1i s t l PAGE ‘FOUR ' Tilt fflllilllli lllllli Blilillllil Morning Dally (to nded 188'!) 35.00 per your tin advance) delivered. per yen! (In advance) mulled in Cunudu and United Match. Plvellent. ‘W- ileolvtnry. Lia-It. 00!. D. litter nndnlllnnaner. .I. ll. Burnett Cheater S. Mellnrel 1 Vine-Pres! e11. A. Mnelflnnn J. IL Ilnrnettt D- I. 0. Anloelnte llidltor. I1. II. Ours-lo. I ow Yuri IIepreoentetlve-Rrnnk It. Inrtnrn Ollrnln ltepreeentellve-I. I. Power Charlottetown: Dlnrltlbe ltntlonerl. GPIINII 51- Cnrtel l 00-, QIIQI“! 7"- A. Ilrown. NtnID Vent!" Btephen Duly, Rich-and Bl- RnllwIY llookltnll J. II. Tnylor, Grafton S‘. ‘The GUARDIAN ‘n7 he obtained hem the lellovvlll Ilflnil |l WI- Ilnlllel. lpllng PIIK llolll I‘. T. Murphy, Prince M» Grocer! J. P. Iiufli. Queen M. IV. U. Wrllll, Kent titreet Welt ll. Thelma White. 12f! llil- Ave- Fred Uundrl, (Brent Georle 8t. THURSDAY,’ MARCH 2o, 1924 RAILWAY FREIGHT RATES 1n his excellent. speech on the Address, a report of which was given in yesterday's Guardian, Hon Dr. McMillan referred to the hand- icap imposed upon agriculture by the prevailing high freight rates- This is one of the great [treble-ms of today and until it is solved pro- gress in agriculture will be serious- ly checked. The ‘Financial Titties of March 14, declares that the tin- satisfactory agricultural condition in Canada today, and the cessation of immigration into Canada are both due in large measure to the high cost of transportation. The Times, in the course oi the article says:- “Tbe Canadian Railway hill has increased 150 million dollars per annum in the last five years with no increase to the amount of busi- ness handled. still draws the peak of war time wage. the farmer indirectly pays his lion's share of this exorbitant The railway titan wage and receives pro-war prices for his wares." To adjust our system of farming to suit thechangetl conditions on the railway may he possible httt a more effective way would be to ad- just railway costs to our system ativs father and t0 611101119 such payments as the court n18)’ 11110“ The Act is a swooping one 111111 Tho Children's Aid Society through whose efforts it has been brought before the legislature, is entitled to the thanks of the whole com- munity for one of the most import- ant forward steps in our legisla- lion. We have no doubt the Act will pass as its provisions are re- cognized by all right thinking peo- ple as a necessity of the age. lt re- mains thereafter to see to it that the Act is fearlessly and impart- ially enforced. 1 A MENACE TO CANADA hit‘. UacKenZie King's proilllfivil reduction of the tiuties on agricul- tural implements would endanger ‘Ill industry in which Canada has 90 millions dollars. would close down plants that etn~ itivestetl 01' thousands of (‘ana- Canadian ploy tens of titans, would deprive farmers of a portion of thcir home market. and would compel further timigratlon to the United States. And this injury to Canadian capital, this direct invitation to unemploy- incitt, loss of home markets and in- creased emigration would be per- petrated while millions were being spent to bring more Europeans iii- Notes By the Way __v_ Protectlonlot Liberals have been Government. Two oi these Mr. Eitior nf North Waterloo and Mr. Raymond oi Brantford, have tn their speeches laid down an ultima- tum to Premier King that if he car- ries out his ominous threat as to tariff reduction he will loso their support. Mr. Raymond went lur- ther according to the general inter- pretation of his words, and advised tho Liberal party to tiepose Prom- ier