..,.. lllfi. 1 ~ BllAlll-OITETOVIII lilllllllllll President-II. can» a. noun. I r . Iceman Idltlo and Iaeagl limerick Idling»- -um -Cel 0's . Dinner-J I. Ounces. ab Wells" and ll l * al ltli m no um loo u: we" yuflr (announce) malls-UT: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY I8, I985. THE PATRIOTS SPLEEN While the Dairymerfs Association. by unanimous resolution, ‘commend- ed the Government upon its offer to establish cow testing associations, (which was part of the agricultural reform, programme announced by Premier Maciilillon at the Associa- tion's annual meeting), we note that our local contemporary takes a characteristic partisan attitude. It lnsinuates that because the announ- oement of policy was made by the Premier, a slur was thereby cast upon the ability of the Minister of Agriculture, Hon. Mr. MacNutt, to explain the details of the measure. Such an is BS m“ ‘ ible as it is‘ false. Due to the fact that the Premier had another ap- pointmcnt. he was the first speaker to address the meeting. As head of the Government, it ‘would be strange if he did not make the Government's important programme for agricul- tural improvement the subject mat- ter of his remarks. The Rims Min- lster of Canada, in personally an- nouncing the Dominion Govern- ment's economic and social reform policies, followed the same course- without any lnsinuation from the Opposition that his Ministers were incompetent to explain the meas- ures falling within the jurisdiction of their various departments. What then ls the purpose of our rontemporarys veiled attack upon Mr. MacNutt? The Minister of Agriculture has proved himself well able to speak on any subject touchs ing his department, and we note that among the resolutions passed by the Dalrymens Agociation was one thanking him "for his excellent address delivered here this after- noon, and also for the splendid in- terest which he has alwaYS evilliled towards the work of this Associa- tion." Another resolution oi thanks W88 adopted with regard to the Premier's addres. Perhaps it was these resolutions which called forth our contempor- ary’: spleen! A WORLD HERO Today throushout the length and breadth of the world Lord Baden- Powell’: birthday will. be celebrated- “hi! m honour ruilque in history. No other man has lived to find hi8 natal day honoured in every nook and, corner of the world. It has been reserved for Mfd BldelPPmlf‘ ell of Gilwell. why? Because he in- troduced something into the world that everybody wanted, but I10 body hitherto had the genius o!‘ organizing ability to make 8J1 m‘ oomplished fact-scouting 1°!‘ BOY!- _ The aim of the Boy Scout move- ‘ ment is not rnw or orislnflP-ll l5 as old as civilization-to develop healthy souls, bodies and minds. the threefold Trinity of Man's Nat- ure, and thus to turn boys into ef- flcient, happy citizens for here and hereafter. It is built on the basis of duty to God and to ones neigh- hour, on which can be bull. a real living faith. Here is where Scoutlfl! and the Churches meet on common ground. Through Scoutin! the Saints of the Church can be held uP as heroes of a great adventure for Christ and His Kinzdom- Th6 Chief scout realized from the first that the heroes of history are Pied Pipers to the boys. No man-made institution can produce a fraction of the great herces that have serv- cd thc Church all down the ages. Ii the boys are to dance to their tum it must be shown that these Saintly Heroes were no sad, long-faced folk, but human men, who falling, climb- ed up again, "Men who." in the vyordg of the Chlnf, "lived lives of adventure and high endeavour, of efficiency and skill, of cheorfulness and self-sacrifice for others. In such a time there is meat fo: boys, there is soul in it," and so will they learn to follow in the tracks of th-E hero-maker. Boy Scouts are not en- couraged lo become prigs, to boast of belonging to an organization that entitles them to ‘:0 considered bet- ter than other boys. It is the wish and endeavour of thcsc organizinil and leading thc movement, that the! training they rcrnivc will offset lees worthy inclinations, aspirations and developments, but thc Chief Scout . . e t‘ and his executives everywh is, se . [mm whwh w i“ mm mum.