é. Jguojn-Illi-Pfiv-cn.’ “ O. o , -,_av r 1 orgy w I ll: Chas-loo mlu-q?wlls '- ~ - > DwKrO-Ill. J- IL Bill!!!‘ BIIIOI Ill Publishes- “M! 7f; ‘ ~ns.....w..~ ,_..-.- a]: .1 Ne other province in Ion in no isolated as Prince Edward Dally flolllel ll) nlvflco Il-IQ pa! your (Iflfiil-‘k I0! your (delivered) ll adv-neg. 'II-QIIIQI"III Ullirl flllitls . THURSDAY, } 7 ‘LEGISLATURE srsonoeuzo. i ‘w’ The last. session of the Bell ad- M AY 3, 1923. snow cover-ins dislwem. 11111 11 smiling lahdscape has already 1111- en the place oi the winter 3815-01 ministration closed yesterday with me p“, h‘, monqm The winter‘ the usual ceremonies. The IHouso was in session for a little over pix weeks, and the results are, or shortly will bq, before u...‘ people as the ‘proceedings have been very gully reported Fby the prcss. The practical legislation enacted has been meagre in the extreme. more mgggre probably, than those ofany previous session. For its barren- h9g9 there are many reasons; the Government vlas on the "defensive from start to llnish and the defence was difficult, fact impossible. There was no time for anything but defence and explanation and attempted concealment, ‘but on ev- ery hand the defence “'35 broken. the explanations did not explain. and the hiding places were fereted out. ‘Ilhore was pracrlcally no leg- islation; one or two minor bills of little consequence went through; onu or two bills "were introduced. in it is ‘true, was severe. hard 11111 honest, end without any malice 0r treachery hidden under 11-8 B110"! mask. There were occasional in. conveniences in travel by 1'11" 01 team, but no losses of any 111111-99’ quence and the winter is now 8111i‘- ing gently into spring and summer. Truly, we have a 80111)’ 111114 m‘! its goodness is at present being gu-“ngly emphasized by the con.- trust with other countries and other ports of our own dominion. Like many others we have com- plained oi money strinflelltly 411111 some of us have been lured away by the false lights of bigger wages and assumed prosperity. Many "of those thus lured avlay have already discovered their mistake and will return when they can. Those who are content with steady progress. who are prepared to "sit tight" dud let. the temporary stringency pails. thrashed out, found unworkable and abandoned. The most preten- tious bill was a gerrymander bill introduced dulting the dying hours p! the swsion by Zilr. A. C. Saund-. ers, which {proposed to cut of!‘ some twenty or thirty (Jonservativ- es from the Third District of Prince and include them ill 1119 second District‘. (This was 1101 the wording of the bill, but it was the intention.) Like the young man who decided not to marry the wo- man of his choice when he found that, she and he.- parents were are the of u.» earth" and wlill find themselves in the long run much better of! than those who, to get rich quick. have dropped aslow but sure certainty for a tlnselaled uncertainty. We have a goodly land. a land capable of infinite de- velopment by hard and honest toil; by it. ---—-<oc>——~ - UNSTABLE A5 WATER. We note that the Hon. W. S. Fielding had announced two differ- violently opposed 1o the match. Ml‘. Saunders withdrew the hill when he found that even the Lib- veral party were almost unanimous- ]y'0pp0Sed to it. and that it was so transparently a serrvmclldvr that it would prove a ruinous boom- erang to the party. As it was. the folly and the "cheek" of the bill has placed Mr. Saunders in a ch88 by himself, and has shown the fatal want of unanimity and 00-00918" tion in ‘the ‘Liberal rartv- T1111 lPremier, the Attorney-General and other members of the Govefllmefll oppflsed it. We shall miss tile genial mem- bers, all of whom made friends in the city. However much one might desire it, they shall not all return; the coming election will no doubt make changes, probably many. 11111 we have sufficient faith in our Dro- vince to believe that when these changes are necetisflfy 1119? 