Y P AGF FOUR iiiiia GIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ; PlIddub-W. Cheater l. hlcLure. ' ticcreliny—l.leut. Col. D. Idltnr 1nd Manager-J. R. Burnett. .-————- ‘ “.50 per your tln nilvnnre) ‘,' Morning Daily (founded I887) $5.00 per year (In advance) delivered. mailed Tlee-Prellclent-J. R. Burnett. A. Llucliinnon, l). b. 0. " Aunt-Into Editor-l). K. Currie. In (‘nnnrln and (‘niteii Sfntel. SATURDAY. JUNE 21, 1930 i The Prime Zllinisterb Visit , __._. Irrespective of party affiliations but citizensvvill extend a courteous welcome to the m. Hon. W. L. Mac- kenzie Kinrr, Prim!‘ Minister of Can- ada, whose addresses at Suinmcrsidt‘ this afternoon and at Charlottetovi n ' this evening will open the speech- _ .' i making campriizn in this Province. Mr. King i: zi pleasing and fluent or- ator. and ma): be cxpccicrl to prcscnti the case fwr hi5 Government in the; moct plausible. wriv. Of course, his Iifriritin-ie tour atould i p haie Lean more cheering: to PTPllllGP‘ . King had the restilt of the New" Brunswick elections been lea unfav- orable to his partv prnvincially‘. The per-pie of ‘Nruv Brunsivick ideritly determined to Leach him a: lesson with regard to his refusal to.‘ recognize the claims of provinces were ev - ldmmi cred hv "Torv fini-eru-i menus." and ‘HEW arcorrlinzly rctiirri- , , i >“ -. ed the Baxtrr administration with an overwhelming maiority. Evidently: too. Alberta is not lif- Eecfed by PTPTHIPT Kiriir‘! assurances of what he had done and ivns furth- er prepared to do for thedvestern Provinces. i get-rainy.- the people of Prince Er‘.- warri Island have not bcncfitcri to any extent, 1f at all, hy havinz two . Liberal C-oremmenh "in line." For all y‘ the regard that the Prime Minister ' . ' has shown to the 5"‘€f‘lflf claims of . Q11; Province we might better have had a provincial Conservative admin- ’ lstration. Sound Anrl Fury At the close of Mr. Mackenzie Y i inc the destruction m‘ Canadian agri- irecoril are discredited, when Cana- our live stock industry. And what said Mr. King? For eight years he went on doinz nothing. scoffing at those‘ who demanded lust rcprisals, witness- culture ivhil= hc brircaincd with this. that and the othrr croup to retain of- fice and power. We must not, he whispered, provoke the United States. ’ After lllhl’ years ihathzive brought fail- Whzit is the position now? urc, at a time ivhbn his policies and are idle. and men dirm factories acriculture walking the streets Jobless and existing by char- ity, Mr. King, seeking another lease of office, asks the Canadian people to let him do the things that he scoffed at and derided for more than a decade, when scoffing and derision meant- povver. That is the position. depressed. Tt. is hts own rrcorrl that gives con- firlcnce that for Mr. King. thcse days. the sands are running out. Lincoln's immortal dictum that you can't fool ell the people all the time is still true, and lhPFP are indications that at last, nftcr ciirht years of log-roll- ing and caballinz, of muddle and miasma, this country is once more turninc to the party which, whatever its mistakcs. has at least. kcpt faith, has at least been true to the principle of democracy that unless parties and governments keep faith with the ria- tion. representative gzovemment, be- comes a mockery and a sham. A Stirring Appeal A tolling passage of Mr. Bennett's \V.2'll’ll]'l€§ speech was that in wh.ch the appealed to his hearers to have King's tivo hour, twenty-thotisarid- word marathon n: l-lrantford Monday night. savs the OTUHVIL Journal, we thought of a story about Lorll Bir- kenhead. Birkenhead. in his younger days. found himself in-cour‘ with a legal opponent nntm-i for his brirrcn verbosity. For more than two hours this rhetorical ccnilemari wont on in copious rllsrrcard of time, placc, or subject. vlhcn m. last no srif. down, Birkenhead carefully Fig-a‘. his glasses, obscrvcd tn the .1116?" 