...., . -.--._........¢.-......“...-¢.‘ _ f l: {Ttssued by this Government’ _ {have reached thc to.al amount of ':;2,cso,00o. flowing“ was of course to dlscrc..it the Government by inlplying that, ‘ sumed office wesc to moot Conserva- . . considerably exceeded Mr, 01mm- ' _ berlairrs estimates, while expendi- ‘ and that largely due to higher pay- ‘ " merits on unemployment relief. But, ‘ . ldltol obi lounging "-01 Aonorlguq Fllllllfi-YIIII THOSE BOND Issues The christened spirit in which the Opposition members returned home yesterday is reflected in our cou- temporarys editorial corn ts. It no longer refers to thc "huge bor- rowings" of the Maclvlillan Goiern- lnent, as it did persistently during the legislative recess. Instead, it re- fers to the authority given the Gov- ernment to issue‘ debentures for $200,000 (for the purpose of con- structing a new ferry steamer for the Charlottetown-Wacky Point ser- vice, for repairs to the Provincial Building and for permanent surfac- ed highway) and says that if all this, ' Government $15,570 for legal services __ amount is expcnded "the debentures will The use of thc expression bdrm i the bond issues raised since it as- tive expenditures. This propaganda was effectively" answered in thc Ixg- i lslature on Tuesday by the Premier, and Hon. Mr. MRCLCan followed up the Premier's statement with an analysis of the figures. He showed clearly that on Dcc. 31, 1931, a few months after the Conservatives as- sumed ofiice, there was due on de- bentures, less sinking fund, $1,605,- 918.68; on bonds of 1921 flotation, $77,516.15, and on bank overdraft, $l,35(i.592.G5, a. iolall of $3,033,757.48. 0n Dcc. 31, 1934, there was duo on llAlllllTTETilVlI GIIAIlIII win...- "om". arr-I'm, .1- vs-u-mue». a n. mun. 1.1.! - loaning-JAIN ~00! l) l IRIIIIOO. I n1 u I uunllmloflwlyoulfllodvollndolvclfl. l’l.:“udla1ii_c)_ul_oll_c_d_l_n_|hlnoo no! Uri-Bod FRIDAY, APRIL S, 1985- D I C lunch. I J l. Wjllor old l) l fouls». , Illlcerals will be whistling tonight to keep their courage up after their disastrous legislative exper- ience. Never hitherto has there been an Opposition so much on the defensive in an election-year session of the legislature. A Liberal feast of fat thlnss in Lent, and especially on a Friday on] the eve of Holy Week, is to sayl the least of it in bad taste, worsel if possible, than holding a politicali meeting in. summerslde on thef Sabbath. The recent White Commission on; Maritime claims cost the Federali alone, the chief items being‘ for, fees of counsel representing the. , Federal Government as follows: Mr. C. G. Heivard. Montreal, $7,960, for services and $1,100 for expenses; Mr. F. S. Rugg, Bherbrooke. $5.283 for services and $1,217 for expanses. What must the annual income of such lawyers be if for ore case they average $7.785 each? Many people will be interested to learn that s. special Jubilee anthem has been published by Principal MacMlllan of the‘ Toronto Conserv- atory of Music for use in Canadian churches in connection with the Jubilee services, proceeds from the sale of which will go to King George's Cancer Fund. Words of the Anglican prayer book version of the 21st Psalm and two verses debentures less sinking hind, $3,- 801,371.20, on bank overdraft, $317,- 201.61, or a. total of $3,938,572.81. Deducting the total as at Dec. 31, 1061, and adding old age pensions, I08, $33,137.05, there was left $927,- 052.38 which represented thc in- creastml debt after paying sinking fund on debentures. A BRITISH SURPLUS Almost to the end of thc British financial year, there was specula- tion as to whether the United rhuig- dom would end up with a small sur- plus or a nmoll deficit; Actually, however, the final figures show guitc a comfortable surplus, amount- ing to £7,500,000 or roughly $36,000,- 000, l. sum not to be despised even on so largo c. total accounting. This may look small when compared with last year's thumping surplus of over 231,000,000. But. as the Montreal Star points out, it looks very hand- oome indeed when contrasted with tho $38,000,000 deficit of two years 980- ' Revenues, particularly income tax, cures exceeded them only slightly, of a hymn in the United Church hvmnary "The King. Oh Lord, His Heart to Thee Upraiseth," provide the text for the anthem. Mr. Buchan is neither the first commoner outside the Civil Ser- vice to be appointed a governor- general in the Domlnions, nor the first to be appointed Governor cen- eral of Canada. Lord MacMi1lan has been searching the records and finds a precedent in 1968 when sir John Young was appointed to suc- ceed Iiord Monck, after whom Moncton was named. 