.r...-—_ :' ._=;.~ PAGE FOUR iHl iillllllllllildllll Iilllillilll I Healing I. Secretary, Bdliol all IIIIIOI, l. l. Barnett. CIMIII I. IILIIOI PROHIBITION ENFORCEMENT There has been a good deal 0f Uhetflp political talk recently ltt cer- the lax enforcement. of the Prohibition Act. the DlIPpQ-IE no doubt being t0 the exceed- tain quarters about allege-l divert attention t'rottt ingly damaging revelattiolts brought, forth by the (ttstottts probe at Ot- tawa. An occasional drunk seen 011 the streetf-atut in t‘ruth, ‘so far as we can learn, they are very occa- former slonal as compared with y~at~.+-—g.ves the pl0il6 Liberal an‘ t-xcuse to raise his hands in boy, horror at the "awful negligence" of the Stewart government! Now, every man or woman who knows anything about it, knows that the Stewart Government has nu more. to d0 witlt the enforccttit-nt of the Proltibifott Act than the tiwti and bur eti Bell government of n11- ltappy tnentory has to do with it. At the n (111814! of the Temperance Allance the whole duty oi‘ enter»- ing the Act was placed in the hanti< l Th‘- sole tinly of the ‘government watt of a Prohibition Commission. and is to ttippolnt this Prohi-h-it on: (‘ttmntlssioti anti, this tlottc, the (‘ommisktitt functions absolutely independently of thl‘ govcrtttttcnt. Ami, lei us say night lterc. th-t- Pro- h'hition Commission is ntatlc up 0i men who wottltl not the dictated i0 by any govt rnmt-nt. Liberal or (‘on-I servative, nt-en who know the res-l ponsiibilltlcs they have at-sstttttetl and whoknosv also that the gov- PHIHPTII, even if it wanted to, has no right to interfere with their‘ may safely. then, a-snttttte lltat the of which Mr. James Patmt in chairman anti the ttersott- t‘untntisslott. ncl of which is tnatic up of simil- arly ltotlottraltle, t-ottst-itetttitttts and indl-‘pentlettt melt may he. ti“ ttentletl ttnott to do th‘-ir i'ttll duty. These. and not the Stewart government, are the men whom ottr pious Liberal friends 11ft‘ ullillfllly and falsely accusing of ttegli-gence in the enforcement of the Prohibition Art. llae there ‘been negligence? Take of the Police During the last. two years of the previous Prohibition Coin- ntisslon, 1922 and 1923 the total ituntber 0f tlrunlcs before the cottrt. was 310 During the two years tt11- tler the present ‘Commission, 1924 and 1925 the total number of drunks] before the court was 212, a falling! off of 98. This falling off in the number of th-e official returns Court. regrettably large. does not indic-' ate negligence on the part of ‘the. present Commission as compared with their predecessors. FPhe number of drunks. we re.- peut, is still regrettably high al- though, compared with years well remembered by many of our citi- zcns, it indicates a comparatively near approach to ‘the bone-tlry era worked for and hoped‘ for by the temperance (Ofceg of the province. Everyone knows where the com- paratively few drunks wt‘ have t0- day get their known where the liquor every one trouble is. ‘ti. comes from ‘hootleggers and ‘smug- lt kt well known that dttr-l lug the past two or three summers‘ glers. this island was ‘practically ‘sur- rounded “by rum-running ships, that lMtre quantities of liquor were land- ed and that the stock so landed has lasted throughout the winber. Thin is what stands tminy between that bone-dry hope of the province and its present btil-l not satisfactory; condition And whom do our plotter-- ly political Liberal friend»: blame for this? Not the Cnntomn De-l purtment at Ottawa wbotte know- ledge of, if not connivnnoe with the smuggling and booitlepging , il wfioify and criminally to blame, an being proved to the hilt by the i which with the economic side of the ques- ‘tion. is a ‘much eaiictr guide to the ‘ordinary Canadian lay render tihan WEDNESDAT, MAY 19, 1926 Yiw-Pnollnt J. l. lunati- Llut. Cal. D. A. Inclusion, IJ. I. 0. Anocllk Illkt, D. l. CIHIU. Customs probe now in progress; ‘wrhlch has no more control overl lsntngtgllllg and bootiegging than‘; aity indiv dual private citizen's; notl