~ .- r ::_~_:-~‘-<.,- PAGE roux TllE llllAllLllTTETllWll GUARDIAN Hllnlln; Dill! (Fflllllbd l“?! Inllslout». Hunt-Col. W. (than: S. Hal-Io Vlos President, J. B. Burnett. IJJ. lcnroury. ueuL-Cnl D A Mullnmm l! ldltm- and Mun Duvet-III .|. Amoeba for. Frank Walla SUBSCRIPTION BATES $5.00 pa year (in advance: delivered lo Llty. IlMpu-year llnadvaucet mallodtollllslaul 36.00 per no: tln advance) lnlllcd to Canada and U-I Members Audlt bureau of Clrculltlona ‘TM Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ =1‘ uonnav, mun 5.19:8 More Liberal partisanship 'The work on the highways is starting and the Campbell Government is swinging the_axe will‘ l vengeance. From several sections come com- plaints of political partisanship shown in~ the distribution of this work. In one district in Prince County, five local trucks and their o\vn- ers have been struck from the employment list and trucks brought in from other sections, run by prominent Liberal henchmen, to take their place. All who are believed to have voted Con- servative lzist mouth are under suspicion, even if they had formerl_x' voted Liberal. in this case the five tnotor truclmien (liscriminated against are all young married men with children. The work on which they were engaged was the haul- ing of gravel from the pits to the highway. Last year under lll‘ unemployment grant from Ot- tawa some $40,000 was used for labour in sub- grading, and under the federal regulations no discrimination is supposed to be shown in this work. But there is glaring evidence of political interference on the part of Liberal repre- sentatives. This may be in accord with the promises these gentlemen gave as candidates in their personal campaign, but it is not in accord with the interests of the electorate or the re- quirement of federal-provincial undertakings. Dr. Manion's Tour Despite the revived reports from Ottawa that the King Government seriously contemplates postponing the Dominion election till I940, Hon. R. j. Manion, Conservative leader, plans after Their Majesties’ departure from Canada on June f5 to start a speaking tour across the Do- minion. In the course of his itinerary Dr. Man- ion will attend numerous conventions and will aid in getting the party organization into fight- ing fettle for the next general election which be believes will take place the coming fall. A dis- patch from the Capital to the Montreal Star says that the details of the Opposition leader's it- inerary are being withheld until it is definitely known whether or not dissolution is to take place this year. An announcement on this point is expected very shortly after the conclusion of the Royal tour of Canada. If Premier King de- cides to appeal to the constituencies before the close of the present year, Dr. Manion’s itinerary will be promptly published, and it will involve a visitation of each of the nine Provinces and most of the larger centres of the Dominion. The Rotary Convention Delegates from the Rotary Clubs of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Is- land and Eastern Maine are meeting in Distrcit Conference in Charlottetown this week. It is a most opportune occasion, as the City is in pro- cess of being “all slicked up” for the visit of Their Majesties and presents an appearance in keeping with its importance as the capital of the Province and one of the main centres of tourist attraction in the Maritimes. The visitors will be assured of a hearty welcome, as they represent an organization which has been prom- inent in community activities in Prince Edward Island for many years. It is hoped that their convention will result, not only in favorable publicity for Charlottetown which we feel assur- ed will be the case, but also in further develop- ment of those ideals of service which have made Rotary a force in world affairs. The Financial Side (rom a dollars and cents view, the estimated $750,000 the Dominion Government is spending on the Royal trip will be returned many, many times, Wfll€S the assistant editor of the Financial Post. Nearly half this expenditure has been al- located