l. . . i.‘ Tho Charlottetown Guardian Pro-Intent. w. (‘lsoctn n. u-Lin-Jsnr. Vice-Profiled. I. l. Burnett. I. I, I.‘ lavatory. Lint-Colonel D. A. Nuelilllol. D. l. 0, litter. and Hugh! Dltlflflk L. I. Burnett, r..v. l. . Associate ldltorc. Prank Walker and h. I. Currie. IPIIII Dally (founded III) ".00 per your (In udrluoel. llverol- 04.60 per rue ('1 alien») nnllnl to can]: " unit United Rhino. BATUIDAY. slniuna n. ma. Mr. Campbell And. The Mounties Jn view of the wholesale condemnation _by members of the present Legislature, when in Opposition of the conduct _of‘ the ROYAL CANApIAN MOUNTED POLIcI-z, itwill be interest- ing to sec what attitude our new Mussolini of Prohibition Administration will take towards the “M0unties." ' Will he dismiss them off-hand and pack them off about their business. MR. CAMPBELL will unquestionably have Liberal precedent for such action. Was it not MR. CAMI-IIELL’; own legal partner who in I927, likewise just after an election, sent a squad of, Mounties to the region whence they ca|IIe, presumably, shall we surmise, on the ground that they were “ineffic- ient arid uneconomic"? ‘It ‘is hardly to be expect- ed that with this excellent (P) Liberal prece- dent, and with the condemnation of his fellow legislators ringing in his ears, Mr. Campbell, the only ePficient and economic Prohibition Admin- istrator we have had (according to his own estimate), will beslow in getting rid of such ineflicicnt and uneconomic officials as the Mounted Police_ They must of necessity be sent packing. It will be interesting to conjecture the class of officials MR. CAMPBELL will then appoint. Will he Organize a bicycle squad? Or will he teach his men motoring and furnish a fleet of motor cars? It is suggested quite a number of “tanks” could be picked up cheap. Perhaps this would accord with MR. CAMrEELIfs ideas of economy. Presumably the new organization will be called the CAMPBELL CORPS, replacing the MouNTIEs and their horses. In any event it will - be interesting to watch developments. Banking On Bennett. One of the arguments advanced in favour of the LEA Government's three million dollar borrowing bill is highly significant. It was stated that a. Dominion election campaign was in pro- gress, that the matter of_ refunding federal, pro- vincial ‘and municipal bonds at lower interest rates was being discussed, that after the election Dominion, legislation would be passed in this connection and the LEA Government wanted to be in a position to take advantage of it at the earliest opportunity. The LEA Government is evidently confident that the administration will be returned at Ottawa. Because it is in the BENNETT platform that the assurance is given to introduce “a huge debt-conversion scheme providing for _the re- funding and consolidation of Dominion, Can- adian National Railway, provincial and muni- cipal debts at lower rates of interest." The Liberal platform of fourteen points was pub- lished in the Patriot of August 3, mud i! Iimkcs no reference rvhalc-vcr Io reduction of provincihl 0r mimicipal interest rater Nor can it‘ be argued that any promise made outside the fourteen planks in the Liberal plat- form is binding on Liberal candidates. PREMIER LEA made this clean in the Legislature on “led- nesday when he repudiated the promise given by MR. DENNIs and other Liberal stalwarts in the provincial contest that the Public Health port- folio would,be abolished. MR. LEA did not deny that this promise was made; but_it was not “in the bond"; it was not a specific plank in the Liberal platform, and if the electors were gullcd by Liberal promises outside the platform, it was their own funeral. ‘~~.. This being the Liberal attitude, it is plain that the LEA Government is banking on the re- turn, not of MR. KINc but of PREMIER BENNETT with a majority large enough to enable him to put his platform into effect. But why rush legislation through at this time? \Vhy not wait until Parliament meets before seizing authority, at a special session, to borrow in expectation Ofithe BENNETT Government's return? And why, after already borrowing $200,000, should itbe necessary to borrow anolhcr cool three Inillion? That is