. i i i. i’ K‘ l e4. ,I,'lflice-I Blanks-l Islam! . Ila-Inst , located-flakes 4M l) A Iulluol. ll I 0. Idlhr Ill Imaging Dlrmton-J I Bluest. I-ll. IIIOOIICQ Idlloro-Inll Wallet nld I) l Oink. 3n: ciunio Ipclllg but; (In and Lin) IA O0 (l: advance) Celluloi- ug pl! n» u: advance) nslleafidufua an United links. . ._ WIDNESDAI. NOVNII ll. l!“ rm." aurmn vzszozv en the ureter-w <1 the win ' . ' From 1911 Oll, ‘lichen-Armstrong. IThooilrrelitilsueofWJniu-edlhn- throush the ‘interlocking eaten. ‘.1 1pm‘ contains the summary of an kept up relstloul with the German slble to destroy a whole clue. Its hiring address on the British firm of Loewe m4 Oqmpgny, nflhwea-ithies members could st the first ‘Empire by Colonel John Buchan, in 1914 Buissris, soon to be at wuP" f’! m!" “M” "h"? u“ 9.8., MP" 1!). Whlffll U18 011M139! in With RUIN, bmllht Iilfll ‘Nllllfew o‘ the 3.51m‘ nobility and moneyiindustrlalists succeeded in saving u“ “mcgpmm o; Emplu wimp; Schneider-Gaunt with his own recollection are vividlydPi-anoe itself bad loaned. whilest by the speaker. A: Bn llll- ,m° “m5 “n” “nut "m! ma“ "(lergrsduate at Oxford at ths ciosefilsl) burrowed from more. boileht ' fol the last century. the Empire} 11186 consignment 91 Runs flomyother forms of reaction-Italy, 1-; KruPp and ioda. The results were seemed to him chiefly a pioneer: “any hum m a” worm ‘wnlimg m, be" ,,,,mp1es_;m_ ground for British Yllllth- ‘ horizon‘ were w.“ bu, they wergnusssn and British soldiers were misty. 1t was a pleasant stimulus toflelu bv the suns supplied to Aus- rncisl pride, but he and his con- "'18 511d. “"39! W 3W5!“ Ind’ temporaries knew very little eboutlmllflhd. Austrian infantrymfll at; my would have been retheqwre sleushtered by Ruthie-ll all!“ ‘urpdsed n told that the Emph-e‘WhlOh, l 16W 11101“!!! DGIGIU, hid unis fully as important to them 5,5 been put in repair in Austria fsc-x ‘my were to m tories. Germanloldiers at Veux‘ ~ since the Great Wm.’ the revvfiemwere enmeshed in barbed wire wmepmn o‘ Empire has bewmeiwhich s German firm had exported] that of an alliance o; Sovereign-lo France via. Switzerland s. few‘ peoples, s new type of union which mmlths Pm/mu-‘l W verdlm- M14 it ‘tie-wuss a profound and essential skeserrelr. sights were drawn upon --uhlty_ The glamour has not depM-tufermcn battleships by British of- nd. but the old racial arrogance has we" "$1118 195N019“! Whml 05W largely gone out. and we have gnfew weeks before, had reached acquired a. broader humanity. We mm mm“? 11911911 V15 zould not ourselves bring peace up. Ho an . When the battle of the on the earth, but we could brinQManm w?‘ M’ m‘ height’ 5nd m“ ‘peace to a part of it. our Dart 0! W ‘sop; crying ‘at ‘mum’ We could make certain that there, ‘mt I'm I! I'm! were selling as was one vast term“, m which much as 250.000 tons of steel s. there could never be war. We hadvmmlth m the M1195- _ use: I- anon I’.I.l. '1! '5' h“ ""1" "0""! 5-"! ‘means. With the exception of the ‘the United States, says a despathl Notes y m; Way - hsvebeande from the UBAtotbeh-‘lonlelnlidsvis NewYork. Some ofthese were lnxioustolesvmsnrfotbsrs left beclllla the government was anx- ‘ iousthattheyiivosomewhereoise. lomewereorimimis, some were ‘ ‘likolytobeoomecrimin- l-lsandotherswereunsbietosirpfl D011 themselves. Under no circumstances ls it pos- lo safer countries. Not s part of their fortunes by various Russian, every attempt to |capitalism has lead to Fascism or mmgary, Chins and Bavaria. be- Belrt of the Chicago court which is trying Samuel lnsull has been touched by the story of Mrs. Nlisry Jones, an Illinois farm woman, who says she and her husband mort- gaged the old homestead, borrowed money from the bank sud invest- ¢d $154700 in one of the Iusuii get- rich-qulck schemes. The Jonescs are now out $15,000. Still, they didn't have to be out $15,000. 