...a!so the associates of men of still i- ' ‘est in the Scout movement. I Ipubuc “mm n“ be pram“ w 5e‘ treal has come to the end of its th t ins lri l ht f Y C - a‘ p n8 s8 o mm‘ m resources 5° m: as new industries be foreign compllcatlonsu-Gaaetfe. are concerned, and has fallen back ~ B“I"m°‘B°Y 5mm‘ had 11°‘ mm" on the devlopment of an old one. I the future." ‘o. ~ g." i-i h..." ter event. ago, is precisely what the Mac- ""'4"fisst week in Parliament Premier Ijonuicti called attention to the II mo». rs am "ti: réiik-J-TI-ociiiis money than during any pre- f‘ i‘ <7 Isaiah lifters-I i=_ WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1935. nlsruvcuisusn cussrs}, pTlio arrival this evening of Lord Hid. ildy Baden-Powell is an ovent to which all our citizens are locking -_ forward. It has been well said that by. his enheartenlng messages to Young Canada, through the Boy “Scouts who have greeted him every- where with such spontaneous en- this country. l-le is fixing in nany unrrowii euinnuin . Helms}: P. Illvlrenllplt. LI lune“. IJJ ’ s- .lla.laelluel.lll0 like: and lasagllg muons-cl * Welles III l) l. rurrls. a uni-am. ls s. ‘ s bell: mauled usn es o0 on nu (ll sensor) sour-rd. roll In: rssmilnsilnuosl noun to Canes as (lubed lhth were created." The Federal ance Department has long been intent, and is still intent, stimulating business and agricul- thusiasm, Lord Baden-Powell is do- ture by making money available to drawn to the “m, in: I. great thing for the future of legitimate borrowers at low rates. The Federal Premigp has 1n mimi meet war- debts obligations already ulioh Notes By The Way \ ii ftisssidtlistwhminllmthe Duchess of Kent hastened home to London from the coirtinent. so that her child-afterwards Queen Vio- i-orio-mizht be born on British sou. her stage coach travelled no faster than Julius Caesar l-isd been able ‘to move when he made his his- toric assault on the outer edge of the world 18 centuries before. Even down to the question or increasing 1-'> years liter. when Elli- Robert Peel, then at Rome, was suddenly m“ Pr“ o’ pflmny commodm" by summoned to the Premiership he "W mew-i “"111” m" 9°"! l° had to travel to Calais by stage- that the purchasing power of money coach. It was Justin McCarthy in will bear some relation to the pur- “mmg "W" "h" m’ °b“‘“'“°“‘ iii 1834 i0 that of Julius cii-siir Fm‘ when he first invaded Britain in his “History oi Our Own Times" who likened Peel's mode cf trave‘. 55 B.C.-Vancouver Province. Amongst the anomalous features o1 international finance, attention is that though nations profess their inability to incurred, they seem to have m thomand young minds the highest another loan conversion 'on an ex-- " difllculty in finding money or credit ideal of citizenship. One of the tensive scale to be carried through m. the increase o! Mmflmenm Just many good features of the Boy in i937, arid this refunding can “Scout organization is that, by its only be done by maintaining the system of administration, members! - are kept in friendly relations with’ "their elders. Scout Leaders are old- _er than the rank and file, and are more mature years. Citizens well " past middle life retain a keen inter- Baden-Powell himself is 78 years of age, and yet by many thousand boys throughout the Empire he is regard- ed with an enthusiasm that amounts fto something like hero-worship. With such guidance filtering its wily down from the Chief Scout through adult leaders to the youngest in the "WWW!" franks, the future of the Boy Scout movement is assured. national credit in the meantime. EDITORIAL NOTES Tonight riord and Lady Baden- Powell, the Hons. Heather and Betty w"; Baden-Powell will be with us. Premier Tsschereau, Quebec, admits he has got “ideas" from the she appears m do m m reality, New Brunswick election, he will now try the effect on Que- beckers of old age pensions, free 5mm‘ bmks’ and mom 1°“ ‘M, who furnish Toronto with her raw Perhaps fit is noteworthy thait the Bit. