.., ... w,» a w"? s-Q 'i a a, __ LILU rfzft. {t l ,7! PAGE FOUR TilE GIIARLDTTETUWN GUARDIAN __ _ - g_ u q, _ n41, vloe-Preoillont, J. it. Burnett, I J i ‘In-aunt ‘vile:r.:t:'|-e;—Lieut.‘-C:ll° D- A. linelilnnou, I). a. 0. ' . Editor and Managing Director-—J. B. Burnett. I- 5- l- Allbcialo ifllillurv4— Frank Walker null IL l. Ourrio flornlng ulilly (founded llla-n 55-00 p»: Illll‘ (in advance) dvllvererl 54,50 per year (in advance) Illlflled in Canmla and United Staten ADVERTISING "EPICESIINTATIVEB UNITED STATES-The‘ Berkvvllll Special Agency Inn, New York OOI g"; Building, New York City, Genrrll liloiorn ilnlldllll. Detroit. Intent!‘ B lldl i-inn an City. Wlllouxhby Tower Bnllliing, Chicago; Glenn BullO hi, Atlanta; llAonadnnck Building, Bin Francisco; 113g ha. 65th llrofl Philadelphia. __ r_ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, I933. INFORRIED DEMOCRACQK ‘tied industrial region with a market at the apiarists door. The ready ' During the past week two poli- market encourages honey produc- ticnl summer schools for the study tion. The area is well cultivated. of public and economic questlvnsdoo, with large orchards and great have been held in Ontario underlficlds of clover. The raw material Liberal-Conservative and p Liberal ‘u; present in quantity and ls pres- gusylzces respectively. The aim and cnt every ‘year. ‘Ifhcre are n0 severe object of both are the samc—tolhoncy famlncs. Honey production inform and educate the rising gen- tin Ontario is a profitable sideline for oration of politicians on public Fthe tanner and orchardlst, who questions. It is felt by the leaders of winters his bees and keeps them both great lwlitzcal parties that at on from. generation t0 generation. this critical period an intensive The Manitdaa producer is not so study of issues by ambitious embryo- certain of his honey crop as the statesmen is absolutely necessarynman in Ontario, and, owing to the anti it is llopoti by nlcans of thcseilnorc severe clinlatc, he finds it Sl1l‘lllll€’l'.<'.‘l’l<)015 lo start a movcment difficult to wntcr his bees. In fact, that will tend to a general en-fhe flas largely given up wintering. llghtcnment of the vast electorate Vile accepts what his bees store for which cannot attend such schools, him in the warm months, then lets but which may be influenced byq-lack Frost take them. In the those who do. An cducated democ- 57111118. he imports packfiife 11965 racy is essential. Otherwise the from the South as foundations for tendency is toward autocracy or.ht‘s new colonies. His honey comes chaos and revolution for, as Ed- from clover and alild flowers. nlund Bilrkc declared ago, In British Columbia. honey pro- {hey} fan be m) me gvjvernmenl’, duction is shifting from the Fraser except on liberty connected with lvalley. a-here the crop h uncertain order-J llbcrty ‘that not only ex- sand ‘the fire-weed not as plentiful ista along with order and virtue, as it llscd‘ to be, to the orchards bu; which fllnflDt 9x151; at all “m1- and alfalfa fields of the interior. out them." In addressing the Lib-t mil-Conservative summer school Mr. Bennett emphasized this, de- claring: ‘The only hope (of ordered and progressive government) lies 1n long THE’ “NEW” CABINET 0f the six Ministers with port- folios in Nova; scotlafs new Liberal ‘n educated’ mmmed demwraclf’ Cabinet four have never yet satin It follows that unless the average {he Home of Assembly and their . . . l ' ' citizen is poltically educated andirmords an, to b‘, written on a new informed the consequence may he slate. These are the Premier, “b "m" Mlsllevlm» wmmlmlmh- Hon. Anglia L. MacDonald, the At- ¢ autocracy. torncy-General, Hon. Josiah Mc- Quzlrrie, the Minister of Mines, Hon. Michael Dwyer; and the Minister of Health, Hon. Dr. F. R. Davis. Many indignant protests haveiZl-Ion. A. S. lifaclviillan, the new ‘Wcamd m the columns of a Dom ;Min‘ster of Highways, held the same don pupcr against the increasinglpost for l year in the Armstrong ‘tendency to use the words "Briton" Cabinet‘ Hon’ J‘ w" “mm” “l” ‘m, "Brush" to the exclusio,‘ of had a seat in that Cabinet ullllzout "English." There is a general tend- morfiono‘ Hon‘ C‘ w‘ Anderw“ 1' ‘ ‘BRITONS OR ENGLISH m“, w date the use o, "Hm/On. new arrival in the Executive Coun- hm wmparafllvely recent mnmicil, though he sat. in the _ House and one of the contributors to the 1920 m 1925' and “M” {mm discussion goes so far as to ascribe 192a w 1933' ‘the popularity of the term to a Scotsman. This was Jamcs Thom-i BUSINESS OUTLOOK son, who in 1740, wrote “Rule Brit-f Amway Speaking at a luncheon at. the But the mmbilrgh Scotsman exhibition in Toronto the other points out that “Brita n" and‘ , ,_ __ _ _ , ‘day. Mr. 1.. 1.. Anthea, pl-l-slaent of ‘British and Britannia were l-nlthe Canadmn Manufacture", A» general use long before this, and Summon saw ‘lcmdmon bet . - I s are - in the day's of Eli abcth w r - z e e m tor in Canada today than they have peatcclly employed to denote Eng- been for gum“ time Razlwa “m fund and its inhabitants. When ingg are u}, "Zora p'0p1 ‘ my - , c e a occup- Cnmclcn, the lcamed antiquarian, fled and the general outlook and compLcd his record of his native general feeling seem to be better, Lnd, h 1t th titl f "B 1g- 1 0 “we e e O r "Four months ago there was no NbkmByIheiVhy 111010 who feu- fhatvwar will spring out of the Austrian situa- tion are surely not taking into 001v sideratlon the dlsarmed condition of Gennany. For Germany to pre- cipitate a European war by invad- ing Austrian territory would be an act so insane and suicidal that even the late subjects of the ex- Kaiser and the fellow-countrymen of Hitler will not generally be cred- ited with so much folly. If German troops crossed the Austrian border. the - magnificent French army would at once cross the Rhine. Its advance into Germany would be swift. irresistible and devastating. The crue for cheaper and still cheaper goods ls being carried to excessive lengths, and threatens to displace goods of sound merit, which ought not. to be displaced and would not be displace if consumers had more sense and a bcttcr grzp of real values. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN; B) lune: W. Bclon. MD. TilE FORGOTTEN MAN_. TiiE RESEARCH WORKER It is certainly gratifying to the medical profession and to all others who glvc the matter thought, to sec grateful patients recognize the dif- ficulties of research workers and ell- dcnvor to give them some financial aid. Thus in England a group of as- tluna sufferers have completed an organization to aid research phy- sicians who are doing won‘: on the cause and relief of asthma. Ml‘, H. G. Wells, the author, has invited his fellow sufferers with dia- llctes to follow the example of the asthma sufferers, and help all work- We find three years after tllc un- ification ol’ China under the Kll0-. mintang, only seven provinces arc; sending revenues to Nanking. Thc South-West is implacably hostilcz‘ in Szechuen civil war drags on; in‘ the North Feng Yu Hslang causes more embarrassment. The Commun- ists aprpear to bc_ slowly losing strength, but the way of union is uphill in China. Too many pat- riots want to save the hatch cacll in his own way. .. .4 The paramount ideal of nil ‘Irish politics, says the Dublin Irish Tuncs ought to be the reunion, at tho earliest possible moment, of that two portions of our sundel-cd island. What has Mr. de Valera done to- wards the achievement of that cud? He has declared more than once, that he is looking forward to the‘ day when he will be in a position to declare a completely independent Republic, and generally has lost no opportunity to show his contempt for the Treaty under which thc Free State enjoys its present liber- ties. All those moves have had a deplorbale effect on opinon in Nor- thern Ireland. The people of the Six counties have become more dc- terrnincd than ever to hold thcm- selves aloof from the Free State, and to strengthen, as mllch