‘ this ideal, moreover, woul _‘ available as yet but the rate of influx in report- ;, ed to have been further aocelprated. <:H frncrr. roux / THE. BIIARLOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Dolly (Founded In I881) President. Lhut.-Col. W. Chester 5. Mcluro Vice President. J. B. an. F, J. I_ Secretary. Lleut -Col. D. A. Mnolilnnon, D. 8. 0. Editor und Managing Director J. ll. Burnett. I‘. J. I Associate Editor. Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES ‘$5.00 per year up sdnnee) delivered to City $4.00 per year (In advance) mulled to P. E. Inland 35.00 per your (In ndvnnce) mailed to Cuudnunl 0.5 Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: :‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the kveakesl Ink." WEDNESDAY. JULY 26. 1939 ~ Hiiiaiy ATSoIutio‘n mtt*rvie\\‘t-d here last week while attending the Confctlermion celebration, Premier Bracken of .\lauitoba said he would like to see the Fed- eral (}overmnt~nt return to “the good old days of free tradt-." This he believed was the only ulti- mate solution to the West's harassing wheat problem. Putting it bluntly, he asserted that in the granarics of the world there are now over a billion bushels of wheat, enough to take care of the needs of the importing nations of the world for two years. Ton _rt-:u‘.< or so agoxcotntnents the Hamilton Spectator, l'r¢-mier l‘»r:icl<on‘s proposal might have carried a great deal more weight than it zloes today, as the traditional political divisions on the question of the Canadian tariff are at this point virtually undisccrnable. But taking a broader world view, what valid- ity could he fountl'm an appeal for "the good )ltl days of free trade"? As an ideal, as an ccollntltic doctrine, no one would quarrel with it, any more than one would q_uarrel with the ideal of world peace. The im- 'llC(ll2\l(! qttestion, ll()\Vt‘\‘(l", is this: \Vho led the mternatimial “s<'lf—=uflicicncy” dance, that fin- ally forced even liritain to put up a policy of protection, and gradually closed markets to Can- tdian wheat? It would surely be a great over-emphasis on the power of the Dominion in world economics --(‘.Ol1Sl(l(‘l"Zll)lC as that p _ --i§-'-trr-'-nall’‘down‘ this country as rcsponsibl for it. Canada play- ed no part in the‘bui1ding p of totalitarian prin- ciples that led to count 5 like Germany and Italy attempting to becom independent of wheat imports. Nor did we hav any hand in the large zxportable surpluses that ocamc suddenly avail- able from Russia, the Ar mine and the United States. Rather, it seems mor thankful that, in this pr the Dominion has a mo and industrial life to su wars for agriculture. nubarltcd on a policy of luring we should still f wheat surpluses. And in n be much worse off than The lower costs of come through a return t free trade" would still :1 (l<‘El(ll(lCl( in the fight for reasonable to -sent world condition, variegated economic ain it through trying cl the country never building up manufac- -‘ the problem of big t condition we would e are today. , oduction that might the good, old days of suffice to break the The cost of be so disruptive that, to see how it applies !