51111" he cheerfully m-ade. iln the mean- time we wish them ~ali good luck ‘whether in retirement or "111 We llorce light that beats" 1111011 11 Prince Edward island politician. _-_ OUR PROVINCE. Our despatches these dsyfl Si"? gm-ne idea oi the blossednoss 0i our province as compared with our much sister provinces and our vaunted southern neighbor. the. Over a million dol- In New Brunswick, and a number of lives lost. carried away by wrrerlts while the stables! New England 811m 11111111- od and families obliged to take re- lvlany United States.‘ isrs‘ damage by floods trying to release cattle from fuge on the higher hills! Manitoba towns and cities isolated by floods! These and similar new: ‘been featured in the This press. for sevsnal days past. yweek our mails from the upper pro Nhlces have been held up-by wash- buLs on ‘both transcontinental rail- yays and the end is not yet. (Here in Prince Edward island of the past winter is quietly soaking into the earth and assuring on abundant crop for the coming sea» pon. Not a bridge has been mov- bd, not a stick displaced by flood! or otherwise. The gloss, carefully the‘ lmlmuaily heavy snow fail nurtured by the unfrozen tinder a covprinl 11! mow. 1pm.... “Q living verdure as soon aethe ent dates for the bringing down oi ithe budget, the last date ‘Tuesday of this week, has again put off the evil day and will not be ready for the job before next week, perhaps not then. (Why are people leaving Canada by the thousands? Why had such a general exodus never taken" place in Canada until the Mackenzie King government came into pow- er? The reason is the same as that. which prevents Mr. Fielding from presenting the budget to par- liament. He is afraid to move; in- Idustries because of tariff wncertain- ties; manufacturers are waiting to see how the cat is going to jump. whether in the direction’ of free trade or protection; they do not want to take on more men and some of them are discharging the men they have: discharged men and men seeking“ employment‘ are going to the United States! in bl'ief. is what is the matter with Can-ads today. The Mackenzie King government has no tariff policy because one section of its supporters wants a lower tariff. another section wants a higher tariff and still another section docs not care ‘a hang whe- ther. there is a tarifl or not salons as they can retain their seats‘ and u... lobe. The Progressives also, on whom the government depends for its existence, are divided on the tariff question. Quebec, inbor- nl in name and Conservative in practice, insists on a protective tar- iff; Western Liberals, some of them’ at least, insist on the tariff platform oi 1019, which was awai- lowed by Mr. Mackenzie King and afterwards dlsgorgcd at tile dicta- tion of Quebec. There the ‘govern- ment stands. ihrdttled by dissen- sions in its own ranks and threat- anod by the lProgresslves, and the population of Canada is wilting llfly- ~ ‘in our own leghlsture the other day o resolution articulated to ‘btrengtilen the hands of the federal ‘government in protecting the Can- adian farmer was deliberately strangled by the Bell government because unopened. to clash with, I section of federal Liberal policy. is it any wonder lnet Ganglia is mofiting awoyfiliovr much melting” ‘will It stud before w; have a and conditions of our isolation, every one of whiclnis more or less a drawback. mineral resources and ness of’ our forest wealth make our, province >l1l0l‘0 dependent than any let us be thankful for it and stand. pther federal unit oi the union up- on agriculture. industry 80 per cent. of our people are dependent, and more than any other great industry