' PKGE FOUR THE nllllllll Incident-W. ldttornnlllllgol~tl ‘run GUARDIAN an! ha obtained town: ’ A, Brown. Stun» Vendor. Itnilwu Bookrtnll. Mnritirnn lltnllonoru, Grnlrln Street. ll. D. Tnylor_ Grafton Street. (‘arbor k Co" Queen QIIDQL Aiox. McPherson, Queen Street. J. l’. linfiy, queen. Street. l-‘ronk N. Knyil, l0 lllllshnrn Street. sUMIEIISIDE-J. 1'. Melanin, Itlielihillnllng. lLIEltALD-Donginu Murphy. tit) l' ILI fl-—.\l. A. Pnquet. Nl-IW GLASGOW, N. hL-(Yhrlltnpilerbi Book L- Stationers. N. m-(‘entrul Phnrlnmly. HYDNHY. NEW \'0I(l(—llofullngti Sewn BOSTON—0ld Mouth News; .\l. Amllor man, 22-1.’. Tremunl st. Lint. Cal. ILA-Inollnnoolhl. 0. Burnett. Notes by the Way TIIWN lillllllllli .. vuo-rmnnn-o. n. Burnett. 1the first t-ranscongai-nenuiclnin ‘left Momma.) for ‘the ci-fic oasl over rs?‘- -»---- rom g o ow n; arena n _nro e- rater‘ July “h. it; arflvad isharp on. time at. ~99" M0063’, then the ‘Pacific terminus. Fl-‘or thlen Van- couver was not. That great and [growing city of lhe presets! W68 whens city yet lo be. Now it stands 110111.111 almn-ng the greatest Canadian ll-ilisla m mountain. led only lly zMontreal, Toronto and Winnipeg Yum! bidding fair -to pass the Prair- ‘ie metropolis before the census 0I1 - 1931 is taken. M". L. Doncott, 29 Spring Park Bond. (i. nornhllne, Kent Street ‘YBIL i-ltephan Dolly, Richmond Street. It. Thoma While, 125 Ella Ave.’ N. Tweel, 46 Eint Ave. Fred tloudet. Grout George Street. “rs. Jacoirlom Dori-hector street. MONT.»\lil'l5—\V. A. Johnston. Depot 1W8 went 40th bit. FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1927 i i i i i it was a condition uporl which PROHIBITION NOT LIBERAL POLICY. N adopting Prohibition as ' his policy, .\lr. A. C. Saunders is din- inelrlcally opposing, and cutting hinlnelf adrift from tile views of his Liberal leaders. Rev. Liberal ill politics, in advising the Father Burke, Toronto, a people of Ontario to vote for (lov- crnmenl Control, said: "In denouncing Prohibition, I am but following the Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King, and in support- ing Government Control. I am but following the example of ,or- thodox Liberals." The Prime Minister does not believe in Prohibition, bu! tines be- lieve ln moderation in all things. Ilon. Charles A. Dunning, Liberal Minister of Railways. and formerly Premier of Saskatchewan. pulslhe situation plainly. logically and ef- fectively: when he elated ill simple language: “it appears lo me mcn have made cndcavors to control this lrnflic mainly for the reason that the tremendous private gains made possible by supplying a popular appetite renders the liquor lrafllc :1 menace to the frec institutions of any country. "That is lo mo lhc basic con- sideration underlying the efforts of mankind. not only ill this coun- try, blll elsewhere, l0 control this lraillc. , “Merl everywhere have fcll if this trafllc, with its peculiar" diffi- culties, were not controlled by the State, it would itself control the State. "That has been the basic mo- live behind llll the efforts to con- [Brfris-h (‘olnlnllla becllln-e a. Prov- ‘ince of the Domhlion that the trans- clailns, \'s'hell lllc Liberals are illlca111-111u11m1 railway should b8 power we gt-t nothing from Oltowu,11,1111_._ The M01110 15-01311“, 011191-64] and nu lhc present occasion-llll-lllltithe union -l'n 1871. Al that tinlo ezthel-e were fewer than 10,000 white people living in lilo‘. vast poytifiil of _ I l1’: ,»ll Norlh America west oflhe go idle. What ls lllcrc lo hope for, G161" 1111111111 11nd 111a 11111118 1311111111 i9livfilily 1"" Driwilli-‘iaiw- "m" I-"Fion conmined barely four millions. iii yr-as a .-i_,;l.llEl1dCllS u-nzlsrlakinlf air the uovcrunz-ent of Canada al 1llltll. time. llt was the privilege of ' lllle writer to be in attendance "THE rapid growth in the liquorlwhcn the foremost sllotesnlen of expzirtlrade (including beer andcank-“h, uuscussed hhe grQ-‘lpl ppgjeCl ,- . _l nines! from Canada to the Unit 1m Pamament‘ ed States, particularly at Windsor1 and its oulports, is shown by the] statements submitted by the and-l ilors for the Commission for thc‘1 ll was not then know" that = years 1924, 1925, 1926, and fonpracflcable pas, could be found 1i"s,l1.ha1f1.