. Mo.» -_..;.._._»_~4‘- - r._~_. '4 uhhtqlztw,‘ 1r v lentative Iliberalshas been chase/ster- PAGF. FOUR Prosldenh-W. Cheater l. sIcLure. Secretory Idltor and llnnager-ql. ll. Burnett. "n" Col. D. A. IIcBlnnon, Hon. Charles Stewart lnformed an Edmonton aurl ‘nae that there is no criticism of til" King administration Yteo-Pronldent-J. I. Burnett D. S. 0. Assoelnie ". l. Currie. Iornlnl Daily (founded Ill?) use per year (ln advance) mulled THURSDAY, J Liberal Insults for Farmers m. A. Cl. McIntyre, official Liberal candidate in South Toronto is not the only one of Premier King's lieut- enants who is attacking the man on Lbs land. At Montreal on Thursday night Sen- i no: Cesgrain, one of the big men in the Liberal party, repeated his forrn- a: statement that the people should thank God that Mackenzie King bad made a treaty with New Zealand. He added that “butter makers are not everyone. some people think the farmfis are everyone. There are four people who eat butter to one who makiu it. . . . .lf I were in Prem- ier King’: place. I would not cancel the New Zesland treaty. . . . I know the west. Those farmers out there bin other: to do the work for them. They do not workthemselves. They yet people to put the seed in for them h; the spring and then loaf during the lummer until the wheb-Js ripened, and then they get someone to cut the wheat for them." Senator Cssgrain has thus gorp Wen further than Mr. McIntyre, who laid that the farmers were always wanting something for nothing and should not be allowed to go to the Government for protection. The attitude of these two repre- O istis of Mr. Kin: durin; the past nine" years. Senator Cesgrain says if he were in Mr. King's place he would not cancel the New zealand ‘meaty. Perhaps he lmows what is in w. King's mind. Farmers should act accordingly and make sure‘ that Mr. King will not have the oppor- tunity oi continuing the New Zealand Treaty. __¢-___--___ Send Mr. Bennett! Back in Ontario again, Premier King cannot face audiences with his former asurance. l-le cannot dis- semble the deep disappointment and discouragement he met with in his tour of the western provinces. He speaks like a man whose wits are of! their guard. One of the latest 0i his silly sallics in his statement that Mr. Bennett is seeking an excuse to avoid attending the Imperial Conference. The truth is that Mr. Bennett is the 5;- r- pally leader in this country who has any plan for making Canada a party to an arrangement for the sides-sic unity of the Empire. The 504511.34 Empire preference provided for in the Dunning budget is not bas- ed on any conception of an Emllife trade union. The concessions. such as they are, are. made to Britain as they might be made to a foreign ‘country. Premier King. at the con- wmwv woum be able to speak oi these things as a detail of independ- ent Canada's fiscal policy, and hold aloof from any aroieet for bring“! the countries ~of the Empi" m“ a“ Empire economic union. Has his Government not alwB-Y-‘i co-operatlon with pep; apart, from Britain? He would come back from the Economic conference of the Em- pire with the same boast as he flame back from the last Imperial Confer- ence. to the effect that Canada is a nation on her own account and hi5 n9; entanglements with the Moth?!‘ country. What is the meaniris 0f hi‘ m: today about not baraalnih! with 37mm? He means to keep out of any gyruigement that would commltt Canada m an Empire Dut- Hen" h° talks about his Governments giving w 351mm and about Mf- BQBYWWS bargainlnl. Vim mm!“ Mr‘ Bennett is a loyal upholder of the amvire- In m mp1” economic conference be would represent this country u the gfggtagf, of the dominions of the Em- . td He m". “serves tobearepnsen has made it clear. b0“! i“ Pummm‘ and on the Pub“ Pmmm’ m” he ' th t favors an E0191" “mm”: “m” l his Do- will romofc the interests of t p the sistcr million u well as those of t dorninlons and the Mother Colin file-m 111: question between Mr. Benn No.00 per your (ll ndvnnes) delivered. steadily promoted the interests of the United states in Canada's home mar- ket against the interests of Canada's er Country. Of the $900,000,000 worth of merchandise imported from the United States every year. much more own producers and from those of the Empire. why has riot the common sense course been followed of match- ing the United States‘ trade policy with a like trade policy in this coun- try and of favoring Britain for such articles as we must import, so as to because there is none to make. Evi- ln Canada and United Staten. not reading the newspapers. ULY M, 1930 wn producers and those of the Moth- = time Rights?" han half could be obtained from our Great" New york, with a popuia to come-Montreal Gazette. One part of the Halifax Harbor Commission of “lr ‘ependc ‘ business men" appointed by the King Govern- ment, says the Sydney Post, is in the political field as a candidate, and the rest of