v y i.‘ t 2 . .. L. 3/1 - . .-¢-.-~ $1119.; a1.<~_.‘D-.~?u'b-“f- r. -.'.-1_~ - _. .. a‘ ‘miFfl-LIK. ‘ ‘ - -.¢~.-»¢..~..s\- i , I .I.T“Z'-&ib-v ' “We ,. 1.‘. _., pa”, t - ‘*4?’ “THQ-“Ifzfei-‘ff F ‘PAGE I*'( “W, fut: ounntomrown tumour N»... 3.331.. w.» r “A! on nu (ll nlnonl uullrn lI| comm! and rmna anu- IIM) Ilhll u" yum un nah-nun) Illllvfvfl Inning‘ llnll! tlnumlnl rrbndvnh-N’. Chou" u. I4‘! nu flro-l-vvndvau-Q u. Bun-on llrrrvllry-Llrut (‘nl ll A Mu hlnnun l) 14.0 1.1mm and Manager-J It lluruvft \llm'hlll ltmn-r-ll It. (‘urua THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1929 ‘ years of his life in ease. Mr. McGib- lbon, scored the Postmaster General Charlottetown Harbor has been in these scathing" words: "Then my clear of ice for same three wet-ks and’ first complaint is that this house has the people on the Rocky Point sidel by“ deceived by the return tabled. ROCKY POINT FERRY of the river are obliged to usc a small 1 say any minister that would so de- , and inconvenient gasoline launch. cetve this house 1s not worthy of his for their markedng and other busi- ‘ 0mm?) ness in Charlotterotvn. The steamer} The chgrges against Mr. veniot oc- I-lillsboro which is supposed t0 op- cupied several days and in his de- erate this ferry is not yet rcady- ‘ fence Mr. Veniot was as sliPPeW B5 Cn the 17th instant, during con— an eel. and although battered and sideration of the Estimalcs- the Mlh- cudgelled. he can scarcely be said t0 Ister of Public Works was asked re-‘ have been caught. for his Liberal garding the .del.ay. He rcpliz-d that 11-111d5 stood by him and when the they were obliged to send to Scotland vote finally came on Tuesday night Mr same of the rcpalrs needed. He all the Liberals voted in his favor as shown by the report lll l'@5l9l‘dl1$"5 Guardian. stated. also in reply t0 8 film-sum‘- tnat the repairs had been ordered, last fall-we understand late in De-i czmber. after the usual dilator-y man- ' ner of the government. It was known nil last summer that these repairs would have to be imported from many wonderful invcndons and dis- WHITHER RADIO? Modern science has introduced so Scotland bu". they were not ordered coveries that we have ceased to won- until too late in the Fall to be re- t der. No invention can be so astound- cclved in time to have the repairs ing as to raise our incredullly- The completed for the opening of navlq impossible is being made possible ‘anon levery day before our eyes. It will be remembered that whenfl during the Stewart administratiornmothers been told that. we could a delay of a weck occurred in open- some day sit in our private homes in; this ferry service. the local Lib-j in Prince Edward Island and listen eral organ fairly screamed daily with l to a concert in New York. London complaints about the delay. What a ‘ or anywhere on the other side of the howl would be rising now from thej globe, they would treat the predic- same source if the Stewart govern- . tion with scorn._ yet this has B0111? nient were in power. and what right- ' p855 and we listen without surPrlse ecu; indignation would be vented by, to voices which come to us from the Hon. Member for Rustlco and. the ends of the earth. More than West River, over the injustice done this we shall see in our homes by to his suffering Tl television the actors and poi‘- makes a difference whose ox is gored. formers on the streets or in halls 1 thousands of miles away. How is this going to affect our present institutions? Shall these also Few Mznlsters of the Crown if. so mm the discard along “m our _ ' ‘scrapped machinery? When we can any’ have hem sublemed m such M} sit in our parlors on Sunday morn- iittinzg ‘figilgltsiafimgfelfhgeizzl-g ings and select from a dozen church ' ' ' ‘_ y services one we desire to listen to, of Canada. Mr. Vemot has had a lcng and continuous experience of this kind and he is receiving the fin- constituents! TIIE POSTIIASIER. GENERAL .where on the Continent. what is 80' in; to become of the hOmP, church? ishing