i .; ..1"` if), .f...5....~_a.1- , v, . .'g».-_ i__ l tp. 'u :“ y _,tit ' _ S , 1- It e ~,\,,~;. 1 l i \ I < 1 1 1 1 ll ). ;. ._v`., ,_ 1, \~_ ‘,>_ ,. tl “i ll §» :fi 14.111 if " L( I ._-.3 ,.,. .- , |11 .,f . . i ___, 1, .f ».! it Eg f "if _ »; , y " 1.52 25'" .:»», , e FL .‘ \' I iii ‘ ', fi' has 2 irr~».~~-'.,f,..‘ z . = - _ - ~.:;§’_r , . ,_ noun . §@lB-W UIUNUI I If V J ldlail ' scanner;-u::'s'liel he lullneauill mieqaaaluqlq mneten-JI bread Ill. Asa lah lditura-lwaal Walla! all Ill lilello .Notes By The Way I The great point for road users to nam right away is that the mil- ture of whim and laxity by which of .. leaning uni; unused nam la ae oeegzéia cheap) adlvqea. O_a.U per nam lla a_|Lvaneei__Ell__a__d__lg__ HI U ll ` rmnav. Aran. al. use. ' » _ ...wk r'¢......r..;~. re.-sg' ~ _ . . . bflldll - revincc's hishwev `g‘»i-calm will hope that this will be lie case. _(___-----1 bf IGI’ showed that ten yeah diltihl Mechanic this thfinum- evans ohne new deal and a square deal. ed “Protection se in canada." There should be a' great no-union to exterminate paciflsm in time national emergency. Contrary seem to be convinced that it war is a thing to be glorified. 1_1,- 553 fi R "entering the camps receiving cloth- ing and then quitting and selling ’ the goods in Vancouver. Af-t/er that ,Fe fum” is Yew “wk for me they would go to another camp and ° time Uber” p°"y”"h° m°°l' repeat the process. Racketeers of that is hoped for it is that it will this type may be alarmed over the be absorbed by the Liberal Con- Prospect of a closing up of some of the camps because of strikes Walk- servativea. It ma no distinctive ' . , ' outs will spoil their opportunities ' mncy except' 'rw' T"*d°_ .5 m of making a dishonest living. mslandf' and alas' lngland has aho.nd0hed The Tride. and adopt- What Hiller threw off the mask and openly announced the recrea- tion oif the German army and the adoption off war planes ,and as a h °°?m°°M°n vm* the Jubn” practical witness held the war- d¢m°“°¢f\l*°M md snnd proves- plane demonstration cvcr ncnin. sion it should be realised tha/t all t/liere was instant reaction on the overs," men' ,haha they ne stock exchanges the etcok of arm- ament and allied firms rising in members of me lub” °r 'wt' 'N value. In Berlin these stocks rose invited md expected to participate. from 1 to s 1-2 points. stccl. of aviwtlofn, and elcctldcal equipment veterans over th k was in lively demand. United Steel 4 e_ e 'ee md of MW rme 1 l-2 points. Bavarian Motor Works stock rcsc 4 3-4 and the Berlin-Karlsruhe stock, mak- And sneaking or veterans there ers dr wer _materials 1-csc 5 1.2 will be on parade on May U, men points.-Halifax Chronicle. who volunteered for servim during _ L the Nmhwm Nmmm- 901101 Forever will the power of the Af1'|<>e veterans .old oontemptisles wr-inch world ride down thc sgcs from ,Great Britain, as well is gm- and rout everiy enemy to progress. own Rsimunl of me Gu" w“,_ Long after the blood has been wiped from the sword will the wrkten words of seers, prophets ,and dream- In "5 °°mPli8n lBl\1hSt “the de- ers be revered and become it guide structive work of pacifist; and anti- by day and a light by night. Ban- millm-y 91-3|,n|“y,mn_,_-» me ou, ish from the world every recorded . word of man and what a desert iti Govemmmt mmm” nu* would seem! From whence would tl” dellfh DUIIWY Wi-ll N ilW°iD¢l come our solace, our understanding of of even the vague elements of hu- m nun life, or our appreciation of the common ccuer, the muitn-mic Nuts ‘”""“‘°‘ “M “"”’”“"°"“ °‘ “‘°“° long gone? Are not the written 5* words of the world the very tracks peace that is