- o! their faces steadfastly against the idea of encouraging "the holler than j u Tm mm thou” spirit among Boy s:outs.i film" bum" h°"° ' Humanity is the same thc world; “W” ‘Mm’ l° arm “M” ha‘: over, under all slime: and. under aill year broke I-ll I'm"! m“ I beginning of the trade revival. roe ' Travel Association states that busi- skins. Scouting is Intended to de- veioptiae best instincts in the bays ofallraalbandtomihe them worthy eitileiis and better Caril- time. m scout Law. on which the "or aim.‘ Holiday villwfl will!" movement hinges, sends us back to minaret m the not! Grail. for iessmemsomias-xsusou ‘fies n» watercolor-m- yo; 55mg pound‘ pole. peal- ,,mo,viltora,wa| IOJU, an increase ‘specialties. Bovine osmium and Woe- . . .‘ klarridnalbal“ puma. I J I I J l. Ourrh. HI ill “new! leliused. —ll SI IIIHII Ifilfl. lnl. Is it does with Honour, Loyalty, Usefulness, friendliness. Courtesy. ’l'hrift and Purity, it forms a self- ‘ r ’ Rule of Life than which there can be none better. This h why Lord Baden-Powell hasiived to be remembe w today on his birthday in the four quarters of the globe. J UBILEE TREES An interesting suggestion has been made by a titled correspond- ent in the London Times with rc- gard to the King's Silver Jubilee. The suggestion is that throughout the Empire, trees be planted to mm atl- the event. The Times adds its editorial commendation, -, intlng out that of all the dlmrse forms of memorial devised by men trees are perhaps the most generally satisfying. They are less enduring, it is true, than buildings and more at the mercy of the ele- ments; but discreetly chosen and tended, as all worthy memorials should be, they may last till the story of their planting is lost in the mists of traditionjThem is still sufficient time to prepare for the planting of King George the l=‘lith's Jubilee trees, and to ensure adequate handling of the subject and rule out haphazard placing and planting. _ EDITORIAL NOTES Carrying service to the farms instead of farmers to the Govern- ment service is the policy of Prem- ier Macmillan." The demand for Island potatoes in Montreal and Toronto has be- gun: would not an advertising campaign in Montreal and Toronto papers help it considerably? The nomination by the Dairymen‘! Association of Mi‘. J. A. Dewar to the Advisory Council of the Domin- ion Marketing Board was an excel- lent one. There is no more capable farmer in the Province than Mr. Dewar, and his experience and abil- ity are widely recognized. The report of the White Mari- time Commission is now in the hands of the Government; wheth- er there is a minority report re- mains to be seen. 11' it be not a unanimous report then the adjust- ment of our claims will not be final, the case of the Maritimes being liable to be reopened at the demand of the Federal government or of the respective provinces- Mr. Boulter and Mr- Lea are agreed that an average of four acres per farm is not too big an area for potato cultivation. The trouble is, however, that some farmers go in too heavily for spuds to the detri- ment o! other produce, while oth- ers hardly grow enough even for their own use. A quota. system might not be bad for the indust y. the quota to be fixed by the Marketing Board, with an apPell to the Governor-in-Councii. From a social and governmental standpoint, the implicdtlons of nation-wide television are tremen- dous. The‘ results will be far-reach- ing and will go a long WW 1n Dill- ling the coimtry out of the depres- sion. Each television transmitter built will be the means of initiating the manufacture of thousands of television receivers, involvina’ MW factories, restofifll emPloymim 3nd injecting new impetus into the machine or national business. The longer selling season afford- ed retailers by the late date 01 Easter will be featured by special displays and selling wwftllfllil" on the part of the retail stores. An early Easter is not appreciated,» it anticipates norms ooeninrs while still winter and tends to P097. business on bothaocounts- But Easter, in the ulna week of April enables merchants to 59°01!!!" m end-of-wlnter sales. Mllmlfilll"! Easter display all in orderlijllc’ cession. Mr. Morgan and Mr. Howl-Id both cited Great Britain as a 91161 course, the old country is in thB ness and holiday visitors durinl i984 numbered 2N3“. Ill "w!!!" 301,106, an increase of 50,604; busi- ness visitors ems. an increase of Notes By 17w Way Aaron the line the newspapers were recently boasting that the authorities now had crime leaders well in hand, while in New York this week Mayor In Guardia, during the course of a speech said: "I have been in office but one year, but in tint time Ihave attended. funeral after funeral of our great police officers. Thisis no'tin1e for sentimentality. this is no time for crooks." Uncle Bem has’ cuddling manifedly not yet learned, the lesson thot his entire machinery for handling criminals needs to be thoroughly NVHJIIPEGr- Brantford xpositor. A recent British writer has been keen enough to observe that, from beneath the surface con-fusion of the struggle for "orders" in the land of teeming millions and mass pro- duction, “order” somehow seems to emerge-eve.