.c',3~= u 8§L4fiifi§i B§§ Q1; "I Hm-u-vwmavnrvnhi-azrn , would be necessary to ptit the plans into effect PAGE FOUR lite Uharlottetoivn Guardian IaLulO I. I. l er measure of security, as tneiitioned before, for Canada's wage earner. Greatei stability and more consistent buying power should follow. Will it work out as expected? ls (Ianada ready for it? 'l‘hese questions are being ztsketl. That it has worked out satisfactorily in tire-at Britain is pointed to by advocates as a success- ftil precedent. Plillllnlll l-lOIlL-Ovl. W Ullollol I. Vino-Practical J. ll Burnett. I. J. l- ltlltov unil ulllllllll] lllroelor J. B. llllrlllll. flet-retary Llnill Col D A. Iuefllunou l). l. 0. Auueluto lllllturl lfrniili Wullsn and ll. K. Clllrll llorulng Dull; (Iounilvd llllfl). “.00 on your tlo udvunnct tllllvurnd to Olly. 81.00 pa: your tlu uilvuncr) mulled to l’. B. lululll. Q5410 pa: year tin advance) "Ill"! l" Clnldl ""5 U- 5 ruizsnav. ivoviiimiuu 30:13!“ Saint Andrew's Day In €old figures On a dollars-zind-cents basis it will be dif- "Ttitiights the Day" so far as the celebra-i ficult to justify any action on the part of the tioii of the zinnivi-rsary- of 5t. Andrew by the King Government iii swapping our Empire pre- Caletloniati Club is concerned. Reference has fcrences for another United States agreement- already been made to the programme, which " at least in so far as one can judge from the avail. promises to lllL"<l>lll'L‘ up in every ivay tu the high i able statistics. Canada's trade with the Mother- standztrds oi previous years. | land saved her in the depression. The favor. Scotsiiien are prvliy tmaiiimoiis as to the glories ' able balance was stibstzintial even in the years of their country", and they rightly regard thcm- of greatest depression: It is more than $100,000,- si-lvcs as being best qualified to speak on this , 000 annually now. By way Of_COllll'Z\Sf, the subject. Thcy' are inclined to regard condescentl- trade with the United States. despite the busi- iugly the most fluttering tributes from the bzis- ness recovery of the past two years to assist it. senzich; bitt there are exceptions to every rule i yields a favorable balance of only $40.o00,0o0 .1 and in tliis cast‘ we fccl that the following com- _vcar. ls it good business to “swap" a tradi- nicnt by liarl llaldwiti is worthy of quotation. yielding a surplus of $200,000,000 for one yiold. awn on Saint .\ntlrc\v's Day: ing a surplus of only $40,000,000, "if vou ask an Tluglisltman what he thinks 0f Scotland iii contradistinctititi to what comes in _. his mind when he thinks of England. we think I‘ Edll0f|3| NOIES J 3f the hcatlicr and the moors, and we see your northcry countnv as we should see it in juiie, Saint Andrew. ihlazi‘ with the glory of the broom. Those are * * * * ;he pictures that rise in our minds, and if I johathan Swift burn this dafe i767, and were asked what represents the soul of Scotland Princess hlariiia i906. l could not intsiver better than by the reply which * * * it ivas giien nizin_v ycars zigo to a relative of mine Simimersitle Fox Educational Vice-k is now in Xcw Zcidtintl by an old Scottish farmer. My the attraction. relative a-ltt-tl him how long the traditions that * it * * ytitll‘ pt-oplt- bring from home last in a new cotin- \\'hat subsidy has been Zll'l‘i'lllj.{C(l for the svn- try, lllltl ihc old settle-r replied: ‘The porridge dicate who propose building and rtiiiiiiiig ihe and the licatltcr and the Psalms of David last \\'ood lslztnd-Picttiti Car Fcrryq‘ to the third gciicratitiii as a stistt-nance for body * * * * and spirit.’ .\nd may they abide for ever, be- Mi‘. F. G. Spencer, Saint john. .\'.B.. writes c:itisc—zinil I $i\('ill\' as an linglishtiian—\vere the to Mr. L. D. .\liirray specially commending 51-1,; in i..