` , v ll 1 Zin 1 1', .. .i__’. 1, fr' ?<'.' li " 2.; ' ¢T.’f,’:».'2,"T‘ - .9-__-_ <3._.s>:..»,; .nu ‘wil ~.‘f:f_1_~ .».lg1. if li J. 1 ll” _ "HIE lllllllll-0Tl'El0Vl_|| 3' ' ' naman-w owne msfmdu sl; ‘vue-ne§s.a. nuanalrai laeratarr- I . . . _ . . ldltoe and lanagllilllnatosh-rl I IJ I. Aaasoelalr ldltnra- roll 'altar all ID I Funk. - L llirllhs Dells (nausea sans) lssa an nel' th aavunanl annual. la.|¢per.vaeaunadvaaaasna||a¢la¢hnah¢dl1delahas. _ MONDAY» APRIL Us lf. ' Q - ll, _ PAGE MR. LEA It ia evident, from Baturday’s com- ment in the Liberaipreas, that not- withstanding its 1eader’s statement to the contrary, the experimental highway projects undertaken last _ _ ny (all are to be made a Liberal cam-~ mmm "N mn, mv, gm-15;- paign issue. Our contemporary is in error in assuming that the raising of this is- sue is, objected to by the Govern- ° ment or by The Guardian. The ob- 1 _ gf ._ _ iq ‘l ..- .J rf. l. lf' ,___ _ Q, ,_ ,_r . 'U ._» -. y » 1 _,L jectiorl taken was to the misstate- ment that the repairs at Southport were being made at the taxpayers' expense. The Liberal party, if it sees fit, has a perfect right to make the question of experimenting in these projects a campaign issue; and the Conservatives are quite prepared to meet it. The point emphasized in these columns on Saturday was the inconsistency of our coni.emp0rary's statements with the attitude of the omcial Liberal Opposition. Mr. Lea expressly stated that this issue would’ not be raised politically. Mr. Lar- sbce voiced the hope that* more ex- perimental highway work wo_uld be done this summer. Mr. Thane Campbell said it was "very desir- able" that last fall's projects should be tried out; and he particularly Rt. En. R.. B. _Bennett strait from his sick room in guest at Windsor Palace. that the rankandflle of a P9' inns held together by a minority true, practising Christians. of successor. They are sure to be great- ly relieved, we dont think, when they find Mr. Bennett succeeding himself. Sales of gasoline in Januiry were as follows, with the 1984 dgures in brackets: Prince Edward Island 23.000 (21,000) gallons, New Bruns- wick 3’1'l.000 (308,000), Quebec 4,- 298,000 ($398,000), Ontario 14,588,- (909 000), Alberta. 1893000 (1 761 000). British Columbia 2,411,000 (2, 585,000). Nova Scotia and Saskatch- ewan sales not yet received. Sales of gasoline in canada in 1934 totaned 534,782,018 gallons com- lavored the plant-mixed procass,.pared with 484,966,879 ir) 1933. which was the process employed in the\_Southport project to which our eontsmporary takes most violent ob- jeetlon. Moreover, we note that while Mr. i..ea’s attempt to formulate a com- plete Liberal "platform and policy" proved a failure at the Lenten ban- quet, there were some planks which,` apparently, met withthe approval of the party machine and Mr. Lea was permitted to “outline” theae at the banquet, They included: "A thorough investigation into the most efficient and most econo- mic systems of road building." This, be it noted, is merely a. re- statement of the MacMillan Gov- ernment's policy to which our con- temporary objects. For it is obvious that no "thorough _investi¢ation" can be conducted without practical experiments b¢i.ng made in different processes, as was done last fall. We have then, on the one hand. not only the Legislature unanim- ously indorslng the Govemmentls policy, ‘out o rc-statement or that policy included, as a matter of para- mount importance, in the Liberal skeleton platform “outlined” by Mr. Lea; and on the othq hand- we have, the local Liberal press, vociferously claiming that because the Conserva- tives denounced the extravagance 0 incurred on the Mclntyre highway and exposed the cracks and flaws 'which developed in that s27.o0o-o- mile sand-asphalt project within a fore it will fight, tooth and nail. and