. 1 Hearts has the gift oi happy expres- s as a back iarm since the advent oi ' i community. One such place in each ~ season. Eiiorts are being made nannies-w. oil-Ju- a. llnl. ‘v 1 ' s Secretary-Liens. ‘ ' and Handgun-J. ll. Buns-u i sue w in» 70g; sands-r maile- ponu; =lilgpfiglbnndep p lam jrlimnnv, JANUARY s1, 1930 are Vlsofnei (M. D. l llneillnaon II I. 0. saseacnarih dent-l. I. Ineaeet Annotate manor-n n. Curie. uh United advance) Ilfllee ‘II Ullill delivered ' ‘The Common Touch I His Honour Lieutenant Governor On Wednesday evening, on the focoasion oi the presentation of thc ‘ cups which he donated for the best ‘kept residence and grounds in each County, His Honour pertinently re- Jnarked that there ls no such thing the automobile. Every house and fies-m, well kept, is a credit to the .'.‘ locality is an example to all the rest. i The PPOBNII made in recent years his: the “improvement oi school ‘igrounds dud‘ community weliare_he, ;‘._ attributed? largely to the ladies. Thci . ladies, we" venture to state, would at- -3 itribute itfin no small degree to the fipracticai interest which His Honour izhas taken in the movement. It would Ilbe an excellent thing, he suggested, Elli the men could get together into Jan organisation like the women's . nisiitilts. *~ii_ would likewise be iin iiexcellent thing if we had more public " ispirited citizens like the present re- iipresentative oi His Majesty in this . The social amenities of life have éalways appealed strongly to Gover- rnor Hearts; It was typical oi him to ' ay, with a touch oi whimsical hu- flllOl‘, that the one drawback to living; in Government House is that the country people will not call. It has 'been his privilege and pleasure, on ' every occasion, to entertain the dis- tinguished visitors who come to our _ shores; but if he were permitted to do only this, ii the friendly relations V‘ and social intercourse between him- lelf..and our citizens oi town and country were interrupted or aiiect- Jsliibf reason oi his oiiicial duties, -ws believe that His Honour would 1.10118 '89 hi" resigned in iavor oi I’ some one more ambitious oi gubm-ng. fioriol“ distinction. For ii he has ,. been punctilious in the display lei pomp and ceremony appro- ~ priate to public occasions, it ipan be said with equal truth gthat he has‘ never tor a moment pilost the common touch. This is an lhclilevement which Kipling cites as brie oi the distinguishing marks oi a Man. pueue-Iliaale-lllllllu l l Tourists and Farm Products s- a» -‘.--\-.... fl-hl». n1-e:—~e uwrsar -u _ One of the most noticeable effects jpr the tourist business is the inihiod-l Hate demand created ior the home! "Hind domestic products, particularly gs, chicken, cream, bacon, and flatter». Mr. A. R. Jones, manager of ‘he Maritime Egg Exchange, St. John J e l I Conference Propaganda The reading publio, suggests a western exchange, may rightly be‘ warned not to take too much stock in the press reports about the Naval Conference that will come irom Lon- don. during the next iew weeks. Ae- cording to reports, there are about S00 newspaper correspondents in London assembled from all parts of the world, which works out to about ten correspondents per delegate. In-_ esmuch as the conierence will do all its actual work "in committee," that is, in private, and will be particu- larly desirous that the details oi the inevitable diiierences oi opinion be kept secret in the interests of an ul- iilomziow W luniinuiii NoterBy Th ' . . “Government by Acreage" is dis- cussed in Plain ‘ralkvbyi Orville Welsh, his contention being-that‘ the representation of the people oi the United States, both in C0 and inthe State Legislatures is as un- iair and oorruptas was that oi Eng- land in the days of the "rotten bor- oilghs" before the passage of the Re- iormBill. Itwasinthedaysoi George the Third that the Colonies rebelled and at that time it was poe- sible ior less than 100 men to elect a majority of the l-Iouse oi Commons. “It ll the Misiortune oi A " ," writes w. Welsh, "that the rotten J11 borough system still flourished in England at the time our State. and Federal Constitutions were (armed. Since than in Britain as well as in most other countries