PAGE FOUR - THE tttnttitnnwt titan Mint-n Dull! u. "-59 i" Year tln . . vane-e) delivered. United Ninten- Prelldellt. M‘. Cheater H. lllel.ure| fiecrrtnry. Lleut. Col. ll. A. ltllrlii-non. l). S. 0 Vlee-Prcnlflell. J. ll. lllrlelll Notes By The Way At the Liberal meetifig In Pownal oh Monday evening the mutual ad- miration of the suvornl ttilvllkfirti for each other was a fatnlllar and yet noteworthy feature. It was flunillar because it was. a rc- tufnder of the old days when thc 7WWQm. swarm-mg...» ‘as: » Aunt-lute Edltorill. K. Currie. New Folk Ileprrlintutlve-Jlrnllk It. Northrup Chicago lteprenentuitlve-Iti. .I. Power Elltnr and Altman-r. .l. ll. ltururlt “W13 t happen in StfAtltoiue Division on that Sir Henry has more than once, like The GUARDIAN III be obtained from C (clown: “ ' SIIIIOIPII, lrnrlc-r A 0m. Queen 8 A. llrown. Fill-p V l’. '1‘. Murphy. Prince it” Grocery J. l‘. Duly, Queen it. IGOI W. C. Wright, Kent filler! Welt lltephrn Duly. lllcl-III ll. ll. TIOHII \Vllie. I25 Ifll- Ave. “film” "Wilt-ll Fred Gindlt, Grist George 8t. \\ I. llalalel. Spring Park llond J, D_ Tgywr’ (yqfgqn 5t Grafton lit. i. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1924 THE PLATFORM COLLAPSED al influence bcing exercised in The wimp“ M m“ Liberal plat" Iiimouski, that Sir llcnry-'I‘horniot1 form at tilt-St. Antoine meeting the hlhhu h vigorous hhhhc dufuhcu U; other night was as pathetic asdit [he govcrnnlcnfs prophet ic. The .\I r. ltiarinc Hon. (iarditi. liiinistt-r and Fisheries W31" The cvitlcnco at hand appropriately ranged in a row alongtsil. “wry-S hvfhhch o: lhu “overly the front of the platform; ilfllliiltlimhut‘mm conclusively hwvhs lhht tit ‘Ill were the rank and file of h, -C|,.C1h,hSV uhlmlnununts “igimlhni ‘Hmili’ ‘lull’ n w“ wit-onuncrcial patronage tli-l Govern- start the appiausci bt-hlnd from m“. w,“ the mhh, fimhghvllnun‘ purhflsos- Lam w“ m0 vtvtthottt portfolio. a tort-t-nstle h‘ I f ‘ n“ I l 1 ‘ Xituist-r." anti. able and worthy l 'i if“ l) ' ‘ QC " 5i l t. 4 '. '. ' A v‘ v. t . i i“ m‘ “ii U“ i ‘t nnatimn Nattoiml Itaiiwny had hhhlh. huh ha h‘, “ML he was m, ‘i midi” “i “"““" u‘ “ml m‘? ictptiptneitt tirtlcrs to place, and proachctl in its columns for accept- i""‘*l""l “mm” "f m“ simiim“ Trhwztfter one was secured for Amherst. Liberal candidate . bad got ut1tlt-'r~lIN_ ‘he hreshleht urn“, way anti was warming up eloquent iandatitm of the Minister, the blessings that badlhhhyh-h] ihfllunwe hf beloveddlfbcrzti nn-mbcr in the cottntrydurittg thc Ilcucficcnt rcigutymiuhhl “lunzlgclnfint: the been showered upon his of the “uncrownctl King.‘ and tbt- stiii grt-zitoi‘ blessings to follow. "lti_\|r_ 1L n (vrhwfhnh is this way." ‘be ticcittrwl, with Sh“. “hhrd or Trhhm dratnatic fervor —win-n down wen. 5N’ 5 the platform, the roar rank out l)pal' sjnkJfhl-nugh mi). thc front below! The orator,‘ when ht- ft-it the earth going from [mghlh yum. 1mm hhhhhh, beneath his fcct. said something‘parjhuhmn’ WU hhvh the hllcvvll‘ lleltl In conticctitln with the byo-citiction in tion-political Rl"H"“' attitude at North Liay n few days liittcKoilzle King, and his Liberal ugh “is defence h; hm being tum“ cantiitlatc. Mr. Iiushloti ami thUseriohsly ht Quhwih “new it h. "fircgartlcti as suspiciously political. refutes and "wtmt-nt iufiucntwc is used for (inverti- car mit-txttlpztily in that town wrote thc , Prim“ following it-tter testifying to thc local Catlatlian . ‘thin. however, Montreal, May, 29. 1923 Amherst. tho persist- -nt-y and influence of Mr. llantxe oft “WHY luscfttl which had no commotion with thcishccpmted 1h getting [he (jhmuhhh Illell flovorunlctit was in office and wi h the liouue in session some tw nty five honorable tnembers spent weeks upon woeks by day apd night singing songs of praise about each other and landing what thoyyeouceiveti to bu thc Best of Aii-{Qovcrntnenlia Still in vthose dtwpdheyfaiicd to convince the people that thc Govcriuuent was J;Ul)tl.