-t_<<_ with his ltistoryg with his tradition, "Blake Adliish", the picture that is to be shown ‘ with his character, there would pass at the same at the PTHICC lidivard next week tinder the air;- tinie from earth a large part 0f the licfilisni 11ml P1695 of the Boy Scouts Association. 1r weiii the roittalicc of the world, those intangible qual- Over big for the ROIHTlZlIlS at 'l‘ruro last week. itics which. perhaps more than anything eise, ' ,,, ,, y, ,,, r "Vibe "5 "1ll’"l’l""°f Plill" li\'"‘E~ hlgh thlnkmg Is joliti Bticlian also among the Plollywvood 511d 31'0"‘ ‘kflk- “pocts"? In his recent address on poetry he cit- ed Shakespeare's songs as the epitome of lvriclil heautyn “Their content is simple-obvious, you like; their music is far front elaborate. But at- tempt to ptit them in any other form and iliey will he either ridiculous or haiial." He took the song which bcgiits “O mistress mine, where are you roaming? O. stay and hear! Your trite lovc's coming." The tlebased l'll)ll)'\\'0O(l version, according to Lord T\\‘(‘C(lSllltlll'! “Huh, Sweetie. where you gicttin’ to? Your big boy’s here and pcttiif you, And he's the guy that rings the bell. Say, kid, quit hikiii’ and sit nice, For shakin’ feet (lon’t ctit no ice, The gnopiest mitt can tell." Hope no llollywvotid promoter will feature this as john Buchaifs latest “poctn.” v >i< >l< >l< t “Rather Unfortunate" fhe Winnipeg Free Press (Liberal) has been vociierotisly calliniy for amendments to the Bri- tish Xorth .\lllL‘l‘l\£l Act and the transfer from the proviitccs to the federal authorities of im- portant political rights tinder the Act. 1n this connection the stunt john Telegraph-journal says! ‘ i "Thi- president and editor-in-cliief of The \\'in- nipeg liree Press is Dr. john \V. Dafoc, who is also a member of the federal commission which \\ill certainly ltcar evidence submitted to it by the provincial govt-rniiieiits of Ctinatlti and vari- ous other public tirgztnizatitwns conccrnitig the fitt- aricial relations between the provinces and the Dominion. The commission has determined that the eii<|i1‘ry' \\ill be wide in scope, and among other things ivlnch will be discussed are certain propositls in regard to .'unciiding the B..\'.:\, Act. The fact that the iit-ivspiiper which Ur. Dafoe directs has declared itself so emphatically on the question, titight be interpreted as having given in atlvaiive the vicws hcld by Dr. Dafoc, and it may bt- llllll no reprcseiitatitnis to the coinmis- sion \\'lll influence that member of it one way or another. 1n these circumstances, it is rather tin- fortunate tltat The Free Press should publish such an oiitspoketi editorial on this question on the very eve of the commencement of the in- vestigation." \\'t-stern cities are tiianzigiiig to get their fin- ances straightened out. Final zipprovztl of plans for equalization of bonded indebtedness of Cal- ‘gary and Edmonton has been given by the (iov- crnor-in-Council, authorizing the scheme and the Alberta Board of Public Lftilityt (Tomntissioners granted orders for operation Steps to put the plans into effect, started early last _\'('-'l.l‘ when Mr. jtiles Fortin, of Toronto, boiitlltoldt-rs’ repres- entative, met civic councils, will be completed when new 30-year bonds are printed to replace issues now in existence. The plans, equalize over 30 years payments on the bonded indebted- ness of each city. Charter amendments eitahling the cities to adopt the schemes, involving an Ed- monton civic debt of $.26,000.000 and a Calgary debt of $25,000,000, were passed early this year by the Provincial Government. 