l ~ ""P.v'!"<'-"" 115-74195. - "routs" 4 4 narrows cuannuu ill-elven» Iflll’ (headed III) sass t? President-I. cam- s. mam. ' ‘J Elites and Ieeageh-I. l. Iereete filled delivered. Ill United odvaaeel ll.(I_l-| III-rill i Vlevfreeldenbrl. l. Barnett. Cemetery-Lint. Col. I). A. leclinaee, l). l. 0. Alaoellh Idlloshl). I. Currie. SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1929 ,' . FIRST THINGS FIRST lt- is to be regretted that the thoroughfare on the Island, namely, the highway between Borden and Charlottetown. has been one of the last to be attended to this seas- q, The tourist business, which oi- dcially opens on‘ the first oi July, is actually already under ‘ way, and many visitors from the neighboring peovincaslas well as from the Unit- ed. States. are arriving daily. At present the Borden-Charlottetown road is in a condition which, to say the least, is discreditable, and many snniplaints are being made about it. an army oi road machines is of little practical: use u there is not intelli- rant supervision at the head of the department. AN INDUSTRY WOITH WHILE _We note that the government of gritish Columbia, impressed with the pmsibility of developing a market {or strawberries in England -and oth- as countries, purposes this year in eta-operation with the growers, to carry out experiments in the pro- ceasing of berries which will include the Dutch method of treating ber- ries with dioxide of sulphur, a meth- od used by the Dutch growers to ship their fruit t0 English markets. uperiments will also be made with the use of sugar, and with freezing’ -_>-the existence of cold storage plants up convenient points being of greet assistance in the latter process. 'I‘he purpose, as outlined by Premier Tol- mie, is to ‘expand the berry market fol-take care, not only of the pres- ent-output, but oi a much larger poduction. All jam manufactured by the growers this year, with the of agovesnment loan, will be subiect to strict government super- vision-as to quality oi fruit. the amounts oi sugar used. etc., to in- sure the reputation of ‘British cor- ugoba berries in outside markets being maintained. _ln other provinces. press notices appeenfrom time to time with re- spect, to government activities in en- couraging the development oi lu- crative agricultural and horticul- tural sidelines. It will be recalled that one oi the pie-election planks oi the Ieundere Government in‘ this Pro- vinblmes "to promote the growing 0i. panbenies, blueberries. and small v vegetables." This promise was ob- Vioiialyintended to assure our peo- , pie that. the activities orthe Stew- art Government in appointing a hor- ueiuitrqai expert end initiating a fruit culture movement would be fol- lowed up and expanded by the Lib- eral ‘party ifreturned to power. So fer, QPPl-rently, the only action tak- enbylar. saunders and his col- leagues has been to dismiss the ex- appointed by their predeces- eore under the technical grant. It is knoyn that hundreds of acres oi and blueberry lands are available in this Province and that e mill-kyle indmtrv could he built up both in the marketing and can- ning oi these and other small fruits. Apple culture, also. could be deval- qpia into a valuable sideline if pro- peiheqeouragement and instruction were oven ‘ ThFi-nitiatlve, of course, should pom the Government. The of Agriculture has ‘ ,uent- M-Atlslgflsed his gppreciation oi the {glue fliruit ouitllfl. and it is to- ,§l,,bl_lthatthisyearhewiligive ‘ticel proof q! his goog m. 09a anti-militarlst measure. The terms of the Disarmament Bill to be in- troduced in the legislature are dras- tic enough to satisfy the most ar- dent pacinst. It provides that the Army and the Navy shell be abolish- ed, together with the Ministries of War and Marine. All fortifications would be demolished end the con- scription system discarded. »0l11Y l constebulary force, organired 0n non-military lines, would be retain- ed for guarding the frontier, togeth- er with a smell State Marine‘ for police