é 2',’ I - ‘FAB Ja. PAGE rgm CHARLCTTETOWN CUARDIAI Pins |lcnt~-\\' » Su-rl-ixiry -— Lil-iii -('o|. ll llriitur and Managing Aawelnto R1i‘tnru— Frank Fitvsier S. lit-Lure Al. i‘ . Vict- Prelldlnl-J. R. Ullflifli A. HIFKIIIIIOH D. 8 0. Ulrrvtnr -J. ii. Burnett Walker and D K. (‘urrio , fly-Y. ng imiyfifil. mat Sl'.\'i‘ - livi-lnvilh o l‘ i. fir" I“'l'ilIl| .\. lint: l iis: Marni (i-mi-rul Motors Building iieirnlt Wilinughhy ‘Prwver Building , _ , l;i'nn BUHIHDILAUITHIII] Francisco; lift; No, li-‘rih Street, Philadelphia iiiwi 13:7) $71.00 per year (in advance) delivered. led in Canada and United Stuiel. Agency inc._ New York Central lilltfnlfliw- liuuu- (‘nir-ngu; Syndicate Trust aiuuuduock Building, Ban Specn ng M axlm It's a rare thing to win an argument and the other fellow's reap"! =1 ihc Xarnc time. TUESDAY, JANUARY l7, 1933. THE NE ll‘ COLLEGE six-rial pages 1n connection with trade with Russia. What they do. the . cc oi Wales in today's Issue Oi 'l‘i1c f-cnml opening vi the {iuatizution has been postponed until the return from Ottawa oi * Stewart and Hon. Dr. Mac- :\,1-~_<_ m- o; Education. In the construction work ha‘ <1 and the stud- ri ..<> ‘.1101! new quart- Lil :4, . : 1.1-i- 3f 13:0 new build- ,;_g, l! .5 one of {lie finest 0i in l.‘ 2cm Canada, are ‘u 1:: iii‘. article elsewhere in '1 b’? seen from this nut the zm-tltution vvlll ' 1.1.11: pcsdzon to cater to the educat ona‘. requirements oi the Provinre. 'l“.te work has been done wPh ‘ ' less and despafch by the des goers, corxi-ractora and sub- aontractox-s, and there is reason to anticipate that it will be satisfactory in every way, Of particular import- =. the irrrrased facilities for lTl "I: I trier. t: and the well equip- DM in!» . cs for courses in p‘: ' s, senior and junior chemistry, biniojv and household science. l‘. is fPp-"l, with the co-cperation of tkecam 1c Foundation, to make the new fitution a iul1 Junior Cwilve h, .. e addition 0f a fourth rear‘.- cwr-sr- to the curricula. The ‘ :il y 1r ‘would. be necessary ‘Iir- in~‘..sion of such subjects If» l‘ - ' " l so: n1 science and rur- and the work would merit of at least. ‘.‘;'" 21a‘. tcncher. In addition, l‘. L= lvrié-d to ctvcnd the library " ‘mg up a commun- .n chm '30 of a com- rz, to SFZTC thc read- c! all sections of . Ila-so are matters "d tipon assistance ITS Carnoie Foundation, =nt no dofluite informa- tion L; avirilzll-lle. If the fourth year eoifrrr- s g-staiollslied it will mean 9. tom“ ‘or I0 surfing t0 students who hisend tn pro=ccuie their studies hrrfi. .- in more advanced univer- us». on the mainland. Pr-on-ivlon is made in the new Prince of Wales College to solve the problem o! increasing student at- tendance as well as the need oi an enlarged curricula. The extra class- room accommodat on will fill a long- . icit ivnnt in this connection. I Exact figures of the total cost of the bill in; and equipment are not .. “able, but thcy will approxmate . , the total cost of the bulld- l being in the vicinity of I). t. iors who have inspect- , and who are Iaznillar in: crtt of simlar recently ..o: .1 on the mainland, . .1 surprise that the o-vitl be constructed and ‘ ll such first-class manner lender half a million dollars. There is no doubt flint the new Pznnre cl Wald; College will givo greatly CiiililllCitl cduoat-anul op- portunillr-I; to the Students of this Provinrt, flirt it will muuil MOW economic ii‘; \'.‘(li as more efficient ulmin :1, and that to our cltr/cns {"I‘.i('! ly it trill become a mnrw- m‘ incl.....’.ng pride and sat- isfacT-iti". ‘i. Tlfiflfi.‘ WITII RUSSIA The Calgary Alhcrtnn says that Canndalfor trading purposes, can- not intelligently ignore Russia with its 130,000,000 people, and con- tlnues: "For this reason, those who expressed violent and hasty con- iicmnalion of trade with Russia- and among them are a number of the most prominent people in this country-were ill-advicod indeed. It ls not, good policy to condemn the Inevitable." ,‘ intelligent business man or news- paper in this countr)’ cimdemm condemn is trade on a preferential basis, or on Government security. 