. "'1' A" ENGLISH QFATIOMAN 1-5“; WHAT GREAT BRI- TAIN l8 DOINQ Us, SAV- ING ' ,- A habit Dominion: have not learned. ~ l r» "’ ‘t y'all‘ . \ , . (Historians) Hero in Canodr-whero the m‘): material is yet abundant the ‘I19: _ _ o; mg Bowing Habit lo not,so r I my enforced as _.it iii-in Countliy. All Canadisnof M" o‘ m do so ‘u’ “ u”, u re “un- work or u“ jun!“ ll b iron the manufactured isto (a M: n and "member “atop will‘: filial!“ n“, pili up a , ~ ‘ t miitttbtt. ‘filament? sltljvgnv]; r313; fllllll Y ‘ ' °“"’°"° °' m“ u‘ riIIsWIlFlaIt liipdw qgonshflllléragtoamgguvbm’ ‘Wm | 0W .' '- ' have me mews “ttliimdtyxofh are’ o! course’ Drip thtgre is no unravelled‘ so “flu about them Krenaneettlfgsusyhorll-rylie; are and ha“; in r88 been different. Thilifllilavagnglailzf lgilltafhétygfinelllgwfng consplcul s: t °““.“°°f.i'.ii'.i.“.iif i“"""i'l‘tlfiil“'iil§ll.° 211p parts 0f tho mpor procure the 111M191‘ “em but also to providga lotzlllslllvuflflaurflm an at izipltfzycarlfrying the raw‘ lil-aferliats '° m“ “Mi.” $35,311? i??? i‘; we- . i _ ». . gall? all-Be at grips with thsiabouritig people. Their system C8118 m; ‘mg: book-keeping than-Midi hi‘! 8 ' mmion, hence it is harder to show the workingmen over there how the profits are distributed. Under modern legislation the re- lations of the landlord and tenant have ‘become greatly improved so that "there is less trouble than for: inerly between them, and today England is avast producer of 88' ricultural produce, and many of tho farming class are reckoned amons the capitalists, -whose interest d0 not cohere with those who spend their earnings or returns in folly- On this point IHOH. '.Mr. Runcinlan. one of tiling-land's really great statesmen has lately WWW" much light. He calculates that there are at least 15,000,000 small investors in ‘Great: lBritain, most or them wage-earners or members of wage- earning households. Their iIIVQBF ments are unostly made ‘in (be IPOBl Office Savings GI-iankh n ‘filjxlllili Certificates, in vern » 's oc . in lire insurance societies, building societies and other provident insti- tutiotis. ‘lir. Runciman quotes official U8- ures to the effect that the total amount of capital now <owned"_by small gnveastors 1s dzomre in? '02‘: 1,776.0 0,0 0 poun . -wen y ye , , poun s. - u ' lowance has been made after the ni- temtlo i the value , one?- those flguxl-es mean that tbs? small in vectors now owns several lmndjod millions more capital than they did tiff’; fig‘ fmftig ‘Iii ’ tional loss of capital from which greatest o! all industrial problems, is the conflict between Capital and, unborn-g’ 11p to g point this conflict in excusable. 0n dividing the pro-- - segue: industry it i.| natural that} lance or ma at till Qlllense bf those who sup- whlk 8m" men supported him on the right and lcft, and stalwart and conspicuous men of note filled the front benches‘ op- those ‘who contribute the labour should wish to enlarge their share ply thqcapitlli ‘and, vice verso. , “But it i; donbtml whether one in "a thonllnd of these prudent in- -v _ _. liae that while saving money r his own personal adlvan. tags he b simultaneously doling a, good, vice ‘t0 other people by in- crelsi the supply of capital, and thus helping to linanoe industry Jana to raise wages. " ‘ilmm e nrosreas towards in- dam-fat ipeacifwouid be made if this fundamentally important tact were generally understood. {it would help to that understanding if wage. earners, in ‘addition to investing in Government securities and provid- ent. sociétiea. also acquired the ha- bltoi’ putting some of their sav~ ings" into good. industrial invest- nients. In the lUnited States many big industrial concerns make s, prac- tice of inviting their employees to buy shares in the capital of the company that employs them, and at once a new spirit in industry is developed. lLabour and Capital then work together- t-o secure a higher product, instead of quay- relling over the division of a small- er one. . lif there is to ibe a real and ex- tensive improvement