¢ ?i fi i., =l ,i l i i i ;. fvggcisicicicvernisaiezisirincrecr ,‘.§»w, .d` "K Ddililiiwll- -l*gf{_'gg¢;'Wul\ll‘a institute was a and-to the canadian ron or bn- cm-.aei on c `1’-'§“`*°’:`f. » . ‘ 's-FJ-". " ` "` ~. ' f’ ., ' " F15 I `: , .Y " V ~_ ‘ 7 r ` :__ ':f.`,', -` -tu ` . FUUK ` pf” E ,. GIIARLUITETUWII GUARDIAN e-~i_ Q-llpanrtlnadvaaaelnane' IAPIIIIDIIIIUOIIINI lll'l)l5.Di_lI' li it Unless leaks lallvuea. - , i- . _ _ in ' Praaldease-W. Cluster l. Islam Vlee-President-J. I. Barnett. d ` scci--sary-ucut. cci. n. A. luxiucb, n. a. o. . ldttss and Iaaagem-J. I.. Burnett Auaeinss lditor-D. K. Curia ° IAINPS ATTITUDE PILLOBIED' rbc sais or Maine, according tb Irion L. Newdick, Chief of the di- ,Uision of Plant Industry of the State Department of Agriculture, finds it unprontable to grow seed potatoes. _The reason given is that “the south- ern buyer has not been willing to pay s premium for the extra work which the Maine grower has been forced to do in order to grow s high grids product that would pass in- spection." The Department of Agri- culture has maintained for several years an inspection service and will continue to do so. but will not carry on an intensive campaign in the in- terest of the growers as it finds it “hard to creato an interest where the financial gain is extremely doubt- lui." It is contended that the table stock grower during the last five years has made more money hand- ling his ,crop for a period of nine months than has the seed potato' grower who sold his potatoes out of the field or contracted for delivery the following spring. Seed potatoes have amounted to between ton and nfteen per cent of the entire crop, and even this comparatively small production-representing a total ship- ment of l,l68,23'1 bushels of certi- fied seed out of the i928 crop-will likely be reduced in view of the lab- crinvoived and the unremunerative prices received. Nevertheless, the Milne delegation in` Congress and the Maine Development Commimioll are insisting on an increased duty on, seed potatoes so as to shut out the superior product of the Mari- time Provinces which. despite the present duty of 50 cents per hund- red pounds, has found a successful and profitable market in the United States. Commenting on this dog-in- iiié manger attitude, thc Lewiston (Me) Daily Sun says sarcastically: “Aroostook demands a big in- crease in the tax on potatoes to compel potato growers to buy from Aroostook the seed potatoes that do not pay Aroostook to raise. I “Aroostook demands the in- crease in the tax on potatoes-on all potatoes-so as to prev-ent D0- tato growers from buying from the Martime Provinces as much as equals one-seventh of the Aroos- took potato crop. "That ts, Aroostook insists on taxing the people of the United States and the people of Maine, on all the potatoes they eat every day. enough to enable Aroostook potato growers to sell at a profit the potatoes it doesn't pay to raise. "A tax on the six potatoes the people eat big enough to give Aroostook a profit on the seventh potato; the potato that Aroostook cannot afford to raise. "Not all of those potato growers that need seed from the Maritime Provinces are the South. Some of them are Maine. ' "Aroostook demands that out- rageous increase in an outrl-SCO”-5 tax to prevent Maine potato grow- ers from getting the seed that is moat profitable to them. “And that outrageous demand put up by Aroostook to prevent Maine farmers from getting pro- per seed is backed up by the Maine Development Commission. "Maine Development-what in time does 'development' mean in 1 Maine?