°[ 1927' retspficlwegy: ‘through . the ‘ Rocky M0llfllaifl5. “ l. x f-ll- _ _ - _ _ . ..l.=°v¥5.1‘{'$f3i<i’ $5530.33? .5‘.,.-L<-d--g v-blw m“ v- 1-8 “PW-v- 056,000 and 51215111100, 1tkrn t Ifdflllllled the project as one 1 "ii-Exported lo the United State-snot u-zter recklessness and likely lo 1:?).119$l1i)1il1i116$1111118ld000, $1$-i°4~“"°-le=ltl ‘to financial disaster n" ole "Percentage exported lo [Yllilelhautempm were “Hyde w_ build m? Status; 59,1 72,9, 351 nuu 91 1road. J-t was also predicted that if “y"E1YllOl‘l0(l$ lllroush the Port of1il were blrill ft could. ‘not pay s0 inlsor: .4,581.'2" $6,572,360. , . .1 1~ 1 ~11 1 111-1. 11112561867111111 $7"- 17601 1nlnch as the coJ tle Oi o‘ u ..1,e1_cemage 01. 1.1111011 s1ates1colte the lrolllnlg stock. And ll was shipments exported ill. Windsor;{ii-Tiller Doillicd Ollithat the Unil- 434 .4. 61 11"" 5315-" .e<l lSttltes lrlld not. built llleir- firs! T1 ‘b 11 _ _ _ transcontinental railway until half l0 .1 oat ls _.ul exllncl frolll theia 111111110“ 1180111‘) were 89111611 1,11 Toronto Globe's rcporl of n nlcclingl-l1el1- lruulfiu may“ of lllp Customs Commission dated hiolllreal. Juno 5th. \'l'llclhcl' XOUFCO the old story, the story of mil is ndtled lo injury by forcing lllu Noses upon us, willie our own lll9lll crnls in poyvcr? iiaé-i- PROHlBlTiON IN U. S. o 1 A change of qovernmefit at Ot- lllu unlyfiaws delayed "lhc construction, hul it vras colmlpleiotl and put in opera- 1llon in 1883 and under superb ‘man- ngenlent. ‘it has proved ~10 he the ply we do not lllillk it necessary (018311 paying rauway 1111. l111e world, enquire at present. However, for n. Tjue ul-lglalnl lino “has tzxpondod ill- to a vast network of steel covering seven of Ilihe nine provinces. is the United Slates people get their liquor sup- (‘llnatln from which country as dry as our political pro- hibitionisls declare the United lrol this tralllc since governments and legislatures first attempted to deal with it. "I advised prohlbitinllisls Snskolcllelvlln not lo push the pendulum ton far. 1t is a human tendency, particularly ill connec- in ‘States lo be, we feel they are not connecudwuuh the” and owned by the game Company are splendid ‘liners of s-teomshlps, crossing holh the Atlantic and Irh-e Pacific. carrying a VBML llrzlffic ill passeng- ers, mlcrclul-nd-iso no Europe, Alls- ‘suffering very severely from thirst, judging by ffflm ‘Canada alone. their imports 1 ln the face of all that. is known some active infection from sonic friends and relations on tllc other. tion with popular movements, lmfeiiilfiiilll! U19 Wfifklllg 0i llfflilibl- continue pushing lllllil tho muxi- nilllll resistance is reached ,and _ when yuu uuull 1111, 1101111111111.“ (,1- hrlnesl, (Jllrislllul men aild women ll. ' ' - . . pm’ " “mm” ‘mm "mi "iaxim .ln this Province llllnk of tho men, lion ill lilo United Slates, what do um of resistance is reached, it is very likely to swing buck to the other extremc. This has been lht- exporlence oi’ Saskatchewan on _ this question. "There in n grcal problem: 0n the one hand the recognition by ull Kood citizens of the ncccssilv of controlling this traffic; and nil the other hand the grep; populul- appetite for alcoholic beverages. Because of the latter, the way for the lrlw violator has always been made much easier than in connection with other laws be. cause violation of any liquor lawi has never been regarded by our Pwple or any other people a; 5° serious a matter as violation of ‘he °"d'"fl"i' Provisions of the Criminal Code or the Ten Com- mandmcnts." These words surely should carry weight with our Liberal friends. They are "o! ii"? Dfelutliced views of fanatics or idealists, nor 11w propaganda of the Conservative Dart)’, but the solemn. considered verdict of the two lending Liberal statesmen in the Liberal Govern- clergymcll ulnollg them, who de- clalm from pulpit and platform and 