- if, at times, slowly and expensively and painfully enough. Is luw and order forgotten in the commercial field-ore shoddy wares or even poisonous foods marketed sometimes at high prices-there iiilrings up Consumers‘ Research or the housewives strike. When mass meets mass, the odds are on the side of a victory for the intelligent battalions of Creative Emergence.- Exchangef Lloyd George it is said, will serve in the cabinet, if MacDonald and Runciman be dropped. That, judg- ing from Iiondmi‘ reports, should Present no insupemble difficulty For it is no great Downing Street secret that, in the opinion of most hi“ lingered too long on the stage, Ms Olll-livod his political useful- "955- Vague. verbose, with no flair for economic legislation. and without influence in the Labor Party. he has become a political and parliamentary liability, some- thins 0f a political tragedy-Ot- tawa Journal. The London Board of Education Yesterday refused to be stampeded bY the Toronto Board into adopt- ing a resolution on the school tax question which woufdhave pre_ vented if from giving impartial con- sideration to any propgsals recommended by the Ontario Government or by any body 3p- DOlTIWd by it. In such a matter ‘Toronto is the last place from which other municipaliths should take advice or lcadershilz- London Advertiser. , , Even the law students at Osgcoclc Hall are somewhat alarmed by the ever-increasing number of King's (‘WW1 bolus appointed by Ontario Governments. In their official Publication, Obiter Dicta, a con- tributor devotes considerable space i0 dlsmlssion or this situation. In the Pzovince, he notes, there are some seven thousand barristers and soiicito rs, and something like seven hundred K. 0's, Here a note of alarm ls sounded: “with the Law School turning out nigh unto one hundred new lawyers each year. and. with the Legislature (‘Felting K9183 Cnunsel at the reckless rate of seventy-five to one hundred a year, a future may be faced with the unpleasant pro- Sneot of a lawyer-ridden Province and a K- C.-ridden profesion."-_ Globe. President Roosevelt's troubles were increased lately who... m; Postmaster General, in an effort to create a diversion. sent sheets of new stamilps to several friends, auto- graphed by himself. The stamps went out unperforated, llngum- med and unsolicited and, being filmed l’? a high official, were estimated as of fabulous value In fact, efforts are new being made to deflate the gift stamps by handing out quantities of the same at regular prices, Latest word is that the storm will blow over. Everything should become normal again at Washington-that is, un- ies the Secretary of the Treasury should take it into his head to for- ward o. few choice samples to those of his intimates who are coin col- leciors-Torcnto Telegram. Hobbies are often am excellent way of helping children to find their vocation Illh-e, late Cyrus Curtis. founder of the Curtis Publishing Company, as a small boy published as amateur newspaper. Helen Hosklnson, famous magazine cartoonist, as a child loved nothing batter than to caricature her teacher and fellow-students. A little boy named Bouohed was a tireless constructor of smiall boatzo-to-day the H. E. Boucher Manufacturing Comlpany is the largest concern making miniature boats and parts Some grown-ups have turned ho!»