_._ _v_._.u._‘_.“.____. .. .- ..s_.._..,_..._._.___.__._._: _ _,,___L____,___~__ V“ L“ 1 I Q} E _ F r ' _ h: the Empire, were persuaded to -; the people of Canada. Any (m. am»- .|-..- i.» , nnm-l / s HE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN SEPTEMEERJZ 1933 PIOl-lfllllir-W. Chester 8. IieLurc. Il-P. VlorProaii-iolsl. d. l. Bur-ell. l‘. J. l Broretary-Llenn-Fnl. 0- A. lhelilnnol, h. B. 0. Idltur and iluuglug Director-J. B. Burnett, I‘. J. l. Aslnchsto tl<iiinsru— (‘mun Walker and D- Ii. llarrfu los-sslrsg ilnliy (founded nun» .00 pf‘! yesp (in pdvgnee) delivered I140 POI III! (ll! ldvasrre) m I d in Ullnsslu and United Staten ' ADVERTISING fills‘ INTATIVEB UNITED lTATES-‘Iho lleekwnii gym-hi Annoy l“, no‘ n" c... III Building, New York City. General Minion! Building, Detroit. inlrrstll; Clir- Will-roam»: ‘rows- llulidlng. Chicago; Glenn aunt I13} N0. “ti! Biff 11.. HlHilHH-HH i Building, Kansas - . Atlanta; Ionsdnock Building. Ban Frunciseor I adelphln. - WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 27» 1933. ‘HUM 7i I DESERVED TRIBUTE- troubles." "Nations of the Empire," he adds, "cannot only afford to welcome kindred nations to world trade but, by enlarging their IrcuP. will stre 1;“ the advantages oi the trade bond they made at Ot- tawa, and hasten its results. A club of world trade with s. wide mem- bership, bound together by an ex- chang, of most-favored-nation treaties trading on principles which encourage exchange of goods and services and by the combined ac- tion of its central banks in main- taining stable prices, currencies and exchange between the mem- ‘F-‘iui 1k sometimes one falls to see the yeocdfortheweessoit maybe r V .‘ E I r s i :5; r § l lcr the existence of the Royal E flushing commission because of the Epleiihora. of witnesses heard and E oridenco submitted. The Bank Mt 5c: Canada a subject to revision _:_ ever-y ten years; last year was the time for revision, but because it was S: claimed that the existing system was g; too inelastic to meet the needs ofi r y producers, the Bennett Government appointed a Royal Com- isslon to investigate credit facilities‘ .' generally and to report on the b8". 811110114 b6 1518B 911W!“ w 1'9‘ f.‘ Bani: system as a, whole 10rd MM. vive world trade." Here is a chal- E Millan, who has had considerable 191089 m “W” 'n"“°“3 “h” may be " disposed to plunge into self-suf- l ficiency. iflilllflii E _~_ experience in financial matters, and f: Bir- Charles Addis, one of the most 5 outstanding authorities bank . 1;; practice and banking credit systems Oil A LAME APOLOGY “Our Boards of Trade are silenced. Brief bags which were regularly brought forth are now placed in cold storage to be used only when a Liberal government resumes power. What a farce it all is! Those who were most vo- ciferous in former days are will- ing now to kiss the hand that smltes themJl-Patriot, Sept. 23. lend their services. and the Royal ._ Commission has now concluded the f.‘ baking of evidence and are prepar- ing their report. We have heard a fl good deal of the adverse criticisms ljleveled at the exsting Banking _ qstom-Iwhich is natural, as the pointing out of the flaws was ‘ "nevvs"—but we have not heard so that the foregoing statement should‘ L much about the favorable oom- not be interpreted as a criticism inents passed, for a similar reasonllof the Boards of Trade! There are i vts: that everyone recognizing our|among the members. it says, "a ~§anlring system is outstandingly number of leading Liberals who Kane of the best in the world, fav- [have been always and are still in- . arable critlcsm is taken for grantqteresied in trade matters," There- ‘ ed. But it is well to put on record ‘fore "it should not be necessary to oflie very fine tribute paid by Sir state that our Boards of Trade TOharles Addis to the Bankers pres- were not critcised or attacked." at the concludmg public sitting Ils tirade of Saturday, apparently, cf the Royal Commission at Ot- was just our wntemporaryk way of l tuwa. Addressing Mr. J. A. McLeod, expressing its esteem and regard. 'Fresident of the Canadian Bankers‘ Our Boards of ‘Trade must feel Association, and General ltinnagcrilighly honored at receiving such Mo: the Bank 0i Nova scozia. Sir i an encomium. They may, however. Charles saldz- excusably retort, in the words of "Mr. McLeod, I am proud of my profession. You have been subjected lo a searching ques- Our contemporary now declares the immortal nursery rhyme: "It's all very well to dissemble tionnairi- and you have given us 0 r _ . . straight reply‘ You have Ycfmod But gage. o“ kick me do _ yrederwk m‘, Chicago-s mun“ possible and the use of a quieti-“E t th 15 n o! Jordan ran amok, killed one of the one by onc Ill." mmj." ill-inform- stairs?" y w“ oipal reference librai-‘an, has pre- dfllk. . ma“ m m '1 He m Sig, o ed Hanged semen! 