-Maine Development Com- mission sending a telegram to washington, to urge that a new addition be made to an old bad taxi What for? Why, to make it harder to raise potatoes in Maine." A GROWING MOVEMENT The importance of the Women‘s Instituto movement is becoinills more and more manifest as a factor iii the social and cultural life of community throughout the Umpire. It may not be generally that the credit cr buying nm established this great enterprise be- ' lhgs to' Canada. The original or- was fcunaca am in ou- ggybm mc your im. not until me lic,w0vll’. were the groups federated their own national scope. bodies of this imueuic move- racbi emi” cuba mommm ll iawcuiu unix- abirice acces. whim ¢',`°§_..*¢ig'g\|d\¢yatinthedii!- t of an educational system which rv* ,~ cl , f :_ i NotesfB__}f_T7ie ~Way llledlealseleneehsswonaloug wwgasivu csvicicricc cm may cz the great maladies and plague that lwlvt millions tothe grave in past Iles- By reason of these triumphs WN Prevention, control and cure of °3U"l°¢lV0 Gllideinlo and cont_agious diseases. The people of civilised countriashave little fear of plague, H0105. sm`allI>0l. yellow or typhoid ' levers. Science and sanitary measur- TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1929 '°° °°$§f\l\1¥ ill the long warfare against ubercul . ' , _ire battling hopefully and suc- oeis Agalmt cancer,~ the most skilful ies has been of inestimabie value to the l\1l’l¢l‘y.»with the aid of radium. has ' ved thousands of lives. but 'new - es i year women living in the country home- 5* steads, and has exercised |. social ln- fluence in every way benencial to the welfare of tha community at large. ri 'Thanks to the vision of Mr. Nugent p Harris, acting as secretary of the Ag- ricuizurai organization sociciy, X: land took a leaf from the Canadilh buck. and. in 1917.' Mrs. wma in- troduced the idea into the British Isles. Gradually the Women’s In- stitutes were formed in Victoria. f°1’ New south wales; in Queensland. ye d song. But that story is far out- r I ` ol New zealand' in Bwth Ames' md in done by one that comes from Scar India-all crystallized more or less bo upon the Canadian model. The re- liv boasts the possession of a grand- spective governments have given them their sanction, and in many 1° ways have fostered the movement. recognizing its worth. In Great Bri- "L tain, when the organisation of the increase more rapidly than the es. And influenza has in recent s swept the globe with a fatality ing the old time scourges of ue and cholera so far medical ntive measure to ward on its at Ck. or any specific remedy for its v`all ~ . las ‘ . science has failed to devise any pre- cure 'foraaafaihcrc clock was ion lung the shelf and it stood ninety are on the floor." says a familiar 0| 68 near Toronto. In Boas-boro one Mr. Thomas Foriar who ther's clock that still ticks bravely the age of 400 years since it start- It is an heirloom of the Forfar mily. He recently celebrated his h birthday, and at the celebration Mt National Womerrs Institute was showed a razor in which he takes well established, the Board of Ag- m stant use by his grandfather, his fa.- he - riculture handed over the work to t uch pride, as it _has been in con- r and himself ln succession, dur the women, leaving its control to the me thewmt 150 yea" That om mz_ members themselves, and, further- more, gave the organization a sub- ta s ntial grant of fifty thousand dal- E In record if they can. _ s per year The generous treat- r . ment was fully appreciated, as shown by the fact that, seven years after- or and old clock may be taken as a challenge to elderly people ln Prince dward Island to beat the Scarboro In the'Britlsh elections 55 women wards. the Womens Institutes in were dcfccicd and ia cicctcd. oi Great Britain had become self-sup- t porting. Over four thousand of these ose elected seven had been elected h before, seven are