° \CF FOUR The Charlottetown Guardian l'ffhi1l|‘"| l.i t lul. ll (‘hvblrl H lit-Lon \Iar—l'r ll J K llurllrll |‘-~|~l £11m “..i \| "r-i-tm .1 K. nun-at l’ J I \ l) \ “ufhillllllll l). S. 0 a In n1. “talker and D. Ii. Currlo IIIIIIIIIIIZ 11.111. lions-int [M111 saw ill-r rut (In Itlfltl") mulled to h-lnvlrtl n. w; >1 m i..r vi" ‘l!’ '"'""“"" mill.- Lllu ...t i-itttlt i "i" t-t-r 2MP l"! "WM" )l.i i.-.t t.» I .....t-t-.t inn] 1mm: sun-u {ii Hl/NUAL .\l.\\‘ 431M193“: “The illllllgS That Matter" Siqiiiiilitiitit Trade Figures vent" (Ein- itrts iroiii 111.4 per ;ll'L_‘\l Cl‘- ~trt< ‘tad -<tr cent. i." -ni t.e l-li-titt-r- "o rtliotit two 1c (tiller ilziiid. l 1611 l> an air on the ground ui tvliich "Iilti Save 'the King" is sometimes claimed lJ\' 5uot!.-'1-‘-H llll lTllfi ritvthm and’ melodv are verv ililfil". i it is in the minor key. A ballad wzis first priut ed in i669. and still another b; the great! F-IIQ li-h genius. Purcell. was printl-tl iii Wi/c-Illll-"j the rhythm tutti. phrase; or" "(god Save the Kittg" and even the unequal length oi’ the tttv had existed bvittrt llcnry Carey's ti: c. The melody of the British national aiatlttn “as a great favorite with the oiil masters. lit-e- thoven wrote seven variatiltiu tin it for tit..- piano and also introduced it in his "ilztttlc Svm- pit/tn)” at which time iie made an eiitrv iri his journal. "l iittist show the lZitgli-it ttitat a bless- ing they itate in ‘Cod Save the Kiiigf" ll1t_\llll. too, during his \'l~ll> to ifnqlziiitl. oi- ten envied the English tiieir glt-ri-"tti- anthem an‘? he dt-tr-rtttiitetl to write a irwa-"itt aiititeni for .\ti-:ri:t. l own llCll'i\'(‘(l coiiittr)". lit ijof ht- ct-ittposrl the hymn. "(Jud Prcsertt- the iftii- gk-rttr". wixcit received a spEeii-"lz-n ovtlti-ut and a lasting p'il*lliZll’lI_\'. ' ' e time of "(jolt fave the Kitty" .. digitity to the firs: ltzili, wit? ~;.\" i-ztr- iit i“l‘t',_'lll. and the tiiieipirli lenwh (‘l the ' Tilt" fir"! of ~‘.\' itars and the ~t-t"- . ‘airs-is its Ill-Jrl csseittiitl pet" and cltltriit. W; (t; t. t l l Ii\ 1 (Editorial Notes 1 iiitiaiiii. lgilti. n- a- n I iliittt .\'ov;l .\_-.""ll3 caitipztigi". ttr-titti-es to lit‘ a ~i~~rt and itttttr one. t n n is .r l‘.\\‘.(f. cl-l-ril on iirirla)" to rc-tgtctt toilztt" i.. .'lll"'.i'lt'r three wctaka fi i I ‘- lieriiizitrti- Ttilllllll ~.~ t-i LflHlTIlllIrt pester i~ as rt-Valtlc and tru-tttttrtitt" as it.- itrttierliiztl paper." >51 lti - i l l l There is still a Natitttttil 'i~\"t~ritiitt-ztt fit i‘- mt. titrttigh it l1l€l_\‘ ~eeitt iiiiiii) to ll- for a it- Hl lfzirl to lit one or the two ill-Hut‘ fl'lll't‘~t'lllt't.- i tiw- and the other an Oxford jifillllldlt. i 1K t T i The {Quinn birthrlztyt con-E-ttr-l priitiztrilt in lirifllfllllg lots of ftiii and pltwviirt- {or ll!lll't'~— a good iil-giiiiiittg in the fl('\t‘ll>l|lll':lll of tht spirit of tin-cliishncss-tltiiil; ~t' 1ttltt-r~ fir-t, a= n a Yi-twtttttt Szlittticl, who has tll-scrtt-il the lcztdcr- slli]: iii the Liberals in the lloti-t- of t'rtitttttitit< for a safe scat in the lli-tisc oi l.u'l'll~'. izltlttrt-tl a Free Tirade resolution at It Liberal itzirtt" e ~11- vt-iition at lluxtott. llcrlrvsiiire. .\t this iii-tuner it looks like an In hlflllllrllllll card. ' i ¥ ¥ \\'ert- it not for the hrrvzil dt-crct- spttciiit".'ill_v _ aitotit to per ..i-ti >t:-.te- lll the 45 pi-r 11.1, in thei to ‘gt-cit llritztiti 39 twl with 37 pcr i- uiiiler-tl-ttd to "'.t- tttcre-"t-e in Lttiiatlittit ‘ . c HiV-‘t ' ‘itial United ocity agree- . ‘ liililiti‘ CPU‘ . '.