| 1. l1, l ' the Liberal party." monsoon” . iliililtiilliiiiliiNl lliliiilliii Notes By The Way lHi Wan-w. can: l. mun. vuc-rmum-a. n. aunts. loudly-Lint. Ull- D. A. Incline: D. l. 0. like: All Inlljplbi. B. Blrlltl. Auoeieta Billion-D. I. Olrrln. ‘ FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1927 MR. SAUNDERS’ SINCERITY. lWONI, prohibition, and are declar- 11111 ‘he wmpaig“ 110w mmmgjto perditiun! Lille up the men and 1° a dose- 1° “hock 11w “11411318121! ivomcll on both sides of the ques- of the Gospel" who are Svlflllrlllll; llolh lmllllcally “ml morally‘ undfllfe. There is ill the Government's 311101111 115 111 Wesem" but no doubt‘ see how they compare with eacll the greatest shock has been to omen Are Premler sléwml and 111111 111111 11191’ ‘m’ assocmtcd 1“ the men behind him luore likely [Glam] me splendid recflfd [hey have their strenuous labor of love, Willi be u" the mad m perdlllon mm; a 1111111’ 111111 111° 193d“ o! a partyjhir. Saunders and those who stand; “'11” are “P1111115- nm m1 11101111111‘ by him? Think it over ill terms of 11°11 o1 1e1"1'e1'a11°e' but “new “torlpraclicai common sense and votel iaccordingly. l Mr. A. C. Saunders, Liberal lead- er, explains filliy, ill his letter that he was prepared u, allow as hi; OUT-HERODING HEROD l policy either Government Control or Prohibition, whichever appeared to he thc most likely winner. And 5113 1491,1111" 11“1‘11°1°‘1°d 11°10“ 1“ the ream,“ he glue, i_t., map ll- llle his vitupcrailon ulld -l1ll3l‘iJDl‘0B0lil'l Liberal party is returned to pilwi-r 1111011 111 11115111“- 1-11111 1101 511°11l lhey wlll have al lllelr dlgposul over shrift from thc disgusted elector-l 5150 009 nddlllomll subsidy 599,". ate. l-le slallilcred the Premier, . l l eil by Premier Stcivart ivilicll. he 110 5111111191111 1111‘ 11"- N°11 1191"‘ i—4{-Oi That fircbrallil of local politics,‘ ‘said, will "slmplitflv iilf‘ work." lull nlall, iillii llc slalldcrcd the (luar-j over and above this ile reiterated 1111111- A5 11° 11110 111311911911 111111 1111 and stressed the best interests of 111151110 111$ 1111110115 11111 11° 11111111 lllle --pllrly"_ll<_,l the Provlnffl. ‘lllCfC, hut lost some good Liberal lf anything more danlnablc tllail P01111101; i110 1W0" 11! 111$ 101111111111 tllis hits occurred in the political may 11o 11101111011 1o mvo our to 11111l history of tllis province we have "V1111 1168131110118. 11111)’ not 509“ in what do m‘, "giflnlg. now, at the close of the campaign,‘ tel-é of the‘ Gospel" think oi‘ it? 11s We have-iloue previously, 1111111 what does i; mailm- pmvided we there is not one word of truth ill get the handling of that additional 1118 11119811110115- yearly-Bllhsldy of 5154x090 and 5n mains ill the same hands, has uev-l keep ill power for the next fifteen 01' 110011 11011111001104. 01‘ 110011 01101” ed, by any body, good, hail or in- years? 1 This is Mr. Saunders’ “Prohibi- different. for the summit of any tloll policy" to save the young nlen l11111T01111~ am] women of the province! ‘pressed the views and convictionsi on the question of Ircfornl that it believes to be ill the‘ i Temperance- Oll, for a forty-parson power,‘ To chant thy praise, Hypocrisy! -__{-0->-——-~- 1 HOW WILL IT END? 1 tlve party merely, but of the Prov- ince, and nothing has occurred ill lthe campaign which would indie-l _ ‘1°""1“,aie it had made any mistake. Ratli- exprmimon of 11111111“ Dplnmnxir are we more convinced that ever 35mm" 11101111111101“ 11 has beenlllliit whatever the result of the 19111111 not only (“mum but 1mDOS'lelci:t.i0n, Prohibition is ilollhly 511119 1° 911101” 1119 law" whateveraloomed and can never effectively [Til llO-IJOIICEFIGH or the decision on Saturday next wiliibe enforced‘ Public oplnlon l8 be——and we believe it will mean thelless than ever behlml lL Rem death of Prohibition-one thing islNell Herman in the Public Forum aheady clear’ there Wm be a tmflflatly denies the foolish charge in mentions vote against i_t. With oneiwlllcll ML Lepage to ln_ l sought ha“ °1 more O1 the me“ and w°'1,volve him with the Premier. So ma“ "1 111a P1111111” 1111811131 “hthus ends one of the bltterest poli- where is the prospect of enforcingtlcal camnalgns ln the Island“; the Act? Prohibition is already hlstorl dead. Tho wise course is to buryl ' {0-§_..