i. T18R14‘: I'OA PAGE FOUR THE CHARLOTTE TOWN qunnnun President-W. Chester S. 1111.111; Al. I‘ Seeretnry- u-ut -1‘ol, l) I~I1li1or nn-l Urinal-Hui»! Ascot-mic 1:1 1111 ,__ ._-___... 4.- _. -.-__. uunrng llsily (Ivillidnl lxi $1.51) per year iin nmpuce) _ Vice Prelldnnl-J. B. Burnett A, §TflFK|1lI1(\\i_ I). S U. 111re1-t11r--.1. I! ilurnetz k \\‘11lk1-r 1 11 D K. (‘urrio .. . .. ..........._____i__________ 71 $71M per year (in advance) 111»llv1-r1~1I. 111111led in 11111111111 sud United States. ADVERTISING If EI'ICESI'Q.\'I'.\'I'IVES UNITED STAT The Ih-ckwuh 5111111111 ‘ New 11 1.- 11 <:1~1~11r.111 11.11 111g, i‘ 111..11-_11.1»11 1.1., 1111 _ outs, 1;1~:11. .'111=11~. I1'r..111 , 11".. X-v 117.111 M71111 l’11,l spec's] Agmey ine._ New York Centrll 1111 I111 l-l 111.: ill-troll lurch-inu- 11111111- 1.'1l11 1,; 1‘1111»:1g.1; Synnllrnlc 'l‘r11st 1111.1; .\l1-111.l11111~k 111111111111; San Morning .1) axfm Ono run listen io any kind of sentimentality that isn't flavored with poor perfumery. ILIIPIRE RIi’().1I)('.-i. I‘ It 1121'. r1 thrilling experiwlrr 1o "l:"r:1 1:1 1111110 gran broaclrrr-t on (Jllrlstlnas 11111: l- 11,11? plmslr-q" 111 the ciiilcrrnccs in time. 7111* lnilLfrzlllllllC on L‘!1:':'~'.'111:1.s alH-rnoon. 111 W118 Brlisll (7111111111113. 1l1c sun 11ml not’ then risen on Cl1r1=.:111.1.= Days, while '11 ow": 11r11~is of the llulplro 1t was 1l1c 11111‘ .1111~1- (Jl:1'1.~.111111~ Fmlu 1~:11:11 broudcastllig 110111: came [rcetLngs and messages of optim- lsm and good cheer. The story: is {old 1n 11 brief paragraph 11v the C:11~.;11l1.1n Pix-q»: “i~‘11~<: 1.11 411.11 was on the nir, then Wales, Scot- lwld. 1l1c-Lei‘, the Irish Free State. The voices of Canada. followed, Halifax sending its greetings, Wont- rrnl 1101111111: on 111 French 111111 Eng- lish, Toronto, Winnipeg and Van. eouver adding their voices. Well. lnglon, N. Z._ picked 11p the chain. i°13°'-‘»'i'1l 11v Brisbane lifel. Wurue Australia, 11111.1 cape Town, 11111011 of South Africa, Port Bald added a. few words. The liner Majestic in the Atlantic Ocean 11nd 1111‘. 111101‘ Enlprnss of Britain in the 111111 in \\'I€I1\'I‘..\'I1\Y. IIIIFIISIIIER ‘ZR, 1911'.’ ‘Incl ‘vim evpanse of the Elmpirc was ~;-n1- 1 messed in the 111st that the for- , eign terms used‘ in the game point . to its Continental origin. The exact jyiliili‘ 111 111111-11 1l1c game was first. lmknown. hut it is believed to have (luring the six- l ,111<1~;1 some time ’ i1"‘111l1 1-1111111111‘. ‘1l1c painting, which is 6111111911 "Die liellnkelu‘ der Jager" ("The Return of the Hunters") 1s signed ‘nncl 1i11tvd Bruegel, 1585. In the IIMCREIOUIIKI of the picture, below the 11111 on which the hunters arc standing, five figures can be clear- ly seen curling on an ice rink. A \11l1o'.111"r1111l1ic enlargcmelit of the rink reveals that 111011‘ lnodc of play and the stones themselves are considerably more up to date than anything hitherto ascribed to Scot- land l11-111re the nineteenth century. The Rev. J. Ramsey 11777-18711, who is believed to give the earliest account’. we possess of curling. states confidently’ that the sport is of C1>111i111~11iul origin. “We lune all 1l1c c\idc11cc that etymology can give in favor of its Continental origin,” he writes. MFIIO‘ICITIIS being all Dutch or German point to the Low Coun- tries as the place in which it most probably origlnatc(l—ut Red Se“ i°°k Pari- in extending Christmas srevtmcs." 