\htt-l~ salt-s to 5-’ 471-474 w , l ET‘ "ll Sultr- ‘ttttsitic-s iii the .'tgrl: in. chine iitdti-tries t‘.'i~i'(l t'l’~'i1i'l l ritllzittg-itiill in- tt- $i,-.I>o4.4_»8. iroitt '$_=.ri_;_=.f'-.t_z to '.\l-. up from 37,-‘ trtitt~. tip -'lI<-- lll~ ; ti».- from . ;“t\'»_I<II itt:l‘__'1i/.ii1t'-, tip front t : earIy vegetables upl United States <3 ~$31'i9.85/».000, as l; ctjooo in the previous year " _l-‘ i twr c» U. jales of Canadian Y '- .tl"l States. on the other "wit Stjttitllxxxl to $417,547,- - 13.4, pi-r cent. an wit; of the picture. the it» t-fit was fiat: di~til1cr_v. _. ~ '1» tltt; l<e~pti3>lic jutitpittg from ..:..i't_; if," to >_*_*.o_»t‘..$4g, A Tune \Vith A History SK us realize the historic interest ‘W tttt-it-rl" of otir National Anthem. .\ corrt ~ Tioroiito iélolte and .\lail ht- ;t1t . .'.t"it~ on thi- >lll!l(.'<‘[. The lllti'l'.‘_‘-. tr/tvi-il itacl; to the early rlttircli mind by the itilgrints, but hit“- mudt of it ltit- lwrll compiled from these old airs probably nr-wr w-Tl lie known. It is claim- t-tl it; l1;- tlttt Scotch. and liy the hntiiclt, ziii-l .=ii< ii in the ljeriiiaiis. thc United Stall-s and \ii . 1n rh-rtiiniijt" k sllllfl to "lleil tlir im Sie- gv-luwtv.“ Itinl iit the [hilt-fl $tatcs to “.\ly (‘niiiitrt "lk iii 'l'hi~<-." The authorship of both words ‘and tttiz-it- oi "Kind Save. the King" has iwt-itr he: it il-tiittitclv proved. .\s earl)" as 1545. I-‘rnnth, tho ltiqitflilll. tiuott-rra watclnvtird of the llll\'_\' ulilltl Slivr- the King," with the coun- ter-iutt "ln-ttg tt- Reign (‘ivvr L's." “int-l .\':t\l- tltt» King“ is the refrain of a hal- litil in tin/It. and "lil-il $avc tharles the King, (ltlf Rot-til l<~_\.. Grant llim Long to Reign in Pcact- mid vl-tjf‘ is the opening of another ballad tinting illmttt t/ttz, The antht-itt as we now know Vi; tinnit- its ti npplwlnttict~ at a dinner given in Up, [l] colt-l j ' the taking of Piirttihello by 4,\ill1lil'-'ll \'i~r;ioii, Not". go, 1730. when it is said to have ltr-t 11 sting hy li"lll’_\' Carey as his own inn, In in; ii ll"t‘illlll‘ ptihliclv known h" lit-v": <" g at tltt- theatres as a “loyal song" "rriiii! thi- Sentiisli Fvltvlllllll. The Pretender was r-vl-tinil-rl :11 lViiiiltiirgh, Sept. 1ft. 17.1<. and 1'1" fir~t .'l]1|’)(“lf‘{ll1L‘1’ of "(ind Srlvc the King" ill till‘ l‘_.il' ii-llt "in ‘on tin-ts :1 fl-w ti-tt-s later at l)l'lll'_\' Lane. I". I-‘i- I745. llr. 'l'lmm:is .\riie harinrmiretl i‘. znttl lti-tlt v."'tl"l'~‘ niiil music were niililislictl in t ti-tttlt-iiizifs llwtznviiie. (lctolier. 174;. A §Clllllll catrul, "Kentettiber O Thou Man," in l ilt-priviitt; the tin-posed l)l.lt‘llt‘~> t-t ‘Wittil-itr oi the use of the title “llcr l\'o_v:tl liiglttiti-s" tioilt- t‘ ing. iit the 1il‘(lll‘l3f'_\‘ Cuttr-e could ltatvt- ]tl't"\’k'llICll her as-untiitg it. iliherc llfilllLf no sticlt thing :1- ittiorgztitzttic nttirriztgc iit ‘tritaiit, the trttv- ,ttirall_v assumes the name and eltrrespotitliiig titles of the htisliztiirl. in k i The .\pril extiort of l)llllt'r and Cllvest" ‘.\"l.~' higher than iii the COFHKIYI-llillllfi itioiiili lll~l vezir. Cheese exports iitereiiserl to $109,140 from Syrzots‘, ivltiie lititter rose to $io,4;4 from $7.» The Tjnited States. the hinted lviitg-loittl and Jamaica were the chief purchasers of cheese. l and Newfotiiirllaiirl and the sittziller i-lriti-li \\'e.~"t ' litdies took a large part of the ltnitttr. i i 7M “We are rtbvittttsh- going into a rteriitd of, higher prices and higher costs. ztitrl m)" coit- fident expectation is that we will see fivc cents established as the niininitiitt price to suitscrihers, of a daily paper." declares colonel Frank Knox iPUTJllSlICT of the Chicago Daily News. "The sooner this wholesoiite division between reader and advertiser is: established the better. .