ism, l , t . 4.. ‘R " PAGEJQUR TIE OIIILQTTETIWIII GUIIIIIIAII Morning Dally (Founded In llfl) hull :Uet.Col.W.Chater5.bloLIn vii: ‘m: J. w.‘ sting-n. u-i- Igon a Col. D. ‘Qw- ‘:57 L I" . l. B. Burnett. IJ-l. Alochte Edltnru: Frank Walker and_LIeII-. Ian A Burnett, B.U.N.V.B. (On Active Bervlul ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tia the Weakest Ink.‘ WmPiEEEYJ-Jfl‘- Plowing Not A Folly A few months ago, recalls the Financial Post. Edward H. Faulkner captured a few headlines with his boolc, l‘lowman's Folly. Faulk- ner, a former agricultural county agent in the U. S. Midwest, came out with a sweeping cott- detiination of the IIIICICIII practice of plowing. He claimed it decreased crops, encouraged erosion. wasted moisture: iii fact it ivas just about the worst possible thing a fariiicr Cutiltl do. Instead of plotting, lltitlktici- advocated little more tha scratching of lllff sods stirfacc. ‘ Iii sonic circles, lllil~ll_\' urban. the lxiok was; hailed i: a major tiuricultnral Ill>CIl\‘(.‘l'_\‘, bull Inong pndcal fariiicrs. lil<'l't' was derision <1 perhaps a little iiiit-:i~iiics~, especially‘ on the . < - l western plains \\llt'l't‘ uidcsprctid w.iid erosion is always a Ittilfillllfll (Lang-er. llut even thrrc, IIIITIICFS have nothing to worry about, and iii-thing to gain save cittertziiii-- ment from Tuttliilg l‘louiiiaii's Folly The lead- ing article in the current Scarlc Grain Co. letter points Qut two fatal weaknesses in the Faulkner theories; liirst, lll\‘\ are .'illll(lFl directly coiitrary' to the 1151.115 oi‘ forty _\'t'.'ll‘,s oi tlt-tztileil experimental work with ciiltitzitioti oii the Cattatliaii prairies. Fecotid, ll."\'Ulltl sot e backyard vegetable gar~ dening, lfitnlliiier appears to have conducted no field expcritiictns at all. lti some of the lielitct" soil areas of the west, shallow stirface cultivation is safer than ploiv- ing, but farmers have kiiowti this and prac- tised it for tears. In other and wider areas, however, Zlllfl-IllTIHlgllUlll the hulk of the eastern half of the iclllllllclll, zniiiual fall and spring plowing is stainlftril prccedtire and prontises to remain so. It will take more than a. book with a catchy title to displace it. Mr. King peeved Again judging by stiiiie remarks he made in Parlia- ment last week, .\lr. Mackenzie King appears to think that \\‘ll(’ll Mr. John Bracken became lead- er of the Progressive Conservative party he should liaic izikt-ii a vow of silence. .\lr. llrack- en, iii' his capacity of Progressive Conservative leader. and lllC-lflflllflll)‘ iii his cttpacity‘ as a Cau- adiait citizen and taxpayer. issues a statement criticising .\lr. King's plan for family’ allowances as an rletstion gesture. wherctiprtti .\lr. King turns upon him as though he had cciiniiiitted some ter- rible criiiic. Tihus: “There will be a reckoning one of these days in the tiiatter of public discussion coit- ccriiing the Illfllilllff of laws as carried on by men who art) l'('.\'[lllll=llllC l>(‘(.'\ll~'(‘ they" are rep- resentative of the tier-tile and have seats in Parliament _l)y--tlattse who profess to repre- sent great parties and at the same time are free to make any asscrtioti they‘ tilease witli- out being rtqiiircrl to itiake good on what they sayz" ' .\ir. Bracken. it ivould seem, must not dare say anything about .\lr. Kitig, nor anything about Parliament, lllil‘ anything abotit anybody in Parliauit-rt. Tiltzi: is an extraordinary- atti- tude for the l‘riuit- Xliuistct" who boasts of be- ing a Liberal and dctiiocrat. Also. recalls The Ottawa vlllllfllftl, it is an extraordinary attittide for out- who, uht-n he was outside Parliament. had plcniy- In say altout Parliament. llocs .