I iiil BlliHIlIiN ‘A 1 ii (‘nnndn e ll mo emw (fhtllxnrgl zfll.dpoal volr tiu-‘tulvnnorp (otherwi- ' lloLnro. vtoe-rmlaane-a. u. aeroeu. .0noitt MFQW ere. XITON-Olll lolil Nuvoi ll ~ new onseoow. s. nonnative-w. A. Johnnion. A. Drown. Poet Olin. l. l). Taylor Grafton street. I; Q mqmufsrnnt hoorgo direct. lflnrit anon. , _ B. ‘lbw no While. its Elm Ave. i Coo-‘or k 00-. 00¢" 9""!- lUWbiflnek. Great decree utroe i. Irnnls N. ltnye. l! true our SAFE counss " 1;, is possible, although eXtremeiy improbable. that the favorable con- ditions at the Capes will continue indefinitely. oeihevs thwuflimu‘ ‘he winter.‘ EXDerience-of mall? Years has taught us, however. tharcondi- tions tn February ‘and March aretin- vnriably difficult. There is nofiust- iftcation for any hope 1h" me" Wm be any exception this year: 5"" under the most favorable circum- stances the demands upon i!" i?" ferry during, the heavy shlDPlhB M!‘ son still before us will be much greater than they are It Present Prudence demands that the‘ Carlie-ii opportunity be taken to make the necessary repairs to the car ferry and to take such other steps as will keep up as efficient an interim ser- ‘vice as possible. As has been point- ed out. the best way in which this can be done is by providing double gieamehip service on the only open rgubg, that is, bct-ivecn Georgetown and Plctou. v .__-._¢__-_i___. THE PIONEER SPIRIT The pioneer spirit oi seventy-five lo a hundred nnd fifty years ago has undergone n great change, if indeed it has not. been entirely extinguish- Aed in this commercialized. modem ’ nge. When our British forefathers left their homes and braved the dan- gers and discomforts of a. three- months’ ocean voyage in sailin! W5- selo to reach the new World, they c"- i-ied with them no return tickets, no guaranteed return passage money. They took their lives in their hands and determined to make a new start in a. new world of which they knew little except that it was largely wild- erness and afforded an opportunity for strong hands and stout hearts to make a living. . If. Col. D. l. llnv-Kinnnn, ll. b. Ilitor nnd longer-J. I. Burnett. . Anallorlnnn. 2M Trvmont I sinvv IOIlK-lloiolinll Non IMM- W WM "lb "l- llllll IRNIDIS-llllllilr Ball ‘III GUARDIAN one be obtninod Irons 1 D. Aeoueinto lelitol- ll l. (lorrie- Bw- M. l5. Faulkner. r Ilii n. IOI-BIB~II. H. Acorn, the following“ ngvnio In (blrioitntown- .. Duly. llluunnnd Itireoi. . Alix. MoPlu-rnon. lluoon iiirfli. n. ‘Ivveel. Urn Ave. Toullmi flrouvry. for. Kml d llnohlord .1. . mill: "hail litre-of. (‘nnnrln News ($0.. Drnni. .\lra. rllfi-llieflll. l-nrrhentrr iilirrel. llllloboro SUMO. _ MONDAY. JANUARY 2s, 1929 officers preaching in 84 languagesl n conducted 1,142 social institutions and agencies. It has grown steadily since. The Army flag is now born in 83 coun- tries; its officers preach in 9’! inn- guages; there are 15.51’! corps offic- ers, cadets and whole-time employ- ees. while there are 105,034 local cf- ficers and 43,000 bandslnen. The Army conducts 340 shelters and hostels for working people, in which the aggregate accommodation nightly is 35,443 persons. These have supplied 20,268,752 meals, and 10,012,640 beds. The Army has 210 industrial homes, elevators, work- shops and woodyards, where over 454,600 men were found work. tem- porarily or permanently. ‘Through its labor bureaux 284,800 men have obtained situations. Home 7,302 wo- men and girls were recetv i tn its 112 industrial homes, and of these 6,931 returned to their friends or places were found for thém. Over 16.100 women were cared for in the Army's 70 maternity homes, and 2,- 534 ell-criminals were received into the Army prison gates homes. The Migration and Settlement Department, of which Commissioner Lamb is director, has settled about 38.000 people in the domlnions since 1920. During the 25 years of its existence the department has trans- planted some 200,000 migrants, of whom less than 1 percent have not succeeded. They train boys in agri- culture. and since the inception of General Booths schema in 1923 more Ithnn 4,000 from firimin have been