something which neither MR. DENNIs ‘nor MR. Cox could understand, nor could they_ get any information which would - enlighten the House or the country. Incredible But True “The session from o legislative stand- point run: a rather barren one. There ‘was one bill however it-Iiich indicates that this administration, lhc most extravagant since ._.Confcdcrati0u, IS RUNNING TRUE TO ‘FORM. This ‘IP08 a bill introduced yesler- day, the very Inst day before the session closed, to authorise the Government to issue $200,000 more debenture; . . . This $200,- 000 i: required for several purporcr. Firrt, Ma building of a ferry steamer, $30,000; l recond, repairing the Provincial Building, $40,000; and fhirdpfhe payment for hard Jurfncvd road: constructed or under con- '.tfrucfion last year at Borden, Milton, Sum- nurside, Soufhporf, North River, Hamp- ton, about $86,000."—PATRIOT, April 4. ma} . A . . . he foregfimg Liberal editorial statement clear and unequivocal. It denounces bond bor- 'ng, and it states conclusively the purposes which authority was given in this particular Iuthb of ‘ . < ' ' »'--‘-- - § i iiocflfl-wb;‘R~F"""""-"““‘ ~- l . l and other large expenditures made on Public Works during the past season." It was further stated in ‘the Speech from the Throne that -"a.r no legislative prvvi-rivn ‘will Inade for funds for these exceptional expend- itures, a large overdraft ha: accumulated at the Bank during the past summer. You will, there- fore, be nslzcd to aulhoriae the irrue of bonds lo provide a rum sufficient to fund the present overdraft.” . What was the purpose of that barefaced misstatement, put into the mouth of His Honour the Lieutenant Governor? What has the Lea Government done with the $200,000 which it borrowed, and which it was authorized to bor- row only for specific purposes? Why is it necessary to borroweafurther amount to meet the same cxpendiftifer? This is the most out- rageous piece of deception ever practiced in any Parliament in Canada. Not one of the thirty, Liberal members raised this point at Wednes- day's session, although it was the crux 0f the whole situation. The LEA Government have now authority to borrow, when and how they please-mot $200,000 _this time but a cool THREE MIL- LION DOLLARS for purposes for which no definite information hasbeen given: What will be the result? If they can flout the will of par- Iiumz-III by mirappropriafing $200,000. earmarked definitely for expenditures Ivhich have been left unpaid, and camouflage their action by falsify- ing the Spcrch from the Throne, zvhat may the taxpayers now expect? Editorial Notes A great welcome waits PRIME MINIsTER BENNETT next Saturdayé 9k 9K Tomorrow inevery prohibition pulpit there Should be the petition “Save us from our alleged friends." 9K 9K 9K The echo of PREMIER HErBuRNs message Sim fiflgi in 01H‘ €8rS—-“Save Canada for the Grits." ' ' ate ale at _ MR. A. E. McLEAN can now retort to the LEA Legislators: “Anyway it was my friend: not ntysfllf I provided for.” 9K 9K 9K ~ There can be no war till after December 4. Then perhaps it will be delayed till after Christmas. . 9K 9K 9K The Third Central School Fair, inaugurated by the Conservative Government, has been another great success, and the oratorical contest introduced by -The (iuarrlian, a major attraction. Congratulations to all concerned. A lone voice crying in the legislative wilder- ness, was all that was heard in favour 0f the Prohibition Commission, the Temperance Al- liance and the clergy. How the mighty have fallen. *1 *3 it Without batting an eyelash, PREMIER LEA cautioned the Souris meeting to “beware of promises." Such advice, from such a source, was surely superfluous! a“ ' MR. DENNIs is undoubtedly the ablest poli- tician in the legislature. PREMIER LEA is not a. patch on him. How he man-handled the Premier over the finances was better than the way Lotus kayocd BAER, and it made that wily, oily poli- tician squirm. 