1a.. t >- '\. -'\ \ v... 111C111 FOUR “ Notesbyéthe W8! i‘ ,, . rnstinaniorrsrowu cuannmu" 1 I what The Spring Time 111E lilllfliflllETflWN Blilllillill Sir John Wllllson in Willlscws oi Youth and 1 The 1, 1n surname-roost‘. paler." Monthly, tells about liquor revenu- lrnus-u-‘w. man- s. luau: lllssrsalIsdsssr-d. Liars-ts. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1926 YIss-Prslllllf-Q. I. Elliott Oil. D. l. Ilnllllll. D. l. 0. , Allllllh litter-D. I. Oat-sh es and new they are disposed of in the Prairie Provinces, as here aub- joined: In M the net annual re- venue from liquor is between $1,- 200-000 and $300,000, half of which “a 8E LF-PROTECTION Protection-like orthodoxy, which is my ‘doxy-is usually protection for me, not for the other fellow. The farmers of Quebec and On- tario are now asking protection for the kind oi‘ farm produce which they, under the present system. are obliged to sell in competition with the United States. Those pro- vinces are deluged, during the early summer with vegetables and garden truck before the Canadian product is ready for market. As covering it! no_one knows how, and raised t the top oi the pyramid no knows how. And the huge pyra as solid as when built nearly G000 Stand in a thirteen-acre field and imagine a building 417 feet high There were 300,000 men working on it. and the blocks of solid granite oi which it is built are from l0 to 12 feet long by about four feet square. all hewn from quarries up the "Nile and carried. 011E mid, the largest work of human hands in the world today, is still goes into the provincial treasury, among the municipalities. were $1,822,155. 8166.641 csme from license fee 240 from permits. berta no tween the Government and til municipalities as in Manitoba. There is in A 0 were $1,897,762, and there it is th deliberate policy of the Governrnen to set aside the whole amount f0 Hoop of fiours Balsam W. Button, MD - Pride of Birth (By W. L. Cotton) “votmo nee-titre’ oavt Hlstorious. 2-115. maxi - z ' iterates; NEW while the other half is distributed in Alberta the net profits ofthc Provincial Liquor Board for 1925 Of this amount $444,878 from beer taxes and s112.-"’°"‘1" “111111-“4 ‘"1111 1°11!’ 11°’ @111" division oi profits be- METHOD DIAGNOSINC; LUNG CONDITIONQ l A few years ago two Flrenchtphy- sicians were able to locate obetrne tions in the spinal canal by means of a specially prepared odl of poppy; oi the world. a strong tide oi warm ieelin the hearts of those who bared the i .1 iodine. The iodine resists the X ray ‘and thus showed up any obstruc- ‘H011. Tlhese physicians then began using these tale-atoms into the wand pipe and bronchial tubes/find found l. t. survived and returned there certainly a. feeling of sorrow an gin heads to the cold wind in memory of the brave men who fell by the Great 'Wa.r. -And for those who intend to explore l ir are able to lay of! their time study and their time for their e ular employment to greater adva was tage than in longer days and short- So we need not dwell d er nights. lerary quarries are, therefore -- or perhaps we should say perforce- o ii- f g. n! In Saskatchewan the net profits of the first year of operation. from April 16, 1925, to March 21, 1026, lions. enlargements, 8 l. rtopullhis breathe that it would show up any dilata- thickenings and so forth in the tubes and lungs. introducing the oil is s. simple matter. All the patient has to do lg tongue forward and regret that so many of them are longer on this point. no longer here. Many oi those who‘ were present on the first Armistice information a disputed point. to the higher life in the better spent. gone to the United States. cr West- ern Canada, or elsewhere, in search Nor is the importance of seeking All Day have, in the meantime. passed are agreed that it is time well-‘ Moreover, we have the ma- world; and, many—too many-have terial for able debaters and teach- ers oi the art of speaking in goodly . . l? Oldeflmie a result. when the latter is read for market the country is satiatc farmers are now appealing fo higher “my on me mmign prWi-ifil A. D. Authorities differ as to Herodotus credits This is quim Datum]. one of ‘lwthem with 373 feet. the historians chief instincts of humanity is 58111-101 ‘uexandna reduce 111M figure duct. preservation, self and l'or his property. protection for one’. ears a 0. y Y B d f.