ciliifliorrrroivseusnmsn i-~.-.....+-..-.-.-- 0' (uni.- Ins» . ‘ ‘i’ \ i m‘ t giiowtr BUT‘ sunny [PF iii Henry Ford has announced so for ‘ss his company is con- sented the depression no longer oxide. The same, adds sn exchange, _I be said by many other com- and great numbers of indiv- ldudfi in Canada. That is the way the depresion f Is e: lng. It does not happen over- ‘ nig : we shall not open the morn- “ in: er some day to lead that st _ .o‘clock the previous afternoon theiworld went back to full activ- jlty ht post-war wages. The process ls gradual, largely individual. One g by hne industries revive and their empty... g0 back to work; ships sremut back into service to carry the-goods the nations are demand- lngjig grester quantities; railway locomotives and cars are taken from the melancholy lines of deed equipment; factories call for coal or electrm power; retail. establish- ments need more people to serve J lo spend. And the circle, once started, grows larger and more Wiqdt as its rays of influence Those who sit back to wait for folders, who look hopefully in ltiefmewspapers for word that the depression 1s over and, we are flbsck I0 normal," are likely to be the last lo find places in the procession. i Prosperity does not just come, but ll achieved by effort. EMPIRE BANKS Graham Towers, governor of IJclBank of Canada, shortly to #1 w Qua-sins‘ Dull! 8-00 y! your (ls ndvsnoo) delivered. M-IU so: us: (h saunas) menus is 001ml: sol United Items. WEDNESDAY. NOV§II 7- BIL ~l2mpireexchsngeslsssinsquswon trade sgreements. EDITORIAL NOTES The busiest and most entertaining nlscs these dsvs is the m: show at the Inhibition grounds. Sir Robert and Indy 35491;. Powell (P rid Bsydi-in Pole) W111 lllwd I full‘ week hem next summsr, from July lito July s. Tiwywillbethehouse guests of Lieutenant Governor O01. and Mrs. George DeBlois. "Distinguished for its work in behalf of cripples is the Rotary Club oi l“ lottetown which last yesr alone allotted the sum of $1,- 300 to this activity." The foregoing item eppolrs in the current issue of Th! F4758"!!!- 07811! of Rotsry m- , more customers with more money mstional- 1n the old country they are s13. fering as severely from mod scot- dents es we up here, and lord ADI]?!- MR, who ,. "od at the opening of an international exhi- bition d! cripples work in Bristol, said: “Life is more ’ us today than st any time since the Wars oi iihe Roses. Ne msn can venture out, whether by csr or bicycle, horse- csrt, or on foot, and be certain of coming back home olive and whole." m his admirable address st the Boy Scouts Association annual i? mit- dwrs. is aimed 1s iii-vine. meeting, Premier MiscMillan said ” __ lusqitption will act as a stimulus to = Canadian economic recovery, now t ~ well under way-that the Bank will ., lndedi mist trade by improving i conditions. The recent hieqtlugof theBoardoftheBank notsfiie m: the presenceof w. I-Vwemlh-Hlowersisnotnmem- per-Eel the mam of the n.1.s., but bcowdlngtotheBasl-ecorreswnii- entiq! the London Financial ‘limes. ynkoffianadawilltakeup ' sums, in the B1B. and than Mr. ‘rimvei-swmuumviientoioinths Bodrd v t us; developments, say iihe . Iinsiicial Times, come as a remind- s thit tho new chain of Empire pleibTs-ndwithinsshortspaceof bimeyill be in working order. The New zealand Oentrsl Bank, in fact. noinsced that no alteration in the = exchange rate was contem- plated "for s very long time." - ssivfitfiiy be taken by the other new I‘ fioncentralbarlkswithin s. imeasurebis space of time. Their delicate problems will be to pe 1e and at the same time plsy ‘ the part in the general financial machinery of the Emil“! 811d m‘ would. The financial Times regards as baseless the contention of some bsnqgiisn bankers that all the Do- central banks are destined to become minor satellites in sn jsizimisl constellation around the Bani: of England. There is not the slightest evidence that the Bank oi ‘misuse is desirous of placing the Jhminion central banks in a. sub- orclillllto position. "The practical Answer to these fears is that none the Dominions possesses a fully- uicveldped discount market, and so hi! new central banks will not be h s position, even if they so desir- bornmunities. For home the ~msin level in the hands the-Dominion central banks will be thpt of influence and WWII!!!" tint or the rediscount nu or‘ operltlons in the open mn- ‘bet. m“ will induce them all the i feeiltheir wsysnd maintain their vi