wvtvsr». 2Z!I¥?>‘i:~'°'~‘;"" Tialwir“ " J “'3” .. M}! er “AGE FOUR‘ kuldnlt-W. (‘hauls-r l. Irlmro. I. P. Y‘ Secretary-Lions. Col. I). A. llulllnaon. 0. I. 0. Erma: and llama-lug Dlrnnlnr-J. IL Burnett Alcoa-lain Eelllora-Prank Walker and ll- l. Cnrrlo lliE BHARLOTTETOWII cunniliilifiéiilii. w... PraaldanO-J. I.- Barnett | 7 $5.00 ea (In ldvnnm) delivered. Uni-jig"; iihozldthflcntnulallrd Iranian; and United States. WEDNESDAY: JUNE 1o, 1931 Keeping Its Pledges "I confess I would be much more butter and cheese, flax, hemp. 51581- ready to, forgive honourable gentle- cotton crops, tea-growing, tobacco, men opposite for not carrying out a rubber and petroleum. It will be seen few of their pledges than I would be that Canada is vitally concerned t0 commend them for endeavoring to with some of these trades. It is a do so under present conditions" said comprehensive account of present wumfles" is 59mm” i“ Germany‘ the Rt. Hon. w. L. Mackenzie King achievements within the Etmplre. In -“ cussing the Bennett budget ‘Lieut-Colonel Lord Herbert Scott. from his seat in Parliament on June President of the Inndon Chamber of 2nd. The Liberal leader went on to Commerce, is given the place o! hph- worse they are dangerous fools- suggest that the Government should or with an articlevon "The Achieve- ,. definite curse to the community. remember that it is in its first year ment of Great Britain. He opens of office “and may be continuing with the remark that it is fashion- there for some little time." and that able in these days to say thflt GT9“ living has done so by many pennies it-was not expected by the people Briifl-in l5 B Spent 101'"! bu! 5-5 he i . that the Government would impie- proceeds the reader is made flwm m“ ‘mes ment its entire programme, especial- that Britain is rather a force that i5 ly where money votes are requiredqgoing 0X1 51'0"! SUBIIEUPW sifeulth It this session oi’ Parliament. This remark, comments the Syd- PB-Uelwe with tion of office. ‘The truth is that the "1 R181“! a’ u“ "hum" *'°"1°’-" present Prime Minister has gone far- H” “m!” m“ “u” and "we ther, in less time, than any states. “m” regulations m the cijuntry are peruy thlt 1185 ahefld- When those good times arrive- mm wholever premded mm as 19am too inflexible, and that this lack of ed with fruit production, forestry. It is evident that he has little those .who take a All pessimist! lays the the nation. After Simplicity/purity. one might ll- most say austerity, yet not of a cold nature, in interior decoration has been the cry of the last ten years in many German architectural circles. Let us be mattcr-of-fact, let us put aside false sentimentality. it is said. But this demand ls not the result of a mere craze. It certainly comes from the innermost feeling of a. the wool trade, u" came shipments, people who have seen so many of their old idols crumble away and who by circumstances have been forced to abandon cherished habits and pre- we“ Pmvm dun“; m’ 3"“ w conceived ideas. Thus simplicity in architecture and interior decoration, D" “m” Mwkmzle‘ often termed "modemistic" in other London Dally Express are fools. What 18 At the present mounent they Ire l Men on salaries that have n0! shrunk a penny although the cost of go about muttering darkly about Holders of first-rate industrial shares are selling out at heavy losses and putting the money in the bank (where it earns nothing), so that in the future they can buy" back the . - h‘ t t0 i065. ney Post, cannot fail to command Eli-‘ioml’ View 0f mu Tutu" mu he s “as a p pr the endorsement of all sensible peo- makes "m9 illustrating ‘30111951150115 pie, and it is a. complete answer to 5°‘ the benefit °I "w" wh° u" mud thing is going down." the politicians and journalists of °l making ‘mmpafl-“m 9° Pm“ that ivir. King's 0\\'l’l party who have been ‘Mugs used '0 b° better ma“ they directing a barrage of absurd criti- a" MW- F°r example- “mid” the cLsm at Premier Bennett for not liav- nineteenth century‘ Lord Herbert ing carried out his entire programme 5”“ Wm“ ‘mt m“ 5 who“ ‘mime Wm,‘ m; t 115 . of that "halcyon time" was known hi! 88911- n nine mo“ o I assump Today, while the fools are moaning, wise men are planning, working. dreaming, under-writing the pros- “The world is in a. terrible con- dition. Things are very bad. Every- That is their daily chant. 