yy ...I .'“~ 't ji, it . E9-_ ...Qi-_._*,. _vs io.. » .1 ly ff iv`.»'.‘§ 551.* » "fl if-‘fy -eil I s la Qi, li. i>l""'_"1'i'_ _ ;'I.;._i“: 't <__;.'_.__., ' *l '.s,'}_x‘ .~-~. _. s »¢. l _ » ~»:,i'». if l,'.‘ 1 l (.~ .~ V ;l.;_. ; et '1‘ :'» |_ l_l_,_ ;;»r.~`1) ‘. 1_5-_ ,, -._ if >&1 . l sr ‘_i___ l T' I lull _ ,_ _ , l fl “gg _'_g.»»;_ '9 ,_ V, 3 (_. - y l o .5 _ i{>.\.."- ~» Em _,., \ ~l 1. l 'y_ 4., i. __._ _,L :V . _.__ , '§._ 1f_ v.. l.. _ e 4 Z ‘E R ._ rl. ~_»_ ‘l,__,»_-__ fli1‘:i1_‘ 1 H 1', ' _ i I » ':>-.li i W ,gn f _,lf _. f .i:L'»,'§'__~_. if ' _ l i * "“‘“’“°' “ ° °' _ eslegolug down sud bu' l-ooobod e.` vlee-rneune-a. a. donna °The Ilia-thratiila lnglmd and Wai-_ lasaeialf ldltcr-D. K. Carrie. . _ ~ _ new low level. _Simultaneously _the (la advadse) mailer thladed UU) “.40 ' death rate has incl’°ll¢¢l~ In_-1920 i' ”““‘ “° °"°“ “‘“'~ theblrtbretebedbeenasmblma or nv ue odnaeo souures lt had fallen to 11.1; andiast year i?0»16.8'per thousand. 'I'hB_de¢thrlt0 ` increll9d Irum 11.1.50 13.4, lo that 29’ 1930 reached the stage when deaths will U’ ` England and Wales hive nearly ff _ no You Like 1: ‘after ell the talk =\>°\1t that fm- Palace. lookin: on at the proceed- next with rl; ceoode. tblrd wltb al; brieff which Premier Saunders pl-__epor¢d ls im, lr. seems :bet lt wlll be about as serviceable as a fifth '“°.'° nrt' Tm °“°S"°ns djs' dispensable for an intemational the low," nt,_1a pu. thmmmd eulsed therin, according to the Lib eral organ, were settled by lbe nun-` can Colnmission before Premier gaunders came into oi!lce. the finding of the Duncan Com- missionistobe taken asailnal jury verdict on our subsidy claims, as the Patriot states, then Premier Saunders fades completely out of the picture. The counsel that presented our claims on that occasion were Premiers Stewart, Rhodes and Bax- U0!- In The Wrong Camp V M. F. Hepburn. Liberal member of the l-louse of Commons for West Elgin, Ontario. has placed himself at the headof an organized demand for an increase in the tariff on beans. Mr. Hepburn would seem to be in the wrong political camp. The Free Press of London, Ontario, suggests that “he should go over to a party sympathetic with his view." _It is extremely difficult, and next to impossible for a member of Par- liament to 'change his politics on principle._ But the situation which sees a Liberal member urging o. Con- servative policy on a Liberal Gov- ernment contains latent forces which are certain to play a big part in the approaching' Federal election. Not sinct 1876 has Canadian public sen- timent veered so strongly toward tariff protection as in the past year. ~ `_\ P "2 _ ` The' Q:z`esf‘~n of the' Ships _ _._. The central impulse -inspiring the Conference on Naval Disarmament, says an exchange, is that the whole idea of naval policy, as it has been held and followed hitherto, since men built ships, be amended. The old naval theory required each lla- tion to build as many ships as it could. The new theory to be consid- ered would require each natlon to build as few ships as possible. The true background of the Conference is not-.the dlplomaticsettlng in the Rmb of Lords or in St. James' Pal- ace. Its true background is the ses.- the tossing waters, inundations, de- and tetnpests of the oceans. three thousand years-since the records of men’s doings in civilized world-the sea has been pathway to empire and the sus- of states. Before Western had emerged from the dark- historical nonentity the long the Delian league upheld of Greece and liberty Persian tyrants. It was sea that Tyre and Rome and Venice and imperial and mighty It was in ships that the led the Duchy of was with the ship! and fifty-nine King Alfred saved from the Danes. the Normans was by Eng- dominion was mercantile is in the wash waters that %m- llave gone Ill 'M0868 ' _ equal the number of births. mosphere, with Lord Nelson on his w;;g,:mb1:h::;_;te;l;; m°t_°;’_:; column, round the corner from the uhmhmt Wim” per thmmmd; muy _ings. London essentially is the one H01ll¥\d 10111511 With 23: A\|8f»1'i° fifth ‘city in the world with the sea know- with 235 D°“m“k 3|: A“m`°'u" ”"` ' ll With Ulllikd BWWS 8 hiih ent 30' "°"“° “nd “‘° "“ ”°°"5’°‘”‘d ‘“° wltlrlo. Nestle nrltelu. mnoetgbes gathering called together to chart e new dlreozlou lor navel policy ond In Ima sf the nine provinces of _to steer a new sea course towards _immxexfmcggtx “°"1‘1 P°°'°°~ it Wm b° “nm” W’ five years. the same as members of background of maritime realism-at the Dominion Peruomeoc. 