to the last ditch, against the Con- servative policy, notwithstanding its party’a adoption of the same policy in its draft platform. This is me p°sm°“’ and we sub' midst of the hysterical clamor in mit thot it has no parallel ln pro- vincial political history. Whom does the Liberal organ represent? We asked that question Saturday, and we ask it again. It is speaking for itself alone, or is there some nigger in the Liberal party wood-pile who tr ction that conflict with the policy of ex- d X ti M .P also in the reasoning process? What °"““”“°““°" an ""3 ga °" protection have the citizens of this We know, from past history, #here such views lead. We know what the h DSL wa Know and general incompetence in legis- Mclratyre liig way c 3 ~ . lti h lls?" The He ld - that the present Governments road- ez vtehe “belief 5 remeg; v;T§;“:e making experiments have been (on te th cx ense, ducted at one-quar r c D __ , _ _ R M “_ ed to pass a stil! examination cal- md that permanent cum" K culated to reveal his fitness’ before ways at Bcrdcn and Summerside have been built ut less coat per _ flquare yard than v..1.. Novo. sootla 20,003,000 us.- 635,000). New Brunswick 13,640,000 02,574,000), Quebec 98,511,000 (97,- o77,000,) Ontario 252,977,000 (238,- 4l6,000). Manitoba 27,694,000 (24,- 896,000), Saskatchewan 36,795,000 (3l,83'l,000), Alberta 45,104,000 (40,- 324.000), British Columbia 42,33il,00 68,689,000.) In Quebec they intend leglslating against the peddling of shares from office to oilioe and door t.o door. Here are some of the “teeth” which Premier Taschereau hopes will bite the salesman who tries to make the investing public the biter: No broker or salesman shall call upon any individual at any residence for the DU-*P056 of trading in securities. The words "call upon” include tele- phone communications. No sales- man shall trade in securities for a bloker other than the one for whom he is reilstered as salesman, un- less the written consent of the broker from whom he is registered has been flied with the registrar of the act. No broker shall employ directly or indirectly any person as salesmen unless such person be reg- istered. _ In the United states they are suffering from the election to the _ ' 1 ' _ few months of its comp etlon, there various legislatures of men mc°m_ petent through the lack of educa- tion or of ordinary cmomon-sense. Zion's Herald, the oldest Methodist Weekly in the\United States, has this tn .say on the subject: “In the many states and even in Washing- ton itself for the passage of ‘teach- ers’ oath' bills, we timldiy venture to suggest an intelligence test for legislators. why now n lt prepos- terous to demand of our lawmakers some token that they possess quail l:"~_1 , _ - 1 has views on highway cons u flcatlons not only in flag-waving but _ ,_. country against coarse manners folmd if each legislator were forc being seated. class In an interview in In § P35 i its U. i waapail-'lrmwiul Notes By The Way Mr. Ooots on this oooaaiou fold of the man who wld accosted on an Ottawa street by a thug who threatened that hs would blow out the brains of the citizen if money were not forthcoming. "Wal-L you might as well blow out my brains," replied the victim. "I can live in Ottawa without brains. but not without money."-Edmonton Jour- ‘°°‘ nn. the Chateau Laurier to be the King's Queen'a University has done a fine thing by ouerins its hospitality to a famous Jewish professor, who has bfen driven out of Germany \ It V” mm ml* "h° d°°1'“`°d because of his race. He will pursue research work at Queen’s, and it is hoped he will be spared the spectac- le of any fellow professor going around applauding the Nazi system. -.London Advertiser. It is surprising how wm-ried Lib-V Under the 'new conditions. with erais are getting over ltr. Bennetts Gi/erybody seemlnsli' . d¢5P€"f»¢11' anxious to be graded and control- led, Government has become a vast cleanng house for all the ills, hopes and ambitions of society. Rightiy or wrongly, paternaiism is the ,order of the day, B form of collec- tivism that our forefathers never dreamed of, and with it has come a revolution in the character of government and additions to the task of government, for which gov- ernment is not equipped.