t. -,, illllifiIlIlllIIill Olefin l. Inlnnl Vino- l. l. III-molt: rIllIhIalIII-Od-D-l-Illllllolill-LO- fllaeliudlaugur.l.l.lunofl. Auotlelllhmlmltluvln Blew York Incentive-Incl l. IQIQWI Gllclto Iopuoeuhdvo-I. I. Pow-v FRIDAY, JANUARY 30,1925 . NOVA BOOTIA LIIERALISM The inenuity of the Armstrong gdvernment in Nova Scotla is un- dergoing a severe ‘test these days. The vacancy recently created in the cabinet by the resignation of the Provincial Secretary Treasurer has Iheen filled without the usual formalities. I-Ion A. S. McMillan. who was defeated at the last elec- tion. was made a. member of the L gislative Council to avoid the risk of s ibye-election and was raised from there to the cabinet vacancy. Premier Armstrong was defeated at the last general elec- tion as were also Hon D. A. Cam- eron and- thc above named Hon. A- S. McMillan. The cabinet has been “recoastructed" byswapping seats and the general election is not more than six months off. ‘these seats must be filled in ‘the regular ilvay lIly election. it is gen- erally admitted that the Arm- strong government is suffering from dry putriflcation and cannot survive another general election. W} A POLITICAL EXPERIM ENT Then III!‘ govern- There are doubts as to sLabIIIty of the Veniot ment in New Brunswick and as there is to be a general election within the year the Premier is naturally becoming anxious. B: way of experiment he has decid-“i to put on a bye-election the date of which has been set for February 5th, next tuency selected for the experiment is Gloucefier and the reason for the selectlpn is that the county is Thursday. The consti- In history as a SLIJOIKII, Cabinet Minister. The outcome will be look- ed forward to with interest. EDITORIAL NOTES Christmas buying in Dec-ember oft makes bard sledging in Janu- ary, worse luck. Don't hear much about the vac- ant Senatorship these days. A nine days wonder. The next nine days wonder will he when the appoint-l meat is actually made. There will ‘be a demand for who thinks he preach from now on, for there‘ will GVBT)’ 111811 CZIII be far more churches and preach- ing stations than ordained mcn to look after them. Rcv. Dr. Drummond of Hamilton thinks because of the great cleav- age it has occasioned the United Church of Candada Act should ‘be repealed; but. on the other hand, here are the views of RevJtM. Ham- ilton, a unionist minister of Brock- whose congregation voted against union. "We are dividing over a great religious issue, for my~ self I have no doubt as to the right- eousness of the cause of union. I shall not review the ‘bitter and hum- lllatlng struggle. Every true child of God must look back upon it with disgust. It has been a shame and a disgrace to this Chucrh." ville Not many people in this country now adnys ever read a line about Ireland but John Dillon's attack Notes By The Way ment claimed a surplus for WM‘. It_ was at once denounced from cue end of the Dominion to the other as a fake. The Domin- ion owed these millions the same as oefore and the ‘tax payers have tho interest to pay just the sa-me. lit was a dishonest bookkeeping brick on which the Government based a false claim to having had a SUCCESS-Ill year. Still for a t-ime ministers and their supporters as- serted before Parliament met, dur- ing the session and afterward that there was a surplus. knowing that It had no existence. We have heard and read little of that surplus of late. Doulbtless the party is ashamed of its ,baseless claim and nf the ministers who set it up. And we hear nothing of any surplus for 1924. The Liberal pap- (‘rs tcll their readers that trade is good and the country is prosperous more so than last year. if there ‘was a surplus last year there should be a bigger one this year, but it seems not to be forthcoming. Pros- porlly brings increased