PAGE FUUR THE CHARLOTTE TUWN GUARDIAN Brannon-w. Cheater u. lloLurs secretary-Linn. (fol. D. A. llarlt Idlinv 1nd llnnnlvr-J. & lllllll"! lllfl Ilallai. . ll . I".|IIIIII—II It. Carri; u,“ y‘: you (In Qdvanoo) In bland gnu Unlwl lllloa SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1930 Cnendurable b'topias Canadian Peflpie. the Liberal parlia- mentary mriy in 1m, less than twelve months later. turned a com- blrt: somcrsault, a volte face unpre- ccdcntcd in political history, and put, forth the doctrine of preferential dull-cs on British goods. The Con_ material changrs will ‘iiilgfllfilcfllsimgttexizsts gitotnjclanzfserg: wrought by applied physics; sv.i- ~ , party to wash away its sins. As Sir ma“ food lacwfles “"11 have dim" I Robert Borden declared in the House The latest attcmm to see into the future is made by 1.0m Blrkcnhead in his scientifc prophecy “Thcl WOPld in 2030," rccenily published 2n I England. It is s. strange world in- deed that he describes. Stupendous have been en the product". ofagriculiurc off. o! Cnmmoxxs on Jan’ :6 ‘my the market; ivhysivisis ivill navel "The Canscrvanvc “Amy ghnds solved the problem of silpplying thc I today" as it stood in thc past for a “mad “u, “muss. “moums °f| policy of reciprocity within the l3 - t; l ' cheap power by the release of atom- n S‘ Empire in energy; “a m“... 91am, o; 59;] Time passed. In 1896 the Conserv- horse-pcrier will c.1111‘; fuel for n, l‘.El\i: party wcnt down to defeat andi thousand hours‘ work m. in a 1.1.x: tho Liberals came into office. Fif- rQun[Q1n pang-l teen years later they were: again passengers win travel n eym-mougiyi looking to Washington, where 'Hon. swift. aeroplanes, which \\".ll ascend MF- Fielding‘ and Hon. Mr. Paterson, rnrl descrnd \'."f'lli‘.llil_\'. Dcscricd by "Clint! Fill llvllflll 0f thc Liberal Gov- agriculture, "tamed" by crnmcnt, cnlcrcd into a reciprocity complete erctdicaton of w-ccds and Duct. with the United States Govern- thorns. the COHXIITySKlO “will i ment that literally in respect of its rent. on appearance of an lllt-fldllllh‘ durability was not worh the paper able mm. brokcn only by patchcs ol , it was written on, a pact as obnox- woodland. gaidens. houses BTd lac-l lous to the people of Canada as had toriesfl while the problems that are i been the unrestricted reciprocity Dol- today Vfilli icy of twenty-one years before. and Iianlfndl Now, having courted Washington freed from dirt, povcriy, (ILSCRbvC and ilnsucccmfulfyi since, crime. will haw leisure to devote itsi permitted Canadian markets to be no bigger than a and the i pre - vexing soc a.l reformers have been solved. c-. er having l merges c111 will be armed 41th suf- l fzciortt. power t0 undertake (vera- tions "on a cormic scalc." All this makes engrossing rendzng. but it leaves our. certain rather im- explolted for the benefit of American producers, the Liberal part5; again makes a vnltc face in the direction of Imperial preference. As Mr. White i well said, surveying these gyrations omtant human fzutors. It fail-i like‘ in policy. this jumping from one ex- FYGFF‘ Sfilflfltiflc TOPCCKISt 0f till-S 1H0: trcmc to thc other, this blowlnghot "i illii“ “ll ‘Til m‘ i-"l-i’ 1W5 b9?" UFO-l and blowing cold upon prcfcrcnccr. li-ctetl, in being IWIFHCLIVE to nornioll p; lyrgnjgtiul] of British trade, onc men and women. ' From Plow toi is reminded of the lines of James up amo. gst his Birkenhead there’ is something hbout the predictions of these Utop- ian seers of an improverl and ll‘l‘ll“il- any, hun-iarxity. intense); rlllClClll and intellectual and hygienic and all that, that somehow. swrilatx: a clnll in the heart. We are attached to "ncoplciand lllf~l.l‘llllt;ill§ much by their Ifllilllgi. m. by m‘. r v rides; c. d when civilization btccuics it ivcrleci- Pz’ mcchaiism it will lo". ‘ or earn r\'lfllli‘tll)lr*_ . D0_.o‘.cvsk_v, the lturuziri novclasl, ccnrvc to b: Li one of ill“. prolouiitleoip studies CIESPPEDGCI wnrtt is Lkely to happen m that em of mcchctnlcul " ~l b‘o- ltgiczl ])‘l'l0(‘ll.')li |)l'C(ll4'|l‘(l 21v I~rrl BTRCIIIICZICI. Onc day a mun will get fellows. "Fellow men." he will sax’. “now that we have got everything kcycd up to the high- est EillCi€l1C_\' on thc prniixrxlc liizit two and two make four, I propose hare and flow i.» take my fopt and knock the wholc iii ng to thc Dnvil!" This he will pfocccd to do t‘: r; 0f applause. fnstnblc As linfcr One of thc reasons why Conserv- ativcs otipose the tircscnt tarzff pol- ‘3: :9 ‘:31 Mackenzie Kim: Govern- its Wlllilll 1|. is a sham. about. the local LlbPflll organ has. been sit;- nificanily silent. arc not zlcsigncd to mcnt ir because coimtcrvailing flllllPz-j give protection to Cfanadian agricul- ture but to catch agricultural votes. Its gesture totvaixh: Imperial prcfcr- Inlll II finally prnven by Conservative rluring thc Budcct rlcbatc lind not- ably by Mr. R. S. Wlntc, of Llount Royal. In 1891, as Mr. White poinlc-zl out, thc policy of the Liberal party vain "unrestricted Willi thc United states. The tar-fl wall wits to be swept away bcuvccn the two countries and a common tariff cr- ected against all nthcr countries, in- cluding Grcnt. Britain. Smaking in the Housc of Commons on thc Liber- 5,] policy at that time, Sir Richard Cartwright, official lender of thc party, said: "If unrestricted reciprocity (loos discriminate aflflin-‘il Gm“ mil‘ nln. we have a right to. Our own interest is paramount. We nwc Great. Britain nothing but char- py for her atrocious blunderinrz against, our gnu-rests, There ncvr-i- w,“ a fimg when Canada ‘could not have bcitcrccl hz-r condition by joining the United States." lIlI-JIICCYC, ITS “T15 speakers rcci1ii'ncil7"’ The electors of Canada rejected the Liberal policy in 189i. Edward Blake RIIVB it thc finishlnfl blow imd pu-n, in desperate Dlllllllv- ill hill" °i Iecderiflrig the pouy which litrr- ally ltaat In the nostrils of the Russell Lowell: "A nnirciful Providence fashioned ‘cm holler I In order that they might their principles swallcr." A Sfnlcsnzafis Exit No mnrc graceful cxil from public. lifc was madc than by thc late Lord Balfour, Brit sh statesman and ph‘l- ocopher. whose statement on his ros- lignzttioi from thc Conscrvativc Par- ly is rcpiibliciicrl m an Etvglsh ex- change. As m example of choice and dignified language it may ft.- ttngly rank among thc classb": “I inch to lonvo this {Ifllillfill of hcavi‘ ‘Dfilllllbillly hcfnrc I can to. s cc d of suffering from the 11101.: ll dcus of all diseases. thc disease which comes upon those w-‘niw. without. using their health <1- ihcii- iniell l, ncvcrthless get. scmrwhat pctrif cd m the nld couiizfs which they have pursued. whosc nutitority/ grows because ' have been long l1 thc public c, or have been great men . icncc or business or whatever it may bc, but who cannot deal with the great. problems which ii lh s chlinzinz world are pcrprtually arisinz: wzth all the freshness and elasticity really desirable in those who have to conduct great con- rrirrs. ‘I nm vain enough in hnpc. lhouch in man can l/fll. that l he no; yct reached that. period. but I .