PAGE roux 1 TIIE ‘ Weather Prognostication: THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN JANUARY ' . NOTES BY TIIE ‘WAY i i» l A! “IQ Wefilhcr _is still} a dominant field of “""'— PUBLIC FORUM - conversation it is mtcrcstin to have th d " ‘ ni- oellll h on: In the - - "ml" m“, mun“ “n, and] thekbad sifted. Such agchore was rllcgiifly sniff h’ ‘t: “an.” gnu“ election ovum-n. n. on: ' ’ i i President. LlenL-Cnl. W. chutes l. Mel-Ire un erta cn by Harold Hart, questionnaire ex. bgugg‘ . yum-g ouse- iauuvu cumin don not n- f win-st "-“""'----»~““‘»-»~ "rifts?J§;i.§°i.':.§;:::; n... . firs?» n». "°'""--"’-""*'~'" "' " 0. ~ i Frank W SUBSCRIPTION w ‘n, .00 in adv nce ve . I gdvana) dulled to l’. B. Island $5.00 per year (In advance) mulled to Canada and ll-I. Members Illlor and Mansfinhwn ‘ J- Sualrfllllfi F-l-l- set usually bode well? Yes, says Mr. Hart. It presages clear, dry weather. The dry and dusty atmosphere which is nearly always associated with good weather on this continent transmits allow» for $1.250 wlu gag-stand his motive. f-ealslllllstlan c ence . Because its charter, granted In the time of Charles 11., prescribes HAVE WE DICTAIDBBIIIP? Camel Llama OVercoa M"!!! 3'1"" 03 ti’? red rays of the sun in larger measure than géikcz-Pgdfarétaiillhbewggglnladviiltlg _ rnmsut. an ancient “Spam: reduced tQ “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than f ° bl” , _ _ n, pgh‘ o; hi“; beflyera me Hm. wmntqffm mffdwun} ‘uleggwgealiegtfi-"Ik." What about the belief that a ring around tlie ggxnsancagl (igmggntyhelgeonratiio mt gigs (dares locfieflnttlovi ft? the - 1 .__ moon means that ram or snow is coming? Its mam whfnot "m", E m gt bub our government Ru- WEDNESDAY, JANUARY, 25,1939; true enough. Cirrus clouds, composed of min- ute snow crystals, stand in the path of the moon lness in the way of the hard- presslng dry-cleaning establish- mor tells us that title mlner twenty- nlne have nothing virhstever to say in the matter of policy. especially Still UIISBIiSfGCIOIY and cause the familiar halo around it. Such Qifilsdfefii E€§,,,,‘,,,,§{,2°‘Z,,§§_”’m “.11.? n ‘flfilfgfif, dwmment ’ i l clouds usually mean unsettled weather. --_ certainly v absolute pow- . _ _ ' There is nothing in the outline of the King Is never we cold" m snow? Iilardiy- The ,,,_,,',§“',f,',§,f§§,'§.;{,', '11.‘; hfif. '1'}; inin?iy9°h“?°3§i§lm§?fni§n‘°,‘§l§? Horse Hide Coats’ Sheep skin last week by llcn. Dr. 1\l'inion. this system is Robert Burris born this date 1 . dress “d “s bmke“ °r ‘mlshed ime out. to explain to the Gan-i “i unfair the, \\'L‘Zllllll(‘l‘ municipalities being able 1- v w r ’ 759' {mngmalmwgégestifmd fllfigitggg: adieu Ohalnber o! Commerce at .. ‘. g >_ _ _ f O I - I n i” pf“ ° ch t Montebello. Quebec. just what a ..- _ __..___ _______ __ _ , to obtain llltltll grnitci assistance r0111 ttawa tis a ready possible to start work at 7,30 ;_m_ play d! R-U-R- — MB" e5 e‘ democracv is. However let n: m — ‘I than others wlicrc the rchcf burden is grcziitr. GU“ m‘ bMk l0 the dictionary main and whim. with brellnsce/pable of adap- ‘happened at Rome. But the be- will, in (Mg, Qheflsh y, Guvcriiniciifs uncinplcrvtnciit relief program as given in lhirliiiniciit by the llon. Norman Rogers, Minister of Labour, t0 indicate that the Gov- ernment has in last l-volvt-d zi practical relief policy. \\1’liil~ Ill" lllllllltlpilllll€S arc to rcccive a grcalcr proportion of fcdcrzll and provincial relief, it is on lllt‘ Sillllt‘ basis as before, namely, on the amount. which thc municipalities individ- ually can afford to contribute. As pointed out All municipzilitirs