__. it, allil we trust that this cercmonyl EDITORIAL NOTE will be performed tomorrow. ‘ - tense feeling has throughout the province over ill-j been aroused There was a good many uncon- me 7- Mr. B. W. lnePage lost his iuul- question. The controversy has beonlmr at we Hustle‘) meeting. Ne“ inflamed by the interjection of m” tiling he is giling to inl-lil is it. chalice ligion; animosities have been ell-lm s“ m ‘he legislature‘ gendered, friendships have bet-id broken. (roolzrosiitlohr have 11L10111lvertcil Conservatives in Hi0 lltlili- split; ilnil all, for what? To lllllkltlpllcp whll-ll “pooled M,“ Newcnmhu 1t honour that there ls no why 0111-:lll tin». Sirallii Thoafril last illglit. of the. present moss of lawlessnessi “ml vlce_open or concefllell_ owl Tile [lolitliral situation is rapidly cept by the prohibition which hasl°1e‘“1“5' l T11” “1111 01 111° 1111151111 brought the present summon mm],proilihltlolllsts in now fully under- exlstanca lstood. it is not to ailvnnco tom1 The Liberal party and tho Pl-(yi l10rance or to enforce prohibition, hlbltlon Alllancs declare llleylililt to handle the $160,000 subsidy can enlorce prohlblllolh Prwlsecured by Premier Stewart and bibition has been tried, conscienti-1“1°““‘1“ l“ WW“ 1"‘ 15 1'93"“ ously tried, hy ablcr men titan the when the Em‘ the Guardian pro-Pent Liberal party and by more; has anything to liay, he says it oili- tczziegggzrblttrz: lliuzilezim‘ fifllgltorlaliy and has no occasion to re: they succeed where their predeceli-iwltt m the Public Forum’ Evidently sors failed? What do sane menievery one b}? Mr‘ L. p’ Tank)“ and women mink of n? lknows that; Scrutator" is the nom- lde-guerre of a well-known citizen ‘Prohibition has failed whereverlwho would be the-ml to deny his It. has been attempted for the sim-lldenllly pie and natural reason that it isi I inherently wrong, that human na-l torference with the rights of men vote for the Liberal candidates did? and women. The beat men in Can- not enthuse as the canvasser ad: and in the United States, man thought she should. To hasten her "110 110" 10118111- 101 mmllerance decision she was sharply asked. 111111 '°111'1°1Y- 1111111!’ 01 1110111 llrflhl- “Do you want a rumsbop at your bitioiiiatlt. admit and openly declare door!" The lady replied quietly, that prohibition bu proved e la- "We have one now on each side of monuillo failure, and a fruitful us, and we want to get elim- of lonroe of lnvlellinesa and crime. them; so we are voting 1m- My, ml. ilng that men and women who holill MANY things have happened inn-la“ opposlle View are on [he wad‘ l tinned as hopeless. ibest interests, not of the Coaserva-‘Slljll Del. lamllyl A lady who was being solicited 1111111611 dem°ra1lzafl°11 “"11 1115‘ ture revolt! Bsalnst unwarranted in-; by a luiberel prohibltlonist for ill Pllqn w: find both the Govern- mellt and the Opposition with full tickets ill the field and the candi- dates and their supporters natural- ly active in their efforts to hold ‘former supporters ill lille and to gain such new support as they can. ‘That far there is little that is new iin the situation as conlpared with iprevious elections. There is an entire absence of third party candidates, which nlust ‘be regarded as -u satisfactory feat favor the fllle ability and hlgl‘ character of Premier Stewart and ,his colleagues ill tllc (loverllnlelll