revenues in other countries. Why not in (Jan- ada? The bookkeeping trick of last year will not boar reputation. It is too much discredited. Parliament is called to meet next week. in the meantime certain facts are well known. The fetirrzil revcnucs havefallcn off. This Is true of the customs, excise Income tux and sales tax. It is also true of railway receipts. upon which so much ildpcnds. Immigration has fallen off from the previous year notwithstanding that almost twice as much public money was expend- eil on this service in 1924 as in 1923. The country bad hoped for a much greater economy and re- trenchment in public expenditure than has Ibeen realized. Moreover the country hils been looking for- iward to the homing session of Par- liament for aconsiderable reduc- tion in the heavy burden of taxa- Lnt yur by shifting fllfty mil- llon dollars of the National Debt and charging l-t up against the Na- tional Raflwayg the King Govern. the overwhelmingly Liberal. Al, the missed. Listen to this gem: last general election the county returned four ‘Liberal members. one of them being Premier Veniot himself and each of them securing. in round-numbers. over five thous- and votes while three of their Con- servative opponents lost ‘their dc- posiie and the other escaped being distanced by two or three votes. From this point of view ‘hhe ex- periment looks promising. And an- other attractive feature from tire government point of view has been ad ed. This vacalnt constituency M11. Vcniot argues, would no doubt take. kindly to a Cabinet Minister and in pursuance of this bait he _has chosen as the government can on tlic Free State Government and‘ Its methods is a tiling not to be thought that I would never live same kind of oppression now." tion it is now bearing. Massey Hall. Toronto. back on the days when we wm-Qto moot it." There is in this no dpprssed by England it would loomhnpe of loss taxation; really thcro 11k‘: Paradise if we could get the1 ltaxutlon. Taxation hc admits Premier King in his speech In tho other ‘day almost forbade his hearers to, “The old Irish Party has been 1100i’- f0r any Basing of tax burdens. accused of bogging. bu,’ my 60¢ I|"\‘i'hat I want to make plain.” he .,-sald, "is that it is useless to talk 10f reducing public expenditure and s an lmlplictl prospect of higher is Wconscqui-nt upon oxpollllltllre." But The iplain fact of counse is in all these cases that new heavens and new earths are difficult things to . evolve; but people who start them should not rcpinc if they do not happen to materialize at the first off-go. Tho $3.000 tpIODDSGII to be spent dlliyate the Attorney General, Mr» "an Q Rand ‘who’ it Wm be n, on advertising by the Touris/t As- meumbeued, was offered to Mon- ‘mclatmn ‘l3 a V“? m°d°5t “PP?” ctgn some weeks ago but whom Moncton rejected by a considerable rnliljority. The Opposition candidate ls,_Mr. J. L. Ryan a rising barrister of‘ Bathurst. Another factor which is of the are Mr. Venlot regards as hopeful the fact that five sixths population of Gloucester linemen to whom he can talk con fidlenvtially In their own language Tills however, la not ‘all to good as the Conservative M. P. Mr. Doucet who suasively" than Mr. Veniot. What the Conservative hopes for winning the constituency are, we, at this distance, cannot appraise with any accuracy and ilt must ‘be admitted that the undertaking is not promising. However, the sym- pathetic advice of a certain man (g his little son who was ‘seine (uh/lag is always oprovol- "1! W“ In- deed the opposition bu already JueoudQd in searing “em. At the can't catch em, scare ‘em!’ blroral convention which nominat puaboofloillld‘ the captured Kent County from the Liberals a few months ago is around and he also can speak French ‘even more pcr- ‘ea m. Rand there worenbout aoo electors present and the Llbml brass regarded it an very promis- ' when. however, some 900 conservatives ‘pour- q: m» mam; u» omi- day to antidote their candida“. MI‘- m... there were lone hid!