, ‘_PAGEi Foul: iiii [iliiilliilllliiliill iillliillliil Trams-w. cum: s. lame. \ VlQO-IIOIOIIQ-l- I. BIIIIG. g@|»¢v;|7—].l-* GIL D. LIIIQUIIOIID- 8. 0. lifter and lumps-J. I. Bunutt. Almellto Editor-D. K. Currie. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1927 \ A "CLEAN-UP" BEGUN. frame of liiiiid stand before the _ ' people nightly and tcll men and wo- THE C111’ C°1111°1L 1“ 1119108111101 men who know better ot‘ the ilura- ' 1111‘ T111“ Datecuve Ageucyxstilltlé prohibition has made of the exposure, has begun a “clean nltwflnrned 3mm“! process |il its civic administration‘ The r010 or- rrmuy pdmiud pron-l. 01 P0111113 111111111“ T1111 C°111m11 1swlbitionists during thc present cam- 110 11011111101111911 111-1011 111° 11101111111" paign has been one of clcar and 111110 ‘V1111 “'111'~‘11 11 111-15 131w“ 119111)"- deliberate tnisrcpresentation. They and wil lllld that not only the citi-‘rmrp on [he recognized and “rrhnw zcns but the whole of the Province 5a“). admitted evils or intenmen. are behind it in its endeavor to re- mm, and they 1m nniy hands nnd store resilect for law and order in Say “awn it!" “Pfqhibu tin; 51116 our nlidst. The City Council may d; n!" “IQIL they nnnn been stop- he relied upon to do everything in ping nnd m-dnibning it {m- 9nd,- lts powor to assure that coniltlclicc4wenly4ivn yen“, and ti“; Penn]; gs in police administration so needs-lug we have n ruddy, as it was did. sflry t0 11111110 £110 111W 11 “101101 1° closed by the recent survey evil-doors and a commendation [Orflliarlottetpwi], Tirol-e are two main them that do well." 1 factors which make the prohibition i“ ‘of tile usc of liquor impossible, A SLANDER NAILED. ‘namely, tiiat the great muss of pub-r‘ jlic opinion is against it and that; T 1119 101111 11199111111 i“ 110111‘ “alcoholic liquors are being manu-i 1911911 111 11111911 311110111911 mrfactnred in immense quantitiesuntlr‘ Y0510T1111Y1-1 13111111111111- P1191111", every quart manufactured is intend-l 310“‘111‘1- 111 1119 1011159 01 a ve1‘1',ed to reach a consumer. To say‘: able address, branded as absolutelydmat the use o; “duo,- nas been‘ 111100 1110 sa111111°1‘5'1'11111‘11e111191".curbed to any appreciable extent! cum-Tanton illsinuation tilat tile; by p,-0|,|bnim, is u, say what every‘ OXIJEHSBQ 01 1110 P10118111 1Ifl111l1111§11‘oiie kilowsis not true. The present‘ in and particularly of Mrs. Fallis‘ Vifiilicainpalgu for the continuance oi‘? 1119 1111111119111 flndiprohibitioil is fifty per cent. ignur-l We‘ 11011 11118 119011 “111151997911 1101 111113’ “Hmust face things as they are, notr public meetings but were paid by . . . i brewers of Ontario. TlllS/ iilsillua-innne and mg feg[.)|yp[)(3f[gy_ P111010 as alfevr zealots think they ought‘ canvas. lnsinuatioil is the fllflklileflliro bg_ form of falsehood alld slander. lt is the action of the coward who raises his hand ‘hilt has not the‘ They dare not in -—-—-—~<0&——-—--- i ‘To ENCOURAGE IMMIGRATION) ‘IT would be seasonable in ihisr’ 5 Diamond Jubilee year to make a‘ systematic effort to establish Brit-i lisil families on some of the vacant‘ courage to strike. make their charge ill u manly way, and take the consequences. so they - tlbl 1' d ' resort w Ummmp e s d“ elousifarms which are becoming an eye-r ‘nsmuaumzl andiprlvamlco:venzu‘.sore ill olir Province. Although ill‘ tmn‘ sue mm cs are n eep ugilurgel‘ number of immigrants than‘ with the rest of their campaign» i [usual have come witiliil the pnst, i which consisted almost exclusively‘ _ I d p H year or two. the efforts lo inducol "r misrepresent“ on ‘m! ‘lrmsb iscttlers to come here have hlthcrtlr. the pomkdl Farm“; w" ‘y his anyélltflllltll‘ been satisfactory nor migglvmga as to w ML 1 H” (Jmsubltaossllll ill proportion in the oppor- vative expenses comt- from lot thcnl‘: _ - |lunities we have to offer to linnll- have the courage to stutc opcnlyn and stand behind what they arcI i tl " 119w only ms nunmm and ‘ehilO see that they are contented, as “mums” Wm very shortly be set Milt is to bring thom here. We might feet‘. profitably follow the method adopt- ed in Alberta. and Saskatchewan, where patriotic women have organ- _.