lmrrirowu cuinnum flnkyl .444 t l . ,. ,t_vm n4- ,_ . ’Idvance) hustle‘ ln“1"auani and Talked lllalaa ' . fir-L": i out fir‘; “t Iaralaa ‘Della ylgaananl mm as.“ u" "I! d» advance-i av-llu-n-u. V. Cheater l. McLure. Yloe-Prenlcleab-J. B. Burnett. eeeli-iary-Lliui‘. Col. u. a. llurlilnnon, n s.‘o. l‘! wager-A. ll. Burnett Aaaovluln Bullion-l). K. Carri; "lqvioivoay, MAY 2o, 1929 .'.~.~1 Notes By The Way The political tattle in the Mother Country as the day of dccLlon on May 30 draws ‘ .".: gfJl-‘i more ln- tense. But w ioss every one o! the 615 seats contained by party can- didates and ail the great lsadcrs pm- ferslng confidence the ‘ 1...". o.‘ c.t'ncr cnc of 11cm cu a clear nzahriiy ovr: the 0111.. t o are ex- y slim, is i. now sands there arc L00 seats in which three-corner- Vvalcs is the scene of a hot contest ngdy gxcgflliily criccided, that thB _‘ __ ladverse balance-now in excesspf The opportuynitylfor the people of C111.000.003—is increasing, and that Charlottetown, and indeed of tho, changes in the American tariff, cai- Province, when: ln its entirety'culatecl to still further reduce im- Haydn’; grangrératorio “The Crua- por.s from Australia, will mean the tion" WhlCh\vhI!»<l'ltld a tiremier diversicn of Australian trade from. place in the music -world since i; ‘the United Statcs to othcrcountries. production in i797, is one of allifc- , The statement in this regard is quite ime. Passages from this magnificent | definite and precise. The Ausralian o composition am been heard by many ncte contains a clear analysis oi pre- ‘ cfour readers, but few have ‘and the: scnt trade conditions, and thcn says: ' . privilege of hearing the complete or-I ‘ie Australian Government l8 . ., . . , i ‘ desirous that 111M113"! Pill-liable “Ono” The we‘ l t‘ UM“ mtqand amicable trade relations be- the way of rendition are naturally; tween the two countricsdshalltge ' _. ' s n n ai aim» . At e "w" “"1 1"’ h“ ‘my be” M“ ‘he fffifrlofiifl. 3th: cdmgetent authorit- aid of talent from abroad that it has , ics oi the United Saves will readily ‘ npprcciatv that, if further restric- tions be placed on Australian trade been attempted even in the largurl centres. wrnbincd of‘ by tarilf inc: srs ‘affecting ‘Ag-s- . . . ,, . .._ trciicn prcduc . i is lllevtfl 0 “mm, cfluich “m: we 133mm ‘ that fcclini; scams; American rrade Church of this city, have been prac- predominance will grow, Tho Cov- llClng cnIthLs production for thc pas: , M4»- >AJ Ci‘ crnmcnt cf the Commonwealth - th cfore fears tha; increasing ‘four monllls Wider the 13049751110 01' i pressure will tend to divert Austral- ' .. _- 3;: 9 5p um trado from the United Stale-s Profescr ‘Retainer, and a pub r n ‘O British counmes and to foreign tim 0f ‘lTlie CIT iin" 1Y1 il-i Wm" countries with whom the Com- plete form will be give,‘ on Tuesdav monwealth has favorable trade re- “ l ' ' laticns." evening in "rrinityw Utwcd Church. Miss Robzrta Spencer will be the or- ganlst, with- Professor Flctclicr dir- ecting. ' ‘The main object oi the pcrforni- ance is {Io develop local talrnt and raise the stimdard of in elation by giving our ciLizcns an op- Comnicnting on the above state- : rncnt, the Montreal Gazette suggests ‘tltat the Government of Australia, 1 believes in plain-speaking, probably lyccatlse its members have acquired pa, flppm , m. habit oi‘ straight-thinking. ‘The 7 Canadian Government, whose case is portunity of? hearing what has boon ""7 “man m°r° Serum m subsmnce described as oLthc greatest chor- 1 “ml by mpncalion than L‘ the Ans‘ l] produmcm of an time‘ In this. vralian case, talks of protecting tho mutfimqmflfl Haydn‘ the massed ‘ interests of Canada "uiext session;- choir of seventy voices, composed en- 5° ‘a? as the Canada“ people a" tirely of local singers, will be heard I “warm m’ “rm” “w” h“ been with magnificent effect. The fact that I served “mm me United states‘ and the cl set-s, s. well