- bies into profitable businesses. The kiddie-kar was devised by Olarencc W. White in a whittlers idle hours. A fisherman invented a new kind of bait to subtract more fish-and thc Al Foss Pork Rind Minnow, nation- ally known, was the result. A Chicago bond man named Dodson built bird-houses for fum-to-day. Dodson bird-houses are sold far and near, "Hobbies." said Mr. Giles, "make interesting to other people an interested in life," He offers this prayer for parents: “And give to my eons slid daughters the hobbies which enlist their kneenest interest. which arouses their great- est enthilsiaszm, which make then painstaking and persistenrtisndrin of 1,668 over the total for 1983. French visitors numbered 55,786, an increase of 4,048. The volume of Continental travel to Great Britain u a whole has never been exceeded. There is no method of checking accurately the number of visitors from the with British»! - rough estimate they number about 100,000. It may be estimated that adding together foreign tourist and business visitors, week-end visitors from the Continent, and visitors from the Dominicans, some 100.000 guests ,were welcomed by I“ we Dominions who travel ts, but on a Bfltdifi . _ THE CHARLOTTETOWN ' UARDAN TONSILS ABE STILL REMOVED WHEN 1T IS CONIDERED NECESSARY The fact that there are not as many tonsils removed by surgery as there were a few years ago, may lead one to think that removing tonsils was only a fad. As a matter of fact tonsils must be removed in many cases if rheumatism and heart disease are to be avoided. However tonsils are not removed now just because they happen to ho large or because the individual may have a sore throat occasionally. To-dsy the question of removal re- ceives careful conside ation by the family doctor and tho, surgeon be- fore any operation is performed. Dr. Ailgus A. Campbell, Toronto, in Canadian Lancet, says, "Definite reasons or indications for removal should always be present. The his. tory of the patient is most import- ant and if he is a sufferer from -acute tonsiilitis, quinsy. has frequent sore throats, colds, rheumatic pains or other signs of infection, the ton- sils should be removed. When the tonsils are very large and tho lining of the throat m-ouncl them is red, thc tonsils should be removed. When the tonsils contain fluid or pus, are firmly fixed in the hollows in the throat in which they are situated, and the glands in the neck are en- larged, operation is necessary." As mentioned before there are cases where the individual is unable or unwilling to undergo Operation and yet the tonsils are doing so much damage to the body that they should be removed. A method using electricity-diathermy - has been used in some of these cases but Dr- f‘ pbell advises against it bo- milsfl Y-hfl patients tire of, or quit treatment before it is completed. The Symptoms arc often aggravated by scar formation scaling or cover- ing over the 1itt‘e crypts or holes in the tonsils so that the pus or ex- udate gets sealed in, instead of being removed. Then should surgery be finally found necessary the surgeon has a difficult time with all the hard scar tissue present. "A 800d. clean, carefully perform- ed surgical operation requires less skill than diathermy, is more qulck. ly performed by less expensive equipment and gives much better results.” It would seem that the X ray treatment acts in a somewhat simi- lar way to diathermy and is not usually advised according to a state. ment from the Journal of the American Medical Association. British Parliamentary History (London Times) The task of compiling and writing a complete history of Parliament is now well on its svay, thanks to the preliminary work of a distinguished Committee of members of both Houses of Parlimrnnt and to the persistent exertions of Colonel Wedgwood. The History is to b: divided into sections covering per- iodsyof approximately forty years each and will eventually run Into some 40 volumes. These sections will be divided into two parts, the first‘ containing a list of members, names of candidates at contested clnctions, the number 41nd length o! sessions, and the names-of holders of official positions. The second part will consist of a biographical account of all members returned. It is an enterprise which should oer- tainly command public support (when £15000 is raised m». Gov- ernment will authorize the publica- tion by the Stationery pfllce of 20 volumes) and which, when it 1s finished. should be dipped into by the general macler, porad over by thc scholar, and acquired by all who have shared in the government of their country. Obviously the biographical section will havc the greater general in- terest. All those who have had to study history have come across that grave constitutional problem- the Knights of the shire who, with almost less personality than wooden chessmen, h0pped about from a Parliament