. jgQlABLOTTTII uiinuuu “f... a . “JO MI 41s: “(til advance) muile undue ul§jllgrhndud 1mm u.“ ' II (Juana und lJullod Ital» p" your (In udvullM) lnllvund. fiuiazwu‘ Cheller B. llcLure. ,,. Vlce-Prelldaut-J. B. Burnett. lynly-Llrul. Poi. II. A. afuclllnnuu, ll- l. 0. u¢cr.._|. ll. llururll. lliumulu Edllof-D. ll. Currie. Y,- llk- uuluuru n» ‘ “ ‘ NEW (fl 5150"‘. S si am A. Julmnluil. ll0.\"l‘AG(i l1l'2—\l'. THE (lfAitlllAN run lu- nbiulnul from the fallnwlu A. ll-owu Pom llfillir. J. l) 'l‘iu'llr lirunun rural-r, fr r‘ (duller, tie-at uni-run- Strut. Pal-lulu. pruning-q], R. Th0 n! tVllllr, I35 lilm .\\t. rareiyc Co‘, Unveil hirer-l. ll. Whlflncy, Grant iii-orgi- sin-n. . ' Frank N. hugs, l = (THURSDAY, TIIE CITXC PIKOGRAMJIE The City Council has been wcl advtnd {Q_.l'C‘L‘Ol‘;5.(iCl" the mllitsr of‘ the municipal grant of $11100 to the n. A‘. Wcdllcsild}: Provincial Exhl night's spa/sol liilS grant Prince Edward Island potatoes. In was passed ill‘... _. _ -. and ‘llcrc is the circumstances there is no reason no question. that ihc d.-:l.'c will lo be pessimistic. In whatever action unsightly szrazlzp ' A ilauilp atljoiil- intercsm. Realizing this, we may con- ing tlzc‘ 1x129‘ r. h the aid oi‘ sole ourselves with the reflection that ihcflggggcr _< g: inns l.l\'£‘i‘?.i.‘i_'»' rc- we are neither beggars nor pension- ccircil by ‘Hi8 Coiinlui and a cem- to take the, nlitiee was apppintcd matter up. l: is hoped that this iln-i ~ carried i0 a sue-i s; the low ground cnlranoz From the .. (‘-5 llllh", United States tariff are concerned, llqli-"Tiiiil I i" P! “'35 0m‘ , says the Montreal Standard. the Ser- wouid b: a Cililélfhulbi! lllliilfllVlf-i mon on the Mount may n5... be w- mfllfi i garded as a Liberal document. Other iznpcrznzlt mailers were‘, They love their tariff enem]e5_ fake-l 11D l‘? i111‘ CY“ “i1 1"- Vi/Tdilcs‘; They revel in the beatitudes as- days meeting, int-hiding further"? cribcd m the meek 1n spirit“ street inlprovelnents, stricter regu- lations with respect to dogs running at large, preliminary arrangements for band concerts Gllfiflg the slim- mer, longer (men hours for rcslziur- ants cri Silndnys dilriiie the tourist season, lifulitiiUil for in: sisrirvillg oi 5trcet-. ide trues. and the rlzxlning up of the unssau (lump slngton Road. Thczc lncnsilres will commend thrmscives to oul‘ Clillfllfi generally With reference to the guns at Victoria Park. luany will take excep- . tion to the silggissmou that tilcsc his- toric rclic; be T! m‘? wooden carriaircs "n" safe‘ mny (an be replaced at COlll- dismanllcti. have become paratively 1:“ "l"l‘.FL‘. Til.‘ histor- rather ii ornamental im- rydtnpcr; of i‘ Llildnlarks should Their plctilrcsqil: ' to cvcrjv ris- be kept in nliild. r gppoairiincc in vii htlil iilcil‘ rc- of our old- hlZIOR". Let us l-Jl and preservdisuch as rxc i‘.."l'.'Z‘. - U. S. POTATO Tcflliff‘ .- g“ _ Aslndlcatcd ill our despziisllcfi J95 ‘wagon; ‘En-hr hill increasing the dufy on lygmlocs into ‘.11: United ""150 cents l0 1'13 c-rnis a ,. Statié -fro Jslnld-llulilof- RI to, Ill (Ill (‘f’f‘."Ql".‘. oil Ken-i v _ fol finulll News: 0|. Amllrrmun. Ill TIIIIIIII m, w: lupin, 30i- “nt 60th 5L . N ill. It. l-‘nulliner, uonk P‘|\"| SOl RIB-M. U. Acorn, g up-utn In (‘lurlnllctowu . lllunmmil Iilnrl. ' . n ‘nl Ave. '1' nllml (horny. l/‘nr. Kvmt 8 llnchfnn . llufry. "umu NIHWI. ' J. (‘nmuln News Cn., Input. ra. mumivouvl. Lon-heater iflrul. l) lllllnhnru 500GB. MAY 30. 