these ‘but the Stewart. (loverntneltt. which has neitherjurisdltrtiott ltt titt- ‘enforcement of the ‘Prohibition Act not t-otttrol over the Customs Ur‘, partment at Ottawa! ‘l Liberal consistency. verily thouf jewel were clean and flawless it, could ‘not shine in its present en-i t The Liberal fabric it; ‘rotten from the core at Ottawa tol t vvirontnent. iiti that it no longer offends the‘ nostrils and there is good reason] :0 hope that. ere long, the rest of‘ lt shall be ‘buried, and that the long—reign I dead or alive short, though of sntttggling. legging and corruption shall have {passed from Canada forever. So ‘mote it be. ‘ [O0 boot-E Imus; count for much. Notes by tlie Way Commander Byrd in credited whit the ntnismont ‘that. be was able b! illmflvod appliances "to locate ‘the North Pole with a margin of error of ‘twenty miles." To the ordinarv newspaper reader who may have imagined that Byrd's aeroplane passed directly over tthe Pole t-bis intargin will seem a pretty wide lone. Twenty miles this side ‘the ;mark or twenty miles beyond it is gno; very near the desired ‘spot, but the statement is calculated to in- nttt the Prohibition (‘ommision spire cmmdwce h‘ ‘he C°“““““d' 1111011 11)’ $0111‘ PhYslclim- N's honesty and candor and that ‘Pfievioug reputed discoverer: had not the appliance: that Byrd p08» sensed which have been invented i" Derfected slllce Peary supposedly vl-snteti the Pole seventeen year ago Peru-one curious lnltuch mam-rs may inquire what was “the margin of ermr" in 1919. No doubt it Wilr! art a jewelabeit badly besmircht-elgmiwh gremei‘ m” ma“ "°w'p°““' neys. digestive orzlmtt. the tlttctlesfi and badly "mummy ‘Even n, lmyiltly twice as grenLWe are now told glands, and so forth. i tlhat. there is no land where the Pole Ought to be. only ice at the surface and water ‘below. The ice is probably movable as it i-s known shouid not be treated 1151111! Thelc°inegiale to be in the higher latitudes and its circumference. Fortunately atlnobotly has even “bushed" the ice. d lllis "side of the dominion it l.-i s0 it is ‘howevern matter of small con- ly fair lo the patient to blame the s-eqttentre whether anybody has yet visited the exact spot. Over a score of persons in and isinct- April, 190.11 have been fairly near it. Premier Baldwin enjoy! the credit of having‘ handled the greatest strike in httntan history with signal ability attd success. The press i»; enrplttt-fc in its praise and even \ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIKN - ' what A £11112 of flours ~ . . r3119”; Barton, ID FlN-DING cAusE or-' HEADACHE While ntoet headaches can b6 traced to saute disturbance of d18- estion, the persistent daily head- ache demands tt thorough examin- A Cincinnati physician mm l-iflc- ed these chronic headaches ittto three convenient classes. First. the head ache due to tiir- ect irritation of the nerve that Rubbing Elbows With Reality‘ Condensed. from,“ The. Century (December. 26) Jerome Dlvlv- ‘Ever since Woodrow Wilson de- clared, "The side-show has swal- lowed up the circus," our colleges have been the target for a growing volume of ot-‘twleln. Ex-President Eliot challenges attention with the question, "How can some ntenta work be got out of boys who come to college for athletic ap0rts. to have a good time, or to get. a good social start?" How can we bridge the gap ‘be- tween the geemintg unreality 0f the scholastic world, and the actual- itles of the ‘world outside? There it; no problem involved in making a thoy accept the realityof student activities; be acts ‘these out in his supplies the bead and face. Title glntlfleg ut- caverns adjoining the nose, deformities of the none, mid- dle ear trotthle, to uctttal inflamma- tion of the brain itself. The second kind is that tine to poisons circulating in the blood. due to chronic ailments of the kid- daily experience. But the things ,wh ch he reads about in his 8561811" may be from‘ inflammation of thee‘! work. “mm he “Bu,” m m [he ‘classroom, are essetrttially unreal. They are remote from his