“AGE FOUR TIIE GIMRLOITETOWN GUARDIAN ‘Ncics by the Way puflggllp-W, (‘hunter l. IcLun. l. I. lnn-lary-Lleut. fill. ll. A. liwllln Editor and Managing Director-J. B. llurnfll lnncialc ltdituro-Irlaul Walker and D- K- UIIIPIO Vlnn-Prooldeukq- l, llundt 0 ure is ‘ disable; it must always- llornlul Daily (founded mm 00.00 per year (In “so pqf year (In advance) mulled advance) delivered- In Canada and Ilnllad lteigc. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1931 have some outlet. It functions in a‘ period of depression as an antidote’ to the despair which might other-' wise grip the populace. It is no re. flection on the integrity of the Brit- ish character that this instinct should Patriot vs Its Advertisers The difference between fiction and fact was amusingly illustrated ln Tuesday's issue of the local Liberal organ. On its editorial page of that date under the heading “Taxing the Tea-cup," appears the statement that a tax of "over 5 cents a. pound" has been imposed on tea, and that price to the consumer “must inev- itably include the new duties." page 8 of the same issue of our con- temporary, in three column type ad- vertising a. well known brand of tea, IPPQI-YI the statement that this com- e‘:- onomy; nothing but the same windy mm“ Mum“ m“ “M h“ Minister of Public Works about the need of "broadening out," supplemented by tention and kept pressing itself on bitter criticism of the tax leducti --..-. "W" W” 111° 1118mm "we of W" made under the Stewart administrat- m our cm“ u Show“ by u” m“ I ‘Tile “broadening out" procassresult. Thgy rgmgflged ed, at the end of 1930, in increased Only bid 101‘ health. but W85 8 liabilities for that year of $234,491, a "WW1" ‘"85" °1' 10°11”- defim on current account of $32332 m“ 18 0119 01' i119 WBSWS Whifih too longor a little too hard, for their prairie provinces. _ - science is aiding us to eliminate. The mvdliy is selling at tile same prlvi‘ and a total increase in public debt in use of electric power, coke and gas is death follows the continued exert- making coal more efficient. ion. as before the Bennett Budget was all- nounced, and that "there will be no increase in the price notwithstanding the higher taxes imposed.” In yesterday's issue of our contem- porary a three column announce- ment. advertising another well-known brand of tea, carries the message: "No increase in the price despite new duty and salestax . . . Canada's largest selling tea will not cost the consumer more despite the new tax. ation. Do not pay more than the price shown on the packet . . . We pay the Duty and the Tax . . . To the Grocer: You will find no duty or sales tax added to our invoices." ._________. Squandering the Money three years and four months of Lib- eral nlisrule of $758,994—-over three quarters of a million dollars. the Legislature. Is it any wonder dmlbt 1t i5 $61119“!!! these days to try that the Lea Government would pre- fer to rehash federal issues in the coming election campaign, than have the spotlight turned upon its own mismanagement and extrav- X00118!‘ ____._____ Nothing Constructive When Mr. King and his party were {in power at Ottawa they could not, Before the purchase w” wmpleted, of course, do anything to render Can- ada immune from world-wide com- mercial conditions, but they could have done something to safeguard the Dominion against an accentua- rse conditions. But they did nothing and “would not give as No Government in the history of this Province will face the electors with a. sorrier financial record than tion of adve the Lea administration. When it as- sumed office in 1927 it did so on the promise (among other things) of ec- unemployment" constructive proposals which would be more calculated than the Premier's proposals to ‘remedy the economic ills which still prevail -tlley are not apparent in the labor- ed and futile amendment which Mr. Ralston has proposed to the budget _.