1r they hsd| a farm and good credit at the bank‘ thew Wile no need for them _to' gamble. The gambler who gets "bit" has no license to squswln- Bolder Cities Star. War veterans‘ orgnnimtious in from Washlngtfln. are preparing to» take a terrific crack at war profits during the coming year. Revelations made before the Senate Munitions Committee in recent weeks have hit the veterans where they live. ‘Through such organizations as the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. the’ ex-soidlers “mum . .. pqpncsnd future security erected in a world, which had seen 3 terrible renaissance of barbarism, one solid enclave of civilization. We had an instalment, at any rate. 0f the brotherhood of man- Coioriel Buchsm concluded: Thu-t Is a. greater thing than we thought of 3o years ago, for it ll no 1on8" a boy's dream, but a man's Pl-IYPOSP- This is a year of Imperial centen- lries and commemoratlons, in Aus- tralia, in Canada, and elsewhere. qnd our minds naturally tum back over our checkered hlstory- The story of the makinfl of the mp1" is not a steady march of drums an trumpets. There is conquest in it. but the right kind of conquest. We mnq ed human enemies, but 18-1‘ more, we conquered savagery and the blind forces of nature. Above all. where we succeeded, we conquered ourselves, our impatience and ill- temper, our short views, our false rhetoric, our human weaknesses. If this greet things of ours is to en- dure, the conquest must go on, for it is a. war in which there is no discharge. Today the Empire is a more practical thing than it has over been before, but it i! H180 I moire spiritual thing. For we have some to regard it, I think, as a lmiun in far more than the func- tions of government-as an alllhnoe devoted to emerging and perfecting whet Stevenson has called “the dif- ficult but not desperate life of marl.” If we look for words to ex- preu the poetry of it-for Rhodes was right, and poetry is of its es- ‘gncQ-we shall 110i; g0 t0 the Rom- ans, for our Eimplre is very differ- lni’. from theirs; nor even to the lI-mous passage in Claudian, which has never yet found its transistor. I would choose rather the word-l with which Shelley concludes his greatest poem:- "Ilo suffer woes which Hope think-i . infinite; 1T9 forgive wrongs darker than death or night; . To defy Power, which see omnipotent: 1'0 love. and beer; to hope till ' Hope creates From its own wreck the thing it contemplates: Neither to change, n01‘ falter, nor ‘ ' repent; ‘This, like thy glory, Titan, is to be Good, great and joyous, beautiful and fr i This is alone Life. JOY. moire. and Victory.” _'A HELLISII TRAFFIC Perhaps never before has the de- sire for world peaze been 8W9" such general expression ss it was "qt Bunday last. Throughout the .worid. wherever the anniversary 0 Armistice Day was observed. P101116 million on this subject found DB8- ‘bnggq wise in denunciation of war Add war’s atrocities. Who can 6011b‘ eh; this mighty movement, gather- ing momentum with every recur- tenco of Remembrance Dav. W111 "1- ‘bmmy achieve what world flatnunen seem st Drew" "w" fi m“; 111111911, some means of m. lions‘! -‘ i. IIVGBUODI 0f "19 . ed experimental shipment of 400 “my, m. w, m" my, g mpmflon l EDITORIAL NOTES Air disasters and road fatalities are now so common that, ails, they fail to make us shudder. The clty population is steadily increasing, judging by the ever- growing demand for additional school sccomodstions. Alberta has adopted the Federal Natural Products ‘Marketing Act, and s. live stock producers board has been launched. the plan being forwarded to Ottawa. for approval. The straightening of the North River Road should not prove in- superable. It is understood a price equivalent to $800 per ‘acre is asked for part of the lend necessary for the purpose. Another country