f-l-wm-s-nurvl-wm-lo1:l-:muig-imm;-=y¢wvro-rcttmmno PAGE FOUR The Charlottetown Guarllian that the duty ivas “entirely too ltiglt." MR. R055 (Liberal. Moose jaw) di(l likewise, the latter declaring tltat like MR. DEACHAIA). he was a President. lJeuL-Cul. W. Cheeler I Ill-UN vmc-Presillem, J. B. llnrnolt. l’ J l- Secretary LIelIl. nil. D. A IIu-mnnan. D. I 0- -__ louuctute Iiilltou, Frank Walker and I). I. Onrrlo. llurniug Dally iluunrled I887) 55.00 net- yeu (In IIIIIIIBG) n l‘lly “.00 tn-r yelu tln advance) mulled In advance) ii-llvrrrtl Print-a liilwurd lnltunl. “.00 per year (In lnilt-ll Iu'(‘untulu and Ulllled Hillel TUESDAY. RIARC", 30, 1931- Parlisan Civil Service Bill Our local '04‘l1lti‘lll]1(1|'£ll'§' has begun “stibgrad- itig" the nay for tlle (‘ziiitpbell kicneritinenfs lllllllllllCliiill iii a partisan Civiljervicc Act. 'l‘hc di-clarcil obit-ct oi tltis proposal is to get Zl‘.\'il_\' from lln‘ "spoils" .<_\'~lt‘lll by giving per- lll-l!.‘L'|lt'_\' to \'t2\'il'llllll‘ll[ zippointtneuts. If that were lite rwal ii-ct. thi- bill should have been llll"ll(lllv’i'll at .1.‘ sprcia] September l-)_;5 ses- snin. lit-fort llév lioieriinient had started its (itlllt rgn oi uh sale partisan dismissals. After (wttiii - [ll iiud job. ilir its party iii; insult to injury to put w for llle purpo-i- of giving Ipiitn. nu an iiiili-iiinie tiiiinopolv of their l. , will be fooling nohiiil_\' if it .i ..-ttt'e——~-h-.'t~t iii all lllt‘ ills- ‘.\l .. i=-_ l-o are ziuari- of the scandals ‘ill’. l \| i’. \l ‘iii-ll in public adinntistrzitioit as " r~ s t‘ .ti' swltiv oi lllt" ili-niissals refer- \~, -_- Ciition it pitts throttgh ill this :1. .-ii'i.ini1\ llitl be rcgzirtleil as ." "- vtcci-“i-"s. To lit? [ii-rinaitciit it _ .' lll\.".l, iii liflllClltlC at least. iii‘ (~- .i .~ as \\t'll as Liberals. If the ttampliil‘ liimilllllltdll l\t'l~l~ls iit wasting time owr .i L17 iii ’l‘l§ kind, n will simply be zitlord- int; Alli‘ yery QOi-tl excitse for tlte electors b tin-t ‘it it thc ttc.\'l election, No Prohibition Speech? R is io be ‘iioped that before he goes over- seas ior lllt‘ coronation. Hots. MR. LEPAGE vial‘ Pltll\t’ll the legislative proceedings witlt a rrvaeu oi the Pfttllllllllfifl enforcement situation. His speech on the Draft Address proved dis- appoiiiiiitg to his cottstitnteitts in this respect, and llTlW d l‘. i. the Ill'~l occasion we recall in Mk. Lrlltni ‘s political history" when he did not Indcrtake to Cll<Cll<< this question. [Toes the Presi-li-itt of the Executive Coun- ciultill believe. as he stated in 1935, that the mva-itrc of lriiliiliiiiitit enforcement is the meas- ure of the sincerity of thc fjovernmctit of the day in carrying out this method of controlling the lt-pior traffic? said. that the Frovc-riimeiit through its Liquor Stores is lllt‘ greatest bootlcgger in the Province? ACffirflltlg to l‘iii;.\in:lt (Tantalum. in a state- mom iii thc Patriot on _\'ov_ 30th last, there was lctiizilly" a sharp decline in sale of vendor's li- quor in the years to“ and 1935. Yet MR, Ll l'~\i;i: in to}; condenitierl the amount of li- fitti-r salt-s an-l particularly the beer sales, and di-iiianrlcd: "l-loiv ilare the Government say that they are eniorcitig the Prohibition Law when fflllllllltlll\ of this kind are going on?" (Patriot, .\l.'irclt l1). I035), .\ reiiciv of present and recent conditions in coiiiiwtioii \\llll the ('.