'I‘l1at is their contribution to the morale of Waterloo there was real distress. Then came steam and the greatest era. oi prosperity the world er of a. Canadian Government, in mltted to the people in the general election. The calling of a. special ses. sion to deal with unemployment, the voting of $20,000.00 for that purpose, the revision of the tariff, the exten- iion of Federal aid to agriculture and technical education, the increase by 5O per cent. of the appropriation for old age pensions-those surely con- stitute a most creditable, and alto- gether unprecedented discharge of preelection undertakings, by a Gov- ernment which has only been in of- fice since last August. But even this is but a partial list of the Bennett Government's meas- ures for the promotion of Canada's development and prosperity. A n3_ tional fuel policy, the most compre- hensive scheme of the kind ever launched in this country, has been formulated and presented to Parlia- ment. An appropriation to aid in the transportation of wheat amounting to more than $i0,000.000 is forecast in the budget. The anti-dumping pro- visions cf the Customs Act have been enlarged and applied courage- Wsly for ‘the protection of Canad- ian producers for the first time in . the country's history. No Government that has ever held office has gone so far in honoring "8 P185888; 1n relieving unemploy- ment, in stimulating industry, and in helping every branch of product- ive activity as the Bennett Gcvem- ‘Inent in its first nine months of office. If it continues this splendid record, its hold on the confidence of the people of Canada will be un- breakable, _.i___i______ Empire Achievements ._-____ ‘The London Times. in connection with its Empire Day issue, published a British Empire products section covering the whole field of activities Ln all parts. ‘The record is little short of astonishing, for it deals with what the Times refers to as the bounteous sources of supply of all the principal products needed by mankind that ocirders. Condtlons which have pre. ly experts in their several fields, so nay be accepted as correct in detail ' ire to be found within the Empire's drinking in this Province under the in 1914, fluctuated between its peak of 21s in November, 1920, and 151 in i930." On the other hand, he says that a nation which is perpetually trying to adapt its economic system to conditions which prove to be merely rapidly passing phases is like. ly to find itself in a state of chaos. ' Lord Herbert Scott gives figures t0 show where Great Britain excels in trade and employment, concluding that the future lies with the econo- ,mic groups which can command large markets, and he says that "the potentialities for all its units which a united British Empire holds out are almost limitless." The first duty of every nation must be to its own citizens, he admits, but continues: ffEnlightened self-interest will often dictate the sacrifice of an immediate advantage in order to secure a far greater in the future." His is a reas- suring statement of fact in a. num- ber that makes the reader realize the importance of the Empire in a ma- terial way and shows the advantage of membership in it. ______._____. Editorial Notes _-__.._. The City Council is to be congrat- ulated upon the fact, reported at Monday's monthly meeting, that a larger proportion of tax arrears were collected this year up to May 3i than in any former year. ._-._. Are our contemporary's continued misrepresentations regarding the tax- ation measures in the Bennett budget inspired by the desire to cover up the Lea Government tax increase on gasoline, which it put into effect this month by