_ =- ' ‘iwnewand 1,‘ mg". e.'e".fglgllb0ll share their paper. _ PAGE from: i an; tllilliinnnowii GUARDIAN 7* In Q - _ _ - g p_ viee-Preeideat-J. R. Burnett 5mm“ Wlssucmyigfilltl-‘goi. n. a. ltilcKlnuorl. D- H- 0- ' Editor and Managing Director-J. R. Burnett Associate xlllfflfl—|"l'flllk Walker anil l). K. Currie 1881 5.00 ier year (in advance) delivered. uagbnfieggzpfiixléfilfanoe)nrraiied[in Canada and United States. ~' ’ ll t 00 ier cent of the stores offices and if...gliiigfrl"§“ci.lie'ifiitlfi'°tfleaiehe; by ‘Post Office deliveries.’ The ntorcl ' nd offices ‘are llkfiiae’ ‘ncludeil anion: the "llmllelwlikfl." l0 “It l“ ' uardian is rend irpracticiilly every worllflvhila b01118 in the ¢| - The Guardian goes by mull daily to 00 per cent of the rural routa b0! The Guardian in itigi ‘lead prutlonily in every ru home in the province. ADVERTl-HIKG REPRESENTATIVES UNITED STATi-IS-Jflie Bockwiih Slllcllli £36116! lnc. New York Central Building, New York City, (ii-ncrnl .\lotor| Building: Detro t, lnterliate Buiiti- ing_ Killlliil City, Willoughby Tower Building, Chicago; 4-131) City; Uienn Building, Ailnntzg Runs Building San i-‘rnncilco; 1135 N0. 05th Street, Philadelphia. » WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1932 EA CHAAIGE 0F HEART Hounds, running free, noses to the ground," and the British Prefer- ence "on a pair of crutches." The Canadian Prime Minister was rep- resented as being "attended by a squadron oi Trick Economists, led by Professor Deacock, reading his Book aloud," The British delegates were depicted as being followed by “a troop of Rebates, Drawbacks, Dump Duties. and Treaty Rates. four and four." and "the Gold Stan- dard in a Wheel Chair." Further on in the pIOCESSlUKI were described "shoals of currency Sharks convey- ed in a Bimetalllo water-tank, ac- companied by Investment Brokers and Bond Brokers walking three and three, in Diving Suits," these in One of the bittercst critics oi the Bennett Government in its MR0!‘ iatlons at ‘the Impcrial Economic Conference vras, the Winnipeg Free Pres. The Free Press predicted the Conference would be a failure, and it cannot be said that it did much to help it succeed. Nevertheless, this great, western free trade journal now realizes that the Conference has opened up great possibilities for Canadian agricultural producers in the British market, and in a recent issue it devotes’ a lcaciing editorial to the reccntiy concluded agncul- iural conference at Toronto and the emphasis placed at that confer- oi quality enco 0n the necessity i . n .. i 1"‘ producmn as w Tnpqns 0 rpaumgipiifiltés of Briefs from Boards .of the benefits obtainable from the.‘ treaties signed at the Ottntva par-ibo U Ems Provincial Governments rii , . icy. The Free Press editorial reads’ r h part jiour and four." the whole brollklli "With an assured market in Great To; China on g, truck," . Britain for her agricultural products T1113 kind of propaganda was,- iis a result of the Imperial Econ- continued throughout the Confer-i bmic Conference, Canada‘ would be ence proceedings. Now, in the article Iacriflcing a great opportunity if above quoted, the Free Press admits rhc did not undertake, forthwith, toithat as a result of the Imperal improve the quality of her farm Economic Confrence, Canada, ir the Vfildllct-‘l. 1° 109mm the EXPOTT-flble opportunity is seized, will obtain “an surplus and to improve her market- 555mm market in Great Britain lng methods. ‘This was the IJHIYPOSB for her agricultural products.” This of the National Agricultural Con- W35 one of the great; objects which ference in Toronto, when planspremger 3mm“; had 1n mind, and were laid for more effective co-or- 1g 1,; interest-mg to note that his; dlnation of the efforts of all whoflsuwess has been 51w}, that it can: are seeking to promote the dcvelop- m, 1on3“ be ignored by even the; merit of agriculture in this country. Strongest; partisan crmdg “Great Britain. with its small area ‘ , and great industrial population, is NEW BOOK IN INDIA i the bcst market in the world for wheat, meats and dairy products’ than any other country, but only a small proportion of her food supply comcs at present from the