'4». l -' i‘: uni-c)‘ Nailed‘ in Hill) 15-00 “' ‘Yreeldenh-W. Oheeter B. ill-Lure. l. , __L ‘ ~ Editor and IlIQIlb-J. (fantasia your (Ill llml Ullllril . l"? Vli-o-Prccidenty-J. ll. Burnett. hut, col. n. A. ammunition; u. s. 0. B. Burnett. Associate Edl\ur—ll. K. Currie. l } i g wEDNEsbAY. Novaltliaaitci. ‘1928 ‘ u‘ | rm: NEW can‘ FERRY‘ ‘ THE Associate-Soards of Trade i. "are ‘to be commended on their 1 watchfulriess regarding the obn- - __struction of the new car ferry. From the outset‘ "there hasbeen a good ‘debit of -wool~gathering in connec- ‘ tron with this project. we were as- ‘ sured that “the new ship would be in many ways superior to the pre- ‘_ sent one. She was to be fifty feet l longer and provided with much more jocomm -‘ tion both for passengers I and freight. We were also assur- " ed. as far back as the middle or October. thatthe planswere about “ readyland the contract about to be iet_.__ with the information given in , this ‘conriectionthe Boards of 'I‘r_ade ‘Emphasizing this point; he suc- l +_ l ceeded in so interesting the people that ten million dollars was sub- scribed for the erection of a. magni- ficent EO-story building as a Cathe- dral of Learning which will be the new home of the University. While the primary object of the building is to ‘arouse tlie community to the importance of the_ university ‘to Pittsburgh. a not less important object, Dr. Bowman declares, is to awaken the university itself to its own responsibility. Above all, "a building is wanted that will inspire the studentstto- their finest efforts. “Today. intellectually America is fast asleep. With all our boasted wealth, we are living educationaly in a Dark Age. But there is a new of Charlottetown and Sullimerslde ‘ were not satisfied, and they veryi day ‘coming, when schoolboys will find joy that thrills them indiscov- Hinton udruiire) delivered DTOPt-‘Tly P091565 ‘Wt that the Plhnsmring alid developing their own native f6!‘ "V! DF°P°59<3 new steam" 51101114; capacities, quite as much as tin be made nubile before nryceedlnsihcscboll or football;_ when college him ‘he mntract- L554" "- dev91dp“£i1f.l(i€l1tS will talk in dead earnest ed that the new car ferry was iiot|about economics, politics, chemistry, l0 be fifty 188i- lfihfel‘. but 0f all-iliterature. biology. and religion; proximately the some Size as fbelwhen great monuments will be‘erect- llfeiefl} 0m?- imd lihfll She WWW bfllcrl to teachers as creators of signi- bullt tolaccommodate the presentl piers, irrespective of whether these piers were best adapted for the,ac- oommodatluii of the type of ship F most suited for the service. We were informed by a railway official who visited thetProvince to confer with , local authorities that in view of the expenditures on the Charlottetown and summersioe terminals during ' the last few years we were indeed K"very fortunate" tn getting an ap- propriation for a new car ferry and ‘the additional faculties. and that it would be»“out of ‘the questkin” to press for the building of new docks. i With all due appreciation for what the Railway has done, the fact remains that the car ferry as at present projected does not nieet either with the demands of the the I mmendations ‘of ‘l fllthDllflftim Rlepprt. or the early promise of the Government. _.The new ship is intended. not for the present alone, but for the ‘next twenty or twenty-five ymrs. With the growth ol trafflc the de- mands for transportation will neces- sarily increase as the years go by. , Revision for‘ this increase is abso- ,: lutely essential. and the Boards or ‘Iifrade are perfectlyljustified in; in- ;‘ stating upon it. . ‘. '_At the meeting held on Monday. Premier Saunders.