i» easiest- q-Ql\>1»»-o_-A- - flvw-.--s<.-..j-;- §< . '.§,;:_-.£$T” ” r GIIMILUTTETIIII E Illllllllll lea-lung Dolly lhurulvl In llfll Incident. Hus-Col. W. Obamr I. IILIII y“. factions, .|. l Burnett, I. J. l_ llllotarmblenl-fflolllLlulhnbglll-D- ldlhandllmaglngblreeoorl.l.lurletl.l.l.l Annotate ldllol- Plumb Willi BUBSORIPTIDN I-ATII ‘$1.00 per year (In ulunm delivered lo 0N MM per year (In advance) mailed to P. I. Illnul ll-N pet yfl-I (In advance) mulled to Oallllllllll Member: null! Bureau of Circulation: “The Strongest Memory la Weaker HIM the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY. NOYEMBEB u» 1930. Fire Equipment And Protection The Guardian's attention has been drawn by a rural correspondent to the complaint that neither Charlottetown nor Summerside respond- ed to the call to send help from the fire depart- ments on the occasion of the recent outbreak of fire at Bradalbane. The explanation is that this is contrary to regulations, for the reason that during the absence of firemen and equipment a serious fire, or fires, might break out at home. In the present instance the Mayor was not ap- praised of the request for the, services of the Charlottetown fircmcn and apparatus, although a communication was received by the fire de- partment, which had no authority to take action. The upkeep of the Charlottetown and Sum- merside fire departments rests, of course, on the taxpayers of the two County Capitals. £01’ whose sole protection they exist. Calls for as- sistance from nearby rural communities have, on occasion, been responded to, but only on direct instructions from the Mayor, who must take responsibility for over-riding the standing regulations. And this responsibility is a grave one. For example the pumpcr with which the Charlotte- town dcprlrtment is provided, and which cost $15,500, is practically the only equipment that would be serviceable in fighting a. bad fire. lts trarsport to Brzldalbzme would have taken some forty minutes, and its absence from the citv for several hours would have hopelessly crippled thewlcpartment if it became necessary to cope with an emergency in Charlottetown. In the case of Snmmerside the equipment is a steam pumper, which would be of little use even if it had been taken to Bradalbane. Another factor to be noted is that from the standpoint of insurance underwriters, both Charlottetown and Summerside, with all their available apparatus, are under-equipped for fire-fighting purposes at home. Fire rates are based on the amonh: of protection afforded by the men and equipmént available at all times of the day or night. Reduction of this protection in response to outside calls, however urgent, has therefore an important bearing on the insurance question and the contracts entered into with the underwriters. This explanation is given in the hope of clearing up :.ny misunderstanding that may ex- ist in rural sections as to the attitude of the (Tharlottetown and Summerside councils and fire departments in cases of emergency out-of- town calls. It is not an attitude of indifference, but of responsibility to their own very impor- tant dutics and obligations to their employers, the civic taxpayers. Every community that can afford to do so would be well advised to install a pumper for local fire protection. This has already been done by Mount Stewart, Souris, Montague, Kensington, and Borden, with beneficial re- sults. Failing pnmpcr facilities, chemical engines are serviceable as first aids, though of little use in coping with a. fire which has gained headway. The Wisdom Of A Tinker In a letter of the Red Cross Society of which he is honorary secretary Mr. F. D. L. Smith writes: The war in which the British Empire and its allies are engaged is at base a religious war, a war of high ideals against lo\v ideals, of free- clom against tyrannical aggression. Long ago, John Bunyan wrote in his Holy \Var: “For here lay the excellent wisdom of him that built Man- soul, that the walls could never be broken down nor hurt by the most mighty adverse potcntate tmlcss the townsmrn gave consent thereto." l/Vith this sentence as his inspiration and text Kipling wrote in 1917: A tinker out 0f Beclford, A vagrant oft in quod, A private under Fair-fax, A minister of God — Two hundred years and thirty Ere Armageddon came His single hand portrlyed it, And Bunyan Ill hll panel "Alansotil" was of course, the Soul of Man, and it is for the frccdom of that soul that the British limpirc is in this conflict. In this war our (Tommianvczlllh of Frcc Nations, together with France, and enjoying the sympathy of all other democratic nations. is standing up against a regime of violence, rapilic, atheism and pagan- ism which has lrrnnplt-il small nations underfoot. It is worth while remembering that for cen- turies (lrcat Ilrilain and the British Empire have hccn the main secular instrument in the extension of civil and religions liberty, human freedom, pi-tcc and justice and mercy unto thc ends of the earth. Practically all of the free governments in the world today originally drew their inspiration f1"in1 the ancient Parliament at “cstminstcr, linglnnil has been called the "source of swcctncs and light." The great majority of the religious and humanitarian or- ganizations cipcrziting over the face of the world had their origin in the British Isles. Florence Nightingale, herself thc forerunner of the Red Cross, was an Englislnvomnn. Back Again bfajor-General C. F. Constantine is to return tn his post as officercommanding Military Dis- lrict No. 6, which comprises Nova Smile and Prince Iidwarrl Island. ~ _ _ "This," says the Halifax (Thromclc, “is one of Canada’: most important military districts at the present time; by many standards it is the moat important. glance at the map’ shows how these. provinces jut out in the Atlantic as d rampart defending all Canada. This is the, dis- trict which Major-General Constantine is to command. The.people of this district will re- ‘ joice that this latest transfer has worked so well. Any change would prompt some speculation as to the ability of the new commander. But Major- been here before. The people of this district remember him as an efficient officer. They look for orderly administration from his direction‘ Brigadier H. E. Boak moves to Kingston, Ont., as officer commanding Military District No. 3. The brigadier has made a large number of friends during his command in this district and their best wishes will accompany him to his new command." . u.’ =5 EDITORIAL NOTES e: Enough snow to remind us that soon out- door work will be at an end for the season. l‘ F U I ' John Knox died this date, 1572. "I have learned to call wickedness by its own name: a fig a fig; and a spade a spade." i l i I Evidently the people in Prince do not relish the prospect of Senator John Sinclair being en- trusted with the patronage monopoly, not only of Queens and Kings but Prince as well. w w w w Two openings of legislatures are booked for January. The Federal Parliament on January 18th and Ontario on the previous \Vednesday 10th. w w w Some people make a hobby of collecting stamps, others old china, but there is a man down in Ohio who specializes in old horse shoes, viz., Mr. Edward H. Clncker, who worked as a racehorse “swipe" when a boy. He has a collection of more than 1,500 horseshoes —— and says he can produce one from every well-known American horse. Among his collection are shoes from Twenty Grand, Cavalcade, Man 0' War, Greyhound and Tony, the movie horse. - w w w w I Large convoys—some of them as many as sixty ships-have been escorted across the At- lantic from Canada by a single capital ship and destroyers or other escort vessels. The normal procedure in convoy work of this character is for one or more large, heavily armed surface units to escort the convoy until it is near its destination where there is less danger from a surface raider. The large man-of-ivar then usually leaves the convoy, which is strengthened by destroyer and aircraft protection against the danger of submarine and air attack, which in- creases as the convoy steams into the war zone. w w w 1i Reluctance of many Canadian manufacturers to engage in new lines of production for the Government has resulted in a proposal that the Government finance machines and tools. Com- panies which emerged from the last war with little to show for their efforts are believed this time to have suggested that the Government pro- vide for equipment and give them a reasonable profit for supervising production. The Bren Gun enquiry and some suggestions of “profiteer- ing" are understood to have had an influence on this view on the part of industry. Bruce Stewart and Co., should make note of this movement at Ottawa. 