PAGES-FOUR llll Illlllllllllllllwll Blllllllllll .“°.“°? ~ "Pinning press persistently ignore 7'"“'""- ch‘. 5' "Ln" “"'r'“““'_" I’ ""'“' many of the facts that vitally af- losntnrr-Llout. vol. n. A. lamina. D. B. 0. feet the economic interests of Can- Idltor an Halogen-I. I. luau. Annie“ Iditosbl). I. (‘Ink ads. One of these facts ls that‘ since the Great War every civillz-i i WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1926 THEVUHARLOTTETOWN ‘GUARDIAN PRIIGRESSIIF in ‘a " i "CIINTEST unions l|BEllAl BESPAIR _ -_--o--..- The Only Life for the Country is in the Re- turn of the Conservatives With a Sub- stantial Majority, and Laurier Liber- als Recognize This and Will Vote Ac- cordingly. t ' s REGISTRATION . .____ Sir.——Havlng reference to the ed country except Canada has rais- ed its tarln against foreign mend, _ " a facturers and products. Great tBrlt-f3:2‘hinngggfg;fogfttgfixmanam: an‘ h“ done w‘ ahhough 5° ‘Miler, me say that il. is practically im- devoted to free trade. Ireland sfllrfgisslble llélllgatllybflilllffflxgjilirtlelgfltlflzfi “Hlolnogsble isr. sincisir-snd an; The excellent condition of thelgzgee ti?’ piisierrzzglt 2:: ,,§,§.hh £22m ustneeino wool-um): . . enktns, finding the peoplemnin highivays throughout the pro-‘Ipeople more contented m“ everiziaifiléidlrltéaageefiziltugszvgeeg rtehe have little use for their constltu- vlncc this summer has been verybeyore‘ .‘llstraré_wbichyl Ewe” as“! has: tionaP issue. and that everyone irfavorsbly commented upon by i'is-'lsh Dominion has raised its tarlifiitrictly carried out. ivero to cut vitally interested in the Customs itors who made extensive tours tolV-‘all- ‘ I from the printed llevisers lists of issue. are endeavorlng to draw a'various points, and who declared‘ It is So Easy to Say “To-morrow” I ‘_ every ‘man intends to ar- hNO-d _ ranuge in e interest of his fam y. But so many eep putting it 08' till " so-morrow." Result, we find too man women trying to manage estates wuo An: 1'0 BLAME? OUR ROADS- 1925 all the names contained can“. flux" "M" Lin” therein and to paste the same as red herring across the trail by malt- they were the best clay roads they lug party capital out of the regret- ted death oi the Hon. George Boiv- condition is due to the vigilance oi in, exhlinlster of Customs. wholthe Road Masters, practically all succumbed to an acute attack of aD-"of whom are steadily on the job. pendicltis. No honorable man. be: There are iby-roads. however, ex-Cublnet Minister or merely anlwbicb have been sorely neglected ex-meusber should associate hlniselfior many years. Many of these by- wiih such puerlle tactics, for theyroads lead t0 sortie oi the island's will get him nowhere with thlnk- beauty spots. O lug people. ly, that to Keppocli. is one of these. Allowing for a moment. which isjThia is most regrettable as the pro- not their-use, that the Customslvince knows no more beautiful or scandals did hasten Mr. Boivinslniore popular spot. The fact that demise, who then was resiwuslblefla village, of considerable propor- Was it nouMr. Mackenzie Klrig and tlons has grown up here within the his Government? Did not the King past few years and that every vis- Governmeut induce Mr. Boivln,one'lioi who comes to of the most honorable and hlglilyfuar-is to see "Keppoch the hes-iti- had seen anywhere. This pleasing ne road particular- the province 'al control has steadily pursued the ‘opposite course. -First. by giving 1a preference in tarifl rates on Brit- vllsh goods, under the Laurier-Pleld- ‘lug Administration, and later byln- creasing that preference and‘ ex- tending it to sister Dominions. This has been consented to on patriotic grounds. but experience has demon- strated that it was a mistake not t0 have insisted that the preference should lbe mutual. As it is Canada gave something t'or nothing. a, prc- ference to Britain for which we re- ceived no corresponding preference ‘in return. This caused serious loss to Canadian industries and closed many Canadian factories, cotton and woollen mills and i100! and shoe factories. Sixty years ago. before the War originally printed in the proper in- dex books. 