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' ` _ _____,_,__v._,` ._-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ _ ,_ . , _ ,¢,-_- ,- ,_-,-L ,C-_ 7-_-_-_-_-< ~` ~ r 41| I U1 > fx ‘q .¢\,.-:::.-_-_-~.-. - _ , f- - Y NOVEMBER 30th. 1917. -iv _.VZ _ :_____. __ _,M __., - - - “___-.-_-_ ,-_-_--_-_ .¢. ¢ _-_-_~_~_-ia... -~ - ~ _» -_ _ '-_ I ' i'i‘i|i<: L.\l_'ii_ii<:u ¢fi.osl'_ni-: 'Sir‘Wilfrid Laurier in his speech in Ot- tawaV,Tuesday nigllt,.justil_ied the mob de; monstration at Kitchener, Ont.,-'where an organized, band of_his German followers. broke up a ine-eting that was to have been addressed by Sir R,obe_rt -Borden. _ S11’ Wilfrid _.said : - _ '~ “The gag is gag whether it is 'appli- ed by a turbulent crowd in the public meeting or whether' it is applied _in Parliament by the obedient majority of a cold blooded government." l _ Against the constitutional usage of clos- ure, applied in the British parliament by such leaders as Gladstone and Asquith, Sir Wilfrid plaeesmob i'ule, such rule as has disgraced the province of Quebec during the pl-eSen;`¢&1n_paign, such rule as the G'ei°man__foll0wei's of Laurier employed in the'-Ge1°'nian>» centre, Kitchener, foi'inerl_y Berlin. i . The`cl_Qsiire;\yas applied in the Canadian.; parl,iament toinsure ‘progress and to pre-i vent unnecessary waste of time. In re- venge for this,"tU"‘choke off discussion at public meetings; to prevent the Premier of Canada addressing his constituents, Lauri- er finds aplace for the howling mob of Ger- mans who paraded the streets of Kitchen- er with Laurier_bannei‘s and afterwards broke up the meeting called to hear Sir Robert Borden. - ' l In Quebec similar disgraceful occurrene-i cs have been recorded during the past week, and today t-hei‘e are important pop-f ulous centres in that province into which it* wotlldgbe unsafe for the Premier of Canada' to go. And the mob has Sir Wilfrid’s tacitl asselitl "~i'Ifhey have__as much right to dol this as the parliament df Canada oi' of _Eng- land has to apply closure! . , According to `our Ontario despatcliesl yesterday morning the situation in Quebec’ is beginning to look serious and trouble is' expected. The English speaking people of the provincefareVnot'-going to have_their right of free speech thus trampled upon. Laurier defends this on alleged constitu- tional gi°ounds._ _ ' _af _ J O , I)I‘]II"\'IN(i I__\ I`I{|I'iIl l"o1T..S0me t_wen.ty_ye_ai‘s _or so the follow- ers of Sir Wilfrid have been holding him up as “Canada’s greatest statesman.” “the only man” in every crisis that has arisen. This style of advertising has been so pe-‘- sistently followed up that many took it for granted that it was so and these, now find- ing that their idol has feet of clay, find it difficult to acknowledge it. Sir Wilfrid is a politician, shrewd, plausible, ingenious and of a pleasing personality; better still in a politician, the faculty ofconciliating the disgruntled with fair' promises. That he is sadly in arrears in the fulfilment of his promises counts for nothing _ His pro- mises, repeated in __many_ election cam- paigns to overcome our ownlittle difficult- ies in- this province, as for instance our greatest,».