wedllid-‘Provincial Department of Ag- / I .\,~;- at , . IIOIdQOs-I. Chyafes a lslosen vloe-rve-sldvsf-u. I. lessen. leentnry- u, 1 "w l). A. Ivan-nos. n n. lilies and lessen-J. It. Harwell eel-eels» nlmen- n. la. var-mt .8 IQ! ell nlvllees - In": II Dally lhlndsl Ill!) IIJI one SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1929 \ Ilnnl» ass llnlsed' real ilel slvaaesla lelllss Iellvnrol . we could not supply the ordinary de- ularld-end left at home the potatoes for which we were seeking profitable markets. Whatever it lacks in initiative. it will thus be seen that the Govem- ment has been fertile in excuses. in the meantime. the National Exhibi- tion is_ going on. and the Maritime exhibit-or at least that portion of it which New Brunswick has mon- opoliud-is attracting increasing at- tention. _1'n_! user-mas axmnrl- ‘rlculture has now been advised by “Bolton. DePege that the Maritime Ithiliit at the Canadian National ‘hhibition is attracting greet atten- tion". This belated assurance will not surprise those who are familiar with the energetic publicity campaign which the New Brunswick Govern- mcnt is carrying on to make its sec- tieli at least yield a profitable return ‘toltho taxpayers of ‘that province for the money expended. A week be;- fore the Exhibition opened. it was - arrioulloed that twenty-five cases of An important feature pi 11w"- fimm m, N", Bmngwlckfg pqnfon ’ day's annual meeting of the Associa- pf the exhibit were be/lng shipped t; ted Boards of Trad-s was the busi- Jgpchw; m“ m, 101-95; and “pinup; ness-lilfe resolutions ‘ adopted. Not tural- products. the mineral and na- 101-“ 81110118 these ‘"5 l 511mg 1°‘ ‘ ta,“ “Mme, o; the province wuuld l quest for an immediate reduction of ‘n be (“tuna n; Qrfnnggd‘ by tnflthe local freight rate on millfeed New Brunswick Bureau of Informs-And EH11!“ t0 m9" 1119 T“? 1" °1" glen; that various organizatlonyeration on shipments for export.‘ It thmuhom m, Proylnoe hnd bggrwwas , inted out that the existing askfl to contribute samples of theirimlh FEW P" 111w! “H1111! 111K191“ proquctg townrdg making the New ials constitute the granting of a bon- Brunswick-exhibit thoroughly repre-ius to competitors of Maritime pro- gentntivc; and that large supplies of ,ducers whn jfC supplying the same TIMELY RESOLUTIONS ymrntni-e dealing with the recrea-1 market in the British Isles. and that 1 . "i I Many religious were have dlstilrbafl the world in ages past and from the days of their gzeot prop:let_ Mo- hammed. he and his followers have participated in many fang atical struggles. According io ‘ the religious belief of there people and, contrary to the Christian, standard. it is their duty to propa- gate the extension of their faith by armed force, end I-leaven is opened to every Mussulman who‘ falls in the conflict. Mohammedanlsin, which was estab- lished more than six centuries after the Chrisian era, may be said to be the youngest of the great religious creeds whicli have come out of Asia ito claim universal sovereignty and has made a marvellous progress. Long ‘ago it had captured Jerusalem, the ,chicf seat of the Hebrew religion and ‘ycchstantinople. the metropolis of the Eastern Christian Church. Mohammcdsnlsm traces its early development in the world through ‘Hebrew prophets. priests and kings, ‘but reiects as ble phsmous the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. iThe importance of this fact becomes at once apparent when we concider lithe many millions of Moslems irl In- dia and other countries within the lBritlsh Empire. There are estimated 1th be 250 millions of Mohammedbns lr. the world, of whom 6O millions are in India, and many more in Tur- key, Egypt- and African countries. The faith of Mohammed. dominant in many countries. is elsewhere toler- lated throughout the world. Every war lcarried on in support of the faith is a Jehad, or holy war. "Islam" means and Allah is ihs name . , f," 12.5111‘! '13s lamps W-BegtecJlQf; _ _ _ _ , _ '1 1 BTOMQCIi