i r . l . .@‘ n. .,>...~ 1111 11111111 "11111111 1111111111 Notes By The Way "No present intention of placing WEDNESDAY, JA a n. Iulnll: rnfl‘. w, cl tor I. lllfllil Vino-Prolific“. - ‘I’? n. ”‘"T",§ l...“ o‘. n‘ L nu‘u—.' n. D I. Curie. Luna and saucer. .i._ . Baum. Allflbh P- ~ b 5,- "pg gqnummln-Irnlk l. flouting omen“ lopuannclvo-l. J. Power NUARY 21, 1925 full report of w-hich was given in yz.-sttrtlr1y's (luiird Ian. in each one oi‘ these reports every citizen is interested and in no one more than another. The question of cost of adminis- tratlon is balanced ‘by efficiency; thc maintenance of our streets and pu-blic liuiltliiigs is necessarily ex- pensive but when, in return for the cos: we have streets of which every citizen may well feel proud, when our civic buildings anti property are kcp. in t-rctlita-blt- shape, the ques- tion of cost creates no adverse In this respect Charlot- tcnivii may well he satisfied. I'll-blitz lit-alth- security of pro- p rty. maintenance of law and or- tlcr. the I\1arke.t-—a hand between C111’ and Country. are represented by the lriciilth‘Department, the Fire Dopattmeitt. the Polict- Department, the Water iintl §cwer Commission- ers aiitl the Nlzirkct Committee res- pectively and the ytafg mport; Vflllllllfifll. under these ‘heads are most satis- factory. U1’ otir FlTe Department many occasions evoke have arisen compliments to and it is not too much to say that no tire 111,-. tiarlment in any city iii Canada has more to than that oi Charlottetown. llow many millions they have saved w its t-rvdit thc city will novcr be known. but (Weryune r931. izes that. over and over again, they have stivctl us from tl isastrous losses. The record 11f thc often critic and the heads of the different civic department are being congratulated on the year's business as shown ‘by the reports submitted at the spec- ial meeting of the City Council, a i4 THE crrv nenowrs 1'01‘ some action brute 111111111 , ' '____ ‘ States Government in 3511111 1° His Worship Mayor McKeiiua British vegetable“ Ye, they have no protection in 13111111111 According to the annual N110" ° 102.456 summer visitors population of this ‘Province. June 9 to Oct. 30 10,181 tourist mot entered Nova Scotia. lt is estlm ated 87,684,000 was blame the youth of ‘that Province leaving to better theirposltions. He said if a. man saw an opportunity of making $15.00 per day away from home instead of $5.00 at home, he would not have red blood in his it. This qui-te true, but what we comtplain of and what we ‘have the right to coni- plain of, la that the great oppor- tunitieiiin the Ma-ritlnies are not being developed make these provinces a place of at- veins if he spurned is sufficiently to traction both for our own boys and boys from other lands. One of the great troubles in tthc unification of Canada is its immen- sity and its diversity of industries lu particular locations At tthe Bri- tish Association meeting in 'l‘oron- to. it will the rememlberctl one of the ,essayists predicted the time might conic when Canada would he brok- cii into particular areas rating on particular industries. Ont- the Nova Scotia Publicity Bureau‘ just to hand during the 1924 season} an embargo on Canad-nn potabeu" is the announcement made by thc British Ministry of Agriculture. ;'l‘i1e s atenicnt is so far tpiiitlified us to raise doubts I11 regard to thc future from the fact that British poato grouut-s are vstlll ‘imsistitrg that tho embargo against potatoes from .110 Lf-niiotl Strut-s shall ‘t-c- uialn in force. While the exlsdng Mondiiious are mantained they are quite Iii favor of (‘untidan which a‘. the close of last year was enjoyi 1-’. a large export trad-i with ‘the 11'-'111't- 1 ctl Kingtlotn iti tbs line. By lama