knowvoucha!fl€?S8P2E2!$39£55§3§§YE§§ lliE clunlorrnowll GUARDIAN o Yleo-IrooifloIt-J, I, In: Secretnrr-Lieub-Col. l). l. Ioeilllfl‘. n. l0. - Editor oml lounging Director-J. I. A 1 norlnte Editors-frank Burnett Walker 1nd I), K. Cunlo Morning Unify wounded i587) I540 per yeu (Ill odvoncel delivered. 9.50 per yelr (in Advnlte) mailed In (‘undo and United Stolen. Fyg-mwt-W, (‘hector S. IeLnrO, ll. P. - - FRIDAY. AUGUST I‘. 1982 LIBERAL VOLTL‘ FACE While the Prime Minster of cannula was IIQQOIIBHHZ at the Imprrra} Conference in the inter- ests of the Canadian lumber and agric-ultzlra‘. Premier Harrington, of Nov: iscotia, also expressed the belle! ‘that the results would be of mat- erial assistance in reviving the lum- ber mdustry in. that Province. “In uecent years," he soye. "this im- fnd-lszrles, the Libcrsllponant pmvmd‘, mam“), h“ ASmZ-fatfun of Queen's County heldibeen swnfly hmdlcapped by Eur A‘ that rllectzng Mr. W. 51m com petition and it would seem Dr‘ Cyrus hracmnanlthst th‘s grossly unfair competit- . m. deprecatory terms olden Wm new be w . ‘use exwn e P"'re hflrr-ster waawontroned... - mpiied that * p115 d‘: g £00 hard Moreover, Mr. P‘. M. sclanders, Commissioner of the st. John Hoard he was Qlyiflg prac- h, “MEI “press” the opinion ma‘ , 2n return for most worms offered by the ' T13 sol". of frequently dur- Sovlet lumber imports to Great Britain will be effectively restrain- ed and that when the full details, :0! the various trade pacts are made? I'M‘ and was giwniknowu "more benefit will result tol mecca in the cob‘ w‘, contemporary. _ w: contemporary‘ s are now tha: Carr‘ ilariy ;n the not been‘ J-ivded, The Brlpl ‘Z agrpears, ‘were the “KY5 Z.("€i'E, and Mr. Ben- . made stiffer terms fivlth them! Mr. Bennett want- rms for Canadian lum- hard and long for "c his critics, both _ and the United . were doing their best to render hLs efforts null and vozd. despkc tremendous havlng inserted in mutual lmdcrtaking that no sort of State aia, would be permitted to inter‘ c rvith value of the prefe. re: granted. This meant Russia. in ad-lztion, the l0 per cent ffmferetlce on Canadian lumber tvhrh wctlZd othelwvise have expired in November, was retained. Sprll-IC-smen for the lumber inter- ests .n Quebec and New Brunswklk have expressed dissatisfaction that a higher preference was not ob- tained, but Premier Taschereau, who voices the complaint on bc- gun s. Quebec, makes ‘at clear um g fully realized, the Prime Mulls- pr; difficulties. "I ll-m willing to ijuaft," says Mr. Taschereau frank- ’, “that Premier Bennettvand his ‘pfleogues did what they could. the @' m” “mm not cam then-award to reaping the benefits of the pm." mat pclnt. as the ‘Ibwnw Igliobe has shown in statements wushed 1n mo“ columns recent- h, was for an absolute embario ‘m fiussian lumber and other goods en- jermg Great Britain. While the Bennett, Government Id not obtain what it might have ptained but for the antlzonlstn [British lumber interests and the lampaign waged in support 0! ‘We kade by partisan newspapers pm! politicians here, it did, never- Iheless, succeed ifl Oblfllllmi Wm‘ popcrete advantages for the Can- jdum lumber irldustry- T1115 15 mogul; from the comments of M1‘- ueorge Nicholson, one of the Can- bdian lumber advisers at, the Con- krenm preference." Mr- mhopm "is, "ls not as amt ll he had hoped for. Nevertheleu ym; the preference granted and pdcquate control over Russian sm- Parts established. the Canadian hmber trade can, without question. ggsln at least a substantial POW” If. the market we formerly eni0y€<‘1-" je adds: _‘_‘It was never expected that Canada could step into the Brit- lsh market to any extent in 1932. because it is well known that the stocks of lumber impfmcd mm the United Kingdom during 193i and up to the present in 1932 had over-saturated the market. and a will our. some time to liquid- ate thcsr- stocks. "At, the same B.‘ Wm’! U"! Excr-ptlml pr srilciallv sawn stocks zfrnm the Pacific Coast, Canada l5 not in a position to ship large quantities of lumber fh's year. for fwn rcaFons: stocks are low. and. bccrlusc of the market hav- lng lrcn virtually closed to 115. tho stocks flvflilflble have been in tlu- mnln sown in Canadian and .U.!