for transportation, chiefly the outfitting and operation of the Royal Train. The Public Works Department has been responsible for decoration of government buildings’. Military expenditures have been looked after by the De- partment of National Defence. Another $75,000 will probably cover “incidentals." On the credit side, the extraordinary flow of tourists from the United States, in a year when otherwise Canada would have felt very keenly the competition of two major expositions, is in itself of great importance. The I 5-mile blockade of visiting U. S. automobiles along the Pacific highway into Vancouver last week is typical of what has happened across a 3,00o-mile border. “At Winnipeg, special trains and motor cavalcades came from points hundreds of miles distant, and from several states of the Untop. One party made a LGoo-mile detour to fly m from Texas for a look at our King and Queen. -Wilhin The Reich An especially tantalizing job of thejGcrman secret polioosuys the‘ Hamilton‘ Spectator, is to locate a group of men who imp up vigorous put-Hitler broadcasts within the border o} the and. Somehow or other they mm their,‘ port- able’? station-fall over the countryfarld have never been caught. Their propsgshiliull» _ tiaulqly effcctl , scores of executions, and the everwatchful eye of ‘the “Gestapof” pamphlets attacking the Nazi regime are being widely distributed in Germany. Boy skilful camouflage they appear inside adver- tisements, regular Fascist folders, and other harmless-looking booklets. A shampoo adver- tisement, for instance, carried an account of the struggle of Pastor Niemoeller for freedom of belief, and another married a closely-printed analysis of the international situation, explod- ing Hitler's encirclement theory. Nazi inter- vention in Spain was exposed in the same way. In Vienna a like campaign has been pressed, In,February, “We got rid of the Turks, now well get rid of the Germans,” appeared in red chalk on buildings at Vienna's streets ¢Um¢r5_ Gramophone records which begin with a Viennese waltz and end with an attack on the Nazi regime were sold. InIceIIars, forests and graveyards, 5gcfet printing presses pour out this material, smuggled by ratlwaymen and sailors. A lot of it comes in from abroad Its main aim was expressed in 1 proclamation that had a. huge circultion in 1hr; Reich during last September: “We want to live as free German men!" Liberal Amenities Inpthc l-Iouse of Commons the other day Mr. Pouliot, Liberal, was accused by Finance Min- ister l\Ir_ Dunning of “vilely slandering" his, Mr. ‘Dunnmgs, deputy minister, to which Mr. Pouliot replied by calling Mr_ Dunning “a coward.” These exchanges of amenities are not in- frequent among Liberal members at Ottawa. As for example the following interchange between Mr. Gerry McGeer and Mr. R- j, Dcachmcn before the Banking and Commerce Committee. ‘Mr. McGeer: “I do not expect anything from Deachman but bad manners.” Mr. Dcachman: “Not so long as you mono- polize and arrogate to yourself a superior in- telligence which you, neither by the grace of God nor culture, possess." 1 Editorial Notes 1 Ten more days till Their Majesties visit us. a l. a v ‘The recount of votes in the West River dis- trict is attracting a lot of attention. v i: v n- The Boy Scout Church parade yesterday was one of the most successful yet held, and reflects credit on the officials in charge. I i i i I It is time for everyone in the City to make their final preparations for the reception of the King and Queen. s n- u a: General La Fleche is now sorry he spoke so disrespcctfully of Col. Drew who has been so generous in his treatment of the Deputy Min- ister, though implacable in his condemnation of the Minister of Defence and Major Hahn. a # m The disaster to the Thetis shows tha-t the most modern improvement have not rendered the submarine safe, even in peace times, and that even the latest invented devices cannot guarantee escape for those imprisoned. i 1 i‘ 1|‘ The 80-pound and 9o-pound potato bags, which have been in extensive use, particularly in Eastern Canada, will