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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 3 May 1923, p. 2

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y M P s ): authe 4 armmap i Gnlr Te J > u4 u94 . m e e en s ‘ _ __ etfiee not later thas Monday noon to insure insertion. | /. ag a result of the truce the Farmers will t M go fo the country as a solid group, It has been: 0 MWP aavrcccceme â€"â€"zzâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" *!nointed out that it was someWhat significant _ | PHE KITCHENERâ€" WATERLOO MUSIC | that within twentyâ€"four hours of the unanimous ‘\â€" | _ CLUB. Is AN ENTERPRISING _ | decision of the Ontario Liberals to fight the * ORGANIZATION._ | |coming election without making entangling alliâ€" 0__â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-fâ€"-â€"°‘â€"’nmu,Premier,Dmryntraeodhioihps‘totb . One of the Twin City‘s most active and |UJF.O.and agreed to the demands made by the _ entornrisine organizations during the pPaSt| Farmers‘ Sun, the official organ of the United i . * ~*_ ies MontBH .2 cae k en n n 9nn C n n M e es In oMn en A 2M /o Inmieskkcat To‘ e * _ Three Monthé ............»+**â€"«»«+ 608 me, I have believed all along that in b 4; * muj- s matters of policy and administration, there On application. Advertising copy must reachâ€"tb¢e \substantial agreement." o If not paid in advance ........ .. 4200 Mr. Morrison. The Premiér characteriz PhesP s * 4 0 020. $1.00 above declaration "as exceedingly gratif; year or two has been the Kit¢henerâ€"Waterloo Music Club which has been rendering a special service to the community in bringing : here artâ€" ists of the very first rank. Outstanding among the musical events held under its auspices was the recent recital by Salvi, the world‘s greatâ€". eflharpitt.thewarmtho!whoaereeepfionwu‘ pérhaps without parallel in the display of ferâ€" vent appreciation of the artist. No longer do music lovers find it necessary to go to the larger centres to hear worldâ€"renowned artists. ‘The activities of the Music Club have brought them right to our own community. Appreciaâ€" tion of the efforts of the organization has been shown in the generous way in which the music loving citizens of Kitchener and Waterloo and the surrounding community have supported the Club in their efforts. ~ . The Mustcâ€"Club also took the initiative in bringing to the Twin City Mr. J. L. Yule, sup ervisor of music in the public schools of Kitâ€" chener and Waterloo. The choice has proven an excellent one and the study of music has. been given a marked impetus. He has inaugâ€" urated school choir competitions in connection with which suitable shields will be awarded and his recommendation regarding the installation of victrolas and graphophones in the schools to assist in developing an appreciation of music by the pupils has been adopted by the School The coming to the Twin City of Mr. Yule has also resulted in the formation of a Philhar, monic Choir, under his direction, which acquittâ€" ed itself so creditably at the initial concert re" cently. The Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo Music Club is to be commended on the service it is rendering to the cause of music in this community and is to be congratulated on the splendid success which is attending its efforts. Clearâ€"cut declarations by Liberal organizâ€" ations during the past week, helped to clarify the situation as to the stand the various political parties will take in the coming elecâ€" tion. Two Provinceâ€"wide organizationsâ€" the Executive Committee of the Ontario Liberal Association and the Ontario Federation of Young Men‘s Liberal Clubs,have declared themâ€" selves unanimously against coâ€"operation with the U.F.O. forces during the coming contest. ‘They also unanimously endorsed a resolution declaring that a Liberal candidate should be nominated in every constituency of the Proâ€" vince. The gatherings, in effect, denounced group or coalition government, refused alliance with the farmers and invited all progressiveâ€" minded citizens, whether U.F.O. or otherwise, to join with Liberalism with the object ol esâ€" tablishti:? a stable Liberal government. The conviction was expressed by the Liberal leader, Mr. Hay and others, that if loyal, united and enâ€" ergetic support were given by the supporters of Liberalism, the June election would place a Liberal government in power. The provincial | LIBERALS DENOUNCE GROUP GOVT. | _ AGAINST ALLIANCE WITH FARMERS of reasone® economy, Provincial financial reâ€" form, a business Government by business men, and a redistribution of electoral ridings carried out on the broad principle of representation by idberal 1Â¥ader, Mr. Hay, promised "a return to responsible government, pursuance of a policy population." As a result of the happenings in the