’ C THE CHARLOTTETDWN GUARDIAN {L JANUARY 1s, 1941' JAGE F??? TllE ciiiiiiiorrcrowii lillARlllAN Morning Daily (Founded iii i857) Authorized as Second Class Mall, Post. Offii-a i Department. Ottawa. President. liui A. Burnett; Vice-President. “Ill. to Burnett; Sonya-Trains. (i. M. tiui-nutt; Editor iiiid Managing Director. J. R. Burnett; Associate Editor. Frank Walker. JTVWTSJTOIIQ-CSI iTTe-mory Flllfll/IPI‘ I'll-Tilt tlie ll/ealresl lnlr." —_s.:'ii'ii<p.iiv. .;.\.\'uniii' 18, inn Farm Production Program At the i946 Dominion-Provincial agricul- tural conference tlie following important de- cisions werc reached with regard to food re- quirements: Canada wants more of all these, crops and products this year: Cheddar cheescl 3i per cent more, hogs l9 per cent, barley l9‘ per cent, eggs l0 per cent, creomery butter '3', per cent, oats 9 per cent, all milk combined 6i per c:nt, evaporated whole milk 4 per cent. Can-j zida is asking for the some amount as last year. of these: Hay, clovcr and alfalfa, cattle, calves,‘ candcnscd whole milk, whole and skimmilk pow- ders, poultry. Canada wants less of thescirl Wheat 7 per cent, rye 6 per cent, summerfollowl l per cent; and expects l0 per cent fewer sheep‘ and lambs to be marketed. Why, ll may be askcd, the decrease in‘ wheat and increase in barley production this‘ year? The answer is that Canada is faced with a dangtrous shortage of feed grain, and barley’ is the grain that counts most. Something had‘ to be done to increase the returns per acre foil barley and make this crop more nearly com-l parable with wheat. lf, however, the price of‘ barley was raised, it would be necessary --~—-¢ t0 break the Wartime Prices and Trade Board price ceiling. Also,_if the barley acreage is increas- ed, the additional acreage will have to come out of either summerfallow or wheat. There was not much difficulty in agreeing that it should come out of wheat, since it might prove dangerous to make more than a limited reduction in summer- fallow acreage; and it was not difficult to agree on a wheat acreage figure of 24 million, once this was understood. A figure of eight mil- lion acres for barley, or l.3 million more than last year, was finally accepted on this basis. lt was also agreed that a flat acreage payment on western seed barley would offer more secur- ity to the grower and would avoid any early in- crease in feed prices. Along with this, it was understood that the troublesome equalization payment should be‘ eliminated, and the free freight on western feed grains to eastern Canada continued, port- ly as compensation to the eastern grain grower who would not receive the acreage payment on barley. Beef cattle are still high in number and not being rapidly reduced. Sheep and lambs will probably show a ten per cent reduction in marketings during the year, which was not of vital importance. The dairy industry had already mode its representation to the Cabinet for high- er returns, especially for butterfat, though our British cheese contract had been greatly under- iupplied and fluid milk producers were clamor- ing for higher prices all over the country. Hogs were different. Actually, it was necessary to increase the barley acreage in order that more hogs might be marketed and fed, but. under present conditions a sufficient increase in the number marketed to raise our annual marketings to a minimum of five million hogs, could not be secured unless the price were increased, so that something had to be done about hogs. More- over, it was even then rumored thatbritoin might be willing to pay more than she is W95‘ ently paying, in ord-er to protect her consum- ers from a still further decrease in bacon sup- plies from Canada. 