r’. .. y. I I rlloovnlculllllll Notes By The Way .- _- , __ s“ “dwk- “"""sw~.v-u' n ' If ."""”'“""g" g',""'“ "'4 Perllelual mum. rm by Mr mum a u»; """‘::.*.... nu. Ponder-cl - Brodhurst w ms lunch: Edison- manor-u n V ' Win10 aelifbl‘. ouch. "Honest. Richard Pen- I run only (founded rm) 311a‘... nu (in Mane) BIGGER BUSINESS Canada's external trade ‘dgurel rol- um the ‘ ‘ businflls trend ls still dlstirlotly 11P- wnrd. lbrports last "month were rlalued at $48,719,461, "and imPOR-fs pt $37,053,287, the-aggregate trade being $83,772,740 asragainst $71,434,- 287 for February 1933. the increase more than l’! per cent. This is a splendid mid-whiter record, showing as it does that the rising business tide ha‘ not suffered a check in one of the normally dullest months of the o being $12,330,461 cr rather YQII‘. An especially pleasing feature of the Rbruary trade returns. notes an exchange. is the greater ‘ they reveal in ‘QXpOIt as compared with iznport trade. Lsstvmontlfs exports were up $8,817,058 above those for February 1933, the gain being approximately 23 per cent, while the rise in inrports registered $4,250,519, an increase of 12 2-3 per cent. The favourable balance for the nronth was $9,666,174. February is always a, month of lean business‘, generally registering low-water mark in both exports and imports, but this year it discloses l volume of export trade equal to some of the best months o! 1033, and whlch, if taken as an average would mean more than a billion dollar tum-over for the year. As a matter of fact the total for this fis- cal year will nu: close to $1,200,000,- 000,—much the largest in volume and value since 1932. This is not s. wave or even a chance current-it is a, business surge upward which r has now been in progress for up- wards of 21 months. It is now pretty generally agreed wrtalnment st otuwa. Wednesday by business observers, by those who m directly lnncerrled in the actual work of adapting supply to erépect- Id market demand. thbt this is go- ing to be a year of remarkable ex- pansion in the production and sale 1i Canadian goods, as well as in the country's general volume of foreign trade. While it is still too early in fore- eut the degree o1’ business reoov. ery 1005 is likely to register, 1t seems safe to estimate again of at least 20 per cent over the 1934 recordfl great as last year's improvement“ was. This calculation appears amply warranted when last month's '16 per rent expansion of exports is contrasted with the almost static record o1 February i064. Thus far at all events the best New Year's predictions of business lmilroye- merit have been exceeded in Oan- eda's external tmde since the be- ginning of January. ' ADVISORY COUNCIL The proposed advisory council for the Dominion is nothing new, and M; in part already been carried out by the Bureau of statistics The word "Statistics" is a ccnr. parative newcomer to the Engllsh| ldriguage, having first appeared, ac- cording to the Oxford Dictionary. 0*“ rrlrbsr, mum n. ms. derel" and his brothers hid fugi- tive Cha-nles II. in an oak-tree; saved. him. from. vengcf heads. Charles, restored tc the throne, taxed Roundhead lands to provide £100 a year each for ever to members of Penderel family. Perpetual pension was a fav- orlatc method of rewarding those who had served the . Marl- b°l°ll8h got £4,000 a yealr for N! Imieriiy. Naval hero Rod- ney. £2,000. Greater naval hero first) Inlhcd. lilo. and a "centrll thinking once" for securing such date. The wounds Advilvry ocrmcu willextofld lllfludtyebptho services so rdmlrsbuauduudw u» ex- isting Bureau. -------i-.- , “$13911. £5,000. M0 recent snow OLD Elven-awn PM“, m, _ mm, 5;; and my 113.1 hunk,‘ “fa” you“ an.