happily settled overseas. There are an assurance society with £4,063,600 and a bank. There are also the Salvation Army Fire 1n- surance Corporation and the Reil- ance Benefit Society. It is ‘but a brief picture-of the mendous and noble work of tre- this In this Island the farms of today are the worksuof their 1 hands. They were carved out of the forest primeval by unremitting toil and courage. Looking back we can see little comfort in those far- off days, can see little but hard work and little to look forward to but a slow continuance of the prosperity _ which they had dreamed of. Compar- ing this with the immigration schemes of today. there is much food for thought. Migrants today have little faith in the country they are going to, or perhaps little faith in themselves. Before leaving they want a guarantee of a return pas- sage in case things didn't suit them when they arrived. This is not the pioneering spirit which has built up the outlying members of the British Empire; not the spirit which hewed Gown the forests end converted wild- ernessee into fertile farms; not the spirit which united the east and the west of Canada with bands of steel over mountains regarded as impos- eable. ' » We need more of the pioneer spir- it in all our undertakings; the spirit of faith in our country and of hope for its future; and this spirit is nut confined to searching out new lends; 1t ie needed in carrying out new pol- tcleo, new methods‘, new social con- ditions, new» educational privliegee, where the old have become stag- v dent and have ceased to go forward. PTOSDBFOIXS {ft in pi interesting aidsifght on the situation that tho- year. the: sees e in the affairs of high com- d: the Salvation Army is the _ of the birth of the Army's liid l greet clmpnlgn has F" -. v » Wlootb" (we; wee sreat world-wide institution; and ‘Ylemig of the Army everywhere will trust ‘that the present crisis will in , no manner or degree impair its use- fulness to mankind. __i__q_1__ EDITORIAL NOTES. Seats in the New York Exchange might be termed “Seats of the Migh- W." One was sold recently for $615,000. Less money‘ is going to “waist" in the United States. The number of corsets manufactured in that country h“ dWDDed fifty per cent. during the past three years» Profcssor Jiliustein would not make his salt as a "space";wrlter. The eminent scientist spent ten years preparing a manuscript of five pages amplifying his relativity theory. Poultry breeders in an Ontario dis- trict are demanding protection against chicken thieves. The hens are said to be so nervous that they make no attempt to cross the road. Miss Agnes Macphail, M. P, ‘advo- cates the appointment of a minister of peace in the Dominion cabinet. One of his most difficult tasks might be maintaining harmoney among his colleagues. “Interdsuominntionolistically, there is nodispute in England on antidis- esta‘ ‘ishmcnteriantsmf’ writes a cor- respondent, offering e‘- llmplg o: what he terms the longest words in the English language. A Manitoba despntch states that there is difficulty in uecuringa outt- eble Liberal for Lieutenant-Govcte nor. The Toronto Globe suggests: "Then why not emnoh Ill lfliqillifllll i; Notes By! he Wag When trade iii-tum policies mo: J‘ in the fi- they provoke only academic discussion, in which it is difficultufor the ordinary man to ‘ distinguish between the fallacy and . the truth. When the question re- solves itself into dollars ind cents. and reaches down into the pockets of the people, then they sit up and take notice. The verbiage of the politician which hitherto camou- flaged the issue is then seen for what it is worth, and the facts stand out baldly" in the ntimentai light of common‘ sense. This has _weli illustrated in the case of the impor- tation into this country of New Zcaiand butter. The tariff linkers have had their way, and the protests of the uatiiinai Dairy Council have gone unneeded. But now money talks. Foreign but.