I I a . 0 '. Q 1 l’- i 1 c ‘ c '1 I 1. l l . as: we PAGE FOUR THE BIIARLUITETOWN GUARDIAN lvmsflrsvvI/a.» “_ (nun-r n. sir-Lure, bl l’. hce-Prunienl, J. It. Burnett, l- J- a Berretary-Llcun-(ol. D. A. llunzliinnon, l). 5. U. Zd to: Illd Haunting blue tor-J. B. Burnett, F. J. L 4“,.,,.,,,;, 5...; innnli “nllnr and h. K. Pum- “"’flfiffl music‘. ufiifisan: mun p" y». (in mflbl-"l delivered “jg p" ftikr lln zulvnnrelfimnvlird In (=.nula_d;1d_l'qiw\l Hutu 7"“°““ South Africa And Canada an the zwo leading gold producers of the world and ‘.t is all going to cmmt in the anal world reckoning. Ila-one _ authority states, the United States ’ dollar, the Canadian dollar and ms A , gfluffl ‘evfimca m Germany may o! ‘b; pound sterling W111 be stabzbzed on, ' , _ i’, - a gold value o! somewhere around flvar-unongensg 53- 3-» .53, B; Iona W. Bola. ID. _ ~ per ounce-S's. Catharines; . I! ytsi-LICEYS Liberal COD'.'i‘:fl.10!2§U.puics_ Bu; mags: mflugnpgg p{E-_ Qandard flaw“! “v53 0R LIVE“ , . . . l XTRACT IN LNAEMIA ‘f1 11130113 it Wm 5carcfi4" fizzled in i918; Germany was saved‘ i B was do-r n fc: a.., reason that our locilifmm m’ consequences on“, ma“, During m; w" “Wu” og 311.! *' races were abc-Qlutely essential." nfwxnmiarl" n“ care 2° mm“ ‘o! hcr war-leaders which brouzh: . - bags .- IPGF I? 3 Yepimed w ha“: m _ dz taxation to her neighbors, Ce they Le ‘h? o! a“ mod- _, _ h H, b, d,‘ . _ _ ‘em explosives. “v employed a fleet F-BY "q-‘mg °“' J “ and ' ‘esson wrsch she failed to!“ iickermg and squabbliflz 07 a ' vhich must have bEf-‘Yl l"??? {>1- oval supporters Of ’ 112d hoped for e- ,- -.1_ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1933. If ' LIBERAL mscolcb s! E U’ A couple oi years ago a provision merchant was comnlaininc about health writers praising caiis liver as a blocd builder, as he was unable to Shit! b0 bring 0111' #8871195 1mm‘ keep up with the demand despite prof: frfim in 1913 may #83111 ~53“? Ichiii, but Genrsny was unable to ms hjgh pficg chgfgflL “The m5. 1o be adcninmered. lget much more from this source. tome: is annoyed because We zzvo mezhcds of! haven‘: always a supply on hand, - from the a1,- had: and we lose good cuszarners." been developed a fe-w years before, Sime that time W0 1313185 ha“! ‘m; Qulhfggk 0g hosting“; the! happened. first, i: has been found 'B‘_y‘_-;Q1and.f_‘:;de process and mg tha: beef, partzcularly young bee! q-iabe; p;-O¢e§_ gnhappny for fomygliver, and Zambzs‘ are Ill-Stuns ‘p501 Haber. dmcmr o; the I e,‘ effeczzve as ca.fs river in building §AS have been in m pasz-wiznelm Institute, is a Jew. con-f "B" b1°°d~ Sew-“i a“ °""“°‘ h“ | ‘been made from liver which can I. . 1 g sequently he has row been forced wodlcnon n ’ l now be used when fresh liver is not i or uvozaua INTEREST lpps-ararmc of unanzrr‘. 1' a ~ called for the F"- the federal The promising outlook for the Fox Show c“ and {he "rdlue which ' ‘.1058 somezhzng ‘“ W1"- d r ‘Jbera: CO-“cd s" n me S“ ‘the szlver fox industry. were re- 3° It 3 ‘Zlgxizujrcovwfi n‘! availabie. - le’: . a’. 2e , _ , .5?" on *..e men .v . , “Mr” L lama c s. . , , "viewed fir. an a" "robe Attica in ‘figs o: Gena; {v10- e p. since m9 m“ extract has come >bJ@¢?-"~'*? “'- 393“ “t; 5m 53”“ " ' ' ‘y "m one o" into use z): c- has been a feeling in a! F“ Cyrus 3xacmnzanl ‘i105; vesterrizjfs Guardnri b3: Mr. W. RJmen who’ u. men. 5319,1311, “by” n; it is much super- ‘S; ,- 5 r.‘ . .