14-" t v PAGE FOUR Illa Bilarlnttatovm Guardian Pro-olden. nun-cor. W. Chute: l- llfl-IIR- Vloo-Plolllpli. I. I. Ilrloflr s l. L lcorohry, Lint-Col. D. A. Iuollnloh, B. l. 0. Illhr no lull’ Dinner. J. I. Bur-m. I-J-l- Allah“ lumen. Woun- no p. x. finale. umuu Daily (founded um u.» w in. n- advance). dollvuol- It." Ill you (in ndvuoc) will“! III Clllllll llll Unlfod lhfhl. TUESDAY NOVEMBER 19 I885 Harbor Survey The Maritime Board of Trade which con- ~- venes at Halifax this week will be asked to indorse resolutions of the CharlottetownBoard of Trade asking for improved harbor facilities at Charlottetown and improved train service be- tween Sackville and Charlottetown. The latter resolution is in the nature of a “hardy perennial” but is none the less import- ant for that reason. Equally important is the emphasis placed on the need of harbor improvement. As MR. I. O, HYNDMAN pointed out at a recent council meeting of the Charlottetown Board of Trade, this appears to be an opportune time to ask for such improvement, in view of the survey work carried on last summer. The survey of the Charlottetown harbor from Hillsboro Bridge out to the Bay was undertaken by the BENNETT (iorernment as a preliminary to stirveying the tidal waters and subsequently the piers to as- certain what requirements are needed to give Charlottetown modern docking. facilities for trans-Atlantic trafiic. It was also proposed to take up the matter of dry-dock facilities at Southport. The survey was initiated chiefly through Mr. W. CHESTER S_ McLUauz, Ex-M. P., in co-operation with the Charlottetown Board of Trade, and met with general approval. There is no reason why it should not be pushed for- ward to completion under the new administra- tion. The support of the Maritime Board of Trade in this connection will be of assistance in bringing the matter before the attention of the authorities at Ottawa. ' ' The Washington Deal. Congntulating Prime Minister KING on his good fortune in stepping into a situation which has enabled him to achieve a certain meas- ure of tariff concessions by the United States avithin a fc\v weeks of his attaining oflic. To- ronto Satirrday Night adds: “We say good for- tune advisedly, because the determining circum- stances to which he owes that achievement were entirely in Washington and were not of his mak- .ing_ Mr. ROOSEVELT needed something to divert the public mind from the recent United States elections and the hostility of theiSupreme Court towards much of his legislation. Hc needed im- mediate action if that something was to be in the realm of tariffs, because the presence of Senators and Congressmen at \Vashington, especially if engaged in their sessions, would have gravely impeded the work of his negotiators and exposed him to pressure from many different sides. There was, from his standpoint, every reason for get- ting a Ca adian tariff deal through as promptly as possib e, and for making it fairly spectacular, not only from the point of view of expanded markets for the American exporter, but also from that of relief for the American consumer, who is finding the pressure of the purely domestic steps to stem the depression in- creasingly severe. Moreover, Mr. ROOSEVELT is ‘by temperament a spectacular performer, and likes to see the sparks fly, an activity which they will not show unless the iron is hot.” ‘ Telling Him on The Toronto Globe says that “with the rare exception, the newspapers of Canada, regardless of politics, express regret over the prospective retirement of Premier Hawaiian from public life." One paper, the Temperance Advocate, official organ of the Ontario Temperance Feder- ation and the Canadian. Temperance-Federation, has not yet been heard from; but judging from its October issue it will not shed many tears over Mr. Hartman's exit from public life, According to the Advocate, the Ontario Liberal Premier is not only “not a dry" but he is "belligerently wet in policy and instead of taking an impartial and fair attitude toward all sections of public opinion he is using his public office to fight the battles of the Moderation League, and is apparently deter- mined to impose on Ontario the domination of the liquor trade." Mr. Huravnn, the Advocate charges, “came into provincial politics strongly backed by wet influence. Despite the fact that the convention that appointed him as leader ordered that the liquor question should be removed from politics, one of his earliest announcements of policy was to the effect that if Premier he would proclaim the beer bill.” He had stated also that he would require every member of his Cabinet to be in harmony with