- ter is today underselling the home product in the Charlottetown mar- ket, and the chances are that it will seriously injure our dairy business. Must our farmers fight this danger alone, or will they have the help of the Federal representatives whom they elected to safeguard their ‘in- terests? When the treaty was be- ing discussed in Parliament our Lib? eral representatives either sat dumb or "held the clothes" of the treaty- makers. The time has now come for action. and “he that isnot for us is against us." Let our parlia- mentarians speak out! ! A stage whisper comes from on an- onymous correspondent in the local Liberal organ, warning us that a meeting held in the city on Friday night tn discuss the New Zealand butter importation was presided over by a prominent Conservative, and met in the oillce of another sup- porter of the same party. Fancy that! The meeting was an executive meeting of the Retail Merchants As- sociation; it was presided over by the President of the Association and. was held, as is customary, in the ofllce of the Secretary, having been called, we understand, at the suggestion of the Vice President, who happens to be a, Liberal. "Without discussing in any way the merits or demerits of the case", it would be interesting to know whom "Onlooker" represents, and what particular irons he has in the fire. ,Our farmers and business men are too deeply concerned in the matter at issue to accept gratuitous advice from “onlookers"; and they are too old in the horn to be fooled by the wolf when he imitates the watch-dog's bark. Now that the editor of the Patriot has been up in an aeroplane, we shall expect some pungent articles on the panoramic view and the respect- ive advantages, seen from aloft, of Borden and Georgetown as ports of call for whatever steamship service is provided during the tie.-up of the car ferry. The spectacle of frozen rivers and ice-bound Straits on one side, and a navigable eastern route and open harbor on the other, must have been a. convincing one. Had the visibility been good, it might have been possible to descry, afar ofl‘, the smoke of the belated Stanley, but- zing through the Gut of Canso, and to calculate approximately the time which will yet elapse before that steamer reaches Tormentlne. In any event, it is exhilarating to get up in the air, "above the smoke and stir of this, dim spot, which men call Earth," and see things for a while in wider perspective. ‘We congratulate the editor upon his successful initial flight, and trust that the experience will supply a. wealth of material for his vigorous pen. The omission of tlic Royal mono- gram “G. R." from Canadian postal wagons and trucks on, the ground that the letters are confusing, has given rise to criticism in various sections of the country. The Phrflfie “His (or Her) Majesty's Mail" has had a. place on the Statutes of Can- ada ever since Confederation. “It is curious," remarks the London Free Press, “that after all this time, and during the regime of the Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King-and the Hon. Peter J. Veniot, it should be discovered that the phrase is con- fusing. It also is a '"""'\lis fact that the revelation should .- made at a time when‘ seporaticnists are active in efforts to sever the links of Em- pire." The Eskimos of the Mackenaie lllvei-Dieiriotuesbwtedtobe If!“ redio fans. The natives of that far northern p:et, according to o recent press deepatch, toke as keen a delight in dialing tar stations es any Chor- lottetmvn amnteulzondthey ere able tofollow the sun around,eeit we , and pick up stations at any hour Af the doy except for e possible blind spot in the Asletiifeectton. One of their beet stations was reported to be New Orleans. Fancy on Iokimo listening in to n southern American Chautauqua. lecturer counselling hto audience how to keep cool tn_ the eve-dull, ' ' ‘lover a basin of hot water. J ow" hlfiF-Tmlfbi c" vi!‘ IAN .'..