Ufllyde ‘River, Township Numbei tttttr; ‘ HPAGE TWO -. i013 tPUREFLAKE. LE This famous household cleaner and disinfectant _ ts now made in Crystal Flakes instead of pow- der. It is the best house- hold lye on the market. Use it for cleaning and disinfecting sinks, closets, drains, etc.; destroying vermin; softening water; mak- ingsoapmleaningfloors, greasy pots _and pans, etc.; removing paint, etc. ' Avoid inferior and dan- gerous substitutes. Get the genuine article in cans as reproduced be- low. The fairer the hostess the heav- ~ teaid, farmer, of the one part, and v made in payment of principal anti Au sreigneti will be received up to ier the reckoning. Over-refinement is the herald oi the decay of a country. The nearest bour is tho nearest kinsmau when the calf lies In tht ditch. I Mortgage Sale To be sold by public auction ii ‘front of the Court House. in Char lcttetown, in Queen's County, OI ‘Tuesday, the 29th day of Aptt , Al) 1924, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, ai-I that tract of’ land. situau at Clyde River, on Township Nutn be!‘ Thirty-one, in Queen's County aforesaid. bounded and dcscribm as follows, that is to say: Comment in: at a stake fixed in the rcar lint 0f twenty-four and one-third acre: 0f land laid off and surveyr-d b) John Ball, esqtiire, for Mlchae Murphy, according to the report nlade by the late Commissioner fl-Ilpoinied in the matter of tlie ap mlication of James Murphy for par ltition of a fatmi of land on Lo ‘llhirty-onoy-aforcsaltl, and which re iport is mgisterctl in the. oflice 0 the Registrar of Ilcctis [or tho suit iisland. at the tiisiancc oi’ nint chains, thirty-three link-s from (n. 991st boundary of William Murphy’: land, and in the west boundary o ‘twelve acres of land reccntly con Weyed by the said James Murphy tt William Murphy. anti thence run 111118 south one degree, rorty-llvt minutes east sixtyvfive chains, forty ve links to the roar lino oi‘ farms routing on the West River, thonct westwardly along said rear line nim chains thirtyone links to a farm it ‘Possession of ‘Charles Fisher, ant‘ thencenorth one degree forty-fivt minutes west sixtydive ‘chains forty live links to the said rear line o‘ Michael Murphy's land. and thenct ulqig said last mentioned rear line eaatwardtly to the place of com mencement, containing sixty-om acres of land a little more 0r less The above saile is made pursuant to a power oi’ sale contained in at Indenture of Mortgage bearingdatt- the 2nd day of April. A. D. 1897, anti made between John ‘McLean. oi Thlfi-Y-‘fll-‘IB. ill Queen's County atforv iOhai-les Patterson. in Queen? County aforesaid, blacksmith, of tht other part. defwult having been ‘interest due under said mortgage lFor further particulars apply to Lean ti McKinnon, "Solicitors a1 Bank Building, Charlotte towt_ Data this zaut day of March, AJD. 42L MARY PATTERSON, Executrix Estate Charles Patterson. rot SALE 1 himdimm’ ‘imrtered oak bufllef. 1_ solid walnut bedroom suite’ marble tops. 1 kitchtq range’ “imam new. in first class ovum 1 mud quartered oak library ‘bu,’ 1 Em; iish beveled plate min-t,- l,‘ inch 40x24 with 6 inch oak moumed fiame and several small etude‘ ‘tTillle five artifice are s “mum t e ee es Apply 20 strut ilreei George girl-INN. - ‘ week. lie paid that amount during Speech in Budget Debate (Continued From Page One) 8B6 why any reasonable man should obi?“ i" “W99 bills. but the cum» gilaitii. Is the-re. and we know that the biusdveffl Wmldioted. We have and a great deal of trouble retard. Jug those old bills which. if t-hcy 1M1 been properly paid at the time tVOllIll) IIAVE MJORE ill-IAN WIP- I-Il) OPT TILE hiODEST SF-RP- UUGES CLAIMED BY Till-I 13101.1. iiUVl-lRN-hildNT. (Applause) I nllghtt. refer to other instances. since my hon. friend has brought up the matter. There was t-hc bill 11' 1i!’