\\ii>tit~:t.i. Govcrnitieiifs ciiiiircvitii-iit of Prohibition. and particularly with regard to its beer sales, from one so well informed on rhc situation as MR. Ll-IPAGE, would be of great assistance to the public at this time. \\'ill the hon. member from Rttstico rise t0 the occasion and substantiate his oft- repcated assertion that his concern for Pro- hibition is founded on the bedrock of sincerity? Those Liberal Tariff Reductions Putting throttgh his textile tariff items un- der the new agreement with the United King- donriin the I-lottse of Commons last wreck, Fin- ance Minister DFNNING encountered some pretty stiff criticism from his own party sup- porters. Goaded by the taunt of MR. W. j. VVARD (Liberal-Progressive, Dauphin. Man.) that “ap- parently the noisycroivd we have from Toronto and other manufacturering centres have got the ear of even our one-time free trader in thc person of the Minister of l-Tinaticc." Ma. DCNNING re- plied somewhat tartly that he wished his honour- eble friend “would not suggest that 1 have ever It any time been a frce trader. I am not and never have been and I do not believe such a policy practicable for (janada? This roused Mk. R. j. DEAFI-IMAN (Liberal, Huron North). The-item tinder discussion was clothing and cot-ton fabrics, on which the new tariff is 25%. “I ivoulit like to point out to my hon. friend." said MR. Dl~'..\(‘fl.\l.\.\l, “although he mav not be a free trader and possiblyi has no desire to preach protection now. that thc m item really constitutes an increase in protection, because certain items that form the raw materials of our clothing manufacturers have been reduced, T/ir Ilff prnlrrlinrt, Ilicrn- for, is now lily/xvi‘ [him if was before f/lis bun’- gpl “in; limirq/il I/nrell. . .\\‘hile my lion. friend admits hc is not a free trader, and while I with equal frankness say emphatically‘ l ant. I d0 not think my lion. friend will admit that he is I high ltrotectionist." MR. llvxxitvo" "Not for a titontcnl.” Ma. DE.“ ll.\l \.\': “l?! flint riilr slmuis Ingli- er Ioiliiy- liml in I030. (mil 'z'rr_v sirbrlanliallvy hit/her Ive/iv” all I/m rvIr-umit CfI‘l'lll|l.fI(1llCt‘.f are taken into nrrniiiil." (b1 thc next itenn-“wovcn fabric, wholly of cotton, for covering books; rate of duty l5 pct’ (0t1f,"——-.\lR. l)l~lAt‘ll.\l.\N complained: "There has been a straight reduction of 4o per cent. in the tariff for llll‘ advantage of the Canadian manufacltircr. But as I pointed out in rfillard to the item of clothing. which is wholly a con- sumer's item, no reduction has taken place. Tlirre is ml iiirrrarr in frrnlvclioil." Why, he ;"_.;§u.,|_ shtmld an item which was‘ wholly for the use of the manufacturers be reduced 4o per ci-itt., while a substantial consume-Rs item reiiimiitili-d higher than in 1030? (iii other items of clothing and fabricscn which thc new duty is 25 per cent. as against t2 i-z tier ccut. in i030. Mn. Warm protested minor $1 uni-aging Dlrwtnl I. B. Burn-u. l. J- I Does be believe, a5 ht; than . sincere free-trader. This prompted MR. \\'.\t.slt to zislt: “Is the Liberal party in Canada a honiugencotis party or is it a partyntade up of tiieiitbers who scck to be elected on their individual records as free traders. protcctionists. and what not F" .\llt_ l-ll-zxxt-"Jlr: "Mostly what mats." Stibsetltieittly. on the tariff item of sock-s and stockings, which is differentiated by wool con- tent into two categories, MR. l)lZ.\(‘ll.\lAN coin- plaincd; "Speaking as ;i Liberal, if l may do so, I find it difficult to ilefeitd an itcnt where thc rate 0f duty is higher tipou the socks bottgltt by the working titan than upint those bottgllt by the cabinet tninisters. Littler the present ltelu I would expect that a vcry low grade of isoek would come in at tipproxittlately 35 per lccntu and a higher grade at about 2o per cent. lib/lo! jilhfflilllilYl/I-(lll would l/icw b1‘ for int/tos- liuq t/tc lily/lei‘ dilly n/wi l/ir f-oorcr class 0f l gmulhv?” Mk. DVXXING: "I do not acknowledge the lion. nteitibens premise." l Mk. l)l-:.\cll.\1.\.\' insisted that he had “work- led it out." and gave the basis of his estimate. .\lk, Dtixxtxi; retorted that he was itotaccept- ylllg "thcse theoriticzil figures", but MR. DEACH- l.\i.\x repeati-il them and added: “lf the Minis- ter ivatits real inforntatioit l can show liiiti the invoices." .\li<. l)tc.\en.\i.\.