"iiizi-isiaiiiii iiismniil rs A ' _ i661! FOUR. ciuiiicusiowil culinniiiil .,h ‘- many-mus. L7" plaliltudinlzing, with smug ‘ are very much better than we antic- ‘L. (la advance) mnllm ‘ Y nal ' year - _ In: Dally (founded I881) IBM u-e year ‘(in sic-sheep III Ulnndn and slum-a status. dell vered. . ‘i Iraalifeab-W. Cheater 5. Iii-Lure. 7 Secretary-Liens. Poi. D. A, “Llflkhlllllll, n. Illlfav and lanagnr-J. B. Burnett. FRIDAY, APRIL s‘, 1929 _ ‘rm: BUDGET sraacn ' Premier Saunders’ budget speech may not go down in history, but it should prove of undoubted value to his future blographezzbs it was per- haps the most typical address he has ever delivered in the Legislature. It fairly brlstled with inconsistencies, with inane refutations of opponents ‘whose arguments he either misun- or deliberately misrepre- Iented. It wasyreplebe with moral self- ’ complacency, with oratorical flour- ishes towards the gallery and the country at large. It‘ was a gos- aipy speech, aboundlng in persOnal‘ references, Ill allusions to his health I F: Bd broken down after the el- ectioh campaign as a result of stren- iibiii! exertions “for the welfare of , ‘falls Province;"tohis integrity of pun, ‘ ping/his conscientious devotion to, duty, his surpassing ability and tii-.1t j of his Government which had given “a. greater service than we have ever had in the history of the Provincc." And these statements were made not challengingly or hesitatinglv: they. were set forth with the calm zls- surance of a pedagogue demonstra- ting a proposition in Euclid. He, Premier Saunders; had said so; ergo, I they were true, and it was incon- ceivable ihat any sensible person» could doubt them for a minute. It seemed to be his cliicf grievance that the Opposition. still remained sceptical. They l-iad impugned even his‘ "religious convictions"; they had "heartlessly" criticised him for tak- ing “a well-earned vacation" after that strenuous campalgn—the first _ he had had "in thirty-five yearsi" they were continually asking un- expected and embarrassing ques- ,ions,—a.bcut ‘hilriilment oi pledges: -. about the tabling of iniormatloni and correspondence in connection‘, with’ matters which the governmenti had no intention of divulging at the present time. They were carping, too, 1 about thc mere absence of n11 cxter- nal audit. He, Premier Saunders] could never understand why we ev-_ er had an. external audit. since “it, only tends to confuse matters." Thci Guardian was another thorn in the; flesh. It was always misrepresenting! him-saying that the gross debt for: the past year was over $193,000, when everyone knows that that was nnlyi the liability, and that "there is ani entire difference between the liabil- ity and the debt." Wily didn't the‘ Guardian point out that “we have: liquid assets of $111,000. and if youi, take that from $192,000, at most we. have increased the liability of the, “mllirovlnce only to the extent of silk-i} ‘O00? Why, in short, shouldn't The "Guardian take his word for it that, the real deficit was only some $1,500 i and not go broadcasting the factl‘ that we have gone behind to the: tune of nearly one-filth of a mil- lion? Considering that he had budgeted was... deficit of $15,000, a little de- ficit like $1,500 was surely worth flowing about. "I am pleased to re- ‘port that conditions-in this Province lpated a year ago." "Looking at it 1mm every angle, the financial posi- “tton of our Province today is s. very ‘prosperous one." For that reason jtperhapsl) "we are going iobudgct ‘so: another deficit, this time of s20,- ,500." The deficit, of coprse may 4min to be less. and in that case. "*1 shall be‘ ‘as agreeably surprised as 1 have been this year." “Bis year, too, Premiei- Saunders "really hopefuif that the _ of provincial subsidies was be settled. a ‘oommiioo at experts hesi- the case, “in the summer or fall, previously stated, but some time autlmn or-fail."