there are official and authentic re-' -speakers and writers. but the re- ‘ sistency" of tillllfllllll rlllllllF-w. Chunk: l. Helium. Vleo-Proaldulpd. l. Bunion. y lurid-nit. on. n. a. IIGKIIIAIII, n. s. o. Idltorill Hunger-J. B. Burnett. Alaoclnla Editor-ll. ll. CurrI . THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1926 m NOTED SPEAKER COMING. clair anti .\lr. Il. H. Jenkins are» two seats against1 Hon. J, H. Myers and Mr. Hjk. .\Iesscrve,v. - contesting the Every ne. whether Liberal or Conservqtive, wants to hear all there Is_.to he said about the polit- ical i551?!‘ bflombastlng ‘heir bablcapablc Mitiistt-r of Agriculture, a 1°15‘ on man-Hg Dom 5m“ mmlspeaker of outstanding ability and‘ and freely discuséed the mlemgeufla gentleman to be trusted. .\lr. Mes- elecmr can form his Own Colxclu" servy is a good citizen. has been each a history, .\lr. Myers as a l sions and vote accordingly. lt doesmonored b‘ ‘he cum“), by electing? him to parliament. .\lr. John E. Sinclair has a par- liamentary record. er a speaker or a writer is placing ‘Hmqpr in ‘he Ki his case fairly before the people. in the political not require much astuteness on the part of an ordinarily intelligent man or woman to ascertain whethfi ng Government, history of Canada i _ been the means of cuttin out of- The speaker or the writer‘ g ‘ ‘the estimates an appropriation for, ‘a protected warehouse ports. who disregards these, who twists in George- This has been done hyf He is also said to he I iowner oi‘ a bungalow at Emerald- which, when all our bills are paid- will cost the province or the feder- al government $17,000. .\lr. R. H. Jenkins, also, had a brief parliamentary career, the out- standing features of which are his assistance on several occasions them or denies them, may well be _ town. doubled. (II in parliament and of cords stand, the official reports proceedings the findings of parliamentary com- mittees and Royal Commissions are the final resort, and by these the truth or the falsity of statements in the King Govern- had been adjudged deserving of censure by _a parlia- must be established. _ _ _ ‘ , whitewashlng \\ithin the past tew WQGKS audi- , . . nicnt after it euces in Llllri province have heard flatly‘ scandalous: 1surt-d by a majority of the members of parliament. official reports and findings denied. crimes mcntary committee and later cen- have k heard contlfillerl and even ridi- culcd, lntt-lligcnt anti conscienti- ls it necessary to ask how the‘ nus electors will notibe convinced, l rdeal with their respective candi- ldates? by this kind of argument. I i Tomorrow". Friday evening. 0n people will have ait opportunity of W. Bell. K.(‘.. Hamilton, Ontario, on the political In Prince County, .\lr. J. l-Z. Wyatt, K.C.. who was for a time hearing .\lr. (f. 01 Mr. no“ is a gemlonlan Speaker ‘of the Provincial Legisla- tt frirt-oflll and f_'If)!|l|»"llI rifl“ilkl1l‘. The niczistirc tif his situation. M (Husmndillg (‘hunt turc, and declared to bi: one of the bcst informed and the most fair- rflpuHnin" in his "w" (_'ln_%llllllflf.‘ll nir-n who ever held tliut Wposltiou. is contesting the scat with 1mg”! hy m‘: m“ mm he MS elixir. A. H. .\‘lt'l.ean, .\lr. in the late f parliament, and who voted with -Mr. Hamilton may I m-li-d last fir-loner by a majority o _ _ _ ‘I{vH~J(_1lk1nH on every; ivhitqivashin: .\lr. .\lcl.ean "also has a past during which he anti his leader differed so widely that the latter during his recent visit to the pro- over 111,000 and is aflfllll 111" F1111‘ _ > _ H b "ammo in mm (“mm division in the House. serva vc a " - ' tiency. That he 1.110 political sittiutitin fairly and honest- will discuss gave him it wide berth 1y wi- are tissurtetl. lv will hr- inter- esting and lnstrticiivc to hear 111111. and a cordial invitation is extended "Inc" . I-Zlccltirsf 'l'hese are llll! cantil- iilberais and (onaW- vatives. Tlii- (‘onsr-rvaiive to “put over.