Notes by the Way The . commendation: oi\ the Report for this, Province iiwii iuiiiiiii p i,, iiiiiiiiiii Incident-II’. OIIIIOI I. ‘Isl-In. -iu addition to the increased aub- """"'““"'" i’ "nm." Fsidy and reduction of freight rates, - lenders-Meat. 00l- D. A. lulluuna. ll. U. 0. 3115"!“ " - '- l- “IFFJI- l- °""° ,are officially summarised as foI— v 1 i" i lows:- 1-3. The ‘Commission state that MARCH 8, 1927 v ithe difficulties in regard to trans- PASTORAL LETTER HE second instalment the Lenten Pastoral Letter by Hie Lordship Bishop O'Leary. publish- of _ pioyment to numerous grist mills iportation for l’. l]. Island to be such a whey wouhi he io-give em.’ overcome require a measure of capital expenditure and they re- commend that the Railway hdminis, throughout the province. 1i this tram)“ inake a lune, as m i“ million dollars was kept at home requirements and ihe phhhmhehi and in circulation, it would thus; provide the calm-alter the llllllfllvfi‘ | When the leading. cancer special- ilsts from the civilized nations of the world got together, then all that is actually known about cancer is available for the use of mankind. L _. w.BlrklI.M.D. OUR DUTY TOWARQ CANCER ed in yesterday's Guardian, will, we trust, be careftmy read, not only by Catholics but by Protestants as well. The instruction tendered applicable to all citizens. It defines strict honesty, not the honesty which barely keeps within the law, and so escape punishment, but the honesty that to take advantage of an opportunity to profit at some one else's expense. The business serve to give employment to many oi our boys who have been compell- ed to seek employment elsewhere. JVlr. l-iyndman is not advocating the manufacture oi island flour for sale in our stores, but that every farmer should keep in storage sui- flcient wheat, and take it to the mill as required, and bring home not only flour, but the valuable by- product bran. The wheat will keep world is full of opportunities for imieiiniieiy’ whiie ihe iioui. might unjustlflabiy profltting. full of thQsemUL wiihoui minus with a certain tides which taken at the flood msyiquamh, oi hard when lead to fortune or to disaster, and whiie some may ciaim ihai ii will pay to grow other products in with disaster for the sake of tem-iiiiace Oi wheat‘ ii wouiii he we“ PM"? Presem H1"- “19 L°rdsh1Pfworth the little sacrifice that may ' makes very clear the straight path; he gained hy ihe diiierence in order M M1195”- “Pmms 111° 11metrlc1wlto build up our industrial life and M m“ ""119 by "ma" “'9 decrflour home market. The more people 590d“ 111 0'59" 11"“ we ma? buy; we have nt home and the more mo them at less than value, unduly; é, ihey have i0 spend, [he greater 11711191113 111°“ 11111135 we “We willie demand for island products of sell in order that we may receive a3 hii kinda There is cei-iaihiy a higher price, etc. etc. All thesckiahgei- in overhoihg and under. are dishonest: there is perhaps no mining ihe seed poihio indusiry. actual hreuch oi the law of the land and it Wm he we“ goi- gai-mei-s- or. but the"? 15 l1 1191111119 bieflch 01 Ihflganizations as well as the individual 6°15“ R1119- imd l1 “"1111 °" mefarmer to give serious consideration character of the person guilty of it, to this matter before it ls too late. The little acts of non-indictabieiquie duh-y and live 3mg]; jndugtry 1118110116111)’ 11W 110i 00111111911 i0 lhfigis the backbone of agriculture and commercial World: they figure iuishould on no account be neglected l1"! 500181 "01111 =15 W911- T119"w111i9|0l‘ curtailed. It is not possible for I16." the veiled iusiuuuliou, i118 BO-‘lsland farmers to over-produce good is refuses too many are readylto take chances iment to be undertaken as soon ‘ as possible. “s? 1 14. They also recommend thatimggmlilth“ 11°11“? 51111111‘: “:13”, °1 I . er as us ye no een e ute- . ‘he question o! an additional ca‘ ly located, but that there is the gen- "Iwerryt 0" a 99°01“ "e151" 11°“ erai opinion that cancer is the re- 1119 80119 9-110 W111! 