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King was the now there is much uneasiness and considerable criticism in Germany over the lavish expenditures ear- marked by the National Socialist Government for the retorat on of Germany's military and naval power to the level deemed consist- ent for defensive purposes and es- sential to the malitcnaric: of a proper balanze with other major European powers. Toronto, with one-sixteenth of Canada's population, contribu about cue-fifth of the tax revenues. I however, these contributions are.not from Toronto alone, but"1rom the great multitude of producers and the great multitude of consumers materials and who buy Toronto goods-Toronto stew. One of life's really tough jobs must be that of dog catcher. Two An "B.- S“, f” fifth“? m?“ °‘ chic: advocate or the vote o1 m.- men engaged to rid Bil ruiiiou ‘we! g o ys “grown Ex?“- 000 to the widow of the late air town of unlicensed pets and strays. u“ F" °"‘"“’1°‘ Y“ “m” I“ srrriur curra. 1t was attacked by "mild ii 8° m“ ii “'3 °“ we“ told his Canadian hearers at Toron- 1m woodsworth, col," .heart strings that they resigned In and the haste. Both were under instructions w’ "I m“ m“ w" “mm” 59”“ Minister or Justice (Mr. Guthrie). to “shoot to kill." The number one all over the world are the same sort m reply,“ contented himself with i.“ bXOkeS u you are‘, In a‘ message “endorsing everything the Liberal leader said." _ to Mr. W. J. Cairns, Ontario Scout Commissioner, he said of the Toron- to gathering: catcher took aim. The friendly ani- mal wagged its tall. "I quit," the man announced. His fellow work- man followed suit shortly, after . yielding to the plea of a small boy Before very long we are to have and refusing to use the revolver on "The Wflmih °f m9 5W5‘ Bream‘! 5 trans- 511mm ak- mail Serb-ma a dog ‘in another district. Admitted- "nd ma‘ enthujlzm ‘Tux “Tut Regular plane service between Liv- . W“ ' “e erpool and New York will be begun jammed many spontaneous out‘ next year. The Bellanca Aircraft but there's something overwhelming. ly, these men are taking a risk in “grounding arms" when employ- ment is not too readily available; very fine , bursts of the klndJhave never seen corporation o! Amen“ has mrm_ about their temperamenml make- the equal of this one nor one which ed an English camp“), u, comply with the British requirements for "I. have two regrets, however. One subskm The new . was that time and condition did not any. 12 passengers and Wm have allow me to go round all the boys a flying ma,“ of uoovmnes’ touqied me more deeply. 1nd to see their Scouters personally; and secondly that thousands of the Wade." up-s.-Border Cities Star. That nation-wide campaign in will ti-ie United states to deport about 6.000.000 aliens as an unemploy- ment remedy must be prompted by the new-thcughters. lt is unlikely that the suggestion will be put in- It is hardly believable but Mon- to practice. The loss of m‘llions of consumers would hardly help in.‘ dustry, and, besides. there might To please the Spaniards the Ill t0 themselves. The Girl 911K185 viz; the fpuflgt jndugtng "1 can't United States has changed the in- scription on the wreck of the battle- "arid the Brownies were out in force find my new mdustrles u, bung , _ ship Maine from ‘Destroyed by a. I'° 3"“ the“ Lad"- mdy Bade“ to Montreal. we must develop those Spanish mm”. to “Blown up by a P°W°u3 and the ch19! Gm“ 535° we have, and one of the most im- ~---had good advice to give. “I feel to- Is it any wonder that wherever ~~~~they have gone throughout Canada. Jl-ord and lady Powell had been ro- and Hull to create a special Federal soul upon them after ceivrd with the some whoiehrv-rirfl District as iii Washington, no. rt this Provihivr. is claimed that enthusiasm? 1n portant is the tourist industry, "<1 W" i" ii mm-he!