l race m... r tut tunutu _.n..u»3-w. cheeta- I. Isl-an. lesbian-flout. 0d. ldltornllIalogQ-tlslunotl. inu tuuu ' z Vleo-Inoldonv-I. n. Ilrlell. n. Liane-u, n. l. o. Aunt-u nun-w. l. qnmo ... THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1927‘ CLIMATE AND PURE BREEDS. 'l‘ has always been the contention of the Guardian that silver fox breeders must return periodically to Prince Edward island for the stock bred on its native heath if quality is to be maintained. Here we have the temperature suited to tho thickness of wool and length of over hairs necessary to fox pelt valuable; EXEC! make a silver and the absence of lime from our soil preserves the sheen in a mau~ ner all but impossible for the sec- ond and third generation of foreign bred foxes. Confirmation of our theory is found in the London Spectator to hand this mail. Mr. W. Beach Thomas, writing on "Climate and Pure Breeds," re- rnarksz- A "it is absolutely essential for the breeders of certain varieties of farm animals to return to the stock bred on its native heath. The breed steadily loses quality. elsewhere. it is astonishing in 'ed by the Maritimes Commission re- port‘ are becoming more and more acute, as the time draws near when gythe government must declare their policy. it may he said safely that not one of the more important re- ‘commendation: has been received ‘with unanimity. Opposition within land without the cabinet springs up, ;frequently from most unexpected sources, For example, take the proposed iilnt increase in subsidies recom lmended by the commission as a stop-gap measure until the federal |government have time to examine ,in detail into the claims of the !Maritimes on this count. The re- icommendation that the three. {provinces be given $1,600,000 more ‘than hitherto. Paradoxical though it may seem, opposition in this case comes chief- ly from Maritime Liberals. Unless report is widely astray, Hon. Peter ‘Vsniot, of New Brunswick, is very much opposed to an increase in sub- sidies. at the present time. and is is Notes lty_the Way out " Bohr at can be said both for and: "'“_ , ' to the imperial Privy Council for which there is just now a strong feeling in Quebec. But why lock the stable after the horhe is gone? Quebec is naturally aggreived at the recent decision in the Newfoundland ‘ case. but that decision must stand ‘ as there is no power in Quebec 0i’ ONE LONE DEAD Tflfl-t in Canada that can change it. And’ ’—-—-- me “m, may coma‘ "h" Quebec] -A patient was stricken down with may “any desire-gum rm" oiltever,‘ high bounding pulse. loss of appeal to that high tribunal which Tppet m’ vommns’ a mm delirium‘ .= n fact all the evidences of poison- now she would gladly seems o! the ‘ynenh ~ iillollllhod- , After intensive investigation, as _ -. no trouble could be located else- Qucbcc and Newfoundland are ' Where. the teeth which appeared to next neighbors. The Ancient colony-me in unusually healthy condition would never have su-bmltted thehifgeloefillaflldifld 1,00%‘); Taft-filial: Téfliflfif.’ $21252. f."‘l..§“§}'”-Z“.i "t" "".'""""i- w“ ‘ml i" be "w l cause of the severe ailment septic- lellllll- llllli H0 Clllll‘! ill Clillfldil iliiliaemia. The distinctive organisms flllv rightful power to decide such-were located, and the tooth re- a matter or to enforce any decision moved. it mighl. make against any Britisbi it is occurrences such as this that country which is “o, with,“ nlelteaches the medical man that the Canadian Federation. Other mattersfizfigg‘ noifoggezigrlgi?gflis ififlz: °l migaiwll all? likely l" llllleof infection throughout the entire between Newfoundland and Quebec body, or between iCattada and Ncwfound-' We are familiar with the so call- land. and to Newfoundland thoiglll Tllllljllllllfllllllt 0i Jtlillitli. igil-igliiifl. tlniperial Privy Council has been, e m“ ‘m7 ° “u” ° w c “e and will no doubt continue to oe acfrufilfrlgggnt: ifigectg? tfigfltnnd ‘he mm‘ “mm- °1 “Ppeal- ‘chronic cases of arthritis within a ‘few months after the removal of in- " "l9 "ill" l" ililiflil from lhclfectetl teeth, has been observed for Supreme Court of Canada to theithe past twenty years. higher court in London were now! Dl- C- P- Bllii 0i Llllldllll. E118- aibrogated, it would not help Quebecjlggk ‘ffffevse :‘l:_eet‘:g°m"'tie firs; glfilzfirrageggltrn raga: diockflghre-bearing infected teeth has on cans. " ‘fling disease throughout the body in ""149 llll l‘! “'85 lJY ll will‘! 