‘ PAGE FOUR 1111'. BIIAIILOTTETIIVIII 1101111111111 . Imus; out: (Founded urn '7' President. lJeuL-Ool. w. 01min a llol-ln Vlu PIBHGIL J. L Burnett. IJ-l. L llulhnen. 1' Secretary. IJeIL-Col D 0.8.0. like: and Mun Dlnelq. l. l Burnett, IJJ Anoclatc hi. Inn! Walk: SUBSCRIPTION lATll $5.00 w year 11a advance: demand lo (It). ltwperyeutmmvanoci mallmduhl. ulnnl $1.00 pa!" you 11a 8071MB] usual to Ullllfll and ua. Members Audit Bureau cl ktlreulnllll ‘The Strongest Memory la Weaker than fhewllgalreg Ink.‘ - THURSDAY, MARC]! 30, 193D No Waterfront Grant ’ Further supplementary estimates were tabled in the House of Commons by Hon. C. A. Dun- ning on Tuesday, bringing the Government's 1938-39 expenditures up to $548,915,000. Mr. Dunning’s constituents in this Province looked in vain for the promised $300,000 vote for Charlottetown harbour improvement. Not a cent i11 the supplementary estimates for this project, which was cited as one of the reasons why the Dominion Government could not consider the Brighton Bridge scheme. Definite assurance uas given months ago by the President of the Exccutive Council that the harbour improve- ments would be undertaken, and other mem- bers of the Provincial Government gave similar promises. It is almost unbelievable that this long-delayed project, with regard to which initial surveys had been started by the late Bennett Government, should be further ignored through callous indifference 0n the part of our Liberal representatives to take a definite stand. project is included in the estimates this session, there is only one thing for our Ottawa repre- lcntatives to do. That is resign_ Imagine the Western Liberal members standing for such treatment! It should be made clear to Mr. Dunning by his supporters inthis Province that our people, regardless of politics, want action, and want it now, so that the work can be com- menced early in the spring. Mr. McIntyre And Relief physique, with what agility the Minister of Public Works can turn somersaults in his politi- cal specchmaking. Mr. McIntyre gave several in- stances of such agility in his speech on the Draft Address. For example, he recalled the complaint he made last session about the Province not receiv- ing its proper share of unemployment relief from the Dominion Government. That he was re- ferring f0 the then existing situation was evid- ent from his comparison of relief figures with other Provinces, and particularly from his re- ference to the millions of dollars then being voted at Ottawa for seed grain distribution to the \Vcstcrn Provinces. He clinched the matter by declaring: “It is time the people of this Pro- vince woke up and demanded that they get from stration Supported by 300 people in Halifax; and the “warship League may do the Dominion their just share." That was in “arch, 1938. This session Mr. McIntyre laboured to show that his complaint of last session referred chiefly to the Bennett administration, and he went on to cite figures to show how generous the King Government has been to this Province in the matter of unem- ployment relief. Why in that case, it was neces- sary for the people to “wake up and demand their just share" is difficult to understand. But we find, from the Comparative Statistics tabled recently by the Premier, that there was r10 need for Mr. McIntyre to change his ground. The figures show that he was perfectly justi- fled in his condemnation of the King Govern- ment last year as well as in 1937. Statements No. 12 of the Comparative Statistics give the following provincial revenue representing “Do- minion Contribution Relief Projccts"—: 1934, $93.83;: 193s. $339156: 1936. $258171; 1937. $87,500; r938, $30,510. If these figures indicat- ed a. corresponding decrease in unemployment in the Province it would be