I PAGE FOUR THE CHARIJWETOWN GUARDIAN _ “Hid-d i . . Am_ ‘ I I , t’ ' that one positively dislikes. It is impossible to l " _ be interested in mpsic, to the extent’ of goitig f PUBLIC Foam “u” to recitals and concerts, without having to lis- y'”§',‘,'.jf','.,l_l,j',f,ff,'}_c‘jl_‘ ,{'",,E',':',T y" ,| |_ ten to a great deal of what orie feels to be urgly, ' l‘ "" "' .' Ioerntary IJuuL-CML I). A. lmlllnnon. 0. It 0. boring or unimportant music; and if one has to Herr von Bibbeutrop, the pres- ent German 0r t0 Eng- ~Thane A. Cxniiplicll. has just brought down a ldltur sad Iiimugln; Director I. l. Burnett. I. I. l. Annotate lfitltun. Funk WIBII llll l). I. GIIIB. Inrnln; Dally (handed ltflflr I080 per you (In llvllfl) jgnvnm in (‘fly 14.00 per your lll ndvnnee) mulled ll Prhmn ldwaril luluid. I100 nor your (h 11101) lulled to clllldl 5nd Ullllod Silk! pursue that gratification of one’s taste by way of the radio the situation is o6 course infinitely worse. As for architecture, I am often moved to regret that I ever made any attempt to cul- tivate a sensitive taste in regard to it; for in the average North American city of 1937 there are nine views productive of actual aesthetic anguish for every one view productive of a corresponding pleasure, and the traffic condi- tions are such that one cannot keep one's eyes closed nine-tenth of the time. “How different is the case regarding litera- ture- Here one is not dependent on the taste of any performer, any programme-builder, any iivaoxizsnav, APRlIi, 21, 19st Just A Little Thoughtlessness It is plcilsitlg io note that the Canadian Legion, which originztll_i' litlcil otit the Legion Band, has lgziin gztllninly conn- to their zissistance, and will sponsor a fund lo r:t|si' $2.500 or $3,000 for new E skyscraper promoter, any radio advertiser, nor unitorins and llhlflllllfillla" for the two dozenj even on the collective taste of any one vast and members. ' iundiscriminating public which must have ‘what No oni: inn-titled to cold shoulder our Vlfal’ \ it wants and thus in many of the popular arts \'t-ter;tiis' Hand. lt is 1m experience as old as prevents the discriminating few from getting the linrdt-ti oi" l-Iih-ii itst-li that what is every- what they want. There are books for all body's business turns out to hc nobody-s hiisi- tastes, and nobody has to read the books of any 111'»- llH> Mroiiiits". to a considerable extent, taste btit his own. The printing press is cap- for lll\‘ ltl'(‘~(‘lll pfvillcitllltlll of the Band. able of turning out a sufficient diversity of lllost of iis have nikcn it _ for granted that kinds of reading matter to supply all the tastes illlllt‘ Hlll(‘l'lii|il>\ nits looking atter the or- that exist, and to supply them at a reasonably gani/iitioii, \\'llt'I'(2l>', zis agmattcr of fact, our cheap rate. Indeed the difficulty about reading fellow Cllllvlls’ wei-c iloing practically noth- is the exact opposite of the difficulty about go- ing t'\t‘(']il milling; lot‘ lllc bands services free, ing to the movies. There are so manv different grziiis- .lllll ioi- nothing. \\ e need not now kinds of books that it involves a certain amount set-k for ll gout on which to liiy our sins of of trouble to find the right kind, bniission, llVilPl‘ rzithi-i" gct bchinil the hand fiii- " illl\'l;lll_\' nil-l (nili-zivoiir to llllYC it Yt‘SllSCllIl[C(l' \\'e \\.ini it iini] it nnnts ns 1 we call the tune, see f [jinn-fa] N013, I that \\'c ]>i'i_\' toi- ll.. l.i-t the Band stick to its pl'i|ll(l_ll.'llllk', illlsl it'll the coinintittity rally to its Mark Twain died this date 191°. support, not oiny .n the pit-sent jllllClllfC but ,,, , , al ll \' i Hi" i':'i - ; I liztr- rm t- i — I v“v 5 _" "' ‘l. ‘ l “_‘ _g‘_'g“-‘_ PE “ell. Vt hen Norway gets war scared the germ niiist \ dll lllQillllil-llltlll i'\i'l i(.lll\. It) supply 11111516 b - h r ~A A,‘ _ (.- .. _ entteair, \\lllll ciniil n; on. and train the rising ambitious ‘ t ‘ musicians in ini- niiilst niliing and anxious t0 Will the present Lobster investigation inter- » fere with our present season's legitimate lob- ster fishing? lliu.