i 17,-? PW" I i i. i? uiuintomrunn tiuitnnutit l‘ Infill] Dill! llilllfll III?) will. Milli-COL W. CHICO! I. gihlluncllil-JJ. Aluullnnol. ll u an" tin u: meet mum "when Audit Bureau o! Olmllutllul neat EIIIOII is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1939 iqrTsiroii Mr. Jones’ Resolution It is significant that the Dairymen’s As- boeiation has passed a resolution petitioning the Dominion tiovcrnincnt t0 adopt some scheme. by bonus or otherwise, that would stimulate greater production of cheese and thus relieve the surplus butter problem, and that one of our Liberal legislative members, Mr. J. Walter Jones, was sponsor and mover of the TCSOlIIIlOII. 1t will be recalled that ih 1935 .l1is was the policy pursued by the Bennett Government, $1,00o.o00 being placed in the Estimates for the year for the purpose of paying a bonus of 1 1-4 to 1 1-: cents a potmd, through the cheese factories direct to the farmers, from the 1st of July to the 1st of ]ahuary, 1936. The measure passed, but not without bitter opposition from Liberal members. Hon. W. D. Euler, present Minister of Trade and Coni- mcrce, argued: “In thcir ignorance the farmers 8V0 producing too much bit/tor.’ By the templa- tion of a bonus you are going to get them to product.- more cheese. What argument is there against the application of this principle to 'any other production, 1 do not care who! it is?" Hon. Fernand Rinfret, present Secretary of State, denounced the Government for spending money in this "very irresponsible manner,” and said all that was needed to solve the problem was "good tariff conditions and good govern- biiiii." l\Ir. w. A. Fraser (Liberal, N0rl£llum~ berland) declared that "if there war ever an in- stance of pork barrel rolling, it is this vote of $1,000,000!’ Mr_ E. I. Young (Liberal, Wey- burn) urged the Minister "to abandon this pol- icy at once and got back to the point when: all our prices will be based on the price: of export commodities." Mr. J. F. Pouliot (Liberal, Temiscouata) suggested that the vote be reduced by $975,000, as he believed all that was neces- sary was for the Government "to advise the people to eat more cheese.” The debate extended over some twenty- five pages of Hansard. Not one Liberal voice was raised in favor of the bonus, though its purpose and necessity were fully explained by Agricultural Minister Weir, and also by Mr. Iohn H. Myers, who stressed the need of com- pensating the farmer for the loss 0f skim milk by-products, as a means of diverting production from butter to cheese, for which there was a good market in the Old County. . The effect of the Conservative bonus prov- ed beneficial but unfortunately it was discon- tinued after the change of government at Ot- tawa. It is to be hoped that Mr. Jones, with the influence he has with our Federal Finance Min- ister and through him with the rest of the King Cabinet, will be able to persuade the pow- ers that be at Ottawa that the Conservative pol- icy which they opposed in 1935 is one which should be restored in the interests of our dairy producers. Last year's enormous butter surplus, added to the millions of pounds which were ermitted to be imported from Australia and cw Zcalatid, had a ruinous effect 0n prices, and unless something is done to relieve the situation, the backbone of our farm industry will receive a blow from which it- may take years to recover. An Expensive Minister Agricultural Minister Gardiner’s $48,000,- 000 wheat pcggitig policy, which he admitted in Parliament to have been a "mistake," is ' much llic largest, but by no means the only ex- traragaticc, this Saskatchewan member of the King (jovcrhtncht incurred since taking’ of- fice in 1936. Some of the political expenditures made in Mr. Gardihefs department are review- ed by the Ottawa correspondent 0f the Globe ‘and Mail. They make interesting reading for our farmers in this section of Canada, who liavc received little or no benefits therefrom. In 1935, it is pointed out, Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture expenditures amounted to $7,106,534. In 1938 they amounted to $33,204,- . 