of cnfling PAGE FOUR i TIIE BIIARLOTTETDVIII Gllllllllllll Bomb‘ Dilly (Iflllllllfll 1N1) Incident. Lhut. Col. W. Cheater tl. lloLun Vice Prcuhlcnt J. B. Burnett F. J. l. Idltor and Juwuqln‘ lllroclnr J. B. Burnett, F. J. I. Burnt-dry Llout. Col. D. A. Mackinaw, l). S. . I Associate l-ldlwlu Frank “nlker and D. K. Curno SUBSCRIPTION BATES , l ll ' ll ll ‘ ll l0 Cl! ‘yfeuyrmllniuzvlfmbztfrgilllzd‘frl’. E. lullind 5,00 plr your (In iulvunec, mulled to Canada and l}. l. ‘ Audll. Bureau uf lllrculltiuuu "The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAI, MARCH, 2, 193B New Zealand Tariffs Boosted Last fall the .\lllClit'llZl(.‘ King (ioveriinlciit tllillll‘. a new trade arrangement with New Zea- land and Australia. giving tariff concessions on a wide range of products iiicltitliiig wines, mut- ton and lnnib. canned meats, canned fruits and ivitiiout sectiriiig any coiiitieiiszitiiig re- (ln fresh lainb and mutton the duty from three cents to one-half cent a pound. This was done admittedly because the King (ioveriiineiit was unzilile to obtain further extension of the favorable terins negotiated with the Antipotles by the llciiiiett (iovernnicilt at the imperial ("tinfei'enc<* at (lttawa in 193.’. After juices Juctioiis. was cut gaining office on the promise to sub- stitute liberation tor sti angulation ', and “stability” for "uiicertziiiity" in the matter ol King and his colleagues taslt of even maiiitznii- ucd by their Lon- cxteriizil trade. .\lr. proved inadequate to the iiig the trade zivenucs ope servative predecessors. \\"liat has been the result? As announced ‘in yestertilrus despzitclies. New Zealand with freer entry than aver before into Canadian farm inarltets. has boosted its tariffs on some forty items. affecting Canada's export trade adversely to the extent of nearly $500,000. These tariff increases conic at a time when. according to the Liberal press, Empire countries are moving steadily away from Tory protectionist policies. It is the second rebuff which Hon. W. D. Euler, Liberal Minister of Trade and Commerce, has received from our Empire cons- ins “down under." Last year, it will be re- called, following his visit to Australia, the Aus- tralian Trade Minister, Sir Henry Gtillctt, re- signed after declaring his dissatisfaction with Mr. Euler's methods of negotiation. How fortunate that our Liberal tariff tink- erers were not in power during the critical de- pression years. whcn world trade was at its low- est ebb and failures of this kind would have oroved disastrous to our prospects of recovery! __.____.___.._..__ “Shades 0f Coles And Whelanl According to our evening contemporary, it ~ was “a few rabid partisans" who prevailed upon Mr. Bennett to defend the right of the dispos- sessed landowners in the National Park area to appeal to the courts of justice. Time was when the Liberal press of this Province prided itself on upholding the principles of British liberty and (leiiiocracy which Mr. Bennett enunciated. and which the Campbell Government has flag- rantly violated in this instance. Shades 0f Coles and Whelaii. what a falling off is here! And why does our contemporary advise its readers to consult Harisard to see “what a weak gesture it was" that Mr. Bennett made? The Guardian has published the full text of the dis-‘ mission. and the Liberal organ would do likewise if it was not for the sorry showing made by its tongue-tied representatives. t As for the “partisans” who are supposed to have inspired Mr. Bennett, they may well have included one of the Goveriimenfs own support- ers, namely, Mr. \V. F. A__Stewart, Liberal Councillor for the First District of Queens. This gentleman, in a letter to the Patriot last October, stated that he had “strongly opposed" the Expropriation Act in caucus, and had even “questioned its validity". Btit he was gagged by being placed in the chair when the bill came up for second reading in committee of the whole House. \\'liat better could he do. seeing the rabidly partisan attitude of his colleagues. than solicit Mr. Beniictfs co-tiperation in bringing the doubtful validity of this uii-British legislation formally before the Dominion members in Parliament? Mr. Stewart