zirc not able to cooperate fili- ikehhood of a heavy fall of snow is remote in the extreme dryness of really cold air, due to a lack of. moisture to form thick snow clouds. But a fairly substantial fall has bccn recorded with thc mercury registering 24 (lcgrccs below zero. J‘ Editorial Notes ./‘ without artificial light. iv it it Ir came to think of his robot idea. Hts father was a surgeon ln a remote mlnlng village when he and his brother were boys. There were many accidents tn e ts and men were brought up to the surgeon's house like broken dolls and his father mended some of them and some died. Some were dead when they were found. 5n the boys were used to the sight. of men wearing one kind of rough Incidental intelligence by wsy at men magistrate. neither will we ud- mlt that there existed an em~ last. elected Premier being the late Hon. W. M. Inca. So it bolls down to the fact that if Mr. Webeler ‘new his dictators we have one Molding the reins of bower i-n this Province at present. But on the other hand we have been t/sld. gear after year. the/t we have a we find that “Government by tlhe people collectively urn-such elected urgency. but he was appointed. the l tation. Surely n found 1n ca, ed; Lined $18.50 reduced to HENDERSDN a. GUDMORE Men's Wear such brains can be illef survives that it is potentially a dimserous weapon. > For the umbrella w cs1. ts best-quality $1 6.50 $1 2.50 rlbs are rusty and its fabrllemfrlsyelli 1939 , ls too wee. n. too homely. too nlfgllgbl: in l infinite associations, to be. Wine the bleak banner o1 5m. render. Tokio is to the effectjlhst theJap- 1 m: 51L 9m anese Government has banned the “twig p, TMQTQM ancient custom of placing tiny - piles of salt in front of business places to ward off bad luck and One hopes that Mr. Chamber- lain wlll cling more firmly m hLs, that he ,wlll not again leave it in a dictators antemom, and that he anciallv with tho Dominion Government, in con- y‘ ncction eithrr with (lire-ct rclicf or with a pro- gram of [)lll)llC works such as is outlined in the The hope for legalizing swccpstzllccs has gone for another year—thc promoter of lust year's bill, Mr. hrnest Bertrand. having to go to Londgn to representatives" is democracy. but are we enloyinll lust that? What. say have our elected representa- tives in the policy of enforcing the Prohibition Act? they approve i" "1?"‘<*"‘"‘- “-' '“ the responsibility ‘for the cure. of unemploy- such _a bill in his stead. The swccpstziltes bill hZ§°dn$n§§v°1Y$11§gh§n‘Z°.§i§§§§§§; ‘Zfififmefifi 9fi,§.‘,‘f.‘;§,“.f,§",w‘ i For a Delieious Cup 0t f ment is not municipal or provincial. but federal. was introduced in the llousc last yctir but was The "m "w" “w” 11°" decree 0°! SW“? D° m" “WNW of the In tllillse New dlork M This W115 one of several recommendations which defeated on second reading. {feiggwafélmg gfgsugitlrfglfnldea pfifggfinghjygigm,,gjf°fihe “Zn,,,‘,‘,‘,‘:‘ Chamberlalnageumbrelllh has beoomle o i . the KiI1HG°\'srfl1"@flt has ignored. floiwllhslflnd- * * * * place. the salt thus sav ‘on umornre Act and do they approve o! imnorwwe to the peace of fangB Pakoh TF3 , ' 000.000 mid 100,000,000, but these figures have lwe “Hm, a 1i, has be g. amhe i’ of provincial governments (including the Camp- since been discarded as unreasonable. The new Zl-l;,:%‘ll1l€5b,o%%.. tlslfiougllug: kfgfifif ed ‘first tihee Premier talc: iiiazeiiiesot Dull/iii}, §l$,,,.n,'lf¢“§,n1_°§‘o_ Flavoured T53, "i _"_'_*"'_Qi' l’ T ’ Many» with 5 Shaw of reluctance‘ eat-en and the world pagans; he descended M‘ the Gum d“ Nora 1 l l i - - -- . . . t. n 1.1 ‘ .. ~ “lnParlst6'olkt.l\ <1; ,_ ML, King's C0mpl3ifll Prime Minister King lets it be known-mot §§,°,.’,d“f,‘}°";§,,1£“mfl§.