< s --¢.»-->-.~,~.~s~v.-/.-e-rw-v¢_-..._~ '.-~;~_ .14; -"»k.r' _ _Q~<<>>4~<'Q sang‘ ._, .~ illiteracy, incapable of writin as much as their Tliaociroult ' i=- _M ._ T llE BIIIRLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN - loo-lung Doll) (Founded 1N1) President. UantvCol. W. Chain: B. M V100 President. J. B. Burnett. FJJ. Ll A Maclilnnon. 0.8.0. Director. J. I. Burnett, IJJ» llocla dltor. Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES {HI per you (In cdvancel delivers! to Uty. 84.00 par year llrl advance: mailed to l‘. l. IIJI per year (In advancol mulled so Canada and 0.8. Members Audit uni-en of Clmllatlunc “The Strongest Menloru to Weaker than the Weakest lurk.‘ wrznnpsnav, MARCH c, mo Third Queens Ready The enthusiasm at yesterday's Conservative convention was another indication, if such were needed, of the strong tide of public opinion favoring a change of government in this Prov- ince at the first opportunity. \\'llel1 that op- portunity will come rcmzlins to be seen. It is understood that Prclnicr Campbell is desirous of bringing on the provincial contest before the King (iovernlncnt goes to the country, and be- I lftlifiiiri.:°§.:‘",i£‘:::".3l.:‘?..‘h “$2252; IIOTES BY TllE luv gwommml marl. how it shall govern itself internally. It is not an inlpertinence to have our own thoughts whether Spain represents a fundamental basis for anything that could reasonably be termed one internal goverment. It seems quite possible that any settlement made in the near future will only turn out to be a breathing space for tem- porarily exhausted antagonisms to rebuild their one form 0f central government as under an- other. - “Looking at it from a distance it is difficult to see in the Spanish situation hope for more than the loosest possible federation of at least three autonomous states, perhaps tnore.” In view of this, it takes no seer or prophet t0 foretel the fate of centralization propaganda and engineering in Canada, while the Spirit of Pro- vincial independence remains in Quebec and elsewhere. I‘ Editorial Notes I William III and this date, 1702. i It‘ Ill lll Locking the stable after the steed has been fore all the jobs arc (listributcd to deserving Stolen is not confined w Halifax unfortunately. democrats on road work ntxt summer. In any they do i, eyeryyyhcre every ,hn'c_ ' ll It‘ IR event. as llon. llr. .\l.'tui\lillzln emphasized. it is important for the Conscrvzltrvcs to complete their organization and bc prepared. at ally linlc, hm another yea,- if it med, the nmnbers being thin. go Sgldtgkllugélila here-Tn to l . y . . 3g ._ ' _ n. or - o:::.r;::lé;1§;‘§; ‘l: Mm» hslisrr‘ ‘i? M“ candidates for the Third ‘District of Queens - - ’ - bu; me L, 5°;- we struggle on h, . . \‘ E h fllrtl.".”.iill..‘“il..l‘lffiflfi..25‘.2?fifihfiili; gtfifinfi’,,iff°sflf‘ffi,°‘iiflii,,lféifinff°h‘l .’.°J‘.’.‘“l$%l" "v m“ ‘on at“ IIXJAIZIYOT Samuel Rclmetl)‘, 1L B~ " t e suppressed. The only common ground they could thllhra. we shall still seek to estab- be got to be brought together on was the 13"" pwminent i" the public and business me retention of Lapointe in the ministry to prevent lectlva discussion and guidance e n which Ls a condition of the some mmethmll 5w“ to take the field. fell upon Messrs. I. .