i ,. t. ?'- " Jatz-rwmore-gsqp, _ - “ma... _ ..... ...'_ rzq- >:a'~. .1‘ ~ PAGE FOUR Tll C ' GIIAIILOTTETOVIII GUARDIAN lorufngllilblfolldllllfl) QUBSCIUPTION BATES IBJI pa: your tlo advance: oeuvend to llty. Il-Iporyeortlnldvlnrll mlllodlalfilllllnl IMO p: you un advance; Il-llll to (3nd: and U-l Ionian Audit ulna cl Circulation: ‘The Strongest Menwry is Weaker than "wettest-tel .. ‘W’ TUESDAY, IVZWCH 28, 1939 How The Money Went The comparative statistics of provincial fin- ance for the years 1925 to 1938 inclusive, tabled along with the Public Accounts by Premier Campbell in the Legislature last week, show the extent to which the Government has fallen down ~in its pledge to “balance the budget an- nually" by reduction of bureaucratic expendi- ture. The year 1934, the last full year 0f the Mac- Millan Government, may bc taken as a fair basis oi comparison with last year. In that year there was a debt increase of $357,827 as against $1,249,856, in 1938, but this is by no means the whole story_ The taxes collected in 1934 amounted to $560,581, as against $783,581 in 1938, while the revenue from licenses, permits and fees increased from $140,290 in i934 to $190,333 in 1938. The total ordinary revenue of the hlachlillan Government in 1934 was $1,- 666,260, as against $1,894,135 enjoyed by the Campbell Government in 1938. During the period mentioned ,real estate taxes increased from $68,519 t0 $89,477; in- come- taxes from $35,346 to $50,792; dog taxes from nil to $3,404; corporation taxes from $92,- 962 to $126,322; amusement taxes from $5,535 to $11,255; gasoline taxes from $202,596 to $342,171; succession duties from $50,452 to $67,782, and motor vehicle fees from $100,873 to $154,898. Much of this increased taxation revenue went into the very classes of expenditure which the Campbell Government members denounced when in Opposition. Ministers’ salaries, for ex- ample, increased from $9,500 in 1934 to $10,200 in 1938; Executive Council expenses from $136 in i934 to $330 in 1938; Departmental salaries from $31,167 in 1934 to $38,143 in i938; De- partmental expenses from $29,483 to $40,113; registry and land title offices (salaries and ex- penses) from $7,856 to $8,923; miscellaneous expenditures from $1,991 to $6,229; total gen- eral government expenses from $96,502 to $118,387. Altogether, total ordinary expendi- tures increased froin $1,666,260 in 1934 t0 $lr 974,284,—a jump of more than three hundred thousand dollars. _ While bureaucratic expenditures have gone up under, the present regime, we note that mis! cellaneous grants have been reduced from $4,- 100 in 1934 to $2,900 in 1838; public health expenditures reduced from $24,120 in 1934 to $19,938 in 1938; maintenance of highways, bridges, ferries, etc, from $349,661 in 1934 to $266,441 in 1938. That this latter important work was badly neglected last year was made the subject of complaint by one of the King's County members in the Draft Address debate. Altogether, the showing financially compares anything but favorably with Conservative years, and gives evidence of extravagance and incom- petence to an extent almost unbelievable. Sir Andrew's Philosophy ' In that comprehensive, cpigrammatic style, peculiar to the man, Sir Andrew Macphail wrote out his “Philosophy of Life,” not long be- fore his death. It is quoted by “Bookman" in the Winnipeg Free Press. A short dissertation in five characteristic paragraphs, it contains his credo in terms to promote discussion, although its import is dogmatic in no uncertain sense. Here is “My Philosophy of Life" in full: “Beliefs are of no value unless they govern conduct. Most beliefs are merely intellectual processes 0r opinions acquired by imitation or tradition. It does not matter much whether they are right or wrong. A man may believe that the sun rises every morning and be none the better or worse for it. Indeed, the greatest of the saints believed that the earth is not round but flat. There are good men who believe that fossils were placed in the rocks at the moment the uni- verse was created. In the process of education false beliefs are exchanged for others that may turn out to be equally false. "In modern and middle English, the term ‘belief’ is confined