“ Thi- plain truth ac- cording to the authentic records. them and l0 all. dates from whom you are lo claci your representatives in the next parliament. the men who are to faithfully, Iionora/bly and honestly adminlltei‘ the affairs pmince and your country during the next four or flve years. And as is good enough for should be good enough for the elec- tors. Let all who possibly can, from country and city’, hear .\lr. Bell tomorrow night in the Strand The- of your you choose so shall you be govern- atre. @11- i1 7 THE CANDIDATES -———<-0>—-——-- EDITORIAL NOTES this Province The "Bmpuig" i“ Hewarir of the man who has a 15 "m" “"1111” l" a“ "M; m” “'1' past wlilcb he does not want to dis. deuce is all iii. ll now remains 111 sum up the evidence anti for the (SUSS. |twice [Liberals but a host of Conserva the the Conservative party within th jury to give its verdict. The [uttiplo "if Kings CtiunlY 111"! agkfrd to vote for cithcr one oi" two candidates. llon.J. Adlacdtinttld or Mr. J. J. Johnston. ‘Both these E011" llemen have records. By these their claims for election shall he 111115911- Mr. Macdonald has, in his brief‘ career in the federal parliamentu been honored by his leader with -1 seat in the Cabinet, the first honor of the kind that has come to Kinllfi County. He has had a ‘Iirllllant and useful career in the provlnciallefi- islalurc, Minister of Public works, honored and trusted ‘by his leader, his colleagues and the [1011- ple. _ _ . Mr. J. Jqlohnslon. 8.1.1.191 111" i‘ parllhmentarydhllstory. I-le is cred- lied ‘iwitii having been a traitor t0 his leader and his party and with having wrecked the ‘Bell Govern- Wlillo some may feel inclin- B merit. ed to glvo him credit as the instru- A lot of prophets are going to lihclr reputation as prophets about the evening of September 1i. lose Harvesters are complaining some- what sibout the weather and, in truth. there has been some ground for complaint. in. The beautiful month of Septem- In its weather conduct but it will proba- lily recover alter the election. her has shown some dlaws The wish ls father to the proph- etlc thought of many wise and oth- erwise men these days, ‘nut there wlllvbe revelations on the 14th. “At the: top of the front Page 0f Q contemporary are the “The Evening Patriot.” at the hot- tom the legend "Patriotism ls the words last, refuge nf a scoundrelK-aud In between the proof. merit which relieved the country from tho Incubus of the late Liber- al government. his most earnest ad- mirers will not call him Qhe "h0n- ored instrument." Once falthless- i i Mr. Mackenzie King's following fell from 1l6ln1921 to 101 In 1025. llaa he done anything since then to make lilm more popular than at his last election? He dld the Customs and false to his ladder and his col- demorallzatlon. he lost his Cabinet leagues, is he again to he trusted? and only a few of his Ministers Kings County will return the Hon. dare to face the coming election. J. A. Mncdonald. Does anyone believe he will win in Queens County Mr. J. E. Sln- out? i Notes by the Way last October at the beginning o1 the present campaign the Conserv- ative chances of securing a major- ity of the new House were greatly better now than last year. For four year: Mr. Meighen had had a party of fifty, with more than as Progressives against liiui. It was smallest of the three principal par- ties. “Meighen can't win!” was the Liberal slogan then which not only lives also believed. But Meighert did win and within a few’ months after the meeting of the new iParliamenc was again iPrime Minister of Canada. backedipendlx is As a Gamma by a large majority of thie electorsi‘°“'111§ 1° 1118 79131101191111? lcwas a stupendousl he has been openly charged, nndiachievementalike for the Conserv-l of Canada. he leads. Who can measure the gain In numbers and prestige achieved by past few months? To estimate ll: rightly one must take account ofi vrhatlMackenzle King and his fol-j lowers have lost-he and eiglii_ Cabinet colleagues defeated and» his followers decimated. he and his; One week before polling day find: Conservative prospect: increasing. They were bright when lthe campaign began and have steadily improved. Compared with i "absolutely essential for'iife's sakelequal force in regard was "cniiitnonnrown GUARDIAN fllibat Baby f at i... . ‘ a your‘. QJLIQittW-lletleii. MD ' AVOIDING AN OPERATION’ ommendlng the removal of the gall many Liberals, and fi5lbladder in middle aged and elderly itmlle who have "spells with the The latter two havelfearful 0mm ms was much the-heart." ln other words it is a slow lat-tiny liver, and a congested gall ‘bladder. which gives the attacks of "gassy indigestion" with which Ithey are troubled so often. I A couple of years ago I spoke of a Canadian surgeon who said that The had been able to cure these gas attacks by removal of gall stones, because gallstones were practically .always the cause of same. 1 lncldently the removal of the ap- considered advisable between the gall bladder and appendix so frequently found. Now the risk of operation in he has not denied it, with hairiiiguitiire Leader and the great party these cases is not great because the patient is not acutely ill when hb uindergoes it. And the result ‘is usually satisfactory also. However where an operation ls no one would question the wisdom of same, but wherela little thou and care can avoid an operatlond certainly worth while to this thought and care. Whena liver and gall bladder get sluggish it usually is because they do not get sufficiently exercised. t is exe rclse Some of our surgeons are rec- ght‘ The Public Forum This coin-n ll open for the by correspondent: of The Chlflutlof I pol. neon lly undone ill or Inlon u! correspondent!- 6000000000 0 PHA RISAICAL CONSTITUTION- ALITY ‘ Slr.——Does "not the advocacy of Mr. King's absurdity. Liberal Con- stitutionality, bear a. striking re- semblance to the hypocritical zeal of the Pharisees? The Law of‘ Moses was intended for a good purpose-to make. or. at least, to help mankind to do right-to be- come God-fearing Godobeying, God-loving, and. all that such con- duct implies. the intent of the Divine Law. But it was twisted into an instrument of torment and those who thought more of worldly gain than religious piety. The Man who knew all things. knew 111311118 law". IN SPIRIT. did one oi‘ the weaker sex — mayhap over. more sinned against than sin- ning. lf the law said soliterallyx l, was a literal error. a false con- ception. or interpretation of the real meaning. There l5 a rule of grammar which says. in substance. i"\\'hen the form and sense or lmeanlng differ agree with the sense." That rule applies with to the prin- Constitution. The British Constitution built up as it is of principles and precedents. |ls not intended to help men to d0 “"1115 or to shield them from just punishment. _The great achieve- ‘lllfllllfi of legislation — Magna Charla, Habeas Corpus Bill of Iciples of the Government driven from power, ltsiaiid properly treated from the dleflmgm“ “"11 1111111)’ others. were in- prestige gone and its record blot- ted with an unprecedented scandaLi ‘t. ,lt is now apparent to every intel- ligent elector not only that King can't win on September 14th, but that his leadership of the party is greatly in danger. His Govern- ment inflicted upon the Liberal party the deadliest wound which electors of (Zpcens County will mm “me grkat and respected 9311111115 ‘*1 m“ has stilfcred since the was formed. Dominion ers who supported the King Gov- ernment in October will give their votes to stipport the Meighen Ad- 1niinistratfon next Tuesday. In every one of the nine provinc- ‘es the Conservative Leader stands party than ho did on tho eve of the last election. The revert-ac of this is equally true of the Llbertii header. There is not a provincein Canada in which he has n-ot lost ground in the respect of the Elect- ors botlt personally and as a