‘ W1") ‘We! 1°‘ Mayor Hcude told a representative ' 41" fliildfeni" 511° 9°31 h" 55°14"! gathering of citizens called to form "" "mhearers. “Grow up to be the splen- dfi “(Omen m“ can“! needs m Tourist and Convention Bureau in erliil 165565 ill“ w"!!! making the city better known. a committee to assist the Montreal submarine mine" leaving the ob- server to draw his own conclusions. And what about the slogan of 1898 “Remember the MalneP-Globe. No matter how serious the mat- to us all. their value ls only transitory. But the riches which we store in the mind are there forever. We can live Arr agitation is on foot in Ottawa upcn them, and feed our immortal everything material has ben proved of small account. The richer we make this 5' Distmt mind of ours, the poorer everything _where the Boy Scout and Girl Guide ghmfld he a, model gm- ihe whine o1 else seen“ The greed (m- um Th, movements have made remarkable Q55“, m; only from the 991m, or scramble for omce and acclaim. The Pliiifeis. the P168911“ 0! Such iii-i‘ view of geographical appearance pride of ownership. The gloating over a. beaten adversary. Silly, tmimshed vmm“ Wm be E redkt’ but 319° I“ “verythin? m“ mm‘ childish. and foolish aims and acts narrows SPEAK LOUDER One of the planks in the provin- cial Liberal party platform is the premise of "an early endeavor to ~ refund high interest bearing bonds wow produce " on more favorable rates of interest." This. as we pointed out a few days Milisn Government did last year in ..issuing 8 per cent b03155. "with -far from commending - the Opposition members endeavoured Wto charge up as additional “borrow- .,.ins" against the ‘Government. Not only,hss this been the poiicy of the Ilschdillsn administration, but it has been adopted successfully by ~_the Bennett Government ss well. I success of his administration in re- "diwihs the rates orbiter-cot which third riiiiiioii, imir chi-co pence, one will on both sides. helped farthing on the next million sets." the people have to pay onlthe nat- Michel ohiigltlmil. . "has been doiisiutbeisstiive yesrsincheap- compositions DODGE. ‘_ for» viousperioaintlie, .1”. _- __ ofCon- _,nns| jllhtlou liu emu-icons mightily patties imouiiii EIQYQITW rciiiiisro cerns the individual rights of all are each, Bur; gvery effort, to make the citizens interested. The District, the mind richer. cleaner and amet- beirig on both sides of the river, would take in all that part o: Que- bec comprising the city and im- mediate vicinity of Hull. such a be definitely ended, it is true. As District would, it is claimed, be a m“ "mmple m a“ cmmdmm and hes had more than normal rainfall a beneficial in- fluence throughout the Dominion. much more than has fallen in the er in wealth, is an effort of per- marierice. The cycle of dry years seems In figures published showed very strik- ingly. the drought area as a whole in April and May this year, and same period in the last seven years-for which everyone should M"~°-1"-J“m°3'¥°“°"“' “ma?” be devoutly thankful. But just as 0f the PBFIOTMUIB 318M 50°53)’ 05 sure as that rains have come is the Britain, told the Commission in- fact that drought estigatirig the affairs of the Can- ‘dian Permnmng mam many their effect, if measures to combat that the British Broadcasting Cor- them “a not employednwinnipe; potaticri paid 8530.000 last year for Tribune. privileze of playing owned by the British Performing m “m,” pmmema m Right Society. "We have got five pence. hslfpenny. on the first mll- satisfactorily settled. The readjust- lion receiving sets; “""°““Y °" '3“ "m" '“'“'°"' is another. But time are iii-rim and three pence. hsliiwhhv 0n the which can be arranged with good .... __ Wm return. over a. wider area, of long- er duration and more devastating in It ll, of course. true that there pire re- iationships which have yet to b: ment of the Ottawa Agreements is one. The restoration of emigration by the Albeftl. his to look to the Dom- min. lnion for financial assistance and ., . e . ,1 , -0 it! ‘YLUQ brim by lower Interest rates 133., goiifitrfam" . ==-__—_..--=-.