4 Summarizing the results of the agricultuiul lication, points out that these decisions do not necessarily mean that they will be Cuiiflflfid-ullfl implemented by the Dominion Government, any more than they mean that formic-s will produce exactly the quantities the conference deemed most desirable. Some of the (JGCISIOIISi "5 l" the case of barley, hogs, dairy produce and flax, will require additional money and ‘payments from the Dominion Treasury at o timebwéien nearly everyone would like to see the su si ies eliminated and markets returned to a more nor- mal basis. Certainly, however, "i056 Pleielll "l the conference were convinced that the decis- ions arrived at were sound and in the best in- terests of the world food situation and of the Canadian farm economy. Privy Council issue “h week's judgments confirming the rlglit of the Canadian Parliament to make the Su- promo Court our final court of appeal, is being welcomed by some as a necessary adjunct of full nationhood, and criticised by others as a "further threat to Commonwealth unity. Both those views, suggests the Financial Post, foil to deal with the basic question at is- we: What will provide Canadians the best possible approximation to justice and to im- portiol interpretation of our lows? Maximum objectivity might be had from o panel of men from-Mars or from Indonesia. But low has beeirdofincd as "the expression of the social ex- perience of ifpeople." Our highest court must, therefore, have high eiipertness not only in our low and the manner in which it developed. It must have diep understanding of the character ond aspirations of our society. For this obvious- ~ ly we would choose Canadians. For the full de- egnfei-ence, The Country Guide, a western pub- ~ the Post. ”How ready for this new status is our Supreme Court? There is much opinion in legal circles thot it is not. Others hold that, given the final authority, our Supreme Court would with reasonable speed grow into its new garm- ents of authority. "ln a federal state, inevitably, our final court will frequently be called to adjudicate con- flicts between Dominion and provinces. Not by any means are the provinces unanimous in their enthusiasm for vesting final authority in our Siupscme Court. lt seems to us that the present inflamed state of Dominion-Provincial relations would make now a singularly inappropriate time for effecting any change that might add to the j inflammation." - EDITORIAL NOTES - George V died tomorrow's date i936; his widow, Mary, the Queen Mother, is still hale and hearty at the age of eighty. Prince Edward Theatre has been showing an outstanding picture in "Captains Courage- ous‘ this week-end, concluding tonight. Both acting and scenic effects are well worth hear- ing and seeing. .. .. . Evidently there has been no rush for citi- Z?n€l1lp certificates at $5 p-er, and now a reduc- tion is proposed. The regulations may be changed by arder-in-council and the cabinet has or soon will be asked to authorize the reduction. lt is not known how much the reduction would amount to, but 909irwould not entail very much greater demand. w ~x w a Moncton could not inaugurate its new T. B. Hospital the other day, because the City Coun- cil discovered that the R. C. A. F. area in which it is situated was consuming fer too much water, and it was feared a leak in the main was responsible for an enormous wastage. An in- vestigation was ordered and the opening of the hospital postponed indefinitely. itera- "New Brunswick can hardly’ congratulate itself (says the Telegraph-Journal) on the fact that in i946, with incom-e at a level we would not have dreamed possible o few years ago, the net debt increased by $4,204,026 to an all-time l hign ,of $88,363,659. This is a very large debt for a smoll province." , i I i i I Rudyard Kipling, English poet and novelist, died this date i936," was characteristically a British Empire exponent, and never tired sing- ing its praises or denouncing its shortcomings: "All we have of freedom—-all we use or know— This our fathers bought for us, long and long ago." "For agony and spoil Of nations beat to dust, For poisoned air and tortured soil, And cold commanded lust, And every secret woc The shuddering waters sew—~ Willed and fulfilled by high and low— Let them relearn the Law." n w. w x Absence of on institution to rehabilitate alcoholics is one of the many shortcomings in Nova Scotic/s equipment to treat mental ills, Dr. R. O. Jones, professor of psychiatry at Dalhousie