t t jg‘ zen Ill advance) In!" i = holly (founded ltilll) led» . . queue-w. chum- s. ueLur-e §O6fflll7—-IJIM. (‘e . ' h! llll ulhllifw-‘Je B. Burn l i .1 MONDAY, round. end Unite! MINI- "for lln ulltnnrei delivered \ lee-Presldrnf-J. afflict-etc. A, Mnl-Klnnun, l). S. 0. Anociutn Editor-D. K. Currie. ll p" MAY 1s, 1929 - v vrrw re tlm rAnn-"r our-zoom t" draft of the new tariff bill flew being framed by the United fluted government is still under con- sideration. The outstanding 0111111885 ‘b; ‘interest, to Canadians lwere pub- dished; in The Guardian a few days l ' “ago. A glance at the list will convince W * the most sceptical that the purpose , '61 thi new blli is to exclude all for- “ elln products that are iiilfiiy to @111" ‘I ‘mtg Qompetition with American pro- ‘. gum. This, it is believed. will affect ' ' 3 try, i! the United States do no‘. want canadien‘ products, it is of‘ Course theinovrn business. alidilify M" framed their tarifi accordingly. day forecast important announce- ment; within the next few days as a i result‘ of several caucuses held by tiie _ kingiGcvernment in Comieffiivn ‘"1111 ' . thetoriflquestlon. Wilatever actii)" Ottawa may now take. ilowever, will be a belated one. It has been known ; ‘ ‘malty; King Government came in- _. 1° pay/er that the tariff relations be- tween Canada and the United States ' were-‘lll in favor of ihe latter. The Olnndlan Government was urged rc- gn equal chance in their own market with foreigners. But Premier King and his advisers were 1 looking for voies. rather than the in- terests of the producers. and tariff flnkgrlng went on ‘from year i0 y?" with Lfncreasingly disquieting results. The excuse given for not protecting , ‘our own markets was that it might F be construed as an unfriendly act l ind {he United States Government jgighg retaliate by raising their dut- ieg still higher, This attitude was not very icomplfmentary 1° Washifigimi. nor did it fairly represent Canadian opinion. v ‘Events have proved the uIiWi-fdfim L-of “watchful waiting" so for as Can- adians are concerned, and this i391‘ fry has placed us in the embarras- sing position of being compelled to take some action which at this stage will either have all the earmarks of l 1i retaliation or of a nicely-mouthed submission to whatever our neighbors "arose the line fence may hand to us. i the inhabitants of those islands that ~ were L1,; strong demand for Can- ‘lidien apples, particularly at the . Glirlsamas season. Now that we have ‘direct communication with the West Indies. this should be a hint to Mari- time farmers and orchardists. It, has been demonstrated for many Years , g3”, the Maritime rovinces can pro- tfuce ls fine a qunlhv of 8W1“ i“ i can be grown anywhere on the 6w- girient, This Province of ours is rislit yin the fruit bclt, and the quality of ‘l i“ “m”; when properly cultivated ‘i. has not been excelled evcrYWhCTP- we n, thousands 0f barrels 0f Yen‘ growl!!! a ppl es .e very flue“; m4 particularly in lpfll!‘ fhg, me great bulk of these armies H lost, left on the ground to Hil- Thd late Conservative Government in“ made preparations for a revival .¢( the‘ fruit industry. A fruit expert one ippolnted and the work of d.- ‘ viiopfiient had actually begun und- ' or ‘direction, but his public servic- ‘c e to an end when the P1959111 ‘QIQIIQLICIALXOII came in power. Noth- fib; lfll since been heard of the de- ,fll0 ent of the fruit industry. with h live man at its head) this y, gould be greatly enlarged leery profitable trade in clinics be worked up with the West mud even with Great Britain. l. matter that now demands .. , and if the Sounder Gov- eln be moved to do any- lt should at least. mcke n l: a notable nvfvu in con- gjngd; more than any other coun-‘ our Ottawa dcspatcllcs of Satur» of Quebec. A Conservative conven- Afcntreal at 9h the six F4116 3°11" siituciicies of the P.