o iiliE [IHAHHJTTETIIWN BIJAHIIIiN llornlsg Dally (loanlod 1887) 85.00 per year (la odvsaeo) delivered. 54.50 per year (la alvalsoo) mailed In Canada and tailed State's. Vice-Presldosst-J. n. its-nu. PIisIdoat—W. (‘holler 8. MeLuro. _ Associate Edltor—l). K. Currie. 0.. Editor and Manager-J. ll. Burnett. Socroiary-Llout. Col. l). A. Maslilnnon, D Fmnairiiiubifésgififzir juhitaxgtes! Jmjgiaund up with ‘ournotlon o ; is even one m, always been m,‘ 8mg: z‘ of‘ the Christian P"°“"'Y i” i‘ “d” '“*“'3'“ be‘ Posingwas prohibitionists while tween abstinence and temperancc. sneaking“, patmnyzmg the boom? with the ma“ or wmnan Wm’ be‘ er and the mu er, can succeed lievu in either we have no quarrel‘! in“, m develipuf: a “we o! sneaks Total abstinence is a virtue, a safe‘ and hypocmes Let us‘ m any use‘ m", "0 "We! upon and a road m‘ be honest about it. There are worse ‘men ‘he footsteps o‘ the young‘ evils than drinking and one of them should be directed, provided the is hypocrisy‘ ~ direction is sane and in conformity with truth, t- mmon sense and per- sonal honesty. Temperance in all things is a Christian virtue and can- not be too strongly emphmlimd. Temperance is no doubt the goal’ TEHPEBANCE. _-_--¢-0§-—-—— ‘RETIRING FROM SERVICE. liE cherished dream of every young man is the hope that. ul- Notes by the rway FIVE ThonsanTITc-h about Cong Yeigh of Tomato. is a valuable com- pendiem of information concemlnfl the Dominion which should be in‘ the hands of all Canadian who de-I sire to know their own country. This‘ is the 24th year of its publication] and each successive annual issue is of increasing value. Not only are salient facts in regard to the Dom- inion set down in this little volume but in liké manner important fact-s in regard to each of the nine- pro-i vinces are included. i liere are a few of the Prince lid-i ward Island facts: ' ada for i921, published by Frank’ The Public Forum" This column is opsn for tho discussion by correspondent; of questions of interest. Tho Ohoriottstown Guardian doso not necessarily sndorss tho opinions ol to" spondsnts. OUO-O-OO-OOOO-OOQ OUR PRINCE AND OUR. PROHI- ‘Y BITIONISTS. 3ir.~Some time $80 lhefiqfl-DPERY-‘I I heard recently of a young 0d in the Montreal Herald o: Star '.\_ woman whofligg been "nurglng" liii- Siffies 0f leflfirs desiifiblllB mlny 311'] (ectled torlsiifi for over i! year. Her cidents in the every-day life ‘of the; phygicjan gfivjggd‘ their removgi} 11105! POPUIBI 0f flllifliuces. our own‘ pointing out the possibility o! rheu- Prince oi Wales.‘ and in particular mamm and organic hem-i, d159,”; l recall one describing a visit by him‘ He; dislncunaflgn town-g m; to the Slums of London. It flppféflfliiqwraflon w” so gimme ting g1“ that he was wont to call regularly fofsogk he; ‘imam and wok ‘Qum- NUBSING ‘INFECTED t Hfiliil-mliili: so. » a ‘Its-Discovery o A WONDERFUL 0A8 PRODUCE ' BY THBOUN. _ (Historical) ~- Since the startling discovery in i895 of this remarkable substance its development has appeared in a Dominion pamphlet. ‘ At the outset- if may state that its ‘bounds are almost confined to, the Sun's lim- scientific pun-wiles iii equally be- yond ‘cblehlstloii. ’ a i ‘- ‘Wa areiindebibd to the Mines Department, Ottawa. for a copy of a pamphlet whlchshads light on this new disddyéby‘ and present a few extracts hora ‘for. the informs- tion~of Guardian readers: , itations. and, ‘itrjopplicstioa to‘ gion of prosperous farms, comfort- able homes, and good ilvins condi- tlons. agriculturwPrlnce Edward Is- on this particular occasion he was‘ ‘invited by the proprietor of a publicl house. or “Pub? to “come in and havela glasls of beer." and, strangel ‘to re ate. t e villains audacity was‘ “mu mdyonef)! we most prosperous‘: not immediately punished. but, hor-I yt-‘BTS l" 115 hiswrY i“ 1925- The t°"'ror of horrors! 