1929 l past season it has been clearly dam- onstratcd that there is an increas- ingly large demand in the Canadian market for a superior quality of table l . ket, which is bidding strongly for . the United States Government takes. we may be sure they will be govern- ed by no consideration of Canadian crs of our American neighbors. THE MEEK IN SPIRIT So far as the relations of the Mac- Kcnzie King Government to the i Thy cxult in turning the other check. l They swallow the holes ‘in the ‘ tariff doughnuts and complain only i of a slight indigestion. . i In the bright lexicon of the Gov- ] ernment there isvno such word as i "retaliation-some tinkering there may be. some ‘adjustments’ so that i the kick will not quite reach tile spot {aimed at, but. inothing to disturb i friendly relations. Meanwhile, the l railways seem to be quicker at. the l uptake. The C. P. R. and the C. N. R. | do not babble "retaliation," but they ‘ put it into immediate operation. i The Interstate commerce Board cuts the grain rate to the Atlantic _ seaboard two cents a bushel and our ‘iCanadian railways meet it with a ‘similar reduction. They do not wall ‘ a year to see how the United States i, rates work out. They take their wolf Eby the 081's right now and shake him. Oi course, the railways B" bush ness institutions and are run on . business methods whereas the Gov- l eminent is the Government, with all ‘i the vacillations, oscillations and W" turbaiions that the much abused word implies. But surely U" T°““'“Y5 . point the moral—hlt back and do it l quick. l EDITORIAL NOTES stock. There is also the Cuban mar-, lng material of the near future ac- cording to detailed information of a now process published in the New York times. A fibre machine has been devised, and is now being made for general distribution,‘ that uses up old boards. cuttings, chips-every part of a tree that is not now cut of that finished lumber that has be- come “waste? and turns it into fine clean fibre. Mixed with-cement and water by a spcclai process. that wood fibre be- proof, less than hall’ the weight of stone concrete, at not half its cost. and that much cheaper to transport. Used in lofty buildings, it means that the steel frame has less than ‘ihalf the load to carry. And wood ‘concrete we are told, can be nailed land sawn like ordinary lumber. E , i Flying at low fuel coal was report- cd the other day when Capt. L. M. Woodson and an assistant flew a ‘Stinson airplane, equipped with a heavy-oil Diesel engine miles at a fuel cost of $4.68. journey was made from Detroit to Langley Field, Virginia. Had airplane gasoline been used the estimated fuel cost would have been $26.65. “Those who have seen the engine," says the New York World,” say there is no reason, if it proves successful why it may not be adapt-ed for use in automobiles, thus revolutionislng the costs of motoring as well as fly- ing. President Hoover's last fishing trip was not a great success for the great man he ls. While he was sup- posed to be fishing he was otherwise engaged or idle, because his tackle did not arrive in time. On his way back his motor car stuck in the mud. He arrived home with a black eye caused by a bent twig snapping back in his face. According to the press accounts presidential fishing comes far short of what it was in Roose- velt's sporting days. Mr. Hoover cannot even boast as others can of the big ones that got away after he had hooked them. Income lax “d0dgers" are said to be numerous in British Columbia. Premier Tolmie when he took office was amazed at the number of them, and his Finance Minister, Mr. Shel- by, decided if they would not pay their names should be published. Now the dodgers are in a panic be- cause of the publication. Forty pages in the official gazette __are_ covered with the more than 3,000 names. And they must now' pay up or their pos- sessions wfll be sold for unpaid taxes. ster fishermen this year is the de- cree from Ottawa. This is probably well-intended and may prov-z bene- ficial to the fishery in future years. There is little doubt that hereto- fore too many small lobsters were caught and canned, but there