"wqavrr - r . PIUUIOIQ, “OIL-Oil. W- Chill" I. IOLIIO. " . V dent. I. I. Ionoft Connery, Mont-Col. l). A. lloellul ‘ ‘ m ‘ . l. u t... v.4. l- 1nueanmmnnu..r.au. ll-OO your (ll dull!) ‘cu-zit’ mun a Could licks. m......"“"" "f-‘i-‘ll-"fibh-‘t _ ll! SATURDAY, ivovlmnn n. ma. - , l , . Politics And Potatoes “A Liberal government at Ottawa would restore Prince Edward Islaiid’s lost markets for agricultural products, Premier HEPBURN of Ontario assured a Charlottetown audience to- day.” Thus read the" introduction of, the Can- adian Press report of Premier Hi-zrlwkrfs speech here on September 26, during the federal elec- tion campaign. According to the local Liberal press, he was given a cordial reception. coupled with the assurance that tlie Maritime Provinces were following with approval his “fearless stand in the interests of Liberalism.” 'l'hese statements have an ironic significance today. Last week Mr. JOSEPH SEDuiaWlCK, K. (L, appeared in .\loncton in opposition to the hlaritime freight rates case and announced that he was-present on behalf of the Ontario Gov- ernment's agricultural department. His creden- tials showed that he was also a member of the Ontario Attorney (lenerals department. He made very clear the stand which the Hepburn (iovernnient takes in opposing the claims of the three Maritime Provinces for equal treatment in potato freight rates, ‘and for the enforcement of Clause 8 of the Maritime Freight Rates Act. In the meantime the King Government has signed a treaty enabling the United States to export potatoes of all kinds into Canada free of duty. . Here we have a striking exinple of Liberal co-operatioii-—the King (iovernment wiping out our tariff protection, and the Hepburn Govern- nient fighting to wipe out our liard-\von conces- sions under the Maritime Freight Rates Act, both of which are essential to the profitable marketing of hlaritinie potatoes in Central Can- ada. With I00 per cent Liberal representation in the Legislature and at Ottawa, what docs "Prince Edward Island propose to do about it? Per- haps Premier Lea will call another special ses- sion to draft a vigorous protest, reminding Messrs. KING and HEPBURN of the hospitality they received here, and the fine promises they made to our farm producers, It would be worth spending another twenty dollars for such pur- pose! But Liberal politics is not played that way. The local Liberal press furnishes daily examples of this fact——the criticism even of such a strong Liberal as Mr. j. W, BOULTER, manager of the Potato Growers’ Association, being sup- pressed in our contemporaiys columns. Ari Interpreter Wanted Iias Prime Minister KING been at some of his old tricks? President ROOSEVELT told the newspapermen that neither he, Secretary of State HULL, Secretary of Agriculture “iALLACE nor Under-Secretary of State PiiiLLirs could under- ltand an’ ‘explanatory note in the official sum- mary of the new Treaty. The President recom- mended that news men read it if they wanted exercise in mental gymnastics. It said: “The effect of the concessions on the charges appli- cable to those American vegetables which still remain subject to valuation advances may best be shown by an illustration. Formerly, if the in- voice value of a given vegetable were five cents per pound, and if the valuation advance applic able were three cents per pound, the charge would have been 30 per cent. on eight cents plus a dumping duty of three cents, making a total of 5.4 cents per pound. Hereafter, the valuation advance, if supplied at all, may not exceed 2.40 cents per pound (four-fifths of the former three cents) and the duty in that case will be I5 per cent. of 7.4 cents (namely LI cents) plus 2.4 cents. or a total of 3.5 cents per pound as against the former total of 5.4 cents, a charge 35 per cent. less than before." English In Italy The rupture of the historic friendship be- tween England and Italy is noted by the New York Time: as one 0f the pitiful things brought about by the Ethiopian \var. “To English poets and scholars and artists and public men, Italy was long a land of light and joy. What they did for her in spreading her renown and