1- titude, in view of the fact that he| This would indicate that our local .\ ' yneed of a co-operatlve or central sel-| A ' resolution sullestllfl that it bc Riv- ‘ Iii! iillfifliiil 0! the hem! lllflfliiiii-i ncas, requires the repetition of the m: Pour? rue ,0 flulIuH-W. on nu u. lleLfle vm-i-n-idnrt-s. u. sums. liens ry-Licut. Col. ll. A. Illlhlnlon, ll l. . gnu-J Anne-late Killian-ll. ldltnr and Inn . It. llurwll l- “I'll II bin-ll your III (ill l lnullli. 10.00 D9’ M.» on nu m- QCIIIQI) Queuing lluily (IIIIIPII ll") , SATURDAY. FEBRUAEYE. 1930' i "Was the emphasis placed by the Mr. Dunninds Agnosticism Department of Agriculture on the The] that in his opinion increased tariffs: titled by the circumstances? ' for Canada would not help to solve‘ Dairy Commissioner, in his annual our unemployment difficulties. It report. stated that the average price ’ _ might be asked, then, what will' received for butter by our Island fac-' solve these difficulties? Apparentiyi torlcs was from one to two cents‘ MigDunningdocs not know. i-iis at- above the prices paid in Montreal. has no solution of his own to ad-' salesmen are at least equal to the. vance, is a rather hopeless one. It high pressure salesmen of the Que- fs much more depressing than poori bee metropolis. Mr. Keenan's. Mr. Hcenan dlsposedfi Again, during the week of the far- of our unemployment problem by (le-. here there were trying that there is a problem; Mn. Dunning trys to dispose ofitby deny-j lng that there is a solution. In thcl meantime, in every large centre from’, Montreal to Vancouver. the uncm-i ployed are parading the streets, den mending employment. Woudn't it be a, good thing if we had a party inf power that did recognize that there was an unemployment problem, andi that had a policy of some kind with, which to tackle m i Tariff protection may not be the: panacea for all our political ills. No‘ rational Conservative would advance mcrs" convention 3.000000 pounds of New Zealand birt- ter landed at Halifax. This amount is equivalent to 200 curloads. It was offered delivered in Montreal at 35 cents per pound; in fact, some lots sold there below that price. the Canadian dairyman, tralized selling, or any kind of sel- ling, meet this competition? The only cure for the present sit- uation in the dairy industry is tariff revision. This was evident to all who attended the meeting of the Dairy Association, but many were hesitant to discuss the matter because it in- such a contention. But the bitterest‘ vohred‘ l, they behaved, ponucg on opponents of Protection must iidmiti this point. the Farmers‘ Advocate, in that it i5. it! My "lie. R 001W)’. and a recent editorial, speaks out strong- that it has behind it l Dari)’ 1111'i ly. It suggests that when the manu- eompromisinziy dvlefmiiied i-° "i"! facturers and other interests desire it out. The cevemmi-‘ni 01 which M‘ | a tariff revision, .either upward or Dunning is a member, on the other‘ downward, they forget the“. spar“, hind. 1135 110 Piliicy- W111“ M‘ Dim‘ affiliations and proceed with busi- nine is criticising tariff protection in x1635. whereas farmers one“ shun and the West. Mf- E111"- i-11° Minisi" ‘*1 refuse to discuss a question of this National Itevenue, has lust bcfliliklnd. Certainly nothing can be gain-i commending it in Ontario. Premier‘ N] by discussing political issues in Kiilll. W119" 111 011m?” m" Queb“) an agricultural conference or conven- has always a kind "0111 ‘i’ s" 1°‘ tion; but tire tariff is such an im- DPOl-fliliilii- W119“ 1“ u” west‘ M: portant matter, affecting the farm- B011T59- 1'19 15 ‘lime in acmrd Wm‘ er to such an extent in his cost of Mf- 911111111113- But ‘hat-s u“ way it: llriirg, cost of operations and in mar- IZQif-‘i- N°b°dY mm“ what me- Pfimci keting. that it can no longer ber 341111511913 1'91“ °P1111°" 15 “mm 1m” shelved or disregarded. Instead of tgctum, Nobody knows what the brim: n political question the tariff, K1118 Gtivermncniis Wmcy is‘ m‘ and esDeciallY at thc present time “'111‘1'11°r 