in: Ihsldant—W. timbers: l. Islam I Idilor and lalllllll Inning Doll! (lllllifll "l" » $4.10 per nae (ll advance) QUIZ GREATEST ASSET. magnificent compliment was to Prince Edward Island b! Senator Meighen when he said that our tourist advantages did not rc- _'"lwQ to be advertised. ‘Ihcro l8. - ever, another Prince Edward Is- “fi; met of which we are still :$§uder than our tourist attracti or the products of our farms and _ Jisherles. It has been said many “"times that the Provinces greatest airport is its brains. There is scar- gJtiY a Province in Canada, or s ....5tate in our sister Republic, where Prince Edward Islanders have not made good and are today occupying "Iédding positions in the churches, in pdlitlcsfln business or in the various _.,,,grofessions. And this supply of trained intellect and initiative shows _ _no sign of diminution. Almost daily ‘during the past week there appeared Tllts of Island students who have distinguished themselves this year in various universities and colleges on the mainland. In this connection "we might refer to the splendid a- chievement of Island students at lDalhousie, especially of Mr. Mal- “cdlm Birt Dockerty, Cardigan, who tied with another student in winning ~tho Dalhousle University medal in Medicine, both students’ marks be- ing the highest ever attained at the College. Another Island medical student Mr. Fred Henry Wigrnore, Bradalbane. son of Mr. Thomas Wigmore, M.L.A., is winner of no viewer than three important prizes at JIaIhousie this year. Again, at the University of New Brunswick, the Lieutenant Governor's bronze medal for fourth year forestry was won by Mr. Ernest Arthur Smith. of Pcwnal, _a_nd another Islander, Mr. James E. Dodds, of Suinmerside, won the Noel Stone memorial scholarship in third year chemistry. At the Nova Bcotia "flichnical College, Mr. L. J. Taylor, Victoria, won the Alumni medal. At ‘Acadia University this year w the graduating clas includes six Prince fflldward Islanders. At St. Francis Xavier, Mount Allison and other in- s-titutions Island names also figure prominently in the lists of success- ful students. It will be recalled that only re- centlv Mr, Cedric Boulter, son of fir. and Mrs. J. W. Boulter, Char- Tiicttetowrl, now a student at Johns ., Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md., United States, won a coveted fellow- ’ ~shlp in the study of Greek architec- " ttire which entitles him to a year's - fiiurse of study at Athens. -_ Another Islander, Mr. John Denny, of the Bank of Nova Scotia, Char- -- ~;~:-_Jl_ottetown, recently took the highest “Jnarks on the honour list in Canada ‘1_ Yin the Bankers‘ examinations. '3 "Many other names might be cited ‘Th’ this connection, of Prince Edward _,_'.'is_'land students who are achieving y "splendid success and bringing credit yto their Province as well as to them- selves. """.'!t should not be forgotten, either, "ufat both Prince of Wales College mad St. Dunstanks University afford Ttplendid opportunities for the hard- _ figorlrmg etuuchc, and that the high ‘standards prevailing in these instit- mutions are an educational asset of ' jriestimable value. The Convocation ‘It Prince of Wales College takes _ jfglfilace this year on May 25, and the St. Dunstans University Convoca- tion on May 29. There is the keen- est public interest being taken in ____, both these functions, and it is this ,.. r... . n ‘"111 the du-ofigh Africa directly into speih There u no dog -,_.'aplrit which indicates, more perhaps J-theh anything else, l the fact that “higher education in Prince Edward MIsland is regarded as a subject of in- “jreasingly vital importance. “M,” ABOUT GARDENS ~~ History records beautiful, walled- Plh gardens ilS existing id Egypt ‘ihlcflrly 5,000 years ago. These were poses of shade in a sun-baked land. lllany such gardens have been re- presented in wall-paintings Egyptian temples, showing symmet- lrical arrangements of paths. alleys qof palms, pools, building and per- lflolas. In those days gardens were ‘shictly formal, undisciplined nat- "ilro being looked upon with suspic-, 9461s. As far back as 600 13.0. King flpbuchadnczzilr had built his .