gone dictator is Belgium, but for budSet purposes only, it is explained. Unfortunately, it is the financial side of govern- ment that most directly and inti- mately affects everybody. The Liberals continue to laud Premier Bennett for accepting Mr. Steven's lgnstion. mior Snel- grove presiding at the Davenport, Ont., Liberal convention for the nomination of a Liberal candidate said he felt Mr. Bennett was "quite right, because Mr. Stevens was acting as a. Judge in the Mess Buy- ing investigation, and yet he came to my riding s few weeks ago and disclosed findings that had not yet officially been nude public." The prospect of two brothers heading Britain's two great nation- al churches is seen in a. rumour current in both Edinburgh and Lmldon. Among ministers mention- ed for the moderntorship of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, is Rev. Dr. Marshall 14mg. of East Lothfan, s YUUDQOI‘, brother unemory-and that the next war are resolved that these revelations be kept fresh in their country's ill provide slim pickings for the‘ merchants of death. The entire question opens to the veterans a field of very great usefulness. The things we have found out about the profits of the munitions business are enough w shock any citizen; to no one can they be quite as shook- ing ss to the men who actually did thejlghtirlg. Properly directed, the indignation thus amused can be an exceedingly. good thing-Guelph Mercury. . . If. yollclll a man s klhitur. you should smile. It 1s a shade puzzling, butthe explanation must depend 0n exactly what a klbitaer is. The _ dictionary. which has already bles- sed -the word, is not helpful in de- ciding the point. What is wanted is a. declaration of whether s. kibitzer is Just anyone who sits and watches s card genus-necessarily with a view of one or more players hand, or is he not s. klbitzer unless he moves around the tebleeovericokixig all hands? 0-: does he stillescape i the term of reproach until he be-f comes an interfering and meddle-I" some spectator? As stated, the “dis- tionhry leaves the point in ‘doubt; but there is no doubt about kibitzer being a. term of reproach. when one‘ comes to think cf it no word like‘ "kibitizer" ‘could be anything else. - stores sell almost every- thing, but, down in Florida, they have gone far beyond the variety of the stores up this way. A Unit- ed States cruiser stopped st 8t. Petersburgand “ 15,000 pounds of fresh meet. The purchase was made,“ a 8t. Petersburg drug store. ‘ The word “advertise” (which wss originally accented 0n its sec- $i,500, which appears to be fairly conservative when all the various implications arising from an ‘accl- dent are considered, such as capital- izing damges for death, etc. Using this figure, therefore, s ‘Toronto statistician estimates that during 1938 the CityofToronto suffered an economic loss of over $600,000 due to its inadequate street lighting. of Most Rev. Cosmo Gordon Lang, re hbiflh Ip Of CIWYWTY- Tmidoiiars takes into account only the This loss of six hundred thousand ‘sym ‘whathincagerh advertisements sc- father 0f “i680 diVlIlQS. NIB 11M RbJdh-ea 1°” due b0 damage and Rev- Dr- Mmhflll Ie-hll- Principe! \ death. There u also a loss oftrade, of Aberdeen University, hold the such u mum; traffic’ "tau “m, hishest ollleee in the (mulch o! etc, added costs of fire protection, BCOU-fllld 1J1 hi! dlY- Willem“ Lml- | police protection, etc, which would the actor. is s will!» greatly increase the sbove figures. ‘our own city Council should take Adviiee from Welllllsm- N" note flndlee tmt dark streets are Zeeleud. announce tlwt the Ww- emu-my provided with street crews of ease to OHM: h» W" or the School st. uwlceht. cancelled. and according to an Ot-f tewa despetch the difficulty of‘ How Great Britain revoiutionizes making egg shipments pay id