Order-in-Council? v Our local contemporary, which just now is complaining of the burden of federal taxation. should remember that an eighth of the total revenue of the country comes from the duties on spirits, wine and beer, which are paid largely by the Provinces under government control, most of the flexibility must prove an immense giving effect to the comprehensiviflhandicap w an “wrung nation and constructive programme he sub- “during a’ permd “he” the m“ of living index figure, based upon 100 fools will moan: known we could have . . l’, Don't be a fool! ._____ . . Of the budget statement made by Mr. Bennett, it was the finest, the most able and exhaustive that Par- liament has heard in years. Cana- dian Budget speeches had. unfor- tunately, degenerated into a mere slur-ring over the country's. financial position. Mr. Bennett, breaking with this unwholesome and undemocratic practice, gave the House and the country a complete balance sheet, a full and detailed, almost minute ex- planation of why and how and how much money was spent, of the rev- enues from various sources, of the Railways, of the amount of borrow- ings and loans, and the reasons for them, and their status, of payments and receipts, and, of assets, active and non-active, of liabilities, and so on and so forth. The whole picture, complete in everydetail, is on Han- sard. It was all a remarkable per- formance. very typical of Mr. Ben- nett both in its industry and its con- scientiousness. _ _ _ -.__ We have repeatedly bdraiwn a-‘ten- tion lo the part played by Soviet Russia in recent disturbances throughout British India. Of Ilwh interference there is ample evidence. The International-Press‘ Correspon- dence, the organ ‘of the Communist International, recently declared: “We need in India tqlouud class pro- letarian ‘trade unions at a. feverish pace, intensely, everyday, and under all circumstances. . . . The pre paratiohs for a general political strike must be brought to the from. ...We mustrcusethemassca. . . We must inspire them with the spirit of war to'the bitter end and the spirit of struggle for India, in which their will be no place for British Imperialism.” The Commurr ist International 1's in‘ effect Soviet Russia's other name. . . Recently lt was suggested by an English speaker that the reduction of armaments was the remedy for political differences, the reverse 0f the view more generally held. Prob- ably the two act and react on each other until the cause and effect is lost. The Manchester Guardian ub- serves: "Competition in weapons and competition in politics are accom- plices. If one can eradicate competi- and they are on their way now-the "If only we had financial position of the National‘ B) lulu .Barhn. MD. JAMES ‘llmcxauzla One of the greatest authorities His practice was among workl and earn their daily bread. He was able to show the patie really not very important, but that that was most important. That amount of fluid needed, in fact power to do its work. hospitals where only bed patien but were not really in good heal whole profession, instead of a. bra practitioner. ure health of the patient. on future ailments. There is a. special. branch whlc child. The Institute is equipped to d and so forth. mon cold and its relation to lnfiu of the abdominal organs, forth. i DIME. A LYRIC DAY As I went up by Bramble Burn, The bubbling brook at every turn Made merry bickering; fem, ~ It seemed a living thing. A vireo in the barberries Ran rippling through glees; An orange oriole trees The secret of its soul. Across his tiny violin A cricket drew a reed-note thin With his responsive bow; A belle-playing frog Joined in From out the marsh below. A parson blackbird had his say, A Wren-choir raised a tender lay, A cctbird called, "Amen!" Oh, it was such a lyric day, I'd love to go again! —Clinton Scollard, in New York Sun. tion in weapons, political Jen‘ ‘ may tend to disappear. ‘That at least Lea Government being due to the railed in respect of each of the pro- existence of smugglers and bootleg- lucts during the year are discussed gers who pay no customs duties. years, then for that period the var- Emphafs 1S placed in the mommy ious countries concerned will not Conference will have to work. If lt can secure the adoption of a Con- clusive. It will not do to leave any is the hope. This is the main pur- gape for competition, for that would pose for which the Disarmament defeat the whole design." ._-.