9K 9K it ' HoN. THANE CAMPBELL has reached the pinnacle of perfection. He arrogates to him- self the distinction of being more honest, more righteous, more economical than all the Prohi- bition Commissions since 1914-—and that in- cludes clergymen and leading citizens of all de- nominations. i: it 91¢ PREMIER LEA complains that provincial matters should not be discussed in the federal campaign. Neither he nor his federal leader omitted reference to provincial politics at MR. KINds meeting here, however. What has hap- pened since to change the tune? Was it Wednes- "day’s unprecedented “gra " session of the Legislature? 9K 9K 9K Funny. After PREMIER BENNETT declared that Alberta was quite within her rights in choosing a Social Credit or any other kind of government and would be treated by the Fed- eral Government accordingly, he was charged by the Liberal Press with catering to Alberto. Now MR_ KING comes out belatedly and says he is not opposedto Social Credit but would rather Al- berta than he make in §€xp$inIent_ An Ontario newspaper took a straw vote Lu Government on taking office ig- find on closer scrutiny that mental G IVotee By The Way Prime Mlullts Bennett. [Ives Canadians sound savloo when he exhorts them to deal with the baslc Issues of the compgtcn, “as 1f each one of you were the sole arblter of your country's destiny." “Vote,” the Prune Minister advises, "not for your party, but for yourselves, your children, your welfare, your country. Vote as your duty to these compels you to vote. Otherwlte you wIll nsruredly vote wrons." That 1.; truly the advice of a. statesman and should be demotratlc and non-barman enough to meet. with the approval of all party leaders. A Berlin glrl has been sentenced to four months‘ imprisonment be- cause she erased the word "Jewish" from her grandfather's death cer- tlflcate and Iubstltuted “Evangel- lcal." She did 1t. she explained, for the purpose of keeping her ‘job, proof of Aryan descent being pre- scribed. And yet Germany protests. through her Mlnlster In Washing- ton, when a New York judge con- demns ofilclal policy which makes It. necessary for a. poor glrl to do as this one dtd. stoppage of nrmis and munitions shipments to the African nation threatened xvlth invasion and ccn- quest may be good strategy from the prospective Invaders‘ viewpoint. but seems hardly conslstent with the spfrlt of falr play and the prlnctples of international equlty embodied In the Natlans’ League covenant. Geneva maydlsavow all responslblllty. of course, but at best that. will not lighten the task of "face saving" for the League In this Ethiopian business.--New Orleans Times Picayune. ' Man has an lnsatlable appetite for learning about man-earner man. A ieast for the archaeologists 1s afforded by the find of a. Moscow expedition 1n the Crimea. The discovery consists of human skeletons believed to be 40,000 years old. They are extracted f."cm clay beneath a. aettlement believed to have been inhabited by other peo- ple 15,000 years later. Jars contain- lng the charred bones 0f animals used In sacrifice Indicate a form or worship followed by the early people. Along the Kntcha River well-preserved carvings show how sympathetic was the mentahy of far back times to the hopes and fears of our own-the carving; show that they just adored to make war. —Chr1stlan Science Monitor. Mental ability 1| larzc-ly condi- tioned by the G element. So a Brit- ish scientist has just told the Am- erican Psychological Asszclation meeting In Ann Harbor. It. 1s, there fore, n dfsttnct. disappointment to ls not a vitamin, like so many other capital letters of the alpha- bet now being studied by science. Because 1f G were a. vltamln. a per- son could attaln a. high level of Intelligence by concentrating on a dlet of spinach, cracked wheat, soft-boiled eggs or whatever other foods were found to be rlch In G. For that matter, phosphorus was once rupposed to be a brain bulld- er. but G. we are told, ls nothing so specific. “It might, perhaps. be‘ called a person's general mind pow. er, available for all hls special pur- poses." Thts almost. sounds as If G would stand for Gumptlon- New York ‘Times. One and '1 half million dollars has been added to Italy's national debt In the last five years under Musrollnl. And If I1 Duce persists In Izolng to war wlth Ethiopia there will be fewer people 1n Italy to pay It. Amen: new friends of children ma? be counted