~\-~.» . “i 011M 1801112 oi yours By [qmce W. Barlon. LOSS OF APPE IITE One of the serious conditions in childhood is when the y ungs los- es its appetite. You can undrstand that growth and health are absolutely dependent upon food, and i! focd is not taken serious consequences must arise. a study of los of appetite in nearly 1500 children between the ages of 1 and 14 years. a research man‘ has divided his cases into two groups. Organic loss of appetite in which a definite cause ,for the condition could be determined; functional loss of appetite in which eon organic cause that could possibly explain the condition could not be found. The commonest conditions that were found in these youngsters with- out appetites were infected tonsils and" ---' noids, acute infectious ail- ments suck as scarlet fever, measles, and so forth. tuberculosis, infected teeth, and inflammation of kidneys. Now any young growing animal wants and needs food and is not happy till it gets it, and any young- ster, boy or girl, who doesn't want food is not normal; there is some- thing wrong. In the treatment of loss of appet- ite, broiled beefsteak, iamb's kidney and fresh caif's liver wereadded to the diet of the child with most grat- ifying results. In a previous article I mentioned the work of a research man who demonstrated that in additi to bo- inga wonderful blood builder,‘ liver had something within it, some pro- perty, that created and stimulated appethe. Hence the the diet. The vitamin B as found ixrwhole wheat bread, lettuce, and yeast cakes, helps to increase appetite, The thought then is that; as 3]] normal youngsters desire food, some- thing is wrong when they don't, and instead of coaxing, whipping, or ihfefltehillil. an examination should be made by the family physician. Oi’ course any youngster may go off his food for a day or two, but any prolonged lack of desire for food on the DB1‘?- Of the; Oungster should be treated as a serous matter, and the cause located. A "run down" condition from lack of food renders the youngster an- easy prey to illness. - o~o++o Modem Etiquette - ¥ . BY ROBERTA LEE QOQHOOQQOO-OQQrvQ-o-vvvv-OQ‘ Q. At breakfast, when is the finger bowl removed? ' It is removed with the grape- fruit. Q. Should the crest on white sta- double value of liver in is gold or silver better? A. Without color is preferable. Q. What is a safe rule for 3, mgr] to follow when in doubt about taking of! his hat? ' ha?" “When in doubt, take of‘! your FQ§VOOOQ O+QQ§§QO~Q£4§ O§§-§-§¢I § The Land We Love i pv FRANK YPJIGI] QQQQ-oe-oooooee 0e >0 or eoeo w Canada's Leadership in Agriculture Q- In what respect does Canada’ lead iii Agriculture? A. Canada lends in agriculture in, the following ways-as the world's greatest wheat exporter a5 the WHOM.‘ granary 0f the Empire, as the highest‘ pcr acre yield, as the grouvci-‘of the‘ world's best wheat, for flour liiaking and food value iii broad; for the cx-‘ tout of the WIiQJS form", in the C: adian West, running into tlioucslnrs of acres and for modern methods of‘ 790F103 and 112!‘ " '1. Caitnda also‘ has, in its ivlicat poo‘; the irll-gcstf farmers C0—O"3I‘Ilii‘-‘r! i. gnnizrtitul of‘ its kind in the uprld. lQOQO-OOO-OOQOOOQGJOOOAQQoo E Daily Lessons i in English g By \V. L. GORDON .H»»»¢.............'.. 4>o00oooo< v WORDS OFTEN MISUSEDZ: D0 not say, “He came to see my brother and I." Say, "and mc." o F‘ T E N MISPRCYNOUNCED: ranch; a as in "an." and ch as in "chew," not as sh. OFTEN MISSPELLED: irrctriev- able. BYNONYMS: many, numerous, divers. multiplied, multitudinous, sundry, various. WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: EMINENTLY; standing out clearly. “It is eminently proper to do so." "*li§fi§£i{$l2l”""““" y“ Scrapbook ' n; nonsnrs - no OQ-O-OO-OO-QO-OOO Table Linen To bring outthe real beauty and also of table linen it should be - mpened almost to the stage of being wet, before ironing. t ‘not rm To keep food hot, cover with I lid or tin pan and place it Vomiting > ‘mile?! be stamped without color, or - Carcassonne inn-anointed from the French of Gustave Nnndnlld. by 10h! 3- Thcmpeon) ' I'm growing old. I've sixty years; I‘ve labored all my life in vain; In all that time of hopes andlelre I've failed my deanzt wish to gain. l see full weii that here below Bliss unailoyed tilere is for none. My prayer will ne'er fulfilment know- I never have semifieeraseonne. > I have never seen Carcassounel