'rbe ex-_ the centre of the greatest naval or- ceptions to this rule are the provinc- gsmzauon in human hmmyl and in _ es of Ontario and Prince Edward no academic or parchment envlron- :F21 ‘;::l°°1;o";'°f°d:;g;x°e`gv;yb§:: ‘ment-that the question of the ships thorny of tha crown in me interim will be settled. between election and the expiry of the official term for which they were _usunknmllilvotes By'l`h`e `Way _ Significant Figures Canadian police statistics for 1925. recently issued by the Department of Trade and Commerce, will give little satisfaction eo the advocates of prohibition. The number of arrests per policeman in the city of Char- ` loltetown ls glvell as ss, the greatest in all Canada. Nova Scotia, the only other Province under prohibition ln 'with a population shows a still further increase. there is every likelihood that we shall re- tain cur unenvlable POSWUH at the need ol the list. The nrures sive" speak well for the efficiency of our police force, but they BW* *Ven louder for the amount of work which the police are called upon to do. The number of the population to each policeman is BYBHWF 1" the Frm” elected. It has seldom happened in Canada that a parliament or legislative as- sembly has been permitted ‘to live through its entire onicial term. very frequently they are dissolved in the fourth or even the third year after being elected for a full term of five years. Governments like to take the opposition by surprise and they eas- ily flnd a pretext for a dissolution which is seldom refused when asked for. Holding on to the end has been elections are costly since the voting 'rr "r 1 -H A-qv ., . "M4-°~\_ raaammo slraai. wouims One of eéeefdiatressing thing! that occurs only too often is death from a small wound such as the prickof a pin br a knife. Sometimes it is only a small scratch. Now when a severe wound occurs one might expect that there would be considerable dirt get into the tissues, and infection follow. As a matter of fact it is foundthat infection starts in a ’ small wound more often than in a large wound and as often in the upper as _hx the lower part of the body. ' Unfortunately also, these small wounds that become infected sometimes cause death occur for the most part in vigorous persons in the best years of life. Now why do small wounds cause so much trouble? Because the average person simply puts something on lt, g'1u'.'c and ad- hesive tape, and gets the blecding stopped *~ soon as possible. ' Now is a sma.l instrument or/some- thing sharp has caused the wound, then the edges close back almost im- modletoly soo mere ls very j limo bleeding. This means that whatever was on the surface of instrument or other object that caused the _wound, is carried rlgbt into the body and 'thus sets up trouble 1028. comes next with an average ol’ more lrequently xmmwmte than - » _ _ _ Q ave, he 1 t U of where the wound lelerge or done ‘Obi What I tweled web v' 45 arrests per policeman. Th fortunate for t 'inis ra on 5 ' _ - by :something blunt the wound W¢“V°» - f . , + 'v _ “Ee 1°’ “H tm mwns md cm” of the day and partly for that reason is bleeds profusely and this carries tho When'er we practise to decelve.' , p .