\ii_\"- thing less than three cents in an unfair lnirileit - to pUI on the publisher." fi l! a 3t“ l Cattle exports dtiritig April were not llléllll-i taincrl at the levels of the corresponding itiottti‘. ‘t last year, dropping t0 19.619 head of the value“ of $1,012,160 a5 compared with 39.179 hcztd rtt Y 51.892665. The export of 18.840 head to the United States were of the value of Sg65.352. The decline was accouhted for in hccf cattle weigh- ing over 70o lb., which class fell to 10.615 iit-ad t valued at $86091! front 33.898 head at $1, l 779K259- ! i I! The rapidly approaching stinmicr is to be an “outtloor" season in even more marked degree than is usually the case. according to numerous reports. Merchandisers are pointing to the sales of automobiles as evidence of this and sports- wear manufacturcrs‘ sales confirm the view Bathing costume manufacturers believe that people will cover up more 0n the beach this year than last and anticipate enlarged opportun- ities for sales of beachwear other than swim stilts. Much business in equipment and cloth- ing for trailer tourists is also expected. a a m o a o Now that there is an historic change in the British Administration it n1ay be well to recall a few salient dates in British ltistory tending to the. greater development of democratic govern- ment: l ' med Ali brttitt-‘ttvs at zia- i.- . as 1t was forty yea _ Tar . IJLABLQHETIFW notes By ine way The Rotarian Jlugauine give; 1h; u» utnll]; umcllllUll :0 J15 capuou d- ~~ ~\>= -' - ‘ll-ic- persuil “no L: going to catzy oit “ha. you nave stapect. h. l; to eat wltt-te you are l t you are gu." tutu-ac. bu‘. ' 0e carried out depends n. Ev en if you matte Leagues cnies, es and empires. He '.s Qchllg 1o more ill and [B56 over your chumps-s. cCFAOOlE. uitlirerslues. cor- pozacozas counctis. and PTDODS. Al. you: “on. going to be Judged and act; and coitoenineo 0y niin. ‘the 112.1. e and desnny o: hutnanky" are iii ' ianus so t ntlght be Well, to tentlozi '.o him now." A Dundee University professor in tllélflllt": re'.eittl;; informed a Glas- gbtv audience that eatzng for many gratification OI the senses, 01' taste. a soul occasion sing. for sort ' . [Jlcflélllg ' skillet". in L2.‘ tor t. is seXxstiaALZ . lie ties- cz-zbeti as "datigerotis crimutnls. - Ex. Premier Hepburn's stand against Tzldifiil tttttucittes Lll Ontario has‘ ' Maris" oimioaai of the Hon. rice Dup. la. Premier o: Que- Attci at me time.‘ My.‘ Dsp e-sis. a vative. doc-s noi-l he.» ta. " t: the Doniznzon ‘ ‘vita: he terms 1L5 on in comuatzittg = Dottmioti au- Iflllafid :0 ltseti tlta". COnllIltlH- om enzerttig the l0 . “Tllllzlll. Perhaps b". too i211‘. but tne 1L .\ll'. K111i; might n a sti-oitg twsltzoit, easily ltatc in stipport of Hepburn and ‘flfllsbll; 5e tiisnppout c‘: . he did no". (to s.i.—\\.'ti1cl.>or Bad lies insult the intelligence of tn whom tltcv ate told. Do arts really tfiljlfct us to be- the firm of Alohaninted I;.ti .111 .j.:;a'1"zi1 deal- wi it a not work of chain stores ittt the Ettrtlier East-move .1 — if." grra. A .- to lwttc-rii themselves tn t it-tnote p011 as of Abyssntia. the lea» lmpo an. and t remunera- 2h" o’. a ~ of thezt" vast ‘ <’l1'-¢'I'lir:se‘. is the acu. a- ' brvtigltt for- . the Rloltam» used as con-l tres fcr atttt-ttili an £‘.\i!.0ll:lg(3. and‘ tha". the i s thein_ . t auuttis .f the Brit- . Vftlllill be h» _p aiisible t|.a‘ tit": kratit-ltes oi "tn iit Enltlaitd tire ltotbccls‘ tlious propacntiidti organized he United Stair-.- s of 'llt-.l‘ tioit cthzctt kart. 1'. :.