4- m at i: Here is a fine Imperial declaration by Mr. Leon Mercier Gotiin, K.C., LL.D., son of the late Sir Lotiier (Jouin, one-time (Quebec Pre- mier, proving him to be a "chip 0f'the old block”. l-le was addressing a Canadian Club at i\lorris- bury, and was arguing that the French-Canadian rights have been preserved by British fair play. The Constitution, he declared, clearly recognizes the French-Canadian nationality and said it has survived through years of Confederation, modi- fied by climate and local surroundings. “In in- ternational law," he stated, “I am not a French- Canadian citizen. ‘I am a British citizen and well satisfied with it." In Quebec, the speaker declared, nothing shall change. lle held the pro- vince of more importance than federal rights. Separatism, he said would mean eventual im- nexation by the United States, and expressed Federal Unemployment Insurance From Ottawa comes the announcement that the Dominion Government has worked out a plan for establishing national compulsory un- employment iiisuraiice although it has not divulg- ed details to the Provinces. lt is undoubtedly an uudertaltitig of major importance to the Can- adian people and has caused widespread inter- est. remarks Printer and Publisher. Co-operation of the provinces involving an amendment to the British North America Act in the way desired by Premier King. Whether co-operatioit lll all etises will be forthcoming re- mains to be seen but the premiers of six pro- vinces have to date expressed approval with the broad principles of the idea, while three others, Quebec, New Brunswick and Alberta, have so far failed to commit themselves, preferring to remain out until they have had an opportunity to give the plan more study, in accordance with their conception of provincial rights and priv- his ahsolutc opposition to separatism in any ileges. f0 ln any case it seems that there is a preponder- "n ,,, i, ,,, ,,, ance of provincial opinion in favor of insurance, however to be effective. Should unemployment insurance come to pass it might lllil[(‘l'l2lll_\' affect the structure of Can- adian life. lf feasible, it would giveworkers a measure of security nt-ver before experienced. 'I'axation necessary to support the scheme would, of course. be htvivyz The plan passed by the Conservative iioveriiiiit-iit in i935, but which was declared wholly ultra vires of the Federal Parliament by the Stiprcme (Tourt of Canada and the l-‘rivy Council, was to cost something like 5n million dollars annually — about one- third of the expense to he borne by employers, tine-third by t-tiiploy'ces and one-third by the Gov- ernment. (‘oiiirilititioiis payable in respect of 4 _ adult workers were to he .25 cents per week for Smlci “WWW”- ma)’ "m h“ ‘wlllmll Somc lllsf" W." “mi _,, Cm“ fm. “Ummh “hi, m“, anvmnts fication. If it is a well-grounded suspicion it front the t'llllllil_\'f‘l‘. The weekly‘ benefit was to ' means that a great many ijepiile have been ruin- vr- S6 for men and $510 for women with pro- ' (‘Kl i" hlrllmrallce "l P‘ lmllllml Pllflms‘? and the iortionatt-lv loot-r ratt-s for persons between 16 fact that speculators have been included does lflli 2t itnirs of :ige. ‘not lessen the seriousness of the result. The Premier Kinggk plan mnv call for something Roosevelt Atlniinistration. through the Sectirities liift-ri-nt. ovt-n l'.‘lIli('-'lll_\' different. hut in anv and lixchrvige Commission, is now dismantling \V‘hether or not the recent costly vagaries of the [Inited States stock market-reflected as al- ways in this country-were a natural, if exagger- ated, expression of business recession, or were deliberately engineered for political purposes, it is apparent, says the Gazette, that there can he no return of confidence or stability so long as Wall Street and ‘Vflfilllllglfill continue an ex- change of brickhats. There does not appear to he enough wrong with business in the United States to explain what has been happening in the stock markets; certainly there is not enough wrong with Canadian business tn warrant the ‘behavior of stock tnarlret prices in this country. The suspicion of manipnltttinn in the United , 2150000900) , 