' "pen-roam". ave-w: ‘*1,’- - Q I€I"FIAFFEYP‘\ will ~I M\Uv~/I.'*UAA ‘lvt-Z-niv‘ ' PAGE FOUR fliE cilllntomiovtu GUARDIAN Cheater fl. blcLuro, M-I’. Tine-President. J. B. BIRD!“- 7-3-3 n. A. llnclilvmon, Ii. w. U. lYrIctor-J. ll. Burnett. F- J- L hunk Walker null B. h. Uuuil l‘ UNION-JV. n flrcrntlry-I.|euf--('4I|- Editor uml llunnliirl Auucluiv Billion- ~ , hvudvuxeu) delivered nTanalqimpey-ygur"fiilintlfiniifil? artificial: 53in: and United Staten ' anvt-zitrlslsu REPRESENTATIVES . run-nu ST.\‘I‘l€5-—Tho ueelwmh sped-I An“! l“. F" "Y" Cr" h“ building, New York City, Genrrui hloloru Bulidlnt. Detroit. Internili - ' cu . Will iby To“ r nullalng, culcngc- nlenn unllu w:ldlkrifunlhfmglzrlnuduozk Iluiliiiln-ii,‘ Gnu Francisco‘. 113i X0. ' 65th Sued. vhiinuelphln. w SATURDAY. JULY l5, I933. much easier to ship cream “to the United States and past GXPBYir-‘Yil-‘e means little w new generations- LOOKING FOR WA RD Evidence of increased activity in educational matters is noticeable throughout the Province this sum- lncr. New school houses have bccn built at Central Royalty and Cherry Valley’. West Royalty. has voted 5150 for increased accommodation and plans are under way to rebuild thc schoolhouse at North V/lltshirz. This in conjunction with the com- THE GLADSTONE TOUCH whatever ‘changes modern condi- tions may have effected in the per- scnnel of the British House of Commons, the classical trfldiiioii i5 not. yet a thing of the past. Its liouzs av lllE wllv A popular radio performer, who was greeted upon his exit by a mob of female admirers. with his hat askew and his clothes generally dis- hevelled he hopped into a taxi, mut- tering "I'm a fugitive from a Jane gang." At Kenora a man who “accident- ally" discharged a, rifle bullet which km“! a my has been sentenced to six months in jail for not taking “reasonable precautions” with his weapon. It is a just sentence. oer- tainly not errirlg on the side of severity, and should serve as a les- son to all persons who go hunting with firearms. Many fatalities call- ed "accidental" by coroncrs and coroner's‘ yurics can be so ifltfiflilei- ed only by the exercise of an ex- treme charlty. The hunter who bangs away at something moving in. a. bush-and kills a ccmpanion— is innocent of intent w commit homicide, bu‘. guilty of a decree of, recently made a stage BPPBQTNWP- ' o, 1...... . Barton. up. MOISTURE MAKES HOT IVEATHER. HARD TO BEAR. As youngsters we were taught that it was Lhc amount of carbon dioxide in the air in a room that was harmful. i A little later we were taught that ‘it was the waste matron-organic i particles-in a room, coming from lour skin in perspiration, and from l the bangs in our breath, that mode the air in a room unfit to breathe. Now it is known that It is the lmoisturc in the air of a crowded l room, heated to a high temperature, that makes us feel faint and weary.‘ plction of the new Prince of Wales College is reassuring evidence of the faith of our pcoplc in educational members are still capable of dis- sing with Gladstonian relish questions of purely academic inter- _ _ d I. H And the way we try to prevent criminal carelessness csrriirlg o ' u" heated moist a“ aflectmg us is punishment. ' to open windows or have fans mov- ing thc cool air inward and the hot _._l—._ 4'10: values, as well as ol their optimism and confidence that the cccrtrrmic ‘ode has turned. est. Where else nowadays but in England. one wonders. would parlia- mentarians be found rising to in- dulge in the following discussion, or be heard without astonishment by their collegaues if they did so: i Mr. Vyvyan Adams: "I 5l1l>l>°5° Canadian Authors Association now that I can mu clam to be a "b fmgalld. Mr. Rudyard ‘atwew “mug Iimn‘ but when x find Kipling said it had once been given is resolution upon we Paper tabled him “to sec Canada en bloc, in a |by B Sm, younger Member o, the prodigious sweep from Quebec to y . V; l d b k“ House who represems an adjacent '” 01'“ ‘m a‘ ' constituency. I am afraid that 1 Appmhcnlty the greatest feel my hair growing perceptidlv K I PL I NC 0N CA NA DA Addressing the members of the ‘Ollflllg of our| Em lr ioets i" unaware of thei , _ _p e I a _ , ‘greyfl and I am inclined to say: existence of the Maritime Provlnc- . “Partununt monies. '5 or canéda‘ ridiculus mus.’ Mr. Kipllnes tribute to Canada Perhaps the Committee will al- was a maghifzccnt one, but what a 1 10w me, m my own language, to Pill’ 11¢ had n°i 5C9!‘- Somflihiiis 0! construe that hcxameterf" the eastern as well as the central ‘Mr. Wise: "Before the hon. and western R-ostinccs. 'I‘he fact isnG-encleman construes it, will he that for years past the tours o.‘ dis- i mun-l manning it?" burnished visitors to Canada have: Mr. Ayrcs. "It, is perfectly cor- nascitilr bren arranged in such a fashicnirectly- scanned." that they see or hear little of this! Mr. Wise: "Nascitur." scctzon o: thc Dominion. and hat-i Mr. Adams: “The hon. Gentle- vu-“flii? 111W return home with but a marl l5 entirely wrong. If he uses vnzue impression of its existence, the classical {arm 0f the word In Air. Kiplings case, of course. ‘nascitur,’ he will find that it is im- ihns is particularly to re regretted. . possible to scan that line. If, on 91"‘- Wh" Suns‘. i “Ship m0 ‘the other hzmd, he will realise that rc cast o.‘ Sucz" and who by thcrc is a line from an archaic .l‘i'l.'l'»_'i(.‘ r-mhrincd Mandalay" form of Latin he will appreciate . hcarzs n,‘ Wcstcrn readers, that ‘nascitur’ is the third person have found another sourcesingular cf the present indicative 10c. had he taken the ‘doponcnt of thc archaic form ‘nas- - " '21 his Cflnadia" ‘"1". <1’! clor’ or of thc more classical forln Pjvcl "somewhere east" cf ‘nascor.’ Therefore, I respectfully QYE“? "I" immffifli- isuggcst to the hon. Gentleman that ‘he should not make irrelevant or 1'. Iv’. (‘HEESE MARKET Pnaccurale interruptions ~ in my ‘rspccchf’ "Tl-if on thc decline of‘ chtese the United .. the Ottawa Jour- Ofl SCORES’ SOCIA LISM S:r John Simon, British Foreign jSecretary. issued a grave waming ‘Vagainst the consequences of a So- lcialzst victory in the course of an .21; cic-‘addrcss at a Conserativc fete at ‘vCazvston House, Rugby. and his re- nearby" ‘ marks have been receiving much at- . Production LUHjLEIILlOII in the English press. Sir "be farms bu‘. with thciJohn stated that the Socialists‘ rvcrc openly advocating a KICK"? mpuon in to :hc leaders l .1»:- lri Onialio method of government which could l a sllrpius ofyonly bc described as "the sahotage n. exports HA1“ prrscni fJ\'t"l'~Sll§‘!',)l}' in In thc s of choir": lac- ‘of our parliamentary institutions." ‘For a long time. he said. there had ébCrn izcliided in thc Socialist party w bPPil cinsrzl and a hllqc tynllnzbcr of thoughtful men, many kcl ids-n ma,“ l“: mm‘. xvii; the rc-ujt ‘ "(l .of distinguished, who have ‘ "Nev: t‘; ihclusclvcs advocated a departure from Pillilll- i r.l".'.ul;:(~:i l: back up a ];l'0- meliiziry methods and lhc substitu- Iincial coicrnmcnt campaign fr.) r-c- timl of g very different method oi’ falrrnrvz. rc thc WilOiC industry. Thc governing thc country. These men is pledged to bclicvcd in British institutions and f‘l‘.'i"'l\'fll' to injcct new cnthusiasmllhcir loyalty and patriotism were for thc l-hrc c itidustry into fnrm-fnot f0 be denied. In the last few or. in central. try and lm]7l‘0\'0 twccks. however. a change had come iii" quclzty of milk supplied so thatiubout. The leaders of the official a hlrhcr and morc uniform grade Socialist party were now openly oi chccsc may be made, and inlfldvocating a mcthod of govern- f“ii"r Wars rmnpl-raic with thcjment which he could only describe (""'~TYT'll*""i'-* ilollcy. One ncrdcdUis the sabotage. or destruction. oi rcfczrn is cvnsilidation of many the existing parliamentary institu- Fmnil factorlrs into large lmits, forltion. Their plan was to seize power It. has bfcn found that. thc cost oilsuddcnly by a victory nt the polls l I1’ ‘.