F01 'R THE CH/\RT.0T‘TE'l`0WN GUARDIAN ,_ FEBI{UARY13, 1929 l]Hi_FI|.l]i`|[i‘ii'isl iil|iH|]|iN "L12 f°’.T.".f’.f yell (la ndvnnre) mallul In lsnadn ,ond United Bilton. 1 Daily 4lou'mi»d ilifli M-iw oe' .vfv (iv ndve-levi ¢'U\=1’°¢- various names, as influenza. grlppe ~-""°'°"°"'“;,',.f,ll';f,:-°,'.s|`,|:,'f p_ A, Tllxallhmgtnlgqsz gf "Mm the mortality rate, as it has done in’ ldilor and Manager-J. ls. liurnelt Ansonlnu Lultor-D. K. Currie. our Province m thu winter at 1929_ up / Apparently it had its origin m me ` Bl /“M” W B°"‘°"- ‘ from a million farms and flung into miliating disillusionment they have Mm ‘Sl-|.‘\'\‘ News-:tunic lfuulansf ope westward to America This time Mum' W T "_::*u*n:*t;L"*""“"“' "‘"“‘ ’,‘,‘6['"_m__“_ ,_ ‘um it seems to have reversed that order tic .:l‘hT|`¢|»|Al\ ml; iw .-mulnml rrhm rm wunwlns ws-nh in l‘hl'|°¢¢°WWl ‘md “Wt b°°°m° Prevalent in “Per” 5 l'n|t 077|", DIIIYJ. lltiinlnund iitrfff. ma" °'“"""..':f,»':f' Html, l:f'Tw:-:pfT:"xvg“”" HUM' Sporadlc cases occur from year to °‘ 1;-n~l|n'»;“l;f’<~'»»'|r:_f:~‘:i|_l_;'\!v\¢ 1! Bwhfefd year in many 13nd5_ and at wide, m_ ala tablet, a headache and used s cfm Au' famine News ch. nf-not' tervals the malsdy becomes epidemic. h°“d“°h° wblet- B' Pm* in swmach s . - - . . < .. , I is tit set. ";f‘r;'n°u Nl~:r°:l'»'iy». \:"iT|ll'»-1:-"Hs "s';v»'u:." nm r During last century visitatlons of in- fluenza occurred in Great Britain in th” 1° was like “sms aénmh t° car' to our’ despatches yester- that Mr. Bennett himself will be occasion for such amendment, but were somewhat severe, of further discussion as the ses- proceeds. announcement, which will received with mingled feelings the House. , This announcement that there would be no general may be looked for. Two subjects stand upp'_-fun-sf to- in the minds of Canadians. treaty. The Hn. lr Bennett stirred up the counlry on the with the result that the peo- generally are beginning to real- the losing game we are playing our trade with the United States. figures issued by the Govern- Wlth reference to the Austf treaty which permits New l butter to come into this agricultural country of ours practic duty free, widespread dissatis has been expressed by those the bcst position to know the conditions-namely, our dairy- organized and unorganlzed. are the Liberal politicians, chief aim is to defend the There is room in this for such a change as may an election before the end ready to appeal to the people. of the party are opposed vlcstc their* comfortable seats while a grave uncertainty exism as who shall occupy them in the event of an election. But the change hinted at by Premier King come at any time. and it would that the Government is pre- itself for the worst. THE PASSING OF COBDENISM. The London Times vol :es the disillusinnmeut of a grow- body of British public opinion respect to the virtues of free policy of free imports." it “originally designed as a prac- meslis of insufing cheap labor the cost of subsistence, cssssd to be s question of prac- sxpediency, but is regarded by as sn article of faith. It is tbst so long ss this coun- the monopoly of industry #spared to sacrifice its the °°““t"y and pamcw | By forcing upward the cost of living among members cn both sides m an countries’ it has so increased a \ . . | itself show very clearly how situation is “omg from had to exponents cf tariff reform. As for i0!1 IDODSY have 80118 into this Work fthe workers themselves, the philllpics me ,_0umry_ OM/_wed to nsnism over the minds of the Bri- the Year- | Automobile racing oil the harbor Obvivusly the government is not lee is the larch sport. The only cashire and elsewhere, because they Hon. R. B. Bennett, leader of were name to pay lower wages than r Conservative party, will have the would otherwise have been necess- E* of the public generally for My and there was practically no for- ed announced intention of shorten' eign competition in manufactured may be 0! short duration but is 0!-ten get a. headache, stomach ache, or any as far as possible the debate on articles; but muse conditions hive pr Address. Fcrmerly this debate long Ceaged to exist." ‘ i an excellent excuse for rhe- when Cobdemsm mme 1,, Britain it C0 and for members, particularly came as a palliative' as me ,_,orre¢i,1ve t benchers, to appeal, to tlieirot A Condition of me “mes whim 31 . It ls not improbrblef demanded direct leggslauve Mylan, Conceived as a means of imP1'°Vi“¥ living conditions for Britain's indust- only Conservative speaker ln the tml population’ it Mtuauy became m is “nd he Wm °ffe’ “° “me"d' instrument in the hands of capiffll m Not because there will not to maintain wages at low standards. 