_'l‘his com- " wclliiuh-n feporvibaok to the Government. I-iqw long the m" wouldtcke to imple- "tlcl oommlweele he ‘ttbegbeetof aaldeeJAsto N shall Mfeu lucrehsc Vlce-Pvealdent-J. B. Burrs-It. S. 0. Associate Edison-l). K. Con‘ o forecast." So there you are. Across his heart, Mr. Saunders confessed to some disquietude about the finances. “It is true that we have been gradually increasing our liabil- ity without making any attempt to fund our debt and pay it off. I be- lieve the time will arrive when we will do that. There are only two ways of doing it; by getting- an in- creased subsidy or by increasing the taxes. I think it is a poor business year after year to be increasing u" liability." A poor business, but ap- parently not safe to touch at pres- ent. The climax came, not with the Premier's speccli, but after he had 1 sat down, ivhen the Speaker absent- ly put tllc motion to g0 into Supply and the nintion was carried._ Well might the Leader of the Opposition remark, \\'il(‘!1 he_ rose to his feet, that i~c ivns in a dilemma; for he must (‘liilciflbréflli a fundamental ruin 01' the debate or leave the bud-~ gut There speech unanswered. i u a: no motion before the House and nothing to speak to.‘ It then seemed to dawn upon the Liberal members that there was something wrong. Anxious glances were cast in the Speaker's direction; but the Speak- er was looking at the Premier, and the Premier's attention seemed to bé"'conccntl"ated on something in front of him. There was a. silence as Mr. Stewart proceeded that was rem- iniscent of the schoolroom hush when the master is advancing with the fcrule. ., WHERE chann- IS DUE A Libcral journal, the Glace Bay Gazette says : . If Mackenzie King had done rio- tliinil hiss for this Dominion, his translation of this group‘ of railways lTlle Canadian National), aggrega- ting an annual deficit of $50,000,000 in 1921, into a. smooth-running sys- icm shoirlng a profit of more than $60,000,000 1928, would have stamped him and his advisers as great silatesmen. The Glace Bay paper is in error in making this statement, says the Moncton Times. The translation of the Canadian Northern Grand Trunk -and other roads into the Canadian Naiilonal was undertaken by the the Conservatives during the war, as the roads were unable to meet their obligations and were in danger of passing into the hands of receivers, which at ‘what time would have been n national calamity. The work of cc-orriinntiing the various roads as in one great unit v/as completed and the operating deficits were about wiped out before the King Govern- incns- reaclied power. Great credit is dlie Sir Henry Thornton and his colleagues for the continuance of the good showing made by their prede- ccrscrs, and as the Canadian Ne.- ticnal is supposed to be free from Gdvemment control, it is difficult to see where the success of iihe sys- tem can stamp Mr. Mackenzie King 0s a great statesman. EDITORIAL NOTES If the roads last year were not as good as they ought to havebeen, it certainly was not for lack of equip- ment and personnel. Premier Saunders’ d-eiiiclt is like Pat's pig. When asked how much the pig weighed, Pat replied: "Not as muchas I expected, arid-I always thought it wouldn't." The Premier is again budgettlng for a generous deficit, but thinks it will not be as large as he expects. The country roads are now in a condition that requires amphibious transportation. being fit for neither wheels nor runners. Bo ‘far is we know there is only one vehicle in the province that is equipped with both runners and wheels. The change from-tho one be the other is edectcd in a moment by wens of‘a lever. This amphibian was invented b! Ilr. camera say. 1N0 ~1#'"!_?‘I"'"lt' ‘i Henry mctcnsie. of lecithin Notes By_77le ‘Way euce is a. sham and a fraud was clearly demonstrated by Hon‘; Stevens, M. P. for Vancouver in" a recent speech. The K1118 Govern- ‘ merit has so framed its tariff that our trade relations with Britain and the United States have been going from bad ‘to_ worse. Taking up the record from 1923 to i928, covering the period of the King Government's complete controlof tariff legislation. Canada's imports from the United States were nearly four times as great as from Great Britain-Al,- 29B,000,000 against $l,106,000,000—- while of the imports from the States but 58 per cent werq dutlable and 42 per cent free from tax, and of the imports from the Mother Country 82 per cent were dutiable and only l8 per cent free. Th9 Guardian has all‘ along con- tended that in its tarifilpollcy, as in other matter the King Govern- meh‘ has been from "thebeglnning not only pro-American, but anti- British as well. The indisputable trade figures speak for themselves. As for other indications, where do Premier King and his Cabinet col- leagues spend their sessional vaca- tion and their mid-summer holi- days? Under the Stars and ‘Stripes. All these ministrlal trips across the border have cost Canada a mint of money. _ Looking in Washington, kowtow- ing to Washington. fawning and bending the knee to Washington has become a habit with some Can- adian Cabinet Ministers oi the Lib- eral stripe. And imitation of Wash- ington is ‘the ambition of the Liberal regime. 