-, ......'..>..,«, gm-.=-..-x:-..-«.i.-... ';,_..._ .. l '» ‘,.< .:';.-$:..;...,.~-..-....-.--‘ . ., , _,,. _,_‘_{,',;,,,....-.-u-‘q.- -.-e. Tliii clllrloiliflflll Guardian 1. Ielan. I I. Puolloit. l.|o c.~ooi. ‘w. on-mo Vloo-Ploulil:Ila J. I. Brno“. . J. loo:-«cry, Lloutocol. D. A. Iullnlon. D. I. 0. ran” ua luulu Dluctor J. B. Burnett I‘. J. I imam Iumn. mu wniim no 0. 5'. Cunln. Ilornlu: Dally (founded III?) 04.00 901' III! (II ndvuru) dnlkuml In city. I830 not you (In ndunu) III“!!! '0 Prince Edward I-land. 04.50 on you (I: cannot) Illllod to CIIIMII Ild Unltod ltlkl. WEDNESDAY JUNE 3 1986 "To Him The! Hath-/’ Well-to-do citizens, able, like our Premier, to take an occasional holiday in New York or some other United States centre, will profit at the expense of Canadian merchants by . the provision in the DUNNING Budget exempting goods up to $100 from tariff duties when brought into Canada as “travellers_' baggage." Those not in that fortunate class. however, will appreciate the force of the following objection raised in the House of Commons on May 27 by Mr. \Vooos- « WORTH, C. C. F. leader. We quote from the Hanrard report : - Mr. \\'ooDs\\'oiu'H : “May I point out a very serious danger in this proposal. It involves dis- criminatory taxation, or perhaps it would be more correct to say that it involves the discrim- inatory remission of taxation. If a man has a car or can secure the price of a railroad ticket and has a day or two of leisure, he can cross the bor- der and return with $100 worth of goods. Mr. DUNNING : “He must have the $100.” Mr. Woooswonrn: “Yes, if he has the $100. He can bring back $100 worth of goods if he has the leisure to take the trip. He can do this four times a year. If he has four or five children he can load them into a car and bring back $400 or $500 worth of goods at a time.” Mr. DUXNING : “If he has that much money." . Mr. VVOODSWORTI-I : “Quite so. I want to point out that a great many people have not a car; a great many people, especially those living in districts remote from the boundary. cannot afford the price of a. railroad ticket; thus a great many people cannot possibly take advantage of this opportunity as they have not the leisure; they may have steady work and cannot spend several days in taking a trip to the United States. All these people will continue to be taxed and in the long run their taxes will probably be heavier because a few other people are exempted from taxation. It would seem to me that the sugges- tion thrown out by the hon. member for Rose- town—Biggar (Mr. CoLDwi-:i.L) contains some- thing of merit. He suggested that every resident of Cannrla should be permitted to obtain $100 worth of goods free of duty. . . . If half a mil- lion people can secure goods to the extent of $50,000,000 which, as the leader of the Opposi- tion suggested, would involve a remission of tax- atinn amounting to twenty or thirty per cent. I .‘:--i l : see why a similar remission should not be :22, i‘ to the ten millions of people who do not in tile border.” . . . ..lr. DUNNING : “When my hon. friend rc- .’.~x "1 those who cannot afl‘ord cars surely he it , .8 that nearly everyone in Canada has a fi-i...il who owns a car. He rides in that friend's car and he goes on trips. Surely it is an exag- geration, in the light of experience of the popu- lation of Canada in travelling in each other’s cars. to say that this exemption involves buying a car." .\_ir. Woooswoitrn : “I think the Minister is pretty hard driven when he has to make a state- ment of that kind. . . . I am afraid he has been living in certain circles during the .last few years and has forgotten the actual conditions which prevail on the prairies and in many of the cities. There are large numbers of people in this country who have no cars and who have no friends who own cars; there are a great many people who cannot afiord a railway trip and there are other classes of people who cannot af- ford the leisure to take a holiday across the bor- der. Under these circumstances I should like the Minister to justify discriminatory legislation of this kind." ' (Mr. DUNNING did not reply). Ur. \V/\l.SlI (Mount Royal) : “I have list- ened with much interest to the hon. member for- Winnipeg North Centre and I think his remarks bear out that oft-repeated text from scripture, .