l million iiiWN Bliiliiii “Burns! advance) Idltor III‘ Boundary-Lion. on. TUESDAYUOCTOOBER _11, C1927" luring Daily th l!!!) “All pol your (II ldvlnco) delivered. Iilllnd President-W. Gunter l. luau. longer-J. I. Burnett. in Ul-lllfll and United Staten. Vloc-Pruldolt-J. B. Burnett. Anoelnto Editor-db. K. Currie. A. lilnalillilluu. n. n. 0.. ' ‘365 days of the year comes to 836.50. LEADERSHIP question of leadership is in the minds of many Canadians today Jand perhaps before this issue of The Guardian our readers a new leader will be se- are born, not made. position. many qualities are accumulated leadership and those that nlake for last analysis the followers make the: leader. chosen, when they are loyal and true to him he beconles great. Sir John A. Macdonald was a typi-; cal leader. He had a charming per»; sonality. he was a loveable man and the party followed him. The leaden rounded and gliarded and advised he cannot go far astray. Sir John, it is was his own principal counsellor. yet any of his great achievements were accomplished without serious con- sultation with his ministers. Sir Wilfrid Laurier also was a typical leader. His success as primarily in his charming person - aiity and in his loveable qualities. He was not a greatstatesmlin. the lust analysis he was ilot a states- man at all. The greatest achieve- Railway, was which Transcontinental colossal blunder froln his whichfperhaps they drove him into. The point is that the loyalty and the continuous glorification by his party, know and to select wise advisers. What is true of a political leader is true of leaders in other walks of life. First, his personal attractive- ness, then the loyalty and faithful- ness of those who selected him as their leader. NICE FAMILY PARTY It is becoming more and more evident every day that the Saund- ers aggregation is determined to provide their own relatives while the going is good. We have already record- ed the fact that the Hon. B. W. LePage was in the forefront with a Job for his son-in-law in ‘the tax office. The Hon. J. P. McIntyre, Minister of Public Works, has suc- ceeded in having a brother appoint- ed to a Customs inspectorship. Now we have reason to belle‘ that the Hon. Walter M. Lea, Minister of Agriculture has succeeded in ‘gett- ing his niece. Miss Windsor. re-ap- pointed to the position of Supervis- or of Women’s Institutes, a position she vacated in i923. To round off the nepotism of the- portfolio-hold- ers, the Honorable A. C. Saunders, Premier, has given the assistant- supervisorship to his daughter. Of course at the meeting of the Gov- ernment tonight. these two latter appointments may not be confirm- ed, but again the chances are they will. Bo altogether we are going to have a nice family party in the I Provincial Building, keeping the loaves and fishes lh the ‘family Cl!‘- olc. , - Speaking of’ the family compact or pro-confederation days. why it Illift in it with the family party nice comfortable jobs for reaches some of 1 during the years between birth and‘ true. was o. satesman and probably1 mon sense that will enable him to A FINE TRIBUTE ON. L. A. Taschereau's address in Convocation Hall yesterday, says "The Mail and Empire, was a confes- sion of political l‘ orthodox stam As long. he says. as their their lother British subjects in loyalty to rthe Crown. With men of his staunch Canadiailism at the head of their i _ . successful leadership are graduallylProvince, the French-speaking peo- Dense of couectmg the taxes’ a“ of developed. Leadership at any stage pie of Quebec will grow more lllldiwhjch mus; be pa“; And m pgy presupposes following and in thejmore attached to the establishedthenl takes seven cents out of the Premier Taschereau recenuyl ten and leaves a distracted Govern- order. made trying for him by the popular Committee of the aroused in the boundary line pute between Quebec and Newfound- land. That finding was profoundly ‘a measure cutting of! appeal to that final tribunal. Men of Mr. Bour- i Confederation, the reality of the a! I faith of the trulyls p‘ He benevesm con-light of it as mere "chickenfeed." lected to lead the Liberal Conserva-‘federation, in British connection, He treated u; Wm, me respect that a tive party. We are told that leaders and in Canada's free will as a na-‘substantial and dignified national This is on1y‘tion, and he deprecates annexation! 