l_,__.,_.-.._.. , _..-:-.r~'- v- PAGE FOUR ' m: cniniorrerown cuinnun leueturr-Lhnt-Coi D. Editor and Illllllll Associate Editors-Frank lflfllolb-W. Chute! l. Helium, I. I. Vino-President, J. B. Burnett, I. J. l. A. Inelilnnon, D. I. 0 Dkoetowl. l. Burnett, I’. J. L Walker, and D. K. Currie. Homing Dally (founded Ill?) “.00 per year (In advance) delivered. 80.00 pa: your (in advance) nailed to Oenhdn and United States. TUESDAY» JULY Us 1085. DOESN'T IT MATTER.’ Mir. B. W. LePue. in a signed ltatement in yesterday's Liberal or- gan, implies that The Guardian "misrepresented" his statement, made at Aftonl-lail, that the 823,000 of the taxpayers’ money had been given by the Government to the Ex- hibition Association to remove clay at the Exhibition grounds. If the Guardian ‘misrepresented’ him, what about his own party or- ' gan, wherein the same statement appeared on Saturday? Mr. LePage now says “it matters little to the public whether the Ex- hibition Association actually receiv- ed the money or not." It surely matters whether a man seeking public office can make de- liberate misstatements with impun- ity. LEA’S LEGACY One contention advanced by the LibeLaI candidates at Afton Hall was that the Conservatives claim- ed the Lea Government overdraft to have been a million and a quarter dollars whereas it was only a. mil- lion and forty thousand dollars. The actual amount of the "Lea leg- acy" was $1,041,240.88 in overdraft, plus ‘accrued interest and unpaid bills of $151,280, plus the Liberal lha".c of the sinking fund provision for 1931, amounting to about $38,000. The Conservatives had also to pro- vide $18,000 to redeem s. $125,000 bond issue which Mr. I488. l5 "BB5- urer in the Bell Government, made at six per cent for a term of ten years. This was the kind of “budget bal- ancing" the Liberals achieved when in power—under conditions which they claim were the most PYWPHO"! in Canada's history. THAT R. C. M. P. PLEDGE In the Liberal "manifesto," slurs on the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are preceded by the follow- ing statement: “The Liberal party‘ has been the- pioneer of police or- gsnization in this Province." My, Campbell might have gone further andboasted that the Lib- erals were also the pioneer P10111156- makers with regard to the Mounted Police. Does he forget that the] establishment of the Mounted Pol- ice in this Province was one o! their own pre-election promises in 1927? Does he forget the assurance then given in the liberal press that “with the assistance of those well- trained and continent-famed Royal Mounted Police we may count reas- onably. upon a thorolish 019841-119 of illicit stills, smuggling and bootleggera, making a most convinc- ing argument that Prohibition does prohibit?" The Temperance Alliance, to whom this Pledge was glvtn. d55- covered during the campaign that it was only a bluff and ihflt 11° effort was being made to implement it. ‘rhéy promptly got after the Liberal leader and threw such a scare into him that he despatched the following BOB call to Senator McArthur, who happened then to be in Montreal. The telegram, sign- ed by the Liberal leader under date of June 19, l92'1—]ust before the election-read as follows: "Insistent demand by Temper- ance Alliance for Mounted Police. Pear adverse results poi- itically unless granted. Peeling running strong. indignation meetings held. Make sure Police here before next week." \ Bo critical waa- the situation for Liberal promise-makers that two Ifounted Police omcers were actual- f; despatched from om." to the Province. They were visible for I ‘few hours on the eve of the elec- toin. A1001‘ the election they dil- appaared sud were never seen or ; invader sssslvcsns" J. P. McIntyre, whose 821,000-l»-mile highway cost $4,000 last year in re- pairs. Now the same gentlemen, defeated on "expansion" are seeking votes on the diametrically opposite policy of “contraction? And in the ten columns ofLiberal “Manifesto? not one word about the debt increase of over half a million dollars in their last eight months of office! The "budget balancers" will pro- mise anything to get back. But the best answer to their “Manifesto” is their Record of Performance. Place that against the MacMillan Govern- ment's Record and their ‘Manifesto’ vanishes into thin air. It will be found that instead of usurping the seat of Judgment, they should still be apologizing in the dock! EDITORIAL NOTES The old Roman Emperors had nothing on Mussolini as a. martinet. Interest now centres on Premier MacMilians -speech tonight at the Capitol Theatre, at which he will announce the Conservative platform. After the provincial election the next