life, itn- posslble to verify itt his experience. it ‘is my belief that all men "live their way into their thinking much more than they think their way in- to their iiving." Hence ii’ each The third type is that dtte to re-l flex action, such as eye strain. lie! advises that a constant headache isl a serious condition in life, and. iphysician should set out t0 locate] the cattse of the pain. and if in, ottht should call in help. it is hard-t t headache cn teeth, tonsils, en-l larged tunblnate bones in nose. thel gall bladder or appendix, and hovel these removed, without having the. diagnosis checked up in every pos- sible way. For instance a pain above the nose, immediately bet/ween the eyes. is ttsttttlly due to some nose, condition. A lit.tie above lhis.| ttsttally to constipation. Pain im-l metilateiy above the eyes, to eye] strain, and just a little above thlsj person can experience or observe ltt actual life even a fraction of what he reads. i-t enormously in- creases itg effectiveness and value. An effort b0 achieve jusnthie has -been made in what is called thP industrial Research Movement. ‘ln~1920 over a score oi‘ men from different colleges came together in Denver, and each one secured a posdion as common ln‘b01‘- er. ‘in various industries. Their ul1~ tieriyittg motive ‘was to understand syntpa-theticaily both the employ- er’s and the workers ‘point of view. Four limes each week, they would come together undcr expert leader- ship to discuss their experience-s. lil the sttnlntet" of 1912 ‘the movi- tttettt branched ottt to Omaha. lntliitttapclis. Minneapolis. Portland. Ore, and New York City. The Y. W. C. A. also started a similar ex- periment for college wontett in Den- ver Dur ng the summer oi‘ 1925 wt itt Denver. tli-lpltitt. l’zt._ —-—-———oo>_-__ ‘sitarp critics of some oi’ his titer-- ‘B11765 atttl deliverancee in former ltiztys are now joining in trlhttte-s to lhl t "f . , _ . A truth ttattet-‘ptt-hllslvti in Philr‘ ("m m prwamuon 1nd we“ “e _ ,t sell plan»; to meet the great crisis has a long ttrtlclc on} . and the tntlltary firmness and pre- HOW IT STRIKES THE U- S. .the reduction of Canadian tlttty oitl The covers five pages . A tneriviin utttontotiiles, it-le which 11H- cislon with which they were car- ried ottt. Barely 10 per cent or the again, to indigestion. Thus on the forehead alone there may he ally one of these cnntlltions causing the heatiaclte. Pain above and around the car may be tlue to inner or tnitltllc ear trottlble. inflammation of joint where jaws meet. had teeth. or‘ even eye strain. Pain right at tip of head may be due to anaemia, or nettrasthenia. ‘Pain right at back of head to gas Iflntl groups for nten ‘Detroit, Lots Angeles, Portland. anti Chicago. Let us takc as typical the experiences of the 13 nten and 1i 'W0lllt!il who nt-et in Denver, Besides s-ltariitg the work of the itnskilletl labors-re ‘(he group lived with ‘thctn ‘in the cheat) boarllillliv houses anti even followed them to the theater and dance 11f tiitzlll 011 occasions. ‘lilo tulip-r. in dttrodttced by ii t-ar-,if newletl were cnllctl llllu action (won 5h(y\\11ng Jack Cflnmwk remohlattti the stfike was called off ill int: ohstacie~ froth the path of theffin" My“ “He” n w“ hmiigh‘ 0" lstfctinl and extending i1 kindly welcome to‘ the American ‘product. itow thc rt-moval of these ohsbt-lclety . , ~ -, _ t "Mmwrm Wrmrmmg m?" duly"ve‘i)fl'ii_1i'lifi lht‘ American tnannfactttr- ers of ilillUfllOblhbi. estiecinlly i‘it0.~tl1.‘l1°‘1'11ilg lllt: order t0 clone public 01' organised forces which were reatly of Antt-rican atttontobiiet‘ Considering the number suddenly .made idle there Wits a ttotablc ub- uflllvvtti‘ serious disorder anti of cas- to show , ttttlties front violence. it was thlg-h- ly cretlitultle to llt‘e strike leaders that they joined lteartily ilt .Sll,'l- The article proceeds who have no branches itt fluttads.