‘ d THE cllsltnommows‘ culnomir" , I U)!‘ Confederation And ‘ - After Sixty Years Into of 0f Progress flours HOW COLONIZATION m EAST- 11 B; [anon rJquJl-D- rlcslroun. . llii lilillilllill T111111 Bllifllllll Incident-I. Goats: I. Inna. Vloe-Pudlofl-J, 3, ha,“ _ loordIr-I-lolt. Gel. D. l-Insllnllu I). l. 0. AWIII" litter-n. s. cum. , . Nova South's Part In Canada's History Although 5t 1111811!- nae-s Jieen suspected of a large blend oi‘ Scot- tish tradition from the long tine of CIst-lnguished men‘ who acknow- led-ge Nova tSdotia as tlllb land of their birth it is not generally recog- niwd as.t'he.o1ll1y Province which has been officially ‘Scottish from the first and the on‘ly Province in the Dolmlilliioul of Canada which has Notes by the Way ROWING out. the raid upon the Rillllln headquarters in London has (allowed the breaking up of diplomatic relations between tho British and Soviet governments and the more recent dislocation oi 'tlle trade- agreement between Cun- ada alld Russia. lt has also trans- pired as the result oi disclosures "". . lion per hour and 'llp'(e_|¢¢‘;ic m- ERN CANADA WAS BEGUN . . mRlfIO-d-flfllilill" pump All historical precls of the devel- opment of our forest wealth will not be out of place on the occasion lof the Diamond Jubilee oi the Con- ‘nfederation of Canada. .l ' I . ulc y d use. c». all’. kwtitlillildlylpopcngn TUESDAY, MAY 31,1927 EMPHASIZING THE “LABEL? ‘I S the result of i-rlveaigatlon car- ried on by some political pro- hihitionists in this province it has sion firm doillg business in Sav- annah. The results have been 50 gurprigingly good that l feel im- pelled to communicate my com- mendation to the Brovrer ui1°11 in London that Communistic infill- euces are to a pernicious extent be- coming active in Canada with a real wasps‘ nest of adherents locat- ed in Toronto. The London raid uncovered‘ the names of active ORDINARY SQNl-‘IGHT . ~l have lvi-ilteuU‘ ore than once about the ultra v olet rays of the sun, and about ‘the wonderful lwin- dqw glass that is now being manu- factured that permits these r8115 Tile clearing of forest lands was ihe primary step towards the set- tlement of eastern Canada by the early pioneers.‘ The ‘material removed was at first sufficient for more than ‘building purposes, surplus its own ancient and parttfcular flag —au azure St. Andrew's Crolss- with title Scottish ‘Lion rampant in gold —tllia‘t shines like frozen lfurs. 0m such an occasion as the Dia- mond Jubilee of Confederation itia tbmely ‘to recall something of‘ the S0 Other Fairbanks-Mom products are windmills, mum jacks If"! m a am lea. . u‘.i§"“"1" mp0. feed 11h , or full, emu" ' m. though,‘ ' Mono Co. Lin! fences and fuel; and the was burned to get rid of it. Later on inroads were made into the for- ests surrounding the farms and settlements tr~ supply these needs, and lumbering 11s a business devel- oped gradually as the settlements extended, demand increasing as supply receded. The industry, which started in the lflW(‘l' St. Law- rclu-e and the Maritime provinces, spread northward- and eastward during the period of rapid advance ill settlement. . 'i‘llo Ottawa vullcy becnlllc the first important t-clltre oi‘ 00111111111‘- l-ial activity ill tho industry, with lllc railing of‘ square timber to Quebec for export. The (ler-rgilln Buy and Jlalny lllver districts ill-ere later oilonetl up and, although the industry is pow established over the entire ‘Dominion, these districts arc still the chief lumbering re- gions ill eastern ‘Canada. Exploita- tion of the inlmenso forests in Bri- ‘ish Columbia was undertaken sini- ultaueollsly with a similar develop- ‘lnent in United iS-tates forests along the Pacific coast. Canadian forests cover approximately 1,227,000 M _ , , . square miles. Under presents enn- (L1_lk_.I..OOl“:5 Q“I,.I,,‘IQI”;,,,“I'LL,,L’,“,II,.notions, about one-quarter of the mu‘,:;',a1l,v.