W": iilonsol ’ lhilrfh ass .. sa.p,,,,~“:'“ul-_II1)) 1r‘ Wont: PROVIDER - {flamenco was made on - L ' , ups-t at north Rustioo Barbour, i?» mmilsh the representations w. Chestei-‘B. Mal-use, ma, P" e1 ammo has been author- ing: the Dominion Decal-uncut of ictuio Works for the erection of a i0 Preserve the sand beach i‘ 118M. wrought by easterly ‘Ill. and where, st the present l. repair work involving the ex- ditureoltzsoolsheinsdcnetc inner portion of breakwater; al- othefactthatforthefirst time war seventeen years, this 593.3011 see dredging done in the har- r and Gauthiers Creek, all of oh work should prove of substan- beneiit to the fishermen in that ion oi the Province. Yard oi the authorization o! an- ar worth-while project, namely, "rebuilding of Pinette Wharf, 'been received by Mr. McLure, . the work will commence im- iiatoly ynder the foramanship of Charles MacKenzie, Pinette. It pe done by days‘ labour, and the lber purchased locally, as that - Inna“. IIJ, MONDAY, JULY a. l9“. United Btafcl, if not deiiniiel: re- moved, must at least show evidence ofschangefcrihebettenAtths moment these external factors are causing much concern among in- fonned business and financial cir- olesandmustbereckoned within my appraisal of the Canadian bus- iness outlook. ‘ w UNNOTED CENTENARK Una oi this year's centensries that has passed without attracting the attcntim that it deserves is that of Mrs. Robert Burns. l-ler chief title to fame is that she was the wife oi the author o! "The Cot- tcr's Saturday Night" and "Auld Lang sync," but a contemporary newspaper observed, she “was come- ly and prepossessing." Mrs. Burns! real importance however. suggests the Christian Science Monitor, is as a symbol. She stands for that army of great men's wives, neglected by the hi;- torians and biographers. Almost every noted versifier in the calen- dar has been made the subject oi don of the Province has good lber and well-equipped sawmills. rcostoi thewonkwill beap- ximately $2,000. tis interesting also to note, as re- iod cbewhere in today's Guard- , that reconditioning oi the Mar- Whari at Charlottetown-a pro- involving the expenditure of ¢,000--has con menced. It is hop- to complete the work before the val here on Aug. 24 of the Eur- . - delegates to the Cartier an- ‘ersary celebration. The employ- rit thus provided will be welcomed our working men. It is znany in since any extensive repairs ' - done to this wharf, though the ' '- of Marine. The present occasion, the eve of the visitation of an im- rtant delegation to the city by , gamer, makes particularly timely a a work now under way. it i! is now fifteen months, says the iiihcial Post, since Canada passed ‘,5 nadir of business activity ioi- Gian] the boomoi the post-war ‘Antics. In that period, economic - in the Dominion has been only remarkable, but sx- y encouraging. As we swing ltbe second hali oi 1934, the _ facts oi what has been achiev- ‘ito date are worthy oi consider- < l l/SINESS UPTREND __.__.4 some learned monograph. But no one thinks of writing about Mrs. Burns and others like her, oi how she kept the children from squalling when her husband was writing, and how she mended his pens, and pre- vented his losing his manuscripts. Here is practically an untilled field for those who weigh down the pub- lishing lists with oftentimes un- wanted biographies. EDITORIAL NOTES All children of one hundred years oi age and under may enjoy the circus today. "I have absolutely nothing to -_.se/_v," declared Premier ‘rilley on Saturday when asked if it were true the New Brunswick gu-ovincial el- ection had been fixed for Cvctober. A1. the Hovincia-l Conference with the Dominion today, Premier Ben- nett will iace five Liberal Premiers. two Conservative, one Liberal-Ro- gressive and one United Farmer. Hon. W. D. Euler who was prom- inently mentioned as a. prospective member oi the Hepburn Govern- ment, is already at loggerheads with it. He criticises the dismissal oi Mr. Goby, Hydros chief engin- eer, and urges his reappointment. Opposition to the new government from within the Liberal fold stead- ily grows. ’l"he Maritime Managers oi the Bank of Nova Scotia, together with West Indian representatives and a - is ably, says the Post, we have ?iieved twdthings- We have w- avered almost halt o: the decline ‘ . took place in business activ- between 1920 and 1933; further- _ we have achieved that fo- - by steady, healthy progress in spiio oi the handicap oi a . 