‘t a fin hoe a building!‘ Y?‘ imam I'm going a Iwirblbadibomofam mm. Well, why not? lily wife An it: In II I would be a grad worry if any "thing happened to ma. Nothing to it, my . The arrangemeni: I've ma e with the SUN LIFE OF CANADA will dur the mortgage in the event of my untimely death. I a tbougbt of tbnl. Wbd about flu ton? lnsignifiuotl In fact, i adds little in the carrying charge of the mortgage. o Illyouareahome-ownenmalro your investment safe for e- terityASlINLlFBmanw be glad to talk it over with you. SUNFE OF CANADA HAL KARI! Unit Mana er 1M Rlchm d Street Ohnrlottotowgll: P. I. I. gm‘. Enfllfllid - diooesan chancellor, complained of l tenq. reserve too large “We H.H. Kim. may to spaces. 3 HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL hi] Course and Brush-g, on all Branches. Teaching b! ELIZABETH. Prominent Hair-Stylist. ‘ rhflgfuAND EVENING ts Era umeevlim T-Puigoitsiiif n area to help them to deft-W ellienacs. rite for particular! ELIZABETIPB IAIBDRESSING SCHOOL 822 Main Si» MONCTON N OP) - GEITMI. Gllillillllll o fim°"§“'“"f.%‘£ - Q pm s y 1142c“- A“ WOMEN are invited in at- tba United Missionary Meet- Zion Hail, Sunday, llfli. at ‘clock. Ilia. Wilkinson will be the speaker. 11-17-11. IAIIA’! EDUCATIONAL nears’ Ooll e Audi Nov 1.2m om. f Mrs. Selina M0- Rocky Point. Not MID. TRINITY UNIT CHURCH .- Special Anniversary Services will be held in Trinity. Sunday, Nov- ember 16th, both morning and ev- The services will be c . will teiéhaes his Sig: we." morn be broadcast over Y. The special music for y will be under the direc- tion of the Organist, Mr, A, Rog Kendall. The morning anthems wi be "Jerusalem, My Glorious Home" M and ‘Oome 1e, Eric Th of Freedom." You are heartily in- vited to with us. The Ohm-ch glhool m ma]? a‘; tlhe regul ura. uncr Choir will meet as usual in the afternoon for iheir practice. Mn. Gould Ii. Procter of thb cl/tyisabatient at fihe Prince Edward Island Hospital where she wider a serious oper- ation on ‘lhursdmv. Mrs. Proc- ters. many friends wish her a speedy recovery. AIRFORCE MEMORIES No one can say where you have SW19. With heart so unafraid; Except to say your task is o'er The summons now obeyed. So young, so gay you went to light That menace over there; When only yesterday it seems You roamed without a. care. We can not see your smiling face Our eyes are dimmed with tears; But still the memory llngen on As on down through the years. We would. not ask that this toast ill. Thn on patiently ed; Wig: new! at screams stealing ‘ilo hear "No one returned." Dear Loni we thank thee for thy care - 0f him from sun to sun: And now the last call ame to him, D9" Iflfd. “Tliygrwil be dong)‘; — ernon y or. (Dedicated to the late W/C. Vin- cent S. MaoOausland of Tyne vs}. 1w. who lost his lite during the attacl; on the Ruhr dams. Ger- many . MPO» 1m inM/‘tlrfl GENERAL ELECTRIC LAMPS ‘s _ CHILDHOOD. BLIQBTED BY SALOON By Amos Alonzo Stagg My interest in the welfare of young cpeople is the outgrowth o gratitu e-graditude I es- caped the conditions to which so many of my boyhood companions were subjected and by which they were handicapped for life. My home training in com ara- tlve poverty was all that cou d be desired but the environment of my playmates and myself was, far from helpful. Our rendezvous was close to four saloons; the atmos- phere o! the neighborhood was charged for exciting episodes. Beer-drunken men were a ally sight; rarely a Saturday night passed when one or more of our nel hbcrs did not go on a debauch. Fig ts, more or less frequent, furnished the thrills for ua youngsters" Every now and then the cum: men would CfilK together an buy one or more egs of beer, take them out in the big lcta near by, and get soured. The saloons were our substi- ing.. They to go to wot young, not because the father di not earn plenty of money. but be- cause good wages were squander- ed in drink. Aa a oung man I promised God to devo e my life to young people mlng physical director an athletic coach, specializing in foot- ball. baseball and track afliletics, in two of which aporta 1 achieved a reputation as a student at Yale University..