1n: ‘cnnnton: WI au > Pruldodbli. (‘be-tn h. InLun IIfIIIIIY-I4IIIII. I'm. ll. A. Inrlilnlmn. ll I. II. Vlro-PrnldOuln-d. K Illlfli line: and Handgun-l. It. llunms Anna-mu lemme-n. It. Uwrftn ' m“ mm‘ “i”! _~ “."::..r..'.' ma. ‘.'.".._..".".'."""""r.'...":;f:; .::. ":.":' ..:"...::.":'.' _..'.::..:". _Eft Whrljt, “Yfifiqfi” "j Net... gyro... wept lilac‘ "fnlltolnilml THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 193i) The New City Council Yesterday's civlc election, resulting as it did ln the return of every mem- ber of the outgoing Council offering for re-clection, may be taken as an endorsation on the part of our citiz- ens of the work carried on during; the past two years in the various dc- partlnents of municipal affairs. The contest was confined to . four wards. Conn. Reardon, in Ward Two, was roturrlcd by i accla mation. Conn. Douga n was f again successful in Word One. COUNT-- Holman and Fostser in Wards Three, Ccun. ftfcDougall in Witrd Four, and, coun. Kennedy in Ward Five, with, Dr. Blanchard and Mr. Walter" Burke i returned as his colleagues. Mr. Burke l will be the only new" man to take his scat in the Council, Dr. Blanchard having served a previous term. May- or Prowse and Water Commififiiollefs q, D. Wright, H. Connors and J. A. Webster" were elected by acclanlation. The defeated candidates, Messrs. A. A. Ilennessev, \V. P. Doull, J. 0.: Crabbe. .7. A. Brady and D. A. Mani Donald put up a good fight, and are taking the result in a sportsman-like fashion. The incoming Council, under the‘ capable chairmanship of May"? Prowse, will be expected to f-unction ‘ smoothly and well. The llfvvivus 9*" perlcncc of the members on the var- ‘ ious committees will greatly facilit- ate business, and there is every rea- son to believe that the 177031155 mime 1n civic improvement in the past fe\v years will be continued with cveni more success during the coming; term. l4 lmirulirfs Tariff llleilzorl y While the Liberal press and poli- . lieiail: have been busy (lefendint: thc Amtrnlian trade treaty and contend- ing that Czmadian dairym?" hmm‘ no right to insist on udcqllli-Q 01'9" '~ . ‘l: t. high- “cnrm m the“ home m“ c "Under the new plan it will not. be er duties on 221 tariff item". have craruc into effect in" Ailstrnli-a. In‘ many cases the new Australian dut-‘ ins, are described as frankly prohlb- . itnrv. For instance, the dull‘ 0" Ell?‘ lish cotton hose has been doubled. and the British preference on gas")- llnc has been wiped out. In defend- ing his new tariff. Hon. Ml‘. F6109“ the Australian Mhilfilil‘ "i Cllsiilms- t: :7:..".?i as Elevint: ssaid: "If British manufacturers want Australian trade. let thenrestab- lish themselves here and enjoy the protection of the Commonwealth. . , . We must build up our 1n- rlustries to the point where we ‘ shall have them Sllilhflftlllf; us as m-mly n5 practicable." The new Australian Prime Minister‘ wins equally frank. lfc raid that his Government had conzsirlered the ef-i fect the new schedule would have on‘ the British textile trade. llc was‘ ruindiul of the serious unemployment flllllt consideri llilrilill there, but the ‘effect on Auitralian ntion was the upcmployment. It is evident, too, that the new‘ Australian tariff will injuriously af- fect Canadian trade with that coun-, try. Not onlyllavc taxes been rais- pd on several lines of Canadian ex- ports which wcro subject to the pen- i eral tariff, but duties have also been‘ increased on corsets, nssclnblczl motor. car chassis, sparking plugs vrhcn ae-f companylng chassis or complete cars, and certain parts of motor vehicles. , including springs. 