I-Oloctarllnlmml- BVlIe-Pkcgldoll. 1.:- a-nm. 121.1. loonhryi-Ihat-Cel lull .l.0. __ ldlh and Hanging sued-u IflfnIb-Ilolk . I. lunch, I. Jel- Wallar, and D. l. Currie. Inning Dally (founded Ill?) ll-Ildrn you (In advance.) 11011111011- Il-lOpm-yau (lladvnlcfllall QQQAL, ‘Quail-rev camera-moan‘ nan-rue. Brim-IRA t-r-xl-luevorvla 5 lei that no government since Con- fedlration has done more for the befifit of the Province. in a time of unflrecedented economic difficulty, tail the outgoing Macllilian ad- miiistration. The tragedy of the eleitien results of July 23, however. is not that the Opposition has won but“ that the experienced Conserva- tive members of the Legislature. W110 have held office in the MacMiilun Government and in the preceding Stewart administration, have been 10st to public life for some consider- able time. The Province will be all the poorer. and the new Govem- ment correspondingly handicapped, in being without the services and advice of men of the calibre and ability of Dr. MacMilian, Mr. Sharp. Mr. Frank MacPhee, Mr. MacNutt. Mr. ‘Strong, and others, in the trans- action of public business and tho passing of legislation. Thi-i 186i- W111 become more and more apPflmif 11-! time goes on. In the meantime. 111° lea Government assumes office with onefoug rewonsibilitles, enhanced by poison of promises made to the cl- ectors, and with every need for the exorcise of all the ability which Mr- Lea and his colleagues can bring to their task. A Pours DEATH vcarry the last great bard to his ‘ last bed . . . rmtlrs little rift hath rent the - faultless lute: me singer of undying sonl! 18 dead." n —'1Lachryrrlaa Mussolin- A great Eniflish p091’. 11118 P1185" 5d m the person of sir William Watson, whose death at the age of '17 in a nursing home in Bus- aex is recorded in yesterday's Guardian. Living out his last d!!! in neglect and poverty. Watson paid dearly for a satire which he wrote many years adv 11811-11181 111° ‘we. of B. leading Erlgli-ih penit- mentariul. The satire was provok- edby a scurrilous attack on Robert Innis Stevenson. Its provmiivh was regarded as no Justification in social circles, however, and t u811 the influence oi the socially elite the author of “The Woman With a Berbentk Tongue" became P18111111- glly ostracised. ~Ao far back as Gladstonestime. Watson had been recommended for the poet laureateship. Th011811 11° failed to receive this or any 01h" public honour. his 8611115 11"" lacked silent rec08nit1011 from those qiiqlliied to judge. Perhaps. 11W that math has intervened. the true 1 pleasure o1 his height will be taken by the Einglish public generalii- 11 willlmot be the first time that I- pm} "has had m wait roi- posthum- mu fame. Born in Yorkshire in 1858. W11- Iiam Watson's first published book of verse. “’I‘he Prince's Qlltfifl" l1‘ tzactcd little ttentio .. alecccni- tlonicame ten years later with the publication 0i "Wordswortbb Grravc." which marked a reversion from the ‘rerlnysonlan and 11m- WwIuhLOII to the meditative note gflbiatthaw Arnold. From thlt 111110 $111900. when "New Poems" IP- watson wrote muchpin- to Ouldini Ulihd listen. ___ ruuaslsr. suovsr 15. ' ERALS TAKE OFFICE The things that are more excel- lent." “w” ma“ mm" “gamma “Not unaccompanied filht you wt! tender the resignation of his my‘ good mm, crnment to I-Iis Honour the lords‘ raft invisible and invincible :1 ttnggmarivfrxnufidpsesmigf 1110 d’ all are with you ever. cl y. after having first submitted Much!