l l ---"-= ""-””\‘"[7_'P+1€ tr: - - ‘ goat. l-‘lans were going along swiminingly when PAGE GIIARLIITTETIIIII GIIAIIIIIAII 1mm; ma; (Ibllduu um Inlldoll Link. 00L w. cum- _ “on Prnltlonl l. Dmitri: ' J L “all: u": E. u. A. shuts-u. o. n. o1 Auodnh lllltor Inn! Walker IUIIACIIPTION SATIN c. . I M‘ I dellvurod ll U u.” ‘ui-lviuxl-‘lllallzd to l‘. E. Inland u,“ p» your ill nuns“: lulled to (‘ninth and l! I- lunlun Anal“ Bunch o! Clmulnl-ona “Th; Strongest Memory in Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ TLESDAY. MARCH 29, 1938 A Speech From The Throne fort-cast of legislative nicastircs. Ill" As a _ inrone deiivered at the opening Speech froni ol the Lcgisltllllft‘ yesueroay can dcscrinctl in. liliilllllltlilllg. \\e are told "the account. ._iiti reports of the various dcparb menis o. ui_v tio.ei"ii...eiit for ‘illc past year, and the estimates ior the current year. ‘as well as u lllllllucl‘ of propusctl statutes and amendments, will lit- prcaciittd for _\'0ur consideration." For iill tiic .iii'ori..;t-.i.iii [lli.\ coiiieys to the legislators md tiic public geiieriiiiy", it niigiit just as well navebeeii omitted. The accounts and reports n-t- iilwiys lirotigiit down, the estimates have li\\i"._\.~ nccii llilflqllittl, and there has ncvci" been ise. ‘.1 i». any i.t~_..~i_'.ti.rc in iiiiich statutes IllL. aiimiiaiiici-is iizlvc iii. been iiitrtidticed Jllll tll.\'.‘.i.\~:ii_ . \'\'t- ll..l ll\i“L'(l tlr- vc;:r to iiiid, ii not a IlwR’ _'uli't“t‘t'l-c' lTuYCllCC to the proposal legislation, zzt twist an asstiriiiict- that discussion on all matters‘ of public nngortance ivoiild take place on the; floor oi the llotist‘, and not be confined to the :;i‘.t;tis c.i.;..iiicr. .\ caucus on legislative miitltlh‘ win-re tin lllCillllJfs oi tllt. House are of one‘ .h'i‘i'l_\ iifiilizitioii in really an anomaly. \\e hati zilsti expected an aniiouiict-iuciit that the Lllflrfllllltlll had succeeded in balancing its budget. at iezist tni current account. lu view oi many tax increases-on gasoline, on chain stores, structure is flexible and tariffs are noiv frequcnt- $4M 08-1‘ 00.. an amusements, on insurance companies, on motor vehicle licenses and what-tiot—iniposed by the prt-scni administration, a balanced budget should prt-st-iii tlu difficulties to statesmen plcog- ed in l‘.\'llit'\L‘ this result ever)" year wiili the teientit- avaiiable uhcn the) took office. Tilt’ two cents extra tax on gasoline, we are told, is eariiiarketl for road paving and subgratl~ ing purposes and not for general revenue. But this woik is referred to in the Throne Speech as involving "capital expenditures on public works . _ . for the relief of tniciiiployiiieiit" That is pre- cisely‘ what it is, and if a special tax had not been lcvictl it would have been necessary to iin- flllCt‘ the projects out oi general revenue. Mort-titer, the paved roads. when constructed. should relieve the general revenue iii the matter‘ oi road maintenziiice ior many years to conic. This has already Ireen the case wiili the Mac- Millan highway between Charlottetown, Borden and Stinitncrsitle, aiiil the McLurc highway to ltustico. Thesc projects, constructed without additional taxes. have saved thousands of dollars to the present Government in road maintenance costs. Another reason why we should expect the promised balanced budget this year, ' With regard to the paving contracts involving, we tiiiderstzind. an expeiidittire of upwards oi 5800.000 apart from the sub-grading contracts, the Tihrone Spflftlll states: "You will be asked to provide the necessary authority for financing these projects." Does this mean additional bor- rowing, over and abo\'e the tlirce-inillion-dollar blank cheque which the Government received at the special session iii the fall of 1935? The Speech is longer than is customary, and deals in part with federal matters with which the Legislature, as a body, has nothing to do. Its prime purpose seems to be to provide subject matter for political speech-making Reference to many still unimplementcd planks in the Liberal election platform is conspicuous