authorities. cnrllulrrsroill iilliiiillllii Heroin; mu; ‘mime-vi lu ran - cu- mu rm Olflee Department. Ottawa President: W. Chester S. MoLrlre. I}. Vice-President: i. it. Burnett secretary: iirui Col. l). a Muillrnnon. 0.5.0. Iiitor end Manning Director: i Associate editors: Frank. Walker and B Burnett. IJJ. l'ila Guardian may be ibtnlned at: Huh ruascco Shop. Morn-ion. N l. The News Shop. Munotun N B. George McLean. Plctou N 8 Walkers Whta Rpol. ll Salter St- Iialllu, NJ. lletropolitan News Agency. [L48 Peer is. Montreal United Cigar flares Chateau Lararier Ottawa Ont. B. Aiiken, Lord Eigirfs Motel (lttawn, Ont. J. Fine. 354 Bay St. Wolfe's News Stand Surihury Ont. Old South NnIs. Cor. Milli and Washington Sta. Iotniinfa News Agency, Times Building “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Thur the Weakest Ink.‘ SATURDAY. APRIL 27. 1M8 Wood isia ndis Ferry Announcement is made in this issue of the pending resumption of the ferry service between lived islands and Caribou. it is stated, pend- mg decision (l5 t0 whether one or two boats will operate, the M. V. Prince Nova will be put on the outs on or about the first of May. Surely at this late date there should be no doubt about the necessity of having two boats for the stead- ily increasing traffic between here and Nova _ hxpcrience has proved that one boat is entirely inadequate to provide the service, and the Northumberland Ferries having acquired a second one, all that is necessary is for the Federal Government to authorize increased subsidy to set the wheels of industry and development in motion. the coming season are most encouraging, it be- ing estimated there will a 5o per gent increase in passengers, 75 per cent increase in autos, and I50 per cent increase in trucks. This, of course, is dcpcndent upon the carrying power available, and that is up to the Federal author- ities. Ilhe Northumberland Ferries are prepared to provide the double service from the opening to the close of navigation for a subsidy of $150,- 000, a sum which all (including Government of- ficials), who know the circumstances, consider The facts and figures have been placed before the powers-that-be at Ottawa, and it depends on their decision whether or n t the Province will enjoy the double service. T e Ferries are all in readiness to comply, and thus provide the means for the further development of our main industries, trade and commerce, but naturally they are not prepared to do so at a loss. Should the Federal Government fail to comply with the reasonable request for a double service, the company can easily dispose of the S. S. Sankaty, at a profit, and confine the serv- ice to the Prince Nova, but this would be the falsest of false economy. need for an efficient double service title nfldlNova Scotia, everything is in readiness to put it in operation, waiting only the “go Federal authorities. The prospects for fair and reasonable. There is a crying ahead” of the ‘Budget Next Month? ‘Parliament resumes its deliberations MOnday, and it is hoped that within a reason- ably short time thereafter -1'r possibly in May —- Finance Minister Ilsley will be able to bring down the Budget. Seldom has a budget an- nouncement been awaited with greater expect- ancy. Everyone is hoping for some measure of relief from taxation burdens, but many are like- ly to be disappointed. It is safe to’ predict, as ttaiva correspondents, that there will 'be reductions, but that these will be givcn mainly if not solely where they can do the most good in creating jobs and keeping production at as high a. level as possible. Business men are hoping for elimination of the excess profit tax and for at change in the present duplication 0f taxation 0n All classes are hoping for reduc- tion in personal income tax. The gcrleral opin- ion seems to be that while there will be a re- duction in the lowcr brackets, thcre is not much hope for those