“ no 011 111M119 EEIIENUOIlS. After the, South African war lord Roberts gob £100,000, Kihohener £50,000. After the great war, £100,- 000 each to Earls l-Iaig and Beatty. London Impress. » Then is a movement in Great Britdlln to encourage a larger con- srrlnlption of’ milk especially by children. and to the outsider it locked like a good thing for the farmer as well as for the consumer. But now we hear lzhalt 30.000 ‘child- ren in Eamon have a. distaste for Ill-ilk. girls fearing that it will make them fat. This is rather reassurinr to those of us who were distressed by stories or undernourished child- ren In England. The fat child will obtain less sympathy than Oliver Twist; and the Marchioncss be- friended by Dick Swiveller. At. the same time it must be admitted that the problem of the super-felted is a different one. Danger lurks not only in milk but in flour, sugrat. potratox, pix. pancakes, pork, candy and many other things acceptable to the palate. We are not sure that those milk-rejecting girls would {efteussc presents of boxes of choco- a . and m. dutmetlori by m» of the great trench ham-which were sup- posedly fire-Fwd. tended to throw discredit u; sxmvlllnt claims. The Britishhnve s rum of doing trungs thoroughly ‘andon emhingc instan- ces that in the construction of the great new ship the Queen Mary, ev- ery precaution u being taken to .173“? her u in every ., uis’,“e.R _' one section of the ship was deliberately set shine. Twmty glllons of gaso- line were poured ever the csbln and {set slight. m... flames burned mn- l ously for some time. When they died out it. was found that the fire‘ had done no damage, the alone was consumed, and all that was left to mow the effects of the blue was a dank blur on the walls 5nd thg roof o! thevenbin. EDITORIAL NOTES It was fitting that the Island Bishop MoNally should preach the sermon at the thronement of the Island Archbishop McGulgan. _ Things are cllming to such a pass that It. is almost impossible for a nation to do anything at all without incurring the sfispfcion of some other nation that plans of attack are being prepared. The United, States proposal to establish a. trans- Plwific air service has brought violent protests from the Japanese press. Not mulch comment is pos- sible, There is no gainsaying the fact that the ground services of a commercial airway could immedi- ately be turned to military uses, if required. Nevertheless the world must adjust itself to the idea of a great and rapid expansion of com- If our esteemed friends. Messrs‘ rNelson Eattenbury, Simon Pyrll. D. Edgar Shaw and Doc Yeo are “younfl Libel-ell. who constitute the old his beehs? It turns out that the Liberal en- night was in honour of the mem- ory of the Leader of the Opposi- tlorfs grandfather. Hr. Elmorepvflillpott, former 0.01‘. stalwart and leader of that- pdrty in Ontario. has been adopted Fledieral Liberal candidate for South York. At the nomination meeting, which m; a very uproarlous one. '§.....‘T§.“"§.’§‘§.§r§°s'.fv'§.$?§§ Kvnlhogmhuvmm dvifis “Maw. . ea pa. once an era w mob, Mr. Phllpott justified his re- be necessary in the commercial air cantatlon of 80.10am by declaring ‘elllllll-"Blll" m“ l5 mlllilmll- that Liberal Premier Mitchell Hep- burn “first entered Political life as‘ ‘gill-fig: 13f Gvrrggeny Adolf Rigor’: U _o_ t _,, Th,‘ _ s orig n m a ear Zounfmgrilcinefizm m gttigsqrnarket. Such news as now seeps m... .....’ “ lasers; . a- n ccun ry seems 1n- -.._ - dicate a similarly declining internal The way of the world is exempli- hrend of the Hitler prestige and M v l» M - my lszrr~..rrazrslr.v mmwnt ma" h“ "t" the world has not only ledtliem nowhere near b! u“ 9"‘! by 155m"! h“ 59mm‘ their promised place in the sunlrut elation of theversailes ‘Preaty, an merely out of the fhfillg pan into hrternotionll soccer football match ikxffiuige~gemn ringlctticlasfallaégan w“ “Mai 91'“ m Pu“ bawwn nomic. military-is foI-xiotr-onger to- GEWlQ-lly "l4 “m” 59"" 53-990 day than it wlas when Hitler seized 139110115, (sq-many won by three power. On the face of it, there goals u. one. To maintain law and ,“'°"1d Wm Y" b" l°8l¢ in Drew" balance the military and conrmer- cial aspects of aviation exactly the salme, The United states professes u. regard it as fundamentally a com- mercial activity, although there has recently been a. notable move for in- creased air power. The European nations regard avaitlon as primarily mlillltad-y, while it is likelry that Japan looks on it as almost exclusively so. rulioundé menial aviation. No two nations Smmuh and intestinal specialism oases-SO digestion ditions were due to an irritable or "unstable"- duodenum