may not have gone that far to salve his conscience; but we suggest tliatdic might very properly have done so. and otir contemporary would be more in line with its boasted principles of "Liberalism" if it had followed suit. Community Drama ln Scotland A full page in a recent issue of The Weekly Scotsman is devoted to Community Drama Festival activities. As in Canada. the inove- ‘llCfll. is for the development of amateur draina- tic talent and this year no fewer than 349 teams have entered as contestants iii the Scottish fes- tival. Scottish authors are to the fore among the plays selected, thirty-nine teams offering original plays by native writers. It is interest- ing to note that the adjudicator at the Scottish Final Festival, which is to be held at Glasgow April 7, 8 and 9, is to be M. Michel St. Denis, the London producer and former director of the famous FrenchCoiiipany of Fifteen. who ad- judicated at the Dominion Drama Festival in Canada last year. Subsequently, in November I937, he produced “Macbeth" in London. Certain teams in the Scottish Festival ‘iavc affiliated with the British Drama League and the highest placed team in this class will per- form in the final of the British League Coin- munity Theatre, which is to be held in (Biasgow at the end of May, ' Commenting editorially on the movement, the Scotsman says it. is one of the most notable of the public developments in recent times. "It in not ma yearssince the decay of the dramatic impulse in Scotland was a subject of lamenta- tlmi. The (ominunity Drama movement ha! t about a complete change. Now through- .» g‘ the li-nqth nnrl breadth nf the land amateur with each other lor the are competin dramatic expression. A - z striking proof of the revival of dramatic inter- est lies in the fact that in busy cities, remote fllgllllnds, and the scattered isles men are to be found ready and competent to act as adjudi- cators, and perhaps the strongest evidence of a rebirth 0f interest in the drama is seen in the ‘IIICYBQSC in the number of plays of genuine ers, that are made available for rehearsal an final performance. movement seems destined t» have a lasting iii- fluence on Scottish life and character.” Airport Facilities A curious misstatement appears iii the uii- reviscd edition of the House of Commons dc- batc for February 24. Hon. Mr. Howe, T rans- port lylinistcr. is quoted as saying that $300,- 000 of federal money has beeii spent on airport facilities in the‘ lyfaritimes. “We have 5101115 under way at Upper Brockway. Blissville, Cain- bridge, Havelock, Moncton. West Brook and Stanley." he said, “and we have fairly adequate municipal fields at Moiictoii, Saint John, Hali- fax,‘ New Glasgow and Sydney. We have good municipal fields at Charlottetown and Summer- side. \Vith the work we expect to do there this year we believe that the Maritime Provinces will be as well equipped as aiiy'other part of Canada." The error. of course. is iii attributing to Char- lottetown a llllllllClpal airport. Our lac regard has been given as the reason why no federal assistance is available in developing air- port facilities here. Stiminerside, with its own municipal field, has already received a federal grant and is looking forward to further assist- ance from Ottaiva, It is time that some effort was being mad:- to put Charlottetown on the map so far as im- proved airport facilities are concerned. Min ister Howe is evidently under the inipressioti that we are entitled to receive federal assistance in this matter. An Unconvinci ug Alibi Anticipating a Liberal victory in Argentcuil, our evening contemporary was “all set” to ac- claim it as an indorsation of Mackenzie King policies. Now, of course, it has discovered that the election “was determined by certain local - a issues. That doesn't say much for the two federal Liberal cabinet ministers l-loii. P. j. A. Cardin and Hon. Fcrnand Rinfret, who stumped the riding! » Nor does it explain why our contemporary found it necessary to garblc its news report of the contest. It says that “in Lachute, the county town where Heon (Conservative candidate) lived most of his life and was Mayor for two years. he gained r77 votes.” Mr. Heon