work. It is quite probable that the bill will pass, though ti"! ""1 Coalition does not command a ma- jority in the Upper House. Should it become law, Denmark will have taken the first definite step towards realizing universal peace. “Granted that Denmark's pro- gramme is attcnded with risk." says the Glasgow Herald, "it should be realised that some de- gree oi risk must be taken if any real progress is to be made in dis-_ armament. And other Powers. which find it as yet impracticable to follow her example, must ap- plaud the courage which enables a State to give such practical ex- pression to an ideal for which all are striving." ROSEBERY ON OLD SPEECHES The writings of the late Lord Rosebery, which have mme into de- served prominence since his death, reveal him as a man oi mellow cul- ture, oi sound sense and high vis- ion, ;_ in a literary style at once llmpid and profound. The fol- lowing charming passage from his Miscellanies should find a place be- side the Fssays oi Ella. and the sob- erer musings of Sir Thomas Browne: "No one reads old speeches any more than old sermons. The in- dustrlous historian is compelled to explore them for the purposes oi political history, but it is a. dreary and reluctant pilgrimage . The more brilliant and telling they were at the time the more dolorous the" quest. The lights are extinguish- ed, the flowers are faded, the voice seems cracked across the empty space of years; it. sounds like a message from a. remote telephone. One wonders if that can really be the scene that fascinated and iri- spired. was this the passage we thought so thrilling. this the epi- gram that seemed to tinlifl. W15 the peroration that evoked such a storm oi cheers? It all seems as fiat as decanted champagne. . . . All the accompaniments have dis- appeared-the heat, the audience, the interruptions, and the applause -and whet Nmains seems cold and flabby." _______________ NOT SO BAD! The latest tonic for British agri- culture, says the London Daily Chronicle, is fox farming. Here is a tale a northern farmer told the ed- been doing badly for several years. Then a son of his came home from Canada and said: “Dad, why don't you breed foxes for fur?" He talked his father's obiectlons down, and when he went back sent over thirty blue and silver foxes. "Well, the re- sult is." said the farmer, “that last year I dropped e thousand ,. ’ on the old farm, but I've made twelve hundred on the foxes, so I'm cominli out all right." ' EDITORIAL NOTE New Brunswick also is disturbed by raucous noise oi the nocturnal hom- blower. The 5t. John authorities have announced their intention" oi rigidly euforcirigihe regulations re- gardlng the needless honking of motor horns, particularly at night. A despatch from London states that the Eight lion. Stanley Bald- win, retiring Prime Minister oi Bri- tain. has turned from the racket of political life to the less strenuous raoquet. oi tennis. Mr. Baldwin, it is said, intends to start playing tennis ‘again. Ir. Churchill, on the other hand, cannot settle "down to piebelen dives-aims after the tumult and the shouting of political warfare, and willmakeatsiptotliiseoritinent jliluadertake e lecture tour. Canadian wheat. the best in the world, and Canada the largest es- porter of this precious food stuil- how these facts stand out in the economic situation oi the 'world to- day! In production the half-billion mark has been passed and the busy ing forward confidently toward a billion dollar crop in the not distant future. ' ‘ The production was equal to more than 50 bushels for every man, wom- an and child in the Dominion last year, and the exported surplus oi 365,428,565 bushels was equal to e million bushels for every day in the year. Who were the purchasers? ‘the Mother Country as usual came first, taking almost 237 million bush- els, or nearly 65 per dent. oi the tot- al. The Netherlands came next. tak- ing over 24 million bushels. and Ja- pan, with over 16 million came third, ,_oubllng her purchase