PAGE‘ TOUR Till lllilillllilililliii Elliiilllili “(twitch-Wu -.I7IOIOIII.IGLIIO~ littoral!“ Vise-Penal -l-lsIi-. (III. D. l. IaeKlnael. D. I. 0. . lunati- Aeeeeiate Idihr— Who saved Prince Edward Island from bankruptcy? We answer. the luv-L l- Ilrlfl- Conservative party! A ~briei recit- I-CIHII MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1926 ILLUSTRATION FARMS. government was that it was domin- ated by a small group who b)’ i119 al will demonstrate the fact. A Conservative Government at Otta- wa under Sir Robert Borden and a- Conservative Government in Prince Edward island with Hon. .I. A. Mathis-son tnow our honored Chief iJusllce) at its head. gained for this iPmvince an additional subsidy oi $100,000 yearly. That fact ls be- i fishy. at I . i. B: lune; W . Burton. M-D- FKWTING FOR EVERYBODY. . Someone. watching animals, tells gus that wheniu animal sleeps it is i figure ' 34.291191‘ 110. 192s- in complete repose-absolutely req The long discussed qtleetlotnmdcidem oi an dieciioii iieiii awgiii; whether the abandoned farms the mwrnmeiii and muipeii. yond dispute. l l 'What was the financial position laxed. When ifldses if‘ gradually stretches itself, thus "loosening up all its muscles and joints." l be revived and brought under ‘pm-M ii m d“ iiieii. bidding The King mnfle °"m‘"m°n' h“ bee“ nlmnyiGovernment and its Ministers held [oi our Province when the Conserv- ln regard to food the average ani} lative Governments came to power mal. not at all however, teaches, and definitely settled by the redo“ m Dime dim“; mo“ ‘our yeflsii suits obtained on the several‘ lllus-imr ti“, iove and [he dweeis oi DH tration ‘farms now being worked ' under the direction oi Superintcnd- enacted iegisiaiian which drove‘. en'- Clark "t m” Ekperhnemal s“ hundreds of thousands of Canadiansi tlon at Charlottetown. These lllus-iu, m‘, Uniied Sines and demoriiiibl ""i°“ 13"“ we” ‘eiecled “me-ed the industrial and commercial tour or ilve years ago on the ad- me or [he coumiw Them m mend, vice of Superintendent Clark. They their iitflline, ‘My dppedied id .ii_,i were selected as lYPlcally imporer-coumry m, a new ieaae of powcri lshed farms. typical of the land They empioyed aii ‘he Baidy Rd-“iidi i“ m‘? ““'15h'b°'i‘°°d~ l" smurda-v‘! of the party to defraud the elect- Gllardla“ i‘ "mo" i“ 5H9“ °r ‘he ors; they consorted with smugglers work done on one oi these. a farm and crooks to win m" by any means’; near Montague and conducted by that “mid be devised M a reduiii .\lr. Fred Macintyre. The report some m, ‘he Baid). Hobbs went wi speaks for itself and also speaks it“niiars. and w iaii_ b“ some: iilce. Yielding to their masters theyi pen Tuiat least of the men whom the! inielecittd by ballot-switching and {our War“ Cause n l" prmmce aiother such means came back ‘.0 the “m? “huh “mild d" cred“ m (med-louse oi Commons to support .\lr. of the best cultivated farms in the Mackenzie King volumes for the work done. rejutzenatt- a run-out farm and l i Notwithstandingi “(Wine “Mum he an eyefipenerisll these efforts and this crooked? to any who liave"ct1nt-»:ll'ed the idea He“ [he King "any cam‘, back‘ more hopelessly defeated than be-i it should also encourage-more‘ but by bargaining wiih the: those who want to buy cheaplarmsimiddik grow they managed i0 hang, for. undoubtedly farms which have ‘m w mo" in“ and iheir emoi been vacant for a number oi yearsimems "n. Six mnnthd that their farm cannot he profitably worked. "-1 when they. should be purchasealile at a VELViWErE driven m“ 0i Omce by the men; . W” 03"“ and “Y “n” or ‘heseiwho had enabled them to hang 0a.! “'1' with g0“ judgment and “mi This is the brief record of the! the expert knowledge and adviceimng (iovemmem 33 (knows it. And yet the Liberal “l swam” profid“ a c°mmrmt"'le‘press is fairly screaming with ful- “vmg and a wmpemnce for auwW-iomc praise of its leader. its Minis- one who undertakes it. Any young mm‘ m; Candidates’ man with a taste ior farming