electoral in-I equalities have.in thevmain been abolished, but in the United States they linger in their very worst iorm." There was no manhood suiirage in those old days, and in only one-third oi the early States was population taken ass basis for any legislative apportionment. In Massachusetts each town (or tirnate compromise, the 300 corres- pondents are likely to be hard put to it for the daily story that the folks back home, who are paying the bills, will expect. They will not get much help from the oiiiclal bulletins which will be as colorless aszthese documents always are. Under these conditions, it is predicted, we shall have tons o1 speculation, surmise and ru- mor, against the odd ounce oi fact which will now and then em~ erge from, the proceedings. This spec- township) was given two representa- tives in the legislature regardless oi its size. . And how is it in the Electoral Col- lege which rinally elects the Presl- dent? How are the State Electors chosen? The Constitution says each state shall appoint a number oi El- ectors equal to the whole number oi Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in Congress. That gives New York 45 electors, or one ior.230,'182 people. Nevada has three electors, or one ior every 25,802. ulation, from the circumstances oi| ML welsh Wm‘, out that while the case. will have to do largely with the city oi New York has a popula- the possibilities oi disagreement. And tlon almost a million greater than m addmon the", Wm mevimbw be thatwltl-iin the State but outside the big city, the outside, or "up-state" despamhes tendencious m chum“: ivote is much larger than the vnteoi designed to make trouble, which will ‘New York Guy‘ This m“ domkk appear in newspapers o1 the ulire- 'ates the politics of New York state nationalistic type in the United both in the Legislature at Albany and States, IPr-ance, and possibly other in Congress at Washington. All the _ m“ 1 m States haveeach two Houses, a Sen- countfles Th“ w” no way e ate and a Legislative Assembly and ca“ at Gem“ m 1927' when the so there are National Senators and reporting leit much to be desired in Represenmlwes at Washington and the 011515165 0! clarity 111d mill-l" ‘State Senators and representatives at and Halifax, who was for some time ‘associated with the egg and poultry. industry oi this Province, informs The Guardian that on the beginning ‘oithe tourist business in New Bruns- wick and Nova Scotia the demand for eggs immediately leaps beyond the productive capacity oi both pro- vintu. necessitating the importation ‘S! fresh supplies irom Prince Edward Pleild, Ontario and Quebec. This " ‘bend continues throughout the and poultrynien of giewlyrunstvick and Nova Scotia to the, production oi eggs; but were unable to supply the F- Prince Edward Island has‘ been ‘finest successful in the development eli and Poultry production, large- fimiamh uio elem-ts oi the provino- ileoeiltibn and its capable man- y: and-secretary. Messrs. George i!“ James teigntiser. elven with m, tlality. While the conditions aur- rounding the London Conference will aiiord a measure of discouragement for trouble-make , the ‘ rests that want the Conibrence to be a iailure will use every available agency, in- cludlng propaganda, to that end. __________.__.. Editorial Notes ..__¢ It is encouraging to note, in the secretary's report oi the yotato Growers’ Association, that the sav- ing efiected on acid phosphate by the reduction oi $1.50 a ton ior this ier- each state capital. Under the present system New York City hasqonlyzz Senoitprsyout oi 51 and as Assembly moh out oi lso i at Albany, so“ "the up-state tail wags the New York City dog." And that is the way it is all over the nation, accordingvto Mi‘. Welsh, owing to the iact that acres count ior more than manhood or womanhood at the polls. United States cities now contain much more than half the population oi the Republic, but owing to not being fairly represented, they are out- voted by the rurahdistricts all the time. " -__..i. tilizer will amount to some $20,000 -or enough to pay the entire ex- pense of running the Association. A news item, published elsewhere in The Guardian, tells oi the impend- ing visit next