Prdoldult. ueuc.-col. w. Glamor I. mum. V|o0- dent. J. I. Burnett. I‘. J. I. Iocrotu-y. Illnutacul. D. A. Inellnun. D. I. 0. Editor and launch: Director. J. I. lurnott. I. J. I undue Idtwro. nub Walker and D. K. cum. Io:-nlnrbnlly (lauded I-II1) Btu per your (In ulunul delivered In Olil. $8.00 Dir you (In uh:-co) IIIUNI 90 Prince Edward bland. “.50 per yur (In nausea) Idle! to Gland: Ind Ilnlurl Stun. SATURDAY. JUNE 8. 19%. What A Revelationl Our contempoi-ary’s editorial of yesterday on the subject of the British North America Act raises no question that has not been dealt with fully in The Guardian. Two points, how- ever, are worth noting and remembering: (1) It speaks as the mouthpiece of the CAMPBELL and ;\lAcKer<zii: KING Governments. (2) It professes to see no difference be- tween amending the Constitution “in the public interest" and amending it witlzont Legislative ' : autliority for the purposes of violating Liberal pledgxs by nmlrling the tarpayer: and precipit- ating a tariff war between the provinces. Now we know what to expect, and what will happen to our minority rights under the B. N. A. Act, if the KING-CAMPBELL aggrega- tion ever succeeds in getting past the guard of the Conservative Senate and the British Par- liamcnt! It Sounds Like Magic A daring inventor has come out of the West, one CHARLES NELSON Poem: of Winnipeg, to say that he can make an ordinary motor car travel anywhere from 150 to 200 miles on a gal- lon of gasoline. The Ottawa fownal discusses the claim. in an editorial entitled "25 Miles on a Pint," and cites the efforts of the Financial Post of Toronto to find out how far it can be substan- tiated. The consensus of all this opinion appears to be that it is a fine trick if Mr. Poem: can do it. Mr. Pocue says, of course, that he has done it. Mr. I-1. C. BRAUND, editor of the Canadian Automotive Trades, of Toronto, seems to believe it too. i\lr.Por.Un says that the secret——-and he is keeping it a secret—-lies in a wonderful new car- buretor that he has invented. Mr. BRAUND vouchcs for a test in which an ordinary motor car was driven 25.7 miles on a pint of gasoline. He also mentions a car equip- ped with the Pooun carburetor which went from Winnipeg to Vancouver (1879 miles) on 14% gallons of gasoline, while a similar car with a standard carburetor used 106% gallons on the journey. But when experts disagree, who shall de- cide? The Financial Post referred these claims to Mr. CHARLES KETTERING, head of General Motors’ research department, who said: "It just can't be so; I'll bet you ten to one it can't be done. There's a joker in it somewhere. Mr. Pl"lil":; may have found something else. but he cerrzlmly has not obtained the results he claims such as that made by Mr. WAYLING. I put it to any member of this committee: What would you think if ou were asked to‘ compare the regiments of t as Canadian army in France and England with the skeleton units that are scat- tered all over Cana a, and than -were asked to soy tho: because th 9 is only a skeleton unit of the militia in thilr coimtry at the present time. therefore than is too much fat on it, the militia, and it should be cleaned out and cut down to the number at‘ full strength that exittgd during the war!" Criticism of this kind, Mr. BENNETT added, is “unfair to our fellow-Canadians who are offering themselves for the defense of their country. I repeat that the whole policy of the territorial: in Great Britain and our militia here is to maintain in every section of the country, even in the remotest, some skeleton organization that will permit of men enlisting for voluntary service. When that is understood, is it not almost ungrateful of my hon. friend to give this article a degree of approval or approbation, an article that compares this condition with war conditions in France or Flanders? The mere statement is its own refutation.” Incidentally, the editor of "Cat/alcada” is Mr. BENNEr'r’s former secretary and biograph- THE CHARLGTT E Notes by the Way W9 -¢l|l—voi room at has British Commonwealth of nations —hr.ve some klnd of faith in the things for which we struggled through a thousand years or ms. wrv~free speech, fredoin of ldeu, decent. law and arder, gm-.p13y 3,, mlnorltles. There are some among “S-¥°lm8 people. very lrnpauem, very scornful of the past-—who would give up all that for 5 short, cut to Utopla. by way or >1:-;5¢1;m_ or by way of Communism. Because of their generous lndlgnatlon on account of the unemployed they would drag down forty-rnllllon others to 8 common state of misery on the same level. Because of their dlsllke of young fanatlcs of Red or Punk persuasion others would put on black shlrts and strengthen their wrists by exercises wlt.h rubber t.runcheons.