________.._ Editorial Notes Hon. B. W. LePage is obviously whistling to keep his courage up when he alleges that the prospects for Liberalism were never brighter 18nd a little attention in this respect It is passing strange that the Hon. Mr. LoPage should claim a reduc- tlon on the motor car fees and ne- w, 1938 session was to borrow $100’. glect to tell the electors that the ow for mad machhufljh Its next Liberal Government had increased was to borrow $300,000 for highway work. This sum would have been in- creased to $500,000 but for the vigor- ous protests of the Opposition. It then violated its promise of a gen- eral reduction of taxation by boost- ing the gasoline tax from three to five cents a gallon, and passed leg- islation saddling additional expense on the Province to provide for the employment of twenty-five Liberal campaign henchmen as road sup- lnent. the gasoline tax 100 per cent. since con-ling into power. would try a “McIntyre Highway" ex- periment on the city approach to the Hlllsbomugh brldgeit would win if not the everlasting gratitude of most vehicle drivers at least their thanks for keeping them in better humor during the lifetime of the present Provincial Government. This piece of road is an eyesore to the Province and a disgrace to the Provincial Government. The Liberal organ announces the re-nomination of Messrs. LePage and MacPhee, the Liberal candidates for the Second District of Queen's, as “Signs of Victory." Well, there is nothing like being thankful for small Mrs. J. A. Wilson. of Ottawa, Na- tional President of the I. O. D. E, thinks that the new tariff regulation affecting imported magazines, par- ticularly from the United States, "is one of the best things that has hap- pened for a long time," adding that many of the better class magazines would fall within the duty. being of an educational, religious or scientific nature, and that much of the dubious literature would be de- barred by almost prohibitive duty. summer tourist traffic it. would be a good idea to put some kind of a surface on the gravelled walks around the Provincial Building and Post Of- fice, This effected the age old legend “Keep Off Tile Grass" might once more be placed in position and the greensward which once was so much admired would flourish again. At the end of 1928, despite greatly increased revenue derived from the interim subsidy payment, from in-l creased tax arrears over i927 of $88,- 237 and increased revenue from mot- or vehiclalicenses, gasoline tax. sllc. oession duties, real estate and per-- sonal income, road, horse and dog taxes, the Government came out with London Times says that a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Communist Internationale, held in Moscow was chiefly devoted to dis- cussion of plans to make capital out of the Spanish revolution. This in- volves an attempt to disintegrate the Spanish forces in Morocco by meth- ods found effective in Russia in 1917. Adroit agitators would seek to per- suade the Spanish soldiers that they should return home and secure their share of the benefits flowing from the revolution. Native risings would then be stirred up, in the expecta- tion that Franco might bemoved to and n, deficit on ordinary account of $1,558.15, as shown by their mm Pub- Hon. J. P. MacIntyre, who ordered $100,000 road machinery and could not produce any correspondence on the subject when asked the Legislature, states that the in- collie tax 0n corporations, is a case in point where “the Budget has in- creased the burdens on poor men." As the corporations tax has been in- Again there was no move to im- plement its election pledges or econ- omy and reduced taxation. Hon. J. P. McIntyre, Minister of Pub- lic Works, stated: “When I hear the say to reduce taxes, to cllt down ex- penditures, I say that it is time that both parties should brradcn , We should get clear oi this small politics and say: ‘We manifest itself more, boldly today than when times were good. Rather 13,434. rth °'d'“°’y “mum °t ’ F“ u it a sign that hope still springs borrowings of 5200.000 were made for highway work. Still no reduction in taxes as promised, nor any as- of misfortune. eternal even in the British breast, crushed under the weight of a decade been visiting Canada ill the last few weeks have said that one of the first things that attracted their at- mcnse volumes of smoke pouring forth from hundreds of chimneys. that this was not Liberal speakers and the Liberal and depress people and frighten them in the hope of making political converts. Depression talk only adds (70 the burden of life; insolvency talk iBoth of these politicians rendered a dis-service to the west, in thus fool- ishly trying to serve their parties. The Edmonton Journal cites a case in point. It appears that an eastern Canadian man proposed to invest the proceeds of a $5,000 security in Government of Saskatchewan bonds. he read a speech by a. Liberal M.’ P. from lvlanltoba, adversely picturing conditions in the west. The speech of gthe Liberal M. P. so affected him instead. -_____- ladies complain that on their outing tours to the city their hots aroun- ceremoniously skewed to one side or such familiarltias but the ladies are becoming indignant and the street committee could not occupy its time better than by yielding to their modest request. Anyway our oma- mental trees cease to become oma- mental when they become a nuisance would be welcome. .___.. The cynic was sorry who insin- uated that Premier Lea in postpon. ing the naiming of the date of the coming provincial election is prob- ably going to try out a five-year plan in parliamentary procedure. It plan to save the present Govern- While preparing for the coming ._.__._ A recent report from Riga to The / usually looked upon as “poor men," Mr. Maclntyre is Just as much at sea in federal politics as he is Ir his method of distributing $100,000 ord- ers with the people's money. intervens and that eventually Great Britain might be involved. This is a foolish dream but the Communists are nothing if not ambitious, and they have the example of Russia al- ways before them. are going in spend more lrloucy.‘ ” In the following year the Public Accounts for i929 showed increased liabilities of $246,049, and a deficit on i i I The gambling spirit In human uat- ' golf. Now curling. bowling and golf are winds and frost in mlhy P151168 h!" excellent games, and maybe' played 611115811 "Tm!" Fflbicks- 511d I 91'0- into the seventies and eighties; why longed drought MW Md! lflriher W should so'many players die during the 111181111004 01 9- 111111311 small" these games? simply because they play a little pressing and general in» all three age, use up the heart reserve, and Actual and prospective difficulties Now how are you to know just how reduced wheat crop there possibly much your heart can stand? Is may be a veiled blessing, if high , there any way, are there any signs, qualities are maintained, and if as Tliflthttefthfines _ ' I s “as e s a o e me press have a duty m the public ugh by which you can recognize that you seems to be very probable, smaller as revealed at the recent session of er than their duty to their party. No are gemng toward me point where harvests are the rule in an other is nearly ex- “heat-producing countries of the . . “W11- "BWPFS 1111" m" b11118 tribution. Very well, but that would Unfortunately the matter of being about what could not be hoped for tired or fatigued doesn't occur to from man-made your mind even when you are tired lo l . Th bi ‘mly ‘mmpedes the “Nesting Public‘ because the pleasure and excitement econom ews 8y may rug 0i the 881116 "flakes Y0“ W189i your demand. At prices which can be fatigue or tiredness, and you may go on until you collapse. ‘However if you really watch your- 51:11’ you will notice yourself getting a little tired, and that is the when you should rest willie if at all possible. The most important sign or symp- tom llovlever oi‘ a suspicious heart is getting out of breath, breath Under ordinary exertion you will of course breathe more rapvliy and l l . that he decided to buy Ontario bonds deeply. and you breathe the an out mpractpable, and the question was be done, but justice is often hastened not revived at the subsequent con- 'by argument. and agitation, and Bu °f the “mgs wmwut dimcultY- l" conference presided over by the Hon. 