'At e. cost of millions Ottawa it being reconstructed as a Wash- ington in miniature. "The Washing- ton of the North" as it has been proudly named. Little wonder that many are led to think that ‘such Washington-loving and admiring statesmen hold in their mental vision and are preparing the way for a time when the British Flag» shall no longer oat over the Par- liament Building. --~- . The crazy vision runs toward gradual change first an all-Can- adian flag with little or nothing British or Imperial about it, Just to extend tho separationist policy by so much. and further weaken the tie which holds the Empire together. This mystery oi iniquity is already working. Against which all loyal and patriotic Canadians should pray the Supreme Goodness in -“confound their politics and frustrate their knavish tricks‘. - ' Rudyard-Kipling ls visiting Jeru- salem, having arrived there from Egypt to spend Easter in the Holy Land. Mr. Kipling is a member of the Imperial War Graves Commis- sion and the purpose of his visit is the inspection of the‘ war "em-tries That m. boasted Brlllsh areroi- ' 1 The, QHARLOTTETOWN nU Cmi e £0112 of. _ inure B; lanes WJiulen. ID. TWO KINDS 0F ASTHMA That an innocent beloved cat crea- ted unhappiness and financial loss in a household was amply demonstrated a couple of years ago by one of the health magazines. As soon as the father-of the house moved to anothei- city or climate he was free of asthma, but when the family, including the cat, followed him, his attacks returned. i Investigation finally showed that the asthmatic attacks were due to “sensitiveness" to “ailimal" protein. When the cat was removed from the home there were no more attacks. As you know lt is now amply prov- en that many cases of astluna are due to protein substances either-in the air or in the food we eat. _ Dr. H. K. Detweiler outlines the at- tack about as followsz-When the patientlhas been exposed to protein substance ‘to which he is sensitive there is usually a feeling of tightness in the chest, which rapidly grows more. and more intense until the breathing becomes little more than a succession oi quick gasps, followed by prolonged and wheezy explrations (when the air is going out of the lungs.) The main difficulty is in getting the air "out" of the lungs. Fortunately, just as it would seem.that the pat- ient must suffocate, he coughs up a thick jelly-like material and gets re- lief. The attack may last from a. hali hour to three hours. Between attacks the chest is quite clear and the patient suffers no in- convenience. In the other type of asthma, the kind that follows bronchitis, the pat- ient has difficulty in getting air into his lungs, instead of getting it out. as in the proteid asthma. And even between attacks the chest will show signs of bronchitis. Further, in the proteid asthma the skin tests for the proteids is always positive, while in the bronchitis type of asthma. all skin tests are negative. Another point is that the sputum that is coughed up is clear and jelly. like in the proteid asthxna,-wlicreas it is gray or yellowish in the bron- bhitis form. Now these little differences may help you to get an idea as to which type your asthma belongs. Adrenalinds the best treatment during an attack.‘ Your doctor will give you the correct dose. Injecting it is more quickly effective than by the mouth. in Palestine. We are told that he ex- pressed great satisfaction at the beautifully arranged British milit- ary oemetery near Jerusalem. All of his many admirers will in the hope that apart from his official duties he “may feel inspired by the historic and sacred sights and scenes about him to give the world in his inim- ltable way _a poetic pen picture of his impressions. Mimi fmnlne is being adopted in the Prairlg Provinces irom year to yearas compared with grain grow- ing alone in former years. The grain grower mills his grain and feeds the waste products in farm animals and poultry thus producing beef, mutton. pork, butter and eggs. The dairy records of Saskatchewan have be- come am ‘ , and Manitoba and Albei-ta ui-s following the same line. And along with mixed husbandry on