‘=94 ‘ ...__~...-<....~a @-c§0l!;.\-O-\l~bfil4... PAGE FOUR me GIIARLOITETDWN tuinnun Id t—\\. f". ..n ucereilry-Lieuh-Coi. l). ldltur and lhnuglug Director-J. B. Burnett, I‘. l. l. l-‘renk Walker and B. ll. Currie (founded mm lb-W n" in: (In adv-flew film's" (in Qfly-pug) ggilud in Clundu and United Shoe! Aenoelute kldltorm- lurnlng Dull! ‘C50 D0! Y!" TUESDAY, “SAFE AND EFFICIENT" Elsewhere in today's issue appears Ill announcement by Dr. Franklin H. Martin, director-general of the American College oi Surgeons, outstanding international association I! more than 10,000 eminentflsur- (eons, which is holding iLs twenty- lhlrd annual Clinical Congress in Chicago this week. Dr. Martin re- m-tg um, again this year the three hospitals-of Prince Edward Island ire on the approved list. This means that they are considered, by the nost expert organization in Amer- m, as being capable of providing ‘safe and eflicient care" to patients. Ilor sixteen years the American Col- bge of Surgeons has conducted an- nual surveys of hospitals in the United States and Canadadn an ei- icrt to improve these institutions i.u the best interests of the public. In 191B only 89 hospitals could meet the requirements oi the College for approval. This year, of 3,554 instit- utions surveyed, 67 per cent have been approved. It is highly gratify- ing to note the manner in which our three provincial institutions, the Prince Edward Island Hospital, Charlottetown Hospital, and Prince County Hospital, have measured up to the Hospital Standardization test, ls well as the increasing mensure of success which has attended the ef- forfl of the American College of Surgeons to develop sllllltlnrd meth- edl of efficient hospital administra- \ion. ' GREAT OPPORTUNITY On the recommendations of the Invport Duties Advisory Committee the British Treasury has increased the duty chargeable under the Im- port Duties on dead poultry- namely iowls, ducks and geese, but excluding turkeys and guinea fowl -from tcn per cent. ad valorem, to three pence per pound as from September 15 last. After the duty has been in force for 12 months the committee intends to review it to ascertain what has been done by home producers to improve their marketing methods. This further British preference favorable to Canada should simul- at: our exports of poultry, which has a good reputation, to the Unit- ed Kingdom. Nearly 40 per cent. oi luch imports reach Great Britain ‘in Decenaber, but the January, Feb- ruary and March extemel supplies frequently exceed 60,000 cwt. each month, the Canadian Gazette says. PI‘he total imports last year were 51,900 owt., or 146,000 cwt. lese than the previous year. Of this amount Canada's share was 12,000 owt. Can- adians in this trade have to meet competition from Russia, where products are placed on the British market at low Prices. This foreign trade is at its lowest, however, to- wards the end of each year, when Canadian exporters have their op- portunity, ss the demand is at its lenith. The new preference will it is pre- iiicted be cf great advantage to the poultry producers oi this Province. ‘As stated in these columns on Sat- Irdey, file co-operative Egg and Poultry Association is planning to lhlp from Halifax to the British chicken market, and the prime quality of the Island product should unsure ready sales under the new rates. The opportunity is one of many which have been opened as I. result of the agreements nego- tiated at the Imperial Economic‘ Conference at Ottawa. last Our agricultrists are now beginning to realize the immense potentialit-Iwas going to do for humanity be. trade. lore they discovered that it was not end as time goes on the foresight-the Libenel rally! lea oi British preferential of the Bennett Government in neg- otiating the Empire trade treaties ‘ill be more and more appreciated. l 1' N. S. INTERESTED Chester s. lleLnre, ll- OCTOBEB. 10. 1933 self depended very much on helping ‘the farmer in the time .. _ " _, ‘Jeflflififjiihk NetesBy The Way lion. Mr. Cohen's ltrklng es- ample oi the manner in which Nova Sootia bore her burden in the old days as compared with the pres- ent is most impressive. Today, he says, the value of her motor can is prdambly more than the ve-lue of her industries in the golden age when r. Vloe-Preeidunl. a. n. sun-m. "-4- 1 A. liucllnnon, I). U. U. .marketing oi their products this Iseason: “A meeting of potato shippers and wholesalers and bankers was held at Chaiilottetcwn to discuss the matter oi how potatoes can be shipped from the Island to bring the best financial results to the u“ “.01.” that we a" on the mad] farmer. The statement was made- bask m solvency, and it was not denied there was a , reason ‘or the pmcuoe_that mm The next months will show if Mr. lducers forced their product on the Fpwevelt h“ not manly cnmus" iasm and energy, but that grim ten- merket in the fall, causing a glut, _ acity which—in another field-en- wlth the inevitable result that the shied Lgmmn to w,“ through 53-3115; price was lowered. It was contend- a not dissimilar opposition. One ed that if the farmer were able to thing is sure. If the President wins. retain his m: and D1860 it on he “m "l" m” by “’“”‘“‘“' b“ by‘ the market in an ordetily manner, strengthening, his efforts and his so as not i4; create a congestion, program. Ii’ he illnches now or draws back. he is be8.iC—ll.