by its absence. ___ A Modern Horalius Not mentioned in the Speech from the tnront‘. .5 a matter which has stirred up a good deal 0f pontical dust iii int- last few weeks, _ ‘lo tiic proposal oi a tourth buprcnie Court judgeship ‘u; Urince Ldward island It is rc- poried tiiat Uitaiva countered with the suggestion that in tne event of such office being created the Province, in the interests of economy, should b1 prepared to sacrifice one County Court judge- ship. iitrange as it may scent, this ‘met with the approval oi a number of Liberal wire-pullers and txings County was selected as the sacrificial tiic Hon, 5. 5, llcssian intervened. Mr. ldessian, in the event oi tiic retireiiicnt oi judge ltraser. i5 regarded as the logical Liberal appointee to the lungs County Coiirt bench, and he failed t0 lee why his prospects, and the interests of King's, should be sidetracked to make_ 59in!‘- legal colleague happy with a brand-new job In the Stiprenie Court. _ As Speaker of the Legislature. one-time pros- pective Attorney Lieiicrzil and veteran of several political battles. i\lr_ lrlessiankiiows something about the art of wire pulling himself; and rumor credits him in this case with achieving a single- handed victory with the powers that be Bl Ottawa. _ Nor is it reported to be likely ‘that. Parliament will put through the proposed legislation to retire tho Supreme Lourt judges at a certain age. the"?- b maxing room for deserving democrats. The Si: reme Court, it has been pointed Oul. @155!“ betpore" Confederation and there in no PfPvlslll" in theBritirh North America Ar: for legislating its member: off the bench. Perhapsit was reali- ution of this snag that prompted scheme ti? create an additional Judgenltlp by llqllldilllfl- u Hitler would» say, the Kings County Court- “om my 49;] body," said the llonouriible “Stave” in effect, and he moved his gum M0 sitfm with such alacrity that he wps bombard~ _ V in juggled, Minister Lapointe’: office, lfld d" thereto, beforei- his oppon- wme dirty looks from his fellow stalwarts in ‘the House, i _ But what oflit? Horatius got the same recep- tion from the envious when he came home after defending the bridge against Lars Porsena and the whole army of the Etruscan; Latq- a, statue was erected in his honour, and he recgivqj as mlmh llnd as he could plough around in a day- Laud and glory are not what the new Horatius ivants. All he wants ‘is the bridge. After his spectacular feat in holding it single-handed, who is there among his Liberal “friends" to say him nay? The Big Slick In Transport Under the above heading the Woodstock, _O_ntario, Sentinel-Review has the following crit- icism of the King Government's Transport Bill, now before the House of Commons for second reading: , "It may seriously be questioned whether the Transport Bill, which received its first reading iii the House of Commons (m March 1, i5 designed scarcely bcllto promote the best interests of either shippers lllill or carriers. The first four parts of the Bill are innocuous enough. but the fifth, which makes provision for “agreed charges," seems to be a move towards the rate conditions prevailing some thirrv-five or forty years ago, when the most powerful shipper got the lowest freight rates. “Part Five of the Bill provides that "notwith- standing anything in the Railway Act. or in this Act or in any other statute, a carrier may make such charge or charges for the transport of the goods or any shipper or for the transport of any part of his goods as lllél_\‘ he agreed between the tuirrier and that sliippvsr." For safeguards, it is ill>tl provided that such zigreetl charges shall re- quire the zippriival of the Board and that ship- pers who feel that an agreed charge is tiiijtistly discriiniiizittir)‘ zigaiiist iheni may protest. But in practice it may be questioned whether the safe- guards would bc effective. "Our present freight rate structure is the rc- stilt of niany years of experiment, btit since the early years of the century it has generally been recognized that no shipper of goods should be put at a disadvantage