‘ A f“w of the ttaragraplts ‘are worth ll0llh~lf=tt in which liquors are sold. A etrong anti capable govt-rntnt-nt. ttressttre. to eye strain. or to mett- ial depression or melnnchnlia. l itave just tottchetl a few of the conditions that may be causing the lteatiache. There are really many othets. And so when a headache pert-lists day ztlter day, despite the ttsuul tnens-tttres as to diet and cleansing of intestine. rest of eyes, and so forth, then the family doctor should be consulted. . Don't ht- impatient ii’ he tloostft order removal uf teeth. tonsils. and other portions-t of your anatomy. They may have to ‘he removed litter, lint give him time to go over tuuotittg: jutriff rt-tlttres the barrier against ‘was able from the otttsvt to uphold l - .. . s l1 - - ~- i " - - ‘The lowcrlni: of the Canntlianilf", ‘c mm“! we’ "hlmln" °.M"'" llteep up the supply and distribution [of food anti carry on ntetiftti [Jilli- ‘he cnlry oi‘ U. ‘S. atttomotbiles and Iwlll utttlotthtetily msult in mnterl-l tnllv iucrtased sales. T-hose mantl- t fnctttrers who have invested int -, l (‘antttlIan factories, however, 318ml‘ tn ‘loaw the advantages which they. previously enjoyed." l U I I U ‘Canada is an important and cas- Fnr this ltappy result lic nervitreu ill an emergent-y which in ally other European country would have resulted itt a revolution. ntuch wit» 11190 1111i‘ to the calmness of tlti‘ British tentpt-rament and the prc- valent respect for law and order in the thlother Country, We cannot but tiimtt what might have happened in the United King- “And when ye ‘will offer a sacrifice you thoroughly, and try to locate tho (‘Zllliilf ttf your ltcatiat-lte, mi i§-O-§§§§QfO§fi O§O§O-O-OQ-O§O'4' Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers 0v0+Qv4oa+o+vvo+o+++¢++_ May 19, 1926 A GIFT 0E‘ TIIANKSG'IVLNG— fnrcmatt ‘ WPTP Note the variety of occupations among the nten: vulcanizer in a tire factory, ltotl-carrier, dish-washer. street-car conductor, stocker in t1 tttmttnq-qtartl. ttnbkilletl laborer ill u smelfng plant, and cal'l1@11l\’-i' Among the women we find/n salt"- lady, a switch-hoard operator. all elevator runner. t‘wo hottsetttttitk. two laundry workers, two ‘UlSCllli. packers, two overall sewers, anti ithree cafe waflresves. »Eaclt cne’s experience was ‘t-tlgn - ficattlly tiiiferettt from the others They all exprt-stsw, ‘ltowcvcr, their reactions by such typical phrasrs as "ttever-etttliltg tnonototty." t-hattce for self-expression or initi- ative." 'l‘he ‘girls "no in ithe factories ltuntllint: cas-tttttlty lnsttratttat» show tile to labor; the Denver ‘$101111 seemed favorable. it is not thfi 11"‘ mediate outlook toward capital and labor which i-s a0 important as that than; shall be aroused in tthe stu- dent a passionate desire for ‘the truth. Some increased intellectual curlogfty t; almost sure to rat-lull. For instance, in Denver every single student wettt back with i11- terests and incentives changed. 111 fact" many who bad bee-n 111051 ‘prominent in ou-ttsitle activities re- signed their places to devote more hours _to the now fittscinatilll; sttudl$ of sociology and economics. Throughout the year -they pursued thFse courses with envhuiasm, n01 only doing all the required work. but coming together in biweekly’ meetings ag well. ‘Several actually revolutionized their plans for a lifv career. Dreams of corporation fin- ance were transformed into dreams of social engineering. A movement which catt help ‘10 brea. the unreality of scholastic knowledge is of great lmportattce (‘an this not ‘best ‘be done by bring- ing the t-tttttlettts in -tottch with the realities of life an it exists, with the laboring-classes, attd thus fol-ct‘ them to ace at flrst-ltand some oi’ the cotrtpiex problems oi‘ our work- aday world? ‘in ‘physics or citemis-try we r8- tgigre laboratory work. ‘in the social sc nces it l5 more difficult. to pro- vide an experimental laboratory. ‘but for the average boy who is to live in our complex social order it is far more important. Antioch Col- lege it; expenmetttittg ltt a similar way by forcing the student to work during the college year at intervals The Collegiate industrial Research Movement offers an opportunity t0 obtain sintilar results without t1 fundamental change of ottr present etiucatiottal gyastent. 