18101101101 The Spanish government has restored to the Spanish clergy the payment of incomes by the State, a practice put into effect by the Vatican concordat of I851 and suspended by the Span- ish Republic after the revolution of I931. ln addition to the 62,000,000 pesetas fixed by the 1851 concordat as the State's annual appropria- tion to the clergy, this'nc\v decree appropriated additional funds to repair damage done to church property during the Civil \Var. Genet- alissimo Francisco Franco said the object of the decree was to repair “the wrong done to the church by the Liberal governments" and to re- cognize “the sacrifices of thc clergy who co- operated so effectively with the Nationalist crusade." w w w w Prediction that Germany soon may be ex- pected to persecute Christians and Russia to persecute Jews was made to the American Philosophical Society by Dr. Carlton Hayes, Columbia University history professor. The society, oldest scientific body in the United States, devoted most of its session to discussions of totalitarianism. Prof. Hayes defined how to- talitarianism differs from all previous govern- ment systems. “In Russia Christians and in Germany Jews are first got rid of," he said. "Presently it will be the turn of Christians in Germany and Jews in Russia, for if you are to erase the most constant memory of the Western mind you have to destroy Judaen-Christianity both in its roots and in its flowers." e a a w How to rave upwards of $50,000,000 each year on the sales tax in Canada was the purport of an address delivered to the Advertising Club of Montreal by Mr. Arthur L. Brown, general merchandising manager, Northern Electric Company Limited. Such a vast saving to the combined pocketbook of Canada could be achieved, in the opinion of the speaker, by the removal of the present sales tax and substitution of a “terminal" sales tax. In other words, in- stead of having the sales tax collected from the manufacturer, as at present, it would be collected from the retailer. Under the present method, the sales tax, imposed by the federal Govern- ment at the rate of 8 per cent, is paid by the manufacturer on his particular selling price, which on the average is 50 per cent of the re- tail price for the same article. The big saving, according to Mr. Brown's plan, would be elimin- ation of the process of “pyramidingf the pres- ent salcs tax. At present, the manufacturer adds 8 per rent to his price,,and makes his per- centage profit on the total price. Then the article goes to the wholesaler, who makes say 25 per cent profit on his price. The jobber lakes his profit on his price, which in the first place had been stepped up 8 per cent because of the sales tax. lt was from this profit-taking on the tax that Mr. Brown visualized potential saving of as much as $68,000,000 based on re- cent retail trade turnover, but which might vary ldowmvards to" a little under the $50,000,000 level s _*_\. General Constantine is not a new man. He has. nous nviueivli loot c! the new can an ready for inspection and to date we haven't beard any enterprising luluuun claim his product nu a ‘bomb-proof roof. - Columbus lllfveulng onpswn. llltlbr paid o attention to bp- pecls from the United state: bo- fora wu- wu declared, but he now in bl: behalf. What» insufferable cheek! No wonder there ls no response from the White House.- Brockvllle Recorder. Soviet Bunion n are involved 1n I. plot: against the Ford Motor Company's (Rouge plant in Detroit. Some Bl Reds have been barred from the factory. ‘rhut will help m. Ford understand why Canada is in this war against the faiths; and Communists. - Windsor During flu last war the Idea o! wearing identity discs did not. occur to members of the civilian popula- tion. ‘Iiodey, however. with so much larger a. proportion than ever before living or working far sway frmi their own homes, some are beginning to regard some means of identification in case of m- Iury or unconsciousness u c», sentlal. - Manchester Guardian. The report that the judges were unable to read t-he signature of the successful architect for the new Dundee art college recalls the classic story relating to a. medical man's prescription: After re- ceiving tbs medicine, the patient used the prescription for years as a railway pass, twice as an invita- tion to a dance, once as an lnvita. tlon to a society wedding and later