i iiedgcof event-sand Iditor Asshole“ liners-Isaak w; Inning Daily (fouled III) Hill pa year (ia_ advance) NE_W LAMPS FOR‘ OLD Our local oontelllvfllffl PM! ticlpatlon of s. sweeping Liberal ry in Alberta. which would b! helpful to m. Mackenzie Kins" not materialized. Perhaps the ls of Alberta were not as t at promise-making as they ‘vedrecentlytobeinthisprov- ce. Perhaps the achievements of 3.1mm gorcmnlenfs in British ahlumhia, Saskatchewan. and Cen- ‘Q-al and Eastern Canada were not {pf the kind calculated to inspire fioniidencc in any pre-eiection as- flglmances. Perhaps the Alberta el- Qpctors didn't want i0 be “helpful" Mr. King. At any rate. they flyoted in a brand-new party with a Qirograuune which eclipses anythin! rjthat the most imaginative Liberal Qrarnpaigner has been able to con- Qoct. “Balancing the budget" is jphlldfis play compared with the feat gyrhich Mr. William Aberhart, lead- ior of the. victorious Alberta= Social Ziiredlt League, promises to accom- ylish. Having no past political rec- ord. Mr. Aberhart was unassailable " that point. l-le was frank en- Tiugh to admit in his campaign that Lit would he at least eighteen inonths before a. Social Credit Gov- Qfnment, if elected. would be in s. (position to pay its promised initial ‘dividend oi $25.00 a month toevery bona tide citizen of the Province. This sum. he also explained, would not be paid in cash, but in credit. A “State Credit House" would be created. Under the plan. each cit- izen would be given a dividend- ' book and a book of blank, non- negotiable certificates. Tile book would be presented to the Credit House each month and a credit entry of $25.00 made. For children, from 16 to 80. payments would rangeirom $5 to 820 a month, sc- cordlrlg to age. A wife would rs- ceive $25.00 as well as her husband. A11 this would be financed by rc- duc‘ existing price spreads in production, pl ing and “et- ing of goods. No new money would be issued, and no ‘_,’_ “'- scheme of taxation" was contemplated. It reads Ike a story out o: the Arabian Nights. It has been esti- mated that it would take 0lao,ooo,- 000 annually to pay the basic divi- dend at the rate of $5.00 a month to each ciiincn. Aladdin with his Wonderful Lamp could scarcely be expected to do more. ‘The defeated administration, the ‘Alberta. United Farmers‘ Partyhad doubtless a sorry financial record. and was open to attack on many grounds. But it was precisely on such fantastic promises of achiev- ing s co-cperotive economic Utopia that the United Tanners first es- tablished themselves in the West. This fact, apparently, was forgotten by the electors in exchanging still Jlewer lamps for old, in the hope and expectation that prosperity could be pulled, like a rabbit, out of MT. Aberhsrfs hat. if HERITED TRIBUTES I Prince Edward Island is deeply indebted to one of its native sons. Professor D. C. Harvey, of the Hil- toric Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, for the attention given in recent years to commemo sting, in enduring form, matters c! na- tional interest concerning the his- tory of this province. The bronle tablets on the pillars of the Pro- vincial Building, eommemo ail... the birth of Confederation and the laying of the first marine cable on this continent. as well as the Cartier Cairn unveiled last summer, and thsfstill more recent cairn erected tdjCaptain Holland, are in Sarge sflrasure due tn Professor Harvey's pal arid initiative. As an histolhn. the, he has performed m invaluable ' in his brilliant History of c Acadisn Regime infrincenld- , Island. and in contributing ‘fishy shorter articles dealing with ‘re-Confederation days. “,;i‘lle painstaking research which wfit mm the preparation of his grfdfiss delivered "etude! is an i mailers thekind ofvork il- whtch Professor Harvey has devoted his talent. As Archivist for urn ills rs- ts nat- w.oanaora.lsor.cru.u.r.'vuc-srouuso.a.a.sursm.r.s.r. '°"'"""‘-' . . a pirates-a. l. Iarlettlhd. l. an lalsgllg In yoarflaaa Wdklnaldlhkfi 1 vanes ) delivered. M val l til Ihhlo snoopy. sooner u. loss; b. mentiimed, as was dooc by H15 Honour Lieutenant Governor De- Blcis, Chief Justice Mathieeon, and