-f,fhanglng gardens" where tropical plants grew on the pillared terrac- watered by sparkling fountains. rsian gardens contributed much Jowards the achievement of the garden of to-day- Their influence ' was felt ln Europe 1n early days across the Aegean Sea; and later, I eighth century, coming em-oelfn. lIlroohr-ekl. sue-isle Iditaro-Iraalxalld an I-l. mailed MONDAY HAY ll, 1”‘ Bri. history, were orderly and kindly nrduu in mains will» WI Ro- lmblic and wen fashioned toshol- tor fruit; and vegetables. unam- the nnpirc. however. they became mun elaborate. and, about. the time Pompeii was destroyed, Roman gardens resembled Renaissance gardenr of Italy or France ‘with clipped boxes. lflrtioces. alcoves and damling fountains. However, a little space was left sometimes for "an imitation of the. negligent beauties of rural nstuleffl Th very name garden meant or- iginally a yard or, enclosure con- veying the ides of privacy. The medieval monks of Eilropc culti- voted their small wallcdin plots, luxuriant with flowers. herbs and vegetables. These gardens were in touch with many countries and so were able to introduce "outlandish plants and trees of curiosity," as foreign trees were variously called: fruit trees and ornamental ones, too, for the y gardens were good places to rest in as well as to work. Many flowers such as tu- lips, hyaclnths and 111m, that to- day are familiar sights in all gat- dens, were at one time rare novel- ties brought back from the East by crusaders and scholars. POULTRY OPPORTUNITY The Dominion Department cf Agriculture 1kg and Poultry Mar- ket Review points out that there is an opportunity for both Can- adian poultry producers and ship- pers, which if taken advantage of now, could be made effective for the present year's business. The striking and most worthwhile fes- ture of the market poultry situa- tlon is the unusually keen demand for export which has opened up beyond the expectations of even the most sanguine Canadian ship- pers. This situation has been brought about by two factors: first, the very favourable recep- tion which Canadian chilled poul- try shipments of tho past two years have received, and. second. the fact that the British tariff on poultry against foreign countries has directed more tisntlon to lfl| Canada for supplies. Hitherto it has been the impres- sion that there was not very much light weight poultry available in Canada, but when the demand really developed it was surprising how much could be found, as is in- dicated by the inspection reports coming to hand. While there is un- doubtedly a considerable market for the heavier weight chickens, yet it is clear from the information already received that the big de- mand ls for the light and medium weight birds. 1t would appear, therefore, that both Canadian pro- ducers and shippers would be well advised now, early in the produc- tion season, to take stock of the situation. It requires initiative and lead, and that lead must come from the shippers and exporters. JUSTIFICATION.’ "Justification." says our local con- temporary, "cf the stand taken by the Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King and his followers at Ottawafin regard to the Marketing Bill now before Par- liament is shown by the very impor- tant amendments which the Gov- ernment have been compelled to make in many of the objectional features contained in “the original Act." How much of truth is there in the foregoing statement? The latest is- sue to hand of the Winnipeg Free Press, leading Liberal newspaper of Western Canada, supplies the ans- wer. It says emphatically: “The clarifying amendments to the Mar- keting Bill, announced by the Miri- isier of Agriculture, do not change at all its outstanding features." In other words, it is still in principle the same legislation against which Mr. Mackenzie King and his follow- ers announced that they were pre- pared to fight “to the last ditch!" EDITORIAL NOTES . It seems, for all Hitler's racial in- quisition, it is easier to be s true German Aryan than to be a true Gennan dog. Professor Rilshelmcr. curator of the llserkische museum, has been investigating German dogs for their racial antiquity, and what he has discovered is said to be dia- concerting to the most fervent be- lievers in the Aryan tradition. so German as the . th the Moors. sardis in Lydia. dachshund, daekel or badger dog, u Minor, was famed » for ~ita but, alasi the professor has in report . Hbcautiful garden known by the that the dachshund is not very ; zflreeks as the Paradise of Sordis. Xenophon speaks admlringly of its dacbdlund ‘originated only in the j ffireoi me.