Johann-w. can: l. than. rub l C5 i i i F 5 fl -_-| “Th; Government Controller: are . lining up with the scum of th raucous-d. I. lunat- - . A lulu-non. n. ti. o. urthfl-Rev. A. McLeod ill lll! Annual: Editor-D. Cunt lallllllells lll Slllllmetstdel h —' ' l The above brief extract from the. TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1927 ‘address o! the organiser and trove-la ‘ling secretary of the Tempelflllcel "P. - .7}- uuwll Bllllllll urinary-Lion. 00L D. manna-u. n. nun-a. .,' l I r ‘m: Ymure-rnv AND reopen. even in the most civilized ‘ t? ANCE. deal wqtk 1s being do“ w assocmm "°l'“l>"1°115 "Se 1“ “Q1 ummml“ 1“ pie of much intemperate language-theylshama your earlier doubts. the (lllrlstian ministry with Mr 1Chtmthll hhtl lt ls "he U; out. gut-sot hot a few 0t the prohibition an.‘ ‘flt's_ the real stuff, all“r'lght,' Scum-firs‘ pseudo-prohibition and,“ htltlohal dangefs, a dangerirvooates op" the platform and in thelwilllllllllllefilqfk- .l l h ll cheapfiliquor. No wise and pru- whlchl ll not avettetll may yo; let“; press. For that-reason it is takeullle ltolfugllgrliosolll? am ‘ e m." ' dent clergyman will give any couuim the heceshtty ht correctton hyhotlce oi here. . ; The llllllllls lllle lllllllllllll ‘finance to ‘he “may a511a11°n'ltl1e iron hand of a dictator. Nvl ll the language o’ the Reverend when, 911911 °11191a11d111g 1119“ “ltional sins, like individual sinwselllletally llll above quoted had hee Goon Codyl Toronto. in the AnKli-lchrrt, theh. own punishment and addlesselt to an thdtvltlttttll the l?!“ chllfch- "m1 1119 RW- R- G- F“1"the most flagrant of all national speaker mthht have been called 1°"- 914119 Cemerarl’ 1311193 “111111315: sins is disregard of the sacredness nrpon to answer for it in a coutt of." si-Jlflflll-Tllvlll‘uraciicoltemperauceol the frzincllifle. the dearly bought law. liut il refers obviously and. under government control, lesser hrt-ttlegt. 0t hovel-hint; 0m-5elvegl‘gent~rall_v to a class of citizens. and 1181113 may W911 931159 and °°1151‘1' not for ourselves alone but of those we b81181.“ i‘ "my B? i119" D°51i1°ll~ The R91" R- G~ nsscciated with us in our national Fulton was possibly one of the lllt. most popular and successful min "Justoff-tbe-sblp." is a quaint _ ‘entire address at Summerside much a some 0t lhhmorlu t tries. has its diseases and one of ol “llllcllls lllllll and lolcllllll llllgllh the worst of these is the unlcrupu» ' "No bcotlegger faked that bo lc." cries t boat. happily. “It certainly looks real." “Well. here's how!" law no longer commands or command that respect from our - citizens that will- secure its eflecvfererl the "Rum ual enforcement, and that the timel“'1"1° 119 ‘"5 bottles and has come when another system of lhtt tltstt.lt.t_ controlling the liquor traffic should r 10“ 11111361111)‘ made a demand up. be substituted for it and given a “Gmm” smmh" F1°W5 o" on rhe Montreal Builders‘ Exchange lltllt ,, industry, booilegglng. ___.._.-_-0§~-~ lnterslwho ever officiated in the THE V1c1°U5°1F1°LE' Brick- Church here. ‘lie is a man among men. He is not easily fool-T and aoothsayings. He is a thinker, a iii-J international Bricklayers’ Cu ed by-sanctimonious phrases fr r an increase of twenty-five cents social service enthusiast, untram- Jersey; then to Florida, A1191" i1 11111111191‘ °1'°°-""1 California's offshore. Ml llWY- We believe that nine tenths of ftrr-nr-cg-i a t-ompromisé was effected the people of our Province are eat re item. of temperance forces in - q _ by splitting the (llfferencc. The new temperate and 30W"- fiflmlllllflllh! 