as pos- sible, the links that bind them to Great Britain. In such circumstan- ces all talk of, Irish unity ls idlc. Did you ever pause in a post of- fice, asks an exchange, long enough to take a squint at the floor after a numbcr of people have received their mail? If you have you were probably struck by the numbcr of circulars, fol-m letters and hand ‘bills that litter it up. In truth you doubtless were imprcsscd with the fact that many of them had been thrown on the floor as soon as they were rcmovcd from the envelopes, the recipients not even taking the trouble to give them a second glance. But did yoli ‘our? notice that you dfdlrt see anyone throwing the newspapers and cspcc- laily the home-town paper, in the was: ‘racket or on the floor? In the Philippine Islands, says the New York Times, the orchid- llunter finds a paradise. some of lh_c rarest and most beautiful specimens are to be found there. While the flora of the archipelago is mainly Malaysian, Himalayan and Austr an lYlws also occur. Thcre arc said to limb-I"; hfvhacl Drnvton throu h- _ _ g one blucr than I," Mr. Anthes went out "Poly-olllloll’ and elsewhere ' , on to say. "But there is something consistently used both "Briton" and _ in the air today. something that "Brit-Tn.“ and c figure of Entan- _ has happened since that time that 711a appcarcd on the title-wigs of , _ has given us and put lnto us new his “'01 . In 161.7 Bron-no of ‘Fnv- . _ Flillrlt. The Empire Conference at lstock prctlucrd his Ottawa last year in my opinion was lihstorals." one of the most outstanding steps It is only within late _vcars that over taken for tho “m, t m . y o e "England" and "English" have bccn Empire? hp rmmkod. “I believe our so widely used. Perhaps some day ummrd p s5 dates that “w” m“ b“ ‘m WMM“ '° g“ time Anything that makes m “wk u’ ‘h’ ‘mgmal mm“ “m” Dnpire solidarity and brings us ‘for Engmnd*'qnn15'guin" or m” closer together is reflected in a “mm Isle‘ forward move economically." EDITORIAL NOTES The death this wcck of Viscount Grey of Fnllodon directs attention "Brilnnnials CANADA'S HONEY Honcy production in Canada, rc- rcnt flzurcs show, amounted in 1032 to 20,628,934 pounds, valued at to 911g of the may; wgr flguj-Qg, a]. $1.661,175. Ontario produced 10,- ready sadly diminished in number. 000.000 pounds; Manitoba, s,aas,29s‘,\s sn- Edward Gmy, British pounds; Qucibcc, 2,651,200 poundspI-‘orclgn sacrum-y, he made the British Columbia, 1,007,200 poundsflfntcful lmnounccmcnt of Britain's Alberta, 550,000 pounds; Saskatch-Trcsolve to support. Belgian neutral. cw-an, 420,149 pounds; Nova Scotizuiity, thus making a declaration 01 67.037 pounds; New Brunswick, 44,- war incvlta-blc. l-le was then 5n 000 pounds: and Prince Edward Is-fycars of ago, and at the height of land 13.000 pounds. Canada's exporishls powers. He went out in 1916 for the year were 2,298,360 prlllnds,|vvlth Asquith. ivlth whom he re- mostly to the United Kingdom andirnained in full sympathy, hm, soon Norlvny. v _ after the war he acccpicrl the post Ontario, it will be seen from of ambassador to tho United states lhrse figures, was responsible foqfor a bricf period. Falling eyesight nearly half the honey output of had for years hampered his politi- maintaining such dcfencc forces as be 10,000 species of fimvcrlng Plants and ferns in the islands. The numberwgf varieties of orchids is Dut at 900. A good deal more than half the land area is onvrircd with forests. Says Admiral JEXI‘. llarpcr, ('13., M.V.O.: "World peace will best, be assured by each peace-loving nation are best suited to its llflqulrcmonts and necessary for its security, and no more. and to follow a policy which will ensure that those forces will be rightly, and not wrongly, used." Mr. Campbell, head of the (‘lin- adian Ford organization, annolmcns that more than 30 pcr cent of his Wnnaayh appropriation for a vag- orous fall advertising campaign, will he spent in the newspapers, Mr, Campbell was optimistic in a mcs- Hage