as rm- director it ntov be argued that I10 fvYmfll “Oi- ‘nd oléigxét“ fire‘ aim“: than. servms ‘ ice is necessary; but a definite and qhqxu; ‘b: heme in mmd‘ ‘. straightforward statement of policy‘ xtt$kgguntka an,“ dc: c; mm l is something to- w-nich the people of _wmk‘_-.mu‘-hie expmsg m pumhtwm; . Canada are entitled, and it would mummkcorcs‘ em‘ m5 mm comm. serve the addhlonal purpose of in- emmi-i-{Jrué 5mm aimyim, f3;- formlng the United States Govern- er-‘nrcciing these (‘Xpcns- latent of Canada's intentions. The a h} ‘dxonizirds sup g both United States Government con- choirs z... "Additional ‘music. . wirahiv. might be interested menu“ occupied m "nan-m; m9 in knowing that the Canadian ‘ oompllfréoratoriods an hour and a ' Government considered such action half. "lftlis thus considerably shorter to be necessary in the interest of Can- than ,l:‘h;:_"‘l\ic.‘s'siah" and some ozlicr ‘ acla, as understood by M1”- Klfl; 81111 (amiliargprqductions, ‘ his associates. It would not be retalia- Thqmgéoprio bsgim writ!) the dawn ‘ tiou: because lvetaliation implies an of creation and the establishment oi_ attitude ‘of unfriendllnes, and Mr. order out of chaos, the sun, moon and , King; has made it abundantly clear stars bcinlg relegated to tlzcir rcspcc- ‘ that the relations between Ottawa i... i. . . , five ‘Jparg two opens with and Washingmn are of the most am- tha cragtipnpof plant, bird and ani- ‘ iccble kind. At the same time, the ma] lifg-rfiihe latlcr secilon oi part Washington Governmeyt has made it two and all oi part thrcc deal with » equally clear that this internation- the creation! ‘of Mun, the concluding l Bl accord has noihlng to do with the H‘ n devoted to Lion's ' businecs of tariff revision and trade l The [nXL from ‘ regulation. It ls superior, for example m; suhjlgaeihpglnnlng to the majcs- I Lo the adversetrade balance of $350,- tlc choruses oi praise which conclude 000,000 and more which represents the oratorio, is Scriptural throughout. the difference between what the Do- n t; Lhg language cf the minicn sells in the United States and 31hr; get tornajestic music, I wiict .he Unized States sells in Can- Profaam: Elicia-char, who is hintsclf i ada, Moreover, the Unitcd States g cumpdder ‘All! musician of a llf§l1'—ln the most friendly spirit imagin- ofder, and who has for a number of able-is raising the duties against a yam-a bgenfaflleader ln the musical ‘ number of impcrrtcnt Canadian pro- m? °lr:l'llF-4?§9\'31l'~‘@. Plobly, dcscrves there appears to be no the thanks and support oi our peo- ple. In this great undertaking, the ducts, and I icascn why the Government, prompt- ‘ed by the same delicate sense of in- mlmbala of Jboth church choirs vjho- iernatlonal propriety, should not fur- ‘ are lftlllialtork for the love 0f "- I iher exemplify its friendliness by tak- also daervewrnuchlcredit. If we are m; a. leaf out of the Washington qqhave musical talent developed in ‘ book; it would be flattery in the high- tlila ab; V: Iwlt 1911"! W 599W" est form, and a very good thing for the eDrbMf-Wbwe will’ "9 leudl"! "the Dominion besides. along this line, and no better oppor- flnjty-ggulld‘ afforded for showing our appreclatiaiu.t_han by. aiiendin; mmdaynight‘: performance. for». ~ EDITORIAL NOTES The cordial welcome extended t0 ccsrs. Burnaby and MacPbce on their arrival Saturday afternoon aug- urs a large attendance at tonight's meeting in the Lszisliiiive ohamber. where they will speak on matters of great economic importance to this s,‘ l Ausgrcgipih rnorasrs '1 l ‘lhalitlmrnent of Australia has Oahu Grit-minty attitude oi business tdwaralllieularlfl relations be- and the United Qflflggpmlly our southern fellow qmaifliqsapvosuittu filth in at pqlfiyfiif/wntm; to deal wtzh future ' h ' Ihlld letting existing con- ing our business men toils-yin an informal discussion. They will bc at the Premier's office from 9 till 12 