_r .-. 153 *x ri 1:.:-nw I i I . ~`. np/ ,. f r . §- *`;¥~`S§}`*~ _ .§~`- Luiz- ‘.1 .fig \ -~,§. ' filter into .ff “Zig yi /$61 /5 U gs. \ I' 1 ff 7.7.' f . '1 =: .£--r*f;'f=L»’/’;»t't g_' ‘li ._/' " ’ ' fi ,l/vi/P/§’f,e‘,,»J filler ..j.f: ' j,/'D ‘~ f g v/-;‘,',y,i_» 7 ,1 r .._._.,._.--.__._.__,,. -_..,_-._ _a._._.. -.,..._._,.... _ . A ~.. _._._._. ._ ,.. .-. .,i...l.._ is _ ‘ ` » » » V _, . ` » I \ cHlilu.ofl;rE'rowN cuanblhn ' __. _ _ _ , / si. _ , .-=.. referee- 12,32 rhcl-: FOUR it _g THE _ l_.. cf - THE GHARLUTIETDWNI Gllliililhii ' , . _ ‘ - .lu i. M. P. - Vice-President-I. B. Burnett P'“!'d'm “'Sifixltffy§|,\§uitl-lgol. D. A. MacKinnon, D. B. 0. l-Illllnr and Managing Director-J. R. Burnett Alifwointe l-irlitors-Frank Walker and D. K. Currie _ ~-,__,_______..A_ - ---- - ` _..._ , ,, - - liiS'I) $5.00 ¢r year (in.adv|nce) delivered. TZ M¥§.[.:1tJn'pnli~my“|e‘ur"i`ll:ni::l€nnce) mailedpin Canada and United Silt!!- ' ' .\nvn|u-lsrno. nmrnnsanrnrrvns llxlrnn s'r.i'rl:S-'run Beckwith -Special Anne! IM- NW Y°'\= CMU" jlutldlng New York Pitv General .\fotorl BuIlding_ Detroit interstate Blind' -ing. Knnsns (‘i!y, l\'illon|:l\h_v Tower lluilrilng_ Chicago: Synrlllcnte Trust ‘1ln|liiinlr, St. i.oul.~: (ll-‘nn lh|llillng..~\tlnnta; Monadnock Huldlnl. 35" ifrnliclsl-li; llfio .\'o_ 65111 Street, Philailelpblu, Morning Maxim ' if you are slipping through living without real awareness, and if you do not open doors and cross thresholds which you actually have, then already you are s good deal dead- ' THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1982 I 1lonc1.vG THE Issue In its issue of yesterday our lo- cnl contemporary devotes more than two columns of black type to n llcatcd discussion of this precise .amount of the Lea Govr.‘rnmen'.'s ~cver'lrnft in August, 1931 but it takes good care to steer ciearof lrie issue set forth in ycsiei'\lay‘s Glinrdion. That isslze is the re- sponsibility of thc Len Government in failing to reduce, by bond _issues at -W; per cent, the higher interest charged and compounded quarterly on the overdraft ‘by the bank. It was due to this negligence that the Province was forced siillseqilufitly to lmue bonds when the market was unfavorable, the bank having refused to increase the advances of credit necessary for the construc- tion of Prince of Wales College and Falconlvood Hospital unless _,the overdraft was reduced. This, as stated yesterday, is a fact which not only disposes completely ef the argument that the Stewart Government should have waited until the pres- ent time to issue the bonds, but it places the responsibility for failing ‘to obtain better terms upon the Lea Govemrnent, which neglected to do so in the early months of 1931, when many other provinces and cities were negotiating success- ful bond issues at 4 and 4'/1 per cent. ‘ Beyond the paltry excuse that the bank was not pressing him at that time Mr. Lea has had nothing to say on. this subject, and the tlrades of our contemporary 'can only be construed as an attempt "to muddle the issue and divert at- tention from the costly blunder of "which the Lea.` administration ainndil indicted. ‘ I PARLIAMENT MEETS -__; The parliamentary sessslon, which formally opens today, is one that .promises to be of exceptional im- portance. Ratlfication of the trade 'ligrdements negotiated by the Can- adian Government at -the Imperial Qnference will likely be the first business w be disposed ol. The at- ltil/u.do‘0f the Oppositliin toward the ‘igreemente has not been ofllclnlly grtimated, bfirt in any event the _,Uo`vemment's majority assures fltheir adoption. The same applies to fphe British Parliament, so that our ,Canadian agricultural producers, .Who stand to benefit materially as 'kr result of the preferences obtain- ed by the Government in the Brit- Ish market, need be under no un- certainty in this regard. -According to a news item from 'Ottawa in yesterdays Guardian, the agreement between Canada and Great Britain will be tabled in psf. ilament on Oct. 13 and made pub- lic simultaneously in London, al- though the British Parliament does nlit meet until Oct. 18. Following the customary practice, the tariff changes proposed will go into effect ln Canada immediately when the agrccment is presented to Parlia- ment. ' I The probable line of criticism which the Liberal leader, Mr. Mac- kenzie K'ng, will 'take during the parliamentary- debates, - as indicat- ed by his campaign speeches in the Huron constituency, is referred to in another despatch in yestcrday‘s Guardian. The tendency at Ottawa, the despatch states, is to interpret these speeches as ir resurrection of the promises and policies wh'ch have lain dormant on the Liberal sllcif during the lJlu‘ty`s tenure of power. l\i‘r, King had virtually nine years in which to accomplish him- self the reforms which in now says to be so necessary. There is some .. "Qs" v comment upon the Liberal leaders omission of 'any mention of Senate reform, but it is presumed that he is saving that plank until closer to the general election, which is still some years in 'the offing. Other matters which will engage the attention of Parliament at an early date are the report of the commission on railway transports.