'This future King.’ tal value of the field crops. wheat...“ our Great Empire entered that} cats, barley, buckwheat, mixed Den 0f llliqllliy._fllld 110i Only Dar-j grams‘ potatoes‘ turnips‘ my and took of “that which inebriates," but “id the purpose oi mm] abstinence‘ ter he has clone his bit, he can .re-‘ although the phrase i5 a mi5ngm@r_ tire from active service with a com-l That evil consequences have fol-‘DQWYICE 11nd “Vi? U19 eyening 91"; I illS life in ease and comfort and, without any of the worry and res? poiteibillty which make up the bur-= dens of a busy life. ' ‘ The dream is rarely fulfilled. The: competence may be ufiqlllled- the: time may come when the worryingy lures may be laid aside, when Pm‘! vision for the indefinite evening of] life is secure, but one cannot, even lowed drinking no one attempts l0 deny. The evil lies in yielding to the temptation of indulgence. In ‘dealing with it there are two schools 0i thought. One says, “Remove the. dangerous thing." The difficulty here lies in the fact that the danger can- not be removed, at least under pre- sent conditions. With the consent oi governments the dangerous thing‘ 1s being manufactured and imported to an extent which can supply all the demands of excessive drinking.‘ Even should this manufacture and portation be stopped there re- mains the ability to manufacture it on the kitchen stove in every homo.‘ While this is so, the folly of attempt-i ing to check it is apparent to all,‘ prohibition of the evil by cocrcion,, with the future as: the habits of n lifetime. The busines cares and the responsibilities have‘. ally fails and life becomes a burden‘ rather than a rest. i The habits of a lifetime will per- lured, lay asideIMIiIJOO, including lands, buildings._ sflive stock. implements and animals iCapital 821337.844; ‘salaries and Wages.) 2.271: Dfodlm‘ ition value 313.720.1374“ - sist into the region of old age and: Minion retirement. If they have been whole-ismallest but richest province. thlfter iiflpractically everycorner of- s, wholesome mentallshcarden of the Gulf. Every acre till- chwer _over $16000 00o seeing that the room had filled with those who had‘ heard of his pre- Ai-ea—2.184 Sqllflrfl miles. 1.397,99l‘sence. he went _to the taps and drewi acres. Twice as many people to the‘ t glass afterglass of that “vile bev-‘ square mile as any other province. ‘t°g‘§-m"“m‘h““ We" sell/Bil And‘ Education—4'76 public schools-J e.“ “ °m “'9 we" "mgmby _ iour provincial censors of morals, by‘ more in relation to size than onyiour high-minded preachers in the; other province one to every 4.6 ‘ggteglltitcaursfi of‘Prol:ibition during the‘; square miles. L“ u lea i: 3n‘; ‘zjsregard 55 WiYi Fishefy Plmiucnm‘ l925*$£'589';(13:iof lsinpaiilrihdifsglirljlargon: infdgigtlligias: Fur FurminB—P- E- 1 85 ‘.15 to have the glass out oi which! ranches (nearly one third of alliglgteerPrince ‘drank preserved there-: Canada) with animals worth 53w‘ m a g “ss_°°5°~ dmlbueiily W! ‘ k tl .' 000.000. Live foxes and pelts pringifiaiielflfwlfgfi“??? giiafpfilscgurlgif annual revenue of about $3.000.000. ‘and became as one of them Gross Agricultural W€B1th—-$79.-‘ Over that part of the Empire we; ihave. alas! but little control; but; .in view of the fact that our Prince! ElS about to visit this Dominion. of on fur farms. which this Province is an integral‘ Live stock-Horses, 32,357; cattle. part, and a part which has recently. become part of his WW “m8 “d 114.704: sheep. 