big event will be thefarewell visit of Their Excellencies, Lord and Lady Bessborough who are scheduled to arrive here on Friday. July 26, and leave the next evening. Mr. Stevens party will make the‘ sixth to enter the Federal field. We have the two old straight-line‘ parties, Liberal-Conservative and Liberal, then the C.C.F., the United Farmers, and the Labour. It is a matte: of extreme gratifi- cation that two such strong, depend- able and resourceful statesmen as the Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett and Hon. W. J. P. MacMillan are to lead the Conservative forces in the Federal and Provincial elections respective- ly. They have been tried and tested and are to be trusted. There is a possibility that Pre- mier Taschereau will have as the principal plank in his election platform that municipalities be re- lieved of the burden of direct relief. This is evidently one of the "ideas" that the New Brunswick election has given him, and is halfway house to old age pensi0ns.. The advent of Mr. Stevens in the field with a new party is iikeiy to draw more support from the Lib- erals than from the Conservatives. Hon. R. B. Bennett has already re- forms under way as far as the constitution will permit. The Lib- erals have no policy, only stand- pattism, and those of their number who are restless under such in- activity are likely to vote for Stev- ens candidates. According to the Royal Bank Monthly letter for July within the last month the agricultural situa- tion throughout the entire Domin- ion has improved as the result of generous rains. The latest index of the physical volume of business and the indices of manufacturing and marketing show that the activity of business in 1935 has been above the levels attained in 1934 and that s gratifying volume of mineral pro- duction is being maintained. Iron and steel, automobile and newsprint production have been satisfactory; car loadings have increased; new gains have been made in export trade and employment is more general than at this season for some years. The airfleet display in England dralws attention to the fact that the British Government is ready to throw mother £5,000,000 (almost ¢M.000,000) into the pot to keep her air armaments abreast of European air expansion. A supplementary estima‘ seeking this amount for pcrmnnel, work and technical equipment will be introduced in ouse of Commons this week. The fund, which may be swelled if considered necessary later, is for the year ending March Si, i000. At i u Notes By The’ Way ..'.l‘he school ehiid of twenty years ago knew little or nothing of air- today these are a part of his life. Child life is also organised today as never before with Boy Scouts. Girl Guides, camps, clubs, choirs and athletic teams. The process of ialised existence is in itself a prob- lem of importance.-London Free Press. For months. say; the New York Sun, thoughtful Americans have been asking themselves how the great mass of debt piled up by the Roosevelt administration is to liquidated, President Roosevelt has a plan, continues the Sun. It is based on the old formula of snak- ing the rich. Tax them living through income taxes raised higher and higher. Tax them dead through increased inheritance taxes. Tax the big corporations so that the little ones may benefit, even if the small- er corporations may have richer stockholders than the big ones. Tax not only for revenue, but in order to destroy. King George has been the recip- ient of many richly deserved com- pliments during his Jubilee year, but none more aptly phrased than an appreciation voiced during the course of an address by Rev. John Gazdner in the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Long Island, N.Y. His reference was as follows: "King George V of England, is a man of rich and rare sanity and a great deal of his power comes through his saguity in knowing what to say, when to say it and when not to say anything.” This summarizes an ideal which it would profit all to 1ollow.