1t was two years later that SirRobert was rais- ed to the peerage as Lord Llsgar. 1t ll expected Mr/nuchoh will re- ceive a. cimilar honor prior to his assuming duty, which ls unlikely l0 be until after the election. The Hepburn Government started legislation to void Hydro-Electric contracts with limited hydro-elec- tric companies, and immediately then was o. slump in stocks. Mean- time some one having inside know- ledge C! Bepburzrs intention: un- loaded their holdings and escaped loss. Now the wise Mr. Hepburn has directed his Securities Commission- er, Mr. J. W. Godfrey, K.C., to with Hitler setting Eurcpes nerves on edge, and every nation increasing -ormnments, there is littl; prospect of relief in the forthcoming British budget. For already the country A has been presented with consider- able increases in Army, Navy and Force estimates. Balanced budgets, of course, make for business confidence. There can be little doubt but that the sound ‘_-,- -__- British budgetary policy of Mr. Chamberlain indirectly accounts for a good deal of Brilalns remarkable trade revival last year. Thus it is no accidentJhat on the same day that the surplus is announced the British Board of Trade reports that the last financial year provided an all-time record in British industrial --actlvity, which went ahead of the 1929 total. Activity in non-ferrous metals was particularly high, with iron and stcel enjoying a revival as "i well, and even industries like tex- tiles-so long depressed-contribut- lhg to the rise. Building activity also was par- ticularly notable in Britain last year, in contrast with conditions in most o! the rest of the world. At the some time the price levels remain- od practically stable, thanks to a Iound currency management. in *'- spite of the general rise of prices ‘i? 41-, u; the United States. All in all it appears that John Bull runs his ....-- concerns-about ls well ac anybody 2on4 thrives, on balanced budgets. §pprrplc14p lvoras ----_ s. " m3. ‘is; and m. arms. uh- 1 manna- plumlc mimoualy of opinion that itir n. [Qqfl this; to have ii bcd-meuiory. _ liabilit- ‘lity to but . 9° vii-Hive ascertain the names of the heavy sellers, and to check for the leak of confidential information which gave these friends of the govern- menVsuch unfair advantage. A book-“The Administration of Lord Duffcrln in Canmdlf-believ- ed to be the first item sold over the telephone, has been added to exhibits at tie Alexander Graham Bell museum on the Bell homestead near Brantford. where the tele- phone was invented. An agent sold the book over the newly invented phone in November, i878, to Alex- ander Graham Ball, the inventor, at the time visiting his parents lure. Equally interesting in this respect would b? the first telephone order for $100,000 worth of road machines sent by Hon. Mr. Maclntyre when Minister of Public Works. Our new Governor General (Mr. John Buchan) is not only a dia- tinguished novelist but an canop- tionclly good story teller in com- pany, and especially at the expense of his own brither ficots. Here are three which he told in Holyrood Palace when presiding at n. Royal Bligh Commission '5 dinner to the "nether-e and Brethren" o! the General Assembly: A Scottish sold- ier from the village cf Rnthiemur- onus was asked where he was wounded during the Iraq campaign. He replied in brood Doric: "I was wounded about a mile on the Hoth- iemurchus side of Bagdad." A staunch objector in union of the Scottish churches described the union ac "unconstitutional, imprac- ticable. illogical. and absolutely idiotic, but I line no 600i w; God's will’? 3AM "aPl-elbylerlan civil-lo referred to Holding‘: outspoken novel, Tom‘ Jonel. ll “Grand stuff thoctfltrofthe apostles Notes By 171a Way If those scientist: who sco a direct connection between sunspoto and earthly climate conditions are correct, we may well be in for o. period of very disturbed and unusual weather. German as- tronomers report a sudden and surprising development of now , ‘-= the largest seen since 1917 One group of spots developed from nothing to an area ten times the size of the earth ln 48 hours, swirl- ing and rotating in a manner to suggest a “storm" of almost un- imaginable violence of the sun's flaming surface. What this may mean for tlfbllly weather is some- thing for the scientists to argue about__apd for experience to show. For the ordinary reader, meanwhile there is something exceedingly fascinating about the thought of these titantlc