“ u“ mom “pm the his} cabinet appointments to the “mpg o1 night." [lieutenant Governor. will be sworn n ' ' ' ' lnsogether with the other members w‘: “d d1" 11*‘ ' 01”“: Lea Government. The fune- And “Begum 86d‘ w ma‘ the ting will‘ take place, as is customary. unwmmg ma“; ln$be Confederation Chamber. The best of guordons is the Eatery will pay testimony to the Andlrgfiyfleifg or- m our “elm and deed." No tribute to Watson would be complete without reference to his magnificent “Ode in May", the fur- est thing of its kind in the English language. What reader has not thrilled to the opening lines: "Let me go forth, and share, The overflowing sun, With one wise. friend, or one Better than wise. beins fair. . Where the pewit wheels and dips On heights of bracken and linB. And Earth. unto her leaflet tips Tingles with the Spring." The Ode flows on, a-stream of majestic melody, to its tremendous conclusion: "O bright irresistible Lord! We are fruit of Earth's womb, each one, And fruit of thy loins, O Bun. whence first was the seed outpoured. To thee as our Father we bow. Forbidden thy Father to see, who is older and greater than thou. as thou Art greater and older than we. "Thou art ‘out as a word of hi1 Thoflpeaerthbut as s. wave of his hand: Thou art brief as a glitter of sand ‘Twixt tide and tide on his beach; Thou art less than a spark of his 0r gilllrolbmenils mood of his soul: Thou art lost in the notes on the lips of his choir That chant the chant oi the Whole." EDITORIAL NOTES l Today the MacMilian Government passes into the "his beens." From today it will again be Pre- mier Ice. The second Premier to ‘come back after roul- years in oa- portion. There will be no joint meetinss 1n the coming campaign 'b1il 111111 an hour iorquestions will be al- lowed. To whom went the profits of the Victoria picnic? According tn re- ports they must have been consid- erable. for the picnickers had t0 put their hands in their pwitth for everything. I Hon. w. M. Lea. says a Liberal mainland exchange. “is not 0111i’ Prince Edward Island's farmer Premier; he is its premier farmer." This is covering a svod deal of ton- ritory. Mir. J. Walter Jones, H.112. may have his own 001111011 11111111 who the premer iarmenin the next legislature will be. It is not the outgoing but the incoming Premier's conveliltni-‘t that is considered in fixing the date of handing over government. TM lieutenant-Governor, ccnstltutio - ally, will not accept a Government's resignation till he has another ready immediately w 1'11" 111 nlwt- Tirere is this to be said for the re- newed Premier; he is-no novice to caucus warfare: and he know! 11111 wiles and sfrategy of the old gang. to which will be added the in- noooni, or otherwise. insistence of the newcomers. who only V1111 111° earth, politically speaking. A merchant marine ‘based on military rather than economic needs obviously cannot exist with- out artificisl stimulus. any more than can the battle fleet itself. Government aid is the only way to d ‘ .. and sustain a Lnt service on the elaborate scale dc- manded by a big-navy policy. sev- eral“ ‘ ‘ ‘ make it im- possible for the United States to compete indiscriminately with other maritime nations without subsidies for its ocean commerce. One is a relatively higher standard of living which doubles costs connected with the building and operation of Am- erican tonnage. If there must bc merchant ships for a big navy to defend-or to defend a big-navy policy against tale-payers-there must be subsidies. The taxpayers foots the bills for the navy and for national shipping services, over and above those which can operate profitably under private manage- meniL-Boston Christian Science Monitor. Abolish the black cap. It is a grim relic of on age of terror, when v geance pamed for justice, and mercy was the enemy of law. No- body wouid be sorry to see it 30- certainly not the judges themselves. and least of all that judge who. wearing it for the first time. falter- cd as he uttered the words oi doom. All that the Black Cap stood for has passed away. The spirit of our courts is far different from that which filled them in the days when such ugly symbols were used to put fear and dread into men ac- cused of crime.