§,, mfiflid. t m“ “kamsem S“ m That a. few lriclnilotces lafelgrlmlig vials _ J by way of a threat, of course, but a wink is as 800d Point. In the natural order ' TAXPAYEIL glf-filgvedb-sga-nrfigg in the rain. Prime Minister Mackenzie King complains good as a nod to a blind horse-that if the work ggdmlfl,“ ,§},}s§“"§,m‘;,9§,j;5 ;é‘:€:§,! maxi-ET‘? ml‘ h: had lfgtmlglfi, uvfilgrflgag . . w 1. .. ' - dest household He added" “Don ti -l 1 The" "Wld- l‘ "WWW halldled- - press who rascd the QULSUOH. Onrdocal con ")0 - - ics c con men: trade relations between b pemema H d mlers “Us _ temporary went so far as to complain that the {IP65 (l0 "(it iiffiaw i085. ililllfillgll the 5m0l<¢ 15 Canada and we Unmd 5mm eieotiia piroduotifinl) wibllld not ad- SWIHC BPCGdCYS E i- ' f‘ 1t t dc- l ' dustrics, bQcausg all cousin. When the mud was dried and the or- be One 0f the most» 58501115“!!! d18- ' < ‘ , " . , . . ‘ , , . . . s ' ~ i‘ lllbslccucostg hulcc ‘is bgucrirlljicd into the price" ganlc “tall” bllmed 0H. lhfi Ydildlle W35 60m‘ fifismiififwinfiis°fmlln$°“f§;‘,,§‘“‘§;‘§ blirsgilfugiigbofillrllrrlmtqrecdliigg “bu; SIMPLY OUR -. (Patriot, Scpt. 9. i935). If he Wlll compare that mentally valuable_‘diaiomecioiis earth.’ fhis relatively small estate to his wife, f3; “éggldsafggméfcflglsagi 12%; 2 A PHONE COPYWRITER _ statement with Ur. Dunning?» last budget, show- earth is used for fine filters, such _as sugars and gglrfebgmgalgggfkflhlggéorguglgehasty‘: gmflg, 9g the mm ' “m; and e ‘ I WILL CALL f, in an incrca§e Over 1935 m sap-s m); Qgllcc- fruits, for heat insulation, tile-making and many pres“, mm that he is n“ a, wood oonsurnmtlon. the same 0N YOU x tifns alone of more tlnn 3460000000 and of other purposes The lake muds \\'llCll purified dead" pBut "legally dead "g bl W” m3 Ta‘ mm“ Prescrlliflonl A Specialty. <lrii ": ~, _ ‘ 'a.ra .a-na~esere- __ more than $37.000.00o in income taxes, Mr. turn pure white, cxccpt when discolored with fgélgmsggfls gfzifivfeflgesfsrltl empegl‘ d- m doubinwliaresent lfiginatlofii and - You are invited to make appointment, for any KlnK will .1“ 5mm idea "f the ream“ wlll’ tfhe lmn‘ Sway of tlhe ‘Y'~‘F,°"-“{‘. lllkcs‘ Mr- COT pftern havtglcicme lzgcfk lungxpleined-l hi: eifiler. andetléessxlh domes; -v- itenrember there In nothln: hour of the day or night with the public is lonih to accept lllS prcscnt excuses or g8)’ Says» 510W‘? K111i Sim! Hr fwioniuicoiiis niurs gavggfliwas- Yeager f‘ sulfide ego Then whait a boom in building Jfillcl‘ m your Stomach than - ‘J; failing to solvc uncmplqvmcnt by the ‘dolc" will bc_ found in ltakes of hliiliicmla. Michigan. View“ o; some relentless 3533551,, $5 gmgglggfifip‘; 23g ‘flfif Dr. Evans. iii,‘ system. l New York, New Lnglanil and Sotitlicril Canada. or LE1! fugltlvle man ‘zsong: tform “pf mm hM-dwm and m-ockefv? ma” . h _ _ _ _ V‘ g _ ' \ 7*‘ \‘\’here is the national cm lo merit commis- . " " " " 1"“ “e °r m“ °° “ "I ° would be WW f"? IWBW 0M W0"! slfllllflCh Mlxlllfé l ' ' 7’ ltl l’ rdnledyuith it" ma'0r Radio without static liibc noiscs or interfcr lliiie ljiisvclutzecim “rill elglfllosxlfgrlngs m plenty unemolwmenlt a “no E » - - c * . . ' s - < . - - ' ' e - . l mo“ mo” l m?’ J en S‘ H j ortleng alle three thegfzles. Thelsillslzn of “he Duel“ PRICE 7E3- BOTTLE u“ m}.i;cL-1_r§=-:e;;~...v; Speech from the Tihronc. In this connection Dr. Manion cited the rc- port of the Purvis Commission to the effect that ing that the Purvis Commission was its own creation, appointed for the purpose of solving the unemployment question. Dr. Manion is in agreement with the Com- mission in the matter of federal responsibility for uneniploynirnt, and also with the majority bell Government) in their recommendations be- fore thc Royal Commission on Dominion-Pro- Vlhcial Relations. that his Government is not getting credit for the huge sums it is spending in unemployment relief. “We arc taking money out of the Federal treasury in ‘millions of dollars and giving it to the provinces to help meet the cost of relief,” he says; “but instead of the Federal Government getting any credit at all for that the people are told that all this has come from the provincial governments themselves." If Mr. King would recall his own campaign in 1935 against government “d0les", and his in- sistencc on the fact that it is the taxpayers who arc footing the unemployment relief bills, he would not bc so surprised at the public attitude towards his failure to adopt a more effective policy. “jobs or Doles, Which?" was the ques- tion the electors were asked to decide four years ago; and it was Mr. King, his followers and Bennett Government had “spent or pledged $312,328,o98.o7 under the Relief Act”; and it interpreted this expcnditure, not as something creditable to the administration. but as “a ter- rible indictment of Tory policy for the un- employed." It pointed out that this money was coming from the taxpayers and urged all and sundry to “vote Liberal and getback from the Poorhonse." The increase in taxation revenue since the King Government took office would more than account for its unemplyment relief disburse- ments. Yet in 1935 we recall that Mr. King, m a speech dclivcrcd here in Charlottetown, dc- noauced the then existing taxation rates as the greatest hindrance to employment. "There are very high taxes on the people,” he declared, “which affect the cost of living, and where the cost of living is high it is going to be equally recommendations lcft unimplciliciitcd. Where is . _ . . the “national system of unemployment lclicf’? Not yet on the statute books. I Liberal Budget Balancing _..__,_. That “will-o'-t'he-wisp" of a balanced budget which our local legislators profess to be follow- ing, but without much success. has turned up in New Brunswick. The Government of that Pro- vince annpiinces, ‘for the second successive year, a snrphis on current account. Unfortunately- and for the second consecutive year—the net debt of the Province has been increased by more than nine million dollars. This achievement in Liberal "budget balancing" has been accompanied by increased taxation, as was to be expected. counts, let alone capital expenses, both of which were implied in the pledge given to the electors four years ago to balance the budget “annually” , s ‘were going to pertonn their eat in plead a casebcfore the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Interviewed at Ottawa, he said he knew of no move for anyone else to introduce It appears latest estimates place the number of caribou 1n migratory herds 1n the Northwest Territories and northern parts of Manitoba, S39- katcheivan and Alberta at 3,000,000, Former estimates bad placed the number at between 30,- estimatc was made by_ comparing the carrying capacity ofthe areas with the known capacity of Alaskan reindeer ground. . i l of Parliament is concluded with reasonable ex- pcdition, either inst before or after the Royal V15", the fact may be conducive to‘ dissolution and a September election. If, after the King's tour Parliamcn; returns and strings along till hill. July 0r Aiigla-t, the influence may prove