PAGE t~‘()'._"’.'_ rii. ifyltaiiottsitimm Guardian . w 11...... s SIeLura l--l' Uh‘ .. 1.. 1: .- .1-:.1| ~ - s....~ .\ 1 . 11 \ iii.l-‘iii......... l. l"‘X Hi0“? _. - - - -- -— i. .1. * ~-,~ 1... m... .1. It llurm-tl, r. .1. 1 _ . , _ . _ , , 1...... 11.11..» .....1 1» n. 1.1m... .\__vn1pathy goes our Illhllllltttl) to .\_\\l"*.‘ ' '"' ' . . ‘§ii>"' i " in u'tr t1b‘e. .|...~..i.~.= 1~-:. s. 11.1 nvr iv." 41.. admin") 1 I“: m l” l! e l, '2,‘ ‘l’ _, V, _\-,_ m, “atom-e. IIlll||l'l| In r "ii. "iii fiiilinc...i.llv.l “m”, tilavsituv is llllll\lll'~' 11 ~11vvi1~> til l-ilY'>' “its” _._.._._- 1r", my, x;-,..ra:t;1t n 15236 Still liilewtl-Jllltltl hlute! The wet weailu-i- vlcare-l up in tint." ituilk is sold ll) children :it :1 cellt :1 glib» w. w~ s The roads are titrociuuc rupecially- where the l_it|\'L'f'IIlllCII[ attempted to "111]>1'--\-' 111F111 l" lllc late l-‘all. VH1,” , l1. llutiqli." t y ~.__ hut‘ l~ " ' 1 ' ' “ l‘ i‘ “will m ,\CCHI'YllII_Q lll the riwuw 1.1 the lit-val liillllm '-\'l'l“l“ " ' l‘ i i» in‘ W‘ d1.» i-i-ttiri. of t-rn~[1Cl'll\' 1.. tl-ui-id-i dates tr-l-"l Y'1\‘~5"'-' ‘ ' _',' w“ ll” the riilnptivm --i the (111.11... Aqrccuiruts wlii-‘lt tiers 11W" ' d‘ "mink wt 'ill the other nations i-u the t4". Vlfilll l“ y , v ' _ _ _. . . I “ml l "- ‘ " ‘ M‘ '1 ghmwi-ilil which ltklllllljs i._>tl1e l\'t. lli>u_ h. l'-, l-vuuvtt. writ-oi. l’ l l‘ l‘ W l" i a m e lill" i i ‘U. h db.‘ Production of Cl’('fltlICt‘_\' butter in Cainada t-- meet this ~ \1 \e.'11' there --.'= it. -i sinking’ luu-l-s-l debt :.-~t on this ..tr reduce -.~ the. Crimp- die-l and titty ‘a ' ' ‘» . - ‘Yllflt .11‘ rIe flousaiirl il-illar sinking " ' '- < *- »l to the pur- i-v the .\lac- ,_r used to pro- llli‘ tut-leer, or t1- ris incurred on " in iiovcrnincitt .'::rv has brolceii ' ‘Liberal bond - w, and give creW-x loan v. ' "Quaint." ' lIlC .i. The rd’ an In- r ‘ . iailure of : into the cir- t . ulf , cup-sni- - ' "cc occasioned a great-I .‘ i currently re- ported "i." ‘i " ' ‘ ‘1 t" - in Charlotte- t-v-vu 1'1 i ‘t. s"-\rtl_v before Ins . - ' ._i Yorl; Point, ind: l l to expt-stire. ln ‘tw- a corrincfs n man in ap- nat-et his death ‘ \L"l.l'. this fatality, upon the au- <r.-it.,n-"‘.:u1cc= fully Fri-hibiti-iii .~\ct 11s. elt-ittJll in it- 1n ‘ ~ v In it \\ 'l . . T» e‘ ~ ~ stii-rial session of the l . - ' " i- ‘ \. -11 the Prohibi- "t t" " ' aii-l the powers m in .\lt'il‘llt'_\' (iQIP .. ‘ F < '. ' w: tvzts given that tll~ ' ' ltr-Iter law (till-ree- me: 1. l‘ , l " n-nv Presiiltiit (if the l7.\"“<‘\" ' " ~ t i\'\llItl‘l_\’ emphatic on this 1 l‘. 11 t-ill (ommission- crs," : r- w-utisililt: to the peo- ple. . ~ t» r1111 an election and their t“i'~ '- 1 l;1.\"..,.l“' rniV-i-vr- "l ’ lt-‘tbh-l 1n lll‘t|1 un- ller anv I .= ' l." li th» "' <=ir1n were in exist- QYTV” l"‘ . ' ‘~11 '1 position t" iusi-t on 1. -.“-‘1's riti-‘ctiug the 1 vH-tgwvlic-tlicr or not 1' ~ -- v .l-..~-l_ :1 cor-titers iti-pt-r-t. ~"-1'~‘ 1 w-l .5. a tnattrr oi - - ~ i - r- -t\ i... the Attorney ‘ . .~'- 1‘ 1 ~: .. ptw-v-"r-ilitigs are still Cummi: mlv tsziuuiug Plants 1". i~ not llit- only Pro- -.l -»1 1 11min; lll-‘Illttlilr- l in \-"‘.'1l‘ vti-in with agri- ‘ - \\1‘. 5-1 Fri-c Pres.» »-111li1|l \:i_ \: -, ~ W.» during tlei- mouths ' ‘ i-it‘ the !1;tl‘-l"ll(‘l' are ~‘t iV-r the 11.-st iii them .. .. - ‘ ' .' v ut-i-t till‘ - ~ 1 1n‘. l.\1i.l l. . i ‘W. ' -»., imp..rtni1£ -l-~r t-i zicres 0t r i-t vegetables, lllt‘ p t . - tru- . 11<-ei‘<<it:it- i111’ ti-t- l. t .<1' the article is ready, au-l llt- i- -.