in America agriculture is now in adepressed are and with our one productive |industry languishing as it is. what is the lesson of -the lhour to ollr beinggovernment and people? _ to pracugg the 5mm“; ec°nomyglittle story written by an American Ivforo our province can recover from ivestors are afraid to invest. in in-Lwml ilfiillvfiflcy- W8 are Wholly de- This. ' nuns, u u. in mo classic longti- yge of one of its renrooen liven. "entirely surrounded by water." The other eight provinces oi the federal sisterhood are all connect- ‘smq on“ ‘under u “one ed by. railway. v We have but a "u. rukn m‘. “an u.‘ “ms terry connection and have had too extremes. .1 have read o good that for only a few years put, Oth- many extreme views in_ tho Public u (mum, of m, Mum,‘ u.‘ Forum. I may baveheen enlight- . ooodnloroor less by them. Ilgen- found in our diminishing popula- m“), mun“ bflwaurtm "m hon. in the fact that our people _ _ draw s. line there. and form Ill op- are almost entirely native bornand inion. There are two extremists without any infusion from abroad, "1 my mind ht DNBOM.’ 0M l5 in having but a fraction of indoor tho drunlnrd. The other is the manufacturing‘ industries and so ‘Amman. f w My I l‘ thinking mind will ‘Pitt. lhose two on par, although the tom, aunt: fanatic is the' most suitable tothe age. d-le generally hos some object in view, in some cases a Very self- ish motive. ‘libero is s good deal of popular- ity these days in being a good tem- perance worker. That is a good motive for those _who cannot let popularity in any other way. We have a good many of such tern- perance workers in Charlottetown and all ova.- the province. We have some who are trying ingot their names down -in history as temper- ance pioneers. Tllere are other reasons also for being good temper- ance workers. They ~sa ‘they are waging war aslinstillt uolittnce. They are going to fight it to o lfln- isb. They will write long sorawls such as one who called himself “Prohibitionistf has been writing during the Piabiscite campaign. They will go out on the street and set the officers nu a. poor victim who happens to take too much. run him into a police station. imposea severe line on him. and let him go. worse than he was before. ‘ heart is turned hard as granite lig- ainst his native laud. its laws and officials. Those workers love to go out trying to flnd something 11o do. They will write some nonsense. They will get together and waitcn the Government. in order to get something else added io the con- struction they are building on lilo Quicksand. They are s-till building and shouting how well they are do- ing, praising and patting themselv- es on the back. ‘They are busy decorating the roof, while the boot- legger and moonshiner are pulling away the inundation. ‘Some tiny it is going to topple over, and the moonshiner, the bootlegger and the .0 A," "19 01hr provinces are Flfoteltld In string-like fv-mltion across the broad continent. . A threefold cord of railway and tele- Bfaph lines binds them together and through this the great currents of social, commercial and political life’ have been flowing for fifty years post. Nova Scoiio clasps bands with New Brunswick, New iBrunswick with Quebec and so on, with Ontario, Manitoba. Saskatche- wan, Alberta and British Columbia, 'l‘ho other and larger provinces standin single file. but in touch with each other from been 1o ocean. Our island, a tenth part the size of the smallest of them, 518.1105 physically apart. likeapearl diitachcd from s. necklace, and the more isolated and liable to neglect because of its diminutive size. Such are some of the elements The absence oi’ any the scant- Upon this single a... ; .......... 