that policy. “This utterance," says the official organ of the Temperance Federation, “consigned to political obscurity servants of the public and of the Liberal party who, because of their character, their service and their standing in the House and in the party, merited recogni- tion, Again, this utterance was unnecessary. It was surely enough to say he would proclaim the bill. Did he have to give hostages to the liquor trade? Did he have to present to them on a charger the political heads of any and every man who in the House had dared to refuse sub- servience to the liqii6'r"'fffd€"1JYVOti'tlg“agaitrst‘ the beer bill? This utterance stuck a. blow at independence, moral ideals ‘and integrity in pub- lie men." And in the same issue); “The transfer of liquor control from the department of the Attorney-General to that of the Treasury. which the Premier holds himself, suggests that!" h" view the whole question is mllch more a matter. of revenue than of 1w and order _or even of human values. His adoption of npohcy that has sowed beertaaloons broadcast in Ontario, placipg. I number oftlaem in the hands of _ a Wllb reoorrljfor violation of the h our. laws. p how m the Premier is willing to sacrifice Qf-Qlllltifl. h £111 tariff policy. greed of the liquor- trade and to his’ own wish for easy money for the public treasury." q This unequivocal indictment would indi- cate that the Globe no longer voices temperance sentiment in Ontario’ when it eulogizes the re- tiring Premier on his success in havlng.“shaken the dry bones of politics into something new and sparkling.” _ . Editorial Notes Everybody was prepared for winter any- way. It it i . Now we must rest discontent with our tariff till Brennan's return ' 3K 9K People are beginning to prefer an Island Red Mackintosh to any other. ilé it 5K He was as good as his words-he blasted his way into the markets of the world by his _ If If ilt In the Treaty evidently every U.S.A. farmer benefits but the potato growers of the Maritimes are left out in the cold. if ¥ If The Hart House is good, the Public Health Clinics are better, and best of all are the Gyros for unselfishly assisting akto provide us with both. 9E 9K Sunday, or no Sunday, our telephone went likety-spit all afternoon, evening and late into the night to ascertain the contents of the Reci- procity Treaty. Reaction Oh, no good! 3K §l€ NE While Mr. Krno was afraid of offending Washington by retaliation, Mr. Bennarr raised brick for brick, and now for the first time Wash- ington has responded. to bargaining. If we had n0 tariff to bargain with where would we be to- day? We would have had neither the Empire tnarkets nor the few’ now promised us ‘in the U.S.A. 9K 9K 3K ' Now \ve know the reason for the smiling countenance of U.S.“A. Secretary Hum. after his interview with Premier KING: There was once a Premier of Niger Who smiled as he rode on a tiger; - They returned from the‘ ride With the Premier inside, And the smile on the face of the tiger, 9K 5E 5K The Universities are not going to take Sir Eowann Buarrfs criticisms lying down. Dean jonn M/vrncson of the Faculty of Arts, Queen's University, speaking at the Sopli-Frosh banquet, took exception to his allegation that many of the younger professors were responsible for “radical” ideas among students. Dean Mnrnason said it was impossible for any man concerned almost solely with one phase of life to make correct judgments regarding a differ- ent realm of society. _ 5K 9E Bit Rt. Hon. R. B. BENNETT has gone on a. va- cation to his home town of Calgary. An Ottawa correspondent says he slipped out of town quietly for the first rcal holiday he has had since 1930, The former Prime Minister, who took time out from his duties last winter because of illness, left for Calgary, for six weeks. It was said he might go south afterwards for a further rest. Mr. Bennarr, leader of the opposition in the House of Commons, had been at his office daily since the general election October I4. 