the farms manufacturing industries are multiplying and prospering with the aid of cheap hydro-electric pow- ers. - f ii A provincial budget and ‘her provincial deficit --have been ari- nounced together. with the promise of e. plebesclte onthe liquor question to be taken in the month of July next. Our Province was made very faihilier with deficits ‘during the closing decade of the ninteenth cen- present one, when under Liberal rule revenue to with lsrgeiglrfioue tnm ever be- f another Liberal Government re- la to a bed old habit. ‘ v Piebiseites onyaridus aspects of the liquor question have also been quits numerous ‘within the pest thir- ty o1- forty but never, boioio under circumstances such as new eiist. fills Previnbe ‘ m. now had Miler experience ofprohlbltlou than it ever before hell. lad other prov- incee have also lied experiences that throw light on the temperance ques- A new generation of voters men 1M hut arisen since the 1hr U0 their peceint vices on ouch Mu! lj-imevilfllilifll‘ 1°11 - _ . s l ' end it us... desirable to lam Ill join ‘ tury and tho opening decade of the- tiiere were annual defloienciesof‘ expenditures. Now- THE LAND WE LOVE BY FRANK YEIGH THE SANDBANKS Q. Where are the Sandbanks? A. The Sandbanks is a noted nat- ural feature of the County of Prince Edward, Ontario. They extend for miles along the shore of Lake On- tario sometimea rising to a. height of several hundred feet. The sand is constantly being driven inland, cover- ing forest, farms and roads. No way has been devised for preventing this state of affairs. The beaches formed by the sand deppsits am of tl\ finest character, and make an attractive summer feature of this section of Ontario. I ~ FAREWELL T0 ALL MY GREATNESB Farewell! a long farewell, to ali'iny ‘ greatness! _ This is the state of man; today he puts forth The tender leaves of hopes; in- morrow blossoms, W" ‘" Amibesi-s his blushing honors thick upon him; 1 The third day comes a frost, a. killing frost; _,_s ' And, whelrhe thinks, good easy man, full surely - 1 Bis greatness is a-rlpenlng, nips his root. And then he falls,4ss I do. I have ventured, Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders, This many summers ln a see of glory, But fer beyond my depth; my high- blown pride _ At length broke under me, and now has left nie. ' ‘ mercy _ '0! a rude stream; that must for ever hide me. ‘new m; l . * I f feel my been age, opened. Olil how l“ It_ Weary and old wlthzscrvlcq ioftiie , _ g jfore pin)! and fears thln-_ or Vein pomp and glory of this world, f k TTleJAdvantaIgPes and J Disadvantages of Confederation The following address was deliv- ered recently at‘ the Csledoulan Club by Senator J. J. Hughes: The title of this paper assumes that, like most other questions, there are two "sides to this question, and we shall begin by considering the disadvantages, whatever they may be, first. A . From the time that this Island had beencstabllshed as a. separate Colony with a Legislature of its own until Confederation, exactly one hundred years, its growth and PIO- gress had been steady ""1 ffllfly. satisfactory. Walled opened T0365. erected public buildings, construct- ed wharves, breakwaters and light- houses, and had established and equipped a creditable eXpeflmeni-Bl farm. All ilhese things we haddone with the revenue obtained from com- paratively low customs duties, with- out direct taxation. and without in- curring any public debt worih speak- ing of. Moreover, we had establish- ed many small manufacturing in- dustries that supplied nearly all our local wants, so that we imported little except iron and steel, shelf hardware, cotton‘ goods and 811m?!“ ies. and our growth in population was maintained at a. steadily in" creasing rate. In a word, we had be- come a fairly prosperous self-con- tained community, ‘having few? wanis we could not ourselves suP- ply, and no doubt we could have continued to lead this simple life for a few years longer, but could we have continued to do so indefin- itely? I doubt it. We could not have continued, cut off from, and indif- ferent in, the life ofprogress, and the development of the. great world around us. "There's a divinity our ends, Rough-how them as we may." Our greatest draw back was our extremely antiquated means of com- municaiilon with the mainland _in winter, and our greatest and _must irriatating trouble was the landlord system which had been foisted upon us bLme, Home Government. Confederation removed one of these grievances, and has greaiily improved the situation in regard to the other.