- l-.11-_.- quztulitizs fit the .~'i11-.- t; ".1 - i -1* di- iris with the .'\-l- l Q11‘ 113-- t-t - W : . 1 iondttiotr, “All t'~r- i - "- 1' <-'. luv-l re tilt. in a glulte-l n1'i1l ‘ r‘ Z- -‘. ----11i.i l.» ;. _it'l\\' il i! “v1.19: . .. 1 . . 7 .- l11‘t‘\1\ll<\\\\ \\:~.st.- nl gll-lll 1 ’. ~.- :'- "1 71f i ‘ 1.1'i".'-Ill-1l ll ll'lll'll(‘ll fifilti. "\lv “tie-j. 5i "t. "ti-He, ui-ul-l hi1 the es~ lahlislinu-zn ... . ..- ..-x.~ r wnnuuiivv t. lining plants l’? nit-z 1T - 1.t.:"’-t i-i thi- ll'i‘lllt’lltlt)ll:. mrplup; 'l';..,- r. 1' v.--';ll l-c u-ruiilolil. lim- pltiy-"mz-ut u-wdd i1.‘ i1. 1| i.» .'t1i il1.‘1t‘.'i~lll'__' 1.1:m- bcr of mwu and u 2- ~11.'11"Y\1t would hr ft?- lirveil of 2t l\1.\\‘\' pi. t‘e.~ttl-.illlf in‘ lztiri-r prices. and qnuit l-n-I rut-pit. . n-iv: g-Intg to ‘mam mp] I-l-Vllltfl h»,- l-uwil Ql‘I1\‘.'t‘l\ wiittlrl liC lave-I ail-l ifiiui-J-l- \'.'tlll'l lift-l llllit’ \\'-'I_\' l‘) flu- hnym». p .'_l~ i-n relief m- t11 the dittitlg halls ll~t‘4l ' - .""-liiljf ni the llll(‘lll[)l(1_\‘(‘(l. "\\'l.€I¢ s... I. -:--: llllli‘? might not return flfly ptuiii-t- prut- . i1|--.ir.-i'il_v thr-_-,- Wntllfl mean til a grind s:.\i1i-__- ... l'1-".' \'.»ll'ltl 1' till in the enl- ting ltl v “if "-1 ' » <--'.= ' V. _ l,‘ 1h.- 1». .1. l-tv o.‘ .‘¢..,..pi11_c_r- cmllllllllllty c1111 1' ylznt- i1. l 1i‘.-i-:i is leasihli‘. it should l ~.1- r- .~ . in tlii- f» - '11‘ 1v Provinces where our an. 1., tlv- 0v." t lulu-h market puts us '1 d1 ‘ -l l1l\'l.l.' iinly 1111til we have fw-‘i -- -l llti» i.- .1... .~..t'-.i.r~i111ati-i1i will we be mp" a: 1’.-- lull littti-lll oi the Empire Trade Agr. .11.-nt.<, win-h l"."‘.'i.‘ tipcuc-l an unlimited marker for (Eitvi-l ;.i1 farm ‘pn-iiilfls Ul all kinds in the (ll-l (Vm-itry. --.~.....»,..- . . Thi-ri- zirc scv-l during (trtrilier amounted tr. :_‘.-'>o$.25'i pflilttdi (nlttpuffftl Willi :1__-;-tf>._:_:_;, in ilie mine month lil\t yum.‘ u gain of .\‘.1 per v-tut. .\ll provinces, with the exception oi New lliun~uicl< and Que- bec showed increases. The increase in the pro- vince (tr Alberta 0t‘ 4- i per cent. was outstand- ing. Factory L‘llt‘t‘>c proiiiirtion zimounted to .1;,ooo.4z2 pounds Fiuaitht 1:.<_;3S,0-'12 :1 year pig-J, a gain ol 1.1.8 per cent. U i \\'hat about the Winter? .\l1'. Wil- liam Lloyd Bennett, GIbSOYICYIllC, N. Y., weather seer, has just issit .1 hi< annual predic- ii-ins: “The Indians 11.»? 1.. h}: TllltlKlCI‘ in the fall, no winter at Elli.“ 'lil.erc has been consid- erable thunder this fall, he noted, “and the abori- gities were never known to slip up on this one," llt‘ continued. ‘\\'itliered leaves sticking to the trees mean a late stiriug. llut few lur bearing zuiitnzils have put on heztvy coats, so winter \\'ill be late, too. Real old-fashioned winter won't put in appearance until February." ti! Cold storage holdings of crcaniery butler jainotutted to 53,351,301 pounds at November I tcompared with 55,372,160 a month ago and 48.- l3-)o.i76 last year. Cheese stocks were 33,38,168 tpOlllKlS against 28,277,334 last month and 3S,- ._§:,728 in 1035. Fresh eggs in cold storage amounted to 182,951 ilozen c-nnparc-l with 430.- 503 and 225,910; cold storage eggs 7,023,060 dozen compared with 995,580 in the previous lmonth and 6,507,503. Frcfzen eggs totalled 4,- l407_.qi)7 pounds compared with 5,023,833 and 3,- 441,676. 1 l iii It's an ill-wind that blows nobody any good. An expression of thanks to SignorlMttssolini for ivalring up Great Britain to her tinpreparcrlness in the air was voiced by Air Cominoilore P. F. .