all right; but not even Mr. McIntyre would contend that that is the case. Liberal Excuses U nconvincing Our local contemporary defends the in- action of the King Government in face of the huge importation of vegetable oils, free of _ duty, to the detriment both of our dairy and livestock industries in this country. It advan- ces two arguments: (1) that vegetable oils were allowed to enter Canada free under the Bennett ,Gover11ment,,and (2) that to impose a tariff would not cure the trouble but would ’l1ave the effect of increasing the price of do- mestic shortening. These alibis, concocted by Hon. Mr. Dun- ning in the House of Commons, were fully an- swered by Conservative speakers. In the first ‘place it was pointed out that in 1933 the entire importation of vegetable oils of all classes was 91,000,000 pounds, as against 255,000,000 pounds in 1938. It was not the comparatively small importation in former years, but the hughely increased imports i11 the past two or »~threc years, that have affected our butter prices adversely. The same applies to imports of Ishortening, the figure being 67,000,000 pounds -in 1933 as against 120,000,000 pounds last year. It is estimated that apart from the loss to our dairy industry, Canadian farmers are losing $6,- ~o0o,ooo annually in the price which they re- ceive for their cattle and hogs owing to the present increase in these foreign importations. . In connection with the second alibi, it was . oinltrzl out to ltlr. Dunning that the United States in r936 imposed on all fats entering that’ country on excise tax of three cents 11 pound r and above the regular rates which were in pct it that time, This excise tax was of " bl» applied to vegetable oils. In certain ‘it-m an llldltlollQl. “mus-i; m. of from 3 to 4 1-2 cents a pound was imposed. These taxes had the immediate effect of decreasing by about twenty per cent the amount of vegetable oils entering the Untied States. It resulted in-a reduction of from 30,000,000 to 40,000,000 pounds in Canadian fats entering the United States, which had a very serious effect upon prices of lard and fallow in Canada. It was also pointed out that though these oils enter Canada free of duty and with no ex- cise tax, prices in Canada a11d the United States today for vegetable oil shortenings are practically on a par, when the sales tax is taken into account. Mr. Dunning's further statement that the whole matter of vegetable oils had been referred to the Tariff Board and that the Government was waiting the decision of that board, is scar- cely reassuring. It was called to his attention that this question was referred to the Tariff Board on Dec. 10, 1936, and now we are at the end of March, 1939. As one Conservative mem- bcr remarked: “If it takes the Tariff Board two years and four months to reach a decision on an important matter of this kind, while our farm- ers are labouring under such a disadvantage, there must be something wrong with the Tariff Board." And with the Government too, for tol- crating such delay. I Editorial Notes I Budget to be brought down today. I U I Lord Tweedsmuir appointed Governor-Geri- eral this date, 1935. a a n a What about that definite Liberal promise 0 Another name for the “100 per cent" Govern- the Harbour Improvement scheme, might be “Four Flushers." u w u “to get mad" in order to “put common sense into this insane world.” This undoubtedly would be a case of the blind leading the blind. u v l- People are anxiously wondering where Prime Minister Mackenzie King stands in the present I i Canadian Treaty to The danger of the fall, it will be recalled, it was predicted owing to scarcity, potatoes in April would fetch $1 per bushel. Alas, the free entry of U. S. A. potatoes has changed all that. Exporters arc now 9,1511,» “mug-red