‘- e S l ws 5 _ generally avoided. There have been ram Su, etc _ / ' Agnlmm ° E c mama, Canada 18 22. New Bl'll¥iSWlC 3 | dirt 0|- other cause or in! tl . d tes l e.l l °° °“ °“" ' - . ure le 25. Quebec-muon mellgned ° '°°“ ° °’"“' ° °°“°'3”' "“‘ o 9; me bady ,,w,,_ om-: wno was rassax _ f \ nomo: -wmmoso _ - succeeding census since the first in the Dominion, which was taken in 1871, has been more complicated, covers larger area and embodies more facts about more people and their ac- tivities than any that preceded it. The coming census has hardly been mentioned in the press as yet, but it -involves the employment of an anny millions of dollars. Every lnembc ndwerd lslondroapitel the” 1° the towns and cities of other provinces: but lt is not so great l>r°l»°rti°uatf=- ly as the number df arrests Der P0' liceman. The smug self-satisfaction with which political prohibltlonists discuss our "white ribbon" standins and moral superiority °‘/el' °‘“' ““ ter provinces is therefore scarcely justified in the circumstances. 1' , Editorial Notes An inspiring instance of self-de- nial is reported in Detroit. The hre- men of that city were recently grant- oh an increase in salaries amount- ing to about $215,000. In considera- tion of the vast number of unem- [ployod ln elle olty, the are nshi-ers 'requested that the increase be devot- ed to the relief of the out-of-works. The decrease in winter dllrylnl was the subject of considerable dir- cussion at the annual meeting of the Provincial Dairy Association. One reason has been the high P1160 Of lnillfeed. Another reason is the dumping into Canada of cheap New Zealand butter at one cent per pound duty. A freight rate llllustment llillht settle ond difficulty; a tariff adjust- ment would assuredly settle the oth-_ avunnurremdlnlbeoltytbe 'ocbueudumesweenomenfv blbltlooaeteetiverrom 'nie Prohibition oomlselea oneekupeo thisetetemsnt. mustlsaveasieetivlluvnilu msltioamspeewllomforeetao itlaidhtiiewl srqaliebie who supports the King Governmen will have a share in the distribution of these appointments. Whether these appointments wil be made before orafter the electio~ we have not been told. but betwee counting the people and taining the' votes the present year _will be a bus_ one in politics and governmental business with lots of patronage and money enough to "grease the ways” _and make it run smoothly. I _ During several deesrles past an in- terim census has been taken in the Prairie Provinces five years after the regular .decennlal census, and each of those provinces has been given ad- |dltional subsidy and also additional _representation in Parliament as the result. This ought not to be contin- lued. After a quarter century under ,this specially favored_treatment, like ‘favor should be extended to all the |provinces, or the interim census Ishouid be discontinued. _*_ _ The Chigneeie Canal profect far .antedatep the era of Confederation, ,and was an influential motive to bring the Maritimes into the union of all the provinces. Nopublie work designed to shorten transportation distance shipping ports would be of so much value- to Prince lll¢_lwardrplmdurnlo.1lllebel\nl-l- dew!! inidteltcd in this l>iT0.i0`°t but did :Premier Saunders thinklof it all. when he was'st Otta- wa looking after our elblms? zealand Itaomssin tralnleadq at and Vancouver. damp, enlunemlnlem ebunowzulum displace! 5 __ _ _,m sir,-1lt_’ the nzi.-i-_for 'rl3se`_meot- _ in; 'on the 21st lnst _when Senator delivered his addressl- i_¢ee_srs. Sinclair, Dufly and_ Higgs opposed the idea of appointing a Royal Com- -hlission, saying that the Duncan Cdlrlnllssion had covered the ‘ground completely, that another Commission - was not necessary and that when the recommendations of the Duncan Commission would be carried out everything _would be satisfactory. The Duncan Commission was ap _ pointed on April 7th. 1926 and re ‘ported on September 23rd, 1920, mol » than three you-sago. and if tha; Commission covered the ground thor ~ oughiy and gave us all we are en titled to receive it would be pertiv ent to ask what the Provincial Go. ernment and Mr." Sinclair have bee. doing ever since. Why have they not had the recomlrlendationsof th' NPLE lifeinsuranoefprotection at the _ __ lowest oost,-tha_t's»wllat - thousands o men want, -and what the I new _Great-West'Minis_ii,\im