would everyone always available at the Experimen- fix-Premier Kine, is making a campaign tour u! Canada. carrying with him his re- Everyone knows both him have a much better chance for malt- ing good on one oi these farms than Cord’ he would by running the risk oi a lurm in Western Canada. Here the climate conditions are certain, the soil capable of revival a’. a moderate cost. l 'l"l1ere are eight of these illustra- tion farms in the province. so lo- cated as to test the soil of the whole province and the restllii-idltr- in: the past four years have provoti abundantly satisfactory. They are a standing example to the farmers within reach oi‘ ihcm and should be vlfliled as oilon as pivssililc. There is room for still more of them in the provincc- so that every farmer can see for himself what possibilities lie in our soil worked when scientifically proper direction. Possibly the trouble with our and untim- and his record and the innocent and presumably ignorant people are be- ing told. in all Libcrsl seriousness. that he is the greatest premier Can- ads has had since Confederation. Sir John A. liiscdonaid and Sir Wil- irld Laurler. whose "shot: latchei. hc is unworthy to unioosc. were but little puppets on the political sea." They tcll us he is making such a triumpiial tour as no other leader has made —aurl some are expected to bellcvo it. ‘ women think of it? EDITORIAL NOTES. Harvest is now on in many places and the grain crop is very promising. poorest farms is [that their owners have followed the methods of iarm- N0" "a" 0"" "Diana “"5 19w‘ ing when the virgin soil only to be scratched good harvest, when little cultiva- tion was required and when all necessary fertilizer was naturally in the soil. These fsrms have been bled to death. transfusion of nee/‘ed to yield .1 Now they requires new blond and science has shown bow that can lir- sccomplished. The thing is to us- oertain how and to follow expert. instruction. -_i»<.-e-c-__--__ POLITICAL BUNKUM “Reading some. Lilicrsi newspap- ers. those hectic pro-election days, one is driven to one of two OllllClii- clans; either that the readers are assumed to be hopelessly ignorant or that the producers of the stufl‘ are making one kind of a noise to conceal another noise. in any caso the conclusion is inevitable that whatever its purpose or its cause may be. it is pure and unadulterat- ed bunkum. We have had iour years oi “gov- ermnonPaiOttawa. iour years in which by the admission of its lead- er, nothing was done because. as it was apologeticaily declared, the government had not a stimclont majority to go ahead. The people from one end of Canada to the oth- er know that the real cause of the stsgstlon and uselossness oi the land, the charm the Golden ltnd." reminds us that Autumn is 0i Just around the corner. The ofllcors and men of H. M. S. Calcutta were warmly welcomed to the city last week. Charlottetown a warm spot in its heart for warships. always has Repeaters is what they now call the Liberal candidates hccause they persist in repeating every state- ment ihey had previously made and which was proved to he incorrect. Two Conservative Governments in lino, one in Charlottetown and the other in Ottawa. have in the past given us all we have that is worth while. This is our hope for the ititure. Make it unanimous this time. Deny all the charges, even after they have been proved by sworn evidence and by a majority vote in parliament. is the present ‘Liberal method of persuading the people to support them. Will the people yield to it? The smuggling revelations at Halifax are even worse than those at Montreal. ‘Some one is likely tn be exposed before it in all over and the ibct is ten to one that he is an ex-Llberal ofiiclal. possibly a Minis- n 191i? it was lamentabledndeed! Successive Liberal Governments had been in power in the Province for twenty years and in that period they had rolled up twenty annual deficits. These deficits ranged. say