l. “FRI? r s. hie-Lure, Pr.» nlz'|-i-—\\ . _‘ Smrl-lllry-dlicnh-COL ui-i-uluflhuiy ‘(founded m1) ADVERTISING hnl Bilililiug, xvi-iv York City, " Builflinvi. 1......“ Trust luqiiivlg unJ Managing Direeto ' ‘Asrsovluicy ihiiiuru- Frank Walker and l!- K. Currie oxrnzu 5i‘.\'l'i~..\'-—‘i‘he ummlih Special Agency 'Ine._ .. llllllliilijf, m. lluuin; Glcnn ll- P. ViehPresident-J. B. Burnett D. A. lhcKlnno l). l. 0. 85.00 per you (In advance) delivered Jilin pa: ycur (In nninnu-e) mulled in Canada and United Staten BE PRESES ’l‘A’l‘l\'l$S \ Mulorl City. \\'llluughby ‘Power Building-Chicago; Syndicate Building, Atlanta; llonadnock num- ing, Sun smut-lava; 11115 N0. 85th Stu-cg Phllndclphlm ‘ Morning Maxim New York Cen- .. | A . Reported discoveries of prehistor- ic monsters continue to come from Nebraska. Recently, while a. con- tractor was excavating a new_ base- ment on a farm near: Iiastings in that. State, bones of a huge Colu- mbia nutnunoth were unearthed. Curator Brooking, of the " "tings Museum, in measuring some of the bones, concludes the beast stood at A SPRING CHANSON Sing to the Spring-but through the Spring I look And see, when fields are bare. the woodlands pale, And hear a sad unmated red-breast The ~,,'ii'l uilh the asbestos heart nuts no risk of catching fire from ‘h; flame. oi" lore. x.‘ least twelve feet high. lastlmates are Wm that the alumni roamed Nebraska m bewhfl" Yum“ bl’ I let-den pmliris 50.000 years ago. , hm)‘ WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 19R . . . . . . . . - Sweet ls thy song oh meriel and , ,, ‘, _ . , . t If six months ago the United ' 01,111. .-i CONTRAST dent Rewwl" WW" 1* “m- ma,“ M hm, wunn, ,0 mp, sweetly Sliilg , " ‘m Ymh ‘mbusadmial fink‘ He h” a consultation pact’ the success 0t Thy forefathers in our forefathers’ Our local contemporary ondeav- been given authority '9 ‘NW1 mm m“ "m! camel-en“, mjghf, m“, em; . we to cnrlirasl in an editorial clip- country to country. not 01 WWW been possible Just as this country M‘ ‘hm-m’ “m” m.“ m " m’ ' ' d “mmm” 1mm“ “Wm”! t“ m“ m” m‘ “pm” “w” t° ma“ m“ “ °°“' m thvrtnl: 221mg; old world with _ cession however Hitlerism in Ger- us of the members bassador in the country in which many 123x065 flak“ to raise her d” the young. ‘rlrlff i Board with he may at any time happen to be, mmd and seek stm more specific Men lived and die, the song remains tlim<~ jmil ".0 iull-Ivny officials. ‘The but supplementing him, urryinz wedge; gm- gh, aafe>gugfdlng o; and when wuaasz is indeed a strikingcme. mfonnatlon and impressions fmm her security as the price of any I u“ m’ puma o! m, n m“ The Twzfi P-oard is being esthb- capital ‘l0 68/911531 "15 119K713! W n“ dbammment‘ ‘ pad from Ihe breath, I think thou slngest best to love lishul 1'1. ".2. yz-i-sent lines as a re- give uniformity to United States u £0! wand and death- , ‘ ‘ m" '1‘ happy lovers and to dying m . Init o! m, imperial Conference vpolicy in Eincpe. p1“ “mum Depression comm o! 0 exude: a; Th0 PW‘? ("M19104 by MY- 90m» fear and consequent imwtivity. Justin . who is one says the Inndon Times, is a novel of tin“ . w»; jurists of Can- one. The United States Govern- fmm Yeroda jail, where he has , gdil ’ h I ixrlnutteclly high- ment luvo so ingeniously appliedybeen confined ‘or the past elghwm (vanwuver Pram“) ly QLc. = lvi‘ ns new position, old and modern precedents to our-Imomm’ h” mused no wry In“ when President Rmmveu the will .-@;<»~_~,,. 915000 a. year. Under rent conditions as virtually to create BMW.” to mo” mmum. Mm we on,“ day m“; yo, Pmsmmt John Idtvzrti v." e tile salaries and g nqw bypa q; diplqnmtist, An Qn-ipgcuugr mm o; even“ whwh have Leighton Stuart of Yenching Uni- pcluzi. . i: II-Vl-vi‘ to government wy is normally uncredited from led t0 this decision on the part. of V9133?» t0 5391155 Priiblemi 91' the ,,,_..,., B, (c, .,_--., rflfgggd m... s35, one Sovereign Mate so another the authorities. Gandhfs imprls- For Eflst with him. he summoned om to Prwfio a ye“ one or the 80mm“ Bu“ m. my,‘ u u_ cnment has been o; p, yeyy mud not only an American citizen and V _ \ A‘ gym; 1t m; mp0,,“ no n”; hush a. man born in China but a member reasons .