CKNVOIB _ skPuughdrn ":1 ‘b9, l ‘no ‘ tmudan , yh ‘u, _ QM oyth‘ populu- boon‘ flnqto the Island dilfllllftllb played on the stage. and later filmed. mimihl I". “u” 1° ‘m- Mum‘ depicts one outhe‘ characters as hev-r m“ m‘ “L7 mhunufl “an?” was snnoaafira- y 1 i" jut‘ "WP-WI. ing slight ‘attacks of indigestion, and. - between the prince Edward descend finally when he undergoes an exam-I u“ N“ Bmmfl“ “in 1' Flu‘ ‘nation by hh- doom, n k dhoovéred; ference of color. Even that differ- that he has cancer of the stoma ‘.1 an” do" not obum m" m‘ land. bum pmem ‘M doc“, "know-n mentine shore . road.. Ittis; lust as . . 1 red there as it is on the old Island. that there is no hope. The“ w” bowel”; ‘ deem-ed ma” ace to driving on the Island‘ soaps during a rain storm (end we had the only wet Sunday ‘during Iths _ Qum- rner) due to thetvery. high of the roads. One has to use or run the risk of landing-truths gutter. The red mud is lik_e_’_s_o much grease under the tires. 0n the whole. however, we found the quads vary. good. Much of'ths nqn. reissue under construction. They- are widen- ing therio. l l-oedfsbouizlu elm-a feet ,on a stretch of- about l mile dong. between melitirle and. Monctom. end- eeverhi other stretches on the Ne. a. road up toward Fredericton,- _ ’ w; J After an absence of about- twenty years without a visit, weiere surpris- ed to find no substantial chengdin the general condition of .too;- on the Island. My uncle. "who had-root been back there for 4s years was sul-‘y It ls Just taken for granted that as| it is cancer ofthe stomach that noth- » ing can be dons. Of course an opera- tion can be performed. a “palliative“ operation as it is called, which may‘ proloagjlife for’ a few months. Now there is a lot of truth in the fact theta" nuinber of individuals about middle age and older, who suf-i fer for nionths with little attacks of_ indigestion, really have cancer. and' by the time they consult the doctor it has developed to the point where an operation or other treatment is_ too late. On the other hand there is no rea-, son why cancer of the stomach should-I be fetal if the diagnosis is made‘ early enough. It has been estimated that an, average of eight months is lost frcm1 the time the individual begins to notice little attacks of indigestion or‘ disturbances of one kind or another," prised to find Dundee even mailer note llvl-iis Diary ‘The Great ‘*0f""l‘he"War‘ in Which His ' 1 WasJLJoncerned. _ iOopyrightI _ . x . - . l tempting to remove the possible cause: ~ s.“ -' s‘ ?-='-‘- 1.6m‘ ofquarrel. The moment when Greet"- ' t! J ‘ ' o ’ . > "uailueteediba ivttb» the Brii-iih i“? the emcee of Freedom of the our}: .i»1.i9"¢- Ftilwfn" p‘ ‘y? 9pm ndlftleial question es- bebt ' ta‘ oftthb "uanlo of" Nations with 'which' it women connect- ediibfillliilfi hfifhlii Wilbiiih" the {uliefst of ‘iorld tran- nulllty'~vllr. to"be found in the clog Ill _' 0! the 3113" lieh-slmlihi peoples, wevwih“ hadjihipiredhiikittltude 6o all his uipe,,abroed_ er rtprwailiivt P’ wibon.’ eoillt had boon in- ;b9nai:ia_d~'"by¢rtbe~wer3 re hi". the social‘ end‘,'q1"°,*1omi_c confusiob‘ certiln To follow‘ the‘ “war. '10’ i1"! 0P5" fiifouniihaos, a true" of, Nations was flung“)- flflqarflqfltdlellsiiod that the success of the league wcuid ds- pend ifisiii-ge’ nieesilreupon the en-i during: jeitoberadefr-"of ‘iths United ‘States. GreafiBritlan)‘ and‘ he; over- ssas‘Dofillfiion1.