some natural solen- . ci-IE- cuARLmTETowN GUARDIAN’ \ Byjnnu W.BI'QIIM VARIOUS STOMACI-l AND AI- DOMINAL SYMPTOMS MAY BE DUE T0 UNBUSPIOTID FOODS Many individuals suffer wIth one 0r more _of the following symptoms: sour stomach. belching of ~gas, coated tongue. nausea, or even vomiting, heavy burnlng paln 1n the stomach. cramps In the stom- ach or abd , constipation, diarrhoea. They feel weak, tired, nervous ,fr- rltable and “thick-head ," They go to their physician and by following his uivlce may feel bet- ter for a while and then return for further advice and help, The physf- cian may then give them a thoughougroverhaullng, including an Xray of Jxe teeth and an Xray examination of the stomach and In- testlties. If no organic trouble ls found some patients seem to 1m- prove a/t once. but there are others who continue to suffer with the above mentioned symptoms. Nor research physlclans are fInd- Ing that the abovesymptoms are due to ertain foods to which these Individuzfsjarte sensltlve. but because they do not come out hlves. get head colds,_have attacks of hay fever, or ecmmn, they do not suspect foods as being the cause of their symptoms. It Is estimated that about ten percent. 0f the population are greatly sensitive to oertaln foods and have these well marked symptoms. However Dr W. O. Browning In ‘Trl-State Medical Journal, tells us that from 50 to 00 t. rcent. of the population while not suffering wlth hives, eczema. asthma. or head colds. do have one or more of the symptoms first mentioned. Persist- ent diarrhoea is one of the most frequent symptoms. Whlle skln tests —scrat.chln¢ the skfn and rubbing the _ suspected food Into the scratch —may loc- ate some of the foods. this tethbd ls not entirely. accurate. The best method, though slow, ls for the pat- ient to treat or rather watch hlm- self. f-Ie ls instructed to keep an ae- cuaie food diary, recording hll daily diet and hls symptoms that day. Icy watchkig the diary carefully and checking up with the results found by the skin 1t u usually poc- sib e to work out. a, satisfactory diet tha will soon bring relief. This 1s a slow process but to be free from the dlstresslng symptoms- mentlo rd at the beginning of.tl. article, is surely worth the effort. A SONG 0F THE SEA A wet sheet and a. flowing sea, A wind that follows fast. And fills the white and rustllng sail And bends the gallant mast; And bends the gallant mast. my boys, Whlle like the eagle free, Away the good ship files, and leaves Old England on the lee, _ 0 for a soft and gentle wind! I heard a falr one pry; But give to me the sounding breeze A white waves heaving high; An what: waves heavmg high, my B . The good ship tight and free- The world o1 waters Is our home, And merry men are we. tlsts of Cornell University whose extensive experlments In feeding anlmals Indicate that cod liver 011 "my not. after all, be such a ngg- e-WBW or desirable addition to child diet as has been widely as. sorted. Some easing of the pressure for eating spinach, yeast, cod me,- oll. and so forth, may b; 5 m; Ineonslderable contribution to more cordial relations between cnnnnm 1nd Dnrents.—-Chr1stlan Scion“ Monitor. Messrs. Goebbels and Stretcher now leave the outslde world no room to doubt that. Nazldom under their influence Is determjned m, force German Jewry upon the char- iW 0f rm otherwise sumclently s15. tressed world. Tnelr tactjcs ‘show that they are determined to glve on the election prospects which shows PREMIER BENNETT winner with a large majority. The percentage of the vote obtained by the various parties is as follows : BENNETT-70%, KINo-I7%. STEvENs-Io%. WoonswoRTII-flb. 1t if if Speaking at the "IIIanmIoth Liberal Victory picnic" on Aug. I3, PREMIER LEA referred to The Guardian's prediction that notwithstanding the election of thirty Liberals there would be “an Opposition, all, right, in the House." He scouted this prediction because he knew every one of the members and he "knew they are loyal.” Does be ‘now regard MBSSRS, DENNIs. Cox, MAcKAv and HUGHES as "disloyal"; and what, precisely, will be the form of punishment meted out to the districts represented by these members for such a heinous offense? O I Q The Conservative bill authorizing the bor- rowing of $200,000 was introduced at the last regular session, according to our contemporary at the time, “without the . resolution, which is necessary when bills calling for expenditure -.