‘ thin" yibitrs gllllnlllg our public benefactors. ’ or: The Provincial Government has already paid $22.o7i.46 for sites for the National Park — which is $7,071.46 more than they paid for Dal- "Not An Inspiring One" The .q_\llllt"\' Post-Record (link-pendent) of- fcrs tln- iolioning continent on the CAMPBELL vay‘ g g g Qoretuiincnls? i'iii.'iiii‘ii1g to (late: _ , "Prince l-Iilirzirrl lsliintlIs Premier Hon- Germany do“ mt Seem t” m“ the “lea °f Belgium flirting with Washington, especially with the ‘benign acquiescence of Britain and budget which forecxists another deficit,-—this France. time amounting to $t»_;._’S8—fur the current fiscal y-enr. .\nd this" substantial shortage must he fact-d drspiti: the imposition 0f increased gasoline. ninnsvincnt nnrl instirnnce company i: a a A car came through from Souris on Monday, but the occupants are not boasting over much about the condition in which they found the trixes. Tllc persistence oi rcd figures, PREMIER d (Axirin-‘Li. l'.\'l>l.'llll<. is atiriliutzthle to an un- m“ S‘ g g g controllable incrcnsc in expenditures. It usual- _ b. is_ Could meanness go farther than to specially pass an act to deprive a political opponent of his rights at law? Iii there anything too contem- ptible or mean for the Campbell Government to stoop to in it's own personal interests? v e v- is It isprcdicted the ivholc province will be a blaze of bunting and flag flying» on Coronation Day. Church services will be held, parades take place, speeches delivered, and at night illumina- "llrtlinairyi ex-pcn-litures for I937 are esti- mated by .\lr. C.\.\ii~in~;i.i. at 51.803000 and or- dinary l'(‘.\'t‘ll\l(‘.\' at $l.7<)(_).000,——fnirly tall spending nnfl tztxing for a Province with a pop- ulation of li-ss- thin; 00,000 ticople. "To meet riciv lincoiitriillzilile expenditures‘, the gasoline tax is bring jumped from 8 to l0 cents, the trix on lll.\'lll’{lllCL' companies doubled by lxving ivn-cil io l\\'t'l cents. and the amuse- ment tztx sczilr~il upward. These increases are expected io swell the current year's revenues by about tlijgtioo. "On the ivholc the budget is not an inspiring one, and rht- ri-ing pace of expenditure holds out little hOpP ihnt the island (iiovernmcnt can ever make t-nils tncet, uithotit still further ad- Jtions to the Provinces taxation structure." >3 A tions displayed and bonfires lighted. double the death rate during 1930. This con- stant natural increase, says the Minister of Pub- lic Health, during the past few years with little or no emigration will undoubtedly show itself by a very considerable increase in our population next census. is a- n- The birtlirate of the Province was more than land, is evidently determined to keep hi; name before the public as much as pcaslible, though the meth- ods he adopts are not those usually associated with the decorous prac- tices of diplomacy. He created a decided impression, but by no means a favorable one. by insist- lng on giving the Nazl salute 1n the presence of King George. I-Ils departure from the ordinary eti- quette of Courts W85 considerably resented 1n London. but: he has continued glving the salute as prac- tised by the German Nazi party whenever he goes into the King's presence. —Belfast Telegraph. The University of Manitoba has a good friend in the Carnage Corporation of New York. For the fourth time ‘in three years lt. 1s the reclplent of a. valuable gift enhance the value of the Univers- ity's course in music. The gift is a-m teacher set. It comprises an electrical phonograph of spec- lal design, nearly one thousand records, 151 bound scores 0f all the completely recorded wonlls in the set, and 100 valuable books on musk: generally. The recordings are by the world's leading musical aggregations and soloists. What. such s. gift will mean to the Uni- versityb students of music wlll be readily appreciated. ‘Illie general pubrc, however, will be privileged to share in the gift through re- xeoltals and broadcastss-Winnlpeg ‘Tribune. - After having steadily declined for some years. there were in Grefl Britain and Ireland last year forty- ntne more mllllonaires. There Wsré 8.180 2,000 more persons W" annual Incomes exceeding 10.000 than in the previous year; and the aggregate income of all such per- sons increased $85.8'I5,090.— Cal- gary Herald. Agriculture and industry alike have been benefited by the series of pacts. In addition to their economic value, there can be no douibt that these treaties have tended to lower the world's isola- tionist barriers a prolific cause of excessive nationalism and the eit- cesslve naflonallsm leading to war. The Senate's early action to make possible continuance of this 91'0- gresslve policy is to be hoped f0!