= A. sHnn/jards, but, in 1933 and ovrfniulv in 1934 tvc should, lln- rlcr fair competition and with mo, prr-forcnrc granted. br- nblc m. rr-rn. r flu.- ll:l‘f~l Kinzdom market in c. substantial wav!’ 1 As Mr. Bennett stated '1 a new light. its. ‘ldoea not contend that it has ae- kured all the odvantages it desired- New Brunswick than is now gener- ally credited." at the Conference closing, "this Count?! No one hoped for that. We were n0; ffepflfed to press for conces- slols so out of step with the tra- ditional fiscal policy of the United Kingdom that they would endkhler the agreement arrived at." There, in a nutshell, is the situation. And the surprisg is, not that there is disappointment in some quarters, but that the benefits to Canada. and particularly to the Maritime Provinces, have been so substantial- Tl-lis also appears to be the view of the Munchester Guardian, spok- esman of the free-trade element in Great Britain, a newspaper antag- onistic to Premier Bennett and the one to which our local contempor- ary seems to have transferred the allegiance ft formerly gave to U18 Toronto Globe. Summing up the Conference results, the Manchest- er Guardlan says: "Mr. Bennett has no cause for regrets, he bus 5ecured u: open market for the whole of Canada's products." Prom a. source so orthodox, this should make an excellent text for and Cyrus Mbculillan and editorial comments by our contemporary! GOOD ADVICE Timely advice to Canadian agri- cultural produoers, now looking for- new trade agreement with Great Britain, is given by the Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, High Commis- sioner for Canada in London. Mr. Ferguson advises Canadians to be more careful in packing the products which they send to the United King- dom market. He stresses the sb- solute necessity for uniformity of product and continuity of supply. He also suggests the establishment over- seas of a. number of cold storage warehouses to preserve the perish- able produce of Canada and have it. on hand when required. Mr. Ferguson refers to the keen competition of other Dominion-s 1n the United Kingdom market and declares that Canadian commodities have not always been so packed as u, .11“ up vol-y well in comparison with those from other parts of the commonwealth. ‘This is a Bitllltim ‘which our producers and bhlppefs must deal with unmedlately- a The Canadian High Commissions tpredicts great advantwses a»! I 1'0"!" of the Conference agreements, but points out tun immediate results L-hould not be expected. The chan- Inel for a new trade current, he ‘says, has been dul. but the stream fmust still be directed into 1t. SIGNIFICANT It is significant that followinfl ‘the agreements reached at the Imperial Conference, farm produce figures showed an almost immediate favorable reaction. Montreal re- iupward move in butter and egg prices. Doubtless there will be m‘n- or fluctuations, but it ls i-easonsble to believe the general upward trend will continue, NOTES BY THE WAY A: lent one question has been definitely settled by m: Imperial Economic Conference. Oulwa folk have learned hclv lo pronounce "Newfoundland." rollouzzclation of this name has long been a matter for dispute. There were two dlfilillcl schools of thought. One gYOllp p“! all the accent on the second syl- lable, “found? The‘ others illslszcd in accepting the “New” with which the word begins. The pronouncia- tions ranged all the way from “Ne-Ffilllbllilund" to “NEW-fund- lund." The presence however, of delegates from the oldest dominion has definitely settled the qllCSZlOH. Those who have listened to the pub- lic utterances of l-lon. L. E .El1lt.‘!‘- son, KC, Iliinlszer of JUIZiLC of Newfoundland, have found that all separate words. Listening m him, one gained a. new appreciation of the symbolism of the name. The Jewish people are vcr)‘ proud of the progress they arc maiizlag in Palestine. Acc ding to reports at the World Jewish Conference being held at Geneva, Palestine is the only place when: the Jewish com- munltlcs are flourishing spilttually and materially-z Ever since the war _ the Jews have bean trying to make headway in the lfolj." Land. Going in under the pfOI/ECUOI! of the Union Jack, they have born given a chance to develop the coullzry, To the Cilll- adian Jews, Palestine would EFF-in a rocky, barren land, But ma Jews who have imlnigrrlzctl to the tcrritory- had been living under dis- tressing circumstances. For {hem the change is beneficial. They have made advances, although they have 5W1 E 1011B will‘ to go :0 be on an equal footing with Chnntiial: J'".'