Dom- inions. Canada is a. large agricul- tural country with great. possibilit- ies of increased production‘. Briton is now inviting hcr farm products and oficririg thcm a preferred P05‘ ition. But our agricultural leaders time. and since Gandhi was once more imprisoned, the sin-called saint! seems to have prettyywell disappeared from the picture oi Indian affairs. Mrs. Patricia Kendall, author of a new book on India, gives ample doc- umentary evidence to show that Gandhi is more of a pretender than urated his passive resstarice cam- opportunity cannot bc gillllcd with" wou'd lead to violence and blood- out a united and sustained cIIoriQshcd. If he had his way he would on. the part of all ngriwlillrill lfltflr- l destroy the 44,000 miles of rail~ ests in ths country. way and other improvements with . _ . , h m ta - he describes how h “An assured market. alone. would ‘which British initiative and Brit sh “l” Yea“ °d“~‘m°“' W m‘ e x e p""““d°d " b6 8J1 i1dYa1Y-0B0 t0 the (IHIIHdlHHImQney have provided the country. farmer, but the premium that is al-fithus facilitating the internal trade ways paid for products of the first oi the country and rendering it easy: whlchfhe is proficient and sent back‘ "We!" heard anything so horrible. quality would increase that advan-iin cases of local shortages 0i 100d} i0 the 00° ch55 whim he Md mt. And the“ he splashed "hm" m“: B , ,1 ~_imastered? That is what a parent fleet 0f Dflflloises, roaring most tagmaswould the prruticcofmarkift ito convey supplies to the needy dis .does with his child at how. _,mel lng in the manner most acceptable Itricts. in Great Britain. The farmer has| Mrs. Kendall opens with a de- every reason to cO-Opcrate heartily scrfption of the Khyber Pass, throush in this effort to put more money the Himalayas on the north-west in his pocket And meeting the dc- frontier by which conquering ai-m- time whim WW“ b° “mag than! In another seaside 19”" Dickms ‘mands of the market in regard t0 ies for centuries (and until the ‘quality and otherwise, will be thegBritish arrived) poured out upon ent hold on that most desirable oi ‘er and destruction as they advanc- all export markets. There is not ‘ed. She deals with the whole cruel the slightest doubt that pan do It, with the proper co-oper-ilsion oi the 641000.000 11115011011051“? i hllOh between the various agencies with the place of the Mohamrnedans and with the farmers themselves in the Peninsula; with the rolc rising to the opportunity. v which first the East India Com- “It i5 a matter, of course. in Wlllchipany and then the British Govern- the whole country is interested. mcnt have played in the develop- Every business man knows how the,ment, protection and advancement returns from an incrcascd and oi a vast sub-continent. There arc lmbie expflfl, trade ‘in farm pro- chapters on the cites of India: on ducts would stmulrite every otherIthe vast peasant population: on the business." ‘lcohstant conflicts between the var- It may be noted that before thcuous elements in the population: Imperial Conference met, the Frcflupon the fact that but for the stab- Press ridiculed the proposed plirleyfilizing influence oi the British oc- ln an article purporting to repre ‘cupatlon, the population would fail sent. the "Empire on Parade," liPbaclt once more into b‘oody internec- which the reprcscntativcs of each inc struggles; and upon the truism Empire unit. and particularly the that but for the British, India would Canadian delegates, were lampoon- be subicctedio further cruel raids ed, The “paradc" according to the from the Khyber Pass. Free Press, would include such spcc- The author, who is an American incles as “Economists Walking in‘lady. concludes with the em- sxes and seven“. "A squadron 0| phatic pronouncement that Brit- cnsmms Brake“ mounted on m, ish rule, British guidance and Brit- Bams,“ “The Dominion conglomerhish protection are absolutely necc‘s~ mo“ or m“: experts," The Dom, sary to the development, through _ mum Govemmmt-sh ~n'ncty_gh,¢e the years that are to come, oi a Dump Duties on horseback, three workable system oi representative and three," "s back of Exchonas wolf-momma!» ,turn being followed by “Bankers. flirokers, Economists," assorted com-i Trade, Chambers of Commerce. Lil-- fup by “a section of the Great Wall‘. fluke. less activity when will be Widely It is noteworthy that since Lordl "lt- " ' ' .