-<iw:t~; -FOUR~ The Charlottetown buarillan Prulilont. Llolt.-Col. W. Cheater I. Ilclmro. vleo-. uilfdolt. I. I. Burnett. I. I. I. Bparefnry. Llepucol. D. A. Ilwlil-nu, II. I. 0. Editor Ind Ilnnonlu Dlnolol J. I. Burnett. F. J. I Auoc-Inn Etlltu-I. IPI-III \VIlI0l‘ and D. II. Cunle. Ilurnlny Dally (founded III?) 81.00 on you (In NH: eel rlallvarcd In city. oS.00_ur you (In Id‘T|"°') Iullud '0 Prlnu ldwud I-Int... II.” our your Ilnlleil to Danni: and United ltntn. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1936. Up Go Prices Liberal members of Parliament who came from the praii'ie provinces and other agriculti.ir— a_l areas are more or less in a panic over the effects of thcil\IACKi5Nz1E KING Goivernmeut's tariff and tax policy. These members promised their constituents that once the Liberals got into office the customs schedules would be reduced and that lower prices for those things which the agriculturisi has to buy would be the inevitable result. They voted for the Liberal candidates;.the Liberals came back to office in control of two- thirds of the House of Commons. What is more, the Liberals hate carried out their pledge of tar- iff f'C(lllClli)ll. .\lr, .\lAt.‘Kt-INLIE l{i.\’c started ofl‘ byfaigning the Washington trade treaty, cutting Canada's fi~c:il protection considerably. Mr. l)L'1\'f\'l_\'4; ha.-' i‘ollm\-oil this up by a number of further reductions in the customs duties on im- ported goods. In particular, the tarifi on motor, cars and agricultural implements has been slash- ed, and the sales tax has been raised to 8%. And \\li:it has been the result for the farm- ers on the land and the purchasers of motor cars generally? The prices of both motor cars and agricultural iiiachinery have been jumped; in the case of thc fornier by the sales tax as the motor coinpanics had lately reduced prices. The leaders of the Liberal party have been faithful to their pledges, but the expected miracle has not occurred. Perhaps after all the BENNETT Government's method was better and more ad- vantageous to this tountry. \Vheri it raised the customs schedules during the depression in order to give the Canadian manufacturers a firmer hold on the domestic market, and to,providc work for Canadian artisans, it stipulated that the manufacturers should not take undue adgwtiitzige of the consumers by advancing prices. The licads of industries all over the cogntry readily agreed to this condition and lived up to it. ' “Liberal trade theories look all right on paper." comments the Mai"! and Eni/iirc, "but they do not appear to be nearly as successful in ‘practice as the policies followed by Conservative ;adiiiiiiisti‘:iiioiis. .\'or is the combination of lower = ’.‘taritfs and higher prices any new thing in Can- . ‘bridge and tennis parties he was an attractive ada. Over and over again Liberal budgets have so undermined Canadian industries that these _have ceased to operate, Thereupon the foreign (‘I!ll" otitors which have driven them out of busi- ll(‘~\ have promptly raised prices to Canadian __cuii~iiiiiers. \\'e have in mind at the moment the "pi u ular instance of the binder twine industry Of some years ago.” "Old Bill" At Vancouver ' For more than two months this summer] :'_V'ancotiver will celebrate the Golden Jubilee of . its founding, (.)fficiall_v the celebrations will be - opened on July I, but numerous important cveiits ‘have been arranged to take place in advance of that date. One feature of the t~elt~bration which ...has received l€mpire—wide publicity is the pres- ence of "Old Bill" of Lomlon, Fhgland. For the benefit of those who may be puzzled by this cognomcii the Lhiitoimcr 1’rn:tiiit’r explains: ~,- “Old Bill is pretty nearly all there is left now of the fleet of buses which went to the front in the early days of the war~-in the days .of Sir _lf)ll\' ,..17kE.Ncii's First Seven Divisions. (There is just one othvr bus, to be exact.) Old Bill himself is a dugout and a relic. They dug him out of the museum of the London Transport ‘Authority. It is more than twenty years since Old Bill was going strong. U “There are enough citimis of \'ancouver '-"ivlio can remember the likes of Old llill at the front to make the coming of the venerable old __-,Cocl<ney an authentic note in \'aiicoiivcr's jub- ilee. _Nonc of the things that have happened in V'ancoiiver s Fifty Yi.