111° mm“ m" “mm: m‘ n11 the birttcr tariff, is a vital economic down at the next session of Pan: How can with cen- one. liamcnt. - The thing that makes for success in governments, as in individuals, is‘ ___ 511131911955 0! ‘m!’ mmsunai Siam‘ The final quarterly inspection by 1115' cmwicimn‘ moral “him” m hrwi the retiring Council of the Police 1° the “m1 m ma“ Snmgm mWm-dsi Department will lake place this af- a definite goal. The thing that makes “moon M 4 “lock m me Ponce h" mum“ in govrmments‘ as m m-i Court. His Worship Mayor Yen will dmdums‘ 1' vacmabion’ indccisiorm deliver an address and thc occasion "Wamhrui “Ruin? for Something w will be an interesting one. ‘Yhe ef- i 9'" W Th: i‘ Wm b” “dmmcril fleieney of the Police Department Ne“ by M" Dimming’ is strikingly! during the past two years has fre- '~‘°1“1‘11fl°d by u“ cmiscwiitiv“ Dani qurnlly been commented upon. and u‘ l" “'5 ‘mqualiflcd ndhcrcncc mi the Police Committee, of which Coun- tiiri“ pmwcuon’ ‘like for immsn-yl cillor B. Roy liolman is chairman. ""1 “1“'1°"m'"°‘ Th’ omcr’ “Ihcuwri dewrves rzreal. credit in this connec- Mr. Dunning admits it or not, is mm. irucdifyingly illustrated in the pain-l fral mnnocuvering and side-stepping of thc present administratton at Oi- Our City Police _~__ Page The Purists Commenting on the press criticism i of Premier Ramsay MacDonald's I phrase “It is us" in referring to the lBrltish navy at thc opening of the n” i‘ “mm” comfldcmip‘ in “m! naval conference, a correspondent in period immediately preceding thc| a Toromo Pxcmmgc argues m“ an annual meeting of the Provincial: m” esflmgtkyn‘ o! thousands o! hairy Association, when the National» Engnskpspcaking hnorppuflsts» the Dairy Council was preparing its brief! Pflme Minmer w” ‘fight on mo" against the wholesale dumping of‘, mun“ than Ont Noam, "My one‘ New Zelland butter into Canada for‘, m“, peasant and prolessor ‘ma. h; presentation lo the Tariff Board andl now “an: the mm“. “W! me... “It-s when protests from dairy organiza-| h"? “W5 u“. we n" m m. the” lions all over Canada were being row nccuswtivc_nom.natlve forms Wham. celved by the Federal Government, H we wish n m. ML Furthermorm ‘h’ 1M1 D°1"“rim°m M Agflcunurei had the Prime Minlgrtr-r used the took occasion to circularize the dairy“ strictly grammatical for-m, ~10, is me“ “I m“ Pmmwe ‘m m” crym“ we," he would have done violence to two powerful influences at work in all spoken languages since time be- gsn-euphon, and mphasls. It will be remembered that Mr. MacDonald mid; "The British Navy is ml- I , superfluity to us." follbvlllil‘ "118 01'0- 911 1mm" mmiflmdm w“ “W” nouncenient with his famous state- . ca, The mairfiuuehownver, and the} m“: h" 1,, "M. mummy, m- p". em which had everything to do with‘ M" n W" M“, u, m. mo“... tawa. l The Butler Tariff Isa-rue ling agency for the better marketing, of their product. Naturally, when the provincial sssoeiati met. there mil uiueh discussion on this point and a ‘ fllflfl!» n" I 'vr: in "IQ ‘ N" milifi-"I ‘1111111111911111’. whore. Irlmmltieally speaking/fit is ~ 11v fliilflmiiiei "iliflei-i- out of pines. And emphasis u we '5! lllllllltl!!! QWIJIPI 1911i‘ served and inane greater byptlll Finance Minister Dunning i says need of co-operative marketing jus- John and Mouton on me runway“ iljlliionrzrowir GUARDIAN rvuspfl-r. woi o Already February hasibrought us a i cold clip in temperature. North and: northwestern winds have bffflllflhb it, to us acrrms a frozen continent. This ' serves to remind us that the 6th day ' of February. 186i was the coldest day the writer ever experienced in 90 years past. 