‘ True, the improvement came slowly, butthere were many difficulties in the way, and the Fed- eral Government have recognized their liability for the losses we sus- tained becaus‘ of this slow improve- ment, and have given us monetary compensation therefor.“ Whether t-hlsgionetary compensationwwas ad- equate, it is'not my purpose a: the present time to state, but I do be- licve, after having had some years of opportunity to study the matter, that the Federal Government and the people of Canada are prepared that shapes ‘ to give justice to every province of the Dominion; and to every citizen of the Dominion, and I would not ‘Eel so proud of my counilryif I did not flmly believe this to be the fact. Most if not all of the men of this Province," when _ Confederation was being considered, thought the higher customs duties of Canada would be our greatest disadvantage, and the different delegations to Ot- tawa who have since asked for bet- ter terms have held similar opinions and some seventeen years ago a. cal- culation was made upon this basis which showed that at the time of Confederation and for some years afterwards, we had contributed to the Federal Treasury one hundred and fifty tihousand dollars a year more than we hali received. Presum- ing this calculation to be correct I doubt whether a similar calculation made now would show like results, because of ilhe large Federal experi- ditures made in the Province in re- cent years, and anyhowI am satis- fied that any just claims we may have, if properly‘ presented, will re- ceive careful consideration at the Capital.’ " ' On the whole, I am‘ convinced that Confederation has been to our advantage, and in any event it was inevitable. A thousand forces would have operated to bring us into the Union for the one that would have operated to keep us out of it, and I believe ..this fact will become more and more apparent as the years go on. I fear that we Islanders and. ev- en we Canadians do nofyet fully re- alise the vest heritage which lspurs. and the/advantages and opportunit- ies we possess. Let me try to enum- erate some of these advantages and opportunities and to visueliu the prosperity and prestige which must _ princes’ favors. aspire That sweet their ruin. women have; And when no falls he fella ‘M’. l lo nope bgain. 4,, Never 0 if iii that poor- men that hangs on There lsdaetwixt that smile we would nil-a ‘of princes and .;. i . lIQJSuci- . ~07. lbehespesre. in. i. cometousassnlntegralpartof this great Dominion, and which we never could have possessed as a smaliisoluied Colony. "Weown sic occupy half the land area of the North American contin- ent. Our fisheries are the most et- tenslve, and potentially the mosh vul- uable ln the world. Our agricultural resources are greater ‘and potentially moremoductlve t-imll“ those of any other nation m the world, outside of Russia. Our forest wealth is at least equal to thairof Russiawand some consider it to be even greater, and wiUh proper care" and conservation it will be a perpetual source of in- come. No man has yet estimated or can estimate our mineral wealth. Suffice it to say that nearly all the Valuable minerals hitherto discovered have been found in the pro-Cambrian for- mation, and ninety per cent of that formation on the North American Continent and nearly twenty per cent of that formation in all the world, are within the boundaries of Cana- da. But perhaps our greatest source of wealilh is our water powers, which are,'of course, perpetual. These can be, and have Ween, estimated, and their immensity staggers the imagin- ation. In the older and well settled parts- oi Canada it is estimated that we have at least twenty millions of eas- ily available horse-power, of which only a fourth has yet been names- sedrand on the rivers flowing into Hudson Bay and the North Atlantic. snoidier twenty million horse-power can be developed. What does this mean? The JOURNAL OF ELEC- TRICITY states that twenty million horse-power‘ fully developed and ulation of thirty million souls with an average annual pay -roll of ten billions of dollars. At iihe recent time over one billion dollars is lnvesmf’ in Canada in power and the invest- ‘merit is growing at the rate oi one hundred million a year. Qf the billion lnvestedz: 67.00%-is Canadian. 