5nd “ma” 5 damn“ it‘ 1c and, 1 may hold. in some pared a table of statistics from of- Between attacks some nails!“ m“ k°°“°“" ‘Rights m vng‘ o‘ ———- ‘W! “non captain Stairs whahow- ‘ ' ' ‘ " - cases, mfliiclllii charges which “m, and the h) are helped by Epsom sang. gpgglgl 1118 Bilmeihl"! WW1 ti“ him“- Th° evcr, jumped overboard and man. have been lcvclicd at the bunks, POPU, ATION INCREASE ° r 3°“'°°5 511°“ diets and sometimes by mental smooth. velvety surface and clean (Exchs-HBQ) aged to keep “no” mm rescued by and 3.0,, ha“, dam, so with a m? 1 that his home town in i931 was as ' - edges of a new-planted board, and Those who complain of the sever- ,8 Amer, "sh h m g . . ‘M. down as twéntsufuth place m treatment or suggestion. my o‘ me m“ at the present time n can_ crman, w o ca ed I Twice in the last iwo days the Liberal organ has attributed to Hon. Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan and Mr. W. Chester B. McLure, M‘. P, with a frz-ni: sinccr y compels (‘OHVZCIIOII I believe that your document will stand histor- caliy as a ciefencu of the Can- sdian Banking System, and if this Commiasioir, ill my jndgi 1cm, mg- ' d British l _ Mr. ZPred have clone iroihlng more ‘than the statement that the population ill: figiiztesltl Jacksonville heading we sometigles tliicmk “Quit womi; zsillilalmzr the motorist’. recalls that Kelley md an three were ‘rmmmd I ' O . ' ' ' ' I ' ' In" "'29 w 1 43.99 murders per who do nee ewor mus inow , . and ‘fled upon the charge o’ piracy '00 Home Bu’. hon m“ elicit this response it would not altogether have fmlccl in the task allotted to it. ' "I think that he are now past the controversial stage. I have ' no questions to ask, or at least none which can b:- considered ‘ argumentative. The need for that has gonc. Your papers have re- of the Frovince is 80,000. No such statement has been made by either of these gentlemen, as our con- temporary is aware. The quotation as it appeared in the Liberal organ is from the Canadian Press, refer- ring to the population as "over VE-iied that we have n. common human life cannot be matched in aim. that - n - . s ~ BALLYLEE 1 h t 1 tin Sti t uncl of J. r‘. 50v Tube we me 1 c mmon 80.000. and given on no other any other country in a comparable Md‘ eve“ y’ t e "pp" “"5 is gem y Sim“ :3’ $33M P gr Halifax, cred at Black Rock near the present Shaving Cream 39 | . . purpose, vxhich is the welfare of . , authority but that of the Canadian Icruncc that may cxist. any shade 111-955, Ag 5, may“; 0g “cg our shOW the world the way out of its . A Wisconsin despafch i!!! "W behaviour of wild geese and 51111"- rels portends an early severe win- ter. The story is e. hardy annual and while wild animals and birds may have no more advance infor- mation about the weather than humans, they make more provision for the future than a good many ‘people by laying by something when there is abundance. _ The New York State Department of Education in co-operation with the Orlme Prevention Bureau ar- ranged a concert st the American Museum of Natural History which was attended by 900 children. Re- ports are that the youngsters liad a good time. The purpose of the spon- sors was to ascertain by experi- ment whether music should be ad- ded to the bureau's plan of child education. There is no queston of the cultural importance of music, for its own sake, in any scheme of education. but its value as a speci- fic, or even as a prophylatic, against crime remains to be demonstrated. . fiuurc 1 w. Baku. up. COMPLETE EXAMINATION LIIGRAINE 0R ONE SIDED HEADACHE B: IN Despite all theefiorts of practit- ioners and research men. the cause of migraine or one sided headache has not been discovered. You may remember that an insti- tution, in an endeavor to investi- gatc this ailment, advertised for sufferers to submit to treatment and were forced to turn away many hundreds, such is the number ai- flicted. Drs. M. Gritchley and l". R. Fer- guson, London, state that migraine may be due to the liver, the eye, the food, and other causes. '1‘hey' believe that there are two factors entering into the cause-something already existing in the body, and A. philosopher surely would be par- doned if he confessed to a skeptical trend in his meditation on that subject. -.