1y p001- agricultural YQIX‘ l-fld ‘flatly restricted market for our ' pal commodity-wheat. . the 10w point of the de- _ . n, m, volume oi business “c; has increased appren- T. - so per cent. Not only does gamma very favorably with Amp-overheat in the leadin8 in- ’ countries of the world. but a gain which is fairly well dis- throughout the. country- ation, mining, industrial , - tiorls, employment, trade and. ’ - igl factors have all shared in ‘general improvement. Another ’ '.~.slgnificant eel“ is '- leswim .“° l“, m we pried which Can-l ' farmers receive for their PN- md the my“; u; be paid for! they buy. ' ' w” we“ 3P0“ l" apparent from ‘survey, namely. film" "I m‘ - such industry w ma“ ‘i m‘ , “Wm; ma, secondly. I . n; in our exports 0i . turd wheat flow. Confirma- ‘mrm; u” past week of a - siurtherdeclinfeinbsnkifl- - rates which should eventually funds ma: buildins’ and "m" Uwnflty. m‘y b; considered l omen in respect o4 °°""-'“°‘ An “ugly favorable indica- is the continued strength c! m4 uni-m with hiBYPFl“ ngw ggfling at the niche!‘ l in 1s new The '0'” ‘m’ 4_ d”. 1mm angdygpointof ' gppeara more aatisfacwfl m" go;- mgny monthl- jmf’ goncludfll the Financial . m‘ bulincl outlook at tho ttimeaafarasthllwill"! l. u emggmed, is undoubtedly ra, ' u,“ g any time in the fill‘ FM‘. B“ u m; gains thiil uqpbeheldandovflnu‘ , r delegation from the headquarters in Toronto, have been having "a whale of a time" in Saint John de- ciding to whom shall be awarded the Golf Championship. We hope none oi the aspirants was Hilde to sweathalfasmuchassome cus- tomers in the cool shade cf the manager's bank parlour. In view of the Austro-German cmbroglio it is somewhat amusing to learn that Germany has enfor- ed a, ionnal protest against the speech of Gen. Johnson, NJLA. chief, who told an Iowa. audience that the Hitler murders made him "actively sick." United States Sec- retary Hull tells Germany that Johnson was not speaking for the Washington Government, but the General himself refuses to retract s. word, remarking "Hitler didn't seem to like what I said, did he?" 0n the eve oi the anniversary of the outbreak of the Great War, it is interesting to note that the French Government is presenting to Mel- bourne, Ausralla, a tree from a battlefield in Northern Pruitt where French and Australian sold- lm {might side by side in the Gmi War. It will be planted on Armis- tldanmybeiorethcbeautuinew shrine of Remembrance, to which reference was mid! in W? 5059"!" ian notes the other day. There is at least one thing to the credit oi the new Hepburn 011W" ernmesit in Ontario-the Attorney- General has obtained an ordsrgof gqun appointing fam- guardians oi the Dionne quintuplets w prevent m“, “m; ewloitod by Yankee “a4 w gig: a contract ior 8100 p“. ‘wk gm the quintuplets were paddy for exhibition at the (Jhicasv world Ibir. llli "W1 “o” P“ W“ and m.“ o; m; profits thereafter. Such an efliibwm- n" m” m!“ ‘u, dung“, would meln within death! i The 3mm; by courts Uflflmm- _ h ghgneat five months. ii snowmen. The Ill-ho? fill! boon ilk, itimisly using violent and extreme whuhssmuiesthemflflmh", Ierloyeantherrinceofwa-‘u has been thg world and, for the latter third any-way, do- in: much to stimulate the trade of the British nnpire. A travelling man without an order book, a glori- lied mm agent wiuiout a type- writer, a master of ceremonies with l-bgglmutdlihesunashisring- such is the Prince of Wales. Fun- dl-mflmlly Just a bvYish sort oi a. chap who bears his years lightly, W110 Mhlfived hi5 Kiwi-test renown about ten yfl-rs ago when he be- Kin falling 0f! his horse with per- iodic regularity. he has fluttered the hearts of feminlty all over the world. ...