\.l_. ..le railway financial “edited 9g none, Nb: doe; he bg- amp upon the Nationalist leader of an oldflme and disunguished 'slt._;."'-:~.‘ =1=<~h a mess today is long to the new class of privileged who, apart from m, mm Canadian family. The first of the bvlwu“: l J- wholesale extrava- representatives of Members of the directed zeal and activities as a. ‘will’ kmw“ i° m“ W" J°lm gal-lee, in 813111-35 and other ex- Lug“; o; Naflgn" who m ‘mp political agitator, is highly respect- stum» W110 W38 11°"! 111 Pelmflyl- pendtlltoo, of the Mackenzie King mm. o; A5191, 1 o1 m, qoven; ‘*4 “"1 l’? “W” W110 hi" 11° "ma in 1740 "m man“ a mi" v‘d_x__‘"_fiwp\‘_h) d‘ h m d m syqnpaghy Wm, m; mischievous eh sionary among the Mohawk: near ~- - l R ~“ 4 8 sot eoiw diplomatic mmunlties: mm m mmenung tmbm Scherlcctady, New York. There Jos- rrm "r-l l"*“"'l‘- Tim present Gov-v for the U.B.A. is not, of course, eph Brant was one of his parish- emmcxv, 111-; introduced rigid ec- a Mamba- og m, 133,811.; He 1g m = and the chairman, Mr. The release of Mahatma Gandhi Stuart 0f Yenching w, M; u, mo, 1M“; dawn icners and not far oif was Johnson ononiles in this department, includ- Ambassador M Lgmgg, mg h, a south in the season of tornadoes, Huh u“ “at °f Sh‘ wmmm “h” ii-wlllPtlbfllv which in particular sense the personal rup- humane‘ and °"nhq““k“' They so“ and um-wmds o! ms ‘on’ s“ y. m. .. r 2 have hm seven ma», mm“ m John. when the American revolu- t‘ m “~ ‘h- “m”? “mt” °5 the rcsmtflttve! of the Chief of his the southern United States this tion broke out, Sir John Johnson, M ,..~ln~..-,=, use naturally being re- 5w”, whose oomplete confidence swing, saying nothing of the mum, Stuart and the Mohawks took the ;<>~\,;-_-.1 h...» m» which the taxpayers he enjoys. when he was at Geneva ones, taldng a toll of 250 lives so Brmsh aide’ and Stuart m Datum" generally are rlevoutiy thankful, 135i; mommy”;- iu ‘m, m, gm u, far as reported. l“ w” handfly ‘mated by n“ Te‘ volutionists. He joined the tide of m‘ “mud m‘ Mu’ wmoh has United Empire Loyallsts to Canada since been taken up, that all the (m; salary Representatives of 35,000 dairy- men m New York state have 1s_ in 1780, taught school at Montreal FOR WIDIJR MARKETS by tflo Iii-rm vs. if! rat-e on dairy produce. whe 1 1m in .21 of t?! u. Ilnce it a I156’? ' " domestic V. Si’ T105 . 1c Aiinister. ‘parts of the Llznoire, which to‘. irwumcn‘. in their and there Z" .‘..tl. . ~>“.h the flszxtl policy *“‘“““l“"~"°" MONUMENTS .41 rpmrs ml office iii 1930 OI industries '1 inventories from tions made by the British Legion “M. 11y means of with the object of preserving ms of opening wider historic character of the Yipres ‘iflll Producers by Salient, u... Belgian Government l‘ "We flgrcfimellts- has given its consent to the preser- of these far- vation of a number of War sites. The following will be preserved as Imperial Conference, historic monuments:- Bsex Farm: defence works at 5t. Julien, Wleltje, Sanctuary Wood, Ploessieert Wood, and st. Elol Road, and Chateau Lankhof; the in craters in the Wytscha/ete and Mes- Sines districts; the trench system markets. at Gheluvelt; works at Kitchener Wood and Battle Wood; Triangle Ffl-Ym; Frezenberg Pond and Faun Fitzzclarcnco Farm: and Hussar .1 Africa, Australia, Now Farm at Potize. ' c nheuts was arranged he instance of the These ‘oilmi special open- -- ‘Q11 fol" goods from other allllpllftfill. of these treat- Llznt nnulc Filth the United were others proposals so far generally accepted Jirmong the concessions obtained by n” “mafia” ‘hand b” wdi‘ ego‘ Gowmment m me fled and given the form oi a 0on- ynncq_ganndian “can, signed 18st vcntion. The ultimate adoption ._~,_ M