lived in Sher- brooke up to a year and ashalf ago. If was M r. Leguult, the defeated Liberal candidate. ‘who lii/ed in Lachute most of his sixty years and was Mayor for two years, as stated in ynrterdayii Canadian Press despatclier. The town's I5 polls gave the Conservative 1,201 against 1.024 for the King Government candidate. This is strik- ing evidence that the issue was fought on broad federal lines. Local or personal issues would naturally have reacted in favor of the Liberal candidate in his own home town, where he was stifiiciently popular to have held theoftice of chief magistrate. Editorial Notes I I‘ Ash Wednesday. date, I791. John \\’cslcy died this iv n: w at It would have been better for the Liberals to have kept to their agreement of a “saw-off” be- tween Saint John-Albert, N.B., and Argcntuil, Quebec. n- : m a Bingo fans, and not a few bridge addicts. will be at a loss as to how to spend their even- iiigs for the next few. weeks. . n: iv w w Indiana wants to be iii good time for the choice of a successor to Mr. Franklin Roosevelt. so the Democrats there Mr. Paul V, MacNutt, Iiligh Commissioner to the Philippines. as their candidate for I940 coii- test. a m it: v kVould you believe it today? When the New York Y.W.C.A. announced typing lessons for women in i881, vigorous protests were made on the ground that the female constitution would break down completely under the strenuous six- montli courses offered. F l! I 11 Correcting a report of his address in Oshawa February I6 in ‘which he was (|ll0l(:(l as saying the law “resulted from a conference of Cardinal .Villeneuve with Premier Duplessis and other I officials," Mr. Calder said: the Cardinal conferred with the Premier before the Padlock Act was drafted. I quoted Hr. Duplessis who said he did." iv m w n: ‘ toric patroiiymic uounciiig the waste of that their representative is on the job. Sinclair, there would be no necessity for such a move, a- n a w treachery". Ulllustration Nouvelle (Montreal) says: SOUS. the imports coming from B courtesy, privileges that have cost tury of courageous, persevering struggle? Our ‘idvantages in the British markets are our own, we won them, and it would be betraying Canada to ‘in Item up for n Roosevelt mile." dramatic worth, many of them by Scottish wrir- {KUGITUIB flirtitln: 1n (l The criticisms of adjudi- cators are well balanced and helpful, aiidthc k in llllit have just nominated “l never stated Au Ontario Liberal M.P. bearing tlic his- of Gladstone, has been do» parliamentary time and of Haiisard recording speeches made for the chief purpose of assuring the folk back Ihome f all the members were as tongue-tied as Mr. Peter A Montreal French newspaper denounces in- terfcrcnce with the Bennett treaties as “economic "England wants, or at least certain inter- ests operating in England want a closer econ- omic alliance with the U.S.A. for political rea- But how can the doors be opened to Am- erican imports without turning back a part of ritish Dominioiisi‘ For what reason should we make sacrifices for which "we would receive nothing in return? By what aberration would we concede. by pure us n half-cen- ‘rue: gnancorrmvwiv GUARDIAN ‘IIUTES iiv iii: im Her armies have ltlll some 3,000 mugs m uobelora they reach those acme-s of the Yanstae ln Blleonwm wnere. so me Chinese proverb says. “an wars end." The resumption of the nelznoor- hood‘ of snansnat- the JBDBDBAO starving-noun. ls already giving a remtnoei- that. ln a Brent country lu- VasiOn and subjugation are not. quite the same tnlniz. e Yangtze valley ls not. all Chinm-Lflnuon Teleizrsuh and Post. In England hiulueu accept; the edics of Whitehall and Westmin- ster. It. is taxed heavier than Amcrl- can business la taxed: feels me hand of the Government upon prac- tically everything it does, _YeL 1i, accents the situation. No one- tn Enizland says that "buslness men |should run the Government,” nor does the average English buslness -man believe he coud “run the Gov- ernment." In the Untied States, on the contrary. success lii buslness ls iacceoteu as moor o. capacity for eyerythmu. izovernment. included. Government. the thought of many an American. exists for bust- ness. It ls this thought. with Llie mood it. has produced, that Mr, Roosevelt. apparently, 15 out to ‘smash. The nlty ls. and dun er, that in the process o! smash g so many other thlnizs may go gdown.