as a letter from his employer in- structing the cashier to raise his salary. And in the evenings his dflullhwr lllflyfid it over on the planol — Edinburgh Dispatch. Other leaders are looking across an abyss of war and mass murder toward an illusion of victory and conquest and triumph through force. Only the Pope speaks of the “tribulations of humans" which at- tend war. and strives to spare Europe this awful tragedy, and ex- horts to Christian prayer and unity for the peace on earth and good will among men to which people of all creeds aspire. It. is perhaps too late to save Europe. from its great. folly. Perhaps the Pope speaks and pleads for peace in vain. Perhaps even Christian prayers will not. avail against me tempest. But the lmmlnence of disaster and the appearance of utility have not stayed the hand and. voice of Pope Pius. - The San Francisco Examiner. There ls no ‘doubt about the, law and tradition of the sea on the rights of neutral ships against. n. belligerent. Nothing except the safety of a belligerent vessel can} Justify it in sinking a. neutral. The German war on neutrals is be- ing conducted according to the commander of one U-boat, tinder, orders that neutral shipping may be destroyed “on the ground of des- tination." But apart. from capture neutral vessels have been tor- pedoed when they were going from one neutral port to another with a. neutral cargo. They have been sunk though they made no at- tempt in resist the U-boat or es- cape. Thus far the Scandinavian countries have been the victims suffering most, but. Germany has destroyed ships of other nations and blsred threats all over the world. she is raving again in the madness of 1917. Then, as now, she believed that her brutality could frighten neutral shipping from the seas and terrify neutral countries into sacrificing their trade for her benefit. The lesson of the last war has to be taught her again. From t-he neutral Govern- ments comes no sign of submission, but stern protest and plans of self-protection. - Daily Telegraph and. Morning Post (London) The promptnesa with which the British government, in collabora- tion with the Commonwealth, nu brought: into effect plans for the purchase during the war of the whole of the wool clip, as well as the surplesses of most. other pri- mary commodities, is another ex- ample of the thorough preparations which have been made to mee: this emergency. and of the way in which the lessons of 1914 have been taken to heart. The outbreak of war in 1014 dislocated most. com- modity‘ markets, merchants were unprepared, and there was n wild supplies. Our trade with Germany bud been important, when it. was abruptly cut. off, there were slumps in some things and shortages in others. It was not until the 1916-17 wool season that. the Imperial government intervened directly to ,. rchaso all available wool. That. arrangement worked very success- fully, under the direction of c central wool committee which left. the wool trade to carry out most. of its normal detailed functions and the system is now being reviv- ed. ‘Hie existing marketing boards for various other primary products furnished a skilled and far-reach- ing organization which did not. exist in 1014, and which has been swiftly linked up with the British authorities. This organization of Australia's export trade will en- sure the most useful flow of pro- duce according to the shipping available, will eliminate proilteer- lng by merchants and will dis- tribute the proceeds fairly among the farmermi- Sydney Herald, When Herr llltler made a virtue of his plan for the movement of lypopulatlons, and the trunsfer of persons of German origin from countries controlled by Russia, his Hollow-countrymen can hardly have lsupposed um, to M. Stalin these Germans were undeslrmbles whom he was prepared to pay Hitler to get rid of. But according w the Riga co-respondent of The Times, they are pawns in s. game by which the Neal regime gets iold from THE war cu y, scramble from all sides to obtain . l irunuc comm I SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL Ill I ..