OUVL-a .5 a mhlmum tab of his suggestion is seen by the at Iiondon Times as a. good augury for and other farm, fisheries and forest u” “we” o! h“ "mwm ‘nuts prcdugfg The tel-m, o! the treaty. to help to unravel the tangle of T915911 911"‘: zrwitlrti satisfaction, world unfair" {m response to the representa- sued a call for a strike today unless the Milk Control Board grants their demand for three and a. half cents s. quart for milk. Nearly half the dairy farmers in the State are said to be behind the movement. A rarer moored by n. 11.1.. Corwin of the New York Academy of Medicine, says that hogpflzals have been one of the bulwark; that man, since the time he set- tled in large aggregations, m; 1W1 to build to defend his civilization against the forces o: destruction. They so back to the ancient em- plms of the Hindus, Egyptians, Persians, Balbylonlans, Hebrews, Gm“ and Romans. and their rise, decay and recrudescence re- flects well the development of mans’ fortunes, his social ideals and conscience, his religious spirit and his scientific achievements. An express train has left Euston station. 1005011. for Scotland, for nearly ‘I1 years without a. break, g; the present departure time of 10 a. m., the 70th birthday of the W111 hflvlns been on June 1, 1932. Since June 1, 1862, the northbound and southbound Royal Soot ex- ilresses have covered between them 17,000,000 miles. The railway in- dustry was young when the first railway service between England and Scotland xvas started. The L“- for a time, and then became the first Church of England missionary to the “western Settlements." He became, thus, the father of the Church West. He became also the father of education by establishing at Cataraqul the first school in Upper Cimada. Later he became rector of St. George's Church in Kingston and. died there in 1811. One of Kingston's streets ls named for him and another for Jane Okill, his‘ wife. l p 0 a John Stuart had five sons and three daughters, and two of tl~ former held distinguished positions in the public life of early Canada. James Stuart, the third son, was for a time the leading advocate in Lower Canada. He was solicitor- general and later attorney general of the colony, and was appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Queen's Bench by Lord Durham. In i839 he was president of the Special Council of ‘Lower Canada and in that capacity had a. great deal to do with framing the Act. of Union which joined Upper and Lower Canada. He was made a ba- ronet for his work in this connec- tion but the baronctcy is now ex- tinct. A younger brother, Andrew, was closely associated with Papineau in the twenties and early thirties of the last century, but broke with the '- ‘ -h -.-. the Irkl F: Stu. _ - - ‘ .' ‘ ‘ 4 » f‘ . .. . H ~ -ce x cs and Many o: these names evoke ha‘ caster and cams“: Runway w” popular leader before the Rebellion l l J s; a humour or die British colonies. lowed associations in connection aubhmimd m 1844' ‘md ‘mmed f" of 1837 and became his principal ' . l ‘q~ . .- 't f ~ w . . disuuihrtrcdty As pcnding with with the hams,“ and gamma o; ti‘; Ilgcfiuglfsg eztmdlnll almost W opponent. He was solicitor general UH, 1 .1 Drmsh 1mm" s""'"“1 °f “"150 Canadian soldiers during the Great m on on Feb 15’ °f L°W°T Canada- Whill h!‘ died 1X1 1s - - ~ . 48' the Caledomm‘ Railway 11m’ 1840. His eldest son, Andrew, was a ngrcclnrius lmvo airrndy brought war Their .' - preservation as historic connecting carllsle Glasgow and (Montreal Gazette) The reforming ordinances of the Hltleriic regime in Germ“: n- flect a fanatical spirit and suggest that the pace is too swift to last. No department of national life is permitted to escape the dictatorial decrees and arbitrflrv New!" 0! this zealotlst temper. The officials at the Wlllielmstlnsse make ‘no concealment of their cherished de- signs oi fetching all the education- al agencies of Germany. the schools