“math. x l lllIARl-UTTETOWII GUARDIAN Notes BLnre Way: I v KM "M IeVeelOeel-W. Glacier l. labile - _ Jewelery-laces. Col. l). ‘Cleo old Chennai. lg, gun"; VIlI-PIOIIIIIQ-rl- K IIIIIQ A. Ieeltlansn. D I. Associate Gillan-ll. l. Oar-lie. GUI so: nee us elvaeee) ‘Iernleg Dally lleneded mm sLeu Ill |I\ l; lllnsoa delivered UIIIC III IJIIOOO D0’ VIII (ll advance) The Government measure to ban liquor clearances to the United States is likely to have an easy course through the House of Conunons. Mr. M‘ ' King has been a long time ‘r l MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1930 Nova Scotia‘: Altitude .1110 following paragraph from the Speech from the Throne, read at the opening of the Nova Scotia Legis- lature, will be of interest to everyone in this Province. We advise our read- ers to clip it for comparison with the Governor's address at the opening of the Legislature in this Province to- lnorrow: "The Audit Board oi Canada has communicated with my Gov- ernment, contemplating an inves- tigation of the subsidies payable to the Province of Nova Scotia from the Treasury _of Canada. While my Government is prepar- ed to render every assistance to the Audit Board in its inquiry, it is apparent that the terms of the recommendations of the Duncan Commission on Maritime Claims have a far wider scope than is competent to the Audit Board's inquiry. In consequence my Gov- ernment will again press for full implementation of the recom- mendations in that Report, not merely as respecting grants for the machinery oi government, debt allowances, and consideration be- cause of territorial limitations, but also as respecting other remedial measures recommended, that yet await fulfilment." The Government of Nova Scotia, says the Halifax Herald, will have the backing oi the_ whole people of the Province in the stand taken and restated above. It will also have the approval of the people of this Prov- ince. Such e. straightforward state- ment is worth all the political man- oeuvering the Saunders Government has done or will do in the interests of our subsidy claims. Siill No Action It is now about three weeks since the drunken brawl in Prince Coun- ty Jail which resulted in the severe beating up oi the jailer. The fracas, es stated befdg was but one oi a series of scandalous episodes occur- in: in the mu agement oi that insti- tution within the past twelve months I-all‘ pointing unmistakably to the fact that liquor is being freely pro- eta-ed and consumed within the very Dlfivillcts of the jail. The public'by this time is well aware of the cir- cumstances, despite the obstinate re- fusal oi tho Liberal press to discuss the matter. It was expected, in view of the seriousness of the situation, that the Government would hold an immediate enquiry and would issue an authoritative statement by way of explanation. So far as we arc aware, however, no such enquiry has been made. Certainly no statement has been forthcoming, nor is there ‘any intimation that the Govern- ment or its party organ feel the slightest responsibility in the matter. The only effect of the exposure has been to prod the Government organ into frantic and furious abuse oi what it terms, with parrot-like reiter- ation, the "wet" element; meaning thereby the element that is frankly disgusted with political prohibition and desires to substit ‘ for it some- thing that’ will at least have the mer- it of sincerity. _.___.-___---<- Our Dairymerfe Handicap IThe situation of the Canadian dairy industry as based on existifll market conditions is studiously ig- mmd by the New zealand butter for reasonswhich we shell leave our readers to Bllm- In" growers looked forward rather than back, planted a good acreage and as a result won out with excellent pric- es. Had ‘they been advised, howev- er, that the producers of some other country where potatoes aflgood as their own could be grown at much less cost, were preparing to under. sell them on the American market and to dump five or ten million bush- esl on the Canadian market under a preferential tarlfl low enough to enable the imported potatoes to be sold at a few cents a. bushel lea than the home product, there would be every reason for our growers to be discouraged. They would then be in very much the same position that What are the present prospects of the dairy industry in this country? According to Government statistical reports, the quantity of