King, or failing this, for cach member to look out. for hlinself- Mr. liuymond is a prominent member of the Liberal party. although first elected in 1921. Mr. Euler has been longer in Parliament and both he and Mr. Raymond are men of mark- ctl ability. ‘ “it is the Pilot I am going to blame," said Mr. Raymond, using a nautical figure of speech,“ I say that if the Government have on board a false, or a wrong pilot. if they are taking advice from a man who rcall_v does not know tho coast they are on, they had better drop him or get rid oi him and strike for tho open W810i‘ if they want to be safe." lt has been a generation since a prominent pnrty man has used such wordsas these toward his leader in Parliament, and they created no small sensation among the members. The existing critical situation arises from the complete surrender to the Progressives foreshadowed in the speech from the throne at the opening of the session and from Premier King's own speech. lt is the more significant from the fact that only 21 Liberals were elected to the 1101189 of Commons lu Oti- tario in 1921, while only last sum- mer what remained of the Liberal party in that province was utterly rnutcd at the general provincial election. Since then the bye-elec- tions in Halifax and Kent have further diminished the Liberal strength in the House of Commons. And now on top of these losses (ZOHIPS the revolt of Liberal support in tho House. Junius wrote long ago: “Thesub ject who is truly loyal to the Chief making things llvoiy for the King ‘rt-toss "s" cusves You have sometimes felt a pain abdomen, just a little to tho inner side of the point of the hip bone. You have said to yourself “if that pain were on the right side, I'd think l had appendicitis." Because as n matter of fact it is almost exactly in the corresponding position to the appendix on the right side. What is this pain? Simply gas pressure. Why does gas lodge there? Well. the large intestine is pract- ically a reservoir for all the mat- erial that is of no further use to the body. it has-a long straight drop. from a point almost opposite the stom- ach on the left side of the hody down to the hip bone. it then curves intrard. then straight downward, and then in- ward again. Thus an actual “S" citrvt» is formed within the space oi‘ a few inchcsi. You can sce thou that with the tube a little sntullel‘ in (calibre) nt this point anyway, and then an “S" curve in it, that any unusual ac- cnmulutioti of gas is going to cutise distension and very often some pain, because of the difficulty of passing two sharp t-tirves. As a matter of fact there is an "S" curve on the right side also. where the small and the large in- trstinc come together- Pas likewise scctiniuiates and (vauses pain and distress. The only point here is that you might take it for appendicitis anti worry about it. » _ 0n the other hand if you thought it ivcre only gas, lt-might possibly be a supporatltig appendix, and tints would be lost. What is my suggestion? if you have pain in the abdomen that. seems to shift from place to place itmcz-ins gas only. lf in the loft lowcr side it is likc- ly also gas. And to relieve 1111-1111111‘? _ Simply bend or rock the hody ironi side to sitic, and the gas will be itiovml along. it‘ sevcaro. the ordinary soup and water injection is affective. Andlf the pain is on the right shit‘? here down at the lower loft side of your Conservative Rally At Montreal Next Saturday Night , (Canadian Frau) IMONPRPJAL, March 18-10. Hon Arthur Alelghen, Arthur SBUVU. Lender of the Quebec Opposition. lion. Howard ‘Ferguson, ‘Premier of Ontario, and Hon. Mr. Martin, On- tario Minister‘ of Agriculture, will be among the guests at the dlnncr t.o be given Hon. ll. Monty and Hon. A. lfiuitenx ihere Saturday night. Arthur Lnloude. Conserva- tive organizer, stated tonight that a strong delegation of Conserva- tives is also coming from Que- bec and 'l‘hreo IUYOTS and it is ce- tlmnted that ut least 1500 14119111“ will be present at tho dinner. W. s. ’Y. ruunsn/iv, M/incii 2o T90 Kilotgvclcs i380 hlrtcrsl WGY lSchcncctaily, N- l.) Eastern Standard Tin-e 11:55 n. m.~'l‘imc slsflflld- 12:Ziil'p. m.—Stocli market rc- port. 12:40 p- llL-‘PITNIUCQ iuarkrt rc- port. 12:45 p. m.—-\\'cathcr report. 2:00 p. in.—l\litsit¢ and atldress, "Beauty and (‘omfort in Homo Lighting," Society for Elccirlcui Dcvolopinriit- 0:00 p. iti.~l‘rotlticc and stock market tptottititins; nmvs httlluiiiis. 6:30 p. m.——l)itin'er music by lto- mano's Orchestra, New Kenmore Hotel, Albany, N. \'- 7:45 p. m.—~Program by llaldock Double Quartet. A Few hloments with New Books, Wm Jacob, Librarian of the Gen- eral Electric Co. Selection, "Unfold, Ye Portals," front “The Redemption" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Gounod . lialdock Double Quartet . . . . Sopranos: Mrs- lda llluy Patti, hlrs. lra Brownell: contraltos: Mrs. Theodore Gaudy, Mrs. Plwzirt \\'. Edwards; tenors; Percy Santcr, Ewart W. Edwards bass: William Patti, William llambly; Mrs. Frcilorlck Ilulilock, dircctrcss Selection, “in Absenco“ ..... Buck Ruldock hfalz» Quartet Soprano solo, "Just Because" Bur- leiglt, lda Mny Paul _ Selection, “Lllllv lilothtir of Mine" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Nevin liultlock lluublc Quartet Tcnor solo, "Ilioiintain Lovers" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Squire Pltvnrt h}. Edwards Sclectioit. "'l‘ht- Little Quaker" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Adams llaliloclt Lttdi Quartet Address, "'l‘hp Electric Hoist" S- ll. Libby _ Daily _ Selections Guardian Readers ' MARC-NS WOOUVG - d i lis snllow chcuk‘ NnNlrgmilgtldllklgvltli-ix‘rbugh-blown ltaii ills voice is hoarso and hi! 8111911 are bleak, ‘ Ami his rugged woods are bate. And be saith: "O April-mold, coiue out; l'll greet yotrwith gust and gale My slglts shall blow your locks about 5 My kisses are 116111118 111111- rl(1o“‘e out, conic out, O April-maid. 'i‘o your lover wild and bold: l'll race over the frosty gladc Till your cheeks arcsrod with cold." A pink and blooming face petipetl nil Above the crocus bed; She flung to him u. bttttercup And a wild-flower seamed with red. Across the misty border-land With sunny eyes she smiled. And lo! herlover‘s voice was bland- ills mood surpassing mild! -Harrict Whitney Symonds- Prince 0f Wales College Debate The'l’rincc of Wales Debating Society held its regular debate on Tuesday, March ii. The suibiect "Resolved that a diligent student will gain more information frotn reading than from observation" was thoroughly discussed. Each aids presented many convincing nr guments i'or and against the resolu- tion _ Excellent addresses were do- livcred by the leaders. They were zthly supported by their assistants. The vote resultetl in a victory for tho “Pro" side. The critic, -.\ir. Lorne Aiaobean offered some, good tauggcstlons for the improvcmeitt of the debates. ills statements wrrc confirmed by the ‘Honorary Pmsidcnt who urged the lllU|i\l)l‘I'S to ptit more time antiouerizy into the preparation ll;- rufcrrcd to the rot-cut intercollegiate ilcbntes In which form-or students o|' ‘Prince n!