In: cumin n- 8oerolfl1-—Lhnl.-Col- P. E. 1. uosmma j-r-ir. r E E E E5 l-_..‘@.Q.A--‘~P- 1 F 989 of m; practically low I [g3 attention to the value of no less C than $9,264.80 for patients unable pgrfl It to" pay, and another $9,000.00 for M6111 U l patients who owing to unanticipat- “lw f Co] ed circumstances were, subsequent .3 to their admission as paying pat- Tl“ l ‘ ,5 fonts, unable to foot their biiis. m {seen 231:2,“ the round figures this is practically $20.- H‘ Monda‘ 5°! 000.00 that the P. a". I. Hospital has ' ‘ism confere R" to find in addition to the amount ‘nit l-lle m‘ be received from financial patients. rwj chm‘ , ‘gt ‘The trustees expressed an opinion, I w!‘ ‘Sig: I h, which will be heartily endorsed. l hall“ Subject; pai that without adequate assistan YB‘, E. Boo , '3 from the city and province the y?‘ Mulls“ “c hospital could not continue for u, 233i)“, m; long to carry on the good work it of c chm“ , has been doing in this respect. It Em‘ ‘ vokmg ,5, Lg gratifying that the ouy has made “id tion in : a fury percent increase in its con- lgx, e1‘ l°° l9! tribuuori. but where the balance is {grim 25,2; 1 to come from ia s, problem the liAwf ‘ways g ' trustees will have to solve. It is " xwm" i quote , ‘ pleasing that the trustees have been l Al? f 1 able, as prevlouslyannouncedinths I thy i r;- 1 Guardian, to arrange for a. modified one. l z order} Hr building program for the new hospi- ’ ‘gun, itaLandthatworkwill be oom- ' ‘V? i Bron ' menced at an early date. Although , “f ' l8 thi l the new hospital will not be on the l lame‘ m; scale originally anticipated, noth- j fir": ing will be sacrificed which will m ' my way prejudice the interests of ; there '- the patiests. The nurses’ Home will It‘ not ba preceded with. The humbe mm sue _ of moms will be reduced from one t. m, ' hundred to eighty-five, and rrie ‘iwhfi dam,‘ ‘d, heating plant will be Within the ed u m; building instead of outside as .' 171' b, ‘ po originally contemplated. The trus- lml. itees and building committee are :3‘- vn worthy of all the good things said N", m‘ about them at the meeting on Fri- “; 3 day night. orb,’ " Rl;_ WEST, YORK VICTORY M‘ '-. m The election of Mr. Harry Price, Conservative candidate, in the by- m election in West York, Ontario, by u a majority of nearly a thousand votes over his Liberal opponent, ls . l- significant both from a provincial and federal standpoint. The fact that there were four candidates in e field emphasizes the import- ance of Mr. Price's victory. The opes of Liberal supporters centred around the intensive campaign of Mr. Mitchell l". Hepburn, M. P. Ifrulrlonww. Chum l. Helm". I- Y- uan" “q snagging Director-J. l lurid!- Auoellfe Idltorklrunh Walker III I). I. CIrrll | .4 13cc) delivered. "“,';,:‘:,,” (('r:n.f|ev:|a‘c'e')1)m.:l?el ‘l: ‘and ‘mud am». annual meetlnl 0! m! Prince Edward Island Hospital sub- ggribers passed off satisfactorily under the able direction of the Chairman of ‘Ir-ustees, Mr. W. K. Rogers, the repvrls all being un- Pll lnimously adopted. The truatoefl. "01 while submitting statements show- _ lng that every bill owed at the end B." of‘ each month had been paid and the deficit in the bank reduced, m‘ expressed the opinion that it was impossible to finance BOt hospitals where the city and prov- “ lncial assistance was out of pro- portion to the work done. The rc- m‘ port pointed. out that 1n the past year the hospital provided care and ILLIuIMnnJLI-O- MONDAY. my u. 1m down, and accordml w “mum government in this wu- Thw 1N hard times for all gverywhem, and the hand of the tax gstherer is seen in almwl gygfyflflu‘ one sbyl, hear-l, wrftell. imtsxod domestic item anywhere ill the world to-day is the cal. llld 110 doubt the PIE-fly also would be in- cluded were it not the priitlvlcll impossibility o! deciding her owner- ship. Unlike moat other but!!! pussy selects her own home. whether aha is wanted or not, and refuses to be turned adrift. FOXES IN ARGENTINA The amazing development of the silver for industry in recent years from its humble origin in this Province is emphasized by the in- creasing prominence given in it in trade and agricultural publications throughout the world. The latest at- tempt to acciimitize the Canadian silver fox is in Argentina. Accord- ing to a. recent issue of the Com- mercial Intelligence Journal, the present situation of the industry in tho Argentine i4 comparable with its beginning hem some decades ego. Actually little is known re- garding the cars and keeping of the animals, and there is little Spanish literature available on the sublect. The moat ‘ drawback existing to the further