291. Some $20,000,000 of this was spent in “handouts,” in the shape of drought relief and feed to the prairie provinces. ,- In addition, subdepartments have been built up creating new jobs to be filled by pat- ronage appointments. Services that have been established duplicated work done by_ other de- partmentspThere has even been overlapping of existing services in the Agricultural department itself. ‘, For example. a trained staff of Trade Commissioners under the Department of Trade and Commerce is stationed at posts throughout Great Britain. Their job is to direct the mar- keting of Canadian products, a job which they have done efficiently under both party govern- ents, - Under Mr. Gardiner, the Department of lgfigriculture has been sending its own men into the-field at an added cost of hundreds of thous- ppdtrof ‘dollars. The Minister shows ‘a marked A rtiality for Saskatchewan appointees. Salaries his department in Ottawa alone have risen i '- ‘Befbre 1936, when Mr. Gardiner took of- "thelkpnrtmentof Agriculture carried on refiner grated undwappointed. year were $3,110. His assistant, l-l S. Arkell, receives a salary of $6,000 a year. His travel- ling (XP-‘tLrS in 19;"! were $5148 Mr Arkell ‘ . ' ' ‘ ' increased 111 th yes of all intel- was sent to South America, where the Trade 113cm, mam 11:11am, Telegraph. fornaer expenditure of $1,500,000. Professor Shaw went to England, took a staff of four- teen men with him, and submitted a voluminous report. It recommended establishment of an ex- tensive agricultural marketing service duplicat- (publislted of course at the taxpayers’ expense) was later suppressed, and a garbled edition substituted. Today, it is claimed, Mr. Gardinefs official: in England are not only duplicating, em,“ m but hampering the work of Canadian Trade Irish niny spfiillrt finished, the I chanca are it's flnlahed. -Chr1s- luau Bclenoa Monitor. ‘11937. For fiscal year cndgig March, 1937,; Tgo alpha l: ma}; thpot kloyallstb is new su - apartment cost 111,128. Durinv 9'1 l" 8° "P W1 the next year the expenditure was $305,021.: “setétefi-wy “e mum ° Total salaries of the unnecessary market- cess we am certain many of them . -— Peterborough Ex- Commissioners, Professor Shaw was appointed in January, Total travelling expenses amounted to $29,447. Mr. Shaw's o\vn travelling expenses for the res av TIIE mt With all a! our tuelpwo , e mg that of the Trade Department. The report spend. wh wnero that. leans has no right to be loose. -~Buffalo New: comes that Ireland nu Prim . Well, when the f ' like nature. ing assistance branch last year were $25,521. znlfingmd We no re-armlng not because of any certainty that war la oom- fng or that war ls not coming, but. because the reasons that war may come have vlslbly< mm $716.31.’. in 193510 $916,336 iin 1938-- ‘ ' rttvelllng expenses are more than $300,000 a t-nttl marketing services attached to A each ch Their contra-an to approxlmat y $1,- jobbi 11 g. in this "Island Province. died this date 1852. I tom other year. v n: a has now done that. m i: invent an anti-broadcaster " un l” m 1k a g clared policy to unify them. w n: m elements having been in eruption. v 1r at ment at next election. n: a a m ivaitting and sight seeing, but where he was laid up for repairs. =1: n: in foods may contain the metal. o n a a . is Captain Ian A. MacKenzie, “' and Commerce Department has Commissioners stationed who report periodically on marketing possibilities for all Canadian products. Expenditures under Mr. Gardiner's Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act for 1938 amounted to $1,357,425. So far Ottawa is depending chief- ly on rumor for its information on the opera- tion 'of this act_ But the rumors are almost un- animohs in speaking of patronage and political Post. sound which ls taking their place: A business which? possibly, u of services for partisan purposes is not one of them. These items must be added to the deficit ‘mm the "V" °l the °1d- W119i!" side of the ledger, to be paid in sales and other ‘ taxes by our farmers, who themselves, it will be Ideclslve action recalled, were unable to get any assistance whar- ‘ ever from Ottawa last year, to help them meet the serious seed grain shortage which occurred J‘ -Editorial Notes Thomas Moore, “Oft in the stilly night," _The farmers now return to their labours having “repaired” their organizations There comes a time in Rugger when a player puts his heel in the ground. Chamberlain The latest danger in the world is the hid- den or secret broadcaster which spreads false news and enemy propaganda. Who is going to Liberal politicians are at sixes and sevens both provincially and federally Canada. And it was Mr. Mackenzie King's de- Calm and peaceful here, both as regards, weather and controversy, has been the week just concluded. Not so elsewhere, both man and the Pity the poor lot of Amherstl