___<-o->---- SEATING TH E AIR. ‘rank abuse toward all who do not 9W1)’ 01111001111111? 10 11.19 111111111 1°- Surrilfii) years the pcnple of Prince ldtl- lwnrd l-slund huvo chosen their own tlcgislitturcs and their own Govern‘ :H1‘1*1115- 11 1'1 113 1111110113111 1° V1311i and schools of our own. The people our settlers ill their new homes andiliave not invited these wollld-bc ln~ Notes by the Way E note that the advocates of I prohibition, including those worthy clergymeu who have made, themselves prominent in the polltb: cal campaign, are loud in their de-r‘ clamaljons against wllut they onllr the ‘Government engaging in the“ liquor business. They have not, llowlevcr, a wold to say against the} Federal (ioverllmont which is talc-l int; illto its coffers every year IONS’ of millions of dollnrs in excise and that 3012 of fiours ‘a151,’; I’. Burial-P.- WORK AND REST Tllore wcro u few. a very few. taistoins duties on liquors niailufucflsond things that wore dis01>V°1°d . t . . - . ., , during the war. tuled oi inlpoiteti in Canada uionsl one. as “wnuonm borne, was Wm‘ "came tees 1mm by 111511110115 the knowledge of heart ailments. 111111 111“‘we1'“- 11119511 1“""~‘1111°11 1~'1‘111'land that a lleait murmur didll‘t nec- ored from the liquor traflic by tile‘cssllrlly mean a weak heart, if the Ottawa Government are counted inrhlfillfl 11111110111 111111 1181111 11139111“ tens ot‘ millions as these advocates‘ “'91” 311°11- . _ . _ t And nowlholnutter of fatigue, or o‘ molmnuo“ “an klmw‘ B“! thcyitirctliless from murclliiltg or other 1191191 19191‘ 1° 511111 1111193 11111 thalmxercise, has been learned, and the 111 111011‘ 11111100110)’ 0f prohibition. ilesstin is woitll lunch to us ull_ ‘ ' For‘ instance it was found that Tmy im up their Mm]; in h°|yrwhere marching was continued day horror of brewers and distiliers, but after 111w‘ m“ reserves or 5115a“ 51ml their m,“ m ‘he m“ mm trwiand starches stored in the body be- ‘ v _ _ " _ ;came so .lo\v that the body tissues Cm clnmcill s profits nn a gallouoifbecame hungry for the“, and used whiskey is larger than that of tholnn a great percentage or the other CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Confederation And After Sixty Years ,~ Of Progres NOVA SCOTIA AND CONFED- ERATION l'l‘lle history 0t‘ Nova iScotia 1s older than tnut of ally other Prov- ince of Canada. Cabot landed on Cape Breton in 1497 and first 181800 St. George's lCi-oss on American soil, lDe Mouts and Champlain, ill I605, made a settlement at lPort Royal (Ailnapolis Royal.) For over .l century there was almost coir tinuous conflict between the Eng llsll alid the lFrencll, until, by. the rapture of Jnuisburg (i758), Ifrench rule ended in what is now called tho Maiitime ‘Provinces. Nova Scutiu, with a population approaching 600.000, is a peninsula 3st.’ miles ill length by front 50 to 15o ill width. The coast facing the Atlantic is for the most part rocky and barren, but the waters yield a rich harvest of flail; the land along the Bay of Ifilndy is highly produc~ tire, particularly noted for its fruit glowing. ill early days Nova- Scotla was known as Acadia, but its name really dates from 1621, when Sir William Alexander obtained (llstlllcr. And who is the grc-aterifoods. meats and fats. ill manufac- sinncr, thc distiller or thc Govcrn-“ulflllg sugar and starch fol‘ the ment who license lilin'.’