0f NDIES BY TllE WAY Sir Kingsley Wood, Mlulltor oi heath, wants toknow why the baton... are not coming in so tlilclt a ciop. we'll tell lmn —w1tliout having his new horde of Inquirer: on our doorstep. One reason 1a tibut there are v00 many of up herded into the overcrowded towns, llvtng in qutrters already cramped 1n- steacl of in more spacious moms "in the country. Another reason t» the people dread war, dream war, talk war, as though the thing were i as inevitable as sunset. They don't want. to bring the little ones lnw that. Sheer fright-Daily Express A - on” _... c . legislature said this week that 1f eoiist." Perhaps this may be w- , garded as an alarmist view, and yet l an all-powerful Japan in the Far ' East is not to be regarded with com- pltmcency in Gunman-Telegraph Journal. The time, is ripe for u combina- tion of forces-commercial and private motorists-to urge Parlia- ment to call a halt. to the policy or repression that. has hampered motoring in all its forms since the advent of the car, and instead of trying to fit the traffic to the roaos re-form our roads to flt. t. traffm-Daily Mall. Italy's finances have ‘ ‘ hi mystery since the beginning of the Abyssinian campaign; all that. B known ls that. they are hopelessly unbalanced by the cost of the Abyssinian war (estimated at intervention in Spain, and of military preparations. The normal financial resources are exhausted; but, what 1s perhaps even more serious, the money to be raised by this desperate method . is needed to pay for enterprises from which no return can be eit- pected; Abyssinta will be product- ive, lf ever, only at. the cost of heavy capital investment, and it l8 difficult to see that; Italy has any sufficient resources at heir com- mand. The Itallan people are pay- ing heavily for a. policy directed purely at military prestige; prestige is the only return it can give. — London Spectator. As meat-eaters the citizens of the British Empire remain un- rivalled, and their first choice 1a stilt beef. New Zealandei-s, for 1n- stance, average about. 150 pflimdi of beef per head eoch year, Aus- tralians 130 pounds, and the people of this country the more modest total of sixty-five or seventy. Even New Zealauds figures cannot com- pare with these of Argentina. where the average consumption 0! beef ls over 220 pounds a year. but New Zealanders also find time t0 eat. nearly a hundred Pounds °f mutton and twenty-eight. pounds of pig meat. Argentina sticks to beet. Britain and France eat more beef than pork; Germany. Canada and the United. States out more pork than any other meat. With the exception of Britain and New zealand, mutton and lamb play B minOr part in the meals of all other countries. — Mambléfiwl‘ Guardian. The social history can truce the expulsion of the sweet 18th cen- tury flute by m‘? 19th “PW-Y! banjo, the invasion of the b11110‘!- popuiarity by the concertma, and the revenge upon the ooncerflna 0f the banjos cousin, the mandollne, before the accordion itself begin Ln oust. the mandollne with a. MW victory of wind over string. Todfl-Y, so muse learned in jazz maintain, the accordion is itself threatened by a. kind of iiummins hvrn. vallrd a kazoo. The bennnsers iii’ the Ancient Society of 0011989 Ymlm“ may well, ring out B- 11911 °f de‘ fiance; their kind of pvptilar mimic ls more dura/ble, and will lust as 10mg as churches have belfries i1! hand-bells handles.