revealing her charm is almost incalculable. Npr was it only BYRON and SHELLEY and the BROWNINGS WllO loved Italy and made her a large part of their lives. English sympathy with the aspiration of Italians for a unified country was always acute and alert. MAzziNi found a refuge in England when he could not stay on, Italian territory. Galina/tun was a popular hero in the streets of London. GLaosronifs eloquence against Italian tyrants was almost as sustained in invective as were his attacks upon Turkish oppressors. It was a long and beautiful tradition of friendly appreciation which bound ‘the two countries to- gether, and which it is distressing now t_o see evcjfl temporarily broken, One day it will be restored’: w Editorial Notes iifiiisy scene ,9 . iRegret ‘is general at the unfortunate re- laple suflered by Pflmlrf LEA. i» " » .- r iv iti-Railwagwharf these days. It in » ‘ Kiito/ditt-‘not realize our hope of tilfliIII 815M311’: treaty-able .:lflfl*@ Roosmnr s‘. ‘sihit jeeiie, ‘sing; Mr. LAPOINTI to M; Kind, ‘friendship play! the pleasing -*~#~i~*i=re+"~*i~.i"r- I i» the fllffl of Mr. Joan-O. Hinto- a lintaof members of SN Mill’ time Transportation Commission. He is “the daddy" of them all. 1K * fi Endoijsation of our claims for better- train service and harbor improvement has been given by the Maritime Board of Trade. Will they folloirtbis up by action? i! fl K Those unfortunate farmers who pledged their potato crops to fertilizer dealers at 15c per bushel are now kicking like steers, and who cian blame them ? 9K l} 5K . There is said to be some difficulty in know- ing where BENNETT left off and KiNc. began in the reciprocity treaty. Our idea is that Kmo begins where it starts to get bad. 9K 5K it TheRadio Branch of the Department of Marine is, according to an advertisement in this issue, on the war path, threatening to institute prosecution should fans fail to pay their licenses, X 9K 9K One of the immediate results of the new trade treaty is that every motor car in Canada is worth less than before. It is as if they had ztll been in a collision over the week-end, none of them escaping injury. if. Congratulations to Dr, I. A._CLARK, Ex- perimental Station, on his election to the Presi- dency of the ll/Iaritiine Board of Trade. Being a civil servant he will be in a position to handle the Government very effectively for its neglect of Maritime interests. an ilé an The Government speaks of the new trade treaty with the United States as having been made in the interests of the consumer. But the average man cannot be a consumer unless he is also a producer and, therefore, in receipt of an income. If the treaty decreases employment in our factories the number of consumers will be lessened. 5|? 3K 9K His Majesty the King in consequence of the recent death of Lord LYSONBY, Treasurer of his household, has reorganized his stafi‘ with the result that Mr. ALAN FREDERICK LASCELLES has been appointed additional assistant private secretary to His Majesty. It will be recalled he was assistant private secretary to the Prince of Wales, 1920-29, and in i931 was secretary to Lord BESSBOROUGH, Governor-General of Can- ada. ‘ ¥ l! ¥ Government officials have had a reprieve and expectant appointees a disappointment by Premier LEA's indisposition. A meeting of the Government was to have been held last Friday to decide definitely whether there was to be a clean sweep or not. The Premier issued the ultimatum that members must come prepared to’ decide one way or another. Now the decision is. postponed. 3K §l€ if Our local contemporary says that the free entry of United States potatoes under the Reci- procity Pact will be stopped by raising the in- termediate tarifi’ at the next session of Parlia- ment. l/Vhat then becomes of Liberal tariff re- duction pledges, and what will Uncle Sam say to Mr. KING jacking up the duties in order to undo his own work at Washington? Better had he followed 1\1r. BENNi-zrs course, and made haste slowly. x x a The “higher-ups” in the Ottawa Civil Scr- vice are allowing no grass to grow under their feet in demanding increased salaries from the new Government. Immediate implementing of