University, declares. Addressing the Nova Sco- tia Society for Mental Hygiene, Dr. Jones said there was a large group of alcoholics in Nova Scotia which could be rehabilitated if a proper institution were set up. He sugczstcd that es- tablishment of traveling clinics could also make an important contribution to coping with men- tal ills. i i W i The Federal Parliomenfs Committee on "Free Ports", evidently misunderstand or wil- fully ignore the roison d'etre of such an institu- tion. lt is for the purpose of encouraging and developing trade by always having on hand and accessible a plentiful supply of foreign foods, for which there is a market, on which duty must be paid. By providing a customs-free port that can be attained, the duty being paid as the goods are let out for distribution or con- suription instead of when placed in storage. Manifesting, drawbacks, etc., offer no corre- sponding advantage to free port facilities. w w r ir lt is mentioned that the Hon. William John McKell, Prime Minister of New South Wales will succeed H. R. H. the Duke of Gloucester, as Governor-General of Australia. This would be a distinct break with precedent, as so far politicians have been barred from gubernatorial positions in the dominions in which they are lo- cated. The Prime Minister started as on op- pientice boilermaker, and became financial sec- retary of the Boilermakers’ Union. He entered politics, became member of the local legis- lature; studied low, became a barrister, Miri- ister of Justice, Leader of the Prime Minister and Colonial Treasurer, becom- ing o K.C. in i945. lt may so happen that career‘ with a similar appointment here. neat Agricultural Minister Gardiner wants to avoid in the Prairies and Vancouver what oc- curred here through the gobbling up of local in- dustries by big interests in Ontario and Que- bee. lp an interview in Vancouver he said: "Development from here to Winnipeg has to come-and if the industrialists will not do it, the people will take over and see thot it is done." The minister declared: "lt is my opin- volopinonl of our institutions, it ll. tho logic of events that final responsibility shoul smotlrno be plocud upon our Supreme Court that, Privy Council oppeols be abolished. If "all t‘ Canadian oycs into proper foc in‘ lho tum. ggrgblighod political, ‘economic and socirl It would liolp the Supreme Court ilsgt tithe full challenge of its rcsponsib’ IIIIJII for this change now?" asks nationhood and its essential- of course, desirable and is‘ ion industry should be developed all over west- ern cflllltlltffl and especially from Vancouver to clll9uty. Mr. Gardiner said thot often in the past large industries (in Central Canada) bought up smaller, localized industries (in the Mari- tymesl and closed thorn up to provide selling field! for their own products instead of open- lllfl up and developing new territories. "There Yfllllfl l" "0 "i6 ti-‘illlirig of enterprise operat- y ing industry if they continued to do it as they had m the post," he said bluntly. . Opposition, Prime Minister Mackenzie King will crown his llotos By The Way 0 To use n medical term the "mort- filily“_ in the nursing profession i; fillOlllflngly high. In other words nurses do not stay nwses very long after their graduation. They get married or graduate to higher peld Jobs in allied professions. One hoe- iiiial authority estimates in; "lite" of u trained nurse is about [h1g9 years: after that she has most like- ly left for more attractive fields.- Vancouvcr Province, There is n class of young C311- adians who are becoming em-bit. tcred over their pOSitlOn in our postwar world. Thrv are the young men rejflled by army doctors be- Callse of physical unfitncss or who uiero not old enough to g0 1o way, Now. through no fault of their own lllvfv‘ find themselves virtual cut- ciisls from the labor market. When lllC.\' 589k Jobs in private industry <11‘ governmental service they usually are c-rifrcnicd with ihe Sign .._ "icii-iiiiis only need apply." --Van_ ('lli\f1' Province. Orir of the IIPTIIIPIICI’! that m, u, 'l“’ lllllkllli; of criminals is lllf‘ liaze ill uliiiiiui‘ ariil iuiiiiiiiivc wl i'.li ivri1_ i'l'- liiici iu iliinw nbnui ii“: c. Words i-ir ir-ccl-neuiis il11('l atljrciivcs — “lYlPll oil-Quasi iliel the t::i<l inn-n is ii brave and owning personality. 