in the condi- tion oi’ the wage-earning classes it must come from the increased er. ficienc ‘both of labour and Capi- f; T at can only be secured i! "hour and iCapital are working in harmony instead of in hostility. and, iboardly speaking. they will not work in harmony until the wltialgtefarner becomes also a capit- a s .' We have no statistics of the number of employees in the United States who have invested their Sav- insa in the Company that they are share holders in, but it is prdbable that there are a very large nutm- ber, as the country is very large and the industries in proportion to its size. This ls- how IProtection Ibe- came so popular in the United States. Their manufacturing me- thods are run on the principle of one man earning double wages. 'Be all this as it may it is evident that a large percentage of work- ingmeal in ‘English-speaking coun- tries are also doing some sound thinking. This augurs well for their success and the peace of the world. That. is, ii they halve ‘a voice in the companies and use it against becoming "Quakers." tit does not seem that we Can- adians nre giving the measures of arttention to industrial ptoiblctms that the country needs for its in- dllfltrifll fiXimllsion and success. lint the time is not far distant when the country will notlbeableto live on agriculture alone. The grow. ing competition of‘ other grain growing muntrles i5 a factor in. our affairs that requires careful ot- tention. The habit of saving should also be cultivated. Q we are now qlflerinl. But much, _ ' more is ‘involved tblli this. Thai ‘ ~ ~---=-Y1w~Jb-uustmqgw "-' ;. s:'i{.'i"sl':t[i.ii p ». :l,,,iil| o iv: ILI. . .\‘t. 1-1., l ozwmrrw, . .I (lConpnued from page 4) n - P ‘ad Challtfflged attention from their oddity and grotesqueappear- nner-among them all Sir john looming large as a king, posite. Cnnadals rigdtrue that in both journalism and politics the bigger f _ P uccs smallcrmen? We would all be reluctant to con- ess lt were it true, and it IS not true; butthere was undoubtedly a lafge!‘ share of Canada's rcally great men Lin the first Federal Parliament than are in that body today. iVe have multiplied our 57°31 railway men, our mine owners, our cotton kings, our coal barons, our steel magnates, our captains of industry and merchant Pmmest m" 133mm medicine nabobs, our bankers, financiers, in- mrance "Villagers. land speculators, our charter-mongers and con- tractors, and these callings have absorbed a host of out; shrcwdcst and ablcst men. At Confederation, stafcraft was viewed as our Bfeilteit Calling, and though Ministers served annually for $5,000 and Members and Senators for $600, a seatfiin the Commons or Senate counted for more, relatively, than they do today, and at- gilcfcd nrcu 0f foremost ability, as they do not always now. "Slims ls at present bigger than politics and millionaires arc. ml-lluillYlng in tllc land. Who was there in all Canada whose pri- vate fortune was expressed in seven figures in i867? ‘ S0 thcrc were great men and new men, and great and new questions as well, to furnish subjects for ‘the pens of the gallery scribes and thc editors at home in those days. "There were three ‘general elections in the first seven-year period, secession rampant miNoya Scotia and rebellion in the Northwest, occasional Fenian ‘raids, the pilrcliasc of the vast Hudson's Bay Territory, the carv- ing out of thc first new Province therein, the. bringing in of Brit- ish Columbia and Prince lidtvard Island, the binding together of the whole fabric u-itli bands of stccl by the Intcrcolottial and the C Canadian Pacific railways, the organization of the federal scr- vlccs, the lmlkiilg of one (fztllzltiiail tariff to replace the differing provincial schedules, the zlbolitioil of dual representation, the bringing in 0f the ballot, thc settling of the serious quarrels with our neighbors to thc south. (Iver these and other great questions our statesmen tlcbatcd and deliberated as serious men who were conscious that they were laying