universities, religious organisations. artistic and literary societies, com- pletely tinder Nazi control. For the furtherance of this movement the members of the Students’ Associa- tion, connected with the universit- ies, have thought fit to make a demonstration of their patriotic zeal in insuring the future domin- ance and effectual sway of Nordic ideals. To this end they made a wholesale raid upon the public lib- raries and back shops of the coun- try, and collected truck loads of books blacklisted as “breathing an. un-Gennan spirit." At Berlin and other centres the seizure of this literary material was duly celebrat- ed by torchllght V‘ 157004581 . speeches and songs, the proceed- ings winding up with huge piles of condemned books being committed to the flames. The reason advanced in explanation of this drostic and amazing house-cleaning process is worth attention. It ls stated as fol- lows: “Anything that works lllb~ versiveiy 0n family life or married life or love or the ethics of our youth or our future or strikes at the roots of Gennan thought, the German homo, and the driving forces of our people: any works of those who would subordinate the soul to the material, anything that serves the purpose of lies.” On the face of it there are many who probably would not find themselves disposed to raise any serious objec- tions to the Nazi programme in ih's respect, nor regard it as any great calamity that books of a. vicious and trashy complexion should be hurled to the flames. Yet experience has shown the futility of the method adopted by the Nazi adherents. Their zeal is not accord- ing to knowledge and their im- petuous behaviour ls far more sug- gestive of ulterior motives and the spirit of intolerance than in keep- of England in Canada lng with tho truth and substance of the lofty moraiist aims which. it ls to be feared, am made merely a convenient screen to cover activ- ities of a sinister type. A glance at the’ partial list of books banned will sustain the impression that the Nazis egotistically identify‘ the future welfare of Germany with their own party, and have first and foremost in mind the deepen- ing and straightening of their power in the councils of the nat- ions. The nationalist conception is thus stereotyped within a very nar- row groove. Much has been heard of late oonoeming their nuiitant predellctions and of the ‘ominous signs of a Germanic leaning to- wards tho revival of armamental forces. How comes it that books of a. pacifist aspect, such, for example, as that of the Baroness vcn Sut- all books auywisa adjudged as not in chime with the Nazi version of the new Germany reconstructed upon the Prussian model, should be flung to the flames? How comes it that every book dealing with the horrors of ‘war, or having reference to the Welmar Constitution, or ad- vocating any European federation of nations other than Pan-Ger- manic, conies under the ban of the Nazi ref ers? It looks very much as Thlzliugh their statesmen- shlp is very largely confined to the propagand t device of- Compoundng for sins that thcyTo , ' ', - , illdto y n‘ ‘In \ ‘j k a 111411.41 illPlCfl-vc .11 mtra-Dnvplre monuments shawl-l sari/e as a per- Edlnburgh’ was ommd- and the iudgse of the Snupcrlor Court oi’ B darnlte those the h e y, , L H mm“. “H. Hi0 “hwy, o, Such trad f ; Que c for twc ty five years and l’ E y av no 5, l ‘ ‘ W" ‘ _ v v ‘ e lYrt-lllll reminder of the price paid “st tram m “m” we mrimgh chief justicc for six years. He was min w- “ f » ‘ V is ,,.r./.. rllfltl Lolly after the stzlb- f0;- vmgm-L and the knme mm 101111103’ bctuccn London and Gias- knighted 1n 1337 and died 1n 1991, At any r te, impartial observers . 1... . - ‘V ._ 01z1t1<>n_ or lmemnunncl exchanges sequences which must ensue if m- m’ 1°“ ‘Mm smlwn- London. - v - will have o hesitation u. voting 1 y?» v-hlrzh ("flbtidd to he achieved vcnflve steps are not “ken to avert on that’ date‘ Sir Campbell Stuart of the Lon- this TJBORBl-lflllll! demonstration v f I 3 ht xiv: \\ .