butter held in storage throughout Canada on February lst was over double that oi last year on the same date. This surplus, together with subsequent heavy shipments landed in Halifax, Eifords anything but encourage- ment to our dairy farmers. These facts, we submit, are of far more importance than the estimated aver- age prices of butter last year or in any preceding years, for they have a direct bearing on the prospects of the industry this year. The Horse Holds His Own Notwithstanding the apparent competition oi motor cars of various kinds, the day oi the horse is by no means passed. On the contrary, the report oi the Minister oi Agri- culture for Canada for the year end- ed March 31, i929, states that during the fiscal year just closed the horse market was quite active, the demand being considerably keener than dur- ing the previous year. Ontarlo, dur- ing the calendar year 192s bought upwards of l0,000 horses from the western provinces, while Quebec took 12,000 and the Maritime Provinces about 3,000, making a total oi 25,000 for the year. There was considerable activity in horse-breeding in the five eastern provinces, with the result that there were more colts in the country in the ‘spring oi i920 than at any time during the past half dozen years. Editorial Notes The tactics oi the Liberal organ with respect to the prohibition situ- ation are characteristic of a journal- ism usurplng the seat oi judgment when it should be apologizing in the dock. Our contemporary has found an appropriate source oi editorial inspir- ation in Mother Goose. There is, however, a. serious flaw in its appli- cation of the nursery text chosen for Saturday. The prohibition Humpty Dumpty who had the "great fall" has no connection whatever with The Guardian. A Baltimore editor, who has been in England to watch the Naval Con- ference, has shaken the dust oi that country cfl his feet with the remark that although the English laws for the control oi the liquor traffic, with their licenses and closing hours are jug, they" take refuge in figures‘ very sound, still he is glad to go back which; to show a certain definite increase m the price of butter 1b jgpover 1m. new figures. I1 aval- ‘edhythelocsl Liberal crem- m at with the figures given by secretary of the Deiry Associa- tion. ‘And eihcc they do‘ not take in- toaecolmttheincreesedeostofpfii- so»... which. amen: other thins!- euteedmn increase of two cents a g qoertfetalllnmilkyrloll. my‘ vwld n aefilumflmlilllflmfi‘ . Ital. . arriving at sh ubdsnuhdiae of 10m‘! “"19"” 1”‘ 5'5"‘ ' _ - joflhe at ‘time. t!!! 0 W" i" ‘PW .9 coalitions. f-lilyilflllli‘, m a free country where the speak- easies never close. "What about this affair at the Court House’! There have been some happenings around that Court House of late, about which a. num- ber of people have been led to won- der; this is not the first thing oi the kind, and it is time that the people make a demand on either the civic ‘erwthcprovlncisl authorities to find oiitwhu le the mammal m ex- htieg Government, or any other I"- we...» condone m. and mo» to laws in order to secure the Canadian dairyrnen are in today. ' 'dlIlotl1ip-iflth0 fscetethesefldt- in making up his mind to take de- finite action, the cause oi his dila- torlness being the attitude ‘of Que-e bee. Many oi the Liberal members from that province are strongly op- posed to any such ban, and even when the Premier did take his cour- age in both hands and told the cau- cus his determlnation, he was bitter- ly opposed by Quebec members. Ui- timately an agreement was arrived at, and now the Liberals in the House have for the most part closed their ranks in its nominal supporh Whirl the questlonwas previously before the House. Hon- W- D- m1"- Minister of National Revenue made a statement oi Government policy di- rectly opposing any bl-W He “m” ed that the boats cbrrylns “all” W the United States were one’ hundred pcr cent. United States boats and that the men engaged in the traffic were practically all Americans. He urged further “that the United States authorities are makinll m VETY 911m" est effort" to enforce the law. and cited his own experience in the Dc- trolt River in proof of what he claimed. In conclusion he urged that prohibition oi the issue oi clearanc- es would not solve the difficulty. that such a law would be very Km" ficult to enforce and. that it would need a large preventive force and would ‘cost a. large sum of money'- "I am sure," he said, “the most ar- dent prohlbltionlst will not say that this country should be under any ob- ligation to spend large sums of mom-y in employing many men to see that a law prohibiting the exportation oi liquor is not violated. Nations have not yet become quite so altruistic as I that. Besides that we would not suc- ceed; we would not swl) the OXDOFl-R- 1 toin oi liquor, thouiih it might be lessened to some extent." l i This was the Government's atti- ude in May last, less than a year ago, and it was surely sumclimtll! 