PAGE FOUR THE CHARLOTTETOVl_/'_l\_I_ GUARDIAN’ The Charlottetown Guardian Prunldont. Llano-Col. W. Chub: l. Isl-In Vlm-Prculdltil, J. B. Burnett, I‘. J. l. loornnry lJUIlL-UIDL D. A. luflhlnn, D. l. Os tam: flld Imaging Dlrnclo: I. l. Burnett. I‘. l. I Annauhm- lumen, Funk Winn: and D. l. Oink uornln; Dally (founded mm $.00 nu you (In Minna) dullvrrrd ‘n (‘My H.011 per yen ill nlvnllu) lulled In Prim»: Itlvvlral Inland. i410 pa: your Inlled lo Cunt-d: llld United ink: TUESDAY, APRIL l3, 1937 Credit Where Due f iii l1 is giiitifyiiit; to know that PREMIER KING a|1]1I'\'L‘l.'ll1‘\ \l11. lI1.\.\1~'1'1"s "co-operation and assis1.'1111'1-" during tl11' parhztiiiciitary session at 011111111 j11s1 1-l1._.-.l: h111 it is rcgrcttable he did not iakt- 1211- .-;1p.11-11111it_v 11f expressing his ap- prt-ciation i11 11 1111-11- 1-1-11cr1-tt- form. For ex- zuuplv, i11 1l11; .\p1-1-1-l1 from thc Throne at the ]1r111'11-_-;11i1111 1-11 .\:1:111'1l;1_\, ri-fcrcitcc is made t0 th1- 111-11- 11.11l-- 11-411-1-1111-111 l11-t\11-1-n Cziuatlzi a11d thc L'11111-1l l\111c1l11111 11C "insuring a freer ex- t-hzuict- 111‘ 1-1-111111-11l11i1-s." bringing “stibstantial h1-111-ii1s" 1111-11-1-111u1-1s ;1111l product-rs alike." and tsi-rriu; 111 win-uozhui 11111l1-r~t:111di11g and good- \\|ll" l11l\‘.11!1 llii‘ l\\111‘=>llllll'lt‘r1. \\ 11:11 1111s 11u11:11-1l 111 1111- Spit-ch was the fact 111-11 d11- 111 1.1 :1_;11~1-1111-111 1s substantially the same fl> 1111- '1c1'1-1 1-111111 11l:11"l= 1l11- Hnxxi-Jri" Govern- 1111-11t ncg1111u11wl iu 1111;. uhich .\-l11. blxckizxziiz }\1.\1;.'1fl<l l'll\ 1‘1>'Il1-:1Q111-.s oppnsrfl. and which 1l11-_1- 1l1r111:1-11--.| :11 11111- 111111- to terminate if re- 1111111-1! 111 1-11111‘. Thc "1-..-11p1-r;11io11 Find assist- Illl1‘1'“ ch11‘ ~11 cvirvroiisly by the Opposition l1-.11l1r. \l=»1, 121 \ .1 1'1 1i11ri11g tht‘ rt-ccnt session, \\-w1'1' 1' -:1~11i1"11~-11~ |1_1 1h1-1r uhscnvc throughout tl-.-11E1 11-111111-11111111111-111111- lhcxxizrr Govern- -.1s" i11 1-111111‘. .1111l .\l11_ KING and his col- ~ 11111 1111111p11-i1i1111. ‘.:11 r1 ~p1-.1 1x111 11 l11: claimcd that the .-;1.-11 q-i11s .111_1' more "substantial ' 111 l .11111l1:111 product-rs? According to 11 1~~:111l l11- 1111- tI-iiizuliaii Chamber of .\;1111:l111:1-_ 1: ~llll]1i\ "r1-1.1i11s itiost of the bene- {1-1 111' 1111- {1111111-1- .-1.-1-1-1~1111-11t. Canadian farm ]1111-i111'1~_ 111-14111} l11-1-1‘ 111111 hacoii. arc to be ad- 111-111-11 111 1h1 l 11111-1I Kuigduiii ntarltcts free of 111111 or 111v 111‘ any l1i111l until August, 1940. ln 1h1- 111.1 111' s-11111- 111l11-r 1111111 products, such as ('<,_‘_Q~,‘ll1tlllil'_\, ciu-t-sc and other milk products, this 1-1111tl1111-11 is- suhjt-ct 11) change. To this ex- 1.111 11V; 113,». 1-1111-11/ 1111.1‘ n11! srriiirrd .1; 11111011 for tli111111'11111 p1-1111111-1rs as 1111.1" b11111: generally stip- foam/f’ llie Chrmihcr of Agriculture built-tin quotes n11<-1l1111ri.1] i11 'l'h1- l-Iiriucrs Weekly, an in- fhu-iitial l-inqlish farm paper, as stating that ".'11"t11:1ll_1- 1l11-11- is not :1 great dt-al of difft-rcuce" b1-1111-cn thc provisions of the two treaties. Une 111111lifi1v1ti1111 1111-11ti1111cd is with rcspcct t0 the 1111131111 1!11111;1. \\l1i1‘l1 undcr the 11132 agreement 1-111i1l1-1l (1111111111 111 ship 2.5000110 cwts. a year frw- of dut_\ .'1111l 11f iw-giilziiion. Cutler thc new agr1-1-1111-111 1h1-r1- is il11: proviso that this quota 111111- lic rvstrictcd if it can be shown that Can- adziis "advance inwards the 2.500.000 cwts. is ah- 11111111.'1l and 1-111l.'111;_§1-rs the cfft-ctive working 0i ti11- s_\ s11-m 0f stipply rt-gtllzilitin." \g;1111. thc l’l|'ll|~ll ii11vt-r111111-11t has given "no |111./.-1-/11/nfn.; 1m.‘ i1: 1111/1111? ilnlirr 1m Canadian 11:11.1. [11111/11-1. h11//111'_1/11".-.1r 111111 11/1111‘ milk pra- 1i.-1.