1 ‘believe that every student, except those work- ing their way, should he t-otntielletl to enter sonte euoh grott-p at least onuc during his college career. Every teacher of the social ‘sciences sil0ttltl have a rich Ihackgroutttl of such experience, A college tlc-grec should only ‘be given lo tnen who have insurt-ti themselves of some degree of interest itt ottr social problems by coating in cotttact with them at. least for ‘a summer. Sontetlting must be done to in- crtasewlhe interest of the collcgc hotly itt the real live problcnte of our age. Some tnecitttttit-isttt ttttist ‘he tlivisetl t0 make the inlt-liecttlal santptts as real as tltc world oi‘ otttside ttctivi-tie-s. IWill America tlare to ‘ltlttze a new trail of educational adventure which ‘will recreate. intellct-tttal in- terest anti tt titles-ion for social reality. AutoiBumper is l Up m‘ s Miles l (llhlCAGO, l.\lay 17.—'1‘he tnotor- ist who-tt- attlotttohile buntpt-rs pro- tect ltint al a fipvtéll of more than vlgiil mi-l. s an hour i-s “just lucky". 131st.“ tnzttlc hy tihe Underwriters Latborntorlt-s herc for companies tggtttplnlneticf the “strain thrott-glt lhat no ltuntpcrs can he guurttnlceti ,xue,asyve shpeed)’ They “tug-l keep lo protect a motor cur atltl its (locu- pltckln-g l‘lte cookies into barrels as P111118 fast as they came from the ‘bakery. 0|- ttttny tnttst ket-p “Ip with the ttttt- vettteti by htttnpers tvhen cars am] t-ltittery in the overall tnattufacturc. travelling faster but the extent of In no case was there any trttin- suc-lt prcvt-ttliott cannot. be calculat- ing of new men. nor 111119911 11111011 cont-tideraflon given to them. 'i‘lteY weri- "simply ‘hertietl around." The never pretended ment was very uncertain. 111d nten continually ‘lteittg ‘la'tl OiT wlt-ltout any warning. Only two plants had ttny plan for enrployu‘. a specified number of lintes. representation, ‘Most of the [gllow- trallbtntcd device rectirtis the ability “qrkH-Q tgfifiilled to be tilsnatlsfit-d 111' to get on ,,,.q,,utn.tefl with the men Etttploy- Fastunittg butttpers atthtttittetl liori lily accessible market for the attto-ldom had t! been afflicted with a motive products of this country." ‘which have not bald manufacturlnglhappened ‘here h“ me Dommm" ‘plant's ‘hut good to receive from the down. ward revision of tariff schedule-s.’ ructttrers ‘who have not. ‘been main- tirttnks. while ‘the number is "stilljltummg 1mm“ lthttsittstic atbout the opportunities afforded them for increasing their business in that territory, at; well no those who have been maintain- ing (‘anadlan factories: or situatiion ‘Dlmrently was rnot considered at all in t-he ‘making of the tariff revision. (IUCUODQ which naturally have fol- lowed the retiucttlon of levies leave the Canadian B heavy loss The 3.500 dealers anti distributors who make up the Can- adlan stand to ‘lose something like 85,100,- 000 on these stocks, according to Automobile fPrade Association." ‘the opinions expressed in the Can- adian party press which may or may not bias. mutter squarely ‘in the fnce can nee in the “removal of dbstnclee" from the path of American ‘products, whether hldtltrial or agricultural, ‘anything ‘but. a nmotbetring band on mm“ g, . . . government t-tttch as we now have ‘Obviously those companies l" 91111114"- 01‘ W114i‘! 1111811! have een confronted with a crisin at equal ‘Eerion-sness to that which has just now passed in Englnttil. The ‘Baldwin government, sttrong and stable as it. is, commands the respect ‘even of its bitterest po|iti~ cal Opponents. Here in Canada we ‘have a government of shreds and Dfllchezs, the fragments of a Gov- ernment, condemned by the major- ity of the ‘Canadian people in 0cm. ber last, whose continuance in of- fice le a usurpation and a defiance of the people. in Canada. have nothing O I U l "Consequently all of the manu- in (Laniada are en- The deal- , its narrow majorities of two or three are the result of corrupt