using the lo\ver prices prevailing in the U. S. A. as a threat against further advance in Canada. gum,” Free trade in potatoes cuts both ways. l ¥ l When Liberals are in office for any consider- able time the morale of the electorate suffers, and we have demands for new parties and new policies to displace the powers-that-be and their machinations. That is why we have a secession movement in Nova Scotia with a public demon- that is why we have Mr. Daniel R. jay, Winsloe, crying bitterly for a new party to supplant the Liberals in whom he a11d thousands of others have lost faith. i U i O Mr_ R. B. Bennett and Mr. Joseph P. Kennedy U. S. A. Ambassador were guests of the London Press Club the other night and praised the part played by the British press in keeping the country calm during last week's crisis. “We are faced with a crisis," Mr. Ben- nett said, “and we must depend on our c011- ception of ordered liberty, which mean dis- cipline and restraint, if we are t0 weather the gale. Unless we can ma e our democracy as rf- ficient and effective as autocracy, then we have failed." n- u m Two private bills aimed at resolving the long- standing misunderstandings between the United Church 0f Canada and those Presbytcrians who did not enter the United Church in the 1925 church union have been given first reading in the House of Commons after passing through the Senate. The first bill, sponsored in the Lower House by Hon. W. R. Motherwell (Lib. Mel- ville), would amend the United Church of Can- ada Act so as to allow continuing Presbytcrians not party to the Church Union to employ the name “Presbyterian Church in Canada." The second measure, introduced by C. A. Cameron (Lib. Hastings South), would grant incorpora- tion to the Board of Trustees of the Presbyter- ian Church in Canada. The legislation was ne- cessary to aid the Presbyterian and the United Church to achieve harmonious relations and maintain their separate identities, it was ex- l' d. Paine n a u n Under the auspices of the Canadian Medical Association, Sir john Boyd Orr, M.D., DSc., F.R.S., LL.D., director of the Rowett Research Institute, Aberdeen, will address a meeting in Montreal on April 11 under the chairmanship of I. C. Meakins, M.D., LL.D., P‘.R.C.P‘., pro- fessor of medicine at McGill University, and Dr. I. M. Rabinowitch of the Montreal General Hospital, chairman of the committee on nutrition, the Canadain Medical who will speak on “New Standards of Diet and Health," in addition to being director of the Rowett Research In sti tu te, is also director of the Imperial Bureau of Animal Nutrition, and editor-in-chief [of “Nutrition Ab- stracts and Reviews." He has long been inter- ested in the economic aspect of the problems of health and agriculture and has been strongly ad- tvocating, in speeches and writings, the ldca that national food requirements should be the basis ,of agricultural planning, and stating that to bring national dictarics up to the new standard for health would lead to a great improvement 1n national health and physique, bring prosper- ity to agriculture‘ and lead térincrebsed‘ 1am- lfmpcrial trade. . hlbltton for all youths under 25. A the consumption of tntoxlcanhs af- fects those under 20 years of age. It was put into effect 10 years ago. f pgr, says that " a man continues ance of the high quality of our Unless we have immediate assurance that this ment supporters of Brighton Bridge project and ¥céefi _ Japan Times Weekly, M. the well °V°- 01h lcgtlay mcontalpllriigl 50thp1ecea , _ e e wcg ess a an Miss Agnes MacPhail M. P. wants women Xunig and a; made o; sgajxl-‘flesg steel made 1n the leisure moments of table knife grinders. cabinet. perfectly carved 1n Queen Anne style, 1s 4 1ns. hlgh, 3 1-2 ins. wide and 3 111s. from back to front, European crisis_ So far as the average citizen ipggn thug wuum 1,01,; hurmy mum d h ' ' l ‘ h'dd b d ‘ H i I _ slcpincerfrne be 1s 1n tie air 1 en y a ensc mm which would only pick up It 1| surprising, considering his gargantuan cou o vcr iage.