\' crzalhzrlilon y‘. .- J'I'I’"' manufacture in the smnll fnclory and then put an end tn democratic »_ is too h ah. one rent to a cent andfnethnds. They hoped u, abolish Lhg a half pcr pound more than in thciI-ioilse of Dorris, take over and reg- iifger units. ulate the financial machinery of "History repeats llsclf in thedhe Kingdom and immediately so- chcrsc lnrlllsiry‘. At several stages clallzc all industry. Sir John, in whcn the United States have slap- summing up painted out that the pltl on a iarff the Canadian rifliry change; wcrc pretended to be for [IFOIILKPTS have built up a fine ex- the sake of transferring power to yrri trade to Britain only to lose it the people, whereas the Scciaists when thc U5. tariff was removed. in reality wrcre making an effort lo IL seems a pity that the dgifylng give the maximum amount of power - lntercsts do not stick to the Brlt- to a little self-appointed group in (sh market but of course it is so admiration of continental methods. -"'-'L1sr<rrw~: If the results of, first the Dis-i armament Conference. and nmv the World Economic Conference. have to be regarded as evidence of the‘ hopelessness at present of attempt- ing international cry-operation. thc fault ls, perhapsgno; so much with the statesmen who have been at- tending these gatherings as with the times. Thoyare merely the victims of circumstances over which they have not the slightest control. Withl the failure to work in accord. rash‘ ilatlon must now sec what it cslni do to save itself. The present sit- uatiorl might well recall another of an earlier age when the cry was heard, “To your tcrlts. O Israel; now‘ see to thine own house, David." If there is one thing, says the New York World-Telegram, that. this country has learned in the depres- sion it is that no man is rvzse cri- ough or good enough to play with other people's money for personal profit without being watchrd. May- be financiers cannot be regulated by the Government effectively‘; mav- be they have been a law unto them- selves too long. That remams to b; seen. But the Government should either find the moans to rcgulrit: the money trust. cffcctivlcv, cr the money trust may go down in history i as the public benefactor who force-ll the Government in self-defense t)‘ nationalize banking. Fifteen percent of the population: lives on rclzcf. That is. fiitccn of‘. CVCfy hundred Canadians iivc bye. the charity of 85 others, like so many parasites. Life is hard Cllfilljgili surcly. Evclivcilc has cliourgh to do} carrying his own burden, But whilei some word too hard, others who‘ ask nothing better than to bo ilsc- ful to society can find nothing tn do and have to livcby someone class's labour. Whcrl will we have lilc cour- age to go to the rdbt of the evil and find means of sharing the work equitafily among the available men. taking into consideration also the phenomenon of the machine, that phenomenon which should have been man's slave and has become man's masteri-Lc Canada. Is history repealing itself in Lon- don’! Garbcd in white linen trous- ers. a. soft collar and shirt, the Duke of Marlborough appeared at the Grand Druids banquet thc oth- er night. His Grace, like the orig-i incl shlrlwaist man. was unabash-i ed. In fact, he took occasion io~ congratulate himself on his comq fortable attire. To those about himf wearing still the cruel yolk of thc starchcd collar, whllc they mapped fevercd brows, he spckc in duiczi ‘and kindly tones of thc appalling. tortures imposed by evening drcssj in July. ‘ Two little