- o! the Fox ‘zibi- ~11 _--,- _ ' i nealzl". did not permit of him acccllt- a’? s t I n‘ B‘ and 5k‘ ’ p e “ted me wmvjtc liver as only small some place-s | ior to fresh Emu“ a’ this "ma and gm; A;__<_/)¢fg_._.;p_ ‘am; pm ',"_n¢‘_a'_iCOii3}')£0 o! Get-many wrlthin a. few; quantum, are necessary. and n is at 1 - [Liwsvxk superintendent. M!’ Imontks o! the declaration o! i akvays mama-ale. . to consideration as a‘ emphasized the improvetrze :3 m“ reward“ by a Mm" - a ~ Now the extract has these advan- 1-37 ti‘ G°""3'1"~-m5nt~ 7-" 59' rages and is particularly helpful “hm” ‘he €°d$ would C957")? - - - where the patient dislikes fresh liv- '——- ,er, but research workers find that cture of the Hindu re- "fresh liver is superior to all liver IiCSLphiC‘ " "res ‘r/rr. preparations in activity. The use cf ' :1: like fresh liver moderately cooked has -~ _. . from af not .211 surpassed by the introduc- lforeigri Iand, mod.‘ d trans‘ tion of liver preparations or by the ‘Jr-c hirtcrr o! formed by n. new er». ,1; m; method of injection of liver ex- it may, therefore. hr,- supposrd to‘ "ac?" was Qmtryrjir gm; 29,-5.5 .73 e Hindu The Prcsbgvtcrirm Hospital, New former candidate and bfinlszer of 1g; King Government ,p__ored_ Hwhlshow, and states that this year it ma; an)‘ gs expats/l to establish a. new rec-l ‘Ln avenge- qus...._,r at las: n; apparently W" i‘ SEPT; 1'11: strn , .._ z ."§ strange ,1 m; 0rd in t.‘ " connection. There are l Of and ind cations tha: ' be the largest Assncztncn. differences were no: srrf. pefore the date of meeting, and t2‘. luch ddfic . should have l? cc-s vrl _. in the entry .11.?!‘ if‘. m}; in maintaining a mmnlanze c1‘ , On The Klondike Trail Of '98 A FIBST-HAXD A0601?" or A nnznonanua ADVE‘..\"I'I.'BE (By Ernst (xabbe. v1.1.1 Baden. . XIV Before I transfer the scene of m? mining qzentions to its latest field. 1 will give you a description of the first stamflede 1 took part 1n- which was to bower Dominion Cree; 50mg (my miles from Daw- son. Four of us undertook the trip- Not being able to obtain access t0 the books mirselves, we were sup- posed to give an interest. in any ground we staked t0. a. second Pan-Y 1m- gupplfing the information. We hm a pack each, consbting of blankets and food, as we thought. back. We more the best part o! three days making the journey there, and each staked a claim as (treated. I found that the mnollnt of provisions 1 had taken along for the trip was not suflicient, and as the others were not much better cff I didn't know just what to do. Anyway, there were quite a few aband Mid cabins, and bydooking around one, I found about five pounds of rice. Wshing under the circuncszar-ses to mach Dawson as quickly as possible, 1., with a pot m cook the rice, and a7 spoon to ea‘. it with. s/nouldered my pack. and struck back for Dawson, arriving there in about two dnys and g, half, with rice siraight with- out salt three tunes a day, and the only reason I was no: hy-i-ing like a Cliinaman was. I didn't under- stand the language. As far as the v . . . . _ w. D J! mposed on tne cnarman, .. .. .! I 4 - r. d. H" . . ardcra d r-cs qm . _ They are fmrtat. “Jsh i York, and other large hospitals, in, _C_ and they are‘ as i: werell order to have patients use the fresh, lturiurcd 113011 dfsjussfln and 2.21M‘ liver if at all possible, got out ai Q = ~ , ' f lar e number t menus usin freslr I d.flicu.t for the V.e_=.:ern~ , _g h t ofla t Id g t“ . l.. ta speak for thEImZndY fixed with the over, sot a pa -n s wou no re gag axon of material things, a. 1w aw “.3, t. . , ‘ ' serving it. .1"; :1‘ int. '- . .. . fwlgo dééugs_ 1;“ .,,‘5ma::,co; admznli