-zii's has left so drop a mark -upon the city and her citizcnshipwa city is only ‘her citi7.ensliip—as the rally of her people to the ;:call that came from liiirupe then. lt is t\venty- two years ago, nearly hallway hack in the story of \':mconvcr—lialf the life of the city has been lived in the incinnry of that time. ’ “Tlicv used to go tip towards the “linc.“ in the Old bhiliciil, (lld llill and the likes of him. iiililiey used to go bumping ovcr the coblilcslones of the pave, from Poperiiighe to \/latnertiiiglie, 9611 route to Hill 60, the Railway Dtigoiits, Fleet istreet, Piccadilly and all points fronting on the gging of death. Poperitighe was always “Pop“ and the cobbles were “pcbs." otherwise pebbles. It"'was' better tlianhumping your pack over Jhooe old pebs, going up the line in Old Bill.” W Von Ribbenlrop ,.,_ Just twciity-three years-ago a yoimiz Ger,- man, who said his name was VON Rllllll-‘.NTROP, vmade his appearance in Ottaiva. Fanlilessly ‘dressed, faultless in his English speech and man- ners. he was t ei;i_ up by_, the younger set. At Rideau Hall e seemedvery welcome, and at But he had his serious side. In those days i érfilltts about «re -world find its problems. used a ‘nicer regularly for .-[uneheon in a certain Ottawa restaurant, and N Rinninrrnor was of the number. He ‘talked "ell, and very intell'¢enlly_g seemed to know a ' rent deal (and to want to know much more) bout "Canada. . On Amst 4th. 1914. .; -Rtlun-not . It I’ figure. group of young men. this rou met for were already ‘ what England‘ (In, -4'--.922. ,. doubt about the matter, he was skeptical. ’That night Britain declared war. VON Riunianriioi-'s Ottawa companions nev- er saw him again. But a month later one of them heard from him. He had gone from his last luncheon in Ottawa to the Union Station, board- ed a train for New York, managed to reach Ger- many by passing himself off as an Englishman. Of the precise character of his business here -he was in Ottawa upwards of a year—no one ever knew. In the war, von RIBBENTROP was a cavalry officer. After the war be attained rank, money. power and prestige as a whisky and champagne salesman. He married the daughter of a wealthy champagne maker, through which alliance he was more or less “declared in" by the minor German nobility, And then he joined HITLEK. Today, by coniinon consent, he stands as one of the arbilers of Europe's destiny—per_haps of the destiny mi‘ much of the world. Editorial Notes Our "picnicing" government have not stayed long on the job. - its act sit A half million dollar rake-off from an ad- vance cabinet-tip of intended new taxation is a pretty good gamble. evep far a bookie. If Notwithstanding Eci<i:Ni:iz's new record crossing and re-crossing the Atlantic in his huge dirigible they never mention him in the German Press.‘ He is in bad odor politically. if it ill New York HERALD-TRIBUNE opines that if Europe is to be saved from bloodshed it will be necessary for the League_of Nations “to put genuine force behind those settlements which are dictated by force, while resigning the pretense of maintaining those general ends of ‘law’ or ‘treaty observance‘ and so on which the peoples simply will not risk a major war to uphold." filé 3K 3K Wish being no doubt father to the thought, Mr. CHARLES G. Dawes, former Vice-President of the U. S. A. says that Hi'rLsR’s occupation of the Rhine Valley, and MUssoi..INi’s seizure of Addis Ababa “have finally brought about an at- titude in the respective public sentiments of the ‘European nations which should result in a, series of settlements making for an enduring period of peace in Europe covering decades.” *6 3lE Wise cracks from the House of Commons : Right Hon. R. B. BENNETT (Leader of the Opposition): Mr, Speaker. I desire to congratu- late the hon. member for New Westminster (Mr. l{r.io) upon the moderation with which as a lay- inan he presented his case. It was admirably pre- sented in every way, and had he not devoted his life to acquiring skill with the bagpipes he cer- tainly would have been an admirable legal prac- titioner. . . . !l€ *6 )lE .