will be some kicking against the official re- fusal. Full grown men and women may keep a sharp outlook for the speed- ing cars on the streets and highways but some of them are absent-mind- ed and get/ knocked over. It is dif- ferent with the little ones. They are not born with a sense of all the dan- gers that beset their pathway. Full of life and intent on play, they can- not be expected to be as careful as their elders. So it happens that among the pedestrians who are kil- led or hurt on the street by reckless spaedsters a majority are children. There is something very sad and pa- Nteo By The Way Wood concrete ls to be the build- lnto finished boards-and every bit, comes a very strong concrete, fire-‘ some 700 The i No extension of time for the lob- ' Elm 80hr of yours Q [can W. Balm. ID. CURING QTOMAGH ULCER S I find myself writing often about ulcer of the stomach and of first part ’ of small intestine, that la the part into {which the food passes from the stomach. ; My reason for‘ this is that many ’ individuals are suffering from a small ulcer and are treating is as "indiges- tion.“ . ‘i _Now my first suggestion ls that these folks should see a doctor be- cause his experience will enable him | to diagnose an ulcer, as he will not 5 only use test meals but also have an i X ray or barium meal taken. If there is an ulcer he will likely put. the patient on a soft. diet and a number oi weeks. He will perhaps have the patient rest for a few days and will put him on a diet of liquids or semi-solid foods such as soups. soft boiled eggs, smooth cereal with milk or cream. However if the ulcer is severe the patient is put to bed and what ls known as the SlpPy treatment ls often used. There have been changes made, or variations of this treatment, ‘out the main thought is soft food and alka- line powders. There are Just four points to watch. First that the patient rests quietly in bed; second that he gets his milk cream mixture practically every hour from 7 o'clock in the morning until 7 o'clock in the evening; third that, he gets his alkaline powder one half hour after every milk cream feeding. starting at 7.30‘o‘clock in the morn- ing until 8.30 o'clock in the evening, with an hour's rest from them be- tween 11.30 o'clock and 1.30 o'clock. This powder is a combination of car- bonate of lime and baking soda; fourth the stomach contents are re- moved at 9.30 o'clock in the evening. You can readily see that this re- quires a lot of panence on the part of the physician and patient but has been the means of healing many 111W"- Tlw thought then is that if you have “indlgestion" regularly, that Y°ll d0 110i Ely to take "home treat- ment," but consult. your doctor a5 to the possibility of ulcer. Early medical treatment as above. will not only help to heal the ulcer but. will give you relief from pain, and may prevent the need of an opera- tion. IN THE OFFING I walked upon the headland With my friend one sunlmer day, when an unknown foreign schooner Came stealing up the bay. Ifer sails were light as moonshine Her hull was dark as night, And silence fell between u; For wonder at the sight, No name “upon her quarter, No fiag at peak nor fore, To tell her port or errand_ N0 friendly. look she wore. All day she ‘tacked before us Or lay to on the tide, then use alkalles after each meal for} The sea. has not chlllifld bili- $110 lhips have. To live as o cabin PI!" ‘lg-user on a liner is to Blfpcrlfllwfi .ile comfort and tireless service of l dc luxe ho.el. The pmenzer ll th= honored guest: The entire Owl-Ill!