83.931; swine, lwiuziuroeiainied itself as of a highly to attempt m 13y lhem “Side gem“: worth $149999“)- igilflgilgnguiléflgellmzfw alaraililter-‘not i c‘, ie e rna - Manufacturlh8-49241 313 Plums ed. and Ontario which has iyecziftliyy cmplfiyees ‘mflauen “Wit-Bruce. and seeing that our Prince has as related above evi-- denced the weakness of his human nature» and will be‘subject to con- Farm-Canada's tinual temptation of a like charac- Acre Canada west of this "Pulpit of. by making it a criminal offence has some habit ‘ ‘ 1 216 Jaighmousmssyyd am taking this‘ ~bee ri t h b h f xt - and Physically. wholesome in incor-lflbiev 133m farms‘ Dccupy mg ' "pmrtunity ‘rmough the medium °YI n t ed a t e e est o e rem ‘483 res . _ _ m‘ with them the thmgs- 80 - 00 ‘YOU? D8P§1'_"l<1“a‘l~7l>eal to our glori- m‘ “"4 "- has “twfly failed- 9°“ g Population, 1924 estimate 87.7 - .ous Temperance Alliance‘ that they Those who ‘advocate temperance are placing their confidence in the development of manliness . ‘ . ~ / strength of character to resist the M01181 05 busmess cams‘ that matter. literature. love oi‘. Ptoducflgi-i value 1923—-gross 322.4110 immediatelyappoint and dele- an‘ love of 5ervice_t‘nese will fill up‘ 629392‘ and the mental spaces left after the rc-E Trade—1925-26- imDOYl-s ‘214; exports. $1228.82!!- ,‘gaie our illustrious advocates of the, tcausc. Messrs. Bentley, Tanton and McLeod,‘ assisted by‘ some of those who so willingly came to our assist. ance from Ontario during the last $i,06I.- Jemptation. The Aatter is gradually‘ Comfortable retirement from ac-i Important resohmonh we" ,d,,'y,u.i‘gio.ious simggie‘ to attend the pep _ i ‘rive service is Possible Pwvlded ‘heihy the. Dominion Board 9?. P‘ winning its-way and-would-undoubtq ‘ edly have made more progress than life 0f Bctiile Service has been we" it has were it not for the chliaishhiorcd for it. provided "l? mil"! h“ instinctively. yells- the strain of retirement. To the man whose active years have been full of business only. 065" sation from these duties is usually which human nature rebels. During a recent discussion in the‘ British House of Lords on a bill pro-‘ viding local option, or possible pro- ‘ hibition where discussed, Lord Daw-ifl Smck “mick? ‘cw ca“ long endure’ my,‘ the King-S physician‘ the Bishopfwant of occupation is not rest; n of Durham and other celebrated‘ mid ‘Wm? Viican.‘ is ‘i mind distresfi’ a peers, strongly opposed prohibltivekdy nwasures as tending to prejudice To those who are fortunate enough “the, than m promote wmperamm to face their declining years with- They agreed that Britain is becom-‘(lui- ‘my anxiety f“ ‘he future’ 35am fng more sober without prohibitionxsubsmuw is “ h°bby of some mud; while in the United States underii-fflfdenlflg- umuiflur science, carpen- prohybmon drinking and amedtering or general tinkering of any i ECanada at its meeting in Saint John‘ ‘ ‘last Tuesday. These resolutions askuializcd by a repetition of that low efforts of a few extremists to check been stored with the kind of foodie‘ a further reducuon m the sales the evil by force and coercion against that nourishment into the declining‘ t“; a tax on mail omer housesf A mind so stored can standmrotesiing against the reduction in‘ Jun, 25‘ 1921 tparcel post rates, and a decision t0- crimes are on the increase. Lord kmd m“ may mm“ occupation and Dawson offered statistics as to the interest m “mmeihlng “immpted” decline of business drinking. Among; city clerks, he said, 21 per cent. of‘ those over forty were abstainers, and below that age the proportion was 40 per cent, while, in the army, five ‘out of six soldiers go to the dry can- teens. Alcoholic diseases, he told ‘the House, are vanishing. Better houses, more playing fields, the ciil- ture of the cinema, the modern de- repose." It would be risking life and health and happiness to simply lily asido>even if it. were possible-the responsibilities of life and business. Such retirement usually ends in the collapse of health and in an old age that carries no