re- conditions without bloodshed was garded hm as the reason. The fold a Montreal audience by Rev. Canadian Government was advised‘ Dr. F. W. Kerr, recently returned some weeks lgo that New Zealand , from a. visit to the old country. The proposed to ship fresh eggs into British Empire is the last strong- (Jansda during the three months hold of true democracy, and the when they are, admitted free undsrillotber Country has shown how to I m, ma, agreement between thflmsmmn it. He quoted m. a. s. two Dominions-December. JLnu-‘Spender to show what hadbeen ary and rbbruary. No protest was sccomplisbed: "The great mass of mAdQ from 0mm miner theltht people m better fed, better shipments although it was felflolothed And have more to spend on osnsds’: supply was ample. PIX-i enf ‘sports and pleasures than before “my ‘hmq ' m‘ m; digbolicni traffic in ticulariy with the Prospects of l. the war." Mr. spender had writ- mensee may mfu fall. It out: about zften. ‘filmy unemployed m drawing of. . e ort, cents edountoklncesu from elimveneesuneedinginmmyeeleldm theimtisieesttiunmseit u mwzeelandtodsmdaand wlthitluwsgseoftmskilledlsbel-before of “ammo” “mun, m mill in meeting l limflll‘ probing’. experience the war. 11511! P79410004 tint the sluwlvtilaltridelt-hatdllllfllllu .4», t.‘ seieiuohvbfllf 8"“ I‘ ‘of this f-‘Plflid have isteiydoubtful u there would be much A ‘u, q-Mmqtupomnlprofitmmmpaithniimosnsdunmmunhuwouflhadtohsnk- My,’ of dorm. m»; q’ st around 40 cunts s ruptimjot ltrllllel! 0000811.!"- ‘ inparoonshilllaricveithaube- biamivllebuntssndistributionelwealth.“ rdhhingriehrotertopaypoorbui. with the money remaining in the wintry. fthudono muehcotsilai- ruvxnrm susous cora- ssuunucss non ~n.u - The terrible flu epidemic of 1018-10 isnotuitolyw netorgotren oythis ieileratlon and. dospiimtbe not that epldemiss since that time have‘ been 118m. the medical profession every‘- wnere ls seeking for a cause a-nr‘ cure fu- fiu ~ Dr's.‘ D. and R. ‘Thomson. of the Pickett-Thomson Resesrca labors. tory, London, nave Just issued two volumes of many hundred pages “mama! their, iindmse and me findmgs of others 1 ,, .,, nu or influenza. The various and, newer metnoas of treating influenza. are outlined in the books". and the re- sults of some of thesemsthoas of treatment are spoken of very savor- sbly but the conclusion‘ is that dee- pite these methods “there ‘is no de- mute specific remedy for influenza." If then, there is no ‘special’ rem- edy for mnuenm, what should be the “genera? treatment for it? Drs. Thomson state that t-reut- ment must be directed to tlfe symp- toms and condition of the patient and to the relief of any prominent symptoms and complications. ‘Ihey believe that the most im- pcrtant measures in the treatment of influenza are“: 1. The patient should go to bed at once, however mild-thecaae, and remain in bed until the ' u" has been normal for two days. 2. The intestine should be- clear- ed out daily, or twice daily, as an st- tuck of innuenza tends to cause constipation. 3. The patient-should be kept warm and encouraged to pcrsphe -by means of hot bottles and hot A powder of ipecac snd opium; night is excellent. l 4. Stimulants should be given. not at thebeginnihg but towards the end of the attack, and more espec- ially during convaiescencc; that is when patient is up on his feet again about the house . - I believe most physicians will agree with the above method of treatment-to. bed immediately, re- maining until temperature is normal two days, clearing the intestine, 1n- duripg perspiration and tho use of stimulants late instead of early in the treatment. I However as all patients and all ptoms are not alike, treatment wiihnatilrslly be in accordance with conditions. ondiyllablé, than on its third, And now often _on its first) means, among - other things, "admonish," and/the Fergus News-Record points out ,that.it.is used in the Book of Ruth: "And I thought taxi-advertise thee, saying: “Buy it," .A Biblical authority ss s" thet fsdvcrtise!’ ‘as thereused, a translation oftwo Hebrew words meaning “uncover the iesr.“ And that, of course, is coniplislpflhey “uncover the ear" of thousands of readers who would otherwise be deaf to the appeal of thsuedvertisers goods. ' Justice Among Aborigines (Fdmoxf Journal) Canada is not alone in the prob- lem of initiating its abOflBInAI in- habitants to the white men's con- ception 0f Iustice. How backward Australia has been in the matter was , illustrated recently when natives at Oaiedon Bay, Northern Territory. killed Vwo white pros- pectors and at police officer. S0 QIBBLWBI the excitement and in- dignatio l that." the federal govern- ment proposed sending an armed force against the tribe, Ilbrtunately therewas 5 sensible strain of fore- besrance in the general public which resultq in numerous protests against the expedition. n! ‘ l" s small mission party was sent and. to the concealed dizust of the sabre-raiders. the killers were sur- rendered without the slightest re- sistanoe. Eight of them were tried at Dar- win, found guilty and sentenced to deutimfieports in the ‘press, how- evenhedproven that the bewilder- ed, panic-stridrsn actions of the netivm while in the cells and the courts were those of l. people who had. no conception whatever of the responsibilities and punishments of thewhiteman’: code. pired, mo, that the free use of their spears had been the result of white men off " against the tribal lsws of thoblsoks within their own country. Amiher wave of public, revulsion resulted in the death sentenoesbeing commuted. | Ass resultnf the incident Aus- sponsibillt to the “oldest inhabit- ants" as she Already s system has been sug- gested for the appointment of patrol officers. with powers. the work to be carried out by man who have a full knowledge of the native customs and - Missionaries and benevolent or- ganizati and. llliderltflldlfll - difficulty of competingfin interns- n gnnpiwhich would have delighted him it trails has become aware of her re- 1f 119 has never done before. 5 unbelievable." This is another feather for tho Mounties caps, but members of tho “silent force" who,,by their skill in the saddle, have unused blue New York audiences accustomed to thrills will have nothing” to soy about their success. 1n records orthis world-renowned police or- , "m may r some silch entry as thin/Detachment visited New York and took part in the pro- gram of the National Horse Show! jGraduaily the "Mounties" are seeing greater variety of ssrviw. Sixty years ago their sole business was the preservation of law and order in the vast and thinly popu- isted-Northwest, and on towards the Arctic Circle. And how they dis- charged that duty is s. nutter of history; s. stony that has been read in all parts of the world. Of late the sphere of the "Mounties" acti- vities has been enlarged, and now they are found in Eastern Canada, engaged chiefly in the apprehension of smugglers of all descriptions. In this business they have taken to the water, and their speed boats have become the terror of the customs dodgers. Another Trade Stunt (Toronto Globe) A recent issue of s. Welsh news- paper contained and advertisement which discloses something of the tional business with a country like Germany. The advertisement read: “£20,000 commission offered to Importer of Genrum goods ‘value £100,000 during next three months to enable English Exporting House to execute order from Gemmny, o;- pro rats." Evidently the interpertation is that an exporting firm m miglmq can get £100.00) worth of German business, provided an equivalent nmountof German goods is bought, and somebody is willing to pay 30 per cent. commission