whose income is on the higher If the Dominion-Provincial Conference comes to a quick agreement, it will be possible for Mr. Ilslcy to announce that the Government i ‘eliminate uncertainty in taxes by extending iillx program over several ycars, which will a V f keeping production at a high level is to criterion, their our farmers who produce st essential of all colmnOdities have ». expect consideration. This need not bc pense of other classes. Indeed. the fol- fproposals advocated by lion of Agriculture and supported by iltlbn a_t the last annual meeting, of our ~ , jEdward Island Federation, should make puny uneral appeal: )‘ That the income of a farmer,_for in- to; purposes, be assessed on the basis of iivesyear ~<liibving average. i 3) That breeding her til-um; and that in the case of proceeds tflspcraal sales‘ over and above this cap- ' < ‘ the farmer, be permitted to average from such sales over a period of three " fnmieelsx purposes. " s t the exemption for single persona lmd that for per- ds be recognized as This last request is something which should not have tube made. It should long ago have been incorporated in the Tax Act as a safeguard against bureaucratic control. Magical April With the Psi-is Four-Power conference and other momentous events on foot, the New York Times gives editorial space to a. subject of equally timely interest. It hails the advent of the Anemones-“Spring itself thrusting its petaled presence into the ‘lengthening sunlight of a new season"—and it says, how truly and well: Poke among the sere leaves and you come to the dampness of decay and new soil in the making. Green "shoots are thrusting through it and the purple-veined leaves of golden ragwort are spread wide to catch the sun. There is sun and warmth above, and beneath, where the roots lie, is the ferment of change and decay. Growth persists on the leavings of other growth. And of tomorrow. and winter to spread their white petals and welcome the early bees. There is a life cycle to be completed, blossoms to be borne, seeds to be made, leaves to grow and strengthen ‘the root. will over-shadow them and the viburnums will be in, full leaf and the maples and the oaks will be reaching for the sun with their full leaf heads. This is their time, n0w when the April wind beginning. Now they must bloom and lure the sluggish bees and get their cycle past dead cen- fruit and witheriflfl 3W1)’- i-EDI I URIAL NU I ES- freshed. ’ s e s s for the beautifying of Ottawa. w a s s development of “brain trusts." n- s a e Canada known as Viceroy. ‘ U U Q . . . . it is the finest of fine arts." r- »: e w EHCCS. Q I l i portiiiere- to Mexico/fills matter. under consideration. sill‘ i i ~ n0 ,5 this growth in_ turn will become the leaf mold a‘ Anemones rise among the debris of fall i‘ is still chill and the warmth of ferment is iust mm h The teachers having concluded one of their ‘ most successful and enjoyable annual ‘confer- ences, return to their duties today like lions re- Mr. James E. Harris, aichitect, is to be congratulated on being suggested as the_ rep- resentative 0f this Province on the commission we are assured of something from Ottawa to relieve our necessities, and the least we can expect, whether we get it or not, is an annual sublsidy of $5»0°0.°°°- It must be evident t0 the rest of Canada how much they are indebt- ed to the Island for its export of brain power for the development of their professions and industries. It would be a paying speculation t0 retain and endow the Island as a, nursery for the Mr. Bracken recently suggested, in his Ot- tawa Address to the Pro-Cons, that this coun- try should be regarded as the Kingdom of Can- ada. There is good reason for making this actual change in the irational title, and Lord Alexandefs very welcome appointment as Gov- ernor-General should remind us that it would be far better if this colonial title were abolish- ed and