\lr. King foijqct tli sc llt"._‘.'< when. in the wilderness. he used to cd-t the I.lll('l'<'\l‘ .\loitthl_v, in bctivecn making speeches tearing the Government t0 tatters? .\lr. Ivitig was within his rights then. and Mr. Ilrzickrii is within his rights now. \\'ere it otherwise, then uc should have come to a prettv pass—tlic pass where the Government and Par- liament would be sacrosatict, with nobody per- mitted to say a word against them unless he had a seat in the llouse. t Augirvtiiiziclite Show rlying (ilfficer Noel Knight. R. A. F, rec- ently broadcast over I’LF‘I_(I~ hi: experiences- iii Australia iii uhich he said: “.\t the end of janit- ary l fittislititl a tour of operations" with a I.aii- caster squadron and was given a ground job for a rest. F0 I've been able to get about a hit and sci" more of the farming over here. My first hit oi luck was getting leave just when the Perth Shorthoru Show and Sales were on. hly friends in the breeding; line had told me a lot about this event and l was keen to see it. My train was due to reach Perth at 6:30 a. m. but -it (lidift arrive until 0:30. So I ilutiiped my kit at the hotel where I'd httoktid and rushed out to find the Shoiv ring. I turned a corner of the street and ran slap into the judging. 'I“liey'tl just roped off part of the street to form the Show — ring! The quality of the stock stirprisetl me. The bulls there, lllllllll('l' about 26o, were easily the ' best draft of that size I've ever seen. And the ring worked very efficiently. As the bulls were led out, the first class ttirned left past their judges and were tiaradetl on the street through the spectators. \\'liilc this was going on the next class came out. Iuructl right and were ready for the judges and the spectators so that very little time was ivasted. Nearly everybody could get a good close view of the stock. Next day the bulls were sold iii the coverctl sale ring. Prices were good for the ontslatitling btills—-4.0<X\ guiuctts for the top and sixteen others brought ovci‘ 1.000 guiiieas. Iliit tlicrii were a lot of really good bulls", \\‘lllt‘ll \\'(‘f(‘ inst not of the fttshioii- able colour and l_vpt*. and these were compara- tivt-ly clicapci" than eillii-r the top llII('§ or the crossing bulls. 'I'lie_v \\'(‘l'C selling for too to tlo guineas, and ivcre the ones that aroused my ‘Mewt- Ihei-e were several who: present in the blue uniforms of the Air Force and of the Navy and we were all. taking a pretty likely interest. Another Aussie well to the fore was Sir Charles ‘McCaiin. If it ,liadti't been for the limited shipping space Australian breeders could have filled some of their requirements ad- vantageously. I expect before long we'll be able to buy bulls in these markets and fly them out iii a few days-doing away with much of the risk and inconvenience of the long sea trip. It would take quite a few bulls t0 equal the weights we've been carrying to Berlin recently!" EDITORIAL NOTES .- Though furnace oil supply is more plentiful than hitherto, there is a continued and increas- ing scarcity of gas for autos. it: p it u The Senate has been discussing the advisa- bility of adopting a change in the method of voting at elections, quite a number favouring the transfer vote system in vogue in Manitoba. ll‘ 1K i! l‘ It is S€Cllllllgl_\' not finally settled who will move into tjoveriiiiietit House when the Hon. .