1t a all set’ lowu in matter of fact language,‘- TPt 1i [represents 1111.1 of 12111 ;r1e.t-' m .11.l111:\"1rr.1~11ts of the 11g; 1m ‘mum? 194T)’ tale come true.‘ British nation spoke to British nation. shore to ship at. sea, and? |11ip answered to snore, and even‘ the “little town of- Bethlcbeln," the; cradle of Christianity, the place to: which the thoughts of all 0111111111»! 110m were turned 0:1 Christnuts D1113,‘ Wlllflbllifli its 111L>>11_111‘. Liosb impressive was the broad-I mt by His Mflicsry r111- Kinq, 11119.1 it, is -11nders-’ocd, mllzcd into thr 5111110 golden , 111111: llfiniszlnlitui 111s: speech throughout‘ the world on {he occasion of the opening of the Indian Round Table Co!11'vr~111-r~, two years ago. 'l‘l1e' 111-‘ sir 111 es. ' :11. i:1,<~11ll1)(i :11 lli. :..n1l_1.' 112]- llt Sunclrirulha111 for .1111? e1 n‘. AT‘. file arrangements for the! broudrest, uerc submiited to 11111 K1111; for 111s 1111111 approval 110love‘ helm! (lefzlllieiy carried out. The bevel srvctinlzs were heard by 111.15 lllrfiest. audience ever assembled toi listen to the human voice. And it‘ was a imssllgo wliizh was worthy of 13w 1>cc11s£on'.7"1‘o regain Pros- perity wifhouc self seeking, and to‘ carry with 11s those whom the bilf-] den o! the 11.151. v0.11: 111d disheartJ a: in 111111‘, phrase Ills Afujestjr the keynote of [he gzganiie efforts which the Empire is male‘ 1X11‘; at the present time. A personi sl touch was added when he said. with the simple dilgility which 11:11.1 characterized all the utterances of the British monarch: "My lifes aim has been to serve as I might‘ tmvnrds those ends. Your loyalty,‘ your confidence in me has been my,‘ abundant reward. I speak now,‘ from my home and from my he“; lo you nil." ' Foreigners have expressed cur. prlso at. the increasing strength of those ties which bind together the various units of the British Empire, In the Unlicd Stairs especially [hero has been difficulty in imdcr. standing the nature of the British- If loyalty to the Crown. Perhaps m" ChYT-‘imfll Dill‘ broadcast will e111- Outsiders a clearer insight into these matters. It 1111s, ut any rate been an epochal event to Brit.- bh people. WHERE CURLING IIEGAN filters-sting lig/nt upon the much-disputed origin of curling, lays the Iondon Morning Post, is provided hy a slrrteexiih-ceitiury oil painting 111 n Viennese. museum. Al1hr111ql1 held by Sco1~11.111 :11 11c iuuiucilous to their lilr :11'11'1 i", wu111.r_v,1111u11u11s have been ex- leust, whence it was conveyed to us. Had there been only one or two foreign terms one would have mllitated much for the domestic orioiu of the ganle, bu“ the whole of the terms being Con- tinental compel us to ascribe it 1x1‘ Continental origin." The various doles given by au- thoritative sources as 1l1c earliest by which curling ivns known are equally tinsafisfnctory. The En- cyclopaedia oi Sport states that the sport, "in one form or other has been practiced in that coiultry (Scotlandi for more than four cen- turies back." The Encyclopaedia Brl? ‘mica suggests that the sport "llns V6.1 popular in Scotland for three centuries at lcnst." Finally J. K1111; whose "History of Curling" was published in i890, writes at that date, that the game could be trriccd back for nearly 400 years. ‘The mo»: conclusive evidence as to the sport's origin, however, is afforded by n study of the stones shmm in the painting. “The an- cient stones had no handles," states the Encyclopaedla Britan- nica, "but, notches were hewn in them for finger and thumb, and as their weight, varied from five to tvrcllty-five pounds, it 1's probable that they were thrown after the fashion of quoits." The players in the picture have evidently long par-rod this stage, for they can be _ seen scooping to grasp their bowls. "Dining the next period we find the heavy bowlder stones, unhewn blocks fitted with handles and probably’ 1111011 at shorter distances, seventy o1‘ eighty pounds being no uncommon weight. The rounded stone. med.