party leader. His loss of prestige is conspicuous in the Province of Quebec, which had hitherto given him one-half of the support which he received in Parliament. And what King has lost Meighen has gained In Quebec. lVlicn 20.000 people turn out to llsttin to a party leader to whom they had been poli- tically opposed and give him an attentive and apparently sympatli- etic hearing it means something! Mr. King bad visited the French- speaking Province during the pre- sent campaign. ‘but met no such vast assembly at on; time. This change of attitude toward the Prime Minister la one of deep significance and a salient feature of the campaign. It is accentuated by tho accession of Armand Lav- ergne to Mr. Meigheds following. and his confession that he had been wrong in opposing him as he had done In years past. Mr. lllelghen has gained also the support of a number of French Canadian news- papers that were opposed to hlni hitherto. He has spoken to French Canadians at length in their own language, eliciting their applause and admiration. Hon. Mr. Patenaude, Minister of Justice, now in full accord with his leader, has spoken in tho cunt- palgn as a high-minded statesman in both Ontario and Quebec, anti his ability and influence recallthe days when iSlr George Cartier was the right bower of ‘Sir John Macdon- ald's Government In former years. Other Quebec Ministers. of whom Mr. Melghen had none in the Octo- ber election as Cabinet colleagues are now at his side and wielding a strong influence in support of the new Conservative Government. From every province, Including our own there come report! of meetings much more favorable to the Conservative cause and policy than in October, and new acces- sions of support. What could ‘be more favorable than this’! And the conviction grows from day to day that the new Government will have a. good majority over all, which la quite impossible to any other party. That conviction tends also very strongly to bring about a notable victory. l... V“ 111-, llirkié ‘ That is one of thcl ‘main reasons why thousands of vol-i ‘standpoint. The liver is the largest organ in lthe body. It is soft and yielding and lwants pletity of room in which to Ido its work. And when you remem- ‘her all its johs-nlaking hile. help- ‘Illg to make blood, storing sugar, removing poisons from the blood. and remember further that it ‘makes one third the heat manufac- Itiired in the body, and. has one ‘quarter of nil the blood 0i‘ the bod)‘ ‘in it all the time. then any cramp- liver so that it can't do iits work is a serious matter- ' Formerly women with gall stones otttnumbercd men I to 1 because of tight corsets lt will be interesting ito see this proportion reduced now itltat only low corsets are worn. 1 if you walk fast, or breathe deeply, you squeeze the livur and ‘then it expands again, all of which [Wsxercisc-s" it . l, It‘ in addition to that you do not 11l\‘(‘I'(.'iil. especially pastries anti ‘make its work too difficult. ' l-‘urtlicr the exercise of walking. or any exercise in fact. will m) strengthen your heart muscle and the circulation, that the blood will make its trip through the liver more vigorously and thus not re- main there ttio long. The gall blad- der will be induced t0 be. more active also. and llo stones can torm- .‘\n operation is all right tliqxlamagc is done, but the pre- volition of ziit operation, antl the possession of a healthy liver apd gall bladder, are worth the above. effort. .___¢0§i_- 0000-4-0000000000000000000- Daily Selections FOR l Guardian lteuders 9f§§9 94+ 4am September ' 9, 1926 ‘ I HEAR AND DO-"Behtild t0 obey is better than sacrifice. ‘and to hearken than tho fat of rams.” I Sam. 15:22- -PRA.YEII.—"I'IIY sacrifices. U God, are a broken spirit. aswanz or THE PAST‘ Seek not for your Joys that have vanished lii the dusk oi‘ a dim long ago, Lest you find xvhere your flowers once flourished Are now wltherod and pregnant with woe. The past is a rose that has faded. 