- D. Edgar Shaw. County Court Magistrate. extending over two or three years, He could not let that bill paid. Other Unpaid Mil; The Public Accounts show anoth- *r hill .of Mr. G, tS. Inmatrs, for ionrt work done in the absence of he Attorney General. I-le could not 1e! that paid and it was handed ov~ .~r tons. Tltcrc was another case of an old ztdy, infirm and feeble. who ap- lii8ii for permission to get into the tifirtnnty. A (certain charitable so iety agreed to pay one dollar a tut-k for -her tnaintenzltice, and Mr. loll acting for the‘ (lovcrniuettt agreed to pay another dollar a tart of his first year in office, but luring the next three years he tVOULD NOT PAY A CENT though he Society continued its payment ~ight along. That was ANOTHER 311.1. we had and after the witnes- ies to the ttgreetneut were produc- ~d I think this Governluent was ustifieti in paying it. We bail SPILL ANOTHER BILL neeented to us, from Iiruce Stew» trt d; Company, for $1,200. going 1' k ALMOST‘ FOUR YEARS for vhich they could not get a settle uent front thc Bull Government. .Vhen that bill was sworn to by the lecrctary Treasurer. don't you hink this Govcrltnretit had a ‘right 0 [my it? ‘Ilhustnztrta smite of the tills that the loader of the Oppos- tion says 1111s (lovcrnlticnt had no OFFICE. I can tell him, further, that last year. when "tenders were Plliitiii, cite gentleman submitted a t-tndcr THAT WAS NEVER HEARD 0F APPEEWARAE! and if neces- sary his name can be produced. 'l‘he contract foi- that printing went to a I-l-IGHtER ieutlcrel‘. Whatever happened his tender, I don't know. (Applause). (lbjcctiott was also taken to the tact that during the last four lttonths of last year this (lovers- iucnt paid out more for Boards oi‘ llvaltlt and Coroners‘ Iuqntzsis than tliuy had paid in tho first eight months oi‘ tho year. Did any sensible person ever hear the like o1‘ that? ls that something over which this Government had con- trol? Are we responsible for tho fact tha tmore cases of illness and contagious diseases were brought before the notice of the Board of health in the last four months of the year than in the first eight. months? Or that more coroncrs’ in- quests had to be held’! Yet this is what We are blamed for! What the External Auditor Found We have ‘been accused olf going outside the Province and brin-gittg in an External Auditor. thereby slighting our own auditors in i-his Provence. Such was not the intell- tion of the Government. The idea was to get a chartered accountant. an expert in his line. about whom it could not be said that he wits parii sun, and whose findings of the fin. ancral condition of the Province would be indisputable. I take it that‘ it was a very good thing that we (brought that man here. I ain not casting any reflection upon the audits made in the past. in this Iruvince, Ibut I believe this charter- cd accountant ‘from New Ilr-ultslvick .133 the FIRST to ca-ll attention to the fact that the system of putting dcpgslg slip; by as a sinking fund WAS BAD BUSINESS, and just pretty near not being LEGAL. l have tried to follow i111} leader of the Opposition in his’ remarks on this question anti all I can iiutl ill his argument is that the province was lu-:'r'r1-:lt OFF by the system be argued sticccssftiilp". if it is 9V0- ‘igill to pay. No! We should NOT ‘ave to pay them. HA1) TI~Il1IiI€ IICICN A BVSlINIGSS GOVERN- JENT‘ 1N POWER BEFORE VS! tipplausc) I do not think, had they teen attending to the business of he country. INSTEAD OF TRYING “O FIGVIIE OUT FI(.‘.’I"I'I‘IOIIS IURPLUSES to prcscnt, that we vould have been undcr tho neccs itv oi‘ doing anything like that at ill! Tho lender o!