—slr Phlllp alpha 1;; World Review London. Those who have fouowed the av]. deuce taken before the Broadcast- ing Inquiry Committee wlll, agree with the general conclusions drawn. It is of the utmost importance, however, to note that the com. TOWN GUARDIAN fE“ lllbat LACK OF THYROTD JUICE! CAUSES BACKWAEDNESS MENTAL AND PHYSICAL I often wi-the about the effects of havlng too much juice mm-fume. cured by the thyroid gland in the neck. This causes nervousness, rapld heart, tiredness and loss of welzht. All the body processes work too test. However there are cases when ttnere is not enough thyroid juloe manufactured and the lndlvldual ls listless, not active mentally or Physically. There 13 usually an m- crease of welght because the body procasses do not. burn up the food i=UBLic FORUM run mm. in an I" W dluuluon by "|"“P""“".l." quootlnn of |l|0"¢‘- ‘ Charlottetown Ourdlui dun I0 u... 0 cm on cold!" ol ewruullcltu THOSE INCRXIKINATING uwnyssu 51:.-In Monday’: Guardian Y0“ publish seven questions asked by "Cavalcade" at Toronto. It. 15 en- couraging to mid one paper in Can- ad unafraid to talk blunt. and to the point lnsteul of pusayfootlng around well known evils. one question, with a. triple BP- pllcatlon, relates to customs duties. unjust. admlnlstratlon, and fellure to get Wlxxtelllgenc acknowledgement of a. letter written to the govem- ment seeklng lnformatlon." I speak from personal experience. In buslness with the department of Cuslloms, and several departuients of government. for fifty years back, ex- cept within the last months, in Lib- eral as well as Conservative periods. I must admlt. courtesy and intelli- gent effort to meet the Lima with 01' Vitalt] ilwaus use BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA J UNE 6, 193° Keeping the would be the consequences to broughttonlutlilenend. Thhlnthoproudoocroatlonofthe In-mar Qndm.‘ nnforsoan catastrophe. the work of every farmer were !Iu'Itvirlully.thhmnyha-pin to any In-mu-um, fl.no,wtthdtsutwuoiI:uqnonoautohhfnmuy.,__n..um néunllfohnunnceutauonlynfeguarll. If your funny need: protection. our low-con, prom.- urnlngpoltcleuwmporvo you wellwrltle for rnteuto body’.-. credit. X § I ]apan’s interests. X ! owing to financial difficulties. ' it 3K 9K Souris. if X if of a million dollars a year. it it it by carburetion." "Rut," asks the Vancouver Province, “what does zhat matter? If Mr. Pooun really has got a gadget which will give 200 miles to the gallon, who will care if it is carburetion or simply a divine miracle of mileage? The Ottawa four- nal suggests that the oil companies might care, and perhaps the provincial governments which depend so much on the gasoline tax. But the mot- orists still would not care. If Mr. Poovrz can really demonstrate. he will be told to come on with his gadget, whethér it is carburetor or new lamp of Aladdin.” Mr. Bennett To The Rescue Several times during the present session of his sense of responsibility as leader of His Maj- esty's Loyal Opposition by coming to the aid of some harrassed Minister of the Crown when he believed the Minister or his department was being criticized unfairly. A striking instance of ‘Mr. BENNETTS refusal to mix politics with na- tional interests occurred the other day, when he replied to an attack launched by Mr. MAcNni_LL, C. C. F., member for West Vancouver, against the Militia forces. Mr. MACNEILL based his criticism on an article by Mr. WAYLING in the magazine Cavalcade, which appeared under the heading “We Are Too Fat to Fight.” He quoted the author in part as follows‘: “1ook‘at the flanking record of the Great. War. when aboilt, the mlddle of hostilities the Domlnlon