mainly to intellectual pro- ceases, excluding the moral element of trust and confidence. In early English, belief was the equivalent of what is now commonly called faith, that is the substance of things not seen-but hoped for an inner conviction Br assurance felt and manifest in personal experience, but not demonstrable by the obvious senses. “We have returned to this original meaning. The one belongs to science; the other to religion. Thcconflict between the two is at an end, but in a deeper sense religion is just as scientific as science, since both are observed in human ex- perience. The result is that a scientific man may now be asreligioua as he likes, and no aspersion calf upon his science; a religious man may be as lcientiiic as he likes, and no aspersion out upon Itirreligion. . _ f is only one belief that is of any im- _ parlance, and it is common to both religion and ‘science, the belief that there is a distinction!»- . tween‘ good and bid, between right and wrong. fioth themselves upon the existence "of a " ‘ Will, .»by‘wliit:h the heart beats‘ ‘and l All living creaturposfrorn _ . vcn the aphcrfithcm- of!!! to this writ-tire win form, they perish; that is the way of death. “And this Will can be discovered. It is the daily desire of every good man, but this ‘Will may be done on earth,’ 1t is being revealed cori- tinually as the way of life. Indeed, the One who revealed it most brilliantly merely claimed that He was come‘so that men might have life and have it more abundantly. It is all very simple. It is a way of looking upon the universe, of bc- coming part of the Infinite. It adjusts every relation in life, and solves every problem, Also, it brings peace. The experiment is worthy of a trial." I Editorial Notes 1 o Stores experienced one of the busiest days of the season on Saturday. 1r or w john Kcble-poet, priest, and founder of the Oxford Movement——died this date, 1866_ 4 i J l It is reported the Government may be asked in guarantee rlic- bonds for :1 new north shore hotel. By-the-by, how has the Government got out of its $100,000 guarantee for the Potato Growers? i iii There is about one chance in five that the in- ternational situation will cause cancellation of the Royal visit, according lo Lloyds tinder- writers. Lloyds are asking a premium of 21 per cent. from the increasing nnmbcr of people- chiefly hotel and shop owners-in the leading cities of Canada and the United States who stand to lose heavily if the tour is called off. a- Soine 200 printing shop employees in Toronto lost their jobs as a. result of the removal of the tariff on United States periodicals, Mr. John R. MacNicol (Cons, Toronto-Davenport) told the House. He said one firm had been compell- cd to lay off 50 employees and had suffered a loss of $400,000 in business. And this is but a fraction of the price we pay for admitting in- decent publications. I ll i flit been looking at political faces for years, agree that bushy eyebrows are the badges of legisla- tive leadership. The amount of hair on the head, chin, or upper lip, they contend, doesn't mat- counts. A lot of famous faces bear out the theory. a n 1- w It is amazing the amount of good one man may accomplish if his heart be in the right place. There has just passed away in London at the age of eighty-eight, Sir Robert “hillace, the founder of the probation system for first offenders. When he retired from the bench in 193i he said 9o per cent of 50,000 first of- fenders whom he had given a second chance never relapsed into crime. He became interested in probation work early in his career when he found that under the then existing law, he on an aged woman who had stolen an old pair of shoes to replace the rags in which hcr feet were bound. ll Truth will out. It costs as much to move dirt today as it did when Canada's transcontinental railways were being built, Agriculture Minister Gardiner told the House of Commons. l-le was discussing irrigation problems in Western Can- ada. It was a mistake Mr. Gardiner said, to think modern, labor-saving machinery meant decreased cost of the article produced or work performed, whether it was irrigation or manu- facture of war implements. In other words we pay more to get less; turn