_.___. ._......@- —-Ivv WI‘ ._..._A Ila-I "Chit I Molecule-ll “~60 III‘ In: Ill advance) __ k SATURDAY, I: paring to commemorate two notable events, - the dedication of the present mag ‘nificent church building. The oc ccasion is to be marked in a special manner, by the unveiling and dedic ation of a memorial tablet", Day service in the afternoon. James’, will assist at the service. The place which Zion Churcn has taken in the life of the city and During the Great War, more than 120 of her sons and daughters served overseas including the Minister of that :lme, community is known to all. the late Rev. George c. Taylor Moresthan a. score of her members. have ta-ken up active ministry In the and others are now in course of preparation for this great work. During the past seventy-five years, eleven Ministers have shared in the building up of the spiritual forces of Zion Church, four of whom The present pastor, Rev. ‘G. Carlyle Webster, since his in- ductlon in August, 1931, has labored ‘ acalously and energetically in main- _ taining the high traditions of Zion ministry. and the work of the church materially under his Church. IIIIVIVE. v has grown leadership. Httmgly, during the coming week- days there will be services of more than usual interest. on Monday the Young People’s Rally will be ad- dressed by the Rcv. J. W. S. Lowry, Th.D., of Canoe Cove, and on Wed- nesday there will be a Thanksgiving Service with the Rev. J. Keir Fraser, D.D., of Alberton, as chief speaker. On Friday a congregational gather- ing will be held at which the mort- gage on the church property will be burned. l-feartiest congratulations to the Minister imd congregation of Zion will be extended by all our citilens on this joyous occasion. The Guard- ian joins most sincerely in the er.- pression of ‘this sentiment, and in the hope that in the years ahead. even greater progress than in the A past will be achieved in the great k Christian work to which the church is dedicated. GETTING ANXIOUS Our local contemporary is greatly worried about the date of the forth- The coming provincial election. ' ' reason is not difficult to surmise. as ‘I {it is no secret that the rifts within the Liberal party lute have not been permanently soldered, and are likely to give rise to sounds anything but harmonious under the stress and strain of a campaign. The Liberal "platform and policy" which was to have been announced by Mr. Lea at the famous Lenten banquet i! still awaiting completion,—-or rath- and who knows what It will look like after the can- ’ didates get through with it? Moan- while. the election date has not been ontemporary will have to await, with what pati- , once it can, the Governments decis- lts clarion call "to the party stalwarts to be prepar- ed may be interpreted as a warning to all concerned that the fiasco at- * l-oending on the ubci-n leader's la- of his policies at the pre- , banquet conference in Charlottetown mun on no account be repeated at I the nominating conventions. The I show which the OPPOsItIon out up in the Legislature was disappointing Liberal adherents, and our con- ‘ tgmpufflry may feel that this is all .“'“ui, more reason for a heroic ex- ' album-i of shadow-boxing it the er reconstruction; announced and our ion in this matter. E y trcduc ‘ precast time. MOTHER'S DAY . WV {intimation IIIIQIILUTITEIOVIIILGIIMAIIII NOTABLE ANNIVERSARY __." ‘ The Minister and congregation of Zion Presbyterian Church are pra- w namely, the 75th anniversary of the establish- ment of Zion Church in Charlotte- town. and the 22nd anniversary of zcev. George l. Ross, D.D., of Frederic- ton, 14.8., a former pastor of the church, vwill preach at both regular servicu and at the special Mothers’ The Minister and congregation of St. James Presbyterian Church are can- celling their evening service in order that they may unite with their sister congregation on this joyous occasion. Rev. Dr. Moorhead Legate, of St. QIIQQL IJJ Aaaalnle Milne-trunk Wnlhl all ll l rank. ill‘ AID-l) lfllllfis IIIH no It p" I—I ill QCVIlW hlnflfl. ‘ malls-C la oun- an valve aqua. lesryutms. it l mbled a pork-pie but in ma- terials It was a rich plum-pudding. In Gloucestershiresimncl cakes an still common; and at Usk, Mon- mouth, the custom of mothering ll still scrupulously observed. In a book published a few years ago by the MOuIGH-u] Sunday