--L1.7l1{l.'ll there would be a greater uniiorm- Daily Heriald. lty in the price and the price would be better. “This was admitted by all who took part in the conference. The difllcult feature in the situation is that many farmers have to sell at what price they can get. because of ‘the pressing need for money, and if they are to withhold their pro- duction for a longer period than usual from the market, some means m“, be ‘WM by wmch they can fresh impress'ons.—-London lvlz" realize something on their product. Post This can be done through the bunks, as one of the ten agencies, but extra warehouses would also be needed so that the potatoes could be stored until they were needed for shipment. It was one of the en- couraging features of the confer- ence that the banker‘ who were present expressed a desire to be oi use, and that they- realized that the prosperity of the banks as well as of the agricultural industry it- geve birth to e. generation oi men who are still n. tradition for public service and sterling probity. We! must get book to first principles,- live within our means, make our I Them is a certain superficial plausibility in the idea that because Herr Hitler is the enemy oi the Commumsts therefore Russia. is the enemy of Germany, and that be- cause Russia and Germany are en- emles thezefore France and Russia may again be Allies. Those who argue in this uav may have been quite intelligent before the year 1917; but since that date their minds must have been closed to a branch oi diplomacy, conducted in whispers. Now it is a battle of kilo- watts, with every nation trying to howl its neighbours down. The Gar- gantuan voices of Moscow and Prague and the new £1,000,000 trerlsmiier at Paris make it neces- sary for the -B.B.C. to give ite new station at Droitwlch 100 kilowatts, with another 100 in reserve for imockout purposes. It is now time for the BBC. to revise its motto lo make it read “Nation shall yell unto natIonP-London Sunclny 0g m5 Chronicle. Kllestest need. "With these favorable factors de- veloping in the situation i; L; not considered improbable that a better marketing system can be arranged, and that on the whole season's operations there may be an adv“- Jage to the farmer in the higher pxvice received that will fully com- pensate him ior any special bank. ing arrangements he mgy mud w make. In ‘any ease the root of the dlmclllty has been discovered and this is an Important beginning in the solution oi any problem. "It is very likely that we are troubled with the same situation on the mfllnlflnd and that if our farm- ers were not forced to sacrifice their production in the fall to as. cure money to: taxes and other Dressing needs, they would have a rrwlm from tcn to twenty-five per cent greater through a. system o! orderly marketing. What may be worked out in Prince Edward Island will be watched with interest by farmers all over the Mai-itimles." So far from being hard and fix- ed, the thing which for short we call Capitalism or the capitamt System changes every ycar. It is an Bvvlutifln from the time when men first began to buy and sell, and is constantly developing new forms 3M1 001111118 UP against now dasta- cles, which it endeavouts to removc or circumvent. The truth is that no known method of collective bargaining is ideal. Success in reaching reason- aicle agreements between represen- tatives of labour and capital de- pends upon the good sense and the smcerity oi the principal negotia- tors, not upon the existence oi’ an open or s. closed shop. The impulse to open the doors of Palestine wide to Jews from Ger- many is inevitable and laudable, but Great Britain, as mandatory Power, has to consider both Ara-b interests and Ara/b reactions as well as Jewish. If Jewish colon zntion in Transjoivdania, could be arranged by free agreement with the Emir Arbdullah the situation would be eased considerably-The S-acctnioi- (London) Japan has no aiiiee in the world, and few friends. America has twioe SOUNDED nut‘ SAME‘ she won through to stability and]! THE