V. VV.. .§’ *5 l¥"l"‘ ._ .. f- ` 1 *I* '7»:f. ->’.*‘; .- :-. ;i .. eisriu 5 :E QE az a ilii 4 .'},V . ., 5" 'S2 W z' '51 'J i! Rei! ,- ui' ‘frfl ‘U- i ‘!l__. inf' :~ef:f1i 23 \ . _ T ..._ , * .~ . __ . . Q' t. VV .1 ~ _ .. , .i v »~ -- ,"“ 3' _»_~'f l 1 l _ ~ W ‘.~ 7 , _‘M51 . ‘ i V ._ _ ' J I V ., , 1 ~- -~ ll _ , -. _ ° _,_,. . » 1 ~ .- _ _ ._ -'- If -. . -----. --~ ____;- ,_ __ _ ' _ -"°~~--° _.‘. ._ -- _ _ , ¢ ,_ _ _. ~ - _ _ _ -, t , < .- V _ .. , . , A V ._ _»,V - ~ |» » . _-.if ~V . .- .. --_-~ ~ _ - 1 ` \ _ ' 4 l . . _ .1 1 » ...ls ' 6.2 . _ , APRII 1 1929 ~ 'ma cni\iu.o1"rr.rowN ouxnnrxw V V ____ __._V_ '!_ !L*’__ :iw is the best ir repair jobs. ons, prices are donlt forget :i r new home or d and Beaver \\ gur-9°‘ vI°“° um oy" 8” \\°5\{s 1:5 wa c §¢ 9\°s:`;:l r0° -».:~°°‘ 5 0 any mens e,a¢\°b Asif* td “°“ “`\\\CJ\\9°5 Bd” o ..°;1°--_ °°‘ $0 MADE _-Q°`°{;.§‘€`,*;/ ,,°°‘T,.=»’ / »~,_..o / / / ER BOARD, Phone 341 Bw” s¢‘» l\‘°‘ 1 .g!.I~°\°‘ Q a¢° awe ' \\ (ls ' ~ csc* li s. “", to ‘A ws” iii# ‘ ~ s¢‘ Sq » is g o¥I\°'F‘1_`;EE ___ V ;>,l--___.-. _ T\ s 1-=`-5 'i 5% for repairs to your present home, use Insulating Board You’ll get first . al at_no extra cost. Ask your nearest builder or ' an estimate based on the use of Beaver Products. BEAVER BOARD Four-ply wood tibre,`cach ply sized dur- ing manufacnire and the finished board surface sized to eliminate a priming coat when i'inishing;_ Easily decorated. One coat of good paint covers completely. V Lays Hat-stays flat. Know the genu- _ -_ ` l »‘ ine by the red Beaver trademark along 'ima ace. _ V,. ._.,»y j BEAVER INSULATING BOARD An investment' in comfort that ',V_,4 pays good dividends. Saves fuel 2;-5; and repairs. Keeps homes cool 4 in Summer, warm in Winter. Five-ply wood fibre construc- V tion (six sheets to each ply) fi provides thirty-four barriers ago-.nsf the penetration of heat cr colil. Double strength, twice the rigidity but not brittle. Close laminated texture pro- vides permanent nail grip. IN CANADA FOR CANADIANS as/>.vsa.o;..ar/llvlalz _soaao iii7'~isii.‘s~° Bl-:Avia sesrwiii-75. :ipmfp/a.efi.i//can/oi Beaver Insulating Board Usc coupon. V FRE” Booi;>F§éiit.ed the wholesale price. The total milk production was over 14,000,000,000 lbs. Over I third of, this was used as milk, and nearly a. third to make cresmery butter. About 75,000,000 lbs. was manufac- tured lntio dairy butter, mostly used on farms. The rest naturally \§ , ‘_ "' `*"; .._______i... in _F i_ __ ;___ v___,_V #__ L Dr. A. C. Ruddick, Dairy Commissioner, Ap- pears Before Select Committee on Agri- _..... culture and Colonization. _ . . Bbllllll IH] ______ ‘ _ [' . (Special to The Guardian) Vlsupplies more cheese to the world ./llll OTTAWA, March 22-The silent than does Canada, which ls~ only ,. C Ruddlck, Dairy Commlmioner for belongs to Holland, that little coun- V sts th° Same the Dominion who has been fifty lry, the total area of which is about I inferior ma- ~ years in the dairy business in one equal to that portion or Ontario F , V in south of the line from Hamilton to .rl ' Southampton (59 miles) and that Canada, and ln the second place with' about one third less cows than Can- ada. has." “Our cheese brings a bez- ter price," it was added. Canada taught New Zealand how to make cheese. Creamery butter, Dr. Ruddlck told the comniihce, was quite aiiotliei' matter. In 1900, we made only 36,- 000,000 lbs. In 1926 the production was 177,000,000 lbs. of which the three middle west provinces produc- ed nearly one-third. WHEAT AFFECTS MARKET Since 1026. there has been it de- cline, due to western pre-occupation ln wheat, but all the other