8 VIEW of 1111' suit oi’ causes and conditions dir- proving communication and theectiy due to our civilized methods lien-y sen-ices be i-uh huge,- a '0! living. They agree that the diet separate account. ,is a big factor. and of course this i 16. The Commission TGCOIHIIIBDGIiS reasonabh enough became we .ihat the Department of Pubuciinust, we can only be, what our . ood makes us. l Works. make an immediate surveyi can“, is not heiiiiiiaiy’ impugn in.‘ the harbors of Chariottotowmiit be transferred from one patient fGeorgetoivn, and Summersldeflifl 1111011161‘. lhhnicuhii-ii. m, ,0 wiiiiiiiige and‘ However these physicians tell us ,stoi_age accommmiaiiou. ‘vim adhat while apparently cancer cannot , . ibe revented b tk ~ {being made to meet the needs of! cancer certainly can be prevented- l: the islands produce, the work to boi This is where the patients them- iundertaiien by the Department ofiseives are to 111111119. 1190111156 i119!’ EiPllblIC Works and not by the ‘Rail-f“’111 "e818" 611101110 indigestion. isevere hemorrhages, progressive And what do these physicians tell way’ iloss of weight, bad color of the All of these recommendatl 121393322330211,‘l1iig1rptdi1ilifitihat point a" a‘ “b1 1'"1‘°"“"°° ‘m’ lf cancer is dfiscovered early urgency, and stress is laid upon many 014119 deaths marsh-om can their urgency in the Report by be prevented if surgical" X ray, or ihe use oi (he words o“ soon agzuitra violet ray treatment be possible" in regard to proividing the ;g v9“- ‘ Tli k h mono i" o6 improve-o 0t 0rd... .".'..Z‘.‘.‘..Z..'.‘Z .2.‘.‘ti.‘i.'“§?.§.. Li“; transportation. There has been: icer is possible in perhaps one third ylready o succession of long end-oi the cases, and easily from ten to iunnecessary ‘delays since the dllteen years added to the average pDuncan Report was submitted to 1 "W111i"? 0! $811091’ 11111151118 11y‘ 11111111- tlie Government, a fact that hasifl ed treatment. already been referred to repeatedly so we must be wise and pane“ in The Guardian. iin this matter, because when we '*' 4Li°§m§i$33“f..if.‘i3‘§.‘l£$'5?,i.ii2§5.“ We" nurnorsiy Mimi todfly a3idiabetes, typhoid rover/aha or...‘ above some of the recommendu-ideuilr dealing ailments that our re- tions of the Report that althouglflsearch men have been able to over- 0i very great impomihce i0 ihismome, we cannot but look forward Province have been iargaiy droppedito the conquest of cancer also. out of sight in the long newspaperi Howewr‘ 1e‘ us remember the 7 01112410 the other provinces for e vert eneer—aii belong to the samelquality dgiry pfQdu¢(5--eggg and1d15°1“‘51°“- We separate ‘them 17°11‘. category and all are dishonest. Asuln We 0011111191111 B Careful llt-‘f-ghemember the results of continent- vihces coiieciiveiy_ in order ihaillchance to learn of it as soon as pos- wide over production of potatoes iniour readers may see that Prince, 1 EiEdward island is not usal of ills Lordships letter. reminds us of many things which in the rush of these hurrying days, we are too liable to forget, things lip-i patently small in themselves but1 immensely large and important 115i they are character-making. Our, to... big aha little, become a 1181111}: habit becomes woven into charac- ter and character means destiny. SOUNDS A NOTE OF WARNING. T the banquet of the Co-operu- tive Egg & Poultry Association, Mr. J. 0. llyndman, President of the Prince Edward Island Associat- ed Boards of Trade, in the course of his remarks, sounded a note of warning us to the danger of over- doing the seed potato lndustry,anii suggested that it would be a good thing for the Potato Gowers them- selves, as well as in the interest of the other agricultural industries. such as poultry, dairylng and hug raising, if tho growers could agree among themselves to control the acreage that should be planted for seed potatoes. ' li the demand for Island