-,m,;“.fl fésmlonajfle “venvcotl is not economically access- tioen-ot need’ to g0 imp]; no the, 113,5 ible. About 249,000 square miles nl’ will,“ Wimkrws were ,a‘xed w g8, forest land have been set aside or Sum] windows ‘forest reserves or parks, in other Now our factory architects plnllfivvllls. they cannot ‘bevdestroyed- bundhuyy “um ,tl'El]l€-D(l.3llB wvin- in our country, scientific forestry the excellent (lllflllly or his nom- omly ‘history or this pal-t ol‘ the Do- minion before reciting some of the lldhllevemen-ts wrought in bu-‘Jlding nus Canadian nation 'hy its many outstanding chnzens, Nova. Scotila. will probably always be, more Scottish than either Oll- ario or Memitloba. The only placc ifn Canada ‘where the neutlher gm w.l wild ‘is to be fbllllfil in title neighbor- hood oi‘ Halli-fax, N. S. Tho story goes that lane ‘of a company of ‘Mfg-ll.- land soldiers encolnped there had o letter from ‘his far-away ‘beloved Jn some llrlstly lallleling, who cu- closctl‘ n sprig of heather. lic planted it and i1il’ll.§“L4.l.lll(! into lltlllg a ‘little patch ol.‘ purple li!)\\'4ll'.l flagrant: with nleluorloll. to penetrate ‘it, so that all of us may goon be gettingthe benefit of these most helpful rrays. 'l‘l"..'1ir effect upon undernourish- ed and also tuberculous children has been pl-ovenlln thousands 01' cases, so that lamps which give off thlese ‘rays. artificial sunlight, are llltw part of the equipllle-nt 0i’ many hospitals. HOWPVGl we are talking s0 moth about those u-ondzerful rays, and that tile tordinary window glass pre- 1101213 them entering tlftn the ‘hmuez. 1.11.11 ps1 hops you have lgot thr- inl-l to seed tubers. it is the common Communistic agents operating 111 remark he“, ma, no guch porn-the British dominlolls beyond the toes have ever been grown inleetl and the Cfllliltllilll addresses this vicinity; and their lsulelsiveu were located 1n Tel-onw- qulllity is all that could possibly” _ be desired. l apprehend, alum! M°"°°V°" m’ chawma" °l m‘ that no small part of the creditic°mm“m"' i" m“ ‘mumry’ n ma" m], the excellent (mum), of m, ‘named Specter, resides in the some seed should g0 to your inspection" My‘ Th” ‘\no"ney'ce"ernl of 0"“ division, and l am quite satisfied ‘arm m1mmies "uw m mvefmgme ‘ha, ‘my Hagen," l“. ‘lilfl doings of those lncu and women The grower m- m,” amok Wm, and promises lo lilkf‘ lu-tinllallzuillst w. J. Power P:lli0t‘va1l_ tile-m i1‘. as is sulpelzlcd, they urv IHPdH-Hn, “m; ,h@-,.lllllllg1l!ll you 1'1‘- ' _ ',l'nllllll ill lu- violating lllt‘. l2l\\' lr-l‘ (jfliy? through the ortltilary window Pfilw“ Emww" 151mm- M“ pnwpriilll lillltl. llithl-l-lo Canada has llnt Klaus 111 1101 \\'111‘1-11,111l1"11- hull toll acres uf lrisll Cobblers odprovt-d to bu illvtllnlble. ground ill N-uu‘ as n lutltllsl‘ 0f fact we nlusl ‘his grade’ and l“. is u, he (.o||gr"|.1Wlli(‘il lo propagate communism. relucmbc-r, as ‘Dr, Meaxlerof Detroit _ l ’ _ ifJilll-‘l mu, chat sunllglblt and "sky- ulatcll on the quality of‘ the stuclvbm mew m“ i‘ 19w "M “pm” l" ‘ ‘ lthe Dominion that are worth light ‘destroy hnl-lnful nrganl-slus. ,he has marketed. 1 1f H1056 orgaulsnls are exposed 11.1 ‘wmching’ 1t two hours per day. The Grand Forks Ileralll, .\iinno-. l‘!!- lleen discovered that Mrs. l-‘allis. who is conducting a campaign ill the interests of Premier Stewart's proposed new temperance legisla- tion, is not a member of Mrs. Wright's temperance organization ill Ontario. Mrs. Fallis, at every meeting she addressed in this pro- sll ohn I ‘ suit’. 13.1222.