COMMON com _ 001m railway services pay for themselveefl-wmmon cold", trim away legislative frills, show'w1d_~ 1w“. m5 whole wmqd 1g THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN What. Bub? of (‘n The Klondike Trail Of '98 A FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT OF A MEMORABLE ADVENTURE (By Ernclt Crabbe, Borden, Qflllrfl rum.) B) [emu W. Baden. MD. After we got back from our trip to Fort McPherson, and had com- pleted the toboggan, we took one each, and. started in, portaging the goods, hauling one hundred and fifty pounds each day seven miles. We had about two tons to move, so it took no conside u/blé time. On MON THE WORLD A few yea-rs ego very little was said, vu-y little was thought, and very little was done about the It was “only a interested in the common cold be- cause practically everybody is bo- SWALLOW SONG Oh, little hearts, beat homo, best home, Here is no place of rest. Night darkens on the falling foam And on the fading west. Oh, little wings, beat home, beat home, Love may no longer roam. Oh love has touched the fields of, wheat, And love has crowned the corn, feet completion, we moved camp to the goods, and proceeded to relay it to a point about eight miles from! Trent River. On getting it that fen: we moved up to the river, estab-j lishlng ourselves there, and after some pretty steady hauling, we tent eventually got everything landed some idea o; the grmunt 0g fe- about two thirds of the way to the search work that is being done i summit. Here we rested for a while may be gathered from the futldoing some trading with the In. that Drs. D. and R. Thomson, Lon- ‘ dians for caribou meat. Perhaps thered to some extent by this mis- erable ailment. The result is that in every coun- try now, rdsearch workers are in- vestlgating theee symptoms which irritate the nose, throat, chest,‘ eyes, and often the digestive sys- .don, have reviewed over 2000 siu-, there would be a whole tribe come H195 m"? b’? Physlm“ mvemfi 81008- BQIIBWS. P81100585. 508$. Elw- A place where wandering wings may gating the cause of the common The youngsters were wrapped up in National propaganda used to ;::~_ cold. They have issued it in book form, 738 large pages, the price oi which is about Fifteen Dollars. i This book contains all that has x been learned about the little or- gganisms found in the nose, mouth, ‘throat and lungs. It is believed that ‘certain organisms prevent colds and others cause tliem. The belief that there are other ‘causes than these organisms is also strongly supported by evidence, that is injury, irritation, tempera- ture, and eensitivenese to foods and other substances. I The book devotes chapters to lfatigue, clothing, diet, deficiency oi vitamins in predisposing us to colds and concludes that a. deficiency in Vitamin A plays some considerable part in lowering the body's resist- Caribou skins, made into parkays some of them real pretty, with rosy cheeks, Of. course we would give, them a blow out, with tea. and bannock, which did not lnconven-‘ ience us, as we had all kinds of it. - It; was a God-send for us to get the lmeat, as there were no caribou yshcwing up, and it was cheaper to ‘ trade for the meat than hunt it, I Lloyd had a breech loading shot- igun. and all kinds or ammunition, ‘and as the ptarmigan were plen- tifui in the hills, we had some fine sport shooting them, they were there literally in thousvnds At certain times of the day, when they were feeding we found the best to hunt them, I was out for a days I ance to colds. discovered by these research men who wrote the 2000 papers still be done on the organisms and on the nose, throat, mouth sport hunting them on Christmas day. I started out in the morning, the weather looking favorable, I was skirting along the side of a mountain, stalking a large flock of ptarmlgan, and was bagging quite a few, when I happened to glance up at the sky overhead ahd ob- and=served a. mist approaching and a and during‘ , short time later, down came a the progress oi the cold itself. l The thought um. is that if you “Ema” dew” °‘ ‘aim “d m” are subject to colds, you investigateilsnow Started to disappear M, by the cause yourself Were you tiredtmagm a chmwk wmd ham“: Did you cat tco much food? Were: Spruug up‘ I “mved hm“? at you exposed to a draft, or to a wet,' camp Ike a dlvwned m‘ about cold wind, while tired? m eeminlelevil" °‘°l°°l< ""4 We h" 5°!“ °1 foods cause a‘ “snuffling" of the the Ptarmigan for our Christmas no.5? Am you 8M1“; Enough 0g dinner, and the next morning it the foods containing Vitamin A- W56 1°11? 5°10“! 29W- enollih l0 beans, peas, carrots (carotene), freeze the 11°59 0" You!‘ 1'80!