- atlon of a machine marvellous in its complexity and beauty is devoted t0 carrying him safely and, happily acres the ocean. He spends his ‘days at deck games, the dining table, the smoking room. the library, and in ‘flirtatious with ladies -he met when lie cam: on board and whom he will never sec again when the ship docks. It was not in this style that Crlstof- cro Colombo splashed his way to Panama, or Cap‘n Drake lived on the Golden Hind, or the pious Fathers pitched and tossed wlih\ the bilge of the Mayflower: we have for some generations been living in the age of science, and are now waited over the iravcs with the magic celerity born of modern drafting offices and the lilcavy occupations. An ocean liner irepresents perhaps the very flower iof our industrial accomplishment; it iilzls to be both fair and strong; your ‘passenger must not only have a roast lquail to his dinner, and a du Barry salon to sip his grog in. but all the security that can be riveted into a steel illlliirilfl demands engine power, and he gels i.; as be pushes shuffle?- board on the sun deck or fools around on some game of hide and seek, the enormous ship is vibrating to tho impact of the thrusting screws- forcing her swiftly forward. The sea lifts lip the whole construction to wrench it from helm ‘to bow and pitch its 20,000 tons three-cornered wise across the twisting water, and the ship must stand the onset as like a castle wall us possible. The cookie-shells our forebears voyaged in to Canada behaved like demented corks in these monstrous waters, and both ilasscngers and seamen became acrobots before landfall; but this mighty boat beats down the waters as they swell under her, and flattens her path as she goes. The passenger fccLs. the lift and settle as the ship sails on, and his mind is in the com- plctc repose cf safety: the modern liner can mulch her strength with the Ailanlio storms and seas and come to port the victor. So the pas- senger cats his gelatlned capon. reads his novel in the amber lounge, and sleeps soft in warm cabins, while ilic days and nights placidly go by. Tile Duchess of Bedford, in whlh these observations are written, ls one of the last words in the great narrat- ive of ocean ‘travel. Passengers say to each other at intervals. "Isn't she a lovely ship?" When a pause occurs in the conversation at dinner, some- onc pipes up-"fsn't she a lovely ship?" A lovely ship indeed. and the‘ most restful vessel in the North At- lanti: service. as we now proceed to prove. We have Willi ils on thejlcdiord a member of the British peerage whose name and honorable appendix es fill thrci- iincs of the passenger ship list. He is a stout, bucolic-faced old noble who rarely combs his hair and who never breathes through his nose: if you had three men and he was one of them. and three guesses which one wns the belted earl, this dear old gentleman-on the looks that go with Norman blood-inevit- ably would be your third pick, A staunch old block of English oak. With a view to doing a bit of read- ing one day after lunch our earl came trotting into the forward lounge-an upholstered chamber full Jstic. It was anticipated, and its tenor - inorantiam." ,I Ships OK and New (T. Bale-In Muulfnh "do PM») ‘ looked at his lordship fast in the. arms of democratic sleep and for- guvo him his three lines of trlfili . latter-s m the luv-wow llui- The Redford-who is of course o D11- chcas-hod gently lullabyedllim l0 sweet and musical replie- A ship men. of repose. but also of alertness. There is boat drill; this is a preparation which shows 11°" h°W W abandon ship should surnethnig cat- aclysmic hit her and force you over the aide into the life-boats and the Icy water: a most unlikely event. but one that must be prepared Ivrl the waiting seal At the sound of a klaxon the pas- sengcra put their heads through their llfe-beltk-uncouth collar-like 'cork contrlvonoes which catch you under the chin and the back of the head- and parade on the muster stations. With your head thus, as it were. set on a brown