___. But-We read these mornlnn “Wfll m" "W"? i0 "W!!!" where the Olty Council ha: held 5' special meeting for this or that- ° always you will not: regarding some expenditure, but never do I 1 see where they held l special meet»- ‘lng to decide why more of the taxes ml; m; are not collected. I In Charlottetown one out of every three men pay their Poll tax. and I venture t0 my this third are the ones who have Real Estate and who walk up and pay every year, but. why should anyone pay 1f all are not going to be made to pay-(now I don't mean those who never do l. days work) but young men should be compel! * to pay who an work- ing and earning their own living, why I know fellows 25 years of age and older who never have paid Poll Tax, and they earn plenty to b0 paying for the privileges they en- joy such as Police Protection at $20,000, Lights $10,000, Streets 830,- 000. etc" etc. . The tax collectors run around to the voluntary tax payers, is this necessary? Wouldn't these men pay their taxes anyway? 8o why not make a drive on the ones who do not pay?? The City Staff an now quartered in their new offices and I hope the change did not. cost too much as we are still paying interest on "the $27,200 spent on the brain wave change made in that building in 1934, should we not be able to pay our bills before adding to the def- icit ‘I As a matter of comparison (Real estate only) and I do not want to spoil it by having too many figures. 1984: Rate 2 per cent, Real estate levy $129,000; Amt. Collected $99,- 000: Arrears $30,000. 1937 Rate 2 1-2 per cent; Real es- tate levy $147,000; Amt. Collected $117,000; Arrears $30,000. From the above I hope I have made it dear the unfairness of only col- lecting from those who willingly pay, the increase in taxation was absorbed by same ones who always pay, and the stragglers were left. It ls nearly time the City Coun- cil have a meeting and get the ar- rears question down to s. sound bas- is, pats a law to collect them. If they have one why not enforce it??? I am Sir, etc. ONE WHO PAYS HIS TAXES AND OWNS N0 CAR RELIEF AND CHARITY Siij.—It is high time for civics, chaixty institutes and governments to develop some practical system for handling of relief. With war time enllstments, out- standing demands for commodity and greater farm production, we Should. during the war at least, escape filer-easing relief ex endi- tures, and. if not entirely pen- sed with. beyond doubt it. could be enormously reduced. _I see innovations from time to Lme with tendencies to encour- age sponging on charity and to increase wilful waste of taxpay- er's money where therels no real necessity. The last. manoeuvre of the City Council to extend relief to om- DBfi-y holders, who are not. in poverty under any correct. in- terpretation. is not. a necessity, The claim is that it is to save them mortgaging for funds to live on. But why not? How many are there who have not. merely to mortgage. but. to sell the few items of furniture in the home, at times the beds on which they sleep, even the clothes 0n their backs; worse still. the boots from the children's lfeet, flfhln the contributions of philanthrophy, to buy bread. and not always bread but booze at the vendors? Where does relief money g0. whether given as free gifts. or for rel-ef labor performed? It ls true of the majority that it is used as economically as the capacity of the recipients are able to devise. But I have seen parents reeling drunk through the streets, with bee? purchased by wages on relief wor . It should be evident- to the busi- ness mind t. these leakages and im rovident distributions of cash co d be remedied, and by. the same processes the number on re- lief very lanzelv reduced by the methods. or some of than, in- stituted ln the great Bernardo chantles. of world wide fame. 1n England, l _Under singe roofs a multitude FLEET STREET I never negvhthe newsboys run -Amid the Lrllng street, _Wi.t.h swift. imtirlng feet, ,'f"o cry the lamest venture done, 1311f I mtpect one day to hear Them cry the crack of doom And riskngs from the tomb, with great. Archangel Michael near; And 2:310 £21m: running from the As messengers of God, ,Wlt.h Heaven's tidings shod I About. their brave unwearted feet. -5_h.l_1"_1fi°11£- Russia and Gennan labour for Poland. Most of these people who are to be turn from their homes in Latvia and Btonla where their ancestors have lived for genera- tions are to be transported, it seems, to Poland, where they will perforce burn tn places and work allotted to them by Nazi labour officials. It will be their task to “Gennanlne” the conquereu Polish territory, ‘working. as hidden, in textile factories or