1prcss, daily and nightly about the lllilllflfilf llcltveniy (lillldlliml brought ‘about ill lhc Ulliloll Slates by that only plan of salvation, prohibition’! We do not accuse these men of deliberately stating whnt they do incl menu. We prefer lo think they 'do not know what they are talking about. But they ought to know, [and could know if they wanted to. iln any case, whether their repre- sentations are wilfully false or simply ignorant the result, is the same. They are misleading the public and doing incalculable harm in frying to perpetuate a system of liquor trafficking which has for many Years been a curse and which, according to incontrovertible evi- lug worse and which, if permitted (lance is ‘rapidly and steadily grow- will inevitably lend to uncontrol- lable lawlessness and crime. ment at Ottawa. today. 1n Blllllwrtlng Government Con- trol Liberals here are not breaking with Liberalism, but with Mr. Sounders, Mr. Bentley, and Ml; L_ P. Tsnton. ‘Li-ILL IMPQRTING N. s, GRITS, EVADING TH E ISSUE. HE persistent eflrontery with which our political prohibition- isis evade the real issue in the pre- sent campaign recalls the experi- ence of a Dutchman named Hans who as one of the jurors at‘ a cor- oner's inquest in n murder case. The body of the victim lay on‘ a table carefully covered with n sheet. Miny witnesses gave evi- dence, lp all of which Hans listen- ed with stolid indifference. After some wellrlsome hours of examina- tion and cross-examination, Hans rose slowly, walked over to the body, drew book the sheet from it and ln a surprlsetltone remarked: "Mine lilmmol, dllt man vlls dead!" According to all the evidence so NDSR Liberal representation at owl"! 11111188 her-Me are going from bad to worse. The powers- thllt-be at Ottawa have deprived us of our seat in the Government, Mr. Sinclair having been "ggnt to gov. Entry" for reasons that may, or may not, be obvious. He and Mr. Jenkins seem to be of o account at Ottawa, and their wlszes and re- presentations are evidently disre- Fifded with ll blah hand. A case in point ls the manning of the Gov- ernment steamer Bayfleld, now lu ,our harbor, and which is being ~c0l1IIl1ilI|OliBd as a revenue cut- ter. There are plenty able ofllcere h"? M» flflllllitt ‘ and ready lo Alliance, prohibition is dead. The lilili on the Blyiield, but the Muc- question now ls what to do with 19F!!! Kill! Government has ig- the remains. ' I ilgfiililwllm ulna not three‘ mugs‘ rm political Drohibitlonlsta vim ill, gilnljrp‘. l: into cam no um alon: tar-liner. w,-r.. far adduced, much of it by pfpmn inent members of the Tempsrnince» trallia, China, Japan and other coun- tries. All cxttallsivo nystcln of irri- gation ‘has =heen= cstrrbl-islletl in Soulihern! Alberto. in all-oils wlrcrc lire soil is nzcliurally rich. but whole libero m. o. -ln_ck of lrctaessary lrlois-uure, wllch the lrctnclt that lux- uriant. crops are being grown on lands 1.11m. otherwise cultivation would have been useless. The first transcontinental railway with its connecting oceam- trans-port n. irrigation 21nd immigration sys- iliems, rholve been. a lpnlnci 114a} lllaclor in this vast progress that Canada has naule sllnce T883 and- especiallly in placing two and a. ‘hall’. Ilflliiilifiilllfi of people in. till-e Oandllan Wes‘: where before MIQTQ wene ‘but a few thous- anlds. The wriber remembers well when the first q-tlota of members from Manila-ha and ‘British vColum- hia, itieln in all, took their seats in IBsmIlame-rllln, In all ‘theiifr con-tested elections they hn-d polled but s. t0- tol of 1,350 votes. Three of- their mlnnlber ‘ll-ad been returned by ‘ac- cla-matio-lr. The eleven who wcnlt llO the pol-ls hind only an average of 193 voles ,eo.ch. prohibition writer; the connfnry The at"! speaker: out in ‘in-g the black wash brush to -sta'l\e control nrighl. teil their home that il-ave grown up and gone from: lurid aio worse under ivrdhihi- iAiOYL- ‘llholl. ‘is o subject. they avoid as llhby would ovoid lfil-son. Form- erly» when there was no election pending, four or frlve fleadinlg