_ Actuallyddslum‘ ‘ , Now when you remember that they license him for n good roulldrmears are needed m repair worn; price to nmke what fanatical RdVQHdJaPtS, and that when fats ill-o catenl cates call “liquid llrc aild distillediwilh the nleat less -mcat is re-‘r damnation,“ and tllc fact is not eveii,‘1111l1""‘1- Y0“ c1111 see 1111111 1S £02115} - , r, , 11o lappen if fat and meat ate e ng, mentioned b) these holy men whorcmwerted mm sugars‘ msteml or are horrified at the thought of urberrrg used r0 repurr the worn parm 11111141101111 soverllnwut uttelnlrlluaiTile Iiltlscles will not be getting tut-i ‘to control the liquor trullic! iiproper amount oi‘ repair mllteriall ' rfrom the blood. and will thus be- of Qourser ‘h, gnaw, Goperrrrconte we_akiel' lil a shorter time. mam is Liberir just "ow, and unyrfoAftei- careful experiments it was‘; _ . _ r ulld that a. day of complete rest. letelence to such matteis would beianer an! three days marching, was; inconvenient. ' 5° 111111 111 °111\0e1=\1011!sufflcieiit to enable the worn muse. as far as these artful dealers lniles to get repaired completely. and lialf-trutlis can conceal it. Therc;$1fl1‘1‘1\‘0rk afresh. 1 are times wliell it is convenient to, h‘ m“ 1t was mm“! that this“ “mm ‘n 1 Conservative “at mritllree days of marching and one day. ’ ‘ ‘ g a of rest. after a certain period found; swallow the Liberal camel. This me men in mmer Shara This ht has been characteristic of the llyllfl-diigt wiint should be expected be- icritical prohibition campaign from 031158 1111110111115 B018 111 11 5111111111"r,ram_rca"y hrexhausflbla the beginning. its advocates have 1111x1119‘ 1° ‘mybother exericise’ - _ . ‘ runner. oxer, _ sw mmer or dsalt ill‘ half-truths. in concealmentmher mhrere works gradually up r0 o the teal tllith to such an extentlhrs ‘perrecuon Dorm’ and men res“. us to stamp their advocacy withrgmn, his won‘ two u, four days h... indelible hypocrisy, flavored witlirfore his match or hon-t. This gives! get rid of wastes, and to replenish, tired or worn muscle tissue. What is the lesson? ~ Another batch of imported advo- (That a short period of work, “i” 11°11“ "w" 111° 51'3"‘ hasineeds only a short period of rest. 1 appeared to tell the people oi‘, iPrqlonged w_ork like marching or‘ Prince Edward Island iibw to vote. other heavy work for a few days‘ Political missionaries who have 1111:1311 112115971 Dizgiig; rest. U pr 1 H 8 H , OP 0 L come to this. benlglltcd land to eli- flurry egermse‘ {flu cur flow“ the lighten our ignorance and instruct “mourn or res, rrflerlml’ H U", exerw us in thc rudiments of politics und also. is persisted in for some pcrioli the A. B. C. of moral conduct. Why ' of time. have they come‘! For more than agree with them. We also learn from the above that. when heavy work is done, meal and fats should ho urlllutl to tile dietary. ~ — ~ -<0§-»-~ Wm- OO-OG-bQ-vu v0»: v-oo-o-o-o-fivéi DAILY LESSONS nionls. We also have had cliulwchcs strnctors from abroad. There is u _ IN ENGLISH 8101111115 sense of (IISKUSL and ro- sentmcnt at their presence hero on, By W. L- GOIIIOII such an errand has brought themi,,_,,,”,.,““‘,,,,_,§,..,, here. j WORDS OPYPEN MISUSED: "pulpwpod to the _vaiue _of about .51 ! .4.‘ 1 good deal of eloquence is being poured forth these days in tell- ing of the evils of liquor drinking. All this is admitted. Probably no other agency llus boon instrument-ll in producing so nnlcli poverty and . vico and misery as liquor lins, and the evils of tllu trafllc cannot bc over-emphasized. Tho however, is what are we going to do about it?‘ Various means have been trlod, including teaching. preaching, warning, and lcglsluting against the use of it. The only suc- cess that has been achieved has come through the BEE... teaching and warning concerning the evils and the dangers of it. The sober, ab- stlmeous men and women of every country in the world are, generally speaking, the products of such teaching and warning. They are those who know its possible dang- ers and have enough self-control to avoid it as they avoid other pos- alble dangers. The history of prohibition is the history of a lamentable failure wher- ever it has been tried. Every pro- vince innCanatln. has triad it and found that it. not only did