comfort. In any case. the time for comfortable retirement is the busy days of active life and the she w keep “my. love of the open best antidote ' to a wearisome and country‘ and the greater compam_,burdensome old age is a healthily ‘stored mind. This storing can be accomplished by the business men. There are always books, there are always the romances of science, there is always the great world with its innumerable and endless myster- ies. In the days of our youth and strength. let tin-learn to look with pleasure and pioflt on these things. d "sermons in " h-unnfilk brooks and gooddn evorything"— and the sermons and books and the good will stay with us. onship of men with women -these were the influences making a sober nation. . /'Cultiv_atc these thingsfhe bade the Peers, "and in ten years you will have accomplished more than i any restrictive bill could secure in a generation." '_.. Prohibition, on the other hand,‘ - icording to Lord Dawson's observa- tiomnled to more ‘drinking amrifi y youth of both sexes. and to more wdownright drunkennese-"of such a terrible character as I have never ‘ seen in this country. the victims , looking more like death than life." Oharobonc parties wont from dry areas into wet. or liquor was "hinted up. and the occasional drink became an occasion for drinking. ' "I doubt," said lard Dawson, "if fermented liquors can ever be ben- irom civilised countries. can so easily be mode, and intmuilylnwonu howl-ital -' M '55 ‘ iFmfi m‘ ~v. ——--—4o>__._ sniroltlsi. 1101's ' The label goes for much these days. l! w'e wear the label of righteous- ness we are accounted righteous; if we declare ourselves prohibitionlsts * b and godly people. I ifliflfl‘ ‘"19" ‘"9"’? ‘"8". i i i we m mmmmi “mmnui “b” his report. His ‘survey convinced Yet chlmter Dr‘, Oreelmon that potato growing. mm of tiielgw now hold only m I00! deeper than the um, sndWhitlh "I . . v ' d . b0. something done, that earrls a nights.‘ me Crlnimal c‘, e e Qson of our weak and human Prince, {and actqas his protectors while in Retail Merchant-S’ Asswmtm“ °f ‘Canada, in order that the people of this great Empire may not be scan- iinv-ident of the Slums. i 1 am, Sir. etc.. ONE 0F Tm: FOUR. THOUSAND. co-operate with other ESSOCiQUOYiSIREV- MR- MUIR AND in the remedying of price-cuttingi on nationally advertised 800115- Tile, ‘T-ho following leiu-r nppeayg in Ontario members were strongly in Ellie Halifax Chronicle of July 27:— favor of abolishing the clothing levy.» 0 the Editor of the Chronicle: _ 1 “(ms can ‘or making} Slr:-The letter of Lewis P. Tan- Othel‘ Ye5° u ‘ G m_ tnii in your issue of the 22nd fiist., the salaries 0f D0m|nl°n ‘We is an excellent specimen of what ment officials attachable the samethc genuine temperance people of‘ as those o! persons m private em. Prince Edward island have been ‘ Jfilliljticififi to‘ during the rece t l- ploy; the Wll-hdrawal ‘mm “mum Jtical campaign. He a-ssume‘; 3311i tion of one of the two five-cent] wrote my letter to you under “a coins now in use; that the use oiiyvail of hliilflllilplltillltment." May l ‘i s gen email that instead the mms be denied m persons or or} gilxirlllgdlififlllllOilltefi l re _ ‘ . juice and firms distributing unsolicited i§°°d5| uni exceeding glad that I had the for sale; askinB that 18159 Bdvelusficniiraflv to stand alone. It is not ing chain sales in connection with the first time that r have stood 'nloiie rt f "Ath i Vii-Wm” and the issuing of N‘ 8' Fimuniliuliifongatinst frilrlctaus cheques be madevpllflishable ““d°"have iiad no power to crush the ‘flfllll out of a liberty-loving Scots- man. I nm proud that I can call _ C ‘ l no rd o; New my soul my owii, In this connec- Thc uqu“ on m a on i. mlglrt commend Lewis P. Brunswick under Chairman R. G-‘Tanton w the ‘Study o‘, that ‘mmmh Fulton. 