i'.rii'~£-s-.ic:'-n=s a as. -. saucers-cocoon ‘a ' Q 4aaAsPQ"5\H~"'5 4 times of world unrest. ,.parently forgotten that IcI-IIO. I.I. Vino-Incident. an _ ELECTION RETURNS Indications at the time of ‘writing point to a liberal victory in yester- day's provincial elections 1n Ontario, with Liberal candid-ates leading in the Saskatchewan I elections. The result was not unanticipated. In otirprovinces the economic diffi- culties, general throughout: the “wdrld, were seized upon as evidence ref ‘governmental incompetence, and the general tendency to blame the powers that be, inflamed by demo- gogio oratory, prevailed, seemingly, 111th a sufficient majority of the el- s ectors to place the Liberal Opposi- tion candidates in the lead. In Ontario the contest saw a de- luge of political candidates of all stripes, comprising LiberaI-Conser- vatives, Liberals, (Io-operative Com- monwealth Federation, Labor-Soc- ialists, Liberal-Progressives, Inde- pendent-Liberals, Independent-Con- servatives, United Tanners of On- tario, Liberal-Labor, Farmer-Labor, Independent-Farmer, Independent Dry, Socialist-Labor, Workers’ In- dustrial Party, Independent-Labor, Communist. As an Ottawa exchange remarked, the only party left out seemed to be the Nudist party, and doubtless if the weather had been warmer they too would have been represented. .In Saskatchewan the return to a Liberal government was generally predicted. In its brief existence, Saskatchewan has had five Premiers, four of them Liberals. Never at any time have the Conservatives held a majority in the Legislature, and the particularly difficult times which that Province has faced during the I past four years reacted, as it did in Ontario, upon the administration in power. It would be difficult to point to any decisive issues in either electoral contest. What is apparent is the uphill fight which any government ills to face, however competent, in f THEN AND NOW Our local contemporary has ap- it was through the efforts oi Hon. John A. MacDonald and Colonel Cantley, M.P., that the initial t1¢000flil0~waa placed in the parliamentary esti- mates by the Mackenzie King Gov- ‘l ._i L» ernment for the construction of the new car ferry steamer. The fact is Y on record in Hansard, however, and was so generally recognized that the Z Liberal organ itself referred editori- 7 _a_lly to Hon. Mr. MacDonald as the / l f -.- . "car ferry father." Our contempor- ary is still less desirous, seemingly, _ of recalling the events leading up to ' ‘the construction of the ferry. The initial appropriation, made by the Liberal Minister of Railways on May IN. 1928, after . sledge-hammer speeches by Colonel Cantley and Hon. Mr. MacDonald, was credited by our contemporary to its pally 16' presentatives who made compliment- ary speeches to the Railway Minis- ter after the vote had been granted. Notably absent from these speeches {was any reference to the specific re- quirements of the Province I01‘ B» 116W car ferry service. Our Liberal re- presentatives accepted the promise of a million dollar appropriation without any question‘ as to the do- slgn of the new shin of the terminal facilities that would be required. It was only several months afterwards, when The Guardian pointed out the urgent necessity of the public being fully informed with respect to the Plans "then under way, that pressure was brought to bear upon the authorities by our Boards of-Trade. and the “work was held up while a delegation, Jieadcd by Premier Saunders, was Qhespatched to Ottawa with a strong u-esoluiion, endorsed by the Maritime j {Boards of Trade, outlining the needs ' 0f the service. As a result of thia pressure, the plans were reconsider- "Ied, on a‘ basis of $2.800.000 elfillelldl- ture, and an additional vote was put through Parliament. A delay of over a year was occasioned before con- ‘ , structlcn could even be started, and this was due entirely to the fact that ..',¢ur Liberal representatives had fail- ed to insist upon the provision of a ~:~EI'VICQ which would be commensur- ate with our requirements. The local Liberal organ's incon- sistency lies in the partisan criticism which it now voices against Conser- vative members for not interfering with the railway officials in the ‘matter of car ferry repairs, when it I epted, without the slightest com- int, the serious delay and incon- ‘ veniences suffered by reason o! tho inaction of its ow-n party repre- sentatives when the plans for the "steamer were being considered. ___ CARTIER CELEBRA TION ""','|'he Empire-wide interest at- Efigl-lihg to the forthcoming Cartier ‘ugjversary celebrations at Char- and Gaspe ia_ shown by I minent editorial reference ‘filfevent in thecurrent issue of "cam-a moire." official journil of the Royal main Society. wlidon. £20m which we quotei " l" “"1110 Cartier celebrations are cf oclvlcw. my will take place in Canada under the Britishllag and will, be supported by Franco. which cherishes the thought tbatthough the diild passed into foster hands. its descendants have never lost their love for all the real mother gave them: The story of New Iirancc, down to the September morning in 1769, when Wolfe and Montcalm met on the Plains of Abraham, invites reflections on the difference between British and French methods of colonization. But the significance of the Cartier celebrations goes deeper. A tiny battle outside Quebec changed the history of a Continent. One of its consequences was the loss to the vTcfor of her own colonies to the south, and in its turn the coming to Canada of the Unlied li-mipire Loy- alists who are celebrating their sea- quicentenary. Without the United Empire loyalists, Toronto, also now rejoicing in the completion of its first century. would not have ex- isted. Quebec and Ontario. with a common loyalty and common pride in the parts they have played in the building of the Dominion, may well advance a twin claim to a share in Kipling’s line: ‘Because ye are Sons of the Blood, and call me Mother still!” EDITORIAL NOTES New Brunswick will be the next to take the plunge. It is highy satisfactory to learn on the high authority oi the Min~ ister of Health of this Province that the insane population here is de- creasing contrary to the experience of other provinces. Dr. Macmillan suggests that this may be due to ‘ the fact that we have a smaller foreign element in our midst. But did we ever have a foreign element to decrease? “No time like the present" is the motto of senator Dennis who-suc- cessfully carried his Tourist scheme through the Upper House, got the approval of the Cabinet, and now a vote of the House of commons for $100,000 "on account" of the $150,- 000 per annum asked for. The pros- pects are also that a Cabinet port- folio will be provided for Tourist business, which is as it should be. Considering the world-wide con- dition of revolution and dictatorship, Ontario and Saskatchewan have done remarkably well. What other country at present could have c.0061 the ordeal half so well? It must be borne in mind, too, that according to the Hon. Dr. Maclviillan, insan- ity is on the increase in these two provinces, as it undoubtedly was in Nova Bootia and will probably prove to be in New Brunswick. ‘the great Duke of wellington. whose descendant has just passed away, was the first of "modern" ‘generals who relied on quality rath- er than quantity in fighting troops. He did not believe that God was on the side of the blg battalions, and held that it was the business of a British Commander to fight with every normal and artificial advan- tage on his side. In other words he trusted by his art, and the art of his men, to overcome the hordes of n. modern Attila. The very Rev. Dean Inge, whose resignation has just gone into effect at St. Paul's, London, is no more entitled to the prefix “Gloomy" than is Mr. H. G. Wells. It was a description applied to him origin- ally by a. writer in the London Daily Mail, because immediately after the war he did not share in the general optimism voiced by Prime Minister D. Lloyd George. Dean Inge used both pulpit and pen to warn lmgland that the aftermath of war had yet to be overcome, and that leaders and people should orc- pare for the evolution if they were to avoid revolution. Like all true prophets since the beginning oi time he was scoffed and laughed at -but that did not make him deviate one hair's breadth from what he considered his path of duty as a voice crying in a wilderness oi scepticism and crass ignorance. In the preface to his volume "Bigland" in the ‘Modern World" series, Dean Inge strikes this sig- nificant and arresting note: "Is the fire of patriotism burning brightly enough to save our society from disintegration and our empire from disruption? We hear too few ex- hvrtotions in the spirit of Edmund Burke: ‘A great Empire and little minds go ill together. If we are peculiarintercstfrcmeverypoint~ Notes Bvy The Way and Paper Association at Poland Spring. June 20-32 inclusive, brings out tne fact that Maine mills have been making paper for more than two centuriel. and an eighth of the population ia reported still profiting from the in- dustry. Pulp and paper interests say their industry 1s today double the size of any other in Maine, al- though prior to 1900 it was seventh. ~ lomlgaa_-_Affaln (New York): Jiluch nonsense has been talked about