ir .r i ,_ ...V-». =£\w W *gli* *’§i“i**’s..s... ..~. ....§ ~< #euro- as "` l *¥¢§%¢ """':_._ sf -g _<.»».. -,, _;_._; 'You ’ / \~7..\;;f, ~ i,i / U 1 \`¢{_/5;, `_._` I r //Q _». 1 iii; A . ;'-gi I - .4‘§ ~ .s‘§:.'~ -nf _ .» - . y V , _ ,_-1--~ . .__ _ . ' _ ' ' 1. , , . APRIL 7, :gn . PAGE TWO ,'"rHE mrnsr News I I THE CI-IARLOTTETOTNN GUARDIAN _ P rms-r oAifYAr.ii»'-;' _ M ,__ *Y 4- _ .» np ~ _» ni it-1 r 'n uw nnunenf i i \\.i\ o mi iz lnmin wiinlii be to double its size WI :ippi-oxiiuatcl_v and change its politi- i-al majority by appointing some 500 in-w Pei-rs of Liberal convictions. ' A S T M A This vnu-rgciit mi-,thod is not looked i Any pei'.~`oii willi this distressiiiig i-iniipluini Will fliiil illis cliaiigc- able wcaflicr r-"iii.~c tlirui alot of iroiihlc \\'<- rc- ` commend you to iiy Campbelfs A sthma Cure zi remedy ili:ii luis ii large and iiici‘c;i.~lC\liZc themselves to vote for aboli- tion. When the numbers had become almost equal one of his pledged men changed his mind and voted against abolition, thus prolonging the life of the (‘ouucil. This raised n storm uuil in the end the Upper House rvaseil to exist. No later appointee i-iireii to break his pledge. ’l`hc Lords tlieniselves have atleast iuo plains for the reform of their llouse. of which Lord Lansdowne stands sponsor for one and Lord l.'osehci'y for another. The Asquith ili»\'ernmeut has also a plan not yet iiuiile public, besidcs the emergency plan of appointing a large body of uc-w l’cci's us lirst above incntioued. Party politics is the leading factor in promoting most of these schemes of so-culled reform. Lord ltosebery condcinncd both the l.ansilowue and ihc l.ihci'al plan iiiid appeals for a i'cI`orui on national and not on party izmiiiiiis. And he has little faith in an appeal to the people onthe ques- tion. “'l‘hc general election, after all, is nothing but a confused clamor iii voices," hc said. Anil he thus uarned the Llovcriiment: "You," he cried io the ('lovcrumcnt lcailcr, “cannot achieve a settlement on these lines. You can achieve a JL.“.L.|,... party triumpli. You can take i'e- i Heros _ _-ff 5t.Y1@/5 if . fur (L 2/-':;= 'll i . ' \ .-15 "‘,s. /-`o- 0('\/ I, \\T`\>\\\\\ \€ _ -,,/ Blf.\'llll"S '.1i»i\i] /ivi//if/'riiiil i‘.\|u»ri' ':L'm'/.irfiiiiz\/ii/f. .i iu.iii wuiii-.s .\/_in/U' in hi-; % Sliiuz-‘_ ill' j.;a‘i ~s all / tlirm- in lliv ii.iiii Slliiiu 'Tllii ll.\ll'l"i` llGf)'l` S1 S1101", (Il). |.i.\l|'l`l'1l| Frcilciiriuii, » N.ll. "(.'uiimlu's [Teal i 1| b'lun,-nmkl'i'.=: ’ ' \\ \\;. u / . .1 ;/-"f7f,7,7”./ “fc ff /, .,..,<»;c-is \§ ~<.- S. '.1//` 0;"-'1§i" , ia,/.A » /4/' W/ /L Hnprrr . I /‘/.1105 \ Q HLLU, ' L.._ _;;;; ' - -_;.._.._ ..:.....;;': -.___' is is the time iiii 0hi|iiren’s Shias \\"e`ve Weak an klc ~ Thi | 1| _ H §l`\§l'_i I .#--v A; W3# """ " ‘”-11° ~ ». Shoes fc' L li i ldrcn and heavy soles in all "ithcrs for the older ' 1 1 . L il” I llilii , . _ Q ' learningio w.'ili.',l1_-.'glit U ‘li 49 AQ: c ‘ .Hi , i . . , Tories. ln flici every- ' thingused to beautify bi ffl* and protect thc juve- nile is here in choice vii it , i » va ri et y. Mcfarlane, ' ’“ Instruciors, Security and many other lines. , off Bros “ l X “The Re|i\ble$hoe Men" ‘ \'i~uge upon this House for wrongs- ipgm real in many cases and in some cases w~__»g_`__H H g -, ,» __, _ .- y iiiiiicil-.ml haxiug done that you nill lmvc attained by party what Call `Unionists inake it their first task to be undone by party. Will not the uproot that which you have rashly planted in the rocks by the way- side?" . Lord Rosebery pointed a finger i.»