You see the city from the hill. . It lies beyond the mountains blue, And yatio rea:h t one must still Five long and weary leagues Dill‘- sue, And to retum, as many more! Ah! had the vintage pienteous ' grown! The grape withhclc. its yellow store: 1 shall not look on Carcassonne. I shall not look on parcaasmne. They tell me every day is there Not more or less than Sunday gay: In shining robes and garments fair The people walk upon their way. one gazes there on castle walls As grand as those of Babylon, A bishop and two generals! I do not know fair Carcassoxlne. I do not know lair Carcassoline. The_lli0ili"s right: he says that we Are ever wayward, weak and blind; He tells us in his homily Ambition ruins all mankind; Yet, could I there two days have spent While still the autumn sweetly shone, Ah me! I might have died content When I had looked on Carcass- onne. When I had looked on Carcass- onnel Thy pardon, Father, I beseech, In this, my prayer, if I oflend; One something sees beyond his reach From cléildhood to his Journey's en i My wife, our little boy Aignan, Have travelled even to Narbonne; My grandchild has seen Perpignan. And I have not seen Carcassonn And I have not seen Carcassonne So crooned, one day, close by Lim- oux, A peasant, double-tent with age. "Rise up, my friend." said I; “with you I'll go upon this pilgrimage." We left next iliorning his abode, But (Heaven forgive him!) half- way on The old man died upon the road, He never gazed on Carcassonpe. Each mortal has his Carcossonne! INVOCATION Then cried i, “Lord, Thou Who hast biddeli me pray, . These many years have I by night and day Petitioncd Thee, and yet no answer known! i Art deaf or powerless on Thy distant throne?" Then spake a low voice, present in mine ear: . “Sayest thou that thou dost pray and I not hear? I, Who am nearer than thy hand is near? O ‘érou, vociferous by night and day, Art ‘sure thou kiiowest what it is to pray? “I heed notwindy words nor foolish _ tears, And though thou seekcst thousand years, A thousand years thou shalt unan- swered be; And yet I say, pray thou, and cease- thus a To arrest vomiting, administer finely‘ GPMKBG I00 ill nneil Ulli ‘ffiqliflit lessly, And what thou prayest shall be given to thee! "Behold. I show you tcry. Who looking ill thy soul shall there find i/te; Desire, with passion deeper than the a great mys- "\ sea: Believe that I, thy God, will uphold thee: il-‘ind in Mv name ccmmund. and it shall be! . to m“. tit‘: moitnfaizi in ‘ c rout ~ 4 I _ 0v r223.‘ ‘ . i mightiest, till, 2031mm: i w’ . ‘ fifSlYl-S 2'1 hope is wesh- 1 4 ‘n2, and thine the‘ I d2s're, believing . iset. judgment on thine own hear‘. fail, Watch wc‘i tiiy prayer, for lo. I an- swer all! . —M. E. Buhler. O-O-§§-O§-O40§O§O§O§§§€§O§Q§O The Poet's Corner QQ-OMO-OQQQQOO OOO-OOOOOO§O Love's wisnoivl Now on the summit of Love's top- most peak . . ' Kiss me and part, no further can we I0‘, , And better death than we from high to low Should dwindle or decline from strong weak. . We have found all, there is no more to seek; ' All have we proved, no more is there know; And Time could only tutor us to eke Out ruptures warmth with custom’! afterglow. ‘ Y _ _We catty-lot keep at such a height as roi- evheytl-eullns souls like oure in- But once in life so rarefied a bliss. What if we lingered till love’; breath . should fell! Heaven of my north! One more col- eotinl kiss The Ciifl Waste Condensed from The Iornni (N0- voinber, p8) John iinkeiell York's huge wastes, let ue take first the disposal of rubbish and ERIN-Eh Ali that the averlifl New Yorker if you put it outside the aria-ment- door, the Janitor takes it away. What becomes of it is, he think-i, no He is mistaken. Much of that i800 tons of unsavory materials which daily is towed 20 miles to sea and dumped would have value ii it were scientifically used. A few years ago an engineer oi‘ the Bureau of Mun- icipal resenrzh estimated that the city was Paying 83,500,000 annually "for damping nearly $5,000,000 of values into the sea.