1 fail to lhd any case ln w-h!ch_ this has not been done‘ ‘and all voters of 1925 l am satis- .fled are now duly registered. It is of course possible that some jclerical omissions may have beas- ruade in the copying of these lists ‘for the purmse of posting but such [errors would have no effect what- ;ever upon the status of the voter. ;In some instances persons were in 11925 registered in the wrong poll laud the names of such, taken from |tbe printed lists will continue to ‘appear where they were first reg ilstered. ' ‘ if however any one interested lwill report to me such omission ll shall iuqulre into the matter and‘ advise such voters in time to eu- able them to have t-he necessary n-orrectlon made before the Revis- [ing Officer. l am Sir, etc. ii-i-ii ....lt is always a sympton oi despair when party managers begin broadcasting extravagant claims about their election prospects. and Liberal headquarters are providing abundant evidence of their stale of mind. Day after day its propagandlscs are publishing statements to the effect that the Liberal party is certain of at least 130 seats and the only question at issue is the size of its majority. Now the ‘beet antl- dote for this sort of twaddle is the recollection of the fact that just prior to the election of 1925 Lllberal organs like the Ottawa Citizen were blithely claiming 140 seats as assured certainties, and the actual outcome only gave them 101. The truth ls that the Liberals have as rhncli chance of gaining 230 seats as they have oi securing 130, and the proof is to be found in their anxiety to enlist all sorts of allies ou their side. They are leaving a free field to Mr. Forke and nearly a score of other so-called Progressives. they are offering no opposition to lnborl‘ tes like Messrs. Heaps and Woodsworth, and they are booming _\ir. Bourussa as a prospective member of a King Cabinet. 0n the platform Liberal candidates are brazenly appealing for sup port to every uondescript group in the country, and they are singing dif- ferent tunes to suit the temper of the locality in which they are runn- iug.. s. P. connou nzrunmuc OFFICER ron loueews. j lii North Waterloo Mr. W. D. Euler tevtionlst who will not countenance any further lowering of the tariff. is running as an avowed pro- f yond their capacity-a prey t {experience and often bad advlc: Make your will to-dsy, and appoint the fem Trust Company as executor. By this practical arrangement you insure und management for the property your amily will inherit. Our booklet “Your Will" tells in simi ple lsngua e the facts you need to know about wllr making. Sent FREE upon request. EASTEPZIIQBI TRUST . c Richmond sum, (‘hlrlof!o(osvn, P. I2. r. C. ll. B. LONBWOIITII. Ad!!!’ Manager HEAD OFFICE—HI\LIYLX, N B. Montreal, P. Q. Slint John, N. B- Bl. John's, Nil}, esteemed members of their partyMul" ls sufficiently significant to °'_ ‘h’ Rebflmm" the ‘mum Slates hail a comparatively low tarifl. 8M to accept the olilce of Minister of rhake the road thither worthy oflalso reciprocity with Canada m Customs after they knew the pre- laud in Saskatchewan every Liberal candidate is waxing eloquent about the terrible evils of protectionism and pledging himself to their aboli- tlon. care and attention. 'd _ lutlon to Mr. Mackenzie King .3"! tats"- in some yilcict-s- valllng conditions and without en- deavpring in theleast to clean up the mess, rather seeking to protect the guilty ones? Al. least a year before last elec- two cars cannot safely pass each other; in places the road is :00 rough to be safcfv driven oveu This should be attended to before another season brings more visit- Hefore the now popular Stllli- ‘IOB|'MT> King knew what was go- ors. ‘lug on, as he admitted in his speechlmer colony was established at Kep- in the House of Commons on June 24th last. This is what he said: “Mr. Sparks was chairman of the group who came to inter- poch there was some excuse for letting the road fall into disuse. but now as a thoroughfare to one of the island's most popular benutrl spots it should ibe made more near-I ly commensurate with its import- a popular drive with ii view the government. .\iy recol- lection ls. this was in the fall of 192i. it may have been and pos- sibly it was earlier in 1924 that this, delegation. representative largely of The manufacturing iri- ance as beautiful destination. l l WORTH MILLIONS. l The following statement made by‘ w Mr. Murray l]. Williams, prominent‘ financial leader in Montreal, should‘ wake up any Canadians who are not‘ already awake. Mr. Williams is‘ l terests of the country came Ottawa and drew the attention of the Government to the circum- sarices that. owing to the smug- gling of liquor, coming to be the problem. it was that numerous persons had become engaged in that traffic in an illicit way. liar:- lng become engaged in it to all intents and purposes they had become professional smugglers, and, while seeking to export- liquor in one direction they were seeking to bring back in the other direction, namely to Canada, oth- er commodities-silks, automo- biles. tdbacco. 