'I‘iiat day was passed in Penobsquls, New Brunswick. a little morc than half way between saint The night previous there had been a rain storm which ended about eight o‘clock. The moderate wind from the southwest suddenly shifted to the northwest and blew with increasing velocity. In the morning it became a gale which blew all day at about 70 miles an hour and the mercury re- corded 28 degrees below zero. Never before nor since can we re- call s. fail of 62 degrees in the tem- perature in so brief a. period of time. The gale broke young and vigorous ornamental trees planted in front of our home and swept them away like chaff. The cold gale had swept over Ontario the day before and was there remembered as the cold Thursday, but the wind was not so violent nor the cold so intense as it was central and northern New Brunswick. Nei- ther the Cold Friday nor the famous Saxby Gale of eight or nine years later seem to be remembered in Prince Edward Island. it is years since the Duncan Report was presented to the Dominion Gov- ernment and it seems strange that our claims, although in part imple- mented had been then apparently pigeonholed and forgotten at Ottawa until the question of giving the Pral- rle Provinces the natural resources within their boundaries came up. New and Important. claims for the Maritimes have arisen out of the special awards to Manitoba and it now appears that all our claims new and old are to be adjusted by an air- dit board at Ottawa, in the appoint- ment of which no Maritime province had any voice. slrrcry this r.- not the form of nh- al settlement that was contemplated by the Duncan Commission. They thought our claims urgent and im- mediate, not matters to be postpon- ed from year to year as has been the case. They likewise doubtless thought and hoped that any future board of audit or estimate having to do with our claims in any way would have in vicw the need of an early and final settlement. and would be composed of men as representative painstaking and impartial as they themselves had been. The Coal Fund in aid of the poor, founded by the late Dr. Jenkins, is much more needed this winter than it was a year ago. The fund has been exhausted this year in mldwinter partly because of colder weather and partly because the COfitfllJlitiOlif thereto have been fewer than in for- mrr years. The need for more con- tributions to the Coal Fund will doubtless be promptly responded to by our generous and charitable citi- zerrs who have never hitherto dir- regarded such an emergency. The Coal Fund is n. really noble charity. It appears by reports fro Ottawa that. in the matter of brdiiicastirrz by radio the annual license fco is to be increased from sf to $3, the num- ber of receiving stations greatly re- duced and Sunday Church services cut out. This last limitation will be a disappointment to many who by reason of age, sickness or infirmity are unable. to attend the public scr- vlces which they formerly frequented. They enjoyed listening to a sermon or two on Sunday. It was not alto- gether to escape the collection that they stayed at home. . The exodus of Canadians and new- ly arrived immigrants to the United States is an unmeausrcd number. 'Ihose who cross the border openly in legal fashion are counted, as also are returning Canadians who state their intention to reside permanently in Canada. But these figures take nn account of the number that cross the border southward, by under- ground methods. The number of these is known to be very large. Thedevices by which they effect their purpose are as various and see- rel as those of the rum smugglers. They are assisted often by reigrtives or chums living in the States, or by employers on the other crating on both sides of the line. it is well known that thousands of im- migrants come from Europe to Oahu- da yearly for the sole purpose of getting into the States. They take assisted ‘fringes across the ocean and than steal their advantus of way secretly across the long boun- "any into "the land of the free and tbthornl of the brave.“ smug- i of tight money conditions “Nfirllll. -._I‘i1'."-.i.‘;1.1_.i\1¥1—.QT1‘$'IPi‘V1‘i r - . as?” . side, or by regular man-smuggling agencies op- ' Irma... of rim or...‘ into Hung- _ My frollttilb United Historical- Mar an: 40 as: eent mater than in my y in: stepped its rallwurmrt of urrrburrh is‘ legally in oaa- shelter.”