—Ottnwu Journal. In the King's Bunch Division, "Mr. Justice Goddard says there lhave been Jerry-builders ever since ‘Tudor times. But. nobody ln court is able to say who Jenv was. All we know is that. he left a. blfl and pro- lfic famllv to bulld shoddy houses. and hls descendants are stlll busy, ,as vou can see for yourself. The {chief curse of the Jerry-builder ls not that noor men lose money on these houses. but that. they and their wives and families lose pride of home. You cannot be very proud about the ancestrn. dwelling when the foundatlon slnks. the walls crack. the woodwork warns. damp seeps through the wallpaper, and W011 01111 005i a 081191 under the decry-London Dally Express, Denmark. for nearly half n cen- tury. has been engaged ln the sci. entlfic breeding of trout on a large commercial scale. Not only are the va. fertilized in liatcherles, but. the rout are brought. artificial voids. In hundred to were exoor to maturity ln 1931 over five ~ of pond-reared trout d and by 1936 this ex- port trade had risen to 732 tons. There are now- about a hundred trout farms, each laid out near a stream with a regulated flow of Rood water. Freshly-caught, sea fish constitute the bulk of the food, The farmers concentrate on the Rainbow Trout. an American fish, and on the Brown Trout. The for- mer grows quicker. the latter sefls better. The Danish hatcherles ln addition to sunblylng home farms, export. ova: 116 milllcn eggs were exported l_n 1036. Some trout are shipped alive in tanks. but the bulk islet-worded ln lce, a proportion tzoina as far added as Palestine, us. A..t and M€XlC0.—II‘lSh Independ- en . In any case, it. is perhaps unwise to recognise an empire tlll lt. ls firmly established. and the Italian one still has its shaky place. Native has ruined what exports usedto have; the elabor- o. corporations and that was tn make the -S\1r>D0rtln¢ has next to no produce to work with. The new Viceroy mav chanire all this, but untl. he does, Abysslnta, ls an ec- ate Nothing. moral or material, seems llkelv to be trained by a recognition elven before circumstances make such a dlnlomatic move quite un- mistaka-bly necessary. - Glasgow Herald. No one knows yet how much more the good earth can yleld. Can- d than ever before, and her to mineral production during 1937 was more than $90,000,000. Before the war lt was under thirty mlllons. New land has been opened up. new methods of mining uncovered. Get out your map and note the vast; regions of the earth that as yet yleld little or nothing. The day of the pioneer ls not. oven-London £113., Express. Actually, of course. the reports from Germany—-lf they are not. to some extent true-are the conseq- uence of a tllctatorshtp and strict censorship. In a, dictatorship no news ls bad news. When o. coun- try is asked to restrict lts inform- ation to what, can be found 1n cen- sored newspapers and inspired ov- eminent bulletins. the most - tastlc rumors arise. People slmply do not. wccept wlth crouullty the of lclal version of important events when there is no o portunlty for; lHClEDEHGCIli observer. on and re-, porting. They would be stupid if! they dld. 1f Hitler and his allies; are annoyed by the quick concluson, of most people that. the deposlng of Field Marshall von Bomber; and the rest of the army shake-up. lus the purge of the Forelgn O lee; meant the bezlnnlniz of real trouble: lt. is the fault. of the regime ltsell.