- and the regularity of "when period." Whereas, the Great ._tbcribed as s beautiful grove, full beyond the Roman period. w the w’: Nbmne had he: many gardens 300d Gdflllllll ll H18 Oflllllfll GCI- v as: in min no: Jbeir planting. The Academy near ‘ilkthens. where Plato taught, is de- W,“ 1mm“, 5nd temples and slate- iy trees. which. g1 the earlier daiya of ancient after all. It seems that the Dane (Deutsche DOIIQ) and the spits go back two thousand years CAIIICICSQOIQIQHIIDQIDG AN undoubtedlyioboc " vi bill-ll y; ‘adjourn of women in Inn- ‘don cheered Rt. Hon. Stanley Bald- winwhenhesskedthemtotrust ' t in disarmament. the govcrnmen the spirit of nations changed, if the treatment of Jews in Germany moans anything. These an the dsys when people who don't have to work are wor- ried to know whether they should go fishing or golfing- of course many do not have to study the al- ternatives; they take naturally to the club or to the pole, Constant work saves one from a lot of in- decision and expense. The outlook for democracy is brighter than a month ago. Here at home people may still differ on Just how narrowly President Roosevelt escaped being suppl beq by n. dictator, but even those who viewed with alarm will concede that things are much better since Dr. Wirt let the light into hitherto dairk places. Things are brighter in British Isles. Recovery is mov- ing forward in Great Britain. Tax- es are going down a. bit. one phase of popular griunblmg is allayedby cancellation of earlier cuts in un- employment pay. The late “hun- 8H‘ march" 0n London passed off quietly. Mulch less is heard of sir Oswald Mosley and his sudden convert to Fascism. - New York ‘limes. Patriotic citizens of Winnipeg are curiously shy about their pub- llc library. Mention it to them and the effect ~is much the same as if one mentions Dr. Buchman to a company of old Oxonlans, or John Dillinger to a. squad of American 009s. Eyes are cast down, a hush falls and everyone squirms until the brightest mind says: "Isn't it lovely weather we're having?"_ peg Exchange). _-----__. Mrs. Helen Mclsner’; long vigil l; ended. For u. year and a half she has scrutinized the feature; er 0W1’? man she has met. seeking the man for whom she cashed two forged money orders for a total of $37-50 in her restaurant during the i932 Christmas seascn. At last she saw the m said he was Phillip Goldstein, a2, was locked up on a charge of for- 8911'. It is entirely probable that .the name of Leighton Howard-Smith would have faded swiftly from memory like the names of the vast majority of people who live and: die. but for the fact that Mr. How- ard-Snlith left behind him a trifl- ing memento that will appeal to millions. In his will he asked that the following inscription be en- slaved upon his tombstone:- "Well born; lived simply; died without fear. If, because I happen- ed to pass this way, some have be- haved e. little better, talked a. lit- tle cleaner, laughed a little more, then, my friends, I have made There are two ways of being happy-we may either diminish our wants or augment our means —either will do, the result is the same; and it is for each man to decide for himself, and do that which happens to be the easiest. If you are idle, or sick. or poor. however hard it may be for you to dinlinish your wants, it will be hardes- to augment your means. If you are active and prosperous, or in good health, it may be easier for you to augment your means than to diminish your wants. But if you are wise you will do both at once, young or old, rich orpoor, sick or well; and if you are very wise you will do both in such a way as to augment the general happiness of society.- Franklin. That a dog has as much right on the road as a motorist is the ruling of an English judge. Ih the Slmderland county court, Judge Richardson awarded damages of 30 pounds with costs to a dog owner whose pet was killed on the high- way. Judge Richardson expressed the view that, with the speed li- mits on straightened l08dS, a great many mowr drivers failed to appreciate that they were operat- ing a dangerous machine and were prima facie responsible for My damage they might do to indi- viduals or animals. Remains of what ..was once a huge under-sea forest have been discovered on the west coast of the Cotentin Peninsula, between ti; seaside resorts of Flamanville and Roaei. Lodged among the rocks have been found huge tree trunks, manyof them six feetorooin diameter and 60 feet long. It is thought that these trees formed the long lost forest. which. accord- ing to both British and French le- gendary history, once Joined the Channel Islands to France. In some quarters Austria's trou- bles are blamed on the struggle “ ‘ Fasciln and Socialism. If this be the case, the rest of the Austrian public, which is perhaps the majority, may feel inclined to exclaim. “a plague on both your