how it l5 really up to the physio. Carzadzan l, _ ‘on t’ '_ ,1 f ‘ > , ‘_ l fan to say whether fresh liver, liver ‘ ‘o m‘ “ d'5“““5'°“ m‘! foods put, up by responsible whole- ] sale drug houses, or the extract of I m ' — lzvr-r itself, should be used in any " ' " ma“ "7 mum» ‘"051 "ll can’. He knows what is bcst for any '1‘ "T-Tiflin Mcause we can't havfi‘ patient. o! Prince vs: of us really; need lrs In very severe cases it has been I, chamrmm as break, * "'15 often bring their train ‘_ mind that the use of fresh liver and , ' To happily live-apprcw .150 liver extract may be used. .~ .111 about, us, m; mane; how-k Before the discovery of the value or unpretentious, to thin}; o.‘ liver in the severe form of an- of others and gr 'y comp,“ aemin, blood transfusions from a , i»; finsqhgs 15 to MC the m9 healthy individual were given to ~, hang; l lJlliid up the qualily and quantity p of blood in the patient. Tncy are ‘ mm, Britain should fimfly 1.65mi .-:i1l u: d lfi some cases. I m1, s. “moms for further entangleq Hm rvcr in tnose cascsl-avhc-rc the Hnmy-HJYAT DL’.'\'VEGA.\"m' 1.. u... 1mm... affairs on‘ “I” "7' f“ ."'5".“"" “"5 . “Wm __ 1 ‘I WE sham get ncflvhere by] (l; _t.:l..»‘i5 simplest and mos. i0 form part of a new Eur-' on‘: he J03“ l“ ‘naiance of Powers. "Fm basis, T lnxport Trade n policy must remain the? and as such it ‘s regarded by a‘. . C"? "r110 For“ c; ' , . ., ”'I‘S from the U aw‘. E?" Fptif‘. cc . 2s from our . 1‘ P:'>~;:.~- rcures the isuc. ..°_ ', hith from uni‘, icaiizrc of imrrna- shcuid ric "on of ‘_ and co-r. 771g.“ r- Isle of Si" "tlqplaca- of our " I‘ _ z and the Kcll/xgg Pact.‘ Ex; mndin Bung‘ 5°“ the‘ . - true foundation for the! l g 1 "Wm 533$ aztzic}: on inlernatlondl ariwchy, 11,1511 and Empire) It n10?‘ m‘. b: generally lznown 3-"- “ffife I01‘ vbbfll-Rifi? a tol- My. LIQCI-Lilllfi King claims that rrnsie world in which to 11%. The!’ Canadas export trade has been des- are equally the ioundntzon for the troyed under" the prcscnt Govern- uinzj: of the British Commonivcallh merit. If he were to call at the Par- anci for Anglo-American relations. liamcnt Buildings in Ottawa he --T‘r.e Round Table (London; would find ample evidence to the —-~_-- contrary. In the National Revenue Life without . ponsibllity, :..-.diF=~‘-"~’5EW. Published by authority of me Ego“, o; sew,“ “gum b, dark} the Bllnister of National Revenue, indqed_ won; 15 a wonderful pry“; we learn that in the last calednar new.’ and the 58d Lhmgs abom, year this Dominion was the lnrgest human fife is that so many are‘ producernnd exporter of printing cheated out of this heritage of’ paporf ‘mml and asbestos’ Canada happy work The tragedy, ,5 that :,J'OCCLlf)lOd second place in the pro. ‘mam, haw Cheated th,,'msolves_ duction of goal and zinc, third in ' lhc output of copper, and fourth in the production of automobiles, wheat and lead. In newsprint paper production mat, after n11, is 53m“. ohm}, ,1 good many Lil.‘ 11s _ ttendcd ycstcrrl-ljvs "free-for-all" I - m1‘. nation-house aims to be tho oldest in... . in Scotland. They ye now devcutly thankful. ' [am asked to share this honour THE DANGER POINT l fzvtth IlcdL-asilc. Dunrcbin, and other knell-known» res dances, but the . [question raised is zoo muc‘ i. l - Mime and 51mg German’! rJP-‘Pd in the h'-zc" of anfqufltyvffoolie . .. _> . . 