of the prev- ‘ious year. Belgium followed closely with over l5 million bushels, then eiy with 12 millions and the United States with over l0 millions oi bush- els. to mix with her own less valu- able grades. ‘ Various United States authorities and organizations have been investi- gating Canadian wheat production and have all reached ‘the conclusion that our wheat, is better than their own, and sells in world markets at an average price oi 5 cents more per bushel; that the Canadian wheat fields yield ‘I bushels more per acre than theirs, and the crop k produced rirccnxrtorrc-ro Notes By The Way: ' L grain-growers of the West are look- - Germany with nearly 15 million, It-' yours Bplsmss W. Bod"? ‘f? MEASURING THE HEARTS ABILITY b You may sometimes wonder why so many people die of heart ailments; ‘in fact more than ever before in history. You may also sometimes wonder why this is true with the medical proiessionso much better equipped than‘ ever before. ‘ z It is not the fault of the profesion that there are so many cases, because all over the world there are organiza- tions whose sole object is the study , of the cause and treatment of heart ailments; And they are putting the heart all- ments into certain different classes so that physicians everywhere will be ‘working from the some standpolnts. Your family doctor will tell you that in his days at college (that is i: he has been practising a few years) all that was expected of him was to be able io tell which valve of the heart was affected. The treatment was always about the same. Now these organizations which are studying the heart, locket it from iour main standpoints. First, what is actually causing the heart ailment. Isn‘t it rheumatic fever, tonsilitis, thyroid condition, WN GUARDIAN THE IN TIMAU: PAPERS OF COLONEL HOUSE to Friend Arid Adviser Of President Wii-l son ~ Recounts In His Diary The Great [Events Of The War In Which His Country Was Concerned. (Copyright) CHAPTER. 1B The summer oi 1918 witnessed the turn of the iniltarytidc the final col- lapse of the German offensive in France. and tlie triumphant counter- cffcnsivc of the Allicd armies under the coordinating dircolon oi ’Fach. I: was natural that during the same period preparation for- harvesting the results of the impending military victory should bc hastened. Few guessvd how close that victory was, but there was an instinctive cryzsial- lzation of plans for the peace. In France, Grcnt Britain and the Un- ited States the committees which had long been at work gathering data. for the Peace Conference, began to put the results oi their studies into compai-szively definite and final form. TilPSO very crises with the Europ- can stairs 5-1100}: Wilson loose from any sense of isolation and impressed upon him the role which the United States might play in an association. no: merely American, but world-wide in its character. Colonel House's irui‘- less mission in 1914 for the further- ance of a general agreement be- tween the United States, Great Brit- gesting that the belligerents state their peace conditions, he intimated that. ‘a concert of nations immediate- ly practicable‘, was lhe chief purp- Pose oi the settlement. In his speech of January I, I917, he spoke of a ‘covenant of cooperative peace’ of a ‘concert of power’ which should re‘- place the entangling" alliances oi the past. The speech of the Fourteen Points, Januarypdth, 191B, culminated in his insistence upon a ‘general es- sociailon oi nations‘ which ‘must be formed under specific covenants for the purpose of affording mutual guaranteu of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike. - It‘is clear that President Wilson came to the endorsement oi a League of nations by gradual steps. It is equally clear that he was slow to ‘m!!! Wu eral family, really of the aristocracy of the land. Trcvelyan, who is Pres- ident of Education, is an intellectual, one of his distinctions being that he is a relative of the great Macaulay. William Graham, who goes to