1111141111 1s 911111193 1°~ partly true. They are both born and to the United States. These loyalties’ made. They are born with certain of his are the loyalties of all goodfln View whm, he wen, m, ,0 palm qualities, perhaps the most useful in Canadians. For the Canadians ot_'{Qut_ A considerable p311 of that a coming leader being a genial dis- his race he speaks no less than fo with this foundation, a himself. fair amount of brains, however, be- traditions, their culture and ing presupposed, the quality of lead- language rights are respected, llleylmm specific pufposci before the ership may be developed. Of coursewwill not, he says, be surpassed by anyl Government had received it, That l-‘Wten cents a day" received by the . Government from all the Canadian, i i When the followers gBthEYigaVe proof of his fidelity to British‘ around the leader whom they llavqconnection in a situation that was i 3551115 99111113111115 “cl-Willi “gamstibcen expended in these ways within British connection have no love for‘ the past five years? v , it must not be assumed that all cr1Mr. Taschereau, and he seems toi‘ 11love little respect for iheln. But for; these trouble-makers, the solidity oflolll- B111 11511 01 111° 111111111115 9X‘. British tie and the non-existence of; annexation sentiment would every-fir i, worse than wastmt leader. like that of’ Sir John. luylwhere be taken for granted, and as-il-iudson Bay Railway and its terln- surances on these points would be‘ lconsidered unnecessary and would ,Qucbec and Ontario are bett I . inelghbors under Premier Taschc hinting good understanding and good - i gprogress of their Provinces industri- w . EDITORIAL NOTES The statement made by The Guar- police court reports. these the number of convictions for drunkenness in September, 1926, was 10. In September, 1927, when the Saunders Government had got fairly under way, the number of convic- tions for drunkenness was i8. And the downward pace was not confin- ed to drunkenness alone. Convic- tions for other causes, crimes of various kinds. in September, i926, numbe ed l2; in September. 1927, the number increased to 25. If we go on at this rate of increase we shall land somewhere. According to HE explanation given by the Pat- riot for the increase of doctors‘ prescriptions for alcoholic purposes, namely, that a larger staff of offl- cials, "six inspectors and three spe- ciai Prohibition magistrates were to be appointed" (they have not yet been ligpblntCd) is, at least, ingeni- ous. Doubtless the increase of drink- ing through the increased issue of prescriptions will necessitate in- creased watchfulness. But the idea ts not original. Many of our read- ers will recall ii prospectus issued some two years ago to launch i new fur proposition. Catskins had a cer- tain value, as they could be convert- ed into seal or chinchilla; rat skins are largely used in the manufacture of gloves. The scheme was to start rranch with a thousand cats and the same number of rats. The lat- ter, when skinned. would be fed to M than degenerate Saunders days. Inlcease to be given iii public speeches. er| operation. 1‘- outlay with no return are that hotclhqtmlght, will “tighten up" the ab. ment of his life. the building of the eau and Premier" Ifergtlsoil than they. pure o.