KE EP YOUR EYE" ON LONDON NEW EMPIRE MARKETING BOARD IS REACHING OUT FOR TRADE Hixlaricus t. THE CHARIIOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ‘ which grants have been made con- Igagonal amount to more than £230.- h‘... to the production of all kinds , of products in our vast country is an extensive and l “ “ _ "m ._ _ ‘__ . ‘ a list of the research grants actually WW} “ ' ' ' approved on the Board's advice -‘, . tween July, 102s. The total conti-i- PublujfFflrum butions from other sources upon ' I i AfewfriendsdropinouPaBuzz ‘is n-n‘ AAAITQQ 4 0 4V- 4i. ‘AAAA-EAAA '1‘ may and‘ ‘es. and thermal- mankind. Will not stain. Ge: Focal ro insects» clears your home of mosquitoes It also kills bédbuq, roaches, ants. u! harmless con Flit today. ._, puma‘ -' aauii-nbuawrisliébeccwuar-c-n" I Y‘ d I nEsTnoYs 1 ‘ ' Fuel Mosquitoes MOI-ll! Ants Bed Bugs Roaches “"1413? 5" ' Only one year ago the Imperial- Economic Committee, whose Chair- man was to be Secretary-of State for Dominion Affairs, conceived the idea. of forming a Marketing Board and induced the British Government to place at its disposal the sum of~ £500,000 a year, and were promised the Bum 0! £1,000,000 a year for the future. It was not to be called upon to surrendeixasy unexpended balance of its incom and was thus \f-ree,to plan out over a period the wise em. ployment of its resources. The Par- liamentary Vote, from which’ its funds were derivedpindicated only that they were to be devoted to "fur- thering the marketing of, Empire produce in this country." The Im- perial Economic Committee, recog- nising that the Home Country was not less a part of the Empire than the Dominlons and Colonies, had announced the unanimous view of both its home and oversea members that the policy of the Board should be to encourage the public to ask 0h! What a "There Is ’~81i!$' Lovely Flavor 0 IiicKEY s , NICHOLSONS CHEWING.‘ TOBACCO ‘It Is ‘The Nice Big» Juicy Fig. Hickey & Nicholson Tobacco Co. Ltd. mlmlumu_ Charlottetown ,.,_a.__..---—-———-——.-"— . Sport Shoes‘ 1353.50 , ‘lRegular Prices . LADIES’ . SPORT SHOES , _ $3.50‘ ' 'A~PAIR- ‘ From $5.00" cc $6.50 ' Elk, Rubber Soles, ' Iwmai-o olearlitkitlfl balflflllibl-Wiri-"Sport Shoes at $3.50 - g pali- Brown Elk, Pearl: Elk, lfawn Trimmed with Brown Gristle Soles and Chrome Tanned Sole! in the lot, all sizes. I ~ A Golden Opportunity l >~ > l to procure a suitable pair of long wearing and comfortable shoes, for the holiday, for Sport. Tenn", G0"- mW- 5"‘ flflQ m- Country Wear, at s‘ big reduction. P0 T FREE. . ,. LLTEYntinii , FASHICIHABLE‘. FOOTWEAR methods. J. s. TAYLOR Registered Optometrists m Richmond Street Z .9’ (‘veldhgrylarge stocks of all ‘A FEEDS. ~ I " g EYES TESTED ‘ioimei titted by scientific i"- E. w. TAYLOR AND $1: I'M live stock ‘ I o_ ' in CAILOAD I01! I‘ ‘veryfliiwest prices. W! "9 in‘ “position and do boll‘ It ygiiyzfelose prices. ‘I’. H h g v "WHOLESALE I 1 -5l_¥ ill-lands full lino‘ of < (for Polltfll. Bone "N. (Ina no coarse), Beef lull) lone Scrape (foI-‘fonlr 0 "' ‘ s‘ ‘Hay and "rim Suppllcl. y qgnuk a m‘ A *- mgwa... no. ’ THE ROGERS . .. . _ . , h Ina‘ chmflmwmrll Co.’ LIMITED. an i Bibi. 1mm Humour. g . . All.‘ ill‘ Del Professional Cards C. C. Archibald ’ "blflarlottctowil. P- 5- 1- "‘ Bo A0 I. ‘MCDONALD H. F. MGPHEE B» + IW‘A“QITWY'I Etc. v fluid! to loan. lillark R. ‘Mcfluigan ....~. . nald h& MflPllee » I claimed to be the world's - otor yacht, being built‘ in sop-will be eofllilwd Vi"! 