0i 00m" general, and in joints in particular. petent jurisdiction, would be quite then the time has come when medi- unaffected hy the changfi icine ‘and dentistry should combine ____ toget er. - 51...... W-Borlomll-D. - CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN , gtems, we had. a dream that lwlh-ioh some cases how very narrow is being supported by many Maritime the area where the continuity of Liberam m” 9599mm] ‘mallllila is exclll‘ These Liberals view the situation spoke lnsultlngiy about Maritime people, also other things which gave offence in‘ Mayor Webb of Winnipeg, who} in Vancouver; said‘? Perhaps in _the future dentistry will be more readily recognized as a specialty in medicine, and the dental specialist will take his place with others specializing in various sively maintained. South Devon. and Aberdeen-Angus cattle, South Devon sheep, and Welsh hill pon- ies are good examples . . . How far this association of place and quality in the breed goes we can- not tell. but it goes very deep. Only in North Britain is the es- ' sence of the Aberdeen-Angus stock permanently retained." Similarly only in Prince Edward island is the essence of the silver fox stock permanently retained. mom-i? OLD AGE PENSION-S BILL HETHER the long heralded Old Age Pensions Bill, which has been passed in the House of Com Inons will survive the ‘Red Cham- ber remains to be seen. Should itI go through) it will create an anom alous position. Some of the pro vinces have already expressed their intention to have nothing to do with it, others will probably ac- cept it. In that case the non-par- ticipating province will help to pay the federal fifty per cent. for which they themselves receive no return. The unfairness of such a scheme is very evident. The lotus-eating period, after ar riving at ‘the three score years and ten mile-stone,. p.omised,by Mr Mackenzie King and his lieutenants before the general election, looked well at that time to those who saw in it a retiring allowance for worthy old age—and they were all worthy then—-looks very different now to the older provinces. The Marltimes whose respective populations com- prise a disproportionate number of aged men and women, simply can- not afford to pay theilfty per cent. share of the pension. but. if the bill goes-through the Senate, they will be obliged to pay almost in full the pensions of the younger provinces. The ‘bill was intended not to benefit anyone but to hoodwink nd de- ceive the electors. lta fallacies and ‘ ‘its impossibilities were pointed out at a previous session of parliament, but it was a net scheme of Mr. Mackenzie King and he has got it Jbrough the Commons. lf it is re- jected by the Senate. as is gener- ally hoped. the Conservative maj- ority in that chamber will be blam- ed for it. and Mr. lIacKenzie King ' will have a ‘new charge to bring‘ against his opponents. . ——---QO->'—-—- f ‘meet mantrms cuums “lfli character of the propaganda noted against the Royal Oom- J en's report on iilvarltime claims looted by the following sam- pit which appeared recently in the innipog Free Preps in the shape ‘ ' Ottawa deispatch. __o Liberals will assume the ‘which tliby- are ltore dint-futon ma... from .l purely political standpoint. other quarters. As reported, he Whether _ l . [Most of them have been active in said ma‘ "5" m" can‘ 0’ ‘he People , rovmd n m‘ s and m 8rd m of the three Prairie Provinces are p a Do c g p anti-British." The Toronto Star quotes "statistics oi’ the numbers of in-arms. lt so happens that all,‘ "British and lCanadian born people ‘Ithree provincial governments in theli“ ‘he “"99 Pmvllli-‘e! lll 1921 Maritimes i... Conservative antbaccordlng m me census of that . _year showing that two-thirds of ycommencing with 1928 theta wlllimem ‘Vere either Canadian m, _"be a series of general