~ BIIARLOTIE TOWII GUARDIAN I Way ‘ of a ‘wantto Notes yTlle M - .. Dill! (QOIIIOI “I'D IIJO m? It Ill advance) instant-w. Cheater s. aaeaaaa. -' -LlaIa. Col. o. a nulls‘ leereean '_1, Idieaw and Iaaaaeo-‘J- l- Bllflf" In final-s 1nd United ltaloa pew your III mdvnnnl dollvnoc Vioa-PI-uldene-al. l. Burnitla A. Iaelillncl. l) d. . Aaaaelatn Idltor—l). I. (luvrla. ‘f ' SATURDAY, JUNE s, 1929 \ xelaurcnawsu ILICIION Although at the time of writing lapipletoleturns are not available for the Baskatcbewan election on rllursday, it is evident that the Con- servatives under Dr. J. T. M. Ander- i‘ loaflhave made sweeping gains. From l p“. ngures received the result will be ‘very close. To add to the un- . nrtainty the election in two consti- tuencies have been deferred to a lat- er data. The result as far as can be teen-means that ‘the GardinenGov- ‘ trhment is out of power and the Cénservativas with the assistance of . tho Progressives will assume cflice. Iijiiwill begin a new era in the his- tory ‘of Saskatchewan politics. The result will be a severe blow o“t-he King Government at Ottawa, ‘ whose chief lieutenant, the Hun. C. AqDunning, now Minister of ‘Rail- ways, held the Premiership of Sas-i fitchewan for four years preceding bia can to the Federal Cabinet in i010. Mr. Dunning had watered the ‘ garden in the western pro-‘I rlnce very ledulously, and it was be- i lieved that the seed he planted would bear Liberal fruit for mother gen- trptlon at least. There were. d‘ We went tom‘ i" Clam“ “m” ‘when in recent years Britain adopt- A Government so through the lvrw- The fact that the ‘ed the principle of paying her legis- ' nurse. rumors. long inpcwer tends to become auto- rriatic and careless in its adminis- tration, and Opposition sentiment, admittedly strong at the last elec- ti‘on, was growing ominous. Even Iu'ch'a. stalwart advocate of Liberal- ism ‘as the Manitoba Free Press could" only express the hope that the storm would blow over "as. lpllall‘ It only needed "a thunder-‘ lag victory for the Government and ‘dispersal of the Opposition tothe ielir ‘corners of the province to make ‘ this contest a replica of all those gllflfmve preceded it." The victory." hlwwfi‘ filled to materialize lmd fame of originating the undertaking statesmen o! m“ em we" slums“ the ‘isperaal of the Qppogmg" 5| l would envelope bun like a. mantle. ye; they med [hgh- own my gt 35m kiflfllviy to be to commanding asat. in the Legnlalure. i l U. S. GRABS THE MARKET in l. our market d-espatch from Qgtreal yesterday appeared the fol- lowing significant item: "More arrivals of new potatoes "will" Unlwl slams proved ‘l i combined fish collecting and buying m April H901‘ The“ “e rowflb weakening factor on the local po- tlto market today. New Bruns- wick Green Mountains went five 5.9!"! chow l0 55 "M! P" 9° . ward Island under an arrangement/Prairie Provinces grain "elevators lfl. in bulk. while Prince Edward i Island potatoes held unchanged at i . 76 cents for whites and 80 cents ‘fer-Green Mountains per ninety pounds irl bale" ‘at l-time when the United states Ubllkrlls is considering measures for ekcluding Canadian potatoes alto-‘E gather, the potato growers of that.‘ country are flooding the Canadian‘ sine. with their product! This is a ‘ ‘qqnereto example oi the effect of the king Government's policy oi "watch- fill waiting." The fact that Prince; naval-d Island potatoes, due to their l‘ superior quality. have maintained; their price even against this injur- ‘ . ious competition is no excuse for the i‘ inaction of the Federal Government in- an emergency of this kind. i-larl; the same thing occurred in the 3 IInited States, the tariff would have l been raised over night to shllt out‘ all‘ eompetiti . and the American f‘a'ri‘ner would be selling his product ‘on his home market in perfect se-I eurity. The King tarif! policy, being “ ‘a-‘pclitical compromise and not a‘ salie protective measure designed in ‘ theintarests of the home pl duoers. {question of tarii! Pmteclmn- w‘ lhave three Liberal representatives i at Ottawa who are. or‘ should be, vit- 1‘ ally interested in the