‘0\"l1i¢e Will 171-‘ represented. There have been misun- idcrstandfrigs and joalousies in the old Province for some years post. ‘The leaders cf the party in some measure and for reasons that are not liery obvious, lost the confidence of ' lhe people and, as a result, although f the Conservative policy is still strong in the minds of the people. they have failed to elect Conservative members to the Federal Parliament. ~ A: the last election the Conservative eiectors' numbered 35 per cent of the whale electorate. but succeeded in electing only four Conservative repre- seniatlrcs, ivhlle the Liberals, with 65 per cent of ‘the electorate, return- ] ed sixty members. The people of Quebec and their political leaders are protectionist: to an extent not equalled in any other province in Canada. Yet with the di- ilsions existing heretofore their re- presentation has been largely in the Liberal column. The provincial gov- ernment, led by the Hon. Mr. Tas- chereau. has‘ more than once de- clared in favor of protection to in. dustry and agriculture. It is confid- ently expected that under c. more popular leadership and with the old little jeaiousles wiped out, there wiii be a much stronger line-up of Con- servatives in the Federal Parliament after next. eieczlon. ‘The Hon. R. B. Bennett has made himself very popu- lar in the sections of Quebec which he has visited. He is regarded as en able and honest statesman, and it will not be surprising if this fact shows i:self very distinctly in the re- turns of the next election. The Province of Quebec. with its indus- trial and‘ agricultural development, and its knowledge of the need of pro- tection alon; these lines cannot con- sisicntly remain Liberal. rm: PATHFINDERS With the wide world between them, two men chatted together over the radio the other night, as naturally as it they were talking across a dinner table. From the Byrd expedition camp in the far ‘Antarctic to the meterological station at Mount Ev- ans, Greenland. the winged words flew, annihilating time and space. Twelve thousand miles of continent and ocean girdled with the speed of thought! The language spoken was Danish, and the speakers, one likes to imagine, were descendants of those cid Vikings, reputed first voyagers across the Atlantic, whose sagas thrill us yet with the sense of man's indomitable spirit at grips with the blind forces of nature-those "whose trails were the first furrows. and whose lives the first harvest." Today we are reminded, in the miracles that modern science is bringing to pass, cf our debt to the pathflndcrs of eiery age and cllme, whose accumu- lated labors have brought us thus far along ‘a road of every amazing adventure, of ever broadening vistas. "They are hushed who dared Lev- fathan And the dragons of I-fesperie. The frontiers of wonder are dis- solved, The purple kingdoms of the old mirage. Leif Erfcson sleeps. and the fire that was Columbus, But Time has new Atlantic-s. The stars they followed still go over. Their voices are on the wind from the North-east. And their flags in the sunset." EDITORIAL NOTES iii- A mechanical device, known ls the "business brain" which will simul- taneously do the work of half a doz- en departmental officials, in being placed on the market. One of these machines might serve a good pur- pose in the Provincial bulldinghere. To e Gael, six pipers in e drawing room playing "Monymusk" is the nelrut approach to celestial art not attained by man. but the non-elect an other opinions on the subject. c latter are.» be pitied, no doubt. ‘on the narrow and cioselfiand lock- tquita unfit for-the wider open waters iof Northumberland Straits. Ind sev- ' lion a to be held next ivetlnestiay ini ‘tshall still survive!" A pitiful plea. Notes By The Way The Scot-lads a poor substitute for me Prince Edward Islet-d on our fer- ry service between Borden and 1'0.