7l8l‘('0llCS.—\§'6l‘8, l think, the items specially men- tinned.” Accordingly, Mr. King is guilty beepuse eighteen months before he had the fucts before him. Mr. Sinclair is guilty because he was not a politician, and not a partizarfi He in" engaged in financial affairs and reaps his benefits from the prosperity of every llrie of business from ‘growing potatoes to making steamcuginea. This is what he has to say: “l have voted Liberal more often than I have voted Conservative. and therefore [feel that I can speak with an open mind. l honestly be- lleve that if the Conservative party ls elected with a working majority. Canada will have a boom. the like of which the country has never seen before. lf not elected. we shall witness another protracted period of tariff uncertainty and stagnation in many lines of industry and busi- ness. Surely the people of Canada are not so blind to their own inter- ests, and the interests of their country, that they will reject pros- perity and progress and again vote for slow suicide. Lord Aiholetan put it in a few words when he said that a Conservative victory would then a member of the government and a party to the scandalous pro- motion of the Hon. Jacques Bureau to the Senate. And i.\ir. Jenkins ls equally guilty because with all the facts before him he voted for the wh-ltewnshing of the guilty parties. -€—-o-0->———- IN KINGS COUNTY. a mean a thousand million dollars to the people of Canada." ————<-o>—-—— EDITORIAL NOTES. Ex-Hon, J. J. Johnston is preach- lrsg "constitutional" law to the elec- ‘toil of Kings County and proving inlils own way and to his own sat- lsfitotion that Lord Byug of Vimy acted unconstltutlonally lu refusing August la slipping away but we still have before us the beautiful month of September. Canada's igreat need today is men of honor at the head of its adminis- tration, of clean men against whom the finger of suspicion cannot be pointed. Are those men again to be trusted who knew the country was being robbed of millions, and its public services prostrated and, for fear of losing political support. never raised a hand to prevent it‘! John lJ. Sinclair was a member of the Cabinet while this was going on; he knew all tlbout it. R. H. Jenkins and A. E1. McLean were nkey wrench that wrecked it. supporters of the men who “hdb- Icy have their own opinion of his nobbed with smugglers and crooks" yalty to his former party aud,aud, knowing it, voted to whitewash loader. and their suspicion as to the guilty and cover up the dirt. Are they again to be trusledf I w made the demand in order to escape defeat on the lloor of ihe liaise. “fr. Johnston, by virtue of his having been Attorney-General in the late Bell Government, knows all tfire is to know about constitu- tional law, and what he doesn't Irkow he can supply otherwise. I ding Liberals in Kings have a distinct recollection of ‘Mr. John- sQIFs "constitutional" aflllctlons ‘on he ruled the Bell Government machine sud finally threw in the -!"-"""*¥ “P3 “b?” *".‘.’!”°i"i°“ natural products. That war of four The Man , years’ duration loaded the Republic!‘ Knows with a national debt of such huge‘ i proportions that the Allléfivan 3°31 lar was worth less than sixty cents. INSTALMEYT XXX“! It fell off in value about three times THE BIGGEST SIX as much as the Canadian dollar fell "whosoever shall compel thee‘ at the worst during the recent to go a mile." said Jesus, "go with? him twain." I Which means, l take it. “do more than is required of you, do twice as‘ Another startling bit of, busluess advice. Where will a‘ mill! 6V8!‘ Eel. you ask. if he de-‘ livers twice as muoh as he is paid‘ to deliver? The answer is that? unless he's a fool he will probably! get t0 and stay at thetop. 