\lr. THOMAS REID (New Westminster): Mr. Speaker, the few minutes left before nine o'clock will not alow me to deal with all the arguments that have been advanced this evening. At the outset let me say that I appreciate very much the kind words 0 f the right hon. leader of the Opposition (Mr. BENNETT), and I can assure him in regard to his remarks about me that if I were as good a lawyer as I am a player, I would be some lawyer. Reference to publication in The Cuardiaii of the work of two Charlottetown poets, Mrs. Lucy GliR'l’RL'DE CLARKIN and Mr. HARRY E. li‘osri«:R, is made in “Letters in Canada, 1935'’, a literary survey and bibliography which has been reprinted in attractive booklet form from the April issue of the University of Toronto Qiiartcrl_v. Mrs. CLARKIN is also credited with contributions to the Canadian Bookniiiii, the Ex- tension Magazine (Chicago), Magiiiticat Maga- zine (New Haven), “Red and White" (St. l)unstan's Utiiversity). and “Spirit”, organ of the Catholic Poetry Society. Another Island author, Mrs. L. .\l. .\l(‘iNT(,;0.\ll£R\', is mentioned as having contributed poems to the Canadian Magazine and the Toronto Saturday Night. The (fiuirdimi. incidentally, is lllc tilll_\‘ .\l.1ritiinc iicwspapcr listed as a source of publication of work by Canadian poets during the year. Qucbeckers are beginning to realize that their iniagc of gold has feet of clay, as witness this from the staid I\lontrcal Gusrllcz “l\‘lost of the jittery Councilmen, who have been spending an unpleasant time lately over knowledge that the Qucliec Government and some Montreal citi- zcns have been discussing the best way to shear the head off aldcrmanic influence at the City Hall, already had their idea of Premier TA5Cii- iaiu-:Aii and the halo painted around him for years gone by. But what put the monkey glands into the jaded aldcrmanic body ,over the week-end, were revelations before the Public Accounts Loiiiinjttce at Quebec Friday of the luscious expense accounts of Hon. Iiu«:Nr.r. VAUTRIN, while a Minister under the same Prime Minister ruling today: above all, discovery that, according to evidence, TASCHI-2REAU'nlll‘liSlel'S are too big to do anything like accounting for the money they spend on travelling, etc.” if SK X With reference to President S'l'ANLBY's out- burst against Ilitlerism, Mussolinism, and all that sort of thing, we are afraid that he has be- come so obsessed that he has formed the im- pression that lie, and he alone, with the humble’ exception of Oxford and Cambridge, has been keeping the religion of democracy pure and un- dcfilcd. Perhaps if _he were 3 more careful and nnprejudiced reader of the Press he would have discovered that the United States Conference of Mayors had decided not to be represented at the International Union of Local Authorities convening in Berlin on June 7, Mayor LAGUARDIA of New York, speaking on behalf of the executive, declaring: "It seems rather paradoxical for municipal authorities to gather for the purpose of discussing local self-govern- merit where it has been completely obliterated." This might not b,e_no~;qngati'onally expressed as my .~ I lt,_§nt it is equally. if not] THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN 35%‘ Notes by the Way ltslhn experience In Llhyn um French and Bpanlsh wisrfute 111 North Africa have demonstrated that no matter how ferocious trlbll resistance may be. ft. is Ineffective without leadership. Natlves seem prone to adopt B “To your tents, 0 Israel!" attitude when a. lender la slain, or flees, and small tribal units are easily subdued.—'I‘orontn Dally Star. Every nation is pledged to the hilt. against resort in arms, and a nation that wantonly attacks a neighbor is guilty of B crime against world society, as the Coven- ant. declares, and should be res- trained. Loyalty tn the new world order has become the highest. obll. gatlon resting upon the enllght- ened peoples of all nations and he who acts as an apologist for eg- gression cannot be regarded as 3 true frlend of humanlty.