the Board of ‘Trade, is one of the young Labor members who has done well in the House. Outside‘ the Cabinet, there is rep- resentation for the iritelligenzla, and for party workers as well. Oswald Mosley, who has a knighthood, mil- lions of money. and a wiie,who ls a ARE YOU IN —then your widow would hevem harder time meeting instalment; -make it easy for her than by taking equal to your debts. mort- gages, and similar 9h. llgetlons. The coat, lg remarkably low. scum orsuca: uaarrarocau _ _'I. W. BENTLEY, Manager for Prince Edward Island formulate his ideas as to the exact i daughter oi the late Lord Curzon, is kind of Leggug that was dpsifgblq ‘rewarded with the Duchy of Lancas- His biographer, Mr. R-ay Stannard , ter, a job that pays $25,000 a year ior Baker, in dlgguglna the documengglirioing absolutely nothing. W. Jow- relating to the drafting of the 00v- |itt, KC. who was a Liberal, then a ennrrt, he; written, '01); (n; 31-1595 iLBiJOTiiG, and than a Liberal again, gbqve g1 other; 1n sgudymz these ,'only to revert to Labor after the lntergsiing documgng, Pfgcucanyirfllfnb election. is made Attorney noghing~qmt ‘ ‘milk “mp4,, thetGeneral. He is regarded as a bril- Covgngnt o; the Mag“, w“ original ‘liant lawyer. F‘. G. Roberts and Tom poison from organisms. or from min- eral or vegetable matter? ' Second, what has happened or is ""——‘ . happening to the structure of the A too costly Mr. Rowell formedyheam the subject oi a lively episode in theI 15 H; enm-Bed_ mugculm-iy (mama; Him" °f c°mm°ns ‘m Mmidli’ ‘light any obstruction in the vessels; any 135V 3°" Wesley N- Rbwan- K- c» inflammation of the muscle walls; “'55 MYYIPHIY 14mm] 193d" in 011' iany inflammation of the lining; are tarlo. A staff correspondent of the “he valves inflamed? Toronto Globe, tells that “COIISQTI/l", Third’ as to the regular"). of the U“ members grinned 3nd chucucd beat, Is 1t fast or slow all the time or when from within the Liberal party 111m at times. does it skip beats; how at. lower cost. than they can produce it. itor of that Journal. His land had" ranks there came fierce criticism of Mr. Rowell, and his employment by the King Government in its liquor litigation. Charles G. Power, Liberal, Quebec know and failing to find out-"whet Mr. Rowell has cost the Govern- ment?" Mr. Power was supported in his quest for information by sever- nl other Liberal members, also by some Progressives and a Laboritc, but about all they got from Hon. Mr. Euler, Minister of Revenue, was that Mr. Rowellls counsel was worth, in his opinion much more than it ‘had cost. . It was charged by Mr. Power an others that Mr. Rowell was not sym- paethetic with the Government's ‘policy in regard to clearances for liquor-laden vessels bound for U. S. ports, and that he had lost the sym- pathy cf a large portion of the popu- lation. These matters, Mr. Euler ar- gued, had "nothing to do with the case," while the assertive critics con- tended they had "everything" to do with it. It is gratifying to learn that the _Ot.tawa Government has decided to adopt the British system of separat- ing youthful criminals from those older in years and crime. To that. end the sum of $000,060 has been plac:d in the supplementary esti- mates for the establishment of two penal institutions, one in Ontario and the other in Quebec. In these it is intended to detain prisoners sent- enced to two years imprisonment while still under the age of 22 years. It is stated that there are always in Canadian prisons as many as 300 young men under 20 years, and more than 1,100 between the ages of 20 and 30. The method of separating such young criminals from contact with those older and hardened in crime has worked well in the Mother Country and may be hoped to be equally effective in Canada. Many youths who in the heat. of youthful blood have gone astray and have been convicted by the courts are not really bad at heart, and are still ca- pable of becoming good citizens. News of the election in South Af- rica is rather