through a competitor's ability to sectirc a lower freight rate, The rate l_v modified to nicer new conditions as they arise, but there has been no departure from the basic principle_ "If agreed charges become legal. it is not diffi- cult to foresee an t-ra of chaos in the transport field. Large shippers of freight will be given a tremendous advantage, for to obtain favorable terms from the carriers they will be able to wave The big sliCk 0f threatening to withdraw their business and iransicr it to another mode of trans- pOff. Th6 small sllippCF, having m) flick [Q wavg, except his illusory right of protest, will suffer)’ Of particular interest to this Province is the section which proposes to regulate rates on water tratiic between the Maritime Provinces and the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River ports be- yond Father Point. .\_< noted iii Saturday's Guardian. Premier Campbell at the instance of the Charlottetown Board of Trade has for- warded a request that this provision be omitted. and ii is hoped this will have the support of all our Maritime representatives I‘ Editorial Notes I Keble died this date, 1866. I I I I March made a mistake, both coining and going. I I I I Liberals select their candidate for Queen's to.- day. I I I I Our out-of-iown Legislators are being cord- ially welcomed to the city; I I I I At Ottawa, “they don't know where they are" on the question of divorce, whether Senator Mac- Arthur or Senator Hughes is the right inlerprfltr of Divine Law thereon. I I I I One of, Italy’s new submarines will bear the name of a priest, Father Reginaldo Guliani, a Dominican chaplain and veteran of the World War. who died on an Ethiopian battlefield, ad- ministering to vrounded and dying. ‘ I I I I This is Mr. William Randolph Hearst's sum- mation of Herr Hitler and his imperialism: “As a military genius he is emphatically a good cor- poral, but as a constructive statesman he is still a bad housepainter." The structure he so labor- iously builds is as ephemeral as the morning mist, and the so-called “united Germany" he so cam- estly and uselessly endeavors to create “will eventually dissolve in discord and disaster." I I I I There is a Liberal revolt in Quebec which found ventilation in an unofficial convention held privately in Montreal last week. It was stated i8 counties were [CPI sent ‘- and an assurance was given by a representative of ex-Premier Godbout that an official convention would be, called after the present session of the legislature for the pur- f Paco lit! “In cases where the evidence before the Public Accounts Committee of the Quebec Legislative Assembly is of a nature to indicate certain per- sons have been guilty of criminal conduct, such persons will be arrested, and those who have un- lawfully taken money from the province, as disclosed by evidence before the same committee must reimburse such money. Among those to be arrested is Mr. Charles Lanctot, K.C., for many years Assistant Attorney-General. He became Assistant Attorney-General in i905.” This wgs the announcement made by Premier Duplessis. The Premier said that the Government would 1d as humanely a possible, yet with all the neuter era to he arrested, but slid instructions had been against whom the evidence pointed in a criminal way, As to the reimbursement of mon a which he believes have been illegally takui" rot-n the provincial coffers, the Premier referir-od to a bill . m, “"5 s» r f 2 8 ‘ ', ' ' r. ' Wail?! i§i"'3ii-¢..:' their i i lh‘ h l8?‘ - ti. iu..i'.'i:.....' . .. ._..... ‘autumn fwarhadbdcu dcclund, . Rcnulutlaefiupreim sary severity. He did not give the names of oth- . given by him as Attorney-General to arrest all , Dr.A.ll.llnI-unu. aoanltwadtngrhoAmlrl- (glslami ulwrieouoonven- n . tiyvmemthe viduullsn- gaidednsofsuohhighvalueuln e . ‘The consider 01¢ is made by the individual and for him: he Ls not made for the state. ‘Hint la the reverse of the point; of view found in auiocriwles and dictator- shlpyL-Denton Manny, MP. German scientific have succeeded tn producing soap from coal. since 192i they haire been experimenting in an aft’ t t to obtain a fat-con- taining s; lance by synthetically combining paraffin with certain oxides. Such a. soap was eventually produced in 1928. Now that. a way has been found to extract large quantities of pimiffln from liquid carbon. scientists mnounce that a. cleaning and for tofet purpose can be luiariufactured from ordinary con . The cnnutnmflnn ol a ‘ ‘ ‘ and assembling plant. 