Move- ment with a. foreword by the lord Bishop of Southweli, it was stated that great confusion existed as to the true meaning of Mothering Sun- day. One notion was that though -the custom of visiting parents and making gifts to mother was a. good one, it might quite as well be trans- ferred from the Fourth Sunday in Lent to any other day in the year. "The outcome of such an opinion is the American Mothers‘ Day, which is kept on the second Sunday in May." The author states that most of the opinions about the day are true so far as they go, but "none of them express the full significance of Mothering Sunday, which ls, as the name suggests, ‘A Day in Praise of Mothers.‘ " Whatever be the origin, the Mothers‘ Day movement has become widely popular as an occasion for expressing filial affection, and de- servedly so. 0f human ties the bond between mother and children is the dearest and most lasting. It is fitting that its commemoration should fall on a Sunday, and that praise and thanksgiving should go hand In hand with the outpouring of love and gratitude. EDITORIAL NOTES Conventions are now the order of the day. Thanksgiving is to be rendered in all British churches tomorrow for the successful celebration of the Kings Silver Jubilee. It may be significant that while Hon. H. H. Stevens is spreading his economic gospel at public demon- strations and in churches, Hon. C. H. Cahan is using service club luncheons for his propaganda. We ean be lure that Viceroy: and Governors will be only too be limited and constitutional and not to bc forced to use their reserve powers. It is for Indiana to bring this about from the start, and ' to turn a deaf ear to the perverse advice of I. contemporary who writes: “Despite the safeguards,‘ re- straints and reservation; embodied in the proposed constitution it will not be difficult for Indian political brains to discover loopholes, create them where necessary, take the fullest advantage of them. and ex- haust the oil that lubricstes, and bring the entire machinery to a standstill." This seems a poor use for Indian brains. but there could be no franker admission that the British would indeed be brainless i.f they launched a Constitution with- out zeal safeguards. - Calcutta Statesman. The Cairo museum has acquired a silver dice box with which Ro- man soldiers gambled four hundred years before the christian era, and a dispatch says that this box, un- earthed in Nubia. is the only piece of its kind ever w be found in that part of the world. But. it has long been known that dicing was an old EByDtian custom and anyone with access to a set of the Britannica can find a picture of early Egyptian dice from the tombs. as well as Roman dice-Toronto star. Pius XI . . . has seen the wisdom of making his protest now. It was a stern warning to those "willing to push to suicide, to ruin and ex- termination not only their own nation but a great part of human- ity." The climax of the allocution came in the declaration of the Pope that if the desire to commit the “nefarious crime" persisted he could only pray God to “scatter those peoples who desire war." This will. of course, be accepted as a warning to _Hitler.—-New York Bun. Britain will equal the German air force. ‘Phat is to be expected if, as Mr. Baldwin says. “the Rhine is the British frontier." All the great Powers of Europe are simultaneous- 1y increasing their forces on air, land and sea. when they begin to redum them simultaneously. each Power will be relatively as strong as ever, and will ease it; financial burden. But that assumes a victory for common sense, which may be remote. The Soviet has discovered that profits are required in a socialist ' State such as Russia, just as much as they are required in a Capitalist State, the only difference being that in the one case profits are ordain- ed by decrees of the bureaucracy. while in the other savings and the accumulation of profits-are left to individual choice. Stalin himself Notes By IIIC 1. Illdto. ~ The Canadian rarliament and the German Parliament resume sittings on‘ Monday 20th inst-the one after a month's adjournment and the other after three years! When ILRJ-l. the Duke of York visits Edinburgh» next weelcrepre- senting his Royal father, it will be as Earl of Inverncss that he will be officially recognised by the Scottish subjects of King