Iii-iron FOUR m: CHARLUTTETOWN aunnnun Brenden! W. (‘houn- ll. MrLuro, ll. P. sfffl‘l!il‘l'-—L|l‘lll. Col. D. l-ldllnr and slunnxlnl: Vlce-PrnldenO-J. II- Burnt! A. Ifurlilnnon. ll. l. 0. Director-J. ll. Burnett Qlluvlufe l§|lif0rl—Frunl| “Walker and D. IL Currie llnnllng Daily (founded H187! 85.00 per your (in “Ivonne; delivered. 14.50 per your (in advance) mulled In Canada and United can». l4 Reactionary Leader J. S. Woodsworth, Labor member of the House of Commons for win- nipeg North Centre, uttered a vital criticism when he characterised Mr. King's opposition to the vote for vocational education as re- actionary and. behind the spirit of the times. The Liberal leader's professed objection to this nleasure is not that aid to technical instruc- tion lacks merit, but thut the B. N. A. Act made education a charge on the Provinces, nnd that consequently it is "a vicious practice" to vote Federal money to train young Cu- nadians for skilled vocations, iuclud lng agriculture. , proposed Mr. King is an adept n: conjuring up lions in the path ulit-uevel" pro- gressive men.“ res are ..i When the F». of 1919 expired in l’; renew it because it li‘.‘.'Ol‘-'Cd "an indefensible prin. Wilen Mr. Bennett laioposed to have thc Do- minion nsunle the e qua-lion. ill §"'Jtl(l routs grant , he refused w old age pensions, .‘.lr, King d". ed that there \\'.lS an in. ipcroble constitutional obstacle to When the annual grants such measure. provided by the Borden Government in 1919 for iccilnicol education ex- pired in 1929, .\Ir. King declined to have them extended. declared that the whole policy was based “entirely vicious principle." and re- fused to vote a nickel for any such purpose. And now that the Bennett Government 1x11110505 of Federal aid to tcclinicill and ug- rlcultural education for a period oi i5 years, the LlbLT-il lencicr raises the some old cry and resorts to the Oi] 3X1 an extension some position of TUCiCllOllQFy hair- lplitting. “As the Liberal leader broujht icruulrcl thfae 1 ‘Jl _ ions," (ialared ‘-. Worlds-um th, "and as l llslclllwi to him, 1 could lvcll imagine myself buck 50 years e with his in,‘ ilccliuse think in the (Hi1: of (li.i(;.<"' ‘l‘0Ll"‘ilCllllli‘ili : cl Ti _ l (l0 not thinking bejroiid ilic age oi‘ (ilnd- stone and the nncirlit L ll that clay. lint. tllC‘ moved on and lilil’, i: the trouble v.i'.ll lhc ln Great Izriuiin, and 1L is be the trouble Will] the . l z party in this criuw y. ’l‘hey 8Y0 refusing to recognize the changed conditions. and 111W cilll-rll’ UlPm" selves with mumblul: old slogans at a. time will-n they ivill not v.10." Between 192i and i930, comments the Sydney Post, Air. King lccl the most reactionary Government‘ Con- With the single exception of the unworkable old age pensions act, forced upon it by the Labor group on threat of jmliticai death, the King G0‘.'Cl‘ll‘.l1(3lll» HCVCI‘ achieved a reform nor enacted a line of progressive legislation in the whole Its one ada. has ever had. nine years of its existence. object “~55 m hold DIHCC, and that it did by (lishonoring its own gramme, accepting dictation opposing groups, and rcsnrting to po- the abandoned lltical practices which most of civilized countries before the close of tho wur. Manifestiy, Mr. this reuctlonaiir had fltilllil‘, into oppo citlon, and is determined to adhere to it till, as Mr. \Vood.':\vcrili forc- casts, he leads Glilzullnn Liberalism into the hrijiclcss predicament in have involved The sting of rcbuko is its which slmilal" tactics English Libcraliisnl. the Labor members shrewd and unerriui.’ tnith. “Doomed to Defeat" The issue in the forthcoming clcc pro- from King h us carried . MONDAY, .lUNE 1, 1931 merit was "doomed to defeat": Because "it promised economy but created new offices, increased salar- ies, and increased the cost of admin- istration in public offices. Because it failed to "effectually present our claims at Ottawa.” Because it "violated the principles cf responsible government by Orders- in-Council." Because it committed the Province "to vast expenditures amounting to $875,000 in five years” for highway improvement under the Dominion Highways Act. Because it "did little or nothing to promote the great basic industry o! Agriculture." ' Because, "with a. revenue greater Y than the Liberals enjoyed" it “only t gave about $30,000 towards increas- HIE,’ the teachers‘ salaries." Because it "failed so miserably in J operating the Prohibiton Act that it ,shirked the responsibility and threw i it on the shoulders of a Commission.” Because the Public Accounm (pre- pared and certified to by Mr. John Anderson, Provincial Auditor) were “incomplete, inaccurate and mislead- ing and did not set forth the true condition of our finances." Because it placed laws on the Sta.- tute books "allowing them to become a dead bu...» Because it increased the expendit- ure at Falconwood. Here are charges, brought by the Liberal press against the Arsenault Government. which apply with much greater force today against the Lea. The Lea Government promised economy, and increased the cost of administration in public of- flces; it promised effectually to pre- sent our claims at Ottawa, and failed miserably therein; it violated the principles of responsible government by Orders-in-Council; ' it committed the Province to vast expenditures for highway work, borrowing the money to do so and spending nearly as much in One year as-the Arsenault Government, under the Dominion Highways Act, proposed to expend in five years; it did nothing to imp/le- mcnt its promise regardng the pro- motion of fruit. growing, dismissed the fruit expert then employed, and discontinued many of the agricul- tural short courses instituted by the Stewart Government. With a rev- enue much greater than the revenue received by any previous Government, it gave nothing “towards increasing teachers‘ salaries." It repudiated its prohibition promises and “passed the buck" to the Prohibition Commission. Its Public Accounts, (prepared by the same Auditor who prepared the Ac- counts under the Arsenault Govern- ment) were shown conclusively to be "incomplete, inacccuraie and mis- leading." Moreover it placed many laws on the Statute Books, including a. number of supposedly important Prohibition amendments-and allow- ed them to "become a dead letter." It also increased the expenditure at Falconwood by several thousand dol- lars annually over that of the Stew- iirt Government. Judged by the standards which the Liberal press professed to apply to the Arsenault Government in 1919, the Lea Government has indeed shown um it is "doomed to defeat." Government. Editorial Notes President Hoover may visit Can- ada in July to lay the foundation stone of the United States legation ‘ building in Ottawa. He will receive lion, according to Prvluivr 1M in his‘ a wann welcome and will, if he comes budget speech lit the last session of the Legislature, will be the record of In judging this record it might be lntcrcsting to re- view some of the things which. in R previous election campaign, were re- garded by the Liberal press as politi- me first magnitude. in several- the Governmvnc. ‘ml sins of These are to be found issues of the Patriot ziewspaper im- mediatriiy preceding the election 0f i919. and they make interesting read- bc the third president of the United States to land on foreign soil when in office. The Bennett Government has been in oifice for only nine months and several of the major pledges of its leader have already been carried out, while several others arein pro- cess of being implemented. The late King Government was in office for nearly 9 years. Can anyone recall one m; tgdgy, Herc. according to thmimpovtant pre-election pledge of Mr. Patriot b: that year. are some of the relsons why the Arsenéult Govern- King's that was carried out in the spirit and letter 7 hmbIliLBf-hlywllh QQQL Notes by the Way’ Already, may: The Imulon Dolly- ‘llelegraph, Russian products are be- ing sold in Dllland at prices from 25 per cent; to 60 per cent. below the possible cost -of production in Great Britain, and the output of them is increasing at g startling ma. As a matter of fact, the Telegraph declares, they are cold at pu-icu be- low the coat of production in Russia. The government monopoly whidi markets them does not consider