‘ “Wiles. debating society took an ac- tive part. Prov-Adelaide Chnissou, Slnudt- Sttwvnrt, Evangeline Bell. Con:—-Cousttinvi- hlarlfnrlant- Isabel llcidtttrhern, Jessie hiaclietitl, Save Soap Simply rub SURPRISE on the soiled parts and you get im- mediate results irom the foam- ing, cleansing suds. There is no danger of undissolved par- ticles of soap scattering through the clothes-no waste. Strengthen Your Credit Confidence ls the golden key to credit. lt lg said of certain men: "Their ‘word ls greater than their bond," but in such cases there is always THE BOND behind it. 'l‘horc is no finer tiollittcrnl on earth than a Grout West Life insurance policy that will adequately meet the case. llynilman 8t 00.1.16. Branch Managers The Great-West Life Assurance Co. Offices, 61 Queen Street Charlottetown or fmmmg" I‘ is (“me Wssime m to the country. Can it be that Magiswa“ win-neither advise "or Uon‘t take a (ehuncr. See your $010,110“ “The [mu n“ 1 H 111111111 0111119» eliminate [mm ,_.._". agricultural sane bunny“ men m“; Mr T A submn to "binary measures}, if tho pain passes away as SLt-Hng, gun ‘fljmn th~nlffilllumilr (-|-itic~LtirnP Nliliiin-flll. -— _. ;' - " ‘ ' ' ' M ' trt- on your wuy to seil‘ , ‘ ' ," ‘ ‘ S: it "l‘. -- .-\-t, - w‘. ;-' -, ~ -,-. . --.. t- 111911101111 111k‘ $111l11110nt of bulky raw Low and Mr- J. A. Ross honestly T1115 "1011" 11.16 10701110 Glob"- 101": much the hotter- L m" Sn kilgg.llfigfi.ulli)o,l];l' ' 13,; “Tnrxiwn N S T (ltiiifiritl Ofiinlltvfrriinwliti tii‘t-sit‘l\tittlutltlixdlzimhiii-riibrtoilndo g1)r11“l11ll¥llilllitll|l| . - 'i' . . . - t '- i "c ‘ _ ' ‘ ' ' _ ', ‘ ‘ , . products anti ship only tho conccnt- hone"; 1n such u poucy?__ottawalthe m“, Drum of n“. Lmual pa") Lem mung Sum‘ 1*];pr(,-<-,\|st-“.. liorntlint- ' ' ot-tzii-sitm to stnnniuu tho Sorgenntlizrtiy cruiser which hits hatintt-tl tlu- -hi~.s kept at the head of its leading Jomud‘ [editorial column for fifty years. .‘ _“'" ' ' - " a 1W0 would like to ask, will the BALANCWG THE BUDGET {truly loyal subject advise or submit Francis (Quinlan St-lerllon. "(loin Home". .. ilvorakl llaldnck hlulc Quartet l Stiprtiitn stiio. “Si. Son." 110ml" rated manufactured product but in any case a towering of the cost of at Arms when ox-iflticrmnn llnclcl\\'tlltri‘s 111' 110111! 1111111111 111111111: tbc icy rntihtrr ticrsistentiy ltitorrittiltnl1111s! tlircc wccks ll()tiiit'ii11‘.11l"l|1 l)l'.(il‘ll.lil.' - 1th". (lPflHlCPiCSH rum trt|fl'lt‘k1‘t‘.~'. .\l. Wrecks, tproprletot- oi‘ they»; ilu-y were bound to rum row t Amendments Be fore Committee; transportation is one of the vital 1'1‘ needs of Canada today. Without tto corrupt int-astirtvs‘? For, judged ‘m’ ' ' ‘ ' C ' ' ' ‘ ‘ ' ' ‘ ' ' ' " Anmil ,. , in a '.“‘"‘“" Ldbnr Pinmiffhflllm‘ Fush for M“, commnmpmfi M lialatuzittg the budget, when ouel s‘ - 1"‘ nmwlw“ (Canadian Press) ‘hum h" “lmlw m‘ bmml" "1 w“! "llmfi "m, the", appears to b‘. "m0 up,‘ l i i u n i 0 t m _hy any tit-cent or uccc-ptctl slaudarth MARpn 2(;__y,," u". flmnmls_ S(‘lt'('llll!l, Trudi» Song" ..\-’nnnnbi i] ti/[FAX N q vmrch ]8__ nuiydive percent of tho propit- oi] 51‘ “|1"“"1l"“ 111"‘ 1"‘1‘11 1111‘ 11l"'F11' _ intcrsams ma , s nco c -. -. - ._ , , _ __ i .. I -, ,., - * ; - ~-~ -_ - ,3 , . . 1 .._ - p . .- q pmunmy for {he tummy‘, “u is h“ lot’ public morality, the bargain b1 hair good brain-powtr, and an ‘ 1111111111‘. ‘l udirs tlimittt, m. H_ n‘ (‘mm hmuhng a largo ll tliiix uiio tttl 111-11 iuohibttltin ti. ins- oi I this‘ m inc ls 111111‘ _\ 11"" .. .. cnslcst. undertakings known to pnl- tween the Kink (lovernmcnt and 1"11'1 "1 11111114- Yflu will lovc with 5“"“"'°"~ ("W1 M111"- Il“1‘“"“1" ‘doll-gallon from tho Social Service is “ m“"""" ' ‘Wm’ m“! “ ‘lhwk h“ mo“ W" "n “going and “Coming _ The m“ me Progresswa party ls a comm‘ 8mm.