‘_DI' that they themselves were [as wise. prudent and patriotic as thtywthought thetnselvcs to be. At Pownal Mr. D. A. McKinnon, .\l. l’. “rt-fcrrctl to thc honor ox- tciltletl to our province by the ap- pojntitig of his colleague, ilon. John E. Sinclair t0 n seat in thc Patihtct." We fiilttl-‘P from the authurlsetl report. It ottght to be .lil honor to both Mr. Sittclzilt‘ anti the I'ruvincc that he was thus caiieti. lint it was not xtlways that the LIbt-rttl organ thought so highly of a mcrc _Cabinct. scat without salary. or a munber of yt-ars thc lat: lion. Donald Fcrgusodhcld a sent in the Conservative (Tabinct at Ottawa anti during all tilose years ut- w s cottstnutly snccrcti at by tln- saint» journal as “a Minister liilg and hultling a position that was ltutuiiiatitig to himself and to thc province. Our province is small, its people are few and we cannot t-xtwct ai- ways to be representctl in the (ittatva Cabinet. We think it tit-sir» if wc cannot have zt salaried heati of a Department in the (Iabiuot, that we shall still have an official rcpres-nltativc within that chariot-ti circle. To our minti this is t-uuaily tlt-slrabic. and thc posifotl is of itself equally honor Iiilitt whcthcr a (Yonservtitlvt- or t Liberal (Iovt-rnmeiit is in pow-u: '\’i"hcther it is or shall be equally tit-pends upon the zlbiiity. flours Egypt” Challenges Will Britain have to fight again for mastery of the Soudan——ranked us onc of the greatest potential sources of the world's future cotton suppIy~udlIch Kitchener first con. out-red for the Entpirc u quarter Britain in Soudau ‘it . "um-- H Revlon. “.0. Rt, "ruoueurs FROM AN oassnv. Klmrtuunr, ING PHYSICIAN A physician, of high standing, was asked what wcrc the big fact- ors in getting sick people well. “Of course the degree of illness varies with people and likewise their powers of resistance. Scarlet fevcr attacks two child- ren in the slune home. One is only slightly Iii, has bu-t a faint rash. stratreeiy any throat trouble.‘ The‘ other is very iii. has a most brill- iztnt rash, tutti has tins-cf, throat, and perhaps heart trompiiczitlotls. Ilut generally speaking where I know the family. from the father to the youngest child, I generally know what I'm up Iigainst and try to act ziccortllilgly. The biggest Iteip I Iiavc is where tht- patient Ilas that very valuable assctficonnuon sense. I don't hetxitate to discuss his case frankly with him, because the day of "Itiystery" in nrctllcine is past. Tho tihysiclanl of to-tiay knows vastly more than tho physician of yesterday. and so likewise docs the average iayuian., I point out to him what has happ- tht-ir fct-I and about their work again. Ont- who is not satisfied to rt-Inain an "invaiiti." I have to bu (‘llflllli with such cases, but it is certainly a itelp in getting wt-ii, to bavc him show this tfsptisititlil. ibis ticsire to get on his ft-t-t again. Ami tin- thirti tiling I like, and that is 0f grt-at hclp, is where thc pa-lit-nt _ not only has COIIIIIIOI] scnsc. and grit, but where hc is willing t0 follow out your ativlcc to the very itittcr. 'I‘his may tneau a change In his own plans. 1t check on his tlcsirc t0 st up too soon, imt also some con- siticrultie |li(!0ll\'(!Iiii"l|('f‘. to him win-n ht- ls bcgluniilg to got arountl again. You may tldvise early hours Der. Imps cutting down on his smoking. it (‘llillll-Kt’ in his dict, a tiaiiy walk. All this may lrr- irksomt‘, but, your itlval patient will carry It out faithfully.