Elsie‘! E g! serrate PAGE FOUR THE DNARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN , , , ~ I-J-l l‘ruit|eul—\\‘. ljln-atrr s. lie-Lula, 5m. llor-‘Prelillfilal: l: "III-v". ~ Siicretrlry-Llvul.»t‘ul. n. A. alunhinnuu. - - L Editor and llunuglng Director-J. ll. BIIPMAH 7'6‘ '- ' Aalvciula tliiilurn- Frank Waller and l). k. ll" NotesByiThe Way Even the most astute authority on foreign trado would be likely to hesitate about making predictions as to the future profit for United States bus ness in Latin American trade. The whole complex problem of buying from and selling to the twenty countries sout-h of the Rio Grande will become ground for in- teresting speculation in the next few months as the State Department carries out promptly President Roosevelt's order to seek trade agreements in that region. The ex- ports and imports of the last three years are certainly not an accurate gauge of what opportunities may be exploited in South and Central Am- erica in the next five years-New York Sun. >_.- lvnnce) delivered Inrnlng Dully (Inumird ran-n $0.00 o" 1}" "" "‘ l d B t $4.50 Der )\-ar (In Il\A\ll:ll\'¢) :";{l!fr.‘\’.‘|'.'{1,'.1"é'f U“ ‘e m c. .\u\‘r:r:'|'i.~' (u :-. ' . .. - » I k c. urwriru sanvrns-rr... Bwkwitli Special tress?!) lncihfislvz‘ ‘trier-ml: h“ Bnmuu‘ Ne" n“ my‘ mm“,amumiiuuginr {firn-arnr Glenn nun-l ' (‘Ala illilaluxhlry ‘Hirer -‘ _ Eginfirlfihtgéufillliindnncln Building, Bu n Frunviaru; 1U“ 5°- “m 8"" hll deiirh In. Li SATURDAY, AUGUST 5. 1933- and his lddnavwfl- The l-W 3°11” .____- _ nal forecasts an epidemic of kidnap- Members of the provincial branch "ping unless this ehcoumgeqngnt of If the Canadian Legion are w be M“, crime l, ended, congratulated upon the success ofl Governor Lehman and the Dis- their convention, dinner and re- trick Atwmey,s Awochmoh o! New anion yesterday. The dinner was York State are studying the 3mm, the first official function of its kind law which ‘orblds ransom “Womb ro be held by the provincial branch, ‘Hons between the family o! a Vi? Ind sets a precedent which will; ,.°°m_ _ ‘ itlm and the kldnflPWY-‘i l“ '°“b“°" b° ‘awed Mm Tum {pounding a, felony." with the idea “m” ‘m ‘ubsequm occasom ‘of applying it in that state. Iifiut," significant “as the enlpmsls placed Isa 's the New York Herald Tribune. "7 ‘t lmmb" °t the speakers on the ‘nth, mm police system is an ali- need of grappling with our pence- De b, 1 n 5mm o; solutely essential precedent to this lime pro cms n re some . country's scorpion" °1 "l? “ch ievotion and self-sacrifice which _ _ _ , . d, h re r closely Great was exhibited by.‘ Canadian soldiers ,1“- “n d“ W luring the war. This is tlrc spur: jflrliei“ m" ha" “Wmwhed n’ which will carry the country "over m9 511197463“ “Stem h“ l 1on8 the top" in times such as these. difii-ame m 5° “m” it can ‘new fhere are hopeful aspects to the enoush Wilma? cmfldence to nuke present economic situation, and not such a law workable. 1i? would be ‘east among tirese is the sturdy bu!‘ V110 @551" n°w t° get a verdict °r work which organizations such as mompounding a felon)" 7mm a" he CB-Iihdiiln Legion prcscnt against American jury against e rather WM any-inroads of radicrilisnr or Com- ransomed his child than to jail a nunlsm. The disruptive elcnrcnts man for whistling on the Sabbath." which were s0 much a menace to The Herald Tribune adds the United patriotic snort in the war find no 51am h; a unit in bi-‘EBIHB m! 90¢- nountenance from men whose PM‘ tors of Jurisprudence to concoct no LEGION RALLY It h not often that The Times of London leaves itself open to amend; but it must now stand cor- rected or start a controversy. One of its recent articles concluded: "In the homely American phrase, it would be foolish to throw away the baby with the bath water." The Times ‘or New York yesterday om- tested that attribution of this phrase to Americans was "ludicrously un- warranted." "Don't throw out the baby with the bath," is declared to be an axiom coined in Germany. But whoever would be so careless as to throw away a bath whatever one might feel inclined sometmes to do with the baby. Unless