h. Z nap Nee- an n- w -~..-_::.;.- ~ .;- . _. .-' i‘ "‘-'=.;..§":§§"__'?.§fi__;,..-..._ it t PA? 3 FOU A rue GHAIILOTTETOVIII curnmui ii&tn-wifl'9y-sxeia cw. » I THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN President-II I IQLIIO. I I org-Lien -Coi D ldlt and lnlogl sum air Editor»- Iornilg Daily tlnuuded It!!!) / “l. . Vlovlvoaflous, J. a Iarllpuou. u o o "II Director-J I Burnett. I J l. vuuh Wnlhur all l) l Parole. l6 00 n» yew (In advance) (anneal. per your (in ndvunot) nailed In Canada III U llkl Ibhl. MONDAY, FEBRUARY l5. 1N5. POTATO FREIGHT RATES The farmers of Kelly's Cross and vicinity, in a resolution published elsewhere in today's Guardian, make strong protest against the high , freight rates on potatoes between the Marltimes ‘and Central Canad- ion points. The resolution com- mends both the Federal and Pro- vincial administrations. as well as the Boards of 'I‘rade, for their ef- forts to assist agriculture, and ap- peals for the co-operatlon of these bodies, and of all concerned, in ob- taining freight rate reduction on form products. ‘This. is a most important question, and it is encouraging to know that it is being pressed vigorously at the present time. This was one of the shicf matters discussed by Mr. Rand Vlatheson. manager of the Maritime transportation Commission, on the occasion of his address before the Charlottetown Board oi Trade on Feb. 14. The Commission's oom-' plaint has been lodged with the Board of Railway Commissioners and every eflort is being made to obtain a more equitable rate sched- ole for our farmers. The govern- ments of the three Marifne Pro- vinces contribute financially to the Iransportation Commission, and it k for the purpose of straightening out such difficulties u thesg that the Commission exists. This does not mean that the resolution passed at the Kelly's Cross meeting was unnecessary, however. 0n the con- trury, it should strengthen the Com- mission's hands, as well as those of our governments. our Boards of Trade and all who are, and have been. working energetically aionil this line. LIFE INSURANCE ASSETS Making clear to the layman what his insurance means and how the interests of policy holders are P70" tected, a series of striking display advertisements is appearing in the press. Number 1 of the series ap- pears in today's Guardian under in’? heading. “I-"olicyholders Own the Assets of Life Insurance Com- panies!“ The message is brief but comprehensive, and well repays careful reading. The development of life insurance in Canada may be Judged from the fact that the com- panies have built up assets totalling approximately two billion dollars, owned jointly by about 3,500,000 policyholders,—or practically one- third of Canada's population. Th0 reputation which these companies have achieved in their capacity of trustees for the policy holders is in- deed an enviable one. HANSON ANSWERS KING Replying last week to Mr. Mac- kenzie King's complaint that the Bennett Administration had used bargaining methods in dealing with the Government of the United ‘Kingdom, Hon. R. B. Hanson. Min- ister of 'I‘rade and Commerce, re- called Sir Wilfrid Laurirfs wam- ing to the Mother Country that if she would not give reciprocal pre- ferences in return for Canada's trade concessions, Canada would consider itself free to turn elsewhere for business. Mr. Hanson went rm to point 0hr how Mr. King had first threatened to scrap the Em- pire trade treaties and then to cut the Canadian tariff in two. If that is the Liberal leader's present "pol- icy, he has been careful not to say so. He has probably realized by this time that if any Canadian Govern- ment were to take that course, Can- adlan industries would be ruined and the number o! unemployed vastly increased. "Mr. King has shifted his ground lo frequently on the Empire trade question that nobody really knows when he stands at the present time. All that can safely be pre- dicted is that, since the a‘. ‘ were neg-foisted by the Bennett Government, he is, and will continue lo be, "agin" them, and will do his boot, in or out of office. to stultlfy them. A poor policy, truly, for the leader of a once great party to fol- low; but at least he can boast that it is all his ownl " EDITORML NOTES - We will now be on th_e__l_ook-out to see whether the end of the ‘week indicates the lamb or the lion. The rcxt big events will be the opening or the legislature, st. Pat- flgflg Day Mk1 hater-March 5, iloreh i7. and April 2i respectively. .