—London Advertiser. The Incoelslon to the Premier- shlp sooner or later seems to he be- tween : moderate like Sir Samuel Hone, whose philosophy ls oom.l promise. and a stalwart like Neville‘ Chamberlain. who, at the Ex. chequer, has assuredly known his own Protectlonlst mind. This is the third of the Chnmberlalns—the chleftalns of England's Birming- ham—who have stood on the door- step of “Number Ten." where-Pr1me ‘ M'inl.st.ers have their habltatlon.. The outspoken “Joe" Chamberlalm: la.ld low at the deelslve mom-i ent. by an accident in a himsomf cab, saw I C.ecl1«A.rt.hur Balfour—' enter the coveted mansion. Bu-. Austen Chamberlain, in his turn,‘ was out-rlvalled by Bonar Law. will Neville cliamberlaln—act.ually oelebratlng a century of servlce by hls clan tn the House of Commons —escape by his slip between the cup and the lip. wlll the new Tow- lsm win its final victory over the old Torylsm and, tf that happens. what will be the effect on British Dolley in Europe? will it be a shade less doubtful and a shade more downright? wlll Neville Chamber- laln in Prlrpe Minister. that would be 8. not unreasonable expectation. —New York Times. ‘ William E. Henley once wrote I famous poem in which he spoke of a. man as being the master of his own fate. Henle_v wrote this poem when in a hospital with his life hanging in the balance. Undoubt- edly his great. lndomltable spirit is what pulled him through. cer- tainly it Inspired this poem which will live, and which has inspired untold numbers. You are your own mflslflh You 0311! No other being on earth can do for 3. man what he is able "to do for himself. His mind ls supreme. Your mind is supreme in your own body. There is nothing ln this world so spurring as 3. master. ful ml.nd—a mind that Ls under complete control. It's a. greater ueatlon than anything that lt creates. The keen lnitresf. that Is certaln to be excited throughout the Do- mlnlons by the announcement. that a British Cabinet Minister will THERE an Empire tour this year wlll provlde one of the best reasons why the tour should be inane. It was once stated that the Empire was a going concern. It. it Ls not, lt is not an Empire in the full sense of the trem. The Statute of West. mlnsler notwithstanding, the Em- pire. for its own safety must. be a unity. Much may be made of the fights of self-government, but Ls the Empire not. in Comnionivenltli of Nations, bearing allegiance to one Crown and depending upon mutual loyalty to me one leda? It. may re- quire a time of danger to clear do- flnltons of all verbiage down to the fundaniciitals. lPerhtips that time has comc.Auckland News. Owing to our association with the European League of Nations iinzl with the British Ell‘.i’!il‘{‘. this country has always lic‘.d aloof from the Paii-Aincrlcim Union and lt re. mains to be seen what. the fll.l.ll:lldP will be toward this new confcrciicc; to wlilch. apiinreiitly. we me not in- vltod. But it is hard to .‘(‘L‘ \ih_\' the United states should be willing to associate with the Latin ropiibllcs and .slicu'd refuse to l'll‘.V(‘ truck or trade with Europe; unless, that is to say, frcm ll pr:-.'er:nce for beznir 1110 biz H02 ln ii small pond; l‘(\il'.f‘l‘ than n. sninller frog in .1 lariztr one. ——Queb:!-c Chroitlclc Telcgrnpli. There has been 5'] little popular reaction to the rccriit majerlly re- Dort of the S'.‘lll\ll‘ Muiiitlons cam- inlttee that casual Ol.)'~‘f‘.l'\ '. might be led to believe that the public ls not llll/PIT?‘-l,l‘(‘l. I‘s R. maitvr of fact. the man in the slrrel is Cf‘Ill'lll~'f‘d by the complexities of the problem. Hr: ls convinced that the private manufacturers of nrmanient have been guilty of reprehensible tnctlcs. He feels that they are verifiable "merchants of Mars." Yet. he remains dubious about the .suggi-stlon ad- vanced by senator Gt-mid P. Nye and his cohorts that the munitions industry be nntlonallzeil—that gov- ernment plants construct. an instru- ments of war except airplanes. Anfirlcan are commenting upon the findings of 3 survey of. traffic accidents in as cltlcs. under- taken by Northwetsem University. These tend to show 3 clear relation- lhlp between traffic law convictions and rcductlon in automobile accl- dcnto. Where enforcement. 