“ scientific prin- civics, did not appear until about 1800. Even then it was of all shapes and sizes with and without; handles and not uncommonly made of wood." The stones in the pic- ture. are ilndoubh-(lly an improve- ment 1111 even this last type, 51mg all possess handles; certainly they n" not “unhewn blocks." liforcovcr, in Lhc "Annual" of 18111 there i". contained a descrip- iion of a stone that had been found that year as follows: "This last summer a stone. has been found in an old curling pond near Dun- 1111mm. is i0 inches broad by 11 inches and five inches thick and seems to have been taken from the bed of the river and not to have been dressed. ‘There are twr; holes for the handle." O11 EDITORIA L NOTES We suggest. to our contemporary that there are opportune 111111.». for playing party politics 1111111 dzrmg 1l1c Christmas 111111- Gays 1 ROTC tukcu 51111111151)’ 1n any country is, . r111: CHARLOTTETQWN GUARDIAN . - ~ »- | numb lflllil: Iii-II, what ibvbe of pours lip [units Wdarfon. M.D. 50,000 fillies oi railroad that s! : - (my; you; DOCTOR A CHANCE never have been buill- T116 1W1 ‘r0 1.0mm: 101m TROUBLE roads of that country have 11> rec kon with the same kinds u: W111- Dfli-iiii" 3-1‘ 111050 W11?“ <"'11l“’1‘-‘~ 11 ~111l_\' 11111~ 1111111: 111 his mind. that 1.1111 nillrulliis‘ oi‘ Can.111.1, 1., 111 1111 r111 11f that 1min. If tho 111111111- 11.1111 is called in immediately wives. 111111 a (lose of some pain kill- 1111; 111' 111011 that doctor "knows 115.1 i111. and will be called in 1111- 111m 111111‘ there is any illness in 111.11 11:1li1"11L's 1101110. 1 Tin-re arc some ‘forms of pain in ‘ l 1011 1111: 1i11ctor is justified in giv- _ 1111111-111111111 relief to the patient; 111 1.1-1‘. 11 uould be 111112111" not 1.0 do 13L]. However 111111 1min anywhere In 111v ‘nodv. particularly in the abdo- ‘1111111, lo give r1 pain killing drug l1ei11re 11 thorough examination is ,111:111e_ might prove disastrous to ‘ 1.1111 1111110111. A 1111111 killing medicine v ~. '1 1i who w 1» M ~11 1 .31.;‘l‘.i;“li-.i‘,li..li‘;‘“.l"lil 7.3.1.5.? w“ debt record‘ Bu!’ the“: “in be a1 ialc operation is really necessary. "or" largc Sized blot on m? .m°m.l So don't get impatient. with Your of filncrzcun (101111111110111. 11 it docsidmtor n. h? “has a hmc time to "05 “n” me Bung‘ debt’, “grub ' try to learn the nulure of your ill- mcm‘ ma“ me m)“ fsemvl-AHUHQWDCSS by studying the puln instead payment is duc.-Prov1dcucc Jour- of giving meals-me to st°p1t1m_ “B1- 111111111111111. ~ Ailother 1101111 forgotten by some 93111133- hi“ be?" W”? “Tum? , 11111101111; is that from the time an new traditions diving 1110-11‘ 118-“ , illness starts until it gels well under few years-never too busy, however, 3 “my ,,',_,y be hours, pays, m- even to form to my homage to bbr Old- \1-1~<~1.-<. Because the doctor who saw or 011cs. Canada 1111s 1111ex11l11r111j11, 511m- 11 WM W911 devclgpgd was riches beyond 11111111111 colnprvlirn-11.1w 1,. rQL-nignizc it, should be no sion in her natural 1-1:~;111r1c.