\lr. Lt-Page transfers to his new home on West 5t. The latest rumour stiggcsts a “dark horse" in the field, one who has itevcr contested a pullllCal election. it i ll * Iii Quebec it is claimed that Senator Bouclii ‘artls sensational charge in connection with the Order of Jacques Cartier has strengthened the cliattccs of Premier Cioglbout. aiid corresponding- ly weakened those of opposition leader Duples- sis and other dissidents. m in i: s \\"hen men and women join the British forces they are taught not only how to handle their particular weapons, how to drive a tank or pilot’ a platic, repair a balloon or titan a boat. They cziii also learn a trade or profession while they train to fight. ' x iii it It .~\ll aspects of British relief which have been studied are connected and ititer-depctideiit. Health will depend on food, which will itself depend on the machinery of relief. These enierg~ ciicies have to be tackled sitiiiiltziiieotisly" and with complete co~operzititiit of all aountrics iii- volvctl. a a iv v The Indian Army Medical Corps. which now has 300 major field units. has attached an .-\rniy Nursing Service. Women doctors and iturses, as well as men, are eligible‘ for service wherever Indian units are in action. Many new medical schools lia\'c been opened. v it >i< a- Tlie great fire at Portland, ‘.\laitie, broke out this dati- 180i», drvztstatitig the greater part of the city which is 10b’ miles tiorth-east of l-‘tos- ton; it is the winter port of several trans- Atlantie liners, including the C. I’. IL; has deep and spacious harbours with ports: has tiiaiiy iiii- llllflllllf public buildings. iiicltitliiig 'I-Ollgfl‘llt\\\' llouse in which the [ioet was liorii. >i< The new airway service to New Glasgow brings the ltistoric Cotuity of Pictou and this Province more closely together than ever. Our earliest connection was by schooner to the town of Pictou, followed by regular subsidized steam- er service. Now passengers and tiiail will be carried direct from Charlottetown to the steadilv growing iiidtistrial centre of Pictou County iti almost as few iuitiutcs as it has hitherto taken hours. r 1‘ i i W .. .. The complete failure of the recent German raids on linglaiirl. which attempted to destroy invasion preparations is no mystery". The .\ir .\liiiistr_i' foresaw long ago that invasion dumps and troup concentrations would make tempt- ing targets. and so set zibotit their [ireptiratioiis accordingly: The cause of the Luftwaffek‘ failure is the development of the RAJ’. night fighici- technique. Soon the [iilotless illaues will he renderd innoxious. ~ »= a- at \\'ar has disrupted food distribution in all its phases, says Clarence Francis, General Foods Corporation. "It has forced upon us practices rtgaiiist which we are fighting, btit there is a ‘plus side.’ \\i'c have learned our power in war, now what can we do in peace? The postwar economy will surpass anything we have known. We have businesses that are not inhibited by a lot of old prejudices. It is not beyond concep- tiott to think of a post-ivar meal entirely cook- ed and frozen so that ‘all you have to do is heat and serve it'.” \ t It t A touch of the dramatic will be tiscd by druggists tiarticipatitig in the September drive to sell $1,000,000 worth of War Savings Stamps. To be known as the "Buy a Shell" Campaign, the objective is to raise sufficient money to pro- vide 1,000,000 AA shells costing $i.oo each to iitanufacture. FJICII drug store will ‘displayi one of the shells for customers to handle and ex- amine, and a card will have a cartridge belt of paper shells fastened to it with space on each shell for the name of each purchaser of four Staitips. In addition. there will be a full window trim featuring an (lrliiigtozt AA gun firing shells at anemy aircraft. at n- it- m In a recent despatch in the Globe & Mail, ‘Yllllfllll Stewart, Cl“ war correspondent with the Army in France, notes that a special detach- ment of the 17th Duke of York's I-Iussars land- ed with the Caiiadiarrassatilt forces on D-Day to carry out reconnaissance and report to divis- ioiial headquarters and MaiJieiieral Keller 0n the situation during the vital first few hours of the invasion. The des atch proceeds: “Most of these ICCOINIZIISSZUICC&IZII'IIOS remained on duty right through the first week. Lieut. C. S. Tlioiiipsoti, who accompanied the North Nova l-liglikiiirlers (as liaison tiffcer) was with them at Huron." This officer is the elder son of (Tolsaiiil Mrs. C. (T. 