-\. UacDonald, K. C., and former an experienced parliamentarian and the The Mackenzie King Government could not 0f this city for many years. Both candidates a general smash up before the election. will be able to give a good account of them- selves, and have behind them the solid support of the party. The Late Hon. Mr. MacDonald x m Now that the Ontario Quints are to be pre- sented to the King we hope the New Brunswick Government will get busy and issue an invita- mm; 1mm” 1n m, people Wm tion to the Saint John quadruplcts to be similarly brlns other thinlzs of value after the new llbvernment such financial honoured. To our way of thinking the doctor In“, conditions M”. ‘killings-trill; help (p: a n13 wlltlhheed are Britain, In ll"! (161131 )’<1='1‘~""lal’, °f ‘he H0"- Davld and mother of the three girls and boy, who are MacDonald, a former Speaker of the Lcgls- no“. big and hcahhy Childrm, deserve equally as civilization: so that these two utmost dlfflc in _ I lost one of its finest citizens. All who knew meht and Big Interest adyertiserm I s >11 Mr. MacDonald admired and rcspectedhinl. His long career in politics never made lum a \\'h0 pays for the Legislature broadcasts? In bitter partisan. 11c could be fair to opponents New Bruhsyyick Legismnre a ‘member asscrted while maintaining his own political doctrines, t hat a series of addresses entitled “Your Gov- llld lllollgh "W" Yflllllilim!‘ Ql Shim“ 3-‘ a Q13‘ c-rnlncnt Speaks" were devoted to party propa- bater, could speak impressively and to the point gahda, that they [anal to give an accounting of when the occasion warranted. As Speaker, he t he stewardship of the Administration and have W35 lnvfiflabl)’ 17011149015» and could b5 remit‘ not taken the people into its confidence. Attorney- upon to give a fair and impartial decision. General McNair denied that the bill for the pro- one and members or ms stair wo, Mr. MacDonald was a descendant of sturdy grammes had been footed by the mxpayem swlch Ploneefs» ‘H1055 "ndllloni bQlh l" Pub‘ Who then paid ivhat Mr. Brocklington, head of lic and private life, he worthily_ represented. the C_ B_ C_ told the Radio Conmfiuec o‘ the Tilt Guardian 5311mm)’ l°l"5 l“ ‘xlendllfg House of Commons, costs $50 per minute to sympathy to the widow and other rclatlvc5. "1 broadcast? their sad bereavement w- m at Canadian farm implements and machinery Looking Backward And Forward were exported to the value of $495,000 in Janu- of central government now or in the future let ——_——— v ary compared with $199,000 in the previous l i If anyone should WlSll to realize the danger "mum and $768,000 a year ago. Excellency ‘he W“ on me m‘ The United States was the leading purchaser with a total of him look at the sad state of affairs in Spain. $218,000, followed by British South Africa with Spain consists largely of provinces formerly en- $70,483, Argentina $20,163 and France $10,- joying sclf-govcrlllncnt. As at present nominally, 795, Reaper {hfeghefs and ploughs and part5 ‘Ollillluled 51ml" b11211" i" 1479 lll the 611d 0f were the leading item. Total exports 0f farln the Five Year civil war which nlade Ferdinand implglngnts and n13¢hinery during we ten King of Caslile as well Aragon while Catalonia months of the fiscal year ‘Vere valued at $5,- and Navarri remained independent states for 739,000 in comparison with $8,928,00 in the many years, as did Granada, and were forced lnto Corresponding period last year. ‘ i‘ 1U lll centralization by aggressive measures, but there has never been unity or a spirit of nationhood. Most old timers, before Prohibition, _recall Here is what a \VEll~l(ll0\Vl'l English writer, Mr. what the Governor of South Carolina did IUT Roy Sherwood, has to say on the subject: say to the Governor of North Carolina, but we “There are (or were before the civil will’) think this beats it for succincy and “wet" four hundred thousand Basques in Spain, one hundred and fifty thousand in France and one Wherever you find one or a batch of them, you find the same apartness, the salne individual in- dependence from the rest 0f the country. They are hard-working first-rate