insects, red mile agd] blister beetle, are said to be joining forces in the West against the dc-i vastaling grasshopper. This boars’ out Dean Swift's cirservatlnn that} “a flea has smaller fleas that on him prey ;and these have smnllcri still to bite ‘am. and so prccccdl a nloisturc in it than the outdoor iiif. [drcamcd dreams and (urc throughout the English-speak- air outward. In the home during the cool months there is really not enough moisture in the air and thus we find a variety cf methods of keeping the moisture or humidity at the right point for health. What about the heat during the hot weather? Tile reason that we "feel" the licsit is because of the great amount of moisture in it. A telnperature of 9D degrees F. with extreme mois- lure and no movcnlcnt in the Bil‘ can muse you more distress than a tclnpcralilrc of 100 degrees F., when the moisture is low and there is a good breeze. That body oi yours wants to get rid of heat from the body and does it by means of the perspiration or sweat, which, coming out on the surface of thc body, should be taken ilp by the surrounding air. If then the surrounding air is not only hot but has a great amount of moisture in it, it docsrrt want or doesn't need the moisture fronl your body and doesn't take it up or absorb it. Thus the body. which manufac- tures lit-at all the time. finds itself‘ unable to gct rid of it as readily as it should, and so you find the hot weather oppressive and weakening. leaving you exhausted. What can you do about it? In any and every possible w'ay try to create a draught (draft) by open- ing windows or doors. If no draught can be created it is sometimes as ivcll to kecp doors and. wiudoivs closed for a few hours as the air in the house is cooler and has less If one can afford it an electric fan is helpful. Thc fun moves the warm moist ail" away from your body and your body can thus get rid of that much more heat, A Ftimous Romancer Passes (Montreal Gazette) The passingcf Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, who achieved fame in the 1890's by his romances. will be re- gretted mtst by a countless hmt of elderly reaCcrs who were his devot- ed admirers in his long heyday. “Anthony Hope" ihcn was a name to be conjured with and each new novel from his pen was read with avidity. He was n son of the par- sonage and a graduate of Orford, destined for the law, but that pro-l fcssion had no charm for him, and instead of falloiving its course, he set them down on paper. He was no lmitator, but crczllcd a line of his own that.‘ provcd a delight to many. “The Prisoner of Zcnda" in 1894 proved an iflstanlanecus success, and oth- er rocks fofowcd in similar vc'n. So the lawyer abandoned his call- ing and gave full rrign to his vivid imagination. Tales oi‘ love and h1- trfgilc with their setting in an imaginary state flowcd from h's mind and were received with pleas- r i ing wnvfrl. Then they were trans- trTE CHAKLUYFETOWN GUARDIAN General Balbo ' (Exchange) His Drcellency General Italo Balbo, who, at the head of one hundred Italian aviators of thc 1t- gllau Ministry airfleet, is flying from Home to Chicago, via Bhediac. is one of the most colorful figures who has arisen under the Mussolini re- gime. As leader of thc Fascist party in the Ferraro section. Com- mander of the Active Squadron of the Po Valley, Quadrunvir of the March on Home, Cdmmander Gen- eral of the Miiita, Asistant Secret- ary and then Secretary for Aero- nautics, his life has been devoted to the cause of Fascism. General Balbo was born in Fbrrara on June 5. 