- tion, Bank Act revision and the Redistribution Bill, which may af- fect adversely the parliamentary representation of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, but will leave Prince Edward Islandls intact tact. The mover of the addraw in reply to the Speech from the Throne will be Mr. Percy G. Davies, Con- servative member ior Athabaska, who has the distinction of being the youngest member in the House. The text of the Speech in which the Governor General win Open Parliament is being awaited with great intel-at and expectancy throughout the country, as it is generally conceded that the ratifi- cation of the Imperial Conference agreements alone would be sufficient to mark the coming session as one of the most important to be held in Canada since Confederation. The fall session is expected to last five or six weeks with an adjoum- ment probably until February. .ln the recess. Canada will be repre- sented at the World Economic Con- ference in London, possibly by Pte- mier R. B. Bennett. The date of the conference depends largely on the United States presidential elec- tions but probably will not be held until mid-January or early in Feb- ruary. JAPAN’S ATTITUDE Japan's attitude towards the re- port of the Lytton Commission -on Manchuria is an apt illustration of the helplessness of Justice without ‘her sword. The report of the com- mission contains a stem indictment of the Japanese Manchurian cam- paign, and this indictment Japan refuses to accept, and threatens as a consequence to withdraw from the league of Nations. In doing so, of course, she will place herself im- mediately out of court. But what ei- fect that will have, if the League is not powerful qnough to enforce its decrees, is difficult to say. Prior to the publication of the Lytton report a British newspaper hinted deli- cately that in the event of Japsn's refusal to accept judgment it would be necessary for the League to con- sider by what means its disap- probation, fortified by that of the United States and the endurance of the Chinese people, could best be directed. The situation, so far as the Unit- ed States is concerned, is not without its irony, inasmuch ls Jap- on‘s policy in Manchurlo. is said to have followed closely the precedent whereby the United States, within the present century, detached from the Republic of Colombia the ter- ritory that it wished to control for the purposes of the Panama Canal. . Precsdents, however, have now nothing to do with the Case. The evidence for _and against Japanb attitude hu :ben heard and con- sidered, and judgment has been rendered. If that _‘.f"'_gm`ent is to be flouted with impunity it will be a serious thing, not only for China but for world pews and security. Emroluat. lvorss The regrettable feature about Viscount Snowden's championship of free trade, notes the Toronto Globe, (Liberal) is that forty years have taught him so little about the futility oi the irnmeiiesl. g A . ` liolrs sv ills wiv niirmni. rides ii! procrm *PW* to different minds. and few °f u’ can work effectively at m0l‘€_ man one thing at a time, but IJEYUQPS We would give greater prominence than we do to the simple 18550" °f Evolution that lestlns b¢**°’"‘e“" must be realised in place and work as well ns in people. in 0n\'i1`°'1“‘°“‘ and function uncludlns leisltfe- time activity) as well as in organ- ism.-J. Arthur Thompson. We are told that in the house of any old Japanese family, the guest 15 likely to be shown some of the heirloom; “A pretty little box, per- haps, will be set before yOU- Open' ing it you will see only il beautiful silk bag, closed with a sllk‘l‘ullllil\PI- gm-d decked with tiny tllsscls. You open the bag and see within it nn- other bag of it different Qualify 01 silk, but very fine. Open that, and lol a third, which contains a fourth, which oontaills il fifth, which con- tains a sixth, which contains a sev- enth bag, which contains the strongest, roughc-st, hardest vessel of Chinese clay that you ever be- held; yet lt is not only curious but precious; it may be more than a thousand years,old." Indeed it is more than clay, there is an idea in it. Natural Science has to do with a similar process of unwrapbing- it opens the beautiful box, it re- moves one silken envelope after an- other, trylng at the same time to unravel the pattern and count. the threads--and what is finally reveal- ed is something very old and won- derful-the stuff out of which words have been spun-“a handful of dust which God enchants." For we _must see the scientific Common Deno- minator in the light of the philoso- phic Greatest Common Measure.