the Japanese standard of liv- ing as compared with the Western standard. The truth is that there is no higher or lower, no superior or inferior standard of living as between Japan and the West. The question is simply one of differ- ence. ‘Iransplant a. Japanese mill hand to Lancashire. give him an iron bed with a soft mattress, put him on a ration of bread and but- ter, beefstcak, coffee. and cream and he will go on a. strike, demanding Japanese bedding, spread on a mat- ted floor, and a. ration of fish, rice and vegetables which, to him, are more palatable and wholesome. It is the misfortune of the British or American that his standard calls for higher-priced materials than the Japanese that is all. Despite the advent in their midst of Western culture, which Norman Douglas characterises as "frowsy and fidg- ety" the Japanese still cling to the simple life and are satisfied with fewer worldly things than are ‘cov- eted by Iheir Occidental brothers. The regular daily and nightly homicides, the regular stick-ups and hold-ups, the regular gang-shoot- lllss and other crimes of violence continue at their regular rate. They are too familiar to be considered news. S0. we ask, in all good faith, who runs this country? We don't see how the decent people can claim to run it. We don't even see how the city and state and nation- al governments can claim 1o run it. If the people or the government did run it, do you think for a minute that a few thousand criminals could terrorize with impunity "the richest and most powerful nation on eartblW-New York Journal, Contemporary Review (Ionian): It has only just become known that Gladstone had meanwhile mooted the question of the first Jewish peerage in 1869, but that his sugges- tion of ennobling Lionel de Roths- child. so often elected M.P. for the City, was vetoed by Queen Victoria. “She cannot consent," wrote the Queer; "to a Jew being made a Peer-though she will not object to a. Jew baronet," and she further defended her veto by drawing a dis- tinction between Rothschilds finan- cial pursuits and "that legitimate trading which she delighm to hon- our." The issues raised in the Brad- laugh case were destined before 1011s completely to overshadow the once allegedly portenious signifi- canoe of a Jewish entry into the Ullllol‘ Hollie, and the peerage be- stoned on Nathaniel de Rothschild in 1855 certainly aroused little but frierrdly and congratulatory com- men . If we compare President Roose- velt's New Deal wi.h Benito Mus- solznrs Corporate Sta.e, says the English Review (London) we shall find both resemblances and points of difference. The circumstances in which the two policies were evolved are of course very different. The New Deal was conceived in a coun- try of unlimited natural resources and endowed wi.h vast capital ac- cumulations, but stricken with a sudden economic catastrophe. and W85 designed to meet that emerg- ency measure. It was only in the course of execution and as a sec- ond thought that it expanded into a system of national planning, which might become permanent. Italy is, instead. a country of small natural resources and densely pop- ulated. The idea inspiring the Cor- porate State was that of disciplin- lllk the nation's economic life. hus- banding such resources as ll, p05- Bosses and exploiting them to the full. For this purpose the whole na- tion has been organised in a vast co-operaiive effort. The system was evolved several years before the de- DIES-lion as a permanently planned economy. although it is being amended and expanded year by year. Ron. Vincent Massey has stated nothing new in emphasizing that Peace cannot be reached by pious resolutions, but must be bought by taking risks. It is nevertheless well to rmtate these obvious truths con- stantly. However, the risks taken must not be excessive. To gain something worthwhile a man may take a with that is not known to be absolutely without danger; but if that path is plainly perilous. if in fact the road to the desired end is known to be so risky that the chan- ces are all against traversing it in safety. then the end must be sought by other, if longer, ways, conscious of our station and glow with zeal to fill our places as be- comes our situation and ourselves, we ought lo . . . elevate our minds to the Breatness of that trust to which the order of Providence has 0011911 us. By adver-‘ing to the dig- nity of this high calling, our gn. cesfors have turned a savage wild- erness into a giorioils empire; and have made the most extensive and the only honczzrable conquests, not by destroying but by promoting the wealth. the number. the happiness of ‘the human- race.’ ‘Iliese are the sole con- ditlons under which little England can maintain her almost miracul- ous and always precarious great- ness; and without them our hard- won liberties hang on a slender thread. Only a nailon which is one in spirit can remain free." Cnnvening of the 1.0.1.»... gulp ” Mills Superintendents’ _ 1.11.... = 300p; ofxf, Quilts. lalnnrlV-lglaarl-D. 1 ncalovai. on NON-BEIIOVAL’ or mucus- As the removal of tonaiis is still done so often, you may wonder if it is always necessary; in fact, you are reading statements of opinion from reliable sources that the operation is performed too often. Herbert Tilley, one of the out- standing throat specialists of Great Britain, states that "for many ail- ments of children up to the age of puberty and early manhood no treatment as quickly restored these patients to normal and prolonged good health as removal of enlarged and diseased tonsils." Because of these brilliant results a great many other cases, not due to infected tonsils, have had the ton- slls removed, and naturally the re- sults were disappointing. _ when should tonsils be removed? _' The tonsils shouldbe removed (a) when attacks of tonsililtis occur from time to time; (b) when pus can be squeezed out of the little holes or "crypts”; (c) when there is an enlarged gland behind the angle cf the jaw just below the ear; (d) when the throat about tnc tonsil is purplish red in appearance. Sometimes there are certain con- ditions in the body that cause the enlargement and inflammation of the tonsils, and if these conditions were treated there would not be the need for the removal of so many tonsils. Some oi these conditions are: (l) Rickets or other "deficiency disesase" are commonly associated with enlarged tonsils; (2) there is no need to remove slightly enlarged tonsils when the symptoms are plainly due to obstruction from ade- nolds. Removal of the adenoids will frequently be followed by the return of the tonsils to a normal condi- tion. (3) Decayed teeth is a frequent cause of enlarged tonsils in both children and adults. It is therefore, always wise to have the infected teeth removed before having tonsils removed as tonsils may return to normal after the removal of the teeth. <4) Many enlarged tonsils are due bo infection of the sinuses or caverns adjoining the nose. and these should be cleared up before touching the tonsils. When the boy or girl is approach- ing manhood or womanhood-mah- erty-there is often a little enlarge- ment of the tonsils but it is not considered wise to remove the ton- slls at this time just because they are slightly enlarged. I believe the above suggestions for and against removal of tonsils rep- resent the gcneral opinion of throat specialists. Oberammergau Today (London Times)‘ There had been minors of political tampering with the text and the spirit of the Oberammergau Passion Play; and none could be blamed for feeling that an official denial of that rumour was not an absolute guaran- tee of its being untrue. Villagers, again, had been seen with Nazi uni- forms, going very ill indeed with the long hair which they wear in the play years; and it looks us if a tiny drop of political propaganda had after all been allowed to get into the preface, though the text has remain- ed pure. But clearly there is no ground for believing that the play at Oberammcrgau has been poisoned either by religious or by political in- terference. And the conduct of the whole, the temper of the villagers, the spirit of the performances, the welcome and the entertainment of visitors from foreign lands will no doubt maintain the true tradition of this unique combination of religion, the arts of drama, holiday-making. and commercial prosperity. Yet, had the efforts to bring change been much more strenuous than they appear to have been, Ob- erammergau would very nkuly have resisted or nullified them. The con- tinuity of spirit through many ex- ternal changes is one of tine festi- val's most striking features and one of its highest titles to respect. It is generally known that this year's ver- formances are being given, out of due time, 1n order to commemorate the three-hundredth anniversary oi the first performance given in 1634 after the vow made during the plague of 1633. In 1770 the Passion Play, with other dramas of a like sort, was pro- its privilege of performance. Bup- pressed again in 1810, it was acted again in l8l1. Early in the last cen- tury the sixteenth century text. (re- modelled by a pupil of Hans Sachs from a still earlier play) was re- written and mpdemized. Of the old music very little has not been super- seded by music of the same period as the new text. The simplicity of