August oi a. party oi some one hundred and ility members to the Pennsylvania Potato Growers‘ Association to Prince Edward Island to inspect methods oi potato cultiva- tion. This is a distinct compliment_ to the reputation Prince Edward Isl- | and has achieved in the quality pro- duction oi potatoes. lion. w. M. Lea, Minister oi Agri- culture, has been invited to attend, as a guest o! the ._'._,, the annual Maritime men's dinner at Toronto on Feb. 4th. The dinner will coincide with the meetings oi national breeders’ associations in the Ontario capital. Mr. Lea will endeavor‘ to at- tend. The Ministers presence at gatherings oi this kind is good pub- . iieity ior the Province. He can be trusted to discuss provincial mat- ters inteliigently and to-avoid giv- lng misleading or embarrassing in- terviews. This is an invaluable qual- iiiooiion tor a government member- Prohibition odvboms will have some diiiiculty in eeeountibi MW! tact, as stated in a recent Canadian Press despatch. that the death ii-omaleohoiismispiopcrtionateiyel- moetsixtimesaegreatintlieflntted sum as in Canada. These is the runner extraordinary rm’ can deaths hem aeuh and slim.- lo. ‘alcoholism in the mime euiesinieaewereeeerlrsisiliisss Moreover Mr. Welsh aiiirms that lt wasthe men oi acres who gave the majority which ten years ago brought in the Prohibition Amendment to the Constitution. It is true as we believe, that the cities as a rule were largely opposed to Prohibition, and the ma- jority in the country districts much more generally in its iavor. As the cities incr the number of their people much more rapidly than the rural districts, the future o! Prohibi- tion seems precarious. ' The . Railway Commissioners haw raised the .price oi haulage oi wes- tern coal to Ontario to $8.23 per ton. which Premier Ferguson regards as prohibitive. This will diminish em- ployment in the Alberta mines, in- volve the importation oi American coal and send a mint oi Canadian dollars acroesthe border to enrich the coal barons over there. It will, however please Uncle Sam, which now as from the beginninz ll ind hi" been e prime objective for the Lib- eral powers that be in Ottawa. "Ifhere is somtbing intanglblr about a Maritimer," said Hon. n. B Bennett ‘the other day at the second annual dinner and home dance oi the maritime Province Association in this Royal York Hotel, Toronto. "ilieldaritinim are a great peopli and irankly admit it," he continued "There are no liner people in cana- ‘up 33in i... i. 4. v34 --_-q I»! st . inure " B; lulu W. Balsa. I-D. ROUGH OB FINE 700178 When you read that one physician advises against the use oi raw irui and vegetables, bran and other ‘rough’ ioods, whilst ‘L eir daily use, you may wonder which one is right. As a matte oi iact, considering, that most individuals get very little| - exercise, the use oi these rough ioods would be of help, as they give bulk to ithe iood and this enables the intes- tinetograsportaksholdoitheicod better as it moves along. ' Also its roughness irritates or stim- ulates the intestinal walls to tract and this helps iilter iood through to the waiting blood and lymph vessels in the small intestine; and lathe large intestine where the wastes oi the iood are accumulated, these ‘rough’ or ‘cellulose’ foods stimulate its walls and so the wastes are car- ried along, and thus removed from tho body. However where there exists an ir- ritation oi any part oi the canal,- swmflllh. BT80 0i‘ small intestine- these rough ioods can cause trouble and should not be eaten. Further, there are some individuals in whom these ioods cause an un. natural fermentation. It would seem m“ they are Just too strong to: their intestinal tract, and abdomln. al pain, headache, and backache often iollow the use o! tl.i.se ioods. Thus turnips or cabbage, good ‘W811 ioods, give distress, and beans oi all kinds do likewise. The use of raw fruits in their nag. ural skins or coverings is 5,150 me cause o! much ierrnentation, gas formation, and pain, What is the thought? That a little rye, brown, or whole wheat bread, and a little raw mm; m- even raw vegetables could be safely added W the dolly diet oi most oi us, but should not iorm any 13mg pm of the day's