\ a Stta ttged t t thr- Anterit-ntt on TYlllll. ‘ With the pulil alion 0f the re-, port o2 the .\Itii1~.i"_v ot Health n- qtii:_. iitto titaterititl mot". ‘ the lilo! tnctise for iittictoit i111 pone and int-re shotilzl now he a bu: and tinreleittittu ativ-k upon the 1110.‘! obstutac prob of the health. lll servit-sn» In alzttns: t-"retgv other way tlr. itaiiottls ltt-alih is improving. Tll‘? death rate of infants ltlts been‘ h . '1 cltilclbzrtlt has tirtii terL-tl. It reitiaitted almost ll. " ago . . It is tlv: ottzstttttdzttg lailtirt- of mcdlcttte‘ and of {he state and local medical] serfice. Btit ll ts~iiot a fatlure based; upon helpless ignorance of why mothers die in childbirth. The ex-I cuse cannot be advanced that the‘; qilrr: for knowledge has proved uit- l availing. The catisv of the high rate , of maternal mortality s kitowit well etiough. And the failure is one of orcatiization. intelligence and social enet"tz_v.—l_lon;l0n Daily Herald. Principal “organ of hlcGill de- plores the tendency to “leave things to the government." it were merely" a matter of Weaving" things to the government it wouldn't be so bad. What, actually happens ls that. nearly everything is wshed tipon the govemincnt.-—Ott,a\va Journal. From the Conservative Foreign Affairs Committee gestlon that Britain should take a closet interest in Central Etirope. ‘Britain's only lHIETGSL "n Central Europe is to keep out of its dangers and entanglements. Interference in the quarrels of others means war and Britain. of all rtatons. least wants that. ft is noticeable among other members of the Committee desirous of plunging the country into the battles and dangers of Central Etirope are several Con- servatives who showed no great interst. 1n rearmainent. As usual. those who would provoke trouble are those who are least ready to prepare for it. They are not reel- lsts. No Briton ls tzoing to shed his blood over an Austrian or Little En- ntains-Keep truth-London Sunday Dispatch. Obviously the administration can boast that its trade pacts have aetileved their purpose. namely. to throw open our rlelt ntnrket to for- eign farmers and manufacturers. President Roosevelt has allowed Secretary Hull and his trade theor- ists in the department of stat/e to use the president's power to cut. any tnrlfl rate as much as fifty per cent. Tariff cuts granted to one country are appred to goods from- most other countries. The dL-iustrotis results become plalner month after month. Will Mr. Hull whoop for joy when imports are twice as great. as exports? Will he say that our flld 00 foreign employment is part of the admltilstraiiottk bent-voleneefil-New Magna Carta 1215 Model Parliament 1205 Confirmation Cartarum 1:97 Fettlement of the Crown r485 Union of Crowns of England and Scotland 1603 Petition of Right 16:8 Declaration of Right 1088 Hill of Rights 1689 Triennial Act i693 Act of Settlement i700 Legislative Union of England and Scotland 1706 Reform Act 1832 British Nnrrrrmrterrcaiaet” ' i867 l'itimt of South Africa 1010 (ireat \\'ar H114 (ireat \\'ar Arntistice 1111B Treaty of Versailles Hi") First meeting of League of Nations tozo .\l)lll(‘i'lilfll‘l oi King liilvard Ylll Fifth Coronation of George V1 I957 v York Siin. i filnee lhr- overthrow of the old regime in 'I‘iit‘ke_v. the Reptiblic has ,fl(l(iEd 1.681 miles to the railway l lrms of the country of which 22 m .113 and elite-nu to Lnuigs which t you '.;l.n.