\'. of course iteeils no intro- idtictioit to Liberal readers itt this Province. His Zarticles on thc tariff fortued thc mainstay’ oftltc ‘local Liberal orgatfs editorial canlpaigtl tigaiiisl étlu- lllzXXlffl‘ tiovernitient trade pacts. and were illtltllfll by our t‘t‘|IllClIl])l)l'.'ll"\" as coniing from |thc foremost tariff authorirv in the Liberal party. l J‘ Editorial Notes I May lzth next holiday—-Coronatiim. * i l! Crinteatt War ended this ilate i856. i =0 ll‘ ' In discussing education reform let us not overlook thc fact that, according to Professor jottes. but for Latin farmers would be farmers still-not Agriculturists. * »< 4t It is regrettable that .\lr. Peter Sittclztir, I\I.P., should have been laid aside at this time due to accident. It is rcportcrl he has brokctt his ribs and is confined to hospital. tiltable to return for the Easter vacation. * 1F ii Now that the settiot‘ tncittltcr for Qttceti’s is tinablc to attend his parliamentary duties, Mr. A. E. .\lacLean is the sole rcpresentativye of the Island in the House of Commons. as the Finance Mittister cati hardly be so designated. \\"e have reason to believe. ltowcver. that Sen- ator Sinclair is still active as an uttofficial nleltl- ber of the Lower Hottsc. and his advice is greatly relied on by Mr. Dunuiitg. i! I * What is done with the Czuttpbell Govern- ment's “Slush Fttud"—thc profits from Pro- hibition? According to Rev. .\[r. Wattcryvorth these mitst be cntmiioits, as (luring the first four ntoitths sales, increased by $l4,0o0, The employers of the (loverulttcut. the electorate. get no report or details of this enormous secret profit now that the Prohibition Commission has been abolished. In Nova Scutia the blacdottitlrl (iovernntettt lottrlly proclaim that 15% of their sales is nct profit, 1K ‘If * An attempt to cure children of thc thumb- sucking habit by placing them in front of a mirror and forcing them to look at themselves was discussed at a two-day meeting of thc New York Society of Orthodontists. The most rc- cent method for cttring the finger-sucking habit depends upon the parents of the offending panics. Twice a day they mtist put the children in front of a ntirror for about five luiuutcs zutd instruct them to stick their llllltllbs vigorously The plan. according to its sponsor. overcomes the habit by making the children painfully con- siciotts of it. The remedy is said to be based on child psychology and coltsists iit reality of self- education. It is, however. still at an experi- mental stage and its value may not be judged until ithas been generally put into practice. u: a: v The leading makers of better mouse traps foregathered ilt Chicago rccctitly when Mr. Al- bert G. Burns. president. held forth on thc lat- est development in mousc traps. He said: ‘It's kind of a perpetual motion itiottsc trap, the tilti- mate in mouse traps, I should think. As the innit-c enters thc trap, he sets the trap for thc next mouse. Not only that. btlt thc mouse is his own bait. Attractcrl by the odor of cheese, be peeps cautiously inside. and that is his undoing. Inside is a conglomerntion of mirrors. The uiriusc secs himself reflected a dozen times, is tricked into believing there are a dozen other mice in there, and enters confidciitilyx Click! The next mottsc secs twcltty-foitr mice. and is twice as confident. After a while you have all the mice in the ucigbborltoorl.” x n- : - Whether or not the law can recognize a pre- sunlably miraculous cure may be a point to he_ decided by Mr, justice Chase (fasgraiit during thc May term of thc hloittrcal Superior Court. The action. bulging partly on whether an ex- constable who was formerly completely disabled had regained his health by prayers to Brother Andre. came before Mr. justice Casgrain. but the roll was too crowded for it to go on. The former constable. Francois Lecuyer, was retir- ed from the force December l. I934, when he ivas unable to work because of rheumatism. Later he filed action for tlle payment of in- surance policics totalling $2.000 under the per- manent disability clattse. However, a French afternoon newspaper January 9 of this year published a large picture of Lccuycr attd a long article, both of which claimed he was cured by prayers to Brother Andre just after the latter died. Latvyers for the insurance company pro-. duced the newspaper record, but heating of the _ . t _ cajiaui.0t_'_rp'tvwtv___cuARmA~ notes by lne Way It must. be very difficult to be a competent Dictator for any length.