Canada. can set up and maintain a high reputation for quality goods, all the elaborate sales organization abroad is simply wast- ing its time. Canada has not always done this in the past. In her fruit trade with the British Isles, for in- 9y [cum - Blrlan. AID "run “NEW" mar sysrsm You are hearing something of a “new" system of diet whereby you do not eat meat when you eat pota- toes, or you do not est bread when you eat meat. The reason seriously advocated by those who use this dleffs that your digestive apparatus should not be asked to do too much work at one time; thus if it is digesting starch it shouldn't be required to digest protein also. As a matter of fact there is noth- ing "new" about this system; every doctor has heard or read about it for a great many years but there never was a time when it was so much discussed or used. You may remember how the 18 day diet swept over the country leaving many invallds and causing marry deaths. It would appear that this fad is also interesting a great many people, but fortunately it is not likely to cause any serious trouble. \ h While it must be admitted that the enzymes or ferments in the di- gestive juices which break up or digest foods, act differently from one another in that one acts on starches, another on proteins, and another on fats, nevertheless as they all flo\v together at the sight and smell of food there is always enough of them to digest a "mixed" f meal. Will this system of not eating iervice is a summit"? 0i "m" Pics‘ more unenforceable laws, and in in- mt and future loyalty; to our British sis/ting uhoh the emomemeng o; the urstitution. laws which now exist. SCOPE OF INQUIRY CANADA'S DA Y - ‘ meat or eggs with bread or pota- Stance’ the" have bee“ lmkdentsl Loos help certain individuals? ’““°““““g ahms" "° ‘umdfis- whim; m. Ruth F. Wadsworth in Col- have ‘imaged the standing M the lier's says that while this new sys- Dommim m that mark“ 1°’ "an tom is unnecessary for the average such practice‘ may 3'99"“ 9" the well individual, nevertheless arry one time’ t” be Smart’ buslnex- but um?’ following it really gets a good all The Romance Of Geology (Montreal Gazette) The geologist takes long-range views. He talks of mlllenniums as though they were but moments in geologic time. Likely most of us have hitherto been content vfith geology as a folsiliud affair or with the nation that the old-time divi- sion of earth strata into aqueous and igneous rocks is an all-sufficient account of everything the expert has to say. ‘Tina as a. rook" and “durable as the solid earth," are phrases familiar enough in everyday speech. Now and then it may come over us that the presence of fossil shells upon the hill peeks remind usehattheooeanfloorhasbeen uplifted and that vast siunbarine areas were the land surfaces of oth- er days. It is a century and a half since Hutton suggested that the earth crust is a solid Layer spread over a yery hot interior. Playfalr, Jukes and Kelvn accepted this theory. it belig added that the pro- cess of forming the earth crust might require forty million years or so, and that new lands were built up after the manner of rivers choking up their mouths with silt and forming deltas, the foundation of future continents. The modern geologist has induced an entirely‘ new factor in his calculations and, we are informed that the continents actually float. Also that it may have taken five hundred million years to form the earth's crust and make it a habitation for living creatures. 