from $10,000 up to a maximum of $186,000 a year. Our public works were starving for sustenance. Roads. bridges and ferries were in a shocking and deplorable con- dition. No remedy was applied. or attempted except provincial tax- ation. It was in those days that a Liberal ‘Provincial Government laid on the income Tax. which has since been continued to the present day in the effort to make revenue and . expenditure meet. During the twenty years of Lib- eral deficits the Province had good and valid claims against the Dom- inion for more than the $100,000 which Conservatives afterward gained for us a part only oi our just dues. But those claims were never for-mutated or presented at Ottawa in any effective manner and ‘Y nothing came oi them. True, they were always dangled before the voters at election tlmns. Every Liberal Government was promising a settlement of our claims. but all the people. or the treasury got was promises! Note this also-during 15 years of the 20-10mm 1896 to 1911 —the Laurier Government was in power at Ottawa and four successive Lib- eral Governments were ln power in this Province. There was much Liberal boasting in those days oi the advantage oi having the Feder- al and Provincial Governments in line. And what did lt do for us in recovering our claims? Just what a drought or frost does to the farm- er's crop! Ii. brought us no return except shriveled and blasted hopes. I How different was the result with Conservative Governments in line! They who hurl saved our Represen- tation also saved the Province from ‘insolvency and they broke our lwinier shackles by giving us the two Conservative Governments in line. They are lboth agreed to car- ihegun when our Province was saved iirom financial ruin ‘by the recogni- itlon of our just claims years ago. What would our Province have done without that $100,000 a year? {in actual money paid to the Pro- ivlnce it. amounts to abouts. million {and a half in dollars. We have tier-d {the words bankruptcy and insolv- 5ency~are they too strong? Let those who think so reflect upon what would have been the state of our provincial finances. the present condition oi our roads. ‘bridges, fer- ries and our educational system were they starved now as they wore before the two Conservative Gov- ernments got us this great finan- cial boon. Do we not owe those Conserva tive Governments something when they got for us already a million and a halg dollars and the 5100.000 yearly still to come for all time? We know that Liberal politicians and newspapers call them Tories and enemies oi our Province. Let the vile aspersion go for what it may be worth. if they were our enemies. then in the name of com- mon sense and reason were either lsaurier or dvlackenzie, King better friends than they? We hesitate to nsme Lsurler and King In the same breath! Sir Wil- irld, though he made mistakes, at least gave the country a strong and stable Government. composed or able men and free from public scan- dal. Mr. King gave us a Govern. ment. in unholy alliance with men elected to oppose him~a mongrel combination. unstable in all its ways, and smlrchsd with scandal from start to finish. Our point la this: The Conserva- tive party saved our Province a representation oi iour members in the Commons, as we showed yester- day. and saved us from bankruptcy ter; who knows? as we endeavor to show today. These are among the big things .--.-_ ..-v-¢_-.-..~¢-.