1° New, Brunswick he has resigned his ‘United Church charge in Saint John to undertake and organize the that province to carry out Government melled by rerl-tapism. At the earn- arrangement givcs the bricklayers t them still believe in prohlbitoryjlll other lofts and tenements. a wage of nine dollars for an eight ° , Jaws such as we now have. . _ _ _ , _ others illclllfillllg lllllldrfidfl \\'1l° containing sea water the DTICRIJFETS point of view. bu lolmellly lllllllllled ullll llllly have taltt Oh an ltttctt ltthttttelth lltallel u somewhat serious outlook forth hour flay, a. fairly good ivage frnn Temperance Commission in Control. Judging by the zenl with l l l l ll l lll Illflll \\' ll) lll Pllf S H) l'l‘lll ll‘ llll t . ‘ ~ wtltctl he tllltlllllt to llrlllllltzll lllllt l l kulLs of prohibition and now dean l l ll . _ _ iug. Similar demands und z-unuln ‘a. change. ls that a. sufficicnt reason 0|‘ ‘l’ "WY We "lldPrfliflfld- carry on the Prohibition Commis- _ _ . l ll ll ll l l concessions and vnmprilmistls lutvc for u leader lit the iulvocacy of pro- 0t» . .,. “on are’ we now e s m“ 1' 1' mph.» liibitiou 1o now sllinnnilsr- them flH als would be stained, - ,_ , it. . . r missus‘; ::::1‘...:"::.:‘::::..~,.~, m ‘transatlantic liner yesterday." been marlc in practically all mailings on llw ground that ill0!t'lllll,b"1“ Tllll llllll lll rln uoi think so. living cannot rln olherwieu- than k0 the new movement in New Bruns- wlclt-just, that impetus irrccssnry _ _ l ‘of living is going up. to make its success assured. Th!‘ fact. that the Rev, R. (l. Fulton has given his unbounded approval We share the common conviction America's larger-it businesses \ _ keeps going up. to the New Brunswick Temperance who tic-manila a fifty per cent in- lnlemhel-ale language “w; never measure shows conclusively what l l - _ l lll lll_ lll ll l crcase rn his wages, if he wants to yet the best weapon for ever r - lll n man w o ins _ r y g g rent one of the houses he helps to fence oi‘ any 300d cause. “New “tum”! the mmt" free lttlltll my portant public question. is at issue frotn bias has realized long ago lllgllel llllll lh out. ythvlhct, tbat-pseudo-prohlbition as a cure _ vorkeil for the lower wage and be is anuch worse than the original _ ' _ and discussed informs-temperate » .rs no better off because of his in- tllseasel and moderate. An lm- Hennessey. Martel, Sanchez 8t G rnez, or wliatyou will. must expect to rent than if he street. New York City. . $0 fol‘ fliers m8? The raid was at night. creased wage. have been home l What. is true in the case of the vocates on both Stltes who have wages increases the cost of ‘produc- utlon in their advocacy. ‘rNew Y°rk 11°91“- VERY now and again, especially lion. the inureirsed t-ostof protluc-j -—-—- 1 when some pglfllicll] move has lion increases the cost of living. ln an increased wage there are More than in any other Province es and says: l . l ll. . miscarried, some one rises up and our people a" we famfly T 1s 1s hmlljlmces that democracy l5 {all many atlvantagtea. notwithstanding _ ; ll _ l , l .cal isolation. But we are living fol lug, or, if the case be a particularly l B111“ 111m 11 ‘nmeases ‘he W5 ‘gather in admirable harmony, with aggravating one, that democracy 0i “villi!- escapc in the back. States agents. A survey “vas recently friendly relations. mutual respectlthe httthtthg next defllocracy is despotism. dictator-t We have our llttle‘l“l’el'l‘l1llll1l“ 1119 “remvaY- ship,‘ and when democracy fails we changes had been brought about by squabbles about politics at election get ht; to the Blxth not"? shall be gbngéd lo accept the ttlf the wage increases (luring the past tlnles and laugh 800d llfltllTP-dly‘ tentative. There has conic u time (Wilde- r . , afterwards. We are all agreed that ~ l A l l l] . tl tl tl t tl t-hl peiez ss s ant tilted States A in the history of many civilized 1°? '1"11°“"°° ‘a 1e gene the cvtts 0t thtemhgmhce are yQl-ylIOHlCY Watts. economists to try to ascertain what and cteetlsl Ah ttresttlt 0t the survey about them when we meet togetherl