."rj.'. The Imperial Conference just closed has been a success. It has produced agrcelncnis which promise Substantial benefits to all parts of ‘the Empire, but its main achieve- ment P185 btren in the establishment of a. principle which, if publicly en- dorsed, will govern the economic-dc- velopment of the Enlpirc through- out a long future. Representatives oi‘ the Ynltcd 8d that the hrbitl-atinn trlbtlllzll in slst of mcnlbcrs sclcctcd from Com- monwealth Slatcs, representatives of the Irish Free State Government, the syllables arc given equal s:ress,, Mr. Emerson very distinctly pro-‘ nounces it "Nclv-found-lalld," giv-‘ ing each syllable its full value, 0x- ‘ actly, in fact as if it were three Kingdom have constantly mzlintzlin- ‘ the Anglo Irish dispute should con- ‘ rm: crmntorrzrowu GUARDIAN I w; Jamel . Borion. M1). FOOD CAUSES A LOT OI" TROUBLE When you think of all the trouble that can come to you just because of the food you eat, you may be wondering if in the days to come research physicians may be able to supply food in such a way that all the necessary nourishment will be provided without any of the tmub; lcs that. now arise. What are these troubles? Indigestion, ulcer of the stomach, stones in gallbladder, stones 1n kidneys, inflammation 0f intestines, appendicitis, inflammation o! the kidneys, epilepsy, overweight, hard- ening of the arteries-high blood pressure-autolntoxlcatloh or pois- oning from the wastes of foods 1n the large lnzestlne, and .a great many other ailments. Now naturally your common sense tells you that food is not ‘really to blame; food supplies all itne necessary forces to maintain health and preserve life. Your body is made up from the same mater- , lals that are in the food you eat. * Why then does food give us all ‘the above mentioned troubles? In the great majority of ‘cases these troubles are due to Our own tlloughtlessncss or carelmness. We were givei a body that is capable of withstanding many hardships, I and much neglect, but after all lL ls not entirely proof against some of our everyday‘ habits. Your doctor will tell you that careless habits of eating—tuo much food, not enough food, eating too fast, eating too much fat food at the end of a meal instead of the he- ginning, not chewing the food, not eating enough fruit, not establish- ‘ing a regular intestinal habit, thaving meals irregularly usually {too close together, are among the imany reasons that the food gives itrouble in the body. ‘ Life is maintained in a healthy state by seeing that. the right food .1..d in the proper amounts is patch daily. Dr. Alexis Carrel has kept cells alive for fifteen years by ,s'lmply' giving them a little food jlnatcrlal (salt solution; daily, and lsccing tha; the wastes from the cells is removed faction of the (illlly. , The reason that man has trouble ills llla: by using his brain he has been able to develop all kinds of devices to save him from working, The King Called ' Longhand (Winnipeg Free Press) I mum; gmong the foundation stones of a palace uncovered in Pgysepolls, an American expedition h“ gome up on a. document of Artaxerxes 1., a Persian Emperor of 2,400 years ago, whose identity holds some fascinating mysteries. m, Breasted 01 the Oriental insti- hlte of Chicago has not yet receiv- ed the full text of the document. but he described it as a record of the completion of the Hail 0f a Hundred Columns. 3W much this discovery pro- mises to reveal of the history o! Soon, by a righteous Judgment, in nnglent, Persia is wholly conjecture. the llna of course, but the possibilities are 0! hi8 deicvndlhl PFOBHIY- W" FROM “THE TASK" on every heart Are sown the sparks that kindle nery war; Occasion needs but fun them ind they blaze. Cain had already shed l. brother's blood; The deluge washed it out, but left unquench ‘ The seeds of murder in the breast . or mm. exciting enough to stir scholars the world over. Those who take delight 1n playing “m: the riddles of all-f tfqulty never have been satisfied with the bare facts in the text found The first artificer of death . . . Who forced the blunt and Wi- ll!!