houses." It's {not weather for yawning gazing out of windows. looking up the price of tires and scanning the brightly illuminated pages of the seed catalogues. Conditions arc ideal for discussing tihe baseball situation with friends or "overhaul- ing ifle beloved fishing tackle. But please. let's not talk of work! Wily couldn't someone introduce a. law to provide for a week or so of con- for the whole wor ‘mi- ins-eels. onsetofagonisingpainintherog- bone, accompanied by a feeling of ‘ '4’ (tightness) and in sov- dill deathurhepaincxtendsiotheback. the shoulders and the arms partic- ularly the left. The patient is pole, haggard, motlonlesiband often bath- ed with cold perspiration. nition of what is known as angina pectoris or breast pang. I'm men- tioning it again as it is a very com- mon ailment in middle aged. or el- derly individuals. infectimus, rheumatism, kidney dis- ease, influenza and others. As excit- ing causes may be named: physical exertion, mental strain, profound emotion; and digestive disturbances. Something interferes with the flow of blood to the small vessels supply- ing the muscular walls of the heart with blood. As these muscular walls do not get enough blood to nourish them properly the heart cannot do its work of pumping blood to the lungs and to all parts of the body. Hence the tight, vise-like feeling. However recent researches seem to show that these little blood vcsels may be partially closed, not because the walls are becoming non-elastic. but because a "spasm" temporarily closes or partly closes these vessels. This would account for tho angin- al attacks from emotional and di- gestive disturbances. Recently Drs. M. A. Rothschild and M. Kissin in the American Heart Journal tell us of causing a lessening of the amount of oxygen in the blood by having a number of individuals rebreathe air. some of whom had true angina pectoris, and some were nom-isl healthy indivi- duals. ’ It was found that rebreathed (lacking in oxygen )air caused symptoms exactly like true angina pectoris. The thought then is that with a. pain in the region of the heart or under the breast bone. simple gas pressure from indigestion is, the commonest cause; and even when it is not indigestion and resembles true angina pectoris as described above. the pain may be due to breathing impure air-air with insufficient oxygen. Crouched on the river bank, Elbows on bended knees, Sits an old fisherman Under the willow trees, Flipping the stlppled trout Up with a. sudden pull; - Wrlths of the shadowed stream. Rnsy-moled, beautiful . . . Like a gnarled Crecian River god by the stream, Or. if you saw him there. Well might this ancient seem Time with ills silver hook, snatching the golden curled Ladies and gentlemen From the blue world. --II‘homas sulkie in the New York. The Insull Case (Mail and Empire) We some time ago expressed the fear that the Insuils, who have been taken back to Chicago for trial, because of certain financial transactions in which they were engaged, might fall a. victim of political influence in courts which are political 1n character because the judges are elected at, the polls. But we learn from the latest des- patches that already there are signs of a reaction of public sympathy for the aged and oomparativey impov- erished men. According to a Chi- cago despatch there has been no demonstration of the vindictiveness that was widely expressed immed lately after Samuel Insull fled from the throne which had toppled him off in the wreckage of his empire. "Then the stern resolve to bring Insull back was greeted with gen- eral applause. Even so. the popular resentment was not sufficient to rc- nominate the State's Attorney who sent his deputies post haste w cap- ture the fugitive. He overdicl his eagerness and the VOters put it down to politics. and began to wonder if the former utility magnate was not justified ln making a hasty escape. That marked a turning point in public feeling." Ar. the chase pro- ceeded and the Federal Govem- ment joined in it, following the old- er man across Europe to Athena, thence to the Mediterranean and the Dardaneiles, the pursuit became in many minds a sporting event. a great game ‘of hare and hounds, and sympathy increased for the hare. According to a New York Times despatch there is a hope that he will raise the curtain on the greed of politicians who. with much reason. are supposed to have been corrupt parasites on his great enterprises. That hope has been vigorously voiced by at least one big Chicago newspaper. The hypothesis that Insull may be s. scapegoat for others who no lus merit prosecution arouses sym- pathy for him. Such comments as “Why don't they go after the other fellow? The old man wasn't the worst," are heard repeatedly. ‘time has taken the edge of public anger with Insull. _.