marketing of Prince Edward Island potatoes. Let them unite with the Liberal mem- bers from New Brunswick in lnsist- . ing that Maritime potato growers be given a square deal in Ihfiil‘ 0W" markets. AN UNDAUNTED CHAMPION The indefatigable Mr. A. E. Mac- Lean. M.,P. for Prince, is at it again. I-Iis vigilance relaxes not. l neither does it slumber. In all things ‘they can." But none of them ever, remotely bearing upon his ‘prestige as a wide-awake‘representative, he is sure to be on the spot. He may be late in getting there. but he arrives. ‘ alld his constituents are duly noti- fied of the fact. When the rest of us were clamoring for a second car- l ferry of the best posihl-l type. Mr- I MacLean was chamghning the ideo- oi a Giants’ Causeway between the Province and the mainland which would render all car ferries obsolete. I and the news oi the vision vouchsaf- i ed to the Prince County representa- rallway authorities were even then investigating the proposition, and i were preparing a report to submit to the Minister of Railways, was known only to the few who could be l dfllilellded “P011 l0 keel! 1t illllet- Ml? Iso many matters of world-wide im- E MacLean. in launching the idea as portance and gravity. his own. ran little danger ofbeingi accused of plagiarism. Unfortunately l l the causeway scheme was damned as ‘equal to impracticable by the Railway Min- ‘ lster; but had it turned out a suc- ions First Parliament there were ‘ cess. there was an even chance that Mr. McLean's little manoeuver would be successful too, in which case the and ‘he would be acclallllrfu as the l greatest statesman since Pope and ‘méll in BTW-ill hISIJOPY flollflihed 59H I Laird. Mr. MacLean‘ has not al- ‘ lowed the failure of the causeway ‘ m‘ lndmlry in many “n” are l.” scheme to ‘dampen his ardor, and he t is again standing forth as the cham- l Western Provinces. In 6i cities build- ‘ pion oi our political interests. Two ‘ weeks ago it was announced that a service would be operated this year " along the north coast of Prince Ed- with the Department of Marine and ‘ Fisheries. A steamer, equipped with refrigerating compartments, will run ‘completed m“ ye“ the numb" of between Alberton and Georgetown or ‘ the” mull gleam" l! expeclled h Souris, making at least three trips weekly, collecting and buying fish from the fishermen at the different fishing points. In yesterdays dc- j spatches from Ottawa we have the‘ reassuring news that Mr. MacLean is again on the job, urging "that's fish collecting service be established on the north shore of Prince Edward island." This will be great news to f our fishermen. It remains only for Mr. MacLean to urge the appropri- i ation (alrcadyyoted) for a second car ferry and terminals and the construction (already decided upon) of a C. N. R. Hotel at Charlottetwon, to entitle him to the credit of having sponsored everything we are likely to get. DIGNITY REBUKED Coincident with the British election‘ _ returns have come some a using: Small“ “m. (“fir/S a I stories arising out of the campaign,‘ of mg pgegbyull-lgp Qhurgh in cap- ‘Parliament sits about twice as long gvinces westward the pay of members [raise their indemnity‘ from/ mioo‘ to lecooo per session Not this session. | and probably not at next nation will ‘lthis be done. At present it is suffic- ‘filt that the coming event shall be 1 foreshadowed. And in this lriatm of I indemnity the politicians are wise in Itheir generation."rhey realivo that I it would lose them many votes at the next election should they. dnerease their own pay just as the form for. .which they were elected is about to! Iexpire. No worldly-wise politician f would d0 that. It would look like taking a plebis- ‘cite on the indemnity question, al thing that isn't done. Besides the Federal Parliament there are nine Provincial Legislatures in the: Do- minion in. all oi which the members have the power to ilx their own re- ‘muneratiorl and every one of these. legislative bodies have raised their; lown pay on “the good old fashioned ‘plarv’ that they shall take who have ‘the power and they shall keep who‘ ‘asked the people