liililli ‘utm- lIaIII nausea iauii Ill-IO per your ti-‘oov-n.» ee In - * i. v and _ ‘and our citizens generally. v good to the participants individu- - have been a feature in the life of v -‘“ as a result of the frequent meellng . of agriculture specialization along 31o. lvouii- ~ iinwiiuinmii '0 Notes byfitholWay Philip Onowdom Ohanoello of can pu yell i * y sum.- m, - -- i _ ‘ of the tax- - Ros:- 8.3.0.11.‘ nan-pom ation par head In the principal ‘ as . a c ao . Ishtar and ll I, J. ll. ‘l -' n, 1g, “Hm-countries in 1914 and i924. ~§ 1 New York Representative-Junk B. y Ollcapo llrlwceltntlvn-l. J. Ionian’ Power Ilwelel. srnment a few days ago supplied 1914 1f 102i m? Iuiuna ltatlaaell. Graha- 8t- tirter b 60-. Queen 8t- At Brown, stamp Vendor gaggle; , Richmond It. Railway Baa all J. l). Taylor, Grafton til. n one uuaiwiaa In) iie aitqllnl m; - no ion-win; age-ca “in WII . - win. iipnu run IIIIQI. ‘ P. T. lug-ply, Prlnee if». Qraeery J. P. DUI". Qleea M. . W. C. Wright. Kent lined Wut II. TIDBQ WING. IE IIIQ Ave. Fred Handel. (inst George Si. TUESDAY," MARCH 4, 1924 FARMERS’ WEEK 4 During this week, at least up to Friday morning, the city will be- long‘ to the farmers and we feel surethey will be cordially welcom- ed by our merchants, our ‘hotels In this welcome The Guardian joins and expresses the hope that the delib- erations of the various organiza- tions will he productive oi much ally and collectively and to the pro- vince at large. The annual farmers’ parliaments the province for many years and one oi the great evidences of their success is the number of organiza- tions that liave grown up largely and intermingling of our farmers. Under our more modern methods certain lines is being given more and more attention. This country is peculiarly adapted to mixed farm- ing; indeed any other system would he an uncertain gamble. A farmer might devote his whole farm to one crop and make a suc- cess of it; also, he might make a lamentable failure of'it beciuse oi climatic or marketing reasons in which case he would lose all- with crops of different kinds, with a», number of classes of animals hot cannot fail as no general failure oi crops or apldemltisiifong‘ ouizaiiim- als has ever been ‘known in the province. . In the various classes of animals, in the different kinds oi field crops we have our specialists. Ont- prides himself on his potatoes, another on corn or a certain vari- ‘ oty oi oats or wheat or harley.. (in;- gives special attention to his dairy hcrd of a particular breed and ho swears by that breed; another specializes in swine, another in sheep or poultry and so on but none oi these to the exclusion oi all others. The prudent. farmer pugh. es the line which pays best but " does not neglect the others as all are interdependent‘ and each ls necessary for the sullliort of the other. For this reason those annual gatherings are necessary for the exchange oi ideas, for mutual en- eouragsment, and mutual help. In- doed the gatherings should be more frequent Infill-they are- We can- not get together too often. ~ The meetings this week are for the farmers themselves, to discuss l"!!! Problems and there are many oi these. While the meetings are no doubt open to all citizens who wish to attend. we believe that much would be gained, as suggest- ed in a previous reference, by an n: ngsment which would at regu- lar intervals bring our farmer; gm] merchants together for the "discus- sion of problems oi mutual inter- QQL . I , _. Y fir ‘i i SOMITHINGQWRONG Therein‘ ‘ ‘word ill the ED811415‘ lllnifi!‘ has been morn instantly ‘littlest-ingro- W." IlMtbHlI-i stilts-void mn- oioy our film ‘irliifiuiiiy no ti» i-hr-lfitflli-ril a virtue-that hop-been iiiorei flagrantly outraged. W16 talk economy and liraotisi ox- invasion" and walto: with our " deplore " ottrlvagoncs ‘ ‘ oiiiriiiih our imiiii w 1 - '- aiaanaipioi Zpptoq are ani- » titty otirioiiiuam to ; i out means and our liv- dld not properly care for their up- ples: the other partial reason is that because of the carelessness of some farmers our merchants have turned their faces against island grown apples. Now it is well known and has been abundantly proved that, with necessary care in spraying and liar- vestlng, we can grow as good a quality oi apples in this province as ‘can be grown anywhere on the I Many farmers have gone to the espouse oi nlantins orchards but, either through their own fault or because oi that false idea, prevalent in many other cases continent. 