clevrsy- men of this city told the llrutll aiboult rllt, as the detective brought lllere by iihe fMayor and City Coun- cil lbblve mid tibia ltmumh recently hens. Butt we look back and ‘listen in vein lfor any reference Ito tihese conditions lim llihlel illel-lvemnceo lof one proihllblliiorrorntors of today. ‘llhey seek to otmlceail Itlhe "blot." tin-d “dis- graoe" am borne under prohibition, leaning their country ihearers to believe mhslt everything "is pure and clean vnnstlasr mrdhilbiliidnl here. This ‘is qwilie l3 mceoilvd wviffh the decep- tion and hypocrisy llhort ‘has charac- terized their campaign from rllhe be- ginning. Sane men and women want to bury it. as it is becoming offensive to the nostrils of all who know conditions as they are. The remains will, it is very generally believed, be laid to, rout, ossullrlnv, istil ‘in "n1 _ Qp-n. 1 . . _ THE CHARLQTTETOWN GUARDIAN -' “£47. .~'~"S".QT—) Elm Confederation And After Sixty Years uhp l ‘of i Of Progress _ CANADA 'A_FE~HER BIG , Quilts 1 -- s11 wool-tun. NEIGHBOUR PERNIOIOUS ANAEMIA ll is not necessary lo remind our- jselves of the Hundred _Ye.\~s of Peace lo realize that the rclalrlous ,between Canada and the United lslalels have been on llleuvhole re- One of the serious and fatal llil- markably friendly and even cordial merits that attacks our middle agezi riilw Cvllieiielui-iilll- "i"! lmmbly l; uullgu peruigluug uuaemlu they have never been more s0 illuu Anaemia. us you know, is simply llley are "Hiay- A4011)’ "IWSB have thin blood, und in anaemia there is contributed to that fortun-llo situ- a lessening of the food contents of lltion—one not so common h-{i 1'99“ the little red cells. ‘In pernicious nolbilbourlng nations as not to ex- auaenliu however there is also il cllc surprise. Canadians and Anteri- lessening ill the number of the lii- Pails Silfillill "i fiiursi? be Mil‘! 1° 111. red cells themselves. get along well wl‘._ll one 011M118!‘ Just wllnl causes this trouble is ’l‘hc_\' $993k the 9am“ iilni-zuafle- ns yet unknown. In fact a bul-ltlin’; “M” ‘Vhill L“ Dlil-‘ilifliiii’ ll Ivlllllloil lo study this discuse ulone l‘.l now lilcralurc, our)’ (OP lililvF-Vifie) being erected ill Chicago. it would much llle same laws, fill-l have appenr that folks at the use of l.‘- much tllc sumo democratic point of to 55, mostly lusn, are tho olu-srrlclv toward social and political wlu, u“. ulluulleu luuut ll-euuculllg 1pl-obicnls .'l‘llcy nlovc bnckwtllli and Moll of powerful physique, luldullrwanl across i110 llllelllfliiilliili nbuve the alvcrugtt lncnlully, lll~te1illlllllllal~y freely --.il0llllh_ l“ K110“! stricken down just lu the primc olfl-llcll tilllcr, and dud hi6 0n i119 lira ;oliu-l Side lery similar lo life at. One of tile latest ideas is tbnl lt1ll0lllU. l-Iach "PIMP-filly lililliifi ill!"- is due i0 some interference wllll ill-sills own kind of government ls u action of the ductless glands, soillcllfiffl i" “*0 mil-lei‘ "m" m3!- 0' that lll their secretion which siloullfillis neighbours, but that is perfect- he a blood builder. may he actually ly ulllnral and inevitable, and does helping lo lieslroy the red blood not make for bad feellnll- A111. l0 populist-lug _ crown other reasons. lllflli‘; of us Another cause is thought l0 be on each side of the ilu: have source ill the body such as lillii looking buck d¢i059 51V)’ ."*'3'"5 teeth, tonsils, perhaps anti-um or one finds tile two Countries 911E118- sinns trouble. ell ill many controversies over ques- AlnLlnst but not least the ideitliolls ill which they were‘ null-lull)’ that intestinal putrsfzlcllou is lllcdntercsletl-sornc of which, lllld cause. This perhaps being duo l0 they arisen ill l-Jllrope, would almost the fact that the individual is so (‘Bflillllly have led to war. ‘lere intent on mental wolk, that lllB they resulted ill nothing more ser- llatural impulses froln llle brain ions llltln such lempor-ny ‘Yfll-ilifill which slilnlllnte movement all down as the supporters of one hockey intestine are interrupted, laud oflcn tennl feel for its successful rival. A cease fcr minutes at a time. - ‘case in point was ‘he A1531"! 