had 4,452 officers and 104,251 other ranks in France; a. compact fighting machine. "Today Canada has 5,531 olflcers and 31,153 other ranks. The pennsnent. force numbers All Officers and 3,093 other ranks, the rest. are non- permanenl; active mllltln. "In France, ln the midst of the most desper- ate struggle, one officer to every twenty-four lien. Today one offlcer to every seven men. "Too many officers, not. enough men . . . "The reason: the bulky, obsolete, mllltla sys- tem. Canada is too fat. to fight; her mllltnry de- fense forces are scattered in innumerable until. the multitude of which is the army‘: chief week- neu." - . The Vancouver member argued. from the foregoing premises, that there was "conclusive evidence to show that this vast expenditure of ’. public money: could be directed into more use- ul shumels for purposes of defense and tram- L..: * ' Mr. BENNETT was prpmpt to point out the mine, in Hill. conwition. .10 compare W-r,,c°'=- ditions with militia conditions in Canada. he T" aid," "is In iristilt tdthe intelligence of the Can- adian people. mt think l0l'_I. moment ,what_ the a silica in. w did the militia 00t;I¢_Sll1t0Gb¢ln8? “ , ' ~ an -n in row: '- CiA3mflI:I}’°lt:..wibl.lci‘inil°dIo 34:," of lt._T|io Milltin -gggmuo every. portal- ,,.for who to de- , «it 1 l . budrlaotirlhi rowan that I’- 'l"" “'f:£li new Parliament Rt. Hon. R. B. BENNETT has shown that BK Bléiiiil ings account. iii if! it can he sa Gunny bi ception of that in Charlottetown direct taxation. o ftallnm to Socialism, large Editorial Notes ANTOINE c_ TASCHEREAU confesses to re_ much or their entertiunmcnt, and in every case of ulyxedema, where ceiving interest on about $75,000 of Government money..The surprise is that a Government should have such a sum of idle money to place at any- Tbe proposal to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church that ministers receive their stipend from a central fund will be ap- preciated by the smaller Churches which in some ¢”°Y- mmfiked th“ 3 chill!“ Whlch ‘°°“t°d~ cases have been unable to hold regular service t Among the majority of 50 against to which tamed down the taxation privilege of. B. N. A. Amendment Bill in the Senate were child welfare services, or publlc individual in each ca.se.1't ls advis- tliree Liberal Senators, A. C. HARDY, Brockville; "“‘“‘- because "*9"-' W” 13° P0551‘ “M9 V’ 5”“ Wm‘ “mm d°’“‘ °’ T. S. LITTLE, London, Ont., and J‘. J. Huonns, the The C. P. R. owns a. distinct railway over the C. N. R. when it induced the railway com- mittee to approve of its branch railway into the mining district of Northern Quebec. The C.N.R. employed. N0 Orlliofllllllty W35 1059 V9«l'l°"5 5“m°“‘5 5115“ 9-’ "h°““'“" had claims this was an invasion of their right and would entail a loss of revenue to the extent "It may be that capitalism is on the verge of collapse," said Mr. GORDON VV. Scorr, on his BhBl'8Cl’I8X'l5l.lC5 return from London in the “Queen Mary." “I don't know. But as long as it lasts the game must be played according to rules." One of them is are not. that there must be no reduction in interest on basically different bonds without the consent of the holder. That is “Bad” lake“ ’"’"‘ °"°°k' Lam“ why Alberta bonds have been removed from London Stock Exchange. 9% if The London newspapers seem to imply that Rt. Hon. J. H. THOMAS was the victim more of a loose tongue among friends than calculated dis- tlser. , honesty. With an unlimited capacity for friend- ships, “Mr. THOMAS has not always chosen well,” the Daily Telegraph observes, and the London spaper is probably right in its conclusion feet). The highest. navlbable lake “public opinion before long will regard the disclosures by the former Colonial Secretary as an indiscretion and possibly an unconscious in- discretion.” The latest sensation in Quebec politics is the admission of ANTOINE C. TASCHEREAU, bro- ther of Premier TASCHEREAU, and accountant or’ the Legislative Assembly that be since 1923 per- sonally drew for his own benefit the interest on clse gzelvances which the ‘Adminis- Government funds, which he handles as account- ant, the funds be deposited at the St. Pacome branch of the Canadian National Bank of which