provinc- es increased. Now production as a whole is on an upward. scale. How- ever, in dairy production Canada'_s_ record during the last five or six years has never been equalled in pro- gress, both as to quantlly and qual- ity. This was, evidently, due to the system of grading for export oi butter and cheese, and “it is having a very important effect on the out- look for Canadian cheese in the world's market.” In the fixing of grades the factors are flavor and tev- ture, now the price is fixed accord- ing to grade, and so that p-~o<’iucers are encourag°d"to make improve- ments all aio:-g the line. There has been a. tremendous i;~'.ci'ease in the consumption of butter, and Canada by the way. consumes per capita. more butter than any countrylii the world, 28 lbs. The per capita home consumption of cheese il four lbs. The increase ln home consump- tion of cheese was due to being put up in packages. Otherwise, dcinand goes into cheese. Between 1924 and 1927 there was sn increase oi 2,000,- 000,000 lbs. of milk, or equivalent to 187,000,000 lbs. of choeie or 87,000.- 000 lbs. of butter. Cheese has been made in factories sinco 1864. The maximum of production was in 1904, being about 250,000,000 lbs., after which it gradually declined until 1927, with a production of a little over 138,000,000 lbs. Dr. Ruddick rs- gsrded this as i-ether fortunate iflian. otherwise, because milk found other and more profitable channels. If the production of cheese had kept on in that scale the market would have been over-supplied long ago. 'ma onaasa Manner "It is not true" declared Dr. Rud- dlck “to say that New Zealand's cheese has displaced Canarlign cheese on the British market. New Zealand che-‘sc never displaced a pound of Canadian cheese,~ and nev- er wlll, so long as Canadian cheese maintains the quality it has." On the other hand, he tihought it import- ant that the New Zealand supply ln- crease has been balanced by the Canadian decrease , so that there 1 la Ask for the New g ° Cat Q... .-`\ `._,; . 3,4 "as V \ 1 '§,"f_ _. `, ~ »-'vu i-fi .»... . ‘ ..‘,- rr WALL PAPER alogue , WRITE your name very plainly on the coupon below, cut out and mail to us and we’ll send you the bnzgest, best, most economical WALL PAPER CATALOGUE ln Canada. A Eighty six new designs, prices based on' DOUBLE ROLL OF 72 SQUARE ' 1~jEi~:T. Address |» ¢ »i-|» -me 1;-1- .-._» . 4 . . »-.».-. » » » . .um . ‘uve no “mb” umt ‘ good deal of ' '-""'*"°’*'“"*‘°” -___ ........ \.-.» ..\..»'.. 4. .am 1;.. aw..- QL _ ' ‘ " U try ii the standard ici- me type of ||.r cheese we make in this country. Chit' - nn ‘°‘°“'“’*’ E’ Bell & M-nie-on ‘.'.::;.l‘:_:r.:':°;...";;:l:.:“;‘.fi‘.f:;‘; I *HIM tml: _ Send the new Wall Paper Catalogue to “‘“""" * °°“°“`°" vmf-' s pound _above me baivonn- M-..a.ii. M im “_ V omm _ c|,.,|.,¢;,¢,,,,, 'ml asian. Ir hu been in s elm by iz- }’§dmu?*l§.%.a'&-‘gfxvnau Name ' ”°“**¢"°- "lf-B“°Y°“ °“°“‘° "“°°f°“" ldtmwiiil., "°“h°'°'°“”“°“ MONEY T0 LOAN cheddar cheese and it is just as good seemed to ltq Q ,MOORE & MCLEOD LIMITED is not much more cheese on the market than when New zealand came into the picture. New Zeslsnd Do Your Knees Swell? Are Your Joints Sore? Those who have tested out nume- rous linlments will agree that when something is needed to dislodge deep-seated, more or less chmn come to bs known as King over all Pain. For rheumatic conditions, mul- wlnr and Joint nuances. Nerviline works wonders. A trial proves this, ic condition, nothing compares with Nsrvillne. Its because Nervlllne pens.” making dlstricls in England an trates so deeply, because it has about five times the strength of Ayrshire