- the transportation problem, is a case in point. Had he remained in power the’ solution of this question would still be in the dim and distant future surrounded by a halo ofrosy promises. But that by the way. A former colleague of Sir Wilfrid, the Hon. R. L. Richardson, a'former Liberal whip, in the Liberal Winnipeg Tribune, gives a cold blooded dissection of the “Lib- eralism” preached, practised and finally shattered by,the Quebec ,leadership of Sir Wilfrid. H`e"says in part: ` “Aifter 189_6_, Sir. Wilfrid Laurier became the §atS_pa,.w`__,Qf__s ecial interests. He be- trayed his partyfiié betrayed the masses of the,~peopIe,»,ahd¢, -by ~‘__hi_ -acts 'constituted himse`if't'-he ‘champion fifsthe very predat- ory interests against ,which he 'was chosen to fight. .$._;`jI'i“_` “Under partyism-always a virulent weakeninipdisease of the Canadianbody politic-theogractice' had become so well established `deifykig party leaders, that Sir Wilfrid’s personality soon became in _ ' ram CHAR _ __,..\",_.1_-_<;,__,__ .._-..-_..l*l__J-...__ - ~> '- -i, 'under “Lat1rierim”'Canada’w`as disgraced with the Saskatchewan land deal, fake homesteading, grazing land deals, irriga - tion deals, -timber limits;-scandals, etc., etc. In the marine departmentscaiidal followed upon scandal, incl-uding the Cana- dian fog signal, the “Arctic” scandal, pat- ronage prices, e`tc.,~.etc. c ' ' “Bastard constitutio'ns were fastened lupon Saskatchewan and Alberta,” in the face of. general protest from every section of Canada save Quebec. - "_ _“Sir Wilfrid treiited as a huge joke his pledge to “reform” the senate.” .These and other exposures _of things no\v almost forgotten, set), forth by a former lieutenant of Sir Wilfr,i;},.may sound cold and even unmerciful inthe midst of the present glorification 'of Sir"iiNilfrid,_bul coming from an old associate they are worth considering-even in the midst_of` ,` the ‘glorification and especially in view of. the fact that every other lieutenant of Sii* Wilfrid has left him because of his War policy in the greatest crisis Canada has ‘ev- er known. I _ _ Mr. Richardson sums up his article' by saying: A “We repea that. Messrs. McLean, Row- ell, Carvell, 'Calder and other Liberals have donea good day’s work for Liberalism.ir Canada” (iii abandoning Laurieiiaiid join- ing tlie Union Government.) .\ i_iisi~;n.\i_ \'ii<:\\'( ‘ Would it not be infinitely more becoming- if those who are tryingto make partisar copital out of the name of Liberalism Wert to join hearts and hand/s for the once-tht I occasion being so momentous - with al their fellow Canadians in the great figh’ for real Liberalism, now reddening thi fields of Europe with _blood and w_hi_cl might quite conceivably be lost for lack of-' such suppoi‘t as a united and earnest Can- ada can give? Our sons, our brothers, ev- en our fathers are dying there in suppor' of that great cause, the cause of universa _ Liberalism while disunion is being foment- ` ed here,aiid the sending of vitally import- ant aid delayed, in the hollow nami of _party Liberalism \vhich stands for thi time being iii this Dominion, for no recog- nizable moral or political principle.-Hali fax Chronicle, formerly Liberal, now Uni- onist. - . _ ---0-.-- 'l‘l.