-"i'he farmers had a good and sorofitablotime at their annual conventions, and there was not the “ "Bad trol of any of the various organiza- tions. The Hauptmann jurors are to appear as a theatre attraction. This is bad: but what would be said if the members of the Supreme Court of the United States were to tour in vaudeville? Anything may hap- pen in a land where people are eager to see the men and women who condemned a suspected killer to thr: electric chair. Speaking in the British House of Commons the other day on slums and housing Sir F. Fremantle said that overcrowding had never yet been dealt with. queen izabeth, in 1500, recognised that overcrowd- ing was the main thing that had to be dealt with, and in her proclama- tion of that year said that where such great multitudes of people in- habited small rooms. if there were plague. it must spread. and great mortality ensue. Mr. Wilmot observ- ed that it is still the same. Three and e. half centuries have passed, and overcrowding is still not only at the root of the troubles which it produces, but at the root, oi slums. Gold production in 1934 amount- ed fo 2.964.826 ounces compared with 2,949,800 in 1033. an increase of one-half of one per mnt. The December production was 261.874 ounces as against 248.839 a. year ago. Ontario's gold production in De- cember was 184049, Quebec 38,010. British Columbia 22,952, Manitoba and Saskatchewan 13,657, Yukon 1.- 516, Nova Scotia 489, Alberta ll. Gold quotations. in Canadian funds, averaged $34.57 per ounce in De- cember at which price the Can- adian output during the month was worth 80.035599. In November the average price per ounce was $34.16 and the value of the month's pro- duction, $8,540,000. It is often remarked that choir boys can be naughty imps. The fact that they sing like angels does not prevent their having a good scuffle when they get out of church. "Well," asks a Toronto exchange, “what oi it? Such children have learned to take the church and art as natural parts of everyday life. When they get older it is usually second nat- ure to them to reek recreation and pleasure in types of music which some unfortunate people have been taught in youth to regard as "high- brow." They never quite escape from music as the most punctllious mistress of organization and forrn, and yet the greatest teacher oi how 5.0 praise God with a merry heart." The Last Straw of Liberal Hope has gone. Toronto Saturday Night which deserted Bennett because it thought his reform policy detrimen- tal to business, and ,’ ed its faith in Mackenzie King. now finds it was relying on a, broken reed. It says: "We are informed that a great many people who know Mr. Bennett well felt all along, even in the deepest depths of his silence. that he would ultimately speak. and that when he did, it would be to very considerable effect. We are quite sure that the people who know Mr. King best have little expecta- tion that he will say lnyiihin-S startling between now and the date of the elections. And there is an urgent need that the Liberal party should say something startling." This is a definite hoisting o! the S.O.S. by the dismayed and dis- gruntled "die-hard." Mr. Roger W. Baboon, economist, a certain "thatprospeflty is new just around the corner. It would come into full view if it were not so frightened and scared by the politi- cal and labor situation." he told Phoenix businessmen. "The gap be- tween the purchasing power of farm and industrial prices is grad- ually being closed," Baboon BIN- ‘ are ‘ ‘iv be- ing cleaned up. Private and corpor- ate debits are being rapidly reduc- ed. The decks are being cleared for a retiu-n of good business as soon as political and labor leaders come to their senses. "More money i! available for expansion today than ever before in the history of the country." Cattle and calves on’ Canadian farms on December 1 totalled l.- 406300, a small increase of 3,100 held comm-Nd with Dec. l, I080. The reduction from June 1 was 407,000 head. mdicationi are thbt the rm of increase in the cattle population is slowing up. The num- her of hogs is eltimatod at 8.048.900 hood compared with 0,001,000 on June 1 and 8,001,000 a year ago. Indications point to an increase over 109344 in the. number of bole iflghteot indication or throat of up- ‘ mm lu the iuunogoment and enn- for market and local slaughter in the Dooorubor to Kay period. ‘rhea-o Notes By The Way In August 30,000 boys are expect- ed to gather in Washington for a 10-day Jamboree. Then will be seen the knot-tying, the wig-wagging. the handicraft and the athletics of the Scouts. What may not at, first be appreciated, however, is im- portant; the New World counter- part of the "playing fields of Eton" on which England