‘To him that hath shall be given.’ ” Section 98, Criminal Code The St. John Telegraph-Journal (Ind) says: “From time to time one reads and hears of efforts being planned or made to have the federal authorities repeal section 98 of the criminal code -—why. in many cases, it is difficult to determine. The section specifically prohibits the preaching of "governniental, industrial or economical change within Canada by use of force, violence or physical injury to persons or property or by threats of such injury.” There does not seem to be anything in this which would restrict the rights and liberties of any law-abiding citizen. Certainly it does not hamper freedom of speech in the accepted sense of the tenn, because it allows full and frank dis- cussion of forms of government and systems of economic procedure, provided there is no advo- cacy or threat of the use of force or violence to. attain the objective sought. ' _ _ “Even those who disagree with the existing form of government in this Dominion, and who would have it replaced by another, or_ thosh who would supplant the so-called capitalistic SYSW“ by oneof the various suggested ’i3i‘[i5. 6811 ll!“ no fear of sectlon‘98 unless_they believe that the only way to realize them aims is through force or violence. And if that II the method bl’ Wl"°l" they hope to see their theories brought into ef- f‘ ., ism page so be jgstifieution for the iiifiiuion in iscgonugsyé a-e-fiiatigaail, code- 33 hf ‘ h . y OOIICC ' i ‘j ‘ .v Vi¢m fl!“- i of P- ‘I campaign issue by the present Prime Minister of Canada l , ‘ ‘ Editorial Notes The increase in the price of farm machinery will cause many intending purchasers to make the old equipment (at: fzr 1; while longer. Members of the League of Nations are be- ginning to realize that sanctions against any nation can only be strictly enforced by military measures, and this fiw ;re gnxious to undertake. If the B. N. A. Act amendment goes through it could easily happen that farmers in this Province would have to pay a duty when shipping potatoes to Ontario. it if K It was reported among “Mircn" I-ii:rnUitN’s friends that he would not grow any onions on_ his farm near St. Thomas from now on. the reason being that it is too hard: “*Rowe" to hoe. ii The 20th Century Liberal Association con- ference at Ottawa clearly demonstrated that the proposed B. N. A. Act changes are but the thin end of the wedge to scrap the Constitution as an Imperial statute. élé 306 it Having had time to look into the problems which prior to the election he was confidently able to solve, Prime Minister KING now tells us that he has no solution, the only hope he can extend is that in the end “right will triumph over might.” _ iii BK X The local Y.M.C.A. has passed its eightieth milestone, but it is still in the vigour of youth. The expansion of its activities during the past year, and the plans made for even greater ef- forts this year, are the best testimonials to its value to the community *and* the Province. The Blue Ribbon for the fastest Atlantic crossing still rests with France. Official records of the Queen Mary, however, give every reason to believe that should fine weather favour the next voyage England will again set the pace for trans-Atlantic travel. BK 306 3K The worries of a. European statesman seek- ing peace are not so much due to the attitude of those nations having a declared policy in the event of war, as to other countries bent upon maintaining an impossible indifference or isolation. ii NE *6 Mussourzr is in a dilemma. A few months ago he was pouring troops into Ethiopia and is still holding the country in spite of the condem- nation of the Leagaue of Nations. How can he ask the League for protection against the mass- ing of German troops (£1 héiés northern border? Quebec government members are having hard sledding both inside and outside the Legis- lature. Hon. T. D. BOUCHARD, Minister of Municipal Affairs, was refused a hearing when he attempted to address a. meeting of three thousand in l\’IOl'ltl’€a*l 0; Sgenday. Does education pay? Ask the professors and staff of the