18 field-WIS Yefldy m!‘ 535M955 tzll poem iii which these words oc- Liquor purchased by U19 Ward 11m": being distributed to the Governmen stores. Each package is wrapped in official paper manufactured for the board and tied with colored thread. u I “d h . n . , , 1 p-ieiswav-m-ie- 3;‘;,...::".Y.:. .2? ‘has: ries the letters N-B-L-°-B~ i" clerical firehrand," but that l be- extra employees~four men and teulong to a great succession of men girls-have been engaged for theagllé?‘ Igoiitoumhlécaziiiall nio! nlogrii-iv- xgaiipmg deixsnéergeagmrtlrllznrzuz‘: from illie letter (Sf nfievignl’. Tan- r s expec ion is the at. a t evidence tn me the business which the board will that he, at all events, cannot be do. " "Sneak history who lire the victors lfnroll thy loiig annals and say." if Lewis P. Tunton conscien- put in this category. His low- down insiniiatioii contained in these words, "lf rumours are . | u, true. is not in a humour of de- cnnnn Bemlersflnno“ ‘h p’ eiliglit aiiice the vision of a bubble Arctic. in which héhuifdefifl "Wheeling in the political air. en- oloratory trips thfoqugh tiieierthesqiitioii ‘Chairman I of Liquor Con- north, is now condemned to be‘tli“::si:0;1g‘d;na3aa IyEQtII: pliii-iitctluyledle’ broken up for the scrap iron she d r 0" 5 9 5 '"' » . . h b i oonwiwt-The Arctic w“ w“ w =h~i§i.?.'..i“i. infill”. e1...’ ‘-"'.‘v°i‘.ii...‘ii.““ Dominion Government two yew $eeing that Lewis p. Tanton h. ago for. about. siaoixrena hiore-re-igrlrtlgizi‘? igfiigivizsggiubfyhiyiln fslzhtéilaslzrafgqimlupghnetgar‘: ifiail ‘I Piiillliyptreat ‘it wfgi scorn once familiar to"the' winter “travellq " " ere here. is a much older ship ‘than 10¢ o! w“ ihet nroduoe only half the Arctic and is still going strong. m? FY0991‘ Quint"? M. "ink-u"! ' stock-raising: that the province Premier Baxter of N. 13.. wanted a should produce the beef and meat farm expert to report on farming supply for its home market anti conditions tin‘ that province. l-ienot import ._i_t; that more horne- asked President Beotty of the C. P.‘grown seed should be ,_ oducsd: R. to recommend the best man for. that a good "farming train" should the task ahd he selected Dr. o. oh. sent through the province a Oreelman, who has since visited all had boon .,do|po in Nova, goods; sections of the province and made that more short courses in agricul- ture should be hold everywhsrolin- A him greatly had nqy been ileyoiopsdsnllwiist y a" . principal centres. "it a absolutely - - ~- ow the ‘mo! r I ..,. v "The Island"—-Uhlqul! H8 B 5911'“on many of the flne old residents of ‘ supporting agricultural area. a re-fl-llfllllilrt 0f m? clty- and “mild °f"electricity. ten JOlll them in a cup of tea. But; she w“ suddenly stricken the MR. L. P. TANTON ' Aa to its discovery and proper- ties we quote as follows:-- “Helium was discovered in 1895 by the late Sir Wm. Ramsay. one rheumatism. complicatmi with an of the most famous of British che- Mum he“; inflammation‘ and i; mists, and noted for liia work _o means weeks in bed at absolute resin‘ tlie rare gases of tho atmosphere. Wm, the outcome somewhat doubb-l-le was struck by the disarepaiiciee my - _ etween the weights of equal vol- Rleporting on the causation of; "m" "Y "M08911 Blew?