his son was manager. He admitted he drew as interest approximately ten thousand dollars per annum. Although the Government was not sup- posed to earn" interest on money deposited on current account since the election, the bank insisted upon the money being deposited on sav- Prime Minister KING has not taken the de- feat of the B. N. A. Amendment Bill in the Sen- ate with very good grace. On \Vednesday night he told the House of Commons if they were to play a similar trick with the railway bill they would see where they would get off at. Still what to recalcitrant Liberal Senators? Even cGzan, M.P., is demanding the right to criticize what he considers-Kinds faulty at- tempts at legislation. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce claim that every Board of Trade and Chamber of Commerce in Canada-with the ex- opposed the am- endment to the B. N. A. Act which would give the Provinces the right to impose additional in- Trouble with strikers has for the moment u eclipsed all other worries in France. The Com- munist group whose power in the Government has been increased by the last election, seized the opportunity to bring pressure on Premier Leon Bum. During the election the Popular Front m rty under Bum promised I chdndc-frorn Cap- Itttelin pub- lic works, "lonldng the rlcliBv"t_h5totlon. price er. This personal factor weighedvas little as did mlttco ts unanimous In lts endorse- political considerations in preventing the Oppo- sition leader from speaking out “loud and hold", when he deemed the occasion required it. ment of the pi-lnclple of nmomxx. zatlon. In thui oonnectlon the re- port’. nys:—“We reaffltm the prln. clple of complete tml:lona.1l.mt.lon of radio broadcastlng in Canada. Pending the accomplishment of this, rndlo listeners will continue to be dependent on private statlon.-s for your committee is of the opinion that the fullest co-operation should be malntalned between the corpora- tion and private /stations."- Wlnaor Star. mmdndn of people waited for Japanese officials have made the best of a “'6 blldflel» '10 come down below delicate situation. Troops taking part in the re- cent revolt against the Government have been sent to Northern China where they wlll'be out lmdels *0 Day of mischief and still be of use in furthering They expected a blg cut ln price. Now they are asked on the popular 8. higher prlce. The reason is. lnc ' l. The extra money goes to the Govern. ment.-—not to the ear-makers.-. Financial Post. at Blrmlnghum on “The Finances of a. Great city," Mr. H. Welland. chlef accountant to the was often levelled against local au- liorltles and local government of- tlclals was that municipal affairs were not managed on commercial lines. It would be Impossible to do so. No business man would under- take the provision of maternity and bllll/y of proflt. The provision and nialntenanoe of social services es- sential be the publlc health and communal well-being had only be- come the work of the local author- ity because there were no protlts to be made. It did not follow, however, that business methods were not of rellevelng the publlc purse by efflclent management and the em- ployment of up-to-date machinery. —The Munlelpal Journal. London. It has been one of the distinctive of the English language that it. has accepted con- trlbutlons of value regardlcs of the source. American contrlbutlons more numerous nor from those French. German, scandlnavlan, Ar- able and the Oriental language. The United States may enrich and modify the language, but it will probably remaln the English lan- guage. wherever or by whomever it. may be spoken.—London Adver- Tha highest spot on which human beings live all the year is the vlllage of Gartok in Tibet (H.518 ls Tltlcaca In Peru l!2.466 feel). The highest cltles are La Paz (ll.- 800 feet.) and Qulto (8.343 feet) in South America. The clolster of the Bnlnt. Bernard Pass in Switzerland is the hlizl-rest. spot. in Europe where people live all the year round (8.- 111 feet.).—Montrenl Star. It does not appear that the Arab leaders even pretend to have pre- trstlon could redress. They do not say that anything has happened to violate the undertaking elven in the Balfour Declaration and the Mandate that "nothing shall be done which may prejudlcc the civil and rellglous rights on non-Jewish communltles ln Pa.'cst.lne.