‘ at the suggeinion of one of the members, indicated his . ‘ willingnessto go to Ottawa to ‘lay the matter before the Prime Min- ister, but would be unable to do ‘so before the week after next. In the meantime, in response to another l - é. suggestion, heipromlaed to write trb following day to Ottawa and ask that work on the ‘plans be stopped until representations were laid‘ be- ‘fore the Prime Minister. In view of the urgency of theficase and the ‘time already lost. it is to_be regret- ted that Mr. tfliiunders could not find it possible either to go to-Otta- ‘ " wa immediately or send a. suitable alibstitute‘ presentative. The urg- ency of the was; properly emphasisedin the resolution pass- ~ed by the noel-d, which insisted that the construction of the new ship aalifl aocu should prooud with the __ utmost pceeibiedlspatch so that one new service would be ready for we south of ion-so. i v b. ‘ ugre ., l. r. __ i \ _ Jowldlirlcchsacelfor of- , hbiiliivtreiolczmtaairzitbu- "fitment-stud a new educational ficant life. _ “Wehave not. made the child like school, nor have the schools made us an educated and cultured pebble; We‘ have taken education liken-iodi- cine.‘ with a wry face and plenty of‘ water- In‘ brief, we have become imbalanced. We have grown mat-Y erialy, but have lagged spiritually and intellectually. Football has superseded the\classroom, not be- cause there is anything wrong with football but because there 1S some- thing wrong with the classroom. “Instead of guiding our youth to understanding, we have beenttrylng to stuff “understanding down its throat by a process of forcible feed- ing; while professors stand by as policemen. “we have been calling the college, cr school, a preparatory course fpr life and utterly lgndring that it IS life-that a boy's life is .iri_ progress as much when he comes to college as when he leaves it. We have been blaming the boy, the times, and out- side influences for many failures that justly should be blamed to the school itself. We have. let the classroom be ruled by tradition in- stead of by need, with the conse- qucncc that its methods‘ have ‘be- come antiquated.“ . ,. . "The blame belongs on theschool, and we should set about to remove it. If teaching methods are bad. we should find new ones. If textbooks are dry. we should re-write them until they are interesting,‘ or do away. with them." Dr. Bowman declared that at thel University they had wprked out a method of getting acquainted with their students. They endeavored to find the bent or the individual bu-j "ameni- plls; they invited parents to come‘ and _taik with the boys‘ teachers they tried to divide classes so tha The bexperiment was h”! The ‘fiittsburgb experiment might I well hf-PfllllldflQfl b! “"3119” °l productive ‘of millions yearly. "the warmest section of the country. ‘lAs in Australia, rabbits were intro- tlduced and have m teacher would have more thantnome‘; pen 30 students at a time; and they in-- slated that teachers . spend "at least; fifteen minutes weekly alone with each pupil. extremely gintcrestlns- As soon as, characteristic or the weather. Abun- they began getting at individual dent moisture land soil fertility give dmecum” they bu", m 1e55,’ Why, rich pastorage and enable the farm- m-m, student‘ h“ “fled. and "were to export butter, beefgmuttnn result was that the number of fail- ures in the freshman class was ra-' duced by two-thirds. i ycattle in proportion. Pigs and cats A hint for our fishermen comes from New Brunswick where those ‘engaged lb the sardine‘ fish- , ery are reported to be making good money by saving the scales from herring, Onmboatmali is said to have made $280 in ‘a. week in this way. These scales are used by Ger- man manufacturers in the maklrtg of pearl fnecklaces‘ and other" so-call- ed Jewelry. - I ‘The Bureau of‘ Industries credits