Conservative, five aborites' and Megan Lloyd George, L tab- group gatherings wwe been ea the 27 year-old daughter and “right lished in England and Wales. h and 'man" of her father is the only Libcrui. `_i..abci-, with :iv per cent ci I » -. _ -..,\.. _ , ‘-’ _,'.,'-s,-...i _ , T 5 . U_M45W*'|§1UV§_ nhl, _Y.,_a_.,.i___.. -TUNE1_& 1929 Elia! The, City Of Many Memories loop of 0 rxrrr mans or rnooaass “‘° , l_ l "mc binary cz nemburgb, urop- 9 criy co-ccucu," -wrote sir wciccc nur’ scott "wcuia be thc abridged bist- fl' 01' 5¢°f»lllld-" Much of that history, familiar to readers all over world. is being _recalled in con. ` ncctlon with the commemoration of trict the past autumn and winter m season and left grief in the homes uf’ there was granted to the little com- of many. , - 30 to 40 per cent of the entire pop- C uiation had the Flu in a mild or se- ° vere form. i th As you think of this. and remem b ber .also that the scourge, cancer, 3' It his bceueatimated that from ‘“ sun :arcs in icrribiitcu oi nm, bl' T11 you wonder how much progress the ° medical profession is really making. d° and ycoit wouio bc.;wcu if we 5°-‘ would recall the words of the speak- °| er at fiftieth anniversary of a 'Uni- versity recently “Pasteur has proved ° the germ theory of disease and phy- ° sicians now know how to fight or th ward off these organisms. h .crowded into the intervening centur- Lister has taught us how to make surgery safe. Before this time, the ies majority of patients died aft/er op- nf o erations. Smallpox and typhoid fever are`°t banished by preventive vaccinat.ion.|d 'rhc hundreds or thousands that were “° swept od thc earth by these scourg- su es is a matter of only recent history. th Diptherla and scarlet fever can be R prevented, or cured if contracted. h Patients with tuberculosis are 8 placed in sanatoriurns and a large ° number are cured. ' 'h 'the fucination of its spirit. If typhoid or other ducticss glands ' is deficient in ii.; work the condition , can be helped by glandular extmctsy I to the ey-2," as the author of "Kid- ' Jeffrey, Lockhart, "Christopher ,3 cl t be nopped" noted, is merely the reflec-5Nortli" and De Quinccy, or seeking The Flu swept through your dis- m ur event that may be said to have arkcd the foundation of the Scot- h Capital. Six hundred years ago unity that clustered around the astle overlooking the For-th thc harter which conferred upon it all e rights and privileges of s Royal gh. In that act of monarchial ace, shared about the same period several other towns in the north- Kingdom, Scottish political free- m had its birth, and a Capital, tined to rankamong the gregt ties of the universe, its origin. But it is not the political signifi- ance of the concession made in the arly part of the fourteenth century at is recalled today so much as the istorlcal and romantic associations . Edinburgh, it has been said, °W lil/BS 11D0n her past. Conscious a natural beauty surpassed by no her city in the world, "Scotia's :irling seat" takes pride less in the tractivencss of its situation and rroiindingsthan inthe memories at cling to itsstreets and closes. obert Louis Stevenson may have. ad reason for reviiing its climate, nd Ruskin for condemning its ar- hitecture, but neither could resist e spell of its romance, or escape The 'fbarbaric display of contrasts snanters. of the political struggle thi! ill# `Ull10D» 0| Prince preceded cbariic and inc ‘nn-ey avr tam are memorlies and landmarks that sro the very essence of pic- turesque and romantic history. And_ : Q -simian __ g ,‘_~__¥ .t..................» a A 7212-?0&l§ff 0.i`1ll°f Lf, more impressive to lovers of llterat- '~ ure- than thbse are the liter!