9X- pliclt and definite. What mysterious power has induced the Mackenzie King Government to eat its own words and swallow a. diametrically opposite policy? why. the approach b: B-Il election and the policy of catching votes in every direction. It can always look to the Senate W D18- cote Quebec and. if possible. to defeat b measure which it does not itself have any faith in. The following highly imumi’? interview appeared in that admirable , 'Toronto Liberal Journal The Si"? —#it licks creation for smugnessr "Canada's only decent course," was the way in which Mr. E. Calvert. chairman of the finance committee oi the Toronto Central Conservative Association, commentedto The Sh" on Premier Mackenzie King's bill. prohibiting the export oi liquor from the Dominion to the United States. - ‘ Declaring that better understand- ing, and increased tourist traffic would be the inevitable result of such a course, Mr. Calvert predicted that "Canadian border hotels will become gold mines with the passing oi the bill." “Canada must benefit enormously by legislation of this kind," he said. “It will be a good thing for all con- cerne<i—more Americans will come to Canada and business folk will benefit instead oi bootlcggers. "What the prime minister proposes to do is the only logical and decent thing that can be done. we should show some respect for the law of the Unlteu States. No right-thinking Ca- nadian would take another view." The largest sllfllhl! l“ omum" history. thwliilil- W" "P°"°d m" the fiscal year 1929 by Hon. J. D. Montelth, Provincial Treasurer. W119" he presented his annual budget speech m the usirllturv- In a speech ‘sise 0i the liver, , y years 3,1 W.Berbl.I.D. LIVER. CAN INCREASE IN Sill ' Perhaps you have had the idea that the liver was just a large soft organ that simply filtered out the starchy particles from the blood coming from the small ll iestine, and Iidflllfl them away in the form of sugar for future use. And the liver is so big that it has been mic to do this wit-flout dif- faculty. However our research men have been finding that this large organ can increase or decrease in size when the need arises. For instance any exciting emotion such as sudden noise decreases the whereas injecting sugar solutions into the veins causes an increase in its size. It was found that vomiting ‘also increases its size. Now when you remem“ the tre- mendous size of the liver, the largest and heaviat organ, and that it holck one quarter of all blood oi the body. then you can see the importance of ability to increase or decrease in else when necessary. Thus if the liver decreases in size it means more blood available for the rest of the body. and when it increases in size there will ‘be that much less. And the volume of blood coursing through the vessels of the body in- fluences the entire system-mental and physical-in that, the blood is where it is needed most "at any one time. Now not withstanding the ability of the liver to increase m- deer-use in sine if the need arises, if you wear tight clothing, or sit or stand i" 11 ¢flmllfid or stooped position, you can interfere to some extent, with the increasing or decreasing sunny 0g m; litusi". ~ By Standing or sitting erect, and taking Ions or deep breaths you will squeeze and relax the liver and thug help the blood to flow through it more rapidly. It is the slowness of the flow of the blood through the liver that causes Comical-ion there with nausea, vomit- ll18, Imd jaundice, and the fem-ration of stone in the gall bladder adjoining‘ the liver. 5° "mlmllh the liver dam a lot of things including this increasing m4. decreasing in size, ygu can help 1t by Ewing it more room by SW-ildlng mtg sitting erect‘. Smndlng Wm, he up’ chin drawn in, chest out, abd men drawn in. Sitting with back supported, and feet lllaced firmly on the floor. THE LAND WE LOVE 8y FRANK YEIGB JACQUES CARRIER SQUARE, MONTREAL Q- What 1S the history oi’ Jacqugg Carlie!