.3 1111 .. initial I Vis- \’ R ,. . ,. .: ».' 1,, l .‘ .;i 15,, .. .- WV ‘\ E .9, :- *-:.-~ rs‘-7-1-: - 4.4:’... nm CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN MAY 7; 1936 K The charlottetovm iiiardian Pvuhlobt. Llont.-('ol. W. Chufer 3. Islam. VIuo~Pr-uldent. J. Ii. Burnett. I‘. J. I. luntln. Llnnt.-Col. D. A. luclflnnol. D. I. 0. R. BIIIOII. F. J. I Clflll. Editor and Innulng Director. J. Auoolato lilitorb. Ifrn-k walker and 0- K- ulvuoc) delivered In Clly. 88.00 per you (In advance) IIIHOO '0 Prluoo ldward Inland. 84.50 p ("I |¢“'°‘l Ihllod to Canada and United States. '.l'lI'UBSDAY_, MAY '1. 1930. Housman As Moralisl The press tributes paid to the recently de- ceased English poet, A. F.. HOUSMAN, make a point of stressing the poet's allegeddiking for beer. From frequent references in his work to this beverage, inferences are drawn which, we venture to say, are entirely wide of the mark. In the two little volumes wliich he left Of lmPCl’lSl|' able \'erse—":\ Shropshire Lad" and “Last Poems"—beer, it is true, is eulogized as a sedat- ive- but much of lIoL's.\Ii\N's finest work is in the’il'0llic vein, and nowhere is this more evident than in his references to alcoholic stimulant. Most iiewspapcr revieivers seem C0ml3l¢l":lll ‘° have ignored this fact. .-\ copyright article In the New York Harald Trilnme, for example, quotes the fullowiiig lines from “Epll0gue" in the "Sliropsliire Lad" witlioiit any apparent under- itanding of the meaning between the lines: “Why, if ‘his dancing you would be. 'I‘he':c‘s brisker pipes than poefn’. Say, for what were hop-yards meant, Or why was Burton built on Trent? on, many a peer of England brews Livelier liquor than the muse, And malt does more than Milton can To justify God's ways '0 mim- Ale, man, ale’s the stuff to drink For fellows whom it hurts to thlnll. Look into the pewter P05 To see the world as the world's not." Those who cannot see that this is merely me poets way of ruliculiiig the popiilar prefer- encc for beer over the diviner iutoxicant of poetry, sliould not bother attempting to ‘read l'l0(.'S.\l.-\N at all. But had the reviewer continued his quotation for .’lll0lll(’l‘ dozen lilies, even the most casual reader would have detected tlle moral‘. Here it is: "And faith. ’tis pleasant till 'tis past: The mischief is that 'twill not last. on 1 have been to Ludlow fair And lcfi, my necktie God knows where. And carried half way home, or near Pints and quarts of Ludlow beer: Then the world seemed none so bad. ‘ And I myself a sterling lad: And down in lovely muck I've lain, Happy till _1 wake again. Then I rnw the morning sky; Helgho. the tale was all a lie: The world. it was the old world yet. I was I, my things were wet, And nothing now remained to do But begin the game anew." (‘an one find, in all English literature. a nutter temperance sermon than this? but it is as a poet, not a, iiioralist. that lioL's.\i.\.\' should he enjoyed. Now that he has ,r.,vone, the following beautiful lilies from “l.:ist Poems" take on a prophetic meaning and deeper poignancy: "lVr'll to flu» -woods no more, The laurel: all are cut, Tliv liorrcrs arc liarc of llay Thu! 0ll[L‘ Ilzc .l[u.tc: r:'or(‘; The year (Irate: in (he day And soon will crciiing shirt: The laurel: all are cut, We'll lo the woods no more. Oh ice-'ll no more, no more To the leafy woods away, To the high wild woods of laurel , Alld the bower: of buy no more.” Britain To The Rescue As often in Britain's “rough island story," says the Mail and Empire, it has again fallen to American and other nationals to take refuge in a war-ridden foreign capital under the British flag. The story of what happened over the \veek- I end in Addis Ababa reads like a romance. The United States legation in the Ethiopian capital, attacked on all sides by war-like natives, was unable to communicate with the British legation four miles away. The United States represent- ative therefore sent a wireless appeal to Wash- ington. VVashington telephoned across the At- lantic to the British Government. The British Government instructed the British legation in Addis Ababa by cable or wireless telephone to go to the succour of the hemmed-in Americans. The British commander at the legation there- upon sent a body of Sikh troops under command of British officers across the city to raise the siege of the American legation. King HAIL! SELASSIE, with his family, had already taken - refuge on a British warship lying off the coast. All of which leads to the reflection that if the United States had joined President Wn.soN’s League of Nations, Germany and Japan would never have retired from the League, and the League would have been strong enough to pre- vent Italy's attack upon Abyssinia. . Page Dr. Grant -u-—v-t-r-**----'-''''‘- ,, ,_ Dz M.P., who recently complained ' bout the lack of publicity this Province received in 3 map published in it Conservative political phlet, Wm fin¢.1v..