- -st. IJOlJlS Post Desimwh- ,. Signor 'Mussolinl must. hive h magnetic personality for on his recent. vlslt to ‘Prtpoll he was pre; sented with "the Sword of Islam Moslem nctabllfties. It was give" tio the victorious Duce ln the name of the soldiers and the Moslems oi Libya," on the strength of this Signor Mussolini claims the till?‘ of “Defender of Islam." This claim 1s not. recognlzed in Egypt where Shaikh Hustapha El-Mnraghi says that no person can claim to be the champion of Islam except a Moslem. one who will do all in his DOWe-T to uphold the teaching of Islam.- Vlctorla Colonist. The investigations of the Brain Institutes department of morvlwl- ogy of the nervous Syslfm Tell“? the assertions of those bourgeois scientists who divide mankind into higher and lower races on the basis of differences in anatomical brain structure. These scientists assert that the fissures ancl convolutions of the European brain espwiilly the Aryan, differ from those of the so-called coloured peoples. and that. the weight, of the brain of the from the Corporation designed b0 ' HUNGER PAINS OFTEN G0 UNNO ED TIC We have been told that we should not eat any food until Nature sends us a warning by gtvlng us "hunger" pains; that lf we follow Nature we'll never have any upset of the stomach or intestine. We have been further advised that. the infant. teaches this lesson-to watt. until we feel hunger pains before we eat- as it wouid sleep all the tlme if hunger pains dld not wake it. up to take in some more food. Now we all have 111111891‘ P9915 ll- tlmes but. research physicians tiell us that even when there ls still food tn the stomach the hunger pains may develop. These hunger pains M1 due to the contractxm of the muscle walls of the stomach (they act just like the opening and closing of your hand.) "As the stomach ‘ empty, lts muscular walls contract from 10 t o 25 or more times. after which it becomes quiet again 811d then following this, the contractions occut again, and then again the stomach becomes quiet. If no food la taken these pains become strong- er and occur oftener. In the clilld the quiet periods (when there are no contractions and pains) lasts from 10 minutes to 1 hour. and from l to 3 hours in the adult. In his book The Control of Hun- ger ln Heafth and Disease. Dr. A. J. Carlson says that. with strong hun- ger contractions there 1s an un- pleasant or, even palnfuhsensatlon lit the region of the stom ‘*. While these contractions are painful enough to make an infant cry. they are often unnoticed by the adult. but there ts, a. feeling of weakness, lrrtablltty, and an inability to eon- centratie, and also a feeling of tlred- ness, fatigue, and lack of desire to work. Now if these symptoms were due to just tiredness or fatigue, rest should bring rellef, thus Drs. How- ard WJ-Iaggard and Leon A. Green- berg, point. out. ln their book ‘Diet and Physical Efficiency.’ "The feeling of fatigue and 1n"!- aibllity that shows the need for food is not relieved by rest but ls reliev- ed by food. And the food that ap- perirs to be most needed ts sugar.” Thus the plece of bread covered with brown sugar our mothers gave us after school was really a "scientific" method of preventing quarrels and crying spells. A lump of sugar, a piece of taffy, a chocolate bnr or a banana at mld- aftemoon should relieve those feel- tiigs that were formerly thought to be due to fatigue. every time I think about it; as a = * u» ipply w Charlottetown IPOIIDMIN Elf»! lead 1n a recent issue of you: piper m Article headed: “True Sportsmanship" and signed "MINOR. BAXGN". Boys 1 to my- self when I read It: "My old friend "Philly" is back from the 0088b, the ooone from the Bowls: H: ha: cleared tihe cobweb: from his brain and he's rartn to no". To tell the truth I needed his moml support for the Sportsmen have been gett- tng Into my halr aomethlnc terr- tbls of late. ‘What with that: via-r on our beautiful horned owls and cute llttle skunks. with their funny striped faces, Just. because they kill the f hens, chickens, tu-xhyb ducks and losllngs, and hellp them- selves loony wlld game than. 1s loose. The poor little tth am hungry and must. out somethlriz. so why kill them? Then again these insects of lpoiiitdnten had the nerve to elk for on open unison on Hpnguilan par- trltho this fall. Just because they brought them hem 1n the first instance l; m mason that (but! should be allowed to shoot them. I was real worried at. one time as there are four or five hundred in my district and I dlcrnt- went to see any of them shot, but that ls all past now. large num‘ will serve as ‘fooder’ for hungry owls. skunks and oats, cw. tihoimands will die during our severe winters. others will be exiled to Ontprlo. the remainder may live tn die 0! 