.\;. v suemamgfleg-r, ' and there are indications 1 ldlssnllfieesv. 'I~ iliniiiqimwn but GeI-‘I. l. illanse,\'l,o, Vhrlesie l. L-jppq; IQII-l-LOIIII. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1925 OIL-BORING PROPOSITION _____ ROOM FOIHOFE Boring forloil on Governor's ls-l A deepalch -in our news columns land will begin ' today and the Agent of the Opal-sting Crun-psny, Mr. ‘Ross Msfluntz. has invited a number of ciflaens to witness the ccmntencement of operations. acccm-nnodate its. guests boats w-ill kave Messrs Bruce Stewart t (‘o's.. wharf at 9 and 9.30 respec- Tflithe Supemior Court- yestenisy stated the! the 517°!‘ °l iqusssecuy had -been unseat-ed from the mayorelty and dhfran- chised for five years by s 1min of The c arge lagainst dtim was that he had 97°" ‘fired by certain transactions 44; which the City corporation we!‘ mm oasmcrrmowncusnnmn Notes Byline w... t It may be placed to the credit of the driven ef meter ears In this city that as a class they are as careful‘ as those of any other city in Can-f ada. it may be also admitted thati the number o! fatal orserlous scci-g dents resultilll from motor trsfllc‘ ma: so» of Quote throughout our Province has been. B", h.“ |y_ Bah“ “D! comparatively few. it ls. hos-even, much to be regretted that there are THE BTQMAGPFB SELF STARTER a few who are not so carefulhf the, safety of pedestrians as are the} many. We have it from a careful observer who usually takesa walkior djsggflgn m“ t; do“; p, m; every evening along or around agstomach- few blocks in the heart of the city, A3 7°“ km“ ‘mm umfleuw‘ 1 “l” ""113 "I ‘he "WW6 "ito lay some harden upon foreigfl a sort of starter for the first stagesigm- we encouragem The Public Forum ADAM SMITFPS SUGGESTION sin-Adam Smith in his "Wealth of Nations." resua-rks that "as there are two cases in which it will generally be advantageous ‘ of domestic industry. go there are two others in which it may sometimes be a matter of deliberation in the one- hetween eight and nine o'clock that '70“ d‘ do" m T ma] “m” “m” 'd‘tbllksoodsnd he rarely does so without seeing n He" n: 0° s one or more cars passing without showing any headlights. jturbance afterwards. And yet the meal was plain in every respect. lively. Luncheon will be served in g party. In the opening of a new? 9W‘ "WWW!" "l!" "l" IMRi A‘ ‘Mme’ “me ‘he m“! is tho Main (‘amp at mid-day after street the Mayor. it is said bad, which actual drilling of Prince Edward island Oil Well No, 1 will (‘OTIIIIIGIICR lottenown at 3 p. m. As the operating company is equipped with the most modern drilling machinery known the op- mauy who have got away with sim ilug unlighted. (ration n; any stage will the one 0min deals, 1-{6 m4 ma] m; omibe permitted. and the careful driv- much interest but more eepciallyicial posithn no promote deals from a" “a a! the outset 8s all beginnings have a u-pecisl int-rest of their own and the beginning in this case, of an npcrnnon whiclfmny make Prince‘ Edward island a land of oil wells. will certainly be accompanied with the h sf wishes, not of the invit- ed gut sis alone bu! of all our pe0~ pic. -€—-<-o>—-———— WANTED. A PRECEDENT The Ottawa Citizen. a newspaper quoted as a Conservative or an in- as the need may arise. although never as a Lib- dr-p ndt-nt according tral. which it unequivocally ls. has rihcovcred a “precedenW for Mr. Mackenzie King's present attitude towards parliament and towards Canada. To find it The Citizen goes back to the year- 1792 and “it has found something which ig as much like tlr- kind of precedent it was looking f0.