Cost Policy is specially designed to give., _ _ A80' 25 Grrlli. q§».nEA°1'~w1:.sGr I/IINII/IUNQ BUST _ _ nobler _ SGS8lS Duncan Commission implemented _ Why such masterly inactivity? These men pronounced the stron" » ._ est condemnation of thelocal gov emment and of Mr. Sinclair lllrr ‘ self that has yet been uttorod, C lcnurse, the gentlemen did_not ir . _tend to do that, they wished to p! party/politics regardless 'of the ‘did not see where their remarks wr leading "them, _ form of Life policy. the meeting in question gives pol: - to the old adage which says. » has four outstanding features: Second-The ii provides teotion when on need it-at tggagne time rgrdgldng the iiurflen _ <, l __ W, of large premium payments. | \. _ H I iw of Prince Iidward Island s Third-It enables you to carry more insurance 0 .. . \ than would otherwise bepoesibie with any other ' ,' P - . Tm "°°“"°" “‘°’° ”‘°” "°°“ ` 'Fourth-No guesswork-all thee benedts are guaranteed. ' _ \ ‘_ lr ~ 29. _193q _ Premium Rates ' per $1,000 of Insurance Premium 8ia.so 15.so 13.55 22.35 27.50 34.40 Wrlh -NOW for full in ' formatlbnoneil'eGreae. _ A __ lluNuMAl~l olilo.l._'ro_ Provloolol Mooogeee Qutbeff-had bm* l3_°Y1'°5*'5 P91' 9°* franchise has been so vastly extend- Dr' F' R°S°' B°"u°' Wu* h°W h° ' ' . eman the lowest figure in the ed and also they seriously disturb "eats 5m°“ W°““d3 °f 31° mud THAT “morons DOCUMENT T - _ - llc . ' \ ._ \ 1 _ _ » which of cour ii to ll ll ' _ In 0 ` ' D°”"”"1°“' Tm “sure” 1°' the mm igggmessd Jn gxfgio uit Tisislbfieno' lands. se app es 'B ‘ma slr,-I have read and reread the ,ti I -' ‘ » _ Ontari0 29. Mimi mae ° e“ R ve copy of the pamphlet prepared by. ' ' ~ - ‘ Charlottetown P. IL I. 1-‘lm-'rn ao oemgirb lowes' olrefos 1 '°“°’_ °` ; for smighauemumnw. ° t_"" l l wen ubllm'uni_coe . t _ f0 l- t' ‘er p“?vm°°° ue: ' _ term from four years to five That D1* F- 905'" Berlin. N118 l1°W he ~ ‘ “ohm 25; Sask,whew,m_ 35; Albam would gm ummmwy with the otherjreats small wounds of the hmd th_l;s_l_l;cal m?;ve;r;n__1se_n°td r; itrxzregsid ly andunot leave it until th¢»present_ . _ » _ ° szmmnl " ‘ 2°' “nd Brmsh °°mmm 3°' The 1”” °'°"”‘°°” ‘md with ‘he D°’“’”' which °‘ °°““° °°"u“`°° “H ‘mu ills: ozetlle zletpinet end Ihavzttl-led lgnbzlzrzudglx zrnytwhmgoldgl A I ‘I . ' f statistics cover all cities and towns 'En btllt the bl_e_nei°lt of such change wwgds. _ to undenu-nd “_ but so mr without they_w°n,t B mu monument to um: of 4.000 or over. H0 RPPBYBH - \ en me "°““d is 1‘“`3° ‘md dirt* success. I ,have some knowleur of _ memory. one that will outlast s dor- ` '|ngures- and accounts myself and I en car ferries or hotels. they will see _ badly soiled with earth, an antlaep I” 1928 “?°’° "°’° 13° ‘um munm' . ]uo should be used to wesb lt out _ Pillmes "Um Whmh "°°“f“3 ‘f"°"° fe' The time for another census taking _ However with the small cuts` pu'n¢_| _ - _ celved and recorded. The 1929 figures 'has come around. As provided in the tures, or Utne, .wounds that Lo n.e_l;};:;°'°:h§;°;°':§a:°g4'; 3?; §°%v°°°h:;;: ’:2°':y\’$' A __ I . . I '- . are not yet available, but since the‘_:;_il_9_i_-_S:t___ll0r;»;\ $erlca_Ac_i; tche en- que,-my oem" me thought is thatvbulntiom hm been mad” “im” samt___u_y___wa hem” _S _n moBlrdo!__ number ol mens ln onorlotl.el.ewn~ mm me °°°_‘;.“ °'“°d;,‘°’°““"°i‘ “_ "my "h" ¥}‘°°F P‘,"?l'°°° answered they could uct. 5-Hou. an-. ewiltiné e 'elto not loot . P ° “WY 1* Y°°fS~ E” _tlou ol use luleetlon and that 'l:ben_e_'i__._e__s-llosvbeen asked lol- _en__eg¢_pla1xev_ nu- ;_g_4.,.‘g the center _or _mo piano S‘\°“1d be M hurry to stop the bleed-_don but be bee, so zee,_seo1loed_ to we believe we are tbo only p'l~oylne.,_ ‘"8 bi' Pf°SS“f°» °°ld~_ apnucstlobs. sive one-._~ ` _ ln me nomlulou overloolroo lo this U0" S°1ut10m. collodlon and so forth' Within the lasttwo or three years, regard. Also, our birds not having one Induclng it to bleed by gentle pres- Hon. Mr. LePage published in the protected spot in the wholeiprovinco " sure is often a. wise procedure. The use of iodine after it has position,'which were clear, concise foralsrge n\`unbtr` after leaving their stopped llleedlllg ls llrewleo good f'-nd intelligible. I therefore respect- nesting grounds. and the Jumping on treatment and ~nrst aid kits are now fully Mk Mr. MPM” W9-_*£11.55* Pub' P1390 b¢f°\‘° WMD! UP their sum-_ of H _supplied with this valusfble anti- sidgiglzixetgirax ?;dtv:'ov'°;§_y;;?