on the land, and without the right to move back to their homes or into Germany. This traffic in human bodies, u:- tually "Aryan" bodies, ls one of the more ugly features of Hitler's deal with Stalin. It. will help him to colonize some purely Polish parts of Poland and to buy ores from neutral countries, and at the same ‘rue maaerlally strengthen Rus- sia's hold on the Baltic states, .... frlie Spectator (London) ITINGS n] or do without it. Mmover. undcr I. mus Imam It would be more than mm dol- lars #1133 Eng ecbtzxggruykfglie M0- and cared for 1n awry t. 1f you hand out l. bare ll lo bum of Igor-icy; even the careful woman u my top prices for mint- mum gammy 0f meanest melt! and fe_ . In many cues they can scarcely this o as it should be. In the mass ltution meats by the at tender wholggsrale prepared un compllshed cooks cleanly served. with no individual m) 1 from an wnployment bureau. where in- tor-gs gupporfm‘! could seek to place these on relief ln some form of employment. and from there mature plans for locutlna or de- vlsin pernmnent methods of self susta nlng work for the working classes. We cannot in reason make relief necessity n. perpetual burden upon the taxpayers and charities. or continue present growing methods of encouragement to the wilfully idle who bank on the old meory that the “world owes us a. llvinlt. and set their minds upon the de- termination w collect lhfll» 119m xvegflrdleSfl of the contra Droverb.— "If a. ‘man will not work, neither should he eat." , Let us at the same time recon; rum that “poverty is no crime . nor even to be ashamed of. un- less it is dishonestly cultivated. 'I‘he crime. and attendant shame and disgrace only creeps in when lazy or un-needy take advantafze of benevolences to SIDOHRE 1119011 generosity by reaching ou 1'01‘ what. they are not entitled. 1 am, sir. etc.. GENUINE CHARITY. A CountryiBoyhood (New York Times) Politics sang low at Hyde Park on Sunday. Only for a moment. when Mr. Roowvelt. broke away from his prepared speech, did the reporters dream of eight-column headlines over their Monday m0?"- lng stories. The President then said that. he hoped it would be a fine day when the library of his Presi- dential papers. whose cornerstone he was laying, was opened for 1911b- llc use. Was thero anywhere an embittered economic royaiist who gritted his teeth whep he heard the words and prayed or rain "by the Spring of 1941?" Surely not. Nor could any one who eyei- was a country boy repress a kindly ln- terest. in Mr. Roosevelt's country boyhood. Young Funk Roosevelt was born to comparative wealth. He never had to fill the woodbox. get. u-p before dawn to do the chores, hoe the corn, nick bugs off the potato vines, or use matern- ully minded cows through the bhickbe vines of a pasture lot. At ieasfrlihere is no reflord 0f 5110b activities. But. the things he liked to do, and of which he spoke lov- lngly on Sunday, were things any country boy likes to do-and usual- ly finds time to do. He climbed an "old tree. now unhappily gone. and ate peers. He sprawled in a strawberry patch and ate straw- berries as they should be eaten- sun-warmed. soft, ripe and 0f! i110 vine. He sailed toy boats. He dug into woodchuck holes while the doizs went into hysterics. But he did not exterminate the wood- chucks and still doesn't, want to. He hopes they will enjoy phat is now the Roosevelt estate for all time." His adult. mind. "l"! hi! boy mind, goes back to the In- dians who planted corn there. In the kingdom of country boy- hood there are no kinks. 1111171 I10 Presidents, either. For the adult it is u Utopia to which he may not return in the flesh. but which L! safe forever from wars and po- litics, from failure and success. The boys who go back there to climb pear trees or steal straw- berries won't pester younz Prank Roosevelt for jobs for deservlnif Democrats. 