Wiiveiiviiéfli '1 in London. that the new nations-l the problem oi the present and the immediate ruture was whet to do with the young people leaving school, him school. colleges and universities. Owing to the conges- tion in all industries st home and abroad there was little immediate l I7: International Settlements was mm“; gm- our 115mg hop”. and m; that reason it was desirable and necensry to maintain the morale and spirits of the young by the training and personal discipline pro- vided by such organisations as the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides. The Government wes 100 per cult be- hind than. It was only lest you that we recorded the visit of “Alice in Won- derland” to the ‘United States for i central banks is nwiiwlly wm- the Lewis Carroll oentonsry cele- brations, and now comes word that size. Mrs. Alice Hargreaves, is dying as s result of s. stroke suffered ten 3" t. h sllefldy OWE-Wis. and nearly dsys ego when being driven in an " Iinetmbiiths B80 it took its first automobile. she is 82 years of sge ’ major decision of policy when it an- snd doctors ssy recovery is impos- sible. Bhs has been residing for some time in an old white house ova-looking Westsrhsm Green and i , llqmlly important action may ooh- is attended, by her sister, Mrs. Lid- dolLuidhcrsoihAsschildshewe-s s favorite of tbs distinguished msthentsti ' , Rev. Charles Lut» wedge Dodgson, who for her sinuse- g servo the illicit“! 0f their W" ment wrote s number of apparently nonsensical stories, subsequently publishing them under the pseud- Wonderland" being the first. It is said when it appeared Gulf- Vic- toria reed it with delight, and sent out immed ‘ for all of Mr. Dodgsorrs previous works, sud found that they dealt with logar- ithms snd the higher calculus. Montreal Gsaetto editorially pays this deserved tribute to the mem- ory sf Mr. A. A. Leiurgey: "Thirty- four yesrs sgo Mr. Leiurgey was elected to the House oi Commons for the old constituency of East Prince, in his native province of Prince lidwsrd Island. He was of loyalist stock. the son or the non. John Iiefurgey. Although still s young man when he entered the frequent consultation. atsbility of tothefullsuccessoftheiflmpire onym of Iowis Oar-roll, "Alice in "° Notes s and seen flash out oontinuslly and sdd sest to whatever interest or con- cern there is in the rotation of the wheel o1 time. ‘There is fascia- stionin ‘Jfitheuufoldlngof s mystery. movingslowly to its de- nouemenhlsnotthessmstrueln “__ the partly understood, marvelous, tragic story of dsiiy sf- fsirs? The unknown, the uncertain, the elusive odd a rich flsvour to life and prevent insipiduess and dullness Even though anxiety is often increased there is s tonic ef- fect of considerable value. Something new in instalment selling as it is practised by one trader on the Gold Coast of Africa, is reported in the current issue of Sales Monument. At s. small trading post in an interior village, it is reported, the trader removes the winding keys from some alarm clocks. Ho gives the clocks to the natives upon the payment of s smsll initial capital deposit. Then the natives continue psyment on ‘bringing the clock back to the trmder to be wound. When the clock ils entirely paid for the natives be- come the posseasors of the keys.- Flnsncisl Post. Ithssbeenssidthstthelostof Ia nation's greatness is not in its - strength nor in its finan- cial slircflflh. but in what it thinks o4’ human life, in what it stead- fastly tries to make oi human life, sndinthswsylnwhidaitmakes everything in its‘ life minister to its highest human outcome. The test of a. nation's greatness and civ- ilisation is what it makes oi men. “Tho Puritan begins in time id live in eternity." That is a sentence thst caught our mind recently and hold it. Most of us, through the religion that we have inherited, hlve s. strain of the Plu-itan in us. But we wonder if in these of speed we are keeping that sense of eternity that msdc the Pirrltun, whatever the oddities of his sev- ere manners and costume, a. mag- ln some quarters to insult and de- ride the Puritan, ers the meaning of “Duty? Puritanism produced the most massive and the morally strongest type of clmracter the because “the Puritan begins in time to live the life of eternity." what our nation means. Here are the mots of our heritage, and here our central loyalties belong. But because we feel so deeply about our own land, we understand how oth- er people