“ The present disorders and threats to paralyze the state are like similar disorders before. almcd at. the one thlng which cannot be changed. the basis of the policy on which Brltaln holds the Mandate. This happens. too at the very time when every consideration urges that Arabs and Jews should and could lite and work together. The pollcy of the National Home brlnglng tn the capital. the lntelltxenoe. the nboundlng vltallty of Jewish lmmlgi-allon, has enrlch- ed not only Palestine but lta Arab lnahbltan‘ themselves; and so it will even more as the work of de- vslopmcn‘, for which there are mmy rich opportunltlu. proceeds. The Arabs. were they wise, would to make the most of the energy whlch is being poured Into the agriculture. the industries. and the ports of Palestine.--Manchester Guardian.- control oatloiuliution arthfiufir-of France,’ ‘dun. “*- -four hau ‘Bum now haul, and i.'."'if.¢‘."_§iii& or Iii!“- ‘ * i =2.:-..-- e .u l ."“'7' '°“"- amine but he ;thelr werto Big . mmum, Jul the . _. .. Y bllylns their new 1936 motor cars. lrrltabl well and so allow storage of fat. This ailment ls known as larval myxe- deme or lnsufflclent. thyroid and in addition to symptoms outljned above there is low ‘ , cure, cold hands and feet. Dr. .A. .1. E. Akeln-ltll. iucnulml N. Y.. in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease declares that business-like common sense. Fhr years we have been rtlnz from the United States several classes of goods "Made ln Japan." some of these are classified as sub- ject. to "dumping duty" restrictlona. There to no objection to um. But. those restrictions are confined by statute within certain bounds which even otllclal arrogance has no right. to abrogate or exceed. Take one article, used ln almost every home ln Canada. It cost; ln Japan about $3 per t.housa.nd. Im- ported law the Unltcd states fmlght, insurance, duty, sales on. dealers’ profits, and other inciden- tal expensa are added. They are then sold at wholesale, all over the States. for $9 per thousand. For years these have been admit- ted to Canada at regular rate of duty. 30%, plus 6% sales and 3% excise rues. That; is what we have pald up to the wlnter of 1935. Under the new “world trade ex- pansion" admlnlstratlon, the same item la thus dealt wlth: Duty 30% on $9, $2.70. The new trade ex- pansion special (or dumpinfli duty $18.36. These added together total $21.06. Sales tax 6% and Excise 3% is then computed on this that cost; $9, duty and dumplnc duty $21.06, making the total oomblnea extortion of $30 on an arblcle cost- them ls no psychosis (fear at an ailment). there la a. apeclflc mental condltlon as shown by the martial and physical backwardness, and an ever present feeling of tlrcdnss. As these patients reallze that they are a. lllstle backward in everything. they are apt to be depressed and e. The most frequent type of mental disturbance in these cases is where there seems to be a combina- tion of dellrlous lmaglnlngs with hallucinations (when the patient thinks he see; or hears things that do not exist). With this is a cloud- ing of the consciousness so that the patient has difficulty placing himself, things, or other people, and he may believe he ls being per- Dr. Akelaltls further states that this lack of thyroid juloe may start a mental disturbance in the ner- vous type of lndlvldual. "Deflnlto improvement occurs In my ‘em; 3 mg 1 ' under treatment with thyroid ex- §:,‘:g,oi', ‘$5.... g°;$,'f‘:f.:",;°°,°xsfi;',t_ tract and the treatment should be ‘men; go camdm “Cavalca.de" asks: "Why .13 it of- ten posslble to obtain oircllnary justice In regard to the payment. or duties without employing a political thyroid because these patients are extremely sensitive to thyroid ex- tract." When the Symptoms of lm.yxo- demo. (backwardness mental and physical, tiredness and overweight) are prominent, it is not hard to tell what is wrong. However there are tlon. "Cavalcade" further asks: "Why 3 ditterem rate of duty is collected from one importer than from an- other for the same article?" The