‘ of time. 1n Autltorltarian cowitrtes i a premium ts put. upon flattery and znoompetenoe. slguot- Mussolmi has l resisted his atmosphere so far, but ' Ls the system itself enervaltttg toi Italian policy are the names appointed nowadays as good as those appointed a .ew years ago! This question must. ~a.t~ise waen European policy is considered. Italy has only one potential enemy; only , one nation has proclaimed that, its destiny lay across the sphere of Italian influence. Only the Ger- mans have plans which reach from °I the oldest- tlte North Sea to the Atlantic. We may be slllle that. Signor Mussolini knows this better than anyone alive. But Italian statecraft, at. the nio- men does not. show this-The Nata- m)!“ employment’ ma“ any other tonal Review (Ixmdon) . Slowly and surely the econ- omic intportaitce. from tlonal standpoint. of the wood lot which nearly every eastern fat-m possesses. is becom- ing apparent. Hitherto lt. has been considered valuable only to the individual for the ftreivood it furnishes and the occasional stick of trmber that can- though far less frequently than uscd to be the case~bc hauled out for sale or for needed repairs about the farm bulldings._Montm-.tl star. A war between the United States’ and ourselves scents to us so diff- erent in kind from any other WAX‘. so fratricldal, so uttnatttral that we ro use to contentplabe it. evau as a possibility. For as long as I have known anything of BriUsh Govern- ments it has never entered into their calcitlations of what. was itecessa_ry' for defeucca-Sir Ausvrn Chamberlain. Professor E. P. Calhcad. head of the department of physiology at. Glasgow University in a recent lecture on food and nutrition said: Eat; all kind nature doth bestow: It. will amalgamate below. Ifmhe mind says so. it shall be s0. But, if you once begin to dottbla. The gastric juice will find it out." -Moncton Times. The amateur prophets suggest that. because of the uttusually high temperatures that. have been characteristic of this winter we are likely to have a cool summer. The records do not tend to support such a prediction. In the past. when there was an exceptionally mind winter. the succeeding stim- mer usually was hot. That. was actually the case in seven summers following the nine mtldest winters in the last. 96 years. The mildest winter on record in ‘Ontario was 1931-32 when the mean tempera- ture for December. January and February was 32.7 as compared with the normal for those months for the past. 96 years, 23.8 The gen- over the world organizations whose I object is to learn the cause and the 4 , best. methods of treating rheumat- LOILSILS is perhaps the cause l; known, weather, heredity can all be factors 1n caus- ing rheumatism. moval of lnfcctlcn, there has been the cutting down on starch foods. the application of heat, the use of salicylates, and also of sulphur. in attetfim to relieve and bring about a cure. era] explanation of‘ ered by weather experts as to why warm summts follow warm winters is that trends dis“ ed ieeth m‘ tonisus‘ lmpmve" In weather persst. It. is also the ease, as in the present winter. that i tremendous areas of the country] are clear of snow and ice so more l heat; from the sun's rays can be absorbed and given off by radiation. _Wo0dst.ock Sentinel-Review. Some amusement was caused by the “ntttsical pottery? T111‘ Queen picked up a beer laankaid, which at once started t0 Play. from a concealed musical box. “Daisy. Daisy. Give Me Your Answer She drew the atten- tion of the Duke of Kent to it. and