8051“ and ‘flmb shields, all of which items were ac- corded tariff preference under the terms of the trade treaty between cnnadn and Australia. Other chang- M ""1"" °°""‘d°"‘b‘y l“°'°“’°fl| the King Government is prepared duties on Canadian timber. wrappins paper, silk hosiery. metal manufac- mm, gum, wading ‘boots. dressed skins, wire, lawn mowers, aluminum were. pianos. m. It would seem that the Australian Oovbrnment, like the government of the tad Status and other pros!”- reedgnirtl that its Nlihtrili. y will have the support of all our hock- ‘also extended to the same date and = Northwest, thcsc barnaclcs on the es, in short that imperialism, like charity. should begin st home. ‘The idea that it should sacrifice one of its prime industries, as the King Gov- ernment is sacrificing the PB " dairy industry, under the specious pretext of encouraging Empire trade, would make Australian legislators laugh heartily. lt is not uneasy to enjoy the Joke on this side of the water, especially if one is s tanner. Provincial Champions The Abcgweit hockey team is to be congratulated on its splendid victory in a series of pitched battles for the Island championship. Not. for several years, since the Maritime cham- pionship was fought for and won by the Abegweits of that time, has there been such interest and enthusiasm in the work of a local team. The Abeg- weits of today, under the veteran coaching of Mr. Roy Prowse, are shaping up for another try at the coveted Maritime trophy. Their un- disputed victory over such capable and determined players as the Crys- tals of Summerside ls ln itself d guarantee that they will give n good account of themselves against their New Brunswick and Nova Scotia competitors. In this endeavour they ey fans. The rivalry between difler- enet sections of the Province will be forgotten in the general desire to’ see the Island champions bring home the bacon. \ New Brunswick Innovation There is nothing slow about New Brunswick when it comes to reach- ing out for increased tourist travel, and receipts from gas taxes and other sources. says an American exchange. its" latest move in this direction is cited as an example worthy of con- sideration by some of the States. necessary for New Brunswick own- crs to equip cars with 1930 Dlltcs uniil Feb. 23. This encourages own- ers of cars to drive them throuzh tlte winter season and thereby in- cruises the sale of gasoline and con- scqirently increases the receipts from gasoline taxes. Drivers’ permits are the New Brunswick government asks States and Provinces with which it has reciprocal relations tow this new rul: and allow New Bruns- wick cars and trucks passage over 1929 plates until f. their roads with F01). 28. "Unhorsing the Barnaclea" U. S. Senator Nye from North DI- kola, denouncing in a recent: speech the middlemen who are fighting the Federal Farm Board plan that would eliminate them, gave this masterpiece of English: “r feel confident that this troop of pirates ln the grain trade, these economic leeches in the. grain marketing ship, will be un- horscd." These glowing words, suggests" the st. Louis Post-Dcsmtch, should ‘be written in letters of gold beside um other oratorlcal classic: l "The chariot of anarchy is roll- ing onward and gnnshing its teeth l as it rolls." .