‘\'(‘ll as an ideal, it is ha evidence concerm since 1919. a new loan. run largely 0 position has c feel past twenty years. from 1938, a per capi is considerably largel has been developed by pri ly casting about for new fields. Establishment of a Bata shoe plant in Canada, recently ar- ranged, forms a typical example of what is go- ing on. Tourist Accom modation Complaint has been received from the pro- prietor of tourist cabins in the eastern part of the Pl'0VlnC€» Charging both the Travel Bureau giving misleading lack of iiccommod- -9111!!! It ation in that section and with seeking to induce ‘ all tourists to go to the National Park area in- stead. Travel Bureau and railway officials, interviewed with regard to this complaint, state that on the contrary all available information as to tourist facilities in any part of the Island is gladly given on request. Where full details are‘ not supplied this is due, they claim, to lack of co- operation on the part of those catering to sum- All such persons are advised to keep the Travel Bureau posted early in the sea- son as to the number they can accommodate, the nature of the accommodation, the prices charg- and Car Ferry officials wit information regarding allege mer visitors. ed, etc. I Edilnrlal Notes Today’: event, Northam Races. as it it It Georg! Bernard Shaw born this date, 1856. 1! Ii 3 it The north shore hotels are filled, and with waiting lists.» #8!!! llaymaking is going apacc, but, alas, the crop :ent-tmentfil is far from being a heavy one. at :- 13 It The worst of banquctting the Prime Minister in nti<l—summer is that business and politics, as nerds, when, the mtnmg 01 mm on well as vacations, all get involved in the wait for 5 his pronouncements. at it it The results of the medical examinations of the first batch of the young men, aged 20-Q1, who have registered fo Great Britain show that 93.3 per cent we for training, and of these 3+5 P“ CC“ “'9” in the first class. Only 2.3 per cent were definite- ly unfit—and this on a high standard. Thi a ; remarkable result--vulziclr-provridecirrc ng the rise in social con itions lfifii Mr. Walter Nash, the New Zealand Minister 6°" 9 of Finance, has been in London. negotiating for muted 8“ New Zealand it may be noted is n socialistic lines, and its economic hanged considerably during the The public debt has grown $750,000,000 m 1918 to $x.435.oo<>.ooo in ta rise from $655 to $906. This mm “"319 higher than the per capita debt of Canada, but perfectly comparable with that of Australia; the statistical difference between Canada and the Australasian Dominions being y accounted for by the fact that Canada vate enterprise, Aus- aland by State action.‘ tralia and New Ze . It It It It-. I r military training in on re fit erty. diamond drtlllng is in Since March, 1938, the number of Roman Catholics under German rule, has, through vari- e ous annexations, increased by some 15,000,000. Religious statistics for the whole German rm- sis ° - .. \ IIDTES ‘av nu: luv and ‘Institutions w an they are in I. position to one (or them In their own home; and so la it tho be t this zaendency ta perv or to Hamilton; but that does not make the burden fl, easier to hear. The splrlt or ependence has lost much or, its vlgor; more and more the state or the munlctpallt/y is looked to to solve domestic pr ‘ which are ea.seutla.lly or 9. private character, and which should be loyally settled by the parties so - oerned, without resort to ubllc agencies. -- Haurtlton spectator. The sentimental power or (ser- mon propaganda must be enor- ous. In the cue or Danztg. evm Germans, who make u 90 er nt of the pulotlon, re: a t at lncorpora, n in the Retch they in lose about all their economic avnntazea. Danzlg is very pros- erous. In contrast: to Germany as cost. or living is very low, and zero la food in abundance, and nports furnish the people with ‘erythlng they need. Taxcs are w and the port is thriving. mod to Germany with its huge es, forced to supply food to the ten, undergo mllltary conscrip- tion and lose a good deal of tts part business, the people of Danzig woul be In 9. sad pllght compared to thelr pnesent. position. Yet, the appeal of race will sue them to choose the sacrifice. -—Boston Post. 2'6’ "E-Est.