ordered one. and also a clvna cigarette box in the form of a dos kennel. which plays tunes while Elie dog delivers Ggatettes from its mouth. Queen Mary found a tanls- ard which plays the National AnthertL-London Times. The happy mind rarely gives way to anger. It. thinks clearly. and ls efflden-t. Also It doesn't blame someone else for its own misfor- tunes. It is highly important that e. day be started happily and endfd happily, no matter how many tn- stgnoes may spring tip to d sturb the hours intervening. Nothing tn llfe ls more lnsplrirtg than the good momlng and good night. Sir James MacBrien. commiss- loner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, suggests that. a saving of approximately $1U00.c00 per year would be effected lf On- tario, Quebec and British Columbia, llke the other provinces. turned over all their provincial police work to the “Mounties? IL is perhaps H natural idea for the commlsuoncr bo entertain. What gettcral bul. wishes his "army" w be basel‘? But. Canada wants no nitttozial “police army" exercls ng the func- lions of provincial as well as fid- eral police from sea to ma. The general effects 0f such a change would be to place too much power ln the hands of the force thus constituted. -Toranto Star. A deepatch from Ottawa men- tlon; the fact that John I Mc- Farlattd, former Chairman of the Canadian Wheat Board. was grant- ed a ‘gratuity’ of $9.000. and was sent. o. cheque for that amount. but he returned the cheque to the Treasury". It ts a rare happcnlng. It. ls so rare that It. almost. ctlls for three cheers and a ttgcrl-To- rono Star. - One flrm In London glands In do a brisk buslness ll‘ coronation day turns out to be wet. Thoy have a large supply of drlzzle capes ln coronation colors and embellished with the Saint. James rose. That's just one of the hundreds of ways the London merchants are expect.- ed to cash ln during the coronation festivities. -Wlnd.sor Star. Multlply your ego by two and odd five l0 the result. Multlply bv 50. Add the change tn your pocket; l! less than a dollar. StMl-aet the number of days tn thls year. 3R5. Add 1l5 for good measure. The two left hand flguroa wlll shcw your one. The two rlnht hand Strum will show the change In case was delayed until May. yous-nodal. l Bylqru W.BI$.“. VACCINE TREATMENT 0F IUIEUMATISM—ARTH.BITIS Rheumatism. or arthritis as It is now more frequently called, is one l! not. the oldest, disease of ntan; yet. to-dny it affects a large percentage of the popul- atlon and next. to the common cold ls responsible for more loss o (time ailment. You can understand then how all 15m are hard at work. That. infection from teeth and commonest and also that the the diet. injurias, and Thus tn addltlott to the re- the symptoms As vaccines have been used with cottsltlorable access in varlous all- meitts it was only natural that vaccine.- shoulcl be tried in rheuma- Lism» Utifortutiately the reports from research workers In various countries showed a great. difference of opinion as to the value of the vaccines; some report 40 percent cures, others only 10 percent, and some no cures whatever. ' However in cases where the petl- ent has had teeth and tonsils re- moved perhaps after considerable damage has been done to the Joints in cases where the dlet. heat, sulphur and snlicylate m ts have brought no reli , the vaocl method of trea nt would be greatly welcomed. What may be a. more effective way of using the vaccine method is outlined by Dr. A. E. Greer, Hous- ton. in Texas State Journal of Medicine, Fort Worth- Dr. Greer searches for the focal Infection- found nearly always in teeth and tonsils-but. gives a period of vacc- ine treatment before an attempt Ls made to remove the Infected teeth or tonsils. This prevents the severe symptoms which sometimes follow the removal of teeth and tonsils. Dr. Greer than descrlbes his method of lnjectlng the vaccine directly into the vein. and gauges the dose from the