‘curator. FOUR THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . ‘Th: (lharlottotown Guardian IJlIh-UOL W. Ghetto! I. llcLurc. Vice-President, l. B. Burnett. I. l. I. i locrotuy. Lint-Uni. D. A, Ilolluol, D. l. 0. ldltor on longing Director. I. I. Burnett. F‘. J. l Auoolnta ‘dimers, Inlk Wllkor and D. l. Cnrrlc. dcllvcrcd. can rm your (In ndvcnco) mulled In old Unlhd Statel- TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 18. I836. Farmers’ Week an I being held in the capital during the week. The iod, by meetings of the Sheep Breeders’ Asso- ciatioir, the Co-operative Egg and Poultry Asso- ciation, the Swine Breeders‘ Association, the Horse Breeders’ Association and the Dairy- men’s Association. The exceptionally fine weather prevailing should enable the meetings to be attended in large numbers. Reports both of the addresses and the discussions -will be given in the press, and tliese will be followed with great interest throughout the Province. There is a real sense in which the expres- sion “farmers parliament" is applied to these annual farm meetings, as they represent a very large and progressive element in our agri- cultural life, whose interests are, or should be, of chief concern to our legislators. That their deliberations this year will be attended with pleasure and profit is the hope and expectation of all concerned. Nearer Home Than Moncton The Moncton newspapers are protesting about the lack of news available with regard to business transacted by theMoncton City Coun- cil. Our local contemporary cites this case in order to point the moral, “on general principles", that suppression of news of public concern nat- urally arouses suspicion, whether unfounded or otherwise. “What,” it asks, “is happening in Italy? Muzzling the press is a very dangerous practice and calculated in the end to do more harm to the muzzlers than the muzzled.” It cites also a press despatch revealing that in Ven- ezuela the government has been obliged to yield to the pressure of public opinion and remove press censorship. There is no reason to assume that the Char- lottetown City Council is in need of such warn- ing. But what about, our Liberal Provincial Gov- ernment? Since assuming office last summer it has followed a policy of secrecy unprecedented in political history. At the September special session, it will be recalled that the Hon‘ Mr. DENNIS, now Minister of Agriculture, made un- successful efforts to obtaindefinite information ‘as to why the Government wished to have bor- dollars. The information was refused, but the vote was put through nevertheless. k Again, a secret bond issue of half a million dollars was floated by the Government through an Upper Canadian syndicate, and the public have not yet been informed of the purpose of the issue, the amount of the bids, the names of those tendering, or the reason why tenders were not called in this Province and the issue adver- tised in the press for the benefit of the investing public. Then, too, there is the matter of the Gov- ernment's unexplained failure to be represented at the Ottawa conference of Dominion and Pro- vincial legal advisors in the matter of scrapping the British North America Act as an Imperial statute. Repeatedly challenged to explain why they are not standing behind the New Brunswick government in its fight for Maritime rights un- der the Constitution, Premier CAMPBELL, his colleagues and his party press, have had nothing whatever to say. The Government has also failed to explain why it is withholding from the municipalities of_ this Province, relief moneys which it was supposed to have obtained from Ottawa for the specific. purpose of lightening the municipal re- lief burdens. ' Again we suggest that the Premier read carefully the solemn warning issued by the Toronto Globe to his late predecessor, Mr. LEA, following the Liberal landslide at the polls: "lt will be his duty, if for no better reason than the future of