destructive and that of those whose feet have beaten an immortal path for us? The human body dies ,and its brain becomes -but athlees are the writ- duat de A°°°'dm‘ °° th’ 'muh “°"' ten worth of that brain, conceived P59611. GVOUUDO il anxiously walt- in lflel ine the arrival of Premier Dennett ---1 to direct the Dominion representa- tives in their unofficial Conference with the llother Land ltateamen Never has Canada Mood higher in ~ FARM CREDH' the wcrld's estimation than it does ,..._“.._. at present under' Premier lennett'| °1§,h¢.diseuseiononthe leederehip.lventheIAl¢\\eofN'af °f°d“°f‘ 'xnintenwnt um* nn th. “n“l°n of comment from Canada" one of the committee of and lm- 18 nwom fo'daal with economic Canton, N3. 'I'he conference will °**'l*‘“°““ sanctions and violations. ‘Ibis not- he part of a comprehensive survey M°Ph°f°°P- 1'“P°f*°““‘°“* vlthetendine out ceased in not er omedun-Amended felsticnr. the.eet.v111\n md with scwememenenaeoeundl. riemeyezoeneeinlcspitudm storms ndie lost soil and real es- neither the . rs i; Egiggiil rig $=5E lgfjiilé ;§t§§§t industry is beiilq made by Pre- felm' Rank A. loutbard. fr., of ih»"r'erii! oemmiuma in washing- ton: rrofeaeor Kenneth W. 'I\71°\‘. er :sement uefnnay, nuhawa. mt.: Preenlor mu A. Knox. Iiaivariity; and Herbert lineto ef ltatlstles, Ot- . iB°vv .cf . liners ASTHMA SUFFBBEBS HELPBD BY EXIRCIBIB ment that physicians everywhere are ___.1_... _nu._am. | Seokins and often finding the cause lor causes in many eases, so that the I hopelessness' of former 'years ' ie , gradually disappearing. 1 Thus lt' was found -that certain ' dusts, pollens from plants__th¢ .fur lcr feathers of animals were the causes in some cases. . _ Other cases were found to be due to certain krowths, or defomitlea,-in the nose; with the removal or cor tacks were stopped _ Sometimes lt was el 'c'oin`blna‘tio'n' of someiirritant-pollen, fur, feath- ers - together with some deformity tliatwaslitfault. is known as the Asthma Research Council, just as they have organiz lof Heart Disease and Rheumatlsm or Arthritis. - asthma in the large asthma clinics I regularly for the benefit of physic inns and asthma sufferers through-_ out the world. has issued an illustrated booklet on the treatment of asthma by exer- cises. The object of treatment is to restore the lungs and chest to nor the chest from occurring. Ordinary which is to increase the expansion of the chest, are useless, as the as thmatlc tlent is alread ca ble e If an asthmatic patient is toll to breathe deeply his respiration Ls al- most entirely in the upper chest; the chest is already fully expanded and there ls thus little if any move-_ ment ln it as the diaphragm-the muscular floor of the chest-is used to only a slight extent. The exercises are designed to teach the patient first, to use the lower part of the chest as well as the upper. and second to use the diaphragm more. The body should be held loosely with the arms by the sides. The patient should face a mirror so that he can watch the effect of the exer- cises on his chest. The exercises are mainly exhaling or blowing the breath out of the chest and the pat- ient helps to expel or drive out the air with his hands pressing on low- er part of the chest. _ » ‘ When the exercises are performed properly they should cause wheezing and often coughing as the air is all driven out. - Interview With Mr. Buchan Colonel John Buchan, whose ap- pointment es Governor-General of Canada was recently announced, will take up his new task with en-. thusiasm. In an interview with a Sumlay Times rllcndoni representative April 6th he stated: ' . “I am looking forward