919.2‘??? ,5 mo YOU sin-Neon srluno .0110] - Whilst driving with a friend one any a youngster who wu with lle - oomplainedpf hello! "F1011 11¢ 11111 stomach." A: we were near to our destination i thought flotilla: of it. i was bidding my friend flre- ‘- well when the youngster, who had hurried into the house on our ar- rival came out again and started to play around. "Why." said my friend. “ll thought you were sick." ' "And so i was, but, 1i know s trick. and 1l‘m all right. now." - ' ‘My friend turned to me for an explanation. "Oh." I said. "I guess she put her finger down her throat and got rid of that conglomerat-ion- of stuff fllut was upsetting her." iii is n suggetiotl that is worth something to you should tho need arise. You have dined somewhere whcre your good sense advised you otherwise. Perhaps you huvg 9m. on something that your good sense has likewise condemned. Some- times, indeed. your very Imaging. hfgc hiijférflersggfelgfilixflngu ‘graft; 5?," 110i out of the gutter and make him t ' a ood res ctable citizen. How ‘gygljelglous even D°'s°“°“s"° dogs he dean? By decent treat- NO,“ why worryaboutmoreven fiezhmlsrakin! him realize that he r332]: eihzglc: w Eh n‘ when the The lSalvation Army saves more gm, downp themthr "an"? the m1‘ drunkards in'ono month than the m" or [he troubled’? Willi relieve Temllemnce. Alliance can save in ‘literally’ . gum "MY “d zh-lifdlllllllthtifllidf youth nelaver hear ‘ em a oil llg - roln t e lousotops ‘Sometimes ‘he flckun“ "f u"! 0r wailing on the government. 70c peryard. . r a drunlnard he or V the error of his ways’! The towll is zuuol bootl reel-s. 11w “"11"” full of nlootish ners. the M1018 province full of consumers. 111111 there are the great 10111991111169 '19‘ formers preaching. Wrltllls 111111 waiting o the government. Henry _ord can take a drunken éliew Curtain giuoted are all" under the present market/ quotnétiqflg; scrjma a 32c and-we pelryard. 1n- , at45caild58c pet-yard. , _ beautiful. denim. m. lace ~ 7 A swell assortment of ScrimlandMadl-as suitable for ' side at . . . " “CoverediArt Sateen and Sllkollne at prices ranging from 28cto 65cm‘ yard- A. ..__€-———— an? can my o1 them tell us of ’ she saved from . throat with a feather is 1 rather than the finger. amp oyéd ‘Th; slight irritation producgd by‘ 13° nger or feather induces the a omac to exlpeii its contontc Th1, very muscular act on the part of the stomach is really benaflcga] m 1119 111011111101 itself. -,\0W. it is possible that you may do this at limes when it i not neces- sary. But it is better io be surg u..." 11011.1‘. and not. wait until the in- lurious substances get, further down the intestine and other means . l ‘ "m-‘i 1'19“ be 9111111031111 i0 secure relief. temperance hypocrites‘ wifil perish with it. They are’ all one in dif- ferent ways. ‘The poor druukard is the victim. He is the one to be pitied. Bin you will find more principle in him than in the class already tlrscrlir. ls it notyd. He is rightly pictured in al I condition. Thus isolated as we author, as follows: “Two young brothers helped an old farmer to drive some, oattleJ When they got‘ the cattle home the! , farmer gave them each a dime. and. " as all young boys are likciy to do when they get a few cents, they headed for the confectionery store, in expenditure a-ndlin every p09- 1111111 "fly 10 lighten the burdens of taxation‘! The ltaqnaflon of trade during tho long ooldf-moniiho of the pant winter rigorously enforces the some lesson. At best it must be long be- home with their purchases. One went to the woodshed, crawled in behind a barrel and had a. glorious time by himself. The other fellow went straight to the house, tapated his little sister and his mother, and enjoyed the treat better by-having them enjoy it with him. The hog behind the barrel in the woodahed afterwards turned out a temper- ance fanatic. The big-hearted. off- llsnded lad, through being a kind, the