the Beatty report of i929, which recommended higher salaries for technical and professional employees of the public service, will be sought by the professional Institute of the Civil Ser- vice of Canada. An interview will be held al- most immediately with Secretary of State Fer- nand Rinfret, to whom the requests will be pre- sented. w a it With regard to Japan's aggression in the East this is what Col. Eowaao M. Housis, President Woomtow WlLsoMs war-time adviser, has to say: “If Japan should undertake to lead a revolt of the colored races, violent spasms would convulse India and every territory under white domination. If China should undertake to assert the power which is hers by right of numbers and intelligence, India may do like- wise. Then the cleavage betwecn the dark and white races will become such that it can no longer be bridged by peaceful compromise." if! if? Those papers which were at first inclined to give an unstinted welcome to the Reciprocity Treaty are beginning to realize they had hallocd befor they were out of the wood. The Montreal Gazelle, for instance, which on Monday hailed the Treaty as signal victory for Mr, Kinds diplomacy, now recalls the painful experience of Canada many years ago, when a U. S. A. trade agreement was terminated almost over night. The same may happen again on thirty days’ notice. The Gazette says it is “the well- known tendency of the U. S. Senate as repre- senting gpecial interests to upset the calcula- tions and frustrate the purpose of America's presidents.” i if fi Montreal Catholic School Commission has i-To meddle openly in political or municipal affairs; they must restrict themselves to the cast- ing of their vote for their chosen candidate. a.--To take ' in, or to belong to, societies of definite poll proclivitlcii." In a letter to all tench”; under-it; jurisdiction the Commission ‘says: “The tetcber performs more than a task; he exercises I lay Ipflltlfllllg: He is an exemplar a model to be followed. he strict obedience which a teacher must exact from his pupil must be directly lfflccord with the obedience he. ‘lhfi tout", given to his‘, , - Oitr commihlon it» m by-llwl of ' _ aside’; hrh We posed to w th 'j*~lifificll'lnot violate them without in n‘ himlelf liable tothe pellllfy lft- re-endorsed its rule prohibiting teachers from . , political activities. "It is forbidden for teachers: ' HE CH.‘-RID'I‘TETWN GUARD Notes By The Way Port. Arthur 1| getting u lot of publlcfty over the fact that. it his not only been able to reduce its tax rate and delynture debt, but pay reltef changes out of current mv- enue. No one will deny that tho- publlclty 1a well deserved. Miracles ton Spectator. The flmllhr metal nlllu and bars so common 1n most banks originated back 1n the gay nine- ties, according to an lrtfcle ap- pearing 1n the journal of the Caniultan Bankers’ Association. And therein lles a story. It seem-s that it was Christmas eve, and that even tn those days bank clerks had to work overtime. A thief managed to get lnsfde the premises and hurled a. brlck at the glass partition behind which were stacked bags of sovereigns. Show- ing what would normally have been very good judgment, he scooped up the largest bag and made his getaway 1n one of Lon- don's “peasoupersfi Unfortunately for the enterprising young man, one‘of the clerks had appropriat- ed that particular bag with whlch to carry home his Christmas dln- ner- It was one instance where the thlef literally obtained the goose but lostthe golden egg. However. the Incident; impressed officials of the bank with the need for morel adequate proteatlon. Result-cages and bars.