PTGEFUURT 1 llli Bllllllllll TIIWN Ellllllll Notes by the Way . HE relations of the Temperance Alllani-c with the Provincial Gov-. ' use-u; Dolly (foulflodlbflll 05-00 w v-u- ou ldvnrioo) Milt-mt MAO per 1on0: advance) nnlhil lii Cnnull Praline-J". Chum l. IoLno. tum and launch-J. B. Burnett. Boerotory-Llut. vol. u. THE MAKING OF CANADA l WAY back in I878—when Canada; vras still young. but {9811118 1111’ needs of her coming years. $11” 501111‘ A. Macdonald moved the followlns resolution in the Parliament in which the Hon. Alexander Mackem, zic- was Premier: , "That this House is of the op- inion. that thc welfare of Canada I requires thc adoption of a Na- tional Policy. which. by a judl- l cious readjustment of the tariff. will benefit and foster the A311- ctlltural, the Mining. the Manu-v lacturing and othei interests. til the Dominion; that such c. soli- ty will retain ll‘ Canada t oli- sandr. oi otii fellow countrymen 110th obliged tc- expatriate them- solve: ll‘ search oi the employ- ment denied them at home. will restore prosperity to our struggl- ing industries. liow so sadly cle- presscd. will prevent Canada from being made a sacrifice liiar- ket. tvill encourage and develop an active interprovincial trade. and moving lilS it ought to dot in the direction o! a reciprocity of Tariffs with our neighbors. so‘ lat" as the varied interests of Canada may demand. will gretit- . ly tend to procure tor this . t"(lllllll'_\' eventually‘. a reciprocity ‘ of Trade." _ l 'I‘lll.-; was the t-tirni-r stone illloiil, which the Canada of trltlziy tv;i.~. built. Canadians; it meant t-vt-rything that lt liiealit (rancid-a lur Illr could ‘tnake for the building up oi a country that everything that. was needed lo liiake lLltl ltilhln itseli a country great. it had tiatural re- sources, then undrcaiiied of, con- sisting at that time of timber, coahl‘ fisheries power. Its! mineral wealth was unknown. the] possibilities of its water power and the development of electricity had not entered the imagination even of and water the far-seeing man of vision. Mr. (afterwards Sirt John A. Mac-don- ttld. Yet, he saw in the then known resources of the young country that the development the meant development from within. He knew that Canada. dependent upon foreign countries for its needs. could never grow. of country l-lencc his reso- lutlon declaring that the agricul- tural, industrial and commercial life of the country must be given ade- quate ‘protection against competition. What resolution is history foreign followed the The National Policy. of which this resolution was the founder. today. There have been gaps in thi- development. gaps catiscd by tariff tinkerings to please and to secure the support of certain sections the country by politicians who re- garded their political lives as more important than the life of the coun- try. The Canada of today. with its immense wealth of natural resources partly uncovered. has the same needs as the Canada of fifty years. ago, btlt with infinitely greater op- portunities for advancement. This was recognized at the great National Conservative convention of last week ln Winnipeg, when the resolution of, 1878 was endorsed and the consist-E ent policy of the great Liberal-Con- servative piirty was again Cflllllrllllfltill Adequate protection for Canadian! agriculture and Canadian lndustrles.1 ln the words of Sir John A. Mac-' made the Canada of of wltfONldAY, O1CTOBER 17, eminent and Legislature. are ano- ‘malous and. since the election have’ gbeen seriously strained. The Alli- Iance itself is an entirely Arrespons- iible body. It is a purely voluntary jcrganizatioil, as other societies are. A, uummm", n, ,_,_ n" ,Its members are not elected by the} ,p€0ple as Members of the Govern- -,ment. the Legislature. the City and lTown Cotiiicils are elected. Nor is _.__.