W. ""1"- M-Du . YOUR IDEA OF EXECISE. I spoke once before about an ac- quaintance, ivlio, watching u dog s-tretch- himself nfier_ n sleep. thought that it looked like a good proposition, Despite his ago The atitude of British potato. qtwer; in .h.,-1. pcrsisituit demand about sixty-he began stretching ovoi- anti touching his toes a nuui- ber o1‘ times daily. it: addition to this he took three or four minutes enteretlf From or cars. carrying 48.868 passengers. distributed throughout the Province ‘by sum- mer visitors. The expenditure of tho Publicity Bureau twas 812.941.1351. In a a:.d ittlii ' favor iviruld be ‘ipillliiliflli. in td that. the 1501111‘ \\'Z\‘_V l‘ tli- y were d‘i. ed upon Canadian cattle 8111111 was‘ contiiiuetl for years, Pmmler Armstrong’ of Nam ish catttle grmvcrs, while the p11‘ 300118. 8411119881118 1-119 liflifylllv-lffl tcxt of foot anti ui-outh disease in cooperative societies, did not (‘nuada was piovt-d to havt- no [Olllllliltlilll in fact» its bass in the tsnnie spirit proniptttl tht‘ cattlt-remlizirgo. Both atlititg tintltz‘ faltse colors. thc Kingdom is and has long 1101111 cccivniLi ‘ti 1o a policy tit‘ -r.amiu:il lit-e. trail‘. tcmpcrttl hy embar- goto. it‘ llPiWHlffl-l‘ the content-Ion of thc British inirtstl. and acatl upon. and w» have no assurauc= that it may 11-01 be herealtt“, a strong feeling will 111cc. sarily d vciop in Canada fav- ‘oriug a rectiinsitleration of tine out-- sltlt-td picfcretnce which Canada has for more than a quarts-r of a meutury‘ cont. tlctl to imports from the l'uitt d Kingdom, in the mean- 11"nic our island potato growers hav‘ sufficient ivariiiiig zigaiust lplanl 1.0.: tott largely i|1 uncertain 1111 thi- Iiritish market. ‘.01 tint-t‘ ‘that "farmers are great grum- ,tliat it is spoken in the town. 'l‘lit‘rt- izctl Police Dcpartiuent is also very of the weaknesses o1‘ (‘anatla :15 111a” ‘in many mn_nem_ mm 0mm.“ tltaptntlt-tit upon laruiiug. and no lplltliile, until you reach t-ho allotted‘ tueditable and 11m tribute paid the trfficcrs of the law by Councillor Foster, sti-bstantiatctl as it was by offitrial statistics. was well mcrlfgd, While, the be“ of communities. there is an Qccggionfl] violation of law. the impgrtayu 11111112 is that the violation is prompt ly detected and the offender pun- ished. Charlottctoivn is on the whole a law irhldlng and law m. petting city. in the matter of health and the care of the poor therc is much t9 the credit of the Board of Health ‘and the City Dispensary with 1t; efficient B1111 painstaking District Nurse, Miss Earle, Space forbids an analysis of the different rqports but they speak for thenisolves. We commend a. careful tpcrusal of them to our read. ers and we feel sune they will be [read with satisfaction and pride by all whoare interested in the wel- fare andithe good name of our city. 1 as occurs in <51; EQITORIAL NOTES ’. The of the Governor of the Bank of Engllund to New York has quickly had its effect in regulating exchange. A The Mayor and City Council have reason to pat itself on the back for their progressive work during the past year. As this is preliminary to election year we may anticipate a contimi-ancoof that "assidnity to lmslness".whlch usually results in a. rcneivad vote of confidence. it is it giggnt thing to honour the past and revere old institutions. conimenorating’; ' thoir‘ foundation ‘and establishment. St. James; Church. Charlottetown aotains its centenary ilQIf. June and arrange- ‘memsfare being made for a suitable and adequate oqldirltiou. An ap- iivrounme pi-tiuminm w rostmi Week and the unwitting of (the Sold- MamorisL. Canada's tprotelt on the proposed Potato endiargo has boon succum- ‘hll for the time-DOM‘. Dirt l! i0 in- Livrautlnc to learn till the