33g t, t; IL fir» "-4 ==__ "=:~.s;=~ s P we." <1: N . W, at U 1T3‘. N. *9 Ml. y‘ ,, 2G,, n“. 11¢ (d: a‘ t... ,2 . a-osznraazsrarsréeswifisz: \ “grass FOUR fnullult—w. Olultot S. Iolllu, I.P. Ylot-Pnlldnll, l‘. IJJ, Bnrotury-Llaut-Ool. D. A. Iucliuuou, 111.0. Iditor uud Imaging Director-ll. Burundi, IEJJ. I Alumina Hilton-Fran! oru n; n y (fouu 186'!) l6. Wllkur ulil ELK. U! pa: your ( Y1K IV u gainer your (in udvunoe) mailed in Canada uurl Unlkd ltahu. THURSDAY» AUGUST M, 193G THE KING'S JUBILEE with the 400th cartier anniver- sary celebration successfully over. interest will centre on the prepar- ations which are being made in London to celebrate, on May 6 of next year. the silver jubilee of His Majesty King George V. Represen- tatives will participate in the jub- ilee from the farthest corners of the Iimpire, and, needless w say, Canada will not be lacking in dem- onstrations of loyalty on such an occasion . Already. according to a London despatch, a. committee of the Brit- ish Cabinet and representatives of the governments of the Dominion are working on the plans. The cele- brations will be Empire wide and it is anticipated they will last a fort- night. All the overseas Prime Min- isters and most of the Indian princes Associated Boards of Trade insea- slon today. Itlooksgoodtcrudoffanners advertisifls for help. _ A big time among Knights of Pythlaa is scheduled for Saturday. Work will proceed forthwith on the new Borden highway at Bor- den, the tender of the Warren Pav- ing 0o. having been acceptcd. Mr. W. Chester S. McLure, MLP. has just received intimation from the Minister oi Public Works that repairs at the Drill Shed, totalling about $8,000. will be proceeded with without delay. This will be mostly labour. Uncle Sam‘ has been carrying on unsuccessful conversations with the with their picturesque entouragcs] will likely visit London to take part! in the festivities. There will also; be visitations from foreign rulers, and the occasion will be marked by! impressive naval, military and air reviews. The school children. it is intimated will have special place in the programmes. A unique feature, will be a, ring of bonfires around Britain and across the Empire. t0 be lit by Boy Scouts. Issue oi a sp:cial| honours list is expected. and a spe- cial jubilee medal will be struck. for distribution to all the troops taking part. It will be recalled that on the oc- easion of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, a, number of Island militia- men participated in the London celebrations and received the Jub- ilee medal. EMPIRE TRADE The Ottawa. correspondent of the Toronto Globe, leading Liberal newspaper, has wllccted interesting statistics regarding Canada's export and import business. which, says the Globe editorially, "throw a re- freshlng light on the operation of Intro-Empire trade." For example: Canada's total sales for the year ended June last were nearly $622,- 000,000. an iibrcase of about $139,- 000,000, while imports were $481,- 000-000, an increase of over $102,- Exports to the British Ern- pire were about $305,000,000, an in- crease of about $7l-000.000, while purchases from the Empire amount-, ed to about $150,000,000, an increase| of $29,000.000, both 9f these develop- ments again reflecting the beneficial effect of the Imperial Conference pacts. “These figures," adds the Globe, ‘indicate an encouraging revival of business, and an increasing tend- ency to buy and sell in Empire markets." They are a direct re- sult of the policies of the Bennett Government which Liberal politi- cians and newspapers-with the solitary exception oi the Globe- havo criticised persistently and which Mr. Mackenzie King has in- timated would be discontinued if he were returned to power. The fact that his party lacked the power to defeat the Empire trade treaties in Parliament was indeed a fortunate thing for Canada; as the Globe figures. above quoted, convincingly show. Recently some alarm has been ex- pressed that the British Govern- ment's agricultural restrictions soviet for a settlement of approxi- mately $500,000.000 in debts and claims. It is stated that the Soviet Union has, from the beginning oi the negotiations, insisted on a cash loan as an integral part oi the agreement, and that the United States has consistently