feel about their lands. and using our patriotisnr to inter- pret theirs, we grow, not in bitter- ness but in understanding and —-Ha.rry Emerson Iibsdlck. to remind us that none of those Balkans has not exploded. inc before you our have s serious explosion. Hats and fear are fuses, but wealth is the power. Money has been well named the sinews of was‘. Omy states which are econ- omically well oil’ can afford to go to was". and the Balkans today suf- fer under the depression. ‘There are forces in Europe tending toward war, but there are also forces oper- Bfln! Bfllfiflt lit-Hamilton Specta- r. The Athenian accepted slavery because he did not see how the good things of the Greek civilisa- tion could be achieved without it, and Europe has always accepted an essenti lly similar attitude, riot merely in regard to the political and economic subjugation of its population but in regard to the more general fact that the cost of every civilized institution is tre- mendous. Indeed, its boasted spir- ituality-its tendency to put honor and loyalty above material profit, its emphasis upon the beauty of its poems in oontritdlstinction to the ugliness of its history, and that pride in the nobility oi its cathed- rals which disregards the brutality 0f the ege which produced them- is merely an aspect of its pessim- ism. It is based upon the assump- tion that such intangible triumphs sre pcasibb only st the cost oi tangible failures, and that the nob- lest humanity is the which recogiihes the fact-Joseph Word Krutch, in The Nation. F =2 é ii i E pen tbs newspapers. pri- f r information on whet is in his own comnumity O gggiiiiii rim WN isms B The Way wit? m mrmo m rum wum n- l5 ssrs ro Uss DINITROPHENOI~ rim vveronr nenucmu, nnvo It is unfortunsto that the new "B18111; reducing drug, dinltmphenol, is not more safe for use; from var. ious cities reports are coming of sev- ere skin reactions, collapse, and s. number of deaths. . It should prove a. very vnluabl drug when more about it is known and some method of testing pat- ients so that it can be definitely known when and where it is safe to use it. A drug that csni crease the rste at which the body processes work by 50 per cent without in- creasing the pulse rate, the heart beat, cr the temperature is certainly s remarkable drug. 1n an effort to find out whe“ it is possible to know when a patient can safely use dlnithrophenol, Dr. Edward Matzger, San Ekancisco, used three diflerent methods of skin testing. l. The patch test in which s small quantity of dlnitrophenol pow- der was placed, on the front of the forearm and covered with waxed paper held in position with a. wide strip oi adhesive plaster, Readings were msds at intervals of 24, 48, ‘l2 snd 96 hours. I. The scratch test in which s 2 per cent solution of dinitrophepol was rubbed into a little scratch of the skin about one-quarter inch long. Readings were made in 5 minu- tes, 15 minutes, and 34 hours. 8. The intradermsl test in which s 1 per cent solution oi dinitrophe- ncl was injected into the upper arm. Readings were recorded in 5 minu- too, 15 minutes and 2A hours. 4. The indirect test in which blood serum from a patient who had n violent reaction from using dini- trophenol was injected into those who were not sensitive to it. Read- nificent figure on the background ings were made in 5 minutes, 15 of history. It has been the fashion minutes and in 2i hours. The tests were made on 157 per- yet it was he sons of whom ll’? were patients with that put the backbone into British hay fever, asthma, or hives (urtic- cherscior and taught our foreiath- aria) and 40 were not subject to the word these ailments. What were the results oi these thorough tests of dinitrophenol? Dr. Matzger says, “These results world has known. And that was show that skin tests are of no value- in telling when a patient is “sen- sitive’ 'to dinithrophmd." The lesson then is that until more No other nation can mean h us is known about it this powerful drug must not be used except under the close supervision of s physician. This Nervous Age (Exchange) Ibrcita-billty and nervousness are sympathy. so all fine internation- blamed sometimes on the Great d“ -Mcc‘nnbcr “n; slisrnmustberooted bsckinthe War, P“ w I sometimes on trivsnces. But more than half centurvasovr- George Besrdin s t1 ital-o o sd’ ruin The statement of the Jugoslav p, book called “meme” New“- pfimwflum Ufimfsmg, courage is pretty equally shared