“ ‘ < infiut-tlt-t- amt character of the man political Summon and which whsilxzllhnlal Imihvayh w “we “S hhltyiitfls citost-il to fiii lht: place. variously intcrpratcti by happened to be under the ivatcrffm- m". Amherst phmh ltilvhcl" and as the ice cold water This is h very sallhfhhmry trickled tiown tmdcr his collar onto bis manly bosom he thought the yo," hwhh, n; Amherst "icy hanti" had got its grip on him that his brief but political 14ml strnnttous career was over. liow we give him as I don’t think Amherst. and the Minister of Marine and Fish m-um [qr p cries fared is not stated. It was evident front the livr-iiticssa n! the this through M r. sccurcti business scuffle that ensued that lbw)‘ wort- Logan‘ not all kiln-t] as t)". r(_l(\' of H“. expenditure." iIoth tir-tso gcnilc~ noun“ mum m, SW,“ ahhve m" V"? trill)‘ yours, ‘Inch know very wcii that thc point I‘ v _ _ \\'_ M‘ 1;[]'r|,p}[g_ is m tilspute. Thcy Iu-ard it dis- Illtlfitfivfil humanity (nth foot pttr [jrnsident hhleh h, the “Bu,” Every Cmh tiaiunug its vitality ami many of gprvgttvt; nuwgpaptgf in (‘Minna it" them painfully impressing tin» fact Tim, letter on“. "W"! tilwritcwiitlt-rtttl countenanccs ill “It! "Plffililfifilllfllb ‘the golden days of patronage on tire The previous Prime Minister. who had "Xberinntrt-s with broken thc first he was not ticati platforms, was one of to "discover that 3mg“; and he announccti his tiiscovery to the anrlitmce. many of whom icarn~ lire-ton, N, 8,, ed with a feeding of relief that he the activity and inflututtrt: had not been cut off at thc pre.~.(‘.anatiittu National Railways sent stttgt- of his political cztrccr further tragic scene and bt-italf of the (lovt-rntnt-ni ""4 Wilimi" Itfcparatiou. flagrant as to call forth It was a Liberal faith in (aim-its than in his political thc cantiidatc. Will) has more privately such partisan foundation, zicct-tltt-tl the “slgu" as hm hm publicly umblcnmtit: oi‘ what is going to National Railway Steptetniler 2nd. The Int-Ming was “ponch- Th" mm“ mm worn sum are permitting tht-lr plans wore noi the. thing's that ltati been pre-arrangcti for tho certification of the electors and on the hoped a gloom st-ttit-d bad tovbc- "mag"?! M thme Wm opt-ration of the National tho elected rt-prcstintatlve: The belief iris t i n ' ' - -. (or favors "m" . no I00 chaiittigttl by prcsltit-ttt. 110W Kcncraily prevails in St Antoine that what. tho Liberal platform on Monday night happcnt-tl preparing to pcrpcttlttte is going to happen to Liberal itopes on Tuesday next. --—<0>-_--~ would insist on a non-partisan A POLITICAL UTILITY _ tiircctoratc. Th" (Yanatlinn National Railway It was in thc notorious branch lines’ program that the ment‘s political control of National system apparent. To the program system was taken out of politics and Sir. Iienry Thornton gave it to be ‘distinctly understood that he would tolerate no political inter- his Evldontre Ia rapidly accumulating was made forence with management. Government insisted on Lord Nelson, placed telescope to his blind eye. I’: a somewhat significant that, m: a rhino when there is l. the were these roads that the pany's officials at Ottawa U105‘? l)I‘(lt‘.I‘ to change over five itnntlred‘ noarrst him. The. Prime I\iinl-iii‘i't‘or more box cars into stock cars, raugt-tntint for us and should be to m“ said. “Every one was would have been possible to have cxcept tiispittyt-ti far as our readhtg goes has ticnicti tilrottgilottt Amherst, as proof that H" Inter-colonial btttl rciurtietl under the hhhhet has ha," hhlhhhhm A the Ilibt-rzti cotttroi of that system. Tilt-re was no rebuke from thc pre- of the National Railways. in lW(l_l)y-t‘iI'(lii()IlS, North (‘apt- and Halifax, N. 0f