refused to awed; to that demand. A deputy returning officer was being examined as a witness in an election investigation in Toronto when he was asked if there had not ll l i TIIE UIIARLOTTETOWI GUARDIAN Notes By The Way a Herr Hitler bu temporarily at least removed the proverbial uncer- tainty from elections. His method is to remove by disqualification or otherwise all opponents. This it would appear is more effective than the method employed -by cer- tsln Canadian politicians which consists mainly in abusing and vil- lifying their opponents. Shall this latter method continue or will the Hitler idea be adopted’! If nations afford to im- port ready-made articles, they will be forced to make their own, as U10 f-‘lskmtte smoker has learned to do. That is the logical end oi the narrow economic nationalism that has infected most of the world. Yet if every nation is to make itself self-sufficient or nearly so. it will be a self-sufficiency that severely lim- its the richness and amenities of life—like the self-sufficiency of the backwoodsman. In the end, says the New Zealand Weekly News, such a doctrine must defeat itself. Where political boundaries conflict with economic boundaries. the 1a:- ter in the long run will prevail. Rdiglous arguments are seldom profitable and there is every indica- tion that it is sheer ivaste of time debating the dicta of the Nazis.,II the latter impose a "faith" without “hopes for the beyond,” declaring “no need for redemption" and as- serting that the Old Testament is "full of peril for the German state" they cannot be stopped. but they need not be taken seriously. stark materialism has never fired imag- inations, and in this respect the difference between Fascism and Nazi-ism becomes very marked. A Frenchman was relating his experience of studying the Engish language. He said: “Vifhcn I firs: discovered that if I was quick, I was fast; that ii I was tlcd I fast and that not to eat was to fast, been an unusual proportion of illit- erate voting in his poll. “Well.” he replied, “if they marked the ballot in Jewish, how would I know what it was?" The audience rocked with laughter. "How is a cross made in Jewish?" counsel asked. "I don't know," said witness. "The two dominant impulses of youth are toward activity and to- ward some kind of collective asso- ciation. Our failure to provide for these two impulses under the chang- ed conditions of rural as well as city life. is at least a partial measure of why we are getting unsatisfactory results in character development." —Dr. John Dewey, in The Rotarian Magazine. Hence the importance and value of the Boy Scout move- ment. Both the City and R. C. M. Police are to be commended for the way they carried out their duties the past week. The average individual can hardly conceive the added respon- sibilities thrown on the shoulders of these two forces during the Exhibi- tion and the Jacques Cartier cele- bration, in some cases constables do- ing double duty, and it is to their credit that as in previous years not a single accident of a serious nature occurred to mar the occasion. Chief Birtwistle and Inspector Fripps in stationing their men at vital and strategic intersections, both in the City/and on the grounds. kept the steady flow of traffic running smoothly and greatly minimised the danger to the pedestrians. An unfortunate contretemps has occurred at Niagara Falls, N..Y. It was announced on 26th inst. that on September 3 to 6. Great Britain. Canada. France and the United States would join hands there to commemorate more than a century of peace. Next day the town was under arms with 3000 engaged in a free-for-all, which started when an might interfere with the 0011685510“ Qbflalned by Canadian producers under the Empire trade agreements. That this fear is unfounded was in- dicated recently by Sir Wliilim Clark, British High Commissioner, attempt was made to break up a meeting oi the International Labor Defence, called to rally workers to the aid oi Alphonso Doors, negro, who had been under arrest. It ap- pears there has been ill-feeling for 1n opening the British Fimlliffl 56C" tion st the Canadian National lFx-i hlbition, Toronto. Sir William said. in part: “I do not think you lived be hiraid of the present policy of the British government affording scr- ious menace to the intcress oi the; domlnlons. They will benefit indeed... since my governments major ob-‘ jective is to raise prices in "If United Kingdom for the advantage‘ not of the British farmer only but of all producers alike. ‘In order t0 achieve this end. it is necessary for the time being to reduce the im- ports of certain commodities, but a, fgggfdg the special intersts of agriculture at home the aim is to arrest its decline and to restore its gtatus of before the depression| rather than to pursue any imvflw’ [iblg deal of self-sufficiency. In a ‘alum-y 11kg Emgland that I , only be attained at n. rlllflollfi 605i?