-fy tradi- tions and associations of which Edin- burgh can boast. _ From a window in me of the tow- ering "iands" of the High street De- \ foe, the author of "Robinson Crusoe" gazed upon the riots that preceded the Union. Almost adiolnlng was the shop, and, not far off, the home of Allan Ramsay. the poet. In the same neighborhood may yet be trac- ed some of the haunts of Robert Ferguson, the vernacular bard, who was born within sight of the lofty tenement in which Boswell, the bio- grapher, first saw the light. Here is the dwelling place of David Hume, the historian; there the home pf the mother of Smollett, the ncvelist, and yonder the scene of Burns’ convivial-' ities. Over all is the spell of the "Wiz- ard of Romance", the immortal Scott, of whom the visitor is reminded .at every turn. His birthplace, the house in castle street where he finished “Waverley” and for years plied his busy pen; the Parliament House, where he worked as a clerk of court and found many of his characters, and the localities described in his poems and romances are slirincs that V have made his “own romantic town" an alluring place of pilgrimage. Nor cau a lover of iitcratur-: visit Edin-‘ burgh without recalling the names of Diets that are d il en can I y corrected by appropriate roads com -tion of the city’s odd and stirring,out the homes and haunts of its ex- mining ,,1¢ammes_ Ihistory. As Hciyrocd in picturesqucl ilcd son, Robert Louh Stevenson. in_ Bables receive such cue Mmm' lruins, half hidden in a slum, reprc- f`\vliosc writings the city ot liisbirth during. and after birth, that but g fscnts the departed glory of a court is pictured with a sense of the liistor- _ small fraction die at birth or aurmg and the dingy growth of modern in- , io and romantic that has aczentuat _ the mst yean ;dustry, so the Castle, enthroned high cd its charm. Hospnab are now eagerly sought on a rock. recalls the spirit of strifej T v by thousands of patients with no that brccdcd over the ancient Capi», "There is," he wrote. "no Edin- A K . tal and for centuries turned it into L-"i-gli emigrant, far or near, from ` fear or dread any more, because they hav, proven their worth - Ian armed camp. Within its walls the THE CINEMA EVOLVING the popular vote has 40 per cent of The difficulty of adapting our- the seats in the House. while the Co . nservatives with 89 per cent of selves to the rapidly increasing mod- li - . , , ern pace is well exemplified in the pe, cent of me popular vote h"e‘p9,¢,|¢ni; with ygsem-ch physmfms in ens to a sense of its former gio cs ' ‘ hen a State visit reminds it of the only 9 per ¢¢nf,_ sf the commons their search forthe cause of cancer W elm gud my 5 pg-gvgngiy,-.3 for 1:qu_ " f days when it was the home of kings. and gallant nobles rode abr-rast down history of the cinema. Many of our readers will remember the earliest 5 h emembcr thin stranger may bridfze a thousand And w en you r_ prammlly an this promm has come years; down the High Street and about du,-ing me latwr part ol the Canongate thc ghosts of centuries this dog every fcotstep the votes polled, have 42 per cent of flllst Century and the first Dirt Of ' t ' l rr ii c io time the city cuck- e seats The Liberal party with 23 then yOu are willing to be a little 0m "1 ~ 1 l‘ attempts at A motion photography. The first pictures shown, considered wchdériui at thc unic, consisted mainly of simple movements, such as individuals crossing 1 street. flocks or birds-scared for the pur-|; pose,-photographed ln flight and showing distinctly the individual movements of their wings; a train in motion, approaching the spectat- or with fearful realism, and similar lifelike scenes. The first attempt at dramatization was in the nature 0! slapstick comedy, much cruder than anything now seen on the screen. Then