politiâ€" eal field during the past week, Ontario will have four distinct parties in the coming election, Liberals, Conservatives, U.F.O. and Labor. The situation has clarified to that extent owing to the pronouncements of the various p.rties.m Perhaps the surprise of the week in politâ€" feal circles was the apparent abandonment, for the present at least, of the "Broadening Out" policy by the Prime Minister, as evidenced by‘ the conference between Mr. Drury and the U. F.O; Executive. â€" As a result of tha conference Premier Drury gave a definite assurance that should his government not be returned with a majority of the House he would invite a conâ€" ference of the elected members, the defeatâ€" ed candidates and the executives of the United ‘Farmers and affiliated organizations, and acâ€" .cept the wishes of the conference ag ‘a guide to by the VJ& lh"m_kfl‘_ ollowin !o. | FARMERS WILL GO TO COUNTRY AS | i SOLID GROUP. | : ""Lhat this organization firmly beâ€" Farmers. The Federation of Liberal Clubs at their meeting at ‘Toronto last week, by a unahimous vote, adopted a resolution recommending that the Hydroâ€"electric Power Commission be inâ€" structed to report forthwith plans for the deâ€" velopment of power on the St, Lxrence River in coâ€"operation with the Dominion and United States Governments, and that the Provincial Government assert Ontario‘s inalienable right to all waters within the Province not required for navigation. the ?W,SL_O_?__L?.Y..ga}_ sg 41..‘..6 4La watkas It is interesting to note that the water‘\ powers in Ontario already harnessed, provide as | much electric energy as could be generated by | the use of 6,250,000 tons of coal every year. It | is predicted by careful students of the question t that within the next decade the demand for power will have so greatly increased that the electric energy utilized could not be produced without consuming 10,000,000 tons of coal per annum were water power not available. 1 It is well that the great asset contained in | the water powers of Ontario be recognized so that they may be conserved and developed for the benefit of the whole people. Last week Andrew Hicks of South Huron, who recently resigned as U.F.O. Whip, in an interview, charged that the Premier had at one time decided to join the King Cabinet as a Liberal and that he had discussed with U.F.O. members Cabinet changes involving the entry of K. J. Fleming, Hon. N. W. Rowell, and Sir William Hearst. The Premier issued an unâ€" qualified denial and the U.F.O. caucus also isâ€" sued a brief statement of denial. The approach of the provincial elections is certainly bringing with it some interesting ‘reâ€" velations. : . Attention has recently been called to the inadequateness of the remuneration received by rural mail carriers. An instance was cited where one mail carrier gets $1.50 daily for a trip of fifteen miles and out of this sum he has ‘o Keep a horse and rig. The rural mail car‘ riers desire an arrangement whereby they reâ€" ceive remuneration on the basis of an agreedâ€" upon iate per mile travelled. ':erv!mts is unquestionably inadequate and the Post Office lfepartment and Pariiament should give sympathetic consideration to their plea for better remuneration. Representation of the municipalities comâ€" prising the Hydroâ€"Electric Power Association on the Hydroâ€"Electric Commission, is again beâ€" ing urged. With the great investment which the municipalities have in the Hydro, it seems but proper that they should have adequate reâ€" presentation on the Commissionâ€" Up to the present, however, the government has not seen fit to take action in the matter. With the cost of living still abnormaly high the pay received by this class of public | THE REMUNERATION OF ‘RURAL | MAIL CARRIERS â€" Official recognition of the services of Dr.| I€ G. Banting, the discoverer of the insulin | treatment of diabetes, is being given by the' Province in the form of an annual grant of $10,000. This will be controlled by the goverâ€" nors of Toronto University for the purposes of continuing research work in the interests of a cure for diabetes. â€" As a part of this arrangeâ€" ment is an agreement which the University Governors have made with the Government, whereby Dr."Banting is to be given the rank of full time professor for so long a period as he cares to occupy guch a position and that he ibo given entire charge of the research work which is to be prosecuted. ° °. ‘ | SERVICES TO HUMANITY RECOGNIZED | The action of the Government will meet with general approval and will serve as an enâ€" couragemen t to scientists to continue to deâ€" vote themselves to intensive research work, the results of which have proven, on various occasâ€" tons, to have been of such incalculable, value. ONTARIO‘S VALUABLE WATER | POWERS. A RETURNS TO THE