University of Montreal who 4 Notes by the ,Way You probably navcr hard of Baron Vledmlr van Gtullnaen. It. in even more likely that on are totrllyunaw not thank nceof Duke Genmim Pueano d1. Memo. The first of these, who has Just died. was the Austrian Mlnlater to Serbia. He delivered the ultimatum of ‘July, 1914. which bet:-I1 the greatest wnr 1n the hlstory of the world. The second on Italian retir- ed naval officer, has Just written a booklet saying that the Mediter- ranean “will be the grave or the British Fleet if Britain fights Italy." It is men who have never previously or since been heard of who strike the matches that. set. continents alight. You do not know their names. Yet some of them have been behind events that have filled lnnumerable oemeterlea with the bodies of the best young men of many nations. Such men are the unknown agents of l destructive destiny. And it is well for us to mark them out when a. brief pub- llclty reveals their unsuspected features. — Manchester Sunday Chronicle. some things they do better In Japan. one is public education. There the best education is given by the public authorities. The son of the rich man and the son of the poor man mingle. Who gains most by the contact you can figure out for yourself. University fees amount to £12 a year. That. places higher education within the range of all. The Japanese workman bests his English competitor with something besides low wages. Education may be “the somethlng."—London Daily Herald. A contest. in -‘fidelity to the earth" in Italy has disclosed that one Antonio Castellanl is working the same farm that his ancestors had worked for 709 years. Casual- liinl has had his photograph taken surrounded by 19 children and grandchildren. Evidently he is as faithful to family tradition as to the good earth from which he secures support for his large house- hold. Cnstellanls may be on the same form for some centuries more. It is is great record the family has made.—Montreal Gazette. The well-informed Literary DI- '7,f‘5l. makes a. slip when it includes Iraq (Mesopotamia) among Arabic countries whose nationalists “cease- lessly clamor for freedom from their European overlords, especially England." Great Britain relinquish- ed a few years ago her League mandate over Iraq, thus winning the friendship and confidence of the population. The bonds between the two countries are close and cordle.l.—London Advertiser. A friend tells me of 3. strong epitaph he encountered some years ago in France. A small lamp was kept burning under an um over is grave. and the inscription read:—- "Here lies Plene Victor Foumler, inventor of the everlasting lamp. which consumes only one centlme‘s worth of oil in one hour. His incon- solable widow continues his bu.sl- ness in the Rue aux Trols. Goods sent to all parts of the city. Do not mistake the opposite shop for this". have gone without salaries for three months, because its financial resources are “dried out.” The administrative committee of the university expresses the hope that the Quebec government will come to its aid. . ¥ ¥ 3! No longer 8. dream, television promises in the near future to replace radio with the same success that has attended the introduction of the talking film. One noteworthy change is the sub- stitution of the hostess-announcer for the radio announcer. The British Broadcasting Co. has already appointed two young ladies to this po- sition. 3K 3K BK VVho is a contemporary liar, who in par- ticular, when all alike get called as much in clashes of ambition? This is applicable ap- propriately enough to the prevailing conditions in Quebec Legislature where respect even for parliamentary language has gone by the board, and members quite frequently call one another liars. The same thing happened in the parlia- -mentary committee on radio. , IE it # According to the British Board of Trade figures for the first three months of the year, British imports from Canada since 1934 have increased nearly 50 per cent, while exports to Canada have increased about 17 per cent for these months. This represents Rt. Hon. R. B. Bisniverfs monumental achievement in negotia- ting the Empire treaties at the Ottawa‘ Confer- ence of 1932. if Bit It “Red" RvAN’s