___ During the sessions oi’ fihe British Commonwealth Relations Confer- ence in Toronto last week promin- ent speakers declared that one of the problems of the banks in Bri- tain today is the large quantity of United States money on deposit. A veritable flood is pouring in, main- ly from investors and subject to, withdrawal at 24 hours‘ notice. As the interest rate is small. the pre- sumption is that these deposits of American money on such a large scale are for reasons of protection. Ii’ that be the case, it is a com. pliment to the United K ngdom and its hanks. A leading business journal says: With general business definitely better, the mid-summer or holiday season over and with the outlook decidedly brghter, it is opportune i0 but more effort into selling. Dis- card the thought that sales volume cant be increased. It can. ‘Yhere is more business to be had, coupled with an increasing inclination to bull. and constructive steps are nec- cssary to ensure that rull advan. I889 be taken of this more favor- able situation. Sitting back and waiting isn't the answer. Business won't just come in increasing v01- ume. Rather it will go to those who B" mm aggressive in developing a tabulation oi 95 cities according to the number of murders per mm. dried thousand of population. The lead is taken by cities of the south- hundred thousand. Chicago in the percentage table comes below suoh cities as Kansas City, Washington and Cleveland, wjth 9.31 per hun- dred thousand. and New York is in thirty-thins] place with 6.62 per cent. Such a dreadful disregard for stage of civilization. something which affects this body condition. As you know this is also the thought in Qpll6P5Y. the cause of which has not yet beendisoovered. In epilepsy there is a. body condi- tion, and some outside influence such as food is the match that sets oft the already prepared fire. If then migraine may be traced to the liver, to the eye, or other part of the body, or to the food eaten, then the natural method of treatment would be to try to deter- mine which one of these may be giving the trouble in each particular case. , ‘Thus. to investigate a case of migraine, a regular routine should be followed, which would include: (i) a careful previous history of the patient, and also his family his- tory: i2) a physical and mental exam- ination: ' (B) careful testing for anything abnormal about the, eyes; (4) an X ray examination oi low- er floor oi the skull, LhE sinuses, the gall bladder, and the intestinal: tract; (5) full examination of the fluid in the brain and spinal column. and the pressure of this fluid; (6) examination of the blood sugar, the urine, and the alkali re- serve of the blood and tissues; ('7) finding the rate at which the body processes work, or the basal metabolism as it is called. Drs. Gritchley and Ferguson state that it is useless to fight ofi an at- tack and recommend retirement to a quiet darkened room as 601m B5 Sufferers with migraine might well think about the above complete examination and the possibility of locating the cause of their suffer- BLIND RAFIERY REMENEERS With solace and pleasure of mind I'll be taking my ease This modern sic has ‘ of "hand-made" are not at all un- derstood. There is, to most , ‘ such a definite satisfaction in hav- ing things done well, quickly, and efficiently byunachinery that there is cousidcsbie ’ er of losing s source of infinite delight, even cf imingonscfthetruc baeesof fun- damental religious experience-the art of doing things by hand. To us, doing things by hand is s mime oi joy, eccentric Joy, if you will, but nonetheless sbidingl ‘risen b a certain physical exhil- aration, and s. mental regeneration, coupled with a deep spiritual beni- son. ‘The flexing of 'the muscles, the acquisition oi skill, the satis- faction oi accomplishment, give us an infinitely wonderful feeling oi letene Take physical labor, in the fields. We are well aware oi the efliciency of machinery in, say, the hay mea- dow-thc mower, the rake, the sweep, the staker. But to face a field, perhaps bordered by magnifi- cent hills and dotted by bluffs, with» the scythe and rake and fork is a profoundly stirring experience. And grass low with rhythmic swings, cutting closely and smoothly and evenly. 