the foundations of a ‘great State. And their ability and earnestness lent at dignity to Parliament WhlCfi it scarcely possesses today, There ivas, on the other hand, a strong note of provincialism among the members from the different Provinces, which made it difiicillt to fuse the various elements that were brought together, and even to enforce party discipline. This cropped up strongly when the first tariff was brought in and sent some of the New Brunswick supporters of the Government almost into revolt. That n bread-tax and further taxes on our \Vtcst India trade would be imposed by the Catiztdiatts if once they got us in their power, had been zealously proclaimed by all the anti-Confederates in the Mari- time Provinces nnd as earnestly denied by those who supported the Union movement. To the dismay of the Maritime Unionists, a duty 0n flour and increased diltics on sugar and molasses was now proposed. "Fhcy were loud in their protests. Ilow could they justify such an outrage to their constittlcnts? And yct, al- most bcforc they could realize it, the odious faxes wcrc being rail- roadcd through the fiousc in concurrence on the report of the Committee of Ways and hlcans. Charles Fisher, zt forntcr Pro- ',"'l"'t"'"lfi"'l".'le ,. .5“ rimfiyrhi ‘Prince Edward Island meinbersare t0- _ in insisting that tflc union compact should be carried’ outvto the‘ lcttcr at whatever cost. None the less their complaints were a weariness to the House. That fact affordcdno proper justifica- tion for. Cheval accompanying Mr. Bunstefls robust, if rather of the mmlth organ and the ]ew's harp. Mr. Bunstcr was in some measure justified in resorting to summary proceedings, an-l would no doubt have got even with his adversary had not the door disjointed. eloquence persistently, night after night, with the music a of the locked room been, and the little Quebec man rescued just at thc momcnt when lr: was able to bear away as a trophy a tuft of black" beard torn OQOOO-OO _ God forever and ever: he will be 0 -i8 1 Mighty, Thou art God nlonc and we trust in Thee. Beauteous emblem of Spring. Born ‘neath an April sky. Far o'er the hills you sing, First of the wilderness flowers ' Bravoly you blossom forth, Nurtured by warm spring showers, ‘Ushering in the birth Of the springtime that comes when 0st inopportunely for llim, broken (‘Continued on page 7) ' ’“ -40- you bloom. But why so early in Mo)’ Do you wither and die. Andvyour pintk bildli B0 Hay Dally, Selections ' FOR Guardian Readers summa, sky? my 1s. 1921 UUIl.CONli\ESSION:--(}0d it out The fublic Forum This column is open for the discussion by correspondents o1 questions of interest. The Charlottetown Guardian docs not necessarily endorse the opinions of correspondents. ur guide even unto death. Psalm : 4, PRAYER4~0 God, Merciful and TO A MAYFLOWER ‘ i Winter's past, it is spring, here clear in the third and last state] z::_"gk*g._ 0,. ,. u) i... ../ Zuni-Hull 1...... to... drunks! lg. Hm 1- mam or Liberal policy. Mr-s 70",,“ ' .1..,-_ s»; in} niulwnvshnrulr. it... nu lam-Bub Saunders, and those by whom on principle; they only want get into office and power. er they are in office anti prohibition is found "filnworkable," then the ‘mlrtho question of arinir not for harsh winds from the north. Hardiest flower 0t‘ the earth, itil- your scented perfilme, erned by the nlajorlty. That, will be noted, is precisely w “ “a. \_\*i\\"\§i$_Q/§ Ilrop their heads ‘heath the brisll! —Carl r. wctmorc. O-O-OOOO 0-0‘ roooo-e-i MR. SAUNDERS’ THIRD PARTY,‘ Slr,--One fact ‘has been made is advised, are not prohibitionistsl.____ If. flfl- 'l‘lley will llolli n plebiscite. D0\\'0l'. majority ot" tlit- electors should en . l0 b9 fil-illWlorse their policy. they will enact y will suir‘ it inlo law and prmrcetl to cilfurve “governmeliiii it, ycontrol" to the people and be gov-i hat illvi Sil.