the question of profit. or loos but mere- ly the desire to industrlnliu Russia. to put "an increasing floodcf its products into the world market, and to render impossible competition eon- ducted on the ordinary commerc l basis. That. in the view of the rul- ers of Russia would be worth whet- ever loss it may involve, when ex- ports on that basis are balanced l- gainst the indispensable import-S purchased at commercial. prices." It is time, the London paper points out. that “other governments" woke up to the importance of this "serious attack On the commercial system of the whole world." Mr. Snowden leaves the noun"! says the Eoonomist,,mndon, to face the possibility of a grim P06191011 next winter, supposing (and in the view of recent political history the assumption is by no means extrava- gent) um the Cabinet and the House of Commons fail to effect major economies and to overhaul the dole system. Such a. failure would incidentally render sovlnlfi by large-scale conversion operations impossible, for such operations can only be carried out with success when the city possesses confidence that the resources of the nationfifl! being wisely controlled. The Lnncashire cof-ton trule with India is being steadily and remorse- lessly strangled as the result of an unholy alliance between the Bomblv mill owners and the Great Soul 01 Gandhi. Gandhi openly avows that his object is the total extinction of the importation of firitish mules. Hence the enthusiastic support given to his agitation by the Indlln cotton bosses, who see clearly enoush how beautifully Gandhi's idealism works in with the commercial real- ism of the Indian Protectlonists. Meanwhile, a presumably Free Trade Government, terrified at the pros- pect of raising awkward questions with their Indian Nationalist friends, or of questioning the "success of the Round-Table Gonference, does noth- ing whatever to protect mlilln" greatest export trade from‘ ruin. Lancashlre is fighting a. reMONQIQB-‘i enemy with hands tied. The Union of South -Aff|¢l. Wm" of age this year on May 31, when lt will be 21 years since the four colon- ies, the Cape, Natal, the ‘Irnnsvlll and the Orange Free State. 49°14“! to forge B, new united country. 8D- pnrently to those who did not 1°01! below the surface, sworn to the OM15! of ecu-operation between the tWO white races in South Africa. . . Twenty-one years may be i200 short a. period in which to find re- sults, because racial co-operatlfln matures slowly, but it ls time fllflllih in which to look for the characteris- tics of the nation to be. - - F"! the first fourteen years there W88 some slight appearance 0f DYOIP"! towards the union ideal . . .But the last. seven years of Gjivemmfllt by Generll Hertuog and the Nmm‘ alists have undone Any 8°“! W" of General Baths. and Smut: B-nd have lowered the enthusiasm and de- sires for racial co-ovefltmfl W i standard below anvthlns WNTWlWd in the history of South Africa. There is no racial split, because there never was racial unity. The pflillilbn W!“ 15 one of racial tension, that. r8- quires only a. tiny strain t» "e!" the break. British South Afrlclfl! hope the break will never come, b“! they cannot watch the present trend of events without grave anxiety for the future. It was once said by l. Trade Ulflflll leader that, when he went to a 0on- iinental capital to attend an 111W!" national ‘Trade Union Congress he generally met the captains" of hi! own industry englged at the same capital 0n p. similar game. ‘Thus the trade union of BuwPQ i! Mini ' l" oomplished. ' The King Government, while I-b- andonlng the grants to 800d fold! and technical education, provided automobiles for the Minister: Ind their deputies and their sisters Ind their cousins and their cunt-l. l‘ l cost to the country of lulf a million dollars a year. This luxury hu Men cut off, by the Bennett Gove- the Ministers being given a small increase in salary and then oblllfl to buy and opernte their mm auto- mobiles, the saving to the cmmtfl being three or four hundred thous- and dollar! u year. Actflflllfl‘ u» an nnmmwm¢fl' just made by m Irnperill shlpnlnr Committee, ships entering Hudson