-2 It Is one of the strange trends that in Algoma mining commercial scale has just. been resumed other a lapse of two dec- ades and where the dtst.rlct's most successful gold mining operation Ls beln carried on in 5 big way, n'l03lI~0 the talk at. the present time shouicl be of molybdenum. A mlll is now being lnstalled on e Algoma. molybdenum prop- pro- grtss on another and still a third ls being examined by engineers of well-known companies. “You can't get. people to put up money for molybdenum It seem! to be dlt-i rerent." -—‘5o.u1t Ste. Mute star. lo I. uotlon has been taken by of Canada and the to revent the dis- appearance 0! went poles, those heuldlc emblems sat up by. the rod men. Many tooam poles have been sh to museums and magic in cities far from their orig- l settings; this ls no longer allowed. The larger poles are over Gotcet in height. and were carved tram. Many have béen taken down by Government experts ‘and have been treated and an-en L-hencd . before being raised on . Otherwise they would have decayed, in the In. seldom repaired those which 11. A number of the poles have repainted by ‘Lndtans familial‘ th the colors used. Each pole es the genellogteal lrlstory of a. particular Intitxp family or tribe d to the equl on} or s cont-oh . Dect horlngr of the em- b ms is d flcult because few of Indluno rods comprehend —- New Yo!‘ Sun. out of 10 firmer: In II- t em’. ‘Nine in O Canada today. pirc, including the ‘Bohemian-Moravian Pro- lluo take some daily newspaper, tectorate (Czech territory) are now as ‘follows: ‘ nae?‘ m"e’~§°‘:g1‘: “£333; Protestants . 43.500900 50 , that ht to learn from Favorable 4_Roman Cathollcs 37,509,000 43.1% gugmmigctmme 0%: :3: \ -Other Christians . 9oo,ooo :86?‘ ,, on “M. pm, um, ,,,m,,,g - ‘- s oooo‘o. nI‘l:ict.lces.'1‘lrlal:a tnot'l8per- -10 question but that t arlottctown is at the -lg" religion, dc. issgqooo 5% cant. over dmunr Ifzaures compiled lime-light these days, a the Glace Bay Gazette, licity is calculated to he Edward Island's capital~ and flowing over for the It reviews the various programme, “each of whi traction of national or self.” It also recalls the district meeting of R0 concludes: “All these e early summer cannot but vertising the charms of 1 its capital all over the co tent in Great Britain_ It addition to the Island’: will be known by the ev Our Glace Bay conte ting tribute to its fircm honours at the tournam received a well-deserved turn home. ich says: “If pub- : community Prince as had it to the full = t couple of months." vents of last week's 5' 93 ‘< 1'1 £3. a 3 -9. . ts occurring in the ave the effect of ad- er Island province and inert: and to some ex- hould result in a big ul"lSlI traffic, but this D ' nary also pays a fit.- , who carried off the t here last week and vation on their re- Massey As i The high commissione Hon. Vincent Massey, for rbrief hour in his mreer a newspaper -» . S6’ reports A. C. Cumming], London com ndent of the Sout- ham newspapers. “ Mr. Massey confessed : much when he spoke. at a Newspaper Press F (1 dinner.