11' 1110 C’l'1ll1l!121l were ciiiy (lC:‘Ql'|l7C(l as ‘what he ls-a fool. aii 111191. a. moron. n dunce. a simple- 1011. ri blcekhean~pnrg who ngvgf rc-ips unyihiiig but grief from his ill.(.!l efforts-there would be 1955 tendency on the part of ycuth to emulate him. Ycutli does not like in be made an cbpt-i of ridicule.- Vancoiiver Province. The rapid development of living irrrir memorials may be called the lYlUmDii of common sense over sozvtimenialism. But it migihi be more accurate to say that, both sentiment and practical purposes will be Sfirvcd by many of these living memorials. In a recent study the Russell Sage Foundation dig. covered that few American com- munilies llTlCIlCl to follow the pi-c- crclciii of lllf‘ past in the matter cf slzitiirs and groupings of pan. non. Coolest .. Pcnn~ylvariia, will sfrve as a representative example of iiir trend toward living memor- lJlS. This community of 15,000 pop- ulation has raised 5552.000 and will build a iammuniiyi centre as ii war memorial. Ln the centre siili be in- (luioil rn auditorium. a kileiiep and luncliroom. clubrooms. a snack tar. a bowling alley and other fac- ilitivh‘ for different activities. In Coaicsville. as in other places. this living "war memorial will be an tnie- gral part of the community. with a role lo play something like that cf ilio ol/‘l lawn hall. In its daily scr- vicc llicre will bc little clargci- that 1110 l11"1t‘.(1’Z'l.'1l(‘lIGIAClCT of the build- ing will be 10st upon those ulio use i‘ ~Nfiv Yoik Sim. 'l‘lii: London restaurateur who l11l.\'C.\ ciirysiinilicmuni leaves with iiis China ten is not the only pgy. Son l0 servi- ion in an unorthodox way ’I'1"ie Chinese themselves often mix onions. spices or ginger sivitii ll1f‘l1' tea leaves before adding toil- ing water, says The blancliesici- Guardian. Burmese tea drinkers l1'i':\l soak their leaves in heavy. .‘.t'C11lf‘(I oils. ivhilr Russians prefer in [luv-or il ‘with jriin, rum or .-i slice of lcmon. In Mongolia and Tibet llli‘ flaverings are adder still. for their ten contains generous quant- ities of rancid yak Dllltf‘? and oil. Tibeiain tea. incidentally. 1s sold 1n briek form and is used as cair- rencl‘. Up to the middle of the 18th century tea often had eggs whisked with it. and 2.1. various times drink- ers were advised to add rice. flour. vinegar. orange peel or anions. Umil the reign c1‘ George III tea “as commonly adultcrziicd with almost every plant that grows in an English “Ptlffcrow. n-ttd in 1818 Dor- set customs officers seized ii con- signment of 1.000 pounds of drier] lcrivcs fnieurled for tlie aclulieration of gen. In one year over 4.000.000 pounds of iliis lea was sold and tlie collection of leaves iivns i; recogn- izcd industry employing hundreds of people. especially children. Dues your gorge heave? Do you ‘nave fi-rqueiii nausea? Do you ever feel as though your brain had turn- cd il11o low-grade mushroom soup? inks The Peterborough Examiner. 1f ca. you nre probably a vlctlm of hypouorisnia. Hypeoorisnia ls not a thing which you have yourself; it ls n thing which othen people have which makes you stiffer the symp- toms listed above. llypocorismn lo n university word meaning baby- talk. Dr. Allen Walker Reed of Columbia University says that there are six types of hypooorlsmii. Tncy are (1) wheedling, (2) talking to children. i3) talking to l lover. i4) talking 1o n dumb animal, (5) talk- ing sarcustlcelly and (6) writing cerialn eortii of advertisements. We will provide example; of each type herewith: i1) “Is the big bed Pope Bear going to buy his Bnuftklnu a new hot?" (2) “Of course Mama's Poopsle-Woopale l; going to eat the lovely prune." i3) "Whose Baby Doll 1s 0a?" (4) “Aw! was it ii love- ly Doggyklns then?" i5) "Does Mama's Boy wont the big maty Sergeant to take away his ‘nasty old rifle?" (d) “Golllwog soup: are easy on the tummy. They're vlrunln- Picked and boyl are they Yummy!" iAmy