'it will be in this case. Our public Howard Ferguson at Canada House, ‘men are swayed by logical arguments, in London. Artificial rertrittlon of ilot often by Svplllstry- $0, let H11’ _ production as a means to incl-ease .of the old teachers or their friends flcient and that you have to force prices l5 Somgffhjng hard w deylgg ‘use all the logical arguments they whethenthe article be grain or any 68h 11'! the 151119111! P1955 and 011 the other product; and even if it could rowers that be. that Justice be done your heart reserve hausted? IGELHESS. fact it just goes out ufrle Life, is a mystery and motives n breathing lh, cent piece to rellevei puzzle. As they say in Laricashire, m a Conservative "There's nowt so quare as foaks." onomy and B general reduction of province, Now that they are in Op- taxation. Shortly after the election, pggitioll, if they have any alternative the Patriot congratulated the Gov- plans to the policy which Mr. Ben- ernment on taking office “under pc-I ~culiarly favorable circumstances" for: the carrying out of its pledges. There’ was found in the treasury a substant- ial surplus of $70,697 arid there was another windfall when the $125,000 interim subsidy, recommended as an annual payment by the Duncan Com- mission, was received. In less than-four months, accord. ing to the Public Accounts submitted at the 1929 session of the Legislature. the Lea. Government had turned the Stewart Government B. deficit 0f $159,129.21; words, it had gone behind to the ex- tent of $229.826.39, and this apart from the highway account in con- nection with which $60,000 was bor- rowed in November, 1927. The Les. Government's first act, at n you stop But if you find that this is not suf- the air out of your lungs with all the The Chairman of the Street Com- muscles about the mlttse would ingratiate himself with l {the ladies particularly the taller nett is courageously putting into ef- tones K he would immediately order I the lopnlng on’ of the low hanging must be “‘.""’°" at Once as the lung-s Way ‘° bellemlfll branches over the side walks‘ The simply cant take care of the impure chest and ab- domen,‘ then it shows that too much carbon dioxide or waste is in the b10011, and 811 exerclsg Therefore whether you arelyoung, yourself getting o t f b‘ tl dmwged by mmmg m mntact’ with slight exertion lctuyouti- fulrllielii 110T: philosophically’ ‘Dupe these branches. Men do not mind m, examine yéur bean should/be a heart cond living will permit a ion Even if it ition, careful even at complete danger is near. WALKING SOFTLY is now too late even for a five year. "It is 5° big a thmgqmd wet’ 5° a i l r e ——— -———-——--——-——— Thls walking softly through the Patsy“?ngnzzilezseipztzsthgzofz? this country is in a position to meet aging trade si n a d th i lf the Public Works Department wearing the cloak of patience’ the which purchages flor tliemmllllbelitle: broad’ “m; being reported lnpm‘ Kin d i Of quiet understanding of life's ways. g 0m are “creasing my” hope And intricate to eyes that do not week a total o! 3'1“ boxes of a6 The endless turning of the wheel of Along the highway toward Divinity; “The endless lifting up and weaving Threads of experience; the cults and Of creeping centuries; the silken Fibre of human love for living needs. "It is so small a thing to say, ‘I And yet so big! lt means a soul has to Englfln‘; Into the heart of ’l‘ruth, and can The music of time's rolllngunder- world, millions of boxes of cheese b“ u" m,“ Mun" m‘ —AI1I111 H- Wodd- of butter being sent abroad annually. worms act poomptl, with this '\\\’\\\\\ \‘ r:DODD'S"’/, l/ ZKIDNEY T HE CIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Harvest WheatAnd Prices: The Public Forum ’ the (Montreal mam) n", “h”, hnmuma‘ '- n is early, but not, too early. W- w ' naps, to look forward to and caJcul- “unfit,” own“ d“. ate what the nut Iflln harvest 0f the Dominion may be. The first privat eatilnata - of this year's Can- ._._......€___ BRAHMIN TEA iVllen youwant _a delicious drink edian wheat crop hasjustbeeu made. i _ smug 1t contemplates a total of 8l0,000,- TEACHBB’ P“ 000 bushels. The 1080 crop was one _ to "one of the BREMIHLESSNESS ofrEN A Oi’ 397,372,000 blllhCLl, 0f WHO}! lpfllll sir’ lttcfifrxfilongmquut w.‘ mad’ m wheat represented a1s,aso,ooo bushels. 00mm ° t m“ Famous apply _ , The spring wheat acreage this year ygrstfirinwho m‘, mmued m wllhlh the Show space o; two shows a decrease estimated at l.'IB6- “n36 requirement!