—' Baltimore Sun. ' n For some years British migration to Australia was ln the doldrums; n act the flow of migratlon ran backuaru, with a loss to Austral. of nearly 30.000 people of British‘ stock during the period 1930-36. Now the tlcle has turned at last, anti the flow ls lii the normal direction. outwards from Brllaln to this coun- try. In the nlne months ended ln Seplember of last year our popula- tlon gained 1'17 people by mlgra- nerlod this year tlnn. For the same rapld and the ualn was 2,430, a grailiyln increase which is a natural from depression to economlc recov- ery. Wltn better condltlons loo, there has been a recent psycholog ln the attLude to m- izratlg , both here and ln Great Brita n. It. ls felt-and felt right- that the time has come when prac- tical plans for stimulating Bfltlsh migration should be marked out and Dll-l. lnto action-Sydney Herald. The hlltory of diplomacy‘ history of inevitable confllc ed. He might/recall. too our speech ln whlch Law stated: "There to no such thl as inevitable war. If vu- comes, will be from failure of human wls- domF-‘ancouver taco. l nd ft protection for imdoul llveu and on‘? of ttumqdtnanu‘ torn that. ply e Atlantic. ere ll lliomethlnfie t. of those llt t/hQ berm-coma floctlnl death t-h hourly-Baltic! some profit-by moss and expor . hiding. The comment makes sor- B ndlcatlon of the change m‘ i; vlce to , viii ti" "i. he cin- Andicw Boner 1M PUBLIC FORUM‘ I'M: column In open h: tho f b: oormlnflnntu o. unrest. ‘Ilo hrlmaiawu Gouda: In: on l! undone ti: ovllluo at correspondents. IRISH MOSS Blrw-I have been mak . quiz-lea from the m: m ou; coast ln regard to the moss and have received a number of letters. ’ there wera Ill-go ld g3 than shores. taking the lrls aroiin the matter up wlth "$818M. I might My that Johnson and Jonnjsoxi of Charlottetown were kind enough to obtaln the whole- sale prtces for me from Lyman a; so. ylliiogesiile guy ist, Monti-eat, or w c thanks. w express my The price paid by them varles from sixteen to twenty-one cents (l6 to 21c) per 1b., when washed clean and drled- so that I do not think lt Ls possible for our people reap any benefit from the gath- ering o! this moss. I had hoped the prices would be much higher and that lt would be osslble for our people to make gathering this sea- lng 1t. the I mght further say that supply needed l. very low as this wholesale house only uses approxi- mately 200 1b,; per yicul‘. case, I cannot advise that: the peo- In this le throughout the any further notice o l rovince take the matter. Sll DRT COURSE APPRECIATE!) Slim-Having just returned from attending the Short Courses at St. Dunstan's Unlverslty. I have been asked in give my idea about. the course. and what I have learned if anything from it. I would like to say that I think I have gained a izreat deal o." very useful knowl- edae from it. besides enjoying very much every minute of the time while I was there. From Mr. Mc- Carthy and Mr. McIntyre we got, many polnts about fish that. were new to me. I especially appreciated what. he told us about. storlnr rope and traps just. as they come lrcin the salt. water instead of drying them first, which I always under- stood was the right thing to do. From Pr. Francis we zot some splendid lessons ln English, .also Arithmetic, business letter writing, book keeping and some other things. I would also llke to make speci mention of Dr. McMlllairs lessons on First, Ald. Dr. Murphy on Cou- diiotlng Meetings and Dr. Croteau and Mr. E. J. H. Morrlssey on Credit Unlons. Besides the many benefits derived from the oourse. we were most fort.- uriate ln hearing a discourse from Hts Lordship Bishop Nelllgan, WhlCh I am sure was very much en- joyed by all. Now ln conclusion I will say that I hope that there will be another course next year. and that I shall be able to attend. I am. r, etc. ~ _ LANCE DALTON Bloomfield. P. E, l‘. .__._______ CLAIMS PRESENTATION CRITICISED Elm-The newspaper reports of the meetlng of the Howell Com- mission ln Charlottetown appear- ing in somewhat abbreviated form tn the Canadian Press make sorry rier reading. when the reader knows the uses ln these days of propaganda by Government agen- cies and other interests. Surely the residents of the Island cs see what ls indlcated by this un ave‘- able publlclty. Surely they‘; can see what Ls indicated tn t e cheap wise-cracking and rldlcule of the Island's claims appearing in the newspaper of one of the Commls- sloners. That Commissioner fortunately will have llttle to do, It. ls suspect- ed, wlth the intimate action of the Commission. He has, it has been sold. already lmlulted (Xiaractlcally every prominent Carla lan. The Commlsslon, however, ls dominat- ed by the brllllant mind of the Chairman. To hlm. therefore, the