- A.nlmate Nature. li would have been better, fir- tainly, if the British Government could have retained the services of such able and experienced adminis- trators as Lord Snowdon and Sir Herbert Samuel, but these gentle- men and the third dissentient, Sir Archibald Sinclair, have been so cle- ilnitely out of step with the minis- terinl majority. and with British public opinion as expressed at the last general election, that their pre- sence i.n the Cabinet has been suf- ficiently anomalous even without the issue created by the Imperial Economic Conference. The Abnor- mal Importations Act of last No- vember, the Horticultural Products Act and the Import Duties Act of February and March last were en- acted in compliance with' a popular demand, and they marked the end Of the Old free trade tradition. If the new policy was so unacceptable to some free trade ministers the time for them to have demonstrated their irreconcllabillty was when these acts were being sanctioned by their colleagues and by Parliament. Their retention of office on an "agree to differ" basis was a purely formal and meaningless contrlbu- tion to the cause of ministerial unity. There is a higher law of equity, and its application for the most part rests in the hands of the judg_ el. is dependent upon their human- ity, thelr broad general experience of men and things, their wisdom and klndliness. The great figures gf the English Bench are the judges who spoke out their thoughts, who hfltfd illlustice and loved righteous. D955. whose judicial vision was not obscured by technicalities and pre- cedents. the Last twenty years, says Nations Business, shows that it is the merchants who continue to adver- th* W" 111. year out, in good times md bad, that hold top place in their respective lines. And many of the-ie strains-hearted, consistent ad- vertisers will tell you that most of t-her vwstlre has been built, not in times of prosperity, but in pei-~ iods of depression. if” I/et me enjoy the earth no less Because the all-enacting Might Th” fwhtoned tonh its lnvelineiu Had other aims than my delight. About my path there flits a Fair, Who throws me not a word or sign; I will find charm in her uncare, And loud those lips not meant for mine. From manuscripts of moving song Iflillired by scenes and souls un- known, I'll pour out raptures that belong To others, as they were my own. Perhaps some day, toward Paradise And all its blest-if such should ne- I shall lift glad, afar-off eyes, 3 -Thomas Hardy. 'down to hell. The priests boom and "The history of business dm-ing ‘The Religion Of The Kali Tribe , (I-‘rom “Come With Me To India" by the United States Writer, Pat- r.cia 'K'e'ndl.l.\.) On another side of Calcutta, only a mile and a half from irhg Imglish Cathedral, on the bank of an old bed of the GHHBH. is tho repel- lent temple of KSU. which ll tho particular proprietorship of a fam- ily of Brahrnans who .slaughter ani- mals every mornng beskie the shrine or the Goddess or Destruction in order to appease her appetite for blood. Until the British fdlcld the at this sacred site, the Goddess was best mollifled by the blood of a virgin. aut today the heinous deity must be satisfied with I50»or 200 kids, whose throats are cut each day by the priests, on the altar of the tsulbous-eyed wife of Siva. It is a revolting task bllt We really should visit th`s temple which is one of the most important _of the many shrines erected throughout India to this principal goddess of the Hindu hierarchy. Early mom- ing is the best hour to drive by motor to go by boat to the sanc- tuary. Lcavlng our car at a. short distance or stepping from the boat to the ghats leading up from the muddy stream, we make our way along 9. narrow lane lined with the shrines of minor deities and the stalls of sellers of repulsive religious symbols, our _servant cleaving a pas- sage through the throngs of jost- ling devotees, sacred C0ws and par- iah dogs, past rows oi wild-eyed, self torturing fakirs squatted on spikes, holy men whose naked bodies are smeared with sanctified grease and cow dung, whining-medicants with festei-ing sores and sickening muti- lations. We hold our breaths as long as