First Mont- real envied and “stole" her prosperous car in- dustry; and now Halifax, her own provin- cial capital, wants to “steal" her Winter Fair. When sister cities behave like that, what can be expected of competing European nations? m m Speaker Casgrain of the House of Com- mous, is not a partizan, of course, ol1, no, no! but he is Grit enough to stop another Grit who essays to proclaim the doom of the Govern- The genial Minister of Agriculture, Hon. W. H, Dennis, is being welcomed back after his "picnic" to Ottawa. Unfortunately for him unlike that of his colleague, the Minister of Public Works the period was not spent in gal- Discovery that excessive doses of vitamin B-I, the nerve tonic, change the instincts of rats. making _thcm cannibals without mother-love is announced in Science. 'l_‘he experiments, indicate there is nothing dangerous in the vitamin itself, but reveal that it needs, at least in rats, to mix with some kind of metal in order to be beneficial- ly useful. The report was made by Dr. David Perla, of the laboratory division, Montefiore Hospital, New York City. He fed rats 15 to 2o . times ntore vitamin B-1 than they needed. They lost their mother-love instinct, failed to give milk and became cannibals on other rats. haps that is as good a way as could be devised ‘ of getting rid of the obnoxious rodents. But the significance of the discovery is that some cases of seeming malnutrition among persons rc- ceiving normal B-1 in food may be explained by insufficient metals in the body to enable the vitamin to work. Manganese i6 available to hu- man beings so widely that it is difficult to escape. Some water supplies are rich in manganese, others have none. But both plant and animal narlly Telegram. Evidently some one has been blowing the horn of the Minister of Defence in London, for this is a new: item sent out from there: “One of the Canadian Ministers who will be in attendance upon the King during the Royal tour of Canada will be a North-cast man and former officer in the Scaforth Hi hlandcrs. ‘He later of Defence. He was born in Aesynt, Suth- erland, in 1890. and educated at Kinguasle and at Edinbur h University,“ where ..he lni-Lawbe ore migrating to British War-time Seafortha will probably recall chief centre of operations where Elizabeth Chronicle Slelghnella were once the lym- bollc sound of wlnter on this con- tinent. ‘Ihey seem to be losing that distinction to another wintry very little known. ln eastern Can- ada at any rate, is the sale of _ salted salmon eggs, for the most If our farmers were getting the value of part to the markets these huge expenditure increases, there would be nocomplamt. Indeed, there are many ways the 933s from me sauna“ we cop! 1n which money could profitably be expended 160ml. 581M111 811d Dflckfid- — tor development of agriculture. But duplication of the Far East. British Columbia ls the rustic rortuM ll Ilomlnb‘: no not lo- unhnc the UDlllill of ootnolonlutl- y an. hrs can! grpulrfifiv" me mane 1n your hl and enlll the wcnl "J ". wherein he has described lt. f: REPLY TO MR. TANIUN Sun-Lu llflmsot! .231dl.ssue0tyour perlnotiewlthdlsguatn. P“ 00n- wenmeratlon of words and tho his correspondent Mr. L. P. n- your ton has triad to put together. A1- though I was aware Mr. mutton; was advanced ln years 1 dld not know that he was 1n such a state of mental disorder. Hts wrltln s merit more lty than laughter. bhe sound of automobiles wlthluttacks on . Grant are as un- broken chains. -1-Iallfax Chronicle ' called for as his Eltilkka on the milk vendors’ blll, and I note with pleasure that a correspondent has seen flt to endorse the ‘a suggestion ct‘ a cover front for the album. which our friend 1n his pips dreams has praoased to pre- pare. 1n his oorrespondertoo wlth Mr. Daniel R. Jav 0'. Wlnaloo he brlnzs t0 mind the woods of the beloved poee, Oliver Goldsmith in ‘his poem absut the village teacher. The new navles have arisen ‘son owned h]; 5311], (or (pa; er there s much more llkellhood of theh- ever being brought to a. than there was tpitiilugh vanquished he could urine s ." Iwotuankewtirinizmhiamim at this pout-t: "those who llve ln with the old ones, the chance that glass hotises should 11.! throw they will flnd themselves at war “stones.” So for his own benefit he (which la by no means the same) chilling enough as 1914 olna hands with a. 1939 or 19 , so much the same, on'y far worse. - New York Herald Tribune While we are at great and in- creasing palns to ship only qual- i. m better not start delving too dieep into the traits and derivations of uunes, etc. as he has done wltr Mr. Jay. He may as he has tn his trlp to Eden became bewildered. “A little comedy now and then” says our doting scribe. "Is relished by this] gsest men". I note he dld lty produce to export markets, we not, L 1t. ought not to overlook the fact that the equally important homo market is, Just as much entitled to receive the best that we can grow or rB-lse. 