“ “I confess,” said Mr. Masseyy "that I ap- preach the newspaper rld with appropriate humility. My own career 5 an amateur journal- ist was brief and poignall I once edited an un- dergraduate journal whi h died of pernicious financial anaemi , and : er was editor of in- other at Oxford which ,._ xfgfi-,,gvmtg.—,,¢§gs.; Under “Other Christians" are inc Old Catholics and Greek Orthodox. t on It ‘-0: It gestion of the editorial column." ___..________.__.___._. New Capital For Canada —_.—.—A—- The Windsor Star's Ottawa correspondent finds "a silver lining" for Canada in the clouds hanging over troubled Europe. He quotes of- ficial figures to show that in the month of May, as compared with April, the net inflow of capital into this country jumped $5,800,000, to a total of $ro,8oo'.ooo. For the first five months of this year there liasbeen a net inflow of money Into the country running to the impressive total of .$6r,oqo,ooo.. June and July figures hl'¢> not \. There is nothing to won<le__r' at‘, of course, in the flight of capitalgfrom Europe to this side of ,thg, ocean. cqndtnonq abroad have become Io gfor bilstiaenituscu-—tI1atv they-Ira in France ludcd the 800,- ooo members of the. Czech National Church, the 10’ years no by the some or¢anlIa- . In other words runners and mom come to - t '' ‘rut: CHAxrJtn'r'ré'rowN Guaiunr.-INT PUBLIC FORUM - n u 9 an:-3-1:‘ or u ' 0 I: “i auctions Mm Ibo- ulurtonqtown 1! ‘due no nuuurlly adorn opinion 0! urnlp-Ileltl. -mu CITY IIUDDLI s1r.—I notice In the Auditor: re- |port, certain clauses, in the Act of costs tor the ta.xDBl’era- ldlhwomomuon mm“ to “yum- posed tbs. It may surprise them to statute law L1 0! varied char- acter. and varied lnterpretatlon. A Mandatory law is supposedly of coma) Lion. A "Direc- tory" clause is almost the same, yet more trrstruotlve than Iorclble. But. the power that ‘nuke can also destroy, and when the Legis- lat/t.‘l.re enacts other laws, in a. measure overruling these. lt creates chaos._ and neutralizes all mau- datory law to a “d1reotnry" stat/us. Breaches or the Mandatory, have been tn evtdenm (or many ears, ‘andm more so In the presgnt lban. n y preceding year. et. 1 would hesitate to declare them wilful, or even to am’ sertous ex- gml. My Dresent. ob ct is to and throw llgh Custom is often low, accepted very frequently in common law courts. custom. in our city. covering, soy forty years back has much the toms of common law, perhaps no; 8 teswble l Xorce. For in- stanoe how of n. tn the period above mentioned, has been "Man- '35’-OYY” Sec. 89 been complied with? Has lt. not in the major ol ears Wliy has its mandat/~r,v By the met that other leglstutlon confers on the city council a co ration executive power direct on_ in which there ts no crlmtnality ap- parent when they thus not con- l-TETY to the Statube. A831“. W what. extent has re- S t. or even a. reasonable con- sderatton been given to the es- senttal "Mandatory" requlmments or See. 101? 1 will not go lnto this queshjm at Drescnt as lt must be cons in a more important. Phase of the “mudd1e" which, in my 091111011. has been exaggerated conmderaably beyond lts Just: pro- pot-tlon. ..m .. ménke tea; D s a . of affairs it would not the public interest to raise as issue. But men all thought. in e .nce. and public concern sh study for them ves, and neck 1 pro- Another not. In come up r mture '4 -9. 