George. l-leartiest congratulations to Pre- mier MacMlllun, who, with three other distinguished Canadians, is to be honored with the degree of Doc- tor of Laws at the annual convoca- tion of his Alma Mater, McGill Unl- versity, on May 30. has given up the pretence that it is possible to establisnan economic order without resorting to Capital- ist methods. Instead of the class- less society, we find in Russia the growth of new classes with an ‘aris- tocracy composed oi membrrs of the Communist Party. Nor has the Soviet Government found it incon- sistent with lts Socialist principles to finance its plans by means of State loans, at a rate of interest which in most Capitalist countries would be regarded as usurious.- Trinidad Guardian. The Franco-Russian pact mutual assistance is signed. lt wonderful what Hitlerlsm is doing to make strange political bedfel- lows. It will be recorded of him in history that his supreme achieve- ment was not the unification of Germany. which is proving a curse, but the solidarity of all the other great Powers of Europe. of is The German Minister of Aviation ‘People are naturally more than hasbeencallcdlntbeea ‘ wqquinm to the fact that Simday. any 1a, is beiul observed as "Hoe- pftaisimdafltiiroushwt "NW- ~. , ._lt'iaaleobeifll°llfl""iil" ‘ ‘our an American in- ordinarily curious about what Pre- mier Bennett cablpd Sir George Perley was the ‘Harley Street spec- ialists’ verdict on his health. Sir George told the newspapermen that such a statemnnt "should come from Mr. Bennett himself." As the Pre- mier will be in Ottawa for the opening of the House next Monday, everyone will be ago; to know what he has got to say in the matter. Admission of women to the min- istry of the United Church of Can- ads has been approved by a large majority of presbytories throughout Canada, since the question was sub- mitted to them for their opinion. Sixty-two presbyteriea have adopt- ed resolutions in favor of opening the ministry to women, and only 15 have opposed the principle. There are altogether 114 presbyttries, and even if all those which have not already reported on the question were to vote against it, there would still be a majority in favor. Notwithstanding Washington's bad break about military air bases. hands across an unfortified inm- national border were clasped rec- ently in honor of the Silver Jubilee of King George. Citizens of Calais, on the United States side, and of 8t. Stephen, in New Brunswick. met at the centre of the " al bridge to unveil a "good will" peace tablet presented by Kiwanis Inter- national. The tablet bore this in- scription: "This unfortified bound- ary line between the Dominion of Canada and the United States cf America should quicken the remem- mace of the more than a century old friendship between men count- flll. I lfllfm 0f DOM! M ~01! Ill- tione." Representing their respec- tive countries, Mayor Clarence I. kckett. of Calais and Ham David It. Wilson, of 8t. Stephen. extend; Id their hands mom the invisible line and shook heertili- ' 4 declares his country will not return to the league of Nations llhlfsS th." latter apologizes for its resolution of April 1'1. This feeling of being right under all circumstances. while other; are wrong. must be wonder- fully buoyant. but it has not help- ed Germany heretofore. AI. least It can be said that the British authorities are doing some- thing I/o check the slaughter on the roads. What puzzles most com- mon folk, motorists or pedestrians. is to discover whv on earth any ordinary person should want to travel more than a half a mile a minute.—‘lrish Independent. Amid all the talk about ‘how far Roosevelt has slipped, the fact should not be overlooked that the President has just achieved a major triumph. This week he signed the gigantic 84.880.000.000 work relief bill, the principal measure on his immediate programme. And he got it on his own terms, with but little compromise. Thus the plan to pay "prevailing wages" on all relief work undertakings was struck out. except as applied to the construc- tion of Federal Government build- ings. After his defeat on the World Court Issue-and Roosevelt cer- tainly did not go "all out" on that -uie President appears to have changed motion-Montreal Star. What instinct was it that plbmpt- ed a bewildered woodcock. trying to find its way about the skyscrapers of