Isl-Premier MscMillan. each 01 whom spoke from experience and _ al contact with Mr. Harvey in the work which he is doing. EDITORIAL NOTES Tomorrow is practically the last of vacation Sundays. The rain was not before time-to say the least oi it. The Exhibition i_s all over for another year-and mighty well over too. The clean sweep of United Farm- ers in Alberta is further proof that we are living in a time of unreason and opportunislrr. "There will be nine Liberal Pro- vincial Governments after the 29nd" we were told. Well, there ain't. Potatoes have suffered from the lack of rain but judging by the samples in competition at the libr- hibltion, the early varieties have fared‘ well. 'I'he,export of eggs in July was 21.007 dosen as against 15,022 last year. This export has doubled in the last four months, being 50,914 dosen last year and 105,159 this year. ‘I'll-e wet spell should give Hon. Mr. Macfrltyre his opportunity to get on the roads. Due to the lengthened period of intense- drought, some roads have got badly out of condition. and require im- mediate attention. Nova Scotials Minister of Agri- culture, the Hon. J. A. Macdonald, was an interested spectator at our Exhibition, and very appreciative of the excellent management and magnificent displays. meme omcials are said to be surprised that the British govern- ment should be prepared to go any length to see that the League lives up to its covenant. But, of course, officials are proverbially laissez- faire. Mr. Guy Henson, secretary to Nova Booties Premier during the past two years. has been appointed secretary of the Nova. Scotia De- partment of Education. Mr. Hen- son is well-known here, having pre- viously held the position of assist- ant to Mr. R..W.E. Burnaby, Mur- itime Trade Commissioner at Tor- onto. are of the prime reasons for Britain's anxiety to prevent a clash between Italy and Ethiopia, is that given by General Botha. of South Africa. It might set the match to a racial ‘olocaust. As Britain has always looked upon herself as the foster-mother and protector of col- ored rsces-"the white lhs-rfs bur- den" in Kiplingb words-—with such dire and inevitable consequences obvious to all, she cannot stand idly by and allow a white nation deliberately to make war on a black nation merely out oi a spirit of revenge and envy. Charlottetown is mt becoming the centre of pilgrimmage from all parts of Canada and the United States on the part cf curious poli- tical eoonomists and joumaiists an- xious to discover the nature and quality of an electorate which vol- untarily submits to government with- out opposition. Hon. Thane Camp- bell may be equal to the occasion, however. pointing comprehensively tn his 39 brethren. and quotin/l scripture about the worst enemies being those oil coca own household. And under a parliamentary dictat- orrbio they cannot very well be’ P-ahot or imprisoned. The Moscow oorresponfint oi the Christian Science Monitor gives a different picture c! Russia from earlier .- yrin " A THE. CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN - Notes By. The Way Canada's offer of a new bond is- sue in this country comes as an- other indication of returning confi- dence and increased activity in the investment markets. The new bonds. offered at 9'1 3-4 and ac- crued interest, bear the low rate of 2 1-2 percent per annum—a figure in itself a sign both of the easy credit conditions now prevailing and o: the belief of the Ottawa Gov- ernment that it is in a. pos.tlon' to ask for favorable consideration of its securities. The Canadian bud- get» for-the fiscal year ended March 31 showed a surplus of ordinary revenues over ordinary expenditur- es. Csnadian business has. been improving, and industrial produc- tion is now at approximately the highest level in five years. Cana- And . Commerce Trade (By Drool-fer) . "Balance of trade" is s. term cf- ten used in party discussion, yet many fail to understand its im- port. The Liberal tells you (when he is not in office) that, unless ex- ports exceed, or at least equal im- ports, we are on the high road to ruin. This is true, only in respect rto the character of the goods af- fected, but blindly