‘- mentine as has been rpeliédilf PI"- ed in put years. It serves vef! "11 el Strait of Canso where there are no heavy sea; to encounter. but ll eral times in put years serious acci- dents were narrowly escaped from this cause. ' we all realise that. our ferry stee- lner must be sent away for overhaul- ing and repairs after her hard wint- ers’ work here at home. This time more extensive repairs must be made owing to the accident which happened to her early in the winter. The winter work in freight, carrying was unusually heavy owing to in- ITEISEd potato shipments and it wl-l agreeably surprising that it was per- formed so well. Also it was creditable. to Captain Read and his hard-work- ing mates and crew. ‘ How long the Prince Ildward will be of! the route is always a‘ matter of uncertainty and no one appears to know anything as to when the pro- mised second ferry will be forthcom- ing. In_ the meantime newspaper readers have been eniertaind with revived advocacy of the tunnel, and new projees for a causeway and ali- rail connection by a newroute. These were generally set down by thought- ful persons as mere excuses for de- laying action in regard to the promis- ed second ferry. At the present time we hear noth- ing from Ottawa to indicate wheth- er there is anything decided. or do- in; in regard to getting on with the second ferry scheme. People are ask- ing, are the plans and specifications yet prepared? when will the contract be lei? How ioniiwili it take to build the million dollar vessel after the Ottawa authorities make up their minds to get on with the Job? Our three Liberal members at Ot- tawe, who have the ear of the Gov- ernment and of Sir Henry Thom- ton. ought to be able to throw some light on the situation if they would and their own supporters want to know es well as others the cause of tho long delay and uncertainty. Ara Messrs. Sinclair, Jenkins and Mec- lean or either of them consenting parties to the delay? We certainly hope they are not, b t who knows? A sudden drastic breakwln the price of wheat has caused alarm on‘ the prairies. All the way fronrPor-i; M. thur to the sea the elevators are full of grain, and the canals and water outlets are choked with grain laden PIESEIS Whose cargoes are yet unsold. Officials claim that the peak of the transport blockade has been reached. but it seems that the world harvests of last year has produced an over supply of food studs. Grain trader in Chicazo and western U. S. farmers aresafd to be as hard hit ls those of Winnipeg and the Canadian prairies. . Locally in Charlottetown there m loud complaints among householder-g regarding the absurdly high prices they are obliced to pay for fresh fish, especially herring, o1 which the catch has been abundant. One is led to wonder whether the mid- dlemcns profits are not, larger than what the fisherman actually receive for their arudous toil. 0111M dQIPI-tches tell that while Canadian exports to the United States have been decreasing and must. decrease more largely when the new U. S. tariff goes into effect. Our imports from across the border are steadily growing from month to month. Last year our ‘total imports from that quarter were 8916155906 against exports of $180,920,157. But Liberal optimists in Ottawa express the hope that if our exports are this year cut down by 50 millions ‘fwe More and more ocean steamers are finding their way to Toronto. A few days ago four arrived from Eng- land. three of them loaded with Welsh coal and Another with a cl!’- go of oil. It would seem from this that the waterway up the 8t. Lew- renoe and the Lakes is practicable to an extent not generally reiifoeif and may be developed into g great high- way of water-bome commerce in the not verkdfstnnt future. Hon. It. I. Bennett intends w spend hil vacation in touring dif- ferent pci-ts of the oountryHeonlult- ing with local Conservltivc leader-c and delivering oddreelle‘ public eimi-e. ilie efforts will notdoubt prove to he infer-mini 3nd ‘produc- tlve of benefit lo veil ‘l: productive of more intimate acquffiitincl with ineny of his supporters and‘ admir- I-ni-n Are we uienam deiiroill to if»- come Nova ocotlnm?