seed in 1927 should be for, say, one and one- half million bushels, it would be greatly in the interest of the lndus- ‘ try to have the production as near _ that mark as possible, rather than a million or two million bushels in excess. With a big surplus of seed it is bound to have a serious effect on the average price realized, and at the same time, the other branches of Agriculture are liable to be neglected, with an excess acre- age of potatoes that require ‘careful experienced cultivation. wiuT-JHYIIRIIIIII suggested that; a varyi- good plan to curtail production woiild be for ditch farmer to plant that»; three acres of wheat, as the which potatoes have been la in ideal condition for the [rowing of wheat. If every farmer ill Prince Edward island grew ani- flcfent wheat for his own use, this would retain, in Prince Edward maud, upwards of a million dollars, ll now sent to Central and Wiltern Canada for flour. Al it is now. an amount almost equivalent to that received from seed potatoes idieuttint hora ‘this Oardeuof the should be and can be loll§l nil of minor-r Hei poultry or hogs——but it is well to i Luther sections of the Report whiciliness, any pain'occuring regularly. izefer to the three Atlantic Pro-i by any 3 iiIle year 1924. , . _.___4+>—-——— ‘ P. E‘. ISLAND HORSES. NCERN in ‘one important branch C0 of farm produce seems to have been somewhat lessened here in recent years. . Not long ago many farmers in Prince Edward island took the greatest possible interest in the breeding and rearing of horses; and the pro- vince was famed for the excellence of the horses kept and’ sold by them. But lately interest has cen- tereil in other lines oi farm produc- tion. That horses oi the best kinds ought to be obtained, and newyand improved strains of blood introduc- ed from time to time is, of course, to be admitted. But to import horses for ordinary farm work and carriage driving is not good econo- my on the part oi the farmers of this Island, at large. That was a good resolution oi the Central Farm- are’ institute which reads: “Resolv- ed. that we, as farmers, encourage the-breeding of horses as far as possible." We hope that it will be borne in nrlnd and acted upon. _i¢oo—-—— EDITORIAL NOTES The great trouble with the world is not that we don't know better, put that we don't do as well as we know. There are few indeed who do not know that stealing, drunk- enness. scandal and our other occa- sional weaknesses are wrong, but many flnd it more to their liking to do the wrong. I mo; I, ‘ i \ Intellectual caliathenlcs are just’ as necessary as physical. The mind needs exercise, alertness, steadi- ness and strength just as the body does and these can be cultivated by judicious exercise. .___‘_i The television invented by a telephoning to see each other, II not without its drawbacks. who is awakened in the middle of the night by a telephone call can no longer go to the lilttrument in his per-jumpers as underdtile old French pcleutist, enabling people i The man ' .Don't say "here is the last book as in "met," last e as In “mo.” 11o- , ‘gent last eyllabie. -s'ymm. 1H0 must dross for the 0mm .v m. - iii'.tm means overlooked by the Com- mission, but that the recommends-i‘ tions affecting this Province are, quite as important as those which deal with Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are to the people of those provinces. Premier King has been iii and returns wholly recovered, it is said. All will be pleased to learn that he has recovered and is at his post again and presumably ready to take action upon the IDuncnn Report. And iMr. iMcLean of iPriuce County has given notice of a. motion which squlnts in the direction of reciprocity in farm products, lumber and fish. This is a side issue and may embarrass the con- sideration of the most important recommendations of the ‘Duncan iiteport which are all important to the lttiantic iProvinces. it ls"hard to see how the