______-—- Editorial Notes y We gather from Mr. Dunning‘: nt- crence to the tariff and Mr. llulerfs Iqulte different reference to it that. ‘do nearly lnythln} thereon’ to lave its unworthy Jlfe. ' I Last week's enthusiastic ammu- ltion meeting of the Conservatives“!!! utterance to ' Summersidc and 3.. Eleanor! mill have been more than sawmill“)! . n» Federal connrvnun candida“; m. a. mp: Ammmnm throughodttlii wen-l ‘g6! upfilbqrgbat success mby frown ‘tljfilr tensors- nolu. ‘The ieeretnriel of the erienn acme-mu,» 12 vomit was wiwnuw‘ , H'1y-,l\‘9W-i=l"flaru1| duced in The‘ ‘yutéruy Digest. , ft. tells that “the American, ladies gave lnndon a thrill because of their smart fur costt, chic hats and their wk . ‘YIF “.""' A! for um disappear defences‘, being mere men, theii-‘cdstumas are mot described And no mention is made uf any emotion or thrill caused by their presence inllondon. - _. Al! Franco in not afraid to bieettbo Washington -tl.riff policy ‘ with i. Square tlfiforntst. policy of her own. notably on motor cars and machin- ery. On those both the Government and Parliament have declared their detennlnatlbntn/raise the duties to from f2 to J23 per _i:ent. American manufacturers in "the r alarm induc» Cd mm ambassador ‘ tr‘; and nae- tncbthe proposed, ibcresse, but no- thing came of his efforts. ' - What: besides-eased ithqslarm is the mt oiaipyduynbec Ofpthel‘ Euro- peln nations Are opposed y-to follow fiance's example. 311x033» no fear p: reprised; but, o‘ ratified pp protect their own. ypr-irmplq Jr‘: their home markets. Our wobbllni xphllly» sbnllyuig ministers at Qttatwsiirttlw fearful ones‘ who dare nbtf re In why or make reply; otherthtn nu t mtekly to the dlictatéi 0'1’ Washington. s... “one, ofionr exchange; from across thwportli , More and more violent become Chicago's‘ nlunelil “convulsions ‘as thepcltyistruggles ‘with new desper- atlcn titres itself from the morass 6f bankruptcy. v The outcome ap- pears to be as uncertain todlyas it. was a month ago. Buried in debt and wmnm éxedit-exhsusted, Chl- cngmpdpors lay, the city faces a complete " t "u" n idall ' ‘ ‘ pll departments. Now even the street lights maybe turned ofl, it is feared." because of_ the city's inabil- lty w pay thepndrmqllp ugh; bills n has run up. 'fA gallery ‘c1714. 000 citizens concerned butmnldl ed. ‘stands “warp; m qnmcm pinin- pions.“ says the Associated Press, “but these , champions. it" appears, ‘have beeh unablé win-cc upon-any concerted‘ ictlpn." ‘Worse thlni ‘that, we are pbldpytney’ srqpqc ‘evjapgninp that me one: psrévdlvmn will prove elective. - ‘ Mr . * ‘."' ' v J . . Sydney B. Norman. editor of The Mining World , telliJhat .111‘ metallic minlng- osncdt- compare; very-Jp- oribly. witlrthé‘ Ilnlted Qmenm the produétiompf goldpClnsda produces sane pgifqinittind on amt; as centsper head of ‘populationl ln sil- ver Camels “snap; 21.0 bullets no the sum 44 bunces: in copper, 11.5 pounds tots-e pounds sndllnfnlckul as": pounds h" nonein m! sum. In ma‘. Canada" ihows s4 pounds agsiijist 10:4 pounds, and in zinc 16.3,’: pound! lglirtst "0101 pounds per aébd producedin out untied amen. ' e 1w‘ big leplblll. lsiliacquirad .1 vast share‘ of gold bullion Arid coin, largely . gathered 1mm cantor rim fishing the Kaiser, before Unclejim took n and in the my. oinsdnlnp a. vast store of gold underground in her open mines and" doubtless much more -yet to‘ be‘ ~ uncovered fl in iher boundless territory not yet‘ lnlfex- plored. ‘. _ ' , ' We want more‘ factory industries in Prince’ bldwsrd mum and n is n crying wantsbur excellent Board 6f Trade miglst do‘ weuito study wnit other cities, have doneftn gotbnncu hidnstrlésvestlbllshed within their 1mm. ljhtiyekr :1 i, _, "‘ ‘ an u Industrial {Cosnmlllion vvitltffliin end in vim slid-within nine months it pm lmnrmqbm up, loq\flng'_.20 industlitl flrmsflin one ..clt.y,_.gl\<i tam arenow us British. Amancrii Ind sumac»: mmn-mitoucawith tlie- doinimlnloh "djdmtely Jlfifllldlff m; thd tsunami: of lumen ,1»;- tones‘ in that oiw, wbuqplts-ot-her Arms’ ‘brown-um; fnquirlfli? ' mfl-n-q-u i msdeltp o! dllfi y ..ol on five; it we ' r Elli" TONSILITII‘, '. IIIUMATIBM, ‘ HEART DISEASE An acquaintance of mine had m attack of sore throat,‘ tonsilitis, some months no, but seemed to m over u lll right. ‘ “ A couple of months later he suf- fered s severe domestic loss, and about channelling was moved to a distant city by his employers. He ‘wit nbturllly m great’ distress ovcr his loss, and the moving at this time upset him considerably‘. ' Thtll followed a ‘r attack OI tonsllltis which however was very severe. i‘ Within '1. m. days he was stricken with rheumatic fever and for several weeks, lay in the hospital practically helpless, ' Now the‘ reason that the last. st- taek of, tonlilltlnwu so severe was 007553}, t . l-‘L-u-L I». Rdaiiolegdbnr ‘i110 rtoommondbtlons of the Ail-d Gommhnwnhwnlhn-wbula spasms govemmunt- control rot radio humi- Mlflill Canada. Ire to be sub- nnlttod" td, Parliament in-tho form of s OOVQPIIIIIEDPDIII, but it is not. appar- ently, tht disposition of the Govern- ment m insist‘ upbn the ‘adoption b: ‘all press rccommentlltlons " wltubut , full consideration and the hearing at representltions pro' and con. It lb pro,- posed, therefore, u» send on‘ bill m a special committee. Where every inter“- 'est cnncemed in the leglslatl will have an opportunity of being helrd. ‘fills does not mean that the work of the Aird ‘Commission is to" be don: over again ‘by a committee of "the" House ofcommons, since lt is ob- viously impossible fornucn l. com- mlttce tn cover the ground over which the commission travelled. ,At‘ the same time. there are a number of importantlconslderations which have been emphasised since‘ the report of the commission was made public. and to which jthe special committee‘ n bound to give a good deal of atten- tion; andfto understand thoroughly what thesb considerations are‘, and I11 that Indy be involved in them, the door should be ed to ell who likely due‘ to his emotional distress causqthére is not only the r-ental and‘ physical. fatigue which was brought lijfthls way, but emotion- al distress brdlsturbdnco so upsets tbe.'di_g'estivo_ tract that the natural movements of stomach and intestine deldycg and often stopped for vfii@ute__s' and even hours. Constipa- litmiffpilowsfas u natural result. EfA-hd the-tonsils. s: well" as the tmgue, reflect the condition o_f the intestinal tract. 1n fact the ivery first trvhoent in tnnsilltis is not. to the throat but a dose or doses of ellomel, followed in four or flve hours by epsom salts, with the idea of cleansing the in- testine dndyrellevlng congestion. And the tonsils than in the relief thus obtained.‘ ‘ However, as mentioned before, after dud the disturbance of moving. be-| have evidence to offer or helpful sug- gestions tozmake. This appears to be the view of Hon. P. J. A. Cardin, IMinister of Marine and Fisheries, iwhoso deportment exercises control lover radio licensing and kindred mag. lters, and, having regard to all the ‘conditions and circumstances, it ls ithe only fair view. The Aird Commission. following what seems to have been a really l thorough investigation proposed that radio broadcasting be placed upon s basis of puallc ownership, operated |by s government-owned‘company, ‘and controlled, so far as local pro- lgrifnme stations are concerned. by ‘the provlndes. Each province-the gMaritlmes bblng grouped as one- _vvould have one high-powered sta- tionflrhe cpst would be $3,215,000, and the an ual operating colt l2,- l500,000. There are thdmdln recom- wmum? ca?