01d age, for they'll not be shot that's certaln. , ' ' What a. joke on the Sportsmen! Ten years ago they payed $130.00 out of their own pockets and brought the original srrpment of Hungarians to this province looking forward tn some wonderful sport, afield. The birds multiplied beyond their wlld- wt dreams, but. what have the sportsmen got out of the tran- saction? Nothing but abuae for all their trouble and expense. I 19-0811 matter of fact I am chuckling myself right now. - I am, Sir, etc-- ANTI-SPORT THE LIQUOR K3855 Bin-I didn't think there were 30 men 1n the Liberal party who would do such a thins as our 168181930" have done ln the matter of ac- cepting two stallions from the llq- uor people with whom they flholllfl have no dealings whatever. Thus they have betrayed the sacred W115i imposed upon them as representa- ttves of people, whose greatest hope and purpose was to Bet l! 80W!!!" ment true to tine charfle 81V"! them to deal 1n the most. drastic way within their means and 90W" to dislodge the liquor interests in this province and banish it from our shores. Now Whl-lli have we to- day? I am glad that. Mr. Wright, after two years service, has woken- ed to express his protest azalnst. such work, and brlng these gentle- men tao their knees ln confession THE HOUSES SETTING 1n griefe, No cypresse despalre. cheerfule leaf In trtuzerle most. falre. stand poplars seven Here is no hedge of yewe to hold long nor wlliow for But the young birch dtsplayes his Where the sunne falls it morn a v a Sir Geoffrey Clarke, President of the As- sociated British Chamber of Commerce told the members in annual meeting assembled: "There is a marked improvement in almost every branch of trade and the problem facing manufacturers is not a lack of orders but the lack of means to carry them out within a reasonable time, Late delivery is clue to a shortage of raw material, a lack of capacity, and a. lack of skilled la-bor, but we have always pains somewhere. and it is bet- ter to have pain due to satiety than to starva- tion." i Those Travelling Expenses We all remember the fnitioiis Plank N0. 3 of lie Liberal election platform of i935: "Aboli- ttion of the present extrariigant system of furn- ishing Ministers :inil tifiicinls with motor cars." This pliink irris elaborated on in the Liberal mai-iiii-siti. to the following effect: “Without winnwniin; on the original merits of the system oi furnishing niinistt-rs and officials with gov- ernment itioioi- can. gzisolinc, oil, and repairs, the Lil-trsil p.'ii"t_v l('('l,\ that this system has been so fi.\'ll'il\£l‘_'-lllll_\ nnsnst-d by the present Gov- ernment and bit. so grown out of proportions that the pi-opli» (if the Province demand its aliiillllilll. li \\lll ilir-reioit be the policy of the iiicoiniii; Liberal (iori-rinticnt to (liscotitinue this t-xirnuignnt practice and to allow to Govern- nltdll niinisti-is and ofiicnils (mly such expenses as are llvCednillllly incurred in the course of their fiublic duties." ‘it “If the time has come when we have to bow, to foreign agitators whose every act has been il- legal, then I think the time has come for me to leave the Cabinet of the Administration counten- ancing it," declared Hon. Harry Nixon at a meeting of the Brampton Liberal Club. “I have never been prouder to be a member of the Cabi- Wlizit lizis been the result of this assurance, Eetiundel: Preml" Hepbumd, sud the Mlmster‘ nl-irh the i-iiriors '\\JlllIl\\'1‘Il in i930? Last year, The igtrlkers a General Motors had not gone amnwhng m H", public l\ccolln,s_ for travep on strike because of any grievance, butbecause ling and iininspoiintioii expenses alone no less a dlctator m the Umted Slates had sald’ You must go on strike?