the early productions has changed, in days of greater audiences and of greater profits, and a huge theatre now houses performances which us- ed to take place in the open air. Sev- erest trial of all, Oberammergau and its inhabitants have been subjected not only to in the influence of visit- ors reckoned each festival in hun- dreds of thousands (and many of them very ready and able to spend money), but also to the greater strain of such publicity. personal and collective, as the Press, the camera, and the wireless can spread all over the world. And it seems that Ober- amrnergau has been proof against all. temptations. The spirit of the performances is the sincere and in- nocent spirit of the old time; and in a village which la still a village the people, artists many of them and carvers of wood and ivory, live out their natural. unassuming lives without loss of dignity or of reserve. In particulars Obemmmergau end itg Passion Play may move with the tges. In spirit they are above t e. . -—-i--_ Sales of American automobiles in Belgium this year are 10 per cent stage those of the same period of 1 . ' hibited; but in 1780 it had won back lizards (Mail and Imvln) Developments m Palestine 111166!‘ British protection in recent Yo"! have attracted world. will! “W” tlon. Is there a danfll‘ “l” mm’ ial improvements may destroy Biblical associations? The PNWW‘ tive effect of a tentative plan w use the Bea of Galilee for electric power pUflIOIBA ll Ofififlbdd in CD9 Qlgggow Herald by Rev. W. M. ‘mums, D, D., of Mount Carmel Bible School. at "We - The-proposals are thatthe Elec- trical Power Concession oomomy be permitted on the one hand. in connection with their works a few mllles south of the lake. to lower the surface of the lake nine to i611 and. one-half feet, and, on the oth- er hand, to raise the surface of the lake by flooding to a like or smi- er level; 1n short, to use the lake c; convenience may Milli" l“ 5 reservoir to suit their own P11111059- Dr. Christie says that while thew 1s some recognition of compensa- tion for material loss to those hav- lng claims or rlghié". the Queen“ of Christian sentiment or Chflsllull rights in the lake as one of Chris- tlanliys most holy also“ 1-‘ “llflly ignored, He continues: "Think now of what flcodins would mean in connection Wm’! Gospel sites. Raise the water. say nine feet. A great Pa" °5 m‘ Plain of Gennesaret is covered with wafer, and its lands, the most fertile in the world, through lower- ings and elevations, are rendered unproductive and useless; the whole of the valley of Bethsalda of Galilee and the site of that village are laid under water. and the call of the Apostles occurred when they were well-i out in the sea instead of up to the knees a little from the shore. The synagogue of Caller- naum will be practically an island. and the place oi’ the feeding of the 5,000 under water. The place where Peter learned to swear, too. cursing Matthew the Publican, at the harbor vmrks of Capemaum. will become a bit of the sea bot- tom. Gergesa will be covered and Magdala and Dalmanutha will practically disappear." Dr. Christie claims that lowering the level would be equally disas- trous. The whole Bea of Galilee was free for fishing to every Israel- ite from the days of Joshua, but the scheme would totally destroy the spawning grounds of the fish. He adds that this scheme doubt- less means big dividends- wealth to the Electric Power Concession Company, but it means lose and disaster to all others who are tou- ched by its operations. To the Christian student of the Bible, and especially of the Gospels, it means lncalculable loss. It removes condi- tions, unchanged through many centuries, that make the Gospels intelligible, and, of course, it also, in a very great measure, affects detrlmentally all the literature of the centuries written on either the Land: or the Bock. Swallower Swallowed A few nights ago a. dark and dreadful deed was done in the reptile-house in the Endinburg Zoo. In one of the larger cases there have lived for some years several large pythcns and a common boa-the it may be noticed being the smallest snalke in the case. One night ail the snakes were "present and correct," but the next morning wlhen the keeper looked info the case he found the boa was missing. It did not take him veryll long to find out the reason of its absence-the enlarged and distended outline of a. large African Pylhhon indicated cleanly where the boa. had gonel It has sometimes happened that when food has been placed in a cage where several snakes are living two of them seized the some object and began fro swallow it from oppo- site ends: then when their mouths meet