- cress, spinach, kidney, liver, bana- It kept us busy the balance of has, oranges,‘ milk, eggs, fat beef, the winter, moving the outfit to the and butter? summit. On arrival there, we erect- ed the tent, and proceeded to lo- cate trees of a suitable size for whip-sawing into boards for con- structing our boat. Lloyd, as de- signer was bent on a centre board boat, and he made it so; really a lot of work for nothing, for all the sailing we hadtc do, but it would not do for me to object so I let him go to it. We had lots of oakum and the gum off trees provided us emmcnt, declared himself a union- Wm‘ PM“ while waiting f“ the lst. But at the some hour of the)!“ u’ mm"? wt‘ we climbed the same night Prmmex. Tolmievs Mmghills on the north side of Bell ister of Finance was taking the R1“?!- t° 399 “- slgm o! the Amt“: new 1n t)“. okanagvan vaney as an Ocean. When we got to the top oi Independent, with the Government m6 hm- imd 1°°ked ‘"1"- We “w forgotten, This while he wag m1] it as a blue haze, the outline unde- a member of the Government and, fined, owing to distance. presumably, still drawing his sal- At length the ice started to shift ary. ' in the river and Jam. Shortly after But this isn't B-ll- In flddlll-On it broke away, and started down there is the curious news that some stream, waiting g day after it had of Mr. Toimitvs erstwhile Ministers gong we 10mm the boat 5nd Lloyd Notwithstanding all that was _ about the common cold, Drs. Thomson conclude that much work must chest during health, The Battle In B. C. (Ottawa Journal) All that we know about the Brit- ish Columbia election is what we see in British Columbfas papers. And we see some extraordinary things. Last u-eck. for example, Premier Tolmio took the field as leader and defender of the Gov- her population and many times her wealth; Canada and Australia, and- indeed Great Bnitain, would be by’. no means disinterested in case oi’, a conflict between America. and! Japan, and there is also China tel be reckoned with, and perhaps‘ Russia. Japan ‘s very vulnerable. It ls fear and fear alone, which is’ forcing a poor and tax-ridden na-' tlion like Japan u, build a huge’ navy; and that fear is oi us. It would seem the part of statesman- ship to make what gestures are; necessary to allay that fhair-De-l trolt News. t A writer in the Vancouver Prov- ince describes an amusing incident that occurred at a. Liberal peiiuggi rally in Vancouver recently. It seems that in the building in which the meeting was called the-re were two holll, one above and one below. While the Liberals were to rally WY"- e lame number of enthus- “m-B lfiiembled below l0 listen to a perpetual motion crank with a thing called “co-motions! motion." As both aggregations were em". lng at the same time, quite u m YGQT. ‘ Scotia.“ comments the Sydney Poet- The following editorial from the Record» "l! that I-lbml newsroom i Amherst News and Sentinel shows the interest which others are tek-Jwuslness betterment as clearly M ill in the constructive efforts oilheir conservative contemporaries, our suppers, bankers and parlia-land the entire press of Nova Scoiie nentary representatives, to a rl thehas become gloriously optimistic. NWO growers in the orderly; Whether we w to have worse or H1.- It is curious that those who her- ald with large headlines imaginnryl deals with Russia have not had a word in say in support oi the very’ substantial trade agreements now. in operation between Canada and, the Mother Countiry and other parts‘ of the Empre. These agreements! have greatly increased intro-Empire trade, although they have only been a few months in operation, and the pro. "ise is that if our inr- mers and v ‘xcr exporters take full advantage ' them, the whole Dn- minion wit; be correspondingly en- riched. Th: pro-Russian press and‘ politicians refuse to admit tir- (‘=- tablishcd facts in this rcg..r<i. better government at Halifax. liv- voice of journalistic pcsirimifim has 0f 9881?!‘ Iwlitioians marched into the other show and listened for a Ions tune to the great things the dlwn of the new engineering em EDITORIAL NOTES "One gratifying result of the re- cent Provincial election in Nova now vision the general signs of hoped, for good l. ‘made with prayers, whereupon it at least been sih-nced, it is lo b" i are attacking the Governments re- and a young fellow’ from guy-my cord. Tney were in it and of it, named Atkinson and I Jumped but by “m9 5mm“ Prwe“ “I aboard, and down stream we pro- reasoning they “we they were ceeded in one place going over some not responsible for its acts, com- pletely disovvn it- It is an attitude more curious than convincing. Then there is Mr. Bowser. Mr. Bowser, a former premier and Conservative chleitain, wants