not stop the drink evil but was the direct cause of oven worse evils than drinking. Seven have since tried other means, common sense means, namely, to u far as possible con- trol the trufllc and reports from the I places in which this bu been tried ihow conclusively that it hu brought about u marked chanho for rthIc‘ ‘blittor and a mum‘ respect for Lou luvr. Tile United States; hvhlch has _ bobs under a prolllbitory luv for several yearn is Canada's greatest. bums-m tinnitus», unas- receiv- lnfi lune importation: from Grout ‘ "s. w» rune» w», question, _i I (COMMON, ized themselves to procure definite information ilS to actual conditions zlinong tho newcomers, whcthcr llicy iloctl women and girls as helps and whothnl- they would tuko British helpers ll‘ they woro brought out and what lands were ltvsilublo for settlers. in one cusc two school teachers showed their public spirit liy spending their summer vacation in this work. Later "locals_” were formed throughout the provinces which reported to lilo control ofilcc wlicre iif-euch district women and girls niid families might be settled, how many could be used, what kind of settlers would_be most suitable, whether English, Irish or Scotch; Protestant or Catholic, etc. A woman of intelligence and tact ls employed to go to each district to verify conditions as stated, to ar- range with the proper authorities for the settlers to be brought out and to visit them after they are settled,’ 1 A woman can go into a homd and talk things over with another wo- man and soon discover if all ls well. This is as it ought to be. In this Province we have the Wo- men's Institute, a live organization ready to take up anything for the good of the country or the coin- muuity. Thay can do much for the settlers who are already here and hluch also’by wayof ascertaining whet the prospects are for new- comers. We have unbounded faith in our Women's Institutes: they have already abundantly proved their effectiveness in many ways, and‘ we feel sure that, it they bead their energies towards immigration by giving such information as our authorities may need in the way of directing new settlers, they will do muclrtowards supplying our ¢rel§1 i an...‘ ‘l fir‘, n present null, more not; ltiopil. . . i » , d, There. may be some hope, howev. =1‘. that from warnings given them 1110)’ may prove to be more rotlon~ al, less fanatical and slanderous titan some nl‘ the ll0lll(‘vi)l'(lli advo- cates who lutvo hitherto figured ill the caliipuig_n of slander and hypo- 1"1‘11'i)'- We have hall enough oi‘ blind #1111100» illutructors iii and dc- fondors oi‘ tho (trout liypticrlsy. We have had enough of pastors who have divided their congregations and brought ill dlsseiltiou to their 911111011011 1))’ 1111111111; religion with an over-dose of polities. —{O§.__..._._ non ‘ TITE: , SCRAP BOOK AAAL] Don't suy “l have heaps of wolk to do.” Say "much work." OFTEN MPSPIQONUUNKIED: fac- Silllllté. Pronounce fuk-slnril-c, a as in “ut," botll 1's as ill "it." e as 1n "he," accent second syllable. OFT EN MISSPELIJSD: pl lltoc- rar y ; oy. lSYiNONY MS: DXlOIIi, (logree, amount, ratio, scope, grltlic, range. WDIU) STUDY: "usit a. word lllrno times and it is yours." l.ct us increase our vol-zlbulury by master‘ ing one word each day. ~ Today's wold: PEIUCEPTIDLE; that may be seen or apprehended; evident."lt is only when these things are per- ceptible. that I shall accept them.” ¢4>-—~ ‘#61 n0 Da-‘llyj Selections 1 FOR Aal-zmes or LITERARY BOOK LOVERO o Wednelday, June 16th “Fhiz" (illustrative of Dickens) born 1815; Campbell dlld, 1844. Why are there mo: I never walk under but large and melodious thought: duoend upon met-Wait Whitman. Ilf all would lead their love like me, _ Then bloody swords and armour should not be: No drum nor trumpet peaceful sleep should move, ‘ Unless alarm came from the camp of love; _ But fools do live, and waste their little light. And seek