0 - new" a io-ton wheel first for the produce of their own ., country and next for the produce of the Empire overseas." The first annual report of this or- nearly the whole Empire. I Office and Address are as follows: ~ the starting of all the machinery bids fair to develop an immense vol- I. ume of business with Canada and all the other Dominions and terri- tories of the Empire. The pamphlet that. .1 "Many Empire products are ripe for advertisement, and their produc- ers need the encouragement which I‘ advertisement can give; but such publicity should be regarded as the last stage only in a. sustained at- tempt to promote the organization ,of Empire production and Empire lmarketing. That is an enterprise Igreater than the task of any ap- l operative endeavour. to do." number oi lines assist in opening markets, plications for services of this 4: for Research of the marketing produce. . _ Peerless > ‘I > Fly Oil 4 FOR COWS, POULTRY. l ORSES, IIOGS ls economi- c l. One gallon ls enough for sixty thorough spraylngs, that is n month's requirement for a herd of six cows, providing two sprayings a day-after milking morning and after- noon. In winter, fall and other cool days, one spraying is sufficient. Every part of the cow should be sprayed fiver. the body, neck and legs as joints. A _ light all-covering , spraying will be found the best. PEERLESS goes much farther than ordinary solu- tions. More milk and health- ier cows will bc the result of this treatment, and in a sur- prisingly short time. , 1 gallon .. $159 ‘" r PEERLESS E DISINFECTANT It kills lice, flies, toes and all other vermin on horses, cows, hogs, hens and A " , , rad to» ’ ‘AND RETAIL °'“ll':.§.°..°.'.’:..§...'.i"...i‘n~" cit-c». n» - »~ Pam- . ‘ rncacc limited u» are. hr. NM £1152‘ I"? blimt": zffm“ and Throat > m n: n ma. w “M- p-“n o‘! .. ~‘ Q | | Glasses farm yard: and water-pools. ..., ...: *"""'.I';.I:'..r..:."r.s.i's_'._:t. i wmm‘ Em‘ M" °“'- ‘m’ ‘ m, n‘.§,,'°.2f.§‘.'.'."i'§n. Lao m 5.00 health. A high grade disin- Island whites 1nd‘ .- ' feotant, deodorl and in-‘ I‘ nun should convince u mtlolds- It S“. blurs:- “h : , . _ < agrees e, powo an - , . _ {I \ __ ey- Afectlve. (Also) I» .1 I ‘vhf. BENzIgRZ-Qfhcu‘ 1 gnLcans $2.0? r an - - l. .. a . E itnn, Shorts, White min. _ c. In iuciimzigilnsocet ‘ " °'"“ ' "°' ' dilnn. Crooked Corn. Food “I. MONEY To > ___ . HOUSEIIDLI) , FLY SPRAY ’ for flies and IIIMQIIMW- LIMITED. u-n .- .l .i ganization was sent out a couple oi v weeks ago and is now spread over Its Head “The Empire Marketing Board, 2 Queen Anne's Gate Buildings, Dart- mouth Street, London, S. W. I. Thus of one more or less the project is now in full swing and which one more or less "lives." for the marketing of our, goods. Great Britain offers a wide field for absorbing through commerce (just such goods as every Province in ‘ Canada has to place on the market. hence it is incumbent uponboth-lo- cal and federal Governments to co- Canadian shipping centres." It rests above -all with the heads enhance the value of our produce ers and other producers-of town and country. vo chllengsvgeggsfiétgfivifiuigdgg? “gr large addition must be made to ' thus "hmg remains but “cavity °n the submit, that the total voting power part of those officially interested in the public service oi the country. ARE YOU ALIVE? Condcnsed from The Nation. ._._.. Stuart Chase. The following paper raises an in- teresting question for reflection. ‘ There seems to be an ascendlni; scale oi values in life, and some- where in this scale there is a line— probably a blurred one—below which “exists” and above Ofi§ffifi+§4§fi§4 . publication, Lpeeggswsgé ggésgawagmifiagtvlégi brought forth the statistical ' (ll l. l ‘ll l‘! S all possibility of congestion in our glgzigfie’ aisiieipssiteg"h\"...rhe Patriot" of Aug; 5th. lust. - a of Agricultural Departments to ggggrl ‘us? to “mnk the “meme Watch closely #11610‘ qlltlfglg fr; plied, I wish io take issue with h rectmg the “W a e ‘i219 d w statement. made in his recapitula- market's abrmd’ very n8 one lion, and to point. out certain sal- l ' l‘ - a drive for the welfare of the farm- ciggefatls which the ‘laurel, d l This column is open for the discussion by correspondent of questions of interact. Tho Charlottetown Guardian does not it, endorse tho . opinions of w-reopondontl. THE RVECENT VOTE sending Ito you for Slr.