bar- ter. Collectively its Mlnlsteps thaw. broken faith and violated their promises. individually a nttntbar of t.hent are tarnished by question- able conduct in office. ‘Notorious- law breakers outside count confid- ently upon certain tMinistte-rs as their friends at court and look to them for siheiter from the legal consequences of their own wrong doing. These things‘ ought not so to the and cannot he permitted u» continue. The price re- dealers with car tnckis on which they must take rt distributing organization J. Brawley, secretary. Toronto in better day: Canada hld Minia- fiern at Ottawa who were n (Hrrflr to evil doers and a ‘praise to them tthat do well. They did not wtnk "1 ""1118 1101118 or shield ‘the ‘guilty. Wiho wtill say that it in than wt O‘- lwe today? Decent. pmtriofic txli- eritls. and there are many of’ them fhflfllsliout Canada and some we trust even with-in tt-he Cabinet, who are nmamtt and shocked at the dirt that in being disclosed before the Pmbe Committee. All are aware HIM. thing: rim.- bePfl going from bad to worse fotr yearn ‘pant under the King Government. To believe that present conditions aln be por- Opinlon south of the ‘border, its concerned exclusively be colored by political No tune Canadian who ‘looks the oi thanksgiving unto the Lord. 01TH!‘ it at your own will." ‘Lev. 22:29. lunAYER~We love to give to Thee, O God, tor Thou gives! all- IF I BUT KNEW if l but knew what makes the apple tall, ‘Could teach to man the mystery oi.’ it all. lOr, stranger still, extplaln the ocean's tide. Where we behold this natural lMv defied; if l but knew what lifts the clouds towards heaven. To drop their rain and make this iEurth a ieaven, if l nut knew what tints the red. red rose, What brlnss the whitenessnohtlte wintry snows, Then ‘l might tell who paints the violet blue Anti gives the azure hue. sky its wondrotin if l but knew the Complex laws MAY i9.—iYou are of a nervous temperament, energetic, and some- what excltnble. You have consider- able happiness in your homo, and a rollicking good time with the children in just to your lilting. You are kind and affectionate to tboae around you. hive out of doors as much Bu yml can. Your birth-stone in an ‘emerald, which moans succen in lo 0.. H. Your flkerb a lily. to continue would be to dec- tq-t , I II i .u H.‘ f1 ‘t '.'.\t l I ode our lucky colon are i‘ Then l might scoff at miracles div- . wlthotl-t knowing exactly why» Considerable immorality environment chiefly ‘to the ment was such as to make moral life almost impossible. The result of the sumnterh ex- perience was that the students saw something of the very heart. of the ‘ndustrial problem and returned t0 college rioth in experience if 1101 111 money. Listen to what they 511v! “A ‘part of the world that l have read about hats ‘become a livintK 19' alltty. The problem of capital an‘! "qfbor geemg difllerettt mow.“...“l' have ‘suddenly realized t‘hat the ‘worker has a real gtrwggle for food. clothing, ‘lodging, entertainment‘, its well an for church and 11011001- ."l have a greater respect for me people who work, and my know- - ' t t t conditions i-s infinitely Calltngdeignlglature, and all her lows ‘fltogleientédm “Amer u“! w"? ' mer. l think that college peolllt‘ are utterly oblivious to the really worth-while thingn." A gmup of 30 college men who wen-get] t-heit- way on cattle-boats o Daily Lessons In English of life, in primal form could make a pro- toiym- By W. L. Gordon Then. in my triumph, l might o proudly any 4 it is not (lotl, ‘Tls only Nature's way.‘ WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: —-il. Cottlter Todd. "Shall you go tomorrow?" nteatts are yott going? "Will you go t0- morrow?" nteane are you willing to go? OFTEN YMTSPRONOIJNOED: Calliope. Pronounce kal-i-mpe, the a as in "at," an in "ice," o un- stressed, e as in "me.