‘ ivere before. Of their success in pro- mlnlsters might have saved hlnl, oswill between the two provinces, these‘ statesmen may well bc proud. Theyg both have done great things for thei ithe country so vast and so burden-l i i I i l . i dian that drunkenness and crime had but (m5 and VHS; projecm such have increased under the Saundersias the St. Lawrence Waterway, to regime is abundantly verified by theiCOSi hlllldleds °1 11111110115 are "'1' [ready at the front. i I i i I ‘spending public money like a drunk- ‘like the Government at Ottawa, are i Notes by the .Way 0N JAMES ROBE. speaking of; tum, points out that Dominioni taxation amounts to ten cents per‘ head per day. That makes easy calculation. Ten cents a day during {And there are. say. ten millions of ipeople ill Canada. It follows that. they are paying ten million times as much as one individual taxpayer is paying, or $365,000,000. Mr. Robb was not trying to make the na- tional tax bill appear small, or in- ignificant by thus dividing it into dimes. ‘Not at all. He did not make Mr. Robb had quite another object taxpayers was all disposed of, prac-‘ tically mortgaged, to be paid for cer- was Mr. Robb's point. There is the interest on the national debt. for one thing, and the subsidies to provinces, and the war pensions, with the ex- ment with only three cents which they can control or spend otherwise. ‘curves form a sort of spring, whicll- QJ-Bamsnllfl ‘POSTURE AND ILLNESS A friendly controversy ls...now being waged between United States and British physicians as to whether round shoulders. protruding ab- domen, round back aud sway back. are the cause of illness, or whether illness causes these wrong positions of the body. v In the United States faulty stand- ing and sittinig are thought to cause the illness, and in Great Brit- ain they think that illness causes the faulty positions. As you know there are four curves in the back or spinal column; one curving forward from back of head to half way between shoulders, then the curve backward at shoulders. then he curve forward at small of back. nd the curve backward again over the huge gluteal muscles on which we sit. - These curves are natural curves, and are intended to absorb some of the shock from walking or other work done by legs or feet, whiohl otherwise would be transmitted. to! the brain and cause headache or other nerve disturbance. These‘ makes the back more resistent than a straight column or tube. | Further, our engineers tell us tlla ' a tube, with a double bend in it Some may pity the Government} Heeling the finding of the Jlldivifllthut has so little control over the‘ Privy Council money which the people pour intoienough dis, the treasury from year to year, andSl-lll-S- some may pity the people who have1 to find the money. All intelligent,‘ and prudent people will see in thei of a political party is not necessarily]disappointing to Quebec, and Mr. existing situation strong reasons whyzis I. . . . a dictator or a czar. He has his ad-‘Taschereau stood firm against the the Government should not expendlnl; 111141 Sllimél W111 1191i? i0 911981391“. . I . ~ visors and his counsellors. So sur-‘attempt to have the Legislature pass 1119 1111111911 sum over which they, have control, foolishly, rashly or say that maliy millions have Canada needs more people, we are pended under four successive Liber-i a! Ministers, or acting Ministers of Immigration has been wasted, much} On the‘ lflfll twenty millions have been ex- lpended and nobody outside of some] [enthusiasts on the prairies believes lihat it will ever pay the expense of Other instances of all 1 hase in Paris and‘ the Vincent 'Massey embassy in Washington. . A ‘very formidable array of new offices; with very large salaries have been‘ created by the King (invcrnnlent. Nine years after the Great War ianll with fixed charges resting upoll T013191" $111111 1111i! Personal Bfefltllesfiwally. but nothing ‘is more to theirwsome as they m“ i, is bu, poor Con,‘ ‘N made him the popular lender lhfltilwnor than the happy effect of thesolotlon to the people to be told that, he became. ‘influence they have exerted to bring seven-tenths of the expenditure is] 5)‘ w- L- 9991111" _ Naturally. good. sound common the two provinces into relations ofifllncmltrollable." But 50 it is.