extension of the in- dustry lics in the almost complete lack of positive information that the investment required will produce any return in Argentina. The peo- ple of Argentina, conservative by nature, are afraid to risk their money on an industry that is strange to them and which requires considerable mowledge and per- severanoe. However, a foothold has been gained, and it is hoped that the results will eventually prove in the country that there is much to be gained by entering. into the business of silver fox farming. The ranches already established are located in widely separated parts of the country. ‘lfherc is one situat- ed at Junin do los Andes, some ‘I80 miles southwest of Buenos ALres in the foothills of the Andes and at an altitude of 3,120 feet above sea level. This enterprise was the first thoroughly practical effort at fox farming in Argentina. Blx pairs of some of the finest Canadian stock were brought from Prince Ed- ward Island in December, 1030. Alter a. little preliminary trouble the foxes soon became adapted to the change of seasons and higher altitude. Another farm was started about the some time at Abra Pampl- in the province of Jujuy, the most northern ruovincc of the Rs- r Ontario Liberal leader, whose ef- forts to lead the party out of the wilderness have so far been singu- larly unsuccessful. The present world wide .economic depression was capitalized by Liberal cam- paign apeakers and it was hoped, in the event of success, that there would be an unfavorable reaction against the Bennett Government. The result indicates that the peo- ll‘ pie of West York are strongly con- vinced of the value of maintaining Conservative administration at the present critical time. U. S. TAXATION I Tc show the world-wide. effect of ‘the present period of depression it may be pointed out that the United ‘states has followed the example of hcairada in the extraordinary taxa- ytion schemes adopted in order to Qrealize a balanced budget. Inland Fpasihge has been increased to three rents and newspaper postage by “ vveght correspondingly increasfil. ‘ftlicfitwo estimated f0 bring in an ‘jrdrutionui $160,000,000 revenue. For lrc,',first time a tax on cheques of y fc has been imposed, which is ex- Argentina after the exhibition, but by force of circumstances they could not be removed from Buencs Alres to the colder regions. Towards the end of the year four of the male foxes died. However, bore sxteen pups altogether. ‘Ihesc foxes have recently been moved to the Cordobl hills, where the young animals are reported in be doing well. This farm is about 440 miles northwest of Buenos Alrss at an altitude of about 2,700 feet above sea level. of the Canadian ‘trade public and on the edge of the tropi- cal bone. ‘This farm fa high up in the Andu at an altitude of 12,150 feet above sea. level. Brought from Prince Edward Island and sudden- ly placed in so high an altitude after a till-III trip through the twill“. ll l! gratifying to note that the animals have been constantly free from disease and worms. At the time of the British nnpire Exhibition in Buenoa Aires during March and April, 103i, six pairs of silver foxes were brought from Prince Edward Island by an inter- ested breeder. These were kept in the females Throughout the year the office Vloo-Prn-ldnt-i. L Dunc“ especially intcrestinfl to note that unlike Canada ch90"! °1 “'00 “d under are not cxcmyt 17°!" m!‘ W° cent tax. An atfamPl- WM m!“ l” have exemPl-lfl bl"- ll w“ “lmm momma will be raved by the administrations eats, wears or buyl. About the only sufficient inquiries foxes in show that interest is stead- settled state of the world is forcing both individuals and rirrirs to go very slowly and to postpone any venture they might have formerly contemplated. There are many large firms holding great tracts of land in the interior and to the and it is these firms that would be able u» enter into fox farming 1n g big way. Doubtless these first re- sults will be of Brent influence to the further extension of the industry. The Buenos Aires press has devoted considerable space to the enterprise. and it la hoped that in the not too distant future llllTE BY TIIE WAY Al than Is no prospect of ems country retumins to a gold basis of currency in the near future, ow- ing to the attitude of Franco and America, three courses appear to mo to be open to Empirg 5mg”. men: 1. For all Empire county!” to abandon gold and adopt sterling w a standard. fixing price levels on. say, the Board of ‘lrads index number of price values. 2. To adopt silver as a standard. 