actions Men air-um lttuortolu potatoes '1 was not no inuch on account of the Doniitiiuti is the fact t-liat west of the flakes, where one-third of the ptipulation resides. only 50 per cent are British. und they have not the samcdesires or aspirations after tinity w‘hich characterize the rest of us. Besides we must always hear in mind the West. especially the prairie provinces think in terms of wheat. which tt-hey produce and sell to a free trade market. ls it not naitural that ‘they should want to‘ buy in a similar market and be restive under the restraints of the National Policy? Nowadays the different vocations are located in different centres, each apart from the other, ‘with different view- points, and widely diverse interests We must inculcate intto eaoh suc- 1169111118 generation, tthat for the sake of our own. fair land we must unite in the true sense of the word 111111 uphold the great work of the fathers of Confederation which 1s not to be accomplished thy merely "19111118 11- irut by means of discus- sion, controversary and argument to convince the non-British element and tmany who are now misled by them. If it ‘be true as reported in yes- terday's Guardian that Hon. Jitqnes B11791!" 15 801118 to the ‘Senate and Mr. Cannon to succeeed him in the calbinet. it will the the expected pap. penlng. The Hon Jaques ‘is one of the most humorous ‘and tbest liked memibers of the House ‘but he is not the stuff cabinet ministers are made of. On the other hund Mi‘. Cannon was foreordained for caib- 11191- P111111. ‘He is a son-ln-lnw of ex- Chief JUSTICE Fitzpatrick ‘who wag later intent-Governor of Quebec. As a child and young man he was the ‘favorite 0f ~Slr Wilfrid Latirier. and it will be remembered in the stormy days of 1914 twheu Mr. Con. non entered the political nrentcfor the first time as a verltutble fire- eater. Sir Wilfrid wrote him a let- ter of commendation not in the 1°1‘111111 style of “Dear Mr. Cannon", but ‘in ‘the manner of a father ‘to his I011, vll. “My Dear Lucien." "Luc- ien" has since justified the fondest hopes of his distinguished friend for ho has Proved one of the most -tlnubt. a uuiiilicr of grumbled.‘ laiuong thriu. but the proportion is 1111; unduly lam‘- Tht- itvcragt- ‘fuirni- tlsvelli-ng as cheerful a 1101111‘ as is found among any other class. of \‘v‘il4.1kEl'S. 'l'licrc art- fai‘ [tux-r outright failures timun-g farmers than among merchants a:.‘t| litisi- tress men in proportion to U1l"ll‘ numbers. and ‘this hcraust- I15 per ct-ntt of farmers are tiainctl ‘to their ca-lliilg from early youth and because early rising and ‘nearly r» - tiring at iright are necessary to ft.t.‘in lifti anti these tuakt- for health aiitl cheerfiuln ss. We recall having heard a city man, who ‘hatd folloivtttl faruring in earlier lifo 11-11-11 various other i11- door call-lngs later, who frequently remarked, “The only time I ever made and saved any money was when I was farming years ago." Many a. farmer has been lturetl away from the old homestead in the thope of making money faster in 150ml: other calling of which he knew little ‘or nothing. Those who are thus tcmptctl away front ,the fairm ~ln‘ their after negret often recall the satisfaction they had before enjoyed ‘in Lin" outdoor life. the close contact with nature and the joy of possession in land and flocks and herds. along with the feeling of independence less coin- lll0ll‘ to other occupations. Something of this feeling of in- dependence atnd joy in , ssession is expressed in the lines copied from an old ‘pitcher of English pottery: ‘ Let ‘the mighty and great Roll in splendor anti static, l ‘envy them not, I declare it; I eat iu-y ownt lani'b, My own chicken and barn. f slieau‘ my own shrtap and wear it. l have lawns, 1 nave bowers, l have fruits, I -liave flowens, The lark is my morntlntg charmer; So you jolly (logs. now, Here's "God bless th-e plow»- Long life ‘anti content to the farm- era sirangt- com-mentally on the Nova Scotla 01' more 1.11811 1119 10131111. .1‘. 