11m high- speed iaircratt at Mutton. aliitle village near the new airport. that]: oezng ouiit. outside Toronto, has been undertaken by the National and will be oom- pletiednbeflore the end of it‘: stung; mer. . . Magor, pres en the company, in the an- Hamlltou. Ont... would continue working at its fuil capacity in manufacturing machinery connect- ed with transportation of various kinds. but that the reason Million had been decided on was that land was til/Bllliblg them at a cheaper , price. it was close to what will probably be the biggest airport. in Canada where the runways would get)?!‘ stifllclettztzstllgnghp high t. t? DWPBI g o -speed machlnes.- Montreal Star. A lion's cue for drunks. adorned with old-fashioned limtems and drawn bi.- a sad-faced horse, inside its first public appearance in an American City recently as taverns emptied and residents lined the sidewalks to see the sight. Carn- ival spirit. prevailed as the mllln “hoosegowf led by a sound tru screaming martial music and im- wmpanled by the mayor on foot. ptasseg through the city’; principal 5 R9 . In accusing h! men of lnlnosl Dr. {leopard Williams runs count- er to the oplruon of another eminent medical authority, Dr. Berthold. who has declared that "emhonpfliu Ls one of the great- xt benefits that. Provident» can 5 i vviIOlQSOIIIO and useful soap for much when they eat even less than J others of normal we ht, but they Eastern Canada-no ey have an know say. making nouncement said that. the plant at __nmh “m, can“, but out dawn out down on U11 liquids-water. tea. coffee, milk, soft. and hard drinks, tat individual is somewhat “water- 0 o . when hum-moo dompuu mint out?» other tinny will t lndlvrltul blznnmn-liiiigdlvevho do not. visit’: ‘to t _ e .._ retain a guthul ftgureli Unfortunately n. nuuiaer of’ casu of the {g3} of goltme. cataracts and death n; be thinner. but at the same time cause of their tumble All but. a few cases. simply eating its daily work or aotlvi not think economical’ body which does not xieed as much food for she amount of work as does the body o! one of normal weight, and so. as body has more food than it. needs. l-s stores t-he surplus as fat. thin body or one of normal weight. does not have this extra. store and would not store ease m ‘or scientific my to mply to continue eating the usual amounts of on starch foods—bread, sugar, po- tatoes; and try to do without fat. m‘. cream. yolks. fat. meats. as the excess at on the the body pro- thiit. much Oine other important point ls to as fat tissue hold more water than more active tissues. That ls. the logged" anyway. IIEUEF gfw, ,.-'==_~*,-.'=-;';1>= |" 2o misfit}... i~- ink-ti. o liin ‘template n’: C Penin- uudiaontml. Rallalfruill worth—or mono; ATHMA was“ °°°“‘"l8§ IAAIYS BLOOD F000 IDI PALE AND THIN PEOPLE lion ln the treatment of one when lieu origin hedtraoeahle weiiiemsom us aslawi breakout-hm those of any other? naaautJ. .Iill¢ll oftheG-meu, nowre 1. lien, without cxoepthn. loathe‘ the hats that women wear 00-‘ day; and most. women love th protest that they find ‘°°"- ' 1 ui firs??? i???” 11' Rt.H.sli-JohnA.Maodon- .111! . - °"° °' 9" a?” "mfi- nu. mgr- and Premier. No- Rt Hon. n. B m. 0101M! lea In the an ent of Rhen- vmmr 3' w“ ‘mm 131; 1,34,1- Luder October. l2. I921. Leader of ""1"- of the ition. 1m uiitii ma. the um from M’! in 1W- For than. who lino lost Leader Premier 150m 1B‘)! until Prlizie fer ugust. ‘l. 1980. to their ‘ufipctlle Mac! Blood his dea in 1N1. - 0mm- 8. 1905 [AME of e 0D- Food prove the mfor- Hon. . John J. 0. Abbott. Mon from 23. l , to INVO- LCIdEI‘ and Premiu- trom 1891 un- Fulfilli- GIT A BOX NOW 500. snout n1- sens-rm WIIGIIT unucmu . _ "° uce lBt-helarqenumherofwomienund Th ngnboutfo short. tsb hich ' si..i.i..... ~1- d?»