dc- terrent to the election. Parliament has more than a year from next October to run before its term is up. o m v n: Addressing the Lancashire Associated Colleries delegates in Caxton Hall, London, recently, the chairman of the departmental committee, Sir Walter Monckton, revealed that a “smokeless grate" had been invented and that as soon as the question of its several patents had been set-f tled it would be placed on the market and would, be found to be within the reach of the most retained by the fog and increases its density. Nevertheless, it is recognized that a reduction in the quantity of smoke emitted by coal fires would be of benefit to the community. Although the grate that we have pcrfcctcd may not be literally ‘smokeless’, it will nevertheless dispose of unconsumed carbon dust (80 per cent of the smoke content) and make it available for future combustion." u a- s n A new source of wealth in Canada and the U.S.A. is-dcscribed by Mr. Paul S. Conger of the National Museum, Washington. He says he has discovered mud worth millions of dollars. It looks like ordinary muck, but really is made mostly of diatoms. These are miscroscopic marine animal shells which are pure silica. Mr. Conger says he found this kind of mud in sixty- four lake bottoms and bogs in Northern Wis- ence of any kind will emerge as an ziciuality by Spring when the first high-powered, thunder- defying radio station in the world will be put in operation by Major Edwin H. Armstrong, Pro- fessor of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University, inventor of the supcrhclerodync re- ceiver and other important devices in the field of communication. The new system, because El wipes out static, tube noises and interference, promises to replace the old method now in use in the same manner in which alternating cur- rent replaced direct current, Professor Arm- strong declares. If widely adopted all the par- lor radios now in use will become as obsolete as the radios of the earlyliiyioaare today. ¥ BURNS NIGHT, 1939 And when the haggis has passed round And Afton’s strains have charmed the ear,‘ The Memory nor timecan sere ' n-Gsorcir lillzusa-Nrcuozgsrf woo customers. The salt charm was known as “mori Jlo" or "devil chaser" and its abolition re- chllmg Kalshekfls tail feathers and capture hlm.— Quebec Chronicle- ‘Ikilefllllh- A veteran member of the Lind- say Board of Health protested against the reappointment of him- self and another member of long duced in clvlc bodies. It ls un- usual to hear objections of this nature. Most men lflte the hon- ors that come to them, and gen- men should be given a chance. Soon it will be their tum to ac- cept responsibility. and experience ls necessary lf their work is to be well done. — Idndssy Post. The first. step in the construction of a highway hrou h British Col- umbia and the Y on connecting the United States with Alaska has been made by the appointment, just announced from Ottawa, of a commission of five members to investigate the proposal from the Canadian standpoint. The Con- gress of the United States has also appointed a commission, of five members to ‘co-operate with the Canadian body. For some time the project has been under considera- tion. Action has undoubtedly been hastened by recent developments in the Far East. While the propos- ed hl hway would be valuable to stlmu ate tourist traffic and ce- along the Pacific coast its prim- ary purpose ls undoubtedly for de- fence. If the road is bullt lt wlll be a concrete expression of the com- mon defence policy of this country and the United States. It would provide a means of communica- tion between the United States and its advanced bases in Alaska immune from possible Interfer- ence by Japanese submarines and raiders. It would be a striking gesture o! solidarity in the faces of a. common menace. - London Free Press. When Joseph Force Crater, 41 year old. a ustlce of the Su- preme Court o New York, van- ished into the night on August 6. 