1‘t.‘llll.’\l custom tluttns volun- :ai.i_v granted by Canada in 189'.‘ t- iticreased. Alaiioutgh Can- kcd for no prethrence in re- turn. many Canadians had expect- in this ppolntetl aiitl worse still. a British embargo was plac- it merely as a pitta-cult“: measure foi‘ Unit- The persistent demand for an embargo on (‘triratllaii potatoes has that t‘ tirohibitory iueat-tuvts. masquer- because potina growers is titl- “ backwards. nor sideways. ,\\'11,\'.~: u l One sometimes hears the remark 1pm . tvlljttv i1. cnneent- blers." it is not true in the ts"11.~‘t-,"11111 1111111334 111* 110111‘. <11‘ .1011 11111.1’ .1111 past 111111 stage. ling t-xert-iscs uill kCPp the ‘muscles 12 Thousands of Canadian: who fought In the Great Wlr will look forward with much interest to 6 . 6. 7, B. PRAYERz~O Lord, we thank Thee that when we have Thee we exercise every diiy. He found that he was becoming pliable. and that he had lost that stillness that had been with him tor nearly tcn ye 1-2. You ‘may tiotlce that yoti sit down more frequently than you for- merly did, that you ride where you walked previously, anti that ex- cept for a little golf in the sum- mei‘, you ale not. really getting any xert s whatever. Now there is something about the word exercise thnt may simply “gct“ you. You hate it worse than the wortl “workfi With work you are really doing somtithing definite, something that can bc st 1n, anti that may be of sit-me tisr- 111 the world. liut exercise, simply moving ‘the titutu-lcs as in cnlisthcnlcs, or free hand exercises. secuis so useless, almost foolish to you. And yct you are tilotheiright fro-m you licatl in your feet with masses of muscle. 'I‘ht=.re are nearly five hundred muscles in thc body. and they-have only one job, that it. to shorten tlicmsclvcs, anti thus do some work. ll‘ the muscles on the outside of thc body were not meant for 11st‘, tlicu you might just as well have a uicc layer of deep ‘fat all "V91" 1'11". rovcrtttl by your skin. 'l‘hcre would be nothing with wliit-li to hcnti the hotly forwards. l if _vt:u give these muscles such a lliitlc i111 of cxarcise that only parts {of thcm move, 1n‘ all parts move a jiittlc- tlicn like any other unused ‘or slightly used part. it willlose ‘. elasticity anti you become , stiff" and old." 1 l“11r'.li.‘r. you can bend ynurhotly in t1\‘(‘l‘_\' direction a few times daily 1autl you will hot-p the ‘muscles pli- able. Yuu can do this a1 any age. (If t-ouist: thc best exercise is al- ‘lhla column ls noun for the Ilwuutou It: urrupudnla of . Iutlonl of interest. ‘I'M . lottntown Gun-dial don not noaollnrlly undone tho pp- lllpnu of correspondents. SUGGESTIONS FOR - feel-every one tihuuld (we of the greatest assets of ‘th-is which will reach the people of ‘the United the ‘ upper pzovfuces. Arlyn-raising -;n DZIDETS- tells of 111G beairilets to! =uho island but “Ollltl it not he better still if some of iii-e (‘hurlottetiovvii Settle- ‘tios should put on‘ a program deal- Wlth ‘the island, having ‘music and also telling of the udvnntagies of lilo “lslantl" as ‘a sunimu. rc-sori. They could thcii- try and obtain ivtaltliy ‘States and perm‘ si-on from a rvitltlo station to broadcast, ttliis program, such utt CNRA which would be heard in the Llnittotl SlutLs or possibly from some of the New Eit-glzintl broadcasting stilt I ain sure this would ' i-itt the bltllrgiilg 1t totirisls Hoping t-liis could be accomplished by thz‘ association. I atin, Sir, etc. INTERESTED- -—j<0>~——--— ZlON CHURCH VOTING POWER Slr,~ln your uc of Dec 30th. ‘I924, lllt‘. folltnving tippeaitctl: “l-Lctiti‘ Zion ‘Church, lChtirlitrite- town has ‘struck -:i snag in the Linloat votc. lliitlci‘ its act of iii- corporuri t only mule members htivc till‘ night to volt‘, a coirdtllion of tuft‘ ‘its which woinein members in particular‘ anti ‘adherents gener- ally \‘chei11-.t‘i1‘tl-y' resent." S.ll‘c1—‘ that (lute . ‘al refer- ences ‘liziv-J been iuatlc to the 111111.