‘ ‘their height. 11o 93 feet. i One thing is certain I S tank-that in a day when all cities had dian farmers have been dcmandingipowerflfl 111111111 1111 a necessary 1111111 The walls of Babylon were the with the American product. These 5130111111 11101111811‘ 11111911 ‘Vere 1111i 1111 around 600 ‘B.C., and torn down in protection from Competition Mm tection those of Babylon were so the “lore cheaply ‘Imduced farynloug and high and wide that all the reduction of the public debt of the Province. General Smutz. ex-Premier o [iirilnsopitet- as well as a brave sol ior. appreciation of humor as a sup port against the depressing e!‘ ifects of a life on the veld is 31198.1‘ front which we make the subjoin- ed extracts: naturally, and with the numbers all over the province. South Africa, is a. statesman ltlldii. That he has also a strong ent front a loreword which he wrote for a book recently published and opening of the wind tfhus ex- posed. about one tihirdpiiamtwo thirds 11110011 and 11103118111111 that of an ounce of the oil is than 11011111 11m 011111111 111 home‘ poured down the wdndpdpe. If thei right bronchial tube and lung are to be examined, the patient leans] Slightly forward and to the right, or if the -left side then to the left. a considerable number fell victims to tuberculosis. The poisonous gases by which they.were greeted in the course of the war may have weakened‘ their lungs, f ‘are they endured. Their memories |Wlli long be kept green by a grate- ‘iul people. But for those who were compelled to go abroad to earn 111051 Bkllliflllltheir livelihood, there is to be add» entail-er tubes of the lungs can be watched by m if there is any obsttnictiion obese will he shown up by the 011, eygn in cases where the of the honest and independent live- they 0f those who have passed away ' knowledge which Have we not had experience of this in the past and present? On many occasions we have had the pleasure oi seeing our own compe- titors at the art oi speaking on their feet. able to hold their own with speakers from outside and thus show that our system of Edu- cation can supply the fountains of produce good speakers and eminent teachers. There is one branch of training in the art oi speaking, however, which has not been taught here as wide- ly and as effectively as it should have been. 1 Hel l IIIZIIIEIH “ fONG the few great piano, - o l0 ysician would not have beern able’ ed a deep feeling oi’ regret that ter oi eiocution. We refer to the tnatl oCo. the world," is the we musical celebrities voice their opinion of the Hcintzman & Co, Piano. Its warm and Syfnpg. thetic tone has earned the approval of musicians claiming both local and intemationai fame. Visit our Music Salons and inspect correctly diagnos other methods. e them *by1thore are n 0t more means of em- ployment and pmflt in their island 111 empuflon 1111011“ precede Afirst-class course the the various Jnoclcls. products of the United States, bu politics has taken precedence eveu' oi‘ self-preservation. Today foreign I world wondered at them. I ‘of gens in the temple at Olympus. producm are comm‘ into Canada n builtbettveen 470 and 462 B.C.. and about one-half and, in some cases destroyed by fire in 408 AI). its Onequarler the amount of duly the frame was ot wood, strengthened Americans charge against Canadian .1111111 111111 111111 Coiimiod 1111111 products going into their country As a result of this one-sided adjust- ment sonic section oi hurt and. when hurt. it squeals. Now the formers and gardeners of Ontario and Quebec feel the pinch they of unequal competition and are lookingvior a remedy. of Alberta found Canada is thin shot-ts of ivory made pliable by 1ilamc. The eyes were oi choicest gems, the hair was of gold, the ‘mantle was of gold studded with enameled figures. The fourth wonder was the Temple of Diana ‘at Ephesus, built in the fourth century before Christ there is in ‘them. Above all W01 some “m0 “so the l _ and burned by the Goths in 33g must open out the sources of fun coa -miners they were up 11' The third wonder was the statue “'\.. against unequal competition with 1111111 111111 111111111611 1111111 11111 1111111111 American coal and they demanded 1111111111 111 1111111111811111111111111’ '1111111 "More stulid enough; for by patience is themselves thing like human bovines of veld. \\'e want something more to 11111111111-11111111011 01’ L118 Oil is ab» hem [he “m” . , - . - E1951. l C i. i1 keep up the self-respect of the Z°11L1$Y 11111119111" ‘111113913 11°w°v°1atuivc audjnost capaiiioefigdntfgogrdf spirit in us. Specially do wewan. 