-1_1; 111- n1 [11-1111/1-11111 frmiiirc TUl/flflf a rc/ir-zne yo»- l/u- iyiiiiii/i/iil/r-r 11711111111111: of inl/‘nr/yf’ ;\'g 1s111-l1 duiios 11111 he imposed “until the tariffs on eggs and 1l.'lll'_\' produce from foreign countries are incri-ast-rl." The Fnglish farrn journal says this latter pro- vision is impnrtatit because it reaffirms the Uri- tish floverniiients freedom eventually to impose (In dunno) 1 earn an honest living in a world largely given over to technical pursuits. The rest of his ad- dress was a solemn adjuration to Canadians to preserve all that they possibly can of the llU- manitics even in the most purely technical oi their training process-cs. “It is a. pity that LORD Twrznosiuviifs words should have been misinterpreted t0 the general public, because the world outside of Canada is witnessing a dccidcd reaction from the scorn- ful attitude towards classical learning which pre- vailed a few years ago. MR. M. MACDONNELL at another matting of the same convention gave the latest news of this reaction in several de- mocratic European countries, but especially in France, where fro111 about 1900 there has been a definite governmental tendency ‘to make high- er education fit for everyone if everyone is not fit for higher education.’ The method was that of ceasing to insist 011 the ‘difficult’ f and econo- mically unrcmtincrative) studies of Greek and Latin; but a reaction has been going on since 1920, and from 427 students in the classical op- tion in that year the number has risen to 2,- 975 in 1934; and the reaction has no more ard- ent supporter than the present Socialist Premier of France, M. 31.1111. Friends of the classics claim to discern strong signs of a similar re- vival of repute, for Latin at any rate, in this country." .r Edilorial Note: I La Fontaine of Fables fame, died 1605. this date n a 1v The Spanish situation is getting worse with the passage of time. x =11 =11 duties on all imported eggs and dairy produce, "and we must" now exert the fullest pressure upon the Government to c-ut through the tangle of the trade agreements which a-t present bars her way. The l111me producer demands that there shall be a substantial increase in the tariffs on the foreigner, with a preference for the Do- minions. Int-reused iwu/iort; from the Domin- ionr should be of the nape-nee of the foreign im- pom-rs.” To rho-e strait-meme the Canadian Chamber of Agriculture bulletin adds: “It may not be gen- erally kn-uwn that rho [jnited Kingdom Govern- mr-vu intptiscis considerable- duties upon farm im- p1 111s oi forwiqn countries. To the extent that this le‘ 1h1 casr- (I-uizidian farmers, as well as ‘ fr1r1111-rs in ihc other Dominions. share the b1-n1-fits of this protection with the producers of thc lfniir-d Kingdom." V‘ l11 111111-1- words, the principle o-f tariff protec- t1-111 ziciiust fort-ign c111111trics. embodied in the l-tlr r1,;11-1-1111-111s. which M11. KING and his col- l1 1cm"- di-noiiucorl. is the same principle em- l11-1l11--l in 1hr- 11137 agreements which .\IR. KING 11ml ‘ i- 1:11:l1-:1;_r111-- _."11'1' taking credit for having p111 1l---111-;l-.! ln l1111l1 ncri-i-iuents. as the Eng- lish 5111111 _i11tll'l1.'ll ('X|'7l'(‘>s('€ it_ the aim has bggn "111I1;~Ir’. 11 111/ 1111- /»11/11'_\' 11f giving Ihr home pro- n‘ '1-'1-" l/‘r I-wr/ /l/l(‘1" Ill 111.1 mun market. In give I1‘ " P11rr"‘1111111: 1h.- sovnid. and lh! foreigner the 49-11-11 M111." \\1th lllli difference, however, ii 11 '--11.11li,111 farm product-rs obtain lt-ss; and l'.' u‘ ‘~11 i111h1-1ri11l1s1s1111111‘. in 1hr‘ way of tariff l" "ow-live. 1111111-1- 1h1- 111-11- agreement than they did 11111101 lh1- pact ui-goiizitcrl by MR. Bl-INNEIT. Classical Curriculum "\\ l11-11 .-| uisr- 11nd \\-1-ll-infor111cd man speaks f-1r l1.1l1'-;111-h1111r 1111 lllf‘ stihjcct of Prlucaiion, it 1s 1-\1r1-1111l1- difficult to compress what he said l - ' - a 1111l1111 ih1- twmlplis- 11f 11 ht-zidhnc.’ sa_vs Toron- to .\'-1111v1l:1_v Night. "llut it ivoultl he (liffirtilt t1. i1111-11l :1 l11-:11|li111- 11-hicl1 would lt-ss accurately r1-pr1--1-11t \\h.'1l 1.1111] 'l'\\'1-cds11111ir said here last \11-1-k than thc 11111- which zippcared over it in a H ]111‘;1l 11111114‘; “lh-lit-rcs cliissitltl curriculum 0f E (mloril 11111! (l-mihridgc 1111i for Canada." The .' 11111111‘ .'11l111i1:1l1l1- sp1-11-l1 1111s a plea that cdtica- _ lion in Carnal.- should ht- so dircctctl as to i1n- , |1.-11t 11s 111111-11 ..s l111--il1l(‘ 11f that ‘humane’ know- l11l-_;1 111111;. 1l1.-1ls 11i1l1 v.-1l111-<, as ilistinguished f1- 111 l.'11- l<-1i|1111';1l kii11\\l1'1l;11‘ uhich (lcals with 1 b11111: 1'..1-1s. _\il 1h.-11 Lorin 'l‘\1'1-.|;1>s.