his party and the democratic sys- tem, to see that every action of hi: Governmant is token in full view of the electorate, and that every piece of legislation i: clearly and reason- ably in the interests of the people o: a whole.” This is precisely what the Campbell Gov- crnment chooses not to do. Instead of worrying about the Moncton City Council, therefore, we suggest that our contemporary use what influ- ence it has to bring its party administration in this Province to a clearer realization of the danger to democracy which its persistent hole- and-corner policies have occasioned. An lgnoble Position Prime Minister Kmds amazing claim that by rcpudiating the Rrnprzu. proposal at Geneva . he saved Europe from war is receiving the com- mcnt it deserves in the press. Says the Mail irnd Empire; "Mr. KING must have been read- thc storyof the little Dutch boy whosaved . ‘ollmd lay-sticking his finger in a hole in the The fact [of the matter is that for a few clflfitllll reputation stood high throughout y been ‘ct Dr Rmmrufs action in .,_- m...- Ilornlu; Dolly (founded Ill!) 16.00 per you (In advance) T- . Charlottetown today extends a cordial wel- come to the representatives of the numerous farm organizations whose annual‘ meetings are opening meeting, that of the Central Farmers’ Institute, takes place this afternoon, and will be followed, during the three-day convention per- than his colleague's unhappy diplomatic blunder have dreamed of occupying. It is openly anti- ditions. It is most unfortunate, that in such a crisis, Mr. KING could not forget politics, could not dare to prove himself a real British- Canadian." Editorial Notes Welcome to the Farmers to their own capital. ' 9K it 3K rowing authority to the tune of three million, The “tearing down" of the Provincial Building internally by the CAMrnsLL-LEPAGE Government has landed the government and gov- ernment officials in a sorry mess. 9K it 3K Lest we forget that other‘ countries besides ourselves have relief problems to solve it may be pointed out that the number of unemployed ofl-lcial figures just issued reveal. Figures at the end of December, 1935, stood at 2,506,806. and at the end of January at 2,520,000. 9K 9K 5K KNox and BoRAn have definitely entered the contest for the Republican nomination; ROOSEVELT has made no official disclosure of his intentions regarding the Democrat nomination, though AL SMITH threatens to “take a walk”; Thomas, the head of the Socialists, prcsumes he will run again: meantime he has been arrested in New York for taking part in a strike. 9K 9k 9|? The lVindsor Daily Star asks what has be- come of the fellow who assured us that the Gulf stream had changedits course, and that old- fashioned winters were a thing of the past? We don’t know, but had the Gulf Stream come our way as alleged, we would have had the climate of the South of France. As it is, we are much bet- ter off thanithe p001‘ be-ivintercd inhabitants of the Border City, not to mention Manitoba and the Prairie Provinces. iii ih Reference _ w a s m a d e in ‘yesterday's GUARDIAN to the new King's beginnings in stamp collection, which recalls the fact that His BARTLETfs magnificent c o llc c t i o n. Major BARTLETT was an enthusiastic and outstanding devotee, and after his demise, Mrs. BARTLETT forwarded the greater part to the Prince, who at that time had no interest in the hobby, and in acknowledgement the Prince's Private Secre- tary stated His Royal Highness had handed it over to his Royal father to augment his collec- tion. Now the BARTLETT contribution again be- comes his possession- éli 3K Having failed in its endeavour to force rail- way amalgamation on the country and also in its campaign for coalition, the Montreal Star at- tempts to make our blood curdle with an “horri- fication" (to coin the only word suitable to the occasion) of the present condition and future prospects of this Canada of ours. The financial situation, Federal, Provincial and Civic is bad enough in all conscience without getting hysteri- cal over it. Our business is to “mind our pres- ent step," and to take all reasonable precaution to see that no one lacks the necessaries oflife in a land flowing with the milk and honey of exis- tence. Let us keep a “calm sough," and trust our respective governments to carry us through with public works and suchlike until Europe gets once more into her stride. Horripilation never ,helped anybody anywhere except to lunacy. 