traditionally de- pends for its leadership and strength, will be presented. For the Boy Scouts and the principles they so actively exemplify have become a powerful influencr: among the youth who must meet the problems of the hex: generation-Washington Post. whet" lieu ahead for sum-hey- General ‘David T. Wiientz of New Jersny? The Leo Frank trial put the prosecutor, Hugh Dorsey, o! At- lanta, in the gubernatorial milli- sion oi the State oi Georgia. Thc trial oi’ Lieutenant Becker, of the New York City police department, made a governor of Whitman. Both of them conducted excellent shoivs in response to public demand, Mr. Wilentz has done likewise. Perhaps be has staged an even better per- formance than Whitman or Dorsey. The governorship of New Jersey will probably be his for the asking. -Border Cities Star. Du Pont research workers report the discovery of a new explosive, twenty times stronger than TNT and a little harder than a tallow candle. It can be bored with red hot irons and pounded with tripham- mers with impunity, even put un- der the blow torch and shot with high power rifles. The only thing so far found which will cause it to ex- plode is a charge of dynamite. It is regarded as a peace time explosive and its main usefulness the removal of danger in industrial blasting. ' The destruction of three United States dirigibles—the Shenandoah, the za-z, and the Akron-meant a total loss to the U.S. Government of $8,375,000 in construction costs alone. The Shenandoah (ZR-l). de- stroyed in 1023, cost $2,000,000. She was emcted‘ at Lakchurst, N-.J. The ZR-2, lost during a test flight over Hull, England, in 192i, cost, the United States $1,000,000, or half of the contract price paid to British builders. The Akron (ZR-U, built at Akron, 0.. and commissioned in 1931, was destroyed nearly two years later. She cost $5,315,000. It is very questionable whether Washington will authorize any further expendi- ture for some time to come on such death traps. . Washington hears Senaioix Elbert E. Thomas propose a. novel and promising method of assuring mace in the Pacific. This Utah strtes- man who spent five years as a teacher in Japan asks the United States and Japan each to spend "a little more than the cost of a battle- ship" in an exchange of students. I-Ie would like to see 10,000 bright; Japanese students come to America for four years‘ study and bright American students go to Japan. H2 secs this as ending a distrust that promises only unhappy things. His thesis is indisputable—“Nations that understand each other and have no fear of each other will never fight." -Monitor. In an interview in the London Daily Mail in December, Hitler de- clared that nothing would mducc Germany to go to war as another catastrophe of that kind would end western civilization. Neverthe- less he pussyfoots about taking the initial step to prevent such cams. trophe. It is quite evident, adds an exchange, that Hitler is in the habit of "protesting too much" to be sincere. "It is true that we cannot predict what will be the cost of evolution of democratic institutions in India. They may take strange forms un- known to us in Western countries. It may be that further experience will show that these forms of gov- ernment are not so attractive as they appear. But there is no doubt that they havr: for the present captured the imagination of politi- cal India. We cannot leave the Gov- ernment as it is. It has been use- ful as a training in the arts of rule; it is marked ‘provisional’ in the constitutional lists. We must choose between a resumption of authority or an extension of self-government. The history of our Empize and its traditions point one way: in spite of risks and forebodings wr: are bound to follow it." On Lincoln's birthday the Moni- tor is privileged f0 record the un- familiar circumstuncss under which Abraham Lincoln freed the Negro slaves. The story comes from a lady who grew up with Robert Todd Lincoln to Artist Dwight Sturgcs. who made the remarkable Lincoln portrait "Guidance." The Presi- dent's wife vigorously opposed his signing the Emancipation Proclam- ation. All night he walked the floor of the White House study. often reading his Bible. At dawn wife and son returned and she demand- ed whether he was still determined to sign. Lincoln answered in il- luminated words which must now go into history-"I am a man under orders, I cannot_ do otherwise.”