 0o ea en. P1111“? Eidvrard 15mm‘ ‘Ilcluihml "y Further. the normal protection vely sholt lay clop. and ll’l tie fol-{for a ma,“ nel.ves_ bloodvcssels‘ lowing severe winter thousands ofjalid abdominal organs is muscluar head of iarill live stock were reduc—11155l10~ T110 171g 111115505 '01 1111180105 ed to starvation. It was a rare oc-flifiifificl r111” (‘$153319 51511113111105 119111 °""“““°F hem‘ of c_ow'se‘ for nmlfrolnylieasgl flgg111lg.al“:t where in Canada ale good harvests with the proper working of me more certain than in our favoredlmusculal" structure oi the body. l pfgvincflt I Now_a woman needs muscle but| l l 1 .not as much as does a nlan. Nature provides her with a little extra fatty What is the economic lesson i0 bc‘,°°"°1‘111€ W01‘ 1110 1111150105 01 1110 learned from these glimpses ill pastfigdi‘ ‘u? “as L“ '5°1]“'°5 B: 11 i110- » .. . c l0ll or oo vesses an nerves. and present conditions, and to be. A Von mm woman ma _ _ _ ' y be well. applied by Federal and PYOVIHCIQIibut she 15 usually nervous‘ high Governments for our future progresqstrung. It is a sign of health to and security? Is it not a lesson ofihagtitll-iwl 11111501?‘ 10111111011 Out with economy and prudence ill regard ids‘ h‘ e “yer ° at" . . l otl ' word. littl i t‘ tl . public expenditures? Most urgent,onaumxezonditizna for ewogwfis by; needs must be provided fol, butInOt for men- needless outlays must be curtailed,‘ This means then" that man should in order that provision may be madej5001< 1° 110011 111$ 1111150105 so that ‘u, our most exioellt med in lesswhey show themselves. ‘It is not nee- °. .. ‘e‘sa' tl t- e fib h picspcl-Qus areas, without piling lilhablwzalgs ofilnfgdfybu. 15161-59 ‘jgllfiulgl 11011’ 11111110115 01 1710191- ‘lnot be such a thickness oi fat, that‘ {the muscle as a whole is not out- What are most urgent needs pre-llined. canted at the door of our Provincial,‘ In a woman a light layer of fat Government? Better provision for,“ “mfmly m0“? bec°ming~ b1." 1 the public health notably the care Nlfitures protectim)’ as nlentioned ' El OVC. and cure oi those afflicted with tu-j so whether you are a ma“ m. a berculosis: and then. co-operatioirwolnan instead of dieting and using; with the Federal authorities ln a,T111'k1-§‘11_ 1181115 10 1100i) 3101115011 well-considered scheme of inlnligra-‘abflm “gm: “gm T851113" exficism. . _ . . .11 __,suci as brisk walking and‘ the 11,01“ ‘ylalgcPitrfatlon thatnévlfarpllg bending exercises, will develop mug- vice ..e ls ol our vaca n V. ck. 5m. the mam and for the woman Both of these are urgent. The SflIll-‘kecp ti“; layer of {at from being iorillln must be provided. if the lives_ 100 1.11101!- of mcn and women are to be regard-i ed worth as much as that oi cattle in their stalls. {i z t 0Q 0O O-QOOQQ4'&OO-§QO-O OQQ-QQ And how are our Federal affairs ill regard to trade and productioni‘, Canada is buying far too much; ‘HOUSEHOLD abroad that should be larocluced m3 SCRAP BOOK | Y b home, alld far too much of what was By ROBERTA LEE {l 0+4 0+0» owoo-wo-ooo-oo oov imported was brought under alien; flags and not where the Union Jacki is flying. Think oi it, seven huh-i dred million dollars ‘paid last year; for United States products and mall- Itinsing lleavy Articles A garden hose used to rinse heavy articles. such as blankets. is very ‘handy and makes the work much ufacmres! That so", of thing “lighter. Blankets rinsed in this way the some time bleeds Canada. w'cak-l?l‘gg;:gztwu?filizlgc Sfnlghghizipwlilsl ed by the Ottawa Government. qllired, 1 A Plant 'l‘nnll-. Tllc boasted reduction of 92 mll-1 |the country. The nobles. impover- i countries. England was not ‘a great learn and in time become a skilfuli welded nation but a loose bundle of and valued employee, but, he never-i 10151111110110111101111111111015. 