elections. isgrltish by birth. "What is better," i The attitude of federal LiberalaTiw Star. adds. “lo that many of ‘is this: way should the federalgov- "le- lillllllilrbillll llilllllle a" “'5 _, sound Canadians as any in the emmen‘ rush to m“ am o! TOW ad I country." This is no doubt quite .ministra.tions in the iMaritimes1’,_,.ue_ Mayo, Webb, who “ballad ~Why should Premier King dlllih gal- the Maritimes, seems also to have .lantly to the rescue of Premier lllfllllleleli tile P901119 0i llle i . ‘Rhodes in Nova Scotia. who is saidhpraiues‘ From an of which we " |nre left to infer that he is about t“ be mugmh a mm“! °t flnanwas antilBritislt as he represented ‘cial difficulties and to be marked‘ the people w he amgng whom he ,for electoral slaughter unless HBVGfIi ilvell- AIIYWBY he lllllilefi Very Peck", I ‘by some such act of grace? we“ statements" EDITORIAL NOTES. -vincial Liberals as their comrades From Los Angoiea comes a song. or poem sounding the fame oi George Young, the icnnntl-latt swimmer, but also reflecting on the Canadian climate. it includes these llnes:— i . ls it not time the first robin had put in an appearance? Signs of spring are multiplying. The man with the step-ladder and he whitewash bucket ltas been seen on the street. ‘lHe sought a sun-kissed country rFrom a land amid the snow, A land oi‘ bitter winter winds, A land of toil and woe." iBllf. if George had been born in iCalifornitt would be have had the muscle and the endurance to achieve his swimming triumph. And isn't an occasional snowstorm preferable to that nine-days torren- tial downpour and flood which left so many thousands of people home- less and destroyed so many millions worth of property in iCalifornia recently? The lute Lord Beresford.‘ who knew China well, once remarked:- "Nothing will teach the British pub- lic Chinese geography but a war in China. Let us hope they will re- main ignorant." No one seems to be particularly interested in the doings of the House of Commons these days, ex- cjpt when there is a row on. The only interesting thing in sight is lthe Duncan report and that has been shelved for another week. It In often laid that democracy is yct on its trill. It is sometimes contended that from inherent weakness it has failed in Europe. One writer of some note’ claims that it must fail anywhere and give place to dictators, as has occurred in several European countries of late. But if democracy tends to bring in Caesars, Napoleons and IMussolinis, the dictators in their A Detroit innn. criticized by his wife dAring a card-game for trump- ing her ace, shot her and took his own life. A bridgeauthority, says an exchange, tells us that this is unsound practice and not approved of by good players. is restored. Oneof the later perils of democ ucy is the enormous extension of the voting rivilegc, . -—-— . which once conferred cannot he The speedway on Victoria Park has afforded much pleasure to citi- zens as is shown by the increasing number of spectators on every rac- ing (lay. Visitor's to u... city, also derive much pleasure from these meets, and our citizens are justly proud of their many and gamy ‘horses. is generally conceded by thoughtful ‘far. But even so, the liberty-loving spirit of the age in which we live will not lottg tolerate a dictator- ship, No Cabinet changes are to be made until the close of the session of Parliament. and it is intimated in a special despatch from Ottawa to The Guardian that then l-lon. John E. Sinclair will ” Minister of Fisheries. The only objection to this arrangement is that it increases the number of salaried portfolios in a Cabintt that is, already too largo and to! costly. \0ur Province will not object to being again represented by a full-fledged Departmental head. as it was in the ‘Meigben Govern- ment and among the three Liberal members. new sitting for this province Hon. Mr. Sinclair is well entitled by ability-and experience to tlie promotion, which will pro- i-"liably be given him, g ' j- King George enjoys a joke even" at his own expense. He visited the use? 110mm ‘u... otber day with the Queen. learning that a boy in his lteens to whom they were talk- ing was a rheumatic patient, the King inquired of him: "Have you been getting wetf" ‘ "You, Sir,” the boy replied. ' ‘ll-low did you get wet?" "Swimming." naively replied the‘ bdy, and the King, lagging: hear-h iiy observed. "Well, you could dry. y‘oui-neif_ smil- tun. r135: would halve-luminescence ,. g, .. 