‘ the Opposition tnok 'rcat objection to tho putting hrougli of the Tax Acts this your. so far as I can soc, thp only ob outlon lir~ presented was to giving IKIIIIV‘ printing to some of the news- iapcrs; lio ohjocttitl that thorn was to tender called for this. 1m toll iltc lion. gontlr-ttian that be printing this your was gluon uli A'l‘ LAST YEAR'S FIGURES. “ho only tllffcrcnt-.r= xvan ‘IYIIAT l'I‘ III) NOT (‘.0 TO Til-E PATRIOT Farm For Sale tcrcs all fcticcti 60 clear. bulnucc warns. Apply MRS. JOHN P. McDONtALD, 3032-44-31. Farm For Sale AT DUNSTAFFNAGE ivation. Ind butter factory. Dunstailnagc 1335-4 7-6i. l Farm For Sale Ioffer for stile my farm 0190 tcrcs, in Newton, Lot 26, centrally ocnted between Emerald Jot, and Xlnkora, being convenient to hurt-hes, schools, shipping and beeso factories. For further particulars apply on iremises to owner. EDWARD McKENNA, i320 4 ii 3i FIRM l-"Oli SALE The undersigned offers for sale his farm consisting of 80 acres of good land, B0 acres clear and tinti- er good cultivation. Balance cov- ered with bard and soft wood. ls convenient to school. church and railroad station and only one half mile from McMillan’; roller mills. Good buildings, good shelter. ‘Tenders For Hotel 1 Property in Char- d lottetown some Tenders etidrosoed to the 1 ton Thursday. the 10th, dc of A. 1)., 1924, at twelve 0'0 och . the property on the corn- Oeergs and Dnroheeter . Chefletfetown, known u - i Vie! Hotel" end having 29 9 bathrooms and 9 toilet maybe for the Hotel pro- sjnrniturl therein. or ' '- may be lode for but» momma m I p.11. .0 my mm let ‘i M.» ' 1nd never failing well of good ‘water; plenty of seaweed at foot f! the farm. Fenced with wire throughout. Milly to MR8. J. D. McMlLLAN. 7319-44-31. Wood Island, P. E. I. One of the best. l0 acre farms on P. ll. Inland at Em id Jct, adjoin- ing one of the best I pping ltetions on the Island, few yards from stores, school. and ohene factory. i! ecrec for seed potatoes, 9 room house, frost proof cellar, large bet-n with cement stables. llillery, poni- lery. machine house ell in first clue repair; also new store l4 ft. macro with’ plus front. not cold b! April 11th. will be steel, 1:10p, flrwqnict Idldoithetdl! with lupionnmvluymnn 1 inilc from St, Doicrfls Bay ltIOItttt-ttts at that time; wood anti lumber. 8 room house, 2. Cardigan i olo I’. O. Rice] The tindcrstlgnotl offers for eale lcr farm at Duiistaffilagc. compris- ng ll-i acres lt\ good state of cul- Near school, sit-tire and Well watered. Has grove suitable for Fox Ranch. Apply MRS. ALEXANDER McLEOD, per business, why not lake THE REST OF THE SINKING FUND and THROW THEM INTO GEN. ERAL REVENUE- as they dld with (hag large pnrtion? \Vhy have a that W115 living followed. NQVUFIIIE“; logs, ‘1 tit; not sale how that ctillldi ma: cnttmtormrowu GUARDIAN. C DlllOE THEIR LIABILITIES‘! WAS that. the object? I’ can pitly leave i1 With Y0". Mr, Speaker, and with UIRIIIENT REVENUE TO iRlE- tbe House and with the country. But whatever the object, it. is cer- tsinly GDRANGE. that that jump happened JUST PiRtEVilOUS TO 'I‘.Htl£ ELECTION YlEAR. IN THE LAIST‘ PUtHUbC AlOOOU-NITS ‘DIIAT (JOliltD BE ISSUED BEFOiRtE THE l-lblwliltiN. I think the inference is very plain. What They Did With the Auto Ffies But the chartered accountant is very definite on the matter. He says -IT IS BAD BUSINESS; anti that. if known, it CANNOT BE DEFIEIVDEDLAntI he draiws atten- tion to something else. In 1921 there were Victory Bonds amount ing to $95,500. which was just the ‘proper thing for a sinking funrl. and which it has been explained tby the leader of the Opposition. were sold because they were going to give good profits to this Province. The chartered accountant says. that instead oi‘ that money being rc-ltivesied in sinking funds. it was placed to the credit of GENERAL AiOOOUtNT in the Bank of Mon- treal ;and in the same way, in 1922, the sinking fund of $10,470 was also placed to GENERAL AC- COUNT. Also, in the some way. $291178, collected under the Motor Vehicle Act, went into GENERAL REVN-UE. This, by the way, is the money that was “esr-marked" for good rotttls and for no other pur posts! This was the auto money that ivas going to pay for the im- proved highways “whlch were not going to cost the fa-ntiers of this Province one cent!” We find that nmicy was placed in GEN-ER- AI, REVENUE also. Tile chartered illzflllllililllt says. that in order to make their sinking funds stable and adequate, as they should be, it was end of 1923, or now, nearly $180,- 000: and that has been done. That is all wvc have 1o say about it; this fact was drawn to our attention by a man who knows his business. He said. “You are uoi doing ‘business properLv.