Scotland, glass-lined tan the ordinary oily preparations, 1; hu is not stimulative as groccrs, as a handle cheese and have no farlllt has been large increase in consump- great as it was as dealers in the Old Country get their cheese (cheddar) and other coiuitrles and lirefcr can handle it better that way. Can- adian cheese never stood so high in and New Zealand cheese stands at the head of their class, but the price in favor of Canada is from 3 cents to 5 cents per lbs., owing to super- same degree. FIXING TILL* PRICE er dairy products in this country.. It Canada is affected to n vcry larg cheese. It is a basic price for doll' B entlywvers not good but now muc improved, he went on to say: "Th Scotland. They are shipping iro is diminishing very rapidly, and the tliat cheese made in the Old Coun as any English or Scotch; and third on iihe list And here is some- h small country produces the largest in amount of. cheese ln the world. from rule, have little knowledge of how to ‘ - les for keeping and maturing. Theic gague and will bg plgggd tg receive tion of milk and ice cream which ack 1- ` counts for decrease lil exports. The ..*SUPER. AND VAC -Rubbdf amount of package cliccsc exported boom, short and storm king, Get to the United Kingdom is not so our su ply now. Poole dz Thompson. from New Zealand, Holland, Italy ..’SEE OUR WINDOW- New. to Spring styles. Wonierfs shoes. Poole' _ba blended together thinking they .Sr Tlionipscn, Ltd. 2040-4-1-31 great Britain as at present, due to EUM, oll cloth and linoleum, also grading and ceitlflcatlng. Canadian | lor flavor and texture, which owing to climatic and pasturage coiidilions ‘New Zealand cannot achieve in the Dr. Ruddlck made this important statement "The pi-lcc of cheese has a. great deal to do with the fixing of the general level ot prices of oth- is our big export and the price of - milk that you pay in any city in amounting t° smut $z’°°°'°°°' it extent by the average prlce o products. Discussing milk condition in Great Britain, which until rec milk is being drawn from the chees T, Present time, butter il being lm- cars every day. The manufacture o cheddar cheese in the Old Country Y seem to think that in a ahort`tlm llisywill not be iiiaklng any cheddar Get a abc bottle from your dealer cheese at all. They have been .ya-_ ' USE THE COUPON ¢°4lY- I making about 100.000 lbs. a year, and fl ll CONVENTIDNB _ Now you can ' choose Nova 8120- ila. Tb! Lflrd Nelson provides spurious holpltll- liy _ . . uupllllsd by Hlmtlon CHNIJ. on the premises . . . ai 1920 lmgrl directly oppoa s /A the Public Gar- /1 f’- dem. Halifax. L 0 RD N E LS O N Western Guardian l -WESTERN AGENT.-Mr. U. J Llallant ls Guardian Agent in How- l lan, and will be ylaased to receive new and renewal subscriptions. ti. -WESTERN HORSES -Two cars ueslem horses arrived at Freetown, weighing from eleven to fifteen hun- dred, ages five to eight. See them before buying elsewhere. A. C. Gard- liier. Lower Freetown. 2034-41 1-51 i* i . -MAKING GOOD RECOVERY - Mr. Keith Mann; son of Mr. William Mann, Indianl River, has returned from the Prince County Hospital, where he had taken treatment for some time. Recalled it will be re- membered how he was the victim of R gunning accident, from which here- .1 celved a charge of bullets in the stomach. The operation to which he was subjected was practically suc- 7 cessful and all friends prospect in seeing him fully restored to his pris- tine manhood. Y PERSONALS _ ____. V -Among the students ot Prince of ,Wales College spending Easter with itheir parents at Alberton are Miss Joyce McArthur, Mr. Ralph Larkin and Mr. Elmer Ashley. ’ -Miss Mai-lon and Isobel Wilson are spending Easter with their par- cnts at Albcrton. -Mr. Blols LePage, student of Prince oi Wales College, is spending the Easter holidays with his parents at North Rustlco_ Mlnnrd‘a llnlmsnt for coughs ‘sud eolrll _1___.1_...._.. Eastern Guardian ..'EAS'IER.N AGENTS-Mr. J.W Murdock is Guardian. Asent in Mon- new and renewal subscriptions. Y P Ltd. 2040-4-1-31 ._*SI‘RING STOCK OF CONGOL- dining and bedroom suites. Call and see tlielri. Poole dr Thompson, Ltd. 2040-4.