--_-‘it a representative body so far as the d with i; {he Province is concerned. Its members ‘are professedly united for the pur- pose of promoting temperance and 1111151191111’ “lllch 11 11*“ l‘ 11111“ Lulprohibition. but with a wide latitude enjoy and which will k139i) 11$ Dwllmjboth of belief and practice in among iii their own country developing it. a minor section of their number, and Cnltod Staten. _ , ._. _~s . J _./7 vlae-Proulllent-J. B. Burnett. Ann-Into Editor-II. K. Currie. HEART SECRl-ITfON You are likely irouderirll W111“ will b: the next discovery in medl- :iuc. You have learned that the secretion of the gland in the neck. the thyroid gland. itcts as a suit of whip to make‘ the processes of the body work faster. SLIIIEIIXIIES it has been likened to the forced draft of ti furnace which lforccs the cells to bitili more rap- » 1 sdli: The large majority ol‘ its members! ‘T110 590E110" Q1 111° 1113191131 “e admitted“, abstemious and Smjglalids. situated on top of the kid- . . neys. act lii the opposite way. and ecre til adherence to their professedsoe“, m swim}. or slow “D the acmm principles. but the membership .is13, l)“ (hyrgjd secretion, HE Right l-loii. Mackeilzie King. (‘Ollsltllllly changing as members, Thell tilesecretloil front the part- T cncc active become inert. drop thoiri 71111131 1113111111‘ mmbwF ‘he 5115mm to iluiiics from the roll or perchailceluullzc m9 mgam o‘ ‘he ‘Md m a ur osed taking a va- v , ._ _ . 5111191‘ P1119111 . 11011111191!‘ had p p 191111111‘ 1111111 1110 P111\'111C1". 130110111“ llowevei no one has ever thought 1t the heart zis a dtictless gland. You . the salubrious and congenial air of here to one of the two large bodiesli“ mm": 11 15 511111111’ *1 nmscm“ . pump. that works by means 0f the the UiiitcdStates. vrhere the wicked 119N191‘ 111mm m? 1.91190,“ 1am‘ c‘ ziiipulscs which go to it from the from m” people of 11115 1)1'°1'"1°° 15 111' brain by liieaill; of tllc nerves. ,lll0Sl equally divided. Our point ist Hotvevel e heart has been known "that the Temperance Alliance isnot 1C beakevlelnaagm‘ thetnffives 111mm A National Lib-~ _ , _ , _ _ tht brain iii. een cu , us s o\v- , _iii any senseof the wold a repleseil- mg that m the hear, nsem was oral COIISGFYRKIYPhCOllVelllltlll was tativc organization. Knmnhlng ma; had m9 pqwer, [or about to be held in Winnipeg aboutl, new,“ its i awn F“ d at least. to keep the heart _ _ ._ _. l »‘ r rrr siiiy an ‘- ~ , . the intended time o1 his S0]Otll‘ll1“on_reDre$/enmtive churaflcr, the As ‘you know a few amps of me “A1111. 111111 11 111111111 11°‘ he $°"‘“13".T@111i>@1'a11v@ Alliance as =1 body £115. ‘igiigflld ‘lii???’ to be not only "looking to" but actu-wiotisly ineddlcd iii the last provin- l um. nvmg m Washington whim ‘he ciztl election in this province. It.tl1c heart began again to beat. and, ' , . ._ threw its weight and influence into’ *°m““‘ed 1° d° 5°‘ C tive. were ititting on theut I ,. . . o“ “a c’ 1 .tlic scale to elect the candidates oil And so when Pm" I ' - I . . - 1 . _ _ 1111‘ Lllilelfll Dllrll 811d 58011186 secretion ill the heart itsclf that NOW 111111 1110 C011V1‘l1110" 15 "Vflupledges froln all those candidates-Hts this nutvcl". the same POWBF 3S l‘. is announced that Mr. Mackeiizirythat if elected they would carry for- .- 19-4 country as a whole. an smaller sections. may grow" 111w 1.119 and enjoy it. .. <30->-—~—~ r '- HOW PLANS MAY CHANGE. a mouth or ulort‘ 1180- 11 “'35 1111' cation and a mtich needed rest in 1,13,10,18“). m‘, gm,“ major“). adj Canadian iaoliticiaits cease ‘iroubliilg and the weary may re.‘ But he didn't go. I-Iaberlandt \v.i.' point. , . . accept it as another dis over that “u. ward the liizim feature of the Alli- may move U, grm, bencem 3,0 the 111111’ 110110)‘ by 5lll1ll0T1-1l1t; the PPD-liltllllzil‘. mo: , 4 , hibit-ory litiw. anlondint; it and i-n.l_ '1‘l\t"1't"_is 111,1 (lllfifiliflll but tlic rest that was crllilillg to him ili forking l, n,‘ dpnuunlvd by U“, MIL‘ ‘dtilnffllllll; ‘llil tlii~ heart. itself. tl 1 Wt-st dllflll’ the coilvr-lltloli, but ans I 1 . . ~ ., _- .l “MW “"15 11111 11'“ 11111"? Mwllyfi l1 t. ‘W111 bwu ‘he, tlctitioli tttiiity ioul IqIH-(gq --,-..S,.,-\.,. mwp,,~ has brought I ll its u tlt l lllllA‘ who allottld lllttlvitlttzih. tlirtitllglt. llltiesser. when ‘be the free and llltlF])(-tl|_h1|1[ NIH-p. -.ill liilllt- has bwlt flbillldmlfitl. ‘t.t‘!l|llll\f':» ol the elm-tors. were rt». AM m’ m" ‘"1"’ 111m“ 111911‘ _ _ - -.i l|ltt‘.