“ Anti we have bought lllosu bottds and they are THERE in tho sinking fuutl, ANI) I HOPE “"10 I-IIAViIC. SEEN THE ENl) OF ‘I'll-IS \\'AY OF -FINtANOING BY “l. O. l“s" ON DEPOSIT REC- 1Cll"l‘S IN 111-1110 RANK. WIIERI-I 'l‘lilIi.lC SIIOIILD BE SOME COL- isiltkiitt: fluid at all? What 1s thu ncc. it-ssity for it ‘Z thc province is thcro and wlivn ililli(i.-4 become tluc tlic Province look after them. And so. with argutttt-nt, you would dcstroY ‘he ivery essence of the principifi Whiiih |t. behind the sinking funds. a |Hi.l‘Z\Il¥.1' part oi’ it is this, that it has boon argued that W1C arc rus- ptiitsi-lilc for the system. 5011190"? was rtespotisiblti for i1. surely. ltet my lion. friend go back to the orilil" those will in several sinking funds for wry lsmttll amounts oi‘ a fcw htmdrt-tl doi- tlttrs- ~atnuunts thatwt-i"oiioi.ltt1'gt~<~u itiugli tn huy bonds with. 'i‘llls Iwas done for rotivt-nicttc-u, Ill 1913 iliP do posit. rtwcttipts amounted 105521512; in lill-l, 1n $1,533; in 1915 to $12,390; in I910 they were cut (IOWll to $1.390; bcczttlse there wort» atljtist- some bonds [were uiaturing and ‘the fund accum- ulatctl was used tn pa!’ oil‘ part oi that wind to renew (others. and so the deposit is down t-o a pretty small amount, Ill I917 it was tilfagain to $14,591; in 1918 it was again reduced to $731.00. just. about where it should be. In i919 it was $29,384—-a pretty Ibll-f jump. In 1920 it wont to $51,943. In i921 It was 82-834. down whcro it should b0 again. BUT IN 1922 IT JPM-IWED TO T-IIE ENORMOIJS ANION-NT OF $148,126 AtND TI-Itl-llbh} IT STAYED. WIIY? WAS 1'1‘ ‘BECAUSE THE PUBLIC ACCOFNTS DOR 1922 WERE TIIE ItAST PUllltl-C ACCOVNTS THAT WOUItD BE IiSSUED BY TIIE DELI. GOVlERtNMENT‘ PREVIOUS TO 'l‘-II-E GENERAL EIIECTION. AND TIIAT IT WOULD Till] AD VISAliltI-l FOR TIIAT GOVERN- MENT TO MAKE AS (i001) A SIIOWIING AS POSSIBLE: TO PIYT IN ‘AN "l. O. U." 100R AS 111G AN AMOVNT AS POS$IBIII~I BY TAKING FROM THTE SI-NIQING FUNDS AND PUTTING INTO Sage Tea Keeps Your Hair Dark When Mixed Wifh Sulphur Brings Back It; Beautiful Lustre at Once ii Gray hair. however handsome. denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a yopthful appearance. Your hair is your charm, It makes or mars the face. W-hen it fades, turns graty and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a Ibot- 'tle of "Wyethb Sage and Sulphur Compound." which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the ad- dition of other lmrredients. Thou- sands . of follte recommend this readylto-uss preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully, be- sides. no one can tposeibiy toll, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft lnudh with it. drawing thin through the hair. taklngonc small strand at e time. By morning the grey hair disappears; after another ep- plicatlon or two, its natural color llc says the tirctlit ol- this- oi‘ it and Ili: will find. in thostz flit-ll ‘vmi- ‘years. that a dcllimil Sill) will‘ 1'1"] Don't stay gray! hook. young! ' l.t\'l‘I‘3If.Atll OF A STABLE OIIAR- ACTER, >11 ntight ‘bc argilcti that it was good business betrauuc solute hund- reds 01' dollars have been saved in illierllfii. That is a question. There may have been some money saved. but when this tfact. became known. tutti it was tiruwn to our attention that. anyone checking up oilr Pub- lit- Accounts oi‘ any year and look- ing at them and finding in our sink necessary to put In $148,000 at the ~ was ‘collected by the Bell Govern. menu in 192D and 1921 must not be taken off the $253,000 ‘deficit! 