made during their term of ofiice. unchallenged except ill a few nlill or details and then but feebly, by their opponents. The Opposition is weak In its leader, who is wavering timid and vai-illilting ill temperament llllil has three fillies alnellilieii the platform since he first announced it. Except in regard to Prohibition apparently ileltllcr lie nor ally of his followers appear to have ally idea of wllatiiis ])0ll(‘_\' would lie the day after the election ii he was given power. Mr. Saunders is further handi- cappfid by his record as u lllt‘.lill)f_‘i' of the licli (loverlllucllt party oi 1010-211. They came into power un- iler lilOiillii to i'll|l the (loverllmelil within the revenue then lleltllfcol- lecteil alld ileclarillg it to bc llbllllfl- ultly suflliticllt, allil no sooner were people by imposing ull ullpreceilent- tangible and intangible. Such a gross betrayal of the people was never before known ill done during the i'ull term toward collecting our irluims against the Dominion, those claims being ahan. Such is Mr. Saunders’ background its a record and his party to give away $200,000 of otlr revenue to other uses than it now serves. which can only he restored by new taxation equal to Contrast that record and prospect with the splendid efficiency of the Stewart Government. ill eillclency. lnlcoliecting claims, ill reducing taxes, in keeping promises and lift- ing thc Province out 0f a veritable slough of ilespond! Go back a little further and ask which party got the greatest boon in our history, the Car Ferry, with- ollt which ollr seed potato trade would be but a dream, and the $100,000 new subsidy, and who sav- ed our representation‘ at Ottawa from being reduced to two.mem- hers? Ali these are in the Conser- vative record! The value oi‘ these services counts as ilollars against cents for anythinglilone under Lib- eral rulii for Prince Edward Island since tho twentieth century began. Now let us come to the new qufis- tlun of Provincial control of ille liquor traffic, which has lo some ox- iollt. ilisrupteil political parties. Will anybody venture to flay that prohibition hail not utterly failed? lf ally will any so they cannot mllko good iilnll" words. What said Rev. Mr. Tilylor, Rev. Mr. Raymond and Rov. Mr. (llolltliulnlng llhnllt ill-lop- crntlon when the llcll (lovornlnont WilH ill power? Whltt was there- pnrt, of the Montreal detectives, brought here by our City Council? He. who rims may road the ghastly story, a shame anil a disgrace to our fair city. So bail was it that proilihitionists protested that the report ought not to be printed and that the lid ought not to have been lifted from the reciting cauldron of vlce, immorality and crime. 1 Before the facts were published hundred: of the strongest and most ardent advocates of prohibitioll here had tllrneil their backs upoli as milllonslof the Canadian peo- pie had done at all -earlier date. There came growing demand for a change in the law, rising higher and swelling iollder from day to day. “Something must be done" was the call to save the province from grace. , _ . The Stewart Government res- ponded to the cull. They felt their responsibility for the welfare, the honor and the fair fame of the pro- vlnce of which they were the custo- dians. They did not shirk the urg- ent duty of the hour. They propos- ed a remedial measure~ribt an un- tried remedy,—but one that had ERY near the close of the um- may be safely left to consider and 0118M to he and we believe they are, capable of deciding on which side they ought to cast their voids. THE CI-IARLOTTETOVi/N GUARDIAN ‘ 1 0.1 w. tin-um. SILENT SICKNESS There are two kinds of ailments, ihose that announce themselves by pain, lever, skill eruptions and so lorth, and those that come silently and practically unknown to us. Dr, l. D. Rawiillgs of