3K M 3K They're making butter in electric washing machines now in Perry, New York State, where the roads are buried beneath four feet of snow. Dairy farmers who cannot get their raw milk churn it into butter. Few farms in the vicinity possess the old-fashioned butter churn and most owners buy theiqbutter although they produce many gallons of milk a day. CLINTON F. SEY- which is being stored till the roads re-open. fi ti! fi C!‘ t0 Nazi » In‘ ulna-by Biron. musk: thing, even more regrettable and is certainito be more deeply resented in the countr at large, ' For the Prime Minister has not only repudiated Dr- RIoocLL,-he has actually gone on record against Great Britain's policy of oil sanctions, has boasted that Mr. LAroINTq statement frus- trated that policy, and has reiterated Mussounfs shallow propaganda that Britain's proposals at Geneva might, and probably would, if adopted, produce a general European warl ‘Such is the position in which Mr. KING has landed by at- tempting to defend what ‘he knows is indefen- sible. lt is the most ignoble position ever occu- pied by a Canadian Prime Minister with regard to a question affecting British foreign relations and ivell-established Imperial policy. It is a po- sition neither MACDONALD, TurrrzR, LAURIER, BORDEN, hlrzrcnsx nor BENNETT would ever British and repugnant to the best Canadian tra- in Germany increased by 13,194 this month, Majesty is the possessor of the late Major to market are utilizing the family washer to MOUR, a farmer near Oak Hill, solved the prob- lem. He scoured out the family washing machine, poured in a Ito-quart can of cream and turned on the electricity, In a short time he had a good- sized pat of fresh butter. Smmoun cranked the rural telephone and notified all of his neighbors of the discovery. Now the family wash in that section is piling up while the washing machines have their daily job of churning, the produce of The swastika, symbol of "light, life and glory"—and also of Nazi Germany-is no long- be used by Boy, Scouts in Great Britain and Dominions. An official‘ explains that a de- cision to remove the emblem from the “thanks" badge and the ‘medal of merit”. was due t_o_the Council's‘ desire to keep political and religious controversies out of the movement. The swas- . tika desigdfor these badges was chosen by Lord BAmm-Powstt, Chief Scout. 1°"! beforeJhe regime was introduced in Germany. Pres- . . .ent holders of the badges may exchange their i for the redesigned budge if they wish. ‘ .- Decision to-abanlioh, the‘ swastika recalls a simi- Notes By 11.. Way tbc various Insoluble problems that have been railed during tho week Is the old prob- lem, how to Ilnd a word that sug- zesta both the unIty and the equal- Ity of llbrglmd and Scotland arid that has the some emotional and imaginative significance as "m:- land" and "Enxllsh." Tbs score have been on the Warpath again and seem to think that, In justice to themselves, “Great. Brltaln"anp “Brltlslfl should be more frequent- ly used. Yet who, even apart from considerations of metre, could ser- iously write, “What. have I done for you, Great Britain. my Great Britain?" or “Who dies If Great, Britain lives?" "mgland" and ‘Scotland’ arc words that stir the imagination-the imagination, at least, of "Englishmen" and “Scots- men." “Great. Britain" 1s merely a prosaic and convenient description of the union of two Ienrarkable nations. "English literature" Isxme of the greatest ltteraturcs In the world: "British literature" one thinks how comparatively fcw genuine Britons there arc In Great Britain outside Wales, It ls clear that the word "British" Is an even more inaccurate misnomer for the combined races than "English." There are, I am sure, tar more Englishmen than Britons In Scot- land. Itself. Here, then, Is another problem-how to 5nd a really In- spiring word to describe the Eng- lish and the Scotch and the Welsh without offending the susceptibil- ltles of any of them. The problem seems to most peop‘e, including myself, fnsoluble.