claims of the Island should have been addressed ln an orderly anct logical manner. Wlth the news re- orts of the Toronto newspaper be- ore me, lt can only be concluded that the clalms of Prlnce Edward Island to assistance were present- ed ln a ludlcrous mariner, and ln a way that. will clalm llttle s m- patliy from the average Carla lan. The Commlsslon a Canndlan, not a Provincial one. It wlll wlt.h- out doubt do an thing reasonable to rectify lnjustces under which any vlnoe is labouring; but where the interests of Canada as a whole conflict wlth the interests of any Province. the lnterests of the Domlnlon must prevail. Nor should it, be forgotten that Cen- tral Canada. ls anxlous to build up a united and prosperous nation and ls prepared to make sacrifices to do so. These facts are basic. but. Rllllear to have been lost sight of ln presenting the Island's claims. I" these circumstances, and with the more nrosperou: Dcople of Cen- tral Canada iiiixlotis to liel you. MW b81181. was a great eal 0t the materlal submitted to the Commission! ' As Islanders Ls it not possible yet hr you tn instruct. one or MOW.‘ of your numbers to .peak for von nnd so correct 3J1 some degree the wrong impression prevailing that {my money ranted you ls as use- ess as pour ng water down a rat hole? Your appointees can surely W11 the Commtirlon what. you tn- o to do with the nddltlonal IIIOHE you expfict to receive, that you ntend encourage your armors imd fishermen to place on D°°P1B around y ‘ n. the market products of the highest. quality and dlversllled so far asi your ctlmnto conditions peftnllng and that. ln this manner you ln- tend to make your people an. prosperous. By so doing you will be rendering o. service to Can- r.d:. Qenerally and n dfstlnct. aer- yoiu- people. It ls not dlffl- aee how definitely the sage dlsc polntments. distress. ullunl and tlclenoy, g . harlottetown neu no O bu alien: this publlc more uummm on your delightful ‘aw ' m U“ mrth align. u Gllglfll rosilst nls- (lioeln the lilo c - Im con loengyour ted States Cont. Gun-d alum benutl ul lnco misrepresented n rd on the International foo before tho eyes of the Canadian Patrol and once more u-iouchtl tin-n people. the Titanic tragedy. for it ll to I am. Blr. etc. prevent cnothe such tor I . O. C. BCIIMGIOUB, M. I. the trol mo: out ovary your to Toronto, Ontario, w or born in c steamer Icbrunry l, 1088. lance. It ls a lonely lrvlu. th .---—-—- petrol. a donuroiu one. but FIND VALUABLI NUGGIT mgu]. __-—n IAILARATZ A — Work- KM-nlll nlluvlol country “ill. 74 sentr- wururr mw . . a z .This man played a part - THE ONLY INVESTMENT he ever miide was on the considered advice of this Great-West Life man-annoy years ago. Azlchat time he needed financial safeguards for his family. He dreamed of the day when he could retire and see the world. The Great West Life man showed how to obtain imme"! are protection for his family, and to build up over a period of ears, a guaranteed fund at age 60. Now his reams are coming true. A Great-West Life man can help ou achieve the things you want most in life. er in touch with the nearest Great-West Life office or representative. ' Qélilllll-WEST llFE ASSIIMNBE lIllMPllNY HYNDMAN 8: C0. LTD., Provincial Managers Charlottetown , - fi-Juualllarlonlllb. THE SHAPE or Tl-l ' rrs RELATION If) lhigialaisiiin I have wrltten befo in» 0f the tviiicafepeptitiltiiiftii- Pflilenl (itlcer of the stomach or or Zfllggerlflbti-Etine) as one who was “any wdh ital-row chest and us- ner un eryvelglit. That his vmlsmsfi 15 DflTl-ly the cause of his ailment Ls agreed and part. of ‘he lmtlment 1S w try to have hlm Wqulre calmness o! spirit, mg m avmd excllemem- 311861‘. or other emotional disturbance. This as you may mmember. ls also iné treat.