thousands out of jobs; and are heavily taxed to provide un- employment relief. Yet there is not a Liberal member of Government able to solve the problem. n- u n: a Without committing himself to any definite prophecy; Mr. R. H. Bruce Lock-hart, author of “British Agent,” told the Peoples’ Forum Montreal that he believed the world stood a fair chance of evading war, and if one did not come this year, would perhaps stave off conflict indefinitely. “Physically and spiritually strong" democracies, he stated, would be the greatest guarantee against a war. If they were weak, the smaller countries would turn toward the dictator nations, and the dictator powers would not stop in their march toward greater power. One important force working against war, Mr. Lockhart told his audience was that Great Britain had "wakencd up" since September of last year, pushing a rearmament programme and building for defence. “The dictatorships know that Britain is stronger." he added, “and that is our best chance of keeping peace." The dictatorships, he explained, had created a new form of diplomacy. They did not want war, but they looked around for territories where there was a 9 to 5 chance against a war being fought over them, then struck suddenly. v n- o n: It appears that two mounted elk heads‘ and two rare black beaver pelts will be presented to the King and Queen when they arrive at Winni- peg May 24 on their Canadian tour. The gifts are the historic rent which the Governor and Company of Adventurers of England Trading into Hudson Bay-now known as the Hudson's Hay Company—pr- mised to pay ivhen King Charles II granted them exclusive trading rights in all the lands ilrainodby rivers emptying into Hudson Bay. The tribute stipulated in the Royal Charter issued May 2, 1670, was to be paid only when the King or his heirs or successors visited the companyb territory. Because Royal visits to the CanadiauiNorlhweat have beefiinfrequcnt, this year's presentation will be onlythe second in,269 yam-The first occasion was when the Prince of Wales, now Duke of Windoonsame to Winnipeg in r927. The. gleamin ' akins-arcthz pick of 16,000 pelts. , 1i II able to shift NOTES BY TIIE 1m ‘Jew: ln Germany an o ’ to tum over to offlclala their d11- monds. jewels. ecloua stones and so on. The Sta funds. -—'I‘omnto Globe and Mall. Egyptian: who know the K01‘!!! b h art will be exam d 11ml nillltnfry survlw. aowrdiilil‘! 9° l“ announcomen K1118 311°“ l" o nlng o e - ‘two: million meg; The Boots 1n the old 850 had n. different vfawPfilnl- '17" man who did not know the Longer Catechism was not good enousrh w fight. -—\d0nctm1 "transcript- It be that tho Canadian tom- gfuhhelr Malestlea this spring may do more to stimulate the 1n- terest. of the B rush people 1n the Dominion man thousands of PT°' pasta from Canadian sources. As they follow the tcur they will learn that. Canada ls u huge country, with many up-to-dat-e cities and a vlrlle and loyal popu-atlvn. and they may learn something abcut Canadian industrial enterprise and progress. This may do much to counteract the persistent impres- slon that. 1t 1s a country of ice and snow, populated with Mountle heroes and Indians and cowboys and little clse. -Cal.gary Herald The people of Canada went $990,000 further into the red last. year as the result of one lnstance mixing politics and public iworks. An engineering estimate prepared before I930 placed the maximum cost the Jazques Cartier bridge at. Montreal at. ap- proximately $9.000.000. Built unuen the auspices of a politically ap-l pointed Harbor Corrurilsslon. llllfl total cost of the bridge and fight- of-way was swelled o 818.649.0011. Even the curving rl$ht'°l'w'a¥ ll- self, lt. ls claimed a monument to lltlcs. The bridge was opened in 1931. Since that. time deficits have plied uo to the staggering total of $5,516,003. Strike has succeeded strike among the students for 1n weeks past. It looks as thou: Physiognomists in Washington who have striking ls established as an en. demlc disease 1n schools and unl- verslties. Previously one could lay the whole blame on the politicians. They were always stirring up the boys for ends of bhelr OWH- Ill lble that there may be 80ml? ter—~the quantity that shades the