degree of re- action shown by the patient. If the reaction is favorable the dose is increased, lf uttfavorable, the dose is decreased. There were 50 cases treated by this Injection of vaccine into the vein. 39 of whom hed merit was noted in 44 patients-BB percent. Twenty-nine patients apparently recovered completely. but a: 3 of those had a return of the arthritis, 26 or sllglttlly over 50 PUBLIC FORUM , Illa IIlI-I In Open he flu . illnnulon by art-announce o! | quot-lone ll Internet. TM l UbuIotkteI-u Guardian don l manually undone the ontnlnl of oerloepolrleltl. TANIHBLI AND INTANGIBLE Sir,—I see our Llberal govern- ment ls now busy making arrange- ments to tax everything tangible and mtanglble, also to have e. new valuation of the land with the ob- lect of tncreaslng the tax. I. as a farmer would ltlte to know l! they have the power of law to do such a thing after hlwlng made a con- tract. with the people ogthts pro- vince they woud not. tncreue the taxes. Now I would like to know l! this pledge or agreement is binding, or was It. just words to mislead us farmers as the story of the spider. and the fly, “come right lnto my parlor”. I wonder t! these men can be so ignorant‘ of conditions on the fann or do they want to force all the farmers to appeal to the Farm Credit Board for adjustment. Why don't, they collect the taxes due on present; valuatton? I saw some of the members were emphasizing the low Drlcea the farmer was recetvtng VERMICIDE first of its kind in capsular for animals. the mixture No. 3 size. an» s. llsed by leading Fox Ranchers everywhere They were firstidevised by Dr. 1895, as the original Combination Worm Remedy the Dose your foxes now with the No. best. results-All foxes (from 2 to The Price $1.00 box (30 capsules) i” Boxes of 100 Capsules -- - - - _ ._ ... ' Ranch size, 500 Capsules - - - _. _ _. Prepaid to any addres on receipt of price E. A. ,FOSTER, DRUGSTORE Sole Authorized Distributor for ffrench Animal Remedies for P. E. ~101M- ‘CAPSULES Cecil ffrench in form ever to be produced i 3 size, and get 4 weeks old) need Z, — $10.00 l" CENTRAL Island o... for his products. I as a‘ farmer was wondering ff lt. would not be In 0r- der for a number of ua farmers to put our heads together and test thls case tn the Supreme Court, or have we got any right to quesuon the rlght of the dictators. or do we have to let them hold us by the nose and pour it down our throats. I saw tn the Guardian the other dey if the car llcence end gas tax had been spent on the road paving and upkeep the road Improvement would ell be paid for now, and I notlced you dld not Include the farmers road tax tn your figures. I am, Sh‘, etc.. ll iirriitruiziir liiiiiuirv "l TIIE GREAT-WEST urr riiovinrs= 1. An attrnctlve saving plan. 2. A ; cranked llfe Income ‘ to ‘l0. ' ,, at any age 50 l. A flexlble lnveelliaenb-you don't have to choose now when your Income In to begln-yon may decide to Hebrides "Folk-lire of the Hebrides," province : Laval. country m Dlngwall, a line bends across Scotland east to west, passes between a. land of bens and lochs, a of subittne vistas, of wide and clous landscapes, as Inspiring way ends on the marks of ocean. ts the quaint. clachan mine eyes, percent, were considered cured as there was no rot-um of symptoms after a period of 2 years. Btibsoifs Radio Experience iSt. Cuttiorlnes Stanclardi Roger W. Babstm. the well-known economist and commercial statistic- tan. recently told a rem: "vrble ex- perience he had with i-aw Ind newspaper advertlslng. 