confusing and not eas- ily understandable at this distance. Party names, racial differences, pre- judices and problems are altogether different from whet we are familiar with in Canada. as are also the var- ied empioyments of the people. Oi the leaders, l-Iertsog now in power and General Smuts who has led the Opposition forces, patriotic citizens of the Empire outside oi the S. A. Union had formed opinions in advance, very favorable to General Smut: and unfavorable with regard to his opponent. Bmuts stood as a statesman of high and honorable" re- put throughout the Empire, the friend and defender of British con- nection. erteog, in his hostility to ‘the Brit h Flag, and in_ his treaty which gives an equal trade prefer- tncc to Germany with that before accorded to Greet Britain was oeu- demoed as e disruptionist. a distur- ~ber and a menape to the Empire. That opinion eovered~ but a part South. led the attack, demanding to‘ iare the valves doing their work? 1 Fourth, even if it has an acute or ‘chronic infection, its structure af- ;fected_, and its beat slow, fast, or ir- ,regular, how is it doing its work? Now you can see how sensible all this is, and Tve only outlined it briefly. It means that heart organizations and doctors everywhere are doing everything in their power to prevent the acute ailments that affect ihc heart; rheumatism. tonsiliiis, and other throat. ailments, correction of .‘thyrold conditions and avoidance of iharmful organisms nf all kinds. Second, where the damage is al- iready done they can estimate more 1 correctly its possible outcome and be ‘able to advise the patient as to the , correct manner of living his everyday i life. THBENODY FOR. A POET ,Not_in the ancient abbey, Nor in the city krmllld. Not, in the lonely mountains, Nor in the blue profound, Lay him to rest when his time is come And the smiling mortal lips are dumb; But here ln the decent quiet Under the whispering pines. , Where the dogwood breaks in blos- com And the peaceful sunlight shines. Where wild birds sing and ferns un- fold, When spring comes back in her green and gold. And when that. mortal likeness Has been dissolved by fire. Say not above the ashes, "Here ends a man's desire." ‘For every year when the bluebirds sing. l-fe shall be part oi the lyric spring. Then drcamful-heartcd lovers Shall hear in wind and rain The cadence of his music, The rhythm of his refrain, For he was a blade of the April sod, That bowed and blew with the whis- per oi God. -Bliss Carmen. THE LAND WE LOVE II FIANI IIIGI SIR LOMEI GOUIN oi‘ Dcrcmbor 18 of that year. a lan- Franco and Germany, had in it the perm of n League of Nations; in August, i914, House laid before Wil- son his belief that if such an agreem- ent had been in existence at the time of the Scrajevo murders the war might have been prevented. Aftcr May. 1916. 'Wilson became the enli niastir champion of the league of Nations idea, which he set. forth, although in the most general terms, in each of his important ad- drcsscs nn foreign policy. In his notes with the President. Rh relation to it was mainly that of editor or com- pller, selecting or rejecting, recast- lng or combining the projects that came into him from other sources. l-ie had two greet central and basic convictions that s league of nations was necessary; that it might be brought into immediate existence. In voicing these he ielt. himself only a mouthpiece of the people oi the world.