at York to one at West- minster or from one at Lincoln to one at Oxford. It will therefore b: stimulating to learn that them elus- ivc gentlemen were really human with names, families and fortunes, and even numbered among them the author of "Moi-to (rm-tr ur." We know little of those bearded and beruffed persons who sat in Queen Elizabeth's Parliaments and listen- cd to their ageing mistress, as she wlmedled supplies with assurances of her love for them and that she was “no greedy. scraping grasper nor a strict fast-holding Prince." How for did all this deceive them? Did any dare to ' 1 Answers t0 these qi-nstlons may well become easy when, as the result of this which they can lose themselves completely, Amen."- Rntarian Magazine. With his uncanny faculty for saying the right thing, Dr. A. R- "Qulntuplets" Dafoc says that the rive Dionne babies are not the only children in the, world. While it is of importance that their health be guarded, ft is equally iimlportafll that other children get the best of care. And there are so mam’ other boys and girls who need someone to take an active interest in themfirhere are hundreds of crippled children whose parents cannot give thorn the attention they require. These boys and girls are confident they will ‘not be forgotten when the people are asked to do what they can to help relieve their suffering-Genie: Cities star. ~ » There would‘: m“? Tm ulenjmu u that country did not tolerate system of slavery. MY!- .."$".‘i‘°‘.s.""2.‘t Ten Foot es a General Bir Bindon Blood, 0.0.3.. writes in the February number of The Empire Review about tiger- huntlng in India. During my rer- vice of 82 years actually in India. he says, I only saw three tigers measured at or over 10 feet in length; two of them being i0 foot- ers, and one, a, splendid beast, l0 feet 8 inches long. I shot all three in Nepal, the first of them. a i0- footcr, during my first visit in 1900. to that delightful country. Ho was marked down in a long rather shal- low ravine which meundered for several miles through s. great allu—‘ vial deposit at the foot of the Hima- layas, and varied in width from a hundred yards-or so to nearly half a. mile, with tall l2 to 15 foot grass in large patches, and with trees in clumps and also ‘in many cases growing singly and in twos and threes. We began by beating about two miles of the ravine, two guns being with the line of beating ele- phants, and two forward, at a place where the ravine widened to about 400 yards and the grass had been partly burnt, so that there were several open spaces between de- tached patches which had been left standing, I was the right-hand for- ward gun, and I stod at the end of a passage made by the fire, between the main body of the grass which was being beaten, and a patch of about a quarter of an acre, on my right as I looked forward, all of it being under my command. The up- burnt grass was about 15 feet high. with me in the howdah was a jemadar of Sappers whom I had known from, his childhood, a gallant fellow who had won the Order of Merit gloriously. I told him to watch the detached patch on the right, and to touch my elbow if he saw a tiger. I watched carefully to my left. ' After about one and a half hours o; the lion came in slzht and the rishi hand gun passed me to the right about 50 yards distant. As he came level with me, the lemadar touched my clbow and I at once looked around and saw the tiger standing in the detached patch, at a place where the grass had been trampled down more or less. I could not see his head and thought be had not seen me. but that he was watching the gun on the right. A moment later I fired with the .500 Express which I was holding, and the tiger. with a roar bounded forward across a bit of open into another drtached patch of cover, about 30 or 40 yards ahead. The right-hand gun fired at the tiger as he crossed the open, but missed him. and I pushed my elephant on qulckly- The “Bur disappeared in the grass in front, but almost immediately had turned and appeared again with a roar and came straight at me. full of himself and a. grand sizht! I had picked up my heavy l2~bore rifle, and as soon as the tiger was close enough I placed a bullet just in front or his withers. He dropped dead instant- ly, lying on his side in a curve like a cat and not- moving after he fell. I remember that I was curiously af- fectcd by the sudden contrast-be- tween