-Ot/tawa Journal. _ Unemployment remains the great cd that this is due in great measure to restriction of immigration in overseas countries. Had the British people been able to move in their accustomed way. a heavy loan would be lifted from the Treasury. Great Britain therefore is deeply concerned in tht: restoration of prosperity throughout the rest oi the world, and especially in British countries. when these countries learn the essential lesson that bal- anced Budgets are the key to pros- perity-learn John Bull’s way-day- light will appear.-Toronto Globe. 000 (l3.564.000), Manitoba 1,242,000 obstacle, but it has to be remember- _ .De Valera has until lately :appear- ed likely to prove an exception to the rule that revolutionaries given responsibility discover that after all existing forms work best. At last. however, he snems to be going the road of others in the Empire who yearned for republicanism and “in- dependence." As yet he has not gone far, but it would not be surprising to see him soon as strong for thc llbnpire as South A.lrica's General 1-lertzog.-_Telegraph Journal. A press despatch from the Eth- iopian capital t/ells of a decree of the Emperor for obligatory milit- ary service including both men and women. In drafting women. however. it was made plain that fe- male military tasks would be con- fined to nursing and the like, with little probability that women would, be actually trained in fighting. The best statlstlcluns are very skeptical. They respect their tools but they never forget that they are tools and not magic wands and div- ining rods. If we as laymen are go- ing to use statistics as freely as we now use them, we shall have to _learn from the statisticians how to ‘be thoroughly skeptical, particular- ily when the statistics indicate a conclusion that is contrary to com- mon sense and general knowledge. -Herald-Tribune. A meeting in Massey Hall, Tur- onto, at which it is said three thousand people were p'.esent, re- .ccntly declared for a nation-wide [protest against war preparations by ithe Canadian Government. It will astonish most of us that this country meditates making war on anybody. but there appear to br some anxious souls in Toronto. It is quite the funniest city in Canada. Always there is a sensation of some kind which passes and nobody is hurt. , _ , Nobody wants to be an alarmist, 'but only a g.oup of mad fanatics would assert that the mod- est appropriatlon for defence ap- proved by Parliament is too great. This 15 by no means a peaceful world in which we are living.-Ex. Neither for their own sake nor for that of tlrn roads should motorists use the highways unless they po".- itively must. Driving is not safe .and even a light car will cut up the surface when the frost is com- ing out as it is now, later than usual. A few years ago the high~ ways would have been cloned alto- gether. Ncw it is possible to be less strict in this way and more is left in the good sense of motorists who should nct, however, take unneces- sary advantagc of a concession. If they do not exercise self-restraint the autho;ities may be forced to reimposc the old prohibition. It ia never very easy to decide exactly which straw it is that breaks the camefg back. but there is never any doubt that when straw after straw is piled on, the aggre- gate burden will eventually break the hack.