0r a thorn that lives on throuKh the years ln a garden by vain regrets shaded That thrives on the waste of your tears. f Build anew, it is useless for vain regretting The wreck and ruin of days long gone, \ As a. new day dawns let us start rebuilding Our shattered hopes and keep mov- ing on. Let the past decay in a tomb of sorrow, iPut your, trust llfthe promise o future years. And when to-day is the past of b0~ men-ow, Gone will be all vain sorrows and fears. —C. A. Romaly. In Prince Edward Inland the IIIII- rule and neglect of the late govern- mont. and the scandal and discredit into which it has fallen has served to recall In contrast what Connervt ative Governments did for our 111m- vlnce ln its time of dlrest nood- Thuy saved our Rapronntnlon. They saved our Province from after‘ tended as auxiliaries to the Divine Lana They took into consideration the frailty of man and the circum- stnngces in which he is placed. The 5lllrit, the intent of these charters was not i0 allow either the peasant 91' 111° prince to do wrong without suffering atlequate punishments. .\lr. King's oratorlcal flourish, “Not in a hundred yciira was a liriiiie minister refused dissolu- tion," which his evidently distress- "d l'0110\\'€rs are repeating parrot- likfl. even here. will bring him no 1111111. lint he may go down in his- IQFY as the founder of‘ the monstro- “lly Pharisacal Constitutlonally. lina-glne Palmerston GIZHISLOIIKLDIST- raeli Asquith Lloyd George, going stvivelllng to the King when they were fairly-beaten! Slr John and Sir ‘Wilfred resigned with clean hands. ‘What about» King? I I aiii Sir. etc, , READER far higher in the confidence of lllrlhals‘ mo“ you do not compost itgintlclvn‘ SERVANTS’ REMEMBER! Sir,——ln liii-t Strand Thipatre Slwnch here .\lr.i\‘lackenzie King de- nounced Mr. Melglien and the (low, |ernor-General. because Governor- [Generalfl-i warrants are being used l!" $911111"! ‘51ll'f'l¢l0llt money to keep [the machinery oi‘ government going ,until the new Parliament meets, ‘which tictioii became necessary as a result of .\lr. King's childish tac- ticr-i in blocking the voting or 511p- ‘I11Y dllfihg the closing days of the lam session of Parliament. ‘NOW- ll is clear. from Mr. King's WOHI-i. that if he had liatl his way "no civil servant or other employee 0f the goveriiinctit would have ro- eeived one dollar of salary since the 27th of June. tior untll such time as the new Parliament meets which would mean II iperlod of some five months. What flu government employees in general think of the Liberableaderhs proposal to keep them without pay for five months? ‘$111813! lhBy are not etithuslastlc over it, yet that is what would have happened if Mr. Meighen had not resorted to Governor-Generalui warrants as a means of paying the salaries. - 10f course the Liberal ‘party was never very partial to omployegg 0f the government. Under [he Lani-for regime men and women in the pub- lic service of Canada were work- ing for a starvation wage. and it was not until the Borden Conserva- tlvo government came into power flint they received a living compet- once. Moreover, the Borden gov- ernment provided for annual statu- tory increases in salary toi- nll Dom. lnlon clvll servants. All Mr. King's Government dltl or government employees during the past five years was to cm, m": tho bonuses given them by the DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon WORDS OFTEN MlSU-SED: Don't say “l don't doubt in my mind that it la true." Omit "In my mind." OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: poignant. ‘Pronounce poln-ant, the ol its oy ln filmy." accent on first lylla le. ----- warn-an misses-uncan- date; on u.» . - _ - ,8YNO MSX/‘Mdssolate. dreary, dismal, ‘bleak, gloomy, chill, chilly, chearlass, bare. _ WORD STUDY: "Use a vmi-d three time: and It is yours." Let an increase our vocabulary by mutating one word each day. To- day's word.