10rd Rayleigh in 1921 de- clared that this multiple was a moderate calculation. The wizard force which is supposed to have brought about the slow sinking of continents and the uprise of the sea floor is the thing we know as radio-activity. Such is the gist and tenor of some of the papers recent- ly read at the International Geol- ogical ‘Congress and the theories advanced have aroused widespread interest not only in scientific cir- cles, but also amongst all and One of the most important ques- tions to be considered by the Royal Banking commission as it tours the important centres of the country will be that of the advisability of setting up a Central Bank. This is an issue which has been much dis- cussed for two or three years past and, the prospective influence of such a proposed institution upon the finance and credit of the country will be thoroughly gone in- to. The commission has been ask- ,cd to make recommendations relat- Conference policies of Imperial prc- 111g to general banking and cur- ference in trade now implemented rcz-zy practice, with a view to the b)’ Imperial financial co-operatlon- revival of trade, the stimulation of It is gratefully recalled in Britain, intra-Imperial and international 101‘ eXiimlflel 11ml; Canada ‘leased oo-operatlon in the financial arena, borrowing in 101111011 ililflni; U"? W“ the raising of commodity prices, the to relieve the strain on British re- stabilization o; industry and finance. sources Mid devPwlled ti"? “WHY m and the cure of unemployment. Our 710M the 8"“ VICWTY 1mm!“ m” economic, financial and social in- “Qmesm miirkct- N°w the circle is stitutions will come under review, so Iompleted, and Canada returns to h“, as me machinery of nuance has mndtm- Mnmvlng “me $70'00O'0o0!any¢hin8 to do with them. The odd, much of which will probably be frorthcomlng inquiry and the report “ed w my o“ maturing 5U‘ per ‘which the commission will present "m Victory bonds’ to the Government and Parliament Mr. Bennett, in common with the t 65 m gums will be regarded with intense in- or n , dehgatcs O some o iercst by the whole community. suffered disappointment at the fail- ure of the World Economic Confcr- EDITORIAL NOTES ence. He will rciurn from his trip to _____ London, however’ “m, somcthlhg At the Century of Progress Expos- very definite ln his ling-more than mo“ in chicivagi’: where ‘Werythmg 570,000‘O00__nnd an obvious fchbhelwls so modem it hurts the eyes, the tn his cap. True, this success ls due igcneml manager’ Leno)‘ R- Lohrr has to the Ottawa Confc-rchce and the exammed the amusement places arid "Little Imperial Conference» hem has found that old, familiar devices m London when the ‘vmld Confer- of entertainment are more popular eme flopped‘ Em the Sh“. homtslthan the latest offerings to divert out ma, it dcmonflrfllcs the Govgthe minds of visitors. The snake emmenhs wisdom in negotiating the ‘ishows, the street carnival and the Empire agreements, without wnltingwwight guessers attract and hold ‘or the world Conference as Qpp°_ i patronagein 1933 just as they did at ‘mun Spcfmsmcn ndvishd q“ Opnthe Columbian Exposition twoscore position advice had bcuu followcdfyeilrs "W and “t munucss cattle Canada would today lit-looking very Pshows Years before that‘ . i ____ i h. ‘i d u concrete ‘:01 sht, 1‘ If“: Ipjrglfirc ptrxr lc for For his outstanding wurk m com a van ages n or f hypothetical advantages in vcrld ncctlon with the world's Gram trade which lhtcr vanished int’) the mnfcrmce now m progress at Rb undo“ m‘ Igina Dr. E. S. Archibald, director of many or whom had no fight to he the EZKDQrimentaI Farms system, in the market at all, and caused has been awarded the annual gepithe collapse of the greatest market Iowsmp o! the Canadian society ofzboom in history. Yet within the past : _ ‘few weeks, there have been indica- The prevalence of krdilfllljliflg inflrcchnlcal Agriculturists. 'I‘o be thusitions mu another such boom w” the United States has prompted thchhonorcd by the technical men wlth-‘m progress, and many pe°p1e_ New York Law Journal to cnndcmniln his own industry is a signal markiagain including many who had no Itmngiy the prriciifc of POITIpOiiIlCl-IOI ability. m. Archibald is reécg-Eailxiliszifrnbeaignthma-iriziig-ghge big felony by paying :1 ransom, wiiliinlzcd by his colleagues in Canada m1 enthusiasm and unbridled op. promises of immunity to thc kid-‘and by agriculturlsts throughout the hmism which prefaced the 1m nappers, It doclarcs iimt no onciworld as an efficient administrator, conmpsh who mum pay ,1 Ijlx-rlii ransom lsltirorouglrly vcrscd in both the prac- safc from kidnapping "us long asltlcal and theoretical sidcs oi‘ hisybazilegthgrsrtlifiltnm igiflklvf "l; the crime is encouraged and con-lwork. As head ‘of the widcspreadimelr savings deposit: mcgaesmzmzo "ioned to the extent with which wcsysicm of Donuznlon Eixpcrlmcntalgquickly they cannht flnd “twrwmry ‘rave lately bccomc familiar." 