___. Lilvenement, Quebec: It is time to act. ‘Phere is no need to seek proof that our influence is at a 10w obli; we have had these proofs be- fore our eyes constantly. Particu- llrly during the past few years. Our leaders, spiritual and temporal, may mfllle bonne entente visits to 0i" neighbours: they will not amount to much unlms we our- selves echo them. We are all right not there. We will have to tum to? action without delay. It would he,’ s pity i! a people which had under- , 8011c everything to be born and to “will 116 youth. if one may so ex-I press it, should consent. once ar- rived H'- thai period, w iall back and so endanger its life. There is °X11y One thing to do: to add. once‘ and for all, to our religious and pat- riotic spirlt and economic sense. Wall Street Magazine: Much could be endured if Gemiany were regaining her once high place 1n, the sun. but the knowledge grad-l ually percolates that Germany is, today isolated from the world and condemned by all its free peoples. France and Russia have grasped Ill-Kids. the iron ring about Germany BWWS 118mm‘. France is regaining her ascendancy in Europe, and all that fellow dictator Mussolini can Rive I-Litler to take back from the Venice Conference is advice to keep out of Aus- tria and come back into zhe League oi Nations or at least the disarm- ament conierence with a. promise of Italy's support. The wild enthusiasm 0i the rise oi the Nazis to power is cooling in the face oi moral and economic realities and the "Hell Hitler" salute shows signs oi fatigue. The greatest hope for prosperity, and hence for labor, in the future as it has always been in the past, lies in increased efficiency of pro- duction and distribution, which will lead to adequate business pro- ms and create such a demand for labor that high wages and full employment will follow as a natural consequence of individual initiative and wise business policy on the part oi successful capitalists-The An- nalist Old men do not want war. Why shoud they War threatens their security. Old people are the bene- ficlaries oi the status quo. Why should they disturb it? It is the young men in the army who want war, lwcause they want promotion. It is the young armament firms who want war because the old manu- facturers have their established markets. It is the young nations who want war, because they want their place in the sun. They com- plain bltterly of the world being preempted by the older empires- New York ‘limes. ‘Iio overcome tariff barriers and obtain advantages in the Canadian and British markets, manufacturers in the United States have estab- lished more than 100 branch fac- lories in Toronto since the depres- sion began, according to a state- ment by the Toronto Industrial commission. These branches are turning out more than eighty dif- ferent kinds oi products, have in- vested millions oi dollars in plant and equipment. It is ("iservatively estimated that during the last four years approximately 200 American branch factories have been estab- lished in the Dominion. Evidence of Nazi activities in the United states "in contravention of international law" has been un- earthed by the Congressional com- rnitioe investigating these activit- ies, according io the chairman oi the committee. The evidence al- ready disclosed clearly indicates that a. well organized effort was being made in the country to group Americans oi German blood and German descent into one bloc and to utilize them in a way which would be subversive in its charac- ter. An America was in an lihigllsh port 1'cc.l".._\, and one of the "gobs" mailed six post-cards to six different girls. He made the mistake of putting them in the let- tcr-box oi a store next to the post office, and the storekeeper found that the sailor lad had written to each girl thus: “looking forward to marrying you. I never think of any other girl." ‘This spells like a lot of trouble ior the sailor, but fortunatey for him the addresses were so widey scattered as New York, Halifax, Hawaii. 