~l_ am the letter wlilcli Aiid the information sup- Ile slates: “To get the total the ~Provlnce, :i l'lgurea——"63,l91"-—now. I of the province, that ls, the iiuni- ber of voters-is more nearly re- presented by the total number nf votes cast for Assemblyman, viz: "36,7l1", and l-L is apparent that the Liberal majority out of this . total is “2.517" or approximately 7 per cent. and in the Counties, the majorities are as follows:- Queeiis ' County total "15,876", majority of "642" approximately 4 per cent. - ' Prince County total “12,'l93“ Ina- jority “1,2~l5" approximately ll) per cent. Kings (louiity total “80-12" major- "Y "620", approximately 8 per cent. The figures also show the total number uf voters who voted ior Pennile s Old Men. A few dollars saved each year~now, when you can spare the money—and invested in an Imperial Endowment Policy will provide the means to keep you in comfort and independence in your old age. Or it will take care of your family should death call you early. 0U know many of them—men who in their prime made plenty of money, but who spent as freely as they earned. Old age finds them in a sorry plight. You don't expect to be without means of sup- port when you grow old, , do you? Neither did they. lpointed body. It must depend for its success mainly upon the energy and foresight of the men and the women of the Empire. of numerous agencies and oi many Governments; but it has seemed to the Empire Marketing Board that a definite part is marked out for it in this great co- The Board's first year's work has been conducted in that belief, and this Report is an I have often been perplexed by people who talk about "life." Ameri- cans, they tell me, do not know how to live, but the French-ah, the French!—or the Hungarians, or the Poles, or the Patagonlans! When I ask them what they mean by life they do not advance me an inch in my quest of the definition of life. What does it mean to be alive, to live intensely? What do social pro- phets mean when they promise a new order of life? Obviously they cannot mean a new quality of life never before enjoyed by anyone, but rather an extension of vitality for the masses of mankind in those quali- ties of "life" which have hitherto been enjoyed only by a few individ- uals normally, or _by large numbers o. ‘of individuals rarely. What is ithvhich is enjoyed, and how is it to be shared more exten- sively? Can we hold llie to a point for a moment while we examine it? bo to 17,102. figures tliouglit to those wlic act as if they considered the recent. Liberal vic- sky the limit" lll their efforts to assert The will of the majority. Sourle, Aug. 6th., 1927. Editor Patriot: appeared “The United Cliurchinun” in which I-oneous uiul misleading, vlz.: that electioii~l92ii—tlie total vote of both pin-lien was 49,987. What, concretely, is this “aware- ug attempt to show what it has tried ness," this "well-being?" 1._want in and I WUlllfl like to nsk whether tli parties us follows:—- Liberal 19,619; Conservative And iii my bumble opinion, those provide food for serious ry entitled tliem to think "the l um Sir, etc, “ENQUIRER" (ENCLOSURE) Sli',—‘lii ilic Patriot of July 16th ah article copied from statement ivus made which is er- "lii lii' Llic fllfffllll election. llie total vote wun increased by li,173—-add- these figures will give 59,160, "nu." I xv Illrfl m... I xx n".- rnrn-"nmsn nun“; ‘I\1IXIllJlX But you can escape their bitter experience if you“ wish, and that quite easily. Delay is dangerous-tomorrow you may not have your h¢lilllt>iilld be unable to secure insurance. THE IMPERIAL LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY c! CANADA TORONTO. ONTARIO Branch Oflice: 70 Prince Street HEAD OFFICE a CHARLOTTETOWN a rather personal way to tell you the ‘votes’ mid ‘voters’ in llils instance Just fill out and return the coupon below and we’ll gladly send’ you complete information. 19$ your booklet ab!!! imperial Endowments. l This pamphlet also mentions a facts as I have found them. I want kind lst." I want to make llie very defin- will doubtless find a ready response. lte in terms of my own-experience, nIuI-It be IieI-iectly obvious that we It also speaks of procuring grants ior in matters oi this nature about cannot linve 59,160 voters. source oi data one has is 0f the only WGTB synonymous lilflllfl ill U19 which it Will totell you when I think I live ln con- writer's niiiul. and ao- tradistlnctlon to when I think I "ex- Tile herniation of P. E. l~ is something less tlixiii 80,006 and it. Now Mr. Etll'10l',~1Jl8flS8 set uII one week, oi the 16B contained there- in, I only “lived" about 40.01‘ them. or 25 per cent. This allowed for some creative work, .. ..