0h no; out OUR axes must be taken 0ft their huge deficit, That le the proper way to argue poiltlce ie it? (slaughter). subtracted the partofthe Dominion subsidy or the rest of the year 1919 attiountlng to about $119,000. .I-lave not we got the same right. to sub- tract that subsidy in 1923'! ILet us take that, and add it. to the deficit proven here in phe accounts, of $219,000, AND YOU WlI-IJL [FIN-D TIIAT Tl-IIE DEEIOIT OF THE BEDL GOVERNMENT, WI-IEN ‘IYHEY WENT OUT OF POWER. \VAS JUtST $396,000. The is judg- ing BY THEIR. OWN STAND AloDS. They cannot object to that! '(tApplause) We have heard a great deal about that $263,000 deficit, but we never heard a word about the ASSETS of the year 1919 and 1920 which should have been credited to that year, did we? Can they criticize us if W9 followed as they say, the same methods’! But. we did not have to put in our Public Accounts in I923 the note that they put in their Public Accounts for 1919. It reads as follows: "NO INICOM-E TAX FOR THE CIiRiRiENT YEAtR. REC- EIVED WITHIN YEAR END- ING DECEMBER 31. .1919." They must admit what they put. In there. THAT THERE WAiS NO COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX 100R 1919. Follow it into the next yeirnnnd you will flnd that they col- lected on income tax $40,288. (-1 am quoting page 31 of the Public Accounts 1920.) It says: Income Tax of 1919 received In 1920, and Income Tax arrears, $1,810, Land lTax, $5.589. ' Fox Tax arrears, received in 1920 ferthe year 1919 (page 43), $16,000. What the Public Accounts Show So there are two items. of in- come tax and fox tax arrears for 1919. collected in 1920- amounting to ovcr $56,000 for which they did not even glv-e us any credit against. that enormous fictitious deficit of‘ 8553-000. But when the same basis in used to‘ calculate their de- ficit this year they put up a "howl" about taxes not collected and not credited to them. The loader of the Ollpfifiiiiflll last evening brought out the fact that there was remaining in the hands of fthe assessors. on December 31, 1923. the sumof’ $25-- ttt mutkinl; up that szaaoooo they‘ 000. He tries to make, the House believe that this is a temble thing; than. it showed neglect and miame agement on our part. But let him examine the Public Accounts of 1920, and he will find, Ion peg; 81, that the money in the hands of the assessors at the end of that year Wll $25,130. 0f comes it. h not. so much every year. 1n 1922 It was $9.600. But he cannot infer from that that this Govern- meut neglected to collect the tux es, because, as the Premier ex iplained very nlaittly to the Iiousc lost night. THE SAME MACHINE- RY WAS ‘DI-I-ERE FOR TIi-E COL- LECTION OF THETAKES. The officials w¢re the offltills of the Bell Government; they had every inducement to collect the taxes, and the tax collectors in the coun. try were given their percentaqgon taxes collected to a longer date In 1923 than ever before, so they had every tlnduce w... to cotll¢ct them. Thin inclnuntlvn that we were holding up the taxes to make a de- ficit against the Bell Government ls something THAT has NO FOUND- AT-ION IN FACT. (tAtpplause) Don't you th-ink the simplest way of dealing with our financial situ- ation is this: Here are the reports of the Provincial Auditor t'or years hack; you will find that-the debt of the Province in 1919 was $1,198,000: in 1920, $1,176,000; in 1921, $1.277.- the external Auditor, lg h" increas- ed to $1,676,000. Thlt l: all therl is to any lhout our ilabllltlu. They are GOI=NG U-P, and every eet of figures you can produce will chow it. , And why should not fhe figures sltuw that the debt is goingup‘! It. is only a matter of common sense to know that $460,000 worth of bonds huve been sold and none have been paid toi- except what is in the sinking fund, so WtI-IY SIIOUIIID NOT TIIIE DEBT BE GOING UP? It is no use trying to argue that if the Ilell Govcrntnen-t lntd tbccn in power 1‘0r th-c next Ilour years there would have been surpluses. WE KNOW DIFFER- ENT, and you have only to ex- amine the accounts to prove i-t. Can it ‘be questioned. in. face of the Premier's statement that this yen;- tlie Estimate for INTEREST it; $100,000-$70.000 in General Ac- count and $30,000 in Highway Ac- count. Does not that show that our liabilities are Increasing? A Comparison of Road Policies The whole question its, whether there is something permanent to represent these increased llabiii ties.