—Manchesier Sun- day chronicle. In spite of all the difflcuitiel that have been placed in its way. priv- ate enterprise has shown such toughness and vitality that it does not seem unreasonable to assume that it would quickly restore our economic life to full activity. were it only to recover a. reliable mon- etary basis and something like nor- mal liberty of action. In any case such a heightening of the activity of the social economy ‘seems to be the only solution of the problem of the world's crisis that is compat- ible with the rizht a-nalyss of the causes of the crisis as well as of the normal way of functioning our present social econcmyL-Pmf. Gustar Cassei. The wage-cut strikes in Franco appear to be causing quite an amount of trouble to the authorit- ies. particularly in Brest. Here pub- lic and possibly international in- conveniences has been caused by the refusal of ships’ crews to sail. This involves both‘ officers xdnd men of the Shiips and 800 passeng- ers are held up in consequence. There have been riots also in Tou- lon and in the Montmartre district in Parish-Ex. A progressive bit of legjalaljm was that recently introduced in the Quebec Legislature aimed at the curbing of the mushroom growth of gas stations, which in that province, as in other sections oi canada, has been stimulated by the rivalry existing between the oil companies. Tlhe ‘Quebec ,Pub- lic Service Commission has been given full control over permits for the construction of new stations. so that henceforth them will be a. check upon these places. The pro- vincial government takes the view that the great competition that has been going on results in increased ulstr bution costs, which tho con- sumer ultimately has to pay. and at the same time the beauty of the countryside is often injured by these conspicuous filling stations-Ex. Down in the earth more than fifty feet below the bottom of the Hudson River a wiry lttle man pushed his way through a muddy pipe and grasped the hand of a stocky engineer waiting to welcome bimLIt was Harry strlpling, forty years a. “sandhogf and Col. Char- les S. Gleirn, Port Authority con- struction engineer, who thus cele- brated amid an exuberant group of tunnelers the "holing through" of the first bore for the $87,500,000 Midtown Hudson ‘nlnnel winch, after eight years more oi digging and finishing. will carry millions of work would be necessary orl the roads this Fall. Wonder what these "thousands of men" on the roads could have been doing before the election? is Without any design on their part the new government will “drop their pilot" within a fort- night. By then Mr. H. R. Stewart, Deputy Secretary-Treasurer, and a multitude of other things as well, venom have been reported by Dr. Levediin w the Academy oi. Medi- 111 cine. Paris. There were fifty-one pat- ients and the cancers were located in various parts of the body. Every patient received the injections for at least four months. were cases which had received X ray or surgical treatment or both, six cases no previous treatment had been used. The dose began with 5' units three times a day and was Bradually increased up to 50 units twice a week. cases did the venom have any influ- ence on the pain, so that there is no reason why. in incurable one should not prefer to give mor- phine in gradually increasing doses to ease the pain rather than the venom which is so uncertain. While the injections of the cobra venom gave a feeling of well being and in- creased the appetite, they rlad no @1101". in curins the cancer. cobra venom had cancer itself. close study of the tissues shows that the injection had no effect in stop- ping the Srowth oi the cancer cells. venom will not stop the growth of cancer. and eases the pain in only one out of ten cases, in the treatment of motorists between Manhattan and the New Jer 5ilblli‘bS.