‘ll.l(lll hilt that some of the 1111111-11 r1» lllttlttfll llflfl l| - l " -» .". . . . 1 ‘ ‘ “ “ddllls-lmtlllt- llllltfinhtfl. such at. influenza. AT the l‘l‘l'l‘ll\ session o1 the Sit-fill 1hr Alliliiii-tl. ‘typhoid. rllt-llulzitinu, tonsilitis, iind lilllvrs. ht't'lll to “usi- up" this re- wrvt ]ll)\\l'l lllltl it l5‘. often many King ‘is "going to Washington." ltll‘ u rest this; time. as he had all that Oil business. Funny. isn't. it? -.~_@o>--—- IN PROHIBITION N. S. P111810 Court of Nova Scotialasl! V Tho degrading bolul ol‘ servitude! week the Grand Jury concluded it?» was lightly taken m, by we Libel.“ .report as followsz- ‘,ca'tididates. up again‘ That ‘w [he r6150“ 1111"‘ The pledge was signed ‘ill secl-ccy. and might never bc EKIIUWII. The support of the Alliance. las they thought. would secure their "We view with alarm the in- creasing number of cases: sent u} to the Supreme Court. and tht apparent disregard. for the sanctity of the oath and we tecl that the present Liquor Law as constituted in this Province. is probably mean defeat. Anyway the isiglial pledge could be treated as llllfilell’ 11 Scrap of paper. No sooner to a great extent responsible for .1134 1111’ G<l\'01‘1l11t0l1t. been formed Um Condition» laud begun to function than pressure Thir; requires no comment. Fi'o:ii'11'°111 1111.‘ Alliance was exerted .10 1SCUUFI3bCCl1£IllI ends; certain person» _ _ _ 4 _ w _ Illllll-sl e appointed to certain posi~ Plohlbitioil has been tiled the sanitmons; Coma,“ other ‘Jersnm: must .c.iliplalnt comes-disregard for tut-mm be appommd; (.,(,,.|_a,n removals zaiictity’ of tllc oath.‘ Nova Scotia110111 Oflicc must be made; a special and Prince Edvuard Island are lio\vK.”e5S1"“ ‘*1 111° LPfilfllfllllre tllust ht- ‘called to stiffen up the proliibitory the only provinces of the nine ‘in 1a“, and .50 on, ' tery country and province in which Canada that arc still trying. however earnestly. to control the liquor evil, Nu self-respecting (iovemmenl by means of a prohibitory law which "mm, subm“ 1" “P11 flirtation. is prohibitory qmy m name: Practically there were two bodies , seeking control of the affairs of the ‘he 19511115 m province. and the entangled execu- tive llesitatilig as to what extent its lawful power should be yielded to the irresponsible Alliance. And the flight is still ou. Tlic Government 11 1S lPtllf-‘llPd 111111 1110 FY1139 01,lhas its newspaper organs. but they hog products has fallen somewhatlarc flushed to silence iti regard to as Compared Wm, recent yea“ Thiglthe controversy. The Alliotlcc has. is very proper“, attributed to nwgits Bulletin. boasted as entering ev- im ormuon of ch A _ _ lery home in the province and having p mp merlmm pomdoellind it the pastors of many of the which unfortunately has found itsmlluyclwg Tlwl-e a". t-Gmgc]. way into the British market as CalifGruttps" ill both camps demanding adnm bacon of a quality that wmcxtrelile measures. Heated discus- no, hold its own in the Stmnglsion and late night sittings have I _ _ . failed to reach any agreement. Wlial competition with European products, the result may be who can m“? l and both cases are far front satisfactory’. m EDITORIAL NOTES The busiest season of the year, thc A numb" n; kmding newspapers most anxious also. is now coming to call attention to the “bootlegE111Z" ‘of alicii immigrants into Canada. The Liberal Manitoba Free Press and _ _ tthc Conservative Ottawa Journal cally finished. Next comes the ship- agree ma, i, ,5 being carried m], The hint: and marketing 11f tlmrlllcv. 