it is campaigning for him. Mr. King has yet to learn the answer to his cynical question, "What are Mari- tion. of 6.958.792 by the i930 federal census is still considerably behind Greater London with a. population es- timated it 1300.000 odd. The Metro- polis promises to lead for a long time Mr. Bennett has said that he would .11]; __t;rl_snl.fqrra‘rowl~l__gl_l_argrolalv_ _ TNE GNARLOTTE TOWN GUARDIAN Notes By__The Way i COL. course's i ARGUMENT i Colonel J. P. Hooper, to make his i potato contention acceptable, claim: that he "is not writing for political PIIYPOMA." and asks "how many cars dently the Mi ster of the Interior is 5 or bushels oi potatoes Maine has, shipped into Canada during the past nine years." " Those who ksow Col. Hooper, a born life-long Liberal, will take with considerable reserve, his disclaim of political interest in his writings at this juncture. Maine ‘is not the whole of the po- tato producing area of the United States, and it may be a. surprise for - ColxHooper to get some of the fig- ures he asks for. 1t will evidently be news for him to learn that in one year (1926) 62,000,000 pour-ids of U. S. pouztoes were imported into Can- ada, that on an average basis his "nine year" estimate would be in the vicinity of half a billion pounds. at a cash value of between two and make our purchases from her more nearly equal to our sales to her? The Canadian people will do their country one of the greatest services they ever rendered at the polls if thy vote Pre- mler King out of office and put Mr. Bennett in his stead. ' their majority since the 1926 election, will be eligible to cast their not favor any arrangement within or without the Empire that would work injury to the interests of Canada. He has further said that Canadian pro- ducts should have 'a preference in Great Britain or other parts of the Empire in return for preferences giv- en by Canada and that all prefer- ences should be mutual and not one- sided. This was the policy advocat- ed more than a quarter of a century ago by the Right Hslorable Joseph Chamberlain in England and Sir Charles Tupper in Canada. This movement made some progress but was sidetracked by the action of the Liberal Govemment of Sir Wilfrid Laurier in passing a one-sided pref- erential measure that has been of no benefit to either Great Britain or Canada. iii. EDITORIAL NOTES It is estimated that approximately 300,000 electors, who have attained first votes on July 28. The Winnipeg Tribune says: "The answer to Mr. King is that only a. Government that knows where it is going, and why, can lead Canada back to paths of prosperity." Besides having the last of the un- occupied wheat growing areas in the world and having 50 per cent. of all the timber lands in the Empire, Can- ada's fisheriu are among the great- est in the world. This Dominion has 12.500 miles of indented coastline on Atlantic and Pacific Oceans; prolific with edible fish; also 200,000 square miles of interior fresh waters, or more than half of fresh water of the globe. Of the three great salt water fishing areas in the world—North Atlantic, North Pacific and North SGIr-Clfildl controls one-half of the first two. Premier Ferguson is quoted es say- ing that at least seventy of Ontario's eighty-two federal w: tituencicls will go Conservative on July 28th. and he generally is pretty careful as well as accurate in his political prophecies. lt is unfortunate for the federal Government that the Governments of three western provinces are at present in conference at “Edmonton with regard to the serious condition unemployment Premier King virtually declares that, if he had desired to play poli- tics with unemployment, he could have urged Parliament to vote mil- lions for doles and. thus earned an easy popularity with those who would have received them. It is an insult to the people to say that they expect- ed doles, or would have appreciated them if offered. The people were looking for work and Premier King should have taken the three million dollars a year that his government of widespread throughout. the prairie country. Judging by the number of men put to work on our roads within the last few weeks,‘ says the Summerside Journal, we at least for the time be- ing have no unemployment situation in P. E. Island. A three millior. dollars.