\l. Fellowes, speaking at a luncheon given to air pioneers at the Savoy llotel recently. "\\'e in this country,” Air Commodore Fellowes Said, "have been setting an example of paeilism run innd for a great many years. \\'e have hail the idea. iu our heads that everylirirlv lrtvtzil the llri- tislt limpire so tnucli that they would go to a11_\' limits to preserve it. Unly recently has a little sanity tiercolzitcrl through." 'I'herc has conic a great change iu the last 1h‘ mouths, and we were going zihezul with (lctermitizttion. “I think,” he added, “we can really say from our hearts, "Thanks t0 Signor Bltissttlini,’ lot‘ it it 11.1.1 not been {or him we would have been as sound asleep as we were I8 mouths ago. If we ever sct up a memorial to liiin in linglaiid, I think we should have 0n it, ‘the n1.'1t1 who \\'1>l\'Q up the British Empire just in ti1ue'." a n. 1i A penniless former Captain of the Royal llorse Artilleryy uatticil Alfred ll, Kitchener llltlvYtl was buried itt Chiezigo on Saturday with lull military honors, and this is how it came about. Floyd, who was 58, died October 3o in hospital alter he hurl become ill in a Iiriusas rc- lief-work camp. Ilis. body was placed in the county tnorgue. It was to go to a paupefis grave. 'l'l.eu a former sweetheart, Miss Jilsye Kahuic. came forward. She said Iiloyd was a nephew of Lord Kitchener of Iiliartutuii. She asserted he had served 1S years in $outlt Ali-lea. J‘I_-.{_vpt and ludia. Nexrenme Bliss lilizabeth Fitz- niaurirr, who said her family 011cc occupied an w-state in tiruuty Kerry, Ireland, near that oi lLord Kitchener. She said she luieu" Ploy-i] \\‘.'l.~ in. iui-mlier of the Kitchener lztmilyv. Capt. (iilr-iy |pensioit (illieer of 171st ljl of the Lauzulian l.e- ‘glint zippeareil and started the snhsrriptiuii lituil. .\11 undertaker uttered his service .'i11d his chapel. [YCIPTZIIIS volunteered to take part in the military irites. Th1! body was remuvcil 011 Armistice l).'1y' tfrinu the .-..tt11tr_v morgue to a North Side luu- ‘Ierul hiiuie li-uii which the lltllililly‘ luucral tool: plzicc. >1 Sir Fzunucl lloarc, First lmrd of the Ail- titifnll)‘. made the surprising statcmrtit in the (Vanni-ms that liritain has 11o e-iuuiiitiueuls at the present time. flilllpfllillllC 1.. those of r1114 wliirll would r-inipr-l h-‘r to >c.1.l troops to the tliuiiiiriit in event ol 5tlll!ll1(‘l‘\\‘£|l'. The >titteilttttlt was iu reply to i\lr. Leopold .-\111rr_v. Conserva- tivc, who i11 tlic course 0t the (lt'l).'ll(§ 11.-id said that in a (outincnlal \\'.'II‘ llritziii. should give all the help she could in the air but should not at- tempt tn iutcryTue with an expcditiunztryt laud lnrce or zit any rate should 11.11 ruunnit herself i11 ztdvziuce to send trimps. Sir Sauiuels e-nn- meut .111 such a coutiiigi-iivv was, ‘His tn the so- crillcil expeditionary force nl the army which has been iuetitiiiticrl in this debate I prcler to call it an all-ptwpnscs force. To call it an cxpeditioit- ary force is to assume everything is going to PFOCCCLI as in 1914. 'l"h.'it is an tissuniption from which I (l(‘l\l\\l‘. Au zill-purposcs force will be able to gu anyivhcrc: :111.l carry out wlnitever re- spntisihilities may lie impfl-setl tipoii it. The situa- tion differs inziti-rizilly- lrntn the sitmitinn nl 1914. In 101.; there \Vl‘l’(‘ in existence definite commitments. There was an zictual plan agreed bctivcen the French and British General Staffs. In the present case, there are no such commit- merits. We shall have to judge the sittiatioti when it arises and my own yicw is that we Stump; be unwigg to rqake either afl-IFIIIHIIX‘ or negative commitments as to how or ivlie-"v we are going to use our all-purposes force. It It! IE” l 1."