'l‘liniiips-oii, and son-in- law of Mr. and Mrs. Raoul l\'l'\'lllt‘lllll, fdotitliport. lle lteld the rank of Captain ltcrc. biil revcrlctl lo Lit-itti-nant in order to get overseas. Since the despatch was written it is lctiriieil Lietlt. Thoiiip- son has been wontidetl and evacuated to ling- III-ad Notes Ily Tho Way‘ Speaking of penetration. mush- rooms can new through a con- cerlc walk. Thls Ia more than can be safd o! gettlng- certaln Ideas lhwuflh some People's heads. - St. Thomas Mines-Journal. Naturally In a newspaper Qmcg, tahelaoet Inyaslonldayii. W; are sflgk€d 0 “wr y" ues om. ~ne- tavrarhsribee a“ o a r w 0m FIT’: téawp 0f St-tlnt Waidnameid?" e es wasno sum .Rght, aarmwaenn ,es e n ansan,‘ ,tli Poor Indian ivhose untutoreil rnlnd . . .' ‘L-Wlnnlpeg Tribune. If plans materlalhe, Torqnh) wfl| become famed as s. hospital city. It. Is amazlng the development there has been In hospitalization. H515 B century ago such attentlon was regarded l5 Incllctiting a serf- ous condition. Now many counties have theI. own hoapltals, Increas- Iniz_ demand for accommodation indicates appreclattcti of hospital servlce.—Toronto Globe and Mall. According to reports from Cllllngklng. the well-known Chl- nese engineer, Hllllmz Keir-LI. has Invented a new process for utiliz- Int: tuntz oil as n substitute incl In automobile engines. Fciv-dc- lails have been tcvealed reswll- lng the process. It is described as a’ “fuel Just as gOOtl as ordinary kinds of gasoline, with practically np fumes injurious to the en- gine.” Herr Goebbels flnds hlmsrll In an embarrassing spot right risiw. So much of his elaborate build-up has crumbled within the past three or four days In Italy and on the West Wall. Only a year ago his Nazi trumpets were blaring SUCll boasts as this: "There is not a sin- gle unguarded place from the rat- a landing or the establishment of a bridgehead is posslblc. In the event of an invasion, the Axis al- ivars has the B(l\‘Ill1f2\§€."—I'IIImll- iiortli to the Bay of Biscay where m E. Matthews, a Iormer well and fav- orablyknown tesldent d’ your City, beral Member for Brandon. Man, 1n the House o1 Commons, which izlves a splendid word plcture o1 the Memorial Chamber. probably one of the beat: ever written. Yours etc. G.M. MATTHEWS 014001’!- P. E !. (ENCLOSURE) House of Commons. Ottawa. June 27. 1944 Mr. Georue M. Mattlieiva. O'Lear,v, P. E. I. Dear Georne At cievcn o'clock sharp thls ntortuniz I went around to the Mem- orial Cliitiniher. ivlieie upon n inas- sivu alter. about four feet. limb. Is the venerated Book of Remembran- ce enclosed Iiiia lartze Rlass case. As eleven o'clock Is the hour when the Uflblllel. Is ttiilwkcel and a new leaf turned for the any. the Officer accorded nie the imlaue courtesy 01 m-t- tiiilockiiii: _t.lie cabinet and turn- . In: the artistic and historic leaf. There. on mute 1292. and on this date of June 27th. appears the name of your dear brothel‘. the ex- act eiitrv belntr as follows: "Pie. IWIIITIICWS, Frederick Stew- art. IUZ-rtij Battalion." There are llti names Inscribed on pant‘ ‘J92. I looked uiion those names wltli a feeling of reverence as from that large and magnificent Book It seemed as though they handed us the Torch and spoke their silent, mr-ssaee to the world. As one page of the Book is turn- rach (uv. the page bearlntz Freda name .vill not. be on Wlew a- gain tintil June Q7. 