beforehand to say’ whether they thought it desirable or Very shrewdly the manage in this little matter of periodically “jacking up" the indemnity do it in a new Parliament, quite assured that although the country will look upon- lit at first as a selfish and mean tran- saction. they will either forget it be- fore another election comes round. or that it will be then so overshad- lolved by other lanes as to be buried. out of sight and memory. The members of the great Mother of Parliaments in England served ‘without pay for hundreds of years. i ‘lators the seaslonal pay of members ‘was fixed at £400 something less than $2,000. That is quitamodest in ;view of the fact that the Imperial as the Canadian and has to deal with In Quebec and in all the five Pro- Provlncial legislatures is or greater than that of the Imperial Parliament. In the Domin- of the ‘more statesmen of national calibre than in any of the more recent Par- lliaments sitting at ‘Ottawa. It is a‘ ‘common saying that the Canadian And ill England the grcatost stitch‘ ‘fore the paying plan was introduced. i‘ Prosperity and activity in Canad-‘ ‘ported especially in the Central and ing pennits are breaking past re- cords. In March last 40,621 motor cars were produced in Canada, and “breaking figures according to the Do- imlniorl Bureau of Statistics. In the ‘with a capacity of 30,000 to 45.0fm ‘each are being‘ rapidly constructed lthe grain-growing districts. When ‘reach 1608. The large elevators ai “lake and ocean shipping ports are ‘also being extend-ad. i That the nth tariff, blll new be- fore Congress may not become law I before November is now stated. ‘There is a. lack of harmony between the leaders of the Republican Plrty- 50m! ‘of them think the calling of the ‘extra se ' was a blunder and that ‘the President has not added any- thing to his prestige since hls inaug- uration. It takes" a long time to en- act a new tariff in Congress and storm-centres have developed during the process of which Mr. Hoover is‘ now painfully aware. l I - i Dorothy nix, whose contributions‘ ‘appear in The Guardian, seems to‘ ‘be getting funnier all the time. Bhe now says that “husbands must train their wives lrl the first months of .their marriage, while they are still ‘wining to heed advice." | N! "" h'lm°" w mm my °m""'n°y' among which is the following from an‘ ada, The Tvronio Globe me lmons result in this ease has been a de- praulbn in the market at the very tifisemwhen the farmers had hoped to make up the leeway lost during an ' ‘iiebbtionaliy bad marketing season. ' l... that Prince Edward n- 3lsnd§potato prices have so far been is testimonial to "tliairsilesilellt quality and a tribute ‘am earl and watchfulness of our ‘. in properly main: and their stock. m Montreal as ia ‘rlireato and other central Cal- cities the marketing wwrwn- ‘ jflltlloarol- the nulls product have only r ‘tapped. we should demand. " “_ ,flllt‘l0lllithlfll otherthan juflflerenee to our interests characterise the attitude of I English weekly: 4 speaking for a. considerable time. A: Ihad he ever served in the Army dur- I ing the war? l I‘ The speaker replied that he hadi ' not. “Well," said the lady. "How can youi dare dictate to all these people the‘ principles and doctrine of the poll-l‘ tlcal program of this country and the line they should take when you your- ‘I self shlrked your duty not only toi your country, but to your wife and" children." The speaker replied: "Madam, I wasneverintbeArmvJwasinthe ltavy.‘ The local candidate had bcent ‘ other things: ' “In every country in the world he history of the Presbyterian Church has been a stormy one, and it was lent in twain. but four years af:er this event it faces the future with much of its lost ground recov- ered. its force and vitality unabated. its geniuses undestroyed, its "soul" still marching on. The bush may be burning but it is never destroyed. It still burns. The Saskatebewa election appears to have been conducted with consid- erable energy and spirit on all aides and although at this distance no one expected the Conservative party to win, it has strongly emerged frmn