the‘. m, honest hlfliihfliSiivtii. to icnti “'35 hi!) strong tirotests, but Sir Ilcury ’l‘hornton trontctltctl hinrscif with dcprccatiitg activity, nothing. In Iiimtitlski by-cltvctioti thc (innatlinn tnatlagctncnt for t-contuny to b0 cottntcrtitatttlted to suit thc political exigencies of tho (Iovcrnmcttt. So far this political system tilt- In tilt: new appointments to the. ' rtiiiway directorate, Sir Ilnnry, in his tiefcticu of the. (lovcrntnotli. is tho par- tisan managt-tnt-nt after having de- clared to a tiozt-n people that he (lovorn- thc most pre- pared by the railway officials, the ‘political railways being added, and the pre~ Wléffi “Act wx-ll your part. thcrc all the honor lies.“ i Another feature of note in the iLibcnIi series of Int-ctitigs is that [I l" ‘all of thc leading spcttkcrs have lthought it nctrcssary to "balance wthe fr-ticral budget." or to assert Mr‘ Imgm‘ has Me“ “mflrmg i“ that it has ileen baiaut-oti. Tints his t-fforts to get this business tout Mr. I). A. McKlnnoti rciicvetl when it was zinnoutlcctl that tin- btitlget was balanccti." Mr. Sinclair wcnt a little further and said. "This was the first time in tt-u years that the revenue was greater than tht- Pownai. a; journals of thc c that wt- that Tbe financial Dfiltiiiliflll have in no c: know of Il(1('t‘|)l(!fi thc claim number of‘ tin-m have disputctl it cin'm anti not ,. ttblisitetl ifact. ilS ll The Toronto Globe, chief tirgati o! the Liberal party, had tno lunch any support to the party, claim. as wt- ptiiltit-tl out at. tht- time, and plainly implit-tl its doubt. It would be worth a mint of political capital to tho party in powor if thc. Globe would cntlorsc thc claim of thc balanced budget, as no tioubt it has ilcctt urged to do, but the entlorst-iuont is not forthcoming. What is tho trlaim worth’! Just. this, that it is a. fiction and not a fact; it ls not crt-tlitcti or bclitevt-ti by one-half of the intelligent Liberal telcctoratetir one quarter of thc intelligent t-lcc- tors of the cottntry. That is why the parrot cry of "balanced budget" is repcatcti by tlht-ap polltitwiatis at every political tuncting anti by a few sncoittbci ss Llbcrtil newspapers with whom un~ veracity in the party iliififctli is akin to virtue lint the stubborn ilc has about run its court-lo. Already it has nearly run itself to death. Wt- doubt whether it will bc hoard of" a year hence when again the public accounts of rt-dtictstl receipts and larger expenditures have come under review. It may than perhaps be recalled along with that ancient. chronicle of a man and his wifo whose account nf their land sale and the price roccivcti was audited by the Apostle Pctcr with very tragic results. - There in growing evidence that and the. others treated it asa party _ I just thought I would pass the ltbtmgitts of this phys wi- iyott. It uiight help all of us. \ ———-—<-o->-i- l . Atrousr ztt-lvott are tncthtltiitrzil, and never act very impul- sively. You likt: to know how and why things are douc. and, wlniu you do not accomplish Uiiililrs quickly‘, you arc generally acttttr- atc. You should be very careful in your lovc affairs, and no‘, Inztrry hastily. Your birth stout! is the which lucntis a happy mart‘ Your flow-t‘ is thc IIOIIILV. Your lut-lty colors are or;n\.,t_:-;- and rcd. ..l lift‘. rO4QOOOOOQOOOQO~OQQQQOOQQ 3 Daily Selections i z FOR Guardian Readers .04o+44 o-0o+o+o+04¢+ 0o QQQ LAUGHING SONG Win-n the grt-cn woods laugh with the voice of joy, thc tlitnplltlg stream laughing by, When thc air tiot-s lttugb with our merry wit, _ Anti the grown hill laughs with the noisc of it; Anti runs When the titcatiows livt-ly grt n And the grasshopput- laughs in line tnt-rry st-t-tic, \\v'ht~n lilary and Susan and I-hniiy \\ltb_thtnr awtot round mouths sing Ila, ha, he! laugh with Wilt-n tbt- paintctl birds laugh in t the siladc, Whcn our tabit- with cherries and tints is spread, (‘omo livc and lit! happy and join with me To slug the s\v.