—'l‘he Voice.. Note-Alonzo Stag famous in sports" e has one of the greateat athletes in the United Staten. , PIOIIBITION 0B GOVERN- MENT SALE The liquor question la one about which there has bee deal ve , caused tlon of unscrupulous politicanl, who, in order to gain their ends try to bsfuddle the electorate and to persuade them that black is w Unefortunately (or 1y. u the eaae may be.) neither liticai part now apcnaora proh- bition, so t at it cannot new regarded as a political matten. never has bean a lltlcai subject. as a matter of face‘) it has always w“ - mwisii~saric we can a ,- p‘ hing said in cm article regarded u hav- “Twill dggrinto essentials, “is taliue 11m the ‘tleiriperfnoe as; a an m e.. us? say iha-trit la alwpaya eaa.y to live uptc, but it is clear. .._,....... —_-q__ -»- pn- ‘roams. ~ Paparilaagara, Window claim. " moms . . mwam . m4 A slivmse L Silver Clean-ad Currants, SilverxiSaal Molasses, Silver Soul Jolly Powder,‘ Silver " Seal Extracts, Silver Seal Baking Povld Silver Seal Mustard, Silver Seal Mixed Spices, Silver Seal Peanut Butter, Silver Seal Breakfast Cocoa, Silver Seal Puddings", Silver Seal Custard Powder, Silver Seal Nbpdle Soup Mix,‘ Silver Sea-l Dulse, Silver Seal Cider and White Spirit Vinegar, Silver Seal Chocolaite Decoraties, Silver‘ Seal Drug Products including Salt Peire, Epsom Salts, Sulphur, Borax and-Borecicb Acid, Silver Seal Macaroni, Spaghetti, and Vermicelli, Colony Club Coffee, Colony Club Tea and .lumbo_ Blend Tea. ‘ s/zvsa s54 "Francis Willard. Abraham Lin- With regard to this Devil's brew called liquor, there are just two attitudes to take: Either you want people to have it, or ou do not want them to have it. f youflwant them to have lt you are a wet and if you do not want them to have it, you are a ‘ .." If you want them c have it and work with that e d in view you must. shoulder the responsibility for all the drunkenness, criminal as- saults, broken homes, divorces motor accidents and untimely deaths caused by liquor, insofar as your help and influence go. If your are in a position of power or influ- ence, of course your responsibility ll be that much greater. If you do not want people to have liquor, and work with that end in view, you will have a lot of uphill work, and will probably no\ be very popular, with some people at any rate, but you will have the satisfaction of knowing you are on the Lord's side" Dare we say tha ‘I We dare not say anything cls. Knowing what our Saviour said with re erence to helping the poor and downtrodden, to suggest that He would favour the llqll0l‘ traf- fic (which is the chief cause of poverty and similiar conditions) sounds to us like blasphemy, You will also have other good company Q The new Nash “600"-—now in productiotw-nas basic engineering advances that cars of the future are bound to follow! . From 50 to 35 miles to the gallon at moderate highway coin," Lloyd George. General Montgomery and many dhers. So also, with reference to the attitude of the State toi li ucr, there are just two courses to ake. If the State wants pfiik to have liquor and works th that end in view, its resorts to Govern- ment sale in some form or under some name, such as Govurnrnent Control, Six-months‘ Amelndmesnt to the Prohibition Law, or some other name.. If the State adopts this attitude, it will make large revenues from llquoil. will dnvhilvw". be willing: to qrovlde Social Service workers and. " illive- inc applause oi’ the wets and the su port of the llquol" in- terests, an will have to shoulder the responsibility for the crime. broken homes. venereal diseases, murders and untimely deaths caused by llquor.. if the State does not want