B) I11"; W. Buff‘ " ‘ THE TONE 0F THE SKIN Why is it that so many folks who give agreat deal of time to looking after their complexion have so little success. And those who have very largo pores in the skin oi the face seem to have no luck whatever in reducing the size of the openings. Dr. Earnest D. Chipman says that "In practically every instance we found that persons with enlarged pores have been using a great amount oi hot water, their idea being that it is more effective in removing oil from the skin than cold water." - Now this is true to ‘some extent. still hot water lessens the muscular tone of the skin and this allows the open- ings of the pores to actually grow larger. ‘ Dr. Chipman suggests the use of an alkaline soap to dissolve the oil of the skin, even with cold water, as the cold promotes the muscular tone oi the skill and contracts or makes‘ smaller, the pores. We have all got so much into the habit of talking about the benefits of hot water that we forget that there are some places where it .ls more. harmful than helpful, We know that after exercise noth- ing "relaxes" the muscles and gets rid of the stiffness arid soreness that comes from the wastes made by exer- cise as the use of a good hot tub or even shower bath. You will remember that the Japan- ese soldlers during their war with Russia had hogsheads filled with hot water in which they immersed them- selves each niBht after the exertions o! the day. This relaxed the muscles and they were ready for work next day. Now it is this very relaxing that you do not want when the pores are large because, as mentioned above, You want the muscles of the face to contract, to tightm, and close the pores if they are too large. Remember then that hot “later and a" Blkflllnrsoao will lmove oil from the skin, but this llould be followed by cold water to contract the skin, In fact this loosening and tighten- ing oi the skin not Qlliy knoll, colltaaateu uub lleips to suille extent in warding off wrinkles also. The skin thrives on exercise as. docs all parts of the body, and not bvatel‘ followed by cold, keeps it agtiyd l4 at; cow BEAUTY I have seen dawn and sunset on moors and windy hills Coming in solemn beauty, like slow old tunes of Spain; ‘I have seen the lady April bringing the daffodils, BPIIIBIIIB the springing grass, and the soft warm April rain.- I have heard the song of the blos- soms and the old chant of the sea, And seen strange lands from under the arched white sails of ships; But the love lTest thing of beauty God ever has shown to me Are hcl voice, and her hair, and eyes, and the dear red cllrve of her lips. -—John Masefield‘. THE ‘LAND WE Love BY FRANK YEIGII RURAL HY‘DBO IN ONTARIO Q. To what extent is rural hydro used in Ontario? A. The Hydro-Electric Power Com- mission of Ontario is steadily col/gr- ing Ontario with primary rural trans- ‘ mission lines for the use of electricity l on farrns and lrl homes. A thousand ‘I additional miles of those lines are being laid in mo, which will bring - "l? WW1 "D to five thousand miles, ‘ 11d? With miwh dlsn-‘i-v “K96 him l Canada has been no exception to the; "Wm l 40°00 ‘rule. At the time of Church Union a nary ' summer" no rural districts are now co-operating I" ‘hi! hlBhly important service, which ls revolutionizing rural liie and conditions. c seems to be good ground for hope that in the three Prairie Provinces there will be a substantial increase of strength to the Conservative par- ty in that quarter at the Federal election next year. Prorogatlon next week is the word that comes from Ottawa and it is high time the country was given a rest from the reckless expenditures, _ . Events Of CIIAPTEB l’! The incst interesting ddelopmenb cf the January meollng of the Sup- rslllo War Council was the plan for ‘handling the general reserve; ifcrys- lfilIlZUd the effort to make of the sllprcnle War Council a real factor o: illllitary coordination on the West- crn Front. It will be remembered “.!