==i====——__=m “’ w“ ‘u ‘h’ m" '° m” ' ' f‘ “jfonbwiisn. but the Ottawa iidmin- Minister of Health. told the oico- mist new taxation on s huge tors the other danlbdorsladvsncos scale. This money io ibopioviuos amount to 01171.net out of all idolatry. which 1-11- ftisaslfbswrenoelndsulotly In“? fol ,9 ‘Tile W.I'IOQI~B rasvirnnlvo near STROKE Dllfllll hot weather or when Wvlilliis in an enclosed space heat stroke is not uncommon as the 50d? is unable to throw of! this heat 0W1"! to the heat and moisture with which it is surounded. ft is the ability of the body to b11118 the heat from the inner part to the surface and have the sur- rounding air absorb tllis heat and moisture from the surface o: the, bildy that prevents heat stroke. In heat stroke as the symptoms are due to the great body heat being held 111 “It body instead of absorb- ed by the air, the individual feels weak and exha. ted and Collapses, The skin is col , olammy and pale. In sunstroke, as you may remgm. bel‘. the individual is out in the dir- e“ "y! 0! the sun and the skin becomes hot, flushed and dry_ As heat is the cause of the heat stroke the patient should be re- moved to a cool place and kept quietly in bed because any move. ment. however slight, increases the heat 0.1 the body. An ice bag to the head and cold applioetzons to the whole body f0 a. SHORT time is good treatmenIr. To restore consciousness the or- dlnery smelling salts are mogt u“. ful, and after consciousness has re- turned, hot milk or hot coffee will be found stimulating. ‘These hot drinks must not be given too soon. However as far as you and 1 are concerned our thought should be to try to prevent, if possible, these at- tacks of heat stroke. Working or filiiiliilik steadily during the hot wea- ther or in an closed space mans the accumulation of -heat In the body. This accumulation of heat oc- curs beceuse we are making heat. too fast, or the air is too full of mois- ture already to take up any 0f our perspiration, or the place where we are working or playing is so enclos- ed that no breeze is crcated to carry the heat and moisture away from our bodies. ‘first is why the electric fan is so refreshing in a room; it removes the hot moist air that Is immediately about you. and you get a. fresh supply of air that has not been heated and moistened by the heat and moisture of your body. A "draft" made by open doors and windows gives you a "change" of air. Good ventilation which means change of air will prevent heat stroke. Hauptmanrfs Fate (Ottawa Journal) The appeal of Hauptmarin- from his conviction and his sentence to death for the murder of the Lind- bergh baby now rests for decision with fourteen judges of the New Jersey Court of Errors and Ap- peals. The Judges will announce their findings “probably in October." If the conviction is sustained, and defence funds per- mlt, the case can be taken to the Court of Pardons. and as a last recourse to the Supreme Court of the United States. I; ls clear that a couple of years easily may be oc- cupied in these elaborate and ex- pensive processes- There is a Court of Criminal Appeal for England and wiocil that is a delightful contrast in its speed of operation. "The average time." says the Encyolopaedia fiiiimhlol. "that elspses from the receipt of the notice of appeal or application for leave to appeal till the same is finally determined iby the court is from four to five weeks." Many criminologlsts are eon- vinced that swift and certain punishment for crime is even more important iiiiui the roriii this punishment takes. The English practice saves the interminable delays of which advantage can be taken in the United States by those with ingenious counsel and abund. ant funds. The Canadian practice like a great marry Canadian Practices, is a compromise. We are neither so expeditious as the British in disposing of criminal case nor so dilatory is our neigh- bor but strike a reasonably happy average. most highly-wealth, fame, high ilosition. leisure. and the acclaim of our fellows-do nct. after all, amount to anything. The things that make the diff 1, TOWNb Wm csrrrony rssseas-nr