<=. B111 1-1-1111111111111111 1l1c first doctor or doc- her greatest treasure house is in the 1111-1 1111111 saw the case in its early hearts of her sons and dm1:zI1tc1-s‘.s111gr~.==, when it. resembled half a who regard her traditions so sncrcd- ‘ doren 11tl11-r ailments. It is quite l . While this spurt lives in 1l1c 111:1 hat the doctor who was call- ylarts o; 1m. pegplg 39.113411 i; 1105- ed in first would have no trouble tmd w film-e and “w “Chm-e £10111. ;rec1'1_;t11l.:ing the ailment. in these er and lofier objectives. 111191‘ b13295- Of course, as some one has well lsnid. each mum's health is to him- ..\’elf so etnotloua‘ and personal an Canada ls not alone In hlving a. serious ralroad problem. The 111-; tersiate Commerce Commission cs5 tlmatcs that Clam I railroads 111 ihe United States will this year‘ fall. short of earning their interest cllflrsf- ' 11 is es by over $200,000,000. 11. estimated that. the eou11111v \\’11~11 =1 1111110111 is in pain there It has almiys been very hard for the 1x151, brain; of thi- imitcd States 1o coerce Congress; 1111i Confllib‘ will have to be coon-Hi 11 1i. 190101‘ n1adc to forget its 1.11111 ' its bonus marchers 1111.1 ed constiucuts, 111111 azn-e 111 1M‘ ulllioits of dollars v11! .1: 11111 .\111~ erimn 11011110 for 1111' ' ‘I 11:» Fill‘ ope-Europe 1111111111 p1,, 11.11‘ . armaments today‘ ‘ 11 1L did beiore the War. Howew , Cougars-s 1111s a! tunes been led against. 11s 11111. 'l‘l1e .1 was 011cc a Ilooscwlt vino 11:11 :1. l1‘ there anything in a 11.1111e? The first purpose was s911'-i"'¢5i‘!" vaion, the second, o. 1110:1115‘ of bun magma they cauld mom pemmh l1u-‘1i111:t01~ 11-1111 disinterested mtcl; ently through a one way trade. O;_‘11gr-I..(‘1._A throbbing earauhe wil Lawa. seems tohave been signdliy “T312 i}‘Sushi"ldiijiullldimenipt successful in 11011111151 to restore vviln£i‘;\'y‘l;m?‘inihéuéginpgifxuremsg: commerclalsulliiy wlicrc it ..< 1110s; inlysp" 1021]: at {he tongue and "EHIKI-w-‘iucklfllld 111M111‘ *‘““1"P» 111rd11~1~1u11111 El little medicine until‘ somciliixig: develops. The physiciani of 10-day tries to diagnose the case from i111.- vcry beginning, but he k11o1vs tluit he must; make certain, “ex111n11111t1o11s, certain laboratory be expected °I a °°r“1‘“15‘”5’ 51x‘ Losis, and get. as much information hour day for railroads as follows: as pnvflbk, from the patient mum,“ "There would be rlo material s-fleci-jb-L-y, rherffifiiivgivfififqftfcfjfisydi Reporting u. a Congress, pathe- tically/ eager for an education, 111'! Interstate Commerce Co111111l».s.1111 informs it conccrtnlag the effects to Old Coffee Houses And Clubs 1E, Lytton wybert, D.P.S. in the Montreal Gazette). I. Three centuries ago clubs were the natural resorts of men who. though socially inclined, did not en. joy the social position, and could not, therefore, command the intro- ductions into high circles which were accorded to Pepys or John Evelyn in the 17th century and t0 Horace Walpole in the 18th century. The “clubs” succeeded the fashion- able “coffee and chocolate houses" of a bygone day. They afford ad- vantages and facilities of living to thousands of dividuals in every walk of life, civil and military, ccclesias- tical, peers spiritual andtemporal, commoners, men of the learned pro- fcsslons, mose connected with lite- crature, science, the arts, and com- merce, in all its principal branches, as well as those who do not belong