4-H ' turn are over-thrown and democracy taken away except tby revolution. It persons that the voting privilege ‘has been extended too fast and too . lye" ialiments, for surely a clean mouth lie just as important as a healthy -cle:in stomach, intestine, or other part." w; t _i believe you'll agree that when la medical man» admits his dellellii" ‘ence upon the help of a qualified dentist in searching for and colt- rectlng ailments in all parts of the ‘body, that the amalgamation of‘ the Tdcntal and the medical professions may not be fat difltfllll- tHowever the point is that irres- pective of the fact some physicians and some dentists are warning these patients and the public at large. that many good teetbare being extracted, nevertheless Dr. Mayo our foremost surgeon and Dr. Price, our foremost identist, both agree that retaining badly infected teeth ls_one of the biggest factors in causing heart disease today. iSo don't tske chances on infected teeth, particularly grinders. Artific- ial teeth are much to be preferred to the possibilities of heart, joint, or other infection in the body. -i~—-oo->-——-— GXO-O-O-OQOO-OOO-OQ-OO-O-QO-QQQ‘ Dnilytl Holcctiotts FOR (iuartlilttt Readers 0990-094-0040000-96 ' Maren 1D. 1927 GOD ‘OWNS NIJLI—‘TJIG earth la the Lord's, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein. Psalm 24:1- OH-ARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE How "haippy is he born and taught That serveth not number's will; Whose armor is his honest thought And simple truth his utmost skill! Whose passions not his masters are, Whose soul is still prepared for death, Untied unto the world by care Of public fame, or private breath; Who envies none that chance doth rise Nor vice; who never understood How deepest wounds are given by praise; Nor rules of state, ’ good: Who bath his life freed, Whose conscience is his strong re- treat; Whose state can neither flatterers feed, Nor ruin make oppressors great; but from rumors More of His grace than gifts to lend?“ Ami entertains the harmless day With a religious book or friend; -.'l‘his man is freed of servile bonds. Q! 1110118 to rise. or fear to fall; 14ml i?! hilllllllif. though not of lands; And. having nothing. yet mu. all. ‘ —-Sir H. Wiotton- -. “H DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon ‘ALLA A A‘ AA there." Say "persons" when referr- ing to a small group. orrnu Mtsvutouoii-lslcmo: pre- decessor. Pronounce lpred-e-aes-er, first e u in "set" preferred. and ac- cont-thiril syllable,- not the first." - f MQPELLED: gage, or auto.‘ , . ~' ; i BYNONY-MB: eminence, riches. weeltihnopulence. fortune, abundant su p , __. ~ STUDY: "Use g, wdrd thrdeititttemaad it is yours." Lot- nl iacrctile out: vocabulary by, mug,”- ios one“. ‘owl! thy.- Today‘; " t slime 8 ' t‘he lntercolonial Railway result/ed rules of ' Who God doth late and early pray’ wonos' ornmr utsusmpl ~ IDoaTeay "very few people were‘ i Cost 0f Construction‘ 0f _ Canada By Foderai Government. A Huge outs-y. (Hiotorieue) 39mm we tackled- giVlllK a sketch of early tlflllllwllllllml l“ icanfldfl on the old caravan sy- "W115 soon dII-tlPBIlBti b)’ "l9 ‘Wk °t facts, each; Pitovince Mill! l-llfill ll separate colony. and not all keel)- ing records oi‘ their ex-Pfllldill-‘llle ‘m their primitive common road-e B)" mom, We have done as much e8 possible in our two preceding ar- ticles to give a shadow of what tihe pioneers did before railway coil- structiou diverted their "M" tlllll traffic to the first railways- xVe have found 3H5"- Bllcll ll m‘ rt as we have alluded t0. llllll "will boil it down for insertion tw mo“ as posed-hie. in our search for information we are glad to mention tlhat we mot with partial success by filldiilfl ll Blue Book of the Deputy Mlllltltel o; hallways and Canals, Ottawa. ‘which is up to March 81, 1915. and which included one war your. "1915. and practically terminated Railway building ever since. it is, iihere- fore, an approximate lrecord of toi- ai expenditure down to the tfisciul year 1015. "ilhls Blue Book sets ii fonth as follows: The total expenditure 0m Bali- ways prior to and since Confeder- ation (July 1. 