- ward Lord Morley, saying: "He bears an honored name, a famous name. Does he wish it tu go down to pos- terity' allied with a one-sided fanati- cal partisan settlement? I appeal to the head of the Government, who has to settle with history and posterity, the great claims which his intellect gives him to be a conspicuous power in the history of this country. "How will they stand wheuthcir names are at last produced before that dread trihune from whose ver- dict there can be no appeal, if they conspire to lay hands on this imme- morial constitution, rashly and reck- lessly, without having done anything to build but only to destroy?" The difficulties are indeed very great. The Lords cannot reform their own House because no plan they can agree upon would be likely to pass the House of Commons. Equally the Lords are almost sure to reject any plan sent up from the House of Commons. So that if the lenders of parties cannot agree upon a plan of reform on national grounds, and they probably cannot, the only resort must be either by an appeal to the people for a mandate on the question, or the appointment of enough new Peers to carry the Veto Bill. That once passed, the popular Chamber would have a rea- sonable security that its measures would become law if twice affirmed in successive sessions. As to an appeal to the people on the question of such a great consti- tutional change, the competence of the masses to decide it wisely may be doubted. An appeal to the people made upon one single question is nev- er considered by them in that way. Many other matters would enter in and confuse the issue. Too many el- ections are, as Lord Rosebery says, “a confused clamor of voices.” Not always, but only sometimes, do the people pronounce in the same way at ii ---'ILT H? F H A é GU AR‘D'éN lziriziL;r3`l`;:?“l£":ot°Ef Th best Coffee costs but er settlement to be reached! RECIPRUCITY IN CONGRESS. The President has by special mcs- sage placed the reciprocity agreement before Congress and urged its adop- tion. Here we are all interested to know what Congress will do with it. Generally the press and people of the Republic appear to favor the meas- ure. but there is danger that the Democratic desire for a larger meas- ure of tariff reduction, along with political complications may cause de- lay. The New iYork Herald says: “Before attempting any revision of the wool or other schedules or under- taking any other legislation the House should pass. this reciprocity bill. It is thoroughly in line with democratic policy for reduction ol the cost of living; it has been thor- oughly "thrashed out" and, backed by the demand of the people and the support of the democratic Represen- tatives, passed tbe late House. Gen- eral tariil legislation is liable to give rise to intricate debates and to meei with delay, opposition and possible defeat in the Senate or at the hand: of the President. "If the House will pass the Cana- dian reciprocity bill to start with- a measure that has a good chance in the Senate and which the President is eager to sign-it will make sure oi a most material accomplishment to its credit, even if no other legisla- tion should reach the .statute book as a result oi the special session. The beneiicent effects of the recipro- city agreement iii promoting trade between two neighboring and friend- ly countries and in reducing the cost of many necessaries to the American people will probably be set forth anew- in the message from the Presi- dent, which will probably reach Con- gress on Wednesday. ln Canada the Parliament is waiting to sec what will be done at Washington. “If the House wisiics to make sure of at least one achievement und to decision is almost always that of a party majority. At this distance \vc _must all feel with Lord Rosebery that the decision of the fiiture status two successive elections. Ami their, lcountry it will pass the reciprocity strengthen itself in favor with the ibill promptly and without amend- ment." lHB|lHlT_|_Ull EAMPAIBN LONDON, April 4-The Archbishop of Canterbury will be asked to start a great religious movement in favor of Anglo-American arbitration. This is the outcome of a meeting held at the Mansion House of which a depu- tation from the free church council presented resolution urging the lord mayor to initiate a national move- ment. The lord mayor said that he had received a large number of communi- cations from various bodies, includ- ing those representing the leading municipalities, in which approval was expressed, but he added that it was essential that the religious side of the movement should embrace all churches. The Rev. F. Meyer, former presi- ient of the National Federation of Free Churches, said it was obvious, in order to insure success, that the lead should be taken by the arch- aishop and the Anglican Church. It was then decided to present the re- quest of the Archbishop of Canter- bury in the lord mayor's name. _ BORDEN T0 TOUR WESTERN CANADA THIS SUMMER TORONTO, April 4-The months of July and August have been chosen for the tour of Western Canada by I-1'. L. Borden, the Conservative lead- er. This will, of course, be dependent on the federal house closing by the end of June. It is the leader‘s in- tention to cover the whole of the west, including Manitoba, Saskatche- wan, Alberta and British (‘olumbii=.. Arrangements for dates are now bc- ing considered. . LUNENBUR6 BABY P0lS0llED #- HALIFAX, April 4-The twenty- months-old baby of Obed and Mrs. Ernst, of Blickhouse, Lunenburg, yes- terday ate half a box of patent medi- cine pills, and then took fits and died before medical aid could he sinn- moned. Mr. and Mrs. Ernst some time agn lost another child through nu accident with boiling water. EIGHT-HOUII DAY FOR MASONS, E’l‘(7. GUELPH, April 6-Bricklayers und masons here have inaugurated an eight hour day. Formerly they re- ceived 43 cents per hour for nine hours' work. They are now paid 48.5 . ARE YOU - ~ rn- 1-zf;..i.=,.......n~,‘,one fnznizaifamsiiff. 222? little more than the poor .cor f E r grades. You get the best that money can buy at moderate price when you use cal ,Brand offee Packed in I and 1 pound cans only. 124 PHUVIUENEE EHS INIIHEASEU TRAFFIC Pnovinntvcii, n. i_., Aiiril 4-TENS my is jubilant on its iii'i>si>@¢U"¢ good luck in getting a Ve1‘¥_lBl'ile port benefit from the constrllctitm Of (1annda’s new $250.000.fl00 Tf““5°0'_" tinental railway, by diverting to lt tratiic which otherwise should 140 t0 Halifax and St. John. 4 By its action today in ai»ply_ins_t0 the state legislature for mod1l1CB.i$l0D in the charter of the Southern New England Railway company. the Grand Trlink showed its hand and disclosed the proposed location of its tide water terminal in Rhode ls- land. ` '1‘oday's -developments by the iiraud Trunk situation coupled much with the almost simultaneous. aCti0I\ Of the state harbor improvements com- mission, in proceeding to condemn. under right of eminent domfillli _l8“‘lS on the west side of the Providciice Iriver, for the purpose of constructing state docks and builidinl a b0Dd°d warehouse, fill the hearts of the peo- ple of Providence with enthusiasm and ghatituile to the Government of Canada for the benefit this city will derive from the gigantic expenditure of Canada in building this new road and to the Grand 'l‘i‘\'nl< in deciding io 'bring ils Canadian traffic to Rhode lslnnd. _ The Grand 'I‘riink's tide water tcr- minal on the Providence river, con- struction of the new state docks, ex- penditure of $500,000, the work of the United States government in dredging the river so ns to admit of the entrnuce oi ocean-going steamcrs and the l>urcha.