1t is well known that the Soviet l Government repudiated payment of i all indebtedness to sovemmentt and traders with Russia prior to , the Revolution. It. disowned re- , sponsibllity and for that reason no i civilized government at the present ‘ time has tmderfaken to resume diplomatic relations with Russia for ' the purpose of reopening inter- tional trade channcis. lt is true Germany has made a provi- sional deal with the Soviets for certain purposes, and if- is also true that China has entered into semi- . diplomatic relations with a view to defensive arrangements; but recog- nition of the Soviet Government l as a whole, for diplomatic or trad- ing purposes, has not been assent- ed to. > There ls nothing; however, to prevent.“ any Canadian trading with Russia. There is at the present time free scope for any business house in Canada to accept orders or give orders to Russian firms for lIiYthing, with the exception that by order-in-council the importa- livn of coal, wood pulp, pulpwogd, lumber, timber, asbestos and furs is prohibited. Outside of these spe- cified articles there is nothing to prevent trade between this ‘coun- try and Russia. Of course, diplomatic relations being broken off, there is nomeans of insisting upon payments, as, {he Russian Government not being re. fiognlled by the Canadian or any other Government, the usual diplo- matic channels cannot be resorted to for guaranteeing and collecting payments. It was the Mackenzie King Gov- eminent that broke off these dip- lomatic arrangements in ma, and 5° Tefienill’ 88 October last Mr. Mackenzie King in the House of Commons stated that the nego. tlattons related only to certain diplomatic privileges which had previously been granted exclusively to Russia. Th1! b91118 the case there is no excuse for any agitation at the present time to get the Govenb mam i0 Permit trade deals between m“ cmmiil’? and Russia. These are matters permissible and legal now, save and 9x¢ei>t transactions in the articles specified. It is surprising however how many people are un. d" the imliression that the King Government's action in 1928 strict. . iv prohibited inter-trade Wm, Russia and are blaming the Ben. nett Government for not rescind-i 1H8 what actually never nus put into effect. CALGARPS FAILURE l l i N0‘ thinking person 1n ma“. Says the Monetary Times, will for a 1111mm? believe that the responsibil- ity for Calgary's failure to meet 1L; “aiming debniures m New York funds on January 2, rests on Ilrc. micr Bennett or the Dominion gov- crnment. The Prime Minmfcr owns Cflitwrv as his adopted home town 3nd Tflllfewnts that constituency in the House of Commons but it can- not for a minute be said that be. cause oi these facts either the Premier or the Dominion govern- ment were responsible. The Domin- ion government has assisted ccrtan of the provinces to meet its Obliga- tions during the past fifteen months but the task would be endless it’ it undertook to help out the various muncipalities that "have " issues maturing there or bond interest coming due. Nor would it be fair, as it would appear from all the evid- ence available that Calgary is Just as able to pay as (fiber western cities that have paid similar obliga- tions durum the year. “It; Alberta-n is sadly ashay. No NOTES BY TIIE WAY A despatch from Wachtngton dia- clcsvs that the United States, which had 360,030 men killed and wound- ed ‘n the late war, i; now making am ul Payments to veterans 20 per rent. more than the aggregate of payments of Great Britain. France, Germany, Italy and. Canada. who had a combined casualty record of sixleeil and a half million men. ‘hr: combined cost oi veteran DRY" meuzs of Great Britain, France. Gcrzuany, Italy and Canada was ~ - ly over eight hundred million 2'5. That‘ of the United States was more than a billion dollars. This vu-t sum paid by the Amtrlcflfl maple i5 25 per cent of our iedeffll expend ture and comes to 25 per cont of every dollar of taxes tnkfll from our people by the Federal Gov- eminent-Chicago Tribune. The policy of honesty Ind 151m“ followed by the British is duly ap- preciated throughout the world. This is exemplified by a 51811 in a local shop in Oklahoma which ad- rnontshes “Be British-pay nOW and have an understanding after.'