my will only be entitled to insur- once between August 10 and 80P- outn ill. , \ THE CHAR LOTTETOWQ GUARDIIAD rt i’ your: - I B) [elm W. Barton. MD. WHAT ABOUT YOUR VACATION? During the month of June I al- ways like to say something about summer vacations. Fortunately in most countries-now the need of a. vacation, for a. change, i: a0 well recognized that everybody tries to manage for it. I think, generally speaking, that it is unwise for any health writer to advise his readers just how to spend their vacations ,and yet there is one rule that 1 think I can advise and that readers can follow safely. ‘Ti-lat is that during your vacation “you do wlnf. you want to do." That you try and follow in so far as is possible, those longing! of what you have been thinking or planning during the rest of the year. One of the things that used to bother me somewhat, was to see young people, young men and women, go on a. vacation, be out- doors swimming and boating all day, and then dance until the hour when the hotel lights were turned ofl’. Where this was kept; up for the en- tire two weeks, some of these young folks went back to their work more tired and worn out than when they started on their vacation. And yet as I think of it, they did what they wanted most to do, and the fulfill- ment of that desire, was perhaps of more benefit to them the rest of the year than if they had rested the en- tire two weeks. The sugestion I make to patients or friends ls that they simply rest and relax the first two or three days, keeping outdoors all the time; then for about ten days they lay out a plan of what they'd like to do, walk- ing, swimming or boating till one hour before lunch time, getting an hours rest before lunch. After lunch, sitting around for an hour then spending the afternon again at what they like best, swimming, golfing, fishing, walking-until an hour be- fore the evening meal, then a rest of an hour before they eat. After the evening meal another period of rest- ing, dozing in s. chair, but not lying‘ down. The evening to be spent ac- cording to the means at hand for their enjgyment. Then-the last cou- ple o.’ days spent resting entirely again. Qt course the ideal vacation, where possible, is foreach of us to try and be as free in mind and body as when we were youngsters. You know, all a young animal does is to eat and sleep, but to this we must add exercise if we are to use up or burn up the large amount of food that the outdoor air has made us eat. We can't enjoy a vacation or get a real benefit from it if we continue to think. worry. and elm as w. do dur- ing the rest of the year. That is why trying to turn the years backward, and thinking ourselves carefree youngsters again, will give us the right. point of view for a vacation. Literaw Remuneration (Montrell owner 1t is estimated that. the amount of money left by Arnold Bennett will be tunes ever recorded. ment of some other modern author: is quoted by way of comparison, and it is interesting to not: tbot Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy stand earnings. scribed from the economic viewpoint u l. good walking-stick but u. bod crutch, undfar buck u the “eightlerfl plnint was hen-rd that what was once deemed a profezoion had be- come a trade. It was pointed out that the golden shower did not fer- tilize the field of genius. And this is true. But it would be an entirely wrongful inference to conclude that because an author manages to earn a substantial fortune, the values of literary effOfts m determined by the economic pull. Defoe and ‘rroll- cpe might frankly confess that they drove the quill to earn money. If so, they both did it to effect that can- not be ledgered in terms of cash. merit, some of the. greatest writers in the world have sadly missed the mark. The Ellzabethans wrote hundreds of plays. Henslowe, who acted as marketing agent for these effusions, tells us in his diary ‘that one dress for the leading lady on the stage cost more than was paid for the dramatic manuscript itself. Shakespeare received five pounds for his "Hamlet"; Milton a similar sum for “Paradise Lost,’ and Fanny Burney the same rate of pay