to my particular class. " The opinion of Dr. Johnson on the subject of clubs and club life is well known to every reader of Bos- well. A gentleman venturing one day to say to the learned doctor that he sometimes wondered at: his condescending to attend a club, the latter replied: “Sir, the great: chair of a full and pleasant town club is, perhaps, the throne of human fel- icily." Addison, who knew something about the chocolate and coflee houses and what we may call the “club life" of his day, has given l. sketch of St. James’ Coffee House, which stood at the western end of Pull Mall. He modestly surmised 111111 his detractors had some color? for calling him the King of Clubs, and orscularly said that "All cele- brated Clubs were founded on eat- ing and drinking, which were points where, most men agree, and in which the learned and the illiterate, the dull and the airy, the philoso- pher and the buffoon, can all of them bear a part." I According to John Timbs, Pall more than three centuries ago.1 "The first. time that Pepys mentions it" is under dare of July 26, 1660. there we spent till ten at. night." The passage is strangely curious, not only as showing bow even at that time Pall Mall was famous for also as the earliest instance of the use of the verb “b0 club," in the_ sense now so comma 11y in use. Thackeray deacribeslthe club life, oolliflmfi SOUL’! BEAUTY Under the arch of Life, where love and death, Terror and mystery, guard her shrine, I saw _ Beauty enthroned; and though her gaze struck awe, I drew it in as simply as my breath. Hers are the eyes which, over and beneath, The sky and sen. bend 011 thee.- whlch can draw, The allotted bondman of her palm and wreath. This is that Lady Beauty, in whose praise ‘my voice and hand shake still- long known to thee By flying hair and fluttering hem -the beat. Following her daily of thy heart and feet, How passionately and irretrievably, In what fond flight, how many ways and days! -D. G. Rosettl Canadian Grain Routes (Winnipeg Tribune) The Maritime grain route is be- coming well 1.511111111111111, through 11 combination of carefully planned governmental policies, and certain recent changes in freight rate structures, both land and water. In all likelihood this new develop- ment will eventually mean for Saint John and Halifax a. repetition of the phenomenal growth which has taken place in Vancouver as a grain port. Habit plays a considerable part in sustaining trade routes; the volume 0f. traflic‘ of a particular commodity along a selected route tends to attract more traffic through improvement in rates and service. Mr. James A. Richardson, presi- dent of one of Canada's largest gaming “m, 10mg“ cauntvrisl; which 11111111" 111111 lie c1111 scarcely judge Mall was noted for its tavern clubs grain exporting firms, in an inter- view with The Saint John Tele- graph-Journal, sweeps isway some of the beliefs which had made some 1 when he “Y8? ‘We W611i f0 WQOWS. Westerners doubtful of the ultimate 1 our old house, for clubbing, and success or the Maritime grain route. For a long time it was thought. that. a. large proportion of ly to the aristocracy. In the words of Captain Gronow, "My trades- m_a_n,ff as King Allan used to call the bankers and the merchants who had not then invaded White's, adverse or o1l1c1'\v1re, upon 01111111- tion o." the several carrers, tlnSlllll- lng that revenues would be suillc- lent to cover any added Operaikng, expense and still maintain Credit.