- - I 52.551715" .1 j The rubric Forum ‘This column U opus foetal dlsolsilbn lb! borrdplisdoats ol questions of lament. The Charlottetown Ofislln duel not lpefilflly’ undone the opinions otetrllllilllellla. Stloyun. The piece-name i ,_ occurs in Feminine. also in flkye. btrorvui It Oribfl._thc ltrllin, A. D. 1920. Probably derived from the Gaelic sci-rich. "s. stream.“ with diminutive an. "little," thus meaning "a little 1 ., i s Tlll WOMEN'S LIBERAL OLUQ Bin-I understand that Mrs. it‘. '1‘. ifiggs. President of the Women's Liberal Club of Charlottetown, has been canvassing the members of that club lo sign a petition in favor of one of the aspirants w the office of Judge of the County Court. . What I would like to find but from Mrs. Hlggs is l! @119 Pulpit" of organizing such a club is w‘ pro- mote the interest of one Liberal for office against another Liberal -for the same omce. It, i; rather an important prin- ciple especially when put into ef- fect by the wife of a man who some- iiimes yeks the votes of all Llbcrlll women. Perhaps she may find this out. PLAY AND DEFECTIVES J Did you know that one in every fifty persons is more or less tacking in brains, is what is called a mental defective? . And yet this one fiftieth produces from 25 w-aa per cent of the popula- tlon of our prisons, so as a matter of fact there are many- more criminals drawn from the mentally defective classes in proportion to their per- centage of the general -popula" l. than from the rest. Now this is certainly a large per- centage but until rccently- it was thought that the ‘ percentage was nearer 00 per cent, that is that two out of every three criminals were mrntrily defective. This means of course that our prison population is made, up of many more persons with normal and sirperlor intellects than with mental defectives. Following these investigations frrr- ther it has been definitely shown that many mental defectives are leading good lives. Now why do I talk about this? What has this to do tvith health, with that body of yours? i Simply the fact that the surround- ings of these defectives when they are young has much to do with. I~ am. Sir. etc. LIBERAI woman. ‘ - TIIE MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION AND FUNERALS - Sin-I would like tovoice a lay-man's Views “Birding the conduct of fun- erals by our clergymen in the hope that the Committee appointed gt the last meeting of the Association will use them in their deliberations in preparation of their report for the March meeting. The adoption of a uniform ritual for funerals being the form in which whether they will enter the criminal class or lead useful illves. "ion- 1111591‘ °°11~“1d°1‘1118 11W Wliduct 0i And the surroundings aside from‘ 111mm’ genemnyr 1115i’ easily be d18- thc borne are what communities sup- lmfld 0i by the irw of a xrv-maohene ply lntlie way of playgrounds. for which records might easily be ob- A boy, or girl also. who gets an ta-ined. But seriously. funerals during opportunity to play-with others, in. ‘W911i W!“ 115" 5900""! 111 Very the ‘outdoors, taklngihis or her part mini’ 1111mm!“ 91¢ eiilvtmflit 0f a in the various games learns to fit 137°9- rhtn the scheme of life better than! I 1111"? Hill/Ended iiiiitrflis in city and when this opportunity to play doés cwiiiry W119"! iWQ- W!” 01‘ W911 “m first . i four ministers havctaken part, one A judge of B juvenile court told inc‘ inner-Heinz hymn-n another, Radios m“ who“ a playground w“ p1aced'|s:,ripture another reading (I was go- in a community, the number of juv- i“! 9° "Y °11°T111K1 11 WW" 511d 11 enile offenders brought before his “"1 when a" "iiempi W" milk '4’ con-n lmmcdragely decmumi g sermonze- in most easesit r. lved it- Further m“ the boys who had self, into a eulogy of the deceased ab- bem summoned before him prewiout whom a minister is likely to know 10,1513.’ m“, expended the“. energies?‘ the least. At a certain funeral. stand- ing with two others while the minis- irr games. In fact some of the worst? prating about the merits of had become leaders, captains of i“ w” _ teams. and were real nfluences in the 69061159111. 