- llsrcblan in Liberal circles and inns oven went so p" — m u. lactic for actual ossification. p§§fl|afeartha~titmllhtwhard ‘ u» meet c andidato u l, for ma» Iona um ol00tbl|_,17°"11"\ M 1N elflflviiv 91w printlon when compared with‘ tho similar expenditure of other suc. ccssfully boomed enterprises. For instance I-ast year, the Victor Talk- ing Machine Co, spent 81.500000 in advertising. Wrlglcys‘ $1,000,000 Sun-Mold Ralsen Growers’ Assoc- iation. 8485-000. Quaker Oats $400,- 000, Borden Condensed Milk. $265,000. California Fruit Grow- ‘ere Exchange $240,000. French Irick Springs Hotel Co. $105,000. Dairymen's League ‘o-operatlve As. soclattion $150,000. McCall's Mega. nine, 8100.000. iIf these prlvalte enterprises find it 9113's them to spend so considerably in advor- tising surely the Province of the "Garden of the Gulf" would find it equally remuneratlve if it mulvtlp- lied its appropriation by ten. ‘The Island Farmer, the Wednes- day alias of the esteemed Pioneer, rises to remark that "outside the Charlottetown Guardian's editorial columns and the pages of some IWWBDBIPQPs of that ilk." the key- note of the vbudd-Ing year is optim- ism. Alas we also were among _ the optIImI-stic prophets until the Hon. George P. Graham, Acting Prime Minister sadly disillusioned as ‘by telling a "delegaltlon that his optimism of six months ago had peter-ed out, and with it 824.000,- 000 of revenue which had not mat- erialized from anticipated increas- ed business. Optimism is a fine mental exercise but is no prophy- A new Governmem at Ottawa is now the only optimistic keynote of ‘the 1 means of revenue has been eon: b qqun] ‘m ‘g flown plotoly exhausted. 'his idea of needful expenditure is drcd of miles of new railways in Canada which already has railway THUMB sufficient for twenty-five mllllfltls of people?" Ill Business failures for the week ending January 23, show an 1n. crease in Quebec and Ontario, ibut not a general Incronsc in other pro- vinccs. Thirty-two failures in Que- bec and fourteen in Ontario were something of an avalanche. The recent llquldalxlon of the Pemlbrokt‘ Woolen Mills adds to tho list of many woolen factories that have closed their doors within the past W0 Wars as the rel-suit of outside. competition. It had a yearly pay P011 01' $110,000. The fadlure is-as- crilbed to the British preforr-nco 11111195 110111! lowered on British goods ‘by the King Government in 1922 and furthcr reduced in 1923. The French treaty ibfgught in“, force in 1923 also lowered the <11!!!’ on woolen goods and knit goods from France and Belgium. It ls a great shame that so larqe a share of Canada's innupei-t and ex. port trade ‘with the outside ‘world should come and go through U11“. ed States ports and be carried over Fflfiwflys in that country. Canadian lpnrts and railways are thus robbed of their just dues and the Domi- nion is made ‘tributary to a foreign country. The Dominion is now be- ing aroused as it has never before ‘been by the movement. for Mari- time and Canadian rights in these matters and it wl-ll be stranges in- deed lf some adequate remedy is not applied in the near future. ._.