or all of these instance; of hllwcorlsmo are calculated in molt! sensitive people cringe. Eypo- cOflemg ls incurable; the only way to atop some people from ulk- lng baby-talk i.i to shoot than and out the b0dy 1n a comretc tomb. It l; possible to prevent hypocorllmq l.n the young by proplr training. however. Noah Webster sold that "a bay of iilx year; of ego may b! lfl-"Bhi. to qmk ll correctly u Ole- ero did before the Romln Senate.” If you have a boy of it: 1n yoil home you should lnooultc _lilm lnitwt hvmcorlcno u. our. IJUBLIC FORUM open to by corro- quootlono of Thll column ll the discussion opondenta of lnterelt. The Charlottetown Guardian daeo not. neoellar- u; endorse the opinion of eorrelpondents. PRICE 0F MILK else my last letter on milk prices one J. A. Gillies. entangled. Regarding hatter tests iii his first letter lie says: “Butter fat test from one fact- ory was 13.7 per cent higher than that received from the other." 1n his next letter he states, “I siili maintain that, I was correct when stating that in i; given (jllrlfllly of milk the butter fat content may be 13 per cent higher than that contained in another lot, and still not; necessary that either six-av e 13 per cent butler fut lost." These are two entirely distinct and sep- aivle stiiirmcnis. His furihoi cl- nboratioii on llie latter is correct. hiil, that cl-ar-s nut fi-re him from lllf‘ fiii-i lliai ll(‘ \\'i'l.'~ cnlii'('l_v wrong in his first letter (‘Uvflfillg this ]ir)l1)l. A,- in the Si. John mill; sirikc. he again shuns that lie 1-" ioial- ly ignorant nf lllt‘ irue situation. The contest is not between’ llio producer "lllCl the consumer as he contends, but between the produc- ci‘ and the N. B. Daily Products Commission who have uhsalulely refused to grant the demanded in- crease. beinc supported i.i their decision by Mr. Taylor. Minister of Agriculture. The Commission has won its victory by opening tip other markets, one of H1911] being outsifile the Province, in Yar- mouti. N. S Regarding‘ tlie health jui-nmntirtg qualities of regular cow's milk we all agree, but I still contend that cheese. condensed and powdered milk are good substitutes when it is necessary to leach ill“! gzrecdy jirarlucer a lesson. And is he learn- ing his lesson? Thousands of pounds of surplus‘ milk 81".‘ new on their hands at half price ivliicli shoiilrl remind them of the fort that they were duly ivarnerl by the rlisiriliutors that this sillin- iion would ensue. Lcl the consum- 01's keep tip this effective work and they be riot misguided by .'ll'l armchair critic who has flamen- slraterl his lack of knowledge of milk in all lls phases and )HI'll\'ll' lars. And ncnv. Sir. I comp 1o the lost paragraph of his l9ll81‘—£ll1'3 this is really funny". The writer P11- (leavors to give himself a wer- pat an the buck by trying to takr- the credit for mising the 11:1; price levels iii llllS Province. May I impress upon him the friil. that ling nnrl baron prices wet‘) raised 1o their present heights iiiiuiigli lho iiniiriiig efforts or :i crczit Canadian statesman. nnw Visi-riiinl Wnnotl. Iii 1930 Mi". R. B Bi-iiii-it pic- soiilvrl jirc-posals. which were pf- terwncrls known as tlie Ottawa Trade Agreements with Britain at London. These were termed “iiuni- bug" by J. H. Thomas, tlie lhcn Colonial " rctfiigv. but wet: af- iirwnrrls ni-cec-ied ill Ottuwii iii 1932 b_\' the snirl Thomas sric the "W" PFPIMN‘ Baldwin. Those “Dortirfi lumber Province, .ri 1934 sold moi-i- lumber than .ii any lllllcl‘ YBHF in its history. [Mather- mori‘. Gil‘. anihplease pardon this digression. the Annapolis Volley apple market received such u boost that Mr. Iislcyr, who represented and still represents that are-s, mm the courage 1c» vote for the said agreements on the floor of the House of Commons, when all the other Liberals Mr. King leading, votcil against them, this some chameleon -liki.~ Prem- ier King and all his poliiii-al r-on. Slillflultiity voted to retain “lr_ving" thirties. What a travesty on juslipa] My, prices when he and his Morin-um; Board are selrlnm heard tell Boy credit is deserved i0; Clay and tell "w! very lUCTRIlVe channel channel ln which the 1755.