1896. and is thus thirty- sevcn years of age. Young 8nd enthusiastic, he is one of the pop- ular champions of the Mussolini ..ocl3fl0".l_“-_.. PEACE However may unrest monopolise 'I'ils melody, peace is an overtonc That cannot be surmounted. Pain may moan The poignant motif of rise A: may the clashing chords in pu- sionb guise; . Increasingly above them and alone. I existence; Peace dominates. what hungry ear has known Sound more sweet than sound when sounding dies? Peace is an ovcrtone in which all Name‘ whe" the Great w” broke Is Cénttilixf? Man may struggle with out Balbo was one of the first to the scales advocate Italian intervention on the or ms own being, but to seek the side of the Allies. He enlisted balm promptly as a. volunteer in the A-l- o, its compwkmwhen m! tenma pine Corps and was decorated with mus _ thrcc medals for bravery. When the The nmnmng 03mm". u‘ m. h,‘ Armistice was signed. 11E founded n5 Psalm and directed the newspaper L'Al- o, Stung“ tempers] Shem” and pino. At Florence he obtained a veils‘ doctor's degree in Social Science and then, returning to Ferrara, de- voted his energies to the advance- mcllt of the Fascist cause. Ho became one of the Com- manders General of the newly or- ganized Fascist militia and was one of the most active leaders in those memorable days when the revolu- tionary blarkshirts marched on Rome. He was first called to the government in Oclobcr, 1925. In August, 1928, he was appointed General in the Air Service and lu September, 1929. raised to the post or Secretary" f0 Aeronautics. The present flight. to the Cen- tury_of Progress Exposition in Chi- cago ls by no means the first of these Italian mass flights which General Balbo initiated. He. lfmseli has conducted various memorable flights with a large number of planes, in the Mediterranean. across Europe from Rome to Lon- don and Berlin, and to Rio de Jan- eiro. this being the first crossing of the Atlantic by aeroplanes in mass formation. The same model of seaplane is being uscd ln this en- deavor. “Rackets” On. l-illge Scale (Fredericton Gleaner; The “rackcts" in the United State: do not sccm to have abated. Yester- day in New York City a new form of attack revealed itself when a gallon tin of acid was thrown against thc sidc of a car in thc street with the result that thc oc- cupant was severely burned and his eyesight injured. Activities in aid- ing the authpritlcs in the sup- prcssion of "rackets" arc assigned as the cause of the attack against this particular citizen by gangsters. So serious has the situation in the adjoining country become that a speclalcommittce cf the Unit/ed States Senate has been named to act in the matter. Senator-Royal S. Copeland is chairman and accord- ing to his reported remarks, kidnap- ping is the most dangerous form the “racket" yet has assumed. The recent O'Connell case coming so closely after others, is taking the centre of the stage. Prohibition in inter-state ship- ment of machine guns, sawed-off shotguns and automatic pistols is now being urged. In support of this it is pointed out that recently eighty-seven machine guns manu- factured in New York City were found in the possession of, private citizens in Chicago. The entire situation in the Uni- ted States without doubt has re- sulted from a long, gradual but steady weakening in regard for law and order and from undermining of confidence in those to whom the enforcement of the law is entrusted. The situation is one which should contain a warning to this Dominion and to any other country. —Sonla Ruthele Novak, in the North American Review. Getting Things Done ("Y. Y." in the New Statesman.) ' Mr. Clenneli Wilkinson, referring i the other day to the often heard l remark that what we need is a i Mussolini or another Cromwell, ask- . ed why; on earth anybody should want a man like Cromwell. A cor- respondent immediately replied: "The answer is a slmpleone. He succeeded, where others failed, in getting things done.” There is a positive craze for getting things done sweeping over the world to- day. It does not seem to matter much what