‘ ~ In the building trades New York goes a step further than inefficiency and legally forces its architects and engineers to waste millions annually. The chief difficulty lics in flashin- tiquated municipal Building Jade, framed when steel construction vas not fully understood, whtsh limits the stress to be placed oh test to 16,000 pounds to the squar inch. Now the p-.operties of structural steel are known today more accur- ately than those of a PhYSiGLZfYB prescription; and it is agreed among the engineers appointed to report on this question that a stress of at least 18,000 pounds, the figure now used In most large cities in America, should be written into the New York Code. This saving would amount to one~-eighth of all the structural ..teel used in the city or about $0,- 000,000 annually. , - WASTE IN THE All. In New York waste is in the air. both literally and figuratively, for smoke is-‘a heavy item in the waste bill. In the dense black clouds that rise from the smokestacks goes on incredible amount of heat, actual as well as potential. On an average winter day, New York raises the temperature two degrees for a mile into the air above. But the, loss of ed to the damage it does. For the finely divided coal dust, poured into the air as smoke, settles again and ruins everything it touches, from pictures, paint, furniture and things which can be replaced, to human lungs which cannot. Everyone, from the manufacturer who pays an extra fuel bill or sees his product deter- iorate, down to" the housewife who has to hire an extra maid, is paying for this plague of smoke. The De- partment of Health estimates New York's total loss from smoke at $96,000,000 a year. If New York is wasteful with its fires, it is almost equally wasteful with its writer. Already possessed of the most elaborate system of water supply in the world, it is faced with the necessity ofbuilding an addi- tonal one even more costly than the present system.,Small streams have been transformed into great lakes, roads moved, farms slibme god over an area. larger than Rhode Island, tn provide New York with ii water oupply. And after all this,'New York blandiy proceds to waste water at the rate of 280,000,000 gallons a day -~a daily loss of $20,000-—because of leaky plumbing, faults in the wat- cr mains, or careless householders who levlvetheir spigots running. Meantime, a city government which hasriot changed its rates in half a century blindly proceeds to encour- age waste by refusing to extend the use of meters. LOST TIME Time is supposed to be one thing that the New Yorker values; but the dca that New York saves time is largely an illusion. Already possess- td’ ui a permanent population of 100,000 or lnore to the square mile- probably the densest on earth-low- er Manhattan receives each day 2,- 800,000 transient workers. That is to say, the equivalent of thcentire N 2v. Mexico arrive daily, all coming Flt about nine o'clock in the morn- ing and most of them departing at nvc o'clock in the afternoon. I11 tho phenomenal congestion of e m ivrczl: slow vengeance i ‘- the viLy, the automobile is the lin- nizilatc cause of one of the most ' ,, ‘wastes. Since practically all n is at street level, there is no way for two stream". to cross with- out correlate stoppage of all traffic In cm d . tion. At any givenmoment the" ‘ore, exactly one-half of all the in ~ vars in New York are stand- ~i itng still, as are also a fair propor- tiozi oi the pedestrians. This means. for example. that a $3000 motor i,"‘.l"( i", not one truck, but half a tr...i:. it cnl. be used only half of the time. That means that a busi- ness firm which needs one truck must buy two, must also employ two drivers, and pay twice for gasoline, The total loss from traffic congee tlon is officially estimated at 8000,- 000.000 a year. for passage, the , of getting New York's ‘millions of workers to work falls on the subways and ole- vated lines. And lower Manhattan is not only the directing center of the nation's industry-e fa share of_ the nation's industry ht there on the spot. So, in addition to the thcu- i-mds of office workers who travel down the narrow island each mom- lng, there