crclcck this morning and in the beg- do not ‘dwell upon lslatlve chamber thia afternoon. when ~ R -mpgg|_nbllity of promoting iheywlll be clad to furnish any in‘ Y ‘i i filth * a nation whoaofformaticn or receive any suggestions boapnutmr ~mu n ‘It! Mm citizens situated in developing I? filial-a. Aulkalla eomtfiallta thmm trade with Central Canada. " " lo an opportunity which should - mm i‘: al- be lane advantel! N» , t... . between the three parties, which is dntenslfled by the sufferings of, the ‘unemployed miners. Lloyd George with a son and his daughter Megan, are candidates in the Principality. In tlté House recently dissolved Wales was represented by 12 Liberals, 8 Conservatives and 15 cf the Labor parry, a total of 35. But many of these ceais were held by small ma- ‘ joriiics. ‘ In the Ottawa Parliament the ooh- ,c: day Hon. Harry Stevens, Conser- watiive, Vancouver, scuiidcd a warn-I ting note against excessive expendit- ‘ure on Canadian National Railways. ‘fie rcckcned up the sums now called ‘for, on C. l1. R. account ‘to which ‘the Dominion is commitcd up to {June 1930, These included 227,000,000 ‘direct to which must be added $125,- ‘000000 for the purchase oi other oilways and branches and termin- ‘als at Montreal making a grand tot- nl of $352,000,000, a sum greater than ‘Canada's national dcbt before the ‘war. Hon. Charles Dunning. Minister of RflnWfll-‘s, in his reply to Mr. Stevens ‘claimed that the National Railway ,SYSlem has been the greatest agency under the control of Parliament for Ilhe dEVEIODment of our material re- sources. The Canadian National must "be allowed 2o grow. he said, if Can. iada is to be allowed to grow. I Thus easy it is for a Cabinet Min- " ister to find an excuse for an unpre- ‘ceclented outlay. No country in the ‘World had ever before expended in =PY°P°Pl1°I1 i0 iwbulation so much ‘Imoncy on railways and canal; 55 Canada. had before the King Govern- ‘merit came into power, Some 9g its ‘members admitted that Canada was Wover-railroaded." In the light of isuch facts the expenditures of the Iprcsent Government on railways and icanals ls colossal and reckless. ‘ The!’ are proceeding on the princi- iple that a government is seldom turned out for spending the people's {money with a too lavish hand, This 3ls unfortunately true at time; but; ‘not always. There have bccn notable exceptions and another is now due. Some compcnratlou for the low ‘Iprice of potatoes last year was found iin the increased production of starch. vTliis industry languished while po- tatoes commanded high prices abroad ‘Ibut has-since revived. Ono of the Ilargcs. starch factories in North Am- Ierica, situated at Woodstock, N. B, Ihas resumed operations aficr s. sus- ‘pcnsion of temycars and is expected to manufacture 50 carloads oi starch and potato flour during the balance of the season, which will utilize 400 cnrloads oi potatoes. Two c‘ torlcs are mcriticncd as operating in our own Province, on: at Hunter River, the other at St. Peters. The egg and poultry industry in Canada has advanced‘ remarkably. Whereas in 1927 our import of eggs wcs seven timcs as grcai as our ex- ports, in 1028 they were about equal. Imported eggs come chiefly from exports in that line go chicfly to the advance in BBS production has d..- vciopcd principally in the Maritime Provinces. the Prairie Provinces and British Columbia. " A Canadian Pacific publication lclls ‘ that not long ago one of the Govern- Iment departmen s at Ottawa became Iconvinced that the country was suf- rfering much wastage in the handling 1 of its raw fur pelts through unskill- ful skinning; stretching and drying. Izind that millions of dollars were be- Eing lost yearly ln this way by fur- Ifarmers and trappers. A scrles oi |uscful instructions was thereupon ls- ‘sued. for which there was an enor- ‘inous demand disclosing the need of- _such information. It is hoped that [much benefit