- ‘ . grid through a. ruinous reduction oi | I the standard 0! "V1118 of the people. ' ,0“ the other hand, it would be no less disastrous to allow the agricul- guy-pl population to b: derived of‘ their livelihood and driven into the - towns." 507521274 117617155; Harvesting is now Boner“- _ l-laff holidiyfll for 8W“ m" L" uded could , some time between the negroes and whites because the former were moving into the section around East Falls and 24th street largely popula- ted by Polish-Americans. ‘The out- break should lend emphasis to the international peace celebration. Perhaps it may be the last rc- sort. but it seems probable that Germany will find final solution for its social and fiscal problems by reverting to the kingdoms and princi- palities in which Bismark of Prussia found it when he starmd to create an Empire by smashing the French in the ‘seventies of last century. The German Empire was never really a united Empire in the sense in which the British Empire is: it was hammered into being by blood, fire, and coercion, the dominating and driving force being supplied by Bismark. So cruel and bloodcurd- ling were the means adopted that "Prusslanism" became a word de- scrlptive of conduct uncomprlsingiy merciless and hardhearted. That Prussia has not lost this art was evidenced by "Berlin's Bloody Sat- urday," which ever will make June 30 a day of shame for Géflnflfl! it home and abroad. captain Ben W. Allen of Ottawa has been appointed organizing 89¢- rotary of the melons pilsriml-ae w I was discouraged. But when I came across the sentence. "The first one won one dollar prize’ I gave up trying to learn the English lang- uage." Nobody wants war, yet almost everybody but Mr. Jimmy Thomas, the British Dominions Secretary, seems to expect it to happen soon. The fight to prevent it has almost become a war in itself. The sharp engagement between M. Barthou and Sir John Simon at Geneva had a distinct air of pistols for two; and the Disarmament Conference, which has been dragging on for nearly three years, seems to regard Mr. Arthur Henderson as the only bulwark against Armageddon. Mr. Arthur Henderson thinks so him- self. He says modestly that "he is at present as, the guardian of mil- ‘loins of the world's young men, whose lives are in our hands." Out- side the British Empire the world's young men are busy with prepara- tions for looking after themselves or for preventing other people from getting into mischief, says the Syd- ney Bulletin. Evidently they don't share Mr. Henderson's opinion. The uncanny instinct which birds possess for returning to their homes guided two pigeons, xvho escaped from their crate at Vancouver. B.C. and flew 3,000 miles to the home oi their owner, Louis H. Ogden at Norwell, Mass. Both birds were ex- hausted after their trip. . It is surprising to read in so usu- ally sound a nevrrpa-per as the Bor- der Cities Star a. suggestion that.» in the Dillinger case the officers of the law "disposing of him finally just as they would shoot a marl dog. have saved the people further outlay for court proceedings," and that "the only danger in this sort of thing is that they may have shot the wrong man." There is, of course, a basic danger in it which far transcends that, possibility-the danger that trial by po‘ice should replace trial by the courm. the pre- sumption in the former case being that a man is guilty, whereas in the courts he is presumed innocent until his guilt is moved. The shooting down of criminals or supposed crim- inals when they can be captured alive and dealt with in a court of justice has nothing to commend it police are the servants of the law. They must not bc allowed to be- come its administrators. The pro- cedure in the Dillinger case is not something for Canadians to copy. but something for Canadians to avoid.