\|l-I l~‘<>l: l'l.,\'lN si’l~:l-I('lli‘ It is time for plain and honest speech Quebec has not borne, and is not bearing a reasonable share in the great strugglf' against autocracy_ That province, undei the Military Service Act, will be called upw' to furnish a fairer proportion of the mei’ required henceforward to make good the inevitable losses of the Canadian corps The citizen who votes against the Acl knowing this to be the case is casting z vote for Bourassa’s policy, no matter whal he may say about Bourassa the man Bourassa’s policy is to let Britain fight il out alone. He denies that Canadians hav: any interest in the war, and declares thai the depopulation of Canada by voluntary enlistment would be no better than its de- population under the Military Service Act -Toronto Globe. r _ _____O_______ I s \\"I[() IS liI.\'(i 'I`IIIlKI‘I°.’ The Globe says editorially re Kitchener episode:- "If Kitchener can stand it Canada can. But that sort of folly is bound to hurl both. _ ' “Who is King in Kitchener? Canadians will be tempted to ask after Saturdray night’s outbursts.” - _\N _\ I’I’I‘]_\’I. I"I{().\I 'I‘III'} |)|‘J_\ I) \ . “I have been with your fathers, hus- bandsabrothers and sons' in the stillness of the night on the shelltorn ,Western Battle Front-I have been w_ith. them' when they were passing through the. Valley of the Shadow and their last thoughts were al- ways of you-their loved ones at home- and they made the glorious sacrifice will- ingly in the thought that it was to protect you and save you from the sorrow and similar suffering of those people across the sea. They died in the thought that their the party a' greater powerthantprinciple. “Sir Wilfrid Laurier surround-ed himself with a number .of men whose _ god ~ was Spoils. Sir Wilfrid took_into counsel and was `ad\9fseld"b_v, the very classes of men whom. the people elected_ him to fight. As- tute as he was, and is, he never openly dis- avowed his professions more emphatically by acts, and m e acts, to the disadva age ofgrgligxigtlfie bgllrayal *of trlue Litber- a . `_, _ l` ‘_ ° ’ / “ ,gin the hmiiingfof the public-wioniiiin £3? xnvib. loved ones in Noya Scotia would see that .their sacrifice had- not been in vain.”-- Eieut. “Toby” Jones at meeting in Halifax. ‘ _ _ _';NoTi~:s _ l The Laurier candidates, whatever they say, -will-,~-as supporters of Laurier, sup ~ Port referendum and delay while Canada’s sons ,arefalling out of -the ranlls. That i_s,,yvlia_t, defeat of, the Union ,Government H 1 _ _ J ‘A 1 ~ -_ ' g _ _ l , i _of .success_ lf the Jews wang to return ‘-c were to edl th irl_icle‘ lor' circu ooooopogx 9 Q oo neo; Ill! f lHE~~l f WAN! E|illiESl|Nt 'l»§§'l»OO +0 1|\\i~l-'l'§'|»'ll»¢ upon the borderland of §ealll.y,,ah.d_ recalls what Thoreau mice said about castles' in the air. The Ol-I'#ll*'l'§*'l 'I' 0 'll #- #- Q. .¢. American philosopher observed th:it`C5“9'¢9- I' IE' °lm°“ “emu” that we the air was the place to rear caatlos,' illld 80060. "Now put the foundations '>\mdé,._.. so fa-'_ As the movement isiamglgm times, an-agricultural people, concerned to return nie Jews to Pin-lp cstlne. whence they escaped many '10l\¥Ul`i€s ago, it is now within sight' *o Palestine and become a nntLon,l ‘hc'_v will have _tho opportunity- Ofi 'lolng so. Most of_Palestlne is in tho ‘wnds of British troops. which are only a few miles from Jerusalem. A` "lay or so ago Mr. Balfour said that ‘he British Government _would look ’avorabl_v upon the aspi-rations of lews who desired to re%urn to the old homesteui, though li intimated *hat they would be provided with liritlsh suzeralnty. and that they “-'0Uld not be permitted to make! Pal- #-‘lne a country which -would support lows; and exclude all others. Turks