‘ Ibo qua game that fl ma: 0e" ltevh eeouc xiuq- on .1111 riot-w"- ....__ .... .. i. 901M lclenz-Wflamlb voun- ‘eons Lin A souls Some years ‘ego I compared the body of yours to a house. " Your foundation ist he frame work of bones that carries your organs in- side and your muscles on the out- side. To be more nelrly correct of course the foundations of your body are the "kind" of n. body your parents gave you as to heart, lungl, stature. and everything else. ‘ Your foundation is the frame work the. food you eat which is the coal or fuel. These various processes going on insfdeyou, particularly the work of the huge muscles which cover the body. manufacture heat, and the warm blood coursing throughout the bodycarrles heat to all parts. This 1e iikie hot water heating. The ashes are the wastes from the body which are thrown out by the kidneys, intestine, skin and lungs. Your“ mouth u like the vestibule of thehouse. Just u you can admit ony- body to your house from the vesti- bule’ when you are satisfied that it is all right to admit him, so also can you do yourgown chobsln, of the food or liquid that enters your mouth. In your mouth also‘ is the saliva that prepares the food to enter the stomach or house proper. Now your stomach is like the kit- chen of the house. In the iritehen All the food you eat ll prepared. There f: the cutting up, grating. peeling, baking, boiling, and roasting, before it is brought to the dining room. And so your food is prepared in the stomach for the digestive processes. From the kitchen or stomach the food goes to the dining room, or small intestine. r Your small intestine calls to its aid c. couple of juices that. throw them- selves upon the food immediately ft leaves the stomach. These juices make m immediate change in the foodJnd this ehlnge errniee the blood to drew the materials out of the food, that it needs for building the body. The ventilation of the body is the lungs, and it i! like a perfect type of ventilation because the lungs draw in oxygen with respiration, and throw out. waste, carbon dioxide, with each expiration. The library in the house is ' the brain. Your brain stows away know- ledge that you can use at any time. just as you consult your library for time to time. The storeroom of the house is where you keep an extra supply of things. That body of yours can store up thing's also. Your lungs carry an extra hundred cubic inches of air for em- ergencies; your liver stores sugar; your gall bladder a little extra bile; your muscles surplus power so that they can work even without air for e short time. The bedroom of your body is the hours of rest you give it. I‘!!! COURTS OF OLD ATLANTIS (From "Frugal-tents"; In some green island of the m. Where now the shadown coral grows, In pride and pomp and eiiipery, The courts of old Atlantis rose. In many a glittering nouse ol glass‘ The Atianteans wandered there; ‘A rite. ' ctr-tar Dog I "1 wlni’, you to chloroform this do! he‘: ciiniteroillf’ “How? "Oh. e lot of wnvs- To" 11w clothing of the last men who tried to handle him. Bit the fellow who cleans the kennel. wants to fight every other dog. Howls and barks ii he feels like ft. Mess all around." This conversation went on out side my place in Nome, Alaska. a few years ago.‘As I'd done a good deal of’ dog racing I suppose I was looked upon as a good person to Dul away ’ ‘able dogs. However. I can't remember ever having killed a dog. While the man talked I studied me dog, standing there with hang- ing head. muzzled and ' “ I-Iis eyes were keen, his chest wide and his hcunches rippling with muscles. And I made UP my mind. “N0," I said, "I won't kill him." The fellow leemed e little taken aback, The 1 guess he caught the way I was admiring the build of his ch18 ould you care to take him?" I said. "Sure I'll take him." . For three days I kept the dog-- Jack was his name-chained to the big knnei. I wanted