“ um! hi!" rheumatism and rheumatic heartamile" "Dlrfltoil from the air, disease in children in England, Drwlwhich M"! K819i!" °b9°YV°d l" Reginald Mm" tens us that mfihis study of the density of nitro- dmaase is rare m prune Schoomgeii. and the results of his experi- where facilities are, provided forrmenta showed that the atmospher- dxylng we‘ clothing‘ but common m‘ ic nitrogen was heavier on account the state elementary schools whichi“ ‘he Preimlic" i" "- 0! ll new "l" Cert gas which he isolated and call- lack such provmom '00 argon Lord Raleigh and Sir Briefl he considered dampness. ' the secgnd most important factor.i"xlzlni‘nmggsgg tttfigngrgpgsggdailfrfsg And what is the first one? 5 i , chronmmy infected wnsns werestud ed its properties. lts princip- found m 95 per cent o‘, ‘he casesyal characteristics were its inert na- He found that the curly renmvaylllfe, and the monatomic composi- ‘methods of treatment, including other day with acute inflammatory _ tion. lf was found to be present in glfasggiiilieianzzilgroizct illzimuggg the atmosphere to the extent of rheumatic infection. .0“? per can!‘ Now for years dampness, over- Ramsay we“ ‘mugm 1°‘ work, hunger, worry, strain and 0' argon" fatigue have all been thought to have something to do with causing rheumatism. Of course muscular pains, or what was formerly called muscular rheu- ' BOUTCEH out in 1889 by the ill I l l . mo... w» ..%.*':.'::':;;:: as this was thought to be due to cold 12 per cam or n certainly W“ wet, or other agent showing up the R " ' chculatlon m mé part‘ amaay repeated the experiment With bfldly inlficwd “"1915 95ml” gon spectrum. However. he tonsils. meiits of the wave length of Other research men tell us that liiie. the tonsils are to blame cases out of four. Tonsils that are healthy, even if iii the chronacpacre of the Sun dur- in‘ thre€that this line was none other with the‘ .‘ " they- are interfering breathing. But to allow a child to, retain in-i ‘footed tonsils, that have outlived their usefulness as filters, is simply taking chances on rheumatis ll and heart disease. —---‘¢o&—-i— Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers Jilly 29. 1927 DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH t By w_ |__ 6on3" ‘iltgathlge aiéoiiice of my supplications. o o-wool ‘ t ~ PRAYEltz-Jhiiy faith looks up to WORDS OFTEN MISUBEDIThee, Thou Lamb oi Calvary Bav- Don't say "I never mean to go." Say-mm. Divmey- , ' "I mean never to go." 0 F T E N MISPRONOUNCEDI. divan. Pronounce the i as in “lit," ____ not as in "light," and accent iB-Sbvrhe ma“ who Wm,“ with hm eyes sYllablg- on the clock, QYPEN MISSPELLED‘ °“P"°'~'Juet gets to the end of the day ious. " ' ' - SYNONYMS: part‘ portion‘ plecflBut he docsnt get far on the Road particle, share, allotment. ‘ope ENTflEaTYz-Give ear, o‘. . o THE CLOCK WORKER 6 1 to Success For he isn't headed that way. ing one word each day. Today's word: IRRATIONAL; contrary to reason: absurd. "Such irratlunfll views cannot be acceiitfli" ‘Except to "push the cloclr"-- And then when .other folks get ahead He loves to sneer and ‘knock! He gives just. so many hours a day. And he draws no joy from his work: The only thing he draws is his pay, And it's all that he doesn't shirk. and contempt. it will, however, be an evidence to all sane, temper- ance people of the insidious prop- aganda ii-aed by Lewis P. Taiiton et al in their campaign of slander in the recent election. We do not wonder that even honesfmen and wolnen were betrayed when such an unwarianteil rumour was broad. “m5. cast amongst them. i had all iilust- which he Mummy,“ proceed, w rious fellow countryman who would spend. " not "sell liis King for gold," and if ' Lewis P. Tanton imagines that I n-s the chap who rend"! Bel-flee could be induced to sell my con- - victiona for any sordid, material gliin he does not know "the rock” he i-a up against] Ilia inalnuatioii is mean, low-down, contemptlble evidently evolved from a sub-con- scious llfo which would not stand the seorciilight oi psychology eith- er ancient or modern. - Lewis l’. 'i‘liili0l'l'ii attempt to raise a prejudice against me by saying “l am not an Islander hut a recent importation" will not !