may resul". immigrants? Some Danes l" vol mn- ...., some \Vel.s‘.i are coznin; to us- cc I a few. A welcome to them each ‘just Province. They are desirous o! meet- I and all. It makes one think of Queeni ythe beautiful "See Kin-rs Daixqhtci" lfrom over the Sea." and of Lloyd ICeorgc, and of the happy Prime who Ibears the name of Wales. -I1arly pron-option is in the air at Ottawa. Meanwhile important meas- ures are lacing jettisoned and money lvoted a million to the minute. who In: it who coined the phrase a "Dash-away, rplash-away, cpuvl- ithe caala-(ioz-rnrrtoniv’ Good Lib- China and the United States. Our. United Kingdom, with a substantial‘ number to Newfoundland. Canada's-I s‘ -&~-. l i . i r 4 “ . B ’ a lane; W> Ban-x I.’ l ZIET YOUR CHILD'S BACK BE EXAMINED One of the difficulties that faces ‘ ‘ the school physician sometimes la the Iunwillingness of the parents to have Ithelrchlldren remove their clothing‘ 'durins the examination. Now you can readily see that ~whlle throat, nose, eye, and ear con- ditions can be learned, that the phy- sician cannot find out the condition cf heart, lungs, and spinal column. A little curvature of the spine dis- ‘covsrcd at the school age, can, by ‘properly directed exercise, be brought =into a straight line, and the young- sters health and appearance thereby ‘improved. In former days before the use of .\hB X-rays became general, there -v.ere cases of spinal curvature that :secmcd to rcsist all efforts to correct- ithem. Now however the X-ray will show ‘the physician the exact position and Icondition of the bones or the spine. ‘I By pulling the patient’: body as jstraisht as possible and pulling on ‘firms and less by means of weights, Ithe exact shape of the little bones can be seen. If the spinal column can be straightened by extending thg body ‘in ‘"115 Ml’. than the physician knows ‘that by Eymnastlcs and massage he ‘can straighten the §plne and femgvg the curvature, Bower/eras Dr. K. Gangele points out. no mater how severe the con- diticn, that m where there is this un- eveness of one of the bones, the cur- vature can be prevented from be- wmlfls worse by continued gymngg. ‘Itlcs, massage, and supporting apper- [atus . So give permission to your young- ster to allow the school physician m examine the spinal column with the clothes off. If the spine a straight, so much the better. If there is a curvature the treatment, begun ln the school “W- Wi" Mt only straighten the tspine if it Ls a simple curvature, but ‘even with the revere type the child {Wm b5 5° hfillied that the curvature will be scarcely noticeable. Further, if treatment is neglected PM“ the Youngster- is nearing m“. ‘Ihood or womanhood lt may be jmpog. film‘? l° hell) ‘the condition. and you. ‘villi feel badly to mm]; that you did ‘not do all that was possible for your Iclllld, when treatment would lmve Prevented the deformity, THE ARTIST I love all beauteous things, I seek and adore them; God hath no bcL-tcr prose, And man in his. hasty dsya Is honored for them. trri-n-vrnww m lARDlAW ksmb i~ .. Condensed from ibe t The morale coda i185 V811"! 55ml" "- lslzingly from time to time, and "W" I place to place. I 1t said a Greek thinker, you mako i a heap of all customs somewhere‘ considered sacred and moral, and I then take from it all _, I customs somewhere considered lm- I i pious and immora‘ nothing wll re- $60M"? In expensive 5mm‘ °t dwm" l main, ‘ What 1s it that changes moral ‘i codes? Probably alterations in the. v economic basis of life. There have I {been Iwg profound economic trans,“ " latest SW15- fnrnictlons in history: the passage‘, from hunting to agriculture; and,‘ the passage from agriculture W, industry, These are the pivotal event , in human development on which all i other fundamental processes have turned. And in each instance the moral code which had served one group welfare in the older mode of. life eras found ‘rncladapted, and was slowly transformed under the new regime. Nearly all the races cf man once ‘ lived by pursuing beasts, killing , them, and eating them, often in the raw. Primitive man ate like the modern dog, because he did not I know when his next meal might-I come, Greed was a virtue, necessary to self preservation. Every vice was I once a virtue, and may become i respectable again, just as hatred becomes respectable in war time. So as long as America's resources need I ed exploitation from within ‘and, little protection from without; we fostered the acquisitive impulses 1 and deprecated military nrtues. Now something less of exploitation I seems demanded, and, so they, say, something more of protection; the mere mlllionare is too common to be honored, while our Ktnerals take the air with unaccustomed grandeur There is a supply and demand in morals as well as in goods. The great transition from hunting to tillage created a demands for new virtues, and many old virtues became in the quite routine of the I farm. Industriousness became more> vital than bravery, thrift tr"- desirable than violence, peace nzr profitable than war. Above all. status of woman changed She we- more valuable on the land than T. the hunt, she earned her lzeep a hundredfold, and every child she bore was soon a help far beyond the cost of his ‘food and simple ralment. Motherhood became increasingly t sacred, sterility the supreme disgrace to and large families were pleasing ‘ God. I It was in that rural Milieu that our inherited moral code took form. ‘ On the farm and man matured at am early age-both ln mind and in self I support. At 20 he understood the tasks cf liic as well as he did at 40. so h} married early, almost ns soon I rs nature dccircd. He did not fret I lcnr; in the restraints which the! r moral code placed upon premarital relations; the requirement of contin once sccrrrl reasonable even when, he violated it. - And when the precepts of Christ lanlly chi.“- l1. ‘ ' ' i t zvnziogmivy and ' these scornrd :‘ the pcasantis ‘cltildrcit, and icr and mother -' t1 e"c‘\ r~"1cr tvcr,» establfishcrl ti? n~ gcie lrim m: Lt was right that . '~'t'if"ll'.‘l rcnnrin ln-"ni I too will something And jny in tho tr . Altlio‘ to-nicrroiv it .. Like tlic rmpty word. u! a dvjgmn ilcinc THE LAhID WE LOVE BY FILQNK YEIUII ' SAINT ntatcrvr AVIATION FIELDI Q. Vflzcrc is the Saint Hubert; Aviation Field? ’ ; A. The Saint Hubert Aviation‘ Field is situated a few miles from‘ wiontrcltl and will be the largest gnd best equipped of any in Canada 1t; . chlcf feature is a mooring mast, 220 It. high for the reception of the giant ‘ derlgible now bcizut built in England ' and which is expected to inaugurate it: trans-atinntic seiwlce during the spring of 10211. The field is already | widely uscd for the aeroplane services crpcrislly the mail ones under the Dominion Post Office Department. ltudyard Iiipllng often geta heart- ,ily sick of hearing some of hla own ‘songs and poems. On ,one occasion, iwhilc out walking with a friend. ha Iheard a barrel organ roll out his IBouth African War Ballad. "The IAbsent-iiilnded Beggar," long afbar the whole thing was over. Y-l-lls companion made some com- ‘mcnt. to which the poet replied: ‘"00 you know, If It was not suicide. It'd like in murder the mm who . , wrote that." Irala don't mention such things now. ' mm‘,- uu-u. u‘ ‘h v fer-m the code . Role and more in! a cwrincrit in a c" ‘ury. rural early . l‘.'.O!