1,1,“ the Legislature has, b at stattutn. legalized m t thg Auditors have denounced “lr- regulurlttcs". Ind even ntly more cr' El and ttrted wrong doing with the s, of aintpmved Indulgence and I utory pat-mtsslon. 3. Thus lt. hardly meets on se to take up special clauses , rm. Fly to immediate Iibjcutl while ovgrlooktng very many 5 at study or which would -' ttrely chance their momcuve ob- ?;.'?“°’ ”3"§..““ °t"‘° . B , U04] 3 1‘. eves wlth.,t7lre.whol ~ . E. i -3; 0: im. sir.‘ i - 1° ' ment by bolting various An £0112 at Enurs .l'!9!.?-9!“?-.§_.V suau; umom up nuuutvrs * run .__.___.. when we nod/years I80 about the "medlntne mhn" of savage tribes and how.h6 bolted the var- loua organs or animals and 83V! the Juice tor various atlments, we thought: tt, was funny. we have known for years now that the Jule- ot the organs or gland has restored llfe tn many whose hearts had stopped basting; extract of thyroid gland brightens up and removes weight in children who have been sluggish mentally and slcally Extracts are obtain- ed a from prtuttary. sex, and other glands. No lon er, then, do we smile at the “med ctne man" and his treat- lands. other treatment 0 Peoples and tribes was the use at vcnom or the poison from snakes. In Medical World. Eugene Mater. Ph.D., Director or Laboratories, Florida Medical Centre, Venice, Florida, after tracing the history of the use of snake venom from its uses in the treatment or disease to-day, “The venom may be used in certain dose; in depressing higher centres or feeling or pain, and possibly be of use tn dellrlum, hallucinations, loss of speech, and melancholic. It might be in apoplexy, meningitis. hysteria, and chores. (St. Vitus‘ Dance» It might. be of use in depressing or qulettng attacks of asthma. abtltty or venom to not us an an- aesthetic has been put, to practical use to stop the severe pains 01 cancer (too late for operation) by parulystng the nerve emllnlts. Re- scarch work on the anaesthetic ‘action of venom shows that it is much like mor hlne and other Opium preparnt ons. Snake venom does not act; as quickly as mar- phtne but: its effects last. longer." some weeks ago I spoke or the results obtained by Dr. D. I. Macht. In the use of snake venom to relleve pain in incurable cancer, angina. pemrts, and serve rheu- matic pain. Further reports come from Dr. Martin Ktrschen who gave cobra. veno_m lnjectlons to’ 23 putlen‘ suffering with lncurable or inoperable cancer The effect of the t-reatrnctnt in most cases was to ‘reduce pain and improve the gen- eral condition or the patient. Dr. Mater reports that in persons bit- ten by snakes. epileptic attacks may stop for yrnrs. Drowning Is So Unnecessary (Lttcguaru James W. Dunner in the Baltlrnore sun.) ' I seven thousand people in the ‘United. States (800 or 900 tn Can- ~Ida) will die of drowning this year —a'nd many thousands moze will come too close, to this choking fwte. Seven thousand people——~‘;hls year, and the next, and the next. Andltlhose deaths Just aren't nec- essary Practically all our dirownlngs are due to reckless dtmegard of plain common sense. on behalf or my tel- low lifeguards, who have own again and again how quickly folly leads to stark tragedy in the water, I em- phautze these essential "don‘t.s": Don't swim far from shore, un- acooanparued a. boat. The exhil- aration of coo water gives you a. false sense or power. nut this stim- ROG '. urauo.