~ "uld b" miccrablc if I ran the marg n fire." _._i__i- . Let's All (in ("tizcnq will have an oppor- Tuesday Jwq Our (n ,-'L_v on Holiday nights of patronizing a local nutcr- tainment and at thc some imc as- isiitinc in a most worthy causc. A roll ckifg three act comedy ii be‘ in: SlilfJFd under the capable direc- tion of Mrs. Arthur H. Romr in ftid ol thc Prctcstnnt. orphanage. The cntcrtalnmc i‘. i". under thc patron- IIIJQ nl His Honour Lcutcnant. Gov- ernor and Afiu. llcnrtz, Ills Worship birigyor Frc-"zsc ILKI blrsz. Prcnvsc, and and is bciug given in the Prince Edward Theatre. Charloitetoyvn is justly proud of its local dramatic tnlcnt. mid one effective way of encourag- mg tins talent is by largo attend- EJCI‘. at thc performances on Mon- day and Tuesday evening. Erlitnrial Notes The United Fanners organizntlots of Saskatchewan and Alberta have denounced the Dimnizg budget. When thc Kng Government at- tempted to "steal Be:.r.ctt's thun- der," it lost more than an equival- ent quantity of its own, and helped fill thc Opposition annor o: with new ammunition. Neither East nor I the pioneer ' onstrated Notes ByJ/ze‘ Way suffered a loss of $16,752,948 lsix per cent) in gross revenue because of, as Sir Henry Thornton says, "the de- crease in revenue from grain ship- ments and thc non-operation of har- vester-excursions.“ Losses suffered by the Canadian Pacific Railway were on a proportionate scale. Such loss- es meant that large economics had to be effected in operating expenses, and consequently considerable unem- ployment ensued. Chief Justice Mulock recently made the very significant remark that the majesty of the law is the supreme dominant fllflhflfity. Without the law there is no security for life or prop- erty. "In an accident near St. Thomas," sayis an exchange, "an automobile hit a horse and buggy and a prosc- cution may rcsult. But. the charge may be laid against the owner of the buggy, for failing to carry a light. Any vehicle on the highway at night. without a light is dangerous both for the occupants of the vehicle and others who happen to be using the highway. Says an exchange. "whether or not one has a special interest in nat- ural history and thc wild life of Can- ada, it ls an amazing and memorable experience to see the grand army of wild geese that halt in Manitoba in their northward migration. Such a sight was to be seen a few days ago, just beyond Rosser, the geese exe- cuting their strange and interesting manoeuvers in the air and then set- tling down in vast, numbers upon the lake. To thc old timers and to those who have travelled much about thc prairies and the north country this may be a funilinr sight, but to people from the city vgho witness it. for the first time, it is exceedingly impres- sivc." "General elections which will be held in this province and Dominion this summer,“ says the Moncton Transcript. "are expected to bc warmly contested, but cvcn at their most/exciting stages they Will M! b‘! able to rival the campaign now in progress in the Dominican Republic. Thbro opposition candidates declare that they dare not risk their iivcs campaigning ln the interior." It has frequently been stated, that. in scientific discovery had a vcry rough road to travcl, that, as a rule hc died forgotten and that he was honored only when lt was too late for him to know any- thing about it. Occasionally, as in the case of the lntc Lord Lister, thc man with a new idea fights his way through and wins recognition. This, howcvcr was not achieved by an earlier physician. Henry Hill Hickman, who first dem- ihat certain gases could hi‘ used tn produce anaesthesia and cleaden the pain of operations. Some time ago, many people on both sides of the Atlantic were say- ing that war between thc United States and Great Britain was un- thinkable, which shows that they were thinking about it. Something had to be done quickly, ncthe posi- tion would have gone from bad to worse. Today the nightmare has cndcd. Anglo-American relations have become genuinely cordial, and the foundations of a permanent friendship seem to have been well and truly laid. “We cannot even If we would,“ says thc New Statesman, Ixmdon. England, “dissociate ourselves from European affairs. We arc, whether we like it or not, in