‘u|,,‘q-,1, matter for I more egitimate complain if. he examines the new ad- vertising folio pub shad-by l_l1°.C#“3d"‘“ T““"l Bureau, Departn/1§flt of Railways and Canaliy Ottawa. This tailor purports to love In Id" of the Bureau’: new*2o in United ‘States newspa ' he vdtl HQ! °"' ‘f"i’i".ia-.. . , 1 " _ "u ‘question land. Fermi g-system. of advertising pen and mlgallllfl Edward Island. True, the tourist is invited in one advertisement to roam our “red cliffs and sandy beaches"; but the illustrations to the text afford no hint of our existence_ Immediately ad- joining the textual reference to Prince Edward Island are pictures respectively of Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia, the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec, salmon fishing in New Brunswick, and Grand Pre, Nova Scotia. More than one advertisement displays prominently the features of Mr. IRVING S. Conn, American writer and movie actor; but for the features of Canada's Garden Province and Cradle of Confederation, or any part or par- cel thereof, one must seek elsewhere. Editorial Notes This is the anniversary of the torpedoeing of the S. S. Lusitania in 1915. X it ik According to Senator DANDURAND, the lllacxznzns KING Government sold our Merch- ant Marine to Australia for less than scrap. 3K 3K 3% The New Glasgow News is raising the ques- tion of the future of Senator HANCE LOGAN, lest he and his works be forgotten with the passage of time. K V X Not a single one of the readjustments of tariffs and taxation is in the interest of farmers, save and except the concession to fox breeders obtained by Mr. J. VVALTER JoNas. NE *6 9K The present good standing of Canada is due to five years’ arduous and successful administra- tion in the time of a world crisis when most countries went hopelessly "in the red.” But, says .\Ir. BENNETT, the policy now being pursued by their successors is almost certain to cause a dis- astrous revolution. fl X It is with pleasure we note Mr. T. F. DRU.\ll\ilE, of the Saint John Telcgrripli—JourmiI has been elected to the Presidency of the Can- adian Daily Newspr sr Association, and Mr. H. P. DUCHEMIN of The Sydney Past-Recon! has been re-elected First Vice—President of the Canadian Press. BK 306 According to Mr. FRANK F.i.IAsoN, Secre- tary of the United Farmers of Canada, Saskat- ,cl1ewan, the farmers will not benefit a cent from the Dunning Budget. The agricultural implement manufacturer will maintain their present prices ‘and add the Sales Tax: while in the case of the oil companies “apparently they had foreseen the cut and raised their price accordingly." 3K 9K BK It is reported Premier Cluurai-:i.i. has decid- cd to refuse any share of the Federal Uiieiii— ployment Relief Fund. He points out, it is said, that if he does, the Province must pay an equiva- ilent amount, and it cannot afford to do so. If this Province can get along without unemploy- ment relief we certainly are “on the top of the world" and the fact should be blazoned abroad to the four quarters of the globe. l 3! filé ale l In Canada, said Mr. P. J. Rowe, S.C., M.P., Athabasca, people were trying to make employ- ment on one hand and on the other to cut down employment by the use of labor-saving devices. Mr. ROWE referred to the appointment of Mr. A. B. PURVIS as head of the National Employ- ment Commission by saying “I suppose he quali. lies as head of the unemployment board because he is adept at uneniploying people.” if 3K 3K - The Penitentiaries Commission, of which the late Mr. HARRY W. ANDERSON was a mem- ber, has had a succession of mishaps which has prevented it functioning. On the day of his ap- ‘ pointment as chairman, over two months ago. Mr. Justice ARCHAMBEAULT, suffered a frac- tured leg. He suffered a further injury just when his recovery from the first was complete. Now his colleague Mr. ANDERSON has gone, and the ,Commission will be further delayed till a suc- ‘cessor has been appointed. ; iii an in When the Central Women’s Institute pro- tested to the Government against letting Miss lMACMILLAN go without an endeavour to retain her services, the Government told them they could select her successor. Accordingly the Exe- cutive interviewed and examined six applicants, and unanimously agreed upon one as the most eflicient and one likely to be a worthy successor to Miss MACMILLAN. Fancy their surprise and disgust when they discovered that, without a word of explanation, the Government gave the appointment to another. i if X lNotes by the Way A compilation of Domhlua Gov- srnment figures show: that the total oost of the Great. War to Can- ada, in “ interest ‘ over the past twenty years, has been the stnaserlns Sum 0‘ 04.341.488.004. There is only one thing worse than to lose a wax-—and that is to win it. —-Financial Post. The President’! I“-“ville was “Do something, and when you have done that something. if it works do some more. and if it does not work do something else. You young people want action. You believe as I be- lieve that something that needs to be done can be done." And how sig- nlflca.ntly American it is to believe that.