injection of this subject at this time can be of any benefit to the Maritime cause. Reciprocity with the State: is a large proposition quite his enough to be considered by itself as was shown when the Laurier Govern- ment was defeated on that issue years ago. iMr. McLean no doubt as a supporter of the iKing Govern. ment ,is fully aware of what the Government intends to do andhow far they are prepared to go in giving effect to the Maritime Com- missions recommendations. The motion of which he has given notice may even ‘be a part of the Government's plan of dealing with -the Maritime case. at. The predictions at this writing (on Monday) foretell an- other that? with rain. ‘We have noticed that the weather forecasts for the Atlantic ‘Provinces are usually correct for -Nov_a Scotla and southern New Brunswick but fre- quently fail in regard to our own province. The Garden of the Gulf is less subject to extreme changes of temperature in winter thin are the sister -p'rovinces across the gitrsits. And we are frequently! wholly or partly outside of the range of winter storms to which they are subject. DAILY LESSONS inv- ENGLISH 1' By W. L. Gordan w-oans owns Mtsusr he wrote." "Latest" is. preferable. ‘OFTEN MISPRONOUNOED: khedive, Pronounce keii-ev, first e lug other: azilrvi- ‘ advice that is given us to investi- sate any lump. any prolonged ill- alid Rive our family doctor a This then is our duty in the meantime. iWe can't prevent cau- cer; but we can prevent deaths from cancer. r012 THE SCRAP. BOOK A SERIES, OF LITERARY QUOTATIONS FOR BOOK LOVER! OQ ru-esoav, mason 8TH. 0f late did I gaze into thine eyes, O Life! and into the unfathom- able did I there seem to sink. iBut thou pulledst me out with a golden angle; derisively didst thou laugh when "I called thee unfathomable. “Such is the language of all fish," saidst thou: “What they do not fathom is unfathomable. ‘But changeable am I only, and wild, and altogether u woman, and no virtuous one." - N. . t _ __,-. ‘The Fear of ‘Experience-How can our literature ‘be anything but impotent? It is inevitably so. since it springs from a national mind that has been sealed against that experience from which litera- ture deriiveis all its values. . I open. ‘for instance. one of our so- called better-class magazines, and fall upon a reported interview in which a well-known. popular poet expatiates on his craft. ‘lModern life," he tells us, "is full of pro- biems, complex and difficult, and -the man ‘who concentrates his mind on his problems al-l day doesn't want to concentrate it on tediously obscure poetry at night, T116 "QWBDBDQP poets are forever preaching the sanest optimism, designed for the people who really used the influence of ODI-Imiome-the breadwinuers, the Weary. the heavy-laden. That's the kind o! poetry the people want, and the fact that they want 1t shows that their hearts and heads are iaiil right." Here we have the doctrine. expressed with perfect candor. that the function o; art is to turn aside the problems of life from the current of emotional experience and create it its audience a condition of cheerful- "01" experience but added from the outside. It assumes that ‘ex- perience is not tile stuff or llfg but something essentially meaningless; and not merely IIIIQQRIngIQQQ M" an obstruction which retards and complicates our real businvsg o: Betting on in the world and getting up in the world. and which must, therefore. be ignored and lfgir. gotten and evaded and beaten dawn 1W 6110i’! means in our power. -Vlri Wyek lroaitl. protection, a leldln , reg ‘ dhuwrrgocmiy- 8 _ iatauce. wiom) stiuov: "Use . yo“ three times and it is yours." Let ua increase our Vqiilbilllry by mgtgr- in; one word-each day. Tofifg WOHI! T81R80 ; 313mg‘. in enrbileucs. "The. ills ness that is not organically derived mm" w 117mg '1" 110W. the spear. and ‘Fbrihe us t | u, of 0 0 ‘man u e Garden The Public Forum ‘Illa IIII-I ll ID‘- h’ ‘i. in b cnuawadntl I! $11k», ‘flunk l” ‘dot ueeounr endorse llllll of correspondents. ma‘; wvv vv wvvvv- v-rvww loaggflvifls" aentv T0 REV- ‘ ma. HERMAN. “The flying rumors lli1i°"'d " they W115i.