511 his blantlcst tone “NIX Tffil- T931°"-" mg m» examplp of my loarncrl friend, I silhmlt. the case ivithout. ar- fl PCS“. gument." For Mr, King's speech was an ex- traordinary example of the. use ihfli can ‘M. made of words to cypress nothing in particular. The philoso- pher who said that. there couldn't be thunder without. llzhtninz. listened h. Premier Kma. the Minister of C1nafi8, on the never listr-ncrl to those lontz. crash- ing periods which. not. unpleasant to the ear. ‘iinflle all nnwlrlsis. For exact.- ly one hour Mr. Kim: discuaccri~ what? H“ talked thiutts fmfi 1851195 HPVPT Prime radio. ivhich, whatevcr their rcl:vanc_i' iivc or six years ago. have no more r!‘- lation t0 the issues of this campaign than thc financcs of Haiti. The Robb budget, the Canadian National Rail- way‘! inception, the question of war financing, the matter of the sales and income tax; these tlunai “'61”? issues in i925 and 1926, hut vihat. iri faith in Canada and to join with him in thc adoption of n consiritctivc , p91,“,- wmch ‘m “mm a “m, andi tion that. subordinates country either i constitutionally or economically to industrious pcoplc to realize cn thcir. the powerful American Republic; t The‘ Untod States lwrn- 1 od a Ions: Lmc aco that to hccoizic, a great. nation it must first look to itself. It therefore began to lmilrli up its home markets by keeping nut? the zoork of other Ffllllliflrs, Thcie ' ivns n timo when forcizn countries hzdtbwwavliawevmfodfieibeste the hurt of American industry. "Look at it now. marching to ilic slogan of America First. It rlcvclopcd its industries and its natural resources, encouraged and protected its agriculture. so that out of n slow-beginning it hris rzrovm to those gigantic propor- tions where, if the countries af- fcctcd do not. trike action, its strength will overflow its bor- ders m‘! h'it'lc lllffl th." olhci‘ countrirs it is its avowed purpose" ihfillFlflflill’ to subdue. That. is the story of thc Unitcri Stair-s Ii. horl the start. of its. Today it l". more yioivcrful lhrin we, hut. un- lcss ivr- are content to hocnme it; cconomic \'$‘l$)~'-.'l], ivc must do as it did. we must fitzht for our own." next-door. Mr. Bennett. procccdcd: “Givcn an cven chance. an equal opportunity’. you Clint‘! but win throuilh. In war you were uncrnqucrablc, in pcacc you wear the yictor‘: CVOWH. Stiud itzeilicr ~-. _'\ll did .1: l u‘ the world's tribulations. Endurc if necrl he, some filliilflVflnlflflfi now for a crcai. ndvantmic soon to cnmc. Fnrtify your knnwlcdflf‘ that. you are. helping to build Canada int.o a nation the like of which there is no record in his- tory." This moviniz appeal to’ national pride and ambition aroused the. Win- . ’ Heaven's name. have they to do with i V In election in i930? Mr. Kins: spcnt much time in an u endeavor to show that hc had bcnn audience for that matter, to a ',r-.~.'.‘. Cm" nnuntms Wm exercm the same 10m! thinkinz of mectlnf! {W331 Fl?" _. , . gression v Dunning budget, was no dcnth-bcd repentance. Is that true? If it is true‘. how comes it that tha Mini-“KPP "f Finance. Mr. Dunning, declared in Weswrn Canada less than a veer w‘ mnnuhes on agricultural products would ruin the. farming industry’? funhgf; if what Mr. Kim! now says be right, vvhnt. has his Government been doinz these cw "is?" m"! aggression from washinflifm is not a new thing. It has been 11°- mg ever since th! F°Ydfl°l"M°' i _ gumbcr tariff. passed in 19oz. ‘Phili- l i tariff, one of the 1118M" l" m’ wm-id, struck a deadly blow at. Can- ada‘: farm export-s to the States. It t m,’ o“ mo” exports, git them off i... g...“ of millfonl, all but. mined rich natural hcritarc. He minted to‘ THE CHARLOTTI-TTOWN GUARDIAN Notes BLT/... Way‘ Nearly every year, says the Hali- fax Chronicle "almost buried in gov- ernment. statistics there crops up a simple statement in cold unmeaning type, marked "conscience money." be- hind which lies some story of long fighting with conscience and the gov- ernment statement hears witness that conscience has won. For examlll? in Public Accounts of 192'! there is the item "Conscience money $1.00?