- as ‘The Citizen is like s Conservative. h w“ in [he Mme a‘ me WHHgéIIwiLh tboth feet on the guilty one Pitt. Prime Minister. who had Ibeen appointed to a lucrative office and therefore, as -in Canada. was ob- liged to geek re-e-lection ibelore re- suming his sea; in tlr- House. in the- ntt-gtllilne rebellion ‘threat- tiled the possibility country dicing drawn between Ane- tria nntl Prussia 0n t‘he one side and France‘ on the other. To hold the threatened revoiutionists in check the Gov rument was‘ obliged to call out. the Militia. Accord-lug to ‘the law of England. when the government UiliEd out the military ilor any purpose l; is obliged to call over the info a of war;- parl-iamen-t together within four- rev-n (lays. This afforded no op- portunity for Pitt's bye-election and parliament had to sit without its Fri-rm» Minister. The-re is no precedent ‘in thl; tier Mr. Mackenzie King's present st- titude. tPitg was ready to face the necessary "aye-election, ‘Mr. Mac- "MFB K1118 was not. The-re was an unavoidable emergency which rvccssitated the calling of the Bf]. tish parliament before a ibyvselec- lion could ibe held; there was no "l"!!! flIWImflv-‘y in Canada. More- over, Pit; had a safe majority Ibe- hlmi Mm; ‘Mf- Kills had not. Pitt. was tthe accept“ Prime M1”. ter of Great Britain; Mr. Macken- zie ‘Kins was not only personally defeated but his followers were de- cimated and his cabinet dttietrly do- mollehed. tPi-tt had the confidence of the mule: Mr Malokeulle rue; "I clflrl! shown that he hisd Wt- Au already remarked there is 1W precedent. ‘Of course Plot's u. perience was ln the old days when ‘perhaps they did not know as much‘ as we do now. Mr. Mackenzie Will's method is much more mod- ern. so modern that 114s useless to l"?! If" I precedent ‘in the Anne Ddrninies. Perhaps if The Oitison W8‘! N 80 hick to the days cl Kins Tut or the ‘Pharmhs, one were credited with boingqmg w}. itiniane. it might find the kind 9r precedent it wants but. so tar es in tfhe Illouee at all there's where- ‘personally profited to the extent of 16.000. He had also protitted. b! ‘tasted. i The Mayor of Quebec was pro- - ihss frequently seen in his shorting“ have found ‘swiftly. to the great danger of ped- imost elaborate, and yet nothing znlighted care are ll" ‘°"“ ‘afTdsstes really good. and .yon get no u‘ by "0 ma“ a ways’ mo‘ ugleujoyment from it. i What is the reason for this? estrians at the street crossings, and; Simply that you didn't have a ‘Boats will_ leave Govqsalee made L0 the city by compfln- that on Saturday and Sunday even-ikilarter" as it were. and the stom- .ru»or's island on return to Char-fies in which the Mayor was inter-‘inss. when the streets are usually! ach found it harder to do its work I ' I U l (II ' itbronged with shoppers or church-Inf” pmpmm on for m es “a s“ goers. and many cars as well. he {research men ‘pm-km: on 415e,;- that the taste. bebly not any more guilty thaniwnlk as many as three ca" pa5g.:BIllC", the anticipation due to pleas- Fwhiich he himself would derive {some benefit. In other words he was n grafter and he was caught and. once a grafter -is caught and his guilt established in the courts. there is no esca/pe for him. British law is exceedingly sensi- tive regarding the honour of {hose entrusted with its enforcement. The hands must be clean which sacred vessels of office. Pt is true the law win-ks occasionally at hands ithat ore known to the stained; true. the people not only wink but deliberately blind themselves to -the stains, Once the eagle eye of the law is officially fastened upon [the guilt. then with pomp and clr cumstance be of the stained hands is publicly and rneroilemiy ground between the millstones of ‘the law. Curiously the people who deliber- ately blinded themselves lest they might see the stained hands jump pence ‘it is publicly known that be ihad offended. 3 The Mayor of ‘Quebec as already istated was ‘probably not more gu-ilty than many others. Perhaps he may have carptured a graft ‘that some one else had ‘been angling for; perhaps he was more than or- dinarily successful and made more money than the ordinary grafter and some onemerhaps a disarppoint- ed one. officially laid a complaint. and Nemesis was officially chimed tn ‘show himself. Even Nemesis sometimes sleeps and has to be of- ficially awakened if; is s. ‘hopeful ‘sign of the times that now and alga-in a grafter is brought to judgment; it were s much more hopeful one if our peo- ple aa a whole and those entrusted with the enfo- rneng of law were as watchful unofficially as they are when the guilt is officially proved. EDITORIAL NOTE$ ‘Niow for the oil fields of Prince Edward Island. Oil Well. No. 1 starts today. Hope the newt move will be a gusher. Premier King does not know