-—Toronto Daily Star. The season of tragic bathing fatalities will soon begin. If one oounted only the number of times when, according to the daily papers, drowning is due to ignorance of the art of swimming, one would be Sllfliflsed at the umber of lives which might be ved. provided Practically everybody oouid swim well. swimming, into the bu‘g51n,l3 asplendld exercise for the body. one should teach children to swim from the age of four or five. once they have learned the art, they will never forget it. Learn to swim Yourself, if you don't already know how. There are instructors every- where who can teach you in a very short. time.—La Tribune, Sher- brooke. A Harvard professor says: “It is egregious obscuraniism to postulate that sycopat-ion in harmoniznuon has an immoral connotation." ’I‘i-ans- lotion: Jazz won't hurt your morals, if nny.—Grand Rapids Press. With vast. experience of colonial overlordshlp, Britain has learned to L~: magnnnimous. and liberal, to. ward, and very considerate of the aspirations and rights of people under her chaperonage or tutelage, But. nowwhere should she exhibit ll‘..CI'8 genuine deference than to her peoples of India. And 3.11 her tendency is toward increasing their share in and responsibilities of gov- ernment and in educating them go that end. In that the best of British traditions are linking up with the best. of mdian aspiraticns.——Mon- treal Witness. The declaration of President Roosevelt that he seeks to make it possible to keep every bay and girl in school until the age of 13 will appeal to many people as idealism ~ run rampant. There are thousands of buvs and girls better of in the actual school of life at an earlier figs than 1il.—St. Catherines Stand- ar . George Lansbury. veteran leader of the British Labor party. on his way to preach peace on the con- tinent, said before sailing; “we are trying to be true-hearted followers of the Prince of Peace. who was crucified on Calvary because He Dreachcd the realist way of life." A noble idealist. yet a voice crying in a wilderness of armaments.-—0t- tawa Journal. I have not narrated everything that I have seen or learned during my long and adventurous career, because I have the right. to unfold only sectlom that are mine, and because I do not wish to follow the example of some men who, when they speak from beneath the tomb. accuse. attack, destroy—-and only give the victims an opportunity to reply by digging their nails into the planks of one‘: coffin.—-Memoirs M. De Blawitz. By serving min-garglne instead of butter to the troops of the Royal Air Force. Great. Britain saves about £25,000 a year. The aviators have been complaining about it, and their cause has been taken up by champions who urge that butter be used as a ration instead of the substit.ut.e.—'rhe Windsor star. no suggestion tint Government business should have precedence in the Dominion Parliament for the first six weeks or two months of every session has distinct merit After the slate is cleared of the Government's program, the mem- bers who want to get. themselves into Hansard for thebenefit of the folk back home could have their inning.—Peterboro llbramlner. We knew It was Io:-nothing like that. Mussolini intimate that Basset! Ethiopians are victims of their own degenerate acts. They tried to unloose poison gas upon the Italians in their own clumsy way The curse of the Sales T are is that it pyra- mids. The mu-iufacturer adds 8% and the re- tailer another 8% making the consumer pay 15% or 16°/$—making his dollar worth only 84c. Besides it imposes a great expense on the business man keeping books and records of his sales and paying for the auditing and return of his sales. It acts as premium to U, S. A. exporters and a handicap to Canadian industry and enterprise. Of course it saves millions of dollars to the gov- ernment making the business man tax collector with no hope of evasion, whether he collects his accounts or not. K V Hon. Mr. C. A, DUNNING, practical business man as he ll, has done a praiseworthything in wiping out the distinction between ordinary and capital surpluses and deficits. It has been the practice of the Finance Ministers and Premiers of both parties to budget for an alleged surplus on ordinary account, and a deficit on capital ac- count. In this they were merely attempting to deceive themselves and hoodwink the electors. Mr. Duumna put: an end to it. He said the Gov- . u z‘ " and ~e:Jn9rievi:motceh'leil’ii‘l: than eminent was determined to present clearly the ‘ - mu. mgphy over-all deficit in the Government’: accounts. “In the past we have too frequently misled our- selves," said Mr. Dmmmo, "by the form in which our Government accounts were presented. luv: po_lntg__d with pride to a Small surplus on ‘nary account and we have tended to mini- the importance of large deficits resulting .. , __ _ ' expenditures." and the stuff boekfired.