“ ‘hmnm’ ' ‘ndfmendntions. based upon what". the m‘ - rhfrmtmm “m” °"3““l°,members of} the commission heard ,'“"' " Th‘ ‘°‘1“‘m"m°°' and saw in this and othe countries '“°““°"'d ‘W’ h“ m" "will w which tnqu mission le them. 1t “m”; l?“ “mt” h’ mm’ 7"“ b“. final legislative action is taken at all *5 l" "mliY "PW" M" ‘somber-mg the forthcoming session, it '4."9.\l'$'.“'ml°ui- much "W519 hdwill bu along. these lines," since they simply ignored the ldvkh are the linesiof the bill to be intro- fivlt- MW much dlmue rhw- duced by the ‘Government; tbs um- tflli-R lever 11 rein: to do to his native n m leave things as they are, heart. to sir nothin: of his iolntsiplus, perhaps. a larger measure of Tfllllhklflrm b? 8"}- istnte supervision, but if the special ;!".°' Yhfllmfliim l! You‘ RHOW has‘ committee chooses private in preter- a.‘ tendency to recur, and while it is'euce to public ownership, the bill is ‘conjjcniyent to bcgvdbleto tcllftbs sp- unlikely to be reported book to the preach _of b weather wben’ you House, and the main object of the hive rheumatic ffblnts, a. bibometer Aird Commission will have failed of is less painful. achievement. There can be no doubt _ And as tqhpsrt ‘" ‘s, rhcums- whatever that‘: remit of this kind acme. furpfshcs the mnlority ofiwould please s. great number of peo- ctses. ' _ lple who deslreto have things left as ‘ Don't'tske"_s ‘they are, and whose respect for the tonsils. _ ' [alleged benefits of public ownership chance on neglected _ I v_ _ ‘strong to offset a two hundred per went. increase in licence (egg, s; runs rsldu‘ Opposition l Private b. adcasting organizations, . , ‘ __ naturally. are opposed to the project- Q. Where is' the‘ C urch of Vlc- 9d “time. but they do not constitute tory? ind vnfyf ‘pp ein‘ 7 ithe whole position. The question A. rue ‘Church’ 6: Victory, orb" been or Isgbeln: studied" by "p nan.nmpasvvlptdrfa,"can. when»: or bum» hem"- » such s» ' ‘boards of trader and the yvlews of _ was or vrcrolty the 1mm Tobin- of Quebec near the ;snd operation‘ is not sufficiently; or n» moot-l in: ll oblntionahlo in principle, pm a ll opeuto serious Abuse. There tl a t’ system ll hal been recommended py‘, _. . dfflmnce of opinion. also. as to whe- l we: under such at the Alrd Commission are likely to be, of n. higher standard than those now , oflered upon a competflve basis. y SOMO téilhhltll mu hlVQ I150 presumed. but they m probably b: a ‘- kind that can be more ‘or less easily sltion p: the advertieer. . . Direct advertising iswholly elimin- ated under the ‘Alrd recommenda- tions, but provision is made for in- dlrectadvertlsing. _ In this respect inucfi ,de_pends ‘upon the; location of the "line between direct and indirect advertising. ff the radio public can- pod pbnln _ high class. entertainment except to an accompaniment of such dlrectadverlillhl l} is now broad- cast, many of them may be inclined to regard“ the pricejaf their enjoy- ment as far too lsigh. They do not like beingrsuddenly switched from grand opera to the merits of some particular line of household applianc- vocsl . and instrumental mastcrplcc-v ‘as to the self-made Erlglish of the Average announcer. Moreover, théex- cluslon of direct advertising from the air imposes no hardship upon busi- ness. Every. other medium is still available and open. and may be used to the fullest extent without incur- ring the resenment ‘of people whose goodwill the advertiser desires to en- list. Private ownership has done n. great deal for radio listeners in Can- ada, and perhaps such difficulties as have srlsenpcan be overcome without having recourse to government own- ership and, n‘. all probability, anoth- er set of difficulties. If more regula- tion is nccesse. y. it can ‘be provided. and there is a distinct - ibilitythat. a Commonscommtitee may decide upon": broadcasting system which will combine the best that private and public ownership can offer. m t SOUTH AFRICAN RIDDLE SOLVBD nunam. South Arr-lbs, Feb. 11.