eyes is what political undercurrent 1n the pres- ent disorders, but 1t is not up; parent. on the surface. The boys are finding their own excuses for leaving work. One could always hope that political agitation among me students was a mere passing phase. Now 1t. ls apparent that. the evil has taken deeper root. The lltl l ns may have sown the Eli-me lazy calllrtg out. the students during crises. but the soll was evi- dently, and regrettably, a propi- tious one for the growth of the dls- ease. -'1‘he Sphinx, Carlo. The annameut. race l: bankrupt- lng Germany as lt. will Great. Buutaln. ‘there are plenty of reas- . . . ous why Hitler ought. to be glam to could do nothing but impose a long prison term stop it. But ll. is by no means cer- tain that. be can stop lt.. German industry 1s geared t.o armament. To throw 1t. out. of gear suddenly would be exceedingly risky. True, a totalitarian State ought. to be its workers swiftly from one form of production to another. but at. best. there would be a. period of confusion and dlf- ficulty, and a period of confusion and difficulty even a relatively short, period, might be perillous to the Nazi regime. For six years lt has driven tine German people at a terrific Dace. It. has reduced their standard to llvliig drastically, and has increased their labor as it cut. ta. But they have endured lt because they thought the dictator was certain of his pur- pose and clear as to his methods. A sudden reversal of policy, at- tended by wide-spread unemploy- ment and troublesome ecr roadfustments. would challenge mu idea; which ls to say, lt. would chal- lego the faith that. has kept. the Germans quiet 1n spite of hardship. Does Hitler dare risk it? It c - ls not to be blithely acsumed at he can safely take the chance. —Balt.1more Sun During the lut twenty-five or thirty years the ca» ltollstlc system has suffered a fairy large number of attacks. In certain cases the were Justified and 1n others muc less so. Oertalnhr this system la not without faults, but. 1t seems as though no one had up to the pres- ent discovered another which la superior to lt....One thing ls, however, sure and certain. and that ls that lt. ls easier to improve the present system of capitalism than to create ancther out of whole clotlh, as the partisans of Social Credit 1n Alberta. wish to do ls not necessary to be greatiy structed to perceive that. a sys- tem like this cannot work for lon . Governments can count on on or or pi-oc ‘"8 “l2 they need: loans . they borrow. ft 1s clear that they must pay interest like anybody else. Naturally. there l1 a third way of obtaining funds-that whim Socfel Credit members suggest, and that. 1a the manipulation of money. It lt ouy for a vcrnment to sot the muses 11o ng and to print bllla. but ft. la much lru easy in this way to maintain the cred t of the country and the value of the mone . We may enunclote all tho t-hcor es we like. It. will remain Ab,» 5L1‘ wiur o Muck u new. 0011861011: humour. M0‘. ‘ the u an: meat. ‘fduiyiw-Im. 3 “rill-rt m» ‘fatbdr’ oral-fair THE ciinizirrijrcroyvu continuity 1 against. desperate odd g5 asldel Esta. llsh a ‘° lfled salary only. un my; info that a piece of paper. oven though issued by u. govern-Q tfon, Mon ' ‘i. °"‘“il~r . It" . tho-Bocretary- for Juntlodli: PUBLIC FORUM Ill: QIIIZ ll k dllounl; b; ooflolpoldllto ol qudhu of Inland. ‘I'M lottotwwl Gnu-Ill: loco no no- ooallrlli onions bio olllloln o! I a oonncnonlcllo. All FARMERS OI‘ N0 ACCOUNT? Sin-Since tbs u more and more re- on port of tho prod the betterment 0f themselves have woven abortive being llmltzed ln space, and disc nected in action. Economic evlla can be the uom. lat movement. such a movement because of the 3n class to outer to cheap party p:llt- lei-all at their own expense. If we could muster enough cour- lse to set aside all thus old fall- ures. and re vote for them we an in dse ln the mlre as they. we will have ak- en no small step in brlngln :ut the downfall of an outwar y cap- italistic form of rovernment. which is suokln the life blood from the veins o1 nbor. and lf not curbed thremen; through its own efforts, to brl-nsz about the destruction of the country in whose behalf they bolliiflllly declare they are direct- 