Springfield, .ii., reminds lls that diseases of the .leart, hloodvcssels, and kidneys, .he recognized illness, and more .ilan 33 per cellt of the total deaths while contagious diseases like in- iection, injuries, cancer, and all the other 205 classified means of death contribute 90 per cellt of the sick- ness, and less than two-thirds of the deaths. - These “sill-slit" sicknesses, are zuore. deadly than those which are lccompilnicil hy nausea, pain, and eruptions. And the reason is quite plain. it .5 simply that if you feel sick at .lle stomach, have pain anywhere in .he body, or break out ill an elup- .ion, you have something you can eel and see, and so you get busy llld fight against it. You call in the iloctor, are kept .-ontributc loss than l0 pcr cent of 1 i L The Fathers of a Confederation. COL. J. H. GRAY’ . orrdouble breaste Col. John l-lalniitnll Gray, who. lcprosenteiiNew Brunswick at the Confederation deliberations, is per- haps the most difficult mull ill for this ilifficuity is that another .lolln Hamilton Gray, who was fllfiil a colonel, attended the Confeder- ation meetings. Tilt! iorlrlcr WiiS two yours the junior oi the lattcr1 but botll lived lo he seventy five ycals oi’ age. The one who lornls 3n bed; if the ailment is contngiousl you are kept away from other poo-l plo- Everytiling is done to give you, ‘very possible chalice to get hotter; ind prevent ally ‘complications from] lrising. ‘ lint ill llcari. disease what happens‘! You go illollg day aftpr day, not, oust-bus of any trouble, because‘ ihcrc is no pain or other ilisturh- llap-E ltlley ill pilwor than they amazed the all“, 1 Perhaps you get out 0i’ breath “'0 1'9111111‘11'eil burden of taxation on everything more easily than you did. but you‘ ‘illflilillil! this to poor condition. l Perhaps you decide to take out ionle life insurance, and ovilry- thing is all right until the urine is examined, which. reveals sugar or; T110 6111111111111 "Pour island history. Nothing was albumen‘ and youlare rejected‘ Similarly the insurance examin- ation reveals high hlood pressure. which remains high even after ro- peatoil examinations. ' i What about this? 1 These “silcnt." illnesses as sintcd The Guardian has Off-land he has now ggmmlttgd hlnjsglf almva are resvonslhle l-m. one thlnllflllfit} was cnlargeil and met again of all deaths, and you UIltEUIISCiOIL-“l ly may be afflicted with one of them. Why take a chalice? (in to your family doctor and get llim to owl-r- llaul you thoroughly. If you have no “sllent" illness, it is worth a grout deal to know it. if you have sonie lloilrf blooilvcs- i-lel or kidney ailment. your doctor can prescribe a mode of life that will‘ "enable" yolfto" "liyo"?nr' many Years lil safely. ‘ Y‘ ‘.4; FOR ‘THE SCRAP BOOK A semen or LITERARY QUOTATIONS FOR BOOK LOVERS 0 FRIDAY, JUNE 24. Midsummer Day. St. John Baptist. Empress Josephine burn. 17113; Dumas. i803. If a man thinks about his physi- cal or moral condition, he generally finds that he is lib-Goethe. SEA-CHANGE. "(loneys and guilics all‘ nil the birds o’ the sea, They ain't. no birds, not rcnily," ' said lliliy the Ilanc. "Not mollies, nor guliicll, nor gun- eyi-l, at all," said llc. “But, simply thc sperritli of mar- iners living again. “'l'llonl birds goill‘ lllillin‘ is nothlll’ but, liouli-i o‘ the ilrilwlloil, Souls o’ thc iirowncil all’ the kick- ed its are ucvor no more; All‘ that tilore haughty old ulbut- ross cruisill‘ around, Belike he's Admiral Nelson or Admiral‘ Noah. “An‘ lnerrykx the life tlloy are liv- ing. They settle and iiip, They fishes, they never stands watches, they wagg-le their wings; When a ship comes by, they fly to look at the ship, ' To see how the nowailay‘ marin- ' crs manages things. "When freezing aloft in a sum-tor, l tell you I wish- (Thougnmaybe it ain't like a Christian)——-l wish