\11"|iz said i 1115-11111! th1- '1'l.1ssi1".1l r11rri1-11l11111 of Oxford and (‘:1i11l1ri1l1-1-' \\'.‘|\ that :1 country like (Iannda —- a111l for that 111:1111-r :1 country like the England i.‘ m‘ t111l.'1\' -1-11ul1| 1111i afford 1o occupy its young ' 1111-11 c.\'1‘l11-iv1-l_\' in tl11-s1- l1u111.'1|1c studicsuntil tl11-1 :|1'1' l1\1-|11_\»11111'; ih'|l ii mllsl (‘oIlCPrn itself largely with preparing every young person to Premier Hepburn demands a showdown whcthcr Ontario ivill be governed from Queeifs Park 0r Chicago. =11 =11 =11 Figures for the 1936 canning pack in Cana- da show that 4(1.63o,846 pounds of tomato juice were canned. compared Willi 10,362,411 pounds five years ago. _ - n 11 t “Oh to be in England now that April’s there,” is the song of many others besides the Hon. “I B. Le-Pagc and the late Robert Browning. a1 1: =11 Russia is building for children automobiles having three-speed gcars and capable of making twenty-five miles an hour. \\'hy not have such for our spcedsters hcrc? =11 =1 a1 Research workers in California have un- earthed an ordinance, still uurcpealcd, passed in 18110. standardizing the legal degree of intoxi- cation. Drinkers violate the law only when they are “tinablc to walk or so stupid as to be incap- able of sclf-locomotiou." 1 i i It is no new news that Pritnc blinistcr Bald- win is to rctirc alter the Coronation. What is news is his determination to forsaltc Westmin- ster. It was generally understood that in the rcshtiffling of portfolios he would sticcccd Ramsziy- Macdotiald as Lord President of Council, the former going to the Lords as Lord Privy 50:11. _ v u I _ From what was hinted in Parliament and what was stated the other itight in the debate on the Privy Council decisions, it is expected that this fall the federal Govcrnmcttt will call another conference with the provinces to pave the way for what legislation in both the pro- vinces and the Dominion is necessary to make an unemployment insurance scheme effective. =11 x Prime Minister King was able to do what Hon, R. B. Bennett was never able to do-—con- gratulate the Opposition on its active coopera-c tion in facilitating the progress of parliament- ary business. It will be recalled the late Premier Lea paid a similar compliment to the late Hon. J. D. Stewart. It is a good political failing Tories have of helping the other fellow in the public interest. i 1 it February imports of farm implements and machinery were valued at $928,815 compared with $713,203 in the month preceding and $464,- 046 in the corresponding month last year. The United States supplied to the value of $892,530. Internal combustion traction engines accounted for approximately half of the total February import, amounting to $491,025 against $160,681 last yea-r, a a a Mexico has gone 5o per cent dry, as one day last week the citizens rose to discover from their morning newspapers that President Laz- aro Cardenas had decided to make Mexico “non-alcoholic” three days a week and to pro- hibit entirely the manufacture and sale of alco- holic beverages in the Indian regions. While the announcement came without warning. the pub- lic as a whole was not greatly surprised, since President Cardenas, who neither drinks nor smokes himself, has already eliminated gamb- ling in Mexico except for the national lottery. =11 x =11 King George VI has invited four workingmcn and womcn to attend his coronation on May I2. The lucky four. who accepted with pleasure, are Miss Lizzie McCuIloch, a weaver employed by a Glasgow firm; Miss Doris Ciriffiths, of the General Electric Company, Birmingham; Leslie Pollard, a pit boy in the collicry near Chester- field, and djlfzted Thomas, employed by steel and tinplate manufacturers at Pontardawe, South Wales. The royal invitations were conveyed through the Industrial Welfare Soci- ety, of which the King is president. I I I To be, or not to be that is the question the Legislature has to decide regarding the future .01’ the Liberal Party in this province, Messrs. juries, Hughes e1 al. are shrewd enough to re- alize that it is useless for them or their party to go to the expectant electorate with their hands tie regarding plums of office. It may be a prgt§ low standard of public life, nevertheless camlitlates realize that if they want to be elect- ed