‘ been!" mere w“ weeks four middle aged men died, 9°” bushels‘ or 7'5 p" cent" which. no authority from the old teachers. “m”? °‘ ‘mmediatfl? m"- mdml‘ “mp3” Wm‘ a‘ decm” o’ ‘ppmx- What arr explanationl 1h a matter 1118 in curling, which consists of mite]? 1909900 “"1915 ' “n”? o’ Just,“ nothing would b, do“, ex- throwing a "stone" along the ice to- 118111115 bl D°m1"'°" Gwemmem‘ ‘n’ 0e t 40m“ ‘ulhol-lly l; given by ward a mark’ much slmflar lo roll- ficials. The condition ‘of the wheat this‘ w whom just,“ is to be done; ing the bowls in iawll bowling. was elven at 82 per wit» wmvflred You read of many men dropping With 95-5 Per 0911i- "115 W" 1"‘ m. " dds insult to inim- The on the 301g llhlgs during a ggme O1 year. Germination of early-sown Elpriesslot‘ is Mt that me ‘munch! burden of the new pension is borne wholly by the teachers, when 5110b is not the case. It is. also will 111111 the new pension system was self-im- grain was generally good, but hlflh _ ed, Ola, wfiat an imposition! crop this year. The need of rain is p05 ‘ of the farmer are not to be under- estimated, but in the prospect of a tribution is taken from present PHY- laws, or so-called no; be a new flflng, - about an adjustment- of supply to wheat at a fair profit. As a means contribution, 11W‘? reduction of wheat acreage, it will resentatives of wheat-growing coun- selwlce gets from $365 to $1000? ference in Rome, but a proposal in into a matter of Justice, and I fe‘ this sense was outvoted as being . confident that eventually justice wi be devised, it might be impossible to 11ml 1111119 1111101111’- real ml only on agriculture generally. Bennett's Old Age Pension. but on all industry. When the Iam,>51r, 9m. ‘found, there will be at once removed _____________ $240 a year, and when he asked for Butter Export Increase a small raise in the supplement, and (Mbntréal Gazette) - eration, and a concise statement of all the demands for butter from a- duction in all parts of the country. that the business may m due time Quality is held to be satisfactory, al- _ t, m 1 f _ so, because of grading, and Canadian “The crlss-cross pattern on the loom a a ts arm" are“ proportions . butter has foundsuch flavor in the The Gazettes records show that last North o‘, “gland w“ that n is , Y pounds, or 174,496 pounds, were ex- preferred m any Other‘ ported to the British market, all cum shlmnenta’ m” “w” °r b?‘ bought at the m“ market price hem ter are increasing, and there has a so totalled 4,129 boxes, or 204.224 pounds, we" w“ M“"‘°°' °f Ag"°“"‘"°' as compared with no butter exports has been pursuing an aggressivemar- whatever for the same period last ken“ policy’ and u seem evident’ year. Indeed‘ the exports this season that his efforts to improve the to dateare the lies: in the last half- ““"°““"'f‘,1 smmm“ "e m°emu dozen years, which is very signlfi- with c “m” success‘ ' cant. In the whole of man only 168 ———————i——-—-—-—— packages were exported; m the We“ ious year only 4 and in 1928 but 30. e Indications are that 1931 will be the q biggest year since 1925, when 350,- NEMA WORM CAPSULES 404 packages, or boxes, were shipped A ‘cmmfluuy “and m,” duct of Parke Davies a 00., Not many years ago, the Port of are effective, safe and sure in Montreal .was one 0f the great cheese "will!!! W011!!! from the Ill- and butter exporting centres of the "Mn" "Mt ° "m" ‘ml’ ‘flu d II. and hundreds of thousands of boxes o" your mlml. flgyglgp m mo, for instance, the shipments Imiflc 11°11'11""- were 356,583 boxes of butter and 3,“ 5A3 lvllrl; Loflon 077,482 boxes of cheese. In the last wllllln ‘h, u" ‘l, Wu" w, five years there has been a. Brest de- all: rail‘ Illlflrfll of ourhlljar sline ln-the butter exports, althoush “n- °* m“ "° cheese made a better showing, rela- fig." .,';‘;‘:‘"':§:$"_" o‘: tively. Now it is reported that pros-l "m, "on, m, "an m”; pects for continuance of a good ex- Flil P WDEB p0" "we “e n" brunt‘ one m.‘ This is ‘the otima oflyear lish buyer in Montreal states that, when you “n” pram‘ ‘he ‘u, Eflflllhd Wu] llkQly CIIE fairly 1.116 "om deuflongnn b, yum!