isitizens, but they cannot be assimilated or absorbed by any other race. Their speech is different froln the Spaniards It is not a difference of dialect but a totally different language. liven in Spain their minds arc firmly turned to the north, to the sea and in the direction of their brother Basques in France rather than to inland Spain. They have hardly a habit or a thought in com; mon with the Slaauiards of the centre or the south. "Catalonia is agriculturally, industrially and conlmercially ~somc pL-ople might add hnlnanly —thc star part of Spain. It has a population of three tnillion people and its capital Barcelona is by a hundred thousand inhabitants larger than the national capital hladritl. apart from being commercially twenty tilncs more important. The Cataluns are frugal, hard-working, intelligent and enterprising, an utter contrast fronl Andalusian and many other Spaniards Their temper with the rest of Spain has grown worse (it was never vcry good) since the loss of the American colonies. That hurt their overseas trade severely, and they took the loss badly be- cause they attribute it to corrupt government misrule and lmilnaginative incompetency-a subject on which they hold that their own ex- perience gives them the right to talk. y “If Spain had been a moderately contented and united country thcrc would have been no Prime dc Rivera dictatorship. If dictatorial nuthlessness were capable of proving successful there would have been no 1931 revolution. If abolition of the monarchy were the efficient remedy there would have been no outbreak of civil war. If in that civil war there were noth- in; more at stake _than the precise form of [bvernment to be adopted for the future, it 3mm not have lasted half as long as it has Uflt. “To think that Spailfs problem is merely to decide between monarchy and republic, with the addition of a few internal reforms, is like a be- lief that a pneumonia patient will recover if we [lve him the choice between green and yellow iryjamas and ask him whether he prefers them with pockets or Without. A: the outbreak of the clvll warS ht still had over forty percent of her fltlpllltf can in s condition of complete humour. Relating the explanation given by a South Caroliniaxl for sitting on a ten-gallon keg hundred thousand in Canada and Antfffilia- of whisky in a moonshine camp when it was raided, a Federal agent wrote: "He stated he had been cutting wood on the other side of the mountain and noticed smoke. Thinking that his woods might be on fire, he climbed t0 the top of the ridge in order to make an investigation. As he got to the top he slipped on some wet leaves and started to slide down the other side of the mountain. When he stopped sliding he was right in the still. Naturally, being badly shaken up in the slide down the mountainside, he sat down t0 regain his composure." 1i it‘ 1F country, war or no war. British manufacturers will be called upon. u a ready two years ahead of schedule. electricity transformers and switch” equipmen which ‘will i 0W1: nafnetrand the distribution of that vast ig- poocd and unprotected as the last. 4 I “It is an impcrtincnoe to tell another country strength, and they are as likely to do that under w“ Business is still business with the old cqu The British House of Commons has been m told that their vast defence programme is al- Furtller b‘ he said, the Government has ordered 1,400,000 pocllblv protective anti-gas helmets for babies and I, 0O.- ooo gas-masks for young children. Orders Ivt also been issued, he said, for large suppltgs of llu volt rumba c! stars 1n w one stellar unlvonc. we aho expect in flnd only l, lllnltod umber with a funlly‘ o1’ planets; and amongst one funlllea of planets there cannot be more than a small proportion whore ccndltlonl exist that make llfe possible. 