great world earthquake of the war which has bankrupted and overthrown great nations and threatened our own beloved Empire pendent upon ourselves. Other provinces will not assume our bur- dens. ‘The Dominion will not come to our aid. Last year added forty- flve millions to the federal debt! What can we look for from that qtllllrtler but. lfurther additions to our federal tax burdens for years to come? away to drink." ' The fanatic, tilrough selfishness and a desire for popularity will start a law and order campaign against his brother and have him locked in jail and fined $200.00. Such is what is going on in this province. 'By this letter you will nudge that the ‘writer is not s temperance man. that he wants the old traffic back again, and ‘that that. is the reason he is firing point blank at the temperance workers. Not by any means! l believe in temper- ance law-s and temperance workers. What kind of a. law? ISome kind. The only Prohibition we have so far is to decrease thequality-and in crease thc price, ‘chasing properly _1_!li\fllll.'1t.'llll'Pl| liiquors nut of lhn laud to make- ililsiness ilrisk for the l‘ ‘l It, lWlt-a time and under limb conditions thit our province In‘ litldied’ With a guvgrnmgng whose wicked and reckless you, doubled, the, people's burdens and d°“b|°4 "19, Provincial burdens in n single yenrl ‘This Wtlilill wit“. incredible were it not prnv..| 1,9 ymld question ‘in be on flhHOLllP fact. it is an unpl-ocnllnniwl r,..-._ moonshine. The ponr- victim who L9; Mston. he soilrrhm “m, Hw-nlusl imvn it cannot got decent '" " ' ‘stuff. it u. prohibited. llc turns search will ho nlluiu ill ‘iilill. L, find where evcr ill n frrt- ,,l,.1.. “m1 Ill time of peace such 1m outrage. 111111 been Dflflletrulcd. This W65 m“ in "m6 "1 Peace. lit was done 11y the IBcli Government. tit has done 11111-0111 1115111)’ to our province _nnd people. it is u. main impelilng cause oi‘ the bleeding exodus m... is driving our. best and bravest in- to exile from their native land. Daily Selections - ‘_ won ' Guardian Readers From them. Louoony collection. ¢++o++o+0+0+o+oo0+o+¢ou THE ILLS 0F YESTERAY- Yes, let them pass, the ills of yes- ..a .._..i The authors of this flagrant terday—- _l__ wrong must shortly stand at m, Tile deed unlovely and the speech bar of public justice to be ‘ud ed "n-mst‘ for their misdeeds. They dejceiged The nggisgirfrd hml—betrayal o’ 1119 11601118: they burdened the peo- ple as never before llnd they been burdened; they seized upon the people's money and hook it to themselves. They became Lords or ‘Misruie in our peaceful land. They have proved themselves. faith- less to their most solemn promises, ' faifle to. their professions, callous ‘BM |pltiflthgny'pnss‘ [be mm“ ma, and cruel in their neglect of public . gflgygd 1.5 “m, duly. But the end draws near, the Behind His back God casts the sins incubus is about to be removed, 01 111911. we uilgnéejhoruy to bB-flmwd. Repented of, remembering them no 11 1.1111111111011111.“ 1191181 do! to 119 |And= $5.... That struck Faith's chalice from ollr lips away, And trailed hcr graceful garments in the dust; Our own default-Abe good we might have done, The battles lost that’ patience might have won The "word in season" that we did we who ‘ha? been ushered in. The time bps eomifor pom min,- t Chlllfll The Boll Qoygmmgnt, And by-his wondrous grace to him like Iohbaznr of" m. m been 111111111111 111111 “fling; m m. "In" ‘M ‘ound Hold fast the good. and let the evil stable government at Ottawa’! (HG? “mm”! ' -—Mrs. M. A. Maitland. disposed of ‘the money and went. wcll-liked, generous fellow. was led- to the moonshine. and if kills llim 011101111‘. He might live long enough to reform if they would let him have something m; to tiring Whut do you call u good temper- lfillCP worker? you ask. ltre