1s an adventure in pure con- tsntment. There is a sense of very personal accomplishment; s. sense of mastery as skill triumphs over brute strength; a feeling of supreme grace —one appreciates something of the famous mowing scene in Tolstoy's “Anna Karenina." Of course, it is all very foolish, very wasteful of time, very inefiicienh-but no one of real insight can deny its charm or physical and spiritual gratifica- tlcn. Gardening, too, is replete with opportunities of doing things by hand-and here those who score on charges of inefficiency in the field have no legitimate objections. Ma- chinery has no contrlvance that can weed onions like human fingers; nor prune rosw; nor stake dahlias; nor lay borders; nor pot plants. The real pleasure of gardening is the pleasure of manual accomplishment. And to put a horse and cultivator among the potatoes and corn is to lose half the vital asscnce of raising them: instead, s. hoe, skilfully wield- ed, which treats eacn hill of corn and each potato plant as a separate _ and specifically individual problem requiring mental concentration and manual dexterity, captures the elixir of this not-so-menial task. Garden- ing is, indeed, an art. Carpentry, too, is an art. I-ie who does not get a feeling of satis- faction when the sharp, shining auger bites into the wood is a poor the fragrance of pine shavings, are natural joys. They give an abiding sense of oneness and round of‘! the illusion of permanency in a world of fleeting inconsistencies. this enjoyment. And those who arc fortunate enough to be mistresses of their own kitchens, where delect- able edibles are prepared for their hungry families, are surely rich in imperishable wealth. Take apple pie making: the crust is rolled thin and placed in a pan, the apples are laid on and pressed down at the edges, it is ornamented on the top, so accustomed to mechanical contri- vances that the subtle implications to advance on this field, laying the . o! questions o! Insult» ‘Ill Charlottetown Guardian does not necessarily endorse III opinions o! son-anvil"!!- TB! PATRIOT’! IIIINDI Bin-The Patriot editor in sev- eral editorials recently has ssksd the question what are our Isdssvsl representatives doing for our fsnnsrs! In yesterday's issue it asks the question, “Will Mr. Ben- nett and his associates givg up their Jobs and salaries?" While tbs Patriot editor I n this fob and salary questim, let me remind him that his nletivcs are feeding in the trough of p2- ltical jobs with 300d salaries. Now I want to ask our federal members a question. when are these sgri- cultural promoters of’ live stock going in be sent back to their‘ farmers? If our federal represent-l atlves want to do something for the I farmers, let them send some of the ‘ Patriot editor's relatives and friends back to their own farms I am, Sir, etc, EAST ROYALTY FARM!!! listening to the birds in the treesz. "There's the wind on the heath, brother; there's night and day, both sweet things; sun, moon, and stars, ‘ brother, all sweet things." Others may find the lark's song made noti more divine, but more complex, in Mozart's music, irrepressible, un-i wearying, inexhaustible. 0r the nightingale in Bach, with those melodies infinite in variety, aver flowing, intertwining, which seem as though they would never and, and you pray they never may. Ducts of voice and wind, like the tenor and flute in the Mass in B minor, or contralm and oboe in one of the cantatas, suggest how the nightin- gale might sing in heaven. For the nightingale is not s plaintive singer of dlrgss: his song is the voice of giadness after great tribulation, which can be heard so often in Bach. The child is not yet able to feel jay in such things; but if the man wishes to feel Joy in them, or any- thing else, he must first become as a little child. I-Ie must forget his own name, and lose himself in his joy, whether it be the simple icy of the child, or some vision called up by poet or musician: such a. vis- ion as has been put into words in Dante's Paradise, where it rises like a Psalm of degrees to splendour in- eflablc and overwhelming. When Pirates Were may be reminded that in the long ago not only pirates but those who broke the customs and excise laws by smuggling were liable to be hang- in scptember, 1809, a man named Peter, or Patrick, Jordan was hang- ed in Halifax for piracy. Jordan had. in some wny come into posses- sion of the schooner Three Sisters. which, while at Gaspe, Quebec, was attached for debt owed to Messrs- Tremain, Halifax merchants. Cap- 1801-96, was sent to Gaspe to take the schooner to Halifax. benefit Thousands this way ‘l‘hc thousands of men and women all over this continent and in the British Isles, who own Canada Life policies, have protection running into hun- dreds