-;i;5~~~ who sole to Anglo-Amer- icelilfriendehip lay in the ‘question pgn-nlgitishtnhval riolicy. There was aiwayeithe danger that in time pi ‘future oarfasj in‘ mo. a crisis c1181" ‘arisafwhiob: would" touch American riieepptiltiiitiegiiaodjieterelis. mouse zdidzliotTwisll-to it until national still bound by the common effort ‘against Germany was, he insisted, the moment most suitable to obviate any British and American "v"! Witt:- If the British would agree to discuss the principle of -the WQBdOM 01 "i! seas, he" believed that‘ itwould not be impossible to reach such an un- derstanding as‘would settle the rules of maritime transport in war-tirne to American satisfaction. and also lead to the abolition of competition in naval armaments. But' if the British rejected summarily the Amer- ‘ican demand for a revision of those rules. the cloud of futursquarrels would hang u}: \\ the horizon. At the infects; of November 8. Hones planned to ask the British to accept explicitly the Pfilifllflfl 01 @119 Freedom of the Seas. as Wilson de- sired. This as he knew, would be re- fused. What was essential, as e mi- mimum, was to receive from them s guarantee that the reservation they had proposed would not exclude full and free discussion of the principle at the Peace Conference; He began by presenting a paraphrase of a cablegral-n of October 31 from Presi- dent Wilson, commentin upon the possibility of afuture clash "between. ‘ Britain and the United Btateswsra‘; sf tlielsas be accepted.‘ , viammwail. to whom not... 1 beast-talkie!) interjsctgd; q do , M lily. Jolson for not u.- ..._ 111! Wlnfllih- We accept; annl .,, llll 141$‘. LIOYQ Gflorge with imihvmmit: fvpu do also, i. not?" Hilton this Lloyd George wt, , ‘N0.’ be said-fl could not accept . principle of the needolo of hi, It has got associated in the p .. mind W1“! “I! lDIOCkI-dl. It] no ,, saying j ICOQM the pgincipm ‘ would- only mean that in n . _ time a new Prime Minister won“ _ here who would say t)“; h, w not Itiiept this principle. The on people will not look at it. on .. point the nation is a” ' is], _ , It’! no use for. me to say l can V1195‘! 311W $11811 I em not s for the Britlslhnetion.‘ Then. asked-House. if the prind itself "could not be accepted t; .. I . . l . . tional attractions, the natural re a strong market exists for dairy and “salvation .. m Teflon o‘ the ‘stomach be!" _ , _ . ' e . s- real than when he left there so many l time. were the British ready to . feelinesi were ",.s W1‘ . i qcgfleialgiaaiywent an exhibit of sources. the opportunities for lndus-lother products which in a measure‘ trial expansion and various other ac- i are being supplied at the Drew" me by non-Canadian producers. tivities had been forwarded from the ti Bureau to Toronto for distribution“ Later,‘ when the Exhibition opened. ‘ with the failure of the Federal Got;- "I-wu. uncut-wed that prime ship-‘ernment to implement the specifc meats _ of New Brunswick potatoes irecommendation of the Duncan Com- and ‘apples were being displayed, that mission that the s0 percent reduc- mndmon Ition on the Atlantic region portion of they opened up in perfect ‘ ‘h. ‘ta-cud B m” d", of luenwthe freight rates should apply on all freight originating in the Hon; and that fresh shipments were 159911‘ Provinces and forwarded being sent to keep the display as a.t- M“m'“° 6m“ u ‘me by rail. The resolution very properly . hi. at u now “out . week since theicalls attention to the fatcst. that ths Mlbluon . The only lnforma- P'°"11:te.€n accncémtoxc; l ueiiolirlagpw; tion so far received from the Prince m“ s u“ ‘on c q . 1' be Edward-Island representative is that hem“ "mm B 3M5: M a :1” o: ' 0H5 the Maritime exhibit is attractingidbadvunitage than: at pm " t -= C05. great attention, and that "in addi-lthaMar m“ Pwvn iliti tiqn" to the exhibits which are com- n“ mdamm” sttealmer i“ c: . s _ monJto the three pr0vinces"-l. e., provided ‘or the was“ guppy . i b t the poster Qplagfs. illuminated de-P“ and "hemeed of h“ n! a on sins and other features upon which isuuable m m“ service placed pen?