a-nr J _-ms oih'ifim'€'foiin auniififm ~_.~ ‘oauuu a.,iu1.m. 'lea-.Hellcat-il. L laraeoa. Notes' B_}_'_1_'he ”Way_ Marohcamoialikaalampsll' ‘rightg here is hoping it will not.go l susan-suuaca. n. a immune, n. i. o. Wi “U '- 11011 f: 'llheaallnagui-J.l..l¢rana. .il-, . _ Associate ldihlhli. K. Carlin nu no monaco nano- an una no ,uuuo anus This is the month in which the Legislature meets, and preparations §ae\|n_g__ Ilally (handed will ILC: air wil ill savanna) lallvana are 'om' on apwe forthuimportant ii i ' ' event. An accountant from Halifax " MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1930 ' .llaritime Trade Commission The nrst annual report of the Maritime Provinces Trade Commis- sion in Ontario, a copy of which has been received, is of great interest to the people of these Provinces. The annual meeting of the Board of Con- trol was held on February 3 and 4 of the present year. Four lengthy ses- aions were devoted to the receipt and discussion of reports on 'I‘rade Com- mission policies. Among the matters dealt with were contracts with other Maritime agencies, the marketing of fish, lumber, potatoes and fruit, the development of an increased tourist trade to the Maritimes from Central Canada. These reports amply dem- onstrated the existence oi’ large stable markets for Maritime goods provid- ing suificlently large orders can be accepted, and a high standard is set and maintained by Maritime pro- ducers. The need for a. closer study of market requirements, particularly in lumber and fish, and for e. rigid inspection of such commodities as fruit and vegetables, were strongly endorsed by the Commission. As is well known, the establish- ment of the Commission was the out- come of recommendations of the Maritime Provinces Association of Toronto and the co-operation of the governments of the three Maritime Provinces. The services of Mr. R. W. E. Burnaby were secured as Trade Commissioner, and Mr. Burnaby is now installed, with an assistant and two steriographers, in well equipped oiiices on the ground floor of the Federal Building, Toronto, assistant Commissioners have been appointed for Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Of special interest to this Province is the ,statement that over 2,000 cars of New Bunswick and Prince Edward Island potatoes were sold in Ontario markets during the past season. The demand for potatoes this year is re- ported as fairly keen and both pric- es and quality are better than.lo.st year. Rigid inspection of all ship- ments is emphasized as a necessary qualification for successful market- ing of this community. That the Commission has done work of iiiestimable f value to the Maritimes in the short period of its operation is freely admitted. The commissioner testifies to the har- monious cooperation of government- ll onicinls, newspapers, boards of trade and business men both in the Maritimes and Ontario. The pros- pects for continued service are more than encouraging, and the report suggests that consideration should now be' given to future policies. The question now to be considered is whether the best results are to be ob- tained by dealing with a great var- iety of small units as in the past, or whether some attention should be given to the larger problems such as the encouragement of shipping through Maritime ports, nationaliza- 'tion or the pero er seine .mm sud Halifnt, assistance in bringing about the realization of the recommenda- tions cf the Duncan. Commission, and n lystematio s§ly and preparation of a comprehensive report on the im- portant national question of inter- provincial trade. World Perils The 'comforting assurance is giv- i an in "World Dominion." a British publication, that the Yellow Peril, which has disturbed many Europ- ean |tatMmen‘l