be- m, ppm,” c, regency. prvcloinlins the unity and ness” said that a new class o! market, W" the stability oi the nation. serves emotional discuss has swims up States trade which hsd remiss the lmiihsrv But the my "mt-the book acted with all the atmospheric chic! clossal value of nearly sl,000,000,000, mm“ m“ m"! "flnnxlbflitl" accompaniments in the United States. ‘The country and no form of civiliza- tion, not Greece, nor Rome, nor Spain, nor the Netherlands, in the days of their glory, possessed such malsd ." It seems strange to us that one should describe the eighties of the nineteenth century as seething with nerve-wracklrig activities. In that time you could read a. newspaper or shake hands with s. friend in the middle of the street, or walk along c. coirntry road brooding upon the eternal verities, without looking before q;- behind for sutomobil Men were prosecuted for "furious driving" at a pace which would now hold back a. stream of traffic on the highway, No airships, no radio, no motion pictures with or without _sound._ If the railways made you nervous you could avoid them. To us this suggests a calm and leisurely llie instead of the hectic activity described by Dr. Beard. Even now, the nerves of the human race have not quite gone to pieces. and it looks as if from time to time we are sble to adjust our- selves to new environments. We learn, before crossing the street, to look automatically for the green signal, and we turn oil’ the rsdio when the charms of chewing gum are too blatantly voiced. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE' "I want to buy s. box of break- fast food," said Mrs. Nubride. “What kind?" asked the grocer. "I don't remember the name, but it's the one that the advertisements speak of so highly.“ _ interests him. An intelligent selec- tion oi news items will ensble the lonelier to clothe the dry bones of historical or geogrsphlcsl hot with life and reality-Ottsws Journal. thorium" . ‘JUUNEY; i PiLLS I?‘ Ei well up its sea-coasts aruLborders and llve prosperousl-y within them, was the which sew Europe deprived of ability to psy debts which prod u. mania for economic nationalism, whole structure of world exchange and credit. begsn automobiles» dest ti of hsps th test noble siznlficances of nationalism. telephones and other modern con- twoféfyfiflgd, my“ m,,§,";}'._h, ch u d I think u 1 ‘he s _ _ srsc nan 8W! in inN Yoktheth ds. word mum“ by m’ any!” higest form of ccuragefllthink thst B u" W r ‘ o or y Why Preserve It? (Manchester-Guardian) . isieurnsswaliiyoechimutsin 0 o recen v-holrd loflllflf IKW flu¥ U | venient. Many nations signing that document reserved their. right to ‘uetslist1on" in their use of poison- Kl-i- - How, then. c!!! ti!” preparations-the collecting of poison-gas stocks purely for “rs- tallstlon”—be legitlmstoly objected to? The likely result. ls Mr. Prstt suggested, is that “s nation having the means o! chemical offence sll worked out ready to hssid will be greatly tempted to use it, Ind will almost certainly succumb to the temptation if things begin to go aggzm it." He gives his own ture of the results of the “slsoulinb- ing": “The civil population ss s whole can keep indoors . . . In sirplsne spray gives no wsrning. ‘its sir- plsne, if high up may be miles sway, and a man, if he were in the open, would be e-ntaminsiodbefore he realised his danger." Gas-masks for civilians s.re sp- parentiy only for TIT‘, ‘ ‘ "' value; they ‘ , teet against mustard-gas contamination of the clothing and the body: civilians had better stay in s. gas-proof 100m iii- slde. Outside, however, tho-defend- lng chemists and the "decontamin- sting" squads will be busy. The chemists will be rushed to the scene of the latest smell and swiftly sn- alyzing it to find whet sort of gss it ls. "An error of judgment may be fraught with serious conse- quences." But whybothsrtotrytoropeir s civilization that allows itself to come to this, Uncle Sam Repents (Ottawa Jflllmll) H-nunillty, it has been said, is the beginning of wisdom. It that be true, it is good to have Mr. Cordell Hull, United States Becre of State, admitting that the United Btstes set the "vicious example or high tariffs" and declaring: "We have now repented." And what Mk. Hull confesses is true. It was the lbrdney-Mcihimber tarrif, enacted by Congfibs ln 19%. that launched the world madness in tariffs. Thst act. born and you feel inclined, will you United States belief that it could ma“ d“ me your opinion as to coursge in high and low. You have 3 beginning of the trouble uced and which ultimately crashed the In the case or this continent. the sew s Canada-United dire effects have occurred which um primary cause o; this dove] ,.