came the era of melodraml. when cu :nc stage barnstormins DIG- ductions were taken over and re- vamped under new titles and thrown upon the screen with gorlebus £3015- Of late years there has been a won- derful improvement in the artist!! of the cinema: and while the Old style comedy and melodrama sur- vive for the enjoyment of the large class of people who still delight in that form of amusement, subtier ef- fects have been prqduced and NNW' siriii and thought have been cxnend- ed in tuming out pictures of recog- nized artistic value, which have vied as masterpieces with anything hith- erto produced on the lcsiiimlil stage. 'rica silent drama, now developed into an almost perfect medium of ar- tistic expression in the handspcf great producers, is faced with an uii- expected competitor in the shape 01 the talking movies. The latter have been exhibited successfully in till larger centres, and the Upilllllll _il expressed that the “taikies” are_d8- anted his services as his State At- rney, but as he was too young to legally eligible, a special act oi' e Volksraad was passed to qualify him and he became a. member of the Govemment. He soon became a general in the Boer War against Britain. When the war ended he was prominent among the Beers who met Roberts and Kitchener to' ar- .range terms of' settlement. After the Union .of South Africa was established he became a mem- ber ef its first Govemment. The Great War gave him the opportun- ity to conquer German West Africa returnhig to the Transvaal. Kruger be th and East Africa. In succession he had been a Boer General, a British Lieutenant General, Prime Minister of South Africa, a member of the nrst Imperial Conference and an outstanding figure among the states- inen of British Empire. ‘The lam-war Showdown" is the headline in the leading editorial ar- ticle in The Toronto Globe of rec- ent date. It has 'reference to the rum-running from Ontario into the United States, the clearances given by Canadian authorities to liquor- laden vessels bound for United States ports, and so on. The Globe says in The responsibility is primarily that of the Right Hon. Mackenzie King. nc is the Minister br micr- nai Affairs. He cannot sit passive- ly by while 'a gigantic traffic is go- ing on with intornational possibil- ities as dangerous as dynamite. He is the Prime Minister-who on the eve of the 'last 'election tersely promised to implement the lind- lnga of the Customs scandals iri- vestlgatlons. Both the Parlia- Further many who are wealthy are remarkable career. After grad-|81V° their out c time to h l\- uating briuibntiy at cambridge and 'Search w°rk- f ' _Ll I uncc uiumctciy to supplant 111 °*-il," forms of theatrical presentation. Slit inentary Committoe and the Judic- ial Oornmfaeion recommended for its narrow stre~ts Oi' Mary Queen General .fans Christian Smut.: Il°W` giving their means to enable ` _ ~ » - - d the Rc- gmi under go ye," of age has hadggifted and__enthuslastio physicians to 10f 5C0i»S- 0! JUN" Km* R" ` ir L is =` 1 f`orr'nation of Montrose and the Cov- 4 :glorious and stirring history: China to Peru. but he or she carries -emo lively pictures of the mind ,--:me sunsft behind the Castle alms. :me snow .sewn-2. some maze of city ‘tampa indelible in the memory andi -‘.cli':iitful to study in tlie intervals) of toil," To these haunting im- pressions of n city so fascinating in z ~cme of its med;-rn aspects have to; be added the still more gripping me-‘ vnorics of a Capital _that looks back with pride upon six centuriu of A Great Celestial Year' 6 Wealth not blast abode But the hdpe, the burning hope, and som §r;°°n:r°;,vm1':°t:`°m '-5° ` e course I iii me coulce of a delightful ad- . THE SEEKERS ' dives on 'wrrcieiice and tne