him to get used to me and to the spirit of my other dogs. I knew by experience he'd absorb these things whether he wanted to or not. Jack was n bad actor. all rght. When I fed the gang, he'd rear up and make a racket as ff he'd tear me to pieces if I'd give him a chance. I guess my own dogs wondered how the newcomer got away with such behavior. My old leader specially kept his eye cocked on me, no doubt looking forward tothe pleasure of seeing this noisy hoodlum. get what alas coming tdhim. ‘ Oh the fourth morning the teat come, I went right up to him in a business like way and put the harness on him. He took ft without a hostile move, I mated him with a strong. Sensible am on the tow lino olxnlt midway between the sledge and the leader. I counted on my old lender's keeping the team strung out so they wouldn't "gang" Jock. ls dogs sometimes will when a new dog won't behave. That would have been the end of him. Jack now began to Jump up and down like a crazy creature. The minute he was hitched he wanted to like charge and be off. If he didn't like the way things went he‘d attack the driver or start a fight among the whole team, On purpose I didn't have s, whip fir. my hand. I spoke to Jack. I went around to the other dogs and adjust- ed their harness. “Shut up!" I called to him as he 30f, more and more excited. When I passed him, I struck him lightly on the nose with my mitten to show 111m I wasn't worrying about his threats, ' At this he flew at me like a mad wolf. But I had cussed the distance correctly. His tow line and neck strep Si/Oilped him just before he reached my throat. As he was yanked down, l sprang icons-u and siezed hlfn by the ioels. Withthe full strength of my shoulders l yahirned his whole head into the snow. By throwing my rjiiARnl-W l fSense Condellled Good settlement-Beet‘! 511°“ Fun“. Mun“ Mueller he egught his balance. I lwiiilf; 111111 9v" gnd do“; Again I seized his and erambccl one knee into his ribs- We hag it out to a finish. 1 tvasnii really hurting him. But I was in furlatlng him beyond control. So long as 1 held his iowis end 1mm some of my weight on him he couldn't bite me. But ff my Brill had slipped, nothing could have savtd me. My wife, who ivas watch- ing, nearly lost her mind as we rolled wildly around in the snow. Finally I got Jack's nose into sort mine; with all my strength I Dlifillt-‘il |-; 49w“ end down. I was thankful when at last he wen limp. For a 18W moments I didn't get up. 1 was tuckered out. Then I stood back and waited for Jack to come to. when he 0P911¢d his eyes, he rolled them at me. I talked to him gently: “Oomefhere. Jack,old bvy- 091119 on old man. We don't want to flaili- do we?" He‘ began to whine. slowly he crawled over to me, I held the whiP in my hand so he could see it. I wanted him to feel that I could thrash him if I chose. When he was at my feet, I leaned over and patted him. Slowly he stood up. looking iuto my eyes as if he couldn't believe that he wasn't being whipped. l-iis tail began to wag. All the time I was talking‘ to him: "were friends now, old fellow- Your going to be a great dog on my team. Let's hitch up and go. What do you soy?" His toil was wagging harder than ever. I hit/shed him up. "An right!‘ I called. Jack jumped info his pliicc and trotted, tail up. pulling as hard as any dog I had. I'd won. From that day on Jack got better and better. Later he was one of the great racing dogs of Alaska. Now I'll tell you what was the matter with Jack: I-Ie hadn‘t had a proper bringing up. When Jack was a, young dog. he had not beein made to mind. When he was an older dog, he was still undisciplined. As a resillt; when hc was strong and well fed and every nerveiumping for the word "Mush" he hadn't learned enough self control to stand the strain. He was so high- strung he'd buffalo his driver iliio letting him do what he wanted. And when the driver triedt to handle him. he'd fly at. the man. When I tell this yarn to