__- Qlr Henry Drayton, oat-Minister of Finance. just unturned from Europe finds the people of France busily occupied and making and saving money. The same Ia true of Ger- many. both ‘p. ‘ectiolrlst countries. It is in “free" trade England that there are nearly a million and a half workers out of employment, a spectacle to the world. Also in Canada in all the lergefbltlea there is an unemrnpled number of wort- ere with nothing to do. Why la this‘! ‘Because the K-lng Govern- ment policy has lowered the Cana- of wort-en of the mascot-mot- lng a living. -1 that it includs the biulding of hun- I Il- m GHARLOTPETOWN connotes ‘ y Iliibat “i , 180112 of _ sum 3, 1 w, Bum. M0,, FOOD AND BLOOD PREOOURE A business man past sixty found it necessary to take out some in- surance for the protection of his firm. » When he was examined by the physician it was found that his blood pressure was over 160. which was twenty or more points higher than the company liked to have it. There was no heart nor kidney trouble, and the applicant appeared to be in the best of health. The examiner and the agent were in a quandary because the re- fusal of insurance in one company is quite properly renortcd to all the companies, and flsurance cen- not be obtained except with certain reservations. Ho was not refused directly but requested to call back in a few weeks. The agent hnd tho applicant con- sult anothcr physician, who like- wise found the blood pressure 160. but everything else normal. On enquiring us to his daily hub- rnun he should out down his food supply by at least twenty five per cont. Ho was outing too much for his age, and getting no exercise. No special diet was laid down, except the lessening of the quan- tity of food eaten. _ ‘Further he ‘vns tn walk to bus- iness in the morning, and part of the way home in the evening. l At the end of two weeks the blond pressure was down to 150. another two weeks it was at 140. al company which had held up his application temporarily. Further the npplicatit felt strong- er for his exercise, fresh air, and lessened food intake. Now what about this? _ Wall. high blood pressure is not an ailment or a sickness in itself. It is just a symptom that some- thing isn't just right iu the system. ,Some of the British physicians be- lieve that this high blood pressure. where there is no heart or kidney trouble, is entirely due to the pols- onlng from a lazy intestine. its, he suggested that for an offico . and he was accepted by the origin- ' The Public Forum Illa column ll o»! ha‘ the (Infill! Charlottetown I“ necessarily undone the op- Mlou of correspondents. LIBERAL NOMINATION 8ir.-I do not care to offer this suggestion to a Liberal newspflilill‘ -for dbvious ‘reasons and will be obliged‘ if you will favor me with the necessary space. ' It is well known that the Liber- al party is dissatisfied with their present representatives in‘ the House of Commons, particularly in Queen's County. They have not yet nominated their candidates, a fact which in itself is significant, but is there any good reason why ‘the party should allow itself to be caught napping. A general elec- tion may be called within a few mOntIrs- is it not time to wake up. call the convention and be prepared for whatever comes. Pending the calling of such con- vention and mindful of the fact that It is strongly improbable that the present standard b€arers shall again be honored I wish tn sug- gest that Mr. J, Clrving, M. L. A-, of Vernon, be nominated as one of thc candidates for this county. Mr .lrviug is a success- ful fanuvr and stock raiser, a shrewd business man, honest and honourable and if elected may be depended upon to do his best in the lntcrsis of the province. It is unnecessary lo go into par- ticulars hero and I am just mak- ing this suggestion iu whnt I I10- lievo to lbc in tlic best iwicrcsis of the party. I am, Sir, ctc. R. A- McLEOD Uigg. ._._-¢0->-—-—— THE “WEE FREE" CHURCH Sir,—'i‘lic Rcv. i\lr. Bonncll is out again; this ‘time to set ns all right on the Woe Free question. The “'29 Frees will now under- stand that they might as vrcll take to ‘their Ibighlziuti ‘Glens and end ‘their Wee Existence where they it'll-i ncvcr bc heard of again. Let us enquire us to why the history of this small church is tlraggcd In- to the discussions oycr our