11nd Ottawa Journal remarks that "what this will be on shortly. There is. is being said openly till over Canada. little time for rest in the farmefslvhl’ "m" W1") ‘mgm 1° kmw- 15 111111 thcrc ls a regular traffic going on. even tlicn llc will flnd much tn do parucipated m chiefly by friends m ' ' ' ‘the Government. lll tlic bootleggiiig of foreigners into this country. Itnrl it is bring said fairly npcnly, that a satisfactory close. the harvesting of grain and potatoes being practi- lift- except when wilitcr comes, and Tlit- Oshawa Tinics says: There =1: P19011011. while refusal to sign would’ donnld, the rinc‘ lc f t tl . . . m u C dp__ “m ‘ 0 rpm 9C Onlflllf WHY by W1ll011 i1 1lll$1llPS$ mlllllflmcil who get so much per head for a an“ u“ Sm p" 1W‘ 1“ mewtrcdit is improved, mid that is by irbrluging foreigners ilito Canada. WQTd-‘l "1 1111‘ Dllllyi“ 101111015 Slllf-‘B-poucy Mvertxsmg,lforeiglltll-s who under the provisions of then, this is the, policy of the Llb-llaank mm Dene“, m ndvormmg mrqlf the Immigration Act could liot consistent. eral Conservatives of today. This policy has been hounded by political opponents, it has been false- ly called "high protection.“ It never meant higher protection than was needed to safeguard Canadian de- velopment. By the policy of 1878 the Liberal- Conilervatlve party of today stands unswervlngly as was so un- equlvocably agreed upon at the Winnipeg convention. By that pol- fcy Canadians must stand if we are 1° IIOW to the stature of a nation conic iiil go to the Governments and The" f°"""1='q|sectii'r» special certificates permitting therefore, is that when a lflerchlllllgsllflh people to laud here." There who is a. good udvgrfiggr gpphe}; (m? must be some record of these special certificates, and if so this crooked work will in dtic time be exposed. It b is yet to be learned whether these. e tmned Over quickly and Pmmm‘ thus unlawfully admitted persons. ly paid for. on account of his meth- are included lii the published official ad qt keeping ms goods constantly statements of foreign immigration. harem the pubnu Dlscflmlnatlng The natural inference is that they t. buyers of every class know that“? no they can get fresh goods from the‘; Notwithstanding Premier King's store that advertises. The merchant‘1°"""'1 °°11l1'1""1-'111'"l§ 1° 11011. R- B. who advertises seldom has shop_fl3ennett as leader of the Federal Conservative party. it becomes in- d.. A - . worn goo s nd in that way ad pmamngly apparent ma, the Pnme, they know it pays. a loan. a reasonable amount of goods bought by him on credit ls likely to1 ‘vfirtliy of the resources with which “ire has endowed it. Little nec- ‘eeda must be made aullcervb! L ygfqreater, needs so that the verllslna helm the merchant's cred-Minister and his colleagues would it. not only with the banks. but have preferred that the grout Con- wlth his customers. And one ls jtistiv°1111°11 111 117111111911! 11nd made a as important as the other. ldiflerem’ Chum“ your doctor isn't lii a hurry to let you get up and around again too lsoon after ah illness. (39111118 11p too soon tises lip this reserve power. instead of letting it gc- stored lip. _ We will await. with interest. more iilforttlatioil about this heart 59¢. rrtion. l éi-tl |4¢b¢eovewtvvvoovceoooeoo , . , - . Modern Etiquette i By ROBERTA mo. i E ooeoooeweooooeoveoo-eoo-q 1. Q. On entering an office-building elevator. in which there are ivoliicli. should a man remove his hat? 1 1 1 V Not necessarily. unless u woman acquaintance i-.- on the ole. 1 valor. I Q. Is it correct to use the fin - E lers to hold com when eating ‘it from lthtt cob? , _A. Ycs; lhc cob should be field 11811113‘ Ill the flngcrs at each ciid, Q. After what hour is full cvcli. iilg dress worn? After six 01:10:14, ace-o v0 were oov0m¢¢..,@,, A The Land We Love 1g’ By Frank Yelgh ~ 000a voo-aoo-oeovvooovoe-eq FORT HEN]! Y Q. Where is Fort Henry? A. Fort Henry is a famous ills- toric ruin near the city of Kingston b11111 llflflrly a hundred years ago at a cost at. the time of $4,000,000, n find conlmodiotis barrack quarters (ll a large force and when built was 2'. strong defensive work situat- "11 1111 11 lloiut that. coiiiiliunds m»; A dvetl moat sllrrntlndod the ck and high walls at a big EX- pcndittire of time and money. The lllllllpct alone is half a mile in ch:- ctinlfereilcc. Fort Henry is liow llow_ ever, deserted mid while some of the outer walls are bcilig kept ln- 21%‘... flL‘£l'.1.