__Z____________.._ fever, a delicious but deadly ma- lady, sweeps us all off our feet and lists all among its vlctsns. E0 ld at iqhlillllll ANCINA IYIPIODI! IAY DUE T0 IMPURE'AII Anattackconsistsintbesudden‘ ion of the heart or under thsrbrcsst . S e I am again slvlns tho lull-ll dofl- M Various causes are given-alcohol. I the April showers had turned lo fair blossoms where they fell. It is the springtidc festival of May with its myriad charms, even as the poet Thompson says- "Amoug the changing months, May stands confessed The sweetest, and in fairest colors dressed." And Shakespeare himself could find no more befitting simlie of youth in the fullness of its finest impulses and high emotions than to speak of- “Love, whose month is ever May." Which epigrarn in six brief words is about as complete a. summary of the Maytime festival a; ever we are likely to got. thought the folk So, at least, who in ilbe time of Spenser and Shakespeare made May Day a sea- son. of rejoicing throughout the length and breadth of the land» At early dawn they hied off to the woodlands to gather "May bushes and scented brlere" with which they decorated the oxen hitched to the WBBOn on which was placed the Maypole to be set up on the village green, And having decorated their home porches with grcen-bough leafage they builded an arbor un- der which the “lowlieet lassie" silould be crowned Queen of the May. Then these rustics dressed ulp as Robin Hood and his merry men and amongst them Maid Mar- ian and a. host of attendants. weaving the Maypole with the gay Hblflidjpflld themselves, with gar- lands’ crowned. tripping the -mea- sure of the "light fantastic we" as only gleeful melryrnake-rs can. Elven in old Iondon Town the Maypolc was erected; the smoky gables were adorned with green anbors, and. dressed in fanciful costumes. the merry old citizens with their wives, daughters, maids, apprentices, all sections of the community from aldermen to the chimney-sweeps, played "Don Gal- ligaskin" and gave themselves up to all the fun and jollity of May. Comhill and Charing Cross had their Maypole ensigns dedicated to the Goddess of Flowers.- When the Puritans came into power, a ban was put upon these playful festivi- ties. At the Restoration of Charles the Merry Monarch, an attempt was made to revive them, but the oldtlme spirit was lost. The inspir- ation, the verve and elan, the sweet faces, had died out of the picture. The festival became a pretty gaudiness. a. rout of plumes and scarves and feathers. Corinne and more. and Phyllis were truss- ed .up in a make-believe costume. "Gone are the days of Gamelyn." All the some. it may be admitted that there was something poetical andtbeautiful in these old-fashion- edi customs and festivities wherein rich and poor, high and low, mas- ters and servants. all Joined boge- tber to catch something of the spirit of Maytlme. green upon the hilltops. and of rosy muntenancc wherever the .dew distilled itself upon the swéet wildflowers. It may be that these folk had a keener sense of joy and of beauty than obtains generally in a civi- lization which l; packed with din and fluster and hurry and vexed problems that irk the soul. It is clvilzation bent upon getting 0n in the world. and is all too forgetful of the things really worth while, of the trilths that stand at the back of life, ever making for our high- est good once we 601i" info com- palzionahip with what someone has called the “brown bread of the earth." that is to say, those gentle influences which make their con- stant appeol to us in and through the faces of the flowers and that remind us. as Keats said, that "truth is beauty and beauty is truth." And in this commercialized age when these oldtime exprv/ons of festive ‘observance are being killed off like weeks by salt, and when our souls are obsessed by the pressure of false ambitions and by. the smoke-dried actuallties of a civilization which much resembles a smouldering volcano threatening eruption every time May Day comes round, it might be well for us to consider how much better it would be if only we all could get into closer and more vital . wtih the true qailit of a hopeful and genuinely productive order of progress, born of sunshine as the flowers themselves are, so happiness and for the welfare