5. and to prevent the working classes whatever the occasion might from enjoying the rewards that were 9, |1011!! W'oll1di‘i11'I'1’8§dil1Sb the ma' due to the skill and brawn and and bronchial tissues, and in the vote of the House. The critl- brains that made Britain the para.. nasal and salivary secretions. They °“e"ed by M"' Bennett '“° “t“'“` mount manufacturing country cf_ the E in me speech :mm me world for two-thirds of a century. In le tual inflammation of lining of chest other words, Cobdenism, as it work- duction and with them the stand- ards of wages at the lowest possible The Prime Minister also made an 1evexS_ 1 In one respect the Great War prov- ed to be a levelling economic force. me prices oi Britain’s import/cd raw materials as to make the price of this ye” "unless the mum' | "com" a trivial factor in the cost of C ket. Fazed with keen competition in all foreign countries, and confront- eu in their own with virtually unre- stricted foreign competition, the prac- tical fallacy nf free trade has been forced upon them in the most im- pressive manner. The result ls that Britain`s manufacturing class, previ- ously the stoutest champions of free trade. have become the most eamest of their leaders against "sweated foreign goods" show that they too have learned to vision the fiscal -ipzchlem in the light of worldwide' conditions. Traditionally accepted theories, like old customs, die hard in Britain, but the signs are not want- ing that the long dominion of Cob- tzsh people is nearing its end. EDITORIAL NOTES speed limit is the capacity of the machine and there are no cows on the track, if the claims for speed attained look like fish stories the ex- aggeration is excusable on the ground that the speeding was achieved on fishing grounds. been in the world from time immem- crial known ln different countries by or flu and has, especially in its more severe visitations, heavily increased on swept the world in 1918-19, the As an epidemic disease it closely “ debility and depression; the attack the present season did their b ost deadly work in Europe, the East agnified appear somewhat like hey are usually discovered in pairs, t and where the disease has attacked person are abundant in the lung|t d re lmblhed lu breathing and will not reed except in a temperature of at ast B0 degrees. Below that tem- perature they remain dormant. Yet °°“m‘di°n°" in "`°m° C9585’ ed out in the Old Country. proved to no degree of natural cold can kill the” Wm “° d°“bt f°rm a s“b` be a force to keep the costs of pro- them- ` The germ was discovered by Prof. Robert Pfeiffer of Berlin, who ob- served that it breeds by lengthening tself and then dividing itself in two. ~ , The new Welland Canal connect- ing Lake Erie with Lake Ontario, is very important and costly link in lake navigation. Its length is 27 miles and the first little canal was ut there a hundred years ago-in 1829. It was built in five years, a changed." The situation has. ~ F 1 tim i _°n3,;_` MW during tml uf°d“°i1°“~ 0* the US” ° “ shallow little waterway with 4o wood- en so land B a _M , ‘early a century British manufec- cn locks. These were reduced to 21 y or ’ pp y turers have come to realize the rela- !,t.lve importance of the British mar- when' the canal was enlarged and given a depth 0( nine rect ln 1841. That was the Welland Canal at the date of Confederation. Since then are the .zuiff and the Austral- ` the Maritimes have been contribut- ing, and the Welland Canal received a new impetus. Work went on year by year till the locks were 12 feet deep and 45 feet wide. Now there is a new Welland, with only 7 locks but they are 47 1-2 feet deep, the canalls200 feet wide and navig- able ip ‘ships of 30 feet draught. Tens of millions of dollars of Domin- from year to year, and this is now being made a. pretext for building a 'great waterway from Lake Ontario to the Gulf of St. Lawrence "up to the standard of the New Welland." So it goes, but what the Maritimes will ever get out of these vast ex- penture to which they contribute, is problematical. Another reason has been discover- ed to show why we should import New Zealand butter. A gentleman in Sydney, probably a Liberal, when opening up the box containing his latest purchase of New Zealand but- ter, "with due regard for the virtue of thrlftlners, started chopping up the box for kindling. By chance he stopped between blows tu 1001; at a nail which his hatchet broke out -om the wood-and, lo and behold, every nail in the box was found to 'have come from the Sydney steel plant." The