-Toronto Daily Star. Democracy, if it works well. is the best form of govemmcnt. Experienci- shows that it docs sometimes work well and sometimes wrrks b"dl_v. "Seli-govcmment is boiler than good government," but thcrc is a limit to badncss. when that limit is overpassed, dcmccracy is in (‘an- ger of being overthrown; and onsc overthrown it is hard to restore. Ob- viously then. if the higher form of government is to be preserved, it must be made tn work well, and this can be achieved only if elect/trite. legislature and executive play their assigned parts with encrgy. honcsty, and efficiency And that in ium depends upon a sutilcicnt number of men and women of intelligence and goodwill being willing to come for- Canadas memorial on July l. 1936. A question unsettled is whether the pilgrimage should be direct. to France or whether the Mother Country should be taken in en route. It would be great to make this Pilgrimage to Great Britain and France B5 spectacularly success- ful as the Jacques Cartier delega- tion here. Captaln Allen is presi- dent of the Ottawa branch, ist vice- presldent of the Ontario Provincial Command and also a member of the Dominion council. He served over- seas in the 16th (Canadian Scot- tish) Battalion and is widely known throughout, Cnnarln as a former mcmbcr of the original Vimy Ridge for the nudist d Dnnbells" troupe, l . an...‘ THE "CHARLOTFETOWN GUARDIAN Elia: . 30b; of flours “Opllfflflahgil MIGRAINE- NE SIDED HEADACHE Notwithstanding the fact, that the cause of all cases of migraine-one sided headache-has not been found, there is no question but that the cause of many of them is some food or other substance to which the individual is sensitive or oversen- sitive. Dr. Albert F. R. Andreson, Brook- lyn, in Digestive Diseases and Nutri- tion, states that the cause of the symptoms of migraine is a. tempor- ary edema or swelling of the brain matter. Now just what causes this swelling must be located and anything and and everything to condemn it. The- cveryihing that the patient has eat- en or has come in contact with must be taken under consideration. In addition to this the history of the patient/s parents, grandparents, or uncles and aunts, as to migraine, as- thma, hay fever, or eczema must also be investigated. In this way some one food or other substance may be located to which the patients family is over- scnsitive, and the patient has simply inherited this overscusitiveness to this particular substance. As far as treatment is concerned the patients in many cases have learned that a rest in a quiet dark place for one to three clays gives them the only relief obtainable. Dr. Anderson says that the treat- ment of a migraine attack consists in rcst, cleansing the large bowel, getting the offending substance out of the system as rapidly as possible, and the use of adrenalin or pituit- ary extract. Adrenalin as you know is the: late relief in asthma,’ severe attacks as it is called. However the real treatment in migraine should be the prevention of these distressing attacks and so every effort shoudbe made to find out, and thcn avoid, the ofiending food or other substance that is caus- ing the attacks. However the fact that these foods cause migraine in some individuals and not in others is not always be- cause the victims have inherited this sensitivcness, but because their res- istance to the effects of these sub- stances has been lowered because of infected teeth, tonsils, sinuses or gall bladder, or to constipation or other depressing condition. You can readily see that if the various gland products of the body are busy fighting infections they are not in good balance, and so can't hclp the body to handle certain sub- stances properly. Ocean Wave 112 Feet . (Time) Mcu familiar with the sca know that when towering waves roll past a ship with ihcir crusts above the cbscrvcr and their troughs yawning ‘below, they are likely to look twice as big ns they really are. Conse- quctly marincrs and seasoned ocean travelers were last. week discussing excitedly the carefully documented measurements of prodigious waves '11 tit-e Pacific reported