1n: their efforts. ‘Iloday s. man l: obliged to vote not for the better- ment of conditions. but 1n the mn- iarlty of cases he ls prompted by rlbzs which include false promises. money and liquor. surely a count- r_v that. ln clays past, ha‘; s.r flag s e ' the lndustrles of our land. surely a s pas-seaming the nlcnecr spirit of our IOIGmBIhEIS and just as Wllllm. if tzven a chance to dis- play that s11 t. today. Surely these deserve a better heritage than that which they are forced to accept. It 1s not uncommon for men today to be xlliéll/Cn to the ‘Dfllls bYmf-he de- n ma. s of cces y. It 1s time the worklmz class, who are the back bone of this as wel as any other country, gm‘. together and stood u for their rights. Give these Politic ans a shock that will shiver every timber ln their feeble frames-right to the very sole of their ill-be often shoes! Cast. em workln man's government that will woman or ehlld that chance to llve 1n this so-called and of peace and plenty. I q >- un Sh‘. 01.0., DANIEL B. JAY. COMPLEMENTARY ADVAN MENT 0F TEACHERB CE- SLn-I note with some concern the indignation of the people and more particularly some o! bhc school teachers throughout Prince Edward Island concerning lasulne. by the Department of Education. of first-class licenses to second- claus teachers who have taught. t/wenty-flve years. When first I learned of this, lt seemed so incredible that I d little or no attention. but latey 1 have been forced by concrete facts to believe that. this is something more than idle gossip. I; 1t pos- slble that the Department recently tuned first-class loencea to second- claas tenche a lust; because they had twenty-five years experience, irre- spective of their qualifications? I ask ln all sincerity ls lt possible that the Department in accordance with the Board of Education of Prince Edward Island would so de- grade ltaell’ as to be guilty of such an atrocious not? If so. why? ls lt: because the Department hhlnka lt still owes them money for their services after they have been paid the full amount per year for which they were l-ilrcd-an amount. which was declared u a complete settlement at the end of each year? There was to be no after-could- eratlon. ‘Ihcy wen to et this spec- bhey raised themselves by honest study and had passed examinations proving their canoe, Doe: the Department fool 1t should bonus them for atnylnglri this class and setting such a bad example before ‘young second- ‘ ‘- be do: crowding I think I may venture to any that fully ninety per cent of tme younger teachers use modern teach- lng methods, while what: do we flnd about the methods of these old sec- ond-clus ‘ ” ‘t Their methods went out with hoop skirts. Has th imam; no dulre to M .._._.___. MAC’S HAIR RESTORER A delloltoly perfumed DN- plrluon which restores um ueautlftel the holr. It. will ransom any halr u. Irowh he the hnlr falt- mg uindwh lkaflnlrklbly "tuneful a; preventing dandruff utmylny guano of the rmltl. l" Y - "".'s:ar":."'satlr MAC’S PILE OINTMENT Glvwn Quick one: r lcllul 1n u. Internal and later- ‘-. III .l beoom more each do . All previous 030501.: conditions for m.‘ eradicated Chi-Milli y a provincial wide proletar- at of tn l: handicapped ass o1 this that. when we piuallflcotton for a hlizher clue of g the ward Inland going rice no unehalle I . lr. 010.. l!!! A DIlGUSTl-‘D TEACH!!- BLAUK WAIWII PIPIII Stan-In the Friday mornlnl Guardian libero appeared a letter signed “Liberal . ' ' which dealt with music at the Iroglalotlve ly on opening day. "Liber- al Progressive" use: some very flue words 1n pointing out how ancfcnt the pipers appear to be. and states that: there ls little chance of t-hla type of‘ music 0n account of the Scottish ancestry e present leader of the Oppo- sftlon. I would like to explain to "Llb- eral-Progrcaslve" that: the gentile- man named has little or noth‘ to do with the instrumental par of any of the parades, which are purclv military. "Liberal Proarcaslve" should re- alize that. all military unit; have their own type of instrumental music, the average unlt having brass bands. but with a. Highland regiment the bagpipes are asmueh rt of the unit. as the 0.0. or a oa. Adijufiant. Oonsfdering, therefore. the fact that the