sleep, never really existed. The hosts of Asia. awaken- ed ina organised by western wen- nicaiacienovforourdestruction,-wiii ispeech” wm°h 1" pm” m ° liovsroroasthecaucuusorthe Ur ths announcement, made by sir neiio-ts ac an me meeting who amino ameiauou. um me mai mineral products are not, J csougm. moi; cumsuua , of the aria. Nature v . acornerolthesepreeipol k if .ij aw- °°»-- . _id [ ‘ '_ ef sm. __ I 'wi 'mis prediction i» focused ei; ’° "'°°° '° '°“"‘"”"°" ‘“‘ "*"°°' D .it oanncttaba the slightest credit. world. and it is not in Asia. The metals are found in well-defined and compact areas in Western Europe and North America. Nine-tenths of the coal, two~thirds of the copper and ninety-eight per cent. of the iron ore consumed by the world, come from these two regions. Seeing that neither the vastness of China nor the organizing genius of Japan can greatly disturb the rigid limit of industrial or military power which mineral wealth or poverty de- termines, the Yellow Peril passes. Exponents of this metallic form of reasoning further claim that by the simple expedient of holding up min- eral supplies, unlversal peace might be imposed upon mankind by the peoples 'of Western Europe and North America. It would appear as though nature all along had been silently preparing through unnum- bered ages to ensure the success of the Kellog Peace Pact! This comfortable thesis, however, is open to the fatal objection that the major mineral distribution can- not yet be so accurately known that further discoveries are impossible, ss, for instance, in the case of the im- mense copper deposits found at Kat- anga in the Belgian Congo. The whole of North. Africa, too, was thought to be entirely without coal, yet important coal measures have just been discovered in Morocco. ‘ In future, Africa may hold such mineral surprises that they will con- stitute a real Black Peril. Science, too may come to the aid both of the yellow and black races, and by im- proved methods may make profitable the working oi’ minerals of low con- centration which exist in immense deposits outside of Western Europe and North America. ' 'I‘he .present color of our peril, how- ever, is neither Yellow nor Brown, nor Black, but White. The_tire1ess efforts necessary to keep the peace among the rich mineral nations ex- ceed those expended for the same purpose on all the rest of the world. Mr Bourassffs Suggestion Mr. Henri Bourassa, Liberal-Im dependent, speaking during the par- liamentary debate on the Draft Ad- dress, offered 's. sardonic suggestion on the preparation of future Speeches from the Throne which might be worth considering by pro- vincial as well as federal govem- ments. I-le said: “I have long come to the con- clusion that since we are evolving into a new state of policy and democracy, Canada should in- augurate a reform, small in it- self, but one which perhaps would give contentment to the common sense of a common sense people; that is, simply enunciate what the Government intends submitting to the House, and leave it to the newspapers, to the commentators, and to the orators who have no thoughts of their own, to dilate upon the good or bad times, the state of the weather, the prosperity or otherwise of the country, and so forth. Especially since it has been decided that the Govemor General is no longer a mere agent of the govemment in Lon- don, but the true personlfication of the King, I think it is unfair to force him to sign under his own name and to pronounce in a magnificent garment while seat- ed on the throne in the Red Chambcr,~such elementary truths as: the wheat we have not sold we still hold; intimating that were it not for the wisdom and foresight of this Govemment, our good friends from the west would have eaten up between