—Mi1' ‘vcrton Sun. Technocracy ls merely a §Ymb°| of the machine age. It is somethi-YIE that, nan neither be accepted nor rejected, but .t is already a. reality- It is here. when you step into YOU-i‘ mpmr gal‘, that is an acceptance o1 technocracy. When you eat YOU-i‘ wheat harvested by an auwmfltic reaper and thresher, that is accept- ing technocracy. It is no more cal)- ame o: gcceptflnCfi or rcjecton than fire or electricity. It 1s u. fact. The machine age is established. Tech- nocracy merely points out that. we must either run the machines or they will run us. a5 they ha"? ‘seen doing. 'l‘cclmocracy's duty is to work but a system whereby the productive power of machines will be harnessed for the welfare o. the masses. Mr. De Valera has picked u qua-r- rel "with England. and 1w time" has escaped the disastrous result-S- od markets and the gr0W1I18 Tewm‘ merit of the British nation are U1? terrible cost oi his tactics. l-le is turning a potent friend into a P0" tent enemy; while he fights 1°? l shadow, all the material benefits of a. real independence are crumb- ling into duali- A recent story printed in an liai- lan newspaper told how a imrchant in Ohio was fined because a 0100K “p501, he displayed outside his store gave incorrect time. complaint W85 made, it seems. by a 1111510055 ma“ who, because the clock was late, missed an cngaficment- N°W a rmm" ber of American cities have ordin- ances providing that if a merchant displays a clock he must see to it that the clock keeps time PWPETIY- Such ordinances are sensible, mu the Italian paper jumllfid to the conclusion that American businwi men are too poor to cB-rrl’ “VB-Wiles in these depressed days; and it remarked sadly that the situation in America "must, indeed be lamen- table." There is still some money in the United states, the sale of a collec- tion of rare things in New Yflrk realizing $360,431. A Charles II Pai- isandcr tall-case clock, made by Samuel Knib‘), in London in 1665. went for $3,100. This clock W85 formerly in the collection of Kim; George 1V of England and. stood in the library at Buckingham Pal- ace. Anoiher purchaser paid $2.909 for a. Queen Anne carved and in- laid walnut card table with needle- point top formerly in thlc collector: of Sh" George Donaldson. The same buyer got a ChiDPB-ndalfi ma‘ hogany tall-case clock With Diifc" toire case for $1.150. The chance o! b41111! km"! '5 533d to be ten tines as great in the United states rs in England and the rate u‘ using. Amen: causes given are the exaggerated Symiiili-hii for killers, lax law efliflfwmeflii and public indifference to crime. Tho Canadian Pacific Railway is given the palm for f/rain WW1 l“ North America. The run oi 124 miles in 10B minutes between Smiths Falls, Ontario, and Montreal, West hits an average speed of 88.9 miles per hour and is‘ the fastest 1n North Ammica. In Europe the laurels are given to the Chcltnnham Flier of the Great Western, wh'ch does the 77.3 miles from Swindon to Pad- dington Station, London, in 65 minutes for an averagt oi 11.4 miles per hour. The outbreak at the Dartmoor prison in England a year or so ago was believed to have been lmfted by agitators from outside the prison walls‘ by means oi the stranze method of communication common to all large penal institutions. De- velopment of a spirit of unrest cul- Unemploymflit, falling trade, 111111‘. what 300p of £01m! y mes W. Barton. M,D_ RHEUMATISM, CAUSES AND TREATMENT v “Rheumatism, or arthritis as it 15 now called, is the oldest disease on record and is the cause of more ill- nessfor which a pension is paid than any other condition except the heart and biooclvessel diseases q; old age." i Agroup oi 200 physicians inter- ested in rheumatism met in New Orleans last year for the single pur- pose of trying to learn from one another who; each had discovered in his investigation and treatment of rheumatism. _ , some points stand out. Dr. John H. Musser, New Orleans, stated