food supply, Where the use of any oi these ioods is known to Rive distress there is mthlns t0 be gained by the continu- ed "Se 01 that Particular iood, as “w” “e "h" mush ioods that may not createyfiis ‘filing-hung. . ; whim? PEN? of exercise or work is taken, it would seem that thesystem can take care of almost any kind o; food, because. all the pfgggsses m working dfull tllne’. ‘ - The lesson is obvious. RICHARD ‘novnr i e Askingnothlng, revealing naught, But minting his words irom a iuno oi thought. ' A keeper of silence eloquent, Needy. yet royally well content, Oi the mettled breed, yet abhorring strlle, And iuil oi the mellow Juice oi liie, A taster oi wine, withnan aye gm- g maid, Never too bold, and never airaid, Never heart-whole, never heart-sick, (These are the things I worghip 1n Dick.) ‘No ildget and no 1210111161‘, just _ A calm observer oi ought and must, A lover oi books, but g, “m” .01 111511. Premier Bracken oi Manitoba has gmade it clear that thejominioh , Government, which is responsible ior ;ir_ Jhouldbeapartym g solution of the unemployment .' ism. He would have‘ the Ottawa Government pay one-third at the. colt. Y nodnnsnivmonoi sensor‘ adopted a number oi resolutions‘ among wliich were the‘ following: .< .»-r-, -.. w! I Di‘ ~°"-.<>-.'1*»i@v.w ~=m-.~'p~i»' ‘ ‘ it-brlon} Act" ing . vfhioh--rniset'he1'v‘e' glad? dosed iheiasre-oiievowlvllrson in this Province. became it showed that wewere entitled tean additional yearly euilidy 0i 00.012.100.07. Note how carefully the .GOIfil‘lmfllii'hld . "i" pamphlet whenthey brought it down‘io<the‘exeet_ cent. With these three and than snllllon dollars extra subsidy, I can tell-you - Sir, I became pretty nhesty and my wiie Mandy boughtie. new from. I uimlghi we would money to lmglind and other com. tries that needed money because‘ we could nom- ppsno it all ourselves. But‘ lilacs o! my disappointment wheinPmnier-Saunders canoe from Ottawa and theiPatrlot an-, bounced he had filed a “lidielhorial” claiming only ss-isaielu. ri-uo this was for public lands only but that was all the memorial mentioned and thepemphletseysthatilnde the . some head we are entitieddo-tL- 618,463.94. why did Mr." Saunders, wlienhegottoOttawarnakathis, tremendous reduction of $1,041,040,- 00? I would not have minded ii he had taken oiI a. $1500: so ior cash dawn, but to makefa reduction oi more than a million on oneltem oi‘ lfcturnie. _A§aafe ruler [tofremembelrl is - the greater the risk $AVINGS 1IN'I'O A: SAVINGS" ACCQUNT _.-i lure of high general the ih-thd MONTREAL lstabiblied all! i’ d will earn a i reasonalelefinterest and he safe Charlottetown mo. GnFiLLlTER, Manager alone has plunged me‘ into ‘the CGPlQRSOI despair and Mandy’ ieels worse about it than I do. This me- morial is signed by Albert C. Saun- ders, Premier: Walter M. Lea, Min- Maritime. Shipbfilder, ister oi Agriculture, and J.» 0. C. Campbell, Counsel. ‘fhismakes it a. very formidable document, but, all the same I like the pamphlet bet- Prince EdwaldIsland-has g, (m- Juisuisiiod eon ihooos BayIOpegon m!‘ i! Who'd; Bohks oi River. lflnks m, Pin. I. rlelieiongs Temperance inennual session‘ m, and 1 wonder at Mr. Lea giving to the well ‘snowy. Sh“, buflmmgg-m up without a struggle -tlie-. child c: Kruse and sonic... envoys,- n, which he had christened, and which Boaird of Marine Underwriters of ho sowed to make his very-own. I San Francisco. rem- the "memorial" was all the do- nobei-i Banks. left the Island in lugs oi that Wung roan‘ osmpbolnlsso, and learned iihe irsds “or ship who got our esteemed, Minister oPbuilding in ._New England. Altm- g Agriculture to sign on the» dotted stayiin Seattle, San Francisco, line. But the greatest danger is,_ iiiEureka, lie-went Mr. Saunders ehouldnpay another ,M.r Kruse, his partner. is one he had visit to Ottawa and make another known ior yea-rs as a ship builder, reduction oi a million- . or so Wfiiilild that explains their partnership ‘would be in debt and would. then in i905. ' -" » 1.1"" i” PW s- of. getting one. rho ‘fact is. ‘the plot‘ seems to, thicken d darken yvith ab» oi.a‘ Weill». ~aino~°1mb~ was.» steamers, several opi- ieiwybqats that operate in San Francisco Bay,.to say until my headaches." and that is’ the reason r want"to' u: ‘io his . . - a c knothing oi many barges and‘ repairs pamphlet and liave_'notl1irig ‘in do v with "rsoniorion." 