the Mackenzie King aggregation now lay it down as a rule absolute. The trouble is, it hits back. - In the nine years ending 1931. under King government, our ad- verse balance of trade with the United States amounted to the en- ormous sum of THREE BILLION DOLLARS. Think this over. In ille short time of only nine years, dian exports have been gaining, and the balance of trade with other, nations is favorable-New Yorkl Times. A peculiar incident took place 011i John Findlays farm. Meaford. While he was busily engaged coil- ing up hay, with a slight, breeze blowing, he decided to go into the house for a drink of water“ Just as he was returning to the field he noticed one of the big coils lift off the ground and go straight up, he judged, about 40 feet. He was greatly surprised to sce it spread While up that distance and sud- denly go through the air to light on apple trees in the next farm owned by Mrs. W. J. Johnston. Findlay as first thought lle was seeing things and could not under- stand what took the hrly into the air so suddenly-Wingham Ad- vance-Times. One becomes aware that unlike, the old days, Hong Kong is not at all sure of itself. At the moment the Colony, notwithstanding "out- side appearances,’ is in the dumps, a mood resulting from the fact that after a surprisingly long period of resistance the Colony, like the rest oi the world, has fallen victim to the economic depression. As long as China managed to keep out of it, Hong Kong too was able to hold its own, but now that China is in it, l-Iong Kong necessarily follows. The discouraging feature about it all is that the Colony has no chance of emerging from the slump until China has done so, but this is all dependent, amongst other things.on the future of silver, the price of which is being artificially raised above that of _ the goods which China sells. However, if Chirlivs capacity to sell is restored, the fut- ure outlook for Hong Kong would be relatively brighten-Hung Kong Press. Arid now we have Miss Dorothy Frocks. attorney and counsellor-at- law, of New York, concluding a fifteen thousand mile journey from Los Angeles to Alaska and across Canada, outlining a. plan to end the depression in thirty days. Her plan in brief is as follows: All real es- tate should be graded into zones from $10,000 up, and upon this val- uation banks should be empowered by law to lend up to one tenth the value in cash, such money to be used in improvement of the prop- erty. This, Miss Frocks contends. would bring a huge amount of money into circulation and by so doing would encourage spending and so end one of the vital causes of the depression. Miss Frocks‘ scheme seems to be almost asprac- ticable as some of the fantastic proposals advanced by Canadian radical political parties-Ex. ‘ To the many Royal relics in the London Museum, most of which have been the gifts or loans of the King and Queen, a notable addi- tion has now been made. The organizations, radio stations, thea- tres and scientific institutions. The party's central organs assume direct supervision of the work of every teacher, writer, artist, architect, author and natural scientist." Of course, as the new generation of Russians know nothing of freedom having been born and reared as Soviets, it is believable they wouid be "apparently hapill" in their crabbed, cabimd and confined tute- lage. A writer recently observed: “The Lfague of Nations as it wa". con- ceived in 1919, was the outcome cf a very general change oi heart among the people of Europe. It denoted the desire'for a new sys- | iem of international relations. It‘ the peoples. They mo must supply the engineers in use the machnery for good or bad purposes. If any blame for the p:'e'eflt stat" of Eur- ope should be given. that blame must be put where it belongs- nsmely, on the separate gcvern- ments, and not on the league. Af- ter surveying the work done st Geneva at close quarters, I. am bound thithfully to assert that many cf the foreign minjstcls and others who come together in the Swiss city. are just as nationally- minded. or individualistic, by the Lake umsn as they are at home. Their policies are national or individualistic