by Lieut- Oomm-andcr Ross Palmer: White- morsh in U-S. Naval Institute,- Pm- ceclings for August. Leaving aside water walls of earthquake origin, skyscraper waves arc pied up by steady galcs blowing ovcr a great expanse of deep sea. Once formed, such waves may con- tinue their majestic roll until broken up by slackening wind or shallow watcr. Loftiest ocean waves mentioned in cncylopcdlc discus- sions of the subject is n 70-footcr roportcd by the Majestics officers 12 yours ago. At tales of bigger ones scientists and seamen are inclined to scoff. Bound from Manila to San Diego last ycnr. Ccmmandcr Whitemarsh frund his 447-foot navy tanker Ramiapo wrallcwinf: up and down the slopes of waves the like of which he had never seen. As the speeding giants overtook him one after another, hc stationed observ- crs in various places, git out his cinccamcra. Whlio the Ramapo was borne up a wndward slope. an officer on the bridge murkcd the mp of the fol- lowing vvnvc by a point on the mast. Tn crr on the std:- of caution. the crcst was assumed to he on his hori- rouhl sivht llnc although it was unmlstnlrnblv above him. The Rn- mapo. its stem at the base of tho wove behind. was found to be tilted un at an anal:- of ll degrees 50'. ilsing this angle and the dstance from bridge to stern the wave height was computed by trigonom- etry. and like computations were made from other observers‘ mcusurr-mcnts. Thp results, in good ngmcmcnt. put the wave height from trmyrh to crest at I12 feet. -.--i(‘Y-P-# ran“. “' '"""" ward and acccpt the burdens u! public duty. Democracy is a hobby- horse which will go nowhere unless you use your own legs. says Sir Herbert Samuel in Current History. It is an Idea. and habit of human nature that something just a little further beyond must be bcttcr. So we have so little appreciation for the near things. No matter where we tcrcsts of absorbing import and it is our privilege to appreciate them. It is an excellent idea to aspire to- ward something better, but it is best to master the situation at band before attempting anything clsc. We grow by inches. The near thinrs n-e the most familiar. and there- fore the easiest to master and to undr-rstnnd. Those beyond take care oi thcmsclvcs in order. That which touches our cxpcricncc most is ab- scrlicfl mcsby us. We beczmc a treatment that», gives almost immed-f of hay fever, and hives or urticaria s are stationed in life, there are in-' PUBLIC FORUM This lolull II IPII l" ‘l! I m: Guardian dual 5:." ‘imam!!! oudoruo ti! qluloul of nnolllllflilll- BAILEY MARKETING Sin-In reading over press re- pom wager-ping a, special meeting o; dis Council of the Charlottetown Board of Trade ‘we notice where the "Board". had taken action with a view to securing access, for our farmers, to a Monilrefll Barley "m" ket now being supplied fwm Ger‘ many. It is only fair to 81W U"? Board of Trade credit for its good intentions in this respect, but 1t seems as if their efforts were somewhat misdirected in this in- stance. wg have a splendid market right here in Prince Edward Island that will readily take care of all the barley we can grow, and an outlet that. will give farmers a much bet- ter return than they can hope W receive by exporting to other PP"- vinces. Prince Edward Island is essen- tially a livestock and livestock ‘FY01 duct producing Province. and 8i such requires large quantities of grain and other supplies for fecd- ing purposes. Owing to a yearly shortage of home-grown $111115. W3 are. unfortunately, obliged to im- port annually thousands of tons of mill feeds from without the Pro- vince anu usually at high prices. It. seems rather out cf place then, in the face of such a situation to suggest the export Qf barley. which is far greater in value than any class of grain or feed that we are now in the habit of importing 1Y1 quantities. Farmers in this province are growing only a small percentaze of the barley they might produce t0 profitable advantage, and the Q1151- fty of livestock, especially hogs. placed on the market, in many in- stances. is eloquent testimony, to the truth of this statement. Mr. K. Todd, Secretary oi the In- dustrial, and Development 9011M“ oi’ Canadian Meat Packers, when in the Province last year, made the statement that our Island farmers were producing