that he sent out to Ford deal- ers three months ago. Today hc is able to rvrwrt that his cxpcctations have been fullillrd and ho is 110179- ful of further steady gains. “All in- dloations," he tells the dcnlcrs, "mint to bcttcr-than-usual sglgg for the balance cf this year . , , To lldl‘! YOU 89¢ your full share of this business wn haw started another Mllrbfisive advertising campaign," with perlnanent blindness. But he never ceased to speak nnd write on public affairs, though holding no office, and no British slatcsman the country. There are two reasons cal activities: at one time he lost (or this. Ontario has a thlgkly set- nls eyes‘ght and woo threatened ~"~\.-- - _..__ , , .. stood higher in popular confidence and esteem. l-rs and institutions spending their Lilllc on diabetes. _ 11c points out that, thanks to a rt-gullllcd dict and to insulin, they are living active, happy lives, while a fcw years ago many “would have bccn uncomfortable and dying-slow- ly or already dcnd but for idle ‘work of a small group of experimenters and practitioners who have brought this pnrliclcl" lnaizldjustlncllt or dis- uasc under control." Mr. Wells says that diabetics, now financially able to do so, should not only help thcsc research workers but help also those Poisonous Mushrooms In The Maritimest (K. A. Harrison, Held Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Kentvllle, NS.) Several very poisonous mush- rooms (or toadstools) are so com- mon that everyone who gathers mushrooms should leam to recog- nize them. The most dangerous of all is known by the appropriate name of the Death Angel on ac- count of its pure white colour and the deadly nature of the poison that it contains. This is only one of a group o: poisonous mushrooms that have certain definite charac- teristics in common that enable any person to recognize them with a. littlc practice. The three characters following should be remembered. First. the deadly mushrooms have white spores. The colour can be deter- mined by removing the stem and laying the cap with the gills downward overnight on panef- The print of the white spores shows best on black paper or on a piece of glass. The second is the veil or ring hanging on the stem. This is the covering that protected the gills when young, The third char- acteristic is the death cup at the base of the stcm ‘which is fre- quently burlcd in the soil. The term ‘cup’ for this structure is slightly mislcadlng, to some people, because it varies from a sheath,‘ around the base of the stem, as in, the Death Angel, to tom frag- ments nn o. bulbous bnsc, as found in the Fly Agaric. ‘The dcnth cup lllubvtirs who arc not lvcll enough nil to gut the dict and insulin lrcuilllcllt, In other words diabcticsl‘ in good or fair cil-c-ulustances should; tux tllclnsclvcs for the benefit of Bill (iiabciics. When WC rclnembcr the years dc- votccl to the dlctctic control of din- llctcs by Joslin of Boston and oth- ers, than the work clone by Bimting and Best, disccvcrcrs ol insulin, in ‘foronto, under ihc most trying oil'- cumstzlnces, with the final refining proccss of insulin developed by Collip, we can get some idea of the pailcncc and perseverance of prac- tilionvrs and research men. As you know, if these men warp paid for the livcs saved, it would run into many millions of dollars. aside from the happiness achieved and silflcrlllg rclicvcd, All that research men ask, in fact they do not an‘; for anything; all they would like "is that they be sup- pllCd with a. place and equipment with which to wcrkhnd enough to livc on, and they are willing to give illclllsclvcs to the rcllcf of the ills of lllllflillllly. In fact many of them are doing this without proper equip- ment, and witholit resources to act- ually support themselves. ‘Yozfll agrcc that Ml‘. Wells has done a "good picccof work in call- illg tho ultcntion of ills follow suf- ferers to the need of helping the cause of all diabetics. The Enchantment Of September (Montreal