1 have spoken Ibefore of howllouudttry question, and that transfusion o-f blood from a llclllllly case (‘zllladian indignation subject to the patient, has often inflected not so lllllch low: rested lllc course of lire allulcnbjluliletl Slates as towads the Brit- und the patient enjoys good llcllllll 1511 rcpresentallvc who by voting for months and even for yelus. fwitll them decided the case llg-{llliil Mslenic. iron, extract of bonoguuullu, No one who knew the char- marrlnv, have oll been uscd- bill acter of the man believed for t1 transfusion is the ulosl. effcclive 11101119111 gum l-le had acted in bull me-lllotl of arresting llle progress fuilu temporarily. 1 TPhe question of reciprocity has l-lovrever another" form of l,l‘Uiil‘,]1ee11 11 1111111111 110mm, 01- 1115501111. mcnl, that of a good ricll iWilN-‘UHIiOn between the two nations. The diet has been ill-led by llr. l. f‘. iilliiiold Reciprocity Treaty of 1855 had of Portland, 0re., who gave his pzlt-flleuu or great, lvalne to Canada, hill lents a generous livcl‘ null bcuf-ilm- one reason or another it did lloL streak diet with t-xct-llcnl l'L'“ll|15~‘suit the United State-s. and in 1366 There were lhrcc l-uscs, nil of overlu wag fl-brggalet] ul their instance. three years standing. . 1For many years after fluff Canadian {Po this dict was zlddctl "an ab-Humeumen made pl-Qpognls for n rc- undunrc of flesh fruits and vcgel-‘llewsl of the treaty in various ables." ‘ forms. Sir John Iiiacdonald, George Now gone-rolls lll-lpillgs of liver lju-uwu 'l‘u1yp¢u- and (jm-twrlght at and beefslenk for the llflrfiffie i" various times made proposals to the door workcr would he a mistake Americans, but without result. The and would girl: lilo kidneys ill-ll llv- lynllud Slates preferred to build a or loo much lo do, but will-re lhc-111g11 1111-111’ wall ul-uuml llqu country blod, and the body gcllcrulijv, ilcod 4111111 keep wlgulu ll, The“ when they ill . of them." "l described Buffalo lo n PROHIBITION IN THE UNITED STATES As Seen by a Reporter "anv" CHICAGO AND OTH ER SECTIONS. Historical. Rollin Lynda liartt, newsnflllel‘ reporter, of New York, took a. 100k in some months ago to ascertain how Prohibition was doius in H?‘ boken, Buffalo, Detroit and Chicago. At the close oflln interview with many lending citizens. he summed up his observations by llnyiuzl- "Chicago might as well never had Prohibition." The above is about the same as the report brought from all the above-named cities. As to whether the same might be said of Prince Edward island we have already de- scribed the fruits of the Prohibi- tion law after several plebisciles and a good deal of swearing and bootlegglng for about twenty yenrs. According io tho information thc reporler gleaned there were open saloons ill Buffalo——-"n whole nest of them," about seven blocks lli) Broadway, "and the story turned ollt to be true." l found lllcnl scll~ ing beer, but not whiskey; indeed. the only liquor I cnme upon ill Buf- falo was offered lllB in a homo, by a recent graduate of n famous ensl- ern university. He had obtained the formula in the university lvhcro by diligent experimentation he and a group of classmates became very successful university dlstlllers and bootleggers, although the prohibi- tionists still assert “A generation is growing up who will never know the taste of alcohol." Ofliclally the saloons ill Buffalo are not saloons. They are not saloons; llley are soft-drink parlors," licensed at $5 each and with Mayor Schvrabfis per- mission selling beer." After a sc- ries of heart-breaking thefts fronl cellars, rich Buffaloiuns mounted electric lights on their garages with reflectors brilliantly illuminating their hack yards. "Booze-lights" those are trailed. "i saw hundreds fighting prolllhltionisl whom l mel, and he said, "Tile cities are wet and the towns are dry. I go every- where and the only trouble is with the cities." I answered, “More thull half the people of the Uniled Slates now live in cities." lie