cap-the first part of the small This was shown by the X ray. These individuals were. all of the nervous, most‘ important part of th treat- ment, * . e the proper course. World . MAK no. no sm m; run rooyowmsyr m1 To -._--,_ Every health wrlter naturally has 111K011 l0 58y about foods because W" "l0 I are Just what our foods lllflke us. We know that we mug; have (a) pmifilds_megt' 35h Bus, cereals to build up and repnlr mg body tissues; 1b) starch I ._ potatoes, bread. sugar-to provide energy; (c) fats-butter, cream, fat meal-r to slve energy and protection to the tissues; (d) miner-g]; and vitamins for blood and tissue build. 1H8; (c) water for lubricating, 511p- Pm"! 11011105 l0 the digestive and other juices of the body, mmovgl o; wastes, and regulation of the body temperature. . . That all seems simple en ' 1; l; g; you and I know healthy inglillllilduai who have to watch trien- diet circ- flllly as certain good foods which we can efll regularly. give them indig- w Another Scrap 0f Paper ' (Tm-onto Globe) ‘Hrbglfltol c: 1014-1! wall tun soup paper ‘ to the ground and was tmnoled under feet in (kn Lindon Unfa- deii Under: echoes Vera-wed by Prussian splendor. Nor the world of 1935. Dementia the German , , are aurveylllfl aoenc today. as they stetesmanshlp. And their attention is focused, not on soaring Germanic eagles nor on soaring Germanic war machines. the modern emblems of the Ger- manic wlll-to-power-lbut on another scrap of paper that 1s fluttering to the Krfnmd in Berlin. In plain, direct, words the Brit- ish Cabinet has spoken what the world is thlnkillt- "What was contemplated,” it reminds the swashbuckling Nazi chief. in its formal ‘note, was. , “A general settlement freely negotiated between Germany and estlon, skin eru lions. "cofrls" the head, or .v.,§'...-- ‘ m thus see that. the food to suit those l.l_ ._ There are others who .lri.. a Erclit amount of trouble with may; digestion. Sometimes it is gas in the stomach or in the intestine . or Poms immediately after or three hours after eating. or pain a little to the right of the pit of the 5mm- och or even down in the mgion o; the appendix. When the symptoms are not “cleqr . cut". so that it is impossible 1°;- u... physician to state that the indiggq- tion is due to stomach ulcer or in. flammution of the gall bladder, or inflammation of the first part 01 the small intestine into which Qhg stomach empties, or chronic appen. dlvlils. or chronic inflammation ofr the lowest" part of the large 111mg. trrre. an X ray examination o: the filvlllrloh, liver, and small and large intestine is made. Where no ulcer of the stomach or . intestine is found, and no inflam-f matlon of the gall bladder m- 3pm pendix present, lt may be difficult? for the physician to state definitely the cause of the indigestion. Dr's. Julius Friedenwald Maurice Feldman. must be made and the eminent Baltimore, report 100 men and 20 women-in which in-l symptoms resembling ulcer, gall bladder inflammation, ap- pendicitis and other intestinal con- intestlne into which the stomach empties the food. high strung, irritable type, The treatment consist-s of proper food, rest of body for half an hour after meals and rest o1 mind all the time. the use of suitable foods the most important point, making the pat- ient sultable —- by rest and a change of disposition - to the foods, is the Piraeus And Salonika (Frank Yelgh, in the Mail Empire) Rumors of war, if not. an actual one, from Greece; and from its twin cities and harbors of Piraeus and ‘reports, even though unconfirmed. order, however, it was necessary 1°‘ ‘that the Reichswehr. Economic Dic- lhe mllve to bwvlde a guard w mm Schacht and and chleftains of prevent any excited has rushing the jBlz {Briefings m? becvméllge lrl- hnue K2605 ill! y C T88. llll 0T5 0 rm- fleld‘ Th’ Gem“ mm w“ d any. maintaining the puppet Hitler ! coming on and leaving the field, but is long as i, suns the“. purposes? there Wig no violence. IMB/gazine of Wall Street, I in 1707. The French Revolution is credited with opening up in Europei u... modern era. of social drsalllm-I lion, and statistics have developed? within this order as its indlsilell- table guide. i Statistics originally meant Ill-oils loncerning the State and were not. [ggodflibd particularly with infom- ation in numerical form until the 18th century. Sir John Sinclair wasr the first, to um it in his “Statistical! Account of Scotland. 