—Chri5ti Science Monistzly. m not by the German government. and has got out of hand; and the present moment seems to be in over the possibility of armed revolt at home might be opportune for the League to issue a shanp re- minder to Dansig. Surely Danzig call t0 order. Free Traders are lifted thsnkfulness. They are encouraged to advance to new tasks. There is plenty to fight to gain. The next °111Qctive ls the Customs Union of Britain's Colonial Iknpire. It means the denouncing di agreements like the Congo Basil-i ‘Treaty which lay British territories wide open to the trade drive oi’ Oriental competi- tion. It involves the directingof British capital and enterprise into yhlc unelrploited area under Colon- a ‘Ikadcrsl Renew your faith! Thke up the battle! Perscvere to the end of the iourneyl For there lies the Oitv 0i’ a Gfclt Ideal. rt is the ideal oi a mighty, united Empire. iivins It pence with its neighbours. 11114" lust laws affording full life, 1111M" 11nd hfl-Ppiness to allits citi- 19118 0f "m! creed and colour.- —L0nd0i‘1 Dlily Exprag, ler served as head Police Department, when be found that he had tend with conditions of which he did not approve. And g recently asked hirn in the cuuygg 01 I11 11119111191. how ‘a big city- oould be "ciearlcd up." General Butler is rcPlicd by You know a single big city that "I11! wants to be “cleaned up?"_ Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph. a Qua-rs [one W .8010». MD. OORIA VENOIF-SNAKI P018- ON-DOBS NOT CUBE CANCER. Whenever n new "cure" for cancer is announced than are many who wonder why doctors do not im- mediately get a supply of the "cum" and use it with their patients. Now physicians are only too will- ing to try anything for cancer be- cause the ,_ X ray and radium-can only lleip a certain percentage of early stages. from past experience that all these cures heretofore have been unsuc- cessful and they do not wish to raise false hopes in their patients or have them undergo physical or fin- ancial straln for nothing. ' methods-surgery, ln the However th y know One of the recent cures mentioned for cancer is tbc poison or venom from the cobra snake. poison from a snake may cause such a severe swelling and reaction that that patients may become free for some time afterward of certain ail- That the Q Sin-The bocs oi’ the Liberal hen- 000p spices an editorial with this tid-bit,—“A farmer's wife being ask- ed 1g their hens were laying wcll fgpllgd,—"NO, we've the Benn “ breed of hens. lots of caokling. but ve few e385? Trzlii is certainly rich. aplienflnl 1n the columns of the mtriot, a paper that does more cacklifi! 1119-11 gny half dozen papéfs in Canada all punehed together. For years. when in occasional luck, the “Ro:ster" has been its official trade mark. and day in and day out. from yea: to year, it never ceases from cacklilid. its columns containing very little else than cackle, cackle. cackle from the rising to the setting of the sun. 1 am. Sir. etc. SEAN/IRA] ELIMINATING IMPORTS sin-In a characteristic blunder. titled "Butter HitsBiwk." thtuiilw- kgnzie King organ exclaims- Hish tariffs have meant the elimination 1C FOR Trade And Commerce rum‘ L“ (as Inverter) 1 ".'..."'"'.'. " m...“ "'...".P.' ‘ g m, 111M ' e Ito Mackcnaie s " L713: eLITZI-e: ‘that-inn m-‘frreiudicefl our Inland-U alum 1h cobbl- governments, provincial and federal d wm-ww“ have been charged by ubml prop- lagandists (u responsible for till; o z ttocs. the THE BOSS CACKLER ovznpfloe c.’ p0 ‘ my Viewed by Mr. King's; belittled standard.—"lntclligen ," and com- 1111111‘ new. it, is without founda- tion. Potamc prices have cvcr been under absolute control of the law of domandsnd supply. Despite every effort of government trying to resist the ravages oi war time living the price of potatoes soared up,to 88.50 per bushel. and like- wise under the . Lnurier Liberal Government, and aLiberal Gov- ernment in Prince Edward Island. over supply and under demand. made potatoes a drug on our market at 10c per bushel. In those days politicians were too honest to claim credit for the $3.50 market. or to charge opponents with re- sponsibility for the l0c slump. ‘rho Cuban market was the one flimsy pretext used to mislead those to whom "prejudice" was more potent in argument than "intelli- gence." The informed man would know that Cuba, an island of 3.