15.00%—ls American. 6.30% is British, and wrote-is from all oiiher countries. If this enormous source of wealth can be kept for the whole people of Canada, to whom it rightfully be- longs, our industrial future is assur- 3d. This ls by far the biggest ques- tion of the day. In ilhe United Stat- es electricity for domestic purposes costs about four times more than thenHydro-Electrio Power Commis- sion charges in Ontario. The ELEC-' TRICAL WORLD staiies that ii’ On- tario rates had prevailed, the Unit- ed States’ bill forelectrical energy in 1926 would_have been six hund- red million dollars less than it was. All the changes that would or could be made in the Tariff would have but an infinitesimal effect up- on our industrial life compared with the adavntages the ownership, and DYODer utilization of our electrical Piiwer would Blve us. David Lloyd George has stated -that "Power is the key to the fut- urc," and President Hoover has writ- ten "Power is the mightiest: magic of modern times. Just) as coal and steel reared Ehlglands supremacy in the nineteenth century, so will that nation which can utilize the maximum of electrical power dom- inate the industrial future." So far as our vast natural re- sources and our growth are§ con- cerned we would, I suppose. be jus- tified in looking at them as others see them. In an article in the Saturday Ev- ening Post Courtney Riley Cooper tells of the "Cracking Open o: the North’ 'of Canada, a, great rich Wllfltfy once regarded as a. frozen waste. In the last three‘years, with railways. mines, paper mills, water- powers and towns astonishing things have been done, and things greater- still armnncei- way. Mr. Cooper says: "No longer is the country referred to as the Frozen North; it’; tho cola. en North, and the better etiquette ia in forget the-former term entirely. FronrLabi-ador across tlie Ungsva country into Northern Quebec, across the new north of Ontario and through the Patricia district: into Manitoba mic noi-ihwsi-ii into the ass-m Land; and beyond. across Buwkatchgwgn ‘n4 Alberta andlritish Columbia and into Yukon. the northward pilsh is going forward like the eklrmlshing line of a tremendous army. The weat- wara flow of empiro in thg hum»; of the United States is puny, ohm. pared with it. In fact, there is no comwlwn‘: cumsuofloi the Alaskan rush w re easier to describe because they were concentrated. But ti!!! Idle sic-mom prevalent." Two railways are pushing on to nuaon any-cm J1» rm chiuehlu will be ompietcd this year, the other from Cochrarle North, is some whet more‘ may, but it will cer- tainly reach James 1a _g_1_ie Inc. puma mourns the or. -' - - ~ . t. f‘ l‘ . J L m,» I - -.APRII; s. 19cc .._You WANT 11-11:, BEST JSEAL BRAND ORANGE PEKO Yuma/ls 9191420141’ and 621141127 ' E In sealed air-tight package! it"é%'“s‘."'sflfiau““."lfil't'ffiffl f“ when you try it. l WE 11c NOT SAY ‘V, ~, 3 Crown Ten Is the best Tea you can buy. ‘ We leave that to you to say " R. areJlt Ottawa pressing plans for new lines in the Northwest. On the Churchill river the Hudson Bay Min- ing and smelting Company has an electric development of 2,000 horse- power almost completed, to be used in a 40,000 horsepower development for operating mining and smelting plants. ' This is 450 miles north of Winnipeg. And all across the north from the Atlantic to the Pacific the wilderness ls being examined, hill and valley, as never before, with the frequent result that astonishing dis- coveries are made. _ " Another aspect of the matter is discussed by the Edmonton Journal: "More than half of all the home- steads taken up in Canada last year were in Central and Northern Alber- ta; more than one-third were in the "$911 W111 Support an industrial p01)- ~Grande Prairie and Peace River lend districts. New settlers coming into centrar and northern Alberta- last year increased the population by more ‘than 25,000, while the asas entries represent about 1,373,760 acres of ‘land. The significant feature of all these figures is the northward march oi the man intent on takinl up lami- ivluch, has been said in the last two or three years of the northward trek of the miner. the electrical engineer and the pulp and Faber man. But the farmer is heading that way, too. And allrindlcatiom are that 1929 will beat 1928." In the North and West there is un- doubtcdly, already getting under way and bound to rise to Breat FY0001‘- tions development