“ The syllogistic form here emllbyvd yvlll be rccognzed as t1 classic b}; 01's 1l1c proper diagnosis. " "s" Try to rclnelnbcr this when you or a loved one is sick. AVOIDING AND FIGHTING FLU 'l‘l111:c 11f us who went. through it thowesifllnddn‘QueeKWAnues 'Brook‘s, Boodle's,"or Wattiex-‘s, in day with his usual felicitous man- Bolton Street, Piccadilly; which ner. "It was too hard, too coarse oi witIr-the" Guards? Arthur's, and life, for the sensitive and sickly; Graham's were the onlyclubs in the Pope. He was the only wit. of the‘ West End- "White's" WG-8 dwldedly day—he was not fat. Swift was fat; the most diflicult of entry; its 11st Addison was fat; Steele was fat;- of members comprising nearly all “Whatever Happens Our Future Is Secure”, OU an when Y on you for support. DECEMBER _28. 1931 easily u rec have In I equate income for yourself and for the members of your family sliIl relying gun your niTuiru so that the age of 60 you will Some iihlc in lhe future your family will, perhaps, be do- pendeot for their comfort on your ESTATE. Slucly the table below. upllnl you It shows you the need lo have, invested ll 6%, In ylclrl you any desired monthly lineman- TI and" nah Ioulh ' Q2500 you would mead O 8,000 50.00 “ “ " 10.000 15.00 a z 2 13.333 .1 cud"; ,, u ,, 501000 Dominion-l and 35°30 u u u “L000 " m "a-"W The sures! nnd easiest way lo gull-anion Kabul}: yourself, or your family, any crzcil monthly nun! nu lull cheque you need when you wish lo rah-o " ‘I /'“°'°'~P' il lo obtain a Mulunl Life lilonlhly Income f" '9",bnfi Policy. The (Iounpuny will be pleased lo u] prnparuy u you nlld youn- Ialablhlul 1l69 lend you full _ _ or any other plnn of life. msurance, on request. Simply mail the coupon below. informulion regarding if, Ii. A. EBEIIS, Provincial lllanngcr 135 Kent Slreci, Charlottetown. lMuTUAE-i» LIFE Assurance Company ‘ 0F CANADA Dwnvd 11y fhepolifiylfvulrleltr I-l L‘.\I) OFFICE — WAIIERLOU-ONI. Canadian grain must flow through New York because of the cheap rates given by passenger liners. ‘r1115 factor has been eliminated; most of the grain is now being car- ried in tramp steamers because their rates are lower than those of the liners. Discount on Canadian and Brit- ish money as compared with Am- erican dollars affects’ both railway and ocean freight rates, favoring Canadian and British lines. This is- a temporary or adventitious factor, but 11 is only “the added stimulus needed to get, the Maritime grain lucvemeni: into full swing. For sev- crgl yeaxsugreatjeal. of work has been done by the Maritime Prov- inces and ports, by the Cuugdlgn railways and the Dominion Gov-r T eminent, to lay a solid foundation for the shipment of grain through Canadian Atlantic ports. when exchange -rei.urns to parity this The Maritime lines and Atlmtil ports are evidently fully aware 1.11M in order to hold this traffic they must give service of a high ordort this habit also will tend to give permanency to the route. _ Advantages of employing Cauld- ian equipment and Canadian labol to the fullest possible extent in thl handling of ducts are ‘perfectly obvious from the national point of view. Bu! suflicient t0 do 1.110 trick; it mus! be backed up by real performance A combination of circumstances ha: given the Maritime ports a great opportunity, 11nd it. is evident: lhoi they are making the best of it. 1r. W. l1. Garsont CHIROPRAUFOR patriotic sentiment. is not alone all masters Oi fdletics. It was 