1.9 severe, the number of accidents dlmlnlshes. Thus ln Detroit. the "Motor Clty," when 3 drive led to an increase of Bi per cent in prosecutions, auto- mobile fatalities dropped 14 per cent. for the year. The experience of Detroit in particularly interest- |I'II’.a1nee It is the centre of no Am- erican motor industry and in "motor conscious" if any city la the world is. The opinion of the Da- trolt News to significant: “More Im- portant than anything ‘else in the traffic quutlon is the human ole- menl. Good drivers do avald tool- denta year after year. though mov- mg daily under all ooudluounln mu traffic and 1181!. la alvllu nu muons up out." , 4: X“, Qfljat CUBVATURE OF THE SPINE MAY CAUSE SIYJMACH UIEEE Despite the fact. that ulcer of the stomach and of the first part of the small intestine Ls qulte common, the exact cause or causes is Always a matter of close search on the part of the Physician who notes certain points about the majority of ulcer patients. _ l".u-st the ulcer patient. is usually of the nervous type, usually high strung and apt to be irritable or “jump,v." This la the "nervous" cause. Second, there is often some. thing wrong or rather “dlfl’erent." about the position of the stomach so that there is some interference with its action. This 15 the "mech. nnlcal" cause. Third, there is aomethlng differ. ent. about the lining of the stomach due to infection or certaln foods, , something different. about the Juices and their action. This might be called the chemlcal, the infective, or by some other name. In considering the mechanical cause of ulcer Dr. I. Pines ln Medl- cal Clinic, Berlin, directs Attention to curvatures of the spline which cause pressure on certal.n parts of the stomach and thereby lead to the development. of ulcers. He re- views his own observations and those of other physicians one of whom reported twelve cases of ulcer in persons with spinal curvature. The two most, frequent forms of curvature l.s when the spine la bent l0l'\\‘l1l‘d at the small of the back (sway hack), and the curvature to the left, which lowers the right shoulder. It was found that in way back the ulcer is usually found at the left side, the part of the stomach lnto which the food enters from the mouth. when the curvature ls to the left. side, the ulcer is over at the right. side (the outlet.) where the stomach oontents enter into the small intes- tlne. This can be understood to some extent as the right. shoulder Ls low and there would be less room for the right end of the stomach. The remarkable (and yet it should be suspected) point observed was that the ulcer was located at the exact points in the stomach where the most. curved part, of the curved spine crossed it. spinal curvature can be prevent- ed by standing and sitting “tnl1" or erect. It can be cured ln its early stages by splints and exeiclae. The Joke Factory T‘ t’I‘oronl.o Globe) An elghteenth century writer is credited with the statement that a. joke ls a very serious thing. It ls easy to conjure up situations in which it might. bc,of course, but ft is safe to say that a joke Ls never so continuously serious to anyone as it. ls to the jokesmitli—Llie man who makes his llvlng out. of it. There ls a stood deal of toll in compounding joke.s—even subtle and seemingly spontaneous jokes. There ls so narrow a. margin between E howl- lllg success and an utter fallune. Some people may object. to the siissestlon that jokes are com- pounded, But. that Is really the way they are made. There are the accidental jokes. it is true—<me in :a million perhaps. These make themselves. as mushrooms or truffles grow tn the fields. But the run-of-the-inlll _lokcs—nnd they are in the m.al0rlt,V—-have to be built up in sweat and tears. And when tlwv are made. they have to be marketed. Business Week tells how thls is done. It. tells of R joke-selllng flrm \\lll\‘.l‘| has on file five miulons of jokes. mic-cdot.e.s and cartcons, ed under tlioiisantls of sub- }..