platter. and a tape tied on your breast, you stand ln a Buy “Prucu SHREDDED WHEA i siibigiilgo i N n: if: A Canldlln food Illlfl ‘ diun Wheat in our‘ May 2511b new, nun-lit Canadian Pkwy June 1st I! Nllmn Fall» Canada. —<q m wow ma; THE swear FRESH FLAVOR or BRAHMIN TEA Sold only in Red, Hygienic, Airtight Packages, huddle of similarly dished-up fellow- voyagera and wonder how much wat- er you would have to swallow be- fore you pulled the platter under: submerged you would be to the chill at the absolute very best. And so oc- cupied and harnessed against the perils of the sea you await the cap- tain's inspection. Presently he comes along, peering at the life-belts to see that they are properly adjusted to the neck. He stops in great concern at a. charming young female passenger standing be- side us and taps her peat-colored ruff reprovlngly with his nautical finger. "Why, why," say he, anx- iously, "this tape must be tied quite tightly-so!" And he steps in close to the pretty creature and fabrlcates a sailor's knot for her with an alr of great responsibility, and gives her a deep blue smile. We are there be- side her and our cork collar is only '—————-____ Get Your House-Cleaning Supplies At the Central Drugstore Now ls the time you will need u number of article; u; quake your house-cleaning less laborious. We have fllirays catered to this housekeeper wllh fills llne of goods and in“ prepared accordingly for her requirements. Al. our store you will find Household Ammbull, Born, Castilc Snap, Carpet Wash, Silver and Brass Polishes, Funn- lurc Pclhh. Smoky City Cleaner, Cedar Flnlffl. Moth Balls. Crcolin, Bug Polsm, Scrubs, Chamois Skins, Sponges, on, CENTRAL E. A. FOSTER viwcwmc Sunnyside _ Dr. Ffrcncirs Vermlcide Capsules Glvo Result; I half tied on, tape-ends flopping in the broeze- but Capnliever sees ‘em; on he goes to tie another glrlie‘s strings for her farther up the line. Ladies first! All the nice girls love a m. _ And so the days go by on the Bedfm-d; but soon we shall be look- lng for coast lines and harbors. The Public Forum frills column ls open for the dlacuulou by correspondenw ‘ of questions of interest. Tin- Clllrlolliebown GII-ltdiln does not necessarily endorse the ojlnlfllllihl w" spondeuie._ OUR CLAIMS Bin-Senator Hughes‘ letter of re- _ ply in today's Guardian is charactcr- » fully expected. He states that he has derived no Information from my previous letters Idid not expect him to;—some pco- ple are like that. I did not. advise Mr. Tldmursil to study the subject more thoroughly, as the Senator statesr-and the latter, I comprehend, is not looking for advice. In the worthy Senator's former let- ter he, impeached 1n one breath at least four Canadian Premiers. I cm hlPPy to have escaped so easily, and in ouch good company, from the puni- tlvo thrusts of this modern Sampson, and the Jawbone of an ass. At the some time, the Senator's "urgumentum ad homlnem" does m; preclude mother's “Argumentum ad I agree with Senator Hughes that 1 which the public are lo-day being treated is in a delibcraic attempt to "we" ‘he "WW1" Of" the cnvrmlws spec: the childmn‘: footwear. ma! is the Time To ENSURE Your‘ Car if a car driver is sued for damages for which be may, 0r may not, be respon. slblc it is important that he should have the best lbgrill advice obtainable. This is provirlml by a liability insurance 110lic_v- which will also pay the amount of the Jlldfllllelll. if any, up to the limit of the policy. _ lfull information concerning automo- bile insurance furnished without obliga- tion - f (ionic in and talk it over with Hyndman £9” Co., Ltd Tl: e Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. I.. CHARLOTTETOWN Municipal shoe repairers m tori! Nottingham, England, schools, millil- hqh§g7§w5lam>t,_.has been