marvellous perspicacity of this gentleman is comparable only to that of the political economists who see in the dumping into Canada of this foreign importation nothing The Patriot's “explanation” of the; alleged interview with Mr. Appleton; referred t/o in yesterday‘s Guardian I does not attempt to clear up the con- tradiction between the statements of the Religional Manager of the C.N.R. at Moncton and his previous telegra- phic communications to A. E. McLean, M.P. "The interview,” the Patriot says, "was absolutely genuine. No newspaper man in Csnsds would descend so low as to 'fake' sn inter- view."' Nor, may we add' would any reputable newspaper publish ss sn interview statements which it kneww be absolutely incorrect. It mstl/ers lit- tle where ths mhrepresentstion orig- inated. The attempt to mislead the public has failed, and the parties rs- sponsible for the attempt may sgrss tsmmtmmselvunésvmmsu popalstiohfrse imports “ll WUPOIUIII ldvlii- hm-'A . i but benefit to the dairylng interests of the country. Ordlnarily men see only what they want to see. but here is an example that rivals the psychic powers of the magician who finds lost collar buttons and other articles in the pockets of his astonished audi- ence. Yesterdsy. the 120th anniversary of the birth of Abrsbsm Lincoln, was observed as a legal holiday in several States of the Union, and no doubt rsvorentiy commemmorsted. Lincoln stands out as the most loveable fig- ure in American history. His great- ness owed nothing to accidental cir- cumstsnee. His homely features, his angular fomr, his oddities of manner, vire- the subject of many jssts, which passed over him harmlessly. His latest biographer. Arthur J. Bev- mm. depicts me min with almost devastating realism. "If anyone knocked st the door," ws are told, “Nicola would answer in sock-foot, 1837-38, 1847-48 End in 1889°91. ThB ry WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1929 most deadly and widespread visita- ffl ts train and in non-fatal cases re- tn very ,S commonly slowy hiding the cause of the trouble and The epidemic or lola-ls and that Y°“ “’° \P’°"°“““¥ the “"5” "°m oose eggs in form and substance. Y ry to “kill” the pain but to find out wh of Some years ago I wrote a little ar le asking the qution “do you use crutch?" _ The thought was that if you had stomach ache and used a dyspep- and use some morphine, and so forth, you along. The idea was that while a crutch was necessary at times or emergen- numbe, of its victims being c°mpm._ cies, where you had to get work done szssiolv UNDER WAY ,taceous to the H1°¥\“f“°f‘”‘°’S in Lim' able to those or the Great war. e ven if you had a headache or stomach che, that you should remember that esembles, but is quite dystmct from you were using a crutch and should e common cold in the head. It "Y 13° d° away with it' “nd Walk characterised by early and mark- unuded' And I often think that when you 010nged'b,.mgmg complications in other ache and take some medicine stop it, it is simply masking or elng found. ' As someone has well said "When Indies’ west Indies and North Amer_ the fire bell rings the fireman does ,can , not pour water on the fire bell; he It is now known that the mnmdy recognizes the signal and goes where produced by bacilli, which when the me is" And so when a pain or ache comes our first thought should not be to at is causing the pain, and have he cause removed if at all possible. As you know n headache may be ue to eyestraln, indigestlon, and many other things. - Pain in chest maybe due to an ac- wall--pleurisy,~or it may be due to cold, injury, or infection .ln the mus- cular coverlng of the chest. Pain in abdomen is usually due to gas formation, which in turn is caused mostly by misuse of vege- tables and fruit, both excellent foods of themseves. Pain in lower back and hips may be due to sprain, or to infection in hip joints from some infected spot somewhere in the body. What is the thought? That when pain appears don’t try to “kill” it with drugs. but try t.o re- member what you,.had been doing or eating a little previously. If before you learn its cause some pain killing drug is used, you will make it hard for your doctor to learn . the cause. l ;_______.