! i" .._..._.'i J)‘ (jug .\'o man czn b.- 11;; 01w‘ l . 1 1 .1. Illa own clinrucnr 1.11.4 by ivba. m: uoes. "Int: nne, worthy- .1_1e can- not b1: measured u) tiie amount u.‘ LIIKL-C)‘ ziccuinulnted by that one in‘ .21 trains of public ZLCJIUXLILILII. but wlitly through the habits formed which have meant. an abundant life. a lite of service and astivlty -- m things done that Iiavc been taseful to others. Indeed blessed istlit- 111.111 wh) has foiuid lllb" work, for .11 11. lIC finite himself. The man with git-zit wealth never gets the 111.111 out. of. life that the one who has little noes. The latter t-ontiiitzally has minis in lllS mind-die is forever dreaming and enjoying the thrills which his enthusiasm creates. It‘ the plan, long since advocated by The London Free Pi'l‘.‘5, of plac- iuu the settlers m Iaigc hoinogenous groups was canted 01.11, whereby some of the homeland relations and- fnterests could be Dféfiéflfid; Lf the settlement were chosen with the HIPS. of suitability to the occupations of settlers. Again, if those whose 0c- cupatton is that of agriculture were to be instructed by experienced Canadian agrlculturists, until they had learned methods suitable to Canadian climates and Canadian needs, then there might be weft- founded hopes that: Canada could absorb and establish even 10,000,003 settlers-London Free Press. The Bishop of Birmingham thinks that. General Evnngeltue Booth, of eluded among the church dignitar- ies at. the Coronation. It: seems to be she is the tiead of an organization which reaches and helps the masses to n. greater extent than tiny other agencyn-Brantford Expositor. Timlay people hop out of their motors—nobody has expected them —and they rush in and say let. us sec the menu, what have you got; to eat? And they take what there is. trig "Steaks rind chops In fifteen minutes," they cannot; be bothered with any such delay. They take what. there is already ready, made In advance for sale yesterday, to-ctay or tc-morrow. And they expect it to be good food, the best the hotel or restaurant can provide. Why all the rush? There is good food. to be tiad anywhere if you will arrive by coach, place your order and await its coming-Toronto Star. If the control of (‘rimc is pos- sibtc-ivhethcr in New York or Van- WvWr-it probably must be attain- ed through such day in and day out switching of criminal trends and constant checking on police effic- iency and methods as the com- mittee proposes. Certainly most cit- ies, and New York outstandingly, have found that. the objscllvc can “not; be reached through flash-in- the-pan sensatlonnlism.-Vn11co11ver Province. Changes in fqyms of speech often indicate altered conditions. For instance, during the runriizg twen- ties when a. ycutzg fellow lcft home it was reported that. he had “ac- cepted 11 position." Now, when such u. thing occurs, the proper phrase "he has secured a postman-Grit 1.: Fae-tact. and Times. With the pasting of October, sev- en full yen-rt; Iinve )S(.‘ll since the ed in the depression. The seven lean years having brcn sitvived, possibly seven full years lie uticutt. Certainly u ClIflt\§,ll\glT1Ql\l.flOll.