011011 11105- the-less is always heavily handicap- ided over by its fuedal lord who ped, might as well have been king for If the parents of children could all the P011101‘ anyone else had in his only hear the opinions of the menI district. He was indeed more than who strive daily to keep up, they 1111013’ 10 0W0 0011015 111111 110 0110,would strive harder to have a high- shouid leave hi5 1111511101 81101 10 er standard of education and better 5.0111011 1111i’ 8111111201 W110 W811<1010g1taught schools than we have had ill, into _lt. The lllanol" house in cal: the p351; in Prince Edward Island. ccmlnunity was the centerof activ-lgducanon, likg cycrythmg clscfi 11y. 1110 0011115 1111.01 1111 1110111011111 001'lshould always -be keeping onward; emonles‘ of fllllcdaiisnlh being (lilfilfliand upwafd_ Such is the 31m or within its we s. n 10 08H! fly-‘iothcr countries. The . trugglc i any traveler who chanced to b0 1n maintained in those states, and iti the dlsiricthhfld Pvaforlce t: stay] ngdouha impossible to accomplish this, the manor ouse w ct er 0 W15 w laudable object in day hours they to or not. He probably sot 11e°1make use of the night schools with lodgings, which consisted of a meal unabatlng gngrgy, 1n England, 111101 11' 1111100 1111011 1110 11151108 111 1110llreland and Scotland this system ' MARCH 23, 192g -FOSTER’S GUAIACOL EMULSION 011L701) LIVER 0IL_ This is without doubt the best preparation of‘ n,“ “nu we have ever sold. It contains all the tonic and nulrllivg properties of Cod Livers with Hypophosphates of Lime Illll Soda and the addltlonoi’ Gualacol makes it specially bene- ficial in lung and bronchial troubles. For Chronic Coughs Bronchitis and all wasting diseases ll has no equal. 50m’ on its merits at 50c and $1.00 bottles, E. A. f-‘OSTE """“' sllllllysidg Drugstore. A new lot of the celebrated Japanese fountain Pens jug; reccived—$l.00 each. ' SPECIAL ANOTICE’ POTATOES MARKED PRICE Buying potatoes and turnips daily at hlghwt market prices. On account of the bare streets in town, com. mencing Wednesday morning and while the loo lasts we are arranging lo have our truckmen haul your potatoes from the ice at Cut Street to our warehouse. , If there are no truckmen there when you arrive leave word at 4 West Street and we will have one sent down lm. medialely. HARRIS ABATTOIR gCO. -. as»: so» 484111’: "R1111 great hall whcre the men atarnlsqg pursued with remarkable gncfgy, l - and retainers all slept together. am; P05511113’ 1110 111111010131 E111 10 1110lhighcr branches, as is told by their 1105101181‘ when he sneaked away inlpronciency Eng grudcs ‘vhen Gang. the morning was the original of thgdians come 1n Conga“ with Lhuigfl tin W11iL11 0110 15 110W 011110111011 wicolnpctitors at the work-bench, in 15110 1111‘ 11111101‘ 01 11 001111113’ 11°115° the engine-room, in the ship-yard- on leaving after a visit m fact. m all departments in Toward the end of the 14th Céll-‘al-Lisan arenas of gunflda, tury, however, a change came over we have always boasted o; Dm- moreover, carried oll in the i-shed by insuccessful lobbying at court and by equally unrelnunerat- ive participation in disastrous for- estly at their country seats and leftimcn themselves stewards in charge of their mallors,|Is1cS lead, with Ontario lwldmg sec. 110W "1511911 bY an 1111119351118 mmwond place/and the Maritilnes conle 1101' 01 1101191015- 1-1-1191‘ ‘m 111° 51°"""£third. It would be well to have this ard was replaced bl’ 11 10111111" “Pnisubject discussed by our teachels 11001101‘ 111111 111° 1111111191» 51111 bebrmglin the local press with the view oi the arms of its lord, became the lo-mrccurmg light, and remedying de- H cal inn and was called the Ncvilleifccta i; they exist, Qne thing we Arms. the Warwick Arms 01' 5°m°|believc to be an established fact other AFmS- A11 111115 ‘V1111 any lemlrlght now. Our teachers do faith- gth of legitimate history Wllliilktn work as m]. as the“. Standard o; have tile word arms in their llamelour System requires of they“ are fairly certain to be lllflllbflali John W_ Bum; of Toronto, can. iimS- mdian organizer of the United Asso- The uwnastaries 10°- 1100111110 “relation of Plumbers and Steamfit- stopping place for travelers, theltcl.s_ was a visitor at the mommy wealthy seeking their COmpflfEltlVflimneflng o; um Halifax Trades and security and the poor their freelyllabcr Council on Wednesday even. offered p01'5011111111/~ 11 ‘V111 be Yemhing, and was invited to address the enlbefed 111111 19110111111 Durwam mdelegates on the Labor situation ill Scottis novel sougllt out monastlccanada_ ‘ lodgings on his journey because 01 l-Ie said it was unfair for critics of 1110 0100101‘ @1159 which the 11m)?