___ i THE POET’S CORNERI MISTLETOE -~ “I am a haunted man- Happily haunted; Summon at will I can Visions enchanted. Summcnat will, say I? Rather I mean I can’t forget or fly Laughing Eileen. “Winter may howl and cry, Sad in the doorway; Hence, you old rogue, say I, My wave not your way. II-Ience with your rain and mist, What can they mean? (N0thillg to one whos kissed Laughing Eileen.” --Arnold Dawson, in the Clarion. "On what grounds are you seeking ,a divorce from your wife?' ‘Misrcpresentation When I ask- ed her to marry me, she said she * was agreeable." Mackie: "Eh, Jack! Money talks, ye ken. as the auld sayin' is." Maesrescr 2 "Ay: but it nivh- gl'es itself awa'." Some people who say that their photographs do not do them justice should be grateful to the photogra- pher. .__.________ coatless. and without the stock which he removed from his neck as soon as he came home. Sometimes in this state of undress, except that he wore flapping carpet-slippers, he went t/o Gourley‘s ‘to borrow a table necessity, and courier particularly observed that but one suspender held up his trousers...When on circuit, he carried s dilapidated, striped car- pet bag, md s big, stout umbrella of faded green, well-worn, the knob gone. and the name 'A. Lincoln' cut out of white muslin, and sawed in' the inside; s string about the middle kept the umbrella from flapping open...Hs slept in 's home-made, yellow flannel undershirt'...resohing 'hslfny between his knees and his snk1es’. A young lawyer who saw him thus sttired for bed declared sf- fcrwsrill that ‘Limoln was the un- lodlllt figure’ I 'snr ssw'." - _ g V -=='1|= Tlthat IS SOCIALISM DEAD ? BUD? condensed from The century wul nu:-ant _ Watts labored, and Arkwright, and Whitney, and Fulton, and Btcllholl breed, and life found itself caught up man and woman, of parent and child, of master and worker, of ruler and ruled; every faith turned into violent unbelief, or faded reti- cently into doubt, or remained dearer than ever to the lips because dishon- ored or ignored by life. How could the human mind stand the strain of so profound and complete a transfor- mation? Industry hurt religion because it nourished the physical sciences be- yond the psychologlcalfbecause it ac- customed men to think in terms of cause and effect; because it made them handle impersonal mechanisms rather than growing life;_because it gathered them into cities, where every faith lost edge by rubbing elbows with a. hundred hostile creeds; because it increased the prosperity of men and enabled them to enjoy the earth too well to lose themselves in hopes of heaven. Then hope, cheated of heaven, came down to earth, and socialism was born. The wilk rank growth of industry had brought new forms of misery to the working-man. To tend machines that raced faster and faster with every year;‘ to stand in the dark and filth of factories for 12 to 14 hours a day; or, worse, to see himself unused. while this giant slavery opened its arm to receive his wife and children; tol find the old trades and skill made worthless by the iron rivals that grew up on every side about him: it was, too much to bear; one must see a way out of it, one must believe it have to bury one's_ self in the nearest stream, and seek justice or forgetful- _ness in death. ‘ But, even sc, wealth was increasing. It made for misery only because it was gathered greedily into a few men’s hands; let these harsh manu- facturers surrender to the worker the unnecessary profit mnde from his toll. and wealth would spread evenly over the surface of the land--vitalize and nourish us all, as Bacon dreamed. Or let the state, in its new omnipotence, become the great father and employer of all men. So the new religion grew and had its Bible, its prophets, its martyrs and its saints. The wave of rebellion almost mandated Europe, and for a time in 1848 overalls sat with swallowtails in the government of France. One revo- lution left 10,000 communards slain in the streets of Paris. What a battle it was, that 19th century- the cleav- age between owner and toller growing alwaysdeeper, the workers multiply- ing and suffering, think and organiz- ing. fighting and losing, nghtlug from 1789, through 1848, and 1871, and 1905, until in 1917 their long-awaited hour came. At last, when Lenin sat in the DB1' ace of the Czars after so many trials and defeats, socialism had comel Here was the modem state, powerful with great armies and meteoric geniuses; it would take over railroads, and mills and ships, and factories, and trade. It would put an end to the exploitation of man' by man, of woman by man, of children by man or woman; it would give to each worker an equal share. cr at the _very least an equitable share of the goods in this new and better world; it would be a just and loving father, in whose family there could never be poverty any more. From the peak of passion and be- lief how have the mighty fallen! In Revo u on are Y D mon" who feel compelled to abandon the dreams