——Brockvllle Recorder. The United States, as was to be expected, has made 1t clear that lf sanctions are imposed, America. will not. attempt to block their op- eratton. That would Indeed have been the last touch of lrony 1n the history of American dealing with President Wilson's creation. Clt- izens of the Unltled States are told that lf they choose to send sun- plles to either belligerent, their Government wtll not. ensure their right ti; do so. This removes the gravest apprehension-however re- mote--whlc.h England had to face 1n taking the course whlch Eng- llsh public oplnlon has demanded. —Stephen Clwynn in The Fort- nightly (London). More power to twenty-yenr-old Esther Strohm, who ls upstate New York's only woman bus drtv- er. Mlss Strohm covers a. fifteen- mtle trip four times daily, but sees nothing unusual about her job. She accepted 1t because she could flnd no other employment, and 1a quite happy. Certain men may claim she ls invading their territ- ory, but others wtll glve her credit for not being too proud to eam her living in a role not usually occupied by women. She at least possesses the proper qualities of industry and sincerity-Windsor Star. and we are back. The We have moved on not golng to move League of Nations has passed from shadow lnto substance, from theory into practice, from rhetoric into reality. Wesee a structure a1- ways majestic, but hitherto shad- owy, which is now being clothed with life and power, and endowed with coherent: thought and con- certed actlon, We begin to feel the beatings o1’ a pulse which may, we hope, and we pray, some day-and the sooner for our efforts-restore a greater measure of health and strength to the whole world.- Wlnston Churchill, quoted ln Pub- llc Oplnlon (London). Mount Ararat la ln the news again. It. is a long time since Noalrs ark grounded safely on the mountain following its voyage dur- lng the flood of Biblical history. Now the mountain is before the public because wlld wheat has been found growing on the foot- hills of that. region 1n Armenia. As Ararat served mankind ln time of flood so many centuries ago, so Ararat ls to serve mankind again. Only. tlils time. it is for drought and not for flood. The area has been set aside as a scientific pre- serve so that the wlld wheat may be studied by scientists of the Armenian Sovlet. They are plan- nlng experiments by which the wlld gratri may be blended with domestic wheat to produce a var- lety that wtll resist drought and frost better than any of the known brands of wheat. If the scientists of Mount Ararat can produce a wheat that will withstand frost and grow tn splte of drought, the famous old mountain wtll be right back on the front pages of the neswpapers-Wlndsor Star. Great FalbnMontana. believes 1t will always be llve newm-Hamll- _ in after being soaked by a. rainfall, 8X‘. clothing will cause any disturbance fn the body? Oregon, 1n an address to the Ind- iana State Medical Association at Indianapolis says, “The prevention of sinus diseases (lnflammatlon of Andrew Carnegie And ‘The-Library Movement (contribute-ii "I choose free ltbnrlel u um heat agencies for improving the mules of the poo o, becuune they Klvo notblns or notblnf, They only help those who hep themselves . . . I prefer the 1N0 public library to most 1f not any other lgeuclel fon the hnpplnell pnd Improvement of u commun- ty." _Androw Ciirnogle. November 25th, 1935, marks the hundredth anniversary of the birth of Andrew Oarnegle, the godfather of the free library as we know 1t today- ~- At the age of eleven Andrew Carnegie left Scotland for Amer- ica, a poor boy. Wlthln forty years he made and distributed to world- wide charities mllllons of dollars. His introduction to llbrarlea 1s lnterestlng. As a messenger boy ln Plttshurg he was permitted to use the library of a Colonel Anderson. It was a library of some four hundred books and Carnegie tells of his elation as he used to carry these books away under his arm. He says. "I would not. have ex- exchanged the pleas es I then found for all the mtlllons amassed by man." Later when he amassed his own millions he made avail- able to many others that free ac- cess to books which had meant so much to hlinself. ' At first it was buildings to which the Carnegie funds were given. Beglnnlng with a library 1n Car- negle's native town ofDunfei-ui- line 1n 1881. approximately $65,- 000,000 were spent 1n building and equipping llbraxles. Many towns ln the United States and Canada started their llbrarles in this way. Now, however, the Camegle Corporation has turned its atten- tlon and resources from buildings to other fields. Today ttm great need 1s for books among country people and the