possible as we push through the milling crowds, for the stenches are almost overpowering. * This lane of agonles and hysteria ends at the gateway to the sanc- tuary. whcih has derived its hal- lowedness from the legend that when the corpse of Kali was cut to p'eces by order of the gods and chopped up by the d'.sc oi’ Vishnu, one of her fingers fell on the very spot. A pillared portico with flights` of steps leading up from three sides surrounds the shrinel, Shouldcred and iosiled by the mob or wor- slrippcrs whose eyes are aflllmewlth fanaticism, we wait uneasily in front of the sanction sanctorum for the great doors to swing back and reveal the idol. " Siowly the portals move outward. The clamors of the frenzied mob drop to waling moans as the pious prostrate themselves in fear and supplication. A monstrous idol with a terrifying black face and gog- gllng eyes 'peers out through strings of hair, and an out-thrust tongue drips blood. The four-armed body is painted a ghastly blue. Around its neck is a string of skulls, about the lotns is a crimson g'i-die: one arm grasps a. reddened sword, sn- oihcr lr. gory human head, the third is raised in menace, the fourth points the doors swing shut. On the altar ,of sacrifice the priests begin their work of the day. Shrleklng goats are dragged along still drtpprlg from the waters of a sacred brook where they have been consecrated by being d'pped in the murky stream in the midst, of pray- ing devotees, who immerse them- selves in the holy water. Brahmans in blood-smeared garments force the terrified animals, one by one, up on the slimy platform. The ex- ecutloner‘s blade swings down in a gleaming arc. The mob rushes forward to wal- low in the gory sluice or be be- spottered with the sacrificial blood; it is holy. Some of the pious cruwl on their stomachs about the altars, others lap up a stream that trick- les out of a drain gt the back of the temple; it has washed the feet of Kali-it is holy. The crowd beat their chests in pal-oxysms of de- mentia, and some litter the ground where pools of crimson are fast congealng. The Aslan sun beats down on s scene of slaughter and perverted p'ety» that slckens and saliva-tes our very souls. A shadowy Gandhi stands by our side and we speculate upon the "love and beauties" of the creed of this Mahatma (saint) who gxpounds the purity and humanity of his doctrines. What does he do when he attends the monstrous rituals of this major goddess of his religion. the wife of the God Blva? I do not know: but of H'ndulsm, in gen- eral, he proudly says: "I am a Hindu before I am s Swarajlst." A nausea of horror fetches the spirit. We flee the satumalia of gore and make our way as swift'y as possible back down the lmao of dcmonlacal pilgrims. and escape in our car as fast as we can to the sanity and cleanlness of Calcutti Though it contain r.o place for me._ without visiting the bum'ng ghats near the temple. I-low clean seems the smoke of the jute mills, how priests to stop the slaying of human‘ victims, lnctudlng pilgrim who came from far and wide to worship what iBu¥w of §ours W. Barton. M.D. REMOVAL OF TONSILS BY RADIUM When it becomes necessary to have the tonslls removed the ques- tion may arise as to the “so.feness" of the operation. While in the nlaj- ority of cases the tonsils may be removed by a skilled surgeon with- out difficulty or complication, there are'so'ne cases where it is not con- sidered wise to have the 'patient undergo operatlon._ 'I‘he tonsils must be removed be- cause they are no longer serving the body as filters or in the destroying of harmful organisms, but are act- ually pourlng poison into the blood. As you know, the method of des- troying tonslls by eleetricity-elec- tro-coagulation -_ has been used successfully in a number of cases, but the scar tissue remaining in some cases where this method has been used has formed “pockets” which were difficult to remove when, as was found later, surgery had to be finally used. Dr. J. C. Seal, New York, who, while still of the opinion that sur- gical removal is the best way to re- move dlseased tonsils, recommends the use of radium-radon seecls-- as an excellent method where sur- gery cannot he used, or where the patient is "afraid of the operation." He states that there is no bleed- ing after the use of radium, no danger of lung abscess, no chance of pneumonia following, ‘ond no danger to the middle ear. Using the radon seeds causes no pain. can-be performed in the phy- slcian's office, and the patient may be permitted to pursue his normal mode of life without inconvenience of any description., Of the number of patients treat- ed by Dr. Seal, 20 per cent were af- fected with joint symptoms, 28 per cent had heart disease, 3 per cent had haemophilia tbleeders), 5 per cent had the severe form of goitre. 