disturbances-unl- maginably vast cycles in flaming gas-taking place far off in space, with a few astronomers at teles- ; copes as the only spectators- Exchange. It will take much clarity of mind and grace of hcart at the confer- ence this year to break away from the evil influence of the new rivalr- ies. It can be said with truth that the outlook is not altogether dark. Some of the elements in it are not so hopeless as may ll-Pr pear. The American policy of parity with Britain has no sinister hostility in it. Although between Japan and the United States no luve is lost and their thought of each other is much the same as in their quarrel of 1924, neither can afford to continue loading their taxpayers with heavy naval votes. Between France and Italy is a ripened understanding from which the seed of peace may come. There is not the slightest Justification for panic. Nevertheless, national pati- ence is here and there being tried and suspicions are afloat-Ex, Addressing an audience at Lcn- don, Mr. J. S. Woodwortll, M P, leader of the Co-operativc Com- monwealth Federation, proposed as a slogan: "Vote as you pray." He asked whether people believ- ing in intellectual honesty and sincerity can pray one way and vote another, If Mr. Woodsworth judges by the small percentage of voters who have cast their ballots for his party in some recent elec- tions. he must have come to thc conclusion that a large number of Canada‘; citizens have forgotten how to pray.— Border Cities Star. The first essential for a worth- while life shoud be to be ilseful. If we do things that serve a useful purpose, we don't have to worry about happiness for ourselves, at least. That takes care of itself. The distribution of happiness, and of the opportunities to be useful, is far more important than any dis- tribution of mere wealth. Richness of heart is happiness, but this can come about by no other means than by daily balancing our own pre- sonal ledger, and seeing that we think and act more in the interests of others than we do of ourselves. Peovple who keep thinking of them- selves, their troubles .their dead ambitions, their lost opportunities. and who are forever envying the success of others. and bemoaning their own hard luck. always end their days with an unbalanced ledger. The most acute remark in the very interesting speech cf Sir Will- mott Lewis before the Ottawa Wo- men's Canadian Club the other day was that in which he pointed out how nearly all international law concerns itself with war, or with conditions arising out of war. Yet. as Sir Willmott rvllcd. any great nation may. by manipulating its tariff. or by managing its currency. take action affecting the interests, livelihood and happiness of millions, beyond its territories. The inevi- table consequence is that commer- cial fear between nations has been added to military fear. with the ad- ded danger this brings in the way of war. What can be done about it? Well ,onc answer is the fate of the World Economic Conference. which, beginning with every hope and good-will, ended in futility. Nationalism, with what is thought to be national needs. is a des- perately tough lhlng.- Ottawa Journal. Since thc resurrection of thc “rum row" last summer, the Administration has made deter- mined efforts to halt the inflow of smuggled liquor. High taxes and high pdces encourage bootleg- ging everywhere. just as did Dro- hilrltion. Conditions are reported similar lo those prevailing here in the Canadian provinces, wherc liquor control schemes cvpemtlon some time. THE have ‘been in _ _ QuPbec j inauguration Liquor Pommlrsion reports that its ' gross sales have fallen sharply, and ' our y will» B0 lame-a W. Bovlon. ALI) . THE NEED Fol PRUIICTIVE FOODS Practically everybody is inter-cam} in food these days because it la gen. fl'-~-.~'_-_\'~‘ognlzed that thc kinds and qumitlzy have much to do with health. 