- look is eritleitt. As the New York Times rcmtirl ' "'l‘hc deluge of printed or spoken tirgumrnt in 1.93.3 rtgarcling abolition uf the gold stnntlurd, Irrezneslulil: btcrtkdoz‘. 11 cf the capitalist, :y tcin, even 10:1 te- cuslon) the collapse of (‘I-‘Iillflllhl. has already come tn retrospect. t: seem a. curious and litmus‘. forgattni episode in political history."—-Etl— monton Journal. 111cm is as much truth, and a great. deal more rcztlityy to be found among decent. pcopio than 211116.11‘; the debated. Those who rend with avidity tinything mean and deprav- rind- think, are only seeing a small ptcasanter and more filled with romance. struggle, defeat and triumph. which does not. include a very heavy stratum of decency, mom-titty and honour. This should be remembered by snare‘, y? j: people who are rculiy no ' elm! life "in the IBW "— Y»... IL‘. Wt. Jer the uv.'i\e.; .'y 1211111: t0 tzncnt to 1.5 sud- les titty rshculcl .21.". smrtrfifrv; dot will train the _v :4 X12311 I1 av ti. ently In 0.111111 ,.u , .. 11cc. At the prev: trutn men forulgw ‘ l. :d in vulu. our dun tnrougn t1..- baiaurtucnv. the Salvation Army, should be tn- ‘ quite it reasonable proposition. forl If the menu has a black 1111c read- i great Wall Street. e ish that USIIQT- ‘ ed because they wtitnl, to "see life" and to understand how others live part, of llfe. Real life, and n far satisfactory life, may be found among decent people. Their lives may btfcqually adicuturc, No cross section of humanity is true pisrloi-ni lizni~'ti,v' {Illtl a t. .1\ti:t'.t~,-, What w.» _ at 9...... a, 1...... w. B001. 11w. FURTHER FAVORABLE RESULTS IN TREATMENT OF ARTHRITIS WITII SULPHUR l i That rheumatism —arl.hritls - ‘ dates as farbark as human history has bio-n demonstrated. l Yet to-day its cause and it: l treatment Ls receiving attention throughout thewvorld, so numerous are I15 causes and so varied the treatment. . Some months ago the excellent results obtained by Dr. S. C. Wol- denberg in I00 cases of arthritis with the sulphur (colloidal) treatment were recorded in the Medical Record. It 1a gratifying to team of the results obtained by this methodin 892 cases as re- corded in the Journal of bone and Joint surgery by Dr. Thomas Wheetdon, Richmond, Virginia. t Dr. Whecldon suggests that. at. ‘ last; some, if not; all forms of arth- p rltls, are dueito lack of sulphur in the caitfagrs of the joint-the ' hard fibrous tisue that. serve; as a buffer between the two bones that form the joint. That given a l sufficient reserve supply of sulphur l in the system to fight. off whatever is causing the arthritis, arthritis 1 would not occur. A further point I is that whether - or not there 1s a suffkient sulphur rejerve depends I upon the ability of the small intes- . tine to absorb sulphur from the food (which is being digested) 1n the small intestine, I Dr. Wheeldon describes in rletalt ' the method used for over -four years —c011olda1 sulphur dispersed fr. a protein-free aqueous of water medium when injected into the vein", and cottcidat sulphur dispers- l ed lnollve oll when injected into i the huge muscles of the buttocks. , em were practically no re- actions or upsetmenis from the treatments. "Fifty consecutive cases were set aside for extiaustive study. All of these cases had been treated with- ti out succexs by the usualmethods- , removing infected teeth, tonsils, or l gall bladder; correction of deferm- ity; proper mechanical support; local applications; control of diet; and use cf the special Vaccine l, IhOI-léttit advisable for the particu- \ lar case. Forty