to my stay i11 Canada immensely. It will be an experience of infinite variety, in which I will find-a great deal to exercise heart and mind. “Ca.r:ada, itseems to me, is on the eve of social developments of a far- reaching character. We in Britain have been undergoing these social changes for many years. but in the Dominion the movement will. be- cause of physical circumstances, be, I think, more swife and spectacular. Country for the Pioneer "Until recently Canada was a country of incalcuable resources. It was still essentially a country for the pioneer. Now those resources are becoming defined; their exploit- ation has been set upon an ordered industrial basis; rationalisation has taken the place of the usual de- velopments of the old days. In this new state of things thecitizen is finding new opportunities as well as new restrictions. He has the task not merely of industrial construc- tion, but also of personal adaptation “There ,is always something dramatic in the spectacle of a great nation marching through a quiet revolution to a new destiny. To have some part in it, even as a watcher behind the scenes-for that will be my role-is a privilege of which I am more proud than I can saivt “Canada has already a. literary and artistic achievement impressive in a country which is, by the common standards of age, still young. I must confas to only a nodding acquaintance with its art. lnrt I have delved pretty deeply into Canadian literature. onus in hmmm iiggtggggttlgtittittlesigit 'g -"" ie E ighé =-i-5:5. §ltti§;;;§§,§§-igléttcigtsr 'gg 3 E.; .s §c§;$§§§,;§s&§.§§ fi tt§§§§t§§~. iii.; liitl 5.2.-t€.ss..§r Of my OWU il of thelhui nan. studied profound in- Asthma is such a distressing _all-_ Duke . ‘And gtsgssgtistgstg . htttrtit; or A tlrgltliatiitiitrgtii shag; igtigiyéttt ..§ttl;.;t...tttr no ment- ei went to audience a company ‘ II. After permanent 1670 Kind’ _Charles a charter “to the 'Govemcrand Company of Ad- itiuies re-'elected till his death. was the first Governor. In 1688. James. Duke 'of York, waselected tosuoeeed _ mm. 0n_ Jupes' accession John came the third Governor of the “threw himself heartily into the work of the Company" In 168 it declared adivldend of 50 percent in l689a en pe 11690 f'I5 1-cent andinthat share-splitting operation the value' of its original stock. Nor was the ex- al £10,500 Thus the Asthma, Resarch Council l“““°“ °' th’ M51” st k in is properly proud. The Yukon in ’ capital urljubtilied. Th! 00 B the warehouse were aloine worth that sum: the trapping of the year was expected to bring in £20900 £100,000 was to »be made. The its trade and widen the scale of its operations. The rlvel-,runillfls Ulm the west side of the bay far to the new Covemor. Churchill River. and at its mouth in 1686 a new wrt and trading centre for the north and west of Canada was founded- M` instances are irlven by me ' W pa v aa ld. nrtsxpshdlng thc chest t his fullest 1101"* W” “°‘““"- 1” h°“°" °' 'h' But ur. nl-lnglc was mt mugs.. X T1 . in chronic cases the lower part of “W me Hudson* B" arousing a legnar-tic ,ggnumgmg historians of Company of the energy and hell?- fulnese of Lord Churchill. Clluroh-ill'a 'part in the Revolllflbh gave tho Company a Bond P051*-W* in the new reign. In June. IG9- he posts cn the shores of the bay. “He slderatlon obtained through the in- mlnutos that profuseitha-n WG given to the Governor, and a. piece lid ld worth a. Of plate of so U0 hundred gulnees was presented to Ramilies, Oudenarde and Mal plaquet-the masterful collqmrol' Of Louis HV. Twenty Years Past (Toronto Globe) "rn the latte: bait of Avril. 