- . "If you will remll. a service fee of $10." lhls llrm writes ln :1 form letter it has sent out to trade jmirnals. "within ll few days you will rccelve from us fifteen jokes. .'lllCCd0b(‘.‘i or stories pertalnlng to the industry your publication rep- resents.“ Bitsliiess Work is tncllncd to think the prlce-67 cents per jokc—— rather lilgh for the mothcnlcn stuff that wlll be snbmltlnrl. But the poor Joke-carpenter must live. For H joke that was entirely new, 6'7 cents or even 867 would be nn entirely absurd figure. A new joke would be priceless. But after ten thousand years of laughter, it. is hardly pos- sible there are any new jokes. There are only variations and com- binations and pt-rmutatloiis of the old ones. And ft. is a skllful jokestcr. and qulte worthy of his hire. who can take I modicum of this hoary conceit and 8 filling of that old side-aplltter and a dusting of R tlme-worn smlle and concoct. a new guffaw or burble. It is not so dlfflciilt. to be s Joke- emlth in the old World as ft is in the new. There are national jokes which seem to be perennially fresh at home. They grow out of the ball or out of the national characteris- tlcs or out of the shades and lub- letles of the language. But. such Jokes do not transplant. easily. and in the melting-pot they lose not only their flavor but t olr humor nii well. Perhaps that. is why, on thla comment. our hum-or has to be broad and direct. port-lklfll llfloly of the qualities of bolmroumcu and exugcntlm. .._..Z B R, (‘fl \l’-wt K Enclow Yourself Sea a Great-Welt mun. He will show you how an Endowment or I Retirement Income Pol- lcy can be added to your usets. Rates and plum to unit your clrcinmuncu. Funds uved out of cur- rent income mount up surprisingly u the year: go by, especially when Invested The Great-Won Life way. of the years of life. The destination I o t lasanl: A Great-West retirement policy is your ticket and passport to the pleasant platen of the world. It in tranaportation do luxo, providing you with the height of service during the retirement N-iv: W 23!”!!! ’ C28 World . . . in your: to choose. You can travel or any at home — live when it is most convenient and do the interesting things for which you have never found time. , And. if anything should happen to prevent your reaching the age of retirement, those who are dependent upon you will be protected by Life Insurance in a great Canadian company. $— HIADIOIIICI ii 0 ”‘°'};'§'.i:.T.'.lZi.'E§I.l-ll’ '5 LWINNIPIG PUBLIC FORUM ‘IN: column ln 0 n for NH dluunlon by 0"" 4'3" '' question: of Internet. The Charlottetown Gurdlnn does In nnveuully ondono the opinion of aonupondento. THE CROOKED SCROLL 8lr.—Perchance Mr. .1. Walter Jones may turn out to be the ab- normal of the aggregated thirty. Sometlines a questionable batch of seed produces a seedling of merit and why not such a sprout from Bunbury? But he will have lost. ground to retrace. The worst. drawback is hls envir- onment. Flclucatcrl in the politics of old time Llbsiullsm. when men of the type of slr Loula Davies. the Palmcrs, the Yeons, Lrilrd's and Hizythorns and many of tlielr kind. whose word politically or otherwise was their bond. who wou‘d any from the crooked paths and spum dishonesty with lontlilniz contempt. Mr. Jones made the mlstiike of meats- urlnr: the other twenty-nine by past. standiirds. He tliouglit he was ln good honest company. and now, finding his mtstakc, the problem Is; shall I play the game of reputa- tion, or join with the Baal's who have supplanted these ldeallsts of clean politics? - On the election platform Mr. Jones launched with cmpliatle de- "solld Block" east of the I-Itl‘sboi-o, to see that those districts, united for action, would get. justice from the government. what progress has he made ln this novel. yet, rather commendable dlrectlon? Where la that “solid Block," and whom ltl leader? Premier Campbell has apparent.