18st) up to Mawll 31. 1915, amounts on Capital ac- count. to 835234735730. including expenditure on the Quebec B71480- and also the sum of 325000.000 granted to the Canadian Pacific Railway ‘Company for the maill line; also tlite amount. $660,683.00 expelldifid ton the Annapolis anul Digby Railway. in addition there l,“ been expended from the Con- solidated found a total 0f 3295-127.- 07025, covering it-he operation ex- qtenses of the Government roads. and 572.757.000.17 on subsidies of the Canadian Pacific Railway. other than that for the main line making a total expenditure ‘fit $646.075.427.55. ~01’ this amount the sum of $13,S81.46\0.65 "was ex- pended prior iCollifliellllloll- namely. on the construction oi’ por- tions of "what is rnow the ilntercol- onial Railway system $10.766.725-" 4t. and on tihe constnucti-oti of the Paince Edward island tltailwuy. $3." l1~i,735.13. The total Government expendi- ture 0n Canals prior to and since July 1. 1867 to March 31. 1915. amounted on iCa-lllltili llcfilllllll 1° stiznrzsatona, cf‘ which 820.593.- 866.34. \vas- expended Dliilr to Coll- federation. and llrom the Conscio- datedi Eund for operation, maln- tenattce slnd repairs to $37.733-193-- 55, making a "total of *S150-205.770-" ~i L0 i ‘(This figures re Canal exilelldl ture and receipts put a totally till" ferenit face on those twe lltave been hearing from tthe public platforms of East Canada which have repre- sented thht tine Canal System has been operated free 01‘ change, etc. etc. This shows how careless some of those" who undelttake to en-ligibten the public frequently are.) This report also says: "Details respecting these railways and their operation dimming the fisflnl Yellll‘ ending March 81, 19-15. show tlhn/t .'n a profit of $42,005.03. bili- ‘lillil sum of $36,465.08 at ilil9 close of the year was transferred ~10 the equipment. "Renewal Account and u-as expended as part of the "work- ing expenses, making their total 811.438.373.14. to whicih i8 '10 ‘b9 3.1.19.1. $0,000.00 paid under special votes as compassionate allowances, making the total $11.44~i,873.14. The tote-l earnings amounted to $4l5.495.44, deficit ‘being $183,730.- 5... OfQO-Q-OO FOR THE SCRAP BOOK A SERIES OF LITERARY QUOTATIONS FOR BOOK LOVERS e Thursday, March 10th cnonus FROM “ATRLANTA m caavoou." [Before the begillllillg oi you" There came to the makini; ‘ll man mime, with a gift of tears; Grief, with a glass that ran; ‘Pleasure, with pain for lesiven; Summer. with flowers that fell; Remembrance. fallen ‘from heaven‘. And madnesmrisen from hell; Strength. without hands to smite; iLove that endures for a breath; Night, the shadow of light; And Life, the shadow of_ death. And the h-igh gods took in hand lFire, and the tailiagvbf tears, And a measure of sliding sand ilProm under the feet oi tbe-yoflltl. And froth and drift of the sea. And dust of the laboring earth. And bodies of things that be, » la the housesof death and of ibirth; i‘ " And wrought with weeping and laughter; And fashioned with loathing and iove, _ With life before and after. And death beneath and above; iFor a day and a night and a marrow, ‘ . flint his strength might endure _ for a span,‘ {Withtrevail and heavy sorrow, The holy spirit of man. tlllroil! t-he winds 0f the north and the south . .‘ who. authored u unto strife; whey fool-had upon an mouth. ‘The? filled hi! Wily with life; Eyesight and speech they wrought For the veils of the soul therein; Al" time for door,» and thought. , t. - A timeio serve "and to sin. trim em sun-suns: in an way: mejrimen 5110mm Sixty , Years Ago About this time sixty years ago Coafederationfof the ‘British North American Colonies was the tollill of conversation. la a despatch from Downing iStreet, - dated 19th January, 1807, to Lieutenant Governor Dundaa of this Island- Earl Carnarvon the British Secre- tary of State for the 'Colonles remarked that ‘Her M91891?