the appearance of this tiger. charging full of life -- all ineth. claws and eyes-and then, in an in- stant, as a dead body lying still and helpless before me! I recollect that I paused a little lcnger than usual. with rifle reloaded. tn admire the beautiful animal I had slain. before dismounting to pull his tail and make sure that he was dead! He fumed out to be a little over ten feet long, tho biggest tiger I had killed or sccn killed up in that time“ SYMPHONY OI‘ SNOW Within the room is the sound of music, , And through the window I see snow fa ing. Here the violin sings its song of silver. There the snow beats immeasur able notes of white. Over and over the wind sighs the theme of winter. The iced branches sound the flute notes, The sea on’ the sharp rocks. Has the bell tone of great honns of brass. In the stilled wind an icicle breaks With the thin sound of a harp string. The high notes of the violin Are no more white than the snow falling. The silver of the blown snow Is the sliver of the music's fare- well, -Gara. Van Alstyne in Christian Science Monitor. History, we known more of the type of man who made up those Par- liaments. Even in the great poli- tical oontroverses of comparatively modern timesr-like the Reform Bill, Catholic nclpation. and the ro- peal of the Corn Laws-we know what swayed the minds of a hand- ful of leading men on either side: but our ignorance of the back- bench members, who really carried the measu es. is abysmal. i-Iow far did they act from party or from independent considerations: How far were they influenced by their electors, in the words of Burke, "degrading our na onal represen- tation into a cont and scuffiing bustle of local agency?" Such ques- tions csn only be answered by more knowledge of each member's per- sonality. ' There is, however. a wider Hound for supporting this undertaking than that it will arouse our curios- ity pnd stimulate our inmfli- M a-time when many fol-sill! coun- tries are ridiculing all Parliamen- tary inatituiions. when‘ some ' to dcrltend the c one was"... ... .. 7613111. - ;\. .-v PUBLIC romnu l ‘Ills acid-n ls on: for the. dllOllllOI by aarrclpondelll of election cl tetanus. The Obs-l we Guardian loos not . adores the melon of oerrcllellllie- PRIOR 0F MILK Sin-I was amused to read the correspondence of the party calling himself "Anti-Combine" in a re- cent issue of the "Guardian". He certainly paints a severe cari- caturewf that plutocrat “The far- mer." We all know the unwarranted profits that farmers have reaped during the past few years, but we suggest that your correspondent should approach his criticism a. little more delicately in order to give this criminal time to reform before put- ting him entirely out of business. He is reallya necessity you know. Milk even at the unholy prim of seven or eight cents a quart is nice when delivered at your door fresh from the cow in time for your eight or, is it ten o'clock breakfast? We agree with "Anti-Combine” that the milk vendor should beheavily taxed for using the streets of Char- lottetown so indiscriminately in his nefarious traffic. What the deuce does he mean anyhow, getting up these cold frosty mornings at four a. m. to milk his cows and come rattling in to town waking up sleepy cltiuns who had to dance half the. night when he has noth- ing to do in the afternoons but clean his stables, and attend those old cows again? He can finish be- fore ten p. m. easily. He should creep carefully over the streets and pay heavily for the privilege. Char- lottetown don't need him or his money anyway. It can get along fine on its numerous factories. . "Anti-Combine" also shows a thorough knowledge of the subject in his masterly rcferenm to fecd prices which he says were nev-er so low. I wish I \\ uld find the mis- creant I saw on the market the other day asking eighteen dollars a ton for hay. He ought to be ex- posed as an cxtortioner. According lots of hay for sale zit less than half that price. Those wholesale feed merchants also who ask thirty- two dollars a ton for bran cannot possibly have any grounds for this price in face of you.» cox-respondent's claims. As {go has written under a pseudonym. we will have to be ex- cused for guessing at his identity. Who is this to whom we are in- debted for exposing such a base ex- iortloner? Let's see now. Ah! 1 hive it. His name's the clue. He's one of last year's hockey team!