—DB-lll’ ‘MB- gtraph Morning Post. Lord Tweedsmulr, our Governor- General, recalled in the course of his remarks at. the dinner the Canadian Institute of International Affairs that Canada could MI dlsassoclate herself from what goes on elsewhere in the world, imtl that the moral obllgatltln falls 0n her not only to support moves likely to lead to mental rapprochement, but also tn cultivate among her people a stronger feeling for peace. Moreover, our own material advantage ls enough in enoouraw us not. to hesitate t0 d0 lihBli- W9 trade with too many countries not. to wish that; nothing should M1116 to disturb world market: and spoil our ohtnicec, of tlolng business —— The more we think of our attitude Japan slmuld gain supremacy ln the ;' Orient “we may be meniwed on tlil-s . Scotland’; Saint (Gerald Yynne Rushton 1n 11w Purim Manama, 8t. Peter's ciiiiismi) His name '; Greek IDOMIlILIDd means Velour; Manhood. It 1| not liiopt; than la something indefin- Bbly Greek shout. hlm, one my levensuppoae ultra-In ofGreek blood; since the name Andi-aw. like . other Greek names. omens to have been common among the Jews from the second or tilili-n cenutry B. C. This may have been - due to intermarriage-and thus, we may 11nd Andrew beooinfng u. faintly name. Among tho Green lie 1s called the Protoclete; or tho First-Called, because h; was the l iii-at called to be an apostle. m l VP- “' Bede calls him "the 1n- | ti-oducer to Christ"; because he‘ was always eager to bring people i to our Divine Lord. Brother, per- l haps the elder of Saint Peter. and . disciple of St. John the Baptist. -—lie want tn seamh of Peter certain with ii splendid fnnaberiesa of oer- talnty. that he had found the Messiah-and led Peter Master. Andrew 1t was who polnted out to our Lord the boy with the five loaves and two fishes on the occasion of that miracle; and 1n- deed in many ways he falter the lead. But o! his career after that first Pentecost little ls known. Orlzen mister seythiii as hi5 mlsloti field, while St. Gregory of Nazlanztis says it was Eplrus. He appears to have tituvelled widely in the East — Cappiulocta and Blthynla saw and heard hi.in; lie comes later to Byzantium where he appoints St. Stlwhys as its first bishop, then on to ‘Ito-ace, Mace- 6011. TIINWIY and Achiila-and, according to tradition, was martyr- ed during the reign of the Emperor Nero (A.D. 60) at Patriis m Ashala. Both the Latin and Greek churches keep his feast on No- vember the thirtieth, His body, m. tamed first at, Petra-s, was brought in A.D. 35'! to Constantinople and re-lnterred ln the Church of the Apostles there. But at the beginn- ing of the thirteenth century it was hwiiaiit thence to the exquisite Cathedral of Amalfl, where 1t towards the outside wflrld. the more ewch of us feels ii. desire w aid ln the settling of lnterniimn- at conflicts. For, its we must. rec- ognize. peace l5 wmethln! m“ does not come iiy itself but Whit!!! must be acquired often at a. grant price-Ila. Press (Mont-real) The Thames. of course, 1a patroll- ed more carefully than many l maln street. If. has its mfflo rules and regulations, which had been In force for years before street crou- lngs and Belishu Beiwonl won dreamt. of, and the enforcement. of them ls very strict. ‘Iilie dutlen of these water policemen are not nearly so pleasant. its those of theft fellows "ashore." They fun about ln launches, and watch lights on izugu and steamers and the be- havoiu of anything, 11mm I Bovlet- boumt steamer to u tiwo-ocnd skiff. "Do you aver got Qoodln; otfinoeal!’ the motorist. natiiitlly lnq tree, and the ni-iswer h that; onecandrlvcnbtntutnnymeed whatever on the river. There l: n0 limit, but there la the very lundble XIV‘, ll|i' cost is hound to he ll(‘t'l\'_V and will have ' that \Vnll Street take steps for the more rigid o be paid through taxation in one form or an- ' regulation of its business as an alternative to zthl-r. stricter regulation hy lllf‘ commission itself. Results expected are important, too-a great- rule that if you mvlgutie any craft to the danger of anyone else, or the discomfort or danger of my riverside property you are “fm 1t." —Belfast Telegraph. rests to this day. The" i8 l strikiiiiz tradition about Si. Andrew preserved 1n the Muratorlan Fragment. This Man. "$011M ls so culled because it. was discovered the middle of the eigh- teenth mntury by Muratorl, 1n m; Ambroslan Library tit; Milan. 