New York. to fly against the win- dOIg of the quarters o! the Nation- al Association of Bird Societies? when that is explained. there re- mains the question: How does a homing ,'_ n. taken away In a own ioftf There seems to be a great deal of uncanny wisdom in the feathered kingdom-Toronto Star. A child at play. a do! Iron-ill! mat before orr. a flower poking its nose from the rich ground uponits rim visit in the world at Spring- worker in the fields, a singing bird W"! I Offlmtry mas-what or more mgr-ing than these sim- ple (hinge! store's ornaments are all simple. though many mums: metabolism rate. This measurement is taken first thing in the mo no food having been eaten sine, e o'clock the previous evening. Thus ~ with no food in the process ti’ dig- estion and the. patient lying down quietly for a half ‘hour before the test is made, the amount of oxygen being used up_ by the body is then measure . If the individual doesn't lie quiet- ly or allows his mind to be very active. then more oxygen will be used, the rate_ will be plus a certain amount. and the thyroid gland may bl lhWIht to be too active—produc- ing too much juice. Even when the individual may think he is resting. his Jioughts may actually tense some of his muse. les slightly and this slight tension, by tightening the muscles, makes a demand for more oxygen and the measurement will be plus-the came as would be shown by an overactive thyroid gland. ‘ An interesting experiment by Dr. T. M. Carpenter. Boston. and his associates Drs. R. S. Hoskln and F. A. Hitchcock. is recorded in the Journal of Physiology, They measure‘ the breathing (exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide) the pulse rate, the number of breaths per minute, and the blood Drfisflllre in a person lying quietly and having had no- food for 16 hours. g They then had him slightly tense his muscles, which increased his breathing and heart rate, and raised his blood pressure. He did this so quietly that as far as his observers could see there was no effort on his part. The increases produced were from 13 to 32 per cent in the amount 0f OXYIzen used. from i’! to 26 in the pulse rate, from 28 per cent in the high or systolic pressure and from 4to27 peroentinthelowordias- tolic pressure. It was only when the clothes or sheet was removed and the body ob- served closely that it was possible to detect any effort on his part.» The point is that more than one test should be made of the basal metabolism as the patient may be learns that he must be completely relaXed in mindand body. And for all of us it would be wise when we lie down to sleep or rest if we would keep the body relaxfi, elbows and knees slightly bent, and the mind as "bland" as possible. Asleep At The Wheel that he has let himself in. and-per- haps some other people too, for a great deal of nnpleasantness. It is, indeed, as evnry motorist knows. something to consider rather seri- ously. “What automobile driver," asks the New York Times, consider- ing this case. "dozing at the wheel at the end of a long day, hag not had his heart quail within him at the thought of what might have happened had he actually gone to sleep?" Quite s. few do so to sleep. The number 1g not as many as might be supposed-considering the ‘com- mon incidence of drowsiness at the wheel of the motor “ ‘ - at least the National Safety Council thinks that "sleep or extreme fa- Ullle probably cause only 1 per cent of all reported acciden‘ ." But, in the United States. "that is enough to account for 20.000 of them every year and for many hundreds of death-s" We sussest. on our own ac- count, that this cause may very box. nturn hundreds of miles to its in time. a sudden Summer sh-ywer. a b easily be the real one of a. great many accidents where the cause- because nobody survines to testify —can not be legally or statistically assigned. As far as drivers employed as drivers are concerned-chauffeurs, bus drivers and truck drivers-a great deal can be and is being done to prevent accidents f.om fatigue. by laws restricting the hblifg of duty. It is not so easy in the case of the owner-driver. In the long_ rim. no legal precaution against this sort of accident can obviate the necessity for_ caution and good Judgment in the driver hlmgglf, The National Safety Council with simple seriousness , discusses the things that motorists