with pain their ever-dur- ing night. —Thomul Olmpion (1667-1620) lives in In themselves things are neither sreat nor small. and when we any the Universe lsvast we speak pure ly from a human standpoint. If lt were suddenly reduced to .tha di- mensions of a hazelnut, all things keeping their relative proportions, we should know nothing of the change. The pole-star, together with ourselves in the nut‘, would still take fifty yaarsto trans- mit its light to us as before. "And titre Iiwrth. Itihongh grown ntmller than an ntoin. would be watered with tears and blood just as cop- loully u it ls to-dsy- The won- 1J1 i QUOTATION! FOII i i i included ‘ Guardian ltcaders 900% June 15, 1927 STEAIDPAIST STAN1DI\NG:— O bless our God, ye people. and make the voice oi‘ his tpraise to be heard; Which holdeth our soul in life, and euffeletli not our feet to belnoved- Psalm 68: ‘8, 9. ‘nlmvnnz-lwe also. o 4.0m, will go unto the house of the Lord with the multitude that keeps holy day. . . T-H E LAN D8OAPE GARDEN (tbord Darling. in the Sunday Primes.) “Deepstands the prt-nrent to the P081 in ddbl: The seen to the remembered owes its soul; The best we hoard because we much forget, And hold some fragment deal- be- yond the whole. These ‘pictured lawns and woods are stately prose, But in them legend hides a poem 3'81. ‘Tia not the heart that shows. "To me those stems that huddled closely stand- As thoupii defence from vmnfgiug foes they lflllflhlv" Tell how they, saplings, rude Cumberlllld . Destroy the Clans, who ‘round Mince Chortle tfoulht. v _ Them-of cuiiodon’: spoil his marked , \ liar u. not that tho field of tum: to‘ llttlin a . slender, . t. from King Joules i it grant of the territory which now constitutes both Nova Scotiu and New Bruns wick. The British gained a firm and abiding foothold ill the province when Halifax was founded ill 1749. From the first days of British rule almost to ‘Confederation the history of the province was a his tory of the struggle for responsible government. Nova Scotla sent dole‘ gates to both the Charlottetown Futon Conference and the Quebec Confederation ‘Conference but there was a battle royal against entering the Union. Two strong men led the opposing forces, tl-Iowe and Di. afterwards (Sir Charles) Tupper in the end Tupper won; iHowt yielded to the inevitable; Nova "Sco- lia received "better terms" ant} with no degree of enthusiasm be came a part of th'e Dominion. The plovlnce is rich in natural resources. lIts fisheries are vast and in 192-1 they had a total value of nearly $9,000,000. it‘ t-be waters yield a rich harvest an even greater one can ‘be dug from the earth. Vast coal beds exist, capable of yielding a supply, at. the iplesent rate oi consumption. for seven hundred years. Besides coal audits by-pro ducts the province is rich in iron gypsum, limestone, etc. Since 186i there ‘has been a steady productloi. of gold; ill one year, 1902, the yielt‘ being 30.348 ounces. Lumber and $30,000,000 are annually produced. Nova Scotla has n flue Agricul ture College, a general stock farm a poultry form, a horticultural farm, and two eicpcrllntriltal farms. Al- though thore has recently been a falling off in the field crops the) are still about $20,000,000 in value The cliiei’ industry, apart from lumbering and the fisheries, tho lut- tcr employing over '20,(|U0 men, h tho manufacture of iron and steel About 20,000 people are employer‘ in purely industrial occupations ant‘. the products are valued at about $30,000,000. Since 1605. when the first vessel built lu Canada. was launched at Port Royal, Nova 'Sco' tilt has built, and is still building mllny staunch and swift merchant and fishing vessels. ‘ tl-ler contributions to Canada have been great commercially politically and intellectually. Th: heads of the three leading universi ties of the Dominion ‘have beer from tNovu -s(lf)lli'l.