to put the deal through. It would be interesting to learn whether the miglish liixporter is making sufficient profit out of the German people to offer this in- ducement, or whether German in- terests are ready to pay the shot for an order from Britain. Twenty per cent. is a heavygcut either way .It would be a remsr able profit to make on a sale. Whichever way it is worked, apparently it will come out of Germany, which pm- fesses to he,,tqe_z_ieu the, paluper line to pay bills. and so sevoriyglp- pressed by creditor countries that it cannot produce v at competitive prices. And how is Empire trade to proc- per under such adverse conditions? It would appearthataone more regu- lation is needed. Courtesy As A Policy ._ (Ottawa Journal) Mr. Bennett's address to the 0t- taws. convention of the Canadian Association of Tourist and 1>ubli- city Bureau: contained in a few words the ideal "code" of the tourist industry: courtesy, truthful repres- entation. fair prices. These things are imperative if we are t0 make the best 0f our natural‘ charms and cultivated attractions. It is ‘ to present the visitor with perfect roads. with good fishing And hunt- ing, with. scenery and historic lPotl. if he goes home irritated by an over-charge or filled with resent- ment at the ungrsciousnesl of s border official. Thus the organised effort such as is represented in the Government's new tourist branch largely is ne- pendent for its success upon the attitude of fridividusl Canadians towuds the stranger in their midst. Advertising and r ‘ can bring the tourist, but nothing will bring him s. second tints if the pleasure of his first visit has been buried in unpleasant incidents or annoying experiences. If he has en- countered dirty rooms, insolent waiters, brusque gasoline station attendants-end all of these are to be found in every country-the recollection will linger. crowd out 0f his mind the features of his trip the little things had not created an unconscious resistance i OBnBdlA-n should look upon of the ‘llmirist Bureau. and ‘ “"- he is Rlvitil fie‘ rold tgirecticn or arranging s hing counggy should be his dominating thought. is courteous he will not over- . nor mis- represent secumodstion, and u he does not do these things, is poillg and useful, the tourist will call down biessinfl "Don his hesd—snd conic back Illin. E é é _ traueller’: load _ Andfortbsboursoflestthatecsne between, i precis- Anihwsrd Joylnsil thinllheard andseen. Those are the sins I fsin Would have thee tsks away: Melina and cold disdain, Hot anger, sullen hate, Acorn of the lowly. envy of the 8N“. And discontent that casts s shadow . I!!! Onailthebrlghtnessofthecom- men day. These are the things I prise And hold of dearest worth: Light of the sapphire skies, Peace of the silent hills, Shelter of forests, ort of the . ENE-l. . Musinrfifsbirds, murmur of little Shadows of clouds that quickly pass, And, sfter showers, The smell of flowers And of the good brown earth,- And best of all, along the way. friendship and mirth. Bo let me keep These t. of the humble heart In true possession, owning them by love; Andwhen stlsstlcunnolonger move Among them freely, but must part From the green fields and from the waters clear, Let me not creep Into some darkened room and hide From all that makes the world so bright and dear: But throw the windows wide To welcome in the light; And while I clasp a well-beloved hand, let me once more have sight Of thel deep sky and the far-smiling en — " - Then gently fail on sleep, And breathe my body back to Nat- ure's care, My spirit out to thee, God of the open sir. —Henry Van Dyke. Central Bank Shares (Eitchenfl!) The official list of’ share-holders shows that the shares 1am widely dristributed in e11 the provinces and some of it is even ‘in the Yukon-end. the ‘Northwest Territories. Owing to the heavy demand for . sharevthr‘ applications were] scaled down. The‘ Courage _ road, Goodcheertohelp me bear the- t. ‘Cont: For Round phsrmscis page fromtlisuéet NW‘ It “u” h‘ m‘ 1°11“ °i ll D00 lilt includes. in lddltifm to the above, s butcher, a grocer. s book- keeper, an inlwuwetsgent, a con- e fifiiifitfiiiifi gflhfntf“ 9"" w “h” "Will . a em oyee s laborer, a mhoereoher. anengilieermdother ff, gyglgmfgflfhoéglnsmuuf, the workers. Among additional occupa- puucumly on the pan o‘; w‘: co-eds. H0118 described Oll 0X19 W39 0f $116 W?