Departmental answer is that other lmportatlons “have been treated the same way as your lmporl.a.t.lou.” If this ls so I join “Cava.lca.de" in the query: How do those other lmpor- tors sell the same artlcles at the sanieprlcenstheysoldthemayear ago after paying added duties, sales and excise taxes of several hundred per cent? The inference is under- standable. "Cavalcade" then asks: “Why one cannot. get an intelligent acknow- ledgement of a letter written to the govemment seeking lntorma.tlon'i"' I ask the question ln ded form: Why can one not get an tn- telllgent answer, touching the ques- tlon at. Issue ln lts concrete form, instead of evasive excuses or irrele- vant explanatloris whluh ne1t.hcr juetltles the action nor clarlfles the sltuatlon? The figures I glvo are not in actual amount of invoice but. rated on an import. of one t.houaa.nd on some basis. nor must. my protest. be mlstuken to refer ln any way to our local customs ofllulula. They con- sclentlously do their duty to the de- partment, and our intercourse with them, without exception, has been that of the hlgheat. standard of courtesy. I doubt if any service La Canada enjoys a. more gentlemanly and efficient. offlclal stall. Theer are other publlc abuses and lt la comforllng to mid a. movement towards exposure. tlsm. neuralgia. pain in the lowest part of splne. sluggish llver. consti- pation. extreme mental sluggish- ness in backward children. where the underlying cause is due to the fact. that there is not sufflclent thyroid julce being manufactured (myxedema) to tlthla polsons of these nllrm-!\l‘lL% off the Past, ruined Illon Helen lives, Alcestls rlses from the shades; Verse calls them forth; 'tl.s verse that gives Immortal youth to mortal maids. Soon shall 0b1lvlon‘s deepening vell Hide all the peopled hills you see. The gay, the proud, while lovers hall These many summers you and mo. W. B. Lmdor. Spoken From Experiences I am. 811', etc., (Mm md Empire) LEWIS P. TANTON. Miss Agnes lvlacplmll tlon tn - the House of Commons ioniigduca to Lord D3rl1ng"S Humor one dollar the Government‘: ap~ —-—-—-— proprlallon of $150,000 for cadet tralnlng tn the schools of Canada, was rejected on :1 vote of eight. yees to 109 mys. Among those who sp:i'.e agaiiist the motion was Mrs. ucorgc Bl:-.c1;, who succee‘ ‘ her liusbnnd as member for the Yukon. From her long residence in that north country she realizes the value of cadet. training. In fact, as she rernarkcd. many of the speakers on the subject did not speak from praotlcnl experience. Mrs. Black contlnued: "I speak from experience. because I have ralsed three sons to man- hood. They have taken thelr plows In the world as good, decent, law- abldlng, middle-class citizens, the best. class we have. much of those boy! had seml-mllltary framing and I sbtrlbutc the fact that my boys have done comfortably well In tho. world to the foot. that they won (Toronto Globe) Lord Darllng, xvetlred Judge of the English High Court. of Justlce. whose death at the age of 36 years ls reported from London, may have owed something of his longevlty to his lrrepremlble sense of humor. Ills Lordship was the author of several volumes of light. verse, and durlng his occupancy of the Bench his count was llzhted constantly by unexpected flashes of his wll. Judlclal humor in Int to be cruel. but. Lord Darling seldom mode a. prisoner the butt. of his jokes . An overoonfldent lawyer or a pompous witness, however, was pretty sure to drew his shafts. It. is recorded that, during I our- hln t.rlI.l baton hlm, counsel was enmlnlng I witness of I butl- culu self-uscrtlve type, who por- alsted tn unworthy u to his poi-umnllty. buntaau position. ._o mldd.lema.n?" I ask the some quea-‘ l nail-mllltuv it . Even ‘Wm, W cm. manmmt place at resldoi‘-ice etlo.. with the '9’ 9*‘ as “N?! “"‘“‘“"l- W‘ “W7 M‘ m‘““*1 '°,?,_;:l£1:,n,.,u :m)'wd W, rum-nmnlfs uuodlacrouttype trunk‘ um d".1°’m’n" 0‘ ‘M mu.” 1" we thuuapg: founh Offlifll ‘lid hid {DEM 316!!! 310!!! "“W°‘°”*l°4*b°‘l'* W‘ tholu-mllonitfkouttovbmfloo bm‘m up in 1.1,.“ gm, em.“ tune, lad Dullnc leaned forwud, ma tactic: rmnpllv gultouloklr ‘‘‘"''°‘' W """" "“ °°"" saucer .1 .v.'nu¢hu (bib. Prtnau vnu . Itmmv - mu,‘ .,.