18819111118 011 the Win85 preventing Qthgr ‘boys from v gglng’ and assuring U5 Of hi! salvation lfbfi wrong and having to appear incpurtw: death. one said to the other "Just My thought then is that when the listen w that" - the other reniied ‘"111 question oi‘ playgrounds and thelr'<!11d1'1'1 11110111? l5 We dill" cost come up for decision in a com- munity that they remember the i1 nlembti‘ 0i 111$ 0111711‘ 81111 flbi-"idiriii above facts, l at church functions. We know him as Also that normal children need a week - dill’ 1111111 W11°5¢ (my! W?" these playgrounds, and games also, if 8116M in 00109111111111! 151N188 511d 1115 ithey are going to adjust themselves“ 11181116 .li.°§!"LP1l71“8 "111 "#1141118 ‘m mo about them lcvery dance within a radius of ten I miles. no doubt all in ‘premration for 1 this wondenful aft/er - life. Why in the v name of all that's sacred didn't that minister give the party a ohanpe dur- lng life to at least attempt to merit a few of the boquets. My idea of the conduct of funerals shared by scores with whom I have talked._cali.s for the preaching of a pogulvg gospel message, assuming of course that the minister conducting the funeral has such, for the reason that at most funerals. especially here in the country. audiences assemble which could not under any ‘"11" °°“' drum“ he hi, together. “Then here- after let us hear of the salvation be- fore death for the beneiflt of the liv- lng. leaving the vii-sin: vi iudzmeni en the merits or otherwise of the de- FROM ‘“ULY5SES" I am a part of all that I have met‘, Yet all experience is an arch whcrcthro‘ Glearns that untraveli'd world, whose margin fades Forever and forever when I move. How dull it is to pa* to make an end, To rust unburnlshki. not to shine in use! As tho'_to breathe were life. Life ceased with £11088 1i'1 I1 P°91t1°n t” piled 0n life i do so. ahiriet chc minister oilicilil Were all too little, and of one to me giving the others an hp unity l0 Little remains. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vile rt were onizing BndIeQkiIIBl/OIIVG1W1'B°‘1" For some three suns to store and before death. . hoard myself 1 l-m- 9,11‘ *1‘: And this grey spiflt yearning in de- LAYMAN sire ._-_---'--,---——-— ' To follow knowledge like a sinking ORIGIN OE RNAMES star, ~ . -—— Beyond the utmost bound of human Iiurf! . thought. ' An Iiberdeenlhire surname qril- lnating frotn the DIMC-IIIIHQ Orii m- ‘jg-y, In early records Uri’. Urr, Urr. m... Urry (i476), I-furre. flurry. nun-w. "fheiderivation is 1min tiw qqglid uraigir ‘(gh pwnounoed y). "sbwnding in yew trees." ‘ —'I‘onnyson. _._______,____. THE LAND WE LOVE“ oi ram: rerun nova scours m score/inn ' Hideous. Q. In what sense is there a bit of Nova Sootia in Scotland? _ A. 111m is it is said s srnsiibroa on Iidinbourgh Castle near the en- trance to the cunt um" u legally Nova‘ Beetle under a law that has never Meir-repealed as told urn. v. Merton in his "In search of Beet- land." The expiihnuen u that dur- dag the reign of Charles l. this small area was declared Neva aeolian ter-‘ rltory in order" that newly made Nova Bootlan blrlmntl might satin" of ' their lllldli withltuti crossing the Atlantic to riobo. it Huston. "filriel" i is found in many of All interesting fact therefore that thlrliouf rFtfilImea. and n praimned to piece or wall and pavement in the be derived from old hem flail. "s ‘\ m‘. omqlr of the lsmwho probably hm char]! omhe "earthen-roll." l npmgfllllulbd ill Scotland fbflufl a: criminal oases. crest, a turtle- dove. with olive branch in beak.’ 1W1’- Moltb. "l wait my tllnfl" - i‘ fBhlelds. s Also leheie. lheli, ohms. lhieiil. lhhi. he. Aahiei or diliiinl is u hilt brsunrmr residenee. for shepherds. nanometre a cottage for sports- , Melrose \ Circa 750 A. D., Mailros. "Oid Melroee, which is on a peninsula formed by s. loop of the Tweed. suggests the meaning of bare oixbiunt promontory." o , Matthews. In lmgiand this signifies Matthew's son. Derived from the I-lelrew MatthewTGift of G0d."