- scarce any tale wauleoner bélfii than told; i . And all who told it time some thing new _ And all wilt; heard it made en lsrgementu too, In every ear it IF"! tongue it grew. d, en every PRIOR Sir,- There must have been i111?‘ appolnlllltillil to many 0i 91°" “£411 turned out to hear the Rev. Herman's much proclaimed repY to "Observer". There was surely’ something in those columns of cri. tit-ism to which he could take ex- cepiitm. How flat it must have sounded to listen to an extended hyiflay upon words and phrases. without an intelligent or concrete attack upon a single sentence or utterance to which he promised re- ply. Even his admitted sift 111 magnifying failed him, yet there was no sacrifice of his facility for chasing shadows. ii-ie commences with tihe 11181111 lhzui an advantage was taken of his absence from the Province- Why did he take advantage of the eve on ivhich he was flitting to other climes to launch his diatribe? He find several months of previous sojourn here. Why not take up the matter -then when the red blood of island Justice could meet him to the face? Did. he imagine that an outraged cause would permit the spawn of error to germinate and pollute public opinion while he in- haled the balmy air of the laud of citrus neetars and California mead? IHe calls to his rescue the atti- tude of the Alliance. after the man. iier of a vain effort to extract sun- beams from cucumbers. "0bserver” was rzcseiit, and a strong consent. ing party ito vhe iAiiiance resolut- ions. ‘But in these there was not u lino or ‘sentence at variance with what I had written. it was the limited quota of “illicit stills" ad- mitted by "Observer" that the Alliance sought to . supress, and not the imaginary contrabands of the I‘El\'. gentleman. dot-tiug- the scandalizcd homes ‘of our respect- able farmers throughout the prov- ince. They asked for patrol boats and mounted police to check the known smuggling (which my pap- ers freely admitted). but not the mythical vessel standing out of "every cove and harbor" of Mr. Herman's unfounded creation. in humble confession he tells us new IIIHL-"I don't know where they “"37" 11118 doesn't know now how did he know when contriving his lurid colored Opera House dis- course? I-ie still nourishes the un- derthrust surmise that in "certain localities, nearly every third 1101196 ‘I188. H S1111", another product of his elastic imagination. In strussiing with his untenable statement °f a 9711118811118 vessel standing off “every cove and bar. bor". he seeks shelter behind the Rev. H. R. Grant who declared be- 1°P@.!11e-iRoy'ai Commission as to the difficulty of enforcing prob"). ition as against "ubiquitous smug. 511118" on the ‘Nova Scotia coast. W111! B0 to Nova Scotia to conjure up a piausib-smoke screen tor a o0+++e+0++e+e+e+¢+e+o+o+ Daily! Selections FOR Guardian Readers March 8, 102T * run GIFTS ioir GObz-The Lord W111 Rive strength unto his people; the Lord wii-i bless his people with izeace. rPsalm 29:11. TREES vvvvé (By Bliss Carman, in the Christian Leader) i In mile Garden of Eden, planted by God The" W910 goodly trees in the springing 5°d__ ‘ Trees of beauty and height and grace, T° “"111 111 Blllendor before I-lis face, Apple and hickory. ask and pear 05k anti.