-Brockville Recorder. In demonstration against war, fascism and auch things. students in United States colleges skirrnlshsfl with each other and employed sticks. stones, eggs. fists and feet as weap- ons. The peace advocates in ques- tion evidentiy believe in hghting for their conviction.-Montreal Galette. ‘Ilia French -sum especially Never- tlhm are just mah it WY! ze.; Ere in .Boop of _ yum toon Mona mronranu 10 HEAI/I1! THAN CMHA11 I hove_opoaen1bex two African tribes. 244° on the highlands or xsny¢_ the Masia and the Klkuyu. They are us living amid the lame smog- Pherlo surroundings and hay; gh, same choice of foods, The Masai sat meat, milk, and l°1°°d H their _staple foods. The X°llIlK~mBl1 and warriors eat these -°°d-5 ell"-P61! while other members of the tribe sat some bananas, bww. millet. and maine. Th? Kikllllll sat cereals. sweet lzfxlefzw. plant!-ins, beans and glee.; "M *U “Kes the Masai males (meat, milk and blood eaters) are taller and heavier than the Kikuyu lllBl¢S. and are.rnuch stronger; in fact the Masai women are as strong 'I`hr°ushout their primitive hu- ¢0l'Y the Masailo lorded it over their Pull? Ilelshbors and to-day are cour_ aseous lion hunters. of 1075 Kuruyu men called up for service lr. the Ceffler Oorns. 10012 were immed- iately rejected on medical grounds, ‘1'§e;12g\¢l;¢a_;»t0£°xfP‘l;e¢i 057 npuer cent wenc _ m . plgslelall uhm. ° 'wh as ow.we are not Masai Africans, Ido not live in Africa. do not hunt CWS- 0' belong to the carrier WPS. so it would be unwise to con- fine ourselves tn.a diet of meat nllllr and blood-_ This would be con-' Sllvatlns. and ha.-ln the kidneys. tNor would we do well on the veg. e arian diet of the Kikuyu tribe of °‘“'°“1-5 Sweet P0*Bt0¢S. beans and Deeds meat. eggs and milk." A diet somewhere between that 91 the Masai and Kikuyu ig suitable to us and the sooner we realise that we are what our food makes us the tW1¥li!l8 Wh¢1'e experiments on men This diet includes the "protective" ftogbgiis- milk, eggs and leafy vpgg- Memories Good And (Y. Y-. in the New Statesman and Nation) The question whether the posses- `a~reawuuaau.htl\° 1"" ~ln'pi.ra) ~ _ rnenffhwnmhohorurmoum. Dickens? fWatcl\ In ’ "Toronto 1 ‘ and ur. nsveigst. nv# to u MBI' told thlt ll tokens watch ha? add; A “ng _add¢¢ 00 it. lm tx very reliable oorrlSP°11¢°D“ circumstances under which treasure was left in Toronto. and W. Gibson, of the mines department. writes: ` ' "1 served as sergeant in the Q`ue¢n'g own Rifles during the lv' benign, and well remember 12181190' tor Dickens, who came down tlw saskatchewan from Ivor; Pitt with a '0fref\lB°U.lll .Nfulkuls "M mu and or the police detachment at Battleford. He hair and beard. He did not aPP° to have many associates, but was the prairie. accompanied by NS receiving a note from him to release o white prisoner. who. alone with ‘ number of Indians and halfbreeds. was given in mY ¢\lBl'B° 53°’ 3 pound-maleer's surrender. ‘-oloreno rho.-uv afterwards left the police and arrived at Toronto, presumably on his way home. Ap- parently bclng short of funds, he pawned his father‘s watch, but did noereelalm it. and lc woo sold by the pawn-broker. Eventually- ll came into the hands of Mr. E. B~ Williamson, who was a clerk in the Department of Crown Lands. a F955 collect/or of Dlckensiana, and at mit time president of the Dickens Fel- lowship here. Being desirous of oo.-n. 'rho um' tr, ’ mn; the woven coins. he we it and lack of vsgrengttl-Lufgr vom ‘tg I Jeweller for repairs. In a sco- rer recess or the watch the ieweller fauna a tiny look of fair hair tied with a little piece of blue r‘lbb0D- I saw the watch and hair myself. ll-ll# they remained in Mr: Willlamsons better physical! 