- human beings a good ilesson. When it is not. feeling well it ahstains from food completely, and usually, _ eats grass or other green growth’ I to hasten intestinal action. Perhaps you have been watching the results oi these "lasts" by pro- fessional and private lndlvidualsd and have been wondering whether. or not a prolonged fast might be of ' help to you. ’ " l believe a short fast from time’ m time would be of benefit to the majority of mankind, but there are} a few points worth noting should- you undergo same. i First talk it over with your lam-i ti ily doctor. He is very likely to ad-' mlt that a. short fast cannot buti help you. i You would have to he in very poor physical condition indeed if he would not permit it. There are three essentials to a‘ iast. You must make absolutely‘ sure that there .ls no food or wastle' matter in the lntcstlnal canal. This; means that a real purgatlve should be taken, such as caster oil or ep- som salts. _ The reason for this is that ll‘ youi abstain from food entirely the __ _ ,_ blood will reabsorb the waste rnatwiiifigiiinrllirjd méhplnse; of “"111"- ters from the lower intestine which‘ ‘ u‘ “ P" l e nmlutud” “Quid be a real “aback immedmle' lstlillllgtiflieifglrezltils govzwfilfdFtititliliilylgfi l . . l... b. .- 3041 0° 70°11 Whalev" 501mm be picture-kite vasy dumb niultittides "ikml- ‘W319i’ 103)‘ be 103190 which of men. His ‘brothers and sisters. 1B 118111101 l0 n59“ 00d halls to flll- the blind being led by the blind. ay the intense desire for 100d. A their SillllS squeezed dry of vision little baking Snda in the water pre- untl hope by the machinery of form- venls acidosis. » aiism. And finally when you do break‘ He can’ generations born antl die your iasi ii simiiiii be broken wiiii in spiritual servitude which nothing "fl V811’ small meal"as Leonard Wil~ could end except the Truth that He lisms tells us. Two small meals hurl come to declare. To put Him- on the fourth day is considered a-‘sclf at the head of this army 0t‘ imiii right, a three day's (as; hglng itmatical patriots would be perhaps l. The Man Nobody Knows H lNSTA L)! ENT XXXVI. \ l RENUNCIATION lt was as splendid a picture as “med was“; mum“, from bioodwvitn it. But worse than the pos- dnd iissiied ifillilllly of failure was the probabil- li you are in ordinary health youilly ff ifuciiesik T" h“ MFR m m" wuuid he wise w g0 aim“ ym" Gin-Jens would mean a ilfctuuc spent dmary work This occupies your in the defense of His throne and nine and mind. Ii you are noytitle. a lifetime of hlnndsiictl untl iiiiiiaiiy siiggicicm go remove accuni-‘lfi risk His life and His ntessaize. The Public Forum This column ls open for the discussion by correspondents of questions of interest. The Charlottetown Guardian dot-a not sirs-essurily endorse the op- inions of correspondents. §¥+§+O THE GREAT ISSUE . AND THE CANDIDATE Slr.—-’l‘lie real issue before the electorate to be settled on the l-iih September next is the Customs‘ Scandal. and as we have four cati- didaics in Queens County seeking cords and how each one stands on this most important question. Parliament heard the case and had the evidence before it and rendered a. judgment against the King Government of failing to llrctect . the National Treasury from a gang oi robbers. The cri- dcncc was clear and the verdict cannot he questioned, it was just Now. an election is called to oh- tatu tile country's verdict. Should we stand by the verdict of parlia- ment or not? . So that we may make no mis- (takc. let us enquire bow each of the candidates stands. election we_should know their re-i i“ Irlnch om“. Royal Bank Bldg. Charlottetown en Bu of Secrets Solved inf ted Traffic Mgr. G. N. Railways (Special to The Guardian.) MONTREAL. Aug. 27. — A. T. Mr. Messervey voted condemna- gtion in parliament. Mr. Myers Weldon is appointed General Trai- ilc. carry full Aiatiager. Canadian National." [Car Ferry. ‘Today we have attain Wm. strong you might rest quietly at home. Remember that three is the number of points to watch, and three the number oi‘ ays to last. §OOOO~Q+§ Daily Selections F O R i Guardian Readers August 30, i926 Till-l WORD PREUlOlTS “The lotus in d of the Lord was prr-c those days." 1 Sam. 3: 1. ’What do sane. thinking men and ry forward and complete the work‘. PRAYER*""°W Plecimls 1'" the lDOiJR divine. By inspiration given!" "A RAGGED JACKET." Although l am but a working man, l live by honest labor, a needy neighbor. . . .. . .. Content in health is all my wealth, with