0n the other hand we must remember the vutnosa of. creation: there are about one hundred mllllon separate um- verles 1n the region 0:30“ acces- to ohoervn-lon, we know not hclw many more beyond. If 1n each universe there are not more than m or three dosen stars with 2:11p; of lanets, ‘the tputol nuts:- o lane ays ems thin o relative amnzll that we can survey great. If the proportlon of p eta on which llfe can exist ls not. more H survey of the solar system Bluest: that this la ll conslderable under- estlxnate — the tot number of planets were condltolna are suitable for llfo must be considerable. So lt. lseenla probable that there are other worlds where llfe exlsts. though that. life may be entirely different from any form of llfe with which we are fa-rrllllnr. -.Dr. B. Spencer Jones, Astronomer Royah ln "Discovery", (London). people a healthy 2n: Cl-lnnpoflrtrowlv GUARDIAN ~=1-;,=,=,,,,~,,=»- filth-til... than one 1n a. mllllon -- and our me France to recognize the Franco regime ln Spam d W11 th 1 ll In: $16G COWIIMDY Whit II III-I Here i whole salience of Pulle- mlgli of 1.5m“ n23“ liirflm- s a - wtl mo pa-rochlal Ln n l i t ma“ wlpledil: 1 emseves o an so o hey are elected. lntroduclni nw he electlon of Parliament a yelled orm of brlbflfy Sensible ‘rhlng To Do (New York World-Tehran) The decision of Britain and w some bitterness ln tnls cause There 1s always ln the British count: . Yet, they had no safe al- "cggca; 5P1“; ternat ve. Thou} almost certain delayed recogni- whlch seeks to arr ve at positive result-s, and ls not discouraged by lon would have been to throw Hcrlco lnto the waltln! B11118 01 obstacles. We confess to many faults, but Defeatlsm ls not among the policy of change." and to restore “ eaceful affairs we shall stand fast for our If we can euccerl 1n the polltlcal ln. religion. art and porary Revlew. London. On his way to Calcutta,‘ for Christmas the Viceroy. Lord Lin- llthgow, went shooting 1n Nepal. The ex sdttlon ended with a bag which ncluded ‘l4 tigers, three rhlnoceroses and one bear. Dur- ing the first three days the party pazzod flvc tigers, two fall- ng to the guns of Their Excel- lencles, while the Lady Joan Hope. the Vl:eroy’s daughter, shot The last two tigers charged the beating elephants, but owlnlr to the presence of mln of the inn- bouts (elephant riders) did not maul them. Two blank days tol- lowed and then came two that. al- most produced records. One tlger was an inch off the Nepal record. Two other tigers and drhlnooaros were shot on the first day. On the second four tigers appeared tn the pg of beat! elephants and His day s rhinoceros churned the ele- anta and broke through the e, but was killed by l-Ils Excel- lency. Two other rhlnoceroses also broke through: a ember of the staff pursued them and shot. one. —Indlan Press Unlon. _ The Intelligent vlcw of the IJLA. des radoea 1s that they are a. ere lnlstlc survival from an obsolete epoch. Falling a museum their proper place would be a lunatic asylum, though a goal might make a useful substitute. They do not even comprehend the pollttcs of their own country. The British Government cares not two hoot; whether Ireland unites as one country or not. That 1s o. point ex- clusively of Interest ncw to Irish people alone. Mslmlng mllkmen ln London ls not going to affect the issue one way or the other. But a questlon which 1s profoundly of 1n- tllrest 1n London l: whence comes the money whlch ulte obviously 1s being lavished th suspicious freedom on these larger lunacles. Does ft all come from across the Bt. George's Channel. or are there