~.h1 during the Paris Conference l-lcusc had agreed with Clemenceau that the military advisers should forlll a board of cordination and that lu. chairman should have executive powers. To this the British raised objections on ihe grounds that it was an infraction of the Rappallo Ag- rccment and would come close to lllaklng of the chairman‘ a general- lssinlo. In January, a new plan was envolv- cci by General Foch and Sir Henry Wilson which provided for a large pleasure of coordination. Since the Allies were decided to remain upon lite defensive until the‘ American zrroops appeared in force, they plan- ned to create a general reserve drawn from all the Allies armies. which would be placed-under the orders of "liie ‘military advisers of the Supreme War Council, The latter would form for this purpose an Executive War Board which could throw reenforce- lnenis to any point at-ached by Lud- cildorff. Ii the Germans drove back eltiler the British or the French in so doing ihey would present an open and was in essence lhe strategy utilized British and French Commanders-in‘ Chlfl supreme over their armies on l the fighting line, but created an“‘ zlllthorty higher than the Command- ‘ crs-iIl-Chief to dispose of the reserve. ‘ It was open to criticism in that it» dl\‘id(‘d the forces and placed the‘ CJllllllBlld of the reserve in charge of ‘ n Culillilltiflfi. But the committee. as‘ constituted. expressed the military l brains o; Foch and it was free from ‘ u“ ii urnly when attacked. ‘ The plan was approved by the! lll€€>illlg and received the enthusiss- ‘ ilC endorsement of both Perishing and Blisll. who bclieveclit the best avail-I abl substitute for a generalissimo. ‘ ers-in-Chlef were present at the] Meeting of the Council which and the General and seemed to acquiesce. When how- ever they were requested to contrib- utn their quota to the General Reserve Sir Douglass l-Ialg after waiting near- ly a month replied, that he had no divisions to contribute. A new plan was therl drafted by himself and Petain for resisiing the German attack. The reserve was not constit- uted. the powers of the Executive War Board vanished (for it had noth- ing to command.) and file Foch "clleme of defense was shattered. 1 rm m l Hill-l 1 1:. retrain: ‘OF, COLONEL HOUSE . '39 Friend Alla‘ r\.s\IS¢i' ul l‘... l-aaflll VUII i r son ' Recounfs In. His Diary The Great The War In Which_'H_is Country Was Concerned. ' lcopyrlgbtl It is a question for military ex- perts to decide. whether Plalg wa: sufficiently supplied with troops con- sldcring the length 0i his line, ancll rhus was justified in his refusal ta‘ so whether the plan would have a:- tually fufiiled the hopes of the mili- tary membe of the Supreme War Council. It is certain, however, that the Haig-Petain plan wasinadequatc under given condLions, but when the named by the Executive War Board troyed the British Fifth Army. With- ‘itive separalions of ‘the British and French armies. The peril of the Entvnie armor led to their salvation. It was clcrr lthat ii'AlIie:l-Mili‘lal'y unit wrr: n: ‘at cnce esnblishcd, CBi'l'illl“y llli;.. !deieat the Allies separately. T.ie (ls:- man victory was not the result o: anything so much as unified action and concentration of forces. During the week that followed March 2i, one hundred German divisions had come iillo action against thirty-five thous- The moral was obvious; the Allies must secure unity of control. On March 26 at Doullens. the new resenting the British, accompanied Clemenceau, and the French military leaders. (Ed. Note: by Foch and his July viciorynOF FF IField-Marshal Halg agreed that he by Foch iii his counter-offensive Inlguld b; glad l‘, recelve General the beginning of VICIOYY. It left the 'Foch‘s advice.) It was seitled that: ‘ ‘General Foch is charged by thc British and French Government with ‘ coordinating the action of the Ai- lied armies on the Western Front.’ _ For a few more weeks l-le was com- pelled to cllTy through the task ‘more ‘ by negotiation than by command‘ , but from that moment control of the forces in the West was in his hands, , A new era began. Ed. Note: At. Beau- vais on April 3rd. Foch was given a erations.’ But the Commandors-ln- Chief were left in control of ‘the sllprrlnc war Coullcil at its January ‘tactical conduct of their armies,‘ with “ the right to appeal to their respect- ive governments. It was not until April 24 thatFoch received the ‘cum- mandement en chef des armees al- The French and British C-mmand lliesf) ' Mr. Balfour in the meantime cab- led to House asking him to impress created the Executive War Board lupon the President the need for I Reserve lAmerican troops. would lt not be? possible for the United States to in- crease the number of embarkations ‘and to send 120.000 troops a month for four months? Lord Reading’ also ' laid before House the gist of a long cable which he had recieved from the British Prime Minister, emphasizing. the immediate importance of Am- erican rnan-power. Colonel House's notes of lord Reading's communic- atlons follows. (Continued 0n Page 12) , Home Again ‘ (Condensed from Good lloasekeepln g-flal-l-y 5mm. Williams) Crossing‘ ollr wooded hill pasture. I saw a pair of scarlet tanagers and mused regretfully on the fact that they would not—could not-remain to set up housekeeping in our wood- land. although it ls ideally adapted to make a summer homejor them. The explanation is simple. We knew the birds were not born there. because we had found no tanagerk nest there last autumn. A bird never sets up housekeeping in a locality clller than the region where it was born. The primal law of bird econo- my is that cvery migrant must re- tllrn to the old homestead lo spend the breeding season. It is a pract al law. If birds in general did not l- low it. there would be such chat! in city whose inhabitants should de- cide to bay no need to their legal dwellings, but to seek sh “ and food in whatever house was nearest and seemed most inviting. The region immediately about the Alest must supply food for the fans; lly during its most critical period. and this is the restricted area over which the nest-makers claim prop- erty rlghts. Thus one of our robins builds a nest year after year on pre- clsely the same bracket of a rose pergola. A. doaen other coigiia of vantage are similarly held in fee aim- the insignificant position which it which goes on day by day while the ple by other rohlns. And so of each businessman/authors session is continued. . new o! w" "n"! INWM GI"- N» “which: fer themselves, next If we find a prairie warbler bulld- ing in a certain laurel shrub, we know that we shall find no other 80; but that next. year we shall prob- ably ilnd another nest of the snmc bird very near-perhaps within 10 or 15 yards. Each bird appears to own its free hold In perpetuity. But note, please, that a bird which excludes others of its own kind from its freehold may tolerate birds of a different species. Robin-food lifferent that there is no competi- tion. Every moment of daylight must be utilised at high speed to iced the nestling: until their wings have the bird world as would obtain lnfflrouied. and then they are urged. even forced, to leave tne cradlu. and are conveyed to some suitable iced- ing ground outside the colony - MVBI l0 return. this maneuver is of p. found importance. The fiedg-l lirlgs are led away from the natal‘ colony at the moment when they! first begin to show signs of dawn-l ing intelligence-before they are old enough to form permanent mental pictured ortlieir aurroulldlrlgr. rhey will‘ have no recollection of their ac- lual birthplace. ' when than youngsters, following "l! Primal instinct. collie back to the home of their childhood. to set /r..l l‘ i A- Lifé Insurance Tum .. Whether through zoupgggdon of - .. fiompanyoraninsulmentplmwmnlu l‘ ‘ “ [ll l _ Llfa Company aloha-lie the moan n“ Tna cooperato in the Foch plan: arid el- i‘ Germans attacked. on ‘ March 21 (and that too at the point ‘ .hey broke the Allied line ‘and des- : in lass than a week they ulrcatened I ‘ the capture of Amlens and the defln- . ' land ‘British and only fifteen French. ‘ secretary for War. Lord Millner. rep- ‘ ‘ by the chief British generals . me‘. ‘ unguarded flarlk. against which the;by thg gl-lleg British Ggfmlns me; Allied reserves could be hurled. It lPoncare prairie warblers within 50 yards or’ and sparrow-food for example are so . Branch 0 .l. E. PHILLIPS. R "° INSURANCE Company meet Maaneaul Bliss Ind- N-I- R. c. Macoolv/lkll. ‘l..i..n-. C-l-l-J. Geneva] A l. CharIoIIaIowIeI-THIZJ. Sqrhbdaag . w.a.sam'll ClIldhfiwqhLP policy. tion ' season, they will not com-e into _close icnmpetitinrl with their pilrcilts. Their ‘nests will be built in suitable loca- "_‘_':; :2 7122+: '."