there editorial ill any in Charlottetown? Yes. most 116111111113‘! iBut you do not hear much about them. You never see ltlleil" names at the bottom of llypo- liiacKeuzle King and hir. .l. A. Mes- (‘rlticai temperance sermons, or on a delegation waiting on the govern- ment. l will illustrate one:- wellt into town on business. When his ilusinesa was done he thought he would get a little "smile". so he went down Queen street. went in |a back door and got a. ‘bottle that was hall‘ rum and hlalf water. and perhaps u little of something else ito makc the water stronger. He paid $4 for it. He went to astable and look a big drink. He was hungry and tired. and it seemed ,t0 revive him; ‘so he went over to itilc iCllillumanks and lmd a, good meal. dlc thou went buck to the stable and drank another third of his bottle. “Now," he says, “l must‘ loaf around until my train goes." tSo he lay down ill the stable. Hus head whirls, he forgets his tired limbs and lle is soon fast asleep. When he wakes up his train is gone. it. is after sun-down. Now he must get e. place to shay forthe 1118M; Ho is drowsy and dry, so he drinks the remainder of his bottle. and starts uptown. everyone Betting off the sidewalk to glynm... room to pass along. iBut flnalllydm topples over into tho gutter, ‘and there he lies. A good, 511.com temperance-aflheart mall on his way home ‘from an holiest day's laborpsaw this young mun before his enemies, the white-washed fem. perance workers, had n chance m flnd ‘him. 'What did ting-ma“ do? Go to the nearest telephone and cslll an officer to iooklllftcr him? 1Y0. iflir! ‘iHe 'hl1.ip'ed the young man up and took him to his bongo, His wife and daughter ~met himin the yard. and all three busted "hemselv" 1° b11111! tho young Vii‘- tim to life and sense again. They put him in n nice warm no.1 and tho lady dressed an ugly wound m, this forehead. in the morning Lhny advised him rewarding the err-m- o; 711$ ‘V113’. and directed ll-im to the izrcnt Reformer of Ilsnael. when the young mall loft for home he “la-s u riiifcrnnl luau. Ha did not g0 home vl-xcll and hardened, with nunlllor hmsio in his itockeg, ,H.._ W011i llolllc very much ashamed of "11111011- 111111 wry grateful to l... new friend who llad treated [im kindly. When he got back to is farm in the country he did not forget his friend in the city. H; Picked the fattest lamb in 1.1.. flock. killer‘. and dressed it, and picked a nice bug of potatoes and sent them to his friends in the (‘My by the next taxpress. ‘in the ‘Fal ihe saved for his frienliagood Christmas goose and spent Christ. runs ‘Day with him. That was his flit-st Cliristmus for ten years with. out a bottle of "joy- water." no h“ no desire for. it. Good, kind, wor- thy friends bad taken the place of his former am ements. Three and one-half years passed since then. and t/hat was his loot dl1nlr. lle Is new a worthy citizen. a good Christian and n noble example to other young amen. ‘He follows fie 91101111110 of the-man who lltlt- his feet on the right path. This is only one instance. Space would not permit any more. Those are the good temperance wankers that we never hear of. out ll have no quarrel with the Tem- perance, lance. 1i am not sore hyp-nt in it. ‘l simply say they are no good. They are ilevcr going to cure drunkenness by force. They are novel" going to keep alcohol from men by making laws. They must prohibit the growth of barley, wheat. hops, po- tatoes, apples, cherries, blueberries, and stop the importation of yeast (litIkOS, raisins, prunes, molasses, 8 C. Our Divine Master never railed on a poor drunkartl so far as is rs- cortied, but He. did gay “Woe unto} you. ye ‘blind guides.” "l am, ySir, etc... " ' AMATEUR. —-——-<o>-_.