countries, when the hand of thellllviug conditions of working people 1161191” °1' 111° ‘11°1“1°" 119981119 11° 11mm "om twemymve to ‘my Del-Alas done good. ls that a good reevso up. lceastthyl Eve“ Great Bhltaltt one’ cent. better than before the watzlson why we should not "y to find a‘, bad its Oliver Cromwell. is sum-errant" saver-bed by u dicillléanythhm “"’ “"‘“‘ "m" 1° “lw the nraioritv oi our people if we! 0t. ahtl hottslhly lt w“ the ohlylis probably true that. living condi-tcan? way in which certain nationull11°ll5 Hmong working people hovel wrongs could be righted. Mussolini‘°°"‘11‘1e"“111l' 11“1“'°V°‘1- . has ',so far at least. given Italy’, All objectionable feature of inter-jwovinces or Canada’ are or ‘hatiiifihlcootiindowa, we saw the prin stable government- it is qrritel“““°““11““‘ 1“ "““’“”_' “° 1“ “Silas out what the Illwlorlty or the|Litho§rnllhlnB Company. tltlhhhhle that tt htmhttl thlsel just ;Canudn is concerned, rs that there people lll ltltll Plovtllce lltllllk llllolllr patriotic (lictrttorship might he th "'1" 11° 11° "°'-“1“11'11‘°“ between “tit and let us all loyally submit. tn1and m" we‘ wide we hehtthohttlhlh temporary thtm t, [Canadian andru United States wagemeir decision when 11 comes, h0g1 govhthmehtl lh a Cristal httt it t lschedulc. The latter with its hunlneglecting in the meantime thclellllll lllllll not hlhlthhlo that h l-reh and ttthewlrt-tl million more people than Can {b91197 Qdllcfluml 0t “~11 11°91 Yilllllltl dhhhlovlhg people could long ettlada has. with its larger cities andlz11dlil11d 1" ""9 temlleramle “111911 durebnch a government. Hriggui- factories must necessarily llzgllnlem‘ *1" RTE-lily Ilfllllvolflil Ag human nature is at present‘! 4 years. w " lttttetl the people must have! Canada can afford to pay. For this a y lh the tthvermheht ht thethreasoir a union governed in the Un-t cbttitryl . must govern themhetveh lted States and functioning in (Jan- I‘ pretty dark. lof the adjoining building. SEW m5 stamps ——- the gree and necks of whisky bottles. tlliatamps were being printed i ‘sheets. pay a higher rate of wages than _._-"_.. ilwinriow’. :0, sample. Hon. J. -A. Robb l: to be com- mended on his resolve to count the icost of a. further increase in the d lll ll l it l lbl l l. ' ’ . 1' ‘nrecuy “r 1111mm“ 1'81"” a a w m mm“ e 0 He iauperannuatfon allowances to re- tfves chosen by 19.1116 ideal democracy. ' be frankly admitted i _ l cy has not always uvsyrip tol ifs goals. that the representatlvel1 1°’ 11115- They “e 1°°km3 W‘ 1°‘ ll ‘ mhhlyj ltlhhheh hy the hehhle. themselves imtl internationalism. l l are _ 0t always the choosen of the. which“ “aname "1 “mg "11 111° , .* ,, ~ whhle hot. the heat lehrehehtléttveh‘ whole business of the continent illzhzexrlzllifdallltlgulfl Mwzllwrlfl: gnaw-ml, could hhvel gives them the numerical slrangthllllllllcll hall llllllll llllllllly lllllllléllsllll » mwrncv is the movie collec f” ‘“_'1" “1’°“ "w" ‘1°‘“‘“"1" hem‘ by some high authorities, rbuf. we Kin! the people in simply a 5' ' Incline to the opinion expressed by colloctlon of individuals each one 3- L- Gflfvlll ll‘! Tlurbbssrver that of l-vvhom hu his or in pun, to they are of vital utility rboth in war Hug in a democratic government. and peace, “V1151 “n” "Pmtr 111° long u individuals. or even a lllfslllxence and the faculty of the t! of them nretruo to them nation and to the future needs of r the empire." r 0c and to’ humanity. democracy Ill]; nap- l thl: is the burdm and the ‘ '- ion and tho privilege o; do Watch Press Turn Out Labels. named Krug and Nagelberg. themselves the some wage schedule for both lllllllg cw" llllllvllllm lllllllllll lllvlllll it.°°“.""1°“' “"51 '1'“ “mmm 1"" °“““'lit his sanction. rAnd bu remark us ed "flllllle m0"! ""1" "lwe- The that (‘it is time that some one thére?