‘ he told members amid ap- plause. He denief that the actiomof tihe Pro- vincial Administration in connection with the strike had been intended as, or accepted by the United States as, any "affront." There had been no intention of any such thing, he declared- Iii Pointing out the growing concern regarding the place of religion‘ in the public schools, the Board of Christian Education of the United Church at its annual meeting in Toronto sug- gested the outlook of the present age upon life had a trend toward too much that was secular and scientific and not enough that was spiritual. No system of education can be adequate for the needs of life that does not include an expres- sion of faith in God, claimed the board. A resolution passed recorded the conviction “that the time has come to consider seriously how this belief can find its place in the life of our public schools." The board urg- ed that the Committee on Philosophy of Educa- tion give serious consideration to the place of religion in public school education. The board also urged that leaders of religious education in each Province take such steps as they are able to make religious education an integral part of the school experience of every child; that each conference committee on Christian education “lt is iiiiiiii-s-ilili- to lie inn-roster] in pictures look into their own Provincial laws for week- wiiliont biinz nhlitfvrl tn i-niiti-inpliite, at least day religious education and encourage ministers than $7510.52 was incitrred by the "econom- ists" now in office. Here are expenditures by ili-ltiriinctiis: ghflklkllllllritl‘, $4,981.58; Education, $o4o._'o; .\ll~L‘(‘llill]l‘t)ll.\, $1,770.17; Treasury, flit, Slijlifll; .\liIti>r YchiClrS, $_}.5J8.2Q; Old Ago Pensions, $i.;_;_i.o8; Public Works, $4,- 999135- i ls it any wonder that Premier Campbell and Ilon, j. l’. .\l('llll)'l‘(’ lnid both to ailniit, on the floor of llll‘ llouse lzist week, that “no saving" had-been .'tchic\"ctl liy doing away with depart- ntental motor cnrsl They might have gone farther and zidinittcil that on the contrary there was a suhstnitiial increase in travelling and gnmtportntion expense,- last year, in direct viol- lion of Liberal campaign pledges. “Why Read?"- An article in a current literary review eon- tains some llllPFPSllllg reflections under the lliove heading. by .\lr. B. K, Sandwell, editor of 'l‘oroiito Siitnrrluy Night. Mr. Sandwell lii_\'$ that rvailiiig has one immense advantage ori-r ('\'('l'_\' other form of aesthetic pleasure. That nilv:ittt.'igc is the absolute power of choice of \\'ll.'ll oiir- ri-nds". Nobody- has tn read aity- tliing that hi-diii-s not like to rcml. He continues: latter is les than that of the Eu . The work of the Brain Institute has not only disproved this conception, but. has also prov- 3d that the structure and develop- ment. bf the brain of colored 111d "savage" peoples have the prere- qunna; r0; as great a cultural de- velopment as that. of the Europefllh -Moscow News- lt l: expected that a scheme for oarrylng all Commonwealth malls lby alr will be introduced this Y9"- When the contemplated reorganisa- Mon ls in operation Ezyirt W111 be only just over a day's journey from England, and India two and a. half dgyg, as against five at. present- As soon as the North Atlantic service becomes effective a refill" atr girdle, Dmtlicall? but round the earth by Imperial Alt-ways. _Wlll b? posslble. A service embracing all the cununomzealtih nations coul then be maintained from We Pacific coaat- of Canada. across Eumpe, Aft-lice and Asia to Aus- tralasia. and the Pacific agaln. In has diverted pnssensefs from the railways. lit. ls pt-doalble that as alr transport ’ 91111191118 00"}- pgnlea may feel the effects ln their r lists-Irish Independent- It ts reported that Britain has only 17 days‘ supply of wheat. and the world supply ls hardly adequate to the demand. Mountlng wheat iprtees are predicted and such would mean it great ye" 1°!‘ can" ads 1f tihlscountty can Dfoflllfie I bumper crop. No doubt. many farmers are aware of the world situation-St. Oal-herlnics Standard. lather than accept the offer of nnkers to equip Montreal police mime with new engines at $100 n" unit. the city executives turned the p; iwer to the municipal gut-am. vfltere the cost. was $1200 to $1800 par our-or much more than the ftratcostoftheeartmwhtchts: fair idea. of how things are done at, Montreal's cit-y hnlL-Mlvnt-Rll Financial Times. Ono of Ire emu bu: u"!!! hlpfllhell is the enemy mind. Peo- ple who have retired from bustneu or After n lifetime of labor with n0 hobby or interest are bound to be thrust back tn themselves, and the house of llfe is not intended for one solitary tenant. lit should have a welcome for friends and