that since he had been in New Orleans he had seen practically no eases o! arthritis in contrast to his exper- ience in Philadelphia where 50 per cent, that. is one half,‘ of patients in hospital wards had arthritis. In other words climate is a factor causing rheumatism. , Another point definitely proven is that the diet, the food eaten, ls l. big factor in causing rheumatism. Meat is not at fault; starches are really most to blame. Other causes are infections from teeth, tonsils, intestine and gall bladder; injuries such as back strain; constipation; overweight. Just as there are many causes so are there many forms of treatment —vaccines; climatic-hot dry clim- ate, such as is found in Arizona: colonic irrigation, that. is using enemas that completely fill the large intestine; gland treatment, particularly the use of extract of the thyroid gland in the neck; heat and electricity in various forms; surgery-cutting nerves supplying the painful part. In addition to the special treat- ments above mentioned, trying by all means to improve the‘ general health of the patient. It is thought by many that some general condi- tion in the body, perhaps wrong diet, may cause teeth to decay and the infection thus lodged in the teeth causes arthritis. Sometimes the infected teeth are left in the mouth so long, so much damage is done before their removal that it is too late to prevent severe arthritis. These points from the discussions of 200 physicians interested in rheumatism should be of great help in fighting this old, old ailment. De Pachmann (Winnipeg Free Press) If de Pachmann had been a poor, frlendless, uneducated and untal- ented man he would have been locked away in a mental home many years ago. But he happened to be a genius. He was no lunatic. But he was so erratTc that he spent his days- and they were great and happy days—iu that wide No Man's Land which stretches from complete san- ity down into the shadows. And he played the piano, and cspecially Chopin, with such magnificence that long ago the critics stopped appraisal of his playing and merely recorded the fact that de Pach- mann, last night, had played Chopin as no man had ever done before. Often, to the terror of his manag- ers he refused to enter the concert hall. He was not in the mood. He had hurt his hand. I-Ie had indiges- tion. Any one of a thousand excus- es. Sometimes they would literally drag him to the hall. Sometimes they would fall, ‘and to their dis- gust he would stay at home happily playing to himself. When he did appear there were often a. hundred Objections. Hc would demand the removal of fur-c- body in the front row because he did not like his face. He would de- mand that all lights in the hall be switched ofl‘, and the evening would be spent in darkness with his haunt- ing music sweeping out through the gloom to his audience. On other occasions he would sit playing at his piano and chatting intermin- ably with his audience. He did all this until he was over eighty years old. Dc Pachmann is dead 110w, and the pundits who know no better will be finding him his place in the ranks of the greatest pianists. But those who heard him will he satis- fied t0 know that they have listen. Q12 CHARLOTTET OWN GUARDIAN . Unfair Criticism (Moncton Times) The Sydney Record publishes a lengthy statement from a former convict in which the administra- tion at ETTBUS at the Dorchester prison is condemned l!) B11 m6 moods and tenses. The 100d 18 5am to be poor in quality and in- sufficient in quantiti- “hue “Th! conditions are “unsfl-flii-flfl" Ind filthy. This former convict ls giv- en two columns or space in the Sydney paper, and hi5 absurdly false statements are cople" in Cull by the Halifax Chronicle. A I004 deal of the trouble in prisons has been attributed to tircouraflfililfillt the inmates get from newspapers and people who seem to think any- thing in the way at propose-min against those in authority will have an eflect in a time oi unrest like the present. In The Rocket Age (Sydney Post) Orosa the Atlantic in thirty min- utes? Professor Auguste P1006"- believes it may be