Bin-Two thousand years no. two men “passed by." They had no sympathy for pain or distress. Reasoning. no doubt, that as they had not caused the misfortune. “W! had nothing to do with it. They were men of business and they saw nothing to be gained by helping a robbed man. But a third man came who did not “pass by"-a man of a desPi-Bed nation, but one whose heart was right. He pltied, he lost time. he spent money. UucOIlSCIOlLSIy, per- haps. he well fulfilled the command- ment, "Love thy neighbor as thy- self." Now, though praised. Drflflched and expounded fer twenty centuries, is it. not a sad and distressing fact that for a great part of sc-called Christendom, it has about as much effect as an old yarn. Though they may not say so, the actions of rnll- llons go to show that they consider the Samaritan was merely on old fogy! Furthermore, their actions show that they considered the priest and thelievlte "all right." They had some style. They were aristo- ._G_I!A1§PIAN i H. Dttawa I Pacts u: in ‘ % "‘"" “‘. "' ’°“ir“.‘;“oii'fi'..iiio,'““'i.i"tiil’i"ti’.f have hampered Canada's world trade. . . . ‘rho 0t- taws agreements have been definite- ly advantageous to the base metal mining industry in this country. We have seen, Great Britain's im- ports of Canadian electrolytic oop- per grow from 4,170 tons in i881 to 36,764 tons in 1933, and we note that the president of Consolidated Min- 1B8 and smelting Company of Can- ada, Limited, remarks upon the ben- eficial influence of the agreements Canada's quantity ,. copper, lead, and zinc reached all time records during i934, which was partly due to increased markets in Great Britain. These facts do not bear out Mr. Rinfret/s statement so far as mining is concerned. Changing Their Tune (Mail and aiiipire> crats. They did not come from the back woodsl Fortunately for the world we have a. goodly share of present-day Sam- aritans, but how many- All. 110W many of the passer-by style? Go out on many of the country roads. Contrlve to have your hair look grey. Have a seedy coat. Lean on a cane and limp. Now observe how many cars will pass you st full speed? How many will “step on it" to pass you? If you be a woman let your dress be somewhat ancient in style. Contrlve to walk as if you wore brogans or moccasins. ivatc how the “bloods" will slow down arid smllingly ask if you desire e. lift? However. we should be thankful tiiiit it is not trio kind. the wise. and the honourable that abuse the great modern invention by making it the means of cultivating pride, selfish- ness and unklndness, but snobs and selfish worldlings, and these are the ones most likely to suffer pangs of remorse. I am, Sir, etc.. OLD FOGY ____%¢_.__ SOME MORE TWISTENG Sire-The evening twister is trying to solace its despondent party in federal matters with a glimmer of hope that the New Brunswick elec- tions were fought on Dominion is- sues, and the verdict against the Bennett reform policy. To work out this fallacy it quotes Liberal press opinions-not one which even pretends any truth in the Patriot's fables. The first quo- tation is from the Halifax Chronicle, the one Liberal paper that exhibits almost as light a respect for truth- ful politics as the local organ. Yet, while filled with cnntemptible lir- sinuation, even the Chronicle doesn't show a syllable of fact to sup rt its false diatribe. Dealing in mat- ters of fact it confined- ltself ex- cliisiveiy to New Brunswick matters. then adding from its home made blufl,—-“Its close connection with the Ottawa Bennett administration mil- h most beneficial pieces of leoislotioh of Act their it does not iioed to have it. A year ago the Ottawa Govern- ment put through Parliament the Farmers’ Creditors Arrangement Act. It was designed for the benefit of industrious agriculturists who are overburdened with debt. It pro- vides machinery enabling such farmers to get together with their creditors and agree upon some sort of compromise settlement. Its whole object is to enable such people