3. To adopt bimetalism proportion of silver as a standard, Of these, the first appears to be the most practicable at the pres- ent time, although the second and third are also attractive. offering, u they do. great Opportunities for extending trade with the enormous markets of India and the Far East. But whatever policy is eventually adopted, the advantages of a uni- form currency policy to future trade relations are incalculable. These are problems which will test the statesmanship of our delegates at Ottawa-Captain Peter Mac- Donald, M. P., in the Empire Re- view, London. ‘ The most resolufc visionaries, says the Week-end Review, who foresaw Dominions and Colonies failing over one another to demol- lsh their tariff barriers and to give the British manufacturer a larger share of their markets are rapidly coming to admit that so farias the tariff argument is concerned Im- perial economic unity may have little of immediate value to offer. Politicians, economists and civil servants, who have been instruct- ed to arrange for large benefits all round without anyone having to sacrifice anything, are accordingly focussing their attention on the possibilities of an elementary form of economic planning for the Em- pire. In nil the Dominions, and in Great Britain, a useful stock-tak- ing is being pushed forward, and while the Empire Free 'l‘rado myth only recedes further from ac- tuality at every investigation, it seems likely that by limiting the immense waste and duplication in productive capacity which has re- sulted from the fostering of local secondary industries behind un- necessarily sweeping tarififs. Otta- wa. may yet produce something worth having. The cause and cure of crime lies in the home training. What is needed is a stiffening of the pa- rental spinal column. Home train- ing and environment is a most im- portant agency in thc development of the boy or girl. No boy or girl was ever born a criminal. If, in la- ter years, they appear in court, it is a sure sign that something was the matter in that home. The home is still the hope of the country, and the training, the care used in the up-bringing of our boys and girls indicate what the Canada of to- morrow is to be. It In eatlmafzd that about 224 million cubic feet of wood onstitu the forestry wealth of Canada, but this wealth is susceptible of depre- ciating each year by reason of the industrial and commercial exploi- tation, coicnization, and forest fires in particuar because these leave but ruination in their wake and it is not easy to build anew the forest that has been reduced containing a major I a . Barlcn. up in ".3 By lame: W. THE LAZY LOWER 30m rough enough, f-hitt they are 000 concentrated. ter, mfifll». 9885- breakfast foods, and white bread. food will cause a ‘siowlns up’: al- tectine, and out of the body. Fortunately, in the majority of cases, adding a little ‘rough food’ to the above foods in the diet ls all that is nec ry to stimulate act- ion of the muscles of the large in- testine; fruits, vegetables and whole wheat bread being quite cf- fective. sometimes however the lower bowel-large intestine-has bewmc so tender and inflamed due to waste matter remaining too long in it. or to harsh purgative medicines, that rough vegetables, fruit, and whole wheat bread only aggravate this inflamed condition. In such cases a liquid or soft diet should be used, and enemas of warm water or warm paraffin oil should be used until the condition iiriproves suf- ficiently so that the ordinary diet, and then the rough diet may be used. What happens when stasis or stoppage occurs in the lower bow- el? Some of the waste matter flows back through the opening into the small intestine, and this waste is actually absorbed into the blood. It is not to be wondered at therefore that many of these patients ‘com- plain of headache, dizziness, tired- ness, a coated tongue and bad breath.’ The first thought then ls to pro- vent any ‘stasis’ or spastic condi- tion in the lower bowel by includ- ing in our diet one or more of the following foods every day; apples, oranges, bananas, grapefruit, ‘dried fruits such as raisins, prunes and flgs;; vegetables such as tomatoes, lettuce, asparagus, beets. onions, cauliflower, and carrots, all of ivhich coirtain bulky fibrous huskis and coverings, or rough seeds. As some proteid food must be eaten to renew worn tisues, eggs or meat at least once a day should be eaten. Milk is excellent but is constipating to some people. Butter or fat meat is likewise necessary as a ‘protective’ food. As the above list of rough mods gives ample selection, there should be no difficulty in using one cr more of them daily. SPRING WIND o full-voiced herald of immaculate to cindera. A house, any edifice. 