- ly taken the wind from his ulls and by the breath of his omni- clenoe has formed the “Bloclt." but has enlarged the territory by re- moving from the I-llllsboro to the eastern boundary of his "own dia- t.i-lot." The leader has not yet. been nominated. why not. Mr. Joi-tea? Another preeminent promise of Mr. Jones‘ was "meet. Inspection“ and I chain of "cold cw:-Ize" sys- tems throughout. the Island. with the knowledge that to "balance the budget. without added taxation," was the cabling being held out to electors, it seems hard to noon this lnto his old Llme Ideals of ub- ernl purity. How was he going to accomplish both! Of course "Brutus rm Vil.-ililu .iiw.us use ._a_H M l N >r.|\iii wunnhononblIman:aoIrewo Jones. How comes it? Not I squeak $0 bring his mleo into life. 591)- arated from the twenty-nine lt goes without saying that Mr. Jones could do no wrong. What state of hypnotic coma. had they worked him into to make him the goat. of the solid block? Fortune favors the brave and If the member for Bunbury had been only A lltle more brave what A fut- ure of promise lay before lilm? The boundaries of ms projected kingdom enlarged by the degree from the Dlct.at.or's throne, to tn- clude the whole Province east. of the Plrst. District, the lnhabltants read out from the old compact, with no place of shelter except under the wing of the leader of the “Solid Block," wlll Mr. Jones prove big enough to so ln in earnest and pos- sess his Kingdom? If he does. let me advise him to forsake the ldolatory of Baal, re- turn to the honest purlly of the fathers of Llbemllsm, and cloaive his polltl‘.al skirts from the foul odour and heresy which ls comlng in A raln of fire or flood to bury the betrayera ln political annull- latlon. I am Sir. etc. FOR. CLEANER POLITICS ll‘l‘l'flllllll4l0ll his promise to form a°Y5l°" l“d“5"'Y mlflht b9°°mC ex- Oyster Farming (St. John Telcgnph-Joumal) There was a lament some years ago that the Prince Edward 1s'a.nd Line: as A result of over-fishing. on the other hsnd ll. was claimed that. the Industry might be preserved by conservation joined to scientific oyster fuming. The latter experi- ment was tried and has met within measure of,aucce.ia. certain areas in Mnlpequa any were surveyed and In 1931 were offered for lease. The next year twenty-alx areas cover- in; 110 acres were under lease. Lut year than were 140 leuee 6t)1_ scram. but this includes the leue; in nine other localities. al- though Ihlpoque any atlll nu the most. of this oyster farming. _ In 1982 the f_u-men planted :54 barrel: of oysters while luv. you they planted 2.103 but-eu. In the earner days only ninety-two bums were .out. but last year I thoushnd. Il/la now claimed by the Illhflflu dencrtnienx. that the ex- periment in I success. and ' Dr. A. W. H. Neodler, the scientist who supervise. ll. declare: the industry 3 gimp: uncouth; I OXDIHHIU 9 I to thojllond DNV|nov.mm«‘ '”“° 1_ HYNDMAN&C0.L'fl).,Prouina'dlf ,, . . 0, 31- ~ men?’ nu. .'t-7' Ocalgol/lit/L rnoin "mrzmomai. vi;nsi:s"- ' WORDSWORTH l-le laid us as we lay at lJll'lll On the cool flowery lap oi varili: Smiles broke from us and we had ease. The hills were round us, and the breeze Went o‘er the sun-llt. flctct.-. .’lSfllllI Our foreheads felt. the '.ii::d and rain. Our youth returned; for them an shed i on spirits that had long brcii dfifldt Splrlts drlett up mid cio.st~.;.-furl'd The freshness of the early world. ‘I‘lme may restore us in his tour“ Goethe's sage mind and IWOD3 force: But where will Eiirupi-‘s laimr h'll.Il Agnln find WOf'(lS\V(il‘ll‘i'.s nmlinfl power? .—-<lWHl»lll(‘W Am"ld- can breathe! Audio. in Jar him‘ half in. nl mi Whoelt l"'<",‘i...l'......1 Pm: lenl brain '1' nuunds have huh pun nliafclln Rel-Mh/_\{l.t ‘;\cI..nkn‘n ttshrlerll ' ngouy. can mun II n -- - Fuyio uh. No humlul martian: itiliil —ar your mono refunded. '\I "IN" we and Il. For mnic llmnclnuc. (mi N1 Templeton’: HA1-MAM Can“-ll" Trifiiritiiiiii Just arrived a fresh slilpmfl“ of FORMALIN one or nu but prevw"“'°' known I 0? SMUT OR RUST ON GRAIN A cheap but tlioroulhly 'l' fcollve remedy. onln l|'""'I" would be who to m prom?‘ '- ln order to have need v|’°P"" treated heron uowlnl. one plat to entry WU 3"‘ ll!!! of inter.’ I-'ulI direcllofll may with ma ml"- FOI IRIS AT 400 PINT. mi: 2 Macs PIG‘! Ill “m an aim n=A