‘ square. Montreal? A‘ 35W Cartier Square in the old port of Montreal is e. centre g1 historic interest. Here is the Nelson "umem. the oldest monument in Canada. erectecuh i809. Not far away is the historic Church oi Our Lady of Bonsecour, the Sailors’ Church, A long. low buildin facing the City Hall. is the Cha au do Ramczay, erected in 1705 by Claude de Ramezay, at that time Governor of Montreal. Itwas occupied by him as an official residence for many years, It is today an interesting place, for it contains a rare collection of old a Plflllrel. Print-l. arms, coins and rel- ics. ‘fire old council chamber, kitchen and vaults, can still be seen, the lat. ter as perfect as when first built. The Square on market days is also a place .0! lllifllnt interest. that lasted over two hours. he PW- sented o full statement oi the financ- es of the province. 80108 111W a" phases of its financial fabric. He said the province's borrowins DOW" I1"- er was at a higher peak and the ‘debt and would wipe out the current debt at the end of 40 years. The estimat- ed surplus for 1930 was 8490.000. founded on a new accounting system that eliminated gross entries and ‘needless inflation. The PM!" 1mm the sale of liquor in 1929 was given u $400,000, and the estimated pro- fits for the current year, 08.100.090- The revenue from the flve-cent-a- gallon gasoline tax _in i020 was set at 085430.000. while the estimated revenue from this source for i000 was given as $11,000,000. n. mouth of the dairy farmer! _ sinst New zealand butler impor- ' tions has sufficiently influenced the Government tn open negotiations to exclude that Dominion from the Australian Treaty. This is a distinct triumph for the dairy farmers and a tie Canadians" who believe every retirement scheme was functionlnf | l On the thin plank of courage I Walk with slow steps, and fearfuily, Across the unspeakable abyss, And dare not look that way or this beet the unfathomed depths should show a The things I am afraid to know; Lest on my downcast eye there gleams " The phosphorescent stuff oi dreams. Or, trembling in the misty sir, y r Grim shapes of tenor and despair. ’ And ever as"! go I hear The jealous waves of doubt and fear Stretching with many-fingered spray To snatch me from my narrovrway, And drag into thdlif "ll?! see. My half-inch of security. Gwsrllnt itrsu not tau r- feel TM solldygrth beneath my heel. -J. J. Mills. in landed Observes. iu-bt-b-“e-q u mum rooftop-owned us». anthem-sum m who: mm‘ " Auttiddun may“; menisci-ac rammauufacturerlahalhesule- ,.-r.. ‘rm: crvsfnyym-rmnwnflcusnnrsn . ‘lwho are supposedly dry supporters u. uni. Ihie<eeh£;I nu DIUNK! AGAIN Sir,-'ihere was much discussion and mucheffort. put forth by the temperance people to have, the Act amended so that magistrates, before whom drunks were on trial, could compel the drunks, upon oath to tell from whom they procured the li- quor. After a hard fight this amend- ment was secured. The supply of drunks in such courts has increased plentifully, but how many of them have been forced to cash in under this law? Where are the inspectors on those occasions? Why isjhls question so insidlously dodged sway from? Are the Govern- ment afraid that it might implicate- some of those in high favor? Is the danger of reaching the‘ top sources of supply too great to risk? I am Sir, etc.,‘ . S0 1'1‘ SEEMS PRDHLBITION IN U. S. Sin-The estion is often asked, -Wlll pro ltion survive in the United States? Local conditions in- spire the hope that it is under the same handicaps as in this Province. Those hopes are ill founded and groundless. ' When the United States takes n matter in hand they carry it through. Their methods are too democratic to permit defeat. Their mode of operation is as different to ours as chalk is to cheese. There they get after the profes- sional bootlegger; here they skin his victims. There they employ men oi more than average intelligence to enforce their laws. There the law is placed in the officers hands to be enforced without regard to degree or‘ to persons. v Notice how quickly, and frequently they send the rum runner to the bottom with a bail from a cruiser. Nor does wealth escape as it does here. See where men, high up in the social scale and in political influ- ence, are gathered in in scores, in- dicted by their grand