‘ And 94+ mopawloo-o-t 1 - - d‘ . sense is a necessity in a leader,com-!mutual confidence. ‘where 1S the evldence of any ‘SP0 woggg OFTEN MISUSED; sition toward economy at Ottawa? It cannot be found. In small things and great, under the expenditure], mounts up. Premier King must needs have five secretaries on the pay roll where Sir John Macdonald What will the end be? . A series of good crops and a world revival of trade have with the in-' dustry and thrift of the Canadian people made Canada‘ prosperous. That is no sufficient reason for en sailor. And the time is ilot very far in the past when Sir Rich- ard Cartwright complained of "three successive bad harvests." That may happen again. Already Canadian ex- ports have declined while imports are increasing rapidly. Exports have fallen ofl by 70 millions. Canadians. becoming "luxurious." Our increas- ing import trade is largely in luxur- ies. "At the present time," said the Saint John Telegraph-Journal, "Ca- nadians are buying imported silks, and motor vehicles and parts at the rate of $100,000,000 a year. or prac- tically double" our imports in those lines last year. The cars imported are of the more expensive type. And Canada has a silk industry and an extensive automohileyindustry of its own. With Premier Ferguson definitely determined to remain at his post in Ontario, the choice of a leader at the Winnipeg convention will be lim- fled to one of a numbe of other prominent Conservatives. ft is a re- markable situation. Mr. Ferguson (‘Continued on lpngo eight) the venture automatically and in- definitely self-sppporting. It was frankly admitted that it was a skin game and in this, at least. it paral» leis the Patriot's idea of selling more the cats and the natural increaainllquor in order to necessitate more lmtinm or the stairs ye‘ll nee two -~.~ve=.= . ‘ - -.<- ‘solved. Turn trousers and moisten will sustain nlore weight than a straight tube. _ However if the tube is bent too; much in one direction, and not‘ in another, weakness re-w Therefore for proper posture these curves should nearly balance one another. i Ill regard to the controversy there‘ no question but that faulty stand-y ate these curves, and so less chest roonl and dropping of abdominal _ yorgans will result, causing illnessfibrir-k building, standing at the side [Wil-Slfiflllly- 3111i W110 W111 "$11111"? 111,011 the other hand almost any ill- of a lane about a quarter of a mile notulcss will cause weakness, includingflrcm the village. }Wl‘il.l(i‘l(.'SS of the muscles, and soilane and by building -a flint wall ythere will be a dragging or slouch-‘HIOIIH’ 111M part. of it that bordered» ing of the body. So both nations are rigllt in their statements. Now what about the proper posi- tion standing? You will remember the commands "Head up, chest out, chin slightly drawn back, abdomen slightly drawn in. thighs slightly drawn back and weight of body on balls of feet." And the biggest factor in ob- taining a good carriage is to develop the abdominal muscles. Trying to touch the toes with knees straight, ltwenty times night and morning, Ell/inf; on back 1 and raising legs ialmost to a right angle with knees {dominal muscles and give a good {carriage Simlavly in sitting, chair should support lower back, and feet ,shou_ld be on floor, your thigh and leg forming two sides of a square. i An erect carriage helps to ensure lliealth. and a bright outlook on life. 40m DAILY LESSONS +1004 o+++o4o+>o4+0++o+0+§ Do not say "I have a financial ob- ligation." Say “pecuniary" when re- ferring to individuals. “financial" applying to public funds, revenues of a government, or large transac- tions. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: cap- rice. Pronounce ka-pres, a unstress- ed, e as in “me." accent last syl- lable. OFTEN ltlISSPE‘ LLED Z heroes tplural.) SYNONYMS: abate, diminish, re- duce, decrease, lessen, subside, mod. crate. WORD STUDY: "Use a. ward three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by master- ing one word each clay. Today's W014i SPECIFIC; distinctly and plainly set forth. "Give me a specific outline of the work required." iO-i- hero, roo-oooo-oooooo n-oooo-ooo-o-o-a HOUSEHOLD SCRAP BOOK R0BERB1¥A LEE o-o-oooow-oo-oouawowwn- Pressing Trousers Turn wrong side out. dampen knee thoroughly and allow to dry for 30 minutes; then press knee dry; this takes out the bag and allows cloth to shrink properly. Then dis- solve equal parts gum arable and gum tragacanth in '.-’.