'I'he_Farm5, i110 Quail/i farm beinfl the outlets for the money. The "Big Federal Bureau of Investigation is largest unit, he directs one of the I ruin the most valuable trndo this They called it "Canada's Day" 1X1 country seeks. London, when the 215,000,000 four oer cont Canadian loan went “out of the window" with n rush — W08 immediately over-subscribed. The enthusiasm of the British press at Canada's return to the London mar- ket, after twenty years of absence, comments the Montreal Star, is quite remarkable. The SUCCESS 0f the offering proves the high stand- lng of Canadian credit, the suprem- acy of London as the financial ccn- tre, and the success of the Ottawa A recent survey made in co-oper- Dartment of the Home Omce and with the Ministry of Labor, survey has been confined to factor- ies engaged in the manufacture or the processing of goods for sale and does not cover factories engaged in the provision of services, such as foundries, dry-cleaning establish- ments, etc. These 646 factories were employing 44,750 people at the end of April, 1933. The position of Great Britain in the Persian Gulf is unique in world politics. Without owning a square mile of territory on either of its shores, or even possessing one of its barren and inhospitable islands as a base, she has for generations borne burdens there which no oth- er nation has ever shouldered, ex- QBPE in the capacity of Sovereign: she has undertaken duty without dorninions; she has kept and keeps the peace amongst people who never have been and are not her subjects; she has policed waters over which she has no formal authority, and she haskcpt an open market in those distant ports equally to all the merchants of the world. If Mr. Roosevelt succeeds in his present experiment will he be able to control his success; or will the Speculative temper of the Americans quickly turn success into a boom that will prepare the way for a fur- ther dlsastcr? That is the unsolved problem raised by the present Arn- crican experiment in "controlled capitalism." an experiment whch the world ls watching with 311 the more concern because the failure of effective international action has tumed people's minds everywhere to the chances of restoring prosperity by purely national measure o! con- trol. People forget. easily. It is less than four years snce the crash which wiped out thousands of speculators, COM PO U N I)! NG FE LON Y Five" joint stock banks have had (1 _ _d{ - mo din ‘is nctirz- most important branches of govern-m‘ Increase M n Per cem- during "in 0mm‘ 015's!“ l ll o fslto allow'mcnt W‘thin recent years he has me fiscal ye“ ma”; ‘mm 3o‘ The lees for twcn j- our 1 u . I . i ‘ "Big Five" form the five stronsen eontact between the family of Char- been honored by Acadia and Mani- hanks m the Brmsh m,‘ “my l“ - s" crane}, 914 men. in» more \ a‘ have repercussions which can almost ' ation with the British Factory De-, has raw fruits, with your cereals and shown that the total number of new more salads and vegetables. factories established in this country sequently you are getting more var- during the year 1932 and employing ' lcty, more vitamins, more bulk than 25 or more people each, was 646. The ' you ever thought you had time for round “mixed" diet. "If you won't} cat starches with your meal youl can't eat meat alone so you add vegetables, fresh fruits and salads. And if you can't eat meat and eggs with the other two meals yuu are bound by variety to have stewed or sundry who take note of their de- liiberations. The hint about radio-activity may be said to have revivifled the geo- logical thesis. At any rate it has upset all former notions concern- ing stability. We are told that the earth pulsates. Reokoningfar back as the Cambrian period, which is a long, long stride, the sea has per- iodlcally risen and fallen and in its tidal uprisings on this scale has time and again overflowed