that will vastly ex- tend the area. and range of Canadian enterprise. The next ten or twenty years will work wonders that even the most imaginative are today 1m- able to predict. _ The natural resources, including nearly all thewfllel‘ rower in iiflllede- belong to the Provinces, and whe- ther the Provincial Legislatures will recognize that they are but the trus- tees g9}: "s11 the people; or whether they will 1w. these vest resources to the muiti-mlllionaire corporations to exploit thcm for their own 981W!" ial benefit. it is yet too soon to say. We ‘may, however, be assured till‘ the efforts made by the WW" 55ml“ to obtain the ownership of these 1'6- sources will be commensurate with ma value of the prize. On the other hand, the people are 11110180111166 and cannot be expected to appreciate fully tips importance and the vastness o! the issuesaisstllke. The hour has struck, and no Cana- dian worthy of the name will hesi- tate to exercise whatever influence he may possess to see that the com- mon inheritance is held for the whole people, and is used to the Efellmi advantage of the nation. Let us hOPE that the words of Lord Carnarvon, the Colonial Secretary, when intro- ducing the British North America Act in the House of Lords were prophet"! and will be fulfilled t0 thelettfil‘. H9 said:- "ws sishsylhs the foundation vi s great State-perhaps one which at a future day may even overshadow this country. But, come what mlyi we shall rejoice that we have shown neither indifference to their wishes nor jealousy of their aspirations, bill’. that we honestly and sincerely, to the utmost of our power and know- ledge, fostered their growth, recol- nizing in it the ccndtlions of our own greatness. W; are intliis measure setting the crown to thefree insti- tutions which more than alllllflfl’ of a century ago we I!" will‘. In“ therein we remove. l! 1,1111!!! b9- lieve, ailpossibilities of future iflll“ quay or misunderstanding." glance at the immensity 0i WI‘ P!‘ naeisn estate, and the rommibilltlw il. irwglvel. let us remember that I! are but one Nation of the British commonwealth .0! Net-will. 1M l" us try to realise whet this involves. ‘mu-flies ne_v,er mvthlfll .100 in all human mbsbiiiw Add how after taking this hasty never will be like-It, i iii Housecleaning Troubles Made SMOKEY CITY Wall and Ceiling . Cleanser has established a standard of cleanliness which should pre- _vail In every home. ‘ SAFETY-Thorough cleaning without injury to m; gurfggm EFFICIENCY - "Thorough "lflmlnl- qlllckly and‘ easily _ done. LAST and most lmportant— Thorough cleaning by tho‘ 1-9- moval of the invisible and often d"E'B°T°ll§‘1II1P1ll'ities as well as live visible dirt. , . . ours: 25c The Z pa... DRUGSTORE 149 Great George Street Mail Orders Given Prompt ‘ .\ C. M. Lampson t? ($0.. _ LIMITED. - 64 Queen Su-rsi ["5419", l5- Q 4, ElIg-u-il Public Auction ‘i. i p: or Raw Furs Bllllllllug ball will be furnish- ed without charge by applying to ll. T. Holman, Ltd, gum. V merslde, P. B. I. Represented by Alfred Eraser, Inc. m Fifth Avenue New York, Nrg, i P11119060. and ilhough they did not always prove’ worthy of their calling. the Pllrlmsefwas‘ fulfilled. God still rilles the world by His Providence. Has Ha not called the British races _ and given them dominion over land and sea in all parts of the earth for some purpose? Can we douln it? Let us flrst_ look at the material Win85 He has given us. We occupy and possess territory in every lati- tude and longitude of the world, and more than a fourth of the earth's surface is ours, with every variety 0i 3°". climate‘ and production; and ill? seas and the oceans, instead of sep- lrltifls us and being barriers’ to our communications, have linked us io- gether. Did God not make this world and all it contains for the men and women Replaced upon it, and did He not wish them to be happy? Anci in order to achieve this purpose must there not be leaders among men and leaders amoi-ig nations’! When great wealth andmossesslons are given t0 an individual, should he use illvm for himself ‘alone, or should he 110° rather ‘boa steward in the hands C! God? ' I When great wealth and Power and possessions have been given in a 11B" tion or a ‘group 'of ‘nations 110W should thqegjlltl be used? Great Britain he's made many mistakes and has sinned often, but she has much to her credit. 0 Her conduct durih; Qqhtlmgd on" pm llillllifilw 4, KID N EY