touches at present in the. when ‘vihout paying ‘he regular House of Commons. If the charges a-cimiegiox] me WP mm get the m“ that have been brought against‘ " ' .b2nefit of concert; or lectures, what is to become of our lecture courses and nur charity concerts and enter- tainments? Even the circus with its street parades and its calliope must give way before the powers of radio and television. him arc true. and they have been pretty well substantiated so far, he wieserves all that he has received and uihatever more of the same kind _tl:at is ccmin; to him. . Mr. Veniot is a rabid politician, clever. siipperyn and possxsm! the afiutencss -and unscrupulousncrs of c112 who goes after his quarry with- " cut regard to Justice or ran play- He became Pcsmiaster General after the election of 12125. His first work rfmr his elevation to his new posi- tion apparently was to rid the ser-i ’\"ice of all officials who were su-z riectcd of Conservative leanings, In: two ycarr. he dismissed 421 officlalsl the majority of them country 005l- nirsters. Tlwi: wholesale slaughter S precipitated an outcry in reply 1°’ which Mr. Vcniot‘s general defence .v,-a5 that the dismissals were on ac- count o’ dlshonesm good crops. Another advantalge 0f During the present session there‘ the h“ spring is m“ n ‘we. us a has been a further inquiry into thlycause {Dr complaining. causes for dismissals by, and other acts of. the Postmaster General, and the record is by no means to the cre- dit of the Postmaster General. or oft the government. One of many cases reported in Hansard may be cited here. Mr. McGlbbon. Muskoka. pre- sented the case of the postmaster at. Umnzton’ an omcm who hid sew-i Our little province is at present in ed the public in that capacity for 31; m“ unhappy position o‘ “m; years under both Liberal and Con-ground between the upper Libel,“ eervatlve administrations. He was mmslone M’ Ottawa and the m,” dumb!“ ‘mhmlt 5"“ m” mnmbllher Liberal millstone ln Charlot- Ity of a notice. and being aged and Mum,“ age of speed, invention and progress. The quiet and leisurely age has gone by. and in its place we have the gn- ahead-at-any cost age. Unquestion- ably we are going ahead. but whith- er? l EDITORIAL NOTES ‘ WiLh the best we can do now. ‘this Spring must now be claiscd among the late ones. but the crops will be none the worse for this. Late springs have invariably been followed by Another nuisance which should be made a criminal offence is the dumping of coal into cellar hatches ‘adjoining the sidewalks. This is a t relic of the pioneer days of the city and should be discontinued. Had our grandfathers and grand-t wither in our own province or any- Them are among the possibilities. which are now looming up in this‘ \ Just what the Saunders-Madalyn legislation would be like had the 0p- | pcsirion chose to remain silent andl ‘let it go throughas it was presented- irnly those in the know can form any Idea. Hui according to the full and reliable reports in The Guardian mere was scarcely a bill of any pub- lic importance that did not have to be pruned and altered almost be- yond recognition; scarcely a clause hhnt dld not bear evidence of haste and inefficiency in its preparation. The Premier, the House was lnform- - ed. had prepared all the legislation before he went to Ottawa. Yet on reveral occasions he was forced to mrike out sections in Government “ms ‘vmbh he °°“"“"d h” h“ men before thcylcft m the front the, never seen before. or which were un- intelligible even to himself. The or-' iiginal drafts of these bills should‘ ‘really be preserved in the new mus- .cum to be erected on Queen Square. where they would be available to ‘ posterity. They would make excellent lmaterlal for a new Dunciad or a Gil- fbert and Sullivan opera, and they Imight serve to perpeluate the name , of the authors long after the verbal imbecillties of the Session have been forgotten. A few examples. even~of the completed legislation, will suf- ‘fice. The “Act- to further amend ‘the ‘Motor Vehicle, Act," reached the ‘committee stage only to be hastily ‘withdrawn. The Government mem- bers could not: agree among them- selves and the Premier terminated the discussion by announcing that the Motor League was not satisfied =wlth the bill and had requested that l‘. stand over. Finally two or three sections were passed, the rest being struck out. . t . Y The "Act to further amend an Act tn further Amend the Act to incor- Pffflle The Telephone Company of IPrince Edward Island," which prov-\ ‘ed as wordy as its title, was utterly ivalueless- as a. new Act was later in- itroduced which did away with the tPrince Edward Island Telephone lCompany altogether. If the promoter prepared both bills beforehand, he tmust have been planning an April tFool joke on the House. This later ;"Act to incorporate The Island Tele- ‘phone Company, Limited." though ‘a Iirivate measure affecting outside dnterests entirelyFvras introduced by fthe Premier and Attorney General ,of the Province; a course absolutely Ht-ithout precedent’ in this or any tether Parliament. And, his explan- ’ations in committee were no less ex- itraordinary than his actions. During gthe discussion on this bill he an- Inounced that. the Eastern Telephone lCompany was really the company that had been operating here since ‘i922, though the said company was quite unknown to the Legislature gand had no office here at all. t‘ Other measures. like the “Act to Amend an Act. respecting regisra- tion of life insurance agents," the "‘Act to incorporate Scale; Hydro- Elcetric Company, Limited,‘ 'and the “Act to incorporate North Try- on Electric Company Limited," Xvi-re so badly riddled in committee ‘that their own parents wouldn't have ‘ nown them. Much trnncccssary time and ex- ‘pcnse was spent on the Act to pro- ,vide for a plebiscite on the liquor lqticstlon. A similar act, passed by like Arscnaul’. Government, was con- dained within a couple of typed pages. All that, was necessary was to make applicable the ordinary elec- tion machinery for the special pur- pcsc cf the plebiscite. and to do this the Saunders Government reprin ed the whole voluminous Election Act cnd wasted tile time of the Hottsc for scvcrai solid hours while the ‘clauses were droncd out and debat- cd. t l The amendnmit to the Road Act was first introduced improperly and had to be withdrawn and placed {again o nthe order paper. I‘. finally ‘wrn: through in such form that; the ‘machinery for collecting the tax is ‘defective. and the Act will probably have to be redrafted and amended lnext year. When the leader of the Opposition polntd this out t0 the promoter he was greeted with a tsnort of contempt. The legislation iwas enacted with the full know- :lcdge tlmat it vras practically worth- glass. , _____ In the “Act to further amend an ‘Ac’. to assess, levy and collect on ,Income and Personal Properly." ,tl~.ere was a clause putting a maxi- Baby . m? _ t Qours 5.1.“. w Ijalomlp FREEDOM 0F THE FEET 'A great military leader once said that whining battles was due t0 “getting there first." Another said “The army that marches best. other things being equal, is the successful army." In the final examination of the examination of the feet-was just as thorough as of the heart. Why? Because it has been found that as “carry on" because of foot Injuries that are due, not to deformities, but to carelessness or thoughtfulness in the care of the feet. And the cause of most of the foot troubles was the wearing of shoes that were too small. . As a matter of fact. the way to really think about your foot is to What many as one in ten are unable tof uurvuvwuamudrwuwus 'l‘-h.- Public Forum thin column h open for the discussion by correspondents at qucnnnnc of Interest. Tllll Lharlottetown Guardian don: not necessarily endorlc the . opinion: of correspondents. i ._._..__._.i.