___._____ u‘ niostliumaii beings. Generally speuk-‘Jumcu A. M. (lillis, pastor of lug, one‘s salvation is bound closelydnlin Ilie Baptist Church, New Ab» with that of all iiiaIikiiid-tlie ratio urdeeii, died unexpectedly , at lilb of living, of growing with that oi tlieresidenI-e liere on Saturday after; mass 0i one‘s;- fellow-men. iinoii~ After completing his custogt- airy round 0f duties during the d__§' of the total time. a Sunday's hike, some genuine hun- ger, some healthy sleep. a little ‘ For instance, it contains the following InIormatlQnrL-“Tbere < is printed at the end of this Report mi? Q-Q-‘RO-QOJ §4§+¥§44+0§4 044 it well as luslde of logs and- oneself. what it means to me, and I have ‘I get out of bed the office-and so forth, These are the crude data. Take‘the days as they come, put a plus beside the liv- lng hours and a minus before the ‘ dead ones; find out just what makes the live ones live and the dead ones die. Can we catch the verihood of ‘ llie in such an analysis? The poet will say no, but I am an accountant and only write poetry out oi hours. My notes show a classification of 11 states of being in which I feel I am alive, and five states in which Iieel I only exist. These are major states. needless to say. Inadditlon, I 11nd scores of sub-states which are too obscure for me to analyze. The i1 "plus" reactions are these: I-seem to llve when I am creating something-writing this Iarticle, for instance; making a sketch, working on an economic theory» building .a bookshelf, making a speech, Art certainly vitalizes me. A good novel, some poems, some pictures, operas, many beautiful buildings and particularly bridges affect me as though I took the artist's blood inw. my own veins. There are times, however, when a curtain falls over my perceptions which no artist can penetrate. The mountains and the sea and stars-all the old subjects of a thou- sand poets—renew life in me. As in the case of art. the process is not automatic-I hate the sea sometimes -—but by and large, I feel the line of existence below me when I see these means to other people, ‘but I do knowuiml I do not know what life right on this matter by telling us. producing figures to show: The total uf voters who voted for worked out a method oi measuring ilic Liberal party, and also the 10t- ul for gulp coffee and headllrlxnggedexrjifijaxiglllgo illlltlllulllil ‘llllrlcllliil-fi iljflvolllllllljliliywllich "clause me m me “dense it m know where my raincoatlis, start ior ity in each county. the Conservative party iii Sourla, July 29111., 1627 ._.___.___._.____.____.___ Eating, drinking, or sleeping when one is already replete, when one‘s senses are dulled, are states oi exist- ence, not life. For the most part I exist when I am ill. -—,city walls, too familiar streets, houses, rooms, furniture, clothes-- drive one to the existence level. Sheer ugliness, such as one sees in the stockyards or in a city slum, de- press me intensely. I retreat from life when I become angry. I exist through rows and misunderstandings and in the blind alleys‘ of “getting even." So, in a general way, I set llie ofi‘ from existence. It must be admitted of course that "living" ls often a mental state quite independent of physical environment or occupation. One may feel--in springtime for in- stance-suddenly alive in old. mon- otonous surroundings. Then even dressing and dlshwashing become eventful and one sings as one shaves. But these outbursts are on the whole abnormal. By and large there seems to be a definite cause for living and a definite cause for existing. So it is with me at any rate. I believe that I could deliberately “live"twlce as much-in hours-as I do now, if