C.assLcs‘ l- 1 oelore tiie Classical Asso.iaLion at Friends and loves we have none, ncr ’ Cardiii, Wales, rocemly p,~01e55m~ Wealth H91' ble-‘Ji Bb0d€~ I D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson re- Buff i-he h°P¢. the buminZ h°P¢. Bild § marked that the heavens of which the T014- UIC |°¥1¢1l’ Wild- f Aratus tells us are not our heavens Not for us are content, and quiet, and - ,mg mai, Hom"-5 pictures of mei p°“°° °f mind' sky, “though exquisitely true, are For we go seeking cities that we shall ‘ no lang” to be seen by mom" men.. I _ _ "ev" Md- i l-ie did not mean that the stars have, The" is “° °°1°“ °“ "M" 1°’ “S” I changed appreciably their positions 1°' “wh °" We” F relative to one another; there has Wm’ "um 1°' tm hmdm b’°“°y been some stellar movements of thati th" W” may “ever 5"' sort since I-lomer‘s time, but it has! om); f'h°thr°“dm§“d ;h;1d“w;' "h°‘ not altered the aspect of the con- “”' ° W ' “n ° " ' . stellations to any considerable ex- And tm w°t°h'm° “nd” sms' md' tent I-le referred rather to the sleep and the road again. h by M ba W° "ek me City °! GM' ‘nd tm des-slilgxtsof eqitlndlifesbytlfixx gltievv “°““‘ ""‘°" b°‘“‘Y dW°““» , ccciiictibu ci thc cnc or thc arch And we “nd tm muy “mn “nd me 1 which causes the north nd eouth "°“”“ °f "“”“' "U" ccicsiihi pcies to acscribc acir is in* Never the Golden City, where the ra- the sky about ‘ony seven fees diant' people meet ' 8"" ' 1 . _ aut thc ucicruus sown whcrc thc 1§et:,:°‘,;°°: |,'ft?:”mZ;;“°;m“;° £50 néourgiers are going about the yum Pmmnor Thompson c’am| s ree . the long cycle the "Gr t Y ” f part: .weutrazel the dusty road till the the huvem um wmchmzmh °;;n;’h gh of the day is dim, .' And the sunset shows us the spires :I ?:‘§:°lg: 1° 7"" |°1lK Ind away on the world's rim. md tan ,, y mx°°'°°r° Wm We travel from dawn to dusk. till the with 'tha norm I ed day is past and by, in prumt 1.” 8:) ° m°' ‘mm scoring the uciy city beyond inc is my w smut’ “f‘ch""° “mi IUKB ¢ rim of the sky ` Friends and loves we have none, not mad °°°°£“"ye:1:r°"ow” h* time' » . w en the the road, the lonely road. ' " "°”“ ""'°°°“ rt' in the nmzamntizc ?ic wma ‘mn ' _ I11'°D¢r mo- one wonders. Tal-klhl P|°'~“1’°|- 'WV' ever realistic. cannot comP¢¢° in N' num with livin: stan vhlflwfli and there are points _of merit IDN* the silent drama which make it _li- perior, in its symbolism, to I8! hill* sly realistic presentation- what il wanted is not more_elabcratl nia- chinery and equipment for the inli- iciicn ci rccuey on _ibn in-an. tin greater arthtic rstraixit. ocamvc mc, thc ccucticn ci granting expert clearances to the ‘rum runners. They have not ceased. ‘ _ . Canada need not help the Unit- ed states enforce her laws: :sin should not help foreign outlaws to breakthem. al Canada is legally Stall 55?; §§sa *figs iéaa 'égi cl .,_ I -4 maansleu vulserltylllll “WMV tion.endt.heeoiira|\teooutilill_iill ia¢prciucticucniwum'ii¢iAi~ lightful pictures which itll! eh-.nmmn |atsmihlicillV . Australian it 5; ,ii i is :ii If YIANI IIIGI tions of the stars which compose iz 4° 11°* GGBUOY the cruclform ngu" 'ri-is LAND we Love wc... mn... 1...... .... 1... 1...' _illrandsteered byghg Q,-"gn", °° Nl wvm w scbcric out cm- ltellltifm lievcr dippgg mm th. watersofthe Aegean asltcirclod axQ~ what are our current wheat 3,", bmw", 2:1” it: ports? . nw* A. Value of exports. ol wheat aging, l°"‘°" W5". ircmouaac :cr uicarcccigbzlwmada ““"°’;: montluoftiiecurraatyearmded __ 'mmm ucrcbsi, mo, mum ummm cb'iucr,¢m,bfcbcuns0.000'.000cv¢r.r lsht months under review were val- tb0_o0rre`spo{iidipg'plfi0dih\!ilpl\° lied IBMCJILM llpdlilialidwltli § 2 E 5 $ rs it § E' E Britkh Isles wal MI.4\‘l.UI for the corresponding 8i14.l4l,- period cf the piroedlng ¢h!s.uacuu’i an an _aio.m.u'1. wi cum gs iii iie . l 1 r s _ gions further north it never sets. it happens that the north celestial pole at present is very near the rather . .) Y \"_ ;\ rn, *ty `.