—Klngstaon tlliljat pg II). gala. mp. DIZZINESS —- USUALLY DUE TO EAR OI LIVER. '1'ROUBl..E when an attack of dizziness oc- curs there is often the feeling on the patient that there is something wrong with his heart. As a matter of fact most cases of dizziness come from a disturbance in the ear or in the liver. Generally but not always when the objects about, the patient seem to be going "around and around", or the patient. himself seems to be going around and around, the trouble,is in the ear. whereas when things appear to be going up and down or the patient feels that ho isvgoing up and down the liver is at fault. When the ear is at fault, that is the part of the ear that “balances" the body. it is very often due to some trouble in the nose and the sinuses adjoining the nose. Acute or chrome catarrh, or infection of the sinuses immediately behind the nose are the commonest causes of this dizziness which is usually ae- companled by nausea or a “tink- llng" noise in the ear. These attacks occur about once or twice a month, lasting from a few minutes to a few hours, or even for a few days. The treatment in these cases is to look for trouble about the nose and sinuses, and if this is found and re- moved the attacks disappear. Of course it fresh infection occurs, the attacks of dizziness may return. Treatment, during attacks consists of any quletiiig medicine such as phenobarbital. While this is a most helpful drug. there is the chance that the patients may acquire the “barbltal habit." When the attacks of dizziness cannot be prevented or controlled operation for removal of the little bones in the middle ear may be per- formed as these bones obstruct the outlet and prevent the removal of thickened material, which is causing the diulness, headache and deaf- ness. The removal of a part. of the large bone behind the ear ithe mastoid) is sometimes necessary to prevent these attacks. The attacks of dizziness due to the liver in which the objects go up and down (not around and around) are prevented or controlled by cut.- tlng down on rich starch or fat foods. The use of level teaspoonfuls of Epsom salts regularly for a week or ten days every month should prove helpful in this type of dizzi- oaafl ma FROM “A SHROPSHIRE LAD" I hoed and trenched and weeded, And took the flowers to fair; I brought them home unheeded; The hue W35 not the wear. 80 up and down I saw them For lads like me to find, When I shall lie below them, A dead man out of mind. some seed the birds devour, And some the season mars, But here and there will flower The solitary stars. And fields will yearly bear them As light-leaved spring comes on, And luckless lads will wear them when I am dead and gone. —A.E.Housni.sn. Palestine’s Troubles (Exchange) For the fourth time since the establishment of the mandate than is trouble in Palestine between the Jews and the Arabs. Apparently so far as violence is concerned the Arabs are the aggressors. The five Aflob relnesentatives who recently visited lush Oommissioner Sir Arthur Orenfell vlauchopo stated l-ll“ “"9 l'l°l'1hE had been caused by the lovemi-neat‘: refusal to for- bid Jewish immigration and by tho sale of land to Jews. 1; is hlflhly probable that if this last Whig-standard. no can of Agriculture has discovered a. racket that the of- ficials are suppressing with not a from the prairies for one publica- tion available for farmers p. on investigatio . which showed that children were sending {or it, gs the Plus were only printed onone side. It develops that the books were "3 Y°\lnlllfl‘8. who mailed Wins no-Mae. Admitting this. was a racket, it may be that the child. Rn actually but the debllftmoatsl publication to better use than some of their elders. At least they used both their heads and their pencils. —Moritri.-o.l Glbette. In the hone-and-blur Ian. observes the Kingston Whic- Btandard, "the ahllmh euthwittel in Philadelphia had permission. be- tween 1798 and 1831. to stop all vehicular traffic by placing largo amino some: the principal Itrooto" fortunately they didn't have keep on hand a stock of mu! sunning] io {W Point has standard. It wil be recalled that when Britain did the some thing then was a good deal of e(I'lBlAl'fll- tion throughout the world, but thlnu went along about the was as before. Therefore, Poland’: jump will not,creal.e undue excitement of onaion.