—-Brantford Expositor. as revealed by photographs taken when he tried to comfort the sur- vivors of the German munitions plant explosion suggests that rumor was right in setting the number of dead at 1,000 instead of the official- ly announced 52. The . democratic state is the creation of the people. It is subject to, change if the people desire change. But while the state remains it must function with authority. Its authority must not be challenged i by force by any section of the com- munity. To permit that or to con- done that is to authorize‘ anarchy. The state has the authority to call upon all its forces-police, military, naval and civilian-to maintain its authority. The stat acts through the g0vemment——t e government eleciéd by the people, by a major- ity of the people. Governments in Canada are changed by ballots, not by bullets. The police forces of the community are the servants o; the community. The community must stand by its own servants. The pol- ice are merely the agency of the geople themselvesh-Reging Leader cs . A citizen of one of the larger West Riding towns had occasion to make a claim from the railway company for the unused hair of a summer ticket. As the railway peo- ple emphasize the point that they do not charge or refund fractions of a. half-penny he was surprised to receive a postal order for 3s 6d 1-2d. On presenting the order for pay- ment the Yorkshireman was hand- ed 3s 6d, with the explanation that the post office does not pay out half-pennies. Ncnplussed for a moment at the prospect of losing the unexpected copper. he recovered his poise swiftly and asked the offlcer to give him back the order. Then he bought a half-penny stamp, attached it, and demanded 3s 7d. The post oiiice pald-Manchwter Guardian. A toil of 15.200 dead and 300,000 hurt in automobile crashes in the United States during the first six months of i935 is reported by the Travellers’ Insurance Company. The number of deaths is about two per ‘cent. less than for the first six months last year, the report shows. The disintegration of the forest resources in any land usually pro- ceeds by stealth. No one advertises the fact by a rise in the bank rate, or by streaming headlines on news- paper pages. Depletion, nevertheless, goes forward lowering the reserve of all forest industries, cutting down the capital assets of the prov- inces, pinching olf the raw mater- ials to which workers must look for their daily bread. The Canadian Forestry Association in its educa- tional program for 1035. as in pre- vious years, steadfastly holds to the belief that an informed public, and nothing short of that, will automatically solve all conservation problems, whether they apply to the woodlands. or to the protection of fish and game. Hence, the pres- ent season has been ushered in by a powerful effort on the part of the Association to enlist the mosa- es of the Canadian people as guardians of their own forest re- souroea-Jorest and Outdoors. As Eden argues at Park, I0 Ger- man veterans of the World Wsr are welcomed at Brighton, Eng, on a visit to the graves of i0 German military prisoners.‘ The visit takes on- national andeven infn " al importance. since the Prince of Wales declared in a London speech that the British and German ex- aervice men ‘ “ extend the hand nmopean great powers tried ecl- lectively an approach to Germany got nowhere. Britain. France and Into‘? rggeittd into 0 front 0f mm h. YrJNUBflWIWNIFU to tlmhofly that in 5 35?; fit‘? ‘iai Iridze planes or radio or automobiles, but i relating education to this more soc- i The obvious grief on Hitler's face 5P0 otfellowship to one mother. The - um cnancorrrmowar GUARDIAN “It ilobg of 9cm fifias W.§Q,,I_fl A NEW TBEAHIINT PUB ECZEMA You are reading much about the tendency to hay fever, eczema, and asthma with which so many are af- bfi, Jicted. They have been bom with this tendency toward any one or all three of these ailments, and natur- ally anything that will correct the tendency or relieve the symptoms is eagerly sought, Of all the ailments of the skin comma is the most common, In fact over 50 per cent of skin ailments are eczema. It is of considerable interest then to sufferers with eczema to learn or the new cure reported by Drs. T. R. Combleet and E. R. Pace, Chicago. They record in the Archives of Dermatology, Chicago, the treat- ment of eighty-seven cases with maize oil (Indian corn) with gratify- ing results. A few of the patients had asthma and this was benefited ~in some as well as the eczema. The improvement seems perman- ent and there have been few relap- ses in the four and a half years since the treatment has been used. A number of patients who had had eczema since infancy-have remained wel for as long as three years. In most of the cases the condition commenced in infancy and was still present although sometimes the symptoms were less severe than any other times. The skin between at- tacks remained thick, scaly and tted. Before the maize oil was used practically every other form of treatment had been tried without success in all these cases. The patients were all more than five years of age, and were mostly youths and young adults. The average time necessary to obtain a cure is from twelve to eighteen months. The maize oil was given by mouth, the patient began taking one table- spoon before or after meals-which- ever