~ct chorus of lla. ha, he! —Wliilam Blake. Lem CAMBRIDGE DEBATERS IIALIIPAX, Aug. 27, n tn... (‘unuda-ilnltt-tl States tour of lilo, ffantbritigc Iinlon tlcbtttltlg tcatn will open at Halifax on September‘ 29. when tho Old (‘ountry coiicgians will meet tho wicbatiltg team of Dalhousle University, according to an announcement made here to- flight. whorc a fow months ago it was harp-ti upon in articles of column length. Al Pownul neither Mr. Mc- Klnnon nor Mr. Sinclair vcnturctl t.n say that they believed a rttai balance had been effcctetl. Mr.’ McKlnnmi-spoke guard-tally of It us uotnethitlg that bud been "an- “idemv "clliliesced- 3° “njunifiahi” the party advocates are becoming intimated com ashamed of this fictitious ilaiunco. not tat-tzurrs-ti in ten years before. At. their public meetings their ihearera listen to the phrase in‘ nouncetl" anti Mr. Sinclair casually that such n thing had It is still’ open to either of them tqsay that he does, not believe the “"""°" i“ “hm” m" "1‘"”‘°“ittent iucredulity. In u... Liberal ibudget has been balanced and Donald u only w chlllenxo lis- ‘liritlsh Clillllfli, and General Allen- vncti, and thc nccossity for his cooperation in the trcaltltctlt. ' Thi- second thing is the "grit" in people, That ticsirt- to got on lsh trottps, however. the main army v mont. but in official circles ltcrc iL ernwent is fully prepared to ntcct of n century ago after General Gordon had been wipcti out at With British tr"ops and planes being rushed to the by, British High Commissioner in idgytit. stunnionod in council by the Ilritish Labor Ministers, this ques- tion is being asked seriously, due to the outbreak of disorders in 1.000.000 square miles of the terra- [pry lying south of Egypt. The outbreaks, which may herald a nation-wide rovoit. followed the flztt ticciarzttion of I-‘rcttiicr Ramsay liiacllonaltl to the cffcct that Great liritaiti will not surrender control of thc Soudan to Egypt, writes thc London correspondent of the New York lIcraiti-Tribtine. visit to Ilondoti at an curly date is expect- ed frtnn the Egyptian Premier, Zag- hinl Pasha, for negotiations In which the future status of the ter- ritory will be (Le of the principal gnhjtttflt; for discussion. Begun byjiadeae 'I‘ht- tilsttirbttiict-s “ow tiiarming Khartouut Ilcgan when cadets of Ibo Egyptian military school stat!- ctl an zirmcti dcmonstruiloti in thc This was followed by a ntort- serious outbreak at Ilalm. when hlgyptltttl raiirotitl troops br .kt- itiosc and conimitteti tilsord- crs until Iiritlsh troops wcrcficolu- pt-Iicd to flrt- on the riotors. (lthcr Egyptian railroad troops broke into tin- imrtacks at Port Stmdan and imluigcti in similar riotous 11% iutvitir. Although thc dlstirdt-rs havt- not iwcn on a large scale. their gravity lit-s in the fact that as st-cn lit-re. thcy arc. part of u ronccrtcti ztgittttititt, stztilfli i" i"“ tint-net- ucgotiutons to be hold itcrt- iKPIWPPII hiaclltitlziitl anti Zilli- hiui Pasha. <'I‘he viewpoint of thc pritigh Labor (iovt-ritmctit hinges on the firm conviction that thcrc is no justice in the claim that titt- strt-cts. Woman Sails Ship On Pacific Lanes PORTLAND, Orc., Aug. 27—-Tll9 big freighter Atlantic, of the Pan- Pacffic line. is somewhere on the Pa lc occon with a woman at ti"? heim——for part 0f the time. at least. Miss Ilclen Olson. comely. 21 your old daughter of Caaptztiti O. Olson, sk'ppei~ of the big steamer, is a senmau on board thc vessel. anti at times takes thc Wheel with the other tptartermusters. 