tor remain on the land. It has been taken advantage of by thousands of farmers in all the provinces, and it is widely regarded as one of the yet placed on the statute ‘ . » It came into operation Ln British columbia last November. and al- ready a number of farmers out there have taken advantage of it. Its op- eration in that province had, now- .ever, no sooner got under way than the local Liberal Government, head- ed by Premier Pattullo, challenged the validity of the Act and sought an injunction against it on the ground that it is unconstitutional. In no other province has the Dro- vlnclal administration taken such a stand. Anticipating that British Columbia's action might lead to fur- flier litigation and interfere with the Act's operation in otherprovlnoes. the Federal Government recently introduced a measure amending the Farmers’ Creditors Arrangement Act, so that it shall not apply to British Columbia. If the Pacific, Coast province docs not want the Imagine than the sax-gaze of the Government at Ottawa when Liberal _ members of Parliament from British Columbia violently opposed the leg- islatlon removing their province from of operation of the measure. This they did in the House of com- mons on Wednesday. They accused the Bennett Government of playing politics, but we think that the charge reacted as a boomer-n; on their own heads. In order to a9- pease them Finance Minister Rhodes agreed to have a clause introduced in the amending Act providing that ltated against it." This is the far fetched dream upon which the local prevarlcator fcunds its nonsense. The Moncton Transcript, ii radi- cal Liberal organ, states the real truth so clearly that we wonder at the Patriot reproducing it. It says: "The change is in keeping with the trend of the time. Probably any government which could have been in office would have gone down to defeat. Dissatisfied’, with existing conditions, and admittedly then; ‘is good reasons for dissatisfaction, makes it natural for people to turn to a new group in the hope that a change will be beneficial." Turning to Federal issues the Transcript cites the "railway situa- tion" alone as having an “influence? The railway grievance referred to was purely local, and without irn- port in any other part of Canada. The TYEBBOIIDITIS extremely rabid in its Liberalism, but to its credit it argues from the basic principle of truth as to the factors in the elec- tion, so much so that it is a marvel that the evening organ allows so much pl fact to reach its readers. The St. John Telegraph-Journal is also foolishly referred to. This pap- or, (independent) goes no further than a bare statement of election results, with simple comment that, "it is obvious to set down the plain ‘ ‘ that the province de- mands a change of government." Extracting suribeams from cucum- bers again, a favorite pastime. i am. 8h. etc. READER a good life arid a failure lie deep- Bi‘; they take place inside a man, deep in the recesses of his own heart._ and the outward. visible trappings are less than the dust, This. to be sure, is not a new dis- covery. But the rest of us seldom get more than s. suspicion of it at best-Chronicle-‘flelegraph. Old ass pensions new paid in Germany to people older than sixty five will be alblialisd and special workshops‘ sons u to Illhty years. Dr. rt My. ties Iisbour Iront lea o tho new policy, Ilowentempe of have been riiiio bell’.- would be QIMMHBQIO wit! i» soumsiiawitlie , iiiimpiiig, ~ , “Li, email-misnomer- i». one... . p A ' fruit wit“ mt {nfifi ' ‘ i" I 3%‘. i§..-.*f.‘."'g“i'£‘t.i'£."°' stated nehfancifulsciismsnauiifiisse v " when plain it surely most _ ' iiismt rims A , suxwsr. m," m, ' out oo the inn-oaths! not be- oould not io Ii» mlrsouiremsutof olden m" THE DIFFERENCE Sin-The evening organ, unfamil- iar with political history, has some stransli ' ‘ New Brunswick vot- ed Liberal, ergo Prince Edward Is- land will vote Liberal. ergo Canada will vote Liberal. It is a fact that history repeats imif? Let us revert to history. r Ontario, Nova Beetle, New Bruns- wick and P. E. Island voted on the prohibition issue. 