No Longer Count I In this connertloii it is interesflpg 'i read nn article in the London' `po'ctulor of Soptcnibcn( l8!L7. in- vhich the question of the Jews' re-: nrnlng to Palestine in discussed. ll 'ay's- something for the writfr that if i of ~ ilion to--day ha would not have to 'lianize much. On only one point vnnld he 'have lo revise lndl:nient..' -nd that was when he (liscussed who-, bf-_r the Sultan ol` ’l`urke_v-at that 'nie our old friend Abdul the 'iiiiniicd--woiilil sanction the project `f re-estalillshliiiz #lie Jews in theiri \r‘~ghinl home. To-dav nobody is con-_ iileriiig what the Sultan of Turkey 'ould llke_ Twenty years ago ig seem-l fl to the author thai the Sultan mightl ‘e_ agreeable, slnco he would regaril ‘io Jews uc part of the Oi'ic'nlal racc.| ‘nd inlghf like to have ii solid lump ol, hcni in his Empire io resist the ad-i 'aiu-oe of the Occiileiiliil. Ile 'calls at- -nifioii to tho lac; that the Jew is ‘ora nliled to the 'l`\irl< than to Ulf! ‘lii-isfian.l\iohnniinoiidaiiS do.not inas- 'nifre Je\\'.~'-_ 'Ifliey' iiiass;iei'e (_‘.hi‘ls-, `\ns: ` (‘lii1'stlnn§ do not iiiassacic” lohaniinedans; tliey inassacro Jews. Two Classes of `Jews _ i Tho Sprizlnloi' divides the Je-ws in- l\|Yi tho mcam were secured whereby tho_ -- Work of reclamation cold bo boglllli on_a largo,scnle_ The Gorman col-‘ ?.’?~.`."I* L" ' .` 1*' _are few parts ol’ the land that would _I not yield wealth. lt has been obievied __ _ -.._'ilé°Ye1erri§~itn.1i _ , -_ ., :_ _. _ ;V .» :- .~-~-Rv ~ y 1-.-. “"" -‘_ \Vhat arc _you paving for .it P' 1 ' Save money by using -MORE _ V ' _ that the modern Jews' le rarely H flf' _ V mer, .that he prefers to work ‘Wh his _ ' _ f brains. to turn` money over. to Engng’ 1 . ii\` speculative occupations -rather I I than tgwrk with his hands. The fact ), is true in the main. but lt is capable 5 of explanation through historic, , owe agriculture to the Semites. M10 -= it is certain that the Jews were. ln I ,_ Their exclusion from so many I-|19 ill l \Ves_tem Europe, their confinement for centuries to a few calliu89 “nd W -' narrow areas., will sufficiently l1°°°““"_ for their present speculative and . somewhat mercenog-_v instincts. __ lt' would' be 9, distinct gain to them, nim- ally and socially, could a goodly Dl'0‘ portion of their race_be induced to -. '_ resume_` under happy conditions, TL "»E.`f§`i`».&f»§ "Wigan ! A ,wholesome spread for o 'slice' of _ _ ~i,_`LQ‘_._i-" _ Bread - and children V'-‘l¢'»2;e_,"'_ i{_ _ ‘_ ~“`"-0° r z,s,io,zo_u.. i '\i`a ,- ` -_ I "‘Porloot Se\|'.f‘ 7 _ liii -._....»- i` ' - Write forffreé Cook`Bqok_ -ri-is cannon s'rAnci»l co. L|M|'r|.f|>. Mourqiqg af 54 . fi fs Q- _ ie 's fs those healthy and primary 8115 °f me in which theyfengaged before the I overthrow ol’ their ancient common- ; wealth_ _ 4 Th, Jgvi/3' Great Chance 4 The Spectator artieloillsr-ussed U10, anti-Jewish movement. which Was; then spreading among tho Western' nations. lt noted that so easY-lZ0\\\§- ii city as Vienna had elected an allirl . S-_emlte Mayor that a wealthy Jevlf, hail been black-bailed at a New Y0l‘\~- i-ion, and another expelled fr0m_Sc1'u I loga. Most of us F903" 'llc D35-°"0"“l€ hatred of J-ews that was rev,euled.in, France at the time of the Dr05'f\|S, trial. Undoubtedly _this antagonlsiii to tho Jew whether -based on_raclal.