____- vention defining and limiting nat- ional armaments for a period of lister designs on the tiling: as Imperial economic co- snce. which is referred to ed torially’ ahey fnregather. Sir I 8mm; Other features are concern- ilclcnt. leafs with canning, which is dcscrlb- tain whether lights and brakes a: id as a matter fraught with immense in gcncl working condition. These "dun m’ w.“ °‘-' “rm'm°“t" H’ , i -h ever, the limitation of arma- . potentialities for all parts of the words to the prudent should be suf- m2“ u to be ‘uccmmll the ca’? vention must be thorough 1nd la- . h ' t . There are artzcics on such tmelyrlreport of the Chief. of Police upon Me o m“ 'ihe necd of motorists exercising every iperatlon and the Ottawa confer-iicare to opcrnte their cars at a reas- onable speed. Members of the Police "iumPY" Ll a gathering which will present have been instructed to carry out a poweflul‘ “t” “ch ‘ period o’ ‘ ipportunities to the statesmen when thorough inspection of all cars in stability countries which today are frightened at the first mention of ' reduction might be ready not Only e to extend the period of truce but to part of their gzighbnrs. A period of five years whm no armaments might be increased r. lid make Europe less and general staffs less i “i ma cmarnrraroww nusaoishi l- I .m.]at. y was a reel beloved family physician. and the medical profession also, that a leaking valve, a heart murmur, was “m l“ looked a m‘ Wm‘ “m” was the condition of the heart mus- cle ltself, its ability to do its work, Instead of confining his work to Unfortunate] he and midst n vides the filler for hash. sausages agency of his activities, gut such we: their:- “d “mm” °bi°°°" “d ‘u h“ l‘ “ma” pressmn that h" work made on the skinned by those she has bcneflttcd. its own exceeding reward- It ha._ monument, an institute was estab- _ ,, lished known as the James Macken- and m “a?! 11mg gnanulmmsrztgf a“ m” meets 1nd sulround’ me‘ zie Institute, which is i carrying on chicken s: adgu rhea e tvfizheznkno“, the traditions of this simple general er uses o w c no ‘u fine of the main principles of the Ins ltute l: to deal with early symp- torus and ' ' " ents so that‘ m°““t°d' how and why they are caused may | , b‘ learned‘ u to m, m I t_ has a universal Joint. It ls used tocamng the “n, ' n me p“ A”, she disturb maraudlng flies and the m- - same time the patients are visited in the“, own homes‘ and an endeavor al value. Persons who come in con- As m the“. my," we,“ the mom, made to discover whether the pa‘? tact with the tassel have vocabularies ient’s surroundings and clrcumstanc- a‘ pecuu“ and lmpmmve ‘om’ es have anything to do with his present ailment or have any bearing concerns itself with the health cf the all the necessary laboratory work, purine and blood examinations, X ray Members of the staff investigate the “commorfl ailments that have so veyed for the second time to we m‘ terlor of her face ls pulverized and ., . - ' ' much to do with keeping people away _ ~ - ,. ‘tom work_tonsns, cause”: the can“ delivered to the auxiliary stomach, PfGVBfltllflg DISCZLC enza, an X ray examination and in- vestigatlon into the normal position and so / It is wonderful to think that an ordinary beloved family physician by ,, _ . painstaking 8mm could “use suuJsald, No, I looked overtime fence at rnedival attitude. Leaders of people a memorial m be estabuaul m ms, a cow and that is as near sis Iever must come, forward to save the Bebe“ through leaning rush and‘ cf the Canadian Authors Association ‘And allpthis costs Canada $1,311,000.