1-11 711111 1111111 more g11111111f¥111g11111111l 1-‘1 l11'111111111y 1116 1111181’ 8nd the _ point is that administration 0t the “m. r(kugon M, m U f an antidote for that deadly tlull- 011 direcuy to ‘he wmdpipe and thaw who t“ 7t. ebpr°11l°r1°11 ° ness and monotony which often bronchical tubes by the above or a 11 111 11111111111111 111111 eats the heart of life on the veld. How shall we fight the effect nn our spirit oi.‘ droughts and locusts and other pests? . . . "A little pinch of humor will go ‘very far, indeed. We must to some ,cxteut idealize our surroundings and see the interest and the fun [in ourselves. We must learn to Ilaugh at ourselves and our troubles." not they make of us in the end merely some- the _‘i‘his is worth much to many indi- viduals who have been going arolutd to various [physicians with a history ref persistent cough and a,’ generally exhausted condition. The home. The bravest in war are those who are most ambitious in peace. Apart from those men who have farms of their own and can live contfnrtably‘ and independently other diseases that fasten them- “ selves upon weak constitutions is ma‘: ~91‘ shown to be larger in Prince Ed- .. particular cases. I ward island than in the other pro- _ ‘A1111 11'1""! 3'01! Ywllze that thus vinces of Canada. It is re-ussurlug really valuable agent. iodine, one to note that the great majority of man, can the boys and girls attending our now be placed right into the ailing schools are healthy. active and 101MB. without having to ‘go all the strong. Otherwise there would be mflydmuntl by stomach intestine, ground ftn the feur that the vigor . o0 , and so forth, you are not which has hitherto characterized surprised at its effe-ctivgnegg m. the sons and daughters of this fair curing these cases. ‘isle might ere long be diminished. ‘There can be no such fear in view .of the fact that the climate of this other methods, is now considered 1e best possible treatment training of clubs formed for the in- tellectual improvement oi its mem- bers. No person can become a fin- ent and pleasing speaker without such a course of training. it is like beginning in the dark and meeting with pitfalls that cause failure and discouragement. The remuneration reqfiired by competent teachers of elocution should not prove a barrier in a province like ours, nor should it be hard or impossible to find a thoroughly qualified elocu- tionlst for the length 0i time ne- cessary m lay the foundation of such a school. in years gone by in this province we have had efforts made to estab- lish such schools. They were made by really superior teachers, and if they had been encouraged would have sent out a large school whose example would have been most beneficialito the cause of education; but whenever the next vacation came around the professors were Great G MILLER BROS. An Illustrated carafolus with prlu [In w!!! be sens you on requur. eorge Street Jamieson’: Carnation Cream ———-—-—oo>---_- DAILY LESSONS 1lsiand province is one of the most healthful in the world, and in view allowed to relinquish the efforts. and thus the death-blow given in qlves you all the good there ls in any skin preparation, no matter CHAPS a protective duty on ma]. The around 350 B.C., and torn down in 1') . coal miners of Nova Scotia had 11111“ A111 11 111111 11 11111g11111c11111 been fluttering from the same "W structure. 