New Brunswick with having 910, in- dustrial establisments. employing 17,674 persons. paying $14,600,000 in yearly salaries and wages. and the capital utilized makes a total of $5,681,194. The industrial estab- lishments include 257 sawmills, 5 pulp and paper mills, 4 cotton mills, 190 flsh-curinggand packing plants, 11 biscuit and confectionery, 43 elec- tric light and power plaiits, '5 boot. shoe and leather factories, 38 but- ter and cheese factories and 12 cast- [llig and forging illdustrlés. g La Patric was established as‘ ‘tlic ilcading Liberal organ in Quebec iii Lauriefs time, while Isa Presse. the hiaper most read by the French- lspéaking masses of. Quebec, has gen- ‘lerally supported the Liberal party Bothtllese ablywonducted and in- fiuential journals now favor -the policy of protection. No doubt they ‘have the country's welfare at heart. and are also aware of the direction in which popular opinion is now moving. This is said tof beiipjile Week. wherefore we are ‘admonished toeat more apples, just‘ as the dieticians were telling us the other clay we should eat more fish. and the potato growers by unanimous vote instruct us to eat more of ‘the apple that grows under‘ the ground." Our live- stock men are yet to be heard, and they will be, telling us we must eat more beef, pork, mutton and lamb" and the poultry-grower beseechirig us to eatsmore poultry and eggs. Alas, for the consumer. if. he acts upon all this sage advice.‘ It will bring him a gorgedstoniaehcempty the doctor. What shall lie do? Eat apples, of course, and let the fish. meats, poultry and eggs go hang. “An apple a day keeps thedoctor away." ' ‘ When the Lusitania was sunk, followed by an inquiry‘ as to liow it came about‘. an American senator asked oile of the ship's officers, "At wllat time did you leave your ship?" The calm reply ivas, "I didntleave the ship. Sir,‘ the ship left me." Captain Carey, ‘of the Vestris, is not alive to answer as to his con- duct or capacity, but he seems to have fairly followed the rule of the sea that requires a ship's command- er shall be the last to leaveasink- ing ‘ship. unless. or until the ship leaves him. ‘ New Zealand, where _the Coates Government was defeated last week. Its ill-ca is 104.000 square miles. or about twice as great as our three Maritime Provinces. with about the same population.’ Two large islands separated by a narrow strait and kliown as North and South New ‘Zealand, and another much smaller, lmake, up the insular group which‘ Iezftellds from north to south 1.000 ‘miles. The population is about 1,100,000, including some Macrles, descendants of natives who were there when white men first came. They are now civilized, have lvotes and four of them sit in Par- The Maories live mostly jin the North island, which ls much multiplied and be- New Zealand is a‘ stock-raising country, has 30,000,000 sheep, and! run wild. l Frequent ‘ ‘ are and wool in vast quantities to the British Isles, and also to compete with our Canadians here at home, of which we complain. l‘ Coal is abunda ‘ in New Zealandend gold mlneslin both the main islands are Notes byihe Way ‘ BPTETIJWNEIJiBIIIAN ~uliy kind, or has pockets and probably a big bill from . ‘Quite a wonderful Dominion is ‘~ cg ourleciiocli andcolleges, in too other nueeu.