‘cut any ice" among the‘ intellect- ual. cultural people of Prince Ed~ ‘ ,1 - ward Island. I have heenniong enough‘ in Charlottetown‘ “to kiiow that ita citizenship is largely com- posed of fl highly intellectual pew pie VITIOTITG not caught by buch chaf‘f"as_'_is contained in thefliitter oflrewis P. Tauton. ' ' ' _ ‘ -_‘ ‘W. BRUCE MUIR St. James Miilifib. Oiisrlottafowfifi i~ ~- PLANT DISEASE BULI-ETIKfI He puts nothing tr xcept his time. So gels nothings out at the end Besides some palty dollars and plus, _ Not just by the hour or the day, But by all that's in him, and gives h best, - For love of his work-not for pay- Who‘: going to alt in the leader's chair, And get to the very top; For he's headed straight to be truly F919. . And nothing cfli make him stopl . -8trathmorean. Psrspii-stion odor on the body-coo A Sin-Potato growers are advised that Lats Blight is developing rapid. of worm watbr. it whielf. NI N!" ly in the fields. Rainy weather dur- added two ‘ 13PM!!!" .01 0001-‘ i118 the post week has favoured the Wm"! 5PM". lmlilfiyll- Tllll Wm development of this, destructive di. leave the skin cloanand ftssh. sessoandnoeifortshouldbospsrod ‘ ‘ -‘ brand in which he found that an in- Hem“ en gag was glvgn o" "om m9 u... meiits have been carried on with unite mineral cleveite on boiling i: “QUMRBIOPY Buccan- lts Properties. His determinations showed "m" ex than l5" Lord, unto my prayer; and attend +0» FOR THE ‘Um i BANK OF 1 Capital $10,000,000 Always Find Us Business and .-l__i‘~inaii ‘a. Slime ‘I832. when ‘t... founded, hi" ‘lithium’ served thousands of farmers, ‘and to-day our‘ e knowledge of . business conditionp Iii! continue to be willingly plsoecl at their disposal, ., ‘j Mm ESTABLISHED 183B f Resl§ Resources $24§,000@sp q §$‘1_9.§0fi.0ii0 it 1- a other by Jansen, and afterwards shown Hie attention by Franklin and Locllger to be due w“ drawn i0 some work carded to a new element in the Suii which ‘ate m. “me, they named Helium from the Greek Following these experi- ‘ experiments of its Early in 1916 samples "'0! natural gas from most of the producing field‘! of Canada were‘ oxamitfdiiz‘ Thmreaulta of the survey showed that there weretwo places in tho‘ Dominion where an experimental l l extraction station might, be estab~ | lished, at Hamilton, OiiL, andfat Calgary, in Alberta. Further" exam- inatioil of gases from all points of As the ant brought to Solomon the‘ WORD STUDY: "Use a 130ml‘ ' Th ‘filial, three times and it is yours." us . ‘- s g increase our vocabulary by master-inc ha?“ .2‘ ounce o‘ genuine . ofIsri So do l bring to thee, beloved, m! l have placed my head and heart ‘ On the sill of the door of tlfiy lovo: Biep genilymahlld! 1* V —'l‘cherkess Khan- ODSTOMS PR bodostrflyodby ustlumlnvmai» * to combatit. It is therefore urgent hail.“ Drills that the first application“?! Bord- ' . eoux Mixture be made edlamy, To prevent tho scattering ofi at lntervsiwsi tsitdays to s fort- crumbs whsnirtiilllililblbod h night is! the remainder or the grow- tho food dropper. tostdn Monsoon: uwerthsopsnmoofths Bsfifobtor! control of blight is a rubber bond. ‘ ail-oil; lllllbfllll oilumsrwi -.. Passing over a lot , and examined the as _ explanations we again quote briefly Now the point is this. Many folksxum tube éxpecun: m QQB§§§°§L “in spite of the was pamphlet say in 1917 small quantit- rheumatismmnd heart. disease, and struck with the brimancy o; a ye]. ies realized the sum of “.5000. per a few individuals without tonslllar i0“, line which he mum not ac, cubic foot. trouble have rheumatism and heart count for very close to the yenow oriess and odorless and its origin is disease. but there is no evudinz thmine n. and n2 which are due tosiveu "1 Website“ Dictionary u! fact that Dr. Miller repflfii 95 P" sodium. and he asked Sir Wm. "hYllmheuclmY 6911i 01 "1659 ED811511 C8595 hB-d bfld Crookes to carry out exact