1-; g an eighth or ninth century copy of a writing 0d unknown author- shlPi 119M118 from the last quarter of the second century. The writer bm185 Andrew and John together ln their old age as they had hem in their youth. "The Fourth 605F911‘ he says. “was written by John. one of the disciples. when his Yellw Disciples and bishops lllfléiibly pressed him, he said, ‘Fast with melfor three days, and lot us tell one another any revolu- tton which may be made m us, “P” 1°!‘ 01' Wflinst the plan of WHUHL’ On the same night, it was revealed to Andrew, one of the disciples, that John relate m l-lllnilfi in his own name, and that all should review his writing." 5° much 101‘ fiwt. and what may be called regular tradition. New 1st u»; ma. on to legends attaching u’ the saln- ma"? 0f which have Md E V"? wide-spread influence, It ls not fifty years since Ewes folk were roused by the ringing of fl bell fn the streets at midnight, and the 51118111; of the following couplet: St. Andrew's Day ln the morning, st. Amlmw was a. fisherman, He threw his nets all on the sand, “gut when the Lord he did hlm Hie 1°" hi8 flfllwfl. nets and all." But he ls also. for some obscure Feawn- "16 Pfltron of laoeinakers is it because of the fish. nets re. ferred to? Scotland and Greece claim him as their pation saint, and 111 Div-Soviet days. Russia. The National g, ofsgggjqnd i, me st. Andrew's banner, azure with n. cross saltli-e silver; white of old the Russian Navy flew as ensign the blue sulttiie of St. Andrew on a white ground. Russia and Greece both hind nu order of knighthood dedicated l0 Bil. Andmw, them being besides in Russia th¢ ordin- of the Blue Ribbon of 5t. Andzmv 1mm“! by Peter the 0cm. "ii-tidi- tlon of old was strong in Rum; that the Apostle pimheq mo“ them. and the name of Andrew ls B Wmtlac one in Russia still. Hi5 Brim and Dominate Cross figure tothei Tl-HE-CHARLUYFIUFOWN GUARDIAN ____—---- ~ , n? PUBLIC FORUM ‘ CULTURE-WHAT I8 IT? Slip-Willi is culture? My zwd ' friend Rev. Mr. Nicholson from North Bedeqiie says that I aeemtn associate the word with the old aristocratic idea of 1t, niuriely, that it consisted in n. fair knawiedse o! Latin uid Greek classlca. Not ne- coasarlly so, sir. but I do hold that that conception of culture was no mean one. Mr. Nicholson then goat on to define culture 1n I leneral way u consisting 1n a knowledge of hls- tory, literature and art; and he argues, with some appearance of truth, that a fair knowledge of li-"r . . . NIOIIIBIISIIIESS Disturbance Business Insurance obviates disturbance of management, and has a positive effect on 41w credit and stability of the business. It also creates; reserve fund as a safeguard in periods of depresslon—a most valuable asset for any business Partnership or Corporation to possess. The Great-West Life specializes in Business In. surance. Consult your nearest Agent or write or call on llYllIlMAll 8i G0,, , LIMITED Provincial Managers these subjects can now be acquired by our boys and girls by reading and study lii their own mother tongue without the aid. of a more ianclent language. To which we reply, perhaps it. can be. But even 1f we grant tihut. Mr. Nicholson's category of cultural knowledge in a fairly comprehen- slve one, he will still find himself at: variance with a large school ‘of thought, who lnaht that. culture does not. consist entirely 1n know- ledge of any kind whatever. but rather that it consists in what. a manor woman can do. and do well. ‘Itiey argue, for instance, that the man who cultivates a field- the agricultural-and the woman who cultivates a. garden-the hor- tlctilturlita-ere by sheer influence of their occupations, more or less cultivated or cultured themselves. Hence all good farmers and good _ gardeners are to some extent cul- tured. To which proposition cer- tain of our male brethren will give their hearty consent 1f we but add b0 this 11st of cultured men and women, the woman who in the abundance of the things that a mm possesses. A inodem Am- er erlcan wrltierconmrne Lung on this conception of culture among his 0f own countrymen remarked that the average American today seem- ed to think that culture consisted in owning costly houses. costly “l works of art, and 1n wearln! DIW i.y pyjamas. It is to be noted. l5 my frlend from Bedeqlle sill’! l" reference to what he conceives to be the modem British conception of culture-it Ls to be noted that neither Latin, French. Gwme“? noi- Algebra ls essential u; this lat- 8° get account with Mother Earth 85 ignores,“ lflfi‘i°l.i'lil';“li' order of the ‘Ililstle; while the so Order of the Golden Fleece was founded by Philip the Good 1!! honour of the OM86 0f 3% Andi?‘ —pui't of which rests in Btu-SWE- The 80mm ls the bfldile 0f t-hl!» [unions ordea- alao. Strangest of all ls an Order in Freemasonry 11¢‘ dictated to "st. Andrew n: the 39w 0mm," which it. one of the highest ordem attainable. ‘me Knights who are t0 under!!! a" oemnoriy of initiation, are required m p33 through a. dark chamber, hung win-i iiiiwk. tvplfvms Hi8 Death of Our tmvl and His Dil- seent. into Hell, aftei-whkfli they are invested wltih the arhnwn will and jewel of the Order, and PM" take of a sacramental meal t0- gather. ‘me lnconsequem nature of many of the '_, ‘ attach-inc W his name in northern countries would seem b0 indicate filial: pagan baiokgatound and observance that. persisted, lit whitewashed form, U. ln the cue of St. John the Bap- fist, whose feast. oolncldfnl with Mid-simmer Dw- Wu formerly m9 occasion for all aorta 0! Billnratl- lions of pagan origin. In 8t. An- drew’; can he appears to have succeeded to the honour! mid t» mreyr, the Norse God of Love. bmtiiiei- and Consort of rivyla. t-hu Goddess of hove. Blank cats were atwndtolielnlnd aowe tlndln Pohnd, on 5t. Andrew's Eve, girls take a black cat. and hold 1t over gl ---. ATTENTION Swine Breeders Nowlllhcllmeto Illlrtl ugalnll. PIG - WORM by using the moot elective "l"!!! M! the uinrkot; Mac's Pig - Worm Tonic Powder If will flioflfllllll! lbollah all tnouolvvonnsmdlmpmvo tllolienllholyoiI-lind Price 35cts. per lb. Don't delay. Olvhr by Pb or Mull. s Phone 315 TIIE N0 MAGS freon-lotions A Specialty the fire saying, while they mt the name time sprinkle barley on the flnflflarley, burn! Oat mew! And lot my dear one comet" Neoleo _ tells u: that. for pivbably the sumo plllll moon, this Rut, Novnnbu‘ 90th, WI! considered fuvmirable for taking love-omens. fbr he my! "To Andrew itll the lOVlfl 1nd, lusty wooers MlllQ"—WhilQ there is . o. IAtln prayer extant 1n which timid: uk toboahuwxibyflt. An- drew the form of their future hus- band; "Hollie mlhl oatende qtutlls alt. out mo 1n iixorem duoem albeit"- M Wells in Somerset the belittl- fiil Outfietkll la dedicated to Bllnt Andrew, and during the Octavu of lilsliieaat ulanioullialrlsheld than, even yet. Then there 1a. of course, tho old gray olty of St. Andrew! m Scotland. all! to have been founded by a curtain Abbot called Reruliil who bivuiht. ulthiu- from Patrol or Oonstuntlnople 1n so; A.D., the relics of flu Bnlnt. and built than by the North 80c the lovely Cathedral and founded- thn Uhlvemilty 1n 5t. Andrews honoir. certain ll. k that. the Uni-- vanity h the oldest. tn the British ma; but. the famous Regulus ‘lower 1|, K unyhhlnl. older than 8t. Andrew tumult’; and unmet the old gin-y city by the us, with 1t: nqownetl student, oom- mmiomm his name for. all time with uo-lhe dint hluisetf aleqil far from Boob not] above another and more {umoul see In the mien- iloiir Ind the glory that. h Amaln. ""9 L118. the following comment; m? rgeldoinlnterest to the s‘ r fin l if h he viewswhec" Y ls thoiiflht as i ‘iignfuslon which la so common to. listed ihereln are:- l. M0888 t0 the Earth. SWALLOWS 2. Moral disposition. trihlliducatlonr general, special’ o Iillgllnfeheflll-S. beat home, beat ec iical. ' fiiflpliflbllll-Y t0 concert of la- dutitton, can make a good apple pie. Oh mi; that apple piei a Ambition. doom Love may no longer roam. ‘riiere remains still another con- skin, dmgenw, wumg: 1,013,222?