‘! diver! his secondary min; challenge liim 1o dn 5m y ho that he will now understand wh for our farmers. and that he wi_ reriini gracefully, I l7". Sir, otrn. ANOTHER CONSUMER MID-DAY MEAL tin-minnow and enjoyment. sKYscnEEETiQ-ug and teldlng mama, REIIEI/E Y RUIIING IN D rl n ll uleti rollol. l9.“ ‘ *"— . ' . h . undereiandlin be Sin-In a very ineffective ct- filtgru: y c“ 8 tempt to misconstrue and criti- Take m, yeammd example, [he becomes sadly fat. I-farwevcr. v iiiem in 1937. All this happened in the Gillies taking credit for Islqmy hog of llladlflfi arid better prices on P. 0t E l- I would Page Mi‘. Harold w. ‘ him so. Agriin, Sir. the writer has failed ta show u; infant An Incident (By Judith Robinson) Let 1L3 all hope the press services of Canada will do better by Oun- adiim unity this year/Let us pray they may resolve to provide us Ergllsli-epeaktfs with adequate report; of what is happening in French-speaking Canada. Else how r shall goodwill flourish? Where two-thirds, of a country doesn't know how the other third ls ect- late federal lay-election 1n Riche- ileu-Veretieres. P. Q, the neat occupied for years and Years by Quebec Iilberalisrws elder states- man, Hon. P. J. Arthur Oardln. Press services gave us englaphones the result; of the by-election plus Ottawa comments on the results. plus i; passing reference to abduc- iors who kidnapped aind beat up the provincial director and organ- izer of ‘tlie Quebec Social Credit party. the Union of Electors. dur- ing the by-electfon. No more. No English word. then or si-nce coiiceniing the identity of the kirl- nzippers who hold pro-Christmas. level iii Riclielieu-Vercliercs Dee- cmbcr 211. No English vrm-d at. nil of that wliicli the Wench-language press reported at length and with (lr-licaicy.‘ RS “lincideni Corbeil." Yo! its inlcrcsi is fully bilingual. Ufiiciclciii Corbell occurred. as the Hench-language mess reports. when byclcction day had ended in Richelieu-Verclieres. It occurred ill Station CJSO. the local broad- ousting studio at soiel. industrial centre of the constituency. It oc- curred shortly alter 10 o'clcck o! a, 001d by-election evening in pre- sence of the victorious Liberal can- didate and the defeated candidate of the Union of Electors. Each had come by invitation of the mBIIBBB- meat of Station CJSO 1o broad- east o message to the voters of Richelieu-Vercheres. The defeated Progressive Conservative candi- dat had ako been invittld l0 (cine. but he ‘hadn't. He. had pre- {erred to go home to Conirecoeui". Liberal - candl- date. M. Gerard Cournoyer had first broadcast. Leaving his sup- porters in tlie antercom to listen lio entered the inner room and spoke to the microphone. He expressed his happiness at ilie result of the day's voting in Riche- lieu-Verehcres. He. expressed his admiration c! urid his gratitude to the Brothers Siniari, “These in- dustrialists of Sorol and their ch11- dren." he said “aided me from the commencement 1o the end of my political campaign." He expressed a1 length and eloquently. his deter- mination i0 follow in all things The successful 17L London Letter By Stuart Underhllli iCa-nulhu Prue Staff Writer) churches play 1n titie City's history. funds to rebuild many City churches, and plate bombed-out churches. much bert Museum. Less tha.r.'100 yards from where ened spire of St. Brldeis soars past tihe window. It ls Fleet. Street's church. and because of its old as- sociations. ft i5 to be rebuilt. along with 10 other churches built about the same time. A quarter of a mile farther on. up Ludgoic 11111. the izrcai dome of Si. Paul's roniains a serene land- mark. liirgcly thanks to the work o.‘ V0llLl‘i'(‘(‘1' fire-watchers which Dean lllntthcws describes in "Sl. Paul's Cathedral I11 Wartime." 