of millions of dollars. The thousands of policy- holders who have had Canada Life protectionythrough the years have found the same premium which maintained their policies can also provide s fimd for their later years. The thousands of policy- holders who have lived to draw substantial sums for their pes- sonal use have a rcal appre- ciation of Canada Life Service. They have 10H us repeatedly their Canada Life policies have been their best investments. . Canada Life Assurance Company A Established 1847 LACE FOUR __ _ ' .. I" f‘ "E GUARDIAN . Notes By 77w Way what o“ Usmg Hands PUBLIC FOR “i- (wlnmpu n” Pa.) This _eoluu ll OIII Ill; fit ,\ " Gaspe that Jordan was "s dang ous man." A few days out of Gaspe, him to Halifax. ‘There s gunboat was sent in pursuit of Jordan, who was taken close to Newfoundland and taken to Halifax in irons. With him were Mrs. Jordan and on. the high seas. The i“?! found them guilty: the judge --- ‘ ‘ thetriotobe‘ ‘s-nd;‘“‘ for the fowls of the air to devour their bodies, as was the ‘ of the time. Mrs. Jordan and Kelley were reprieved, but Jordan provided a spectacle for a motley crowd gath- Point Pleasant Park. It was a re- volting spectacle, witnessed not only half What ft should be. $1 Wine 110W 60c Box Chase's , Ointment The average yield per acre of -~ tatoes in Canada is approximstel PIECI a l $1.00 Bottle Nujoi . . . . . ‘iii $1.50 Bottle Fellows Syrup ............ 89c 50c Box Gin Pills 39c 60c Box Chases Nerve Food 49o Menthoistnm w 50o Package Gillette Blades . 89c I. the superfluous crust is trimmed ofl’, and this perfect circle is baked un- der watchful eyes. A browned, tasty pie is surely a work of art! However, this is all foolishness, we know. We neither are nor want to be a Gandhi advocating a revolt against the machine and a return, by the free populace, but also by the many uniortunstes in Jae civil and military prisons who wHe paraded that they might see, and be impres- sed by. the terror of the law's ven- Oosrstitution Day was observed In the United States this week, the occasion being the 146th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution on September 1'1, 1787. It i5 quite safe to state that little or no credit was given in that country to the of difference. is no longer, I view it, in fundamental principle, but mflrvly as to the pace and method of our advance." At the turn of the year, if I'm spared, in Ballylee, In a warm house of feasting, with songs, and the telling of tales, In the midst of my friends, and Mayo, ‘twill be well there with me. Jordan pleade“ for passage for his wife and himself and his mate, one Kelley. The request WM 8T0“- ted, despite the fact that stairs was warned by the shipping master at 50c Jar Ponds (from: .. 43c 35c Tins of Taicnm lic 1 Pint of Essenceof Vinegsr .......................... 35c I 0s. bottle of Wsmpoles population is now well over 00,000. The population st the 1961 Do- minion Census was 88MB, and since _ * This is a magnificent trzbute that time it is estimated to have 4 from one in airihoitty; and this; increased by some 3,000. The garb. I Province must fcel a reflected glory 1mg of it, own new; “em 15 just h s0 far as the gentleman address- our conwmporary.’ way m, showing id is Ono of our sncccssful Islandcrslns misdirected zeal both at homo and abroad. l THE’ COTTON PLAN EJIPIRE’ CHALLENGE _ The United Btatcs Government's A noteworthy feature of the plan i” mcrea” the Price 0f 009W" “we returns L, a decrease m | by limiting the acreage seems lilac- Unlted Kingdom purchases fromily m “ma” much mflermg m m” the United states. The figures. cotton-growing suites. On or about cldentg in Nicaragua of several In bejrerig tug‘; akin“ m‘ m‘ JOY is largely 8 matter Of taken from the latest issue of the 1 "m5 fir" °f “an ‘hnuaryr n“ wt‘ f"! s? being moaned to produce My way to the house of Mary correct can’ Commercial Inmngcnce Joumulhiton landlord's, with the approval aémgvhe lsiplgfistgnadtd men "'3'" Hynes, beside the strong sea, u)" w‘ Hllrwss’ in me S“h‘“day' Donvt neglect your are. Th Unmd Kingdom puhfand co-operation o: the Federal ream th f ‘ g 8y prepared m AndIknow, ass moon on the wave. knew) ha“. 