‘ in i028 “Conscience money $500." and in ‘.929 "Conscience money $80." These monies come back to the treasury usually without any name.| with a simple statement that it is" \~___ i ....¢.. _. > _ 1.. “‘ M0115: a; .1 0v n11 nu AHLVXK] “w.- sccurccl, and its return marks not the fear of any physical process of the law, but the making: of peace with a troubled conscience, whose writ runs everywhere. Noting that few candidates are capable of making more‘than one outstanding speech during a cam- palgn. the Toronto lvfall and Empire suggests that "too many of them re- quire second speech to explain that. what they appeared to say in the first speech, they did not, as a mat- ter of fact, say at all." The Hon. R. B. Bennett is at least to be credited with defmiteness on- every point he touches. Referring to his opening speech at Winnipeg. the Vancouver Star says: "Mr. Bennett stated his principles in the most def- inite terms. Thcre was no ambiguity about his language," The Liberal Press and Liberal Pol- iticians are making the boast that Canadians are wasting heel: from the United states. lured by the pros- perity now oierspreading Cosme, as a result of the wisdom and fore- sight nf the MacKenzie King Gov- ernment. Yes! They are coming back. Over tlirre thousand Canadians were deport/rd from the United States during the month of April last be- cause the. positions in which they were engaged were wanted by Am- ericans. They are coming back to swell the ranks of the unemployed in Canada. The Liberal boast about this return of exiled Canadians is only a part of the camouflage Lib- eral campaign riow in progress from the Atlantic to the Pacific. .“Th:\t man is the best Britisher said the Hon. R. B. Bennett, “that loves Canada most. and any legisla- any other country. whether it. be within or without. the British 27m- pire, is bad legislation.“ As reported in l-lansard, the Hon. R. B. Bennett dealing with the Duri- ning Budget said: I am for the Brit- ish Empire next to Canada. the only difference hcinz ~that some gentle- men are for the United States be- fore Canada. I am for the British c5 ‘Eris w. c: :2:- this question to the Minister of Fin- ance and let me put it. also to the unemployed walking the streets today. If wc buy steel in Pittsburgh and those men are deprived of employ- ment; if we now shift the buying of steel to another country what boots it, twhrit benefits it) the unemployed? If this country has attained equality of status with respect. to constitutional matters, this country stands to main- tain its economic life as against the ivorlcl. What. is more, the develop- mcnt cf the British Empire lies in ' tlv» development. cf each unit com- prlsiric the Empire. With rcspcc‘. tn the countervail- int: duty fcaturo of the so-called Dunninr! Ludrzct the ineffectiveness and the impractical working nf the measure is not hard to understand. As regards the futility it is obvious l..'i anjvohe that. in commodities which we export. heavily our imports cannot be ccnsldcrriblc. In the practical working out. of the measure we m- come at. once ridiculous. The Sultan of Turkey the. President of France and more particularly the President of the United States will from day to‘ day make the tariff for Canada] acainst rzoods from their respective nlpcc nudicncc, and the. vast. radio rpm. or enthusiasm. If Mr. Bennett f rn Washington that tbei Continues i" mm” mi‘ 5°“ (‘I "imech l6 items in our countcrvaillng duties. ro . i all across the country there should hcl i little doubt about the outcomey)! thf‘ vote at the. end of Jilly. Editorial Notes ‘There is no reason to l-ielieve the Patriot desires to