of communism one by one. It is the fate of revolutions to create. by radical legislation, a new conser- vative class; by distributing the land of s few feudal lords among a million families it widens the hold of greed upon the soul, and decrees the do mination of the proprietary impulse in the life of the nation for centuries to come. Bolt was after 1789; so it must be after 1917. The proletarian revolu- tion wil hava as its sole result the transformation of 20th century Russia into a gigantic 19th century France the mujiks will force an individualis tic economy upon s socislistic ¥°veni‘ ment. By 1930 the peasant demand fo the divine right to sell not to the ststa but to the highest bidder, and to buy not from the state but from the lowest bidder, will have broken down sli resistance before it. Boon thereafter this policy of barter will have developed s new middle allel- clevcr enough, ss in America to squeese into their treasuriss the now of goods from producer to consumer. In Germsuy slmiisr'iy.' the socialists made the revolution, and the hour' geoitis inherits it. In Prmoe the osu- tious peasant odors to the middle clones the support which onsblsl ii ss El ii “&-1 --reiifvun-h»v~¢»u»-~».... Russia the leaders who made the 1 tl replaced b “ faction' ‘ U _ »workers played at revolution 101' B time, and found that something more son; suddenly inventions began to than more possession was u¢°d°d W run industry; chastened with a hu- gasf, and it has “sunny in the years ` a million factories; every custom surrendered completely. In Enllltnd rms-l-on -om sl-un. N.-w-= st. Amir--mart. su ruvlannt st. of lf; prevglenm' gp,-end from Eu,-_ USING A CRUTCH crumbled, every relation of the workers were so well-Ursllliled - ' u , sur Wm l. Bt. -_ _ P0 that for a moment they thousht °f seizing power; then the terrible re- s nsibility of taking the intricate processes of industry from the hlndli of economic law daunted the statis- ticlans of the proletariat, and kd 15° an abdicstion which has left the British employer more l>0Wel'f\11 than at any time since the coming of the factory. And in America, where Bre tho radicals of yesteryear? Some of them have abandoned their hopes be¢\\UB¢ the Russian Revolution seems a Dro- found failure. Some socialists, some communists, even some liberals have grown rich; and the apathy of the use does not replace them with pious re- cruits. It is difficult to remain radical when one becomes a partner in the firm, or builds a sweat-shop of his own, or finds royalties mining down upon him. It is difficult in general for a country to be radical when every gms; in 11; ig prosperous (except the farmers, who are conservative because they fear that radicalism will take from them their land); when almost every family is rich enough to afford the nuisance of owning a home; and 'when automobiles are so common that the rich must retum to horses or le8S as a form of distinctive snobbery. It is above all, this shameless and unpar- slled prosperity that has killed or wounded the cock-robins that used to chant the songs of revolution. ,, There are some other radicals who arrived at dlsilluslonment not through wealth but through a decreasing cer- would come to an end; or one would tainty in their knowledge. They have m _ co e (as the wage workers long since came) to doubt the adequacy of the proletariat to cope with the complex- ities and inter-relations of industry. They have come to fear the pre- carlousness, and to question the ulti- mate value, of violent social change; they have realized the almost ineradi- cable rootage of the acqulsitive im- pulse in imankind. If we can analyze the transformation which has come upon their ideas we may find them of some help in our efforts to under- stand the meaning and possibilities of human life. THE LAND WE LOVE By rl:.».;.l; stroll THE PEACE OF UTRECIIT, 1713. Q. What was the Peace of Ut- recht? _ A. The Peace of Utrecht (1713) closed this war. If, by it, England gained less in Europe than her bril- liant successes in the field should have secured her, in America her gains were marked. The French abandoned all claim to the Hudson Bay region. The Five Nations, or Iroquois, Indians were acknowledged to be British subjects. Acadia was wholly given up., Newfoundland was ceded, with a reservation, how- ever, of certain fishing privileges on a portion of the coast. The Island of Cape Breton, (Isle Royale) then entirely uninhabited, was left' to France without conditions, and she proceeded at once to plant 'a fortress upon lt. Isle St. Jean (now Prince Edward Isalnd) was also left to