PE I H. are the only infantry unit on the Island and the normal instrumental music for this unit ls the bagpipes. li. fol- lows naturally that. lf iihe Guard of Honour ls furnished by the P. E.I.H. and the Band is composed of pipers. that they will carry out their duifea according to "King's Rules and Orders", and not ae- cordlng to the l‘lres or dislikes of a few civilians . It appears to me that Ubernl- Progresslve would like to have some jun music on l-hese parades. liubead of muslq played for the occasion 1n front of the Leglsiatlve Building. which consisted of the “Royal Salute" and followed by appropriate rnuslc during the 1n- spectlon of the Guard by His Ex- ceuoncy mun-Governor Defilolu- No other entertainment is ever lot-ended on these parades but. to honour the King's rcllfflellllllw- It ls. of course. common know- ledge among military men that durlnr a irenerul inspection or on bv representatives that. lazz mlwlo would not. be aoprllorfatz. as this klnd of parade is ab all times con- ducted wlbh military discipline and dignity, hence the music must. of the right. kind and correct in a military sense. The bawolpes are the onv trim Instruments of a Hlfllllll resi- rnent. so I don't see what Irlberul- Prrgresslve can do about 1t. lf the P.E.I.H. continues to furnish the Guard of Honour. I um. Sir, etc, INTERESTED. THE BONSIIAW HOUR slig-Klndl allcw me Imus 1n your voluabl: and much circulat- ed publication to place before the pflhllg, 1n my humble way, a. very brief recital as to the alllwrlvrlly of the Borden vfu. Bonahaw-Char- lottaetown highway for all W" use, over the one u now 00n- stmotod as a, permanent highway vlz: Via Borden-Reid's Corner- Kenslngton and Olmi-lottewwri. In the first instance arid one that must appeal to all. ls the 1M! that via, Bonshaw. the distance ll ahortmicd by approxlmotely fifteen miles and‘ la almost a direct. route to Charlottetown. This 1n itself la a strong point 1n favor of‘t.he Bonshow route u 1t. represents a acvlnq of about. one gallon of gaso- line, or thirty 0011M. l0 W"! D"- aonoachtiuieheorahomakua one way trip from Charlottetown ,tn Borden or vice verso. Again It. ll doubtful 1f any other polnt in our foli- Province can this Boushmv route for reaquencsa, and parllvllllrll’ this applicable ln the Bonshaw and Churchill Region, where the color and betting cl the West River. as 1t. wand: 1t’: way sea- , is unsurpassed for loveli- ness and natural beauty. Then. too. this road through all 1t: length spans a section of the Prov- fnce that. cannot easily be dup- licated for fertility the gen- eral pa: excellence of he oondl- tlon of the f toads. Then we omne to the most ltn- portont. reason cf all; the ease with which this hlgihwa could be kept open durl the ntor months in contrast wth the impossibility of maintaining unlcatlon on the Borden - Kenslngton -Cha.clottewwn road. I think. and doubtless many readers will agree with me. that the present winter has a good example of the difference ln snow difficulties on these respec- It-a onnnal color. ‘ tlve reads. There has not been Ml" n"! 3¢"°"°' W“ over three weeks durl the en. HM“ a n" mil WWW» tlrc reason when wtom lies have been unable to operate from Chur- lottbfnwn to Bordon vln Boiuhow and Oropoud, and this mark you without any super efforts, pold i’ rioivisnr . , - rid ul of tpll lndolmcef Why ul- fiwmmtsr-Tnfir fiif-Jrtr-Fffi 3.11"?" ' l3 2?.“ 'r‘."'.r.% r. so “saw; lllfifffi warm... ‘l rra"..e.3_*1.-_;.... - '11: Prince nu- o let-this out- ASSOCIATION wlll bo hold In tho Committee Rooms McLure ‘Full attendance requested A. R. MCINNIS President - of will be held Kent. St. Mrs. H. H. HORNE President “w erence to permanent 1t now exists? Simply that snow- plows and paid employee; are un- ablotokoopltopenoudoaovrln- By necessity by wa show. ‘ the $111011 of the writer that the bu lng up of a few low places on this Boriahow , the removal of trees 1n some pluses and an intelligent use of a. cu- taln aruount of mow fence. such ll now 1n use ln tabo 0th lDPlHI-rs at. lts best. GI attract er Pmvlttcu and only the most. un- usual and severe storms would ne- apparent. This concern interest» to ccsslwte the oontmual ruse of snowplows. ' Now we must deviate from a