___ MARKET souana owNl-znsnrr t I t I l. i Slr:——'I‘here is very little conflict between Judge Stewart's contention and my statement on the above aub- jcct/‘Thc Judge should not forget that the Governor of Nova Scotiu acted only as the represzntatlve of the Impcrlal Government, giving‘ ef- fect to its edicts and program. That program set apart the lands of the whole Province, g'ving lmminse tracts to landlords, and apportion- ing to the county capitals certain areas for distinctly fixed purposes. In addition to what I outlined in my letter, Government House and Victoria Park were similarly granted. Thzsc were in lively dispute, and 7(7) Waterman‘: regular Pena for women are now being made with a clip and can be ac- curcd tothe inside of one‘: puns. settled by legislation when the park roadway‘ was constructed. Several Governors in recent years have as-t sorted their claim of right to‘ Govcrntncnt House by virtue of these | conditions. and have defied inter-l I 1e can? Colour, » " ty y Dcskscts/ I'm their long, tapering penhandles, and bases of marble or onyx or bronze, Waterman’; vari-coloured Gyro-Sheath Desk Sets add a charming touch of Old World atmosphere to spinnet or secretaire. Have your dealer show you the No. 7 group of Waterman's Gyro-Sheath Desk Sets. seven pen-points--one of them is guaranteed to give you lasting writing satisfaction. ’ Try the Our-illustrated TrophyCix-cular sent freeonrequesg. Use Waterman’: Ink in Waterman’: Pena l Watermalts SERVICE AND SELECTION AT 5,500 CANADIAN MERCHANTS gram. The people had decided at the “even” mm mo“ rights. polls and that dscision should pr’:- ithink about it from the standpoint Iof the hand. l The toes have as many little bones as the fingers, the foot proper has as many bones as the hand, and the ankle has almost as many-dust one less—bones as the wrist. Now how do you treat your hand? In the warm weather you keep it‘ absolutely free even of covering, and- in the cold weather you put on mits or_gloves as a protection against the cold, but the fingers, hand and wrist, are all free to do their work. Now as a. matter of fact; your foot has the same little ligaments hold- ing bones together, and also muscles ind ‘Jendons that pull on these bones and thus allow the foot to move in various directions. And it is these .muscles that hold the bones in posi- tion to support your weight. Now how do most folks think of tlt feet? _ Simply as a support that needs a leather shoe to bind the front‘part of , the foot, corresponding to hand and fingers. into a small solid space. Nature meant this part of the foot to be free and movable. She supplies us with two arches, one we call the instep, and the other supporting the ball of the foot. What ls my thought? No doubt Judge Stewart is correct d‘ 1 rm” "e e _ a in saying that it is the property of ccor n8 y‘ e s?“ m n WJ‘ the Province and that the legislature ‘“°"““““d by ‘he Amame “d m" h 3 H M _ omme ‘ ‘ for appointment in tn: M t e r presenmuve or l: ‘j three counties. One only of these- , esty has powers of diversion. This Mr‘ Geo‘ Needy. an excellent 0L has been done in part when the t flclal-was appointed. P t Off' t t f d tomthe Fsdellhxlopéfivl-Izrriyzfcnlfnlitilfltd ‘n Povfny and filfiinimildistress “ram in the compact of union by Imper-l ‘e p“ upon w c w one m“. [program was advanced. One or more‘ illl-lti, ditl fthe. _ ginseeis iusltlrolazlvenn to ‘she ‘grovf {of the nominees it is said declined. . »- _! ince wider rcspfinsible government. Mgrezftg: tterzpétfigggebggxlrlifildsyi“ I S , t. “mmgrélflm pathetic to a fault, believing u. thlsi scarcity of funds were -not too ln-l tslstent; they believe in charity, even; COMPLIIXITIES ‘to governments. The announcement, ‘Qthat Prohibition revenues are on an; Sir:--In Monday's Guardian I increase, that $25,000 is in the en-j note the Rev. Mr. Norton's too truth- for-cement treasury unused is cer-i ful indictment against “petty polit- tainly an unexpected eyeopener to‘ m?‘ and the amplification of his those so lenient to the Government.