‘- W123i‘ wlonlvel it na- ' Vancouver Vktwia‘ o1 Smut Dflallfoyer l There 1| only one way in which Formhldehyh can M In destroying smut germwthat’; by "ulna a hw m“. o" Formaldehyde. You can sully avoid “that ‘chance b ’ l getting your supply here. Our L s FORMALDEHvDE ls highest grade used for this pnrm"_h_"h and ~ strength. , _ M‘ _ The White Drug ‘Store . JAMIESON "rustic vim-e, gave this information her- self and told why, and so the prr1~ hibition “detcctivet-l" did not dis-‘M cover anything that they llnd not Yet to at least snllle’ l’. of known before. small-settled prohibitionistslllofucl g a . that she does not W911i‘ on her bos- RETURNED To FRANCE‘ > 0m the Mrs. Wright label she cau- not be a temperance woman! Mrs. Fallis, with the great major- ity of her fellow countrymen and women, disgusted not only with the failure of prohibition to lessen the The first. Scottish settlement was a falluro and the territory ‘was, given back to France by Cilarlcs 1.. French tolonists Jlavlng nttcluptetl] to plant themselves ‘these. long bo- fore the grunting of rhc chm-tor to Si‘r Aleldaudel- Mackenzie by Kiln‘! James ll. In point of‘ fllct tho country was something of o foot- llalll of international politics until} its ‘British sltutus was csfzlblislled by the Treaty or Utrecht. Even then lit-s dwstines did not run sllluoth —it. was ilvicc captured and recap! lured-stud not until 1703 did its ull- ljinej-l-upted connection with lllc Bri- tish lEmpire begin. "\l'i‘thdl~avvln.g the draperies and raising .t-ll,e ‘slllalles. even if tlhe W."- llrrws are closed, ii‘ rhe sunlight and sky-z-lltllile can enter, will gradually bring about the ‘destrutltllon (if 111*‘ organisms. _ Orgunislns live a long time ‘in Russia wants more horses, and Canada has horses to sell. A pro- l-Itlwartl island seed potatoes recelv-lfitahle trade migm (levelop ‘mum ' ‘ lillese conditions, but as the Edmon- _ _ ed i" ma‘ Smle- The “"1919 i“ ilfttlll Bulletin points out, these horses "us or lmempemnce’ but [he m“ lustratetl with a cut showing thchzlre vvtlnted for military purposes. ma! 1'! 1110113711 111 ‘"1111 11 1111191‘ alldhhqnce Edward Islam‘ "we mnrkllussln is the one country in EIITODC- ‘ today that is distinctly militaristic. it is governed by fanatics who are nothing if they are not aggressive. {This is an extract from the lleraltlxphey have not ‘mined a“ arm)“ or sotn,~hns the following to say gordiug the first shipment of Prince LG til, even greater evfls’ demrmuled land two full bags showing the packu abolish it and to seek out a more ‘age as shipped by the Association.‘ effective way. She took the plat- is still in its experimental stage. form to promote what she believed; to he the better way. ill this she was associated with many of the“ bankers, busi- write-up:— “Vi-‘e must have new foundation stock, and we nlust have the best ,which Trotsky is never fired of boasting, just to be able to watch it go through manneuvcrs. diows, principally wiih the idea <11" giving good Jght so Uillil the work" ers can do efficient work, T11" benefit. to .t.lle enlplnyoss from 1110 standpoint of M81111 (‘H11 P81111115’ hi‘ Forest authorities, federal and pro- viucial, as well as the exploiting, companies, have principally devot-l ed their efforts to the atlmiuistraq tion of existing forest areus and‘ It. may "be first Nova Scotia has missed. ‘tlhle expansion of uienltll zulll [)0])ll1fl1llOll‘V\'ll“Cll has so rapidly iu- lcreused ‘the political and economic consequence or Wlelstern (‘anadae leading clergyman. leading the province backed by an. that is to be found anywhere ill The soviet Government’ having the country,’ ill". Pratt said, in renounced God and religion’ has SPERM??? of m" forwalfl mnvp‘ become a. world-incendiary and n overwhelming majority of the men‘ 1119111 11131 1119 g1'°“"@1'5 111‘? llllllPfnlcllace to the Christian nations. lf | I'm-l 111 lllflllllllll! 