- 000.000 population. principally col- ored. 44.000 miles area. was wrested by the United States in a war with ments with which they suffered <is 1111B 11151’- Bs small pox, diphtheria and scarlet fever can usually he we. vented by vaccination or the put- ting oi small doses of poison into the blood. However some real trials of snake Forty-five In In only about one tenth of the Oi-IIOEXS. The A The point then is that if cobra it is of no help cancer. 1111111: u incited by Germans, if when Nazidom a nervous state 8111111 811011811 for the Leazue to Now the hectic of the Empire up in administration. Empire Free For a time General Srnedley Bu!» of Philadelphia's but retired to con- reporter Whereat quoted as having another question: "Do lladins a number oi odes. sonnets. 1 ‘pm-mg and elegiac verse ‘of en- jfltfng quality. labia to "Lachrymao mlsarum,” 1W5 in I092 on the death of ‘.1 y“ Tennyson, that one natural- , on the present occasion. with»: Dlid wins Winnie .3, post. whom he rtllrdad ll Virgil of our time." His stab- Taking Mr. Mackenzie King's political assurances with n10" 111011 a grain of salt the Vancouver Pro- vince (Independent) remarks lac- anicaiiy: "We have seen two yea-rs of a liberal Government. nearer hams than Ottawa. that went into cflce on a. string of P10011108. 0-1111 wbatwostilihavctoaecisflloro- ‘demotion of my a Twecdsmuir. will regrettably have severed hh connection with provincial ernment. and gone to Ottawa to assist in the direction of the affairs of the new Govcmor-Gencrai. ford "Men, seeking jobs or jump out from every corner; they pastor the life out of the premier A speaker at the loyal sanitary Health Institute Congress. at Bournemouth. recently pointed out that five times as many people dic of tuberculosis as are killed on the roads. That is true. and it is a re- proach to the nation. A concerted o; imports", qf butter. 0f course, and the Patriot's lead- er has given us radio assurance that lie will abolish this high tariff. open the market again for New zealand butter, and give back the 16¢ b11118? prices to the dail-ymen oi our Prov- ce. But to be honest we can get alons without this South American but- ter. We d:n't want to beg for buy- ers again at a 16c or perhaps lower price. We prefer the present Ben- nett average price 0f 356 W1‘ 111- I am. Sir. etc... aauavaa m HOME MARKETS FROM “LACHRYMAE MUSARUM" (On the death of Tennyson, 6th October. 1892) The seasons change, the winds they shift and veer; The grass of yesteryear Is dead; the birds depart, the groves ecay: Empires dissolve and peoples dis- appear: Song passes not away. Captains and conquerors leave a lit- tle dust. And kings a dubious legend oi their re n, The swords of Caesars, they are less than rust: The poet doth remain. Dead is Augustus, Maro is alive; And thou. the Mantuan of our age and ciime. Like Virgil shalt thy race and tongue survive, Bcqueathing no less honeyed words ti to me, Embalmed in amber of etemal rhyme, And rich with sweets from every Muse's hive; ' While to the measure ofthe cosmic rune For purer ears thou shalt thy lyre attune, And heed no more the hum of idle is pra e In that great calm our tumults can- not reach, Master who crownfist our imme1od- ious days With flower of perfect speech, —Slr William Watson. Postal Tercentenary (St. John's. Nfld.. Telegram) This year brings the tercentenarv oi the Royal Proclamation which instituted the first State postal service for private letters in Great Britain. The only cflicial postal per-vied that existed under Queen Elizabeth was aimlessly limited “for her Maj. cstielr aifairca." The general pub- lic were only affected by such mad traffic provisions as that "the poste" 01' 1111 postbov. must "blow his home so oft as he meets companic. or passeth through any towne. or at least thrise in every mile." Even in James I’s reign the duties of the Master of the Posts for Eng- land and Scotland and for Iibreign Parts in the King's Domlrlions were not sumcienty comprehensive or wall defined.