\ i` My-, Whethesyouhcldyourpdl ' at an angle or straight-bp ‘tween fingers or between finger and t.hun'ib-limiting' e e nit makes no dilereuce. _ Waterman's have a pen- polnt andapen to ault every penrnan....andbci;h are guaranteed to give persian- ent writing satisfaction. Aakyourdealertoletycutry Waternmrfe No. 7 poup of seven pensat $7.00, Theocr- rectpen-polfitforyouietherel \\;\v _ "" °:1'°~ é{.\\§\\ "'>i -isle r / , yi -~ r \ 1 lei, “wer W o° 700 iUsc Waferman’s Inky , » & €l`II`l5lfS r Sonics and ealocrilori at .ZW Qnsdlsn Ilamhsnts. ' B _---~--~-----~ -~- -- --_ - ~ --____ 7h. ~ LIGHTNING ' Already this year lightning has taken its toil of life and property. ~ 4 NOW is the time to arrange adequate , fire insurance protection. Rates and full information furnished withoutobli- gation. Consult - Hyndman £9’ Clo.,'»pI.‘ i .The Oldcstf Insurance Agency in P. E I. 1 Offices, Bower* 'Queen St., Charlottetown S. M. HICKS, District Agent, Suinmers” ' I- E- BURDEDL Fire Agent, Montaguf conspicuous star Polaris, which serves as a guiding sign to travellers by land, sea and air; but Ulysses had no north star to steer by, nor will mariners a few thousand years hangs, Wlien 12,000 years have passed, how. ever, there will be a north star of greater brilliance than P015;-ig, th0U§h not quite so near the pole. The Star is Vera. one ci thc brightest NOW TASTE THE ' SWEET FRESH FLAVOH =F BRAHMIN TEA scia only in Rea, Hygicuic. Amiga: Puciuigcc - gems that sparkle in the northern sky. f The slow wabbiing of th; ¢u»¢_1; causes a gradual westward movg- ment oi the equlnoctial points-the points where the sun cr-ogg" gh; celestial equator in March and ggp. teniber. Centuries ago, when the zodiacal constellations were named, they coincided roughly with thc 8 twelve signs of the zodiac, but _,um swamps, bush country. and across is 0° looser the case. when the elmwacs ser, about march 21, -'sun enters Aries and spring hogmgj' th” mem “N M811 of Aries and not the constellation. 'I‘he sun at ehgt. time is actually in ping, me mx, constellation toward the west. only when eleven more months of th; Great Year have rolled by win _:mm the constellation and ‘Ari¢glctios a is,ooo-uni. bimrg tour A. de A. Lima recently arrivgd “i U°b°n- Pvrtiini. Hb mrica mm 1-°*“4e. Pwtiiseso was Africa, in M\1‘°h.,193'l. on a lone bicycle tour to . 30181811 Congo. the Budan and Esyllt. he traversed Syria and Tur- k . by way of Grecee, through the wiids of Belgium, France and Spain to Portu- d never gave any trouble, he says. Conservative, Liberal and Bacialis; pariias of Bigland have agreed that election candidates ` will decline reply to questionnaires or to receive deputatioris except from electors iff their districts. _ Z hishomeiand Riding through inc ey into Europe He then traveled Albania, then by Jugoaiavia, Italy, *O-0000#-6§§§9 t al. Although his routo lay through Q-vafooo-4 HOW TO KEEP WELL eserte and mountains his machine M Keeps You __ V Internally Fit! _ __,_,_,,, wamrunus y ,,‘;_',';',;',;::,{2 GRAPE SALTS rs is a iraccpiiucn ¢u¢..~..niabriccua_. Ill! stlr loaspnonggl GRAPE SAITTS water every meals-Infact any leolb|licaa.Yoa will msg E 5 er; §E|. mornin; thapifaelplseflliflelihak eaneetleaofthehaiaaa arub- holy-ehsllwehlcagglklii istllelreatlesl of eemstllll' PLIASANT, HIALTBPUL all LNVlU0l|»A'l'|NG, Mowrmm glioail always carry g bottle el ALT' Ill "Ulf Cir Inj ggy. ms of sedentary keep me en wonderful sid nmlsrlori all invaluable fer Ill with faulty lI»lllNA'l'!0ll, LIVII 00lll'l»All'|', IIC. -c»».»»."°’