juries; and committed, for trial for violation of liquor laws. Ever hear oi the like of that in p .152. Island? ' ‘ Then look, at the immense liquor seizures, running __\lp mm. the 541.. liohsor scum. High she 10w, rich and poor, prince and peasant, all are requlredvto obey their law's, or take the consequences. No monkeying with the hip-pocket flask and con- doning the car ldad. No doubt the Act is exploited there, but. as soon as the explolter is dis- covered or exposed, he gets his walking ticketi These are sqme of the reasons why anomaly In . » _ LondonAnd Vicinity ‘is; s. Brenner) } i n To see London streets and their moving panorama properly, one when from there one looks ahead at the motley crowd shopping and hur- rylng by, and the ‘buses and attract- .lve shop fronts on some of the great thoroughfares. notably Oxford Cir- cus, Picadllly, Holborn, the ‘Bank, and The Strand, it is a sight worth coining to London to see. But you must not think that that only ls London. Right in the heart of the Metropolis there are great stretches of parks and gardens, such as Hyde Park, Remington Gardens, Regents, St. James and Green Parks, con- taining thousands of acres, besides mam! lesser ones, all contributing to the rest and recreation of the public; magnificent breathing places, with ponds and lakes, where numerous waterfowl may be seen, and so tame are they that they will often follow and eat out of one's hand. .In these beautiful resting places, some parts having stately; statuary and playing fountains, are immense beds containing great banks of flowers, adapted to all seasons, which in spring and summer are a blaze of color, also an immense variety of "shrubs, small trees, magnificent oaks, beeches, chestnuts and countless others, lining long vistas oi delightful scenery and surpassed nowhere. Large sectionsof these parks are used for sports, where may often be seen tennis, cricket, and croquet par- ties, and to make it still more at- tractive there ynre‘ numerous free benches where four or five can sit together, as well as hundreds of thousands of single chairs, where you can occupy one for a whole day for the sum of two pence. In Hyde Park is situated the celebrated spxace cal- led "Rotten Row," one and a half miles long and reserved for horse- back riders. The ornamental lake called the Serpentine, a beautiful sheet of water where boating parties may nearly always be seen, except in winter, is situated in Hyde Park, and nearby ls the "bandstand" which is occupied nearly every afternoon in summer by '8. first-class band. Then the “Ring ‘Tea House," a. little north of the Serpentine, a very popular addition which was a great resort of fashion in Stuart and Com- monwealth times. Teas and light (Gontinuedon page d) Good Sdmaliitans _ “ - JusttPolrticians? . . it was Labouchere who said that he didn't-mind Mr. ;Gladstone having a trump card up his. sleeve, but that what he objected to was the Old Man talking as though the Lord had put it there. That, sometimes, says the Ottawa Journal,‘ is what we feel about Mr. King. When last year the youcannot judge ofthe success of prohibition in the "United States by the results of its manipulation h‘. this Province. ‘ ‘I am Sir, etc, rusrrcui . ("'I‘he Canadian Labor Press," the Orson v! orsahizeu Union ubbr m f‘ ‘a in its current issue under the heading. "The New k-uritanism," has this pungent contribution on the subject: "Those whom the gods would de- stroy, they first make mad," is an old quotation and it seemingly 311-; plies with ‘ emendous force to the_ advocates of prohibition on the Am-‘ ericsn continent. In Ontario our greatest suffering from the Drys is the intolerant attitude we have to reckon with, but the effect of pro- hibition oper “ and attempted en- forcement is exemplified 1o the greatest degree known to the world._ by our neighbors to the south of us. There as a resultgof prohibitory laws, crime flourishes, 'murders take place with appalling frequency, mur- dersrs go unpunished, corruption is rife, not only amongst the law of- ficers, of the communities and high officials in public service, but also as has been found often, amongst those and those who are especially dele- sliedto enforce the law. We see ex- amples of e. millionaire giving a half e. million dollars to the anti-saloon; league and then being caught in! adultery and creating s public scandal. Evidently the policy of