interested foreign donators? Peo- sold out to e. us: "Vvhat creatures we are, their support in hi! a ordering of the world. ln national glam“ Amen“ h’ has atmed up h ts’ t all th v 1mm own Ideals 0f freedom and justice. an xeuragfise to can: 1Y3", motor powers Hitler and Mussolini. To say that Franco has already Germany and Italy 18 has lwce war. We mo- epted French sup rt. l.n our of France. ecple of Spam. Franco mung em. are no 9,; m1- wlllln ly to foreign cmmlnatton. thta country ought to know t that. t1 arfne; have lnterven in Spanish reconstruction wlll coat “plum me“ m“ “m”? “m” a lzroat deal of money. and the only ln a position to give elements that make a. worthy Germany and Ital? are havln! the ulty flnancln lative Assembly and a mcnlber of two Liberal much Credit as Mm Dionne and DR Dame, c? ggllllggg yflgwdlllhddfitflllliglfrmmggttér: Weill-Kellie“- provincial administrations, this Province has peciahy as they carried on unaided by Goverrh 53:86am“ samue, m The com VANITY ‘I'M fleet astronomer can bore And thread the spheres with his qulck-plerclng mind: He views their stations, walks from door to door, Surveys, m; lf he had designed To maloe a purchase them: he aces thelr dances, And knoweth long before Both their full-eyed aspects and secret glances. The nimble dlver with his side Cuts through the worklng waves, that c may fetch Hls daarlyaam-ed pearl, which God ‘did hide ’ ' ‘ On purpose from the ventlroua wre . That he. might save his llfc, and also hers . Who with excessive nrlde Her own destruction and his dan- ger wears. The subtle chymlcl: can divest And strip the creature naked, tlll he find The oallow principles wlthln their h . est. There he imparts to them his mind, Admit-hid lo their bed-chamber, be- ole They a pear trlm and dressed To ord nary suitors at the door. What hath not man soufllt out and un . But hlisqdeair God? who vet his glor- us a Ehnbosoms ln us. mellowlnc the Bround With showers. and frosts, with love awe, Bo that. we needtnot any. ‘when’: this command?’ Poor man. thou seaxchert round To rlnd out death. but mlaaest llfe at hand. :t_:__-Geo._ Herbal-rulings.) p who subscribe llberall by stealth and would blusn to lnd 1t fame? when the police get to the bottom of this evil affair. as they will, this polnt may be cleared up‘ qvttcwo Journal. The federal government's policy of kee in: interest rates low ls n: out the thrifty middle cfcss ln America, Samuel‘ B.Petten- x111, former Democratic com-tress- have just succeeded against keen German com- mm “m, Indiana’ (‘calmed y,_,,_ petltlon m securing a £650,000 (3,250,000) c0ll-- txerday. He; gpokc before the Unlon1 ‘ eague cu ‘s tract for the supply of automatic telephone d" lunchym Peytengm equipment for the public telephone exchanges m“ h“, ‘oval-amen; mnncin,‘ of Portugal. This success follows the recent visit 10 meet rwurfln of a British Government mission to Portugal. Fifteen engineers and technicians of the the palm when m; mleregy, on Portuguese Government will shortly arrive in ‘"0119 IBVBd by worklnif $821k“!!! year has resulted hat, has lowered interest rates t) less an half what 1s us England t0 work on immediate problems with q-hh, u mm lecumy h, reveria the manufacturers, the Automatic Telephone and gear." old Pettenltlll ‘The luv-n- root tn mo Electric Company» Ltd., and t0 Kain cxpcriencc. “"4 W53" a‘ tfmmmmdle chm country and The contract covers fifteen years, as it is cs- m“ 1, m, “u; ‘m; m"; n1 m, sential for economical planning to look many ‘ 1- —“ ' ‘P11511110- years ahead. Over a hundred men will be kept in employment in England for the period of the mcnt fer ldeqlldm annament h; contract and various subsidiary firms supplying m" "lum- "oamfl "l" V"- batteries, cables, iron and steel, copper and brass Dclpltc the ovelilwltclmlrlg‘ mltl- We wan to IV war. We want peace. we era wllltnl to pay for whatever annulment f will ‘ ck. -- New world-Myron. 