10s Angeles. fllfl Francisco and Mexico so the rivals are not likely to meet. This la the one hundred and fif- teenth anniversary oi the birth oi Elias Howe, inventor oi the sew- ing machine. He was born at m, ‘Ibrn Mann, the veteran Bocial- iat leader was charged before Mr. Justice Talbot in Isoneon with sed- lmguagg in denouncing capitalism. m y“ gcquittod, and left the court "without s stain on his reputation." es By The Way in making speeches; the trouble is. ther hemia, the strengthening of the ‘abdominal muscles is a 800d in- vestment of time and effort. Thus in» oi- . Quota . Qlcmw-IIQ-l-A, HOW HERNIA (BUPTUBI with hernia or rupture whom were wearing trusses. sides, come a complete hernia. the lower bowel or the lining coat oi the abdomen, or both, fo ‘ ,, it- self through the small opening in the abdominal wall through which only blood vessels and nerves should pass. " When the hernia gels completely through, it can be made to drop back info the abdomen when the patient lies down. By applying a properly fitted truss against the opening while lying on the hack, the patient is usually able to get up and about with the bowel or lining of abdomen held firmly back in place. However many "threatened" hernias, when there is a lump at lowest middle of abdomen, it has been often found: that if the patient is willing to take exercise he can so strengthen his abdominal muscles that the lump will disap- pear and hernia prevented. m. J. c Elsom in Archives oi Physical Therapy advocates the regular practice of a series of exercises that will undoubtedly strengthen the abdominal walls and keep the muscles in good oon- dition, ccnsequently lessening the chance oi hernia. 1. Lie flat on face and abdomen and tum the trunk from side to side. 2. Lie on back and raise first one leg and then the other, keeping knees straight. After a. liitlc practice both legs can be raised together. Butiocks must not be raised, A good exercise consists in raising the right leg, 60661118 i9 over the to the left and touchifi! the floor or bed on the left side. and: then raising left leg and touching right side. 3. Bending from side to side. keeping knees straight The big pqmt about exercise of the abdominal muscles is that we- you have no hernia, a threatened hernia. or a. complete if you have no hernia you acquire a good posture or carriage oi the body; if threatened with hernia you should prevent a complete hernia; l1 you have complete hernia and operation is advisable or actually necessary the surgeon has a good muscle structure to work on and the hernia is not likely to return. EILEAN LEOGI-‘IAS (Isle oi Lewis) On Sassenach soil my step is stayed, Neath} fiiassenach roof my head is 8. I Low-lying fields my slag-heaps drear Appal my eyes, both far and near; Till, turning North, they see in dreams 'I‘.‘ne heather-glens, streams Oi’ Alba, and her far-flung Isles: The Hebrides! the Blessed Isles- Where dream the hills in sunlit peace, Where laughs the wave along the sand. So fair, so white, my spirit flows the moorland a ‘IT-IE Eta: MAY OFTEN BE PREVENT The examination of recruits for the army showed a. large number most oi ‘- _ ywsuc FORUM Charlottetown Gurdinl .00 necessarily anions opinions at acrnalollilil- FARM BRIDGE! Bin-There has been good work- done on the roads this sprins Hid early summer, that I have travelled. between East Point and Georgetown. and between Souris and Charlotte- tDwn. Ithlnkitisamistaketomm‘ chine the main highways in mid- , Perhaps some work could be dons on the by-ways profitably In addition of the number with "complete" hernia on one or both there were a. number in whom there was a "lump" which might under work or exericise be- A hernia consists of a portion of at this season oi the year. Many farmers have adopted the very serious practice oi filling in the dr‘ , the entrances to their farms, thus turning the water from the drains onto the centre of the highway, where it cuts deep trench- es, and in one season practically destroys a.ll the repairs that have been made. This practice will sure- ly have to he stopped some time, and why not stop it now? I have spoken to some oi the road officials about it and they say the offenders will not stop till an example is made oi some oi them, and the Minister. will not prosecute. In this respect, he is much like his predecessors. I have been informed that the Ministers are urged and importuned by the mem- bers not to prosecute, and the Min- isters have always yielded to this pressure. Ii the people living along the highways turned out and with picks and shovels dug trenches in the roads the; would certainly be prosecuted, and I ran see no dif- ference between destroying the roads with picks and shovels and destroy- ing them in the other way I have mentioned. The roads that have been well machined this spring and early