rclorled. "Well, anyhow, you can't say pro- hibition was ‘put over‘? Almost lllc \vllo1e territory of the United Slates was dry, territory. When I told lllnl my only object ill travelling was to obtain views of prohibition “as it is." he declared "it cmft he donc," in a tone that implied. "You have no business to attempt it." This reporter travelled over the rural parts also in sellrcll m" 11,-1.1. hand information ill reference to {WW Drollibmition operated in the farming sections. This mun ul-lsur- ed the reporter thnt it was a great "'11- "6 Hlioke of “homo brew," "nlvoliflhifle." etc“ and declared lllarihey were “making drullkzlrds of the women and children of the country." .» 1,. ll BANKQF Amour . Eifiblislledfill ‘Y? , ASSETS) and LIABiLITiEs i 30th Avril. 1921 . } ASSETS Cashonhami . . . . . . ,1. 041?. with and notes and disquiet» oerBanh....,...,_,. Deposit with Central Gold Reserve . Callanci Short loan: on BondnDeben- turesandStociu . . . . . , Dominion and Provincial Government Securitics......... Canadian Municipal Securities 51nd British, Foreign and Colonial Public _ Securities other than Canadian . . Railway and other Bonds, Debentures andStoch........ Quick 1...... . . $421.99o.a1ss" Loans and Discounts and other Asset: 33z,496,996,71' BankPremiaea . . . . . . .V . 11,8o'o,ooo.oo Liabilities of customers under letters of . credit (as per contra) . .1 . . . ll,82l,4oo.79 - Total Assets . t $734.i1Zi774.0Z _ LIABILITIES TO PUBLIC i- Notu in circulation Q - . . . . . 45166519859 v- Deposits . . . . . . . . . . 6$6,173,7i4.64"'_ Letters of credit outrtanding . . . 11,815,400.» ’ Othex-Yabilities . . . . . . . lo,3o8,l33.87 Total Liabiliriu t. Public . . _$'7n.<>68.747-30 i Execs‘: of Assets over liabilities to Public . . . . . . . $ 16104431633- bllildillg {vi ill pornltzious lnsemilnwere 11161111811 to 191 11011.11 111,1 1,111. or lubl-rculosis, llcufsllullt null livcru-lur, 1111111113 ueutlmunt lmu changed arc clcluly iudicatctl. [in Canada. Whether lilo two coun- Slmlc physicians are - llivilu: flour-ici- will evcr roach common luucll u»; u pound ul‘ hoof il\’i'l' u dny ground ill lrado reciprocity l-enlalns lo lillliPlllfl with pernicious nlulc- 11,1119 gel)“, llliil. 'l‘lle lulllnd and sea fisheries, the ‘That illicit brewing oml flglnng 2111: now the rage ill lho Western t ates seems lo he the geuerul face lo flu-e with a like situation ll the lwfilllc vole for pruillbitlollf View "i lile Evil. and how it is 105mm i“ injury w 11m 91011116,] l1, 1191111111111; 1111 111111_“1_lllu1sl. jbo11t1t1>lit1r111>liell1 1 1 r me pg 111-11111 11_ T111 p. , ony us cs on or ll er ere - e I q “whim ‘BMW with private (Tfillliilllli. ill respect to it. din-l. ll‘ the individual freedom the public and OQOFQQOOIOVFI u, That is lllc ' DAILY Lnssolls._ 11v nlvomsn -. Lem... FOR THE SCRAP BOOK A SERIES 0F LITERARY QUOTATION! FOR BOOK LOVERS e Friday, June 10th God was palpably present In the country, and the devil had gone with the world lo town. -Hardy. Speculation-Terrestrial life is precarious since it is at the mercy of atmospherical circumstances. lf the original heat had increased in- St8l1(1\1()f diminishing. tho termites and the ants would perhaps be two great nations. sharing between them the empire of the world, and man would be one oi‘ their preys. . ” -—De Gourmont Boring Sen seal question, the priv- ilege of laklng goods through one country or the other ill bond, the question ol‘ copyright on book-H, the mutter of extradition, and innumer- able olllel problems affecting lilo relations of Canada and the United States have come up from time to limo, and have been disposed of without any serious difficulty. Various commissions halve been I set up lo deal with particular or general questions in which the two countries were interested. One of these was the International Joint High Commission of 1 8. which ton. It discussed a number of ques- tions but. did not come to any de- finite agreement on any of them. Another was the International Waterways Commission, appointed in 1902, which