‘ work with Hum.’ and may _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ‘ _ _ V H Film,“ Asuvlatioll"flnpvared hpflnwca “m” _ ..... l'lllil-pllllllllli.l lll thut sector. An.» lticnl mathematicians. All that is with a Uhmbukp Mumdn" “mm “unlock “mum, Qlmnpt ,»,| Wm, H", |"m,|,in,. guns‘ ,,,-,.,,,~,; - y. - - . ,., . . 1 . ' way gnts as lllllClLtifllllOUlllCS more rumlirwl is 07ml“ m wk“ a certain hm-gam l“ the ("Ht p1,“... mo“. w“ MW leamwl or H00“ yn" m) ___ lllllllt v on llaitv lllliifillififllfililfl iionwPhantonl d"? 1" 11"‘ $11113’. tho 1.5mm. ,.,.,HWI_ out of his carload of produce than lmmunl fmn] m“ 5m‘ of U" 8L two purtics weero elected in opposi- not forget. You should r,.n,¢_.,"|,,._,- vd. It was a wr-ok ht-fnrt- "it! ln- in‘(‘u?(i()v;ggl:lall$gg sfuziifibinvmxl"igt . 1,\'\\‘(lil|)h‘llUWl'| upon tlu- ruin Flli-itvi". ‘ i 3 3 " - - - . '- .- t ' - . . -' ' ‘e l s ’ - . . . . . he hum..." “UL The high Co,“ of up" m p;|¢11oth@r_ Ifluflgg] gupport that totttttitmt-nt is bcttcr than ‘l""_“* N“ ‘"1 m“ H" "m" “"'"1'in,(,rn1ng y mmw‘ 11"" ml“ "ml 1"" l" “ "1 vii-hunt.‘ cu tori wns empty, and by that um,» ‘ w-aslt and th-"u lllllklW out to .\l count and add it to the other, or of wwh other is by no much 1 viola Th“ pmwn! ‘ t my f 1 4" ' * ' '. . or we our sun, the necessaries he purchases is due to u certain extent to tho cost of transportation. How is it going to bu rcmotiicd‘! l‘hls is a question for our states- nen.not for our politicians. it is ad- mitted that the prosperity of Can- ada depends upon agriculture; that our hope of securing immigrants dopeuds upon thc itttrnctlvctir-ss oi our agriculture. it ls known that agriculture has lost very much oi its former attractiveness and that.‘ the cost of transportation has very much to do with this loss. ls the country to he sacrificed in order that the present extravagance on our railways may be continued? --_-¢-o->-i FAR-REACHING ACT "An Act for the protection of the children of unmarried parents," now before the legislature, is de- serving of more than passing com- ment. 1t is not too much to say that the legislation it provides is a trumph, a belated triumph it is true, of Christianity and civiliza- tion, it ls a measure of justice too long denied, another step in the em- ancipation of womanhood from a species of bondage existing for many thousands of years- it will be recalled that in the old Jewish days the “child of the bondwoman" stood ' ‘without the pale of the father's pro- tection and care and in no way en- titled to the rights and the privil- eges enjoyed by the legitimate chil- dren oi the home. This custom has practically continued to this day. The "child of unmarried par- Vonts" is, according to the Act re- ferred to. the ward of his father end the latter is responsible for his maintenance, his education anti the expanses incurred at his birth to remove ll sufficient amount frotu the debit side and transfer it to The difference between the debit and credit side of the account is a "surplus" to hr- iboasted about. purposes. Tho federal budget is, we are in- anotht-r account. for future election formed by lettding Liberals, ex- pooh-d to be dilly balanced tit thc end of the flscnl year, March 31. Those huwcvcr who object to this systciu,‘ complain that $50,000,000 of the government's litdobtetlness has been transferred to Railway account, the