they must have poll workers, and if they 11-11111 poll workers they muu have inducemen to offer for their acivfi. - Notes By The Way Anrmuncauicnt that a White Home message soon will revive the problem of uood control, a matter 0t" vital interest. two mouths ago, 1s a reminder of the complexities of the problem. one o1 the complexi- ties oi the ease with which the flood threat is foigotten when the water recedes. It. takes a great dis- aster to stimuate interest. in flood control. So far, no one has discov- ered how to revive interest when 1t begins to lag, or how to keep it. from lagging. The situation is like that of the farmer who couldn't re- pair the roof when it was raining. and when it. wasrft raining never thought about Ila-Canton Reposi- tory. Germany will shortly have the automobile to sell at. $400 which the German automobile industry has perfected in response to the desire of the Government for a “popular" car at a low price. It. is now ready to be introduced. The cars will be manufactured by all motor vehicle plants in the country and a]! wlt be alike except for some difference in appearance. The machine will be a four-passenger. and powered by a 25 to 30-hotsepower four-stroke motor. It is designed to attain a maximum speed of 55 miles an hour, according to Berlin reports.- Chmnlcle Telegraph. In an article in Harper's magaz- ine. Vllhialmer Stefansson takes ex- ception to what was supposed to be a svell-settled fact; to-wlt, that 1m exclus=ve meat dict was not good for people. This well-known explorer lived on meat exclusively. one year from necessity ln the Arctic and slx years from choice in New York city, and during all his life otherwise has been a heavy meat eabt-r. He says that the doctors tell him, not-with- stand-ing, that he ls physically bet- ter than the average in those par- ticulars whore meat eating has been supposed to be bad-Duluth Herald. .1 A pretty experiment is being worked out, by many people espec- lally at this time cf year. namely, by taking a branch of a fruit tree, placing it. fn water and watching the blooms develop. The branch of a cherry tree or an apple will serve admiralfy for this purpose. and a very attractive lot of blossoms may be produced utllh a few weeks. Evidence is accumulating to show that foreign-born in the United Sttnes cannot be blamed for most. crimes, or even for a majority of crimes, in some eastern communi- ties, where the proportion of for- eign-born is high. when the coun- try as a whole is canvassed, as the Rum-ell Sage Founddtion has rec- ently proved, the foreign element; in crime drops to less than 6 per cent; of all white persons received in state and federal prisons during 1935. In New York City, where 32 per cent of the populai. on is for- ign-born, only 22.1 per cent of 2,590 offenders brought before the Mim- haltan Court of General Sessions were born outside the country. This result is reported lntlependently of the Russell Sage conclusion that. crime cannot smugy be blamed on twtslderss-Chi-istiun Science Moni- r. There is a radio plant in Ger- many from which at 10 o'clock each night. Communist propaganda is broadcast. A dllgcnt, search has thus far failed to reveal the sta- tion, which is now thought t0 be lodged ln an automobile. This is one matters ‘are not. on such a united front 1n Germany as the Nazis clalm.--Brant.ford Expositor. Eight steamship: have been char- tered to transport. the British con- tfingenl: of 8.000 Boy Scouts and- leaclers across the English Channel to the World Scout Jamboree in Holland this summer. Two of the vessels will sail from Dover, two from Great Yarmnuth. two from Tfbury and t wo from Harwlch- Moncton Times. The job of being a. member of a. legislature ls not ivhat. it; ls cracked up to be. An individual member ls expected to do a. lot. for his consti- tuency, but 1t. must. be remembered that there are a lot of counties in the province, each of which wants everything in sight. meantime 1n- sisting that the Budget must. be balanced. We certainly are an in- consistent lot of people and there seems nothing to do about 1t.