1700." Elllln". erlt, scientists subsequently demon-y mated the superiority of quantita- tive data for the analy$i5 0i’ 800101] problems. | The Royal Statistical Society of; Great Britain was. founded in 1834.; m mom ygcent, year's U10 recOBMP ticn of the necessity of such infirm- luun h.“ grown DIIEIIOIIIIDEHY- Statistics, as we know thim MW’: m the equipment of the aociall “hum; mdtsperrsable to him as ‘he tglegcopf) to the astronomer- Cgnada holds an honourable? place among the nations in the de- velopment of stlitistltS. T0 GRUB-d! helm“ the credit of makllls "l" nnt scientific M15115 °1 ‘mam w,” m any country. The yvfll‘ W" of the colony o! New FY0000- slnce Confederation, e census loll population every ten years-every‘ a,‘ w.“ m me prairie Provinces mhu been taken- Jugt before the World War I- oommlsslon was apvlllllfed to study m. statistical situation in‘ the “may g5 g whole. It recommended m, u...“ up 0f m mnvlflllllfl 04w lye-ordinate ab, statistics ‘o! 0mm under nilnfle Wmmm’ sive scheme," and the prwrll "m" w m“ vrwml" " ‘"1?’ ‘manifesto decrying Germany's new .0! pacifist action such es [would rm and the census W“ m’ ‘mm’; seriously umt the lucqgenrfz: f-lfcrald-‘Irlburw. of. the. British govemmen a .lhd- particularly to implril Great lnrltslnby bindinahsrw take part m...“ raglan-people’ err-cu. n is m Immfctpol - and then stinking u. “ct mlnkmsegupmu“, o, them. We do not think it is reason- thosepsclfilfewlwclinltothedoc- tripe of lnternltionll intervention from the some income m 9;] u“; pmbqplymqg 0g m”; have income to: let it go to one We are told over 700 Confes- sional Christian persons‘ were ar-' rested over last week-end because o1 their insistence upon reading a, It ls to be trusted that the wlrolc situation will not lllVllC another blood-bath. Herc is something that might ‘well be pondered most carc- fully. There is a potential aspect to ‘ the situation wholly apart from the ,1 actual conflict between nations that would ensue. There is that aspect o.‘ the situation that is suggested by the Russian revolution o.‘ 1917 There is the possibility - many might put it stronger and call it the probability-of radical uprisings in nearly ever-y embattled nation. In other words. another world wnr might be turned into a. revolution in at least a. number of the partici- pating countries, Here is something that might wlell invite serious con- temYrtion on the situation that t may be brewing.—Rcgina, Leader- Post. paganism. The manifesto luxiong other thlnu declares “the German people is today being offered a new religion designed to creatwrrnew type of man and woman. Room has been made again in this religion for the old German gods: Odin is wor- shipped as the eternal-image of the spiritual forces of Nordic man. In this religion mm creates God again with the own image. Conse- quently it is irreconcilable with the Christian faith." Appeal is made for Governmental defence against this new religion. between which and the Christian doctrine "there can be no peace." The Government's re- spouse l) w look up the woteetonts. Whoever made fir: Balkans look all the mountelns in Europe outside of the Alps and the Pyrenees and tossed them together in a jiunble. He then laid down a patchwork __ quilt of races among four or five According to the ‘telegraph-Jour- ml, "the Pccoe Ballot." being taken by several pacifist organizations in London, hos been n: cirrlstoned ‘the Blood Ballot" because it is belie/ed to be extremely dangerous to Great Britain. The ballot attempts to build up In scum-M M rurrmrt Balkans as we know them todny— separated into COUXIUKSS confllotlnr: rrrolmfl, dominated lby external forces and powers, and doomed to be the origin of rww wars. Isiah must have hrtd this region in mind when he prophesied that "they shall j fight every one agalnst his brother, and every one against his neighbor: city against citlv and kingdom kngdo ." New York It nee-ms highly Important that ways and means should bc round for defining the three fields of Federal. provincial and IICILIGOOIIIOII 0B PGIOO 811d WIT. able, for instance. for two or three collectors to gather an income tax . If we are to authority only. Surely it is, possible 08m d0.