- (Brltish United Press)-i"Tho answer to the riddle of Zimbabwe has been found," declared Professor n ‘ nius on his arrival from Indll, whither he had gone to seek the missing link in a theory that the Zimbabwe ruins in Afrlcl. had their origin between 4,- ooo n. c. and 2,000 p. c. _ "In the region of Dhsrwar. in Southem India. he continued, "I dis- covered" the missing w " ‘." In brief, this evidence is that the religi- ous practices ofthe natives of south- enrfithddeiia" and bortuguesw" East Africa, which. include human. ‘sacri- fice, are exactly the same as those of Shlvalsm, the religious culture of Southern India. "The worship of the moon as a bull,"_ said Professor rrobenlus, "occurs today lu South Africa as in India. Similarly with the worship of the Evening Star is s goddess, to whom in secret places of the African forests young girls are offered as sacrifices. My investigations have proved that the Zimbabwe Colony was [of the Sumerian-Babylonian civiliza- ‘tion, thecentre of which was the Mesopotamia valley. . "Prom Southern Arabia these peo- ple sailed to Indlahnd Africa, for in all three places are ruins identical overcome; and thonthere is the po- ‘ , es, and from the classic beauty of " sin when Champlain hid the first building erected in‘ i608. The corner atone of the Church of Victory was "w" “divs-w m" u they hlll6‘h¢QfI_1Il'l9Y1¢-" Their object pt Zimbabwe JXPNIBHI. are instructive. 1119 Couu- ‘ was purely (o obtain mineral wealth. cll of the Calgary Board of ‘Prado, and we have proved from exqmlm. for example, hasgdeclared in favor- of tlon of ancient mines here that no laid by Bishop Laval in i888. In 1650 it received its Ipresent name to com- memoritc the‘ repulse of Phipps on the city ind spun in nu w mark private ownership and operation under strict government supervision. lthiaaction belnmtaken after‘! com- the second deliverance from the Eng-l mm” of ‘he Boyd’ -'pp°inmi i” [study the matter, had reached an fishnet drSll-l d Wlk.. e “n e r oven m “ u|entlrely different. decision. The ob- ‘I'm church Wis destroyed in theuectlom "m." .1 d n t ‘beige p: use "ind restored in nos and- y "f °° m" " ' m“ the main; completed u it a was.» y in I817. ' 1i .. l nan-nip fir, l ocIJLQoMzr/r. f». FOB L,‘ BpTILEFlELD l yTbe depth pf know hNlfCqllflltlY beén ‘grebter in this Province in mid- winter thin it bu; been this year. no inowmtorm has greatly added to phat wlsialrepdy, down. There has _ enubnsldérlbllef drifting’ but hand- lymbfeftbs "whiz u, unto. partway, train iitve at ‘betnf much‘ detained 8rd‘. anti-ion,- dp" - ‘bruit up» _ willed in ltur-ornn-rdw ‘ ‘ m" l‘ * ‘1“‘"“¢' "m" W" ' " " dud- " ~ Ylnlesa your fcct- may trend b. yotutg winds tread “ here; l ti. Many; musfutuing comers _flnd_ imp taelrndvibtuc w tum, ‘ ‘nchfl. d! .the_-bdnkm--d6,_.wldelf dlltrlbutlddfiupply lml- pgeqnne roam "1 imwflil avian. mm: l nrpmnm. add- habitually. f, ‘ and rabtwwacanhu rope-m! I111 oltmlll,» w lusufystl-lc utlblflhl lty In Prince county in endocri- ,xt lrupaér um; cofiditiomxltbiat . , . 1 “' Amfigghbvgupyed» "what a,“ A silence but the silence of n tear’. it ' mt may twins nqetbu-su n w wow who"! mo m- om» o: _ mo dc. ‘up and bbmluto- , . a A u; ‘ '~ I l r nnpduablrxr-bnr new» nap. adwwflt» "M Mb n ‘m: they nib t i gin-clear Vlfmoinv artery of our] “m” a "m! . g any system and imp a clur l: 11m broad Above n passionate vlllilliutfifled~in~ nnnbpblqxmi- m: 1w ‘ l y ¢ " , _. 