measure- “Y9 M 1M 5"" ‘"9 Presem-y l‘ ' ' m“ was first found in Kansas: but is tending its usefulness rapiti- in 1808 Prof. J. C. McLennan, the D line only iirevioualy observed °i m“ Umvelsny "l T°T°m° made large quantities oi large, should not be disturbed unless-lag a solar eclipse in India in 1868 A" the iwdins notions, especially ,. - _______ Great Britain are making extensive“ A SERIES OF LITERARY QUOTATIONS FOR BOOK LOVERS Friday, July ma. Marvell died, iefl; AI-‘GIIAN Lovs some. It is not given to ' every man‘to take a bath of multitude: to flay ig‘ upon crowds is an art; and he a one can plunge, ‘ mankind. into a debauch of vital- ity, w whom a fairy has bequeath in his cradle the love of masks and disguises, the hate oi home and the passion of travel. , ‘ Multitude. solitude: mutually convertible by the active ‘ and begetting poet. He who does not know how to people his solitude. does not know either how to alone in a busy crowd. c The poet enjoys this inoom able privilege, to be at once himso and others. 'U.5. of scientific difficulties the tliani lt is described as col- found where the It‘ wail] liquid helium. LONDON, J possibilities. ~ ' w tooth, to swell." SCRAP BOOK Gilchrist. I‘, i M.‘ Jcampoign. of a passhoppsr as on 51 ii . ~.» caowns 7°?“ m st the expense of equal terms qu-tll iiidlrl Libs those wandering the liritia - any ‘additfiw E 53$ clal _B0lll‘t‘¥8w¢._‘1h$‘_])iBll! ,'clo 9 ti. Developments ‘ in‘ Great Britain the United Stai- éfl Iliiiiing parties and following- countries. .- mining operators up coiiqidei-ipgytlle feasibility i p iiig the production of tliisic ‘P’? and ifuii‘ détallflare expected ‘ fr ere long. Also there are Jay flu- Australia. Newv-ZGQMII, Per ‘ Rufloiu. Traiisylvanica. Gernia "Elli. Prance. South America, a i?! l"! lwlle our own Island m conie in for its share ufliiélluiii if. is found to be present here. . ti‘ l! Dear; however, fro the invest ga on now iii progre _ that some new information oa sublect hascomo to light. comm‘ notice‘ rays ‘ ' ‘ fro. ‘ mu: ‘riuso - _ . . i. : i. L-r..s__- né-tidistlsse e » com$r i .4 i i 1 . ‘. um .\ 8111C i. uly alt-with m. ‘ 0i s message smuggled to him Sir Arthur 5° 9- 1! lfyinirtlo reduce by ~= tzhe prison population m“ his‘ olori. Sheillock Holmes vudjw Bir Arthur is ‘leading an agi for. the release _of {has sci-veil l8 years‘ offil" lif fence-in ' Peter-head Prison." ‘_ ‘land. for the ‘murder of Miss i- ' oliehrisr, ‘wealthy Glasgovfw i Doyle claimsithat slam- was ~~ ‘vlcted on circumstantial evi "not one _ point- of 'which 'does i ‘ crumbidiinder examination." ' Shortly after Miss Gilchrist murdered, Slater left for the U States‘; Police found he had "~ , arbroochthilt had belonged to - in‘ j‘ explai ‘ $18M!‘ is asaistinl Doyle and o i ars workinglfor his release by mull g messages to them. e brie in question’ he wroilh i "" painfully small handwriting oil sheet of tissue paper six inches l i _. eight. ‘Folding “it as amali as ~ m, sible'and enclosing it in a wit! proof covering, he soil-ISBN‘! l‘ “ in the hollow ‘tooth of a fellovii oiflil" who‘ WaFiiQlhB diacharll‘ r ,‘ t-n- l! +—— ' - s-OTTAWA, July 28.-—Whii0 date has been ‘definitely filiiil ‘expected that tliitziicusiiilllnzw. . _ n »_ rytwlgaefipvgmiier $11 devil“ y or two to the quesiionlill" aiiqilarters officials as to a lipi- orivlutteri which have i ring the investigation. ayingiidauito-tour. the comm oiiLaome time. in Ottawa wl > * ere of the Department inii" ‘ to the methods adopted l" ‘ i551 fiy the chief of v - ‘his owu r0110" ' o ile and apparently l" m ‘ cumii Oscbr sum the murderer." 0s‘: MAY as. ‘RLY syswrzlltiil, ‘T a , _v ti I! m, -='.'They jum, ’ to the conciusi i ' fiifii-‘iéi-YE Bel - not final deci ollllll. . 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