1n- llic Flu cpiclelnic of 1918 and 1919, vented some tme after Aristotle by and who have seen the Flu grow the colored gentleman who s d: "If loss severe in its effects the past: 1 had a yme ham I'd have 1111111 few years have much cause to be and eggs for breakfas-L if I only 11nd thankful- the eggs." Ilmvcvcr the Flu is $1.111 with US, i ,11nd we must be ever on our guard. In ms mega,“ to congress "e51. ‘Naturally we believe that it was so den, Hoover Says, “A5 manmmcd severe and did so much damage in armaments can rm. a ‘M3,. increase 191B, than n certain amount of pro- in expnecliturcs 011 our (lclcn-lvc 11‘ ' i5 m“ Prcscm m “w” °r forces’ me Mneman people [eel ma.“ us who passed through it atthat cancellation of those W“) debts time, just as uttucks of various ail- would only free larger sums for iur- m?“ 9mm“ “s {mm mture at‘ v . ' r tuc 1s. fir? fiiiggfgr Ziggmiiuigiugzgoigd Iio1.vc\'cr the protection may grad- _ , , _ _. 1111111‘ 11:11:11" :1\'.'ny, and in addition a szi.d in LDC-UH ted Stass nlnu. ‘u 11..1l ncw gonvmnon o‘ young peome 1S w-de céandntoriisl, iléieplsfkcwni ‘d; 110w srmviui! up about. us, so 11: gurnen cera n y s ~lll1 l-' , _ _ would b1 wise if we kept invmirld the cam otfh Gm“ Bmmrxhvbocaxlslg just 11.1.1: lo recognize the Flu when Britain 15 c only on: o .111 urea it 1" .. , and also the best way to powers that has given 11 clcuz- lend figm l,“ 1-°“'"dd15ar"mm’~’“i 5m“ 1918' ‘md; 'i"l11- ‘"11 tisunlly starts with a it is to be remembered that Brllan med “my” rcenng_palns and PB-Yb 111B $19M bulk 0‘ t“ w“ aches over the body. There moy be (161115 1.01116 United 5111195- a little. "snuifinesrl" or cold in the --—-— Illcad, 11 $111511; cough, and a little To glow how lmpomnf, 1g 15 that irLsc 1:1 temperature. If the sympt- lhe jurors keep their minds 11n- 10m“, increase there may be seven mused, the digjmiggal o1 d jury 11111111111 in the chest, more coughing, m asault case in London is 1.11111. 11nd a ilronrho-pneumonia or pneu- Lmd Hewafl, the Lord Chief Jus- 111011111 1irrvelop. All over the world time, heard that during 1l1c 11111111- 111111 5111111-"5110115 are brine elven by eon interval two o; me Jurors 11nd public lumlth departments or hyg- made a 50mm. “mark m ch19; o; icnc societies 0n the _best. way to defending counsel. The barrister had lmndlc the Flu situation. replied. Directly the 10rd Clilrl , Hm" i" “Wm the m“ Keep Vhy‘ Justice heard of the octurrcnrc 11c ‘$192111’! 11b Plléflffisi! l!" 5110 011361111111‘- dismissed the Jury and ordered =1 G“ W“ y ° Seep n a we"ve ' new u,“ Although notmng m the llnted room. Avoid crowds. Wash ,_ L your hands and face frequently and Eéngozxelt-Zztlgstclggi ointlllledifisiy , always before eating, If you cough the Chm Justice wok we ground mr-lancczn do so in a clean handker- mm we Jurors and counsel ("a m": clnei. and thus protect your neigh- ‘nbr. Don't 1vorry about; the Flu. Bldg “veto on terms or ‘mdue mm- l This zloeslft mean that 1f you fol- marmy‘ Th“ “and tmd t” sway I 111w 111». nbove you will not have an their judgmwi 17 ‘m’ Fa“ Wm‘ 11111111: 111 P111. I1. does mean that c109‘ 1111011111 you bc attacked you will be 111 your best possible condition to ilrthi, it. The Chiddingfold 11111111111111111 Association has presented 1t cheque How”, 111mg 1:11“, go w bed 1m. w m. Hon. David Lloyd (leorcc. mediniclv. Cal! your physician n1 wpruwnung prim nwnqy “itch hotoncc and do us he tells you. Stay ‘ M ‘ in 1101i until your doctor tells you to won l“ wmpetmon ITS“ sgmlnbcr’ gel, up. It is nlwuys wise to call your when he 10°11 m“ Place m‘ 1‘°*‘""‘°'"'°' ' 1111;. 