11118 3894- '“'L‘1lli6y are strengthening the cavalry have bought the best Early Ohio-cloud artillery branches they should to be had ill Zllillllcsota, and well“?! 110 help from Canada ill doing thelso. Especially is this true at a imtinle when such imminent danger seen. _ The ilesseu lllleil 1S 1° Eel- 111G111!‘ cl‘ uvnllosv space, and ‘sec ‘lbw-y 11161 sun gets its chance to d) 1&5 111119 job of disinfecting the home; M1109. m factory ior a portion of t-he lily at least. _ ‘R‘e-melnhel* the sun Is gdod for‘ you, esplecia-lly lvfrlz-li you are $11111 in. Alreatiy thlere is s movement in r11 r cities l‘) linrit ‘vhle height of buildings h) the width of th-e stfeél. citizens of‘ tfiheir" protection against fire ondfmce the ("eat I'm“! Lam and “"9" other damage. ‘However lnboratc-rylme GT6“ “m” Land’ “Ow a "Gum" experiments have been uzldertakeui“ pr°g?ssl"e Drwpernl’ 1mg?“ m‘ to tleterlnine soils unfavorable to fmaxlormc Teauuf” 3"‘ m” 0m general cultivation but suited to af- SCOPMM‘ qohm’ is ‘V9.13, prospsrims. forestatlon. Plalliing has been of i“ '11s 1111191 “‘11Y_ 1191113 H 1111141 <11 a“ expeflmemal cha,.ame,._ I, orig descended social zuuellit es might Jndeed he Said ma,‘ a without ilaupers or nlilllonulrcs. very small portitu of our forest The "we $0“ 59ml“ “m T each wealth has been scientifically ex- a ‘16ll1gh‘t‘flll “rus in 111119." 111"’ 1*!‘ plokem llabited by itfindly and highly illtclll- , - gent people for lvllJln lilo art o1‘ lir- ness men and 6 % is an exceptionally high interest rate, but it is the lowest K ever paid by The Great-West Life . on Profits and Policy Proceeds left and, and women voters they carried the measure they advocated. None of her fellow workers. we take it, cur- ' ried the label of Mrs. Wright's so- llave secured from Canada best Irish Cobblers produced Canada called temperance society, and for this they are dubbed by our label- worsllippers “wct.s" and "l‘lllllilll'0v'<." And this and similar nncs are the only arguments used by our politic- a1 prollibitionists and "temper- ancc" mcll ill the present pnign. The day has-gone by when. such “argunlents" as these could cam- carry xveigllt llnlonguscnsiblc men and women. The grout objection of our poli- tical prohlbltinnists Fullls is that she is carrying the country with her and showing the utter absurdity and of culling prohibition a temperance measure The facts have stored us in the face that prohibition has fail- od not only in this province but wherever it has been tried. in seven against hirs. inconsistency of our own Canadian provinces it. has failed and, notwithstanding statements of prohlbitionists to the contrary, official reports show that Government Control has succeeded in reducing the evils of drink alul has increased respect for all law. in the ‘United States, pictured by some oi our prohibition enthusiasts as a veritable paradise of sobriety, rejuvenated industry and thrift and luxury among former drunkards, official reports show that drunken- ness and crime are alarmingly on. the increase. We have in former references quoted Mrs. Murphy, Judge of the Juvenile Court in A1- berta, and from the United States Anti-Saloon year book, to prove our contention it is not necessary to repeat it here. Prohibition is an empty word and, as applied to the prohibition of the sale and use of liquor, means no- thing. lt has been {node fetish by certain political workers, it has no doubt misled sincere temperance people, but men and women who look the whole situation in the face know that prohibition as it has ex. isted here and elsewhere is any- "11118 but temperance, and is also even worse than lntemperancs The