-: are so ttnportalit. W116i)‘ You may auop: all,- now -‘ - treaties he Wlli nave to titan-Q i W011i 20 jéflfS 8Q!) 8-5 B member 01' I . “l? and trials so often experienced by _ as a tleaizng house on all subjects comes the sug-l tente quarrel. The Brit sh motto re- , t l i Briana I’. iititevizsrtso HARD OI‘ HEAR-i two A-RQM salsa A uaaul. Bohmlfl. CAP 1N LIFE Any family who has one of 1L3‘, members aztnctea WTJI partial oeai- ‘, tress or "nard of hear 11g as it is! $101M: 1 110w more properly called, soirieututg oi tne dilitcuities, one ntisunuerstatittings and the periodal oi ciepressioti not only- 0t the at rizttea one out of the whole nonse- ftoic. fortunately yust as Organ“- atiun; 101‘ 111v: olmu are now quite rumerous. so also are the branches o: ‘te AJIlGIJCS-H Society tor me Hard oi Hearing being organized m many Culeb, itxztt Headquarters loc- ate-o a: i541‘. $5111 St. N. W., Wasn- zngzott, D. c. A moot. interesting and helpful OXQAZIIZBZLOX} formerly known - as the speech Readers GllLd of Bos- ton, non" known as the Boston Guild to: me Hard of Hearing, began its a part of the 150M011 Council of bOClai Agencies. It 1s a "Member- snzp coporation offering free m- iornruon and consultation service regal‘ "lug tlte problems of GEIBCLIVE neazuig and providing opportunity 01' reattiusuitetii. to persons wno nate acquired deafness." It is also a member or branch of the Amer- ica". swzety- for the Hard of Bear- mg. flit forming of this group or otganizatiott "was the outcome of reanaauuii on me part Of teachers of lip read ng, themselves tiara o1 lieariitg Jtnai. abate should ue a centre LII Boston-outside the bCll0Ul1‘OOIl)—V\'ll€l'€ the aiiiiculries titote who are acquiring deatness cutlJu be CulLitYUClaYbly discussed ant. perhaps overcome. Those strug- s-nng tnrouglt the c ouds o1 discour- agcment oiten need the message of and itispiiation derived from those who "have overcome.‘ It was believ- e. that a little who esoine phlos- otitty. u little social comradeship, and a little coitstructtve thougni. tutnc. be embodied in and expressed thrciigtt aUCll aui organization.’ The obiect 0t the guild is to serve reltlltllg to hard of ltcarliig. Hard of hearing persons are encouraged to stud)" lip reading. Nerve tension and qlfillfl are greatly" lessened when eyes are maimed to make up art idling ears. They are also at». .1 to find an electrical or other ax. I i" they have sufficient hearlngi. lne Gui (l tries to see that all pzsstb e is dore to prevent hard of lteuizng being a handicap in life. is at” edZLQm/itr/t. f i THE LAST Lixcsor "P5359155 LOST" , ~Thty lcolsutg backfa-ll the Eastern T‘ side belteld rU late their happie seat, Wflvu _t.- l U) that flaming Brand. tlie time W tlt c-teauttil Faces tlirongkf and ficrze Atmes: Some i:a.tii"al wars they dropped. but wiped them soon; Tilt: World was all before wiiere to choose them, d. Yet the tIc-azltrate of women The“ place °f m“ and Hmddence their guide: b,“ n, h gh now - They hand in hand with wandering steps and slow, Through been took their solitary way. —Jolm Milton. About “Our Mrs. Simpsoni” IA Letter to the St. Thomas Timeo- Journal.) Slr:—-Let me tell you about our Mrs. Simpson. She 1s the most useful. helpful woman 1n our world. yet never has she been "in the headlines as news. The most, she ever gets is tlwo lines: “Mrs. Robt. Simpson is the convenor of the lunch committee at the annual tea meeting of Grace Church." Of late every once in so o ten someone will ask: "Say, did you hear the latest story about. Mrs. Simpson?" A vtave of horror pass- es over faces of the audience and eyes get round-"Not OUR Mrs, S‘mps0n?