un- ion; but he doesn't want the sort of union Mr. Tolmie seems to want, or at least doesn't want union with Mr. Tolmie. More than that, and even more strange, Mr. Bowser is no longer in the Conservative ta- bernarle, has no particular creed. Meanwhile Mr. Patiullo, Liberal loader (and the Liberals, inciden- tally, are not without schislm) is having his own troubles. Mr. Pat- tullo made the mistake of boasting that he had a "great organization." This caus-"d the Vancouver Pro- vince to ponder that, as Mr. Torte once said, organisations are not submerged ice, with Just enough water over it to float the boat. Beyond that all was clcnr, and the first thing we sighted was an In- dlan Camp. We landed there to trade for some flsh, Lloyd making a trade for a caribou hide, andi when we left the camp and got, going down thg river, I took it up, to have a look at it, and it was just} crawling with vermin. On the‘ spur of the moment I threw it in‘ the river, but Lloyd snatched it out, again and said, “Look out what: you are doing, they might take o‘ shot at us." They didn't, luckily. Shortly after we overtook three other boats and. proceeded down stream with them. Towards night, we lashed the four boats together one of them having two masts placed in position, leaving one fel- low in charge, while, the rest of us turned in to sleep. Coming on to- wards morlng, we were awakened by the jarring action oi’ the boats. and Jumped up, and found the- wetchman asleep and two‘ of the boats skirting in shore, the one with the masts, scraping an under-‘ mined bank of frozen muck, over-| hunsl"! the river about twenty feet, the masts catching and scrap- ing down large chunks of thawed muck, with a chanq- of the whole bank collapsing and drowning us began asking Mr. Pottullo what he substituted for the prayers. Th6 Province hints, in feat, that what Mr. Pattulio substituted was the money oi the brewers- Llqllm‘ and Liberalism! The whole thing hes an atmos- gthriw‘ oi Gi“.crt and Sullivan. We ~'u pact bmvttcr, that some POODlQ in ll C sec behind its mirth cer- tln r’ mvrts oi tragedy. I‘I.1I"I’\(1 brgf gold during the : m August in Canada io- tnllad 2060240 lbs, Through all the ways of mom; Through all the silver roads of air We pass, and have no can. The silver roads oi love are wide, O winds tltat blow, O stars that guide; Sweet are the ways that love has i trod _ Through the clear skies that lead to God; But in'the cliff-grass love builds deep sleep. —Mar,iorie L. C. Pickthall. all. We immediately cut our boat clear, and decided to take no such chances again. It took us nearly a week to drift down to Fort Yukon, and we found the water very slack upon ap- proaching the fort, on account of being backed up by the Yukon River. 0h arrival, we found Lloyd's partner Stewart awaiting our com- ing, and also a lot of boats ahead of us. We were informed by s United states customs officer, named Millmore, that he was there to collect customs dues for the U. S. Government. He seized all outfits going into Canadian terri- tory, so as we dld not have the money we stored the goods in his charge, and taking sufficient pro- visions with us, the four of us pro- ceeded down the Yukon River, with axes. saws etc., to cut four foot lwood for the steamboaots which sold for nine dollars a cord. As the wood was back some dis- tance from the bank, we built a tramway with poles for track, and constructed a trolley with wooden wheels, I being the wheelwright. Two stayed in the bush and out the wood and wheeled it out to Stewart and me, and we split it with an axe apiece, having no wedges for the purpose. We cut about forty cords, and piled it on the bank, expecting right along that a steamer would call and purchase it, but we seemed to be out of luck. At length Atkinson and I decided to go up to Fort Yukon, and see what the chances were for working our passage up‘ to Dawson; and luckily for us, shortly after we ar- rived there, our chance came. A boat pushing s. barge, landed it on a bar, not far from the fort, so we got a. fellow to row us over in a boat, made application and secured assage, on condition of assisting to get the barge off the bar, and help- ing to wood up en route to Dawson. We helped move quite a portion cf the cargo of! the barge, with boats to shore till at length it floated. They put on these goods again, and we proceeded on upriver, having no- thing to do beyond wooding up, but rest sleep and eat, and we had a fine bill of fare. We began to an- ticipate the sight of the golden trensure we were after, locked up in the Klondike vale, but we were to find a time lock attached to it when we arrived, in the shape of government “lift, concessions I granted to individuals, and no way ‘of obtaining access to the record books, to enable one to gain infor- mation cf claims open for record- 89c 8150 Bottle Fellow: Syrup 1.29 $1.00 Bottle Nujoi . . . . .. $1.00 Bottle Beef, Iron nnd Wine ........B9e 50o Box Gin Pills 89o 60c Box Chases Nerve Food a Q 0 Ointment 40o Tube Menthoietum Bhuving Creun 50c Package Gillette Blades now 60c Box Chase's l? . ... .....