811F318. may be re-built in a few months; With clarion 8156M" slim" at least; a half a century is requir- every W39 ed to remake a forest and, at that, To answerins TflDl-llf“. 5-1 l 795°!“ it is not always possible to replant Bill 5e9- an area which, badly burned. Fills rock-bound shores with thun- leavea the ground sterile for a ders echoins- lengthy period. Experts have cal- 0 thou. Eflcll be“ M Wm)“ tem‘ culaied that forest depletion in the IWStlIW-‘l W193 Dominion each year is at the rate Sllfllifls the 1°08 Wml°l"5le°P ‘mm of 4,136,000,000 cubic feet. hill and lea. I __ _ And rouses with loud reckless lllb- Thfl world economic depression “ant 31°“ is curable, says an exchange, bc- The 51rd! m“ have m‘ dared u cause it is man made. It is a de- yet m 5mg: pression in the midst of plenty, and results from the failure of hu- man organization in distribution, currency management, and so forth. But no one nation—even the greatest-can cure it or overcome it single-handed. We must have international action. about silver fly growing. Unfortunately, the un- south, the demand for 00m- ccttcl to realize $95,000,000. It i! minions: in Burns Aim rgccived creased. Canadian foxes will be greatly in- 0 wind that comest with prophetic cries, l-last thou indeed beheld the face that is The joy of poets and the 81°17 01 birds— Springs face itself r hast thou ‘heath biuer skies Met the warm lips that are the gates of blisfl. And heard June's leaf-like mur- mur of sweet words? _William sharp, "Poems! --’:l_)(liil.)“\ Kl D N lmf vhggmuowlllflin" - You have likely read often that most of our modern foods are" not The foods usually spoken of as in this class are: but- fata prepared 1f you take no exercise it is pos- sible that too much of this kind 0! most a ‘stasis’ or stoppage o! the waste passing through the large ln- Riche, when he was Undersecretary of Blah for Air in the Laval Gov- ernment. Thc new building, which fa to form Plrt of the national re- equipmcrit Dim voted last autumn, will face ground floor there will be one main hall with offices of all the leadlfll air lines and other facilitlel for air Millionaire liberals, (Mill $811959) m. mroireu r. uevbilm will ti» elector! or West York that h» 1M1 the fight to make millionaires dis gorge the wealth they hm rliwl by the exploitation of the wqrkfl- Thc lllll "it; 0f leader's brlggadocio is Fri-Wed b! the fact that he was elected in hi! position by the MW Llbqrgl organization, Whlfih Ill 3mm,“ by the Beauharnols millionaires to the extent of $730,- 000 in the last general election. If he meant what he has said he would have Joined in the attack upon the Beauharnois Senators in- stead of being one of their defend- ers in the House of Commlis- We have still another point to make in regard to Mr. Mitchell F. Hepbunrs brave words. If he is out to make the millionaires dis- gorge their wealth, we presume that he will signalice his presence in the West York fry-election by specializing lnthe casccflilr-Vib R- P. Parker, who isono of M‘r.. Hepburn! chief backers. and who owns one of the finest country estates in the vicinity of Toronto. l After compelling Mr- Parker bo| disgorge he will g0 after several members of the Stfton family, whose fine country estates are the show places of York County. We, ourselves, have nothing to say against the Porters and the Siftona so long as they pay their taxes and bear their fair sham of the burden of unemployment relief. What we do object to ls that Mr. Hepburn. with his tongue in his cheek, should fulminate ' ‘ imaginary rich, Tories while he utterly ignores the influential millionaires in his own party without whose support he can have no adequate financial backing, and without whose back- ing he will probably not get very far. A Museum Of Sound tlondon Correspondence) The modern world has been so busy enjoying _ the entertainment afforded by such scientific toys as the talkie and gramophone, that it has perhaps p not yet properly appreciated their value as records of the age. Now, however, a "museum of sound" is to be opened in Berlin. For the past 90 years, the or- ganizer of this museum, Professor Doegen, has been collecting records cf the voices of famous persona of all countries. Great Britain's representatives include Mr. Ramsay Macdonald and Miss Pankhurst, while the former German Kaiser is among the royalty represented. Much of Professor Doegen’: material was collected during the War, when he visited the prison camps llectirig records cf foreign languages and dialects as he went Know Your , Mushrooms (Department of Agriculture Bulle- tin) It doesn't