are more thousands of workmen and working girls. In the few square miles south of Ififty- ninth Street are crowded liinumer- able industries. Prtntingy metal working, cigermaking. leather welt- tng occupy large areas. New York makes most of America's, paper pot- torns, Jewelry, tobacco piper, hair work. and furs. to hour," whidh involves wlltel no grave oe any that even New York City hoe to ehew. some wanton can ‘Jlien down by iieparnte pathways to the vale. ‘ vv-Ufllfllfl Imieoo (1010-1600) loioodliie As a prosaic example‘ of New ‘ knows or cares about rubbish is that ‘ concern of his since no charge for_ ' that item appears on his tux bill. fuel due to smoke is small compar- " villages have been drowned, rail- - population of Arizona, Vermont, and: Where the streets are too blocked V tigueimel, ioeooeof -time, domen- l eti-ehieicse in mum, one uitioieteiyq _ v Flash ‘If you Smoke 2- save IFIVE FREE. FREE ROS-EBUD p dnd Save the “Poker Hands” e Enjoy this y’ sweet, mild Cut Plug with its mellow fra- grance and satisfying quality Hands”, contained in Rosebud packages — and you obtain this genuine Eveready Flash Light, Dealers everywhere have Rosebud in 10c. rind '1'§c.' package; Light m. ma. sum nfm inches long and lo oom- ';.'.:'.' cementum sets of “Poker ‘ 123 Queen St. Call in and ask for o demonstra- tion on “The New Coleman Instant-lite Lamps And Lanterns NO MORE ‘HEATING GENER- ATORS. BETHUNE Hardware -Co., Limited ' Phone 757 "The Friendly Hardware Store.” .. n 140 Richmond st, “PO-O Q-fQ-O O-Q-OPGO-Ofi-Qfi-OQ-O THE SUBWAY RUSH , This last is no hyperbole. To- ap- preceate what the rush hourts like. one must be a participant. Bear in mind that there ie no alternative. Only a small proportion of the work- ers in this crowded district can hope to live near their work. And if some fiend with scientific training in bac- teriology had planned the conditions which exist in the rush hour, he could have devised nothing more neatly adapted to spread disease. A cynical English observer once ha- zarded the guess that the subway rush hour starts more disease every day than the Rockefeller Founda- tion ccn prevent in a year. Certain- ly the subway Jam does materially increase sickness and the death rate. Here, then, is an obvious waste, even though it cannot be evaluated ln terms of the cash register. The New York worker arrives at his desk with frayed nerves and weary body. Sooner or later he picks up a. germ or two. That means a day out of the office-two days-a month. There is no way of putting a value on the days thus lost in New York. but the value certainly rune into millions. These are the conditions in a city of eix‘ million. It is not pleasant to IPOGUIIM Whit they may bgcomg u the Population grows toward that i0,000,000 which, it is estimated, we must anticipate. Yet solutions to these conditions are not talking, in moot cases. It ta simply that New York, like other cities. is so used to doing things in its own way that it hoe forgotten to ask whether it is n good way. Being used to graft, it ob- teotl mildly and submits cheerfully. Being ueed in traffic congestion, it grumbles a little and does nothing. Beinl used to waste. it protests but 907s. . nner- r can gsumieeuo‘ which will be ell»- ooo-vooo-o-oooaeeoe-oeoo-o-ooo-eeo-‘os rooaoeooeooooevoo-vowe , E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and‘ "Plate Glass insurance at _ Lowest Rate. flood Strong Stock Companies Agent at Sumnierside, Lloyd Lewis. 0600 OOIOG§O QO&0O§O-OOO44§-. FQ-OOO " Charlottetown 50000000 oo-oeeu in ii C. M. Lamgson 8 Co. 6e Queen Street London, a. 0. i. Ireland Public Auggion Sales Raw Furs Shipping bngo will be furnish- ed without ehorfl h! l to B. '1‘. Holmnll, Lure I5‘ nienlde, P. ll. Li“ nepreeen by Alfred Fraser. Inc. n: Fifth Avenue New York. N. Y. “iiIi-lI-IB-fl Help Check The Influenza ' Toke time by the rmlooli nnd etnrt ilvo troatmeni Al‘ ONCE. Bight now while FLU is prevalent every llfl‘ caution ehonld be ilk!!!» therefore procure immediate" o Box of . Mac's" Cold Tablet! u“ _ A Bottle of Mada Syrup of Tar m . Cod Liver 0i!