“ from this land of farmer jGreek culture gthrrs frrv. .<."l‘lll to lndfcate that the ltwo chief centres of Pllllulatlon are tAthens were to be bombarded it l would bc still Parthenon. century, would be n. more heinous crime thnn its {by tlhc Vclrsilnns lrrrrthcr- injure the Caryatides the Porch of the Maidens, Temple of the Win ‘ess , would shock t-he w ole world-the moo so l! this were the result of a domestic quarrel or civil vulnerable rvorc prrnriticd to approach closely. Thr “City Crrl be in ccrr-rspundln-fz danger, some of its cltiurrs are a ready use. ll"! is ill iircll dizccncerllnfr. unless an rrnrrdmsoning fcar- has caused it. The harbo: is one of the busiest in the Nem- East. Ever since stanlrlcylc hm lost much of nlarltlme trade. Greece has profit- Pd in the Piraeus lmd hostile regions. The result is the _?:,t1)l]‘ "Opals. ’,‘,’,,"‘],§,‘,fi‘§,‘;°d to the" water-fronts of any sea bordered land this Athenian doorway is one of ti?! ‘worsh The traveller can only reach the his; Austrian liner in the dist- ance by being transferred from the quay in a entail boat. leaves one exhausted. Pa-rls L! a more incident tract. It 1s only when one climb! the :lirip‘s ladder f0 the deck of hlls liner that a to survry the harbor as ind it presents a striking scene of filly. The zoadstead is crowded little rental boat lo amnrr-of-wat or vessels flying many flay. (Tr-r ind u stmige device ll the fir: of the Bovlet, bringing l fold of matches in exchange some f‘ ‘ and Solonikal Where next, one wonders, and lcast expected in rle- Tllo c'=\'.l‘:~_ happily contradictory among the threatened points. H’ another crime against civilization. The llsg is already far loo long. To drop bombs on ‘the in this twentieth partial destruction in 1687. T0 of or the Victory strife. The port of Piraeus is apparently if rm attacking fleet too ol the Violet o z _\' tcn miles away. would and ho rtpimi. in yesterday's cables that Con- its Salonika. riervish and this ourney is. in itself p, conflict that A fight with the iAJrl-tarlrors chance comes a whole, all kinds of craft. from a e foreign for commodities needed In other words in§ead of making be stateslmanshlp has at least Greeks themselves. Here. W0 done in an hour, for the new sect- ion nf the city, built since the 18W disastrous fire, lines the quay. Our ‘ hem wag within a. stone's tlhrow of the sea and several o! sles would be within gun r0088 85 well as the historic White Tower. a grim remllnder of the Turkish occupation when it was n prison of horrors. To-day it is pu to a more practical Elam and troops of Boy Scouts occupy it, as hcadqllflfwfl- bumlbarldmelrt would be horrible to contemplate. A few rrllinareis still survive their slender towers gleam- ing whit: against the blue sky line. Modem Selonllrs has 1a.. addition some farther back from the water- front are surviving sections of Turkish architecture. very down at the heel and hlt-or-miss to-day. On the Wi- gkhltgj)! u: eigistlll stand the 1 rows W 6n cgxrlrgprlsod the Oanddiln Mums-y Hospital during the war. Fbryw" 5 I a I l people are perfectly sincere in their rleslnforpace: butltisthcmeth- mum ldvoclh lmmuuly u. lead to wei- in whlchpenrof the bllinrmts my have 1min or no John trill‘ fill in Stalin's Elricrsvlzr, Any explosion of modern war material into such o jvwnrr: "l lmsa u‘ dllcrll": would be more than disastrous, it would be murderous and suicidal Already in these anxious days. the worship: of‘ for the most part they are not do- lncpo at pram-llama Cities to divide the field on a reasonable basis. Janet-o? important, too. is this nccenloy keeping Oilltflmehd- monastic: how the other Powers" and "flureemenw ‘zgardlng armaments which 1n the Ase of Germany would replace the rovisions of ‘Part 5 of the Ver- sailles Treaty." This has throush- out been the PUFPOse of his Majesty's Government. and ‘W900 its achievement they have con- centratcd all their efforts at Geneyfl and elsewhere. An honorable way had been opened to Germany to speak ii-S mind freely on revision of the covenants to which it subscribed at Versailles on June 29, 1919. Is lb purlposed {the London note mquires. in effects M take insfkfld "l6 dishonorable course-tr tear WP m‘ only a treaty but an inlvltatlon to British representatives to visit Berlin for discussion of the friendly overtures looking to an ll!