ATTACK. wWANT REPRESENTATION. gratifying to The ~Duke of: . York‘s : wedding was a dinner bell for thousands of children, who not only got a holiday on ‘the occasion of the wedding, but were the guests of the various munâ€" scipalities at "wedding parties." In the city of London 8,000 children atâ€" tended a party givem by the Duke ut York, at which a fowurfoot weddâ€" ing cake was out up for them. This also applies to all the larger cities i1» Great Britain. : LABOR PARTY GETTING READY FOR ELECTION. ~ Committees were appointed by the Labor Representation Politital Assocâ€" lation last week in connection with the orghnization of the Labor forces for the forthcoming Provineial camâ€" A committee was charged with the drawing up of a manifestd and program of the Labor party to be placed before the electors, while anâ€" other committee has assumed the duties of arranging dates and places for mass meetings and other demonâ€" strations. Â¥ _ A committee is also to decide on ltl'ua constituencies © in which it is 'moum advisable to run candidates. PLAN TO RETIRE DEBT OF PROâ€" vINCE DROPPED FOR THE PRESENT. Hon. Peter Smith‘s plan to inaugâ€" urate a sinking fund to retire the present net debt of the Province within forty years will not be proâ€" ceeded with at the present time. . ‘The resolution proposed to authorâ€" ize the setting aside, out of ordinary revenue, each year a sum equal to one per cent .of the tota! amount of Provincial debentures or stock isâ€" sued without provision for sinking funds. On the basis of a present net debt of $61,000,000, this would have amounted to $610,000 annually. In announcing in his Budget speech his intention to introduce ‘this proposal, tÂ¥e Treasurer esiimated that these }amounts. with the interest therefrom lreinvested and thus compounded, would repay the whole debt within }a forty year period. ‘ ‘Nobody works or plays or docs ‘anyllming normal ‘theso days"" the ’(lO(‘tm‘. said: "When we work, we Lwork like mad. When we play we do ‘lt with all the intensity of a crazy ‘enthusiasm. INSANITY ON .THE INCREASE. LARGELY RESULT OF WAR. In another quarter of a century or so pretty nearly the whole civâ€" ilized world will have become or be on the way to becoming insane if nothing is done to stop the rapid increase in mental derangement in the opinion of Dr. A. Desloges, direcâ€" tor of asylums of the department of public health of the province of Quebec. The past year the do‘> stated has been a recond onc in the numâ€" ber~of cases of insani‘y treated not only for the province of Quebec, but throughout _ the whole world, . the reason he believed in common with inost alien‘sts to be the extraordinâ€" ary intensity and excitement of life toâ€"day. s i "Then there is the genc:al and economic shock of the . wer whiach \has had its effect everywhere and ‘which has largely given rise to this ;rcondmon of things. It has left a ‘tendency to lose all sense of balâ€" }mn(-o and proportion both in work and pleasure. This is increasingly disorganizing the neryous system ot the individual members of society to the extent that insanity is becomâ€" ing one of the social evils which have to be dealt with by energetic i measures» â€" {[@LIVES| Olives of Quality Packed in a manâ€" ner which insures their koopinf in fresh condit ion. Remove capping from cork :!Pdlv' ping in hot water. Every -l-’h o.ll;: m w-mobrdm c tworee? Hamilton & Winniper Plain and Stuffed, At all Grocers lusist on MeLAREN®$ INPINCIBLE does | the i now known is â€"that Duiphiste, aged 74, was found with his head severed, and ‘his tmipping partner was dis discovered â€" in a lonely sh Milé Post 150 in Northers lumberman, who found the bodies when ‘he went to make a friendly covered‘~ alongeige of him with a bullet n his breast. Phe information was comimunicated fromâ€"Valoa by a the data received at pÂ¥ice headquarâ€" ters. One is that Morseite slew the older mans with an axe, fouhd in the shack, and then turned a gur on himsel. The other is some other person committed the double. crime \fior money kyown to be in possesé fon of the trappers. VOTE AGAINST CHURCH . UNION Members of the Christ Congregaâ€" tional Church of Stratford, after takâ€" ing a vote on Church Union, yery emphatically stood out for an inde pendent church. The following stateâ€" ment was issued: "The Stratford _ Congregational Church, at a specially called church meeting for the purpose of voting on the subject of Church Union, has affirmed ‘ite desire to retain its (Congregationalist principles and polâ€" ‘lcy by remaining an independent Christian church. _ The votes in ’ravor of continuing to do so were €4, as against 5 votes cast for the Ientmnoe into union. â€" ‘The spirit of our decision is one of utmost loyalty and good will to our beloved sister Churches which ihave voted otherwise than we have viewed