- DEBEUITY; abnormal weakness; Ianguor; feeblenosl. ‘ll-Ila Illness ‘was followed by gen- oral dehlllty." I i 8116C- uiimiitiid ind m ovum World. Whore would our Potato Trade In If we had not the Oar lorry? ‘Whqt did the King Government bankruptcy. They created for ul a new iAlI-ffie-Yur Highway fnthl ever do for us that we should want. It restored? Think It over. That was the spirit} persecution byl not condemn to death by stoningl preceding government. and 110W M1‘- King would ask all s1>ver11111°111 workers to do without 811V 1111181’? for five months. ‘What do clvil ser- vants and other emlllflfilefi 1111111‘ of his proposal? ‘Will they sulr port his candidates on the 14th of September? iln conclusion it may b8 P01111911 out that the means employed by Mr. Melghen to pay the salaries 0! government employees 8P9 9131111)’ the same means that were 8111111111!- ed by Sir Wilfrid Laurler in I911. when Parliament was dissolved iriiiioiit voting eupiilv- 011116131111- ently. Mr. King denunciation of ‘Mr Melgbeifs action in the present 111- stauce is lust s0 much more ht)! air. l am Sir, em, FAIR PLAY -—-—-<0>——-—— A DAMNING ARRAIGNMENT Sin-Electors who entertain an)’ doubt regarding the seriousness ol‘ the Customs disclosures should bear in mind the fact that every independent newspaper in Canada has denounced the late King Gov- ernment unreservedly for its con- nection with that scandal. The last newspaper to come out with its de- ‘me “Mbnunmfl? 11"“- 111111 mmflnunciation is The Grain Growers’ Guide. the Progressive organ in Manitoba. As the Liberals and Pro- gressives have joined forces in Manitoba it would naturally be supposed that the Guide would be supporting the fusion candidates in that province. but in a recent art-v icle on the sliortcomiiigs of Mac-i kenzie King it concludes thus: i “But along came the Customsl scandal. l; was one of the gross; est cases of trial-administration‘ ever disclosed. .\lr. King lacked the backbone and courage to deal with the situation in an honor-, able and business-like mannerA ‘He sought to whitewash the re-l cord of his colleagues. The Lib; eral niemoera stood by him marri fully; even the Liberal members from the Prairies obeyed the de- mand from the party ivtiip ' steadol’ declaring for clean, hon- est administration. Of .\lr. King tells uis that lie will clean up the whole dirty mess. but that he proposes to g0 about it i-n his own way. He is rigltte~ Ously inillgnantdhal any person would even suggest that he would contloiie wrongdoing even within his own party. But Mn-King is the type of'a leader who does not know what he is going to do today, tomorrow oi- tiie next day. His idea of stable government, a»; demnostratcdi by his four years In office. means that if he i; returned to power with a clear majority over all other parties, he will continue to violate party pledges land will whitewash wrongdoing In his own party. Mr. King is the biggest load the Lib- eral Party has t0 carry." The above arraignment of the King party's conduct iii tifflcn should he sufficient to convince every independent elector that the late government is not fitted to again control-tho public affairs of Canada. I am, Sir rtta. ; INDEPENDENTi Sin-General (ilisirrvatlon would: seem to indicate that the coming,’ election will sen a smaller vote: polled than last year. l presume it. is possible to get "fed up" on politi- yrtil clap-trap. These are days, how- lever, for some careful thinking. If épeople are not deeply contrernetl ‘lnhout this election they should he! There is no doubt that widespread public opinion is a force of lncalciil- able power. which is largely tin- used. Politics and business will become clean and honest just as soon as a sufficient number of peo- ple walte up and demand it. We have the power to make slits which are now generally tolerated and respectable. so odious. so infamous, that they will practically disappear. -Now there is a tendency among men, especially among men who have few ruling ideals. to bo con- tent with things as they are. The miracle to the student of hlstroy is not the number of quarrels that have arisen from man's Intolerance of wrong. but rather the amount SOM E OBSERVATIONS. coursel lpilemise was not. absolutely justifi-i SEPTEMBER 9 192,, __\_,X y 4 wflhiv‘ 1"“ "Olivetti q, Q . . ,,_ ' Qrqivioyly- ‘nice new cqmh“ y fir’ i‘, ° IOII .5“ g _ ONE DOLLAR 1! II. 603M small flnlnh andjnavory w; NIFTY NEW I1». um. y attruqv.