‘ claim" in your legislative reports. I . in the stres of poverty. ‘ have no political axe to grind and} The fundamental object of the Al-f must ask your indulgence if inliance was and is. an abolition or= hewlng to the line my instrument l the use of intoxicants as a beverage. formulas to this end were sugges- may scarify the timber on both aides. | 1 ted, amongst others a drastic reduc- There is altogether too much‘ of hiding behind the skirst of The tion of "scripts." A reliable doctor, Temperance Alliance and the tem- , insisted that l0 would be ample. The perance people, on the part of thelPremler (then plain Mr. Saunders) Government, ‘when seeking escape I gave no pledge. as some have claim- ‘,. i from dzservcd strictures for acts led, but most emphatically expressed‘ i That, in buying shoes the tdealwliich are inconsistent with their ‘rhls belief that 25 should be the limltt’ shquld he h; have this "front" pa", °1|promises to the people in the mat-lComlng from such a source it bc-' the foot able to move freely," so that lter of - prohibition. That there has j came crystallzed into a popular be- all the muscles will have a chance to %en a community of interest be- illef as a certainty, and the votes work instead of being bound as in a] tween these parties is not open t0 t were recorded upon that as a part of vise. dispute. but this fact does not Just-f the prospective program. The shoe. should fit snugly aboutlify the Premier or his supporters in! when a. delegation from the A1-_ the ankle because the ankle bones are making the Alliance and its support- lianoe sought a fulfillment of this used to support the weight. THE LAND WE LOVE BY FRANK YEIGH l%hu' CANADA'S AGGREGATE waalxrrrthe lmezioatlvn t0 say that the GOV-Wimn the nmwdlns aw- It l5 i ' ers the buttress of refuge from crlt-y iclsms of their failures to make good. ‘who pgvgrty m-y h, the Premier's ; From the outset the cooperation declaration that the Act must be] has not b:en satisfactory and be-l cause of this the Alliance and fem-i perance forces have suffered serious. deflctlons from their ranks. It would require a long strztch of» ernmcnt hns glvcn satisfaction to‘ policy they were confronted with‘ self sustaining. An expzctcd rcduc-i tion of scripts of about 75"?» has not; materialized. Admittedly there is a ireduction of about 25% which is to that extent at least an improvement known to the ruling powers that a Q. What is Canada's Aggregate the temperance ample to the extant few at least of the medical men are . Wealth? A. Canada's wealth is estimated by ‘the latest computation of the Dom- lrlion Bureau of Statistics at $26,001,- 482000 for 1926, as against $23,073,- l74,000 for 1925, and $22,195.00J,000 1'01‘ 192i.) Agriculture acootinled for $7.- 8l7.7l8.000 or 29.28 pcr ccnt of the total; urban real property came so;- cnd at $7,081,375.00 and forests $l.(i06.6l3,fl00. cacher of Awtronomy Claws: Fxeshlzoy. can you give mo the name of any star that has a fail? Ficrhbay: The only cnc l know is tsc, some of the faulty clauses bcln: struck cu’. by the promoter himself. The leader of the Opposition suztrest- ed that provision should be mode to retain such part of the Legislative Library as would be recur-ed for the Legislature. But this advice. like many other tlmcly suggcsdons from the same source. was loftlly ignored. Later. when the House was in Com- mittee on the‘ Estimates the Pre- mier admitted that the ldca was a. good one. - In the "Act lo amend the Statute Law" there were buried important amendments in connection with the Prohibition Law which. as-the Op- position pointed out, had no busi- ness there at all. They should have been lncludedJn the now famous "Act tntfurther amend an Act to ' exercised of anything near a hundred per cent fulfillment of thclr pro-election . and not over cautious in the sclcc-, We are advcrtturcrs who come promises. Wc would have to strain I tion of their patients. comical-able; Before the merchants and the priests; lllilli l0 “limit llifil- lll DPBIWIIIPIIC? of the Vendor's liquor is being used; Our only legacy from home, ‘ A wisdom cider than the