‘\\'ill‘l will present government is about to do. imtkt» in, IF you get any sudden cut, bruise, burn or such like, apply a remedy known for its great soothing and antl- septic powers. Heal it with Zam-Buki In case of pimplce,rash_or suspicion oi eczema, psoriasis or ringworm, or other stubborn trouble. Heal it to-day with Zam-Buki - 5. Skin health and Zam-Buk go to- gether. Whenever your akin worries you, Zam-Buk will prove a kindly, soothing friend. This great herbal balm is the most widely-used remedy in the world. Every home needs lt. "' My flllllly‘ liiVF long 'l-'or lmlinu. 1m Hui ngarded Za|u~Buk at tho is lb: fllltii thing I kilo» one iuir reulady fur nun. it nrsd m: from blend atiildi, burnt, and other poison. nlv childun from injuries. zlsomirenliurlit scaipdiazaie. and heats-i ofsktnsurnaniletiumom my husband's’ badly t ' illfliplflttdld Woaluaya crushed hspd. lain-Pub keep a box of 7am link ii priceless. Mrmhlllers. lmtdy MI: Mam» i.\n|- fsiadiccns 5L. Montreal. net. Bayard. fink Always Soot/ling] J Sat? for I/le Skin l i FOR IRII IAMPLI BOX 00nd nultnl he’ Mancini! Snap a» but): tun! fmltf. u.» “n. tu ilw people‘(itivorltlllvlti (‘mlirnl it‘ at later. l0 They will appeal two wars I tint, Sir. vtC. A WATCHER. --—--~»—-<-0§----_- it’ the mnjoriLv prefer‘ to nlain- The grutidstnl of tile man who ‘liilll a law which its defenders ail-blew out tlw. gas now starts the nu- it,mit to be impracticable, Premicnlolndbilc engine with the car in a gu out oi‘ office ulttlvl-"st-ti l1£ll'flK(’.*_-'B()§l()l] ‘Pranscript. u-uy fur .\lr. Stluiltlcrs and Model 4-3 . $115 or with , Electric Drive $160 twenty years ago. _ "It 000k Y0" ion minutes tosny “So for as the habit of saving sopd-night to Boxer." spreads among wage-earner: it will ‘ Yes. much adieu about nothing." ‘M?’ _ I Mrs Howard Fallis ONE OF THE QUTSTANDING WOMEN SPEAKERS 0F CANADA Will Address Meetings In Prince Edward Island at the Following P and mm in the interest of micr and Attomry-Ccncral, sccomlcd by his brothcr-in-laug Charles Connell, hastily scrawled an nmemltilcilt to rcfcr back to tlic com- mittee with instructions to strike out thc duty ou~ flour and rctlucc the duties on icn, sugar, tnolnsscs “and several other articles.” That was all lic had time to write before ‘flit evil would be coll- summnted. In an instant illc ycns and tiny; were called. "Charles Fisher and ‘scvcral other mcnlbcrs’ will stand tip," sneercd Sir- John, with mocking rcfcrctlcc to Fisher's loosely worded resolu- tion, Some very angry New Brunswick nlemtbers rose t0 their feet, with others from Nova Scotia, only to be outvoted by a laugh- ing House. Thereafter thcrc was a duty on flour, much more irritating than burdensome to the people of the east, and it did not lessen the irritation when the gossip of thc lobbies and smok- ing-room repeated other sarcastic references of Sir John t0 llw “two Charlies." » The bread-tax, as it was called, long remained a. sore subject in the east, but the incident serves chiefly to show something of the sectional feeling of the time and also as illustrating Sir johrfs method of imparting a lesson in discipline. He was always qulfc intolerant of any independent nctioitt among his followers. The newspapers of the sntallcr Provinces in their then brief and some- times prejudiced reports of the proceedings in Parliament, sel- donl failed to record even a trivial matter such as that just mcn- tioned, and these had their cffcct upon the public mind. It waS not long till Mr. Fisher accepted an offered judégshtp, and Mr. Connell gravitated to the Opposition. T he IVIaritlme people were quite provincial yet, and it \\'.'lS not pleasant reading for them that their public men should be. cvell at infrfllllfim mtefvalfffdlclfled across the floor, either from tho Ministerial or the Opposition side. Hence, when Alexander Illackcnzie rctorted to ‘Tllley that “the honorable gcntlematfs logic was as bad as hi5 grammar’ f“ when D'Arcy McGee infiltrated that Mr, Anglin “satltherc, not on a Sea,’ but on a three-legged lie," the effect on the eastern tmfld was far more inflating than if the words had been applied by men of the tame Province to one another. In not a few cases tile men of the east and the west, like boys at school, formed tlictr first acquaintance by nrt exchange ofmetaphorical ltard knocks, only to become fast friends thereafter. . - _ ... 