prohibit the furth- er sale of Dr. Drummonds Habitflh! Poems. and tn lntcrdict Mr. D. Edszar Shaw from reciting them in WIWC- during the election. New Brunswick is the first answer to Premier King's "Not a rm Cent." piece to a provincial Tory Govern- ment. The Provinces are not to be dictated to by a would-be Canadian Mtllsqlipi. Blbylfllllodvlhtll! countries. The rullnf! authority ln power by reducing their duty "n the How that ‘factor affects Canadal may be understood when it ls realized that the President of the United States under authority "I C°n8T°55 may raise nr lower the tariff 50 per rent. over night on any of the sche- dules of that. country, and thereby automatically lower or rain lb‘! Canadian tariff. In other words. W! transfer the making of our tariff to Wmhington. ‘There are says the London Satur- day Review, faint but. unmistakable signs of a revulsion against the new style of war books which have been all the rage for a year PM?» "Th" h as it should be. for they were neither great literature nor true to life l! I .-ui-_-_ 0n me whole they W91‘! "i141 "I. THE OPENING GUN The following trenchant editorial i reprinted from The Montreal Star:- The rousing receptionaccorded the Hon. R. B. Ben- nett last night in Winnipeg may be taken as fairly indi- cative 0f the trend of public opinion as the campaign opens, even in the hitherto almost. solidly Liberal-Pro- gressive West. Mr. Bennett was clearly not in any “ene- my’s country." He was surrounded by a huge audience which cheered him again and again as he pilloried the King Government for its betrayal of historic Liberal prin- ciples and as he gave pledges for Conservative perform- ances if his party is returned to power. His address was a mas-terry revfew oi’ the policies of his party. It contained no last-minute sensations. but it presented n program of promised "achievement which must give new life to the rising hopes of our people who admittedly have dwelt for some time in what may fairly he termed “the doldrums.” Undoubtedly, Canada ha of late lost. step with progress. Whatever the causes, she has not recently made the headway on the high-road ofsuc- cess which was rightfully to be expected and which we had grown accustomed to regarding as a settled habit. Her industries have been running on half-time; her wages have been lowered; her wage-earners have been out of work; unemployment has shadowed hercities and burden- ed her charities; the drain on her youth and energy has increased. Under our system of alternative party government, there is no way in which the party in power can escape responsibility for this condition of things. The people have no other means of punishing neglect or even mere stupid- ity than by turning out the set of politicians who have permitted this tragedy to happen. It is not enough for a Government to say that it has done no wrong. A Gov- ernment, to deserve the confidence of a nation, must act- ively lead it toward successful achievement, must break down barriers that cripple and confine its trade. must build up beneficial enterprises at home, must staunch such bleeding wounds as “the exodus” and extirpate such cancerous growths as unemployment. These things. the present Liberal Government by universal consent have not done. The first principle of resposible government, therefore, is to “turn them out." Mr. Bcnnetfs address was not only a succession of pledges that he could and would cure these ills, but itcon- iained as well a number of the methods by which he pro- posed io work this cure. Standing up in the Western Capital of Winnipeg-where Protection is supposed to be anathema-he presented as the first plank in his platform Protection; Protection not only of industries but of our natural resources, our agriculture and our consumers against exploitation. He might well have added a special clause pledging his Government to the