policies. Tbey en- deavor io-line up their colleague! in accordance with their own views and sympathies. Something good undoubtedly eomel cut- of these meetings. despite this general, st- titude, for, with so many nations lillsent, it is obviously sensory to modify policies and to Ind a our‘ Canada bought $3,000,000000 more from the United States than they bought from us. One of the effects will be remem- bered. We had to pay for these ex- cess imports in cash. And we had to pay in United States currency, and because of this we had to pay as high as $1.18 for American dol- lars to pay it with. Under Mackenzie King the sale of natural products to the United States, that is mostly farm prod- ucts, DROPPED FROM $35,000,000 DOWN TO 514000.000. This is what Liberals call enlarging markets, with the gall to call it prosperity. These vast imports canle in by the open door oi Liberalism, while the Fordney-McCumber-and Haw- ley-Smoot tarifis in the United States were busily shutting out out produce from their markets, and while Mr. King was sitting back 1n his cushionedchair in abject fear crying,-Hush! Hush! don't strike back lest they make it higher. That was not Premier Bennett's timid way of dealing with it. He adopted the more businesslike rne- thod and closed the too open door against United States dumpings. The result was that Canadian mar- kets were reserved for our ownfarrn products. prices of butter, cheese, eggs. bacon, hams, poultry and veg- "etables advanced in Canada's in- valuable home markets. The Lib- eral balance of trade against us was wiped out, ‘our dollar climbed up. not only to n81". but for a time selling at a premium, and the Uni- ted Staies, adamant against recip- rocity with the King Liberals and. their open door, are now anxious to trade with us on equitable terms. and a. favorable reciprocity treaty is under preparation. Balance of trade may be a curse yet it may also be practical busi- ness. If a farmer incurs debt for eggs. meats, eats of any kind which hc can produce on his land, the adverse balance of trade is not to his advantage. If he creates that outside debt to buy better brood stock to produce more eggs, bacon, or produce, then it is practical bus- iness. If to buy fertilizer or farm implements to increase production. it is also sensible liability. It was for this reason that Hon. Mr. Bennett closed the Mackenzie King/s “open door,“ cancelled the lc duty on New Zealand butter, the semi-free-trade in pork and animal products, substituting higher tar- lffs on farm products, and wiped out the Liberals adverse balance of trade, to benefit agriculture in Can- ___. Queen has lent a cradle which was used for three generations of the Royal family. Made for Queen Victoria's eldest daughter in 1840 and used for all her other children, it was given first to Queen Alex- andra, as Princess of Wales, for her children, and subsequently to the Queen, when Duchess of York in i894, and used for all her family. This cradle, or swing-cot, stands seven feet high and is of mahogany ornamented with gilt and with in- set panels of embroidered satin. Mattress. pillow, and brzcaded hangings complete it. -— London Times. Mayor La Guardia and Police Commissioner Valentine have reas- on to be pleascd with the results of the campaign for fewer auto- mobile accidcntsj New York is the safest of our large cities. So for this year the automobile deaths are eight pzrcent under lust year, no doubt with more cars on the streets, Even then by the end of the year the present death rate of 11.5 for 100,000 oi the p0plllail0n will have‘ taken more than 800 live . The in- jured will be more than 30000. The city is much safer than the cpen country. For the nation at large the death rate from automobiles is nearly twice the New York rate. It has bren as high as 25 deaths per 100.000 peop'e. lat so long ago scarlet fever, diphtheria and typh- 20k} were words of dread. But ilicl form" it was commended by the 5001911941 the mwhlflffy- bit "l9 motion-wide automobile morialityis - opposition. in masse. but with vig- motive-power must be supplied by , five times as high as for typhoid crous protests that he “should