'It happened once or twice in those early d3)“ ‘hat a ‘PW’ pa?“ man agteiiding Parliament was assaulted. by an sggrwvfid i t ~ member whom the scribe had caricaturcd OIQIIIIICIZQd with undue severity ' And mny more were from time to time threatened l.‘~;i.';-_{: I. laces rigmal Batty and lDQweT/ A _ are sustained in Orthophonic Victrola music due to the principle of matched impedance or “smooth flow of sound". MUSIC with tho new Orthophonic Victrola Improved Temperance Legislation m. ers-watnriluoaasy, my 16th, a ‘P. m. . m. itch-sear, Tuesday. May 11m, a P. m. wmetos itAiLL, Wednesday, Msyihth, a w. m. summsaeins, rgionssmtasy 1am, 82F. m. s1". nus/unions, Friday, my 20in, a s. M. swmuo VALI-EYHSatut-dsy. my 2m, a P. m. Atssgn-rouliliiiiiruiy; may 2am, a ‘P. m. otzanv, Tuesday, my 24m, a p .m. TltlN-IQH. Wednesday, May 25th, ll P. M. .'\ Everybody Invited to Hear This Gifted u Woman Speaker patience and skill to glue you the remark- able result embodied in the application of matched impedahcc, the newly applied principle of "smooth flow of sound" . . . as found in the licw Orthophonir: Victrola. This principle is Victor controlled. is so real . . . that you lose yourself in its reality. Full bass . . .clear trc- ble . . . natural volume, round and mellow. You listen . . . you absorb . . . you praise the performance . . . you call for encores; and you can imagine you see the artist bowing in acknowledgment after his masterful ren- dition of each selection. y It takes a wonderful instrument to make on impression like that. It requires research, 5M)“: omouno of Particular Importance to Every Woman Voter. Mfl- Fllllo Will Broadcast ‘divert Address iFrom Station C. FAG. Y. ; Qhnrlotutow» on n- cysntni, May m» at a O'clock. .1 Ne». -,, »; v.» Temneranvsil Alliance To hear this instrument of miracles, is w fall in love with if . . . to want it at once. Possession of any of the exquisitely designed ' models is easy, on convenient terms, from all “i-iis Master's Voice" dealers. Prices are from $775 down to $115. Equipped with clectric motor to eliminate winding if you desire, at small additional cost. Demon- strations given always. ed but fortunately escaped unbruised. The most trying ordeal, “has in 50am _, _ . . . . - " ‘ and nalties that were never realized. In y _ . _ "l"- mlm" WNW-IT. or ' ti on torlnmo with wrpoteal Pam ltpfhere was no doubt considerable pr<>v°' a ‘ . Made 001V bYVICtOY "matwsttr or “News m" " n réwpmmes’ ‘h’ “°*"" m” °‘ '5'“ ~- h - ‘h . ~ ‘ Look for the Tr a u umou. with; ADDRIGUINLIOT ‘d: mntuonme cation an the gallery was able always to make swd v" fl’ I" t t ‘ o , a em" - ‘I'll: Auoptcscor rug 11"]: y, “Mimi m, m ' ' . . t of it so that m) mernlbers of the .4» ~~"‘"“*~~ -. - gown“, “LAND, M. mien,‘ km“. T“ rob encounter or m the accoun I _ _ _ h t‘ _ ,- ' LOWING DATED: ~ - ‘.- 0N ' - ‘ House had much to boast of. Iwas two or three tiniest rca n . _ . i a ‘Monday. my lat», it a e. "that, Jpvpcfiu“? cmr,o,,,,°v;n_ Tuesday, May flthfliomztti pfiiitjmqq-pbyflhy, ‘I’, m, Uillor data Ind piano wlllyfifllinngmi*_i=.uri.__ t m». vm‘ ‘ ' . ' - r- ~-"~~--~ Q. Trade Mark Refd and it was moreamusing than dangerous, was after having pub- lish“; a m“, m- lesg graphic account of thfc gilt bidwccneaflrzz; ster and Chcvai in Room I3. iflfldfllifill)’ T° °‘_' t° l" ‘f’ __ ,, _ number of these retrospective sketches.‘ British Columbtallgzltld a m" 6f Prince ldvvard Island upon the _ fi‘gp?raatiand very Nil 859131109 l" ZhQIWK ‘may which ‘wk Pl!“ l" m‘ m‘ a All n; |nw¢,,|“”'_i“.n;'§,,. mm” " ' “ ' ‘ l the terms of union, while the Pacific Railway was a bohe o _con tiles-lap, .1. __ ,‘__ _,, l jg y 1 f __ . tcrpion between opposing-parties. The lirlttsh Columbia numbers Victtjolac , Victor Talking Machine Company of Canada, Limited, Minimal I 1 r v ,, ./l