—Y.Y. ln New Statesman and Nation. Numerous queries about the present title of King Edward VIII as King of Canada have been re- ceived by The Star. When the ac- cesslon to the Throne of King Ed- ward VIII was proclaimed In Ot- tawa. this new title was added to the others-PSupI-eme Lord In and over the Dominion of Canada." Thus the provision of the Statute of Westminster (1931) that the King becomes the Sovereign not only of all his domtnlons. but of each one separately, comes Into operation for the first. time. By that statute the domlnions may approach their King direct without any statesmen In Britain knowing the reason for such an approach.- Montreal Star. A deapatch from Doom, Holland, the home of the exl‘ed Kaiser Wll- liam If or Germany, states Lhat he was greatly concerned over the death of his cousin, King George V of Britain, and well he might be. It. would be Interesting to know his thoughts as he medltated on the unprecedented ovations given to King George on his return to London from Windsor Cs tle after his long illness at his Silver Jub- flee, which called forth the loyalty and devotion of his subjects thrvvshoui the entire Common- wealth of British Nations, and the extraordinary manifestation of grief Iat his death as displayed In the 80f8eous and stately procession throughlLondon on the way to his burlel at. Windsor Castle. as well as at thousands of tervlces throughout the British nations overseas. He must have been a. lonely figure as he recalled the best, and remembered that he once bad In his porsesslon the crown and see-ptre of Imperial Ger- many. and was one of the‘ most ll- lustrlous personages at some of the historic pageants In London. Burc- ly he reflected bitterly on the stup- Idlty and" obstlnacy with which he and. his counsellors rejectetrthe overtures of the late King George and his foreign secretary, sir Ed- ward Grey, for peace. He engaged In a. gigantic Rumble with his acn- federate, the Emperor Francis Joseph, for world domlnlor. or downfall, and lost. one or the most exalted and powerful thfones In past ‘he assuredly has a lot. to think about, and his remorse, es- pecially u he viewed the end of poignant mdéeti-Brnnfiford Ex- posltor. Al l protest. against of goats In Ksltglmt ‘Temple during the four days of tbc great Hindu festival, Pmdlt Ramchlndru Barns started a fast In Calcutta. Hc de- clared that he would'not est again until the sacrifices were stopped. cncc In opinion In Bengal. some declaring that be should attend tb his own buafnus while others be- lieved the sacrifices were l. blot on the Hindu rellgolri and that Pan- dlt was laying down his llfc In a noble cause. At the end of a2 days o body of distinguished Bengalls persuaded hlm to glvc up the fut. and iced s campaign of edu- cation against the sacrifices. The Pcndlt llld be would start another fut at the end of the year If the pruotloc had not been stopped by bhflflr-Q. vu B. Bnldcr, Anhtcbnlc. Ind n slick little mystery on his hands for l. few minutes the other dcy. In- formed that the glue In the front door of his like cottage bad bccn smashed, supposedly by burglars, h, found upon crrfvcl not rclngla truck In the surrounding blanket of snow. As be entered thc cctts met-MIXING! t0 Filth D8118. sounds perfectly unreadable. Besides, when Europe. If he ever thinks of the King George's 111.0 must have been the nlsuzhtcr His not. has caused n. sharp dlffcr- you‘ cusps Solder csllcdo glautcrr-Olovcllfnd . lllhat 1MP at goat's Iv Jgjics-W. lgrtpn, THE IMPORTANCE .0!