‘ thc Labor movement to draw a coni- trusivc care of the monks offered inlparison of progress bctwccn the m. keeping his 1111551011 11 $00101- Th“ flatcd war period when the nlcmbor- Wily 111 11/111011 111050 11101105131155 b°'1,ship of unions had been increased came inns is interesting. The nobi-llby Wm. ‘vbrkefs. and “my, of [lormal es who frequented them genelally|per1ods_ - had in their train a great many scr-, Taking a comparison between 1914 vitors who, after a good meal nndjand 1928 statistics would prove that plenty of ale, were likely to ‘190;Labm" had increased its member- boisterous. Thisi C01lSi(10l‘3ll0ll,-Sh1p 50 pm- cem" and that wages 1110111111011 the hwuks to b11110 spec-lilac been raised and conditions of lial guest houses outside the wallsgwork mmyoved_ of the monastery. One of the 111081; He strongly coildcmncd thclead- 11011111111‘ 11011105 1'01 0 111011115110 11111§crs of the national movement for ilvhfi "T110 1311.11" 01 501110 0°11111111“"trying to salvage the legitimate the ‘ ,Island school system, but we, fear ,the standard is not as high lll any ,, lofthe grades as they are in the ,_ icountries we have nalllcd. In fact l 01811 W015. 10111001 1° 111° 111°"? m°d'.we have it on the opinion of work- that the British i" a E- R. BROW 146 Richmond St., . . Charlottetown. Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and‘ Plate Glass ‘Insurance at Lowest Rate. Good Strong Stock Companies Agent at Summerside, Iiloyd Lewis. ‘ll l ,.iaslzrl-. -l=.- :1‘. new»: made strenuous objection to Labor's proposals. buthadlatereome to ac- . . cept them as feasible and Just. Dally SOlGCtIOHS FOR Guardian Readers 0-004- lndustrlal Education Needed. Industrial education was another thing that was needed today — the training of boys for industrial activ- ity. Elnployers were beginning to realize that efficiency is a big factor in industry and the trained worker was thc most cflicient and thc most valuable. There must be developed an apprentice systeln that will train the worker to take his place in ill- dustry. Some unions were already acting nlonc this Iiuc. and the Pre- mier cf Ontario was taking a lead in ,t.his nlatter ond a government lnczls- ure was being put forward that Lord, cvm- work out for us m would help to solve this problem. pcncablc {rum of righteousness, In closing, tile speaker urged tllc ' delegates to get behind the movc- ‘ mcnt, study and understand the many problems that affected the March 23, 1928 CHASTENlNG—My Son, dcsp‘ not. the chastening of the Lo neither be weary of his corrcctio For whom the Lolrd lovetll he c0 rcctcth: even as a father the s in whom he dcliglltctil.—Prov. li, 12. PRnYElt-May our cllastclllll THE SPARE MINUTE Oil, what will you do lvitiltl tion of it with lurid adjectives. ‘grade union nwvgplent by seeking to There was 1111011101‘ 0111150 101‘ 111°1callse division among the ranks of rise of thc inn in 133112101101- 11 W05 trade unionists and disruption of the one which was closely bound up Inlemntiovlnl movement. _ with int/er struggles. ultiiuawlv 8110- These httenlpts are meeting with ccssful, of the British commoner to failure‘ and no; only was the 1mm. escape froln the domination of lan- ded proprietors. Chaucer in the "Canterbury Tales" shows plainly what this was. It was the growing popularity of the idea of making pil- giimagcs. While the belligerent bu- rons and their unscrupulous retain- ers were off at tile crusades the or- dinary Englishman had an oppor- tunity to wander about visiting his 1 er, but the minority movementpas represented in the All-Canadian Congress was making no progress. 172,000 Organized Workers. 1 Figures issued by the Labor Dc- ipartmcnt would show the strength oi the llllltldlflllOilill movement in Call- natioilnl movement growing strongq interests; encourage thc spirit of enthusiasm and develop an attitude of loyalty that would help strength- en the trade union movement, and thus bring ‘HD0111. progressive re- forms. From n handful of men tllis move- lilellt hud begun 100 years ago, until today 72,000,000 workers are enrolled under Labor's banner. Let us be worthy of those early pioneers, keep cur feet on the ground, and help in making a better world for the pre- lsent and future generations. MISS AGNES MacPIlAIL, M.l'.. lninutc to spare. The gay little, stray little nlilluie spare? ' That comesfrom the clfnle Oi old "Plenty-of-Tlnlc." With never a worry, and never care. Oh. what silall we do witll minute to spare? The dear little. queer little minu to spare. Who's only content. so long as he's spent. No mutter however. whenever. ~ fralnillg fronl thieving because thon- is nothing to