‘ I am, Sir. eta, C. B. PRATT St. Peter's Bay. The Doukhobors (Vancouver Province) The Doukhobor problem, it would appear, is going to remain a prob- lem for British Columbia. It hasn't been solved-merely pushed round a bit. ' It was considered a. very clever move on the pan; of British Col- umbia Government whcn, a few years ago, it succeeded in halving the Criminal Code amended so as to create a new penal offense. There were mass convictions at Nelson and Grand Forks and nearly 600 Doukhobors became wards of the Federal Government. The mass con- vlcitlons involved a lot of expense -the setting up of a. new prison at Piers Island and provision for caring for the minor children of the convicts. The province had to look after the children, but the major cost and 'all the worry fell to the Dominion. The mass conviction plan worked so far as to stop nude parades and the burning of schools and other outrages and threatened outrages. Either those who had been _guilty of the major crimes were among those locked up at Piers Island or they were deterred by the govern- ment's drastic action. And now comes the aftermath. 0f the 575 Doukhobors sent to Piers Island-NS men and " 280 women- 204 have been released and the time of the others will be up about July 1. when, according to the minister of justice, it is intended to close the prison. The qucstio A now is what is to be done with the re- leased prisoners. The custom is to give a released prisoner $10 and a ticket back to the place at which he was convicted. Having given him his ticket and his money. the Do- minion washes its hands of him at the prison gate. Next July, then, the Doukhobor problem will be British Columbia's very own again. And it is evidently to be a new sort of problem. FARMERS ATTENTION While in the City do not forget your supply of M A 0 ’ S Condition Powder For Bones b Cattle. , Tones w the system, cures all akin troubles and llvol a glossy control hair. For swel- led legs, Purifying the Blood and as asrlradiosior of worms it is an Unfailtng Remedy. ALSO MAC'S IIIAVI & COUGH REMEDY "i. factions of the Lungs of Ion-v sea. MAGS PIG WORM {QW- Thaaecprunluunandinvesnnencineolnefos- Company's history and the resultn for 1934 provide mnvincing evidqm of "*' _"andsound" Souzvb, §it0pIm 11v STRENGTH ' o/Itr (EVERY ‘Ponvr _‘DURING 1934 \ ss,os9,4sa.zz AN. INCREASE OI ‘M33374! POLICY RESERVES . . . . . . . . $2,453,416.00 an mcaassa or ummoo SURPLUS FOR PROTECTION OF POLICY HOLDERS . . . . . an mcasasa or $9,138.81 NEW INSURANCE issued AND anvlvsn......'...... $3,: AN INCREASE OI 18.8% rusuaaucs m FORCE... $17,185, an mcaesse or $l.07l.l9e.00' ~ ‘growthin‘ 6H1» Empire Eff: llnauranrc (linmpaug TORONTO HEAD OFFICE: R. H. MrNeiIL-Dislric! Manager 179 10:11! Street, Charlottetown ' Buuaar zz. 17.55 lktlargestiurh Before to "Anti-Combine" there must be of Island Doukhobors were members a thrifty worked for the community and ll“? community looked after their needs. They were in no sense a Pllbu‘? burden. But now Mayvi‘ 10W ‘l! Grand Falls has been telling Ai- torney-Gcneral Sloan that the com- munity doesn't want the released prisoner's" back again. They are out- casts. Some of the men alreadd released from Piers Island have gone back to their old homes and Bargain Rates to Western Ganada Dates of Sale-March 1st to March 14th inclusive. Final Return Limit-Thirty days in addition to the Piers conviction community. They date of sale. City Ticket Agent' For rates and» full information call Canadian National Railways 94 Great George Street have been driven out with pitch forks and other weapons. Love wants to know what is go to be done about the 200 or m who will appear next summer . be refused admission to the .. munity. Grand Forks, he says q v rightly, can't look after them. Well. the province got the sons . Freedom out of thc way of ear . their own living. And now it i~ have to look after them. To sol one problem, it created another perhaps a bigger one. ' -- a mcruv NICHOLSON 5 7/;- .s/.',Hu‘//f4 \I $111.14" wllllilillliiilibil or. HcNk BRIGHT CUT ma... n-ucxzv a NICHOLSON'S SILVER FOX -A_lJCTF_0N5~ ._LAST RECEIVING oars IN LONDON 1111.190 September 19s., 193s August , a1st1935 SALES May London, England 29m, 1935 M8,. Forhfurther details and shipping instructions please communicate th our New York Office 15,1 West 30th St.. N. Y.' City Fnurk nurn ta co. 58-60 Cannon St., E. C. No. 4