“ accent the Cliff-EN MJSSHEIAIBD: mnrize. Two m's, and z. SNYONYIMS: .footi, fare. diet, nutrlment. nourishment susten- ance. vlotualn. WORD STUDY: "line n word three times and it b yours." ‘bat us increase our mastering‘ one word each day. To- ' fiAPOIDGETPIC; in the Illlll" ‘E s with the ‘present economic system, 60113-910115 was a car found, bttt the students attributed it ntilc-s an and circumstances crack 0ft‘ a lamp , haokgmun‘; A“ the gtrts working post. or knock ‘dtown a telephone ' ltt restaurants felt that the environ- D016. Germany to Reward vocabulary by ' irtmt accidents at a gmtttter speed. Matty accidenta- are prc-l <0 a 'l‘lte laboratories have a heavy steel, bullet-t-tltatwtl rant tnottttted tttlteeit; on an inclined track.- [test to a standard motor car frante,l they let tihe ram crash ‘into the bumpers at vurtiutts speeds and for A the ihttmper to withstand tht- Experiments have ntltown that travelling more than elgltl. hour may under many Those Living to- BERLJN, May l7.—The P-rttssian government. reviving an old cuc- tium. has put a premium on mari- tal bliiss. Whether the plan was to out down tltivorcee was not dis- vlosetl, httt the Minister of Fitn- unce will pay fifty marks to each P0l1l1ie tihat has lived together fifty or sixty years as a golden or diam- ond anniversary present. The only strings attached w the award were that both husband and wffe must the permanent residents of Prussia. All Indian Cav- alry Unit Repre- seating 26 Tribes ‘LAWRENCE, Kan" Muy 17__- Troop C, 114th Cavalry, Knttsng national gun-rd, ‘is compoget] tinttte. ly of ilndtlans attending ‘Haskell tin- stifute. The eighty-five enlisted men represent twenty-six tribes in Klimt ntwr, -t ,. l‘ ‘ ‘i ‘lghllii tin-t r ~11; <_ to Europe came back definitely 1105'! i l - New Conditions Require New Wills -T‘IMEV alters a man's plan, Ind P9515011. A will made ._ years ago should be re-read and if necessary re-wt-ltgggm 1 , Our booklet "Your Will" tel]; in simple, plain language the facts you need to know about will making and executorship, ~ Sent: free upon request. Y 0 Eittsmfift TRUST 1 COMPANY ltti-tmiimn Pifrenf. Charlottetown. I’. If. t. l2. ll. B. LON(i\\t'0l(1‘|I, Acting Nuns“; HEAD OFFICITF-IIALIILX, h’. S. satin John. N. It. St. Joltrrn. KIM, hlontrrnLlhiL. ml Good For Safety t ~ Choose » Walls ADMIRAL BEATTIE HOTEL, SAINT JOHN, N. a. Proof Against Moisture, Heat, Cold, .Sonnd ‘and Fire interlocking Tile offer; all these advantages. And is proving right here in the Maritimes possesses them. That ‘is why the magnificent Admiral Beattie Hotel in Saint John was built with Interlocking and Hollow Tile. And a majority of the most important Maritime jobs of the past three years (list On request) specified interlocking Tile. / - Half the weigh‘! and half the erection cost of brick, with greater non-conduction. Cuts insurance ‘in ha". 119M199 to zero. So write for statements of Maritime architects, quotation, etc. L. E. SHAW, LTD. Makers for tite- Maritime: Avonport, N. S, that it gather 50 Years Exquisite Rlpaud’: Perfumes if you desire something perfume-something no mwih than any scent you eve!‘ UN AIR EMBAUME Will just "ll U16 bill. odor just received in Yardley"! The mm fastidious iadlen are iv" W" ""° ecstasy over these odorl. THE vm-trre nntue STORE l. G. different for! more aetiaitiiii‘ dreamed of, 11"" Another very 10"" i noun srnzsr ‘ JAMIESON DRUGGIST - twenty-two states. Troop C its famous for ‘its client. drill oi‘ twelve minutes, during tultticlt the nten tlistttount, Spring Cleaning Time Vou will need good coal. We have the but lnvornen Screened. Albion Nut, Albion Lump. Old Sydney. Boson coke and other ltlndn. Your order will bnvu but lNIMlon. A. PICKARD 8t. C0. OI" PHONE Something Ab“ Our Mail Order System Sometime: yOI-l Md "S: Wniple to coma 1° 1"’ In" to purchanc your drill “Pr, 01' 99'7"?‘ you h." ‘aven- noription and MM“ s," iently bring ii 1° W’ ' ° '0“ It is for 99°F“ "c" ‘d’; that we have eptnbllllil MAIL QRDER SYSTEM a '. it mutton not wbll nlra In our line all who"? '° d° " '° “m” "iii" m we guarantee to tie o y“ 000d; when and W11" want the". AND ewe us A 1'11""- L; FIND our tron VOW“ . rug 2 MACS _ onunsron: Ci m amt 0MP!‘ :1" a 1' phone $1 ‘t l l