8e broad- casted an advertisement by radio at a cost of $3.000 and reoelved sixteen enqutrles and two orders l5 I re- sult. A couple of dnye Inter. he prlnted hls advertisement ln flve newspapers tn different cltles at. e cost of $3.000 and received 4.000 re- pllcs. The radio advertlsemenl. cost. hlm $166.66 for each repiy. whereas the tiowspaper advertisement was only 75 cents per reply. Sustained newspaper advertising with its power of the printed word, embellished by attractive illustra- tions and set-up has been proved to the satisfaction of every expert advertiser on the continent as the cheapest and most effectlve of all forms of advertising. Radio has been 1n use now for several years and yet the prlutlng industry, due to lts increasing advertising rev- enue. has reached an all-time hlgh in ertnployment and capital Invest- men . SONNET Brown Eyes. were I your dressers looking-glass I should reflect. the glory of deep mots. And take no hurt; my surface, n culrass, ' Would turn each before ll. coo I should give back your grace with- out. a qualm, Your lbw-some form, your hatr all lambent. gold; Your skin. felr ea a summer cloud, I'd psalm. Yet never sigh for love nor feel too bold lightning glance ls. Content. I faln would have you quickly gone Lest your warm breath mlglfl vetl my mtrrored face: Cnlmly I'd watch you sleep tlll may awn, And gravely dub you queen of all our race. But can I be cold mirror when your eyes Consume my soul wlth torment. dreams and slgha? -G. I. I. Charlottetown. ---i-____. TIT FOR. TAT. "When dld you blow In?" sar- castlcnlly asked the Sargent. "With the hat. draft,’ replied the leer-lit. noon, Thy rlven peaks the lnmost. ollence relsns profound." p ‘eul- of its, Scenery must, out the Island, l.n its deep Druids rises o! MacLeod. Here l3 one * one of the MbcLeods from cup of horn, filled ROW M0311‘. a great was the home of the famous Crtmmons, and heredttary muslctgng to MacLcods of MacLeod, lends whlch are known as the "ldss- Skye be-‘onizs to the Hebrldes, and h” names as Etgg, Tyree. Illamore, Collnsev. Jura. Muck. Mull. Blnfffl. Ke Icwls, n o, n South m m“ W‘ FARMER Folk-lore Of The l The following paper. prepared by Rev. D. Maxwell MacOdrum, ‘fella’ at a recent. meeting of the Leeds and Grenvllle Music Festlval Association of Brockvllle, Ont... wtll prove tnterestlng t0 many 1n this "From beautiful and historic In- vemess, ‘Capital of the Highlands’ the Ltondon Midland and Scottish Railway llne proceeds through the little town In RDSS-SILIIB, Dlnxwalt was the blrthplace of Sir Hector McDonald, ‘Flghtlng Mac,’ and his memorial crowns a hill behind the town. From Dtngwall the branch‘ Wyvls and the Spa or ' "athpeffer. and then plunges In; ‘- mid and tumbled land of mouu...itt an! of flood which is northern Ross-shlre, poet's dream. There, where the rat]- oi Lochelsh and. across half-a-mtle of ocean, lles the Island of Skye: “Grand Isle of Beauty, rlslng to In mystic glories of the sununer soul , lnsplre, ' ' the ‘Songs of Love and Sorrow 1n A: they cleave the ether blue, and the fourth Wll-lme °I m” Helmd“ soon. series ts ‘Seabird flying H1019!‘ The mystic canopies of pale mlstI T611 M6’ 0f‘ which u" Gun" “Fm” mrround are the some as those of the _Sea- Peaks, cltffs and glans, when gull of the land-under-Waves but: "The Island of slcye, mountabl- nun. with coasts bold and rocky. 1s forewa- heid ln men's mlnds as the Isle of Bonnle Prince charlie and Hon MacDonald. The romantic be umurpossed‘ as the setting for royal romance. scattered through- are the remains of mysterious ctr- culer towers and monuments of the - On the west of the Island magnificent Dunvegnn Castle. the ancient seat of the Macleods, Flag.‘ said to have been taken by Saracens. Here, too, l5 the drinking holdlnz three quarts. which, with claret, every chief of the Macleods had to dratn on his “min! of one. And at. Dunvegan Breatest ol all plpers, t5"! Skye 1s only one Island m he smut» ol about flve hundred ls- as Its nelghbors little Islets with such fasclnatlng 151B)’. Slat, and - ifiiiiilhatl ;.“.I;.“‘°.."”lf:f';‘ - Benn-rated 1mm‘ the lnner neat-loses by the Mlnch and Little Mlnch A aauumly perfumed pm- are the Outer Hebrldea, comprlslng UM. Benbecule. 