whether he will go to Bagot or ot. And there are those who thin-k Ba- ‘Sbt will mt go to him. This isdhe morning ‘after the nisiht before, which was Saint And- rei"! Nfkht. But it was a ibraw wish-f and a. fine morning This cold snap started ‘in the West. ISomeIfh-ing should be done l0 Qqnnlize the temperature of west and east as well as our pol- itical differences. lit will be smoothing new in pear- rlernenf to see the Prime Mfn-lster‘ 8min: in the cattery. Yet, rif he is he'll have to sit a, the-m is no u“ for him on the floor of the House. Everyone new lees tfhe need of hold the eceptre, which hear the-"mlo, "m, one 1B frequent“. given i ative candidate has still a chance elected is opposed to the King Gov- Peace River with the National Rail- way system. which plan was sup- ported by the defeated Liberal can- didate. elect is confirmed in the seat there "um" o‘, Rm", “ml cms_ will still remain a question as to h!!!» W! llfifhlps we are weiung for a flftllfy which will be stifli- memu“, b’ “Mm “m”? 'h°""°l6'll’ly ehodlrfttgvto rna-ke ns take . Mr. Maclepljkllfliag mes; .10“ how be will vote on a want of con- fidence motion. | er meals of the same Th“ ought m" loiilxdmudfilxe? like circumstances, all [have a tendency to excite the flow We" as 15°" “h” "ejof juices in Jhe stomach. and thus abroad on foot strenuously objectighe digestion there gets off to a to this breach of the regulations. flylllfl 9"!"- ‘ A night of confinement in an un- H115 is ‘be pa" M“ digesting“: ilihted cell would seem to be a notiwmch ‘he bum or e8‘ ' a“ ' unilttlng punishment for such oi-lthlny w m"), m;uu,es_ fenders when caught in the act. but‘ Thu, means then that if you have who is to catch them n sood appetite. you have thirty or The nickel five-cent piece is gen- erally condemned throughout Can- ada. it is very nearly the exact size and thickness of the silver 25- cent coin and so nearly like it ill expression, door work or exercise, iby spreading or taken in Payment for the other. g2‘:- bgleficl; 3x12: 3x335: cal-m"! much “Pmwance and wme‘; On the part of ‘those who serve you times leading to wordy diflllllles-iby the "appefizing" way the food The church collections suffer in u prepared- flnd the atlfflcllveflesi consequence “Isa h, n", mm re. and cleanliness of the table and its ‘ilgious light no doubt some devout coggnaflwu seem m lack appeme worshipper has occasionally and ‘m. be no“ W," (oody "y m regain inadvertently thought he had con-‘it by the above suggestions, tributed a quarter of a dollar when Remember appetite not only he had many given but ave mum means enjoyment. but also an act- But there are others who apparent- ly contribute nickels quite osten- tstiously at church. and when u * silver collection is‘ asked for at thug door of lecture halls. intending thsti onlookers shall mistake the "bnsei"'§ coin for silver. ' ‘ ‘ of digestion. O Dally Selections FOR Guardian Readers ' yssee _ . l The silver five-cent com, if dim-i Deccmbe 1. 1925 inutivc In size was at least honcstlwh t vet and did not lend itself to the cheat- ' a 5°“ , . . ‘l ll he also reap. Galatians 6.7. ery and hypocrisy that ‘have been lbw so frequently attached to the nick-ghee yo,» ‘m; 1mm, el. the image and superscription of‘\'@_‘5l- our Kracious King. and his imperial! 1 HE LANDAGMN crown. with the date of its issue,‘ wish (ha, there were some from the mint. all of which befits, derfui place OF BEGINNING United States coin of the same And an o, our pooh selfish gflet value which was not ‘needed in Could be dropped "kg a ghglyhy old Canada. Its introduction has led cost at the door. to confusion and pleased nobodyliApd new!‘ P"! 