‘ Hairs whispered to me. unions, however. cannot be blamed should speak on behalf of the fax ' payers oi’ Canada" has the right trlng.‘ larnall panes of glass. in. Ilass fired his revolver. ltrliwda n. stick-up. e told rested them. Agents police station. ‘ ____4o¢____ gprfgmAL No-l-ggl window and couldn't atop bleeding. th That young mania worse than foolish who starts out with the sole purpose of being a moneyed man. First, get rich in manhood. Then the money part. and all the hqppfneaa which you tblnlrmonay filling Company. Ono pint, 10 proof.’ " His companion. Agent Hus. said .“We stayed on that roof forty sea turn out Mhiirky labels. we crashed the window. ‘The fur ulu In Montreal ahovv no decline in silver fox values, and cm buy, will be fallen care of by Aim” ~ » l l l advance in price for the dork . i m“ "B?! Ml! llld >70 universal providence; that is un-lvhtlottelrhhtl the, to‘, "M" u ll;,l ranting at; or her duty. not falling. You eta-ti... the nvi oitwmhmd whh h“, ;,.,..h.y‘,..l,,_ . ~ "I" 1° “=11, eternity. ‘rho mqltltho tilfigg l: is m outlook appears to his satisfac- r"'1.m~§~. the impreulon of the count in front ol-the 0161M fill .' ». rrlsutvr t "Tb" f’? QWiIUFIFWP? Notes by the way iAGTUAL swam: r l 1. TrII: of the new billion’ dallqr Iiqltorl-l lbtqlllligi? 7011017‘ “id” ‘spread arfit-ific: today penetrate our nafitllral lifc. _, .. l, cloun-lAmance 1‘ 11°‘ chamcter1sflc o! hrsand gratefully adopted by w sucker illlilflace. The bottle is placed on the table nearby. lupraised glass. at the bottle. You. too. look at the light glowing in the n glass——ut the bottle with its splendid labels. But the art of faking whisky lab-1also a commercial l llll cls would be stained. Then their it all with my pencil for identifica- 1315” C ass’ 1‘ 1 foreign dlstillers and even United think tllfll Olll‘ 1111958!“ Dlflllllllloll‘ States internal Revenue stamps has. ’ can been a boon to that growing infnntfithe stamps through the BT98! The bootlegger. it seems. has foshcrashed i Row" tradition —’ot' these buying his liquorgl labels in n Brooklynili. But the flow of “genuine Scotch" Tom whlhhy lhhelh (fflllllllllCS—h8C3llSe as fast as theltwehtthetght stone mints 0t asst)“: _ authorities break up one “cutting ell whisky hhtl glh labels; ten small the best average in any liilld- W1") plant" a hnlf hundred more open uplzlhc hlttteh; sevemymhe larger-Zinc “any There was told in Philadelphia,‘ ‘ ‘for instance. the finding of a vati-Sthttgglet. E1g11151l'1i111ent—lnternal over zealous “d. hours later and the reassuring pa‘- aulhot-lzetl by act rper stickers would have been on hlht-cl-t 3l lgg-ll "ltlwas nearing midnight when l l l l l l hllllVl-B yisitetl the nine-story. building MR9 Y l"? "5" t ° m" 1190"“? ‘tat 4b [lose Street. There was a fire “There were five more ‘United We passed through; _ , - door. went has failed. The only alternative to mad‘? 1W 9- Ylllmbel‘ 01 Ulmed 5131-95 and. goodwill between all classes through tt long, dark hallway and We talked How was the best way to, _ “The other agents took out their" rrevolvers, climbed a six-foot, fence. "’Don't make airy noise.’ whis- . "l f l ' . ' - great and that the prollibitory laul other ‘zllgcgllfldllllltyfljltglgellgiillillilsll "TWO agents were posted ontha ltttlyyvhile statistics may prove flllllflflilbettet- lawl and one more oongonialwtitféfife aggga11t1otfll1fi tflifirettllsllalliligglllt "These counterfeit stamps cans out in that zirearway. It was “We finally got on the fire escape W The majority in six of the nlnelqlimbed to ms sixth floor. 