of the community and its highest interests. And this lesson stands for us all as good countenance at this hour as at any time in the whole cycle of human aotivitirs. Canadian alsike is regarded in Britain u the best available, and, since the United Kingdom harvests very -little-of this seed as a crop/i the bulk of the requirements arc {Ill-RICO PUBLIC FORUM "ileum-unambi- in I'll‘ ,e!:aonless-ot6 taunt. no Ioeiaaasili endorse fiat ,qlnleleoloonolooldooh. COTI IAIILI mfg-Every one should got ac- quainted with his family hero and heroines, who have lived their life in beauty. and "W! u‘ ample must insure their owp 11lo- “1083 win mark the y all the arrival and marries‘ 01 "l9 Cote in Canada. To com- meznomto this event a monograph)‘ of the Cote family ll b91113 11"" said family and all those who could supply an?’ 111081319111”! °" genealogical information are kind- ly requested to communicate with the Reverend Father Samuel Cote. o. 11'. M. avg gt. goal-goo" 8t» Th", m _ , . aina a. W" I I am Sir, etc. FATHER SAMUEL COTE, 0. F. M. ‘Iklroe Rivers. ' OUT OF DATE Sin-Stale out-of-date editorials are as nauseating as stale brood and rotten meat. Pity the Great Gyraior organ can't whiff this in- to its olfactory furlnel. Bcrefit of the sense of vision, it should at least have some sense of smell. The Globe. with only Mr- Slew- art’s (the tobacco witness) state- ment Before it, might be excused for accepting and commenting up- on as if it were truth. But a week later. after Mr. Stewart uncondit- ionally withdraws and declares his evidence to be without foundation and apologises for what he said, and after that letter of repudiation and apology has been broadcasted in the press all over Canada, and after Premier Bennett has the gentlemen recalled to make his withdrawal under oath. P801118 0! common sense and common honesty even the most rabid of Liberals will view with supreme contempt the and the Globe's comments in their official organ. But the Gyrator organ is starv- ing for political propaganda stuff. Anything. no matter how fabulous, is grist for its mill. Is it possible that the Patriot really imagines its readers to be stupid enough to swallow such ridiculous doses of exploded buncome? what kind of an estimate can it have of the in- telllgence of its patrons? Has it nothing new, nothing truthful, no- thing more plausible that this ver- lest bolder-dash to hand out? If it has not then its plight solicits sympathy. _ Straddling the fence on the Mar- keting Bill is of course embarrasmg. Its local leaders on one side. and its federal contingent on the other is perplexing. The "red her-ring" refuses help. scheming to lay blame on Premier Macmillan and his col- leagues for not wasting the time of the House in useless gabbing does'nt take it out of the hole. The bill was before the House, intro- duced and supported by the Gov- ernment. Its provision said all that was needed. why talk to no pur- pose? The Opposition talked enough for all concerned. That wise prcsdriptiom-"Kecp in line with Ottawa." also bothers the Gyrator. It pinches hard when lo- cal Liberals and Federals are in direct opposition to each other. and the party organ crushed as between the local and federal mlistone What aplty? No; don't keep in line with Ottawa, or ivif-h the pub- lic. or with common sense. "Fight you devils. fight" is the approved motto. obstruct everything, cavil at whatever is proposed for the coun- try's good, but don't try u. con- trive anything better, just vote it down-to stumble-block the coun- try's progress. “Your leader is your policy." so says the mberal-Gyrator organ. Well, no one can answer back in the same language. If they did it would be a change of policy with every political breeze. and every time they would look for him the porter would answen-“He aint yar; moved somwar else." I am, Sir, etc., POLITICAL STUDENT. Moral In The Insull Case (Baltimore Sun) The aged traveller has not yet been tried, and the moral. if any. must be confined to factors other than Mr. Insull. Many former in- vestors recall the reverence with which their investment were wont to assure them of the soundness of a public utility outfit by murmuring with something like awe in the voice, “This ls an Insull property." Music lovers in Chicago moved to.one side to allow this successful magnate to take charge of the arias and choruses at the Chicago Opera company. Ma 13.5 was an artistic parvenu by compar- ison. This is the real pro-trial moral of the Insull saga: That the Am- erican people themselves have a lot to do with the creation of such fiascoes through their fatal habit manages to tack together a lot of holding companies and pile up a fortune. If the Insull episode can cure us of that notion. it will be worth its cost. even if Sam never spends a day in jail. “\\\._\\\\\\II “FIINDUDDS '9, g}, KID N EY ‘h/I/ -T/$ lull, 5p‘ “it \\\\\\_\\|5h '1 pl KIDNEY li ‘la ( i ‘u I fly ' K 1,‘I.,, "HR TR 5,6,.