— Monitor. New York has lived through any number of anti-noise campaigns and yet to the ordinary ‘ear. 1t sounds as noisy as ever. Nobody publicly de- fends noise. and science, we are told. has pronounced against it. we learn that medical study has shown that noise impairs digestion by affecting the flow of saliva and gas- tric juice, that a typlst under noisy conditions uses l0 per cent more and loses 42 per cent in campaigns make, so to speak. so lit- tie noise in the worldf-New York 'f‘lmee. London Sunday Dispatch: The was a smell increase in sheep and lambs. which shows that we have reached the and of the downward movement. The downward move- ment in the production of hens and ohlehao has also been checked. enemy speed. Why. then, do the anti-noise m, Q2100”- ' ANIMAL PROTEIN BETTER THAN VEGETABLE PROTEIN FOR HARD WORK It is only too true that many in- didduals who do nothing more than sit in anofficc chair all day make a mistake in eating meat three times a day-bacon in the morning, a chop or steak at noon, and roast meat 1o; the evening meal. Meat about QIlCC a day is sufficient for ullS incLvldu-ai, On the other hand to try to do real work without meat or other ani- mal protein is likewise a mistake. “It is well known that athletes who specializein contests demand- ing great endurance lay stress on an ample supply of protein in the diet. The persons who call themselves cheese-ail of which are animal pro- icins--t9 secure this supply of pro- tein." lire London correspondent of the Journal of the American Medical vegetarians usually take milk, eggs, ” . Geography Interpreted (M511 Ind B11191") lemma continues r5 hfié work of iuterpretl-g y its widest sense, first 0i 9m"!!- thenof the rest‘ of the British Commonwealth and other bu" °i the world in which Canada has special interest. mu is done in authentic and popular form with extensive illustrations. In tho Rb‘ ruary number Mr. John P. T011191‘ begins the story or the first creel march of the North-West Mounted Police from. Duffcrln (now Emer- son) slxty miles up the Red River from Fort Garry. across the open prairies to the Bow and Belly 3W2: in the country of the 313°“ Indians. ‘This was in the Summer of m4. The 10M, which he“ l“ inception the previous year in t; office of the Prime mnisier r John A. Macdonald, was organized u» patrol and safeguard the "WW purchased heritnee 9°11! F"! mm to the Rockies. This first greet mum firmly established its repu- t ti . ‘A? interestifl! article "Y M'- Donald W. Buchanan describfi Unjygg-glty Oity, Paris. A sketch ma? shows the original all“ of ""001" m; ma recreational grounds a! 18:6 out on the site of the form" ¢i Y fortifications. Nineteen dormitoflel Asociation tells of a test made at the Institute of Physiolofll’, Glas- gow University, to see how leaving out animal protein entirely would affect the work of a 48-year-old cyclist who was a consistent prize- winner. He was put on a strictly rationed diet which was varied as regards the kind and amount oi protein. l-Ie pedalled a stationary bicycle almost continuously for more than eight hours daily and each dietary experi- ment lasted a week. The work was measured by special devices and an electrical brake maintained the sort of resistance that would be found in a good level road. Four standard diets were used in which the pro- tein was obtained from strictly vegetable sources. An attempt to use a large amount of vegetable pro. tein failed because it caused diges- tive disturbances. The cyclist was then allowed to choose the sort of food he would use in road racing. This included 5 pints of milk, 8 eggs, 1 ounce of butter in addition to strictly vegetable foods. This- diet gave the best performance of the series, with the highest speed records, Thc conclusion is that in prolong- ed hard muscular exercise the large supply of energy required can best be obtained in small bulk and in palatable form from foods rich in animal proteins. The point is that while vegetables might be able to supply the amount of protein necdssary. the human digestive apparatus can not digest the large amount necessary. London Calls Iroquois Falls (Ottawa Journal) The London Daily Express comes to hand with a. heading three col- umns wide, "Silk Stockings in 105 Degs. of Frost." "The Daily Express,” it says. "established communica- tion yesterday with Iroquois Fails, Ontario, the col€est spot in the world.” Nine minutes after the call was made London was talking to Dr. Young at the Falls over trans- Atlantic telephone, and Dr. Young admitted a "cold spell," l record "low" in the previous night but he didn't feel it because he was “snug- ly tucked away in bed." But the Express man was more interested in his conversation with n. telephone operator _at Iroquois Falls. whose name is not revealed. “It is a bit cold today,” shr: agreed. Apparently the interviewer asked if she were suitably garbed in wool and fur, “What do wc wear?" she is quoted as responding. . “Just the same as your girls, 1 ex- pect, only heavier coats and muf- flcrs to protect our ears and noses. "Yes. of course we wear silk stock- ings. But only a small part oi them —about nine inches-is exposed to the icy air. We have snow shoes that come a long way up the calf. When it is as cold as this some girls wear two pairs of silk stock- ings. "You do not expect us to wear wool stockings or undies, do you?" Nobody, of course, but c, mono man would expect girls to wear wool stockings, cven at '72 below zero. and those who put on two pairs of silk no doubt felt they were making a great concession to the thermo- meter. Fashions nowadays are world wide, almost, and Iroquois Falls is not behind London or Broadway in its conception of what the well- dressed girl should wear. The weather is an incident. but to wear what everyone else wears is really important. And, as Dr. Young and the tele- phone girl told the Express man, nobody suffers in the occasional low temperatures of Northem On- tario. In the crisp, exhilarating at- mosphere, the bright sunshine and the star-lit nights, it is n Joy to be alive. and few would exchange that environment for the smoke and fog of great cities. Briton has no special cause to worry about being a Briton and is little inclined in consequence to indulge in invidious national comparisons. When he does so he finds the com- parison in nearly all respects flot- tering to himself. Them is, however, onolarge black fly in this ointment of racial content. Every time he considers the matter he has to ad- mit thot in the matter of physical fitness this country is steadily fall- ing behind its more rPlOIIOlllVO neighbours. All visitors returning m F‘ comment on tho magnificent physique of the Labour Battalions there. We never beer now, as once we did, of the foreign- er be g impressed by the English physiq e. Now the Council of the British Medical Association is 00 consider. we are told. tbeloppoiut- ment of a committee to discus! means ofenoouraglng the physical and mental development of the nation. we sincerely hope that the cbmu-iittm will come into being and produce what cannot but be n val- ulblo report. reeled. The Can- "roousxmusnmwsa This was a tortuous road. Bill whet has been traveled May well be traveled again. Though the grass of time has through its dust unraveled, It will bend again to the chariot oi’ firs; to the wheels oi’ pain, Why should this stir me? Why should this esomc grim Word of a bayone Cali till the lure of all gold horns is in And the bed of down and the castle of light are things to forget? My brother, your road was black. ' But it. had an ending Though 1t twisted far and far Through the terrible hills beyond my wurprehendlng, Through the flaming wound and the choked breath and the opened scar. Yet I covet your wisdom as bees de- sire a hive, Toward your‘ dark death I years. but of love would} drive, learn. be e $111’. gllhcefitlh is midway alone the Boulevard Jourdan. beiiwee" he Foundation Deutsch do 1B Meurthe and the Argentine House- M Vanler. a. Canadian architect, in collaboration with a Parisian as- sociate. gave his services voluntarily towards the oesienine e1 e 45km“ residence for men. Some future exr tension of the house may Wm" the accomodaticn of women stu- dents since the French. United stat“ mg Danish pavilllorns al- ready provide dormitories for both sexes. The average one v1’ the 9'3"‘ adian students in residence is be- tween 25 and 2'1. Most of them are French - Canadians. bu; 312: dig‘: always a few W115 a and sometimes British cubism fwm other Dominions. s- Relief And Reform (Sydney Post Record) 1n a notable address before u" Canadian Society of New York on satin-day, Premier Bennet wtllned Canada's experience durins We depression, dismissed the Pifiibm‘ ties of the reciprocity plan now b0- ing negotiated. and. outlined the aim and scope of the ecomia: reforms he is P3541138 hem" Dominion Parliament. one 1185318‘! in his speech relating to these re- forms is worth quoting. became of its careful analysis of the Sii/llliililn- "Now that we can safely do so," he said, "we are abandoning ‘he gechmque 0g me depression. We are , repmmg emergency measures by reform measures. Recovery mea- sures have done well by us. Wit they are based upon the assump- tion that our capitalistic system is relatively flawless. And the majority view in Canada is against that 5§l1mpi£i0ll. The Majority view is that the system is defective and requires