Europe, politi- cally and economically. We arc a Mediterranean Power. war in the Mediterranean would affect us little less vitally than war in thc Channel. Indeed, any big Continental war would inevitably involve us. . . . The ldco. that. safety is to be found in an Anglo-Saxon bloc—a. dupli- cated nationalism to promote inter- nationalis-m—ls preposterous. Friend- ship with Amcrica. is nll to the good. The proposed inter "l" mull across Nlcaralrua to supplement ti" Panama. Canal is a far oldcr pro- ject than most. Americans believe, according to Captain William Kllmcr. nrmy engineer. The first proposal for such a. canal was made by Antonia Galvao, a Portuguese in 1550. ‘The Nicaragua route was actually survey- ed in 1850 by Orville W. Chllds, n New York engineer, when thc first Commodore Vanderbilt proposed cut- ting n. canal through as a private project. Vanderbilt actually did make use of thc San Juan River and Lake Nicaragua in conveying gold hunters from California during that period, laying the foundation of his fortune with a steamboat line that followed the river to a point only '12 miles from the Pacific, where his passen- gers were transferred t/a stlfle coaches until they reached the 0th" ocean. Mon and women live longer now The Canadian National Railways 0,1...» w. am... up. comucrmo YOUR sromcn mounts. Perhaps your stomach bothers you considerably and you wonder if there is anything really wrong. If you are of middle age or over, your doctor will tell you that the su- fest thing to d0 is to have a thorough examination, including the X ray, as cancer often comes on without giving many symptoms. If your distress comes on two or three hourse after a. meal and con-i tinues until you eat. some food, which eases the pain for mother two or three b01111. you may have an ulcer. Perhaps you have been thoroughly examined, no cancer, no ulcer and yet you have consideralbe distress and gas formation. The liver ls working right and also the gall bladder, es shown by the dye or other tests. What may be the trouble? The very fact that you are worry- ing about condition may be partly the cause. as an emotion like worry can interfere with the movement of the stomach and the food thus remain in the stomach too long. It, may be that. you have a slow emptying stomach and attempt to cot e. meal before the previous one has completely left the stomach. It may be that you have a slow act- ing large intestine, and instead of the muscular movement being downwards they reverse and come upwards, giv- ing you a sick feclin! in i119 Iwmich- Now as-there is no organic trouble. you may have to take your case into your own hands and use a. little com- mon sense in the matter. There are two 0r three simple things that you can try for yfllifwli- and if there is no organic trouble Y0" should get. rid of your stomach dis- trss. The first is to iie on your rlaht ride for ten or fifteen minutes before t-li! midday and the evening meal. I! W" can sleep this fifteen minutes all the better, 11 not relaxation is what’. is really needed. After eating do not lie down but sh, in an easy chair for ten minutes if possible. you we lying down before meals gives y-ouaeleunstomachas any i°°<i that, has been left in the stomach too long syphons into intcsine. 