people whose. dogs haven't any manners or are completely out of control. they usually say: - ‘That doesn't apply to our dog. Your Jack was a big, fierce Alaskan animal. We couldn't bear to have a fight with our Fido." But theyre wrong. True. I've had most to do“ with maieintites. those powerful animals we drive in tilt‘. arctic, dogs that can sleep out in B0 degrees below zero and live on frozen ‘ fish for months; dogs that nuzzic ‘ed against this tyranny long before: snow for water and gnaw rawhide the objectionable law was repealed? for grub; that can tear of a hundred It was rcflcctccl in the refusal of miles of trail between dawn and ‘Juries to convict a man for sheep dark and come up for another dny stealing. No matter what the evidence of it; ' hard dogs, half wolf and might bc the jury, altogether primitive. But I've find a fudge of facts, rrfiisrzl to find the lot to do with other clogs, too, And i1l'150111‘1‘ "isht into my elbows, I manager; to hold him dawn till he relaxed, 1,- ‘ufrl von i112 flirt roumi 1 1111‘~"\'~‘- M11 I kilrw that Jack knew, irlm r hadn't beaten him in inil-' fight. If I had stopped now, he'd | always remember this. Quickly 1 Unmflpiltd his neck and towlincs and stepped back unwinding my "b": f--~-~1 Tfv --' The paleness of their faces wls Like ivory, so pale they were. Arid hushed they were, no noise oi words _ i In those bright cities ever rang; 1 Only their thoughts. like gunen oQrrfs' About their chambers thruied pm song. They knew all wisdom, knew The souls of those Egyptian kinll Who learned, in ancient Baoifu The beauty of immortal things. They knew all beauth-when they thought; - The air chimed like n ltrtcken lyre. The" elemental birds were wrought, The golden blffiljlfllllll a fire. And-men 1n desert plcuc. men Abandoned, broken. lick with furl. mu cintinmi swung their swords for they i i lllln, ‘ And ilulhed and died among the " lpllrl. - The green lane greedy can have drowned. . lfsritlmel-lhouid be uniteruoaer one Government. That done, our Governor. ' legislature. Illpreme court "and Mattel city would ui/ go to following the wotilebeyof control efalltbc lui-itfdiu. m»; Islander when but surely not. condemned. n. ll just chluinaiiooiilmvinee i Rlelljtlllottullmdlol their fault. m ‘ma; no whet. fe ctflilhldfroiu one. minor om; it» while‘ iiieeti ‘is ’ wiuiinj blib afiouia ill-ale ‘febojl e out ma.» .010 4 oirflhltlll mne- fury. were fixcd on me. I called him to come to me and swung my whip, ‘llit not to hit him, I had no idea of 31111118 him 111M Way. I just wanted him to see the gesture before it was too late. Almost at the same instance he let drive. You never realize how far 1 1118 dill can 111ml) until he comes at you in anger. l-fe literally shot. thi-oulh the air. But I knew, what. to expect! ducked. Aa he sailed by my shoulder.’ I grabbed his belly bend. It ‘took quick work. But before t That city's glittering walls and tow. " era, Her sunken are crowned gwfth red and russct water-flowers. In towers slid room: and gelled court: The sundown coral lifts her sprays; The ‘screw! hath gorged her progen- ‘hie shark doth haunt her hidden ‘WM i but at the turninl‘ of the tide. The golden birds still lllll me ileum; The Atlenmuc have not died. Immortal thilltl etill give uc dremp ‘flledreamthltflrocmenbbelttcw make. ‘ 1'0 Wild. to do. to lilll or ny A beebly Death can new take, An Aden from tbeerumblod city. Pretty soon Jack i-clled over on his , Vtmnagh‘ ht; buck eyes‘ sharp “m, . ~40» lllllfleld- . u. I've yet to find the dag that doesn't heed bringing up to make it e good but they chose. that rnthcr thiin that dog. Just as a child needs pfcpgr ‘greater sin of complicity in judicfnlf Now the hi: moment h“ mm?‘ Iiringing up w make it a decent mun murder. So the law f:ll into disuse i or woman. THE LAND WE LOVE BY FRANK YEIUII FLOUR-MILLING IN CANADA . Q. What is the extent of flour- miiiing in Canada? A-. The flour-milling industry in Canada maintains its importance. The latest figures for the cnlcndiir mills; capital 882,062,013; 0384 em- ployees received $1,372,010. Value oi products $181,741,! T3. 