0" "Kai"- except those who prefer to look to l wish we could come on i, a“ ‘m. Washington for examples to follow; ‘mt-ares, lt bears date 1923. which is of it-iLlke tlieilllunter who finds i! 10H! ra n" sigumcwnt |And l wish that the ones whom our iblinduess bad done The greatest injustice of sll Could be at the gates like an old friend that waits For the comrade he's glnddest to hail. We would find all ‘the things we in~ tended to do. But forgot and remembered too- late. Little praises unspoken. little prom- ises broken. And all of the thou-sand and one ldttle duties neglected that might have perfected The day for one lees fortunate, The drop of the mercury and a northwest wind has reminded ev- erybody that winter is upon us, so far without snow. Strangely enoueh ,The Guardian's weather reports [from half a dozen Canadian cities tells that Charlottetown registered the lowest temperature between Toronto and the sea and six de- grees lower than Quebec. The opportunity to hear Dr. Rob- erts tonight is a rare one for lov- ers of poetry. "The world is full of poetry. The air breathes with its music and the waves dance to the ripple of its melodies. while the distarnt walls that close the universe with crystal in are elo- quent with volcee that proclaim the unseen glories of immensity." it wouldn't be possible not to be ltind ln that Land of Beginning Again: And the ones we misjudged and the ones whom we grudged Their moments of victory here, Would find in the grasp of our lov- in'g handolssvp More than penitent lips could ex- plain. For what had been hardest we'd know hsd been best, And what had seemed loss would be gain, For there isn't n sting that frlll laughter is not fake wing And l think that the nnost what we're after iln the Laud of Beginning Again. The seat for Peace River, Alber- ts, which was at first reported to belong to Collins. Conservativwhas on a recount Ibeemgiven to Kenne- dy, the Progressive candidate. This has caused some rejoicing in the Liberal press. notwithstanding that there was a Liberal candidate who also ran and was left at the foot of the boil. The case was been appealed to a higher court and the Conserv- So i wish that there were some wonderful place the Lanrl of Beginning Again Where all our tnistakee and all cur heartaches And all of our ‘poor, selfish grief Could be dropped like a shabby old coat at the door, And never put on again. —-Bnotl| Tarkington. -_.__.._...____ The main point is whether the Government can muster 123 or more votes in the House without the Speaker. the Liberal voting strength being only 99 in a full House. At best the Progressive of success. Apart from that there (lined is s report that the member now ernmenfs plan for connecting lf the Progressive member When the test vote comes in Per- ‘flllf Nwitit deeth sodithis is what Jen-l ma,’ ,1’ h not m“ M be mm,‘ llament it will probably count for vsry little where there are 117 or strength is only 24., Can Premier King hope to get them all? if is croslitya use“, . ..-.-»- sa-a-............ 118 strailht Oolllaflltlve votes in U‘, J, ‘opposition to the King Government, ‘tastes good, You enjoy every rpertjforelgn B00118. and in U18 0019!‘ {of the meal and it sets up no dlsqhOW fir. 0r in what manner ‘it may l . On its small surface there Wadscetl that assures us a 300d hill‘- WOIP‘ v pesos throughout the marches of Mr. Tbosnson replied: 0Q I0!’ the ‘IIIIDOIIUOII of pengpggg how fair it is proper to wntlnue the free importation of oer-lain b; proper to restore that free im- portation after it has been for. ‘eoruetlme interrupted. The case in which it may sometimes be a mill-r ter of deliberation ‘how far it is proper to continue the free impor- tation of certain foreign goods is when some foreign nation restrains by h-igh duties or prohibitions the importation of some of our manu- factures into their country. Revenge in this case naturally dictates retaliation and that we should im- pose ‘the like duties and prolrlal- lions upon ghe importation of some or all of their manufacturers into ours. . . . . , There may be good policy in retalistions of this kind. when there is a probability the high dutlies or probibitionsi complained f. The recovery of a ‘great foreign market wljL_gener- .aiiy more than compensate‘ the dearer during a short time for some sort of goods." 1 These words of the great "Fatheriha" forty minutes otthe stomachs work 0f Free Trad-c f"- HMUY ‘"16 Dre‘. l d M, _, done m‘. you by you, 3996mm m-gsent situation as ibetween CanadsiPi lmemallmla‘ “w a“ “r m bra", desiw u 1 c" use such amand the UTIIIJQO States. There are. tion. {Adam lSmith admits two cases inf - . -. -.. And how is an appeum craatedqauhiclt high tittfles or prohibitions ; : h, l! . d f fh l '. 