‘ THE LITTLE RED COR-PUSCLEB IN YOUR BLOOD Asthe little red cells of the blood pass in single file through the tiny blood vessels In the lungs, they ab- sorb the oxygen from the alr that ls In the lungs and give out to the air the wastes they have gathered up In their travels around the body. You can see that In order to sup- ply all the cells of the body with oxygen to enable them to keep working, there must be s. tremend- ous amount of oxygen gathered as they pass through the lungs It ls estimated that If all the red cells could be spread out, their surfaces (which absorb the oxygen from Re slr that is In the lungs) would DB about 80 yards square, more than half the area. or size of a large city block. Now Just how much oxygen each cell can take up or carry depends . upon how rlch l1; is in haemoglobin —t.lre red coloring matter In the blood cell. This color In turn de- pends upon the amount. of certain vital substances including iron that ls in the red corpuscle. If the llquld part of the blood without. the red corpuscles could carry the oxygen, the weight of the blood itself with this oxygen In It would weigh twice as much" as the weight of an average man, ' - One of the first symptoms of lack of oxygen due to thin blood ls get- ting out of breath and getting tlred easily. _ The point then Ls that you and I are only as well or as strong as the number and richness of the 151 corpuscles In our blood. If the nu...- ber of red. corpuscles is normal but the amount of haemoglobin ls low this is one form of anaemia (thin brood), and if the number of cor- puscles ls low and the haemoglobin rs also low, this ls another or more severe form. That Iron has been needed to en- rlch the amount of haemoglobin In the blood has been known rsr a long time. That some other substance (which prevents anaemia) was needed was known but the nature of this substance was discovered only a. few years ago by Drs. Minot. and Murphy of Boston. They found that cell's llver increased the num- ber of the red eorpuscles and also their richness and thus the preven. clon of pernicious anaemia, former- ly an incurable ailment, ls now pos- sible. Other organs-staunch and intestine-arts now used also. Bo now" you can ‘understand why your physician prescribes pills or capsules containing Iron or liver or liver extract when you are pale and run down. Survived In Canada (Exchange) An unexpected source or cvI- dence bearing upon certain aspects of European cultural development. has been brought to light 1n the study o1 Canadian Iolk songs by Marius Barbeau. It was 1on1 thought that E. GlgnOffs "awn. sons populalres du Canada." had exhausted local tradition; bu; m“. lng the I88! fifteen yerifi renewed search, with the assistance of a few. collaborators, has brought. to light 6,700 versions of songs from Quebec, the Marltlma Provtneeg and New England, where there are many immigrants from Canada. Of these songs 90 per cent. src French in origin and retain their traditional character, the remain- In: 10 per cent. being a purely Canadian pllldllct. The true 101k songs, forming the bulk of the rep- "Wfv. were introduced between I808 and 1678. Others, more recent, but In the true folk song vein, were brought In after I680 as marching and college songs by soldiers, priests and teachers. The truc folk songs came with the settler-a from Normandy and the bolrc Valley. ‘may do not be- long to the tr-ubado tradition, which l: aristocratic, but. are prob- ably o survival o’ the obscure lit- erary upheaval; frec from Latin Influence, which took place In the Intro Valley and t-bc north, and found , r expression. tn the tours. It inherited and conserv- ed the older traditions of the land. presumably as the heir of the an- cient Druids and the Celtic culture that bsd undergone a mutation, but 1nd not altogether ceased to cxfst. Although the jonglenrs bad died out. and there Is no reference to them In the New, wot-Io. these old folk cunts of Canada, more numerous and better preserved thin In mo“, thus represent Ill an- olcnt stratum of much lIt ‘uro never wholly submerged neo- Lnttn influences from the aoutls.