__in_re and small. rt-‘l is_'freely admitted that the curricula! li‘lr. AJM. Balding. whose mission . ‘ _ _ ,- r, . $a Inna U-P- V THE VALUE l0? HEAT Wlren you see an individual» all "flushed up" with a fever, and then see the same individual when he is well, and still again; when he looks pale and haggard; you.may perhaps wonder what is happening to the circulation of blood in his system. Two BerTin hysicians, Drs. Ep- penger and bcilurmeyer have been doing some reseiifcIiWWQIFmn-this subject. and tell us that these differ- ences in the appearance of the in- dividual are due to the fact’ that the actual amount of blood that is cir- culating in the blood vessels varies greatly according to the individuaPs condition. . “1 In the case. of fever the amount that is circulating is much more than when the individual is well. ‘if he has undergone a shock of llapsed, the amount oi’ blood circulating is less than normal. ‘t After undergoing a general anaes- thetic there is less blood circulating and in one case of severe burn, it fell to less than half the normal values. “ - , ' - They tell us that by the‘ use of hcat and certain drugs. moreblood can be taken from the storage. de- pots and thus get into the circula- tion. - That is the reason that in a “case of shock or collapse, your first thought is to get heat to the body. You will remember that your treati ‘ment of shock was the “application of heat in some form to the spine, abdomen, feet and hands. The pat- ient should‘ be placed 1n the lying down position with the head lower than thertrunk. 4Sma1l doses of hot coffee may be given by the mouth." After operations. as you know, hot water "bags, or bottles, or hot bricks are placed in the bed alongside the patient in order ‘to give heat. So now that we know thatheat in nny form will put more blood into circulation. it would seem like"only good sense in cases of jainting. burns, shockfand so forth to apply heat in some manner. Your doctor will tell you that. ‘ In the case_of fevers, as Nature has plenty oi blood circulating-he is not anxious t2: "reduce” the tem- perature unless it gets beyond safe linilts. » In fact this temperature, this heat. is Nature's way of fighting oil trouble, _ “ . . l -—,——-—-<-o&——-- .. QOOO-O-VO-O-OOQO4~O§GO§GQ-OO;IOO ‘ ‘Household Scrapbook. 3y Roberta Lee VQQ Q’. "§‘OQ'.-§"§'§'§4 Q‘ §§ QQ-‘Q 9" Nut .Meats \ If nuts are soaked in hot water for a few hours, the meats will comeout whole and are less trouble to pick out. This is a big help when mak- llig nut cake or candy. '. 15E Restoring Rug Colors when ‘sweeping rugs put a teacup- ful of gasoline into a bucket of water and wet the broom in it. It restores the colofs. . ‘ Stains on Tinware Wét a cloth and dip it in com- mon soda. This will remove all dis- coloratioiis ‘from tinware. Miodern Etiquette l i By Roberta Lee o+o++ -0+0-v-0 lLfTowN ‘l W Viflse . of Ldziinessl" ' universally appreciated. of insight" may be gain-ea, "ranging w in value from “bflEht 15°" t° m CONDENSED F3161“ PiC/TORIAL liEylEW (November, '28) H. ADD- ~ INGTON ‘BRUCE It is o. paradoxical fact that a‘ cer. tain amount of laziness may count zmendousiy toward high achieve- merit. Actual laziness-not Just play! 0f» course it is true that all work and no play makes the smartgsf, n: the smart prcsy and stupid and qyq- lliptlc and below par, in every way. is plain laziness-looting, idling, do- ing and thinking of nothing partic- lllflfl Laziness. I would repeat. lS something that should be cultivated in moderate degree by very one who would make the moat of himself or herself and, achieve things very much worth while. ‘ ‘~- Mcre than this, in the light of evi- dence readily available from the lives of great achievers, the surpris- lng thing is that the value of lazi- nt:s as an aid to achievement ls not “Work, work. work; concentrate cn your job; stick everlasting to i ;, remzmber that genius lsnothlng but} an infinite capacity for taking! pains," is typical of what ‘the young and aspiring are ccmmoniy- told. They are told this in all sincerity. precisely as Newton told Halley, when the latter asked him how he llad lnade his great discoveries, “By always thinking about them." The actuality is thalt the basic ideas