- ttr ‘in ‘thc press. Some of which were t-vitlc-ntly instiutetl for thc purpose of z-retitiiiti the l'lil1l)f‘CS13lOll k o that the Scssltm of Zion Church was (lllptvsctl to granting i111? te- inale members a vote 011 the Church luiutn question and a nunrbt-r of them. not knowing the‘ facts, b liovcti lilo ' a-tcuicut The vciy opposite of position taken by the Sc the following piovc. A to ara11gt> fir: a tc-tt- was tstl to, Dec. 211th, 19:24, 111141 ‘the Alndcrator oi’ Scss on. .\lr- ’l‘a_vltir. was asked to so antiouiice on Sundays bee, 14th anti 21st. hut tiwiug ll) his‘ neglecting to do 1st) on .111.- lat-ici- date, tlit- lllilPlilllZ was automatical- ly canct-llrtl, as‘ tii Dtiiniiiitir At. me wlier.‘ you move ev- le in ever; direction. and. 11m into it, because youi ’l‘liat is ltlcai. llut ‘that 111')‘ Finn a few bending m‘ stretch- haci the right to vote, sintl nu Wm" thought of t‘1.t.‘tail.11g the viitc val. t’ ‘ ‘ . . nnwivtior-wl. Just almnt the Illll“ If vou are willing to walk a1 ' .. ‘ . - ‘ 1.. ‘t ' :1 ' ‘ 1 little distance very day, you Wllliyhlufftlng“ rm? H?‘ nnl‘i__"i.ll-l',')f,llf'lg all]; titty. lop thtztit- two vital centres. the Jmlnce‘ i, ‘mm, p,,,._.,.,‘,’ d. Wm. Q11 hm" “m! lung: ‘c-Ummamy‘ "at tinder‘ 1l1t- .\t‘1 lil('(11'l1Ul'illilli-I 0 mom vro-oo-o-voovoowowf. Daily Selections FOR I '1 i Guardian Readers i ‘*'“”R"E‘.=Tv‘.fiE"TTi3E, Grant inc to sit when lifetimes sky grows golden, ' Low in thc ‘west, llcforc n p, chiuiney-trliice, mouthed and olden. 'i'o dreatm and rest. wide- Where hemlock logs now sputter- ing and sparkling, New dully red, May pain ‘in hues, bright, iii-thou grey, anti durkling, The days ‘long sped. Grant. me to sit a-lone, or all about me Gather .me then The little ones who now can't do ‘without tme. At home again. Grant me ‘beyond the years of separation My easy chair And loved ones near. o1‘ lonely segratlon With none to care. Then I shall see by Memorya un- locking, Back through Time's door Each limply hanging wee expect- ant stocking A-row once more. And in the llglit of embers gruyly ‘falling Shall come again Necklacing arms. und lilting voices calling, Calling me then. So let ‘me sit when living skies grow golden. Lowly in the west. Before o. chimney-place, wido- I moutlie-d and olden, 1 Waiting for rest. January 21, 1925. BETTER THAN SIIJVER AXD GOLM-Gorlllness with content- ‘ment is great gain. For ‘we brought nothing into this world, and it ls certain we can carry nothing out. And having food and ralment. let us ‘betherewlt-h content. 1 Timothy Session on the assumption that all closed; the age of 2i yt-am anvil upwind-i, or have both nialc and female hers ‘the right to vote. on section l0 (b) o1‘ the At-t has been fully tronsltleretl \\". Mason, K. (‘.. 0011111411 to the haw IHiilltl associated w‘1-tli Mir. W. N. 'r|l1ey_ K. C., con-heel for the Presbyter- ian Church in Canada and also .