reform. We maintain that without reform. substantial progress is improbable and recurring depressions are in- evitabie. ~“We believe that the 01d older 1-‘- givlng way to a now plan of li.fe. We hold that acknowledgment of this fact is the price 0f FY0819“- Consequently, we are for reform- reform so absolute and embrac- ing that, as far as lies within the power of one nation, want and suf- fering and unemployment. which are the visible signs of the system's per-factions, will cease, and there will come age-in that sezurdty and happines upon which is based the whole concept of Christian civiliza- tion. "We do not claim that there is arvy magic in this reform program. We do not say that it will redrem our troubles in a day. The disabili- tics of which we are the victims have long been building into their present formidable proportions. Only time and infinite patience. and the hardest kind of labour will wholly rid us of them. And yet. effective action brings almost in- stantly a certain degme of relief. That has been our experience, We accept it as an earnest of our ulti- mate and complete success." The situation could ‘hard?! be described with ‘av ter moderation or clarity. At the outset of his adchus Mr. Bennett made it cle:r that the reforms to which his Gov- ernment is committed are not in the some category with the Roos- evzlt recovery policies. The NRA measures are adapted to an emergency situation, while those comprised in the Canadian p" gramme are economic reform’ eoigned to build for a stable d future. Nothing oould be in greater contrast than the Ilflrit of the Canadian Premier's ttoronee, rrzoted above, and the objections his parliamentary. critics have raised that. social insurance, the 8-hour day. and the various busi- neu reform mcasu es impendius, do not provide an immediate means of livelihood for those who are temporarily out of work. This dif- ference is all the difference be- tween rellef and reform. In i post four years the ious govern- ments of Canada have spent hund- reds of millions in relief, and while the need of this form of ossietono: is eteadilyhtnpering gwnduigurtlm oppropria no on an 60 I0 will be voted for this purpoie dur- ing the present session of peril ment, To grasp the vitoi signifi- cance of the economic reforms be- ing enacted by the Canadian Parliament requires genuine states- manllko vision. Deep and rride- spreod as hoe been the distress oe- eesioredbyfoiryoorsofan un- es-Zon, ti: old structure will . is not my mother And. my dust will leave her some day That the road of suffering runs further than any other Toward God. It was I-lis chariot of life. His horses of love that ran this way. Hog & Bacon Prices (Perth Expositor) Many people wonder how it is that the price we have to pay for our bacon and ham is so great compared with what thc farmer receives for his hogs. but if we were to follow the porker from the time it is sold by the farmer until it finally reaches the consumer, our wonderment would have reached such propor- tions that wc might try to figure out how we could afford to have it on our tables at all. Mr. A. of Ba- thurst, and Mr. B. of Drummond sold some hogs to the drover. It cost the drover something in gas and time to make the purchase- first cost. They are delivered in Perth, and taken to ‘the hog pen at the station. Men are there to load them. They have to be paid for their labor-second cost. The C.P.R. hauls them to Toronto, and the freight has to be paid-third cost to be added. Arriving at the Queen City, the aquealers have to be un- loaded, and drovers have never yet been able to get men to do this work Just for the fun of the thing- fourth cost. If not sold the day of arrival these pigs will set up a great holler for their regular rations, and they will have to get it, perhaps three or four or more feeds-Jifth charge against them. A commission merchant locks them over. Considerable haggling is done as to price. Arbitrary meth- ods are adopted by him in grading the bunch. Finally a, sale is made. The commission agent gets a per- centage on all hogs purchased - elxth charge against the hogs. He may be paid a stated salary and all moneys pulled down in commission over his salary may be tuned over to the parent company, or he may be working independently. but that commission must be paid on all sales. The purchased hogs are then loaded on trucks or cars and hauled to Stratford-seventh charge. There they are unloaded, the cost of which constitutes the eighth charge. Per- haps they require another feed or two and there goes the ninth charge. They are slaughtered, cut up and sent