injections into the veins x and fcrty into the muscles of the buttocks were given each patient- tliree into the veins and three into the muscles each week. DI‘. Wheeldon states that among , the results noted were, (u) an j apparent improvement 1n the . svmntrms. (b) B slight rise u. u... l metabolic rate (rate at which body processes workt, (c) fan m the | blood pressure, (d1 a tendency to 1 weight reducticn, (e) Xray cumin. atton show-ed noprcgress of the ‘ disease. I The very favorable result: ob- t tamed by the use or colloidal sulphur in arthritis by Dr. Wheel- ; doti and his associate Rolland J. Main, PhD, Richmond, by Dr _. S. C. Woldenbcrg and others, after l failure by other methods, should stimulate inter-est: in this irictliod. Fl‘ WAS MAY ONCE . ,- What. it the ttrya JYC null and guy ‘ Oacc it. was May! summer dwelt. lVQYCl Spring Must. pass awaiy. wing To lighten the gray. arir..;ag f* from the taxpayers-Carlton cLLe. setting any further dev.‘ establrhlnz on ‘freer’ sate of Intoxtcants." which form I accept 1t. reason of the greater Woman's Institutes, W. C. T. U., ‘ ltshs-il at Snurla?" rihnt if the leaves are thin 11nd sere 1311111111101" and LIIIIIC of Summci" 11nd tier-p In your lltlllfl. the but‘. of their —Rutn1mal1 Sciieinfcld wank. a mun can learn to run a. public of- fice, is to get; elected to one. And many times the cost of his gutting experience runs into a lot of money Vid- l PUBLIC FORUM nun at..." n on" M‘ ti" Jlfillillfll by wrrouvon-hll- " “ugh.- ¢| tut-nut. The hlrlollnllwn "‘ docs no! mfCUIlIIuI undone tin Opllltlll ; of nornopondeltn. PROIIIBITION SO-CALLED Slr,—'I‘he Rev. O. Watterwcrth commenting on my prevtou: letic of whose sincerity I have no doubt. after admitting an increase of $14,- 000 1'11 the last. four months sales 1 1 almost astride the fence claiming that the 'rt"ll"lpl‘l‘fl.llll(‘ Fvderatlonfis program of education "has done a great deal of gocd b}; way of eff- ‘ tn the Island any Does he mean that. there is more of sobriety, less human sufferlngfi reduced debaucherles and the product of liquor sates, undert the "greater efforts" of churches} 11nd lectures, than a. “year ago?"| If so he is near to the apex of that. . straddle. crime i 1 If, however, hL= meaning ts, 1n that by effort of Church and‘ Temperance organiz- ations, thousands have been tn- fluenced into sober thought. and action, and by so doing have “off- set." or prevented the government's increase of $14,000 being muitiplied up to $140,000 of their remuner- atlve booze busfnes, then I new? with him to the utmost. ‘These God l inspired forces are doing a splen- l did work. I I disagree with our Ret-‘d friend. however ivlien 11- t-t-.-.:tn=---“O:1i' l ‘Silence’ is certatntv mt consent w what is going 01:, I» in: 1-'-:.1- oration as a body wcaketled by politics." "Those who are not with me are against mo" should be familiar to my friend. When a body ordained to oppose a defin- ite wrong, when that. wrong ts stalking forth with Increasing menace’ to the spiritual life of the community, bBLK-S of! Into flitence’ and shrinks from tackling the bloodthirsty invader, that cannot be interpreted other than In the words “eoizseniingr to the evil." A chain is no stronger than its weakest link and sincere as the vast majority of the Federation most: surely are, the body. as a whole is no stronger than the pot- ittcal tint: which may influence its mow" v-zts. This ‘mess ts more evident. in the .;‘.ii2IiSSlD11 that. “we have‘. endeavoured to co-opcrnte when‘ eo-operation was possible, and have urged the proper authorities to sincere and active enforcement. of the P:rt: b ll.'