11.111 11s the real danger of the and swedes grown on 1115; farm atlFlu i: that many cases go on to Churt. If politics lcls 1l1c v.".'1ri11:c11""""7°“i“- Rememb" m“ pen“! Gay and Thompson were prepos- temusly fat. All that; fuddling and punch drinking, that club and cot-i fee house boozing shortened the lives and enlarged the Waistcoats of’ the men of that age." “The chief of that age spent over spudille and caption of Congrave," he writes further, "were what. we should now call men's men." They spent many hours of the four and twenty, nearly a. fourth part of each clay, in clubs and cofee houses, where they dined, drank and smoked. W11 and news went. by word of mouth. A ioumal of 1710 contained the very smallest portion of either the one or the other. The chiefs spoke, the faithful "hnbitues" sat. around; strangers came to wonder and lis- ten. The male society passed over their punch bowls and tobacco pipes almost as much time as the ladies of that age spent. over spadille and manilla. We see 11o sign of club life in the tuttling writings of Horace W94. Dole, though s0 many of his person- al friends-marge Belwyn, r01- m. stance-were devoted to its plea-s- ures. For himself, so it is stated, he W85 hfifdly robust enough to live in such an atmosphere, ' The clubs of London in the days of the Regency belonged exclusive- I have Passed the above advice 130118 before and I'm doing so Bllin as one who was close to the mvbkea of 1918. I believe had we known as much then as now, valu- 5519 “W! mlkhb have been saved. ~_ i 1 I * 111111115 "11 KIDNEY; hem," down nuogncrgr |11I c-"iing wcll is longer than the 1.11111.- uciuully sick. Keep your room ‘m “ck um“ iumm" at. 6B decrees 1". and Well ventilated. 11c 111.11‘ the noble names of Great Britain. Here flaming was carried on to such an extent. that. it made ravages in large fortunes. General Scott, the father-in-law of George Canning and the Duke. of Portland, was known to have won at. "White's" a. large fortune; thanks to his notor- ious sobriety and complete know- ledge of the game of whist. The general possessed a great advant- age over his companions by avoid- ing those Indulgences at the tabla which used to befuddle other men's brains. He confined himself to din- ing ofl something like boiled chick- en with toast and water. By such a Iesime he came to the whisl. table with a clear head, and , ssing as he did a. remarkable memory, with great coolness, he was able to boast that he had won honestly more than a quarter of a million pounds. (To be concluded) coLDs ! Prompt and effective relief 1s obtained in Coughs, Colds, Chills, Sore Throat, Whooping Couch and Bronchial Troub- lco, In infant and adult by MACS SYRUP TAR AND COD LIVER OIL COMPOUND This‘ preparation is com- pounded Irom pure drun llld has been thoroughly med ma tested. Erndicnio colds quickly bo- foro they become deep-sealed, thus tending the sufferer to serious bronchlnl 5nd pul- monory conditions. 40c. PER BOTTLE AT Till THE 2 M1103 Drugstore 111.111. onnsus o 1 vb u momm- ATTENTION favorable basic structure main, with the added momentum 0f habit. will re- Uhrcc Year Palmer Graduate .24 Prince Si. Phone 1072 Home Calla Made. 146 Richmond St.. E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown IIICKEWNICIIOLSOWS BLACK \. M‘ 1r; the Dominion’: mu- ‘