‘ "or "sufficiently safe- guarded against abuse. for the ser- Irioe of that time to be considered a true ancestor of the present sys- tem. James created. among other doubtfui monopoies. a further office pi Master oi the Pests for Foreign Parts out of the King's Dominions. which in the next reign infuriate- iy fall into honest and competent hands. A joint holder oi the latter office. one Thomas Wltherlngs, turned his eyes to the mismanage- ment oi the borne service under Lord Btanhope of Harrington. His attack on tuberculosis would prac- tically wipe it out. It is, largely, a discus of poverty. of malnutrition, of ovurcrowdim. of‘ unclean rni‘k. Give evurybody decent homes. ada- quate nourishment and open-air Quinton "and fastidious mu an rinthiswfltthewncludilil Wbcnllnllaokansiokingsays hi allies with Mr. Baldwin's pol- icyhclaaansthctbobelicvcsoau- Mo's policysholsld be Britain's Filmy-Wit iaadnimdto suit Iritainbfiadoandnotdansda’; "Ilodmadafirvvwrlthllnllac- blllaictlngwcaalltplwsoccnd flddiotoicmlaiialldioilrtbfid- dlotofihahlam. $555 1 5 r i: B 5 r1512?‘ All activities and the disease would accnbcccmcasraraasloprosya- Inndnnnaiiylleraid. ' iyiznroaaor uwnas {i} scheme for reform at home was aa- cepted by Charles 1.. and embodied in the Proclamation of July Si. 1685. Thomas withering! was. in fact. the father of the 02.0.. and the first real 9M0. The Proclamation itself is a rare document. A printed copy in the library of the British mucum has recently been issued in facsimile: and the Record Office's original manuscript has been reproduced- both in facsimile and. for the reader whom the ornate handwrit- UUONOBI M . wealth m llifléfld. $11011‘): hQ pug. wlilll charges of delinquency Spain. and is in a sense under American protectorate. As in other ptaces the U8. potatoc maritet was demoralized, and to help their po- tatoe farmers they used their pres- tige to secure control of the small Cuba market. An open or closed Cuban market could have no more influence on the price of potatoes than a fly’s resistance to a locomotive. In proof of this. the State of Maine. with first access to the Cuban market. were unable to get 10c a barrel for their potatoes. and Canada had to adopt measures to prevent their be- ing smuggled into New Brunswick to get the attractive Canadian price of 10c per bushel. But the bare fact of a preferen- tial tariff in Cuba, in favor of the United states, was magnified and falsified into election defamation. by Liberals in theh- appeals to "pre- judices" to get votes. Their claim was, although without a shadow of foundation, that the Cuban duty as against Canada was in resent- ment against our sugar duty: to nll?i_—— which it was broadcasied that Cuba was our chief source of sup- D1Y- ‘ Time has proven that every one of these claims was basicly false. Canada's sugar duty was not against Cuba. but a needed revenue imlwst azainst all countries. Nor was Cuba in any sense our chief source of supply. Barbaiioes was largely by almost 81.000000. and in 801116 Yen-rs by nearly twice the total import. Barbadoes sent us nearly 05.000900 worth of molasses against Cuba's less than half a. million. Santa Dominga. another source of supply. contributed $2,- 452,627 worth of sugar. These are British possessions. They put up no squeal against Canada's legiti- mate duty. but because Cuba. a ward oi the United States. gave= their foster parent a preference in their limited market. the Liberal propagandists made the mole-hill into a mountain, and then tried to slander the Conservative govern- ment with its parentage. No doubt that in the federal contest they will continue to dis- eminate the some false doctrine. Where "prejudice" is their chosen camping ground they will hope to entrap some straggling votes. There may be. no doubt there will be .an oflset amongst the "intol- Iigent" voters. for the Liberal ranks are not