‘ ' i t , be - a ioint expenditure was made-thqanently “t Charlotte own m av Island is also showing “fox pelts» fish products. etc." And this in- ailable at all times to carry out ti" work of the Marine and Fisheries n d .thc formation. meagre as it is. was elicqmparmlmnt "that (fggnffiurgw: Ag . r - lted ~only after The Guardian hadtwperv“ on o e _ - l i Lted u n. The exposed an astonishing lack of know- I ency’ w“ a 5° n5 g p0 need of such an improved service ledge on the part of the Provincial! mputment u w the doings o! "dwas clearly demonstratefidby‘ thee faiclt representative at the Exhibition, sndfh“ ‘ 1”“ “m” 5 °“ “v ‘a even the nature of the display to ‘"1 “my”! "pplms w fr“??? which the Province contributed sisoo. f-mm“ °“ the “em” °‘ N“ s“ in’ The "Bu" m ‘and an "mm was not available until August ‘l . it ‘of Prince Edward ‘ Island pO- lwhen l Mm“: w“ malt: fro: ‘firs; tstoes is explained on the groundwottemwn‘ and the: “though u u“ that it is .too early and the po-im capacity’ took e“ an a tatoes would necessarily be smallisuppnes nesdfld‘ and wasflfgxpetli: and immature. This might ap-‘m return‘ Zztliyg on a a ply w the when] Hm n’ anylonOaltmtresolutiona strongly urged puma,’ but surely not to m: Bel-Mlle continuation of a double mail action of s choice lot of Irish Cob-i ' m"! ‘of exhibitions purposel cefiranmpaasenger service to and from . ‘ l 'i thyhle ear; tainly it did not prevent the sendingme mam and d1" n8 e w 0 y m d “w” w m R y“ Wm the provision of air port facilities at of- an po t 0 - ' _ itnbl laces throughout the Prov- ter Fair lest year. yet the Govern- ‘u e p |l th 1 li kin s in the chalp merit failed ss hopelessly then as, ma’ “a n g u _ u . - " ,| of trans-Canada airways, a da y it has failed now to seize the oppor- trsnsportlltion service. including tunity of advertising our product in _ sundays. to and from the Capes the Central Canadian markets. The! " l d ldnnring the busy months of Jily an excuse then offered was that it wou ‘ t b the , August; the establishmen Y be as useless to send potatoes to On-, Ion“ . t Provincial Government of e ~50 tario as to send coals to Newcastle-i Db .. zation. Statistics and Publicity that one Prince Edward Island farm u _ ,partment to work in co-opei‘! 0" could produce all the potatoes 0n-, Imp ‘m, the Federal Department o tee-lo would imDOYt. and that the ef- i t . . migration; and the lnauaiifi-l 0B ° fort would only be e waste of mon- 1 f u m“ When the example was cited 011a policy o’ m“ bund n8 0 p ‘L t nature as possible. commenc- lileiv Brunswick! successful exhlbitmmf: the enmest poaible due Wm‘ g1’, the winter llair, it was flatly dei F the roads t the complete surfacin! 01 M“ m“ N“ 3211151731‘ ‘Zldnglesz from Charlottetown to Borden. Bop. nny potatoes: en as on t lden m gurnme side. and Symmerside aw: Gdornzl to Charlottetown. Y - ‘ - An even more extraordinary n Wm be noted “h” thgsomolt! legislate was advanced as a reason tions adopted Italic" "W" A 11a‘: Millet of the Government m" “m” m" mm“ fikvirméen 1n‘ mm‘ ma”, ‘bun number of them have a res y . "mdtmflgr m" “mm “um pngnntng, bng n) far‘ without effect. ‘m. ‘q ‘m m“. h.‘ ‘Nanak m It is hoped that the Associated i“ d“ Bu“ puma.- Wt ‘u Boerdp- of Trade, having placed lt- __ siuuadsd ffmaLdoing no by the ffed- "u ‘m m"? 1" "1"" ""““1"' ‘"11 m, “mum o‘ “munum ‘he continue tolnsist on their implem- "ku ‘am-m. mm m“ u N" entatlon. and that neither speeioull I Drumwlok was hsvifll an exhibit of -pofetoal."he had better send mt “'~'?‘r"°"-‘i a ~~°'--“'»_"l' ~ * ' " l AM Pre i Ba - - "m" “w” m" ‘ml anlroluaf. sons t l “qiitue-tofwlliobvebedsolewtbe I Another important resolution dealt, " -- W118‘?! What a little bus can do u I of God. "There is one God, Allah, and Mohammad is His prophet,".is repeated many times daily as a pious ejaculation in worship. The chief ‘benefit it has conferred upon the ‘world seems to have been its great ,and successful crusade against _wor- lship, but its main objective is arid 1has besn the conquest of Christianity. Just. now the situation appears crit- llcal in Palestine, India "and Egypt, but we may recall also that a gen- leral uprising throughout the world ihas been frequently threatened when i‘. did not come to pass. The last ,time it threatened most seriously nvlthln the British Empire was dur- iin'g the Sepoyl-‘tebeliion in India in i857. The great Exhibition at Toronto with fine weather broke all previous records during its opening days and’ has raised high hopes that the two- million attendance of last year will ‘be eclipsed this year. Of course, much |will depend upon weather conditions gin the Ontario metropolis during the days yet to come before the closing. 