notables and service for omens-Carleton Place Canadian. briefly, a very considerable number of pictures to take advantage of every privilege, gvery country the motor vehicle ,_ Where freely I of all sweets Joyes may borrowe, An elm that lifts hi3 prayerful]; arms to Heaven, And three tall pines for sorrows. -Marjorle Plckthall. \ fight lt-we should flcht it- ln me light. of day, by being able to anow, through education and discussion, that we have a system better than Communism. No other way will. or can. be successful. The other’ ways were tried tn Spain-and tn Ellssll, Mr- Dupleests. quite clearly, has not heard of them-Ottawa. Journal. ___________... srmivonoxs mcx mimvmo (By The Canadian Press) ~ JOHANNIEBITRG-dfied amid noted South African athlete, says m8 Country's representatives do not show up well 1n tntematlonnl meets because of ti- mg coaching. poor" 5mm‘ SPRING TONIC B11001) PUBIFIII Mac s Blood Food A combination especially n]. noble In the treatment of thou disuse: where that; "llin h traceable to n; m. poverhhied condition o: In blood. One of the greatest renal. let ‘alts treatment of Bhu- Illl and guaranteed petite rector-Jive. u. Get a box to-thy. Box of I0 tablets Q00. DIL L. B. IVAN! l lflflfll bottl flhnlvnll’! ratch- mtxidre lanol- y. lldlallfwhlohwylwygflg loloflllllltolntlllclfl- hluhlzlifflOhflfllllfiflUfl tutlmon hum ‘(mg imrohuen. llyahtloto-Iny. Idle lloflll. IIIE TIO MAGS Ifwelregolngto ll|htl un- tsm la Canada-end we ought to encourage temperance people 1n their sacri- ftclnl labours 1n oombstttng this strong tide of evll threatening to engulf us which 1s being hoisted . upon us while we stand complac- ently and North Carleton. pmvtxiclal government to create l "Milk trust." 1n t-hll city? If not what was the pilrpme n bill 1n the closlnl hours of the recent canton. aflfhcrm; the 0p- pomtlnettt of I 00111151851011 "which shall make Inquiry Into the advisa- bility of eltebltshln: n. board to regulate the price paid for milk and the conditions under which milk shall be sold." It is evidently the intention to have this pro town for the promoter of the blll who ls Jeeldent. of the llltecutlve Council, Hon. B. W. liuPue-"satd the sol; wouldn't apply to any part of the oomtryt not tntermipd." This wuntdtnreplytolqueryfrom partleuinr loosllty and; particular market" Inn's Stomach lflxtlro i th! 001ml?! n01’- llltfllfifll" M‘ a prescription of Dub. l. N. than perttnentty naked Inns, noted Inflhh Ihy- the question "Dill the consumer-l who, like good boys, promised that. it would not be done next year un- til the polcy had been submltted tio the legislature for its consider- ation. Oh, how wonderfully good these legislators are, when they are trying to please. Mr. Mustard ls not converted yet. He said hs_ coulh not. understand how "that splendid type of Perch- eron horse is going to corrupt the morals of our young people,” or "now the mere presence of a horse 1n this province to going to create although mus of the oonsilnwrl be- called to enter; stiff protest distant the appointment of m! ouch commission as pmposed. The molitorofliluoootofimllkwu gone Into I couple of years ago and the prlee was then raised. The elty has now a Milk By-law. It has inspec- tors who keep l. close check on all producers selling milk tn this city. The stables are tngpoctzed and other regishtlmzlupre enforced from n. unitary dpokxt so that the new legislation: is an infringement upon municipal right: which wu not naked for-by the Olty Councl and tznotnecessaryoxceptasauun- duhand. utethod of fiuther boosting prices, but. when our local govern- ment attempts to regulate and raise prices of commodities it will-find out before 1mg that it has entered a. hornets not. ' Further, this legislation may be I move to force "little" mllkmm out of business and possibly to confine theblstneuofselllngmlk tople- teurtned dealer: only. At any lute, our citizens ” ‘ watch further proceedings closely and be ready to take prompt action to assert their rights """’¢'B_ti"ii§im ‘IKIT LIABLE” Sir-You have asked what. s meant. by the Road Act amended to save olflclals of the Public Works from llablllty for acts of negli- gence, wtllful or otherwise, in dis- chnrge (or failure to discharge) their public duties? Wild you permit. a common um- len to answer? First, never ln the history of the province was there such danger of actions, and never such exemp- tions needed. Never yet has our highways been under a. like neglect, and never so llable to (in-mime to life. lilmlb and property. And why make ti. retroactive? Perhaps another pldgeon holed se- cret. ‘The government already aware of road conditions since they took charge, not unlikely dlready up ‘ actions for damages, for the amendment includes "all ac ions heretofore or hereafter to commenced." And it ls plainly evl-l dent that: their future program ‘meeting of the Olty ooiimn should. could know ofbhlsbuttho ,,‘ bcr for the dbl-riot was ma?