‘ Th‘? 131118 Store -- l; AIIQZIQIESON A_ Pllggist DOLLAR COMPACT The Marriage Partnership" He the breadwlnner, aha the homukeeper, standing together through good and Ill. sharing the bLIrdfll—equg| partner: in the great bullneu GI building a homo and bringing up a family. " Equal partners? 8o It seamed; but she was left without support to ohoulder It all — urn the bread, Imp _ the home, meet the obligation; his death had created. There can be no equality In the marriage partnership where Ilfe inluranoe in left out. No man has shouldered his full share of the burden, until‘ ho- hn mads tliq future safe for hi: loved Ones. . ‘ For parllcplaro of life insurance c your circumstance: write HYNDMAN & CO., LIMITED. Th, Great-West Lila \ _ , T‘? [sort of thing has been going on istence in the future or whetlierlt‘ since 1878." I inferred that such will be simply an adjunct 0| rogiiery and deliberate stealing of Queens satisfied with aiiytliln; the national revenues, was l0 b9 that Queens may see fit to give it ltaken for granted: and because it Let IIS [ECO thc facts and in ‘has been, it must continue to he. what they are. It is a fact tint 'The miracle is that the public con- Georgetown is the only poi-t Quill; HUiCXlCB is so comparatively 11111°lslantl rroin which slllpllléills Elli stirred by what has come to 115111- lie ‘made In ordinary steamers dlir~ ~and the end is not yet! l D111" lng the month of December. snlne that \\'e will votr- as we did it is a fact ztttcsted tn by iln last year-l know I shall. 0f one pnlaw Grmver“ ASH-negation m, thing I uni proud. and that is Lllllfllhe ‘afmy and 5nccpgs o; w, ii was I111! 11)’ 1119 31d 111 111)’ "mcipotato industry in this Province that Mr. King was able to carry onmcpcnd “Don being 31,10 w my, —huphazardly as he did. A_n late shgpmeng‘ by “'3[Qf_ lfllmfl T111111 l1°1111¢111 P31119311“ 191' it is a fact, "attested to by Seiiii- itcrs, I cannot see what IIIHIPI‘ the m. Hughes’ that in [he session or sun can 111' 1111i’ 11111115 “"1159 m‘ 1925 the Government were prepai- sniuicrtiiis 1111? $111119 °°1111111“"1°“-<~tl lo provide facilities at Georgi- Parli-Hflll 1011"“ 111113’ 591"“ “s “ town to muke such shipments nil flimsy 0111-1180‘ 1>11I11 111 1"" usomunlllfll Mr. Sinclair. tin-ii n nt-nin - rt-iison. nl" the Government, prevented Years ago. when I Iiegan to vole. “mm from doing Rn‘ I IlS(‘(1 tn -'lFi-’.111-'i “Yule 1111‘ 111": it is a fact. imrnt llIl1\'l‘I'l'1i0l11i man—not. the party." .\l_\' 1"'1“"‘ml"g|ihat five nit-n in (luv-ens including ii.\Ir. Sinclair and -.\lr. Johnston was logical enough. 1 111111151111- 11 you send good itieii to Ottawa- YO" have deem“ that f," ‘he (Mm ‘ they will look after Ill!‘ politiciilii- ghnnpl gm good rcsitlts. l have. however, since found out that fairs m. Kings and Hm m Mm‘, son of Kings will ever-spiny took too niuoli Ior granted. allowed to represent that court in Parliament. ontract llfllablg My Provincial Managers, M y able—tliough it should he. I lfijllllfrl‘ that so-calletl 200d mm “Tm “l 11 1 fl 130i that on the (lay m, as much tied hand and foot to the Johnston rocmved H", mum 1191“ "any “s any denp-dwd polnrtllflllllllflllfill that he and .\lt.Sili- cal sinner in the IIOIISIB. So. llflwnclair “em wmkmg "mother “l -~ when candidates solicit my vote. I n is a mo! that My RUSH] CM flllkObllgOd to tionslder. not so much and My R “Iplntyrodwo of nmfna" as the “My” 1 the five from Qllfiens. vlgoroiiiiy 5°“ ‘he!!! what am um ‘loop? applauded this aniiouncciiienl- in this lirlovince going lo do." 3f u R a “um that ML Johnston Ivotn at th s lime may int-an o e . ' * i q i t "m, M, in have things as they V1131?