- beech and the tulip rare. The trembling aspen. the noble p-ne, The Bweepmg 9111111? the river line; , Trees i? the ibirds to -build and s s And the lilac tree for._a joy in the spring; - A turn at the frosty call ‘"1 “"11" the around m their ‘Lord's footfall; Trees for fruitage and m; anti shade, \ Trees tor the cunning builder's trade; . flu , The keel and the malt of the dar- ing sell; I19 made them of ev at ‘I _ gm“ 9T! ll‘ n and Then lest the oohi should not m1 her eyes i‘ From tie out. to the Giver of ~T8flilIlO. - - to in his theatre discourse, unless refuge? it was not the smugglin! iu that province that he referred it was an absent minded rehash of something preivibusiy roadcasted = to a N. B. audience. It was of the harbors and coves of P. E. 1., that we were speaking. it was of these that he launched his exaggerations. and oi these I gave him an aus- wer, not a sclntliia of which ho has been~able to refute. ‘And eveu Mr. Giant's conclusions gives hlnii no comifort. for it only describes smuggling in‘ its"- actual reality, and- uot the many times magnified 111'"- duct of our rev. friend's fevered fancies. Our rev. friend hinted that he had not access to_ali my papers. and this infarentiaiiy an excuse for avoidance of facts. These are all on file in the public library and news. paper oiffices, and open to his per- usal. This undermines any pallia- tion of hie offense when he mis- represents my utterances. Upon the question of "Scripts" he seems hor. rifled by the phantom of "Observ- er" pouring upon him "all the Fairbatiltl-Mor 1* home water plants, I gallons per_hour and up (electric or engine driven) will pump- watcr from cjst m. spring, lgke, ltrlcam, o‘; up we uic an easily loathing ‘Costybut a lewcentsadaytooperate. i l) Other Fairbanks-Morse - prodingtl are yindmi n. . pum yackqgumpmfeed ' grin m, an Fairbanks scales.‘ Write for full particulars. Saint John Quebec Montreal Otta to vials of hie wrath." Not so. "0b- server" has no grounds for wrath, but much for pity over the soiling of sacred vestmen-ts. In cold un- truth he says that “Observer's" pos- itiou is that practically everything I said regarding t-he doctors and the script business was wrong. misleading and mischevious to an alarming degree. He had bet-ter look up my writing and conform arguments to what i wrote. My protest was‘ directed against his fourfold enlargement of the truth, his unfounded declaration that from 120.000 to 144,000 scripts were utilized, while in actual ifact about a quarter of this maxi- mum was aii that was used, anti his ‘inferential reflection that the whole medical fraternity were in the untrustworthy class. iMr. Herman, in referring to my statement re “sixty doctors". and of the $20,000 estimated script 1110119)’. usks if I "ivouid like lo re-“The Spahlinger Treatment for of me vei- Tu-ilerculosis," shortly after one of Leonard our local M.D's. inqulry—ilut did not seem to be in’ (‘Mgdigal News] iii a race fuvor of this so-cailed new treat- he devotes the space a merit for a very old disease. in the last issue.of Magazine (‘March under heading of "May Conquer man, engined x50“, Tuberculosis" an article by Dr. Leonard Williams in Review'—in which there is a. short but comprehensive description of the workings of which might be of interest to any- one seeking light on the subject. I herewith enclose. undwould ask you to copy into your daily. in tho Empire Review. a journal Williams conduct‘ answered this partment under the hqhdi nti maud to a review of w Maoi. \n's'siders a most valuable I notice‘ written, curiously enough t, to 1st.-) Consumption.’ After praising the qualities oil the book, he mini, that. the only treatment for fillmlliloli, both surgical and 11101181)’. endorsed b ‘DSNICI Iiviasters, is the iSpahlinger ‘Williams says: ‘I welcome this Upportqhii the ‘Empire many this treatment tre tm valuable a m‘ l am lSir, etc, affirming my conviction n, GOOD 0F HU-MANITY. linger has it in his power M, ‘ (Enclosure) to cure existing tuberculogh :4 DR. LEONARD ‘WILLIAMS reduce the incidence qt t0 1 (Continued on Pflgg gi swear” to these? -My statements are excerpts from the official rec- ords, they are not of my com-piling,‘ and, unlike our declamutory. friend, I only vouch fo_r what i‘ know. But a better and more bi-t- 111B answer would be to ask my rem friend-has he sworn‘ to Ills liiin- dred ilst of doctors, and their loud. iy denounced scoop of $‘1‘20,000.0il? iHe next appeals for synlpnthyi with a camouflage of some timely‘ utterances from the Rev_ M13 Ray- mond. whose solidity upomnmtters of temperance he cannot, and no‘ one else will question, iBut it no had read that sermon aright in-i stead of making it -a screen for hid- 1113. he would have bowed his head: in shame, for iris efforts to remove‘ from those helpless innocents what protection our Prohibition Act: gives. .