possible-not b7 ship or plane but in a rocket. He has invented a rocket that he ii- gilres should go 185 miles a minute. rt could be designed w fly the ocean with passengers or mails-He knows geven other scientists in lim- rope who are experimenting with rockets. The next era may b9 M! age of rockets. The present genera- tion may live to see the sky full 01 whlzzlng projectiles. Such a possi- bility does not seem foo fantastic when Professor Piocard thinks about it, for he is the man who started for the stratosphere and go there. It is his theory that the air at high altitudes is an ideal speedway for rocket flights and that any speed up to WM miles a second should be simple- after the mechanical details have been worked out. The New York Bun paints a vt- vid picture of what may happen should Professor Piccard’: exnwtl- tion be realized. The first daredevil to pilot a rocket from Battery Park, New York, to the Rue do 1a Paix in half an. hour will become the!‘ Bleriot; after him may coma the deluge. New Yorkem will take I stratosphere express to a luncheon in Iondon. They will go to theatre! in Mexico Cirty or Montreal after dinner. Busines mm and women will commute in rockets from the wilds or Inng Island or New Jer- sey to Wall Street in less time than can now telephone acrom the dis- tance. The rocket stations, local and express, will be in the tips of skyscraper towers. The habit of spending winters in the South will become lets; instead those who can afford it will swim, play and. sleep in Miami or 1.0a Angeles any day of the year and attend matlnees and afternoon receptions in Manhat- tan. The summer tour or Europe will require only twenty-four hours of travelling, split into tut-minute hops from point to point on the Continent. The air will be screech- ing with projectiles carrying loads of merchandise, love letters and holiday greetings. Ordinary aviation will be a haz- ardous business in an era. of rock- ets. Show the world that a steel tube with a gpeed of three miles a second is a workable conveyance. and some bright fellow will find a way to make them for the public at $250 or less. 111cm will be no tire trouble, but the rooketeers will learn to beware of punctured parachutes. Vilhen the stratos- phere is crowded with missile, that can outstrip the wind, when rock- ets leap aioiit from the ground or swoop to the roofs‘ of the city, anything as close to the earth a8 an ordinary airplane will find it- self in a shower of vertical traffic. A dirigible will have no more chance than. a. soap bubble in a halutorm. Traffic problems will be Slightly different in the stratos- phere from those on the ground: it W111 be easy enough u» keep moving, but what driver or a rocket some a hundred miles a minute will stop on a red light. which this or any other generation has ever been privileged to hear. He played in Winnipeg some years ago. Few of his audienie knew that he had spent hours that afternoon nil-vine. disc-reruns. exhortins. scolding lecturing in a mall part? of people who had been asked to have tea. with him; and that hi5 manager had the greatest difficulty in persuading him to play again at night. It is odd to reflect what dc ed to the greatest p- ing of Chopin first in one penitentiary, than in another and another, until it has crossed more than, half the Domin- ion suggests something other than spontaneity in emh instance. The circumstaticesindicate a relation- ship connecting all these outbreaks and if there has been such relation- ship it is obvious that some external influence has been not only active, tingindisouderm! '_.x‘4;1uun. Janna. lung“ .4.m_d .IQ-@a_-...i._._.. _.