investigated and re- ters, and made _certain recom- mendations which things led to the the international Joint met at Quebec and later at Washing- ported upon a large number of mat- among other creation of Commiss- ion, a. permanent body which has Tile evil will grow to vasl propor- UOII-‘i. and do lnculculuble Illjilry to both old and young ill bolll l w auu cuunl,” . " " mcu living in this country must be lu pearl )- - _ 3frec to eat and drink and do ‘lhut cuuuua ,,y,,,""1,‘,’,f,,',1'}_,° which they like, no long as inJnry mlgm 1,1111 11111011110611 n11“, which lo other person-s and the public in. 5111,1111“ 11111611111611, 101.1110 H") re“ lt-rests is not thereby caused. lf 810,, u; 111,, 111,11 1111,, prgxncélllliiy have ml that freedom llhelr alone must decide whether it will “EMS l“ British ‘we men m8 un- lullow 11181,. 1111111111111, m, go "Iduly restricted. That. R seems. ul-uulung 111° 111w. 11 11 1g agamuo lne, is where Prohibition l-a adopted. “It is time for n change," is lip; universal cry m the United States. Temperance Situation 1 Reviewed (W .L. COTTON) Whatever we may mink of 111s ‘i-emllerancfl WNW. we have to thank Premier Stewart and his col. leagues for mining the public 1o u sense of the evil or intemperance and the ‘Ministers to do their duty lin respect to that evil. if they had Wt Dwncsed a change of the law that was being broken every icy is right. -Prohllxi.ion goes into a man's house—lrl-s cottage-opens his cup- board doors, looks into his cellar. enters his most private closet. and it he has itionoenled snywhorli tin-his premises a flask lot-liquor thu- lie not officially marked subjects him ‘.0 fine and imprisonment. "Phat is not ill accord with British fros- dom. Jlrolrlbltion. preventaipp hon; est and temperate man 1am. ‘pur- chasing the bottle 0f liquor that he may desire or that "he to be nee-d-ful -in case of illness in his family. is seen to be wnqng when brought ‘.0 the -test of the higher, British law ol individual ll ‘Wnnflllnil that fin-without doubt, the ' n why so many persons buy " dram lbootleggers and make moon- whlch oll British int-n prize, is to By W. L. Gordon _; be maintained ‘tllcro must be a lllrr- _' it to interference. Men nlld wo- Qq-oveoovoooe-O-N wrong und- Premier Bzewarrs pol- a ml‘ doom“ u‘? tot; '1‘ otfillio, - ‘ wonns OWE?‘ ~" Don't any "there isnt 1 on the ulblc." 5R1)’ ondlvrns nlsl-nosovim dress. Accent both pong‘ -. on last syllable. not "Ii OYPEN MLSSPEIAUED- t. . aiivnollvvms: aims-as! , conversation. diflfliifwflw’ lecture, essay. speech; W011i!) srunv: ‘UN _i three times and ll. is Y0":- 11101-93” our lvncabulnfi l lug one word each f“? - wclflgDEsul/PORY- " ,'. one thins to another M .1 or method‘. Brim“ not come from 811C“ 4m‘ ions iNutnl E9 . lbslveuldler bedroomfi A“ r quite u Ware‘ U lonee of c0 0'1" J1 wvering amid lllihillflmn‘ ~ mm my oven he 6999M" dis- tricts who are so zealously apply" ‘hearers nlboulll the a-otlusl condillilorls bore at Tile soul's dark collagp, 11111191911 ister at Ottawa. and decayed, Lets ill new light through chinks that time hath mode; Stronger -hy weakness, wiser men 1 become As they draw near lo their eternal §§§QOQO-O-i Household Scrapbook -‘ ‘y 1 ROBERTA LEE o+e+o¢u+u+o44+e+e+e+e~ 1 ° " A Uleful Kitchen Tool , ome: Leaving the lOld, both worlds at _ once they view That stand upon the threshold of the New, --Edmunu Waller (1505-37.) a ‘ Purchase a small tin coal shovel, or a dustpnn, flatten out the edges with a hammer, and keep in a con- venient place for removing hot pans and dishes from the oven. _ - \.\ To Strengthen Blbyh Mulclel Massage the hack and legs thor- oughly every night with alcohol. ‘Rub from the feet urbwards to the hipl- lioll the muscles gently to bring the circulation through file muscles. dtub from the neck down the back to the hips. Improved Vlnegnr Add a small amount of garlic to ~ - quart of vinegar. it river tile ‘ “Iii!!! a delicious fl and is ep- . . . , 1 . , 1 Washington and an American Min- d?!" OLD PTGE been in Bxiflieiweflince 1911 "i"! day and night, lie Ministers ‘and The sells ore quiet when the winds hi“! 