__ the music had frls In his throat." -'I‘oronto Globe. Sbthtlm n Shins chow that 94.500 people were klllcd In household accidents dur- ing I084, s figure second only to that of tbs auto levy. The lup- pcsed safety of the borne I: op- pomntly a mlsnomcrr-Brcntfcrd mposftor. l DfDDIlS KIDNEY Pll..i..??.= Bln-m an cdltorlsl In your Imus or the utlryou lsk If the nsw In- cumbent In the ofllcc of Minister ...:-.'-...::-r: :.:'.=.,-':..,'§ _ _, mla|¢awn“flull:? not FOY R dGIICIOIIS cup y cndcrll tho ollll." v a of full flavoured tea M M Mr. Tea Poft Says, use BIIAIIMIII Orange Pokoe Tea of Agriculture Is llkcly to " "cranber-rlec’ when him for not doing that. But we are’ wonder-In; If he la likely to mention the government's "dark horse"; whlcb by the way we understand ls actually black. an up- standing animal with an enviable reputation an horses go, and a good auver rnent for "black horse." fectlve In Char two short period-s ed (1891 t0 1394i other r blblttons became neeessa y- But. the demand l n o Beyer ioowu becmienlilfillwnt- 9°“ he ,, before the farmer's conventions this 1; a ' mmqn gmllcl. conducts and I week. Probably we would forgive ygggscganumd u, b, ,1- newspaper correspondence u; m, lomwwn durlfll ti" already Imflllm“ and mo’: to r900). and resolutions for the Prohibi- Bale in Charlotte- crcdtt snddllscouraga law-that the Iround. may be out from llllder 1i, feet, and that of which lt wu a memorandum largely be lost. '11, however, does not. make It. any 1w worthy to fight for the law. May I re t a sentence or u, Bentley's 1e tar In the Issue o; m; m“? mo. "m; mlgbt m» wot by m. bo- Th° PM“: would m“ w know even find" the” Ben-h“ vIslflI obedience tolaw." uwewlll something about what the Mln- m , ‘m’ h“ °“ h“ mind" In lifttitfifkfilibbfllillitll" 1°" “m” filulliisfiuibchydfifii; Zmalmm; I am Sh’. etx-Nxlous pend (o pass a statubo (1898, esp. problem '--’-- ""‘°“.l'.“'°.li:.ll?.l.‘°.t ‘s; MouALs, sTuns, rrro. gal: 13ft,“ hm,‘ b, “ “n”, m. “T "WWI. tlon, to prohibit the sale of liquor In such block. 1111s also proved Insufllcéemt. and next year, 1900, the legisla. ure p88- scd the Prohibition Act 1900, the first Provincial Prohibition Act In |°1“..“'“" .3“ “‘i"“‘;'l°.§Zi;‘ l? amble of his letter fully sustains}! 1171i W158i’ 89° f? . mu statement. Can u. be. that m. i first. the Act only gpnlleéllewngm} his age and experience, he now lottetown. lnasmuc it; Sam Am wishes to bring back on us, the Ion Prohibition Act( f m m open bar, for, virtually this ls all was then In effect In ll o er pa _ government control means In Que- of the Province. bee and the other provinces wherc There were many reasons for It obtains? I llved In Quebec, and preferring the Provincial Act. to the know full well what I say Is true. nonunion Act. Ono of these was I would dearly like to reply at m9 right to amend the Act. when length to the Sengtorb letter, but m9 unruly splrlt of liquor-sellers 5PM!‘- Wm 11°15 Permll- Due f‘) i“ or other violators devised s. way to authorship, I read the Senators let- circumvent o, evade the 15w and ter over twIce. He admits that tn- {on “g purpow, u amendment; temperance ls u. very great evil and were to be made to the Domlnkm is also accompanied by other evils Ac, the whole o; Canada hm u, be greater than itself, buff-and‘ here wngulmd“ Puma Edward mud l” u“ “Y "t m‘ welkwlz" ma“ alone could amend its own Act. is perjury. can be name a statute Bu,’ new“, the mayhem M, that; has not resulted In perjury at Con“ apply elsewhere m“, m some time or another? In the vl1- Charlottetown l,‘ was neoéssuy Inge where l live, there are seven that the soot’, M, be Wm OUT Pfd"“'°,',f,f‘°§,§°Q}“f,,§‘,,§“w§§§ $3.0 in the other parts of tbc Province. o ero . - jured In connection vrlth a. prohlbl- ‘ilizlgtlzfilimggxdbqnlqx 1:21? tlon case- When they received their l" M m t v ta subpoenas, they met. to discuss the “We 6W" e!