1405i 9f us likely eat more than we need but the idea that a "var- iety" of foods is all that is neces- sary for health is a. mistake. For instance it has been shown that the following dict despite its variety is not satisfactory for ani- mals: cereal grains such as wheat, mm» “m. barley and rye; legumes such as peas, beans, soy beans; tub- cl-s, such as the potato; and fleshy roots such as the sweet potato, rad- ish, turnip, beet. carrot and pa“- nip. Even when lean meats such as ham, steak, and the like which some CHARLOTTETOWN‘ GUARDIAN from muscles are added to this diet, it is still not suitable for animals. That is, the animals fed as above, do not grow and develop as the} 5h0l1ld; thére l5 irritability, nervous. i ness, and a. tendency jo grow old a; a nearlicr age than is necessary, That is because there is a lack o‘; mllltmli Drlnflipally calcium (lime) and also a lack of vitamins. What has this to do with human beings? Dr. E. V. McCollum, Johns Hop- kins Unlversity, says, "Wg do not attempt to say of! hand that the same kinds of diets which produce such marked physical defects m“. ins the growing period lrrlittle rats will have the same effects in child. ren. What we do is to study the in- mates of oprhanages and other in. stitutions. We observe the unsatis- factory physical condition of these Dimple and‘ discover that their diets have been obtained from the same combination of foods which would cause. defects and lack of nutri- tion in little animals. For instance, the children of a certain orphanage were fed on a soup made of meat. barley. Potatoes parrots, celery, cabbage. Peas aha beans. These children were suffering from bone defects (rickets) and were pale, with flabby muscles, poor posture, and the typical expression seen in malnour- ished children generally. A quart of milk a day was added to the diet of these children. Many of them res- ponded with rapid growth, together with a marked improvement in their 861161111 physical condition." Thus milk is called a "protec- tive" food; also butter, cream, cheese and other dairy products. The other protective food is the green leaves-spinach, radish, tur- lllp. beet. celery. clover-and alfalfa. Just a little of these protective foods daily will ' the “ordinary" dict. Economic Statistics Of The Week In- Canada (Exchange) Economic conditions as meas- ured by an index of six major fac- tors, showed slight betterment in the week ended March 23. The in- dex rose from 102.7 in the preced- ing week to 103.5 in the week un- der review. Carloadlnsfi. inverted bond yields and bank clearings ex- erted a constructive influence on the composite index. while whole- . sale prices showed slight recession Common stock prices and trading on the Montreal and Toronto stock exchanges vzere at lower levels than in the proceeding week. The lead over 1934 was. more than maintained in recent weeks. The index 0f 103.5 oontrastfilg with 93.7 in tge week of March M, 1934. a dagalnoiflodperoent. The ascendancy" of the present year was due to gains in inverted bond yields, bank clearings and wholesale prices. Aside from a temporary reaction in February the level of economic conditions has beer» well maintained during the first quarter, the index regis- tering a. gain of 13.1 per cent. over the same period of 1934. The railway freight movement recovered somewhat in the eleventh week. the weekly index being 72.6 compared with 71.1 in the tenth week. The total for the flrsi ll vrcrks was 468.000 cars provincial revenue from this source l are quite disappointing, The com- ; missions chairman attributes this decline to high Dominion excise l‘ and saleai u Journal of Commerce. l Signs that lhc thrift trait mil lruns strong in many hundmds of {thousands cf persons, despite the of some measures favoring the grass-hopper tradition as against that of thc ant, and the agitation for fantastic schemes of manufacturing security, are con- tained in the showing of the A Treasure‘ Hunter —*.-' . ahncouver Province)‘ o! m. An 1p reltlnl $090111"!!! few days is that of Dr. A. G. ty 0MB" to be Dominion the Historical moms that nrxnouzhtv. who h“ been Dominion archivist .for thirti- one years and‘ bu 118161116811! ml- ted the archives-department at 0t- tawn, ls retiring.‘ 8c celebrated hi! seventy-fifth birthday on March 21 and feels he lsontltled to s rest. His position is now to b; a particularly hgppy one. He will be relieved of the hwvv msponllbllli-v for imam: safe the country's records and, at the some time, as chairman of the Historical Records Board, will have every opportunity to continue those researches into Canada's history which have been his chief interest for a. third o! ocentury. - An Oxford man, Dr. Doughty en- tered the service of the Quebec Gov- ernment fn 1901 u lolnt custodian of the Legislative library. and in 1.904 transferred to Ottawa. At thc capital, he devoted himself to the double task of studying Canada's records and of amplifying and sys- temintng them. In the former capa- city, he has written a. number of books, alone or in collaboration with others, detailing important incidents in Canadian history or bringing to- gether documents that have a vital bearing on the constitutional level- opment of the country. In thc lat- ter qapacity he has added enorm- nusly to the collection of treasures stored in the big building over which he has presided.