un- derlylng Newton's discoveries came to him in moments wheh he had temporarily closed shop mentally. cams welllng up, in "flashes ‘of in- sight" from that part of the mind, the so-called subconscious, where the best of one’s thinking isdone. It is this fact of the division of the mind into conscious ‘and sub- conscious regions and the superiori- ty of the latter as a fabricator of ideas, that gives point 811d substance to the warning: “Be lazy on occasion if you would profit to the utmost from the labors of your hours of conscious thought and effort." ~ _ . _ What happens when one puts his mind on anything, observes anything closely, studies anything? The mind at once begins to come into posses- sion of a large number of fact-Q. 09W some of which are stored away m tllvsubconscious. So long as thege ideas remain ln the subconscious they are of no us: to their possess?- Before they can become cl use they oowwwwe oven ovoowovfoo But it 1S not Play rheve in mind; ltl ‘Daily Lessons ‘- in English ' By W. L. Gordon ‘v000000900-04090660600000- WORDS OFTEN MiSUSE-Dt “I him" is preferable to invitation." to lengthen, stretch, expand. - O F T E N MIQPRONOUNOED: “extend an in "it." accent first syllable. OFTEN MISBIELLED: observe the gu. SYNONYMS: lblunt. rough, curt. unceremonious. WORD STUDY: "Use a three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by master- lngpne word, each pay. ‘today's word: PREVAILING; predominant. "It is the prevailing custom}? linguist: Daily Selections‘ for Guardilu Readers November 21, 1928 c-on Nrivanfgarbs- Can a. woman forget her sucking cliild, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb‘? yea, they may forget. yet wi1l‘I ilot forget thee-Isa. 49:14 and l5. i PRAYEIt-"God gently calls us every day; W_hy should we then our bliss delay?" ‘MOTHER. Pilaf/an‘ ‘ She comes with her childish puzzles! And tiiequestions deep in her eyes; And -I ask of the Giver of Wisdom above: ' .. [l “Make me wise." .. _ She holds my hand, aild her childish trust Shines out through her eyes of blue; Alid deep in my heart I am praying the while: “Keep me true" I am tired and she comes with car- esses - And her arms about me wind; Then I ask of the Onewho blessed the child: ' l “Make me kind." Her faith in the goodness of all mankind She holds in her heart secure; must be transferred to the resion °9‘ the mind. the conscious region. That transference, unfortunately. 05m?!“ be eff-acted by an act of will. Nor can it be effected so ions as the Posses- tar of the new idea keeps himself Lm lously and. tensely lire-(WWPF ed. conscious thinking enriches the subconscious with additional mar»; erlal for future developelheht- B“ so long as conscious thinking is un- hing of the results"0f1Pfl$@ sifggrinscious thinking. the up?" consciousness must from timee a; time take a holiday. as it w-fia-nce give the subconscious n. iairnc h to benefit it. Then indeed. “as e5 ' nius. Spgfim‘ ‘guggel Wallace. f0!‘ ex‘ ampie, has described how ‘the doct-i trine of evolution was suddrclrlglynfigixd unexpectedly presentedfroi lo“ a whne ‘he my day-drag?“ mention Malayan island. 08111605 h“ 1 the pendulum came when 119 financed to notice the motion of the huge bronze lamp swinging from me roof. Jules Henri Poincarestfitié c! the greatest scientific men d“ S ration. tells us that. offer Y gsngerhelpc weeks of fruitless effort on, abstruse mathertiaticliglagfigg; lems, the debt 801"‘ °" m... him while" "walking 0n 1L9, ' 3x19025111; n, streetfletc. Mozartfloi the aria. for ‘his beaut ul "M35?! Flute" quintet while p vine - Q. What is‘ the proper thing for a man to wear at an elaborate _ A. Etiquette permits it during a‘ long Journey. | Q. At which side of the host does his partner sit at dinner? ' A. ‘the right