her. Vessels Marooned In The Baltzc (Canadian Press) LONDON, Feb. 11-Ice and snow stretched today in a bleak, white blanket across Europe from Scandin- avia to the Balkans Some towns froz- en in faced food and fuel shortages. Ice was piled high in rivers In the Baltic 140 ships of various sires were held tight in an ice crush. Passen- gers on the Birnplon express. which a week ago was buried in an avalanche, near Tchataldja, arrived at Constan- tinople from Rodosto little the worse for their harrowlm experience. Among them_wss Sir Gilbert Clayton, new British high commissioner to HIGH GRADE tobacco. Lumbermenls' Boots _ You maynow secureapairof thc” high grade lumbermen’s boots, fr” in exchange for eight complete seg. i of the valuable ‘fpoker hands” packed with Rosebud, that wonders. fully satisfying out plug* smoking 1 Standard sizes to select from, 7 to 12 inclusive (no halt-sizes). ° - Smoke RUSEBUD j and Save the “Poker Hands” I Pe n s la r (Palatable _ Tasteless) ,,,< $12.2./-/§` P li ii ii li Ir we to as is h has atcs calling of the Cunard and White Star Line steamers with the increased tonnage which is being provided for these three steamers and which have a fine thing for us all. and par- been brought about by the railway ticularly so for waterfront workers." Col. A. N. Jones, the Represent- ative in Halifax for the White star Line. declared that the real credit for mer Secretary of' the Board of Trade, Mr. ent of the Canadian National Rail- Wlys, who was instrumental in bring- ins 1118 enjoyed. "The joint service is a INDI concern,” Colonel Jones ss- sorted. Cod Live ` Extract An excellent ionic for child- ren and aged persons, contain- ing all the virtues _anti none of the disagreeable piinpertlos oi' f` Cod Liver Oil. . _,, - W “Q/T, ff-£02112 .\l§/ZIIl\§;` >¢fZIIIfi@§fI1l;<@ZI,fI§§-EI For aencmic persons or ' i those suilcrlng from delic- lcnt vitality, Pcnslar Cod Liver Extract is heartily recommended. It builds up the cells and tissues, by increasing the appetite and aiding digestion. Large bottles $1.00. Small size 500. If you have n. perscription (0 be filled which requires unques- \ tlonahly pure drugs and u high 5', dogma of plmrmarcutlcal skill. ty bring it to this store. You will make no mistake. ,l/Q E. A. Foster CENTRAL DRUGSTORE `6 \'/ 1 /. L fl k. Denmark had the worst ice a conditions since 1803. Many Islands re cut off. One of them. Pclvorme, been isolated since January 11th. SUCCESS OF ALLIANCE WITH WHITE STAR AND CUNARD LINES Bufficlent of the winter sport sca- son impres upon Canadian National ol- ficers but the country at large, the success that has attended the all- at Halifax has passed to not only lance which the National System made with the White Star and Cun- ard Llnes, to have their boats call at Halifax on a definite, regular cast- bound schedule, for British ports. D. R.. Tumbull, President of the Halifax Board of Trade, in his ad- dress Board held in Halifax January 29th, said, “The Canadian National Rail- ways are doing their part in helping at the annual meeting of the increase the business oi' the port, noted by largely increased estim- for grain shipments. The regular the new service must go to a for- A. T. Weldon, now Vice-Presid. about the sllled service now bs- -____ “And will you love me as much ss this when we are married?" "D\l'1ili8. how can you doubt ms? I‘ve always liked married 'women best." - --__._______ mlllfs Llsimsst prevents Ile / i il | E" ~» .. 5/'P-` or ."` ff _» \_‘\ = 4 1, D / .'Ab".i'nl:Q"Q‘ Ill' r _ D ` Plvsii-I You can call thd Doctor -after you are sick. You can consult a. lawyer after you re in trouble. ' But it’s TOO LATE to call an insurance man after you have had a loss. Insurance is one of the few' things you -can’t buy when you need it most. A phone call will have our prompt attention. Hyndman _& Co Limited The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. I. Charlottetown »» -i_.____i______, W J ust Arrived AUSTRALIAN BUTTER? N0. 011|! s Consignment of N ORWEGIAN PURE COD LIVER OIL Put Up By TIIE PARKE DAVIS C0. A wondeful pure vitamin- rlch COD LIVER 0lL-recol- nlzed by leading pbyslelsns IS e ideal, easily digested food- gnlo for all ages. Noihinl Ni' ter for the prevention or HW’ eifects of the FLU. GNLY $1.00 por large bottle at The 2 MMS DRUGSTORE ‘ 149 GREAT GEORGE STREET Prompt attention #Nil ma cram _ GM, &&o| ounsnn |.¢ns':a.s.o.sl¢¢'°"* Public Augion Sales Raw Furs _ 2l""""'...u..."&'..T3»‘.% to l. I.'lns. IM-» III' sunsets" sy gg! 'slit It If A-.\...\... rs/ 1 f gf . ._, »,,..§,,,,. , . l. ."~~.f..-._1..v,>:‘a.f<.;.»..;~tr.t.._ FREE