- larm products- Slle imparts m°r9|Willingdon went to India this lasti __. iiilTES BY" TilE WAY Addrenin‘ g m“ meeting at Oll- gary on the evening of Labor Day, Preafer Bennett, referrlnk to the Imperial Conference, said among other thlnis: "We are going in blaze the path to progress-show the world it can be done. It is a great experiment but it will not un- fold itself today, nor tomorrow. I will not see it, but the children who entered this room tonight will wit- ness it. We have a. great responsib- ility. We haveuaid we would be able w provide the goods ii we only had the chance to deliver them. We'- have got the chance-now deliver the goods. ' It cannot be called reprisal‘ when we are stll willing to buy as much from the United states as they buy from Canada. But, as the Vancouv- er Province says. we weary of buy- iiig too much from a country which erects a. hostile tariff" against bur farmers and our forest productsf particularly when that country dis- counts the par value o: our cur- rency. Thcre is memory in a. Bird"! which strikes on the tender-est chord of human relationshipsand in an educational way reminds how each of us should obey the urge to become part and parcel of the com- munal life in an uplifting, cheerful. i and serviceable fashion. And ii man r in times of serfdom, oppression, bat- tlefsiavery, and poverty prays for sparks or comfort and some sort of heart-balm, thank heaven the gar- den flowers can always give it. They bespeak an eminence of grace in which we all can share and share The luscious Ontario pzuih, rip- ened yesterday on the trce, has now taken possession of the stores; and the Ontario tomato, whose juces contain more vitamins than oranges is coming into its own in the home circle. Perhaps the upswing in com- modity prices generally will soon be felt more widely in tho articles the farmer has to sell. Qttawa. already reports the index number of prices of field products in Canada ruse _THE CHARLO1TETQ1V_1\_i__G_L_TQ§DlAN | Treasures In‘ A Bookshop i I (S. L. Ricardo in Great Thoughtl, September.) “Dear Ellen, I scribble one hasty line just to say that after a pleas- ant enough Journey we have got safely to Conway; the evening ls wet and wild, though the day was fair chiefly with some gleam: of sunshine." So wrote Charlotte Bronte the night after her wed- ding. Of course the evening was wetnndwild. How could it be otherwise on such a notable Bronte occasion? The letter, together with a lock oi Charlotte's hair and l. pair of minute slippers, are in the possession of Mr. W. T. Spencer, the famous bookseller of New Ox- ford street, He has another letter, too, in which Charlotte shows great con- cern about a bonnet which is be- ing altered to suit her. But the most‘ personal ofthc Bronte ielics is a hook, a finger long, in which as a. child Charlotte translated, Voitalreb "Henriade." All the op- portunities withheld from her, all the energy and pain of great pro- jects are cramped into these iiar- row pages. Paper was a luxury and Voltaire not a young lady's author, but somehow she obtained them both. ‘ A happier woman than Charlotte Bronte and less in stature, Eliza- beth Barrett, has left something o! herself in this London bookshop. Writing to her dear Miss Mitford, she describes Tennysonb descent on the Browning household: “He dined with us, smoked with us, opened his heart to us (and the second bottle of port) and ended by reading ‘Maud’ through from end to cnd and going away at half-past two ln,the morning. If I had had a heart to spare, cer- tainly he would have won mine. He ls captivating with his frank. ness, confidingricss and unexampled iialvete. Think of his stopping in ‘Maud’ every now and then__ "That's a wonderful touch! That's very tender. l-Iow beautiful that is!’ Yes, and it was wonderful, tender, beautiful, and he read ex- Bjldllltl W. Baden. MD. WHY S0 MANY DIABEHCS DESPITE INSULIN "With insulin it is possible to raise diabetic children who former- ly were doomed to die-to prepare them thoroughly for an occupation and to make them worthy heads of families." This is the statement of Prof. Umber of Berlin, where there are 8000 cases of diabetes. A He finds that severe illness, tuberculosis, and surgical oper- ations are withstood by diabetic patients, properly treated with in- sulin Just as well as by healthy persons. If insulin can save the lives of children afflicted with diabetis, and can keep alive adults despite the damage already done to ‘the pan- creatic gland, why is it that so many people still die of diabetes? ‘The reason is that. many are un- willing to follow the diet rules and also use insulin in t_he manner pre- scribed. Dr. Elliot P. Joslin, Boston. says there are three to four times as many diabetics now as there were fifteen years ago due to the newer knowledge of diet, upon in- sulin, and the dependence of these two on exercise, which have great- ly prolonged the life of the diabetic. Unfortunately the diabetic pat- ient is still compelled to inject the insulin he requires. Insulin by the mouth has practically no effect. Most of these patients learn to use the hypodermic needle properly and have no trouble from its use. It is now possible for those un- able to pay for insulin to receive it frce from the province, state, or city. so that no diabetic patient need die from lack of it. -potatces, bread and suBBr-thllt must be eaten in small quantities by the diabetidand as Prof. Umber from 40.6 in June to 41.8 in July. Canadian farmers have suffered long from low prices. When encour- agement comes back to them their course in buying what city indust- rial plants have to scfl will induce a new sense of confidence and busin- polnts out, this makes the increas- ed need or use of vegetables, fat, and moat, somewhat expensive. The point to remember then’ is that there are more diabetics be- cause lives have been prolonged and there are naturaflly more deaths because of this increased number of cases. The number of cases has in- creased about fourfold over the quisitely in a voice like an organ, rather music than speech." It is a long step from Tenny- son's organ notes to his old pipes, but Mr. Spencer once purchased a collection of these from a gardener and entered them in his catalogue under colored prints, the poetical smoking equipment that so pleased Elizabeth Barrett after having i An American cducaiionallsl says! . "Th,- school was made for the llllllll- not the pupil for the school. Th0 ‘educational system exists for the ibeneiit of the child, net the child ifor the system. The child is 8 Del‘- sonality and its welfare is the ob- ject. It is not merely a nee w be i thrust into a. certain hole, or a sau- ‘sage to be turned out by a 5805880 saint. It is obvious that he inaug-‘machinefi’ He cites the case 0f a, 'pupil compelled to repeat a whole‘ , 1,55% though Dickens said h 1i know that the full advantage of the ‘palgn knowing all the time that iii year m 8mm! {n the Same c time to write any lettzrnligelwouig {because he failed in one subleilt- fThis is nothing new, yet it is simlll‘ 11y foolish. It means not only that B: ‘iyem- 0g the pupifs time 15 wasted,‘ yet some that lie here are written ‘but it means also that the cost of payers pay, is thrown away for noth- 1mg. What is to hinder the pupil ‘bong advanced in the subififit-‘l m parent teaches the chifd what he does not know, he is not so foolish as to waste his time going over and over what the child does know- wasted. Instead oi makInK ihewillld “i” sure way to get a firm and pcrman- the Indian plains carrying slaughtq gm- democracy, the upshot of the ‘wai- has been that so far there has ‘been no particular safety fill‘ WY‘ Canadamaste system‘ with the suppres_(budy. Italy has a dicmwr’ 5° has.thls pubncaum- and Mr- S90E09!