Gazette) Soptclnbcr is one of the months with a numbcr which must pass mustcr in ilcu of a name. And it stands ns the initial of those months which are so designated as though, forsooth, they manage to fill in a scat or fill up the sum of nature's annual score. But this is a bald reckoning and only shows ‘how \vc pcopic have wisdom in llnlvcs. For there arc two things which bash ollr inlllginnllon: one is the sparsollcss and seeming skimp economy of u season, like Novcmbcr, for example; the other is the opul- once and lavish display of varied trcasurcs :1 scnson pours forth and presents to thc gaze. Ancl it so happens that September is the scv- cnth month, which, as everybody knows, is a magical number and signifies complctcnrss. The 10mp- tation is strong to remark upon tho rich suggcstivcncss of the numbcr sevcn. But there is nothing occult in mentioning that, thcrc are seven days ill the wcck, seven ages of man, sovcn main tones in the musl. cal sonic, scvcn colors in light, scvcn "lamps of architecture," whcrcof Ruskin has written. 'I‘hore nrc scvcn years of famine followed by scvrn of plcniy rccordcd in the biblical story of Egyptian exper- lr-ncc; nnd the scvcn scas upon which commerce floats her freight, nnd seven cycles 0f ascension in knowlctigc according to the sacred books of thc East; nnd if we are to believe Milton tllcrc arc sevenfold harplngs amongst those “solemn troops nnd sweet sccictics" who know something of and celebrate Paradise Rxgzlined. The hint might be pursued much further, but enough has hcvn said to show that is the most important of these thrcc characters and a mushroom with this structure should be avoided by the inexperienced per- son, The above description does not, mean that all white sporcd mushrooms or all mushrooms that have eithera ring or a death cuP are poisonous, but it does mean danger when a mushroom is found possessing all three characters. It must be remembered that there are other poisonous mushrooms that do not possess these charac- tors. The tests of our forefathers are not reliable. Probably the com- monest that is still believed is that the common mushrooms peel and poisonous kinds do Mll- Tl" 99m‘ Ange] peels readily although not qultc in the same manner. One who has peeled field mushrooms would notice the difference at once but a fatal nflstlike 601116 be made" easily by an inexperienced person. In general appearance the dead- ly species are the handsomest of the mushroom family. They are tall and stately when fully ZTDW" and the colour is usually attract- ive. They are found in deep woods or occasionally near shrubs 0r bushes butlnever 1n open cultivat- ed fields. U. S. Automobile Front (Ottawa Journal) Oftcn there is grim humor in statistical rcporis. Thus we have a. Uni-fed States writer building up columns of figurfls W DY°V° "that the health of the American 1190916 is improving," and then going on to show that there have been 200,000 automoble accident deaths on United States highwhys "since the btlys came home in the SiJY-‘Ylg 0f I919." Unitcd States losscs in the Great War were in the vicinltyof 100,000 men. Last ycar in the United States thcrc were 60,000 deaths from general accidents, 31,000 au- tomobile deaths, 17.500 suicides and 11,500 homicides. More people than were lost in ihc Spanish American and the World War combined. Obviously, it's a good thing that those who manage to llvc, live lon- gcr, and that: "the health of the American people is improving." Live stock shipments from West- crn to Eastern Canada for the week ending August 17 wcrc: cattle 1,915; hogs 4,172; sheep 250, making a total for the first 33 weeks of this year of 36,484 cattle; 185 calves: 207,570 hogaand 34,105 sheep. For the first 34 weeks of this year, up to August 24, 2,043,078 hogs were graded in Canada. ' human imagination seems incap- able of finding a foothold or perch cxcept our tcrms are, in jackknlfe fashion, trimmed to stiff cxactltude. But. the gentler and finer nuances of the