!'\ lunv," and "plac- ed valuable information before the proper flllilill'_l.lt‘;. vsitli 1m zifisfitc- tory results." ‘ Why co-operate with the cobra that Is attempting to strangle you out of your life tilood? Don't you know it means death? That the father of the traffic glOnlS over your soft words and your resolu- tions of approval and peril: to them with grim satisfaction as a. moral endomtment (f his 1u1uuit-‘ 1e"? Wheat 12c faces the tribunal of the people In 213210215 hc will trot’. out. those soft; soap co-operative approvals n5 his warrant; [or wld- _ entng the {load gates of grog de- batichrrics, . You ask some questions? The.’ aflsizrr is on 151- 1.1 e. "ilntv Ls it so much Vendor ztoct; ls fcr stile In Alba-ton?" It. Ls the Prcmhris district,- ilifrst must b: satisfied, and the budgst balmcctl. Whv a “W-ndofs Stile tins bcczf. estab- To sell more gro‘; of canine, and grt, mjrc money. "Is it 113M010 that. sneenl enfoncment is din-ctru aruznrst rum rtmnfrs 1'11 ordrr ts) tirotcct the Govcriintriit sale 0f business through the Vcniltzrs?" It, 15, um‘ less the booze is bought tron. gov- crnmcnt. grog shops, or sold by ‘ wards of the (iovetirtticnt thriving in their Irollegeitct: trade in tnqd of grinding hard tat-k In their uroivr place the Government jail. 1' 11m Sir, etc" PROIIIBITIONIST. Vagaries 0f Spelling ti. change) 111011.111". one dlslllzcs to con- template the possibility of Iiaving to, write such apparent- lurgon as, “He woz awl cxsltcd brcau: he 11nd cawt tvim fish and nnuthor got away," a good case still ls to be made for those who advocate the reform and simplification of E113- lfsh spoiling. The sentence, "The rough cough and hie-cough plough me through", was Invented by a. writer who wish- ed to cmptmstne the number of dif- ferent ways in which "ough" may be pronounced. It gives 1'; tiff, off, up, ow, and tn our Government grog shops, gets 11 1=.....11i works to provide them homes. 3 llYllt’ Lower Queen Street .-,__ ,___ Solution Life Insurance guarantees to a man's family . when he is dead the very things for which ha The Great-West Life is the champion of thrift and the guardian of thousands of Czmzuiiim Consult your nearest Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. ..1‘I.‘.N & 00..1.1u11rt11 Provincial Illanugers J. M. Nicholson District Manager" Summcrsidc Allison P. McLean District lllanager blontngin- "l? while he lives. Charlottetown 1 i M... Tea Poll s3... For a. Delicious Ciip 0t Full Flavoured Tea Use BRAHMIN Orange Pekoe Teal ‘i K. S. IIEIJMING, , it ls pronounced as spelt. Certified Public Accountant and Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised Profit and Loss Accounts Computed Trustee under the Bankruptcy Act Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prepared. 1 Administration of Estates a. Specialty. g- MONEY TO LOAN. Bank of Nova Scotia Building Charlottetown, P. E. l. ~-_--.. ..