—G._ n. p. ‘Weekly Scotsman I ~ v r arts 8. s... ,, lirowingililtlirnugh ' i‘ liivlng’ — Business ‘in * force with the e Home Company increased pearly one th rd last year over the year beYor . - .,.. Write for the rates réspbn. sible for this great gain, / ,.. Means It would no doubt sin-prise some people to learn how large a percent- age of the community is mystified by appearing daily in the press in con- nection with the Qrrestof certain mining brokers and ‘prospective in- vestigation of others says the Toronto Saturday Night. 1t is s word of curious derivation which came into use many years ago when there was little or no regulation of the brokerage business and when "bucket shops" ‘association first dealt with the ques-i The minister knew the deceased as’ prose-mm their divine callng ‘in 1.3-. ‘were numerous in the downtown sectioons of most. Canadian and ‘United States cities. Generally speaking "bucketing" lmeans a speculative transaction on margin in which no actual securities onassets change hands and in which the/Icustomer to all intents and pur- pos s makes a bet with his broker as to the future price of» a security Fifty years ago when the number of incorporated companies whore shares were traded on the stock ms kel. was small. this form of speculation was largely confined to wheat; and bo typify the shadowy nature of the rransaction some forgotlen humorist spoke of it as "buying a bucket of wheat". The phrase caught on like wild fire and within l short tlmethe omeerof brokers in which no trans- actions in tangible assets were recor- dell became known as "bucket shops"; and their mode of doing business as "bucketing". For about three decades " in moat other parts of America but a good deal of ll: has gone un er olive". especially in times when the stock marketwas depressed. In the old clays speculators dealing in such es‘- tablishments did so with open eyes. They look a sporting ehancemreclsely m. does the man foolish enough to think he can make money betting on horse races when he lays his bets with handbook men. Under the modern stem which the provincial lgovern nts of Canada. sre trying to {stamp out the vast majority of custo- rmers are ‘iindfold. They imagine ‘they are actually buying securities ‘on margin, and do not know until the crash comes that the broker has treated the deal merely as a bet. A renowned authority on race track book-making. Abraham Orpen. once described the business fin which he was at that time engaged as pitting "my luck against your judgment“. If i116 1101'” you had bet on lost it was his luck, if the hoiise won it was a triumph 0f the other fei1ow's lud- mcnt. , This is precisely what "bueketing" signifies, except that to-day the spec- ulator imagines he is really buying something whereas the betting men knows he is rne'eiy taking a‘ chance on a horse: The arias.‘ evil of "bucket- lng" and that which led w its being delegaliud is-that. the broker cannot conceivably make rnoneyuniess, the‘ client loses. legitimate brokerage houses make their profits from coni- minions on-the tlirn-over-bf stocks: and it is their interest to give honest advice to thlil’ customer! asyto the value of the-shares _in which 'tbly deal. ~ 1t a on the other hula" in the lntreot of the bucketeer to induce ll many of hll clients ll possibly to buy stocks ofrdoubtfui value. likeiygto‘ fall customer is speculating on" margin add not entftlld to m: m immediate deliveries of elicits. . tbs lower‘ thé stocky-ill. tbebothr the broker'- mm u» mum "which hlvQbiIn put up Jn stock "iiweii,;piil'_eiiuad_. AllAflfll6i'_"'l_luchQtin|” under" tbs modem system in a-rusuiiylbuslaen. um Oll dictation and botflyatv-r - v 'L_'.._.4..t_.--_.....