‘ That is indeed_ the only qirestluti left to trrgfie about. A grout deal of money has been ex- pended on "permancn-t” roads. or 000; in 1922, $1.397.000; and in 1923. $1,714,000. Are you SATISFIED to take the reports of the Provin- cial Audiior? There arc his figures, It maybe argued that they are not| correct-abet certain assets must be deducted from these totals. Well, itakc the reports of the External Auditor, the only other source oi information. and you will find them too that the debt has bUGn steadily increasing. These reports show that in 1911 the net debt o1‘ the Province was 9.008.000; in 1912. $1,003,533; in 1913, $977,514; in 1914. 9921.377. ('l‘hcse are the years. you will rc- naembcr. when there was n Coil servatlve Government. in power yonder Premier Mathis-son. and the financial affairs of the Province were revolutionized and twenty years of Liberal deficits were turn- ed into surpluses; it was a n-cw thing to do in this Province, but they did it.) In 1915 when the war period com-" menced) the net debt was $1.026.- 000; in 1916, $1,010,000; In 1917. $1,002,000; in 1918, 91.006000; In ‘i919, $1,121.000; In 1920, $1,101,- ‘000; In 192i, 1.231.000; in 1922 $1,354,000 and in 1923- according to "good" roads. or “itnproved" roads, |or whatever kind of roads they are. The l-eader of the Opposition was “pleased to know" that the policy oi‘ the Bell Government yvoalltl be continued by this Government. despite the fact that he has been told in this Htouse that their pol-icy is NtOT going to be continued; that OU-R policy is going tto he contin- urd: the policy that was laid down by the Conservative party in 191-9. that Premier Bell laid down in his first resolution in this House in 1920 but failed to carry out. 'I‘I-IA’l‘ its the policy that we are going to adopt. and that means that we are NOT going to tear up miles and miles of good road and expend thou- sands of dollars on it and leave it no better-and In a good many eas- es worse, than It was before i be- cause you have distilrbcd n good solid foundation oi‘ many years‘ ex. llilPilPt! and built. Oil it o. temporary! [wick able to carry on this policy, foundation which goes to pieces if not taken cnrc 01'. - Y A9911. '1, 1924 CRNS- “stop hurting in one gnmute! For qukk lasting relief from some, Dr. satur- Zlno- dc stop the plin in one minute h; removing the cause-friction and pressure, Zin pad ercthhcefemnticeptiq healing, wafer-proof end cannot pro- duceinfectionoruaybedlftereffecu. ‘Ibree cine- or f come, and hunionl. Colt but I trifle. Get e boa today at your draught‘: or oboe dealer's. - Djflahall’: Zane-pad: ‘Put one on-tlnepain i: ‘one! which the Arsenault Government was defeated; and Opposition to that. policy was Olin oi‘ the chief factors by which the Bell Govern- ment attained power in this Prov. itice. They claimed that the policy laid down tby Premier Arsenault was going to be this ruination of every farmer in the (Proinoe; but ju-st as soon as they get into power they adopted it, exactly as Premier Arsennuit laid it down. However, they got away ifrom ‘it. and that is where we find fault. with them, We say their money has been expend- ed injutliciously. The concrete cul- veris. the levelling of hills and building up of swampy places-that was all right; -but tearing up miles of good road to make a continuous ‘roadway was NOT in our policy. and f our policy nas been contin- ued a great deal more money could have been expended in the concrete culverts, the leveling of the hills,tlio building up i-‘he low places, and in drainage. all over the Province. And it would have been money far better expended. They say that