‘ Turkey and Austra, and Germany is in a fair way to have one, ‘while from Siam in the far cast to Chili on the other side of the world. there is hardly a country betweenin which commotions have not broken loose and of such a chriwtfir that in many it has overturned fabric of the state. Mank nd has H- long way yet to travel before it creates the perfect state, and it is: undflr- tipio of his death, and sold to Mr. king, dictator, Fascist, democracy. , Spencer by Miss Hogarth, Dickens! we'l to realse that whether or any other form, the Pefleilil Stale; can never come about without- P9P‘ fcct citizens out of which to makel it. And where are they? i The United States Children's? Bureau finds that thousands of boys of all ages are aimlessly roam-i iiig the nation's highways and rid- ing the freigh‘. trains. Some of them have left the grammar school, others have finished college. Inves- ti§at'on proves that mainly they come from homes in which, owing to hard times, they can no larger be supported. They are swiftly be-i coming idlc, shirtless and dlshon-l est. Appeal is made to organizatbns‘ and to undertake to save those who, are on the mavc from becoming hardened hcboes. Professional _ tramps are not to b; envied, soy i i I i records of fifteen years ago, and before the discovery of insulin. Remember then that deaths from diabetes can be prevented if treat- ment is begun within a reasonable time, and the patient carries out the treatment as to diet and the use of insulin after he no longer visits his physician. Dis. Leonard F. ‘C. Wendt and Franklin B. Peck in a series of 1073 cases/found insulin necessary for about one-third. had to be used tinted the pipe bowls. A tortoise-shell trinket-box, giv. en by Nelson to Lady Hamilton, is the sort of thing that American dealers describe as “romantic link with past," but it is Dickens who has left his heart all over the shop. There are dinner-plates from Gads Hill which must once-have held lllisllty rounds of beef, rivers 0i gravy and magnificent helpings of pudding. There are letters, and al.- temporarily for another third, l while the remainder get along ) ike to write because he had to without it Wm out fifty a day he did not like, with relish. In one from Broadstairs when she begged for keepsakes. A few days later Mr. Spencer stood in the bare room with its iron bed- stead where Meredith had died. and was taken down into the veg- etable garden to see a heap of ash- es, all that remained of the price- less MSS. sheets. Each visitor to the shop makes straight for the thing that inter- ests him. Lewis Carroil, whose real name was the Rev. C. L. Dodgson, was fascinated by a. collection of old puzzles stored In a corner, and, whenever he wrote to Mr. Spencer afterwards, drew a riddle in dia- gram in the corner of the page. Sir Henry Irving often came to look for old editions of Shakespeare, and among souvenirs of him are the dagger he used as Hamlet and Shylocks knife. Lady Tree wanted help in making her Trollope fl- lection. Lord Roscbery specialized in drawings and prints of Eton, his old school, and his daughter, Lady Sybil, came in search of old draw- ings of parachutes. Lord Curzon bought views of India and carica- tures of Napoleon, and Dr. Tru- man, Queen Victoria's dentist, came for more and yct more Cruikshank drawings. Swinburne, a. tragic, Victorian, whose very words had lost mean- ing for him, just as Wilde's emu. tions had lost theirs and had be- come mere sounds unrelated to anything a man may touch or think, came often to New Oxford street. In his velvet cape, with his red hair on end, he would stoim up the shop shrieking complaints against the landlady who had dared to wake him before mid-day. LatenMr. Spencer bought many o1 Swlnburneb books from Wm; Dlmton. who kept the Poet Biiye sculptor named Fletcher to bathe and how the sculptor “set up a ‘shriek which pierced the air. You lmrrlbll’ all the time and dancing a. maniac dance which defied de. , scription. Such a. devil-such a bold, lhowling, fearful devil in buff I nev- or beheld." iflys: "I am working, walking and lseawatering here, and only going ‘into the great Oven for ‘Household _Words’ purposes and coming away I again as soon as I have baked that yweekly bread." I-ie was editor of has an old speaking tube, with whistle and fittings, which once hung near the editorial chair in ‘the “Household Words" office in Wellington street, and down which Dickens must have bowled many, orders for galley proofs and more; ink. _ , _ ' The most. treasured Dickens relic of all is a