9m can vaguely gum vim. . and sinjo and gay youth lcal thdp botbIpi-QQentcondiAlonefSpl lllllfld.‘ "l . " .- _. twhh“ m‘ "H “u” , Speak nowhvoe wordfldt only Aprils I I _ l a in N .. c» ‘. he l r ' ppimtptuspleybnii. , ,1 .0” " it“ W! 11a dull I . Irma of- can divination m» mu The lisfosJf sunrise, do not venture‘ .. I fewer“ xsfid: 14,000,000 kilograms (about 3 _0,D00 lbs.) of bronm were exported b ‘k to Southern Arabia. ' "The most important evidence,“ continued the scientist. "is the find- ilnz of ‘bronze - at. Zimbabwe. N» other people in Africa, save in a small part of Egypt, possessed tho knowi ‘ledge to make bronze," yct cvery ex- cavator st Zimbabwe has discovered promo ‘of dttype which ls identical ‘with that which I have Just found lnfloutherntlndil. y " “Therefore .1 definitely believe that ~hhd lts-iorlgln between 4,- 000 spd imtliyears before Christ, and m the centn 6f": "great y mining bonny which? existed until-boo u. c. in the llglono prettiest-of Southern Rhodesian actives, as they exist in, Bduthirlfindl’. Tliflhnilarltiu are ‘dnisfllug!’ ' ' “' » of radio broadcasting in Sweden is incoming the use o_f_win'd IIIIFFIWPWWm-w : .» ‘ ' ' ' i ..........._._,_____.. i‘ longest cure give you , v . "idslislbuv drew when " ‘ ‘your, life" trying mg .. cannot ‘ v. -.i7 p i w -. / "rap wetness... A A ' the most lastlngan4 ' youasli for H ‘_& N 5 v nlllack Twist. from" . . (, have the tlmejof ’ g chew the flavor out‘ _ of this fine tobacco. ,7. .1155 ' It‘ ‘“"ws “l IT" CEWIN hooooooooooooooooooooeoooe-e e FOR AROMA ‘AN n mans f NIC.IIQLS_QN_ (i o oau ,, USE BRAHMIN TEA Sold Only in Red. Airtight Packs" es .“»“»~»w»»“"z“; for the children. to meet. '_. lcntrate of~ interest. For particulars write, stating age. to‘ ‘ £5‘ " Co, ‘Lower Queen Street- ‘r ‘ ~ ' Provinclzi on: nnnvzsr is sun: v ~~ mam-planar: in the and pr mp Insurance. yields _- an unfailing harvest... The‘ bun-a pr m6’- unoertalntyill ‘ overcome and the savings let aside WILL PROVIDE pa}. tcctlon for your family. an income In old lge. an education V” or whatever requirements you luve planned 1 v . F No other method of saving can gin this assurance. and the premiums paid on. Great-West Life policies urn u excel- ‘ . QIOUS rLAvo r ' d ‘ , Lt ' _ _ _ < Charlottetown ’ ljtlilifljtf‘! -" The ‘Great-Walk Life .1 t l,. R y . v gt (i 1 i l i x z z i. t. § i i Danish agriculture is being "motor-y I lzed." there being nearly gpotrtppc, tors on farms of the country. , i Motorcycles in France now number 325.000.1111 increase three years. A qgooouauiy ‘HOT - WATERy § 1 B,9TTL15,]..§ u ncccssn y part of and‘ household equipment, " Ion "will ' find‘ u.» excellent "md- weather‘ "comm: and " ‘We hove uunbnslnp u. u»! our‘ ion-sf i- splendid IIM.~ non! (all hewetookl tools‘ v from and every-bottle INEIIII to ‘give perfect ' ' ‘Ml? ' , ‘f ~m_..¢u._.p.~.p.m=b irbuuty," g s" . ,. -. §\‘QQO§QQQQQQQQQQQO—J¥QQ’{ E. R". BR Q 146 Richmond i | _ Fire, Life,“ l4ccident} Sicko and Plate palace» Insurer: at ‘Lowest Ratey; Good Strong Stock Compaoiesirif; Agent atLSum/mersideyLloyd Lewis ' r oouoopoovoubkTToJoopooooooooaoooo-e-oooooun’ r: of 175,000 in ' RAW 1 > tel-fine menltlg. l. ll] i Ilflhv w...» .1. m‘ ‘e ~ " , has: “l M Queen Sir union, IJC. l. l Public Auction \_Ss‘l "" or » llilpplng page‘, will be f - ed without churn bi Mai. l- _ .Alfred»Frés, Ncwwfprk iwisfiflsitnilelili 1 i ABSORB ._ \ r ., __ "when the bowellf M19" etownf ' p‘ wry; - l e88 i , . . C8 i l e i ‘ '1 nil-ill’ Q t t 1 v-t runs .' "M: "-1. . " ,.,-. 1.- I26.