119°“ 0f V91‘? 8P9“! Value i0 other leaders of publlq oplul-ou glve or"; both countries. Sill) another is the would have remained silent, andl 3D calm are we 11,11,111 111151110111, are llnternstional Boundary Commls- we should have supposed that. all uu more; slon, crested in 11892, which has had was going well in social and rellg. For then we know how vnin it was the imlmrmm d“? °f slirveying 1°“ 1129"“)? my!“ 5° ‘QTY billi- 10 1,0351 and marking the luternatlonaé dlibtlie factslrgecentiy adduced have, ()5 ll u 11,1 boundary between the Yukon an 9 “'11- - 9 Iefmons recent- eelula? n“ so cermn to be Alaska and between other parts of Hlv-Bzcmld fluid llhedatltl 15151811918 nub- ~ . - , .C nad nd the United States. J-‘in- c Y B Vere an nu e ed by (Imudsei-fleggsflltlon “om m“. young ally life aDlamond Jubilee has been Pildio 111ml tthefressuhave certainly . . mu‘ l ked b u. i t- "W" a w "8 1 iroillrhov-t the cOllilelllllegéilfiéselfllillllvi-lfl llhlth age manila‘?! ‘Ilmaanndhifl M31112?’ “a1 community that. whoever may win in the coming election, something lmlst be done to combat the grow- ling evil, and that a change of heart, a ddferminwtion. to resist. ilhe Eppg. tire for inlioxlcsnts and the increas- ing eorelessness that pervades so- cial circles and personal conduct, must take mince. For that result we hlwe to thank Premier Safew- srt and those by whom he is coun- selled. _ - The next result to be looked for is ‘personal and social reform on the pull. of those who have fallen away jfcom the path of temperance ulnd 800d living. By their denun- ciulons- pt Government Control and their ad-vopley or prohibition the ntinioters have lately-very lately-Jone Willi. they could in this direction. ‘it is to ‘be hoped that, whatever the political result may he, they will keep right on w. wards-it use ‘Premier Stewart's iphrue- "mailer temperance" and n. night Judgment and right conduct on tho part or nil ‘ill-ole to whom they minister. ~ hi this country we bout about our freedom. This is t Free coun- ltrpm Tat-ale it‘! giribilil law and too co n . every tnln llumsdomlpllo lhervilllflo I idihfiiifg alibi-tau. ro- 1, mmmwf airliners. \ o! Ham “m! dark , - On the other hand, the law 3111111: ' f. " ‘ i! proposed by Premier Stewart" will, ‘it seems ‘tome, the in accord with 'lil6 law of British freedom; 51%: otdliiquor nugget‘: H it mber of D00 6 - lb m,‘ and 1t Milli tand- ppeltitee and a-l. the same time restrict, the 1,116 a in tlloee action oi‘ all those who nevi 115111119141‘ At the, the Liquor Evil-by which. the in- all pol-who's who abstain teresns of religion and the country- al. large are injured and prejudiced. “Undbiectionable applicants" who desire freedom to partake of intox- icalditaurilll b9 "permitted" to do Q0 n Brow. higm‘ o; an‘, o" of residgnee. . ‘Doililflhsfbunaiiab appointed .1 _ "lluntfiiertnlvts" to adult persons of temperate llolblta. find refime ‘ilflfln-ltn" to thine who are inclined llo be tntompertto‘. Tile liq-um- leauly Uihilldililrflliriil use of 1mm. and wit" example to their felivfi laeivo ancolrraivflw" w‘ . ‘lion of. Trout- ’ more now in will." purchased at e. Ilumltethnnmherof . until“ "°' 11-111.,- vondcr’! Itorem-qll under i113 n» hotter 0i‘ i". : U01 of the Commission. All igu- ~, time m» troll!» dor's store to which OM00 _n ‘yuttgbel " - i§§°3£i»3‘““’°"".§‘.“;°l:.‘i..“°’l. c" MQXIPNII r . o - have wllli at once be clown. and the‘ the ltlnd W" "DOPE-N!" of lull-none who abuse the use of intoxication, will form- wlth, be cancelled, fwllilofll ner- solu who drink flaw! illegally,“ tii0se who sell liquor illegally will be subjected to “greatly in- creased possum." , " “ - ‘in this way the sin and evll of drunkenness will; u turn by maul: or iulmn in, o. mill mined. and all ilmolu of mod chill-scler- .1511. he wflflflflvfi 1.1111311‘: freely-but niwpyn in As between-mantra i; ~ the m on"? u , rovtdod .1 mm a u. '"°"i"*ltii*s‘ . ‘- ........ a. mlfii‘... , ..: lo»- m-i». m» 1m tmrutqunt the . unit; up my, 1 .