protection of the wage-earner, . guaranteeing him not only a job and a wage, but as good a job and as good a wage as he could possibly hope to get in the United States. It is a comfort at. any rate f0 find a man who says in Winnipeg what he might he expected to say in Montreal. Such a man and such an address leave no room for sec- tional appeals and Janus faced policies. The country may or may not accept his policies, but they will know at. all events what they are. This is in sharp contrast to a party which changes its fiscal clothes on the eve of an election- which permits New Zealand butter to bring our dairies to the brink of ruin and then recanis on its death-bed- which caters for local votes by adopting regional Protec- tion-which pays no attention f0 the sufferings of Quebec industries because it thinks thatit has Quebec in its polit- ical pocket. _ 7:1 the autumn an Economic Conference of the Em- pire will be held in London. The coming electionsyvil] ' decide what stripe of delegates we will send to represent us at that Conference. If the present. Ministers go, they will carry with them, it. is to be presumed, some such policy as that contained in the Dunning Budget. That policy is very simple. It is to masquerade a Free Trade tendency under the-guise of a free and-as between the two nations-an undiscussed extension of the British preference. They will ask nothing in return. for the very‘ good reason that they do not conceive of themselves as giving anything to Great Britain. What they are doing IS to fire on our already crippled Canadian industries from under-not the white flag-but the British flag. If Conservative Ministers go to represent us in Lon- don. they will g0 frankly with an ofier to trade conces- sion for concession-to get something for Canada in ex- change for something for Great Britain and possiblv other parts of the Empire-in short, to sit down in l. ' the soda fountain. the tea rooms, the Sirs, if the truth must needs be told, We love not you that rail and scold; And yet, my masters, you may waif. Till the Greek Calends for our hate. No spendthrifts of our hate are we; Our hate is used with husbandry. We hold our hate too choice a thing For light and careless lavishing. We cannot, dare not. make it. cheap! For holy uses will we keep l ‘ i! young ladies who liked being shock- ed by stories of strap? drink and Q‘ ‘Wm n! have“ 3h”, by mp0; lamina at secondhand." Iiusiness way rind make n business bargain ivhicli will he helpful all round- but ruinous to no Canadian enterprise. The Conservatives will build on long-established princi- ples. They are for a perpetual Imperial unity. They want t0 create a fiscal basis for that unity. But thev well know that they will be building on sand if they wantonlv slaughter or circumscrihe any Canadian enterprise for the alleged purpose of increasing British imports. _ No more important decision will be made by the Can- adian people at the general elections than their choice between these two policies. They must decide whether they will be represented at this great gathering of the Empire b)’ men who wear the British preference as a mask or by men who regard it asiegiiimate building material that can be cemented into the fabric of a solid and econo- mically sound British fiscal confederacy. A thing so pure. a thing so great. As Heaven's benignant gift of hate. Is there nn ancient. sceptred Wrong? No torturing Power, endured too long? Yea: and for these our hatred shall Be cloistered and kept virgii-ial. -William Watson. ' This poem _on National Hate was War. Ti-ie tmo we LOVE I1 FIB“ LEG“ '-_-__-__w___._ IDWAID BLAKE .A. Theimne of ldwnrdkpiah piflilished five years before the‘ B) Illllll W. Borhn. MD. TWO MFALB l DAY I had a patient once who told me he got along nicely with’ twmmcals a. day. ‘Of course, ‘he said‘ I eat a little fruit at night ' before retiring-mer- liaps