‘.1"'~ilvia:"y and Econ- don Times is one of tile present 35 a 11581‘ m? 105M111“ 0f "Well? ,. my - n“ 02-130 <1‘ w‘. in London next another world m’. e Many 20:11:19 in the (Fund Sh‘. generation or smarts. m. 3' h mmdkected u“. l ~ I s, r ar ,_ ' ' ' ' >1 '1‘» nmnlh. 'l'ilc o; alrnjjs for Canadian cg e propose obtains“ m Smut 0t 1791mm"! l3 9' 01 i: l‘ _, _ the conduct of national business as the Ameflean brgn¢h_ m5 unwer- f, y ' L P’ "y, Dloflucts m the United Kingdom ED]T0R]AL NOTES dangerous innovations. Iiltherto my L; situated outside the wan o; '- . 1 ‘. a -~ . _i nil/He are sutllcxent to enrich the presidinw’ htmever desmus the? Peking and on the road to the ’ l I ‘ .. A _ whole Canndinn farming commun- The Principality of Monaco-WA in“ ave been to adopt’ muck‘ W659i?!" 33115-15 15 513780 lll-Stllll- E n l,‘ q ‘j; 17;] '3 ny on“. flu-ma; economic 00mm miles 14mg and 165 {D1100 rds h“ n‘ the“ °Pml°n “Wm hi"! tion with faculties of arts, science n * ' l ~ ~ y“ been fin n l ll d u.» IA * l. a.. ‘i?’ timu; rc-Lum‘ we think especially wide, as the guidebooks notwwhere benaficialats :11: cfintrscm/Tlzli: 31%;“? at: nil-Edna? {esfarch ’ I .1. ' » _ of the zum-lzct we have Obtained it looks down from its terraces up- balked in their efforts 'by a 001p a,wpf',f, 5:31” 9286891130: 2;]: all?“ 323:: i‘ nun" a 4'.’ 1i‘! h l “lore for bacon and other pork 0n the blue Mediterranean, is a 9°59 m“ had u“ m" °l m“ of architecture to the large strue- n", an], mom g, h“, ‘g ' 7 L! ,_"l l . products, dnlry roducts live cat- ‘171119 Prlflfilllfl-lity these dia part3’ 3°d m the" hearbs- T710"! tures re ulred for academic work. night 1c "crowd" our eyes ra- ‘l’ 3i "Ky ' ‘ l l p ’ m For h b n n tabl ill q lent-lea: from one lb to ~ l ' I ‘a _- t ' it ‘ th f] t 1 33 3C n0 more 0 e llS- -n 0 14'» - '1 Q é ‘ lrllitnl?‘ it glib“ and ha: fafnoul: die‘: tint,“ opened its trauon o’ that ‘act mm u“ '°' “mi h" changed it oonstltutlon- '“°“‘°" " atlffllgil 4 , 1 {- ' k “ us we“ ' y years ago’ ‘"5110! the United 551595 Asscmh- ally. Backed by a strong body oi llowlong will they stand It? y M 3%, k - , y rucmure up to the opportunities "w" l5 59110118 talk of shutting up lies to join the league of Nations supporters in Omlgresg, and sum m novseniovlrathnz . f ‘ ,i- _ ~ y p V. t}; g _ cencv an -como w e I; "ékal a, A I hue created for our own people. yel-ngamfoilgo the second Zrzllutollfih Stirs practlglaiydglliis pier-ted a llalrofier-vliiclaencd pub- mum D be ,0“? Fe, ‘ A '1 ——————i— 011 e fnpany 0W"- 0 0p 011 0 88 Ii gven 1ft‘ 1 ' _ ‘Alillf/LQSADOR AT LARGE mnwwmmm’ °1 lilo Casino has Mr. Woodrow Wilson. In other powers to act to an extent hither ‘larval: ‘fl-dug. 7311.33‘ 1m; . ~ f . ~ . ~ ds in tho post the dominant to unknown except as wnr time ’ ' fi- W‘ 4 ——— passed its annual dividend. The w“ ' MW" "l 1°"- ' 4 _ force in United States politics has emergency measures. , i’! f/ » g Irequcniiy mentioned in recent reason given is the 1i th k . , . . p0 to euphcm- b“ m1 in a one e nowledge , 3&4. N V_ . been a pu o 0p on created l r I u fir’ g ‘i dhfathes m _°°n°°°“°“ Wm‘ m“ m“ M “m” °“’“““¢~' We 1W and fostered by tho isolationist The Iiondon Rallwfl! Commls- Sazgitmvxllmviroififi: 2:50.01‘. r W I?’ . _ fflriilcllllllllg World Economic 0on- "Wfl. finest: the Vancouver press and the fiery polemics of par- sion has obtained from the forestry ,4: h. ~ » _ p fvrcncc is the Imillc of Mr. Nor- Pmvlnw. is Moody's secret a; m tizan representatives who have station m. st. Williams 145,000 i. i» l V 1,; ma“ Davis‘ Mn Davis L, a (Menu 1g 15 rumumq along the sunny been animated by the purpose of young trees for the double purpose G ivl- y. . = of the United suites m the no. Riviera um the man who has “'“'£m'N:h° 23%;?“ °‘ mml‘; “irfiwmg sh“ ::“;‘t"°§'“’“l’ °‘ ' ‘~ j - men w s Rnoscve , e n on an Po ancy nail- urmavhvnt Conference, but he is ‘broken the bank at Menus Carlo ‘Med Wm, . m,“ flmmm and w, oPTflMETl-IBT . .