__ but successful . ‘ n“ would have been without his music. - Tommy returned from school with a perplexed brow. "What's the mat- MAGNA EST VERITAB Here, in this little Bay, Full g1‘ tumultuous life and great repose, Whale, twice a day, The purposeless, glad ocean comes and goes, ' Under high ciifls, and far from the huge town, I alt me down. For want of me the world's course will not fail; When all its work is done, the lie shall rot; truth is great, and shall pre- vau, ' When none cares whether it pre- vail or not. -uoventry Patmore. The Stonehenge (London Dnchange) Dir. model Harris, the famous arohaelogid; and Bibical scholar, propounded a startling nex expla- nation of Stonehenge, the n86 long mystery of Salisbury Plain. It was built, he says, by the lkyptians, 1,800 to 2,000 years be- fore Christ, for the joint Worship of the sun and of the Dead. (Ac- cepting the popular chronology of the Bible, Jacob built Bethel about the same time). It is a second Aliydos. (Abydos was the gm: rig-man sahctuary of the dead and after Thebes, was the most im- portant town in the ancient king- dom of Upper Egypt). Its archi- tect and builder was probably named Merl-An (meaning the Beg loved of oar-u), wihods no other than Merlin, the wizard of Arthur- ian legend. Going even ftuther than this last fascinating statement, Dr. Harris any; that King Arthur himself. hero of mythological romance. was either Osiris (the Egyptian god of the dead) or someone whose story has been colored by tbs oairig legends: while Arthur's beautiful queen, Guinevere, wad really Isis, queen of the god, of ECW19- Quite close to Stonehenge lie two mysterious barrows. known a5 Rpbln Hood and. Robin Hood's Ball. What are they doing on the Wiltshlre Downs, beside these tre- mendous standing stones? If rightly named, tihelr proper home, as Dr. Harris says, is in Sherwwd Forest. . Bug write Ra-Bennu for Robin Hood, and we shall have the Sun- God. and the Bun Bird of Ekypt. Ra was the Sun-God (every moss- word, "fan" knows; this by n0w).i Bennu, the Phoenix, (from which our own Robin is derived), was the herald of the rising sun, and was also the living symbol of Osiris, the god of the dead. ‘ The Egyptian myth declared that the morning sun (and Str ‘- r" has long been regarded as a solar temple, witness the lvildsummer Day diaaerva/cions there) rose in the foam of a Bennu, and Sir lib-nest Wallis Budge, the great Egyptolo- gist, declared that the sanctuary of the Bennu was the sanctuary of Ra and Osiris. ‘This is one 0f the keystones in the extraordinarily in- 1'15 has built up- He produces ar- guments, mostly in the form oi place names, to show that the Egyptians had colonies in England -in Devon, Cornwall and Dorset. Then he quotes the assertion of Geoffrey of Monmouth that the stones of Stonehenge were brought from Ireland by Merlin, the wizard. having previously been brought to Ireland by giant colonists from "the farthest coast of Africa.” MAC S Special Rx. 315 COD LIVER OIL EXTRACT WITH CRESOTE AND GUIACOL COMPOUND An ldeal remedy particularly adapted for w. latent and lr- ritating Coughs and Bronchial allections. It quickly relieves the con- gestion, and thereby allows Its tonic and flesh producing pro- perties to become immediately effective. It has the Tonto properties of llyphosphltes, and the flesh producing properties contained tn the Extract oi Cod Livers, this combined with Crsiote which ls a moat effective Antl- aeptlc, make It a valuable rem- edy tn Chronic Bronchitis, ln deep seated Coughs, also gives appetite and improves general conditions. ' tee, sonny?" asked his father. "I ain't get a certain sum right," re- turned the boy. "I wish you'd help me with it, dad." His father shook his head. “Can't, my boy," he said, “it wouldn't be right. "I don't sup- pose it would," Tommy replied, "but you might have a try i" ‘(let a bottle today. Price $1.00 a THE 2 MACS Mall Orders Give: Prompt Mention teresting structure which Dr. I-Iar- l ing Life Insurance; of the picture. If you Lower Queen Street Prsaoeliy, in Pembrokeshlre, and whence ardhaeloglsts say they came, was only an lntennediatn stage in theta transportation. Five Egyptian sanctuaries, more or less closely naked together. ml Dr. Harris. have recently been dis- covered in this country. Anion! them are Bt. Knightolfs Kim. near ‘Iintagel, airmail, St. Neo- tan‘s Church, Smith Cornwall, and st. veepu, on the east side of the F mveegahosayaiswlp, or Anubis, the dog-hearted attendant of Osiris. Duo north of Stonehenge lies Knighfon Down, and 51110118 it! 1mg Barrows is one known a8 Dodhill Barrow. Evidently. 