_e 5¢p~l;l¢_ will not answer, the conclusion _will ,can rest and feel secure. _ " _ Dom, neglect B small wmmd_ It is be inevitable that no member _of the We hope the Fish and Game so- .wt much _trouble to safeguard y°m._ Government can give an explanation, cieties of the Island. if there are any, and that they have issued a pamph-‘ as well as private individuals will Ifmb 01' perhaps your verydlle. g & ` "‘=u€;&a> cclélgol nc/l, 'xml MYBKIC "Lo, ! and He Are Earth ,and bel. ltlr; 'Twixt l-iis and mine 'mere is nor line, Nor boundary, nor bar; " Out into His Inilnity My finite reaches l'ar;\ _ 1 merely thrill .ind know that I-'ie must bs- fhat heart And limb ' AN' part Of Him, ~ And Hs a part of ms- _ That we grow one ' In-star. and sun, _ A114 Fifth. IM SKY. andrea." ` - _-Donald Campbell i`i-lit _LAND WE DOVE ‘ -' lo mana mon Lhll Slave Andcloddodaudw ' ~ __ _ _ 'an 8 " om' mu I am. Biff etc.. _, mitments, andthe consequent over- Anzl yet I know not what He is, nor “twang” mn W, “.5 mum” Beneath Hlswlll, ' ' _wi 1', resenl have asked other men who read it that we get our share of the money 'Patriot some letters on our financial which 'is about the nrst landing place lic what the' pamphlet means. If he mer quarters in the north where they` *let ,which they themselves do not take these matters up in earnest-mo understand. That would, indeed, be a give them a boost. This~_ls all that .leplorabie situation. With ‘such a is need to .make both proposition: Government handling our case we aleality. Iliopetohearfrom some] would not"hav'e one ohanes in ten cf our conserlration friends on the thousand of having our claims prop- _ llbjeot. _ ` _ l ierly adjuptsd. Ifear that the=B0l\'¢| I lm. Sir, etc., - _ ,of Trade 'is our only hope. senator Narmm (agvgg, Hughes has put our can well. but _ ` apparently the local Government-_ gmrrymq mag. “mg wouidratbsrl_osetile.easetiulnwork_ _ ’ with him, or even use the arguments Sir,-The Guardian is= much dis- ne neo elven lbgm. turbed over tbe number or lou oem- » AN ACCOUN'l'AN'l‘_. _crowding offthese places of deten-_ __ _ uno. rt louse suggested that ony ,NATURAL PARK AND DIED - uno-hal suffered imprisonment. Who SANUEUABY' ’ tmerlted it by some breach w. _-A simple seg §§g s' .__-___ _f i||i¢|¢eus _.._. _,.g, '_The best _leaf and the longest curegive you thgmost lasting and ' de cious chew when you ask for _H 8: N Black Twist. You’ll have fthe _time of your life tryingjto chew the 'flavor out i of this 'fine' tobacco. slr;-n lewlzb e erees_roou_m or ul mob oem... to .mo _ ' __ _ _ _ _ _ E. »li\il~“brevlneeslstbsmeturors lil srl Gevernx{eat` ein do. even building ,moby-plug; _'Ji _ a_`new hotel. or‘car°fsrry. will. or can glvssuch a large ameuatof en- joyment`and~'whelefsoli\e pleasure to a»~lai'|e_n\l`lllber of oar,-,own well ag ig.: iigglg sig delivery of ite be caught la __ iielieve _}_hll`a- efrestraint such _ _ ways and the jails would. ' _ ' "W -S _ _ --_ """”"°'*°“"“'°- nruourb your valued new tm er- speedily-may lbeuuelve rbere ere, °°°"”°'”°°*°°- W1‘°°» "0 re- te be also :bm nylons use Wh” lllnnmi P"f°°"°” mm “"5 forts are' made to piece this several' other ways] however by `°°m'1ym°°°°°' “WWW Water had llvilloughby, so miles away and - , _ _ _ . ' . . _ _ I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , “"1" *"1" mf- __ me nemo loose; u ner fwblollglue new oz mme oould be -- ' ... buobetml wnggm.-s,,.,,, to ml, hon., ~ __ remedied oneulbetbodtwblobnor -' _<'s».ily.\'l _ _-_ _ tmdboagolateieduot' _ " ""'°"°*°"““*‘ toldrant 'attitude to-‘ ~` ' TE Y -e Ont llesltate To Fliolle Us l lr