Cana- dian Church Affairs. There is an object and it is this: Vary runny Presliytrriuns hcrc arc not ivllliug to enter the jiroposcd Union. Ilonv many is us‘ yct unknown. That is being tlocitlvd in similar fashion to a publiczil election with all the QIICSIIOIIZIIIIO features of a corrupt Other physicians state that it just indicates a slugglshncss of the circulation, ' Now there are various methods used to reduce the pressure aside from reducing the food and fluids. One of these is the cutting down nut the excess of salt in the tis- see “that is taking placelthe consequent taxation beyond a sues‘ today under an 11-131, Gm... . ‘However, where there are nn Dmmbm Whpn l k frinéun pomt'_ It 0mm“ be doneQcompllcatlons with the hcart or ~ . . we oo , 1e problem IS to, find some way kidneys, it is wcil to remember that the simple reduction in the tissue by exercise, is u sensible and cffcctlvc trwtmcnt, tné power to influence all with whom JANUARY 30.-—You have you come in contact, cltlior for good or evil, Use this power wlsc- iy. You will never be demonstra- tive, but_-will, nevertheless. Iovc with a true, strong passion. 13c careful to abstain from jealousy. Your birth-stone ls a garnet. which means faithfulness. Your flower is a suowdrop. Your lucky colors are ‘Navy-blue and black. ooeoaoo-o-o-oowo-oo-o-oo-ovo-o4 Daily Selections l FOR Q Guardian Readers January 30, 1925 TRIED AND -I‘ROV‘ED:—~As for God, his way is perfect; the word of the Lord is tried; he is a buckler to all them that trust him. ll Sum- uel 22:31. |PRiAY‘I9R:—The law of the Lord Is perfect converting the soul. Help heart; then it will perfect us. EVERLASTING ARMS The Eternal God is lhy refuge, and underneath are the evcrlust- ing arms.—~Deut. xxxill, 27. 0 Everlasting Arms, be under mo. And guide my feet in paths I can not see; Help me to keep within Thy love so sure. ‘Tho only place where l can rest se- cure. .0 Everlasting Arms, be under me When tossed and driven hard on life's rouflh sea; Help me to anchor in Thy haven sure, From winds and tides and breakers rest secure‘. O Everlasting Arms, be under me When sorrows come so fast I scarce can sea" ‘Help me shelter in Thy love so lure. The only place where l can rest se- cure. Helping Hlm Along- Roporten-“And in what were you born. professor?" Profeocow-"Unleaa my recollec- tion fails me, in the state of ignor- state um: tariff and mum thouolnds “l” ‘Reporter (ocrlliblian-"Yes, to ‘lie calm. And hovl...long have you lived there?" election Clllllvsla-llllll to show the poor ignorant Prcshyrterians what Jsuuauiiso lees I in their report (latest available C/re Reason is Quality at of all the Baking Powder. Canada is MAGIC BAKIN PQWDER. This fact is establishe jbythe Dominion Bureau 0F reduced in ta: lcs for 19214922 report) - Absolutely Reliable a Moderate Price gatious. and according to Mr. Bon- ncll's figures they now have at least over seventy churches occupi- cd, being thus almost three times as largo as thcy were in 1900. The Ilnitcd Frntv Church bill-Kill! “'1i11 about sixteen hundred churches, and rulizrblc accounts put thcm now z‘: zibout fourteen hunilrt-tl. Thrir gain is biickwarils. if they hull gain- vd like tlic Woo Frees thcy should have uvt-r [our thousand Churches Fur Farms With Canadian. Foxes EIGHT PAIRS FROM P. E. I. BE- GINNING OF DEV‘ELOP- MENTS IN SCOTLAND I\lON'l‘IIEAL, Jan. 29——The 8H0- uss of Major Lionel Hanniuig-tou, u Canadian barrister‘. who broilght ovcr eight pairs -of alive-r foxes .l\.‘ili,l.l.,lcil',ull ‘gukwm. u‘, gcothnd to csl-zihlishctl thiui at Alncss, Ross. ‘M . .