(:ic)_" o‘f' obey are presentedto the House. In _~ _ posting this resolution the Government have . Jon ‘acted unconstltutlonally." This did the Ln Govefitment from issuing ‘and mist ‘sting the money. Nor ‘did they think it necessary to introduce a resolu- the German Jew far less 500p.‘ to survlve In Germany than the In- qulcltlm left him In fifteenth-cen- the hysteria which s. food shortage generous, the antl-Semltlc aadlsts 0f the Goebbels-Sf. ' her school have launched n campaign deslgngd to rob the Jew of every economic rllht but that. of taking 1n another Jewb- washlng or that of sneaklng acrolc the neural. frontier empty. handetL-NJ‘. Herald-Tribune. It bu been reported that the Japanese Government has the In- tention of sending It; Ambassador In Mme to nezotllte a new carn- merctsl treaty to replace the one the fiypttan Government has rep- udlnhd. Illunwnllc the Japanese has been In s tion before sing their three million dollar consistency! ‘ There's tempest moon, And lightning in yon cloud; But hark the music, mariners! The wlnd 1s plplng loud; The wlnd Is pipltr; lcuu, my bays, The lightning flashes free- Whlle the hollow oak our palace la. Our herftage the sea. --A1lm CunnIngh-Im. In yon horn-ed rcstrlcted exports o: low-priced mg. ton gocdw-‘Ihe Sphinx, Cairo. In mlny ports of the world to- day there 1s the hum of armed men. War drums are boating In Africa, war birds swoop over Eur- ope; on the sea the seazchllghts of battleships play. Conscious of Its perll, aware of the price It. must pay, humanity move; onward to what. statesmen consider Is Its drom. tury Spain. Taklng advantage of The worid ls madder than 1t we; in I914, for then It knew not what miseries were to oome-I-Iunllton Spectator. Where Abraham Was Born (Exchange) Archaeologists have thclr way o! meklng time tum backward; con- stantly and consistently they brine bits of the put. wlthfn the vlewlof the present. Again the llftlnz o a veIl Is unmanned-this In the nelgbborhood of Ur . of the Obsldeel. the auclent clty whom molt pmmlnent native was Abra- ham and whose con-the cross- word punle. . Them Inscribed tierra. eottn. conel. found In n. temple wall at Ur, are on exhlbft In the Hall of 03d World Archaeology In the United states Museum st. Washington. The cones, a gift to the Bmlthaonlan from the Bruce Hughes Fund. were obtained from Dr. Edgar J- Banks of Eustls. Hurdle, who has long been Interest- ed In ‘ ‘ ‘ 1' ‘-. Near- ly Identical In their cuneiform 1n- scrlptlona these woes, accqrdfng to the smlthsonlan Institution were set In a. wall to perpetuate the reign (about. 2076 B. C.) of Llblt- Ishtar, fffth king of the Isln dynasty and the temple builder. The record Ia, In part: The dlvfne Lfblt-Ishtar. the humble shepherd of Nlppur, the faithful husbandman of Ur. who does not change the face of Erldu, a lord who befits Erech. the king of Iain, the klng of sumer and Ak- kad, who captlvated the heart of Inlnnl, am I. When justice 1n Sum- mer and Akkad he had built. he ‘ ‘lfshed justice In the land. ‘The kingdom of Akkad, as the Smithsonian notes. included North md South Babylonfa. Somebody, It 1s to be hoped, wlli tell some time about I-nlnnf, and how a. heart was captured. The names of several places mentioned In f‘ esls and concerning which there has been some doubt are given In the record on the cones. As to Abraham he was born at Ur a century or so later than the relgn of the just LlbIlt-Ishtar, the temple builder- between 2000 to l900 B. (7., it ls be- lieved. This presumably was during the reign of Rim-Sin or of Mam- murabl. How frequently 1n history a monarch-and 1n this case there appears to be some question about wtual identification ——shlnes only In the reflected glory of one of hIs subjectsl ‘ Facts Versus Fiction (By Analyst) Public men, leaders of parttes, should know the truth and speak only the tyruth. Making statements, alleging them as facts, before young men unacqualnted with