\lr \V. N. Howell. K- C., Cllillrllltlll o1‘ the haw 111111 Legislation (‘tiuiuilt- Act vwhlch prescribes tli“‘ tiuallfl. cations for votltntg un-ticr that Act, its made up of l-llree ‘st-nttiiiccs. ls clean‘ -tliat ‘thtt- second sentence can apply only to those provinces the coming vie-it of Field Marshal Viscount Haig, who wmrmwndtetl tthe British forces in that htic toric conflict. He is comtiig in July next to preside over tthe third iii-en- ial Conflere-nce of the Brloioh Eni- pire Setiivice League, which in honor of ‘Canada's splendid con- tribution to the lliglrtiug forces of the Dnplne will be hold this year effective ddbnters and most un- spurliig critics in the ‘House. Oolotfudo bottle II "in nlllifutlou 1o Ottawa. Field Marshal Hui; was culled to command a Briiiioh host t which ‘in number; vudtly exceeded have all and abound. the armies led by Wellington or Mulborougth, gathered‘ from the British Isles and the Domtlnic-ns over ‘the seam. a host which int valor and tendurance emulated the heat traditions otf the past. l-itlst Canad- ian cont-rules in arms, who shared in the conttl-iet and ‘the ulitlm ate vic- tory, willnba delighted ‘to rnioet on Canadian soil one of tlhe most fam- ouc com-matador! that ‘the Empire has yet pnoduoed. slalcs that sitch notice must 11c givtn at both diets of worship on two successive, Lord's days. 'i‘l1t‘ 1n ttiut.‘ 1111111111 l‘El'0l‘l‘l‘ti 1.» was‘ tirraugt-tl by the} members, both male and female, te-u Church pas-at t1 iu 187:}, t‘ht‘1‘t'.~ wn-s a lliuitt-tl tptalifit-atitui as to who could vote on the disposal of property and as ‘the tpialiflcattiti 1.1 the Dominion At‘... Chap. IUO—— passed Jilly 151th. ltlih-Scctitiii 111 subsection tbl thiitl scutcnct‘ ills- tlnctly c-t-atts that only those who wit‘; entitled _to vote on the dis- posal of property could vote on the Union question, a tltiulu arost- ‘is to the 11.011111‘ tttialificatioii anti 11's average businl-s-s mcn \\‘1)ll141 tlto the opinions.‘ til‘ 1w.» ltiwyt-is were ohtaiitrtl- 'l‘hcst- opinions. along with tlli‘-('(".\‘.\'il1l‘y inforiutitltin wtcre by retpics-l, 21111111 by 111L110 'i‘or0n-l.t) for‘ ('OIll":l'llliillUll ‘or titlicr- wise anti i aui handing you hero- witth ‘t-ho opinion of lllr. R. ll. Wli-l-tehead, K. (‘..', ‘Portruito, N‘ Lllt‘ inatteut, which l t-ittst you wllll ht‘ ahlte t.o liis-eit in first issue. I am. Sir, etc, W- T. HUGGAN. (Enclosure) Jtinuatry 1-iLi1, 15125 W, T. H-uggau, l<2st|., Chtnrl-ottettiivu, l’. E, l- Dedr Slr:—— You-r letter of the 8th ins1., rc- celvetl, to-gehlitar with letters of opinion from W. E, lleizttley, K- (‘.. and Mr. Donald Alat-Kinuon‘ en- also copy of Afltlllllil-l Re- port for‘ Zion (‘bu-sch for thc yt-ai‘ 1899. Y-ou have askctl ‘my opinion as to whether ‘lli-e persohs cirtitletl to vote ‘in Zion‘ Church, (‘harlotite- town, un-der section 111 (bl 1111' -t.ht- Domlinilon Act. arr only thc malt‘ members of the congregation of meni- The tronsiiriiotloii to he tilatttul by M1". (l- Loglslutitin ('0lll.lll‘lll.0f?, are, anti the followitntg is their 0|). n-ion in this mwtter. viz: Section 10 (b) of thc Dominion it ‘\\=\ \§T'\\\ i) on n15 1 t t” ‘summit. ' ‘ P .‘, The Public Forum. i O-QOOO-O-O-O-Q every way ‘lo iirukc it: a 1511609515,} », whose names uteio on tiio roll ot’ ‘ cncc. are (illilllttl to vote on mat-l which ‘had 11118118111 consequently this 0e livnd. ' Aocordlntg to one of the canons of tionstruotion of Statutes. recog- nized by ‘the Courts, somie unsan- ing must b9 given‘ to every 56m.- lt your» suggestion were t-nce. adopted and it mas tfiaclde-d‘ "this fouRtsf A$5Qc|AT|QN1lll0>B t-nzxtiod to vote ts-hould be who according to the Slr.—--.