small New Testament found in his travelling desk at the beloved sister-in-iaw. It contains an inscription in Dickens‘ hand, two or three piously gaudy old book-markers and a forgotten Christmas card from an equally forgotten admirer. Meredith was perhaps more care- ' less about his MSS. than any other author of Mr. Spencer's acquain- tance. He frequently lighted m; pipe with a discarded page, a. more expensive habit than lighting it with a bank-note. Once, when m5 nurse accused him of mock mod. esty, he ordered her to make a bun- fire of his MSS. at the end or the garden and only reluctantly yielded years. Robert Louis Stevenson once sat on a chair in this shop and sipped brandy and water while his wet shoes dried, and herc his old nurse, Alison Cunningham, sorely pressed for menu, hmuabt, the presenta- the knowing ones. Forever moving. they are not. actually going any~ where-They are only trying to get As you know it is the starchy food ' and respectable for so many Weary. Into the wood the old king went And greeted an ash and touched an Oak. Out of his sore soul's discontent He sighed and spoke: “Children I had, and dead. A wife I had, and she is lost- What do you do. 800d trees" he said, "At the hour of frost?" they are The oak trees coughed, the ash tree sighed, But never a word they lave that king. The crow in the ash tire cawcd and cried, But did not sing. The old king shut his two eyes fest, And lesnt his forehead against the ' tree, And thought of all the dead leaves past- A marvelous company. They came, they came, like waves oi the sea, These ghpsts of leaves came round _ that king. They hushed, they whispered, ceaselessly; And he heard them sing: Children and bright-eyed wives we were, But Time forgot us, and no one grievea, who remembers us? Who will stir The ghosts of leaves? . . . The world is a world of forgotten things; It is better s0, far better so. Wives and children, even a king's Are as brief as snow. And who can be happier than the dead, By all forgotten, forgetting all? Come with us. -King!-the dead ' leave-s said- The year's at the fall. -Conrad Aiken in Poetry. tion books he had given her. In "An Island Voyage" he had writ- ten: “My dear Cummy, ii you had not taken so much trouble with me all the years oi my childhood this little work would never have been written. Many a long night you sat up with me when I was ill. I wish I could_ hope, by way of return, to amuse a single evening for you with my little book! But whatever you may think of it, I know you will continue to think kindly of the author." Later Miss Cunningham arranged for the dis- posal of a heavy gold brooch con- taining a lock of her hair, flanked with two curls from Stevenson's baby head. A letter from him acknowledging the receipt of some old Scotch pamphlets contains the rhyme: I thank you, Spencer, courteous chap, ‘ For many a volume quaint and neat, Which would not have been mine perhap, Had I'not known New Oxford Street. Miss Large, Stevenson's last nurse, the "little spectacied angel’ he wrote of in the Vailima Letters, brought many relics to the shop, including a prayer written by Ste- venson for his Sunday school in Samoa. This prayer reveals the man more cruelly than any other lines of his writing: "We beseech ‘Thee, Lord, to behold us with favor, folk of many families and nations, gathered together in the peace of this roof, we men and women sub- The list i! no Ioflowl: A 19" D0580 liondlrdlix sedan 17000 miles, 8450.00. I 1880-81 Dodge eight sedan 39M m“ $150.00, n. mo mun-m eight eodm 11000 ma... “m, °' 1m Buick eight ledon 11m mllee $150.09, . 1mm L; ' ‘ sier- Ill liziieikmilee $550.00, gum-“ p," a‘ ‘on p 32:00:01». with wvmd body. one mt 1cm.- "m, "P, Ourphnmiiiatunoonutheeetencanareeeid" ' ‘will call the pnrchllcre together and they will m,“ u“ deehioauiowhogeiehiaoarfreqwehandingbugm, settlement given no and allowing him to ksepm, cm Th“ is up to 8500-00- ' The decision of the ten lfllrohlserg m, "Whmw"! m°7d°‘l""l°nl'l-litfsafairway_ Should they not be able to ltree, then we will deciq, g method to be employed. Bat you can be ante that n“ o; these ten can will not colt anything u; the pmhu" up to 8500.00 u we will hand that amount back to him i; h“ ear coats that much. All "W" Ill-l‘! IN Drilled 20% below Montreal or Tor- onto prices for the some care and at least 50% below their real value. Bot we must cell in order to pay our debit We will tell you as each em la sold. ' W. B. PliiIWSE 8i SONS - - -w e-S . Nebraska And at the time of the suit, 1613, "Ham let," "MacBeth" and "Klng u"... Shakespeare w", mm m, my, M he u" lli (The Edmonton Journal) have mmen while has!