1915. the First Canadian Division, now allotted to the British Fifth Army Qu;-pg, occupied the northeast face of the salient as far as the Y'P1'¢5' Pceloapelle Road. Thence to the vp;-es-Yser canal tim line was held by French troops, chiefly MYWSUI- It was against this last section that, on April 22, the Germaris de- livtred the nrst gas attack. 'rhus badly begins the story 0! the Second Battle of Ypresi U19 battle that is engraved forever in canada's remembrance as st. Julien. Twenty years is far to remember. Yet all across Canada in these days memories twenty years past return to live 138111- Scenes of ter- ror and confusion and unconquer- sblc cow-ere. of surrcrihs b¢v°nd words, and endurance above praise rise clear of the mists of time for men who were actors in them. And the hearts of women, awaking, re- member waitlng and terror and desolation and the long agony of loss. Few‘C‘ana ° as , -Arthur Qlliller-Couch. A “Warrior Priest” in Great Britain they have what Churchill was chosen. He thus be- (Toronto sm) Reverend John Pringle is` on earth.” It ls years now since he ` figuratively set the Yulcon muskeg Everything that is learned .cout amd d of 25 :_ cent ;“s mm: on fire, but the record of his battles on that then far-off frontier in the or in private practice is published yi” “I gms dxmed ,A mph by B ‘days when mining camps were still modelled upon those of 49 is an epic of the war upon unrighteous- ness of which the Canadian church had within it all the elements that might have made its camps into villes and it was only -the spirit mal size or to prevent distenslon of Wmh °°f beaver? “M 8' claim 1°' men like John Pringle, backed by North-West Mounted Police, that breathing exercises, the object of C"'“D°“Y me” dedded t° imma” turned the balance gggingt the “soapy Smiths" and the hard BH-HSS that gold rushes invariab attract from all over the wor wlth. figuratively, tucklng up h favour of better conditions through- out the Yukon. He let' the chips fall where they would as he laid about him. and there were those in Parliament and elsewhere who were made mo'e than a little uneasy by the gainer ' CMMY. unspeakably more danger- same seal, the same convicitcnj though necessarily with a leuening oftlwse remarkable physical powers the Lord‘s side," with every mince of his strength and every thought of his brain. Any country may well wuntrymen of the men who died enriching the heritage of Canadians with wisdom and courage distilled sorrow. It should be so. Ilbr if to live greatly, the men who turned the men who died at St. Julien de- feated death; ' At the St. Julien crossroads the Canadian memorial stands. a slim, grey shaft, tall and proud. Each night from the Mr-nln Gate of PTH. _ . 3 over the Salienlfs dead. Across that rolling Flemish plains it sounds’ toward Weiltje, Langemarck and ap . is said, the sound carries beyond, who lived said only: “H” was al- (Washington Poet) The State Department has ad- dressed a. very solemn and decidedly ‘ humourlcse admonition to the "potato growers of Maine and others who have written to the Attention Truss Wearers Tofheeeofyoawhoarenn- cetmate mana to have to weaakaheqlcl- herlwlththe lllllllerlyerhlt \0l¢!le,eaaelng Wcaanprc- I i not taller fl. 3? tlgiiti lisigiii iii ‘;»";s;°E§;s` 52;# ~ l 2 titres sails 9' E ._ _ _J 5 \ at St. Julien. Years yet to come' may transmute that loc; into gall-1,' at L0west Rate. cad < - H“d~°°“'S 9”' °°““’°‘."" and with him passes almost trial-' ations for thc study and prevention "The new G°"°m°"" we “N wld' tion of the “church milltaeit, here HAVE YOU TRIED H &N" anlciir, cur SIIDKIIIG TUBAGGU IT’S A MILD COOL SMOKE MANUFACTURED' THE