- sackvllle Tribune. Members of’ the Hunter College faculty consented to endure that. night-mare of the sensitive adult-q public exh bltlon of their baby pic- tures for the benefit of hLBh W918- Snapshots of boys 1n sailor suits, of girls in plnafores and of Juveniles of either sex in even more tnfantfe garments were thrown on a screen to the delight. of the upper-class students. The audience paid five cents each to enter a. darkened mom during the lunch-hour, and each got her moneys worth. The receipts will be used for committee teas. The exhlbtlon was a free-for- all guessing game. As each picture was thrown on the screen the oper- ator of the projector called out. the department. tn which the subject was teaching. Sometimes identific- ation was instantaneous and unani- mous-Canadlan Press. The Goshen, N. Y, min who left a will designating a son and three grandchildren to share and share alike all hla lawful debtsbui. did not mention real estate valued at $3.000, followed somewhat closely the spirit of the times, economically speaking, though he wu franker than moat persons. Every year for a consider- able period the voting grandparents and parent-i 0f’ the country have been piling up gigantic debts for the taxpayers among their children and great-great-great grandchild- ren to pay, but, unlike the Goehen satlrlnt, they do not mention the fact. Fcture the equlvflent of the Goahen man's frank statement. of liabilities In a bedtime conference between a member of conaress and his zrandchlldicn. — Philadelphia swim; Bulletin. more indication of the fact thatl P.E.I. fPotatoes ByLM.BellM.Da PUBLIC FORUM I 1.3.1.“- .'.'..-.»...'.Z'.."-‘F union d lltoufl. ‘Ill Shari Gurlln loaf!" . s. =='-—— in doubtful tn the bonn ftdea o1 the info. tlon so given. the Judge. Mist ‘ ‘ appointed un- der this Act or Stlpendlary Maz- lstrates may order the detention of’ the accused!» custody until enquiry can be made to the satis- IV The potato is a very desirable and appetizlng food to supply heat and. energy and for activity of’ all kinds, due to its carbohy- drate, protein, fat, vitamin, min- eral and water content and is therefore a very valuable addition with milk, to the diet. of the grow- , ing active child, as well of.’ the a- dult. It. is exceptionally good when carefully baked tn a. cloned oven, as in this way almost. all of its abundant vitamin content is retained. It also favors the for- mation of dextrln from its starch content, which is very easy of’ as- similation. One precaution, how- ever, should be observed — when the thoroughly cooked POI-W) l5 taken from the oven, it should at. once be pierced deeply tn several places, so as to allow the steam t0 escape which forms from its wat- er content tn the high heat. of’ the oven-otherwise the condensation of this steam into water within its baked shell,‘ rendered inrpervlolll by baking, will tend to make lt. ap- pear a trifle soggy when Opened- The Committee of Health of the League of" Nations gave out. a re- port; advising that more potatoes lbe eaten, declaring that potatoes ‘ provide extra Vitamin C and also lcontains more readily available ‘ calcium and phosphorous than are present. ln cereals. Ind ‘Phil'- they yield more tron and Vitamin B than milled grains. One of the most. outstandltw qualities of the potato lies tn the fact, that up to the present time, no known method has yet bee“ devised for the so called “Proces- sing" of the potato, which usually, in almost; all other foods destroy a great part. of’ its food value. 1f we review the foods so unf- versally used today, it. is apparent. that through commercial greed, the most. valuable part 0t the food value ls generally destroyed in processing them. For example. white wheat. flour is made from wheat by eliminating from the wheat berry lts germ part-using only the endospcrm of the wheat. kernel, which removes, the greater part. of its nutrition and food value. This ls done so 11 can be kept in storage for a long period of time without. any danger, relative- ly, of spoilage. The germ of the wheat berry contains the great. part. o! food value, but. ls contains an oll which soon becomes rancid if stored for a little time. This wheat germ con- tains a great part of the food value of the wheat and has been found of the greatest value as an acces- sory food ln the diet. of animals kept in captivity as it is very rich especially in Vitamin E. ‘The processing