the drys in the States is that if men and . women will support the prehlbitionf law. all other sins of vice sad im-' morslitwcorruption, theft and bribe- ry. will lac-condoned. "Atleest-the people of ohtsrio are‘ of ihelcgieletlve principle initiated 57 the hreusoh Government and sretlledkful that the influence of s verysmcll group of inlolersnttigots ipzsivinfllinl~nvidlyshc m any yell‘! wlll-reeehthe ssro polntli . .W"Ilil' Nfilw as ammo-mimosa” moon Perfumes-to rctflilllle the soundness‘ Government was asked about stop- ping liquor exports to the States, Mr. King declined to do so, and Mr. Eu- ler got up in the House and in his austere Western Ontario wa-y placed the refusal squarely upon the highest moral grounds. lvir. King, we then thought, was sincere. And he prob- ably was. But one grave trouble with our Prime Minister is that one never knows what he is going to be sincere about. i-lls sincerity, in fact, is so flexible, so variable from day to day, that what he told us yesterday with the fervor of a. revivalist he is likely to denounce today with the passion of a cntsader. ' It has been that way with the ex- perts oi liquor. What Mr. Euler and Mr. King last year held to be good, Mr. King now holds to be ‘ l- and he is all for our playing the role of. the ‘Good Samaritan toward our unfortunate and fallen brethren in theU. S. A. l-le has so changed his mind, in fact, that in changing it he has trampled upon a Parliamentary principle that has been much upon his lips these years. We mean the principle of the Government getting i the untrammelled will of the House before submitting a definite policy. Mr. King is not going to ask the House of Commons what it thinks‘ about liquor exports. and guide bim- Mail, ilrders ‘ Bring I The Goods should ride on the top of- a ‘bus and _ / Promotion depends on appearaneeas . well as brains AYBE this sounds foolish at first glance, but i: it? How many men do you know who need just a. little practical grooming to give them a better lace in the world? Two things will im rovecyour a pcarancc immense y. W l kept ands and a 00d smooth shavcl And " aselinc" Petroleum Jelly makes it ssiblc to have bot economic 1y. Take the shave, for example. Tomorrowmornin spreadslight film of "Vasclind Jelly on your face before you wor in the lather. Then shave and sec the difference. After ou cry this once you'll be a. " aseline"Jeliy {an for life. As for the hands-when you come in from doin an form of manual work, a p y " ascline" Jelly and rub it in briskly before ou wash. It softens the cracks, irritation. These are sensible things to do. Easy toQIAnd "Vaseline" Jelly costs only a few cents at the nearest store. Gct some today. And remember when you buy that the trade mark Vaseline 0n the package is your assurance that you are getting the cnuinc product of the Chese rough “Beasnob”slayks College Prof. “Manicure your a " oosens the dirt, soothes the Mfg- Co. Conrfd. 5520 Chabot Avc., Montreal, Canada. self accordingly. What he ls going to do is to bring down a bill‘prohiblting exports, make it a Government meas- .ure, put on his whips, declare it a question of ‘confidence. ‘That, of course, will mean that the House will not express itself. Liberal mem- bers and so-called Progressive mem- bers will not vote to stop exports to the United States. They will vote against turning Mr. King out of office thus bringing on an immediate elec- “Golden Ian is editing this Special tion. It is perhaps unfair to atihck Mr. King for his bill until the bill itself is made public. Yet its principle, we think, is wrong. "Am I My Brother‘: Keeper," is a challenge to which r nation like an individual must pry heed; but we doubt whether it im- poses obligation uponi Canada ta take on trouble and expense and to Prince, Edward” lsland’s “Faltu re ” A Booster Feature To ‘Stimulate Business and Business Con- ditions in Prince Edward Island, published by The Charlottetown Guardian l We are Soliciting the Cooperation of the Business Firms and Leading Men of Charlottetown, Summerside and the Province. Mr. Frank Walker, Assistant Editor of the Guard- now in the course of publication, and Mr. J. M- Kirk- land is in charge of Publicity. Boost for d Greater Province (Continued on page B) Feature Edition, which» is The flavor of H. &N. Black Twist is cured in-‘-you'll have the time of your life trying to chew it out. Ask for it land enjoy yourself.