- h, 19g deem‘, to $509003“) m were feared or predicted when King merit and very ympld 111mm s: 193g Alexander was assassin-tied. Italy- nervousness is modem civilization, and Jugoslsvis. have not gone to which is distinguished from_ the worgq within n, “w ygflg “m; 1o where else W- Kipiifis Yifljfiflicfii will‘; the limo onion"! i8 5W1 111- ancient by these five charecteris- nations, their exports declining and "mum b!“ M W" mt: the powder mssssine or the tics: steam-power, the periodical seeking desperately u» protect their 4m was i0 or s" MM "W" b! Th6 press, the telegraph, the sciences, trade balances, reared higher and Balkans is a powder magazine. but and the mental activity of women. higher tariffs to reduce their im- YWmlIBliIiBVBDOWiiEIBIB-miisiiz- All thisismodcrn; andnoagmno portnAss resulhthetrsdsofthe The world onscquences wereieven nations was curried on within water-tight -‘ ts, with consequent stngnsflon for every- body. There followed. ss there was bound to follow. depreciation of eur- renciee, paralysis of exchange, rc- pudistlon of debts: the financial certainity and chaos which have marked the pest fiye yesrs. . Ithsstnkenmuchtimemndmuch tribulation, lo bring the repentance now voiced by m. Cordell Hull. In the 1900's when ‘Uncle Bun was _ thumbing his vest, and he was send- lng his experts to tell lair-ope how to settle her sffairs. few Americans could be found to doubt high-tsrlff wisdom. Those were the dsys when Mr. ‘Coolidge was tslkng about Europe llsving "hired the money," when Mr. Hoover was p "a chicken in every pot and s ces- in every garage." when s soaring stock market produced millionaires over night. Th! United States. living bY sndof itselfavsstogoonsndcn ts" greater prosperity, and great tycoons, unloading the stocks that were ‘to mske everybody rich, and reaping vast riches for themselves, gave million-dollar coming-out per-ties for their debutante dough- tersThiswIsnncwwoi-ldsadthe best of sll worlds. Thencsme thscrsslmlnsdsm the United States ssw its vest pros- perity bubble burst, sew mrope un- sblc to Ply its debts, ssw the foreign trade which sustsined millions‘ of Stroll m, hinted in any tions whether he was hot or cold ‘or I mourn no more my vanished years: Beneath s. tender rain. An April rein of smiles and tears, i is young again. The west winds blow. ind singing low / I heir glad streams run; The windows of my soul I throw Wide open to the sun. No longer forward nor behind I look in hope or fear; But grsteful, take the good I find, ‘lhebedofnowandhere. . . . . Enough that blessings undeserved Hsve marked my erring track;- Thst wheresobr my feet have swerved, Bis c-hsstening ‘ ‘ me beck;- Thst more and more s Providence Of love is understood, Making the springs of time and sense Bweet with eternal good. . . . . And so the shadows fall spurt, And so the west winds play; And n11 the windows of my heart I open to the day. —-Whittiet. Kipling Discusses Canada (Mail and Enrprlre) About two months ago we pirbli- whether courage is more often found in men of humble origin than in men of high estate: “In other words, is courage, or discipline of mind,‘ as 12.x. puts it, bred through education (which makes a men concious of somethir; great within himself), or does it come by inheritance? Usually our arguments circle around Sir John Pmnklin, Gen. ‘Chinese’ Gordon and Scott o! South Pole fame as examples of the heroic in educated men, while Gun-_ gs Din and humble V.C. ‘Tommies’ and sailors, whom Kipling glcrlfies are championed on the other side. Smneone said, “The height of good- breediilg arid character is indif- ference to prrlvstion.’ and history proves that in tragic Arctic expe- figons the educated leaders die h afwp. is Mr. James w. Barby of the Strollers’ Club, and he recently passed on his query to Mr. Kipling himself. To the poet of Empire he said: "Sometime, when not too busy. had contact with msny V.C's in your day, and your verdict will settle the matte;- so fer es the Club is concerned." Mr. Kipling replied: “As to your question about courage snd charac- ter, the biggest mun in every way that I ever knew, never said or We/y under any condi- full or empty or sick or sorry. That's n high and low in one form or -seems to need antecedent train- oniopofneturalgiftltiss most fiwinst“ subject." some- sel- slovens, self-indulgent or undiscip- lined people: have-not yet met s. v.0 who has not strict notions of keeping himself decent on his way through the civilised world . . . . Somehow, the clean and consider-etc mun mostly seems to take hold of circumstnscessttherightend. . When sil is said and done courage oimindisthsiinest thinganyone can hope to sttnln to." The same versatile and uninspir- ing writer he: always been s tre- mendous believer in Oanadiam as inthecaseofcsnsdigaswellasin the cese of the whole British lhupire, there om be smell doubt of the response. At Geneva a few. dsys ago m. Bennett spoke arres- tingly of the evils o! tarlffs—spoks ls one who, ss long as three years sgo, launched the Imperial Eco- nomic Conference es a step towsrd freer trade. Nor- should it be forgot- ten thnt Britain, although she has sbandoned Free Trude, still main- tains the lowest tariff of any notion in he world. us it may wel-l be that, with this repentance by the United States, or new wisdom, the world mrw be about to start that retreat from tariff msdrmss which is so lam overdue. W! BELL AND RECOMMEND I l 0 S Special llx. 315 00d Liver Oil Extract, creosote snd Gnlsc Oompsimd. with nl Anal tulle for Coughs, OoMsJnIunQsndGrIpPe. PIlOln-IIPIIBOTII-I A‘! 17w Two Macs shed g letter from J.W.B, ssklnfl ' tries are also much interested, but THE . ROYAL OF FOR Your: PROTECTION Securities and olhlsrvlsiluoblsswhlch you keep oi homo or In your office ore olwoys In danger of firs, thofi or loss. To have freedom from Worry, use a Safe Dsporll box oi The Royal Bonk. l? combines pro- tection with convenience, o! o trifling coal. CANADA BANK a people possessing distinct courage and a great future among the ns- tions. He developed this view of them in his visits to this country. in 193i! he prophesied that this Do- minion would be well on the road to recovery within two years. And he was rlsht, for according to the Secretariat of the Iiesglls of Nations at Geneva. it has for s. Yea-i‘ vast led all considerable nations in the ex- tent and rapidity oi its recovery form the world depression. It will be interesting to Canadians to learn that Kipling watches this country with close attention, and that he is constantly on the lookout for reli- able information from Canadians regarding its development. In his letter to Mir. 3B .hc said that the drought in Bsska hewan has been bothering him for a. long while. edd- ing in his picturesque style: "I once saw a big dust-storm in one cf the cow-towns-in Dakota. and it skinned off the too of u. bit of dry plow-land, loose snow." Talking Books (lihrchsngc) ‘mlklngbooksuetoprove sboon to other: beside the blind, tbs dir- ector of applied lighting informed the assembled Motion Picture Im- Book lovers of tomorrow will have lining in their fsvorito reading chsir and s of music and sound effects. In these days of taut nerves it is perhaps curious that not so rmny people actually suffer from insom- whilc I watched. like s. wind skins Nd nis ss formerly and the explana- tion probsbl will b6 found in thr ease with ch the average man our switch on the electric iighi without getting out of bed. insom- nis loses its tenors ii’ one may pick up s book and reed without having t9 make any great effort, so the fesr of not sleeping, which is the chief cause of insomnia, has disappeared. I ' in bed ‘will J-iold even greets: pleasure when the talking book fills Great Wis‘. " When lord Grey's eyesight fail- odhisnhelelrnedboroldBmille, butsfterhsxeco uutheuseof his eyes be continued borrowing the Braille books. He explained that he ihld fonncd the hlbit of reading in under the bedclcthss with the light out and it was sudi s couuort that he refused to nbandcn the practice. MOTHER OI‘ EMININT CLIRGYMAN PASSES (0. P. Dy Glsrdlufs lpeclsl Wire) O'l.‘1‘AWiA. Nov. B-Jvlrs. Gather- ine Burke, mother of Father John E, Burke, ‘ ‘ member oi the Order of Peulis-t liiathcrs, and rec- w,- og at. Paul's College, Washing- ion, D. 0., died at her home here today. She was 86 years of age- A nstive of Saint John. N. B. she came to Ottawa in 1896 with her husband who predeceased her in 191T. 146 Richmond St., 12.12; 350W Fire, Life, AccidentL/Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance -at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown Iflmlllflilpl! Attendants.