amount having‘ been borrowed for the railway but still remaining a debt of the Dominion. The transfer will balance the bud- get, no doubt, but the debt of the country is not reduced. This "balancing" of the budget is already being heralded throughout the country as an evidence of the "economical" administration of the King government! We in this tirovince have learn- ed much during the past four years nbout "balancing the budget" and having a surplus at the end of each year. This period in our history is still referred to by' some people as an "era of stirpluses.“ and in moments of extreme exuberatlon as "the golden era." Yet there has exists-d throughout the "golden era" a strong suspicion that the lmdket was being "balanced" ac- cording to political rather than mathematical or financial rules and it is well known that no ac- counting of this "era of surpluses" has yet been made public. it is therefore a little premature to boast too loudly or to msks dispar- aging comparisons with alleged ex- travagance! by the Stewart govern- ment whose financial achievements and until he attains the age of sixteen years. The Act makes ell necessary provision to prevent eva- sion or concealment, ell births be- ing reported to a Provincial Guar- 1. dhn who in vested with authority [to arrest and bring. to trial the unt- also have not been made public. Sane criticism involves knowledge of the whole situation and this is not available until the accounts are presented in the regular manner‘ before the legislature. tion of tho compact with the peo- plc who elected them. lt is a corrupt bargain for politi- cal support hccatise it is paid for with promises and payments m‘ public moneys, tariff atljttstmcnts. and railway freight rates that are wholly sectional at the cost and in tho disadvantage of the pi-nplc of lhc Eastern half of tho Dominion. it is corrupt beyond all precedent in (Iunntlitin parliamentary history. it is entirely (lifferent front a (705111- tion of parties, or a tttiioii govern ment in which ministers of two parties come together and assume mutual responsibilities. Here the Liberal Ministers alone are res- ponsible to Parliament. No Pro- gressive has even entered the fore- castle of the ship, yet to them the Captain has surrendered its con- trol and shapes its course at their bidding Such is the abject position in which the Premier and his collea- gues have placed themselves. it ls pltlable for Mr. King himself who has lost his ahlest colleagues and is inst losing both the respect and the support. of the party he wng chosen to lead. lt is humiliating for the Government who have sur- rendered their responsibUitles for 11 Dflfie. t0 gain a brief extension of their term and the spoils of office. And it is most unfortunate for the Dominion that its fair fame should he smirchcd and its energies par- alysed by having at its head a gov- ernment‘ that is so imbecile and so corrupt. The time was when it was held to be important that the Govern- ment should hlve n mandate from the people to carry on. But where is or even has been the mandate of the King Government to rule Can- ada? lt is but a brief space since the corrupt bergalners of todav wqe shouting the word "mandate" and it was repeated with ompliuis in Parliament, on a hundred plet- forms and in tho editorial columns of their obssquious press. Today it is an ljflfilfllltitinnblg thing. The" lips are now forbid to speak that once familiar word. it is hum“ out of the Liberal MM‘ y: Bel. lflfifl IITIDOOIIH] hlckgfl b, l 3gp. mpt and infamous bet-gain has Your