1946. The alter. which supported the Bcok. was carved lll _Ottawa out of a nione sriit licre tn the rough ton Spectator. of vi-hl‘ measures ttiitrti to One example extreme habiiants of a thinly-populated district Iii the south or Eriglzti 1 Most of the people liacl been ev utited but a few essential ivo- had to FPITIIIII], _S?n‘tt‘ies stoa lbw" curs. kqciiiiiii their families virtually imprisoned within ‘.116 garden fences. They were not even allowed to go out to buy rations. so the Army red tlism on militant food, and gave their ear- responclcnce a very 51353131 Cm. s0rmg.—-St, Thomas Times-Journal. _ There is nothing very convinc- intl in the Information that there are only six Germans at the Nazi iegatlon in Dublin. Even neutral Spam ls moving the German ren- resentativcs cut of Tangier - 0n the African std: of the Sti it of Gibraltar. Wlicii it is COIY-ldfiltil detrimental ta the Allies to have a I-Iltlerite aseizfl." lttiywhci-p in North Africa. it must. be at least eqliaili’ liai-tiifu] la have the Nazis at large in Dilbliii w ivlitro Ill!‘ street lights were a " ‘ beacon tar Gcr an lizitiibc: I111)’ came hver Etieland to t Liverpool and Belfast. -— Ottawa Citizen. .Rev. A. (‘. Stewart, MA" minis- ter of Knox 'cl, Ii lr litis bctn ch General Aesci blv . -f‘ .\< tartan Church iii Clllflfill, is the third Zorra man to attain that high office. The others were Mae- Kays, cf the first Canadian-born generation of Sutlieilanfsliire Seats in Ortford. Ilcv. George Leslie l‘ ic- Kay, D.D.. ITIISSIOIIIIIW t» Fat-n , Was Moderator in 1894. Rcv. Robert P- MRCKIII‘. D.D.. one-tints minis- ter at Aginceurt" rand Parkdale. was elected in I911, wlilcli would berabout the time the Pair-Presby- terian Alliance iuct here. - \\'(‘l‘e tiatives of Ills Embrn ii: borhcod, received their secon education in Woodstock and iverc graduated from the University of Toronto.—Torontn Telegram. The (‘hinesc government obvi- ously has made a grave error In its attempt to control the thoughts of Chinese students in the United States. It has derided that no Chinese student shall remain In United States unlversitles ll’ his polltlcnl views are not: satisfactory to the authorities at Chungklnz. Agalnsb this regulation there ‘has been Wlclc protest throughout the United States and espcelally Qlllflllg the friends of Chlnn. By Its pro- posed thought control. the Chinese government has merely strength- ened those who Insist that It. Is not democratic and has no Intention of establishing democracy even when the war Is won. The Internal business of China Is Its own affair- Tlie undemocratic control which it seeks to extend over students In the United states Is bound to be resented by Americans. even when ‘they realize that support for the Cliunaklnf! Government and its success against the .I'apririe5e is vital to the Unltecl States. The Chlnese authorltles would be ivlse to withdraw their cdlct coverlnz students before further harm done-Winnipeg Free Press Out of nothing but water, rar- bun dioxldv rind Elllllllllli. plants make sugar. For more than 70 vears chemists have been trylng in dupllctit/e the process, not In the hope of dispensing with cane and beats. but. In the hope of flooding Wlth light one of the more mysterious proce es of lite. Th: Investigations conducted by Johann Frledrlch von Baeyei" and the Nobel prlze winner Richard Wlllstrittcr led to the conclusion that the plant first forms form- aldehyde and out of the formalde- hyde sugar Though this conclus- Ion has been auestloned. It. has been the startlniz polnt of most, of those who have