1 re‘ member once traveling from Chic- ,ago to New York on the Twentieth gCentury Limited. We were due (Continued on page 5-) Daily Lessons In English in the Grand Central Station at? nine-forty, a nice leisurely hour, and three or us who were travel, ing together decided to make al comfortable morning of it. Wei got out of our berths at a quarter after eight, shaved and dressedi and half an hour later were making our way back to the dining-car. A door to one of the drawing- IOOHIS W85 open, 811d 8.5 W6 “Yllk. 8d by we could hardly keep from looking in. The bed in the room lhad’ been made up long since; a table stood between the windows, and at the table, buried it; workf ivas a man whose face the newe- pallers have made familiar to every one. He had been Governor of, New York. a Justice of the Supremel Court; a candidate for the Fresh’ dency of the Llniied States. and was—at the time-practising law and reputed to be earning much itiore than a hundred thousand dol- ’ lars a year. My COmDanlQna and l were young men; he was well along in middle life. We were poor and unknown; he was rich and famous. We were doing all that was required of us. We were up and dressed and would be ready for business when the train pulled in at a little before ten. But this man. of whom noth- lng was actually required, was d0- iug far more. 1 thought to myself as we passed on to our leisurely breflkfafli. "T-hat explains him; now 1 understand Hughes." l have several times been in the offices of J. P. Morgan and Com- Dany after six o'clock in the even- ills. -1 remember vividly the men- ial picture which i once had of what such a private banking house ‘must be—the partners coming in limousines at eleven and leaving at three, after having given their nonchalani approval to a million dollar deal. But 0t]. the occasion By W. L. Gordon o-ooooo-s ‘VORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Don't guy “I have nothing farther to relate." Use "further" to ex- press that which is additional; “farther” 1o express dlfiiflllce- OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: daunt. The a as ill "Calm" i5 We‘ ferred to a as I'll "awl" OFTEN iiissPpLLi-ID: delirium- SYNONYMS: desire. wish. 1on5- ing. craving, covetlllg. 8111mm?- WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it its Y°"r5-" Le‘ U5 increase our vocabulary" by m8? tering one word each dfly- T0581’ 5 word; pQRTiFY; lo strengthen against attack. “The HTIIIY “'35 well fortified.“ - 0+ooo+o4 Dailv Selections FOR Guardian Readers 1, August 25. 1926 ONE-"Tlicre is for there neither ls l THE HOLY none holy as the Lord: ls none besides thee: there any rock like our God." "Sam. 2:2. pR-AYER_"Sl|1g we here with glad accord, lioly. Holy Lord!" MOTHER AND HER STYLES Dresses high and dresses low, Fashions bids ‘them come and E9; Tresseg ‘bobbed and tresses long- Fasblon sways the moving tllrvnili What was new become the old. Thus [his changing life ls told. First we view it with a smile Then adopt the latest dzyle— But with all the passing days Mothers never change their ways. of one of the visits to which l re- fer tiie offices were closed. ‘ills clerks, and assistants and even the Blflvlilflr men had gone. leaving on- ly lint-watchmen. Nlght-Iwaicli- men. and some of bhe partners. There seem to be always lights in the partner's offices m; mutter what the hour. Of the office force it l! required t-hal. they travel the one mile which lies between nine o'clock in the morning and five o'clock at night. But the part- 11ers travel the second mile. have always traveled it all bhelr lives; and ure partners because they have. Here is another business prin- piplq, seemingly equally imprac- ticable. - Remember the words of the Lord Jesus how he sald,"lt ls more blessed to give than to receive." We came perilously near to los- lng those words. They are not recorded In any one of the four Gospels. Matthew, Mark, Luke sud John all forgot them. "All very nice to talk about giving instead of getting." thought Matthew per- haps. "ll. may work in religion, but iI.'s no good in the tax collect- ing business." "A splendid thought. John may have said to himself. “a very noble sentiment, but not quite practical in the fish- ing industry." Maybe they intu- Gay of heart and bright of face. Fashion seems to rule the D13"- Wlth the swinging of the clock Youth given age another hhock Fiaunting into public view Something age would never do Laughing at us when we preach Scornful of us when we teach- But with all of fashions wlleg Mothers never change their style!