“ , what l. weary tale, what m flflgcg leuoatotzhenoltofqsltadohavs we h lune shame!!! disclosure; before the laden-l Commbalott. predator first be matting-la no far as m. mhti. _ of’ the Prqhlbttlon Act in o0 " You silence. and eonoedlimont of facts and evfienws, flhe 11089 Dlatlslblei and only, vefugs frqm the wave d condemnation Much El lfemesk trails lien- track. ‘Illien an. pmeoui-w tumor. that "41 auto drivers had been cons.’ vtcted" and "challenged the Guard- 1m to show a Potter rem‘; g1 any WWW"! Wm‘. HI 111d have flick-A worse record, or I his drgen (rivers were not more my t» not be ootwiloted, and n ‘m. eminent rum selltrg him npt dawn 10d I0 in 111183191’ there opuld not hove been so many and JO many fatalities. I um. Sh‘. , ., 2160mm tonsil ‘j (OF ‘III! (BlwWEnY-t 04mg; It's-It ls to writers of an early day that we no indebted for that W15). Prudent, and cautious Saying —'*beware of the Greeks, beam; grits." The words fomt a sentence in our school Latin books. They m tput. there no doubt, not only n; teach Latin but to caution and in. atiruct the reader. What was the ' duoemeii tam made our Premier, who ls a lang- uage scholar, discount or forget the warning words. when the "brewery" Greeks made lilm an of- fer of free stallions? It is impos- sible to believe that anyone pus. sessed of the shrewdness andfore- stght necemltated by the position oif a hader of men, could not see that here was a. diabolical at- tempt. to counteract the prohibit- ton sentiment, by making drink- ers of the youth of our land! Our modern "Greeks" with h- ous astuteness, sow that by one of further carelessness and ne- glect. for which they legislate t/ make themselves Immune III prosecutlon. It indicates further characteristic dlsllke to payment o1 honest bills. I The McIntyre road record justl- fles this precaution. How we re- member when he flrst took office the dangerous "Hump Back" road was his creation. Highways built with a mountain top centre, on top of which two cars could not. pass one another, and on the sides of which, to drive on the dangerous decline, a tall car was in Imminent danger of upsetting lntio the ditch and lnto disaster. Protests filled the public pres- md became so vehement that. even the Patriot, ln forceful editorials, joined in denunciation of the out.- rage. ~ Public oplnlon forced them to lev- e1 down the neck brakers. The tux- payers had tio pay thousands to build them, then more of thous- ands to cut. tihem down to a degree of safety. Then. his 828.000. per mlle McIn- tyre Htghway. Crumbling to pieces every year, kept. tn repairs at en- ormous cost, and today with all the thousands of outlay, and the whole practically rebuilt. 1t ls breaking up waiting more costly repairs. Yes, immunity from prosecution is needed self preservation but what of the puibllc interests, tine rights of those who have to travel, and the abundont Liberal pre-elec- an appetite for beer." He under- 1 stood 1t had been loaned “free m“ pedgiszln. Sh.’ m“ without any strings attached." AvELum How m“ tthiit. h L iiitwfit i in its eonton . u ow r I L m nis iismiiti taste. Such tux Bil ms “ism” l" “v0 T h“ "m" 11°‘ WV“ l" m“ 9"‘ sin-menus: Campbell might hlbltlon province. It would be bet- ter for our farmers to revert to working oxen than to accept bribes of stallions or anything else from the rum party. We as a people can't afford to be soft-scoped that way. It ts hfgh time that. the good people of this province rtae up 1n mass formation against. such tactics and the really bODI ftde submit to be submerged. I am, Btr. etc. W. 5. MUTTABT _ MILK CONTROL Sin-Is ll. the intention 0f the of enacting poled ll’- andemeztt. only apply to Charlotte- I you have my trails n. runl number who stated ,"h0 h h“ ,'mlifillrllomnolllinll th iittiiiiimiim 1016100?!) “ "”°°”l“‘“lY"°°"'-h°° llllllflllflflih IYIPIIIIM. no: a (lair-flame;- locality m’: plrttcullfi mfotmirr "innum- “Tullfllu market." , dhtremsumimam nsiissstumiymoniiywu m“ “l” m‘- wflvh" 4"- ti-tct r113‘ "he airtight should be 099110 J! hm m!