be abolished after July r, and the only legal weights after that date for potatoes packed in cotton, jute or mesh bags for sale will be foo, 75, 5o, 25 and 15 pounds. Weights for potatoes prepacked in paper bags are l0 and x5 pounds. - u n: a u Seven years ago historic Annapolis Valley in Nova Scotia inaugurated the first Apple Blos- som Festival of Canada. Since then it has been an annual and beautiful event in the spring life of that area This year the Festival started June 2 and concludes today. In commendation of it the Kenn/ills Advertiser has produced a very creditable special edition. u p: c Do you know that there is a right way and a wrong way to fly the Union Jack? Here and there are to seen some Jacks that, if flown that way at sea, would be interpreted as signals of distress. Though to a casual observer it may look as if the stripes are all centred evenly over each other, more accurate observance will show that the red diagonal stripes of the St. Patrick's crpss are not placed evenly over the broad white bands of the Cross of St. Andrew. There is a wider margin of white on one side. To fly the “Jack” properly, the broad white band should be uppermost on the side of the flag that is placed against the pole. . o =0- u a Carlyle wrote this in r871: "No revolution rises above the intellects of those who make it, and nothing is gained when one false whim sup- plants another. But one day we shall pass, at last and forever, across the line that divides non- sense from common sense and on that day we shall pass from class paternalism, that historic relic of the time of universal ignorance, to hum- an brotherhood in accordance with the laws of nature, and our growing knowledge of it. From political government to industrial administra- tion. From competition in individualism, to in- dividuality in cooperation. From war and des- potism in any form whatever, to peace and lib- crty" a a n a Commenting on Deputy Defence Minister La ma,” Flechcfis outburst in the Bren gun inquiry, the Ottawa journal says: “The journal has com- plained often of the practice of, Members of Parliament attacking public officials on the floor of the House. It has criticized as well. the failure of the cabinet ministers to defend their officials from attack. By the same token, and for precisely the same reason, it opposes the right of public servants to engage in controv- ersy over public policy, or to involve themselves “l gir- fn dis ute with men in public life, Such _s_prac- L. . I permitted, would become ‘Intolerable, » Wlliilhrdu chnoeiin public admmmtwm" i was icaaiiwrrmwu cuaaot NOTES BY TIIE WAY _-.-—» Public seaport ldespm and realization of the mini: or m: quote protection the steps neces- sary for the maintenance of nee worm be made more dlff cult. Nothing whatever would be - ed by crying "All! well‘ and put- tlrx on blmdfolds. That would m e the danger sttll gnaw‘. To preach that war ls lnevmtbb would of course, be harmful as IINII ls silly. But that has not been done. Efforts were made ln years put. by misguided disarmament ttlsts to convince the publlc thick. the only insurance sgalmt war was the destruction of defences anlnst it. The folly of that. view ls now Behfirfllly realized. The realization, however does not lnvolvg an accep- tance of war as a certalnty. - Toronto Telegram. The worst thlng about lottlng Int-o the habit of reading poetry l5 that you are liable to try to write it. — Kiwanis Magazine. Coast defences have bad pride of place 1n Australia's defence prosram and she ls now ln s position to use them to their full- est extent. New uns and lights have been installeg and adequate stocks of the latest types of am- munltlon from the Australian Government factories are available with modern equipment for prac- tlce. For the first time for many Years an army transport. left. Syd- ney this month to take s new permanent defence force to Dar- win. — Australian Press Union. M. M. Porter, K.C., former luv partner of Hon. J. E Brownies, former Premier of Alberta, made the statement tn an address ln Cal- gary that, if Alberta would, lt could pay its debts. He pointed out. that. two bridses at San Francisco had cost that cfty about $120,000,- 000 Alberta's debt L; about $170,- 000,000, iMr. Porter pointed out, of which some $45,000,000 are easily realizable quick assets, ‘This leaves a dead weight debt of about $125,- 000000 plus some unpaid interest. or little more than San Francisco owes for two bridges. Last year Alberta's agriculture produced about. 