801 0111 Across the way. looking ‘way of ‘11111111113- We 91m“ Nesenuy lug presses utnning in the Monroe "lu a room about 150 feet deep working. lsaw a man I later learn- etl was Mr. llauck, the foreman, taking one of those internal Rev- stamps they paste over the corks- The “lle stood with his buck to the l saw him looking over "Two other men working there The window was in iroipcnsings. with F‘ ‘How are-vie going to get, in l“! had a -fi'roman's axe. Iclimheil "Y" '1" lllelllu esolnfl. sot baslllo the wlndom-gnrashed it. d1: and went . The n inside fan out lutoihe hull- tifThey were fright hed‘; thought them we were Government h’. We an chreyer and Haas took them t0 the Oak Street "l cut my hand on‘ the broken lsaw a copper plate bearing the words: ‘Thompson Dia- | live minutes watching those prel- Tboil l l "l examined the two power prell- t 0| audlfound lmprenious on thoro- _ WORDS onlmt. l maustttbl verso rollers. 1 pulled out an elool- .. trlc torciugot underneath and n! strip stump. The strip stsmplvflfi FEAT». (.21 .- 1 . . . . 1 By NQRMA .Kl-Bl."7.""'. ’ it, was bred by prohibition Phrase. 1'1 ilYoui- hosLproduces the Jaottlé with a‘ smngl"llourisbi' ljllabortatelly _ ' lment in favor of prohibition, bullhu pfeels off the tissue pupsk wrapping. He holdslull 1°15 9'01"‘ 9 °“' 1' of political , hock’ 1on5 use 0f the franchise. This un-llllll sentence quoted ts a thh. samhthctihslng atlmlntloh a bottle plastered wllh label; so gllthentlc ‘that "he gloats. and proceedsto stfutléle the more reliable the liquor. That is Your host looks at. his "l found another printing 10b. l also some labels for There was 1 marked ll . ifound Scotch labels and lBcotch wrappers and. mther Scotch whiskies. job. lion. "They were just preparing to I'll: put on the red printing when We n. l saw 300,000 sheet! booze labels-——" , But let Hobart D. Brink, another S. Treasury agent, enlighten {you "just-off-the-shlp” connoisseurs ‘with the following sworn data: s "There were, in one pile, 800 1sheets of United States strip “Rum Row" may shift-ha it has-stumps 120 stamps to the sheen toduy—from off Long island to New yehl they-he the stamps you llhd and tol ‘ on bonded whisky. There were 4500 Booth it Co. gin labels and Old and sheets; lplates, 4x3 feet. “There were 10,000 sheets of Old whisky wrappers; 100 ‘11111115 111°1sheets of Old Lawson whisky wrap- pcrs; 100 King William lV whisky . . ~w' r. .l.l b thl. ' been sadly (llfiztppoinlctl m the rc- walls. Zllglrtell 1l’t‘;;’ll‘l'l‘elltl1'..wt:lll"l‘lf:t wrappers- "Anothei- job just off the presses i‘ examined some of the cases readylhhh lltmtl hheeth h; whlte not-sh lwhlsky wrappers, 100,000 wrappers "Thal “"°“"1 "Willi" "WW ""1119 of another English whisky, and 100 whiskey in sea water so tho lab- Bloch hhtl wt.tthhht.h_ Then their “We found 100 (lrautl Old Purl‘ "T111" wrappers. fen King George wrap- " pers, 50o Johnnie Walker labels fund sheets, and 500 Hennessey 8n ' H111 1" "ndermand 111° mlum] 1111-00. labels rind sheets. ‘tlustry—whiclt is becoming one of "Also in that print shop were up so long as lire t-trsi of producing that at" , , . _ 1'"- 200 000 Scotch whisky labels and OYmQ" l1" “e11 4“ “ma” volume of production sales and dol- wtflqh r g George labels. in the of- For the u. itlran many. clients of "Rum Row . He“ 15 the SW01“ 111°‘? “1 111° oootleggers." He quickly saw that ed or and it is important finding of 800,000-odd liquor labels he labels and amt, stamp, were that it shall be considered calmly in the printing plant of the lllonroe {gkgy in 9Xg¢l|llgll_ Lithographing Company, 4B Roao_ utt was htath to the eyel" he Agent Brink's eyes are sharper which prohibition mouoriou or rain- (w. L. cone-u) 1 No. k-Pollcll: of fill Plfllll 1 Al we have soon, the lander the Government has alt-med the conservative 0 itemperauce and sobriety." 