the Representative of the Crown in Ralph Waldo Emerson, American essayist and poet, died this date I382; he was a trans- cendental philosopher, his writings and. lectures doing much to influence the thinking and clrar- acter of his day and generation, his real con- tribution to philosophy being his insistence on the identity of physical and moral law; in prose his style is brilliant and epigramnatic; his verse never had much appeal; his publications in- clude: Essays, Reprcrvulativz Men, English Trails, The Cortduc! of Life, Society and Solitude. “The laws of behaviour yield to the energy of the individual." . . . “A beautiful form is better than a beautiful face; a beauti- ful behaviour is better than a beautiful fornr. Lt. Cindi: Alan Beddoe of Ottawa, de- signer of the First Great War Book of Remem- brance in the Peace Tower of the Parliament Buildings, has been given the job of breaking the 2,000 National flag designs down into groups. They have finally‘ been cut (lDWll to 22 classifications, each generally based on its chief symbols or, in some cases, on visual ap- pearance. Iii colors, red, white and blue dum- inated. When the Parliamentary coillniittce be- gan to consider requests for personal appear- ances by various persons and bodies, Mr. Tom Reid (L-New Westminster) opposed it be- cause "if we start this we could be here for years listening to pressure groups." Some,mem- bcrs opposed his views, others supported them. On a vote, the committee defeated 13-9 a mo- tion by Mr. Reid to exclude all personal appear- Trade with Mexico is being slowly but surely developed. Virtually all the fresh torna- toes, eaten in this country from December to April are from Mexico, Mr. Duplan, consul gen- eral at Montreal, states. In January $259,000 worth were purchased, and in February, $388,- ooo. Total goods importedby Canada from Mexico in January totalled $t,4i5,ooo and in February, $r,723.oco. Larger scale trade will only develop, the consul general said, "when Meters,» 71.. W», Another month and there will be little sun where m‘ the anemones now stand thick, for the ferns ine In Britain's new drive for expert iwto trade, nearly one hundred f me been switch ire. For they, too. are a part of the change. lhfl gar-mm 910035 ceaseless wonder of growth and blossom and unk . it rioilrwdoftonusbvuietorm fierce ~ y BMW; but they were withdrawn merit. -Ma.nchester Guardian. “liberevtlng" watches-is well known Bo when . propelled a farmer in he the farmer wus smart eriou keep his watch in stead. he thrust —Bra.ndovn Sun. l! and selling t $3.000. -S wet-Dispatch“ M. the disposal of ma ers who app-ear on in’. The second ls a svsvpem plan has been us specially de=erving c holder. . Not without misgiv‘ erican Airlines grains stewanlesses. the larger»: class trained by on Amer can CDZYIUZ‘? the -_-_.i. . The Australian Irltiali Common upon alil-v w tofar biilprovldlng aoduoedinto o“ A i the we have direct steamship‘ liner-from Eaton: i’ ll ciravatorleilo, ’ many years later) was ti: frame f t larger place of meeting. Tbe smell I church was moved back, and a new one erected on the same site, r- wo d never have ~ ts ~ol 103M that widely‘ felt in E118 “of mwcorpor achiow e o er. - rd of‘ nine fill’: lish thqedrala served by . "f: rai- swi"’".“‘ll‘n bee‘: Dd» is leash: dauaainl. COII m “Larrfirgil. we ca; B lit Re MacDonald, iiv'c(i_at'R at. {tissues churchxwas on itis prea- en s e, corner o understood ih 5mm" Th’ Wm" “d; later; when m» Wishes o! the and chapter are known, wbe make the presentation in cash bacribed ‘L: restorim the famclosrls buéiltl onliy a few yegrs befgaea CE an W 0 IP90 e 6 e acLntyl-e in st. June: Boned was the Rev Mr. Maclntnsh. - residence was on tween Ken-t and a very tall man and alws and beards be ore leav- Kirk. ; and in them w ly the Christian of absence for a while, and a very short man was sent to relieve him. Old Betty titre maid was