suited best. The dose was m- croased gradually until four table- spoonfuls was taken three times a day. An "especially refined" maize oil was used in the above cases, being likely a little “easier to take" than the usual kind. It was found that the oil was more palatable when taken slightly chilled. The above should be of great, in- terest to all sufferers where the symptoms are due to this inherited tendency to eczema. It should be remembered of course that all the patients were over five years of age. Educating The Sea- Cooks (Toronto Globe) The day appears to have arrived when the sea-cook joins the white-collar section of humanity. This is an age of education. There are degrees for almost all kinds of human endeavor; Bachelors of this Doctors of that, and Professors of the other. And into this expanding company steps the hitherto-well- berated sea-cook, the man whose grim duty it is u. appease the appe- tites of able-bodied seamen, the sturdy lads of the merchant marine who know nothing about in- digestion. Henoeforth the sea-cook will be gradnlate of a training school for his kind. There are in Old London several such institutions of leani- ing at which he may secure his "parchment." And surely that will mean also a white collar. Would "PhD." be too pretentious a degree for the man who essays to satisfy the appetites of the sait- wind-bitten, hard-working and ravenously , crew of a merchant vessel, and needs all the philosophy there is to be culti- vated? There is room for speculation as to how hardy seafaring men will greet these dietitians, who may stress the value of vitamins rather than bulk in dishes sent along from "he cook's galley. No cook could pass through these schools without acquiring the vitamins and calores habit. If he doesn't why go to school? Bu; the main point involved is the school standing of the new sea-cooks. For genentions the sea-cook was a sea-cook because he wasn't considered of much use in any other capacity about the ship. Any one omiid cook, after s fashion and "A.B.'a" could eat anything anybody cooked: they had to. Those days are gone. The old order has changed yielded to education. There will be fancy dishes in the sea-cook's menu; but will tarnished seamen be satisfied with the dietitians’ ideas about food? The prospect is brightened somewhat by it: additional news that these sea-cooks’ schools specialise 1.. guvy. Railway. This latter system Qmplflyw ed these atone blocks instead of wooden sleepers for support d icullr ala- By Mr. A New Book Of Verse Kenneth Leslie To write poetry at all. ii "w" that one must write B5 l- bkd 3m"- -effortiessiy. Such isthe improl- aion, at any rate. which lyriiill W?" achieves. The poet mil‘ ‘Fwd 1°" ing hours m the poll-shins o! his periods, but the music that dil- tinguishss his work from nrvw- that transmutes the common 00111880 0f words mm golden melody. is s. mind 1h creation beina "as a M- ing coal which some invisible in- fluence, like an lnconstant wind. awakens to transiwTY brightness" O! Canadian poets now writins. none shows in his work a KNEW! gmedqm from pedantic rules, and a “Windward Rock" and revisiting Charlottetown. of which we are privileged to quote on this occasion. 'I‘o this reviewer at least. one poem alone in the new collection would make this volume of enduring value. It is in sonnet form, and entitled "Indian summer." We quote: "A warm rain whispers: but ihfl earth knows best and tums a. deaf ear, waiting for the snow. the foam of bloom forilotten. the rolling crest of green forgotten and the fniit swelling, slow. The shearing plow was here and cut the mold and shouldered over the heavy rain-soaked lands, letting the hot breath out for the quiet cold to reach deep down with comfort in its hands. The sap is ebbing from the tips of the trees to the dry and secret heart, hiding away from the blade still green with stubborn memories; down in the roots it closes the door of clay PUBLIC FORUM Ills column is one for as: discussion correspondents of questions of interest. The Charlottetown Guardian. lees not II eorrsapoulnta. LAW ENFORCEMENT s l B1r,_]’_,a,w i-m... r as relating to drunken drivers, is a plank in the Liberal platform. Like others it is made in true Lee fash- iorh-"To get in on." What is the Ina record of this in the past? Drunken drivers in open violation of the Criminal Code were allowed to escape Jail by pay- ment of a fine until the Depart- ment of Justice at Ottawa inter- fered to stop the laxity. Prohibition enforcement was sel- cctive as to persons liable to prose- cution. One prosecutor under the Act, while shadowing a suspected car, was advised by an expensive imported detective