‘ Howl“? The attainment of a comprehen- sive agreement which by common consent would take the 111100 01 the treaty provisions cannot .be facilitated by Germany's action ‘in putting forward, as a decision al- ready arrived at, strenzflls f" military effectlves greatly 8X- oecdlrlg any before slllkested." 8W5 the British note. His Majeflyli Government is still unwilling to abandon any orvporllmillv wlllcll the arranged visit mlsht 9110M Q‘ promoting an understanding, but it wishes assurance that it is still the German Government's desire that the visit shall like vlwe- Here is a reply in courtous dllplormtlc language to a. stark as- sertlon d: military bower that Olll- do” m “Epiilriiy 1:131 that ythlns hielretofore issued from Get-runny- clumsiness . has Is 1t slwer-wsteof time to at- tmnpt. to wit: in the l- 0f. polite" diplomacy‘ to a bullying dictatorship whose vison seems to bounded by a Caveman philosollhy? Perhaps. But In refusing to divert its attention from central principles it has token opinion has had to choose before be- tween mesexages tlivereddlglo the rmgrmgc o cour us and those couched in the terms of military fright-fulness-mnd it has chosen correctly ‘The British note dispOSI-‘S ef- Britaln. Italy and France, amongol- 0mm are on guard at this marine gateway to the heart 0f 510609- sallonlks has a comparatively pride harbor from. that would also make an effective target 1'01‘ 0mm!’ guns, even 1f they be those ofltthe rnense physical damage would be the embas- days of and human! as a. neather bu!!!“ As in Athens so in 8010mm l1 line thoroughfares land E Zlgi issgir? It is not over yon-the fight Where They stormed the citedels of night. And the night 8o long ago the cause was W; scarce distinguish friend from oe; But-if the dead can help it most- The armies of the dead will grow. The world has all our banners now, And fllched our watchwords for its The Will's has crowned the "rebels" And bmlons crowd his iordly The masks have altered. Names are They piano the "truth" that ls not ue. The “rebel" that the world- acclaims 1's not the rebel Shelly knew. We may not build that Common- weal. We may not reach the goal we set; But there's a flag they dare not Forward! It is not over yet. We shall be dust and under dust. Before we end that ancient, wrong; But there's a sword that cannot rust, And where's the death can touch a , when our bodies rot in earth, The singing souls that once were ours. Weapcned with light and helmcd‘ Shall front ursfinngdoms and the] The ancient lie is on its throne, And half the living shall forget; But, since the dead are all our ow. Courage, it ls not over yet. Alfred Noyt. factually and for all time of the Hitler pretense that it ls the Nazi purpose to work 1n the terest of disarmament and peace. The Clumoellors call for compulsory universal military service and the strengthening of the standing army frmn 100.000 to 500,000 comes as, a downright repudiation manys obligations under the Ver- sailles ‘Treaty. It is the climax of the long series - of evasiohs dishonest practices with which the Reich has met the efforts cd’ the other bin-dens and permit, it to return w was a generous scaling rop::";. an»- b1; merits; loans made available, especially by tlr’ United States, for economic rehabilitation; at Geneva the Reich was given a voice in the well-meaning but misguided writ- er; and speakers endeavored to lessen the Tentonlc humiliation when matters of war-guilt arose for consideration . The German official answer to it all is the mlnglorious answer of the Sulpernmn who led Unter den Llnderrs marching ‘legions in the years before the Great War-but with a difference. The Kaiserlsm in i914 was a message directed