- Ttflllggl fprflpiuppué colltls-lnflamma. m1%!a_ e n t: of the large ln- e fact tn t; t _ dlvlduals havens. sllfifrteiggxiiiidelrl lii- testlne than normal-perhaps five légelctid feet less-means also that. y o not get the "full" benefit, 1mm tlielr food-less surface for “mrvtlon of l-he digested food into "18 blood. These slender lndlvld- ig; 115p pzégdto have the giieyhgund WM t th bulld-wlcle ushoueldgfflernndypehlgé ggfhlgps of body? The lndlvldnal e Wide 11mg body-the bull d°k type-ls usualy vigorous and strong, with n 300d appetite, a. 800d dlgestlon, and u small llites. tine that ls often 6_to l0 feet ion than normal, This lon lntest. ne means that he is able f0 get, the V91’! lab! bit. 0f value from the dl- gested food. It; ls no wonder that he l8 Vigorous and strong and would Oflflflmle to be that wav- except for one thing: he ls apt, to eat mo much. The re ult ls that he be- comes overwelglit much work 0n vnrlous lmporlant organs-the heart, the bloodvessrls, the kidneys. and the liver, Thus instead of sufferlng with peptic ulcer or tuberculosis. this wide bull- dflt! W06 of lndlvldivsl ls more like- 1v to acnulre a falling heart, high blond prrsuro. chronic lnflammq. tlon or the rvei- and m‘ binds" with stone fcrimtton qnrl phfgnjc Inflammation of the kidneys — Bfiilhlfs diverse. It ls overweight fine to lhls nvcrentlnv clam ‘A q t-qqi appetite and good digestion lii these lndlvlduals with a lone wide bcdv "int oswes heart, PllCl blood vessel illsturbances, diabetes. kidney dls- TBE INTIRPBETEII 1n the very only morning when the ll t u low She not all together and she went like snow. . Llko snow ln the sprlngtlma on n m y . And 1 f toned o d ‘éin-‘Pllliill’ in?“ “ We can't. thlnk pulls that the hiy- dlds and rags the lttle cryln chickens and the little pron n1 hogs. And the other l vlni th an that. she spoke for to us. Hove nothing more to tell her since lt happened tliul. flu never ls around for my one to But o! eostainv and tooling ntu kmvi muc .-:’f;:'°-~'.. “ my." is ..... wt..." Mimi-Q u» . . . A d =1 h h 1m —----___..__. Cs " caveat“ "t ', .............. ""1 TW° "A She wglmmoonuncndntéiabnctdc him , . . t.“ __----“ x p l M” a ._ we v: or,'l.'i taunt mam- A m‘ w-Gfllh ulna.‘ mmiqgaullml m" o ‘ Vitality alwaui u; BRAHM IN OANGE PEKOE TEA E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, LffeJ-lccident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Lunmerside. Lloyd Lgwig 144 Richmond it. (gr, foetGwn and puts too , BARGAIN Excursion RATES Po-New Glasgow, Pictou and Saint John Going. Friday, March 4th Return Limit, Monday. March 7th T. B. ROGERS C“? Ticket Agent Can. Nat, Rys. tear. alarms-JR‘. ens.» and‘ lll§tiirbiiii$s“ir5m"ii¥er | ano gall bladder. i l l l l VICTORIA IN BERLIN .\ i“ (By The Canadian Prcsst ERLIN—Two ivctrcsses trike tlie part of Queen Victoria ln tlie Ger- man version of Housmiins "lilt- torla Reglna" here, Irene V0llh".,l_\'- endorfl‘ playing the young queen - and Erlka von Tliellmnn the uldei‘. Crew Of Nova Scotiai Scuoouer F ‘seued tQPJiyG rdl ' 5t wear pill. lilo .°1='ll.,“ill.'t;’, ia-rcfllittaln F. Aeker and his crew of flve men from Lunenburg N. s. rested Aboard the Brltlah stebmshlp cavalier tonight, unaware of the fate of the schooner Hazelmyra from which they were ram“ m. dnygh e Nova. Scotla craft caught. flre and the crew were forced to leave it between West. Palm Bench ' DYS- B11811 L. Bass and Clarence E. Blrd at Louisville City Hospltal state ln bhe American Journal of 511118911’. that. ln the flve year period 1930 to 1935. of 142 cases- i 134 opcratlons-two-thlrds of the bull-GO! lYDe 0f patient were ovi-r- ‘ weight. Each of the 50 new air-condition- B c of the Canadlnn Niittcn- al Rallways has an lcebox tinder- neatli with a capacity ot 6.095 bounds used for coclliiiz. A T T r: N r I o N SWINE BREElll-ZRS and Bermuda, whllc n. strong wut- u the time to erlv e finned the llamas. A NOW lnll dls l h received from .Cflpt,fln u." "n Le lane of the Cavalier lliitmi tho fr?’ sleligelrlggmy. 015:: Ellnord rnuipitt. ‘ '“‘ m‘ ONI WOMAN'S WORK (I! The Clhllllln Prone) IDNDON-Liocned to m; 3mm; gllnmmml by the Millers‘ Mutual lotion of which she ls In ax. mutlve. Mus I}. M. Kdd, m n. gwllilgfirggfll-hfllffll woman tn her . rqunlnln Brltnln‘; mo]. PIG - WORM by llllfll file mall 61mm" remedy on the market: Mac’s Pig - Worm Tonic Powder pll the Iuollli of your I184- Prlce 35cts. 1191' lb‘ l" "trim - hoii n: tn out down ‘mefw-m-rllltt 1M by Poultry dih- “o... n '4 do .1 Order h! l’ orflfhll. “All Order: lii-omit" nttonlod b. Phone 315 Insured for I Phmfl Ins . léltmpyvhen it arrived i.."i..§i"§§§ =-