1 . On the‘ other hand. the Leader id! the Opposition state! that the lpolicy ofthe Lfbéml Party is l0 i-‘atlhere to the rrirllobltlvn ‘with suchiamonilmcnfs as may be deemed noomaary 1o make its ‘ministration more workable; and talso that a reduction be mails in ilthe sale price 9f liquor." As between the two parties in this Province the issue to be decid- led by the electors is thus drawn. ilt will ~have been dbserved that neither party purposes to adhere to ltbe la/w as it now ifs. Both parties ‘desire that there shall be a change. frbe {Liberal Party p.111 strive to [make Prohibition "ntore able"; the Conservative Party will so change the law that only those above the age of twenty-One YeflP-"l ‘who obtain "permits" will be en- abled to legally obtain alcoholic lliquors-and partake of’ them only in their ences. the Provincial Government, wheth- ler Conservative 0r Liberal, will be responsible of the law. ed. _ ! Which, then, is the ‘better policy for the electors to adopt, and which party is the more likely to fulfil the promises of its leaders. It will have foeeu observed that the policy proposed by Premier Slew- an is the more definite of the two. According to the plan laid down by him the use of liflllflffl will be strictly limited to those who xnuy obtain non transferable permits. According to the state- ment ot Mr. Saunders, the prohibi- tory law is to be made “more work- aible"—a very‘ vrague description- and the price of liquor is to be re- duced! The consistency of this statement is at oncc open to doubt. Reasonable electors will want to know why. if the l-xtwv is tn be really "prohibitive" there is tiny need to worry about. the price of liquor, or why if. is necessary that the price of liquor shall be reduced, 0r what the need be to make tho lnw “more workable." "We. all know how the prohibi lion of the sale of liquor has beer heeded in the past. We all know that in recent years there has been. '11” mkmuyer should he temperate in all things. lflr¥~l8l llfi examine 10d!!!‘ all "1111" not; I found seventeen enveloperaa. continuous increase of “bootleg .11 phase-the coirnterfeiiing of bot- lrltey hlohtalhetl shthhleh ol labels ll llel tle llnbels of White Horse, Haigjt lotmtl lh the ht...“ tooml 1e “mgr P°1 R0159." ‘vewarr (1°1"1°11 use of the salesmen, I suppose." ging", “moonshine snaking" and other illegal acts. We all know too that, after ;rll the years in has been the the -Liquor Evil is not abolish- so greatly checked a-s all men who believe in temperance de- sire. That trhere has been, with- ln ‘the past forty or. fifty years, n law. dded. “Thesswere not Govern- decided improvement in the condi- Revenue of Congress. The printing of these stamps was very muclnbrokan and mottled. Thomas (luilfoyle, United States T ‘ - . Treasury Department agent, "depos- hat never appelm; on a genuine 816111811 has 5am" Government stamp. of pa per poor. l _ l Owllrier lsf Qohvicted. “All Government internal revenue stamps are printetlbn special wat- ermarked paper, which is, you will seq ifyou hold. it up to the light, marked 'U.S.I.R.' — special paper made for the Government. "Tlléflzihly persons authorized to use strip stampsaro licensed dis tillerieii. "The stamps are never hloifered for public _ale .by the Gov ernnient. Uni hey havg the name of the distillery, with the number of the distillery and the amount of proof showing the con- tents of the bottles, they are not lgenuine. , l had lneltber the distillery's name nor (the red markings of the genuine‘. lBut the public never pays much at. ltention to stamps over the cork, or the 1abels-—-so long as something‘! pasted on the bottles." l g ‘The defense lawyers deprecated the raid. They reminded the court that the printing of whiskey. cor- dials anti champagne labels wgg t. n illegal. But Morris Lustig, owner 01min Dflllllllg establishment that occu- Dled two floors. was found guilty. Judi-ls Hand sentenced him to three years in prison, chiefly, it is believ- ed. for the counterfeit Internal Revenue stamps. Lustlg today is 0H1. bending an appeal. There are largo printing