1930. he left behind a mystery which in all proabllity wlll con- tinue for many years to engross his friends and acquaintances as well as d hives-amateur and professional — and that includes almost every one. It continues to as been reported as a desert rut in California, a. mlner ln Alaskans hanger-on in small towns in Mex- lco and a recluse in Cuba, but nothln tangible has been found since e night he dropped out of sight. Men with little necks all overthe world (Craters neck was almost abnormally small) have been subjected to scrutiny. But there has been no answer; the case remains baffling and in some respects sinister. — New York Herald Tribune. ' Most of the stories I hear turn out to be chestnuts, but I take another chance ‘with this one: A colored man, having commit- ted a murder, was duly sentenced toha ,1 was taken uponthe scaffo , tled, capped and placed on the trap. The srlerlff was about be e ed slo . "What you Gm: up firs?‘ he‘! ulred. "I'm "I $0 of the system of "undercover mien" and the method used in paying them? Do they approve of the o1‘ the some Minister spendlm; so much time browsing Over cashed liquor prescriptions wt the vendor stores when he rnlzlit be more gain- mlly employed elsewhere? We may have our answer when the local legislature meets or will the mln- rlty of one silence the other he words of Olcero when he sald “No mam should be so madly bire- sinnotuous as to believe that he has either reason or intelligence. while he does not believe that. the Sin-It ls claimed that selected immigrants from the German ex- pulsion would increase unemploy- ment if admitted into Canada. contend the direct cvboslte. On an average hhe Jew Ls a Rood Woe of citizen. Unfortunately they are a commercial race. of limited agricultural tendency. They have a. tact for working out business piloblozns. they should and would of course have a reasonable cash conical. a/nd in new lines of trad- ing not now exploited, they would require suhcrdlinate help. from the ramks of our unemployed. We must estimate that an ad- dition of say 100.000 would mean hat, IIHIIILV more consumers of farm products and users of manuafac- tured goods. and would be incon- sistent. with the fallacy of t/hose who imagine them as displacing labor. and economic parasites n- versely affect our nmrkets. as it would scarcely be more than enough to supply the total increased pop- ulemlon. Bun, they would all be earners. and all taxpayers. rial/Ding the revenues of governments. We could (eel assured of a high petrtiotrlsiln. at least as fair as Ger- many was the menace. the nmjirrlty belief that our races are the lost ten tribes. and thlelr mlistlon. um t0 extent»! tlhe the Jabs 0r Monlwl so from the pagan world. Wttih those amongst us there has been cordial- iggnand friendship to a. greet ex- And tn limnigrattzn generally. What woiuld a doubling of our pre- sent population rneani? and newer life. ‘mere would be a cu ha- of our present tax burdens. or else a doubling up of But. it would of course mean sel- The Chamberlain Umbrella Europe. Therefore some importance also attaches to the question as to it ls the same umbrella, or whether. like the well-dressed gentleman with twelve hats, Mr. Chamberlain has a. quantity