“ wo- e magistrate brlnclnc in a verdict of not guilty." trlct. He. from well Joln the refrain, "Oh save me from my friends." With the more sex-vile henchmen covering the faults and hiding their real feelings to place laurel wreaths upon his Pro bttlon failure record, some dellbera ly, and some inad- vertently destroythe emollient soft soap with heavy anpllcattons__of not. caustic lye. Mr. Horace Wright'- makes his at:- tltude o. Jekyll-rude type, damning hand, and applying salve the wounds with another. "Thus or us who know the facts (he says) have confidence that he has done every- thing tn his DOWer to enforce the Act." This ls certainly amusing. The only facts that he seems to know, la that the Public Accounts show at least tiwfce as much liquor sold under his‘ enforcement than 1n the previous year. that there were more convictions for drunken driv- ers. and that the quantity of fir-Q wafer lold by the (tnernmflt ls carefully hidden from public View. If 1t physical, mental or political blindness?” ,,_ 0t. D. N. McKay used less of the Baht of Gilead 1n softening the callous places. It is written that:- "I-Ie deplored the ‘wholesale k111- illfll‘ 0n the public highways tIIIfOI-llh IOQIQBI dflvlng, HQ 1g- ferrodtnthecnselnhts uwndta. mlwh on himself 1n m. P. A. Melanie‘; 1n trnant for distant Bmlfll the condition of intoxication on one ‘c simple find. 80111 in the fuse of lhv-‘lfl facts. the Hon. Mr. Jones sumwll‘ ed the mnendmentforn close!!!- iaktng a. pretentlon o! giving a little they would in the and gab. much. 'I‘hey reasoned correctly that when they 118d made drink- llrs of the young people, prohlbtt- lon could no longer be the law of the land. How can anyone doubt that. was the end 1n view? l Our Premier is no doubt a. Btbh as well as _a classical scholar. 1| ti: not strange that: he did nd think of the words used on I somewhat similar oocaslon 2000 years ago: "Get thee behind me Satan"? ' Now, Sir. there are alble men of this Island-men capable and wior- thy of Premiership, who ff they h-ad been offered the gift. of the "brewery" Greeks, would have an- swered wlth the justifiable wordst "To H-ll with your horses!" I am, Sh", etc, ANTI-INSIDIAL. OUR. PIZOVINCIAL LEGISLATURE VS THE GAME ACT‘ But-trite 193'! sitting of Th1 Provincial legislature will long be remembered by our Queens County sportsmen. It was during this session that the local Game As- sociation presented the new Fish and Game Protection Act. 1937. for the sanction and approval of the Government. After a. years d1?- cusston and preparation by U" Game Association the new Act wfli drawn up by a. special oomxnltitee appointed for the purpose and sub- mttted to the legislature. What happened is now axfctent history- A discussion that. started the m0- mient that. the Act was introduced ended 1n a fiasco It was ridiculed. slashed and made the butt of silly jokes, unttl 1n the end nothing W85 left but. s. skeleton that: the Mem- bers themseves were ashamed w send to the punters. A ‘committee of three appointed to chock on pro- gress made reported: “That ll"? Act; was so mutilated 1n passms through Committee ti. defeated the fgr which 1t was intended No one seems clear as to its iiltl- mate fate. One a dment only? clear cut. namely: That. there W111 be no opeit season this YEN‘ Q" Hungarian partridge. but ill-ll there will be an open season 0" aimed grouse from October isiti t" October 31st, both dates lnclusiri‘ The Hon Mr. Jones statedotitlle floor of the House that he had 3° ipalrs of Humarlan partridge located on hlS farm this shrill“ and expected in excess of 300 net" mi. Rrom experience 1 would w? he did not exaggerate tn the ltfl-‘l for I know of a score or m0" farms in Southern Queen Count! that. has even that record W“ Now here comes the rus. Wm" Mr. Jones will have 300 l-liin- gulnnl 0n his farm next fall, it would be extremely doubtful if .V°“ could locate tn excess of 3 Ritiffed gmuse tn the some property. Th‘ Balms ‘“‘ applies to the“ other farms I mention crawl m” on at um. m: you woiiia not find a single Ruffed grouse for i114 . reason they are not there to (Continued m Page or . _ m. n, Poll Says: For it DBIlOiOIIS on u Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN Orange Palm Tu