of polished rice and rye com and barley also rc- moves the germ portion so they can be kept a long time without danger of spoilage. leaving little of food vnlue. aside from their carbo- hydrate content. This is also true of all de-ger- miuatcd grains. Another food. that, in its pure unprocessed state, is milk. This is the food on which all in- fants who are not: breast fed, imust. depend for the food essen- ‘ tials necessary to sustin life and produce growth and development and physical well-being, as it nor- mally should progress. There is no other food known today that. fills that: requirements. As the infant becomes a little older, egg yolk, juices from ripe unsulphured fruit. or tomato juice and potato ls added to the diet. The Juice of the potatp ls often used tn place of the mm. juices which makes a very admirable combina- tion. as {ahe potato ls very rich in its vitamin C content. Some years ago, before the 0x- istence of those most. vital sub- stances, now known as vltamines, was known to be present 1n the foods 0t‘ various kinds. it. became the universal custom to feed 1n- fants a. kind of milk which had been processed by a process call- ed “Pasteurtzatlom and the pro- duct was known as pasteurized milk. This pasteurization processing consists in heating at. the degree of 143 clegreess to 145 degrees E, and keeping 1t t. this temperature for thirty mlnu a. HThls destroys all the vitamin O SPRING TONIC BLOOD PURIFIEB Mac's Blood Food A combination especially val- uable in the treatment of those dlaene: when their origin i: tracublg u; m h. poverlshod condlllon of the ulood. One of the ‘rented remod- lea in the ‘ fitment ol Bhu- mallam and a guaranteed op- petlte restorative. Gel. s box 00-day. , Box of 50 tablet: 50c. DR. L. B. EVANS l! you have my trouble with your Manuel: gmh u lndlgutlon, dyspepah, [Qlr stomach, urtbnrn, gutrlo dhtrcu, m, than 6on1 delay Letting: h0tt_le_ of Dr. Bani: hlely. Evm‘: Stomach Mixture I: l prelcrlptlon o! Dr. L. B. Evnm, noted Inglllh Phy- flolnn of which we luvo Ch: ml; right: u» and lllwe all- lng ll luvs rocelved nnmcrou leltlmunh from all!!!“ purehuen. Try a bottle to-chy. Inc: l5 h. the most complete food in itself’ known, is hi? r1110 MAGS Mall Order: Promplly I Attended to. or such Jild8fl. Magistrate appointed under this Act; or Btl- 1. PATEIDGI OI PHEASANT. sin-I not: that. The Minister of Agrlculvure Intends to exchange 100 o! our Hungarian Pat-ridge for an equal number of Ontario R1118 Neck Pheasants. 1m. me point out that the “l-luns" are already paired off and will be laying by May 1st. If 50 pairs are taken now 1t. will mean" a loss of 1.000 birds figuring an average brood o! 20 young wicks. Why not delay the exchango of birds until the Fall season? ~- Several attempts have been made to introduce Pheasants in P. E. 1., and met with ta-llun, no why re- peat the experiment Leave our birdshm-eboralsethntrbmodsbe- fore making any exchange and the L000 young they will raise will give the sportsmen good shooting dur- ing a short open season. Why ship BJWBY the equal of 1,000 birds before the sportsmen even get a chance to try them out u game birds? 1.1m sir. etc. IPOETSMAN PMIIIIEITION LAWS Shy-J see by ‘the press reports that. the Campbell Government 1s consolidating the Prohibition Laws of’ P. E. Island during the present session. In the year 1928 various Acts relating to Prohibi- tion were consolidated as follows: 1'1. That Section 144 01' said Act 1s repealed and the following sub- stituted therefor: - 144. (l) It. shall be the duty of’ the Judge, Magistrates appointed under this Act. or Stlpendinry Magistrates holding am; inquiry under this Act to examine upon oath all persons brought before him charged under any of the pro- visions o! this Act as to where and from whom such person had obtained the liquor which was drunk or consumed or was tn the possession of the person so charg- ed. and inability or refusal to give such information to the satisfac- tion of the Judge, Magistrate ap- pointed under this Act. or Stipen- dlary Magistrates, shall be prlmn. facie evidence that the person so charged had liquor in his posses- sion contrary to the provisions o! Section 52 of this Act. (2) Provided that. t! information ls given under the provisions