steal. Under existing oll - culnstances neither conditioll is cvcn thlnkablc. While the Fcdcrul Gov- omment is importing and sanction- ing manufacture of liquor and while it can be manufactured on thc kitchen stove, liquor, will be avail- Vnble to all who want it, and there will always be those who want it. Tile inconsistency and sham of the whole business lies in the fact that the great majority of its present supporters know this and practice the opposite oi what they preach. On the assumption that Govern- ment Control would afford an op- portunity to obtain more liquor. our pseudo-prohibltionists orate lugubri- ously on the sorrows of the drunk- ard‘s broken-hearted wife and chil- dren, forgetting that, under prohi- bition. all the drunken husbands and sons can get all the liquor they wont. if not legally, then through the bootloggers. It is true many of the latter are in Jail. but according “to the police court records it is evi- dent that the business is still carried on at the old stand. What we need at present more than lnythlng else is consistency and honesty. —-———-{-O}—-—-——- WIIY PROTECTION. DURING the eleven months ending Much 29. the favorable trade balance of Gonna: fell from i220,- 271071 t0 11823031181. The drop in exports o! domestic products dur- ‘K111i! to follow lifter other gods itllfl "Ollll! of the results arc the reduc- , v ‘Lion ill our favorable balance 1 of lions is reduced by MI‘. R. l3. Bl-ll- nctlis infer statclllelli. to Zifl nlilliulls, during six years pastwn lllcrc bagu- tcllo colllpiirctl with the cllurlllolls i ltrude, the exilc to foreign countries ‘of Canadian mcn and \V()lll(‘H in hundreds of thousands. 1 One of the Fielding fiscal planks was tariff stability. Ill tlris he fol- lowed the National Policy instituted by Sir John A. Macdonald and the Conservative party has never de- viated from it. Tariff tinkering with a Tariff Advisory Board as an ex- cuse to place the blame upon is tho policy of the King Liberals. The, country is now thoroughly awake to‘ the tinkering and duplicity which. regardless of the interests of the coulltry is seeking by compromise here and compromise there to keep itself in ofilce. _{§<-0>——— EDITORIAL NOTES Spring has been most agreeably ushered in. We may now hope that it will not recoil. "I know the members of the leg- islature have a well decorated house to talk in," said a bright little boy. "but I don't know whose money dc- corated it." ._ __..-.@ Easy is the descent of the Patriot to Lake Avernus, but to retrace its steps will indeed be a task. Let our tulall. Wllltt could be a more urgent, llecd than the rodulztioll of Cilllil-i dais public debt? And yet it has] not been perccptibly reduced, nl-l though lnally hundreds of thousands; oi‘ dollars have been squandered on a host of new and increased official salaries of unprecedented lllagrli-, tudc. on newly created embassies at: foreign courts. on loans to harbor} commissions on which neither prim} cipal nor interest will ever be rc-i paid, and millions squandered un-, lder an immigration system tllathlls failed to increase the country's pop- ulation. These are a few only of the many ways in which reckless ex- travagancc and waste are going on at Ottawa. - It is a dull day at Ottawa when ten to fifteen millions are not paid‘ out and commitments made that will call for millions more next year. There and here in Charlottetown we have “two Governments in line" to whom the word economy is a mean- ingless noun of seven letters. They work in line, only for political ends and not otherwise. The Federal es- timates show nothing toward re- moving the contempt" ‘e_ narrow gauge in King's and Queen's coun- ties, or for providing adequate Car Ferry service at the Capes. Shall we call this result of the joint pull of the two Governments economy, or parsimony? To construe it as generosity would be to recall what a farmeqsnid of his hay crop in a dry season. He said. "My grass isshort, but it's thin." " y bccll washed 'l'lll- \Vil1l‘l‘ ill which b('ui' lllls is an cxczrlltrllf. whiz: trczttlllcill for plants, and especially for rosvs and geralliulns. Frying Meat Wllcll frying nleat, the grease or lard lll which it is fried should be hot before putting the mcllt in, that thc meat may be seared and the juices retained. &~1-#»————— enooovoo-oooooo-ooooowo-w i DAILY LESSONS m ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon QOO§OQfiOQ’-OO§O40-QOO@OOQ: WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say "lt was a very bad ac- cident." Say "very serious accid- ent." H . O F T E N MISPRONOUNCED: jowl; ow as in “bowl," or as in "how." OFTEN MISSPELLED: mal; s. not z. SYNONYMS: abstinence, abstem- iousness, continence, moderation, sobriety, temperance. WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours.“ Let us increase our vocabulary by mas- tering one word each day. Today's word: SUGGESTTVENESS; sug- gestion; hlnt; insinuation. “His words bore a strange suggestive- ness." baptis- to understand what it means. It may be denied, but the implication is manifest, as I must be either a hypocrite at heart, or be associated with hypocrites if the statement has any meaning." Mr. MacLeod is mistaken. ' Our statement has a plain meaning and lt is neither an open nor a covert charlie of hyDocrlsy tgslmt Mr. ado. The trades and Labor Coll- grcss roilrvscntcrl thc interests of own hollle shrines. such as Glaston- bury. Cantcrbuy. Bury St. Edlnunds l ()'l"I‘AW/\. where. I We'd better take care of that llli Q while he was away, whether for debt readers Judge for themselves froln the following 1m of Patriot polltfcall T110 110111001"! A- A- ""14" “m”, iagaln, and he has a grievance ag- _ _ 'afnst the writer of these notes. l-le Hon. David Laird Jag that period exceeded 015.000.1100, vlhflollho rise in imports amounted ; to more than ‘Then ls i5 . I i». . . . #1. . L.'s.'.".£.'-: gifts.-.“ 1 41s.»... lquotes what we sold about scriptural Mn Henry awson geferences to hypocrisy glad deceit. Sir 1.0il1§ Ii. l vs. 3°“ 5°" °" 1” “YT M" n“ J‘ "uh "if this is not o covert charge of .\Ilr_ l.. I'_ Tilntnn. 1119001113" 1111001011 iflflmmlf- ‘1 11111 ~ . b HLL-Asu-‘Ixl. ma.L....._..;L.i3s=£.lx=»>»---»-w-==»=Ihw- " - . MacLeod. However much we may differ from him in our views in re- gard to prohibition, we had always regarded him as sincere in his ad- vocacy of that measure. ~ ~10} -- - Life ls often but a dream to a Onvyhls coma aw wqliuvqhlm up‘. young man u til experience trends‘ and Durham whcre relics of St. Cll- thbcrt lmd the Vcllcrublo Bede were lodged. These piigrllllnges gnvc the ordinary stay-at-llolne Britisher all excuse for wandering nbolltund scr- ing tile country also, as Chaucer suggests, giving hinl an opportunity to satisfy his Wanderlust. There were many considerations which‘ made tile business of being a pil-I grim seem tcnlpting. In the firs-v pllice no pilgrim could have any le- gal proceedings taken against hhn or any other cause. Then it was widely known that even highway- mcn respected the’ property and person of travelers on the way to a holy shrine. There were cases of robbery in which the stolen goods were returned after discovery of the Voyager's errand by the robber. Pil- grimages, as an English writer has said, "instilled into the heart of tile people that roving, restless spirit which made the Englishman the most successful colonizer the world has ever known." The people of Britain remembered their last Eng- lish king even ullder the yoke of foreign domination which had come lupon- them. Edward the Confessors tomb in Westminster Abbey became the object of innumerable pilgrim- ages and Canterbury, where St. Thomas. the first commoner who dared to contest the power of the king. was martyred, became tile mecca for more than one-tenth of the population in England in a sin- gle year. The,merchant who was in debt could escape under the holy pretext 01 11 9118111111180. the workman who 111141 srown weary of his job couldi use his pilgrim Wanderlust as a pre-| text for running to some neighbor-i mg town in search of n. new mast- er. From morn till night along the great Roman roads a curious pro- cession took its way. Never at any time were there sur. flcient nccomodations along the pl]. grim’: routes to take care of’ these hordes at nightfall. The landed gentry did not regard with any fa- vor thia evidence of restlessness am- ong the common people and conse- quently gave the pilgrims no wel- come at mnnoriol inns. The monas- try inn would have elcomed them had there been sufliclent room. Ae- cordingly it became necessary to found a new type of wayside acco- modatfon. This was the Hospice. a cross between an inn and l chlrit- ' able shelter where pilgrlml wan m- l72,000 organized workers. undthcrc