80 million bush? els of wheat were milled, in 18,787,312‘ barrels of flour. with selling value at.‘ mill of ll2b,ll0,853. t , W" 1937 fellorted i315 flour and grist up and pleaded guilty. This they did I 711;..- FOBT AUGUSTUS SCHOOL The following is the standing of Fort Augustus School for the month of» April. Orlde VIII-J. Agnes Lewlor, 2 Mary Kelly. ~0rcdc VII-I Florence crokeri. Grade VI-l Joseph l-Iegarty, 2 Idonlrfl (Inner. s Rlymond Kelly. Grade IV—- Robert Hcgarty. Grads II--i Marguerite Kelly. jowls with all the strength I hiid. ‘ Severe Jones Law ‘ Proves A Boomerang ti. v. ltlcAree in The Toronto Mall and Empire) When the history of the human i ct the growing disrespect for all law, ‘rage in the third decade of the 20th‘ it was the only practicable one, The fsntury is being compiled we believe‘ bcotleggers knew that each wag em that more than a paragraph will be‘ titled to trial by jury, and that ii (“voted to e couple of incidents that“ each pigaded not guilty and demand. “curred m New 3.0,,‘ cgty the other‘ cd a ‘jury trial it would‘ be a phygicll m“ They w,“ be given more [from-l impossibility for the courts to cope rugnm,‘ we suspcc; {Mn the notable‘ with the congestion. Emory Buckner. 15mm] o, Prcsidmt ncovm- upon law‘ one cf the best federal PYOSCCUM“ ianforccmrnt which was bflllg K1311“ 218w dyorttgg 't:?e"“tl°‘““ 581d - o the same time that Texas, B , 11 91111 911 W1 the tggglgsfifindjiflen Nmmm were be- liquor cases in that city 85 extra m; ("vial-Cd m, guilty of havingicouris and an annual appropriation tflolntcd the “qubr laws” Much more: of $70,000,000 would be required. mun the ringing plumudcs o; me Jones Law a Boomerang. :Pr(*sidcn‘.’s speech they 11'1" "V9111: Bu‘ u“ 11mm” o’ the new ‘M115 the attitud? of the override 111111111 quw’ the smcansd "five and “n” 311- ‘divelier to that pnriicilliir 1a\v which “'111¢11 P91111115 9' 1111186 14? 1111P0se e ‘is bflng most discussed‘ numsly the‘ penalty of five years‘ imprisonment prohibition law. Thcse young tvomermflnd a 11119 °1 ‘loiooo 1°’ P°15151¢nt ‘as probably all newspaper readers V1°11111°11 °1 “'19 11911111‘ 111W- has ‘are awnrc, are hostesses of fashion-:°11“113°d the who“ fltunuian" 01191111- ablc night clubs where the so-called e15 d” 1191 dam 91”“ 511ml’ 111111 115k big butmpnndfgg mm visiting the‘ this extreme penalty, and juries re. my can Spend n couple c, hundred ‘ fuse to convict and thus expose boot. dollars in liquor in the coilrsc of th-E , 1933515 m“? TEX“ Gulmme 51111 H91- Cvmflng and m, mcetgd by Texasi en Morgan to a punishment the; with the ivoriis “lfcllo, sticker." 15961115 1° 11° 111°" 11111118 1°!‘ R Elm- .T,_x_ Kisses Ju,_,.,,,,,n_ ‘man or a bank wrecker. So the m. i The evidence presented in a fed-i h1b1t1°11151§ "e now begmmim t° ‘ernl court flint tiicse young ivomcniagiiate 1° ha" P“ 115111 °1 iliry 501d liquor mid consumed it was as, 14111911 away 1mm 111°“ accused 0i 'c0nciilsi\'e iis if could be. Their per- .‘ 011911595 1181111151 1110 liquor laws oi jiormiiliccs 0n tlic witiiccs stand were: 1119 130111111?- 111 11115 they are 111111119 ‘at least as rrprehensibic as the pcr- 111ml!’ 1° succeed- iwwum] 11b W115“- ‘ffiTlflililCCS of Allaiiias and Sailhirixilnfion 111911311 111°A1111“551°°1'11P118ii9 .The ilrosccilting attorney said that-is- T119 13W 11131 w“ 511111105911 10 {if Tcxns was iicqilitttcd she would be ; 5°11"? 