- Motherhoodi-i no fickle thing To be changed each fall spring; As it was so it remans, Spite of all its cares and Dfllnfl Joy may call nnd pleasure lure But a mother's love is pure. And the baby sinks to rec-it. Plllowed on lier lovely breast. Closing little drowsy eyes To the softest lllllflblffl. and Mothers worry night and day When their children are away. MOIhETs grieve when they are ill Alway have and always will. They wold ghleld you Willi their care Every day and everywhere, And they're happy through through and ‘October that they could gain 29 seats. in British Columbia Mr. Mac-ken: proclaiming his devotion to t ants in Quebec like Messrs. treme nationalists doctrines a net-lion. ln the utterances of the Liberal leaders there is no sign of any re- gard for consistence, no evidence of coherent purposes governing their outlook and conduct, no recognition of the fact that parties are only useful as" long as they are based on definite principles of politics and prepared to stand by and fight for them. Under the leadership of Mr. Mackenzie King the Liberal party which Mackenzie, Blake and Laurler led with such distinction and pro- fit to the country has been reduced to the level of a motley faction whose lodestar is the possession of office and its perquisites, and which cares nothing for political principles or decent administration. its famous platform of 1919 has long since been banished into the limbo of forgotten things and in Liberal circles it is almost a crlrne to mention its existence. it has always been the basic fault of Liberal parties in every land and clinic that they are more interested in the furtherance of certain so-called principles than in the advancement of lhe prosperity and Welfare of their nation. but while other Liberal part- ies atone for this fault by their steady devotion of principle, the party which owns Mr. King as its lender today offers no such compensation. Under the circumstances is it any wonder that many well-known Liberals like Mr. A. ‘R. Macniaster and Mr. A. IB- Hudeon both of whom ie King makes slushy speeches he British Crown. but meanwhile lieuran- Cardin and Cannon are expounding ex- nd fulminating against the British con- liave a definite conception of Liberal principles and are not ready to’ abandon them, are not stan in the present contest. in every constituency in the country whose affiliations are with the Liberal pletely alincatcd from it as the result of The result is that in dozens of constituencies the Liberal party is reduced to a. mere skeleton of its former strength and can scarcely muster a corporafs guard of supporters. Hence the frantic willing. nese to get Progressive and Labor candidates in the field in rldlngs where Liberals can hope for nothing but disastrous defeat, into such re- pute has the name been brought. if the Liberals had improved ding for Parliament and are taking no part there are scores of voters party but who are today com- its performances since 1921. their position so greatly since last it is quite sure that they would not be content with the small majority which would then be available but Mr. King would be going up and down the country, as in 1925, de- nouncing the Progressives as ‘political outlaws" and urging their com- plete elimination. As things are the Liberals have indicated numerous seats which they fought in 1925 to the Progressives, and made it virtu- ally lmposslble that they can secure a clear majority. if the voters do not show sense and give ilifr. Melghen a clear inni- crlty on Sept. 14th, then there will begin at once desperate efforts to furbisb up from Progressives, Lalbourltes and independents another raajorlty which would "restore Mr. King to office. Lately the ex-Prlme Minister has been boasting that as soon as thc arable cooperation which he had arrarmed with the Progressive leaders was supplanted iby a spirit of barter and intrigue, he decided iliat a dissolution was necessary. ' But Mr. King's ideas of honorable cooperation are extremely vague and if ever Ottawa ‘was the S0511" n1‘ shameless political bartering and trafficking, it was under his regime. 'l'he legislative programme which from the Throne read at the opening ‘orig sdicession of brazen bribes and ranehri intrigues and manoeuvres wer hives and other allies in line. The King Government was ready to go any lengths in submitting n directly antagonistic to the nation- juat ended it simply ceased to have Mr. King embodied in the Speech of the last Parliament was one any mind of its own. lf the Progressives wanted special favors to please a section or class of the community they were granted. and if Mr. Boar-ugh waning some special provision he had his way. o‘ Now such a state of affairs reduces government to a farce and lt was indeed a very lange factor in bringing our admlnistratlves system to the state of chaos which the customs inquiry revealed. When the King Government was expelled from office the country at large rejoiced that these humiliating ‘and disastrous experiences were at an end. but there ls every certainty that they