5mm; down lifter the mcallglves the stomach its best chance to mix thc stomach juice with the 100d- The third thins to <i° i! l" "W the meals wcll BDB-Tl- i breakfast and the noon rnvai- A W“ after th evening meal, sitting not ly- ing, should be tfllwn- UAVALOS‘ ‘PRAYER When the last sea l5 sailed 8nd ill“! last shallow charted. When the last field is reaped and the last harvest stored. When the last fire is out and the last guest departed, Grunt the last prayer that I shall prey, Be good t0 me, O Lorri! And let mc pass in a night at sea, a night of storm and thunder, In the loud crying of thc Wind through sail and rope and soar: Send me a ninth great peaceful wave to drown and roll me undcr To the cold tunny-fi5ll@$' ll°me when the drowned galleons arc. And in the dim green quiet place far out of sight and hearing, Grant I may hear at whllcs the wash i and thresh of the sea-foam About the fine keen bows of thc stately clippers steering Towards the lone northern star and thc fair ports of home. -John Masefield. THE LAND WE LOVE By FRANK LEIGH THE PROGRESS 0F QUEBEC Q. What is the progress of Quebcc province? A. The following tribute was rec- ently pald to Quebcc by a prominent railway Executive. "The largest of Canadian Provinces - Quebec — is probably the most stable, beingnvise- ly governed by statesmen who are cultured and whose love for their nat- lve Province is their ruling passion. Long considered conservative and even backward, the Province of Que- bec is growing more rapidly indus- than did those-of half a century a80- West trusts a. politics-l 9811)’ ‘V-lill‘ out fixed prmclplea. "" ‘The life span has been increased by 11 years. Th0 gain in the result vi knowledaa. ' -~"' ‘ trlally than any other part. of the There should be fivc hours between _ i Th: Public Forum This column ls one! for the discussion by correspondents of question: of Internet. Thfa Charlottetown Guardian does not uecessarlly eudoru the opinions of correspondent-a. iMASEFILLD‘ rosin‘: There are inany people who never read poetry and \who are neverthe- less well enough read and possibly cultured, says J. V. McArec in thc. Toronto Mail and Empire. They do not read poetry because at school they had to learn to dissect poetry RED CROSS ACTIVITIES Sin-The P. E. Island Division of the Canadian Red Cross Society is able to submit to the public a re- cord of achievement and a program- me of humanitarian effort which cannot fiiil to elicit the admiration and enthusiastic approval of every. u-ell-wlsher of our people who will“ give it consideration. ,‘ For many years the Society has] been carrying on a school health in- spcctlon scrvlce. This has led to thc j discovery, treatment and removal of i physical defects in large numbers of children, and their rescue from im- , paired usefulness, suffering and prc- ‘ mature death. The work of the Red 3 Cross in conducting clinics for tuber- culous paticnts, and its magnificent! service for crippled children, are well i known. Home visltatlons, lectures in health education, Junior Red Cross promotions and many other activities l have marked the operation of this‘ society for many years. Last Scp-‘ tember, when several cases of incipi- ent infantile paralysis occurred, and none of the scrum for preventing dc- velopmcnt of the paralysis could be i obtained, the Red Cross found a woy , out of this difficulty. By enlisting the , help of those who had suffered in‘, a fonner epidlmic, it was found poss- I ible to make serum from their blood and save at. least two children from being crippled for_ life. During thc‘ year 1929, an intensive campaign of ‘ vaccination was carried ' on in the schools and 6217 children were given this preventive treatment against smallpox. At present, all the routine activi- ties of the Society are being carried on energetically as heretofore, and in addition the greatest measure of disease prevention ever undertaken in the Province "ls in preparation. This ls I. diphtheria immunization campaign, which the Red Cross plans to carry to completion in I930, whereby treatment rendering a per- son permanently immune from thc dreaded scourge of diphtheria will be brought within reach of every child between the ages of nine months and i4 years in Prince Edward Island. With such n record and such a