trled to dub- llctvte nature In the laboratory. One of the most success u| of’ these sugar synthesizers Is Prof. .E C. C. Bally of Liverpool. Sub- stltutfniz for chlorophv (the green mutter of plants) it catalyst (nlc- el oxide and nIckel carbonate). he converted formadlehyde Into sugar with the ald of carbon and light, from electrlc lamps. Now comes Drs. Michael Doudoroff. H. A. Barker and W. Z. Hassld of the Unlverslty of California wlth another method They use Instead of t-i nlekel salt an enzyme or att- turnl catalyst and thus svntlieslze SIIPTOSp or natural stigtir. Wlth R. M McCreatIv, m. Httssld had 1,1‘!!- vlously syntheslztitl starch, ~- New York ’I‘Imes. They discolor. scratch or might Never use metal mesh or wlre scrapers In rkan enameled ware. leaks, ivas the case of the ‘n- . t wzll be mv RCWJYCIC h And so hula on when there ll from Yorkshire. Plnizlatid, a gift frriii the Old Latitl. Irtleretl ni ii iiizlic near the top. txtenzlitiii aroiintl the four res of the alter. ls this fitting ation from Pilgrim's Progress: _“My marks and scars I carry with inc t0 be a witness for me that I lrzive fought His L Ltlcs who nsw Sn he i:.i ed over. and all the tritiij: sound- ed for him on the other e." Turning to leave the Memorial Chamber inv eve ctrutght. again those other ivortls carved so artls. tlpallti on the Inside over 1h: g- nificcl but liallnsvvd entrance. not I thou y ‘Jlfl anv words be .. f nlor or uimronriale: _“All is well icr ovci- there among his iiecrs a hariiiv \\‘ar1'lor'slee;s." _Orte cannot leave that Chamber without feeling that his feet had trcdrlrn holy tri-c.i';1d_ rim-i Hardat as n pi vi n itre=siiiii of iiiv sinctne i to Io‘ ‘ard vuu those iiztrtitu not. so llfl li 1"‘ . rs, ‘gut as something and cvcryr l. C \B_v Request) Usw JUIA , and blatnuit; l. bit sou. ‘ lf you t"... t..i.t yourself waen all lily-l “n/“aald bud But t.t...._- ulAJ-“IIICC tor H.131‘ HuLlLJcJlfl sud; 1f you can t.-.» .....I mt be IAXBLI by v..tl....,,t. Ur bcutt, n-q aaout don't. deal Ill taut to vrlpc. it‘ you Cull utxutti and not make ct.c_..ti_. it... ins“... If )UAA c.... “tun. w... uUI. illalik: _ u-Avklfilkbd _-,.,.u anti; l1. you can tiieet, Afnallpll and Dis- time: And ti»... niece wit: trimmers just. toe some, If you t-.. w...- to hear the uutn JGII H! c-gulititl ‘lvriatca ti, tun“... w make a tratp t..." leer... y Or wahli at. QAAmSS you gave your I114: w Dluiiilli, And stoop tutu ound ‘em up with wum out. tmus. If you can itinku aJieap of ‘all your ivmiiiiilis And ILS» .. ml one turn of pitch anu toss. And less, t...“ start. again at, your oeguiiutigs, And tie-er‘ Lilcubllfi a xvord about loin‘ lot... you ' t “are: tr heart and tier» illlfl stnems To 50in: you. tutti lunar after they RTE gone notlhlnu ni you Except Lne ulll wmcn says to them "Hold on." 1f you can talk _wiili crowds and Keel) your virtue, Or wauc witin Kings-nor lose the common wuen If neither tools nor luvlrig friends can hunt you If all. men taunt with you, but, none to much, If you can llII me unfonzlvlng mln- u Wlth sixty seconds worth of dis- ee rum. Yours Is the Earth and everythlng that's It. And which ‘ls more-you'll be a Mammy son. —Ri.tdyard Klpllng. .______.____ The temperature oI the Saturn Is estimated at Erees below zero. planet 238 de- “What wouldn’t I give 7’ ,. l e. for a car ‘He wants a new car. She dreams of real Nylon stockings. Hundreds of thousands of other Canadians want new radios, new refrigerators, new washing machines, new toasters .. . countless other things they ‘have done without, but’ intend to buy, when the war is over. That means busy factories, working to meet‘ the pent up demand of people with money to spend on every conceivable kind of article from homes to meat grinders. It means JOBS. Of course there will be post-war "problems". But there will be opportunities too, plenty of , them-and scope for individual brains and initiative. Canada will be a busy place when Victory is won. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA at is - PRIVATE ENTERPRISE? It is the natural desire to make ygoyir ownnwayt. as far as 'oura iity ivi tyre. yams" n instinct that has brought to this continent the highest standard of life enjoyed by any peo le on earth. It. is the spirit 0 march . . . democracy on the e monthly meeting of Si N W I was held at, the liciiic of Mla. Joseph Matliesoti on June 7th. Thparaveeizl memuersd ririesent . e m: oncnc w tli clriainz‘ the membe he {Olllllggd bv repeating the Th field with , , ttlillloiicfii. T A C ILSIITUTE {CIIGTIOIIGUOWII were: stitutes unIs flullt completed. Mrs. Mor- lam and Mrs. lam and Mrs. P E. The meetlnt: clos Ional Anthem followed the ncxt ed ' Food and Shelter annual convent-on In s. Em E . Joseph seryet-t by _commll.tee In eliaftze. SPRlNGF-lillil) V u?b.»tt;.-.~..- Haslam and Mrs. Andrew launches it~Iiitz-' with Mrs. Morrls Sinclair an Mrs. Walter MacKenzIe to act. as sub- . t Mrs. R E. Howard klndly Invlted to meet at her home {or the IIEXI13IGBUDR and thlemlétal- . n comm ees were aiovpo : edTgxtzeRed Cross ccmmlttee retiorh, Lunch: Hostess. M 21s Sinclair volunteered to but the Programme: Mrs. .uuares together for the next quilt. son rind Mrs. J E. Sinclair. A blll for tlilrLv-iilne cents was Drecented anti paid It was d t ' member glrlpni; a nggtsegonded each mBPI-Im! for boxes for service men It you Leek.‘ ....,l M»: tread v-nen ail Overseas‘ me_del'3ir'lf~ a 01 urlel Has- I-Iaslam. Mathe- ‘Ihe programme consisted of two contests out on bv Nrs. J E. Has- 2. u‘ < .-. S’ o. Z w .~ I Lia, LIUHL KIVC VIA] IA) f. AL. , And n. t...» IJUK to 300a, Itor - HIICC. omelet Next to food, clotliinif and shelter for today, what a man and his family need most is a guarantee of food. clothing and shelter in days to come. A Life 0r Endowment Plan, with guaranteed Conserve the Home and Stabilize the Nation. Consult your nearest Great-West Life Agent for a suitable plan including Accident and Health Insur- policy is an Insured Savings values for retirement. Hyndman & Co., Limited Provincial Managers . Charlottetown - Suinmersirle - Montague THOMAS McAVINN. C.L.U., auasou P. McLEAN, c.i..ii EARLE S. JELLEY .. District. Manager at Snmmersldn Special Reprelcntallva n Clfllown.‘ CYRUS A~ R- snAw-Rfillrelentatlve at Montague PETER G. McEACHERN-Mnrucntallve ll Victoria F. L. MacNUTT-Rwreaentallva at Dlmley Representative at 0‘Leary PHONE. 117 oveaahwcnnd. _ We have a Limiited Supply Z" Manila Hay Rope . ALSO ‘Xfxx’ Wire Hay Rope GET YOURS TODAY A. Kennedy G? Cm, Ltd. 32 Queen Street l IIHARLOTTETOMN \.. Gassy Stomachs Relieved EV"! person who ls tron. bled with. gas In the atom- iich and bowels should get a bottle of’ "Dr. Evan's" Stomach Mixture and 5e; ha" quickly It wlll relleva all distressing symptoms. Dr. Evan’: stomach mixture. taken at. meal r tlmen not only ‘prevents all bad e1. feels from gas but It pro- motes the functional activ- Llaeaifionlhe stopiiiich. assists an - ‘ppemh mprorea the DON'T DELAY _ vovn BOTTLE 18,825“ Price 85c Mia's rife IIINTMENT A nfe and efficient remedy for Internal and external piles. It Ia made only of he highest quality Ingredl- 1i enta, possessln remarkable therapeutic va tie f this urpoae. It carries out Ila neflclal effect In three ways: 1 It soothes; 2 It liflirlcntel: I u Is Minuet-it. Gei l. tube today. Price 60c. TIIE 2 MAGS I49 GI. George Si. Mall orders glven prompt attention ' ' r. o. Box m. 24s