lcould be, A haughty old coppe -bollnd albat- ross dipping for fish And coming it proud over all o‘ . the birds o’ the sea." —Jobrl Mansfield. on the adoption of their plan by the people of the Province. Both their coilrage and their sincerity were attested by that action. We will not here gchnraetcrlzo the election campaign. Intelligent electors who have heard and read what has been littered and stated decide upon their verdict. The)‘ been tested and approved by the We have a good, honest, capable Our political problbitionistu, bow- Lure and Dr. McMillan." And the 1 ever, still stint to fetish, thecanvauer departed. 810B! mfllflfliy 0f the Canadian Government. faithful to its promis- 900918- Th0)’ did fllvlflv T119)’ es. sincerely desirous to promote the subject of this sketch was lll favor of Confcilcriltioll“and tllc other, who was prilnc nllllistcr of Prince lCilwaril lslullil, was not. Fortulliltcly tllcy cllilsc different LfOFllOPS of the i-zlrtll as a place of birth. The J. ll. (lray who replcs- clltetl New llrilllsivlclt was horn ill the island of llorluuilzl ill the your ltili i. ilc was sent up to Nova Scu- tia to he educated illld took up tile s lliiy oi‘ thc lilW. ll scttlild (l(l\\'li ill S1. John, N. IL, and became so res- pected and honoroil ill n icw years llillbhf‘ was elected to represent the city of his ililoptioll ill the Livgisliltllre ill i850. lie held tliutl scat for seventeen ycilrs. During a' portion of this lcugtlly service he llffltlfl as the Attorney-General for New Brunswick. When the iluestiilll oi“ a unloll be- UVQPII tile lnaritinli: cilluuies wits ilelilleratod ill Cllarlottetilivll ill ltltli he ivils there to represent New lirullsyvicli. Wilt-u that confor- See this line. urday. 36 t0 44. ill a few weeks zlfiorurarils at Que- bec he was also present. Ilc was one of tile few Fathers of Confed- eration who. undertook to write iiowll ill a cool "and unprejudiced lllallller, tile story of those interest- ing meetings. ln the year 1872 he published in ’l‘orinlto a hook cntlt; led “Confederation; or the history of politics and parliament. lll Call- ada. from the conference at Quebec in I-SS-i-l-to-the admission of British Columbia ill 187i." it was rather lengtlly titli- hilt the little book illf- fered greatly from tile heated press ' reports of the period between 186i and 1867. l-le was olecieil to represent. the City of St. John in the first itlficral parliament and acted as chairman of the committee of supply. Ho was appointed a judge of the Supreme court of British Columbia in 1Sl2 and held that appointment ulltll his death seventeen years efterwaril. Col. Gray was ivory enthusiastic over Military’ matters. lie gave a great deal of time and attention to the volunteer militia of New Bruns- wick. ln 1854 he took over the command of the Queen's Rangers of that colony- u O-O-Q 4-9- Daily Selections V. F0 R (l ua riliiln lteililcrs Q'Q+Q QQ§Q‘Q'QQQQ _ June -24, 1927 ‘i .-\ GREAT PlfAYElit~iltlt not thcln that wait on thee, t) Lord God oi hosts, be ashamed for my l-lukg; let not those that seek .lleu he cull- foulliled for my sake, 0 tlod of .15. rael. Psalm 69:6. PItAYElRr-Kocp us, 0 Lord, as the apple of thine eye tliut we may never bring shame to thy llalne. IF TO BE CLEVER if to be clever means that l must sneer At every honest effort to be good, Must tear to pieces all the brave V _ This week-end, Friday more Suits at $15. - ‘Those Suits are picked from.regjular-sfocklfislow-sellers we are willing to take a loss 0n. t0 010111‘ $15; _. - , _ . ‘L 1 , ithe St- George's \ l .. Qiflhe Haberdashery"- Smart New $15. up d models. We got _a. spec and will pass it along. $18, in many new patterns. can be supplied for $4.50 more. We are showing many new patterns Craft special at $25. Confederation And _ After Sixty Years Of Progress .,,- ....., . smacks. rears as; 11011111 Few Canadians thrilled, tile world quite indifferent. when the Arctic Archipelago was added to the Dom- in’on by llnperlnl Parliament in 18- 80. Yet tbiis was the culmina- tion of a history as thrilling as any chapter in the exploration of "the were greatly unknown world. Since Frobsher in, the days of Queen Elizabeth made the first bClilfl ilash into the Arctic, carrying Cross where 11D flag had even been seen-before. British ships and‘ ritisb liven hail been lavished on eroic attempts _to discover the secrets of iths norms-partly in the blope of find- 1113 a new sea route in; commerce from the Atlantilc to the Pacific, revere . :__{o->—-—— , l) 11- f Allil scorn Wllllll. hint clearly unclcr- ($51,219:; ‘nlntéllglellgrfillxglniéslillnégx ouoonoowwowoeeeea4o 11100112 ledge oi‘ tho globe he lives on. 1 if only what is rottcll can be art, Lord, keep me from the sill of being smart! Household Scrapbook ll to ‘he clover menus tllut. l must By‘ ROBERTA LEE 0444-0004944" vnwo woo» - t Worn Shoe Lining 1B [will disdain " Mill-it. serve tho passions lf the shoe lining has worn ill pocket-s gal“; pluccs, which ot‘ course wears i-llt tho stocking very quickly, paste strips of adhesive iapc over the worn places, heart, smart} _ ' Kitchen Lubricant sea . Keep u jar of glyccriuc ill thc kitchen for titling the fooil chop- per, egg beater, and other utensils. lt is a lubricant that will not affect the taste of the food. that real, lie and sfsal ' _ Presenvlng the Umbrella lf the ribs of an unlbroliu urd apart rubbed with vasollnc, it will pro- vent‘ rust from loosening and fole- ing out the small wlreg, - smart. §$¢¢l lniiumi LESSONS 11v ENGLISH Iy W. l... Gordon store respect for law and order. Give it your support, and at tho same time resent the lntermedilling of outsiders in our provincial af- fairs. WORiDB OFTEN ~_ MISUSED: - Don't say "1 endorse your conduct." Say "I. approve of your conduct." OFTEN‘ MIBDRDNOUNOED: in,- dilputably. Accent the "dis," not the up“? - . "MDBS-PEULED: ion; one one l. SYNONYMB: oration; address, speech, sermon, discourse, dissert- ation, . WORD STU-DY: "Use a word three time! Ind n is yours." net us‘ increase our vocabulary by muster- ing one word each day. Today's word: i INATE; not lei.- tled or fixed; indefinite. VOPIIIll- I l. ‘Kli)l\ilY_ ,1 ‘i ‘Hr f; '1“ (‘H U‘l1A\Y T r. rllll _. t l ._Yl;51 courageously stoked their existence the welfare of the people and to re- . l- \ i - jest. - At all that men hold sacred, and 'l‘llo simple teachings tolling what i'or my ll’ ilrllllauce menus all utter hick of Lord, save mo from the sill of llulllg All that is base and lilo and call And finding honor, swear it. cannot Becaudlae I've lknown‘ some mon to if wit must. tear ‘all gentle worth Lord, save me from the sin of being —-1Edgar A. Gilnst, Til-Bits. l ----<o>---- _ n!“ given all indetjerniliinte jlflfllzlnrlgaflnng‘ wines-eon m. Si“ “u” ' 1 1,. " ' Olilor nations at times had join- ed in the search. but none with llhylhihg like the persistent enter- prise ot‘ our empire. It was en- tirely natural. then, that the new 1)01h111l0n let Canada. entrusted with the exercise of British author- iity over the northern half of this continent, should lbs given respon- "siifiity ulsisc-for ‘the islands be. llwflflli us and thc-P0le.