peo- ple to have liquor and works uiith th end view, it makes use of Pr hibltion“ If the state ad ts this attitude and enforces the w roperly, the people will be healthy, prosperous, law-ab! ng and better in every way.. . e State will have the disgleasure of the liquor interests. ut it M]! gain the satisfaction that it is on the Lord's side. an my that it ll doing its duty by the people.. Mind you we said if the law ls properly enforced. Prohibition has never yet been properly enforced it has never had a fair trial. The Government has claimed repeatedly that the law was enforced. but at the same time there were dozens o! boot loggers‘ joints around. and they knew it" Is that enforce- ment.. A few stiff fines of $1,000 or so. together with jail sentences would soon remedy that condition. All this talk a! to whether i‘. wouldn't be better for the people to have a case of this or that rather than l0 quarts of the other. is beside the uestion. The point is that they ouldn‘: have, and don't need, a gill of anything;- alcoholic. People say that Proh i- bition cannot be enforced, Given a sympathetic administration and conscientious officers to carry out the law, it could be enforced per- haps not easily, but it could be done. Oblcciors say that you can- not get the men. There are hund- reds of men who have not yet. bow- ed the knee t0 Bacchus, or even to Mammcn, °i kmlwmf The great weakne: of the Pry. gamma‘ speeds! Thousands of extra miles per set of tires! A lilG car; with headroom, legroom, elbowroom iior six big people! Individual coil sprin wheels! No lubrication required! Nash conditioned air system . . . in winter a draft-like: _ warm atmosphere thermostatically-controlled with ‘all windows closed, and no fogging or frosting! In summur a flow of filtered fresh airl Soundproof insulating! a row/I: 2:40:40 a Mm g suspension on All four Ambassador. A “mat; ‘ \ i firs‘ hibition Law is that it was framed at a. period when pcopk held the mistaken idea the valcolaol was necessar as a medicine. which led to the a uses of acrips. Science has advanced since that time. how- ever, and now the Mayo Clinic and many of our best doctors say ma; alcohol ls useless as a medicine, Therefore it ls not necessary to issue scrip! at all. Five scrip; o. month is five ocrips foo many. With the scri ts and the lib;- months am ent removed, the Prohibition Law would be practic- ally perfect. Temperance education is soma- thins that is sorely needed in . all over Canada in Quebec By-Electioi Begins To Viann llp ‘er speak Sunday submit t candidate Georues Octave - Adelard bsnl fact. For many years the Woman's 1 Christian Temperance Union has been carrying on this work single- handed. For the Government to sponsor temperance education in the sflhools is a step in the right direction. We commend them for c it. But to bench the youth that they should abstainirom alcohol. and at the same time w sell them that which creates a craving for aloo- hvlifl drinks. is. to say the least. inconsistent. Let us promote strong temperance teaching, end let us ract what we preach. let us the scrip: and the sax- ’ “'*_-wrw»._,.,..,,_ "mm-rm", __ a ' r ewe YMuhYPVwu. mun-row, ,.. u , ‘Enfr “'°‘ -\ "Wawn ,. . '&‘**Ail;afl: . ..,.,,_.__V,_,_,W_)_ » » M... , . Edit months am msnt, god m; of Prince ard Island 89001111 t0 n in the world. h Stems. - » . \ Nash tossed out 500 pounds of deadweight for a single unit of welded steel . . . stronger, safer, ilightet-{foreyer squeak and rattle-proof. A smooth, ,quie:, air-clean comfortable drive, in any weather! ‘ And this car, with its fast accelerating, easy-handling, _quiet operation, and its roomy new-world beauty, is in the low-price class! Ask your local Nash dealer about it, and about its famed running mate in the medium-price field, the Nash \ . _ NASH MOTORS OF CANADA LIMITED, WINDSOR", ONT. __ NMWW” """"“""'ic.wrwrwvsaru u "“ 1v. n4 ., 1,“; _