“ "My Manitoba list are several farmers, Ali 900? a grain broker, a ticket cork, a baker, l. steel T_er,n1lld¢e.s clergyman, l nurse, mdwm plsigllishgkhsigitlkisr descriptions _ e y s er provinces The capital of the new Bank of Cansdsis 05,030,000. The ‘hotlsands of applications for shares from all parts of the country indicate the confidence which the people of Canada have in the new institution launtched by the Bennett Govern- men As a result of over ten years‘ ef- fort in the direction of strawberry breeding at the Dominion Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, thirty varieties of new hybrid strawberres, selected for earliness, lateness, pro- Bavo yourself worry snq “um duotlvity, and general health and wumw-"Y "defies e full eun- ply of our Genuine Scotch Anlhn. cifo now. Thorollkhly screened. Courteous capable delivery. A scientist at Harvard Univer- w‘ u" & oo- vigour. have been named. The dis- tribution of» these verieti w ccmmncd in 1983. . sity has made dlscov f six ma! o! l“. "Y 0 PHONE 170 —' _E. R. BROW Ibuaré. Life, Accident, Sickness Pldte Glass Insurance a m \ atlLowest Rdte. a *‘ 1Q“ 11y xghns-na.’ mstely 5,400 shares. Quebec comes maximum _ onthno heads theflllstWiflrlWfiXP‘ ‘ 3.x i‘f~i"Afié‘nt at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis next with approximately 8.300 shares. The other provinces- are also well represented: A sluice at‘ the list indicates that those holding i5 shares do not number one-third hold. each. ‘tom one to seven or eight shares. ' The occupations of the applicants, q; d , by themsollvel, vary greatly. On one page for Ontario are s customs clerk, a housewife, s physician, s civil servant, s. house- keeper, a druggist, s. "lady," a manu- facturer. a retired grocery broker, an accountant, s superintendent, a sum-visor, s ,._‘ ‘ solicitor e householder, a farmer, n civil eng- Prufossional Bards McLEOD 6r BENTLEY J. A. BlNTl-l! W. I. , _. I. 0; Banister and Attomey-atehw NONI! ‘l0 IDAN ~ Ofllca: m Ilchlnnlld sheet NORMAN W. LOWTHEN Barrister A Attorney At lAw M Grant George Street Charlottetown, P. I. l. MONEY T0 LOAN Alex. W. Maiheson » Money Loan , Collection Dillon: uo nor-mm sum. , W ' . _ _ . Prohibition ammlssion Chas. B. Black. Chairman. . Ohsrlottoloyrl. a m. n. McDonald, wen st. Patent lathe above tollllpoom Fdpps.B.c.ll.I.,Uharlottetown. WI HILL AND RECOMMEND MAGS Special Rx. 315 Cod Liver. Oll lxlrsol. with - Oreooole and Gllaool of the total. A very large proportion . BABBIBEI. IOIJOITOIu ITO. 146i lfichniond rSt., _ Charlottetown . u. li._S. li£llllil|ii,B-A..cp..>...c.o.1~ CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT - uumn or CANADIAN IOOIIT! OI‘ 008T ACCOUNTANTS OOIMISQIONIB FOB TAKING AFFIDAVITB IN ‘III " surname. count‘ or r. s. l. r. s. l. zitrnlsaN-rsnvl m: csusnum cunn- muws nus: ASSOCIATION, hmrran nsmr or nova scans auumrm column-novels. r. l. l. Anointing systems opened up and reviled. ‘ [Abel living olice methods illlhlhd. - ~~ 00st Accounting instituted lo nit Ipeclarlqlflensaia. jlonthly, qurhrly and annual sud-ifs. . i lalanooalloofaallhkrofitnndlmamacolllhpflllrod. lbeulnoTsxretnl-mwritteuupandiilcd. iIllll-Ilolllv eats undo between debtor and crellilen. United Liability Companies Incorporated. ‘r. o. so: u. cannon: ma