tm-"Btop that or you'll be sack ." This officer was later in reality "sacked" be- cause his vigorous enforcement of law was inimical to Liberal vote getting. I-Ion. Mr. Lea is most careful to confine his promised enforcement to "drmken drivers" alone. His caution is commendable from the standpoint of election strategy, but scarcely attractive to lovers of clean law enforcement. _I am, Sir, etc.. TEMPEBANCE TEACHERS SALARIES Bir, The Liberal Platform prom- ises “investigation" into the "feasi- bility" oi’ cheaper school books, and several other mat‘ n. These are present government. It has carefully avoided "investi- gation" into teachers salaries, or other salient features of better ecl- ucation. The reason is, their ree- ord will not stand up to investiga- tion. Our Province has had two out- standing champions of education. The first a. Liberal. the Hon. L. H. Davies founder of our free school system. and Hon. Mr. MsoMiilan our present Premier. The depth of his interest, his ability and the services he has rendered is so finn- call them into question. And Mo» Gill University has openly of Literature or Lew. too to suit liberalism. To get fiifmlflfll 1 “N, of the Old North Midland money thing essentially of inspiration; the by greater reliance on inspiration. ihB-n Mr. Kenneth Leslie. of Halifax, whose first two published volumes, "Such a Din" were reviewed previously 111 these columns. Mr. Ieslie is now and he has brought with him a new sheaf poems, "Lowlands Iiow," 1Y0!!! only baits, not pledges to perform, and relate to matters already thoroughly investigated by the ly established that even his worst detractors have never ventured to recog- niled this in the Degree of Doctor The former, Hon. L. H. Davies, (later Sir Louis). to stimulate and generous efficient teachers and the best then was in on grief uni-flowing and this late - warm - babhlpfi faislzn promises in the tin o." style, the reader is referred to to.- dsfs Poet's Corner. Individual lines _in Mr.’ Leslie's verse-such as “the bugle touched sunset to a flame", and many others that might be quoted-mm as those will best be appreciated in their context. Hero is a charming love-story, told in sixteen lines: "I had a. golden master key undid the hard perpiexity» j that guarded at your door. grace . the gateway of your frightened f M, 1.. and through your heart's dear- hiding place - ' I ventured to explore. But now its skill has-won the day " within your heart, there I must stay, my key won't work the other way; forever I am bound. And so because I made so free a locked-up prisoner I must be. and where I would be king my knee must humbly touch the ground. And another, with a quite differ- ent climax, entitled "Troubie"' Two maids fell to weeping "My love is a thief," said one, “And the thought of it fills me with grief." ' “But mine is a. minstrel- a thousand times worse- with his kiss on my lips and his mind on a verse!" The volume includes over fifty poems, varying in style, mood and subject matter. It cannot fail to delight those who have lollowed Mr. Leslie's previous work appreciative- ly, or indeed all to whom "the love of lovely words" has become an in- heritance. A Twenty-Cent Yarn (Exchange) A correspondent of another news- paper repeats the hoary fiction that unemployed men who avail h‘ ‘es of the Government relief camps established for their welfare are required to "work for twenty cents a~day in these ‘-- ‘ltutions!’ This is the ohngercus LLUN ‘ ' that seeks to obtain its objective by concealment 0f the whole truth, says the Ot- fowa Journal. Relief camp workers receive from the Government free food, free clothing, free beds, free medical services, free hospital service, free emergency dental ser- vice, free tobacco, free recreation and entertainment. The cost of the Government- which is to say, to the people of Canada-for each man per calendar day is slightly more than a dollar. or per working day, on the basis of a five-snd-one-half- day, week, about 11.25. The figure is kept to this point by the purchase of supplies in huge quan- tities. The young man in private employment who enjoys a similar standard of living has mighty little left at the end of the week out of I15. Relief workers are _not paid wages. They are maintained in decent comfort at the expense of the state, and in addition receive 20 cents per day for the purchase of small lurniries not, included in aintenance. Even thh snail sum has an inflated value, because the camp canteens sell goods , “ aliyateoswandifasmallpmoiii. is earned it goes into the recrea- tion fund. But the standard maln- tenance is so ample for most requirements that when a survey