the things are as long as somebody gets them done. Thus in one country the man who get things done is the man who gets lJews hit over the head with rub- ber tubing. In another, he is the man who gets peasants torn from their farms and sent to work as ex- iles in distant places not of their own choosing, but of his. It is some- times very difiicult to see the dif- ference between getting things done and getting people done in. The man who gels things done is not, as a. rule, afflicted with humanity. He is so bent on getting somewhere that hc has no time to consider the feelings of the people he knocks down on the way, there. I wish I knew enough history to be able to expose the pretensions of the great men who got things done in the llet us know that. you have got safe- past. Perhaps, however, it. would be useless. for the men who got things done, from Cleon to Napoleon, will always have their defenders slmply| because they got things done. l I dislike men who get things done, because one of thc first things they always do in modem times is to muzzle the press. Give a man dic- tatorial powers and he immediately thinks what a fine piece of work it would be to suppress a few news- papers. Now, newspapcrs may be an evil, but I doubt if they must be suppressed. I should infinitely pre- fer the suppression of the latter. All the people who get things done, I notice, have a mania for destroying things. They must destroy free in- stitutions or libraries or churches in order to get rid of their superfluous energy. Satan finds some mischief still for active hands to do. It would, of course, be unfair to sug- gest that the strong men of politics have no positive aim in their frenz- ied activlties; but I cannot; help fliinking that what many people ad- mire in them is less their ultimate purpose than their frenzied activi- ties. imagination much as the gangster of the films does. "I'm thinking of opening a movie theatre." "Well, there's good money in that business." "It isn't the money so much; but I'd like to see my wlfc and kids once in a while. laud and welcomed by foreign renders with equal interest. The mnsiderable . Humor was _ _ . author also produced plays and had ad mflnu-um" “thc stitisfaction of seeing other ‘creators of fiction copying his piols and hFs style, sometimes with A busy scientist, has discnvcrcd that lhc more counting of‘ sheep is‘ not. silfflcient to induce slccp. The thing is to concentrate on thc im-hungry person. Yet its consumption dividual animal; no doubt nctmgilms fallen of? lately, in Great Brit- mcntal peculiarities as revealed by uin at least. according to statements its method of taking thc jumps, its made at thc annual conference of promise in association with punt thc Mustcr Bakers. Confectioners sauce, and the garment prisslbilll- and Caterers Association at Hast- irr of its "N". Br this time the fngs, The deielates thought that second sheep should be apprcach- we clue; pmbycm or the wheat, 5p- ing. uation was this decline. which they stated amounted to l5 per cent. 'I‘hclr solution of the difficulty was "eat more bread campaign," and the best medium in advance this they declared to be newspaper ad- vertising, consistently and system- Twcnty-two students of thc- “'05- icrn University, London, are to spend their holidays in Quebec, ‘that they may learn the French language. What! Ami after the row some Ontario pccplc are raising nbcut French programs on the radio! atically instead of spasmcdically. 