‘ farmers is manifest in the potato situation, Last ln Ontario 1n the recent. past, has llved tn a sort of fool's paradise you-go method of flnanclng. Th1! Association, 011011 who is in charge of arrangmcnts. Sir John. l; rrramcrrtannorrerown ouanorau NOTES BY TIIE WAY An Irish-Canadian who throw lnto the Atlantic a bottle cont-uln- 1ng bis nuns end address has now reoelved a message from a Freud: wldow with 11 llvlng cblldren. Th1: ought. to serve as a warning agalnst such dangerous pract1oe|.- Woodstock Sentinel-Review. Once there w» a political story golng the rounds. A man was euloglzlnx a particular politician. ment-s wider way 111 Canada just now recall that story t0 mind. — Vancouver Province. Another use for a have: tall, explained 1n the Post by a Chlnse the eating. He says a beaver Ls a. deltciwy and might. get any- thing up to flve dollars on the New York market. He solved the 1n c- tery of where to 11nd anytzhiiig eatable on a beavefs tail by 111t- the hard epidermis. Chinese enjoy this meat very much and many whlte people 1n American cltles find 1t exceedlngly palatable, we are informed. --I.1ndsay Post. A bot debate ls In prospect 1n the Diet when members re- ceive a blll from a group of Min- selto members to establish p110- t, present. the law concemlng Kotaro Bando, a Mlnsettlo mem- w physically and mentally A perfect miniature teen exactly to s:u'e. has betox; a sheffleld flrm the director of The wood and holds lmlfes under 1 1n. long, This olty, like most other cltlcs supported by an inadequate tax the only way to re- the pinch 1s by rigorous and a strlctly pay-as- lleve economy la being pursued. and Ls the objec- tlve of the present budget, which 1f maintained, w1ll make reduc- tlon 1n taxes slmuly a matter of relatfvely short tlme. -Brant.ford litxptxsltor. Mr. Herrlllgc’! New Dem good 1f they sttr up lnberest 1n public affairs. Apathy on the part of the electorate 1s the great mem- ace of‘ democracy. But 1f they only succeed tn breaklng down faith 1n our tnstttutlons then they w1ll have accmnpllshed nothing and w1ll be dmtructlve 1n their results. Our British system may not be perfect; 1t. may 1n time have to be altered. However. we still believe 1t. 1s the best system of govern- ment yet devlaed by man for the government of man. Let. us as Brftlsh cltlzena cling fast to our llberty. —1ondon Free Press. Admlsllonl by Ministers showing prlnclpally, 1f not wholly, upon the Brltlsh market. Dr. Ryan, Minister for Agriculture, who decreed the slaughter of the calves, 1s today crylng out for tncreased agrlcul- tural production. Llvesbock are the most valuable element 1n the ex- rt trade. If the calves had not. een slaughtered they woufd be available today for export at re- muneratlve prices. The Minister's muddllng, before his conversion to what. the Irish Independent re- rnlnded hlm and the Government was the sound pollcy to pursue, al- most rutned the poultry and egg Industry. -- Irish Independent, Dublin. A member of the Brltlah Home of Oornmona has made the predic- tlon that, wtthm a few years Q“. many w1ll have become a second- olua power because of "lack of 1n- dlvldual talent." He remarked: "Untll the us of 24 young Ger- mans have no chance to use their own talents. Labor and military services take up thelr who! ttme. Even today Germany's leaders are a poor second to those of France And Brltaln." Germany appears to have done about everythln u; cramp the lndlvldual style. t. 1a the some wlth Italy. Where the 1n- dlvldual la submerged to lorylfy the State rather thnn hav I the Btu an Instrument sarvln the stpltlflacraalon of hunk? lndlgduu]. n persona . - Ieader-Poct. ‘ can‘ I once lmew, In Baltimore, a man who told ‘ lborlcc n: lurid land u Incredible as thou mm ' . for tnstanra. Casanova o cnvcnuw Cclllnll. People 11a- tened beccun the stories, untrue on thali- face, atlll had the quality of htm romance. There was one story the scene-of which was laid 1n annall town lnsoutticrn Inner ..