10 per c'ent were dia_betics, 8 per cent had arterlo-sclerosis (harden- ing of the arteries), and the rest were treated for “fear of operation. There is no illness following the operation, death never results, and the tonslls are removed without producing any inflammatoln or in- jury to' the tissue surrounding the tonslls. ` Remember, the removal of tonsils when they should be removed is still- done best by surgery. This is the opinion of our nose and throat specialist. '/ However when, for the above mentioned or other reasons surgery cannot be used, this radium meth- od should be considered. _ __¢i____ A Tribute To Canada (Mail and Empire) 'rho story is :did oi ii united States motorist. Mr. William A. Mar- kert of Detroit. who got into an unfortunate street accident some weeks ago. If we are not mistaken, he inadvertently knocked a man down in Chatham and killed him. He was arrested, placed in Jai, and tried on a charge of criminal neg- ligence. After- the iury had dis- agreed the prisoner changed his plea to 'one of guilty and paid a fine of $500. ` Marker-t seems to have mode a. dns impression upon the court and upon the citizens in general, I-le gave his evidence in a. frank, hon- est manner, ma.k`ng admissions which pro'ved him technically guilty, although there was an entire absence of any intention to break the law. There were no other wit- nesses, so that he could have es- caped justice by being less frank than he was. Now that he is back home in Detroit he has written to the News cormmenting with admir- ation uponvthe way he was treated on this side of the line. In part, he says: "The ordeal through which I Passed was leavened by the most humanly interest and kindness, and ill-itioe was tempered with mercy. "From the moment of arrest to the final verdict I have been treat- ed with the utmost decency by evtivons with whom I came in con- tact. Your jallig clean, the food simple but wholesome, your govern- or and his keepers firm. but very klndk. “I have a profound respect for the Canadian law, ;nd the proilclent manner in which it 'is applied quickly and decisively. Just as long as the Canadian citizenry will up- hold such standards of character and integrity in the judicial bronch,‘ for its enforcement and execut`on will they enjoy freedom." ' It gives one o real sense of sat- isfdtion to read such a tribute ~ welcome the wh`te of the faces Perverted piety: Kali ghat. Power John Bulls Dried Apples - ` canning-l There is a market in old london for dried apples, the Dominlon's As-'_ instant 'rl-one oommlaslonvr thm would have us know. But evidently it is not open vo the kind °f-d1'1°d` apples that used in he nuns l=°'. ncath the rafters on strinsb iv N' quire a. healthy coat of tm. It 16 dried apples, but for dehydrated apple rings.” They must be ring!-, .at least 'I5 to B0 P91' °°'Di`v lholei rings in every box, go0d'Si2°d P11188.: and they must be white in colm'.;. Yes, John Bull is particular about his f00d. ' _ ese special requirements wlll~ bdlretter understood when it is ex- ,plnined that he is not ions on apple- sauce,. at least 'applesauce made from dried apples. Seventy i'iV0 P01' cent of the dehydrated apple-5 im' ported into Britain 80 W salad mnn' ufacturers; and how could a. salad appear delectable and erlticin8 with sown apple slice.-ir Besides. D°b°dv in thu country wants it said that brow.. apples in fresh. anlwttzins salads are that way becausefthey Washington and Oregon hill/0 captured the dried-apple market in London because they provide' a fruit that serves well in fNSh 58-1 ads, They _obtain a premium price. Canada has a. tariff pereference of not a market for just ONIDUY, .. IS THE GO0D||5$$.... BEST ¢` ` 1 gunda at its full value, thought they had assured *four years of boom times, and when the bottom drop- out"of things they turned in r on the dismayed engineer `tentions of the best but unable to ve any more direction to the eco- oniie trsndihnnhe might io a :ull wn avaldnche. Wd. 81156 wmv f1'°m C°“°d°~ .who sat in the white 1-louse, nu in El B ` sro s'r0cKrmo'xr:rrs Now cranks Mussolinfs control of the Italian Stock Exchange hasbecome so ef- Icctivc that its officials have lie- come, in effect, government em. pioyes, according to reports. Il Ducn is firm in his stand and apparent- .ly is determined to work out lui theory for curbing financial ..juggcl- rv. . , 25 pn- nent. besides the uncles- W° ought to be able to give Jdhn Bull an- acceptable dried#-l7P1€ 59195- A Picture Of Hoover (Ottawa Joumal) Mr, C. O. Smith, the