time has come for a change. GOOD WORDS FOR P. E. ISLAND. R. GUSSOW, Dominion Botsnlst, Ottawa, has forwarded to the Bmatary or the Prince Edward island Potato Growers‘ Association a copy of a letter which he recent- ly received from a potato grows;- in Georgia, U.8.A. The following la an extract from this letter, and ‘lpealrs for itseif:--' "1 50118111. thissack of seed troln The Pruitt a Son commis- tlle Dominion." lll conclusion Ml‘ Pratt said: "if we can double our yields, we can cut our acreage ill two, them- by almost doubling our profit. A good grower cull raise ‘Z0 acres of certified seed potatoes, and do it right, at a nice pr0fit._The av- erage yield for Minnesota lil 15126 was 101 bushels. Grade Extra Nu. 1 Prince lid- wortl island cl-rtiiictl seed lrislt Cobblers. Those potatoes avo said to bc the nltlsl poi-feet scod cvcl‘ shipped info lilo Valley‘, uniform in size, perfect in type and abso- lutely free from disease of any sort. J. W. lioultcr, Secretary of the Prince Edward island Potato (lrowcrlf Association, wrote Mr. Pratt as follows regarding this seed: "1 may state that this man's field of potatoes had an absolutely clean scorn for llolh inspections given ill 1926, and 1 have no hesitancy ill stating that his average yield for the pant three yearp was at least 130 bar- rels per acre." (There are 1i pecks to the barrel, making this yield equal to about 1157 bushels-l per acre.) Note the "handles" on the bot- The Canadians take no chances on ruining their by handling from which bruises and damaged tubers re- Railway employees handl- ing thcse precious sacks of seed must do it with care, and all per- sons moving them are cautioned to lift them by the handles oi both the top and bottom, and not of toms of the sacks. choice seed stock potatoes careless suit. to throw or drop the sacks potatoes. {mom-i ALCOHOL DEATHS. table compiled for policy-holders ill the United States and Canada says the deaths from alcoholism have increased 600 per cent. since prohibition was en- forced, and that there has been n 25 per cent. increase in the number of deaths lll 1926 over the previous year. Tile rate is now 3.6 in 10,000 policy-holders. merit, This needs no com- -—-——-¢O-}-—-i EDITORIAL mores. Preparations are in progress for the celebration of Canada's Diu-‘ mond Jubilee and everything points to a most enjoyable two days‘ pro- Bram in Charlottetown. Reports from the lobster fisheries are not encouraging. The lobsters. in sections heard from. are small and few and operations were un- industrial ‘exists of the outbreak of war bc- Qtwecn flreat Britain and Russia. 1 A question has been raisfld in re- ‘gard to "home brew," that is, ill- itoxlcatiug (lrink brewed by a house- ,ll0l(1i2l' fur honlc consumption. The ‘fqucstion is raised by lion. Mr. Gor- Idon, u. lawyer of Pctcrbnl-ough, Oul. flrlis contention is that the federal iautllorily has exclusive jurisdiction |over the nlnllufacture of liquor and has prescribed tho (renditions ull- ller which citizens can make tilcir own supply of intoxicating llecr. That being so, Mr. (iordon sell-l forth that no provincial legislature has power to forbid the manufac- iurc of home brclv, or its storage in the household, but that tho pro- vincial legislature hull the power in forbid the sale of llonle brew null to provide and enforce penalties for such sales. m?! i This interpretation of the law, if found to be valid, would derive coll- siderable importance from the incl. that it would apply to all the Dl'0~ vinces, whether under prohibition or government control and would place the home-brewer under the protection of the federal authority so far as the production, storage and use of ills home-made beverage, which, of course, he must not sell. Apart