- meludlous encouragement. Tosseddcwn from silvery birchen mngntuluum‘ ‘mdi ’N°w They Au Know: upon wuuurpuctry" n43. nu lu-lfmil ' . . . . ’ Alihllitllbo- "w; the pluuub m ...._...g. (Financial Post) ‘ lre.u-.uu¢-__,.vl(=. m. 411M" "1 "u," Members of parliament now-know goolgerll. could slant pnejeluueq- what a cow la. They bivalbesn giv- gjllfll,fipdl_l'e,- ,'jdad_ stuff-what?" en an exact and scientific descrip- qurioslty lsplquod, as. to ynult-tha tion of rule mother of prosperity’? 49y uanoyerlan Jnunlrch. might have to Col. H. A. Mullins, livestock b11066! "y to fllgpoet, Byron if ever they and political wit from "Wim- nlctn-wallplct us nay in the fields o: Hansard records the Colonel's little “gum, Jllyufl the incidence of lecture .1" follow" , i ~ "emotions. ecallsd -in hCllrl of re- Mr. Mullins: Yes. I wonder if you mount M,“ 1m Andreas impflrt know. what a cow is? I have a clipp- . um" which- m, . m“; “and m4 on ing here and I will read it for the ‘nu-Wot mart-up obum.‘pbmlaw_ heart ailments whose findings’ were “new; o! “m: no?’ member‘! ab‘ 41w "89 l?! 13'3"”? "Mum! m“ u posits: l. ' "The cow-is a female: some hon. members: Ob. oh. _ . Mr. Mullins: I have-been asked . _ irnatural for human ls shut away ffrom its grasp. Poetry has been, called the, overflowing of the soul, ng the morning dream of great minds, people and his greatest ambition was ‘wash question‘ by m“ a mo“ the eloquence of verse, and the but to try and keep these working people prdmwml. m? 9? met thoughts DllHnto the bait 'It in condition to do their daily work 5"“- “d m" °'°- ‘m’ " i -‘ . l v ' ' of m um article for their benefit. 1 asked date-r wolf: ihghyzgfezythe m”: one hon. gentleman opposite a cer- , l ' , l Ht mu “cation m "mm" to i cow and impulses of mansmorai nature. q ' translating ‘things into spiritual a ment and could not answer-he could ‘Ymmllghfi gauze‘ ctgmfietxcx: not tell me which end of her got up u" ‘a , m“ so I m, “m: m t,“ you m“; of revelation and the search after a cow is This ls an excellent article u" 15°“ ‘which new” mm‘ n” .8 . , nude“; m n Mimemg‘; mortality ‘can corrupt. Real poetry pump that had a leak was all right mm“ by a ' ~ i, m’ ' u, ch “ll-gm; through m; u long u m w" able m pump the college. I thought it was only right g u it that some members here should know medium’. of boautyl And ltvso be- mu; the cow m niey comes, not indeed. the hackneycd was much better than a pump wlth- “menu”; a ~ * l m m out a leak m“ dim,‘ have sumac“ would not ask such foolish questions tlibiliflt 0h ,0! $111M‘ l! 9? "'9 about her. ‘Let me proceed. their prtsfllii _.i°5fl° 31140911711510“. "The cow is a female quadruped but rather the vlelcn and embodi- u with an alto voice anda countenance ment of things as othey mizht b!- ' - ‘ l f ‘l i “t were seen, he spent his time among i“ whth tit: m nonfut’ a? i: 3:6“ eplnlcenm“ e o w!‘ as! n, patients who were able to get about “m” s w a p“ p p ' striving and rezchin’. duction of a liquid called milk, pro- towards n. better estate, is the vezy genuine poetry. Says "Poetry has been to m: as morals commonly are. given me the habit of wishing t1 s5 "The your: ww is celled e he". ,di'ccvcr the good and beautiful in‘ ind if so, what more stimulating in- ‘ucxice 'impe'l'ng us‘ towards noble ledge is necessary. service, or wliat" b't':e"' educational "The “W's 9911"" "rvlty and iwiuliment can come I Wu!" Y°u m kn°w Mu" ‘* -= within our reach? "Beer in Amber" is. the title John Oxenham gives W. a book ofhis verses, doubtless re- “The cow's tail is mounted aft and . Wendell Holmes went the poet's sel on the end has unique education- v6cafl°n_ ' cred bees. , , As the fair cedar; fallen before the “Thecow has two stomachs." .. hm”, One of my hon. friends opposite '1 ‘_ c“; ed’ in,“ t u did not know that she had two stoin- L as inzuldmfyges’ 3 w h achs’ And so long as poetrybas this "The one on the ground floor ls us- ed as a warehouse and has no other m,“ mmorm “d redemptive function. Whth this one is filled. the gsgm‘ wielozilezteit ovglamiorjgi cow retires to a quiet spot where her catalogues hue dropped “no m? bad manners will occasion no com- ment. The raw material thus con- "Se" and yellow m“? 