111s three former ieposlsd ition by large ms- iorities. This oviucg went directly impolite by a si-ge mslority. Iron it'll to 1M every province had Liberal im~ athllllflt- iri-riisiomniioooi province, I wh° "u" m9 by my name and it shall not come into force except. on proclamation. This will give the British Columbia Gove- ‘ an opportunity to change its mind so that the farmers in the Pacific coast province may continue to benefit from last year's legislation, as the farmers of the other provinces are benefiting. iii . THE SONG OF WANDERING ANGUS I went out to the hazel wood, Because a fire was in my new, And cut and peeled e-hasel-wmd, .. And hooked a berry to a thrggd, And when white moths were on tho wing, 5nd milih-llke stars were-flickering out I dliiliped the berry in s, stream And caught a little silver trout. When I had laid it on the floor I went to blow the lire a-flame, Bi" wmeihh-ii rustled on iiic iiooi- And someone called me by my It hadunme: become s. glimmering girl With apple blossom in her hair, ran And ffilled through the brightening Thoiiab r am old with yaiiiiiiirii Through hollow lands and glib 1 ill W d out whore she has gong And kin her lips and to,“ hei- And wan”: mil"! 1W dlnbled mess And. pliuck our time iiiia times m’ one The 'silver swine of th In The when wales of tlge .°..‘.’.‘." --W. B. Yolk. . already fully Hr. BRAHMIN ORANG E“ PEKOE Sold only in red airtight pkgs. IEETH SPARKLING Too Pot says f I Use Best Quality TEA. EMPIRE TEA 146 Richmond Sh. l E. R. BROIV Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance. at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis ___.. Charlottetown and Reports ‘é FIIIIIAY, J Business session 11 2 p. m. féssiori welcome. ' a The Peace Ballot i-is (Toronto Globe) iri Alb_ert Hall, Inridon, when then _were speeches by Lord Cecil of Chelwood. the Archbishop of Can- tendency among zealots to faII in- to solemn folLyJ who in the long history of recorded time have labored to reveal the ob- vious, none ever revealed anything more obvious than do the sponsors of the Peace Ballot. his discovered nothiugihst is__ng_ pro to all the world regarding the British people's desire for pesos. It is not oven news hen nine riatcries o1 the balliit, still cherish s belief in the smouiy ofthetna- lilo of Nations as place-insurance. TiieBr-itlsh are y slew to _ desert lost causes and to face tru- II.II.S. IIEMMIIIG, B-A-~¢~P-A-.¢-¢-.A Certified Puplic. Accountant and Auditor I Bookkeeping systems installed or revised | Profit and Loss Accounts Computed, ‘Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements Prepared. Administration of Estates a Specialty. MONEY TO LOAN. Bank of Nova Scotia. Building Charlottetown, P. E. I. IIIIIIIIAL IIEIIIBAL SOCIETY MEETING The Annual Meeting of ward Island Medical Society will be held in the CANADIAN NATIONAL HOTEL ‘JHARLOTTETOWN, the Prince Ed- IILY 12th. a.. m. Clinical session Visiting members of the medical pro- Ballot is not being presented by its sponsors as an expression of the peaceful aspirations that a: More than nine million people in 2:11:11? yuthglu '16 o‘ G the British Isles have signed their Dream, m,“ m, mm“, policy m names to s. declaration in favor of ‘ ‘“_n.°m_p.cmc worn M such, "m bi’ iniiinmmn“ ‘Wmiiili- its usefulness to either Britain or The fact was flttiiigly celebrated pa“ m” b, qumwned_ w“, mg Geneva are not yet interchangeable terms. It is still possible‘ forhfitlr le f th itish 0H5 ° ' terbury and other pacific dignitar- zruymtxmkemqa witggut ma,“ ies. The occasion is worthy of note, Gemvt n mm“ we“ be Wm in if only as evidence of the universal mo” “new, 6mm hm,“ m)“; latel hsic . to "frliri fr m pull-ins Among the well-marlin; people m n,:’§fithh'§m,p,,,.s f", m m, Geneva basket. _ presented as a and: notably as a WW‘ the Banal- drop in and save none! st llllljlldl. , _ V _ fi1§"vf% i i-i-r-h-w i \