for "Evelina." Dryden made very little money by his plays, although they were popular enough at that day; but his translation of Virgil, pub- llshed by Tonson, brought Dryden twelve hundred pounds. Pope re- ceived more than five thousand pounds for his translation of Homer, which assuredly is a. good deal more money than Virgle and Homer com- blned ever got for original texts. John Gay received four hundred in exceao of a hundred thousand‘ pounds, which ll commented upon‘ an one of tho largest literary for- -' The emolu- next in the order of their respective v literature nu been de- ' Moreover, were this the criterion of . pounds for the first part of "'I'he_ Beggar's Opera" and eleven hundred for the second part, and he fairly earned the money. Can the same be said of Mrs. Radcliffe, who was given as much money for the writ- ing of "The Italian" and “The Mysteries of Udolpho," two books which might after a long search be found upon two-penny stall. We can much better understand why l Fielding found himself better off by ' some seventeen hundred pounds lifter his romances of "Tom Jones" l and "Amelia" had gone to the press. ' But again, all calculations are thrown ‘I out of gear by learning that old George Crabbe took from Murray I three thousand pounds as pay for his poems. He certainly had no reasca‘ to complain o.’ cracked, panes and straw rags. Tom Moore pocketed ‘a like. sum for "halls. Rookh," but how came Campbell to secure a pension of two hundred pounds per year and a fee of more than two thousand guinea: for writing "Pleasures of I Hope" and "Gertrude of Wyoming?! ' There ls no cash measure of liter- i SONNET FOR. THE RUPERT BROOKE MONUMENT Where Theseus sleeps, his storied labours ended, Where Pyrrhus and Achilles sped to 'I‘roy, The Greeks on Skyros guard an En- glish boy And honor well that dust with Greek earth blended. Build up his monument-his youth defended The kingdom of young dreams and ancient. joy. Both sword and lyre he bore; no years destroy l-Ill legend which old Homer might have frlended. He sleeps on skyroa, and great shades abide Where he, a later Paris, with quick _ will Renewed the spell of beauty. Far and wide Men come this April, and new Ilinds thrill; ‘There whisper yet, where England's poet died. The wine-dork seas, unvintcgeable still. —Nl.tlmniel A. Benson in T ‘ Saturday Night. Bay or leave it before or after these dates, they will do so at the sole risk of their owners. 8o, the Hudson Boy route, in the judgment of the ' Imperial Shipping Committee, and of mlrlne insurance experts, is safe only during fifty days of the 305 day; of the year. Between August I0 and Slptember 30. A fifty day route. And ery merit. On _the same shelf, side by side, may stand two books of , cqual quality, and the authentic story back of one may be that its writer barely earned enough to keep him from starvation; of the other that is placed the craitsman in a big house upon Main street and be- longs to the rare shilling-a-word classification. 'l'here is no account-l ing for taste. The moods and foibles cf human nature as represented by " the average man in the street who decides the upsrokea and down- stiokes of literary remuneration, though the golden pen would be little better than a chop-stick in his fingers, are even more amazing than anything any novelist or poet has dared to tell. The only instance we can recall that comes into anything like key position with this capricious "complex" is the payment of s. small fortune, or betimes a big fortune, in secure some crinkled scraps of paper which once went the rounds of the publishing houses and were tied up with a bit of string and flung into some forgotten corner. If somebody could only unearth such relic It Stratforrl, what. s "Tempest" it would rnisel Time For A Pajama Commission A New York papa- uya: ‘rim-con- tinued emphuls by contour-fern and fnhlon arbiter: upon what once Wu “ 3. u ut- tirc for both men and women at more or leis formal "gatherings is rapidly achieving q, point when it in n subject fit for consideration by l. White House trend-finding commis- alon. Persons of eonnrvntlva yet social inclination! are viewing with alarm the tendency of guest: of both sexes to tum upbt- parties in what in the tnotuo distant putwu con- sidered sleeping attire, and the .1114- lcloua are being moved-to Iflef by the ironic part of it is that during than particular 60 day: very little groin 1| reodyfor claimant. '-.v the 180811401107 of the formAl puma. ‘we expect that in the near future Our _AS HE. makers with the blanket assurance that the ivearcr will be tricked out in indisputable rcctitudc at almost any sort of formal gathering. 