latest book was ready for the publishers when he died, but his death has made necessary some ironic changes. The title was to have been “The Futility of Crime.” Now, according to Dr. 0. C. J. Winuow, of Toronto, the co-author, it will be called “The Strange Case of ‘Red’ RYAN,” or by some similar name. It has been necessary to add a chapter explain- ing RvAN’s dual personality and presenting the manner of his death. it X - It i In his book of travel: just published, Rt. Hon. Ramsay MACDONALD has much to say about Nova Scotia, but nothing about this Pro-' yince which he did not visit. "Nova Scotia with- out its past”, he comments "would be as attract- ive as a playground, with its past it is as alluring as a sanctuary. There is a presence in Nova Soo- tia—a cloud of witnesses-—the shades of simple men and women whose deeds of faithful endur- ance wrote history in letters formed in grim out- line by musket flash and sword glitter. The —Ahrwers London. The world wonde 3 if other great. war will be the result. It is no exaggeration to suggest that even civilization ilxelf may totter- ln such is catnolysm. That, prob- ably. is one reason why. in spite of many provocatlons. there is an evi- dent fear to start a new conflagrn- tlon which might spread to the whole of what we consider the civi- lized worrld.—Nlagarn Falls Review. By an lronlcai stroke of fate, M. Leon Blum. the next. premier of France, who has held out the olive branch to Hitler. is 8 Jew. the first Jewish leader to become premier of the republic of France. It. seems that is. Jew must. hold out the hand of peace to 9. Jew-halter. it may be that M. Blum will he as success- ful as premier of France as DLsr£l('ll was as premier of Great Britain.- Nlacara Falls Review. Son Miirlno. vvorldanmallesl re- public, with 000 inhabitants, de- clared war, sent. off its regular tinny of ll, in 1915 when ILi'll_V joined the Great War. A Turkish ‘tourist In the republic was arrest- ed as a. "subject of the enemi- power." and was kept in jall 48 hours. In 1923. when Lloyd George's half promises to Greece could not be fulfilled and Turkey won its squabble with Greece. the treaty between the western Dow- ers and Kemel Pfl5ha'S new Turk- ish republlc forgot to mention San Mnrlno. Now after they have been at. war for 21 years. Turkey and San Marlno are iztartlne neace negotlntions.—Britlsh Cavalcade. No expensive equipment is re- quired to play the game of garden- ing. The poorest and the richest can indulge this pastime and get. equally as much enjoyment from It. It should be the aim of every person to keep a garden. It will help to keep the poor off relief and the wealthy out of the hospital. It‘: is better means of ‘ ‘ I3 than going on a. diet, and is the best kind of exercise to strengthen flabby muscles. Help yourself to health in the uiden.—-l"orest Free Press. "lu;luul Scotland and Wile! hove fewer judges. I am told, than are found in one of the state of our Union. and it in not one of the moat popi.i‘.ou.r states. The Judas in cm: nriiain on men of chsracter and of great. ability. as but than rm: caARi.ori'ris'rov'viv GUARDIAN Iilligljat A £0112’ of goats‘ uao-_-aw-.3-.-is-_un_.n_ MORE ABOUT (:00 LIVEB 01!. IN TREATMENT OF BUB-NB AND WOIJNDS I Blnce ft. was ieamed that cod liver oil was helpful in clearlng up old sores, ulcers and wounds. report; are coming to hand from physlclims who are using this treatment in the above ailments. Two European surgeons, Dre. V. I. lost and l. G. Kochergln, report 263 cases in which cod liver oil was used. of these, twenty-eight were old (chmnlc) ulcers. twenty-nve bums or frost bites, nineteen sev- ere wounds of the hands or feet, ten open amputation stumps, 150 fresh superficial wounds- and forty sup- puratlng (pus formation) wounds. Cod liver oil was applied in if paste made with about 3 ounces of cod liver oil, 3 ounces of petrolatum (Vaseline), about one-twentieth of an ounce of a preparation contain- ing vitamins and one-third of an ounce of Japimese wax. This pre- paration applied directly was defin- itely helpful in old ulcers, burns, frost bites, and recent wounds. These surgeons believe the bene- ficial efiecl: to be due to the ab- undant vltamin A and