111 h possomlon until his death in 1915. lr stored by iexiergon E 1 do not know where lt now ia. those with n solenemo laboratory was Margaret Penhell- I P'-ll secretary, tells me that after Ar. E. and animals i B. Wiliiamsorvs death the T0r0nt° that nutritiongl§saf:rlc(!:ea brmch °f th” ']¥i‘§`°n§nL°u°“hig what we ar th h 1 Purchased part o e BW Nl heredity. e an as “mate md 'other treasures which he left bs- These experts advige mpg we mn, hind; others were Purchased by T110 tinue the daily use of meat, mm; Public Library. But- the watch wr. and eggs, green vegetables cooked 11°* among the collection transferred. and a salad of raw foods _ hum’ It is, therefore. still presumably fu or vegetables. salads are ruling and the possession lor Mr. fatuxbreymvlvéll; encourag hwin. hi ' _ l1a.mson,theonyso_no e ue eouon. e ° e 5 W °h “ms dm or the Toronto branch or the nm.- ans Fellowship, and I have been unable to locate him. It is hoped that evehtuauy the charles Dickens watch will find A place either witl the Boa Club or in the Ontario Mus- hoveusf. and canadian history wh! ' ch Bad should not be perrnlmd ro be lost to posterity. A Storied Flag sion of a good memory is altogether desirable has often been discussed, s akof whole the great writers and the great composers of music have been men with exceptional' powers of memory. The poets I have known have had better memories than the stockbrokers I have known. Mem- ory, indeed, is half the substance of their art. On the other hand. stateamen seem to have extraordinarily had cabinet meeting-and each of lhem will tell you that the other‘s story the autobiographies and speeches of produce ideal statesman-men v/ho. At the same time, ordinarily good gard a man who does not possess having offered to take the iaby out Ln a prealnbulator. was tempted by the door of a saloon bar. A little later his wife had to do some shop- ing baby. indignant at her husband’a the white face and qulverixgt lips that would soon appear wi the What was her vention however came in smiling cheerfully an - ing: "Well, my dear. what's forlunob today?" having forgotten all about strictive legislation of the kind wl1 needed in the lata' 'twenties I would have saved the consumers and investors ol Canada man! millions of dollars. The danger the possibility that in an aroused public ment may so so -far in business rosulation as 'diacourije " bulimia enterprise in tutor gary surald. The terrible sy'mpa.t'h‘;l¢veryw1'1e!0 bsaaii maiva uaipiuuaee of :iatufo basoiul E l ill. 8 2; §“ ll sl 5-less? (Halifax Chronicle) A flag which for over fifty years and men with fallible memories had lam in ,_ owne in me Amuc lggee ?g;n31i§:ss"1eg&;tm°k° °“t ‘ north and recovered by Captain ,hey my who ,ff ngét nernln-1n1ooe.ond preoenur to the bering lnachlne is selledom a maunof SL G°°m°"' Swxew °1 Ham” ml the first intelligence and the quote 9'" Gwmevs day' “ka me mmm various cases of children 0%' men bmk t‘° me m'fM'°d Fmnum ex' tr or less. slr John Franklin who had marvellous memoi d 9”” °“ who yet had no mwllmglggeigp who. with the Erebus and Terror, manned by iw officers and men, pe _ 1 imagine' howeven that on me set out to discover the North West pleahn. 'was an experienced ex- plorer. A rear-admiral in the navy he had fought at the battle of Copenhagen and also at Trafalgar. In 1818 he had his first taste of Arctic exploration. and in 1810 he was placed in command of fm ex- pedition which was to travel over- land. from Hudson Bay t.o the shores of the Arctic. He explored the Coppermine to its mouth and memories. Let two statesman at- tempt to pecan me game event _ after varying vicissitudes returned what happened, iorcxample, at some "°E\"FI*“d 1-" Nm “-"ff WWE tm” YW' ""‘l’- “al” 1" 1°” he “' after the record moped, for Boer.. turned. tracing a considerable por is so inaccurate that either he has N011 0! lm ¥l°l'Ul¢fl”l From a memory like a sieve or is an aud- 1936 W 1043 h¢ WHS BOVGHIOI' 01 acious perverter ofthe truth. The Ta5\‘l'l5|ll5- Fwffllfllilli 