“ quantities of Canadian butter con- Our flea powder always gives atantly from now on, if prices and ntllllgtlvn- W‘; Sig: quality are considered right. These m"! ma?“ L“ n" purchases for British account have M" M, pmmp“, ‘lung. w rescued the price from the low level cllocenuspoilndnndhroushtlt up to 21 or‘ "- and l YPIQNOII- W? Canada's pnli it may be stated "lit Sold. only in red, airtight Packages ‘OT-rm was the some h, ‘I711! Was the time o; our schools and t 411119111118 was lnde ordeal to the p00 er. The old teachers averse to paylng the‘, tax in the new P Surely those teachers now receiving the small dole will be placed on equ- ality with all teachers under the new provision. These veteran teachers, who toiled in the olden time, and who have emerged from the game weakened and generally physically unfit, who labored when the school- buildings were inadequate to their crowded condition-(oiten as many as 60 pupils being enrolledL-when t were voted in general not larger than from $15 to $25 per year, (and in some cases none at all); when every second Saturday was a teachingday. I think the hon. membe for Char- lottetown cited a case of his own ex- perience, when he taught school for succeeded in getting about $10 ad- Just received direct from Factory-_ One full oarload GYPROC truly the letter of "One of the Com- The sole reason for the granting of pulsions is length of service, then why admit those who are teaching and bar those who have taught? Oh, the old teachers never contributed anything to the fund. Didn't they? They worked for long years on small pay, much smaller than the present teachers get after their small con- I am, Sir, m, ANOTHER our mo’ _._____ -___ vvv O§Ov§Q§v vOOO as‘. ROC- "Old Teacher" suggests that for- mer teachers now pay a back con- call for "back pension" which would The old teachers had small pay for many years and small pension for several years, it would be no more obtained in the open market at the than yusllm; phat they be put on the P1959111’- time. H0 country can 810W new pension list without any shylook One full carload TEN-TEST —Assorted lengths- —Prices |ow- L. M Poole & Co. Pooh's Wllarves to help overcome actual conditions, 15 lg not; absurd that a tggghgl- m. "me the method of an agreed compulsory tiring in 1930 after 40 or more years of service, gets $150 pension while’ be recalled. was discussed by rep- one retiring in 1931 \vlth 40 years oi O&QO tries at the recent international con- This pension system resolves itsel. work out on the line of agreement. 117186150115 are 1301111118 011 1Y1 B 19W, Nature sometimes takes a short months and there will be Pronounce-l ends, and lglfments on Old Age Pensions fromi through the prospective universally,‘ both political parties. An eflort blood coming to them to be purified. short when harvests, world wheat ‘ should be made that a pronounce-i prices an; raised h; m _ I ment be given on Teachers’ Pensions. middle, or of old age, and you flnd level, the éutlook Zananbzcozzxselg There are over 600 teachers in the Sal of Cam province and less than two dozen old ariafs 1931 wheat harvest at prices p?'_‘s1°n.°rs' The" wwld be m ‘ea- whi¢ll will he reasonably profitable that an increased pension would pa". t9 the farmers Wm be an added the number over two dozen. In tel. assurance lha l years, Judging by the past, it will b. It is when there is breathlessriess economic prodtucsg: vlzlgfthzlgitlf: fig less than one dozen. What a shabby 011i 0f cultivation; alli-l ll Wm mg“ thing to leave them out in the cold. lmmedlately a beneficial 1.8mm,“ True a few of them may come under - friend-qt never fails to please -with its lasting remedy for ruinous wheat prices is JUSTICE’ .- llvhat ls perhaps the chief cause of slrrThe 1m" M "old Teuher" iilhe economic ms from which the in a recent. issue of The Guardian, whole world is suffering re Teachers Pension covers the case, in question with calmness and mod-i “Buck Iwlstlilso t HICKEY 6' NICHQI§D In the last three weeks m exports been some export of horses. Hon. 1S BEST FOR PUPS FORMULA suited especially to needs of RICH in essential vitamines. HEALTH-promoting STRENGTH-imparting. ASSURES normal and siiccessful devol- Manufacturers, imeenlol. BisTcuIT 13°11":