-. . 50c Jar Ponds Cream .. 43c 35c Tine of Tnlcum .. .. 17c --.-_i-i-___. 1 Pint of Essence of Vina‘:- e l‘? . . . . . ....... “urn...”- iii? a or. bottle of Wempolee Milk of Magnesia $50 THE 2 MAGS 149 Great George Street And we must follow love‘! white o The future lies Bright economlzing on life in: with the Maritime Life . Maritime premium: In the promoting their prosperity PUBLIC FORUM Th]! column II open for the dllenuion by correlpondentn of question; of lnterelt. The Charlottetown Guardian doe: not necessarily endoree the opinion: of correspondents. SITMMERSIIJE CHIEF OF POIJECE Sun-Kindly allow me space in your valuable paper to deny Coun- John Y. Phillip‘ remanilm in re. Bil-rd to my resignation. °WH~ Phillips held four Police Committee meetings at gm o; 1% ‘i ""‘ I clorihmorlgage ieir fuiure mortgage ii.- Don't save at their expense by Salegulrel llielr Iuiurc by carrying adequate protection company investing or spending EVERY CENT of its Accident: WILL be pen In cbildren. "Tb: Marfllml L0: Saver" tell: w t to do . . . Send for free copv. “Kg Socurifq Juno omcl: - l-IALIIAXJZANADA before them. Don't IIIGIICG. . . the one lilo lmurenco Maritime: . . . end thus and yours. The first time that tobacco EI- ports from Canadafexceeded im- ports was duringthe last financial your 1932-33, tobacco exports amounting to 11,195,415 pounds and imports 10,231,643. Production d leaf tobacco was also the largest on record-54,094,000 pounds. An inquiry for the purchase cl apples has been received from Val- ettu in the Island of Malta, and for hay-fork and manure-fork ash handles from Btiistol, England. which I was not asked to be pres. 911$. and he tried to get some vheree flkainst me and failing m. do this, he then drew up a. working I ed to work night shift! alternately with the other otficers- I refused to do this. as I call it nothing but an insult to the off-ice of chief 0g Police; he then asked for my m- 51811811011- Coun. Phillip; may jugt as well ask the Manager or the store where he is employed m gag. alternate shifts with him driving h" 110W! and truck: it would seem Just as reasonable to me. 001m, Phillipe has held n grudge 383mm me ever since I took office s; chief oi’ Police. I _do not know why, but I W111 dflfl’ him or anyone else to say that I ever neglected my duty l-YI any way- I have worked faith. 111113’ 1'01‘ the betterment of Sum- merside both day and night. In Wkard to the commitments which he specks of. I was asked to withhold them for a time, which 1 did and which k done in every Police Department. schedule, when I would be 01,115..’ R 1 |»i\ i 5g, Li ilhliit-Qls I I w E '5 ‘tqgélcuacri ti ,,-. ~~§c.::%%%”,.--,.-@; 081 rue film‘ A Food of Real Merit But I vouch the town oi Sum-| merside has never lost a. dollar byl me 5°13! this. Before I went away on my holidays, I gave these ccm- mitments to one of the officfrs to serve, but I understand» he was told not w execute them. I wish to say all this underhand work was done against me while I was on my vacation. When I came to Sum- merside I came as Chief of Police, not as a police officer, and I leave it to the good citizens of Summon; side to decide ii my work has l ~.“ satisfactory. " , Thanking you l I am, Sir. etc- l JOHN F- KANE. Chief of Police, l S‘Side, P. E. I. ing. When at length we arrived there and landed at the dock, our luggage was the clothes on our backs. ' (To be Continued.) own, the value of which he can be certain of. ment. "BEMA" Molasses preserve: all thf food value of the famous Barbuda! sugar cane iuicewthe purest can! juice in the world. ll: in as rich no It tletee. Rich ill iron to nourish the blood-wick in vitamin! to conserve the health. For children, there II nothing bet- ter, give them plenty of It. ‘Iv Banaanos Extra Fancy MOLASSES l Use Brahmin Tea Refreshing as only fresh, pure Orange Pekoe Tea can be. \ A Guaranteed Estate Life Insurance is the only estate a man can on the day of his death A Life or Endowment policy is an insured savings plan with guaranteed values for retire- Prosperity, from)!’ homes, and a. contented people, are the products of Life Insurance. nearest Great-West Life Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. Consult your IIYIIDMMI 8: 00.. LTD. ' Provincial Lower Queen Street Managers Charlottetown