1"" the Peace Conference, a} v v as mm “Titten m theleasily Rfljblfitfid and ‘.5 better left pm“; ammacveman planinlone. The Maclcods have been at. n“ ‘qrrililch S_A__V,ZET_ yllmnvcgan for many long centuries 1M m,’ Gmuinnd have loft a name behind them armv ‘qnjlzhn: is vvnrlily‘ of emulation. ‘They ‘bcnxrnrlcd the Maccrimmons and ‘rough, slynuriflnfl w Lixcns helped them to build up a piping 5 their objective. ‘Ifiizux: vvnc. knov." Crhcfle that w“ namew far be’ m“ atom French mimfity prfipnrJywr/nd the boundaries of Gaeldom. In mcre modem times they disting- md. I‘ 1r. svccflfcd nns d"; .1- Rxrgulur and continuous inspection of the armaments of the vnnousl powers-that Ls the condition which l Canada, with an output o; about 3,. France dmnamls that (knmmyi. 830,000,000 pounds, almost doubled 8-13" a°°°lll~ T“ 00114100" wuld. that of the United States, her near- ’ not" more Cléafli’ Give EXPTQSSW" w est competitor. The Dominion was “mprcsscd byjufrlind by mwn a the mistrust that exms- GQYYYIBYIW» the worlds largest exporter oi’ wheat we rumours’ £95m ‘he mntknilsc-mnnomwsnsc v cw of the Jncibltelfrfnlliixvgsivilcalf 51?‘? shall be pfimitmd m £932’ with lihlc cxportstotaiggf amrday Revmwl The m”, ma; Lhmv m L BM whne “he ho tr bdd t wcamns as s e was 228,..20,000 c s, l: gzzinsA . I 15-‘. r s m on , . . ' 2 . r en- mpncamd system of French {mu use o possess under 0110,03 ,000 bus cs expo c y g _ unw- gflrlmuryng 1n gm];- adhesmn t°vT7€rlly' of Versailles again displays‘ tlna, the second largest exporter. flrfltlflm $1005 5'1""- ai Emmi or the stuar,‘ “use thw offered m mslrust. The fear of wital, one or, Canada occupied third place in ex- csancon is a5 U10 German-s “'91! rflista to m ' 1 other nation may be tempted to do.’ ports of wheat flour, fourth place in now m error. In these days it is " “Ce e success °n M the exlsfig m. 511 51,155, 1,, mus; surelv! exports of automobiles and wood ‘ Gcorges. They are a o th f . . ' bb 1e business oi’ fortifications to ix- ‘ ‘m "g e Wibc obvious that 1g the w“ 5pm,: pulp, sixth in exports of r11 er l-Ilghland fannlles that retain muchds so strong, whether inspired by‘ mes- These EXPO?“ of stab“: pm“ o: their ancestral possessions andlfoar or by ambition, fighting wml films 10869 up fiftyjper cezit. of nearly all their old-world influence. ie-"entuany "sun ‘Wm thWKh thB canadas total dome“ c 9”” 8' Th an“, l I th R0 nations had to resort to bare knuck- I“ the fiscal year endmg March e a. o e yal couple to ks to "we the“ dmercnces‘ 31, 1933, fourteen of our leading do- spend a few days with them in mcstic exports showed increases Skye was. a red-letter event in their‘ l ‘a 1nd on i-‘mncwl tlons are not much ‘ lnrrmsclvcs ivlslblc and the difilcultles of’ es- lounge have teen enormously in- ‘cascd, It is, however, betraying no rcrct to say that the French de- \nce works extend far soulh of csancon, as any visitor to the ‘compared with the previous fiscal The Japanese have stlll one greati yeah n ,5 also interesting to note after the completion of the work. n number o! us clulzbrd together and built n raft, containing about four '§g‘-=F1;II’E9'§iila:m~9biuuub‘4i~¥‘- ira is likely to discover. A surprise "stack on the Western front is not 1e danger that Europe has lo face. f an attack comes, it will come l the East and more likely than 0t in Upper Silesia. ‘Of course there remains the ques- on whether Gcmiany ls mad en- ligh to plunge Europe into another Var, out of which she could not ftmcelvebly emerge but with defeat iore crushing than was administer- ‘d by the Allies in 1918. Perhaps ii’ ‘ne Allied forccs had really march- d on Berlin at that time and given he German poople n. demonstra- jon of war