-\s 1 am one of those lnte-r- 1911-‘111111111111111 41°" Llmmh- “Le eated in he 'l‘0urlst Association l B11111‘ 1118 111F111 he“. lnlllon-s aft-acting _ plupthqy, you W0ll1ll he giving no tilts. association to in 1-11: advertising. '='911'1911°L‘ for 11 1” “m” ‘ha’: out I11 thc Lust ‘s-eittence 1:11-11 111111111 that had not pusoetl the Church Union Act ' »Tl1-Iu would violate the rule o1‘ cCtI19L1‘1W1-'1°11 111' Suttutrs to which l have just. 11e- only ‘lit-use to vote on (111188 ‘the disposal meaning whatever to ‘the ttualiflcirttioiis for voting as only in 1h 1M i191’ 131-‘9-1‘ 11:1 July 19th 1n tho the Legitdaturc pat stti lllti‘ Church Un-I to July 19th last, the finst sentence must. lie tcgurded us the govern- ing sentence of tire section‘, anti the pt-zsozt. entitled to vote must lie thtose who wire in f1i‘ll nrtnnber- ship on tt-lite 19th of July, 1924, anti other tirovinces the church‘ on that (latte. The third sentence inst be regratlod only as cxtcnt ng the t1 lglrt to vote to those who would not be qualitf cd untdcr tli-z first iseiinence. I11 other woi-tlg. if the Qonsliblltlvil of the congregationt or tthe ‘prac- tice of the (lhurtvh extcittls tire right 1o vcte on m-utiters tilLfectin-g the (1.1Sl)0i.'!ll of’ property on Jul-y lllth 1024, to persons who ure not t|ual.t.-.'tl- untitei‘ tlhc fits. trrtiitciicar. till-till pets-inst in addition to those qualified-under the first sentence, slxall be etititletl tin vote. The pr t-tloe of 11hr .Pl(3t<l1)yl(‘f‘l.t‘]1ll Church -l11 (‘atiiitla doc-s not extend this l‘l§'.1l‘l. to ‘Ui'1l6l‘h‘ bscause by ltuie 1-1 of the itules and Forms of [il'01\?8t(ll1i'-(~ oi‘ ’l‘l1c Piosliyteraiu (‘.hu-:‘1-.h in (‘an-titlu, couiititt-iztly ltnowu‘ as thc lilutc llnok, those e11- (itlctl to vote on inn-tors ailfoctitig the tlistiosal of property, are only those who ate 11:; full mttmir-rslilli with the congregation. ‘lllillt! or fe- IIIQTQ r ‘ 11-111.... Act newts Ifiily? application in Prince Edward‘ ls- of 1E.l(i1- 1.. ortl-e-i to tl-elerininc the pet'- sons en-tl-tltstl to vote in your prov- had not :1 Act prl-u.‘ A. ftiliodtovouantllfillfi‘ \yy ' labia ‘Ac; wodldilitd m]: 1.1.1.3319 the i.“ ‘° “.1315 the age oftwomty-one and‘ mil the female. mom decaying the vote to DQTQML. who are given: thought-filo. wit b! 11141 first. sentence. , l. l therefore ‘think that! 11108191111- titled to vote in Zion Church 11TH those peroonB male or ‘female, who we: gl-n tfull memberstlrlp with the coctgregatlon on vibe 19th of 111:1. 1924, and who were on ‘the ro-1 of the church on that date. The provisions of sections 8 and 9 o1‘ ‘the c-onstittitlon have no applica- tion as they do not eicten-d‘ the talglit to any who are not qualified tinder .1 he fist tststizeentcc. Yours ‘truly, R. B. WHITEHEAD. l. Trotsky Ousted In War Council MOSCOW, Jun_ 20.—A resolution .rellcving Loon 'l‘rotsky of his dut- ‘ios as chairman of the Revolu- tionary War ‘Council was utiopteti in n central committee of the (Join- munist tPtirty by a tvote of tmy 10 futility of appearing before the committee in the face of an oppos- ltlori headed by Zinovleff. Stalin anti Keniencff, thc once powerful Soviet war chief wrote u letter from his sul1u1‘biiii estate where he is resting in which he gave ill- ness as the reason for this nonat- tcudnnco, ‘lie rciteriilctl flint it wits untrue, as charged that he hurl at- Experience Flood (Canadlgilress) .‘\Tl.A‘N'l“A, (in.. Jan, 20.»--Dcati nnd missing listed at. ten, rallroutl Thldwonld be _ Public Au toniptetl tn revise |ll'llll'lllll.1i-i lnld down by llcnine. ~ of _-<o>- ‘ l F Southern States w“ ‘"1 We ofier for invest- merit selgction of these" nds, ‘all of which are or will be darn, we ‘ rented, carefully located apgrt- rnent onpflico build- ings. “ - _ Theyyiéld ftbin these Bonds is about 6.60%. Enquiries are invited for further particu- lars. _ CORPORATION ‘v I M I ‘l’ I D Gran Guru Street two. The Central Committee pns- 133V: cmmonnow" sed it unanimously with two ali- "fin-p 1mm, m,“ stontlonsNApparently realizlngthe 81.11am Wlmkti; llunwnr C. M. Lampson & Co. 64 Queen Street, London, EC. 4,, Eng/mid GU01! Salim Ifepresenied by Alfred Fraser, 2_t2 Fifth Avenue and motor traffic tiemoriilizetl and a. heavy property damage was the flood record in several southern male. (‘oiuscttii-cinly. unless the co ‘tftirt on of the coutifierlat-Zonl- titties that. (li.1l@l'.