pro- gramme the Red Cross appeals to the people of our Province w unite with the Society in membership and con- tribute to its financial support. The annual drive for this purpose is about to be undertaken. The Red Cross relies with confidence upon the gen- erosity and humanitarian sentiment. of our people. I am, Sir, etc. K. H. ROGERS. Chairman Publicity Committee MARITIME LIFE SECUIIES ITS FIRST "CENTURY" POLICY 'I‘he Maritime Life announces that it. has written its first policy for onc hundred thousand dollars. Such policies are rare enough even with the oldest companies. and to place one in the Maritime Provinces is unusual indeed. 'I‘hat it has been placed with a company little morc than six years m operation speaks volumes for thc progress of th’; l Mnrltimc institution mid Lo the ln-i tercst Maritime insurers lake in li. SPRUCE A VALUABLE PULP WOOD Extracts ol red spruce are “import- ant for medicinal uses. Engllshniann spruce of the interior of British l Columbia ls a general purpose wood, growing each ycar in importance. and destined to be a big factor in the pulp and paper industry of the West. tries n snfc investment. Quebcc ls the greatest power Province of the Dominion, having n turbine instal- lation of about two-and-o-half mil- lion horse power, compared with Canada's total million. of five-and-a-half Hardwood i Flooring 35000 feet to choose from. All thicknesses. stored under steam heat. Made by SEAMAN- KENT C0. MacDONALD ROWE WOODWOBKING C0» LTD. Dominion. Its timber mineral, and power resources are bclng developed along llneajvhlcb make thus indul- / I Charlottetown i mus-mum. and it became an irksome task. 1n lthc same way, we suppose u. pcrsc. whose business it was to dabble with ‘the entrails of fish for niozt of his youth would hardly be keen on fish- ’ ing as an adult and would turn vwth ‘ revulsion from a. salmon cu’. i. jThese non-readers of poetry are dc- ypriving themselves of one of the keenest pleasures of lifcmind wc have always thought that if they were t: b: gradually given a kind of invalids _ diel- 01 PWWY to bring thcm buck l)‘ l I . intellectual soundness they ought t9 start. with John Masefield. They would be reading some of thc nobles‘. poetry written in the 20th Cflllilfj‘, and might at first bc unaware that‘ it. really was poetry at all. CCTKCLIIIZQ, i they would not recognize it n; the sort of poetry that sickened thcm c‘. school. They might find some cf hi. “'°i'li‘ R6 lllfliliilé.’ as a dim: noycl used to be. Dccdwocd - wrote a more exciting story "The Daffodil Fields," and yet th is in it as lovcly Poetry i be found in any cf the o".l text books. Why Arc Paciz? Maseflcld pcrhrps i:i;;'c than any mun of old time illustrates one cf thc miracles of English poetry. Cn: might read Shakespeare, Milton, Burns, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, Shri- ley and Tennyson, and at the cnd ask himself what nccd was there for, any other man evcr to write n Lire of English verse. It sccnis tu have been all done. Anything that followed must surely be a fccbler imitation of what had ulnady been wrung; from the ‘souls of these men. Szzruy i‘. would be to paint thc lily. What point would there. be in anyone clsc trying to add to that golden treasury? One might as well ask why the song- birds of today should continue to sing after Keats‘ nightinga‘: or Shel- leyl‘. skylark had done it all so per- fectly a hundred vezrs ngo. when comes a man like Mascfleld and one finds that. the spirit of poetry like the spirit of the seasons or thc rpirit of nature is forcvcr renewing itself, that he had something to sing quite as lovely as ever was sung before and qtfble as new and original. Fcr Mace- fleld at least among the pcct: with "5 lfldfly lleli-‘HBS to the true rucccc- ‘ sion o! English