'as well, that the imported is super ior. there was no market here for them and the orchard was allowed to grow wild and the apples to rot on the ground. ‘There is much that is wrongxin this and the wrong could be right- ed. Our farmers and merchants could easily get together on the question.‘ No merchant will under- take to sell bruised and crushed and unsightly apples and no one should expect him to. We have no doubt that any farmer who would contract with our merchants to de- liver properly boxed or carefully packed apples of a good variety would find a constant market for all he could grow. Another sum- nier is approaching We shall grou thousands of barrels of good ap- ples and unless we make early ar- TQIlQBITIBDlK/ibfiflfllll" again throw away thousands of dollars which properly belong to the province. Some means should be adopted by which this yearly sinful might be prevented. waste ma»? BIG BUSINESS The farmer who would cut. down and sell the lumber on his farm and continue the process year after year would be doing a big but unprofit- able business unless ho replaced the trees taken away by others. Many-farmers have done this and today they are obliged to buy even their firewood. Canada isndoing a large business at present_along similar lines and the boast is mado in certain quar- ters that our trade i increasing by leaps and bounds. lt is increasing. Wo are doing many millions of dol- lars more business today than we were a dozen years ago but is it profitable businessih We are sol!- ing raw material which should be manufactured at lflimo and our peo- llle, young and old, ‘are going away with it tomanufacture it in a for- eign country where it is returned and sold to our people. For exam- Dle we sold in 1923 to the United States, pulpwood and wood pro- ducts to the value of $226,346,429, besides many million dollars worth oi raw minerals and metals. This, if deducted from our total exports would make a vast differ- ence in our boasted trade. We imported from the United 51ml in 1M8; oii-iooiiuroi ' and Vfisstable products to the value of 878,814,028 while we sold to than oi thesp products only 849,225,384. And yet there are those among us 111° "Y to llmuade our farmers that we should still lower the tariff liars that are now our only defence, and a imi- one it um, against lio- tor. noodoii iwith American ioi-io "produce! - increased ‘fro. tariff la about to he discus. led in parliament. The Progres- sivea with: the tariff OIL!“ food- stuffs and agricultural implements rpdoced or aliol-lsllbd. The Mae» oi-oot si-itiin .. saint 1:15:11: The figures are official and sign- liicant, They show that in Great Britain, as the of the war, taxation is nowJour times as grout as it was in _191,4':‘¢Uhat in l-‘ranco it has more than doubled: that in the United States ithss increased four fold and more, in Germany three- fold, in Italy nearly‘. four fold while in Canada and Australia respec- tively it is more than two and a half. times as great. as in 1014. It also appears that the taxation in Great Britain is more than three times as great as it is in Germany and that in all other of the allied nations which wonthe war the tax- ation is from 505w; 100 ‘per cent greater than it is in ‘defeated Ger- many. And yet the world rings with the Teuton wail for mercy and pity! viewed in the Ottawa Parliament is that of a Cabinet Minister, Hon. Mr. Murdock, who 48 hours before the Home Bank closed its doors withdrew his deposit oi $4.000 and placed it in another bank. He evid- ently knew that tlle crash was coni- ins. but thousands oi other deposi- tors were ieit unwanted by the govern ent and many oi them were nined in onsequence. Rela- tions between the King govern- ment and the deiunct bank have long been very, close. Mr. Gough. a high official of the bank, was ap- pointed to the Board oi National Railway Directors at a salary of ia also entangled ‘with Home Bank‘ affah-a as partner in a firm heavily‘ indebted to‘the batik." Unfortunat- ely the Government seems to he politically about as insolvent as the Home Bank was financially. it is tin u minority in the House and with four or five oi its members open to such