very’ d nt “He would wear out all the malster’s gown I only Anglo-Saxon Church —- rounded in’ the egesrfigictge of a ec e ope a soon the tradlt i the cmost illustrious of ‘ The first St, Paul's was polite the Brown Rlfil from the‘ street. down about '41 or '42. The new cilcurch proved too small for which made its Enslim xford and Cambridge. reams that. flow from St. who wanted pews, and shortly aft- erwards about twenty feet in i s liiii have divorced wide- e course-of the ales. The l!’ had a three decker pulpit-clerk's desk, reading desk and pulpit—one a few days when the authorities realized the indignity to royalty involved in the process of deface- of Monte Csssino benefactors of the monks’ own com- on and have offered their gift library. where they ma of citizens towering above the other, uh el with the gallery. and in; crimson silk velvet ngs and cushions trimmed fringe and tassels. The pul- pit hangings were press The Russian soldier’: passion for W1 Nevertheless t is as Christians as well as scholars that they their contribution towards wounds of war. In these years of conflict with the ultimate nih- ililsrn. Christendom, even dl id Christendom. has proved still ills: human brotherhood in a world ravaged by hate. The hands stretch- ed across the battlefield bv the English‘ ch-urchmen h lars of the Italian monks that. in the words also gave handsome Czechoslovakia. and asked the time. The monuments to the memory of General Fanning who was Gov- ernoi‘ of P, E. Island for eighteen years, and of Governor be William Young, uiio died at Gov- enrment House in 1835. were pluc- ed on the east end wall of St Paul's, one on each side. Governor the ground. studied the shadow it cast. and said. “10.30.""I‘lle Russ- ian rolled up his right sleeve. On his arm was a row of wrist, watch- es. He examined them one by one. Each. said 10.30. “Thank you." he said to the farmer-arid walked Oil. with the pttchfork over his slwulder. Rev. S. T. Rand was their pastor. About 1850 they mov- ed their chapel down Prince Great George and placed it on the east side of Great George tr between Dnrchester and Rina. an a flag with a Betrhel on it was m. né Continued) A trailer that is a veritable king of the [lynsies has been bullttosel] for $20,000. A house containing every gadget. lo make life complic- mfed is available for $115.000. In- in housing construction is rampant, is in fact running amok. ‘Brena is, evidently. only one un- important. thlng that the building organ than in Charlottetown ard spy on this Island. It was nod instrument and was aison Duohemin. found- er of the firm of Duchemlr. Bros. near his residence, This organ was "' ma". .rro_ won: rowmis TilE 2 MAGS 030G810}! 10 Greet Goons‘ street All Hell Orders Given Prompt Attention. iiho Benedictine Rule "in every are servants are of one King. For Font Ailments OONIUIB i-l i a, HRUWN. or Orthopedic clunoronlsr Ill Greet George ltreei CIIAIMITIETOWN 9.8.: Farm Fort Sale at NEW GLASGOW. P.E.l. Beautifully situated centrally located at New Glasgow village. Fahm consists of 97 acres in good state of cultivation. Dwelling house in good con- 2 large barns and other outbuildings. Apply io- WART D. PIARKMAN Rustico, P. E; I. if ti. Frillilililliflll s. QiWttMllTltlSTs “sleeillllte. ii d.‘ m? ".ll.‘.‘.l' fill"!!! h: ti". col-roe los orocuiar as.‘ Professional scam "'M~=.*~ v - A‘ his?‘ o! wards sent. to Georgetown and used in Trinity Church there for some years. _ The" soldiers’ seats at St_ Pauis construction industry is not up to. Ln a notion crying for $3.000 homes, QUiCKlES _ it can build houses that are the utlmste in the extravagant and fantastic, but; it, cannot build a lain house. suitable for living in, t. Louis were on each sgrde of the choir. and marching up the stairs and lfllfi The Methodist - Chapel square wooden building with up and lower windows. 