°.%i‘.""°" on ‘ "'*“i-O1~~-_ ~_. _ x44 o—v>o044ooooovo+<‘¢a‘ DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH fly W. L. Gordon evwwoveneoo-oeaeveno WORDS OFTEN MISL‘ SED‘. iJu not say "I shall not go without; .111‘ 200s with me." Say "unless he goes: with me." ,1, , , OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: 1th’!- ernry; first i as lll "lie," second 5y]- lablc as “tln." a as lii "may," ac- ceilt after the n. l OFTEN MISSPELLEDI filament; 8. SYNONYMS: choose. select, elect; prefer. pick. ' WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it ls yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by mash; - in! one word each day, Today's word: PARTICIPATE: to partake. He participated ln several confer- ences." Ruth Elder and her companion 1111MB“ 111M081 by a miracle, but their plane. the "American Girl." was lost. Arid now Mrs. Grayson. In “The Dawn" is expected to hop irf across the Atlantic any day. Here's llopltig that shc may have a 0F [he fOlII‘ SGHSOIIH, PilliUIIlIl Dec‘ m the poems of 81111118. nant note is one of - noticed lllk! ever clltlllglllg scenes 18W. of maturity. the ripeness of harv- heart that has stopped beating. andh. ‘tens Us that he has discovered a A hollow t'l')' til‘ litiuliils llkn lonely that of adrenalin. we are inclined t0 mocks before Nature has it stol~etl'm""""' Autumn 1Why We Are - All Lawbreakers (Norman Napier. llt '17P’! 1 w"k'y') ‘Excerpt: from The Golden Book (Juno, '27) l- eniula- uuafly ‘names poet Ltheg doiiii-' If the Lawn Were All: Enforced ecstatlojoy, hi1 This is the kind of a case that those oi Summer uutl Whiter. there dlgusts one with the majesty of the ls a quiet EXDPGSSIUII of those seu- law: A poor young zlrl. owner 0! gong’ extremes, but the poets have a shepherd dog and ignorant of the ' hail neglected to take out a m“! moods of Autumn‘, ihai season dog license, thereby depriving the wllfgh not only hears the.» fulness Commonwealth of $1; whereupon the coilstabulary brought lier before est. but also is the time of decline a Magistrate, who. with 91111011110118 and the withering leaf. sense of duty, imposed a l‘lile of $10, lii lier pot-m "Fragrance". Teresa with costs 0i.’ $3. 81111 111 1191111111 "1 Hooley skilfully catches the scents payment committed lier to jail fc-r of Autumn as they float on a B10818 15 days. waft or the wiiitl. Here is the l“ the Filitetl States one may poem; ' ' fairly assume [hilt 50,000,000 071111135 ' are being committed. and if these “A millloii scents “'111‘111 were all prosecuted for punishment. there lll‘(‘— "us of course they should he under Perfumes 0f 1110011111111- 1119111111“- iiuy enlightened theory ol euro-roe» and 11w. ,, "ment, over halt‘ ot’ our Federal pop- But. today. its I tlozetl In 111059111 uliitlon would be confined lii jall of t1 1'01" and the other engaged til getllllg A Willll of kindness walled to me ‘ [hem then“ , _ ‘Thu... me law l... that A scent compact of u wonder <11 (lgi-gloping into i; iiolf-tlevtitirlttg 11111111“: I monster. 'l‘.lie (lefotltlatll is tlis- Blfl(‘l(|l8I‘l‘l(‘.H. ilntlerllrut-lll, earth chanzegyh Jud,“ Henry A_ lamp-r, tlvattl leaves. . .._ itlist liuil fungi, and roblns‘ wings. Dctwhuiil: webs that the spider \\’(11\\'I?S . ' lil the The Busy Regulators _ l)“ v01] realize the number 01 Ycllotvitil: we‘ laws you are called upon to lllltlBl“ 1mm stand tiiitl to obey? Wily, this pre- The nlessaliejvllisperetl along niy He“, Congress h, one hm". W11] pa“, b10111!‘ more laws than all the Plirllltnietlts And I know that we passed. lii the m. ‘gumpe w,“ h, one Wat V, 3mm, g"“h°"im: dark‘ , are trvlnlz to regulate every form A littli», lovely. autumnal woot.’ M. hunk“ “cavity [mm m‘, selling ' - t the burial o!‘ a horse. Sit-gtt-ieil Sassoon. too. is a v g.fh:,ell§g1,,&,‘,,,g ma, h, “u, Sum... levied by the somllolent Autuiiiil‘,,sed__hc_rse,racmg_ "wvles, m, tlllll0fiflltt1l1g, lii ii quiet IIOUBiLGV- Sena, re,,nm,,_$__,wu,,,,g escnpefl__ 6131mm L‘. 11111111118’ and‘ Augustus l0. Stanley. tlXrfltlVt-Jfllt)!