0n ‘your part “hey ggggialtlvyysécuslkwign a folizufs ng1,,§'i.i;;,,,,§,i°,,; which leads the list with twenty-i war or exerc - ' Thigh duties and prohibitions the limportation of some of our man- uifactures (or products) info their country." That is just what the [United States has done_ and will icontinue to do in resrxct to Canada. unless some chiange in Canada's gflscal policy be brought about. ’ l; seems to be clear that tho. father of ‘l-‘ree Trade. himself would be a voter for ‘Mr. Melghetfe mvllcy if he were just now a re- s-idenf. of Canada. lie truly adrmlta r .thnt then;- nrre condition; in which Iinapplicable, and the case of Can- iflflfl, at the present time is cer- iminly one of them. ,only when "there is a probmbillty itlrat they will procure the repeal lof the high duties or prohibition-s {complained of." But it must ‘be ievident that the application of high and other highly protected count- . I ._ . d’ 1h krles can the induced-to admit the PRAHFR‘ m“ Logluyfve rgwmroducts of Canada into the mar- ‘kefs o_f the United ‘States u-pon fair and easy (THUS. It is only when ithere is a failure‘. or partial ‘failure, - 101i’ one of its products that we cnn sell that product in the Slates; and then, as The and its (orreepontlcnfs contend. a coin of the realm in s liritishiCalled the Land of Begmnhlgme pay the [up amount of the high country. The Canadian nickel is‘ 58am- k l H u Minty that goes int/J the United Stat- » TWhere all our mista es ant s 0 Fes Treasury. in large m" n imitation of me‘ heartsches As the Liberals still hope Reciprocity with the Stats-s. they can of course have‘ no objection to the adoption of Adam ‘Smith's restrains by h-igh duties or prohibi- our manufactures (or products) "we should impose the like duties a‘nd ‘prohibitions upon the imports- fuctures into ours." On the other hand. the Conservatives will glad to take the same cont-sq for that is the policy ipmpounded ‘by Mr. ‘Meighen. their Lender. it is to he hoped that putting Can-ads. twill ‘in accord with Smith's suggestion-unite dorse a pol-icy that. is. evidently the rr-lEht one to adopt in the ex- cptlonial circumstances and condi- t‘lons which now prr-vail. ‘I am. Sir, etc, A PATRIOTIC CITIZEN. Charlottetown. lNov. 30th, 1926. Adam Duke Raps Pastor Over Controversy ‘LON-DON, Nov. 29.—Argyll peo- ple are interested in a lively corr- Bflpondence between the Duke of Argyil and Rev. Scoular Thomson. minister a1 lnvercbaolaln. which has just been revealed ln ‘he preee. The correspondence arose over a little difference between ithe Duke and the minister respect- ing the whereabouts 01 g mm which has been missing from the ‘Cairdow Church, and gtatements made at a meeting of the Dunoon predbylery with regard thereto. ‘The Duke wrote to the minister taking the latter to task for a ref. erencg at the preebytery meeting to "aborigines" in connection with the matter. and said: "The Innate querreleomenees of Pféfiyterlans ls everywhere not» orioue. Even now they are setting all Canada by the ears with their foolish thickenings over union schemes. But what is more aer ions is Preabyierianismh laps in will! llflsfisb and American dis- trlcts into Unitarianlsm 0r other heresics. I intend to have religions my Lordship of Cows], and | ma“ write setting you some penances." After e period of silence, Rev. "inns and silently t have waft» In m1.- “ assoc. r mast rslrly CIIQIIPIIIIII sll of them be needed, ', ._ _ . ' ~< < n. - ' . .. '- ytu m“ ~\ - ‘ that they will procure the repeal of, are it»? true that Ad Smith wouii _ . ‘tlpplysflilgh duties in? prohi-bitionsfi’ distanced ‘he “m” nations‘ Den Lagerlof. the Swedish uuvelisa, tlon of some or all of their menu-- ‘blzmistry prize alone in 1911. Partisanship aside. the pPOpIB ohm!!!" to en- Bm by p0llp0ning valor on discre- tion. Gone happily, when a Campbell bell jury. and a Campbell Campbell court could glut their vengeance 0h s Campbell chief. tein. In the-letter the minister sires e playful reference to the} l! ll "One lo whom Providence Waiting Award 0f Nobel Prizes The Nobel Foundation‘ which awards the world's highest ac- colade annually to s chemist. a physicist, a doctor of medicine. a writer and a peacemsker, is pre- paring to celebrate its twenty-fifth anniversary 'December 10. when the men chosen for admission to its peerage of thinkers. now only I25, living and dead. will be ah- nounced. Since the establishmenti of the Foundation. about 84.000.