3:12am to "pool their n- an and ‘to t. fol-m a natiorlll reserve of um electrical equipment for repslrldg air raid damage. All these were only n few of the sn- llmancementa," but they were proof that ‘thcnext crisis will not fln_d the people of Ffltallrsl c» _ , , luww lL-Bo w! thin“: lfsxlnie‘ for‘ disclosure of the energy put into the anti-air those who love to vial with a raid defences were made by Sir John Anderson,‘ - Minister for Civilian Defence, who announced that 127,000,000 sandbags have already been de- livered to the Governmenhas well as 50,000,000 civilian gasmasks, and 940,000 more elaborate and expensive gas-masks for civilians who will “all. m‘ span _ viivslin "iii-GS! be on active service during air raids. In addition; o 3; “in ‘an’ w‘ h. Wnshlngbcn for hlr services, he rose to express hlllcknowledge- menlfl: but he was so embarrassed 11 that he could not utter c. word. “Slt down, Mr. Washington," said the Speaker. “Your modesty equals lyour valor-and that surpasses the pcvwer of any language which I mess." —Chrl.stlan Science Mon- FARMERS We carry p complete llno of Iflp Bel or your Borneo. h! I». lion. Poultry. rm. For lloc on hum, “m; n11] hone: or ll and um on co Elihu"; W3??? £21535! affective. We can-y also mwnucoxul-ma-lu raw- Condition Powder 10¢ mln Anlrnll Be for, mm Poultry Regulator - - - - - - an a m Prctfiworlnlowllm ....__._......_mgqlk Prfll‘: Roost Palnt - - 81k- llao’: ,l'lg Worm Pollllor 35c par lll AND thou" llllllllltlllll. Powders for, llorslls A5116 magmas . A a. so... 3P5!’ c»... c "oFTi-"T-‘léihfii of 1 A "it lililrlvllltovn ouarllllll bis-YEN llmaml} “$1: til-sigma , u m nod and an aka..." Qua, _ fr?" t: Jamar. % - Qllurg mnhwnnm, taa-u_,,,w. on." nnbil m “luau of nllocy ' . w 41h» “flrllltncw i qrtnlfl HEADACHE! AND MIGRAINI IN fillDllfl AND YOUNG ADULTS Y Bl DUI TO EYE DEFECTS m tan years Dr. K. Grunert, of Munich, mule careful tests on the as of all patients who suffered 11° otan with a headaches and wlth mllralne x (om-slider! hefilslegluandt, l: ar u poulbo eye o o the relatfves of cse patients. He found that 1n the majority of the Patients with headaches and ln nvflrly all of thou with migraine there were ey t disturbances. He then found at the treat- ment o1’ these dlsturbnnoel of the eycslgl-lt reduced or com letely re- moved the headaches on ml ralne. In children and young adu ts the relation between than headache lll symptoms was most renounced. “Mn-uv of the patents were of the type referred tn as ‘difficult’ children; that u. they showed ms of nervous lrrltablllty, they e dlfflcult to man e or were inattentive at school an so on. In mln? of these children the growth °I u" 0Y6! L! not completed as Qlrlynu 1n others and school. re- qulr I a consider ‘*‘ amount of close ‘work. Involves a great strain on those still growing eyes. D!‘ emphasizes that 3!‘. . Grunert d even lllllhfi eye defects may cause severe headache or migraine (the one-slded headache often accom- Mm bthongaeh linduvgrnltlng). e e ac ave been corrected. close work ls avoided for ‘oneyor two weeks and the ‘ muscle which ‘accom- °d5t95 01' Tellllatea the amount of Uflht allowed to enter is treated th the drug pllocarplne. Pll- pgpcrplnc causes the pupil to con- In oases where the muscles which turn the eye-ball were weak, rlams were used to strengthen e muscles on the weaker slde. Where there are no defects of odstl or of the muscles controlllng the eye-ball the "rm" t’ ‘adv "r e use p ocarplne. During the ten years. 