9 , i? 0N6 Which President she-n come meeting me m," Can we see anything in common ' chased from the United States G°Wmm°ntI Wm 'd'-5_‘P°“B Wm! ti" San Martin has sent against him. the hill between the child's dance for joy, mod, ,,,,,,,h £4,223,448 u, the n“, services" of not less than 200,000 As Hernandez was one of those And “m, QM mum hem, “m, and the profound tnnn which n vasgfing "ah-Ton": ha" or 1931 and during the same ‘tenant fasndies, amounting probably mmmd w Machfidi’ the former the word of her mouth to me. give“ by the “rd” °I ‘ 3m“ p°°h _ _ _ president, he probably ha; some or the sounds of great music? One 1S a liquid preparation Take B lip from Jimmie period this y“, bought mcrcmuhjto a million men. women and chil- disc valued at 234,429,082. an tnedmn- The "will Government will evidence is that Empire countries "m {mm n" own?" 01 WW0" and m, United Kingdom are pnr- lands avmelhins in excess 0:15.000.- 000 acres and retire them from ‘production. Under the terms of the plan, the Government will pay zen- tals ranging from $3 to $11 an acre chasing more goods from one an- other than they were a year ago. Sir Garrett Anderson, president of the Association of British Cham- bers of Commerce, attributes Bri- tains‘ “forward march from the crossroads of despair" largely to the Ottawa agrccmcnts- agree- ments which, lrc insists, are not ,___h0siilc to nations outside the Brit- ish Empire, but "they actually ‘i the average production from the land over a five-year period. The landwoner takes no risk whatever. Where the land is owned by a far- mer who has hitherto cultivated it llliilfifillf, it means only that he to the land owners, according toL DZE. Loyalists who was the devlser 0f much of the system on which that Constitution is based. The or. iginator of course intended that his scheme be B/iYpl-led to a union of British Colonies. Juan Bias Hernandez today looms as the most recent Cuban hero. "The Cuban Sandino" is the title which has been manufactured gm- him, 1n- ""1""? vXhfiriflnce. and as he does not want Dr. Grau Ban Martin as Pmldefll. 1i is very Plain that he 15 ""31" 1110 Bowmcnt." These two 11115110185 mnkc a good start toward ‘whlevlflg fame as a national hero in any Lntin-Amercan country. will farm less cotton land next year. But where it is owned by a landlord who has hltlvrto rented it to tenant farmers on s, sham or cropping basis, it means that in most cases he will need fewer ten- m" My choice above all the world is that place to the west, With a good fire in front of me there, I'd care not a Jot If the seven wide seas were roaring beneath the wrath of the winds, And I with a full jug before me, and meat in the pot. As s tree of the trcos in the wood hears the call of the voice of 5011118» I hear in this brawllng town a call in the hcart of me, .80, at the turn of the year, I'll set my face to the road, _ To meet at its end with-A thou- sand welcomes, O, Stranger to Bnllylec. -Catha.l O'Byrne. The Spectator. The region extending from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific yCoast exhibits within tits area a greater diversity oi‘ climates than any other part of Canada. to a civilization based on handi work. But we do believe thatathosc, who never willingly do anything by hand are neglecting a rich sourco of pleasure; they are missing a real physical satisfaction; and vastly more important, they are losing the very foundations of living with un- derstanding hearts. Healthy Oliair is a matter of correct care Glowing, healthy hair- electrically alive from root to tip, radiant, im- maculate, well-behaved, thing is self-unconsciousness: body, mind, and spirit seem to be joined into one, and there is no room for anything but the feeling, or the vis- ion, or the revelation which is that one whole. That 1s the reason why there is no Joy in any soul along, with envy, or hatred, or malice. Such I I for preserving and re- storing the strength and beauty of the hair. Small size 35c Large Size 75c. JOHNSON and things are tyrants, and tolerate no gods but themselves: they are like Baal and Moloch, and burn up their victims. With them no happiness can be,»and therefore no Joy. But where there is health and kindness, ‘ JOHNSON Cor. Kent and Prince Street The Quality Drugstore and as Joyous as a child. the grown man can bc as happy‘ i I Some may not go far beyond us- ins the simple pleasures of life, or 1336 Many countries in New Zealand are backing unemployed men in gold prospecting until the men find $15 worth of the metal a week, ai- ter which they must support them- solves. FEEO IMPEIIIALS FOR FINE PELTS Says Jimmie to Sammie “Tia true, 0f fine fox pelts, I've raised quite a few. You take it from me, I'm now telling thee, Twas IMPERIALS that saw the job through IMPERIAL BISOIIIT 00., LTO. Charlottetown, P. E. I. M!!! or Mlflusls. zso ..___._.._.._ TIIE 2 MAGS 140 Great George Street