1n seems to be admitted that the lshow\ts a bigger, more varied and ‘t better one than was ever before stag- ed within the Dominion "of Canada. A complimentary dinner is to be given to Premier Ferguson by the Conservative members of the Legis- lature at the Royal York Hoielain Toronto in September next. This is construed in Liberal opposition circles as confirmation of the current report ‘that. a provincial election will be ‘brought on in llovember following. I An impression ‘prevails that Hon. ‘Walter M. Lea is being groomed to succeed Premier Saunders in the leadership of the Liberal party in this province, the present incumbent to be appointed to one of_the prom- inent official positions soon to be- come vacant. It is believed that Mr. Saunders is not unwilling to retire and that several of his ministerial colleagues are quite willing that he should do so. . v The entire fulfilment of the re- pommendations of the Duncan report |is of vital moment to the three At- lantic Provinces and the long delay og the Ottawa Government in com- pleting the work is another instance of hope ‘delayed making the heart ‘sick. The Associated Boards of '_I‘rade_ by strong and timely resolutions un- animously adopted ‘are to be com- mended for their action in this rhet- ter. whether the lvvns mental and railwaymuthorities will still delay. m‘ whether they will at once complete the work. Until they do so the pfu- tellts and remorlstrances of our peo- ole must be continued. Prince Ed- ward Island is deeply "corieern ‘ in this. . ' l \ t serious attention is paid to the condi- years ago. Charlottetown, was pleas- tion. ingly clean and tidy. The streets Now it would not be wise to get were so much cleaner than the Bibs- everybody with a pain or disturbance ton streets that we all noticed itwith of the stomach thinking he has much pleasure. _We were, neverthe- cancer, I 12$, disappointed YO see However if that individual is psst'l'0lih8W0m9n5m°1<1!.1B 6189-1191-08111011: forty years of age, and is having some °1 111° 31111139 Yflifi-iflni-Fl V119" W! stomach dlstilrhllnce, cancer ahouldl 919M911 1° "-1- 11 18 F0 W511i“ iiljihl be the first thought because in that 9119311‘ Ameflcm i" Y'1_\x5°,)~§9'1§ way early treatment may-bring about "1 ""513" exi-"imr W1" "l"? ‘"511 g cu", boobs of themselves with theircheap- Eyen when the stomach disturb- m1" “b” °1 ‘mmfinl: _ -, 1 ance is llsht. if there is a loss of M“? °1 u" m?“ ."°.'"l'1"¢-1'“°' weight, loss of energy. and loss of color, their cancer. should be sus-l pected. , There are many tests that. are madei but the most rczable is now believed to be the X ray. 1 The barium sulphate buttermilk makes a black picture, and shows the: exact shape of ‘the stomach and any defect on the surface of the stomach. and as you know cancer is always found'on the surface tissue. ThisX ray work should be done by an expert because it is the begin- ning stage of cancer that is hard to diagnose, and yet it is thebeglnning stage that can be cured by early oper- ation. _ If this fact were generally known, cancer of the stomach would not be considered always fatal. WISDOM 1 heard, within my chamber pent, The dawn’: revellle blown; ‘ I rose and found the world intent On business of its own. The birds were sincins as they wrought, _ ‘The south wind was astir, With springs light-hearted gosslpI _ fraught _ I _ heard ' the buds confer. No hand had sown the lavish seed That clothed the earth with green: And who had taught the trees their 1 .need Of such a leafy scrdeli? Before man came with conquering stride __ Thisyfondroua work began, And haply these again shall hide The proudest works of man. 