81600001300, and we have an ever-expanding provincial income owing to our developtng resources. Mr. Porter says Alberta could pay 1f we would pay. Most; peqple will agree with Mr. Porter. which leaves us the very unoomforting thought that we are too dishonest. l0 Ply- — Icthtbrldge Herald. For President Samoa, of Niel-mails. Washington turned out 2,000 troops, 500 bluejacketa, a hut- tallon of marines, the Marlne Band, three mounted bands, a, sa- luting battery of the Sixteenth Field Artillery, fifty bombers, thirty light tanks, four scout cars and a machine-gun troop of the Tenth Cavalry, with the Navy Band Dllivln! at. the Capitol and the Army Band at the White House. For King George the turn. out will certainly be n; 1m- o and probably larger. His Maje y will step off the train between bwo lines of marines. stretching to the Presldenn/s room. Emerging from the room, he will face a guard of honor. and a battery of artillery, stationed somewhere beyond old Christopher Columbus, will‘ open flre with a 21 ;n salute. When the King stem ..ito his automobile, a cavalry escort of at least two troops will form Ln front and an- other behind; at least thirty tanks will come rumbling lnto llne, while overhead fifty bombers and an un- dlscolsed number of pursuit ‘planes —one rcitrt says 148 nlmraft ln all-wlll roar through complicated manoeuvres. The whole procession wlll then move to the Capitol, around lt, and down to the White House throutzh streeu lined on both sides with soldiers. In addi- tlon, of course. there will be the police-lot) for Somoza, which probably means at. least 1,000 for the King. In brief, George V1 wt be greeted by an army well-nlgh strong enough to have taken Ma- drid. -— Baltimore Sun, When Ilse powers of the universe are known and controlled llfe will become easy. Foolish are those who say the earths supplies of coal can be exhausted. Lon: before that. day comes coal will be obsolete. We shall no longer depend u n men working In the bowels of earl-h to dig out our fuel. It ls not men's hand but: men's minds, which will harness the powers of the universe. So tn the midst. of our daily toll 11nd time to exerc your own mind S d a few mlnubs each day th lng. - London Sunday Express. It was vvlth Interest. that w! learned of u compromise between pyjamas and the old-fashioned but. practical “nfghtle" and this oom- prormlse ls called a "sleep coat. for men." We have not. heard this de- scribed but. we rather imagine ft. ls a night shirt. with legs, that. l0. we expect ll wlll turn out to be one- pleoe yjamas. If this ls so, then the ch ef objection to a nlght shirt will have dlsa pen-ed, The pres- ence of legs wll keep lt from wrap- ping around one's neck like a scarf after s night of rolling and fos- sing. If the new sleep cost cm combine the roomy comfort of a "nlghtle" with the smarter s pear- ance of a pair of pyjama; o tn- ventor has a fortune wsltlng for hlm. - Lindsay Post, Many, many a time have all u? us heard after-dinner orator: the subject of the undefended 3.000- mllg frontier that separates Oun- ads and the United States - an international bound ,1 without a fort 0r I 31m. Wlndsor discovered the other day that. this ls more than s rhetorical flourish. Wind- sor needed a small of artill- pa féom which to f a salute to was some thouzht. of borrowing one from Detroit, Ihlfih ll hllldlflf, lflll DONOR , 116111 any either-nothing more " “ than revolver; and pis- nfs. rlfles and shotguns. 