-i rm u down sud enl an 1 . T . . . . ‘ Jug’: $wkr:t\m u are ylged to find ailil atiimrog Canadrani are quite definitely consuming less ‘uh ,0,“ ,,,,m,_ I 0,, t you are too exhausted to re- meat than t ey did a few years ago; for example however. do not show “"131 00 5*h‘‘‘3‘‘°- Y*;,“1°‘;°‘“*:h‘$e "mm the consumption per capita of beef and veal in "mm do :‘,§:¢!°m§f 3 Yofi’ ,,,,,,P,°“"‘,,§,,, O, ;,hu,,,,1 1935 was 66.18 pounds, whereas by 1938‘ it had . Km, mciudmg wt 8' tnww dropped to 61.53. The consumption per capitu ".-W... ' F33» lglglggfhtgl. mm of hplpirk in r335 was pxllnds an n 1938 4,, 3,1,‘ ,g2w'_ xgelrsgo e. 3.; 1-,. gram. it gone own tots . 1 year 0 two ago - , ‘ .~ survey. seven 113’ ‘ - , Canadians were consuming more pork than beef . ' I :12 ',1:°u,l:,§,°,,,.‘. ,,eIv$”%?:3,lL'g,,,' but the situation altered last year and the con- ~ ~ the swam in these "°n"- low water. lttadh mis- sumption of pork was nearly five pound» mg; mm P“““' fi,,‘,"n‘;,°,e,h:1n,l,‘,',o 3”“ m ’°m’;;_7 than of beef and veal. It has always been no't- 1 . —___. '0 It a nu ,, mervtary precauhlorr who could able that comparatively little mutton and lamb is “gt; ';‘P° . - lm “ "° "'1 . lftibgtn I:-at hid 8 he1lJt':1¢ used in Canada, the per capita cbnaumption lut mm... '’c.,.,.,, ° ,‘°,§ n‘, W. K. ROGERS AGEN T l-7° Don't. awlm until two hours was year being only 6.09 pounds. The consumption 1190. With “II tfldltllonll 1nd€D0n- CHAN-OTTETQ e=tt’-ln8- 13‘ Y0“ ¢°- the Mlddfll of all those three classes of meat war 124.59 nm,,_‘”°'°,‘m.d Wu. mm ~ ~ ma . . 1“ $0, pounds or to pounds less than three or four -illontnsl t. . . r ‘ Olfiven every muscle is years ago. Canadians consume far more poul- -luv my % move a. flncflmlélfisnve try than Ehfiyndo njrutltonkandblgtmb. the werlg Ponds” upxotalfi g , d may‘ be M N ‘ amount o s an c ic ens ing 15.50 poun ~ WWW 70“ . W11 Wm - last year, which was pretty much the average in 2:} 3";‘,o°g..o¢l:::_m$'ia _ ‘V. ywmciidi gr‘; obld. " mgcrdggd previous years, turkey r.58, duck 0.35 and All ovtgogtvngchvn m:!tIr“mm' ‘ - , R M ufitggttflgmun mtgug goose 0.59. The consumption of butter remain: “,1 V. “W (mm. M when Min” um ch“, ed. 1,; mm,” somewhat the same as formerly. in 31.83 pounds, gin I we love themoaiug. the my or amp. .1. we.-wmimy-.3 tn nor is there much variation in cheese at 3.62.' '7. !"'- -t “W Y - ' ‘Ir: man But. the ms‘iru:stu:icim°“1:°m' » at t at -u . i --r“-, ~ .~ The "almost mai';ieat" results which huvsbeeii; -‘ 1': "'-ii'rn'§-,e at :3 Enm tth:-ow m_ peoplfil” ‘"“°" achieved within the past few months by the new p ,, .,,.‘‘'''‘’fl,‘,.,,°'“.-,,,‘‘—':,,,,,,, “"1 wcwuir-°“,, '’;h§‘vm,m 1’ drug, sulfapyridinc in the treignent of VI_t‘l0tl_I : II ' $9!" Vlflflv 31" % can is swim to salety without diseases were further explain by Dr. . . . , . - "' . , “"°Do‘_'fg ,m':;°,n,o 001°“ Sylvestre, of Notre Dame Hos _' . =t:owa_vu,' ,,h,, p ,,,.,,,,.,.,,,,,,,g,‘f"‘,f:,f,,‘{",,§*; Montreal, in an interview. D‘r‘."‘Sylv‘e‘8tl*€ dared. _ " "§,‘_ utter ptaytmr attmuws nine-. "2" :'.:.'“.'::=n"..‘:**.:: .»............t *=...'?;-.: om. s . .. , , ~~ .__-"'5 , emos sen, ewayo in Valleyfield. The report referred to the " . ' ‘ _ 1%“; tghmim ‘R: as “Dagenan" and “693” was a derivitivc of '°ld¢“",:) ‘;::m§"3‘a",§';°rgm fignivlg: Get Your home Today. In: tlreowstiogo body ‘M - - - - ~ Dart try to rescue mother per- sulfantlamrde and had been found In certain Em. midst or the rainy oeuon- BATIIING ‘CAPS at by pl in ym,-nu my“. treatments to be less toxic and possessing more ;‘_:".