- bloodled steel _ ~ To a keen edge and made it bright 5° m» ‘and Willi coll-ll flrmness.,lroln using his body. Although he further Speeches by Mess-g Leai ha” mamtamed in“: n" wndiiivl-S i llocslft use his body he feeds it as should be attacllcrl lo llle appoillt- much as he would need if he were ment of a Court of Arbitration. In I really working hard. It is this other words, Ml". do Valera llnsmnuscd food, the products from it, hitherto insisted that zllc Free Slate l that cause nlost of the trouble. should be left absolutely frcc to‘. Thole are only two things to do name its representatives from any to prevent trouble. First, eat a lit- "Wnlly it chooses. It has now been U"? 195$ f°°d everyday. or fast oc- intlmatcd officially zllu: the Irish l "asimlfllly. Second work or play position docs not llcccsszlrily mean ,ha"d°' and burn up this extra food. that the Frcc State would "go" out- i side the Cnmmcuvvcnllll for its ZIP-fl Wlntces. This cxlalllllnfion of the . attitude of the Free State Gotcrn- ‘For A FIVE-Day Wcek ment 1s highly significant. It will _—* at once inspire public confidence (Toronto Globe) that conflict over the choice of ar-l out of the crisis M the presen‘ bitratol-s can be alloyed zllld that in idcpressim is emefgillg in the Unit- this 1118mm. the gum, faith 0t they States a definte movement for Irish may be wholly rolled upon, ‘a m9 day week. If there is overpro- ____ duction or underconsumption-as is Just as w“, gesture and mchlundoubtedly the case-why not word of Mr. Bcllllctt, says Iicvcllc- Xvdllce pfOdllction by ShDYWDiHE U19 merit. is Subject to spying by ¢,,,,-|‘“'<>1'ki11c time of employees and thus adlan adversaries of the PYOKDCUDU- ‘Sllféading the work among more 15; pony of which he is me Chmm ipcoplc? ‘That is the logic on whim pion, so the English (ivloguteg, with ithe "lllvcmcfli 15 ba-Wd- Governor their lender, must contend with puh- Wmnm‘ of New Hamlcshire hi5 59' llc opinion in thCLr country, 1L isicurcd a, sympathetic hculzng from reasonable to believe that, fruln bc- Preside“ H°°"e"- Bml several do fore the time of their departure lpartmcnts M the Gmlelnmelll» have from London, {my have been ‘adopted the principle. agreed on certain collcc .0115 101m] A meeting of 100 bush-leg exec- made to the Dominiolls, but lllc “twp-ll emlwmists- Tabor leader-S and probabilities are that, under pres- ‘Qlhcls ill Boston adopted the plan 5117c bl’ their associates from over- seas British countries, they lmvc 1n principle. It is estimated that the 0.000.000 unemployed in the United been obliged, at the same tinlo ;1§[SUIKCS could be at once reduced by selves than there wasuny intention 0f giving them at first, originally intended to be, 01' twenty-four hours. the last few weeks, in consultation as he has been with leading men from all parts of til: Elnplrc. The Ottawa. Journal saw: To Canada's 'Pli_lnc Minister goes the palm for I brevity. At the luncheon in honor of the Imperial Economic Conference , delegates given by the City of 09m. heads of delegations: preceded Mr, Bennett with spccchbs. The Confer- encc hnd born cnllrcl to meet at three o'clock. Mr. Brnnctt rose to speak ct 2O n" ngi< y) Hwy-w A; 531ml‘. 11¢ Sat down, yet he had said they have asked for more for thpm. to show themselves more generous than they 39909“! bl‘ Splpfldlllf; ‘the work in this mamlcr. The plan would involve reduction ,of hours and reduction of pay for Whose now employed, though it is zmpnd that pay rat-s would u]. As Prime lllinlstcr Mr. Bennett is iilnaicly be restored, 11151‘, as those ‘equm-‘d i0 5W and dictate a grout ‘working eight hours now deal and think more in the course igllllcffllly as much as or more than , That hellhfly Were paid when they worked should use as few words as possiblg i for ten hours. Plants which havg is therefore a necessity at all times, i already receive introduced the shorter and it has been especially so during I Working week claim their output has -ln fact, been increased by reason iof the greater leisure and freshness jof the workers. The whole scheme sounds idealis- t'c, wlith a strong flavor of reason. It is the claim of some modem economists, such as Stuart chase, that the present depression is due ports, appearing dolly in Th6 W811i the Chateau Laurier on Wcd- in large measure, to the displace. lGlllfdlilll, Blow an increasingly flcsdcy. Mayor Allm and eight menf, of men by machinery in pro- much very nicely and as the time indicates, very quickly. 