them, their wives and children, the hundred million bushels of wheat that have not yet been sold." The Saunders dovemment, like the Mackenzie King Govemment, in the th mouth of th; King's representative, ising references to matters over which it has not the slighihet con- trol, and to circumstances for which If the boilibaltio lllfllflllhl were eliminated,a|alr.Boun|saaug|sats, thelpaecbatthafcrthoomiugopsn- llltoltheldslllltilrewouldbeshort has been busy introducing a new tem of book keeping, and when sys - it has been installed no doubt it will require a specialist in accounting to keep it going. Dame Rumor ever busy, has it that the Government desires to superannuate the present Provincial Auditor and to reorganize the department. But unless Mr. An- derson sees his way clear to retire on his own terms, the Government will strike a snag. ' The question interesting Legislators and public alike is what surplus the public accounts will show. Except in the matter of road machinery the Government has been fairly parsim- onious during the past twelve months, so if it has kept within its estimates there should be a nice little nest egg with which to begin the final year of its term. tice Taft and the appointment of Mr. Charles Evans Hughes as his successor recalls to a contemporary the fact that much more than the administration of the law is concern- ed in such a change. It says there is involved the question whether, or to what degree, a- change is thus brought about in the complexion of a. tribunal possessing ultimate power to declare void the Acts of Federal and States Legislatures, and whose pronouncements accordingly, under a system crowned by a written Con- stitution, exert a special and extra- ordinary influence upon the national life. Judicial control of legislation has been correctly described as Am- erica’s unique contribution to the' science of politics, and it was John Marshall, greatest of Chief Justices, who first asserted this authority' of the Courts 127 years ago. It follows that the Courts-no less than cus- tom, practice, and the acts of Con- gress and of the Legisiatures oi’ ln- dividual States-have a share in the great work of constitutional develop- ment. The law, whether its funda- mental instruments be written or un- written, must keep pace with chang- es in economic and social life and in political thinking, and in the United States it is in a. peculiar sense the privilege of the Supreme Court to di- rect the speed and the direction of advance. It goes without saying that the charge most frequently laid againts this great tribunal, or against a majority of its nine members, is that it is "reactionary," A _luster epithet, and one which would cor- rectly. dcscrlbe Mr. Taft and his suc- cessor, would be "conservative" The two men are as one in their desire and determination to conserve what is best in the national tradition and the system of government which em- bodies it, as the career of each bears witness. United' States and other propagan- clists are again at work in _an en- deavour to wreck the Naval Confer- ence. It will be recalled that a paid representatives of the United states naval shipbuilding industry at Gen- eva deliberately circulated among the U.' S. press representatives erroneous reports of the proceedings in order to inflame public opinion against any curtailment of xiavai programmes, and in a measure succeeded in his purpose. It would be imagined that similar tactics would not be attempt- ed so soon after the disclosure in the U. S. Senate, but it is so, and even more openly. A leading naval and constitutional authority in the Unit- ed States has just published a book in which he' argues it is sheer folly for the United States to enter into any agreement to curtail armaments, military, naval, or air, as soon or late, and probably sooner than iatcr, she will go to war to become Mis- tress of the Seas in her commercial interests. 