8t. Kllda, the Stilettos, the Fannan Isles _.not 1955 famous than skye__BM._‘ Info Ill: Benton: Dnnnotcn .famll to; I "I l" - the flvey ahitndredhe lisyiahigseiuorii; Z173t1?i,"i'.'»h f-mtffs-‘Iiifnl; about. one hundred 5r; jnhabned lnndrufl m0 deltroyln; per- Invluled by vudngs m the sixth’ lellle huh Hllen. Jun follow gentm-y the ma“ Ibo direction: carefully and you d»! Mme uubu- nu be mum a on. rnulto. ‘memll’ "m!" the rule ol Harold Halrfalr, Km; or yo“, and wnu or plume to-dly. der Norse ru‘! they contliiued unulill "no. m - Then came the ove _._L.. Mac's and ‘l0. or monthly “M”. . A! IIYIIDMAII 8i on and take eIIher cub or Income any time between 50 Cash values from first year-no medical t l, and premlunu payable yearly. ball-yearly. quarterly PROVIDE FOB YOUR OWN FUTURE l 53c, for further Information to- ‘rememg 00., LIMITED -i movnvcutl. MANAGERS‘ e OIIIneI-l“ ' " ‘ _. ‘ . 8L clean For Vitalitq ITO!!! Ben BRAHMIN LRANGE PEKOE TEA alwauS ule aura of grandeur yet lingers. ‘Lord of the Ices.’ "It. was In these Island M00195 that Mrs. Kennedy-Maser set out to rescue from obltvlon the rem- nants pf folkizre now presegvertrilefgr ten y In e poems an - (lflbss known as songs of the Hebri- des. The songs may truthfully’ be said to oqvei- n, perlod of some two thousand years. beginning with the sot-row of Deirdre, whose ‘Farewell w scotland‘ ls one of the loveliest things ever recorded by folklorlsts. Yet. It 1s tlntelessne . not U018 mat characterizes the collectlon. One of land 5P8- 05 B the Kyle say your husband never does anv- thlng to justify n burst o! tears or a Itt of hysteria? klndness itself. thing! o A NEW APPRAISAL. Mrs. Imtgwed-Do you mean to ' IVIJ-s. Justwed-No, mdeed. Heft Mrs. Liong-wed-Why, the mean to an entirely dtfferent. refrain; nothing could be more enchanting than Its haunting and melancholy beauty. An ailnost. mcremoie llrwf o1 me correspondence between IOIK-IDUSIC and unceasmg flow of life was glven by IVLrs. Kennedy- M-aser tn her story of “The sea- wonumb Bear-Joy.‘ Mrs. K8011908- rraser sang the first. phrase of thls song out. to some Jflflgdd reets on which a number of gtcat. grey seals were bgcklng and had the thruluig experience 0t hearing one succeed- lng phrase sitngone of the sealsma. voice, that, to quote Mrs. helmeciy- Fraser, ‘was qmte human 1n char- acter, but. much greater 1n volume than any mezzo-soprano 1 have ever heard.‘ The Ettglish humorous ntagazlne Punch‘ made this anec- dote the foundation for some good- natured fun, but. the gifted spectat- lat. tn Hebrldean loan-song suc- ceeded 1n wtnnlng the acclaim of tnuslcal crltics by presenting Incon- trovertlble corroboration of her ex- pertence. And no one can doubt. the slgttiflcance." EVEI’ 816115. Fairy the cow's Mec- the Heb- Inner Coll, rrera, mic?“ Just about Easter tlme. provide now. Anthracite, Dominion Coke. Old Sydney Screened. sprlnghlll, Inver- ncss, Albion Nut. and Stove. W. l]. GILLIS Co... EGAN Uu Minn-d‘: for Dandruff. { It Is n Ilse thing to think of Coal Warm weather ls not here yBl-ii We are well stocked with Scotch You should place 1°!" °""" "Ml Professional Cards & CO. l P c; Aeoolunlntl I40 Mahmoud Street Phone 41. P. 0. Bu: l!- Dlllflbl which restore! IIII bonntlflu the hale. It will canon gray lulr i0 It! IIIIIIII nollll. and and McLeod & Bentley w. l. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. l. C. -Il-|AI ’ in Special Rx. 3l5 Uellalvee Ml Entree! will .. u.-. .. . A red tenIe 10v (lnlnll and Grlppo. It In balk! Illln an ordinary Cough Inl- Iollo for IO nacho] the old If Ibo arable. rellnoe Ihe eoIII ell upnllen continual hed- IQIIO l0 hnlll I’ Ilse lyflol. 0O IIOIIIQII (INN “Mel. A nplendll blood enl b007- lllldlllf hill In! b“! IOIII lid ell who hie It Hill!“- PIIOI lI-fl I'll I011‘ ail melon promptly nflollil TllE ‘N0 ‘IMGS MacGuig-an & Triiimrr llolunolld Sheet. Ohulottetmvfl H H. F. McPHCIIE, B- A» aunt: n. limomonn. K- 0- o. n. cum mamas. a. n. Oflloe: Over Provincial Bani. Bell & Mathieson LOAN Olleldletovvngfl r nan! ITO- nun a um lootla crumb" Oborloflduwn. P l- l- uoun 1-0 u. c.0101"