“ Government “are not unaware of the difficulties which must attend any attempt to consolidate in one body politic a variety of Provinces whose habits. laws and interests must be in many respects diflerolll and in some, perhaps, not wholly compatible." This despatch was evidently a last effort to induce the Government and , f‘ 0i’, Prince ‘Edward Island to enter the Union upon the terms decided n! the Quebec Conference. Lord Car-j narvon pointed out that by far the. most important part o.’ the dif-ii-l culties to which he had referred had been removed “by the wise allil loyal foresight of the public men of Lower iCanada who. in their; treatment of this subject have shown themselves able to reconcile, a__manly support of their hereditary- customs and institutions with it‘ general confidence in the justice‘ and friendly ‘feeling of their more‘ numerous fellow subjects of ‘Briitsli; orig-in." Evidently ‘His Lordshill‘ thought that _the people and Government of Prince Edward ls-g land should do likewise, and go into the Confederation on the, forthcoming first of July. ' in the samedespatch to Lieutq Governor Dundas, Lord Carnarvon‘ stated that “in time of war or tumult the armed force of British North ‘America should be‘ under one‘ supreme command that in time of peace this commercef of the people of iBritish North‘, America, their mails, their great lines of communication aud-—with due regard to local image-their. civil and criminal juris prudence, should be governed by the same rules; that an extended public llllinion should be brought to bear on the "settlement oi’ narrow local controversies; and that the most important affairs of British North America should be admlttistered by a combination of the ablest men whom it can furnish.“ "These benefits," he added. “appear to mc so indisputable. so pervading and‘ so permanent in their character that I should he wanting in my duty, ii‘ l did not express to you and through you to this community over which you preside. my earliest‘ nope that no trifling obstacle will be allowed to interfere with their full attuinntent." "Nevertheless, the ‘(lovernmenf and people of Jlrittce Edtvartl island" Dersisted iii their detcrminutiolt‘ not to enter the (Tonfctieration on" the terms arrived at by tho delegates who attended the Quebec‘ Conference. lPrince Edward island was then prosperous. Led by such‘ melt as the Hon. George Coles and.‘ the Hon. James C. IPODB, and ud- vised by ‘such men as the ‘Hon. Edward Wilelan, the Hon. (ieorgc W. Howlan, the -Hcn, G. Heath Haviland, the Hon. Frederick "D. St. -C. Bracken and others, the‘ f». Now \p..¢1<§¢t->1n;i_ g o: also ROSE‘. onaivcr: rsxo z <_-_v.- Eu t“ x of the smaller ones. la the ‘pdfltltion not ode/acre or one conh or “the Great Lone Mud. so 0n the 4th..ot uvl-arch 1867. it w“ opened ull lllld delwillilfid." Quebec. announced that the bill to cou- Ontario and Manitoba took care to federatewithe» provinces cf Canada obtain immense tracts oi land l" had a d in the British no“, o, compensation for their expend?" W. , l-hnd had IifGl/itlugly Lures, but P. E. island received-in passed it 011313.31] h; stag“ l“ compensation for hcr_ paymentii‘. the. lflhbsevivf Lords. .- an Planting Money y, Crops The Rich Man’s Advantage Now Gained" by All Through the Investment Trust.- The New York Tl mes, a orig many authorities. give; the following insight Into the enoflh o__t the. Newingland investment Trust: . There is nothing new about diversified investment, just as there is nothing ‘new about diversified farming, gut just as it is difficult to diversify the crops of a ten acre farm, It is not easy to diversify the inuentnutnt of l bare thousand dollars. - - ‘ “The rich man with his hundtied thouiand dollars can ' spread it over a hundred stocks. The little fellow with just 500 cannot Indulge the luxury of variety. But the investment Trust actually enable: an inventor to diversify the laying out of a ten dollar bill." EVERY SAFEGUARD Each $11.37 share you hold