—.I:: - little regret. A growing dgmuu! refuse to consider. The ‘farts their applications "O.H.I(.3." thin to e on the nllthbttbooo la.-oiauuriuwiiioiriiuy objection were closely examined it would be found. as has been found before, that in not . few can the vendors are Arabs; but this is an aspect which the Arabs Hlsh commissioner explained that 50 ....um 13 :_ that is a major policy, mu mg. noted that I delegation of his collar: 20 to London and dlsow the question with the coioniu being use as scribbelrg by the ie- Offioe Intheond ifthsunotsuonot , booouu ‘ some modus opeundl must. be worked out. The British in date wormed to con- older the interests of both people, and seems to impose to please neither, which sunsets that an effort ll beinc mode to keep the pranlu. But the task is one of iateulnlr difficulty. for the differ- ences between these two peoples, inhabiting a small country, go fu- lnck into history and cut. deeply into nllsiova. ouiiui-.1 and national nwlu. The inunigrant Jew! have done much economically for the country through ociontiflo agricul- turo and industry. But the old Arabs, seeing the land of their mum on they regard it becom- ing the pouualbn of "unbellev. cu." donottako the long view gifts of the newcomer: will shun. The young Arab. drunk with the heady wine is i which III hops Jealous of in: t E and inltll Jewish immigrants lions Change Ringing: 111 Minor And MaJ01'5 3. Gordon in Oomlns Events in Britain.) ‘more on over four thmfllnd pen]; of bells in the British Lies. and about 40.000 d°V°“°‘ °‘ me craft of chance rlns1n8~ WW5‘ Great Britain 1,. mud only in certain pa-rt! 0‘ the ampin and in a few places in the United states of Amerlcl Whem the tradition was established by English immigrant-1» The art is at least three hund- red year: old and has never lapsed. It may be regarded as evidence of the fact that the Englishman will contrive to introduce a sporting 01' athletic element into everyilllns (313. that is capable of sustaining 15-. Certainly change ringing demands stamina as well as precision and the team spirit. Speaking broadly. change ringing is to present a ser- ies of bells in every possible mathematical permutation. Th? manipulation of the eight bells of :1 complete dlatonic scale involve: therefore the ringing of 40.820 dif- ferent sequenbes. This operation is called a Major and it takes about 28 hours non-stop to complete, each man swinging his bell over 5,000 times. Obviously the ringing of a Majcr is not an undertaking week of the year, but it is per- formed ln many an English village on such great occasions as ii. Royal Jubilee, and certainly many ring- ers will be looking eagerly forward to ringing a Mhjor next. year in honor of the Coronation of King ' Edwin‘ 1 VIII A Minor may be heard in hund- ‘ reds of different places in England on any Sunday, usually before evening service. It is every possible permutation of six bells that is 720 changes and it takes about half an hour to complete. Among the more famous peals of bells that may be heard regularly may be mentioned that at St. Paul's Cathedral before service on Sunday morning and Sunday after- noon: St . Martin's (Parish Church),, Birmingham. on Sunday morning and often on Tuesday evening; Ind York Minster, on Sunday and varying weekdays. But a Minor is hard to escape on any Sunday in any English village. There are a few peals of 12 dif- ferent bells. and long ago the name of Maxlmus was assigned to the complete change-ringing of that set. A Maxlmus has been rung only in the ringers’ dreams, how- ever, for it. would involve 410 million changes and take nearly 40 years to complete. They say that to ring a Maximus is the ringers’ idea of heaven. 0 I 0 In ordinary change ringing, the ba-‘c rule is that every bell that can change its position in the ser- ies must do so at each successive blow. Thus if a peal of five bells begins down the scale 1 2 3 4 5, the next sequence with be 2 1 4 3 5, followed by 2 4 1 5 3. This plan yields only ten changes with five bells and it is stage number one. It will be observed that each bell works in regular order,from the first position to the last. In practicr it celebrates its tenure of first or last position by two blows. The progress of number one bell from first position to last is known as “hunting up;" the reverse pro- cess as "hunting down." Now this set of five bells ls cap- able of 120 changes or permuta- tions. and new rules must. be in- troduced to pass beyond the series of ten mentioned above. The rules are too numerous and involved for detailed