from this, prohibition was doomed to failure from the begin- ning. With only the provincial gov- erllments to operate prollihitory laws, while the higher govel-nnlout at Ottawa licenses brewers and distillers and encourages the im- portation of intoxicants and reaps a vnst excise and customs revenue from the liquors brewed, distilled and imported, what hope was there that prohibition could succeed? Under such divided authority fail- ure was inevitable. And again, no law could succeed which had so large a body of the people opposed to it as was tile case with prohibi- tion. Laws against theft, robbery -nnd such crimes have always had the support of ninety-five people out of a hundred. Those laws were believed to be reasonable and just. Not halt’ the people in Canada to- day believe prohibition to be either just or reasonable. The advocacy of prohibition In this province is now plainly politi- ‘cal. Some effort is of course made to defend it on alleged moral grounds, but in Liberal sections the main effort is party-political, con- ducted as a "still hunt." There it is whispered “Put us ill power and we will give you what you want," Mr. Saunders’ platform lo quoted ill support of this. The illogical nature of prohibition is to be seen in the persistence with which its advocates call it "lfllllilerance." In its functioning here and elsewhere it has proved itself the very opposite of lfimylqr.‘ usually late in beginning. B1100. l. Thus IlLPults that there will be no ltigh Iluiltlillgs on _nl_ur0w xstrecls. and thus a chance" for mlorc sun- light, lt-lvill also likely lllenll wid- er streets ill the days to come. bo- czlusc ll buildings will (30111111116 u, m. qlffiuilei‘. They have coluc to sin y. @--- HE SCRAP BOOK A SERIES OF LITERARY QUOTATIONS FOR BOOK LOVERS >oo+o0+o+o+o++0+o4+0+4** TUESDAY. MAY 318T. "rue sous t; MARTHA The Stills of liiary seldom bother. for they have inherited tlllll good part; llut the Sons of llior Mother of tile care tile troubled heart. And betanuse she lost her tpmllel’ oluee, and because sllc was rude to the Lord her Guest. y llel- Sous must wait upon Mary" Song’ win-iii without. end, 1'9" prievc, nl' rest. tho. fllvorthcir ful soul and It is their care ill all the ages to take the buffet and cushion the shock. ‘ it is their care that the gear en- gages: it is their care that the switches lock. their care that the wheels run truly; it is their cure to embark and entrain, Tally, transport, nnd deliver duly the Sons of Mary by laud and muiu. it is They say to the mountains “Be 3'4“ removed." They say to the less- er floods "Be dry." Under their rods are the rocks re- proved—they are not afraid of that which is high. 'l‘hen'do the hill-tops shake to the summit-then is the bed of the deep laid hare, ' That the Sons of Mary may over- come it, pleasantly sleeping and unaware. They finger death at llle gloves’ end where they piece and re- plece the living wires. llc rears against the gates they tend: they feed him hungry be- hind their fires. Early at dawn, ere men see clear. they stumble into his terrible stall, Ami ilale him forth like a llaltered -st.eel'. andgoad and turn him till evenfall. . To these from birth is Belief for- lliddellf is Relief afar. , They are concerned with matters llititlen—ullder the esrth-lilte their altars are: Tile secret fountains to follow up, waters withdrawn to restore to the mouth, And gather tile floods as in s. cup. and pour fllcm again at a city's tlroutll. ' They do not preach that their God will rouse them a little before the nuts work loose. They do not teach that His Pity allows them to leave their work when they damn-well choose. As in the throngetl and the lighted ways, so in the dark and the desert they stand, Wary and watchful all their days that their brethrenh days may he long in the land. Raise ye the stone or cleave the I Differences throughout illg is lunch more than ‘the s.