largely to the world against social distress. The memage of Httlerism today is the outgivlng olfadespotwhoiastflvirlglomaln- taln an ascendancy over millions who are in plight: and its delivery synchoruus with a new ssswrflt on the and religious right of large numb- ers of Reich citizens. Almost Herr Hitler spoke, agents of Government were invading Pro- testant churches and arresting some 700 pastors for defying the will Oonrlitionlowder all skln troubles and gives a glossy cost. of hair. For swel- led legs, Purifying the Blood and as an worms It ls rm Unhling Remedy. " for man or bust for sprains, sores. etc. muse, Influenes end all in- fections of the Lungs sf nor- as. I710 TuiohMacsh m: nosr 34111.2 those immortal dreamers failed. " them — and prevailed. lost throne 11311768. steal. song? with mirth POWOIS. 1n. To the Citizens. of Prince‘ Edward Island Itlsmy sease of Cancer. Any individual, or any family, one dollar or upwards to the Fund, from Lady Bessborough a personal acknow. ledgernent on a card bearing portraits of Their Majesties the King and Queen. All letters containing subscriptions m the Fund should be addressed to Lady Bessborough Ottawa, and the envelope should be marked “Cancer Fund”; cheques should be made pnv. able to Lady Bessborough; ' name and address of the donor should be cal-c. fuily stated. Every dollar to it. I ask you to kindly “ Pflylkfle to bring to your ll: His Excellency The Governor Genera] I believe the people of u“, throughout Canada will welcome 12y agorérllked by this Campaign of 2:: ..:..l:.":.l'.:r':i'"'*"* "' ‘or Sovereign King George and Her Mrjesty Queen Mary. There is no more pr ti I f - our thanks u. AlmiglrtycGilzl It? Iweirtfsflifii years reign of His Majety the ‘ sharing in the great work of bringing relief and Blssistance to those sulering from the dread _ given to the King George v, Silver Jubilee Cancer Fund for Canada will be spent on Cancer control in Canada; connection with the inauguration of will be charged against the contributions made direct to Ottawa. with out delay, GEORGE 12. DeBLOIS CH 22. 193s attention a few weeks ago by Plflylncg and l!“ opportun- Ell/ill! expreg. hold for our Beloved Gracious King than by subscribing will receive in every case the no costs in the Fund send your contributions Lieutenant Governor. of Ger- and signatories to ease its ccrnity of nations. First. there down of WIHX purposes of * lI\)\ g1’ int." pgllly; CV8“ Mr. Ten Pot run: Use Best Quality BRAHMIN , ORANGE PEltcE 1s EMPIRE TEA Sold only in rel] nil-tight pkgs. defiant message of outsldr by a nation organizer. a serious economlc civil as his Nazi Herr Hitlers belligerent messarro will not rush the British Govern- ment into a hasty decision. He lw "raised. as a. British remarks, a bigger issue than may understand. A challenge m the sarwtity of treaties is a lenge u. the civilized world, _ Britain has done well in her brief ‘note to formwate clearly The FTmco-Britlsh alr accord is in line with the general movement toward a system of regional ponslblllties by which the fullv disposed Powers will provide ~ collective security frenzied despots of nllllitarism. mmentatol he chal- and this position res- peace- against the) i l i laws a H&N’ HICKEY & POCKET. “ THE SMOOTHES T SMOK ” BRIGHT CUT SMOKING TOBACCO IN THE FAMILIARRED PACKAGE 1s A c001. 1.01m BURNING TOBACCO,’ Now. ENDORSED BY HUNDREDS or ISLANDERS. surr YOUR TASTE AND YOUR NICHOLSONS IT WILL’ For B0110! h Gillie. Tones-up the . ‘ . cure! indicator cl MACS WHITE LINAMENT ALSO MAO? IIIAVI J COUGI IIHIDY Believes UIIIIII. Collll. MAC‘! PIG WOII POW- mm Eff J. UNDIITAIII BMBALIII Ohlrloflleloflllllll “°'.‘#...'Z".'3"' Tl»! ‘III llevl Tlllyyor Lona f when non no need Illlll- Their worth has bee! If.“ m We it up In latent If!!! I! hllnelcemountinga W. IAYLOR Charlottetown " S. TAYLOR . more N.D. MacLean I osional Gard _ MoLEOD £1 BENT LE r W. I. BENTLEY. K~ c- J. A. BENTLEY. K- 0- Ion-Islets ms s‘ vI-lvl-l" MONIY 1'0 L05" Office: 180 Richmond 5m"- Prohibition can n. m» he. ~s. mfi-fiyfi It Pr" ‘ _ pl‘ IIIIIIRW- (bmmiv-‘lm ' 3, choir-man. I _ I null “l? Al“, w, Matheson noun-n. uoucrrol- l"- ' 2532......- We‘