have ‘and diphtheria and l0 times as high as for scarlet fever. - New York Times. Gareth Jones, correspondent in China for the Manchester Guar- dian, killed by bandits who had kidnapped him. was a martyr to duty. He was exploring for his great newspaper a part of Asia which is a nest of ihtnnational in- years hlsbeen so marked that it beoameneosssarytolsurlchanat- ionalerllsadsagainstitflriscam- statistics which have now be- raee sections of the which crime was for- as foreign. The Flflillllg gaining con- tbe e me-probiemof é I I jomnflawuahlali. | ’ BACK-ACRE on Lulumao I A great many of sufferers from ibnckache will tell ‘you that they ,‘ just stooped down w pick up some- lihing when they felt the sudden 1 pain in the lower back and it has remained there ever since. thought that a sprain or strain oc- curred during the eflort of bending or stooping. Now this is true to a certain extent but there would have been no strain or pain if there had not been some "trouble" about the joint. At some time in the past. inerc had been some infection about the joint or perhaps some previous strain. This had set up a flblous formation of tissue about the joint, and the bending or stooping strain- ed or actually tore some of this hard fibrous tissue. Perhaps some new or recent in- fection was present at the time of the bending or stooping and the movement silllply stired up condi- tions about the joint and the back- ache was the result. m Th“ l‘ the weather the cuckoo likes, ' ' Naturally it might be readily» WEATHER-S And so‘ do I; Wlwnnolzowm betumble the chest- l.l And nestlggs riy; And the little brown nightingale bills his best, And they sit outsideat "The Trav- ellers’ Rest," And néaids come forth sprig-muslin rest, And citizens dream of the south and west, And so do I. This 15h the weather the shepherd uns, And so do I; When beeches drip in browns duns, And thrash. and ply; And hill-hid tides throb, throe on , throe, And meadow rlvulets overflow, And drops on gate-bars hang in a and slorl Black, 11.9., former Speaker of the tion, but the Bitiiltkln is l-lllllslifl. The Two Blacks (VlctclrioTimcs) Thereseemswbealittleconfu- inthefasnily offlou. George Commons. Obviously lc loco-ordina- Ill-hcalth caused Mr. Black to retire from public life. Mrs. Black, an active and very cap- able woman, and the wife of Hon. George, not desiring to ‘i; the prestige of the Black family in Canadian political affairs to dwin- dle. conceived the idea of running herself. After this. Hon. George Blsdrgot well-as everybody hoped he would, or his siilrlirlg qualities alone-and. casting back his glances on his own and the Conseavsfive peat‘? but; ground, thong e m l8 oarrytheseatinthe Yukonwhicn he has represented for several years. Husband and wife have agreed in leave the decision to the electors of the constituency. Menendwonrenofthcnorthas row, And rocks in families homeward go, And so do I. —Thomss Hardy. eral invention. under the illusion that it was Hon. Mr. Bennett that Similarly sitting on a cold seat, being exposed to a draft, getting the clothing soaked in a rainstorm brings on a backache the next day. But even here it is not likely that any backache would have resulted from the cold and dampness if there were not already some low in- fection or old infection about the joint. When however there has been a great strain put on the back from suddenly stepping downwards a considerable distance when the ground or floor was thought to be level, twisting the hips violently in swinging at p. golf, tennis or base- ball, braking a. heavy car going down a hill having a very heavy abdomen which pulls the upper part oi the body forward, all put a strain on the joint at the small of the bank. This type of backache due to strain on the joint needs a belt or brace to support the joint for weeks or months. when the backache is due to ln- fection-which means about three- fourths of all backaches-the teeth. tonsils, gall bladder, and intestine should be examined at once. b6- cause the infection has likely Es- isted for months or years before it has made its presence felt by the slight bending. cold, or dampness. nda. for the sarne reason