~:e and proposed devel. opni-ent of trade, and with 2,300 feet harhor frontage hy the city of Provi- dence in the iii-ii_:lil:oi‘liood of Ficl-d's l’oint which is yiitiiull ilic kc to cents an hour for eight hours, i -` ' ' Y v -Y l‘i'o\'iilriii'e hnrhor, tell their own tale. ~ Letters to Housewives No. l Learn the secret of mak- ing the dirtiest dirt get rid oi' iisclf. Watch the advertisements on this page this week. Your curiosity will be well rewarded. The most disagreeable of your housework will be done for you. Such as cleansing and disinfecting the kitchen sink and drain- pipes, for instance, and re- moving one ofthe most fre- quent sources of disease. Look for To-morrow’s Ad. ` u i by I ~_:, 5". ~ il? f _ Y `~\ _g ililli ,_ #ll _»__-i V ,Iii __ 2__?=_ ml l' iirili. i |iii i i M Ili’ I ` y V/ ,Ni I ,AW ' No( 2 Why is it you don't like dish-washing ? China and glass-ware are easy enough to wash and dry- But the dirty, greasy pots and pans--ugh! - If you only had something in the house that would clean them for you- That would be a great boon, wouldn’t it? " Lo-ok for To-morrow’s Ad. IX* ._ M ' il ‘ . ' ' ` i ‘ l '.'.i;_§ Letters to Housewives - l-ell¢l‘8 I0 H0llS¢WlV¢8 N05 3 4 You’d welcome anything that would make it easier to get the floors really clean. Something that would make less rubbing and scrubbing necessary. Something that, added to the water, made the dirt literally “melt away.” You can get it. Look for To-morrow’s Ad. fr' >-..- e' \ "l§.\,\i -,\ ‘ » lf' \J3 V A/ ii _.. _*H* ’ --» . -1 f , ,,\ wb I ` 'NIC E' ‘We -3 li - I ,ii ,li ». 1,., ’ lll Letters to Housewives No. 4_ Are you sometimes both- ered with roachcs, rats, mice, bugs, beetles and so forth P Hard to get at, and hard to get rid of] aren’t they? This dirt-destroyer we are telling you about will kill -them-sure, quickly. It also has many other special uses such as remov- ing stains from the closet and disinfecting it. And for cleansing and purifying milk cans and utensils. Or for entirely removing old paint. Or for use instead of washing soda. Look for To-morrow’s Ad. K 3 I ,.4- mlb 101:: ""1 Can you guess what it is? It “makes dirt run.” Nothing else so thoroughly' cleanses-so completely dissolves dirtiest dirt. It is put up in convenient sized cans'. Is finely pow- dered and dissolves quickly. 100% pure. All good grocers sell it. . 10 cents buys a big can, with improved, air-tight cover, easy to open, easy to close. Valuable rings, brooches, bracelets, watches, silver- | ware, books and other fine premiums given FREE to those who save the labels. To-morrow’s Ad. tells me Look for it_ ' 1 . . ;~.»i..1;;;-.urs . roar. \; . V . i|]H|Nl HlNl]` od; . i-ii' Previously acknowledgcd..._..,,.$ 12335 Chas. Matheson. city. (omit- ted yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. W. G. White-head, Graham's Road . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Presbyterian Church, Tyne Valley...... ._ ........ .. Pres,byterian Sabbath School, ' 'ryne valley ...................... ._ Earnest Mission Band, Tyne Valley ...................... .. J. O. I-lynidman, city .... .. Presbyterian Church, West I Point...... 9.26 Presbyterian Church, 0'- lleary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ , _ _ _ _ , ,_ Presbyterian Church, Bloom- field ............................... ._ 16 Contributors at Murray Harbor, per Rev. Mr. Sel- lar......... .... .. James D. Lawson. city.