able Wash- ington correspondent of the Ott\W°- Citizen, pictures President Hoover as abeaten man, a candidate whose campaign is being run listlessly by men on the .natlon’s pay-roll, a striking contrast to the alert and confident Roosevelt. Then he adds : "Hoover, indeed, at this juncture,” presents a lonely and almost path- etic flgure. All that romantic at- tachment for him which his work in war days created in the hearts of the American people has quite evidently evaporated. At one time regarded as the wor1d's most suc- cessful organizer of victory over hardship, he is now ridiculed as a flop in the iight; against his own col'mtry's depression. Once hailed as the worlds greatest and most effec- tive friend of those in distress, it has now become easy for Roosevelt" to usurp his title as champion of the forgotten man." It is a familiar scene, and if Mr. Hoover should feel that the Ameri- can people are ungrateful he may console himself with the thought that Wellington, who saved Eng- land and Europe at Waterloo, later had to barricade his house against the London mob; that public grati- tude is a fleeting sentiment and not to be measured against such hard facts as lower wages and precarious employment. As a matter of fact, wo expect too much of our public men. In good times we over-rate their contribu- tion, and lnibad we condemn them for conditions they did not bring about and could not possibly mend. Because Mr Hoover had been c rr- wood. _ HARD COAL , ii V COAL SERVICE 'At your service every-day of the year, sup- plying the very best Coal, Coke and Fire- SOFT COAL ' D0_MINION COKE Sold in any quantify at the lowest' price. When you want 100 pounds or 100 tons, see ' l ' or telephone. ' .l.l.P1cKAle1> r. co. ‘ If Your Clock Needs Repairing I PHONE 353 _ \ . and have us call for it -ALL WORK GUARANTEED- l G. 51." TAYLOR l » 1 4 l 5649-io-6-3| - o spicuously buccessful as a mining engineer, as head of the Belgian rg- llef organization, the people wer; asked to assume he would make a President able to continue the era 01' prosperity- that Coolidge happen- ed to enjoy. They took this pi-opp- _ from a citizen of the neighboring Republic to the justice with which the law is administered on this side of the border. Incidents of this sort are worthy to be qhronicl d through. out the lensth and breadth of kinds- They make.for fi-iendsh’p be- tween the two countries. Sole Distributors 'Of This , Exquisite Line ' Of t Toilet Preparations MAX _FAC1.'0R’S Powders and Creams. products of HOLLYWOOD lro ¢h¢`hl|h- est quality products on the market. Used and endorsed by I- -sissy-uri--A---i -_ l \ of conscience. , notable screen stan this line has - alread been received Y with delight in Charlotte- town. . Why jmliviiiual' ilolnmlillion Cups Were- introduced Mr. Ii. T. LePago, Toronto, writesz- ' In 1896 I first introduced the Unbreakable Point 'top cups in the Dunn Avenue Methodist. Church, Pcgniale, Toronto, because we had ten conlnmptl and six' or eight inmates from the Home of Incurahlca taking communion ith. , - 9 our wives, and young and growing famvlgizs which was not only disgusting but highly un- sanital'! (Mfhapl from a selfish motive at that time, the protection of myself, wife and family.1 some other churches wanted them and later on it became n. principle and l decided to put them in all the churches in Canada/ and the United States, no matter what the cost. The some principle dominates me to-day (to do away with a cup that is still a menace to church life and ‘ health) and I data not be rcorennt to the voice THE ACl\flE_~0F PREVENTIVE MEDICINE No one knows better than the Physician how unsanitary the common drinking cup is and that it can be and il. _where used, a ooqtagion carrier. The l.sPl¢° Comilv-Dy are the originators in Canada of the Individlli Cvmmllilivh ` Cup, the only sanitary communion WP il ¢h_;\"°"|‘|- “U . use in churches ia now recognised as being .SANWUW NECESSITY. and those-.vvlm have not as yet ld0P¢°ll |¢ must do so in the near future. if they consider i-ho hcl-ith of their members. lt oarrbo-Iterilllsd ill bull* ""1‘°“* main; and in me reqnim-no silunr ofthe llwl- l -Rep:-lated from The .Vox-rial of Medicine and . surgery, cron . Agent:-LAURA HUGHES, l!..'0. Box 3, Charlottetown . ` \ _ l , I _ T _ . . -_ f . _ - -. .MM-10-5-Si. , ' Some 6f our lines include Jvhltener Liquid Honeysuckle Cream Face Bleach . - Face Powder Brush , Cleansing Cream skin and,'1'iune ‘Cream . visit our sion and look over this new line which ws are introducing. You will not leave the sion without par- ehasing some. , THE 2' MAGS. on Silt: Calcutta, t ‘i ` l - - 1 .ll I _ .._._,_.,_