various Conservative governments reduced the duties on agricultural imple-_ merits, s0 that the binder or farm machinery can be bought cheaper today than under Liberal tariffs. Soda nitrates, potash. ammonia, chlorine, and the arsenliies, sul- phates. oxides. formalins, and oth- er essentials in manufacture of fertilizer and insecticides, are en- couraged on the free list. with re- strictlons only on the manufactured he was attacking. Shortly you will find him in another voile face on this, swallowing his words per cus- tom. and, agsirrcommendin; what he now condemns. How often have we heard that Hon. Gentleman denouncing the Present government as a govern- ment "by commissions"? Anathema could not be too loud nor scorn more emphatic than that of Mr. King for relegating the prerogat- ives of the Crown and the indepen- dence of parliament to the tender mercies of commissions. So was the Liberal leader, in talk. But in ac- tion, what? Every pressing responsibility had to be shelved or temporarily got rid of via a commission. This was why he appointed the Duncan Commission. To dodge away from the demands of the Maritimes for their rights. This was why the Conservative senators opposed it, TO COMPEL. THE GOVERNMENT TO SHOULDER. ITS RESPONSI- BILITY. AND ACT AT ONCE. But Liberals tell us-“You pro- fited by that Commission." ‘J7me, by the report of the CommLssicn, but not by the Mackenzie King's implementation of its recommen- dations. for. after declaring it “l00% complied with," HE PUSHED 1'1‘ IN THE PIGEON HOLE WHERE IT R E MAINED UTNDIBTIIRIBED, WHERE IT WOULD STILL BE RESTENG IF MR. KING HAD HIB WAY. It was the Hon. R. B. Ben- nett who DRAGGED IT FROM ITS HIDTNG PLACE ANID GAVE TO THIB PROVINCE A $3,000,000 1N. TERET BEARING CREDIT OF $150,000 A YEAR. And now this great antagonists! commissions is busy promising a. "commission on relief and unem- nloyment". No doubt. if he gets the chance hc will do so and pig- and processed compounds which in- teriered with home industries. Im- portations of these, mostly not pro- duced in Canada, are contributor- ies to adverse balance of trade which are justified. Yet in all cases an adverse bal- ance of trade is a. thing to he nvoided in the national as well as in the individual transaction. We cannot continue paying out good cam for even the things we need, unless we have a prospect of a trade back to pay for what we buy. And it is to realize upon this prac- tical business principle that the so far successful trading laws sndtar- liis have been operated by the pre- sent government. The Liberal leaders proposal to make Canada a. dumping market for the world, merely as an exped- ient to provide "retum freghts’ for imaglnauy exports, is basically un- sound. and in his former career it has proved disastrous to the trade and commerce of Canada. Retrospect And Prospect (By Analyist) Dodging from pillar to post for stray votes, if it could be mater- ialized into what miners call a “pay streak," would furnish the Liberal leader with employment for all out of work in his party. No politician in Canada is so versatile in chang- ing his views as the I-icn. Macken- zie King, even his best lieutenants unable to follow his pace. When the Hon. Premier Bennett anrlounccd his program of "Re- ‘done this five years ago.‘ Tom Moore, the great Labor leader de- clared, — "they have acted too quickly" in enable labor to “adjust itrelf to tilem." But Mr. King's right about face is emphatic. He says,-"'l‘hey (the Conservatives) say they stand for reforms." "Not now‘, says Mr. King, some other time when nat- ure has ,__ ‘ueed womanly. when business gets back to normal with- out the help cf governments, when labor has satisfying work. and the people live in plenty and content- ment. Then for reform. "not now.’ And then. in moire-fly. as the past. dive boldly into the Liberal type of reform, to bring on another collapse of our economic system. and another of the dlilflh sion which he handed over ic the Ron. llr. Bennett, to adjust and into enthliliastic in its favor. eon hole it as he did the Duncan B60011. until his successors pull it out of its hiding place and act upon it as Bennett has done. Claiming in one breath that the Conservative government was 5, mnentlty governed by commission; then with his next that it was p, Bovtmillg dictatorship, has no con. sistency with. gnythjng except the FARMERS While attending the Exhibi- tion call and get the following Remedies. MACS PIG WORM POWDER A very effective remedy in the treatment and m” d worms. A sore cure. MACS CONDITION - POWDER FOR HORSES AND CATTLE Tom an the system. remed- ies all skin troubles and glvgg s glossy coat oi hslr. For swelled legs, purifying u“ blood and as an eradicator o: worms it cannot be beaten. LIVE STOCK SPRAY r- , red specially for Milk Cows. Cattle. Horses, Hogs, and Ponliry- One Implication repels insects in l2 to 2i hours. Hsrrnlcm in human and animal life when med as dir- eeted MACS BLOOD FOOD FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE One of the greatest remedies in the treatment of Rheuma. tiarn. For those who have lost their appetite Macs Blood food will prove a restorstlwe, MACS FILE OINTMENT Gives quick relief in all cones of internal and external piles. Brings instant relief. We i331! piles could be cured out an operation using tlacs Pile Ointment. b’ EVANS STOMACH MIXTURE We are the only drugstore in Canada having this pregcrip. uDIIDEDP~LB.EYIIII,IIOQIC English Phyisoiah who ob. tallied permanent i“ of Stomach Conditions, such as lllllllfltloll. nmnraia Heart- burn, eie. I i TBUBSES To those of you, who g" m. fortunate enough to have to wear one we can give you per- feet comfort, we have a large stock of ap-io-rlaie Trina. gvpa ted by ms. Black, will sur- mise that the former Speaker of the House of Commons and his charming wife “rolled the boiles"to decide the issue ls far ssthWWT° warran- ~record of his dodsinl. Whlth l8 in‘ consistency itself. There is a time for overythins- His clamour today asoinst many national abuses would have come with better grace had he considered them from 1921 to 1980. when he held power, and when under the aegis of his beneficient rule the greatest of Canadian feudal sys- tems was created, great trusts and combines concentrated into 150 great mowers. to ply its arm row- er in crushing the common people. Yes, "when the devil was sick the devil a saint would be. but’ when the devil got well the devil a saint was he.’ Whatlwculd ask of those of "Intelligence", that discarded aud- ialce to whom Mr. King does not venture to appeal. is to follow the Liberal leader in his ramblings. make note of what he says in any one speech then observe when he is before a differently dis- posed a " . the sudden swal- lowing of his ,1 titudes to replace them with something directly the opposite. it will be an easy task, andyouwillgetmoreoflealsport out of it than you ever got out of AUGUST 14, m, Q MCbQ Suit Sale Ends August 3 You'll find wonder. ful Suit bargains here. PRICES T0 CLEAR $10.95 $14.95 $16.95 vNow is the time l0 buy. HENDERSON & GIIDMO RE 101 Grafton Street i___. ‘TNo Cookie Pusher (New York Post) ‘Ih the Emir Abdullah of mm. jordanla, alone in a world oi cookie. mixing diplomats, we take 0g o“, Asked by a New York Times our. respondent what he thought of ll Duce, a question any diploma would walk s mile to avoid. the Emir 801d: "I personally do not like Mussq. lini. His manner of speaking and the way he appe in photograph; make me imagine him’ to be achegp conledlen. pompous poi-sum demonstrations do not appealiothc trab accustomed to the simplicity of the Sailors." MsybeIlDuoe wlllgotcwir any cross word punale. with ‘Ihnnsjordarlia now, instead. IIYIIIMAN 8r l? You May Be ‘Interested Business and partnership life insurance is a present-day necessity. It insures the brains of the business-an asset even more valuable than buildings or stock. Great-West Life policy con- tracts are specially designed to meet modern conditions. An inquiry addressed to Prince Edward Island Branch Office will bring you prompt information without obligation. Provincial Managers, Charlottetown 00,, lumen The 2 Macs m Greatfleergoltlest tealelio. Plflwlltioosabselaiiy ' Mr. Tea Poll BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE Recommends as a‘ refreshing drink TEA