-.. y and giving a ccrtal a t ' v ’ ‘Wlilmfiullnlmouiiaillinlleflfllflllilllllilllblf. Sndllthlotiflhlehlllfidflllqflfwolktothlnlldmllnnlfltpnsm - - . . _ yed. s.» i. B; In Wlfmfon. M.D. HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE MAY BE AN ADVANTAGE You have been told that your pro- per blood pressure is 100 plus your ago, so that if you are 20 it should l 55cm FOUR 1w (zuskurrrwrovm GUARDIAN __ - MAY 17' 1933 THE GHARLOTTE-[own Gummm" mules Blilii WAY The Burning‘ 0t Books m,“ E. R. BR 0 W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 ilichmond St., Charlottetown be 120, and if 40, then 140. you were '10 it should be 110. exhausted, he was able to prmnotg Naturally this would mean that ii .A Legend Goes on lnimgaclu “scum” 0| .vm_ n]. w." However in older people it is eon- sidersd normal when the blood pressure is 100 plus half the age, a salvaging company, on the Istrength of that part of the Ram-p. ‘m ""1"" "l °“' “m °°“ ‘shire legend which ma that mt- thus an individual of '10 should be “mm called it an "amazing story," ‘chum, w“ mung a "at “mm 135. but the adjective was all too res-i 1d 1 As a matter of fact your doctor “,_m,_.d_ n w" ‘h, m,’ o, haw Z181‘ gereflzflmglllmato the will tell you that while 120 to 125 1mm wumr m ‘om m4 been for an old. person is "safer," never- "waged mm E M a Emmi-um, theless where the blood pressure is Kitchener.‘ “m, 5111mm”; ,1; m; s little higher than normal, say 140 bottom of the Norm s“ a“ m, to 160, the individual seems to enjoy life more. ' Dr. It. flchefler, Capetown, South Africa, points out that in old age, as in later life, raised blood pres- advantage. Old people whose blood pressure is high are much more energetic and useful members of the com- munity than those in whom the blood pressure is low. Old people with blood pressures between 160 and 180 seldom com- plain, while those with blood pres- sure of 120 and less are always all- ing. Provided the heart is regular, the difference between. the blood pres- sure with arm band on and with arm band of! is the right amount, and there is no kidney ailment, the high blood pressure will not cause trouble or require treatment. This doesn't mean that as we grow older we should all have blood pres- sure higher than normal, but that there are people in whom, at all ages, the pressure 1s normally or naturally high. These people enjoy perfect health, provided their pres- sure is not interfered with. If et- tempts are made to lower the Dres- sure by the use of diet and drugs, these people may begin to worry about “their high blood pressure" and get less joy out of life. The thought then is that high blood pressure is “norma.l" in many people, and if there is no heart. blocdvessel, or kidney ailment, noth- ing should bs said or done about it. A. low blood pressure in old age need not then be a. matter of satis- faction, because investigation shows that these individuals are always ailing. ' The main thought is that high blood pressure means nothing in it- self if there is no other condition present; in fact it is of real advan- tage to the body in giving every part seems to know Into the most picturesque of all enters a mysterious ‘m. R." Ho is a relative of somebody who was accused of being s, spy, who had given infor- mation libcut the com. And now. lathe may pg, they have recovered gold from the Hmipshim worth 15,000 pounds, The British Salvage Amociation 511°?" °3 m” w“ mkmy‘ “whiny say it knows nothing of the thedsyloftheflmatwaiulitisl “when. the 311mb “mum, story which makes another appro- m“ “mum "m “m”; “unmet om“ We"! 1n ti" W“ W‘ ‘°' The 1mm of u» Hampshire m4 sure can almost be considered an gfigdrgrirghoglzmtggzm? “obs”: M mwhm“ W" ‘m- whero the stof! comes rromorbywhcmitisfath- Mama“ ‘Mann-mm “*' ered. It may be pure fiction: it may be a. queer and. extravagant count of somcthiud based upon ac- tuality; it may oven be true. An?