1 Agaimt this. as the London Times points out, the strength of the Con- ference is that it is backed by the desire of the peoples. There are con- tinual reminders of this substantial fact. One was the deputation of wo» men from British, American, French and Japanese organizations which presented to the Prime Minister, as chairman of the Conference, me- morials urging drastic reduction of naval armaments. Equally notable is the opposition promised by the Ger- man Bocislists to the building by their Government of a series of “pocket battlashipa" like) the one of which so much has been heard. There is, indeed, plenty of ground for Mr. 8i:|owden’a statement in his broadcast to the United States and canada that if the Conference does not succeed in making a delinite ad- vance a .shatterinpblow will have bseninfiicieduponthehopesoitbe peace-lovin peoples of the world. __...'._.¢ Ollitllykllltflperhhuptovis- imhaabeenmadeinthabomlnien Government estimates for public ies`»a.‘misvouiaut‘ew¢nny' haildiagsiathhrrovinoe. Itwas I. ii’ ' i 1 \ ` i A e 4 . ~ \ mr rHAnrn'r'ri-:1'Qw.\i~r:iii\lzniAi._'_ _ _, " _ MARCH 3,1930 .e ' -H "~--`--F- ' ' 'f ‘ _ - -._ _. , U _ . , _ _ ..2__ I Ublf lair. . if' A Mannmas asia. (Edmonton Journal) to the public life of the Dominion lha.H.D. and urging them to forget insular v O °f P"°"‘“°‘“ v‘1d°-*lid “PFW *M sir -why is-.it that the chief CAUSE °F GAS ATTACKS ""°“t’;*°“' °f ““"“';‘_°"' 3 "“‘;‘“;¥ study or more charged wimihefduty - “P °°"“‘”“‘ “" °“» °“~ - - or putting the prohibition law in P¢fh°D5 Y°“ W°Ud°1' Why YW “`° Bennett, K.C., leader of the oppoai- _force mm in-be to put me AM on sometimes bothered with a good deal tion in th, “nur pu-mm,” “_ the rough? I-,very move they mike of gas onthe stomach alittle while dna” Q1, ummm, club tt n is to dr” it mm “___-_ mud and after eating and at other times, al- lm-wheon unngsd m his honor at make it mde u__p°__ul__ than bd°___ though you have actually eaten more me Mmdomld on Thu,-sd‘y_ smel me big and to make _ food, you feel no gas distension what- Q E_ Wus°q__ pmudem of the _h0w*ilU8hm___g_______. d___________ _om WH- Maritime association was chairman ' - ' _ ' - promising and calling off the dogs mglzvlfwgx 1;u;;:_1ZM§;°? cm” °! H° ’°m“`k°d "mt me *ffm W” "W under pressure'\ of the elite, and B “nt °! its und 51”” the ment °" making no serious effort to punish The eating or starchy focda' '“n‘m“°° °f the °3°°°1“t1°n° the class bootle ers must be awful Aa a matter of fact, starch is the M,-_ wuwn paid tribute _ ¢°__¢he trying my th’ n;gve_'of tho” who ` . . _ l' _ ‘ Bennett -` ~ Phe Public Forum this eohuln U Well lo! tbl discussion bi caffllvilllillts of gall-lens( interest The Charlottetown Guardian deal not noeeaaarily endorse the epioiem er eurrenahdelli- ` WHY? _ I ' on )-. . I ' - Telling his bearers of th'e~past con- ' _ _ Mi ' mr’ tnbutieu ei the mritime Provinces 1--1-----'i \ Choice as its namesake - rich -- satisfying'--_yet mild and sweet-Rosebud gives smokers the biggest tobacco value on the market. Aa an added attraction " -“poker hands” in “ms” "“"°"““” °' th” ¥°°°" ' Y°“ “““" °‘ "h° ‘“>'- Wi" *S ‘ °°°"° °f ieugnt so nerd mi- prohibition. i , , » \\ ` and these indeed do carry the most Mn nephew to the wemb|ag,_ Ap_ . Starch. but meat. 2885 and milk have plause greeted Mr. Bennett as he wslggggxsfgat ¢_l;ul;iifw::1°r :Eg _ / each package. think of starchy foods as potatoes. New B,-umwick _ The an has aomet Q , \, i. ' » hing which radi _ _ , R \ bread, sugar, vegetables and so forth, Dr. H. B. Wood introduced Hon. can not pick up_ but "_ is on mg _ /46% / . Nj ‘ `\ _ _ _ L\\\ _ ’ . '\o\`."