'I‘l1ere ought to be just as much emphasis on quality ln the home market as ln tzhe foreign market. -—Brockvllle Recorder and ‘Hines. Celeb Service, recently on; lzed in New York city, pander“ the strange desire of peoplt hobnob with the prominent. 1-. As a. writer his death knell has been rung. I an, Sir, etc, LEM MucKlNNON, Hlghfleld. WORKIVIEWS COMPENSATION ACT slrr-‘rihe Provincial Iiezlalattue willaounbelnsesslonandlt-hlnk lt viould be well for the citizens of this Ricymce to advise their zeweetlve representatives regard- lnz compensation to lnluzed work- s price, this strange service will mm The m,‘ 1s operated Wm, send daily bulletins on the comings and udolnga of the great and near- great. Thus the diner-out at a particular restaurant may be as- sured that somewhere ln the some restaurant will be dlnlng Robert Taylor or perhaps even Charlie McCarthy. --Klt.chener Record. Revision of the Itinerary for the Royal tour to include a stop at Brandon-reported from Ot- tawa to be under consideration-ll an act of simple justice already overdue. It ls to be hoped that the stop will be made long enough to permit their Matestles to drive through the streets of the Wheat City. How Wesbem Manitoba could have been ignored tn the orlalnal itinerary ls a mystery. which deep- ens when tihe number of stops alloted other Provinces are cou- sldered. Manitoba and Prince Eld- ward Island are the only Provinces allotted but one appearance by their Mejstles under the present itinerary. --Wlnnipe¢ Tribune. The proposal that l the federal lzovernment will share fifty-fifty with the provinces for the iunef of transients, lf ado be’, will take care of a class of e nemployed who have been ln h most unfor- tunate position, and will relieve the municipalities of a problem with which they should never have been faced. There Ls sound reason t r the suggestion that the federal government should assume the tom cost. of caring for transients, since lt 1a the failure of Otto/wins policies which has sent the trans- ients wanderlng from province to Iin Communist Russia. those who get ln the bad graces of thosovlet cletles ot authorities are either shot or sent and t-hciv remanded zenerously by to Siberia. In Nazl Germany they requesting the Government put ln concentration camos. have the Ant. but on the eta B-Te In Fascist Italy it la equally un- healthy to do an thlnz but cheer the totalitarian a te. And now we have General Franco, on the verge of money of complete victory 1n Spain, pre- parln to follow these examples. sat/ton tn thls province. A The decree has an omlnotls tone. It not only indicates that the victor ls not prepared to let bygsnesba bygones and to seek unlty tn the by consent, rather than by oomphlslon ln poet-war days, but that he will govern by the same tactics the conlmuxilata have in ucsla and the Nazis ln Germany. 1f this la criterion by which his future po cles may be judged, will be u "decree rule" for Spain. Emma during to oppose the au- orltlec belna persecuted. and the . people having no voted ln the ud- mlnlctratlon. And some Spaniards will not be allowed to live‘ In their own country, not oven ln d happy one. --Wlndsor Star. . -____¢ Au annulment: uooompum- I-lvlllimllllfl In '3" BN7 ‘£2 '° "‘“““§,’R'.Pn'“$,f,‘,'f,“£ sun; gnu-r. in the dew of g':...§..*:i....:'":.°.*::.’....." * m a k l, -_ 11w. lira nu‘ wit‘; ” °’° “ha... {fwd .' . -6uult OM. Ml eds ,1! Min Mackenzie, for he took , v fighting at Yprea, Kemmel, an »t undwas later Staff Captain to the ' t of Galen! J. W. Stew ' rnlnlon Government htwh all their Act of some other province. Why 3t “have our own act and have benefit under the Act . _ | The money that. builds ub the province ln search either of work compensation fund 00mg from or of better relief than they can ‘everywhere and mywhem and get at home. In any event. there none of those yin: in are too can be no logical defence for hard hit. Tho frnm paying to 1n- ohargtng any province for the re- lief of transients who are not ordl- assessed nearly as much by work- raldents ln it. -—Toronto Rich's compensation and the bene-, {flls to the tr urod workmen would ibe much be were mailed t» the different. ln- stltutlous. finial. The of Charlottetown spent furl! hunts .11 modem Act drafted ‘ia-st year vreaente ‘n the 0o ' lslatium recelve“ a copy at the not worn. Combat-fifths Mot‘ ‘QM : no wrong IIMMMI splendid results 1n all other prov- lnoes of the Domlxiton. These prov- inces would e as midi?’ “Stdflliaié. .3 legislation that has prove-n to be such n wand success and such n. men's Ocmoenseblon Act ha; been operated for years and it has never been repealed. manalwmen-t of the new alr- Dort wtslde Charlottetown used Brunswick Act that were bufldlna roads tn, our Province last. year were paying lame sums to Insurance compan- les for the moloctlon of the work- em ln case of accident. Several of our provincial business firms have WW1!‘ emmoveea coveted with a blanket insurance. The Inland branch of the C. N. R. may thous- of dollars each yegr undu- the New Brunswick Act ‘The Do. employees under some form of comipenmticn operated Lhrmtgh the 18 money 1n our own oom- Denmtlon treasury and every Wflfklne man and woman to surance commutes would not. be . Several circulars 10m and eo- brovlrmo last year to flutes u! this province. laborer’; Protective Union be! year and 1n other years to have wu-lmnien’: confoun- oom- mdttee from tun. tuaanlzatlon had and r’ . vern- ment. All the n i hers of the Leg- CFEREHIE j a icAnqllAten CUT PRICE! mum L. P. imvtozrou hh wonder; 193a All-Wave annrnv THOUSANDS _ SOLD ACROSS CANADA AT $35.50, “SAVE —-THE— $30. DIFFERENCE” AT SIMPSONS .50 $5.50 lever Before _in P.E.l. a Out Price Salenf New RCA VIGTORS! Exclusive With smrsons in Prince Edward Island! Limited lluantitiy-llurryl-We Will Be Quickly Oversold! Mall Your Order, with Down Payment, to. Simpson: Agency, Charlotte town F. ll. Stewart Jonas 56, 58 Grafton Street Phone 602 Charlottetown not" under any con-| sfdwattlon ctrment to have the act ' aiiiliiiidu “WHY D0 I VOTE?‘ Bin-I would; how h m your render: ve ever oneo~ uied tlmnselves the y the tltleof Blotter. lfunswersoould berlvgéz the inheritance g1 dearly bougt for htm by hla forefathers ln long hard struggle to gain Ramon- Government. Surely no man can say that he has "governznent of the people, ‘for the people, and h lt to be influenced by timdl- past, rather than to weigh well his declslon before mak- ep which eventuall de- cl as the destlny of his coun ry. Th xt alas ls becoming “pa: The Act will not. to the 1min: of this orovlnue ft movldtts that the farmer fa free to ocme under the Act or not. he thinks fit. A provision can b6 made to admit the farmer on hi5 the poll lclim and‘ himself PM“ h? he élutes ntztbegret tip! on hflpe o ge ore - action he ls a contlnuul source of annoyance to the elected memb" who ft left, alone would be able to hls time to worth- d ls not. that what he was elected for? If this vow’ 55g the 10b, l1g_ls ‘frldlnelhlglf’. (F ntmued on pgiiwlgiglgljl | elv request the ombu- atton of all the citizens f and they feel confident electors wlll emourflue the xunresentaht-‘llyrtos of the present oonaeguentl th beat. man or the best. aystemy huebeon Oimnda todly. those of votl placed lnto four n‘ timvibtttn" n; 'ytl" ilifwi-M l devote more of while affairs: an d t-niat that. flh out this year. Dorft let this mlen- ll without every We L. P. .U Wonrmen‘: Oolrllzlttee. D. 0. C.. CHAIRMAN. FARMERS any no complete lluo of Clltle, H085. Enllltry, Etc, lurlty. about the cmd nu m u lotg’ p 0cm o votes for u name. It no that. this individual. although dwcndlt hla sincerity in la vln 11115191! or if; as well u several business men and ‘ , INTO I'll! TWILIGHT smi- _ ---— . ' tlon camps. The picture la not a Out-worn heart" k1 n time out- Btzmtnglmtlru-of a ‘wmi- u wouldn't in laonioilaari‘ .lwuu:a11uiru . N‘ ' j will?» e emu” at m’ , N41911:: For lloo on hum, cattle and hone: or lloe nltq ocean oops n 1on1 w "got: i? lrl to onoofthemoat rumors nhnv rnonucrs rouunv MID ms LIVE non AND FOXES ldwudilahnd u world-wide reputation ll THC l ‘l0 OI IIGQX l manna. ‘ ' f?“ tart: meant-ratio i‘; W i . ottootlnl ,,,~,,:,e;; new, 1r. afoul] T, 11mm i t. Summerslde :5: at Morita!" carry also htWLlooKfll-Slic 17k rutt’: Condition Powder 70c -------'ssoo1u TIWIWOIIBPOIIOII .........._._._mg-|, PIWIIMIIIPIIIIC——IIG llaic‘: Worn . i Powder-SS: || , t rvo Pduoo it... nutrition _ iv i: lllllill‘ ,5,“ v.'.........'._..._.-_..._...---_.- .._.