do when they find themselves getting sleepy at the, wheel. I The safest and best remedy of course is to {H111 off the road into a suitable pace and Just have a snooee and done with it. Other mm- ediee are mentioned. Home people sing. or get their travelling oom- panioris to do It. "Some consider gum-chewing effective; coffee is an 1d standby- Pilis‘ are sold at. many truck drivers‘ eating»places._under such trade names as "No-dos" and "Sta-awake," containing strong doses of caffeine. Demons are con- sidered "hnti-aoporlfic." It wrmay . mother suggestion without. trudr- ungue levity. we should think there . linked up by m. was nicely u» anew a lump aim son! uosr corn mm‘ Th, ,3‘ auAxlglgl?' ma“ nationtiriubecamesea-mindedas 4 It is n that it “m; Th 1 t n. “""“" °"“"“ " l“ jggwiigwfig, fimtb‘ the United States. not as a warnillt butuanezampleofwhatmeybe done in this way. Flight. it says is being incorporated into the pat- ternof the life of the people of the United States. The aim is to make all busincs centres accessible to each other between night and morningfCivii flying in the United States has until very recently been covering e. mileage twenty times lihlfl of Great Britain. 0t course that Is largely. due to the immense diffsrcnce in territory, but that. fa only when the United States are contrasted with the British Islands. When the . imparison is made with the British ..' and Common- wealth ghe difference is the other way. The Observer says that there ~has been too much , rslmony In encouraging civil aviation. A more vigorous policy is _p:omised and there is likely to be a widcr air carriage of mails at home and a fast service between England and India. But the arrears, says the Observer, are heavy to over-take. The scattered members of the Empire ought Io be the fastest com- munications. _ “We have entered upon a three- dimensional life and the nation that does not prepare for its conditions must resign itself in becoming very small beer indeed. Flight is not a matter merely of mechanism, but of habit and at- titude of mind. lit must transform our ideas of scale and relation- ship in every aspect of existence. Our vindication either in defence or in commerce will depend, in countless ways yet disclosed, on i how far our methods and in- stincts havc been harnmniaed with the new reckoning. The price of survival is adaptation, and to refuse it is nothing short of national suicide." Clipping Blue Eagle's Wings (Ottawa. Journal) tensed in mind and slightly ‘tensed w d g Wgghington tells of in body the first or even the second the or 5m Fhmngg Qommmee time the test Is made or until he votm Mus‘; m exwnd m; we o! President Itoosveltls Recovery Act for more than ten months, and reducing even the extended act by provisions eliminating price-fixing and intrastate control to a. shell of its former self. Almost at the same moment the United States on k of Commerce was adopt- ing resolutions interpreted as a. definite’ "break" with the Presi- (vancbuve Province) dent. . The National Safety Council of To many observers this will recall the United States invites all and the lines: Slilldflfio consider the case of the "The devil was sick, the devil a driver of a motor vehicle who goes saint would be; to sleep at ma‘ whwl Ind wakes The devil was well, the devil a up-if he does wake up-to discover 531m was he." Two years ago the United States Chamber of Commerce, terrified. and the United States Senate, im- potent turned to nesident Roose- velt, And . hlle Roosevelt has made many mistakes, as was inevitable. he did face his recovery task with resolute vigor, brought the country from chaos. Now, when the hope- less despair and confinion of two years ago have largely gone, and there are clear signs of unprove- rnent. the people who cried to Roosevelt demand that he let them alone. It is an illuminating mentary upon a phase of human nature. There is another suggestion this particular type of " “ rhythm of road and oug mountain grades, for instance -are sufficient to explain drowsi- nes at the wherelQBut also lt may easily be caused by the entrance ‘to the car-through some mechan- l Ical defect or oversight-of the leg; it i; reasonable to think that the cause of greater safety on the motor highway will some day be served by the iriven- tor who finds a way w mill!!! l "gasless gas." a gasproof car, or, for the purpose of the actual trip, al carbon-monoxide Q35 from exhaust. Anyhow. a sleepless driver. IIOIWNDANDIIILII’ where the white van of mow es To shatter on the aerried lines Of fir-wood far below; from the g That ‘cloak their craggy pride. Ineverseehinhbuthietread“ Illf.