- potatoes in hotels ou‘side of this province, and it would not be sur- prising if Mr. Hooper himself had not tickled his palate with some of Son. years of Aplertiful Maritime produc- tion when it would not be in the in- terest of President Hoover to order free entry into Canada. We are talk- ing of the years, or months, in which 1s would suit the United States to’ change our tariff to suit their pur- The writer has eaten those U. S. Mr. Hooper talks in the year or pose-which the King Government hag given them full power to do. This is the crime of their potato policyl ' THAT BILLION BOGEY Liberal propogandistsin distress. are sendizg out shadow soarecrows in hope-of frightening some weak de- serters back to their fold. One of these is that it will take "a billion dollars" -for Hon. Mr. Ben- nett to implement his election prom- ises. The iwentnr of this bogey is without doubt, possessed of very little knowledge of figures, and much less of brains than the weakest, minded of those he attempt; t0 fool. If he had the slightest knowledge of what Leader Bennett has- prom- ised, and to what extent these-would tax the Federal Treasury, he would never make suoll a. public as ofi himself. < - ~ i In point of fact, a number of the proposals being 0n capital account, was spending on immigration and carried on highway and other work to relieve the unemployment. Premier King has ceased asserting that Mr. Bennct cannot establish federal old age pensions. The Prime Minister has probably found that his attitude on this queslon was doifl! him harm, especially in the smaller provinces, which do not feel equal to financing these contributions them- selves, even in part. An important point brought out at the Cambridge meeting Tuesday night by Hon. John A. MacDonald was with reference to the lobster m- dustry. The Government of New- foundland negotiated s treaty with Germany which enables Newfound- land lobster; to gain access to that country at a duty 75 per cent lower than the duty on Canadian lobsters. is the"? My reason why the King Government could not have secured s similiar concession, if it had the interest of our lobster fishermen at heart? It boasts of making many "Billie-i; but What benefit have these been to our farmers and fishermen? The Regina Star, former Liberal Journal, says: The more Mackenzie King is found out, the more he re- veals himself as a veritable Jekyll and l-lyde in political life, writing "Labour and Humanity" and invent- ing "company unions“; announcing that he will not sanction the expendi- ture of a single five-cent piece from the public treasury for relief of un- employed men and women in certain provinces of Canada and at the same time taking valuable water rights from the public domain, and handing them to wealthy party friends to sell for their private profit to the tune of $104,800,000. The King government has wasted nine years in the pursuit of tariff theories, only to find the country worse of! than before. 1t now pre- tends that it can arrange treaties which will enable farmers and manu- facturers to sell their goods in other parts of the Empire, but the only treaties the government has so far formulated-those with France, Aus- tralia and New Zealand-—have had quits the opposite effect. The Austral- ian and New Zealand treatise have permitted the meat and dairy pro- ducts of those two countries to be dumped into Canadian markets and to force the home farmer against the wall. Addressing a Montreal audience, Hon. E. L. Patenaude said: “We should place someone at the frontier to halt Canadians going m the 11mg- ed States. and tell them that they are assets of Canada that they must not go. and that we will find them a Government which will ensure them three meals a day, the means to bring up their families and to live happily in the land of their birth." He went on to affirm that the only way to bring about this happy deliv- eranae out of our troubles is to rs- turn Hon. n. B. nnett and the Conservative party to power on July 28th. He indicated that unless the electors achieved this victory in their own interests the situation There is no guarantee that these duties will be maintained if the Gov- ernment is by any mischancs re- turned to power. Liberals “emselv- es have said that the budget was Just an election gesture, just a temporary concession to the minority tariff group in the party, and that it will be repealed the moment the Govern- ment is returned. If you suffer your people to be ill- educeted, and their manner to be corrupted from their infancy, and than punish them for those crimes to there is good reason for claiming that every promised item can be pro- video for, under economical admin- istration, out of the ordinary rev- enue of Canada, as implemented under a safer and more business-like tariff. I And if it were so, that it would cost a billion, Ywhat of their own policy, which, as experts irl imitation, they are trying to avert defeat by promising to do everything thatlien- nett has advocated, and more too- if you will only let thorn in again. I MPERI A lSISM from the clay of Mackenzie King's appointment as Liberal leader up to the opening of this election cam- naisn. their favorite sport vras in attacking Conservative imperialism, and denouztcing what they called “flee wevins" with unbridled mn- gues. To them the United States was the Mecca of political worship, and elery suggestion for cementing Brit- ish connection they scoffed at and ridiculed in season and out of seas- on. But now