- pint hot water. Shake until thoroughly dis- strlp 2 inches wide down leg. Turn right side out and press with not iron until dry. This kind of ‘crease will hold for alongtlme. ' 1 Rubbers If rubbers persist in slipping off at the heels, cut two strips of chamois and glue them inside, up the backs of the heels. Burning of Food The burning of cooking food can be avoided if an alarm clock is kept in the kitchen and set for the exact time the vessel is to be re- moved from the oven. {-0}- A story is told of an old Scots man who entertained an English friend not. wisely but loo well. At last tho Englishman rose and inlli- I I rated his desire to leave. “fluid nicllt, guid nlcht." said his llnllt. "When you get llown t0 the TETOWN GUARDIAN‘ ‘ Darwin's Home to be oooooououa-ooouowoo-oa l Daily Selections Charles Darwin's old home at, i FDR- ‘ Downe, Kent, where he lived and‘ Guardian Readers worked for forty years, will be bought) ‘a v-o-Iv w» q. and preserved as a shrine of sciencei as Stratford-on-Avon has become a] literary shrine. The house is still in; the p session of the Darwin family; A NEW EAR-THZ-loet the sin- the pr sent owner being Prof- Fran-inert; be consumed out of the earth. cis Darwin. It is certain that helnnd h; the wicked be no more. Bless never would surrender it except as a mo“ the 19rd, 0 my soul. Praise ye a Shrine of Science October ll, 1921 \ was thought better when the time no unforseen circumstances should permit tile place to fall into other private hands. Itlia at present lens- ed as agirls’ boarding school, and it is believed that it may not pass into the possession of trustees for another ten years. But its future is assured. From time to time sugges- tions have been made that the house should be regarded as a national pos- isession, and once Andrew Carnegie wished to advance the necessary to it. More recently Sir Arthur Keith announced that the British Association for the Advancement of Science waslconsidering the purch- ase. Shortly afterward came the of- fer froln Dr. Buckstoll Browne, a re- tired Londoll surgeon. to provide the necessary funds. A Remote Hamlet Downe House may now be consid- ered to stand in a London suburb for it is only fifteen miles as the crow files from Charing Cross, but today as when Darwin moved into it: in 1842 it is inaccessible. Its nearesti “railway station is three miles away‘ and there is no direct bus service. It iwas chosen by Darwin partly beqAnd stepped across the threshold. ‘icausc the climate was coilgenial, and And Si" 11651116 my 1119. vbecause in his eighteen acres or so!“ tlwush you were my friend. of land he could study iln immensely‘ greater number of forms of plant, and animal life than was possible; in the Midlands. Downe itself is a- ihanllet that seems to have escapedWherein my name is written down [the hand of time. Its cottages are In letters of a. strange old tongue, llit with oil lamps and the ‘TOO-year- And written by a. hand old church with candles. The house, itself is not remarkable, and was not particularly cherished by Darwimal-i though it was his home for forty. years. When he bought it, Downe| House was a square three-storey He lowered the ,1 his groundssecured a little more privacy. The house itself was coy-l cred with stucco. than» rear was ning the three stories. Later on :1‘ drlllvilig-roonl was added on onei other. (ircnt Books Written There. oratory and to the cnd of ills life maintained an experimental plot of ‘ground upon which his tremendous ‘powers of minute observation were exercised. Studying what was goi oil in that little Kcntish patch of earth his illiaglliation told d-lim what had been going on all over the earth for untold ltges. It was. in a sense. the crystal lll which he saw the world and all human history. Here lie bred his pigeons and formed the theories underlying his monumental treatise upon variations 0f animals under dolnesticatioil. From this se- cluded fold in the Kentish hills were discharged those terrific broadsides whose reverberations have not whol- ly died away. At Downe House he wrote "The Origin of Species," and “The Descent of Man," setting forth his proofs that the human beillg was closely related to the