-1-31 _____<.--- l\Ilnar|l‘s Llnlment prevents lla. ______________._.._.__----- llttle shortage. The price of cheese averaged nearly 21 cents a pound for the 1928 crop. That is the out- look for Canadian cheese." As already stated, whatever adects the cheese industry affects all other bi-cnelies ci the dairy industry and from the fact that the cheeSe pro- ducers got one and one halt cents I pound lust year as 'a premium, e was safe to say that it meant $10,- f 000.000 to producers more than they would have otherwise received-all S due to superiority of quality- And _ speaking of butter, Dr. Rllddlok lt!- h ted that during the last two or three is years iihe price had been anything E from one to 14 cents is pound high- d' er than the export value, bscaugg there was no surplus export. At Y 1 ported from New zealand into Cm. ado. paying the run suiy or mrs. cents s pound duty. The inarksmhsi-0 e ls high enough to permit ot it. (To be Continued) " I ii.; ll -'+-"-f Make This a TWO H AT Spring urely it’s economical-this switching ` I rorn one hat to another. And of course changing is a. relief from monotony, $2.75 $4. $5. o $7.50 GOME IN NOW and see th e splendid range of new hats for - man. Get your Easter hat--and if you are “forehanded” 1t's a. good plan to gettwo. $2.75 to $7.50. Hats of highest rep- utation sold here cheaper than in Montreal or Toronto. gag il. . ' Prince Edward ~Theat`re--on ` Wednesday £5 Thursday, April 3 £=>° Cooperating with The Prince Edward Theatre, Messrs R. T. Holman Limited and Messrs Alley & Co., Limited, we are stag- . ing Wednesday and Thursday, APRIL 3rd and 4th- the great eat Fashion showin the history of Charlottetown. Handsome Living Models Women’s Costs--Dresses--Ensembles--Millirfery_ Men’s Overcoats-Suits--Hats--Furnishings. Popular young ladies and gentlemen of Charlottetown assist by acting as living models. ' " The Great Fashion Show ` 4th. 1 in *_ . \ last yéor. In inonsss oi about ten person to slide down a steel wire °°‘f@f5?‘lllf rubii`c`iiv.uity";»wei» punts in me in rmgiishman me invented s Tests in Arcanum. have shown United States produced about 87,851, portable fire escape that enables s that agricultural tractors can be op- erated wlth gas oil more economical per cent from 192% _ with s ben imc encircle; his waist. than with kerosene or distillate. Where Shall _I 'Buy My Fe rtilizer? I Through the Potato Growers’A.Association » f _ FERTILIZER! FERTILIZER! _ l Or Its Agents. Why? " ' They are the life of the potato industry for the prov- inoe. They have made the price of fertilizer lower every-year. THEY always fill their orders with genuine goods at genuine prices. They can deliver either the mixed goods_or the chem- icals where and when you want them. _ ~ ` -“THEY deliver the goods. 1. ` " Certainly patronize your own organization that works In your own interest twelve months of the year. _ V ‘ 1 Sells st lowest prices, members or non-members. BUYS from the only fertilizer company that is openly filhtlnll lislnst the proposed increased tariff on our potatoes, which it enacted would ruin our potato industry. Other fertil-