vitamin D 1n the cod liver oil. Vlt.am.Ln D possess- es the power to stimulate the growth of new tissue. when the tis- sue has been injured by the ulcer or by injury there 15 some lack in the tissue of power to Absorb vita- mins from the blood. Vltalnln D Further, it wns found that the little organisms that manufacture pus cant‘ work as well cannot. make as much pus when in contact with cod liver oil. The cod liver oil seems to take away the strength or vital- ity of these pus maktng organisms. “The application of cod liver all to wounds 1n the form of ii paste is more efficient. because the 011 is kept in oontact. with all parts of the wound. Keeping the part at rest is an important element in the treatment and is accomplished by fewer dressings or being put 1n ii. pester cast." The comblmtlon of cold liver oil with the above mentioned -sub- stances may be an improvement on the plain cod liver all but the re- sults obtained with cod liver on alone 3.5 mentioned by Dr. J. P. steel in the Lancet. some months ago were very satisfactory. Llnt heav- lly soaked in cod liver oil win ap- plied to the port and covered with I dressing. The dressing is left, in place and msoaked with cod liver oil every twenty-four hours. the lint not being taken from the skin sur- face until the end of forty-eight hours. Almost every patient said that the first application of cod liver oil save much greater case than other dress- lngs. Danger In Toys (Toronto Blobe) In London. England, recently a dealer was fined :10 for selling an air-pistol to 3 led under 1'! years of age. The sale was revealed after the boy shot. a. playmate, causing the latter to lose an eye. News despatches tell constantly of similar accidents from s1mlLn.r causes among Caniullan children, but 1t is seldom. apparently that any one is brought. to book in thwe lristunces. In Toronto it appears that air- guns and. air-pistols may be sold legally to any one 12 years of age or older; and in rural dlst.rlcL;, since such weapons may be bought by mail, there probably is still less control over the distribution of these supposedly harmless arms. It would secm that 9. more string- ent. law is necessary to prevent palnfuly and dangerous injuries to children by irresponsible playmates. and the menace which nlr-weapons may be in the hands of thought- less juveniles. Recently there have been heard suggestions that playing with toy cap-pistols may develop in a. child 3 taste for imitating notorious gun- men. If this be true, the danger oer. talnly is not lessened by substitut- ing the alr-gun for the toy pistol. Ill - Placed ' Advertisement (Manchester Guardian) Belgium is the latest. of the Eur- opean countries to check the dis- iigurement of her scenery by 111- piaced hoardlngs. A royal decree has been passed which prohibits the erection of hoardlngs at beauty spots, tourist centres, and the en- trances to villages and enjoin: that where they are put. up they shall be set five hundred yaids back from roads, canals’, and rellwny lines. I-lere, t.henka_ to the magnificent pioneer work of 5ciipo—-the Soclaty for Control of the-Abuses of Public Advert.la1n¢——|nd ‘to the legislation lt secured in 1901 and 1920. the some power: of control are avail- able. -In Britain. however, the exer- cise of than, like much clan of the klnd, is left to locsl initiative, Ind in may districts the -local authority remunn lax. Moreover, no power exlrtaln Britain to regulate open- l.lr advortlalnz in the place: where terulutfon in most. needed, the emu. The countryside can be saved if there it-the will to save it, but only if A building of special architectural gives back this power to the tissue. 350 PUBLIC FORUM u.?.'2.i.’."'-'.' .'.'...'.’.'.‘...“.'..".7 (Inlet: of hurt. The OIVIC FINANCIAL TRANSAC- , TIONB fllr.