- A detective has an interesting archivist. emeritus ma emu-mm of 1 Record: Board. can when the Present has latched its Wllflm Nllllld my tremulous lily. And the lloifmonth flops its glad will the neighbors w, such things"? Qllfilld‘: soundless blink, . The dewfall-hawk comes crossing the shades to alight Upon the wind-warped upland "Mm. a swa- may think, “To him this must have been a fam. lliar sight.” n1 P355 "dull"! some nocturnal blackness, mothy mu warm, When the hedgehog travels fumv. rely over the lawn, We my w. "He strove that such innocent creatures would come t0 no harm, But he could do little for them; If, when hearing that I have been 5111M Bl? 168$. they stand at the door, , wfltmlnil the full-starred heavens that winter aces, Will this thought rise on those who "He was l. man who used to notice If it be in the dusk, when, like m and now he is gone." , BETTER BRAN, FlAKES TREAT your appetite to ‘genu- ine bran flakes. Crisp deli- cious flakea of wheat-with CARTERS snaps l GR w IUIPOBTCAIDIIyoQQ waiter-raucous“: GARDEN snubs IQIBOIIEDB ind wm_ pow oaanaunvo m m, of our Boodl for only 9|“; Baal, turmoil, c _ can. BADIBH, cavuggga EB. ocular, mo, m; h", u" Plmllffldrtocetout" soon an the ground in ready, FLOWER SEEDS sun swam PEAS, 1...; "l!!! early blooming Anmh All and have them Ififldy u, not out u soon no the soil is warm and moist. ‘EARLY TQKATO, QAB_ l , A manly of our vacr. rants and novvaa SEEDs "'9 5°" "h! lent out to over one hundred and fifty mmh. 1M4 who cell CARTERS SEEDS 55k Yflllr nearest MBlTEmnl, for CARTEIPS. We pay Pm. ago on all Packet Seeds mailed b)’ us direct. i ' life. He works in mysteries and “H will 019% m? face no more, e was one who had an eye (or solves problems. An archivist is a such mysteries"? detective working with historical rather than contemporary mysteries. He is a treasure hunter, too. Only the treasure he seeks consists of documents rather than gold. It was the fate of Canada that great mas- ses of the documents concerning the And will any say when my p911 o; ‘ quittance is heard in the And gloom, \ "$581118 breeze cuts in its outrolllngs, - a pause country's early history d.isap- Till they rise again, as they were n peared overseas. Governors, in- new hell's boom,~ tendants. bishops, soldiers and “He hears it not now, but uggd to notice such things"? —'I‘homas Hardy. priests came to the colony in the French time and when .they returned to France they took boxes of documents with them. lt was the same in the time of the colonial days under the British Governors, administrators and soldiers took New Approach To enough extra bran to be mildly laxative. Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes are truly better bran flakes. Packed with nourishment. A1- waya crisp and ready to cat with mill: or cream. Sold by all ocere. Made by Kellogg in ndou, Ont. Barter & 0o. Ltd. Scezlsmen chlflfllflgmwn _:\_\ ' Professional Cards McLEOD 6‘ BENTLEY W. It. BENTLEY, K. c. J. A. BENTLEY, K. C. . Burial-en and Attorneys-aid,“ MONEY '10 LOAN Office: 1B0 Richmond Street, taxation-New York away the papers that, onccrned them. Or many of them did. A great many ‘of thflse papers are still ln existence in France and Great Britain, and it has been the business and pleasure of the archivist to to get copies. Doughty and his scouts in this res- pect that the archives building in Ottawa has become a centre of study forhistorical students from all over the continent, and there seems little doubt that, as the mass- arc studied and collated, important pieces of the fabric history will have to be rewoven. compared with 449.000 in the same Period of last year. resulting in a gain of l9l‘l00 cars. Cool. pulpwood and miscellaneous commodities showed masked gain over the levels of the first quarter of 1034 while the grain recorded a decline of 12.500 cars. Commodity prices at wholesale showed slight reac- tim in the week ended March m. The index was 72.0 compared with 722 the revised standing for the proceeding week. In the correspond- lng week of 1034 the index was 71.8. fluctuations in the meantime hlvlhil been of a minor character as far as the general average is concerned. A favorable sign was the advance in bank clearings, the adjusted gain over the preceding week having been 4.4 per cent. As the total was about $292,000,000 against $274,400,001 in the same week o4 last year an increase of 6.5 per cent. was shown in this comparison. trace them down and, if 1t is im- possible to get the originals, at lent Such has been the success of Dr. es of documents gathered together of Canadian Psychology (Exchange) A MW flpliroach to psychology m“ m8)’ Set up a new school of thought in that field has been do. Ill. B. McDonald, Wool 8t. Peters ton. velvped by . Lecky, 11......