1t was, ac. cording to report, the shortest pub- lic spccch the Prime Minister has ever made books. who was Al-taxcrxes 1.? Tile} 1°!‘ W81‘- son and successor of that mighty] - - - - - - - conqueror Xerxes, who was mur-IBW 15 "1 m- 0!‘ “n it be" u" dered by his vizier in a plot w! ‘huk was, comm, of the Persian Em.| Of rational discussion, that o. nun p,” The “on. 15 ma; when Arm,“ Should wage war with my or with erxes came to the throne he lllFl 11° pretence meted me intrigue agams, m5 i Of provocation given or wrong sus- late father. and then. in a band- tam”- to-harld time in the halls of the “Y” ‘m’ “"1"” 1"‘ “ll palace killed the treacherous vi- 1mm u“ chm“ z," “Qd ma, dignnaws sons, , Of poverty, that thus he may pro- l-lut ._l t. m” anzhae: gefrtfrsmoriog thuectfggg His thousands, weary of penurfous . t, m ch i 1 1m’- : hisffttegrrfes Olflarthe sicorc ‘d’? fell: A splendid oppommty m die? generous character the Bible bears _w1111am cowpen if... AEGRST 26. lész u i ' "m: new MARITIME TEA "SAMBA YELLOW LABEL It draws quickly - It has rich strength — IT HAS DELICIOUS FLAVOUR! . and is most economical, for the price is only 40c per 1 lb. packet. Recommends \ Union Commercial College sufficient testimony in the story, iii his cup bearer, Nehemiah, relates Airdromes For concerning the King's efforts w aid the Babylonian Jews who dur-l SCh00lb0yS (Mall and Empire) ing bis reign sought to return i0! their native land. As the narrative: begins, fn the second chapter of‘ As September draws nearer, ti. the Book o; Nehemiah; j thoughts of youth turn to the 0pen~ And it came to pas: in the ‘lug of school. Promotion in new month of lglisan. in tghektgehiilgti: forms is always an incentive to re- Yeal‘ °5 AT ‘Memes ‘~‘ 3- “j llewed application on the part of Zggel ‘£33k zrgufig: Mnbeefgifi, 21:3,; students. Improvements to the_ it mm, the king, Nu“. I had my ‘ school buildings also provide an at- ; traction. There are those who re- been beforctime sad in his pres- member, for instance, the compel-a- ence. wherem" (‘he king ‘Md ‘mm -' tlvely long distances the rural youth . h ' i U1’ f t . . d. 22mg’ $05, as, ‘is? 5132c“ :11“. !was compelled to negotiate on foot is nothing else but sorrow of iin order to reach the modest heart. . . _ ‘schoolhouse provided by the school such a" the mm‘ m mo“ few: section in which his home wpsulo- sentences of the scllcitudc Artax-Z Baked’ and me excitement can“ “m” 5h°_“'°d m" sewams‘ But. by the appearance of the first pu. the question remains. was be the‘ p“ riding to school on a bicycle’ u“ same as Ahasucrus, and can he be 5mm o; trudging 81mg on ‘on identified with the monarch W110, The“ came me day h, urban cm‘; listened to the tales in "The fhous-i res. as wen as m rum; plums‘ when and and 0M Nlshlo?" I“ m“ “a”, the trustcesdonnd it necessary to 11E WOHYd bc i116 husband 0f m”. provide facilities for caring for pu- renowened Scheherazade, the wily‘ pus- bicycyes during hours o; study ‘Queen who saved hcr lift‘ by Te‘, Of late years occasionally a student lating the stories. This would mean. 0g me h1g1; 54311091 m- cgueglgce m- the 011911181 Scheherazade pT@°'-‘d', stltute has driven his automobile “fir, to school, but this class has not counterpart who told the tales been sumcienuy numerous to fie- about. Calipll Hfllllli flI-R-QShldJ ate a demand upon the trustees for who died in Bagdad in 809 A. D. parking spaces. One of the claws to the identity‘ Now comes a. report that English of Artaxerxes with Ahnsucrlls is schools are furnishing private u“- found in the “Tifiings of Flnviufiidromcs for the ’ " of Josephus, Jewish historian who‘ students who fly to school. This is lived about so A. D. But there is by no means a general practice. It o Persian tradition which records‘ may, however, be an earnest of the that the tales of the "Arabianlday whexryoung people, having be- Nights" were writ-ten for Princess come expert in the air, will fly