- ° empgm" ° t matter. They were advised to take 011 U166 01105810118 ti!!! "-5 the false oath by one who was al- AGAINST the 500"» 5° - ready perJuIed-havlng taken the Thereafter, the Provincial Pro- brlbery oath at an election-after hlbltlon Act became cflwflvfi handling the party rum. At the end throughout the Province. of the discussion, they had all de- In my next, I shall refer to some clded to take the false 0am, which or the plebiscite?! and rvpgxilngila on the liquor ques on w . ve they did. I would ask the Senator if the? Wm B!!! Wm men. when been held in the Province, In addi- Ihev Walked out from the v-esvnce tlon to those already referred to as o! the Mill-tire“.- thw when they held under the provisions of the left. their first place of meeting. A 5w"; Mp very great; authority sold: He that looketb on a woman to lust after her, hath ‘ e ‘ v. Would the Senator shut. up all our women from ous eyes? I referredabove to an election. Let me say that there ls more per- jury committed on election day In Print-e Edward Island than happens In ten years of prohibition trials. Dld c Senator ever exercise bim- self to have these laws abolished? I am. forced to think that the purpose of his letter ls to help along the legislation, which wlll be Intro- duced by tho Campbell Government at the coming session. Do the pub- lic know that last. November the Montreal breweries sent their fluent herc and the matter Is all cut and drled (or wetted)? The deal la this: We are to Bet two Perohewn Sin-To my very great sorrow, 1 have recently seen In The Guardian, a letter from Senator Hughes on the subject of Prohibition. Ho opens by saying: "Man ls a. rational being, but does not at alll times reason well." surely, the pre- TO KEEP A TRUE LENT Is this a fut to keep The larder lean, And elem lfi-om fat. of veal: and sheep? Ia it b0 quit. the dlsb Of flesh, yet Still To flll The platter high with tlsli? Is It to fast an hour, Or maid to go, . Or show A downcast look, and w... No; 'tis a fast, to dolc Thy sheaf of wheat. And meat. Unto the hungry soul. It is to fast from strife, From old debate And hate: To circumcise thy life. To show a heart grief-rent‘, To starve thy 51H. Not bln: , And that's m-keep thy Lent. —R0bel‘t, Herrick, (159l-l67Lf .._____---_- ._.BIJY shear steel butcher knives at Bruce's. L-951-2-l8-2l. ___.____--—-—- COLD ENOUGH IN INDIANA SOUTH BEND, Ind-Fmnkla Gaul. captain of Notrs Dame's baseball tea-m. 1B 311181166 will!!! the boys how cold It gets in his home town of Watervllle, Maine Walking a qusryer of a mile on the campus at South Bend the other day he froze both ears. I am. Sir. cw. w. s. BENTLEY. IDEA-S AND IDEALS BIL-An antl-prohlbltlonlst, "Cit- izen", In opening a. recent letter In the press said there are some things we cannot do without experiencing guilt, and we know what. those things are by looking Into our own hearts. Well, the book from which we l. "Citizen" _. “ reads In one place, “If meat make my brother to offend, I will est no meat ~ while the world stands, lest I make my brother to offend." I take It for granted that he would allow that to apply to drink also. If “0ltIzen“ can't. find in his heart that. which condemns hlm for the violation of that. exbortatlon; If he can advocate ' MAGS Pig Worm Powder A very eflccttvc Arentment for worm: In Pl!‘ ll"! "W" N“ In the time for treatment for stallions tn exchange for govern- dunk wuhout “Daphne,” ‘mm d d h, m°11l°°""'°1-°' n" M" “d "m- then 1 do not think he u worthy gym liletffflmnifln Amen. n m“ i“ mi 5 mmslm“ PM” °i to be heard as a. public educator of ' lmfimwihladuihwl’ ‘m’ mm‘? public opinion. And of course his mu’ ___" an man o our young peop e _ for Hind botrgmmthgao tell me who: gggnég; eyénfisgugexauutungt MACSrOWQTION ls. e Sena r a n. poor spur . _ He u not wllltns that the maturity onliginiieltiiraviiie m» him at nu "$.11: ‘,3’ ‘"3?’ ‘if should rule In this matter. We had word’ u “and m m‘ quotation S‘ n‘ c: h“. F" “oh the question submitted to us before 1mm Emergmk “The w,“ know {any coo o ‘W, and are ready for It again. We still lcn I88!- Illllliyllll "W B that foolish Icgililblon is a rope of sand that pert-shes In the twisting.” Exacr, and no law could be more foollsn than that which "Citizen" advocates. For, In his advocacy of It, It seeks to better social condi- tions In regard to the use of liquor by making It, easy and possible for more to be drunk. (Don't forget the experiences of the other eight provinces. What Ls black than cuff; be whltts here), You can't put out ftro by pouring oll, nor yet al- cohol orrft. Consequently "the state must lead, not follow thc citizen" who wants such a law, as “the state and u an cndfcntor 0f Wvfll" It h nu unfailing remedy. autos nnoon roon Ffll‘ Polo and Thin Pwvlr A combination Hindu", vnlublc In the treatment 0 Imus discuss where tllcll‘ origin In tremble to an In" povcrhhed condition of l!" blood. Ono pf the [rutcrt remedlfl In tho treatment of Rheum!- bavc a two-thirds majority who will not willingly sec boon lifted from its present very suitable environ- ment-swlll tubs of the wine, spare tires of dccrcplt automobiles-to spnrkllna ilasscs and furnished brass, " ‘ polished plate glass wtndows Woe to hlrn who putteth the bottle to his nelghbours ltpc. In conclusion, let me suggest, that If our children or: to be suhlectcd to this damnablc curse of frcc rum that the stallion be black as raven. bearing the nuns suggested by Id- than. gar Allen Poo, “Ashes of Hell." F" "W" Ibo hlvc Inst their I an, Blr, ctc., COUNTRY CONDITIONS IN UKABLOTII- TOWN Sin-It. hi! Already been stated must lead and not follow the char- acter of the cltllen" when It falls below the hlehest. standards of men. Wc would do well to rcod and In- wardly digest Mr. Bentley's strong and illuminating letters on how this state has been compelled to take npctllc Mlx Blood F005 “m prove the restorative- MACS uAm REsTOREB n will renal?" my ha" '° l" An cxccllosnifrbnlr food tonal‘! l prohibit the sale of liquor. All was frcocsjtlndbeculnthcpcrlod SD08 UNION that. the Scott Ant was voted out m‘, 15m during the put century up and Invigorating all d In Olnrlottcbown In 1891. Tberc- and more. “And those who bulld- Illnlll, blood vessels l? after, for c brtcf period, tbcrc wu on Ideas", quotes “Cltlunfi build norm of the M" "l" mu‘: no law In force In Charlottetown to for ‘ " ." Precisely mend, this producing n rlch I . my and when will building on thc ldca of "government sale“ u a temper- Qet you In eternity? abundant growth of hatr- Prcmotca new 8'0"“ “lmf the lulr lc falling and l! N In l. previous letter. Allin, t-hcro wls In town a Liquor-Sellers wftih Modcntlonlata tbcrcdlntlrcllnflodlm‘ prlor to I718, which was referred to Charlotte-i ' Pun and their Irtmdsfrcctobuyllnuororlesvc fmctndrlnktnmodcrntc What will It mean In eternity f who thousands who cannot withstand the tornptutlons plnoed before them by such Idea? Bother, “thou who build on Ideals build for eternity.” I'm- Idlall emote Again. "the law In n. memorandum" we are told. Very WllLblIblllIml-ybblodllbfbd tedmdsovlolotcn by; conscience- lsu, wccltlry- trade-c trade, dec- tructfvc of moral, mm and spirit- r mprhb mm In nr='="““' Got a todly- FINA“ THE 2 MACS Grout acme 81m‘ Moll o rromrlllr At w- Prcccrlpttcns s srwl-"Y usl Ideals: o trldc that. bouts It ~r- Z If nanllchlll nth Mildly-moonlit Ianurfiillnlhct i AWIIy Young Fathers Insure tlubnvccnrtrlcltchlcccnaf an Infant lollcthlc. Ocmcrvctbclfunhondllcbflbtlucllotlvn. monmlwénw raincoat-incriminati- Guullucltbcuqnhbloollllnn 0nd- iccilglTfi-‘fcrnll! I" ||Y|lnI5"A‘!|§.. 3, ,. c(|;, Truman moor, or to hrnhlalvml‘ ccvrttocresltfl-f l» - IAIACIII _ “m”,