that their House of Worship —the United States-has kicked them out, root and branch. by means of a prohibitive tariff, and in plain lung. usge has sent them begging for a felflhi Place. the’? make s steai‘of this principle of Corservative. and, fm- election purposes, are becoming 0W1? fledged deciples of what they so vigorously denounced. They didn't do it until they were shoveled out of their United States El Doredo, and until they bed no other place to lay their weary heads. And nowiliketlaedsvinbusrowed feathers, they are trying to make a peacock show is this stolen dress. It was the great Sir John Mec- received my June cheque for cream best endeavors in dairylhfl- tells me that JULY 24, 1930 The Public Forum no column u can II the _ by eoa-mrlwl" of questions of -..terest. Till! Charlottetown Guardhu duel unnecessarily MM". u“ opinions of 001100033”- "raa AQUATIC SPORT! Sin-In the write up o! WW- day's "Water Meet" Why W" 5° much space given W ti" ‘My cm‘ testants and to the divln! Peflimn‘ an“; of the out of town profession- al? Chivalry, 1 suppose. on the first part, and courtesy on the-second. All welliirl their place, but was there no reason for a ill-Siiliibie Pride m m, prowess and endurance of the young men, specially Arthur Mc- Lead, who won first place int the 100 yard dash the must thrilllns and spectacular feature of the meet, whose every ounce of strength was given to give Rome a. holiday. May the sports continue but let the laur- els be evenly; distributed. __i_-—-—-€— INSULT TO INJURY Sll‘,-——F€ii0VI Dairymen! I have just those choice Yankee tubers sold shippled and B‘ gasp w“ my n!“ ex‘ any cause. and likewise the best ress on. in this city in the store of Jenkins a 1p when I was struggling w bum up "Wmm l" l" ell-m‘ °f a herd cf good milkers I little] thought that a. New Zealander would i sit like the one Lord McAulay tells us of, and gloat. over the ruin of our A short distance from here there is an officer oi’ the Merchant Mar- ine spending his vacation. and he the last trip his boat I made was a load of New Zealandi butter landed in Halifax. As if the general freighters could, not bring it here quick enough thei Merchant. Marine that was built and equipped by the Canadian people is being used to flood the market with New Zeaiand butter. The scoundrel who plucked the crutch from the cripple and used it as a club to belabor him had noth- ing 0n the King Government. We hear much. very much those days from Liberals about loyalty to the party. Well loyalty is all right when exercised in a good cause, but when people are asked to be loyal for the benefit of the people living at the other end of the earth, I feel that it ceases to be a virtue. The Liberal who secs a prospect of lugging turnips to his stock all next winter and buying bran at Forty per ton that he may sell butter fat at twenty five or thirty per pound, and still remain loyal; vsz-il, all 1 can say is, l wish him 12y cf his loyalty and a grrd aivpxlfc for New Zealandi ‘cutter vixen he is driven -out oi. dairyirg. . . . . i l am Sir, etc., i A FARMER. f The White House was first paint- ed white to obliterate marks of fire left by the British invasion in i814. j The English walnut is not a na-W Live ct England but °omss from Greece, Persia, and Afghanistan. i The American coin called the nio- the remainder being copper. New York's taxable property ls valued‘ at more than fifteen billion dollars. THE LAND w: LOVE I! IIANI LIIGI CANADIAN FARMING Q. What are some features of Canadian farming? A. Farming constitutes one of the chief industries of Canada in which there were over 700,000 occupied farnrsin 192i at the lest census rep- resenting fsrm population of about half of the Dominion total. The gross agricultural wealth of the country has risen to over eight billion and the annual revenue to nearly two billion, while_ the capital invested in agriculture is estimated at nearly four billions. This is on the basis of only a small percentage of the total arable area being cultivated and a million acres are added annually to the cultivated area which now ap- proximat/ss 00 million acres.‘ .__._.__.._. Liberal ‘ranks, that famous challenge. "A Bfillllh subject r was psi-pi a British subiect I will die,’ to which Canada and the British world re- lponded with immortal applause. And now the Liberal purloiners unnatural attire. Donald, father of true Conservatism . w m‘, M, gm i; this. ls Oenzldnlmd would continue to grow more acute which m“ mt dumb“ r , prefer theinmvi" °" m‘ g h“ “d W“ “m m “m” "w" m“ them-you first make thieves, and mmlbtfiig! §°"Vi“"“, ‘l. Uifflfillffi-‘L tbnmigisbiharsalirmunssunra. ' f. R14? - ~us»-.»" ‘B! Imv W . Baden. MD WAS THE MEDICINE MAN EIGHT‘! Years ago when we read of thej medicine man of a tribe, of his gro-g tesque attire, his incantation, and of his medicine obtained by steeping or stewlng various plants and also the organs of