the land. What "causes this sinking of the continental stufl and the up- Con- before." Now there are a number of young people who have difficulty in di- gesting starches, and some older people who have difficulty in dig- esting fats. It 1's. in these cases that this method of taking food might be surge of the sea in this deiugic three? W. H. Collins, director of the Geological Survey of Canada, tells us that the earth crust is composed of two layers, and upper and a low- er. and that the deeper part of the crust is much heavier than the up- per rook material. Those underly- lng rocks are known as “siai” and are of the type basaltic. Now the upper crust we call our landscape overlaps and slithers on the lower and harder crust. Why so? Be’- cause this lower crust deep down below our landscape and in the foundlations of the sea has in it much radio-active material. This heating material is traipped. It must ler stantles the groundlirrgs by an- flnd an outlet. It does so. It gains nouncing the forthcoming cnd of the “berahbns and in 11°31! 5° Imus workh but these pflmhvc evangeh the upper crust, which consequent- Isu Wm now have w hide the“ ly sinks and settles down into the diminished heads, m, Sh. Arthur-basalt stuff below, and hence the Eddington has outdone them all. Ac- "Psilrge °f the "i! 51179191118 0V9!’ the cording to the distinguished Pro- 15nd "955- A5 Smied b!’ a milder" “m, the universe unfonunatelyliwriter: "The continental mass will burst some little time ago, and only ‘sink mm the 535a“? "m" B 5W8? 0! helpful. For the vast majority of people this method is not necessary or even advisable as it gets the "mind" too much on the food, and upsets the usual household arrangements. However it makes sure of a good all round diet and can't hurt you if you want to try it. In fact, it may really help you. The Vanishing Cosmos (Saturday Review)‘ Every few years some iroi-gospel- the diminshcd fragments now rc- malm-here a little, there a little, as it were, but all the time getting snraller and smaller like a drvidcnd warrant where income tax is de- ducted at source) and moving faster an faster as it recedes from its in- visible centre into outer and out- ermost space. Astronomy is advancing s0 rapidly that we need not take tlrcsc predic- tions in “The Expanding Unverse" quite au pied do 1a ctirc; for not only has the size of the universe been increased byi the rcccni. gala- tlc discoveries, but the doctrine of space itself has undergone revision. A few Years ago the universe was de- fined as being finite but unbounded, and even space cndcd with the out- ermost star: now this ilmtcd space has had to be abandoned, and there are two kinds of space-that within and that without the balloon (the simile is Professor loticimgtons) which contains us. The Eddington Cosmos, if one may so call it, raises philosophic as well as scientific difficult cs; for it appears to be expanding into noth- lngness, and its destruction will in that case be as purposcless as its creation. But the human mind is so constructed that rt revolts from such an impotent conclusion. The cosmos that we sec may in fact be purposeless, but if that is so it con- tains somethng greater than itself, for not all life is unplanned and un- tional Provincial and Westminster. The total increase in deposits dur- in; the year came to 55179375359. which brings the aggregate deposits '-\ the mdlansia. Home Bram-ls lat 81.0331: live" in fiifliisoaim. a -.'~.~.'<venfli"i\lF~¥mr;'a»-a.