- 000 in prizes have been awarded, says a writer in the New York World. The money’ is derived‘ from an endowment made by Al-f fred Bernhard Nobel, noted Swed-‘ ish chemist anti engineer, who amassed a huge fortune from his invention of dynamite. cordite and‘ other high explosives containing nltrnglycerine and from his share in the exploitation of the rich Baku oil fields. The bent 0i the principal nations represented in the list of Nobel prize-winners can be traced through the awards. The United States. which has never won the Ncbel Prize in literaturc awarded ‘to the best work of an idealistic nature. has won the Peace Prize three times. Germany in Lead- lt was awarded to Theodore land they estimate tbs-t it lasts fromitransitory inconveni-ncy of payingRm-‘li-‘Vell ml‘ M5 3°“ “Inc” m ending the Russo-Japanese WM‘. Iv Elihu Root for his efforts in be- oi‘ world peace by codification and to the late Woodrow Wilson for his greatest work. the League of Nations. Germany. five prize-winners, eight in phy‘ ‘isles, eight in chemistry. five 1H medicine and four in literature. ibss never won the Peace Prize. .»France is in second place with twenty-one prizes; VEnginnd third ‘with thirteen. and the United Sta- tes and Switzerland tie‘ for fourth place with eight prizes each. This islflndlflg disappears when the D0~ pulstlon of the various nations are - - I I I' usi self starter for the first processpree Tun“; or a Revenue Tar-m gm ‘°'“‘|d°r°d' The “we com] r es o Europe. with the exception of Por- ‘frugal andthe Balkan States. which not represented. have far out- ‘msrk is first. Switzerland. 96mm‘: ;Sweden. ‘third; Norway. fourth. ‘and Holland. rmn. Germany slips ;the United States fourteenth in a list of eighteen. I Kipling a Winner. 0f the remaining five awards to United the United States. three physicsiawards pa(~h_ puma, prizes were given to Albert Abra-,N,.,,,_.,e,,-__,_ ._,,,,|_ Calvin S. Page T. yluim Michelson. ,and Robert Andrews Millikan. ‘W’. France's ltcnnrs equally between Imedical award. Ihave been divided proposal that when a foreign nationlchennsuy’ literature and me pflrll'rize5‘ ‘W0 or "him “re m merwi gmotiun of peace. The literature t-ioners the importation of some ofswartis went tn Snlly-Pfllillwmmv- illdlstral. Romain Rolland and Ann- -tole France. Madame Curie shar- ed the physics prize with her hus- band iu 1903 and received the che- Ein- stein won the physics prize in i921 ifor Germany. in literature Mom- ;‘msen. Eucken. Heyse and Hnupt- have tied Germany with ‘France for first place. Switzerland |and France divide the honor for ithe peace prize. Each has won jfour. Switzerland won three be- ifore 1904; the fourth was given to Ithe international Peace Bureau. ,Kipling is the only Englishman iholding the literary prize. Great Britain has five physics prizes and four in chemistry. Canada's Two. Rabinrlranath Tagore. who re- fused to take a knighthood from lifts British crown. is the only [Asian to win a prize. Only three DECEMBER 1.—You have ‘plenty of pluck. and are determined. rath- er quiet and reserved. but full of fun, Your friends often follow your lend. You are kind and lovable, af- fectionate in your home. and ul- wnys looking for an opportunity to add ti: the happiness of those you love. Beware of conceit and dis- trusting those you love. ifrom first to sixth place, Prnncei THINK or rm: HARVESTr-tduties or prohibitions is the only it! BEVHIIIYI- Elllilfllld- elghm- M“ a man Bowery,‘ thagimeans by which the United States Millikan received the chemis-i for try award and Alexis Carrel the“)... physics i“ 1999' LIFE Policy “t t. ‘Phi THE TWILIGHT HOUR Dull and checrlcss to the destitute. filled with peace and contentment to these In fireside comfort. A little care now. a little iayirs by while the sun is bright and the clos- ing years of life