serious attacks that the 0p- posltion claim will force their rc-. Islgnatlon. Notorlousiy it has lost the small measure oi confidence ‘which the country once reposed in ‘it. Even if bolstered up by Pro. grossive votes to survive the pfg. sent session, which is yet doubtful, it “all only remain as an incubus and a hindrance to the progrggg and prosperity of the Dominion. Premier King gained the favor of Liberal Quebec by his absence from Canada-whonttve war waa on "Id h" °Pi>oliti {u conscription. That made him loader oi the party and Premier at 815,000 a year. Nat- urally he loves the war veterans. Hi8 love and tlldt 0f his lionurablg colleague from this Province was conclusively edtahlished by the four acre plots sold at four prices to Indian Army Officers. The Hon- orable James Murdock has denom- strated the Cabinet's affection for bank depositors showing that from Toronto to Ottawa snd from Ot- tawa to Prince Edward Island and from banks to bungalows they all have a common policy. 8o many memhen of the Cabinet have already been caught with the gooda on them that is looks bad for the bunch.- it looks as if they were all "on the make" and "all tarred with one brush." Thgy have shown themselves ready to spend all? body's money but their own, east or west. An elevator for Hail- fax, a railway for Kent were offer- ed in vain as a bribe to the electors Now the talk is 1,100 miles oi new political Iiilwlys. Progrgjflyg votes come high but the King Q97. eminent must have them at what- ever cost! Could cool calculating "I011!!! so further than this‘! isn't it the limit? And this also la Economy from the King Government viewpoint. They are ail for economy! Every liisn Jack in the Cabinet stands be- iiiud this railway proposition gmi our Big Four stand behind them to lllflliort them. It seems incredible but it is true. To understand It we will! slve new meanings to yrbrdg, We, llluat mi» are dictionary- We lllllllltrn thtjloononiy baa now till ‘ we once applied to Mo»: commit». is... "llllll ‘ilypocrla hopes}; ,. - fm" w» t in the Labor Gov- ems-w “Clonal Bails ‘_ France 6:18 B’ United States__. 1.? , 6:14 . Germany Hill-x "- 1 N08! ROOM "My ' ' ‘ ' ' " y“ ' 3 You have perhaps found that you Canada .. . 3:8 , i.19 I to breathe more tree“. Australia , . . . .. 3:8 8: 1 through the left nostril than through the right. by the aid of your mirror, and seemed to be bent to the right, and thus more room'was given to the left side. breathing through the left side. And yet a little later you fou-nd that the left side seemed to be stuffed up, and that you did most oi the breathingthrtiugh the right nostril. ‘ You are at a loss oi understand how you are able to get enough air into the lungs through such a small space. _ This "deflection of the septum" as this bending over oi the division in the nose is callul, is extremely common. A straight septum giving eqiinl amount of space to nostril is extremely rare. So that the first thing to re- member is that it has no significan- ce, nor any harmful effecbunless it an each one o, m’ tr-niloflon‘ utbtmpractically touches the outer wall of the nostril. -- And you can easily s“ why- Whether the septum is bent to right or left its thickness remains e same. This means that one division will be large, and the other small. but The two divisions together make up just the same amount oi space for breathing, as if the septum were perfectly straight. However, sometimes the septum isnhent over almost to the outer wall, and then this may occur. You get ii little "cold" or irritation of the lining of the nose, and the lininggof the outer wall and the covering of the flamed. _ You can see then that the swell- s1o.0o0. On the collapse oi the "if "f, ‘hi: fwflflld 189mm t "ti" - ac ua y r ng‘ ose wo par s o- bank he resigned from the Railway gethela and that "fir", Wm be B°l“'°‘~ - - blocked. _ --'—— ‘ You naturally ask why their, Hon. E. J. McMurray, Solicitor is the other nostril, the wider General of the King Goygrnmeng Well, you can sec that the septum ‘has nothing to do with it anyway. What happens is that some parts oi the lining of the further in. get inflamed. This may be the covering of the little bony passages that out into the passage from the side walls. - My only point in this article is to show that ileilections, or the bend- other DOSE, occurs in nearly everybody to a slight extent, and usually means nothing. Where it is bent too much and actually cuts oil’ air supply. you are just that niucli short of having the necessary amount of air for your needs. ln this‘ case you should of course consult a specialist. MARCH 4.