exposition here, but it may be noted that the first variation. and also the oldest historically. is known as the Orsndsim and ad- riots and strikes. On the Jewish side cuoful outside recorders sug- gest that not sufficient effort has been made by the newcomers to understand what must be the out- look of the Arabs nor to conciliatc and soften the impact of new ideas. Perhaps out. of the wreckage following the rocunent clashes there may come wiser thought on both sides and an effort to begin over again. Palestine, in o grea‘ many ways, has a splendid record to show this last decade. But. that record is dukened and distorted by Arabian-Hebrew quarrels; and will continue to be until both sides are willing to seek the road of conciliation and pesos. Mao: condition . Powder FOB HORSES AND CA'I"I"LE Toma up the system, cum all skin troubles and [Ivan I glouy out of hair. For urol- Ien Ion, purifying the blood and an an Indicator of worms. It to an unfailing remedy. MACS PIG-WORM POWDER A very effective remedy In the treatment of worms. ' MACS BLOOD FOOD change ringing mall - the aim of. for every , “ The Haberdashery” Friday and Saturday suns $11.50 This Friday and Saturday we are going to continue our Suit Sale. Fine Worsted Suits, smartly tailored and regularly sold at $20.00. Go on sale at $17.50 ‘ These Suits are shown in Browns, New Blues, Black and White, etc., and are all new this season. We ask you to compare these Special Suits with cheaper makes, . . . Friday and Saturday only $17.50 Special Sale of spring Topooats $12.50 New Spring Topcoats clearing up at $12.50 Friday and Saturday. A few last year's Topcoats at $9.50 HENDERSON & CIIIIMORE MEN'S WEAR mits 30 more permutations The bell returns to its normal positibii. A ringers first task is to learn to wins his bell and control the timing of its stroke. He must mm to give exactly that weight of pull that will swing his bell over tlii point. of balance, if he is to be-coma aoceptable as a member of Pt team. Change ringing depends for its effectiveness upon perfect timing, and there must be no hllrrylllg or slackenlng throughout the whole operation, whether it be a five- mlnutes’ Doubles or a twenty- elght. hours’ Major, or even, for the Grandsire involvm a methodical interference with the order of the bell that precedes the treble, with a nsequent throwing out of work of ‘he fourth and fifth bells. which are said to dodge. After the Grandsire the servlcm of a oonductor become necessary in order to control the intricate in- terweavlng of "‘bobs" and “singles" by means of which the permuta- tions are in fact. exhausted in coherent order, and of oourse, without any repetition of a sequ- ence 01' change. matter 0 that , a Moxlmus in To make this change ringing Eternity, lble Etwh bell 15 hung on a Do not think it. is enough to lis- eam attached to the upper part of a wheel. A rope is fixed to an up- i ten to change ringing. That is only a. small part of a. rich experience The other part is to find out the ancient inn where the ringers fore- gather after their Mhjor or Minor per spoke of the wheel, passes through a hole in the rim, then proceeds along the rim until it. falls into the belfry, where it. is grasped by a ringer. Each ringer swings his bell by pulling the rope until his bell stands mouth upwards. Here the bell is arrested by the simple mechanism and delivers it; note, but a "hand-stroke pull" will exertions, and to hear them dis- cuss the operation. Only the in- itiated will understand all the language. but the onlooker must be careful, should he take part in the conversation. not to betray himself as a Philistine by call a hell ‘‘it.'' To the ringer a bell evoke a second clang before the always “she." Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea use BRA HMIN orange Pekoe Tea E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Life, Accident,- Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Beware! Bewarell Beware ! ! ! Mr. Moth: There Is no doubt about It my dear, times Ire leltllll harder. Minnie Moth (-nanollm WW" the matter now! Mr. noun: I've been Ioollnr unndandftooomstomelhlflll the women in town are WW"! their fur coat: in the Island For- rlon Storage Vault. 0. Minnie Moth: You I know: but I llao HIM! 0' ' In warm oloooto one will w-"40 " few out: In home: for the who with pimty or food as mu Iorfaloallfhlnrooplo. A combination especially valuable In the treatment of THE 2 ‘MACS '-" °"'."....‘.*.'.:- --» Pbllllll. -I-Inner month-: It the hind Furriers sun net 0"" nut. ' scientific For storage You Pulbotovodanllnnndagalnlt. l""vT"°" \ 'tl|IMOChlllII“|III‘0IIIulOF‘lll. 8945 of you own valuation. We call. Phone us today. We d0“'“‘ |SLAllll Fllllll|EllS us not arm! "on 1",, A. 0. HOGAN. Mgr. Charlottetown 4_j T