0n the platform at tho equal competition but the people of 111p “V1111 11 111111111111 carved 11111111 Alberta at that time wanted free 11101111’ 111511111 111 1111111111 11111111 111138 “we in other commodities and ‘statues of Mattsoius and Artem- they opposed protection. And there 111111 we are I The sixth wonder was ,the Coi- The principle of protection. which 1011111111 111 1111111111111 00111111811111 111 Z1111 . B.C., and sold as old metal to the is only another name for self-pre- k i D _3 , eervation, the first law oi nature, 51111111111111“ e111 11 A1 1 111" will become effective when we a; 11eve11111 1111111111611 P1119 realize that the building up of our 1g 1 01118 111 11611111111118’ 111 111111 os, built between 285 and 247 B.C. W118 own country as a whole is common I h n h sense and for the benefit oi all. The 1 11111 1' e 111 est 1111111c11111e O1 1 e ancient world between 400 and 600 need of protection is slowly making f t m l d h i itself; slowly and only as the eel K111111111 0111 11 111p111 1w“ “shoe pinches." As mixed farming a ensfblaped 11111111111 1111161 111111111 becomes general throughout Can-1 111111 11 111 11811 11111111 11111 111 111111 l ads the sectional diflerences wil_l1a11 1111101111 11111 1111c“ 11111111 11111111111 gradually disappear and we shall, 111161 - regardless of political propaganda,1 110w 1111 11111 11111111111111 111111 1110 realize the wisdom of the Conser- 11110111191111 o1 11111118 1111111111 1111111111 votive policy as enunciated by ex- EDn-ORML N°T5s_ Premier Meighen, “to make it as a difficult f9;- a fgfglgn Coupu-y u, Whatever success may attend the send its goods into Canada as it isvllotuto growing business, and it p); Canada (0 gem; m; goods “m, has been wonderfully successful. the foreign couutry"—as difficult the basic industry in this province 0;- “ easy will always be dalrying. This is the -——--<o>—-—- foundation line oi mixed farming Vince.“ 1t may be and ppgbgbly strength of my salvat-iomrfirou hast \ ' w: mo out: ANOESTORS. “m1 1'11"“ 1“““11“g 11" “"1 “B11111” m... been true that the outlook for fffed "W “"111 1“ 111° ‘"11’ °1 111 111.1i1<;1e§1t1111ieii11111111e 11 111110 1111111 ‘"9 111111111955- openings along these lines has not 11 1 e‘ lg m,“ instead o; cleansing if ————— k t it h ld h e , , tbou'rt able outvzrgit [zjzjofnzfem11153129211111 Safeguarding our live stock from 11:21.1’ Ai:ugu:1heasSt_ .L1;1“vo:u,ce 211.1,] HE Mus-r D161 0111)’ "ipiwell 1111101199 1°11 111° '13 BB B lCB. ’ 3mg , our inventions m" lalwlwaving disease is good farming and in ev- the Lakes the rivalry between He waotixtfkiéltsrejob, and, like every- sarwm thou flush the mm mm 1 cry way commendable and well ‘@595 and towns to secure new ’ N _ _ the sea, 11111-111111181111 111111 11111 81111911111 11111101 worth all the money we spend on iiiclorlfl! 111111 118811 11111¢11 111191191‘ fixnheig1liotnes1111.1i§..1i§11...1i.1i111$i1 O11 1117119.,“ 1°“ O1 11110 111111 11111 11111911111111’ 111111 11111119 1° 1°01‘ 111161‘ than it has been in the East and it and his hands would keep 8 e11’ it. it would also be good business to safeguard our children,irom the dangerous diseases, moral and physical. which threaten them. Are we doing it? with patronizing pity on by-gone ages when the people knew so little and, in our opinion, had so little. 3 ‘We need tube chary of our pity. The people of by-gone centuries knew less than we do about many linings. They, didn't know the earth was round; they did not know it went round the sun. and they didn't ‘if we are going into the potato business on a large scale we must reckon with the winter. We must have frost-proof buildings for stor- ing them when frost thredens. We 1 Mayy large lnanufsotu h... con- cerns- in the United States have es- tablished branches in Cattadn. main- ly because our rprotective tariff makes it profitable to do so, but also because it enables them to export the products of these branch- es to other countries within the British Empire at the preferential rates of duty which Canadians en- joy. Canada finds this satisfactory in so far as employment is given to Canadian labor whose pay is disbursed and expended within the Dominion to the advantage of all concerned. Nearly all of these branches of American factories are located in Ontario and Quebec. Why not in the Maritimes? The question has lnot been answered. it would seem that we