from Homal, wife of Bahman Ardashir,‘ their homes in one town to the high. or Artaxerxcs 1., who was also: school or university in another, dis- known as lpngimrlnug because his tance being given little considera- right hand was longer than llis'tion, owing to the saving of time. left. The Princess Homai is a half‘ A greater consolidation of rural mythical personage with a reputn- schools than under present condi- tlon as a great builder, and is l-c- tlcns would also be made possible- ferred to by an ancicllt PerslanlThe future. no doubt. hold-s many writer as Shahrazad-perhaps that changes that the development o! same Scheherazade known to pos-' "Yin! Wm help $0 illlllillfllé- tcrlty as daughter of the grand vizier and wlfc of the Sultan of t the Indies, The Book of n=tll~.l~‘re- fcrs to Ahnsuerus as be who "reigned from lndiacvcu unto Ethiopia," and recalls , a certain‘ night on which the King could ed by more than 1.200 years In Not With "The man I marry must be a man in a. million," declares a film actress. Not, as we might suppose. a man with one. A company selling automatic vending machines in England in- sures the purchaser against all loss from slugs or foreign coins. not sleep and he commanded to bring the book of records of the chronicles, and they u-crc read be- IOYG the King." If he yvag in the habit of passing sleepless night; in such a. manner, could be not. have been the monarch who heard the tales Scheherazade told for a. thousand and one nights? Histor- ians of a more practical mind scoff at any connection between Artax- erxes and the monarch of the Book of Esther, but more romantic scbo~ lars will await the text cf the do- cument just found in Porscpalic 1n the hope that it may contain a. clew to this riddle. . kt‘ DR. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. Noted Physioim treated successfully and obtained permanent cures ol Siomlch Conditions such as Indiges- tion, Dyspepill, Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gootrio Dh- tress and many other Ill- rnents peculiar to the atom- ach with u. pencrlptloowhich we have procured and sell under the name of Ivan: Stomach Mixture. We alone hove the lole "shin on this prescription 1nd since selling it have re- ceived nulnerou telllmonhls from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your ohm- ach. Serious conditions are likely to arise if you allow yourself to lopn into a ductlon, which, 1n the past, has been overcome in the personnel by (“Kim/WY of’ new industries, such as motor manufacture and then radio-making, wh’ch in turn absorb- ed the surplus of workers at inter- vols. The new idea might overcome the present surplus in large measure, but it could not be adopted witb-. out whole-hearted support n-Qml employers and workers, and the abandonment of the old fixed ideas atom‘: "M" °' mu“ an" that a man has a. vested right, to his Job, irrespective of what happens to the other fellow. Is the world! ripe for m ' Get a Bottle today. Price 85c. GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY 1 River Road , Schenectady, N. Y" T0 WHOM IT MAY CONCERN : I would recommend the Union Com- mercial College to those desirous of receiv- ing a thorough business training and there- by filling themselves for a business career- Since receiving my diploma from the Union Commercial College I have been employed by the General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and my work has always proved very satisfactory. Needless to say this is due to the excellent training I re- ceived under Principal Morarfs personal supervision. Yours very truly, (Syd) HELEN A. DOYLE Modern courses. Two certified teachers of Pitman and Gregg Shorthand. No, waste time. Individual instruc- tion. Sanitary class rooms with all modern convenlenc- es. Write today for full particulars or call at College office. Union Commercial College Wm. Moran, Principal Royal Bank Building, Charlottetown wfs-zil‘ E. R. BRO W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at. Summerside, Lloyd Lewis .146 Richmond St.. Charlottetown Man ! Look upat‘ this siiyv Bcrapery, thd lsize of the goodl ,twfst,,you Bwpp ajewffcents for whom you‘. ask‘ for. Make the beat of the trouble you have and dolft go around hunting for more. m 2 MAGS