only "a small frac- tion of the barley they Should EPOW annually for feeding purposes, and until such time as they would in- crease their barley acreage. hog raising would not be as profitable as it otherwise might be. A Muri- time packing concern states that 90 percent of our hog production is suitable m. the om country “Wit- shire" trade except that a large percentage is not sufficleiil-v fleshened or finished. and there is probably no substitute for burloy for this purpose. i The Maritime Provinces are now, producing only about one out of! four hogs required to supply Mark: time pork and pork-product con- sumptlon. The Old Country re- quircmenis are open and ready to receive our product in large quan- tities. One of our Maritime Pack- 5O Years Ago And Since p-i B7 FRED 000K GENERAL LESBAJID It was a source of speculation in many quarters during the Great War why the services of Major General Lessard were not more ef- flcaciously utilized by the depart- ment. Ha was D.O.C. at Toronto at the time, and though a. thorough Quebecker he was deservedly popu- lar in the Queen City and, indeed, generally throughout Ontario. His broad sympathies, and excellent qualities as a military man, had earned for him the highest respect. Lessard had commanded the Royal Canadian Dragoons in South Africa with credit to himself and honor to the Dominion, and his subsequent record indicated a high degree of ability. Why then should he be overlooked in i914? Many around the Department of Militia verily believed that had Lessard been sent into Quebec at the very outset to raise a French Canadian division he would have been ill. He would have inspired his compatriots with enthusiasm to such an extent that possibly conscription might have been avoided. The reason the general was not sent overseas may be attributed to a pre-ivar incident involving him with Colonel Sam Hughes, the then minister of militia. Perhaps there was justification for the minister's feeling, but I always thought he might have overlooked the friction, it‘ any, between them at a time when the interests of the Empire were at stake. The row between the minister and the D.O.C., as told to me, had its inception a year before the Great War broke out. A ROYAIL rox i cones Ranchers throughout the island are v0 Royal the finest feed they have ever used ROYAL FOX (JUBES contain 23 ingmd ients including 10% dried milk. Such qusmy i ' gradients as Egg Yolks, Potassium Iodite us. are included to bring out the gloss and sheen o; yoliir fur which means higher priced pelts this 8. . i When next you need for feed yo _wel| get the best-Ask m ROYAL. u may a“ t n. s. uurcli a. co. no. CI-IARLOTTETOWN DISTRIBUTORS ting For Full Strengéh and Fine Flavor se BRAHMIN ORANGE‘ PEKOE TEA Ceylon Small Leaf new regulation affecting the militia was about to be promulgated, on the minister's order, I forget exact- I ly what it was, but many of the| “1118hl1l1s“ were dubious about it. r Before the regulation had ap-‘ peared in General Orders one of the officers of the department went to Toronto on official business, and naturally called upon General Les- sard. In the course of conversation this officer mentioned the new regulation, and when he heard ft the D.O.C. expressed his surprise and said it would not work. Then he inquired who was responsible for it. When informed that the minister was its author, Lessard bluntly Temarked. "Oh, h—-; that damned fool." Of course the DOC. should not have so expressed himself, but to a brother officer of equal rank doubt- less he felt that no confidence would be betrayed. On his return to Ottawa this officer who was gen- Brally regarded as somewhat of n, lickspittle, in reporting to colonel Hughes on his Toronto mission. mentioned that he had seen Lessard in; plants is now being provided with special equipment. "W855i?! m the processing of "Wlltshirc Sides" and we will :\‘on be on an equal footing with UPS?!