will recur once more. possibly in an aggravated form, unless the Conservative party la endowed with a clear majority. ' The Progressives and other independent groups having on“ “"351 blood will be more exacting than ever in their demands and. when Mr. King begins bargaining for their support, he will be called upon to pay a heavier price than before. lie will, of course not refuse to pay but the country will pay the price in fresh governmental inefficiency and indefensible legislation. There is only one means of escaping this demoralizing calamity and that is by conferring upon the Conservative party, which stands firmly upon a body of definite principles and offers a prospect of sane. honest and efficient administration the mandate of a clear majority. repetition of the shameless mlsgovernmlnt and unsavoury episodes whose prevalence since 1921 has reduced all intelligent and public spirited cllflqng m despair. At the sslightesi smile from you- 'l‘o the ending of their days - Mothers never change their ways. (COMM!!! 9n fill! 5-) - ., .1'., i, offianadafof Million s of lIol Iar idt ‘W’. is .51. _ but nevertheless B UHA CH Insect Powder W For Foxes 45c, 85c, $1.25, $2.00 tin 1 The White Drug Store l. G. IAMIESON Druggist — treatment. ‘He would perhaps g9! heme, 5001191‘ '11 he were made to realize that he could d0 1115 W work if he tried. But all nientle nut constituted alike. and 11' "ill an one as above. is tidcd over lot awhile with an increased pension. and the worry thus removed. he d-ouiq have n better chance of re- covering fully. However, the point is that a ner- vous disability following injury l6 entitled to comlleflsflilml "d i” pension because it is a very r981 condition. l that 80hr of yours COMPENSATION FOR NERVOUQ DEBILITY A decision recently blinded MW“ by the supreme W!" °l m" °' m“ Western States ‘should be handed on to the army D9119” Mam‘ i“ the United suites nnd canads- These pension boards have Ii hard task because ll they 8W9 ‘"19 man s certain pension fOr a. cer- taln definite injury. the w"- m" must got the same irrespective of the financial or other conditions ill not]; or all cases. The decision referred to above l6 that svhere a workman has been in- jured st his daily trade or Work- He loses a-certain amount of time. but finally is apparently 795mm‘! to health. However when he at- tempts to do his old work. or r6- sume his Qld trade. he flndfl hlmse“ unable to do it. and must DQTWF" take other work that pays him much less. Now there are no marks of hi5 injury left, he has r68"! 11° Wm‘ 910mg that he can show or talk 0f about to the compensation board. he can't do lllfl I . T0 BUY HARD cosh w. will have the schism “Tlieollne" next week Wlfll ml‘ ion high grade Hard 6h! Coal. Please semi Y°\"‘ "d" “d” M delivery from this boll. A. Pickard 8i 60- RHONE 240 old work. Why? -- Because the effect upon his nerv- ous systemvis such that he K9618 that he cannot do his former work. its demands upon him are more than he can meet. ‘He becomes what is commonly called a neuras- thenic. I This Supreme Court has decided, that if a man receives an injury during his work, lf after all traces of the injury its to appearance and symptoms are removed. and yet stif- fer; from a, nervous breakdown and neurasihenlc condition attri- butable to such injury. which pro- vente him from resuming his old occupation, then he is entitled to compensation under the workmelfs compensation act. . Now our friends on the army pension board might well say that if a man knows he is going to have his pension increased he can de- cide not to return to his old trade, which may be difficult or distaste- ful g0 him. iHowever where a man was active, made full time st his work before he went overseas, has a family to support. and whore the government pension however large would not be equal to his wages iii his trade. than he should be given the increased pension if he feels that he cannot resume his old trade. l recognise that the very fact that he lg permitted to feel that he cannot resume his old trade h bad LET US MAIL YOUR DRUG 012mm During the past few Milli“: we have devoted IP°°M ' tentlon to our mail order Ill‘ partment and arl "W4 w ealylng orders from Mlfl . outside polnll- UP" "it? 1 of saoii letter we lmmsdla Y ‘ tin the order and In this save our clients mud" ‘m .. Ind trouble. Ls! us have your next 0H4" m medicine. We svl""“' satisfaction. -- r .‘I'IIE g uses DRUGSTORE 14a Grout auras lm" Telephone all Li“ . They arp~»n ow.Jl!l.ll'!i.Il .g, . ..\ l