seasonal cycle and the way in which spring passes into sum- mcr and summer into autumn by slight degrees, here a little and there u little, stippllng in the mot- ley ioncs and semitones upon the we need not think ms-anly of the numbcr srvcn. And September pzrnccfuliy falls in with this chord struclurc, this ant hnlnncr- of qual- ltics making for hnrnlony, Thcrc is n0 nlorr- beautiful month of the ycar. It is thc usual thing to say that thorn is a struggle for mastery between slimmer and win. tor. This ls said simply because the canvas, renders the picture glor- iously elusive. And the painters more than the poets are wont to catch up tho sccnic impression of the physical brauty and luvurlunce of a Scptcmber day whcn- , A sercncr blue, With golden light enlivened, wide invests The happy world. CANADIAN CAMPING GONG A white tent pitched by a glassy lake, Well under a shady tree, 0r by rippling rllls from the grand old hills, Is the summer home for me. I fear no blue of the noontlde rays, For the woodland gladel are mine. The fragrant air, and that perfume rare _ The odour of forest pine, A cooling plunge at the break of lily; A paddle, a row, or sail, With always a fish for the mid-day dish, And plenty oi’ Adam's ale. with rod or gun, or in hammock swung, We go through the pleasant days; vas walls, We kindle the camp file's blaze. . . . —J. D. Edgar. Saving Old Windmills .. (Exchange) France hes undertaken to pre- serve as historical monuments the veteran windmills that remain standng within its borders. In England, too, these ancient struc- tures are enlisting sympathetic at- tention. They arc not the mills of modern type; they are the ancients New York knew when, on the mov- ing in of the English, the city dis- cussed what should be done with the works 0f the Dutch. The windmill came to America with the Dubch but: it was not con- fned to New York City and it did not disappear with the end of the Dutch control. Its arms were seen turning for years afterward in many of the- Dutch settlements in ‘New York State, lh Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. It made its way westward with the White man into the Ohio Valley and, crossing the Misassippl River, it was found in Missouri and Iowa. and other sections. The anti-sla- vcry men in the '50s who went to Kansas left as one of their land- marks a stone mill which still stands on the hill above the Unl- velsity of Kansas at Lawrence, When the windmill first reached the coast of Germany or when it crossed into France, Brittany and Normandy is not: known, but in all these countries there ha“: been found windmills of as great antl- quity as any in the Netherlands. Neither is it known when the windmill first appeared in Great Britain. A recent report, however,- discloses that: England had 2,000 mills to Holland's 1.700. ' Ideals And Idealism -_--.. (Exchange) Dr. Glenn Atkins in the Chris- tian Century makes s. strong plea. for idealism. The danger is that the disappointed idealist may be- come a cynic. The heart may be taken out of endeavor. Because 2:10 hope has not been fulfilled, the hopeful outlook may be surrend- ered. Take, for instance, the hope that the late war would make the world safe for democracy. It seems to have had the contrary rc- suit. In Russia, Italy, Germany and other countries some 300,000,000 people are living under dictator- ships. Is democracy then a. failure? On the contrary the lesson ls to strengthen and broaden the foun- datlons of democracy; to give dem- ocracy a deeper meaning and a widcr outlook; to make it. rest up- on the basls of a. realization of the value of the human soul and of the vast possibilities of the devel- TilE FAMILY iliillli SALE! Check this list over onlo- fuliy and note the remarkable savings. 50o Dottie Phillips Milk o! Magnesia 43o 25o Baby's Own Tablets 22o $1.35 Bottle Buyer's Aspirin Tablets 98o 25c Box Bayer’: Alplrin Tablets 22c 35c Sloan! Llnlment .. 