| economic or religious grounds, was spreading al' lover the world. In ibm war the Jew has had ,a W0llll€I‘l`lll 0D“ portunlty to show that the prejudice against him was due to igl10l`H\lCe- l-le has had the chance of fighting for the country) that received hini, whe- ther that country was Germany -_-_ i _ '». Oni Last Lap _, ' FOR - The great race for the Charlottetown Gu'ardian’s Christmas Circulation Priz s is now on its last lap. _ Candidates and their friends must rally-'for the Great Final efforts to secure the coveted awards. lw®nmmammN .|_ il _ _ nu: ¢-haul ian- RQ&’$'8’5‘k\~a vc -tv-‘-» ~‘ ‘ -»-~:-.~».;`~`-_ ffl -Q-.__ ff '( ..‘ _:»< ave.-`~...~ `~a:_;-.;`~».:.\»_`~ 1;.:-:»\~ ‘_-.-~~ Z-Xmas Campaign Canada. Of course, ln Gerniiiny he was not asked whether we wanted to. fight ills real opportunity was pre-‘ sented in the n-ation, that ilrsl relied upon voluiitarylsnr I-low has the Jew acquitted himself ln England, in (ig ada and Australia \Vhat comfort is he lending the Socialist Jews. ol' llus-'i sin. und France and Italy and the Unltefl States? Tho answer tovtliis question will be also _th-e answer to the question: ii-:~'Pnlcslliie to he n - isi_cR_ANn Pinza __ ‘ Summerside Dealers R. T., Holrnan,_ Ltd. __ Chffown Dealer J. Stanley Wedlock ` $ 1 135; McLaughlin Touring Car Botany Buy or the Proiiilsed Lund for the Jews? ' _ IIN EXPLANATION Shu- Owing to nn error in tho newspaper office an arlielo which should have appeared as “llow we' packed the Xmas Boxes for the boys" By atlled Cross Worker, appeared as a letter over my signature and ad-I dress. ‘ Aznd. `o,aANo PRIZE ' s4oo.oo-wiiiis Louis XV.” - . l Q. . ‘ _ _ Piano Agent A. E. Toombs, Charloitetown lt has -been brouizlit to my notice that this article has been miscon- strued by_s~oiiie outside of my com- _munty as having u personal bearing upon my own society. This is not so. Not one act. word. or expression in the article was dir- ci-tly drawn from, or intended ag a reflection upon the eo lc 3rd GR.-\‘ND PRIZE » $255.00 'vicrroia-'V r " ' _Agent_R. T. Holman Lid. ‘ - ir n or roi-id lens; of all the society Lani interll eslcil in. ' There are people ln he world wiio can see and think beyond their own` personal and community lnleresls.| This is a fact. although it may not be geiiei‘all_V lmown.l aninot ashamed of the nrtii:le'.l do not lake back one wordi of il. My only regret is that by the fact 0l` my name and address being' 4th.' GR AND PRIZE Agenis Grant & Kennedy, Charlottetown $135. Sleigh, Harness and Robe published it has apparently east re- flccl-IOUS UPON the society ol’ which I _ani justly proud. ' in a time like the preseiit. when our lieurts should he breaking for tho sorrows of of_lioi‘s_ when our i‘.oills‘ should be_a;' F ire Insurance - A Necessity Q ' Then insure in good suong stock compao ' |es,wliich never contest an honest claim such as is represented by V _ ~ f E.R.BRC»W} -_ F001 Comfort- for _Cold Weather w,(:,':)er'"mg.B Ruhimm. U 9. Cloth Rubbers. Men's golfers, colors, black, grey and flllll ell S/ .' ,n Muck and raw" lgeszlllovig lfmlrgisiiie andliuuoneil Golfers 10 buttons. grey, brov/n,lnnd black olw 10|! _ ciiiid " ' . - V . __ 'WH lelmlrlss in cloth and corduroy. All the fashionable nh ades. _ _ ..-__ ioorr B f l » wh _ as-.,»-_ uv-:_?_..-.:\t._V....¢...-.. \ ' Charlottetown Guardian _Wheat and meat saving re¢;1.peg .ChaI'I0[E€[0WH I _ by Domestic Science experts - ' ' i Food (!onfrolle|"g office _--A