of’ this Section and the Judge. Magistrates appointed under this Act; or Stlpendlary Magistrates, ls content of milk and impairs its other food properties and 1f this be used as the sole diet for the young child for some length of time, that. dreaded and disastrous condition known as Scorbutus or Scury always develops. the disas- trous results produced by remov- ing the essential food elements by processing ft. and it’ this deficiency is not supplied by other foods, r as to the bona. fldes o1 such Information. (3) 1f the name so given as that. of the person who supplied the liquor be fictitious or be the name of a non-resident: of this Province. or t! m the opinion o! the Judge, Magistrate appointed under this Act or Btlpendlary Magistrate. information so given be not genuine, 1n such a case there shall be i; conclusive pre- aumptlon that the accused had liquor in his possession contrary to the provisions of’ Section 52 o! this Act. Has section 144 of’ the Prohibi- tlon Act of 1928 been repealed. t! so, when? And 1f not does the present; Government intend re- pealing section 144? ‘There can be no doubt that all Judges and Magistrates appoint’.- ed under this act or Sttpendlary Magistrates who are all loyal British subjects and who are uri- der oath past. and present have done their duty as section 144 calls for. This ls a very import.- ant piece o! legislation 1n the 1n- tcrests of Prohibition, and no doubt the officers of the various temperance societies will see that all Judges and Magistrates and Stlppendlury Magistrates will not look and wink at Section 144. I am Sir. etc.. PROHIBITION. A POLITICAL FOOTBALL S1r,—Premler Campbell ls re- portedas saying that. in the past- prohtbltlon has been made a pol’- itlcal football. While to an extent this ls true, any reference to it comes with un- becoming grace from Mnflampbell 0r his party. To charge that Mr. W. E. Berti.- ley, the late W. T. Huggan, Mr. J. A. Brace (Summerside), Mr. G. H. Holbrook, Mr.‘ Simpson (Mal- peque). myself and hundreds of others who opposed our party in a. vigorous contest for prohibition, were 1n the political football game, ls as devoid of truth as it ls ln- decent tn insult. If his reference was to matters of enforcement, during the period when he was Attorney General in the Lea Government. I would not dispute his reasoning, and lf the lld is lifted from many transac- tions of those days the disclosures would put me out: of court. Or if he was speaking of the election campaign of 1935. hlscnse would be unanswerable, yet with the difficulty that it would be one sided, a lone game in which the Liberal party were the sole occu- pants of the fleld. In 1930-31 Premier Stewart an- nounced his acceptance of the ver- dict of’ the people, without reser- vation. thus placing, as far as the Conservative party was concerned. the question of prohibition absol- utely outside the arena. of party may result ln deformity. which might become permanent during the life of the individual if not promptly corrected by adding to the child's diet, foods that sup- ply these deffclencles. As already stated. the potato is of very high value for this purpose, especially as the child becomes older, as ll; contains abudance of Vitamin C. The potato also has many more valuable food elements which ren- der lt. a. very desirable food for the growing child. that will be considered further on, in more de- tall. This proceaslng has also extend- ed 11o the marketing of the cltrous fruits. In order that they can be safely kept a. long time, it la now customary to remove them from the tree in which they are growing, long before they are fully matured, and in order to preserve and ripen them. they are "Sul- phured" as expressed in the Unit- ed States paper advertisements — presumably being subjected to the wctlon o! sulphur dioxide gas. Unrfpe fruit: contain an irri- tating ‘ndlgestlble acid which ren- der them unfit for human use, and ff sulphur be incorporated into them tn the form o! sulphur diox- ide gas. this gas, being very solu- able in the water of the fruit: or of the body tissues after eating, unites chemically in the presence of and in contact with this water, forming sulphurous acid. . Fruit thus processed with contained sulphurous acid, if