oonse,.....c=s such as history and one which appealed 1n a special degree to the people of the Misty Isle, ENGLAND AND GENEVA A correspondent in the London Times quotes the following lines frmn Tennyson as being singularly applicable to the British attitude at Geneva. as expressed in the speech of Mr. Ormsby-Gore: As long as we remain, we must "Deakjrce, Thouzh ull the storm of Europe on us break: ' No little German State are we. But the one voice in Europe; we must speak; - That, if tonight our ’werc struck dead, greatness ‘fnnce and Belgium experienced for years, there would now be no ~ 4 ‘There might be left some record of the things W0 said. esson w learn-the lesson that in, ‘he “m8 n"! quality always te1Ls;! and failure to amreciale this point: may yet Drove their undoing. Their" koods. though cheap, are glmmt invariably "nasty." Not only are they inferior in quality to similar 80min of Western manufacture. but they are often turned out on g Dian that must l?" descrlbcd as one of deliberate 5i rp practice. m- stances o! this-cspcclnlly in rcggrd t° milklmfl! trademarks-have been freely quoted m mm- daily Press during the past wcck: and South Africa. will not eeslly forget the flood of "dummy" lead pencils (wmilllinx hnlf an inch of lead at each end) dllmlird into this country "m" JED" 90011 lifter the war. Work that In appreciated’ ls never arduous or unplcdmnt-and service that the Dominion moved up to fifth place among the nations of the world in the value of its export trade in the calendar year 1932 from Seventh place in 1931. It. displaced Bclgium and Argentina, being ex- cccdcd in value of exports by only the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany and France. The first agricultural process to be carried out in Canada was the raising of a crop of grain at Port Royal, Nova Scotla, in 1605; and the first corresponding manufacturing process was the grinding of com in the fall nf that yum‘. rcnrlrrcd, and adequately apprecia- cd, is fully paid to that one who has Dnurcd u from his life. Appre- c-utccnzc of the journey went, none cf us got our claims. I will now conclude my mining career, by mentlonng my last e!- fort in me prospecting line. while helping in the construc- tion of a piece of road on the White Horse trail, I made the ac- quaintance of William Cooley, and cords of wood, to enable us to nav- igate safely down the Stewart River en route for Dawson. It was a fine. clear, sunshiny day, with no wind to bother, and a good strong cur- rent to boost us along. All one had to do, Mm spread himself out as comfortably as pcsible, and i! he was that way inclined, dream ovf happy days to come when he got back to civilization. We had a few hot air artsls on board, but the gentle soothing act-ion of the raft, combined wih the warmth of the 51m. soon lulled them to dream- land, and thus we floated down the stream, imtll we arrived towards evening opposite Stewart City, where alas, we ran aground in shallow water, and seyeral good Samaritans vyvaded out and tranpsorted us ashore on their back. Then we pro- ceeded up to the road house, and had a. good square meal, not to mention the llqud refreshment. After resting up, we proceeded onward once more, after discarding some of our wood to get of! the bar, and were shortly in the strong current of the Yukon River. and bowling along merrily, everyone seeming in good cheer. After about a day's travel, we landed at the mouth of the Klond ke River, and managed, after some difficulty, to land the raft, when