-i in addition to, those iueirtitinctl in lli.‘ first sc-utq leis aff-‘cting lllc disposal of pro- perty on July lllth. 192-1, ozttly those mention-oil in the lfrtst scutt- K"ll‘('L‘ iuay vow. ¢\('l‘(1ll‘lll=,1.',' to s rtiou b‘ of 1111‘ t*'.‘...-‘lt11-ii()i1 of Zion 1'lllll'(‘1l. tiioscl tsutltltiti 1n vtxtt- 1111 ina-ttcrs itffut-t- lug 1.1111 tlispistil ul‘ p1‘op1-ri_v 011 July 111, 1512-1, we: “.\l‘.1lt‘ members in full t-oiu- niiitiion m‘ t-lic congrtazzit-ion of said 7.511;‘. (‘hurrh land be- ing tidhcicnts inert-of) for 1111‘ states today as (zlenring weather brought relief from u situation zicute since Saturday night. in Southern (leorgla where the dani- age tiroiiably was greatest. and in Mississippi, Alabama, South (Juro- lina and liouisianin the streams arc returning slowly to their beds uiitl fair weather was forecast. ' »~—-<-0&—--- HIGHBROW ARGUMENTS lli a 1111-51 working fi-srsii"! .\l :1 id : for llnw that did you .(ft)11Pll1' pro» in 1111111‘ being of thc aigt- tit‘ ‘twen- ty one ytar‘ ‘rztttl upwartlts." , 'l‘his tpv‘ 1f ‘on tlt‘.t-_‘ not t-xteutl but rest cts thc 1‘1.'-’.11‘1 11>‘ 1111'?" 111 ‘ .~'t‘11tt»::‘:‘.a. and i1‘ 1'1 wort- ‘io 11l€.l‘l'lllll‘.§) those c111 S‘ contl .\laitl~~-.-\\v. ii was a rott- cn job, Ht- \v_us all thc llure ttiiurtimliiig with his wift‘. and thc)" krpi mm busy Flrilllillg between ilic ltcyliolc and thc 1i1lClli1llilPY. i—-—<-o->—-—-— 1051-12-1 Mtlrtlii-flmnn. ' ___________________“ f1ii‘\\‘a1'.l anti he cvcr rcu-tly to forgive and forget. lwbich m Your flower is a snow-tirop. N e20 York i ______-____._ JANUARY 2i.» Ytm are fond ti lllfllibllllffvllflltllllilhlé, hut somcwliat tot» "easygoing." and apt to taltt- lugi.‘ foi grnntutl. You will travel great deal. Unless you corrct-t your-general tcntlency tmviittl scl~ fir. like factory. and unhappiness ‘w ll trtnnc liucss your love will not ‘be sati» lntct‘ lifc. lie sure to be straight- and frank in everything. ‘birth-stone is it cans faithfulness. Your garnet. Your lucky ('i)l()l‘S are Navy-bitc- um. Mlnurd’: Linlnient n» Ilia lluuiiotlllti Dltltfk, Your Guarantee of‘ Quality Fed all the year ro United 11...... " Imperial Biscuit 60.. Charlottetown. P. Gentlemen»- I have been feeding eonside them a Standard eleven pair of breeders th diet in my ranch and have proved the result an I hnd an THE STANDARD FOX FOOD Reg. Trade Mark AHEAD OF THE REST ‘BECAUSE THEY’RE BEST. und in Leading Ranches in E. I. Union your biscuits ever since you Food for Foxes at all lessons. is your. started manufacturing them and Believe in fading a balanced average litter of 41/, All were railed except two killed by ncoldontHD/ly O Your - Foxes Deserve the Best lbyilsecuritics " 0+1 ’-‘***+¢o<o¢oo 000004-04 o oo-o 04> Msrltimel. Eastern Canada and .1. hurl IIIILQ Testimonial from an experienced and highly successful rancher. Road, JlNy 20, 1926f from puppies were unusually well dovolo Fox Biscuit keep the Foxes healthy they are lust right. thing about. i’ pad and mold at a good figure. Your God Liver Oil being slightly laxative, but when fed regularly I certainly recommend this n tho but fox biscuit I know any- uucoqal In breeding foxes. known fox men, Mr. Clarke believes fine foundation stock for Mr. Clarke is an experienced stock feeder near Charlottetown was purchan Your: truly, RAY CLARK. ‘ and certainly Hie In kodplng the but the future. . Imperial Biscuit _Com GHARLOTTITOWN, P. l. _.¢t beautiful farm ma‘ modern ranch known II Orson Aer“ ed recently from J. .0. Tupiln, one of P. E. Island's but. ltrnbinn of breeders and lu building up a has had phenomenal puny.