wasmadeofacampixifiaskatohe- wan it was found the average bank account of the workers was $0- ‘ , m-Z Live Stock Spray Prepared Specially For Milk Cows, Cattle, B01160. lion and Poultry. iiannisaa to human or-sui- nasl life‘ when used as dheet- F- Pearson's runways»: ls a scientifically disinfectant and-- for" i? FE g §§Pia§i :2: ‘in; r g a his; rm- mastery in a. quite dideient evocative as a. Whistler etching; but_ that turned a nasty lock for me. f I passed with that key's fitting " Canadian ironies. Annuities. I" Lower Queen Street, W Financial Success is More lltplnllani; g llpon Wise Plans Than llpon Great ‘Capacity The Great-West Life is the Champion of Thrift and the Guardian of thousands o: There is a “Great-West” Policy to meet every need-Family and Business protection, Educational, Retirement Income or Pension and Consult our nearest ‘Agent or write or, call on IIYNDMAN & 00., LIMITED Established 1872 Provincial Managers Charlottetown tion of these places. Almost twenty-cent ofthfl awed out allowance. There are other mints, to b9 considered in any lair 000514?" variably the men put on weiaht and enjoy extremely good health under the camp regime of 80°6- mha and moderate work. The camp death into is well below the average, and time lost timrugh ill- ness very low. The men are in con- dltion, mentally, physically "Id morally, to take employment when it offers-and that, afier all. is the essential purpose of the can-APS- Prlmarily they are to save. our 70f prolonged unemploymfli "useful work they accomplish the process is a try-product. Empty Holsters (Ottawa Journal) Most Canadians will BXWYWTIW- we think, a fine thrill of pride at the statements of Mr. Bennett and Mr. Guthrie that the Mounted Police were armed only with batons during (he lamentable Regina riot in which a city lwllmmln W" killed. Not a shot was fired by the Mounted Police, said Ms‘. Guthrie, and the Prime Minister went into more detail. “There is one thing," he said, "I desire this House and the country to lmow: not a Royal Canadian Mounted in Policeman had e bullet in his holster." These are the police called "Bennett's Cossacks" by the man Evans, leader of the relief "march- ers,” now under arrest in Regina! ‘These are the swashbuckling fel- lows pictured as hi-relings of a ic Government, armed to the teeth and standing between the "numbers" and their liberties! The axiswcr was not long in coming. Tine to the finest tradition of British police work the R. C. M. P. assembled in Regina moved to put down disorded with ‘ ‘ their sole weapons. The-re were gunsinthehandaoffloiers, guns in the hands of Regina pdiice, but this national police force went into action with empty holsters. It was a splendid thing to do. and it emphasized in the clearm possible way the point Mr. Bennett has made-that the Government and Willie of Canada l i i z H? l, E If a iii IMPERIAL - FOX IMPERIAL PUPPY BRAHMIN TEA IhIPlB-ll GROWN Sold only in red airtight pkga. ~yoimg men from the deterioration. USE ORANGE PEKOE \ itoiucs rnsrsa or inseam In Barra Glen I found my bright woman; her hair is a flame. She is my wife through the church and a. treasure; she is my pulse and my ioy and my Diflwlre . . . and torment. She is my love, and quick t9 l» over like milk on the hearth. - stone, _ ‘ and the touch of her hand is the law and the prophets. Last Saturday dawn I was pulled a salmon of! the blaek rock‘: Myra, but I gathered the prize (from tbs mouth of misfortune and took the bright boyo ashore in my arms. In the Gulch all that day I was telling the tale - and drowning with Phil of tbs Bot. tic the taste of brcvm water. The story was stalling when I van- tured homeward, light foot and light heart, - - . l-Bvnsinnlysoulandthesaimon on shoulder for peace. And pueiace well enough I walbeq to . . . I could sniff her afar like the wind oil’ the ice-fields; , I could see her arise like the spread of a. scowl in the sky avg; Smoky. Caressing a. thole pin she rose up ts reet ms. 8 Then the darkness came down and it stayed till the dawn, when I rose with a storm in m; head. 0h, she is nu love and my joy and and her hand is the law 11g prophets! -xehheui Leslio m "Lowlands Low" cieariythedistvinctionbotweent-ho decent and harmless mm who are assumedtomakeupt/hebulkof EWM’ "army" and the lessen whoavebenton trouble. doing ifheirutmoettoturnsnot un- ‘ ‘Protest of diaatisfied youthinto an insurrectionary The Unanimous Verdict a of Successful Ranchers “We have never fed anything to equal healthy Ind. normal growth of pups and developing sturdy bodies with superior pelts of lustrous sheen,‘ thick-skinned and. retaining their color." movement . BISCUIT S and _ FOOD in promoting