“ "Oh. My. NO! I mean THE Mrs. Simpson." “Ob! Her!" and our interest. drops to normal. Our Mrs. Simpson ls fair, and fat. and forty, and she does not care. She never gives it a thought. a day. She knows she 15 rat, be. cause she can always wear blue, She pretends she broke the last scales she was weighed on. Ask her age and she has to ifiiidyfla mlmlw; ‘Well. I was about slX years old when Queen Victoria died-and that was 1n 1901 __rmd that. ls 36 years ago-Dear met how time does fly. I can still re- member as ff lt. was yesterday. the bells tolling and the heavy bladk drapes 1n our church-I've done a lot. of dishes since then." Our Mrs. Simpson does riot have to wear dresses front Parts. being one of those fortunate persons who can wear anything and lock lovely tn ft. She looks perfectly grand ln blue beaded crepe. or a black fox fur. or ln a blue checked print. allover apron. she always has a clean. well-brushed look and comes down an aisle. or a street. like A sail-boat 1n a clear west. wind. All‘: Well-Full Speed Ahead! She has lived all her life 0n the same street. in the same house with a clean dOOT-SMQLQCTQBTUIIIQ being standard. ‘fhls brlngsthetotal exLstlng mileage up to approxi- mately 4.220 miles of which 1'74 nillrs are narrow gauge. Railway extension is part of the five-year rvim of industrial development llrfiWIl up in the winter of 133-34.- lies are narrow gauge, the balance l Bx. GUARDIAN! I TA Policy for Every Person and Every Purse UNMARRIED . . . btit with a widowed mother and two younger brothers dependent upon his aid! A responsibility that worried him, until he learned that The Great -West Life could provide the insurance programme to meet his needs. Now he has the satisfaction of knowing that he has started otit on the right path to future security-—that he has protected his loved ones during the present—- and that, as new needs arise, they can be filled by this great Canadian company. and every purse.” “A policy for MAY Q1, i937 CV81’ y PCISOH Get to know a Great-West man. HYNDMAN 81 CO. LTD, Provincial Managers ... uR hi‘ in etery window" and fiotvers alll over the _\at"d. Etflil‘ Suit a.\' t ntoniii; she "cos to lit-t" church and sings tn ..i c1101" zxliit or‘ shine. Every sfttttlay" her washing flies in white. blue and P clouds. Every sutiirtiav sh: spicy r-lling thing's. . [ivory Wccatestlay i-hc goes to Ladies Aid. and who; they cmtel, around with a list says. “Sure. I'll = help. what do you want me to do?" She is the sort of person who brings the presstil chicken whle others bring sandwiches or a cake. She is the person who gets places 0n time to btilltl the fire and stays to the last to help wash the dishrs. She always has time to take a quilt home to b ntl nr entertain the visiting deliualos. Every ltarrasvd pastor knows he can depend on NI" . S nip-t. " 1 help She docs not play golf oi" bridge. ' She never seems to get the time for lt. Anyway the garden hoe- lng ever)" tncritzng has intich the same strokes. She likes :1 game of cards Winter evenings. a game you | can talk and visit over. She serves , the sort t‘! lunch after the game' that you can bite into and lots of I hot creamy coffee. It is no trouble. t Nothlntz she does is any trouble t0 5 her. She likes {setting tip nice meals. she likes a clean hottse and ‘ garden. she likes to help troubled l people. "It's no trouble." She does not read very mtich for the same lat-k of time. However. every night and morning she gets out her Bible and reads a chapter as she promised her granny 10m,’ years ago. It. sort of starts and settles the day for her. She knows every person In her town. every child's name and every dog. When any person ls ill or 1n trouble she always happens to be passing by and drops in to leave something on the kitchen table covered with a white cloth. She can wash a new baby or comb a dead person's hair “the way mother always wore it." She can take home the ironing or bribe a small boy to ‘be very. very still. She has no children left at. home now but attmys seems to be too busy to get her pink print made up. so she gives it. to the little sewlniz woman down her street who needs the work. . She has been married twenty- one years to the same olrl husband (the old-fashioned person) a quiet.