\ir. ltaymonifs appeal was not on behalf of the sober militi- tudes, but for those unfortunatesf of whatever their limits, whom we7 all know to exist. but not to give’ Prestige to fables which likens our. island to n. great pen of bootlegg- ers and drunkards. I _\viil not waste time to reply to his interciudes of theatrical flashes and punctuates of comedy. They do not constitute argument to Qople of intelligence, nor, in my Qplnioli would they prove elevating to, WITNESS ul>011 a serious subject. if- my friend thinks these are an ad? ornment to the sacred desk, or ii potent force in defense under arr-] 81Eumen-t, I willingly leave them. in his serivice, contented to travel 101' myself along the surer. atraigirtj e1‘ paths of truth and liacts. I am. iSir, etc., OBSERVER. i SPAHLINGER TREATMENT i I -Sir.—A short time ago. l noticed; an inquiry in your valuable paper,i miiacii ‘and APRIL; You willmed ‘l: furnace fire for‘ two months loud". possibly longer. We are prepared to Illpply you with the beat Coal and Coke at the lowest price, ii . Picliard 8t C o. FHONE 240 4 000090904 IJVSTEIIINE 1 .For Gargie ,_'And Mouth Wash t a sizes email 80o Medium 60o [Large v.10 item, Pam 20a , The'2 Macs DRUGSTORE 140 Ipbq George emit v i.‘ ‘ .-i.illa “ 4 > > b P .' M "‘ ——-v-I| 0n the crow mam-tun m- auto . H, , . . i‘ perspir- , _ ‘ilreleiited "_ i.. . .1 v.»- .. l.- MARCH COUGHS They differ little, materially, from other coughs, but coming as they do at a time when one’: vitality is naturally low they are really more serious. Cure the cough at ones andavoid disagreeable consequences. Our WHITE PINE AND TAR will quickly effect a cure. it is pilnticularly soothing and , healing to the inflamed bronchial tubes and speedily n. stores them to normal condition. PRICE 35 GENTS The White Drug Store’ 1.0. IAMIESON Teachergl- Oui: 1927 caienda has been specially designed to ad- Vorllsc this Province to our own people, and to time abroad. ' We are therefore unxloua to place one in every school, and will be glad to furnish s copy to any teacher or policy- holder on request. Address a postal card to Hyndman 8t Co. Limited The Oldest insurance Ahency in P. E. i. Oiflcel, Lower Queen Street, Charlottetown m y highest stapdmhi It]; "I ii t this hat ha‘: . L 5H l’ the aii that indium Hin- new ill W! i? i v i '1 i Associated Investors INVESTMENT TRUST MEANS QHARING .,, 1 CENTRAL‘ FUND iN-VE-BTEO WITH .., . ._ .1- 1 sxoergriouai. oivzasirv For $11-25 one can become a shareholder In the NW England investment Trust. That sum enters a central fund which is invested in u very wide. range of stocks I" leading corporations. The result is a diversity ind at"! "Wand the limitatio _ of the average Investor's financee At a higher income return, for the securities obtained l1‘ common steaks, which get the real-pains made by f1" progress of the campaillea they represent. . The New England Investment Trust owns stool“ 1'1 "Willy leading industries of the ‘United Staten and Clfiw‘ Not more than ‘as in. the doiiar an go into my °"‘ corporation and ull these stocks are held in trust for-II" Iharelioidére by the FedQuIN-tionai dank of some which collects the dividends antlremitutllreetto altarthit" era of the iNaw England investment Trust. Titans" 1"“ ' your ans a half old, three hm yearly dividend have n1- "My been assumes-ti» taunt-pm»; about 1y, n: '- °" "the market price oi Q1112! ' ' ' ‘ -, J. ~1- "U . - w. will gladly and a elreuiar to all ‘unkind Info” atlon on this moat interesting ierivl__ .-