East's. . . they have ntuch exceeded the fifty per cont m“ lum. i There m: no cast iron pledge to has undcr the prqyLslflng u; the Act‘, Out of a greater town than ‘Tyre this effect. but t’ ‘re was a general: and tacit und: nding that. in maitrvs cf tcrpranrrc and prohib- l inn the To. ' n22 Alllnn‘? wctticl have o. don ieni noatlon. S: def- in“.l_1 we: tons tnrlfltctood by Lib- eral XYETHYJSI‘ rt nfter the election the cffi-c of the itllfntiz-e was bc- “rcci by t‘.2"~c elccicd to gzt pro- lnoitlrn nntiotittn lIiSTOl‘ those on‘ their patronage 1751s. A: capacity for performance and qualification for duty was of more importance to the’ trmuranc: wctors than the minor n" o.’ t;ol".!'.'nl \p"c'errncc, the. wedge of dewvrgc tvrs entcrtd, the Alliance ‘cream’: r1":- and more considcrctl a: only ureful to rubber mamp thrlr operations. Potty pollt-‘ lcs dcminatcd the situation. and pat- ‘ ronajte dictated the majority of op-i polntmcnts. Some care however wuj in those selections. and‘ tlzey could have at least in some in- stances been worse. An outstanding pledge to the Al- liance and the people was that "Three Magistrates would be appoint- ed" with the special object of en- forcing the, Act. Premier Saunders declared that he- had "Changed hi! mind" u to the need of this. but, if the Alliance wanted them they \\t w... crippled is now dependent upon the ' charity of the community. Mr. Ven- fot on request tabled the correspon- dance In this use, but on being ex- irnlnod there wu no mention of an! "irregularity on file. The poor old a putmaltar wu replaced by l young. " anti-mane mm. although three n- fillfflbd 00101011 hid each oflmd to "Mplfinbdltlonandband unm- cily some dimmed official n that’ do IIIM AIM ti: u: nnininc imum tax of $2,500, on trust compan- Street traffic would be made much ‘lea. The promoter. the lelder vl’ l-lw safer and more convenient both for :G°"9mm°m-wh° h“ "P"P‘"d ‘u the legislation before he went to d t l a in l p’ u rm‘ ‘m, vehm a u u ‘Ottawam- confused In committee mmy other emu’ the can". M me ithlt he had not seen, this provision streets were ‘indicated by a whlfi 4,0,0", md moved g1,” n b,‘ “mg; band or ltrlp such as u used in but. ' - marking the parking cones and ltreot y intersection. This marking would 3"""" ‘mmmmmu n" "Vi". mt but moo and would be a defln- t“ m‘ M“ u’ '“°°"’°"'“ m‘ m’ n _ tsl ti d Public Library and The 1h proof flhe right of way in can lno-bez: 21",,“ "cumin mun":- flfiwlwlfillmimlflww mrmtzmiaaumnainoommt- 1 would be appointed. This oouveyn the inference that the Alliance and ‘temperance people were plrtiea to tau betrayal. In point of fact representation! , were made on behalf of the G01- Ilere are ouuundlng examples-of eminent in this relation, incluflm tho blind attempting to lead the ypropoul respecting tho City Omrrt, blind. and those acquoinhd with the _in which the Allin: Executive Scriptures know what to expect took the cubatnntill ground that consolidate and amend the various Acts relating, to the- Prohibition of intoxicating Liquors," which consti- tuted the crowning glory of the aca- alon. - . ‘ - t-hflrefrom. M m. Burton inalatl. amber they nor the Government‘ men of, vhlon are necessary to lava had any right to violah a solemn the province, be they weenie dc he promill to the country. and may ‘they Ooumatlvl. nfuogd to rubber clampdow- not in sympathy with pmhlbitioti,‘ as a beverage. and medical offend- ers have not been brought to jus-l If not directly charged. it wast very strongly hlntrd that the am-, enclmcnta to the Prohibition Act, rcccnzlyt before the House, wrrc dic-i taicd by the Alliance. It was not so. The amendments were wholly oft Govcrnnunt origin. They were how-i over submitted to the Alliance Ex-I ecuiive by a d:ltgatloti nnd aft-Pr a l- fow suggested changes tin the orig-l lnal draft) were unanimously ap- proved. Chairman Brown of the Prohib- ition Commission and Magtstrat‘ Twrcdy were the nominecs of the Alliance. and it would be hard w. find two men better fitted for thee’ positions in the Province. If there ls neglect or failure it will not b“ of their volition. The enforcing staff may not be fully up to expectations but. apart from the transfer of Mr Barbour to Pbderal work, it la prov- ing in efficiency to be better then ever before. , It ls the power behind that the? people must consider and. while will- ‘ ing t0 givetcredlt for what has been done, tb insist upon it that the‘ are not being implemented in good; faith-that there la a falling short‘ in fulfillment of the obligations 0.’