- how it is one of those stories about which we instinctively feeling that it ought to be true if it ‘wont extensively into restocking work during the past you and dis- tributed 85,000,000 flngerling and fry. more than 19,000,000 of them being the famous bIEOk-spottgq trout. , corhcliu Harlem. or Olhhg, N. Y, was recently fined usso for possessingawiidduokoutofcgg. son. Ha saw a disabled wild dlfi, captured it, took it homo and was nursing it but to health wbsn a game warden arrested him. Hampshire to the GennB-Ils- Th9 legend was tlwt the Germans had torpedoed the 1111110011119. t0 N9‘ vent Kitchener reaching Russia on his secret mission. You remember some of tho thins! that were wlde- _ ly rumored and oven commonly bo- liaved. ‘more had been tranche!» and it had icst us Kitchener. and. itwasequaltnthelossofagmt i Bottles Wanted Pints and Quartz. Phone 1107 Hampshire in 1010, and she went down with the loss of all hands on its full supply of blood. Tommy, 10 years old, applied for a job as a grocery boy for the sum- mer. The grocer wanted a. serious- s. little test. "Well, my boy, what would you "O, gee, I don't know-I wasn't expecting so much at the start." Engineers were surveying a road on which a prison gang were work- ing. it was a warm day and one of the engineers hung his coat on a fence post. A few minutes later he happened to get talking with cnt of the prisoners, and the rnun gave him a friendly tip. "Don't leave yer coat there, Bud,” he advised. "Those crooks down the road would swlpa anythins!’ \ “What are you up for?" asked the engineer. “Murdorfl said the prisoner. 0R. L. B. EVANS of Landon, Eng. Noted Physician treated ruc- e ' “ and obtained per- manent cures of Stomach Conditions such as’ Indiges- "QII. Dyspepsia Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dis- tress and many other ailments peculiar to the stomach with a prescription which we have procured and nil under the name of Evans Stomach Mix- tare. We alone have the mic rights on this prescription and since selling it have rec- eived numerous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your stom- ach, serious conditions an likely to arise If you allow yourself tn lapae into a chronic stain o! Gastric trouble. Get a bottle today. Price B5 cents. TliE 2 IMOS Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. board but twelve, and the Admiral- ty said. it was a mine. m‘! “l! 19' gend began. We are told that "Mr. R.” has devoted his time and. his energies for years to the vindica- minded youth so he put Tommy to “on o‘ his accused relauve,‘ ‘mum, ‘w. R." looked systematically for do with a million dollars?" ha ask- m-y “my Down you, “my and ed " had been a. sailor in the Gannon There were people who devoutl? belleved~and ‘perhaps them AN DIQQ-l- - many who think so still-that i! Kitchener had not gone, the whole course of subsequent history would have been would have found a way to reani-V mats the betrayed and defeated. ab] mics of the Czar. numa woul , have stayed in the war with the, Allies, Amerlca- would come in: there would have been no Bolshevik revolution: there have been a different victory and a different peacu. different. Kitchener not have . wouldl“ But Kitchener sailed away in the . Jimmie Jingle Says : 0f all glad words of tongue or pen I write of this good bread again_ ~—Stewart’s Bread. ids]: your grocer evidence. He found a German who war-time mine-laying service. The German sailor had kept a scrap- book, showing the times and places where his vessel had laid mines in the North Bea. The scrapbook was miraculously found, miraculously _ preserved in _a German attic. R." enlisted tho (Al of a fishind boat skipper, and they wok sound-j lngs where the wreck cf the Hamp- ‘ shire was believed to be lying, and, ' sure enough, they located a wreck. And than, when all the available ,