501116. tht! frequency with which the :ooh or old exploring fever asain seized him and he took command of an ex- statesmen are challenged suggests P°dltl0n in 1845 to dlwovel' tlw that the world has not yet begun to northern oassaee- The oomnallv took three years provisions with it, like great poets, have the genius of and no uneasiness was felt, until memory and of intellect. three years had elapsec., when no news coming, exvpeditiarl after ex- mcmory is so common that we re- pcdition was sent out to search for them. it as eccentric. In INI some traces were found of I have heard of a farmer who, their winter quarters. In 1154 it was learned from Eskimo-.i that white men had been seendragging the sunny morning to pause on his a boat on the shore of King journey and slip into a. public house wiiumfg mum, in |355 g pm-gy l°r H glass of beer- Leavlvs the ln- went down the uwxenrie ln canoes fant outside. he disappeared through mgbgned that an gttpmpg jug hee ~ . to ping, which took her past the sleep- gh, “by ‘nd me (wt “mt he hm n made by the expedition taken it out with him. behavior,'she decided to leach him a mm mm, mm bel” M “nt lesson. She wheeled away the per- 0( |, pmioggphgy “um bg c,p.\,\, amhulator. picturins fo hermit hh of ouch ment-mlnaedneu or nun terror when he would come out and Mm or no, I fear. ar, born vm. find the baby gone. She arrived pmguaglly efficient memories and homo. antlelvutins with I-nsrvnltsh are incapable even or forgetting a fishing-rod in a railway train. news that the baby had been stolen. - when just were lunch hir amd. End' Lgme lag* This Easy Way Meal Vlavbel' Tolls New _lalfs Ilall .1 amp -l.":?::.~=.:.~'m= hllaeldill. _ 1 l § -sank-na §§2esl.zf=r§; slits-_:sig . oz§§§-Egagggi no to . ‘§§§ `§§§§§ ‘ Es get 31;; - - _#ff f r_ [ , ‘ _ 1 “_~"... .__‘.$l-l../u TB IDIAL Bo`snslniL1¢“I"so\r not wla atkacts 01\'llvl. yet aupsemab 'rhrilla me with lladness, yet con- J.: . wntsmonever. - 1"ll|uis1rfthsadne¢.yUtlorlr1ds despair. d 1 . £3' ,',“,_ nuouoouluotinsuadufensmz tillill I follow IW Ithinubeyolidfliefartheststars mg Isee; _ ‘ th, lteohoes faisitfmmoosan cavern! 1101101 how - y,..u‘ravedrromobi1v4on. ur.'r. Aldmmglavmlzlld of dreams it It calls, and all my best with joy- ful feeling laayulto reachit as I :uaks re- ' DYE . I feel its sweetness o'er my spirit stealing ' Yet know that ere I attain ll; 1 officer, took comm W” mm d‘e_ V a' mm 0! middle “‘°- "lm ‘mg -1'. l. contre, zluultiomonully. lu or me xlkuyu men. ~ the habit or ming long walrodon The European Hllrdy- or 1 was 1n'oom.oetwith him through _ Gufdl’ (Montreal Gazette) Ever and anon the plalnt is heard that in the realm of political activities diplomatic practices lapse into what has been termed (barrel- olga.nism,” meaning that we hear the selfsams times with weari- somo iteration. Never has there been amoxe salient instance of this than is furnished by the' so-‘ called tri-partito accord said to have been reached at the Stress conference. The parleys have re- sulted in the publication of a report which. in respect to its soothly dic- tion, rnay pas muster; but as re- gards its actual value the docu- ment resembles nothing so much as the elaborate calculations betirnes made by pmfemional experts of the higher mathanatickv, and 'which usually wind up in "progressive" abstractions simply cancelling each other. Not a single crucial item of the broad intemational problem that awaits a satisfactory solution has been brought to a decisive issue. The ultra-cautious tenor of the communique cannot disguise the fmt that the conferees have been_ compelled to fall book upon thc more than twice-told tale of some vague unilateral dadle that nego- tiations ahould be pursued for the development of the Eastern Locar- no plwt, for the enhancement of the Western non-aggression defensive alliancein and