1 hops it i. not-W! gmmtfl. ~ . i . 1 . . wok,‘ M, l“ L“ to “Haw w On account oi mieel ships taking the pamphlet and insist on getting ma pm” °t “Men vwukflw the sssimossi. ’ " ’ m? film: wooden flirt‘ 112m ' I 0113C! me G n’ mm l” m‘ m 1mg or u. s. woodeifvessels dumped Among the many ivessels ' Mr. no. part to have raised our hope so “ab, a“ the“ abandon u‘ 95d l ‘n the market andieold ior ienpe-r . cent‘ oi their original wet. Inspiie don't think he will do it. _ 4 In hasteand partly iniear. I am Sir. etc, . ' z-i all this the Kriiss llliBl-Ilkdrlhlp Yard 1s- still ‘in operation,‘ building ANDY». barges, small ‘beefilgillll and 1101M vepalr work. Their ship ‘yard is o lweil V “"9" ~- ~ on short noises they are ready No cynic and no chai/"letan, There Tm iliieobuuding snail. each - i coo feet in length byvm 1min height uid- fully provided‘ with ear-rink 'cranes. One . ejnloyé ' the smell oi niikum and seasoned sawed lumber. Who never deiers‘ and. never mands, Butsniiiing,‘ takes hands- de- the world in his Seelnsitgood as when‘ Godflrst IIW ' , ‘ And gave it the weight oi hie-will ior > law. ' . _ ,. . . -niiu cal-nun. fl-IE LAND WE-Lovi: ‘ B: IIIGI '- " CANADA'S win: mops-in! . Q- Whatistheextent oiCenadafs WinsIndilet17'l-._ _ m‘ .A.I oniuirovvinsmdurtryqshon growtbfwlthga- vsliu,lnie_ss;oi~ssms,s4s-o,-f.,¢p. tel-investment oiusigtoesggipyynig. 1 meteor, IN persons-in s‘ ~ ‘ ' .3. i: on . and, to Coos my in loos. | P E-Islwd siiupnévails with Rob- ertBvanks and his charming wiie. They si-ira most congenial couple. Mrs Banks is a native oi Scotch Fort, [a E. Island. ‘Illieir onlydailqihtor ‘ ‘alocal high school. The ‘Banksjenjoy a Spliflldidlhfims and ‘garden in ‘aselect part orNoi-un Bend. _ , _ It is wqbiiy oi note that the two biggest ship builders on the Coast 1m Maritimeirs, one is Robe-rt, Banks oi oocs Bay. the other is Matt Walsh ‘oi San reds-o. Calii. m latter is a native of CansoyNiS. R. E‘ Delaney in Oakland lvnplo Leaf. ‘ share the ecstasy of the palate thal revels in the real thlng—a scoop (no; a cut) irom a Que Cheddar, a loaf, oi the true make, the true age, ihs true preparation? . . . . 'i‘here are puzzles, too, about Stilton. It has become the regular Christmas cheese; and many a small household is all but crushed, like Tiirpciu under the shields oi’ the Sabiiies, by giits of more Stilton cheese than it can eat in a year. Eating Stilton cheese indeed, is almost as delicate and a: reverent a rite as eating o parted pear. Nothing can match it at thi ideal moment; but it is so eiisy tc attack too soon, so eluy to delay they built in Zbyesrs are ‘ ‘ railwarworkers ' like lit red; and "moped 1w. (hit, all! i ‘E too long. That ls why wise men eai __ gStilton by preference at their clubs, and choose their clubs by the Stilton they lind there ,. . _. ._ .ls Christina time, when everybody cats much more oi everything than usual, I good time at which to eat rich cheese as well? Mr. Scrooge, who thought that Marley's Ghost might be only ii clot oi mustard oi.a crumb of cheese, was oi those (and they still are many) who believe cheese to be in- digestible. On the other hand no good Frenchman will be happy with- out avlittle cheese at the ohd oi hu deleuner-pour corriger raciditc ill N. “Cheese... ~7-(’l!§le=1l.on.lon5.'l‘lmee)i' ' ... Why- should cheese called Ched- dar have. become "the staple cheese of the great mass‘. bi the 1101140“ population"? Why do dockers and others tnai How is it that Ched- darihaswecomef so to speak. the elemental cheese, soithat in some shops lt'is called simply "cheese". as eggswhioll come between "cook- ing" and “ior electlonereing pur- poses" are simply "eggs"? Do those who eat this w‘ olesome and‘nour- lshlng ,.i_-oduce: imagine that, they (P itinued on Page '1) ‘TZONSERVATIVE WOMEN .h ’_ . a CORDIALLKIO REQUESTED i ‘to at tend ’ AN ORGANIZATION MEETING ' in " THE LADIES CLUB ROOM Bank oi Commerce Building Friday Night at 8 Q’clock \ flsebsetlsaiagdimo . m!” w" We You mossissrlngpnd ‘do!!! chew when _ youvuk-iqr nan Illleckfllivlst. You'll