'Sb'e is on tho ship's payroll, ‘too, anti therefore is a full ficged acu- mun in the eyes of thc United States. » “(ionnnotl0rc" Montgomery, vct- eran shipp'ng commissioner who has grown nltl in the service at the customs house hcre declared firm- ly that “nar ya woman" bud ever before signed on as a sailor in his experience. The pretty young marlin-r will sail with tht- vessel from hcrc to west coast ports of South American anti return to Portland via New York. "I'd like to be a captain sonn- tluy, just like my tiatltiif’. silo said,. when astcd whether she thought silo would like the trip. “I‘d never be anybody's stcnn- grupher when I can gct a job like this." Elevator Makes A Millionth Journey (By Dominion News Service) liUNittlN, Aug. 2T, — Itobt-rtson. the zttlclltiant of the main ilft at thc Savoy. and probably thc host- kuowtl lift tittt-ntlatlt in tbt- world. tlrztvt‘ his ntoving room of gold anti rt-d Iat-qnt-r towards thwsltics for thc tnilitonth time just bt-fort- ilIlIIJll-liiiit‘ yt-stcrtiay. 'l‘|u~ at-Ilicvciitt-tit was registered n! a dial in thc t-nginc-rtitltits ht- low. \\'lit‘l'i‘ t-vcry jottrtit-y of all thc lifts has bot-n zlutouiztticztiiy rt-gist. trrdt- sinct- tin-Ir installation, lteilt-rtsttn hits been tiriving his‘ own lift for cightct-tt yours, For thtt- last thrct- days he has been kcpi iuforInt-tl at frctptctlt Intcrv; :- of tho figurys on thc dial. tutti y u tcrday morning he begun to cuttnt tht- jtlttrnt-ys Itnnst-if. ilavlng cotupit-tt-ti thc ZHIEIJIEIEIII» ht- wt-ni in st-arclt of thrt-t- pcopit- who had bt-n warnt-tl of the ap- proaching moment. 'I‘i|cn the -ccrt-nlony of the mil iinnh jottrnoy began. Drinking His Health In thc lift were Judge Iiasiitt. of Soutlan should iw owned by I'll-Will- anti ruicd from (Yairo. It is arfilc cd that the very principles which ‘avtvketl Britta-h sympathy for Egypt in that cottutryis struggle for indc. IWIHIOIIPI‘ can now be ‘against her tiemanti dan. Egyptians Would Suffer The cottntry today is governcti by an Angloltlgyptian st-rvit-te, in which all the senior tifficittis arc Britfisit. 'i‘I|t~y art- only a few iirit being ltlilyptltttt. The tibjt-twt. of illc Egyptittti agitation is to crt-atc an intpressltm that popular ft-t-iing ill‘ the Soudan favors control of that territory by the Egyptian Govcrxi- i5 tisst-rteti the. Stiudatlest- arc more or icss contcntt-tl under iiritish ad ministration and arc litmliit: only to the ldgytttiatts. This latter claim is certainly borne out by the past history of the tzottntry. Egyp. tian agitators arc seen hero as playing with a dottbiewtlgcti wea- pon in trying to fomcnt avmi~ti in- stirrt-ctloti in a cottntry which is one. of the most infiaunuzlhic in thc world. It is claimed the Egyp- tiang would be thc first to suffer if the British allowed this ttgiiatloti to take its course, and the itisubnr. dlnntlon thus lct loose would spread to tht‘ fattalical Soudnttt-st- trlbcstnt-u, who have a military record of long standing, ‘ilafiit Sotdan Prosperity Near Continuance of British control was ncvcr more nt-tvt-sstiry than it is at this motiltntt tvhcn illt- Soudan is on the cvo of an era of abund- ant prosperity, it is asst-rtcti. Tilt- big Nile dam sent-un~. is In‘ progress anti will bring undor irrigation cui- tivntinn some ilundrt-tls of thous- ands 0f ncros of the fiat-st cotton producing lands In tht- world. This is tne basis for Egypt}; do» "mm! for [iosscssitin of thc Soudun. The Egyptians asst-rt the dam scheme may interfere with the wat- qr uuppiy on which Egypt is dc- pendent. The MacDonald Gov- my! 901m, a! the Egyptinnt claim. by some arrangement whereby England in put in suppressing the. control