111° 1111"“ 111111119111 11115 511°‘ given ii license thlit silo could hang,‘ Cefdzld 0111)’ 111 1115111118 1i m0"? ih- .u) in her club. the Solon Royale. But f 5° 11 °~ isille was acquitted. The verdict was ‘hailtrl by everybody present. ‘except, the judge find the prosecuting at—' gtorncyv, ghilig the “little girl a big‘ ‘hand? Rcsiloildlilg in kind Texas‘ more than 40o agricultural workers jcalicd iili7m "stickers" mid said that ‘, who are mung 13 acres under when,‘ ‘the word so ilsccl ivas to be ill1d0f-i48 under oats‘ and “,1 under not” ‘sinncl as n icrln of cndcnrmciit. She,‘ was and caflng ‘or L359 came “aw m“ u“ 1’"°S”"‘"°r ‘m “ damngi-shctip and 1704 pics. I rind promised flint she would give‘; ' hlin n job ilS her personal coilnssl‘ ‘should lie he discharged by the de-. pariment of justice. She kissed b11136 Many service expert‘ believe c" '. ~ th - I'll’. ‘ZZ§"'..“ 11f.“ $132222.“ ‘lifituifi. m not w“ o’ the "we .' ‘ ' ' ‘ ' i t t went back to tilt- bilslncss of stimu- flue “dd” during the l“ W0 lilting the solo of liquor in her club. Iyears m turning render repairing" The Morgm‘ trial was practically a ‘Mo re“! 5n- The" 1! many a shop . .. ‘ti? t repciiilon of the Guinanc case. i‘ ‘at Wm “rulgmen and "pain u . , badly crumpled fender and then Xulilfication the “my Out N ‘ M_ H, ‘ h ‘Md that me ‘challenge one to find the spot re- m‘ i‘ “m? as s‘ paired. And the work fs quick and best uoy t0 got lid 0f ‘a bad law is lo cnfcrcc it. New York jurirs have mexpe v8 fakcn the opposite vicwi They believe ‘the bcst ivny tn get rid of ii bad law ‘ Nledunne Chests is to nulifyi it. That is what happen- ; Are not complete without ‘Pd n England a cclitilry or so ago. Minn"?! Used for cum ‘in those days the death penalty; bruises and pains oi’ e11 de. would be imposcii for n. ilundrcd of-I Sfifiptions. ' iciiscs, nmonk thcni, for example,‘ shccir stcnling. Min were iictualiy‘ hanged for this crime at a time when ‘ tllc laws of England were made al-‘t most cxclusivcll/by those who had’ sheep that might b: stolen. But the‘ humane feeling of the pilbiic revolt-i LONDONS WONDERFUL RECORD Within the London city limits are Makes Good Appelronce - _...-_._.. ___ iseeo .._i. LOST Since the coming of Spring‘ being the sole guilty. Tile jillTlllll-Ell. no‘ . u ' ‘ -l feel very languid lost all doubt commltLd the sill of perjiiry.-‘ vmor‘ or “Pep” m ‘m "mm Well friends don't be alarmed: this ls only the Spring Fcvcl‘ and we have the remedy that cannot be w» strongly recom- mended- Beef, Iron and Wine A valuable eombinatl of the nutritive properties 01 its ffiilfiili wits brought about not be- i cause it was rccozllizcd as inliumami but ilccausc tiic shcrp owners found. that no lririttcl‘ who stole their sheep ncilotiy could be convicted. S0 they _ t advocated n lrzl. sivcrc penalty; one prim: lean BEEF m’ Mme and that the nvcrzigc mun thought rens- . 1‘ blood purlfylnl properties of cimblc. mid bllfffi) sealers began to. IRON and the stimulating tonic be CrmviCg-d “mm, ' qualities nf good WINE. This is Plriiding (luiliv in Hatches '1 “P1°"‘1"1 ""11"" 1'11"“ 1"‘ ., 4 ' creases the appetite, aids digre- IIiiiiCllD, in the matter of liquor ‘ “on M“, l. amok“, vahlab“. prosccution in the large Amcrican v for exhausted conditions due l0 cities. the police or the federal cgentsj , impoverished blood. WE ldvlsfl hnve laid their charges and the lie-f |~ start taking it lmlneflately. ciiscd persons in batches of o. scorcl Only $1.00 per I6 Fluid 0L nr even fl. liuiztlrccl. have b:cn linedi, B01119- The 2 Macs DRUGSTORE HNGreet George Street ORDER BY MAIL nn the understanding that they ivoilld be givcn light pimLqhmer-lt, After paving their fines they would rcturn to their unlawful practices: -" Iloivcver unsatisfactory this case may have been for both the prohibi- tionists and those who were alarmed ‘$000000QQOQOOOUOOOOQOQQQQ§Q1000OOOOOQOQOQOOOQOVQQ' c. "u. BROW 14c Richmond ‘st, fiharlottctown Firm Life, Accident, Sickness and Gflde I—-8r.-f Mildred Hughes. -Ofede I-Jn-f Margaret Kelly, 2} Women-Hughes. 3 Winnifred Hegarty. i Prefect attendance-Mary Kelly,‘ Allies Iawlor, Florence Croken, Ro- i)?" Kfliifly. midi-ad Hughes, Vernon Knuth. Mei-um mo. m: winni- mil Heflrty gQQQ-QqQQQQQoQOQQOHQ-OQO-vvv-Qoooo Plate Glasslnsuranceot. Lowest Rate. ""011. Strong Stock Companies , Agent at Summerside, Lloydilgwis.