without many of this class. who will judge for themselves. who will weigh the facts and evidence. and who will resent at the polls this attempt to classify them as of the time who have no gift oi discern- ment. or- who can be led into in- justice by the most palpable of flimsy shado musings. Boots-rid." ‘ this was expensive for the King's Scottish subjects they had one consolation. Bristol and Plymouth and Holyhead were to be served once weekly; outlying towns were to be served as occasion dc- manded; but observing that "there hath beena no certalne or constant entcrcoursc betweeno the Kingdcmes of England and BcotiandJCharles was g. clously pleased to command two posts a week between Edinburgh and the City of "london. Under withering! directions the speed of travelling for the posts was fixed at. seven miles an hour in summer and flvc in winter, and the journey io and from the northern capital at six days. He introduced, or at least rolularimd. several useful safo- guards on which modern methods are founded. Registration. for ex- ample: every postmaster was to "keep a fairs paper bookto enter the packets in." and "write upon a labell ‘astaued to every or any of the packet-s the time of receiie thereof and not on the Packet or lotto: as hath been disorderly us- ed." The uumion of postmast- er; from jury service under the Post Office Act of i000 is in direct succession from their exemption 300 years ago from summons. Presto. and personal attendance at As- silas. Sessions, Inquesia and Must- era. Witherings efficiency and fore- sight m in no doubt. But, whether b0 early threw in his lot with the l-Immdbeada or attempted to char a middle-course. the Civil War up- sataotoniybupostalurvicesbut 'hic pnsilic. Charles threw him in favour of o. Royalist mer- chant. and under the Common. cclsfuily’ answered them. hill}! unparrallcd sagaciua and ' will"! divining Genius: witness his great iueusr sun sills now, on GREY FLANNEL . . SUITS Regular $16.50 3"” .. $10.95 Price . SPORT TWEED ' SUITS Regular $22.00 iii“... .. $14.95 DARK WORSTED SUITS Regular up to $20.00 FINE WORSTED SUITS Come and select your‘ S 't neunssson 0! BIIDMURE in IDNWXV—FOY' two years SILVER LEAF Best Makers ""° °'."°' Worth up to $25.00 “$11: aim "Mm"? '1' $16 9s ‘ l price I John 1 4 . AUGUST 15, 19;. ‘e ilalr Restorer . €_ <4 delicately perfumed p“. - . Illllllil which restores, _ mayhem and besuiliieg m, | L ,' fr: at... assroaa can HAIR TO ITS ORIGINAL COLOR An excellent hair food um. fng up and fnvlgora _ .11 a tho glands, blood veaacla mg nerves of the hair and scalp, thus producing n rich Ind abundant growth of hair, Promotes a new and lop". for growth when the hair l] remarkably useful in preventing dllidmfl and destroying plrasltlo his.» killers. Juli follow the dim. lions carefully and you pm b, amused at the results. Get a bottle today 50 oenjg, MACS PIG WORM POWDER A very effective remedy in m; treatment of worms. A The 2 Macs Prescriptions A Specially banks of Brixton unknowingly ilsea a shaving brush infected with an- thrax. He cut himself while shav- ing recently and died shortly afterl- wards. The brush. 1851 01 i1 slic- pected mnsignment of i1 brushes, was sought by the Ministry of Health for threejears. NEW POLICE CHIEF LONDON, Aug. lb-(CPJ-Capt. Henry Studdy. an assistant in- specior of Indian 001106. has been appointed Chief Constable ci N.» umberland. BINDER TWINE TWO CARLOADS rc- ceived direct from the factory and made by the BRANTFORD CORDAGE C0., LTD. of BRANTFORD. ONT. the largest makers of Binder Twine in the British Empire. “SILVER LEAF BRAND”, Guaranteed 550 feet to the pound. Every Ball guaranteed both for quality and quantity, ' knots and snarls. Absolutely free from Book your-order NOW. Prices as low as the lowest. For Sale at our SEED STORE CARTER a. 00.. Limited Mr. Tea Poll Recommends as a refreshing drink BRA HMIN ORANGE PEKOI: ' TEA lI inaii Willi." "md" " _ .c__.‘..l M“. '. .. . a‘ 251/54»; " a/M. was