ecah one pro- ceeded to his destination, Cooley and I going to his cabin. The following morning, after breakfast, we got sizing the stua- ticn up as to the best thing to do, and in the conversation, Cooley mentioned a. piece of country he knew; of, situated about one hund- red and thirty miles above Dawson, ’on the Yukon River. Some parties he knew had been mining there for quite a. while, and had secur- ed, in that time, quite 4i respect- able amount of gold. He said it was situated on the hmd of Britannia Creek. and he thought, on account of the gold being found in that particular locality, that Just over the divide from there, on the Klo- fossin River, would be a good piece "Y °°ll11¢PY W Pmllfct in. As far as I myself was concerned, action was what I was ready for. and we were; not long getting under way, we gathered together such supplies as we considered easary, and 105d. ing them on an up river manner one day in the early fall, booked passage for our destination. A419;- about o day and a hall's mm, m. were landed on the bank of the Am not. far from the mouth of Brit. annfa. An individual named Dan Mann, an lcquaixitanoe of Coolcvs, show. ed up shortly after, and told u; we cculd store our goods in a Cflbin he and his partners P05505590] a abort ways from there. $0 we pro. I _ t0 ‘ ,1 thcm {hp-re right away, he lending us a hand to do so. After cooking up n, meal, 1nd having something lo cat, a5 sufficient to do us the trip there and; selection of goods. and making them prospecting we immediately proceed- lVetch In The Desert ‘D (Saturday Review I The life o! seeds is n mirious study. I Scientists found it very difficult to E understand how from time to time parts o! the Sahan became u green i as an English meadow. The Ian- - daring Arabs vowed that the cw?! was true and indeed claimed some sort of second sight which enabled+ them to drive their cunels to the appointed spot where, perhaps once in twenty years, the stony wilderness blossomed like the rose. In many quarters the tale was discredited, but it; truth was proved by the late Maior Chipp of Kew Gardens. He shot a number of sand grouse in the very heart of the desert I-nd found that their crops were tilled with seed. Then he discovered that mil- lions of these seeds were scattered perhaps once every fifteen or twenty years, rain fell in some area, the seeds germinated, the plants grew with amazing rapidity and went through their whole life history in forty-eight hours to be scorched up and leave their seeds behind when the African sun again blaud. down on them. Specimens of the seeds he collected-they were n form of vetch-were grown in Kew Gardens and their power of arrested vitality is highly interesting. OCTOBER I watched her gliding through the autumn woods, A radiant smile upon her pensive face; Above her head she held a flaming torch, Which flickered as she moved with stately grace. And while she passed, she set on fire the trees, And made the rowan berries blaze with red, - She dropped her cloak of gold be- side the burn v And softly slipped away, with noise- less tread- _. ' Afar she vrandered on across the moors, Whose haunting silence wrapt her round in rest, Then turned her purple robe to rus- set brown, And laid it on the heather! sleep- ing breast. -Edith A. Vassie, in Chamber's Journal. into two independent packs, we ac- oompanled him on his way up the creek. The balance of our goods we had transported with a. horse a short time after. Britannia Creek we found, had a very sleep grade, towards its head. the channel being obstructed with tremendous rocks, where they had been doing their mining being com- among the stones and sand. When, » is the Extra” Special in Tea In view of the advancing martet there is no i“ clued at if: present retail prlcg u“; ca, huh HORSES fiTlNDbBD TEA, It i; 1n u“ M-ecnt clan for quality, bu: you c“ m“ l," uhlulBlhIal‘lofiGll‘lpdfpdlnflpggkg‘e‘ NEW BL OUSES $3.95 HATS on your list . . . a new suit, or just some-_ thing to trick up y o u r o l d o n e '.’ Either way, you'll ‘ need new blouses . . . and there are none smarter than these. In satin, fa i l l e, bengaline, crepe, and even jerseys. They make old suits new,'and Ascots make smart. neck- lines for fall. new suits newer. . Tile dear old ahirtwnisl l" crepe. S. A. MacDONALD’S The Island's Leading Store sleeves still persist! paratively flat in comparison. It looked as if at one time a auddm convulsion of nature had. occurred, upheaving the ground pausing it to dam the water back, until it over- flowed, and in a mighty rush out a deep gorge in the hill. Use Brahmin Tea Refreshing as only fresh, pure Orange Pekoe Tea can be. A short time later, it began t0 though there was but little water showing in the creek, what there was started to form a glacier on its steepest grade, and we found it necessary to wear creepers attached to our footwear to enable us to travel. As soon as sufficient mow had fallen, we got the loan or! some clogs from Mnnn, and hiwhing them up with one we had ourselves, we Procecded to haul our stufl over the divide, and after getting it 0o the place we had chosen to do our cd to put up a. cabin. DR. l.. B. EVANS of. London, Eng. Noted Physician treated successfully and obtained per- manent cures o! slommh Conditions such u Indiges- tion, Dynpepsin, Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gnllrlo Dll- treu 1nd many other all- mentu peculiar to the simu- ach with n prascrlption which we have procured and cell under the name of EVANS STOMACH MIXTURE We alone hove the lob right on this prescription and since selling It have received numerous testlmoninll from alluded purchuen. Don't fool with your llam- aola. Serious condition: no likely to arise if I'd allow yourself to lupus into n chron- ic lhle of gntrlo trouble. Get l. bottle today. Prlcl centl. "m: 2 MAGS elation is lhe one great thlnl ti!“ lnvc alone is afilc in buy! Mann was going up the cvcr-k mm g pack of stuff, we also made a, l0 Great George Strut show some frost at nights, and al- - ll. K. S. IIEMMING, B.A..c.1'>.A..c.c.A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MEIVIBER OF ens/mum socumz 01- cos-r ACCOUNTANTS COMMISSIONER non ranmo Al-‘FIDAVITS m Tm: streams comm‘ or r. n. r. r. s. r. nsrnnsnum-rrvn rm; oamnran cannu- MEN'S musr ASSOCIATION, nnmrnn. BANK or NOVA scorn numnxc. cannon-crown, r. s. I. Accounting systems opened up nnd revised; Llbor loving olllco methods installed. Cont Accounting instituted to nut Ipeahl require/monk. Mnnthly, quarterly and annual audits. Balance sheets and Profit and Lou Account prepared. Income Tu returns written up end filed. Financial arrangement: made between debtor lredllon. Llmliod Iilnbillty Companies lncorponkll. P. 0. BOX I5. TELEPHONE 1378. MARINE INSRANCES Shipments of all kinds covered promptly at lowest current rates. Shippers will please advise their require- ments before sailing. IIYNIIMMI 8r 00.. LTD. Established 1872 Marine Underwriters and Agents for Lloyd's, London. Lower Queen Street Charlottetown