- talklng. grey, little man who never says much about love and romance: but hLs eyes follow her about the house with a smile ln them. and when he turns the corner of his street at 6.10 every evening his feet hurry a hit. She always sees him as he comes by the bl: elm and starts tho gas tinder the kettle, pushes over the meat. and remarks brightly: "Here's Father! You Tltrer. get rhltht. off that. chali- now." . She always rvntcmht-rs to ted‘ him how runny St ivns at the met-t- i lng today and all the news she heard down town. He listens and smiles. shr- talks arid knits. ‘Vhont a I l she Wfllkl abroad down our streets, Cltiu-lonetown guest LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup ot Full Flavoured Tea Use BRA HMIN ‘Orange Peltoe Tea Simpson.’ "Isn't U115 a lovely day!" “You lock in when you come back." "I like your hat, it's be- coming to you." When she enters a shop or a restaurant. no screens are put. up to hide her. Dear me! She sails down the middle aslc and talks to everyone. ‘Oh, Mrs. Simpson. be sure and don't forget choli- practice tomorrow eve. We want you, there Ls a new anthem." "Grammar. PLEASE, give nickle for an lee-cream cone." "Mrs. Simpson. did you get. that. list? I'm depending on you." “Look! see my new ‘toos.’ shopmeft bow with real pleasure to her. "Good-day. Henri. how 1s that. new boy at your house?“ "Fine. Misses! He is a good baby and my woman she say. “Thank you for the oh so nice plet" O O I O She has a married daughter over on the next. street with a ma» months-old granddaughter. She runs over to see them eve-try day of her llfe. She thinks it. Ls the only baby that was s-rer._.ba-.n_ absolutely perfect, "The very darllngest baby you ever dld see and she lmows me already, and can say. ‘Gt-ammo. Grammy.’ just B3 Dlaln. AS PLAIN. Evert if I do my it myself she ls just the loveliest ba-bv I ever saw ‘n all my life. Father says she looks like me, but. he's Irish, that's Just his “NERVES” SHE CALLED IT Luin| interni- |||in| friends-Ill! uupvavodution hdnranylilood quince uid "HI- Flfillll. handle, 4 “m. dinner Budd's Kidney Pill; me B- The . _-- '--.¢\._'*_._.. a everybody calls: "Hell therellvlrs.‘ talk. I am just a common 10o n! t person." Sure, just an ordinary. good k114i. i useful woman, that's all our .\ll‘5» Simpson ls. West Lorne ET C‘ Cans of worms for fishermen t0 use for bait are sold by a .\1.t.~-- achusetts inventors machine ttttett _a coin is dropped in a slot. l Pigments for ' 00101-1118 lmw‘ stone for decorative purposes hive been invented that. penetrate '11P stone and are virtually perntniirnt- FlTllFh the Recent. decrees of the Government have increased number of workers beneffttiit: l)? about ,0.- the 40-hour week to 9mm .....lf_ll..E..llEllTATl\lE FORMALIN one of the best known preventative; for SMUT 0N GRAIN An eflecllve. efficient and proven remedy. Formalln is l ehcarl "l" thoroughly effective remI-‘fly- Grnln grower: would be WI!" to not promptly. ln order to have need properly treated hfl- foro sowing. One pint to every 40 gallon! of water. Pull dlreatlom will! every order. Do not delay. Write In f0" one today. Mall Order: promptly M- tend "d in. TIIE TWO MAGS nntiosrons l mom»: 315 l