-"~"-'4~ ‘giro-e ‘c\'rr‘y' dil-ccli. l~ tile locations where lllcy SDPllL their lldzllcz-crlit days. Obviously. by this process, the des- ccfldllnis of nlly llllil" of birds may ‘spread in nil (‘\’(‘l'-\\'IfI"l'lIllg circle. ‘The red-wing blnckbirds come to us lby nluiunl sizlgcs, along tile brooicl lfrom a colony tllrcc lllilcs away: ‘Under favorable conditions the bal-l lance may be sn favorable that the ‘offspring of ll billglc llia-ll colony may ‘spread across a wide i-f‘l'l'itfil‘_\', mile by nlllc. to rovcr—as the Eilropenn ‘star-ling. llltrnduccd at New York in 1890. has (lune -— llpivllrri of a million square nlilcs ni ilrcn in n sin- gle human gcncruiioll. ‘ Thus. paradoxically’. tile species ‘us n whole cmigrnics, while cvery individual holds iilcxorilbly to the ‘homo-staying principle. That this is ‘the only way ill ullich birds norm- Jilly cxlctld illcir breeding range is a ' ‘matter of fundamental significance. ' Wllcn rt race f0 birds thus emi- graics. n5 (‘\'(‘l'_\' prosperous race must do. its brooding rnilgc widens. Cli- mrllic changes rlrc l-‘r tilo most part ‘ligllfilrcli, also tllc 5fllll(‘ species would not flourish from l-‘lorida to Alaska. ‘But it may lmpllcll in IIlf‘. course of lycars or ccniurics illllt illc northern: most colonies find tllcnlsc-lvcs unable §to secure food in arlcquntc quantity ‘in winter. Silcil coiollics must shift "their location solltllivard in tho aut- uuin--tllat is. illcy must lcnrll to mi- grate. And since tllc immediately contiguous lcrl-ltorv is porrllnncntly occupied by tllc nloiilcr colonies, the nlillrllnls must llfifis llf‘_\‘0lld. till they find llnoccilpicd ironing-grounds, Tlllua the llligrallis mny csiablish willlcr homcs souih of the breeding lraiige of the species. In effect. they leap-frog over the stationary mother colonies. and leap-frog bnck again in the spring to their own home in the north. It is clear thllt each grating birds thus csiablishcs a win- l" 110K111‘; and tilollgh this is never - -»____l.i_____. Continued on I HHF-‘Ulfli caloric of ml- plige 6 4F.‘ A)?‘ Tlg?‘ is the Time To" INSURE Your Car If a car driver is sued for damages for which he nlay, or may not, be respon- slhlv it is illlportzlnt that he should have lilo best llrgzll advice obtainable. This is provided by a liability insurance p0iicy-— which will also payl the amount of the jllrlgnlent, if any, up to the limit of the Full information concerning autoulo- ‘ bile insurance furnished without obliga- Cclllc ill and talk it over with I Hyndman d? C0., Ltd The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. It, CIIARLOTTETOWN- ‘ vv ‘e oeoo-o-eaose-eooei a Lox-mamas: i i I 2 Z -OQ-OO#OOJO<IQOQOQ§‘ I “ titer lvnraaeaar-a a a-aaua-o-a a also: I ma. HQVJ TO -‘ KEEP wELl; 1 If you want a machine O work smoothly. if W“ "It to work efficiently, the I!!!“ thing to do u to ml» "W! oiled-well lubricated. f: A European phyelfllll "PM this principle of lubrication one section of the human t - inery—the bowels. lie 0PM in the treatment of coilliifg lion-and it Work"! 3 A heavy. bllllfl- 6° tastelefl. neutral. nlllflb was used. NATOL (r. n. s. Cd's l-leil Petroleum is such ‘an ell-l Unlike caster oil and d rathnrtica It "1815"," “ ‘ penetrating and sofiefllfll Intestinal contents-re ‘ constipation by lubrication. ‘ Full pInt bottle $1.09. E. A. Foster‘ ‘CENTRAL oavoflfi": I l e ‘FOUND. One of the best prevenllf: known for "' SMUT or R051? on GRAINf; FORMALIIIT; l .4 ll a o a cheap but morons"! ' ive remedi- 0"“ ‘ would be wlle '0 "I ' in order to have ell!) ‘ Perl, gnggq] before l0 ‘.- ollo pint w W"! “ ‘ ' ' efbvater. Fall dimW" . l with every‘ onm- j ~ For aals at w‘; i The 2 M“? ‘ DRUGSTOREi lu ol-eatomnl ‘ ‘ All Mail 0rd are 0|"! Attention. l