HIGKEY & IIIGIIULSUN TUBAGGII GUMPAIIY LTD. 9° Charlottetown nach-day Tdcceswhcs and usa- in ave insp e rs n ques- President in regard to the possibil- ity of reductions induties in connec- tion with the proposed trade agree- ment with Canada." Instead od he- traylng considerable vexation with g the unnamed "propogendists of gs high protection *who are believed to "Jeeves against Apollyon in the h Wed th lellb 1 Northland. Hs took his pen in ham-1 tion, the State Department might and he travelled far and wide have more effectively indulged in in a satlric chuckle over their in- credibly bunglirrg methods. When letters come-from New England school children-protesting that “the economic destruction oi' Aroo- stook Coimty" would followareduc- sent out instructions for William hh ummm mn, but he mt what "°"°'f d“"i°°°n U"”'°d1f“p°mt°°" ummeu’ for me-rv tration ought to be delighted than solemnly annoyed. 1.-in-asuv-is 'l' assisting at a party. "No, thank you, my dear.” it is easy to detect than hand of the publicity agent behind the juvenile Yankee mind. If this is the best that high-presdilre lobbying methods can achieve to arouse public sentiment against a reduction in potato duties not yet decided upon, the Adminis- rather aklng Ne mi “Are you fond of toffeell" asked the ,little fellow of a lady who was "Then will you lock, after these was able shortly ester to report to He W ' m,,n,y_¢w° when me _ _ 3:: °°°;`Ti“7 thagtulzdhangfof Great War broke out, an age when I4’ USE . . .. twins to wax- is not in most merrs - mt;?;s“°°m°““°f uf: 6% fx ,~ mmd'1;stbu,tmJoltr;IP11ng1c was not ’/~;,;;,/ V shsrchciden at this mark or con- °‘ "1 ”~ °"° W" °-“°l*‘°’ ' -cameos rxoa touch” hmwuwry ous thanthethuieandthccrooks iilgfl =.‘ jg qgqpg n“°“°° °‘ m of De/w-son and th amp and he ` ’ ”` g’°°t- *"4 W* 1"” M: "Ig went forth against? him 'with the g ». _ nu -xy in na amine pegs. ' I and Muyytc be proclaimed in the he went “Im md me Nm” was - i r l that awakened the admiration of . i§`Qsfg%§£‘d ,;nQ§°,§i cvdgutllc husxicst in the Yukeh's '_' y with thc hc.-0 of Blenheim, n,:1Mesm11t=)yes.v:rr<; vhazemwmwl _og | E R’ BR O W "° "’°““ °f'“°““'“'~ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness' "Yes f°f the “mee we the 1 and Plate Glass Insurance mm old smilies md remembered' Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis hold nothing back from mc is to 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown the Germans from Ypres twenty |- 1 years ago fulfilled their lives. If to ...__ -h *° P°°1°°P¢“° “ld z°“`“°\`f°k° "ld I 94 Great George Street Charlottetown, P. E.I to Passchendaele. . - . ;.; There was a boy among the boy | ' Plume 540 and 541 BERMUDA and YIEST IIIDIES New Low Summer Rates elective with April Y Last Post sounds aorrowin I 20th Sailing' ,_ For full particulars call msg; dgagh bravely tg go deff,” lg’ f._ X# - =-12-lil-Z I-I 3 3* i!'C£X§l'C§X§1'I~’Q i I! sheu 'rr r-arm oh stui nights, it 5:, w_ K_ R 0 G E R S ll soldiers killed at St. Julien twenty _ _ _______ __ _ __ __ mrs sgc. or hu dean he brother 5- 5'.-3i.’i;,_.;1::;;;:-11-1 -" "" -f " *E*-~“~?.~` ` 4 I , l 1 -| .|| i ways the lucky one.” - .um - ~ - -- V ` ' P t D ' , ' a" “‘-"-““°“ " tannins nrroms ES'?ECIALLY DESIGNED FOR 5'.-MALL PACKERS ‘After years of co-operative work with lobster packers, we have now developed retorts of several types, one of which is suitable for any need. -ii' T SQUARE HORIZONTAL RE- TORTS. ROUND STEEL VER- TICAL RETORTS Tested under ' ‘steam with wide safety margin allowed; Send for catalogue of our equipment in this line. Mfgre- Imperial Gasoline Engine! 1 l 1 K ll