“ 611F111: ¢ he years from 192 to ‘i 01‘ ll .niay ‘be your silent protest. My 1conscience would protest if I should say by my vote: "Go on. Wink 9-1 smuggling, and when it gets too hot for the guilty officials. X1111 them safely in the Senate!" Of course. it is not inlpossllilo for even the Liberal party (if it should be returned to power) to repent and mend its ways, and clean up this awful mess. ‘But I woultll‘ 21:88:35‘: that ll: is running too muc o ars to give that party the ChIhllCf. t] lt is remarkable how tte l6 blontrcal Witness has to say about the Customs revelations. That fam- ous champion of righteousness is becoming more and more the (Continued on pi9¢ 5-1 Buy iliiiin cult -_.__ Now is the time if buy "hard coal. Schooner Theoliiie a1‘- ' that nations have borne and auf-1"‘°mh'p1°c° “I the “berm “any; 'fered in patience for the sake ofinIhES sitmi] m“ strongllitlghmufa peace. lt is astonishing and some-f“ WHY. for ymrfl l u I t | -i times saddenlng to discover how m“ “"1111 11M fro: intn l htadtinf; much humanity will ptit up with, of I" m‘ “genfiakmg ‘Sdeyefoghold m’! wrong and injustice. before it will n seem“ e a pa“ “X ' r rise like an avenging fury on be- half of outraged righteousness. Time and again it has been shown? how much it takes to move the na- tloiial conscience. There is what is called the "conservative princi- ple" of life which saves us from the injustice that rash justice ls very apt to inflict! lt insures that when progress comes, it will be reasoned. deliberate and balanced. It IIILVGB from the riotous excess of impractical idealists and reformers. Every man. however, who loves his country. is brought face to face with the dead wall of base resigna- tion to an accepted order of things. A strange thing about time is that It has the tendency to make most of us resigned‘ to things as they are, whether good or ‘bad. But think of what the history of the world would be if all men had tainely submitted to conditions as they found them. If they had- there would have been no Greek Marathon; there would have been lno Scottish lllannockburn: there mould have been no Swiss Morg- iartan. The fact ls, we can make lourselvel believe almost anything; and conscience will not protest,be-, cause conscience ls controlled by what we believe. The serious thin; In that so many people ibelleve just.‘ what they want to ‘believe! Now. if this ls so. we can understand why those who are political Liber- als treat so lndllferently the scan- dalous revelations that have been made in connection with the Cus- toms hobo! (kn has only tolnake mention of (his notorious matter. to discover who ls Liberal and who In Conservative-u l did the other day and my llltenor said “Oh that some do, that it paper can be 111119‘ pendent and partisan at the same me. Of course, it is not so hi0 tcrly partisan as the Patriot which seems to tlilnk that. tho King Gov- ernment could do no wronx! seems to me that P601111? 11"! 80111118 disgusted with a three-party gov- ernment which ls not really respon- sjble government. ‘Who will dare to deny that while we had tho two- party system we had lnflnltelymore satisfaction than during the mast best quality.. Y011 HOW. PHONE 240 few years? I am, Sir, etc., is queens nurmme Kmosi sir -'riie issues to be decided In the coming elect n are most Im- portant to King County._._ Thoy are nothing lens than whether this county is to have-ally political ex- ‘save money by bllyi ... 0...“... Pigkling '1 ‘ CHECK THIS OVER 40m PIIIT A. Picltard s. cl’ . ESSENCE 0F. I YINEGAR powder cu", "g luff Ill!!! I I ‘whole Gilli" _ .' Olovu cayomll I111" 4 rived and is discharil- ing a cargo of the veil" F‘! i’; AM.“ "m: g mics DRUGSTORE m arm com‘ '1" , "ruonlwt" f“ of