through the -good offices of the Geneva League, and' for the limitation of armaments concerning which it is merely an- nounced that the tripartite conferees "remain anxious to join in every practicable effort for promoting dum. it 15 5 link b€lW°°l'1 th* ZW” international agreement." As regards Cleat Britain. France and rtaly the "accord" is supposed to stand in good countenance. Yet no definite word has been heard from the officials at Berlin, who have not budged from their posi- tion that Germany has the right to an equity rear-mameut correspond- ing with that of any other Euro- pean major power, 'and that no third party shall he allowed to in- tervene should Germany and Aus- tria wish to come together to form a commercial union. The Austrian imbrogllo is still the storm-centre of the situation. And as touching reach a Hudson Bay training post, Ag that point the government gavc up the search. but Lady Pranklill sent out another expedition undcr Captain M‘Clintock in 1957. eleven years after l"ranklin's ships had sailed. This expedition solved the mystery, found some of the skele- tons. and discovered records left by Fraliklin telling the story of their doings up to April, 1848, when they left the two ships which had been ice-bound since September, 1946. Franklin had died in 1947 and thc party was starting the next dai' Fish River. An Eskimo woman des- cribed how the white men had fallen down and died as they walked. _ It was this expedition of M’Clln- took. which cached supplies in case any survivors should remain and would come upon them, which placed the flag. recovered in 1908 in the cache. The parser of the Bemler expedition, Mr. Wingate Weeks, has given it over to the St. George‘s Society for safe keep- ing, and it will' be placed in the Public Archives for preservation for all time. It has a hectic in- terest. making touch as lt does witl the ill-fated expedition whic‘ suffered so dreadfully after most heroic efforts to save their lives. Attention Truss Vlearers Tothoaaofyouwhoareun- ortmate mough to have to we ask she ques- aadaledrwlth the ‘ properly or la ll v to atyla, causing _ We .aan pro- ttiug modern slisllirs fgifii' 'assi ggl 2 . Hs 5 Macs Pile Ointment Glvaa eats! relief ia all can or mural lil? edt l li. its 2 ' i " , this problem, to unite for remainl when Stresa an er B0 much in treaties the strength of sentiment eruption of war. to be asststanrle and invite 5 1 [ USE v" "e BR.4HM1Nf TE-A 'sold onl la red all-tulle virgo. ..' 7 , . .gi L _ | 1 _ 1 _J srnuuns and wlzsr umlrs _ New @ Summer Rates elective with April ‘3 20th Sailing. _ For full particulars call 94 Great Ioalle Street Charlottetown, P. E. I. ` Phono 540' and 541 ,*f`§»“§ 5': = Wi .~!‘§Z'1"_'-C if #fir 1-2 Kill! -H326 !~!§!'Z='=I'I""`§Z-ZT-Z~. ' LE. R. BRO_W_ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rats. _ Agent at Sunimerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown \ \ li \ ‘ “Q Ko so CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT . @\lBK 0|' CANADIAN SOCIETY Ol’ 008'! ADCOUNTANTI COMMIBIIONEH. FOB. TAKING AIYIDAYIIB IN Tl' SUPREIE 00021.' Ol' I. I. I- r. a. l. uarulsulrarsvl ‘ nn: cananlan oauonr infos 'nun 1lssocia°nor4.r.nnrun. V alum or Nova scorn prrmosrm ouauuorrlrowrl. r. u. I. z~_','_»-a Accounting systems opened up and revised. Laboiaavlug oflloe mathoh Installed. Coat Aooouuung instituted to salt special raqaismihh- Monthly, quarterly and annual audits. ua|aaaeahae¢aanarroa¢me_s.euaooon¢ar¢s\r¢l- luoomshsxrstarua written apaudlllel- - Financial arrauseapehla made between debtor Ill creditors. unused uasulw companies raoerpnbea e. c.. nox as 'reraruorrs use HAVE YOU TRIED H s.N’= BRIGHT CUT SHUKIIIG TOBl000 IT’S ‘MILD COOL' _ SMOKE MANUFACTURED' f sv me IIIGKEY &» l|0llll.S0ll rosicco cnmnv Lu. 1 » Charlottetown 1 ~ pl 'l . . _ | J 1 a _ _