history of two or three decade: ago. to mls- lead them. ls the CONTEMPTIBLE OF‘ POLITICS. -. a. r-weflwifiteam-lwi-ottbthl‘ The Great-West. Llfe ls L-LM homes. Lower Queen Street and the guardian of thousands of ‘Canadian Consult; your nearest Agent. or write llYllIlllAll a 00., Llllltlgll Established '1s12 i" sEIiafreMaER 23.1935- llfo Insurance ls Mali’: Effort to devise» an Investment plan which will accom. pltch his purpose for self and hlnlly. the chanrplon of Thrift. Charlottetown BRAHMIN TEA » filo auxin l ULSE is rightly descrlbed by as... Mr. King as a. difference against; the Hon. Mr. Bennett, carfylng no mat- ' crlal Conservative fupmfi. b“ Wi- tlng deep" lntolnberalrarzksra clr- cumstance which Hon. Mr. King forcees. h'n-=. his bitterness against. the stevens party. AND I'll-YB I5 ‘THE OINLY THIRD PARTY‘ THAT] DID NOT CR-IGINATE UNDER. A LIBERAL‘ GOVERNMENT. AND FROM THE WOMB OF LIBER- ALISM. The Floating Vote (By Anti!!!) The empty boast about majorities Is still flaunt/ed by the Liberal organ to fan Into llfe the dying hopes o? their federal candidates. It enumerates the combined Queen's County majorities 1n the local con- test at M50. It falls to classlfy the votes out. of which those majorities were made. It may be noted that Conserva- tives polled only the unswervlng party vote, 42 per cent of the whole. which could not. be bcuflhg. or ca- juled Into voting against their party. Every one of thee will vat/e again, Conservative, 1n the federal field. In addition to the fixed UbmI-l vote, the entire floating vote, the unempltled, the discontented. and Hon. Mackenzie mug has re- peatedly stated, In _Cbarlott.etown and. erewhere, that those thlrd parties and "Isms" were always an outcome of Conservative rule, never originated under Liberal govern- ments, always dlSBppEnTlng when Llbemls came Into power. To deIInat/r this as untruth is a. mlld rebuke. but 1t. 1s nevertheless AN UNTR _ CLAIM. He first mentioned the Patrons of In- dustry. The i-Ion. Duncan Marshall. now prominent Mlnlster of the I-Iepburn government. was one of Its primary organizers. It was c dls- contented offshoot from the Lib- eral party. The first. Patron of In- dustry was elected In 1898, UNDER ‘PHI! LAURIER GOVERNMENT. None under any conservatlve min- istry. , In 1929 the U.F‘.0. party orlgln- ated In Ontario, e‘ectlng 1'1 mem- bers, In 19M they elected 3 and Progressives also originated then, electing 13 members. and 8 In 1929. AIJL DURING THE IMINZISTRY OF HON. hm. KING AT UITAWA. ‘Ff-IE FIRST INDBPENDEINTB IN THE FEDERAL PARLIAMENT WERE ELECTED IN 1890, WHEN LAURIEB ASSUMED OFFICE. a total of ‘l. In I921, when Mackenzie assumed power. ‘IT-HIRE WERE 64 PBAOGREBSIVES= EL- ECTED. IJN 1925 THERE WERE 116 CONSERVATIVE AND ONLY‘ 101 LIIBERAIB TO SUPPORT ‘rim MACKENZIE KING GOV- ERNMENT‘. BUT HE HELD POW- ER. AS A MINORITY GUVERN- the susceptible to lnflueflc’: VOW was polled for the LEB- PBXW- Add‘ ed to these there was the multiple vote, those having votes 1n several dlstrtcts, whloh wIll havebnly one vote In the federal. There were al- so a. large number of reptraters. voting early and oftenrwhlch can- not be repeated 1n the Dornlnlon contest. Deduct. these and the whole Liberal majorities are buried. The total vote In Charlottetown and Royalty was Stewart 3,129 and Prowse 3,872 the aggregate exactly 7,000 votes. Deduct from this the duplicated votes End refill-e". ill’ 500, and 1t leaves a total vote of actually 6.500 qualified on electoral lists to vote In the federal election. The number of" rfizlstered Wm In the clty proper Is 9963 and In the Royalties ma. or a total o! 9.- 016 persons quallfled alone to vote for federal eandldater. This shows. In Charlottetown alone. 2.575 per- sons who stayed at home, refusing to vote In the provlnclal contest. A vote larger than the combined majorities boasted of by the Llb- eral organ In the entlre County. .A vote whlzh 1n the light of events will now assert. ltcelf agalnst the promise nukers and breakers. The Liberal booster also foresee that whlle that. floating vote mal- orfty which they scored fn July may not all vote far Bennett 1t Ia a sure bet that every m"! lbck 01 them will vote against. Klng. That Is the inner secret of the Liberal Lender's antagonism to Stevens MENT BY GRACE OF 24 PRO- GRE$IVE ELWTED THAT YEAR. In 1W6 there changed their party name to Progressive-Liberals, of which 9 were elected, reduced to 3 In 1930. An etfeetlve artawer to Mr. King's statemznt, that these outside part.