‘IC>jllll‘,'.Y. "ricy. nieinhvncd and "ran Even who": in ' "tan 1T0 in lfuixcwe nice. ‘o 8"":8l‘, it V323 1",?" v L- industry "vied "n, no‘. lzi factories but ‘n nnircs. fill‘n'; the lICXZZB wi h new significance. Every‘ thing c-c-nsrircd to stvfnryihcn the ties that l-ehl brother to bicthci‘. Tbcn facts-ix: appeared. Mm and women and chfdrcn bczan lo leave - home and famiiv, authority and ‘ ivnlty u» work as individuals. ln-‘I dividually paid, in dismal shelters: sheltering machines. Cities grew; . and men fought a ills-and death struggle in dark und' filthy shops. Menlll mfltllflly came much later than on the farm, At 20, in a modern city, a man is still a boy lh the face of a changing and intricate world: at 40 perhaps. he appr chea matur. ity of mind. Thus adolescence lengthened. and a vast extension of education became a necessity t adjust the brain to the new tasks 6f nvodcrn life. At once the passage from tillage to iii-dust y began to effect he mmiri behavior of mankind. Economic nta-turity came almost aa late u mental maturity: only in the manual working class was a lad self-support inaandreafltomarr! ‘attheaae o! Ii. Above thola rank: the ago of aclf-aufflolency machinist-with may rile in luxury and blue-in f-hl professions aliove all. And man. bummed as item bum. an wan - , I , . , . i 4 - . I Oat"; Changing Morals ‘w ‘sex. ‘early as before, ec-cncmlc 1 reasonable under variable of ‘ . . .16 soul than from '1’ Forum-Will Bur-ant n shorn of all her old functions by t the developments of factories and machines. In a home now denuded of significance and work, she was ‘ 5 bgx-iutlful parasite-nothing more. 1 If, to avoid this absence of func- ‘ ticn she becomes a mother, the dif- fculties were increased: Mcihcr hood nurresflcnd hospitals. if she bore ‘ many children, so much the worse. ‘ They would have to be edumiodi they would have to bc clothed in the ‘ By the time they I earned an income, they would "W? ilcd from parental authority t» the freedom of the irresponsible indiv- idual life. ' 1 so the city offered every discoui- . agement to marriage, while it FW- " xided every stimulus and facility fun Erotic dovelopntent c (in men: later- That restraint ilpCii ‘ drsire which had been fca JlC rnri ' the a", ‘l regime, seemed now a difficult unnatumi thing in an li1il,l'$ civilization that has [Eoctp-oiicri mar- | tinge, for- men, even to the 30th _vcnr. Inevltably the flesh began to rcbcL Chastity, which hcd bccn a virtue became a Jolie. Modesty disappcrsrcd. It is in terms of this grcat change from farms and homes to factories and city streets that we must under- stand the generation that so boister- ously replaces us. Their lives and problems are new and dlITCYBIli< The Industrial Revolution ‘ transforms their customs, their garb, their work, their religion, and their morals. We stand between‘ two worlds~0nc dead, the other hardly born; and our fate is chaos for a generation. ‘We are conscious that the morality bf restraint and fear has lost its nod upon men, and we must look for a natural moral code that shall rcst j Ibcnds cf the air. Once trade and morality beceuil’ we have no inter. ‘common interests merged tribes in- national order. But the litter-datum. “.0 ‘nzutunl interests slowly weave na JGllS into vast international groups, land provide the basis for an inter- ‘rationul morality in which all the Iworld will agree not enough. policeman; we have no international ‘test of truth. Vinson you wish to send money away- —to pay an out-ol-town account, -—to a relative or friend, I -—to pay for goods from an amide fill --for any purpose, ‘ call at any Branch of this Bank and aecurea DraIt for the amount. Sold “over the counter,” with-no delay or formality, Bank oi Nova Sootia drafts olier a safe ancl convenient method of son ' v money away. ' THE BANK 0F NOVA SCOTIA ESTABLISHED M33 . ESTABLXSXXEIJ 1832 Capital $10,000,000 Reserve $20,000,000 Total Assets over $270,000,000 \\'Itl\ lhn oltjn-t n! giving the heat puanlhla aervlra to our Illflllml vuaiolurra the Euntrrn fiuprrvlnnfla lnparttnona la located in Saint Julia, N. B. Now commerce and cl order visibly comes; and when Y- lat last it is organized it will be per mlssable to be loyal to humanity and to rise in morals to that broad perspective, that-sense of the wliolu that patriotism is which‘ la the secret of