9K 9E 9K The Rt. Hon. J. Ramsay MACDONALD now realizes in par-t what is meant by “Hell knows no fury like a woman scorned." When he was Prime Minister he turned down without explan- ation or excuse Lady Housrons offer of $500,- ooo to make Britain's air force effective. That was five years ago. She bought the Saturday Review and poured out money without stint to ruin him politically. Hence he and his son MALCOLM are the only two cabinet ministers to be defeated. are are an _ American farm producers get a fifty per cent. reduction in the Canadian tariff on a long list of home-grown vegetables, including aspara- gus, beans, cabbage, carrots, beets, cauliflower, celery, cucumbers, lettuce, parsley, peas, rhubarb spinach and tomatoes. In return we get a simi- lar reduction on the U. S. tariff on turnips, a smaller reduction on seed potatoes, and no re- duction on table stock. This may work out to somebody's advantage, but we had better “wait and see" before celebrating the event as a boon to Maritime agriculture. i 5K “Business conditions in Britain show a de- cided improvement, and with the exception of coal mining all industries are more active than they have been for a considerable time,” states Mr. Ants-ram FRASER,,K.C., traffic vice-presi- dent 9f the Canadian National Railways, who has just returned from a business visit to Europe. A tremendous amount of home building is being carried on and this has helped greatly in stimu- lating the demand for lumber, hardware and other building materials, as well as labor. Throughout Britain and Europe, Canadian de- velopmentsare being closely followed and there ia today great interest among all classes in the progress of the Dongnipéfs affairs. Not onl here but elsewhere people are Mr. J.‘ M. fil/mbrnsn "in an address before the Canadians did not know what sport really was. Actually it should have something to do with public health, So fafr la professional sportiwas concerned, he classed it u “a racket"; and tha kcy-noteof amateur sport was high-pitched com- petition not relaxation, or playing for the game's sake. Hp charged that sportsmanship was not taught, but young man were encouraged rather to strive for “a place on the tum” Lick 0f sportsmanship led to many abuses. Much more‘ ghmgld b; obtained from sport‘ than wu got out of it at present. A changed outlook was needed to enable all tohave a chance to piav rather thin - ---'wv--wa-a\nrlflflle\i ova-Inna .- , thauimnlinuldbfloneahibih’ beginning to ook askance at professional sportl. ’ ‘Montrealrjunibr Board of Trade declared that mm urn: , cnantorrnrown ounnomn Notes By The .Way Under the old lyliom the country was not only drained o! silver by Wuhlnzton; the fomlm vslue of its currency was at the mercy of WI-flhlfliifln- Twlrlolls on now aimed at: First, to direct. of sliver to N-l-nklng instead of Washington; secondly, to use these ruouroes in keeping the foreign value of the Chinese ,1 steady. Of lain years‘ the fluctua- tions of sliver have made Chinese omohanze fluctuate up and down so dinlly that all foreign trade has been reduced to a gamble-Chris- tlnn Science Monitor. There is lomethln; inspiring in tho way a man lakes pride in his possessions. The man who lceeps his home ln neat. order and repair and his yard well groomed and flowers to glve ti; color and beauty -you like to have nhn as a friend and to do business with hlm. No on; likes to do bimness with the man who la careless in his habits and who takes no pride in his per- sonal appearance, _or in the things which he owns. A man's actions are a key to his entire character. Old Inndnn now has only three transom cabs left On its busy streets. It. had four until a. few weeks ago, when a. crash with an automobile reduced t.he number of hansoms in active service to three and these three last survivors of a great. race of cabs find their only business tn romance-seeking young people, who take one of the old cabs, at; night after the theatres come out, just for the fun of it. But. riding 1n a hanaom cab in Old London, ln the pie-war days, was quite a thrill, as any of the old-timers will tell you, you of this younger generation who ride only in engine-driven cabs and find the ride boring at. any- ' thing less than 75 miles an hour.- Lonrlon (Ont) Free Press. It la not surprising that, fed for 18 years on a perverted philosophy of history and of national great- ness, and prevented from learning anything about the true state of affairs in Ethiopia and the rest. of the world, the people of Italy rally blindly behind their magnetic dictator in this hour of destiny. The people or Germany did the some ln 1914. Bo did the people oi.’ France in“ the mad days of Napol- eon and his feeble lrnilator, Nap- oleon III. All paid dearly for their mlspllwed trust. Will fate deal more kindly with the peopfe of Itryt-Chlcago Dally News. Women do not llllgh as often or as heartily as men. Whether lt. ls because they fear the disturbance to their facial arrangements or because it. may cause wrinkles or merely because they do not. possus as complete a sense of humor as men the truth is that they laugh infrequently, in spite of the fact that. they have the whole male sex to laugh at. Let's have more laughter from male and female alike. Let's not take ourselves so seriously. let's seek out. the good and amusing and pleasing things of life instead of concentrating so hard on the difficulties and the fears and the falluzes. Laughter is the finest. tonic. Why begrudge it to ourselvesli-vancouver sun. The growing intensify of frlcliim between Japanese generals and the local authorities in North China has an obvious relationship to the Halo-Ethiopian war. Japan seized Manchurla in i931, while all other countries with Eslatlc interests were engrossed with problems arising from the depression. In spite Of solemn assurances from Toklo that. no further aggression against China. was contemplated, there have been many indications that Japanese expamlonlst ambitions are still far from satisfied. Now the concentration of the League ot na- tions upon Musolinfs activities provides an opportune moment for Japan to tighten the thumb-screws upon China-Washington Ptrt. If. ls hard lo believe all that. pes- slmlats say about. this old world when dolly sessions in London re- cently commemorating Bible Week were attended by thousands of people, when 15,000 Bostonlans were present at a similar gathering in that. city, when Bible sales in even Prussia have doubled within the last four years and when the Scrip- tures remain, generally speaking, the world's beat eellen-Brockvlile Recorder and Tlmea. The tint. Chlnelo bbotblnek. ll ll reported, was General Miang Manehurla by the Japanese and had to make his living shlnlng shoes on the streets of Shanghai, thus betting n shining example to hi; fellow-countrymen. -- London Advertiser. ‘n’ doctor hu an, wrmeh that there are worse things for an individual than fat, and that every plan for the reduction of weight hu its perils, some of them dead- ly ones. Ho any: that it ls better to be fat. than dead, a point of view that. is likely to commend itself tn moat of his readers-sun Francis- co Argonaut. Th! wlllnla enriches u moot ll that which llea closest. to our ap- ‘ rounding and "MW! of‘ hot quark: Bar's la all 1%. ham tho the flow . Mini-Benz, who was driven out of ' run nounvrno Ann smu- rnonuorno nauos only natural that you reach for the first drug that will zlve relief. Your doctor is not usually in a hurry to relieve your pain because he want! to make sure what is causing your pain before deadening ll; with drugs. When he has learned the cause he ls quite willing to prescribe a pain relieving drug if other meaaur will not. give relief. Morphine and cocaine are ‘given to relieve pain only ln the moat severe cases, owing to the possibil- lty of establishing the morphine or cocaine habit. Fortunately there nra other drugs which after all are simply “glfhs" from Nature, that will ease pain and secure sleep for those in need of rest. and complete relaxatlon- ' One of the drugs that has come into use lately is the barblnlric acid series. They have various names — barbitai, phenobarbital, the barbi- trates about thirty of these are in use to-day. These drugs are great pain relievers and sleep producers. Now although they are gifts from Nature, nevertheless the difference between the dose that will help re- lieve pain or induce sleep, and a dose that will cause dangerous Symptoms of poisoning may be very little and overdoses causing death are not unusual. "IPhe sleepless patient is too often suffering from mental strain- Worry. Brief. or even pain, or per- haps from the depression which fol- lows the continued use of u sleep producing or pain relieving drug. He greatly needs sleep. Can it be won- dered at if he takes an overdose ln seeking relief? It ls well known that these drugs cause "forgetfulnests, and 1f the tablets are at Lam-tin sufficient quantity r ‘ -: 5°55; may be taken unconsciously and a0 a fatal dose taken unknowingly.” Some idea of the great. strength of these ‘drugs can be gathered from the fact that many eplleptics are kept tree from attacks by '“ down on liquids and starch foods, increasing fat foods. and getting a daily dose of one of this barbltal group of drugs. popular now and deservedly so. but because of their very effectiveness should only be taken under medical supervision. THE VAGRANT Now what can he want, The vagrant, the lout, Who leers in the person's face, Lolls with tongue out? Nothing that. you have, Men with o, motor ear; God keep you your high hats Ancl fine things that are with a knot in his bosom And a bee ln his brains, He goes full of pictures Around the flat lanes. His breeches are patdly, His shirt full of thread. But the hair's plastered neat On his great hollow head. Then think you he mean: To harm our precious daughters? Why, gentlemen, he fishes In deeper waters. Lou, Margaret, Kittie, Em