—l3e hold. diligent snd faithful. You are a shrewd judge of people and seldom make mistakes in your estimates. You have a winning personality, but are somewhat given to fault-find- ing. You will have a happy marriage if you learn. to "give and take" and make the best of what you have. Your birth-stone is a bloodstone, which means presence of mind. Your flower is a violet. Your lucky color is white. -———--<o-o-—-— t Lest We Forget § TUESDAY, MARCH 4 i-ieniuuvno con-rs: Famous Spanish soldier. - or oi Mexico. landed in the Mexican state of Tabasco on March - 1519, when he founded Vera Cruz, Thence he penetrated into the interior, took Mexico City and subdued Monteauni , the Astic "emperor." WILLIAM PENN Distinguished leader oi this Quaker sect in England. came to moii wealth in the Colonies r0 calving the grant of what is now thsi state of Pennsylvania on March 4, 1681. ADA LYDIA HOWARD Prominent American ilffl Jrosident 0i College, died on March 4. 1007; i IIRNIRO M. IARUOH. inan oiKthe United States Iiidiiltrieg Board on March 101d. - _ , , , LOUII aiai. r Whoa Thomas loot! was flit, a thrill of horrol‘ 1', . 1 col i . Ion It! You have looked up into the nose there sure enough, it showed that the division between your nostrils This seemed to explain the easier omy in both men and money. Thut there has been a great waste of septum both become slightly, ii1- these materials in the past is seen ‘ ‘by thefollowing statement from the. Secretary Presbyterian Church in Canada. stand ' ing over oi the septum to one side | along their own lines like the dif- . i , America and founded a new comt‘ educator; Welleslsy - Prominent figure in Wall street. wldly known economist and finan- cial executive, woo appointed chair- w‘; ‘f run casitnorrsrows GUARDIAN " " - The Public‘ Forum_ This column. la. open for the dlaouoaion by corres- ’ pendants of question; of in teroat. ' The Charlottetown Guardian does not naosaaan iiy endorse tho opinion a» _ pressed by its cor-reopen dents. CHURCH UNION ' Sir,-—l desire through the col- umns of your paper to give my rea- sons for supporting Church Union. i believe that loyalty to Christ de- mands this of me. in John 17th chapter 20th and last verses our Saviour declares His will, “Neither pray l for thee alone but for them‘ also which shall believe on Me through "their word." "That they all may ho one an thou Father art in me and l in thee, that they also may be one‘ in us that the world may believe ‘that thou hast sent me." l know that those opposed to Union say that our Saviour was here speaking of spiritual union noi. organic union at all but his omnis- cient eye took in the future of the various churches (Of all those who would believe through their preaching. That it was to be an outward union as well as spiritual is seen by the fact ‘that it was to make an impression on the world.) A spiritual union real and active inust control all organic unions. To be truly loyal to Christ and his spirit we must work for it and pray ior it. In Acts 1st. chapter, 8th verse our Saviour luys down the work for hi; disciples until/the end of time. “But ye shall receive pow- er after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you and ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusa- lem and in all Jutlea. and lo Sam- aria, "and unto the uttermost parts of the earth.” This is a great work and cannot be accomplished effectually with- out a Union oi the Churches. One writer has declared that it is quite possible to have a population of One Hundred Million in Canada at the close of the present century. To be loyal to Christ in this work requires the strictest econ- Treasurer of the .Rev. R. G. Sinclair, Hamilton. P. E. l. Dear Mr. Slncieair: "iii response to your inquiry of December 26th l am sending you a copy of a leaflet on Co- operations and Union issued by the Joint Committee - on Church Union, which shows ATTORNEV-GENERAL W. F. NICKLE Whose figures ‘in his contribu- tion to the Budgetoebate In the Ontarilo Legislature are disputed by Hon. Manning Doherty. There ia a difference of twelve million doi- iara In the conclusions reached by Mr. Nickle and Hon. Manning Doherty, leader of the Progressives, from the annual reports. W. G. Y. . TUESDAY. MARCH 4 790 Kilocyclss (380 Meters WGY (Schenectady, N. Y.) General ElectrllFCompaay Eastern Standard Time 12:30 p. m.