piisstd b)“ m; Housc,_o'f_-_Ri=i>1'\" 4% of cushions and opal lights-and set,- tled himself on an intriguing sofa to have a nice time with his book. The ship was rocking gently in the cradle of the deep. Pmsi-‘lllly we heard '1 slightly hissing, slightly barking. sound, and looking up-there on the larlgurous silken sofa reposed our fragment of thetic about such cases. depletion now taking place in our at once all that need lt, nndclllll wooded arcas as well as to conceal the repairs to parents who can all! the comparatively small extent of to pay. our remaining available silpply. The most serious phase of all Ls. us I have previously pointed out, that :— fwm a cllmnilc, aesthetic, fish and As if awaiting orders From one who should decide. “need never “k the Lord to give me a good conceit of myselffl-nog while the present monopoly exists. The m!‘ 1-! PBPhllD-il noteworthy. m" the 390W)? 11M delicately re- frained from joining issue on the mliv under discussion. The man ""h°- lcilmdllli In his own statement. ilvcs. 'i‘i~.l.~‘ spying’ 53515 an old proverb, has "ly rliclot- came when you can place your foot ‘rtillffi 113d on three daisies at once. With so many voters and candl- dates in the British elections, it is now stated that nothing like a full return of the members elected can be made known until the day follow- ing the polling. It also reads strang- ely that Winston Churchill, who has action if rzwm vim»- m1 b, ,_ um‘! rf-tefiublicail _ i . (i083 at; “up; gg into clfcot. 71,059 who are becoming anxious n "ha, yon w run the {Télllllliib of the about the lateness of the aim"! 5...“... ,4.‘ it p. lctcd that. byl Slwuld not forget that late 219141155 Never a ship's bell sounded, Never a voice rang out, AS she heeled before the windflarvs 01' Bleed up to come about. no‘. lllllliff mime and tourist standpoint. Canada is already over-denuded of trees. "Whv- 1i ls P8551113 strange," 1 said, (he time the slip; or wisdom of that} are almost invariably iollfllvfid by been many times a candidate, says “Aye, paging Huang”, said he; Dcbrett, eyes shut and snoring like mmisfiz my‘? pTml" Fergu‘ I um, Sir, etc" bod! 15 m,_._.,,,,.3, mu; it tllc “Ti-Tm”, the best crops. this is] the! least] flxciting election And I could see that m ms face an honest Briton. This Wu the spir- waged to we“ éhecolietlgurllptlobjc 9;; , FRAN J. D. BARNJUM. Ono of the but prevenllllfl measure ls likrty in he lliirccognlz- _ ___ :11»: an n whc he has taken 1 d“ m,‘ “kc to sea it of Aalncourt and Waterloo. We 810m in . Mmpup" controversy.‘ " Mmurmlr Mal’ 3 h. 1929- known for _ able. RIWT‘ "imw Fnfiuardin- o: It is believed that mutt“ and rig: She did not come to anchor 1m‘ Sh’ 6w‘ I Conzratulatlona are extended‘ to SMUT or RUST New York, fl",i\1“5t' u“ 75' ular summer traffic on Canadian lfl In a report to the trustees of the Nor cross the restless bar THE LAND LOVE l: 0' c‘ CAMPBELL- Mr. and Mrs Roy Adam tl ‘ cent rate. d1“ :l it n; "larceny." c5 will reach a new ililzll PC" h‘ 9”‘ faculty of Arts oi Queen's Univer- gut when the harbor twilight __"'__?__“ rival of a baby boy on 14801251133; tyres; on - i and declared that the Ljcrlaic wouldij smgcr trovcl this season. The Mari- sity, Dr. MacNeill, registrar, states mashed Gut “s evening “an BY FRANK YEIGB 0U‘ FAnLNiFoREsTs 10B. May 13th.. v noi- lllllllW" 1*» ‘)1’i’°’3i"1°“ [mm “pl tlmc Pmvmces is a popular objective it? tfhiivhvlorviltluarlbotaoselfibijzs Sift-My lttentiou his lust b ‘kfl ‘ southern’ aozaio HFOlYiIliZ 51H“ and it is hoped and expected that problem ‘or the aéthofltm In the 3mm“ ‘I'm’ “i 9mm! BRITISH EMPIRE ENIIOLMENT m “fled to I very good editor-lanai: “Miss Thurs“ nrandmnsosmmMm" ' I mdr wluou are 63p?