ooh. cerns in New York who areforc- B11 1° emllloy night shifts to supply the orders of the bontleggers. Y0“ may buy many such’ labels in those neighborhood shops pur- "Ylll! liquor flavoring. dealcoholiz- ed Vermouth, gin bottles, beer vats for home brewing. You may buy the labels of mdny dlstlllerles; The public. it seems. refuses to buy lwoch in plain bottles» Pro- perly labeled. wit; a quart ‘of Mul- hart? Street wine tum» llke-1911 Pol Roger (lllilmpggngl. (The billion dollar liquor in- dultrylia reublnloull. Inigo- "l! ll- for rnall-ordarselling Bus! dsllvsrlnzb ‘Road in the mu .artlolo-~,tomorrow how. Uncle 8am helps the ayndt. cqtes dispose of thousands of dollars‘ worth ‘of liquors through thuiulls.) ll ll 9 ————-¢-_o->_i *§‘§Q-'QO-O'O DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH ly w. |.. u»... 0 o Jllxcltc" means to produce agita- Wlll. l, Illllllltii. "1Mll0"‘lh6l11l to rt nniltioular notion." stamps flons caused by intempernnce pgmqglqsflc GOVERNMENT . their way to provide some “just-i - . They were moron’ ' ‘bricklayer is true all round. Higher ovel-mge-ppetl the bounds ofl mollel-Jolrhlhthhhlhrl cohvershttoh ml, proud boumerlens" ' ' widespread, highly profitable, not' is admitted by every one whose mem- extends over that period, and that law-abiding citizens‘ have act- ed in accordance with the hw is a matter of coitrse. “l will not vis- _l _ The 0010i’ 0! sert that this act, (luring the time; the 1111i W115 different» lllo flllllllly it has been in force has not aeconi-iyou. pllshed good; but ire added: "We may as well be frank about this! ‘matter. A large proportion of our people, respecting Jaw abiding cltl. zens, in every walk and station in life believe that they should not be deprived of the right to use intoxi- cating liquors. That their person- .al habits and tastes should not be interfered with so long as their, conduct tow-larder society ls what it| should be. We may not agree with them rbut the fact remains tthat chose who have such opinions form a (large proportion of our citi- zens. Even m friend the leader of the opposition has practically at]. mitted that Fact on more than‘ one occasion. Under such conditions lwepannot hope for even moderate success in the enforcement of this law. Why then should we go on deluding ourselves? We utnnot hope to change people's u,lnions and view point upon a moral ques- tion simply by legal repression; that can only be accomplished by teaching and hltmple. ’ In Great Britiluas 1n this Prov- ince. there bars ‘DBen in the past forty or fifty years, a great demon. stration of the, liquor evil, even though Jicensod taverns still exist nthere. Yet ubo, Liquor question ‘continues ‘to reoloflve the attention of thoughtful men who believe in temperance. A" writer for The Spectator of lgndon, lariely con- tributed a. series of articles under the rhea-ding "An Ordinary Man's Thoughts onr the Drink Question iln one of thesajgarticles he states that “few things are worse for a country than that‘ n law should be made which cannot he unforced. The only way in which prohibition can rbe applied with reason is to l themselves as a, self-denying ordin- ance. A law which deprives people of individual liberty cannot be imposed without . lllarpanc- tlon. l! it fa thtia imprison it is bound to lead to all sorts ofof- fences. arising from ‘brravddopr re- sentment. Peopim who hafbltunlly break the law eerlouoly believing that they have some l, uniifl- " = cation in doing so. summon road to uémqralimion. And it is not only the ‘law which fa brought into contempt-tile loverument that ptauda by the law is also dia- plsetl. Even in the United States, where if. is true s majority or the‘ people voluntarily aooopted pmhibl. tion, the unount of frivolous low- blrelaktng is dreadful on lcontem- p a a." hope, faith, trust. WIOHD