——Stock market ro- port. 12:40 p. lIi.——Pi‘0dllC8 market re- port. 12:45 p. in.——Weathcr report. 2:00 p. m.—Music and address, "Beauty Resolutions for the House- wife" (courtesy Society for Electrical Development). 6:00 p. m.—-Produce and stock market quotations: nws bulletins- lnstrumental Trio of Hotel Ten Eyck, Albany, N. Y. 7:46 p. m.—Musiciil program. Instrumental selection, "Melodie in F” WGY Orchestra Soprano solo, “The Road Thut Brought You to He" .. Hamblon Mrs. L. Garland Coons Aililress, "Tho Super-iieterodyn Ro- cciver" “ ll. ll. Langley, Radio Engineer, General Electric Company Piano solo, "Hexenta-nz" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ...MacDowell Ruth M. Kingsbury ' Contralto solos. , a. "Absent" . . . . . . . . . .. Metcnlio b. “The Cares oi Yesterday" . . . ._ Motcniic Alacs -Dutton instrumental selection, "American the total number of Union Charges oi‘ all classes to iio 1245. These figures were complied about a year ago and quite a number have been add- od slnco thou. We have avail- able no comprehensive state- ment of the number of men and the amount of money sav- od by this movement towards (Io-operation and Union, and I this is an exceedingly iliiii- | cult thing to estimate. You will, however, find on page 26 of the Home Mission Report to the last General Assembly it~ statement in regard to (Jo-op- cration in Northern Ontario and in the Synod of Toronto and Kingston. From this statement you will observe that 170 Pastoral Charges in that Synod are working under a Union Basis, 84 under-the care of the Presbyterians and R6 of the, Methodists. it is estimated that by this ar- rangement -the Synod is saving 56 Presbyterian men and at least $40,000 a year to the Mis- sionary Funds of the Church Cooperation in East and Weiit is doubtless producing results approximating those of Nor- thern Ontarlo. l trust this is theiniormation you deslrc." Very sincerely yours, ROBERT LAIRD. Those comparatively large Un- ions are only a small part of our Mission Fields in the West. lt used to be a favorite argu- ment with the Anti-Unionists that the different Churches could work ferent armies in France but when it was iound that ‘a closer Union was needed in order to succeed our great statesmen Lloyd George against the will of many oi his own people, helped to put General Foch in command and lctory came. This self-surre sr on the part of the British People and Generals is one of the brightest pages in their whole history. A Congregational Minister in Winnipeg on returning to his charge from meeting with" the Union Committee in order to draft the Union Bill told his people that he had- surronderod every- thing for which their Church stood he had this for the Kingdom of God in our Country. This is the spirit we-want. to "see everywhere. "There is that givetli and still in- creasetb-withlioldlngi more than meet teudeth to poverty." - These then are my two great rea- sons for believing in o Union of the Churches. first Loyalty to Christ 1n Spirit, 2nd. Loyalty to l-liin in the work-He gave us, to do. l am. Sir. etc. Hull. ll CLAIR, l-lami ton. P. E. l tor quarters. and all the fire-arms and supplies in the settlement. The settlers. to prevent bloodshed, had mur- i-sal help dared at loot Garry on this day iii am. irritated by their failure to spread adopt his idol, he took what helio- Clllllll and acted as niucli iievoii 10.50 s mun: of oiiioroiiia . .. . F . t. , _ » t W. to’. We" . is".'i.-r.ir.".'i:.r"i.am, "1:"'.:;-..":'.':."'...:z-i. s: ~~ 0am e atveii a cautious compliance with iilg- semi I authority uiltil is some trim the rCoutralto solo. Orchestra iAildress, "Doctor Trccs lnjurcd byi , Storm" .U. S. Department of Agriculture. instrumental selection, ”i)anuiie Waves" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Soprano solo, "You'd Hotter M" . . . . . . . . . . . .' . . . . . . . . . . Mrs. IA. Garland Goons o Piiino solo. "Tho Two Larks" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Loscbctizky Ruth M. Kingshury “My -Ain Folk" Lemon Alace Diittnn instrumental selection, “lluiii- oreskc" . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .l)vorak instrumental selection, "Hungarian Dance" . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Brahms Orchestra Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers ’ O SUNSHINE AND ROSES If lifkwero all sunshine and roses We'd weary, l think, of the glare; Thc petals would cuniber our path- way, Tho perfume would burden. the air. k So give us the storm and the trouble, Let rain with our plans interfere, That we may rejoice at the season When roses and sunshine are here; For none of us cares ior the deadly Moootcnoug sameness of things To rob us of anticipation- The hope that eternally springs. And so while we worry through winter. We know there is coming a day When blossoms and birds will be waiting To cheer us again on our way, To the place or the thing we are seeking, Though obstacles fancied or real ' ' Are placed ior our minds or our - muscles , To conquer, surmount or conceal By bluff or determination, And so keep us forging ahead _ in search oi the sunshine and rose . To liriihiten the trail that we tread. ' _ ' ' , ~8oldetsd. ..'.'..".l'.’i'i°‘ “H.317; J Piantol gives a springtime beauty arid freshness to the complexion that befits its flower-like ingredients. Its lather, so fragrant and cleansing, cannot leave the skin dry and rough -—just soothed and ex uisitely clean. Try this British-ma c soa with its traditional standards o and quality. I All grocer: and department ill/Fit iH-‘Uiiii HR IltilliNfil iiNlAHm 6:30 p. m.——Dinner music by the . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Rubenstcin v Home Songs" . . . . . . . . .. Aschor i Fl Toilet Soap made only iioin p Plant ffllifelid '. oils I purity Gngxquisite Uoilet Soap ‘ 4 rtore: sell Plantol. linl-Ylli i; Poultry and Eggs have given Prince Edward island a Dominion-wide reputation aa a leader in these products. it further demonstrates that the solution of the Farmers prob- lem today, in all lines of Agriculture, ia not alone higher prices but in more intelligent and efficient production and marketing. All citizens should visit the Poultry Show tiila week at the Technical School and this will help them to appreciate what the Poultry Farmer ls doing to make P. E. island famous and prosperous. Thia space donated with compliments of HVNDMAN d. 60., Li-MITED. iThc Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. i. \ Imperial Biscuit Co; - Mess s. ii. M. Lampson &=ii_o’s Spring Sale Will Commence ON ‘MARCH 27, 1924 Fine fura, such as Fox of all kinds. Boavpr, Otter, Lynx, Fisher, etc. intended for the Spring Sliofahouid ho in New York not later than the morning of Marohi7, i924. Stapieartlcles, such on Skunk, Opoasiim, Muskrat, Mink, Raccoon, Bear, Wolf, eto., reaching New York by' the morning of March 14, 1924, should arrive iii London In time for llicliiaion in the Sale. ' 1 ' Messrs. C. M. Lampoon l. 60., expect that ' fllllfYv Sale prices will he maintained at they . f the "I of "' , ‘r Muskrat, Raccoon, Wolf and Fox of all kinds. the Spring Bale. and ' ‘ Mink. Messrs. 0. M. Lampoon It 69., report that deliveries from the January Sale have been excellen; which is an indication of healthy business conditions in the European market. iiutrition- of Foxes The Secret of Success in fox farming ia acknowledged to be largely one of care and correct feeding. ' Dr. G. Ennis Smith who condiiota an experimental ' flatten It Hull, Quebec, tin rendered valuable uni-vies by calling attontionlto the noeeaaity of I wail-balanced diet at all seasons. Hia diet shoots for iii-inter feeding consist of from’ 29 to 50% oookod cereals, which is obtained bY feeding a good fox Biscuit. Ha also hiplly rooilniitonda codlLiver-Oll aa containing more of the fat-soluble growth-promoting vitaminoo than any ofliar known boil- lxporiovioad feeders know the value of onorfly foods (PNUW! of brain) dining the mating and floatation por- ~ loci, when tho foxaa require to ho wail nourished. Imperial CoiLLIvai-Oll Fox Iiaoulta are the result of soieiitlilo knowledge and practical-cinnamon of our-auc- eoufiil ioirfudon. No ranch oan afford to in without - thorn. We would advise sanding in moon. Growl II early u possible. - i i _______ A-i if. -»ia. "no m 51- Q». aorta.- w 1a.-