{l,‘,’°"F,‘,',‘g"m “fir ‘,2? uf:"c‘£,‘n“’ we mm "a H," you hnwmhfiuurunvtnc ' , rapid curative powers, he said. In particlar, the my gngnzgd 3,, ,, m,,,.y whfi ..,,2 .g filth, c”. "M fltgmmflw but umu-an seldom drug had been used with the most pronounc d 1% bgen -m-“gins ajflhgl-I post or gay; gfvamm "'1 t-M ..,,,.,,.,,.,,,.“,"""",, ,,,,,,,"'°"“, .,,,,,,§,:“‘,,2, success in the treatment" of pneurnon _, «who-,,°{‘,,"m.,.. cam ‘me’ “*3”?!-_ H.“ mm 5,.“ "_ _ tlno.mn1'bouu.'Anythtn¢ whlcnvfifi gonorrhea and-meningitis. Dr. Sylvestre aid in "friend." replied the 0 0. i WWW“ WM ,“"‘~""‘ - - - - ' "Welcome to our mint” sold tho SPECIALS h w Vb‘ ‘mdv "°'“' explaining the extensive research which has mm,’ __ Puma“ 1,5“ 3 , flunk ung_bopumgaqut,,m- um..- been carried out at Notre Dame hospital for the ' __.. ' poops |(|nN[Y P||,Ls °" “'m“3 'P°l° ""*°"'“¢» 5" 5 WW? Aoeonun to word mm Florkln | ' °‘“‘ “*7 “° °° '“' past three months. From 85 to 90 per cent. of an Um emu mm '0 one“ 39.; pg“ 5“ . ._ mo, “.5, 5,“, the gonorrhea cases treated with Sulfapyri- any on mm gmpom gh..¢°h,,,, .__._.....-.........__.... your c for route, dine had been cured in under. nine ‘days. $1‘!!! ital hllifignrggggfsg PAILUM .45: pi!’ box ‘ mm-g (mg! “mm; with complete prevention of complications, with hunk“ no,-am, unwed ,, um .._.__....._ should you become count In «no. older methods of treatment the average case took non from 3.11.3. wlncnenter. V|N0|.|A CASTILE SOAP 0:: from six to eight weeks to cure, be adde<_l.. "-"",‘:g"° ‘“,, ‘°°g.jmu: , I0 CAKES 15¢ l adamant ' , urlndpb. in a Sulfapyridine (dagcnan) is the outcome of llev tiny csngofigxum u an M1 shin. ~ , r ' , "V _ ""‘“‘ °"" 59"“ searches which were completed lust year in the aiunwwm my ‘mg! lg: ~ laboratories of May and Baker, in England, and 4,‘... gm mm, ml,“ won my . H . ~ g ‘L \ _ Don’: M. ' has been used concideratbly in that country and VII MIIGVNM. - 1"!¢df_ '.y. ~ ‘i A F MONTREAL, D. I*‘ltapc.t:rlck. the Grand the Oamdlsn‘ National Railway: ancient times. mentions some of _ cl’ V ORANGE oordtnctn n. heodquutaou ‘.‘.‘u."J:. 1.. about 336 acres, the _ IN nrmorr Quo.'.“'.riuy 25.5. H IIHIICG mwmm limo or 18- ‘ an N W ~t Wt: nut:-; NM-1 l0 .$flou3 H! In toryswedenwilfhegvnorni Ind birds. _ itias ugg B RAH M I N PEl(OE TEA ‘ mxfifl Ncaved or an tun. He was a. neinii'e“.lfI"“ “t¥§;..l.’”:n‘.‘ti‘l..«‘». ‘é‘i‘.i“.‘2.‘?.'.‘,’. °‘ u“ ‘T sovur snows ruummo nosoow—(op) ._ An 9, §rta.r.lturnl show or me man’: strides in (arming but 22 years will be near Mocooyvfi (1 lbttg 1,, .__...__..__._ been red’ 2,093 am. Mon. nu-zrnmrcx ”v°°° W Wit‘ '5 DIES ' BETTENS wmr zoo (GP) _ AM absence 1,, mm o-China. on behalf or the aw.“ and Museum or Nattomt m,_ zhu retum . whldtwu ;ucceus— .000 min‘ ___% ___.‘_‘ ~u You nmt'r ‘train GLASS T0 SPOT THIS BIG VA‘LlIE ES You Can See the Value of Your Charlottetown Guardian by Its Service to You! 0 Always first to bring you the local, national and world events. 0 Always first to give you best buysgtltr-ouglt advertlsefs col- umns. , " Always First to Serve Your Needs! CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Sunrmerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown 144 Richmond / St. WHEN CANA DA‘ WA .9 YOUNG Soldiers marched hand .11: hand with the pion- eers In developing the country. Where once, then only arrival: labored tn ~0ntarlo Tobacco is grown, the leaf of which in used in . Ilnldnl BLACK TWIST [10c"PER~”G * -mi P_oni'1'_‘Tb~N0nTn cur‘ D BY