- Iu always disappeared under Lib- eral rule, Is elven In recorded 111a- tory. when he dissolved parliament In I930 there were: 11 United Far- mers, 12 Progressives. a Isfbernl- Progressives, 3 Labor and 2 Inde- pendents. a totalpr as third party members In the House. Why dld Hon. Mackenzie King attempt. to decelve the youth whom he was - ’ In; "wfth what be knew to ~ MAGS Hair Restorer be a flslnnt untruth? m umn Leaders historical mun of plfflh wAs UNTRUI m nvmw ArvuoAam nurAm an ulcrtfon. broadcaster! over the whole country was that "IIVIRY 1mm ‘IDDHNOWHILI A- WEED‘ POWIIRNUPONEUNDIBANT LMINIBIFRY. AND All: LIB!!!- Itl. RULIL" The direct oppuslts of thfl wu the one In every frutsnce (but one) IIVQY m?! OI‘ THIS]: PART- Q OIIIGIDIATI) Willi - EAL IIINIITIIQ. OIII DBPUJI) UNDII. IAINIQTBY. More than this. the! were the product of DIBCON- TIWIE - DIG WISTQN ‘IDIAL! AND AGRICULTURAL BURKE. NIGAMZE “Ill fififl nwvtnuuu. '%"$Nm w“ "' . It Isl: m: ANY OIL‘- $sflh . "use 0.0!’. In not s NI ‘ fifths-pav- Pronu- clzvuumlfnltsdhtnpnlrl. i. lfillllll Mil. c and the Isms. For the bulk of these discontented with both primes. WM swltched to Liberals 1n local con- tests. are now swervfng back to the Conservatives. and those who do not are casting thelr lot with the zeveral thlrdpartles, whose only sup-port 1s practically the floctlng voters which are lost to tb. expec- tant, Mackenzie King. And those majorities on the fri- >t‘e floating discontent vote have l. rapid change record. The maj- rlty of over 1.000 1n 1912 agslnst the Liberal Clty candidate. revel-s. ed Into a. large Liberal majority In 1919, then only four years later Into s large Conservative plurality, and again snowing the Liberal candidate under an avalanche of 949 majority In 1931. THE RT. HON. MACKENZIE KING INSISTS THAT "HISTORY REPEATB FISHER" B0 FAR. AB um LAST rum vorrr: Is 0cm- CERNED. HE A DEPENDABLE PROPHET. 09E BOAEITUL MAJOIRTPIEB WHL BCATPIB '10 THE WINDS. ‘ Mustache‘ Comes Back (Eacchnnge) By edict of the newly elected Hpngarlan‘ Reform Parliament. from now on all mounted policeman In Budapest must wear mute-ones. these belng held to be conductive to military bearing and In the tradi- lton of dulung Magyar horsemen. Moreover, every one assoclated of- ficially with the Parllament, down to the junlor clerks has been or- dered tio cultivate almllar hirsute adornments. the bigger and bushlet the better. The effect Is to be aalded by the careful application of p9- rzadc In the ends. ' The parllnment. could clte In support of its edict a. paper read by Dr. Frederick A. Collar. professor '0! surgery at the University of MIchIgan, before the American Collge of Surgeons at u. session In Boston. Potential danger to health through lnfecton of the upper 11p area. Dr. Coller asserted, may jus- tify the "eyebrow" mustache as I protection agalnst small ruo! scratches and whatever rlsk may lurk In klsslng. At Providence. Rhoda Island. Francesco Mastrostefano was Inor- dlnatiely proud of his handle-be: mustache, and so outraged was he when Phlllp Beltane. a barber. chopped It. off ln error that he sued for‘ damages. A,Buper1or Court Judge ruled that Rleitano mun pay 899. Mastrostefano» was not sette- ftediwlth the amount; ho contend- ed that ths tlme _oocnpled In growlng the mustache. forty- years, entitled hlm to $2000. What. were reputed to be thl largest. mustaches In the world decorated the visage of’ General Gaunt Nagaoka of Japan; they. ex- tender! twenty Inches on either slde. When the General died llcl year at '15 his son. tn obedlence t1 paternal Instructions. clipped otl the mustaches and held a. prlvl-tn funeral over them. They wen placed on a pillow In a. costly cu- ket and buried tn a separate mound near the one In which 0hr Gerrard's ashes were hurled. Trusty as anfioflld, friend-dt never fails to Fleece , with, its toting ' flavour. i