‘ 0t Kentucky. hrtieken. moss, Qul ili the night. there's Autumn. smelling gloom Crotvtlotl with whispering treem, across the park ‘ The Library of the. Future. Today. a complete American ltiw library wotllil contain 18.500 volumes of tletilslollsl tilltl 55110 vol- ‘llllléfl of statutes. Ulle hundred years lieuce, if the tilt-reuse of liiwil ,dtiring tho last century is main’ umptaineil. such a libiiiry would lllive belle: ' . . . . . ..l~‘:illiiig asleep . . . . . the lii-rolls tllltl the hounds Sltplltlllllvl‘ in the tliirklleslt‘. tlil- tvilrltl . , , . _ I've ltiiiitvll; llll ,t‘:iilliig past mo 1u~ “'“1°“~“ “"11 5501mm “mm” m 3m H, ,,,.,,.,,._-- ,uiiesl.-2tle_rle Tlwrflt‘. in ts lllltl H°W M311)‘ Ha" tiiiiuh oi‘ the meaning 01f ecertaiil. W111 3mm" Tad“? iisportl; of life. FOl‘, while ilal-1 _ ‘ _ tirl-‘s llftllllly is being garlieretlfi '1‘11“1"' 111 1,1“ m1m“‘°h'1" w" m airl- lltlflPllltlllfi signs of the New York (‘ity that ilotls lltll vlo- .,, 1",. ill‘ nlaiiy lhlilgs lfllnllfllP the lruffit- laws at least teii lvhit-li wt- (ll) not ttzilliilgly part. 11111011 it 1111)’. 1111‘ 11 1* "$111,111" ‘he ‘Phi-rt. la‘ lrligmly i" Auiumini ful- hilv and piltiillhiillh- with fuio tillil 'l‘lii|,-i Jnhil Uflvhlstlll impril-luiliilcilt to go alrtiltiitl ii col“ .iit-r at more than four ullleu an hour. lii ltuttlliln modern \\'l‘lllt'I to colitiiiii litllthtltlt) volumes tll' de- ‘ ' “ . . . . . . . .lht_- lililuiis. The tvinc-sttiiiied dusk of Autumn harvest-ripe: Autl I lloholtl the period of time. ttlliilii memory shall devolve and ktiiiwlt-tlge lapse Waiting a. subject. . .. . ." l-lnloulderliig golden Alitl now, hear Sir William Wat- sou: "Thou luirtlcii of blartll has sting, Thou retrospect lii Time's revert- etl eyes, Tlluti metaphor of that (lit-s, all songs the everything vtl liiiil young ll bodiiig trees, Thy ruiiiotis hotvers follrtgc rivet»- 0 lttiat and future lll Hill] bridal met and drifted Alltl soul of all regret." The falling of the leaf is ever a poignant symbol tu poet. What Flcckor styled a... the crcatetl nlysl fig lliottgltls, as Alfred Nojres‘ poem " Atituiiiii": ill entitled "Stlfletl allltl bliiltl Spent: I call to mlilil Dreams long log; "1 Dream till astray ' lii that tleail ltlliy \Villi love-Ks flliouf, "Then. l, too go, As llic winds hlotv, Grey with grief Hither. tllithvr, l know llnl Whither, A tit-all leaf." _'l‘he gloom of lau- Autumn is pictured for ll-"l 11y Robert. Nichols: "A rhetim. like lillglil, hiingg on mo, llrlarm. . Anil from the r-llimmy ground aun- plresl grsweet frail sick nlitumiiiil scent ""110 ""111. furrlng “teeth; long _ HD9111: . 111111 WIITIPII on. llkt-oili- who sleeps A feeble vapour ltaiigl-t or reepli, Flxrléullnl: on tllo fungus tnoultl A M11111 111' 1181*. filtlgllv, lllltl cold." For the pilots, there is nn frn. Ailtl therefore blcst and wlse—~ . . . . ..spectral seem lliy winter»- O voice of everything tliztl pcrlslhcs1 "illsroliiilg of lht- trees“ lliia olleirll1ll1ly they’ 1351111111 it is also all offense piiilishiihle by fine or imprisonment. or both, to fail lu- tle up necuely the news- litipers ill title's Ellrllllgllfilll. 01' 1° ‘llll it to within lens tlititl fotlr iii- ches of the top, to heat ii rug on the front stoop, to carry iiii tipnluz- tzled dog no liiztttcr liow small. to fuse the hose on the sidewalk after 8 A. 21.1., to fall t0 have title's t-llalif» 1fettr wear his liiotor budge on his ‘coat, to have awnings that exleiitl niiore tlltiii six feet front the house line, to fail to keep 0H8‘! curbstoile ill. the right lcvel, to lilivc title's are“ gate tipen outwardly instead 70f lllwnrtlly. to fall to affix your That. dies ill-sliirreil, or llien helov-‘su-egi, "limiter to your front door, lute. _ No citizen could keep up with qt , Dltiu... 5R cltrl§tl.~y_~~ <l toe, all. l...” A goodeduoation is usiéfbt, ,_ the most important -t stepping 810M110 Like every good has tobe provided forlln... . ‘advance, and this pro-z vision carrbeat bezifllfldo“ through’. “count. "Till: Bank ‘solicit! §our Smdnfl Account and will [ladly accept dcpoafn by mau when rectum!