Corporatlon has for the last ten years been fin- ancing undertaklngs to demon- strate how this can be met. It ls a. far cry from/the libraries of 100 years ago to those of today. Librarians 1n those days were 1n- deed ‘ampere of books. .BhBlVI were often screened with mry of Prince Edward Lsliuid. the latest gift of the Car- negie Corporation, mounts a. pleasant contrast to the llbnrlea of 1885. Its twenty-one “ranches from ‘rlgnlah to Sourla have now 35,000 volumes at their disposal. Over 1,000 are housed in every branch: exchanges are made an- nually and books are sent on re- quest. Every week over 150 books move around the Island: books on "Trotters and Pacers" going from Alberton to Borden; a book on blacksmlthlng to souria: requests from everywhere for some infor- mation on the "Aberhart Social Credit scheme," {or books on Abysstnla: innumerable ueiita for Lawrence's much advertised "Seven Pillars of Wisdom." And the children are havlniv their day. The most attractive books tn the library are theirs. As for the picture books for little children. they are the moat popu- lar books 1n the library. Some- times we suspect that the grown- ups are leading therhl And we couldn't blame them lf they do. Outside the branches there should be books for the children 1n every rural school, 1f the teach- er takes the opportunity offered. Of the more isolated Women's In- stltutes thfrty-seven have asked for boxes of books this month. Over twenty study groups have al- so been supplied. "I do not: want to be known for what I give," Carnegie said, “but for what I lnduoe others to give." He believed ln helping c-mmun- ltles to help themselves and lnslst- ecl that his glft would only be of value 11' it led to public interest and sup, t. The community he expected would maintain what the Carnegie fund had established By lame: W. Barton. MD AVOIDING STNUS TROUBLE As youngsters whether we came home from a fishing or swimming expedition wtth wet. clothes or came the removal of all our clothes, and a good "drylng" out was mother's ord- Ls there anything _1n this idea that a chilling of the body from wet. Dr. Ralph W. Fenton, Portland, runuc roizuu Ifiooltlln opQloi h“ ii luring: nllliofio ti; ‘lo: ‘Got That Fliie "Fresh Tea; Flavor Use» Orange i» .__.._ ’ PEKOE TEA ton. "that Amendment has filled the land with spies, created 00n- tempt for the law, jeopardized the atalilllty of the Constitution, edu- cated the young 1n lntempor-ance. and hbs been enforced with a de- gree of hate such u has marked the enforcement of no other law since the fugitive slave-act." An eminent American churchman says: “Unfortunately, Prohibition has not. performed the mtracles that were pected. According to experts, such as judges, public ofllclals, so- clal servlee workers, and others. there 1s more drunkenness and 1n- ‘ oe today than before the passage of the Volstead Act. "When 1n the past dld we see young men and women of respect- able families carrying a. flask of llquor when going to social events? when dld we see young girls, not yet of age, drinking 1n public places the strongest ktlul of intoxicating liquors and rhaps being over- come by them. That, today 1s not an uncommon sight." How nicely thfs paragraph applies to Prince Edward Island! That. 1s Prohibition there and here and everywhere and always. Th; differences between Prohibition hen: and elsewhere are merely u:- cldental. It is futile to blame this or that admlntstretlon for lbs fall- ure. Prohlbltton bears wlthtn Itself the germ of its own destruction. The United States tried 1t for B. period of twelve year. It has been shown that the American Govern- ment spent over $700,000,000 on Prohlbltlon Enforcement. Durliiz that period 1t lost about 81.000.000.