-icllcc _uni_ts ill the same district. (‘vener- and tlble ties will look like ‘new. - from these iill death. in soil, clilllate, topography, average size of treeg density of sllilllfls and numerous other local conditions, give rise to differences ill logging lllethnds; no: only between prov inces but between adjacent loggin ullyspeakillg, throughout eastern Canada the climate is such that the cutting and hauling of logs cull be carried on most economically dur- ing the fall uud winter lllcnllls. ill lBfiZisll lColuulbla, the scarcity of drivable streams and the greater average size of the logs give rise i0 entirely different logging lllzvlh- lids. llll eustel- lCaullda, general log- ging operations are carried on by the mill owners or licensees c-f linlber lands, often‘ through ills luedlulll of contractors, subcon- tractors or jobber!!- ‘lxlgging operatic-us lcollstitutc tllc first step iu zhe industry. lu the form of logs, ‘they furnish the raw product of the forest which. in turn dleconleg the raw lllateriul 0f till‘- snwmill; and the sawmill is thc second stage in the industry. _ A distinctly clear lille of demarcation two phases of the industry. Nor is it nlwnys possible to separate the lumbering industry from that of pulp and panel'- liousehold I Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE 4-000-- Skln Lotion A lotion for whitening the skin‘ can be made by mixing Ztable- spoonlfuls of oat meal, 1-2 table- spoonful 01f powdered borlax, and 1-2 pint of rosewuter. Let lt stand ifor 2 or 3 (lays, ftlhlen lstralin. well and add l-‘2 ounce 10f alcohol, Shelli Covering Try ‘using strips of lilloleum ill- stea-d of ‘ol‘l clotlh. lit Ills easllly cleaned, stays in place better, ‘anti outwenrs any other material. ‘Laundering Tin ‘Ecfore washing ties, ‘haste them carefully ‘to _prevent the iinllng or padding from beoolning lumpy; Re- move the basting before trotting wood to make a path lnore fair or flat; it is black already with blood ho, some Soil oi Martha spilled for her libqzasidclzls. cannot be drawn between these - "and who llms played of earning a llvchhootl. Nova Sto- tulc and LllL‘ crlilel" arts or.- llflllOflltl as they should bc. This literary career began with Judge Ilalibur- 011,10 whom a lllcnlori-zll lublct" was unveiled a few years zlgo. Saul Slick. is as well kllolvu to lllc retzuiing wolld- as Liilllrk 'l‘u'.lin. There are also Charles G. D. llob-‘ crts and Bl"sn Carmuu, inlets, and, til,- \\'ll‘l.€l‘0-l'1‘lCllOll Jlalues de Mille. I O I STRONG ON EDUCATION. ‘All inlptrrtnllt. clclucllt ‘among the Uflrly settlers wcro ujiiglchgfl in min. - this stock wcuit fol'lll:—Sil' Wlllianl Dan's-loll, ‘the maker ol‘ Mc-Giii Uni- versity, Nfllntreal; (icorgc M. (lrall.t| and Dallicl .\i. (lordml, wlln built‘ up QueQnE-l Univol'.~:~‘l_v or Kipg-g. ton, Oll-lnrirl. Pilalou County gave 1.". ‘Dnlhoulsio University ull four of . Sir Robert Ful- fllilel‘. \\"¢l‘11t*r l‘. Murray nud ll. M. Tory, presidents of lllc l1ni\‘cl‘:-l‘it- 10S 0f Ontario, Saskatchewan. and ' 1"11‘11ly a ulfivcr- 1.1a United ‘Slin.i_.‘, that. ‘hos not. Mari-blue luell on i114 staff. A keen jute-rest in politics lllas always dtllniznxtcll lilo people of Novla Scofiu. and ‘it is significant that lNnvzt Scntla, with only our twcntieltll of lilo populating; 0 Carolin, has given one-fourth of i1 Premiers to lilld Dominion. n'fl,m(g]y 5'11 f-"hflrlsfi Turner. SW John s. ll Tllfllllllson and Slr R, L. Borden statesmen of n calibre not fnr b' ililld lilhle beat. orthe Old Country Ii ‘self. ‘H011. ‘W. S. Fielding, wh was retired ‘from aclfvg pgim. lllfge an "Oflllmbls u Dart in lrhe iitilillk‘ “Y9 01' (78-9111111. is also nlllubert 81111011‘?! these celebrities, 1119].,‘ ‘wtfth Joseph ‘Howe, mile eisquenn» baflfllets. ‘ ‘Nova 1Sc0tla produces for Con. ado and the ‘Empire today pile 1,93,, poets, the best statesmen‘ ‘and [he best sea-captains as: or old u pro. duceld ‘this lbest pirates! ‘ sa a p Daily} Selections Ion Guardian Readers +++oo Mly 31, 1927. 