cards among whom ; we think of Tennsyon and Browifnr: and Swinburne as perhaps the last of an immortal line. oFooooio-ooooooooooooooooo DR. J. P. IVIILLAR : DENTAL SURGEON . HOURS-Bio 12.30 I m 5.00 Comer Queen and Richmond .0 00000000 FOOOOOI OOOOOIIOOICOOOO ~-~-~ DR. W. K. (LARSON Palmer Graduate Chiropractor , Chronic and Nervous Uisrasv I21 Prince Si. Phone Ill?! Opposite St. Paul's Church FOUND One of the bc.l prrvcntntiiici. known Icr “SMUT OR RUST ON GRAIN l A cheap but thoroughly cl‘- fectlve remedy. (lraln Growers i would be wise to act promptly l In order to have Seed properly . treated before sowing. i One nlnl. in every It) gallons of water. Full directions every order. FOR sate‘ m‘ The Two Macs DRUGSTORE III Great. George Street All Mall Orders given prompt attention. given with . 54§Y-1_7~193o' . A Policy for “ $100,000.00 Httntlrrrd fl-cuscnd dollar policies are even‘ \ with Lhe lu|;-c:t and longest established qmlpgigtsveu l I , The Dlaritlme Life has placed one after be“, scarcely six years In business. In the some peri I ' _- has urlttmn mort- than ten millions In all - q rs’: n \ unique among Canadian cum- "a v1 V‘ ._ prucs. . it Flax-iii melifir / Au orrucl HALIFAX,Q‘N_ ' "" r w BENTWY- Milli-Her for P E l. SUPFWIEE Yflil IKEPT A Sing, l l i ‘ll same moment; w; And cflcr c,’ c ' 31c’: you 71.111 that; tints ca‘! efficiently mrvc “cur ‘gm-flowers. the“ 0hr” ass . . - n , customers flack int: " our storc. all at thc‘ c d” “miiiliil blllm? 2'91"‘ lvsicm and increase your slag by m sisinnfs-zmd lzcep titer“ i1 rcscrvc in czis: in the*fu¢u,.e szimc thing she's"! l""'l1;';1 r-~-;.;_-,_ S.) drastic a rein“) l - L. . -_ I _ miller would not _ Mihmln‘. 2d l_- [its one isolated instance. i Thk kind of L“. if (Pics in the tclcyftori: Kenn... u; doc-i not lIP-Illwn in store ..'.incss. Our siafi‘ is udcquzitc h ltxzzllc the busiest per-jogs o; ll ‘e arc those isola‘ no mail business hours; but t ,5 cw . q such as when a big fire occurs-when the lines are us ildliionh .. . - . 9 t‘ an) conception of the heaviest normal business rush H“ It would be utterly iziijiosisiblc for us to liccp u stuffy, 5°17? just to work vhen one of those isolated occasions: sprung upon us. ' Till! 011i)’ 11111011.‘? is for our subscribers to refrain from Iiliill?! "P ioi i: cziquiricti ("at thing a firs and b, so doin “i: d “l” lwxiiiili?" ‘i: "ll-‘iiiliflillil 501119 lllfrson more close]; concerned, u: :1 member of ilic lirc brigade or thc owner of ti; propcrLv. This appeal is rttidc ciircctlir ‘in vou. Will ‘sou pllflsg "can iivcs": words at thc instance of Lhc next big fire. i The Island Telephone 00., Ltd. lV/lat Would ‘You D0 if you were hurt in an automobile " ‘“ 1|? Th," mill" l" 7' ll-PIB dMl-BFB bill. and your income might be smaller while laid up. it ls lbw .\‘ou will be glad yuu carried Accident Insurance. “'9 05" lwlicles covering all kinds of accideutl. l" "l" “clients only and will be glad t» furnish run particulars without obligation. Hyndman Ea’ Co. Limited The Uldfst Insurance Agency u; p, p, 1, Lower Queen Street chgflnqw,“ ax-nn-u I I tint-n your IIHCIILI.» diup in uucilllvi-flli! l" u" l‘ evcning IilIlI you are at your wit‘; end lo know what to l ="|-\c, isn't It comforting when thc bright Idea slrllflri F 31m that thc Ycrfcaiiou Dealer Just a few doors coo."- 1. nut thr- mu-ut prrfrcl rcircslnwrnt ol all, ready lo srrvi‘ t} nmnctlsulcly. litcrybudy lilacs 50nd lo: (Jrcaln and In." superiority of Pnlccllon quality Al", fllvnur m‘ . sun's rm enthusiastic reception-on III! "“"‘5i°“' I l i Central Creameries (Ihurlirttclnwfl Perfection Dairy bummurside l,“ your chlltlnll consume all the‘ W!" fcctlon l“ “um you can IIIDIIlI- l‘ i’ healthful In" °°"' tnlns abaolulel! ‘l’ harmful Intmlimu‘ We stand behind dill’ product.