- 000 1n lntemal revenue, that lin- mense sum going into the pockets of bootleggers, hijackers, perjurers and other criminals. Despite that collossal effort on the part of a powerful nation to enforce 1t, Pm- hlbltlon failed. Why dld 1t full? It failed because 1t. ts a law that. tramiples under foot human liberty; that, puts a veto on ii normal habft of the majority of citizens, that ‘ “‘ state-o “, for self- IS ruomnrrioiv oinusjrmm i Btn-"The cause has been be- trayed!" is invariably the answer prohtbltlonlsts make to the that the law That there might. be on intrinsic cause for the failure of Prohibition never enters thelr mlnds. In formlng unbiased judgments or persona and thlngs we ieoelve fnvaluable assistance from the optnlons of men who are interna- tionally known for thelr unlin- peaehable integrity, their pure al- truism and their accuracy of thought. Nobody can deny that. the the lining of the stnuses or cavern adjoining the nose) depends upon preserving the three lines of defence possessed by these sinuses. These defences are ta) the mucus or film that ls spread over the lining which has helpful organisms fighting of! harmful organism, lb) the little hatrs that wave or move dust organ- isms onward, (c) the lining wall 1t:- self with its rlch blood supply whlch can bi-lng a large amount of blood to this ltnfng when cold, dust or any chemical irritants interfere wlth the action of the little hairs which move harmful substances onward instead of letting them get. settled on this llnlng and cause inflammation. We must. avoid sudden or long- contlnued lowering of the tempera.- ture of the body by exposure —long rldes, winter sports, swimming or dlvlng. Sitting around ln a wet bathing sult. with halr damp from swimming or after a warm shower ls responsible for a lot of trouble. Swimming teachers now lnslst that, tn breathing, alr should be drawn in by the mouth and go out by the nose, and people who have not learned to keep water out, of the nose should not dlve or swlm with the crawl or side-stroke. Water washes away the protective fllm. Also drying up of these ltttle halr processes on the lining as 1n over- heated buildings lncreases the chances of starting trouble from the‘ pays to advertise. ‘This season 86,500 1n a street decoration scheme to be ieadypne month be- fore Christmas. It ls the most pre- § tentlous effort made yet to attract i shoppers to the city by llghtlng] and other decorating effects. This year several intersections will be equipped with brilliantly-lighted Christmas trees, and the whole lighting scheme 1a to be extended. Iethbrldgo started a couple of years ago to hang out the "wel- come" sign to Chrlstmas shoppers. It may be that. by giving the un- dei-tiiklng a little thought we might make the clty still more at- tractive during December. let's not hlde our light under a bushel. —1ethbr1dge Herald. In u Ollll In Abnormal psychol- ogy 1n Atlanta. 6a.’: Emory Unl- veratty, Professor W. O. Workman, trying vainly to hypnotlza o alu- dent for demonstration purposes by monotonous talk and having hlm stun at a. chalk line. sudden- ly noticed that ii watching mem- ber. of the clue had Bone into a rtlld trance. It wu Charles Hud- son, lonely nervous junlor, u. star pupll fn abnormal psychology. Pmfenor Workman could not bring Olllrlel Hudson out of the trance, bed eureka and normal activity. For tbmo d: follow-student! walked the blur - eyed nay around the umiiul. MM lllm'ofl"flffli earl.‘ 900i him l0 I ,, ., . _ ps1 sea}, ‘l merchants of that. city wtll spend harmful organlsnis of those suffer- ‘lng with colds or sinus Inflamma- afum Ind n1 . N! l-hltl L . ‘wit?’ lad‘... §i$ Adiimtltlohlm. harmful organisms always 1n and about the nose. or of "catching" the tlon." Dr. Fenton ndvlscs cuttlng down on starch food-augar, potatoes bread. and increasing leafy vegetab- les and frult to keep bowels regu- Ill‘. All dead. crowned, crowded sua- plclous teeth whose roots adjoin the slnus just above the mouth should be removed. All nose deformities should be corrected 1nd punt or pol- len known to cause sinus inflamma- tion must be avoided. --i. "Elder father, thouIh thine eyu Slime with hoary mymrm, Canal: thou toll what 1n the heart Of l. oowlllp blossom 110ml "Smaller than all llvu that be, Secret u the deepest us, Stand: 11ml; house of mils, Llke an alfllfa lrflmry. "B ller of the stones and weeill. Skl ed ln Nature’: croft: and breads, ‘fill ma what 15.111 thojiolrt 0f the smallest o1 the ma.” "God Almllh . 0nd with lllm Ulldfllblm Bllflhlm ruling all cramp!