__ Tlil NAIIDAI. Ell SERVICE Slr,——By way of reply lo your Saturday's issue, on The Magdalen island steamship service, and the correspondence rc- intlng thereto, between l-lou. W. L. servey of Charlottetown, there seems to me. to be some misunder- standing in regard to this matter - A Young 111ml, from the country 11nd,! think it my duty. thereforeddo everything possible to have published. certain informuq _tion in my possession, as being in the public interest. ' fin they. spring of 1921 o contract was entered into, between the De- partment of ‘Prado and Commerce. and the Magdalen Transports, hid. of Halifax. for tile carrying on of a bi-weekly steamship service be- tween iPictou and the Magdalen ls- lanC-s, via Sourls, for -a term of five years. subject to certain conditions ulld this company put tile steamer "R. W. ilcndry" on the route, but the service given. not proving sili- lsfiactory, the contract. was canceli- ed last February, at the request of Hon. J. El.- Carow, the representa- tive of the Magdalen islands in the Quebec Legislature. Wonders for a new service for one year only, were immediately asked for, to be opened on March 5th last. and the result, I will quote you from a letter of the Deputy ‘Minister of Trade and Commerce. to Mr. -.l. J. Hughes. M. P, who had interested himself in the mat- ter, as follows. ‘ "As you know, we recently called for tenders for this service. and of the lilrce boats offered, the "R. W. Hendry" was tile only one that was in any way suitable. They have of- fered to perform the service. charging tho. same rates as those in effect la ' year. rcept that. they have q-Qfilvvl tlu- passenger rate from Piclml to ll... Magrlniells to $5.00 ulnii frnnl Sourls, l0 $4.00. This is for one class only. as the distinctions bclwcon first and soc- ond class, ‘illll/C‘ been abolished .for this year."- service, to cowlmeucc in 1924. and five or ten _\'f'"l‘il. ll‘ we can find n suitable limit," etc, etc. From this _v0ll that the cull for tenders to which suitable ilOili a matter of fact, ice conditions permit. 11p) tho'""8laniey” was ordered 1111911. ilrgently needed. She failed How do we compare them with those Temperance Alliancemudtfl- "Within u fuw days. we oxpoct to issue a cull for tenders for this extending prnlnivly for u period of will readiU sec you refer, nu closing on Jlliy 41h next is for l"Xl lluzllsonbiservlcr. culled early. 1 I give intending ten- derers time :1 look around for a and that instead of is this roulc bet-ll: abandoned in the meantime. us out» would infer. the ‘ill. W. Hentlry?’ ilus again secured the contract. .01‘ one yous and its is now loading freight at ilnlifux. preparatory to taking up the service. as soon as Regarding the "Stanley" you will probably re- member ihut when the "Helldry" was unable to "carry on“ last fall, till ail-tbefrefght had been cleared t0 mike n special trio. as the freight left behind was chiefly fishing sup inuhls attempt. simmy becomes]... tried to reach Souris by way of Cope North. instead of through the Strait of lCanso. itfwas then gener- “filcierlt in every way. Tho eight aiiy understood that sho would try units in question will be chosen l811l11._in the edriy spring, lym, fofvilliflCbilfliy so as w include as some reason tile Department of 10811! ‘representative typos as pol- . Trade] ago "Ooznnerce announced i ~ ‘ & c0 L i ear y n pr , t at she would leave “if ‘hope the people of India will _ I anus; VTOI‘ the Magnum...- witilL-eollle-‘the ilbpdrtmeo of this n»... ’ $21‘; $2.“? Z’ f>‘.’°“..."..""i 3f‘ ‘m’ m“ ‘hi?’ T“ "““ ’ ' , 4-1 111 s o slomstm deciltonofthegov- Elston! Kings Board of Trade, rem-um”; 1 1.09., no 9mm will be ... B1IY’4 -... sliown there now t. is ....._......I..,,f,, ; fine. fancy edgé-ot lac, 30c edged n only Curtain’ Scrim..l_ilce edge, he... from 60c t0 $1.135 per yard. McDON, y LDC -.---- “HUM.-- Hams“.