birth-stone is a hlnndstono, which moans presence nf n1lnd_ Your flower is a violet. Your lucky color is white. éLest We Forget; 'l‘lillllSDA Y, lVlAllCll 20 SlFl WALTER RALEIGH English courticr, historian and poet. was rcloascd from intprisou- tnent in tho Tower of London, on March 20, 1616, after intending thir- teen years there on the charge of conspiring to place Arabella Stuart upon the throne. He is popularly renowned for his gallantry in pluc- lng his cloak over a puddle to pre- vent (Queen Elizabeth from soiling her shoes. SIR ISAAC NEWTON (‘elobrntctl English inaithtrmati- chin and natural philosopher, and discoverer of the law of gravita- tion, died March 20, 1727. His in- terest in gravitation is said to have been occasioned by the full of an apple. As master of the mint of England, be reformed British coin- age- OHARLES W. ELIOT American educator, whn was for forty years president of Harvard Colic-go, was born at. Boston, hlitrch 20. 1834. lie has long been an earn- t-st advocate of international peace. LOUIS KOSSUTH Noted Hungarian patriot and nr- ator. whose leatlership of an in sur- rt-ction in 1848-49 brought about the temporary independence nf Hungary and his appointment as governor. died at Turin, ltaly, March 20. 1894. PIERRE RADISSON Pierre Ratlisson. the explorer, then only twontyone years of age, was the hero of a queer episode on this day in 1058. lie was one of fifty Frenchmen, living in an Iro- quois village. Onondaga, and aware that they were marked out for tor- ture and death. Radiation, whn had previously been a prisoner of the Indians. knew that it was one of their religious principles never to refuse any food set before them. Trading on their gluttonous na- tures. the French invited the tribe 10 11 great feast. at which they gorged themdnto helplessness. Af- ter hours of eating, when the In- dians had been overcome with steep. the Frenchmen barricaded the fort and slipped sway in the (hrlmess, which they had secretly construct- found n. way to cling to office with- out a mandate. in two wooden boatl- llic Fri-tichmen were wcil on tin-ii- wny across Lake Ontario, lownrils hltintrctil, tutti safety. \'\.\\\\\;itgtft ‘\K\'Q§.§j/Fi ‘t a .. RHEUMA-rfi A5 a .1 |(;H.|..s 0,55,,‘ ‘f, D'A‘BETE5’B t, i, FhIeIt-t-nent Gounsel It il our business to help our customer-o in making wine selection of bond: for permanent income. Not all securities are tuit- able for all people. We ad- VIIQ ll to the dollrabillty of any luue with the Idea of fitting the purchase to the annual Income of the indivi- dual man or woman. We are glad to do this by mall, or by porionel inter- view. You are invited to dlucuee investments with us. Eastern Securities Company, Limited New Bank of Nova lcotla Building Charlottetown, P. E. l. W. H. V. DUNIAR, Manager riday Turkish Towels 15x32 25c Pair Table Damask 56 inch-unbleached 35c Yard Longcloth 36 Inch-i 6c Yard 10 Yards $1.55 grated amendments to the Nova SEW YORK. March 18. —l.iq|itii",,\||,.,.,-.|-, | gig _____________ 4 _(g.;_i._ and Saturday IMRGH 21 AND 22 SPECIALS Bodspreads ' ‘ 72x84 $2.45 _ Bleached Sheeting 72 40c Yard Inch Scrim Curtaining ,. ‘"1111 army dellgn 15c Yard Circular Cotton 40 inch 30c Yard Toweling 16 Inch 10c Yard Grey Cotton 55 inch 15c Yard uotmLv BARGAINS‘ l _ Grey Cotton 38 illlch 5 Yards 65c HOURLY BARGAINS ! In addition to the above specials we will place some wonderful extra specials on sale each for 60 minutes only-a different bargain each can’t afford to miss. hour-something you Some splendid bargains in odd curtains at almost half price. (intuit!