‘ Cflflfldfi farmers so for as mmketing outlets and processing opportunities are concerned, but. we need more home- grown feed and less imported ra- tions, and there is nothing better than barley, We believe there is a splendid opportunity awaiting the farmer who will devote more of his time and energy towards hog production. but it must be undertaken, with the idea in mind that overhead ex- penses must be held down to a min- imum. As a Province we should produce, at least three timcs the number of hogs wc are now grow- ing, and we should provide our own raw material in the shape of barley and other home-grown feeds. in sufficient quantities to forestall the necessity of importing expen- slve substitutes. It is only by sane. and well planned eifcrt that we are going to get "withln the mon- ey." Let us Ilse hogs in ever-in- creasing numbers, and thus extend our outlet for barley and other grains at profitable prices. Let us grow more barley. sufficient to iced our potential volume of hows. and forget. about exporting to Montreal or elsewhere for beer making and other brewery purposes. We are, Sir. ctc.. LIVESTOCK MARKETING BOARD and quoted to the minister the. opprobrious remark to which he had “ given utterance. Colonel Hughes had no further use for the D. O. c_ and showed it by keeping him cool. in; his heels in Canada, He was never allowed to go overseas but later in the war was given an im. portant appointment at Quebec, There he could only gaze with long- i118 eyes as the transports, carry- mg his friends into the zone of activities, passed down the St. Law- 213K168. In the House of Commons one day Sir Wilfrid Laurier inquired why General Lcssards eminent ser_ vices were not being utilized 1n g war capacity, and the minister re. plied that he was ill. Undoubtedly he was: the fact that officers, many of whom were junior to him and lacking the experience which hc P05595595. were 801114; overseas while he was retained at home at routine work undoubtedly caused him great mental suffering. General Lassa"; "We? 801'» over the slight inflicted upon him. l-Ie passed away 1n 1931 ________ AMY MOLLISON ms JOB LONDON. Ava. 29—Amy Mollison will start work on Thursday as the first "UV/Oman ever employed as p. Dilot on the regular cross-channel service. She is taking the job gem- Pofflrlly as a means of training for the London-Austrialia air raw m October. ' Hlllman‘s Airways, t0 do her turns or FROM "LINES IN MEMORY OF EDMUND MORRIS" For our friendship was always for- tunate In its greetings and adieux, Nothing fiat or importunate, Nothing of the misuse That comes from grinding Of one mind on another. So memory has nothing to smother, But only a few things captured 0n the wing, as it were, and en- raptured. the constant I would have shoulder Ere the long dark year is colder, And mark that as memory grows older, The brighter it pulses and gleams. And if I should try to render The tissues of fugitive splendor That fled down the wind of living, Will they read it some day in the future, And be conscious of an awareness you ‘look. over ..'.y as others. without a "8895 or conditions." on.“ FY5154? of London, Eng. Noted Physician. treated suc- cessfully and obtained per- manent cures of Stomach conditions, such as Indiges. tlon, D_,spcpsia, Sour Slam- ach. Heart Burn. Gastric Dis- tress and many other ailments percullur to the Stomach with a prescription, which we have procured and sell under the name of EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE We alone have the sole rights on this prescription and dnce selling it have received numer- ous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your Stom- ach. serials condition: um likely to arise If you allow Yourself m lapse into a chronic In our old lives, and the bareness Of theirs, with the newest passions In the last fad of the fashions? ‘Son of a Chief Justice and Gover- nor oi Manitoba. an artist who painted Indian chiefs on the prair- part of the things nearest us. and Jheynrerefleccodiuaupacumk state of gastric trouble. The 2 Macs DRUGSTORE 149 Great George Street ies. -.Duncsn Oampbeil Soot-t. HUNTERS, y BE READY! Buy Your Shells N O W! SlhlHIl-y, sepiember 1, u the opwl-III hr of the shooting season. Your chances of getting u. good bag will be much better i! Y" have dependable unununiti The quality and efficiency of Domini»! Bum-Finished shin shells nevbr varies. TM are waterproof, troubleproof and dependlble under every conceivable condlflm. We carry a complete stock of Domllilfll Ammunition. - lctusacrveyou. The ROGERS HARDWARE counuv LIMITED CHARLOTTETOWN l air.5*w~"wr'rf*v"“"“- "'“‘- ' " "" h... x‘ l-ucxsvaiuicuoLso /