animal king- dom. and starting a controversy that may have almost terrified him in its original fierceness. Few of the days he spent at DcwneHouse were free from pain, few of the nights grant- ed him an unbroken sleep, although toward the close of his life his health somewhat improved. Sublime Modesty. After settling himself at Downe he used to go regularly to London once a fortnight, being driven by an old gardener who acted as coachman. Later these trips became too fatigu- ing and he gave them up. There- after he left Downe only to go to some watering place or other health resort when he had lowered his vit- ality through overwork. When he was at home he worked unfiagging- ly, taking a walk in the middle of the day as relaxation. As he wrote he would occasionally take a pinch of snuff which he kept standing in a Jar in the hall, so that he would not be tempted to over-indulgence. He seemed to think that if he ex- celled other men in any particular respect it was that he had been able to devote some time each day overa period of fifty years to the pursuit of a single object, and he wrote with a modesty that was almost sub- lime. “With such moderate abilities as I possess it is truly surprising that I should have influenced to a considerable extent the belief of sci- entific men on some important, points." He was like Spencer in that pr ctically all his work was done in ill ealth. versy. I g theories upon any one. and had he ~ \\-.~.\\\\\ l) o n [TS 1 "v, ‘l; K I n N EY ’_ z / . cubs. Tali’ the first yin, the cec- ondfa no’ there." . , , . . memorial to his late father, but iti;he_»mrd 125mm 104;35, was opportune to make certain that, money to extinguish all private title, [We learn from fools. . All my days. varied by the addition of a bow run-; side. and still intern study on the‘ I'll.‘ erectccln greenhouse and lab-ldeellly wrinkled forehead and cer- flgllreticent and self-efiaoing of men- But unlike Spencer. , Huxley and Tyndall, his companions, .. he did not himself undergo the ex- ‘ citement and exh ustion of contro- ' e waging for forcing his 1 I PRAYER: Lord, we shall dedi- cote our lives to the superb task of personally bringing souls to Thee. i . i our. UNFORGIVEN You were a stringer {And I welcomed you. ll do not | - toll ‘Of singing and of laughter. These were free gifts. “care that you ‘have taken! I ‘1 do not care That you have told an hundred ; smiling lies, Nor that you crime into my garden ‘Plucking the blossoms And walking under the green l branches ‘Of my trees. , Thegarden and the trees will { understandT I do not care for any of the hours ‘That I have wasted lListening to your babble. I do not care that you have passed Beneath the lintel oi’ my door, The ilre consumes the chaff. I care for this: There is a little book , That will not write a lie, Nor any word that is not born Of beauty and of truth. And you have taken this. I m“ forgive your other stupid‘ n And say. Poor atom! 1111f! forget them all. This I shall hold against you made little noise in the world he lwould have been well satisfied. The True Scientist. C1111!‘ Price. a London correspond- vnt of the New York Times. writes: W11?" 111°51- Photographs of Dar- win fail to convey are his stoop, his lflbored mo. his unsteady hand, his tam physical awkwardness. The only variations from Darwin's routine for ‘years were those jprgfldjipon him by Door health. He was the most incapable of pretence; the soul of honor ill all ills dealings. whether with his fellow scientists or with ills village neighbors; the most thouglit- ll i m , . ‘dualism imiaorlssnqg“‘ i.‘ CI17er.H.1l; zszmloriant- ihopolicicaoftbicBanklrobaaedontbomcordbilg". ; uperience gathered throughout four, . tiooi c! .. clone contact with every phage 053$ ugh f. Canada. Ifyoubaveaiinanchlocbuciuéaogmlin} l Peel“ Q ‘I you may be sure that '0' Bankmany timoo its customers solve just uch a problem. A Branch o] rhfl Boning-pg i. Capital $10,000,000 "Reserve $19,500,000 Resources $24$,000,M0- ' ' .Y°U CAN"T BE TOO CAREFUL. started to pour a. drink lntq til A “blimP beggar sat at the oh- man's cup. trance tiny cup ill ills hand. A passer-by, dell-ly, savwtbe slightly llnder the influence of al- “Nix, ylijxlfNl (rolml, took out his pocket lluskulid §‘0u-'t.'i!ilrLL' want; gm lludf’; For a real refreshing drink lllislzllnlrs BRAIIMIN TEA IS UNEQUALLED- - " Sold only in red, hygienic,‘ airtight packages. 