` \. , upon until they reach the stomach _arg in dugy bound 'A-, help alms oth I am sk _tc _ where they are so changed that they ers less fortunate." he declared, and ' `sU5|,ENSE ' more than half of their contents an-,,¢_ U D y "8 . M in W. » ............. 1... z:;:;:'.i.".;‘::;'.°::.;;i°:..:°,.:.';.°°.; fats yield about ten percent of starch. hem-¢,-5 upon the “omg of the or, me House Things as _mm __ hge Now the digestion of starches; that ggniution wmch' hghoped would be happened i)emre_ why not nzw? Ls tumlns them into susar. basins of service in the community. I,,.,h,, ,,,.,,h,b,@,,,n hw hem can be absorbed into the blood. The fats are not broken up until they the Maritimes to the public iiie er NSSESSION OF LIQUOR acted upon by the bile from ths'liver, In nghggr v¢1n_ h,` wondered U sh, The any Court recom for pass through .the stomach and are gh, p¢m1m0n_ , _ \ , culr PLUG and the juice from the pancreas. Quad. could 1,, . " Thus Nature intended that you without the leadzasprgaztiisssedoftthg x:,dc(;r;1c¢:,:rffi?i§,gdr¢:;x;ki,?,. \ should get 8' good star? °n the dl' Maritimes' toxicated: 83. The report for 102i. ' gcstmn °1 starches "gm .ln me "Why hi*/9 U10 P60916 Of me Mill* records 317 drunks and fourteen in- m°“th' Y°“ were meant- t° chew tim” 8011!? H0 181' Hfleld?" he Hsked- 'toxicated in‘chargc of car These to- °'b°V° dass' By W °“d Chew the” S*“’°hY f°°d= ‘md 8° "Our people have wandered iar over tai ess persons muuiiy' convicted A break them up that the “un °r dh thu °°“““°"¢~ 'rhefe "9 m°F° DB- for having liquor in their "contai Sesulfe Juice of the mouth could get tives of the provinces in other com; ers" or “receptacles” u on won- nt them and wnvert 8' certain pm' munm” th” the" “W in the DFOV- evidence or confession inpcourtsha? portion into sugar before they went' megs, in _ H I di tl ' down to the stomach i “why haw we Mt _“_ __ , 8 u Jurs c on under the Pro- In fact if you have clfewed these There ig 9, ggndgncy on the P3532.; h*,\:r?°n Act' h ` SCHFCHY f00dS Wffll me mflllth Juice Maritimers toward adventure. That singeeiiecijx¢,1°;v;ga3;27mm;ri;l:|`: will continue to act on them for some may be pamy because they were the new order of promised _Mor time after they reach the stomach, bgm by the sem ment Each of them have aw ng; the Si0ma¢h 01' sastric _iuice lust “The sea has a call of its own; it varying from $2 up to $30 Ever e busying itself with the proteids- “|13 mr adveut,u.e_ for wandering apparently escaping the _zoo ymlze meat, eggs, cereals, and so forth. mmm; strange people. into strange ,mum “ne under Prombmow or h; N°W me Starchy f°°ds 5h°uld real' lplaces- 5° 0111' D€0P\9 have wandered. _iailable cases a few days confine- ll’ b°°°’“° fluid bu” if °“°“€h W°’k "There, too. are limitations imoos~ ment instead or the minimum three 2° “° ‘" “W avr ' m , en e o a ces or . begin to»ferment, gases form, and im}‘:es‘;xed:1:i“;¢:r(it:.l1e‘;i¥illeir?iiT:tilolE,inrn;}3: gr;/c;n`;:yt(;f :;Eug§u,3gu(;;s\ you have that heavy distressed feel- of their own surroundings. Most or except 1,, ~C,,,,§_,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,»- of mg ins of which I spoke above. our people have gen that thu., were Pmmbmon Act The Act do_s not __________ ___ _i_______.