in the New England in- veatmcnt Trust, gives you part ownership in a group of eighty ommon stocks. each a lender in it: lino, all must have a steady dividend record dating buck five years, not more than 5% goes into any one o1 them; the list stays at these eighty under the strictest conditions, protecting the Investor in both disposal, succession and how hold. Before stock certificates are released by the Trustee Bank for sale the stocks behlind It must be already thought and on de- posit. The Trustee Bank then collects and distributes the dividends direct, without deductions oil any kind. You get a larger income with larger safety than any other way and your dividends are certain; an a little ‘bought prbves. The third half yearly distribution w... at the new hlign rate of about 772%. Send order or ask further information. l. M. ROBiNSON 8t SONS, LTD, Established taae Saint John Monoton Fredericton people of "Prince Etltvard island were 110i: easily persuaded ' lo. enter a Union with the larger pro» vinces, whose political acts were known to be dictated by tho dekiifll, to provide their own interests. rather than those of the smaller ones. The larger llmvintres were] llilwel/el‘. s0 fully convinced that the entry of Prince Edward island was essential to tile Union lilcy, had in "view, and would benefit] their "Confederation. that they coittinued to urge the people m, '90lllE ill." and to tiller additional‘ itiducemetiis to that end. The coir, lllrllotinll of the l’. E. island ltail», way had caused some financial lllllllgellcy on the Phrt of the island Government and their repre_ seutatives hastened to offer a loan for relief. The lands of Prince. Edward island were then owned for, the most Part by non-resident taro-l llrietors; and the Government of; Canada was induced to set asidel $300,000 to enable the Provincial Government to purchase Dally communication with mainland was then stopped during, several months of each year; and} the Federal Government agreed toi provide the island with "continuous communication, winter and suns, m9“ The llllllllllii’ fluid annually‘ to the Provincial Government w“. also somewhat enlarged, before! ‘Prince Edward Island could he llltlllvod to agree to enter the |Union. iAiflel‘ that event the il-‘ederal Government proceeded to‘ ‘the development of “the Great‘ ‘i-Ollo build" at n cost of millions llDOn millions of dollars, to hhlht railways and extend cauals—all fol‘ the benefit of the larger mo. vinces-Tbut at the equal expengg And lov d e, all n, ' delight; Bllace for And beauty and lea And ‘night. and nisht. ‘Hlllvallllfltifih {is a bur 8 s he in his insert i‘; a bl ‘ill his eyes 8th of days, sloop in the ning fire, travaiieth; ind desire, " den h, Mffilisflioltltnd is clothed "with s.‘ an‘ ‘.11 h . m. life is Quilting}; 'I.°‘..§,'i:,';" ‘Beiwemlil. 5199» and a sleep. Swinburne. ‘ \\\\, , ml.|>'§”/ ‘vii hivtoflllllv. her-nil- foreknowledge 0| . lowest prloo, * Teachers,» t. Our 1927 calendar has been specially designed to ad- vertise this Province to our own people, and to those abroad. ‘ We are therefore anxious to place one in every school, and wiiibe glad to furnish a copy to any teacher or policy- holder on request. Address a postal card to liyndman s. t... Limited The Oldest Insurance Agency in F. E. l. Cfilcee, Lower Queen Street, Cimrlottetown MARCH COUGHS They differ little, materially, mam othorscoughl, but °°llllllfl is they do at a time when she's vitallfy lfnaturaily "l" "WY 8N really more ierioul. Cure the‘ cough at 0M0 and avoid disagreeable consequences. _ . ur WHITE PINE A101,)" TAR“ will quickly effect n cure. it in ‘plfilcuianriy soothing and healing to the inflamed bronchial tube] and gpeedlly r0- stores them to normal condition- PRICE 85 CENTS The White Drug Store i. c. JAMIESON 1 r ,_‘ ' " .114... Gargie t- "ij Lotus ' emu "'0 tudtomYII......-.......---I°° »..‘¢‘ u‘ l 1; iii"*'*'nncu,unlfitrstt MYou will need a furnace fire for. fi ° "l - lillllitl‘. possibly longer. _ y; ‘a W‘ I" Plllllred to supply you “"0 "it hm Coal and cm at the g s m...» L . sand Mouth Willi" A". Plcita j ' rd" 1'60." Haw-us‘;-