¢ I0.I&Ol0.%hIl|f»h0b07IInd "4“‘,§VP’Y'°“'¢"°9°dh|lflg,'3"g.¢.,)b.‘ °“°"“""°°°“°""‘° ‘m’ ‘ wuhrodmolir-iuuwundonctu r°...~.=°:*.“-';..%'..°*..°'*-.°.‘:.v:.~...*; ’":.‘.“.:.'.:.:.'.'.‘.:":'..'°.:'.“"n «m-- «o -w --,,,,.,,,.. wound not only acnb1e.but mm impunity for him: wu'nio only “'°°°'““‘""° 2:’ 3: IbOvoto.'l'hI tnturoofclmdadoo Hut .5, .1 ubonxttn boys and of the whlchbthonutof 9,. wyllldthoilboylllld fit tluolnrdflh .ji_art.lce.xo mind an lllflfiolflfill of the futurogvtlll without having bald t oulywtut we m|hot!ull.mtlt wtnlncvlut.lineo"tba-uvm; tlt'I'dlld|III\Iwh1n|‘lIoIflQ!¢'00~. -" , . No More Ha - M Id 7 Y Br I can-pond-mnvmc ¢\I.|||lv in 3 Ill, nth-uiauwhmod toluyunluhlnc. -—-L--—-' . . ? flllltd nu (mduIv:"fI&BI'lt8ln), ii ii i’ »‘~.: . If UI& mI’ ‘ ‘ 3'51‘! I0? I31?" I ‘ .lh-quuwuuuthng. IIYHIIMAN & Pi-avlnchlM'alIII!II— lawsrfiuunstnot I Nation Alive thoDeoplou,¢.|uou.n.m.. 00., LIMITED The Gnu-Wedlllo . _..—__:—..— IT T’ E. R. Bro Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis w&Son Charlottetown 144 Richmond St. ‘DIllIIEAlIIII@WIDlYr- IAIOIIIIAEWIAAIBSOUII IUYAI Applientam inauld L I VAIDIN -an-r.nu. McG|LL UNIVERSITY Roccnllyonlnvgodfnproofhulldlngfluotouililymodun oqolpuunl. For women Iudonh, resident and non- .5c. B.Com.) Ind In the Faculty of Mid! A-lliultodnumhn ol Scholariilpu and B|IlIlll¢I- be mada early. Pa tn information I-«Idea um-In: Ipply no ('-A . nu MONTREAL for dune! In line Faculty of Art that. young gnu had I far 1118118!’ nutrltlve value for animals than mgture grasp, and («hit if if‘. were dried utlncally tr. lost practically none of its teedlne value. Slnoo then engineers have been gtudylng the problem of maklnz u-iuicisi ‘lanky’ at a prlAceAw2J11gh gguld stuns. Last. month I practical de- manst.n.t.lon was given It. a. farm near smttmd-on-Avon of B dry!-DE apparatus which fulfils thls condi- tlon The cost of the dried you mule by this nppantun worked out At about zlatonnndltwas fed in place of cakes and meals ooatlnl £1 I hon. At the farm where the demonstration was held. hay-mob lng will be dispensed with cntlruly thls year. Drler gnu wlll supply all the requirements of the cattle as regards concentrated foods.‘ and no cakes will be purchased Government ' Might Control Smuggling (C. P. By Guudtnab spdohl Wire) OVITAWA, June 6—6lr Juno: Miwarlen, Groundhog Climbed A- Tree (Peterboto Ebmmlllefl The Murmurs corresponded 0! the Examiner has started 5 blt 01 discussion by a report whlch 53“ 5 _ "“ could and did cllrnb I tree. some of the people in PM- boro admitted they had seen a good many groundh085- 0'19 mm “M had formed for some time said he an seen u. in-oundhos on 5 mm? of I rail fence. but never had ha seen one In 9. tree. that 15 if the tree were straight. \lp- ‘ But our Marmara coire-9901155‘ nwthoK1'0Illldh°sUl>8ll‘9°Wm“ dog on guard, and the thlnll "5 right in front of the ciiumli and who‘: more the rector of '3)‘ church was there as a witness. 80 what in to be done about ll? Those who say that the zWlllld' no; will always run for his hole In the ground must. admit that W use for s groundhog cllmblns I W’ in fllrly well establlshed. When 3 bull gets after 8 man that man 0811 cllmb 3 tree in a remarkable way although he may never have d°“° such . thing in years. Perhaps ll ll something the same when a do! starts utter a eroundhnz. Am; about it if you wish. but ll 3”“ commissioner of the on Royal c cdlan Mounted Police, :‘°3",,,‘flf‘y""_‘},§,.,,‘,‘;§f, Z‘, ’,",,“.."§?,$oi told the Senate buiklnu and cigar: ml , meroe lf New in and Nov: Scott: liquor commlsslons bought rum wholcslle from the West Indies and sold it. as cheaply as possible this "would have I fulr chance of reducing llquor smug- gling considerably.” D can OW!’- Wlth 5 number of clarifying amendments the blll Ill approved. The . C. II. P. preventive sar- vlco wl In the not three in drlvo on liquor muss forccdthc on tromflto no I hKt::ivsrln¢lonotorA.D.Ilcfi.do hr rule and Thin Poovlfi A combination IIP’“"'" nlubbll In the trcntmrnt”"|:‘l_ when to -n l"' .7] III ' MACS Inlr lecturer “ ‘n. ggggon CPI! Iulr " An 0! pl ""3; .3 “Tuna u-W" 1 IN’ N“ ""°,':u. 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