-. -_ v v v v vvv, vvvv v ‘*- W i. _ W . BASE Btu. Goons "Make Famous Players I . USED BY THE l World’s Champions EXCLUSIVELY A full supply of Bdase Ball Supplies m“ prices to CLU BB. logue prices. Carter & 00., Ltd. , Headquarters for Sporting‘ Goods i Everything sold at Cita- . ccivotl several telegrams fromlspared to make the uleasural Magdalen island merchants. D10‘ solid and conspicuous succcssiit testing 111M it “'11s 1111i 1111111 lllilbresponslbiilty which lies bcioretie tel‘ tile)‘ needed. *0 1111"" 115 ‘im-lwlllng ulen who will flliicei‘ lit fishing fsuppllcs iefl _over here "IndIa/nized" reznneuls is n, since last fail and llsklngxiih“ f"; light. They will ilnve 1n rheirhanllt 0 “s” not only tile lives of their molt, 111111" 111 11314115 3 ca" "wee a‘ but also the task oi luaiutsinin! 5°11115~ k I u mhlarnished the high and allow!" “'9 inlmctiiaieiy ion- tie ma er". ‘m, ‘ m- me ‘mumps 1;, up with the Department tilollith ggwhofizey are anlmlmety i cu J‘ ‘l’ kmglms’ who replied as assure them that in the new ui f0 0W5: 'ilich will now W“ xyviregrfittyii~iil have the llciiw ‘and generous support oi the :01! merit of India and of their iirll comrades in the armY- T112013 iSgdJ J. J. HUGHES." "I! 01111111"? "I" ‘xfxiflw On tllc same date we received-‘llldlu. ‘ihe ifliuilillflll‘ "was iill‘ following iclcgrllln from the 01111511111199 ‘m mmrwl)" m’ n m Magdalen islands. lure which. lllullllil ‘111 “m,” filouae lilarbor, S Iscollt! i5 "m! whlch may nprn 18th, 192a. rcachini; results" , "H. ll’. Acorn, Souris: i‘ Yours received. many tilanks for information. iHave wired Carovv. , who advises us cgtzmicy" will call For 1111 Souris. Please advise him ice coll- 4st:- ditlons. Ward] .1- mllLAonlirllu. ‘mlold and Ottawa, April 18th, 1023. “l-LH. Acorn, Souris: “Deputy ‘Minister azssures me “Stanley” will be instructed to call at Souris. ($811.) R. DELANEY G. SON LTD." Tins steamer has not. yet made 1191' appearance here. but as the re- ports of ice conditions from v - - _ i” 1111111 minis, continua in he uilfavfii- ma“ mum's; ‘iiizuilulumnbiles it" 111119- l ilresunlo that she is wailing "mmmd hur ' for better weal/her. in Aprn‘ “ii You will see from this Slalnmgnf that these mailers llud been ar- 13111560 lull: before they were thmgm or by Mr. Messervey, and while ii have no doubt that the 1190. m“ Of 1111-‘ Magdalen dslands will "Wrpmaie ‘hi’ k111i"? iulerost taken \\\\¥\\\l, bonus by llinl. in their affair. t l l,“ K l N not hilt think that ilnrlqllgoacquisg. // r ‘ . led hilllfihn. Wm, u", mew he /l “_ a would have rculizcri that t-he rleccg. L L141 W eity for ii. 1,, kl lllld Dusstld? 1 "g up the matter‘ -l am Sin Me”- H. H. ACORN 1 S - - . - . .~ Oilrlb. May lul, 195; H ‘Qrvlmj p2i7,xT|_7'rl‘~( l " 4 N S r“ EIGHT INDIAN REGIMENTS ‘h ‘ T0 HAVE NATIVE OFFICERS DELHI, . ~»'l"-‘1'i?ll.=‘.‘"i.3.r1.2i “Si; lgtlilnldlligganination" nf a section of ell-by tllelmlny h“ bee“ “"9"” ' 1 mzislntive Aqembiy and ’. . Tillie In" "no a‘ ones‘ ‘ " ‘"11" Which represents a partial cupil-ulation to demands 1111111139 incessantly for several years UITOJZlLPKLQHHIVe Assembly and u H1» other channels, calls for le lndiaulzailon" of eight infan- "Y PBsimc-nls oi‘ lnllian officers. if ills trial is found successful furi- . her concessions are toybe made mt , a later-date. - _ I ; T1111 Dian has been drawn up by Lord Rawiln-son. Commander-in. Chief of the army. ‘In explaining 11B says: "The government con. siders a start should be made at once so ‘as to give Indiana a fair Wporttlniiy of proving tint r951. manta officered by Indians will he me amen ls-rus WEE '4‘ rgorlcriou AoAmrr 1°" .0ur fire insurance 111mg” chance after the fire u M“ life insurance Si"! 73,’ my - advantage durlnB Y°‘" “m, ~ video for yo“? "mm death. mic!- The Hub of Insuralcfl 5 , oibie. a "ION '- E. ‘ind fir; oldest lmumm m"