—'l‘he arbitrary reduction of Interest by the Province of Albert! on its bonded indebtedness dlrects attention to all provincial securities (eapeclally those of Western Can- ada) and will cause some uneasi- ness to holders of such bonds for pension funds, atnklng funds or trust funds generally. _ It 15 regrettable that in recent years our city councillors have been employinz our fund securi- ties to the detriment of the fund. Itisonlve ytolookatt-he different manipulations that have taken place in the lost 3 and 4 years to understand fully how our clvlc financial rulerthnvo worked against the public weal. on afar. December, 1933, um sink. ing Fund lnvestmenta - ‘ to 3247.000. made up of Domlnlon of Canada 4595 due 111 1950 for 1196,- ooo. c. N. R. 5% bonds guumueed $19,000 and Province of Ontario 556': due in 1047 for 881.000. By change was the substitution of On- tario bonds for New ‘Brunswick bonds whose due date for the larg- est. portion was in 1969 instead of 1947, but the past. two years has witnessed the greatest change so that instead of having $198,000 of Canada. 456% bonds not due until 1969 we have only $96,000 due in 1959 and 323.000 due, in 1944 and the balance 15 made up of New Bruns- wick 556% due in 1939, Saskatch- ewan 4 and 4% per cent 1n 1960. Manitoba 454'» due in 1866, Ontario (‘:6 due in 1949, and City of Oh”. iotwtnwn 1% due in 1966 for $76.- Tho result of tinkering wlth the civic sinking fund 15 that the aver- age Interest rate has been reduced. the due date has been advanced. pr-ov1nc.1a.l and municipal seen;-mu are preferred to Domlnlon of Oah- Mzia. bonds and contrary to A rule which has been in force fcr over 30 Years our own civic. debentures form a. considerable part, of the fund. It seems to me that the public should know of these transactdons, privately if not secretly put through and that. some action should be wk. en to prevent a repetition in the future. I am. Blr. ete., FOB PUBLICITY. :A———..____ MONEY AND USUBY 51!'.—Oui-1 goods and our labour are not llquld, they the frozen up by the freezing up of the liquid medium. money, that W95 ongmu. 1! designed or invented to permlt of their free movement from place *0 place or from person to person- This slowing up of money was bmuizht about by the Usury sys- tem that gathered to itself more and more money, and unui 511 me llllilld means of the people were drained from the regular channels of ordinary business into the slow- or channels of private control. Money wasmade to be used, not to be hoarded. It. was never in. tended to sabotage produouon 1n the destruction of foodstu-a that were needed for human consump- tion. It was never meant to re. otmbi d.'lst.x'1butfofi., it was meant 90 Speed and help distribution. It was never meant. to be a commod- ity. but rather is medium or certif- icate that representyl commodity or service. Usury made it. is com- modii-v by buying and selling it BDi'O5c the counter at a. profit. By becoming commodity it ceased to be money and that is the reason we have no money today; what we call money is not money. ft is is private commodity that is the property of private inter-ate. only that which is issued through the Sovereign Right of the Realm and kept under the control of the same sovereign right can be called "The coin of the Realm." The money that a. Municipality, a Province or a country require to maintain law and order. public health and welfare services can not. be alienated, pledged or hypothe. outed on my beats whatsoever. This is a fundamental principle of Basic Law. and Basic Law 15 the bow of Life. Uaury, which is interest of any kind or rate on money. is a. device of special Privilege to viol- ate the I.aw.far lts awn conveni- enoe. Usury defeats its own pur- pose and is not a. Principle but a fallacy. Holy Writ forbids and con-. demns Uaury; the social.‘ political and economic “ a of all ages condemn it. Principles do not change; if they did they would not be principles. A fallacy is an in- terference wlth the operation of a principle. It may work slowly but its effect; are cumulative and it goes on until it either "destroy: principle or is destroyed by it: and principle on not be destroyed. Uaury may be habitual and con- rlght. The lowering of interest rates by degrees 1! just. cutting on the dog’: toll an inch of n time. we may as well ace the note and out the ten of! in one operation touvo needless sufrortxu. The sacred writings of our sin either to pay or A voice non xmos eir.—¢ have been hopefully loot‘- fng h the column’: of both 011!’ 1'11 lllllfll. bovine to on I letter or romeihfng that would t belon 5 no lo er to theme! ' ' dl which I cornmimd to the or historic 1 tenco : town in “W “NNFII 0‘ 10!