60ml- nods will so! lflln that herds l moral for lurope, but. what's the useh- Ottawa Journal. .. an! an ia- d\.yl. . REMOVAL OI‘ SUPEBFLUOUS HAIR SHOULD BE UND PROPER. SUPERVISION It has been found that the best treatment for the removal of su- perfluous hair is electrolysis. The tlnv needle ls Inserted into each halti- root. and, lf done properly, the hulr ls permanently destroyed. Unfortunately. because this la not "medical" document, anyone can buy this electrical outflt. and ln time. acquire the ne- to klll the hair root and leu-ve no soar. But. while these "ODOIWWB" are learning how to use the equipment. much damlSe may be done to the skin of the patient. An editorial 1n the Journal of the American Medical Association some weeks no stalled. "An in- cwaslng nmnber of electrolytic ln- 5h ‘ designed particularly to remove hair. moles and warts are wDDemx-lm on the market. There Ls a trrotwlnz tendency for laymen. unqualified by experience and training. to undertake the use of such apparatus. Because of the slmnllclty of the proces- ses. Deonle are often misled into bellevlna that. they are quite safe with these lay operators." Actu- ally there are a. number of rea- som why such safety ls not as- sured by these lay operators the most lm. rtant or serious: of which ls (a) elr lack o! knowledge of preventlnzlnfectlon. and (b) treet- ing what they consider simple moles, which are really an early form of ‘cancer, To avoid hazards of infection and spreading a cancerous growth. the operator should have some under- standl of anatomy, physiology, bacteribifmy. antlsepsls, besides his knowledge of how this particular electric apparatus ls used. “Plttlng and soars may result. from too much current or too long treat- ment. 12f the operator makes too many stabs at a single hali- root. or treats too many halts (at one time) in one spot, infection and scarring may be expected to fol- W3. Now this doesn't. mean that any- (me with superflouom hair must go to a physician to have lt de- stroyed because bhe rrwlcrlty of physicians know little or nothln! about mmovintz hair by electrolysis. It. does mean. however, that. if he does not. R0 to t-he Dhyslo-therapy department of any hospital, a nettl- ent deslrlnlz this treatment should ask his nhyslclan about. the est- tatbllshment where he expects (o undergo me treatment. A good "operator" of the elec- t-rolyt-lc apparatus may lack the knowledge of antlsensls and be un- able to bell the difference between u simple and cancerous mole. Rest For Their Majeslies (Winnipeg Free Press) we llked Iv dlng about. Their Majestles takmg l-t. easy in the mountains, and felt. they were feeling just like the rest of us would be feeling It we were they, and that they must have been tgotljng glad to “let. down their back halr," as folk do when their last guest has gone. The King and Queen were alone In the mountains, or were left as much alone as a. Kins and Queen can be, and they (went. walking alone, for the mounted policeman dld not follow them down a for- ast. lane when he saw they wanted to play hockey. They were given a few days of! from dolns I111‘ chore of sovereignty. But Their Majestles must still be young enough to feel the strain of pomp and pride. and may. as do moat. of us. feel the longing for pleasant folk to be near and com- mon thlngs to do. In the moun- tains they got. out of their glad rugs to get. into sports clothes. The walked the last. fifty minutes sire of the mountain they were driven up. They rode tn a buggy, and sa/w grandeur they don't see when rtdlng 1n the Klng‘s coach to n Parliament at Westminster. King snapshobted a rare n.1- blno moose, and the Queen picked up lovely lady slippers thrown tn- to her car on the impulse of a mountain chlld of eleven. And who. asking for thrills dur- lng this lull in regallty. would not. long to "ride ln the engine cab of the triple-header pulling the royal train itself? Of course Thelr Mu - estles longed to ride in the ca and tn it they must have laughed over smuts on the! Firemen thought them the, nicest. folk ever come to town. Their Majestlm got their da off, and they enjoyed it, as muc as do other hardworking people. |'I'helr M esttes were oble to do this and do that alone. to dine alone, and perhaps had a chance to wonder if the children at home were getting Into more mischief than tisuul. 