ought tq get a. good share of these branch industries. winter ports are nearer to all Eu- ropean countries than any other Canadian ports or American ports. it is a long and costly rail-haul from a factory in Ontario to the Atlantic seaboard. and both Saint John and Halifax are right there already. Herein would seem to be large possibilities of Industrial develop- ment. ii they were sought for as they have been in the Central Pro- has been proportionately rewarded. Within the twelve months past Canadian wnlneshsve turned out 3,000,000 tonsmors coal than in o. like previous period. This looks hopeful, but our imports of coal have also largely increased. The Dominion's coal bill is somethinti alarming. The tonnage of import- ed coal grows yearly and the price; is almost three times what it was‘ Our ' oi‘ the fact that a “saving remnant" ‘of strong men and women will al- .ways have a life-interest in the fer- ‘tile land of their birth. Neverthe- lessi it is deplorable that so many of the ablest, healthiest, most high- WQRDS OFTEN 3HSI;S.F§D_ l); educated tandnlfayest oittiire peo- Donit say "there were no other ai- 11° ‘We 11° '1 e 1' 11119.11 11 111101 temauvesy. Say “was mo other “L fitabie industries native-to their teruzmven. mqnematfiwy. alsiand home. it is particularly age- choice or two ‘Magi vgrettable that the ranks oi t e OMEN Mygmoyormggn; a1.Isiand's veterans, returned victori- loy. Accent last syllable. not the ous, from the war. have been thin- first. nod so conside ubiY because they OMEN ‘MIISSPELIJED; ante- were unable to obtain here the em- (before); anti-(agajngln) iployment they desired. Still it was svnomtvns: deviate. diverge, arlessins slsht to see so many r tjllgtress, wander, stray, swerve, turned soldiers. still young an veer, fa/nge_ lhearty, in the "line up’ before W031) STUDY; “Use a word. Charlottetowns war memorial on three times and it is yours." [Let 111° 119119111 1111111151108 Day‘ Thar m, tum-ease our vocabugary by mas. medals which a large proportion (f) tering one word each day. Tod1ay's'111°111 p11°11d1y W019’ W126 1111100 11 word: DIVULQE; to tell. as a sec- 111111- 111117 118d home 1116 Se 1131111: re-t; disclose. “Our secret shall 111911’ worthy or 11l11111h111i1:1111 anmoh “Eva, be divulsedp. the tight little is an tom w c they sprang to arms. IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon o is ‘vévvvé "v v v v w n \ D1111! 51519011011! . HOW Nor ‘ro no 11-. ’ 11°“ i-iearken, O scavenger of social . I <1 Guardian Reade" Art thou a hand to help? 0r 11151 +o0< "1 11°59’ 1 To smell the savour 0f 01H‘ 611i’ Novembor 1s, 192s sullth? _ To smell and tell it auiong friends 100p SAVES-"Save us, o 06d and 1°“? of our salvation. and gather us to- A11- 111°11 11 “1811111191 ‘"1 1‘ 11111111“ gather, and deliver us, that we may “W151?” Finding things foul and leaving l th lks 'i‘l hi 1 gve 111T 1o 1y 01111111119 1 them still fouler. Chron. 16:35. PRAYER-O God the Lord, the 1111111» ‘Elf’: 111°“.°“1‘~" °‘" Age“ s . clean. And the salary muetntbe low. fie soaked for a pen, but they gave him a spade, And Ihe Ihaif turned away with s Two kinds of social workers would attend us. Mark well the two, ihow each doth ply his trade, legislstes and labours -to amend ue: Que lifts the critic's torch, bu not the spade, ‘ h. every sphere these two so cheek by jowl, The one‘ will plan and work, the other drowl! I ‘ "What. ho!" quoth he, "my wretch- Ihnm One But he altered his mind, and, seis- . frag the spade- die-dug! lie worked wit-h a will that is bound to succeed, And the months and the years wont U110 this noble efiort to uplift the nrtl care. But they knew many things . p‘_ Th6 wnyit II! 100$. Wild, an ed iellow-oownsmen, ‘ . meats ssd buildings which, with . we do not lmow. Awaypback two ortln-es thousand years before tho Christian Era they erected monu- nnderstand that large quatilties arc at present stored in barns and out- houses awaiting transportation and. in many eases. there is dmger of being over-liken by the frost. \ sli osrunodern science we cannot llhlid may. h. thesevsn wonders of the sn- ., 4 t t. One of the most fsnreaching ad- vertisements this province has ever had