side. ' ‘ --£-O-}-———w—- “ ‘ 4400+O0'-%0 E Thélland We _Love E ‘By Frank llclgll , . A . F. CANADA'S “GOLD OUTPUT w Q. put? . \ , . l A. The last ten" years have brought a radical shift in the sourc- es of North American gold output. l Ten cars I30 the United States M- coun for nearly three-quartered the continent's total gold production. But since 10f‘! the gold output of .the t. ~ l"... e ou pu lowest level in years tl0l1 elm lilm touched l‘ the more tiuuntliirty 011061‘ oaqflfi. through Canada. last year ls repre- sentative of two Saint John daily papers was fruitful of benefit to the‘ Moritimes and ‘dial much lto ‘make many: cases. fall short of creating ‘ehtliueiem and, interest. in the ‘etu- witli each other, is now- about, to ‘dynamical our Atlantic‘ "r I l» ‘slew . , mi ochre; ‘ and- consequently in the all the Proyinoesnbetter ecqucinmfloun n, geniaLpublie-l rn tine wav the , l.“ m, qflfléflllmuqnee cf ouifloducition- does not neonate the)‘ iii -flllllill_llti u ltlllltlllltl- ~ mutt l! make a similar toui- of the went B" India Islands, in order to stimulate _ ‘trim between. thou ‘ l m. r .to‘. ~ theair. so to éneflk-"Thev come 1w a surprise." i Once croslng a bridge. I noticed I man fishing. He bad caulhVflvi-hi and. during the few minutes that stood neer him. did not set w WW" as‘: nibble. I commentedyon his from‘ w“"“.“"°"'““di"‘ 5°“ ‘°“" lufigh." said he“chcerrully. “that's l t ' air I-‘iitffahirigfor ideas." 4 g To atmll, whether in the city or orite ways of flailing the subcon- scious to my aid. Perhaps for most People it isarnong the most helrflll h“ t m, t .weye,. though‘ some may find it c“ mlrgeiolldcsirable to walk quickly than ' ._| again palm ‘States! prodilc- . m, eouiityynotnboolrinhagldyto ‘m , w - . allliltlinedzgggaitgn of‘ ‘m 1'0 l VI “Bibi-HOG. flfflfi the figures for i011. Oanldliipold prodiloti in 102'! showed ‘ crease 0i oun to less‘ thagloore-lftb of ‘the .l ‘n . = ell ~l-=’t*..i."-.:.~a:*:;.:"" ‘ma.’ product“ m "M. in treelootion.‘ The naturalist ‘a when 0IIO#_ ‘ h it on the authorl- . gdrfr‘ lerntffegor “Jiseph Jastrow: morn! " inventor suddenly conceived i-OWIITWIB llhly hOIIOPBd by the A. ‘Tghytgélliar cutaway coat and thoAgilllier “my °f comtructhlg a giant“? o the Yarkrs fir“ patent its accessories. prism. for a binocular microscope-is Br 9- 3:05 i" "11943519 est"? 0i Q; May a women converse with problem he hadiong thwlh" M ‘in engnzip Vin’ 9' “m4.” 9""- ihfi lilt- strange‘ women when traveling abandoned-while readingah u“ n’ on a :08? beenlfamed receml-Y aloner ~ ‘ n-ggting novel.“ l l-fldiv‘ Canada." Mr. Edison is irequelltlv - ‘ d as an example of the. ‘Geftlglflxg: nothhig but an infinite capac y taking pains" theory. Yes he says. "1 find that in,my own case the cle- taiis of earring out new ideas are al-lqved at by hard thinking, but the ideas thenwelveswire pulled Wt- °i rkht. I'm not iishifll 1Q!‘ mn- thg‘: country, is one-oi myown fiv- troll. ‘ uled tn. h or the ideas tha :oc-‘ film-So ' to . . . sweetie"; ‘itch . in nPd . wenteto theltrietho affix-mine. ‘ v it lies Iii‘. der way a barrier 0x153 Kilns‘ ‘my ; Many people want applause For nothing more, when analyied. lt isn't winning daughter's hand The difficulty often is rlnsr PATENT RIGHT This rose is a pioneer in the win- Igél: ‘of tifllcial recognition from the first pant singled out. $115; m the Government decid- flowers, Plants at the request of ‘gzuiho Production of splendid should IQ. iicilccm Dear God of mothers around the world. “Keep me pure." . '—Dora R. Freeman in Good House- keeping. _- ‘l am going to send an invitation to "Extend" really means taxidermist; a as in "at," both i's as abrupt, brusque.‘ word l l |l\ .l_ s,‘ w . . _ ‘ I Illbl’ l -. ._ - i . v COVE!"- Smoke “ ‘ Rosanna . ‘ 1 ‘\ y‘. NQYEMBERLZI. 