11M:- Majestles pus- ed up their seats in the grand train to be driven over the Great. Dlvfde, and locked In awe, asmost of us do, on the wonder of one small spring sending rivers flow- ln: to the Pacific and the At.- lantlc and the Arctic. The cloak of klngshlp was lald aside and the glamor o retreat put on. ‘Little walks we e taken (pallet talks enjoyed mmld the mcun . These simple pleasures. and Bsnff, and Lake Louise, and ll: . He could not have been s. day more than eleven, and he was not very ylnntle even for his cg. But he was batting with all e mane splom of an unb o "W.G." stylishly blocking be s length, cuttlng and slig- rs that. invited punts - t. and dolnq all this with a condescending "on: . frold that. have been i 0d about. . A c hstffcmoon but far s over . . u un heavyweight wweatgd an , Jails al- tho Infant "V1.0. took ft (tufts 1*. g r g 335;? ANTI King George The‘ Sixth Clllilfl‘ TIUIlY-Sll "Our deeds lblll. MINI Wilt Ill 180311 ufntr, And what we have been makes us what. we're-re." , --GO0N0 Elliott». In ttlu enrllu‘ years of bla life. the Duh of York. who ls now or “ . course ln the Navy. his twtlvo ser- vice in the World Weir. and for a time due to u serious handicap of poor health, but when the World burdens or public llfe. He repro- sented the Kin: when the monarch of the Belgtums marched triump- enttly into Brussels 1n Novembflr 191B; he mtumed to that. city in February 1921 to honour the fem- ous Bmxoxmster Max and Prince dc Oroy; he acted for his lather at. the Royal Wedding of Kins Alex- ander of Serbia and Princess Mule of R/umanla vuhloh took Place In ln 1922; he was present at. the Coronation of the K1118 and he acted oft-en 8s NPNSBBW-UVB o! the Bmltlsti Royal Family at. num- erous public functions at, home In his own natlve land. But the pub- lic activities of the Duke increas- ad rapidly after his marnace to lady Elizabeth Baum-Lyon and lt ls no secret. that this Royal couple were much In demand. In 1923 the Duke and Duchess of York travelled to Belgrade where the Duke represented the Klng at the christening of Prince Peter. the Infant son of Klnz Alexander and Queen Mark In July 1924 the Royal couple pal-d an official vlslt to Northern Ireland where the! stayed st Olandeboye for a short time and when proceeded to Baron's court where they met the Governor- neral. After their return to Enkland. they made Inns for their lonzut trip since t tr ngrpase. formu- latlntz anengemen or a voyage to East Africa which they startled on December 8th by leaving Mar- They were accompanied by a very small staff consisting of Lady An- wlth Rear-Admiral Slr Basil Bwoli and Lieutenant-Commander Colin Bulst. ln attendance on the Duke December 21st. and they were en- tertained by the Governor of Kenya, the late Blr. Robert. Coryndon, receiving at the same time a first taste of na/tlve cus- toms and cemmontals. However. both the Duke and the Duchess were anxious to study at. first. hand the life in this outpost. of the Elm- phe, and soon they were on their wuv Into the interior of Africa to five ln the widow-s and m enjoy real wild frame hunting until Elab- ruary 1925. when they mme back avaln to Nairobi. the 00.910010! i319 colony and the first skm of clvl-llw- tion ln that region. Then followed a. number of eioelttnfl and inter- estlmz trips durlzuz the course 0f which they had oocasfon to visit Victoria, Nyanza, the Whltte Nile. the Blue Nlle, Kampala, Fort. Por- tal. Semllkl Valle/y, Butlobu. Nlm-ule. Rejuf, Kusu. and other sections, lncludtrzz most of Uztmda. They returned to civilization once more when the Dart? 041MB Khartoum on AW" “he The“ travels offered an excellent. 0D- portunfty to study the admhilstru- tlon of colonial terrltores. the Work of pioneers and missionaries. We halblts and thoutzr-M. M new“ such as Ambs. Nuerc. Nubian!!- eto, and otherwise wove them volu- able exnerlfenoes tzhgpnlml l vast Em!» re. w . we" gpstlned to head at a. later da/te in tory. 2n ctdlefnnndiddfle fotir reach on e »' able voyage which undoubttedlv proved u bunny and useful expert- ence, thounh lit was only thfl stout of their efforts to cement the bonds of the mm Ermlw (Continued Next Week) , (Reproduction Prohibited. 