'l‘lie cathedral iviis liil twice l1] GOO-patina lilgili explosive bombs and by about 50 inr-cndlarlcs. Reconstruction and repair of the cathedral undertaken ii‘. the helped it withstand the shocks cf war More direct safety precautions were begun 1n 1939. On advice of the London fire brigade. water tanks were built at various levels, with trap doom 1n the main roofs through which hoses could be work- ed. imzi they were often used. The damage here probably will be repaired 1on1: before tihe recon- struction of the smaller city church- es. most o! whlcih were designed by Wren to replace those destroyed in the great fire. But sooner or later they Wlll come to life again, and take their quiet place in the mairch of history once more. 0.150. There the Group Liberal which included ri couple of the children qt’ the BtOlhffrs Simtlrd. and the Group Credltlst. met. as thPy left. For a time lhere was fear that H. biiitir- in form might begin. A partisan somewhat e11- ihuslasi braridished an empty bottle. but his friends convinced him pot io employ ll- Hunt-lily ‘he municipal police of Sorcl mounted o.» gcod Build and “ll were dispersed before the occur- rence of a regrettable incident. For the incident corbell liself- 1t would geem no more regrettable than reportable. Canadian Pr?“ services please note. the ltlle Liberal tradition of “the Cardin. "It was lo his political school that I ireiii." M. Courroyer concluded with emoiiori. “and wish l0 follow in his footsteps." tors. was runner-up in Richelieu- verclieres. 1-10 was defeated with lhe aid. from to the end. of the Brothers Simard. who run Sorol. always in tlie iru’: Liberal tradition of the izrciit de- parted. Candidate Corbfits PBTlY leader had been 511182911 Wllll 5 blackjack li-i his hotel room i.n Sc/rel agreements opened up a trcmr-ij. dous markol in Britain for 285.- that morning. his election organ- 000-000 111s. of lyziccn which Can- izer had been abducted and held cirla could not supply far five prisoner by practical pupils of tlie yvnixs. Br-nnrii. also opened up a political school which grorlualozl market for lumber 1n lllF i-xtriit Cnnadidate Courrioycr. Itlcine with that, British Columbia. the pron’. gym microphone, cuydjdaje cm». bell reeallcd these minor events o! a. traditional election day in Riche- lieu-veicheres. He recalled them with indignation. He protested wiih- violence “the aoanihloua political methods of the Liberal party." I-Ie accused the Liberal! o! Sorel of having had recourse to acts of bimdltry and of’ havlnfl bought up the wnstliuency en bloc with drink and bribery. . "I fellcltatc". Mr. Corbeil said. "all those electors who resisted the corruntors and bandits of the Lib- eral Party." A11 the iwockl. he said. knew the dlriy work accomplished in Richelieu-Vercheres by cut- ihronts in the pay of the Liberal Party. With an tinquallfiable bese- ness, he said. they had set upon election day. At thLq point ln the remarks of Coriiididote Dorbeil the manusc- of Station cJso reroenized an incident and reached ‘the report. of it ln the French- limguage press. the decision was the leader of Quebec's Union of- outside the confines o; R E_ . If Electors and had locked up its 011'- "hmz ganlzer-ln-ctilet dining several hours a deal-- sock:- o-f in his mi 1etle~.-__ p,“ slon. With delicacy surpassed only producer W great departed." Hon. P J Arthur MARJORIE “AWRENCE AWARDED LEGION OF HONOUR IN DIAMONDS At a quiet ceremony in the FOYCY‘ Theft ll was the turn 0fhM.iR0l- of [he Paris Opera_ Marjory‘. Law. r '1 lk ‘ t i1 1' ilgflmcg; bstag-‘Ofi-y JéJSQlnI-Ie eiookniet Tencmrlehgnmal“silisjlragiggafoggayi l sons. This was the last public ex- “ ‘, ' '. ' was p 5 ' i M. Corbcil. of the Un.on of Eloc- Legion or H0110“: in diamonds on behalf of French artists. ll“ °°“““°“°"‘“"" i G. F. llutchcson & Still QPTOMEIRISTS “Specialists in tlie fil- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feats.” 53 Grafton Street Life Insurance stbnds ou with the calm certainty A Life, Endowment, or Savings Plon, with g menh suitable policy, includi "suraiicc. l Qffleoc: l“ ' Londoners are receiving many rc- mlndiera nowadays of the part their rich Dean Wk. Matuhows of St. Paul's Cathedral ha; written a book des- damaged from o! it older than the great fire of 1666. Ls on display at the Victoria and A1- this 1e being written, the fire black- ".Z(i'.