32o EXTRA SPECIAL $1.10 Box Evening in Perl: Face Powder, 50o Bottle Per- fume and 25c Lipstick, all for the price of 81.10 8 Packages Koiox .. . . .. 74c z Tina Dier Kiss Talcum 25o $1.00 Bottle Nujol .. . 89o 50c Box Gin Pills .. . 2c Box Dolidl 30o Kidney . . . . . . . 80c 25o Bottle A. B. S. h C. 17o Telephone 315 if Unable to Como to store. TliE 2 MACS When darkness falls on our can-I ‘ you are in Toronto. You can stay at one of the continent‘: traditionally great hotels at a cost as low as $2.50 per day-yet there is no lowering of those standards of service, cuisine and appointments which have delighted our guests for over thirty years.- A visit at the King Edward is an enjoy- able experieace—and if you care to dance, there is only one Luigi RomaneliPs Or- chestra, Canadlfs most popular radio dance band—every evening in the Oak Room.- Come to the King Edward the next time P. KIRBY HUNT Manager when it is most needed. ment. or write Prince Edward Lower Queen Street opment of human faculties. Plan after plan may fail. The world today is in a. postlon of ex- traordinary difficulty. It resembles a group of men lost in the woods, trying one way out after another, and meeting with disappointment. But brave, resolute men, ln such a position, try again and again. Pllablc turned back in the Slough of ‘De- spond. Christian struggled on and emerged on the right side, but hc was only at the lnginning of a jour- ney crowded with dangcr and dif- ficulty. All through history ldeallsts have had to struggle with stupidity. greed and savagery, and to take inspiration and not despair out of the obstacles they encountered. Ono cause of discouragement ls found in exaggerated hopes. A re- former sets his heart on one reform, expects too much from its realiza- tion and is disappointed. The fire extinguished at one point. breaks out at another. African slavery is abolished in the United States, but race prejudice and forced labor re- Use Brahmin Tea .Refreshing as only fresh, pure Orange Pekoe Tea can be. Sold only in red, airtight packages. _ In Life Insurance you are not spending the money-you are simply depositing a certain sum each year to be drawn at accrued profits A Life or Endowment policy is anninsured savings plan with guaranteed values for retire- Conuit your nearest Great-West Life Agent llvllnmlu a co. LTIL. Provincial Managers l SAVINGS Island Branch Office. Charlottetown 990 main. Justice walks at a slower put i than its advocates expect. Greed will probably always stand in till I way of social and economic reform. Allowance must always be made fol the imperfections of human nature But that does not mean that thl reformer is to give up the battle Idealism ls greater than any on idcal or plan. It is the movilll force of all rclfoml. A keen sportsman turned up. l: ‘ error, half an hour too earlr ‘a the meet. He Jumped oil-his 1112741 and tossed the reins towards one o1 the village children. "Hold my hora for a fcw minutes, boy." The b0; looked in scared fashion at the I horse and said: "Will ‘c bite, sir?" "No, no, not at all," "Wiil ’e kick, sir?" "Of course, not." f "Will 'e run away, then?“ l "No, no, of course, he won't." . “Then,” asked the lad in a burn l of curiosity, "why the ‘ell do 1'0‘! want ’lm ’cld?” ' MAIL IT GINTLEMEN: ‘Midreu Phone No lhrted . at once. PRIZE CAMPAIGN DEPARTMENT HEADQUARTERS The Guardian, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Telephone 482 INFORMATIUN COUPON" Kindly pend me receipt books for taking subscriptions to my local paper, The Charlottetown Guardian, and fall de- tail: relative to the free offer of valuable Cub awards to b6 made in the great profit-sharing oompllln. MY NAME IS ................m....................»...-. ocean-once ruleI-ncacclInnocenceooonollacoocooooolfl - Street No. .......-...... ' Contestants should enroll their name's now and I!‘ Send for receipt books nowhnd [ct l" early ltart. ' You can make good money each week. EVERY ACTIVE MEMBEIA PAID CASH EACH WEEK THERE WILL BE N0 LOSEES TODAY ! 1 no