a dozen oranges, or half a doz- en bananas. This was his idea of a little fruit. An acquaintance who was getting extremely heavy told me one day that ' he never ate any lunch, hadn't eaten I any for years, and was unable to ac- ‘ count for his overweight. _ On three ooasions I saw him get- ting a little ‘snack’ at lunch time. which consisted of two chocolate eclairs and three glasses of milk. i Now that isn't a real heavy lunch,‘ but if you were to count the number . of calories or food units in that meal it would run into the hundreds. ' I I believe that one of the reasons; for overweight in many individuals is that. because they restrict themselves i t0 two meals. they eat a great amount i of foodat these two meals, Ol‘ Whflt; happens almost as often is that be-i because‘ they eat only two regular; meals a day they feel justified in eating a snack of something about l1 dclock in the morning, 4 o'clock in the afternoon, or before Boihg to bed. i On every side are places of freshment of one kind or another- ice cream parlor and other places. Now if they were to reckon up. what they eat at these places by counting the calories, they would find that they had actually consumed as much food as they would eat at any one meal. Some one working on the calorie‘ count of the food in these shops has i estimated that. a glass of milk is nearly 200 calories. a serving o! icei cream 500 calories, a pint of chocolate n-iilkshake about 500 calories, a choc- olate bar 400 calories, and so forth. Now when you remember that the , average adult only needs 2000 to 3000 calories in a day (unless he is a lab- oring man) you can readily see how easy it, would be to take on 800 to 800 ‘ calories-equal to one meal-without 3 even thinking about it. I've no fault to find with young-, sters eating extra food at ll a. m. and 4 p. m., if it does not spoil their ap- ' petite. A growing child needs more food in proportion to his age than an l adult. He needs food for energy thel same as an adult, but he also needs food for growth. The thought then is that lf you are | l working on the two meals a day idea, that. you cut out all ‘extras’ if you , want results. These extras may easily | have the same food values as a meal. stands out prominently among the leading Canadian statesmen of the‘ Confederation period, as a lawyer and a parliamentarian. tHe was first a member of the Ontario Legislature and Premier in 11311-72, and there- after from 1867 to 1891, a member of the Dominion House of Commons. becoming a membe of the Macken- zie Government in 1873, and servxig thereafter as minister of Justice and President of the Council, and from i 1878 to 1887, leader of the Liberal | opposition‘ in the House of Commons. In 1892 he went to Ireland where he I was elected a member of the British i House of Commons as a warm sup- porter of home rule. He died 1n i012 at the age of 79. What Gray Wrote (New York Times) _An interesting editorial in the Times,‘ of April 2'1. On the Tip of the Tongue. dealing ivi;h the difficulty of quoting accurately from memory, took as its starting point the ninth stanza of Gray's Elegy. o! Whifih i‘. The punm. mil-mi; effects of nun-burn Anny be greatly lessened by applying Mac’s Witch Hazel Cream This preparation has a sooth- lfll. Mnllnl eflectflelving the akin loft Ind white. A: a ... faction against um. burn it In unequalled, merely apply the cream to the Qxpoufl Pith of the body before loin; In bflhlfll and the fun of llm burn can b: forgotton, Pr!“ only 35c m mun. The Two Macs DRUGSTORE 149 Great George gum re- ' S.A. McDonaldb K Individual Exeutors 8 Trustee; (lie, but-we go on for ever YOUR estate. whether limp]: or varied in character, will be economically. tfidfiflfly. Ind re , “ ‘y ndmininercd ifynu appoint the Eastern Trust C wmpuy u your execute-r o: trustee. " . ‘ll! EASTERN T RUST CflilPhNi Head Oflice; HALIFAX, N s, '_i'~""ii;fi”.a.i‘.;‘l-at d ll, UISHETT. Mai-up" (‘lmrluttemivn llraiiru Q .