of um- brellas. The record shows that: ably carrying an umbrella, since its absence was not mentioned in the dispatches; That he had an umbrella when afternoon when he got off train in Home; That he had the same umbrella, or another. when he returned to 1 lnndon Sunday evening Whatever one may think of the success of w. Chamberlain's diplomacy one cannot help approv- ng of his umbrella. time very sight of it carries one back to the Victorian days, when a. promise was a. promise and it was au- tocracy. not demcascy. that was on the defensive. A good umbrella, well and bravely wielded. may sometimes strike down swords. It did not do so at Munich and as yet we are far from sure what - ATTENTION ll the time lo Ill ll’ d against PIG i - WORM b! Iulng the most effective remedy on the market: '\/Ia.c’s_Pig - Worm Tonic Powder It wllljhoroughly abolish all trace: of worms d Ilnpr can awn- »: yéul-“iisi-a, m " “o 35cm. ner lb. dehéil Order by Phone 0 . “it... ‘handed I order; promptly Phone 315 MAIL ORDER-S PBOMPTLY NITINDID T0 LAZABUB llaidbesld tiny ts Bee e n m sum llfllll, Othpd, with dllnl-les for trum wiui fit meeor: see me not. I still mil Hungry and thirsty, sore and sick, and bare. - Dog-connorml and ainnb-sollcit-y ousz. » Wllllethou in sllthy ways art mymfioirin tllgel-IOBIJ ma, was end f 11a - mtg: fill», ullilm 2K2: tor e0? \ , ‘ i Mr. Tea Pott Says: Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown 144 Richmond St. I TAKES to WRITE ADS The. Way You Want Them" Advertisers in The Charlottetown Guardian are offered ABSOLUTELY FREE a complete and upnto-the-mlnute advertising service, including CUTS COPY, ARTWORK, LAYOUTS, ILLUS- TRATIONS, READERS, WRITE-UPS, PLANS ESTIMATES, SUGGESTIONS, ETC. ‘BUREAU Black Twist .- Chewing A and all The taxpayers in the circumstances are not This nicht wherever Scots are found fig?“ mftlw" "fimagmfi i . . likely to do much cheering over the rcsult. Throughout the wide terrestrial ‘sphere, a. flrQellvlla a oilgilwsome dlsafence mmgvg" ' ‘mum “m "u ‘I'm Hickeys Chalk‘: Tobacco‘ In this Province our budget-balances haven’t At tables laden with good cheer Qhwgéhpoglfmdugm” mffilza And, be I den or not. seen. I any . even succeeded in balancing their current ac- Shall song and merriment abound; and ed dvermto help put out o,” g ‘warm u,“ . ‘mm’ Per the firs. Whllo e gh - . , Manufactured BY b reduction of expenditures. Next session we » tllpll probably hear more apologetic speeches on We'll toast anew, wi’ honours crowned; ~ mm?‘ "°’“f"'-,-§§°;"§,,, m, .13. . . _ this subject. In the meantime it is worth. re- ~ ' Ivory "tlm I do mg." ‘gill! ,"°h""“?"m"ml' fluff“) ' ‘ ~ ' .1, . _ ineniberlng‘ that the present Government is in the ‘But mingled with our joys may be flan’; g,*“,,,, m’ ° 9a. 3% ‘.=_——-----—--——-===a=-i ' TQbacco ~ - ‘ , _ f ‘Am _ sdjayment of some half a milllomdollars more fond regret for one we miss, u can gnaw," 7mm ~ . m t a. _ I teyenllesnnually than the MacMillan Govern- Or for a day that ne'er returns: f 31%;“ mtg!“ ,. i“: m, '- iflg-mmm» ~ ° ma“ n2".- .. . _l _ v ma», and, tha it was on the basis of the rev- And so we pledge ourselves in this and I'd line's oltfilfltis on» i i if CO. LTD. glue aitatltat t , e that our Liberal bu t bal- That tang together we may see _ $11!!“ v3.3’ 0 11:1’: mt I,’ h ids m," - - , ’ ianceti . Sich ither nlchts wi’. Robbie Burns! n; ' '.. , i . ‘m ' ' _u_v * OUR CUSTOMERS DRUM UP TRADE FOR OUR TOBACCO Because the best advcrtlfle‘ merit is, a satisfied customer our customers are satisfied. That's the reason they sound the praises of 01"’ “SOURIS 1'0 110M811” I