had been llll lllCffiltfifl of 11.000 dur- ing thc past your. lllllllll‘ Legislation lll (liscussillg tile legislative lic- tivitics of Labor, he deplored thc fact thatQuebec had failed to adopt a progressive Compensation law. The Conlpcnslltion Acts of Ontario and other provinces hnd been recog- nized as models of ideals state in- surance. In Ontario amendments would be made to the Compensation Act that would improve it and make it of greater benefit to the workers. Mr. Bruce showed that the de- mands of Labor are not unreason- able. This has been proved in many cases where employers had at first peclally catered to. Many English inns of today have had their origin in hospices although their names may have become unrecognizable like that of the Ostrich at Coin- brook. which is a corruption of the word hospice. Still another kind of inn is that which has had its origin in thc needs of sonle craft guild of the middle ages for a meeting place. There are today among English hcstelries many names which sug- gest guild origins such as St. Cris- pin's the patron saint of the shoe- makers. The Holy Blaise. after the patron saint of the weavers, or the Carpenter's Arms. From these remote origins have come the inns which give to travel over the English countryside its pg- culiorly mellow atmosphere. The counties of Surrey and Sugsex and Kent, in the immediate neighbor- hood of London, are rich in ancient monastic and manorlal inns and the explorer in search of medieval at- mosphere will flnd it in their pic- turesque byways. It is often pog- siblc. so closely are they pfl¢ked w. gether. to sleep in one, have lung]; in mother. tea at a third. dinner, at a fourth and spend the next», night in still another. To rind themi you must be persistent and inquire from village to village. But you will be well rewarded and you will touch the heart of English history.‘ and live more, closely than in any other way to the charm and roman- ce of the we! that la gone and bur- led all too deeply under the veneer 0L buts and. futility which t» mod em civilization. , _ ' lll her spcccll oll the Budget. the one wonlan lll(‘lllb(.‘l' ul‘ the House scored her greatest parllalncntllry triumph. The Ottawa Journal offer- cd her this tribute: . But these defects forgotten, nnd the manner of delivery only consid- ered. the speech was an excellent one; lmssionatc enough to show sin- cerity: witty beyond the capacity of nlost males ill the House; satirical enough to delight a Lloyd George. "Miss MacPhall has captured the best parliamentary manller. It isn manner, unfortunately, not much prevalent here. but it. is a manner that would go at Westminster. The old pompous rhetoric has gone out of date. anditis the master of tile light touch and the deft stroke that is now supreme. . "Miss MacPhail has captured the latter gift to an extraordinary and surprising degree. and whether one agrees with her or not, one cannot but salute her for her skill, That, indeed, is what Parliament did for hcr on Tuesday, as for forty minutes Grit and Tory remained glued to their seats. alternatively amused, irritated and chastised by the flush of her eloquence." lite to spare. The wee little. free little minute spare. And never refuse That nlillufc to use; It always is ready some burden l boar. ~~~---<o>-—~j 0O ¥NO4OO~I§OOOOO~OOOOO9I O Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE o-ooooeowooeovoww“ Q. What should be done when young man makes a. first call Dli young woman? A. I-le should be presented to i girl's mother. and if’ 111° l1 chooses. to other members 01 1 family. Q. How should a woman. W11 marital condition» is unknown. ' addressed in writing? A. “Del-t Madam." Q. At’ what time should a sm evening dance begin? A. At nine or nine-thirty. The fool sometimes gets the best of a. wise man in an auto trade. l-lOUSE CLEANING . TIME ' What you'll 1mm and vile" to gel it. -Oheck 11118111 ' J --Smokoy City Cleaner q-Glllllllb.‘ ivuptlwl -sna-ifluh l -Llqultl'VQnocr -cgrpfl_wllh --AI|lfl\0Il|I -Boru ..rmnll nui- .-eaat|l_o loll! .,_, Pg] an other film‘ ~- "mimiw olfllllll- Money will buy, almost ‘anything from '0. wood toothpick to another man's opinion. If a rich man is stingy people say he has his generous impulses under perfect control. ;/ “ll f l,“ '. "I l Macs nation-one ' iogoihl 000110 91"“ :1- HW '1'? ppm PM!!! - Attontlop- v ‘bill More». ~.- _ _'