- . T.‘ ii mm» a ti.‘ $ ...r"..;.i:.:".*i:“°:...iaa. ‘it: M. dim i. iui t lc su havewieen the cliiiuse of 6-11,, mp“, shop 8"?" in: out some good work "MM M w nlumi» verso-m want iiittiiiiieid iii 8gb Church oi GOd W . they refuse to mcognae the real We wish also u, hleh ls, ln Uglrefleld for tracts distributed. more food than the body aged; to: flowers. Our needs Natumtl a fut tndt dual does more old furniture. The Prisoners (or she) ts eating too one“ doing their Pmlfild 10068 FROM “Till SONG 0F THE 88A” When the wind ls 1mm the lhst,— Whent-hewlnd blows from the Whevnvthewtnd blows from the iiiiiiitts ‘MM-ii .1...» out inobnuil bdnp nit-hm Wheéaouttlihe wind blows from the ‘on “w” mu new” mm 1m —Elevenm Century. translated Old Irish List 0f Party Leaders gllhtfitifil. rotlrcinent in ma“) ml Hon. mimi- u inn. Leader belrhe Wigner...” p.122’: lend glider 0f the i // n a u - _ , er. glut. of thou who have held Julv H. m8. In Prlme Minister n N , t from June 28 until . i, he posltlngmiilralcemwnfodentlon h u, h,“ office. becomes peculiarly lntcreat- Dirty _ t. ‘it Hon. otmdltlon ol u» gig fiwfgulgg been etch in m, Manon 29,193,. ‘a a Mr. Tea ySniysii: For a Delittlottslliipot Full lilavottrvtlTet Use snail/quit llraiigo Ptilttii Tu 6 I v i i - I Auto Accidents Increase ... ....'-:.-:.-.-:~.::. tum-anon oonlléltl Ilthlt kgacgeté the protection 0| Illa a eu- owner for tite- mma-‘armmmHw-nm’ f“ u“ “m” Iatuusidzounfita “u. thonrloiiaeov. iiyiiiiman & Goiiipany Limited eJall ind short outs that ‘prove dlsappolnt- ,,,,3;,:,'"°°' “m” 1"" b°‘“ m“ put In by Rev t)‘ ‘ottetown Mlmlagug ulllllk Rev. M!‘ . B. Williams. Florist for K. s. IIEMIAIIIG, in, wit, ILILA. Certified Public Accountant aiiil Auditor Bookkeeping systems lnltalled or revised Profit and Lou Accounts Computed Trustdii iinilor tlin Bankruptcy Ac‘. Company By-fiirpgvaelgloilljlafieliltzgitl Statements Administration of Estates a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. B8 Great. George St. a Churlotutown, P. E. l. arm-More books sud 1311 111 k ll! ll! clean-the cleanest "and he: those who I um. Sir. etc THE PRISONEIS’ AID the spirit of the wave la amus- ed. so that it strives to puss us westward tn the land where sets the sun, to the roulh. broad. green sea. N th.-- lllgrllbrlh dark waves strive in reach tlieplvlorldw waging wu- e c a , listening to the . . . song. over the swift streams of tho lam-ENG! to no nest us east. min the arrows of the sun tutn the wide and distant sea til retirement, 1802. . There have been 11 Prime Min- Rf. Hon. 8k John S. D lsters of Oanmda since 1867. oi whom 8 were attpplled by the Con- servatives and 8 by the Iilherals. With only one exception, every lesdei chosen by either party liiu at one time or another held the Prom! . The single exception Wl-s Hon. ward Blake. the Lib- erul lender who preceded Laurler but realgiiiémto accept a seat in the British of Commons. - dinua utiau. éffml“ m“ “M” °' m‘ “menstrual-drums aaiuii. mit- mb m “gm, ermdPmmler from 1894 untltlils iiiwmvetiasthe bottled ore Ouhith- {glut-uncut at the and o! April. nit. ' -|1-Qgn - H . 8h‘ Oh l Lelde ntrW-"i “m “a... mama. .39’ from pouuon. 1m to mo. ivy Kuno Mmr- m. Hon. sir Robert admit. Leader of the Opposition from 1000 w Prime Minister. ‘ l I > bonus elr tenures of Mill 0rd Pro Allelelged hump“, unit's FILE OIIITIAEIIT GI gulch lgdlef In “L? lnternulundlxter- nllrllu. iiioiiiiii Mo» A safe and efficient ’ the treatment 0f this In wretched. hi1 Instant rolls! Itching burning Inn the . s sensation or nllu um‘ l: a punitive one. ‘than 1...??? GQOITIDOTIIIY-Pllclflr THE 2 MACS IAIIOIInI-Ifllvouhon -.AMQIIC. m A. mviibvw BMW-nor PRINTING A......M (JUSTOMERS “on iii-um ndiiuq on a your ui-viu. w; m pro- . Pllvifillrllryonwlthtlautquallty prhtlngror 179i!» Blldtlrl. Clinch lupin-u, Cram Btaumltl. Tap. Pnmpnnsemcuquuumiisnutahuiin, nui- hlllillfllfll» floltcl, Placards ulbtbdr NIIIIIICIII. Potash; In that your" Illlullbucnowlabtl-litlolvllcyonlllypulfylll. . twain». i - » i