only I would come out from under the chains of necessity-largely ec- onomci—which bind me. Old scenes, old monotonous things ‘ stimulating reading, two acts of a play, part oi a moving picture, and eight hours of interesting discussion with various friends. ' Sudden Death Rev. J. A. M. Gillisy lie went iiflie duwnuiid upon being (filllell was found dead, Father Cit - vlis liud been lll poor health for number of years but liud continued to perform his pastoral work regii- grnphy were the porcuyii except the geese whici were too proud to light. Mr. and Mrs. Porcupine are at home everywhere as Ion as there is a bite of bark or hazel twig around and here t ey are shown en route to Sou tli Africa, ten thousand miles away from their native haunts. They are travelling in good Cana- dian company with four specimens of the Canada and coyote cubs, striped gophers, black squirrels, ernns iziarmots. But ol all these the ones most amenable to photo- The others were camera-shy, ne pair. Canadian Animals for South Africa, oose, bear and Tliey come Pacific Express. As hora dbeuvrea, lbs. of frozen licrrin nnil 50 lbs. bf cabling from Toronto and were carried by Canadian they were supplied with S0 .._,, W5! Pretoria where n may be that the Sums 0i being jliiriy uiul energetically. l-le was (ll.A(‘l'l BAY Aug. R.--Ru\'. 60 yearn old. \ "ENQUIRER" L South African Zoological authorities exchange the birds and es. hut the babies arc animals oi their country for those of the Dominion. This lot are mosqui- things. I have indeed made some estim- ates of the actual time I have spent the climate is not too hot in summer going in v less cold in winter than in Canada. nntl milk and (log biscuits soaked in milk. although much f~.-'l largely on brco of a reciprocal arrangement whereby the Their trip is part 1 PM‘ MW" -- - - - - ~ - - - 40° I live when I laugh-spontaneous- 1 avert Mill“ 75° » ly and heartily. Sill!!!" 30° In contradistlnctlon to "living" I Sprayers Wm‘ °°"""“°" find five main states of "existence" SD78] .... . . . . . . ........ . ggfollgwgj Love is life, vital and intense. Very real to me also is the love one bears one‘s friends. I llve when I am stimulated by good conversation, good argument.‘ ‘There is a sort of vitality in just. dealing with ideas that to me at‘ least is very real. I llve when I am in the pressure of danger — rock-climbing, for ex- ample. I feel very much alive in the pres- ence of a genuine sorrow. I live when I play-preferably out- of-doors. Such things as diving, sometimes driving a motor, some- times walking. " ' ter genuine hunger, or when buryin one‘s lips in a cool mountain spring after a long climb. ‘ One lives when one sleeps. A sound healthy sleep after a day spent in out-‘of-doors gives one the feelinB of a silent, whirring dynamo. In vivid dreams I am convinced one lives. I exist when I am doing drudgery of any klnd-— adding up figures. washing dishes, answering most let- tors, attending to money matters. reading news, ,_ n shaving. dress- ing, riding on street cars. or HP 0nd down in elevators. buylllft thinn- I exist when atimndlng the average swimming, skating, skl-lng, dancing, ‘ One lives when one takes foodaf- ‘ above and below the "exlstence"line. For instance, my notes show that in 1 _._._€._.._?..___ ORDER t Perhaps you will not need a supply of COAL for several weeks, but our advice to you is to look ahead. Order now and hive it ‘oil your mind. Phone us today your requlreniontl. W. D. GILLIS & CO. Phone I10 I" social function-a we, a dinner. lil- ’mg “pump, v- ‘(~‘fl Jul-- ng to dull people talk. discuselnl (m for. beat four ways. Twain-line Shnnuini Balls This is the Premium the ladies hav A wonderful Shopping Bag", conv sizes, neat and attractive looking. Has a , Whether your Subscription expires t or three months hence, do not lose this op The llharlottetown Guardian suascnirTIoN IIEPARTMENT Given Free as a Premium with every New or Renewal Yearly Subscription to The Guardian. e been waiting ertable to two Market Basket oday, tomorrow portunity now.