eaten, may prove very injurious 1n the body and many people in the United States refuse tn purchase sulphur- ed fruits. Ac the main functions of the cltroua fruits, when eaten. l: to provide Vitamin O to protect the system against the develop- ment. of that disastrous condition, eqaeclally tn the young child, known u ICIIIW, and to guard a- gainst an accumulation or acid in the tissues of the body—lt is thus very apparent. that green unripe cltrous fruit; are useless for either of these purposes, in tact lre very harmful tn the presence o! con- tained acids. lo some other food must be nought that 11:4,: large Vitamin O content. and that also combats the accumulation of acid: In the body tissue: and fluids. The potato fills both these ro- qulrementa for the preservation d! health and well-being in i most remarkable my, u it contain: n Inga amount. of vitamin O, and ‘ ‘ the accumulation o! ac- ids in the body, being strongly al- kaline formlm, to the extent of aovim per cent. and when eaten with milk and milk product: :nd green leafy vegetables and ripe fruits, the body l: fully protect. " against the development of Scur- vy. When egg yolk, I little meat, and cereal grain: including wheat. :nd : little 11m once a week are added to t-hl: comblnntlon of foods. on adequate diet In provid- ed for wmnotlm the develop- ment nnd growth of the young growing child and nlao l: : very ntlafnctorv diet. for the adult. T0 b0 continued) 1"‘ - politics. T!!! END 0F THE WORLD Quite. tuiexpectedly, a: Vasserot The armless ambidextrlan was lighting A match between his great. ‘and sec- ond toe, And Ralph the lion was engaged 1n | The neck of’ Madame Housman while the drum Pointed, and Teeny was about to cough In waltz-time swinging Jocko by the thumb- Qul-te unexpectedly the top blew ofl: And there, there overhead, there, there hung over Those thousands of white faces, those dazed eyes, There in the starless dark the poise, the hover, There with vast wings MPOs! the cancelled skies. There in the sudden blackness the black pal! or nothing. nothing. nothinz — nothing at all. -Archlb ld MacLelsh. ever, 01' Liberal leaders. In strong- est. militant force they took pos- session of the football field. Their declamatlons against the MacMll- Ian-Stewart Government for a1- leged non-enforcement vied in ferocity with the thunders of the flrmament, and their pleadings to give them a chance to save the youth of our land from what: they pictured as an inferno of intoxi- cation was a chief feature of ev- ery appeal. But. they had to play alone There was no other side to ktcl the ball or join the contest. T1111 to the traditions of their part3 the MacMlllan candidates left thi “football" practice entirely in the hands of Hon. Thane Camltbe" and his-party. They could afford to do so. Conscious that. they had a. record of duty performed, they refused to make this moral issue a. political game. And the damn- lngfirecord of today is a. compari- son of’ prohibition enforcement as between the two parties. And Premier Campbell to talk of 111 as a. political 1001111111: ye sods what. a show! What an lndlscre- tlon! I am Sir. etc; LEWIS P. TANTON. .\_\Q 1' / ' 1,. \\E-.iI‘NI E 715/ w‘ "AcxAc H‘ p‘ p!‘ 9 0*‘ 1 ' This was not the attitude, how- Are YOU the Uwner who ~ can never have a: l Efficient Claims Service is the all important factor in Automobile Insurance. IIYIIDMAN 81 60., l-IMITEII Charlotlcluwn Accident Y , Mon thin 1,000,000 Accident: l you on this continent illustrate: thonoecl ofAutomobilolnnurunce. ESTABLISHED 1872 Snmmorslde Montague for animals. the mixture VERMICIDE CAPSULES They were first devised by Dr. Cecil ffrench in 1895, as the original Combination Worm Remedy, the first of its kind in capsular form ever to be produced -; Dose your foxes now wit. the No. 3 size, and get ; best. results-All foxes (fro The Price $1.00 box (30 capsules) Boxes of 100 Capsules — - - - - - - - $2.50 Ranch size, 500 Capsules — — - - - — - $10.00 Prepaid to any addres on receipt of price (Iff)! 2 to 4 weeks old) need No. 3 size. CENTRAL Remedies for .11 .1111 For Vitality E. A. F QSTER, DRUGSTORE Sole Authorized Distributor for ffrench Animal .111. BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA P. E. Island _,.,., dlWdl-H ll“?