'I‘hey won't try to find out if he means to rim again. A Friend Of Youth (New York Times) Mr. W. D. Murray. who died yes at the use of 81, has l remer ls record in tlie_ fidelity with which he kept on dolnfl through life tlhe things to which he gave his early devotion. He was born in New York but lived for seventy-one years in Plainfied. N. J., 110 Kent St. .A_Lx : Fox Farmers : ' We are receiving silver fox furs for TIIE MARITIME Fllll PO0L LTII. Our marketing service guarantees you satisfaction. References-The Canadian Bank of Commerce. Our Satisfied Shippers. sequence in the Fur Trade. Please bring your furs in as soon as ready. We payyon an advance. “W. BHESTER S. McLlIllE Anyone of Con. Charlottetown IQSOII. in Charlottetown. _ sign your furs to co-orrmnv: ulniazrme or SILVER FOX runs Silver Fox pelt shipments from us will be going forward to the fur markets each week throughout the We have agencies in London, Paris, Montreal and Unfit! States selling furs for us throughout the year. All furs consigned to us will be insured against loss by fire or theft providing notice giving number and kind of furs, and their estimated value be’ sent, us by separate mail on the date of the fur shipment. For insurance purposes be careful that the notice be sent separate from the parcel o! furs. Banking arrangements are in effect whereby m]. vanees may be obtained at lowest possible rates. Pelts will he received either at Headquarters Sum. merside or at Massey-Harris Building on Kent Street If V011 Wish an unexcelled marketing service, con- Ganadian National Silver Fox Breeders Association FUR MARKETING DEPARTMENT SUMMERSIDE. P. E. I. country on the outskirts of the city was sweet" to him. For seventy-six years he was in a Sun- day school. He led a primary class for forty-one years and taught. the Bible for fifty-one years. He was in a. university long enou t0 get an arts degree from Ya e‘ and a Bachelor of Laws degree from Col- umbla and he practiced law for fifty-six years. What is more re- markable ls that he kept. u dairy for sixty-six years. It. is to be pre- sumed that. he did not. stop once he began till death stayed his d an . But his two main interests out- side of homo and church were the Y. M. C. A. and Lhe Boy Scouts. He was associated with the for-_ mer for fifty-five years in the local Plalnfield work. He was also a member of the Y. W. C. A. board for twenty-two years. But. his oth- er first. interest. was the Boy Scouts, of whose National Board he was a. member for thirty-five years. He was one of the founders 0f the American Boy "Scouts, of whom only four are now alive, and he wrote the history of the first twenty-five years of the organ- izatlon-sn organization, as he wrote in the foreword, which ex- ists "not alone to make strong men and earnest citizens later on but to help boys to have the best pos- sible time as boys." He resented to President Roosevelt a ew years ago the five-millionth copy of the Handbook for Bo 1a, prepared un- der his chairmans lp of the ed1- torlal board. Llndley Murray. whose Grammar of the English Language and other text-s ran into scores of editions of many thousands each would have been proud of whul. William Murray did with that language in helping to develop millions of American boys and youths. FRESH TILL THE LAST "Wu that sandwich you sold mo just now quite fresh?" “Quite sir, Each sandwich ll wrapped in transparent. B11118?“ when" "Dear me! I wish I'd known about. the pmperl" for as too lsatln poet “the HAVING ANY LUCK? “The double-barred cross, known u’ the Lorraine Cross, is the Inter- lllulillll lYmboI of the fight against tuberoulosll. For Vitalitq a BRAH ORANGE PEKOE TE‘ . Swine Breeders Attention N l Lh tlma to d ow I 3MB" [ulr PIG-WORM By using the most effective remedy on the market. MACS PIG-WORM TONIC POWDER. It will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms and lmPflWI the health of your herd. PRICE 35 CENTS PER LB- Wo curry a complcle line 01 Cattle Remedies. Gassy Stomachs Relieved Every person who ls trouble: A ~_@+¢A.-o¢¢4o++4-¢44- with pl In the It l! bowels uhbllld [ct u bolt-la of Dr. Evans Stomach Milli!" and see how quickly it will re- llevs all dlstresllng nvmllwml- Dr. Evans stomach M11111" taken at meal 11mg not onl! prevents all bu! e cots from but It remote: the func- onal mt! t of the stomach. assists digest on and 111111111"! the dppet te. Dr. Evans Stomach M11611" l: sold only at the Two M!" l‘ 850 per bottle. Got Your Bottle T01“!- The 2 MAGS 149 Greet acorn 811M lwaUS uffli MIN n1» anr'rz'/u vrvirwrw - Whether you are bagging the odd duck o: coming home empty-handed there ls 11 reason to spoil the getting to take along with 3'0" - HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10c Per Fig i.‘ EVERYWHERE 11v THE I P n 0 v 1 1v c a i IIIBKEY and |||0ll0 SON TOBACCO 00-. LIMITED » _ _ . Charlottetown day entirely by 1°“