192g " $11 l ‘Rosella is doublyatftractive these . daysl. tjs aSmokin ‘Tflbacgggf . umlsualmildncqsland- . avour. with . -f a quality that; satisfies?" and ‘- ‘ “Poker fiends” aiepackeciwith it. - For six sets of “rPolzer Hands,” you ém obtain FREE a Manfspilinbrella, with ' sensible handle and strong cover; for ' ' eight sets, a Lady's Umbrella. new style, and fancy handle, with choice of Blue, Red, Green, Purple, Brown, o _ These are only two of many presents pro. curable in exchange for “Poker Hands." '"-.-_ r. t_. l’ Black . ‘ .‘.Am'_ ‘Sold only in and Save the “Poker \HClii(i‘S I 444 O40 O 616-6 O-Q-Q-OQ-O-O-Ofi-OQROO-O >O§O+OVO~Q~Q~O 99¢ V0 9H0“ B RA l-l M‘lN TEA ls better than‘ ever. ‘w. sled, Hygenic, Airtight“Packages. “i. u, v ‘ v v *‘%¢%%O-O_OQOQ —-—r- . W, l 1» Fl at‘ lvoTlcE P. F.‘ Dwyer ‘ViS-llOtIOHgOYIQDI-‘flittllt- ing or connected with us in any way. _A. ‘ s. TOOMBS , mm. all: l~ l. 9201-11-2l-23—2_ 4. '1 - -r% of‘ r ' ‘Imln-ITIWTI‘ Can you complete this poem‘? .And crave it most Than having done 'thelr-+,—- Yesterday's Poem So many lovers fear; x To will her papa’: ear, ‘l , ON can/mun rbowsn BRAMPTON. Onto Nov. 17—Thls on Government, it being the for such latte“ Patent to new fruits and ornamental the Canad- Those who arealreiidy overlazy 0F BQ confirmed in the lazi. t “ndefloy of the am- ‘ ‘- , 9003111011 on con- thflflibv to cheat _ 91.31,! Bid they can or _ the subconscious, ‘PUMHOTWSY. their m1- . "Illllbconscicus |?m5hl' how to harness ‘ ltd whlnfll g .n~.¢"y . . . to ‘"5 mfetififin i: loaning m’ m“ 1 | l . l g l season of any other premiums Write for l ion Horticultural Cdullcii. - The patent ‘ Canada protects it in the same way ill which an invention is protected. and it gives the originator of the typo" of flower right» t? be an n soclatlon. which the Canadian Horticultural Council through whose ment at Ottawa was persua ed of the advisability patent upon fi0W6fS.8l1d plants. The institution of plant registration“ is \ proving of greatvalue to florists. andhorticulturists in the United’ 8tates’have endorsed the Canadian method of plant registration nind ‘patenting. The liiovelnclit" what do you sel:'!_ disseminate it. It would fringement of the patent for any other florist to attempt .to deal in this particular kind of rose. Plant registration in the Domin- ‘ion began in 1913 through the Can-l adian Florist?! and GlirdenersMAs- J toil and some buildings? means of livelihood? ' tSO LONG AS YOU CAN IrABORl-Jfou can see the neccs- ‘ sity ol‘ protecting your loved ones with a life insurance policy. lust they should lose their ‘home if you are coiled-away. A Great-West Life policy is a. sound investmelll, too. come hack to particulars t0 “Hyndman” o Co, Ltd Tr ovinclal Managers — Charlottetown, P. B. l. Agents at All PrinclpalPointl-i on the rose Lady patented the sole married. I -is‘ilow known as| ofilees the Parlia- oi‘ granting ‘ etters along ‘l this line is expected .to receive a ll, flllip at the 1920 convention of the National Association of Gardeners of the United States which will be held in Toronto. - _ .~ when friends tan. B-Bfllthflfflodn lto greet bie bridefrom l “a as» W31 wl ‘ I of Mautevecl» Mfllellf“ r the , the mm ¢ . w: fill‘ ‘$9.1. 1...... _"'“°“‘°° l be- ‘ v 9.51.‘ ‘ WHAT D0 YOU SEE? Wlieh you drive home from town and approach the old farm Just thcbare fields awaiting another Or do you sec in it your homo, where soiong as you can iabor~—you and your family may live a life oi’ greater independence than is offered by you with excellent profits," you live, was enthusiastic over the progress l‘ oi’ her sex in Turkey. Both Mortal: and his bride are Moslems, but un- dler the new Turkish code they 1W.‘ to go through a civil ceremony to be Your