1939, Educational Features S dlcv-M) 1-: _—_—.-—::;‘?_—_?::_._ ..__.____-- ‘ the drive to Field, will be bored ln the long years to come- They wlll be remembered when the speeches are forgotten and the faces presented are misty. ‘Them, if not. now, ‘Imolr Majestles will realize that the people of Canada could not resist crowding to sec them pass tn procession. but were ‘glad that Their Majestles should have time off, so thattheynilght, like other folk, close the door and be at their ease, making them- selves quite to home. The Questions They Ask (Ottawa Journal) su- Roneld Lindsay, the dlwnl- fled British atmbassador to the United States. had another lum- vlew with the massed Wushinn- um press the other day. and read- lnlz the story of it in the New York when one can understand a oer- lsln impatience with these dtsoluved by the diplomat. Would Slr Ronald. the asked. my sormthlnl’ “news.v" about the hot docs that are to be served Kl deem and Queen Elisabeth at. he ulonlo President and Mrs. Roosevelt ar to Rive them M’. time Park would ll. be the first time Thou- Mutation hm en-tcn hot dons? What dld he think of jig; Roosevelt's um- ti“nrnv:sv stir (fatten tr Lulu lnlorut- _,- lulng lands-ah ulnr will OI q Ion—|lny,.t3 snat- nohl tlttolllci. The boat arrived at Mombasa on Q ~ VACATIONS with Anni-an“; nCvlradlbmSnvqwigsyp,kwfi' Dominion LE mtlfk/ANCE (QMD ._ ., Hum“ ANv F 1' Vitalitq a1 BRAHM IN ONGE PEKOE TEA ‘Till III dsnr ON DQMlIlIOI SQUARE J. ALDtlllf: RAYMOND via mncnmr culls. u. may IIANAGII And would 8h- Ronald any somethlnsr more about. the furious garden party he ls kfvfn¢ for Thelr sellles aboard the steamer Malbern. Mummies on the Embassy tzrotmds? How long would the King and remain? What about l nelv as companion to the Duchess. :1”; my; And would m, Am, be so kind as to a. press conference with Th Majestles? Dld the Kin: and ueen carry myinorts when they went abroad? Would 'I’helr Maj- estles accent izlfts fmm generous Americans? What would be "King Gem-xx attléxrdeglrii, placing a wrea- on e m o George W lnmwn? Slr Ronald. We time told. all. the end of this second conference “in- timated he had had enouirh for a lifetime." That ls not sumrlslzic. 2 2.7.11, $7..- “Inaurma ls designed to blto the uncu- hirvv w! of wnlnc owner's. I yum ""06" lllllfld. you Inn when you‘! stand ll disarm lulu o whack I you Possession. lover his my chancel on Queuing It insurance protection. It's foo vilally In- pumu. l wlnl lo hi" when what- nnd no I've turned all mfkuurmn prob- lems OVI lo Ibo agent a! Ilil National Fin insurance Company ol Hartford. Then’: no chum for s slip-up on my woman," W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN NOTICE TO FARMERS We have just received s shipment OI ‘PORMALIN FOR SMUT ON GRAIN A cheap but thoroughly ef- lectlve rflncdy. Grnln growers would he wfso to not gffimplly in order to hive see properly treated before sowlnl. 0m plnt. to everv 40 gallons 0f wlter. Full directions given with every order. We also carry the new snl Improved "nuns * " A dust disinfectant for Wheat, — Oats - Barley. 0m pound treats 32 bushels, Get your pound to-day- ll mil to feed Macs Pig Worm Powder It. wlll thoroughly lbollsl All traces of worms and llll- prove the health of your It'll- PRICE 3s cams run us. The 2 MAGS, DRUGSTORE " H9 GICIQ GHIPSG Sill?!‘ All Mo]! orders Given Prom?‘ Attention. HERE'S THAT NEW "thrill-a-nlinute" S lu cl ebaker i uh w“ plan Biz-n true-blwd downerofthh w ‘lug-minus new Studebaker Cham- -_ team mate the famous Commander and This good-looklnl» new" Champion performs brlllmld ft brlnil y. And u finer ltyle- '°“"d“ <> a workmanship enuler hanfllinl “l “u”. “hwLv/lth stcennl "MI fats an: 1onnzsrtuml fill-nu lulpemlm “"1 nu.‘ I“? g, shrndoorl tcbultnoextrl¢°°_ ; a» and in» on. utttntngavvs-‘fi’. In‘ Cbunplan now. LOW _ H’ mmt-mllywm‘ T. G. IVES e i mil-claimant unuuvsltvrtrlvvl WWW’ ""‘“‘° . U- g v