-;~ M‘ ' armour vs.» Hayralie, ~ What “Bucketing ”, the word “bucketing" which has been . TllE rruivesir is suns. THRIFT-nuance in th n Id r u’: an unfailing harvest... Tlseehatnrdnof i501? uulllzliftedfnytielt overcome and the savings set aside WILL PROVIDE a". fection for your family. an income in old age, an QfluQ-“on for the children, or whatever requirements you have planned to meet. ' ' No other method of saving can give this assurance. and the premiums paid on Great-West Life policies earn an excel- ing" has been illegal in Ontario and - inptfloe. If as is usually the one the . opportunity to-"sell mm out" and r lent rate of Interest. Lower Queen Street Provincial Managers @ For particulars write. stating age, to Hyndman f? Co.. Ltd Charlottetown The Great-West Life i i i 146 Richmond ~St.. i i z l Fire. Life. Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate. Good Strong Stock Companies Agent at Summer-side. Lloyd Lewis \ 00-00-000 000a 0000000404 00000034 00 0-000004-0000004044; 0000.0004o00o00000-.>>0»-000o0040¢oo0000o00+0-0044~§” i E. R. meow Charlottetown 0o0o000>00000Q4r0>00o000§000r000~ 0-61 Sold do..." h. Red. >0$00¢o0oe004vo0000040oo00 §§QOOO0O-OO~O& r012 AROMA AND DELICIOUS ‘rcavorz use ., ' TEA, Airtight Packages. * §-O-O-O-O-O§O-O-O-Q-_O-OJ O O O OO-OQO-O-OO-UQ-OOO-O-O-OQ-OQ-O-OO-O-O-FO-O-OJ which had crept about the world s. few centuries Mo. and were piecing wflcther the comets/hat scattered re- mains. Apparently a defunct din- °51111f °°¢1iPim ii 800d deal of ground but these were zealous men and laekledthelr work win; ubthr dig-q. gard for union hours or regulation. But something happened; more came l. lull in activities in this par- ticular salient of the scientific from. and then the utter rout of a cherish- ed irheory. Reluctantly, word was sent back home to Madrid that the skel- eton-iike thing probably was not a dinosaur at nil. Why? And lihen out came the whole hurrdliatixig’ awry -humill.atlng w science, and to Spain One section of the ‘monster, in quite o. remarkable state ofpmservstion, bore llhe name and t. n of a well-known Chicailq fi-rrn of unple- ment manufacturers. Even science could not explain away this. Admit» ting thpt a dinosaur-even lived a few thousand years ago, and knew nothing of calories. might be careless about its diet, it Urdiy could have assimilated a modern hayrake, made in ‘Chicago. Wiut did the Riffs of Morocco want with , ' any- way, and why mould tlrsyleave such implements lying in the way o! a ilws landslide that handled not so icngago-etieutnotsoionggto Justify m; theory of contact with reptiles and other strange thingsyhst _.__..___._....."........ are now extinct? But being fooled in this way has its value. Other scientists vriii be _ more cautious and careful. The ex-" lwlience in Morocco should be liOled everywhere. In older Ontario one may see abondoned hIYTI-kcs-ad- ,’ mittedly c. sign of bad farming —wl\icb, in a few thousand. years hence, when they are unearthed. may have all the learned men guessing. and ‘iii-re beet thatran hoped i1 that time will deal rough y with the name of the manufacturer. Cashes . of canned food abandoned or forsol- ten by isresent-day prospectors in the North country may indicate to the future scientist that articles put in nature's refrigerator during the ice age have been wonderfully “"11 preserved, and that mu indicate-i bow mucmbetter things were dnllci in some lines long ago-such as the. building of tombs. dinmauria, ice boxes. and so on. Yisr it behoomr i llhe scientist of today I-bd his suc- cessorintheyeanmemm towfliiil ‘wurily. as hnpiuncnt murumiiurei-i‘ have been very busy cur-ins the 1e" _ two or three decades. ‘I COLDS i! i Prompt and ollletive relief h Oblllllel ll Oqljlll. Gblllk Chills. Sen Throat. Whooping, Oolfl and lrobellhl Troubli- hlbhbtaalllllttby 4- a efficienci- or u; Aim ' 00D LIV ~0lla y mo no \ _ This mlsnllel I sen- Inn us - . . has been thoroughly meg and I before _ 1 mar-lam. umber . lllfllilihlllllb; .., ‘e at... ‘v . I A cool) QUALITY HOT WATER "i BOTTLE 1i: .a necessary of every 2 household?“ dipoles’. . You will ‘ It an excellent all weather comfort and in- llapeanlble‘ the slob MOI!- ‘Ve hays a splendid unort- rual fell paw mun h “we “or; bottle ll III!" r. Isaac-guru. muca-fiav-rat- --w.-.;~.~..;