8B!‘ Dr. Hhrris, it ts "significant of the presence of the faithful Dog, com- panion of Osiris and the Opener of the Way to his Kingdom." His phrase Opener of the WI! is peculiarity interesting. W19 means opmer, and in a loam form is written Wip-Wat, the opener of the way. Dr. Hurts finds wlp, as he does ‘Nectar: or magn- ton. in all sorts of planet. most particularly at Babsfleet, in Kent. which place, he points out, was formerly spelt Wippedsflaet. mhsfieet, or Wippedefleot, vvll the entrance to Waning-street- Wetting-street is the equivalent of an inland wai/znvay along which souls were believed to make. their pilgrimage to the Islands of the Blest and the Kingdom 0f Osiris. And nuasfleet was the Openm- of the Way, for wipped is Anubis the Dog (hLs very name preserved for us today in the racing “whippct"). Whfpsrwde, the aid, of Inndonb Mullifl‘! Z00. drawn its name from the some original. Supported by a great, volmne of etymological evidence, Dr. Harris imparts his belief that these lgyp- tians whom he beluga. to our I. i The Fund can be created by a single pay. meat or by instalment payments over a period of years to suit your convenience. -' A Reserve Fund built on the Life Insurance Plan will guarantee a specified Income to your wife and children in event of your passing out _ _ live, it can be converted mto a pension for your own old age, and is ai. Ways available in event of emergency. Consult your nearest Agent-or write or call o-IIYIIDMAII 8r C0,. LTD. Provincial Mllllifll-Tlle Great-Welt Life » IANUARY 17._1933 .. ._.__i__i , u- ‘lav?’ A RESERVE FUND ls What Everyone Would Like to llave r The sure and easyuway to build such a Re. serve Fund to meet all contingencies is by invest. Charlottetown coasts erected Bbtmehdnge um. tho direction at’ a master-mum auoh as could not suddenly hm arisen among the ancient Brlwiu At Amediury, near Stonehenge, m truck: his Merl-An down. Merl-An tax-Marlin, hgtéibllllsMelian Duke of Cornwall, father of Mela: or Meiior, Ameaburyb patron s Ameslmry was a centre of Ea, ties: religion. we are made in no, in tau "second Abydoa" of Stonehenge, u place where two religious lines of thought were amalgamated, repae suiting the two Egyptian ways oi eiupoundlng the doctrine of lai- mortality and the Ilia after death 1h Stonehenge, with llis attend- ant barrows, we may find, 1f we posas Dr. Hart-B's vision, ‘can- tral chapel, surrounded by a ceme~ tony, so that the dead might ‘n mat’ under the auqnoes of Ostrb and his attendant Antrbis." ~ CITY BIIS SERVICE 0°79?!" PTIIIQINI PI-rtl of Gty dllUlrtrm7JlLltL0olLli. Later lervioo by arrangement, . TIME TABLE Inna Iain [hot II A. ll. " Paula's Corner 7.50 A. M. " lanatorlum 8.00 A. M. There after the baa leaves label‘ l5 minute: to and l5 llllniliea after each hour. ' I have: Senator-inn at Ivory hour and hall-hour, haven Provvlfl 00ml ' laltllva mlnnteaaftoirand hen - five minutes In every hour. Leaves Promo’: Corner going Want 10 minutes to and 20 minutes after each hour. "rho Bu: vvlll lfap M Informed- lafaplaceatotakoonorletolrpu- angers. Fans 10o each, three tickets for 25o, or 20 tickets for 81.00. ‘I'll LEWIS AND FAB!!! BU! SIBVICI A Pare Tea Brahmin Orange Pekoe Sold Dill! ll hi] Alflllhi Plbilg$ ' 53-1-1461 OLD G OLD . for 1933 we can use lots of gold-so bring in any old jewelry you may have. G. H. TAYLOR Jewelierfland Engraver Lumber We have on hand and will be pleased to supply the following: Spruce Sheathing ... Planet! Pine Boards .. Unplanned Plus Boards . Pinned Spruce Boards .,.._.. PIIIIBII m Spruce straanin: .. amass m smog stnaains .. . , Pinned m Spruce Stndlllnl use per 10° "- 111"" Planet! and canines as Barnes Btaddlnl 8M0 nor 10° "- Merchantable Pinned Hemlock Boards $1.50 a" 100 "- Also full line of Spruce Scantling. Joists, Fir and Hemlock Timber.- 1.. M. POOLE? s. co. " ‘PaolPs Wharvoe Lumber . . 51.00 per I00 ft. and uiI $1.00 per 100 it. Ind u? .. 81.50 per 100 ft. and nil . $1.50 per 100 it. and at! .- 81.75 perltlii ft. and u? .. 60a per I00 it. Linea! 16o pa!‘ 100 ft. Linea!