my honesty to buck it. My motive pure although l'm poor. l respect a ragged jacket. Let people say what o'er they may oi broadcloth and who wears it. its not. the coat that makes the man. but the deeds through life that bear it. So always help s feilowman; if as- sistance, he should lack it. Do him all the good you camthough he wears a ragged jacket. All men are equal born at first. through Lhis and every nation, The rich among the poor would be. but for wealth and etltication. And when we're laid beneath the sod with a hundred yours m hack it. Who can tell which were titu- bones tltat. wore the ragged jacket. . they did for us, vital and import- amt things. that the Liberal party ‘lcver did or attempted on our bo- ‘iaif. Anti Mr. Melghen, now Prime Minister oi Canada. was a colleague in the Borden Government which trove to our Province the three greatest hoons it has yet received. Mr. Melghen and the Conserva- tive candidates now in the field asks ior our votes and support. Phe alternative is to bring back the infested Kink Government. bur mntentlon ls that the Conservative Marty should receive our suppport ior what they have done and are 10W disposed to do for .l"rince Ed- ward lslsnd and for the Maritime Provinces. We can never hope for stable gov- ernment, clean and honest govern- ment, or for falt- pisy and justice ‘or the Maritime Provinces under 1 Government led by Mackenzie King! We may and we do hope for l" these good things-good for all Zansds and good for Liberals and l alivays do the best I can to help= . the head of every directors‘ table. llntrigue, while His message mztinetl ‘unspokctt. Living. He would Rive His peo- ple only a semblance oi national ilife; dying. He would loave tltetn tio he rc-enslavcd by the. Rotuan power. Anti the Truth which He. had conic. to tier-lure. which was capable of ccontintiittg its tvork of illllililcliliilifill throuizhottt the world so long as time should last. would Ibo traded for a glittering crown iund an empty name. in a flash He saw it all and made ills decision. Err-n as tho. tnultittlde surflctl ior- wttrtl. llc gave a fr-w crisp orders lo ills zllsclplcs and disappcnrcd. i 'i‘l\c (iospel story puts tho drum- itttit: climax into a siticlo sentence. Jesus, therefore, perceiving that {they were about to come and take .Him by force to make Him king’ iwlthdrew again into the mountain ‘Himself alone. in that hour of crisis He isrovcd iHls right to be the silent partner in every modern business; to sit at re- Tlicrc is no mere theorizing in His words; He speaks out of what Ho. himself has proved. ll he says that a plan's work is more eternally im- portant than any title. lf He. says 1W“ "M were bl“ M0003 h)‘ 001110- Railways, with jurisdiction in re- ments verdict. Mr. Jenkins was spect to freight and passenger trai- iin parliament and voted ior sc- tic. according to 3 circular issued Ellllllllil- iii’- flllvtleil l1“? Daily lousy over the signature oi .I. E. whip instead oi the voice of con- Dalvympie. Vlce-‘Presldent in charge isctcnce. lie is not to bc trusted. oi [Yflmlj mid expfiggy Tim appqim. i-“Y- $10440" “'80 8 019K006? 0f the meut will he effective September ‘KOYCiTlillQlll. tlutt allowed tlic. rob- iiip 3h; “vpiiimfs 0mm wiii be inf. ibcrs to g0 on from year to year 1“\)1\1_1‘Q3L ireizartlicss of the knowledge oi Mr, w-Biiioii, ‘pffivigng ti, iii; 3p» them. -.\lr. Sinclair, moreover. iwimmenp was ii-aiiic manager, M. flflllrQ-B iii the Bvldelifl! (liken beqlantic region, with supervision over glow the Custom-v i-ltiquirv- Hc both froight and paascngnr llllsi- iusvd his sweet. lnfltietitco to got nth?