197 chlldren Ind Young adults were cured of flllEralne by the above methods. Now all headaches and migraine am not due w eye defects, even ln children and young adults, but 1t would be well for parents and teachers to have all such patients examined for eye defects. , THE SINGERS’ REPLY (Exchange) A combined choir of New York Metro lltlm Opera stars, a. little out o their courses. has vocally condemned Benlamlno Glgll. the Itallan tenor, who had the temer. 1W when not 1n America to say the 0"!!!‘ dry that American slng- fi" W?" WPulnr only because notoriety created by ipubllclty was ‘substituted for lntrlrlslc value." In their remarkably unanimous gpllpgew thlauforilagner‘; dmourg. opera c s a were lltc restrained. m 1y "...'.l'l1e ‘ ‘ singers Wlth vocalvolces most voclferous, Inlzlect voclferatlon out-voclfer- [Q . lgvinmsouthid Itself." u a matter of bandylng words with dlagruntled foreigners, says an exchange, they {$51153 5p- parently that sweet. though their voices are. "Heard melodles are "will. but those unheard are sweeter." A The most unrestrained and wholehearted comment seems to have come from Frances Aldo, who sang with Glgll when he made his American debut twenty-one years '80- "He l» n nmv um- pig." she said, "whose words are worthy of ‘$0?’ t 11y l i" "l New! to have stuck 1n this tenor’: throat, how. 9V9?’ l5 HOt i310 Inner popularity o! the native-born Metropolitan 09ers colleagues. It 1s apparently the fact that the last time he landed from Europe at New York, the Untted States sent a rep". sentatlve to meet him 1n order to collect the income taxes duc slnce o had previously visited the fiollnlry- One would have “- ‘v To clllllllolillo vlhoreall ‘°' "was ailm used - lltllpllflc =5"- ili-l» nucl- 512%., ‘ififlhgtg d . I“! film Illwlrsd cream: oodiauinuclelliaiiwlirv: Whoa you drop lnAlh-Scluar mhlct or m l at: olivine! ls lznblblu npllkc sparkling .931.“ ' P155533‘ Nfiflhln 'ln[|..d 2131:2111 that quickly relieves pain and omful-g mnallygmmfgofibl?“ ‘dd madman m“ ‘Q ,",,,,{,°“' “~88” Rwoihiliiiilii?’ 51123131 . You will find, when you try it, that 1001M relief from llnplgu. t‘ IT ‘TAKES "-3 TIME to WRITE ADS The Way You Want Them Advertisers in The Charlottetown Guardian are offered _, ABSOLUTELY FREE la coniplete and up-to-tlle-nlinute advertising ‘ service, including CUTS_ COPY, ARTWORK, LAYOUTS, ILLUS- TRATIONS, READERS, WRITE-UPS, PLANS ESTIMATES, SUGGESTIONS. ETC. SIMPLY our: COPYWRITER l PHONE WILL CALL I32 You are invited to make appointment for any l hour of the day or night with the MODERN “ l AD SER VICE - BUREAU ON YOU ;lrrw.t-:-aac~, - Fire, Auto, Life. Accident, Sicknesg and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis l, y 144 Richmond‘ St. Charlottetown u] that a Fascist would lmow j film" "5"! 112i i0 be surprised and offended at such sh 011mm welcome. MODERN MARIA 1 N. England-WP)- Two sllened safe - breakers were nown here from Jersey Island ln what ls bslleved the first 11893“. of sn nl lane as a "Black Marla" 1n the B leh Isles. ORAL SOUVENIR covmvmvfrfii a -(OP) _ More than Z0 years “nutter 1t was embedd , sh ' l ~ d from m’: wnagnbf omflrerlilltlWir tenn hers. v MIIIIIWI Uni-moat kllll mln. A Pig NOT CONCEAL THEIR IS NOT THE RIGHT TONE 0F VOICE FOR 'I‘ELLING SECRETS/THERE IS NOTHING SECRET OF COURSE ABOUT OUR CHEWING TOBACCO. ITS USERS DO rucKEYs BLACK TWIST ~ CHEWING “on sovms T6 rrolhsn? - Manufactured ‘B! l and lllollolsoll.t.lllolim.l ll"- ""- .._ y [to r‘ i" ~—"" 4__¢_ ._.. i} _ _-Ji- nr -. I . n | For a Delicious Cup of ' Orange Pekoo Tea Mr. Tea Pott Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea ’s Whisper y PREFERENCE EOR lo- PER FIG ONSALEA ~ i l‘ ’ w. ' ~