1n behalf of this publicity the speak- crs explained that the decline in -;_- broad consumption had been dug Bread is the ma of life snag-schist m the extensive advertising nothing tasted better to a really of substitute foods. mixed with his dramatic thought and the combination was delightful. His Dolly Dialogues were in the na- ture of witty social satire and in his latcr years he wrote in more serious vein. But it was his "Zenda" books that mode his reputation and that were remembered in the world of readers of pleasant fiction, young and old. They were the fresh creations of his younger days and maintalnrd their hold to the end. When moving pictures camc, some of the Hope series were adapted to the screen. Sir Anthony also lectur- ed and toured the United States and Canada in 1897, when he had a universal reputation. It was well,’ for the world that he turned froml law and invited pcoplc everywhere‘, to come into his mythical klng-' dom. for it was a happy stale to dlwell in for a passing period. An-Y Lhony Hpe Hawkirs well descrved the knghthood that was conferred on him in 191a i OALL HERE FOR YOUR VAOATION NEEDS BATl-lrNG CAPS 25c, 35c, 75c and $1.00 BEACH BALLS "n"... 15o BEACH BAGS .......... 85c THERMOS BOTTLES $1.00, $1.25 Ind $2.85 CAMERAS FILMS (all lines.) FLIT MOSQUITO CREAM A complo‘ assortment of The strong man pleases the ‘ Fllhing Tackle, I-‘Ilel, Rodi, Baskets, Hooks, Linen, etc. TllE 2 MAGS 149 Great George Street JULY 15, 1933 FOR PERFEC l‘ TEA FLAVOR -USE- Brahmln Orange Pekoe Tea Sold Only in Bed Airtight Packages. V Pay Envelope Guaranteed Life Insurance is the only plan in the‘ World that will put a widow on a pay roll and keep her there as long as she lives. A Life or Endowment Policy is an insured savings plan with guaranteed values for retirement. ~ Consult. your nearest Great-West; Life Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. HYNOMAN 8i 00.. LTO. Provincial Managers Lower Queen Street. Charlottetown GOA L We represent the VICTORIA Coal Co- Ltd- for P. E. l. and the BRAS D‘OR Coal Co. Ltd- for the Charlottetown Territory- We offer special low prices for early booking- ‘ RETAIL AND WHOLESALE ' H. R. LARGE& CO. 58 Queen St- Charlottetown Phone 1000 ijiamxri tugal, and is likely to be cut ui before long for suburban building plots. Relatively Speaking (Mail and Empire) James Mattern, the aviator, is re- Pf-‘Yflrfi m be $819 i“ 5ib°Yia~ R i$ remaining big country houses near not the place in which the ii\’(‘l‘.’\_I€'[_,nndQn, King hilllillPl bought it marl would chrorc to be srrfr- wr llusl before his wedding in lots, Telmmbei‘ ‘<1 55°73’ Bbflili- H 1590f. Bid [and sot aside a spacial portion 0f Efl§1i5h 13d? iii W" Lime “m? “msi the llouro for his not/Ed library 0i bidding good-bye to her Iwnhvrv» rzlriv Pnrtugcsc books. Ife publish- WiWW Wave had EWiTCW Si" 5331i? I ed himself :1 guide to n section of "Well. deer. be sure lo write vs and! thc library, rivaling with the WOIIU of thc 15th nud 16th centuries, and finished a second volume just; be- fore his sudden death a your ago. The river Crane flows through the pal-l: to the ‘Thames, and ar. 0pm space of nbolll; six acres on the riverside must be reserved whenever developments take place Not morg than 12 houses to the acre must be built. Fulweil Park ls one of the laa. 1y back b0 the trenches." EPCQUEEN SELLS IIOME IDNDON, uly ill-Fulwcil Park. home of the late King Manuel of Portguai, at Twickenham on the upper reaches oi’ the Thames, has been sold by thc err-Queen of Por- ENLARGEMEVNT “FREE-l .‘\l:.l{ _\‘!l]i Kfiliiik lilllls ilIifi 5U ("cilia tun)‘ size rolli. iifflt lip-ii; llevwlupv-ii iillii ir’i‘llili'fl “The .\ew Wpy", and receive (ml- Em? l-Zlilargcllleill Free with every Roll.’ .\ Tlll.\i, ltllilrfR AND Yf)l"l.l. BE DELICIITED THE REID STUDIO - MONCTON. ‘NB. - SUMMER COAL vloronlll $1.15 AVON $1.00 Fully Screened Fully Screened ' DELIVERY EXTRA TERMS STRICTLY CASH MARITIME GOAL COMPANY PHONE O90 2 CUMBERLAND STREET A better tobacco and a better cureuthat accounts for the popuiarity of our “Buck IWISI" CHEW I N G ,, llltlfliYc NlCl-IOLSCN ' u‘. , . .‘M“_I4V: ,. _. an» zlvrvrptali.’ A hi‘ r {On , .