1t was situa on liiiE'C0l'-Y-\.i' of Prince Sfireets (where Hearts M A Jail term ienvea a stigma on a marn. and s great many persons have had a permanent black mark put. on their record bocause- they did not have the money to pay s email fine. This part of our legal code is archaic and ought to be amended without delay. There are alternatives which should be out eposseslng in its it was nicely fin- ished inside lv-w prisoners’ box kind all round the four sides. the uul it. Pflymwll nart and me Communion table was directly lvfier the l" raised oval-shaped flcor with ‘c flftv people could kneel at allerv directly behind the oulnlt. After the Methodist, brick church was built the old gs ‘Kc flim- hauled down Prince pod 90 (‘is-hit \\\\ x \ x \\‘ is great-er rise of prcba arv sen- tences ln the case cf f t qfrnrl- r chsrgcsl _\ Tn la‘. t-er 5:1‘ never been "cffic a! It snavld be made part, of zeccirnlner‘ ncirr; pro-l.» COdll-N. —Cornwal1 E‘iB-I1i‘l.".l‘fi-Fi‘0€- g rince and King streets and made glnto a doubiehenernent. other church in 1884 was the Ba list chapel. It was a lain. lijnre entious building with wp arched windows on each sids. and was situated at the head of on Eusttm Sine‘. The congregation was smnli and __.,._____._h. _....__.____ -~courlrr: lasunlucs ‘Silvie: 1? am‘ i "so. lei airline in the 15 yzirs during stewardoz-ses have i102". cn plane crews. says ‘The New York, Herald Tribune They were schoch‘ ed in such mat-leis as szrvlm m-zals oirkig for babes and aerodynamics. The airline's misgivings arcee from ihejaot that stewsrclasses. having been chosen partly for their rcr- . amiable appearance, don't stay long h job. The v pleaded with the 90 wrsduartes to tarry s while before marryinz passengers or pilots. The avers stewardess rut; a year -a half. You gov, afld pin if you stick for five yous.- ,t hopes that unlforni lsamtion wili be egnedinhythepeliiemmtilgfi uatrsllanf‘ ,' ,- miniatero! vggggughtygu" By Ken Reynolds J “Stop at the Guardian “and, iueka “a complaint Y- Gui-diam Want .Al| said ‘one rooaiforrani.’ and already _i.ilere’a been 14 , NEW Horus an . .-.."~i Phone . lit! UHAILOTTETOWN. P.E.L PALMER & ii ASLAM BARB! lent of Nova Booth Chambers Charlottetown P I. i_a_..._____,______..__._‘ J. A. MGGUIGAN. RA ~ "ifirlli-‘Ftrlrlhfi?’ - 81.31.5521 FARMER CAIN paranoia-gins. m» Candide To! Commerce IIIII a r; Mei-ups. an. no .» .- 410‘! s. arc. 1' ~ aonmwun ___jiPiUUE seqlrasziian Ia ‘new. hon . I :;~.-.v,-\~v-sab|:vzv-~._ factor’ = i , . ' 58" Grafton Street ‘I ".Y.*+~ Charles R‘, MgQumd ' LA. -- Solicitor. a urn/rm i I. ulrarreiiilswm" Phone. mi ._. , NEIL .W._ HlGGlNs Cllnfldrcd A. 144 ‘iunrr§§'i""sl§"' Charlottetown Tfl- 589" . v.0. Box m; ve-oeq‘ "Urn" and/clllllilflllyi Chartered Accountant. 2 D. F. ARCHIBALD Eastern Trim 3111111" Ulllllottetuwn .a_'__:: a. it. DUANE a c0. Chartered Accountants I! Grafton Street, Charlottetown Plane file , nearer", . ‘y. Manning, “d1” o-e4. McLeod & I Bentley W. I. BENTLEY. LO. I. A. QINTLIY. K40. Barristers" and Attorneys-at ' Lew llt Prince Street“ BELL & MATHIESON Barristers. Solicitor; gm, B. B. BELL, M.L.A., ' D. L. MATHIESON. LL84 11.0. Attorneya-at-Lsw LOANS 0N CITY AND FARM PROPER-TIE i S COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond Si. Fllarlottetown. 9.8.1. iili. W.li. CARSON Chiropractor Palmer Graduate Charlottetown Q01 Plllllll Si. Phone i011 FREDERIC A. LARGE BABBISTER. ETC. II Bnliliilll. lll Grafton St. ' P. 0 B0! “I DR. A i} SMITH ‘UINTIBI m Grafton sum Oflloslloonzlitolii-ltol Telephone £284. ALEX ,w MATiiiEStiN IAIRIBTEIL SOLICITOR. ETC. Officer 90 Great George Street Ilene! to Loan Collection PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER piling cards and circular correspondence. typing and bookkeeping. U188 ‘ HELEN GIIIDEN Tele hone ‘X020 lllveorngs IIOO-J. P 0. Boa I52. 108 Queen Street a. I. IIASLAM. an. LLB area. arc. Monks ' LOAbI ll 1P IEO. Box l! No-rfhus. mo. ’rr"ii“n'é'r‘a'“i.nrs hotel-lea l“