‘ .;.:~.i lazvcly <"-'-' pl-moo Edward Island will receive l.» November. December w, Apr“ er Myiflznfizz; fizlzfil-bonrd h" THE wan. I Quebec newspaper entitled "Mak- in fidfifiwbf: :32: “Zlmrhzrfi fvfhfig‘ “mflwé,” . w: tho Desert." 1n this excellent editor-lg] 1 lm "hm"! m. u" eXécptlon to only one llltement, and Lint is with rujgrd the British Emnlro Enolment in the i0 "is 1mm of time um will c]. War are elven as followsz-troope "P" when the commercial exploit;- mobllized assczao; Total casualties Hon or our forum mull. end. The un- IUFTLZM; Killed, 073,080: Enemy prls-Pillplli-ed statement I have and, 1n onera captured in 1018, 201.000; an‘ i-he Duels throughput Canada is, um, lle Dlflnos inaction at Amiaticc mull with u» onormoiu mu being taken Planes in use, 22,000; Enemy much-H" W: forests through fire, disuse mo; destroyed Aug. 1m to Nov. l9ll,'|l1loc and wind, ‘together my, m,’ 0,039; Warship; long p. Qgtlgn (Ton. ackno lodged out of 30,000,000 cqfdg new 550.000; Anti-submarine craft o! wood Annually, a pgflgd o; m, been strongly Liberal ever since its l“ ‘i-‘tmll 5.000. Th, chm “m.” o; than olvfin yem will 3,, m, end foundation in 1905 and seams likely" "w "MM 5mm Irv-Hoops moiu- i" "w nment mid exploitation o; to continue so for some years to’ "194- 4-395-433; TOW! 0080110198, 360,- "l!" “H41! dwindling wood supply, mme. nut almost every sent ls being 203i Killed. 123.017: Enemy Dfllonen The most winked and. nationally. omtuted by two or three candidates. captured in ma, 50,015 Ibo mo» mmmd. m’ would be who to m one!“ I lu mo: co am sun F." porly trolled mm unwill- Ono plul lo em’! 4' I111’ of mm. nu umuou ll" with ova-y order. tubule n The 2 M“? DRUGSTORE no can doom W" l 0rd on aim PM?‘ Alf/lotion. l shore of the increased traffic. land of’!!! b91057“- aminations 40 to 50 per cent made failures. "The casualties are heav-l fer in the first two years where 60 per cent fail in one or more classes. For the last. two years one-third of the candidates applying for degrees have had some deficiency in their final examinations. They want a de- gmo merely because they believe it to be an open seasnme to all the ma- terial treasures of life. They have little or no interest in the subjects of the curriculum." Prince Edward will be an important factor in Hi9 nappies Cflfliltiilfiillrifl. In th: cvcui offthe ratification of ihc bill. hoe:- evér. there u still the uremia W" '_ in whose inter- aiuro was inim- duped, will not have lt all their own ‘ ‘Iggwqpgllfi always counts, and so‘ l” “d,” has not been able to sat- Wonk; l! lVfr. Euler were a Conserva- islb diner the demands of the sow give instead of a cabinet minister‘ in m|}@fl§;;t¢§g or of the consumers of the King Gcvernmgnt, Agcordin! 1° aeolian. in m0 larw cum"- lthe political Geometry c! 0i" °°“' E5 any coil‘! this Province 15" temporary. however, thinks thnt ll‘! ' ad dcilflndent solely on i1" “m” equal to the mm thin! l" 0°‘ "" . ‘gm potato market. Dill!" m’ maul-fly equal to one mother. " I r38’! For the Isles of the Unknown. M“ (‘write Bflmdon. i Q’. Vlllat was the British Empire Enrolment in the War? A. The official figures regarding -»Bliss Carman, in "Wild Garden," Fully 220,000 cigarettes were n. ported from Tlentsln, China. in the first 15 weeks of this your, as com- pared with 134,000,000 in the same period of last year. The statements of the Hon. W. D. Euler. Minister of National Rel/Elmer on the liquor smussllnz Bliilflm" ‘n the United Slates and on nrchlbliiil" laws in general fall obviously m" the local Liberal orsfln’! “WWW °‘ "wet prvlvflillndl" Th" u’ m" among our formers just now. -—-__ In Saskatchewan a general election is close at hand. The Province has Alllllll More heat within the past few days has given vegetation a strong impet- us and rapid growth may be ex- pected throughout the Province now that it bu begun. It ll I billy time 1'.‘