0 where it is converted into cow. “'1 "The cow has no upper plate." (Ottuwu ‘human Now, get that. I was asked by an Man is a creature of hflblt- D111‘- -~._.__.,_.....-‘.____ v I f‘... uswwojmnt, one“: drags.- glacial.- lines of Oliver fate Wu?- ~ ~ ‘QNE i0" ‘h i wolf r... in... l... nag... ; i of $100 o Month? some one ‘has said that th . t. . est wards in the English nnrflrfrzi... hm“? '1 please nnd cheque." ' denly Th,“ How would you like to have $100 a totally (limb; month mailed to you regularly after Bee what hapeggng; “w m] you rmh m w. 66. so or as, which- casesn- "1 the . ever you select? You would like to He was thirt < =- havs it now. perhaps, and if you have eve “my mm‘ °i he the capital slLn needed to buy such sot tuberculosis w“ W“ WI an income the; Canada Life will earnings. but n‘. 933E“ ht log; guarantee it ‘v you at once. But if paid him $100 B Richard‘ Lilo -. you haven't the capital. you can ar- later be returned m "h' “m” ‘I range now that you will have that "rhat income saved Y": and . income later on. ~ new 003.18% enlbleé’? "it. ggv, Suppose you are earning 8100 a way - g, 51mm‘, 1n dme _to my "With-it filly b! $150. $200 or more. An old man cg’ ad‘, Whatever it is there is a part of that He was alone innff l“ “W w‘ income you want continued. ~ v aligone: unable evrckhumfi? .. If you. were not earning. how-much board bill. He had b n Ely would continue? That ls. how-much 1 can“, m, “t ‘me i ' ti! yiltur income wguld go] on, nolnlat- fore 1n er you came a so cry or drew he id. . pay or not? ‘For many people the thazflthe cars‘; ygfuytomshpdfb 31:53‘ would have tc-be: "Nor very large enough go bu;"<ihi>rcllfl. . h . ' It takes $20,000 capital well in- nfilattheznilrillhixtlybhulgirlir: vested to bring ln $100 a month. but ~u ra under the Canada Life plan you do whaen ‘hf? to not need to-save $20,000 in order to ‘ make sure of an amount. ' The Canada Life with 8188000000 of well invested assets will guarantee to ccmtinue that part of your income you must have later on for living ex- penses, say $100 a month. And the lar income is Canada Life may have to start the ifliettlng the Income our income going at any time to you or Why not send for it new?" This Coupon brings you valuable information without obunu“ ~ m. The Canada Life Assur nce Company, Toronto, Ont. I am interested in/this subject. Please send me by m”; . "Gcttl th -- W" . pa“. ng e Income Yo/u Want, without obligation of any kind 09L income of that .-..--u-o.u-...,,___ Name . (Mu. Mn" Nb“) ....................... a Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...-.-ouo--...-..., cut our tuberculosis death ratefilh mend m, guppmc, m, m - half and yet we are only beginning gar-e, 01d mm, Wm you,» '7 " to treat these diseases. as they “sorry, 01d d1”, bu; r" w’? should be treated. Periodic health half-g-crown," ‘_ examination would prevent many "Splendid. I'll take a. taxi,» crncer deaths and many heart }_-________ diseases. Proper pre-natal care The ilifference between tug ., would cut down the appalling death taxis is that with taxis you m run for your money. . l Spraying Service The owners of Hal-die Sprayers willf still be getting prompt service when f the name of some sprayers now having § a limited sale are gone and forgotten g BARBIE MFG». C0. P. E. I. BRANCH SUMMERSIDE World's Largaat Builders of Potato prayers hon. gentleman: ".How_ many teeth ing centuries he llitllliflid i315 hi5" has she in her upper jaw?" I said to o.’