- tor in the department of psychol- ogy. Columbia University. 1t is cc. fwd as a system that will super- sede the old theories M behavior. ism and psycho-analysis. It is a ""1590 Orllanlsm rather than o. bundle 0f habits and instinct. It is called the "theory of self con. 5mm" 811d is held to olrer the some approach to the study rrf psy. °h°l°8l08l problems that Einstein, Planck and Heisenberg made to the study of _‘ ‘ I problems. Under this "theory of self-condsteney" $110 Divchologloal entity, the mind, is viewed in the same way that the physicist views the atom. It form- erly was believed lobe an extremely wall wtallv inert particle that °°11l<l 11011199 divided. Now it is be. lleved to be a highly complex SATWOWN. part 0f it resembling a 9018i!‘ fiwtem and a. ucleus com- parable to the sun being a highly complex mechanism constructed in some unknown way of electrons, rlobonc, neutrons, pcsitrons and Perhaps other unite. No one has ever seen an atom, Dr. L-ecky points Wli- T119 Pictures we make of them are entirely hypothetical and are created solely for mlrposeg g1 1n. wpreiatlon. The question of the existence or reality of the atom does not afise. It is sufficient that the concept is a. scientific necessity physics could not be solved. create a similar conceptual object, its data intelligible. but its diwdvantage much pea-fer. TRYTIIE iliew Tiliyer Lensc When next you uced glance. Their worth b» been proved. We fit up in latest ltyle of ftamee or mountings. c. w. TAYLOR ‘ Charlottetown . J. §. TAYkOR . Aibortou Prohibition Commission’ Ghol. ll. Black, Chairman. r cauiomam infraction: of PIDIIIBITION A to the above or to FUNK. B. C- M. B, Charlotte Inspector town ' NORMAN W. LOWTHER Burl-Mar la Attorney At I41 l0 Great George Street Charlottetown, P. E. l. . IIONI! T0 LOAN le. theson aaniusraa. souclrou, are. lo Loon Money Collection Office: 140 Richmond ltreei. without which the probleyng Q1’, Psychology evidently needs to likewise l0: the purpocim o1 making e concept 0f the mind, or personality. lagoon older than the concept of the atom, from the i?! standpoint 0f descriptive science ll If one tries to im- "Ellie physics deprived of the atom he can understand something of the state of affairs to be-foimd at present in psycholow. An abun- dance of evidence has been accum- ulated, both experimental and clin- {i III 55%. which did not come to others until the crash of October 1970, but up to the time of his coil-w. in July, 1980, Mr. Kin: inséstrd-that Cau- adg, wag prosperous. One by one other countries were raising bor- rierl against our trade while our producers were subject to competi- tion from those countries. 1t would have been a good thing for Canada H Mr. Bennett had been in power then. fie would not have been mutual savings banks of 1B saw for the year 1934, As just by the National Association of hfutual Savings banks, the number of depositors increased substanti- ally. Bo did the aggregate of rqaoaitnthe‘ ertosnevrhllh record and thelottu in o point within easy reaching distance cf the peak of DBL-Now Hovll Register. A Beauty hon beehibelleilgilo and ogiy demonology think of instinctive forces compet- irq for control of the and we bound POI PALE AND THIN PEOPLE mioniml, to alntinue alrold to conserve our markets against one-way competition.’ Ho would have checked the promoters of mergers and the sale of stocks thlt brought umocent inventors i: ‘ n» torment of the. world ever llnoo it began. There ll something ir- resistible in a boouteoun fonn. H s5‘§§ 5i as s? Mr. Tea. Pot any: : < BRA HMnv A ORANGE PEKOE u Use Beat Quality TEA IMTIBI TEA sold only in ml airtight pkgr. FLAVOR»- § as gszgmkcgzcaiczif‘ WESTERN BAIIAIIA EXGIIRSIOIIS Going dates-May 15th to May 28th inclusive. Return Limit-Thirty days in addition to dole of sale. I. K. ROGERS C“? Ticbt Al!“ Qllllllllll National Railways M George Strut, Charlottetown FRAGANCE FRE$li|iESS--- 'A‘-‘ wax ‘paper lining in ‘every package how guarantees that our new Tobacco will reach the public lrl -perfcet condition, its freelance! ‘ ondamcklng qualities fully retained. f. RlGii cl uni-ii \_ , I v‘ f’ ' ' ft-‘il-YK/‘Itf Al‘ A>j:-'"."iil‘/a‘( rll-lisilitii stilt-cs