___, l a.11.,ici.i1>.A..c.e.i.y which add to the 11st och and aw. The versatility of such letter combinations ls a source of con- stant worry to the foreign student, particularly if, for reasons of econ- omy, he is forced to dispense with ‘ the services of a tutor and to at- tempt to teach himself by the aid of textbooks. ' Early In his studies he comes up- on the word "ear," and finds that Pre- fixlng an "h," an “n", a “t", a "g" or an "f" does not. alter-the "ear" sound, and he can sec no reason why when "w" or "be" are added as a prefix the "ear" becomes "air" so far as pronunciation is con- cerned and "wear" and "bear" are prnounced not. like "weir" and "bear", but like “ware" and "bare." But he has not yet finished with the baffling powers of “ear” and its associate letters. If heiplaces an "h" In from of the word the sound ts still the same, but 1f he adds to "hear" the let- ter "t." ltepets a new prounctii- tlon, that. of "hart." Adding to heart an "he" the "or" sound re- mains; but, if now he strikes out the Initial "h" he gels a. third H.1- ternritive, pronounced "crth." The puzzled student looks in vain for rules to guide him through this tnbyrtnm of English spelling. iivofiiuics" SPECIALS ALL rnts WEEK VICEROY yawn; IIII'I"I'I.I".N Anriiaiiiiirl-mv ial".»\|i.\§'rnr:n FLAWLESS v . iffllllPc lo IC- “hfvanéhcuufi; fiiriygi. nuy lm1tIo_ rum": m glvo uutlsfuctury nel~ vice. _ '1']... Viceroy countess. "We f" Scarlet. -- - "‘ " _ "l": Th0 ricer-i!‘ Green or- heiivy -—- —-_— I95“ The Viceroy baby ll-tlll". IV} nFHlue _ 7' The Vleerny I-‘iviiuinlii hy Scarlet only - — -—- 1111. 1.. u. FN-WB '1! you have nny trouble with your at-ruuieli suvli nu luiltiri-s- no", dy§p0||5'|\, your al-iuiuell. ticnrlbiiin, unstrlc illslreul. ole" then ilou‘: 11.-lay gPlllHR n bottle of Dr. I-Zvnus utollnivb nllxiuru Immediately. 'l‘lilii nilxluro tn n prescription of l)r. 1.. ll. Ernnu. u-iti-il E111:- lhili physician nl wlili-h we linvo tr ante rights 1o 1111i! I5 $111M‘- nnleuil to he t! permanent cure for all lueh trouble of (he ltomncli. TBY A IIOTTLI.‘ TODAY PRICE B50 HAIL ORDERR PIIOMPTLY ATTENDED Tl). . c rlviuo, $1.25 "Cow" Is always cow, and "no.1" always now; but. "bow" may l)(' cit-her bow or b0, and "row" maybe either row or r0. ‘ The pronunciation of “car" Ls indicated by Its spelling. and in such words as carbon, carton, car- boy; and carded the sound ts no: ‘changed. But suddenly “carroV i upsets him by being pronounced usually the same way as "car-it". and either of them employs tllt‘ “car” sound. The foreign student may ash‘ himself why the letter “c" remain! in the language at. all. It has rm real function of its own. but servfl as a substitute, sometimes tor "5' and sometimes for “k." And why should the Engllsl tongue sometimes employ the 1m- posstble ‘ph" to take the place of the clear and simple "t"? If it pharmacy, why not a phat-m’! Ann why is a pnantasy not Dllfllllasll“? ‘These are some of the nnomntlr: reformers would abolish, but Th! majority of English-speaking 17W pie probably will prefer that tlieil language retain the form it has ac- quired by a Imppy combination at accident, error, and tulrullfltl- Hardins “Asco "' COMPOUND T.\ltt.l-‘.Ts The remedy that. relief“ PM" of every kind and ilm-s It quickly without any after-afterli- 7111-. l-‘rirndly Station i‘.1=.i'-\'- will loll you all. about this 1mg‘; derful prrmirntinn unit 11011" .\' can obtain a I-‘rce Gift. Vlllflfll ‘at one dnllflr l"? ll" plmhn“ m‘ n. bottle nf 100 Asro Tliblrl! at 51.25. , This radio mc-ssakl‘ l“ mm- pariah" y-ruiie eating and of vital l"' h w“ Mm your firm" i, the 1n any evciflnlz aflllflmm 7 Information 7°“ Wm “Coma two Axon Tablets are W" “p m r 5W5 slur 25c and 5V5"- A“ o‘ Illcllded t0 ProrrIPllY W“ w" Plrcd nn melt?‘ "l prk" E. ll. FOSTER mum sTOFE QENTRAI. for I -l t r Bole unthoi-I-Lcil illstiiiuv P. l). Island THE 2 MA CS 0o. ~ ' ‘hen docs not exhaust n‘! ‘ as is shown by t w. ..s for... and ought,