is the legend in conspicuous years ago. Wes not W. T. R. Pres- ton then put on their track and did ,he not fill the land with the a before the war. Anti now ocean freight rstes have sqsln advanced. And we have the King Government in power the! was pledged to break the back of hat iNorth Atlantic combine sfew red letters on each oi the hundreds Qrltl one still remains, name- s] of thousands of patio sacks now of cheapo, still one , 1 1 of our world as of . , detest. no pyramid was has m" ‘term u» nun; Bet-Miran 211m "WW 1' " 1111i‘! lsofhtgp m} 1Q - o Garden‘ of the Gulf." of their rsscaiittiesf Preston now? We have not heard. ‘or read anything about _him for1 going to the southern msrksisz-monmm Where is gin-ts ’ labor was hard. twbst are ye doing, doctors, poli- But 1.1;, Exam‘ he rem filled with s » ticlans? l“ ‘d. n“ A d iota ye, m ll!‘ ‘ 9W- Some jeer1sd him and sneered at .11 ‘gownsmen.’ 11116 188k. but. he plugged _ put O especially ye town-physi- Justoshsnlesbeeveroontdping. ' clans? Their words never seemed to dis- of “speaking. on your feet." The literary season is now . opening here in the Capital, and judging by the enthusiasm of the promoters of Lecture Courses we "feel quite satisfied that there will be u. boom in literary circles such as has not been witnessed ltere for many years. it is but fair to say that. the Caledonian Club has set the pace, St. James Church next. and several others are spoken of. The well-known success of the course ofthe CaLedonian Club and others last year sugurs vreil for the very best results this season. The Caledonian Club deserves spr- 1cial mention for the tenacity it has shown in keeping alive the literary spirit in our midst when it appear" ed to have almost fled. Let us hope that it will be handsomely rewarded this season and on through the coming years. We can assure everybody that 1116111111111 1111‘: profitable hours are in store ior al who attend. One of the able lectures on the program _has already 119611 4911"" ed by the iRev. W. B. Muir. and it is to be hoped that he will accept another call to repeat his lecture. or at all events, come 1188111- 111111111 who missed his rflrst effort thronzh oversight are very anxious to hear him asain. tin addition to the lecturesvprtg per there is an hour to be dewte to debate of the lecture by V11111-1‘ tee;- speakers which is an excellent feature of the course. I l it is needless to mention a1 t 1e speeches in advance. As 11111 they are specialists in their litre. and will come well able t0 P11589111 their opinions iu a scholarly 11111;: mun-mm; style which cannot a to please those who 81181111- The matter oi securing seats ill time is one that will have i0 119 looked after in time this season. _._4Qo>——--— THE AEROPLANE st-ne n is new possible to walls 11110 a Bond Street shop and buy an aer- oplane “oif the P98" 30 1° Weak The idea. apparently. 1B 1° 911W?" “g the private owner, and t c firm concerned 1e 918N194 1101 °"‘ iy to sell you an aer0P111116. 11111 1° arrange, if you so desire. 11"‘ W111: “piping, which costs about 2v ounds. 11 A m Haviiand Moth 1s at v18!- ent on view in the showroom. W11-11 a salesman ready to tell you all about ‘it, even down to its petrol consumption. which is about 20 miles to the gallon. The wins! fold up .and it can be taken through s ten foot doorway- 5116811 ik-up to 90 miles an hour. and 011 costs about s M11117 B 111119- All this is very BDCOIIYIBIUI; and an aeroplane shop is certainly a progressive ti... But the day still seems a ong way oft when private aeroplanes will become at , what It costs. BilTllEIl YOU l \ BOTANICAL SURVEY A BOON TO AGRICULTURE. For many years the Geological Survey, and latterly the Victoria Memorial Museum, of the Depart- rnent of Mines, Ottawa, have been engaged in botanical explorations with a. view of ultimately bring- ifig about an adequate botanical survey oi Canada. These investi- gatlons are quietly carried on and few people, outside oi‘ those inter- ested in botany, know much about the extent and nature of the work. Still fewer realize its practical value. As an illustration of the intimate relation between botani- cal explorations ttnd the develop- ment of agriculture resources in Canada the following is rather il- luminating. 