in the middle the one snake gradually engulfed the other along with the prey. the respective roles of swallower and swallowed being determined entirely by the accident of which lmppened to have its jaws open the more widely at the mo- mcnt of their meeting. In the pres- ent case. however. them can be no question of accident since there vlms no food in the case. and it seems to be an example of pure cannibalism. The python concerned had been undergoing its periodical sloughing; i~t had evidently thrown of-f its old skin during the night and, being hungry and ready to feed, with no keeper at hand to minister to it. it made a. meal of its nearest neighbour. Certain snakes. such as the king snake of North America are habi- tual cannibal; and feed on other snakes as readily as they do on and other small rodents. Others. such as the hamadmyad or king cobra, are still more wedded to cannibalism and will eat nothing but snakes. such a thing is. however, quite contary to the family tradition of the boas and pythons. Russia's plan to spend about $25,- 000,000 in establishing farms Within the Arctic Circle in Karelia will in- clude the introduction of cattle, hog and vegetable raising in that part of the world. High ranges at the eastern end of the Himalayas run west to east, in- stead of north and south as shown on recent maps, reports an explorer who has just returned from south. eastern Tibet. Sh: Rheumatism ‘I- lia Source "Humatiam la caused by uric acid in the blood. Urea, a blood inn-- Eur-icy, should be anracud by fha dnoya. If kidneys fail, and urea remaina, it changes to uric acid which in minute cryatsla lodges in jolma or between muscles causing acruciatlng paina. Avoid rheu- matism by keeping your kidneys in good condition. Flush them ovary three weak: wish Budd's Kldniy or over three gen. nations the favorite kidney tonic remedy. Non-habit formin . DoddsKidneyPills , Admiral Phipps, of .l~ia' Tbe night is old. and the worlE Is wearied out with strife. . Along gray mist lies heavy and wan Above the house of life. Ilburstarsburn up and are un- quelled By the low shrunken moon; Her spirit draws her down and ‘ down- She shall be buried soon. ‘more ia a sound that is no sound, Yet fine it falls and clear, The whisper of the spinning earth To the tranced atmosphere. An odcurlives where once was air. A strange, unearthly scent, From the burning of the four great stars Within the fir-moment. 'I‘h_e universe, deathless and old, Breathes, yet is void of breath; Sweefens and re. freshes your whole inner system fresh not froaen; 101ml Pound! of cured, and 10am pound- “! W! in process of euro. Fresh flown veal’ totals 018.818 pounds: fmh not frown mace pounde- Mum" and lamb stocks total mucosa pounds of fmaen and 137.135 pounds of not floaen. Poultry stocks am as follows: Broilers, B7,- 769 pounds; chickens 3.373.377 pounds; fowl, 075.779 pounde; 1111038 78,878 pounds; geese. 70.455 pounds turkeys, 2,160,394 rounds: and un- piflnenil that appear ‘m’. ulna-w 11cm, but that 31..., , ultra-violet light in differ-egg on Pointing with .0... ,..,,,,,,,f*' difficult, s...“ tarsal? sell“ a * the ultraviolet. “M " ""———————~_ rrlllouslas‘ EKYDi-lan Linlmem lieves toothac” and valuable in cafses ...“°§,';*,‘,f,‘}g; As still as death that seems to move And yet is still as death. - --Duncan C ‘ ‘l Scott. Anticosti And Cartier (Exchange) This year of 1934 marks the 400th anniversary of the discovery of the Island of Anticosti by Jacques Cartier, the famous "Mariner .of Bt. Malo." The actual date of his landing on Anticosti is shrouded in doubt, but it is generally accepted that he reached there on July 25th, 1534. Records disclose that it was not. until 1635 that Icuis Jol- liet settled on the west end of the Island, after he had been granted the seigniorial rights by his King, Louis XII of France. ‘This Island was also the scene of a wreck of a frigate mmmanded by Captain Rainsford, on October 28th, 1690. This vessel was part of the fleet under the command oi the English Navy, and an old cannon resting in the grounds of the Chateau Menier, is the sole relic of-this tragic voy- age of over 300 years ago. During the 18th Century, a pirate named‘ "Comanche" made from Anticosti, and his marauding parties lasted for some years. with- out check. He eventually died there, and a cross has been erected to mark his burial place. From this time until-INS. this Island passed through ' various hands, including that of a Com- pany o1 Iimglish Adventurers, who apparently were bent on emulating the already remarkably successful Company of Gentlemen Adventur- ers into Hudson's Bay. This met with little success. In 1895 Henri