——many of them almost touching Canadian silorcs. The responaibl-l y was not light. Our new island l. ritory covers at. least 1550.000 square miles-lmlore ‘GBrmhhy-ahil no part of it. in easily accessible. But. for many years the Federal Government has been exploring it by sea and com- pleting the establishment of law and larder where no civilized au-tb- orlty was known Ibefore. Every year a ship iii sent. north to patrol the islands, carrying gup- nllcs for the various Government poets. establishing new posts where ailvisalble, a-nil amulet- 1118 a Erea-t boily of infor atiop as to the nature and resources of libs and "and the condition! of naviga- tion, which vary immensely ‘from season to season, t‘- ugllout the Arctic- is looked forwarillto ‘with grad/c de- light by the libkilno, who are ea. tertained on board with" moving Pictures and receive medical attain Royal Caliodllll _ Mounted not - 111 11110180 '0! these poetmbave not. only pm etely. woll_ the confid- enicq of the people but ‘allow/p iell their traditional courage and enfor- Prise on long pwtwll, covering ton one occasion 2.000 united by dog- team in the dead of winter. l A, tLmat summer a new post m: established on Beebe Peninsula, llnlalllwalylupdtbe gut mulla- 0 I11. . all co 8 or ' ' 11m 110ml than m 1:14:21; Dost. in noniihera Greenland on the at large was, _ than twice the size of France or if to be clcvermoaus that l must The yearly visit of a ship '1 tilion from the ship's doctor. The 9i? ' m, . f. I17‘. ':i-. and Saturdayliwi-jfclear out Extra Value Tweed , suit. $118. ' ‘$18 will buy you a very smart tweed suit in either single ial buy onthis line, Extra pants ,_ _ j _ l ‘l Q O 2:412:11". 1;i:l1i.“.£;.'.i .'.-.';i?..l Fashion-Craft Suits $25. in our Fashion- Every suit is beautifully tailored, and designed by the best clothing house-in Canada. ~ ‘ Regular stock values, $27.50. Special for week-end, $25. Guaranteed Blue, Suits“ $29. $29 will buy a. Guaranteed Blue Suit, here Friday and Sat- You have your choice of either single or double breast- ed models. Wool linings. A well tailored suit worth $35, and good value at the price. Friday and Saturday,’$2_9. ' Sizes Men’s Tweed Raincoat; $81.50 Henderson 8i Cudmore 101 GRAFTON STREET. l L“ L ticns; and Duudas ‘Harbour on DEVIGII ‘island between Ellesmere,‘ and Baffin. Each of these has it". post office as wellas a police ate-i tion, and that on Beebe ‘Peninsula is the mo-st northerly post office‘ Ellie iiluijllen-t for the reception of messages fun-m the rest of Gaul‘ ada. _ There is abundance of game» walrus, seal,’ and Wildfowl-swan wt the most northerly "post; herds or musk ox are founii grazin! 0150' where; and retool is known w be one of the mineral resources of Franklin District-tile name sivelr tothe wh l-e archipelago ill ilionourl- ni me grezt explorer who lies there’ in an. unknown grave- ' Great additions to Our informa- blon as to ‘the country and its in); lbabitan-l-s are expected from the m1- presenta-tive loif the iitlinea and in? dian Departments who remained‘ on Baffin banq when last year's! expedition returned. -- -_~.—w; w“ i. T0 Be Assistant‘ ~ Commissioner 0f Customs . q Guardian) i » Yuri: 2fl--—<C-11’-1B1111'- who has been chief executive 8i‘. sistant in the Dei1111'1111°111- 01 (“"1 NYm8\f0i' -_overil_l YBBTB- 11" ‘b831, tilromoted to the P09111011 01 as“ ' ant commissioner of customs. Mr- lBlair ‘ls a native of Ontario Cowl and after graduatillz 110111 ‘O55 ll“- Lllwil practiced law in Bowmanvllg where lie was in partnershll? W in the late one- 81111911011’ Kn n. @1109 he camp to Ottawa as dell‘; mental sollciter under 111011- 2‘; Patterson" Mr» Blair also ilecom _ a member of the Board of C11“- toms- ' i ~ (i_- filial-a Time i! __ Are Y0tl".R¢i8(1¥1 its-ii... nil! wtiulm you are an amateur or ext1°1'1°"°' ' ed photogrlpllifi yo" "1"" "tlnvnm ‘good; to work wlth- _ spool-Gamer: and hill‘ 01'" ' ' gupflhm". u‘ . .. .. . Willi. - =ENSIGN Tilebolfen the vilarkot. W‘ 3 have tticnl at priell rltllllll r from. - - “ $25,601.10 $20-11" ‘hm look-mi 09inch. shore of jump 305ml; ~tlio older posts mi at 6PM: Hal- hour. 11a the milieu: cox-non o: 01¢ awe a t inland (it 01.500. 11111611 lions); Pond inlet. ind rill 11-11119. IIM-Jlll i lum- m _ Olful - i i i UNE‘ 24, 1927 miliieioriarld. . Every statiinr ha|1_.