\‘ FMILY. BllLWARK Consult your nearest Great-West Life agent for o iiviiiiiiiiiii a co. LIMITED Provincial Managers ¢ Z)... a COME IN As I came to the edge of tihe wood, Thrush music-hark! Nonv 1f it. was dusk outside, Inside it was dark. _ Cfilillfl (I I13 l. 1h I caittiemael durlxli OITIQPPQSIJTIIJYZC, thg l?” 5112i?" rlheiwflds f" 5 blld Bishop of London ts appealing for y ° w“ To better its perch for the night,- Though 1t still could sing. The last o.’ the light. of the sun That had died in the was: Still lived for one song more In n thrushis breast. For 1n iihe plliared dark Thrush music went— Almost like a call to come in To the dark and lament. Hut no. I ‘was out for stars; 1 would not come iii, ' I meant not. even if asked. Anrl 1 hadn't-boon. ltiibcrl Frost, Aooooooooooaoomooooooa Old ‘Charlottetown 2 mini em.) I y: _. A 4 TRlALa IN coumini. BUILDING. During the quarter of a century that. the Supreme Court field its fillings la tlie Colonial Building 13347-1878) many noted suits were ttiod- Among them may be man. tioned the Tenant League trials, which were held in January. 1866. Tlirei- members of the League, M- rested for interfering with lhQ Sheriff in the discharge of his duty 1n enforcing the payment n; rem, were put upon their trial. They were all found guilty, and Judge iPeters, the presiding Judge, 55m. onced them to imprisonment for two years, eighteen months, and one yr-er respectively with n fine of fifty pounds 1n one pose. and twenty pounds 1n the other cases. Another important suit also can- riucted by Judge Peters was tho trial 1n January 186D. of George Dowye for the murder of Jolm Cull- an. The Orown was represented by the Hon Joseph Hensley, Attorney General. Denis O‘Meor:i Reddin. solicitor General. and ‘the Hon. Edward Palmer. The prisoner was defended by Charles Palmer, Mal- colm MeoLeod and Frederick do Si. Croix Bi-ecken. After a lengthy irlal the prisoner was convicted of wil- ful murder and scritenced to be hanged. on the 30th of March. 11369. on Powrial Square. The scntenct was afterwards suspended for one week to give time for e reply from the Home authorltle; for commuta- ticm of thr- senlence. ‘This Her Mol- -esty refused. and Dowve was ex- lcculeil on the ‘lth of April in the ‘presence of many hundreds 0f 1181'- ecution tn the Province. -~I-‘ram "The 01d Provincial Building" by the lole Mr. Henry Smith. ll. J. hlilllllll OPTOMITBIBT Fitting and Séiaplylnz Gleason Montague. P. ll. l. Office flour! lfl to l! A, M. 2 to b l‘. M. Holiday! etc. bv appointment Offlco Connected With t as a great bulwark, staunch of finality. Pension Policy is an Insured uoranteed values for retire- ng Accident and Health In- made the boiz and bacon markr. The mid-doy_mce1 ls as import- ant as a substantial breakfast, ma ‘l9’ mall" ti" b”! returns ln work garofittea nor before monocea Yenap University boast; a. "sky- EPRPF 08mm: 10 floors of caves Amid encroaching mll-‘llllll! llmmll-Oflfll. classrooms M. Corbett was heard declaring acted upon. The mulbecment “interrupted M. Oorbellh dtsootiree unknown to him." , Ono lied. it scents, mode o disk of muelo to turn at Station CJSO in 8on1 drowning unobtruslvel the voice of Roland. and one li not restored M. Oorbcll to the woven ciwo at intervals whim be was mak- THOMAS ALI-ION P. MoLEAN-Dlutrlct MIBIJI at lnmnoliih CYRUS A. It. SEAW-Dlltrlct Miinqer at Montague Special MoAVINN - EARL ll. BURKE - J. E. BUIIIOWS Mhrcoenutfveo at Charlottetown lng declaration lciio violent. Bitch u: “We will recoil neither before Armed with prayer we will cori- ilnuo the bottle; for to rave our country we hove in; need of de- putleg than of points." \_ lel. one thing more; that lo wln the by- elsorclon o! Richelieu-Volumes: Liberal; tied distributed drink in fleets. . . The root was disks of music made to turn. _ The assistant manager of Sto- tlon G780 explained inter to n re- dllk out the Corbett dlrooinoc, he llld delicately Ill ‘taken because of it: allure. ‘nut was about n11 of Ptneldaii. Dot-bell. t not quite. A pootludo will plli ed oi the nit or stallion \ O INSURANCE W. K. Rogers Agencies Queen Strut commas SERVICE “.1, LIIIITEI Charlottetown