become a twilight hour of happiness be- fore the night and sleep. A very small portion of your Incemmxirtveoted regularly in a Great-West Life Insurance Policy, w Ii provide comfort and independence for your old ape. Should you not live it will protect your family from want. Our low-rate , policlcs yield an excellent profit return. i - HYNDMAN & CO., LTD. PROVINCIAL MfANAGER. Lower Queen Street CNIFIONQWWH Agents at all Principal Points It's Pretty Tough It's pretty tough, after a man has spent his money, time and energy In building up a business in Prince Edward inland . . to have a lot of business he oould take cnrc of go out oi the Province. It's kinda discouraging t0 give VOW‘ l" 1° I "mmllfl- lty and not get any consideration in return. These advertisements are run to draw your BUNK-ion to the fact that Prince Edward island concern- deserve your bugfneae, price and quality being equal . . . and they are in many Instances. At least give thcm a chance, and thus ctr-operate for the community welfare. ECONOMIC COMMITTEE ASSOCIATED BOARDS or TRADE Box 249. Charlottetown .- wottiert have received .\'0bt'l prizes. ¢**9*¢4*9”"¢*9¢¢¢<v<+¢ Cur-iv. St-ltnatf; a _ .; War Loan and Baroness von Suture-r. nu Aus- trian awarded the lwnci- liFiZP_ l"; B d llltlfi. Passing to flic smztllcij ctiun- 1 s ,trles. we flutl that Swollen has‘ tseven nwnrtis-two in literature." Maqurlng Dcgqmbgf 1,1925 iwon by (ljciicrtip and Puntuppitif‘ inn; one in physics flllll one pcztct- z They are Xlndume We will rr-tltaem the above bonds free uf charge .ut anti ‘prize. Holland has three in pliy~ sics and one in every tllllUl‘ line: "ti" |"“"'h°' It‘ except illcrztlure; mtstrin. Italy.’ Payment w,“ he "mm, flleigltrtit and I\0l‘\\'t1_v have four. Huh or “m, M“ he _.>|,,,,_ u, .\'or\va,\"~s luciutlvtl - icr-timtncrtti u suituhlu "ii-in~ Vcsinlcnl, z Eastern Securities 00., limited Bank of Nova Scotia Bldg. Charlottetown St- John in litcruiure. lljtiru- sun and Knut Hamsuu. who once iwnrke-tl in the Vnlieti States as n street cur conductor. Marconi won and itniy has ‘uiou one prize in every tiepnrtntenf z wxcept chemistry. Spain has three-z ‘lure. won by Echegsrny and Benn-é‘ ivt-nfe. Russia and (Tnuntln have} ‘two each in ntedicitie. The Rus- "“zgfitaflmagl"""""" sinus are Methcltuikoff and Pnw- ' low. The Canadians. Banting uud‘ MacLeoti. received the award in! 1923. The prizes arc awarded by, committees of five commissioners; ouch. in the case 0f the physics‘ and chemistry prizes the commit- tee is appointed by the Citroiint- institute of Stockholm. Q‘ O-O-OQ-O Halifax i o I i I 1 i i Nobel's Wish. The Swedish At-utlenry selects the committee to uwnrd the prize for literature and the Norwegian Slofllllflfl the committee that awards the pence prize. Tho Nobel- prlze today is coveted by scien- tists. stntesmcn and writers of‘ tin- uufire world hocnnsr- the founda- AND SOFT COAL tion has UUCIJBOIICII rmuarkuhl’ w‘ c." "PM! "W bfll! "l cu“ v l well in living up to tho command Coke and Wood, at the lowm of the founder: ‘ma. "i declare it tn be my express desire that in the awarding nf A P‘ k d & c prizes no consideration whatever ' o he paid to the nationality of the PHONE 240 candidates. so that prizes may be! i won by the most worthy whether‘ they be Norwegian or not." u n. quite possible that some of the! awards. particularly In "lefgun-e- are open in criticism. hut grungy-a]. 1y. year i_n and year out. the wordi of the Nobel Foundation is the fiu.. l al word on the notable achieve’ melt!" 0i the yvnr in the fields u COVBTB. Good Riddance to Bari Corns Perfect riddsnse to Ill come by the simple applie- atlon of OUR CORN LIQUID w , You don't need pads, bend- _\‘.\‘_< \ \W Your birth-stone is the turquoise, which means prosperity. Your flower is holly, You luck l i k. H"; y co or s pin . are the days sheriff. a Camp- s Campbell prosecutor hsngmsn in a la a little brush and that we give you. The ache dell‘!- Ifsy and the some Q0 tw- Got a bed corn? Try this remedy. S, -’ Iilil or plasters, all you MN! om‘ Prise RI cents mailed l0 any address. ‘rm: z macs‘ l‘~\ii)l‘,\ii.l ._'r 'v»,.-t.,\v' mind.“ . Drugstore ,. “rename bum. strut).