‘ ‘. . ‘» ,~_-' :> H‘ ti m", munurs rwht \‘I\‘tll ms mg Silllli}, hi. ituuulttid iutcres u friends ovcr there. They require his utlt-niion fully mort- thun wt‘. do hort- lu this small viuoyarri.’l‘lu-rc is out‘ vcry singular ft-utun‘ about Mr. llmincll’s contributions. that s lic ahvnys bobs up whvu- his friends urn being cxposvil In uiisrcprcsciilu- tious. but so lung us they are not cliiillciigt-tl hi» is norm" heard from. As our looking up from tho pcn. I often woud ii our ecclesiastical coiitrniwrisi; Fits t-vnr llliilk lhlll. they own uu uurcscrvctl duty to truth, to soc that we nrc not lwiuu it-d on n! any time statements that an‘ not ulw: "s Imnrsl and truthful. Ily the way. I would likv to know and jierlmjis .\lr. llonnt-ll who knows ~10 much, would inform us us t0 thv this new typo of farming. and Ih-c organization which ‘brought over silver lnrm will luntl shmtly in Glasgow scvvrzil pains oi’ finst-cltiss nnliuuls. foxes for an Oxfordshlrc ll is in. ndvd to establish fur farms at PCllUlllIIilllll and (lolspic (lther Vfzirms sturtctl at parts of Scotland and and llI'.‘I‘(' is fool lo popularize lhc industry on llu- Couiiucnt. probably be dulc iu other England, also a llI()\’"CilIOIlI. oi‘. will n lutm" This is thn l) "t tlmc of tho your to bring foxes nvcr from (‘nnntlu 'l‘lm zunimnls. which mny_cost.zis high us £200 for a Ililii-CIZISS pair. un- amt. difficult to keep, ox- istiug on Ill" ordinary food which “Christian Walk and Convvrsutlou" 55 111111111111111? "11 ‘"13’ (‘"111’- Of 11mm. who l-‘rpus, Arc tip-y lui- .\Ill_|<)l‘ lluuniizglous cxpcriiuout rt tor or worse than tho worshippers Mimi-a‘. Wlivri‘. Ibo fnxws lune DFOY bore? If they urc hotter why ridi-i’ cult‘. tlicm‘! If worse why not rfillfl’ n mission alumni; thvm‘! lu cunt-lu-l slnu I may suy that l mu quitv cowl scious of Air. Bouuclls fins uh‘ ’ 9 the fate of those who ivisli to rc- main Prt-slyvlcrizms is to bc,a com- |parisou is (IFIIWII with tlic historyi of Scotland,‘ mic, hmvc-vcr. liuunblo out of their jof the Frcc (‘liurch {known as lilo Weir Frees. - I - Now. u comparison to be of value 1'11 the 5a“ 111M118 W111‘ 111° fmld-lthe both cast-s should be siuiiluinirifirl btllvls by lllL‘ force of civil, hug!"- nro sometimes used to clcarlin an rpqk-cjg, m- a, lpug-g m {)(31lli‘\‘i' or any law. Sim-n‘ lit? is umvi | {nearly so. llut thus.‘- two cases are so dissimilar as to TUIHlUr a com-j |parison of one case with jlhe otlicr n complete fill-l |surdlty. ’l‘lii- \\'i-i- Frccs r:.‘-_I lfuscd -to uniti‘ with ziuuthci" Pros-l food intake, and ‘the using up oflhyicrian Church having tlic some. To 50o OHHPIS 41$ ollH-rs soc us! doctrinal standards and built-is and in cvury rosin-it so ulikt- that lhc! Law Courts of Scotland could lind| no difference ‘between them. It was! mcrvly a union of two l'l'l'.~il)yli‘i‘liill1 Churches as if Si. Jami-s‘ and Zion tloclrlctl to worship llllllill’ the out.‘ roof. Is that the kind oi Unluu we 3N: asked to enter”! \\'hy our s-‘tan- tlnrds are to ‘bc scrapped; our name S008; our church propt-rtiies K005 from the congregations to u‘ largo (rorporntlon. Thc Union we urt- ask- ed to join is as grout u (ZllIiIII-{P us lf tho pcoplo oi‘ Zion Church wcrc to move into the Aicihorlisi. Ilrick Church and leaving everything (lis- tlnctive of Prttsbytcrlanisui hchintl tliom. They would not 0i ‘course bc culled Methodists. as a couijirnurise name would be used. I would ask Mr. Ilnnncll ii‘ he thinks tlic com- parison bcliwccn tlic two cases is honest? The vcry basis and 0b- jcct of such a compnristm is till:- solutcly dishonest and unworthy of any people lc-l nlonc thosc culling iht-msolves Christians. ‘ (lbscrve how this couipzirisoli, which is unfair. untruthful, and dis- honest in itself, is worked to in» llucuco the vote ‘in favor of Union. Tho plan is to show a dark picture of tho condition of that sumll Church body almost unknown to us mid for ‘whom tlic I'I‘OS‘l)yi(‘.I’ll1IlS of Canada are in no way responsible, and then regardless of facts or truth, apply their ensc- ns if