‘ Johnston, both old Labor soldicrs,nre ‘given minor posts: H. B. Lees-Smith, ‘who was once a Liberal, goes to the iPost Oillcc; and Lord Arnold is made Paymaster General, whatever that is. One woman is in the Cablnet—-Mar- garet. Bondflcld. Thu; post, it was ithought. would go to Miss Susan Lawrence, who is the sbler woman of the two: but as Miss Bondficld (she once lectured in Ottawa) had {n minor post in the lost MacDonald §Mlnistry, she evidently could not be sug- (Contlnued on Page l3) ‘ilgnofld’ Who’s i/Vho In The ' , MacDonald Cabinet The Ottawa. Journal HULL, Que, June l4 - Assurance ‘that the Quebec legislature will fight {to the last ditch the proposed amal- l WILL FIGHT AMALGADIATION [gamatlnn of Hull and Ottawa in a, Federal district on the lines of the} iStates, was given here today by Hon. EL. A. Taschercau, Premier of Quebec, ‘on the occasion of his official visit to The most. timid reactionary can hardly be afIi-ighted over Mr. Ram- say MacDonald's Cabinet. For not only have the “wild men“ been rig- idly cxrluricd: the Ministry contains a goodly sprinkling of almost Whig- gish and literary Liberals, the san- est minds of Labor and a wealth o! ability bred in municipal and trades- unlon experience. There is Mr. Mac- Donald himself, an avowed foe of communism, and with constitution- alism in the marrow of his bones. There is John Robert Clynes, bord- crlng upon conservatism, who was the Herbert Hoover of Britain in the i, war. There is Arthur Henderson‘ (“Uncle Arthur") imposing and ora- cular, and who was good enough for the War Cabinet of Lloyd George. And there is J. H. Thomas, who al- ways turns up at Nancy Astor's din- ners, and who ls a crafty Welshman like Lloyd George. Sydney Webb is Secretary for the Dominioiis. Webb is an cncgyclopae- die of statistics in brooches. With his wife, Beatrice. he has rend, digested, compiled and published more stat- istics probably than any living man. He has a suggestive mind and uni- que knowledge, and, despite his seem- ing pcdnntiy, a gift for practical po- litics. In the last MacDonald Cab- inet Webb was at the Board of Trade. whore he seemed to belong; just why hc has been given the Do- minlons is not quite clear. But it won't break up the Empire. Albert V. Alexander is First Lord of the Admiralty. Alexander, so far as we know, never went to sea; but neither did Mr. Churchill nor Lord Lee of Fnrcliam nor Mr. Balfour, all distinguished men who ran the King's Navy and did it fairly well. He is one of the younger men of La- bor, sold to have vxcellcnt promise. Brigadier-General C h r i s t o phcr Thomson. tat the Air Ministry, la a soldier of the non-flre-eating breed. He is a magnificent specimen oi manhood,‘ a born soldier, and had a good record in the war. What he saw of fighting made him e sort oi pacifist (Just as it made a ppclfist of Ian Hamilton) and in 1919 and i020 he came into prominence es a sup- den and tragic death occurred in Quebec recently- was Lieutenant Governor of the province at the time, surviving his appointment by only a few weeks. He early achieved distinc- tion in law, entering the Quebec lag- Q. Who was Sir Iomer Gouin? _ ' __....________..._-_--- of the many questions at issue in the election. At this distance we to decide ‘A. Sir Lorner Gouin, whose sud-, would much prefer Smut: to Hert- I sog but that is a matter for the el- lea provincial in their sQlli. and his! actors of South Africa and not for ue death was a distinct loss to the w“, ‘h, ‘u mm”... Puma“ o‘ islature in 1m and servinz continu- ‘oualy until he resigned the Premier- ‘rhip in m1.‘ Ha was a notqble ni- Iure in Canadian public and‘ political - . “ 1 in the II-Iull W t. k H 1 porter of Labor and a hater oi the Province‘: gtgcaguetlecefpthel‘ premier.‘ Black and Tans. He was in the Air Ministry of the last MacDonald Cab- ifiirtlfmnéniugtcgi; rgiffftiifxrfgns; met’ and made B‘ “my good job o‘ will not. sacrifice it without n. real it" ibaitle. Neither tho Fedvrnl govern- Phmp sncwden 15 perhaps the ‘ mom, nor any other administrative mm i-hiliwlliklwl"! Bimini-Si 1" i" i body outside of the British Parlia- Mmisiry- H” (we WW” °t h“? m i merit, has the right. to make such a m“ whim" the Mme" d") L‘ 5 change according to the British North frail. pale. thifvllvped. merciless llt- America Act", he added. ‘ tie man, with a mind as sharp as a diamond and a tonguqthat laoeratcsq and sears. Ho ls an impressive and compelling figure at Westminster; can state the case against capitalism with persausivencss and power; but knows how to compromise with