sum- mer will be pretty well destroyed be- fore the iall rains are half over, if the drains be not kept open and if the governments of both political parties have decided to let this prac- tice oi blocking the drains go on, it would surely be better to adopt, at the public expense, the policy oi con- structing proper bridges over the drains at the entrances to each man's farm. This policy would im- prove the appearance oi the roads and would, I think, result in the sav- ing oi rnany thousands oi dollars a year. Proper drainage is about nine- tenths of road making. I am. Sir. etc, J. J. HUGHES- TBE GAME OF DECEPTION Sir,--’I‘he G-yrator organ is in n. hole. The hole is uncomfortable. Because when you put a crooked thing in a straight hole it is sure to chafe the bends, and skin the bubble spots. It was looking in the hole for water-muddy water. It. was at- tracted into the depths by an ap- pearance oi political filth, and a foul odor. It iound what it wanted but the smell has reacted. and the casement oi the hole turned out painful misfit. ‘ Its effort to falsify the country's debt, and to fool its own readers has changed its tactics from blus- fer and bluii into that oi excuse making for the financial blunders of its own party. To deceive the public into a belief that the pres- ent Government were “borrowing" with prodigal recklessness it par- aded the issues oi $2,450,000 de- bentures to mislead its readers into belief that this was an addition to debt-incurred by the Stewart- MacMillsn governments. It is caught in its own trap and is strug- gling vigorously to escape. But the hole is a tight one, and a cork- screw form finds a. straight crawl out impossible. Confronted with the truth that more than half oi the $2,450,000 debenture issue was to pay ofi the overdraits and debt left by the Lea Government, the Gyrabor organ whines out that $300,000 of the en- ormous Liberal Habillty was a her- itage from a preceding administra- tion. Possibly so, and how much oi that in tum was further back a Bell Government liability? Don't forget the fact that wherever there has been a Liberal government there has never failed to be a big debt left to its successors. And the On wings of dreams, to Eileen ghas. No word can say, no mgh can tell The magic oi that island spell The breeze that stirs the grass, the tree Has but one meaning now for me; I see it bend the canach fair, And fill the sails oi fishers there. The yellow iris by yon pool Is glowing at the lochside cool. The lark that mounts up to the sun,| Each star that shines when day is done; All lead me on in this my dream, Of Lewis and her rock-bound sham, That shall go with me evermore. —-A. M. in the Scotsman. I Spencer, Massachusetts. on July 9, i019; at the age oi six he began working with his brothers and sis- blggest contracts the Conservatives always have to confront is to li- quidate Liberal debts bequeathed to them. But think oi the gall of the Gy- rator organ, charging up io the present Government the issue oi $3,450,000 debentures, more than one half of which was to pay oii its own debt, and then have the stupidity to designate this as "bor- rowing." And added to this the imbecillty of expecting the country to swallow the gaii. Are we all children to play politics with soap bubbles distributed by partisan mountebanlm, both bubbles and distributor too wind-puffed to face a pin puncture? A writer asked if there was no possibility of muzuling these fab- ricators and, for a. time at least, to have a closed season to protect tha honest public from this sniping of tors in their father's small cotton mill. He left home at ll, and his, life was spent in machine shops in various parts oi the United States. Spurred on by poverty, which made the support of his wife and three children a problem. he made efforts about 1843 to evolve the sewing machine. ‘Pwo years later he suc- ceeded in sewing the first seam on a machine. Trouble with rivals. however, and infringement of his ideas. kept him from prosperity. Not till i864 did the Massachusetts courts rule in his favon-New York Sun. Lowell Observatory In Plsgsiaif reports there is no possibility of life on other planets with the ek- _ag a sontroveralallst, the Judge de- claring: "I see in