the good lift Consicnce follows the n35 it is the guide to beauty and ti“ itcticns. upon intelligence rather than fear. I We are compelled, despite Ourselves. to be philosophers_to build for our- selves a system of life and thought that shall be consistent with itself and with the experience and demands ‘ Bf our time. Where shall we find a mor- l code that shall accord Wlllkllll! ' ‘ranged conditions of our lives, and ,ci. lift us up, as the old ccclcs l'i'i>d ‘ men, to gentleness, decency, inrxlcsty nobility, honor, chivalry and love? The natural and inevitable basis ‘ of morality is the cooperation of tho part with the whole. 1*.I-.n~r.lity"can ‘ never be defined in iernts cf tho‘ individual; we must accept the good of the whole asthe tiltiinulo .ct"itcr- ion by which to judge the behavior ‘ of the part. The test of morality is communifir good. But we are mistaken in be- lieving that the social instincts a" -‘ stronger than the instincts of self. In may be so within thc famiv. where self-sacrifice is natural, but outsidethat little realm the indiv- ' Calgary. Power Q 6% Preferred Shares ‘Ofiioes: . __ "W"! ALGARY Power Company, Twunlo . . . , "aflfa; nfiuted, is one of Canada! $326M" leading electric light and power com- . . . . . . 0pm,, panics. Ir distributes electncity to """"'"'l more than a hundred communities in t: . Alberta, and the output of its hydro- f"“‘"“"’,““" electric plants in 1928 exceeded the 11in: Rli-n: , _ llumflfon combined production of all other Regina ' ' ' ' Emmm generating stations in that province. ("rusty its business is developing rapidly. nrkma — We oFFcr Calgary Power 6% Cumula- Si. Jchvfx, ma. . . . ‘.\_,‘,,.,,,‘., tivc Prcfcrrctl btocl: as a desirable I-"MWHEM- investment. Price 98 and accrued dividend, to yield 6.12%. Descriptive circular upon request. L40 dualisticintpttlses arc in the saddle. as he who runs may sce. Hcroism la heroic precisely because it is so rare. We are not even the most social of species; we Sliiillil llilfl midvrtty bctwecit the indiviziualicnv I of the Jungle and the sociaiirmi of ' Royal Securities Corporation Limited Riley Building, Charlottetown Telephone 822 the ants. The best we ‘can my is that the scrrlal instincts, v-lwinh “rm to be more recent in origin t‘ those of competition and c... huiciw are being slowly strengthened by the_gro\ving survival valuc cf coop. ', wc should rfrfi“ I'm‘. ilic icn in whi;h mar _\' cou- .e loss from the grnuih cf tho wiclcnirr: of economic ' life, I Tiic out r-i ' rcctroc c at. . cccro, The lvn c with u ich llic S B1. ucces tics fl"- : ‘part must linrnwnizc to be savrri bo- mn-ics greater as the \\‘.'\"l(‘l ' unltlcs by i. Province of Nova Scotia 30-Year 5% Bonds These bonds constitute a direct obligation of the province and a charge on all its revenues and funds. Principal and intereat _ayable in Unite States or Cana tan funds. Denominations, $1000 each. Price: 100 and accrued interest Circular on rcquuf One of the bcsi prcvontaiivcs known for ‘,--_ SMUT or RUST on GRAIN J "qi-iluvr ltlflp, Bummer Rh. flummeraltle. I‘. 0. Bax T" i‘..'I.'.'l.'.’Ii'§RS.' illaufrzul Sim-l Ext/imp, Tamara Slur‘ far/range, illomrcal Curb Mariel. Winn)!‘ 6mm Excbunge, Cbir-zgo Board of Trafa- FORMALIN A cheap but thoroughly cficci- Ive remedy. Grain growers would he wise lo act promptly, In order to have SEED pro- perly treated before sowing, One plat to every 40 galltns of water. Fun directions liven with every order. For bale at The 2 Macs , nnuostronu HI Great George Street ‘All lllll 0n! an Given Prompt _ Attention, r Qoivpovooooooooeevoocooooeos ooeiovoo ’. Agent at Summer-side, Lloyd ‘Lewis ‘Qvoooo-oo-ooovovvvoo-v Give ovvro-vv-voev v ll" 000010 oovvv"' a. BROVV, _ 140 Richmond St, Charlottetown Fire. Life, Accident, Sickness and I Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. ' ‘ Good StrongSiock (bmpanlet. no, -9oneonnnoooeuoonwobeppnooevoev"”“