____ _ Of course a. little later when the ,few opportunities in their native give ~di5¢,-imh,a¢,,,y owers t P ml '- starches get out of thestomach the 'pr-°v1n¢e,_ peering these ummmons prosecutor or maglslzrate '_ D S _ er pancreatic Juice works on them again om- page page wandered far ,meld mme what qummy or H :lor 2_8; and helps tum them mm susan 'D Wk better °PD0l'¢\1f1itl€5." M stitutes an offence Theq absoliit But often so much starchy 'food R un _ ~ ' e i- right in the mouth, whereas the pro- "W, ue unxularly bland' in be_ The critical illness of Chief Jus- ltelns (meat and eggs) are not acted ing natives of the Maritimes and we 2f',;]‘z,l;ecL1,Tgn;l;repute to pn? remarked upon the contribution of and to save ,i aside as unprofitable servants? Wherein_ does give the Commission powerto make fish of one and flesh of theiotheri . ___ \\\\\\\ ,_\\\\\\\\\\Z/ --"_"-_'_ hom, and by what authority is this fewer number sel- ected for punishm .opened to the gr must be reasons. ent, and _the doors eater number? _There Is it the falniliar'commc\‘clal idea `|that there is no money in 'them to s the vvherewithal to pay the fines, well the funds? That- they- haven! all board they 'are cast the Prohibition Act I am Sir; etc., JUSTIQIA THE SCHOOL QUESTION Sir -We 'all bww dist “Bac-rifice _ r _ `i losnaoo is the Price of l_’f°Kl‘°U" and conver- sely there can be no progress without sacrifice. How many people on P. E. Island are prepared to- sacrifice in the interests of thh youth oi this beautiful province well named the “Garden of Canada?" We are all con- scious or not looking forward for sound investments paying large div- idends: Then iet us tum our attent- ion to the nation's greatest undev- eloped resourcs; Its' boys and girls. Invest in these and the dividends will surpass all your expectations and con- tinue pnying till time shall be no more. Reader are you prepared to do your part? A young man once asked me the ` "" ` Swim?- h- .hm of .u..°';‘?’...'...€.‘I.12£h.i.°*‘“‘°“:..;‘:.~ .‘1:.°2;;§‘,°. ‘"” ’Priiice .Edward Is|and’s broken up sufficiently-and goes Mr., Bennett contended that their! in“'p?¢;§esc;i;1n'»‘§r iigiiligrklnhggoritiin downto large intestine where the or- sense of obligations to their God gi f ¢_h ., r ' ` ~ -~ - - \ -- ganisms there attack them and gas 'their patriotic nature has resulted ir; vexngntlrtls/is ‘thgcifecorllhiiri i?ilileBE;?e" “ - ‘ ,, is formed again. ' the high characters of the Maritimes. co y ‘ 0 u tu Now the whole point is that _if you “There is no greater element in wh? W};Z,i;?: “A233353 thgydrxfxlg eat when you are in a hurry and :success than to be bom poor," he mandate are those hundpeds of Vlo_i vile in we much Starch without 'said renin-king that luck er mater- iutors handled with such i i 1 3 breaking it up inthe mouth, you need 'ici wealth tended to stimulate the vor while others :spec a B- “°t be S“1`Pfi-‘ed if Y°\l have BHS ai- 'ability of individuals. or more excusablc s<>ofxf1e:i;orsthi:: 31:8 t k . ' . ’ ' “C 9 _ ‘We mustremember these prov-_ ted with the full penalty of the Mes are now merged in the con- Act? rom* nanny ‘ federation which is the Dominion of Q~ Wh” °“'° ith’ °“f'°°“’“u“¢ dm” that love of our homes which char - d. - conneowd mm Fort Ganym wmm- “curb” ""7 tm’ ”*"V° °f ml e "Service does not consist of the' Pell? Maritimes. ‘ A_ Th omsmndmg da,” an me 0 amount of space you can occupy in e Th' "“dm°"‘ °f th* Mafmmea the newspapers. Here in a new coun- Wfblet On F0" Gmy in W‘““1P°3 have much to do with the calib __ _ F1, I Fm,,t_ ed F9 try a new nation is being formed- 2'_‘;__a]1__;_°6 bu;';°by the Nomfuaiest |;’:__t;_1emp_e_;>_i_;i_e_, ;;\d____s_e_ Io_l;>pe___that it is stu_i_;iastic. Let us serve by re- ’ "1 011 member the tradition of the company. isis. Fort aim-elm des-' ____ _ tmyed. iazz. 'rue second roi-i-. oiora.i» cl Frxrt GQITY. after th of the Hudson., Ba; _ “Let us make our contribution to I _md Norm west cos 1835 Fon mm . this nation, not in any insular or . provincial way, but in the broader Canada. Pride of being canadian m, d d Th THE WE W e . oss. inmates are in every mlm l'¢Pl8¢e the insular pride of be- reasonable sense selected from me ny nuuva riuoa meta native or the Maritimes. we V i UWB- with that pride use all our will re°i§i'e'rh'i;`er these truditi , _ ons-will ffgliuy W bwd “P tl” camdiln nb- remember the duty to the nation- ___ "int _ - those obligations which are imposed "° ml" Mi 1°” that pride. upon us by tradition must be ruiriu- Maritimes: 'Fear God, honor the King, love one another.' T116 ]BliS BFG full. They are Qvgr- ian is editing this Special rebuilt, with mme wsus running :ao Sense B _ f , , _ _ ' . ut let us neve f t th ” ~:.