title was not. poe- sl-ble tinder the terms or the Dom- We all know. inion Government agreement. But i1‘ that is so. mow was New Bruns- in much the same way as wo pur- thnt thorn was no attempt. made 10170560 4101B; them and as we 110W takp cnrr- 0i’ those improved high- ways. That is tho diffr-rcnm be- twccn lite two policies. Good ‘ roads was our policy in 1919, upon FOR FORTUNEQ (Continued on Page Three) FOOL SEE PAGE SIX lllg luntl that there WQTO (lcposli. rteccpis valid under the Loan Act such an aniouill of money (lupnsii. rt-cclpts rcprivscntvti sonic- tlting substantial (or as the leader o1‘ tlm Opposition says, something would naturally conclude that thosci tlting~ motley. or Ibomls or I-IOIIIO-l “ncgntiablto; when this rwns brought to our attention, we took the proptvr courso we (lid. The ac- countant. Iilmsclf was‘ surprised when he found that these deposit nwccipts ONLY ILEPRtESENTEl) PAPER. And why should be not ht,- surprised? The Bell Governmcntbcficlt The leader oi tllc Opposition lab orod long last night and today to show Wilili. the surplus of th-o Bell Government would ho ‘if they hail (been in power yet. and he FY9681" cd a long list of figures to substan- tlaive his argument, I think he rea- soned out that on September 5th. 1923, the Bell Government had a sitrplue of $461100, Il-IIT T-I-IE AUDITOR SAYS DIFFERENT. Witt-n we takv the revenue and ex- penditure as given in the account. we find tho receipts to ‘he $549,000 and tho expenditures $765,000; tltc difference. I believe. tbciwccn any hon. lricntls statement and tho EACTS is about 8170.000. THAT IS A-IIL THE DIFIdl-IILENCE THERE IS! (Laughter) But my hon. friend puts up n great kick that. we are not allowing for tile revenue that came in since they went out of power during 1923, and that when that revenue is subtracted from this it will be not a deficit at all lbut a surplus; and in this argument ho is very strongly supported by our friends oi‘ the Patriot staff-abuse gentle- men who attempted to prove to this country that the deficit in 1919 was $253.000——in September of that year, when the Arsenault Govern- ment resigned. I have a copy oi issue oi‘ the Patriot here, and per- hnpn I might read that part of it. It is very interesting. "A tSOLEMN PROMISE on the part of the Conservative leader and his supporters that without additional taxes they would operate public affairs efficiently and have a surplus of $743. But instead of a sur- plus, nn expenditure in the Public Works department alone exceeding the estimates by by 8110.000 and a total limbilit)‘ against the Province created in the last eight months of the Conservative administration of 8253.000. anti-ma its N0 n16- ntlmmo THE mnovma FAICTS. (Laughter). Every allowance should he made for this (the great storm of October last) but whah allowance can be made for the non collection of taxes, of tens of thousands of is restored and it becomes thick. glossy and luetrous. and you appear years younger. dollars amounting in ell to $80,000.” . 11., $120,000 a 1010 m.» um i l l I you an Exide. Any dealer can sell you . an‘ Exide Battery EXIDE BATTERIES TORONTO 153 Dulerln 8t. When you need a battery, any service station or dealer in the Dominion can, under our newbolicy, sell We have recently announced to the trade our entire willingness to supply batteries to all, Make sure you get a long-life Exide. first price, seldom out of order and lasting far beyond the time you expect a battery to give service, the Exide is the most economical battery you can buy. ' Be sure you get one. Exides are from $19.35 up, according to size and geographical location. Use whatever service station renders you the best service and don’t expect good service free. Demand good service and expect to pay for it. modern, sensible way of doing business. or caution LIMITED WINNIPEG I81 Jamel Sal. I 1 TIIE LONG-LIFE BATTERY Fort mttt can Reasonable in That is the I ‘t n’ u -_ ‘l J m». zip-raw.»- 1.1 rem-t.» .