-N1mcl. I thlnk. It had to do with a 111111113111. and the mild cub- lfltutfon of my frluudl 208111111 Inst victory f E-l-Wlbfil-"i? i?“ 1.11.1111..." "i; 111m about lllh lflldllh It‘ Jhbll, resident of the town 1s provedtflbfi g m t eve a vlgorously condemned ngemenfi 0° . tutlonally mt in; out that there was meat n the holdings o‘, m” flat tall when one scraped away problems an” every dwlnwhgf n‘: B 1m to cury ointment application, use vines hold a meeting, chairman or presldmg bv Inspect/ore or e for the service. Rou 111s of work 1s outllned at, the executlve meet-ins. and thelr officers em glve them effect. And I Chalrmau Paton from Premier Stewart. lnstructlnl hlm to enforce the Act without dts- crlmtrmtlon or and I believe M1". w th 11111 torney General for solution. illegal wrong dotnz? tary was not a "fourth He was an offlclal under From its very inception for years, Mr. Henry 1 the C tered physicians plus dentlsts out the r ht 1n finest ed, llqugonroflts totalled 000. regpecttvely. but 1n these last mlnlitratlqn 1t umped 840. 65f Are eh a there would appear in .8101!!- ortbcln n11 tailor. and wlnihls "star", m. over the bulbonoi _f._' 1F ‘m PUBLIC FORUM Illnoolunl In o)‘ hello w» correspondent; of nflltccfl. Th0!» llhdevnfllulllllloecnoc Ic- ovaclrllycnlcra Ila nlntou o! unusual-b. Pllllllll CAMPBELL ‘ AND PBOHIIITION B1r:—I cannot 1n t-hls connection t-hvac lmxencrous, and 1n- correct references to “He 1.; exceedingly well up on all the Pronlbl- “h” 101111-111 “r 1""- wmH "s “air” a rtlfiiinldtefiileiiid S75E25? fitggidlevutlg-g Prfmm“ QLPISraBM- l?" out‘: ‘£9311 e ec: " 0w e on e answ- , era?" Borne of the polltlcal move- m ‘gym ch )1‘ of e t was r1ghfi;"tg£ugh so Could them be a mo“?! shallow agnmst 00mm on man- "an that offered? "A "I188. tor of the not requlres . To this 1s added that. broad fallacy that "90 oer cent of thecgrrobleuts of ministration m1 the l; vatlve administration were either without Commission at all or by the chair- man wlthout. reference to holding anv meeting." Where else could on conjure 11p a greater mus of plf e? Does the the ad- le Conscr- declded reference to the Government of the Pro- du- u he to "dectde" the "various crlbee. roblema" which "arise" every do '11 1t that; 1n tiandltng millions t e administration can run with only a monthly meeting? Is there one of t P . arguments l thls line. ap- *1°°'°°°- 1" 3"‘1"°"'""" cacti; 11122.1: “mars 11‘::*~.:.*°..-.. 112-“121-1... from drinking for the malnten- to the mama" o’ government? m banking and commerce. who speaks ment? Are dlrectora I80 0r shareholders called from the four corners of the earch to dis every da problems tn adm lstrn- tton? U11 0f illiterate weakllnge, government suggestion ls 1.00 mention eof mmfsslon ls one which no u olnt. the rld ulous t.o speak throu h their o flcer, or rt; employed the O0 would All bodies wercd ave doubts forks with hatr-thln prongs. a salt a mbetge or vaifimlifi: ' eon o hen two or three grams. and sugar exggtiviontityfe mafitggggktlmgs about one grain of sugar at a. fiafidfi ,,".,’§,-,°“'¢I>°k§,'§.'iu1um whd ttme. -Industrta1 Brltatn. were not. l s of this type owed me a letter ect of ersons ton d1 sow rate, pplemented by a. danger- the best of his alblllty. I was 1n m“ syiiiem ‘i,’ mdebted- iliiliii wudeiw wguhvlcorous 12211013112?