Menier, whose name is famous as a manufacturer of chocolate-purchased the island from the Government of the Pro- vince of Quebec, and after his death, the administration passed to the hands of his brother, who is now Senator Menier of Paris. The Menier family wm concerned with the development of Anticoetichief- ly as a fish and game preserve, and all efforts were directed along these lines. ThLs administration was in the very capable hands of George Martin Zede, a traveller and sports- man of world—wide fame. For nearly forty years. this Island re- mained practically a closed book to all but a few favored friends of the Menier family. Some years ago flu extensive lmlpwcod development was conducted there. Canad-a’s Larders (Canada Weelc-By-Week) If old man "Famine" in unexpectedly he would find Ca- nada's public ice boxes well stock- ed with nourishing foods. According to a recent bulletin the butter in cold storage warehou- ses and creamer-lee on May 1, 51110110“ to 2.515.091 pounds of cieamery and 11,481 polmdg o1 dairy, the creamery butter total in- eluding approximately 3:40.000 pounds reported by firms added to the list since March l, 1934. Cheese stocks total 9.863.432 pounds. Eggs in cold storage amount to 3.105.877 4102911; fresh eggs 610,814 dozen. and howl esss 838.120 pounds. Fresh pork not frozen 3,527,727 Pounds; fresh frozen 11,209,791 Pounds. and cured or in cure 17,- 334,675 pounds. Pure lard in storage amounts to 3,609,702 pounds, Beef stocks total 4,203,021 pounds of flesh frozen; 4,346,030 pounds Giant alas Kruachen Salts 89c Goal Thermos Bottles 39¢ $1.00 Enos Fruit Salts .... 89c $1.00 Abbey's Salts 78c 81.00 Beef, Iron and Wine 89o 50o Pink Pills 44c TOILET SPECIALS 35c Tin Talonm 14c $1.00 Box Lady K. Face Powder $1.00 Box Evening in Paris hoe Powder, 25c Lipstick ADO 50d BOIIIQ Eel-film; all for $1.00 Z50 Jar Noxema Cream .. 15o The 2 Macs l“ GNU! George “not Phone n! Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention, 69c thl‘ t in . hanm‘ 831d q“ W Keep g m“ libllowlng th_e classified poultry. 596.719 rounda- Frcsb and frozen fish "on ice" to- tals 5.430590 pounds and there Bro she 3,005,414 pounds of smoked. filled, pickled or salted fish. Invisible Paintings (Exchange) A gmup of invisible mural paint- ings, that cannot be seen until in- visible light is turned on them, are now nearing completion 1n the . Franklin Institute Museum, Phila- delphia. The visitor will enter a small room with apparently plain white walfis and a mantlepiece and emp- _ ty flmjlilagtegt tone 331a as fine Qlllillllliily Wool Wanted white g ‘ex ngu e an n- i est - visible ultra-violet light is turned g PCIS“ Pm" on. three pairfitingafliqn colog, or m - threescenesnn e eo en- jamin Franklin. will ollllear. One A‘ BLQCK 81 SON will show Franklin in his print 267 King Sim; shop, another performing his kite _ _ experiment and the other his re- (Opposite Railway ceptlon at the court of France. A ' Station) ' fire will glow in the fireplace. ' ' __'Ilhis will be done by the use of Cine Cent a Mile to Western Canada Tickets on sale daily to June 30th-Return limit 45 days. For Full Particulars apply to W. K. ROGERS City Ticket Agent Canadian National Railways, 94 Great George Street ——-———_ discovery d , rivers and a lake, six miles four miles wide, in the 1m , Desert, in South Africa, an ,. survey will be made to invgmn the possibility of creating a y", ervoir. ' i‘? Apply lllnard’: Lllllmcut to can, wool. "L555? E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown I "o Kn s: B‘A'OC°PIAIDC'G'A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MEMBER OI‘ CANADIAN SOCIETY OI‘ COST ACCOUNTANTS COMMISSIONER FOR TAKING AFFIDAVITS IN THE SUPREME COURT OF P. E. L P. E. l. REPRESENTATIVE THE CANADIAN CREDIT MEN'S TRUST ASSOCIATION, LIMITED. BANK 0F NOVA ~SCOTIA BUILDING OIIABLOTTETOWN. P. E. I. Accounting systems opened up and rovllod- I Labor saving office methods installed. Coat Accounting lnatltuied to ault special requirement Monthly, quarterly and annual audit!- Balance sheets anh Profit and Loss Accounts ill’¢l1"°d' Income Tax returns upand filed. m‘ emeuta made between debt-of Limited Liability comvoulol Incorporated- r. o. BOX as. Tflnmo“ 1” 50-04% FOR SALE We have been requested _by the owner l° ° for sale the following propertlesl- _ Mo Half-double dwelling known as No- 24 Sigh” Road. Contains 8 rooms._ hariwwaiem co down-stairs. hot water heating. all m0 veniences~ A nu Apartment building on LonEVi/“th ye Contains three heated apartments anednngwp‘: heated apartments. Excellent r85 . ducer, completely remodelled recoil Y For furthr particulars apply The Eastern Trust Camila"? ff