to the curing ‘room — tenth charge. After going through this process, whether smoked or synthe- tically treated with oil oi smoke as the curing process, adds another charzc. making it the 11th. Cured. ‘the Pills are Placed in storage, and naturally the company must have something for this service as there is the investment in the building, insurance, taxes, help and all the other overhead to be taken into 1c- count—twelfth charge. The traveller for the company must then get busy and sell the pro- duct. His salary must be paid — thirteenth charge. Gas or railroad fares must be met -- fourteenth charge. Hotel bills must be cash- fifteenth charge. Office staff looks forward to pay-day the same as all other empioyes for the wherewithal to meet their household expenses- rrnuens ATTENTION While in the City do not ferret your supply of ll ii 0 ' S Condition Powder For Hones b Cattle. Tones up the , it ls an Uulalllug Remedy. ALSO mac's nmvu o, 0000!! REMEDY . Relieves Coughs, coll‘, lleaveo, luflleluo and all Ii- 20:10!!! of the Lingo of n". MACS ‘PIG, WORM POW. DIR, every ofloeu some; In the treatment ofvaorlno. 77w Two Macs new eownmlo resorting of the odfoet bringinto‘ Though not with the horses of war For what hate has found on the roads oi grief, love too can And I know as well as I know earth -1essiea Powers. in "Spirit." MADE IN CANA DA EW$©N CANADIAN GENERAL ' because these lamps give LAMPS FEBRUARY Z5, 193; ,. w“. . 0U were in first em i, buyIngEDISON MAZDA lamps in the handy c“. ton of six. And you m", on your lighting bills, lo q, all the light you pay f4; |-_ esrrsa uei-m-asnsa [SIG m iWhZWi ELECTRIC C0,. Lllhiit sixteenth charge. Messrs. X. Y. d: Co. at Smiths Falls, wholesalers, have a consign- ment shipped to them. There is loading of same on cars — seven- teenth charge. the destination a: ‘ th charge. Delivery from freight shed to the something, and there goes the nine- teenth charge. The goods are plac- ed in stock and there is the office overhead charge to be taken into consideration, making the twentieth charge against the hog. The ware- house charges, with all the conse- quent costs connected therewith, similar to those at the packing house, adds one more charge to that shipment oi hogs from this district and the twenty-first charge is chalk- ed up against them. The traveller from this Wholeiale house receives a salary and expen- ses. He hops into his car. runs out to the awrekeepers at Bolderson or Fallbiook or Innisvllle, and takes their orders. Here is another charge. and the twenty-second one is Jotted down. The merchant buys his bacon and hams, perhaps from the same D18 hflfpped from that dis- trict a few weeks or months before. and he pays, in addition to the Freight charges to ' warehouse at Smiths Falls costs‘ have his profit, and a prom u pected also for the drover, - were these poor innocent hop , , sing through at least twenty . with charge attached to cvpry . of them. before the toothscme .. sels may be enjoyed by the uit ., consumer. But what liiout drover? He should hays 811m . to the good, but sometimes he u so fortunate, but whenfiia ,~ . makes the 24th profit on the . . Is it any wonder bacon is-ii oi cents a pound when place ii in Pall. Bud only '1 or 8 oeniu in pen? TO IND PAIN "- D v "“"='-==-"'-‘- i"! Ind: akin N-u‘ ‘Ivorian original cost of the hog these 22 charges. and an top of that he must n‘: %=r 2": i: l-Z i Z-I i l‘! i1 credible. P. O. BOX ll. 146 Richmond so, Bargain Rates to Western Ganaila Dates of Sale-March 1st to March 14th inclusive. “‘ Final Return Limit-Thirty date of sale. ' For rates and full information call m w.x.nocsns p: City '.l‘lcket Agent 0d Great George Strut %Z~Z%I~Z%H%_E%H EH U‘: Kn so B'A°DQPQAIQC°G"A CERTIFIED IUDLIO . @301!!! OI‘ OANADIAN BOCIIT! OI‘ COST AOOOUNTQNTI COMMISSIONER- IOE TAKING AFFIDAVITS IN IDII SUPREME COURT OI‘ P. l. l. P. l. l. IEPBISINTATIVI ‘I'll CANADIAN CREDIT MEN'S TIUBI ASSOCIATION, IIETBD. BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA BUILDING OIABLOTTITOWN. P. l. l- Aoeounilag oystoau opened up and rovlael. labor caving ollloo methods Installed. 00st Accounting lnltltillod to lull Ibeolal Nluilelullll- Monthly. quarterly andauuual audits. Balance ulna and ma: lllll mu Accounts warml- lueouin Tau retina written up and riled. Iluaueisl arrangements mode between debtor ml Halted memo carapa- Incorporated. ' E. R. BREiy Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Platte Glass Insurance dt Lowest Rate. v Agent at Summcrslde, Lloyd NW1‘! days in addition. to Canadian National Kalli rays AOOOUNTAN '1‘ ‘IIIIPIONI l Ml l} Choriotteto‘ wn