@ i _ .-...-_.._._.....J!.;. ' C0!!!- mlght well be a, measure of safety in the presence of the old reliable and well-known Back Beat Driver. about ‘ No doubt in a majority of cases fatigue or perhaps the monotony and engine on long stretcheg of modern pavement -it is axiomatic that drivers do not often g0 to sleep on really flan!"- He meets me on the mountain side. Bursts through the sentinel grey Or where the bastioas of the fella Surge ‘leather- SOII POTATO THOUGHTS Bin-"It is naught. it is naught, saith the buyer. but when he Ia gone his way, then he -" When Quebec and tario potato growers were first invited by the Maritimers to join the Federal Po- tato Marketine the former. refused the invitation into their. __ I / . .'. ___ . ,- m ._ _ w~ . y‘. i... . wAufomobile smash - L'p After tlia bill foreasie-Jnetiauy for Vi! an ektompliile bat lcnibly heavyiuablnty m lbflnroemoiinvuminthemlaent. _ _ ll NQW balm an happens. Remember cale- Iavclvel In . I ‘ .,. _ Scalar: for the? narci- i... the season l . nu information minim mam obligation. IIYIIIIIMIII 811.00., LIIIITEII; it's cmp has at the eleventh nous graciously consented to come Into the charmed circle. Them seems to have been a weakness somewhere cm the Ottawa Marketing Board, whose leaders might asonably have been depended upon to see that all the Clnadian Provinces "played cricket" with one another as fellow Canadi- ans. - Possibly the farmers of Ontario will feel a bit ashamed if they are reminded that, apart from potatoes. Ontario people buy little or nothing in the way of farm produce from the three lower Provinces, while the latter import large quantities of 0n- tario fruits and vegetables. If there is to be any concerted plan regard- ing the limiting of the acreage of potato planting this Sprini. it is to be hoped that Ontario and Quebec will do most of the cutting down, and allow New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island to unake a. living in a. line in which they have specialized with such splendid suc- cess. . Last Autumn, when it was realiz- ed that there was a formidable sur- plus of potatoes, I ventured to sug- gest that the five Eastern Provin- ces should combine togcther to take the whole surplus of table stock pa- tatoes of! the market by flaking them for feed purposes. Had this course been followed some millions of dollars would have found their way into the Canadian farmers‘ pockets, for the price of food pota- toes could have been pegged at al- most the foreign price, plus the Canadian duty. while the surplus stock. after flaking, would have been worth for live stock feed at least double the figure at which the past year's yield of potatoes has been marketed. Moreover none of the potatoes would have been froacn, or lost through sprouting, for “lakes. being dry, can be carried over from year to year as with wheat and other grains. Fiaklng has the fur- ther advantage that small and dam- aged potatoes can be used w the same advantage as the finest stock; In Germany and Holland, where the flaking process has been em- ployed for years in hundreds of es- tablishments. it is contended that farm animals and birds prefer strongly the porridge made from flakes to raw or boiled potatoes, and that they thrive far better upon it. In the United States it is contended. that s perfectly balanced feed for animals and poultry can be obtained by mixing potato flakes with some of the course grains, adding dried buttermilk or skimmed milk, molas- ses and a small quantity of mineral salts. 'I'he proportional parts of i-he several ingredients dlfler for the different animals, but that is only a detail. There are feed mixing mills in the United States shipping no less than 1000 carloads a day. This phase of the matter surely is worthy the iatmr , n, M m - - c ssrsnusaan m: , _ ‘inf. .‘i.°.°°&..n.‘i.’?f‘n...n% i....='°""‘- MW um MM .1 vii-amen . ing that the scheme‘ l2; put mon?‘ l‘ . r a , their Eastern confmres. Quebec af- ~~ um »= ~ M» M» ~= l.‘.'..2.‘?”’;§"..i.°{°t%°m“.i i" ecu“ "are: c.