“ wiiii hfsadqunritar" iii Moncimh ‘political friend out of trouble. Thely, i) man had bccn caught tricd and . Ailii-i-i ‘Thompson \v¢.i;ii,n_ dim-ii ill" appealed to Mir Stiprsmc (‘ouri ill Dornhcntnr, Nil. lilarch s. 1876, convicted for a violation of law. eiiiemii iiie empioy or i)". iiiiei-coid H0" 501F111 l0 hi5 flillicul and what onial Railway as a messenger all ilext? l-‘rlontls used tllclr lnilu- Mimciim in 139p The next in,’ cncc at headquarters Ottawa to i-eai-s “rem spam iii various ciei-i. 00W 1-00 i000 080090 ltflmilly. ctr, cal capacities, ntaltiiy in the freight and they stict-ectled completely. iieparimeiit, and iaiii-i-iy wiiii iiie Mr. Sinclair successfully helped freight claims department at Mono. ‘hi5 Yloliliiml 0f U19 l0“ l0 PBi-‘flile- ton. in December. 190i. he became l“ 3010706 0011MB llllfl Slaw-file!“ chief clerk l0 division freight agent, let him or her read the record of x0e; gmiii; division, wiiii head. evidence taken before the customs quarlgfg at Haiiraih E0000)’ i0 APT“ l0“- ln 190i Mr. Weldon resigned from l 001-50‘- (‘V'- ihe railway to ‘accept the position A VOTER- of secretary to the Halifax Board oi Trade. 1i little more than‘ two that. there are thinizs more vital in"! mower or Jpmls 0' Nazareth years latter he was appointed tren- eral sales scent of the Port Hood knocked at its doors and could not CO3] (‘mpaliyt with headqlmrler“ one question ills authority. He was is. but there is nothing in the whole "F!" "l"! 1' 105i "5 005099- is grand‘. than wdaiiii m. iiiiddii» inn were vicious or hostile? Not sewicd mid imgei. iiviiig ii, yo“, folk who had affairs to attend to your iidipg- Men's lives are sometimes like all magazines ni business. all trsde‘l‘l‘"k“i0 0960""- MB S00 l0 0 100l- emermises iii-ospm-ed iidi-mid aii through the formative years of the he said tn himself: “What. shall time the My‘. but he was busy- And lie said: "This will t do". t You know "ten whose heith is my imiis mid my gonddj- who have literally no interests in many years; take thine ease. est. the"! d"? "e $10000 0W8!’- nlght thy soul shall be required of Never once forgetting themselves business as nothing but a. means life should be. He, who refused to generous impulse; spent his healihlio mm "ide im. a Hick ma". a 80000090 the torsot that one nirht his mother when 0v 000 “M” l"! 006- A00- The threshold of the little inn in ency. but the one great Eventied at its doors. lRiGi-ITEN UP. him unprepared . . . i8 8180 0 lfillfidy- it concerns the faded. mlish it with turpentine and Conservatives alike-under the Gov- ernment oi Arthur Melgheni than merely making money. lot no handed the wealth oi a nation and Cm"? “'- n might hi!“ sheltered handed it back again. idealist He. the Fireflies! Event 10 ‘human his- hard world so practical as His Why? ‘Why was Jesus born in a ideals. “There ls a success which 9mm"? Beilfllll"? the P601119 l0 m“ He “yd “ii domed iiimiigii "inking in the least. The inn was iull- that yo“, work an insmimeiii 0i greater was all; every room was taken by ieiiow men and winded This island ntnney to spend. it was busy. my Father's business and He needs] The"? W05 0° "T0001 l0 U18 100-" He told one business story which ma} m"- should ‘be published every year in ‘"11 kmiw "0100 “WW1 08000 ill paper“, aii iimidd m-gimd ii m“. Yet deep within himself he knows corned s certain rich man whose "it" 004‘- Yallll l9 01B 00'0- All his expectations. His land "brought boy's derslovmsfli. he never gave imiii piemviitiiiiyf- 5n much an iiiai him any time. Not that he didn't dm because i have no 1.00m when, Thcre was no room for family life; to bestow my fruits?" 50d M5 5°“ l5 5 “>01- will pull down my hsrns and build K000‘- 1090 ‘"0059 @0518 f0!