contrast‘. of roads and place» he- fono tho public l. few other fact; icvellant. to the, eccslty for hav- lll8 B permanent road constructed and maintained v1: w. Th“ ll In I80 0f progress. cannot remain immobile. I! we do not advance we retrograde, Tho automobile Ind truck have. and will cont! to displace the horse drawn vehicle. To operate a motor veh lo successfully g var-mung; ros ls necessary. ‘rho people of the South Shore District. have not the advantage of a rsllwgv ‘Werner... sue. some"; l’ and somewhat laolozed. Th1; our and villi be overcome by a per- manent highway pnopu-Jy min. talnod between Charlottetown and “will? ....."'..?°.“i2“"" e a to the much d-lwumd qllelllon of a bridle in 3Tl8lllil7ll. and on thll Mint time Wlllbeniwolentmwr-utns pm- "lt W680 cannot. odequotely oops mtg: the atrolnmgshmolgern taxi! B881‘ then natural! m; bfflgg placed at. B tan. Wm be m conclusion I ma 1 1n all sincerity misvydiiiiisihiisu lull embarrassment Ulllflllgbmt Iwrwi y restl Ludo n March political adivuntag on other occasions. "I know’ situation. “I letter voices the nowaitiim 1'; Sh’ m" vwmh. a m‘ L . woon. PREMIER. CAMPBELL AND PBOHIJBITION BIL-Wading thro Imp; columns of words an“? a t :1! minds mo of that prlrnmvs flown 80 l ued. '1 i) ‘ ~ ' ‘.03: The Annual Meeting NATIONAL YOLIIIIGIIIIONSERVATIVE Wednmlnv. March 2s in s P. M Building CHARLES BENTLEY Secretary I . g The Annual Meeting ' woman's CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION Thursday evening, March 30th at 8 p. m . In the Committee Rooms MirLure Building All Conservative Ladies‘ requested to attend’ m; t. road as _ Mirror Of The Nation "Commoner" UITRWA. March M-Parllsmng 1B8 b0 avoid liavlng n 1 prejudice the natlonaiintiregtteqniig occurs more frequently 11115 public realizes because party m,“ Knitter attention and 9g. forts to avoid them are not alwgyg p11 ‘NIH’ befo h ntorest la lllustratgi tine 512mg llWWn the leaders and membsiq of the Opposition parties to pmgqj to the Government over the delicate international m, While discharging m; m. r of the Of lclal O t1 q Dr. Mmlon has been Brim! m careful. ln discussing the suit?! to avoxl making the position only Prime Minister more difficult. lit was particularly clear ln his atm- ment. ln the House of Commons, on 30, that he was studloualy avoiding any word that might. lisn the effect of soaking 0r procuring e. the desire of the Ooposltlon tom- Opernte with the Government. ‘. Dr. Manlon said, "tho eat difficulties of government 1n 11116! like these and 1t ls ce for from any thought ln my in to add 1n any way those difficult.- lea." ‘The first effect he sought wu unity of the nation in the present consider". lie 101d (Continued on page 7. Col l) WELL G0 N0 MORE A-ROVING Bo. we'll 110 no more a-rovlntl 8o lite into the n l. Though the heart. be stlll u lcvllll And the moon be still as bright For the sword outwears its shealh. And the ul wears out the brew- And the heart must 111W t4 . breathe And love itself have rest. of those expec u] lélcléeéglgugg, a nginrirz” 501:1! i333.‘ Though the rilahl. wfls made roll”- actigl fame. leafs ' ma Tkfiiimlfi $110 tbeuifay returns too ' -ro ¢su__sml'__m_w Bffifi.’ . ‘l? $281120... sharp when it ls my. filo avoid 011 him || On this, u he emphasised -1.<ird Under Formerly Dominion Hauling Act before loom con be granted. Full particulars may b0 obtained from — Al. Offlcu: Charlottetown, Summon-tide, FREE season IN ‘A FREE COUNTRY Permits any Illandor to oxprell hll olllll’ lon on any subject-at any time and '10- landmi do spoakout when the!!!" that way. No dictator an prevent than _ expressing appreciation of i-iiotziavs BLACK; iolius ron riwi-ztuucs llMlllllAL llllll8lllll ART Application: accompanied by plans and specifications must be submitted to tho Department of Finance, Olluvw. If it is dnlrod to starl- conltruction in Spring Orlfllll Summer applications should bo-mudo now in order to ulloW sufficient time to complete details and obtain upprovfll CANADA PERMANENT MORTGAGE CORPORATIQN llYllllMlll 8i 00., LIMIT!" Montugiw- which we! more than zoo Undo. ardjntbittlt- ed on 11111834,: oaken lhleldrfrolll _ w , the V antlers" '_ "f0 feet P.‘ by ' ‘ of tho-Hudson's Buyi i ' tribute toIhci '