animals, we were tempted to smile. and congratulate ourselves‘ on the tremendous advance made int medicize in these latter years. Arid so when research men began to speak about the possibility that substances found in the glands of] the body-thyroid in the neck, adrenal I in the kidneys and others-might be used to regulate processes in the body. they received a lo‘, of opposi- tion to their views. - WEN 3 Ifqou wmldbewmltlzq Think of Saving as Well as Getting . . . i i i prosperity. The Systematic saving is the Bank of Nova Sooiia invites your Savin s Account. Interest m foundation of They wsie told that they I Em Si!’ etggscrxrom goii-g back to the days of the witch doctors. I - little adrenal glands situated on top |of each kidney is the outstanding ‘immediate treatmrnt for shock from have the audacity to masquerade as imperialists (except in Quebec) and parade ls patriots in this. to them. ‘As in the days of the great 0on- servative ahleftain. so it is now, that unity with the Mother Country is one of the would to...‘ of m mm under the leadership of Hos. I. B. JHHM" ~ mem-ueirswses.» And yet what do we find? The‘. the juice of secretion of the The secretio: of the little parathy- rcid glands situated low in the neck behind the breast tone actually con- trois the amount of lime in the blood and tissues of the body. The secre- tion of the thyroid gland in the neck speeds up the body processes. Insulin, the secretion from a por- tion of the pancreas gland. is now preservingthe live; of older folk. and preventing the deaths of young peo- ple who would have died with the fatal illness. diabztu. And now another ailment-pernici- ous anaemia-one that was always’ fatal, has been conquered by the use of liver of animals as a food. Liver a-d even the extract made from liver, actually incre the corpuscles of the blood wo or three' times. And as you know there are otherf glands whose secretions are being used daily ‘by physicians in their fight against disease. , , It is the overactivity of the little pituitary gland in the skull that created the giant or tall man of the circus side show. This pituPary ex- tract is now a part of the equipment of the family doctor at the birth oi? a child in the home. ‘ Azrd so as we think of the native medicine man of by gone years, it is with a feeling far from amusement,- a: we realize that he must have seen some ‘results of his use of t’he_ Orslms of animals in his treatment of; the ailnrnfs of his tribe. ' i i l kel “nun” m“, m“ bu“ nmke’ l Farther than eye can see, far North. CRY FOB- A NATIONAL LYRI‘. VOICE far West, Stretches the prairie land, whose travel yields I Such precious harvesting. The grsiyys ripe crest {Crowns with bright gold the vast Canadian fields. Yet they have lain for ages long asleep, _ Storing in silence their reserves of life, wondrous deep, And drew forth strength to serve his daily strife. But Canada has fairer fields un- tilled. ' W110" embryo thoughts and words of fire lie dumb, REQUIREMENTS NEMA WORM CAPSULE! A scientifically tested product of Parke Davis b 00., are ef- fective, rah and Iure in u. polling worms from the infea- tlnal tract of not only fuse but. live stock. Willtry and dogu. If your animals develop worms act promptly with this specific treatment. EAR-MIT! LOTION Within the last six weeks we have sold gallons of our In. Mite Lotion. Fox-men have highly recommended it as being always effective. Get some from our fresh stock. FLIA POWDER This is the time of year when you must protect the for from deterioration by vermin. Our Flea Powder nlway; give; “m. faction. We have lust received a new shipment. Send in your orders at auce- They will be promptly attended in. 772a Two Macs is oompoun half-yearly. .Ti-iE, BANK 0F NQYA SCOTIA , ESTABLISHED 1832 e Capital $10,000,000 kill’?! $30,000,000 Tots‘. Assets ovcv 0270000000 With tne object of giving the men possible ravine so our Inriflan uunfomnrs the Eastern Supervisor's Denollment is located in _ Saint John. II. B. Resting until the master poet, skilled Water of the Dead Sea is tit-Q human heart, times as salty as that o; tfhe ocean. To feel the hungry shall come. , God! for a ploughman like the Scot Wasp communities last. only one of old, summer. To draw a furrow through the teem- lh! mflilid- ~ Wasps feed their young on other -E. B. Greenshields- insects. Don't Fail To Take Advantage 0f Finland's Special Offers N0. L-Annlversary Offer. A 51-00 box of Finland's Face Powder and a 75c tube of Finland's Face Cream-Both for $1.00. ' N0. 2.-Wlth every $1.00 purchase of Pinaudh Toilet ficparatlons is given-free one special box. Contains fflvg of these preparations in holiday size. As we have only a limited number of these free goods deals. you would be well advised in get yours early. I -E. A. D (Alentral Drugstore‘ Patronlze our Soda Fountain WhcnTired and Thirsty. 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