! the Government to ‘the temperance people who elected them for the special purpose of making our prov- ince a aobar country to live In. An my letter Ia already rather} lengthy I will pause, and ask luvs’ to appear again. . I am llr. _etc. ~ ALLIANCE MIMIC! Th0 Jrulllln government.‘ m problbfMH-ho Importation 0f blklfll terms of contract with the public! when: snatching le'*",',\ ‘ swear FRESH BRAHMIN t Sold only in Red, Hygienic, Airtight Packages "1 Irtuntworj zusrnuzr Don't criticise the man whose , coat collar ls covered with dandruff. Poor chapl-Perhaps he has doné everything pos- - sible to rid himself of it-that ‘f ls everything except “Sh; Delmayisl French Vitalene ~ Ha i r Tonic Dandruff is (‘a-used by but". Ial action which this prepara- tion stops. rt ls u. wonderful hair rcstorer, stimulating the growth and making It 50ft rm! glossy-SLOO bottle. E. A. F ester CENTRAL DRUGSTORE Now ls the time to use Dr. -l<"i‘rcnch's Vermiclde Capsule! lNo. 2 for your fox pups-Quill a box. Ul/IZf/l. ADVENTURERS We march to conquer and control 'NOW TASTE T _..______. ._ ‘ HE FLAVOR OF TEA _-__ m i? ' h m / "I only paid $500 for the bus. Fed- ish to spend a tctnth of its cost for ll- surance!“ "It would be foolish if it protect“ only the car. But ‘It protects every- lhifllyyou own or hope to own far years to come. When you bought that car. you Immediately became mpu- sible for all damage It might do. A light runabout can kill a person ll certainly a; a big touring cur. Th fact that a person was injured by I small car doesn't make his demand: for damagel any smaller than if be were hit by a five-tun truck. lie mlgltl ask for and get 825,000.” "But I haven't got 825.000." well, that won't worry the My. They'll set the award; the clalmui will seize as much of your property as he can lay hands on. and morfngl your future earnings for the balance ‘There's only one way to nub everything safe. That is to buy ll Automobile Liability Policy, with hifl limits." We specialize In Automobile innu- ance, and invite your enquiries. Hyndman & Co. Limited The Oldest Insurance Agent! l‘ P. E. l. Charlottetown The golden hill-lands of Desire, The Nicoittguas of the Soul. i’: ‘ ave cast m our lot with Truth;l wt- will not flinch nor stay the hand, 'l'lll on the lost sitylinc of youth We look down on his fair now land. _ We put from port without u fcar, l for I-‘rcctlnm on thLs Spanish Main; l And the great wind that bore us her r, - Will drive our gallcys home again. i If not we candle down and die, i Content t0 PEN-sh wlthour peers, t So one ‘more rood be gained thereby ‘for Love's Dominion through the years. ~ Elsa: Carmen and Eli-Jiard Hovey." __ _ ..t.._ -_.____.__ A uearlcss enzl clutmless auto-W mobile engine has been invented bill a Frcnzhmnn. t California produces. 99 per cent of “all the almonds grown in the United States - - -___#- _ EYES TESTED t am» .. cusses m-rau ‘ a. w. ravum .| s. carton - Ilnlomelrlatu H: Richmond Street l‘ it '0AUT|0N FOX owuans AND RANCHERS Now um hum 01.1mm: I" arriving dolly, what lirecautloll are you taking for.- lhe new ment of Worms? A ma: many of the lendlvl Veterinarian: ntrongly recol- mond either- auanouong watwvll‘ 0 (London: EDI-i worm caravans. , Nana woiuu carblim out up b! ' ranks. navla a 00- Botb than: remefll" ‘n’: run-maul to dam! B" Worm. [look Worm: n‘ ltlmooh Worn. ‘ , ~ DON'T DELAY- Prlce I80 and 81.00 Per EIf-j The. M955 » r nrtvosrouc" _E n," gtmt . ate‘: EEK-Qua. 0m" "