'l‘hs wisdom 1 have sought is hare And with rlo seeking found; It Journeys with the fruitful year In an eternal round. And whueithe changing nee-sons pass Illl watch them ebb and flow. And when God whispers to the III-I- Iftooshell learn to grow; '-'-Peter McArthur, in "Familial 1 .need" _ |old age. Many do not care tbebe teeth, that were poorly lrept. ' pie tooth brush and paste habit. ‘doasnot scem to meet with‘ approval byte large number of the Islanders. Clean teeth are a great assetito men lad women, not only for‘ heilth," but ifor looks as 'well. 1n fact, ~' it‘ is very difficult to look ' well, if one's teeth look“ bee, And, they are one of the first thioig one observes while talking? with "a person. ‘This not meant ifor old people who have lost their tileeth, ‘through bothered with false teeth endzithei question of _ looks does not w them at all. But, the younger people should take great pride in "their teeth. They are thcir greatest asset (h1g5- cess in life. , - , There were many vacant" farins along the road frolnBorGeFto St. Peter's. Also there seemed-to be a note of pessimism among- solne of tale farmers who seem to. think‘, they are not given a square deal by the ; mid- dleman. The farmer has to buy high and sell low. Thls.is.indeed, unfer- tunate for him and the Iaiand~§in Rtnaral. It is one of the ceusesof the iarae migration each year to other parts of the world, tnvlihs. United States. Many times it is the more venturesome and pl-pgl-egnivn, who leave too. Not alwaya so, pug u; ined, before at- .,- draft. note of the Allies: The President says that he freely and sympathetically recognises the necessities of the British and their istrong position with regard to the seas, both at homo andthroughoiit the Empire. Freedom of the Seas he realizes is a question upon which there should be the freest discussion and the most liberal exchange of views. The President is not sure. however, that the Allies have defi- nitely accepted th principles of the Freedom of the Bees and that they are reserving only the llmitetions _,, i. (yo. , , h, nnty nnpyth lths for?! is" e-myetei-y-io iiieoftcuri-sts who visit the island; newt within: it il ‘abgut time you, fsllowqdown there I sunbeam it‘ and popped things uli a bitr . ' nnespite‘ her. faul . l love har still- ¥fl'e»-17l'"‘Ill1l-h6 land ions sees be- tweengiloewa and P. at Island, the felaodiis" the but farmland of ell. rtbetlevql red fields, ehgreen. as they mey.bat,af¢i=9tili.1!1¥ Md to NM!“ after a~iong- abeencayAnd. toeee the cuss it freely at the Peace l... _ enesfvor did the reservation tglned in the draft imply a W1’? chaliengsof Wilson's ‘This formula does not in l. 19955 thalianse the position oi -. Uniwgiltatesreeid Lloyd ... 'All'wa say‘is tlilt we reset-y. ., freedom to discuss the point . we IOtO-thavreeos Conference‘ don't despair‘ of coming in an , 1 msnt.’ . ; C0 H on racial , old‘ 19.13! Ilththeir sllver-yihair endjindlytamlle u: an inspiration to ongs-stalul. ‘fbltbpnr; their ‘deer sweet ‘voices readthefemlly bibleyend sinl tbs-rams ahdrihal-"aphesee, ‘that are-lee Jamillir-tn overyodevout na- tivs of rriasqgsdvard Island, u ten impression that indellibly marks ones rpiritualzllfessor-ltvteatyuyeare," tears navcr- wet, my. eyes-Aunt. when the voices, for, my, ldssr l parents 6mg, out witli- Joy-end devotion on that/mem- ol-eblestlneay ulcrnins; it carried me back tn childhoqdyhnq adoiesent days, when refs ajboy andjcung man.| song-- with ‘fervor those same longs toffldevctionai‘ praise \-to the. p.91?!‘ . Q94 1n 3-1! 1,1191‘! ‘temple. for _His _ kindness end-lmeifeyftowerd-usvell. In words siYJnisctably-inedeqults. let- ms say. in" humble wgflflof lqye: ~' F"!!! 1.114: It: nstivs 11nd. WiWQITheQEIeQ-pav-L" list” were w m» and free discussions of the subject. American terms in thg programme and he cannot rscede from them.‘ Th! question of the Freedom of the; German Government. provided we? hllvs agreed amongst ourselves be- forehand. _ | ‘Blockade is ‘one of the questions which has been altered by the do. velopments in the war and the law' 803N111!!! it will certainly have t4) be alterpd. There is no danger now." ever, that it will be abolished.’ \ Lloyd George Refuses Mr. Lloyd George at once made Pilin that he was not inclined to‘ change the reservation ha‘ had drafted. and he‘ threw out lines for help from Orlando and Clemencee . ‘This is not merely a question for Great Britain, but also for France and Italy. we have ail benefited by‘ the blockade which presented steel,’ copper, rubber. and many other classes of goods from entering Cler-" many. This has been a very import. ant element in the defeat qg thy enemy.’ | ‘Yes; said House, ‘but the Pr"- the oi" time. lfrj reverie‘ f ~ . At last. can lllqtwo long sweet days t ......, many instances, it is so. This sholiid not all her native sons and, daughter; if adequate consideration and action is used tolvarcfthat end. Other Canadian provinces are up and doing. Whyfl Because their representetivei .111» Ottawa are onto their job or born.’ representation in exchangb for their! taxation. ~ " ‘ I _‘ why does P. n. Island lulporrprat- , b16811! all her commodities? Arum Islanders u capable of manufactur. ing .t'neir own necessitiesof life! why» does she have to go to N. g5.‘ and N. l: and most all of the upper-provinces for her commodities? Wake1up fail countrymen and make. your‘ to gcodsright here on your own Is ' , Charlottetown should be "l. bigjaa froronto. Get after Mabxsitgiygin; and make him spend aoalfvoftnffgev. e. mantis money in merits. How about they“; ‘fin-inf; should not take cunning n. {m}, ‘lbrmantine t0 BOIGOfiJY ' ""11! the time ittook time we left at/il _ Jhfln. W6 rlmllod up - The accepted design for the. mem- orial ststue of Earl flaigxto be~ erijcg tedat Whitehall appears in a mean‘ j issue of the London Illustrated New 3 The greet eofnlnandsr .isf phown. mounted on a fine horse. hie heed‘ bare and his ayes lookingrstflltht toward. The flaws rsmsrksthet tlifl. as that the herpes, heed-is toosnsali. ti!‘ that wcolleie ‘ifturivea select deli-villas aroused much criticism. _ Tl-izlfitio w: Love ‘A flout,»- i or" ‘ T“. 'i . " ‘I: ‘l l H} 0 can ‘at Borden, iWhy 1 ‘mobiles have. 00:,” did; ioratimetheant. ualleetef and be the case, for-the Island chn employ 3"? ,, I l ‘\ s I leli . _ | rilnoiabardifaadsbe brooks- Irma-tint tin we rcliatrbff to. no ‘ ldcnt does not object to the priu-i ciple of the blockade. He merely asks o '1' 1 that the principle of the Freedom! ‘s (Ofljlflllldv, are, pressed. father's, cheat lil-"kiqeem- _ zlisterfneus‘ agbrenlel-fe hand‘ fflfipld-Flfll _I long missed. -._.1.~-l~ l- ‘rhefleide, and; loans Land winding A m4‘ A4‘ ‘ “ A B18 Assotment The elders thy berries blue. TUKKIKQW» milildhillfifill- We have Just received a z a __un',lliid“blrvesf moon, ln?....i';fu‘§‘--o‘$¥7.l loll; - 1 ‘a. ti, ~ A; ob ._eiuidflou.,yootlt"-on also, elFied .- i’ l - _, ' tion than the old cost. . . E. Foster ~ served an oar Fountain. Ovooooooeooo-ovvoow-ow-eowvovovooos-oo ,, Excellent lads Water, Pai-fagfl," ‘The President insists that termsf ' I. II. m, and XIV are essentially. p Sees need not be discussed with the. - Allies} ‘the ravetile affects at" round worms, and hook were! ~19! treatment with . Nemo Worm v Capsules An gsflnsctl", ' efliclent eel‘ woven remedy. These Qallules , are hilillr reeoinni d by the lesdill 401811 y 1 fertile deslraeiil of parasites la tile iuieetiui. _ tract of not only ‘foxes hat e11‘ animals and poultry. Oar lea Mite ‘Lotion llu never yet failed. For Lice It recommend letting‘: Powvlm Consult lls about your Imi- The 2 Mae DRUGSTORE i~ ' 44A an-‘ 4A of Thefluob Bottles c ' and Lunch Kits lllle. shipment of Thermos 800118. including all the newest Bottles, Lana} lit; and the celebrated "Strong Glass" tngngiqng, 11 7°" "quire anything In this line of goods. we are ""1111! sou can get whet yon want at this "ain't-n. _ , Th’ 8m" m"! 11'1""?! liimmllolijetterJatisfas- style and there is my little estre it the l . , ' _ ' OINIIAD DIUG QTOII "s. en mean ‘and mind»!