with the country curls, Are sweet. bites for red lips, Very tine girls; But. he visits with others, With the Queen Guinevere, Troy's women, Eden's, Towns not near. So leave him leering Lettering in the lanes; There's no mischief in him But. a bee in his brains. -John Crows Ransom. AID TRAFFIC POI-IE salmon», England - (0.12) _ ‘Traffic policemen in Balford have been provided with telescopic gas standards for use when fog d“- cends. The floodiightlng apparatus will ensure their safety. M A l! S Pig Worm Powdar This powder bu been can- flflly analysed. nun bu been found a vary effective remedy in the treatment of ‘Vernal. Macs lilood Food I poi and t-hh A" combination "ad. i one of 0t lac may- ‘lulu fraalbafiof QIIIIQIIII‘ 1 Iortbou who have loll um- uoaauunma Fwd wvvotlaaraulan- on- a no: now m. armoramoonmuqiu auuaqau. ’ nonwo- n #15,‘ 1 r 1....- Whai you are in great pain it is ' These dnigs are naturally very- Coast l0 Coast in Canada 0 nvrounnunn, IAILICJ. ctma, PUERTD IICO, DOMINICAN IEPUIIJC 0 n‘ YORK: crncaco, boa-ron, Lonnon, znounn PUBLIC FORUM maul-nu will’ i" at qudlolo attend. 1h “guy. hull! m." CDOOI_|'I' Gill-dbl remission: uflnlyollllis I. IS 1'1‘ NOT TIME? Bin-Yesterday's issue of the Guardian contained a. letter sislwd "One Who Knows" ‘That corres- pondent urgea a temporlzlng policy re the liquor question. He tells us that he has had experience 11nd" a variety of liquor ‘ ‘ , and that none of them proved fully satisfactory. We are not ad- vocating a. glorified humanity, nor am we hoping to make a modern Utopia. of our Island. No doubt there are flaws tn every one of the systems he mentions. but it ls our conviction that of all the expedi- ents resorted to so fer in an effort to suppress the evils of intemlfif- once, prohibition is the least ef- fective. ' The writer happened to be liv- lng in one of the Canadian Prov- lnoes at the time when Govern- ment. Control supplanted Prohib- ition. In a. very short while the beneflclent result of the aubstlm- tion became evident. A few years after leaving that Provin , he re- turned on a trip, visited several of its cities, made specific ulriea about liquor conditions, d found that the conoensus of opinion was that bootlegglng had been reduced to a. n-llnimum by the change. I cannot say that I admire the ptlmiam and ‘ lax-anon of “One Who Knows" in aayinl "189 u" speak-castes "are not. so intoler- able on- low or degraded" as some of us portrayed them. The dc- . scriptiona I have liven of them ln previous letters are not exaggerat- ed. I have known of the existence oi’ several disreputable dives for years, and they no doing just 1m thriving business today u ever. despite the periodic raids of the Mounties" I do not believe any of them has been cleaned ou thoroughly. - are active in keeping the whole business under cover. I know they m; they on extremely active. But. the bootleg- gers are also “active in keeping the whole business under cover," in n. very different way. ‘ "It is not, yet time for a change.’ Why la it not time? When will it be time’) It ls now or never- Pro- ‘lnatlm la min-ting failure. Remedying a moral evll is never tnopportune. I m. Sir. m. ~ CITIZEN. LAW Bur-What does the caption of this letter moon? "law enforoé- ment.” la differently lnkrpruhd. but ls it different? fifteen dpmk: in a police court under one lov- cnt ll "debunking" whllo fifty-four under e succeed rule ' dndividual elastic»... AT THIS century- old bank, attention to the needs of each individual customer is not only a pleasure but a fundamental principle. World-wide facilities in every department of banking ti... BANK a NOVA SCOTIA OVER A CENTURY OF BANKING SERVICE la a rapid stride towards sobriety and an approach to the promised "100%" enforcement. There are some, made so gullible by idol party worship as to swallow the dose. You commented on the suppres- sion of the Report of the G. W. P. of the Boas of Temperance and the author returns with a. lame defense. It. would be a relief 1t that were all that was suppressed, both here (where discussion is behind closed doors), and elsewhere where private expression and protest fails to reach the public ear. The Attorney General Ls at least n de facto prohibition official. Hla and ‘ ‘ with pub- lic bodies on this subject should at least. escape suppression, or the bare passing of a xcmlrk 1n a com- mittee's report. The Grand Division at Halifax, N. 8., vnited upon the government in a body, presented thelr protests and claims openly and above board, and the whole inter- views and proceedings were publish- ed tn many columns of the press. ‘llghere was no back door work about In