“ I 09 . iliriyed by ugs who ail‘ of their lcindr'e:l,."bl\lftAgi:f the United si.mo.-—s¢uo- managed byniixi-ioumngmcm notion 1"‘ my“ nu.‘ H13: Domim relates 1 conversation with an old “"_““" °“"' , ”° "‘ °"' am: for xmiomi um. Scottish peasant woman in.Nova Scotia : A gm-i..n am my , about in zinc’: county. but so in "What would your man be?" enquired twin is inserted fun slot inniu "Ihauldbf ; mm of the runoff in ma. M‘gDoNA]'_p_ used in Hol1lf|ddtl:ndlJNldfl‘It:0x:|fk|;_ house!» of a Whitney. an . “mun align”:- "Tl‘° M‘!-""‘*" W" ‘h’ ""‘"°"- 3":-vi-‘ii it: nmbxiio an inn :?v;w.or "M "M to use other ooimuummui: ‘ " his in the MAcDoim.n" returned the late um. .54 trouble, -mg wouldn't be g.nu.m.,..gy mug .g _ . momma. .9, you upmgp no Premier? I ~ ' a boil idea to adopt in cnuufs.-— Hurst." when an an in saline that forty thousand norm “ uuuacnoiunnswereemasterfui Ohghmoeibxm. oriiaonu nuaomugsianmmumnc on com ‘bull-wiliotbnmterful lot,"doeln_:edL ,, - “‘“§h“”""““'f.:“: \ 315?, December, 1933, the principal’ vmlent. but that does not make 1% "W WNE 3. 1935 Mr. Tea Pot! Saygf For a. Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea "use BRAHMIN Orange Palm Tea Kings County? other counties have had most of the Government plums handed to them, wblle Kings County people have received just smiles and sweet lifomlbel which not sour after every election was over. Then with parental concern In and Po (Prince and Queens.) ma Grandpa. “ChArlotte- my "i1ot/good for baby," sud eat. and drink it themselves. Are you going to stand for this: watch the mi. of the mend amnckfnr their lips over the creun, while you have to be content, with the slum- mtlk; they may even think that to strong a diet, for you. and feed you on bread and water..In fact by oer- taln nation 1:: the paper! it looks in 1f they were even going to take the uaoofsomoofyourwotertrdm you. Mom on that further on. Al-eyousmnctobeslackenoush to leg this political plum no to one of the other counties, Kings peo- ple.afooursoMeorPomnylund you the stone of the plum saying he ii. good child and chew on that. its good for baby‘: teeth: And they will not even worry whether you choke on it or not. Pb: shame’; uka ff 1: else wake up xinu Oounty. Don't alt llke a. child win, it: rinse: in its rr,'ent.h. While the other three have fingers and hands, "not to lay nose and mouth." into the pic on for as they can stick them, uul of the some time saying to baby Kfngs County, don‘t touch. MA or PC spank. While they proceed to de- vour everything flnancfllly worth- while that oomea to the Island. Are all Kings County men and women uleop. Do none of them realize what, an attraction A Nat- ional Park would be to Kings. Do they not know that. in All fairness and honesty, this grant should be given Kings. Moreover Kings County la; the most natural and typical sight tn the province for uucheperlgnnmely thetnctotf luid adjoining Manon’: Pond. fn my opfnfon at least. Now 13 the tlmo and cihsuco for the pro-election ,. and nnlla of our polltielana to show signs of comma to fruit: and not let tho bud and blossom of their pro-else» tlon promises no down in the lila- toiry of P111. on another promising crop that caused ‘hope In the breast: of fta P€0Plc.u1ly to he nipped by fronts of fndlvldull need and self-fntemst. Let us hope the present government. wlll not let such lntomsta fnterfen with the eel- ection of the alto more aultaable and typical of the province as I whole. Again I say Kings County wake up! Try and realise what such I Park would mean to your county, not only what. the grant would mean but the money tourists and travellers might. bring. And 1! you don’: agree with me as to where the park should be. let the rest. of the pmvfnoo mow of your choice and its ettr-nctloris. Don't not like a babe unable to take Its. own part. Yet even the smallest babe will howl and cry if not given what it. wants. Those with experience of babies will tell you he mostly gets what he went; 1! it won't hurt him and I don‘t think 3 National Park would hurt more County in any way. Is there no man or woman in more county with spunk enough to speak up for it, one of the loveilest parts of PEI. for natural scenery, etc. Do you intend to let the rest of the province get. the best of everything without dying even I little squnwk at such an lnjuatloo. It looks t.hnt.way:1tlook5 In if people fro the other oountlea were going to 0 charge of one of our moat interesting spots for scenery and trout fishing. nunely 11': Pond. That. itself is an argument on.