STUDY: "Use a. word three time! and if. in yours." Let us filer-up: our rvooalbutary by matur- lllxono word Ton l a word- um “firs, _ DB? l t] lri-i: Psalms; in‘ h. s. ISLAND that 00,117 favors tbs enactment of a measure that "will if lh-ovesfliperlcanshavetmake for grater. law-observance. law. l ad- r homes or temporary resid-i it is to be‘ noted, too, that! for the administnationl however it may be fram-l Premier! persuade the people to lay it upon ‘ l I l l . i l I etc. l —aaid Smith. l. "Therc'll be very little lOll, it l: c ‘, Two months later he slipped an 1r the roof of the nrenrly completed bulldllll- To got ' a goo I t . l QllQhr yoll - Obllflfifl l» owl.‘ hlbli arm. nay- ing of u; will lnluro quallfirit any- price, we handl: ‘ohly good: 0T ro- llablo makers. We carry I" kind: ; of ‘syringes, 68:0: Qyrlnguq-Faun- taln Syringes. Combination Syring- es, infant filyrlngen, Ear oyrlngoq. Bulb syrlngn. Sqnltiry Syflnqui. The White Drug Store l. G. laiuieson t a “Well Soon Rebuild the Barn” as he and his wife stood watching the flre. overed bylnnuranoe." a mt wh/llé working on Hi: life could not be replaced and there wa: no insurance covering it. Your life i: Infinitely more valuable than burn or build- lng:. ' Do not leave it uflilllllred. Write tobay for particular; of low-cost, profit-earning policies to . llYNDMAN s. cofi. inuso‘ THE OLDEST INSURANCE AGENCY IN P» E. l. Agent: at all Principal Points 1 l v ' tron THE ‘ SCRAP noon . A SERIES“ OF LITERARY l QUOTATIONS FOR l BOOK LOVERS i A ilwwvg: l Tuesday, April 12"! r ‘Send the road la clear before W" ‘lwhen the old _. o'er you, and the Red Gods call for t, —Klpllng. r‘ I dreamed that the visible ull- 1 1llverse is the physical person of ,(;od; that the vnst worlds that we see twinkling millions of miles ‘apart in the fields of space are the ‘blood corpuacles in His veins; and that we and the other creatures are the microbes that charge withl multitudin-ous life the cotllllscles. -Mark "Twain a. 1 The Prison of the Ego-There is no such thing as objective critl cism any more than there is objec- tive art. and all who flatter them- selves that they put ought but themselves into their work are dupes of the most fallacious illu- sion. The truth is that one never gets out o! oneself. --'l‘hat is one of our greatest miseries. What would we not give to see, if but for u min- uie. tbssittr and the emu with tlie many-facet ed eye of a fly, or to understand nature with the rude" and simple brain of an ope? But just this is forbidden us. We cau- not, like Tirealas. be man and f, member having been women. We are locked into our persons as info a. lasting prison. The best we oil: do. it seems to me. iii gracefullyrlto recognize this terrible situation and to admit that we speak of our selves every time that we have n the strength to be silent. Dnilyl saturation: ron _ Guardian‘ Reagan- Aprllfll i911 ‘g, " OUR HOPE:—-And_ now z-j what wait lfor‘! my‘ ‘hope: _ 1116p. Deliver me from lll m; _l _ grlasslona: make not ‘ Fbtich of tlleWoolliitl. w ‘ foirupsnk ‘an " Y0“. .. .. -~ Bound like ninth l f; corntngmmm, . r l _ More aweetlyfbln any 11f. d. . ' l l t. You stand 41nd,! sin-m m‘. you‘ Another sees but ;&. you“ align W?!" are allehwqou l ‘ms 1m: wruum. p turning», ‘ sumsolrllslllau intone: rHu non therd but. oplor unfllght All! ll have goon. wobdufllt l'm llcldnt-Jlla (ongnpl l l. Spring fret comes ,1 ntail 1 FOlR "rm-zxrmo se-so ~- xeorxfoss _._-_ \ l Small ‘quantity arrllved. Secure it once ll quantity i|' z-wéfss The 2 u... nuuqsrons ‘ l14l9 qtléghlQvg-prg: S068! Telephone 315 . "‘."~‘.’r-',r‘\’.1l’..‘ .‘ .olln°as , uugneéla sums 11PM?! r. 111.1‘ . on alcohol. 111 , on filter if. Clllbflfi‘ t. or wool an are shouted ".1 l Détroltm ‘ t. humln sound horn that I c " no‘ been with ~. ._ m; mo! motored l" htoonwll;