slin- ilar in cvery ‘way. to the non-con- curling churches horc. Ii‘ there was no other tliffcrcuct: in the cases but that of mourners and strength the comparison would ho cqunlly absurd. in Scotland ‘luvcn- ty-slx parishes refused to cuter the "Union of sixteen hundred parishes. In Canada 275 congregations al- ready have refused to join the uncr- Kcr nud before this disgusting con- test between the oclcsiasticul par- lics is over. probably five hundred independent strong congregations will remain to carry on the Pres- hytcrlfln Church in Christin. Oh- scrve these differences. it is amusing to see how tlic size of a church Ls the imlportuut elc~ mcnt with Mr. Bonnell. Hc shows us how small the Wee Frees are and how large the Urfiwr] Fm“ Church is and judges the quality or each by their numbers. Well what of it? The Wee Frees begg-n 1n 1900 with owenty-six small congr-e. , . “ hipwiY y. ‘, r,,"r<|ilr~1/\1""/\" 1‘,'~tl1_‘¢,ri|‘i1 it's, and morvovt-r I illli S-lll 1x1‘ hc himself, is (‘vcu moi-t‘ so. butl I would like i0 s00 Ill(‘lll put tu but- IPI‘ use than trying to (lI‘l\'i‘ :1 limo- Olll churches and Into new and nu- likcly to drop tlinsi‘ nltl familiar Prcsbylcriiiii Psalms and Puruplr, rascs rnnld In‘ not girl‘ snmij thought to this verso. from Iiuruw; "0 wad. some l’u\\"r tin‘ glftiv gin. us l ll wntl it'll.‘ miuny .'| Illllnlloi‘ fret‘ 115-: mill foolish notion: 1 What airs in tin-rs and Knit u-zul 1on1: us. and i‘v'n dvvzillnnl I um. Sir, Pill. Tllld FEW. sEr-rsn NAMES "I'm gniilg in (wall my Iurliy (‘bur-l Ion." suitl tlir‘ zulllmr; “nftvv (‘hur- 11's lnnuh, you ‘know. Ill‘ is such, :|. rli-nr llllli“ lamb." "Uh. I'd cull, llim \\'ill‘i:nvi llvuu." nitl rlp- frit-nil‘, "Iln Howells so mucli"—-\\'ist-ouslu' (ll-lupus. DE LAVAL SERVICE the Laval for De We have extras various styles of Separators. We have a competent man who can take your Separator down and put in the new parts. In fact we can guarantee‘ the best service in this line that can be procured any- where. SEND US YOUR SEPARATOFI NOW. Central Creameries Ltd. 225 Fitzroy Sf. Phone 848 l1lU-l~28\vfn\tf_ “New your; FISH ADS. I Have You Seen The BARGAIN S In Our Carpet Department a BEER 8c WEEKS Aim ll porcd well. prove that illu uni. mails will thrive iu lIleSo isluudsf If this development [ITOVIZQ a success, and a lot tlvpi-utls, Q1 course, or trliuiutii- conditions‘ cold weather bclug esscutlal_ lhcre is no reason why tlic Scot. tlsh finmcr slloultl not (emulate tlic cxnurpli‘ of his Ilrvthrcn in ffzinzulzi, and iuak‘; fur-iuruiiizg a [irciitnble industry- ANOTHER sroav blunugcr of Storc~“\Vlmt (lo you imean 111)’ fill-Zulu! Mill that Indy? lmt hcr have IIOI‘ (IWII way. .; Ruuiorwhor, n customer is always ‘- right." A sililli~“lIlll she Slilll were swindle-rs." oo++4+0+4+o+o+o0+o¢>++ C. M. Lanipson & (‘o. 64 Qurrlz Street, London, E1‘. 4,, England W0 Public Auction Salt-s of Raw Furs Rcprcsenmd by Alfred Fruscr, 212 ITi/tlz Avenue New York trove 04090-004040004004-0994-0-0-60 ++oo+++++¢++o¢o 000 o coo “157-12-1MIIFI/Illlflmilfl. in. m Buying o Farm Produce st We are ravine hiahm cash prices for sEED and FEED OATS , SEED and FEED WHEAT , SEED and FEED BARLEY . sEED and FEED suck. ‘ WHEAT BALED HAY ind STRAW We are selling all kinds of Feeds For HORSES, SHEEP and HOGS. Virility of fresh P0111111’ 1 Supplies Got our prices before buy. lng. We CATTLE, A big V FLOUR (but brinds) OATMEAL, no|_|_. ‘ E0 oars. TABLE com... ‘ MEAL. GRAHAM FLOUR \EV_'110LEWHEAT FLOUR. 0.. all at lowest possible PFICG], CARTER & 00., LIMITED. l -......, ' ‘ enfrwflfl‘ l‘. ' "' |I (3.6. WADMANMO. INC- COMMISSION DEALERS IN 1 _’ SMELTSr-EELS-BASS-SHAD ' ACKEREL-LOBSTERS-ETC“. A Oar Load Lots a Specialty g Send to us for Stencil, Cards, Etc. ‘ rnourr DAILY returns I 25 Fulton Fish Mkt. IIEW YORK, ‘II. Y. kegs,‘ .. ;