- lr‘ 1 llAlll<Qlf..l:1..9.Y4t§°°“A ‘i capiggl ‘Q10,0Q0,000 Reserve $19,500,000 , 1 t Resources $245,000,000 14s Richnttnd st. Charlottetown Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and .Plate Glass Insurance at lowest LRate. _G0od Qtocktlorltpilllies Agent at SummevrsitlefLloyd Lewis- thore would not he enough IOQYtW-lik "Won't and W081i? 111111 1111888111 B1111 tho jallfoi- those who llilght retiree. > .1 to furnish ball.—New York Times. They 192.". - t » ' . In threadbare ratment from place Some Choice SPCCIMIIII‘ - . ' 1 1011111109 ' A 'l'cliu'i~.sscti statute of 19131 "ll They've 111188911 Bllll" lieiiiilalvflil for the owiler "o1 human race. horses, mules. cattle, sheep. goats aiil hogs to rttn at large." _l The (loci-gm Lcgllilattiro lutro- lTlllS pitiful pair a part have) played tluceil a bill iuakiilg lt u ground for, , the uliliulmciii ot‘ ll marl-loge it’ the A man cries out on disasters brink; lady had induced the Dlotlosul IIYVI should hove stopped but I dldnt "artificial means false hair. or think!" "'11 follow the path of the men who fall- Athle steps. of the ‘the laws and have time to t‘ill'll his ,llvlllg. There is tic-thing loo ill- ttlliiatc or too triviiil to est-ripe slip crvlsion alitl control under threat of inlprlsoumeiit, expectorzition. ol- the leiigtli or llOtl sheets. The iilore laws HIGH} are the harder it is to enforce them. and when what might he called "the ‘he observingflegttl satutation point" lS-Hlflcllrlll —-wliere owing to their vely liiltltl- liu 8llf0l‘('t’.t|~— they become either ltiuglliilg-stucks 1D!‘ instruments of 1llul'klltftll—~z\f‘- .tltt|l- Train, "(lii lllt» 'l‘rtill ot‘ the ilntl .\leil.' , The Unburied Dead ‘ All iillr codes tire filled with oh- lsillctt- laws. Tho Fugitive slave ‘Law was never obeyed ill the North; it took more than a law to ,t~uiilpt-l u. lllllllllllt: Wllllu tluiii to lsclitl 4i black mail hack to sluvcly. l'l'lio Sulltlay laws today til iiililly Slates fotbltl thc pulllltrzilitlli of newspapers, llic running of lflllllll lllltl street cars, ritllug and tlrlvllig for llleastire, iitteiltlliig movltlg- ltlcttiru shows, playing any gtinlc. tor the doing of ally work except ‘works 0t‘ necessity. They lire ,tleiitl lit-cause they tlo not flt the. time, 'l‘lit-. i-otlld not. he t-ttftircetl. f The Anti-Trust AH ls ii liotollolis example u-f legislation that rs not ('llftll'('t’(l iilid cannot be. enforced. ltlttly ii few prultet-iitltltlil have t-vei- .l)0t’ll brought unlit-r lt. liutl even when ii prosecution llllH been illic- lt-cisltful ample mealltt lltivi- lit-ell found to accomplish the ill-stroll t-ntl» lii spite of llll~ law. ll has llevt-r kept. Illg llualtit-ss front he it lllt‘ sill of| lireselvo charm and beauty ill 'lll (Qmllinln . . - 1 s g. ll ilcver tflll (ll sllrlllltl. 1311111131,} 111111111111- Ill "The (lrentl...i;|;irciico H. lmrrotv. ‘"1"’- Rupert. Brooks la in an‘ introspective monil. lle wan some.’ where lii the faraway Pitclflc when, Qfplwxolfl 1'11!‘ 000m, nntl ft nlmoii.‘ ' n“ as '1 1mm“ h“ 1"“! ""1151" 11ltassetLailtl when tliiit llnllt ls l . tl I215: ll~o‘,)_fl£"x',_xga_rro"' ""1 home‘ reached the laws should lit-come ' ' ' 1,flllll)lllfltltllllly repealed, tullesa re- "Tholie 1 have loved; Zeuactetl. We work (rll the prin- Th0‘ comm-imp“. Sm?" n, (rlenmy Cfpln that lack of knowledge of u fingers, law ls lio defense. and yet Just to llalr'a frngrnnmi, and “,0 mug“, read the laws of the United States reek that lliigem "would take elglll. days and four About tleiul leave“, mm m,“ year-B months. reading eight hollrlt every ferns." day. including Sunday mill lioll~ ilxiytl.—-(lovern0r A. llarry Moore. 111011111111. mo. must be made of-N- J- _ the Poet Laiireatehi verses ml the’ in. ‘Ivivwn '1' "'“"II; mmlthfi. 8nd of W.H. Davleil, who A 3'11"“- characterlstlcally "welcomes the! PERTH AMBOY, N. J. Nov. B.