~wi i- ' . _. I—I'~~v€~'"‘" V I equilibrium is reached in the same surmise ‘ I saw the shining-limbed Apollo stand, Exultant, on the rim of Orient, And well and mightily his bow he bent, And rurseerr-srvlft the arrow left his hand. , - For on it sped", as did those elder ones That long ago shed plague upon the Greek- Eur on~and pierced the side of Night, who weak And out of breath with fright, fled to his sons, The nether ghosts; and loi his jew- elled robe ~ No more did shade a sleep encircled world: And thereupon the fsery legions furled The silk of silence, and the wheel- ing globe - spun freer on its grand, accustom- ed way, -\Vhile all things living rose to hail the day. —W. D. Lighthall. Politics And Picnics (Vancouver Province) ‘My heart goes out to the women of the country even more than the men." These memorable words ware spoken by Mr. Mackenzie King at a Liberal picnic in the wheatfields of Saskatchewan, now whitening to a bountiful harvest. Mr. King is g0- lng to attend ten Lgiberal picnics in the next two weeks and he has bo- gun with the _picnlc at The Ridge, and he has struck his keynote there. Probably the political historians have missed a. great deal of the real significance of political events by not paying sufficient attention to the utterances of statesmen at picnics. It‘ seems to have been too lightly assumed that, because a statesmen is fulr of the boiled ham and potato salad and custard pie of a picnic, he is not to bc taken too seriously in his subsequent picnic oratory. Mr. King at The Ridge is the living refutation of this pro- found misapprehension. It may be argued that when, at The Ridge, Mr. King's heart went out to "the women of the country even nuore than the men"-=we pass over the amibiguity of the phrase as reported-he was merely voicing an ancient sentiment of the male of the species. Perhaps it will be said that this was only the expression 0f a personal emotion, eminently appropriate in one of the most em- inent bachelors of his own time. Perhaps it will be p'ut down to Mr. King's distinguished felicity in the Pght and airy touch of picnic speech-making. He is fortified with cold-boiled ham and potato salad and custard pie, and the surchargng of 11's full heart goes out to the wo_ men of the country even more than the men. How much picnic ham and salad and pie Mr. King will be able to manage in his next nine picnics in the next two weeks it is not for us to conjecture. What it ls safe to predict is that pone if h’s next nine speeches-for there will be another speech for every picnic, of course- can ever surpass that disarming confession of his at The Ridge. No matter how much ho may betray his irritation with third parties who are not satfsfied with the Grand Old way that s. liner sinks in the water until the upthrust of the water equals the downthrust of the ship." We need not, however, grow very much alarmed. The "pulsation" so ‘described only takes place at a met- ironormic stroke of a million-five million years or thereabouts. The .rocks that melt with fervent heat from below do so somewhat gent- ly, albeit the radio-active urge is most persistent and in the process of miilenniums mounts to what we should tenn caltaclyamal results. New continents are formed. Old continents settle down under the sea. The theory advanced as the latest explanation of the Iommatlon of the‘ earth crust as a whole may throw some light upon the familiar Biblical deluge story and also up- on the romantlc tradtion connect- ed with "The Dost Atlantis." But the Istocraoy theorem, as it is nam. ed, must be regarded as a fact which, we are told, has been tested by many observations in various parts o: the glove, and in its broad features has never been found to fail. The average man may find ‘great dimculty in accepting the no- giiilffliliflg 0f an end; and humanity is driven to take refuge in the beief, or at least the hope, that this pur poseiess cosmos which our telescopes reveal is no more than the reflec- -tion of a spiritual universe which is not without purpose. If that were no: so. then we should have to re- vL. u- theology, and abolish the W-li of God; for a rational Will without a rational purpose is a con. tradiction in ter Party, and no matter how clcarly he may demonstrate that the Lib- era-l party has always stood for any- thing in the policy of the CCF. that is right, and is just as opposed tion that our b'g continents are afloat upon "floods of fire," within the basaltic rocks. But there Ls some consolation in knowing that the universe may forever preserve the gift of renewing its youth. ________________ Prices Take Leave 0f Values Here are the best b on Drug: and Toiletries yo! ever bought in your lilo, 75c Bottle Kruachcn Salts . . . . . . . . . . $1.00 Bottle l Salts 79o Root 35c Bottle liire's Beer Extra Specials - Cakes Lemon Toilet. Soap 19c. 6 cakes for .