“ "lit One does not usuall late - the wlgmaker‘ the state where wiiiieryn gzfioticings ' ,,§§°".°“"", ma" m“ Sllltltm 0i Bryan rose to political Prominence .. _ d“; p 8'18)’: Sh‘ John Admck-il" with the mites: figure in English “m” " wma” h“ ‘"50"- litcrature. But a member of the landmark‘, 81013025 mm“ staff of the University of Nebraska, house and we zhgorhd Bmh '41‘ Dr. Charles w. Wallace, who died strayed m the '° “re ‘ii- last week, had to his credit the m" m’ ‘"1" Greatest Shakespearlan discovery in 2:31:62; o‘, the churchyard‘ i-e- recerit times. ' a 5 h o! the “W” 1' "°l' Dr. Wallace's story is a fascinat- x615“: by “Fe Cooper's Am" ing one. A decade and a half ago‘ by way Sgrxafioittlfram" Cmamldi he came to the conclusion that 1f ; Shakespeare walked“ dw" will‘!!! he studied the oil business thOI-i o, “m” on m‘ w“ t?“ “mm-l oughly he could make enough y the Mew“- money to pursue the Shakes earian ___—__'_" researches on which he hadzet his RARE ononnmlry heart. In a few months he suc- oeeded in amassing a. fortune and resigned his university post. Delv- lllB 8-. a the, documents inthe recbrd office in London he came across some-that enabled him to locate the depot where Shakespeare lived during the time that he was producing his greatest plays. The papers had to do with a law- suit. A maker of wigs, Christopher Mountjoy, lived at the corner of Silver and Monkwell streets in London. His household consisted of his wife and daughter, an apprent- ice named Stephen Bellot- and a lodger, William Shakespeare. Bellot married the daughter and after-i wards brought action against his father-in-law for a. promised dow-f er. Shakespeare's deposition was an i important factor in the case. It showed that he lived with the fam- ily for six years previous to the date of the wedding, which took place on November l9, I604, at Saint Olave‘: Church, directly op- Dosite Mouutioys house, and that he probably was still living there’ Motor Car salesman-Are you m 59mm“ i" my PB-fticular make m car, sir? v __Pcdestrian—-Nol I just “m; i, he" 0° flllifiy being among a in that I didn't have i-a jump n“, from. ._. ._____.___.._ Foster's Clean iiead Lotion This is a perfectly liar-mien PNlw-nfion for destroying nl U"! Illrllllel In the hair. it "l" lllVlloratee and keeps the head free from dandruff. aisting under the covert of Thy patience. Be patient still: suffer us yet awhile longer—with our broken purposes oi good, with our idle en- deavors against evil-suffi-r us‘ awhile lonzer to endure." Here is the miserable worm philosophy at‘ its worst. For once Stevenson has thrown aside his lifelong pose of} “the strong man" and shows him- self as the school-boy decadent who could sigh “shall we never shed blood." You will have no trouble keeping your child's head clean ii yon use this lotion. It never falll 25c Bottle E. A. FOSTER Central Drugstore - i} DR. L. B. EiIiiliS of London, Eng. Noted Phyillcian treated successfully 1nd Qhlglngfl Permanent cures ofitolnach Conditions ouch no Indigen- ilflh. Dyliicnsla, Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dia- treas and many other lil- menta peculiar to the atom. ach with a perecriptlon which we have procured and sell under the name of Evans Stomach Mixture. We alone have the eole rights on this pmcrlption and eince selling it have rc- relved numerous testimonials from satisfied purchuen. Don't fool with your atom- ach. Serioiu- condition: are likely to arise If you allow yourself to Iaple into a fiironic state of gastric trou- C. “Get a Bottle today. Price THE 2 MAGS For Success Ranching FEED . “ IMPERIALS " Acknowledged leaders in Fox and Fur Raising. Charlottetown, P. I. I- llmperial Biscuit ilompany, i-iil-