pay to guess as to the edible qualities of mushrooms and other fungi which grow in abund- ance in all parts of Canada from early June until the heavy frosts of Fall destroy them. H. T. Gus‘- sow, the Dominion Botanist, in his very complete book "Mushrooms and Toadstools" (Price ti) states “let us state most emphatically that a knowledge of fungi is the only safe means of distinguishing edible fungi from poisonous." There are essentially only two classes of mushrooms which are deadly poisonous, the Fly A Blli-‘l Dfllfoylng Angel or Death Cup. The Fly Amanita is dia- tinguished by a bright yellow or orange colored top dotted with white specks; while the destroying Anzolls characterized by a death- ly palenesa. Each of these clas- ses have three clear sig- nals which anyone can readily re- co _ u. The first ls a n-r te gill; the second is a collar at the top of the stem; and the third is the serrated rings or cup at the base. Famous Air Terminal (Christian science Monitor) be Bourget, the Paris airport, which is also the terminal point of almost all the Important conti- nental alr routes, is to have a station worthy of its lice and im- portance, according go an an- nounoemen‘ made by Etienne standing and appreciation tomulti- ply contacts with other pecplssflgm see more deeply into their na - al characters, to understand be r, their national ‘traditions and tofap- Lamas‘ LOWEST FARES 11v YEARS Mr. MacLaren wlll quote you a price that will make his British Isl so Days-All Expense Included, sass - $475 - ssso. The differencelnv price is the difference in the class aboard ship. The $550 Fare isflaloon Class, The $475 Fare is Tourist Class, The $395 Fare, is Third Class. ALL FIRST CLASS ON LAND. For Further Particulars Write or See JQA. MacLaren 7a uitisborgsjitb uunoraa travellers ‘rho-Jim?- Ind 8909"’ floors will be used as a restaurant and a hotel and there will B180 be 5 large terrace oommandinz u I°°d view of the flying irruulld- It i! estimated that the buildinfl M!" will cost 1,000,000 franc-P-fllllhllllll- and that its interior and exterior arrangements will cost a further 5,000,000 francs. Work is to. be started almost immediately- True And‘ False‘ Patriotism (Exchange) Japan cannot ' - of being harshly Judged by the outside years old la murdered m cold brood by husky armed officers, and some of the ac and comments leave the impression that the inur- der was the lact of high-spirited red-blooded young fellows whose patriotic zeal carried them a little too far. Jingoism was onca,_dc- scribed by Lord Bryce. as patriotism gone sour. 1n contrast with it; is patriotism as described by Presid- ent Butler of Columbia University: “True patriotism has a moral basis. It conceives the State _ as having moral, personality, with those obligations, those sympathies and those ideals which attach to morality wherever found. It looks upon the nations, both past and present, as having each its own part to play in the making of a continuing and continuous civilisa- tion, and seeks through under- AAQAQAAAA L‘ aaskmnk vrrvv ti! llfMrt- 0h the nauosroaa , m Great doom same ., All sun Onlcn arm. Prompt" moo q ' l if Make It Europe This Year! PAY ‘LESS AND GET MORE Fkofm YOUR VACATION 14H Expenses Paid, Tours At Surprisingly world. A helpless unarmed man '17‘ we Low Costs! you decide to join es Trip, sailing first week in July Charlottetown URIST ORGANIZER and CONDUCTOR. preciate more fully their servicefjection is to the notion that such and achievements. a policy involves hostility to or "'It ‘forms the habit of locking jealousy of others. An individual upon the family of nations aaimey be courageous, independent made up of many individual coun- " and self-assertive without being jrlgg or different ages, different quarrelscme, suspicious or selfish, background, different traditions, ‘ and the same is true of a nation. different speech, but each and ov- ery one having its characteristic‘ saute vlav in the. senewus “d, "Better a. short life, full of deeds lilhdly w-OPIIPMOII 01 311-" {and glory, than a long one without The 99PM“ 01 ll!!! $1110 Pllfllil‘ conteritf-Oswald Spengler. ism is the narrow nationalism that | is the cause of much of the trouble; 0f the W011i‘! Willy-The" ll n° °l" powerful and more shattering than jection ton. nation intelligently gen years agofi-David Lloyd pursuing its own interests. The ob- 3991-39, E. RBROW 146 Richmond St., Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. "Armaments are bgger, more Charlottetown Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis Trubtyasanold l‘ friend-At never fails -to please with its lasting ..ll.i“'°‘"r