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 36o 3 (lakes T. & B. Toilet Snap (cellophane mapped) price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10o $1.00 box Yardley Lavender Soap and 05o Bottle Laven- dcr Wntcr. Both for . $1.00 75c Vanity Cases . . 35o 25c Tins of Talcum 17o 85c Box Mlllots Face Powder .. ...........-.-.. 69o TiiE 2 MACS 149 (‘lint George Street AUGUST s. 1933 RATES REVISED ~ flting piiihmarh You can stay a! one of the continent's traditionally great hotels at a cost as low as $2.50 per day-yet there is no lowering of those standards of service, cuisine and appointments which have delighted our guests for over thirty years.- A visit at the King Edward is an enjoy- able experience-and if you care to dance, there is only one Luigi RomaneliPs Or- chestra, Canada's most popular radio dance band-every evening in the Oak Roomr Come to the King Edward the next time you are in Toronto: ' P. runny Hum‘. Manager \_‘_ as ever to anything that is wrong -the masterly touch is still that Mr. King's warm heart goes out to the women of the country even more than the men. The women will be pleased; the men won't care; everybody, it seems, is embraced in the picnic persuasiveness of Mr. King. N0 Accident (Exchange) A striking tribute to the news- paper as a means of placing salient facts‘ before the buying public is seen in a tabulation released by the American NP- Publishers’ As- sociation. A study carried on as to the way 433 national advertisers of the United States made use of var- ious advertislng media during the in radio advertising. It is no mm accident that the daily newspaper is so far in the lead-large oorpon ations such as the type covered b; the wudy do not scatter their ad vertiskrg quotas by guesswork. Thq spend their money where they know they will get the most value for it An American on his way to worl early one morning saw a negro hm i118 a tremendous struggle with a bi| fish in a creek. He watched fol some time, but as there was no ro- sult he went on. When he returnet in the evening the battle was still in progress. "Gee, nigger," he said, "this? some fishing of yours." .- “Boss," replied the neflo, Willi! the sweat from his forehead, "Ali just can't quite make up ma mint whether this nigger is fishin‘ or tbil fish is niggerimi" past year shows that these firms spent $116,200,000 in newspaper, $32,- 301,139 in magazine and $16,321,084 FOR PERFEC I‘ -USE- Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Sold Only in Bed Airtight imckages. TEA FLAVOR . . a Reserve Fund. Life Insure is the easiest and safest method to provide such I fund which will liquidate business interests in event of death and will act as a stabilizer or collateral in event of A , EVERY BUSINESS MAN Whether an Individual owner of a Business or a partner, r ' * ‘ ’ IILIGIIIB ’ plan of ,, emergency conditions such as a World depression. Mostly every Business Man today realizes the desirability of such provision for the future. Consult your Edward Island Branch Office. ‘ Great-West Life Agent or write Prince NYNIJMAN 8r 60., LTD. Provincial Managers Lower Queen Street Charlottetown ‘I I Includes minimum rlced stateroom dawn . Sag] Saturday; bid‘ in 8 n: o n ligands! orwedneadny- Ily aw men l-‘am from mur- s Inrpolnl: by nil and runner. Lowrance for automobiles. __ lrcellenr mad! to "go Pilfl‘! - on! wav ran ‘I o saint JOHN to petite‘: in 112523551951 iiillféglzfiwna n SEA From SAINT JOHN n>B(>$TT)D| Tine NewMagniileentAtlantle Liner "SAINT J O H N" Al Donahue’: famous Bermudian: hi up room. Smoki Room. M dem . u ' ' Wh Ls IIOMIOOCIIA! and strife: d: iuxeflllirea f 1'33?» A D. . . . vari changing scenes and in- m‘ "" arming activities in a metropolitan if ,.{:{"',‘,",i’_',‘,'f‘ centre of two million people. a; orso CAI.) am mo wiiiiffiitt-fiifi?32.'it“rtf.°i’f,3?2fi£firi%“£t¥£: orchestra. Deck mes. Elizabethan f; ,,§;;;;1_i~v,i;9=;;i-,r_-§,"_*f;§,:i;?; n‘ ‘f Al" |l Return llilinl! r