___ _ ____ __i________ . \ Friday and Saturday SPECIALS ._AT_ Ladies’ Novelty Hand bags. Special. Each . . .. . 69c Special Line of Ladies‘ Silk Gloves. Pair . .. .. .. $1.39 , Pongee. Yard . . . . . . . . . Valencia, Special. Yard $1.79 '. BaronessSatimYard . . . . . . . . . Tweed, special at half price, 54 in. wide. Rayon, special. Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69c Rayon, 36 incii, special at, yard .. . . . . .. 49c Rayon, 33 inch, special zit- Yard . . . . .. . 29c and 39c Gingham, 32 inch special at Yard .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22c t‘ Lacy Mohair Hats, each 54.49 < Hats-special at. each $2.98 Children's Hats, each Baby’s Bonnets,each............ . . . . .. ...98c Crepe dc Chene Shirts, special at, each . .75 Silk BloomersPair..-...,............... ......G9c u Lace Trim Silk Bloomers, pair . 89c Dimity Gowns, each . . . . . Ladies’ Coataeach . . . . . . . . Odd Line of Dresses Eacli . . . . . . .; . . . . . . . . . . . .. $3.69 25 Young Men’s Suits, ass't tweeds. Special at each 810. 32 Men’s Standard Models- ass’d patterns, special at $15 25 Boy's Short and Long Pant Suits at $3.75 to $12.00 50 pairs Men’s Odd Pants. real value, pair . . . . .. $2.75 15 Men’s Single and Double Breasted Blue Worsted i $1.00 . Suits. Special price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22.50 Work Shirts. special at. each 98c '3 Men's Hose. pair . . . . . . . . . . "’-‘ Men’s Hosedi pairfor 51.00 ~ Men’s Braces 39c " Tiesflfor.................... .. . . . . . ..75c ‘ SuitCases.....~............. .. ..$l.50 Club . . . . . . . .. .. .$1.65 BASEMENT BA it Voile, yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29c ‘t Men’s Dress Shirts, each , , , , , _ _ __ 89¢ s; Ladies Hats, each . . . . . . . ... . . . .. ..- Meifs Hcse Pair I Men's Work Shirts. Each .. . . . . .. B Children's Hose. pair 24c "' Ladies Cotton Vests, each 24c i BQVS JPPSG)’ Sweaters. each . . . . . .. 98c " lifisses Dresses- each . . . . . . . . . ........... . .- . . . . .. 98c l Table Cilcfoth. many new dggigns, y-ard _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ _ 39¢ I u a ii P.QV'O4 i_—_i‘ raOCQQOOOTUQOQOOO ‘i- w 1 To get the veal refreshing ‘flavor of tea z O 1 TR Y § B R A H MIN t : . . . . i , sold (lnly in Red Airtight Packages g , oo-ooowoooooo-ooooorooonoaoooowomooo-oqooooo-A-o-o-A-o-sa printed the third line as "Jiivzit alike th’ lnevitzbla httur.“ The line is fro. quenily so printed, but the correct P98511118 is "awa.ts,“ not “await? A &._____.» 'M—Pi" vii-ice one that, a writer so careful 8nd precise as Gray could not have writ- ten "await," with the first two ill!!! manuscript copy in Gray's own hand. w‘ (jgnflnugfl on Page l4 on exhibition in the Bri -h museum . -f anrl published by the mu. .um in fac- simile, plainly reads "3\\'3.l3." “Tlf inevitable hour" is “awaits? the first tivo llnzs give its‘ object. A little reflection will con- -__-. l the A subject o.’ i Delmay’s Vitalene French Hair ' Tonic An.- I! every woman who has bu! benefited by Vltalene "l" Ionic would tell her MI!!!” what in has done far hcr- ii would be even in Ff-‘lm’ d" hllllll than over- B"! l “Tma” ll perfectly right. not to tell her little beauty secrete. fire attacks a dwelling m Canada Do you know vrlzat time yours will be visited? However if you vcLll accept nu: recommendation f0" ‘d’! not be dhlppointed. vitalezie Hair Tonic make: the lu-lr a‘; and glossy. nflmplnfu I" u ohm! hair and makes old 1"‘ BC Prepared! healthy. atop: falling heir Ill n I. ' Insure Now "nzugg: w.“ wm-i nm um skillet ffifl": you want flul l" "m" m‘ m iii-tom trio-h" ‘w E. A. Foster csivraai. nae-a 51'0" BYNDMAN it 00-. LTD. Lows: Queen Street Charlottetown ____-.__ 217ml TH! CANADIAN Fill tteuunarzc: cewraer/ §,,..--.. . >vQ<§>CQ‘P?§~3l&~>Q§.§v_¢v¢—~ -v-|. -