- afoieaald notes of credibility are found 1n the opinion of Dr. Nich- olas Murray Butler. And Dr. Butler was perhaps the moat. trreconctlable foe Prohibition ever had 1n the U.S.A. "For many years," says a leading American Weekly Review, "Dr. Butler has employixl hlaunl- que influence 1n opposing the glg- antic evll of prohibition; not with mer; rhetoric, but with a steady, persistent, powerful exposltlonof his thesis that the Eighteenth Amend- ment is a perversion of the true principles of the Constitution, and- that ll: must b; cut out of the body of fundamental law as a can- cer muat be removed from a hu- man body, before its mailgnant ef- fect has wrought the destruction of the organlsm." I shall cite another indictment. of Prohibition whlch cannot be re- jected as emanatliig from a law- less source, since 1t 1s the oplnlon of a man of merited emtne in a posltlon devoted to just1oe-Mr. Charles A. Boston, formerly presi- dent of the Amalcan Bar ‘Associa- tion. Appearing before a Senate committee. he made no secret. of his Wliosttlon to the Eighteenth Amendment. "Surelyf asked a ‘ ‘ Senator from West Vlr- glnla, "you would not go so far as to favor repeal?" "Certainly, I would, and on every principle on which I stand," rejoined Mr. Bos- M A l; S Pig Warm Powder This powder bu been care- fully ambled, and bu been found a very elective remedy 1n tlu treatment of wot-ml. MacsTSIood Food r» pole um an» moon A combination elppelnlly nluhle In the treatment of poverlnbod oondltliin of In loud. Olleofllt h“ Ill)! Jutliotreofniiiaofrioum- ‘hm' i . . Iertbolobwho have 10,1 IUOIIIIIIWIQIINIQI- on iroox now m. D-Ififlll? llotlmdcntlfi“ Illllflllllll l‘ Ilflfllly. Tho llm , 5-- -. n. 4,‘.W t __ ... charge ‘ ownership, and as such 1t ls bound to break down under the pressure of its own stark tnsanlty. In 1922 an outstanding English wrlter and lecturer opened his first Mortality of Life homes. tional, Retirement Annuities. Lower Queen Street Speaking of Speculation, the Mortality of ‘Investments isitireater Than the The ‘Great-West Life is the Champion of Thrift- and the Guardian of Thousands of Canadian There is a_ Great-West” Policy to meet every need-Family and Business protection, Educa- Consult our nearest Agent or write or call on llYlllIMAll & 00., uiiirrii Established 1872 Provincial Managers YT _ address to d, New York audience with the followlng facetlous, but significant remark: "l2 am happy to become personally acquainted with the greatxnatlan that. started of! with th; Declaration of Indepenn. ence andt wound up with Protilhl. tlon." Hts master-mind just could not understand the mentality 0| n people that had fought so heroically for national autonomy and then deliberately placed itself under the thraldom of the most ruthless or all domestic tyrant-s. What Prohlbltlon dld tn lht: UnltedBtates 1t has done and is gtllli doing 1n Prlnee Edward Is- land. “Every tree is known by its own fruit." in Charlottetown, Instead of three or four liquor stores as we would have under Government Control, we have approxtmatey 500 bootleggers. That ls the condition that prohlbttlonlsts would eoiuolt- dnte and perpetual’. And, believe 1t or not, they are promoters of tem- perance! To them "Prohibition" 1n P.E.I. 1s a magnificent monument to a great Christian vtctor The terms Prohlbltlon and Christian are mutually exclusive. In fact. the odor of Prohibition 1s offensive to the nostrils of Christianity. The only form of prohibition that. Chris- tlanlty recognizes ls the one that depends h- lta enforcement on the free will of properly educated citizens, not on police power. I am Sir, etc. _ CITIZEN Income ‘or Pension and Charlottetown -—;:T when you need I b drop hi and your convenience. it Phone 133. i - QUICK PRINTING SERVICE When you need letterheads l" 3 hurl‘? . . . or enough bllllieada to complete the month's billing when you'll appreciate the really quick service of the Guardian Printer-y. 'And no finished jobjnevor lookl like a “rush” job . . . that’: one reason you will appreciate our lllflfollflll efficiency. Phone otjny tlme,_ i , ting, or The tliiarilldii ttoiitral Print that's -¢- Central Job It at 13a Prince smi- Charlottetown