it no indictment to an illegal act. I do not know if any one really knows what the ‘capitalist Byfliem‘ is, but in Mill ceptlon perhaps oi Mars-at any rate, life in any such form as we know it. The report says: "Mars is the best bet" for life elsewhere than on this planet. Mnrs has clouds and water, but less than on earth." And the wide range oi temperature, ,event Mr. Mann or any oiher cit- imi u entitled to think it is a very iniqu thing." Could such a m‘ mung“; "gm diiudgmcnt be surpassed ior terse- that intiaasgniygprigp nun. can u; Dana ‘an .1. n. JENKINS. m chfllouewm the number syvo from 65 to '10 at midday to below zero by night, suggests an intoler- able climate for such a. being as man, even it lichens or fungi or unprincipled propsgandists and political mischief makers. That de- mand was to the point. Surely them is enough in real politics to supply pabulum for the party in- fants without resorting to crooked- ness. trickery, fabrication and de- liberate dishonesty? I am. Sir, etc, POLITICAL STUDENT. Dillingefs Exit (Ottawa Jmlrrial) The amazing story of John Dili- inger. called “arch criminal" and "desperado," and the most danger- ous man the United States has produced in a. decade oi high crimv. came to an end when fifteen federal officers hennned him in as he walked out of s Chisgo i-‘hmi-fe, shot him iodeath before he had any chance to fire his own revolver. The extraordinary thing is that no ‘effort was made to take the mun alive. ‘Ilhe police knew Dillinger was to attend a certain theatre on Bun- "strange Martian germs" might 89d fill l habitable 9159a , m“... “A. AM 51° wmnd be numb?;,e:pm3_}ry;1n'::y Sfjllitlilacr}: 7mg tesi- Dr. J. A. Clark. Sulnrintend- cslec on r, - . _ . . . . , H . . day rum-obviously sonueone iahh % baa bmhn faith. _________M_ IIII sauna IIII \ ‘in ‘ will i a»: m. no doubt for the iewand. ‘They 50W him enter the lobby, watched him buy his ticket, waited outside for two hours, shot. him down without a. word. The chief of the federal men commends hi5 moderation in not issuing shotguns and machine-guns. for fear spectators mlQht b? Willi“?- The information concerning Dill- ingefs plans for Sunday evening was s0 accurate that it seems prob- sbie they knew also where he was hiding. In any event it is impossible to agape the conclusion that they could have taken him alive had they wished. why the "operatives" did not grab him as he bought his ticket, or a5 he walked down the sidewalk. is the question. Had they no confidence in their own courts and prisons to protect the public’ from his further activities if they took him alive? l On the same day three of "the! most desperate killers" in the Soiith- l west States escaped from the death l house of the Texas State Pcnl- ' tentlam‘ at Huntsville, and a, fourth similarly classified was shot down 8s he scaled the wall. Most of the convicts and guards were present at ' a baseball game "beside the walls" between a. prison team and a team, from outside. Thus the way to frce- dom was almost clear when one of; the death-cell omvicis held up a- guard with two loaded revolvers- which could have come into his hands only through the most in- credible IOOSCIIPSS-milid compelled him to unlock the doors. It was un- fortunate, of cciuse, that the ball game uhus should have been rudely interrupted. Perhaps there is a natural fooling among United S-taites police that the risk attached To the process of take- ing their desperadocs alive is not Justified by the results. ‘They see and know the weaknesses in the jurlical system which makes convic- tion difficult and punishment un- certain. 