“- x. s. naming" Charlottetown, P." m. r. G May 10, 1935 i! i _ The tobacco 3Q British Columbia extend northward from ‘the international boundary to thefiiain line of the Canadian Pacific Railway and in. Maine and other American farmers. Would we not protest under similar ' umstances? Instead of complaining because other countries will not buy our po- toes from us, it would surely be ore dignified for us to regulate our own affairs to suit our own market 3mm othersthat we may be able D t0. . ‘Ihem "i moreover, a much larger camradnedtxrltat“ er “s KQQIW». gilcposted will roi- scientifically Kelownn y, m; “mmhvfgaj: m _ . . would be MCI: e oulzmntufiera Vernon’ Km“ w‘ “Mun- their livestock and poultry if they ‘used a properly balanced feed in place of that mixed in their oivn barns. It was possibly felt last fall that RUP RED ? A perfected inv_ than far rqtui-e control. No legi traps. No elastic, there was not sufficient time In No steel. Light. xpeullve. Guar- which to install the flu-king rnachin- autoed. Write for ‘fouls-rip. cry. but some cicperimcntlns might scum AcmmlNG at least have been done. sdoreover, c0 Aggy i! thy 91m is w be adopted next Bein- 5 i rum, Ont. . the machinery and ouild- Eltlblfqil 1880 Mr. Tea Pot aayezii Use Beet Quality BRAHMIN ORANGF; PEKOE EM! TIA _». Sold only in red airtight-one. . .. IMPERIAL PUPPY nourishing food. of careful investigation. I-"laking potatoes for cattle and poultry feed is quite inexpensive and simpler than when employed in starch mills, where the potatoes have to be peeled, thereby losing th. valuable vitamins besides a consid- erable portion of the tuber. Afte. running through an automatic watc. cleaner the potatoes are carried on a belt to a steam boiler, from. which, after twenty minutes, they are con- veycd to the flaker in which there are two hot rollers, and between these the boiled mash is squeezed to a thickness of blotting paper, and falls into bags. There is very little manual labor. as belt carriers are used»... _,, ‘the, .andtlie machinery which should last‘ for many months, costs but a fraction of the heavy loss suffered by our farmers in a single season such as that of the past year. Emgland as a mails ‘ for potatoes is absolutely closed to us. ‘The American market, barring conditions quite unforseen, seems also to be lost except for a few carloads of seed potatoes. Some Canadians complain ause Maine farmers protested recently at Washington against the lowering of the United States duty against l‘ -" pota- make Canadians realize that, if the American duty were lowered, every Province in Canada would increase MOTHER'S lllY We have reomplefe line of Moira Chocolate. Toilet Waters, Perfumes. eta, which make very pleasing gifts for I Mother. DR. L. n. EVANS , a permanent enrichment "to the “m,” 1 m m, "n; "P ~~ a ~ » “creme-enme- .‘.'..'...“.2'.‘..l'.‘.';.li.‘..'$“.f.‘.‘.‘: lhnaobiefte lie 32mg», m um‘? w’ m’ gellhig It n“. m..." 4...... m Q Whlbh Kaine mrog“ yhqf u 1%‘, ‘IUD Q“!- nlao" "up": lawman» e by one molars-mun: 3'41 M m llflllfifi .. ' Cl [K153]; .':‘..°'..*;n*"~...." "' " "" ;'.',.'L'"’.,.',"“, W”... .. .1... "d"....:"......"~=" . " ‘ ' ions la . "I v ineyuavebscadecintea aaapesuisiehutfi-onfifiw ‘emulates-inculcate :3: xen an thcuean n‘ '0‘ mime”; nun liv- . of marwwe elem: would Cone withuggmlng um. t ' "I" II- Heavily If Jlld diam wan fo ‘Baum wtidrangriitrcckycrelt 43"!" ‘I _ Pmfitli will: F“ "“ 77w Two Macs * wmFi-Jw“ ' vyeeiwimw . . . pk It is extremely important ‘lo givepuppy foxes a right start by early supplying This start can be given by feeding IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD, which is especially high in food values as it is made from carefully selected ingred- ients universally recognized for high standard nutritional content. i IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD formula is prepared with a view to the development of pups into active, sturdy foxes with pelts of highest sheen‘ andsfaultless-color. To accomplish these results “Imperiale" must be fed early an d regularly th rough- out thewhole season. toes. A little thought will surely from factory» Box 446 f. AWIIENII You iio Afteriho m reiiows "lake ling I I - RIVAL PIPSY’ smoinuo roalicco ;‘Peerles's pa‘! tlhteitlfflcdff- Secure from your local dealers or diffifit Imperial Biscuit c... Lia. Charlottetown, P. E. I. Phonc 121 _ \ I