-.~ f. d i uzsoreeinerm " °’°° ° _ ... ,,_., ,__ feeteas an wm an . l d ,' . .__ , . . and south. 1850 Walls extended north- B; éfsrmwxshpzg angie' _ “__ _ ' ' " "1, ward and this gate exeotcd. 1882 _ by Dr ,mme . pe ‘ °’°°°°°'°°°°*"""*"‘**. fort sold. and walls excepting W” ,,Mr` B it h ld _ . 4 - W’ "W d°m°u"h°d' 1897 05"' W “Ml ‘N wuxloned ful contrlsiition t?tllz1‘e r:a:io:?"ns3d WY 9°” Pf°“"*?d W “‘° "“°' A mygnm M M mm me doctor. "civuintion is hunt not 9°” BW C°'mP°“_y V’ th’ my °‘ Wm' mm d co ' mb my by Eovemmentl and policies but bi' “""°“' 'ms "lm p"°'°°“'*“ W th’ sm mn °h°,:y“' persenautiss. Mr. Bennett ndsmme C’-“‘“”““ °1“" °f W”““P°K in 190°- skdfnwgutgm' Wh '°° °“bm°"°d wonderful application of the quai- ities which comprise pe allt . A Berlin PM °1flC0 1198 N011 Nui' u” “mmm 'mpc' “Wt honor him, irrespectivemgfn ou: pg: pped with automatic letter boxes, and » iticai affiliations." ii ine iedintiiemm w°“°"p°° V' iinioenisdneenseute. THE KINGFISIIEB Ilorlotnly sland- rcachcd a certain total weight, they _HW h“"°7 _ are conveyed automatically cn a tra- °°°“° veling band to the sorting room. The outside world smoked nearly half billion American eight and one- _ a c,sm,,,,,, ,M ,em . ne me immune; _unoeiievisiy B r | n g been provided, and everyone interest- ed wanted to know what_new enter- prise the King Clovemment had in view. On .inquiries being made a wag suggested that the only public build- ing for the Inland the Government had in visw.wa|'a greatly enlarged and up-to-date jail to which to send the overflow from the three county’s Jslll. nu if a maiden cmirfarty re-. cently convicted of b00tlil'li'llloom- plained that the oi!iou'l`.h|4 me "riabbed"anotherbooticggsrwl\owa| knowntobeapoddlerinamrallyav, Hewastoidthaiailwaafullatprea- entmdsobootieggeiawhecsaldpay r-iisimuu an-queue siue me mo- ci .men Firli;lilh0l.\etf¢eli Onllllkodtreo Andmndlyblue ’l'hen,le|twlconlurehimas over- drevt. He_turnsto|howu| his cornelian breast, - Bafclehedarts Alougtheawoolen sinam.~avivid streak. ‘ . Hlsahortwiagawllrrlngmdhian- piatbeak Bilfflyouubrust. , little.l0v|ly»v‘italthing from thepllvlrlt ofthe c§§§§§§§` iii-5; ;.. 'ei ii B ° ,,,,,_,,,,, 7 'Mail Urders -_..--._----l.._;____. The Goqiis 'Yeats u¢ne.»l| your ang stonwaniacanbaaapplugpy lava-yqaiekly waotoof- yoarpart. amorlsra schsaarosl senlyoawhae slgiii ?5§§al sill! The 2' Macs _ wana osugefsuuv ,. A Booster Feature To Stimulate Business and Business Con- ditions in Prince Edward Island, published by The Charlottetown Guardian Wc` are Soliciting the Cooperation of the Business Firms ‘and Leading Men _of Charlottetown, 'Summerside and the Province. I Mr. Frank Walker, Assistant Editor of the Guard- Feature Edition, which is now in the course of publication, and Mr. J., M- Kirk- land is in charge of Publicity. f‘ i Boost for a" Cre¢rter"Province E. R. BR O W 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown Fire, Life, Accident; Sickness and Plate Glass.. Insurance at Lowest Rate. _Good Strong Stock Companies Agent at Summerside, hloyd Lewis Gyproc Plaster Just received direct from Factory-, One full can-load GYPROC PLASTER BOARD . 3-8~ and 8-16 thick 4 x 7-4. x 8-'-2| x 9-I-4 X 10- Prices Right. , -L_ M. Poole & ce. i ,-..,_._.;3.___ __ .‘ " , .:. u .__ . 5 ~ _ i. ?`f,"§i, ri i... _ ~ , i» _ . , _ -4 .9 i.; ..5!r.§Qif.‘ / i l