Nova Bcotia a child was killed by n drunken driver, made drunk by the liquor which the government promised but felled to prevent. The delegations made no apologies for characterising this as murder and charging it openly against those ro- sponaible for the enforcement of the Act. V9110 is responsible for the in- crease of ear accident-s (tf we diz- nlfy them a: iaoeide s) and ool- lisions in the last th months? Not the Prohibition Commission of a. certainty! Although still an exist- ing body appointed under statute they have been prohibited, from functiontnl. at lent. till the return of sane government, and the sua- r sentence or tlcket-of-lenvo the ahle‘d of the prospective mur- derer. . In the field of temperance there are two classes, both very sincere 1n devotion to the cause of sobriety. But they differ at times very much ln vision. One of these, the depend- able Godly type who relentlessly subordinate their party p117 udioea to their religions convictions; the other of that. class which condone: the traffic-which ls only n vioe when under operation of those of another political stripe. Unfortun- ately there are too mlfly of than latter in the Liberal ranks, which ln a measure accounts for the in- action and suppression at present 1n evidence. a Correspondents in the ¢ov0rn~ ment organ are buay paving the way for the open saloon. These binla, u ever before. are gotn; w make the Province an Eden or so- briety by opening the present wido- Wfin Ilia! li-lll wider. Light wince and boox-‘u-e even now rumored in the offing Inch by inch and all by ell the liquor traffic la maklnl lta inroads into our once Prohibition stronghold. They luv; (or think the have) our Prohibition Aetut o. Time will tell; but nothing but e mighty uprialng o! tanner- .__- “t... When our chewing tobacco first want on the market QUEEN VICTGIIIA was on tho throne of Croat Britain.‘ it: hlghquglity wad . recognized than, and today one half century lam ii has the ilpprovai of the public, proving that quality. counts. theater's stack ffWlST i Mood her to go by the ht. Peters Il-Il once forces, u In 1921, can save our people from the projected re- turn to .n di-stillerd paradise. I am, Sir, eta, PBOHIBITIONIST THAT MIILVIIW BRIDGE v8lr, - Three months ago this bridge was fenced of! for repairs. The public were forced to put their teams and cars down the low road into the creek bottom over an a-foot plank bridge. With the heavy ratna of September, the hillsides became very bod. '.i.‘be engineers or some- one in authority thought. of laying pllnk lengthw tn the wheel tracks. but forlot to fasten them together. Result: The car wheels upset, tearing of! tires and doing other damage to cars After three months of exceedingly slow work. the. workmen, thinking that they had finished the job, fenced oft the low road, and compelled the public. both teams and cars, to take the high road, across the new bridge. Bub the old hard surface load was buried two feet. below by the hull! amount of muck that they had tak- en out. of the creek. It was interesting last Saturday evening (the 16th) at. the said bridge. At one time there were N many u n dozen nus, parked 0n “on aide, m ace the result of tlw poor unfortunate with his car b03- ged in this mire. I tried ll, and after levelling oil the mud with the axles of mv w‘ for fifteen yards, a very obllzlfli Belfuter followed me and by Dui- tlng llll bead bumper to my "l? one. bot-h starting up W!‘ 903m“ ‘ ther, we mode hard footing- Publlc Works Minister McIntYTQ is I bll man, but if he had been 0n the scene at the time. he sure ivwld have run up against somethlnz ha!‘ di A aha-in ll as stroll: as its weak- est links. The Georgetown mil" post road leading to Belfast. QM?" ray Harbour, Montllue and (:50!- ietown ta of no use. for cm film’ not pass over or 3o throusll m" gully It Mlllvlew Brldxe. While 1n town today inov. 18W I was naked by n. lady about i?" condition of the roads. She wishfll to lo to Souria. I told her of the condition above mentioned. and ad- Rood. She replied um the Ht P"- era Road was impassable, as she had heard someone any that Mcln- tyre was grading the road art-ml- lng for a pavement next sumpiflf out an far as Jim Bill's lobster aw- wry. Just. who m. mu ls 1 do Mt know. ut the public does wt the qu in c4 Mlllvlew dried ull wltb naval.- und, sawdust. or 5'1." thing. I llll. Bil‘. etc. TRAVELLER. POLITICAL IAUX PAS q‘ RUGBY, England-NIP.) -—As I preliminary to lddreuea at a C011‘ llrvltlve campaign meetlns ii" audience no rallied with a H!" reel lpaeoh by Clement R. Al?!"- IAbtI lander. Ito ire was softened later by n cinema speech by n" Prime Min .