'I‘rue, pa- jamas have not yet made their ap- pearance in the lower tier boxes at the Metropolitan, but there is no tell- ing how far such a vogue may carry. Public nightwear, it aPDears, comes in an infinite variety of styles. There are costly and luxurious enwmblea for the woman of fashion, sporting pajamas with button ofthesortcall- ecl “whoopee pants" thirty or fort-Y inches wide at the cuff. and hand- somely tailored outfits for gentlemen, resembling dinner clothes, designed by a color-blind futurist. It, is_ all very confusing, but apparently the‘ style experts luean ll- The problem for the trend-finding commission is to determine just how far this sort cf thing can go. Will pajamas be suited to all‘ travel? Mill’ legislators and public officials will affect green and hyacinth lounging and smoking suits, and will the ulti- mate conservatism of financiers and Fifth Avenue clubmen be indicated by the formal top hat, spatterdashes and stick complimented by the un- compromising white cotton night- shirt of the old school CAVE MAN STILL IN EXISTENCE SAYS LADY EXPLORER (British United Press) LONDON, May 29.—The original cave man who wooes his prospective wife with B, club. exists today in the hinterlands of Venezuela, according to the woman explorer, Lady Dor- othy Mills, who has just returned 91.25 Plnkllam‘: Vegetable Compound . . $1.29 $1.50‘ l-‘ellowb Syrup .. 50c. Bland‘: Pills, 39c. 91.00 Nujol 75c Nujul 50o Blind lron Pll 39c .250 Aspirin Tablets .... 19o 50o Fruitxtiveo Tablets . 89o . 89c 69o i ---- 2:11" - TH "lw§',;:[=1...,,'} in I "go, agile l"°RE{.§.l;.‘Z’.€§I.iJ.FE wwr-lr-llu tr AL’) (‘FFILK i 1 a . 4 '">:< from an extneslve trip in the wild: of south America- Probably the most primitive state ed upon Lady Dorothy, who, travelling for nearly 1,000 miles up the River Orinoco, finally reached a native settlement, where the people live a communal life in groups of a- bout" 100 and are ruled by a. chief. YOU’LL WANT THESE: New Cooking Utensils we will show you are leagues ahead of any you've yet seen, in improved design and qualities. They make cooking more successfur, kitchen work pieasantcr. and the care of the Pots, Pans and Utensils themselves, far easier. Thu-y are shaped and finished so as almost to clean themselves. The Rogers Hardware Co. Limited ti, Marriage is unknown here, Lady Dos othy says. When a man wants I wire‘, lie follows her. subducs with: o.’ life still in existence was happen- club and drags her to his particular after comer of the communal house. Lady Dorothy declared that dur- ing her vislt. among this tribe, sila was in little danger of her life, l: their religion forbids the people to shed bloodl tent. color. factory. 25c I-‘ruitativeu Tablet-l 10c 00c Chueb Nerve Food .. 49c 60c Chase's Ointment 48c 35a Chase‘: K. L. Pill: 29c The 2 Moll Orders Given Prompt Attention Dreupujnmll in the molt elabor- atodQkumbIlfll°§1lf04W-6f°l-. .1 .i Box 446 It is evtremely important to give puppy T03“ a right start by early supplying nourishing food. Till! start can be given by feeding IMPERIAL -PUPP_" FOODHWhlCh is especially high in food values as ll ls made from carefully selected ingredients univer- sally recognized for high standard nutritional coll- IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD formula is prvllflf“ with a view to the development of pups into active, sturdy foxes with pelts of highest sheen and faultless To accomplish these results “Imperlals" must b” fed early and regularly throughout the whole season- Secure from your local dealers or direct from Imperial Biscuit Co» Limited Charlottetown, P. E. I. Phone 721