'I‘hey see professional crim- inals releascd on ball or on parole to resume their professional careers. ‘Ihey are disheartened, no doubt, by the ease with which many desperate men have escaped from eustody_ Dillinger himself escaped from jail a 19W months iuzo by flourishing a wooden gun. and the case of the Hiiliiovllle ldll-eis freshly emphalzes the point. They know that convicts B" Doi-ird and mmpclvd in mam" institutions, that a prisoner with c, distinguished remrd of crime is TlOYIiZEd by an unthinking public, P6031015 them‘ were l-he consider- ations which induccd {he fedora] me" i" 01110380 to tukc no chances whatever with the celebrated 13111. inger. But it would have been ox- irsmfliy awkward for them u it had turned out they had shot the wrong manr having give-n him n0 oppor- tuniny to surrender! Again The Infinitive (Exchange) Princeton has decided to fig-hf. the infinitive splitters-to vigorously. consistently and unremlttingly op. D060 the dissociation oi the mo- Position from the verb in writing and in speech. This is good news; every convert to correct Ffngligh helrps the cause. In Great Britain old shall will are again to the fore. How we know flhe proper usuage? the Celt. It is n discussion wlhlnh the mciai issue cannot, eluded. A London Times WW1‘ signing "Not a Don" attrib- uted to a Frenchman the {en-lum- "I will be drowned and ncibody shall save mo.” At once "A u-ould be Don»- fillramz to traditonfis defence. A Frenchman. indeed! "1' have, alwqyg and shall cues from be ex- letter Th. Answer TO Boils Pimples Skin Diseases Sallow Complexion Nervousness Loss of Muscular Tone Anaemia Impaired Appetite Run Down Condition Stomach Disorders Ironized Yeast The 2 Macs DRUGSTORI! 149 Great George Street I -we1l. for more than half a century." he writes, "heard it ascribed to a fellow-countryman oi’ my Own- We notorous Padralck, who, when floun- dering across St. George's Channel. in seanrh of a. comfortable berth in the Tyrants Civil Service. W118 heard to exclalrn: “I will be drow- ned, and nobody shall save me." 'l'h’s defender of the things that were protests “against transferring the credit of this Hibernian dis- location of Irnglisl-h for the claimant, with a highly idiomatic language, and lots oi faux pas of h's own." But was it not a Scot who would drown and none should help mm? Wham d cl the wise and witty Fowler say about it? Read him in “Modern English Usuago“: “The tune honored ‘I will be drowned. no-One shall save me,’ so much too good to be true, is 1555 convincing as a. proof that there are people to uiiom the EInglish dia- tinctlons mcnn ilothlng than the dis- covery that shall and will, should and would. are sometimes regarded as good raw material for elegant variation is the spice of speech: let all give thanks that the g-uard is on the alert. g l t t Z I i i i I I 6 I V V O o a pest. weoweenwooeeeweewwov AMMAAAALAAALAAAA: A Use Dr. Ffrench’s Vermicide (‘apsules And Be Convinced of Their Ef- ficiency As a Worm Exterm- inator For Foxes. For ovcr twenty years these Capsules have been used by leading fox ranchers throughout Canada and the United States with the very besi results, and we can safely say there is no other preparation of a similar nature that ha done so much to safeguard the fox industry from the terrible wonn increased sales each year, bolh here and abroad, and hundreds oi’ testimonials fram satisfied customers are suffi- cient proof that the above assertions are correct. Now is the time for you ‘m get busy and dose your foxes with Vennicide Capsules No. 1 in order to escape the fatal}. ties which occur each year and reduce your profits so greatly, These Capsules are put up in boxes of 20, 100 and 500 nnd retail at $1.00, $4.00 and $18.00 res any address on receipt of price. E. A. Foster Central, Drugstore c kkmk kkkk kkkkkkk AAAA4AAALALLLA§ .v v_v v_v w_wj_1I_I_U_Y_w v vw v v v v v v v v vv v v 1x3 pcctively. Prepaid to kkkkkmk wvrwv c¢eevvvoo+coau+wo+ol BANK 0F NOVA creditors, P. 0. BOX 35. --*-_-___.____._-, II. K. S. IIEMMING, B.A.,C.P.A-.C-G-A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MEMBER. OP CANADIAN SOCIETY OF COST ACCOUNTANTS COMMISSIONER FOR. TAKING AFFIDAVITS IN SUPREME COURT OF P. E. l. P. E. I. REPRESENTATIVE THE CANADIAN CREDIT MEN'S TRUST ASSOCIATION, LIMITED. THE SCOTIA BUILDING cnsaaorrarovnv, r. a. 1. Aiiwlllllllis mwms opened up and revised. Labor saving office msthods installed. Cost Accounting instituted to suit special requirements. Monthly, quarterly and annual audits. Balance sheets and Profit and Loss Accounts prepared. Income Tax returns written up and flied. Financial arrangements made between debtor and Llmlicd Liability Companies Incorporated. TELEPHONE I378- mcxsva. NICHOLSO Blackglt . . - - - -- - 4 _| 1H,). tdoor world.' F‘. A. Drlsroll, binnazcr of Con the blgiisyui"; Ila-o“ Mr. Jenkins Summerside, P. E. island kkkk