_ regarding disease as unnvoidlbll- him "Don't you know? Have you ever And today the lyeflfll min-Wm looked a cow overon tbefarmWHe the average statesman-retains that , got to seeing her teeth." tl-lousan of Canadian lives that I "The cow has no upper plats. All are lost, every year, through diseases ‘of her teeth are parked in the lower which could be prevented, if a j part of her face. This arrangement Inuuprhwide organized effort were ‘As a result she bites up and gums we“. work muse be united in a . _ _ g ent- national offensive against the common enem, disease. Whlfih u. The Use of P911, y {silently and undramatrally wasting (Montreal Gazette) ‘our livesand our money. One person ln three dies ahead of The awards for poetic compos- ‘his time. [statistics itionsmade by the Montrealinranch diseases which could‘ be prevented. indicate, of ‘are not to- be in any sense consid- iered as coin remuneration for the Tefforts put forth, but rather as be- Ijitting tokens of appreciation and oooirysar, for sickness‘ and P"- mature death and the loss of the futuieeemings ofthe poop" "h" die. Diphtheria. has killed 1.200 The fact that some Canadians‘ in a single yearlout of a seven hundred entrants took-part in total sick list of 13.500 cases. yet it ‘this competition is a matter for could beprlctlcally wiped out in a apart short time. Typhoid , revel- kills from any awards dispensed, it is 1,111 every year approximately Yet pfeasant to reflect that so wide and during the Great, ‘war 301F591? 81W liberal a. respnnse has been-made to Canadian soldiers ‘suffered from it ,the invitation extended. 11hr. it because they. were ~protected hyT ishcws that the poetic feeling is still lueasurel aqua - epplltsble in tivu istrongly in-evlderlce, "and will find life. Are Canadians less valuable- fexpression even in an age whenrall in peace time? In 20 years we have values are curtly summed in the -- ' l .___.. term utility. " . .- . . . Why do poets write? What“ is the good of poetry? Who takes any serious notice of it? Is it not a. sort of butterfly flick amongst the _ blossoms, or the "desire of the moth for the star," a thing aloo.’ from tile practicalities’ ‘of life? And ‘how frequently it is hinted that poetry [is today a drug upon the market. Now all such ‘questions do not in the least indicate that poetry hath fled from the earth, nor that its merits are to be reduced to small print. If they indicate anything at all, lt is that the critical faculty has strang- ely over-reached itself, and that, so - 11hr from poets slackening their en- ‘deavors, there is urgent need that more poetry should ‘ be. written, ‘Those who ask, "What a the good o; poetryii," might as well ask what is the good of sunshine, flowers, music. or any other of the fine arts and in- aplrltlng emotions felt ‘by human be- ing: and made obleris I; human pursuit. A questionnaire u‘. framed admits of no exact answer, for ‘the ' simple reason that it is very, much '. like trying to measure a cluster cartoons by e-oorpantoi-l rule, and * Requirements sums wont "CAPSULE! A lolanllleally tasted pro- duct of Parkellavlol lb Co» are eflectlvefaala and aura In IAR. MIT! LOTION , Within iha m} six wcah we ‘have loldgalleha dLoar In M100 lotion. Io: man " have blgbly recommended It ll being always effective. Cat some from our fresh slack. ~ run rowan. _\ Thla ll 4M- tlnr a! year whln yea naat protect the far sarcoma." ' .." l, ' van as tell-teeth». We M" M a aaw-tblgmant. gr: will balmmptli attended lo. n. ,27MAC.S' “Advances and , ' Improvements of f Woodstock Typewriters” Standard keyboard. Aocclcratl , type b" “lion, 1m. proved sdlustlble hlrh speed ma men. Patented adjust- nbls type bar guide and deep alo ted segment. Rigid car- riage construction. Eight point roller bearing carriage which run: smoothly between two rails. Longer llne space lover. Automatic fractional spacer. Shift lock that locks and ribbon reverse. Greater paper capacity. Adjustable paper edge guide atop. Wider wrltlng llne. inbuilt can-l and label holder. Absolute visibility. Accessibility. Simplic- ity. Speed. Light and responsive touch. Canadian Importers Distributors Alnllcrlt, N. S. u. F. ACORN, Agent. Charlottetown, r. a. l. . ,3- Trusty as an 0H friendmit navel! fails to pleasé .with its lastinfl "flavour. >