‘ m“ ow t e “h; big-us“ ma,’ who toAlgnme-hc wolfid brook ‘p0 1n- “cawh up on us.” and the clty {aflgmmiefi m?‘ w” not “m ya“ ust rforce feel the 11inch. all‘ er gang’ gpohmitmsumlh m‘; awe; 1~1 a 1 11 wliiiomfifiwrihriy Another reflection. that. mfsslon appointed a. secretary. "who w? $11110; qfiupigrlzelgt byh the atugigc a .' a n e case. Statute, 50c. 117 reads, “The G0 - mlssloners shall aPDOInt one o1 theft- number to act. as 11mm and they shall also appotntinpmfieg; retary (wtm may be a me l‘ Why this inference of ‘Ibis secre- member". the Act. 8m 1J1 was éecretary to ommlsslon. From 1980 w 1985. wtth 65 re - w issue "scripts" be- 80000 000 and $22.- hfgh pressure expert ad- .079.03 0m md temper ed by the fllmry pprllamentary, democratic system glgvllcgllfatgglpif that. two hour shad- govemment. 1t 1s the rock of °n Gtbraltar of all our freedom and 5nd Wham:- wggfylltgggnlggtle; esa now. doctors, less 18 emnlnatcd? The not w1ll be. 1t t thlng 1n order now. denomtnaf-lon. (3) The quantity and value of ll uors of all klnda, and the quontl ea. held ln stock at the end of 1927, and the end of 1938 rcepcctlvoL. H)“, 1 t m. ease; aga ns the last three gears. (5) ‘Ihe 1.0 lcosts o1 admin- 18111111 the Act each of the last three years, classified as to the de- ts of oervloe 1n which the ex ndlture was made. If the Pre- er wishes to have the vetl o1’ se- crecy llftcd, and to close the queries o1 public demand. here t; the gold- en opportunity to sttll those voloea, at. least on that. phase of the laauc. I un 81:, elm, LEWIS P. TANTON. Canada Is Safe 1 (Winnipeg 11m Press) 1| nved. macuutng our ' Canada defence sltuctlon after the revela- tlon that Germany was 0.11 DGSGIDIBBHIIG,“ wu p0 tad out. at: Ottawa that we now had ‘all! goount. 111cm. all) Hlwklter umcana planes, cw one moun - 1n; 013m machlnc guns The» would be buttoned 1n the Pnlrlc Provinces (two per province?) for use 1n defence of our Amt-lo n- TNI calculation W? to be mathematically oorrec , gxocpt. of 0011110 (hit. one 0f 0111‘ ll! Hcwbcr , when 1011 ‘The number of Pg AN ARMY METHOD OI‘ TIT-EAT- ING BINGWOEM OF THE _ FEEIF- ATHLETES FOOT In my student day: there dkl noteppeartobeesmanycascs of rlngworm of the feet (athlete's ‘r foot) as at present. whlch may have been due to the fact that. than were fewer golf and teams clubs at that. time. There ls 110 but that most cases are transferred 1n tub or shower both rooms and on floor 116101111118 swlmmln pools. I have? spoken before of the various methods of treating athlete's foot -keepl.ng feet clean and dry use of borlc powder 1n shoes and socks, saltcyltc or meg-f equal parts of 35 percent comer- clal formaldehyde and dlstllled water to patnt feet and 1n between toes, and the preventlon of 1.111s form of rtngworm by stepping tnto a besln of l percent hypochlorlbe of soda gotng to and returntng from the bathroom. As ringworm of the feet. 1a a very common ailment. 1n the army, the tree/fluent. suggested by Dr J. A. Melcdy 1n Military Surgeon should be of interest to the large clvlltan army so affltcted. Dr. Melody Instructs his patients riot. to use soap nad water for bathlng the feet but ollve 011 during the period of treatment. The patient soaks his feet 1n a solutlovn contalnlng two table- spoons o1’ scdlum hypophosphtte to 3 quarts of water. Following this 111a feet are thoroughly drted and then exposed for a period varytng from ftve to seven minutes to the aottnlc my! mt a dlstanoe of about 1B lnohces. While the feet are m“! 9XP00cd the toes are separat- ed so that the ray! can penetrate t-howuehly lntio the spaces between and under them. At. the oom- Dletlon of the treatment the feet are thoroughly dusted wlth a, pqw- der of dried sodium thlosulplmtc and patfent Instructed to put. on clean soclu. (It Ls now known that socks laundered 1n the ordinary way still carry 1m parggtpgs and cagerrselnfect tihxzgfcet. 