`.,... Thos. E. and Mrs. Ramsay, Summersiile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. J. A. McMurdo, Summer- side . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Mrs. Thos. Clements, Surn- merside . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , _ . . __ Miss Jane Brebaut, Summer- ` side . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 52 Contributors nt Bedcque, pci' ll-cv. H. Johnson . . . . . . . .. Dr. R. McNeill ...... 1.00 2.00 8.00 2.00 S"‘!"‘ oo ec 12.29 21.75 r-I »-oc our can 5.00 10.00 2.00 5.00 82.110 2.00 FILES OURED IN 6_'I‘O 1| DAYS, PAZO OINTMENT ls guaranteed to cure any case of Itohing, Blind Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. 'l‘Hl‘} MEXICAN MATTER - IS EXI‘LAINl'lll. EL PASO, Texas, April, 6-An ex- planation bearing all the marks of authenticity, clearing up the Ameri- can-Mexican-Japanese situation, was given here by one of the most prom- inent Mexican-Americansiin the coun- iry. According to this information, given by one who is in position to know but who insisted upon suppres- sion oi his name, President Diaz was seeking ii way to refuse a coaling station on Magdalen Island to the Japanese. even before the rciiewal of American Goverument's contract came up for discussion, and feared an invasion by the Japanese. MORALS COMMISSION TQ DEAL WITH MORALS. . .__.... Cl-lI(`iAGO, April 6-The Chicago “Vice <‘ommission," the first salar- ied iniinicipnl commission of its kind, made many radical recommendations in their report to the Common Coun- cil and gave an exhaustive review of the status of the social evil in Chi- cago. The recommendations were directly against the European principle of se- gregation. They were for the con- stant and persistent repression ofso- rial evil, with absolute annihilation, ns the ultimate ideal by means ol the appointment of a Morals Coni- misslon and the establishment of a Morals Court. FOOTBALL IN GREAT BRITAIN -ASSOCIATION CUP. As the readers are probably aware this is the great event in thd British Association Football World. T110 leading teams are drawn against each other in a "knock out" coml>0' tition, 64 teams entered for the com- Detition, and up to last Saturday the number of teams still in were brought down -to four, viz.. New- castle United, Blackburn Rovers. Bradford City and Chelsea. It is an interesting fact that every one of these four teams is composed of men trained on Oxo. CONSERVATIVES PREPARING.. HALIFAX, April 6-Tha Liberal Conservative Convention for Halifax today nominated Alderman Smith. Alderman F. P. Bligh, and J. C~ 0'Mullin as candidates for the Locul Legislature. The elections are GX- pected before June. ' STOCK NOTES i Peter MacDonald, Ruskin, lost n valuable foal this winter. Robert McNeill. New Dominion. l-' the proud owner of n handsome brown colt sired by the trottinir stallion, Aquirl, Dam by Bow Gallant HU" Of Bow Bells 2.19, grand dam by Black Pilot 2.30}, the Ex-chamDl0“ trotting stallion of thc' Maritime Provinces. This colt was foaled 0" April 30th. . A. T. Bruce of Valleyhcld is the °W“°l` Of a. bay colt, sired by Aqlllfl out of his Almont Wilkes mare. which is two weeks old and is said t0 be a corker. Owen Sullivan, Vernon River. had thc misfortune to lose an Acilulfl foul out of his Exocutlonoer mlm recently. This makes this second Ac- iluiri foal Mr. Sullivan lost out Ol this mare. - ::0f interest to ladiel is the fact that we have stocked uvcrnl 04°" of the Harmony Perfumes md cach- etc made in Boston. You have mil! to see than perfumes to fall in 10" with them. Bold only by the bulk. Price 75° an ounce. The MacKinnon. Dru; Co., Cor. Gt. Goo. h Kara"-