it our bounden duty to do in order toâ€"realize our principle which declares that ‘every member of a icmâ€"nm Church is _respon.flble to ‘maintain the will of Christ in the Church." CANDIDATE IN EVERY RIDING Such Was the Declaration of The Provincial Liberal Leadâ€" er at Big Gathering of Libâ€" cal as its acceptanc}\las unaniâ€" mous two provinceâ€"wide Liberal orâ€" ganizationsâ€"the Executive Commitâ€" tee of the Ontario Liberal Associaâ€" {tion and the Ontario Federation of |Yonng Men‘s Liberal Clubs last week repudiated the suggestion that ‘Ontario Liberals consider coâ€"operaâ€" tion with the U.F.O. forces during the forthcoming contest for Provinâ€" vial political honors. In session at the King Edward Hoâ€" tel. Toronto, 150 members of the Lib eral Executive voted unanimously in endorsation 0%a resolution declarâ€" ing that a Liberal candidate should >e nomiuated in evory constitu_ncy of the Province. Liberalism‘s Opcortumity. This pronouncement followed the delivery bf fighting speeches by F Wellington Hay, Provnicial Liberal Leader; H. H. Dewart, K TV M.P.P. nnd Major J. C. Tolmie, M.P.P., ali three of whom expressed the c viction that, given the unitod, loyal and energetic support of the rank and file of Liberalism | thrpughout Ontario, the June election wou‘d pace a Liberal Government on the ‘Treaury benches at Queen‘s Park. ancial reform, a business Govern ment, by business mon, and a redisâ€" tribution of electoral Hfiiw carrigd out on broad pri of repreâ€" Mflz by population." which was as equivoâ€" . AM that is PARLIAMENTARY COMMITâ€" TEE FINDS COMBINE EXISTS AMONG SHIPâ€" ; PING COMPANIES. "Upon the regular steamship lines trading from Canadian ports the price of transportation service is determined neither by the law of supply and demand, nor on the basis of cost plus a reasonable profit, but a combine exists among the various shipping companies, which combine iu known as the North Atlantic and iUnlted Kingdom conference ,eastâ€" wardâ€"bound. With this declaration the speciai committee of the House of Commons named to investigate the conditions ‘sqr.rounding the agricultural indusâ€" try, summarizes .its opinion based on the evidence presented by shipâ€" pers and steamship men in ocean freight rates. 6 "The headquarters of this organâ€" iration," the report continues, "are at 8â€"10 Bridge Street, New York and if includes in its membership a very great number, if not all, of the principal steaniship companies operating regular lines out of North Atlantic ports. "According to a witness, Mr. W. W. Chase, Atlantic freight rates are made in New York the first Thursâ€" day in every month. To this North Atlantic conference belong nearly all, if not all, of the regular steamship lines Tunning from Montreal, includâ€" ing the Canadian Government merchâ€" ant marine. It will be remembered that a Canadian Government merchâ€" 'ant marine, as well as the Canadian lNafioml Railways, is operated under the control of a board, and not by a ’Minint/er of the ‘Crown. policies of this Baffk and the willing and sotâ€" vice rendered by its officers. Brgesn2d, saves i+ You will get a friendly reception at any branch of ; *BANKTORONTO I + WATERLOO LOO KITCHENER KITCHENER _ (North Ward) A Whole Year‘s Shines. P ird boxes, 60¢; metal boxes, 75¢ extra tins, 45¢, you can have a every dayfor ayear. ir nofuh esd pobstinppadâ€"card‘ of polish and Psn h a io box Next week will be cieamâ€"up '* in Waterloo when citizens are unged to see that their premises are given their spring cleanap. Sanitary Ins: pector Flynn will ‘make his 'WE of inspection and any citizen ‘vbo neglects to clean up Ais yard and have all rubbish removed will be given an o?lpommlny to explain why he has mpt heeded the notice sent out by theinspector. Citizens in the. lpast. however, have talden a keen pride in the tidy appearance of their ‘iomeu and doubtless will have everyâ€" thing in order the next few days. NOTHING TO EQUAL BABY‘S OWN TABLETS Coming! Waterloo‘s Dollar Day Festival. Watch for deta anâ€" nouncement. + |Co. Brockville, Ont Mrs. Georges Lefebvre, St. Zenon, Que, writes. "I do not think there is any other medicine to equal Byby‘s Own Tablets for little ones. I have used them for my baby and would use nothing else."_ What Mrs. ‘befe’bv:re says thousands of other &mot.hers say. They have found by trial that the Tablets always do just |w‘hat is claimed for them. The Tabâ€" lets are a mild but thorough laxative. l‘v«hich regulate the bowels and sweetâ€" !en the stomach and thus banish inâ€" }digestion, constipatien, colds, coli¢, etc. They are sold by medicine ’dealens or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williamis‘ Medicine 1972 1912 1917 CLEANâ€"UP WEEK 3,130 470 1811 429 15,119,753 41,622;345 63,907,297

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