-——_Pl‘illflllllii Daw soil, Moiiill; Principals (lrliut ant‘ Gordon. Qneteirs; and tiln present principal of the University of Tor- onto, tSlr ‘Robert Falconer. Lille wise thtroo prlmu ministers were born in ‘Nova Scntia—Slr Johr Thompson, Sir Charles iTupper and Sir Robert Borden, -i-Q-} g Household, " Scrapbook 1 4 . a7 ROB ERTA LEE u-oo-o-ooown-J-ovo-ooo ironing Sleeves fO-O-O“ W-here a. sleeve ls too nurrow foi the ironing board, turn it. wrong side out, insert a towel or some sides. Register Traps wire netting is placed over the to; of the pipe directly ‘below the regls ter. tsquuklng Porch ‘Swing thin 4euther. or other suitable material that will not wear through easily, And planted, exiles, there. "From cone by Emma found, and Nelson kept, sprang you aspiring shaft-tulle‘: pine- . Beneath whose perfumed plumes i mused and slept, ‘ When vacant hours, unciouded days were mine. Till one, rose-laden, laughed b0‘ ' hind ‘by chain. _.. Or, breathless. through the shad .1» present . quality Blue Suits. AN INVESTMENT arlcu exhibited the bcfore-aitzl-tiltei- 1.0 teachers klud of tpaddln! folded to the width of the sleeve, and then iron on both Small articles will not l-oil down the furnace registers if SOHlG-flfli if the pol-oil swing squeaks, m: wrapping the ‘Iiooks with pieces of Li or double breasted models. These Suits are very car models, also double-breasted, wool serge linings. . have been accustomed to pay $35.00 for. Sizes, 36 to 44 inch. HENDERSON & CUDMORE 101 GRAFTON STREET i “The llaiiertlarsiluryi-‘ipf _ Outstanding t In Men’sd Suits,‘ “$1 5. Most Suits in this lot are worth,$22.1qiusuonéifdiarwo ., of a‘ kind. mostly tweeds. good Suits if yo ‘ _ $15.00 a ‘ 3 ‘Stuart Tweed $lliis $1 v5? snlart light colored Tweed Suits, in either single 2 pairs of pants if you wish them. Extra. value for the money .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . $18.00 We are making a record with these suits. Fashion-draft Suits‘ $125. 1 i‘ ' blade by the best tailoring house in Canada. Your choice of many handsome tweeds in the newest models, designed for young men who are particular. lysoldatthislowprice Guaranteed Blue Suiis- $219. We are giving a special price of $20.00 on a liileflof extra ujrcain your size. 8. t Suits of this quality have rare- ......“........'.$25.0° efully tailored in three-button, While they last, $29. A Suit you, §b IN BEAUTY Condensed from the Woman's Home Companion (March, '27.) Anna Steese Richardson. HAT is Good Citizenship? ite- ' cently we decided that it might be a matter of beauty. Tilnt was ;lle lltly on which the Playground ind ltecreutioil Association of Alli- ollotographs of tho 1112 playgrounds zutcrcd in tho Playground belittlin- mtion Contest. ' ' llort: is an idea which will appoal who know how tho spirit of mischief tron he trausfornl- ad into constructive energy; to club iuct some sort of outdoor caniptlign which would arouse community in t. est; to business men who rccog ‘IlZQ that beauty of environment in- avonlell can present to the Chamber if Commerce, tho Board of Educa. Lions Club, and sccnro tho typnn NIPPON. which success. ihi! Harmon Fonntlatinn in 1922 financial assistance to communities ‘wishing to open playgrounds. Flolll ivorkers of the Playground Associa- tion reported that many of the playgrounds were hideously ugly. Wily ilot make tlloiii beautiful as well as useful? The Harmon Foun- nureery stock worth $1600. Playground and Recreation Assocl ant men noted as judges. - Communities were divided into three 81011901 those under 8000 pop~ ulntion; those between 8000 and 25,- 1100; those over 25,000; and the prizes were not offered for the most beautiful playgrounds but for the playgrounds which showed the greatest progress in landscaping, Diuntings and other development between Nov. 1, i925, and Nov. 1, i926. , v Three hundred and twelve play. hounds, representing every section of the country, entered tho contest, Among communities under_8,000 copulation the first prize was won by Stillman Vlllleyrllt, whose pop- llutioll is 300. The entire popula- tion contributed to making OVBI‘ its 09111111111111?