real- ities. I-le was a good Chancellor of the Exchequ in the last. Labor Min- utry; and he will undoubtedly make a good one again. l-le couldritbc uninteresting or dull. Wedgcwood Benn is Secretary for India. l-le is a Liberal who left Lib- eralism because he hated Lloyd George. He had a distinguished rec- 1 ord in the war; is an extremely able i 8L silt’; CHE ‘"9. ‘QOERKTQQUSB T ,, “Eur-vi ' District of Columbia, in the Unit/rd" parlamentarian", and Ls admired and respected by all. If he is not likely to do more than his pa ' in bringing peace in India. he is not likely to do less. He at least is as able and experienced as most of thorn, not excluding Birkenhead himself. The Lord President oi the Council, Lord Parmoor, is really an old Tory. I-Ie was a. distinguished lawyer, so - distinguished that he was once coun- sel for the Prince of Wales, and also held briefs for the Church of Eng- land. l-le is an old man, with some of the intellectual vanities of age;| but he takes an active interest ini world and Empire affairs, and will, help give the Ministry class. l Bir John Bankey, who takes the, post of Lord Chancellor, was a Llb- i cral lawyer who became a Judge.‘ Lloyd George once thought him good enough to appoint him chair-- man of a Coal Commission, and San- key was enough of a radical to bring i in e report favoring nationalization,‘ of mines. Lloyd George didn't take the advice, whereupon Bankey took a dislike to Lloyd George. He should rriake e distinguished Lord Chancel _ or. ‘ i, The balance of the cabinet is eith- er good or indifferent. The Secre- tary for Scotland. Mr. Adamson, is an orthodox trades unionist who was ‘ once leader oi the Labor Opposition and who_.is as fer from being e revo- lumnll‘! ll Lord Balfour. Tom Bliaw who becomes Becretary for wgr, 1g g dull good man who was probably scl- ! eoted for the poet as the man leasti "i!!! in England to start a war. Noel TAKES gation. Consult life. with interests nltidllll ll Well DOIIIIIIIOIL Burton, who b Secretary rot-Jim. will". is a mother of lydngy pug. "MUQIMOITTIM. Itllliioldiiib- NOW TASTE THE SWEET FRESH FLAVOR OF BRAHMIN TEA Sold only in Red. Hygienic. Airtight Packages i LIGHTNING Already this year lightning hastalren its ‘ toll of life and property. NOW is the time to; arrange adequate fire insurance protection. full information furnished without obli- \ . Hyndman Co., Ltd The Oldest insurance Agency in P. E. I» Offices, Lower Queen St, Charlottetown S. M. IIICKS, District Agent, Suinmerside l. E. BURDEN, Fire Agent, Montague- "M| L.~ i ’ 15,192., DEBT '2 do. insurance no Q0 if you went a macblng t, w"! ‘"99"!!!’ i! you wen; 1g to work eflielently, u“ “ma. thing to do n to keep it well ' oiled-well lubricated, A European physician “MM this principle of lubrication u; one section of the human mach. inery-the bowels. Be lppllefl 1g in the treatment of constipa- tion-and it worked 1 o>oo A ' heavy. hllfld. colorless, tasteless, neutral, new] on was used. NATOL (P. D. it Cole Liqqig Petroleum is such an oil.) Unlike castor oil and other catbarilce it acts mechanically, penetrating and softening the , intestinal contents —- relieving constipation by lubrication, Full Dlnt little $1.00. E. A. Foster CENTRAL DRUGSTORE ooowooooooooeoo i s i i i t 5 i z i 2 i... §-O-§O§O-O 040-0‘ OOOOQ-Q-O4 Keeps You Internally Fit! WAMPULES GRAPE SALTS Just stir a teaepooniul of GRAPE SALTS in a glass of water every momlng before meals-in fact any time you feel bilious. You will iiud it PLEASANT, IIEALTIIFUL and 1N V IGUIIATING. Motorists should always carry e, bottle e! SALTS in their car Ind Ill!“ me oi sedentary habits should keep one on hand as it is a wonderful aid in cases of 1N- DIGESTIOI and HEADACHE and invaluable ior these troub- led with faulty ELIMINATION. LIVER COMPLAINT, ‘ETC. As a BEVERAGE it is EI- PERVESCING and REFRESH- ING. PRICE 50c PER BOTTLE. The 2 Mats DRUGSTORE 149 Great George Street MAIL ORDERS RETURNED SAME DAY. ii 4___-n L__-n . ———"f ALL ! Rates and