‘ the strongest kind for 3 Nat.- ional Park around it. when men from Ohulottetown try in every way to control part. of what I aug- gestod for the Park. it looks as t.hou¢h.1.wem right about its at- tnctfona. when men from other parts of the Inland put notices to that effect in our paper: warning Klan County people to keep away from their own pond: and sends. Audit looks on though -they will bluff it throuzh end Kings county will all: or attend more likely E- i 5 '. E3‘ it-iii? .~iif%.at5.i:§ Friendly Competitors 1m(:‘llaa.nclal Post.) Keen e will be the Competl. . tlon "between the British "Queen 1 Mary and the French “Nor-nun. l die‘; competition to please travel. 1 lers to Show them safely across in. l ocean. to win prestige and public- lty 101' the “DES that, ope]-me the shill . The mu-ltlme traditions and am. bltfons of WD separate nations are at stake. The “Normnndle" won for Pranoe the mythical but vitally im. portunt. Blue Ribbon of the Atlantic The “Queen Mary" within a few’ days may have won it back 10,- Orelt. Britain. Y0‘ Vl¢0|’0|l5 II is the cotnmerc I"-V1117 between the two great 5?: queen: and the institutions they re. present. the oompetltlon will not be of the “cut.-throat" character that 1a,¢ood neither for business no: ma travelllng public. A1108!-‘ll’ the “Queen Mary" and the "Ncrmandfe" have madg H. rnngementa to nltemete in men. weekly crooning: so that the we liners will provide a complementary service on the Atlantic. And. ex. copt 11: peak seasons, return ticket‘ sold for one vessel will be good on the other! In fact, exchange or tickets 1: possible on almost any vessels of similar class on the Nomi Atlantic. What. In example to our two ms. for railways in Canada. Efforts at. “oo42rd1na.tlon" between the two railways have resulted 1n savings of about 813530.000 a year, a trifling sum compared with the enormom cost oi operating parallel lines, dupllcato trains, unnecessarily com. petlttvo express and telegraph sq. vices, even half empty but comm. lng hotels. . If France and Britain, along with other countries, can flnd ii way to maintain competition on the ocean Hid It the same time eliminate the more costly and futile phases of tlut petftlon to the minimum. surely two Canadian-owned and operated railway lines, each one I tlonul enterprise. ought to be able to so much further than they have cone in rettins together to end annulus duplication of expense. NIGHT ON THE BAERENS The long chase and the day an done. Wutwortd, the run’: lest flare an on No antlers swing along the run. The kettle lines, the quick tliuneu tau Putrldzelaro roostecl in the bush And Illm deer bedded in the most. The dim stars glimmer, one by one. The red meat sizzles in the pan. The long day and the chase are done. Orowdln. about our iii-elii pliwc. Prom bog and knoll, vague shadow: in-esp- mt hunters of a Vanished race. Too old for mat, too tlrei for sleep- —'l'heodore Cioodrldge Roberts in Canadfan Poetry Magazine- Slmmer Growing nations for P3: with or without dehydrated ‘ meal; siuiclo No. 2 Ratlim for Mill run. at your nearest denier- Macs Blood Food nor his uni Thin Pe0Pl° A eornhlnnll sIv“""‘“J vnlunblo In the treutmon than alluluu vrllffl OIIIIII Ia trncuble I» 7“-|.|n¢d conditlon 0.,’ .1 am gi-uiui. remrillu In tho iminani or nu-lurr-‘um-:','; I'M than who have 0:” I“, I09!!!“ Incl Blood F0 I prove the rm-confirm MAC'S llnlr Restorer It will restore urn: hnlr N’ llroril 0; iii. '1'... vunell ' -;'.°.'.':.'..'": .".“.' .:'i".:.:-“-"- I ban the hnlr In full- nod"ln nmurl:-big '"'“". puvontlnl ‘l''‘''' ‘ lune lhnuln CI!" ’ ' n,_ 1,, 3. lulu of London |. trailed III-. um _r.Idr-|°°h,:,,,,,, ...i- 004 ii‘ I pound .o—o of H“ nun none! 1"‘ ' la AIDII have “’ W: .. an 'u:|-Iplfcn I:: I?IilI'lI||“ Iflfllfl‘ 0" "I" ' - . 1-"-n ION“ "" 'niiuI~rI°-°“""""W "1iii2 MACS V. ‘ pi. 31