“ S -l | ‘liifiump-T‘ rliclll All the members of the aforef publishing of the cancelled evidence , bankcis‘ of making an idol of any man who m Moll!!! .140 lliobmcndystcet n. nan-noun sun r. s. srsvsivsou Dish-lot . —TURNED CEDAR POSTS‘ . Large quantity on hand. ROUND TOP AND BALL TOP V-Also- 4 CARLOADS CEDAR FENCE POSTS 7-8-9-10 and 12 feet long L. MPOOLE & C0. l-IF su. vaorrrs I-‘Olt Ioucvuomm. M Pooh's Wham, 146 Richmond Sh, Income Tax P. C. BOX 85. Forged In Hell (Winnipeg Bree Press) The world is informed by o French Senator that France is not really prepared to consider limita- tion upon armaments; Italy, it is agreed, l5 of the some mind- ll’- might be said that this has been quite apparent for a long time; b1"- without value. He proceeds to ob- serve that in the condition in which the world now finds itself the best safeguard for P8866 1B m“ "ch country shall provide itself with such armaments as it thinks its cir- cumstauces call for. We are thus back to the policy embodied in the old Roman maxim: "T0 BBRBWYQ peace we must pWPBW 5°? W"- Tmnty years ago or more, before the Great war. Israel Zevirwill made some observations upfm $1111‘ blood-encrusted saylfls m“ l" W‘ produce for their timeliness: "I know that maxim; it was forg- ed in hell. This wealth of ships and guns inflames the vulgar and makes the very war it guards 8-8819515- Th” god of war is now a man of bus- iness, with vested interests. So much gunk capital, such countless sailings. the army. "My. 1118616111?- the church-to bless and bury-mu- sic, engineering, red tape depart- ments, commisariats. stores. trans- ports. ammunition, coaling stations. fortifications. cannon foundries. shipyards. arsenals. rangers, drill halls, floating docks. war loan promoters. military tailors. camp followers, canteens. war correspond- ents, horse breeders. armorers, for- pedo builders pipe clay and medical vendors, big drum makers. gold lace cmbrolderers, opticlans, buglai-s, tent makers, banner weavers. powder mixers. crutches and cork limb manufacturers, balloonisis, mapists. heliographers, flyin! men and dlv- g s . Beelzebub and all his hosts. who, whether in water, earth the senator's information is not . Many Have Always Needed Aid In Seeing Many who have given their eyes scarcely a. 111011!“ h." all their llves needed l“ ll seeing. ln youth tho! l!“ M‘ believe It because tho! I!" well. At 40 they are ll! 5W5‘- At so they are forced to low" help. Much wiser to have lhll Important matter attended to before results demand it. ii. F. llutcheson 0 PTOMETRI 8T I E. R. BROW Hie, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown ll. ii. s. IIEMMIIIG, Ba-.<1P.»-.¢-o-A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MEMBER 0P CANADIAN socnmr or- oos-r ACCOUNTANT! COMMISSIONER ma. TAKING srrmsvrrs IN was surlwua corms: or r. s. 1. r. s. l. aamssalvrsrrva rm: CANADIAN canon‘ man's ‘Bus’! ASSOCIATION, Lmrrsn. mun: or nova scours nunmmc cnsaborrarowlv, r. n. l. Accounting mien owned In and Mimi Labor nving oflice methods installed. a.» Accounting instituted a. suit mold "slimmi- Monthly, quarterly and annual audits. Balance shoots ma Profit and Lon Accounts l" . written up and 3|"!- ‘ mado a. A debtor and Limited liability comma!» lllewflma- TELEPHONE 1376. — or land. among them pocket when trade is brisk, a million pounds a week." We are well supplied with a Ill" assortment of Coal suitable iol kitchen range or grates. Namely: OLD synusy scaaslisn BPRINGHILL SCREENhD INVERNESS SCREENED D arms D'0R maaran NUT 0 EGG. Try us for your next order- Prompt dclivericl. 10"" 9d“! W. ll. GILLIS 8i 00. ‘rilona I76 m SPECIAL PRICES 0n MAX Fliiilflll Toiletllreparailvlll 1mm further notice we l: selling thcso llronflflm“ tho following uric"- ILM Tin Face Powder, s‘ 2s (all shade!) . . . . . . . . -- ' p150 Ju- Foundation Z9 Cream . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3-” $1.50 Jar Lemon Cream - $1.50 Jar Cream . u” $1.50 Jar Bleach CHI" ' uso Jar Skin and Tlw" 75o Eye Shadow ~- Wo would adv c 3' cllfllhe over Fm”, take advanlllo v "h! “m, l“ "'°°" we m ihe my- for this line in Phone 815 or call ll The 2 Macs DBUGSTOBE