5 B oi’ u subway with a The beggar opened his eyes slid- flnak and yelled; qle of} t_ stuff. Do ful and loving of fathers; the most charming of hosts; the most consci-i entious of correspondents. even when it cilnle to dealing with tile obvi-‘ ously foolish letters that appeared from time to time in his large mail.‘- He was an admirer of business nbii-i ity, minutely careful in money mat-i ters, so averse to waste,thut he used} to write on the backs of old manu-f scripts. He was, withal, a lover of pleasant scenery but ignorant in all matters of art. Darwin was one of the great Victorians. l-lis power, his vast and minute observation, his conscientious checking and re- checking of his experiments before he ‘allowed himself to speculate,’ these were elements of his charac- ter for which the world of science will always cherish his memory." --_-_-40>--i ' ‘ Charlie was thirsty for knowledge. and was always collecting interest- ing facts. “I read today," he said. to Michael, “of the wonderful progress made in aviation. Men can now do anything-absolutely -- anythingwi bird can do." But Michael was tired. of won- ders; he was more matter-of-fact. "Is that so," he answered. "Well, when you see an airman fast asleep, hanging on to a branch of a tree with one foot, I‘ll come and have a. look!" Flats For Rent 35 CENTS will SPIN)’ to first. 2nd last month's rent. See "Mcl-‘addenk Flats." All mod- ern inconveniences. llot and C1115 81111111! doors. Rental scent on n. Inlses. Prince Edward Theatre Building. l Putting Up 1 Pickles? n W" are putting Pickles you need Germs: g Brand Essence of Vinegar- "19 flflllnal German Brand 0f which there are many imita- ions. German Brand Euence of Vinegar Ill prQIQfl-gfl by m‘- cemlng housewives andleod- in; cooks all over the Prov- lnce. A pint of Essence make! 3 quarts of Vinegar. Good for Pickles and, Chow Chow. The 2 Macs DRUGGISTS m omit George stl-oot Phone ‘ chumuoul . u. I.‘ 3 1 The Alberta Pacific Grain ‘ Company, Limited 1 6% First Mortgage Bonds, due 19146 The Alberta Pacific Grain Company, Limited, has, with its predecessors, suc fully carried on a general grain business since 02. It is one of the largest grain elevator companies inWestern Canada. As at June 30th,'1927, the Companyb balance sheet sliowed fixed and net current assets in excess or $8,000,000, as against $3,412,500 of 6% First Mortgage Bonds. For the year ended June 30th, 1927, net earnings after depreciation were $800, 857, or nearly 4 times the annual interest require- ment oi‘ the bonds now outstanding. We recommend these bonds forlyinvestment alt- 100 and accrued interest, to yield 6% Descriptive circular on requeel. ‘ RoyalfSecuglittlieg, Corporation 1' Riley Building, Charlottetown Toronto Halifax ohrl Winnipeg Vancouver New ork Montreal Tliiaiifi- as? "- SAFETY y, i l i‘ ' A . When you have money to Invent‘ D1" 1‘ 1"” "m" securities which time has proved are the best-Safe Govern- ment, Municipal, Public Utility or Industrial Bonds. You can make a good selection _fmm "ourcllrrent list 0|’ offerings. ‘Eastern Securities 00., l.td_ INVESTMENT nauiuius - 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown. St. John w Halifair _ Montreal So Nluch for, w . 11f. i . 1 . Every harvest lnust pay, it: Bola “the iql converted ta the use 0f mu, there nflrt koprbdok "so much for reed," that the fields may fr .1; l, a u-If. So with your earnings! Every year must loo coma portion saved and planted with profit, or in the latter yin t_ villi ~- "llourllfcwilillebnrrennnd ‘t Iayoloflvbelolh: your for llfo insurance. Your-pill be blhocdwitlp suflicient for your necdl. In ' _ 330p, will be __ protected |ll the event ofyoul‘ do: l1 ' '1. ‘ r '. ’°““_—{f:*' w For particular! of Great-Wort Life profit-earning coruult llvlllllllll t. .00.‘,»7'f m; ' Provincial Manager: at All Principal Poinll.