01'! D11 on 111s sh patient. ls lnstlucted to the powder lnslde 111s shoes and W" 1m wot-her Pair of clean socks sprinkled w1ll-i the powder and ‘"1" 11111111 dvrlna the mam. In the morning amther pair 0f clean 501*!- SPII-Ilkled. must. be put on. This routine ts followed dolly and two weeks 1a the usual um; required 1.0 affect a cure, was; ormuuvs Ab fl ' l 1y énegQ mile (‘In 08k 0H9 Atpélkslpcrn Wlth uniiiiiniilrxi inneiir Abgefllksrilom. Y Be 1min - Yglgg sevenli §§cv$§iiLfl"' The oldest lnnocen gllvg Bvnclth that Abrll heaven. I uked them why they trudged Ym-h (BT83)!!! looks and 5013-. M4 5°98 Your mother know you're out Al. this unearthly ham-a" They lsntgnood: and ocowllng 111p at “g1 1111501: a sowed head, 1111 fwore: and then spat bitterly, As wt-h one vole; thgy ma; “Homeless, ghoul, Wu never thoughttll: ‘Bide how they have been converted are were l‘ P ‘ihmpmn M nu; mum; ' a. feature of many of their recent ;‘,‘,§“‘,“h{,"}"‘,,,'§§§,ff £9 1 ' i: And broke: flfifififlfifi‘; 5nd med’ utterances. The country was as- mdmbk o; m, Hm“ mow“, _ ‘ sured on Ministerial authority not. _<1) m won l-mounf pm b —-Wl][red alum 5° “m9 55° m" the 311mb m"- 1938 (and proceeding years) for “m ' ket “was gone for ever.” Mr. Mac- Bplrlte, and» the amount, pald ((u- SNOW! 0F IRAN Entee, Mmuter for Fina-nee, 1s now malted liquors. 12) ‘Dotal quantity -—§ satisfied that. for the disposal of of splrlts. and malt ulra remect- (B! The Onnullan Press) the nation's exportuble agricultural lvelybs trying who er 1n wood . Iran - An uupume- surpltis the farmers have w rely or tt and how much of each dull-ed Bflflwilorm at Abkenar de- stroyed rnore than 100 houses, 4m 811k sheds and 54 shops. Abuut, Z0 cattle were killed tn the nu unusual for this area (formgihi ra_1_s). MAC’S HAIR RESTORER A delicately perfumed pre~ llllll-lcn which restores an ueantlllea the halr. It w1ll restore grey hnlr 1 its onl-ml color. Mm’: flair Restorer pr. mole: I new and super-l. 1h when the hnlr In fa: lmllell 5t the rbsulta, Wrltc or one todl . PIJC 60 CEN s. MAC’S PILL OINTMENT Glvau Quick Belle! 1n n1 r of Interns! and Exter- and “A tubule "up flalent remedy f ment of m1. wretched, nrln Hulls n a rat-Guam m» so». 14m".t131ta“&12; Evan's ‘Stomach ixture K Until. a 1.111 ‘Liberal Cabinet Ministers “High-Hat" Their Associate (warm mum ln the 01m m mm newly £33.11 uimaraqlvlnutiahinfu‘ Inch of clan dllflnolllon u un- usctlsblo u the t-radltlons of Bos- Thc ldcc that, prlvsto members o1 Parliament and cablnct mlnlst- er: can meet. people on common among! u the elected representa- vu men are born free and equal. Al ropently la I your vabfn- et n lunched 1n e open 1n the Paruamanmnry mtaurant». They often mlnnled at the u-mc t-abl common .'l. It wu moment. for the the problems of his ocnstltuency with the exceuttve to whom he 11nd entrusted the ul- mtnlstrratlon of government Today the bureaucratic motif has invaded even the lunch hour. Cabinet Mlnlaten Only At the end of the Parliamentary restaurant furthest removed from the portal 1s a smaller door leading tnto a prlvate dlnln -roou1. It. 1s simply but expenslvely fur- rushed and 11a windows command an lnsptrtng vfew of the rlvcr and the Gattneau I-Illlc 0nd. Th1: little sanctum was or glnally de- es u the opportune member to signed for the use of mcmbe a of Parllament who wished to enter- taln special guests from thelr con- stituencies or elsewhere 1n private. T011811. however. 