01m lo/tllrllwulaaoz-ane, u... words of my mouth and the medl- "mml 01 111V heart. be acceptable 111 111)’ 1118M. 0 Jehovah my rock, and my redeemer. ‘Psalm 19:14. RWAYERI-O Lord send lls dnily help‘ from the sanctuary, and strengthen u? out of Zion. r - that! _ Not. as a ladder from earth to. Heaven, not as a witness to any creed, _ , But simple service given to hisown kind in their common need. 1 And the Sons of Mary smile and are blessed-they know the angels are on their side. They know in them is the Grace confessed, and for them art‘ the Merciss multiplied. -. Thewit at tlleFeet-tlley hear the ord—~tlley see how truly the promise, runs: They hllve cast their burden upon; the Lord. and-the Lord He’ lays it on Martha's Sons! 1 ——itutlyard Kipling. a C ltiflflg ‘green-r tih is a cultured lallll (rill-re lilcra- cation lo an unusual (haul-co, From - patriot wlho fought and wonl mam ‘ on deposit with the Company. A policyholder arranged to have his contract payable in 20 annu- al instalments of $250 each. His beneficiary is now receiving $ 307.15 annually t-lll increase of more than 22%. _A f The efiect of the "rllglllroisl rate paid by the Company \ i, may be seen in every Great- West Life contract. @‘re'av”ii~we$i7 _, ' fe calamari!‘ 3B HYNDMAN & COMPANY, 11m Provincial Managers Agents At “All .: r.- ‘fller 341V" l Cllafilottetown, Rh ‘Principal Points ‘ o A w“ I m‘ _ r \. he success of the H1111‘. 11114 ,_ om sure that no live farmtl’. spend 111i ‘price of way t at. could n! it would be an elder-W!‘ pie Aureht sin rec s ofw ich ‘wol ,- — ‘ —nwv-u---- -- 0004». . ._-Q~rv-| DAILY LESSONS 1N ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon vOQOOO+OOQ+OIQOQOOUOQQQOQ WORD; ‘ili-‘TEN lvilv‘ -Sl‘-D 11-111 \..-._v ‘n inrg‘ supplyof bonki were rcx-vl-tl. Slay "w-s rotelv an" ' t OFTF“ .\ilSPRONO'JNi"¢U ter lthe i. orrsu MHSPELLED: twb ' , .1 0‘ ,: ins istor ." 1min llltegstbsflrwqnssifllo. .1. , ploltlat, diplomatist. WOR/D ‘STUDY; "Uee.~a wiry] three -f.llll68_ and it.,is.yo*urs."; us increase our‘ voca-buiar ‘ terlug one wlortheachxla . ‘lwaykt word: or us tivle. filter. senseloi touch-noticed that Nome- tlling was ‘wnoug. ‘ MARKETING ‘TOUR dams A15 ma, 11"" . . . ‘MONTRENIJ, ‘May 26 or tile organization 0i s .1541: o g our for farmers to Great Britdtn nd Denmark, under the auspices M f the Canadian National ‘Railways; rurists in Canada. approval of ‘Dr. J. H. Gris ,~, puty Mirvlster of Agrioul -' (lanolin and other leading airioul- fhlve received the endoluulopjufil “In a letter to Dr. Director of Co i “ ul-e and lNaiul-a brca producing capacity of every cloanu’. - d out keen interest in 111E lrlenlisln; wean: a‘. er the o, no; af- l» 2" . Bffillgll} $0 UTYE; keenlyfiargfernei-ngl A the trill , ford ll|111 ll lull’! Gflflllle. time more - -‘ ml more education and 111 “ a‘ loking to dmprovlng 1111 ‘ .lld getting a thorolllll 8"" he ..marke‘ting problellll °1 zountry ‘than would i115‘ m“ ‘. emofyill" “ lllfullll I mfiny years tilltl -‘ wst the views and inc - uralrmauthoritisgxl . 1 are ' Dpm on 001mg: an‘ . probable that l will hféhslads many mell 111°“ all llrfnches 0f atlflclmuml‘ page; potsxtsnd their 11110" lrrarkethfg conditions 81111 “ vi ilrodttction l» the 01d 1*“ srioll the cut-‘- L l» 1m»- 51.11159“? 1’ tn no“ i urJ/l, Jxvaflidqybu u! 7"“. big one! ‘ 1'