“ ceptlon of culture that. we must 7_ needom frommsordered aném O, Love has touched the fields of mention and we fear lt is iiii all tlons, base passions, unhealthy when ‘ u» widely-held conception w- cravings. And “We hi“ crowned the corn. day, It ls. in effect, that culture a, puke m. helm]. h 1 And we must follow Love's whit; does not necessarily consist either friendship. one,’ We’ fed? < in what 5 man knows, 0i- what he 9. Patriotism, peg“ 5m; good ‘rhrough all the ways of mom. ‘can do, but rather that 1t consort! Btlvemment, Through all the silver roads of all means of obtaining the good t-hlnp the very ii g abundant Mfg. ‘lfrnuofhigtiiqviordi tliizl; are Christian prtnctpla which 111m m pai-dmal o which la _ gr“ law‘ “seek yemotedlnthe not 0m of God d 8,11 aha“ be “deal-film yoillime thinks wonls did truth that. Chrlstlanm-t m i, est * X1 conception of it. a!" *1 We m i» imioy the frllllfi or I m‘ Sh,’ m," e earth. AN OLD TEACHER. A Illldy of the above items will THE ABUNDANT LIFE l" °"°'Y °"° '1' lhem- "id chiefly iiilscaiise we eliminated them from Bur-Referring in Mr. Man's led- 9 l "d? Ind Practice of economics. Our political ignioverzsii the student, He 1mm h 1 we in Reg-i- M we titre“... “at. but. Credit tn film iiibie: it is a Vfirlliisblllncoalvzghex; CANADIAN NATIONAL IIAILWAYS h Ule Canadian Nltlouul Telegraph: Charlottetown Summerside Montague 4i} 01* Vitalit L; dlwus us RANGE P E KOE TEA wide-spread mental He W111 note that the credit items Here ls no place of rest. Night darkens on the falling foam And on the fading west. 0 little wings, beat home, but home; 5 Freedom from misdirected pro- mtiiairecwd dist lb tl , directed consumption, r u on gnwllliebe observed that these We pass and have no can. ins are n t ti, o only e best The silver roads of Love are wide, o Wmds m" Wm» O stars that . guide. Sweet are the ways that Love liril trod the earth but are 1n themselves e branches of a tree stem from Through the clear skies that retell rights. the pueni; to God. But 1n the cliff-grass Love bulld| deep first the‘ king- A place where wandering -wliig| may sleep. -' 0mm emllhaslze the --Mar,loi'le Plcktliall vein our econ i1- und busing; 990719171)’ text-books l°°k "lion labor and capital as hnrlb and Rustun in deadly com- (“nllmled on Dag: o. Col. 1) ROUND TRIP BARGAIN FARES VII Safuf John-All ||~| n BOSTON and new innit ' $13.00 $18.00 ‘RUM ALL STATIONS DN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND _ 00h!!! FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8rd Return From Boston, Tuesday, December 7th "m" " N" York. Wednesday, Deoeiuiber mi. Plllll:lrl should be 1n polnulou of o Inter IN DUPLICATE n" "m" Ill! lllo be used when nmuurln Ouu do. Pulcliloll rnldluu In the vlolull | 3g" t . "h" "l" "MIN win: t» ma, Uullltfld s-txniuylimiiiiiini-fln: nuthorltlol for ponult boforn lanvlug than pltlnil.‘ o Children of Five uul under “an” good ln Twelve Yvon of Age HALF FABE- l DAY COACHES ONLY BUY YOUR TICKET EARLY Consult Nearest Ticket Agent. For Further Information. ' INA PRC???‘ ‘ Now ls the time to put your Coal in. We are well supplied with genuine Hard Coal in Nut and Stove size, all machine screened lie- fore loaded In carts. W. D. GILLIS & CO. Cara arriving every day with‘ Sprlnglilll, lnvernesl, Old Sydney Screened, Albion Nlll» Albion Round and Dominion Household Coke- Careful deliveries. Lowest prlcu. PHONE 176_