—— rlcli Autumn days" and of Eilmum] The police were bllfly today making Blunden, in whose rural verses a list, an complete an possible. of are to he found many Autumn the violator; of the old Vlce and 1101111611- Jmmorallty act In tPcrtli Amlloy. Each new (lay of Autumn whlo- The ant prohibits the playing of hers ltit own message. Sometimes any sort of game on Sunday, the 11 111 11110 "1 lltrfltlge melancholy; onelatton of any store. the opera- Mlmetlmefl. of pence. rind qulm tlon of htiseil and trolleyn, automo- lny: but our noetshavo included bile driving and many other things. Automatic Repeal? A limo limit llhotiltl llt‘ slot for llle life of all lows that lliive been prosperous trip with no liiishitps on the way. ........__ ,_ 1 l...» mint-s...“ them all in their-conga and given The orlglmitlplnn of Prosecutor tn on that. which satiation our com Stricken wait to have iill violators 111" “mmhllll- ' ill-rented, hilt lt was decided that’ I l twinge." tWllS the bflffl dOOI‘ IOOKEG lii 1915 the Legislature of llldllllil night? ‘Twas not. , law to tlic effect that the And somebody mutters: "Oh. I fore got!" Since Adam and Eve and the world lpassetl a lowller of a hotel must provide each‘. llietl with sheets of tl specified at mensloil, "such sheets to be renlov- gan '1,1"'-'=‘l1,~‘ ed hmii sold bell ulitl replaced 11y This pair have followed use trail freshly laundered sheets after the, of mun. _ 1* departure of each guest or loilger." The commonest phrases in print- lt would appear to he pertectly1 er's ink » , legal to lGflVu sheets on ii bed ln-lAre “I forgot“ and "I didn't thlpkx". definitely as long as the bell coir‘, " continues to be occultieil by the some hicunlbelit. calls, . . The ‘City of L05 Aiigeles forbade And there lsntt a doubt may, r3,“- by law until recently “more than calls one person lirttliliig lii or occupying The promise another Yet man will think if a pleasure ....... ...~ has made to him; . LAnd a bdy will -———— think plat i161 wxnts. (Continued on page ether!) l to swim, . 1.1 - .1 d ' And the chances oral-relic? ‘he won't forget l -Tliat he mustn't come hbine with - his‘ hair all wet. "~11" ' It's strange, but duty ls all I find That ever escapes from a failures mind. I - - v0 ~ ~- .__-_-a0>-——-— i-OQOQ-OQQWQOQC-QO-OO-Q HOUSEHOLD SCRAP BOOK By ROBERTA LEE QQ-O-O-QOOQ§QO§OOOO-OOOO Q0 5Q‘ llot Water Bottle < , .. .- I m- y‘ Search‘. ‘the . burdens: which must bear _ And you'll 31nd the tracks of thks precious poll’. ‘ A leak oi torn placc in thc rub- with needless trouble this world ber hot water bottle can often be ,, they've filled. mended satisfactorily by applying n And p/ho _ n‘ measure the tears gasoline patch. such tw h‘. tried for ' , $216511 spilled? repairing the ltincl" tubes of an "1 {pl-gift m; wrecked shlp and automobile. ., n, , "I didn't think" has caused endless . 1m.‘ ‘pain, \ And God must smile as He sees up . sink At our "I forgot" think." Proper Temperature The tenlperature, of a room should never go below 85 degrees, nor cxe coed 70 degrees; tutti. tho room should be well ventilated at all times. V, and "I didn't” To Clean 1 éiiiiéeiiiins 1 When burnt spotsLifrFon sauce- pails. coverthe s .. l .,. with wood, ashes and water allow lt to lln most of the blunders which ‘,' ‘ have made ‘ 1a -. inpgp, it stand for several hourtsThen wash. ...........-~a—~'.nrow..l... i Daily Selections , i Guardian Rodgers, \U'0Q00| October l7, I927 .1 BLESSED ARE THE . QZUEAD- FAST:-Bleesed are they that keep Judgment. and lie that doeth .i'lght-1 eolianesa at all tlmeaslluhn tom, PRAYER: .- “Thlne forever: 006.311 Jove» .. Hear us from thy throne above, Thine forever may we he... Here and ln EtemltyJ‘... .. _. ... "I DIDN'T THINK." s". i.- The weakest excuses of all-flip loll Are: "I. didn't think" and "rim-got." " ..,. t, Pickles? If ynli are put" Plelilea you need German Brand Essence of Vinegar- the original German Brand of .j_. ghlcli there are many lnlto- I one. i i "German BIIIIIIQTNGIIIIIOOY ma! negar la pref by - earning INEGWAVQI and lend- lng nook: over the Prov- liice. A plat oflneneo male! 8 quart: of Vinegar, owl for Plollel MIG elm .:~1'he 2' Macs DRUGGISTS" ‘ 140 Great George Street Phone Ill Oharlottoflffl IFI l. _ l I \ 1 1