1 A few yeaps ago, when o conu- try-wide demand ior largo quanti- ties or turf grass seed oi a super- ior quaiity began seriously to en- gage the attention oi‘ the Dominion Department of Agriculture, the Seed Commissioner, Mr. Geo. H. Clark, undertook to investigate the possibilities oi developing a seed growing industry in Canada which would make tho Dominion independent of imports from other countries. In an indesvor to ascertain where in Canada such turf grass seed might be produced in quantity for commence r Seed Commissioner applied to‘.- nformation to ‘Dr. M. O. Malte. Chief Botanist of the Na. tionai Her-barium, Victoria Mem- orial Museum. From records in the National I-lsrbarium and also from personal knowledge oi‘ tbs flora of the various provinces, Dr. Mellie was able tn point, to particul- ar iocalities in the Maritime Prov- incea suitable for seed, growing purposes and where, a particular- ly fine grass, so-cailed ‘Browntop. there's not a thing about it yo could object to. - to injure. mg lotion that keeps the skin like velvet. It cures. Care's quickly and No grease. no stickiness, nothing A gentle healing, cool- Prlce 35 cents. i‘he White Drug Store ii. JAMIESOI crop of 70,00 pounds. in the sum er 0i‘ 1926 Dr. Malte visited Prince Edward island, and Jtlentiiied another still more valu- able turf grass, the Velvet Bent. which is now being prepullllfid 1111' ' ’ 1'- commerce under the direction oi lthe Seed Branch of the Depart- ment oi‘ Agriculture. The devoi- iopmeat of the seed KNWIHB 0f 11119 exceedingly valuable grass togeth- er with that oi tllle Browntop seed intiuslry may reasonably ‘be er, pected to make Canada the, most, reliable source of supply in the. world for fine\turi grass seed.’ BRIDGETOWN SCHOOL. toilet‘: Grade lX-l. Marion Nichol-son- Grade Vl'il-—1 Raymond Macdow aid 2 Elliot Currie. Glade vt-1 Myrtle lliacKenzie 2 Ernest Cantello. Grade lV-l Reta Mac aster. 2 William McMaeter a. Mat-sued" Moreside 4 itoddie MacKenzie. Grade iii-l Eleanor Morrison Z Lloyd MacLeod. Grade I (SrJi-l Douglas More- side 2 Dannie McMaeter. Grade I (Ir.)—1 Harry Ross 3 Jew nie McMasler. ‘Perfect Attendance: Mlrfll-lfifne MoresitleflDouglas Moreslde. Rutlrfiterns, teacher- ..;,.. ma.» - ~ » - ' 4B0" . In Your Blood. Makes Health Probably m. most tines"- [fly mt tomsns '01 3?..'...i".'~.»1.1~-~r'm3» =1.» or Grade lIl—1 Margaret Noholson‘ Honor roll for the month of 0e- can. him a hit- As he this. 1 . l newts; name at fast when they called tor tile ‘stride Audgsvehimapenintupbco, ‘ fits ioyotocliovesnentwuswsst Uncle Sam imploring-tfs from, A million dollars‘ st 3t to year for more of our iuperli into» st Mews. sli nnrneronus. To. lesrn to fly s modern machine is neither very difficult nor very dangerous. B1111 Whit were the end bad not s Jers- ' lliilh l Come here to admonish you and "11" "1" the recent feats of Mrs Elliott- ’ LVNnALHLynn have shown that women should be just as capable of flying , ' by themselves ss men. 1 to his hots, T119 essential difficulty-quart AM victory irons 1n his flpl- from the cost of s machine, which amounts to about 800 pounds-is Mdhrrt always got what. we hope tu- ot hnt- [that for tskiwff and lending s minim least, ysmtoss Ismail‘ tom laoksi from‘ It 1M1" ""17 Inn use" f" I°°11"""”" m on: anon romo Pit-IT: vssslfist- sure tnstslllo lrIIt . ssslgnllsbls, i911"- 1419112 . "W" '2' .Q1\||'.I”Q;"'Q|IO O ,, . iiflfins so generally p111 the syotom rIeM- t . rmos so osurs so!’ lo one Month's “N. 11 sni 01-N- = . was ini-esdy crow-Ins 1n a prncti- cally pure state. i Under Dr. Malta's su rvision as to correct identification f species the Seed Branch of the Dominion: Department of Agriculture has in the last few years made good pro-i grass in developing a new seed; growing industry in Prince Edward‘ island. In i026 80 growers re-l ceived 813.000 for Browntop seed which in previous years hsd beat-I allowed to to waste. and this year there re not ms than 480 rowers, with s prospective seed _-._..i__. serodrornes is eisislizhett-Tor-por! ash o more liksly iterative-enn- tclksonte lnyontlou aca _i. .1