11a doors are carefully guarded. It. 1a reserved exclusively for the cabinet. No longer can the common represen- tative of the people use lte faclll- llfl 411111118 the lunch period. No longer 1s 1t quite secmly for a mem- ber of the mlnlsteflnl aristocracy to be seen lunchlng 1n the matn room The common membc , 1f he gets a. strategically placed table, c|n stlll watch the entrance and exlt of the upper crust of democntlc gov- ernment. Hm Norman Rogers still has a fr1endl_ nod and klndly word for the tub as he mnheg 111s passage through the room. Hon. Eta-nest In. lnte henna gent 111s ex-ool sigma. Hon. C-D. owe dispenses hurried paaslng smllcs. Finance Minister Dunntng even sometimes forgets hla mlnlstena-l dignity and slta at a table 1n pass- lng. It 1s all a pleasant show de- stg-ned to lrnpreu; the onlooker ll? Ylfllttok mnbxpeyer h uhrLor p!‘ iii: 1ii'uy1ii».i'i',fi mam m. are arc ammo mlnlstera m. -, hm 1a 11111 believe that have free access t Others have built, a neu around themselves. a mu of Qecrefu-lq Qlcr Obnlflbllbaa ‘ ‘Ibo 111m 850.000 o. salaries a éliiafié“ “3°“‘° B01111 -proof b thetmlnlstcrtal sanciiizricdoliislltxia: mus not leak 1 d ' must not leak oiitln mmmum EPW111130’ Oenton Massey Mrvatlve member for ' Greenwood. quoted statlstl L 1n the House u; 1111 unmnloyment. H011. N. Rogers queottoned the figures onl to be told that. they osnie from m: givénddepartment. Since that. m“ N93 11°58 58° 8 minister received a number o1 mild compiumu w,” W011i! certain routine action which had been taken by cubum some bolder members o1 the tex- puylng public even, 1t. requested the minister resented tnlerlerenu wlth the prerogatives of his high office la not known, but event‘ 1111i; matter P111110 1113M! Mackenzie Klng melt unheated that. the whole trou- pnd s because a etvll sen- Vg-‘rll hid glven out Information W ch he believed the public u“; ‘ now and a newspaper hm publlshed 1t. ‘I110 Prlme Minister dlldflnot den that. right but ruled I» n81’. er lnfdflnatlon of th kind being release‘. e It 1s rellably reported that tlu argument he used to back his rut. 111g was the publication of such 1n- wlth the democratic good-fellow- shlp generously bestowed by the gods of the cabinet. But the excluslve lundilng hmblts formation resulted 1 b ministers belng necillcsgssiy geeky delegations and correspond. PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC TENDERS FOR WORKS AND HIGHWAYS MATERIAL Gillan? Bridge, South Kildure, Lot 4 _ SEALED TENDERS addressed to the undersigned, will b0 rccelvcd at this office untll noon of Saturday, April l5, 1939, from any person or persons willing to supply and delivc the following materials ct the bridge site:- 200 cords poles in l6 lt. lengths not Ins than 4 inches at small and. 200 piles In l7 ft. lengths and. ‘I00 pieces 6" x 6"~_ln 16% 200 pieces 2" x 5" in 161A not less than 8 inches at small ft. lengths. ft. lengths. 200 pieces 4" _x S" in 6 t1. lengths. Parties ‘_endcr1ng_ may tender for the whole or any portion thereof submitting a price per cord for poles, a price each for the piles and a price per M. B. M. for sown lumber. marked, "Tenders for Material." Tenders to be Poles and piles to be of spruce or fir, straight, well cleaned and sound. Lumber to be spruce or hemlock, square edged, free from wane and shakes and sown to the exact size specified. All material to be inspected at the site and must be do- Iivercd on or before May ‘l5, I939. The Department docs not bind itself cny tender. to accept the lowest or _ L. B. MacMILLAN, Deputy Minister of Public Works and Highways. Charlottetown, Prince Edvard Island, March 22, I939. For Vitalitu always use BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE T EA Ll339-3-24-tiIl Apr. l8. IT HOLDS THE HUNDREDS OF to YES, HICKEPS TWIST IS JUST WHAT YOU WANT IN A PURE WELL-FLAVORED CHEWING TOBACCO “FROM SOURIS rzcmsu" 10c PER no 10c. AND REMEMBER THAT HICKEYS I8 ALWAYS FRESH. STEADILY AND ME-RCHANTE - SELDOM IF EVER HAVE 1 OLD STOCK ON HAND . RECORD 0F ISLANDERS IT SELLS mast-lacuna, 154-11141" v