‘ P080102 greater; and there will l bestow 00d mllfllcw-"d a" i5 K0041 M00 “And i wiii my in my iii-mi gimp iiic beyond the office which has he- thon hast much goods laid up ior mm“ a ma"! "eildmlll Whefwh drink and ho merr‘y'." in the process of being success- But God said. ‘Thou fool. this iul they have sacrificed success. thee." they have forgotten everything else. The poor fool had regarded his This is not .Iesun‘ idea of what s oi escape from business. He had turn aside from his business to boarded his wealth. denying every iiecnme ii king w,“ nevi". mo mu" Lzrtiltgtinétnjfizxgnfitflllve it" "Twill-linens. or a little child. He never Joy oi living for s selfish sntisllac-iiiad "odd on a iiireaiioid where tlon that he hoped was com nit in“, w“ no weicome_ Fimllflllihedl“ h" hw- 3910mm“! ‘Bethlehem. lt was so busy that he hail provided for every cnnting- ;the greatest event in history knock- which is always unexpected came like a this! in the night and found With that business anecdote When the woodwork does not ro- shouid "be published another. which quire cleaning, but looks dull or little 110181 ln Bethlehem, “thohrmvns quicker and lit-tier than If inn." o“ u - .. . at Halifax. After =bcing less than a ycar with the Port. Hood Coal Com- pany. .\ir. Weldon again accepted service with the lntercolonial Rall- way as division freight agent at Halifax. in charge of the Nova Sco- tis territory. Mr. Weldon continu- ed in this position for two years and again resigned from the rail- way service. this time to enter that of the Dominion Coal Company at Montreal, becoming general freight and passenger agent of what was then known as the Black Diamond, Steamship Line operating between Montreal, Newfoundland and Gulf ports. Mr. Weldon occupied that posi- tion until October. 1914. when he again re-entered the service of the lntercolonisl Railway in the cap- acity of assistant general freight agent, with headquarters at Mont:- ion. Three years later Mr. Wel- don succeeded to the position of general freight agent oi the sitc- cessor to the lntercoionial. the Can- adian Government tRailwsys. Later on when the amalgamation took place between the Canadian Gov- ernment Railways and the Canadian Northern Rallwayb. Mr. Weldon was appointed assistant freight traillc manager with headquarters at Moncton. and later ‘became as- sistant freight manager oi lines of the ‘Port Arthur. with headquarters at Montreal. Mr. Weldon continued in this position until the final consolids-l tlon oi the Canadian Nationailtall- ways, at which time he was ap-i pointed traffic manager, Atlantic, region with supervision over both, Pireight and passenger business wlthi htiflflqilliflun at Monclon, a posi- tion he has held until the promo- tion now announced. MIOHT SPILL In waiting upon the table never, pile one dish upon another. lt. is tmaiiractlve to behold. and often re- sults in accidents. "Beauty is but skin iilitp"_ayid this i: well, for it gives many wom, trouble In protecting even then. t when they learn the problem proper care oi the Ikin they have gone a long way towards sol- ving the secret oi beauty, “k i“ ior one of Elizabeth Arden; "The quest sf the Beautiful", contains very full Ormitien on care o1 skin, stock. We The White Drug Store .I. G. IAMIESON Druggist A. T. Weldon App0in- ‘”""" Da iiy 4 Lessons In English By W. L. Gordon Q444§§4§OGO444§§Q - WORDS OFTEN AHSUSED: ‘Carr’ denotes power. “n1ay“pc1~ llilullloil. “You may tin it ii youun.’ OFTEN .\i‘l SPRIONO UNCED. cou- verss. Noun and adjective are ac- cented on first syllultlo, verb on last syllable. (ll-‘TBIN ill ISSPPJLLEI): giiillll two 1's SYNONYLiS: slicer. jecr, taunt. scoff, mock. gibc, snrtwasnl. WORD STUilYzlXse a word time limes and it is ymirs." Lct 0810' crease our vocabulary hi‘ "l0!l‘-‘l‘ lug one word cit-vii d0!’- word: credible; false. "We must not be- lieve such a fabulous talc.“ Buy 'l‘otls>"s ilyiigrmilts; fictitious; in- Q-QO-O-O-O-O HARD 00M .____. Now is the time i0 buy hard coal. Th6 Schooner Theolme ar- rived and is discharg- ing a cargo of the very best quality~ Y“ ‘Ym save money by b03003 now. A. Pickard 3t c9- PHONE 240 LET US MAIL YOUR DRUG onnnft During the Pl“ 7"” “Mm: we have 110W!“ W3.‘ d‘? tuition to our mall o H; W nertmsnt and an "m." calving orders from ‘i Wald; points. UP" 512m, oi eaeh letter WI "llmz" My fill the ondor and in l h "m. ‘n’. Qui- Qlllflll M99 and trouble- nex! 01'5" Let us he“ ¥°"" nil-uni“ {or medicine. We tieiaetion. m: 2 MACS DRUGSTORE 14s amt Oeorll 10"" Telephone 815