of tba water supply will not. be exclusively In British hands. MacDonald l: Firm At the same time this Govern- ment is Influxlbiy opposed In banding over the Snutlnn to Egyp- tian rule. The effect of the. pro- sent disorders probably will be pre- cisely the reverse of what may he expected in Esvnt- Premier Mtw- Nt~\v fork, who was an tinkntnvn lawyer twt-nty you ', was ont- of dht: first of ii.lIi)<‘I‘lSl)lI'5 passcng icrs: an t-ltit-rly, whitt- hairt-ti gilt-st ‘ '|\vho has but n a twine yearly visit» tor to tln- Savoy for yt-a and a Wl‘ii-i(lil)\\l’i llontitnt bnsntt-ss mat. lnvnkcti ivho. living on the third floor, isl [m- [hc Suuhitohcrtstiufis most rcgttint‘ pussvtip, 1 tor. A tabit- ill-tiring gins. utood itllst-rct-tiy in a corner. . ' For tht- tuiliioilth time tiu- lat:- iqucr room ast-tultit-tl with its accus Itnnt-d scrt-llily. On the top floor it pauscti for a tntunt-tit. Tilt- Ibrct- tiasst-ttgcrs raised tilcir glass s to tht- stately figurt- in iIiIlt- and .\l\'t'l' who, a ft-w Itiinnlt-s later. had rcgistt-rt-ti a fdw nun-t- jtinrncys towards his sccottti mil- ilion. with thc fiat inttntttiott that i-lgyp tittn officials and troops cunrttlt ht- incont- pout-t» 'I‘hi.~t viewpoint will dirt-ct proportion \v‘th troubit- to which iltt'l‘t' is cotmt r_v's if their pufblt- anti ordt-r. hardt-tt in tin- nluouut of |iI‘I‘Si‘II('I' with titt- presrnt tiistlrtlc-rs, 18o KENT sf. ,_ .i._i_ Professional Cards DR. A. n. MARTIN t PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Mt. Stewart Taimcr &WI’aimer H. J. PALMER. K. C, Barrister, Etc. Money to Loan ' Bank of Nova Scotla Buitdln Charlottetown, P. E, I, MacDonald \& McPhec B. A. .|, A- McDONALD, H. F. MePHEii a I Blrrletenn, Attorney, Etc. t Money to Loan Riley Building Charlottetown Mark R. McGuigan BARRISTER. houctron. arc. Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P, E. llilml or. c. c. Archibald Graduate of N. Y. Pout Graduate Mndloai School and Hfllpitll Practice Ilmltod to Eye. Ear, Non and Throat Office layer Iullding ttliowt-ti to rt-Inain in litt- Sttudan ' i particular peoplq. a Pure l “F6”:- No chicor this or‘ an adulterant in nice co fee VC-I - t f Fir Is dreadful at any time. It" is simply frighiftii to the man not. insured. Few men remain nninsttrcd from design. But mttny itcep putting the tnaitcr oil‘ tbrottgh carelessness or forgetful- ness. Let Us Insure You today while the reminder of ‘the Kett- singttnt coniiag ‘ation is fresh in your mind. The cost. will be trifling, the effort. little. You may have catusc to be iiutnititti for this suggestion be- fore you are a (lay tildcr. llyntiman 8t 00., lid. Oldest Insurattce Agency in the Provmct: 'i‘c.lcphonc 67 and 333 Charlottetown, l’. E. I. l f Grout m!» Itroot Ha»- The Guaranteed “Stop Run" Silk Stockings SOLD EXCLUSIVELY IN CHARLOTTETOWN b)’ this store. I _ Absolutely the last word in silk stocking perfection- they wear longer and fit better than most, the RUBY RING stops garter runs, we guarantee this. A L L E ‘Yuiihiii FASHIDNABLE FOOTWEAR Binder Twine ii h. h’ . i‘ iittttm t i '.= rt‘ /v {i "rt-us ‘TRADE MARK DEINOTES l i I Atwssz; 'i:::=:.:.'~ . t w. oo nor n: Ptasusnrn mu omen rwtazs an: j the celebrated AS 0000 OI IETTEI. , iuv ONLY: , “ ovu- rocz. r M .|, tsot. is / ' clot? LEAF. aiilfl“ onetime. / . Sllver suvnte/tr. sins 3M I ssot is MAPLE t-w. Stineii-tl. m" soo .1251... / Leaf” EVERY IALL FULLY GUARANTEED THE BRANTF9§9EDCORDAGE CO. t‘ brand. the b"! IIANTPOID. cmramo. . BINDER Twmi t //. on the market. Guaranted 550 feet to the pound. and every ball full)‘ guaranteed an to quality. We wli both NEW and OLD STYLE BALL. Get our factory price. buy early. Garter & (to. limited FLOUR FEEDS BINDER TWINE