‘ Recreation Pork and all lqbol- was volunteer. An unsight- i! Illibqlril Wis removed and 80 lolds of rubbish w... carted sway. Three old‘ bufldinls were removed and _100 ‘tons of crushed atone were hauled to trite purl: null laid in strrqou and walks. Drinking vmtiar you lnstslle fence‘ ma slloyltpr live» with minted. shrubs ‘mi plum wit? ‘foutrma 111C inl- urovomollu vmi . dudiootht gt q women who wish they might con- " creases the value of property. llero ‘,- ‘s a campulginwilich a few mon or , zion, the Rotary, the Kiwanis ortllo “ spells uliqualilltrti r“ William E. Iiartnon organized largely for tho purpose of lending Iation put up $3000 in casll prizes. (The nursery companies contributed Tho r atlon handled the details. Promln- It is safe to drive an automobile without Liability insurance. Our new ‘Comprehensive Automobile policy covers this risk, and also those of fire,‘ theft, collision, and property damage, at a reasonable premium. For rates and other lnlormatiblvcaii, write or phone ilYllllMMl “ 8i 00-. l.‘lll. The Oldest Insurance Agency In. P~ E- 1- Phones 67 and 333. Charlottetown. oliv- , MILLIONS 0F moor are now ln our streams, ‘ ponds. etc. Thorn In no batter or hulthior pu- , time than trout llshlnq . but to be Iucuenful you ' want good tackle. We have tho good tackle. the kind=yol> can land the big one: with, , A RODS We can fit you out with cheap rode for jult I days outing or lino split bamboo, or lnncewood Now In the time to in- vent. We can uve you THE 2 MAGS ‘ DRUGSTORE 149 GPQIQ GOOPQ. SW66! interesting. This city had received as a 1924 Christmas present a flue playground tract, Scott Field; but for a year it remained undeveloped. When the Beautification Contest was announced u woman, the super- visor of physical training, took the initiative and entered Scott Field in the contest. It was she who nil-mill: ed community interest, nddreuzollr‘ all sorts of organization meetings, and raised ‘funds. ‘Willi-ill! amon- tion of the fence built by tllerghprd of Education sud the ievelibgo! the ground bytlleoity. ovary dollar-in cash and every boar pfwork. ru- breseutlng ;4,lso,__wni"¢sll_t.ist.t.q by pubuc-lpnlteafsttlln l‘ . school jsuitol! mowed the‘ gran, and cultivated the trees. Individu- al carpenters built an artistic“ log shelter house. The Kflulia ~Olub , ’ I gave the pl-ocogtll of q Jill hull game toward klltlétlo otilitplaollt.‘ The Business girls’ "Assoc" lultbliod tho iwlllll. Schools, olu pustniun orannlsitlolin ‘ind ludivtlk * _ lulu responded to the appeal f0!‘ _, trees ‘anti shrubs... ‘ In Pauline B. 0-. till carried ‘ 1 its t». on ell-ole crept, ~ - -- .- 1» ‘- -‘ a Wlifilifl-burll: nail-uncut ti») i“ ‘NM. ~ , l . an ulllot-luflliottji _- ‘dull » ~- . 1 ‘Casting Dice With f . The man who selects an in- . . future administration 011111 that will Int for yenru. 1“ , ._ ditipnu, the trust onmPlnY money on fishing tlokld , ‘ Iaoouvlvl mam...- ts- w! i! r ' = Hm. G. H. Elmo: "J1- 5'1"’ tz-W T1111 EASTERN. TRUST . g - 1 N. It l..ll.".!l,°§.""-;'i.'i5’-‘--. 1- 11 _ The Future dlvidualas sole trustee if!’ his estate ls gambllnti "1111 the future. The man who selects T111 stem Trust Cnmpant’ 1° " form the _aa_me_ . or him’ is eliminating 1111 clement of chance in estate. _ For while the individual r lzrpws‘ old and loses W111‘ with current business 0011' ‘ is always abrmst of the times. perennially you"! and progressive; m... w. 4.11mi. P.c.. M-P- nun‘ ,.-, (hm-I. B. Alt-Curd! F5- flu-mounts l, I. Wtllhv A1113" S . lltChnu. 1‘.F.1‘obu|. -1-'- D. yaqfifinly, Gama! Mm!"- " r. l. l. “and? III f‘! ‘of enrolment.‘ not a flower. . Illt the work went. I01‘ steadily. 11750110111111‘ ‘Q11 and undbd: trons. lingers» swore" 9101111111 T Ilillllli ‘ rm. w‘. l. shrub 11111‘ 1 wit‘ WQTQ shrubs ‘”.a'§ ‘IOVBYII